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Part of The Circle: Vol. 51 No. 6 - April 9, 1998

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Volume
St,
Issue'6 . •
.•.
The student newspaper of Marist College
First
DiVersit)'
Day established
by CHRIS9ROGAN
·Staff Writer
The Student Govemmeht As-
sociation and Studen.t Program-
ming Council were the sponsors
Great weather, deliciousfood
of the event, while over ten •
and exciting entertainment all
clubs participated in the day's
describe this year's "Diversity
activities'.

Day". .

Thv idea for this event was that
Lured by the warmest tern-
of former student· body presi-
peratures of· the yeai:, many
dent Frank Maduri during his re-
Marist students poured out of
election campaign last year.
the dorms and filled the campus
"When I was campaigning for
'
Members of the Darice Club participated at Diversity Day, which was held on
_M~~'ifh2a'~•JCScollo
.. green to experience the events
my election last year, I had the
of Diversity Day.
opportunity to speak with stu-
• There were tables of food from
dents in the freshmen areas, and
different cultures to sample,
many felt that there was a need
along with the entertainment of
to highlight the diversity of stu-
"Keep On America Real".
"I
along with everyone else
this event will be followed up
cultural dancers on stage. The
dents, and to promote harmony
Accqrding to Maduri, the
who worked on this project were
on each year because of its im-
"Passport Adventure" gave
and school spirit," he said.
whole point of the initiative is
very pleased that the day
portance.
students a stamp in their pass-
Latonya Franci.s and Julie
to incorporate the idt:!as of cul-
worked out so well," she said.
"We should all be able to tran-
port for each table visited. If all
Gadorowski, co-chairpersons
tural diversity and acceptance
Maduri said he felt there was a
scend diversity, because really
required stamps were achieved,
for Diversity Day; worked
into institutions such as col-
good turnout.
the ultimate goal of the day is to
• 'there was a possibilit}'.
ofreceiv-
closely with Maduri • and the
Jeges.
• ; ... It was al:>solutely outstand-
have a 'diversity day' every-
ing at-silirt.

. . . .
,cJubs),nvolved. They \Vanted
"Diversity Day was Marist's
ing, e'Jeryone im
1
e>lved
was ex-
day,,, hesaid ..... _
_
~M~.!~iW~•tp_i:_Qfllf~_qt~.Rh.,,.to,.prod_uce;~.n'.e.y~nt!~~t::~P~!~:t.'-:--c?-nttjg_~i2I!J2'._tQt}#fe_t.Jl.~.i:.,_~!~e.~~
1~ .. Pl~a~:~···:.~-t:.~~i~-
.... i_ ..•...
·c_,
9a:40.r-2.~~!5L~~i.g~.,h~,~.<).~-.i!~~
lege Act1V1t1es·
~ollaborated.Jo , , entertam.:an<,ie.duc~te.
~~udent~:
-.•·.t1on.~!:p1ct)lr!!/!
he;smdi ~,, :,·: :' ; -,~9Cul8,cey
0
s~1? sh.~,ital_reaay-

....
trem(;!ly:pleased.
at.the number
broadcast an eclectic variety of
on the variety ofdiffereifr cui" • • The SGA isfonmilating·a:re;:. plariningfor_n~x,t.yeI~~(s}?_i~er-·of people inattendance. They
music forthe all-day event.
tures and views shared by ind1-
port on "Diversity Day".for
.sity
Day ,because of the posi-
saidtheyfelfthere were at least
There was also an atmosphere
victuals on this campus.
Washington .. It will document
tive student.feedback.
1,000 people in attendance for
oflearning'that enhanced Diver-
Diversity Day was part of.a
Marist's participation in the ini~
"We have already budgeted for
the day.
sity Day .. Students who stopped • larger natiohal goal being pur-
·tiative project.
• .
this same event for next year. I
"Diversity Day was so well re-
by learned cultural dances, ~bile
sued by the federal government.
Colleen McCulloch, student 'hope ihat it will become an an-
ceived by students here," she
others took part
iR
the mariy
President Clinton has been
bodypresiden,t; said she was
nual celebration at Marist," she
said. "It was just phenomenal
seminars offering topics rang-
pushing a national. project for. proud Diversity Day wa(weH
said.
.
the amou.nt of support that this
ing from prejudice to gay rights. •. initiative in diversity -~ntitled, __ received by Marist students;
Maduri said he is hopeful that
campus showed."
_7-
New
Townhouses
111_ay"t>e·
a health· hazard
by TARA QUINN
Staff Writer
Living at Maristffiay be haz-
ardous to students' health.
College. In 1993, Bienenstock_.
requested. the. Chazen Compa-
nies to conduct an environmen-
tal site assessment.
t'actured publicationsjncluding
comic books.
In recent years, parts have

been rented
by
local businesses,
including Marist, ·as storage,
The Mid-Hudson Business
Park/Former Western Publish-
ing Co. site was declared
a
haz-
ardous waste site by the Direc-
tor of the New York s·tate Bu-
reau ofEnvironmentaJ Exposure:
G. Anders Carlson, ancl remains
a potential hazard to tlie Marist
College co1111J1unity.
The hazardous waste site,
owned
by
Arthur
H.
Bienenstock since 1985, is lo-
cated directiy across the street
from the North End of Marist
"I
concur with the proposal to
list this site with the Registry:of
Inactive Hazardous Waste Dis-
posal Sites,'' he wrote
in
a letter
to Earl Barcomb, Director of the
New York State Bureau of Haz-
ardous Site Control on Feb. 20,
19<J7.

The site has
a
history ofnearly
90 years as an industrial area.
From 1911 until 19l7;FiatMo~
tors built luxury cars on the pre-
mises. From 1934 until 1983,
Western Publishing operated a
printing press there that manu-
HE.''"'

~d· • • •
>_ ·. ..
1.
0
...
D1
,you kno":7
....
. . Marist is comprised of 55 percent •
• female st_udents
arid 4~ percentmale
students>



4~800 Maristalutnni have_
rem.ai11ed
-. iri.tlJ.efylid::Hndsonareaaftergradu- •
. ation~·
.•.
-

. ' •
• '
· retail,' office and classr()om •
space.
Richard Feldman,• assistant
professor of environmental sci-
enceat Manst College, said it is
this history .of the location that
raises the most concerns-about
the site.
"Before 1975, there were fewer
_ restrictions in Ne.w York State,"
hesatd.
''What happened in
previous decades may be harm-
•• ful still. • Some contaminants
leave, some stay around."
Chazen Companies, an engi-
neers and environmental pro-
fessionals company, conducted
tests on the site from 1994 to
1996. From these tests, the New
York State Bureau of Environ-
mental Exposure concluded that
there were significant levels of
Volatile Organic Compounds
(VOCs) present in the ground-
water.
When VOCs leak into drink-
ing water, they can cause can-
cer, leukemia and anemia, and
can affect the nervous system,
liver; andkidl)eys: -
ltwas found at the time~oftest- _
ing that VOC contamination was
confinedto the square area be-
tween Route 9, Fulton Street,
the Mid-Hudson Psychiatric
Center and the Conrail Truck
Line.
However, the groundwater
flows in two different directions.
In the northern and western area
of the site, it flows towards the
_ northwest.
In the southeast
comer, it flows southeastward,
toward
the
city_
of
Poughkeepsie.
James Mciver ofChazen Com-
panies noted· in a remedial in-
vestigation report in 1994, ·that
high levels of contaminatfun
• were detected in the southeast
area of the site.
"It is possible that clay in the
soil may have absorbed the con-
taminants and may be acting as
a source," he wrote.
The southeast area of the site
is at the intersection of Fulton
Street and the Conrail Truck Line
and is approximately 400 meters
from Marist's West Cedartown
houses currently being built.
Chazen Companies found that
not only was there a hazardous
amount of VOCs on the site,
there were also three septic
tanks that showed signs of con-
tamination and a fue.l tank that
was reported to be leaking pe-
troleum. Mctver determined
that a remedial program was
needed.

- Keith Browne, the Department
of Environmental Concerns' di-
rector ·of the site, said some
remediation was taking place. at
the site.
"There are two different areas
of contamination-
t~~
north end
by the Psychiatric Center is be-
ing remediated,"
he said.
"There has only been investi-
gation on the southeast end,
the $ide with the organic sol-
vents."
The proximity of the hazard-
ous waste site to Marist is a
concern of students and faculty,
and Feldman said that the site
of the new town houses should
be looked into.
"The site should be examined
first," he said. "Records should
be examined to see how the site
was used and whether there was
spillage. The soil should also
Please see BUILD!NG.
page 3 ...





































































































































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2
THE
CIRCLE
The Marist Community
April 9, 1998
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What do you think sh~uJd:IJe·
done ·about·-,ihe
Jtin~~6'6to;,ihcidertt?
In Yo1..rr
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Trevor Spring
. Sophomore •


''I think it was a freak incident. • Maybe
they
were following what they saw in
the movies, so they should be censored
.•
Dan Tyburski
Sophomore·

''There is not much we could do to pre-
vent this, it is really in the hands of pa-
rental control."
..
.
re."
SECURITY BRIEFS
March 31, 12:20 p.m. - Security patrols ob-
like a freak outside her window that she would
suddenly fall madly in love with him. Face· it
guys, no means no, so don't go making a fool
of yourself.
. served a suspicious acting male. As they
approached him, he started running. After
an on-f<?ot
chase, the guy was apprehended
on the green between Champagnat and the
rotunda. The male either couldn't or wouldn't
April 5, 5:35 a.m. - A non-student attempted
answer any questions, so the police were
to enter Champagnat Hall using· a friend's_
called. One of the pairols recognized his de~ I.D. The entry officer observed that this was
scription from a previous complaint of a male
not his I.D,, and had him taken
·10
the Secu-
following a female student. The woman veri-
rity office. After showing three fake licenses,
.

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Jessica-DeCisso
Sophomore
''I think they should be tried as an adult
crime. I think the family arid the children
need therapy."
.
.
.
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at that time, but they did escort him off cam-
before. He was arrest!!d for trespassing and
[');~[iJwl:\:l~~~-■1\;t];;::l::wi:~1,::;;ll);;\i\;;i;:.:::::~:::::[;[j;:[
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pus ~nd mad'e it clea~ not
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come. back.
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cri min~, possession Of
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Apnl l, 3:30 p.m. - Secunty received a cal.I .
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•IJil11fc'@Hiiniffg'lnte'''f•sii-1''''1M~~i

from a student about a suspicious
male
out~· :; :
dn~e
·again the
boys:
ih Gfug8ry'1ind·Be11oit'.:
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side of Gartland. The man refu·sed to answer··, managed to.·grab the attention of some secu- '.
!!P:~/i,i'igl'i'/i!;ii!i!l{g~lfl!ff:Slii;:111'gjjfim
,
any
questions asked.by security, but decided • rity. officers. After·setting
up'
an inflatable
'"''iif',;,,,:,ltiii:,,:::::::t1f',.c,:,,1:1::r::,,,,:'lm'i!:ii'ii£'':'°'°"''"'
to cooperate once police were called. This
pool outside of their livin° area they decided
· Friday: Cool, Overcast, Rath.
•• •
• 43° 56°'

l~s[!it::i,l:t:;::::1;:::IJ:,,:::~:l:,,;::i::::::~:::::/f~iif);i::Jl:m
nQn-Mariststudent frcim Highland, NY, was
it would be more fun to si~ arou~d in the pool·,
mitltmiW'.¥:Ilililmm:1::tl\li¥~Ifl
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apparently enamored by one of our ,female in the nude rather. t!lan _clothed. A security.
ooiwa)•'i'-i'-tf
a:B'
''ice'''"'te'ft:,:'-\\att.enfl\1?
students and did not know the meaning of
officer noticed this behavior and had the pool
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··no. Perhaps he felt that if he hung around
deflated.
_.. • • • • ;. , -
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,,Saturday: Cool, Cloudy, Rain.
43
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··THE
CIRCLE
S
Ap;il_9,t99s

3
.
byAMANDABRADLEY
grade; to take
a:
field·trip to
teraction between the actors
Ma11aging Editor
Marist to see the show. This . and the children.
••
• ,
year, 45 schools within a·half-
Kerry Anne Unflat, director,
• Girls can do anything boys
hour radius from the campus • said she feels that Children's
can do.

