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Part of The Circle: Vol. 52 No. 14 - March 4, 1999

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tli~•:Stllflent
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VOLUME.#52
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ISSUE# 14
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Ea~h year
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held on
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Feb;
$5 for students and $8 fodac-
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AST
sorority
dinner was
a
success
in raising
money
for local girt

skm disease,
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Xeroderma . Christy
~arr.
said ~e din{!er's
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please see
AST,
p/ 6
Electi-01is
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. there
·
Jas more involvementiri
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student goverrui:ient
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Sherry
.
Di~gman, as.si~tant
Dm~ansaiq the
<:~llD.;tr)'
:was
erallywclS~ed aVfay
in
the flood-
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hurr1c~e
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tper~ were t<Even if'th
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co~ld build
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why
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w~re
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a country

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nduras~ to bnng ~upphes
.
hoµieless people hvmg
m
tent othershacktohvemtheywould.
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w
.
ith
.
nearly arnillioripeop)eleft
to
:
these people; especiiµly the
camps on the ~lltskirts
_
of the
.
·
··· please se_e
SGA, pg. 4
h9nieless after
.
a hurri~ane de~
widows ~d orphans .who
·
were
·
city.·
· ...
please see
DINGMAN, pg. 9
lltJnt~_r
\:
yoted s(0,dent
'
body presj(i.ent
.
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YES
NO
56
44
- -
'
-SEEREIATIDSOORY,PG.10
byTIMSORENSON
.
defeated·turrentSGAChiefFi
~
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.
Staff.Writef
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:::
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nancialOfficerRebeccaValk:446
·
·
·
'
votes to 329 votes; He
'took
55.5
.
-~
-
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:
The
-
~~ll~t.~ ljive been
percent of the total 8.03 student
•.·
counted;
_
the
,
res!}lts
·
are
in and
votes.
·
· ·
now everyone
is
bacJc
to worf
.
Current Student Body Pres
.
i-
on Thursday nig!lt,Student
dentColleenMcCullochsaidthe
Government posted °its election
elections. went well and voter
results
and named Ryan Hunt~r· turnout was normal.
the new Student Body
·.
Presi-
"I was aiming for
moo;•
she
dent.
said, "but as we got closer .to
Hunter, the SGA
·
.
Senate the elections, I
figured
800 was
Speaker and a junior political
.
This
u""
1111Scimrific
JJllW'Y
,.,,from
uxi
science maior from Long Island,
...
please see ELECTION, pg. 6
Hunter
Marist:uudOlb.
:.,
INSIDE
·
ro»AY:
·•.
Jf'Cfl'IJWJ'P1
··
Windy
~
hi:39°
Io: 29"
Community ..
.
.............. 2
Features ..................... 7.
A&E ...........
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16.
Opinion ............ 00••·····12
Sports .
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MARCH 4 · 1999
Chess Club
AS'Til1\1ATICCONDITIONS .
What are your plans for
. On Mar~h
zi,
the Chess Club
will be having a soci;µ from 9
to 10:30 p.m. in the, Cabaret.
Elections will
be held,
an~
pizza· .
and soda will be served. Also,.·
theMarist College Chess Club
will be providing leadership te>
the Youth Chess Club as
needed. The Youth Chess Club .
meets at the· City of
Poughkeepsie Public Library
on Tuesday evenings.
ATownhouse ."C" Block resi-
dent· was ·having difficulty
breathing due to an asthmatic
cpndition Wednesday, Feb. 24
·
·
Spring Break? - ·
WMCR
Want the "Odds On Favor-
ite?" Tune into 88.1, WMCRat
6
P,.m. for Wednesday Night
Sports Beat. For up to the
minute stats., scores, and
analysis of all NCAA teams
and games, as well as Marist
and professional sports ..
"You gotta hear it baby," said
Dick Vitale.
Attention Students:
lfyou are
a
member of any of
the following clubs:
·
- Dance Club
· at 9:50 p.m. She was transported
to
St:
Francis Hospital and later
released ..
· A similar situation occurred in ·
Mid-Rise on Thursday, Feb. 25
at
l:
15 a.m. A male resident with
shortness of breath was trans-
ported to St. Francis Hospital by
Fairview ambulance ...
CONSTRUCTION DELAYS
A construction· foreman re-
ported his crew had unearthed
a conduit pipe containing elec-
trical wiring, while excavating
near thenew library at 9:20 a.m.
Saturday, Feb. 27.
" I am. going· to
· California with
.
the
·Womens Lacrosse
team . ."
: Hillary Skoglin,
. - juni~r.,
"I'm
driving down to
Daytona Beach;."
MikeSeaman
junior· :·:· •;
" I
am going to
Montreal."
.
· Katie O'Connell
-
......
junior .
- Literary
Arts
- Marist Band
-MCCTA
-MCTV ·
·
Central-Hudson Power Com-
pany was 'contacted·.
to,
assess
the. situation, -
who,
turned the
decision over to Marist electri-
cians, since the wires , were
prop~rty bfMarist College.Nb ·
problems. were found and the
instructed to lookforthe cab at
resident, said he had been look.:..·.
construction crew proceeded
the train station/where he was ·. ing -{or allother room, ·opened
with their project.
to return after. the; New Paltz
the·unlocked door, and we11t to
drop-off. The cab ~as eventµ-
sleep
in
the confusion.
.
versing
~th
the confused male,
the officets·.·found out·.hehad
been drinking at afocal bar with
- a false identification, which was
· conf;isc~ted before allowing
him
to find his own room.
-PEOPLE
-Reynard
ally·.tracked down attl;Ie_train ·
-The Circle
STOLENMONEY
-WMCR
A student who was dropped
station and all of th~. s91de1Ws
· Joe
Leary,
director of safety
· belongings we.re.recover¢d, ex-
and security;' said·. while con-_
, cept the envelope of money. .
Then you could be a member
offby ataxfoearGartlandCom-
~
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
'
of Student Government's Fi-
mons from the train station Sun-
· . · .• · -,
nandal Board.Yciucanvote on
day, Feb. 28 atiOp.Ill., repo~
Sf()LEN"VEll(CLE
how much mone)' ciubs re~
leaving her b.09ks and an enve-
ceive. :lfy911~~~teres~,calr
.
.l_opb. e ~ontaitlirig $1,000 in t~e
. f\}~h~cl.~~a~}epo~~d*tol~il,
· BeckyValk,ChieffiinanceQf- · 9a .
froril.th~Mid-RiseJ:>iµ-kingl,,ot
fice_r, at extension2863orstop
.
,· at 8 p:r.niS~11tiay,,FeQ,L28;.'I'd_\V11
by. the_ Stud~nt .Govemn1ent .
.
,
As the taxi sped away, she at-
of Poughkeepsie. Police .~ere ..
. Office, SC 347,for anapplica- . iinptec:i'to
signal
the
taxi
driver
n9tified and tll,_e
c:~pµs
.-was
tion.
.
.
.
.
and
th~
students headingto'the
searched by police arid_~ajnpus ,
StateUµiversity ofl'lewYork at
security officers:Th~greeri1991
New Paltz who she. had been
Jeep
was
focat~d the)n the
. riding_witli, but failed.,The stu-
Lowell TliomasParkingLot.
*
If
your club would like to
publish
in
Tlie Circle
what it has
been doing
or future
events,
please
e-mail us atHZAL;
with
how you would like your club
bulletin to read. Please specify
dates, times, and activities.
dent imaj.ediately alerted the
Security Office, who notified
BROKEN LIGHT BULBS
the S.U.N.Y. New Paltz Security·
Office of the situation.
The taxi company was also
contacted, and the student was
Weekend Weather
JfRIDAY:
rain to snow
hi: 44°
lo:
25°
SATIJRDAY:
sunny·
hi:
40'
lo:
'2IJ>
SUNDAY:
rain
hi:
39"
lo: '2IJ>.
Source: http://www.weath~r.com (The Weather Channel)
. Saturday; Feb. 27 at 1:50a.m.
-Mid-Rise Resident Director
Al
Hammell contacted ~ecurity _of-
ficers ·about eight broke~ light
bulbs and encasements in the
third central stairwell, .
MISPLACED RESIDENT
A Leo Hall RA notified secu-
rity officers regarding an .un-
known male sleeping in a fe-
male occupant's rooms Sunday,
Feb, 28 at5:50 a.m. .
She awoke to find .him sleep-
ing in the other bed and noti-
fied the RA. Security officers ar-
rived, woke the student, and
questioned him.
The student, another Leo Hall
... please see
SECURITY,
pg.6
:-Tlie_l:futlsonValley's
<
, . Premier Unisex Sdlon
.. _ IsStepsAwayfromMarist! .
-.-
...
1 1 1 · ·
-
··.·CUfflRY
..
--.~
.
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.·WELCOMES .
.-~-'
Wffll SPEGAL .
'• DICOUNTS! .. -_
-
·.
HAIRCUTS; GUYS: $15
&
GALS: $18
INDIVIDUAL TANNING SESSIONS: $7
NINE TANNING SESSIONS:
$45
(dlj,r~Mbls~Of/trlmdW
264 NOKIH
Rn\D,
POOGHKEEPS1E 454-9239
]d/llZfl~~!i.81111dsHofl/ltll;lwK6l)Ddi;Free~
~~~
12-~S.&»S
•Mar11t~rmdtgi1J/tfor~
ri'b~LDil'rcxf
'
























THE <CIR.CCL£
.·News
PAGE3
Clt~p~J;
renovati()llS
to
begin
in spring
byKYLEWOOD
Staff Writer·
The'
chapel
is
th~ latest
in
a
· long line of consfriictfon
projects occurring here at
Marist.
"Vision 2000, building a
unique f,.merican campus," has
inea.nt a.lot of.changes in the
·buildings arouri'd caf!1pus. 'The
new Fontaine academic build-
_ing is scheduled to be ready for
the beginning ofih~ fali :.Semes-
ter. And by the end of this se-
mester work should have begun
on the waterfront and nature
areas.
Currently- the library is being
built and the_ chaperis exten-
sively being reinodeled.
.
The. chapel is ·not being en- .
larged orremfideled on the out-
side, rather.the inside is.being
refashioned.,
.
_ .
Circle file photo
New pews,- carpeting and stai~ed glass windows are part of the chapel renovations.
· Bfother FrankKelly, director
-o{campus ministry, -said the
chapel really needed to be re-
furbished:
· · ·
"This is an excellent thing.
The pews were in terrible shape
and we were in desperate need
of new ones," he said. "Every-
one seems to be pleased with
the new pews."
Along with new pews the
chapel received new kneelers.
Besides these two major items,
the chapel has been repainted
and a fire alarm system was es~
tablished. _ -.
_
· Syde _Kopstein, office managei:
of the physical phmfoffice, said
it was finally time for the chapel
to be renovated.
. .
''This is
the
perfect time for us
to remocfel the chapel, with the
new library being built," she
said.
But the major portion of reno-
vating the chapel has yet to
come. In addition to what has
already been done, thei:e will be
new carpeting put down and
stained glass windows installed.
Kelly said the new windows
will really complement the build-
ing.
"The carpeting was ·a plus and
the stained glass windows will
,add a sense of beauty- to the
chapel as a whole," he said.
"It
-will now be more conducive to
prayer and quiet thought."
Sophomore Doug Deiss was
thrilled to find out that the
chapel was being. remodeled.
"For something that is such a
.vital part.of the Marist commu-
nity, it should be kept up and
maintained, and I feel that this
was money well spent," he said.
Vigo Bech Rambusch, of
Rambusch Decorating Com-
pany, whjch is located in New
York City, is assembling the
stained glass windows,
The remodeling of the chapel
SGA working
to ·rorm new. student
wingjn_ ~he Poughkeepsie Insititute
by
TARA QUINN·
Staff Writer
-TheSGAis working to add
a:
st~dent
wmg
to
the
Poughkeepsie Institute, an op-
portunity that will increase
:Marist's presence in the com-
:miinity., _
~\-ThiPoµghkeepsie 'Institute,
begiln-Jn~j995, is an advisory
,.bocfYthii'fh1efi'Wenty-one mem-
·bers· appointe}r bythe mayor.
· Ten are from loc<Y colleges, ten
-are
from the
I6calt6nnbon coun-
til ariclonernemberi~:from the
local library._. Pr~senilyithis ad-
. visory" body -worksi t() offer
· courses that help stµdents learn
about ltfe outside of-
ilie
class-
.
.
.
··

--~,'
room.
Bruce Luske, assistant profes-
sor of sociology, ha'.s taug{lt
classes
for-
the Institute and is
.-oiiits Boa:i-d of Directors repre-
senting Marist College, He said
· that Marist students have been
involved in the courses.
''There have been Marist stu-
-
dents in all of the courses," he
said. The first course was
Transportation; the second wa~
Welfare, then Ethnicity in the
· City. The one scheduledfornext
year is Housing. .There have
been · two to four Marjst stu-
dents in each one."--"'~"'
According to its rnissio_n state-
ment, "The Poughkeepsie Insti-
tute aims to ·offer the City of
Poughkeepsie a~ade~ic re-
sour~ from five area colleges
[Bard, Dutchess Community,
Marist, New Paltz, andVassar]
to help inform and develop com-
munity initiatives in collabora-
tion with local political, ~·odal,
religious; and business leaders .
Simultaneously, the Institute
seeks to augment the experien-
tial dimensions of the intelle,c-
tual life of both ·students and
faculty by fostering a formal and
vibrant relation with the city."
· I..uske also said that the stu-
dents benefit from the atmo-
_· sphere of the institute.
"Students get to study with
other students· from ·different
colleges and there are cultural
and class differences," he said .
"Vassar is an upper class school.
DCC tends _to be a blue collar or
lower middle class school.
People bring different strengths
to the community table."
The student governments of
the colleges involved, under the
urging of Vassar Student Gov-
ernment President Evan
Greenstein, have become in-
creasingly involved.
Colleen McCulloch, student
body president has been in-
volved in the expansion of the
Poughkeepsie Institute.
"[I was contacted] about the
possibly of getting more student
input," she said.
"The
Poughkeepsie Institute is re.:_
sponsible for teaching classes
on issues facing the community.
By also applying the student
government, including a stu-
dent wing of the Poughkeepsie
Institute, we hope to put more
energy into it and expand on
cultural components."
_
"The Poughkeepsie·
Institute aims to of-
. fer· the City of
· Poughkeepsie aca-
peinic resources
from five area col-
leges."
Mission Statement
Tomorrow, McCulloch will be
meeting with the mayor of
Poughkeepsie, along with stu-
dent representatives of the
other colleges. They will dis-
cuss the application of a Stu-
dent Wing of the Poughkeepsie
Institute.
If
approved, two mem-
bers from each of the area col-
leges will meet regularly each
month to add a student perspec-
tive to the current institute.
McCulloch and the other stu-
dents have many ideas arid is-
sues they would like to contrib-
ute to the in~titute, according
to McCulloch.
"One of the ideas for the group
is that next year we sponsor a
'Community Day' in the Main
Mall where all of the colleges
come together," she said. "Right
now we are working on a Walk-
a-Thon for the end of this se-
mester. We want to talk to and
share ideas with the people who
run the classes and projects
they work on. We want to help
and make the classes better and
get more students involved."
began in January, during winter
break. · So far, while the chapel
has been undergoing these
changes, services have contin-
ued.· Most likely the stained
glass windows will ·not be put
into until after the second se-
mester ends.
The chapel should be finished
for the beginning of the· fall se-
mester and it will fit right in with
the new library and new aca-
demic buildings that should be
finished at that time also.
The chapel has never been
remodeled this extensively
since its inception in
1953.
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. .
.
Circle photo
Newphones are easeierto locate and provide more

lighting.
Security phones
recently installed
by
JEFFDAHNCKE
Staff Writer
Beginning
.
this month, stu-
dents will be able to feel a little
bit safer when walking atotmd
campus alone after dark.
.
_
. .
·
Marist ha:S started
to
replace
·
·
·
all of the' emergency phones
around campus with more mod-
em phones, which are easier to
"These phones are
much
·
more depend-
able."
,
Joseph Leary
..
..
director
safety
and security
locate and provide more light-
ing officer~;". he said.
:
·
•·
•.
·
-
.-
.Marist 11lust
.
tQlloi.
riglJ.J~ttoif§
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-
.
·- ·
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.;
_
·
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:
,
·
·
1arinirig
:c::
fioliday~-

observances
:
/
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.
w
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...
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/
. --
-
-
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·.
·
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:
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,
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·,.-·-·.
-
.
by
•··.•
d~GR,.()GAN
·
:
·
::-_·_:
~rnment leaders l_lfe cons~lted,
not
'
ha~e a faltbreak. Accor(l-
.
News Editor
.
.
.
.
and ftn3!ly the most feasible cal
-
:
.
ing
'.
to .Aislanian;
Mari~t
r~ally
e~d~r is, pre~ented to the
does not
try
to follow
.
what other
Ever wondered wily M~st president s cab met for final ap~
schools do, but rather make sure
gives certain holidays off,
_
while
proval.
.
.
_
.
-
,
.
.
·
that Marist is within the required
·
ignoring others?
.
Accordmg to Ars
_
lanian, the
state
.
guidelines and that it ca-
While the entire student popu-
needs of the fJ.culty and stu-
ters to student and faculty

lation plans
·
th
.
err. lives around
dents are
_
the pnmary concerns
needs here
~
_
the school year
·
calendar,
-
Jnany
when planning the academic
Spring breakfalls on the same
students do not know how or calendar:
.
,_
week every year, primarily be-
why the acadelllic calendar is
.
"We hke to reach a consen-
cause that is when the middle
designed the way it
is.
.
sus ~etween
·
students and fac-
·
-
of the semester happens to be,
•.
Accordilig to Judith Ivankovic
ultym how we make the calen-
according to Ivankovic
.
of
the Registrar, ihe first con-
dar up," he said.
"Students need a break and
cern inplanning the academic
Ivankqvic said all parties in-
the middle of the semeste~ is a
calendar is to make sure that it
volve~ in: planning the school
good time to have it," she said.
_meets state guidelines.
-
Y:ar take mto accoun! students
The next school year will be-
"For every one credit, there
travel n~eds. She said an ex-
gin earlier than
.
it did this year.
must be 750 minutes of Class
ample_ would be the Monday
Classes wiU begin on August 30
·
time, that is the driving force
after EaSter; there
_
are no day
because Labor Day falls later,
behind making the calendar,"
~lasses so .that students have
according
_
to Ivarikovic. There
she said
.
t
1
J?e to tr~v~l back to school wilI"theli
-
be a ~ee~daJ\Veek-
-
--
-
If Marist does not meet
_
tpe
_
ynthout mtssi~g class .or travel-
end the following
.
weekend to
required guidelin~s
in
the aca-
:
mg on ~e hohday.
mark the Labor Day observance.
demic c~endar; tpe school f..ic:e:
( :
.
"The~e
are a l~t of person~
,
Arslanian said that every six
a loss offunding from the
:
state,
.
.
factor~
:
.
we take
1
n_to account,
.
·
or seven years this happens,
·
But it is notjustihe Re*istrar's
she srud.
'.:1t's
maml{ the stu_ and Classes begin earlier in or-
Office that is responsible. for
dents, thats who we
_
re.here to
dertogetoutintimeforthewin-
how long and when students are ·serve."
ter holidays .
.
in class.
Some holidays, such as hav"'
For those students still here
Artin H. Arslanfan, .vice presi-
ing Good Friday off are tradi-
after the next school year, they
dent for academic affairs, said
tion, especially since the school
can look forward to starting
thataftertheRegistrarplansout was founded by the Catholic
school after Labor Day. The
preliminary models they are
Marist Brothers.
holiday will fall about
a
week
then
·
presented to faculty
.
for
·
.
Some
·
schoois have earlier than it did tliis year
.
.
their input Then
_
student gov
-
· -
President's Day off, but they do
·
·
·
SGA:
Ca1:1didates faced little
_
oppo_sition in eiections
·
; .. continuedft:ompg. 1
·
more.contested
.
races.
·
,
.
.
· . ."Sometimespeopj_e
a.re
afraid
·to run agafos
t"
incumberits," ·
Tyminski said.
.
.
.
.
_
. .
McCulloch and Tyminski
ecuti.ie
-
board
.
positions can
.take up.to ten hours a week-of
comrnitmenfand rriany students
'are
not willing to sacrifice that
much time
.
member
Of
a board, less time is
demanded
.
from the student.
There is usually a good voter
-
turnout forthe SGA elections,
McCulloch said; Last year, ap-
proximately 850 students voted,
·
an increase from previous years
.
.
_
.
ing in case of danger.
.
-
Le~ said another reason for
Joe Leary, director of safety
the upgrade to
_the
blue
.
light
and secudty, said lviarist is p_ro,-
·
phones
.
_
is
·
th._at
,,
the pho
_
nes are
:
viding students
_
with safety
-
extremeifeasyt0 see, even at
measures that most schools cur-
·
night.
.
"
-
agreed that those running an~
>
those currently-involved are ex-
,
tremely dedicated
·
individuals.
McCulloch estimated that ex-
.
More students are involved in
.
SGA's b
·
oards, according to
McCulloch
/
As
a
iesult;- inany
of the boards, such as student
iife and financial, are full. As
a
This is an impressive number,
considering the relatively small
size of Marist's student body.
rently have.
. . . .·. . .
.
.
.
"If
you get in trouble at 3a.m.,
"It's the infamous
.
blue light
·
it can be hard to
know·
where
phone, the type
·.
of
p~one that
·
that phone is," h~ said; "(The
most colleges
.
and universities
new phones) are most desirable
have,'' hesaid;
<
.
- ·• -
because they have a loc.ator
·.
There are five blue light ligh
·
t and a strobe light."
phones l:>ejng_inst~Ue~I;_and
The added safety does come
:
·
they should
l:Je fully
fujlctiomll
~
ata price. Leary
.
said that each
come March .
.
AH are in parl_cing
phone costs about $3
,
000,
-
and
areas, with two in the Hoop lot,
also added that the school plans
one in the north end lot,
·
one in
-
t6
add Inore in thifuture.
·
_
the Sheahan lof and one in the
Students see
.
m to
.
be pleased
McCann:Iot.
.
-.
with the improvementin
.
campus
Leary said that as of Tuesday,
security. Sophomore Colleen
only the McCarui emergency
Byrnes said she will feeimore
phone was
fu1ly
operational:
comfortable outside at night.
·
Leary stressed the phones are
"They
make me
'
feel safer
not solely for emergency situa-
_
when I walk back
_
late at night,"
.
tions. Students can, and often
·
she said. '
'
I
.
think they are a
have in the past, use the phones
good additioJl
to
our campus
to request an escort.
.
security."
.
In the case of an emergency,
Fellow student Douglas Deiss
pressing the button on the Jr. said he is also pleased with
phone automatically connects
the addition, and the installation
the student with the Donnelly
of the phones was long over-
Hall security desk. A blue due.
-
.
.
strobe light turns on when the
"I think it is about time people
phone is in use, creating a safer feel safe here at Marist," he said.
situation for the caller.
.
"If
the blue light phone accom-
The security officer in
plishedthat,theniamallforit."
Donnelly who receives the call
Leary said that the emergency
.
can immediately tell where the
phone system has always been
call is coming from and dispatch
of concern among students and
an officer. In addition, accord-
parents,. especially those con-
ing to
Leary,
Security all around
sidering attending the school.
campus can listen to the call at
'There was always a lot of
talk
the same time in their vehicles.
from students and parents dur-
"Once the connection is made,
ing freshman orientation about
any conversation after that be-
the emergency phones," he
tween the person and the dis-
said. ''These phones are much
patcher is heard by the respond-
more dependable."
































THE•:CIRCLE'
MARCH4!1999._
.
Ne:ws·..
PAGES
JtJJ).i(}rs ~njoy
weekend feStivities
. Ririg
ceremony,
semi-formal
turnout better
than last
year
by
KATHLEEN MOYLAN
StaffWriter
Members of the Junior class
were all decked out in their for-·
mal attire for the festivities this
past· weekend.
The arinual Junior Weekend
for the class of 2000 was kicked
off this past Friday, Feb. 26 at
the Sheraton Hotel.
·
Friday was the beginning of
the weekend celebration for the
Class of 2000. The class hosted
their seini-fonnal at
the
Sheraton
in Poughkeepsie: · The dance
started at
8
p.m: and ended at
midnight.
'
Maureen Sacchetti, junior
class president, said she felt the
dance was a success.
"Everyone seemed t9 have a
great time," she said.
According to Sacchetti, over ·
230
students attended the
for-
mal,
ah
improvement-from pre-
·vious years.
a lot offun to be able to spend
the time with friends."
The Ring Ceremony started at
3 p.m. on Saturday from the
chapel and ended around 4:15
p.m. Out of about 800 students
in the Junior Class, roughly 150
received rings. Sacchetti noted
_that this number is also up from
previous years.
"This year's ring sales almost
doubled lastyear's," she said.
Sacchetti said· that this cer-
emony, too, was successful.
Including parents, attendance
was rioted to be around 480
people.
All students who purchased
rings from Artcarved, received
a wooden jewelry box with the
Marist emblem engraved on
it
from the company.
; The funding for this w~ekend,'
for the most part, was covered
by ticket sales- an:d-nng sales.'
Sacchetti said the tick:et sales
covered the cost · of the
Sheraton and the ring sale was
also used as a fundraiser. The'·
financial board provided money
for
the DJ and the decorations.
Sacchetti said she enjoyed the
entire weekend.·
"I attended both ceremonies
and. they were both dcme
very·
nicely," she said." I enjoyed the.
dance and. the ceremony was ·
great, I think everyone.,had.a
Jonathan Re
_
iss attended the
dance and said he had a' great
time.
''It
was cool," he said; "It was
.
.
,,
. . .
-•
great tune. .
, . , .
. .
. . .-• ;
.
Circle photos
... Over
23.0
stud11mts attended the Junio_r se_mi~forrriafFnday night at the Sh~raton. ,A 909d time
appeared_ to _be had by-~"- T_he
ring
ceremony Saturd?Y was attended
,by
almost
480 ..
_
M•a
r:·j·'s·t-
-
1
e ir:d. e
r.s
·chosen for
conferellce
_byAMYCRUSBERG ..
StaffWriter ·
'
-:
..
,
..
• ~ . ; '
Twelv~
Mai-ist·
ituderi~
'Will
hit the road at th~ ~ncI'ofMiy
on ajourne}' to Wisconsin.
The stuaerits are clrjvingto .the
University ·of ·Wisconsin;
Lacrosse, to attend an annual
leadership conference from May ·
26-31. Marist is affiliated
with
the ·National· Association of
College and University Resi-
dence Halls, NACURH. Only
schoois
affiliated _ with
NACURHare able to attend the
"I went last
year--to.
Nebraska and
l'ni
. really exczted
(o
go·
this
ye_ar."
· Matthew Yorke
·sophomore
.
·
good standing in acadewcs
~d ..
discipline._ ..
, .
.
.. ·•· ,
...
.Kelly
,
Aini
Esposito; ·sheahan .
resident director and trip advi-
sor, said the conference is a
. good· way
fot
students, ·espe_- .
dallyfyeshmen,tolearriandim-.
prove theirskills:
·· . .· ..
~'.It
is a privilege to be ableio
attend
this
conference/
.
she
said.~
·
·
·
Sophomore Matthew Yorke
said he is looking forward to at-
tending the conference again.
. , . ''.I .,.wt~t last year to Nebraska
conference.
· :- ' '
· and
I'ni
really excited to go this
Kate Crisafi, the National Con-
year," he said.
ference Chair, said the confer-
The students are spending a
ence is a way for schools to
lot of time for the rest of these-
communicate and present infor-
mester :raising money· to go to
mation.
the conference. Esposito. said
"It is a large forum for colleges
the students are really trying to
and ·universities in the country
do the fundraising
OQ
their own.
to come and share ideas for such
Orie fundraiser is a car wash,
things as. programming . and
which
v.ril!
take place at the e.nd .
fundraising," she said.
of March in front of Lowell
Tho-:
In order for a student to
be ·
mas.
recommended for• this trip, a
Marist is also affiliated with
member,<J_fthecollegeadminls-
the Northeast Association of
tration has to nominate the in-
College and University Resi-
dividual.lnvolvement inclubs,
dence Halls, NEACURH.-Last
activities and student govern-
semester, at tlie regional confer-
ment is taken into consideration
ence, Marist won awards, in-
when students. are nominated.
eluding best banner and best
The students must also have a
display.
-
• •
'


:_
. •
· ' '
,
. ,
" : - ; .


' · -
+ . '. • '
• •
'....
·-,
• •
! .. -;, .' -~ ·.
'
.
Debate team eyes success
in national competition
byTHEACIMMINO
Staff Writer
The Marist College debate
team has taken on the entire East
coast this semester.
· The debate .team has traveled
from Miami to Montreal mark-
ing its territory as it went along.
Mrui.st's team consists of less
.than 20 individu.als, which is
smaller thaq most teams.
Debate team member, Brian
Konash, said the team is doing
exceptionally well.
''The Marist debate team is
kicking butt," he said. "For the
· size of our team we're an over-
bearing burden for this region."
The team traveled to Louisi-
ana over semester break · and
competed in the I Have A Dream
Tournament at McNeese State
University. 'I)ie team of Mark
Smith and Stephen McDonald
won second place in the Nov-
ice division.
·
The following weekend, the
teams of Brian Konash, Brad
Stevenson, Justin Spina and
Mark Smith made it to quarter
finals in the Hurricane Debates
at Miami University.
This year's debate topic is civil
rights under Title 7 of the Civil
Rights Actions of 1964. The
focus is on affirmative action.
The Marist debate team use
one standard affinnative plan
for the entire season. The cur-
rent plan is that there should be
rriore minority ownership in pro
sports in America. This would
decrease the general perception
of racism in national sports.
Konash said this year's affir-
mative plans have some real
· substance to them.
"Debate requires intense
thought on every word you
say," he said. "I could totally
see real policies coming out of
this year's debate plans because
real thought and research has
gone into them."
In the last weekend of Janu-
ary
the team participated in a
competition in Montreal,
Canada where Smith won the
first speaker award and Arron
Frechette won the third speaker
award. The team of Mark Smith
and Andrew Gorray won second
place.
·
Gorray said some of the south-
ern schools proved to be chal-
lenging competition.
"That debate went pretty
well," he said. "We underwent
some tough competition with the
Shepherds College team from
West Virginia."
In the Orange Debates at Syra-
cuse_ University Jeannette For-
tune and Stephen McDonald
lost in the semi~finals, but
Konash and Stevenson beat
Cornell in the final round to take
first place in the Novice divi-
sion. Konash and Stevenson
also won first and sixth place
speaker awards.
Over the past two weeks the
team has competed at the Uni-
versity of Vermont and Roches-
ter where it won several speaker
awards. Konash and McDonald
made it to the final round in Ver-
mont. Stevenson and Smith
reached the quarterfinals in
Rochester where Konash and
McDonald also reached the
semi-finals.
Philip Scott Thompson, de-
bate coach and team advisor,
said he-is proud of the team's
success this semester.
"I'm very pleased that we're
doing so well," he said. 'Tin
also very pleased with how hard
the kids have worked. I hope
we do well
in
our next tourna-
ment."
The Novice Nationals will be
the final tournament of Marist's
debate season. The competition
will be held in two weeks in
Maryland.
/,
;:
\
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:I
. I









MARCH 4, 1999
AST: Dinner to benefit
locaI·•girl With.XP'diSease
AST sorority stands with a table full of. information a~outth~ XPillness to inform participants.
Katie Brennan; another mem-
ber of Alpha Sig~a Tau; said the
evening really impacted her.
salad dinner and an evening of
"I
could not believe the
music by pianist Dan Allen. All
strength that Katie possessed,"
of the profits went towards the
sh.e said. "She was so outgoing
XP Foundation.
.
...
...
and.friendly, so mu¢h that you
XerodermaPigITientosum So~•·•·-· __ would,not think her .disease
ciety, Inc., located• in Hudsori: · bothered her."
... continued from
pg.
1
Valley, is a not-fot-profit orga-
l
•:C·
The Mahaf7s also founded
nizationfounded by Caren and -Camp Sundown: which haS
Dan Mahar. It is their youngest
been held each summer for the
daughter Katie who.~iift'ers from
past
fq4r y~ars._ Their motto is
XP, a rare genetic defect in ul-
"Doors close and windows
traviolet radiation induced DNA
open."Th~ pi-ogram schedule is
repair mechanisms; character-
from
9
p.m'.
to 5
a.m. to maximize
ized by severe sensitivity to all
nighttime hours for play and to
sources of
UV
radiation, espe-
minimize.the need for protective
cially sunlight. There is no cme
arrangements·.
.
for
XP.
The DNA damage is cu:.
Tliey recently aimouilced th!!t
mulative ancl irreversible; :Man-
a house, barn and
26
acres of
agement is limited
fo
avo_idarice
property Were acquired by the
of exposure to damaging
UV
ra-
XP Society as· a result of the
diation by staying indoors with · generosity of a NYC couple, as
sunlight blocked · out, and use
well as the many ''Buy a Brick"
of. P!"J(ective .. clothing, sun-
contributors and the volunteers
:;~reens and sunglasses:
who have worked so hard to
make this a reality. The facility,
known as Clover Reach, will
serve as a place where XP fami-
lies can get away.
Pat Mannix, a volunteer and
close friend of the Mahar fam-
ily, publishe_s the quarterly
XP
newsletter
aii"
well as'maintains
the XP website at
ww'w.xps.org.
He said that he wasjmpressed
with the nirriout from the Marist
campus., _ .
.
''It was a riie:e crowd .. Amqng
the college· people,
'
they learn
about it and
in
turn teil people
they know.
So
it
[the dinner]
does raise awareness," he sltjd.
"Plus the publicity that go'es
along with it form the
Poughkeepsie
Journal
raises
awareness as well."
.
Like all children with XP,
Mahar must avoid sunlight. The
sun is her enemy: According to
her, she does not mind being a
night owl.
ELECTIONS:-New members voted into office
... continued from pg. I
going to be a more accurate
number."
She said that. some schools
larger than Marist get less vot-
·ers for their elections, so the
turnout is pretty good in com-
parison.
. "We moved the location (for
voting) to attract more. stu- ·
dents," she said. "We used three
locations instead of two."
Hunter said he was also happy
that people crune out to vote but
now he wants to get more
people involved in SGA. He
said that even though the same
people are good, there was a
huge fre::hmen and sophomore
turnout and their perspective is
also good for the organization.
''There's fifteen student gov-
ernment positions open, and I
want new people in who want
to get involved in student gov-
. emment," he said, "because the
people have a lot to say."
Hunter said he was also very
concerned about the social im-
age ·of SGA. Along with host-
ing more social Junctions, he
said he wants to start a Diver-
sity Campaign to help to bring
students closer together.
"We're all here for one goal
and that's to get an education,"
he said. "And I think we need
to be more accepting of each
other."
In the race for Resident Sena-
tor, Mike Caponegro and Travis
Mason both won seats uncon-
tested.
The Class of 2000 ~lected
Dave Sciascia as
its
president,
Sara Pitz vice-president and
Natalie Zeinoun secretary as all
three ran unopposed.
Ben Amarone won re-election
as Class of 2001 president along.
with vice-president Chris Blasie
and treasurer Cristina Allgeyer.
In
the only other contested race
· of the eiections, Meianie Rago
beat out incumbent- Amanda
Kelly in the race for class secre-
tary.
.
.
The Class of 2002 elected
Kevin Hogan as president and
Melissa· Santaneilo • as vice-
president as both ran· unop-
posed.
According to McCulloch, tran-
sition day is April 9: On this day, ·
she will hand over the gavel to
President-Elect Hunter and his
presidency will officially begin.
Around this date, his new ex-
ecutive board will also
take
over.
However, the SGA senate must
first approve his appointments
for those positions.
Photograph curator to lecture at Bard College
Mark Haworth-Booth, curator of photogi:aphs at the Victoria and Alben Museum, London, will speak at Bard
College on Monday, March 8, at 8 p.m. the lecture, presented by the Photography Program at Bard College, will
be
held in the Bertelsmann Campus Center theater arid is free aqd open to the public.
Haworth-Booth has been the curator at the V &A for more than twenty-years. He has supervised the establish-
ment of the Museum's Canon Photography Gallery, a pennanent exhibition space. Call (914)-758-6822 for
more information.
......






































