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Part of The Circle: Vol. 52 No. 11 - February 11, 1999

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~FEATURES;;:..-
._ Vale~tirie'sDa§Jsf~tap-·
-·:. . . achin
'needhet
wi.th.:·i
:.(r~g~o~dayJ1k.s·/
~wins
iri
a
row
have
.
.
things
lqokipf-up
Ior
. Illen'sbasketball,
pg~16
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the
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of/.
~firiSt
C()llege
VOLUME #52JSSUE#11. -
·.f
amu1.ls••r~tt9~$>t(i.·WIJite
Flollse•· ·scandal
_
- by
KA~~OYLAN :
___
· _
--~~~e~'~1'i>riR!i~
i~tere~ri? the
.. ---~~. Miri~goff: direct~r of ~e '. ..
_
_
·<
''.I
f~el he. h~s ?een d_o!ng
!
'
·siaff.Writer
·
_
· _··_
~s~ue:has·dwmdled consider-
~a,ristlnstituteof~~h~Opm-
:g~odJob w!th-his position,
.
__ -. __
.... _ _·. -
. __
·
• · ably._ : . _ . -
.
,
_. ___ _ • .- . ion, confirmed the public's grow--
Qtlfeather said.-
.
. _ Sine~ the:CHntoµscandal . · •-A:receiltC13SN,ews/New.fork . ing disiriteresfwith the i~sue;.
Fellowsophomorefohn Wells
bro~e lastJantiary, opinion_s
on .
Tinii~'_Pol~ s¥d American
citi-'-
::
"The public cl~arly thinks
agreed with Gilfeather.
whether Pr~sident Clinton zens are tired ofheari~g about
PresideiltClintonactedmegaUy,
"By impe~ching Clinton
~hould ·be impeached and re-
the impeacpmentheatings ~rid
bunhey also

feel this is not
you're pimishing the country,"
mo,ved fn,m of:tice or not, have
f~l that removing tllePr;esident
something he should be re-
he said. "He's done a tremen-
contrast¢d drastica;lly from one . from ofli.ce is unnecessary.
· moved frorri office fort he said.
dous
job
politically."
• . individualto the next. .

. The situation
at
Marist is no . Sophomore Lynne Gilfeather
Martin Shaffer, assistant pro-
. More than· a ye·ar la,ter, th<?
different
ilian
that of the rest of ·is in favor of keeping the Presi-
fessor of political science, said
questions at hand still lack an-
the country.
dent in office.
. ..
please see
IMPEACH, pg. 4
.(0·
0
i~
1
e;g
e
Snow removal gets complaints
e~pansion -
_
is ogly:j_µ~t
--begifi.Iij'l1_gt!:
::•;:S•;;i:.
Cr-~:J:,;.,,~~~~~i~:trI,-;:?::
..::. --.:.:,~:
--
,;'<,
:
...;. ..• ;
__ Consthictio~
_
o1(the Matist.>
_ camptis.,w.ill conti11uejrito the·
besh!ru.i:ig'or't11e~e~t
cenaj,ry.: ·:
• The[e?{t~nt <>~;¥#i~t:sic<>n~ ..
structi,oµj>Jai:is,· gcieSbey~ftd /
the visible: benchiriarks·ot
the ...
.
new liljracy- an<l hii11linities ·._.
bui~9it:1g: .. M¢st.;ru.so-plans-_to _
·
• · builcln1oreJiousing alongwitl) ·
.
te11D_is,cori~!!11d_astude11t~en- _
ter•on
West
Cedar
Street The _
-
_
.
. ·t#~ii~1tt~~}~Wk.;; -
. thefoacl'fiofu;the:newest hous~ :_,
-
-
·
inl~fil~JJ~J~{itii~911J~t}
plan_t;-,s_aid.tlle.ii~·f11q~stiJg
·
will_-
be
~ majo{riniler@.diig):i
_
.•
•-~---
.
'There \VOUld
be
six
bhildings.
with. two"
'
lilndtecl/plirlcing .
spaces.anc1Jfiteimfs courts,
. one of which.will
bei
CQampi~ ...
·
onship ~ouit
-~~
_bl~ppers -to
. hos(g~es," he sai~-; .. : -
:
_.
. _ ThesixJ>ui}dings \Vill)1ouse
230.
students,
-wi~
'.10
~eds for
RAs
andRDs. ·Oneofthedonns
will· house. a student c~nter,
... please
see
EXPANSION.pg.
4
WEEKLYPOLL
. ,
.
_ ._
•·•- . .
_.-
. • .
·
'.: ·.· · .. _
.
. -._ . .
'.-
• -:._.·.:· .·_
.
:c-''._:Y·,.:,_
_
,_ ·"··
..
. ,
. _
_
,... .
Cin:lcpbolo/JocScotto
These
~nowrneri
.
have· a great view of
th~
Hudson
from wherEfthey.are perctied/ ~now storms hindered college activities
ovEir winter intercession. Many studen~were hoping
this past storm would delay classes, but it was business as usual.
-;;
,
...
.
:.
-
-~
-
-----·~,
.
---··......
-
__
' • ,
·-.
.
.
.
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.
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'
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,._,
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.,
-
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-·.
.