p· articipated in the event.
Th

. Theater is a wonderful experi-

at .was the message at this
Stone Soup
ran from March 27
ence because of the children
year's MCCTA Children The-
to April 2 with a total of 14 per-
who attend .
ater Production of the feminist
tiormances .
• ·
''It is incredible to see the kids
version of the fairy tale
Stone . ·
Keith Sunderla~d~ co-pro-
reaction," she said. ''It is too
Soup
by Karen Bouttcher~Tate.
ducer, said ·h·e fieels Ch1'ldren's
f





ree
a-Il.·
,_atino
.
.
ee -·s
'Ce. e · rate
.
.
arist t is mont



at
by MICHAELGOOT
St<iff Writer
helps those sut'fering from
AIDS.
Greek organizations on cam-
. . pus bonded together for unity,
fun and a good cause last week .
There was also a lecture that
related to the fundr,1iser .
George Prisco, director of
ARCS. gave a talk in the Per-
forming Arts Room Thursday
about sexually transrnitted dis-
eases.
The eighth an11ual
Greek week
was held March 31 to April 4.
Kelly Quinn, head of Greek
Week; said the fraternities and
sororities decided to do things
differently this year.
Since there are fewer fraterni-
ties on campus and soine orga-
nizations had fewer members
than others, the organizers of
Greek Week did not want to
have the various organizations
compete against one another.
''If we did it that \Vay, it would
be way too competitive," Quinn
said.
Dana Greenberg. a Kappa
Lambda Psi member. said Greek
organizations
have gotten
,l
negative stigma in the media
with reports of binge drinking.
She said the week's activities.
especial
I
y the t·undraiser ,tnd
lecture, is p,trt of an effort to
portray Greek life more posi-
tively.
.
unny to see the kids having
. Eighty Marist students partici-
Theater attrac·ts the most· in-
fun." .
pated in the MCCTA 30th anni-
volvement from MCCTA mem-
Tom Galiagher, co-director,
. This year, the 111embers
ot· the
Greek organizations w_ere split
up and assigned to six dit'ferent
teams. These ttams participated
in events such as an Jell-0-eat-
ing contest, scavenger hunt,
Double Dare, ice carving and big
wheels racing. The winners of
each event·received points.
According
to Monique
Laurence of Alpha Sigma Tau.
the main purpose of the week is
to promote Greek life on c,1n1-
pus.
versary'of this annual produc-
hers.
.
.
said he was happy with the out-
tton.

''Children?s The·a·
ter • 1·s the
· · F
come of the show and enjoyed
: . or the Children's Theater, the
most participated production of
entertaining the children as well.
The rest ot'the month will ,1lso

be filled \Vith other Greek-related

• MCCTA board chooses those
the y·ear,'' he·sa1·d.·
H
·d •

e sa1 1t was like an episode of
scripts that entertain
a
younger
The sho\v is double cast be-
''Jerry Springer'' because the
audience and that also relay a. cause of the_ numerous perfor-. · kids were jumping out of their
activities.
·L,ttino week follows E,tster
break. Among the activities
pl,tnned are ,tn April
13
corona-
tion ceremony, ''Learn to D,tnce''
on Ap_ril 15 and a cultural night
011
April 17. Phi Iota Alpha and
El Arco Aris Latino are also co-
sponsoring Comedy Rumba on
April 14.
• m9.\~&~essage..
. •. . man~es during the week. .
seats and yelling.
Ston_e
Soiip_\Yas
a story of two
Sunderland, a.senior, said he
''It was great to hear the kids
In order to encourage Greek
unity, Quinn said she wanted the
organizations to work together.
This was achieveµ through on
a\\-day fundraiser April
2
for
Aids Related Community Ser-
,
.

· girls ~ho dressed as boys to
felt that this year's perfo11nan<;e going nuts," he said. ''I love it
slay a dragon to prove they
was successful. •
because the kids seem to love
could do it. No one in town be-
·••over the past three years I've • it."
lieved what:th~y had done be-
been involved, this· has been
• Sunderland said the show is a
cause they were girls. At the
one· of the most successful
. lot of work, but worth the time
. end t~e. townsp~pple accepted
shows," he said. ''It was one of
he p'ut in.
. .
tlla
1
t
1
girls cobul~
~~l~ ~
d_ragon as . • _the J)e~~-1'.v.e,se,':!~
·?n:th~;¥~ris½ :·-· '.:It.is physically grueling
.be,-,
.
we as any oy. . . .. • . .
. . stage

• • •
th
k'd

''
h
. . . . ·
. .
. . . , .
• , . . .. . . · : . • .·
cause
e
I
s zre you
out,
e
MCCTA organ1z~s Children. s _ The characters greet _the buses· said. ''It is rewarding to· see the·
Theater every spnng for lo_cal of . incomin~.
c::hildren at· kid's reaction though."
elementary students ranging·. Donnelly Hall 1n costume. The
from· pre-'school
to second
show is aimed.to encourage in-
vice (ARCS). This organization
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love it if everyone who came
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Residential Live staff, and the
:.
r(;sp'ecial
to;The. Circle
• • ••
wou rea • • • • •
byBENAGOES
News Editor
up .for that person that can't
};I:f]'.I;
:t:
1;1;;
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.The first••timeMarist.hoste·
Dutchess County National Or-•· • stand up for themselves." ..
\i'i/i)f'
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........
··..
theireadi11g two years ago,
ganization of Women (NOW),
In Leo Stone Lounge, Assalti
": Tfie search for paradise con- . journalist from the Daily Free
The Mari st community
. among others, started -at the • said the marchers met to discuss
iriues_atMarist: ·•.•
. •.·
• •.•. man participated in the event
~a~~:~!~!:!~:):s}::1::k.
Rotunda and toured the whole • sexual violence on campus.• It
}'~n·~a{?;~pqlfl,;students ahd
and
wrote
a front-page articl
campus until they got to Leo
was an opportunity, she said, • ~~µJty.jgitµ~l'~dijg~iri for an . forth~ Kingston paper.
the Night march.
.
. Hall.
for people to share their per-
faJ)\read1.rig 8tCJohri'Miltori~s
>
Machacek said he uses hi
The march was-co-sponsored
Senior Sarah Assalti said it is · sonal experiences.
~tjij:,(fi4t-'adikii)llist;,'J.'he
read~ ••

•.•
300:1~vel literature· courses t
• by the Gender Equality Club and •
.. · important to participate in_ tl}e ·
''People don't talk about it,"
USi~~i'~¢lj~~µledt<> bt!gin at.9 • •.
_•.··
esiablish some interest for th
Task Force on Sexual Violence,
march because it brings the is-
she said.
''The victim feels
1rniin
theSiiiderit Center and
event/

. and· included a diversity of
sue of sexual violence to the . ashamed and the perpetrators
~~(,f(jf.:•12he>tir§I
:
.
''Oneel establish a core group
marchers. . •
. .
forefront.
.
.
put the blame on the victim.,,
IGreg<>.ryM~thac~k; associ~te •.
• I can then advertise. outside 0
• Marchers from the Bl_ack Stu-
''It was a good event for aware-
Between 75 to I 00 people at-
rqfess
9
f
§fIE~glish, started
the college," he said.·
dent· Union, the Housing and
ness," she said. ''I'm standing.
tended the march.
Vi§:Ctf~'!~~!~tj
tv.'O years agl'>.
<
The event ~s open ~o anyon
oun
... continued from page I
b_e tested. Printing companies
used organic solvents which are
notorious for causing human
health problems."
. Two years ago, a Wal-Mart
Shopping Center was proposed
for
a
site adjacent to the Mid:
Hudson Business Park/ Fo1111er
Western Publishing Site. It was
. at this time that Bienenstock re-
quested the environmental tests
for the area. When the plans
for a Wal-Mart were pending, so
was the remediation of the site
by a Superfund project.
However, in 1995, the Town· of
Poughkeepsie Planning Depart-
ment turned down the plans for
the
Wal-Mart.
The
Department's report concluded •
that because the area was con-
.
.
laminated by hazardous waste,
the surrounding streets could

e·c_o_n ·

1nate

not handle traffic that the store• documented hazardous waste
would attract, zoning codes pro- • site in the area, but there are
hibited it and"the site held his-
· other sites that are potentially
toric value.
harmful.
Many Marist students said
John Conrad, of Conrad Geo-
they were unaware of the con- .. science
Corporation
in
laminated site.
Poughkeepsie, expressed con-
Kris Hart, a sophomore, said
cem over about the steel plant,
he was unaware of the specific
located on the land Marist ac-
hazardous site, but not sur-
quired to build the West Cedar
prised.
.
town houses .
''I'm aware of other dangerous .
''The potential hazard of the
. compounds that contaminate
steel plant is t~at, though steel
the area, like the PCBs in the
was probably not made there,
river," she said. ''It's awful that
the fabrication [assembly of
we treat our environment this
steel parts] may have taken
way and allo\V ourselves to suf-
place," he said. ''In the fabrica-
fer. It's unsafe because we don't
tion process, there is the possi-
know how this is going to af-
bility that there were cleaning
feet us. We could all end up
solvents used to clean the steel
with cancer because of it."
before assembly. How the sol-
. The Mid-Hudson Business
vents were used, spilled and dis-
Park/Western
Publishing
charged is a legitimate concern."
Former Site may be the most

B:¢hac~J<;twho.specjalizes in ·
..
•·.·•·.•
who has the time and interest

~y~rjt~~fil~;c~ntµry literature,-•••·•
participate. • Posters were dis
ai~ he.was prompted to orga~ •••
·•·
tributed to Bard, Dutchess Com
• i:z:~
tijis ~yen
lly
a
Milton dis- • munity College, and New Palt

ij~si~ri group he subscribes to·.•< to· advertise the event.·
ri.:.Jirie.
>..
. :
. . ·••··
• · ·_.·_.•
.........
••
...
··
·. • . Machacek said he realize
ivtitll!i~~ksai~heencourages•-•··• .thatpeopJe·_who study Englis
~oplet<>
corne at the beginning
Literature and especially thos
fcthe r~ding, arid to stay for · who. do not, often find. poe •
e
whole book. However, he.· t<>
be boring .• However, he sai
aid anyone is \velcome to corne ··•···
•. he hopes everyone \Vho attend
or [)Ortions of the day.
• • •• · ._··-•
will discover that Paradise Los
. ''I post sorne suggestions on • ••
is an extremely exiting poem.
he door for people to come in •.·_•
. . ''I hope people will come to
uietly and to join in the read-
appreciate poetry when readin
ng when they feel confident," • it aloud. I hope people will se
e said,
more tings in it by hearing th

Machacek· said Milton· is . way things sound," he said.
omewhat challenging to read,
Owen Foley, a senior Englis
ut no one should feel intimi-
major, said he sees the event a
ated .. Hearing the verse read
an intellectual endeavor.
. loud helps everyone get into
''It's a good opportunity be
ilton's long rhythm, he said.
. cause it's a hard book to ge~
''I expect people, who stay for
through on your own," he saidJ
he majority of the reading, to
''I always wanted to read th
ignificantly improve through-
whole thing. This is a goo
ut the day,'' he said. ''I would
chance f Of me to finally do it.''
I

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THE CIRCLE
-ea
res
April:9, 1998
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Bil,l,MEKRUf
Special to The Circle
,
Oxford. The students who will
graduate with degrees from Ox-
ford are essentially set for life.
College is a three-year process
'
.
here and high school is . more
specifically designed to steer
students towards realizing their
major. No one comes to Oxford
without knowing his major, and
few change once they begin:
-When I am m~ving into Marist
for my senior year my peers from·.
Oxford'\vill be settling into their
new life. The business; finan-
cial, research, law, mathematics,
and engineering recruits stand
by the door _with
their nets held
tightly in their hands, waiting to
collect the stampede of future
leaders bursting from the quad.
When the dust settles I will be
standing with my bags and a
return ticket to Logan airport,
confused about what it is I have
seen here during the last year.
At first glance it is Oxford, the
grand city that looks more like a
medieval village then a center
for progressive learning. The
tall spires, intricate carvings,
and majestic quads feel like the
setting of a Tolkien novel. It was
a bit of culture shock 'Nalking
the streets of Oxford, when I
was s~ used to the modyrn right
angles and circular structures of
,
.
Marist. However, my college,
St. Catherine's, is the most
modem of the O~ford University
schools, and is built in a 1960s
, style (see Leo Hall fori:eference.)
- My classes are not classes at
all. Oxford and Cambridge are
the only schools in England
that use a tutorial system. It is
my responsibility to tell the dean
of visiting students what tuto-
rial
I
want
to
take
(Shakespearean tragedy, for ex-
ample), and in tum I .am told
what tutor to meet with. I go to
the tutor's office and have a one
.
.
hour meeting, in which the en-
. tire Bodlien Library ( one of the

