1 - Digital Scholarship Services
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1 - Digital Scholarship Services
tHe Lafayette volume 131 I number 25 Tke Olaest College Nexvspaper in P e n n s y l v a n i a Nader energized by injustice Sexual assault A charges not sought BY A L E X NAITO fter .spending over four decades as a writer, organizer, consumer adxociite, a n d presidentiid candidate, all the xvliile lighting for changes in gox'crnment ])olicy, 71 year old R a l p h N a d e r stood before a crowded Colton Chiipel M o n d a y night. In a n impa.ssioned speech, N a d e r spent over two hours addressing significant political issues, mainly ones concerning the enxironment. BY M E G A N D u r i n g a smidi reception iit the McKelxy Hcjuse just prior to his speech, N a d e r said xvhere he gets the energy to continue his ]3olitical iictixism: "I get my energ)- from injustice." It is the injustice thiit he feels is being committed iigitinst the enxironm e n t that brought him to c a m p u s to conclude the exents of i:arth Week. ZARODA E arlier this week, llic c a m p u s ccimmunity was iioiilicd by a mass nKiiling fi-om Public Safetx dial on April 2 1 , iin a n o n y m o u s f e m a l e s t u d e n t iuul r e p o r t e d being a victim of a rape. The Ibllowing diiy, a n o t h e r s t u d e n t reported that she was tlie x ictim of a n a t t e m p t e d liipe. Both females declined further inx'estigation into the iiKudents. The alleged xictim of the attempted rape hiid l)ccii contiicted and interxiexved for liiis article. U p o n further consideration, the s t u d e n t xvishcd to r e v o k e h e r conmu'ius. A c c o r d i n g to J i m .Meyer, assistant director of pidjlic siifety; three ia])es have b e e n r e p o r t e d this scliool year. "In the 22 years I'xe been here, I'xe nexei h a d a r e p o r t e d 'stranger' riipe; it's alwiiys been iin iuf|uaintanc('," he siiid. "Genci'ally, a largi'r nimdicr iire iilcohol-related." M e y e r said that rnaiiy ol the s e x u a l iissaiill r e p o r t s P u b l i c Safety receixes a r e from t h i r d parties, such iis ii victun's friend. " O n c e we're awiire (JI |llic situiitioii| a n d reiich out to the victim, ihey niiiy not w a n t to p u r s u e anything," he s;iid. A c c o r d i n g to M e y e r , s o m e choose to p u r s u e internal inx'estigations but d e c l i n e e x t e r n a l , crimiiiiil inxestigations t h a t go to trial Iiy jury. H e siiid that students d o not wiuii to go t h r o u g h testifying in cfjurt or the crossexiimination process. I'llOK) \\\ KlAIN HARRY To end Earth Week, Ralph Nader spoke Monday night about how college students can embrace environmentalism. T h e keynote speaker Ibr Laiayettc's Earth Week. N a d e r l()cused on the e n x i r o n m e n t iind the g o x e r n m e n t ]iolicies c o n c e r n i n g it. The niiun (Mixironmentid issues he beliexes sluclents should be concerneci xvith include giobiil xvarniing, genetic engineering, depletion of the oceans, iind deforestation. Througliout the speech, he enijihiisized the types of programs he feels the goxernment should be sujiporting to iiddress tiiese issues. " T h e r e are a lol of things the dollars you send to Washington Ciin be spent on to make the enxironment better," sitid Nader. ~ continued on page 3 Peace studies major proposition H^ rSRIAN JVIASON A' tion, a n d n a r c o - t e r r o r i s m ~ were intended to p r o m o t e iiwareness a n d spark interest in the possibility of creating a pciice studies niiijor. Diuiielle Polhici '0(i, in conjiinction with SS], is spearhciiding the effort. C u r r e n t l y , a p p r o x i m a t e l y o n e liundred students hiixe signed niililary recruitment tactics a n d the possibility of a nationiil diiilt, the exent xvas piirt of tlu^ Peace iind C^onfiict R e s o l u t i o n Series spoilsored l)y S t u d e n t s for Sociiil Justice (SSJ). The lectures — which also includtxl presentiitions o n the d e a t h peniilty, the Peace C o r p s , immigiii- the ])etitions. "SSJ is tiying to proxe to the lacully that there is e n o u g h student interest in this type of p r o g r a m , " siiid Pollaci. The idea b e g a n last y e a r with ii similar series of b r o w n - b a g discussions led by R a i s a S h e y n b e r g ' 0 4 . Slie)'nberg's goiil xvas to gain A ZARODA lmost three weeks after the .