The Circle, April 29, 1999.xml
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 52 No. 18 - April 29, 1999
content
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VOLUME #52 ISSUE# 1s
http://www~academic.marist.edu/circle
APRfL
·
29,<199~i
·
W
h 1
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nam.ed
ne\\reditor
by
CHRIS GROGAN
News Editor-
;
:-
The
Circle
wiH be undernew
·
man:agementnextyear.
. Patrick Whtttle,
_
the current A
:·_ &E
editor, will be
taking
over as
·editor-i11~chief
'
beginning in
..
Sep~niber. According to hirri, he
,
_ ·is looking to continuing the qua!-
,
.
ity
the paper has achieved re-
..
.
·
c~ntly.
"The Circle
has come a long
way
·
this
:
year,"
·
.
he .
·
said.
'.'The
.
c\qµaiity'
:
_
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editiµgJ~s
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.
,
.
.
really
im
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.
pi;oved
'
and
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.
physically
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PtiOtoC~rtcsyoiTirTIMassiC
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MarisfSingers;
·
seateci
upp~~
.
righ(watch
i
as)he Pope en\ers ~t. Peter's Square duri~g
th~
cal:"lgnization ceremony in Italy.
.
it's just a
lot more at~
.
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.
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Haven,
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attended Bishop
Stang
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-
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ei,pexi~nc~
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the
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"Itwasa privHegeto
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there
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play~~
.
on
the
v~sity soc-
cer
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merriories
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ofhis hometown.
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ersand sev.eral·othef
-
Maris(of-"
'.-
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clents.. p~pd:JorJhe
.
J~llJ~l!}l!}g
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~l?l~~$ll!i
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l~iijt~,t~&;~
.
,,
-
lemis
'.
ihatNe~B~dftird abso-
lutely reeks of.fish 24_1fours a_
.
.
day/'
.-
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-.
\Vhittle,
,
whb.
is
.
c:iiriently a
ne\Vs cort~sponderit
.
for~
his
·
·
hometo~
weekly
newspaper,
'
has
'
Md
much
e~perierice
as'
a
-
writer
for
:
The
-
Circle;
He
has
tion
·
-.
s~nt the
:
weeJ{
_
befoie
~
tl,ie
0-
KenDtxon; pres1dentofManst
canoni~tiririinltillyruidpartjci-
Singers, said she loved eyery
.
pateci ir{t>the~ evbnts
,
iifftljated
.
minute of the
trip
and was
with
the
canoniiation
:
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Lau~ Russi11,dir~tor
,
o.f
the
.
··
.
k~'rLDi><~n
;
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t)j~~r~oserski,
:
'
Matt Yiriceguerra
.
and Craig
.
·
worked
~
as
~
~
poller,
~taff'
writer
.
-
Murr~y sing'Jo~ the Pop~ as he arrives at St. Peter's Square.
_
for
. ·. . ..
.
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Did
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YES
89
11ris
u an
IDISCimtific
surwy
tawr
from
JOO
Marin
stlM/enu.
P h o t o ~
of
Trrn Massie
Rogers
on
cover
of Esquire
as
"American Hero" of 1998.
_
.
.
... please
see
WHITfLE,
pg.
3
Mr. 1!
,
qgers
-
to
·
make-
.
..
·
..
··.
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•
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MaristJ:iis
'neighborbOOO'
INSI][)E
by.JEFJ!DAHNCKE
Staff Writ~r
·
Fred
~
Rogers
·
,
_
the host of the
P9puJ~childr~n'spi;ogramMr.
Rogers'
:
Neighborhood. Gri!du-
ation ceremonies are scheduled
Plans for the
.
53rd
·
annual
forMay22atlla.m.onthe~-
Marist CoIIege commencement pus green;
have been finali~,
.
-
<l;Dd
·
they
Tim Massie, chiefcoliege re-
promise to pro<iu~ a
·
bea,utiful
Iations· officer, said that Rogers
day in_ the neighborhoqcL
< _
.
is a true role model and is very
·
It
has been confirmed that this
.
·
year's graduation speaker
will
be
... please see ROGERS,
pg.
4
_
10DAY:
.
·
·
_Mostly cloudy
hi:61°
.
·
Io:34°
Community ....
~
... .-........ 2
Inner Circle ...............
S1
Features ........... .;. ....... 5
A&E ....................... 9
Opinion ...................... 7
Sports .......... : ............. 12
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TheM~tisiB~ii~
'.:,
The Marist
Barid
~ill be hav--
ing theirSpringErisembl~in the
Nelly Goletti TJ!eater on May
3
at
3
p.m. The following groups
will
be
perfonning:
Concert Band
Brass Ensemble
Flute Ensemble
Handbell Choir
String Ensemble
Some of the selected pieces will
be:
Zanipa
Army of the Nile
Lincoln~hire Posy
English Folk Song Suite
·
.
.
:·
An
overt~rn~d~ portablf s~-
.
tation enclosure and broken
folding
.
table\ve~e
-
left in 'the
wake of
.
Riverfest on April 16.
Numerous studentswere ob-
served vomiting
.
·
as they
stumbled through the rain
•
to
· .
.
their residences; but no major
injuries were reported.
·
Two off-c~~pus females filed
assault charges against one
.
an~
.
other after slapping each other
·
011Fri.,April 16at7:25p.m. The
two were supposedly arguin
'
g
..
over the possession of a male
\student.
An
intruder in West Cedar's
"S'.'
.
.
block was reported by a
screaming female resident on
.
Sat, April
16
at 8:37 p.m
i
Offic-
:
Gender Equality
ers raced to the scene, keyed
The Gender Equality Club will
into the apartment, and found
be having its annual Take Back the intruder, who was' also a
..
the Night March on Sun;, May
.
West Cedar resident and
·
an
ex
~
.
·
2 g
M
h
· th
R
boyfriend
·
of the
·
female resi-
.
.
·
·
at p.m. eet
1
em
m
e o-
dent. The intruder climbed in
·
tunda wearing a white shirt to
1
show your supp<m
:
J~ir
,
putting
·
through a wi~~ow
,
anq_p~~ll
.
e?,
.
an end
to
sexuaLcViolence. Be
·
.
~is exTg~lf~en.~
.
w~~-~ aste
.
d
~'?
.
.
_
.
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'.
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•
.
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·
·
·
-
-
theri
:tra
in
-
or-
.
shinef'Dfiec(a$f
'
-'
leave
'?
Town of
"
Poughkeepsie
·-
questions to the)Jerider
.
Equal-
.
police
o(ficers
_were'called
'
aiid
.
;
-
,
·
ityClul:>atX715{ore~mailthem
·
the intruder was ariested
·
an:d
:"
.
1
·
·
·
·
chatged with criminahr~spass;.
at
HZWA. _
,
.,.·;.
.
.
.
1 2
.
·
h
•
-
1
mg.
·
At 1 : 0p.m.t e same
·
-
English
Dep~en{
.
.
On May 7 and
9,
at 2 p;ni. and
7p.m;
respectively,
·
·· Dr.
_
DeAngelis' Capping Class
will
present "English Under Cover,"
a
~tudent
production o
_
f dra-
matic and
poetic work on
Friday.
A full-length
·
original
-
play,
"Upon In_trusion," will be per-
formed
p11 Sunday. T
_
he perfor-
manceswill beheld
at
the Nelly
G~letti Theater a
·
t Manst Col-
lege;
·
Psychology Club
Be a buddy for a day! The Psy-
chology Club sponsored 1ts an-
nuitl
_
One to One Day onWed.,
April 28. They
,
were on the
DysonGreen :from
9
a.m.
to
2
p.m
.
If
there are any questions,
please contact Jason at
X 4694.
evening, Peter Amato, associ~
ate dean of student affairs,
promptly banned the arguineri_:
tative student from campus.
Security officers were
.
called
about excessiv
·
e noise in a
Gartland Common's
"F'
block
apartment on Sat., April
i
7at
2:
·
10 a.m. Upon entering, secu.:.
.
.
.
rity found
.
two unauthorized
:
guests and, two residents stand~
·.
'
ing ina wrecked
apartment;
the
·
;-
?
-
·
apartmerit
'
was
:
toniplete
,
wH,1
/
: ,
·
.
empty
.
beer
·
cans,
·ari
empty
fire
extinguisherwith
:
<;qmplimeQtacy
.
•
··•
·
foam, and overturned furniture
··'
'
.
in the dining rooin; h~ptoom
;
.
_
·.
and kitchen. O~#
.
'
of
~f,t~~F
:
-
dents gave
•
the
·
se'curio/ yftbal
lambasting,
but
the second
resi.;
dent smoothed the situation out;
taking responsibility for
the
visi-
tors, and they were allowed
t9
stay.
·
Weekend
·
Weather
-
FRIDAY:
mostly cloudy
hi:
63°
lo:
38
°
SATURDAY:
pa,tly cloudy
hf: 72°
lo:
44
°
SUNDAY:
sunny
hi: 73°
lo:44
°
.
Source: http://w
_w
w.weather.com (The Weather Channel)
.
·
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,
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:
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r}i:1{)
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PAGE 2
·
Whit are your plans
·.for.the·
summer?
.
<-
·
~
.
· :
·-
.
.
·
.
.
" iiopefully,
-
(o get
·
ani.nternship and
·
play-baseball.
J'
.
"Work."
" To catch up
on
sleep
and hopefully
-
.·
make money. ".
'
~
~
~
:
Geiie
Antico
.
.
,
..
s~phQ111~r.~
..
·
~
.
-
·,
. :
~isten Nocerino
'.,
!•r
,
~ophoniore
'.
·;
;:
;
;
Stephartie
Koutsates
.
:_,
..
~LSO.
PA.l~'(~E,r!ICE
-
TO:
Woodbi11yCommon
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·
·
Outlets, Atlantic City,
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,
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.
'•
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i
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sophomore
'
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...
.
.
1.
"'-•·
·
·
•··•
.
TH£ .CIR.CL£.
News··__
PAGE3
Stlldertts
lllake
predictions
-fot
upcoming millenium
Marist
hopes .
for best when
2000
arrives
by
DOUGLAS DEISS
Staff Writer
The year 2000 is going to bring
many ch~ges according to sev-
eral Maiist College Students.
Some changes deal just with
. us; here at Marist, while other
changes deal with predi~tions
to come for the world. ·
Freshman Ryan Finger said he
hopes for solutions to prol}lems
·ihat have begun this millenium.
"I
hope to see th.it we will all
work togetht:r to make progress
· in eradicating the problems that
we have made this century," he .
said.
According to Finger, he would
like to-see another Renaissance.
'.'I
would like to see my grand
~nd to dis.ease ..
children experienc~ a Renais-
"I think that they are finally
sance, that would be cool."
going to find a cure for AIDS
Concerning the world , many
.
and cancer,'' he said.
students take issue.with some
Junior Mark Smith goes out
big problems that t:vecyone is . on a limb stating, "The United
forced to think about: war.and· State~ will once again rise to
disease.
greatness as
Y2K
sends the
·
Iri
response
to
war,
·
sophomore
third world and rogue nations
Scott Garretsaid he has high
into the dark ages."
hopes for peace in the future.
· Many students think the
"Many countries are going to
world
9f.~m>rts
wmundergo big
join NATO in an attempt for -changes·, including sophomore
world peace," he said.
•>. •
Michael Ferraro.:
FellowsophomoreKyle\Yood·
"The three players who will
said he wants to live to see an
carry the NBA into the next cen- .
WIIlTTLE:
Editor looks
. forwardto
next
yeaf' s-paper
.
-
}'My
goal is to some-
.-
;,
.
A&E;-AssistantA&EEditor.:
UJay
be the Opinion-·
ariclbisc:urrentpositionas,A&
·Ed_itor ~o_ r a maior·
-Belli.tor.
' '· ·
J'
':I
.:-!Whittle is involved in other
newspaper such as
·
:activitiesoncampusotherthan
The
Boston Globe
ili~newspaper.He_isatnem.~er
or
New
York
. of the. political scien,ce club}tnd :_
· vice-president of the Society
of
-Professional J9urnalists club:
According to him, he came to
Maristfor several reasons.:•-
. "I
like the small size, the.fact
'that it's· hands on and
.the
tech~ • '
·nology in the classroom,'~ he
said.
. .
.
>
Reading and writing are two
:~of Whittle's favorite pastimes.
He said he always can find the
time to read.
"Kurt Vonnegut and George
Onvell
are
two of my favorite au-
thors,'' he said.
. Whittle, a junior journalism
major, Said his career aspirations
involve advocacy journalism.
"My goal is to someday be the
opinion editor for a major news-
paper such as
The
Boston Globe
or
New York Times,"
he said ..
Amanda Bradley, current edi-
Times..''
..
.
Patrick Whittle
tor-in-chief, said the newspaper
will be in good hands.
·
'!Patrick was a qualified can-
didate," she said. "He will do a
fine job next year."
·
Editor-in-chief is not the only
position being filled next year
ori
the Circle
staff.
·
The new opinion editor will be
Mike Bagnato, while Jeremy
Smith will take over as photo
editor. Nik Bonopartis will be
taking over for Whittle as A &
Eeditor.
News, sports, managing and
features editors will continue in
the same capacity next year.
tucy are, Tim Duncan, Vince
Carter and Jason Kidd," he said.
In regards to our rights, Jer-
emy Dorari suggests some
drugs will become legal to pur-
chase.
"We are going to see the le-
galization of marijuana," he said.
Fellow commuter Michael
Craig said he hopes he wiil be
able to travel to school faster,"
he said.
"The Speed limit is going to
be increased," he said.
Focusing on Marist, junior
Heather Suydam said she pre-
dicted problems for upcoming
classes.
"Graduating classes are going
to have the tough problem of
dealing with being the Class of
00, or the Class ofO 1,'' she said.
Suydam also said that students
are going to be thinking they
are
losers because of the
00.
Fellow junior Becky Valk does
rtot make a prediction at all. Ac-
cording to her, claims that the
world will end in eight months
are untrue.
"Nostradamus states that July
99
marks the end of the world,
so nothing is going to happen
in the year
WOO,"
she said.
I
(
,
• \ \
\ I \
\ '
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\
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.
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'
~ouriesy\,i-'i,i;~DeGmo
Guitarist Kare~ Merker, Jen MirandJ,
'.
CryMaJJ.agei,'Li~'feUe
WeLirz and Jara Sullivan sing at the VaticarfCity reside
_
~ce
·
.
• •
,
. •
,
:
·
·
-
·
.
C:'.
.
·
·-:
:.-
.
•
.••
,
;
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,,
·
,
Photocourte,sy~fTimM,assic-
The members
~f
-
Sir~nsand Time
Check
pose
witfl
_
Arnba~sadoi-
,
coi-ri~e
'
¢:
;
s9g
'
gs,)~~
:
~lf
Ambassador to the Holy Gee
_
. Ambassador Boggs
·
wi
_
ll
receive t~e
,
Fre~d~(Jl~)v1ed~! th!s
..
fall ·and is the previous recipient of the Eleanor Rooseyelt Val-Kill
.
rni:idaL
:_
Baclc
row.
_
:
fat1e
·.
·
·
McQuade, Chris Yapchanik, Mike Seaman, Chris Nelson, Ryan Kessler, Jen B~rhmah; Joel
Cordenner
Front
row:
·
Kristina Newell, Jen Miranda;
·
Ambassador B_oggs,
.
Gma M~ntoro,
'
of'Ambassador Boggs.
.
- .
.
Matt Vinceguerra,
Jill
Critchly.
_
"·
..
SIN GERS
_
;
P9p~
_.,
ariion
·
g
·
·
·
audie11ce
" /
:
recei~~d wellinR.6tnei·
>
, ..
... continuedfro~z pg.' I
"W~
:
r~p~eJ~nt~d the
\
:~tire
United States wli
_
en
we
per-
&lad she had the opportunity to.
.
formed out two so11gs and re-
''We te;ft);nf e1i1,ie
--
.
:
entire United States
wbe_n
we.ptJrfqrm,f!d
011.r
:
tlf-!p
:
so~gs.
·
'.
and
·
.
·received
·
a
standin,.g,
.
go.
.
"It was an amazing experience
·
for ·everyone; especially being
so close to the Pope," she said.
During the week they were in
Rome, the Singers performed to
both public and private audi
-
·
erkes'.
A
performance in St.
Peter;s Square asweU
~
a world-
wide Marisf.g°athering. were
.
,
ru.n9ngµ\~
,
lµg~iigHW
:
~f,tlJ,e
,
tiip.
'.
The .. day
·
1iefore
.
thf
_
can9niza-
. . .
.
___
-
-_-
.
-
•
·.
'
('
,.)
-
: •
.
.
,.
·
iion, there was
.
a· worldwide
Marist event with.
:
delegations
from each Marist affili;ited area
.
·
Russell said the Singers were
ceiv~d a standing ovation," she
said:
·
·
·
-
·
·
.
.
,
Dixon said the event was one
or'the most memorable experi-·
ences of the week.
"It was my favorite because'it
was such a great honor
to
rep-
resent the United States in such
a
noteworthy
·
event/
' ..
she saiq.
T,heSingers also.r~te~v~d the
•
h.onor
'
of
p~rt'ormfof\vith
.
the
.
.
-
Sistine Chapel choir.in Latin on
_
thediy,or
th~
carto~ii~tion
..
,
According to
.
Russell,
,
the in-
vitation was an unex
_
pected w«;I-
come.
ROGERS:
,
Speaker
be
·
st
·
represents ideals of Marist
.
... continued from pg.
'1
-:.··:
happyjvith the sel~ti<?~
:
.
·
. -
.
"Many
·
of the
stu~
.
"The
man you see
.
on TV ts
•
,
.
, .
.
.
.
<
-
.
the
.
man you
•.
see in
_
~ea!
life,"
dents
.
·
grew 11,p with· ..
Massie ~ai?,, 'We areyery lucky
him~'': .
.
togeth1m.
Arrangements to get Rogers
began last September, and plans
will be officially finalized next
week.
·
It is anO:ther in a long list of
honors and awards that have
been bestQwed upon the70-year
old Rogers, who has hosted his
well-known television program
for the past
33
years.
·
·
In
1994 he received the Eleanor
RooseveltVal-Kill medal.
He
also won a 1997 Emmy_ award for
outstanding performer in a
children's series, and has
received honorary degrees from
several colleges and universi-
.
.
ties including Yale, UCONN and
Boston University.
In addition, _Rogers has been
an ordained Presbyterian min:..
istersince 1962.
Massie said all that Rogers
has done makes him a perfect
speaker for Marist commence-
ment
"He leads a
life
of higher val-
ues," Massie said. "He best
represents the ideals of the
·
Mari st College."
THnMassle
chief relations officer
The ideals Massie spok~ of
are excellence in education,
cledication
·
to th~ principli of
.
service and pursuit of higher
human values. According
to ·
Massie, Rogers reaches all three
of these.
.
.
.
.
The man known for wearing
cardigans and white snea~ers,
while at the same tiine watching
his trolley roH offtow,ards the
"Land of Make Believe,"
-
also
provides a speaker whom many
,
of this year's graduates spent
much of their youth with:
·
.
Mr.
Rogers' Neighborhood
is
.
car-
ried
by about30()
stations
through-
out
the
countty, seen
in
seven mil-
lion homes each weekday.
Massie said when Rogers was
first introduced as a choice, the
student support was strong.
"Everybody reacted well," he
said.
"Many
of the students
grew up with him."
··
ovation."
. -
-.
i.aura
eusse11
_
_
_
.
director
·
....
fy1
'
~rlsf$ingers
"We found.out the night·be-
forethatthey wanted us to{'ier-
forin with
them./'
she
·
said. ''We
Malvinceguerr'a; Jon Pi~ani, Chris_'vapchanik, Chri~ Nelson
and Kevin Boyer performing atthe Ambassador's residence.
·
\~~~{up
·
late -practicing and
learned the song in La
_
tin so
that
: -
~~i~Hul_d
perfe>r,ni
it thef onow.'..
jng;day,'.;
:
:-,.-
';
.
-;
_,;_ ;"-'
.
.
.
'f.h~ _qay
_
q(..t!)
_
e
:
~~npi;i;1.~~
-
o
.
n
the Singers performed
;
i!}fr()nt
.
of St. Peter's Square and were
only20feet away from the Pope,
·
Russell said.
·
.
.
.
R,ob Ainodeo
i
Marist Singer,
said thaf he could not believe
·
he
was
that close to
the
Pope
!and
·
was able
,
to:si~g in front of
.
f:
hith
);
.:
r~:
;:.i:}
:
;,;
·~
·
·
:
~?
--
2
_
i
--
~-~n,
,
f
i
!J
-
:J
.
''Being
ir1the presence
'
pfthe
Pop'e'
··
-:,was·
''
·extr
_
etneJy
'magnifie~nt;';sru~
_
-~odio
:· :
.
zn,
:"'GUARDIAN
SELF·STQRAGE
.
.
··
-
-
7
-
·
THE
:
:
OIRCLE
.
•
...
APRIL
29,1999
.
·Feat
:
U·res
PAGES
.
.
.
·
Earth
day
raises
awareness
by
CHRISIYBARR
StaffWriter
·
held informational tables arid
gave away free T-shirts, food
and posters in front of the Ro-
tunda:
.
.
.
S~~age, pollution a~d land
·
Carrie Swail, vice-president of
preservation w_ere
'
all topics of SEGA, s&i,d·the
-
informational
·
.
this year's Earth Day celebra-
tables
.
included animal welfare
.
tioh .
.
·
and vegetarianism along with
Earth Day, which fii:st began
local environmental groups.
in
the spring ofl970, was ob-
·
·
''The Scenic Hudson and
served on April
21 this year.
Hudson Cleanwater environ-
,
The lVI~st College chapter of mental groups both had infor-
Studerits Encournging Global · mational tables," she said.
Awarene~s (SEGA) coordinated
.
Paui Jendnejczyk, president of
the festivities.
·
·
SEGA, said the group was also
. During activ
,
ify hour, SEGA
.
selling re~sable mugs filled with
fresh squeezed juice for
$
l.
·
·
"The idea is for students to
take
.
these m
_
ugs to the
·
cafes and
Cabaret instead of using the·
styrofoam
'
cups they
,
offer," he
said.
·
·
·
·
·
· ·
According to the Wilderness
Society's ·web page, Senator
Gaylord Nelson first began
Earth Day back in 1970.
"The. objective
.
was to get a
nationwide demonstration of
concern for the environment,"
he said. "Earth Day achieved
what l had hoped for."
SEGA members agree that the
day went well, but do have ideas
on improving next year's cel-
ebration.
·
Kristin Harvey, freshman
.
SEGA member, said there were
-~
plenty of. things people could
take
part
in, but
~h~
hopes next
year will
.
draw a larger crowd.
"We could use more publicity
to draw in more people," she
said.
Swailsaid she also would like
to see more of a turnout.
·
"I thought it went well be-
cause it was a very nice day, but
I would have liked to see more
people there," she said.
Jendrzejczyk feels there needs
to be more tables addressing
issues of concern on campus.
"We need to
try
to find solu-
tions for.problems on campus,
such as recycling," he said.
According to Jendrzejczyk,
this year there was more sup-
port from local organizations,
but the event would have gone
over better if it were held on the
weekend
.
"We would have had a better
turnout if it was the whole day,
not just activity hour
,
" he said.
·
:
Black
week successful
·
for
en(ertaining and educating
.
.
•
.
·
.:.
.
.
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'
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.
.
.
.
byRICHARDSHUTKIN
Staff Writer
evening wear
.
Music was pro-
people did
_
for the show.
·
vided by DJ H-Bomb of ":fytusic .
·
.
''The models really showed the
on the M,ove."
.
comrriitmerit
'.'
they put in," she
iizelle Andrews and Tisha
•
said
,
.
.
;
Mu'rray were the
.
coordinators
. ,
Sheineta Lake, one of the mod-
·
.
. The
recognition
.
of different
of the show. They havl'been ·e){fQ_f the'sht>w,'said she was a
cultures is
·
--
very
important.to
~
a
·
'
pl~finifig
·
the
·whole shhw sfoce
. -
little nervous at the beginning
lot
;
ofstudents on campus
:
··
·
·
December.
·
·
·
·
but got more comfortable to-
'
,
='3lack week
.
\\;asabig h(?lp,in
Until
the
night of the show,'
.
wards the erid of the show.
accqmp}ishir,ig
~~
.
.
bY
l>eing a
they.spenttheirtimewritinglet-
,:.
'Twas nervous atfir
_
stbut the
huge
·
success.
.
.
.
. , •.
.
.
.
-
,
·
.
.
.
.
ters; call
i
ng people, following up
mor~ Iwent,out;,I became
.
more,
It lasted from April 18 to 24
on calls, visiting stores and tak-
relruced," she said
.
...
..
.
·
a
·
·
nd
·
th
·
e Black Shident Union
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
•·
orgal)ized affofthe eye11~.
:
Edward Antoine, president of
BSU
;
saidthe whole year turried
·
.
o
.
ut wellforBsu,: along with
'
the
week
:
'
'
·
'
'
•
"Weiad
~
good year,'' he s~d .
.
''We couldn't have done it with-
• ·
'out
the
:
6oatd
:
~·
·
"
,
_.
· ··
. : :,'
Mbhairtrtied Bilal from
7
"The
'
Rea1
·
world;
':
salFiancisco"
()Jl
:
.
MTV
cfuri~
·
to
spe~If
11boup:~m-
:
·
"
pus diversity
,c,ri'tlie
19th.
:,:
'.
'
· ',
A
p1ay \vas' performed on the ·
'
·=
20th caJled
'
''Woinyri
·
wi~h
..
Wings.''_It
was'
a show about
ing free adverttsmg m order to
Lake also said she thought the
·
:
punhe show 'together .
.
·
. .
·
show was a good experience.
Andrews said she thought the
.
"The fashion show was
·
an
.r;nost important
thing
i;il>out
_
the
overall success because of the
.
show was all the hard
;
\vork amount of people there and the
issues that women face includ-
:
ing°abortiori
:
'
It
,va
~
aiso_abt:i~t -
,
''
moti~atirig self-co~fi(Jen9e
·"
in
.
';
'
women.
='-"
.
·
.
·
'
.
>
:
_ ,
;:
;:,
:
':
·
oidhe 21st
/
'Nyabirigi" was
.
held which t'nearis
·
"Night of Ex-
ex~itement shown by the
crowd," she said.
Murray said she would like to
thank everyone for coming out
to see the show
:
.
·
"I would
-
like to thank Bob
Lynch
·
and R~ch
'
because they
.
\Vere so patient and they worked
good with us," she said.
"I
would also like to thank DJ H-
Bomb. "
.
On the 24th the Cultural Din-
ner Dance was held.
·
James
Rusch,jimior, was choseri to be
·
·BsU kirig and Jihan Herndon,
freshm
;
m, was chosen to
.
be
BSUqueen.
Antoine said he thinks it's im-
portant- to h
·
ave Black Week.
"It is important to represent
our heritage on this campus and
to make people aware that we
are on campus," he said.
"It
is
also
'
imp'onhnt:
to
'
do
=
things
so
that
African
'Americans can feel
comfortable
'
ori this campus."
. Antoine said that everyone is
welcome to join BSU.
"BSU is
·
a
family
,
not just a
club
,
" he said
. "
We want all
races
.
to join."
. ._
pression.'
'
·
This involves a tal-
.
.
ent
'
show consistjng ofinusic,
poetry
.
and comedy performed
by students
:.". :
:
:
·•
The "D~fCome
_
dyJam" was
held on the 22nd and
~
featured
two comedians named J.B.
Smooth arid Rob Stapleton.
,
About 100 people came to the
show.
.
:·
Th't:in
:
·
:
stdp
,
:Jn
and see us at,
MJLLMAN'S T-SHIRT
The BSU Fashion Show was
held on the 23rd. Clothing from
The Gap; D
'
ress Barn, Dress
Barn Woman, World Wide
Clothing, American Eagle, JT's
House of Style, Finishline,
Mandee, The Unit Men's and
Women's Clothing, and Royal
Tuxedo were modeled. C.C. New
York Hair Design and Ttofia's
Jewelers were also sponsors.
The show consisted of casual,
sports, club, business and
FACTORY
12 Fowler ave., Poughkeepsie
(Take Route
9
.
South to 44-55 East
12
traffic lights 1B/ock down on left:)
.
454-2255 FAX 454-5771
lfidaliiU
Serving the Marist Community since 1978
.
I
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•
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'
,
APRIL 29, 1999
'
'
•
.
'
I
•
'
'
http://www.tourscan.com
Looking for somewhere to go this summer vacati~n? Try visiting http://ww.tourscati.com.
Through this site you can
.
order a 52~page vacation catalog, listing the best priced
.
..
va~ation in virtually every hotel in the Caribbean, Bahamas, and Bennuda
{
arranged four
,
·
·
different ways.
.
.
. . . .
.
.
.
. .
.
.
.
.
Each season this
.
site computerizes virtually every hotel andairfare packages for these
same places to find the best values.
·
• -
~
·
..
.
.
You can choose your vacation by island, price, hotel rating, and availability of golf, dive
shops, casinos, and house~eeping units.
·
.
.
~
.
·
.
.
You can also decide if you want all inclusive drinks and meals, a beach front location,
children's programs
;
a kitchen, or a two bedroom unit.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
.
·
So
if
you
think
you'll need a break from your smnmerjob, go to http://www.tourscan.com. ·
If
you have any s~ggestionsfor
.
this column, or would like to write a column, contact Katrina at
extension 2429 or email HZAL Features Editor Katrina Fuchsenberger wrote this Searching the
Sites column.
.
.
.
.
Horoscopes
·
•
.
~ :
You may have
some moral issues
with what is happen-
ing around you today.
.
Your inclination is
likely
.
to be
.
intro-
verted, butknow that
the
-:
situ'.~ii'on
:
may
change the
"
moment
you take
'
a
'
scind. Step
up on your soapbox if
you really want to see
a shift in the environ-
ment
in
which you find
y
'
ourself. You have
the potential to tum
things all the way
around
.
If
you accept
people's weaknesses,
you will begin to see
.
their strengths.
.
TAURUS:
You are a
-
volcano of erriqtio
.
ns
.
·
today, and
_
don
'
t be
.
surprised if there are
.
·
onlookers
·
.
who find
the situation fascinat-
ing. The heat of your
. words as they
.
flow
freely willsparkfeel:.
•ings strong
J
n inten-
.
sity, Passionate lan-
guage may be all that
lies between you and
some
.
inappropriate
behavior. Listen to
your heart and let your
words mirror what you
find. Popularity will
present itself
as an
is-
.
sue and you have the
·
power to decide ex-
actly what role it will
play.
-
GEMINl
:
Todaycould
find you as the target
of an investigation.
You may feel a:s if
there is a car trailing
you at all times or a
spy behind every cor-
ner. It's
_
nothing seri-
ous, but someone has
a definite interest in
your secrets. You may
be more intriguing
than you ever
_
knew
possible. Hold on
strongly to the know!-
.
··
~
·
VIRGO:
Enjoy what
·
immediately obvious,
·
all
together
,
edge that is reserved
·
1t
you now
:
have before
although separating ~
-
AQUARIUS:Purely
for just you no matter
. '
:
~
letting your ambition
or combining
·
the
·
two
.
and simply, your raw
how much prying
.
drive you pnward.
It
-
could make for a
fun
:
.
.
-
emotions chafe at
tempts you to let it all
will serve as the foun-
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
,
experience.
you. It is down
.
to the .
out. Playing hard to
d!!tion
.
.
from which to
-
~
,,
,·
-
SAGITTARIUS:
If
nitty-gritty and the
get will encourage
-
~<>ve
.
(ony~rd,
,
Just
.
·--
~
,
y9ufstride ~alters or
:
bare essentials. You
your
·
pursuers and.
,
because something is
.
,.I'\..'[
yo
:
ur
_
spark!e:_ta1es;
n
0
·
: ,
W~Y
~
fe
.
el_sqreJb.atev,.
maketliembelievethat
easy for you doesn't ·
don't worry; your
eryone
,
around you
what you hide inside
mean that it has no
·
Jiglit has- notfully
know
_
s exactly,what
is the imobtainable
value. You just may .
.
.
,
- .
gone out.A power
yqu. are Qiinlcing
_:
You
priz.e.
.
.
_.•
.
have
_
the slqlls that the
s~rge
>
may
_
have
are likely to
·
hav~ an
_
CANCER
·
:
Song and
·
,job r
_
equires
sq
the
forcedyoureleciricity
.
audience
·
for
.
all oJ
lau
_
ghter spills o
.·
._
ut the
.
.
V:
_
}_lo
.
le process m
_·
..
.
ov
_
'
.
es
.
to
:
momentarily dim.
'
your e~bti()n
_
S;
:rry
to
doors
_
of
.
your home
_
smoothly. You may
.
Do
your best Jo rely
.
.
keei:{yotir deepfeel-
and brightens
·
the
·
feel restless, though,
on your reserve gen-
ings
·
with you in the
.
whole
_
neig~borhood.
.
.
withouta challenge in
erator. Sagittarians in
•.· .. ;,
Pri
_
".acy -~fy~ur clress-
Smiles
will
flow into
.
. the Jor~ffont of·your
higbprofile positions
: .
'
. j
ng rnq_m;
_
·Reserve
.
every
nook
,
and
experiences
,
.
may suddenly be-
.
.
_
center stage forthe
cranny like warm b u t - ~
. -
·
LIBRA:
Today you
come self-conscious.
mostpositivefeelings
t
_
er on bread
.
. Yo\l
.
'l
.
l
n
.
.
.
ar
_
e
_
•
t~i
:
n~Ji:lg
.....
abou
.
~
·.
R.emernberthaty.9u
.
.
you
~
can nrnster. Be
see your neighbors in
· ·
..
·
•.
·.
money
.
~ specifically
,
.
.
·
are no differentthan
·
~eassureci-t,hat_ there
.
a new light and iri. a
.
.
hov,
i
to
'
getmore
·
ofi(
.:
;
before
'
and iurn)o
'.
·
willbe
":iL
chorus and
·
way that
_
transforms
.
··
Your thoughts
will
be
,•·
·
·
:
_
y
_
ot1r
<:
:
reas,~11ring
.
·
.
. -
ajl
,
orchesfra to sup-
.the
:
often
'
:
mundane
corisuined
'
by
.
dollars
·:'
·
:
:
fu.:oughts;
.
\Vit~draw
:
port yO\l. The audi-
.
.
daily in"teractions iri.to
and the pl.ms that
_
µiay
'.
.
,
_
>:
(
:
,
aµd takeaquick deep
.
ence
_
also wants
:
you
conversa
.
tions
"
you
,
ies~frin"allo;N.ingyou
·-.·,
·.
_
'·,
.
breathbefoietheuh-
.
,,
_tcfd,o
,
yourbest,
at.:
look forward tg
_
hav-
to live large. Complex·
.
.
.
:
comprehetuling lose
.
.
:
.
.
)hough they may also
ing~ New things and
proces~es are ·prone
·
'
tlieir patience wfrfi:"
. ·.
<
i
a~f'as critics as they
ideas-capture yourat-
to small but
·
fragic
ycm; Move
·
·slowly
.
. ·.
.
. :
.
observe:
.
.
.
tendon, filHng you
flaw~tF<>rthigecJ5on,
_
.
.. :
:
:
.
·.
an~tr)'topinpointthe
-·
~
-
--
·
.
riscES:.Think
~ig
·with
an
_
·
eagerness to
take
the tlnie
~
fo work
;
.
re
.
a.son for YQur slug-
.
>-,
__
-:-,
__
·
.
•_
thle
··
to
,·
,
·
.
uy
:
'
.
go
·
~u
·
r~
·
·
w
'
t
_
·
o()~d
·
_._
a
.
sy
.·
·
.
fioarmn
__
d
.
learn
."
-Trusting others
out
all
of the
kinks
and
·
gishness
· ..
.
. ··
•.
~;::i;tf.i!~
:=c~:::~~!
1
.·
-
~
-
:'
:
_
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le
.
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.
-
:
_
-
12
_·
0:
.
·
jl'
·
h
.
;
· ·
•
·
.
·
·
~~~bie~
/
o~e?t:;,c:r
.
return:
working
'
with each
·
.
·_
withothers.You'llfind
·
yourhead.Speakwith
LEO:Adomesticim-
.
other.
:
Define the
.
de~
·.·
.
·
. .
.
that"youwiUclickin
your hands ~nci let
.
bal
_
ance c
_
asts
.
a long
tails and work on a
.
eyery interaction and
.
your
,
e~pressions
tell
.
shadow across the
:
smaller sque until you :
·
enjoy the moments of
..
the
.
true tale.,You may
restofyourday.ltmay
know what you are
conversation you en-
.
feellikeyouarewan-
. feel dark and gloorey,
..
doing.
.
.
·
coqnter. Everything
dering through the
but
.
.
rernember that ~SCORPIO:Youhave
you need is exactly
cl9uds,bµtknowthat
there wouldn't be any
th~
k~q
ability to
be
~here it should be
.
these
·
are where you
shadows aLall if it
true to yo.urself. You'll
when you reach forit
are Il\ore likely to dis-
weren't forsome
fonn
.·
find tJ:iat you ~ave no
Everything has a
.
c9ver your dreams.
of light. Seeking the
patience
,
for
.
those
pl;tce and a purpose
.
.