.
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.
.
oldest and biggest librarie~ in
the world) is assigned .to me,
and then I am told to write an 8
.
.. '
to _IO page paper about my
thoughts on the reading. • The
following week, I must come in
for another ·one hour meeting,
:
. .
.
in which I read the -paper _out
loud to the tutor.
,


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.
There are no classes where
.
.
.
other people can occupy. the
teacher's attention -if a light
.
.
snooze is required. _
This is all
. one on one. _
This process is re-
. peated for the three, eight-,week
te1ms. There is only one meet-
ing a week per tutorial, leaving
plenty of time to read and write,
, and socialize.
There is an athletic life here
that puts Marist to shaine, al-
though· spectators are equally
hard-to come by in bo_th col-
leges. Nearly everyone at Ox-
• ford plays a sport, and every-
-
.
one is welcome and expected to
wander into a sport they have
never played for before. About
one out of six Oxford students
row on the crew team.
university sports are viscous

Inter-
tests of superiority, because all
the 38 schools frequent the
same pubs in the relatively
small, but thriving, cjty center
of Oxford. -
There is a 'powerful mix be-
tween social life, athletics, and
. academics. No one is more im-
portant t~an the other, and the
other
two
are
incomplete with~
• out the third.
The English pay'much higher
taxes than Americans, and as a
result there has never been· a
charge for college. Anyone who
passes a test can go to what-
ever college he is accepted into
for free. But this year, in spite
·of the ''Libra!'' government, a


new system has been. passed.
. Starting in Miche~lmas (fall
ter111),
all students will be forced
to pay a flat rate, regardless of
the school.they go
to·:.
Imagine
if the college tuition in the s~tes
.
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. .
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Harvard than_Marist
... -_ :, : '
This new flat rate has students
on campus everywhere.in a vio-.
Ierit uproar. I saw a demo~sira-
tion in front of the Bodlien Li.:.·
.
'
.
.
.
brary where - banners pro-
claimed, ''I'm miitriculating at
Blair College, Oxford!'' To the
Americans, and some British, •
the protestors are foolish. Iri an
age where education is no
longer an automatic ticket to
.
.
success, but a necessity if one
even wants a chance·at success,
paying for college should be an
acceptable bargain.
The u·ndergraduate studies
here are not more difficult than
Marist. They are very different,
socially and academically;
Rarely _do students have a so-
cial life with their teachers at
Marist like they do at Oxford. I
see Oxford, and Marist as well,
as a situation where each stu-
dent is in command of his own
• destiny. The level of teacher
availability spoils Marist stu-
dents. Between tutorials, one
has a better cllance of running
into a-teacher at a random pub
then finding him or her behind a
desk. There are benefits to each
teaching style and each campus
life, and it would be impossible
to
make an intelligent compari-
son of the two. There is no level
of success that a student_ can-
not reach on the basis of what
college they attend.
While
my
English
peers em-
bark on their life work this fall, I_ -
.
.
will be happy to r.eturn to
Marist, where I -~ill have the
time I need to make my post ,
graduate decisions. There is
nothing particularly difficult
about Oxford undergraduate
studies except being·accepted
and having· the 'confidence ·to -·
make the best out of the three
·years. I think.it is.the.same for·
us at Marist, except for the extra
year of course.

Bill Mekrut is a junior E,,_-:
glish/Political Science major
.
.
were on a flat rate system. • It _
cur,·ently studyi,ig abroad in
would cost no more to go. to ••
Engla,zd .

Top 10 Reasons You're Broke
6.
,
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10. Room deposit fee.
9. Thought.Marist money was never-ending.
8. Paying off books from last semester.
7. Friends ''borrowed'' all your money.
Have a hole in pocket and don't know how to sew.
5. Attended too many off campus social events.
4. Still recovering from spring break.
3. Ordered out too much.



2. Have to pay $2. 79 for an orange highlighter at the
bookstore.

1. Life is indebted to FoxNet .




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Emily's Recipe
of the Week
Last Minute Cheddar Chickeri and Noodles
I
tbsp. vegetable oil
5
'
.
.
3/4 lb. boneless skinless chicken breast cut into chunks
1/2 tsp. garlic po\vder
1-3/4 cups (about 14-oz. can) chicken broth
3-3/4 cups uncooked
egg
noodles·
I
pkg._ ( l 6oz.) of favorite frozen vegetable n1ix.
.
.
2 cups shredded cheddar cheese
)
In 5-qt. saucepan over medium heat, heat oil. Sprinkle chicke
with garlic powder; cook in oil until no lo~ger pink; Add broth
heat to boiling. Add uncooked noodles and frozen vegetables
stirring to coat noodles with liquid. Heat to boiling; reduc
heat. Cover. Simmer
IO
minutes or until noodles are tender
stirring every 2 minutes .. Remove from heat; stir in cheese unti
melted. Makes 4 servings.

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STll>E'\TS
• • · _·.
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NEWYORK
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Take a class this summer

• Summer Tuition Reduction
Undergraduate fees are reduced
from $352 to $290 per credit hour,
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6
• ' ' CIRCLEEDIT
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Editor urge~istud.¢nts:to;tak~;part
in Mari'st life••·.
I happen to be one of t~ose students.who is ¢ompletely in love with the McCann •
Center gym. I think I might actually have a· slight obsession with it, to tell the truth:
So, t~ere was no one more happy than me when it was announced Aerobics cla.sses
were coming to the gym. .
.

.
. Free classes, free machi_nes,
a place to go when I need to take out all my aggres-
sions and stress. Best of all, the operative word here is FREE.:- • .
. .· .• . • • •
But I noticed something very disturbing after the first few weeks of Aerobics; No
one was coming. This great opportunity was being missed by everyone. An oppor-
tunity to do something you might not no11nally
do, like take a step-sculpting class.
Why is this? As I sit back and review my Marist career, I realize that there are a lot
of things that I did not do, because I was too busy, or too tired, or I just could not
walk across campus to the Student Center to see whatever event was going on.
When I write these excuses down, I can see how lame they really are. But in reality,
there have been a lot ~f events I have not gone to because they were too far of a walk
(I admit I am extremely lazy when it comes to that sort-of thing!). •
. •
,

• · . Stephanie Mercurio •
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Editor-in-chief
BenAgoes
News Editor
Thomas
Ryan ·
Sports Editor
'
Christopher
Thome
Focus Editor
'
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Joe Scotto
. Chris Hogan
.
G. Modele Clarke
• AmandaBradley
Managing Editor .•
.
.
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Emily Kucharczyk
Feature Editor•
TimManson
Opinion.·
Editor
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Jim Dziezynski • ..

Arts
&
Entertainment Editor .
Photography Editor
Business Manager
F acuity Adviser·.


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For example, when I was in high school, I absolutely loved going to coffee houses,
and I actually used to organize them with a friend of mine. I think that since I have .•
~een to ¥arist, I have only attended one of these fairly regular events. I see them on
.. If you h~ve a story ide~, wouJd like to publicize a club event or if you would
the calendar and I have every intention of going, but I never find myself there. No
like to send a letter to the editor, you can e-mail
The Circle
at HZAL .. •
one will go with me, or it slips my mind, or a myriad of other excuses come to mind. .
If you are interested in advertising in
The Circle,
please leave a message for .•
Now, I realize that this is such a waste. I know that neither you nor I can possibly -
Chris Hogan at575-3000ext. 2429. • . •
attend everything that Marist puts on for us, but at what other time or place will we .
'--/...,.\---~--~.-t-.--~)-)--t--.-----...,.,-1-.
--. _}
____
d__,
have the opportunity to partake in these kinds of events? Unless you are planning
.
conne~
10n .. ,
e
ween
Sc
00 •
an

to be a part of a residential life staff after graduation, probably never.
.
. •






Theseeventsforthemostpart'arefree,theycanbeprettyfun,andyouactually

life,
who
w_ ou_ld'have
tho_ug·
ht?._·.
might learn something from them. For example, I went to Diversity Day, and not only
had an excellent time, but I learned how hard it is for someone with dyslexia to read
a first-grade level sentence. This fact made·me appreciate what I have, and helped
me see the world through someone else's eyes, if only for a few brief minutes.
Being a writt:r for
Tlze Circle
for the past three years has forced me to go to events
I might not have gone to, because I ha~ to report on them. Although I did not want
to go; when I got to them, I was so happy,_and
a much better person for going. I had
fun, and I learned more about myself and others around me.·
.
. . · . .
I guess what I am trying to say is that we should take advantage of every moment
we spend here: Go to th_at
SPC sponsored event that you think is interesting (even.
though your friends may not), join that club that you alway~ wanted to be a part of,
you should even take that class that you always wondered about, even if it is not a
part of your major. .
. .

You might have a lot of fun, you might learn a little, and after all, it
is
free!
Stephanie Mercurio is the Editor-in-Chief
for The Circle
• Letter to the Editor · .•
Stress, stress, stress is all I feel lately. Being a senior and taking three of my major
classes does not help much. I have practically forgotten about my two electives. I •
am sure those teachers are on the verge of killing me. There is however, one aspect •
. that has kept me sane through all the chaos. It was my third trip with the Global
• Outreach team. • Through Global Outreach,
a
community service prpgram co~spon-
sored by the Marist Praxis Project and Campus Ministry, Marist Students are sent to
help people in impoverished regions. The victims of poverty are not the only ones • •
who benefit from this. Students, sucli as myself, become aware of the problems of
society, do critical reflection, and put their thoughts into action~ • • • • · • • -· • • ': •
Through this program, I traveled to Wheeling, West Virginia and have just·re- ,.
cently returned from my second trip to Miravalles, Mexico City. I have worked •
primarily with the children of these communities. There were extreme c1ses of· -
pove!1y in both regions. Along with poor residents, Miravalles is

village· lli·at: '.
~ons1sts of trash and seedy dogs. One could tell the amount of poverty that existed· •.
instantly. • Through all of this, there is however, something so beautiful about the •
Miravalles. Something so profound that I really cannot tell you what it is because I
Basketball
teams e praise money or
SC O
arship
fund
do not understand what it does to me .. It is what brings me back to reality though.
Editor:
It has to do with the children. · .
• •
• • • •• . . •

· · .
• •. • •• . • •
On._Saturday,
Ma~ch 7, the Mari st _C~llege.
Red Foxes and the Office of Special
··This is all probably going to sound really corny but damn; can kids make you feel .
Serv1ces hosted the 8th Annual ''Kids Day Out'' basketball clinic to benefit the . emotion. They can make 'me laugh, cry, and just
''be''
all the same time. The laughter •
· Marist College Scholarship for·Students With Disabilities. -

• •· · • •·
of a child can not·only bring happiness ,·but pure JOY in one:slife. And Joy· is
The staff of Special Services would like _to thank the members of the Red Foxes • something tha~ lasts forever. • F~r instance, I was in the library this morning doing.
basketball teams who participated:
Torie Anderson,
Sebastien Bellin, Dari Berggren,
.work, I was ,miserable. I really did not w_ant
to be there, so like usual my mind started
Jessica Bergner,
Tomasz Cielebak, Cortnie Ciaccio, Tom Kenney;Tara
Knigh4 Bo
to wander •. But then I started. to think about the trip to Mexico and I remembered •
Larragan, Man~y Otero, Drew Samuels; Alex Stephens, Jennifer Taylor, Donald
Lena and Melissa (Marist students) blowing bubbles to l!ll of the children during
Vale, and Sabrina Vallery
as well as members _of the Red Foxes' coaching staff, recess •. I remembered little Luis's face and how .excited he was to be there.· It:was
Stephen Sauers, Rob Colbert, Alayna Jankunis,
and
Kristen Lamb.