-
~~~
~
TH£<CIR<CL£
:
MARCH 4, 1999
-
Features
St. Patrick's
.
Dayis
·
not
just a day
to
wear
:green
by
JILL GIO(:ONDO
Staff Writer
·
:
n
is be-
1 i eve d
Patrick then
went
to
St. Patrick's day was not al-
Gaul
·to
ways a day of drinking, watch-
study and
ing
parades, and wearing green.
was
or-
Saint Patrick receives credit
dained be-
for converting the Irish to Chris-
fore return-
tianity and this day was origi-
ing to Ire-
nally set aside as an Irish holi-
land between
day to honor him.
AD 432 and
The history behind the indi
-
AD460.
victual who would become St.
Patrick was
Patrick is based mainly on leg-
probably one
.
erids and a Jew written docu-
of the first mis-
.
ments.
sionaries to come to
This has led to many sources
Ireland and previously
-
'
-
disagreeing on
'
wl10 he was and
most
.
Christianity
~
-_reached
-
what his background was.
people by force when
.
the Ro-
'
.
P!lttjclc w,as b.orn
:
sometiine
mans invaded.
:
-
..
,,
,
__
.
:
between
AD385
and
AD 415
io
·
-
Patrick did not fo~ce religion
Romanized Celtic Briton par
-
·
·
cm
the people rather. fod
,
by
.
ex-
ents
in Bannavem Tabumiae.
-
ample and choose to minister
.
The location of.this town
·
is
mainly to the downtrodden, the
\1nknown
but;it.w.as probably in
poor, and the slaves ..
.
_
.
·
·
Roman Britain or Scotland.
Patrickspent the next 30 to 60
.
His nameat
b.irth
w~lvfaewyn
years traveling throughout
'Succat and Patrick was the name
northern and central Ireland set-
he took when he became a priest.
ting up schools and_ monaster-
:
Patrick wa
_
s captured in a
-
ies.
.
.
Pictish raid at the
age
ofsi~teen
.

Many of the)egends about
:
and s9ld into slayery in Ireland.
_
;i>a,trick.grew out of his activi-:-
He then be~ame a shepherd
ties_
.
during the years.
,
.

.
-
slave
for 5-iJ< years ..
,
.
..
One ofthese activities
_
in~
When
his days clS.a.
_
slave\vere
eludes driving the snakes out
almostat an end he gained pas-
ofJri;:_l:incl
th_a~
n:iaxactually
,
have
'
sag~
,
.
on
.,_
~ ship
;
b,aqk
~Q
~
his
'.
tla-
_bee
_
n,
_
ITieail~ a.s
~
§ymbolic
of him
)
tiv.e Englan
.
cl,
bt1~
fmmd ~e
-
no
_
i;eJJ10,yings~~~o.fthe pagl,lnisni
;
tonger fit into,hisefamily.
:
,.,
froin Ireland .
.
.
:
.

:
i:>atric~ had a vis~on in which
The traditionally accepted
he heard the Irish people beg-
.
date of his death.-is March
17;
ging for him to return to them.
AD 493 and that is why St.
The first
fa11s
6n
the
:
_
_
_
..
_
_
.
:
,
cele_bfa.tiop
qf
St.
:.
Saint Patrick's Day' is a public
Patrick's day occµrred
hf
Bos
-
and ~ligfous national holiday in
tori on March 17, 1737.
'
Ireland.
-
New
York City was the fir.st city
There are religiOus cereriioriies,
to host a St. Patricrs Day pa-
people attend mass, wear s
_
ham-
rade and the parade in New York
rocks, watch school _rugby
-
is still the largest.in
_
the United
games, and there is a small pa-
States.
·
~
·_
rade in Dublin.
The Irish who came to America
People a
_
lso make pilgrimages
utilized St. Patrick's Day t9 ease
to Armagh, Saul, Downpatrick,
their feelings of homesickness
and. Slemish which are plac;es
for their native country:
associated
with
St. Patrick.
The immigrants that came es-
The parade in Dublin is a sinall
pecially during the Potato Fam~
affair when compared
to
the
foe came together on this day
Ameijcan celebrations 9f.t11;e· ·
tb
ce}ebrate thejrnati9mility and
holiday:
to play uplifting music to lift
-
' ·
Tue major celebrations of the
their spirits.
holiday
.
.
are f9und in
.
America
In the 1900s second and third
and these celebrations are generation Irish Americans had
linked to theJ9th century Irish
become an established segment
peasantry observances of St.· of American society and the pa-
Patrick's day.
rade provided an opportunity to
PAGE7
celebrate
its
etl;inic origin and
their successful integration into
American society.
Today St. Patrick's day is cel-
ebrated around the world and
most celebrations are secular
celebrations that forget
about
the saint and his life.
Many people wear green be-
cause it is the color of spring,
Ireland, and the shamrock.
_
Shamrocks and leprechauns
have become symbols of the
holiday.
·
Some
.
sources say Patrick used
the
·
shamrock to
·explain
the
tnn-
ity to the people in his ministry.
It is said that on this day "ev-
erybody is Irish"
and
that spirit
is evident in the over one hun-
dred cities that hold parades
and celebrations on March 17.
Wiesel is co01ing to Marist
by
MOLLY MCMANUS
Staff Writer
Elie Wiesel, esteemed author
and concentration
·camp
survi-
vor is coming to speak at
Marist.
.
The
'
Marist Student Program-
ming Council is sponsoring "An
Evening with Elie Wiesel" on
Wednesday, March 24 in th
_
e
Mccann Center as
·
part of its
ongoing Peace and Social Jus-
tice Series.
Wiesel was born in 1928 in
.
Sighet, Romania.
He lived a normal, happy life
until age 15, when he and his
family were
'
deported to ~
-
con-
centration camp in Auschwitz,
Gennany.
He has refused to forget the
horror he experienced iri the Nazi
death camp, and does not want
others to forget either.
In
1958, Wiesel broke his si-
lence about the Holocaust and
wrote the book, Night.
In
this book he.relates horren-
dous events he saw and experi-
enced first hand.
Milton Teichman, professor of
English who is currently teach-
ing a course on the Holocaust,
said Night is about Wiesel's ex-
perie'nce as a teenager in the
concentration camp.
"Night gives an account of a
teenager's experience
·
of
Auschwitz, his struggle to re-
tain his hllmanity and his loss
of faith in a just and merciful
God," he said.
Since its publication,
.
Night
has been translated into 25 dif-
ferent languages.
Millions of copies have been
sold around the world.
Teichman said Wiesel's large
literary output has dealt almost
exclusively with the Holocaust.
,
"Few people have reflected on
the tragedy as deeply as he has--!
Few have perceived its moral
and ethical implications as
clearly as he has," he said.
"Wiesel teaches us that the
Holocaust is not just a Jewish
tragedy."
According to an online
. source, in his writings, Wiesel
calls for a fierce, defiant struggle
with the Holocaust.
He has spent much of his life
working on behalf of the op-
pressed, speaking about human
rights, and promoting peace
throughout the world.
According to the same source,
Wiesel calls himself a "messen-
ger of the dead among the liv-
ing," and says his job is to pre-
vent the "destruction from be-
ing increased by being forgot-
ten."
In 1986
,
Wiesel was awarded
the Nobel Peace Prize and re-
cently was appointed to a board
overseeing a Swiss fund for
Holocaust victims.
Tickets for "An Evening with
Photo
coortc:sy of Tim
Ma.
,;,.
"ic
Elie Wiesel, author of
Night
Elie Wiesel" are $4 for Marist
students and. can be purchased
at
College Activities.
),























































































































































