--
.
.
.
'
.
~~~eJalicway~~erenotsuf:fi-
stoi:ms,. .
_
,
. . _ ... _
... ·inconvenience campus resi-
·cfontlydeared.
·
·.i.;;.'.f\nice storm is ten
times
-dents. ,
.
- ''They\iidn't plow the.walk-
worse than asnow storm," he
·
wa· y·betw
..
ee·
·n Champa·gn· at and
s'ai"·d.:._>_-~'There" ·· w·e·re,·o··n· e·t·o·tw·
·
o
·
···P
__ lease see
SNOW
__
,_:P_:i._
4
. . The
'fres_h.glistenin_
g snow
· ·
-
-
complemerited Maiist's country . LeoAQe said. ''The fact that
I
arid
a
half inches of ice in some
·byTBEAqMMINO.
• Stef!Writer .
~< :~:[~
style campus, but proved to be
had to go oli roQnds.and trudge
s~ts-arourid campus.''_ .. ,
- . a
h _
assl_ e_
·
_
t;
_
_
or s_
taff_
.an
__
d__
stu
__
d_ ents_ _·
__
.
thiilifi
.•
-eoeasugh:
!!1~
~n
___ o_w_. ·didn '_t -make_ · A~ording to Short; the snow
-
V
.
that
foll
during these storms
- T_w o_
se_vere_ wmter_ storms .-- .. _

.
r
~
.

.
. . .
.
.
.
_
.
·INSIDE
Do,·
y<>u._plan _
011
voting{irrthe
coming
Studentgoveinm~rit
elections?
YES
56-
NO
44
RELATEDSfORYNEXT
TI'.U.I\
Thu
is an
,ms,:ia,tific-,
ta!mfro,,r
100
Maristm«Imz,,
>
I .
'
'ecftbePci°u~i.i.eep·-sie
area'.
~~ GradJJ,ate~~dent,
X.
Jeffery .
W~
almost impossible to.c:lear
•---~-va:-
___
'se_·m_
'este_'_rb_ ~accumul_.at:._. Sanfo~·~d some locations
<Jueftotheicybaseitfellon.,
·
· · ·
were slippery
Shon said
clearing
procedures
. mg'
app
·
__
roxiinately-six inches
<;>f · · ·
•en.=..:
break.
·th · ·d alks
vary. ____ .-
_
..
· .. •··
·
·
·
_..
.
vwmg
,
e Si ew
·
.sno_w.wtthinteo<lays. Thecol-
b
h . .
d h
b ·1d·
1·k
._:'I
__
talldependsoneachstorm_ ,"
lege shut down twice due to the
e
m ·
t _ e · ui mgs,
1
~
hazard us snow and ice condi-
Ch~pagnat, were n_?t clean,
Short
said:
''If the guys are on·
ti
o
he said. ''It was yery icy."
campus,
they start plowing right
0
~~me ~tudents on campus
Tom Daly, ciire<:tor
of
physical
away. If not, Security will call ·
d

• te • tercess·on had
plant, was unavailable for com-
when they feel it becomes
dan-
unng
wm
rm
i
t
·
·
gerous."
difficulty getting around.
men
Fonner
Marian
Hall resident
. Ralph_ Short, grounds su~r-
Almost one month later, rem-
assistant, Gene Anti co, said
visor, said these were severe
ice
nan!5 of the stonns continue to
C10DAY:
Mostly cloudy
hi:57°
lo:28°
Commllllity ................. 2
Features ..................... S
A &_E ....................... 11
Opinion ................. : .. ;.
9
Sports ........ _
.............. : .. 16






























. FEBRUARY11,i999
: Dutchess County Happenings
"Lost in Yonkers" will be on
.. stage at the County Players in
· .. Wappingers Falls. Feb. 5-6, 12-
13, and 19-20. More infonnation
call298-1491.
·.
'
Student Programming Council
' Elie Wiesel, Holocaust survi-
vor and 1986 Nobel Peace Prize
UilMUArtsandLeamingCenter -
recipient, will speak at Marist
.· Uniso_n Arts and Learning
College. next morith.- "Ari
. Center is offering Advanced
Evening with EHe Wiesel" will
Beginner Swing Dance Classes
take place· Wednesday, March
with Eric Hollman. Lessons will
24 at 7:30 p.m. in the James J.
take place Thursday evenihgs
Mccann Recreation Center on
from Feb. 18th through March · the Marist campus.
It
is open to
11th, from 7: 15 p.m. to 8:45 p.m. _ the public.
The cost is $40 for non-mem-
'!he MaristStudent Program-
bers. Call Unison at 255-1559 to · mmg · Council is sponsoring
pre-register and for more infor- . ~esel's appearance as part of
mati?n. Unison is a nonsprofit,
its .ongoing· Peace and Social
multi-arts center located at 68
Justice Series.
·
Mountain Rest Road in New
_ Wiesel, a native· of Sighet,
Paltz.
Transylvania (Romania), was
Defensive Driving is being
deported - by . the Nazis to
offered with Patrick Paul on
Auschwitz at the age of 15. In
Sunday Feb. 14th, Sunday April
1958, he broke the silence about
25th, and Saturday June 5th.
his trials and tribulations he en-
Lessons will take place from
countered in the death camps
9:00 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. The cost is
through the book Night. Since
$3~ for non-members who pre-
then, Night has been translated
register and $42 at the door.
into 25 languages and millions
.. This NYS Point and Insurance
of copies have been sold.' Mr.
A 1999 Toyotawas "keyed"
while parked in the West Cedar
Parking Lot Wedriesday,Feb. 3.
The vandalism
was
reported the
following day,
·
Gartland "E" Block residents
evacuated Thursday,.Feb.
4
be-
cause of another case of burnt
food.
_ Friday, Feb. 5, a smoky aroma
was reported on Champagnat's
7th floor, Security was alerted
~nd found the
source
of the
scent in a resident's room where
she. was burning pic.tu;es and
memorabilia of a former male
friend. No damage was reported
and the fire alarms were not trig-
gered.
A female Marian Hall resident
passed her card to an unautho-
rized guest after swiping into the
building Sunday, Feb. 7 at2:18
·
am. The 'entry officer caught the
. two and they were reported to
the
Rl)_
on duty. Security es-
- .c;()rted· t]ie< guest off campus,
_ accoi:npaniedby·the
·
resident.
A Mid-Rise·residentver?al~y - --~eli 1eadi~g
ti>
M1d~Rise's
abused ~e
RD
on duty wh*
m. ·'
ground floor'. The vandalism was
th~ Manan f!all ~ntryway, after
reported
fo
the evening
of
Sat-
be1?g told his fnend-could not - urday, Feb.
7.
· . ·
be issued a guest pass at 11 :04
· ·
p.i:n. Saturday, Feb. 6. Marian . ·LeoHallresidentswerecaught
Hall's entry officer asked the 'doing "doughnuts" in
a
green
student to apologize, and the
Volkswagen.Jetta in the snow-
RD
acquired his identification . c()ated McCann Center Parking
when he proceeded to be rude.
Lot Monday, Feb.
8
at
1
:08 a.m.
Security was notified and es-
corted the guest off campus.
·
A red substance resembling
Jell-O was smeared on the walls -
ofChampagnat's 9th Floor Sun-
day Feb. 7. The.vandalism was
reported at 4: 10 am.
Three large bulbs, including _
their globular encasements
were smashed in the first
stair~ . -
lriternsbipsavailable in Congres.mian'soffice
U.S. Rep. Maurice Hinchey
(D-
Though the
NY)
is currently seeking interns
internship is
for his Kingston office for the
meant
to
spring and summer semesters.
supplement .
While the positions are unpaid, · the student's
they should provide valuable
education,
~~rk experience and give par-
some office
ticipants a first-hand look at the
skills - spe-
inner workings of government.
cifically an~
-·· Interns must be enrolled
in
an
swering_phones and writing let-·
edo,cational. program and may
ters -: will. be necessary. C,orri-
b_e able to receive academic
puter skiUs are also helpful.
. credit for the work.·
F(?rnIO.re information, students
Reduction Program is a course
Wiesel has spent much of his
given for safety and savings
adult life working on behalf of
approved by the NYS Depart-
th~ oppressed, defending hu~
ment of Motor Vehicles. The
man rights, and promoting
cou~se_ is adriving ~owledge
peace throughout the world.
refresher that_ can save drivers
, Tickets go on sale Feb. 16.
}O,%c
p{f
Collison and Liability
Ticket prices are $4 for Marist
-msurance fonhiee years and studen(s, $8 for students from
reduce four points offyourdriv-
other colleges and area
schools, .
ingrecord.
and $10 for the general public:',
.
~
... '-~-?;
'}t·.t ;;' . -
Successful applicants. will
b~ '
should contact Lori DuBord in
<s91llrt; cheerful and should have. -~ilchey_'s_ office _at (914)-331-
~ knowledgefof current events. ': 4466. '' ' · · · · · .• ,, ,·. ,
' •
..
: .
.
'
. .
An on-going Yoga class for
All tickets are general admis-
beginners is being offered
sion and there will be no refunds
Tuesday evenings from Jan. 5th
or exchanges. Tickets can be
_ to June 29th, from 4:30 fo 6:00
purchased at the College Activi-
p.m. The class is being taught
ties Office on the third_ floorof
by Deborah Medenbach acer- · the Marist Student Center. Park-
tifi_ed teacher through Th~Yoga
ing is limited and carpooling is
Institute in Houston. The cost recommended.
is $12 fornon-members in indi- .. - For furtherinformation, cail
vidual classes and $45 for each
the Marist College Activities
monthly series.
Officeat(914)575-3279.
,
. . .
l•~,~ested
~11 ..
improvin9
ycnn=
•~trance
exa.mi
s,core,?
.:.; -
.
. -(.~!~~;f~-!'r~_r,ft~f-~°-f~~t.:_p:~~i~~~
~f_MarisJ-
¢ollege-
- _ _ _ ... · ··. ·
_
, 1s offeri~g a
- . : :
..
'.
'
_ -
~~IS
Prep Course
for Spring 19~9
·
·
:J~,if
1
~n-§fe~it,_~<>u-~s'i-is designed·for those seekirig e·ntrance'
.
,
to gradllate programs
by.
preparing them for the verbal ·
qllantitative and analyticalreasoning secti~ns of the GRE .. .
'' ; . '?J~~ntify test are,<1 st~~~gths
~nd
weaknesses .. .
.
✓ Remediate math and verbal skills _-
·
·

~rn logic
games
to improve analytical reasoning
abilities
·
·
-
· -
-✓ ~earn ef_fective test taking~gies
: .

Take practice tests
·
·
Contact: Marist's Center for Career Services at
575 3547
fi
infi

-
or more
ormation.





























































































.
,...
_
_
"
·
....
.
by
JFSS~C4.
_
S ~
.
.
.
· StaffWriter
,., :
A
slight change h~ gone into
.
· effei:;tconcerriing the first floor
doors in Mid:Rise hall recently.

: An alarm system has been in-
stalled to increase sec·urity and
•aid in fire
'
safety, said AI
Hammell, Mid-Rise resident di-
rector.
''There are not really any
changes," he said: "Students
have the same access as be-
fore.''
·
.
The situation with the doors
is basically the same as
.
it has
been. Between the hours of
7
a.m. and
3
p.m. students can
enter or exit the building through
the doors by swipjng their
Marist
ID
card. Now, with the
revisions; the swiping causes a
.-delay
on
,
the door that disables
the alarm system.

· Before
3
p.m., anyonew
_
hp at.:
.
,
te.mpts
tC?
u~~)he doe>r,s
,
with~
1
o~tswfpirig'an
ID
wilrcause the
alarm
to sound, Hammen said.
.
.
After
3
p.m'., the alarm will be
· set off regardless of an
ID
be-
ing used or not.
The doors are now considered
fire doors. The mag locks are
not activated from the inside. In
the event of a fire, residents will
~xit
the building in the same way
PAGE3
An alarm system ad~~d to
the Mid-Rise first fl~or door is to increase security and fire safety.
as before. Ttie
'
dooi1s are fire Mid-Rise resident, said that she
safety
.
equipped.
.
.
; also doesn't think it will cause
Hammell said he:doesn'tfore-
i
~y major problems .
see any problems be~ause of
"At first
I
misunderstood and
the addition of the alarm on the
thought that we couldn't use the
doors. On move-in and move-
doors at all and it would be a
out days, the doors wiH prob-
big inconvenience," she said.
ably· remain propped open as
"But now that I know we can
they have in the past.
use them, it really isn't a big
Anne Morales, sophomore
deal."
Lauren
'
Montemurro, also a
sophomore resident, said that
while she did not see any par-
ticular problems arising, she felt
that the alarm really wasn't nec-
essary.
"I
don't think that there should
be an alarm, none of the other
buildings, like Champagnat,
have alarms on them," she said.
Player expected to return
to court after suspension
byJEFFDAHNCKE

·
··
Staff Writer
·
in the
appeal.
.
''There was
.
confidence
that we would
(get the SUS-
After nearly four weeks of
·
uncertainty,
the
Marist
mens
pension re-
.
basketball team finally knows
duced)," he
when junie>r forward Tomasz
said. "You
Cielebak will return to action.
would rather
Last Wednesday the NCAA
have
him
penalized Cieleba:k, suspending
back in
11
..._ ___________
.
....
_
--
.
.
,:
Cin:le j,hoto/Joe Scotto
him for l l games for violating
games than 27. The penalty ac-
The
_library
fd~d~rai~ing campaign has raised
$8.4
million.
his amateur status by playing
cessed is certainly better (than
for a Polish club team.
.,
the original penalty)."
Luncheon inarks milestones
Since he already missed six
It is not known exactly how
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
games after being ruled ineli-
manygamesheplayedfor2'.epter
in
:
f
__
u

.
.
n
_
·
_
·
.
d
_
_
r
.
aising
:
campaigns
gible byMiµ-iSlathl~tic officials,
Slask,
.
the club team Cieleba:k
the NCAA-decision will force
playedforinPoland. Butinpast
by
KRISTINA.BRITO
ing venture.
himtomisSfivemoregames. He
cases similarto.these, a player
Staff.W.,rft.er.
_
·
,
· .
"
'
Marist Pre~ident, Dennis
will return for the final conteSt . was suspended one game for
·
·
·
·
·Murray;;commented
about the-
of the regular season againSl
each game he played in viola-
1\ilarist r~cJntly ingaged.in
a .·
grant
in
a
Marist Scope
article.
Fairfield on Feb. 20-
tion to NCAA regulations .
. challenging lllnc~eori
,
to ~ote
"We are extremely pleased ·
·
When asked to comment on
Marist learned of the penalty
the· new library

project
.
fuod-
· with
·
this award because it is
a ·
the decision, Cieleba:k said that
last Wednesday during a con-
·
raising.
.
great endorsemynt of
our
library
.
he has been inStrocted by
.ath-
ference call with the NCAA Stu:
·
The luncheon, held on Feb. 3,
project and fund-raising cam-
letic officials not to talk about
dent-Athlete Reinstatement
is an annual event that tradition-
paign, as well
as
a ~trong indi-
the case.
Committee. Participants in the
Jl}ly mark!> the begiruilng oftbe
·
·
cator of Marist's growing na-
Head coach Dave Ma~arity
·
call included athletic director
Marist Fund's Campus Cam-
tional reputation," he said.
said Cielebak was upsct
wt
th the Tim Murray and Cieleba:k, who
paign. This y~ar's luncheqn
.
,
Marilyn Brandl,
:
director of
_
penalty.
.
.
·
-
.
.
·
·
·
.
answered questions for the
:highlightedlibraryfund~raising,
·
·'
~riual giving said turnout was
:
·0:·
"His firs
_
t
·
reactton
_
was ve~,
.
·ttee
including the Kresge challenge
large for the l~ncheon.
very disappointed,"_ Maganty
~ c a l l iasted about an hour,
grant.
.
.
.
"A record number of 250 fac-
told the
Poughkeepsie Journal.
and then the reinstatement com-
So far, $8.4 million has been
ulty and staff attended," she · "I think he
·
had· hoped that
mittee met to reach a decision.
raised for the campaign. The
said.
·
maybe it would have ~n over
Murray
told
the
·
Kresge challenge grant of
Brother Paul Ambrose, presi_;;.
· _and
th
_
ey w~ul.d have let it go at
Poughkeepsie Jou_rnal
that he
$500,00Q-wiIJ
pe
~Wilf~ecl
_
t_?-
·

••
dent emeritus of Marist, is the

:
sjx."
: :
.
·
.
·
.
.-·
.
·
was
a
little upset witbthe deci-
Marist only if they
~c~
!h~rr
.
-
.
-
volunteer chair of the fund-rais.:.,
"<;
Although it did not go at six,
sion. Athletic officials had
·goai'or
an
ad~~?na.l
~!~•.
1
~H
-
~
.
.ing.eyent.
,.
;:_~)gie
penal~ wa~
_
a).o.~
)~~
~e~
.
.
hoped that the
::
sii
,
games
Ji6iibyS.ept
1';1999.
·•.·
·
'►
.
,
,


..
Besides
Ambrose, thereare4.F
i
xere th~~
-
lt
_
C«?Ul~ ha~~
_
been .
.
Cielebak sat oi.tt before the
' · .
According
,t
.
9
~Jle
,MtlflSI
faculty and staff chairs, eac.lf:
\
'I1le ongmal
·
purushnient ~at NCAA ruling would
be
a suffi-
S.cqpe,
publi_~hed.~y tlle
._
Of;fi~
,'representing
different office~<-the NCAA was prepared
t~
is-
cient sanction.
_.
.. :
of
College
·Advanc~ment,
all
and divisions on campus. This" .· sue was a 27 game suspenswn,
As to why this problem arose
grant recipients
.
inus~ rai~ ini-
group meets regularly with . which was reduced after an ap-
in the first place; Murray said
tial funds toward their proJects
Ambrose to decide what can be
peal.
.
.
that the athletic department ac-
before
requesting
the donetostimulatetheCampaign.
~~
Momso~, asSIStaota~-
cepts full responsibility.
foundation'sassistance.Kres~e
"Itisapersonalinvestmentand le~cdrrectorforextemal_affau~,
"I
think it was just a
funding is also highly competi-
everyone should get involved,"
said that, although the athletic
.
tive. The luncheon gathered
he said.
dep~ment hoped for a penalty
those involved in this fund-rais-
of time already serve~, there
was a sense of accomphshment
... please see
CIELEBAK. pg. 4
·,',
,
...





















FEBRUARY 11, 1999
IMPEACH:. 'Removal:11rilik~y'
SNO.W:
· not believ~ ~at by calHng them
··· continued from
pg. l
.
as witnesses any new informa-
he agrees with the majority of .· · tion
will
be uncovered. ·
the public's feelings ori the is-
Miringoff agreed with
New·
,stor1n·
.
-
.....
,.
adds
to
•piles
sue.
Gilfeather .and ·went on to say
"I do not think the crimes the
that
he
does not believe the wit-
...
continued fro~
pg:_ I
President is charged with war-
nesses will in fact be called to
Director of security, ioeLeary,
rant impeachment or removal
testify.
said some areas on campus are
from office," he said.
Wells disagreed on this par-
still
snow nddeii:
· ·
The charges against the Presi- . ticular aspect of the story. Wells ··
"The fact that there are snow
dent, which are being argued by
said.he felt that calling Lewinsky,
piles around campus is hard to
the Senate, include perjury and
Jordan and Blumenthal would
be
d
,, L
"d
·
·
eny, . eary sai ...
obstruction of justice.
harmful to the President.
Most of the snow piles are lo-
Along with differing opinion~
·
"I'm sure that if they call them
cated in and around campus
on whetherthePresidentshould
as witnesses the Republicans
parking areas. In some lots,
be removed from office or n()t,
will be able to dig something
such as the River View parking
· there are also contrasting opin-
else up to hurt the President's
area, the snow mounds· over-
ions as to what exactly the Presi-
case," he said.
flow off the islands making it
dent is on trial for.
Opinions at Mari st as to
impossible to park in the spaces
Gilfeather said s~e does not
whether or not the Senate actu-
adjacent to the islands.
agree with how the trial is pro-
ally will remove the President
This situation creates the
gressing.
fron:1. office remain split right
problem of insuffi~ient par~ng
· "Right now I feel that the
down the middle.
accommodations. Several stu-
President is on trial for perjury,"
· Miringoff commented_,that ·
·
dents possessing parking per-
she said. "However, I feel that
even if alL of the Republicans
mits for specific lots find it diffi-
calling Lewinsky, Jordan and
vote in favor
of
his removal from
cultto attain an available desig-
Blumenthal as witnes~¢s.;'Yjll, offi¢e, they wbu]d,§till need:n
nated parking space ..
make it appear that th~ P.residenti · V()tes from tl,Ie Democrats. .
Leary
said tp.ere. _is limited park-
is on trial for having
ijh
affai~." ··· "It just doesn't seen'i:likely that, ing available\n'ihese situations.
Gilfeather also safd she
,9b~s
he will be removed," he said. {
. "Alternate parking lots; we
·
· · ·
;
don'thavethatluxury,"hesaid.
EXPANSION:
Waterfront, :. new
Short said they have used al-
h
F
·
·
d
ternate means of clearing lots in
town ouses, onta1ne on agen a
previous.years.
.owned the site before ... they
"Inpastyearswhenwe'vehad
Recent snow storms further complicate icy conditions.
~evere ~inters, . Security and I
have work~d together to clo_se
lots and then clear themt he
said.
,
. That procedure has not yet
been used. this year ....
had an oil tank that leaked and
·cm,.
LE_,.,
B_ AK:. Department to reev~luate procedures
that was also. cleaned up."·
,
store and possibly a cafe.
Daly said students do not
...
con;in~edfrqmpg. 3
Marist basketball program has
from postseason play for the
"'." continued from
pg. 1
However,.Marist is. not ready
need to be concerned abo.utthe
combination
of
things that just
been investigated by the NCAA.
1988
and
1989
seasons.
to. start cons_ truction .yet. Roy dn·_n.king wate'".
· ·
·-In
·19s·
6,· the· NC~ sus·pe_rided
This is the first violation that
•·
didri'twor~ the way they should
Merolli, executive vi~e presi-
"After .you do _the clean up,
have//
ne·sai& ''The'cotnmittee . three players, including current • occurred while .Magarity was
dent of the college; said Marist
you have to test for so many
found that at no ti.me did Tomasz
Indiana Pacer Rik ~mits,for 6-7
the he~d coac;~.
. . . .
i~ experi~ewing )\'ith the ~lans . years_ and capplt to _th~pEC;'. _ )jr'the p~ke!balG~<?(a~~ti~ ,,:
;~aijJ~,- .
j, ·.
J\'.~\:- ;~; ,,, - ' . ,;--·
:tv!?~S~?""'~aie:~~!:1:1
1
f.!cie=
ng~t_n~~..., :-
•·
;'_
,
••. . . ..· •. he Sal~: "Tf1ars.J).O!
~
lSSJ.!~
_t,or-.,
:staff
wil!inglf
wipiliol9:or p.ps! , 1.-,,rnat"~11.ru.~
s~~~
frl;>tj\
al-
:
'·~
1>~~!1~}:_S
~~e-~
. !,l:a. n~l
C,.
r_
"Rigfit
now we
cannot
fill 240 -'
11s
.because we,_don )- 11se .we11 "lead wiili!iiifonnation. ,., ... _· ,~- -. ,
• leged recru1tmg•v1olatio11s. ,As · r~nt proc<:dures regardmg
.f?r
beds.
What we are doing is look-
water, we use city water."
This is not the first time the
a result, the Foxes were banned
e1~n player~ to ke~p such _a v10-
ing at different strategies in
Acquiring the land has not
- - •
~~~=
_____ .....,....
lation from occumng again.
terms of how could we
fill
them,"
been easy for Marist, said Daly.
he said. "We need to look at a
"The town does not like the
lot of options [expanding] the ·expansion of Marist College
freshman• class is one option,
because we are tax:exempt," he
international -students is an-
said.
"It
[35 West Cedar] is al-'
other option, and we
·
are also
ready offthetax roll because it's
looking at students who are
liv-
our property. The town is very
ing off campus and seeing. if · tough on us. I have spent many
they want to Jive on campus.''
nights going to town pfarining.
Daly said he thinks that more
board meetings."
students will wantto live on
.
.. Anotherongoing dilell1Illa that ..
campu.s. ,-
,, . . .'.'
. Marist's exRansion fac~s
.
is
~
.,,~ .,~'With'ih~·
new_;
tech'ijqlqgy;:J , Ro,uie 9,/whic;ll
lias'iiot
yetb.¢ent
·t
'
-ulink
ih~tmdre
aricr'morepeople •, r~solvecf . .
.
.. '_,_ ... - "' .-
--- .
are going to want to live in cani:.
.· Merolli said the collegejs still
pus ·housing, where there 'is
a
iookirig at altoqts.~ptiops.. _ .
computer hooked up," he said. · "We are looking atforicing on
"Also, I-think with the-new li-
both sides·of the road, fencing
brary, more people are goingto
on the median;
and
obviously a ·
want to live close by so they
cross walk and signal," he said .
. can go there at night."
"W<f are working with the De-
. Because of the area's indus-
partmentofTransportatioriright
· trial past, Maristhas been work-
now:
The concern is that if we
ing with the DEC to erisure that
put a crosswalk and signal
the site
is
safe for students, ac-
there, wil1 it be used? Median
cording to Daly;·
fencing· has: been·proposed to
"They are iri the process of us
as
one way
fr,
ensure'
tha~
it
what is called de-listing the
is used."
_
site," he said. "It was remedied.
Merolli added that the state
What happened was that they · department of transportation
[the previous owners] used to
proposed an overpass;
·
park all of their construction
"Our position was that_ it
equipment up here. Apparently
would certainly provide a means
the breaks had some contami-
over the highway, but our con-
nation in them. That was all
cem was would it be used?" ·
cleaned up by the people who
Merolli said.
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/
FEBRUARY 11 1999
F
,-1.
_·.·1· .·
.
.
'
·
.
,,a ent1ne s
'