Throw old ideas out
source m;ty allow you
who hide in ~is guise_
into ~hich you will
.
the window,
-
along
·
to
·
change the dir~c-
trying to fool them-
find that you have in-
with anyol).e who still
tion of it's reflection.
selves and everyone
.
~ight.
J\11
th~ factors
believes in
.
them.
The pull of family can
.
else. Know that you
are aligned for an im-
Wish them well as
exert a powerful and
have every nghtto be
portant decision that
they soar in their own
not always welcome
proud of your desire·
you have to make.
way. Keep moving, or
. influence. It may
be
all
to match your actions
Take them in the order
.
your feet will fuse to
in the
·
way that you
with
.
what you feel is
in which they present
the ground. Use the
choose to receive the
moral in your mind and
.themselves and be
restless feeling that
interaction. This may
heart. The difference
sure to consider the
you feel inside as a
be your best option at
between love and in-
·
bigger picture in the
way to keep your
the moment.
fatuatiQn
process of putting it
forces fanciful.
•·•·
...
'
PAGE7
~· -·1:· 1 ·'•' ,·••. -·
;
•' .• • •.. ,.
:CONGRE§SHALLMAKENOLAW-ABRIDGINGTHEFREEl>OMOFSPEECH,OROFTHEPRE§_ ·
Marist Singers applauded
Editor:
. My wife;Barbara and I would like to thank the Marist Singers for making our
40th anniversary trip to Rome such a pleasant success. Their perfonnance at the
Marist Brothers' Worldwide Youth Festival on Sat., j\priI;
17
was truly outstand-
ing and a source ofpride for all ofus from America. With the thousands that filled
the huge flaul VI Audience Hall to capacity with "Maristi" from all over the world,
and \Yhere North Americans were but a tiny fraction of the Marist family, you
could teUfrom the clamorous applause that they enjoyed the Marist <:ollege
. Singers too,
Their perfonnance at the home of the Vatican Ambassador, Lindy. Boggs on the
Friday evening set the p_erfecttone for the celebration that brought us together in
Rome. We_ 1.:>oth felt Marcellin, ~hampagriat woi.Il~ be pl~ased to see what his wo*
-had produced: · .
.
· ··
·· ·
! ·
·
•
. .
·•
"· . · .
>
_•··. .
.
' .
_1n:appreciated, we have placed ~5 digital pictures for Mansi College Singers
to
" enjoy, on the !vlarist College mainframe. They can be downloaded
by
Anonymous
FfP
from the account
ENIO:
Some
of the "unedited" pictures can be viewed at:
http://niaristb.marist.edu/-ENJO/@httpd!index.html.
·
·
· -John-F. DeGilio
,
school"ofscierice · ··
-Prof~r extends~
to
Marist
community
Editor:
My family and I would like to thank
the
many members of the Marist community
· for
the![ wQrds of condolence during the
time
ofmy mother.'s death.
·
It
has· been a very painful time for us, but the kind thoughts and actions ofso
THE. CCIRJCLE.
has just published their l~t issue.
As,Editor-in-Chief for this year I
would like to extend my thanks to
all this year's editors and writers.
Thanks for the memories. It's been
fun. Best wishes to this year's
graduating seniors and next year's
Circle staff.
Have a great summer everyone
and see (most ot) you in the
fall!!
Sincerely,
Amanda Bradley
Editor-in-chief
Reader rebuts editorial
Editor:
Two of the PBS specialists analyzing the Columbine HS tragedy were honest
enough to opine that a "spiritual emptiness" is part of the cause.
("If
PBS
doesn't do
it,
who will?")
. ·
I did not appreciate Tara Quinn's remark about Graceland be1.ng "the place
where Jesus was born." Such humorous or malicious bashing of the Catholic
religion has become pervasive recently in the media; slowly frittering away the
moral fiber of society .
Rivulets become rivers that lead to Littleton oceans.
Bro. Joe Belanger, fms
Graduatirig senior offers parting words
Editor:
Well my four years are up here at Marist College, and for two of those years I
was _an editor for
The Circle
so I figured this would be my last time to write an
editorial so here goes'. . ·
.
I could do the
typical
senior thing and say how happy I was for four years here, and so
on and so forth, but,I
will
spare you •.
Instead,
I will let some of you in on some things that
have kept me sane in my most stressing moments and made those gocx:l times a lot
better.
First, ~n crossing Route 9, there is a very simple and inexpensive way to cross
the street without _being hit by a car (and I am not talking about building a bridge
.for the students or eliminating the right turns on red law). All you guys and girls
haveto do is look left then look right.
If
you do that, you will see if there is a car
coming and that will let you know that it is not the right time to cross the street.
Next, get to know your teachers. The more you get to know them, the better
01any have helped greatly.
,, • ·
.
. .
they will treat you. The same goes for advisors. All of you who complain that you
-Barbara
Lavin
did not get into any classes, the better you know your advisors, the easier it will
be for them to get you into the classes you want to take. They also can give you
Newly
cha,
rter,
e_dfr._ater_
nifv
welcomes members. . . '
some good advice on some other things going on in your
life
that do not deal .
., J
with classes. Take spring break trips, study outside a lot, climb the trees on ·
Editor:
• campus (not
drunk
please), take pictures of you and your friends, get dressed up
Congratulations to the Oelta Iota Chapter of Phi Kappa Sigma. Initiated the 23rd
on Halloween, laugh, play practical jokes on your friends (and when one gets •
of April,1999, the Phi Kaps are officially recognized
py
their International Office
played on you do not hold a grudge), and have FUN!
as.
a fraternal org.µiization. After more than.a year of hard work, these l!len now
· · You only have, at most, three years left, so make the most of it because after
plan to
be
a strong arid productive organization here at Marist College for years
college, you have to deal with health-care, insurance, and dating sober women.
· · to
coirie;'·c ,
. .
-
.
. .
So this is it, enjoy, good-bye, and I am looking forward to a sober senior week.
Congratulations to these new Brothers of the Plii Kapp~ SigmaFraternity: ·
Ha, you see that is funny!
Trevor Arguin; David Bober;_-Damien Choma, Daniel Coriboy;Joel Corcienner,
Robert Duda, Lyle Flagg, RichardForcellati;Kevin Gianni,Brian Groark~ Robert
Henry, Christopher
Jackman,
Christopher Koehler, Jesse Kupec, Patrick LaCroix,
. Kris
Lahoerte;
~tephen Lapolla; Benjamin Leeson, Richard McCormack, Michael
Mercer, Thomas ~bella, Mark Morici, Michael Morris, Thomas Myers,
Christopher Reed, Christopher Rowland, Michael Seaman, Wm. Douglas Smith,
Tomothy Soloman, William Stahl, Adam Sturges·, Timothy Timone, Douglas
Wtlderotter.
Kevin Gianni
Kappa Kappa Gamma initiates new sisters
Editor:
The Zeta Chi chapter of Kappa Kappa Gamma would like to welcome the
Lambda class. The new initiates are: Colleen Barrett, Katie Brown, Heather
Calanan,
Jill
Cristadoro, Erin Hayes, Sharon Kennedy, Nicole Kulik, Kerrie
Mendez, Anne Perkins and Alison Stec.
<:ongratulations girls.
Jacqueline Baker
Joe
Scotto
senior
Amanda
Bradley
Editor-in-chief
THE CIR.CLE
Eli7.abeth Carrubba
Managing Editor
Katrina
Fuchsenberger Thoma<; Ryan
Features Editor
Sports Editor
Chris Grogan
News Editor
TaraQuinn
Opinion Editor
Patrick Whittle
Joe Scotto
Toni Constantino
Arts
& Entertainment
Photography Editor
Business Manager
G. Modele Clarke,
Faculty Advisor
The Circle
is the student newspaper of Marist College, Poughkeepsie, NY.
Issues are published every Thursday.
We welcome letters to the editor, club announcements and story ideas. We can-
not publish unsigned letters to the editor.
The Circle staff can be reached at 57~-3000
x2429
or by email at
HZAL.
.
.
.....
,
..
.
.,
-
·
·
·
-
·-··
·
·
~··-···
,
·
-
-
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-
.
.
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·
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·
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.
.
The views expressed ·on these pages are ~ot ne~essarily those of
The Circle
Colorado
.
massacre:
·
we
.·
should. have seen
lt
.
coming
we are lucky, it may bring us a
should
'
have
-
checked
.
to see
:
mourning the event
.
and
.
bow-
by
CHRIS KNUDTSEN
.
.
step closer to understan~ing . what
the
teenagers' were build-
fog
our
:
heads
in
silence, we
In th~ wake of the Colorado
how to prevent it from ever liaP"-
ing
iri thekgaiages. ·
·
should.focus our efforts on pre-
massaci:e; many have been say-
pening again. But that doesn't
•
-
.
But they were middle class,
venting
a
simiiar outoreak from
ing how big ofa shoe~ this is to
seem likely.
·
.
·
and this kind ofJhing is only
happening.
;:
our society. Why? Was this
Already
·
the media has been
supposed to happen in
·
the
in-
·
.Another misconception of the
Student urges
peers
·
to
'Take
Backthe Night'
by ERICA TAYLOR
really that big of a surprise?
held accountable
·
for the ner cities,.. right? Human na-
media is
_
that they are portray-
Like the students in Colorado,
"Trench Coat Mafia.'' Musical
.
•
tur~ i~
:
the srupe
:
no
·
matter what
irig this as a random actof vio-
"He began following me - he
the majority ofus has grown up
artists such as
Marilyn Manson
<:lass you'are in_.
In
allac~uality
lence. There was nothi_ng~-
dragged me over to
a
play-
in high schools in middle class
andKMFDMhavealreadybeen
the situation would have been
dom about this
.
at all, it was
ground under a slide.where he
communities and would prob-
criticized for somehow influenc-
handled swiftly
inan
·
imi~r city
planned,
.
calculated and
,
~veh"'
forced himself on top of me."
ably like to think that it could
ing the students to go on a kill'."
·
school
.
by security
,
and local
tu ally
·
acted
.
out.
.
It was not a
.. It happens at.night, it happen~
never happen in our home-
ing spree. This is very remiitis,,
police.
.
·
·.
.
spur of the momenddea:}thad
during the day
.
lt
can be a vi-
towns. Obviously no·w we can.
cent of the suicide case blamed
_
But_they
.
.wer~ middle
_
class,
:
_
b~!l building over time !lfld fes-
cious rape or it can
_
be grabbing
Almost every high school has
on
Judas Priest several years
.
what co_uld, have driven them to
· ··
tering
'
until it could not be con-
and ~oping.
_
It can
be
.
v<>yeuris-
the group of outcasts
.
Some-
ago.
.
this j,otnt. M:()ney and posses-
·
/
tained any
_
more:
.
·
tic
·
stares or sexual comments.
times they are "freaks." Some-
After the double suicide in the
sion-m~at1~little if the parents
'
<
.
R~ther thar
_
dooki,ng for a
Sexualviolence is any
act
(ver-
times they are just normal
kids
past case,
.
the parents of the
'
did not acttially raise the~r chil-
/ ,
scapegoat, society should try to
bal
.
and/or physical)
·
which
who never assimilated into the
dead went on a moral conquest
dren. Being wealthy
:
does not
find. ways to prevent another
bi:eaks
a
person's trust
·
and/or
popular crowd. Almost every
against the band and the music · put
a
person on a moral high
incident by trying to understand
safety and is_ sexual in nanire. ·
high school treats them the
seen!! as a whole .. What the
ground or in a perfect
life
(al-
whyithappenedandwhatcould
-
"I
have l!n empty hole in my
same.
paren
·
ts' supporters seemed to
though many people seem
.
to
be do9e to change it.
heart and ha.veforever changed
There is almost always the kid
overlook was the role the par-
believe that it does).
There is no single cause.
It
is
as a persori.7'
·
·
who
·
has his
·
backpack
·
thrown
ents themselves had in the trag-
, Another r~ason, why we will
a conibinati9n of.several factors
Whether
·
or
not there
·
are
into the showers after gym. The
edy.
.
.
.
probably see this)iappen again
that could be improved upon.
p9ys
_
ic~
.
scars, sexual asS:ault
kid who has his lunch tray
Thetwoteenagerskille4them~
is be~~use
,
~tperthanlearning
'.fheyw~reabunchofkidswho
can be
;'
ancLofieii is, devastat-,
knocked over every day.
·
Tpe
selves while listening
·
tO
:J~das
h!JW. to deal
,
with the situation,
g9t
picked on alotand nobody
ing
to
:
a
wom~'.s psyche
,
She
kid who hears the constant in-
Priest
iri their parent's garage
i.
:
people b~c,9.me mqre paranoid
seemed ·to have Jrie?
.
to help
ca11
.
~xperience
.
Jlashb
_
acks,
sults
·
and threats
'
.
·
while smoking pot and drinkiqg
and
.
aggre~iite
:
ag~iw,( th_o
_
se
th
.
em.
,
Their parents obviously
par~ic.
.
aft~c]c;,
,
)tj$-9.Wi2~~.
~g~t.,
' Yet'as
a
,
sodecy
;
·
we
act sur-
beer. Maybe the parents shouid
that th~y. _see as diffei:~nt.'
'..
·-
'
::
d
,
icfnoi)ciww
.
what was really
mare~, UilC:onti:o,I
_
lab~e shaking;
prised that somebody
;
some-
have been more aware of what
.
'Thei:e will be
:
~ore hard iooks;
.
going .on
i11
their liv~s.
-
.
. -'
'
,
suiddal thoughts. She can
·
be
where, . soniehb,
'
Vsn
'
apped.
.
their children weredoing'irttheir
w,~r~ insuits;
·
etc
·
.. ,. the pi-o}?leih
.
.
·
:
;8ut/~~
-
:
~e
i
so ~hoc!ced
_
~a~
.
~aµnted
:
by
_
fl!~li
_
ngs
.
of.gµi.lt,
Sdmeone·
'
shoulcf na\1~
(
:s
·
eeitit own' house.
' .
.
•.
-
.
.
:..
;
..
'
'Yill
not go away or.geP:~e~er.
,
spme!,h}ng)i
,
lc~,tlJ~s co~J~
h31p
~
.
~eJf
J~atliirig,
litimili~tiori,
;
iear,
coming.
::
~
'
:
1:
.
•-
Maybe the parents
of
the
.
It is highly ironic that there
·
pen."
.
We should have seen it mistrust,' depi:essfon;
·
anxieiy;
·
While this isn't
meant
to
ex.: · "trench coatmafi~"
·
sh9ul~have
was a '.'m~ment
.
o
_
f.si~~!l~e'.'for
,
.
_
c-°-~¥-
~,,
.
.
,,
.
.
.·
.·
. ·
.
..
:
:
a~ger
;
~e~pair
:
Th,ere ~an
.
bej,n
cuse what happened,
'
it does
paid a litde
·
more
_
attentio_n
'
to
,
:
the victims of the
;
tragedy
~
be-
'.
,.
)
Chrii
f
lqiudtsen
_,
is
a
fre~hmgii._
·
:.:
alf
,
co)ls'(iming qejite
;to
\
0
ge,t
bring us a step closer to under-
what thei~ chHdren were doing
-
'
cause it was silence iliat
~
let the
:
'
.
com,
il'
u
ii
icat'ions
·
maJoi-jri:im
.,
'
clean
~
anif-gainsome-seniolahce
standing how this happened. If in their spare time. Maybe they
_
tragedy occur. Rather than
East
Islip,
NY.
of control.
.
,-,,
·
.
:
,
_
·
··'\I
·
took·tlie
·,
10ngest shower·I
ha~e e~e
°f
t£ken
;
fo rily
·
life
:;
,
.
1
•
For Tara Quinn's 'The Jersey
Side,' and Bill Mekrut's 'Political
Scene,'
see
Inner Circle page
3.
The 'recovery time vanes for
.
e~ch
,
'-Yorrian, lasting f~om
mortths
-
toyears; )lit for
_
inany
it is a lifelong strriggle to pick
up tile pieces, get ~trong;
·
be-
ct:mie whole:'
,/
"
'.
:
.
.
.
; ·'
.
.
''He
;
wiirriever
know
th6
~ori-
·
stant pain
thai
Heel
anci
the
feai''
·
'. Tu,elaitiitglegacf<>fvipl
~
nce
,,
is'
•
its
1
ability'
·
to
.
devastate arid_
-
ciamage
.:
thtvetfdomims'itiokM
a
perscin'ssoul
:
-
The
'
coifrse
of a
·
;
life
c~
oe,
drastically 'altered
in
'
a
matter of miifutes.
-
. '
·
,
''.Forever I will be jailed in my
owninirict··
,;· _,
.
·.
,
,
.
,
..
:
:,itis
·
a violation
ofitvoinan's '
ba'si~
:
rights
·
io
'
h
·
ave
·
to
·
con;;
stantly feel at risk for unexpected
·
assitil
!5
.
qii
he
r
s~f~fy:-ii'nJflier
. :
pe,r~on. Thiiis ~hftt Take
)
3a.ck
.
the Night
-
kabouf
.
-
·.
-
·.
. '
Anyonewho supports arid
·
believe§ jffcreating a world
.
where
·
.women;
can
exp~rierice
the safety and sanctity they
deserve
are
welcome to partici-
pate
·
in the Marist ColJege Take
Back the Night March- May 2
_
beginning at 8 p
.
m. in the Ro-
tunda. We
will
claim our right to
safety
•
on the Mari st campus
and then hold a Speak Out for
female survivors of sexual vio-
lence and assault.
"My advice to anyone who
has been sexually assaulted: let
it out. There
is more room on the outside than
the inside."
Personal stories taken
-
from
The Survivors Page :
www.stardate.bc.ca/survivors
·
u~
,
t
:
:~
·
:
All
·
ge
.
tiflJli.t
<
:·
,
~wagon
·
.
.:
-:.·
~
~
-- ,.
-
.
•
~
-
~
t-:
.. •
,
.....
...
.
.
.
:
...
. ·~
.·
-
\' ..
•-
.
~ ;
\
.
:· ably the
.
best band at Tramps
: by"CHRISKMJDTSEN
that night, they should have
StaffWriter
Qeen last but Lagwagon
.
·
had
•·
·
··
·---
·
-
·
·
·
·
--
···
·
·
··
:
higherbijling:
.
-
·.-
.
_
.
/
·:
('
:
~
'
}
LagWagon
:
hehi:ilined
:~t
·
Tramps
;
acco,;npaniecl. by
.
All,
. J:aiei
·
deneration,
and:
wi-Jith
Likt!:M~ bh·Sat:, A.ptjl ~4,
,
:
1
;
·
·•·
.
A/{plriyeda strong,
ff
some-
.
what brief, set.including
Mr.
Coffee which many of the fans
had been
_
waiting for .
.
During
AWs
.
set, the floor opened up
irito two separate pits. One area
was for those w
_
ho
·
actually
wanted to dance and the other
for
_
the angry little teeny
boppers out to prove them-
selves.
. Despite tlittpopp{riature of
the show, some of the _misled
teeny~b6ppers" inanagd to get
violent. The
0
rest of the crowd
seemed
"tci
enjoy
'
ti-iem.iei;e
_
s
·
though ( except for the two kids
who
'
were
;
throwing up
in
.
the
comer for rriost -of the show)
.
• •
·
Closing the night was
. Lagwagon. who played a sur-
prisingly lively set. Even
.
though they are a very poppy
band, they still had alot of en-
.
Wretch Like Me started the
night off With
a
briefintrcffrom
.
Gun
'
i
and Roses which was
highly aimf~ing{and surprising
that
tlje!y
could play
.
thafmany
different chords} .
.
·The
.
rest
·
of
ihefr set was energetic
but
faii-Iy
repetitive whicfr left
:
a lacking
feeling afterthefr liaJfhour set.
. ergy and managed to -get every-
one involved.
·
.
.
Photo courtesy Epitaph Records
Al/played second bill at Tramps last weekend
with
Lagwagon.
·
.
On the surface Wretch
Like
Me seemed to be another pop- -
poser-punk bands· that
.·
have
been b~coming
'
increasingly
popuJar as ofJate. However, af-
ter
'
flipping through
·
their CD
Jittle homo in all of us."
·
Wretch
Like Me could possibly find
themselves a fan favorite, but
also runs'the risk of becoming
yet another corpora.ti punk
band, which is the topic:"of an-
other song on their
c~;
'Punk
At the end
.
of the set
Lagwagon played a brief rendi-
tion of Come All Ye Faithful
which was highly amusing but
crowd~surfer grabbed onto the
'Yould have been better if they
pipes and lights dangling from
had played it for a longer period
the ceiling
.
of time.
.
Eventually the security got
Upcoming shows at the
tired of watching the lights get Tramps includes the record re-
kicked as each ciimber kicked
l~ase paityon May 30 for
H20,
the light set ~~f?~e
_
1.[~p~m~
with openers Kill Your Idols,
()n sta~e,
_
secunty made
an
an- - and Madball. Bouncing Souls
riounceirienfthat
all
climbers· are also holding a record release
wou
_
ld he
:
eject~d
1
which did
show
'
at
.
Trainps during May.
no~·dng to.~top
_
anyone.
.
.
Surpris\ngly, StlffLittle Fingers
'(which
l
would
'
not have actu-
ally bought bu.tit was: free), I
found t,hat there·Iyrics
·
are
·
b'oth
c'iimfoal arid
'
soniewhat.contro-
Rock is Business:•
.
·
·
VefSial~
·
-
.
_
.
__
,
·,
:
·
-
.
__
·
..
·
· '
One
sonQ:
on
their to,
Homo;
ti'as''1:fdc~>j'JiitR'
hir••fti'eie·~
1i
.
·
.:
·
.
-:,.
-·
,.
; ·
-
.
,
.·
.
.
: The amusing trio of
Latex
Generation
·
came ~next.
:
Theii
~econd song,
-
biidd-§;:i/a'.{
'
a
Communist\vas thehighliglii of
thett
sei:
'·
'AdHMpo1nt:'
llitfffrsi
.
_.
.
,.
-
•·
·
--
.-
/
.
--
;
..
·
.1!ns
:
?.a~!~~ly
!hl!
_
f!.e~c_(!n_
.:
will
alsb be coming t9 .Tnunps
dd,its'plus
Cfiad Price:
·
Afgu.:
d~ring the summer.
Mikg
isess
matuiCS
\
~itb
'Cb
eating at
.
Solitaire'
.
·
cl),
a
-Step
beY()~d
So,cial
D
.
.
·
.
' '
'
,
, •
'
.
-
'
.
.
:
...
·
·
·
·
_ and country. He sees confus-
'
Dylan's Don't Think Twice
:
But
by
AD~n-~~i\LS,£9:
ing
.
band
-
names
·
such as
this albuni is very different from
-
ta;;
·.
nter
_.
.•
Creedence Clearwater Revival
anything he has ever done be-
.
.
_
·
;
_
.·
..
·
.
:
. and Johnny Cash. He pur-
fore. That is obvious right from
·A_ sp1ky-~arred p~rik walks m
chases it anyway figuring that
·
the first track, a very dark calm
to _his local 1pd_epe11dennecord ; the description is just exagget-
tune called The Devil in Miss
store on a
_
sunny afternoon.
.
·
ating ... well he is wrong.
• Jones. But is this
a
sign of the
He
.
walks into the store and
Afternearly20yearsas front-,-
end
_
for Social Distortion?
. sees 'Che~ting
a~
Solitaire' by _ mari for one of the most influen-
Mike Ness going to spend the
Mike N ~ss, lead
_
singer
·
and
·
•
·
tial punk rock bands ever, Mike
rest of his life making albums like
songwriter
of
punk legends So-
·
Ness goes back to his roots for
this, right?
dal Distortion.
He
had heard
a solo album he has been want-
·
Fear not all you punks out
.
about this and ~ad heard
.
that it ' ing to do for years. Some songs
there.
was not just another Social D
_
do at
_
times sound like stripped
.
.
According to Mike; ''This is
album
.
He looks at the back and
_ ·
down Social D songs such as
just
a
break, after two and a half
se~s an album description with
Rest of our Lives, Dope Fiend
years of touring we just took a
words such
as
rockabilly, blues,
Blues and .the cover of Bob
break between albums. It was
.
just the perfect time for me to
do this."
• One of the l~gest smprises
on the
,
album is the guests that
Mike brought into the studio
with him. Misery Loves Com-
pany is a song that Mike does
with Bruce Springsteen.
-
Ap-
parently Bruce is a huge Social
D
f.µi
(I
swear that is not a joke).
TeJling their voices apart is ac-
tually a struggle at times. Crime
• Don't Pay has dark rockabilly
guitar work done by none other
than the ex-Stray Cat and MTV' s
·
kirig of swing Brian Setzer. The
guitar work is uncharacteristi-
cally. dark for Setzer and
fits
very
well with the attitude of Mike
Ness.
Just like Social Distortion
songs, Mike brings very deep
and personal lyrics. He sings
about everything from blown
-
chances at love ·(Rest
of
dur
Lives and If You Leave Before
Me") to his drug addiction, or
as he puts it, "dying twice a
·
day" (Dope Fiend Blues, Bal-
lad of a Lonely Man and the title
track)
.
He also puts forth some
of his best guitar work yet and
writes songs that will appeal
tq
even the hardest of Social Dis
-
tortion fans while keeping well
entrenched in his country and
rockabilly roots.
Now I was skeptical when I
bought the album. I thought the
description was exaggerated
.
But you know what the weird
thing is? I really do not care
that this is not a punk rock al-
bum.
The
songs are catchy and
no . matter how offended you
may be at Mike's betrayal to his
punk rock throne, you cannot
help but find yourself singing
these songs to yourself'all day
long. The music manages to
sound
.
like a country song while
having this odd resemblance to
something that should
be
heard
from the centerofa swirling and
violent pit. Mike captures the
essence of country, rockabilly
and punk and forges them into
a new direction. Mike Ness did
not change, he just visited new
territory for a little while. So go .
pick up 'Cheating at Solitaire'
and watch for him to come near
you this summer. For more info
check
his
website
at
www.mikeness.com.
PAGE9
TbeFitlal
:
.'
;
·.
·
_
;
:
.
.
_
:
:
·
:
To
t
.
a
..
lly
Th
·
eatre
by
RACHAEL VOLLARO
Staff Writer
The
Marist
:
Cqllege Council
on Theatre Arts
·
concludes its
fortieth- season this ~eekend,
with Shakespeare's 'Much Ado
about Nothing.'
·
,
I
,
•
I
I
I , I
I '
· I •
< I
I
I '
Performance dates and times
are tonight and tomorrow night
at
8
p
.
m., and Saturday May
l
at
2
p.m. in the Nelly Goletti The-
atre. There is also a performance
Sunday May
2
at
2
p.m. outsi9e
in the Student Memorial Grotto,
weather permitting. F
_
or those
who don't know where the
Grotto is, it's the ston~ memo~
rial near Donnenl 'this perfor
-
mance marks
.
the
.
first
.
outside
-
show in the history ofMCCTA.
Tickef
prices
~re
$7:
get\er~\ ad-,
mission,
.
$5
faculty, staff
&
alumni, and $3 students. There
is no charge fqr
,
~unday's per-
formance, but
'
donations
.
and
blankets
to
sit on are e~cour-
aged
.
Tickets can be reserved
by calling the MCCTAbox of-
ficeatx3133.
'Much Ado about Nothing'
is
considered
one
of
Shakespeare's most witty and
romantic p1ays. The true Direc-
tor Victor Sma_ll said it's
Shakespeare's merriest look at
love.
Megan Williams, a stage
manager for the production, said
the audience should expect the
true essence of the Bard.
"It's a smart, intricate plot,
with a dynamic cast," she said.
Karen Gumaer, also a stage
manager, said that if the audi-
ence pays attention to' what is
going on, on stage, it's a very
funny show.
"The true comedy of
Shakespeare is evident to the
audience," she said.
The cast and crew of Much
Ado have been working to-
wards this performance for the
last three months. According
to producer, Bryan Delaney, the
cast has put their heart and souls
into the production.
The Marist College Council
on Theatre Arts recaps the
1998-
99
season, the following week-
end with its annual Banquet
Awards Ceremony. The cer-
emony starts at 7 p.m. in the
Nelly Goletti Theatre and is free
and open to the public.
For more information call the
MCCTA box office at x3 l 33.
Rachael Vol/am will retum
as
The Circles Theatre columnist.
i11
Fall, 1999.
;:
~
·
,
,
'
(
'
i
1'
,.-
(
1'
·
.....;..,,..
f
{
,',
I:
r-
r.
r
f
i
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f
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j.
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/
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I
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·
/
;
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.
.
/
APRIL 29
2
1999
·
Alien
collspiracy
·
~~~~~.......;......;......;..,.
~rf
~tf
!t
enkindled.
fiy
.:
f
Watih
new sola
_
r
sy
:
·
_
stem
_
·
.
·
'!ilix~
.
>
Staff Writer
:.
ing to a surprisingly respected
~
.
;
~
With two very controversial,
.
byPATRICKWHITILE
A&E Editor
conspiracy theory, the
U:S'.
.
.
arid to be quhe fr~ryile films
Army Air Force cordoned off
_ _
"'
• - - - ' & . . . L , _
irirelease Neil LaBute is head-
the area summnding Rosweff
ing straighffor tlle top.
.·
.
.
··
.
and removed all evidence.
. •:
,
The middle ag~d Moitrion
·
·
.
director released his
first
feature
'The truth is·outthere' might
Robert Hastings was sup-
·.
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
not just be the catch phrase of a
posedly present at
a
UFO sight-
film in 1997,
'In
The Company
popular sci-fl series.
·
ing at an Air Force Missile ba~e
Of Men
.
' The film was not only
·
·
Therecentscientificproofof inMontanain
.
March,1967
.
He
indulging to wat~q, but at the
a distant solar system is
fuel
for
believes that the government is
·
·
-
same time gave you so much
the legions of scientists, re-
very much aware of the con-
·
depth into the two main charac-
searchers, citizens, and some
spiracy to keep alien species
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
...;...:.,_;.;,.._;_:;__J
ters in the
.
film that you had to
: · would say weirdoes, who make · under wraps.
watch it agairt.
_
'In
The Company
PhotocourtcsyTho111asMcDooough
OfM '
d h
'
d 111·"'
a Case "'or the ex1·stence of extra
"Now I would 11·ke to empha
·
-
·
·
·
·
·
·
en surroun st
_
e- u
.
he
·
1
'
-
·
Arecentlydiscovere
_
d
_
n
_·
ewsolarsys_tem has a
.
lien lov
__
ers_
·
abuzz.
_
f
·
k
h
·
d
·d
terrestrial
life.
Theories con-
size, I am not condemning ariy
-
0
two co- wor ers w o
·
eci e ·
tinue to mount on top of each
government agency for its par-
•
Speculation aboutal_ien con-
-
for anything other than humor
to get back at all the women that
other, each new one more baf-
ticipation in progrwns of secrecy
·
spiracy is
.
alive and well
•
on
value. Alien activity database
have ever hurt them by ripping
fling than its predecessor, about
related
to
the UFO phenom-
today's
.
cqllege campuses.
·
www.Area51.i1pfu.plym.ac.uk
thrcmgh the emotions of
3: deaf
subjects including crop forma-
enon," Hastings said. "How-
Som.e major universities
>
have
keeps an archive ofall accepted
sec~etary. Smmds pretty cruel
tions, cattle mutilations, abduc-
ever,
iny
honest and sincere
"alien societies" comprised of.
conspiracy theories to date:
does it not. The lead in the
film
tions and autopsies.
opinion is that the public has a
students with an interest in the
Exactly what it takes for
an
alien
(Chad); played by firSt time ac-
,
But is this really valid scien-
right and a very definite need to
extraterrestrial sciences.
conspiracy theory
_
.
to become
tor Aaron Eckhart, gave
an
Os-
tific research? Is this news or is
know the facts."
Mari st
College
in
"~ccepted" is questiona}?le.
car worthy performance to say
·
it entertainment? And who are
·
The theorists may actually
·
Poughkeepsie, NY, has its own
-
The theories
_
read like the
the
least.
Eckhart's performance
these people, who spend each
have the majority on their side.
share of alien conspirators and
titles of Ed Wood Sci-Fi flicks _ as a· psychotic male ego is so
waking moment of their lives
According to a survey con-
speculators, including Senior - th<tt did. not make the cut:
convincing th
_
at at one early
.
generating these theories? Per-
ducted
by ·
www.
Criminal Justice m_ajor Justin
-
"Farrakhan and UFO's," «The
screening of the film a woman
haps that is the most challeng-
Alienlnterview.net,
67 percent
Chase.
South African UFO," "Project - approached Ec~art ou~icie
.
the
ing question.
of the population believes that
"I think it's good that we are
Moon Dust," and '4HackersTake
theater proceeding to say
·
''!-
Alexander Collier, a self
7
pro-
"contact groups" exist.
·
On the
.
expanding what we don't know
OQ
tlie UFO's" are displayed for hate you!" Eckhart
.
respond(!d
claiIµed expert on the subject, is
other side of the coin, 64 per-
about our universe;''. (;base said
public viewing.
.
by saying, "You me~ you hate
·
a 30-year'..duration "UFO
cent believe that extraterrestri-
-
in lieu of the recent disclosure
Whether military interven
.:
···
·
·
'iriy
character right?" the wo~an
,
.
•
conductee." He claims to be
als pose a serious global threat.
_
of an undiscovered solar sys-
tion, alieOabdu~ti<?il or
·
govem-
simply replied
"N'
0
l?ateyou/'
_ ,.
...
spreading a message given to
Only 32 percent are sure thatw~
tern.
_
·.
'4The universe is too big
•
mentcoilspll1lcy is the
·
cas(!~ o
_
ne
·
·.
_Not
.
~ad you;.,f~t gig, Aaro~.
.
him
,,
by
"
.e,lt~11_:•1;.9~ta(:t
_
s.~~-..in
.
J\re
~
the only intelligent species
.
for
us to be theonly.pJ
_
anetw.ith
.
thfag is;.for
:l
siu:e:
(
scores
•
of
:
,
,
~!~~lt~,a.s
0
~P,~!P~µt,,,y9H ~
.;•_:.
•
,
,
•
Collinsville, IL,
in
1994.
in the galaxy.
life."
.
people are .
.
dedicating their
-
lives
·
qmte convi~ci~g.
>:"
>
,
.
·
-.
.
"Therearewellrespectedand
A 'contact group' is
·
_
what
·
NearbyPineBush,NY,isthe
.
torevealingthe
_
truthaboutthis
-
.
. LaBu
,
te
_
s
_
ne~tftlm,
.
Yo11r
credible civilian personalities ·experts call one
·
of seven
-
pos"
.
UFO capital
-
ofihe easterr,.
_ j
nterplanetary imbroglio
:
,
·
..
· ·
F
11
en_ds
.
A~<;l :t-f~~ghb?~~_,'
:
.w~s
,
associated within the aliens and
sible person1:llities under which
United States. Pine Bush is a
,
So what does Milton William
re~eased laS
t
year_a_nd receiv_ed
UFO scene," Collier said.
ahumancanencounteralienlife.
townwhere
,
~lqcalbarbernam~
-
~oopet
\
~uth~r of th.eJamecl · mu~h the sarn
_
e cn
_
ticalacclam!-
"Some are self-proclaimed ex-
.
These include J;:BE's (Extrater-
..
Charlie qlaims l<1~a~e: been ab:-
:
·_
t
C::ooper/p9cimient': ("The Se-:
~
·.-
In
'.f1l~
Q~lilp~y ~.f:M:
,
~n.;
-
perts in the field, others include
restrial Biological Entities);
·
ducted by alienf
· .. ·
.
I
:
9retGciyernment:
VFO.
Activity . Y9u,r,Fnends ~d !'leJ~hbors
ex-government with UFO sto-
Telepaths (psychic aliens) and
Pine ~ush
_
resid(!nt James
·
in the U.S.,!' a study published
ts_J
_
Ust as appalhn~ as ~}'he
ries and the rest comprise of HomoSapien2
1
(a
·
hybrid of a
Ba~iarz sajd that altli9ug~ Mis
iiatj.onally in 1989)
Qtlnk
abot.1:t fompan~ of Men, co~Slttutmg
abductee accounts."
human and alien ·being. Con;_
•
not
a
proponent ()f conspira~y
.
the ;future of alien conspiracy
.
i
_
n _mymmd . how superb <fa
.
Belief in life on other planets
.
fused yet? Subjects including
theories, Pine
Bush
is
·
alive \\'.ith
_
.
theory?
.
_
.
_
_
_
_
_
.·
.·
_
_
_
.
w~ter and d~t:~Ct()r l;.~ute ts.
hasbeenthesubjectoffilmand
the lifestyles
;
socialization,
•
lWOlogy.
.
..
:,
_
,
. _
_
.
_
;
''It
_
sfo?rild b_e obvious
by
.
This film depicts thehves of
television since the mediums
physiology, biology, and ~pace-
,
-"
'..'There ~eJ:il~ces yo
,
u
_
can. go
)
!
_
ow thiii ~ornething ~iruster and
several
_
couples
an1
·
one bach-
were invented; but serious be-
craft technology are all explored ' (in Pine Bush) where lJF:O ~ul-
'
:
'
terribly
-
wrong is going on in-
.
:!~rwho
_
c~ot s~m t()
,
fiJtd the
'
· lief in
·
extraterrestrial entities · by the self-appointed "alien
_
au-
ture is verymuch
,
~iv~,'' BaW,aiz
.
y.c;,lving tlie
_
governmen(and the
.