r
MARCH 4, 1999
by
BECKY JONES
Staff Writer
_
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join with little requirements?
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United States;
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-According to
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Scileppi;
,
tobe-
.
.
witljh~rfriep.d(or~bo
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titayear.
:
;
IfY~u
.
ar¢, you
.
should
.
con~
_
::Bonnie Luksis~- Director
of
.
come
·
a volunteer, one
7
should
.
Sile said
_
she thi
_
riks itis a good
sider
·
tlie Compeer Program, a
CompeerinPoughkeepsie,said coritact the Mental Health As~
experience.
.
.. -.
·
.
·
nonprofit organization.
the goal of the program
,
is to
sociation and set up an inter-
.
"You realize that they arejust
Are you a psychol?gy. ~ajor
The program was started in
·
provide a one to one support view.
like us, they become a nonnal
and not sure what d1rect1on to
Rochester,
NY
in
1977 and be-
service to persons recovering
After the interview, thevolun-
friend," she ,s~d. "You get to
go in?
·
. .
.
.
.
.
-
gan in Poughkeepsie in
1982.
from amentalillriessin the com-
teer goes through a three hour
view them as a person, notjust
: Are you someone tha! is look- . .
,
'foday there are over one bun-
muruty.
training s~s~ion.
·
from the hospi~ point of view."
mg for a yolunteer program to
.
dred Comp~er Programs across
"[Th~y
J
can benefit from a
Then the
.
first meeting is set
·
·
Cariozzo said she plans to
·
goal oriented, time-limited
up betwe~n, the volunteer, the
keepin touch
with
her friend
friendship with a trained and
recipient, and the therapist.
.
once she graduates in May even
caring volunteer," she said.
The volunteers are matched
though she is planning to move
. Once the volunteers
·
are
up with a friend based on sirru-
out of the ai:ea.
·
.
screened and trained, they meet
·
1ar interests, age, and gender.
.
Therapists, private pJ}ysi-
with their friend one~hour per
Scileppi said there is currently
ciaos, and mental health and
week for a year.
·
a waiting list of thirty people
socia(services refer: the
_
recipi-
This provides rehabilitative,
waiting for volunteers.
ents of the program.
.
·
.
.
social support, advocacy, edu-
"These individuals Jives are
The
staff
at the Mental Health
·
cational
·
and vocational help,
Ort
~old, until they haye a fri~nd, . Organization
.
provide
.
continu-
and access to community re-
then
_
it changes their whole
ous suppoitthroughout the
sources.
·
worl_d
_
around," he said.
.
friendship:
.
:
.
.
John Scileppi,
.
professor of
.
Th~
.
prog~am
is
~
-
t
the point
They also provide up to three
psychology, said
lw
thiriks
·
this
ythere some of the former recipi-
functions a year for the matches
·
program is beneficial.

.
ents are now volunteers them~
.
to attend: ·
.
"You
are not just a counselor,
:
selves
.
.
.
Luksi~
said
that many of the
'
but a friend,'~ he said. "It gives
Scileppisaid the program has
volunteers stay in the program.
the recipients
a
sense of accep-
gre~tly reduced the
'
percentage
.
-
·
"fv1ost volunteers
.
end up ex-
tance; a sense of welconie."
·
of patiepts that go backfor.treat-
·
tending their contracts 'ror more
.
Luksis said the recipients feel
·
meiit. .
.
..
.
·
than a year becauseitis such a
positive
.
because the program
·.
C
'.'.Without Compeer,
50
pen:;~nt
.
w.
.
opderfuf
'
experierice," she
provides a one-to-one confiden-
of released patients go back in,
said.
·
tial service
.
with Compeer only seven per-
·
For more information, contact
"It
reduces their feelings of cent gq
,
back in," he said
.
the Mental Health Association
isolation and loneliness that
;
:
.Emi
.
ly
.
Carrozzo, a five-year
at
473~2500 and
·
the next train-
.
accompanies the diagnosis of a
.
psycho~cigy
,
student, is a mem-
ing Se!i'sion
.
Will be held on
mental illnesst she said
:
.
.
ber of
~e
proguuri and has been
March 9.
·
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MARIST
COLLEGE
· -,,
For more information ,.
and applications:
~!f!,t~li!~
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914.S?'s'-3330
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inteniatiohaI@~arist.edu

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www.marist.edutuitemationar
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·






























THE
CIR.CCL£
MARCH 4, 1999
.
PAGE9
Tannenbaum new Dean of science
by
CHRISTY BARR
Staff Writer
The new Dean of the Schooi
of
Science has plans to continue
.
on a high commitment to edu-
cation and intends to find ways
to
·
attract more science majors
·
to Marist.
Michael Tannenbaum, the new
dean of the School of Science,
came to Marist from Truman
·
State University in Missouri
where he taught for the last
10
years
_
arid was an Associate
Professor of Biology and Coor-
·
dinator of Pre-Medical Advis-
ing. Before that, Tannenbaum
taught at Marshall University in
West Virginia forfour years.
Tannenbaum received his un-
dergraduate degree in Biologi-
cal Sciences from Cornell Uni-
versity and a Ph.D. in Zoology
from Clemson University.
Tannenbaum said there were
a few things that attracted him
to Marist.
"One of the things that at-
tracted me to Marist was the
beautiful campus on the
Hudson," he said. "A more sig-
nificant attraction that led me to
Marist was that teachingjs the
highest priority here and the
Tannenbaum
School of Science had some
great teachers."
Tannenbaum said the things
that attracted him have also im-
pressed him.
"I
am yery impressed with the
dedication and commitment of
the science faculty to providing
top quality teaching and advis-
ing to undergraduate,s," he said.
"I
am very happy to repor,t that
the evidence
I
have seen since
.my arrival most definitely sup-
ports that contention.
"
Tannenbaum also said his time
at Marist has been enjoyable.
"The faculty, staff, and admin-
isirators with whom I have
worked and interacted have
been great. The students with
whom
I
have interacted with are
al;m very impressive,
"
he said.
"So
far I
have very much en-
joyed my time at Marist."
Tannenbaum said it surprised
hiin that given the program's
success, there are not mores
science majors.
. "1
am working with the faculty
and admissions office to de
-
velop strategies to attract more
s
.
cience majors to Marist,"
Tannenbaum said. "As Dean, I
am planning to meet with cur-
·
rent Marist students and Mid-
Hudson Valley high school stu-
dents to see how we can struc-
ture our program to attract more
science students."
Tannenbaum also said there is
a possibility of a new major be-
ing added.
"We are considering adding a
health-care related major in the
near future," he said.
Med•Tech not a new major
by
JEN
GLOVER
Staff Writer
·
.
Medical Technology depart
-:--
ment who all to often hear from
students around campus, "oh,
I
With programs in over40 dis-
didn't know
we
had that major."
ciplines here at Marist, some
The Medical Technology de-
majors seem to get lost in the
partment got its start in 1982,
shuffle.
thanks to a federal Title
III
No exception to
·
this is
-
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With this money, Marist was
able to build the foundations for
a major that 60 to
_
70 Marist stu-
dents take advantage of.
graduates finding work within
months after graduation.
Today, Marist Medical Tech-
Since its inception, the pro-
gram has been successful in
·
placing their graduates. in the •
field, with 100 percent of its
.
nology graduates are doing ev-
erything from working at Vassar
Brothers Hospital to teaching in
the School of Public Health at
the University of Caiifornia at
Berkeley.
.
.
.
.
But what is Medical Technol-
ogy and what makes it different .
than the other science programs
at Marist?
Medical Technology does re-
quire a strong background in
biology and chemistry.
It
extends beyond that, how-
ever, and better
.
prepares stu-
dents specifically for careers in
·
the medical field and laboratory
medicine.
· Associate professor and
.
chairp
_
erson of the Medical
'.fechnology
department,
Catherine Newkirk,
said
many of
the students study hematology
(the study of blood), clinical
chemistry (which requires the
studying of health and dis-
.
eases), microbiology (the study
of bacteria and fungi), and im-
munohematology (which pre-
pares stude
_
nts for careers in
blood banking).
.
Before graduating, students in
the
-
program must complete a
six-month clinical whi_ch let~
.
them experience different as-
pects of a Medical Technology
career.
Starting
in
June, Medical Tech-
nology seniors begin traveling
to area hospitals and laborato-
ries to broaden their experience
and prepare them for careers af-
ter graduation.
While graduates have the op-
tions of continuing their educa-
tion in medicine after Marist,
most students choose to start
in medical laboratories as medi-
cal technologists.
Junior medical technology
major Elizabeth Johnson said
she hopes that thtsi~ what the
future holds for her.
When Johnson came to
Marist her freshman
year,
she
was an undecided science ma~
jor.
However, once she saw what
the Medical Technology
pro-
gram had to offer, she knew that
this was what she wanted to do.
She said she
.
thinks this major
wasright for her.
"I wanted to stay with biology
and I knew that this was the best
chance of getting a decent job,"
.
she said.
Hoping
to som
·
eday work in a
hospital laboratory, the program
.
had everything
to
offer
her in
the hopes of achieving her
goals.
Despite the limited number of
people involved with the pro-
gram, there are many advan
-
.
tages, according to students in
the Medical Technology pro-
gram.
Johnson said there are advan-
tages to the program being small
"Since it is small, the students
develop good relationships and
they also receive individual at-
tention
from
their
professors,"she said
Johnson said the program is
helpful to the students.
"It
is not so much a classroom
setting, as it is a tutoring ses-
sion, to help the students bet-
ter learn about their field and
prepare them for a career after
graduation,'.' she said.
The success of the program
extends beyond the acclaims
from students.
The National Accrediting
Agency for Clinical Laboratory
Science (NAACLS) said that
this Marist program is "excellent
and prepared to go into the 21st
century." The program has
"more than adequate ... facilities
and equipment."
With such a great program
under her guidance, what more
could Professor Newkirk ask
for?
While extra laboratory equip-
:
ment and faculty would be nice,
the one thing that she would like
the most is "to have more stu-
dents
in
it."
'i
I
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.
I
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I













































F
-
-
-
THE
-:
<ClR.<CL£
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Fea.tUres·
MARCH 4
2
1999
off
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ta~t1JJs
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·
_ .
byMOLLYMCMAN:{JS
Staff Writer
while living in his apartm~nt.
travel on foot
·
~t night,
:
hiwe
·
~
This includes shootings, domes-
.
buddy.
If you are alone afoiglii:
tic disturbances, drug deals,
walking down the street, you're
Many Marist students choose
andmany'fires.
looking for trouble."
.
to live off-campus during their
Jen Rankin, also a senior said · Leary said if a person is con-
junior and senior years. While
she feels safe but is scared be-
fronted with someone who
there are many safe areas
-
cause of everything that has
wants money, t\1e person
around the Poughkeepsie area,
gone on in past weeks.
should just give it to
_
them.
some students live in less de-
"Our street is relatively safe,
.
"There will always be more
·
sirable places.
but behind us is the George
.
money, btit tht:re will only be
This is due to the affordability
Washington
'
complex and we
·
on~ of you," he said.
_
"Students
factor. It is cheaper to live in
.
hear a tot of things;" she said:
sometjmes carry pepper sp~y
the less safe areas for mariy.
"The attack last week happened
or mace, buiI amconcerned that
However, there is growing just down the street."
they will be giving theweapon
concern about the personal
Director of Security Joe Leary,
to the assailant. If you are pre-
safety of off-campus residents.
said Marist Security is making
-
pared and are ready to use it, it
Dylan Williams, a senior who_
an attempt to warn off-campus
won't get turned around on
has been living off campus for
students about the dangers of you."
.,
two years, said he feels unsafe
living in Poughkeepsie.
Leary said there are also tips
but to an extent.
"We're
always happy to·have
for students concerned about
"I feel unsafe,
.
but
I
haven't
.
meetings with students and kick
protecting their home .
.
had any problems," he sai
_
d.
·
''I
-
things around," he
said. ''.At
the
"Make
sure windows and
feel that I can protect myself."
.
·
commuter student meetings we
·
·
doors are locked," he said. "Get
He is one of the few who feels
have, it seems everyone is more
your landlord to put in peep-
this way. Many students do not
concerned about parking."
holes. That way you can see
know how to protect themselves
Leary said he
_
suggests a few
who is at the door without open-
properly.
tips for staying out of danger.
ing
it."
·
Williams said he has wit~
"Use common sense," he said.
Williams said he has made an
nessed some serious things
"The reality of it is, when you
attempt to protect his hoine.
'_'Mytandlo,rcl i~stalled
a se-
curity door and intercoms," he
sal.d. "I also have golf clubs."
.
_
Rankin aJid he
_
r housemates
. have
a
security system that they
keep on all the time. She said
they also
.
take other precau-
tions.
.
.
"We keep the doors locked at
all times,'' she said
.
.
"We
have
a
big driveway
_
in front of_ the
house and we all park our cars
in it. We illso
.
use the buddy
system whep we go out and
carry ma~or something like it."
Another way to keep out of
harm is
'
to stay out of the Mid-
Hudson Street area, according
to Leary.
.
!'That is'where there are a lot
-
of unfortunate people like junk-
-.
ies, crack dealers, and prosti-
tutes. Soine students, espe-
.
cially males get curious and
·
want to go down there to get a
look.
_
.
Most of them wind up
getting
hurt,!'
he said.
_
"Thef _
. don'.tuse common sense. The
misuse of alcohol gets theminto
There
are
conflicting views on
whether security should take a
greater r9Je in
_
making sure off-
campus students are safe .
Williams said that it would be
hard for security to do this.
,
"We are all too spread ourand
the security
·
offfceis aren't
trained
.
well enough for the
kinds of things that go on in
Poughkeepsie,'.' he s
_
aid.
__
''Its.the
police's job; no
_
t securities. "
Rankin said sliethinks secu-
rity should
-
~ake more steps to
protect off-campus students.
"Off-campus students are still
a part of the school," she said.
Rankin also said she thinks
-
-
'
students
·
sho~ld be warned.
_
·
'
"Wt(should be
·
sent-outa let-
ter
_to
be on
·
the lookout.
It
..
should have the desc;ription
_
of
the person who co~mitted a
crime," she said. "Marist Secu-
rity
_
sho
_
uld be able to;come if
.
there:is a
'
problemand students
don'tknow another number to
·
call."
Job searching tips for all
,
students
by
JEN GLOVER
.
Staff Writer
There is one 10-letter combi-
nation that rriost Marist stu,- ·
dents anxiously look forward to
-"graduation" or, maybe better
yet, "senior week".
.
However, along with the cov-
eted graduation comes the
10-
Ietter word of dread -
"employ-
ment."
The fact is, there really is life
after Marist, and for seniors that
time is coming soon.
Most seniors should be well
ori. their way towards knowing
what they plan on doing
after
graduation.
For some, that means gradu-
ate school, while others
are look-
ing to take the plunge into the
world of corporate America.
Chet Koulik, the Assistant
Director of Career Development
arid Placement,. said that most
seniors have already started
planning for their careers.
"Most seniors are already
onto their second or third inter-
views with potential employ-
ers," he said
Career Services offers a vari-
ety of placement and referral
services for Mari st College stu-
dents.
If you are a senior who has
been avoiding the Center for
Career Services; located in
Donnelly 226, make an effort to
stop by soon.
.
While Koulik notes that the
job search take
·
s
·
eight t~ ten
months to complete; it is never
too late to start the process.
With programs from online
(JOBTRACK) to employers who
come on to campus for job fairs,
there are many ways that Career
Services can find the fight job
foryou.
_
.
B~fore they can do anything,
you:.inust stop by with your re-
.
sume
and sign the release forms
to
let
Career Services do some
of the work for your search.
For those of you trying to do
it alone, there. are many tips
available
for
job searclJ,ing.
Newspapers
1
are
a
common
way to find employment oppor-
tunities, bui: according
to
·
the
book,
The C<ireer FitnessPro-·
·
gram: Exercising Your
Optidlls,
only 15 to 20 percent of alijob
· opportunities
·
are pos_ted in
newspapers.
It is becoming increasingly
common for comp~ies to ad-
vertise positions
·through
direct.
mail and the Internet.
. . .
·
.
Also; do not forget the ir:ri.por:.
tance ofnetworking.
·
·
By joining professional asso-
ciations and attending confer;;-
ences, not only will you learn
more about the field,
but
make
yourself more visible to employ:-
ers.
.
.
Not all of this is just reievant
to seniors, however.
For students looking for in-
ternships and/or summer em-
ployment, the job search should
also be underway.
Juniors and seniors who need
·
to send out resumes for sum:-
mer/fall internships need
to
see
Career Services immediately, as
_
they intend to send
·
out stu-
.
dents' resumes over spring
break.·
Career Services can also help
stuoents find summer employ-
ment in the area.
This year's Summer Job and
.
Internship Day will
be Weanes-
day, April
7
from
12
to 2pm in
the Student
·
center.
Even if you
are not looking for
a job, it's never too early to
be-
gin.
·
·
·
Just passively looking can put
.. you one step ahead.
Keep an eye open for events
that are going on around cam-
pus and in the area;
Then, wheri it comes time for
·
you to determine your post-
graduation plans, you will be
able to enjoy the search.










































































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• . • • • . • . •
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·
·
MARCH 4
3
1999
THE <Clll<CLE _
Features
<
.

htt~:l/www.gamerevolu(ion.com
'-·
_Are you a ·video or computer game fanatic?
Try
~isitirig
hitp
_
~/lwww.gamerevolution.com,
This site gives reviews ori all the latest games from Sega Saturn, Sony Playstation, Nintendo 64
andPC.
-
-
-
- _ -_
-
-
.
- --
-
-
If
you're stuck on a game
or
just want to learn cheat codes, this
_
·site also offers tips to help you
oot.
-
-
-
-
-
_
-
It
also tells you how you can buy players' guides for certain games. It also lets you buy gaines
and game systems online.
.
_
.
.
_
.
·
You can also chat with other people. You can ask question
_
s or just talk about your favorite
~~
, ,
.
.
.
So to find °-ut information on all your favorite games
try
http://www.gamerevolution.com.
.
.
If
you have any suggestionsfo; this column,
_
or would like to write a column, contact Katrin~ at
extension2~29
01
:
email HZAL
.
Features Editor
.
Katrina Fuchsenberger wrote this Searching the
sites column.
·
Horoscopes
ARIES:
A
com-
promise
:
is
_
pos-
sible, but you may
_
not want to give
·
up
anything.
Think again-you
. ; .
·
·, ""'' ~ay~
.
Jno1:;_e .
.
t)lan
:
7
\
"}~n§ugh.
J
_
T<fp
·
-
rriuch, even. Be~
sides, if you make
cari"tiinkerous
_
mood. You'll never
win by arguing.
In-
stead, take
'
the
subtle, roundabout
route. Prepare the
.
_
-.)pecial
·
meal
__
this
,
'
p
"
erion iov·es
:
-
to-
..
niglit; and
.
you may
-
get what you want
without saying an-
other word about it.
·
. LEO:
There's
a
little
,
~
-
_
-
.
more confusion to-
day, but
-
nowhere
ing to try just about
anything to see
what'll happen. To-
day, that could be
very interesting. A
_
person you thought
-
;
you knew
..
very
well
-
\;o
·
uld
-
-
surprise· you,
tOG.
-
SCORPIO:
You
~
could
·
get tangled up
today in red tape.
.
The machinery's
working fine; it's the
people who are the
AQUARIUS:
_.&1..
You've been leam-
,C-.A,,
ing all week, and
now you could get
a chance to teach.
The flow of ideas is
.
_
stimul,ati~g, and
also creative. One
ide~ !eads

to
an-
other, almost more
quickly than you
can keep up. Don't
be
_
doing all this
studying just for the
a generous contri-
bution; you retain
more
:,
authority.
You and your ad-
versary may never
agree, on
.
your
own. Too many
egos involved;
_
A
mutual
friend
brings the petfect
near as
:
much as
you
'
ve
_
-.
been
through
-
-
lately.
Things are actually
·
starting
-
"
fo c
·
alm
down. Although .
there
will still be a
few
rough si:fots,
the
_
final
:
out~ome
problem. Somebody
"""'"===
=
new concept.
TAURUS:
.You
-
_
wbrk hard
for
the
.
money, but t9day
it might _feel like
you're working for
free·.
-
Actually,
you're making
points, and
_
that
could be even
more
.
important.
Someone in a
·
po-
sition to help your
·
fortune consider
.:
ably is
·
watching,
-
and taking
.
notes.
GEMINI:
You are
looking very good
today, and most
likely making a
great impression.
But again, that
c.ould lead to
trouble. Looks like
e"._erybody wants
your time and at-
tention. Instead of
picking
A
or B, a
third _option that
shows up today
could be your ~ t
choice.
CANCER:
Your
intuition should
still be good, so
use it. A room-
mate or close fam-
ily member is in a
_
today shou
_
ld be
beneficial. That's
especi~lly
.
true if
you
make
up with a
p~r~on with whom
you've been atgu- .
ing. Forgive and .
forget.
VIRGO:
:
_
One
thing's for
·
sure,
-
there'll oe lots of
surprises ioday.
Don't lake anything
for
granted.
Just be-
cause it worked
once doesn't
_
m~an
it'll work again. Just
the opposite
..
is
more likely. Don
'
t
worry, though. An-
other unexpected
development p
,
uts
everything right
again. Be patient,·
and wear your
seatbelt.
.
·
LIBRA:
Back and
forth, up and down,
in and out. Which
way should you
tum next? Knowing
you, it'll probably
be
all of the above.
You're usually will-
else's inability to
make a decision
\_:ould throw you off
your schedule
."
You
-
hate to just step in
and take over, but
you may have
·
to do
just that. Don't let
somebody else's
Ditz Day ruin yours.
.
LJi
-
.
-
.
SAGITTARIUS:
You
rl'\.,7[
ought to be one
place, and you want
to be another. A new
technology could
help you be both
places almost simul-
taneously. You may
already know what it
is, but not know how
to use it. If there's
something
·
that fits
that description, put
in
·
a little extra study·
time. A friend would
love to help.
CAPRICORN:
An
excellent career op-
portunity
could
open up today,
almost by accident.
If you've been think-
ing about the job
you'd lil~e to .have,
you'll know it when
you see it. You
should be doing
work you love, and
getting paid what
you're worth.
If
you're not, check out
the want ads.
fun of_it. Make
it
pay
.
§
PISCES:
Money isan
issue again today.
~ooks like it's coming
mto your account,
which
~s wonderful.
Of course, you'd like
to spend
it
on gifts
,
but
hold back
a
little
.
The best gift of all is
the one you
'
ll give to
yourself when you
'
re
old and gray: a big
,
fat
retirement account.
·
_
1


























































































































































.
·-
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-
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• •
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• :
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- : .
:
.
·

·
.,
.
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:
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·;
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.