captured in my mind forever, along with Lena's and Meliss~'s face. They looked like :
. Thanks to the effort and support of these individuals, the Office of Speciai Ser-
chi!dren themselves:·• ••.. • . . • . . • . •
•. ··. -.
. - .· ... , ": . ·. '. -'. . : -. • .:: • • , • ; • •.
vices was able to host approximately 65 participants and raise over $500 to benefit ... Do not get me wrong, I amst1ll m1s_erable
and capping ts k1ll1ng
me. If I have to go.;.
the scholarchip fund.
. .· • •. to _the Roosevelt library one more time, I am going to go nuts, but in the long run, I
The Staff of Special Services

· knov-,thateverything is going to beO.K;, Iam·goingto'wake up and have a meal in_ .
: the morning, I am going to have the capability of going to class. And I will have a . ,
..
a
.
,
The
View
from
Sue...
• .•
• ·
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bed to sleep in because I know somewhere _in Mira val I es, my favorite brothers are . -.
homeless, waiting for their next piece of bread to come, wrestling until 4 o'clock in •
the Il}Orning
, and not ha~ing to w~ke up for.school in the morning because they do
.
__
not have parents to wake therri ur. This is \vhat effects me, this is what brings me
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back to reality .. The fact that innocent children are suffering for no fault of their own .
. •. • Most of us at.Mari_st.\vill
never experience the struggle of extreme poverty, includ- •
· •• ing mY.self
.. It boggle_s
my mind how a co~11try
has so many different video games
• ~cc~ss1ble
to some children, but for othet:s a simple meal is hard to get. The question
1s why? \Vqat are the social,,political and economic arrangements of society and
historical causes that benefit some, and leave others impoverished?
. · ..
Kerri Redmond , • · •. •
· -
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··THE.CIRCLEOPI
NIONApril9,1998
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Pres1de~t Willy wins another one for democracy and private gloating
~till currently ·in the shadow • terest in filing an appeal. Jones. worse.• If I were her, I do. not_ wear tight, low cut dresses
public eye; outside ot· that they
of Tricky' Dick, Wet Willy ·(or brought this whole issue up in • think I would be able to appeal,
around the president in the ltope
have the right to do whatever
13ubba Hump as his friends in
the first place, so why would
knowing
just
how
good
that he will notice me. I hope he
they choose, within the limits of
.• Arkans~s call him), Clinton is
she possibly not appeal?
Clinton's spin doctors and dam-
does not take advantage ofme."
the law.
. . still working vigorously to clear
There are two viable options
age control people really are.
These women not only k11ew
The last time I checked ,tdul-
his name concerning allegations
as to why Jones may riot ever
To analyze this further, we can
what they were getting· into,
tery was not illeg,11.
11or
was con-
of sexual relations with a large
appeal the judge's decision.
look at recent statistics concern-
they enjoyed it. Paula Jones
sensual oral sex. Certainly it
number of tremendously unat-
The first is the fun option, for
ing the president's popularity.
repeatedly asked the president
would not be considered legal
tractive women, as well as that
the viewer/reader's sake any-
When the Monica Blewinski, uh, • for favors in the job world, which
it.Clinton did in t·act pull a Marv
stale, old Whitewater thing. Did
way. This is the view that since
I mean
Leivinski,
story broke,
she never got. Lewi11ski was
Albert and throw hin1self at
anyone everfig1,1re
out what that • Jones was unable to ink any
CNN
was running headlines at
asked on numerous occasions
won1en, almost to the point ot·
whole thing was about?.· Re-
truly lucrative book deals, and
the bottom of their picture all day
to go home and change because
violence. And it might not be
cently the· first step has· been . did not even ma~e it into
Star
with catchy phrases· like ''The
her dresses were too provoca-
leg,11
if he offered cert,1in people
taken to clear the name of our
(they . were • not . offering
President in Crisis'' or ''ls Im-
tive. And that stewardess, well,
jobs to keep their mouths shut.
good president when the Paula
enough), her fifteen minutes of
peachment Possible?'' · But the
she was a stewardess
1·9r
good-
But since the American public
Jones sexual harassment case
fame have come and gone. She
media, as well as the Clinton Ad~ ness sake (and she immediately
has all of the sudden \Vised up
was thrown out of court by a· will now retire into the country • ministration I am sure, were . tried to sell her story to tl1e to the notion that the president.
female republican judge in.Ar-
club of shamed women with'
shocked to learn just a few days
E11q11i1·e1:)-
and other i1nporta11t powert·u1

• kansas ... The j~dge · said that
Gennifer Flowers, that girl who
later that Mr. Bill had the high-
For me personally, I do not
figures, can do whatever they
Jones' attorneys did not pro-
ruined Gary Hart's political life
est approval rating of any presi-
care one bit if the president
w,1nt, Clinton has nothing to
vide. sufficient evidence of
and (coming soon) Monica
dent, ever .. This rating has since
cheats on his wife. I ,tlso do not
worry about. He (well, ,1ctu,1lly
sexual harassment and. eco-
Lewinsky.
gone do\vn, but not much. Just
care if the man who makes 111y we) are paying out ot"the wazoo
nomic 9rpsychological damage
The other reason Jones may
after the Lewinsky story ble\v
sandwiches at the deli cheats on
for the top lawyer in the nation
.
.
to merit ajury's hearing the case.
not appeal is a more serious one.
up, Clinton \Vas sitting pretty
his wife, or if the man who is
to make sure that no matter wh,1t
So basically since it cannot be
It could be one-hundred per-
with approval ratings around 70
currently fixing my car cheats
Clinton does, he will get out ot·
proven that he· whipped it out
cent true that Clinton harassed
percent. That number has only
on his wife. All I care about is it· it. Until the day when someone
and it did her no real psycho-
her, and did everything Jones
fallen l l points since then and
these people are doing their
catches hi1n on camera.
logical damage, it did not hap-
accused him of. But the prob-
as it stands right now, Clinton
jobs. All this crap about the
That day will be the end.
pen. Maybe. .
.
lem is that if this case comes
has the same rating after six
president having to be a role
So111ehow
it is okay for the pub-
But_Wh(!ther it happened or· back into the public eye, Jones
years as that lovable, old, for-
model is only one half of the ar-
lie to imagine what
111i,i:l1t
have
not is really not the issue, I -will not only be ridiculed by
getful arms dealer Ronald
gument. It is often said that
happened but if they actually
guess, because it did not cause
people much more famous than
Reagan had after six years.
Michael Jordan has the respon-
see it on tape Clinton will be
her any damage, physically,
I, but she will also be slandered
Amazing, I know, but what does
sibility of being a role model, but
gone. Although, he \v.1s caught
emoti_onally,_oryeonomically.
So
on every possible occasion by
it mean? Does the public really
ifhe cheated on his wife people
on tape playing an African drum
wh,a.t ~as.~~e slling for? So she
the Clinton administration.
not give a damn if the president
would only care until he pumped
and dancing around his hotel
got a lo.ok at one of the
There is the argument that . is screwing around?
i11
55 against the Knicks or did
room with a cigar in his n1outh,
president's
men, has he not
people might take her more se-
I do not think they do. Some
some other amazing feat he
in celebration of the Paula Jones
been punished enough. Appar-
riously if she fights this one to
feminists have complained that
seems to do every other night.
dismissal, so maybe anything is
ently Jones thinks so, since at · the death, but there is also the
these wome·n did not know what
Public figures are only public
Q..Ossible.
the present time she has no in-
chance she will look much
they were getting into. Uh, ''I
figures when they are in the
'l'im Manson
is
the Opinion
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..,.,-,-.-..-,-------....-......,.....------. Editor for
Tlze Circle

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• Sometimes;
·Ii
miss the:'ego·•. ··of.cash: ••
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:· • ., ff;;l$it'¥IrJlYi!rt!~}Y.~J9t.1R'1t~lf:~i}y.'.)i-'{f?:l]:lOr~;if~!.~On~,,
t![/llg(~·~tll; ;: .to
a •.
ong
since the last time
~:~:i~:h:;;:~~i;:mairit~i~:
.·.tu~~
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g:c~e:~~~?d •
'Ji11ffi!iffflftsfmi~Iil~i{l;t;Wti~fff
1
f~1~ib~i:~e<JPi.(.•.·:~::.
11
.man.··Bro
th
ers were in ••
.the. opportunity . to converse
••
distort his face by s;ickin his
ii~iii!ilijiili¢'6tt~'jieR~~·ii:thi~
CI
ci8ttit¢'
bf'
ri;d¢'v¢'lo in fettis;
A stud ·•
b • Vir • inia's Coun~
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. \Vith my father. I was reminded. dentures out and dragging his
Pli.§!!0!1t!~!X!I~s9!§§!ti~:g!t}I§/Iii~pij9q~nls
of
th~ qi 11. \Ver.e.·
•·.··•
ci.l of Higher Education found
of this whenl returned home for
upper lip with them. He would
nfm§~li~iiI:~fi~ij~§t~!'.§lg§.ifj,f
i\q.~i~~t()PQin(i<>~ttha_ttht!
p~op-
that· 37. 8 % of students at
Spring Break; •
. .
• accompany this hideous face . 9':m~~lIJ:(#th~.tirj¢i~th~J:(it'igqf lem ·c()ulJi b¢ ayoided if there
Virginia's four-year. colleges·
''That was some frost we had • with strange
high-pitched
• .Ifl)pt~Jm9tli'etti{6~me;},Miqha~j
[ was!isdmi
w4y
that.bars
could
go on drinking binges, com-
• this week," Dad said whiie brew-. '. noises and chase the chi Id
!~;j}¾ij~~]/;m9'~tp~9pfe{~~ll
jjt~
pr.Q~i~~ drJ~keri.phtr8h's \Vith pared to
20.]
% at two-year
. ing morning coffee.
down,the street.
Il~jp.g,gp!{§p;illii!!!i~l}~l'Tleg.irii
phptos Bf what the person they··•··
.• schools. A student explained
''Yeah," 1 saidi ''Just the oth_er
Parents were alerted ot'the old
;s2nl~~;,ti;§fil;:i~~·If~stitfia!'
th~
!l.I"~gqil]gliprne
.withwilfl()Ok in •·· that the difference came from
. day a cab driver was telling me
fellow's antics either by the big
fji,ghf'.i!!i~!i!,!i~':~11.Ilq)\V~S
~9ri,:. , tpe fu9mi9g.
.,:,>,
C
. •
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• ·• the fact that two years is not
that he was afraid of a late frost
mouths or big cavities of their
s~,i.x?iJI
1
[;;)I.@i§fi?¥1;:~~$ : ijf ;, tI\YeQt)':thfe~<>fl'i~yada.'s438
enough tillle
to
perfect a seri-
because his flowers were com-
children. They reported Den-
gyrgJ:±?J§Q~)'.;w!lli-#fj
?lY~?f
§ld
pµplicisshools got F's oh state •
.. ous drinking problem, and it
ing up. I told him not to worry.
ture Man to the police. He was
ti§xii]1:;f:jK;j;,;i',;)'1·;;\
;: ;· .; ; .
,<
te~t~ dete1rnining bas,ic skills:
takes at least three years to be •
The next day it dropped below •. repeatedly warned and arrested.
.{:I§pe:~K!Qg
Q!;»"higli},.Mis$js: I-I§wey¢r, stud~nts in those
able to drink, all night and not
·. freezing and I felt like I had jinxed . Denture Man did not stop giv-
.§ippi'.Jiim~~~rs,li9pe:_t§
r~tluc:e<
stl)q{)Is were found
to
excel at . .have to wonder why you wake
• it o.n or SOil)ething." •
.
• . . ing out. money until parents
:tfi~:(§'~l~i~liiiifi,~~n~g~:,Piig;
l}:lyj11g411protec:t~d
s~x. funnel-.·. up.the next 1110ITJing
in a fra-
• ''Well, I'm sure you didn't,''
complained yet again. Denture
9~ll£X,l£i!~i!?Yimms.i.fi⁢i!l~g~I
•Jrig
a.ri
entire pjitt of Quinness,·.·.·.••···
··temity. house ;with ··vomit all·
Dad said, which was comfort-
Man was
spon
reduced to giv-
fqi};.?i!ii~flµJf.;t§].h~y~·~#¥t'Yitli aricl1"9liifiga.bigfatjoi11t.
overyoiirself.·'
• .·••
··.·•···
..