, P
Day
<not
just
a day of gifts
by
CHRISTY BARR
S~tiff
Writer
Pope Gelasius set aside Feb. 14
to honor St. Valentine.
Gradually, Feb. 14 became the
Valentine'~ Day will once
date for exchanging love mes-
again be celebrated on Feb. 14,
sages and St. Valentine became
a tradition -which has gone on
the patron sairit of lovers.
for centuries._
Herein the United States, it is
While there are varying sto-
Miss Esther Howland who-is
ries on exactly how.Valentine's , given credit for sending the first
Day began, all, of the stories ·. valentines.in the 1800s, and to~
. hold St. Valentine as the creator: . ·day the date
IS
very comniercial-
' .· Some say that Valetitine's:Day . .
ized." .
originated when St. Valentine
However it originated,
was martyred for refusing to
Valentine's day is a popular day
give up Christianity.
It
is said
for couples everywhere .
. that on the day he died, Feb. 14,
The day is often marked with
AD 269, he left a farewell note
couples exchanging gifts such
for his friend and signed it
as floy;ers and candy. It also
"From your Valentine."
includes children sending cards
· Others say that St.·Valentine
to each other in schools every-
served as a priest at a temple
where.
during the . reign of Emperor
Here at Marist, many students
,Claudis, and Claudis- had him
have stories o_fValentine's Day
. jailed for defiance.• In AD
496
that were m.emorable ..
THE.
<GIR<GLE
Sophomore Dennis
McManis said he lfought his
old girlfriend of one year a dozen
roses andtookhepo_a roman-
tic candlelit dinner on the river.
i'I
too)<.her qut to.ginner ~t.this
by
Jll.LGIOCONDO.
· St,affWr[ter
Cecilia'sHallmarkinSouthHills. to see their significant--others
Mall,:Said the traditional it~ms
butsome ~pend the day apart;
. are usually the, most popular: :,
If ·you are spending
-_:•~we·haye
sold·.!i Iotofplush,
Valentine's Day in a separate
. _ . The appearanctf
0
of;candy . cards and candy,''. she said; ''Ev:. .. place, make cute care packages
hearts and red and pirikdecora-
erybody ·has-been sticking-to
for each other With various
·. tions in store windows fill many
the traditional and no one seems
items such as mi?( tapes, candy,
with the feelings··of Valentines
to really deviate from those
letters, phone ciµ-ds (long dis-
•,·
_..,;,, ~-'--~'-{t,.,
. Day.
items."
tance phone call~ aren't cheap)
'.' For others, the appearance of
For those looking to be more
,_these display$ js the start of the.. c;~atjve,
_try
rec:re~ti~g your first .
;_anxiety. offiriding iliat perfect. date>Rentthe-firstinovieyoi{·
~present:
ever.saw.together a11d curLup ·
( · Many avoidth.e wh,~le search
together for .a nigh( iq, ·or do .
Jor the perfect:gfft liY.:going ·something·thatJhe
two
of you
'.\Vith
thetraditional,:others_are .. :h,iive· ahyayS~JAeant to do _or
~looking for, something uniqu~,
something that llas always been
and many arejus( looking for
a unique part of your relationT.
something they can affQrd on.a · ship,
.
coflege budget. ·
.· · ··
After another semester of
Almost T million pcmnds of paying tuition and buying
candywere sold in 1998 for
books many students are in .
Valentine'.s·Daf making it one
~eed
of
~reative inexpensive
· of the most popular traditional
ideasfor Valentine's Day. Cook
:gifts. Oth~r tr.a~Jtlo9al gif~~.
_
,dinnfn.·e··'ned,r_foltr_ydoo' ures'' bonc·,·1yfrili'a~evne·~too'rbgrre:,1a~
"given were-ffowers; jewelry,
stuffed animals,_and lingerie.
Martha Stewart dinner either;
· Donna Protuse, sales person
even "mac and cheese'! can
be
. at Gertrude Hawk
in
the Galleria
romantic by candlelight
_
Mall, said many people have
Another.idea is to-combine
been coming
into
buy choco-
yourcreativeenergieswithyour
late
for.
Valentine's Day.
college budget and create Love .
"The one pound box of choco-
Coupops, IO Us for dinners out,
· lates and the filled hearts are the walks, etc., or Romance Labels
most popular items," she said.
in a Jar. ·
· ·
·
While many of thetn!ditional
For those less creative
gifts work as ideas
'
for guys to
www.happyvaientinesday.com
give their girlfriends, many girls
has a great web page with these
are
also ofteri stumped.
ideas and how to create them.
One suggestion is to think of
Another inexpensive idea is to
his favorite sports team, hobby,
gather up favorite pictures of
ormovieandcomeupwithagift
the two of you and create a
idea from there. Anotherpossi-
scrapbook or put your favorite
biJity is buying him that new
picture in a frame.
Video or computer game that he
People in long distance rela-
keeps talking about.
tionships are also searching for
- Paula Parker, sales person at
a perfect present. Many are able
PAGES
nice restaurant that . - ~
friend first asked her out.
overlooked the river; we had
"We were seniors in high
a greattime," he said.
school and it was on Valentine's
Kimberly Davis, a1so a sopho-
Day when he brought me a
more, said her best Valentine's
single red rose and asked me
Day was when her now ex-boy-
out," she said ..
and whatever else you wish .to
send to them.
, Decorate the boxes with draw-
.ings. or stickers and then send
them to each other and agree to
open them on Valeµtine's Day
when you call each other.
The most important thing to
remember · in choosing a
Valentine's .Day present is
choose something not for how
much it is worth but for what it
will mean to your valentine .
Keep Valentine's Day in per-
spective. It is one day a year and
there are 364 other days of the
year to express how much that
person means to you.
I -
) I
!
I
·
. I
. I




























































































TH£
~{
<GIRJCL£·
.-.. -
FEBRUARY 11, 1999
-.
·
Fe
,
a
·
t
·
1
:

:"
te11
·
·
:
;
_:'

;
_
·
by
RICHSHUTKIN
Staff
Writer
Uganda exists not only as a
.
country without accessories
,
.
.
but also as a nation·with a low
supply of necessities that allow
its inhabitants to survive.
·
Modele Clarke
;
communica
-
• ·
-
tions
_
professor and minister of
a church in Kingston,
N.Y,
vis
-
.
ited Uganda over the winter va-
Esposito, junior accounting

.
cation to teach its pastors about
major from Valley Cottage,
Evangelism
.
,
.
..
N. Y. and president of Alpha
Clarke said he was surprised
Sigma Tau
.
by many of the sights and con-
Howwouldyotidescribeyoorself?

djtions he obsefYed in Ugand
.
a .
.
,
•;
·
Laid-b_ack~ very
i
dealistic and

,
"I\yas
-
sh9cked
,
by Jhe level of .
,
optimistic, truthful,
·
and
,
· genu
:.:

··
poverty
.
th~re,'1 he said .
.
,
!'It had
ine.
I
have a lot offaith
'
ihmy-
-
·
·
t~rrible streets and bombed
.
out
self arid
·
good self.:-esteerri .
.
.
It
·
buildings
:
"
·
may be bold of rrie, but! know
.
Clarke also said Americans
I'macoolperson.Ialwayslook
would sneer at many of the
for the brighter side and
try to
churches in Uganda.
help everyone see it too.
"By American standards
,
the
churches in Uganda
·
were
shabby, having dirt floors
,
" he
said. "Many of them didn't
even have ceilings."
What makes you happy?
_
Simple things make me happy, like
the Marist sky-the colors
are
always
amazing.
Also, just sit~
ting
around,
.
laughing and hav-
ing a great conversation could
put me in a phenomenal mood.
.
Whatdoyoufear?
..
I fear not having faith)n myself
·
and not having faith in my deci-
sions
.
l:am
comfortable being
alone with mys
e
lf
,
but I
fear be-
ing lonely. Another fear is hav-
ing to pretend I'm something
else to please somebody else.
Whatwouldbeyourperfectday?
Waking up when I want to and
actually being refreshed, then
.
having something!
am
excited
about to look forward to
.
Any-

thing with my frie
_
nds and sis-
ters
where we
are
all in the great
..,
estinoods would be perfect.
What
would beyourdreamjob?
Working at a pJai:e wher~ I have
faith
in my competency and en-
joy the atmosphere~ Preferably
in the city, being one of those
people that has «places to go
and people to see/' and not to
be bored with my job,
What things are the most
im-
·
portant to you
in life?
My friends and my sisters, of
course .
.
Keeping my imagination
for the
rest
of my
life,
and
not
to
become
bland and
bored.
I
try
to
keep
my
life filled with as
littlestres.~
as possible, so
knowing
what
I need
and what works for
me
and what
doesn't
is
vexyimportant The
faith
·
I have in myself and the
faith
that
otherpeoplehavein
me
also
means
somuch.
What are your goals?
.
To
be able
to
fulfill
my
own
needs
;
if I know that
I
can
support my-
self with my skills and talents,
everything else is
an
added
bo-
nus. Also, to lead an optimistic,
happy life
.
I
don't
care
where in
society
I
end up, but
as
long
as
I'm surrounded by people who
love me
and
who
I
love and
can
be myself with,
I'll
be complete.
He said the origins of some of
the churches were
·
unusual.
"I met a man who started his
congregation ~rider a tree," he
said. "Others were started in
police sll)'.µons.''
·
·
·
.
Clarke
'
'
said he
.
encountered
the horrifi~
AIDS
epidbmic
faced
.
by the
people
in Uganda
'.
.
"
There were )JDS
·
infected
children whose parents

died of
the disease," Clarke said.
"Some of theni stayed in
.
or-
phanages, and others were
adopted
by
:
church
·
ccifigrega-
tions."
.
.
.
··.·


'
.
.
. .
.
.
.
Clarke said
.
there is a lack of
necessities in Uganda.
"Uganda doesn't have
a
lot of
Application deadline
for-spring program:
For more information
and applications:
Marist College
Office of
International
Education
.
Student Center
-
.
, ,
,
,
,
.
.
;
·
.
(
{
"
Room 368
Tel: 914
575-3330
_
'
·!
: -
E-mail:
interil~tional@marist.edu
World _Wide Web:
www.
rnarisiedu/international
Di~tinctive prog~ams that
·
-
·
_
comb
i
ne internships
in
most
'niaJo
r
ffrHds;
\
iJifh
-
<xJ
_
ut/e
i
t
/rka(

host institutions.
-
Sydney, AUSTRALIA
.
Leeds, ENGLAND
Quito,
ECUADOR
.
.

.
,-
-
Florence,
IT~Y
\
Dublin,
I
·
RELAND
.
Mcn1t¢rrey,Mll:*If
O
_
MQS~OW,
·
.
RlJSSIA
MADRID,
·
·
SPAIN
·








































































































l
-
FEBRUARY 11, 1999
TH£ <CIRCLE
..
Featura.s:
S~arehing--.........
th.e
Sites
http ://www.valentine.infospace.com
Are you one of those people who loves Valentine's Day?
Try visiting http://valentine.infospace.com
·
.
·
!hi~ ~ite of!ers all kinds of greeting cards'for Valentine's Day such as romantic, passionate,
·
fl1rtat1ous, fnendly, humorous, suggestive, steamy, metaphysical, or children's cards. They are also
free.
Want to know what to say when you see someone you like? Read the section on
"best
and worst
pickupHnes.'
.
'
·
·
Want to
.
know about other couples? Read stories about.how some couples met each other.
This site even allows you to make
'
your o'Nn date. Just click on the qualities you want and it will
show the result of your dream date at the end.
.
·
There is also a "Love & LearntJ section which gives great advice on relationships.
So, if you love Valentine's Day unlike a lot of other people, go to http://valentine.irifospace.com/.
if
you have any suggestions for tl:zis column, or would like to write a column, contact Katrina at
extension 2429 or email HZAL
·
Features Editor Katrina Fuchsenberger wrote this Searching the
sites column.
·
·
Horoscopes
.
ARIES:
Something
[i]
GEMINI:
A bold
you learned in the
move today could be
past _is going to be
.
·
disastrous. Advise
very useful today. It
.
· ·
.
your partner not to
could make all the
do it. It's important
difference between
to have all the facts
;
.
.
\VheJh~9'~~ c:~n
;.
.
,,:
;; .;
~
~-~.:,.
..
.J,Of;C.CW
gathe'r, bu~
;
1

ach1eve·your
gbals
....
'"'w
·
"·w"""
0
don"t
broadcast
them'
or not0Yoifcfon't
yet.keep them
'
fo
;
>
want to make the

·,
·
:-
.
.
.
.y~mrself.
You don't
same
.
mistakes you

.
••
·
~rieed
to
.
t~ll the other
·
did before, obvi-
people what you
.
.
ously, but it's a little
know quite yet.
bit harder
to
remem-
·
. •
·
.
Somebody
:
pnce said
her
youf
strengths
~
.
.
.
that discretion is the
It's quite likely
.
that
a
,
:
better paitof valor,
situation will come
·and toda:Y-that's
up that you've see1,1
.
certainly
true.
Be
before. Go back to
·
.
discreet about what
..
-
~~
pn;vious time.
.
you learn, and advise
.
.
·Look
at how it
.
.
your partner to do
.
have even known
·
about this
.
possibility.
But at any rat~, it
Iooks

Iike
'
something
that seems abundant
. will be scarce.
I~will
1
,
..
-,-
·
..
.
.
.
~1
~
.
· · · ~dry up; It won
·
fbe
:
g.j
~e!!r~~,a~l
.-~
§o,
if
you're betting on
there being more of it,

.
:
,
you'fflose.
F
/
s
::
:
VIRGO:
Beware of a
·
deal
.
today
.
~at
look
.
s
too good to
be
true,
.
.
.
.
It
is. Although
-
there
seems to be plenty
of
whatever it is that
.
you want,
k's
not
going to get" to you:
There's some s~rt of
block in the way, a
care. Concentrate on
bringing money in
.
.
rather
.
than spending
it.One thing you'll
gain
,
plenty of today
is
experience. You
don't have to learn

· ..
. ~verythi
_
nf~ti
:
11arf
.
.
way:
By
payirig ~lose
..
atterii1on to what's
.
going on around you,
you can learn from
other people's
mistakes. You'd
.
_
prefer to do that all
.
the time, and you
have a knack for it,
too .
.
SAGI'ITARIUS:
You
could be starting to
wonder where you'll
.
,
.

c:
y.'.()t:ked _ou
,
~ then.
If
the same.

·
·.
·
.
• /
you
did
·
botcb the
_
· • ·
-
r a 1
_
CJ\.N~k;lfyp'u
·
.
;
barri~r.·Strru:igely
·
.
·
'"
enough
/
this c_oul<f
·
..
.
.
>
.
,
get the money to take

.
{t,';;.':~t~i!fJ
.
.
·
~
-
-~
tth
•-
~a:t}s!ybye;c:u
0
a
.
~u!s~e

t
.
)=Y~~
:}
how true learning
o
_
ccurs.
. .
·
.
.
.
.
.
.
TAURUS:
You could
start out th
.
e d
.
ay
.
iii a
rather cranky mood.
You're worried about
money again, and it
.doesn't
really have
.
to do with whether
o,r
not you have
·
. ·
enough: Itmight
have something to
do with a friend.
Perhaps you'd like to
give more to a friend,
or a friend owes you,
or you want to
.
provide something
that a friend needs
but you can't quite
afford to do it. The
anxiety you're
experiencing is
.
·
_actually getting in
the way of having
the problems
dissolve. Isn't it
funny how this
happens? Sometimes
worrying about a
thing makes it stick
in place so we can't
even get past iL
you've
tak~n
on too
·
IJlUCh.
TJ:i.ereji,re
_
no.
extra points
to
be
.
gained for working
yourself to death: It's
much more sensible
to do the things
you
!_re
good at
.
and
delegate the rest to
somebody else .
.
.
Today, thatpe:rfect
.
person
·
could
-
show
up just in the nick of
time, especially if
you make a call and
set things up that
way.
·
LEO:
Don't take a
big
.
~
-
·
sk today-,It~
,_
.
looks like you ought
.
be
tempted to
do
·