.
11
?
11~
perso~,
--
~~~
~ttei:nptto do
_ .
started becoming part of main-
thorities
11
·
who have deciicated
said
,
."O~e
_
of the 1:Il
.
~Y
-
~cµvi-:
.
'
UF,O
'
pllenomenon,'
\
.Coqper
·
.·· c
so J>y
'
~let:pipg
_
~~~
w~o
_
eyer
_
:
-
·.
·
.
·
.
; ,
'
stream media in 1947 when
,
a
theirHves to
,
alien
·
res~arch(and
ties u
·
s bored.YineJ}~
_
s.h folk
.
•
saj4'.
"Weallmustband together
.
COl'Il~S 19etr:
:
war, _mduding the
_
•
·
.
:
rancher supposedly came
seemtohaveagreataffinityfor havefoundis_DfQ;w~tcltjng:
::;
-
~qexposeit11ow/'
;
>>
.
.
·
· sp_~mse
Qf?
frtc::Il~L 'I'h.e
_
fi-,In,i
.
across the wreckage of a space-
posting every new ''.discovery"
_ "
·
·
Of ~ouis
,
e, sqme ~0J_}Spir~cj~s .
;
·
.
·
·
Qr soµtething l1ke that.
.
stars Bell' S~He,!, J~~~wJ?atnck,
:
·
,
craft in Roswell,
NM.
Accord-
on the World Wide
.
Web). .
.
·
.
· stretch too far to
.
be considered
·
..
-
,
Aaron
~khart
(this time not so
·
·
.
.
· ...
.
,
:·
'
foy'ciltirig, tlloughjust annoy-
' Silent Hill'·
_
worthy
;
'
.-.
video
:
g
··.
am
_.
'
e
f
O
_
·
d
_
.
.
der
}:;r.:.,b::~.i:::::J:~;
_
.
,
.
.
.
.
, horse ofa differeni color.
-
Jason
•
byCHRISNAPIERSKI
~ta.ff Writer
From Konami,
,
th~ ~ompany
that made the hi(garne Metal
Gear Solid, comes a terrifyingly
bold new adventure game.
Silent Hill is a fresh horror
experience, which is welcomed
during the long wait for the next
Resident Evil game. There are
few horror adventure games on
the market and the Resident Evil
series is the top among them.
However, Silent Hill has added
·
some competition. While Resi-
dent Evil was a brain-eating
zombie bloodbath, which· was all
about blowing up whatever
moved into tiny pieces, Silent
Hill
has taken a new approach.
·
The purpose of Silent Hill is to
scare in every way imaginable.
The main character of the
game is a normal guy named
Harry Mason. In the opening
snowing even: though itis sum:.
·
iniss~s, does ·make
the
-
ganie
P~trickga.v~ the pddorman'ceof
clip Harry
fa
drivirig down a road
mertirne. Things like tins accom~
'
-
more realistic.
.
.
.
his career in this
o'fihn
whose
with his daughter, Cheryl. They
panied with a nerve-racking
-_ ·.
On the positive side, Silent
chara~ter
was
such a despicable
'
are ~n their way to spend
'
suin~
-
'
·
soundtrack;
:
randpm
'
loud
:'
0
Hill
:
isa spooky game that
of~
-
~rson thatyoujusthad to iove
.
mer in the resort town of Silent
noises, and some disturbing• fer~ good chances of frighten
~
•
him. .
.
.
-
.
-;
Hill.As they near the town/a
.
scenery make the gametiriique
ingtheplayerinsoineway'.The
LaBute's next film 'Nurse
·
·
person steps in front of Harry's
in its field.
.
.
.
·
·
story is C()nfusing, complex and · Betty' starringChrisRockisdue
·
jeep. He swerves and
·
blacks
Harry Masori is also a
·
unique
·
has four 4ifferent endings. The
out this summer.I
am
iriteiested
out. Upol). awakening he sees
changetothesetypesofgarnes .
.
-
townofSileritHillismassiveand
to see if LaBute changes his
the now sinister looking town
Usually the heroes of these
hours of fun can
_
be s~nt ex-
writing style in this film due to
ofSilentHillloomingbeforehim
games are police officers of ploring its many streets and al-
its
studio budget and wid~rdis-
and that Cheryl is missing. He
.
~orne sort ~d have training in
leys.
·
.
tribution .
.
Let us
,
hope riot To
must now adventure into this
several weapons, which they
·
·
. On the negative side: the
·
sum up LaBute's talentin one
. bizarreplaceandfindhisdaugh-
_
.
·can then use to obliterate what-
graphics are not as crisp or de-
word; heis a genius. He gets to
ter.
-
·
ever undead phenomena come
tailed as they were
in
Metal
Gear
your deepest emotions with his
The programmers of this · their way.
Harry
is 'supposed to
·
Solid. The music while eerie gets
work making you so angry at the
game have done a lot of
'
re-
''
·
beacommonnian, whodoesnot· boringveryquickJyandthereis
characters in the film that you
search in the horror field to
have much knowledge of fire-
·
alackofvarietyofenemies.
The
have to tell someone about
make this game scary. They use
anns: There are pistols, shotc.
·
weapons· also seem to have a
them. LaButeis an excellentfilm-
about every trick in the book.
guns,
:
etc
.
in the ga!De but that
Jack of fort:e. I know that the
maker, if you get a chance pick
Silent Hill is filled with a con-
does not mean Harry can use
shotgun would do more damage
up 'In The Company Of Men'
stant fog to keep your vision to
·
them well. Harry will need to
.
be
than the pistol, but it sure did
and 'Your Friends And Neigh-
a minimum, so that you can hear
'
· close to whatever evil he is aim-
not look it when I hit something.
bors' they are both at video
that there is something nearby
.
ing at in order to hit it. This fea-
Overall Silent Hill is some-
stores now. Just one bit of ad-
but you can not see it until it is
.
ture although annoying
_
at times · thing different to keep us busy
vice though, unless you are in
almost on top of you. Another
.
when an enemy appears only a
while we wait for the next Resi~
the mood to get dumped, do not
oddity of the town is that it is
few yards away and Harry still
dent Evil.
watch them with your girlfriend.
'
t
-
..
•'·
....
,....
•,
..•
..
._••
fi:~t~tfl~us-
Report -
-
.i~ ;,;_;:·
:! ..• ,:• -.•
:J .
1 ;;_ ;,;,_,,..,. ·
·
.
by~omasRyan
t
• • .
,·
•
,
~
,r .... •
J •• · ,
.••
.·.
~-{;_,.~:>/""f·~~\
-
?.f-?"
:::"":~_·?·
.;
With the
NBA
se~so'Kcoriiing {,_
on~
of:the conferences elite the West ~ave been through
to· a close, I th.oughHt fitting that . -teams, but it is unlikely that and are a lik~iy candidate for a
I give my t"l,VO ·cents
·as·
to,
~ho
'could put together the consis- . fl,rst'round upset if they are not
you shoµld expect to come out tency needed to make it to the ._ careful. .. _ .
oftheplayoffswfth'tlii:dirstnon-
.
NBA
finals.
_ ._:,':',: The takers should be·a lot
Bulls championship since1995.
_ In the end,
I
see a· downright : ·_ bitter than they are~ and a case
In the East I would expect the· _nasty seven-game final series :· could -be. made,
th.ey-_will,
tum
Indiana Pace~ to reaUy s't~p~up
between the Pacers and Hear. theirj~ts ori)n
.i!i~
playoffs and
their play after
a
lack lu*rregu--
with the Pacers ·coming Our ori
make a run'. The problem with
lar season' which mjmy people
top._
.
thatis the same thfng
has
been
expected them to dominate.
_......,._________ said the last three ·years and it
With so mariy teams changing
has not happened yet.
multiple players over the last
A
ll
YO
ll e . CO mill
g
Kobe Bryant and Shaquille
year, the Pacers nucleus of
out
of
the West be- ,
O'Nealdonotseem'togetalong
Reggie Miller, Mark Jackson,
Rik
with each other, and Gl~n Rice
Smits,andtheDavisboyshave
sides the Jazz will
doesnotseemtogetalongwith
stayed together and that should
be a s urp rise.
the idea of playing defense, so
be a big help in May and June.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ it could be an early exit by the
Db
not count out the Miami
Lakers·.
Heat, however. The Heat should
.. The Western Conference is
While the Blazers have•started
havehomecourtthroughoutthe · not as wide open as the East,
strong and faded lately, the
Eastern Conference playoffs,
and anyone besides the Utah Spurs have done just the oppo-
unless they ·collapse down the
Jazz coming out of the West will
site.'_ San Antonio started just
. stretch and the Pacers or .Or-
be a surprise. The two-time de-
6-8 to open the season, but
lando Magic :catch fire. The · fending Western Conference have gone 26-4 over the last 30
Magic are an Eastern Confer-
champs. are battle tested and games to make a run at home
ence best 19-4 at home, so home
fojury free, two of the most im-
court throughout the playoffs.
court advantage would benefit
portant factors when trying to
The Spurs have a young star in
them the most.
reach the finals. If the Jazz steal · Tim Duncan who does not have
The Atlanta Hawks also could
home court from the Portland playoff experience, but David
give the top teams in the con-
Trailblazers they will be almost Robinson and the rest -of his
ference a run fot their money;
unbeatable.. .
teammates do, so the Spurs
but a season-ending injury to
The Blazers have been regu-
could surprise.
I • , '
PAGEll
~
.
\f(
f)J,
· :';, \ · ,_
.
.
•
·. }· ;-;
;BasebatJ,
-··4129
Home vs~ Wagrief3 :30 p:m>
';
· 5/1 @ · Canisius (DB) 1 p.,n.
ii:
f;
·
512 , @ Canistus (DH)J2:3Q"p~.m.
:S/4 1:fome vs .. St. Francis,
NY
3:30 p.m.
Softball -
4/30-5/2 MAAC Championships TBA
Men's Lacrosse -
5/l @Lafayette 1 p.m.
Women's Lacrosse -
4/30Home vs. Siena 4 p.m.
_ 5/2 Home vs. Albany noon
Men's Crew -
5/1-5/2 New York State Championships
Rome, NY @ Delta Lake
Women's Crew -
5/1-5/2 New York State Champion-
/' '
ships Ro1?,e, NY
@
Delta Lake
Men's Tennis
-5/14-5/16 NCAA Regionals TBA
Tough .Trivia
Who was the last person to hit
four
home runs in
a
~ajor Leagu~
Baseball
game?
Last week's question - Who is now the active career points
leader in the NHL after the retirement of Wayne Gretzky?
Answer- Gretzk)''s former teammate Mark Messier will be the
· active ·scqring leader with 1660 points.
forward· Laphonso Ellis prob-
lar season wonders and were an
I would love to see aJazz-Lak~
ably ended any chance they had . unreal 27-6 at one point in the ers finals match-up, but I do not
at making'a: nH:ilrito' ilje'fi.iiafs.
season. They have gone only
think it is going to happen; -In-
Uriderestimating the under-. · 6-5 since then, however, andiL stead a less exciting five game
achieving Knicks-could also be·
their primarily young team could· • series between the Jazz and
a problem-,for~ a:potential-first . · be wearing down., Arguablyithe, ..Spurs with .. the Jazz.taking the
..=====:::::::::==:=:::::::::::::===:=============·
1
::::;
:::::>=·
=======!
round opponentlike the'Hba{' .'most talented teamin the league;
West, and eventually the NBA
The talented Knicks'.· have _ 'the Blazers> have
-
not:been
·
.;.Championship\vith
a
six game
. enough•ffre power
to
kriock off:· ·through the wars other teams in · series win over the Pacers.
- I '
h' ,, : -·· .• :·~ :_;;-;.;:-·-~:.
'j'~'"'·~:fat
!;•j.:,,;.) ·.-,~ '
; ; ,· .
. Women'serewsrnall,buttotlgh·
.
.
·:
.
.·, •, :~ r•• , . .
,
.,. • :,.:
=.•
. :
,
.
.
·
.
.
by
MELISSA WJLLIAMS · ·
Eight rowed a very' strorm race
President's Cup in his memory.
Staff
Writer . · ·
·
once again proving thatthey aie
An excited team of Marist
. not a team that goes down with- · Women launched their shells on
The Marist Women's C~ew
out a fight. A w~ raged .be-
what most had said was the
Teamhasfaced~anychaUeriges
tween the Marist Women arid
calmest racing water they had
this season. • .
·
· ·
the. Women from Delaware, and· seen in years or their entirerac-
Coming into the spfing wi~ a
with each stroke
a
seat length
ing careers for that matter.
signific11nt decrease in_ team-
was gained odost as the battle_·
The race included teams. from
- mates,each,reµi~&ro~erh~,; ,y_ommenced· down th'e_2000~
UCONN,Army,RPI; Geneseo,
had to oring it
~i>
t9 __ the n·e~t
inet~r course.
·
· · · . _- · andVassar. As the race started,·
_
level to pioye that.
t!iC?i
~1111~till . · _ _J'he Freshman/Novice Eight Marist anctUCONN fought for
be champions, Oftenviewedas
won their
dvanced to ·a lead position as they headed
the team of coxswains
by
other
.
. a fin.al
on in the . down the course. Following
, schools, time an'a :time again
daf ·
t _closely behind was an Army
they have proven·th~t_si'ze does
crew trying not to be def~ated
not matter ..
A
Jot ofpC>wer:·
twice
on ttiesameriver. The Red
comes out: of these ladies whose ·
Foxes had their strongest race
hearts arid desire to.win ai-e far
. yet this season pulling harder ·
larger than any oth_erteain~, _
with every stroke and not los-
The season gotoff to
a
shaky
gatta.
_ _
ing sight_ of the UCONN Eight
start with the first race being
Marist College and the Friends
that stayed right along side of
cancelled_ due to inclement . of Marist Rowing were pleased
them. The infamous
5-0,
a hard
weather~onclitions.:Tiiefollow~ . to again w"elcome all visiting
fifty strokes that is pu)led half~
ing weekend the I.,ady Red· .. coqipetitors, their families, alJ
way through.the race, proved -
Foxes faced
Ai:iny
at home.
returning Marist alumni, and. to be a valuable weapon for the
Marist won two out of the three
spectators from the community women as they neared the fin-
races. TJ:ie_ W9,II1en'.~ ,Yar~tty ,.J~_share in the competition and _ i~h and sprinted out the last few
Eight battled· through .tough
the battle for the Herbert J;
hundred meters with everything
waters and finished with a
win:
Haight Trophy, named aftelr the
they had left.
ningtimeof7:09~gain~tArm.y's
president of the Mid~Hudson .
The finai results of the race
timeof7:18.j1leYaj-sfrfI<our. Sc~oolboy Rowing As~oci~-
were: UC()NN 6:18, Marist
also emerg~~ ~1ci9tj?_~s·yii~,a
tj911.
. _ . _ .
· . _
6:25.6,Anny6:28.9,RPI6:35.67,
time of9:04 oy_er·~fs
9:24~:.. .
The mount~ sHverpup_is a_ and 9~nese~ 6:35.7'6. Vas_sar
The
Freshman/Novice girls ~so
fi
.
tti~g f1!0nument to Mr. Haig}Jt,
was dtsquahfied for cross mg
had a hard fought, co~petitive · a m,an who devoted a majority
over lines.
·
race.
·
of.his_ time to scholastic _and
On May 1st and 2nd they will
OnApril IOth,'theteamheaded
collegiate rowing in· the.Mid:
venturetoRome,NY.totakepart
to Camden, NJ for the.first an-
Hudson area. Following Mr: . in the New York State Rowing
nual Villanova Knecht Cup In-
Haight'sdeath in 1969, a group
Championships and they end
vitational Race. Battling against
of friends decided to honor him : their season with the esteemed
strong winds and fierce compe-
by naming µie trophy awarded
Dad Vail Regatta in Philadel-
tition, the Women's Varsity
to the overall champion at the
phia, PA.
.Marist Scor~board
. Baseball -
4/21 Marist
4,
Rider O 4/21 Marist 4,
·
• Rider 0- 4/22 Marist 17, Monmouth 5
4/24 Marist
i
1, LeMoyne 3 4/24 LeMoyne
3, Maril?t O 4/25LeMoyne 6, Marist 5
4/25 Marist 15, LeMoyne_ 2
Softball :.
4/20 Marist 2, Siena
i
4/20 Marist 1,
Siena 0. 4/23 Canisius 5, Marist 4 4/23
Canisius 6, Marist 2 4/24 Niagara 2, Marist
1 4/24 Niagara 5, Marist 4
Men's Lax-
4/21 Boston College 7, Marist6
· 4/24 Providenc~ 7, Marist 6
Women's Lax-4i18
Marist 17; Canisius 9 4/21
·
Vassar 17, Marist 10 4/23 How~d 15
Marist 12
'
'
,
•
'
'
'
'
I
I
I
,
,
, ; I , ,
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
•
I .
_
_
· _
_
·
.:
..
Quote
.
o ._tl:te
,
,
-
~~
-
j
·
·iugbi is
0
tid.
0
b.~ihl
.
~
4.g
i
.
;
:
-
minuktialves
'/
ofalt:·oµC
acticin."
.
-
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i~sica
Speni:el;
·
i
u,oineri's
.
rngby
,>
.
<):(
·
A
ril
·
29 1999
---------
•
Basebalt-teidn
oil
fir~artet
7-2week
by
THOMAS RYAN
Sports Editor
victories over
·
the
·
Rider Bron.;
cos in a double.;header.
In
game
·
orie,
.
Olore
•
pitched a complete
··
·
1.ne Marist Baseball Team is
game two~hitte.rfo
•
get the win,
heating' up. at exactly the right
JiQUlly Willis had a
.
home run
time.
.
.
and
three
RBI to lead the Marist
.
With a 7-2 record over their
offense .
.
_
last nine games, fylarist is" in
.
·
In
game· tw<;>, Perrucc~
.
fol-
prime position to make a run at
·
• lowed Olore's performance with
·
·
the Metro Atlantic Athletic
a
•
complete game
.
four.;hitter
Championships held May
13th:.
while s~king out eight. Right
.
.
16th at Dutchess Stadium in
fielder Tim Bittrierhad two hits
7-2 week has the ·Red Fox baseball team in the thick of the MAAC regul~r season race.
SoftbaBfadingintothe~
after
losing
four stJ-aightgmnes
Fishkill,NY.
·
.
andaE.BlfortheRed,Fo)!:eS,
.
.
Leading the Red Foxes this
.
After destroying Monmouth
year at the plate
is
left fielder
the following day, the Red Foxes
Anthony Cervini.
had a day off to prepare for four
by
JEFFDAHNCKE
Staff Writer.
The jumor co-captain leads the
,
games over the weekend against
Red Foxes with a .533 sluggfog
LeMoyne, Jhe team currently
average, 48
.
runs scored,
11
ahead of them in the standings.
doubles, three triples, and four
Connelly started things off
home runs. He is third on the
·
right for Marist in game one as
team
whh
a .359 batting aver-
he gave up only three runs in
away.
It
picked up a run in.the
age and is second with 60 hits
seven innings
.
as
.
Marist won
bottom of the fifth; before tying
and
.eight
stolen6ases,
>·
,
,
.
.
_1_1-3.:
.
.
·the score in the
,
sixth on an Amy
.
'
)oining Cirvini in punishing
. Game two proved to·btfthe end
The regular seasori came to a
Dodd RBI single.
.
.
.
.
<>pp
'
osing
.
pitchers is
.
first
of Marist's six-game winning
screeching haltlast weekend for
It would not remain tied for
.
•·
.
bas'etnan ;Anthony
:
B9cchino:
,
streak,
:c
however,
:
as
;
the
:
E,ed
.
.
thelvlaristCollege softball team,
..
long~however,as Mittistpitcher
<
.;:
>
The
fr~s~ma~ leads tlle
·
tearil
-
· ·
Foxe~ we~e blanked
3-0
by
,
the
and now it mustwait,and see if Melanie Kasack was touched
•
~!!Ji
.
J~rin
_
s
.
bate~in~d.js sec~
,
0Jitsta11ding
.
:
pitc
_
hing
:
:
of-
a Metro Atlantic Athletic Con.;
up in the final frameJor another
·
..
()~cj)n
_
doubles,
·
triples, home
.
LeMoyI_ie'sJami~ Steward.who
.
ference championship appear-
·
run, this time by
.
,
a
Raquel_
iiin~
·
1
~dtotai"base~; He is also
gave up onJy)lu'.ee;hit$ in
,
seven
·
·
ance is in its future.
Alvarez single down the left
.
four:th
·
:
on the team with
a
.355 · innings.
;
..
.
.
.
The Foxes dropped their final . field line.
•.
:
-.
batih1g
..
av~rage:
.
.
.
. ···.
.
'
·
.
'
6nSunctaythe tearnssp~it as
'
four contests of ~he year last
Kasack took the loss
fqr
·
singledhefh~>rtl.6":
.·
!
.·
.•
;
.
·
:R.ilti.i,~iiig"qut:Miµist;s
·
hittini
".
~elLGirae.orti?sa'Y
·
¥.ari~tl9se
'
week, finishing up 16-19 overall
Marist, giving up five runs; three
'.
Mari
st was Unablefo
·
respond
·
¢achine
·
so
far
.
this season is
.
a tough 6
:
5
:d¢cision
)
Ol6ie
goi
and
7-
7 in the MAAC.
.•
of which \vere earned, and
11
:
in.
its half of
tl.,le
sev~tith; giving
'.
center fielder Ryan Brady (.389
.
the.loss going the distance and
. The
,500
conference record
.
hits. Genevieve Garcia got the
:
_
Marttri and Cariisius the victory.
·
:s11,
j8 runs; 61
_
ltlts) a11
_
d
PH/~13
giving up an siX.rnris.
:
: ·
left Marist tied with Niagara and
win for Canjsius,
as
she pitch~d
S9 the Foxes looked to
sal-
Kevfo
.
,
Wissrier (36
.
RB I's,
11
..
fylarist hit starter Ryan Victor
Manhattan for the fourth and
a nearly perfect~ee
·
innings in·
·
v
_
age at)~a~t
OIJ.e
.w
_
fo
_
_
for
.
:
ipe
douQles,4 home runs).
-
.
.
·
.
hard, but
.
reliefpitcher
i
Ghris
final spotin the conference tour-
reliefof starter Erin Crowley.
:
.
weekend fo
'
game two~ arid for a
.
fy\arist's b}g'~eein the rota:-· Marsh pitcl!~<i t\J/o
:}
nilings of
.
nament, which will behe1d.May
Game two was not much bet,-
,.
goolportion of tl_le.game it
.
tion; Doug Connel
_
ly,
.
~evin scorele.ss baseball to pi9k
,
up
7-8 on the North Field. Both
ter, as thist1me Kasa~k was
.
!ooked like they'wouid
_
do just ()lor~. and
:
KevtnPemicct~ave
the
,
w,irt
:'>
Brady
,anct'
~nthdny
Niagara and Manhattan have
roughed
up
for six earned runs
that
.
. •
.
.
.
.
.
.
·.
.
. ..
·
.
.
.
.
been
:
inconsistent
/
but
·
when Ambrosini each had two hits for
~~~::r;~
r:r:!~:::~:t:
o~~
~~isiu~ ~cori~ga\i
:
~~e
]H
h~~:r;:r:}[~;tp~ifitfil
\
t t
-
~iefdf e
·
~
11
{~;:\ft\tfi
;
?ry
.
~t~-~~4
Eo~~-s
g~~
:
:
p
:
a~k.-~~
~
for the Fox.es.
.
in the third, fifth and
'.
si#h iif::
).
ning~;
·
y~~@#k'~+}~a'.t:ljaniagi
l
.
·
.
t:qnnelly
;
leaqs
t,he
,
starters . track in game two
·
with
·
a
;
15-2
·
.
:
The four consecutive losses
nings, as they picked up a p~ir
;;;,
g6i11g)nto
'
tlte
finalf~ap:ie'
:;{
;inl·
with
.~even
_
wjns,
a
:.tol
:ERA;
.
.
•
laug~e(lerru~cfoicked}ip
.
the
·
.. ·
came on the heels of a streak
ofnins
,
ineach.
.
.
.
.
.
, .
.
.
offense
·
was'led hi
:
s·aracino,
and6?
.
.'
strikeouts.
.
·
-
'.
•
.
.
;,
completgainewinwhilestriking
-
whfoh saw Marist capture .five
The offense
.
was sparked
by
who went
3-3
\Yith
art
Jt,BI.
)n
Perrucci has
.
the IowerERA,
,
oufthree.
..
_
.
.
.
.
'-
.
.
'
.
.
· ..
.
victories in six games. However,
-
Alvarez, who drove in runs in
additiori~ Koldjeski producy~ ah but Olore
has
m?re wins (4) and
.
Brady was agail} the ~itiing
.
.
last Friday Canisiu
_
s swept a pair
each of those three iimings
ori
. '
imp9rtantfifth inning homerun
mort\~trikeouts (57). tqan his
.
st.µ' as he
1n1t
together a pe:rfe~t
.
·
fromthe Fl?x.es,
5-4
4i
game one
her way to going
4-4
on the day
tQ1ead Marist:.
: ..
.
..
'
·
.
.
•
.
.
·
freshmanfoaimnate.
,
.
. ..
· -
·
.
5
s
for~5
clay,
.
which includ~4 four
·
and 6-2 in game two.
with
three
RBI.
..
But the severidi
:
inniilg still
. While it was
·the
hitting that
RB I's and two. runs scored;
The next day it was Niagara . Lynn Stoczynski had
three
hits
.
remained, and the Purple Eagles · carried the teMt during the be-
,
Cervini had three hits and
.
.
taking two, as they defeated
for Canisius.
.
.
.
. ·.
.
: :
.
.
·
pro~ptly loaded the bases on a
ginnin
·
g ofthe streak~ the pitch-
scored four more
.
runs Jor
.
Marist2-1 and5-4in the double-
So that brought the Lady Red
··
pair of singles
.
~d,a hit bats-
.
ing is what helped them sustain
Matist.
·
·
header.
Foxes ti:>nearbyNiagaia on Sat-
man:
.
.
:
:,
·· .·
..
it
·
·
.
·
The Red Fox.es conti~ue play
Marist traveled to Buffalo to
.
urday. In the first game, Kasack
·
.
"Titia
·
seUip)odi~
B9wers for
.
Following the Red Foxes de-
this weekend when they play
take on Canisius, and they
settled down and returned to
. ·
ali~lelat~gru.ne·heroics,asshe
molishingofSt.Peter's,theRed
back-to-backdoubleheadersat
started the afternoon on
a
high
her old producfrveform, giving
.
.
·
doubled off Kasackand cleared. Foxes came back with two
4-0
Canisius.
note.
.
up only two runs over six in-
the
bases,
thus tying
·
the game
.
AfterJesseRosenhahnledof ningsofwork .
.
•.
·
.
.
•
.
.
·
..
•
atfour.
:
.
.
.
:,
,.
;
.
;·:
..
,
..
,
_
.
:>
.
the bottom of the fourth for
However, the offense
.._was
si-
.
. .
:
The
next
batter, DesiPrhioso.
Canisius with a homerun, Matist
·
lent, as Niagara hurlerChristina
·
doubled home
·
Bowers, and the
.
came out in the fifth and ex-
Martin held M;uist to one run
·
pqssibilitY
.
.
~fa
·
M~srvictory
:
pl
oded
for four runs.
on two hits as she went the dis-
·
disappeared before
,
th~ir
?Wi(
The scoring started when Me-
tance.
.
,
·,
eyes
.
.
.
.
.
, .
. ,.·
,
,
.·
.
.
·
.
.
:
·
'"
·
_
.
•
,
..
lissa Tucci doubled home Marla
.
Marist led
-
for the
ftfei._fi~~
i~-:-
·
.
·,
Mai1iritook the, win
in
relief,
'
SaracinoandKatCheski to give
nings, 1-0, as a resulfofifo'st while Kasacktook
'
her fourth
_
Marist their first lead of the
inning single by Amanda
lossoftheLadyRedFoxesroad
game.
Koldjeski.
trip
.
.
·
.
.
Jenn Hanson knocked Tucci
Kasack was strong until the
Now·the Fo.xes await the
i-e-
homewith adouble.ofherown.
sixth, when Stacy Pino finally
suI.ts
of Niagara's. and
The Foxes added the fourth run
got the
.
Purple Eagles on the
Manhattan's final games.
.
of tlie inning on another RBI
board with an RBI single.
Niagara will take on first place
double, this time by Rachel
Pino then came around to
StPetersonSaturday,followed
Ammons.
·
cross the plate when Randi
by a clash with Manhattan on
But Canisius began to chip
Lawton, who was 3-3 on the
day.
Sunday.
.
.
Lax
suffered
its'seoond
overtime
loss
to
the
FricUS
in
three=;~.
. ..
rt
1
'.1
fflE
:
UmcL£
·
••
·
- .
J
.
nn:rAr.p:r-,.:;
i;J:t::inj,D
.
b
P
·
~u~~o~i!ntn'tfwt'/J;.,.'J/?on';:
women's
The Inner Circle is an annual
· supplement for the incoming
staff members and editors to
~ain experience in producing a
newspaper.
VOLUME 52, ISSUE 18
by
JAMESJ.LIETO
·
·
·
·
of their players.
Rebecca
Staff
Writer
-
.
- .
'
Strunk, who was a key compo-
nentto the team's success in the
After completing a spectacu-
fall, broke her foot and is out for
lar fall season the Women's
the season. They then went on
Rugby Team is back in action
to lose four heartbreaking
again this spring.
·.,
..
.
games. by very close margins,
The fall
_
season was a very ex-
and all away from home.
citing time for the team.
·
In Oc-
The first loss came on the road
.
tober, they captured th~ Metro-
in early April; to nearby rival
politan Union II toi.Jrnamemtitle
New Paltz College, by the dif-
at Stonybrook University for the
ference ofonly one score. The
first
.
time in the history of the
team
then
traveled
to
women's team here atMarist.
Stony Brook University, two
After this thrilling victory, the
·
weeks ago to participate in a
team advanced to the Northeast
,
tournament that was taking
Championship held
.
atthe Uni-
place
•
there. This t9urnament
versity
..
of
·
·
Massachusetts-
..
would be the site of the women's
Amherst, where they finished
next three losses. The team
impressively in fourth place.
played three games in one gru-
Even more excitement camein
eling day, and was defeated by
January when the teain learned
Oswego, Southern Connecticut,
that four of its members had
and New Paltz once again. All
been chosen to representMarist
three games were decided by a
on the Metropolitan N)'A.11-Star
margin of one score.
Team. Amanda Parrillo, Aliso~
The spring season has not
Riguad, Jessica Spencer and
brought the same
·
success as the
Rebecca strunk
•
all completed
The Marist.Women's Rugby team (Top L-R) Janet Ht.iritington, Allison Riguad, Crystal
fall season did, but the season
tremendous
.seasons
to
earn a
is not over yet. The women will
spot on the teani. of o.nlY 21 girls
Rauen, Jessica Spencer, Coach Sean Morrison, Jody Wat~rs, Becky Strunk, Jody Mirto,
·
be traveling to Drew University
·
chosen out of 12 colleges in the
(Middle L-R)· Diane Bonsignore, Jessica Holden, Meredith Kamp, Sarah Griffune, Mandy
for their final game of the spring
NY area.
,
-These a~
~
omplish-
.
Parrillo, (Bottoml-R) Becca O'Neil, Megan Sauers
/
Jeannine Kilbride, Leeann McNally.
this Saturday. Heretheywi,ll be
ments were all gre!it'stri.des for
.
·
25 women this season, and what
tha~
'
she loves playing rugby
ery minute of it."
looking to
·finish
the semester
-
one
·
ofthe newest teams here at
is even inore amazing is that all
''
here
at Marist because of the
Things have not been going
strong, and carry that over to
Marist.
: ·
the women on the
teim
·
have
·
uniquenes~ of the sport.
well so fat: this spring though,
the fall season. With only five
.
Thewomen's team was estab-
learned the game h~re.atMarist. ·
.
"Women's R..ugby is two bru-
as the team has faced· fierce
graduatirtg' seniors, they are a
:1:.;
Aished,at
:
Marisl) in 1996, and Ji;None
·
of-the
team
member~ had
ia(40 minute halves of all-out
I
competition in theiroff-season.
"
you
'
ng tc:iam
with their sites set
'·
.
.
since then
:
they have inade
tr~~
.
ever played rugby
'
before
tom-
. :
aclion,'.' said Spencer.
"Where
.
The first
-
setback came early in
.
on another advancement toward
·
.
mendous steps towards excel~
·
ing to college.
.
elsecan you find 30 girls tack-
the semester when the team suf~
the ~hampionship in the fall.
·· 1ence. ·. The
.
~earn has grown to
.
Captain Jessica Spencer says · ling each other and loving ev-
fered a devastating fojury to one
Marist's top salaries
·
.
from presitlent's
·
:office
·
•.
President of Business Affairs,
'
paid," ~,iu'rray said. "I believe
.
who was paid $105,500. Gerard
everyone here woul,d make more
·
·
·,
·
Cox Vice President of Student · in the private sector, but they
,
by
PATRICKWIIlTILE
Affairs, .was paid $98:
_
886.
:
•
·
..
sfaf in e
_
du
_
catibn because they
,
,
•
•
_
..
.
0
;
·:
Editor
·
· ·:
)-Jarry
Wo
.
9d, who is ncF
·
pe_liev
:
e
,
iri the work that is being
·
.
.
longer employed by Maris(,
·
done ~ere at
:
Marist College." '
'
·
·
'
·
·
·..:<· :,
made$97,984. ShaileenKopec:-, ..
. ,
.
-According
·
~o·Murray,
little·
'
-·
;;:-
·
Accordfrig
fo
the Office
'
of
.
the
Vice
'
President for College
<_
wo
_
utd
'
charJgei!l, regards to Sala-
':
'-
President Dennis'
J. Murray, the
..
Advancemen(
'
earned a salary
'·
fies
'
if Marist CoJlege were
·.
13 highest pakl employees a~
'.-
of$95,000. ·. .
.
chang_ed to Marist Unive~sitt
.
Mari st
;
C~ll~ge
__
.
recej_vef
,
.
.
The rema1nmg five emp~oy~
· .
_
He sa_id that
_
al1?oug~ Manst is
.
:
$1
;346,075
last
y6af.
,,
~
,
:
·
ees do
·
not hold office pos1~10ns
,
!e~hmca~ly
_
a un1Vers1ty because
:
·
PresidenrMurray
/
w.a~ the
atMarist. ~om Daly, theD1~ec~
it
:
C?ffers grad~ate course ~nd
highest
·
paid at $234;200. , He
tor of Physical
:
Plant and~udd-
•
pos~esses
·
t
,
he,
.
necessary s1z(?
.
'
said he does
·
no
.
t sethis
·
own
ing Programs, made $97,254
.
·
and technolog)', the college
salary, and the job of deciding
·
Onkar Shat~a: Professor ?f
. ·
woul
_
d leave any decision about
·
his earnings is given to the Computer Science, ~as paid
~e n~me_of the college up to
Board of Trustees.
$92,175 .
.
Guy Lometti, Dean of the alumm.
.
.
•
·
"(The Board of Trustees) has
the
·
school of C()mmunicatiori
.
''There ~e
·
sc~ools like Bos-
a committee that evaluates my
and the Arts, made $90,
461.
ton College, Providence College
performance •every year,"
Reginett_a _Haboucha, De~~ of · and Dar!mouth ,<?olle~e that
Murray said.
the Div1s1on of H~maruttes, .keep the
.
colleg~ _m ~etr name
·
Murray said that his salary
earned $89,323. Finally,_ ~e be~au~~ of trad1~1on, Murray
iscomparedbyiheBoardtothe Miringoff,Profess01:ofPoht1cal
sa1
1
d
1
. I wou
_
Id ldtke_ttho
_
see o_ur
president's salaries at similar S~i~nce,, made_ $87,390.
co egeass?c1ate w1 JUstone
.
·
institutions like Quinnipiac Cel~
Mmngoff s salary•~ augmented
name~ Mans_t, that people could
1ege , Sacred Heart University
by h~s posi!ion as d1rect?r
0
of ~e associate with excellence and
and Rider University. Budget
Manst Institute for Pt!bhc pm-
tradition."
size, the amount of time holding
ion.
.
.
.
Murray, who was involved in
the position and the complexity
Murray said that the yearly
the naine change process at his
1 k ·
salary is based on the position
alma mater from Long Beach
of the job are a l t~ en mto con-
that the employee holds within
State College to Long Beach
sideration.
l
State University, said that
Roy Mero
Iii,
the Executive
the college. For examp e, a pro-
Vice President, was the seco~d
.
fessorofManagementorCom-
changing the name would not
32 F I
puterScience makes.more than
cause any major changes within
highest paid at $132:, 1 ·
~
•
f H
· ·
Marist. He added that the pos-
M
II .
Arlin
a professor o
umamt1es or
lowing
ero
I
are
sible decision to change the
th D
f
F
It /
Political Science.
Arslanian, e eano acu Y
"Everyone both on the fac-
nameoftheDivisionofHumani-
.
Vice President of Academic Af-
ties to the School of Humani-
-
d $ 125 770 d ulty and administration works
fairs, who ma e
,
, an
h
ties is up to the faculty.