....
·•. •·
• .• • •
ing ... • .
·.·
.. ·_ . . . . . . . .
.
ing out newspapers and those
'.iinxi?n~l'.y]jg~l,•~g~ii!2l!fil1Jg~t
.,,t>Jri';[e~~s; th~ anfiij~l R.~ttl(!f. )
Three.,top Chines!! agricu1-
. Unfortunately, not everything· • complimentary '.'Car Shopper'' • •.
'§µjj-~fi~:I~iliifiy§n~;g§'.1:4-
~fig
§ital<i
I{gufidup is e~pe¢iecl tg
t~reand trade •officials visited .
•. back home remains as constant
magazines. . •
• 9Y~r·m~y,le:gijlly.;~QQ~~it't"t§se,~:
draw
~o:ooo
visitor~]\Ea.rttci~ : Squtli Dakota to find out what •
as Dad's·soJ?ering witticisms. I
When I went home for break,
~~~I~~.n'!$1t~~,t'.[2n(;~m~~;!h~(
.p:1Ql~P~Y$~0~fitryf~~~f{)rthe:kiriosofexportsthe
state has
no longer see Denture Man _ • Cedar Lane looked desolate. .
mf~t~iI!J~gfg~'~~Yif~g?c:IIfi~ii\i:>pp~@µiiy
tg
c:apture;p6isg11-. t9offer. The state government.
wandering up and down the _ ~adly, Denture Man was no-
i§I1!i~i!!ii~I~
PRPHl~!I<?Ui':a~gq
(9½~
;w~*t~l"l}
cli4m9ng,t><1c:k.~t:<
is confident that they have a
· main street, giving candy. and ,, where in sight. Far fewer kids
jijg~lig;Y{Q4Ic!Wajlfti:?h~y~~e,%.
tl~i-$,;ar:id
an a.c:lditi9nal\$
l';OQ0 great oeal to offer to the Chi- .
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... money "to all. of the good chil- ·~-roamed. the streets. going to
<~Iill]'lmypp~;lQY~r/!ff?.'
!(/li~$:"
.tg
liaye_.tlle_
v~h<>m
$µ~k,e_d
out •..
·· .•
nese; and will be sending rep- •.
dren of the neighborhood;
.
matinees and buying pizza..
i~e_ij§g!9fig't()re~lili~·1~\\l··x9f
ihe111l
Fot
ah(a.dditiollal
resentatives
from both the ·
When I was. growing up in• . , .. 'Miiybe. the landscape of this ' ~~qiµ~~,;lt,ij~i!§Si$}4_tµr~;·h~~
$:Io,odQi
the
poisqniv.i,J
I be • . South Dakota Dirt Exchange
. suburban New Jersey, Denture • nation' becoming marred by
~enifi~g
µp\i!tli/~pging
Jig: '
sijc:t<ei!
out
l>y
a<mernber of
tl:ie
a.nd the Meal Worm l\ssocia-
Man ranked higher than S!inla mallification is not particularly
i§l~ii()'i'lgiyjµg,\V{)lll~[l
~li~ right /
!)alias
¢owboys C:heerleaders,.' tion. •.••
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Claus, th~ ~aste~ Bunny, ~nd t~e
humorou~, or maybe _not even
~B'Y§f{;T~fi~.g~~l4~i_ngsJ~yeh'.;.
.· .::Q~l~\lv'ire yclucat!O~ officj~ls . \ . Tennes~~e ~pologized _to
1
ToothFa1ry. Th1swaspnmanly
funny. It 1s sad that kids today
EJ9ncl~_~ynatpr~1ll'I'llmer1s
hayedevelo~dapql1cyrequ1r-•.··
Rtvergate Churchof
Christ .
• because he actual I
y
existed. . do not experience the same sort
ifitt~g~ing.~
pllJ
Jh.it
c:alls for
it1g
p~rerils to write a letter giv~ .·.·•·•·•
and Grace Community Church •
;~::~:~n~.d
H~~~~-~~ ~l~v~!~
~~::~~rd ~~;:e
~~~ty~~~ ~~~~
·~i~t~?~re~rti~~~J~~J~~e~~·•···• •i••··~gJ~~~}~~~fi·.~~~~~:~ih~~t~~··}i
•.
••
~~::r~:~!~~1fil:u~t~.·~~:o~~···•·I
with ·gray hair slicked back by
These prosperous times come
preschool~r~i 1-J.e
said tha.t re-- • tics.doubt the effectiveness of
mation fro11,1
police ca).lsed the •
na~ural grease. He wore a plaid
with a c_ost that money cannot
!seiirc~: iij inf a~(brain d~velop- . •.·
the program, P:trlicularly since ··•
..
·•
chur~hes to· tie labeled Sub- ..
·
1
tnctofCedarLane, bnng1ngJoy
ev_erywhere, from suburban
ttons.!h~tleacl,o smarter teens
$10abag'.
·.•. ··••·
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state to apologize funher for
in the fu11n of candy and cash
New Jersey to Poughkeepsie to
l~rid.a.duJts.il-It! alsq noted that· •..
·.•···
...
·•·•
Wisconsin's. goveITJor has ···.·labeling the.· tate Mother· • ·
to
~~1~~~~~
0
~:d cti~~~~~-
with . . ~::~u!~~!~~~~h~frel~v:s.
1
i~~~
~&~i&p@~k~~tit6~~f t~k~c~
.······%:1:6~$i~
~!~~()~~~~:~~=

.••
~.:~::::=~~aJ~:z:t~~kihe
l
scores of other children; would
then again, who the hell am I to
likely toge~ thyir as~es kicked··•.• \\'orlcl\Varll ace Richard Bong.
all-timerec-ordformostwords
walk up to. Ce?ar Lane with
say so? .
.
.
~y
thei9!h~f Jci<ls, a,nd t)tre~
Thi~.v.rou!dbethe first time that
it~
;ippear
in
1'1ie Circle
to
1
hopes of getting a freshly
_TaraQumn~TheCircle'sHu-
1t1mes~l1k~Iytoca~serumors
S?l'Tleone1~thestateofWiscon-
neverbereadbyanyone.
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bought bag of candy, or a stack • mor Columnist
I
that they are gay. ···•·
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• sin has paid such a high honor


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• · 'Taking
:a· ·closer ·
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by
JIMDZIEZY~SKI.
A&E Editor .

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The first _time I ·attempted to
climb Spruce Knob (highpoint of
West Virgil}ja,
486~ ft.)
·1
had the
unfortunate occasion to arrive
the same day
as
a freaj( blizzard .•.
on Dec. 31, 1997
..
There is no tech-.
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nical climbing involved in reach~
ing the summi.t of Spruce Knob;
it is a straight
f
9rward hike and
there is . even a road that goes
within
a
half mile of the top. TI1e
challenge lies in the fact we were
trying a winter ascent anµ we
could not get oui: nand.s on a to-
pographic map. T.his spring
break, Sean Dougherty,
Christina
Sheedy, Ryan Sheeler, Chris .
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Knapp and myself attempted to.
climb 8 highpoints,
West Vi_rginia
.?.
:t?~i!{\~1
1
~\~}f~:~;\\~:--r~;;.:~'it/if?-;
::?:\;,;t~yt~it;~{°f
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ber. Anyway, ·our deStination
was
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lows the Appalachian''.fratl'.s
, • •
;( ; ; •. ·
most celebrated southern section.
'<. , ,.. ;: · ,
>
· · •
, •. '
, .
The rhododendron bushes are
• • • • ,· • • ,. • • •
. said to be a most beautiful sight
.in early spring bu~;
\Ve were
a
bit
too early. We still had a great hike·
through the _mixed sn~w and
slush.
The
summit is covered in •.
. Pine Trees and ·offers no' views
'
'
until one descends about a hun-
dred feet. From there, one can see
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the clouds about 2000 ft. below,
, the scenic sprawling valleys, and ..
geometric gzazing
Jarid.
A six-per-
son shelter a quarter mile from the
,summit is a great place'io camp
. out in. We met an interesting fel-
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low there who called himself
.
1
'Bear'' ,vho was gored by a buf-
being our second (after a quick
<,;, , •
, , ..
hiketoHighpointinNewJersey.)
-$1'<,.
'
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\Wffe.f!!ilJI'
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falo in Ohio. That was all he re-
If I had to open any business in .
The observatlori~~~;;
-~~
;;,uce
'K-~:ii,the
0
hr;h
;=·~Int'
;'f
4w~st Vlrglnl~ (4863
the .south, it would. be an au'to-.
ft.)The stunning views from the s1:1mmit
look out over the town of Seneca Rocks, a
repair shop specializing
in brakes •
famous rock· cllmblng resort. Back row, left to right: Sean Dougherty, Christina
and transmissions·. The sieep •
Sheedy,
c.
hris Knapp. Kneeling, left to .right: Jim Dziezynski,•
Ryan Sheeler.·
mountain· roads one needs to
.
. .
travel in order to reach' the more
·
ally said about himself, which was
a little odd but I suppose it is a
good convers_a_tion
starter. Both .
West Virgini.a
and Virgini_:,i_
offer, . , .
good hiking with.out
a
lot ~f.s!eep : ,; , ;
terrain. Personally,
I still prefer the
White and Green Mountains for . • •
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remote mountains are guaranteed down, the day of our hike was sun kept us wann providing we Christina ·gets the. daredevil
to grind your brakes to the metal partially cloudy but otherwise kept .moving. An observation
award for sliding down an ex- •
and do a job on the ol' .tranny. If
sunny. The hike· was a little dis-
tower marks the highest ground tremely steep hill and slamming
anyone has ever driven up the • appointing because it followed a
in West Virginia and offers dra-
into a couple of trees, only to get
good, rugged hikes: but then , , . ,
__ •.....
•-J·.-
••
•I
•)l,•
., .. ,
• ,,.
M : • • ,,, h..
A
R d • snow covered auto road for most matic views of the valleys below. up and. laugh ab.
out it!
ount vvas 1ngton . t1to. oa : .
itislikethatforaboutthirtymiles.
ofthewayup.ltwasnotuntilwe
The unique spine of rocks that
That ni~ht we proceeded to
The area is loosely populated . took to bushwhacking that it got
m~ke~ • up Sen~ca. Roc~s rock . drive t?_Virginia,
land of fast talk-
and there are a lot of run down really fun. The snow around th,e •.•