-
·
-
f<)
:
:~
:.
\X
L::-
PAGE
·
ti
-.<
·
.
.
.
.
;(ir~
f(.
.
.
.
'
~
'
Wtl1Htlbv,u
;e~~f..~:c:1~;L!~~r::non

.
I
.
KDITORlittSI
·
~~~e
Feb~¥Y 18~.i
.
ss~e ~;The ~ircle;~~ri
:
wa~ an ~ic~e regard~n~
,
~~
_
ca,~~~
.
·
!
.Ofti ce
of
;
,
1
S~p
:
:'
ecial
Services, -, , .
channels that students have access to.at Manst
1
-J11e article mcluded quotes'ftom·
·.
·
.
· ,
·
~
1
,
_
,

several students dissati_sfiid
.
with
~e
cabl~5~~
~
~es on ~amp~s.·I have sp~ken'i,/
·
·,
thariks
''
Kid~'s
·
Day··
'
volunteers·
.
. ·:
':
.

many fellow students smce my
am
val J:;iere.m Septemberof
1997,
and I have yet
·
.
_
_
.
.
.
.
.
to find someone who doesn't thinkthis
_
coilege c
_
ould use more channels.
_
.
.
.
·
.,,-
:
.
.
·
·c.•
,
i
' '
1 ,
_
.
,,,,.
·
:
·
'
·
·
'
.
.
There are only six cable charirieis that
the
·
schooloffers, and! think
there
could
.
.
Editor:
\:
.
:-:'
:
;
,
·•
.
·
.
:
·
,
easily be more. Yes; Ilrnow" tha~ students
.
do
not have to pay a monthly bill.for
·.
·
.
O
_
n _sunday, Feb. 21 , the'Maris~.C?ll~ge Red F~~es and the O~~e of special
-
·
·
their cable service
.
When niy sistefattended the University of Connecticut; sh~
:
. .
Serv_ices hoSted th
C?
9~
~~~
_
!9ds pay
.
Out:
-
'
b
_
~~k~
_
~ball c!m~c to benefit the
·
had to pay a
$30.00 bill each nionth for her basiccabie service. However; there
_
is a .
.
MartSt College Sc,~ol3:1:sht~
!
0
r ~~~en~
_
~th
-
Dis~btb~e~.
-
,
:
:c
·
.
.
.
rather hefty difference in UConn's tuition and that of Mari.st.
·
· _
_
.
·
·
.
The staff ~f Special S~rv~~~swould hke to thailk the ~~mbers of the Red Foxe
_
s
I
see no reason
.
why the school could not affo.rd
·
to
-
add a few inoie channels. In
-
.
·
_

l)~sketba.1I .teams who participated
_,
JoeMcCurdy, Sean.Stellato, §e~n~~enne~y,
..
.
.
_,·
the article in
·
The
Circle,
it was reported tha~ thert? l_tas been a large amount of
:
· .
Ri~k Srruth, ¥arkProsser, Bo
.
1:,
_
arragan, Donald Vale, Kyl~Mostr~skr; !3eth
. _ ·
interest in aqding srich c.;hannels as
HBO:
_
That is 11nrealistic. Premium_channe~s
.
·
·
,
Shack_el, ~on~ Anders~n, Sabn_na Valle~, Ale~ St~p~en~,}ai:aKmgh!: Jen Taylor,
·
such as HBO, Ciriemax, arid Showti~e are quite f?Xpensive, and it is doubtful that
!=<>rtme Ciaccio, Antoi
_
n~tte
_
~aitta: Marie _Fusct, DiesaSeideland K~tt~D~ley, as
.
·
Marist would add those types
.
of channels ..yithout raising tuition .. B\ltthe.
_
well as membe~s of the ~ed Foxe~
-
_
coaching staff,Steve ~auer~, Kristm Lam~,
.
addition of such basic channels as TNT and USA, which'offer a wide variety"of
.-
.

Alayna Jan~ums
1:1-
nd Casey Holh1>ter.

,
. .
__
.
.
:.
0
~--
·:.

.-
·
:
.
programniing
,
certainly shouldnot b
_
e out of the question; The additi~ri of some

•;
·
·
Th'.1°ks to the effprt and
__
suppo~ of thesemdi~i?uals,
~~
O~~
f
9(~pe~iill,
_
_

inexpensive specialty dianriels!
:
such
as
Fox Sp
'.
orts ~ew York and TV Land,
.
S~rvices was able to ho~t
.
~ppr<;>xtmately
-75
.
participan~
:
and rais
~
;
~{
2:
n()Qwhi
g
i
(
)
:
would also bea nic~
/
and,in
my
opinion
;
re:ilistic ~
-
xpectaticm.
· __ ·
.
·
.
·
.
_
wdl benefit the Scholar~hipfund
._
,
:
-...
·.
.
.
·
,;
·
·
-.
·
·
-
-.
,
:/
'.'>:.\
,
.
.
<
.:
'
·
': :
·
It
is easy to
·
understan<i why c"oHege officia.Is-~ay be dragging their
-
·
.
,
,
'
:
-
.
.
· ·
":"? '.'
-
•.
<
:::
:i
.
feet on adding more cable channels. At the end ofthe
·
school day, a vast m;ijority
·
.
·
:
·:
·

.
of the,m go to their homes where they have a wide
.
variety of cable channels
.
to
·
' .
.
Staff of Special Services
· choose frorri. For example,
TCf
Qable in Poughkeepsie has sixty channels on its
·
·
.
.
·
.
.

. cable system. We get six channels, they_get sixty. Some
:
administrators may argue .
. .
Reader reaction
?
to past lette:r-":to the editor
that this is
a
college, thatthe students
are
here
to
·
-
learn
~
and they can watch cab
_
le
·
· ·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·.
television at home.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
-
;
-~
:
:
.
.
.
_
_.
Editor:
.
_
.
.. _
.
._
.
. ..
While this is true, it is also true that students spend nine months of the year
,
_ ·
..
If you
.
think Mari st shows intolerance toward gays
,
yc;m
ought to be in the
here; and it is unrealistic to expect that.they ~ould
·
not want to watch televisjon
.
-
.
~-
shoes of a practicing Roman Catholic! It's been my sad experience that our views
For many freshman
·
students, adjusting
.
to college iife can be an unne.rving
'
·
·
·
are
_
not tolerated here
;
·
either, though from what I unders
·
tai:id,"they used to
be. But
·
experience:
It
helps to
_
ea~e them into coliege)ife if the~e are some familiar things
. . .
now, the library towers over the chapel crucifix.
.
that both college and home
.
offer.
. _
..
·
.
.
_
:
Itmay seem silly, but familiar cable channels can ease students'·
tensions during the sometimes-traumatic period
'.
of adjustment. They
remind students of home life, and for the first-few months of college,·
that can
be
very important indeed. Also, Mari.st
is
known fl;,r its School
of Communications. Tiiat is why I came here,
_
and is also why many people
.
·
1 know came here. Frankly, for
.,i
communications school such as Marist to have a
·
·
weak cable selection like this is rather embarrassing.
.
_
.
_
I
am
not calling for
a
radical overhaul of the cable system here.
lam
only aslc,ing
.
.
for the addition of four or five niore channels
:
I have been told that the school is
currently considering adding more channels. Yet I
ain
ieluchmt
io
get
very excited
about this statement. When I came to Marist for Orientation two years ago, I was
told $at they would
be
_
adding five more
·
c~annels at tpe beginni11g 't:>f the Spring
,
1998
semester.
Well, as many of you Iqtow, Spring
'98
has come and gone, and not a
single channel has been added. The time for talking about adding more
channels is over
.
The time for action is now.
·
·
Michael Thompson
sophomore
Christine
.
A.
Hapeman
_
junior
·
~Bradley
Editor-in-chief
·
THE <CIRCLE
·
Elizabeth
CaITubba
.
Managing Editor
Katrina
Fu~_nberger
·
']JI~Ryan
Features Editor
.
Sports Editor
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Chris
Grogan
News Editor
TuraQuinn"
.
'()pinion
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Editor
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PatrickWbittle
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Joe·ScottQ
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Toni_-Comtantin~
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Arts
&
Entertainment
,
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Photography Editor
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Business.Manager
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G. Mo_dele Clarke,Faculty Advisor
The Circle
is the student newspaper of Marist College, Poughkeepsie, NY
,
"Issues are published eyery Thursday. .
We welcome letters to the editor, club announcements and story ideas. We can-
not publish unsignedletters to the editor.
__
The Circle staff can
be
reached at
S75-3000 x2429
or by email at
HZAL.





















PAGE13·
CO-lllntllist has no interest in: sex ...
·- .• _: ~- . . . .. ,._. . ·. . :
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.p .
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at: Jea~t if
.it
concerns Lewinsky
i--..;;.....;.,-_;,...-......,;.....:.....;;._;..._;_·.,;.,·:
)ic;'
remains
hook~ 61{the topic. . velops is a kind of sameness at
have as people seems to.be con-
of the media, and thattool is the
.bHtj cal
s
Ce h . .
We ·should all be concerned
each end of the extreme (in cer-
tentrated in the opinions of the . same one utilized by politicians
withwhatthe"pubHc''.b~lieves,
tain issues) and a sameness in
"public," which is measured by
to discover the opinions of the
.. because the "public'; either die-
the. center. This is the age of polls. If someone, or some
in-
public.
.
'· tates, or is:
an
indica_tor of, ihe
the moderate versus the extrem-
sti_tution, were able ·to channel
The corporate giants can use
· ·decisions of ourleaders:-c
ist. Think ofour foreign affairs
into that meas tire of the
institutionalized methods to per-
. . . : <The concept of the public is
positions. Extreme conserva-
"public's". opinio~s. then that
suade you to buy their product.
· a scary ·om~. Hopetuliy, it works
· someone or institution would
For example; did you know that
: on ·a majority rules basis,: and
hold.the power of political per-
Monica Lewinsky is going to be
.
.
,
.
. . for thi~
we
can ptai.~e tlie al-
suasion. What could possibly
a best selling author?
It
would
· -:
-., __ .
:
·. :·· 0.-
:
mightyp<>ll,Ac<;ordingt&myth,
/
think it wou'td be a
havethep9wertoi.nfluencethe· .seemthathertalentsarebe.tter
·. Ife<flike.soin_e9neis.":f.orcing.- ,po.li.tical sdentists can·collect
great idea for Beanie·
public? Weare.anationofindi- . suited.for a practice otherlhan
-~e.
t~
~e)nter~st~.d in· t~e . d_ata that d~pists the opin,i.90 of
b
viduals, are we not?
·
writing, for all we know·ofher.
_pres~deti(s.~ffa~r.with.Monica· .· the public. The public ~as un~'
Ba
Y
to cre_ate ·a
We can fall victim to inanipu-
But, someone has released the ·
. Lewin~ky:_ W119
is
·ft? .
As we.·_· happy. with_ thflmpeachriient
Monica Lewinsky. If ·
1ation at·the hands of the same
information that Monica's book
. :face_-th~ l?~ag~ of'clips an9-
Heariµgs, an<l°'chastisedRepub'-
you have suggestions
·institution that is trying so des-
"will probably make th~ best-
so~nd-bifos pertatriirig to Ms .. ,· lfcanJeadership for putting the
perately to make me.interested
seller list for a week or two,"
.. Lf_!winsky;_W~
~tis~
tell.our~_ pe.ople'.s priority second before
for a name, please
in Monica Lewinsky and her
according to the New York.
, selves thaJ thi~ is n'.i:>t'a,poliiical ,: ... a. yindictive · po-wer struggle.
send them to The
story - _corporate America. It is
Times.· I wonder how we could.
:issue. Instead, we.must engage .
The
result was a vote and ac-
corporate America who owns
know this before the book was
in oneofmy favorite ~xercises, . 'quittal, and back.to business as
Circle
the disgustingly vast· majority' released? Such phrases as
and.vie"' this phenoinenon ab~·.· µsual. We should cheer the
of America's wealth, and vehe-
"best-seller list" should pu·zzle
:stractly:- Let
os.
refer to ''the . power of the poll - in the face of _
tives and extreme liberals think
mently spars for ·your attention . allfellow English Majors. What
:pu~lic'.; as ·o~e;_pe~sonifi~d,
·en- ·.
hard evidence that the ptiblic
similarly that the US should
and the power of influence. · does_ it mean - certainly not that
.- , t_ity:
"The public"-cari perceive ·· .did. hot support Imp_eachment,
close its boarders and place su- . • Mo~ey can buy our obedience. . you are a good author? (Of
·and reacr His the i_nanipulation . __ swi~g Republkans)ind Demo-
preme importance on our do-
:We see our anti-trust l_aws swept
course, many exceptional au-
of this ~ntity, and the.reaction . crats were never enticed to sub-
mestic affairs. The moder3ctes
aside every day by the power
thors do find their way onto the
. t~ this en~iy, w~ch i~.the majqr · .. mit to the Christian coalition..
find little difference- between
of monopolization. When was
best-seller list, thankfully.)
· focu·s:of·po~itjc~,toqay . .-.\Yho-,: . : ,: :This ''pu_bHc:;. Ji9wer .is a
Republican. and Democrati.c
the Iasttime you rented a movie
We should be weary of the
ever is trying desperately to in-:, .wonderful extension·of democ~ ..
' front ruriliers who want to bal-
from. somewhere 'tither then. fact that our fate might be· de-
terest mejnJ\1qi_tie.aJjwirt~ky . ,acy, ffthe majority;__rule can in- . ance our.forei~n affairs\.:omritlt- '' Blockbuster? :wlio'on'thfs cam-· . dded
by
the mindless sweep of
h:as fa}leo iniserabij{;beGaiiseI, . 't1uence the politicaL11ite. Evie.
merits. :
.
- pus does'no_t owri'ciothirtg
from
a polling agency. The accuracy
as weH as most.of!he peopler . ~enc_e of that public power is
The problem created by the
The Gap? Corporate '-America
of such polls can make it easy
have spoken wjth? could car~• . seen in the shrinking of politi-
"public" is grounded in this
practically comrriaitds us what.
l_e~s. :But;: this annoying. •~pub~·. · cal party relevance; What de-
"sameness." All the 'power we
to buy with the_ir brilliant u~age
,M=y_,._.,]):·y1a,i·-1nspired
()dySS¢y
tQ,z[xqy
(NOY)
Th
.··
··J: · · · : · · ·
•ct·, /.
walls .. Between
the
earth tones
. ·. e:
0
.ersey·_s1 .·
e":·_-~d
th_enot-faint-eriough odor-··
.
.




C
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• ' :
of
badfoocL lc'ould not help but
;,· .· · :
. · think about an 9ld friend's' shag
· . . c-•carp~tfortheentiretrip.>
·
. ..' Fr()m the statiqh,T tooki se-
ries or'localbl;lses .. At one point,
a· ten-year_.old black girl ser-
. enaded th~ bus with a rendition
.__ _ __;_;....;....;_..:.._ ____
_,, : of''I Believe I Could
Fly"
but
I went t() see Bob Dylan.with. ·
theantidpationofexp_e~encing_
My.c!raveling to one
_whatlfeelwhe~Jgazeupatthe.
has-been city to an-
_Po.ughki;eps~e-:Highland Rail-... ·..
·· ·.
.

road Bridge;
l
would see a tre.,. .
_other has-beenczty on
mendo~srel!~ofaii"eragoneby.
"the Hudson .was the.
"-fhebrldgebe~sal_ltbe~~jeSty
greatest thing· since
. its years, _but rs {lot functional .. ·
·
.
.
·
·
.· .

SeeingDy!ancompletelyputto·
.James Joyce went on_
rest
°:1Y
stale antie:ipati_on. ·
.
a bar run.
!took a short-rewritten-for-the-: ·
.modem-audience-of-Thi-Circle
-s_an_g_t_h_e_n_e_x_t _li_n_e_a_s,-"-bu_t __ I..;;g_o_t
sort of odyssey. Actually, the: shot by.the FBI." She also in-
~only concrete· similarity to· corporated using food stamps
'HQmer's Odyssey was that I· .'at the grocery store and being
· ventured to ~lid _from a c;ity
dead 00 aisle _fourinto the song.
. named "Troy.'' ·. I tho,ught about . I
w~.pu;rv,l!d, ·
even tpou~. µie
• more abstract·siniilarities, like
str~ets- of downtown All:lany
-:$at Dyian 'isin•·a league with
were gridlocked.
.
• Homer and my journey from one· · Ultimately I ended up a mile's
: has~b~n· city to another has-
walk from the bed and breakfast
. _been cjty on tlie Hudson was
that I had booked · for the
the greatest thing since James
evening. Iwalkedd~wnthecity
Joyce went on a bar run.
streets and passed a graveyard,
' · My glorified. thoughts and · where the sidewalks turned to
stale anticipations boarded an
slabs of slate. As the road oar-
Empire Line Amtrack Train
with
earth-:toned seats and padded · Please see
DYLAN,
pg.
14 ...
Please see
PUBLIC,
pg.
14 ...


















































































































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MARCH
4
1
-1999
Student urgeS meat
eaters
·

·
to
·
·.
thirik
'
tWiC
.
e
by
KRISTINEHAVRY
.
Are animals not creatures of
the earth? They may have to
die to feed our nation
,
as they
have since the beginning of time
,
but do they have to be tortured
.
in the process? Meat consump-
tion will continue
.
However,
could not these animals at least
be put to death in a humane
way? I do not recall the last time
that beating
,
boiling or mutilat-
ing were acceptable ways to die
.
.
If
you are bothered by the
images I have pre
s
ented
i
n this
column or by the images I have
addressed in. weeks past, the
whole story is far worse. Ani-
mals have helped us for centu-
.
ries. Man would not have sur-
vived if not for them.
All
I am
asking is that you u
s
e
.
your con-
"The ·greatness ofil
.
nation
and its moral progress
-
·
can
be
·
judged

by the
·
way
·
its
animals are treated. ''
~
-
.
-Mahatma Gandhi
.
scienc-e. Continue eating meat
types of atrocities.
·
Think about
if you must, but
_
do notcontrib-
what the animal had to go
ute business to large industries
.
through to provide yoti with that
·
.
Buy meat from a Jocal
.
farmer
steak or hot dog
.
Use your con-
who raises his stock as a busi-
science and show respect for
.
ness but treats tlfem with re-
man and animal.
spect even to the end
.
.
Or stop
eating meat altogether. This
Formoreinformation,contact:
·
sends a message to meat indus-
Humane Fanning Association
tries that people are no longer
1550 California Street
kept in the dark about
.
these
San Fransisco, CA 44109
Exercise your rights
.
!
_
--
.
.
.
Letters to the editor can
be
dropped
:
off
-
atLT
i
2Jl until March
·
··
2
.
6fof
',
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_
·
;:·_'
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publicatioif
7
tn Ap

ril 1 issµe.
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:
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a
)lu
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::,-,,~:,❖~~
,
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''Americ~
·
is a melting pot, the people at
the
·
bottom get burned while all the
scum flo
-
ats to _the top.''
-Charlie King



























































































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lnc
:
r:eas
·:
e
·
in
i
advertislilent
funds new
look
Editor:
This
·
semest~r;
The Circle
has
taken a giant step: ~olor publi-
cation
:
Although there has
been much positive feedback
associated with this issue, there
has also been some negative
feedback as well.
.
I. have heard students com-
ment under their breath
>
that '
_
they wonder how many of their
tuition dollars are going toward
The Circles
new image. I would
like very much to take this
·
op-
portunity
to
clear this inatter up:
The money that goes "toward
paying for the color publication
comes from funds that are allo-
cated to
The Circle
·
each semes-
ter by the financial board
:
The
Editorin Chief and the Business
Manager
submit
a requisition of
funds to the board.
vide their readers ~ith
~
a color
fo_nnatnewspaper.
,
.
_
_