.
~
that. You've got a
great opportunity
there, and you feel
like you 're really
lucky. Everything
seems to be pointing
toward taking that
risk,exceptforone
little consequence
you hadn't consid-
ered. You might not
/ /
also app
,
ly to a ~.\og
in
yourplumbitjg',' or
·
to your partnei'not
·
doing something he
or_she said
_
would be
done around the
.house.
If
~ny of the
above tra~spfres
today; be a good
.
sport
..
·
n.
you've just
·
aboi1t
.
..
~
•-·.
.
.
·
LIBRA:ltlookslike
.
.
·
·
'
~~~!
:ITi¥ft~
t!or~
on a household
·
project.
.
~omething
needs to be ripped
out, tom down,
discarded or re-
·
placed. Th,e work can
be fun, espedally if
.
you've gor a pirtner
will)
a
little bit~ore
experience. You'll
be
changing
·
things
·
·
to
·
get themjust right
while you're learning
at the same time.
Don't think you have
to finish the whole
thing today, though.
SCORPIO:
Your
losses today could
·
be even greater than
·
yesterday, so take
,
.
the vacation you're
-
-
.
.
plamihig
.
It's a s
·
afe
bet that you are
planning a vacation~
If
you're like most
Sagittarians, you're
always planning a
vacation, even when
you're on one. The
conditions in effect
right now
are
most
likely keeping you
stuck at horrie for a
·
while.Jnstead of
·
·
being frustrated, you
could use this to
your
_
advantage.
A
home business could
help you generate the
cash you want. Talk it
over with your
roommates tonight.
CAPRICORN:
You
should be starting to
fed
more po\Verful by
now; If you're not,
just hold on. It'll be
happening soon. The
Moon is coming into
your sign. Today,
you're going tQ go
through a bit of
a
cleanup phase. Get
rid of whatever you
don't need anymore
.
so by tomorrow you
can go out and get
a lot of new
stuff.
If
ifs emotional
baggage you're
carrying around,
just dump it. You
don't need any
·
;
inoreofthat; You'll
be amazed to see.
how much fun
it
is
to live life without
it. For example, you
could give up
suspicions and start
to trust.
AQUARIUS:Be
careful w
.
ith your
money today. It
might seem like
you've got plenty
to go around, but
actually you could
be surprised at how
fast you wind up
going through it.
While once there
was a plethora,
soon there could be
a dearth. That
means that when
once there was way
too much, suddenly
there was not
enough. That's
exact1y what
will
happen to you
today if you fo11ow
your impulses ·
instead of your
common sense.
§]
PISCES:
Remember
to be respectful
today, even when
you don't feel like
it. That's kind of
important, because
it'll get you points.
Your friends
understand where
you
're
coming from,
and that's good,
because somebody
else doesn't.'Don't
let that bother you,
though. Some
people just have a
little longer learning
curve than others.


I
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. . ' ' (
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.
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CIRCLE:: .

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. . •
',··:~.Z;.<
.,:
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·.·.- ■·■
..
··:.
·. -
FEBRUARY 11,1999 ... ·
:. ·::. -
·
.
:
----~-~
·;_·
-==' •=,
·=-··· ·...;::·:;::·'
=-· _
.. ·_· _
·
-----------~·~P._i-.-G_E_S
··-coNG~SIIALLMAKENOLAW~ABRIDGINGTHEFREEl>OMoFSP
OROFTHEP~-
Jason Sponzilll
Vice President for Club Affairs
Amanda
Elradley(
Edit9r-in-~hief ·
---THE.
cmcL£
Amanda
Bradley
Editor-in-chief
Eli2abetb Carrubba .
Managing Editor
· ChmGrogan
NewsEdiwr
- . .... •
·:;
.
~
~
-•-; ._ -,
• - -
:,;_
~
_.J
,-~l~¼~~
1
~ ~ ~ - , \ ~ ~ _ : , .-~,;-~
_·,,t~i&r
. : ,
..
.
.:::
·-·.
,:;_:,;.
PatrickWhittle.
JoeSrotto ·• ·
··
ToniComtantino
Arts & Entertainment.
Photography Editor
Business Manager
G .. Modele
Clarke, Faculty
Advisor
The
Circle
is the student newspaper of Marist College, Poughkeepsie, NY.
Issues are published every Thursday.
We welcome letters to the editor, club announcements and story ideas. We can-
not publish unsigned letters to the editor.
.
·
The Circle staff can
be
reached at
575-3000 :x2429 or
by
email at
HZAL.




























THECIRCL£.
:
_FE~BR
..... U
.... A_R_:Y_l_l~, 1_9;..;99_. · - - - - .
-----
~~CJ.;;..:==·.
;.;.,_,_-_
.....
·
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__ . _
·
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___
,
________
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.
···-:-'~~~:':':"."..":_':"_--~~--~-~"'."""Th~e~v:.!;1e:,;_:w::,:s~e~x~p~re~s:;::sed~o~n!.th~es~ewp~a!llg~es::_;are~~n~o~tn2e~c~e~ss:!!an~·~1y~th;!!20s~e~o2.!f~Th~e.!C~i~rc~/e~----...:.----------
Stud.entsays eating .:meat bites
'
'
,,.
byKRJSTINEHAVRY
d
tere ....
.· Have you ever thought about
Ever. (;()DSider .bec<>ming
a
wh~t m~t is? Say some typical
:vegetarian? You soon will.
meat products out loud. Now
More and more gruesome facts: . Jhink of what you just said.
are .•.
bdrig releas~d• .. for ·public :Chicken leg .. Leg oflamb. Spare
kno~ledge;andpeopleares!filt-
ribs> Hot wings. These are all·
ing to
realize
what has
beeri
go-
pieces of animals. Some
. ingon ~t meatpacking plants@.
chicken, cow, or pig has been
overthe United
States:
we:were . dismembered, just so:that you
in the ·dark for quite some time· · could eatits fat, muscle, ten-
concerning animal· abuse .and
dons, and skin.
contaminated meat; however, ·
. You eat intestines .... sausage.
morepeoplearebecomingedu-
You also eat hooves and tails
cated ... and~ngvegetarian.
(among otherthings) ... hot
Many.Amegcans today eat dogs.: People love. the salty
meat, as ~ey hav.e
fo}."
tp~Y-.. ·••
sweatpores and hair follicles ...
years.
_W1tl,1,
the-deman.4!.<>!',h" chicken skin.
·
meat co~e ~dµ_~~~~_that
_
~~:s,t . :, . Yott have probably eiiten 6ther.
packageitfor human
C?DSU1lll}=-
animals and never realized it. ·
tion. Many people ~h<>ose· to· ''You mix·horsemeat with beef
exclude it from theitdietsJor
cookitright,peopled9n'tkno;
health benefits. Some, however,
the difference. I couid
'
decorate
are choosi1;1g.to_go ".egetarian
apieceofhorsemeatandyou'd
because· they are appalled·by
think it was roast beef.
Iri
res-
how the animals ~ere treated
taurants, people eat what you
.. before even getting slaugh-
put
in front of them!'
.
.
"You mix horsemeat
with beef, cook it
right, people ·don't
know the difference.
I could decorate a
piece of horseineat
and you'd think it
was roasi beef. In
restaurants, people
eat what you put in
front of them."
bones that were ground up in
hot dogs, and turkey or chicken
franks or bologna had a foul
burgers are no better. "When a
odor, and there were often mag-
Nebraska inspector smuggled
gots on them. These bones were
head meat out of a plant to run
never cleaned off, so the mag-
an u11authorized check, he
gots were ground up with ev-
found that
24 percent of the.
erything • else and remained in
heads reaching the head-bon-
the final product."
ing table for boxing were con-
There are even worse, some-
taminated with hair, dirt, hide,
times deadly things that happen
and ingesta. The types of heads
to the meat before you consume
getting through, known in the
it. Thousands ofpeople every
industry as "pukeheads," are so
year come down with food
filled with partially digested
poisoning ... usually from meat.
food that contamination oozed
Many diseases can be con-
into the outer surface of the
tracted from meat "Every week,
head and cross contaminated
millions of chickens leaking yel-
others. Head meat usually ends
.
.
.
low pus, stained by green feces,
up in burgers." .
Gail Eisnitz
contaminated by harmful bacte-
(Quotes from the book Slaugh-
.
. .
.
.. . ·.· . ·. . · · · ria, or marred by heart and lung · terhouse, by Gail Eisnitz) ·
Animal flesh is #ot. the.· only
infections, cancerous tumors, or
thing being consumed. "One
ski.n conditions, are shipped for
employee told
a
USDA inspec-
sale to cons.umers:"
. tor that· hundreds of maggots
Much of the meat that is con-
were in the clothes hampers
sumed seems to be in the
fa-
where smocks were. kept. An-
vored form of hamburgers. They
other worke~ reported that
are really not much better than
For more information, contact:
Humane Farming Association
1550 California Street
San Francisco, CA 44109
www.hfa.org
The Spindoctor
:_·r
e
·t·_u
r
n
s . . .
..'.::;:
_
-
·
.
~
7-;"~
·
c..
'"_ .. _
by:OOUGGUARINO
. Though there are few things
that irri_tate me more than cheesy
rap music, perhaps Marist Col-,
lege administrators should heed
the advice of Puff Daddy: More
money, more problems~
..
I
come to this conclusion
af..-
. ter
tecerttly reading a letter that
was sent
to
my parents on
.be-
half of the Office of College
Advancement. . The. letter re-
quested donations. to the
"Mari st Fund." It explains that
the over $20,090 per year that
famjlies already pay is not
enough
to
support "a wealth of
extracurricular activities and the
close-knit a~osphere and car-
ing evident in every facet of
campus life."
"Caring," however, was not a
significant factor mentioned in
a
recent MCTV news re~rt re-
garding plans to remedy the
Route,
9 ·
cros~ing problem.
MCTV reported that Marist is
more likely to choose the most
· inexperisiye method to
fix the
l;:.
,_
.
the
way
to
thelibrary. Nothing
· relieves the stress of research
like
a
face to face encounter with
Mack truck at
60 miles per hour .
As far as
a
"wealth or extra-
curricular activities" are con-
cerned, WMCR
(88.1
FM),
the
campus radio station (huh,
Marist has a radio station?!?),
is
far from wealthy. Since Marist
is unwilling to shell out the
. money required to purchase
a
-· Since· Marist has the
capab_ility··to broad-
cast on· the Internet
yia
Real Audio.
Many Marist sport-
ing events are covered
this way; why not
make WMCR avail-
able on the web?
The following.is a.public service ·announcement brought
to
you by
problem, rather
than
the one that
Poughkeepsie traffic officials
determine to be the most effec-
tive. That's ok; we students
enjoy dodging automobiles on
FCC license, the ~tation can
only legally broadcast with
1/
10th
of
a
watt, despite the fact
that it owns
a
100 watt transmit-
ter. The result? The fox barely
rocks to the far end of campus,
(never mind the rest of the
the editlJr of the :Opini<J11 Section:
·
_
S.!_i~
f'!~ls. like she·-~
.
s~"fulln, <!,n_ top . of a _gigai!,tic float i11. the
Rose, Bpwl 'Parade; Just.-smiling·',iruJ
.
·wavfi,ig; De_ep down insule
she knows there really
is
no float, but she
has
that smile and cute
little.
~ave that might put Vanna White to shame
if Vanna was not
so busy with that wave and smile · herself. . She smiles harder in
order to enhance the. illusion, but instead she becomes a grinning
mockery of herself.: Her mother calls and says she sees her on TV
and says she looks just like a princess.
·
She hangs up the phone and cries.
Please see
SPIN,
pg.
JO ..•














7
FEBRUARY 11, 1999 ·
SPIN: Columnist
que~tions budget
.. :continued
fro~
pg. · 9
Hudson Valley,) leaving listen-
ers in Sheehan and Gartland
sticKing their stereo antennas
out their windows in a desper-
ate attempt to establish recep-
tion.
Ambitious members of the
WMCR staff suggested a
money-saving alternative solu-
tion to this problem. Marist has
the capability to broadcast on
the Internet via Real Audio.
Many Marist sporting· events
are covered this way; why not
make WMCR available on the
web? Marist officials re-
sponded to this proposal by
stating that "the opinions of
Marist students" should not be
broadcast outside.campus.·
Translation: "We don't want to
risk the possibility ofMCR DJs
. negatively portraying the
col-
lege to our potential customers."
Such
a
situation, along with a
.
· . substandard: television news
studio located in the student
center. basement, is nothing
short of pathetic at
an
expen-
sive, private college that boasts -
a so-called state-of-the-art com-
munications program. Instead
of putting money toward these
areas, money is allocated for
useless and counterproductive
technology such ·as a big screen
TV
in the Mccann Fitness Cen-
ter (unless one considers the
notion that couch potatoes can
now feel better about them.:
selves).
THE
OIRC~-
,,....
:.·
.
.
'
.
'
ministratlve~~g~ncia is upqold~
· ing a markeutble image to faini:..
. lies of
potential students;
be:. ..
cause private .education is ·a
business, andit isJhose fami-
lies, whc{will provf de the profit.
For there- was· no· ''.landfill· ..
hour'' (a term I have affection-
·
ately coined to represent the lat-
ter half ofdinrier
in the cafeteria
when students are given _the
opportunity
to
~stle with their
food using plastic utensils rather
than cost. efficient stainless
steel) on open house weekend,
and that antagonizing gravel
wa1kway near the new library
was mysteriously paved a few
days prior. .
In the land of the Red Fox, The
Spindoctor smells a rat -Do you?
_
.
The above mentioned ex-
Doug Guarino ·( a.k.a. The·
·
amples,' a1ong with others; are .
Spindoctor)
is
a sophomore -
making it increasingly apparent
journalism major from East
that foremost on the Marist ad.,.
Islip;
NY,
• •
: ' '~ I
5 -~ :. ·
.
. -,
,
.
AdmissiOns- lnte:r-n

• .. •
.. :-
,'.,
o c • • · • • "
, • '
-

-
-
(?nlY
seniors can be Admissions
Int.ems,
and the
internship is for the
fall
semester of the senior
year.)
...



































































































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FEBRUARY 11, 1999
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ac
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bySI'EPHENMERCIER-
StaffWriter
·
Dave Matthews and Tim
·
Reynolds' new album, "Live At
·
. Luther College," takes the intri-
.
cate and musically rich compo;.
sitions of.Matthews'
,
band and
success
_
fu~ly
_
recreates
_
the
s
_
ongs in a stripped arid simpler
manner.
.
_
.
.
Matthews and his band have
been· a· very successful
_
group
in the 1990s, both artistically

and
-
financially.
-
The Dave
Matthews Band
is able to com-
Totally
Theatre
by
RACHAEL VOLLARO
Staff Writer
bine catchy ~op m~* \Vith
f
~~
.
.
.
.
.
'
.
;
.
,
.
.
.
.
.
.
. .
..
.
.
Photo courtesy RCA
r=rds
.
Eve Ensler has been around
and World
-
music. to create
·
-
_.
,
<
·
·
·
,
· ;
-
·
,
>·
-
·
·
-
. -·
.
,
.
_
,. ,
-:
·
·
·
:.
·.
''
·
·
·
·
·
.
-
·
·
· ·
tile United States asking women
something
_
tpa(peo~le:Jiti,v
_
e
.
·
,i~~
:
.
·
_
.
DE.l~e
M~~~
-
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-
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e.tnd
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ftE3yno~d's
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cq
:
\iy~
_
1{~i.lt~~(C
9
Hege'j~
~n
:~xcellent.
effort
-
about their
-
vaginas
.
She has
ally respond~<l-~9
{:
:Thelllajo
?
f~:
fr9n1
·
Mar!sr~
,
-
m~
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~t
~~
-
p~I~~
~a~
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all-ac~~~!
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,
g.J
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.ve_pe1°rT~nce,s
_
m
~
,
tor~~
°:0.1:Y·
.
asked women what their vagi-
factor of why
:
the;group:;is
,
so
·
·
,
songs
'
Jike
·