Anthony Campilii, the Vice
very hard for what
t
ey are
• '
•
•
,
I
• . •
I
'
..
.
.
'
' \ ;
.
•.
'\
\
APRIL 29
7
1999
Sings
·
p
·
raises
of
.·
·
%:
0
;:r~:~n~~:~e
.
e
.
~o~
.
: t : ~
·
.
.
·
.
.
· tile and rabui Bazongatron
' I '
i
\
\
\
-:~
,
·
~,
_
:
,
_
/
_
,
i
,
·:
,
,
/~ -,
1,,1·1•;'1'
_
1
_
1 :;
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sUPPLEMENT2
·
,
.
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-
·
Bids
us
fond
·
farewell
MCCT'A
'
H · M · •
' -
· .
feeds on marsupials,
·
which is
·
S
·
U ·
ar1
St S
th~ re~son the opossum popu-
my blatant defiance
:.
towards
_ :-.
la~10n m the Hudson Valley has
.
byCARLITO
journalistic integrity,
TlieCircle
• by
CARLITO
be
setting a positive example for
plummeted in recent years.
Staff Graduate
.
.
tolerated nie and
I
can't for the
• Stajf lnvestiggio"r:
.
. .
his peers but instead, is feared
JeremySmithandJoeScotto
lifeofme,figureoutwhy
,, ·
.·
·
.
·
·
•
·
and loathed by all students that
:
have a secret that nobody e.lse
Tlie first article lever wrote·
When the
.
Gender ~uality
For my final article in
The
live in Gartland. ·
.
.
knows abouL They are broth-:
.
for
The Circle
·
was
·
an
horiest,
.
Club attempted to oustnie from
-
Circle,
I
thought
I
would shock
He and his roommate,
-
ers that were ab~ridoned by
fairlyobjectiye ieyiew ofa Rage
these pages;1he
Circle
sup-
the world by writing a legitimate
HuMarist
·
Dan Tyburski
.
'were
··
their parents at birth and raised Againsr the Machine
·
concert.
ported me although they prob-
slice of investigative reporting.
arrested
a
month ago forsc,licit-
by a pack of saheh-toothed ti-
Did
I
say honest?
,
Because
I
-
ably detest~d my writing ..
I
The target of my investigation
ing sex from a warthog: The
gers.'
Jt
did not take long for
should have said poring,
.
would like to thank
The Circle
is MCCTA's HuMarists, of warthog turned out to be Gary
them
to
develop an appetite (or
After that article,I concluded
staff, Modele Clarke and any-
which
I
was formerly a member.
Coleman who has been work-
·
blood:
.
Last week, they were
that objectivity
·
and the role it
body else that defended my ide-
Although
I
was with the inipro-
ing as an und~rcover detectiv
_
e
~restled down by twelve _secu": · plays in journalism has a crip-
als, as warped as they may be.
I
visational/sketch comedy troop
for the past four years. Rumors
nty guards after mauhng
·
a
·
pling effect on the creative
guess
I
should thank Thomas
for two years,
l
did not know
have been drculatingthat woollymammo~onthecampus
·
mind; it suffcicates the o'nly
Jefferson for
,-
the first
.
amend~
themas well as
I
thought
I
did.
Murray and Tyb,urskikidnapped
g~een and sta~bmg passerby's
...
thing that J;iasever ~et nie apart
·
ment because that is
:
the only
.
·
I
decided to investigate the
pary
Coleman, slaughtered hin1
.·•
with the
··
beast. s tus_k.
·
.0°:e
·
~f
·
_
from mainstream
.
society and
.
governmental literature thatac-
members of the group after re~
and drank
'
his
.
blood in apsy
:.:
.
·
th_e stude~ts killeq
m
~e 1n:ci-
tliis lackofexpressive oxygen
tually supports a heathen like
ceiving a
:
phone call from the
cliotic attempt to
unify
theni-
dent was fell~w ~uM~_st Nie~
·
was boring the
,
*$@! out of me.
myself,
·
.
group's newest member, Nick
selves with the soul of.the co~
Fo
ster; In their arumahsbc state,
·
So
I came to the realization
Although he is no longer at
·
Waldsheutz. He called me
in
a
medic god.
they rlid not even realize that the that as
a
writer for the
Arts
and
Marist,
I
would like to thank Jim
state of panic to tell me about
Junior member Paul Dial.a
body they were mutilating be-
Entertainment
·
section of a
Dziezriski for allowing me to
the initiation ·ritual that he was
used to be good friends with the
,
lo_riged to their close friend,
sparsely read paper,
I
would
break from the convention con-
.
·
forced to partake in and
I
was
.
aforementioned until several
·
Nick
·
Fost~r was 20 years
:
old
have to do something different
.
fines of journalistic format. The
appalled.
weeks ago when atrocities oc-
·
~hen he died and he was hung
to peak the interest of my read-
person
·
on
The
:
Circle that
I
.
.
.
.
,
·
.
.
;
He informed me that senior
curred that forced him totermi-
hke a brontosaurus. May he rest
ers as well as myself. Maybe
would like to thank the most is
member Mark Montgomery
nate
.
their friendship. Dialajs
.
in peace.
·
.
other people would have chose
·
my editor, Patrick Whittle.
:;
This
brought
_
him into a rnom
·_
that
th~ only African Americll.n
,,.
·
"
The above article may be
.
to im.prove the quality of their
year, he gave me uninhibited
was occupjep
:
by a baby I.lama
member
O.f
the group and that
•
sho
-
~kin~}!>
~.9.1:p~
<>LY<;>U,
:
1
writing or
.
adhete to a stricter
·
creative
.
freedom to writewhaF
and a full~grown yak
..
Nick was
was
·
never
an
issue for ariyone
knowJ w
,
asJffiJJoerga~t¢.cl.;tvh~n jo!-lrnaJ.istj~ integrity put
I
chos_e . e_v~i:I~h2s
~
. r~gli£dJ;ss
~
how
-
then forced at gunpointto nurse
in the group except Dan and
I
discovered
:'
alf
cit
thiPib?ut· to take a different route.
nsque 1t was .
.
He endurea the
the animals despite thefact that Jon. In a drastic attemptfo
trans-
.
peopl~ I tho~ght
:
I
:
kn~w f~rly . . .. Inste~~ of writing mundane . wr.athof the Gender Equality
.
he is anori~lactating male
;:
cYears
form th~ir friencl into" honkey;
well.'. D~swt~ ~e
~
Jaf~
'.
:
th
.
~t} \ ·nioviere.view
.
s eyecy week arid. ·, Club and
::
~:vet). sufferecl · the
,:_
,/
,,
.
.
,
ago
;
·
M.oritgornefy
;
attempte~fo
.;
they sunk his head
in
a tub
of
.
have ~u~I_
<!iJ>~l~J~g_
:
J~
l
!'HU{E_~~->
·COverihg:_iheA &
;-
E
::
section with~bnuitfo£ .ihe
i
respoiis1bilify {or
j.
j.
-
~
violate me as welt ~lthougli he
sulfuric acid.
1
Dial* barely sur
,:.
·
·
II~~~sts wdl be havmg th~tr
the slightest modicum oflegiti-
printing
.
offensive comments
·
insisted that reciprocal
:
spank-
_vived the incident and after ex~
" :
Big Sho~ on Tu:sday, MaY.
4
m
.
m.a~y. L,pp,ted
t9
tackle thds-
that! had written; The ordeal
.
.
.
ing amongst full grown men
was
cessi ve cosmetic
-
reconstruc~
.
.
th~
.
Nelb
_
Cioleltl Theatre.
.
Al
~
,
-•
sues tha~ really n1atterin life and
.
cost him sever-if frieiidj afoi
foi::
:
·
:
:·
:
:
:~
commonplace
·
within
'
the
·
tion, he now looks like Boris
'.
though the show s
.
~
,
~t?;
30,
.:
did
.·
so
;
_
:
;
.
in a
•·
.
thorough,
:
tliat;-1 wiil
1
b~eteni~lyiorry'.
1
1
:'.
·
-
.
·•
HuMarists,'I
ran
ou(of the room
Yelstin.
. .
.
•
.
:
.
·
. . . ·
·
: .
doors
,
0
~~~
a!,?,:
,
?
,
O
,
and y
_
ou h~d
-·
indiscriinmatory fashi
.
01
¥:
h
f
the
.
n~yer thought
'
Tcoiiid
take
'
a:
ljk-
.' :
screaming after he pulled down
At first glance, the three
_
fe-'
,·
.
;beµer get
'
there e~~y ~ecau~e
-
past two},,~ars,J paye offerid~d
·
ing to
:
~brileon~
<
~ith
0
iii
·
c6
-;
·
his pantsand whipped out a
male members of the group ap-
·
the )ast sever~l
:
sh<>o/s have
orinsultedvfrtifally every en:-
~~trong m9ralfiber
and
811
:
eter
;:-~
ping pong paddle.
pear to be innocent
.
and
'
inca-
sold . out (soit ~s. nof an
.
a~~u-
';tertainer,
_
gender, style!and cul~
.
naj abstjn~ric
,
e
.
fr9lll alcohol; but
.
After finding out about pable of destru~tion;
·
but after
rate~o~d, a~ssi9n
"
i~fyee), and _ ture_.
·
,<"\
>;
i
i
.
'
·
.:
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.
:
:
,
:
.• .
.
..
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J<;iid
;x.
Although tliing~ di,driot
Nick's occurrence,
I
set out to
minor snooping,
I
foundoutex-
-
se':ral huncired ~ttJden~s
:
were
.
. ' .•
.
Why?
,
;
Becausej(is
flln
:
In
.
wqrk
;
oµ
f
fot
uf r<Jmanticany;r
verify if the group was irivolved
actly what they are capable of.
?eme_d e~try. ,
!-11:
~
·
~h?',Y
1~
.f~r
. .
a worid
,
that is
.
exh
.
a~stively ~o~
7
·
·
wiil al\Yays'Iove you; Patrick.' ...
.
with any other paganistic,
Jaime O'Neil, Meagan Verone
-
illlll1ature a~dt~~ce~ only;an~if
:
cemed
·
with beirig
,
,
politicaliy.
.·
_
.
:
The
'
c;ircle
js'a
'
iiewspaper
beastialic activities and surely
and
.
Stephanie
.
Marks are the
'
:c
YOU
are easily
~ff
ended,
:
ke~p pqtr,~ct
,'
Jfotjn
,
d
~
1f~shing
.
the
.·
.
.
·
.
andsiri~e ¥aristJ:'._ollege is
_
votd
enough, they are. Junior mem-
organic equivalent of Voltron
.
,
your@$$ at home.
·
.
.
e11y'elop~ to
_
be
·
qui
~
e ple~§Ur
·e:<,
-,
of
:
\Vorthwpil~
:
Ile\VS
'8
_totjes to
ber and RA Jon Murray should
.
that
.
·
goes by
.·.·
the
.:
.
name
;
.•,
.,
,
.
. .
.
.
.
..
a~,~; Yqu lieard
·
file
·
con:~ftly,L
,
.repgrt, !i
;
fil
_
ajontyofQten1~011'."
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e
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nj'<?y ti~~l.ng p~9ple off and
.
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~ist of seda~ng Sl!bj~~t
_
matter
.
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.
ew
.
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.
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plillOil
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)Iove
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qvhen strangers ap:,
·
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s~tegi~Jnyolvediti SQAe!ec-
.
-
to
take
,.-
op
·
-Ed tO next lever ~:
0
:'::Ii;!it,~r:v~1~:;:
tr~
1
:t::i:n:ot.'.
. .
.
_
.
. .
. more wheo somt!One w.all,cs up
tµjng uricoriventional ancljour-
understanding oflayout design
dt? this, it is ilecessaiy to print
.
to m.e ~d call~
·
nie
an
obnox-
nalistic
.
all
y
:
nonc;c,nformist to
that I would like
to
take further
·• .
any opinions stllderi~ offerfo~,
.
·
io11~ pig •
..
.
I love )he
.
fac(that
.
.
stamlarg newspaper
;
fqrµiat.
.
with
The Circle.
'
.,.
.
Marist is in desperate
'
need of ev5!ry fraternity
.
at Maristwould
Wh~ther: it
W!!S
laughter, resent-
.
byMICIJAELBAGNATO
Opinion
Editor
.
. .
·
After being at Marist for
'
airactive
·
outlet for'their ideas;
love to bludg~on
_
me to ~eath
ment,oranger
;
lwantedmyread-
three years
;
I have seen and
.
this
.
campus is ~ot ne.arly as ex-
and the Jact than,he femi
.
nist
ers to e.xperience tangib•e
emo-
Greetings
.
·
:
· I, Michael
heard from many opinionated
pressiveasitspotential. Ifour populatipnabhorsmeissograti-
ti9ns.
.
.
.
.
.
Bagnato; have been chosen as
·
students. 1ndorm rooms, bath-
fellow students flexed theiropin-
fying; I am
_
almost sexuaUy
:
Invoking laught~r was
.
al~
.
the opinion editor for next year.
rooms, Iunchroom(s), as well as
ionated muscles more often, we
arousedjust thinking about it.
ways my priinacy IJ1otiv~
and
I
Though I had not seen it outside of rooms, there are stu-
would all come
.
out of Marist
· Perhaps I pushed the enve-
wrote in a manner that I found
.
coming, the opportunity pre-
dents wi~ an energetic attitude
with a far superior learning ex-
lope
a
bi
.
t too far in the contro-
amusing. I (!!alize thi.s is not a
sented itself to me and I decided
about their belief. Debates
·
and
perience.
,
versia]/'Joy in Sobriety"
.
article.
humorous entry but I have been
-
to go for it I would lilce to thank
arguments will always
_
arise,
·
lam
currently in need
.
of a • Maybe I
_
did cross that line, but
ti:yipg to amuse
.
you people for
Tara and Pat for their gutsy de-
whether the topic is basketball;
·
Senior Political
.
Columnist ( or
if
I
.
did it is not my fault I am
years so I am afraid that I have
.
,
cision to choose me after much
teachers, sexual frustrations, or more!) to write weekly. Anyone
simply the product of a soc~ety
exhausted
:
my
.
finite chasm of
· deliberation.
.
A
.
question on
Swedish aeath metal. I remem~
else interested in writing an
that breeds desensitization sol
sarcastic commentary.
many of our minds is
,
"Who is
ber my family environment as a
opinion-based column discuss-
can
.
not be held responsible. I
.
·
:
Anyway,
~
t has ~ n
an
in-:
this dork?" I would like to an-
youngster as one giant, never.;.
ing whatever th~y like can call
blame democracy and the free
teresting
·
couple of years and I
swerthatrightnow.
ending argumen
.
t. Thoµgh it me at
X4376
or emailme at
expressionism that it.endorses
wantto
_
thajlk
_
youJorall(?wing
·
..
.To all those who forgot, my
may have gotten ugly at some
·
KX8C.
I plan to write
a
co1umn
so in
'
retrospect,
'
-Thomas
me to broadcast
i:nY
psyche in
real name is Michael Bagnato,
points, overall, the free-flowing
each week, which, in some
Jefferson is ultimately to blame.
cathartic
_:
bursts
'_
of print. I
but call me Michael for short
.
I
discussion over ideas and ide-
people's minds, might be called
Thanks a lot Tom
.
would like to exterid the utmost
was born in Norwalk, Connecti-
als yields comprehension in a
humor. And if that is not
Most of what I
.
have written
of gratitude to everyone that
cut: a large, diversified suburb,
thoughtful atmosphere.
enough •
.
I have worked with
has been either facetious jabs
has ever supported or comple-
forty-five minutes away from the
It
is this type of atmosphere
comic strips enough to be con-
at the idiosyncrasies of 90s cul-
mented me
.
.
And if there is any-
city. I am a Multimedia major
I w.ould like to create in the Op-
fident in publishing them.
ture or maniacal ramblings from
one out
·
there that I
·
have.not
with an Art
·
minor, entering my
Ed section of
The Circle. I am
_
Again, thanks for the oppor-
my tumultuous
.
n:iind. Aside
offended, please confront me
fourth and, hopefully, final year
challenged with the need to dis-
ru
·
nity to have this job. I wish
·
from my first article, I have never
about it so that I may rectify the
at MarisL I am interested in de-
cover ways to elicit students'
the best ofluck to everyone else
attempted to portray myself as
situation.
.
sign for web pages, newspapers
opinions in a forum that will
working on
The Circle for next
anything that even remotely re-
Peace and God bless
:
and nt~g~zjq~ .
.
~
.hay~ I! gQQq
,
.r~cJl.a.Il'~t\lQ~n-~;
.
·
fn.
Qt:dt{ tcf
.;'
J'~.• P~ce,
·
.
.
·
sembJ~.-~ jQ.u_l'l]aji_st--~
·'
P~Rite.• ...
·
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·
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_ _ _ _ _ • • • • • _ • • • • •
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·:CJJJ9<G/Jt
SUPPLEMENT 3
Spooi~,~etqt(:foffl1.¢tci)itoi4
defines "error"
The.Jer.~~y·•.-sid.·,· ...
e.:·
·
·
~~ch~6rri.:6~,jeez:Iamgetting
i,l\~J;~te~. it
-
ii'·hai-d
-
to·thi~ ·1 ~elieve
th:i
Marist can work
This column has always docu-
mented 30 minutes of thought
flying through my head while I
stare at the keys of a Donnelly
computer. I admit, I still cannot
·
type without looking at the.
keys. Anyway, itjusthitme that
this is going to be the last time I
ain
going to be staring at these
keys and Tam kind of wishing
. that was because I learned how
to type without looking, not
because this is my last column.
kind of emotional- I am notwor-
about how you have the power
on -these problems within the
riedabouttears, though,itisjust
to
.
offset others' perceptions of community and bring the re-
. this' god-awful runny snot-that . you and themselves and even
suits along .. A degree is only as
is about to...
inflict pain. However, the pain
valuable as the :work one has put
Qkay lam back. ·rreally have
of an honest rejection bears no
into
it.
The funny thing is, as
.a tough time getting overly sen-
comparison with that bf a life-
strongly as I believe in Marist
timentalwithmit blowing
it-
my
time of deception.
Coliege, I believe that I want to
nose that is. Oh, arid please,no
Yes, well with all of that said~ . be elsewhere. That is the only
innuendo intended. Some
_and that
lit_tle
paragraph
sitting
reason why I am leaving Marist.
people might say that my writ-
above·· this one means a lot to
However, I am kind of bummed
ing is laced with more Freudian
me, I would like to· s~y. that I
that I will miss out on the new
slips than Anna's armojre. Of .. believe in Marist College.· I be-
Home Depot next year. I really
course, that is a complete· lieve in the steps that it is tak-
dig that plastic grass that
phallacy.
-
ing to become a better place. I
people put on porches and
Last week's column was titled_ beHeve in the professors, stu-
pools. I always dreamed ofbuy-
":rl:te end of an error." I admit
dents, and staff who have been · ing some, along with those syn-
thatl was more concerned with . working together to make such
thetic silk flowers. I wanted to
a catchy title than its veracity,
great projects as the Praxis Mi-
put them on my dorm room floor
· or even how true it is.
I
did not nor
.
and Habit_at for Humanity
to give the room a more funky,
. mean my years. at Marist were
become a reality while
I
have
psychedelic-outdoorsy look.
an.error,Jjust meant that !was
b(i~n here. I also cannot over-.
On an even lighter note, I
· going to start listening to, rather
look the· new · library, not only
would like to get _back to our
· than discrediting my thoughts.
because it is pretty damn big,
usual broadcast, which is al-
Discrediting myself was my er-
but also because it
will be an
ready in progress.
ror.
excellentiesource.
. .. which is why I that if.I were
Telling my parents that I was
I believe that the problems that
to get married, the whole deal
obliterated, they can bowl too.
Sure, people would scoff and
think
it
was just soo tacky, but
those are the folks that I would
not want to come anyway.
I would not want an engage-
ment ring either. I would rather
have a dog. I know. Dogs die,
but I once dropped a ring off a
train platform. It is kind of hard
to do that to
.a
dog and a dog
can sort of duck under the plat-
form if a train comes. Wedding
rings are dumb too. I have been
told that if I get married that I
ought to wear a ring so that I do
not look available and have to
worry about scores of mei\.hit-
ting on me. Um, well I ani"'not
· exactly wearing a ring now, and
I do not have that problem. Why
should I expect such when I am
older and more decrepit?
. You may call me a cheap date.
It is not like that at all. I am just
not for sale.
Tara Quinn was the Opinion
Editor of the Circle. She is a
junior communications major
from Teaneck, NJ ..
I kind of
feei
that I experience
an intimacy through this column
that I rarely find in real life. Here
we can just drop our silly
shields of snobbery, h~ughti-
ness, self-inflicted solitude, and
insecurity.·· we· can transcend
cliques; jockdom, dorkdom, ·
bitchdom, and abetcroinbie and
. leaving Marist was· the hardest
Marist faces, such as a lack of
.
would probably have to be in a
· thing I ever had to do. Some-
diversity and intolerance are
bowling alley. I mean, a bowl-
times people do not realize that
not a reflection of the college
ing alley is just like those big
itismoredifficulttorejectsome-
itself, but a reflection of the ills
banquet halls only-guests do
thing
or someone than _it is to · that plague our.society at large. . . not have to sit there and_· _g_et _ _ _ _
_
. Tbf pride
ofRhocJ.~
Island
.
.gi~~s,,~i~_,;;far~~ell:'.yoJyDJI\,
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - . has typically found its way
oii'to~
and ·confidence .
. the pages of
The Circle
arorihd •' <.<\sf ne~,~e tnorgentwhen I
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ · · thistimeofyear. Unfortunately,
willdrivedownRoute9forthe
.
I never .paid attention to .them,
last time as a Marist'c~ilege ~tu-.
so I am
riot
sure how this is sup-
dent, I am startled by the fact
·•pos.ed to work. The only thing I
that I am actually looking for-.
· am sure of is that Al Gore
will
ward to leaving. I never thought
not be our next president. As
I would feel happy about all the
· far as a reflection on college life" · ind~cision and uncertainty tpat
..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
__. · is concerned,
I
think ea~h ofus · comes with a diploma However,
who graduate • should realize · there is strange comfort. that
.. . A long.time ago, in a galaxy
that, arguably, the four biggest
comes any time a period of wait-
far away,: I was
a
freshman.
years in our Hves·ar(! about
to
i~g'is over- I am finally facing
It was tl:ie·end ofthe world
come to a close. .
.
niy destiny; We run from the
as we knew.itwhenwe attended , ·. Our ideologies have forirted
'
pro"spect of facing reality;· but
our firsf"orieritation sessionia:r: ·· during these 'years,' and we will
now th~t
lain
on the thresllold, _.
Marist; :rflreinertibet cb'rredly, · ;carry with us a viorldview that lam anrioyci:l that I must bother
the first'orientation Iileeting - matured while we .called . with.final exams. Every time
was a _
•. talk by . Frank·. Maduri
Poughkeepsie home. Since ·we
summer lias rolled around, !have .
about sexual misconduct.
are'inthetwilightofourcollege
been happy to leave because I
Those were the days. Tlived in
career, I would ratherlook for-
knew I was coming back. Now,
Leo
Hall,
and
BrotherTom,'our · ward thanwa.llow in the nega-
I
am
happy to leave
.
because 1·
nientor, insisted that we "relax ·
·
tive memories that could easily
know that I am nevercoming .
and have
a
beer" on ourfirst be exhumed. Our complaints - back - in the capacity of a stu.:.
night at college. Brother Tom
about the
.
security guards and
dent..
·
.
started a trend that September the stench from the sewage
The setting sunshines its
morn:Irememberthinking:This
plant are a distant.memory. In
last, dimming rays on our lives
is• great! ;I'm
in·
a room. full of our future is the ability to make
as Marist stud!!nts. I· think the
fellow eighteen.:year-olds, and
manifest'all that we
have
done
luster of our shining moments
a member of the clergy is sug-
in college. If we have regrets,
as a student are faded.in com-
gesting we should go out and
and look back wishing for some-
parison to the next stages oflife.
drink!
thing different, it only motivates
The polluted Hudson will al-
A thoughtfully written reflec-
us to cultivate the· future. Our
ways_ churn. and bubble by the
tion on four years of college life · fond memories provide security
sewage plant that serves as an
invisible marker for our campus.
What we take away from this
place remains with us - that is
fond memories of good times
with good friends, the confi-
dence to succeed, and perhaps
a
few
unpaid parking tickets.
That's all, folks. Goodnight.
And may the Schwartz be with
you.
Bill Mekrut is a senior Politi-
cal Science/English double
major from Uncoln, RI. He
will
be attending
Law
School at
American University next year.
.,
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OIEY
CIRCLE
APRIL 29, 1999
f(~,9J)(ijjge!R,t1$l!ll.(J(J8
SUPPLEMENT 4 .
1
New A
& ,}.:
~\~f!fflt~J1i'ew~
J,(i(Big:Pish
· · · - -
··- - - ~0 - · - ~
.
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•
•
•
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• • • •
•
•• : · . . . . . - · ·
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'·N·B:.:.
Thank._YdiCFiir""Nor··7;.s:· Hepcat, .. tlie Pietasters,
<'. ---~ ... ,.
by
NIK BONO PARTIS. --
,.:?A1oshing. is another fan-:favor-- -Spring'-B_eeledJack, ..
,;.'; :.·:.: ·-_,. -,A&E,'Editor~ ·• -:
/ite; and·everyone knows a guy
TW: Well the problem with
• __ _'?,_,_J:,
f:-:-t\:._.-.~ ;:/- '.: ,
\:Jikefou.descdbe, i9-a wife
Moon•is that they will do abs"o-
Tavis Werts, trumpet player
:;;1ieater·~d D9c M:artens beat- - lutely nothing to push their
__ Jor
Re_e_l Big
F,
ish, comes clea11
-:i
.,i!!8,
q~
Fttle. gir~shi the pit, it ac-
b,aµds on radio or
TV
or apy !<lnd
, ··ao'oiit:
ska
mtisic,·:Jife.orr·•iiie
;;'tii~lly.h!ippe9s
h~~
a lot. Was _ofcommercial success, because
· road, being
a
mt,1sician, and the
;_ tlifs:m.-eajt~to:·be: humorous-or
they want to stay· o~ the;under-
. "·trademark
Reel
Big;Fish-.'sai'-
,-jmgry:orjust-:a Httle of boµiz
/ground. And so all th~ bands
, .:casin:in this :interview· at' the
·-.:iw~
i6vil~
iriostly justto make·
·
'on thatiabel who are really good
. ,-,.Chance_
- Theat~i-
.
,
.
. :-
jn_
_;Ju11 ·of aj_}:,tho~e guys, 'cuz we
and want to be commercially
. . . ;)\>i.igh~ee_pi.ie,:: :;:', ·: / ,, _.
:
: .
.J.-~ally.don'twant them to mosh.
successful, want_ to be able to
l'fB:
My first quesfion is, why.
_
}.'lie
first time we recorded that
make a living playing ska, have
. do yoti rock so hard?
.
/:and put it on
a
7"
vie called
it1n
all moved on.
Repeat went to
'.T\V:
Becauseor"Carlos.
-,The
Pii,
then we'd play it and
Hellcat, and they're trying to
·NB: That's the only reason?
· all these guys would strut a big
push them to,radio.
Dance Hall
TW: Yeah, because of Carlos.
pit to it, and they just didn't get
Crashers are on MCA. Moon's .
NB: Ok. .•. ,
-
,
.
. . .
it.. So we changed the name to
a cool label, I mean they do some
NB:
Yo~r second album has a
Thank You .For Not Moshing
good stuff, but on the business
lot niore texture. to it, with the
: hqping a few more people wo~ld
side of it; they don't quite get it.
guitars, the vocal harmonies,
· get it, but-~ don't thin~_theffio,.. Thef re-~ing too. hard to be
and the_ horn section. Did·you
. NB:
In aninterview ori WRRV-
an indie iabell thtnk and that
spend a lot more time in the stu-
--'!(_aron was askedhowhe wrote -.. ends up hurting a lot" of their
dio with Jh_ej~c.ortd one?-.::
·<s\ich catchy tunes, and he said··- bands.
-•-••·-. _
TW: Yeah,wespentmore time " . "'
"
.. ".
0::/c,>: .· .•:_,_,,:.
',,
<
•: ..
·"":·.!.-',: ,,_ •" .-
photocotirtcsyMOJOr=rds '
liestole all the hooks he hears
NB: lthink what\llot of fans
writing all the songs;
bui
the
R~I
L?'_@-R.s1s T~w;
W,«:rt.s
"5.Rii~l
soaa:iyi~
his !~lings
with
Nik _Bonopa~~·
·
:
9-~
{Ile'_
radfo: _ Is there _zjiyOtrufh · perceive as the pr~blein is that
main thingis;WeWrote·al1 these
TW: Yeah, I think that ~as the
_- ·
_
_
..
. .
.~o that ods he just joking again?
they talk about unity
i1;1.
the ska
sphgs right before .we recorded . firstshow_we played with.them, ._ ~ :
tf
mmm
·--~~~hs]
I doI?-',r-
;w:.
[~_buckles] Yeah, there's a' ·s~ene, then gopn a!ld criticize
: theni;.whereas'.W.itlj '_Turn The - arid we ended up touring .with: .knoVf: 1f we were discovered ·
h~e
bit of truth to that. We ere-
otherska bands. -
·
_
Radio Off' most of the songs
them a,lot after that.
It was fun
by him. But, yeah, he saw us
auvely borrow stuff from other
TW: Oh yeah, as you said there
were written two or three years
having something that different,
play _in a club in_Riv~rsicie. He .. _.qands occasion~ly.
.
have been tons of t_hings I've
. beforethealbumwasmade,and
you know, because none ofus·· · sawusandaske?ourhornplay,- . @:_ Does movmg away from. readwheretheyabsolutelyhate
we were still a pretty bad band.
could have done anything like
ers to play on his album._
sJ<a on your new record reflect
us. They pretty much hate any
NB: So that made a lot of the
that.
·
· ·
NB: Was that :mmgups?-'
the way its faded commercially?
band that doesn'ttry and sound
difference?
_ NB: Did you. colfa~orat~ on tlie :TW: No,-actuall~ the first _al-
TW:
~o, it re~ly had nothJng
like the Toasters, and any band
. TW: Yeah; wejustgot better
song ordidCooHe write'it?;'. -: -· . bum. AndS_cottand.Dan played
to.do with that, 1t was more Just
that leaves their label. They'll
·-_ .• , and learned how to.write better
TW: The song; we already had ·. all ·the· h?rn parts
1
_~~nd thr?ugh
C>u,r
t!lstes . changi~g
~n<;l.
the , stick around; because they still
songs, and they were fresher
written, and wejustplayeditas · that ~oJo heard us and then
way w~ want~d to play 1t. And . do have some·good,bands.on
going-into the studio. We had
an instrumental all the time,
and ·
they s1gned.~s. .
•
_ ,: ;
,,cPart
of1t wasJustthat,there are _ their label. But they've never
played them so many times [the
vie said "Hey, you shoul_d,do
,
NB: ~av~
YP~
ey_%reard,of_a " .. Sfl,P1'.111Y-bandsplaying~estyle been a bigfabel and never
will
._old S<>ngs) that with half of them
some toasting '.•over tliis~·;. and> ··. band called _
_tli_e
!!_zpp_q,s._1. , -,, ,: . :
")Y,~m_dpn,
~Tu.rn Th~-~l!-9!9,Qff!
~
•.
':;.be. ,", ,,:_,,
t
;,,;;J :.. '.- . :;,
l
,,_;>;
we ·were·sickof therri before we
so he came in and ~oded up writ-
TW: Uh-huh.
.
and we didn't want
to
sound like
NB: This isn' ton my sheet, but
even wentinto-tlie studio.
_:ing a!l entire song:!'.n,:e_r. i~.; _. NB:. ··A lot of people _saY. you .~~m. sowej\Jst~anted to keep; ... d?es anyone ever mistake
:Nif:
•iA
16t"'.of
b~rids-
;
fil'e reitic-
[Laughs] : ·
-
·
sound almost exactly hk~ea9h :· ou,r own sm1nd.
-.
_ Ricky, your tour.m_anager, for
tantto·putalabelontlieirmii-
NB: Ontheouttakesof'Why o~er.·
., __
. _
Nl3.:
Whatotherbandsdoyou,;,DavidSchwimmer? ,,.
_
sic, and most peopl_ewould say
p
0
They Rock So IIai-d?' you
~=-
_
yeah, they ~opy u~ a httle.
thmk ~e done for? A lot ~f TW: [With .a grin] . Occasion-
· foii'>i-e" ska, _out ·people Hke
talkalotaboutgetting gids and:< We \'e been playmg with them
people say Moon as a· label 1s
ally. He looks a lot-like him. For
. MoonRecordshavebpenlycriti~ . stuff, and in Join
Th~ Clu~,
the
,fop\ while. They'_re another re-
done with their mass exodus of some reason ,jhey;call h~m
cized you as a rock band with
lyrics are along the sa
111
e lines. · ally cool band.
talent -
the Dance Hall Crash-
Chachy, [Shrugs
J ..
-horns: How wouid you classify _ Do you guys attr!lct the ladies ..
yotirselves?
. : ' . . . . -
-
_-
as musicians?
1W:
V{e're a ska:pop band. I ·
TW:
[L~ughsJ N9. · We dpn'L
mean, a lot ofour s&ngs
are
more
'get
any. __ .-.. .
·
·-
.: focf~d r?ll, butM??n ReC?!dS
.@.: "!~~ally? ... · . ·- ;;
,
; ;
>"C.: - ....
· ·-can lciss. tny
~St ·..: __ -- _ . TW:
[Laughs again]<f:he girls
.
·. N.13:-~CanJ
qt1.9t.e,._yqu <>n
i~~t?. . _
that
we
could get
~eJilce.14
and_ ,
TW:'Uh-huh. Defiilitel . - .. ·
'
·
· ·
· ·•• ' · '·
.
,, -' '·.-
-·
·,Nlr_
WhaiIIot"6f'fanfrehll' ·
,Il9.n?,,9
~.l;JS
.\Yal)-!!a:gP.t~J~J..,
.
: . '".' .,like' fu-e-lliat'
'dt'if'sb'11'
t:iii'rtsl
lf~r
It
~
-~?~e,
.~v
agf?~.
:§~~,~
1
'-,
-: : ' __ ,,_ ~tt}'t\t#.if
~'p~Jtff
BB#(
Po,_,-~=
?r~a.h.
~t;1;;,.;t(;~;~i;
':·J9_u~p_,a~,the!11 Jh~tway:ot_do • shtm•s
.
since most ()f.our.Tails:
, _theyj~St'f,Olile
mit
Hke
~a,t?.
,
· .. --
•
.
_.
"¥e
tiii#e~
if,";f?ii.t.itj~~(~~d;t
._'!V(..=,
Well, .J-\~rop. _(13ciffe
_
H) · w9rks.
~µt,tlil:!J
all the. g(tJ~-~ho _
·· ~vn~es.~tthe}y~~~•
-~q
_he
U.~':1: ·
re~)' like-.us are,'i14. J~ot: ,that
.
'ally\vrites abouf'stuff
he,'~ .
th"ire's, anytliing,\hori,g,-w
_
ith .
. P!~s~~_o_ff,~be>u,t
,
'..,WJen ~e
b~tng14.:: . _._ :;
;,;,i,;:_ :_. .
.. ::wnte~:·ap<:mt~~ifp_ejust, g~,ts
""·NB·:
It makes themhieligibldbr;
-__ .t~cJ-!JXtaifa_~ti¢;•an~}Yh~n y_o,t1
·you .guys .. , ._
.
. .
.. - -- .
'piit1yiic~thafare•iea11y·sarcas~
·
--
'IW:
ruihi:' · _, .. __ .. .-... ,
ticwithhappy,_poppy music; it
NB: Whataboutb~1ng·on the
just comes out kinda funny .. But road.- Is it strange wakingup.:in-,
they all come from us being
a different city every day
aricf'·
~
piss_~
_
~f. -: .
.
... , ..... _
,
-· ,. ____ .. __ . -.. being basically.nocturnal?.
-·-·•=
· NB: Ireaifsomewherethatyou
TW: Itwasforawhile,butnow
guys wrote the chorus for
we're pretty much used to it. It's _
Scott's
~
_Doric _and plann<:d to
actllally kind of fun, \Vajtjng up
change 1t, but you never did?
and having no idea what'_s go-
TW:_ Well when we first started
ing on outside. Of
·
course this
playm~ the song, we needed
morning we all woke up and it
somethmg that would fit there, · was raining so we jusf all stayed
· ai!d that fit, so we just started
in bed.
· ·
·
singingthat.and~ethoughtwe
NB: In the great city of
would change it, but we just Poughkeepsie.
·
never thought of an~thing bet-
TW: _ This is actually the sec-
ter.
ond time we've played here. I
NB: What was working with
can'trememberwhoweplayed
Coolie Ranx like?
with, it was a long time ago, like
TW: We toured with him a lot,
a year and a half, two years ago.
actually, with
the Pilfers.
NB: There's a rumor that you
NB: I caught ~at show in Po~ guys were discovered playing
·chester, NY w1th_you and
the
a small club by John Feldman of
Pilfers.
Goldfinger. Is that true?