\])ril 12 theft of the I n t e r n a t i o n a l Students Association (ISA) fiiigs tluring their Extiiixagiinza week, t h e Ciimpus communitx is still left w ilh ii (|uestion wliiit is being done to the perpetrators.' Dciiii of Siudents Jim Krixoski sent txvo ciunjius-wide eiiKiils li)llowiug the intideul, but studi'iils from .\ssistiinl Professor of Lnglish Piiul (!efidu's English I lOihtss wi-re "Ihibbeigiisled" thiil the ciimpus w;is nol niiide iiware of fiirther iiciion. "it is iieeessiirx to reali/e thi' sexcritx ol www.thelaf.com First Class Mail Postage Paid Permit No. 108 Easton, Pa INSIDE... SPORTS Basketball teams host charity tournament ...page 12 ARrs & I-Nll-RIAINMENT Lafayette through a student lens ...page 5 e n o u g h interest to offer o n e class this year. Beciiuse of the series' success, ProfessorJ o s h u a S a n b o r n now pproxin^ately txxenty students teaches a course in h u m a n rights, -sal C|uietly in H o g g Hall on T h e r e is n o set c u r r i c u l u m for . \ p r i l 2 0 axvaiting lociil aciixisi such ii niiijor, but Polhici hopes lo l'<ter C r o w n l i e k r s discussion o n see il include topics such as pciice xoutli iiiilitaiism while ii petition nioxenients. nonxiolence, sustainc irculated l l u o u g h the g i o u p . ability, soft diploniiu y. m e O n it, siudents were iisked ii "Everyone thinks peace is a hippie diation, a n d dialogue. they xvould be interested in a . V c c o r d i n g to Polhu i. a thing, but it's not. Our world just isn't ])i"ace iuid conllii t resolution |)e.u(' a m i rMiilliel resoluused to peace." niiijor. tion niiijor would follow the - Danielle Pollaci 06 interdiscipliiKiry format of .Mthough the talk's coiixcithe existing international alsiition focused specifically on fairs p r o g n i m . The jirogram xxould i n c l u d e iin i n t r o d u c t o r y seniiiuir a n d iin u p p e r lexel discussion class. Students xvoidd c o m p l e t e the o t h e r recjuirenients with courses in goxe r n m e n t iind liixv, e c o n o m i c s , a n d history. "Hopefully, m o r e classes ~ continued on page I Consequences unknown for ISA flag thieves H^ M E G A N April 29, 2005 this incident iind, most iniportiintly, to promptiy iict upon it, so that our communitx' coidd prexent .similiir aetioiis from occurring in the fiiture." wrotejitson Richniiui '08, Marshidl Miissey '08, a n d \ i k t o i i j a Ciecyte '08 in a letter to The Ijifayette. " T h e sniiill g r o u p of s t u d e n t s res])onsible f(>r tiiking the lliigs luis t'onie l()iA\iird, identiiied llienisiixcs, and reluined iill of the Ihigs," said Krixoski this week. . A c i o r d i n g to Krixoski, Public Safety is inxesligaling the issue iind cidlecting suitemeiits from thi- indixiduals. r i i e s i u d e n t s ;ire ;ilso being referred lo the Comniillee on Student ( ioiuliu i liirxiokitioiisol the C !ollegi'"s C o d e of Conduct. Olixer Boxxen '05, ISA president, said thiit he coukl not speiik on behalf of ISA members beciiuse thex hold diirerent opinions about xxluii con.sequenees the peipetralors should ivciixe. ' i n iiddition to wliatexi-r (onsefiueiice the conduct comniittie deems iippiopriate, 1 think most, if not idl, of the ISA members would like iin a|)()logy," siiid Bowen. Howi'ii Siiid thill the siudents lesponsibli'liir the thefts hiixi'not UKide l()iniid contiict wilh IS.V Howewr, Ikdoes not e.xpect any communication until after Uie conduct committee's (k'l ision. "While 1 do iiol extiise these . u - tion.s, nor do 1 think thiit theic should nol be conseciuences, I ck) think thiit the fiict thill these students c;iiiie l()n\;ircl on their oxxn does iiKike a diilerence." siiid Bowen. " | l t | should be tiiken into iiccount bx' the eoiuluc l eomniiltee iis well ;is llu- 1S.\ iiienibers." •"We feel tluit in o r d e r to truly iiudersiiind the motixes and sincerity of those responsible, wc need to hciir from them, not liom the iidniinistriiliou," Siiid the three stuck'iits in iheir letter. Kiixoski siiid tluit college oiliciiils xvill work in conjuiu tion xxilh ISA to discuss how to prexent similiir iiuidents ill the rulmi'. Mindless Selfindulgence ...page 8 \i:\vs i.xsiDi: Fleck retires with 44 years under his belt ...page 4 \VEI-KI:M) WEAniER FRID.W: P.M.SHOWl.RS i.ow: W j iiuai: ')9^ S.viiRtxw: R.\!\ Sl \i)A\: .MO.SII.V c:i.()t'i)V I.ow: 12° I IIU.II: ul^ . ,J ?