•.
_cl1mb1ng
area .1s ·~. particularly . . ing politicians and Wayne's Hair,
houses in the middle of nowhere. summit was about two feet deep • I~)Yeso111e
sight;: ~t 'r~§ehlbles
a: ·.
·a·. mysterious
business
in
I did not have the occasion·
to
a?d the steep mini-ravi~es pr9
70
,',,~.~g~$jl1111Js-lik~.~?:W!?f~~R~~~;!.-,.J;Ia1ri5.onburg.
We also have a
- . savor the
local color,
which was
v!ded s~me good leap1ng/rn,n:-:: $ticking out o~_.the
~artli._
p~r :very-.,illlportant contact in
probably for the better. This is
n1ng/fall1ng
down::type terrain •. speedy descent was half the time Harrisonburg; a wonderful
the land that created the Hillbilly, Had the. sun. not b~en out, it
o~
our ascent du.e to the fact we y6ung lady named Chrissy who
. redneck, Hatfield vs. McCoy ste-
would have been mighty cold
slid and tumbled through the• . works at the CVS in that town. If
reotype. Though we had to deal courte~yof a brisk wind but_l~ck . woods until "".erejoined the road . you get down there say hi to her
w
me snow on
.•
dri
• was with us :nd a comprom1s1ng about two· miles from our van. for us; she helped rescue .the van
again I am biased (being from the ,, .
•~•1•,d/
•· .. •••'

area!)
If
you are interested in pur-.:
suing these hikes, check out •
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America's Roof Webpage at
. http://www.inch.corri/,-.dipper/
highpoints.html. Also if you like ·_ ·· :
hikil}g,
our hiking group MEOW
has planned a trip to Mount
:
Greylock, the Massachusetts
highpoint, fo1111
the middle of
April.
If
you would like
to
go Email
me at: ktnf@maristb.marist.edu. . , .
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Come join us!The seasons are
getting better and there is. no ex- •.
exce · ent· __ om. cem·
ves·
use to n
• y the outdoors. •.
ew
aven:. ··
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by
SEAN D()UGiIERTY

opened up with a-story about a
. . Staff Writer . .
band he had played with
!fl
New
Haven called the Sluts. The au~
••
Henry Rollins is one of the • dience was instantly captivated.
most influential figures in music During the tJ:iree
hour session he
culture: His first b'and,
Black Flag, someJ:iow:
was able to fluently .
set new standards in self-expres-
combine' th.e topics of
a
trip·.
to
sive·music and planted the roots Thailand,livinginNewYork,ideas
for the musical ·movement that for world peace, male/female re'-
would evolve into hardcore: His • • · • ••
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lati~nships, 1bai sex acts, snake·
book Get
i11
tlze Van
is a pow~rful •
•• handlers, ·bu·ying suit$;· car
. and moving account of Rollins •. . horns; a drug f~ee life; and
a
trip
time with Black Flag; taken di.: • to :Africa'. :The amazing thing
rectly from his journal entries. • about Rollins ·was he never.got
Besides being a solid perfo1 rner, boring: It is a rare perforrrier
who
Roll.ins is a skilled author, poet, can speak for three hours (with.
and speaker. His work teems with ·.rr,ifnimaJtpreachiness)
and still
raw.~_motion
and his voice speaks captivate ari ·audience. I was re- .
,vith: brutal honesty. Rollins. gretting I did not bring a tape re-
fo1111ed
his own publishing com- .. corder. , . •
c:. • · .· , . , .
pany, 2.13.61 (his birthday).
More
After the sho\v I had the fortu-
recently,_ h~ has been working naie ·occ:i~i6n to meet the in.an
with ·his latest m_usical
project,. himself. Many may tl}ink
Rollins
The Rollins Band while continu- . ,\vould
.be a gruff, abrasive, tough
ing to write and publish. In what guy but in meeting him I found
little free time he has, Rollins . quite the opposite. Despite his
makes appearances
doing spoken huge body-builder p_resence,
he
word. On April 5 we visited
was a soft spoken and polite
Rollins at Toad's Plaq! in New Ha-
gentleman. I asked him what his
ven, Conn. From listening to his influences ,vere, to ,vhich he re-
recorded spoken-words,
I already plied Mohammad Ali, John
kne\vRollinswasagreatspeaker. Coltrane, and Miles Davis. He
His topics range from hilarious was very receptive to the fans
anec~otes to intense personal
and took time to talk to everyone
expenences. .
.
individually.
One of my compan-
When he appeared before a full ions for the trip, Jim Dziezynski,
house, the crowd erupted into ap-
had the presence of mind to talk
plause. It was time to see a mas-
to Rollins fer a while then politely
ter perfonner in action. Rollins ask for a banana. Rollins was
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quite the gentleman~ and seein ------------.-------------,
that he had a whole bunch, gav .
one t<>
my friend. That is whati.
cool about Rollins. He is a celeb-
rity his fans can not only relat
to but actually get to meet Rollins
does his. best to personally an-
swer every piece of mail that is
sent to him ( e-mail included).
Sure
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he is opinionated and has a his- •
tory of his mouth getting him in .. ,
trouble but he always speaks
from the heart'. The best way
i
describe
him is the ''warrior poet': .
His motto ''Be strong, get stron-
ger'' is one he truly abides by;
After meeting Rollins we rolle
away from the show with an on-
slaught of-ideas and thoughts t
ponder. Lucas Tucker ( orie of my .
traveling companions) invite
Rollins to Dunkin Donuts with
us, but Rollins said he had to b
in New York City early the.nex
day. We went there without him
• and discussed what we had jus
heard. Rollins spoken. word • is
. part comedy,
part
drama,
part com-
plete self-exposure.Rollins has
several of his perfonnances avail-
able at most record outlets. His
double CD set, 'Toe Boxed Life'',
earned critcal reviews from man
notable magazines, inclu9in°
Neiv:nveek
and Rolli11g
Sto11e:
I
you are lucky enough to hav
Rollins visit a town near you; I
highly recommend taking in hi
act.
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Need
shirts
.. • with your_ organiza~ion;
dorm, t~am or
club's
.ogo
• sere.en-printed
on
th~m?
'
Se,ving1~e
Marist(ommunit,,
Since
1918
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FAST,
FlSY DIRECTIONS
fROM
IWUST:
•• lake Roote
9 South To
Rou\es
44/55
EAST
(The
Meri,J\ ..
Con11oo1
On
The
Mtri,J -
We I-le
One
Block
Past
Raymond
J,:w.ooe.
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THE CIRCLE, April 9, 1998 _
9

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ar
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a
cun
.
by
CA.RLITo·.
_
• -• -
ability' to_·
siiccessf~lly bring
·a
...
alt~rnati1e'channels for mee_ting;--c~p plaguing a majority of the . . the blood to dr-ain from his body .
woman home requires the dispos~ women. One of such channels is • Caucasian race. ••
But after ob-
This is the only way you will get
•••• •• • Staff Writer • • • ••
• • • •·..
ing of innovation, creativity arid . the ''hot body· co'ntest," • These _ serving the. dance floor stylings
your change back. 2) Invent a
: As a: higtlJy· estiemed repc;rter • skill, three attributes found in art-
contests are usually reserved for
displayed by Spring Breakers,
condom built out of titanium and
for th'e
Arls,and Entertainment _·
ists .. The ~forementioned
is ' sho_rn sasquatches and juice-
my self esteem skyrocketed.
utilize it. Titanium has a strong
sectipn of
The 'circle;
allow. riie. • hence in:my_eyes;
riot.an
art
form
heads, ,but there was one hotel
Dancing· is
a
mandatory prere_q- molecular ~ond that will not split
.to :4iscuss_m.y exp,er_iences in
but a breed ofanti~art._ Because
that actually welcomed a phy-
uisite to_ sexual activity of any
like latex. If titanium condoms
Cancun b~th artistically and ·_ to_ successfully engage in the • .--sique such as mine. A physique
sort. And although those lack-
were on the market, one of my
based ori en~ertainment; -·
During ··courtship of any rand~m female,
that hypothetically typifies the
ing the ability to dance will un-
friends would not currently be
Spring Break, horinorie. levels • one must abandon elements
archetypal smackhead on phen-
doubtedly humiliate themselves
planning his baby shower.
3)
Do
h1,1ve
a· tendency to augiiient or . such as pride, honesty and intel- • • phen. I inaccurately assumed
in their efforts, this degradation
not have sex on the beach. Even
in some cases, ~rupt into uncon-
lectual convel"$ation. Pe1111it
me
that some women . might_ be
is conquered by the power of the
if you are not having sex on the
trollable outbursts.: I am referring -'• to suggest a few tips for anyone
amused ( or even aroused) by the
libido. Since I have a girlfriend,
beach, if you are semi-naked you
• to my .witnessing someone cling- _ willing to-· participate· in • an • sight of Corona flowing down my
my desire to dance with women
will get arrested for having sex
ing to a girl's legs refusing to re~·
.alcoholic's_
version of March
naked backside. Needless to say, • was not sexually motivated like it
on the beach.
4)
Do not drink the
move himself unless she would •·
Madness. Promise a girl that you • I was mocked by all· that wit-
was for the rest of the Cancun
water. My bowels are still in per- ·
go home with
him.
Outofrespect
will marry her and she will have
nessed the self-defamatory exhi- • population. I simply sought pla-
petual motion and in a permanent
for this person's anonymity, let
no ''difficulties'' going home ~ith • bition.. Surprisingly enough, I. tonic companionship coupled
. state of liquification.
5)
This is
us hypotheticaily say his naine • • you. • • Of course this wo.uld be . lost the contest to the only sur-
with cardiovascular exhilaration.
the most important piece of ad-
was Michael Corvi: Unfortu- • even more.successful if the girl·· viving .• member
of·
the
Perhaps the female population
vice that
I
can offer you. Carpe
nately for the male population, the --_was a Mexico ~ity native seek-: Australopithecus
population.
sensed this resulting in their uni- • diem. Seize the day. The old ad-
levels of. testosterone exceed •.
• ing American citizenship: If you· _ For the anthropologically igno-
tied efforts to greet me with the
age tells us that ''what happens
-those'of estrogen .. The result of
are kicking it to a girl that has a. • rant, that really big word means
same amount of hospitality as • in Cancun, stays in Cancun," so
.
this is the necessity of a man's • • boyfriend;simply info11i1her·that the hominid· that proceeded
. they would the Ebola virus. Re-
act imp[!lsively and without re-
ability to st1ccessfully woo _a you have a girlfriend_. This places. • Homo erectus on the evolution-
gardless of what song was play-
gret. Although you may get
woman back to their quarters for ·_
the two individuals in the same
ary chain. As far as entertainment
ing, Chu mba warn baechoed
scammed by each and every citi-
hedonistic activities. One would
ballpark, making the discarding
is concerned, Cancun offers a . through my ears. ''I get shot
zen of Mexico, go to Cancun:
think that this· ability· would re-
• of inhibitions n,ot only mutual, . • myriad of options; For those of
down; but I get up again.," I
Sure, your plane might get hit by
quire sucli ·sentiments as; a-per-
. but also attainable.· I was under
you
that were pondering
would have stooped as low as to
a truck prior to your departure
soriality possessing slightly more • ·the. impression -~h.at _
outdated
• Tarzan's present whereabouts;
• hook up with a seventeen year
resulting in an extended vacation,
ingenuity than Oasis, an IQ ex-_ one~liners • .were no longer sue-
he is alive and well, residing in a
old, degrade her, break her heart
but never the less, go to Cancun.
ceeding that of a yak arid a cer- • cessful \Vhen picking up women,
Mexican discotequa (that's Span-· and drive her into suicidal ide-
If you have no qualms with be-
_tain degree of smooth talking, But • but !:observed otherwise. Here
ish for nightclub.). One club I
ation. For anyone planning a trip
coming a daddy, tying to get some
after careful observation and per~ are a·few lines that apparently , · visit~d had a ~reasy Mexican
to Mexico, allow me to give you
nookie, destroying the life of an
sonaf 'experience, I concluded
-work. Yo! How about a kiss, it's . (that 1s not a racist comment. He
a few pointers that will prove to
innocent high schooler or hook-
that woineri want.three
things
in • my birthqay. • . Do you want to
was actually both· greasy and
be very useful.
1)
Bring an ice pick • ing up with a woolly mammoth, it
a man; a high level of anabolic
come back to my room and see . 1'.fe~ican) ~winging t~rough t_he everywhere you go. When a
is impossible to have anything
steroids, at least35 grams of gold
my 111onkey?
Damn, you're hot, . air, s~owenng th~ audience with
waiter, bartender or salesperson
but the time of your life.
I
would
and."ilte.iritelleciilal teQaciiy of· _where's the.pisser
I
know what • hoto!landsculp~tngmousse. As
takes 100 pesos from you for
like to personally extend a.high
Fores'tGump:C;; '
'·. _ •
• you'rethinking. Howcouldsuch
th~g1rlserupted1ntoa 1986New
somethingthatcosts 10,holdthe
five to every member of the
In case'you are'thinkirig that
J
a primitive dialect actually work?
~ds on the Block f~enzy~
l
fan~-
ice pick to his neck and info1
Ill
Miramar Mission
Cre\V
and apolo-
havesomewhat strayed from my
If you are like myself and you
sized about ~trangltng him ~1th
him that once you drive it into
gize for my nine day infattiation
· vow to discuss Spring Break ar~·. refuse
to. sink
to
such
the_trapeze
wire. In my l~tart1cle,
his jugular vein, it will take ap-
with the high five .
tistically, I really have not. The · sub terrestrial planes, there are
.I discussed the rhythmic handi-
proximately 12 minutes for all of .
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Bookstore works.to lower rices •
In respo_nse_
to ·student complaints over the high prices, the Marist ookstore has introduced three new
_romo~io_nal,programs
for the 1998~1999 academic year .. ''We've had programs in th~ past," said store
ana
9
~r. <;fu;istophe_r
Rane, ''but these pr9grams are much larger." •
_.. . _
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Accorg!ng' Jo ~~ric,'
~~
bookstore has bee~ working wit!"t
vendors to improve the faime~s of pricing,
bile s~Jlfri:i_?in~ining
qu_ality
in
tlie
_merchandise. These promotions have succeeded in both. . .
• Marist'students will.see tl1e results of these programs upon their return in the fall. The ''Back to Class''
• ale _will
run
ftoin the ·fall
rush
·through· the fourth· week of classes. Featured in this sale will be dramatic
iscpunts on clothing and school supplies. When the holiday season aiTiv_es·in
November, 'the second
rorh_otional
program will begin. The ''Deal of the Season'' sale will not only offer price reductions on
loth1ng, but also on mucQ of the giftwear.
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. While both of these programs will run for specialized times, a year long ''Deal Program'' will also be
ntroduced. This ••~ea! Program'' ~ill feature lower prices on clothing, baseball hats, school supplies and
ore.
· · ·_·
· · · · · · - ··_.
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''I've worked ~ith the bookstore since ~ovember 1997
and
since.then the bookstore has listened to the
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oncems brought fqrth to them from the student body," said Student Body President Colleen McCulloch,
ho sits on. ll:e Boo~~tore Advisory Committee. __
McCulloch added that the bookstore has provided -
any suggestions for improvement, especially concerning textbook pricing. •
.
. . ''With textbooks there's not much y._e
can do· as it is its own industry,'' said Rane when asked about the
ookstore efforts concerning textbook costs; • According to. the textbook cost distribution·. breakdown
ccessed via the Marist bookstore web page, the bookstore receives only approximately four percent of
e entire cost of the text, with the maj()rity of the cost going back to the.publisher.
According t<>
McCulloch, some of.the bookstores suggestions have already been acted upon. Profes-
ors have been asked by the bookstore to care.fully consider the cost of textbooks before ordering
eedless expensive texts. Faculty members were also sent letters concerning the cost of books last week.
'Bookstore costs affect everyone; especially the students'' said McCulloch. ''As a student, I understand
e need for lower prices. The Student Government will continue to work with the bookstore until we find
way to make this happen."
• . .