52.18.1
52.18.2
52.18.3
52.18.4
52.18.5
52.18.6
52.18.7
52.18.8
52.18.9
52.18.10
52.18.11
52.18.12
52.18.13
52.18.14
52.18.15
52.18.16
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~INNE1t·cmcLE~
·
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Jv1~st
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College we>men{
.
·
rugby
team
has
s~tacular
.
. ::
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·
9Q._th},s
sptjijg,
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pg.
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Marist
bareball
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pg.12
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- - - - = - - - ' __;_.._.,
the studentnewspal)er
of
·
1l111St
College
_
VOLUME #52 ISSUE# 1s
http://www~academic.marist.edu/circle
APRfL
·
29,<199~i
·
W
h 1
-
:
-
t
'
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·
l
e
nam.ed
ne\\reditor
by
CHRIS GROGAN
News Editor-
;
:-
The
Circle
wiH be undernew
·
man:agementnextyear.
. Patrick Whtttle,
_
the current A
:·_ &E
editor, will be
taking
over as
·editor-i11~chief
'
beginning in
..
Sep~niber. According to hirri, he
,
_ ·is looking to continuing the qua!-
,
.
ity
the paper has achieved re-
..
.
·
c~ntly.
"The Circle
has come a long
way
·
this
:
year,"
·
.
he .
·
said.
'.'The
.
c\qµaiity'
:
_
Jf
•.
editiµgJ~s
:
_,
.
,
.
.
really
im
;
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pi;oved
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and
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physically
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MarisfSingers;
·
seateci
upp~~
.
righ(watch
i
as)he Pope en\ers ~t. Peter's Square duri~g
th~
cal:"lgnization ceremony in Italy.
.
it's just a
lot more at~
.
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.
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ei,pexi~nc~
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,
the
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n~wspaper
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(<
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'
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"Itwasa privHegeto
he
there
>
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-
play~~
.
on
the
v~sity soc-
cer
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merriories
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ofhis hometown.
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-
aCC:O,J!IP~Uled
,
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ersand sev.eral·othef
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Maris(of-"
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clents.. p~pd:JorJhe
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J~llJ~l!}l!}g
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l~iijt~,t~&;~
.
,,
-
lemis
'.
ihatNe~B~dftird abso-
lutely reeks of.fish 24_1fours a_
.
.
day/'
.-
_
-.
\Vhittle,
,
whb.
is
.
c:iiriently a
ne\Vs cort~sponderit
.
for~
his
·
·
hometo~
weekly
newspaper,
'
has
'
Md
much
e~perierice
as'
a
-
writer
for
:
The
-
Circle;
He
has
tion
·
-.
s~nt the
:
weeJ{
_
befoie
~
tl,ie
0-
KenDtxon; pres1dentofManst
canoni~tiririinltillyruidpartjci-
Singers, said she loved eyery
.
pateci ir{t>the~ evbnts
,
iifftljated
.
minute of the
trip
and was
with
the
canoniiation
:
\
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:
>
:
-<
:
.
Lau~ Russi11,dir~tor
,
o.f
the
.
··
.
k~'rLDi><~n
;
:
t)j~~r~oserski,
:
'
Matt Yiriceguerra
.
and Craig
.
·
worked
~
as
~
~
poller,
~taff'
writer
.
-
Murr~y sing'Jo~ the Pop~ as he arrives at St. Peter's Square.
_
for
. ·. . ..
.
.
~"---·
~
,~
.
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-
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Did
y6,ih~y.e
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YES
89
11ris
u an
IDISCimtific
surwy
tawr
from
JOO
Marin
stlM/enu.
P h o t o ~
of
Trrn Massie
Rogers
on
cover
of Esquire
as
"American Hero" of 1998.
_
.
.
... please
see
WHITfLE,
pg.
3
Mr. 1!
,
qgers
-
to
·
make-
.
..
·
..
··.
v
•
·
:
·
..
v
MaristJ:iis
'neighborbOOO'
INSI][)E
by.JEFJ!DAHNCKE
Staff Writ~r
·
Fred
~
Rogers
·
,
_
the host of the
P9puJ~childr~n'spi;ogramMr.
Rogers'
:
Neighborhood. Gri!du-
ation ceremonies are scheduled
Plans for the
.
53rd
·
annual
forMay22atlla.m.onthe~-
Marist CoIIege commencement pus green;
have been finali~,
.
-
<l;Dd
·
they
Tim Massie, chiefcoliege re-
promise to pro<iu~ a
·
bea,utiful
Iations· officer, said that Rogers
day in_ the neighborhoqcL
< _
.
is a true role model and is very
·
It
has been confirmed that this
.
·
year's graduation speaker
will
be
... please see ROGERS,
pg.
4
_
10DAY:
.
·
·
_Mostly cloudy
hi:61°
.
·
Io:34°
Community ....
~
... .-........ 2
Inner Circle ...............
S1
Features ........... .;. ....... 5
A&E ....................... 9
Opinion ...................... 7
Sports .......... : ............. 12
·;
!
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.
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.
TheM~tisiB~ii~
'.:,
The Marist
Barid
~ill be hav--
ing theirSpringErisembl~in the
Nelly Goletti TJ!eater on May
3
at
3
p.m. The following groups
will
be
perfonning:
Concert Band
Brass Ensemble
Flute Ensemble
Handbell Choir
String Ensemble
Some of the selected pieces will
be:
Zanipa
Army of the Nile
Lincoln~hire Posy
English Folk Song Suite
·
.
.
:·
An
overt~rn~d~ portablf s~-
.
tation enclosure and broken
folding
.
table\ve~e
-
left in 'the
wake of
.
Riverfest on April 16.
Numerous studentswere ob-
served vomiting
.
·
as they
stumbled through the rain
•
to
· .
.
their residences; but no major
injuries were reported.
·
Two off-c~~pus females filed
assault charges against one
.
an~
.
other after slapping each other
·
011Fri.,April 16at7:25p.m. The
two were supposedly arguin
'
g
..
over the possession of a male
\student.
An
intruder in West Cedar's
"S'.'
.
.
block was reported by a
screaming female resident on
.
Sat, April
16
at 8:37 p.m
i
Offic-
:
Gender Equality
ers raced to the scene, keyed
The Gender Equality Club will
into the apartment, and found
be having its annual Take Back the intruder, who was' also a
..
the Night March on Sun;, May
.
West Cedar resident and
·
an
ex
~
.
·
2 g
M
h
· th
R
boyfriend
·
of the
·
female resi-
.
.
·
·
at p.m. eet
1
em
m
e o-
dent. The intruder climbed in
·
tunda wearing a white shirt to
1
show your supp<m
:
J~ir
,
putting
·
through a wi~~ow
,
anq_p~~ll
.
e?,
.
an end
to
sexuaLcViolence. Be
·
.
~is exTg~lf~en.~
.
w~~-~ aste
.
d
~'?
.
.
_
.
•
">'
'.
•
.
•
.
•
•
•
=
·
·
·
-
-
theri
:tra
in
-
or-
.
shinef'Dfiec(a$f
'
-'
leave
'?
Town of
"
Poughkeepsie
·-
questions to the)Jerider
.
Equal-
.
police
o(ficers
_were'called
'
aiid
.
;
-
,
·
ityClul:>atX715{ore~mailthem
·
the intruder was ariested
·
an:d
:"
.
1
·
·
·
·
chatged with criminahr~spass;.
at
HZWA. _
,
.,.·;.
.
.
.
1 2
.
·
h
•
-
1
mg.
·
At 1 : 0p.m.t e same
·
-
English
Dep~en{
.
.
On May 7 and
9,
at 2 p;ni. and
7p.m;
respectively,
·
·· Dr.
_
DeAngelis' Capping Class
will
present "English Under Cover,"
a
~tudent
production o
_
f dra-
matic and
poetic work on
Friday.
A full-length
·
original
-
play,
"Upon In_trusion," will be per-
formed
p11 Sunday. T
_
he perfor-
manceswill beheld
at
the Nelly
G~letti Theater a
·
t Manst Col-
lege;
·
Psychology Club
Be a buddy for a day! The Psy-
chology Club sponsored 1ts an-
nuitl
_
One to One Day onWed.,
April 28. They
,
were on the
DysonGreen :from
9
a.m.
to
2
p.m
.
If
there are any questions,
please contact Jason at
X 4694.
evening, Peter Amato, associ~
ate dean of student affairs,
promptly banned the arguineri_:
tative student from campus.
Security officers were
.
called
about excessiv
·
e noise in a
Gartland Common's
"F'
block
apartment on Sat., April
i
7at
2:
·
10 a.m. Upon entering, secu.:.
.
.
.
rity found
.
two unauthorized
:
guests and, two residents stand~
·.
'
ing ina wrecked
apartment;
the
·
;-
?
-
·
apartmerit
'
was
:
toniplete
,
wH,1
/
: ,
·
.
empty
.
beer
·
cans,
·ari
empty
fire
extinguisherwith
:
<;qmplimeQtacy
.
•
··•
·
foam, and overturned furniture
··'
'
.
in the dining rooin; h~ptoom
;
.
_
·.
and kitchen. O~#
.
'
of
~f,t~~F
:
-
dents gave
•
the
·
se'curio/ yftbal
lambasting,
but
the second
resi.;
dent smoothed the situation out;
taking responsibility for
the
visi-
tors, and they were allowed
t9
stay.
·
Weekend
·
Weather
-
FRIDAY:
mostly cloudy
hi:
63°
lo:
38
°
SATURDAY:
pa,tly cloudy
hf: 72°
lo:
44
°
SUNDAY:
sunny
hi: 73°
lo:44
°
.
Source: http://w
_w
w.weather.com (The Weather Channel)
.
·
:
,
.
-
._-;:
:
yi
\:tf:·
r}i:1{)
:
./
_
,
.
;;-;
.
PAGE 2
·
Whit are your plans
·.for.the·
summer?
.
<-
·
~
.
· :
·-
.
.
·
.
.
" iiopefully,
-
(o get
·
ani.nternship and
·
play-baseball.
J'
.
"Work."
" To catch up
on
sleep
and hopefully
-
.·
make money. ".
'
~
~
~
:
Geiie
Antico
.
.
,
..
s~phQ111~r.~
..
·
~
.
-
·,
. :
~isten Nocerino
'.,
!•r
,
~ophoniore
'.
·;
;:
;
;
Stephartie
Koutsates
.
:_,
..
~LSO.
PA.l~'(~E,r!ICE
-
TO:
Woodbi11yCommon
Premium
·
·
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New
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,
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Island, Upstate
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NY and Colleges, and manyotherdestlnatlonsl
.
.
.
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.
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Arlington
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-
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i
'
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Ashkill
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Chestnut Mobil •
485-8630
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sophomore
'
.
.
...
.
.
1.
"'-•·
·
·
•··•
.
TH£ .CIR.CL£.
News··__
PAGE3
Stlldertts
lllake
predictions
-fot
upcoming millenium
Marist
hopes .
for best when
2000
arrives
by
DOUGLAS DEISS
Staff Writer
The year 2000 is going to bring
many ch~ges according to sev-
eral Maiist College Students.
Some changes deal just with
. us; here at Marist, while other
changes deal with predi~tions
to come for the world. ·
Freshman Ryan Finger said he
hopes for solutions to prol}lems
·ihat have begun this millenium.
"I
hope to see th.it we will all
work togetht:r to make progress
· in eradicating the problems that
we have made this century," he .
said.
According to Finger, he would
like to-see another Renaissance.
'.'I
would like to see my grand
~nd to dis.ease ..
children experienc~ a Renais-
"I think that they are finally
sance, that would be cool."
going to find a cure for AIDS
Concerning the world , many
.
and cancer,'' he said.
students take issue.with some
Junior Mark Smith goes out
big problems that t:vecyone is . on a limb stating, "The United
forced to think about: war.and· State~ will once again rise to
disease.
greatness as
Y2K
sends the
·
Iri
response
to
war,
·
sophomore
third world and rogue nations
Scott Garretsaid he has high
into the dark ages."
hopes for peace in the future.
· Many students think the
"Many countries are going to
world
9f.~m>rts
wmundergo big
join NATO in an attempt for -changes·, including sophomore
world peace," he said.
•>. •
Michael Ferraro.:
FellowsophomoreKyle\Yood·
"The three players who will
said he wants to live to see an
carry the NBA into the next cen- .
WIIlTTLE:
Editor looks
. forwardto
next
yeaf' s-paper
.
-
}'My
goal is to some-
.-
;,
.
A&E;-AssistantA&EEditor.:
UJay
be the Opinion-·
ariclbisc:urrentpositionas,A&
·Ed_itor ~o_ r a maior·
-Belli.tor.
' '· ·
J'
':I
.:-!Whittle is involved in other
newspaper such as
·
:activitiesoncampusotherthan
The
Boston Globe
ili~newspaper.He_isatnem.~er
or
New
York
. of the. political scien,ce club}tnd :_
· vice-president of the Society
of
-Professional J9urnalists club:
According to him, he came to
Maristfor several reasons.:•-
. "I
like the small size, the.fact
'that it's· hands on and
.the
tech~ • '
·nology in the classroom,'~ he
said.
. .
.
>
Reading and writing are two
:~of Whittle's favorite pastimes.
He said he always can find the
time to read.
"Kurt Vonnegut and George
Onvell
are
two of my favorite au-
thors,'' he said.
. Whittle, a junior journalism
major, Said his career aspirations
involve advocacy journalism.
"My goal is to someday be the
opinion editor for a major news-
paper such as
The
Boston Globe
or
New York Times,"
he said ..
Amanda Bradley, current edi-
Times..''
..
.
Patrick Whittle
tor-in-chief, said the newspaper
will be in good hands.
·
'!Patrick was a qualified can-
didate," she said. "He will do a
fine job next year."
·
Editor-in-chief is not the only
position being filled next year
ori
the Circle
staff.
·
The new opinion editor will be
Mike Bagnato, while Jeremy
Smith will take over as photo
editor. Nik Bonopartis will be
taking over for Whittle as A &
Eeditor.
News, sports, managing and
features editors will continue in
the same capacity next year.
tucy are, Tim Duncan, Vince
Carter and Jason Kidd," he said.
In regards to our rights, Jer-
emy Dorari suggests some
drugs will become legal to pur-
chase.
"We are going to see the le-
galization of marijuana," he said.
Fellow commuter Michael
Craig said he hopes he wiil be
able to travel to school faster,"
he said.
"The Speed limit is going to
be increased," he said.
Focusing on Marist, junior
Heather Suydam said she pre-
dicted problems for upcoming
classes.
"Graduating classes are going
to have the tough problem of
dealing with being the Class of
00, or the Class ofO 1,'' she said.
Suydam also said that students
are going to be thinking they
are
losers because of the
00.
Fellow junior Becky Valk does
rtot make a prediction at all. Ac-
cording to her, claims that the
world will end in eight months
are untrue.
"Nostradamus states that July
99
marks the end of the world,
so nothing is going to happen
in the year
WOO,"
she said.
I
(
,
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~ouriesy\,i-'i,i;~DeGmo
Guitarist Kare~ Merker, Jen MirandJ,
'.
CryMaJJ.agei,'Li~'feUe
WeLirz and Jara Sullivan sing at the VaticarfCity reside
_
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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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Photocourte,sy~fTimM,assic-
The members
~f
-
Sir~nsand Time
Check
pose
witfl
_
Arnba~sadoi-
,
coi-ri~e
'
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;
s9g
'
gs,)~~
:
~lf
Ambassador to the Holy Gee
_
. Ambassador Boggs
·
wi
_
ll
receive t~e
,
Fre~d~(Jl~)v1ed~! th!s
..
fall ·and is the previous recipient of the Eleanor Rooseyelt Val-Kill
.
rni:idaL
:_
Baclc
row.
_
:
fat1e
·.
·
·
McQuade, Chris Yapchanik, Mike Seaman, Chris Nelson, Ryan Kessler, Jen B~rhmah; Joel
Cordenner
Front
row:
·
Kristina Newell, Jen Miranda;
·
Ambassador B_oggs,
.
Gma M~ntoro,
'
of'Ambassador Boggs.
.
- .
.
Matt Vinceguerra,
Jill
Critchly.
_
"·
..
SIN GERS
_
;
P9p~
_.,
ariion
·
g
·
·
·
audie11ce
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:
recei~~d wellinR.6tnei·
>
, ..
... continuedfro~z pg.' I
"W~
:
r~p~eJ~nt~d the
\
:~tire
United States wli
_
en
we
per-
&lad she had the opportunity to.
.
formed out two so11gs and re-
''We te;ft);nf e1i1,ie
--
.
:
entire United States
wbe_n
we.ptJrfqrm,f!d
011.r
:
tlf-!p
:
so~gs.
·
'.
and
·
.
·received
·
a
standin,.g,
.
go.
.
"It was an amazing experience
·
for ·everyone; especially being
so close to the Pope," she said.
During the week they were in
Rome, the Singers performed to
both public and private audi
-
·
erkes'.
A
performance in St.
Peter;s Square asweU
~
a world-
wide Marisf.g°athering. were
.
,
ru.n9ngµ\~
,
lµg~iigHW
:
~f,tlJ,e
,
tiip.
'.
The .. day
·
1iefore
.
thf
_
can9niza-
. . .
.
___
-
-_-
.
-
•
·.
'
('
,.)
-
: •
.
.
,.
·
iion, there was
.
a· worldwide
Marist event with.
:
delegations
from each Marist affili;ited area
.
·
Russell said the Singers were
ceiv~d a standing ovation," she
said:
·
·
·
-
·
·
.
.
,
Dixon said the event was one
or'the most memorable experi-·
ences of the week.
"It was my favorite because'it
was such a great honor
to
rep-
resent the United States in such
a
noteworthy
·
event/
' ..
she saiq.
T,heSingers also.r~te~v~d the
•
h.onor
'
of
p~rt'ormfof\vith
.
the
.
.
-
Sistine Chapel choir.in Latin on
_
thediy,or
th~
carto~ii~tion
..
,
According to
.
Russell,
,
the in-
vitation was an unex
_
pected w«;I-
come.
ROGERS:
,
Speaker
be
·
st
·
represents ideals of Marist
.
... continued from pg.
'1
-:.··:
happyjvith the sel~ti<?~
:
.
·
. -
.
"Many
·
of the
stu~
.
"The
man you see
.
on TV ts
•
,
.
, .
.
.
.
<
-
.
the
.
man you
•.
see in
_
~ea!
life,"
dents
.
·
grew 11,p with· ..
Massie ~ai?,, 'We areyery lucky
him~'': .
.
togeth1m.
Arrangements to get Rogers
began last September, and plans
will be officially finalized next
week.
·
It is anO:ther in a long list of
honors and awards that have
been bestQwed upon the70-year
old Rogers, who has hosted his
well-known television program
for the past
33
years.
·
·
In
1994 he received the Eleanor
RooseveltVal-Kill medal.
He
also won a 1997 Emmy_ award for
outstanding performer in a
children's series, and has
received honorary degrees from
several colleges and universi-
.
.
ties including Yale, UCONN and
Boston University.
In addition, _Rogers has been
an ordained Presbyterian min:..
istersince 1962.
Massie said all that Rogers
has done makes him a perfect
speaker for Marist commence-
ment
"He leads a
life
of higher val-
ues," Massie said. "He best
represents the ideals of the
·
Mari st College."
THnMassle
chief relations officer
The ideals Massie spok~ of
are excellence in education,
cledication
·
to th~ principli of
.
service and pursuit of higher
human values. According
to ·
Massie, Rogers reaches all three
of these.
.
.
.
.
The man known for wearing
cardigans and white snea~ers,
while at the same tiine watching
his trolley roH offtow,ards the
"Land of Make Believe,"
-
also
provides a speaker whom many
,
of this year's graduates spent
much of their youth with:
·
.
Mr.
Rogers' Neighborhood
is
.
car-
ried
by about30()
stations
through-
out
the
countty, seen
in
seven mil-
lion homes each weekday.
Massie said when Rogers was
first introduced as a choice, the
student support was strong.
"Everybody reacted well," he
said.
"Many
of the students
grew up with him."
··
ovation."
. -
-.
i.aura
eusse11
_
_
_
.
director
·
....
fy1
'
~rlsf$ingers
"We found.out the night·be-
forethatthey wanted us to{'ier-
forin with
them./'
she
·
said. ''We
Malvinceguerr'a; Jon Pi~ani, Chris_'vapchanik, Chri~ Nelson
and Kevin Boyer performing atthe Ambassador's residence.
·
\~~~{up
·
late -practicing and
learned the song in La
_
tin so
that
: -
~~i~Hul_d
perfe>r,ni
it thef onow.'..
jng;day,'.;
:
:-,.-
';
.
-;
_,;_ ;"-'
.
.
.
'f.h~ _qay
_
q(..t!)
_
e
:
~~npi;i;1.~~
-
o
.
n
the Singers performed
;
i!}fr()nt
.
of St. Peter's Square and were
only20feet away from the Pope,
·
Russell said.
·
.
.
.
R,ob Ainodeo
i
Marist Singer,
said thaf he could not believe
·
he
was
that close to
the
Pope
!and
·
was able
,
to:si~g in front of
.
f:
hith
);
.:
r~:
;:.i:}
:
;,;
·~
·
·
:
~?
--
2
_
i
--
~-~n,
,
f
i
!J
-
:J
.
''Being
ir1the presence
'
pfthe
Pop'e'
··
-:,was·
''
·extr
_
etneJy
'magnifie~nt;';sru~
_
-~odio
:· :
.
zn,
:"'GUARDIAN
SELF·STQRAGE
.
.
··
-
-
7
-
·
THE
:
:
OIRCLE
.
•
...
APRIL
29,1999
.
·Feat
:
U·res
PAGES
.
.
.
·
Earth
day
raises
awareness
by
CHRISIYBARR
StaffWriter
·
held informational tables arid
gave away free T-shirts, food
and posters in front of the Ro-
tunda:
.
.
.
S~~age, pollution a~d land
·
Carrie Swail, vice-president of
preservation w_ere
'
all topics of SEGA, s&i,d·the
-
informational
·
.
this year's Earth Day celebra-
tables
.
included animal welfare
.
tioh .
.
·
and vegetarianism along with
Earth Day, which fii:st began
local environmental groups.
in
the spring ofl970, was ob-
·
·
''The Scenic Hudson and
served on April
21 this year.
Hudson Cleanwater environ-
,
The lVI~st College chapter of mental groups both had infor-
Studerits Encournging Global · mational tables," she said.
Awarene~s (SEGA) coordinated
.
Paui Jendnejczyk, president of
the festivities.
·
·
SEGA, said the group was also
. During activ
,
ify hour, SEGA
.
selling re~sable mugs filled with
fresh squeezed juice for
$
l.
·
·
"The idea is for students to
take
.
these m
_
ugs to the
·
cafes and
Cabaret instead of using the·
styrofoam
'
cups they
,
offer," he
said.
·
·
·
·
·
· ·
According to the Wilderness
Society's ·web page, Senator
Gaylord Nelson first began
Earth Day back in 1970.
"The. objective
.
was to get a
nationwide demonstration of
concern for the environment,"
he said. "Earth Day achieved
what l had hoped for."
SEGA members agree that the
day went well, but do have ideas
on improving next year's cel-
ebration.
·
Kristin Harvey, freshman
.
SEGA member, said there were
-~
plenty of. things people could
take
part
in, but
~h~
hopes next
year will
.
draw a larger crowd.
"We could use more publicity
to draw in more people," she
said.
Swailsaid she also would like
to see more of a turnout.
·
"I thought it went well be-
cause it was a very nice day, but
I would have liked to see more
people there," she said.
Jendrzejczyk feels there needs
to be more tables addressing
issues of concern on campus.
"We need to
try
to find solu-
tions for.problems on campus,
such as recycling," he said.
According to Jendrzejczyk,
this year there was more sup-
port from local organizations,
but the event would have gone
over better if it were held on the
weekend
.
"We would have had a better
turnout if it was the whole day,
not just activity hour
,
" he said.
·
:
Black
week successful
·
for
en(ertaining and educating
.
.
•
.
·
.:.
.
.
'
..
~
'
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
byRICHARDSHUTKIN
Staff Writer
evening wear
.
Music was pro-
people did
_
for the show.
·
vided by DJ H-Bomb of ":fytusic .
·
.
''The models really showed the
on the M,ove."
.
comrriitmerit
'.'
they put in," she
iizelle Andrews and Tisha
•
said
,
.
.
;
Mu'rray were the
.
coordinators
. ,
Sheineta Lake, one of the mod-
·
.
. The
recognition
.
of different
of the show. They havl'been ·e){fQ_f the'sht>w,'said she was a
cultures is
·
--
very
important.to
~
a
·
'
pl~finifig
·
the
·whole shhw sfoce
. -
little nervous at the beginning
lot
;
ofstudents on campus
:
··
·
·
December.
·
·
·
·
but got more comfortable to-
'
,
='3lack week
.
\\;asabig h(?lp,in
Until
the
night of the show,'
.
wards the erid of the show.
accqmp}ishir,ig
~~
.
.
bY
l>eing a
they.spenttheirtimewritinglet-
,:.
'Twas nervous atfir
_
stbut the
huge
·
success.
.
.
.
. , •.
.
.
.
-
,
·
.
.
.
.
ters; call
i
ng people, following up
mor~ Iwent,out;,I became
.
more,
It lasted from April 18 to 24
on calls, visiting stores and tak-
relruced," she said
.
...
..
.
·
a
·
·
nd
·
th
·
e Black Shident Union
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
•·
orgal)ized affofthe eye11~.
:
Edward Antoine, president of
BSU
;
saidthe whole year turried
·
.
o
.
ut wellforBsu,: along with
'
the
week
:
'
'
·
'
'
•
"Weiad
~
good year,'' he s~d .
.
''We couldn't have done it with-
• ·
'out
the
:
6oatd
:
~·
·
"
,
_.
· ··
. : :,'
Mbhairtrtied Bilal from
7
"The
'
Rea1
·
world;
':
salFiancisco"
()Jl
:
.
MTV
cfuri~
·
to
spe~If
11boup:~m-
:
·
"
pus diversity
,c,ri'tlie
19th.
:,:
'.
'
· ',
A
p1ay \vas' performed on the ·
'
·=
20th caJled
'
''Woinyri
·
wi~h
..
Wings.''_It
was'
a show about
ing free adverttsmg m order to
Lake also said she thought the
·
:
punhe show 'together .
.
·
. .
·
show was a good experience.
Andrews said she thought the
.
"The fashion show was
·
an
.r;nost important
thing
i;il>out
_
the
overall success because of the
.
show was all the hard
;
\vork amount of people there and the
issues that women face includ-
:
ing°abortiori
:
'
It
,va
~
aiso_abt:i~t -
,
''
moti~atirig self-co~fi(Jen9e
·"
in
.
';
'
women.
='-"
.
·
.
·
'
.
>
:
_ ,
;:
;:,
:
':
·
oidhe 21st
/
'Nyabirigi" was
.
held which t'nearis
·
"Night of Ex-
ex~itement shown by the
crowd," she said.
Murray said she would like to
thank everyone for coming out
to see the show
:
.
·
"I would
-
like to thank Bob
Lynch
·
and R~ch
'
because they
.
\Vere so patient and they worked
good with us," she said.
"I
would also like to thank DJ H-
Bomb. "
.
On the 24th the Cultural Din-
ner Dance was held.
·
James
Rusch,jimior, was choseri to be
·
·BsU kirig and Jihan Herndon,
freshm
;
m, was chosen to
.
be
BSUqueen.
Antoine said he thinks it's im-
portant- to h
·
ave Black Week.
"It is important to represent
our heritage on this campus and
to make people aware that we
are on campus," he said.
"It
is
also
'
imp'onhnt:
to
'
do
=
things
so
that
African
'Americans can feel
comfortable
'
ori this campus."
. Antoine said that everyone is
welcome to join BSU.
"BSU is
·
a
family
,
not just a
club
,
" he said
. "
We want all
races
.
to join."
. ._
pression.'
'
·
This involves a tal-
.
.
ent
'
show consistjng ofinusic,
poetry
.
and comedy performed
by students
:.". :
:
:
·•
The "D~fCome
_
dyJam" was
held on the 22nd and
~
featured
two comedians named J.B.
Smooth arid Rob Stapleton.
,
About 100 people came to the
show.
.
:·
Th't:in
:
·
:
stdp
,
:Jn
and see us at,
MJLLMAN'S T-SHIRT
The BSU Fashion Show was
held on the 23rd. Clothing from
The Gap; D
'
ress Barn, Dress
Barn Woman, World Wide
Clothing, American Eagle, JT's
House of Style, Finishline,
Mandee, The Unit Men's and
Women's Clothing, and Royal
Tuxedo were modeled. C.C. New
York Hair Design and Ttofia's
Jewelers were also sponsors.
The show consisted of casual,
sports, club, business and
FACTORY
12 Fowler ave., Poughkeepsie
(Take Route
9
.
South to 44-55 East
12
traffic lights 1B/ock down on left:)
.
454-2255 FAX 454-5771
lfidaliiU
Serving the Marist Community since 1978
.
I
I
•
.
\
~
.
.
'
•
l
\
\
\
\
\
\
\
~ i
,
,
\
,
•
•
I
'
\
\
\
\
\
I
\
\
\
~
•
,
\
\
,
\
~
'
·
\
1
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I
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'
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'
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'
'
'
,
APRIL 29, 1999
'
'
•
.
'
I
•
'
'
http://www.tourscan.com
Looking for somewhere to go this summer vacati~n? Try visiting http://ww.tourscati.com.
Through this site you can
.
order a 52~page vacation catalog, listing the best priced
.
..
va~ation in virtually every hotel in the Caribbean, Bahamas, and Bennuda
{
arranged four
,
·
·
different ways.
.
.
. . . .
.
.
.
. .
.
.
.
.
Each season this
.
site computerizes virtually every hotel andairfare packages for these
same places to find the best values.
·
• -
~
·
..
.
.
You can choose your vacation by island, price, hotel rating, and availability of golf, dive
shops, casinos, and house~eeping units.
·
.
.
~
.
·
.
.
You can also decide if you want all inclusive drinks and meals, a beach front location,
children's programs
;
a kitchen, or a two bedroom unit.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
.
·
So
if
you
think
you'll need a break from your smnmerjob, go to http://www.tourscan.com. ·
If
you have any s~ggestionsfor
.
this column, or would like to write a column, contact Katrina at
extension 2429 or email HZAL Features Editor Katrina Fuchsenberger wrote this Searching the
Sites column.
.
.
.
.
Horoscopes
·
•
.
~ :
You may have
some moral issues
with what is happen-
ing around you today.
.
Your inclination is
likely
.
to be
.
intro-
verted, butknow that
the
-:
situ'.~ii'on
:
may
change the
"
moment
you take
'
a
'
scind. Step
up on your soapbox if
you really want to see
a shift in the environ-
ment
in
which you find
y
'
ourself. You have
the potential to tum
things all the way
around
.
If
you accept
people's weaknesses,
you will begin to see
.
their strengths.
.
TAURUS:
You are a
-
volcano of erriqtio
.
ns
.
·
today, and
_
don
'
t be
.
surprised if there are
.
·
onlookers
·
.
who find
the situation fascinat-
ing. The heat of your
. words as they
.
flow
freely willsparkfeel:.
•ings strong
J
n inten-
.
sity, Passionate lan-
guage may be all that
lies between you and
some
.
inappropriate
behavior. Listen to
your heart and let your
words mirror what you
find. Popularity will
present itself
as an
is-
.
sue and you have the
·
power to decide ex-
actly what role it will
play.
-
GEMINl
:
Todaycould
find you as the target
of an investigation.
You may feel a:s if
there is a car trailing
you at all times or a
spy behind every cor-
ner. It's
_
nothing seri-
ous, but someone has
a definite interest in
your secrets. You may
be more intriguing
than you ever
_
knew
possible. Hold on
strongly to the know!-
.
··
~
·
VIRGO:
Enjoy what
·
immediately obvious,
·
all
together
,
edge that is reserved
·
1t
you now
:
have before
although separating ~
-
AQUARIUS:Purely
for just you no matter
. '
:
~
letting your ambition
or combining
·
the
·
two
.
and simply, your raw
how much prying
.
drive you pnward.
It
-
could make for a
fun
:
.
.
-
emotions chafe at
tempts you to let it all
will serve as the foun-
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
,
experience.
you. It is down
.
to the .
out. Playing hard to
d!!tion
.
.
from which to
-
~
,,
,·
-
SAGITTARIUS:
If
nitty-gritty and the
get will encourage
-
~<>ve
.
(ony~rd,
,
Just
.
·--
~
,
y9ufstride ~alters or
:
bare essentials. You
your
·
pursuers and.
,
because something is
.
,.I'\..'[
yo
:
ur
_
spark!e:_ta1es;
n
0
·
: ,
W~Y
~
fe
.
el_sqreJb.atev,.
maketliembelievethat
easy for you doesn't ·
don't worry; your
eryone
,
around you
what you hide inside
mean that it has no
·
Jiglit has- notfully
know
_
s exactly,what
is the imobtainable
value. You just may .
.
.
,
- .
gone out.A power
yqu. are Qiinlcing
_:
You
priz.e.
.
.
_.•
.
have
_
the slqlls that the
s~rge
>
may
_
have
are likely to
·
hav~ an
_
CANCER
·
:
Song and
·
,job r
_
equires
sq
the
forcedyoureleciricity
.
audience
·
for
.
all oJ
lau
_
ghter spills o
.·
._
ut the
.
.
V:
_
}_lo
.
le process m
_·
..
.
ov
_
'
.
es
.
to
:
momentarily dim.
'
your e~bti()n
_
S;
:rry
to
doors
_
of
.
your home
_
smoothly. You may
.
Do
your best Jo rely
.
.
keei:{yotir deepfeel-
and brightens
·
the
·
feel restless, though,
on your reserve gen-
ings
·
with you in the
.
whole
_
neig~borhood.
.
.
withouta challenge in
erator. Sagittarians in
•.· .. ;,
Pri
_
".acy -~fy~ur clress-
Smiles
will
flow into
.
. the Jor~ffont of·your
higbprofile positions
: .
'
. j
ng rnq_m;
_
·Reserve
.
every
nook
,
and
experiences
,
.
may suddenly be-
.
.
_
center stage forthe
cranny like warm b u t - ~
. -
·
LIBRA:
Today you
come self-conscious.
mostpositivefeelings
t
_
er on bread
.
. Yo\l
.
'l
.
l
n
.
.
.
ar
_
e
_
•
t~i
:
n~Ji:lg
.....
abou
.
~
·.
R.emernberthaty.9u
.
.
you
~
can nrnster. Be
see your neighbors in
· ·
..
·
•.
·.
money
.
~ specifically
,
.
.
·
are no differentthan
·
~eassureci-t,hat_ there
.
a new light and iri. a
.
.
hov,
i
to
'
getmore
·
ofi(
.:
;
before
'
and iurn)o
'.
·
willbe
":iL
chorus and
·
way that
_
transforms
.
··
Your thoughts
will
be
,•·
·
·
:
_
y
_
ot1r
<:
:
reas,~11ring
.
·
.
. -
ajl
,
orchesfra to sup-
.the
:
often
'
:
mundane
corisuined
'
by
.
dollars
·:'
·
:
:
fu.:oughts;
.
\Vit~draw
:
port yO\l. The audi-
.
.
daily in"teractions iri.to
and the pl.ms that
_
µiay
'.
.
,
_
>:
(
:
,
aµd takeaquick deep
.
ence
_
also wants
:
you
conversa
.
tions
"
you
,
ies~frin"allo;N.ingyou
·-.·,
·.
_
'·,
.
breathbefoietheuh-
.
,,
_tcfd,o
,
yourbest,
at.:
look forward tg
_
hav-
to live large. Complex·
.
.
.
:
comprehetuling lose
.
.
:
.
.
)hough they may also
ing~ New things and
proces~es are ·prone
·
'
tlieir patience wfrfi:"
. ·.
<
i
a~f'as critics as they
ideas-capture yourat-
to small but
·
fragic
ycm; Move
·
·slowly
.
. ·.
.
. :
.
observe:
.
.
.
tendon, filHng you
flaw~tF<>rthigecJ5on,
_
.
.. :
:
:
.
·.
an~tr)'topinpointthe
-·
~
-
--
·
.
riscES:.Think
~ig
·with
an
_
·
eagerness to
take
the tlnie
~
fo work
;
.
re
.
a.son for YQur slug-
.
>-,
__
-:-,
__
·
.
•_
thle
··
to
,·
,
·
.
uy
:
'
.
go
·
~u
·
r~
·
·
w
'
t
_
·
o()~d
·
_._
a
.
sy
.·
·
.
fioarmn
__
d
.
learn
."
-Trusting others
out
all
of the
kinks
and
·
gishness
· ..
.
. ··
•.
~;::i;tf.i!~
:=c~:::~~!
1
.·
-
~
-
:'
:
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le
.
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12
_·
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.
·
jl'
·
h
.
;
· ·
•
·
.
·
·
~~~bie~
/
o~e?t:;,c:r
.
return:
working
'
with each
·
.
·_
withothers.You'llfind
·
yourhead.Speakwith
LEO:Adomesticim-
.
other.
:
Define the
.
de~
·.·
.
·
. .