• 3 V t;' ;• r (: Page 2 Letter to the Editor/Opininn fliHT ^Pf^l^ ^IS^iill^ this week's question: (OMIMl.l 1) \\\ Calling out sexual assaults BY D A N I E L L E P O L L A C I O 7-5 . \ M A N D A I,iN(:i;R Do you read your horoscope? Why or why not? Deirdre Seifried '07 Yes, when I need direction in my life. Lianiie Hansen '08, Caroline Gibson '08, and Alex Meis '08 Yes. Baby, what's your sign? David Shellhamer '07 Yes! H o w else would I know how to live my life? April29,2005 Dear Members of the Lafayette Clommunity: Last xveek, I xvas extremely saddened by Uie Public Safely report Uiat stated Uiere had been txxo incidents of rape repoited by two femede students on Lafayette's campus. The incidents diflered in that one xxas determined to be a rape, and the oUier xvas an alleged rape. Personidly, I found Uiis report to be completely uiiiicceptable. Without reiterating the detiuls of the Public Safety statement, I would like to discuss Uie issue of xiolence agitinst women on campus. M)' iiiiii in xxriting this opinion is to x'alidale thiit Uiese incidents hiixe happened; I xx'ould like to still id behind these courageous women who haxe chosen to report these crimes, because to dismiss these reports woidd be ignoring Uie courage that they have shown. You may or may not be aware that Ixvo weeks ago, exacUy one week prior to these incidents, Uie Association of Lafayette Feminists (ALF) held our annual Take Back Uie Night event. While there were various speakers planned throughout the week to riuse awareness about violence against women, the main exent xvas the march and speak-out Uiat took place on Thursday, April 14. Approximately Ibrly men and xvomen of Lafayette and the Eiislon community met at the circle in Eiislon to light candles and discuss the need for action lo combat xiolence agiiinst xxomen. As xve marched up lo Lafayetle's campus xx'c .screamed, "Lafayette Unite! Take empoxvering the sunivors of these Back die Night!" and olher chants acts. that voiced the urgency and imporFor those of you who believe thai tance of Uiis issue. We chiilked the this is nol your fight, you're wrong. giound xvith statements like, "Nex'cr There will be no end to violence Again!" and "End Rape!" and "I will agitinst women (rape, sexual assault, not be a xictim an)- longer!" Take .sexual harassment, and all its marufesBack the Night is an exent to em- tations) without Uie xvork of women power sunix'ors and their allies to cre- and men as idlies in prex'cntion. W^e ate dialogue about what can be done cannot let these incidents go without to prexent violence agitinst women. notice, and simply throw away the In Uie gioup, we had a number of Public Safety report and move on. people xvho xvere personally afiected Suivivors of rape, those who have by violence, who were pleased to find out that Uicre "I am here to state that I will not sit were people that back and disregard this issue by simply cared about endthrowing away a Public Safety report ing sexual assault explaining that women are being vioand rape, people Uiai would acl iis lated on my campus." idlies xvitii them. •--«-----------------• As a member of ALF, as a member of the Lafayette comniunity, and as a woman who has been personally impacted by xiolence against women, I am here to state that I will not sit back and disregard this issue by simply throwing away a Public Safety report explaining that women are being violated on my campus. As an institution that is regarded for "academic excellence" and known for its personable students, I find this kind of behavior upsetting. I am also disturbed by the fact thai the Liifayelle administration has not publicly condemned these crimes. By not speaking out when these incidents occur, they are sdenUy allowing this sort of behavior lo continue, and .simultaneously not reported it and those who have nol, need to know that Uiere are people on this campus that will stand beside them, and encourage others who have suffered Uiese crimes to not be sUenced. We need to talk about these issues in a safe space, and discuss how we can end this sort of behavior and make our campus a place that xvill foster healUiy relationships that empower women iind men to be catidysLs for change. If you are interested in discussing Uiis issue, plciise come to Uie meeting for Uie Association of Ijifayette Feminists on Tuesday, May 3rd at 8 p.m. in the ALF office of the Farinon Center. Thank you for your concern. In solidarit)', Danielle PoUaci '06 Horoscopes distract decisions Ryan Higgs '06 Yes ~ almost every day because I'm into horoscopes and I'm that crazy, mystical guy. Greg Herchenroether Editor-in-Chief Brian Geraghty M a n a g i n g Editor Megan Zaroda News Editoi' Alex Gendler Arts and Entcrtiiinment Editor John Raymond Sports Editor Adam Greenwald A m a n d a Lincer Alicia Vergnes Assistant Editors .