·crash'Jni~/Me
~
and
.
Minarets
is ari~Qie
{
i
_
mpr~s;.
.
guitars arid
.
no ~the} tnstru-
Iias wouid say. She has asked
good_is probably the
.
immense
.
Satellite
lack what the originals
·
sive song'. The griiWists play
·fuents
present, it' is difficult for
women what their vaginas
talent of t~e five members,
_
captured, but duririg the major-
· ·
so well that sometimes ifseems
the two to create a music that is
would wear. She has asked
.
Matthews is
a
·_unique and
tal
_
-
ity of the time,
it
is really inter-
·
like there has to

be more
.
than
always constantly changing and
women to get in touch with their
ented singer and gui~st. In
·
esting
_
to hear the two guitarists
·
just two musiciansp_erfonning.
evolving.
·
womanhood and she has asked
~ddition,
'.
the bandincludes
·
an
··
make new interpretations of The tune also features
a
cool
Dave Matthews and Tim
them to take a stand against
_
excellent
-rhyt~m
_
section, a
.
older Matthews tunes.
-
Out of eastern influence.
··
Reynolds' 'Live At Luther Col-
·
.
sexual violence.
skilled violinis~ and a great saxo-
-
the three unreleased Matthews
-
_
With
Seek
Up;
just
·
like the
lege' is a really good album, but
Easler is the author, director
phone playet.
,
Sometimes the · songii" on the discs; none are too
·
other best songs ori the
<
discs,
is also a very challenging album.
and performerof the award win-
.
group's albums are not totally
spectacular.
Deedls
'
Done
and
Matthews and Reynolds find
Unlike the
JUUSic
of
The Dave
ning play,
'The
Vagina Mono-
consistent, ~\ltthey still always
Granny
are good,
_
but are still
balance;·
··
The spirited song is
Matthews Band,
the songs on
logues.'
includ~ many excellent songs.
some of the weaker composi.,
one of the: most nielodic:'of the
this album are not rewarding to
This weekend the Marist
When Matthews is not re-
tions of the LP. There is also an
_
concert; btit Ma~ews'
.
_
v
.
oc:als
its listener unless one really lis-
College Council on Theatre
Arts
cording or touring
.
with
_
:
Ns
__
unreleased ins~ru1m;~tlll
:
fo
_
rig
._
,
perfectly.c~xist
Vl~th
.
the
gui-
tens patiently and carefully.
with the Gender Equality Club
~!:1ji.
-
~:t~;i;~i~~~~fiJ
,
:.,;
~t~~1i~~il~~ie~{f~i~i¥
i~
~~itlli~ilw~!if$~i~~
~'.,-•-.
~~o~it1~1~r;~tcr~
·
t1~~11g~::1~~·i::~::~::
ano!11~rgu1tartst,TIID ~eynolds;
·.·
piece· that really
.
-
displays
. -
ers:
-
.
-
·.,;
,:
.-
- ·
:t>
:
~
,
.
,~
.
:
.
-
seem repetitive and sedative.
·
are Feb
?
13
at 8
PM
and
Feb.
14
In
-
Live At.Luther College
Reynolds' talent.
Warehouse
is
a
good example
The double album also does
at 2 PM in the Nelly Galetti The-
~ama Rags/RCA), M~tthews
·
One of.the best •;uts on
,
the
of how Reyno,lds
and
Matthews
-
not really feature much that a
atre.
A
donation of $3 to
$5
is
smgs,
_-
_
and
-
both ~e ~nd
·
album
is-
Typical Situation,
a
--
have the ability of making both
'
Matthews fan has not heard
al-
suggested. All proceeds will be
Reyn~lds play acousbc gmtar.
song from Matthews' CD, 'Un-
interesting laid back songs and
ready. Sometimes it is hard to
donated to Grace Smith House,
The concert took_p~ace on Feb-
der The Table And
_
Dreaming.'
fast, high-energy pieces. In the
appreciate songs on this album
a shelter for victims of domestic
ruary 6, 1996, so 1t ts not too re-
In the song, Matthews~ vocal~
-
song's fast paced beginning,
that was produced and per-
violence.
cent,
.
nor to? dated. The 23
intera~t smoothly with the gµi-
there is a mesmerizing riff that
formed so w~Hon past records.
This performanc
·
e is part of a
song doublehve album also fea-
..
tars.
The s~nger's harmonies;
:
as
progresses into
a
·
pleasant har-
_
,That is why this set may
be
a
national campaign
called
"V-Day
tun;~ at least one cut from each
.
well :as an interesting

musical
.: ·.
manic chorus. Then; towards · tough listen for' people who are
1999: The College Initiative".
of the five albums of~he
Dave
progression, mal<.es it a really
the end, while
Warehouse
really into Matthews' band's
The Initiative invites colleges
Matthews Band
and mcl~des
_
strong tune.
_
changes up
·
and becomes
elaborate musical arrangements
and universities nationally and
three unreleased songs
-
wptten
_
-
The guitar solo in the
Typi-
slower, it
~till
remains
g~. The
or who have never been big fans
internationally to mount perfor-
by Matthews.
-
-
.

..
>
,
·
.
:
~q.tSituat~on
is also excep:..
manyChanges makes
·
:
it
a
great
of his. But, for
.
people who en-
mances of
'The
Vagina Mono-
.
In tp.e al~um, the
.
~o 01us1-:
_
t1onal
0
Jtbnngsbalanceandfits
_ .
song and
:
also helps
,
prevet1t
joy acoustic music or who like
logues.' Maiist is one of many
·
c~ans
try to ao somethingyery
in perfectly. In sonie other cuts
Warehouse
frmn becoining nie-
·
Matthews and hls guitar play-
colleges; including Princeton
,
·
difficult: they attemptto perfonn
·
on the album; the solos seem
·
out
lodically repetitive;
a
}
problem
ing
-
and vocals, this is a record
Brown,
NYU and Georgetown
songs that
-
~~ usually
-
pl~yed
.
of place, but the guitar solo jn
that pops up throughout the
worth trying.
·
taking part in V-Day 1999.
by five musicians. Sometimes
this one belongs.
record. With just two
·
acoustic
V-Day is a campaign to end
'Felicity'
,
and its , fruitless flood of
flattery
·
foi}ed
..
by_furious_faultfinder
byCARLITO
Staff Foiler
1'.Q.ere is presently a program
on WB 11 that is making innu~
merable headlines in the enter-
tainment industry. It is being
hailed as the best drama to hit
the prime time battlegrounds ~n
the past decade: I have
·
seen
this celestially articulated pro-
gram
and
all
I
have to
S{lY
is this.
It is unequivocal dog sh*#!
'Felicity' has invaded the
prime time lineup in recent
months and the show's ratings
have topped the charts. Kerri
.
Russell, who plays Felicity, has
recently been crowned by the
Golden Globe Committee as the
best actress in dramatic televi-
sion. Although she does dis-
play the ~wkwar<l':innoceri~e
of
a small town girl
.
ihrusted into
the urbanic Mai
Lai of the Man-
hattan collegiate scene, I do
_
not
think she is worthy.of the im-
mense glorification that she has
been bombarded with.
·
_
Ask yourself what is so
_
ad-
dicting about
_
draniatic televi-
sion and you should
_:
cond~de
.
that if the lt}vel of
realism
i~
high
enough, it will succeed in evok-
ing emotion and catalyzing a
·
relation between television and
real life.
That is whatmakes 'ER'
and 'Dawson's Creek' so suc-
cessful. That was sarcasm. Did
you ever see the episode in
which Dawson rehearsed his
first kiss on a mannequin? In
the program, Dawson is seven-
teen years old. Have any of you
readers not gotten to first base
before eleventh grade? I did not
think so.
.
Anyway, the reason 'Felic-
ity' forced me to regurgitate my
spamburger was because the
level of realism found in the
hour of vomitus entertainment
that I endured equaled that of
WWF_
wrestling. There was not
.
onescene
_
inwhich I, as a col-
.
lege ~tudent, could actually re-
late to. The episode I unfortu-
nately viewed was occurring
during finals week. Although
Felicity wouldHke to concen-
trate on the academic task at
hand, her attention is distracted
by a young man named Noel. Is
Noel her boyfriend? No. Noel
is a boy who made out with her
at a
·
bar andleft without saying
goodbye. Yet there is mass con-
·
fusion surrounding :where the
two stand in their relationship.
Felicity's friend was also a bit
confused, and
_
in search of clari-
fication, she asked her if she had
"boned" him. That would have
been· an appropriate question if
it were two guys discussing sex
in 1987, but in this situation I
thought it was syntactically
uncalled for.
Perhaps I am a little more pro-
miscuous that Noel, because I
have French kissed girls in bars
without pondering where our
relationship
will escalate to.
Does that make me a bad per-
son?
If
that does not, every
...
please see
FELICITY,
pg. 13
sexual violenceagainst women
and to proclaim Valentine's Day
as the day to celebrate women
and demand the end of abuse.
ThefirstV-Daywasheldin 1998
with a performance of the play
by notable women from televi-
sion and motion pictures includ-
ing, Whoopi Goldberg, Winona
Ryder, Lily Tomlin, and Calista
Flockhart. Their goal was to
raise awareness and money for
women in abusive situations.
What exactly are 'The Vagina
Monologues?'
Based on interviews from
over200 women from all differ-
-
ent walks of life 'The Vagina
Monologues' is the Obie-award
winning play that looks at the
mystery, humor, pain, power,
wisdom, outrage and excitement
buried in women's experiences.
The women interviewed range
from a Long Island antiques
dealer to a Bosnia refugee.
According to Bret Fetzer of
Seattle Weekly, "When it's
done, you won't be able to say
it enough - vagina, vagina, va-
gina."






































































































































































..
.
.
:
,
I.
,
_
j
-.)
-
.
-
.
.
.
.
.
'
-
.
~-
...
..
'
.•
,
.
.

...
-
FEBRUARY 11
1
1999
PAGE12
Per/
ect Thyroid
put
on.the
perfect
shO"\V
.
.
.
.
.
..
,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
,-,
-
,
Circ
t
photo/DOllglas Guarino
Locals
Perfect Thyroidshowcase
great music, bad hairdo's.
FELICITY:
·
The
.
WB
reaches a new
low~
·
... continuedjrom
pg.
11
theni that little edge so they can
keep on studying .
.
I thought that
other facet of my persona prob-
snorting Ritalin was the most
ably does. So the two star-
effective brain stimulant, butin
by
DOUGLASP.GUARINO
.. ,
Staff Writer
.
.
plaint is th<\t when
a
band mem-
.
the scene, immediately
;
caught
· berleaves, so does that particu-
the
.
attention of Chance occu~
_
lar member's
trademark
songs
.
.
pants
'
with their
~
:
¢ntertaining
.
·
.
.
.
·
·
·
.
.
·
.
.
.
While Skunk empathizes with
ska/punk
SQOW
,
Dra
_
gon Eddie
'
Some say that heaven is
a:
24-
hour Perfect'Thyroid show.
theirpleasheexplainsthat, "Per-
·
·
mixedthingsupabitwithachar-
Damnthosesain
_
tsniustbetired! ·feet Thyroid is like the sun, it ismaticblendofbluesandfunk,
doesn'
.
thav
.
eahardedgeonthe
.
while What's Your.Problem
Thi_s past F
.
iiday night,
Per-
·
·
·
·
-
outside of it. It has the
.
core Brian made a dance-friendly of.,
·
feet Thyroid
hosted one o
.
f their
.
popuJar''VivaDiversity"sho~s
'
thingthatyoulookat...themem-
fering of ska and funk, en-
.
at The Chaitce in Pc
;
mghkeepsie.
.
bers that_ you always see
'
on hanced by the soulful vocals of
·
With a relentless
,
9
·
0-rriinute set
·
stage .
.
But then there
_
is the co-
.
frontwoman Andrea Vitale.
.
fiJied with elements of ska, funk,
ronas that come out...the periph-
With such a plethora of tal-
haro rock
,
and
swing, Skunk and
ery
members
thatcome and play
.
ent in the Hudson Valley, it
is
co. orice again proved that they
once in
a:
while ..
:
"
·
sometimes difficult to fathom
are the finest(and most ener-
One of these "coronas" is
how few bands are signed to a
getic) in live musical entertain-
saxophonist/vocalist Shane major record label. Perfect Thy-
·

ment that the Hudson VaJley
has
Kirsh. Kirsh's gt.i~st appearance
·
.
roid
has had some difficulty to
·
fti
·
·
·
·
on T
_
he
.
Chance ~tage Friday
·
this degree as Shanachie
too er. .
.
.
.
. •
·
··
·
d" ·
·
"Music is a celebration," said
night enabled Perfect Thyroid Records has
.
ceased istnbuung
Chris
·
'Skunk~ Hanson (lead vo-
.
to pyrformtwo fan favorites that
the band's most recerit release
·
cals/trumpet); Stressing the
ini-
have not been
·
on the set list in
'Musical Barnacles.' Skunk
portance
.
of fan-band
-
jnterac-
nearly three years
:
Needless to
cites numerous legal, political,
tion, he adds
;
'
.
'We erijoybeing
say, r~nditions of Thirsty and
and pers9nal conflicts on behalf
with the fans
.
as much as
.
they
.
Lorraine
induced an explosion
of the label as th~ cause of this
enjoy seei~g the sho\V
.
I
think
a
of euphoria on the dance floor.
·
unfortunate occurrence that has
lot of bimqs lose sight
_
of
that''
.
.
'
Perfect Thyroid
was
·
not
the
'
rrustratec:l
,
band
-
members and
Although the so--called
''F~-
only'
.
barid to
.
get the crowd fans alike. As far as plans for a
ily ofthe
.
Gla!ld" is
an
incred-
mo
_
ving however .
.
Four other new
.
album are concer~ed,
·
ibly loyal aiid enthusiastic fan-
talented acts made up the Viva
Skunk states that the band is
• bas~; some fan~ have become
Diversity bill
.'
·
The grooves of currently f~using on becoming
mildly
fni~tr:~t;ed
over the many
Viva Diversity vets Who Cares
.
"tight
as
a
:
~nit''. again, before
per~onnel
:
c~anges tµat have
introd(lced the funk ofRed Hot
·
they head for the recording stu-
com~ ~o~g?,
,
oµt the course of Chili Peppers
to
the fury
.
of dio with theirnew material,
.
.
.
.
Perfec~ 'l:hyioid's
s~ven-:year
Rage Against- The
·
Machine.
:
For more info check out
·
·
·
·
·
·
Th
'
-
·
-
·
·
·
·
TheSchematics,alsofamiliarto
·
·
www.perfectthyroid'.com
.
; :·
,
,
elxisti.fislf
pnmarytcomh
,
.
,
.
_
_
..
...
: .
.
.
.

.
.
.
.
,
_
_
.
. _

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.
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,:
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.
crossed lovers try to study to-
the
·
magical
·
world
.
of
gether but their attempts prove
Felicityland, there -is an herbal
to be futile. After
three
minutes
beverage capab)e of inducing
of discussing a romance novel,
hallucinatory side effects
;
Since
the two agree
to
take a:
·
stiort
Noel is a
:
complete
·
moron,
breal<, relocate to the reference
unconviricingly hiding behind
section of the library, and
:
ina1<e
'
a
witty script, h~ is lookiiig
-
for
out.
anything tcr jumpstart
·
his
·
:
cer.:.
You hec!-[d
m~
correcµy; ma1<e
ebellum.
·
. ·
..
.
. ·
: ·
· ::
,:;O
h
.
~BQNOPAR'.11f·
·
1
a:r~
-'
1agerly
,
aWaitirtg
in
all'.:ne\1{ J.ay,-Z
,
song
,
,!Hard Knock. Life'.
Out.
l
.
,~..:.
.
ow
·
·
.
n
·
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e
·
~ki
·
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·
ad
·
Perhaps the
the
;
sek~ties arid l' l6v/'r6ngue
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cocktail
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.
wrestling
as much as
the
n
·
ext
appareniiy
·
legumes
:
niake
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him
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critit's;,iabels;
.
teIII
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·
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b
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revie
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from cn
.
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·tl~
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~h
.
_
o
.
cess
:
of
:
rap
,
.
goes
.
beyond
.
:the
·
·
guy, but in the 90s, it is weit
beh·ave as ifhe is in the sec
_
ond
·
produc'ers imd
:
prombt~rs
:
alike
·
,
crucified
·
Billy Corgaii
'
in their
·
music,
'
though
,"
Rappers are al-
:
·
proven that getting to first base
leg
'
ofa peyote

trip.
'
He oegins
·
i
-
1998
:.,
waS:the )
1