_
_
. ..
. .
_
.
It
is
the coordimited effort
of
a dedicated staff, sensible bud-
geting, ~
-
d successfui advertis-
ing
_
methods that are the
_
true
cause~
·

for
The
.
Circ;le
gofng
color
;
Th~ rilorieydoes not come
from tuition dollars, nor
.
does it
coine from a circulation
fee
.
.
The
-
.
Circle
staff has worked
·
very hard to put together a pub-
Hcation worthy ofappreciation
for its content and nciw
for
its
appearance
-
anlimage.
So, to the readers who have
supported
The Circle,
I thank
you and hope that you continue
to do
so.
To the readers who have not
been as supportive, I would like
to ask that you look at the big-
ger picture.
·
A
source ofrevenu~ to supple-
ment
·
the
·
budget aliocation is
ac,tvertisin&-:- . J'tie
·~,u~ines.?.
-
:".
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~-
:,
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....
Manager books
·
oh campus as
·
· -
·
-
·
F
:
wellas offcampusadvertisers.
Toni Constantino
~s.
a
res~lt of increased
_
a:dver-
Business
Manager
'
.
t1~mg th1_s year, ~ere has also
The Circle
been an mcrease m funds that
have enabled the staff to pro-
PAGE15
Ey¢1la
-
p
_
ffper moon has a dark side
.
~
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. by.PHILSPACE
<
My search for clepth in
life
at
Mru:ist caused to skip overthe
·
soughtafter third dimension
and end up crossing over into a
dim~nsion of sound .
..
a dimen-
sion of sighLa dimension of
mind
.
.
I had unlocked
"
the door
with a key of my imaginat:ion and
crossed. over into
.
Th
_
e Twilight
.ZOne,
,
or
so
it
seeriied .
.
I feit com-
·
·
pletely flat, until lwerit down to
the Galleria and bought a
Wonderbra. Instantly;! added
a new dimension to my life at
Marist.
.
.
Okay, so that's a crock, but
honestly, life at Marist has an
·
eerie two-dimensional charac-
teristic that I had not fully expe-
rienced since watching back to
back epis
_
od~
<>f
Saved by the
Bell.
In recent:weeks;
'
I have
felt compelled to look at the
darker sides of the happy-joy
aspects of college life.
-
I tried to convince my friends
that Nashville was the place to
go for spring break. I mean, I
just really thought that Nash-
ville would
be
a lot more excit-

"
,
...
ing than
-
Daytona Beac
_
h.
As
far
as
I.
was
'
c<>ncemed,
_
Daytqna
Beach was

going to'i!e jusfa
·
bunch
_
of stupid _c~llege kids
..:.
running around drunk looking
for a piece of a** and puking all
over everything. I mean, why
even leave Marist? But Nash-
·
not want to be quite as psycho
and
embittereq as Dostoevsky
in
'.~Notes
from the Under-
ground."
I wrote that I was not going to
Marist because itwas not
real.
I added that most girls were
"promiscuous
prepsters" (note
that I had to clean up my lan-
guage for this publication), and
Ifielt

comp
·
le
_
tel11jla
__
t,
.
_
the guys·were just a bunch of
'J
dorks and stupid beefcakes. I
untiflwent.down to
.
had only been at Marist two
the Galleria and
hours, but had confided in my
boug
·
ht
·
a Wonderbli_'Q,.
Iittlebookwhaticouldnotcon-
fide in anyone else. After all,
Instantly,
I
added· a
my parents had finally found
a
new dimension to my
proper institution that would
·
accept me.
·
Whether or not I
life at Marist.
·
.
would accept it was not really
an issue:
ville has history and all kinds of
Ahem. So, here I am perhaps
history and Graceland and S~n
the embodiment of my 12th
Records Studio, and heck we
·
grade angst: The Quintessential
can go to
_
Memphis and see
College Student- well, close
where Kinif got shotand ...
- . :
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enough. Is this an awkward
Recently, I came upon my first
position? Would the "me" of
account of Marist, written dur-
three years ago sneer? Or
ing a visit my senior year in high
would that
"me"
be too busy
school. I wrote that I did not
working two jobs at the local
want to go
·
to college. I wanted
mall to even notice daylight?
to
be
a squatter in a dark flat in
So I called my friends and
the village. I wanted to live~un-
mustered up every sort of nega-
derground, but noted that I did
tivity I had ever felt about col-
lege and used it to combat the
interests of six friends who were
set on Florida
,
I could not.un-
.
derstand why we all had to mi-
grate the way of all of the other
college students wfien we could
just escape to Tennessee for a
week. Our conversation was like
Would the. "me" of
three years ago
sneer? Or would that
"me" be too busy
·
working two jobs at
the local mall to e"ven
notice daylight?
one of our treks to the video
store when everything I want to
see meets heavy opposition be-
cause it was shown in one of
.
their film classes or was in black
and white. It is kind of funny:
They do not seem to see things
in black and white. Nashville
was such a black and white sug-
gestion
.
Needless to say, we are going
to Nashville. We are not even
going to go to Florida via Nash-
ville. We
are
going to join the
flocks of two-dimensional, shal-
low, empty headed college stu-
dents and are headed to
Daytona Beach.
My negativity did not go
wasted.
H
ended up right here
in this column
,
and I still think I
have a good argument. I am
looking forward to Florida. How
many more years can I run
around drunk looking for a piece
of a** and puke all over every-
thing and find it to be almost
socially acceptable? Man, I
want to go to Nashville.
Phil Space does not exist. Due
to the fact that the stresses of
college have prohibited the
usual onslaught of mail and
opinions that this section re-
ceives
011
a weekly basis, the
opinion editor offers a thinly
disguised version of her usual
column.





































































































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HumaristSkeeJ.) up
withTheJo:iies'
by
PATRICKWHITILE
A & E Editor
The Jones' return to Marist
College Feb. 19 proved that
laughter is the best medicine for
a r;ugh Spring Semester.
·
·
The Jones', a comedy troupe
made up of Marist College
graduates who were part of the
original Humarists, made their
debut at the Nelly Goletti The-
atre a night to remember. The
Humarists consist of Jeff
Baumgardner, Lewis· Adams,
Scott "Muddy" Kaseta, Chris
Stout and Jeff Gooden, all Class
of 1995. They perform sketch
and improvisational comedy in
New York: City clubs like
Caroline's and The Duplex.
...
·
'This is our house, 1t was
absolutely inc'redible," Adams
said, adding that he thinks the
Jones' performances are best
received by college crowds.
"This is our house,
it was absolutely
incredible."
.
,
·

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. .

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Cir<:lc
photo/Joe Scouo
The Jones' and The Huma:rists put on a hilarious show at the Nelly Galetti Theatre on
Friday, Feb 19. The Jones' will appear at thEf Toyofa Comedy Festival in
NYC this Jurie.
Mwphy'slaw
.
·
rocks Chance
by
CHRIS Kl'.ill])TSEN
·
Staff Writer
Not many bands have man-
agedto keep.the level of inten-
sity o.ver the years like
Murphy's
Law.
They headlined a show
·
at
The Chance last Friday with
opening acts
Beefcake, Joey's
Throwing Elbows, Cooter, and
Ninety9 Cents,
.
Even
with
the
less
.
than spectacular weather
on Friday night, the show was
crowded with a wide
.
variety of
age gr<:,ups from the teeny-
The Jones' have been per-
"I
.
thought the
·
show was
quences: ·
:-
boppers to
·
the old·
Murphy's
forming for two years, and have
ilioroughly enjoyable," Carli to
~'(Improv)
is like painting a
Law fans.
.
received open invita
.
tions to
·
sal.d.
"I
wish my little niece was
house, and having whatever
During
Joey's Throwing
El-
pitch at MTV for new shows.
here, because the humor was
color paints you want in front
bows the rest of the crowd
fil-
When not
·
·
headlining at j1._1st the family fun that every-
of you, and not having to worry
tered in, finally packing the
Caroline's, they play small
body is looking for."
·.
about your mortgage," Murray
floor. The band played a decent·
.
Caberets in Greenwich Village.
Marist's popular Humarists
said.
set, better than the last time
,
I
Their original lineup also in-
.
provided the
.
openirig act for
.
.
The Humarists, especi,itlly the
saw them, but lacked the ability
eluded Marist graduate Danny
Jones'. Junior member Jon
seniors, were overjoyed to be
to really get the crowd to move;
Glover;

',1/µo now perfonns for .
.
Murray
noted
.
that .the
able to put on a performance
·
Following was
Cooter who·
Lewis Adams
ChicagoCityJ~imits.
Humaristsare at their most in-
with the Jones'
:
.
Getting the
.
played basically the same
.
set I
Alumni
The,Jones' .
.
witty, ribald
vigorated after some recent
·
·
Jones'.toperformfailie_Goletti
ha_veheardfromtpem,the_other
- - - - - - - - - - -
brandor'Iiumorhadthepacked
changes.
.
·
Theatre
,
wlli?amajorgoalofthe
tw_o times
.
I.ha_ve seen
.
them.
Baumgardner
said
The
theatn~rq!l~ngo/ithfaughterfor
"Westrengthenedourchem-
Humaristsi·thisyear
.
.
.
With a
:
style
ofFace to
.
Face
Jones' began performing pro-
theirentireperformance. High-
istry and our method ofthink-
.
,
"Onttof the
'
things that
meets
:
B.link
182,
Coqter has
,
·
fessionally almost out of neces-
lights included a skit called 'I>is-
ing, and we've gotten a lot more
·
makes my senior year so much
the ability to attract more of the
sity because none of the rnem-
ab led Pictionary, • a mock-
energized," Murray
said.
more special is the fact that I got
·
teeny-bopper: oriented aµdi,.
.
bers were able to get good jobs
improv skit involv
.
ing
:
a huge_
.
:
The Humarisis' set went
to see them here and perform
ence,.
·
,,
,
,
0
:
after graduation.
··
walnut, and hilarious sketch
in
overexcellently,withtheir
'Erner
.
with themher~,"HumaristPresi~
Ninety9 Cents made another
"Gooden
was seJling sneak-
which
.
eacll
member holds
·
hi~
tional
-
Symphony'
,
:
skit prnvid-
dent MarkMontgomery said.
.
appearance at The Chance dur-
ers to gangsters in Hartford and
head in a bucket of water until
iilg
a
well-received finale. Their
'
.
The Jones' will be perfonn-
ing the show. They definitely
I
was worki11g at a tanning sa-,
another member, tags
.
his han'ct.
routine relies more

heavily on
irig at.the:Toyota Comedy Fes-
tit
:
the bill
to
play with
Murphy's
Jon," he
·
said .
.:''We
said, 'Our
.
.
SeniorI:Iuimµist

member
improvisational comedy than
tivalin June at Caroline's·, so
he
"
Law considering the fact
.
that
I
ive
.
s stick,
·
1et'
S
get
back to per-
.
Car)jto offered his ref!ectio_ns
O!J.
the Jones\ making
:
for a
·
lof of
sure to check that out if you live
.
.
they
~
bot~

enc9urage

drinking
fon[\ing.~"
:
.
.
performingwiththeJones
':-;
.
:
-
unexpected (and fuiuiy) conse:.
near:r-.JewYorkCity.
;
..
·.
~d
_
stnoldnginthecr~wd. The
.
.
.
.
.
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.

>
·
.
.
.
.
~'
/
.
·
·
':
. ":'.
set they played on Fnday
•:
was
~'Sp
...
in
doctor' ,
.
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:
ta
Ckles
·.
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' p
{ :
.
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.
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· ·

·
The mam attraction of the
monotony in modern Rock radio
:!t~E;.i:;iJE:i;l
.
·
.
·
-
.
going at a neckbn~aking pace.
by
DOUGLASP.GUARINO
Staff Writer
Monotony:
·
That is what tun-
ing into a typical rock radio sta-
tion
wiH
get you.
.
Unfortunately,
rn
recent
times, radio has become in-
creasingly commercialized, and
diversity and on.:air experimen-
tation have consequently been
on the decline. The job of many
modern DJs is to reduce the
obviousness of a pre-set format
with their on-air personality,
rather that to select and promote
new and unusuai music. Songs
·
are selected by specialized
fo-
cus groups based on brief song
clips or 'phone surveys, rather
then on an esthetic basis. The
object is to play only music that
the targeted audience will not
dislike, instead of playing mu-
sic that will catch their attention
as new, innovative, or unusual
(Pareles,
1999).
This leads to the
annoying phenomena of "one-
hit wonders" and "played-out"
American culture and music..
..
reco~ds.on.the
:
Meriiphis radio
·
The ~ancers on
the
flooi, my-
songs.
.
The period when radio was
station WLAC(Palmer, 1995).
selfincluded,founddifficultyin
Much of this commercialism
perhaps inostinfluential iri
:
this
Soon; black radio would be~
.
keeping balance ori the beer
and structure has resulted from
regard was in the late 1940s and
come so popular
,'
that even
soaked floor. All of the band's
the 1996 removal oflimits on the
the early 1950s. Jt w_as during
southehiwhite musfoians;
·
who
traditions were followed
.
inclhd-
numberof stations a single cor-
this time that the sounds of had be~n schooled in country
.
.
ing
showering
the
crowd in beer,
poration can own on behalf of black rhythm anq blues began

music, opted to listerito a blues
smoking with whoever could get
the FCC. Since then, broadcast-
to emerge from the depths of the
station
·
rather
.
than a country
.-
close enough, and not havirig a
ing chains have acquired as
·
South. Eventually the rnots of
.
station.
·
.
. _
.
.
·
setlist.
Murphy's
Law
is possi-
many stations as possible at a
black blues would c9meto domi-
·
One of these musicians was
bly one of the greatest perform-
con
·
siderable cost, and then pro-
nate pop culture and become a
Elvis Presley.
The seeds of rock
·
ing groups ever because they
grammed them in order to get
breathoffreshairintothewhite
and roll had been firmly
involve the crowd with every-
instantaneous,
.
marketable rat-
bread 50s.
·
planted.
.
thing. They played mainly re-
ings. This why one can travel
The individuals who were
·
·
In
the '60s and '70s, musical
·
quests,
including
Bong,
cross country, and still manage
probably
·
most responsible for
experimentation continued with
·
Jamacho, and others that fans
to hear vii;tually the same mix of this change were radio DJ's. It
famous DJs such as. Wolfman
screamed at them.
music regardless oflocation.
was they who would become
Jack. Listeners would be in-
After the show, while wait-
A recent artiole appearing in
the ringleaders ofRockN' Roll's
trigued to p~y attentio~ to mu-
ing to talk to Jimmy from
17zeNewYork1imesclaimsthat
original "secret" audience of sic that they had previously
MurphysLaw,Iwastalking
·
on
there is still hope for the artisti-
teenagers who were in search
been unfamiliar with; simply as
stage with
Ninety9 Cents. They
caliy minded DJ however. For
of new and fresh sounds.
a result of a DJs attractive on-
were not paid for the show so
its next act, the FCC may very
Though some of the DJ's them-
.
~r personality and enthusiasm.
·
the guitarist from
Murphys
Law
well enable local, low-power sta-
selves were black, most of them
Late night listeners especially,
came over and pulled sixty dol-
tions to share FM radio with
were white men who contracted
would
be
exposed to a wide ar-
tars from his wallet to pay them.
larger commercial stations, thus
black advisors to help them keep
ray of musical genres on sta-
~!though this was not required,
allotting room for diversity and
up on the latest in black.music
tions such as New York's
m fact most of
Ninety9 Cents
competition (Pareles, 1999).
and culture. DJs such as Will-
WNEW.
didnotwanttotakeit,itshowed
Hopefully, this action will influ-
iam "Hoss" Allen and Gene
Perhaps th
.
ose days of open-
the· true spirit of unity among
ence radio
to
reestablish its his-
Nobles encouraged free and
mindedness and diversity will
the bands in the scene.
toric role as the diversifier of open experimentation with black
·
come again.
. ..
please
Sf!e
MlJRPHY'S,pg.18
/J
.,
f
:















MARCH 4
7
1999
PAGE 17
()scar
seaso;~ ri6wf
in
full
swing
.
'l~~g;t:2~1ii~l~s,~•
·
.
•ijt~ItJ1t~i~··•i!~:~::~a;:!~t:i9;1
finest, pro(essional actors of his
generation and.he deserves .. an
Oscar. Any Qscar. My only
complaint is that
'A
Civil Ac-
tion' was not much of a movie.·
Steve Zaillian's direction and
script were so anti-Glimactic it
leftJohn Travolta wandering
ar.ound wondering what to do.
The film was so slow I could see
Travolta getting fatter. Billy Bob
Thornton was quite good in 'A
Simple Plan' but I have seen
some. backlash ~bout his role in
recent trades. It is
1
·ot Billy's
time
this year, but see
'Simple
Plan'
anyway, it is another excellent
film in a year of great movies.
by
JOHN SULLIVAN
StaffWriler .
Firstthings first, 'Saving Pri-
vate Ryan~ will win BestPi.cture. ·
And it is a good film, so I am not
too upset about that · As far as
the other. categories go, it is
going to' be a tight race. · Any-
one
Cari
ma_ke a convincing ar-
gument for. each nominee to
obtain the coveted Oscar. ·
fut ..
perfognapce,ifr<nJ! No_rton
\Vho shot1ld _havewon·years_ago
for.'PrimalFear.' ,Most likely Ian
. McKellan of-'Gods'and Mon-
. sters' will get.thisio'und.I-ie is
due' for a win" and
is
arispected
and· proficierifactor.
:
i
amreally not too)iased in
the
·
Best· .. Actres·s .· cat.ego,ry. I
would
.
like to see
.
G\vyneth
·Paltrow win tl}is because I never
liked her before until lsaw the
periodco~edy 'Shalc~spear(! in
Love:'·.· She
·
really: must )lave
done herresearchfor this role:
I
neveriliought she had. much
-· talent and her most dramatic turn
upte> this poiiltwas?s..the;ev-
ered head in ·•seven.' She im-
Recluse Terrence Malick
created a.masterpiece of philo-
sophical and psychological art
with 'The Thin Red Line.'
Malick's study of the nature of
·man and war received inuch
criticalpraise but little
positive
·
• publ,ic reaction. I guess people
expected another 'Private Ryan'
but instead got an·equally bru-
tal but significantly more intelli-
gent WW2-drama. Let us face
it,
with
all its savage depictions
and heartfelt scenes, 'Private
Ryan' is a surrimerfilm with some
greatperformances but it never
rises above theinescapablewar
cliches that haunt' these types
ofso-called revisionist films.
Spielberg gave the world a mas-
terfully crafted crowd-pleaser
while Malick created the ideal
war.movie,.repletewithcharac-
ters who are~ •granted,· homer-'
ous,. but are . actually· human.
Give Malick the Best Director
Oscar. We· may never see him
again and let Spielberg be satis-
fied with counting his billions
on Oscar nigpt.
Meanwhile, Best Actor nods
should go to Edward Norton,
just because he is the underdog,
'American History
X'
is a fine
but flawed movie with a power-'
pr~s~ed m?in ~'ex2~llent film
so I-nave to gjve·her.credit.:Now
·th~t.}Shakespe~rC:'::h~s ~been
'
drawing big numbers at the box
office, the acade111y .will.have
good reason to reward the film
with a few wins (probably
screenplay as well).
I
would
also recommend 'Shakespeare'
to everybody. It is .one ofthe
best written films I have seen in
recent years so do not.feel like
· less of a man for having seen it.
I
saw it. I liked it'. That is my
story and I
am
sticking to-it
: Anyway, James C~bumis
underrated. He is, getting no-
ticed. right now ,for.
a,
hilarious
role in the Guri-medy•tPayback,'
but his tum in 'Affliction'· is
appare~tly ~{powerful portrayal
of~ abusive father. However, I
want_ Robert Duvall to. win the
Supporting Actcir because he
got screwed last year when he
lost to Nicholson. Seriously, I
thought
it
.was a lock. Duvall
wrote, produced and· directed
'The Apostle' and they give the
award to· Nicholson for his
As far as the Best Adapted
Screenplay goes, I hope to see ·
Scott Frank take the honor for
the. flawless 'Out of Sight' ·
. script. . 'Out of Sight' was one
of the smoothest, compelling
funny films to have come out
this year.
It
gave George
Clooney his best role so far and
·made Jennifer Lopez look like
she could act. Not everybody
saw this movie but make sure to
catch it on video. The gem of
the film was Don Cheadle who
was, I think, snubbed out of Best
Supporting. Better luck next
year Don. Possibly, 'Simple
Plan' could also take the Oscar
but since 'Out of Sight' was
given the best picture award at
the Nationaf Association of
New York
Film
Critics, it shows
thatsomejudgesrecognize·•out
of Sight' as -the quiet master-
piece itis ..
In the meantime, the smart
money is on English stuff and
war.
If
you guys are not too busy
watching 'Mulan' for the 88th
time on Marist
TV,
check out the
Oscars.
It willmake you smile.
'Payback'.iS ab.igwinner
by
JOHN SULLIVAN
Staff Writer
Ads· have portrayed '.Pay-
back' as Mel Gibson's-first tum
as a bad guy. To an .extent,
Gibson's vengeful character in
'Payback' has all.the markings
of
a
noir-ish antthero but Mel
Gibson's charming persona al-'
ways shines through and we're
always aware that Gibson is just
"acting."
.
'Payback? is a remake of a
movie· that-this viewer never
saw, nainely·theLeeMarvin ve-
hicle 'PointBl!,lllk.' The story is
essentially the same. Gibson
·pl_ays Porter,
a
small time thief
who· has been· doublecrossed
by
his wife
ancl
his partner. Af-.
ter ~overing fyomtwo near.:fa:.:
tal gl!rishof woun~s; Porter
comes back to· town in order to
settle up with his Jnemies. Por-
ter demands ihe $70000 that was
stolen from him but along the
way he gets mixed up with Asian
gangsters, an old girlfriend, cor-
rupt cops and a mysterious
crime organization known only
as ''The Outfit."
Most of the film is set in an
urban jungle where everyone
has an ulterior motive and Por-,
ter has to continually resort to
vioience in order to get what he
wants. The serio-comic tone of
"Paybabk"
is
effective for the
most pan; and many of Gibson's
deadpan lines are quite funny.
But,· with the exception of
•Braveheart,' this is one ofMel's
brutal, violent excursions. Toes
are smashed, nose rings are
pulled out, women are hi( and
A LOT of people get shot. Di-
rector Brian Helgeland (screen-
writer of LA Confidential and
Conspiracy Theory) fill out the
cast with such talented seriicirs
as William Devane; fames
· Coburn arid Kris Kristofferson
in addition to welcome players
like·; David Paymer and the.
underusedJohri Glover .. Gibson
has a voice over narra.ticm that
is appropriately raspy aqd dark.
Helgeland seems to
be
trying to
create a kind of modem noir
crossed with the ballistic ballet
ofaJohn Woo film. It comes to-
gether well and the film, as a
whole, is entertaining.
On the downside, the tone of
the movie is uneven and
Porter's redemp.tion at the end
of the film seems a little out of
character for such a nasty,
bioody movie. The film shifts
from darkened, blue-tinted de-
pictions of cruelty and blood-
shed to quiet emotional reflec-
tions too often. The film wants
to be heartless but at the same
time remain a normal_ "Holly-
wood" story. Most of the in-
consistency
in
Payback can be
attributed to Gibson's own tink-
. ering with the finished film as
detailed in recent trades.
Gibson is obviously having
a good time with this character,
but he always seems· in on the
joke. Still, these are minor criti-
cisms of an overall enjoyable
crime drama. Gibson is always
excellent in any role and he's·
serviced well by a decent script
and some unique camerawork.
I would recommend 'Payback'
for anyone who'd like to see
'Patch Adams' savagely tor-
tured and then cut down by a
barrage of bullets.
·
Check
out
http://
www.lto{lywood.com
for all the
news on new releases.
by
ALEX HEINEMAN
Staff Writer
this) is goh. , to win. 'Bulworth,'
. 'Life Is beau iful,' 'The Truman
Show,' and 'Saving Private
Ryan' are also nominated, but
It
is that time of year again.
there is no doubt in my mind that
No not Christmas time (that al-
· 'Shakespeare in Love,' after its
ready passed) and not Tlianks-
Golden Globe win for Best
giving either, I am talking about
Screenplay, will also win the
the Oscars. The
big
night is
Oscar. How
am
I
so sure? Well,
.
descending upon us quickly,
when you analyze the competi-
and with all the media hype
in
tion it becomes quite clear. 'The
the month prior to this night of Truman show' was original, but
_career m~king extravaganza
the script, even though very
come the nominees. Oh, and
entertaining, had holes in its
what great nominees they
are ...
or character structure, besides the
are they? Well that is for you to
ending being less then satisfy-
decide but, luckily I am here to
ing. 'Life' is Beautiful' -was a.
make a couple of valid predic-
great film and de~erves to be a
tions as to what the envelope
nominee, but in
n. y
view does
might tell us on Sunday, March
not surpass what one might call
-21.
the innovative brilliance that
• The category for Best Picture
'Shakespeare
In
Love' brought
is extremely competitive this. to the screen. I do not under-
year. From my point of view
stand why 'Bulworth' received
there are no sure shoe-ins. Last
such critical acclaim
for
its
year there was no question that
script, possibly because Warren
'Titanic' would take the cake
Beatty wrote it, but I thought
after its impressive performance
the film was a major disappoint..:
at the Golden Globes, winning
ment. Beatty gave a decent per-
numerous awards. That is not
formance as an outlandish poli-
the case however this time.
tician, but it was not quite Os-
'Elizabeth,'
'Life is Beautiful,'
car caliber. ·· The last nominee
'Saving
Private
Ryan,'
unfortunately is again 'Saviµg
'Shakespeare
In
Love,' and 'The
Private Ryan.' This script
Thin Red Line' are in the run-
should not even be in the vicin-
ning, and besides 'Private Ryan'
ity of the .category for Best
all deserve to b_e. Unfqttunately
Screenplay. I am a aware that
. niy prediction is'.that 'Private
many people thought this film
Ryan' will win the Oscar for Best
was a masterpiece but,
I
am un-
Picture due to its timely release
sure why. The first scene was
and the undeserveq hype sur-
cinematically incredible, but it
rounding Steven Spielberg this
did not make up for the rest of
past year. To a point the Oscar's
the film's poor acting, stereo-
all come down to the typical characters, horrible plot
Academy's twisted political
line
and
script,
many
agenda (not goo~ films), and if miscastings (Ed Burns, Ted
'Ryan' wins, a perfect example
Danson), and drawn out ending.
of this will have been set. I am
To those who have not seen the
hopefulthat either 'Life is Beau-
film, do not worry.
If
you saw
tiful' or 'The Thin Red Line' will
the commercial or trailer you did
win for Best Picture, but ldon't not.miss anything.
see
it
happening.
.
Those are my predictions for
For the category· of Best
Best Film and Best Screenplay.
Screenplay, 'Shakespeare in
If
anyone would like to place a
· Love' (you can quote me on
wager,givemearing.
Totally Theatre
"For these characters, it's
by
RACHAEL
~OLLARO
not what's being said that's im-
StajfWnter
portant, but what's not being
In the heart of the Southern
said," he said.
Delta, a family feud is heating
Freshman Kerri Ann Lang
faster than a July morning in
stars as Maggie "The Cat"
Mississippi.
Pollitt. Junior Corey Lewis
This weekend, the Marist
plays her husband, Brick Pollitt.
College Council on Theatre
Arts
Rounding out the cast are fresh-
(MCCTA) presents Tennessee
man Katie McQuade as Big
Wtlliams' Pulitzer Prize-winning
Mama, senior J.D. Lewis as Big
drama 'Cat on a Hot Tin R,oof.' . Daddy and freshman Ben Hecht
Performances are March 4, 5,
&
as Gooper.
6 at 8 PM and March 7 at
i
PM
Co-Producer Christopher
All performances will be in the
Yapchanyk is very enthusiastic
Nelly Goletti Theatre.
about the upcoming perfor-
"Cat" takes place ip the
mances.
South of the 1950s, and coricen-
''It
is
an extremely challeng-
trates on a day-in-the-life of the
ing show, but the challenge is
dysfunctional Pollitt family.
the element which
will
make the
"Cat" is directed by Marist · production a huge success. All
Alumnus and past MCCTA
of the hard work the cast put
president David Laffin. He most
into the show will be evident on
recently directed the MCCTA
Opening Night," he said.
production of 'Marvin's Room'
Tickets can be reserved by
in 1997.
·
calling the MCCTA box office
Laffin said that it is what the
at X3 l 33. Tickets are $3 for stu-
characters do not say that tells
dents, and $5 for faculty, staff
the real meaning.
and alumni.






















,.
/,
"
j
{
j
1
l
THE<CIR<CL£
MARCH 4
2
1999
---
.:·
·.
·.
.
---
Music's·

ami1z1ng
.
.
.
'
past,
ambigriOUS
future·
out of the music scene because
·
by
CARLITO
of a c~ippling dual addiction ·to
Staff Rock Star
Ex-Lax and Gummy Wonns:
Af-
Throughout my life, I have
painfully endured the musical
evolution that has swept
-through America. · Although
some bands have graced the
stage that have left their marks ·
in the history books of quality
music, a majority of them have
left me begging the Lord for
mercy.
When I was young, music
was honest and on the cutting
edge of innovation. And the
diversification of quality far ex-
ceeded that of t'oday. The 80s
saw · a plethora of memorable
acts but perhaps the one group
that had the biggest impact on
the music scene was
the New
Kids On The Block (not to be
confused with the 90s power-
house
NKOTBf They took the
pre-adolescent world
by
storm,
·
1eaving.in its wakemillions of
screaming fans. Although
mostly girls were afflicted by
the
New Kid's virus,
I
was a con-
fused youth and entering adult~
hood during their prime helped
me solidify a sexual orientation
that although not conventional,
\Vas still comfortable.
I
could
not resist Jordan's boyish charm
and . DonnieLooohhh · so
naughty." That-sassy cat made
me want tc{climb· on his motor-
cycle and locate the
·
nearest
love shack.
·And
let us· not-for-
, get Danny,
he
was so.:.so ... well
let tisjust say that lhave always
loved monkeys. ·
· Perhaps itis unfair that
I
am
not going to knock
the Spice
Girls. My reason: Ten breasts.
Moving right along, although
female groups paralleling
the
Spice Girls ceased
to
exist in the
80s, many female solo artists
have left. their mark.
Debbie
Gibson topped the charts in
1989 with the smash hit
Why Did
God Invent Me? but dropped
ter ten years and minor cos·metic
· surgery, she has resurfaced un~
der the alias
Brittany Spears
and once again has a number
one hfr with her controversial
cover of the
Nirvana song
Statutory Rape Me.
Remember
Tiffany?· Nobody
coulg figure out why she van-
.ished after delivering the epic/
Think We Should Bone Now, but
the ferociously persistent staff
of
Circle investigators has been
working around the clock
to
find·
an answer to that very que~tion.
After speaking to her high
school Backgammon coach,
they discovered that musical
expression
left_Tiffanys soul in
a state of emptiness and she
sought something a little more
fulfilling.• She decided to try her
luck as a soft porn actress and
can· presently be viewed in_~<? -
NC-17 rated,• 'Breastfesf'at .
Tiffany's.'7
·
If you will pardon my French,
Rock an_d Roll has gone right
. down the shl@ter.in·recent
years.
I
remember when listen-
ing to
Slayer: and praising Sa-
tan was as All~Americim as
apple pie, but tiow it is a whole
new ballgame. Lastyear I wrote
an article'.opposiriKabortion but
· after the peqJ"etua(boinbard-
. ment' of:headHnes
·
•teaforihg
Matilyn Miinson;T
have
:quis-
_'tioned'the rigidity'of
rµf
stan~e
· on
the•.-issue:. Jr'truly is
a
shanie
. thaf Mansori;s father possessed
a sufficfoiii amount
·
of·semen
becaus{ sterility would h·ave
beiter'suhed' American society.
Marilyn.Mii~son has recently
gotten engaged to actress Rose
Mcdowai1and _since the possi-
bility pf that inan produdng off-
spring petrifies me,
I
am offer-
ing a $50,000 rewar~ to anyone
who brings me Marilyn's
testes:;:or does he have ovaries
-now?
'. . .
·.
Ntiwail~y~,'ihe radio waves
>Rap is the musisal genre that
are
contaminated with criminals
Chas seen'the most ;substantial
and
-~~~~pab_e. tough gtiy_s.
deterioration throughout the
Tupac SlzakurandFat
E.
Smalls
years;; Back in the day,rap was
were'b'dt6\thfoi:ru.nately elirrii-
.G~ratedandradiofriendly.·NWA . ;nated_fr9m ihi.hip~hqp.9frc;Ie.s-
:topped the Billboard;Pop.Chart
.
and
r~an_n9tfeU
youN>'-" iriaiiy
with.their harmony inducing· iimes:·niave/criecl:royself "fo
·song,
Please.Give- the:Police'
0
si.~laf'motii9ing·
their
urf4m~ly
~Your UtmostRespect;·but they
d¢~m~;!il-~As~,'f~u.:i»,~~e1
,
-~~,
were ousted· from:the industry .that _1Jl~l;r~m?fk, was.11;s fai:c~s-
when accid~ntally:mistaken-for
-
tic.
a~:
¢~st~o )~ • Cub~n.:
_In
all
vile; tasteless animals.
2
Live
serioi.Isriess,'I give no props to
Crew became a household name · 90s
0
rappef~ ~~tlf
the
foliowing
in kindergartens .everywhere
exceptions:
the Beastie Boys,
with'theirlovablycatchyMeSo
Public.Enemy, NWA
.
and· .
.L:L.
Barney, butthe band broke up
CooiJ}]:>JffDaddy,Idoubtthat
after their manager painted the
you ~~'readi11_g_ this, butif you
album cover with naked women
ate
plea~'¢' exteµd me tlte follow-
instead of the fluffy dinosaur like
ing cpu~~sy ... stop breathing.
the band had specified..
I
lie awake at night wonder-
ing what will become of music
in the future and my ambiguity
ch~rii1;:-my stomach>_
Will
Michael Jackson come to the
· grips
withthe·fact th~t I{~'iti11-
deedah African.:American? Will
Vatiilla}c;_e
acceptjilat h;\s_
a
soft\vhite pof•'who:possefsses
the
same
aniourit of.flavor as
·rr:9ze1Lyogufr( '·
wui''
the
Unab6mbeieverbe°released to
save pre-adbles·c~ni: America
· froin thewrath ·of the_N
'Syn-
chronized Backstreet demons?
- The fuh!re looks
gri'm.
formusic
fans everywhere
\>lit
embrace
this one shred ofhope ... there is
always
the
possibility that
Joey
Lawrence is lurking in the dark-
ness, planning a highly antici-
pated come back.
Student Programming Co:gncU-
Elie
Weisei
a Nobel Peace Prize Winner and Holocaust survivor
will
be coming to
Marist
on Wednesday, March 24, 1999, at 7:30 p.m.
in
the
McCann Center. Following the
lecture
will
be a question and answ~r session. ·
If
you are interested in having a question
that yoµ prepared considered for this session, please
fill
out the fonn below and return it
to
the
College Activities
Office
by Monday,
March 22, 1999.
For more information or
MURPHY'S:
Justin case you
went to
the
semif offfial instead
· tickets, please contact the
Activities Office at (914) 575-3729.
·
Name. _______
-----=------=--·(optional: only provide
if
you would
like
your
name announced
if
your question is chosen.)
Question':...
·
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
... continued from pg. 18
Finally growing impatie_nt
with waiting on stage; and after
r_ealizing that nobody had told
Jimmy
I
was ·waiting for him, I
walked down to the bar to con-
front one ·of my' long time he-
roes. The next half-horir was
quite possibly the most interest-
ing conversation
I
have ever
been witness to .. Jimmy was just
making conversation with three
members of
Cooter between hits
of his preferred substance and
sips of whatever thick black
drink he had in his cup. When
I
walked in the conversation was
about ~the Tom Greene Show,'
which moved to Jimmy's par-
ents. Eventually the conversa-
tion switched over- to Jimmy's
favorite new toy,
a
porta-potty;
that his parents gave him for a
going away present for this tour.
"It's like the greatest thing
ever ... I'mhaving one shipped to
Europe for our tour there,"
Jimmy said as he exhaled
a
thick
cloud of smoke. So a great night
of music and porta-potties at the
end of it all.
Definitely a highlight of my
year.
I'
I
r,
I
I
i
\













MARCH 4, 1999
THE <CIR.CCL£
~A&
·
E~
PAGE19
.M~~~lta-Blocldiuster night with 'The Big Hit'
··~·
""·1;:~
';· .
. . byNIK·BONQPARTIS
•-· /:
·s1affWri1ei ·:_ :-_·
,,
. Newtp video this month is
;-'Tlle Big
Hit,'
an
irreverent, un-
·PC actiori-thriIIer reminiscent of
: 'Pulp Fiction,'. butwith ahiimor- ·
ous flair which.offsets its vio-
lence: ._
..
.
.
Mark Wahlberg, knowllbet.:.
ter as th~jnfamous· "Marky .
Mark/' heads a:varied cast of
. seasoned Hollywopci :veteran_s ..
Wahlberg plays Melvin Smiley,
hitman by day
ancJ
boyfriend by
nigh_t to P~m Schulman (The
post 'Marric.:d:Witli Children'
Christina·Applegate): Director
Kirk Wong lures 'the audience
into his world with a vivid open-
ing action scene depicting
1
Smiley and his fellow hitmen in
action. It says a lotfor a direc~
tor to be able to convey a sense ..
of humor in a scene.where hired
marksmen wage ·a battle with the
mafia, but Wong pulls it off beau-
tifully. After. rescuing three
women from the clutches of the ..
mafia, Smiley's friend Cisco (Lou
Diamond Philips) propositions
them to have sex with them,
Photo from Sony Pictures Online
Paris, Smiley and company plot
and scheme in their high-rise,
ultramodern penthouse suite.
Things soon go wrong when
the four hitmen pull an
unsanctioned kidnapping of·
Keiko Nishi, the daughter of
Japanese business mogul Jiro
Nishi, in order to command a
hefty ransom of $2 million.
What they do not know (and
soon find out) is that the girl
they kidnapped is the god-
daughter of Paris, and worse,
the ransom they demanded of
Nishi cannofbe met because the
businessman recently went
bankrupt on a risky movie ven-
ture. Somehow out of all-this
there is ample time for on-screen
flirting between Keiko Nishi
(China Chow, yeah, that is her
real name) and Smiley, and even
a scene where Lou Diamond
Philips gets puked on.
· spurring
a
dialogue with Cruncli
{Bokeem Woodbine) about
Crlmch's recent obsession ~ith
Directed
by
Kurt Wong, the action-thriller 'The Big Hit' is sure to be a big hit on video.
· This film is filled with so
many little touches and intrica-
cies that it would be impossible
to list them here (besides I do
not want to ruin the movie for
you, go out and rent it!). From
the nerdy video store clerk bent
on harassing Melvin Smiley be-
cause of his failure to return the
lone copy of 'King Kong Lives,'
to the comic-book style battles
in which characters walk out of
exploding cars and buildings
unscathed, 'The
Big Hit'
con-
veys
a
big
sense of fun.
adult movies .. The dialogue is
movie where a sub-reality too
('A Life Less Ordinary'), 'The
Big
Hit'
leaves the audience
laughing and going along with
·the. insanity. Avery Brooks
('StarTrekDS9,' 'American His-
· hilarious and is· well comp le-
strange to be taken at face value
mented·by theaddition of An-
emerges; but unlike _so many
tonio SabatoJr. as Vince.
films that trip over'th~mselves
'The B!g Hit'
is
the sort of . in an attempt at
~~irig
unique
·feaS'tl'C'Vi.iiia···.
6.4''
·new·Oon-Nintendo·64
aci:er that'the· ga1he can' be'
. played with. Carrie Fernandez is
a young girl, 'Yho ·is also one of
the last descendants of her fam-
ily. The Fernandez family was
rumored to have great magical
abilities. These abilities fright-
by
CHRISNAPIERSKI
Staff Writer.
Castlevania is a popular ad-
venture game series that !J.as
appeared,
9n
mariy
_.systems.
'Castlevani( 64' is the four-
teenth· gru:ne in the serie~; the
first to make the jump fron1_2D
. . to 3D, and
fr
cari onlybefourid
Oil
the Nintendo
64.
Thegame
has quite a p~sfand
~
bigiepu-
tatiori to live up to.
_ · _ .
·
·· The
first 'Castlevania' gam(_!s
were on the original Nintendo. -
They had l.mpressive graphics,
awide variety of enemies, and a
· few
tole-playing elements. They
were not your ordinary 2D ac-
tion /platform game.
· One-thing that has practi-
cally remained constant
through
all.
of the games is the
story line. Ev_ery one hundred
years a dark lord comes back to
life and rises to power. This dark
lord is none other than the leg-
endary Dracula. Soon evil and
chaos spread throughout the
lao<l and people become
ened people and so many of
plagued· by horrible' demons.
Carries family were killed. She
. Only one man, .or more specifi-
became an orphan and learned
cally one clan, has trained their
of her true power when one of
entire lives to com.bat this threat.
Dracula's minions tried attack-
· Toey ate the Belmontdan. _
. ;ing her. With magic in hand,
The Belmont's pass on the
thistwelve-year-oldgirldecides
knowledge°ofDraculaand a sa-
it
is her
mission
to stop Dracula
cred whip from generatjon.. to
and she too heads for his castle.
gener.afton. When Dracula does
lbe two characters give the
arise there will be
a
Belmont
·
-· ·
··
·
game some replay value. Both
re_ady t:oadventure to Dracula's
characters have different abili-
castle and pµt him back to sleep
ties and each have unique lev-
for ano~er hundred years..
els that only they can play.
'Castlevania
64'
sticks to this
However,
I
found that the game
storyline: . The riewest Belmont
was much easier with Carrie. Her
descendant
is
named
main attack is an energy ball that
Reihnhardt Schneider. ·He µmy
shoots from her hand and seeks
not have the Belmont name, but
out the enemies. It is practically
heisstillthenextofkin.·Hehas
an automatic hit every tJme.
spent most of his life training in
Poor Reihnhardt uses a whip
the mountains to fight Dracula.
and has to get close to hit en-
After noticing the rec~nt dark-
b
1
.
ernies.
ness that has een enve opmg
Positives:Twoplayablechar-
the land, he retrieves the
acters; Good music, graphics,
family;s heirloom and heads for
and sound that can be compa-
Dracula's castle.
rable to Zelda; Multiple endings.
Konami, maker of the game,
Negatives: Some views make
has also included a second char-
it difficult to see what's happen-
ing;Not compatible with rumble
or 4 Meg pak; No multiplayer
option.
Overall: 'Castlevania 64' takes
· the classic 'Castlevania' plot
adds a few twists and throws it
into 3d. I do not think it is the
best 'Castlevania' out there, but
it is still a fine addition to the
slowly growing number of N64
games that have been released.
Visit
www.castleva11ia64.com
to learn even more about this
ever-popular game.
tory
X')
makes a big screen ap-
pearance as Paris, overseeing
the exploits of his hitmen Smiley,
Cisco, Vince and Cruneh. The
main storyline develops as
BWck-Crowes
light up
Beacon Theatre stage
by
STEPHEN.MERCIER
Staff Writer
During
_the Black Crowes'
show on February 27 at the Bea-
con Theatre, lead singer Chris
Robinson said · that Saturday
night is the time to be very bad.
And that is what they were .on
Saturday, bad. Now,
I
am not
talking about the negative bad.
I
am speaking about the 'good'
bad, the Michael Jackson bad.
Throughout the 90s,
the
Black Crowes have been a very
interesting story. When break-
ing out in 1990 with the multi-
platinum 'Shake Your Money
Maker,' they were -an oddity.
While glam rock/hair bands were
ruling MTV,
the Black Crowes,
like
Guns N' Roses were a rock
band that was more in the fash-
ion of
the Rolling Stones and
less like
Warrant or Poison.
With their southern, blues
and soul influenced rock & roll
they became very successful
even though they did not fit the
norm of the early 90s music
scene. After another big album,
their popularity waned.
With
'Amorica,' they began to get ig-
nored by MTV and many radio
stations. Even though I feel it
is one of the better albums· of
the 90s, its' lack of commercial
songs caused it to not.blow up
like the others.
Ever since, they have had
two other albums, including
their new release, the excellent,
straight rock & roll album, 'By
Your Side.'
The Crowes have
not been selling platinum al-
bums anymore, but they do have
a very loyal group offans. This
was proven when they sold out
all three recent shows at the
Beacon Theater in· New York
City. Despite lack of huge
record sales, they have also
been making some of the most
consistent rock music of the 90s
and the band displayed this fact
during the two-hour show.
Throughout the concert, the
group played a very balanced
set. While including their hits
and new material, they also per-
formed a good number of songs
from all their albums except
1996s 'Three Snakes And One
Charm.' Although they did not
play any songs from that album,
the band always changes their
set list for every concert. So,
the Black Crowes could play
many songs from a certain al-
bum, and then another night
they will not perform anything
from that album.
They started the set with the
hi_t,
Remedy. It was an excellent
choice for the first song. The
tune's bluesy rock and catchy
melodies got the audience in-
volved. Robinson also brought
excitement with his extraordi-
nary stage presence. He was
dressed in a tight, sequined
green shirt, tight blue pants, and
performed with bare feet. When
the limber Robinson was not
screeching his tortured south
... please see
CR OWES,
pg. 21


