\dclrcss: The Laliiyelte Liifiiyette College i'iirinon Center Hox !)17() Eiislon. P.\ 18012 Editor, I write to ask you to stop publishing a horoscope in The Lafayette. T h e implication of the horoscope is that the relative alignment of the Sun and the Earth at the moment of your birth has some influence on your personality and on the events that will unfold in your life. This is preposterous for many reasons, bul let me focus on one of the most ridiculous. Your astrological sign is based upon the constellation in which the Sun would have been observed from Earth at the time of your birth. T h e zodiacal constellations, however, divide the ecliptic (the path of the Sun across the sky) inlo 12 unequal parts so, in fact, the Sun spends more time in some constellations the Lafayette Tlie o l a e s t C o l l e g e N e w s p a p e r in Editorial Policy Pennsylvania Ediioiiiils ap]ieiiring in 'The Lafayette represent a consensus of the majority of the Editorial Board. Those opinions do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the administration of Lafayette College. O p i n i o n and Letters to the Editor Policy Plciisc limit oj)inion submissions lo 700 xvords cjr less. Responses lo articles and opinicjiis fall under the calegory of Letters lo the Edilor Please limit Letters lo the Editor to 400 xvords or less. The IMfayette reserxes the right to edit the length ol' opinion submissions and Letters to the Editor. Opinions and letters appearing in The IMfayette are solely those of the authors. They do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the Editorial stafl, reporters, or iidxisor of The hfayette. The IMfayette reserx'es the right to not jirint submissions xvhich il considers unpriiitiible. Anonymous leiters xvill only be considered for jirint if they are signed and recjuest anonymity, xxitli a xiilici c iiuse to do so. .Ml sue h requests will be honored and held in the striclesl confidence by the Editor. Advertising and Sponsoring Policy 'ihe Tfa\elle\ Editoriiil Boiird resenes the right to deny any advertisements based on contenl. For rales iind infoiniiition, jileiise call the adxerlising stiiO". .Ml columns and sponsored columns reflect the ojiinions and beliefs of the sponsoring grouji iind do nol necessaril)' reflect the beliels of The iMJayette I'Lditorial Board. Subscription Policy Subscriptions [hv a lidl yciir of The IMfayette are S49, or S30 per semester. To subscribe, send a letter markt^d Attn: Subscriptions with |)iiymenl to The hfayette olfice. Sub.scriplions are mailed on the firsl Monday afler public iition. Chiinges of iiddress should also be sent to lhal office. Theft Policy One copy of The hfayette is free to each Lafayette student, administrator, faculty and stafl" member. Faking more thiin tluit number niiiy be considered theft by The IMpiyette. In such an exent, the newspaper will seek lo prosecute those indix iduiilfsi inx-olxcd lo the liillest exlenl possible. All iirlic les are properly of The hifayette iind may nol be reproduced in ;inx' liishion without jiermissioii of the F.diloi-in-Chiel. than others. Horoscopes divide the year into 12 nearly equal parts so your sign may not be the actual constellation in which the Sun was observed at your birth. Further, the dates which are used as the boundaries between signs have not c h a n g e d since long ago and don't account for the fact that the precession of the ~ continued on page 3 Erika Pepe Business Editor Danielle Bailey Advertising Editor Kevin Barry Photo Editor Laura Roberts Jessica Lasak J e s s Cygler Copy Editors Andy Phillips Web Manager Kenneth Briggs Faculty Adv isor Online: xvwxx.thelaf.coni Oflice phone: (610)330-5354 Fax: (6 lOj 330-5724 E-M;iil: llielaf@lafiiyetle.eclii .Adxerlising: ads@laliiyetle.edu News April 29, 2005 Page 3 Nader: how to practice environmentalism at college — conlinuedfrom page 1 Howc:'ver, Werner felt the work wiis Nader's speech simply because he is In an attempt lo have these issues a well-known politicid figure. Knaus, w orthwhile and thiit Niider's .speech I esonate with college students, Nader like many other students, knew litUe Wiis successful in changing people's stressed the need for practicing en- idiout cither Nader or the issues he perceptions. "A lot of people Iciirned \ironnienlalisiii al college. "If you had tackled, prior