ear
·
.
the
·
_
rockets
-
reviews.
_
Persorially,
:
i liked the
ways leading
,
active leisu~ely
;
will not win the ball game
.
Stress
frantic
.
search for Felicity; who
shoulcr~artg lip
'
their
i
,Yails and
song; and I
am
riot even a Pump~
·
Ufestyles
·
away from
,
,
th~ stag~
reduction can only be ach
-
ieved
he finds in the library with an'-
'
Stratod1stet~
(':
arid
,
puf
·
away
kins
fan. Alanis
·
Morrisette
/
am! studio
,
OldDirty,Bastard,
by hitting
:
a grand slanh:fr: at other man.
Good
God almighty,
theit
!
Metalliea
.
tee shirts for
.
an~t:ned~ favorite among the
·
as h
_
e is affectionately.known to
leastasoloin
'-
the-parker
>
·
·
that two tfming
·
floozy wai gbod
:
·
,
·
Tiad.e
i
tliem

in
:
foi a
masses; followed
·
up with the
his felio:w Wu Tang
'
members,
··
·
During their G
~
rated 'love
·
studying

with ahothe
.
r inan!
wifebeater
;
:
some
·
gold
-
chains,
eagerly awaited 'Stippos~d
.
·
wasrecentlyarrestedforshoot-'
scene,·they are discovered by .Justifiably'so
t
Noe}enipts

into
·
and
'
maybe eVena
•.
litde
·
Wu
Fotmef
·•
Infatuation

Junkie.'
ingattwoNewYorkCitycops
;
another student who is shocked
a iriailiacahnonologue-about her
Weax';
and
theY,~ill' have
a'
new
·
Aiahis
:
·
o
_
nce
ag
'
ain
.
scoreo big
'
Onyx
is in the midstof a lawsuit
because Noel is Felichy's RA.
"·
promiscuous studiousity
.-
In -
·-
Iease
·
onmtisjcal Iu;e .
.
1998
.
was;
·
·
·
with fans,
-
butngt with critics; T
-
involving two civilians "attack-
The student is aghast at Noel
_
's
.
r~ality, sue~ a co~fron
,
!~t!?,•
\
;
~teI~
.
!~
~
:
~
r,
,
} ~
j,
~
,
~~i:59
~J?-
_<
,
S
~IJ
ng~
~e~A~t,
·
so I will join the
:
ing them with Chinese food" on
unprofessionalism and threat-
wouldresultmfightmg9raf~~
=:
"
;[
P.,op
;,
t:9.l¢o
·
~c~Jpc¥:p.ill~~~!9Q.~a
:
,p
r ~
>
ij'~r
.
first album sucked,
a
Bronx street, and Pu.ff.Daddy
·
ens to report
him
as an act' of mouthed exchange
.
of some
~9
,
rt:
_
;:
~ac~
~
e~
~l
?
~
sm~~
t
~
f.~~
~~tY
}:~
_
a
_
n
_
c;I
J
he{
j
econd erf'?rt sucks
·
is out
looking
for a new song
'to
venge~ce. The prior day,_ N~l B,ut on channel ~leven
i
th~ ~o
t
§~l
-
!?.ea~~a tt!~4J
.
app~rs
·
c;
-
~y.~n_
IllQt:e. ij:~w 1s 1~ a~cept-
·
rip'
offeri route to making mil-
·
wrote him up for barbecumg m
sit down, share a cup
:
;
of.~~
.
with: B
~
onx
·
ac~e(l~,
·_
B~t
·
~
.
¥,le
able ma professional mus1c
,
en-
lions
off-of other people
'.
s mu-
i
:
·
his dorm room
.
Iri
this dorm,
milk and bear their feelings de-
..
the late
~
Tµpa~
.
~ha~r
r~leru.e~
·
.
yironnient,tc( s~n,g
_
out
,
,
of
-
~v.e
·
sic
:
·
Wili Smith
was hard at work
students do not get
in
trouble spi~ the fat:t.
:
~at ther art?
i;qni
~:
.
,
yet~oth~f~b?~Jresh~ P1!1 tpe
<
im<!
':
play Youi'.instt:~n;n.ertf like
in
l 998;too; and following the
.
for drinking or
drugs;
they are plete strangers;
.
My~
.
.
the
'
ma~-:-
grav
e:
·
a~cl
q
1,~wcome(DMX
.
i
JOU
Jearried
-'
Jt
.
.
yesterday? sµccess
.
oCthe enormousiy
discipl1ned for overcooking the rity level o~ the WB n
_
etw~rk is_
s~~~ted
:
_
~if
way
:
t?
·
t~e
top,
<
Nanis clail)i
.
fshe plays guitar
::·
pOptilar
M~n In
Black;
Smith re:.
.
London Broil. I thought the overwhelming.
some
-
very mterestmg styles
.
and hannonica .
.
.
But she does
leasedMianii,afunsongwitha
average college kid lived on Cup
Perhaps I am a little tpore criti-
bubble.? t? ~e ~urface of main;,
not. Go buy
a,
harn1onica; and
a:
·
gre~t video
JC>
go along
·
_
with it
O' Soups and popcorn, was I
cal
than the average viewer, but streamm
_
usic as
,:
well.
. .
.
.
.
guitar
,
Breathe iri
'
and out of the
·
.
,
·
1998was also the advent of the
misinformed? Noel does not
.
I think it is fair to
·
say $at the
199~sawilierevivalofswing harmonica,andleam2.5chords
p_c politician becoming
_
a
remind me of the RA's I have
hype emanatin~
-
f~om thJssub-
·
e~~q.w
_
~ere fro~ national tele:-
_
<?n theguf
,
tar.
_
You_
c~ m~e
_
"ghettosuperstar"inBu/worth_
;
known throughout college. My par pro~~am 1s Ill desen:ed.-
-
~
v1~1on
ai:icI
M~'{.to
_
small clubs,
some really bad music, and be a
.
whic
_
h also featured a chart-top-
RA used
·
to give me rolling pa-
.
Drama 1~ founded on realism
.
and
·
~a?<Js)i~f The
-
<;lie~ry
·
r~k star too,!
.
ping soundtrack.
.
.
pers and I am friends with sev-
and ~at is what r~ps appeal.
_
·
_
Poppi~
·
Daddtf!f~
:
The
,
Brean
-
,
.
.
:
·
Hut since we are on the sub-
.
All
said and done, 1998 was
_
eral who have been fired for Forgive me for saymg so; but Setzer Orchestra, a~d Big Bad ject of singing
·
out of tune,
.
an
interesting, if not so great
drinking with their residents.
this _s~ow is not even remotely
,
Voodoo
_
DaddY_
owned the
.
Green
Dax
.
made a splash with
.
year in music. Who can say
And let us not forget the RA
realisuc. The IQ l~vel of mo!t dance ~oor. 'Ybile most of the
their fifth rele~se, 'Nimrod,'
what 1999 will bring? Maybe
thatwasexpelled1astyearwhen
college students 1s approx1-
apathetic
·
pubhc embraced the which evenfeatured an acous-
MenAtWorkwillmal<eacome-
he was found in
bed
with both a
mat~I_y sixty poi~ts lower than
s~ing revival
!
few realized the
tic number to go along
.
with their
back, andBiliyJ9el
will
go punk
.
resident and a yal<.
whatis portrayed m the pro~ history of thes~ ~ands. T_he
trademark "punkness." As a
More than likely all of the afore-
.
Noel's roommate is reminis-
and ~e ave~ge college ~1b1do
Cherry
.
Poppm
Daddies
special guest of MTV New mentioned rappers will be for-
cent of the average college stu-
level 1~ too high to
be
s~ttsfied
_:
·
.
fo~ed
.
as.A r~ponse t9 angst-
.
Year'~ Ev~'. frontman Billy Joe
·
gotten six months from now, but
.
dent He is pressed for cash so
by a bnef mal<e-out sess1on,
,
}fl
_
,9
.
~ven
-
~ge al~~§t
~
~
dec_a~e
.
n~~y ~a~c; Carson :paly's eyes
only time
wiU
teJJ.
instead of delivering Chinese college, people cuss
:
Grant~,
.
.
:
Jgo, ancl
.
~n.an,~e~rhadm.ac:le
·
·
:
pop
·
ot,1t of
;
his head wh~n he
foodordealingdrugslikemost swearing is outlawed
'•:
:
'on
·
·
a
.-
naine
'
.
foi himself with his
dru
'
nke
.
nly tiegan cursing on
students would, he chooses to
primetime, network television,
Gretsch guitar and The Stray
live TV. Add thatto the trash-
cash in on the illustrious fruit
but at least appease me with an
Cats
long before MTV
.
thought
ing of a few Tower Records lo-
vending industry. He is shocked
occasional crap, hell or poopie.
to go "swing." By Christmas,
cations at in-store perfor-
to discover that selling fruit in
Is thattoo much to ask? Drama every
·
radio station was jump-
mances, and Green Day are back
the library was not as fruitful of is perceived as dramatic because
ing and jiving with him.
·
to their old selves. At least some
a career as he anticipated. (Did
it extracts human emotion from
·
.
1998 also saw strong follow-
people are still rock stars.
anybody catch the verbal pun
!11~
depths of ~e soul._ 'Felic-
ups _from so~e ~f the ~ore es-
But ev~ryone knows hip-hop
in my use of the tenn "fruitful?"
1ty succeeded m evoking only
tabhshed artists m mainstream
was the big story of 1998
.
Tupac
Brilliant!!)
one emotion from my flounder-
music. The Smashing Pump-
has made
·
sure we all know,
During the finals season, stu-
ing soul...and it was pure, un-
·
kins
relea~ed 'Adoi:e' to satiate
''That's just the way it is .
.
. " and
dents look for anything to give
adulterated rage.
the appetite of their fans who
I can not seem to get that awful
'
i
t
'
































































TH£<GIR<CL£
---
··
A
'
.
·
&
·
E
......
PAGE13
Random Digression
.
.
'
'
.
'H~ppiness'
··
by
PA'I:tUCK.WIIlTILE
.
A
&
:
E Editor
songs on this one.
Wit!1
.
Or With-
out You
·
pretty much says it all .
.
Get a boy/girlfriend or you will
by
cHRis
KNUDTSEN
erid up
Where The Streets Have
.
Staff Writer
·
Last week an amazing array
No Name.
·
Happiness in pedophi
_
lia and
of well-written, original news
Simon
&
Ga,funkle, 'Greatest'
and
·
•eature stories beset the
H1·ts•
·
Tuey wore cheesy sweat
obesity, quite
an
interesting idea
l'
-
-
for an independent movie.
Arts
and
En
.
tertainment
section,
ers
and
had
godawful
haircuts,
and
I
was unable to provide the
but then again this has /
Am A
·
The movie has a plethora of Marist College populous with
Rock
on it.
disturbed characters, ranging
from a confused
'
and weak as-
what you truly deserve: a full
Dag·Nasty, 'Can I Say/Wig Out
piririg musician to a pedophilic
column from your's truly. Obvi-
At Denko's' - None of these
·
ously, with stories about per-
songs are
.
about getting
psychiatrist. Thi~ is not a movie
versemovies,lameshowsonthe
dum-ped but these a
·
r
·
e
·
good
for the faint of heart. Surpris-
'
WB, and a band called Pe-"ect
records to sort out your
ingly, only five or six people left
11
'
.
the theatre before the end,
1
was
Thyroid (is that a rare form of thoughts to. Guaranteed to pick
cancer or a
·
new brand
.
ofexer-
you up when you are ·ee11·ng
expecting more to follow. This
1
'
cise bike?); that is not a prob-
blue.
movie has caused enough con-
Iem this time around.
Lo
dR d
'R k
&
R II
D.
'
troversy that the release had
u
ee ,
oc
O
iary -
The vast majority of these
been postponed for about a year.
Valentine's Day
Is
H~re Again
songs are more about addiction
Joy is
th
e confused woman
The first order of business
than love, but the song
Pale
entering her thirties, lacking• a
this
.
week •·s to state the
_
obv
·
•· -
Bl
E
th
a1c
·
sense of true direction.
ue yes more an m
_
.
es up
ous. Valentine's Day is a holi-
for.it, even if it is about infidel.:
Throughout
th
e movie she tries
d~y in the same sense that cot-
ity. f:ionorable mentibn to the
to fi nd a
;
sense
:
of meaning
in
ton candy is
a
food. However,
band
Converge simply for hav-
:
her life and
·
e nds
:
up sleeping
so many peopl
_
e get so much
irig a s
_
ong entitled
l..ove
As Ar-
with one of her students, a Rus-

sian cab driver.
enjoyment from the one day
a
son.'
A novel concept
'indeed.
year
.
wheri love reign~ supreme
·
·
·
·.:
_:
,
·
·
·
Hertwosisters;slightJymore
that I suppose it can not be all
AnotherWastedNightonFOX
successful in-life, deal with their
b d
S b
h
h t b
f
.
Ons
·
a
·
turda·y
·
'
night
.
I
ha·d
·
the
·
own problems. The glamorous
a
:
0
uy er
.
t a· ox
0
chocolates, send her tµose flow-
misfortu~e of vi~~ing FOX's
sister attempts to write another
ers and mail her that love-letter,
two-hour bastion fi:,r white-
book on rape but realizes she is
·
.


·
·
• •
·
.
missing'inspiration so she tries
not because it is customary but
trash television junkies.· In
.
~ecause she will probably slap
other words, I watched
'COPS'
to convince a phone stalker to
"f
d
t In th
arid
~'America's
:
Most
:
U'anted
.
'
coineafterbet.
,
,,
..
'-: .
.
.
-
~ou
i
hy?u. _o
.
1~9. ·. f5 ,...De ,mthean
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
>-:'
-,.
,
..
!'> -
..
Tiietn.i°~hero°i:>fthe"Irioviein
-
.
time, ere1;;a 1sto
.
"-
s at
:
b
.
~ck
·
to b
_
ack
'
\
Perhap(this

js
.
are perfectto listen to after
you
.
what
I
get for stay1ng
in
ori a
my opinion is the son of the
d
.
1 ··
Th
.
· h
g~t duinped (
qr,
if y~m .are pa~
week~nd
.
night
_.
,
..
'CQI,:'
$'
.
fea-
pe opht e· ..
.
'
.
roughout t
e
tliitic en_o
,
1,!gh not to
.
have"~ ~ig-
tured
'
a ~tocy

aljo~lasmalf
::
town
movie he struggles
-
with thefact
. .
.
.
.

·
--
.
.
.
,
.
--
.
,
.
"'
. .
,
.
.
.
thanie
:
has
'
n'ot
·
hi.if
y
)riasterecr
0
.i!,~c~t,.9,!h
,
ei:,. after,.~pu,,ge; ,woman ~nose
·
home was under
·
·

·
·
'just
~
friended.T
.
.
:
.
..
.
. ..
.
.
~ttackfroi:rrnratij_erJ~ge
_
serpen-
puberty yetand can nonnake
Shift, 'Pathos'.- Myperso
_
nalfa~
.
tineassaHant- Itt9Qk
.
threepo7
,
himselfreach sexual fulfillment
.
vorite .. Every song
'
on
.
this
lice officers to subdue ·_the
(talk about a meaningless life).
record 1s about getting your
purely
_
harmless
.
snake with
Toe
·
movie is
·
c1osed with th
e
heart:
,
torn out and
-
tossed into
mace and a billyclub.
_
My
two
boy walking
·
in front
·
of his
tQe
,
Hudson
.
$.ver. Weil, that
housemates and
,
Lwere
·
simply
whole family at the dinner table

·
·
·
with a wide smile 00 his face, mighf be a bit of a hyperpQle, horrified by
_
this
.
_
shocking dis
~
.
.
.
.
but
_
still some
.
great tunes'.

.
·
..
play of authoritat:jve negligence
.
announcing
·
that he has finally'
U2,
''TheJoshu~Tree:~ Yori
,
cllll
(in other words, we
.
,
were
performed a self-i
nd
uced-or-
not,Io
_
_
se
_
·
,
i
_
o
_
_
r
_
s
_
h
_
.
ear sad~sacjc
__
1ove
doubled qver laughing
.
_
as Of~
·
gasm.
-
:
1
was proud of the boy.
-
ficer LeRoy McCovey was
quoted saying; "Ain't not
.
trick
ta' killin' a snake. Ya just gotta
hit that sucker in th'. head!")
Then came the real travesty
of primetime entertainment.
'America's Most Wanted' ran a
story on a militant Salt Lake City,
Utah, straight-edge
"gang."
I
hate it when kids who abjure
drugs and alcohol take over my
neighborhood, don't you?
These kids were wanted for,
among other things, carving a
huge "X" into the back of a pot-
smoking vagrant, and fire-
bombing a mink fur
.-.
farm. The
'
producers of the
show
felt it
would strengthen their case if
they
.
interviewed
some
"straight-edge hardcore" bands,
namely
Battery, In My Eyes, and
Earth' Crisis. Battery and In My
Eyes• members had nothing bi.It
positive and anti-,violence ori-
ented things to say'; and were
·
interviewed sparingly.
Earth
Crisis' singer Karl Buechneron
the other hand wa~ given more
camera time than David
·
Hasselhoff on a good hair-day.
Perhaps this
·
is because
Buechner is a vegan militant and
had
·
things to say like, "these
liberators should be
.
recogni~ed
as the heroes they really are."
FOX: has every right in the world
to inundate
.
tl;leir audience with
the drivel of shows like 'That
Seventies Show'. and
.
'Party of
I:~v~.'
:,
Pprt,mying ii,y<>l!th move-
ment
m<!de up
.
of individuals
who see a purpo
·
se in living
drug-:- and alcohol-free as some
sort of saber-rattling revolution
is uncalled for.
· .
.
.
' , .
New Releases on CD
I suppose
l
should work
something at least a little infoz:.,,
°'ative sicle.into this week's
Circle. Here are some releases
that are worth your hard-earned
dollars.
Faith No More,
'Who
Cares A
Lot- Greatest Hits' (Slash/Re-
prise)-
A double CD of Faith
No More, spanning their entire
career. The first CD includes all
of their singles and radio hits,
likeEpic,Midlfe Crisis, and Last
Cup Of Sorrow,
and
some that.
did not quite make it, like
Evi-
dence and A Small Vtctol)'. The
remake of
The Commodores'
classic
Easy is even on here.
The second CD has some live
songs, demos and cover songs,
including the theme from
'Mid-
night Cowboy.' Essentialif you
·
like
Faith No More.
All Chrome, 'Flounders, Flyers,
College and Canada' (Ferret
Records)- Excellent rock n' roll
from these Massachusetts kids.
Amazing musicianship for a
bunch of kids who are just
barely twenty, collectively.
Sounds not unlike
Verbal As-
sault
mixed with
mid-eighties DC
bands like
Ignition or Embrace,
but then again, you go to Marist
College, so you do not know
wha~ on Earth
I
am
talking about
right now.
·
'Velvet