by Sara Bergeron
...
S.G.A Members

· ·
---
Student Body President-Colleen McCulloch
Resident Senator- Kevin Lundy
Executive Board
Resident Senator- Carol Ann Ester
Student Body Vice-President- John Svare
. Resident Senator- Amanda Pike
Executive Secretary-
Shannon Mcinnis/ Beth
Class President I 998- Heather Marriot
Matthewson

Class President 1999- Jennifer Wheeler
Parliamentarian- Kristen Webe~

Class President 2000- Jake D' Addario
- Vice-President of Academic Affairs-Heather Guldner
Class President 200 I - Ben Amarone
Vice-President of Student Life-Robert Bamman _
Commuter Senator- Tori Neville
Vice-President of Student Programing- Heather
Judicial Board
Suydam

Chief Justice- Kathleen Banks
Chief Finance Officer- Steve Coogan
Commuter Justice- Eileen Bubel
Director of Public Relations-Sara Bergeron
Resident Justice- Brian Coakley
Elections Commissioner-Seth Tyminski
Resident Justice- Louis Totino
Senate
Resident Justice- Sara Assaulti
Senate Speaker- Ryan Hunter
Resident Justice- Kelly O'Hara
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Spoiisoi
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by
S.G.
4.
call
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2206
'I.or
111:10:a.
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iuf.or:ao•1;ion

HELP WANTED!
The I 998-I 999 Student Government
is looking for you to get involved!
Diversity Awareness Chair
Vice President of Student Programming
Council
Assistant to the VP of Student Programming
Public Relations Committee members
Elections Commission members

This is
a
great way to buil!i your resume or portfolio while having fun an
making a difference at Marist!
*Inquire with the S.G.A office*
***x.2206***

























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minds some exp~rts of a young ; out of the AL to-meet; anci beat,
e.
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in the AL,. Twins' lefty Eric • Series showdown. •
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Knoblauch trade: ._He remi11ds .
Since I already,ventured_out~
•• •. As iinpr~ssiv~·as the Marist• • you have sorne•probl~rrtsi;: :~-- . -baseball: tha~·: anyoth~r-:~p6rt,,.· some: of
a
young. Jimmy· Key,· side Marist,_
1
might ~s. well_'go •

baseball and softball·. teams
• _··The
women's team has been . • and.there is no bigger.statistic in•.·• They really_·are _nice· to these
the·nextstep and_veriture out of··

• · have been in their inaugural
justasbad,postingJ~6markin-
,baseball than Roger Maris's.
young'.~id,s, huh? ,:

•.
sports; sort of. If,yoti.get a
seasons in the Metro Atlantic· . theii:-first seven games;< Their .-record of 61 home runs in I 96 I. •
I will_ take the Brav~s. Astros,
chance, 'try
to
get your han~s . · •
Athletic Conference; that is ·. defense has more holes than ttie . In this.age of juiced balls and
and Giants in the NL divisions, . on a copy of the: re~release·d
. how. unimpressive the men's . men's team, also allowing over
atrociou·s pitching· that· record • and the Yankees, Indians, and
baseball book
Ball Four,
by Jim ..
µnd women's )acrosse teams·
15 more goals, but in a brand of .has stood the.test of time, but if • Angels in the AL. Put
me
down
Bouton.· It is a baseball book,
have been.
game that does not usually see
it ever is going to go down this . for the Padres and Mariners as . but it is about life first, and base-
The men's lax team stood at
the same high_ scores the men
would be, the year .. McGwire
the wildcards. Cleveland comes··· ball second.
1-:5 overall,_ and_ I :2 in the
post. Their losses have in-
would be th~ man. . .
MAAC . heading
into
cludedscoresof2l-l
I, 18-5, 18-
• Two more expansion teams
Tuesday's game against th_e 6, and 21-9. Ouch.
means there areanextra20pitch-
• • · Rutgers Scarlet:Knights. The·
Not easy to see a positive . ers who should not be in the big •
• Red Foxes currently stand
l1ere; but. it would have to be . leagues. One of those expansi_on
sixth· out of eight in the
sophomore Allison Occhicone ... teams is Arizona, where the.ball
MAAC, thanks to perennial _ After a strong freshman season;
carries like crazy, and. where -
cream puffs Can_isi us and
Occhicone this year is ninth in . McGwire will make two stops this
Manhattan, who are a com-·
goals, arid eighth in assists _in year,' along with his two stops in
bined 0-6 in the MAAC.
the MAAC, and of course the . the mountains
of C_olorado.
One of the few bright spots
team-leader in both categories.
T~ere are only two things stand- · •
has • been
senior
Stu
Occh.

ing in his way of the record- in-
MacMillan who has posted 21
**********·***********
. juries and the intentional walk.
goals in just 6 games. His 3.5
,
• Obviously; I have McGwire as .
goals per game average places
I know I am supposed to only . my NLMVP,_and in thejuniorcir-
him third in the nation and
talk about Marist sports, and I
cuit I_
will go with Juan Gonzalez
first.in the MAAC, almost
a
can usuaily avoid di_scussing
of the Rangers. He is healthy for
• full goal' per. game ahead of· • the' pro sports and_ m<1.jor
col: • the first time in years and he has
Spencer Steele of Fairfield who
leges, but Major League Base-
some great protection in the Texas
is in second. Chris Pistello is
ball is a different-animal. Our
lineup.

also enjoying a fine senior sea- • resi_dent ''Off Campus'' writer
Curt Schilling will have to have •
son, as he is third in the· ria-
Jeff Dllhncke made his predic-
a. monster year for anyone to •
tion and second in the MAAC
tions,' and I thought I might as
notice him in Philadelphia, and I
in assists per game at 2.67.
well as make mine. .
think he will and take home NL
Marist's big problem thus far
It is pretty tough to ignore the • Cy Young honors. In the AL the
has been a defense that has .· first week o_f
the season, and not
race is much closer, but I think

allowed over fifteen goals per
say things like the Yankees and • Mike Mussina has a chance to
game, near the bottom of the
Dodgers are going to finish last,
walk away with the award .. ·.•
MAAC, less than half a goal
and Mark McGwire is going to
Rookie of the year is always a .
ahead of the Jaspers. When
hit 126 home runs; but I will do
crap shoot, but I think in the NL
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you are near Manhattan in a • my best.
Cubs right-hander Kerry Wood •
Both the men's and women's lacrosse teams are"'strug
lacrosse· statistic, you know
. :Statistics are more a part of
has a legitimate chance. He re_. .
now. The lax teams are
8
combined 2-11 .









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The Financial
lid
Office
is • ("'11rrently
accepting
applicati~ns
for
several.·
-Privately
..
_,_Sponsored·
-Scholarships_·_·
:offered

..
through.
the
College:
•· : ,These
scholarships
may
be •
awarded -· on_ the · basis
of • ·
academic.
perforrraance,
financial
rieed~
major·
fiel.d
of • study'
'and •
· loctltion,,
of • pez:manent
residence,
. ·•
or ··a .· combination
•-of -these ••
i terns·.· ·
A· ;t.i~t .·. of .. the . scho1arships
·offered·_·
and •• their
· eligibility


._·
requirements
is •. provided
· in
the.
M~rist ••
-· College
·-tJndergrao11ate
• catalog,
and
is . ava:ilable
in
the
Financial
Aid
Office.
. · All
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s1=:udents ret 11111~ng• for
the
1998-99
academic
year
are
eligible·
to
apply.·.
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To ...
be, • considered
for • these
scholarships
students
mu.st
,'subrn:i:t ···the' •
• following
• to _·
t_he •. Financial
1998.
Aid
Office_.
(Donnelly
200)
by
May·
15,
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1. A
COinpleted
APPLICATION
F()R •
PRIVATELY ·,.
SPONSORED
. SCHOLARSHIPS
for each scholarship
in which you are -interested~




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addressed
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COMMl:l·l'EE
FOR ~RIVATEl,Y

SPONSOREl1 • SCHOLARSHIPS,
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is
required
for . each
scholarship
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interested
in).
_ 3.
A.
'cooipleted
SPONSOREI>
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each
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cotrmittee.
ATION FORM
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• byJEFFDAHNCKE
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Another fyiajor League ~ase-'
considering the, fact this is the, year it is evident why he is in-
ball season is upon us and with - year he will shatter Roger Mari~' . suited. It is absurd to think that
·that inevitably coines niy fear-
record: . The·only-question 'is· Scottie·Pippen, _the best·small
-_
Jess predictions coricemi11g the _·
how· many <lingers • will he''hit. ••
-forward in··the.NBA arid owner
upcoming 'months: - So brace - Be bold like me and take the over -of5 championship rings, makes
yourselves for an enlightening
on 65. He is a class by himsei'f
about $18 million less than
look into the future. _•· · • • • .
-and. will put· together a truly
Kevin Garnett, an exciting yet
First off the Atlanta Braves • amazing season. • •
unproven 21 year-old kid.
will be champions of baseball. . Pedro Martinez will take home
. Pippen deserves to make as
at's