.
that"youwiUclickin
your hands ~nci let
.
bal
_
ance c
_
asts
.
a long
tails and work on a
.
eyery interaction and
.
your
,
e~pressions
tell
.
shadow across the
:
smaller sque until you :
·
enjoy the moments of
..
the
.
true tale.,You may
restofyourday.ltmay
know what you are
conversation you en-
.
feellikeyouarewan-
. feel dark and gloorey,
..
doing.
.
.
·
coqnter. Everything
dering through the
but
.
.
rernember that ~SCORPIO:Youhave
you need is exactly
cl9uds,bµtknowthat
there wouldn't be any
th~
k~q
ability to
be
~here it should be
.
these
·
are where you
shadows aLall if it
true to yo.urself. You'll
when you reach forit
are Il\ore likely to dis-
weren't forsome
fonn
.·
find tJ:iat you ~ave no
Everything has a
.
c9ver your dreams.
of light. Seeking the
patience
,
for
.
those
pl;tce and a purpose
.
.
Throw old ideas out
source m;ty allow you
who hide in ~is guise_
into ~hich you will
.
the window,
-
along
·
to
·
change the dir~c-
trying to fool them-
find that you have in-
with anyol).e who still
tion of it's reflection.
selves and everyone
.
~ight.
J\11
th~ factors
believes in
.
them.
The pull of family can
.
else. Know that you
are aligned for an im-
Wish them well as
exert a powerful and
have every nghtto be
portant decision that
they soar in their own
not always welcome
proud of your desire·
you have to make.
way. Keep moving, or
. influence. It may
be
all
to match your actions
Take them in the order
.
your feet will fuse to
in the
·
way that you
with
.
what you feel is
in which they present
the ground. Use the
choose to receive the
moral in your mind and
.themselves and be
restless feeling that
interaction. This may
heart. The difference
sure to consider the
you feel inside as a
be your best option at
between love and in-
·
bigger picture in the
way to keep your
the moment.
fatuatiQn
process of putting it
forces fanciful.
•·•·
...
'
PAGE7
~· -·1:· 1 ·'•' ,·••. -·
;
•' .• • •.. ,.
:CONGRE§SHALLMAKENOLAW-ABRIDGINGTHEFREEl>OMOFSPEECH,OROFTHEPRE§_ ·
Marist Singers applauded
Editor:
. My wife;Barbara and I would like to thank the Marist Singers for making our
40th anniversary trip to Rome such a pleasant success. Their perfonnance at the
Marist Brothers' Worldwide Youth Festival on Sat., j\priI;
17
was truly outstand-
ing and a source ofpride for all ofus from America. With the thousands that filled
the huge flaul VI Audience Hall to capacity with "Maristi" from all over the world,
and \Yhere North Americans were but a tiny fraction of the Marist family, you
could teUfrom the clamorous applause that they enjoyed the Marist <:ollege
. Singers too,
Their perfonnance at the home of the Vatican Ambassador, Lindy. Boggs on the
Friday evening set the p_erfecttone for the celebration that brought us together in
Rome. We_ 1.:>oth felt Marcellin, ~hampagriat woi.Il~ be pl~ased to see what his wo*
-had produced: · .
.
· ··
·· ·
! ·
·
•
. .
·•
"· . · .
>
_•··. .
.
' .
_1n:appreciated, we have placed ~5 digital pictures for Mansi College Singers
to
" enjoy, on the !vlarist College mainframe. They can be downloaded
by
Anonymous
FfP
from the account
ENIO:
Some
of the "unedited" pictures can be viewed at:
http://niaristb.marist.edu/-ENJO/@httpd!index.html.
·
·
· -John-F. DeGilio
,
school"ofscierice · ··
-Prof~r extends~
to
Marist
community
Editor:
My family and I would like to thank
the
many members of the Marist community
· for
the![ wQrds of condolence during the
time
ofmy mother.'s death.
·
It
has· been a very painful time for us, but the kind thoughts and actions ofso
THE. CCIRJCLE.
has just published their l~t issue.
As,Editor-in-Chief for this year I
would like to extend my thanks to
all this year's editors and writers.
Thanks for the memories. It's been
fun. Best wishes to this year's
graduating seniors and next year's
Circle staff.
Have a great summer everyone
and see (most ot) you in the
fall!!
Sincerely,
Amanda Bradley
Editor-in-chief
Reader rebuts editorial
Editor:
Two of the PBS specialists analyzing the Columbine HS tragedy were honest
enough to opine that a "spiritual emptiness" is part of the cause.
("If
PBS
doesn't do
it,
who will?")
. ·
I did not appreciate Tara Quinn's remark about Graceland be1.ng "the place
where Jesus was born." Such humorous or malicious bashing of the Catholic
religion has become pervasive recently in the media; slowly frittering away the
moral fiber of society .
Rivulets become rivers that lead to Littleton oceans.
Bro. Joe Belanger, fms
Graduatirig senior offers parting words
Editor:
Well my four years are up here at Marist College, and for two of those years I
was _an editor for
The Circle
so I figured this would be my last time to write an
editorial so here goes'. . ·
.
I could do the
typical
senior thing and say how happy I was for four years here, and so
on and so forth, but,I
will
spare you •.
Instead,
I will let some of you in on some things that
have kept me sane in my most stressing moments and made those gocx:l times a lot
better.
First, ~n crossing Route 9, there is a very simple and inexpensive way to cross
the street without _being hit by a car (and I am not talking about building a bridge
.for the students or eliminating the right turns on red law). All you guys and girls
haveto do is look left then look right.
If
you do that, you will see if there is a car
coming and that will let you know that it is not the right time to cross the street.
Next, get to know your teachers. The more you get to know them, the better
01any have helped greatly.
,, • ·
.
. .
they will treat you. The same goes for advisors. All of you who complain that you
-Barbara
Lavin
did not get into any classes, the better you know your advisors, the easier it will
be for them to get you into the classes you want to take. They also can give you
Newly
cha,
rter,
e_dfr._ater_
nifv
welcomes members. . . '
some good advice on some other things going on in your
life
that do not deal .
., J
with classes. Take spring break trips, study outside a lot, climb the trees on ·
Editor:
• campus (not
drunk
please), take pictures of you and your friends, get dressed up
Congratulations to the Oelta Iota Chapter of Phi Kappa Sigma. Initiated the 23rd
on Halloween, laugh, play practical jokes on your friends (and when one gets •
of April,1999, the Phi Kaps are officially recognized
py
their International Office
played on you do not hold a grudge), and have FUN!
as.
a fraternal org.µiization. After more than.a year of hard work, these l!len now
· · You only have, at most, three years left, so make the most of it because after
plan to
be
a strong arid productive organization here at Marist College for years
college, you have to deal with health-care, insurance, and dating sober women.
· · to
coirie;'·c ,
. .
-
.
. .
So this is it, enjoy, good-bye, and I am looking forward to a sober senior week.
Congratulations to these new Brothers of the Plii Kapp~ SigmaFraternity: ·
Ha, you see that is funny!
Trevor Arguin; David Bober;_-Damien Choma, Daniel Coriboy;Joel Corcienner,
Robert Duda, Lyle Flagg, RichardForcellati;Kevin Gianni,Brian Groark~ Robert
Henry, Christopher
Jackman,
Christopher Koehler, Jesse Kupec, Patrick LaCroix,
. Kris
Lahoerte;
~tephen Lapolla; Benjamin Leeson, Richard McCormack, Michael
Mercer, Thomas ~bella, Mark Morici, Michael Morris, Thomas Myers,
Christopher Reed, Christopher Rowland, Michael Seaman, Wm. Douglas Smith,
Tomothy Soloman, William Stahl, Adam Sturges·, Timothy Timone, Douglas
Wtlderotter.
Kevin Gianni
Kappa Kappa Gamma initiates new sisters
Editor:
The Zeta Chi chapter of Kappa Kappa Gamma would like to welcome the
Lambda class. The new initiates are: Colleen Barrett, Katie Brown, Heather
Calanan,
Jill
Cristadoro, Erin Hayes, Sharon Kennedy, Nicole Kulik, Kerrie
Mendez, Anne Perkins and Alison Stec.
<:ongratulations girls.
Jacqueline Baker
Joe
Scotto
senior
Amanda
Bradley
Editor-in-chief
THE CIR.CLE
Eli7.abeth Carrubba
Managing Editor
Katrina
Fuchsenberger Thoma<; Ryan
Features Editor
Sports Editor
Chris Grogan
News Editor
TaraQuinn
Opinion Editor
Patrick Whittle
Joe Scotto
Toni Constantino
Arts
& Entertainment
Photography Editor
Business Manager
G. Modele Clarke,
Faculty Advisor
The Circle
is the student newspaper of Marist College, Poughkeepsie, NY.
Issues are published every Thursday.
We welcome letters to the editor, club announcements and story ideas. We can-
not publish unsigned letters to the editor.
The Circle staff can be reached at 57~-3000
x2429
or by email at
HZAL.
.
.
.....
,
..
.
.,
-
·
·
·
-
·-··
·
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·
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.
The views expressed ·on these pages are ~ot ne~essarily those of
The Circle
Colorado
.
massacre:
·
we
.·
should. have seen
lt
.
coming
we are lucky, it may bring us a
should
'
have
-
checked
.
to see
:
mourning the event
.
and
.
bow-
by
CHRIS KNUDTSEN
.
.
step closer to understan~ing . what
the
teenagers' were build-
fog
our
:
heads
in
silence, we
In th~ wake of the Colorado
how to prevent it from ever liaP"-
ing
iri thekgaiages. ·
·
should.focus our efforts on pre-
massaci:e; many have been say-
pening again. But that doesn't
•
-
.
But they were middle class,
venting
a
simiiar outoreak from
ing how big ofa shoe~ this is to
seem likely.
·
.
·
and this kind ofJhing is only
happening.
;:
our society. Why? Was this
Already
·
the media has been
supposed to happen in
·
the
in-
·
.Another misconception of the
Student urges
peers
·
to
'Take
Backthe Night'
by ERICA TAYLOR
really that big of a surprise?
held accountable
·
for the ner cities,.. right? Human na-
media is
_
that they are portray-
Like the students in Colorado,
"Trench Coat Mafia.'' Musical
.
•
tur~ i~
:
the srupe
:
no
·
matter what
irig this as a random actof vio-
"He began following me - he
the majority ofus has grown up
artists such as
Marilyn Manson
<:lass you'are in_.
In
allac~uality
lence. There was nothi_ng~-
dragged me over to
a
play-
in high schools in middle class
andKMFDMhavealreadybeen
the situation would have been
dom about this
.
at all, it was
ground under a slide.where he
communities and would prob-
criticized for somehow influenc-
handled swiftly
inan
·
imi~r city
planned,
.
calculated and
,
~veh"'
forced himself on top of me."
ably like to think that it could
ing the students to go on a kill'."
·
school
.
by security
,
and local
tu ally
·
acted
.
out.
.
It was not a
.. It happens at.night, it happen~
never happen in our home-
ing spree. This is very remiitis,,
police.
.
·
·.
.
spur of the momenddea:}thad
during the day
.
lt
can be a vi-
towns. Obviously no·w we can.
cent of the suicide case blamed
_
But_they
.
.wer~ middle
_
class,
:
_
b~!l building over time !lfld fes-
cious rape or it can
_
be grabbing
Almost every high school has
on
Judas Priest several years
.
what co_uld, have driven them to
· ··
tering
'
until it could not be con-
and ~oping.
_
It can
be
.
v<>yeuris-
the group of outcasts
.
Some-
ago.
.
this j,otnt. M:()ney and posses-
·
/
tained any
_
more:
.
·
tic
·
stares or sexual comments.
times they are "freaks." Some-
After the double suicide in the
sion-m~at1~little if the parents
'
<
.
R~ther thar
_
dooki,ng for a
Sexualviolence is any
act
(ver-
times they are just normal
kids
past case,
.
the parents of the
'
did not acttially raise the~r chil-
/ ,
scapegoat, society should try to
bal
.
and/or physical)
·
which
who never assimilated into the
dead went on a moral conquest
dren. Being wealthy
:
does not
find. ways to prevent another
bi:eaks
a
person's trust
·
and/or
popular crowd. Almost every
against the band and the music · put
a
person on a moral high
incident by trying to understand
safety and is_ sexual in nanire. ·
high school treats them the
seen!! as a whole .. What the
ground or in a perfect
life
(al-
whyithappenedandwhatcould
-
"I
have l!n empty hole in my
same.
paren
·
ts' supporters seemed to
though many people seem
.
to
be do9e to change it.
heart and ha.veforever changed
There is almost always the kid
overlook was the role the par-
believe that it does).
There is no single cause.
It
is
as a persori.7'
·
·
who
·
has his
·
backpack
·
thrown
ents themselves had in the trag-
, Another r~ason, why we will
a conibinati9n of.several factors
Whether
·
or
not there
·
are
into the showers after gym. The
edy.
.
.
.
probably see this)iappen again
that could be improved upon.
p9ys
_
ic~
.
scars, sexual asS:ault
kid who has his lunch tray
Thetwoteenagerskille4them~
is be~~use
,
~tperthanlearning
'.fheyw~reabunchofkidswho
can be
;'
ancLofieii is, devastat-,
knocked over every day.
·
Tpe
selves while listening
·
tO
:J~das
h!JW. to deal
,
with the situation,
g9t
picked on alotand nobody
ing
to
:
a
wom~'.s psyche
,
She
kid who hears the constant in-
Priest
iri their parent's garage
i.
:
people b~c,9.me mqre paranoid
seemed ·to have Jrie?
.
to help
ca11
.
~xperience
.
Jlashb
_
acks,
sults
·
and threats
'
.
·
while smoking pot and drinkiqg
and
.
aggre~iite
:
ag~iw,( th_o
_
se
th
.
em.
,
Their parents obviously
par~ic.
.
aft~c]c;,
,
)tj$-9.Wi2~~.
~g~t.,
' Yet'as
a
,
sodecy
;
·
we
act sur-
beer. Maybe the parents shouid
that th~y. _see as diffei:~nt.'
'..
·-
'
::
d
,
icfnoi)ciww
.
what was really
mare~, UilC:onti:o,I
_
lab~e shaking;
prised that somebody
;
some-
have been more aware of what
.
'Thei:e will be
:
~ore hard iooks;
.
going .on
i11
their liv~s.
-
.
. -'
'
,
suiddal thoughts. She can
·
be
where, . soniehb,
'
Vsn
'
apped.
.
their children weredoing'irttheir
w,~r~ insuits;
·
etc
·
.. ,. the pi-o}?leih
.
.
·
:
;8ut/~~
-
:
~e
i
so ~hoc!ced
_
~a~
.
~aµnted
:
by
_
fl!~li
_
ngs
.
of.gµi.lt,
Sdmeone·
'
shoulcf na\1~
(
:s
·
eeitit own' house.
' .
.
•.
-
.
.
:..
;
..
'
'Yill
not go away or.geP:~e~er.
,
spme!,h}ng)i
,
lc~,tlJ~s co~J~
h31p
~
.
~eJf
J~atliirig,
litimili~tiori,
;
iear,
coming.
::
~
'
:
1:
.
•-
Maybe the parents
of
the
.
It is highly ironic that there
·
pen."
.
We should have seen it mistrust,' depi:essfon;
·
anxieiy;
·
While this isn't
meant
to
ex.: · "trench coatmafi~"
·
sh9ul~have
was a '.'m~ment
.
o
_
f.si~~!l~e'.'for
,
.
_
c-°-~¥-
~,,
.
.
,,
.
.
.·
.·
. ·
.
..
:
:
a~ger
;
~e~pair
:
Th,ere ~an
.
bej,n
cuse what happened,
'
it does
paid a litde
·
more
_
attentio_n
'
to
,
:
the victims of the
;
tragedy
~
be-
'.
,.
)
Chrii
f
lqiudtsen
_,
is
a
fre~hmgii._
·
:.:
alf
,
co)ls'(iming qejite
;to
\
0
ge,t
bring us a step closer to under-
what thei~ chHdren were doing
-
'
cause it was silence iliat
~
let the
:
'
.
com,
il'
u
ii
icat'ions
·
maJoi-jri:im
.,
'
clean
~
anif-gainsome-seniolahce
standing how this happened. If in their spare time. Maybe they
_
tragedy occur. Rather than
East
Islip,
NY.
of control.
.
,-,,
·
.
:
,
_
·
··'\I
·
took·tlie
·,
10ngest shower·I
ha~e e~e
°f
t£ken
;
fo rily
·
life
:;
,
.
1
•
For Tara Quinn's 'The Jersey
Side,' and Bill Mekrut's 'Political
Scene,'
see
Inner Circle page
3.
The 'recovery time vanes for
.
e~ch
,
'-Yorrian, lasting f~om
mortths
-
toyears; )lit for
_
inany
it is a lifelong strriggle to pick
up tile pieces, get ~trong;
·
be-
ct:mie whole:'
,/
"
'.
:
.
.
.
; ·'
.
.
''He
;
wiirriever
know
th6
~ori-
·
stant pain
thai
Heel
anci
the
feai''
·
'. Tu,elaitiitglegacf<>fvipl
~
nce
,,
is'
•
its
1
ability'
·
to
.
devastate arid_
-
ciamage
.:
thtvetfdomims'itiokM
a
perscin'ssoul
:
-
The
'
coifrse
of a
·
;
life
c~
oe,
drastically 'altered
in
'
a
matter of miifutes.
-
. '
·
,
''.Forever I will be jailed in my
owninirict··
,;· _,
.
·.
,
,
.
,
..
:
:,itis
·
a violation
ofitvoinan's '
ba'si~
:
rights
·
io
'
h
·
ave
·
to
·
con;;
stantly feel at risk for unexpected
·
assitil
!5
.
qii
he
r
s~f~fy:-ii'nJflier
. :
pe,r~on. Thiiis ~hftt Take
)
3a.ck
.
the Night
-
kabouf
.
-
·.
-
·.
. '
Anyonewho supports arid
·
believe§ jffcreating a world
.
where
·
.women;
can
exp~rierice
the safety and sanctity they
deserve
are
welcome to partici-
pate
·
in the Marist ColJege Take
Back the Night March- May 2
_
beginning at 8 p
.
m. in the Ro-
tunda. We
will
claim our right to
safety
•
on the Mari st campus
and then hold a Speak Out for
female survivors of sexual vio-
lence and assault.
"My advice to anyone who
has been sexually assaulted: let
it out. There
is more room on the outside than
the inside."
Personal stories taken
-
from
The Survivors Page :
www.stardate.bc.ca/survivors
·
u~
,
t
:
:~
·
:
All
·
ge
.
tiflJli.t
<
:·
,
~wagon
·
.
.:
-:.·
~
~
-- ,.
-
.
•
~
-
~
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,
.....
...
.
.
.
:
...
. ·~
.·
-
\' ..
•-
.
~ ;
\
.
:· ably the
.
best band at Tramps
: by"CHRISKMJDTSEN
that night, they should have
StaffWriter
Qeen last but Lagwagon
.
·
had
•·
·
··
·---
·
-
·
·
·
·
--
···
·
·
··
:
higherbijling:
.
-
·.-
.
_
.
/
·:
('
:
~
'
}
LagWagon
:
hehi:ilined
:~t
·
Tramps
;
acco,;npaniecl. by
.
All,
. J:aiei
·
deneration,
and:
wi-Jith
Likt!:M~ bh·Sat:, A.ptjl ~4,
,
:
1
;
·
·•·
.
A/{plriyeda strong,
ff
some-
.
what brief, set.including
Mr.
Coffee which many of the fans
had been
_
waiting for .
.
During
AWs
.
set, the floor opened up
irito two separate pits. One area
was for those w
_
ho
·
actually
wanted to dance and the other
for
_
the angry little teeny
boppers out to prove them-
selves.
. Despite tlittpopp{riature of
the show, some of the _misled
teeny~b6ppers" inanagd to get
violent. The
0
rest of the crowd
seemed
"tci
enjoy
'
ti-iem.iei;e
_
s
·
though ( except for the two kids
who
'
were
;
throwing up
in
.
the
comer for rriost -of the show)
.
• •
·
Closing the night was
. Lagwagon. who played a sur-
prisingly lively set. Even
.
though they are a very poppy
band, they still had alot of en-
.
Wretch Like Me started the
night off With
a
briefintrcffrom
.
Gun
'
i
and Roses which was
highly aimf~ing{and surprising
that
tlje!y
could play
.
thafmany
different chords} .
.
·The
.
rest
·
of
ihefr set was energetic
but
faii-Iy
repetitive whicfr left
:
a lacking
feeling afterthefr liaJfhour set.
. ergy and managed to -get every-
one involved.
·
.
.
Photo courtesy Epitaph Records
Al/played second bill at Tramps last weekend
with
Lagwagon.
·
.
On the surface Wretch
Like
Me seemed to be another pop- -
poser-punk bands· that
.·
have
been b~coming
'
increasingly
popuJar as ofJate. However, af-
ter
'
flipping through
·
their CD
Jittle homo in all of us."
·
Wretch
Like Me could possibly find
themselves a fan favorite, but
also runs'the risk of becoming
yet another corpora.ti punk
band, which is the topic:"of an-
other song on their
c~;
'Punk
At the end
.
of the set
Lagwagon played a brief rendi-
tion of Come All Ye Faithful
which was highly amusing but
crowd~surfer grabbed onto the
'Yould have been better if they
pipes and lights dangling from
had played it for a longer period
the ceiling
.
of time.
.
Eventually the security got
Upcoming shows at the
tired of watching the lights get Tramps includes the record re-
kicked as each ciimber kicked
l~ase paityon May 30 for
H20,
the light set ~~f?~e
_
1.[~p~m~
with openers Kill Your Idols,
()n sta~e,
_
secunty made
an
an- - and Madball. Bouncing Souls
riounceirienfthat
all
climbers· are also holding a record release
wou
_
ld he
:
eject~d
1
which did
show
'
at
.
Trainps during May.
no~·dng to.~top
_
anyone.
.
.
Surpris\ngly, StlffLittle Fingers
'(which
l
would
'
not have actu-
ally bought bu.tit was: free), I
found t,hat there·Iyrics
·
are
·
b'oth
c'iimfoal arid
'
soniewhat.contro-
Rock is Business:•
.
·
·
VefSial~
·
-
.
_
.
__
,
·,
:
·
-
.
__
·
..
·
· '
One
sonQ:
on
their to,
Homo;
ti'as''1:fdc~>j'JiitR'
hir••fti'eie·~
1i
.
·
.:
·
.
-:,.
-·
,.
; ·
-
.
,
.·
.
.
: The amusing trio of
Latex
Generation
·
came ~next.
:
Theii
~econd song,
-
biidd-§;:i/a'.{
'
a
Communist\vas thehighliglii of
thett
sei:
'·
'AdHMpo1nt:'
llitfffrsi
.
_.
.
,.
-
•·
·
--
.-
/
.
--
;
..
·
.1!ns
:
?.a~!~~ly
!hl!
_
f!.e~c_(!n_
.:
will
alsb be coming t9 .Tnunps
dd,its'plus
Cfiad Price:
·
Afgu.:
d~ring the summer.
Mikg
isess
matuiCS
\
~itb
'Cb
eating at
.
Solitaire'
.
·
cl),
a
-Step
beY()~d
So,cial
D
.
.
·
.
' '
'
,
, •
'
.
-
'
.
.
:
...
·
·
·
·
_ and country. He sees confus-
'
Dylan's Don't Think Twice
:
But
by
AD~n-~~i\LS,£9:
ing
.
band
-
names
·
such as
this albuni is very different from
-
ta;;
·.
nter
_.
.•
Creedence Clearwater Revival
anything he has ever done be-
.
.
_
·
;
_
.·
..
·
.
:
. and Johnny Cash. He pur-
fore. That is obvious right from
·A_ sp1ky-~arred p~rik walks m
chases it anyway figuring that
·
the first track, a very dark calm
to _his local 1pd_epe11dennecord ; the description is just exagget-
tune called The Devil in Miss
store on a
_
sunny afternoon.
.
·
ating ... well he is wrong.
• Jones. But is this
a
sign of the
He
.
walks into the store and
Afternearly20yearsas front-,-
end
_
for Social Distortion?
. sees 'Che~ting
a~
Solitaire' by _ mari for one of the most influen-
Mike Ness going to spend the
Mike N ~ss, lead
_
singer
·
and
·
•
·
tial punk rock bands ever, Mike
rest of his life making albums like
songwriter
of
punk legends So-
·
Ness goes back to his roots for
this, right?
dal Distortion.
He
had heard
a solo album he has been want-
·
Fear not all you punks out
.
about this and ~ad heard
.
that it ' ing to do for years. Some songs
there.
was not just another Social D
_
do at
_
times sound like stripped
.
.
According to Mike; ''This is
album
.
He looks at the back and
_ ·
down Social D songs such as
just
a
break, after two and a half
se~s an album description with
Rest of our Lives, Dope Fiend
years of touring we just took a
words such
as
rockabilly, blues,
Blues and .the cover of Bob
break between albums. It was
.
just the perfect time for me to
do this."
• One of the l~gest smprises
on the
,
album is the guests that
Mike brought into the studio
with him. Misery Loves Com-
pany is a song that Mike does
with Bruce Springsteen.
-
Ap-
parently Bruce is a huge Social
D
f.µi
(I
swear that is not a joke).
TeJling their voices apart is ac-
tually a struggle at times. Crime
• Don't Pay has dark rockabilly
guitar work done by none other
than the ex-Stray Cat and MTV' s
·
kirig of swing Brian Setzer. The
guitar work is uncharacteristi-
cally. dark for Setzer and
fits
very
well with the attitude of Mike
Ness.
Just like Social Distortion
songs, Mike brings very deep
and personal lyrics. He sings
about everything from blown
-
chances at love ·(Rest
of
dur
Lives and If You Leave Before
Me") to his drug addiction, or
as he puts it, "dying twice a
·
day" (Dope Fiend Blues, Bal-
lad of a Lonely Man and the title
track)
.
He also puts forth some
of his best guitar work yet and
writes songs that will appeal
tq
even the hardest of Social Dis
-
tortion fans while keeping well
entrenched in his country and
rockabilly roots.
Now I was skeptical when I
bought the album. I thought the
description was exaggerated
.
But you know what the weird
thing is? I really do not care
that this is not a punk rock al-
bum.
The
songs are catchy and
no . matter how offended you
may be at Mike's betrayal to his
punk rock throne, you cannot
help but find yourself singing
these songs to yourself'all day
long. The music manages to
sound
.
like a country song while
having this odd resemblance to
something that should
be
heard
from the centerofa swirling and
violent pit. Mike captures the
essence of country, rockabilly
and punk and forges them into
a new direction. Mike Ness did
not change, he just visited new
territory for a little while. So go .
pick up 'Cheating at Solitaire'
and watch for him to come near
you this summer. For more info
check
his
website
at
www.mikeness.com.
PAGE9
TbeFitlal
:
.'
;
·.
·
_
;
:
.
.
_
:
:
·
:
To
t
.
a
..
lly
Th
·
eatre
by
RACHAEL VOLLARO
Staff Writer
The
Marist
:
Cqllege Council
on Theatre Arts
·
concludes its
fortieth- season this ~eekend,
with Shakespeare's 'Much Ado
about Nothing.'
·
,
I
,
•
I
I
I , I
I '
· I •
< I
I
I '
Performance dates and times
are tonight and tomorrow night
at
8
p
.
m., and Saturday May
l
at
2
p.m. in the Nelly Goletti The-
atre. There is also a performance
Sunday May
2
at
2
p.m. outsi9e
in the Student Memorial Grotto,
weather permitting. F
_
or those
who don't know where the
Grotto is, it's the ston~ memo~
rial near Donnenl 'this perfor
-
mance marks
.
the
.
first
.
outside
-
show in the history ofMCCTA.
Tickef
prices
~re
$7:
get\er~\ ad-,
mission,
.
$5
faculty, staff
&
alumni, and $3 students. There
is no charge fqr
,
~unday's per-
formance, but
'
donations
.
and
blankets
to
sit on are e~cour-
aged
.
Tickets can be reserved
by calling the MCCTAbox of-
ficeatx3133.
'Much Ado about Nothing'
is
considered
one
of
Shakespeare's most witty and
romantic p1ays. The true Direc-
tor Victor Sma_ll said it's
Shakespeare's merriest look at
love.
Megan Williams, a stage
manager for the production, said
the audience should expect the
true essence of the Bard.
"It's a smart, intricate plot,
with a dynamic cast," she said.
Karen Gumaer, also a stage
manager, said that if the audi-
ence pays attention to' what is
going on, on stage, it's a very
funny show.
"The true comedy of
Shakespeare is evident to the
audience," she said.
The cast and crew of Much
Ado have been working to-
wards this performance for the
last three months. According
to producer, Bryan Delaney, the
cast has put their heart and souls
into the production.
The Marist College Council
on Theatre Arts recaps the
1998-
99
season, the following week-
end with its annual Banquet
Awards Ceremony. The cer-
emony starts at 7 p.m. in the
Nelly Goletti Theatre and is free
and open to the public.
For more information call the
MCCTA box office at x3 l 33.
Rachael Vol/am will retum
as
The Circles Theatre columnist.
i11
Fall, 1999.
;:
~
·
,
,
'
(
'
i
1'
,.-
(
1'
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{
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I:
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r.
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·
/
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.
.
/
APRIL 29
2
1999
·
Alien
collspiracy
·
~~~~~.......;......;......;..,.
~rf
~tf
!t
enkindled.
fiy
.:
f
Watih
new sola
_
r
sy
:
·
_
stem
_
·
.
·
'!ilix~
.
>
Staff Writer
:.
ing to a surprisingly respected
~
.
;
~
With two very controversial,
.
byPATRICKWHITILE
A&E Editor
conspiracy theory, the
U:S'.
.
.
arid to be quhe fr~ryile films
Army Air Force cordoned off
_ _
"'
• - - - ' & . . . L , _
irirelease Neil LaBute is head-
the area summnding Rosweff
ing straighffor tlle top.
.·
.
.
··
.
and removed all evidence.
. •:
,
The middle ag~d Moitrion
·
·
.
director released his
first
feature
'The truth is·outthere' might
Robert Hastings was sup-
·.
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
not just be the catch phrase of a
posedly present at
a
UFO sight-
film in 1997,
'In
The Company
popular sci-fl series.
·
ing at an Air Force Missile ba~e
Of Men
.
' The film was not only
·
·
Therecentscientificproofof inMontanain
.
March,1967
.
He
indulging to wat~q, but at the
a distant solar system is
fuel
for
believes that the government is
·
·
-
same time gave you so much
the legions of scientists, re-
very much aware of the con-
·
depth into the two main charac-
searchers, citizens, and some
spiracy to keep alien species
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
...;...:.,_;.;,.._;_:;__J
ters in the
.
film that you had to
: · would say weirdoes, who make · under wraps.
watch it agairt.
_
'In
The Company
PhotocourtcsyTho111asMcDooough
OfM '
d h
'
d 111·"'
a Case "'or the ex1·stence of extra
"Now I would 11·ke to empha
·
-
·
·
·
·
·
·
en surroun st
_
e- u
.
he
·
1
'
-
·
Arecentlydiscovere
_
d
_
n
_·
ewsolarsys_tem has a
.
lien lov
__
ers_
·
abuzz.
_
f
·
k
h
·
d
·d
terrestrial
life.
Theories con-
size, I am not condemning ariy
-
0
two co- wor ers w o
·
eci e ·
tinue to mount on top of each
government agency for its par-
•
Speculation aboutal_ien con-
-
for anything other than humor
to get back at all the women that
other, each new one more baf-
ticipation in progrwns of secrecy
·
spiracy is
.
alive and well
•
on
value. Alien activity database
have ever hurt them by ripping
fling than its predecessor, about
related
to
the UFO phenom-
today's
.
cqllege campuses.
·
www.Area51.i1pfu.plym.ac.uk
thrcmgh the emotions of
3: deaf
subjects including crop forma-
enon," Hastings said. "How-
Som.e major universities
>
have
keeps an archive ofall accepted
sec~etary. Smmds pretty cruel
tions, cattle mutilations, abduc-
ever,
iny
honest and sincere
"alien societies" comprised of.
conspiracy theories to date:
does it not. The lead in the
film
tions and autopsies.
opinion is that the public has a
students with an interest in the
Exactly what it takes for
an
alien
(Chad); played by firSt time ac-
,
But is this really valid scien-
right and a very definite need to
extraterrestrial sciences.
conspiracy theory
_
.
to become
tor Aaron Eckhart, gave
an
Os-
tific research? Is this news or is
know the facts."
Mari st
College
in
"~ccepted" is questiona}?le.
car worthy performance to say
·
it entertainment? And who are
·
The theorists may actually
·
Poughkeepsie, NY, has its own
-
The theories
_
read like the
the
least.
Eckhart's performance
these people, who spend each
have the majority on their side.
share of alien conspirators and
titles of Ed Wood Sci-Fi flicks _ as a· psychotic male ego is so
waking moment of their lives
According to a survey con-
speculators, including Senior - th<tt did. not make the cut:
convincing th
_
at at one early
.
generating these theories? Per-
ducted
by ·
www.
Criminal Justice m_ajor Justin
-
"Farrakhan and UFO's," «The
screening of the film a woman
haps that is the most challeng-
Alienlnterview.net,
67 percent
Chase.
South African UFO," "Project - approached Ec~art ou~icie
.
the
ing question.
of the population believes that
"I think it's good that we are
Moon Dust," and '4HackersTake
theater proceeding to say
·
''!-
Alexander Collier, a self
7
pro-
"contact groups" exist.
·
On the
.
expanding what we don't know
OQ
tlie UFO's" are displayed for hate you!" Eckhart
.
respond(!d
claiIµed expert on the subject, is
other side of the coin, 64 per-
about our universe;''. (;base said
public viewing.
.
by saying, "You me~ you hate
·
a 30-year'..duration "UFO
cent believe that extraterrestri-
-
in lieu of the recent disclosure
Whether military interven
.:
···
·
·
'iriy
character right?" the wo~an
,
.
•
conductee." He claims to be
als pose a serious global threat.
_
of an undiscovered solar sys-
tion, alieOabdu~ti<?il or
·
govem-
simply replied
"N'
0
l?ateyou/'
_ ,.
...
spreading a message given to
Only 32 percent are sure thatw~
tern.
_
·.
'4The universe is too big
•
mentcoilspll1lcy is the
·
cas(!~ o
_
ne
·
·.
_Not
.
~ad you;.,f~t gig, Aaro~.
.
him
,,
by
"
.e,lt~11_:•1;.9~ta(:t
_
s.~~-..in
.
J\re
~
the only intelligent species
.
for
us to be theonly.pJ
_
anetw.ith
.
thfag is;.for
:l
siu:e:
(
scores
•
of
:
,
,
~!~~lt~,a.s
0
~P,~!P~µt,,,y9H ~
.;•_:.
•
,
,
•
Collinsville, IL,
in
1994.
in the galaxy.
life."
.
people are .
.
dedicating their
-
lives
·
qmte convi~ci~g.
>:"
>
,
.
·
-.
.
"Therearewellrespectedand
A 'contact group' is
·
_
what
·
NearbyPineBush,NY,isthe
.
torevealingthe
_
truthaboutthis
-
.
. LaBu
,
te
_
s
_
ne~tftlm,
.
Yo11r
credible civilian personalities ·experts call one
·
of seven
-
pos"
.
UFO capital
-
ofihe easterr,.
_ j
nterplanetary imbroglio
:
,
·
..
· ·
F
11
en_ds
.
A~<;l :t-f~~ghb?~~_,'
:
.w~s
,
associated within the aliens and
sible person1:llities under which
United States. Pine Bush is a
,
So what does Milton William
re~eased laS
t
year_a_nd receiv_ed
UFO scene," Collier said.
ahumancanencounteralienlife.
townwhere
,
~lqcalbarbernam~
-
~oopet
\
~uth~r of th.eJamecl · mu~h the sarn
_
e cn
_
ticalacclam!-
"Some are self-proclaimed ex-
.
These include J;:BE's (Extrater-
..
Charlie qlaims l<1~a~e: been ab:-
:
·_
t
C::ooper/p9cimient': ("The Se-:
~
·.-
In
'.f1l~
Q~lilp~y ~.f:M:
,
~n.;
-
perts in the field, others include
restrial Biological Entities);
·
ducted by alienf
· .. ·
.
I
:
9retGciyernment:
VFO.
Activity . Y9u,r,Fnends ~d !'leJ~hbors
ex-government with UFO sto-
Telepaths (psychic aliens) and
Pine ~ush
_
resid(!nt James
·
in the U.S.,!' a study published
ts_J
_
Ust as appalhn~ as ~}'he
ries and the rest comprise of HomoSapien2
1
(a
·
hybrid of a
Ba~iarz sajd that altli9ug~ Mis
iiatj.onally in 1989)
Qtlnk
abot.1:t fompan~ of Men, co~Slttutmg
abductee accounts."
human and alien ·being. Con;_
•
not
a
proponent ()f conspira~y
.
the ;future of alien conspiracy
.
i
_
n _mymmd . how superb <fa
.
Belief in life on other planets
.
fused yet? Subjects including
theories, Pine
Bush
is
·
alive \\'.ith
_
.
theory?
.
_
.
_
_
_
_
_
.·
.·
_
_
_
.
w~ter and d~t:~Ct()r l;.~ute ts.
hasbeenthesubjectoffilmand
the lifestyles
;
socialization,
•
lWOlogy.