Goldmine' Soundtrack
(Innerstate/London)-
I
enjoyed
this CD more than the movie it-
self. There
are
some originals
on here by
Lou Reed, Shudder
.
To
Thi}ik,.
and
The
.
Venus In
F,~rs tl)at
.
are really goq<:l,
as
well
.
as a
song
featuring Ewan
McGregor (he played the lead
in the movie) on vocals. Trust
me, it is not as horrific as it
sounds.
.
I.believe that is all
I
have on
my mind this week. Thank you
s9
much for actually reading this
tirade. I hope it was as good for
you as it
was
for me.
















































































































































































I,
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·
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tally ready and detennined to
·
that defines the men sswmuners
·
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co~~~: ~:Jt~~e, success is
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·
.
1s1_1 :
:··_
es
.
perience, and Marist has plenty
also a disease tlie teamjust can
athletes who have coi;iscimi'sly.
-
·
·
·.
,
·
>
,
·
·
·
- •
_
-
.
·
.
·
:
-
'
of it.
Sophomores Erin - noiseem to shake. With an· held a higher
,
co~tment.to
byPATRICK~F
placefiriishersforthe~edFoxes
McGrath, conference champion · overall record of 9-2 and an un-
sport/' said
Yan
Wagner. "No-
Staff Writer
.
including the
·
4xa0Om and
fo
the 100 and 200 butterfly and
defeated MAAC conference body
·
trains longer, harder, or
4x400mteams.- Individual win-
anchor of almost every relay,
record
_
of 6~0, coach Larry
.
faster than Marist."
The Marist Men's Indoor nerswere Greg Salamone in the
and Sandra Mastrodonato,
.
btit-
Van Wagner had
.
a
lot
to be
With nine
,
schools-and over Track and field team has made
3000rri, Ben Heffernan
·
in the
terfly and middle dista~ce happy about. Now comes the
270 athletes
.
competing in
.
the
steady progress over the last 800m
/
andDennisMcManusin
freestyle, haveagreatcombina-
_
task of sealiIJg th~ season with
MAACchampionships,awinis couple of
..
weeks at the theTripleJump
;
:
.
.
.
tionoftalentandexperiencetliar
ari
·
un1frecederited
'
fourth
·
never a given
.
dust like every
Wesleyan Invitational
·
and
The4x400teani'carnein with a
·
will undoubtedly help them put
straight MAAC title.
.
-
other team; Marist has to earn
Colgate Invitational, respec-
time of3:33;90 While the 4x800
on some great performances. In
Leading the way for the men
the
·
victory, and rest assured
_
tively.
team finished iri 8: 18, 10
.
termsofupperclassmen,junior· isMAACSwimmeroftheYear everyschpolinthecompetition-
Head Coach Pete Colaizzo,
Salamone and
·
Heffernan
Jenn Nafus
is
the conference Dave Dobbins
;
·
Dobbins had a
wants· to be the team that takes · now in his eighfyear at Marist,
crossed the line with times of
champ in the 200 yard breast-
tremendous season and will be. the championship away from
says he believes his.team is
8:57,7
.
and
··-1
:58.64 · while
stroke. Senior Kenna Morari,
defending his championships in - the Red Foxes.
,
making steady improvements
McManusjumped 12.95m.
·
.
.
the nine time conference cham~
the
·
100, 200, and 1500-'yard
With thafln mind, this year's
but still has a way to
'
go.
·
·
Coach Colaizo had high praise
·
pion in long distance freestyle
freestyles. Alongside Dobbins
·
MAAC championships just
"We
are definitely headed in
for McManus,who in addition
and 400 individual medley, will
are two otl:ier standout sopho-
·
might
-
one of the most' exciting
··
the right· direction,''
·
Colaizo
to his first place finish in
·
the
be looking to se.t the tone for
mores in Andrew
-
Knutton, the: sporting everits for Marist this
continued "But we still have
a
Triple Jump had a solid show-
the weekend both in and oufof
,-
2QO.:.yarcf breaststroke
·
cham
-:
year:
·
·
_ ,- ,
.
.
.
long way to go to our ultimate
ingin the
·
long jump.
·,
· .
..
the water with their leadership
pion, and Keith Nichols who
"
is
'
One thin'g is for sure
-
, both the
goal/'
-
·
'
'
' -
_
-
_
·.
·
.
·
. -
.
'
-
·
McManus
·
said
"
he
'
is-just
and ability.
seeded number one in the 100. swimming and diving teams
_
'
Ori Friday,
January
29th the
_
happy to contribute to the over-
·
"The fact that we are favored
and 200-meter backstroke.
have the
>'.
talerit and desire to
team captured first place a(the all success of thetea:rn.
-
· ·,
to win makes us a little nervous
Adding some fuel to the fire is'. win, and
·
by the looks of both Wesleyan
_
College Invitational
.
''I'n:fjust happy that the team
since we have everything to lose
freshman Justin Burkhardt who' teams
'in
practice, have put in
Meet with a total of 97 points,
did great, !mean I'm definitely
and everyone is focused on
goes into the tournament the time
·
ancfeffort needed to
beating the closestcompetitor,
happywiththewayiperfonned
us," said Coach Honig.
"Weare
seeded number one I the 1650
.
defend their title as MAAC RPI, by s
·
even points. The meet but the team is more important;''
however, physically and men-
yard freestyle.
champions
:
Wl!S
highlighted bysevera:J first
the
.
sophomore said. "Every-
W omen' Strack finishes fitst atWesleyan
~=t:::::·:::~:,::::
byTOMHENRY
:
"Everyone
·
has been running
two school records while plac-
Red Foxes' strengths. Closely
sioncontimied the next week at
·
Staff Writer
really strong recently and prac-
ing second inthe 1500marid first
iri second behind
:
Perrine, was
the Colgate Class of '32Invita:-
The Marist College Wo~en's
Indoor Track team led
1:1
other
teams and ran to a first plat:efin-
ish at the Wesleyan Invitational
in Connecticut.
·

·
The team finished first with 99
points surpassing host team
Wesleyan by 4 points.
·
Strong
relay races and a deep squaci of
distance runners gave the Red
Foxes a positive look to' what
the season will bring.
Junior captain
·
nebby
Flanigan said the meet was a
good· indication of what the
spring season will exemplify.
tices have been intense. I have
in the 3000m:
,
,
freshman Liza Grudzinski with a
tional even though they slipped
a good feeling abouphis team
Perrine's
.
second place finish
tii:ne of 10:'.37.0.
:
In fourth and
toAth place with 82 points.
·
.
and ho,v we
.
wili
run
:
at-_the
marked tµe breaking ofa seven fifth respectively were juniors
:
The highlight of this meet had
MAAC meet," said Hanigan.
year-old record
'
as
well
as a per-
Erin MiriorandJen Glover.
-
to
:
be the
:
record school record
The
Mmist
women
dominated
sonai
'
best
for:
ihe
·
distance
run..:"
Joniot captain Flahigan
rah
to·
'
setti;ng
0
·
pel'forrriaiicf
of the
:
the meet with their relays
.
The
ner.
'
She th
·
en came back
tci
take
a strong
·
second place finish iri
:
4x400m relay
team
comprised of
team of Amy:)'"oung, Beth firstinthe3000mwithatimeof thel000m;·rouowedbyleam
~
Mike
:
McCarthy,
:
Kareem:
Cimino, Dominique Pino, arid
I0:37J while beating her <>wn
_
mates
Leanne
Bolingbroke iit
Wallace
;
Glenil:Molyneaux, and
Kate
-
Pieper combined to take
school record
;
(
.
·
_
.
fourth and

sophomore Megan
:
Dan Hagendorn. The team
re-
-
-
first
in the 4x200m relay. Young,
Coach Philo Kelly, obviously
'
Bruno ~n sixtli.
-
-
.
. .
·
· .
.
·
_
.
·
.
-
-..
·•
--.
·_
corded a time of3:30.67.
Cimino, and
.
Pieper
-
doubled proud of the women'~
accom-
The third and fifth
.
place fin:,
·
This rP,ceritsuccess could not
back to combine with Stephanie
plishments; sta:ck
.
ed the 3000m ishes in the 800m by juniorsBeth
come at a better time with the
-
Thombs to once again
claim
first
with
·
the
-
sa
'
me girls Who Jed Johnson
.
and Tara Quinn re-
fast approaching
MAAC
.
tour"
in the4x400mrelay.
Marist to aMAAC Cross Coun-
spectively, was
·
art()ther •grind-
nament right around the corner;
.
.
Sophomore Heather Perrine
try
Championsh
_
ip tlus fall. The ing middk-distance ·event
''.Marist track is getting bigger
·
contributed to
two
major races resultotthe 3000m was a 1-2-4-
where the tandem added some
.
arid better
:
Who knows \vhere
.
to insure the win
>
"
Perrine set 5 sweep tiiai_show~cased:the
,
·
key points
:
io
_
the team.
:
\Ye could go," McManus said .
.
RESHMAN, SOPHOMORE, JUNIOR
.
.
..
· -
.
.
.
.
1999
·
-2000
Financial Aid Forms
,
Have
bee
:
n mailed
·
'
-
T~ey arriveg
.,
~t your
'.
residenJiar adc:l.re~$ befor~

-
Christmas
-
'.·
December'25
··
1998

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pick:them
up
in
the Financial
,
AfrJ-()ffice,
;
·
_
::
Oonnelly
.
Hal[
-
Room
200,
·
,
·
Please adhere
.
to all deadlines!!
Forms are due A ril 15
-
1
·
999





























































FEBRUARYll 1999
·
ffCalllpus Report
.
·
·
·
·
.
·
· ·
·
· ·
·
·
·
by
JanBeigllley,Jr.
·
:
In
_
19_93, ~~:.'fang
_
Clan
'
're~
'
playing baseball
for
a livi'ng
·
ex~
contract extensions this season.
leased their debut album; Enter
·
cites millions of children and
They complain that.the play-
.
the Wu-Tang: 36 Chambers.
·
It parents· to no end.
ers
are
out for money .
.
The own-
was on Enter the Wu that
'.Thinking about walking onto
ers should look at themselves
Method Man spit the hook on the historic grounds of Yankee
for a minute. Joe Robbie, owner
cine of their most popular songs,
Stadium, Fenway Park, Soldier
of the Dolphins until his death,
C.R.E.A.M., and it is a hook that
Field, Lambeau Field, or to step
completed a football stadium for
has become highly prophetic
onto
·the
ice or co.urt at Madi-
the Dolphins and dubbed it Joe
within the sports world. "Cash
son Square Garden creates a
Robbie
.
Stadium
.
Enter Wayne
rules everything around me,
frenzy within the mind of most
Huizenga. When he bought the
C.RE.A.M.; get the money, dol-
avid sports fans. You (athletes)
Dolphins he quickly sold the
.
lardollarbilly'all."
·
get-to play a game for a living,
name of the stadium to Pro
In every major sport salaries
games that at one time you had
Player, and now the Dolphins
are on the rise and seemingly
to love and that you loved play-
play in Pro Player Stadium.
out of control (though football
ing,
it is a privilege.
.
_
This is a ritual that definitely
has done an excellent job regu-
Do not get me wrong,rmnot has loads of C.R.E.A.M. atti.-
lating salaries, and should be
.
saying that players
·
should sac-
·
tude in it, and it has been wide-
credited as such).
rifice all for the good of the fans
spread. Witness 3Com Park,
It appears that no matter what
or
.
that they should bow down
Cinergy Field, Fleet Center, and
·
·
is done this catastrophic rise
qm
ev
·
eryday and thank the fans for
Marine Midland Arena. Com-
not be stopped. Is Kevin Brown
supporting them, but they
mercialism is not only a prob-
worth $15 million a year? Is any-
should recognize the proc~ss
lem that should be talked about
body?
. .
.
·
.
and what the fans do for
.
them.
in rap anymore.
What ever happened to
.
team
And maybe forget about the all-,
Advertisements rule, we all
loyalty?. Bernie Williams gave
important dollar for a second.
know about the
·
Super Bowl,
.
the Yankees a scare; testing the
millions of dollars for 30 sec-
waters with a strong offeron the
I
K
.
B
onds of time. We probably
tablefromNewYork,buttohis
,
S
evzn
TOWn
.
wouldnotbewitnessingsucha
credit he did settle for the $8&
worth $15 million
.
a
.
diluting· of talent within sports
million that the Yankees offered.
·
?
l
b d
?
if it was m:,t so profitable to
PAGE15
·
What's
on

Tap?
Men's basketball 2/15 Home vs. Iona 7:30 p.rn.
2/18 Home vs. Manhattan 7:30 p.m.
Women's basketball
2/12
@
Rider 7:30 p.m.
2/15 Home vs. Loyola 7:30 p.m.
2/18@
Iona 7:30 p:m.
Swimming and diving
{M&W)
2/11-14
MAAC Cham-
pionships
@
McCann Center 10 a.m.
Indoor track
(M&W)
217
.
@
Manhattan College,
MAAC
Championships
Tough Trivia
Which player has led the NBA in rebounding the
most times?
Last week's question - Out of thirty-three Super Bowls, how
many different NFL franchises have won at least one?
Answer- Thirteen NFL franchises have accounted for the thirty-
three Super Bowl victories.
Look around the leagues, any
year•
S
any
O
)1 •
bring a team in with expansion
of them, and find all-star play-
fees and whatnot.
Intramural
·
b ball
ers that have played for only
.
Now, do pot think I am going
Maybe I'm just mad, maybe I
.
.

one
team:
Ken Griffey.Jr.; Bernie
to excuse the owners and own-
-
do not like to see something that
Williams, Ray Bourque, Patrick
ership in general. Owners com-
I love (in this case sports) fall
d
Ewing, Hakeem Olajuwon,Eric
plain that small markets are go-
apart. Maybe I am just ranting
games
.
un
erway
Lindtos (though he was drafted
ing to collapse, owners com-
for no apparent reason.
.
.
.

_
by
,
Quebec, iie.neyer playedfor plain that they can npt
:
afford
One fact:to nibble on.
At
any
:
tl,lt!m), l3arry Sanders,
.
-Dan
·
;
for the
-
salary
structure
to'con~
-
-time
you ire watehing a
•profes-
.
bY
~~IJJ::WQq'9
·
..
margn;i, of 32-30. TQ.e
BeS
t Team
Marino. They do exist, but you
tinue to
ris~
and that they are
sional
sports game, baseball for·
Staff
.
Writer
lived up to their name by defeat-
do have to think, and after a
·
doing
,
everything they

can to
instance, you might
·
be watch-
Last Friday the much-antici-
·
ing And One
66-58·
while it starts to get difficult
reverse the trend.
ing half a billion dollars in in-
pated NBA season started, and
Slightly
S
t
upid
deStcoyed the
Too many players are out for
Giving Kevin Brown 15 mil-
vestments
·
playing a game.
unlike in years past there
is
no
FaDunkers by 36 points, 63 -27.
money. Yes, they have every
lion dollars a year is not an im-
While you think about that I'm
dear-cut favorite to
win
the
Ram bone up ended The
right to do
sd,
the samf! as any-
pressive sign of restraint. Nei-
just going to go play a song...
championship this year.
Ballbags 47-34. ThePJaymakers
body else in any other profes-
ther is the Kevin Garnett con-
"Cash rules everything around
But, before the NB A's games
won a tight game over The Dirty
·
h
Birds, 30-28
.
The last contest
sion, but
it
does not seem right.
·
tract of last year or even the
me, C.R.E.A.M., get the money,
got underway, anot er league's
.
Sports are special. Thinking of Allen Iverson and Kobe Bryant· dollar dollar bill fall."
season began. In this associa-
for that night pitted the Clowns
·
.
tion, p]ayers compete for the
against the Teabone All Stars .
.
.
Vallery sees a brigh
,
t fut
,
"
·
·
re
_
_
.
~~v:t~~::g:a:e~1~:~:e~~
1
!~
~e~~;~s;;~3~easywinfor
As for Wednesday night's
.
.
.
.
'
.
. .
.
. . ··
.
.
.
·
.
.
.
.
··
....
;
.
.
·
.
.
,

. .
.
:
bor
..
disagreements
.
There are
games, five out of the six games
i
...
or worn
.
en s
.
hoops
.-:
atMar1st
:•
/
n°i~_~:~:rrorthelntramural
weredecidedbyelevenpoints
or more. The Renaissance won
·
by
ALFREDDEFATIA,JR
basketoall program becauii'e she
eacli game.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Ba~~~b~~s~!~~ere are two
by the score of 49-37. In a total
-
Staff Writer
·
fel~ ~at sh: would be able to
Howeve~, she still sees_ more
leagues each consisting of blowout the Pure Playerz won
contnbute nght away.
room for _1mprovem~nt m ~er twelve teams. One league is