to the speech. iibout xvhiit his ciinijiaign wits iiboul," ^^^^^^ he said. "Although it's too late monitor where you live and _ _ « where you work and insist "IThe speech! made me change the now, hopefully they will be more .sympathetic lo his rtinon efficient use of resources, way I thought about certain issues and ning and to his efforts," .siiid then you will absorb more opened my eyes to the way policies are Werner. than if you were to read run." A change of view did ociibout environmentalism in cur for Russ Schwaber '05, a book," he said. - Russ Schwaber '05 "'™°" who found the speech very Nader referred to other """"^ inspirational. "It made me change schools like Tufts University and She admitted that her knowledge of Brown University that have imple- Nader did not extend beyond what the xviiy I thought aliout ceriain ismented programs in xvhich they she had heard in the piist txvo presi- sues and opened my eyes to the way rexiew their use of resources and see dential elections from Democrats policies are rtui," said Schwaber. His image of Nader had been one how they can cut costs by tninsform- and Republicans. "I knew he was ing tasks to be more efficient. He a xeiy libend eiivironnientidist, who many jDcople had after the 2000 electhinks that these types of programs I thought was kind of crazy," said tion. "All I knew was what everyone help environmentalism progress. Knaus. Fhis .sentimenl xvas echoed said, thill he was the reason Bush xvas "Fhere is so much ingenuity that is by many others xvho idso admitted in office," siud Schwaber. But he siud not stimulated on campuses," Nader they knew litUe about Nader beyond that after listening to Nader's speech, his opinion has changed. " T h e Sitid. "Lafiiyette and other .schools the common public perception. "Nader has been tireless in his speech made me respect him more can learn from what schools like pursuit of safer lives for Americans," and what he stands for," he said. Brown and Tufts are doing." Vicente Arguello '08 also changed This was the idea that Lafayette said Diane Elliot, associate director Environmental Awareness and for public service for the Meyner his opinion of Nader. "I fell that Protection (LEAP) wanted to show Center, during her opening remarks. the message he was trying to send through a number of events dur- After graduating from Princeton was that we should be actix'c, that it ing Earth Week. Each event was and Harvard Liiw, Nader started his is time to take in our surroundings designed to show students the small pursuit in 1965 with the book Unsafe and make use of it," said .M-guello. changes they can make to reduce at Any Speed, whicli led to a series of "He wasn't trying to push his politicid the college's negative environmentid automobde safety laws. Since then, views on us." Throughout much of his .speech, impact. In addition, LEAP hoped he hiis been a veiy prominent and sometimes controversial public acNader called on students to take thiit this heightened awareness would incite students to demand the admin- tivist who has fought most notably advantage of the position they are istration miike adjustments in its use for the environment, the presence in and become more aware and of resources. Some of the changes of a third party, and corporate re- involved with the activities of the advocated by LEAP include the sponsibility Nader ran for president government. "Right now you're ' as a member of almost in a dream world, in terms of the Green party resources, to extend what you Uiink "You're our future, take yourselves in the 2000 elec- is right," said Nadei; referring to the seriously, and don't let the world tion and again in potential for change that exists on trivialize you." 2004 as an inde- college campuses. - Ralph Nader pendent. He cited the success of the first LEAP Presi- Earth Week some 35 years ago, d e n t M i c h a e l which he believes was instrumental Werner '07 is an avid supporter of in bringing about legislative changes purchasing of wind power, convertNader and was essential in bringing concerning the environment. "The ing college-owned vehicles to hybrid technology, and using only recycled him to campus. Werner recognized initiiil thrust of Earth Day idlowed the lack of environmentid awareness laws to be passed in a Republican piiper in the .school's printers. administration because Nixon heard Nader's speech was essential to around campus, and it was one of L E A P ' S goals because it