.
..
:,
_
,
. _
_
.
_
;
''It
_
sfo?rild b_e obvious
by
.
This film depicts thehves of
television since the mediums
physiology, biology, and ~pace-
,
-"
'..'There ~eJ:il~ces yo
,
u
_
can. go
)
!
_
ow thiii ~ornething ~iruster and
several
_
couples
an1
·
one bach-
were invented; but serious be-
craft technology are all explored ' (in Pine Bush) where lJF:O ~ul-
'
:
'
terribly
-
wrong is going on in-
.
:!~rwho
_
c~ot s~m t()
,
fiJtd the
'
· lief in
·
extraterrestrial entities · by the self-appointed "alien
_
au-
ture is verymuch
,
~iv~,'' BaW,aiz
.
y.c;,lving tlie
_
governmen(and the
.
.
11
?
11~
perso~,
--
~~~
~ttei:nptto do
_ .
started becoming part of main-
thorities
11
·
who have deciicated
said
,
."O~e
_
of the 1:Il
.
~Y
-
~cµvi-:
.
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pllenomenon,'
\
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w~o
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eyer
_
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-
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·
.
·
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stream media in 1947 when
,
a
theirHves to
,
alien
·
res~arch(and
ties u
·
s bored.YineJ}~
_
s.h folk
.
•
saj4'.
"Weallmustband together
.
COl'Il~S 19etr:
:
war, _mduding the
_
•
·
.
:
rancher supposedly came
seemtohaveagreataffinityfor havefoundis_DfQ;w~tcltjng:
::;
-
~qexposeit11ow/'
;
>>
.
.
·
· sp_~mse
Qf?
frtc::Il~L 'I'h.e
_
fi-,In,i
.
across the wreckage of a space-
posting every new ''.discovery"
_ "
·
·
Of ~ouis
,
e, sqme ~0J_}Spir~cj~s .
;
·
.
·
·
Qr soµtething l1ke that.
.
stars Bell' S~He,!, J~~~wJ?atnck,
:
·
,
craft in Roswell,
NM.
Accord-
on the World Wide
.
Web). .
.
·
.
· stretch too far to
.
be considered
·
..
-
,
Aaron
~khart
(this time not so
·
·
.
.
· ...
.
,
:·
'
foy'ciltirig, tlloughjust annoy-
' Silent Hill'·
_
worthy
;
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video
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am
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, horse ofa differeni color.
-
Jason
•
byCHRISNAPIERSKI
~ta.ff Writer
From Konami,
,
th~ ~ompany
that made the hi(garne Metal
Gear Solid, comes a terrifyingly
bold new adventure game.
Silent Hill is a fresh horror
experience, which is welcomed
during the long wait for the next
Resident Evil game. There are
few horror adventure games on
the market and the Resident Evil
series is the top among them.
However, Silent Hill has added
·
some competition. While Resi-
dent Evil was a brain-eating
zombie bloodbath, which· was all
about blowing up whatever
moved into tiny pieces, Silent
Hill
has taken a new approach.
·
The purpose of Silent Hill is to
scare in every way imaginable.
The main character of the
game is a normal guy named
Harry Mason. In the opening
snowing even: though itis sum:.
·
iniss~s, does ·make
the
-
ganie
P~trickga.v~ the pddorman'ceof
clip Harry
fa
drivirig down a road
mertirne. Things like tins accom~
'
-
more realistic.
.
.
.
his career in this
o'fihn
whose
with his daughter, Cheryl. They
panied with a nerve-racking
-_ ·.
On the positive side, Silent
chara~ter
was
such a despicable
'
are ~n their way to spend
'
suin~
-
'
·
soundtrack;
:
randpm
'
loud
:'
0
Hill
:
isa spooky game that
of~
-
~rson thatyoujusthad to iove
.
mer in the resort town of Silent
noises, and some disturbing• fer~ good chances of frighten
~
•
him. .
.
.
-
.
-;
Hill.As they near the town/a
.
scenery make the gametiriique
ingtheplayerinsoineway'.The
LaBute's next film 'Nurse
·
·
person steps in front of Harry's
in its field.
.
.
.
·
·
story is C()nfusing, complex and · Betty' starringChrisRockisdue
·
jeep. He swerves and
·
blacks
Harry Masori is also a
·
unique
·
has four 4ifferent endings. The
out this summer.I
am
iriteiested
out. Upol). awakening he sees
changetothesetypesofgarnes .
.
-
townofSileritHillismassiveand
to see if LaBute changes his
the now sinister looking town
Usually the heroes of these
hours of fun can
_
be s~nt ex-
writing style in this film due to
ofSilentHillloomingbeforehim
games are police officers of ploring its many streets and al-
its
studio budget and wid~rdis-
and that Cheryl is missing. He
.
~orne sort ~d have training in
leys.
·
.
tribution .
.
Let us
,
hope riot To
must now adventure into this
several weapons, which they
·
·
. On the negative side: the
·
sum up LaBute's talentin one
. bizarreplaceandfindhisdaugh-
_
.
·can then use to obliterate what-
graphics are not as crisp or de-
word; heis a genius. He gets to
ter.
-
·
ever undead phenomena come
tailed as they were
in
Metal
Gear
your deepest emotions with his
The programmers of this · their way.
Harry
is 'supposed to
·
Solid. The music while eerie gets
work making you so angry at the
game have done a lot of
'
re-
''
·
beacommonnian, whodoesnot· boringveryquickJyandthereis
characters in the film that you
search in the horror field to
have much knowledge of fire-
·
alackofvarietyofenemies.
The
have to tell someone about
make this game scary. They use
anns: There are pistols, shotc.
·
weapons· also seem to have a
them. LaButeis an excellentfilm-
about every trick in the book.
guns,
:
etc
.
in the ga!De but that
Jack of fort:e. I know that the
maker, if you get a chance pick
Silent Hill is filled with a con-
does not mean Harry can use
shotgun would do more damage
up 'In The Company Of Men'
stant fog to keep your vision to
·
them well. Harry will need to
.
be
than the pistol, but it sure did
and 'Your Friends And Neigh-
a minimum, so that you can hear
'
· close to whatever evil he is aim-
not look it when I hit something.
bors' they are both at video
that there is something nearby
.
ing at in order to hit it. This fea-
Overall Silent Hill is some-
stores now. Just one bit of ad-
but you can not see it until it is
.
ture although annoying
_
at times · thing different to keep us busy
vice though, unless you are in
almost on top of you. Another
.
when an enemy appears only a
while we wait for the next Resi~
the mood to get dumped, do not
oddity of the town is that it is
few yards away and Harry still
dent Evil.
watch them with your girlfriend.
'
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-
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Report -
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·
.
by~omasRyan
t
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J •• · ,
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.;
With the
NBA
se~so'Kcoriiing {,_
on~
of:the conferences elite the West ~ave been through
to· a close, I th.oughHt fitting that . -teams, but it is unlikely that and are a lik~iy candidate for a
I give my t"l,VO ·cents
·as·
to,
~ho
'could put together the consis- . fl,rst'round upset if they are not
you shoµld expect to come out tency needed to make it to the ._ careful. .. _ .
oftheplayoffswfth'tlii:dirstnon-
.
NBA
finals.
_ ._:,':',: The takers should be·a lot
Bulls championship since1995.
_ In the end,
I
see a· downright : ·_ bitter than they are~ and a case
In the East I would expect the· _nasty seven-game final series :· could -be. made,
th.ey-_will,
tum
Indiana Pace~ to reaUy s't~p~up
between the Pacers and Hear. theirj~ts ori)n
.i!i~
playoffs and
their play after
a
lack lu*rregu--
with the Pacers ·coming Our ori
make a run'. The problem with
lar season' which mjmy people
top._
.
thatis the same thfng
has
been
expected them to dominate.
_......,._________ said the last three ·years and it
With so mariy teams changing
has not happened yet.
multiple players over the last
A
ll
YO
ll e . CO mill
g
Kobe Bryant and Shaquille
year, the Pacers nucleus of
out
of
the West be- ,
O'Nealdonotseem'togetalong
Reggie Miller, Mark Jackson,
Rik
with each other, and Gl~n Rice
Smits,andtheDavisboyshave
sides the Jazz will
doesnotseemtogetalongwith
stayed together and that should
be a s urp rise.
the idea of playing defense, so
be a big help in May and June.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ it could be an early exit by the
Db
not count out the Miami
Lakers·.
Heat, however. The Heat should
.. The Western Conference is
While the Blazers have•started
havehomecourtthroughoutthe · not as wide open as the East,
strong and faded lately, the
Eastern Conference playoffs,
and anyone besides the Utah Spurs have done just the oppo-
unless they ·collapse down the
Jazz coming out of the West will
site.'_ San Antonio started just
. stretch and the Pacers or .Or-
be a surprise. The two-time de-
6-8 to open the season, but
lando Magic :catch fire. The · fending Western Conference have gone 26-4 over the last 30
Magic are an Eastern Confer-
champs. are battle tested and games to make a run at home
ence best 19-4 at home, so home
fojury free, two of the most im-
court throughout the playoffs.
court advantage would benefit
portant factors when trying to
The Spurs have a young star in
them the most.
reach the finals. If the Jazz steal · Tim Duncan who does not have
The Atlanta Hawks also could
home court from the Portland playoff experience, but David
give the top teams in the con-
Trailblazers they will be almost Robinson and the rest -of his
ference a run fot their money;
unbeatable.. .
teammates do, so the Spurs
but a season-ending injury to
The Blazers have been regu-
could surprise.
I • , '
PAGEll
~
.
\f(
f)J,
· :';, \ · ,_
.
.
•
·. }· ;-;
;BasebatJ,
-··4129
Home vs~ Wagrief3 :30 p:m>
';
· 5/1 @ · Canisius (DB) 1 p.,n.
ii:
f;
·
512 , @ Canistus (DH)J2:3Q"p~.m.
:S/4 1:fome vs .. St. Francis,
NY
3:30 p.m.
Softball -
4/30-5/2 MAAC Championships TBA
Men's Lacrosse -
5/l @Lafayette 1 p.m.
Women's Lacrosse -
4/30Home vs. Siena 4 p.m.
_ 5/2 Home vs. Albany noon
Men's Crew -
5/1-5/2 New York State Championships
Rome, NY @ Delta Lake
Women's Crew -
5/1-5/2 New York State Champion-
/' '
ships Ro1?,e, NY
@
Delta Lake
Men's Tennis
-5/14-5/16 NCAA Regionals TBA
Tough .Trivia
Who was the last person to hit
four
home runs in
a
~ajor Leagu~
Baseball
game?
Last week's question - Who is now the active career points
leader in the NHL after the retirement of Wayne Gretzky?
Answer- Gretzk)''s former teammate Mark Messier will be the
· active ·scqring leader with 1660 points.
forward· Laphonso Ellis prob-
lar season wonders and were an
I would love to see aJazz-Lak~
ably ended any chance they had . unreal 27-6 at one point in the ers finals match-up, but I do not
at making'a: nH:ilrito' ilje'fi.iiafs.
season. They have gone only
think it is going to happen; -In-
Uriderestimating the under-. · 6-5 since then, however, andiL stead a less exciting five game
achieving Knicks-could also be·
their primarily young team could· • series between the Jazz and
a problem-,for~ a:potential-first . · be wearing down., Arguablyithe, ..Spurs with .. the Jazz.taking the
..=====:::::::::==:=:::::::::::::===:=============·
1
::::;
:::::>=·
=======!
round opponentlike the'Hba{' .'most talented teamin the league;
West, and eventually the NBA
The talented Knicks'.· have _ 'the Blazers> have
-
not:been
·
.;.Championship\vith
a
six game
. enough•ffre power
to
kriock off:· ·through the wars other teams in · series win over the Pacers.
- I '
h' ,, : -·· .• :·~ :_;;-;.;:-·-~:.
'j'~'"'·~:fat
!;•j.:,,;.) ·.-,~ '
; ; ,· .
. Women'serewsrnall,buttotlgh·
.
.
·:
.
.·, •, :~ r•• , . .
,
.,. • :,.:
=.•
. :
,
.
.
·
.
.
by
MELISSA WJLLIAMS · ·
Eight rowed a very' strorm race
President's Cup in his memory.
Staff
Writer . · ·
·
once again proving thatthey aie
An excited team of Marist
. not a team that goes down with- · Women launched their shells on
The Marist Women's C~ew
out a fight. A w~ raged .be-
what most had said was the
Teamhasfaced~anychaUeriges
tween the Marist Women arid
calmest racing water they had
this season. • .
·
· ·
the. Women from Delaware, and· seen in years or their entirerac-
Coming into the spfing wi~ a
with each stroke
a
seat length
ing careers for that matter.
signific11nt decrease in_ team-
was gained odost as the battle_·
The race included teams. from
- mates,each,reµi~&ro~erh~,; ,y_ommenced· down th'e_2000~
UCONN,Army,RPI; Geneseo,
had to oring it
~i>
t9 __ the n·e~t
inet~r course.
·
· · · . _- · andVassar. As the race started,·
_
level to pioye that.
t!iC?i
~1111~till . · _ _J'he Freshman/Novice Eight Marist anctUCONN fought for
be champions, Oftenviewedas
won their
dvanced to ·a lead position as they headed
the team of coxswains
by
other
.
. a fin.al
on in the . down the course. Following
, schools, time an'a :time again
daf ·
t _closely behind was an Army
they have proven·th~t_si'ze does
crew trying not to be def~ated
not matter ..
A
Jot ofpC>wer:·
twice
on ttiesameriver. The Red
comes out: of these ladies whose ·
Foxes had their strongest race
hearts arid desire to.win ai-e far
. yet this season pulling harder ·
larger than any oth_erteain~, _
with every stroke and not los-
The season gotoff to
a
shaky
gatta.
_ _
ing sight_ of the UCONN Eight
start with the first race being
Marist College and the Friends
that stayed right along side of
cancelled_ due to inclement . of Marist Rowing were pleased
them. The infamous
5-0,
a hard
weather~onclitions.:Tiiefollow~ . to again w"elcome all visiting
fifty strokes that is pu)led half~
ing weekend the I.,ady Red· .. coqipetitors, their families, alJ
way through.the race, proved -
Foxes faced
Ai:iny
at home.
returning Marist alumni, and. to be a valuable weapon for the
Marist won two out of the three
spectators from the community women as they neared the fin-
races. TJ:ie_ W9,II1en'.~ ,Yar~tty ,.J~_share in the competition and _ i~h and sprinted out the last few
Eight battled· through .tough
the battle for the Herbert J;
hundred meters with everything
waters and finished with a
win:
Haight Trophy, named aftelr the
they had left.
ningtimeof7:09~gain~tArm.y's
president of the Mid~Hudson .
The finai results of the race
timeof7:18.j1leYaj-sfrfI<our. Sc~oolboy Rowing As~oci~-
were: UC()NN 6:18, Marist
also emerg~~ ~1ci9tj?_~s·yii~,a
tj911.
. _ . _ .
· . _
6:25.6,Anny6:28.9,RPI6:35.67,
time of9:04 oy_er·~fs
9:24~:.. .
The mount~ sHverpup_is a_ and 9~nese~ 6:35.7'6. Vas_sar
The
Freshman/Novice girls ~so
fi
.
tti~g f1!0nument to Mr. Haig}Jt,
was dtsquahfied for cross mg
had a hard fought, co~petitive · a m,an who devoted a majority
over lines.
·
race.
·
of.his_ time to scholastic _and
On May 1st and 2nd they will
OnApril IOth,'theteamheaded
collegiate rowing in· the.Mid:
venturetoRome,NY.totakepart
to Camden, NJ for the.first an-
Hudson area. Following Mr: . in the New York State Rowing
nual Villanova Knecht Cup In-
Haight'sdeath in 1969, a group
Championships and they end
vitational Race. Battling against
of friends decided to honor him : their season with the esteemed
strong winds and fierce compe-
by naming µie trophy awarded
Dad Vail Regatta in Philadel-
tition, the Women's Varsity
to the overall champion at the
phia, PA.
.Marist Scor~board
. Baseball -
4/21 Marist
4,
Rider O 4/21 Marist 4,
·
• Rider 0- 4/22 Marist 17, Monmouth 5
4/24 Marist
i
1, LeMoyne 3 4/24 LeMoyne
3, Maril?t O 4/25LeMoyne 6, Marist 5
4/25 Marist 15, LeMoyne_ 2
Softball :.
4/20 Marist 2, Siena
i
4/20 Marist 1,
Siena 0. 4/23 Canisius 5, Marist 4 4/23
Canisius 6, Marist 2 4/24 Niagara 2, Marist
1 4/24 Niagara 5, Marist 4
Men's Lax-
4/21 Boston College 7, Marist6
· 4/24 Providenc~ 7, Marist 6
Women's Lax-4i18
Marist 17; Canisius 9 4/21
·
Vassar 17, Marist 10 4/23 How~d 15
Marist 12
'
'
,
•
'
'
'
'
I
I
I
,
,
, ; I , ,
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
•
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_
_
· _
_
·
.:
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Quote
.
o ._tl:te
,
,
-
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-
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·
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0
tid.
0
b.~ihl
.
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4.g
i
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acticin."
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·
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rngby
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.
<):(
·
A
ril
·
29 1999
---------
•
Basebalt-teidn
oil
fir~artet
7-2week
by
THOMAS RYAN
Sports Editor
victories over
·
the
·
Rider Bron.;
cos in a double.;header.
In
game
·
orie,
.
Olore
•
pitched a complete
··
·
1.ne Marist Baseball Team is
game two~hitte.rfo
•
get the win,
heating' up. at exactly the right
JiQUlly Willis had a
.
home run
time.
.
.
and
three
RBI to lead the Marist
.
With a 7-2 record over their
offense .
.
_
last nine games, fylarist is" in
.
·
In
game· tw<;>, Perrucc~
.
fol-
prime position to make a run at
·
• lowed Olore's performance with
·
·
the Metro Atlantic Athletic
a
•
complete game
.
four.;hitter
Championships held May
13th:.
while s~king out eight. Right
.
.
16th at Dutchess Stadium in
fielder Tim Bittrierhad two hits
7-2 week has the ·Red Fox baseball team in the thick of the MAAC regul~r season race.
SoftbaBfadingintothe~
after
losing
four stJ-aightgmnes
Fishkill,NY.
·
.
andaE.BlfortheRed,Fo)!:eS,
.
.
Leading the Red Foxes this
.
After destroying Monmouth
year at the plate
is
left fielder
the following day, the Red Foxes
Anthony Cervini.
had a day off to prepare for four
by
JEFFDAHNCKE
Staff Writer.
The jumor co-captain leads the
,
games over the weekend against
Red Foxes with a .533 sluggfog
LeMoyne, Jhe team currently
average, 48
.
runs scored,
11
ahead of them in the standings.
doubles, three triples, and four
Connelly started things off
home runs. He is third on the
·
right for Marist in game one as
team
whh
a .359 batting aver-
he gave up only three runs in
away.
It
picked up a run in.the
age and is second with 60 hits
seven innings
.
as
.
Marist won
bottom of the fifth; before tying
and
.eight
stolen6ases,
>·
,
,
.
.
_1_1-3.:
.
.
·the score in the
,
sixth on an Amy
.
'
)oining Cirvini in punishing
. Game two proved to·btfthe end
The regular seasori came to a
Dodd RBI single.
.
.
.
.
<>pp
'
osing
.
pitchers is
.
first
of Marist's six-game winning
screeching haltlast weekend for
It would not remain tied for
.
•·
.
bas'etnan ;Anthony
:
B9cchino:
,
streak,
:c
however,
:
as
;
the
:
E,ed
.
.
thelvlaristCollege softball team,
..
long~however,as Mittistpitcher
<
.;:
>
The
fr~s~ma~ leads tlle
·
tearil
-
· ·
Foxe~ we~e blanked
3-0
by
,
the
and now it mustwait,and see if Melanie Kasack was touched
•
~!!Ji
.
J~rin
_
s
.
bate~in~d.js sec~
,
0Jitsta11ding
.
:
pitc
_
hing
:
:
of-
a Metro Atlantic Athletic Con.;
up in the final frameJor another
·
..
()~cj)n
_
doubles,
·
triples, home
.
LeMoyI_ie'sJami~ Steward.who
.
ference championship appear-
·
run, this time by
.
,
a
Raquel_
iiin~
·
1
~dtotai"base~; He is also
gave up onJy)lu'.ee;hit$ in
,
seven
·
·
ance is in its future.
Alvarez single down the left
.
four:th
·
:
on the team with
a
.355 · innings.
;
..
.
.
.
The Foxes dropped their final . field line.
•.
:
-.
batih1g
..
av~rage:
.
.
.
. ···.
.
'
·
.
'
6nSunctaythe tearnssp~it as
'
four contests of ~he year last
Kasack took the loss
fqr
·
singledhefh~>rtl.6":
.·
!
.·
.•
;
.
·
:R.ilti.i,~iiig"qut:Miµist;s
·
hittini
".
~elLGirae.orti?sa'Y
·
¥.ari~tl9se
'
week, finishing up 16-19 overall
Marist, giving up five runs; three
'.
Mari
st was Unablefo
·
respond
·
¢achine
·
so
far
.
this season is
.
a tough 6
:
5
:d¢cision
)
Ol6ie
goi
and
7-
7 in the MAAC.
.•
of which \vere earned, and
11
:
in.
its half of
tl.,le
sev~tith; giving
'.
center fielder Ryan Brady (.389
.
the.loss going the distance and
. The
,500
conference record
.
hits. Genevieve Garcia got the
:
_
Marttri and Cariisius the victory.
·
:s11,
j8 runs; 61
_
ltlts) a11
_
d
PH/~13
giving up an siX.rnris.
:
: ·
left Marist tied with Niagara and
win for Canjsius,
as
she pitch~d
S9 the Foxes looked to
sal-
Kevfo
.
,
Wissrier (36
.
RB I's,
11
..
fylarist hit starter Ryan Victor
Manhattan for the fourth and
a nearly perfect~ee
·
innings in·
·
v
_
age at)~a~t
OIJ.e
.w
_
fo
_
_
for
.
:
ipe
douQles,4 home runs).
-
.
.
·
.
hard, but
.
reliefpitcher
i
Ghris
final spotin the conference tour-
reliefof starter Erin Crowley.
:
.
weekend fo
'
game two~ arid for a
.
fy\arist's b}g'~eein the rota:-· Marsh pitcl!~<i t\J/o
:}
nilings of
.
nament, which will behe1d.May
Game two was not much bet,-
,.
goolportion of tl_le.game it
.
tion; Doug Connel
_
ly,
.
~evin scorele.ss baseball to pi9k
,
up
7-8 on the North Field. Both
ter, as thist1me Kasa~k was
.
!ooked like they'wouid
_
do just ()lor~. and
:
KevtnPemicct~ave
the
,
w,irt
:'>
Brady
,anct'
~nthdny
Niagara and Manhattan have
roughed
up
for six earned runs
that
.
. •
.
.
.
.
.
.
·.
.
. ..
·
.
.
.
.
been
:
inconsistent
/
but
·
when Ambrosini each had two hits for
~~~::r;~
r:r:!~:::~:t:
o~~
~~isiu~ ~cori~ga\i
:
~~e
]H
h~~:r;:r:}[~;tp~ifitfil
\
t t
-
~iefdf e
·
~
11
{~;:\ft\tfi
;
?ry
.
~t~-~~4
Eo~~-s
g~~
:
:
p
:
a~k.-~~
~
for the Fox.es.
.
in the third, fifth and
'.
si#h iif::
).
ning~;
·
y~~@#k'~+}~a'.t:ljaniagi
l
.
·
.
t:qnnelly
;
leaqs
t,he
,
starters . track in game two
·
with
·
a
;
15-2
·
.
:
The four consecutive losses
nings, as they picked up a p~ir
;;;,
g6i11g)nto
'
tlte
finalf~ap:ie'
:;{
;inl·
with
.~even
_
wjns,
a
:.tol
:ERA;
.
.
•
laug~e(lerru~cfoicked}ip
.
the
·
.. ·
came on the heels of a streak
ofnins
,
ineach.
.
.
.
.
.
, .
.
.
offense
·
was'led hi
:
s·aracino,
and6?
.
.'
strikeouts.
.
·
-
'.
•
.
.
;,
completgainewinwhilestriking
-
whfoh saw Marist capture .five
The offense
.
was sparked
by
who went
3-3
\Yith
art
Jt,BI.
)n
Perrucci has
.
the IowerERA,
,
oufthree.
..
_
.
.
.
.
'-
.
.
'
.
.
· ..
.
victories in six games. However,
-
Alvarez, who drove in runs in
additiori~ Koldjeski producy~ ah but Olore
has
m?re wins (4) and
.
Brady was agail} the ~itiing
.
.
last Friday Canisiu
_
s swept a pair
each of those three iimings
ori
. '
imp9rtantfifth inning homerun
mort\~trikeouts (57). tqan his
.
st.µ' as he
1n1t
together a pe:rfe~t
.
·
fromthe Fl?x.es,
5-4
4i
game one
her way to going
4-4
on the day
tQ1ead Marist:.
: ..
.
..
'
·
.
.
•
.
.
·
freshmanfoaimnate.
,
.
. ..
· -
·
.
5
s
for~5
clay,
.
which includ~4 four
·
and 6-2 in game two.
with
three
RBI.
..
But the severidi
:
inniilg still
. While it was
·the
hitting that
RB I's and two. runs scored;
The next day it was Niagara . Lynn Stoczynski had
three
hits
.
remained, and the Purple Eagles · carried the teMt during the be-
,
Cervini had three hits and
.
.
taking two, as they defeated
for Canisius.
.
.
.
. ·.
.
: :
.
.
·
pro~ptly loaded the bases on a
ginnin
·
g ofthe streak~ the pitch-
scored four more
.
runs Jor
.
Marist2-1 and5-4in the double-
So that brought the Lady Red
··
pair of singles
.
~d,a hit bats-
.
ing is what helped them sustain
Matist.
·
·
header.
Foxes ti:>nearbyNiagaia on Sat-
man:
.
.
:
:,
·· .·
..
it
·
·
.
·
The Red Fox.es conti~ue play
Marist traveled to Buffalo to
.
urday. In the first game, Kasack
·
.
"Titia
·
seUip)odi~
B9wers for
.
Following the Red Foxes de-
this weekend when they play
take on Canisius, and they
settled down and returned to
. ·
ali~lelat~gru.ne·heroics,asshe
molishingofSt.Peter's,theRed
back-to-backdoubleheadersat
started the afternoon on
a
high
her old producfrveform, giving
.
.
·
doubled off Kasackand cleared. Foxes came back with two
4-0
Canisius.
note.
.
up only two runs over six in-
the
bases,
thus tying
·
the game
.
AfterJesseRosenhahnledof ningsofwork .
.
•.
·
.
.
•
.
.
·
..
•
atfour.
:
.
.
.
:,
,.
;
.
;·:
..
,
..
,
_
.
:>
.
the bottom of the fourth for
However, the offense
.._was
si-
.
. .
:
The
next
batter, DesiPrhioso.
Canisius with a homerun, Matist
·
lent, as Niagara hurlerChristina
·
doubled home
·
Bowers, and the
.
came out in the fifth and ex-
Martin held M;uist to one run
·
pqssibilitY
.
.
~fa
·
M~srvictory
:
pl
oded
for four runs.
on two hits as she went the dis-
·
disappeared before
,
th~ir
?Wi(
The scoring started when Me-
tance.
.
,
·,
eyes
.
.
.
.
.
, .
. ,.·
,
,
.·
.
.
·
.
.
:
·
'"
·
_
.
•
,
..
lissa Tucci doubled home Marla
.
Marist led
-
for the
ftfei._fi~~
i~-:-
·
.
·,
Mai1iritook the, win
in
relief,
'
SaracinoandKatCheski to give
nings, 1-0, as a resulfofifo'st while Kasacktook
'
her fourth
_
Marist their first lead of the
inning single by Amanda
lossoftheLadyRedFoxesroad
game.
Koldjeski.
trip
.
.
·
.
.
Jenn Hanson knocked Tucci
Kasack was strong until the
Now·the Fo.xes await the
i-e-
homewith adouble.ofherown.
sixth, when Stacy Pino finally
suI.ts
of Niagara's. and
The Foxes added the fourth run
got the
.
Purple Eagles on the
Manhattan's final games.
.
of tlie inning on another RBI
board with an RBI single.
Niagara will take on first place
double, this time by Rachel
Pino then came around to
StPetersonSaturday,followed
Ammons.
·
cross the plate when Randi
by a clash with Manhattan on
But Canisius began to chip
Lawton, who was 3-3 on the
day.
Sunday.
.
.
Lax
suffered
its'seoond
overtime
loss
to
the
FricUS
in
three=;~.
. ..
rt
1
'.1
fflE
:
UmcL£
·
••
·
- .
J
.
nn:rAr.p:r-,.:;
i;J:t::inj,D
.
b
P
·
~u~~o~i!ntn'tfwt'/J;.,.'J/?on';:
women's
The Inner Circle is an annual
· supplement for the incoming
staff members and editors to
~ain experience in producing a
newspaper.
VOLUME 52, ISSUE 18
by
JAMESJ.LIETO
·
·
·
·
of their players.
Rebecca
Staff
Writer
-
.
- .
'
Strunk, who was a key compo-
nentto the team's success in the
After completing a spectacu-
fall, broke her foot and is out for
lar fall season the Women's
the season. They then went on
Rugby Team is back in action
to lose four heartbreaking
again this spring.
·.,
..
.
games. by very close margins,
The fall
_
season was a very ex-
and all away from home.
citing time for the team.
·
In Oc-
The first loss came on the road
.
tober, they captured th~ Metro-
in early April; to nearby rival
politan Union II toi.Jrnamemtitle
New Paltz College, by the dif-
at Stonybrook University for the
ference ofonly one score. The
first
.
time in the history of the
team
then
traveled
to
women's team here atMarist.
Stony Brook University, two
After this thrilling victory, the
·
weeks ago to participate in a
team advanced to the Northeast
,
tournament that was taking
Championship held
.
atthe Uni-
place
•
there. This t9urnament
versity
..
of
·
·
Massachusetts-
..
would be the site of the women's
Amherst, where they finished
next three losses. The team
impressively in fourth place.
played three games in one gru-
Even more excitement camein
eling day, and was defeated by
January when the teain learned
Oswego, Southern Connecticut,
that four of its members had
and New Paltz once again. All
been chosen to representMarist
three games were decided by a
on the Metropolitan N)'A.11-Star
margin of one score.
Team. Amanda Parrillo, Aliso~
The spring season has not
Riguad, Jessica Spencer and
brought the same
·
success as the
Rebecca strunk
•
all completed
The Marist.Women's Rugby team (Top L-R) Janet Ht.iritington, Allison Riguad, Crystal
fall season did, but the season
tremendous
.seasons
to
earn a
is not over yet. The women will
spot on the teani. of o.nlY 21 girls
Rauen, Jessica Spencer, Coach Sean Morrison, Jody Wat~rs, Becky Strunk, Jody Mirto,
·
be traveling to Drew University
·
chosen out of 12 colleges in the
(Middle L-R)· Diane Bonsignore, Jessica Holden, Meredith Kamp, Sarah Griffune, Mandy
for their final game of the spring
NY area.
,
-These a~
~
omplish-
.
Parrillo, (Bottoml-R) Becca O'Neil, Megan Sauers
/
Jeannine Kilbride, Leeann McNally.
this Saturday. Heretheywi,ll be
ments were all gre!it'stri.des for
.
·
25 women this season, and what
tha~
'
she loves playing rugby
ery minute of it."
looking to
·finish
the semester
-
one
·
ofthe newest teams here at
is even inore amazing is that all
''
here
at Marist because of the
Things have not been going
strong, and carry that over to
Marist.
: ·
the women on the
teim
·
have
·
uniquenes~ of the sport.
well so fat: this spring though,
the fall season. With only five
.
Thewomen's team was estab-
learned the game h~re.atMarist. ·
.
"Women's R..ugby is two bru-
as the team has faced· fierce
graduatirtg' seniors, they are a
:1:.;
Aished,at
:
Marisl) in 1996, and Ji;None
·
of-the
team
member~ had
ia(40 minute halves of all-out
I
competition in theiroff-season.
"
you
'
ng tc:iam
with their sites set
'·
.
.
since then
:
they have inade
tr~~
.
ever played rugby
'
before
tom-
. :
aclion,'.' said Spencer.
"Where
.
The first
-
setback came early in
.
on another advancement toward
·
.
mendous steps towards excel~
·
ing to college.
.
elsecan you find 30 girls tack-
the semester when the team suf~
the ~hampionship in the fall.
·· 1ence. ·. The
.
~earn has grown to
.
Captain Jessica Spencer says · ling each other and loving ev-
fered a devastating fojury to one
Marist's top salaries
·
.
from presitlent's
·
:office
·
•.
President of Business Affairs,
'
paid," ~,iu'rray said. "I believe
.
who was paid $105,500. Gerard
everyone here woul,d make more
·
·
·,
·
Cox Vice President of Student · in the private sector, but they
,
by
PATRICKWIIlTILE
Affairs, .was paid $98:
_
886.
:
•
·
..
sfaf in e
_
du
_
catibn because they
,
,
•
•
_
..
.
0
;
·:
Editor
·
· ·:
)-Jarry
Wo
.
9d, who is ncF
·
pe_liev
:
e
,
iri the work that is being
·
.
.
longer employed by Maris(,
·
done ~ere at
:
Marist College." '
'
·
·
'
·
·
·..:<· :,
made$97,984. ShaileenKopec:-, ..
. ,
.
-According
·
~o·Murray,
little·
'
-·
;;:-
·
Accordfrig
fo
the Office
'
of
.
the
Vice
'
President for College
<_
wo
_
utd
'
charJgei!l, regards to Sala-
':
'-
President Dennis'
J. Murray, the
..
Advancemen(
'
earned a salary
'·
fies
'
if Marist CoJlege were
·.
13 highest pakl employees a~
'.-
of$95,000. ·. .
.
chang_ed to Marist Unive~sitt
.
Mari st
;
C~ll~ge
__
.
recej_vef
,
.
.
The rema1nmg five emp~oy~
· .
_
He sa_id that
_
al1?oug~ Manst is
.
:
$1
;346,075
last
y6af.
,,
~
,
:
·
ees do
·
not hold office pos1~10ns
,
!e~hmca~ly
_
a un1Vers1ty because
:
·
PresidenrMurray
/
w.a~ the
atMarist. ~om Daly, theD1~ec~
it
:
C?ffers grad~ate course ~nd
highest
·
paid at $234;200. , He
tor of Physical
:
Plant and~udd-
•
pos~esses
·
t
,
he,
.
necessary s1z(?
.
'
said he does
·
no
.
t sethis
·
own
ing Programs, made $97,254
.
·
and technolog)', the college
salary, and the job of deciding
·
Onkar Shat~a: Professor ?f
. ·
woul
_
d leave any decision about
·
his earnings is given to the Computer Science, ~as paid
~e n~me_of the college up to
Board of Trustees.
$92,175 .
.
Guy Lometti, Dean of the alumm.
.
.
•
·
"(The Board of Trustees) has
the
·
school of C()mmunicatiori
.
''There ~e
·
sc~ools like Bos-
a committee that evaluates my
and the Arts, made $90,
461.
ton College, Providence College
performance •every year,"
Reginett_a _Haboucha, De~~ of · and Dar!mouth ,<?olle~e that
Murray said.
the Div1s1on of H~maruttes, .keep the
.
colleg~ _m ~etr name
·
Murray said that his salary
earned $89,323. Finally,_ ~e be~au~~ of trad1~1on, Murray
iscomparedbyiheBoardtothe Miringoff,Profess01:ofPoht1cal
sa1
1
d
1
. I wou
_
Id ldtke_ttho
_
see o_ur
president's salaries at similar S~i~nce,, made_ $87,390.
co egeass?c1ate w1 JUstone
.
·
institutions like Quinnipiac Cel~
Mmngoff s salary•~ augmented
name~ Mans_t, that people could
1ege , Sacred Heart University
by h~s posi!ion as d1rect?r
0
of ~e associate with excellence and
and Rider University. Budget
Manst Institute for Pt!bhc pm-
tradition."
size, the amount of time holding
ion.
.
.
.
Murray, who was involved in
the position and the complexity
Murray said that the yearly
the naine change process at his
1 k ·
salary is based on the position
alma mater from Long Beach
of the job are a l t~ en mto con-
that the employee holds within
State College to Long Beach
sideration.
l
State University, said that
Roy Mero
Iii,
the Executive
the college. For examp e, a pro-
Vice President, was the seco~d
.
fessorofManagementorCom-
changing the name would not
32 F I
puterScience makes.more than
cause any major changes within
highest paid at $132:, 1 ·
~
•
f H
· ·
Marist. He added that the pos-
M
II .
Arlin
a professor o
umamt1es or
lowing
ero
I
are
sible decision to change the
th D
f
F
It /
Political Science.
Arslanian, e eano acu Y
"Everyone both on the fac-
nameoftheDivisionofHumani-
.
Vice President of Academic Af-
ties to the School of Humani-
-
d $ 125 770 d ulty and administration works
fairs, who ma e
,
, an
h
ties is up to the faculty.
Anthony Campilii, the Vice
very hard for what
t
ey are
• '
•
•
,
I
• . •
I
'
..