by 38 points over the Leo
Sometimes people can not
.
Even thoug}_l she would have
gameand1sneversat1sfied with
held on Mondays, the other·on: Lushes,59-21.
.....
change or ·adapt when it comes
to adj~st. here Hfestyle off
~e
h
:
erself.
·.·
.
_
.
Wednesdays. At the end of the
The Untouchables routed the
tomovinga\Yayfromtheirroots.
cou~ 1t w,ould not have any
111
.
·
As for the team sh~ sees ~e season the tgpfour teams from· ·Bricklayers40-29. 2PacForever
Forward Sabrina Valley found
.
effects on her basketball game.
.
future of the program on the nse
·
each league compete in an eight
easily handled the Golden Gun-
this
.
to be true in the beginning
Valley would come into the con-
and a large part of that wi~l ~e
team playoff.
slingers, winning 3 -22. The
Rim
of her freshman year but as time
ference and n_iake her presence
from the head coach, Kristm
Week one, which began on the
Jobs overpowered the Young
would pass she would ad)u~t.
felt ~hether it w_as on the de-
Lamb.
first of February saw The Em-
Guns, 39-21. In the only game
.
Valley lived in a small toWI). in
fens1ve or offensive end
,
of the
''She
.
is a great c
,
oach ~d 1
pire beat Clam Bar by the close
that was close, Whadup de-
South Solon, Ohio before com-
court.
enjoy playing for her. I believe
feated Come Sox 30-27
.
ing to Marist College on a.bas-
She would appe
,
ar 1n all
'P
.
·
she, will
take
the prqgramto
.
.
W :
·
.
.
o,~
KVN·.·
ketball scholarship.
games
.
whether
t
t was
.
as
.
a
where
we
·
can
compete for the.
1 \' .In
.
"It was a culture shock at first
starter or coming off the bench
MAAC title," Vallery said. "I
but I was able to adjust," Vallery
her freshman year.
.
see great things in the future for
said. "I was not use
·
to the fast
Valley would
be
named at the
the. team.
·
As for this year, we
pace lifestyle of New York be~
end of the season to the NEC just have to worry about the
Foxes miss
chancetoshakeuptheMAAC
cause
.
where I am from thiQgS
All-Newcomer Team scori~g an
..
future games and not dwell on
...
continued from
pg
16
.
arelai'1back .
.
Alsomytown that
average'of 6;6 points and
·
pull-
the past"
'

·
·
·
·
·
·
1ust iike the
'
Saints, Marist
I
'.
am from is very small," she ing down 4.9 reb0l
_
m'1s;each
;
~ab!ina.Valleydjd~tcome~O

would not go away either. A
said.
game.
.
-
.
-
.
.
..
miles
from
Ohio
tojustplay ball
basket by
·
Vallery and two by
:
She originally
·
wanted to go
"I think I bring leadership to
and go to school. She came to
Seidel retied the score at 39-39.
ti>
school close to home out to-
the tea!fi by ex~ple but my
Marist to experience a .whole
Oyer the n~xt eight minutes of
wards
the· mid-west
'
where she
·
coa~h wants
be
to
be
a
commu-
·
:
new atmosphere
~
tha~
she was
;
play Siena's MelanieHalkerand
was raised.
nicator also. I want to improve
.
not ~~stomed to .
..
:
.
.
.
Marist's Fusci carried their re-
.
However, she picked Marist
on my game each night out and
·
·
So far she has adjusted very
spective Glubs. Halker was a
because of its Psychology/Spe-
give my all to the
team.
My main
well and has been a force both
scoring machine as she finished
cial Education program and bas-
goal this year is to be a consis.:.
on .the court and in the c,Iass-
with 31 points, while Fu sci
kethall program.
tent player each night out on the
room.
,
.
.
added two more 3-pointers and
She was looking for a school
court," Vallery said.
·
·
Like people .say if you can
two free throws to again tie the
that had a good education repu-
So far this year she has been
make it in New York you can
score at 53-53.
tationwhichshefeltMaristhad.
very consistent, scoring 15
.
make it anyplace. So far she has
The Saints held a three-point
She was also excited about the
points and pulling 4.7 rebounds
done that and more.
·
edge when Shackel drove the
Jane for two with less than 20
seconds to go. Marist fouled
Sinead Mcloughlin with 12 sec-
onds left and she connected on
one of two free throws.
With
seven seconds to go;
Valle
_
ry
:.
was foul~ down low ·
and con
·
nected on both free
throws to send the game into
overtime.
In the extra period the Red
Foxes came out strong forcing
three ties and one lead change.
Lamb's troops just could not dig
any deeper, though, as Siena
scored 11 unanswered points to
win81-7J.




















































































































































































































































































































































































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was
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advantage
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an~
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to se.venth. iri
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which allmved the Gaelst9 h~d
l<o)lowmg the pattei;n th
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~!!t:~t~~e~~!(:!~
\Veekeiid's 'performance; itap-;
.
J\t
th~ IJ.re<ik,}ifagarity chal,
'
~utting
the
.
MaristJ~d
:
to
,
two
peaisiha,tthefmayhave found
len~edhis t~ani toge.tit back in
at the break:
:
.
.
'
.
·
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·
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that
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,
.
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Loyolathentooka65-
.
~3Jead
'
TheRed,Fox<!SWOOth(!irthird
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;
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We gota'fit~ lit
:_
up.der our
on
'
a
.
short lle>ok by Blanchard
stiaighig~iiastSuii~ay,a93-:
butts
,
by
:,
coac~ at halftimet Hurd (15 points and
10
re-
\
89 vict9ry
_
at l<?n~. It
)Y~
·
their-
.
Marjst~e.i:l~erTo~K~m.:i
:
ey
~aid
:
bounds);
·
.
.. .
• . . ·
.·•·
,
.
.
-::-·
'second road wm
m
three days,
.
m the Ne.w YorkDaily
,
News.
.
,
But
.
~
three~pomter,
.
by)-Iatton
·
.
·
~t-a
·is~7q
·
tr1~mp~
·
at
,
~y9fa
,,'
'We
piis~~d
;
up ttie
)
nterisity
·
·
.
·
·
.
ajld
·
then a
_
conventional three~
last
Friday.
-
,
.
.
.
,
,
.
an~e.veryo~e
~as
cra~hing the
..
.
point·play
,
by Larrag
·
!ln put
.
In
'additidn
;_'
to stringiiig)o~
boards
>
:It all came down to ef-
Loyola away for good.
:. ,
·
.
gether
_
thesethree wiiis,
.
Manst
forL''
.
.··
Marist was able
.
to withstand
..
( 14-8, 7-: 7)
ll.lso learned the fate
That extra effort was evident,
·.
.
the strong effort of All-MAAC
of junior. forw,~rd
.
.
To~asz
.
as
the
Fox
·
es
··
out-rebounded'
·
point guard Jason Rowe, who
.
Cielebaic After sitting out six
.
·
Iona 53-42 .. included
iri
that
was
.
score.d 29 points, grabbed eight
gameswiµ.le
'
tlu~NCAAinvesti-
.
26offe~siverebounds. Marist
rebounds and dished out five
gated his
·
eligibility/he
_
will re-
also attempted
37
free throws,
assists.
mainsideliriedforfivemorecon-
connecting on 78 pei;cent of
Larragan led
.
Marist with 29,
tests,,coming ~ac,:k for Miµist's
them.
.
.
.
.
.
,.
.
.
.
.
going 5-6 from three:-point
·
final game ~f th~
~gulal'.
season
·
·. .
.
Iona did not get Closer than
.
range
/
Hatton and Kenn(?y each
.
agaitist.Faip'i~l~ m?~
,.
ni<>re qe..
five until about five minutes re-
added 17 points;
.
.
.
,
.,,
,,
,
_
...
.
·~
---..
tails,
,
8-~
.
M~~l).'
,-
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.
l;lge)_}
'.
/
·.
.
maining
in
the
.
g~e,
_
vvhen the
With the victory over I~na,
--
-----
.
:
Ju
_
dgingbytqeFoxes'perfor-
RedFoxes'leadwastrimmedto Mai:ist has now beaten every
mii:ricesofar
.
tlii.sJriorith,sophQ-:-
·
Tf.-,-74;
,
,;;/;,
,<,..·
,
,
,
.
,
>
·
team
'
in
the conference.
mo~e
,
forward
'

'
nh;w
·
·
s
·
lunuels
·.
Marist
upped the
e
cushion
'.
·
Larragao
·
,
.

Said he
·
thinks
·
·
the
Senior Bobby
'
JJ;
'
Hattop'I·fr>Yaiong
:
wit~
'
},oin(guar,d
Bo
thinks
'
tliattli~i~cis
Back
on
.
backtoten)vitllundera:mimite
.
slump is over .
. ·
.
:,
:
.
.
·
Latragan ~ave
.
led the RecJ foxestq
·
three straig~tvictoii~s
;
.
trac;k.
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)<
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remaining, as th~ game seemed
''I
thirik
we'vebeenplaying the
T

·
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.
.
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. .
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·
.
.
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·
t
···,
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"Coach
'
(l)av~Magarityfsaid
.

wellfuhand.
:
.
:
·.-
way we were at the beginning
_Li_
·.
-.
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be
_
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·
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Bµnona'~P~Grant
(
•,v,y?led
ofthe
·
year/'
·:
he told
.the
-
.J.
.
month/\
:
Saniuels
.told .the
all scorers- with 24 points,
· ..
Pougl_tlceepsie JoumaL ''A(the
pun
:
,
()ft'fiUge
tifJSC{~':i~~:;!~~;i~T.
::!~\~:'~~~~:::·.:;:,~
:o~g~f
gameswe•reteady
.
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remaini~gintbe
,
.
o:~:a:;.\~t::
·
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J-

gomg
.
againstJona,
.i
teapi
_
tb:ey
·
·
·
Granfc~rild n~{~oniple~
:
~6-
.
~
theMcCariri CeQterfor a i:30
.
. .
Staf{Write
(

'
..

·
-
ha~
oitly
.
4efeated twice
_
in
·
19
cdnieback;' hO\V~Ver,
:
~ Marisi tip:-'.off;
"
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8
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t1tle
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·:
today
·
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.
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Seioel
'ret:lirned
::
to
~:sc
ore
_
25
.
·
,
team
~ccpr~g
to ~b._
.
.
.
,:
•:
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;
·
.
.
,
C
tiJP.EfEI<,.MQYLAN
·
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sfrollem
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the~
.
c:hampionsliip
·
thfsweek-
P9,lllts
.
in~
8J-:7
J.ove~eJ9ss;
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PaJ!lt. It ~es
.
:
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-
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-
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.
·
·
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·:.
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J./Wlll
end;
.
For
-the
:
giris; an
:
increase
·
Heid
'
coacli'i{ristenLamb
'
said
.
alo
_
t
,
<?~Rff~n,siy~p~essw:~
;,
?ff
.'
·
.
.
:.
_

,.
,
.
·
-
asaffi'.at~;~iedwasaBigEafr
J.i1boththesizeanddeptlrofthe
·
.
:
·
siedei's
'
'
return
was
very impor-
· ' .
of
S~?
(Ya!lery),~'
pirn~
~d
·
.
·
· The
.
actual
name for
the
com:.
.
3 meter finalist; arid
.
s~nce
co~-
-
~
f~<l
to
an_
8~ 3 overall record
.
:
:--
.
taiii:
\
,
:
/
>
:
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'
,
;
,
:
·
:>
:
·
_
.
. .
.
·
Mag~~
'Y3:5
s~~r.cQ.in~
49,P !}le,
petiti9nis
.
tb,e
:
MA.A~
S\Vim'-
iog
·
·
to .M:aris~ Js a stro~g con-
·
and an undef~ted season in the
. .
'
.
.
'
,
Wtt11t>1~;e
h~ve
11
six-foot
: -
~eld,
:
hitting
1
.
0
.
~f therr
fir~n1
'
.
mfog
·
and
,:
DJyi~i Chaitipi~n".'
.
tend~r for the ch~pionship
,
on
·
MAAC.
.
. .
.
.
.
,
.
·
>
soiid j>qslplay~i-/ Lamb)atd.
,
s~otsJo
,
o~p.
th~
g~~,
:
,
Ba<;ls::
·.
•·
.
ships, but
in
reality it
:
should be
: ·.
botp
b9ar<ls:
.
,
AIQng si~e
.
l'l~erf

·
:
.
.
..
Qj:I~
of the highlights (?f the
·
:O
··
"She
:
realiy
·
s
'
teppe<fup

cffen-'
·
_
to-l>li~t~
~
.
1.>Y B;~
-
~h~c:~el
:
·'
·
eane4
the
Wh?
Can 13eat ~aris~
.
·
·
are
.
·.
Man~i Th.~';11PS<>n~ whci:is
·
.
program came this seasor when
.
sively forµs::
.- ·
,:J
_ .,·
.
•,
~dS.~•~els
.
s.tx
,
tll
.
~~ghtfi(?,~~
Tourn~enl
/
·:
.
,.
··•
.·,
·
..
.
•·
..
. expc:cted
,
tobtpn th<: top four
.
Mari,st
,
\Va~
_
llbl~- to ~7lit s~.
.
Seidel, returning from a
:
stress
·
·
.
J~<>aJ
~~
~
earlyJ6':
10
,
1
~1
.
.
·
For the
-
p
.
ast
tlffee )'.~~
the
·
:
for both
_
bo~, 3:11d Liz Martel,
..
Johns forth~
.
first time 10 sch~l
·
fracture that
-
sidelined
:
her
·
for
,
,
mtq
.
~~n
m>~~
.
~f.},4.
1~~
~r
..
Red, 1-'pxes
i
have
·
.
won
:
the
·
whose specialty IS th~ 3-meter. . history. Alarge partpfnot only
·
..
..
..
·
..
·
'
·
\
12mpt1~
f
'.
:
i
·
:
~:
,
::
,•::t
:

,
,
:,

.:
·
MAAC
:
c~~pionsllip~ due
,
~o
·
on
the fil5!D's side;
.
.M:att St'.
.
that win, bufalso th~ season
_
,
.
C'ucle
(lbolol1oc
Sooa.o
Marist•s· Courtney Ciacciao
walks the ball up the court.
. :
HQw.eyer, ~e Red F~xes ~ere
theirsupeib.
~ffort
:
both in and
Lucia
'
atid Jim Tavares
.
will
be
:
success as a whole;
can
be at-
:
oJ,llY.
~~I~ ~~·
S~<>~/oµr
.
,
po~~~
out of the wate
.
r.: This
.'
year is
.
.
shooting
t°-
be
iii the top six
fin~
~
.
triblited to the
gifted
freshman
:
:
overthenextfiveilllnutes; allow~

·
expected~<>
be no different, with
.
:
,
ishers, with bothmeifhaving a
class
coach
·
ChristineHonia was
_
ing Siena tobriri~
the
l~Q
~o~
a
talented freshman cJass and a
good chati~ to. challenge for the
.
·
able torecruit.
Kini
Roe h;Iped
_
to 26-22~ 1:'he R~ Fo~~
t<?O~
a
_
-
group of veterans
who
.
kriow
top spots. Alorig side theni°w:ill' lead the
team
this year and
will
,
39:24~ea~mtothe~alf,
,
an~wi.tp,
.
what,it takes
:
to
.win
it
lllL
In
be
,
top
.
s~
.
eded freshman
.
be
competintfintheindividlial
;:
_
.
.
theirhistory
.
of pl~png
~111_0
tfie
·
.
other words
,':
Marist
is
the king
·
standoutJeremy
Forrer,
who will
'
medley and breaststroke~ while
~ndhalf,~~seemedtobe
.
of the hill,_
~<l
the rest o~ the
_
bee:,cpec
_
~~to
_
c:onti~u~_!i.is,im-
ajsobeingc~ase4
.
by.~ate
10agoodpos1~0~

..
. ~
'
-
.
·.
MMC. wtll
auempt to push· press1ve~on
.-
·
.
.
·
.
.
,
.
LisaGosiewsldiiithe
'
individual
..
~nfortunately, ~t~na (!~1, 16-
tl,iem off:
·
. -
;:
,
_
_
;.
·
.
· ..
,
. .
.
.
..
.
•Coacµ
·
M~Ianie Bolstad ~as
medl~y
and
200
:
meter bliclc~
6) 1s the top
tea1ll
m the ~ C
.
·
The first area to look at has_ to
high h?pes for her defendmg
stroke forfiist and second place:
and ]9l~ws_ how to stay ma ball
~
the nien's and women's div,.
ch:mi~1o~s.·
.
.
.
·
Adding
tc,
·
the
freshman
depth
ga~e. S1~na scored seven
·
mg
team~
who ~asted an un-
'This 1s the most_ suppo~ve are Cynthia Rowley in the
straight; pomts_ to lead 31-30
de(eated season 10 the ~ C teams I've seen smce bemg breaststroke freestyle and Jen-
three mm~tes mto
_the
sec?nd
this year. Even though two div-
·
here," said Bolstad. .. These kids
nifer
Wtlliams
in the butterfly
h~f. After a ~ane Fusc1 3-
ing champi~ns ~duated last
worked very hard
ang
they are and middle distance freestyle
.
.
po~ter put
.
Manst up two, the
year, Manst 1s still loadedfrom
ready."
Of course no championship
Saints went on an 8-0 run that
top to bottom with talented.
As with the diving team, the
gave them a 39-33 lead.
One of the key additions to the
women's swim
team
will also
be
·-please
see
SWIMMING, pg.14
•••
please see
WOMEN,
pg. 15
team this· year has been junior
the favorite when they defend


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52.11.16