'
......
~.;,,-•
...
MARCH 4, 1999
Crisis
soar to
new
heig·his-
by
RON JONES
&
IVO .
DiPALMA
Special to the Circle
Karyn Crisis, complete with
dreadlocks and angel wi~gs,
scintillated The Chance this
past weekend.
NYC's heaviest female-
fronted band
Crisis
headlined
The Chance Saturday night,
with opening acts including
Albany's
Clay People
and
lo-
cals
Unbalanced, Stitch,
and
Drop/ace.
It was about 9:30
when we.arrived at the Chance
only to find out that
tM
Clay
People
were already half way
through their set. A let down?
Yes, especially since they were
one of the bands we most
wanted to see (along with
Cri-
sis
of course).· However we•did
make it in with enough time to
witness five amazing songs by
the Albany locals. A mixture of
hard edged, _almost industrial
sound, along with
_a
very ani-
mate. and angered· lead singer
made a perfect match to get the
crowd ready for the bands to
come:
. Since we had already missed
Drop/ace
only three bands were
left. The next band
Stitch
should have given up the mu-
sic business back in the 80s. Let
me just say unless you live in
Nordic Europe you should not
be creating or listening to_ this
type of music. Definitely ncifa
good point in the concert. How-
ever'it did provide me with' an
·
·
·
·
··
·
·· ·
·
opportunity
io
talk to members
As Karyn Crisis' wings att~st,
Cnsis and the C/ayPeop/eput oh a heavenly show at The Chance.
from
the Clay People
and from ·, they are ..
They left me with an-
great sho~. _ )'heir b;rderline · for- the band. and the crowd.
Crisis
as well. It seems. every-
other opportunity to get to know
death metal. soun.d • combined . Ovdrnll
I
would have to say that
onewas interested in my digital
the Clay People
better ~d eam 'with the female vocalsied those
Crisis
and
the. Clay People
are
camera. Anyway back to the · a fr:ee T-shirt in the process. · who were left in the crowdto: go . definitely two bands worth hav-
music.
Once the noise was. over with . into frenzy. Even with. two n.ew
in.g·,at The Chance again. The
The next band
Unbalanced, .
the~ewa_s ~:fift~en-~~nute wa~t
i;nembers tQ the band_theywere . only let downjs that security
another one of those played out
until
Cns1~.
Let !Ile JU~t- sa~ it . able to rock .Toe ·Chance Hke · . once again managed to overlook .
hardcore (Bark Core) bands that
w~~
worth ~e wait.
Cns1sw1th · .
nothing had eyer changed.· the drunken p~ople fighting, ·
sing, more like make incoherent
their lead smger-Karyn (a g<>d-
·
Each song·
fed the next ,with
and instead harassed me· be-
noises abol!t:how depressed . dess to many there) put on a
Karyn acting as ihe ri?gleader
cause I wanted totake a picture.
CROWES: NYC getsatasteofSouthern Rock
... continued from pg .. 19
em blues vocals, he was strut-
ting, grooving, and dancing im-
pressively.
·
After
Remedy,
the band then
, played one of their newer and
better tunes,
Go Faster.
With
this one, they kept the pace and
kept on rocking. Robinson:con-
tinued to excel with his ~inging
and drummer Steve Gorman and
pianist Eddie Harsch gave ex-
cellent performances.
Throughout the concert,
Gorman did not do anything
showy or extraordinary, but just
kept a very consistent beat go-
ing, while Harscl).'s distinctive
playing always remained i.nter-:-
esting. The guitars arid bass
were also solid, but every once
in awhile, the guitars a_nd espe-
cially the bass could not :be
· heard clearly.
. During the middle of the set,
tlie Crowes
brought ·a good
change_ofpace with a couple of
slower songs,
With
Se~ing
Things,
the band's fondness for
blues really shined, The inter-
for
Qov't Mule,
making an ap~
action between Robinson and
pearance, the group took the
his backup soul singers with the
song to another_level. Every-
guitars and organ created a
one · sounded great · while
powerful blues song,.
Harsch, Haynes,and the guitar-
After that, the group then
ists kept on throwing inventive
,kept the mood calm
\VithTJwm:
solo~ at each other.
. .
In
My ·Pride.
In the song, t~e
After the set, the rock band
i ;
two guitari_sts,- Rich R9binson .then:played,a very -satisfying •·
and A:udley Freed, d1d- not
three-song -encore> They per-
sound distorted at all and were
formed excelle"nt versions of
able to· show their talents re:.
their two biggest songs,
She
spectively. The song remained
Talks To Angels
and.
Otis
mellow fora good part, then got
Reddi~g 's . Hard·. To Handle.
a
little harder when the guitar Then they ended the night with
players began to jam. Like many
the psychedelic, guitar driver
other songs -of the riight,
the
Virtue And Vice;
a song off their
Black Crowes
would extend
new.record. Thefiercene~sand -
. their songs
:
with .some guitar
feeling th!l,t the s9ng produs;ed · .
and keyboard jamming
arid
so- . mad~ it
~
•good way to finish
. · loing. But, unlikePhishand
the. ..
s.uch .a in\lsically passiorfate
Allman Brothers,
they would
concert.
.The Black CrowJs.
just _do this for· abouf two _or . . performed a satisfying. set tli
_
at ••
three minute~ and·then end'the·:{gaye the audience hits, but al_so
tune .
.
·
.
.
·.
. . : .• offered a lot of rarer songs:that
Shake. Your Money_ Maker
longtime fans would appreciate. .·
. was anoth~r .highlight of t}:Ie
They also presented a good
m.iJt
night. •\Vi_th
.
,Warren Haynes,
of slow and fiist rock
&.
roll
. formerly of
th_e AUman Broth-
songs and performed them with
·
.
ers Band
and now the guitarist
talent and emotion;
Why recor(ls are still
be~(~lf<tlian
CD's
.
~.
~
-
'
-
_.,.
.-
,,
...
~-.
_-''.-'.::-
;
/:
~
---·
.
:::
··~
. .
_
..
~
by
PATRICKWHI'ITLE
A
&£Editor
CD's suck.
They are expensive, they
have no personality, and once
they get a scratch on them they
are pretty_ much worthless.
Records on the other hand have
all the personality in the world.
Plus, they can
be
thrown around
as Frisbees or left sitting in your.
freezer for weeks and still sound
as good as new. You can buy a
vintage used record at any
classy record store for often .
less than five dollars. I am not
talking about
Flock of Seagulls
greatest hits, either. At Rhino
Records across the· street from
Marist you can score yourself a
copy of
U2
:S .'The Joshua Tree'
or 'The Kids
Are
All Right' by
ever,
it
will
make you
think:
''Hey, . platei and oversized coasters as
maybe you can play them in
the
Who
for a mere $3.99,
that was when my dog bit rily , w~ir:;rryouare really lucky, you
yout: car, butis thatnot what
"But Patrick, you handsome
leg and I juinped headlong into
will be·abl,~ to-find some wide-:: •· C8$Sett~ were made for?
~:
,
·
devil," you say, ''.just how is it my turntable. Good ol' Spot."
hole.45's that
yoti •
can· spi11"
·• Besides·· these·intingible
that a record, an inanimate piece
And we all. know ·
the Beatles'
around
on
your index finger, use
qualities, alot of greatrtmsic can ·
of vinyl, possesses a personal-
sound so much better on yinyl
as. candleholders, -and maybe
only be found on vinyl. If you
ity all its' own?"
.
anyway.
:ev~n listen to! · ·
·· ·
·
are into digging through bins
After reminding you that I
· "But Patrick, you ubiquitous,
'.'But
'fyk
A
&
E
Editor," you
looking for albums by whatever
prefer to
be
referred to as
'Mr.
erninentacademician,"yousay,
say, ?aren't records behind in
cheesy out-of-press band it is,
_A& E Editor;• I explain: A CD "where am I supposed to find a
thetimesr' ·
that you listen to, good luck find-
that skips or is. scratched is
working record player?"
{·Qfcpµfse they are. And we · ing it on CD. Nothing bright-
pretty much in the same boat as
That is too easy. Go .to any · SQ<>llld probably lookto_keepjt · e11s up my weekends more than
a kayaker trying to kayakhis ·• cheap-stuff store (you know
t!Ja(way, be:c~use_ •that is
why ·
shifting ·through ·the tons
~f vi- .
way up the Hudson River-with
what! am talking about they are - . tli_ey: are .. s<>, cheap. · .BesiMs~ · nyl -at Big Boy· Retord.s in
a spaghetti fork. In other words,
basically just.souped-up garage · point. blank: records just plain. Newburgh. ..
.
.
·
it is done for. Scratches and
sales thrown into a buildingfor sound better._ Music does not
·••Patrick, yoii are so smart,
imperfections give records a
the sake of pennanence}; and
~ound right without the sound
plus you're
a
snappy dresser
sound all their own. When a
you
will
find not just a ~ord of !he needle dropping into the _arid you've.got awesome side-
record skips, it reminds you of player, but somebody's entire
grooves. CD's are .too pro-
burns, too," you say, "how can
exactly how. that scratch got collection. of
Journey
and
For-
duced and electronic to really , I learn to
be
more ·like you?"
there in the first place. For ex-
eigner.
So not only wiJI you
sound authentic. They may
be
·
I am not sure about that, but
ample, if your
_Beatles'
record
have a record player, but you
compact, but does that not just you can start by buying a
. skips on
Strawberry Fiel.ds For-
will have some excellent dinner
make _them easier to lose? And
record player.















-March 4
7
1999
• _ . : Mari st Me_n 's Basketball Boxsco!e
·_
-'~•.
~;li!~L
· T)<enney
Larragan
.
.
· H_attori
· Cielebak
Hastings
Sinith
SKennedy
Vale
-
':·,-1M~ST(55)'
\: _Jg
{ft
•.rb.
. .
min ffi-a>
m:-a
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a
pf
tp
·rn ~rCo-o
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13
'8 :- ...
·. :14 °1~2
<'o-o ·. o-4
o
i'."2 · .. -•
. 29 :6-10 3-4, 3-i3
lo
is
38 2-8 0-0 1-3 7 1 5
33 2-7- 0-10-2 42 4
23 4-,8 . 0-0 2-4 0 1 _ 9
5
0-0 0.:.2 0-0 0 0 O·
8
1~4
O.:.O
0-2
O
2- _2
18 2-3 1-2 0-4
4
3 6
14 2-4
0-0 0-1
'I 2 4
TOTALS
20024-57 4-9 6-3518 16 55
Percentage~:
FG-.421,
Fr-.444.
3-PointGoals:
.
3-16, ;~88(Mccurdy 0-1, Larragan 1-6, Hatton 0-2,
Cielebakl-5,
S
Kennedy 1-1, Vale
0-~):
Osinski
Cantamessa
Deters ·
Freeny
Faison
Knapp
Fields
Archbold
Stewart
Taylor
TOTALS
SIENA(56)
fg
ft
rb
min m-a
ni-a
o~t a pf tp •
26 1-9 0-0
1-5
1 '3 2
20 0-~ 0-0 2-5 0 3 0
25 1-5 2-2 1-4 1 ·2 4
24 3-8 - 1-2 0-2 4 2
8
27 7-13 3-5 4-10 1 2 19
20 4-12 0-0 1-4 2 1 12
26 1-3 1.:.2 4-7
3
1 3
18 1-4 2-2
0-5
0 1 4
11 2-3 0-0 0-0 1 0 4
3
0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0
20020-609-1313-421315 56
Percentages:
FG-;333, FT~.692.
3-Poiiit Goals:
·,.-~•
....
7-:21, .333 (Osinski 0-2; C:antamessa 0-2, Freehy 1-,2,
Faison
2-4,
Knapp 4:,t1). ·-
. . Tff£,:Clf{(CL£ .
-Sg.ort.s
PAGE21
Spji$p ..
== ...... -·
.combine
to
llesecondin theMAAC
. by
THOMAS RYAN
Sports Editor
It,
would not be· much of a
stretch to say that Marist Col-
lege is enjoying one of its finest
athletic years to date.
The men's and women's swim-
ming teams captured their re-
spective MAAC titles, the
women's cross-country team
placed first at the MAAC cham-
pionships while the men placed
second.
.
Men's tennis also did exceed-
ingly well winning the MAAC's
and earning a trip to the NCAA
tournament this spring. .
Other teams doing well were
both the women's tennis and
indoor track and field teams.
Both squads earned third place
finishes:
The Red Foxes sports pro-
grams are. currently n,mning
second in the MAAC's Com-
missioner Cup Standings.
Teams earn points based on
where in the MAAC they finish
the season, meaning a higher
finish equals more points.
Marist currently trails the
Fairfield Stags by one point,
79.5 to 78.5.
What makes this even more
impressive for Marist is that
they do not have either a men's
or women's golf team and earn
zero points for each. Even with
last place finishes in both sports,
Marist would be in front.
Fairfield is the only school · in
the MAAC ~hich has had all
sports represented in both the
fall and winter seasons.
With both basketball records
not yet included in the Commis-
sioner Cup standings, and the
traditionally strong Marist base-
ball and softball programs still
awaiting the opening of their
seasons, Marist may have a
chance to overtake the Stags by
the end of the year.
Anention Freshmen
applv
to become·a
summer Orientation leader
Dates: June 5, 6,
1,
8,
10, 11, 12, 13
APPlitati~ns are
availabl~
in the Student
Affairs Office lRO 3881 or
see
vour mentor
The deadline to applV is
Tuesdav, March 23rd.




















































































































































































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Marist goalie Peter
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.-
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nation.
.
,•·;
·
byKAARENUMMEIII·

Staff Writer
· :
In
1-996-97 the teani won the
,
Even
.
though the
:
1998-1999
SuperEastToummneht Champi-
.
.
.
·
version oft.he Marist:Red Foxes
··
onship and in.J997:-9~ won the
-
'
only. went'
12'-JS overa11, it was
regular sea~oi{SuperEast Con~
.
the senior class thatis graduat-
·
,
ference title .
.
·
They, wifftruly be
·
ing
·that
represents what
it
·.
missed next seasonas the
'
Foxes· .
means to play Red Fox Hockey.
.
look tq bount:e back aftera sub-
The
·
Red Foxes lost their final
par season
.
under Bill Kamp.
:

home game of the year 6Ato
Between the five senior for".'
Stonybrook Qniv~r~i~y. ·_but the
.
wards: they COip.bined for more
seniors Werit'out
in·style.
. ·
'
than an
·
astounding 230 goals
Three of the
.
seven· seniors
·
and 270 assists.· They were the
.
scox:~4
:
gpals i~c;:luding_ BiU anchors for a powerfulattack
·
Persson
:
Drew Bowden and Carl
.
that saw the Red Foxes put up
·
Libby:
\
Braegan Plambeck
the.
,
tremendous number of goals in
.
·
teams leading scorer no.tched a
.
their careers.
·
·
-
goal as weH.
·
"
.
.
. ·
.
P}.s
for Dan Sullivan, he was
The
Best
Teamislivinguptoits
loftynameaftet~
w~
·
.
·
point victory over Clam Bar, 33-
Jobs wo~
·
by.I
6;
41-25 over the
24. Rambone
·
defeated
.
the· Bricklayers .
.
The New AgeOut-
FaDunkers by eight, 33-25.
laws crushed the Golden Gun-
·
Now there are only two.
Slightly.Stupid gave the Empire· . slingers, 69-53,
·
The Untouch-
Only two teams remained un-
it's first lost of the year by
.
ables conquered Whadup 38-
byKYLEWOOD
, StaffWriter
in
their
'
thfrd season
in
the' the cornerstone for:the defen-·
SuperEast
:
Conference, Marist
sive unit and will sorely be
·
finished a disappointing 4th out
.
missed. Although only ac-
·
of
5
teanis;·{Wagner waif sus-
counting for 14 •goals and 22
pended
.
earlierin
:
the_year).: The
assists, it was the Marist
Foxes ;fought
,
hard
in
the· Tour-
goaltenders
·
who
,would
agree
defeated in the Monday night
trouncing them 3 7-21. The
30 ...
·
division after the third week of Teabone All Stars beat the Dirty
the season. The anticipated big
.
Bir<¼, 32-30
..
.
,
.
game of the week
.
was between
;
-:
Now there
are
only Jour,
·
. .
;.
The Best Team and the Clowns:
.
.
.
Foudeairi's
t
einain undefeated
Both teams were undefeated
in the Wednesday night divi-
'
coming into the gam~
.
However,
·
sion affor
,
three
.
weeks.
:2Pac"
after a 62-25 victory, the Best .
Fore✓~r"'cfushed
the Leo Lushes.
Team remained pet:fect
ru:19-
im-
.by 28
PQ,!fi~,
48
;
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Pure
Platerz ·
proved their record to 3~0

.-
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The
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e
·
team from Monday night that
process
,
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does not have a loss; as they
victory with
a
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·
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.
. Renaissance remained perfect
And One notched the
.
ir sec
·
-
thus
.
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·
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be
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down ih Newburgh, hilt wound
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.
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·
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we
are used
·
CarlLibby(F);BeanPowers(F},
to afMarist;

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·
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·
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.-
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things_
.:
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.
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part
of'the
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Foxes!J~95-96 Metropolitan
·
goals and
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·
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ee
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.
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ai
one
,
point.
·
.
in liri!ited lltjmites of play scor~
·
Unfortunately;
.
Fairfield coach
ing six
'
poin,ts, grabbing four
re-
Dfan~1'1olan's f:roop~ seemed t9
bo~hds and handing out four

llave a
.
n
'
answer every time

assists.
.
·
,.
·
. .
Maristlooked to make a run.
:
.
·
The
'
following Thtif$day; Feb.
·
The "MAI)Trif~ta" {Marie,
18, the Red Foxe,s
losJ
57-49 at
·
An\oinette
and
Dies~d9r yo~
.
Iona .
.
·
Vallery, eighth in the
scholars) a~ounted. for _38 of
·
MAAG
in scoring (15
.
7pg) led
· Marist's 57 points against
the w.ay for Marist with 17.
Fairfield. .
.
·
·
·
.
.
.
points.
.
On February 12th the Lady
Fusd added 14 points to go
Red Foxes
·
traveled -to Rider
.
with four rebounds ..
playing in one ofthe season's
·
·
Marist struggled the entire
mostexciting games.
game from the field shooting a
·
Maristhadtheballwith20sec-
poultry 37.5% overall. Iona
onds left in regulation but- the
·
faired no better connecting on
play failed with Marist turning
only 36% of their shots.
the ball over. That gave Rider
Gaels
forward
Karen
the ball back with three seconds
Culbertson led all scorers with
left sealing the win for the Lady
20 points.
r
:
\