-They have· been too good for ···his second consecutive
Cy
much as anyone except Jordan·
too long to only have one tro-
Young, this time as a member of
and if owner Jerry Krause does
phy to show for it.·. This year
the Red Sox. He will make
not offer him the big bucks he
they will dominate the post sea- • Bostonians forget about the
wa~ts, he should get out of
son just like they· always domi-
loss of that Clemens guy and
there. A player like Pippen
nate tn~· regull!-1"
season.·. ·Greg ._ make them. happy .until . Mo . should not have· to sit around
• Maddux will show why he is the • Vaughn bolts after. the season.
waiting to see if he will be of-
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best pi(cher in ·the:game and .. ·•. •As for the top newcomers of
fered a lucrative deal, especially
capture his fifth Cy _
Young • the year they will be Colorado's
considering all he has done for
Award.
"-_
• ·
. . Todd Helton and Oakland's Ben
the franchise.
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So who will IJe the Braves'·_ Grieve. Helton will-put up Qig -IfKrauseletshimescapeitwill
competition intlie Fall Cla.ssic?, - numbersjustlike everyone else
be out of sheer stupidity and
Forgetabout the _Yankees slow, • to play at Coors and.wjll mini-
go down as one of the worst
start and :pencil.them in for a-___
- mize the loss of ,the_ Blg Cat
decisions by any owner in any
rematch of 1996. Wfth'the addi-
Andres Gallaraga:- Grieve is
sport's history. Not to me,,ntion
tion of.:Chuck Knoblauch the
touted as the best hitter to en-
it would mark the end of a domi-
Yanks have orie of the most bat- - ter the majors since Frank Tho-
nant basketball team in Chicago.
.
anced ~-lineups in baseball.
mas.
And now the top five from the
Pitching is pointed to as their • • _ Lets move on to the situation
week that was:
only question_ mark but it
in Chicago, where barring a
I. Disney-: For transfor111ing
shouldn't be. 'David Cone is
miracle, the Bulls will win yet
Anaheim Stadium into one of
healthy and will be an ace. • another championship. So, in
the best in baseball.
Hideki Irabu will satisfy all the - what seems to be th_e question ' -2. Sam Cassell - Playing great
hype that came with his arrival
every year, what about next sea-
and leading the Nets to the
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last season.
son? Who will be back and who
playoffs.
. ; American League
MVP?
won't?
3. Mark McGwire - First four
Baseball
/IO
Home Against Siena
(2)
/11 Home Against Siena
(2)
/14 Home Against Hartford
Softball
/9 At Fairfield
(2)
/15 At Siena
(2)
om.'s


the Major League record for
Men's Lacrosse
/15AtSicna
/19 Home Against Canisius
Women's Lacrosse
/IO
Home Against Howard
/13 At New Hampshire

cutive games with a home
• ;'Albert Belle. Sure he had an off
,Well Scottie Pippen said this
games: four HR's. Can he keep
run?
-_·
year last season and he is not_ week that he is ''not looking to
up the pace?
,
Last week's answer -
Corey ir ch
was the goaltender
• exactly the apple of the media's
come back here.''. Arid after the
·4_ The New York Jets - Add
;;ey¢ bu,t_this
year
his stats will
way he has been. treated he
Curtis Martin and lock up a re-
, be tbo en~oriiious
to be ignored. • should not be.

tum to playoff football;
who allowed Peter Forsberg's ga e-winning goal in the
1994 Olympic Games.
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MarkMcGwirewilltakehome
-'·:When
you consider that
5. CurtSchilling-Atleastthe
the· NL hardware, espec_ially • Pippen will earn $2.7 million this
Phillies have one good player.
Tom Drag is a regual co rib tor to the Circle
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Would you like to gain
global work experience
and study overseas
at the same time?



_ You can combine study abroad with
-. - · an internship in:
••

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Afarfst
Abroad
Facts
There is a $2,500 scholarship available for
the
public
praxi~ program in Zimbabwe
Internship placements are available for most majors.
costs
are roughly equivalent to the tuition/roon, costs you pay on campus.
You are eligible for grants, loans, and scholarships as
if you v.-ere
on campus.
It
doesn't cost you anything to find out more! Ask for a Program Guide .

Contact the
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Donnelly 220, ext. 3330
Doll
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DEADLINE
1-X
1 'ENDED
FOR
FALL '98 APPL/CA
TIONSI •

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.12
STAT{)F
THEWEEK •
Marislsoftbal) pi~ch~~
f1~1anie Ka~ack
·rtotched.her Wtfriiriofthe ;eason\vith'
a-4~3-_win
o~er·Manhattarion.S1mday.
THE CIRCLE,
April
9, 1998
QUOTe OF -p~E WEE~
"You guys ~re growi~g up a lot faster.tha
we expected."
'.' Bas~ball head coach
'Johri·Szefc
New. conference
nota
big problem for Maristbaseball
byRYANMARAZITI
• Staff Writer
-in
the past two' seasons against
their conferen~e counterparts.
This year the· Red foxes
How does 6~ 1 in their first year
opened the season in their new
in the MAAC sound?·. Not too • conference by sweeping a week-
bad, huh?. ActtiallY, the base-
end doubleheader at Niagara, 6-
ball team is very impressive, and • 3 .and 3~
I.
Sophomore Kevin
the early season recor~, is not
Olore and senior Mark Ciccarelli
as much of a surprise as the per- . both picked up wins to start their·.
formance of the first year play-
season.
,
ers.
..
The Foxes then split the fol-.
Co~i::h Szecf was especially • lowing doubleheader, also at
impressed .with their level of
Niagara, with Doug Connoly
play so.far this s~ason..

picking up his first
"W." -
"You 'guys are growing up a • Connolly, a senior co-captain,
lot faster thanwe expected",
won a tight game, 3-2, .while
said Szecf during a post game
Borowitz was hit with an· 8-5
huddle. •
loss. The captains shined in
Being that. three freshman,
both series behind Connolly's
. Kevin Wissner, Loinas and
solid start (2~0 in the MAAC, 5-
Brady, start for the Red Foxes,
1
overall), as well as the offen-
along with a solid number four
si ve play of· both . second
starter in Corey Borowitz, the
baseman Ben Shove and DH Jim
young squad has reached play-
McGowan, each of whom went
ing at a higher level faster than ... yard.
expected. This is not to count
McGowan has spent the year
out the veteran leaders who
at DH as the result of a shoul-
have contributed just as much.
der injury; but that has not set •
• In fact it has been a strong blend
the team-back on defense. With-
.of play from both the vets and
out McGowan's defensive ex'-
the rooks that has produced the
pertise the stage was open and
near-perfect record.
senior Fred Manriquez stepped
Obviously iUs too early to
up. His stellar play, both defen-
predict Red Fox dominance, _but sively_.and offensively; .. have
if their solid play continues, per- • beeri a pleasant surprise to all.
haps the MAAC is in for a
The team's defensive outings
heavy dose of Red Fox success.
are worthy of praise as well af-
After going 6-0 against M.AAC ter already turning 12 double
teams last year and 6-
J.
so far
plays.
this year the Red Foxes have
After being.swept by Central
compiled a favorable
I
2-1 record
Coimecticut at horrie in a non-
The "Marlst baseball team has· gotten off to an Impressive start with. a. 6-1 recor
conference. doubleheader, s~2
and 9-8,the team rebounded the
next day by sweeping the
doubleheader against Lafayette,
another non-conference game,
at home, 12-2 and 10-8 respec-
tively.
On April 3, the team resumed
conference play and "Big Cat"
Olore (2-0 iri MAAC,3-3 over-
all) picked up his second win of
the season against Iona behind
a
barrage of-Reel Fdx offense.
No word on whethei'Iona paid
them for that clinic. •
Anyway, the team effort re-·
suited in substantial, 16-4 win.
Jon Andros, McGowan and co-
captain
Anthony
Cervini
swung the hottest sticks of the
day during the hitting sho.w-
case.
The next conference victim
was Fairfield. The Red Foxes
handled Fairfield the first game,
I 0-2,.behind the strong pitching
of Mark CiccareHi, (2-0
in
MAAC, 5-0 overall). The sec-
_ond
game was closer as Dean
Puchalski (1-0 in
MAAC,
1-1
overall), notched a 3-2 win. In
both ·games,· Wi.ssner seemed •
undistracted j::>y
his defensive
switch to first (which placed
Andros in the outfield),as he
exploded offensively, going a
combined 5-for~7. Of the five
hits;
two
were long balls (one in
each game), a performance that
will.probably earn hilll player of
the week honors in the MAAC.
. On April
5,
Marist split the day
time doubleheader at Ride·r with
Connolly picking up his 3rd win .
.in the conference in a tight
battle, while Borowitz was
shelled in the loss.
• Although they have played
well oflate, the Red Foxes may
not be completely satisfied.
Having such a high winning
percentage can have ·its woes
as every team is gunning to
knock off the top dog. With this
in rriind; the Red Foxes will have
io
continue to elevate their play
anc_1
• 1earn to. rely less on the
other team's mistakes. The re-
cent offensive explosion may
·not indicate the troubles they
encounter at times trying. to put
please see
BASEBALL,
page I I ...
Mari st foes having problems .trying to
"lrit
the Kasack"
Pitcher Melanie Komack has paced the Red Foxes with 1 O
wins, Including one here against the St. Peters Peacocks
byJEFFDAHNCKE
StaffWrit¢r
The Marist Softball team had
a lofto cheer abot1Llast week--
end. as a sweep. of Manhattan
capped off a4-2 week and im
0
proved· the Fox.es
to)
2-7-1 • on
the seas.on.
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• Theweekl:)egan on Thursday
when the team traveled to West
Point to take on local rival Army.
In game one ofthe double~
header, Melanie. Kasack: arid

Army's ~arah Hatton hooked up
in a classic pitcher's duel.
The game• went scoreless •
through six and a half before the
Cadets came up for their final
at-hat. In what was far from a
dramatic ending, Kari Brizit,is
bounced into a fielder's choice
scoring the lone run of the
ballgame and giving Army a 1-0
victory.
-
Game two was a different story,
• however, as the Fo~es made up
right off t~e bat forthe runs they
did not score in the first game.
Marisnook a 7-:l advantage af-
ter two and the score would re-
main unchanged from that point
on.
After scoring a pair in the first
Marist exploded for five in the
second. The rally was high-
~..
'
lighted by,_~two:out-triple by •
Jessica Craver, who knocked in
four of the Foxes' seven runs

while goingi3-for-4 .. <:raver
would theri score on an Amanda
Koldjeski double.
·. .
- Marist.banged outl3 hits'on
the afternoon• as Koldjeski,
Kathryn ·cheski·. and Michele
GoshaU h,ad two_ apiece. Je.nri
Hanson picked
up
the win by
going the distance. while scat-
. tering eight hits and striking out
six.
Two days later Marist was back
home as they welcomed St. Pe-
ters for a doubleheader; In the •
first game.the.Foxes were sty~
mied by St. Peters hurler Darlene
• Anderson as she fired a three-
hitter while striking out seven.
Marist fell 4-0.
Kasack took the loss as St.
Peters hammered out 12 base
hits, paced by the 3-for-4 effort
of Liz Stivers, as Marist suffered
their first loss in the conference.
Marist bounced back in game
two though as they grabbed a
_ 6-3 win. Like the second Army
game they got on the board
early, scoring four in the first
frame. The fire power was pro-
vided by Cheski who connected
on a two-run blast in ·the first.
Other hitting stars were
Koldjeski and·. Hanson, who
each had two hits and a ·pair of
RBI, and Melissa .Tucci who
went2-for-4. Kasack gathered
the win; going a strong seven
innings.
• On Sunday, Manhattan trav-
.eled • to Poughkeepsie. In • the
first of two, Kasack shut down
theJaspers as Marist triumphed
4-2. • Kerri Harris went 2:for-3
with two RBI.
Uke the first, the second game
was close throughout. Kasack
took the hill again and again re-
turned victorious, picking up
hertenth win.of the year. After
getting .off to a shaky start sur-
rendering three runs over the
first two frames, she settled in
as Maristwenton to win 4-3.
The Red Foxes took the lead
on a Tucci round-tripper in the
third. It would be her first of
two homers in the game as she
would add a solo shot in the
sixth. Tucci went 2-for-3 and
drove in three.
Koldjeski also homered for
Marist and went 2-for-3.
After the sweep over fellow
MAAC member Manhattan the
Foxes improved to 5-1 in the
conference.
The softball team will be in
action today at Fairfield.


51.6.1
51.6.2
51.6.3
51.6.4
51.6.5
51.6.6
51.6.7
51.6.8
51.6.9
51.6.10
51.6.11
51.6.12