.
.
'
' \ ;
.
•.
'\
\
APRIL 29
7
1999
Sings
·
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·
raises
of
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.
e
.
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·
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.
·
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.
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1.
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1
·
sUPPLEMENT2
·
,
.
•
·
.
..
-
·
Bids
us
fond
·
farewell
MCCT'A
'
H · M · •
' -
· .
feeds on marsupials,
·
which is
·
S
·
U ·
ar1
St S
th~ re~son the opossum popu-
my blatant defiance
:.
towards
_ :-.
la~10n m the Hudson Valley has
.
byCARLITO
journalistic integrity,
TlieCircle
• by
CARLITO
be
setting a positive example for
plummeted in recent years.
Staff Graduate
.
.
tolerated nie and
I
can't for the
• Stajf lnvestiggio"r:
.
. .
his peers but instead, is feared
JeremySmithandJoeScotto
lifeofme,figureoutwhy
,, ·
.·
·
.
·
·
•
·
and loathed by all students that
:
have a secret that nobody e.lse
Tlie first article lever wrote·
When the
.
Gender ~uality
For my final article in
The
live in Gartland. ·
.
.
knows abouL They are broth-:
.
for
The Circle
·
was
·
an
horiest,
.
Club attempted to oustnie from
-
Circle,
I
thought
I
would shock
He and his roommate,
-
ers that were ab~ridoned by
fairlyobjectiye ieyiew ofa Rage
these pages;1he
Circle
sup-
the world by writing a legitimate
HuMarist
·
Dan Tyburski
.
'were
··
their parents at birth and raised Againsr the Machine
·
concert.
ported me although they prob-
slice of investigative reporting.
arrested
a
month ago forsc,licit-
by a pack of saheh-toothed ti-
Did
I
say honest?
,
Because
I
-
ably detest~d my writing ..
I
The target of my investigation
ing sex from a warthog: The
gers.'
Jt
did not take long for
should have said poring,
.
would like to thank
The Circle
is MCCTA's HuMarists, of warthog turned out to be Gary
them
to
develop an appetite (or
After that article,I concluded
staff, Modele Clarke and any-
which
I
was formerly a member.
Coleman who has been work-
·
blood:
.
Last week, they were
that objectivity
·
and the role it
body else that defended my ide-
Although
I
was with the inipro-
ing as an und~rcover detectiv
_
e
~restled down by twelve _secu": · plays in journalism has a crip-
als, as warped as they may be.
I
visational/sketch comedy troop
for the past four years. Rumors
nty guards after mauhng
·
a
·
pling effect on the creative
guess
I
should thank Thomas
for two years,
l
did not know
have been drculatingthat woollymammo~onthecampus
·
mind; it suffcicates the o'nly
Jefferson for
,-
the first
.
amend~
themas well as
I
thought
I
did.
Murray and Tyb,urskikidnapped
g~een and sta~bmg passerby's
...
thing that J;iasever ~et nie apart
·
ment because that is
:
the only
.
·
I
decided to investigate the
pary
Coleman, slaughtered hin1
.·•
with the
··
beast. s tus_k.
·
.0°:e
·
~f
·
_
from mainstream
.
society and
.
governmental literature thatac-
members of the group after re~
and drank
'
his
.
blood in apsy
:.:
.
·
th_e stude~ts killeq
m
~e 1n:ci-
tliis lackofexpressive oxygen
tually supports a heathen like
ceiving a
:
phone call from the
cliotic attempt to
unify
theni-
dent was fell~w ~uM~_st Nie~
·
was boring the
,
*$@! out of me.
myself,
·
.
group's newest member, Nick
selves with the soul of.the co~
Fo
ster; In their arumahsbc state,
·
So
I came to the realization
Although he is no longer at
·
Waldsheutz. He called me
in
a
medic god.
they rlid not even realize that the that as
a
writer for the
Arts
and
Marist,
I
would like to thank Jim
state of panic to tell me about
Junior member Paul Dial.a
body they were mutilating be-
Entertainment
·
section of a
Dziezriski for allowing me to
the initiation ·ritual that he was
used to be good friends with the
,
lo_riged to their close friend,
sparsely read paper,
I
would
break from the convention con-
.
·
forced to partake in and
I
was
.
aforementioned until several
·
Nick
·
Fost~r was 20 years
:
old
have to do something different
.
fines of journalistic format. The
appalled.
weeks ago when atrocities oc-
·
~hen he died and he was hung
to peak the interest of my read-
person
·
on
The
:
Circle that
I
.
.
.
.
,
·
.
.
;
He informed me that senior
curred that forced him totermi-
hke a brontosaurus. May he rest
ers as well as myself. Maybe
would like to thank the most is
member Mark Montgomery
nate
.
their friendship. Dialajs
.
in peace.
·
.
other people would have chose
·
my editor, Patrick Whittle.
:;
This
brought
_
him into a rnom
·_
that
th~ only African Americll.n
,,.
·
"
The above article may be
.
to im.prove the quality of their
year, he gave me uninhibited
was occupjep
:
by a baby I.lama
member
O.f
the group and that
•
sho
-
~kin~}!>
~.9.1:p~
<>LY<;>U,
:
1
writing or
.
adhete to a stricter
·
creative
.
freedom to writewhaF
and a full~grown yak
..
Nick was
was
·
never
an
issue for ariyone
knowJ w
,
asJffiJJoerga~t¢.cl.;tvh~n jo!-lrnaJ.istj~ integrity put
I
chos_e . e_v~i:I~h2s
~
. r~gli£dJ;ss
~
how
-
then forced at gunpointto nurse
in the group except Dan and
I
discovered
:'
alf
cit
thiPib?ut· to take a different route.
nsque 1t was .
.
He endurea the
the animals despite thefact that Jon. In a drastic attemptfo
trans-
.
peopl~ I tho~ght
:
I
:
kn~w f~rly . . .. Inste~~ of writing mundane . wr.athof the Gender Equality
.
he is anori~lactating male
;:
cYears
form th~ir friencl into" honkey;
well.'. D~swt~ ~e
~
Jaf~
'.
:
th
.
~t} \ ·nioviere.view
.
s eyecy week arid. ·, Club and
::
~:vet). sufferecl · the
,:_
,/
,,
.
.
,
ago
;
·
M.oritgornefy
;
attempte~fo
.;
they sunk his head
in
a tub
of
.
have ~u~I_
<!iJ>~l~J~g_
:
J~
l
!'HU{E_~~->
·COverihg:_iheA &
;-
E
::
section with~bnuitfo£ .ihe
i
respoiis1bilify {or
j.
j.
-
~
violate me as welt ~lthougli he
sulfuric acid.
1
Dial* barely sur
,:.
·
·
II~~~sts wdl be havmg th~tr
the slightest modicum oflegiti-
printing
.
offensive comments
·
insisted that reciprocal
:
spank-
_vived the incident and after ex~
" :
Big Sho~ on Tu:sday, MaY.
4
m
.
m.a~y. L,pp,ted
t9
tackle thds-
that! had written; The ordeal
.
.
.
ing amongst full grown men
was
cessi ve cosmetic
-
reconstruc~
.
.
th~
.
Nelb
_
Cioleltl Theatre.
.
Al
~
,
-•
sues tha~ really n1atterin life and
.
cost him sever-if frieiidj afoi
foi::
:
·
:
:·
:
:
:~
commonplace
·
within
'
the
·
tion, he now looks like Boris
'.
though the show s
.
~
,
~t?;
30,
.:
did
.·
so
;
_
:
;
.
in a
•·
.
thorough,
:
tliat;-1 wiil
1
b~eteni~lyiorry'.
1
1
:'.
·
-
.
·•
HuMarists,'I
ran
ou(of the room
Yelstin.
. .
.
•
.
:
.
·
. . . ·
·
: .
doors
,
0
~~~
a!,?,:
,
?
,
O
,
and y
_
ou h~d
-·
indiscriinmatory fashi
.
01
¥:
h
f
the
.
n~yer thought
'
Tcoiiid
take
'
a:
ljk-
.' :
screaming after he pulled down
At first glance, the three
_
fe-'
,·
.
;beµer get
'
there e~~y ~ecau~e
-
past two},,~ars,J paye offerid~d
·
ing to
:
~brileon~
<
~ith
0
iii
·
c6
-;
·
his pantsand whipped out a
male members of the group ap-
·
the )ast sever~l
:
sh<>o/s have
orinsultedvfrtifally every en:-
~~trong m9ralfiber
and
811
:
eter
;:-~
ping pong paddle.
pear to be innocent
.
and
'
inca-
sold . out (soit ~s. nof an
.
a~~u-
';tertainer,
_
gender, style!and cul~
.
naj abstjn~ric
,
e
.
fr9lll alcohol; but
.
After finding out about pable of destru~tion;
·
but after
rate~o~d, a~ssi9n
"
i~fyee), and _ ture_.
·
,<"\
>;
i
i
.
'
·
.:
:> •
.
:
:
,
:
.• .
.
..
·,
J<;iid
;x.
Although tliing~ di,driot
Nick's occurrence,
I
set out to
minor snooping,
I
foundoutex-
-
se':ral huncired ~ttJden~s
:
were
.
. ' .•
.
Why?
,
;
Becausej(is
flln
:
In
.
wqrk
;
oµ
f
fot
uf r<Jmanticany;r
verify if the group was irivolved
actly what they are capable of.
?eme_d e~try. ,
!-11:
~
·
~h?',Y
1~
.f~r
. .
a worid
,
that is
.
exh
.
a~stively ~o~
7
·
·
wiil al\Yays'Iove you; Patrick.' ...
.
with any other paganistic,
Jaime O'Neil, Meagan Verone
-
illlll1ature a~dt~~ce~ only;an~if
:
cemed
·
with beirig
,
,
politicaliy.
.·
_
.
:
The
'
c;ircle
js'a
'
iiewspaper
beastialic activities and surely
and
.
Stephanie
.
Marks are the
'
:c
YOU
are easily
~ff
ended,
:
ke~p pqtr,~ct
,'
Jfotjn
,
d
~
1f~shing
.
the
.·
.
.
·
.
andsiri~e ¥aristJ:'._ollege is
_
votd
enough, they are. Junior mem-
organic equivalent of Voltron
.
,
your@$$ at home.
·
.
.
e11y'elop~ to
_
be
·
qui
~
e ple~§Ur
·e:<,
-,
of
:
\Vorthwpil~
:
Ile\VS
'8
_totjes to
ber and RA Jon Murray should
.
that
.
·
goes by
.·.·
the
.:
.
name
;
.•,
.,
,
.
. .
.
.
.
..
a~,~; Yqu lieard
·
file
·
con:~ftly,L
,
.repgrt, !i
;
fil
_
ajontyofQten1~011'."
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e
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nj'<?y ti~~l.ng p~9ple off and
.
,:
~ist of seda~ng Sl!bj~~t
_
matter
.
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.
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.
ew
.
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.
~
plillOil
.:
l
or
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ft
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, ,'-<
)Iove
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qvhen strangers ap:,
·
,.
s~tegi~Jnyolvediti SQAe!ec-
.
-
to
take
,.-
op
·
-Ed tO next lever ~:
0
:'::Ii;!it,~r:v~1~:;:
tr~
1
:t::i:n:ot.'.
. .
.
_
.
. .
. more wheo somt!One w.all,cs up
tµjng uricoriventional ancljour-
understanding oflayout design
dt? this, it is ilecessaiy to print
.
to m.e ~d call~
·
nie
an
obnox-
nalistic
.
all
y
:
nonc;c,nformist to
that I would like
to
take further
·• .
any opinions stllderi~ offerfo~,
.
·
io11~ pig •
..
.
I love )he
.
fac(that
.
.
stamlarg newspaper
;
fqrµiat.
.
with
The Circle.
'
.,.
.
Marist is in desperate
'
need of ev5!ry fraternity
.
at Maristwould
Wh~ther: it
W!!S
laughter, resent-
.
byMICIJAELBAGNATO
Opinion
Editor
.
. .
·
After being at Marist for
'
airactive
·
outlet for'their ideas;
love to bludg~on
_
me to ~eath
ment,oranger
;
lwantedmyread-
three years
;
I have seen and
.
this
.
campus is ~ot ne.arly as ex-
and the Jact than,he femi
.
nist
ers to e.xperience tangib•e
emo-
Greetings
.
·
:
· I, Michael
heard from many opinionated
pressiveasitspotential. Ifour populatipnabhorsmeissograti-
ti9ns.
.
.
.
.
.
Bagnato; have been chosen as
·
students. 1ndorm rooms, bath-
fellow students flexed theiropin-
fying; I am
_
almost sexuaUy
:
Invoking laught~r was
.
al~
.
the opinion editor for next year.
rooms, Iunchroom(s), as well as
ionated muscles more often, we
arousedjust thinking about it.
ways my priinacy IJ1otiv~
and
I
Though I had not seen it outside of rooms, there are stu-
would all come
.
out of Marist
· Perhaps I pushed the enve-
wrote in a manner that I found
.
coming, the opportunity pre-
dents wi~ an energetic attitude
with a far superior learning ex-
lope
a
bi
.
t too far in the contro-
amusing. I (!!alize thi.s is not a
sented itself to me and I decided
about their belief. Debates
·
and
perience.
,
versia]/'Joy in Sobriety"
.
article.
humorous entry but I have been
-
to go for it I would lilce to thank
arguments will always
_
arise,
·
lam
currently in need
.
of a • Maybe I
_
did cross that line, but
ti:yipg to amuse
.
you people for
Tara and Pat for their gutsy de-
whether the topic is basketball;
·
Senior Political
.
Columnist ( or
if
I
.
did it is not my fault I am
years so I am afraid that I have
.
,
cision to choose me after much
teachers, sexual frustrations, or more!) to write weekly. Anyone
simply the product of a soc~ety
exhausted
:
my
.
finite chasm of
· deliberation.
.
A
.
question on
Swedish aeath metal. I remem~
else interested in writing an
that breeds desensitization sol
sarcastic commentary.
many of our minds is
,
"Who is
ber my family environment as a
opinion-based column discuss-
can
.
not be held responsible. I
.
·
:
Anyway,
~
t has ~ n
an
in-:
this dork?" I would like to an-
youngster as one giant, never.;.
ing whatever th~y like can call
blame democracy and the free
teresting
·
couple of years and I
swerthatrightnow.
ending argumen
.
t. Thoµgh it me at
X4376
or emailme at
expressionism that it.endorses
wantto
_
thajlk
_
youJorall(?wing
·
..
.To all those who forgot, my
may have gotten ugly at some
·
KX8C.
I plan to write
a
co1umn
so in
'
retrospect,
'
-Thomas
me to broadcast
i:nY
psyche in
real name is Michael Bagnato,
points, overall, the free-flowing
each week, which, in some
Jefferson is ultimately to blame.
cathartic
_:
bursts
'_
of print. I
but call me Michael for short
.
I
discussion over ideas and ide-
people's minds, might be called
Thanks a lot Tom
.
would like to exterid the utmost
was born in Norwalk, Connecti-
als yields comprehension in a
humor. And if that is not
Most of what I
.
have written
of gratitude to everyone that
cut: a large, diversified suburb,
thoughtful atmosphere.
enough •
.
I have worked with
has been either facetious jabs
has ever supported or comple-
forty-five minutes away from the
It
is this type of atmosphere
comic strips enough to be con-
at the idiosyncrasies of 90s cul-
mented me
.
.
And if there is any-
city. I am a Multimedia major
I w.ould like to create in the Op-
fident in publishing them.
ture or maniacal ramblings from
one out
·
there that I
·
have.not
with an Art
·
minor, entering my
Ed section of
The Circle. I am
_
Again, thanks for the oppor-
my tumultuous
.
n:iind. Aside
offended, please confront me
fourth and, hopefully, final year
challenged with the need to dis-
ru
·
nity to have this job. I wish
·
from my first article, I have never
about it so that I may rectify the
at MarisL I am interested in de-
cover ways to elicit students'
the best ofluck to everyone else
attempted to portray myself as
situation.
.
sign for web pages, newspapers
opinions in a forum that will
working on
The Circle for next
anything that even remotely re-
Peace and God bless
:
and nt~g~zjq~ .
.
~
.hay~ I! gQQq
,
.r~cJl.a.Il'~t\lQ~n-~;
.
·
fn.
Qt:dt{ tcf
.;'
J'~.• P~ce,
·
.
.
·
sembJ~.-~ jQ.u_l'l]aji_st--~
·'
P~Rite.• ...
·
/
:
.
_
·
0
• ~
-
,
~
·
·~
_ _ _ _ _ • • • • • _ • • • • •
•
·.
, ' .
,.
,
.....
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...
'.'
,.
.
•/.•.'.••
TBEtIQ:<OLE
.
g:XfJ/:(j7(,
·:CJJJ9<G/Jt
SUPPLEMENT 3
Spooi~,~etqt(:foffl1.¢tci)itoi4
defines "error"
The.Jer.~~y·•.-sid.·,· ...
e.:·
·
·
~~ch~6rri.:6~,jeez:Iamgetting
i,l\~J;~te~. it
-
ii'·hai-d
-
to·thi~ ·1 ~elieve
th:i
Marist can work
This column has always docu-
mented 30 minutes of thought
flying through my head while I
stare at the keys of a Donnelly
computer. I admit, I still cannot
·
type without looking at the.
keys. Anyway, itjusthitme that
this is going to be the last time I
ain
going to be staring at these
keys and Tam kind of wishing
. that was because I learned how
to type without looking, not
because this is my last column.
kind of emotional- I am notwor-
about how you have the power
on -these problems within the
riedabouttears, though,itisjust
to
.
offset others' perceptions of community and bring the re-
. this' god-awful runny snot-that . you and themselves and even
suits along .. A degree is only as
is about to...
inflict pain. However, the pain
valuable as the :work one has put
Qkay lam back. ·rreally have
of an honest rejection bears no
into
it.
The funny thing is, as
.a tough time getting overly sen-
comparison with that bf a life-
strongly as I believe in Marist
timentalwithmit blowing
it-
my
time of deception.
Coliege, I believe that I want to
nose that is. Oh, arid please,no
Yes, well with all of that said~ . be elsewhere. That is the only
innuendo intended. Some
_and that
lit_tle
paragraph
sitting
reason why I am leaving Marist.
people might say that my writ-
above·· this one means a lot to
However, I am kind of bummed
ing is laced with more Freudian
me, I would like to· s~y. that I
that I will miss out on the new
slips than Anna's armojre. Of .. believe in Marist College.· I be-
Home Depot next year. I really
course, that is a complete· lieve in the steps that it is tak-
dig that plastic grass that
phallacy.
-
ing to become a better place. I
people put on porches and
Last week's column was titled_ beHeve in the professors, stu-
pools. I always dreamed ofbuy-
":rl:te end of an error." I admit
dents, and staff who have been · ing some, along with those syn-
thatl was more concerned with . working together to make such
thetic silk flowers. I wanted to
a catchy title than its veracity,
great projects as the Praxis Mi-
put them on my dorm room floor
· or even how true it is.
I
did not nor
.
and Habit_at for Humanity
to give the room a more funky,
. mean my years. at Marist were
become a reality while
I
have
psychedelic-outdoorsy look.
an.error,Jjust meant that !was
b(i~n here. I also cannot over-.
On an even lighter note, I
· going to start listening to, rather
look the· new · library, not only
would like to get _back to our
· than discrediting my thoughts.
because it is pretty damn big,
usual broadcast, which is al-
Discrediting myself was my er-
but also because it
will be an
ready in progress.
ror.
excellentiesource.
. .. which is why I that if.I were
Telling my parents that I was
I believe that the problems that
to get married, the whole deal
obliterated, they can bowl too.
Sure, people would scoff and
think
it
was just soo tacky, but
those are the folks that I would
not want to come anyway.
I would not want an engage-
ment ring either. I would rather
have a dog. I know. Dogs die,
but I once dropped a ring off a
train platform. It is kind of hard
to do that to
.a
dog and a dog
can sort of duck under the plat-
form if a train comes. Wedding
rings are dumb too. I have been
told that if I get married that I
ought to wear a ring so that I do
not look available and have to
worry about scores of mei\.hit-
ting on me. Um, well I ani"'not
· exactly wearing a ring now, and
I do not have that problem. Why
should I expect such when I am
older and more decrepit?
. You may call me a cheap date.
It is not like that at all. I am just
not for sale.
Tara Quinn was the Opinion
Editor of the Circle. She is a
junior communications major
from Teaneck, NJ ..
I kind of
feei
that I experience
an intimacy through this column
that I rarely find in real life. Here
we can just drop our silly
shields of snobbery, h~ughti-
ness, self-inflicted solitude, and
insecurity.·· we· can transcend
cliques; jockdom, dorkdom, ·
bitchdom, and abetcroinbie and
. leaving Marist was· the hardest
Marist faces, such as a lack of
.
would probably have to be in a
· thing I ever had to do. Some-
diversity and intolerance are
bowling alley. I mean, a bowl-
times people do not realize that
not a reflection of the college
ing alley is just like those big
itismoredifficulttorejectsome-
itself, but a reflection of the ills
banquet halls only-guests do
thing
or someone than _it is to · that plague our.society at large. . . not have to sit there and_· _g_et _ _ _ _
_
. Tbf pride
ofRhocJ.~
Island
.
.gi~~s,,~i~_,;;far~~ell:'.yoJyDJI\,
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - . has typically found its way
oii'to~
and ·confidence .
. the pages of
The Circle
arorihd •' <.<\sf ne~,~e tnorgentwhen I
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ · · thistimeofyear. Unfortunately,
willdrivedownRoute9forthe
.
I never .paid attention to .them,
last time as a Marist'c~ilege ~tu-.
so I am
riot
sure how this is sup-
dent, I am startled by the fact
·•pos.ed to work. The only thing I
that I am actually looking for-.
· am sure of is that Al Gore
will
ward to leaving. I never thought
not be our next president. As
I would feel happy about all the
· far as a reflection on college life" · ind~cision and uncertainty tpat
..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
__. · is concerned,
I
think ea~h ofus · comes with a diploma However,
who graduate • should realize · there is strange comfort. that
.. . A long.time ago, in a galaxy
that, arguably, the four biggest
comes any time a period of wait-
far away,: I was
a
freshman.
years in our Hves·ar(! about
to
i~g'is over- I am finally facing
It was tl:ie·end ofthe world
come to a close. .
.
niy destiny; We run from the
as we knew.itwhenwe attended , ·. Our ideologies have forirted
'
pro"spect of facing reality;· but
our firsf"orieritation sessionia:r: ·· during these 'years,' and we will
now th~t
lain
on the thresllold, _.
Marist; :rflreinertibet cb'rredly, · ;carry with us a viorldview that lam anrioyci:l that I must bother
the first'orientation Iileeting - matured while we .called . with.final exams. Every time
was a _
•. talk by . Frank·. Maduri
Poughkeepsie home. Since ·we
summer lias rolled around, !have .
about sexual misconduct.
are'inthetwilightofourcollege
been happy to leave because I
Those were the days. Tlived in
career, I would ratherlook for-
knew I was coming back. Now,
Leo
Hall,
and
BrotherTom,'our · ward thanwa.llow in the nega-
I
am
happy to leave
.
because 1·
nientor, insisted that we "relax ·
·
tive memories that could easily
know that I am nevercoming .
and have
a
beer" on ourfirst be exhumed. Our complaints - back - in the capacity of a stu.:.
night at college. Brother Tom
about the
.
security guards and
dent..
·
.
started a trend that September the stench from the sewage
The setting sunshines its
morn:Irememberthinking:This
plant are a distant.memory. In
last, dimming rays on our lives
is• great! ;I'm
in·
a room. full of our future is the ability to make
as Marist stud!!nts. I· think the
fellow eighteen.:year-olds, and
manifest'all that we
have
done
luster of our shining moments
a member of the clergy is sug-
in college. If we have regrets,
as a student are faded.in com-
gesting we should go out and
and look back wishing for some-
parison to the next stages oflife.
drink!
thing different, it only motivates
The polluted Hudson will al-
A thoughtfully written reflec-
us to cultivate the· future. Our
ways_ churn. and bubble by the
tion on four years of college life · fond memories provide security
sewage plant that serves as an
invisible marker for our campus.
What we take away from this
place remains with us - that is
fond memories of good times
with good friends, the confi-
dence to succeed, and perhaps
a
few
unpaid parking tickets.
That's all, folks. Goodnight.
And may the Schwartz be with
you.
Bill Mekrut is a senior Politi-
cal Science/English double
major from Uncoln, RI. He
will
be attending
Law
School at
American University next year.
.,
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OIEY
CIRCLE
APRIL 29, 1999
f(~,9J)(ijjge!R,t1$l!ll.(J(J8
SUPPLEMENT 4 .
1
New A
& ,}.:
~\~f!fflt~J1i'ew~
J,(i(Big:Pish
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•
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•• : · . . . . . - · ·
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'·N·B:.:.
Thank._YdiCFiir""Nor··7;.s:· Hepcat, .. tlie Pietasters,
<'. ---~ ... ,.
by
NIK BONO PARTIS. --
,.:?A1oshing. is another fan-:favor-- -Spring'-B_eeledJack, ..
,;.'; :.·:.: ·-_,. -,A&E,'Editor~ ·• -:
/ite; and·everyone knows a guy
TW: Well the problem with
• __ _'?,_,_J:,
f:-:-t\:._.-.~ ;:/- '.: ,
\:Jikefou.descdbe, i9-a wife
Moon•is that they will do abs"o-
Tavis Werts, trumpet player
:;;1ieater·~d D9c M:artens beat- - lutely nothing to push their
__ Jor
Re_e_l Big
F,
ish, comes clea11
-:i
.,i!!8,
q~
Fttle. gir~shi the pit, it ac-
b,aµds on radio or
TV
or apy !<lnd
, ··ao'oiit:
ska
mtisic,·:Jife.orr·•iiie
;;'tii~lly.h!ippe9s
h~~
a lot. Was _ofcommercial success, because
· road, being
a
mt,1sician, and the
;_ tlifs:m.-eajt~to:·be: humorous-or
they want to stay· o~ the;under-
. "·trademark
Reel
Big;Fish-.'sai'-
,-jmgry:orjust-:a Httle of boµiz
/ground. And so all th~ bands
, .:casin:in this :interview· at' the
·-.:iw~
i6vil~
iriostly justto make·
·
'on thatiabel who are really good
. ,-,.Chance_
- Theat~i-
.
,
.
. :-
jn_
_;Ju11 ·of aj_}:,tho~e guys, 'cuz we
and want to be commercially
. . . ;)\>i.igh~ee_pi.ie,:: :;:', ·: / ,, _.
:
: .
.J.-~ally.don'twant them to mosh.
successful, want_ to be able to
l'fB:
My first quesfion is, why.
_
}.'lie
first time we recorded that
make a living playing ska, have
. do yoti rock so hard?
.
/:and put it on
a
7"
vie called
it1n
all moved on.
Repeat went to
'.T\V:
Becauseor"Carlos.
-,The
Pii,
then we'd play it and
Hellcat, and they're trying to
·NB: That's the only reason?
· all these guys would strut a big
push them to,radio.
Dance Hall
TW: Yeah, because of Carlos.
pit to it, and they just didn't get
Crashers are on MCA. Moon's .
NB: Ok. .•. ,
-
,
.
. . .
it.. So we changed the name to
a cool label, I mean they do some
NB:
Yo~r second album has a
Thank You .For Not Moshing
good stuff, but on the business
lot niore texture. to it, with the
: hqping a few more people wo~ld
side of it; they don't quite get it.
guitars, the vocal harmonies,
· get it, but-~ don't thin~_theffio,.. Thef re-~ing too. hard to be
and the_ horn section. Did·you
. NB:
In aninterview ori WRRV-
an indie iabell thtnk and that
spend a lot more time in the stu-
--'!(_aron was askedhowhe wrote -.. ends up hurting a lot" of their
dio with Jh_ej~c.ortd one?-.::
·<s\ich catchy tunes, and he said··- bands.
-•-••·-. _
TW: Yeah,wespentmore time " . "'
"
.. ".
0::/c,>: .· .•:_,_,,:.
',,
<
•: ..
·"":·.!.-',: ,,_ •" .-
photocotirtcsyMOJOr=rds '
liestole all the hooks he hears
NB: lthink what\llot of fans
writing all the songs;
bui
the
R~I
L?'_@-R.s1s T~w;
W,«:rt.s
"5.Rii~l
soaa:iyi~
his !~lings
with
Nik _Bonopa~~·
·
:
9-~
{Ile'_
radfo: _ Is there _zjiyOtrufh · perceive as the pr~blein is that
main thingis;WeWrote·al1 these
TW: Yeah, I think that ~as the
_- ·
_
_
..
. .
.~o that ods he just joking again?
they talk about unity
i1;1.
the ska
sphgs right before .we recorded . firstshow_we played with.them, ._ ~ :
tf
mmm
·--~~~hs]
I doI?-',r-
;w:.
[~_buckles] Yeah, there's a' ·s~ene, then gopn a!ld criticize
: theni;.whereas'.W.itlj '_Turn The - arid we ended up touring .with: .knoVf: 1f we were discovered ·
h~e
bit of truth to that. We ere-
otherska bands. -
·
_
Radio Off' most of the songs
them a,lot after that.
It was fun
by him. But, yeah, he saw us
auvely borrow stuff from other
TW: Oh yeah, as you said there
were written two or three years
having something that different,
play _in a club in_Riv~rsicie. He .. _.qands occasion~ly.
.
have been tons of t_hings I've
. beforethealbumwasmade,and
you know, because none ofus·· · sawusandaske?ourhornplay,- . @:_ Does movmg away from. readwheretheyabsolutelyhate
we were still a pretty bad band.
could have done anything like
ers to play on his album._
sJ<a on your new record reflect
us. They pretty much hate any
NB: So that made a lot of the
that.
·
· ·
NB: Was that :mmgups?-'
the way its faded commercially?
band that doesn'ttry and sound
difference?
_ NB: Did you. colfa~orat~ on tlie :TW: No,-actuall~ the first _al-
TW:
~o, it re~ly had nothJng
like the Toasters, and any band
. TW: Yeah; wejustgot better
song ordidCooHe write'it?;'. -: -· . bum. AndS_cottand.Dan played
to.do with that, 1t was more Just
that leaves their label. They'll
·-_ .• , and learned how to.write better
TW: The song; we already had ·. all ·the· h?rn parts
1
_~~nd thr?ugh
C>u,r
t!lstes . changi~g
~n<;l.
the , stick around; because they still
songs, and they were fresher
written, and wejustplayeditas · that ~oJo heard us and then
way w~ want~d to play 1t. And . do have some·good,bands.on
going-into the studio. We had
an instrumental all the time,
and ·
they s1gned.~s. .
•
_ ,: ;
,,cPart
of1t wasJustthat,there are _ their label. But they've never
played them so many times [the
vie said "Hey, you shoul_d,do
,
NB: ~av~
YP~
ey_%reard,of_a " .. Sfl,P1'.111Y-bandsplaying~estyle been a bigfabel and never
will
._old S<>ngs) that with half of them
some toasting '.•over tliis~·;. and> ··. band called _
_tli_e
!!_zpp_q,s._1. , -,, ,: . :
")Y,~m_dpn,
~Tu.rn Th~-~l!-9!9,Qff!
~
•.
':;.be. ,", ,,:_,,
t
;,,;;J :.. '.- . :;,
l
,,_;>;
we ·were·sickof therri before we
so he came in and ~oded up writ-
TW: Uh-huh.
.
and we didn't want
to
sound like
NB: This isn' ton my sheet, but
even wentinto-tlie studio.
_:ing a!l entire song:!'.n,:e_r. i~.; _. NB:. ··A lot of people _saY. you .~~m. sowej\Jst~anted to keep; ... d?es anyone ever mistake
:Nif:
•iA
16t"'.of
b~rids-
;
fil'e reitic-
[Laughs] : ·
-
·
sound almost exactly hk~ea9h :· ou,r own sm1nd.
-.
_ Ricky, your tour.m_anager, for
tantto·putalabelontlieirmii-
NB: Ontheouttakesof'Why o~er.·
., __
. _
Nl3.:
Whatotherbandsdoyou,;,DavidSchwimmer? ,,.
_
sic, and most peopl_ewould say
p
0
They Rock So IIai-d?' you
~=-
_
yeah, they ~opy u~ a httle.
thmk ~e done for? A lot ~f TW: [With .a grin] . Occasion-
· foii'>i-e" ska, _out ·people Hke
talkalotaboutgetting gids and:< We \'e been playmg with them
people say Moon as a· label 1s
ally. He looks a lot-like him. For
. MoonRecordshavebpenlycriti~ . stuff, and in Join
Th~ Clu~,
the
,fop\ while. They'_re another re-
done with their mass exodus of some reason ,jhey;call h~m
cized you as a rock band with
lyrics are along the sa
111
e lines. · ally cool band.
talent -
the Dance Hall Crash-
Chachy, [Shrugs
J ..
-horns: How wouid you classify _ Do you guys attr!lct the ladies ..
yotirselves?
. : ' . . . . -
-
_-
as musicians?
1W:
V{e're a ska:pop band. I ·
TW:
[L~ughsJ N9. · We dpn'L
mean, a lot ofour s&ngs
are
more
'get
any. __ .-.. .
·
·-
.: focf~d r?ll, butM??n ReC?!dS
.@.: "!~~ally? ... · . ·- ;;
,
; ;
>"C.: - ....
· ·-can lciss. tny
~St ·..: __ -- _ . TW:
[Laughs again]<f:he girls
.
·. N.13:-~CanJ
qt1.9t.e,._yqu <>n
i~~t?. . _
that
we
could get
~eJilce.14
and_ ,
TW:'Uh-huh. Defiilitel . - .. ·
'
·
· ·
· ·•• ' · '·
.
,, -' '·.-
-·
·,Nlr_
WhaiIIot"6f'fanfrehll' ·
,Il9.n?,,9
~.l;JS
.\Yal)-!!a:gP.t~J~J..,
.
: . '".' .,like' fu-e-lliat'
'dt'if'sb'11'
t:iii'rtsl
lf~r
It
~
-~?~e,
.~v
agf?~.
:§~~,~
1
'-,
-: : ' __ ,,_ ~tt}'t\t#.if
~'p~Jtff
BB#(
Po,_,-~=
?r~a.h.
~t;1;;,.;t(;~;~i;
':·J9_u~p_,a~,the!11 Jh~tway:ot_do • shtm•s
.
since most ()f.our.Tails:
, _theyj~St'f,Olile
mit
Hke
~a,t?.
,
· .. --
•
.
_.
"¥e
tiii#e~
if,";f?ii.t.itj~~(~~d;t
._'!V(..=,
Well, .J-\~rop. _(13ciffe
_
H) · w9rks.
~µt,tlil:!J
all the. g(tJ~-~ho _
·· ~vn~es.~tthe}y~~~•
-~q
_he
U.~':1: ·
re~)' like-.us are,'i14. J~ot: ,that
.
'ally\vrites abouf'stuff
he,'~ .
th"ire's, anytliing,\hori,g,-w
_
ith .
. P!~s~~_o_ff,~be>u,t
,
'..,WJen ~e
b~tng14.:: . _._ :;
;,;,i,;:_ :_. .
.. ::wnte~:·ap<:mt~~ifp_ejust, g~,ts
""·NB·:
It makes themhieligibldbr;
-__ .t~cJ-!JXtaifa_~ti¢;•an~}Yh~n y_o,t1
·you .guys .. , ._
.
. .
.. - -- .
'piit1yiic~thafare•iea11y·sarcas~
·
--
'IW:
ruihi:' · _, .. __ .. .-... ,
ticwithhappy,_poppy music; it
NB: Whataboutb~1ng·on the
just comes out kinda funny .. But road.- Is it strange wakingup.:in-,
they all come from us being
a different city every day
aricf'·
~
piss_~
_
~f. -: .
.
... , ..... _
,
-· ,. ____ .. __ . -.. being basically.nocturnal?.
-·-·•=
· NB: Ireaifsomewherethatyou
TW: Itwasforawhile,butnow
guys wrote the chorus for
we're pretty much used to it. It's _
Scott's
~
_Doric _and plann<:d to
actllally kind of fun, \Vajtjng up
change 1t, but you never did?
and having no idea what'_s go-
TW:_ Well when we first started
ing on outside. Of
·
course this
playm~ the song, we needed
morning we all woke up and it
somethmg that would fit there, · was raining so we jusf all stayed
· ai!d that fit, so we just started
in bed.
· ·
·
singingthat.and~ethoughtwe
NB: In the great city of
would change it, but we just Poughkeepsie.
·
never thought of an~thing bet-
TW: _ This is actually the sec-
ter.
ond time we've played here. I
NB: What was working with
can'trememberwhoweplayed
Coolie Ranx like?
with, it was a long time ago, like
TW: We toured with him a lot,
a year and a half, two years ago.
actually, with
the Pilfers.
NB: There's a rumor that you
NB: I caught ~at show in Po~ guys were discovered playing
·chester, NY w1th_you and
the
a small club by John Feldman of
Pilfers.
Goldfinger. Is that true?
52.18.1
52.18.2
52.18.3
52.18.4
52.18.5
52.18.6
52.18.7
52.18.8
52.18.9
52.18.10
52.18.11
52.18.12
52.18.13
52.18.14
52.18.15
52.18.16