March-4,'1999
ff
Ca!}lpuS
Report.··.· .... ·: .
· ,_
:
.
· ·
:
·
..
byThomasRyan
What's next?'·• .
ere Blue Jays
ifi
a different coun-
man who turns the team around.
· Reggie Milie_r ~hooting threes
try.
Now
the
Clemens would is.
The man has a championship
for
the
,
Knicks? Jerry Rice
reopened by-the
,y
arik~es · and
ring for every finger on his.
catching _passes for- the Cow-
Georg~ Steinbrenner, always
shooting hand, yet people still
boys? Dean Smith coaching the
looking for-a chance'to.stick it
want (o say.his off-the coort,
What's on Tap?
Baseball-3/S·@·UMBC 3
p.in.
.
3/6
@
UMBC
12 p.m.
3/7@
Drexel 12 p.m.
PAGE23
Softball-
.3/5-3/6
@
Hampton University Tournament
·
·
lOa.m. -·
Duke Blue Devils?
to the"Red Sox or cross-own
ri-
and sometimes_ · on the court,· , •
Men's Lacrosse . 3/6
vs. LaSelle College at Conneticut
Noneoftheseseemasunlikely
val.Mets.
~tics wil! disrup~ a team. J:Ie
.
.
3
p.m.
as the trade that went down last
Lloyd and Bush aside, many
did not disrupt either the Pis-
·
month sending Roger Clemens
Yankee fans regret losing Wells
tons or the Bulls, and although·
to the l"'.l"ew York Yankees. The
who they had adopted as one. the Lakers
are
younger and more
Woman's ~acrosse - 3/13
_@
Holy Cross 4 p.m.
ex~Red Sox pitcher was traded
of their own.· The lefty had en-
immature than those two teams,
to the Yankees for New .York
deared himself to the fans after
they won't be disrupted either.
darling David Wells, relief ayearofbickeringwiththefront
Besides, Dennis is not.as wild
pitcher Graeme Lloyd and sec-· officeandoffthefieldincidents. · as he once was. After all, he's
ond baseman Homer Bush. Is
married now.
nothing sacred anymore?
If you have_ watched any
Yankees-Red Sox is arguably
But, with th_e cur-
sports highlights shows you
the biggest rivalry in sports,.
rent Yankee. ros-
probably have the word
with Clemens probably being
fer.,· cl_u_· bho_se un_ ity
"bubble"etchedintoyourbrain.
the most recognized figure of
That's because it
is
getting··
therivalry·overthelasttwenty.
may
not be ·that
nearthetimeofeveryone'sfa-
years. Yankee fans that spent.
imnortant.
vorite gambling event, the
years and· years .. booing
r
NCAA Basketball Tournament.
Clemens after he beaned one of ·
Teams are on the bubble, they
their own in the ribs with a 95
They will probably welcome
graduated from the bubble
mph fastball
now
will
watch as . Clemens with open arms, but
(good), or they fell off the bubble
he takes the mound for their
they will alsomissWells .. Los-
(bad)~
team.
ing th~ popular Bush and Lloyd,
If you are looking to avoid the
It is going to be even tougher
as well as Tim Raines earlier in
dreaded word, steer clear of all
on the Boston·fans, however.
the winter.willnot help matters
highlights of Oklahoma St.,
The city.of Boston had already
in
the clubhouse. But with the
Wake Forest, and Rutgers.
gone through the Mo V~ughn
current Yankee roster,· club-
These teams make even the
saga, which. ended, l!P with
house unity may not be that im:-
most original of sports broad-
Vaughn fleeing to the West portant.
casters-utter the "b" word.
Coast to play for the Anaheim
Speaking of chemistry; how
Having said all that, there is
Angels. Now they have to deal
can sq many people still think not a better three weeks in any
with their best pitcher in the last
DennisRodman will hurt. more . - spa~ than in college basketball.
-·· hundred years orso wearing the
then help the Los Angeles Lak-
From the upsets in the first two
pinstripes of tlie hated-Yankees. : ers.
·
The Lakers are a·very
ta1.:
ro4nds to the· dream come true
It's not·like Clemens went . · ented team that struggled ,to ·a
match ups in the middle rounds
straight from the Sox to the Yan-
6-6 start to open the season and
to the nail biting pressure of the·
kees like Babe Ruth did eighty
badly needed a kick in the pants.
final four, the NCAA Touma-
. years ago, but that inay
make
it They got two; Head coach Del
ment has it all.
worse. RedSoxfanshadalready · Harris wasfiredandreplacedby
Th~ Super Bowl may by.the
resign~d themselves to the fact
ex-Laker player KurtRambis and
greatest one day event, and
that the ''Rocket" was no-longer
GM Jeny West finally signed
baseball is America's pastime;
pitching for them, but he was in
Rodman. -As inuch ~s the L.A.
but nothing beats the atmo-
Toronto;pitching for the medio..:
fans love R~bis, it will be Rod-
sphere of college basketball.
Women's
:
.track
fourth. __
at>·MAAC's
))laces
by-TOMHENRY
Staff Writer
complishments.
Coach Kelly said that Perrine
ran two dominating races in
The Marist_women's track and
which sh~ won by a
lot in both.
field team placed third with 86 . "Tliis is just consistent with
points at the indoor MAAC
what she has beeri doing all sea-
chainpionships.
.
son," said Kelly.
. .
The MAAC meet, hosted by
Senior Dominique Pino con-
Manhattan College, mark:ed not' . tributed to the team with -her
only the end of a successful jumping and sprinting talents
season for the Foxes but was
and placed second
in
the long
anindicationofhowfartheteam jump while beating her own
has come
.
.
school record. Pino came back
Coach Phil Kelly said he could
to the track to place second in
remember'back six or seven
the 55m dash in 7.49 seconds.
years ago when the team only
Alsosheplacedsixthinthe200m
scored one point.
with a time of 28.19 seconds,
''This is the best finish we've closely behind teammate Kate
ever had in either the Northeast Pieper who placed fourth with
Conference or the MAAC," said
27.5 seconds.
Kelly.
·
.
Also capturing two third place
Leading the lady Red Foxes to
finishes was junior Erin Minor
such heights was sophomore
who ran with Perrine in the·sk
Heather Perrine who swept up
and 3k double. Sophomore
first place finishes in both dis-
Kristen Paquette crossed the
taqce events. Perrine not only
line just tenths of a second be-
won both the 5k and 3k but also
hind Minor to take fourth iri the
set a conference record in the
5k. This 1-3-4 finish set the stan-
Sk. At the banquet following
dard and showed MAAC com-
she was named Most Outstand-
petitors that the Lady Foxes
ing Female Athlete for her ac-
were unstoppable in distance
races ..
In the Distance Medley Relay
the team of Karen Decina,
Leanne Bolingbroke, Debby
Flanigan, and Megan Bruno
combined to finish third with a
time of 13:19.8. Decina also
placed fourthin the mile fol-
lowed by sophomore
Jill
Stetler
in fifth. Decina said ninning the
mile and then coming back for
the 120001 leg of the DMR was
· tough but you forget all that
when you are part of the relay.
"I definitely was tired, but run-
ning on a relay when everyone
is counting on you reaUy makes
you push yourself," said
Decina.
Senior high-jumper Nadine
Simon cleared 4' 10 1/2" which
· landed her a fourth place finish
in the early stages of the track
meet. The last race of the day
brought Marist another third
place finish. The4x400m team
of Amy_ Young, Beth Cimino,
Stephanie Thombs and Peiper
sprinted to clinch some final
points in the championship
meet
Tough Trivia
Which current
NBA
head coach ·was drafted
by
anNFLteam?
Last week's question - Which players have led the NCAA in
both scoring and rebounding in a single season?
Answer - Xavier McDanlel (Witchita St.), Hank Gathers (LMU)
and Kurt Thomas (TCU).
Talented · freshman
has ·women excited
about--their future
by
ALF.REDDEFAITA,JR
Staff Writer
When you take a glance at the
Women's Basketball team
record and see an overall record
of 4-23 and 3-15 in the MAAC,
there is not much positive you
can say.
. However, sometimes stats,
wins, and loses on paper can be
misleading. It really does not
show you the full character of a
certain team or player.
· Yes the team won only four
games the whole season but the
team was very yourig and weJit
through a lot of growing pains
during the· season. The team's
roster was filled with youth and
inexperienced players that will
only help the program iii the
fu-
ture. Freshman three~point spe-
cialist Marie Fusci knows first
hand what a learning experience
it was to play this season.
Even though she was a fresh-
man, her play on the court was
that of a second or third year
player. '
''There were games I made
some mental mistakes but than
there were games that I would
play very well. The game took
time to adjusted it is much faster
and physical than the high
school game," said Fusci.
Even though she had to ad-
just to the speed of the game,
and the physical aspect of bas-
ketball at the next level coming
out of high school, it would not
be all that bad. She was still able
to hurt her opponents with her
long range shooting like she did
back at high school on Long
Island. Before leaving high
school she would be named to
the AU-Long Island Team and
USA Honorable Mention as a
member of the Island Trees.
She was able to find her shot
most of the games as a member
of the Lady Foxes. There were
times she was a key asset on
the offensive side of the ball.
Fusci would finish the season
with seventy-one three point-- .
ers. She was named at the end
of the year as the MAAC Three
Point Shooter of the Year. Her
play was also recognized
throughout the league and that
is way she was also named to
the MAAC Rookie Team. She·
has gotten all these individual
awards but thinks that the team
will get better in the years to
come.
Marie Fusci sees a bright
_fu-
ture for the team because a lot
of the team is back next year with
experiences under their belts.
"We have improved as a team
when the season went on even
though the record does not
show. Our main problem was
we could not put together 40
minutes of basketball on the
court. The team would come out
the first halfleading most of the
game and than the second half
we would fall apart. This is
something we must work on not
to happen next year," said Fusci.
As for Marie Fusci just be-
cause the seasons over does
not mean basketball is over un-
til next fall. In the next couple of
weeks the team will start their
workout and conditioning pro-
grams to prepare for next year's
season. A season in which
Mari st fans hope Fusci 's vision
comes true and the Lady Foxes
can become the talk of the town.
-
l























































































































































·
·
Quote o -the
Week

Stat:
:
~f
the"Week
-M~e
-
Fu;ct~0_er~gedl8.
·.;.
.
THE
CIRCLE
Jhree~poinfors
'
per.gaine
·:
,.
·

·
·
,
·
·
·
·
·
·
·· ·
.
.
~
.
.
-
~,
.
-
.
.
.
1
'1
·c~'t
bl~me anyorie.
It
was
.
a
p.~ilrt~~~
.
rig
,
way
to.
._
Jose/;
:
'-"Pave_Magizrity,me~~
:
bizsketba[l•head coac,h
.
'.
'.
:

.
}hifseasdn;
:
g~ode~cnigh
·:
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·
0:
·
·
.
.
_
·
.
·
.
·.
-'
'
:
t
:
·
.
.
··
.
·
.
·
.
·
..
-
·
·
PAGE24
.
.
,
.
.
.
'
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:
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th_e_N_C_A_
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._
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.
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.
- - - - - -
·
·
_
byJiWFDAJINCKE
.
·
helpthbFdxes)~Iiostll{~tjurt_o> ofilie'season:
_
::
M~gai"(ty
'
char~ •
.
.
Sta}fWriter
,
..
,
·
'up
:
onej,oint
'.
Shc:>ri
_
:
·
.,
:
'.:
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:/
:
:_
actei#ed
·
t~e
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1qss
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:
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;
:Said
,
fie
'l
thougl)f-_
·
w
·
reo~hing:~
,
:
:
·
·

·
.•
.
.
.
.
.
.
',
The
-
Marist
nieti1;cbasketball
..
he(Cielebak) wasgimg
'
to,catch
: ·.
·
.
.
_,<\'day
ciirl~etitwa~ a different_
:
.
:
...
,
t~amdici noi:\Vantits.season to
.
the
baH
.
a.Qd then step bacl(apd
.
.-st~cy
_
for.theFoxes, he>wev~~~ as.
·
·.
- ·
·
.
~Iid
;
this
.
way
,•
i
,j.
::.
/
'
<-<
.
.
--
shoof:a
;
three/'
:
Mar~~th~a,~L·
th~Y-~anl~()lit:?~
~
-
other si
.
~e
.
.
·:
·EarliermtheyeartheE.edFoxes

-
coachDaVeJ.1agarifytold tlie
.
ofa'coine~ack:Matistdefeated
.
:
W~re':c>n
i
fire
-:
off."to
'.
ilieir-besf
Albariy
i-'.
fimes·Union;aftertlie-. lon~;
-
71_:69-;
,
iitth¢'
·
.Qpe_niilg
.
.
Divisicni'1
start
i~ schocllhlstory:
game. ''C-ielel:>ak
_
was going·fulfr '. · r9µrid. o(the ¥AAC- to_umey
A°Metro Atla11tic
Athleti<.\C<>n~
.
biast; heV1asn't going to bt(able
,<
last: _Saturday
,
·
·


:
: :-
::
,
_
.
.
.
.
ference
(MAAC)'
champion~hip
,
..
to
·
~o
·
thafaHf probably
_
sh011ld
·
:,
-
Larrag~n ga".e Maris~ the wixj
· seemed . to
·
be
:a·
Very
,-
realistic
·
·.
have, tried to gef
a
three ht1:t
1
.
~f
n~ling a
,
tl]ree-.pointer with
.
goat:
.
.
.
'
'/
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
can't blame
,
ariy_qhe
~
Ir·\vas
.a·
..
5.3
sec~mi:1~ reQiairiing .
.
He led
·
.
·
.
:
Anda MAAC title
still
seemed
.•
' ·
heartbreakin
·
g Y'ay
J
o lose."
.
.
.
.
the team with·
·
l Tp9ints
;
while
to
.
·
be
..
a realistic goaf last Sun~
.
·
·
.
Had Nj:arist been able to tie
the ·
Hijttorr and
-qeleJJak
adqed
·
14
day;tintil a Tomas:Z Cielebakslain
.
game on
·
the final
·
poss¢ssion
;'
jt• · · and ·.12 -respecfryely. Jon~' s
dunkendecl
:
th~
,
F<>xes
?:
season,
.
.
wol,lld have
_
marke
.
d ~impr9b~
.
.
.
Ka~hifHameed led all scorers
.
is
~ey fell
'
t\VO
points short of
.
able
:'
<:6~e.back,
::
·
.
Jhe. Fox~s
-
with 23_poiJ1tS:
.
:
.
·
·.
:
,
. .
.
.
.

.
: ~en
,
atioiiallyt(?leyisedMAAC
·
traileclJiy 15 points wid~just ..
...
i
J~st like in the Siena game;
title game and a possible auto~
over nine minutes to play in th
.
e ,
·
Marist d_ug
·
itself a_ hole.; Siena
,
matic
~
birth in the NCAA tour-
-
'
.
game,
: ·
.-
:
.
,
...
. :
.
:
<
_
.
;
0

led
.
42.:.37-atthehalf:
'
The score
·
nam~nt.
·
..
,
·
.
.
.
.
.
.
Marist
;
sparked
'
oy the
.
play o( vias trimmed to 67-61 with 2:36
_-
:
~aristlospo Siena (24-5) last
freshman Sean Kennedy for the
·
. remaining;'
·
when , Iona's Phil·
.
Sunday; 56s55;

the.semifinals
second consecutive game, went· Grant was whi
_
stled for a techni-
oftbe MAAG tou
·
mim_ient at
the
<>n
·
a 1~9.iun
and
cut
the
lead
to
·
cal foul after elbowing Kennedy
Marine Midland Arena in Buf-
one withjusti.mder fourininutes
· ·
in the.face.
·
;
.
.
falo
i
~
A win :would have.· ad.:
.
to play.
·
Siena went back up by
.
.

Larragan hit both free
~o\Vs,
vanced Mari st into the finals to
·.
five with tinder two minutes
.
re-
and then hit cine of
his
five three
take
on
St;
Peter's; who knocked
maining,
.
before a
·
Larrag~n : pointers on the ensuing posses-
..
off top-seeded. Niagara.
·
bucket cut it to three and set up
sioµ td: bring .Marist w-ithin one,
_
The qmtest came down to the
the games final possession; . .
.
67 ~66, with2:20 to play .
.
final eight seconds
.
.
-
Marist
·
'fo1DKen11ey led Marist'with:
Hameetl
.
answered with
.:r
came out'e>fa timeoufand
.
15 points and 13 rebounds.
buckettoregain
_
t_helea~fqrthe
inbounded
.
the bait.to
.
senior Marcus faisoh led Siena with · Gaels before Larragan's heroics
guard
.
Bobby Joe Hatton, who
,
19 points.
.
.
.
.
gaveMarist the victory.
.

·
.
played with
.
the
.
flu a~d
.
Mads(h
.
a~ only six offensive.
·
.
;:
After
;
the
.
game, Magarity
.
stJ:uggled
:
to score four points.
rebounds
,-
and wentjust 3
-
16
praised Larragan for ~is perfor-
·
:
Hatton wa.nted•to get the ball
··
from three-pointrarige.
·
·

mance in. the
.
.
win over the cie-
. ·
to fellow guard Ho
Lamigan;
but
.
.
Afte(m~game, Kennedy fol~
:
.
fei:ldin_g coriforence champions.
·
~aita.gan
.
\\'as
unable
.to
:
break-
·
the Poughkeepsie Joumarthat,
. ·
"If
.
Bo ~arrag@ ·is nor an all-
open
/
Hattori then inexplicably
.
despite
.
~e loss, the Foxes gave·
~
conference player, 1 don
(t
know
P!Ck~d up hi~ dribbl~.
;-
As two
..
:
.
everythi11g
_
they
:
had,
· ·
.· :
·
who is," he told WK.IP
.
radio
Si
_
ena def~riders swarmed
.l;lim,
.
·
·
·
.
·
t'Even
;
:w~en
.
we were down
r ·
inimediately:aftet;the victory
/
· .·
·
hewasfoi-ced
to
dish the ball to
was
·
so confident;". he said .
.
·
'
·
'I
'
M.arist finished the year
:
with
·.
Cielebak\vith only two seconds
made sut~ to leave everything
·
· a 16 ... 12 record, after going 11.:17
·
remaining
:
·
,
··
.
.
.
on the
:
court and
.
play with
. -
last season and 6-:27
·
the year
..
Cielebak, who was inside the
;
heart.'
!
.
·
~
~-
.
. _
:
,
. ·..
.
.
.
./
·
·.
before: The loss to Siena
marked
.
three-point arch;ciiught the
,
Marist did_ hold Siena, th
_
e, tlie
·
final g
·
ame for
.
seniors
pass and sl~med it
:
home .to
third.,high~st- scoring team
_
in
Larragan ·and Hatton; whose
beafthe final-buzier, But
·-
th~
}
cou~try
-.
af87
-
eoints
.
p
·
et
..
spotswilllik~lybefill¢
_
nex~year
:
cfoieb~rs donfctid
nothingto
game;
tc>'its lowesfpoint t~tal
by K~nnedy and
_
~ckS
_
mith.
.
.
.
.
..
.
<
.
,
..
,
:_
,..
·
.. '
. .
.
.
.
..
.
·.
.
M[omen
.
.
·
.
S1i()ops
,
sutie1r
.
:v,~ry-
eatly
;
e~it
;
ft11l)
r
MAAC~s
·
·
.
.
.
.
.
'
.
.
- _ .
'
.
-
,
.
..
·

.
.
:
·
byR\i~
.
::;
rll~eii;tr
a'!t-
st0
pped. pr~t::~ta~l~
'.
;eakness
for the
Oritof
of
·
Va
_
llery' s
·
niisfoi:-:-
··.
Red
·
Foxe{ was the inabili.ty
_
to
turies, Maristwas
stiltwithout
play a c:cmsist~_nt lmfpost game
.
·
guard Coitnie Ciaccio due to a
agai11~t Niagara
.a
.
. .
..
,
.
.
·
..
concussion;
·
·
' ...
.
.
.
Aie.X:
~tep~eils pt!yed solidly
.
All of'iliisMd
·
thefoani went
·
inVallery's
:
abserice,s~oring
JO
.
-'.
inio
'
Bhff~ci andfaced a sharp~ ·
·
points and
.
grabbing
-
six
re-
·
.
shooting
'
Niagara
duK·
,
'
boun'ds;°but
:a
lack
or'
touches
.
V.allery
~aid!he.J>urpJeEagles
,
linuted
the
postplayers
:
forthe
could not miss
:
·.
.
. .

Redf,~x~.
·
.
, .
_
·
. :
:

.:
''They hit almost every shot," :

Manst went mto the touma-
.
Vallery
.
said.
-
"They· couldn't
ment having Iostthreeroad con~
Tile
MaristWomen's basket-
miss
"
and
our
stiots wouldn't
tests within a week
~
-
_
Marist's
·
ball team ended its season with
fall.''
:
:
·
:
·
.
.
.
.rookie
sensatfons; Antoinette
a crushing cfofeatat the hands
In· the first half Niagara cam~· Saitta, Marie Fu sci and Diesa
of the number seven seed
.
out wi~
'
~oth guns firin'g,jum~
.
Seidel
turned
)n
stellar perfor-
·
·
Niagara
in
µie
MAAC
Touma- .
.
·
fogto a 35-21 halftime lead.
·
mc:inc~ indicatit1g a bright
fu-
·
m
_
enf
.
on Thti_rsday, February
.
-
Nfag~ra continued
'.
to sco.rch : turefortheLadyR~dFoxes.
25th.
·
the nylon while applying a siif-
''They've contributed a great
Marist was not able to play
.
focating full court press on
.
runo1:1nt
_
all season lorig," Lamb
their best before the tournament
point guard Beth Shackel
said. ''We expected goo<;{ things
ev~n started.
:
On Wednesday,
through<>ut the second half.
·
from them when we brought
·
while practicing in Syracuse,
Marist had a hard time· dealing
them in."
.
the worst that could have. oc-
.
with th~ Purple Eagle press es-
At Fairfield, Seidel scored
i
5
curred did. Forward Sabrina
pedally with the absence of an-
Vallery tore the anterior cruci-
other true point like Ciaccio to ·
ate
Jigament (ACL) in her left
·
relieve some of the
·
defensive
...
please see WOMEN,
pg.
22
.


52.14.1
52.14.2
52.14.3
52.14.4
52.14.5
52.14.6
52.14.7
52.14.8
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52.14.11
52.14.12
52.14.13
52.14.14
52.14.15
52.14.16
52.14.17
52.14.18
52.14.19
52.14.20
52.14.21
52.14.22
52.14.23
52.14.24