attracted the reasons he put in the effort to the rumble in the streets," he said. many students who had not par- have Niider come speak. "It was "Now the impossible thing of yesticipated in any Earth Week events. definitely not easy and probably took terday is the common thing todiiy Sarah Knaus '08 had not attended about a hundred hours of organizing because a small number of informed people broke through." any of the events but came to and fundraising," he said. their decision-making on what they have learned in physics and in history. Your publication of horoscopes is at best a distraction, but it is also an enticement to irrational decision-making for which there should be no place at Lafayette. Michael Stark Department of Physics Correction: In the April 22 issue of The Lafayette, the picture of the Haggiidah Wiis incorrectiy credited. Nii Adjei Wiis Uie photogriipher. The IMfayette regrets this error Corrections may be sent to thelaf(^Iafiiyette.edu or box number 9470. Ben WilmoUi '05 agreed that Nader's come involved xvitii LEAP However, overall message was x'aluable. "I fell some students hesitate because they that the theme of politicid actixism question the eflccliveness of Llv\P and the idea that we should become and other organizations trxing to inx'olved was a good one," said adxocateenxironmentalism. "LIL\P Wilmoth. However, he did not agree is beneficial, bul I feel like it's not with Nader's views on many of Uie alxvays heard on campus," said Arissues presented during the speech. guello. Ex'cn xvhen it is heard, some do not Wilmoth, xvho considers himself very active and informed politicidly, believe it hiis much of an impiicl. "I felt that Nader's ideas for helping think a lot of the issues presented by the environment were "unrealis- LEAP are not taken seriously," said tic in economic «_««.,.«.«,.,.«,«,,«««. terms." "Students don't fully grasp the reality T h i s is o n e of the issues because they aren't faced reason Wilmoth with jobs, rent, and payrolls." believes many college students - Ben Wilmoth 05 are attracted to "'~'''"~~"'"~'~~'~~" Nader's ideas. "We don't live in Knaus. Fhese are what Nader xvould call a rciil world. Students don't fully grasp the reiility of the issues because "forces of trixializalion" that are at they aren't faced with jobs, rent, and work iigainst studenis. He beliexes piiyrolls," he said. Still, Wilmoth what it comes down to is a level of appreciated that Nader was here to self-respect as to whether or not one decides to become active. "You're speak on campus. Werner suggests that anyone our future, take yourselves seriously, interested in anything related to and don't let the world triviiUize environmental activism should be- you." Public Safety Crime Log Preposterous signs ~ conlinuedfrom page 2 Earth's rotation has moved the constellations in the sky. W^liile it is preposterous to believe that your life is influenced by which stars were behind the Sun when you were born, your astrological sign isn't even based upon that any more. Your astrological sign is based upon a conventional division of the calendar that at one time may have been loosely based on the constellations. T h e r e isn't even any irrational reason to put any faith in horoscopes. T h e idea that Ronald Reagan set his schedule with the advice of an astrologer was frightening to many people. My hope is that p e o p l e e d u c a t e d at Lafayette College will find themselves in positions of power and influence in the world. W h e n they find themselves there, 1 hope they base I'HOIO COl KU.S'I Ol r.Kic I M I I O I Eric Imhof '05 presented his portrait painting to Ralph Nader on Monday. "Painting his portrait was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, which was unbelievable, and I'm going to write a letter to him soon explaining it," said Imhof. 4 / 1 8 / 0 5 through 4/24/05 Criminal Mischief 4/18/05 At 10:.')6 a.m., employee reported damage lo the fence at the rear of 119 Mc Cartney Street. Incident under inx'estigation. (R. Snyder) Rape 4/21/05 On Tliursdiiy, April 21, 2()();i iit 6:20 p.m., an anonymous female siucicnt reported by telephone that shc vxas the xictim of a rape that occurred at iin on-e;inipiis location. T h e xictim reciuested thai no further inx'estigation take place iind declined to disclose the identity of the su.spect and the specihc time and location of tiie incident. (J. Meyer) Rape (Attempted) 4/22/05 O n Fridiiy, .'Vpril 22, 2005 al 1:34 a.m., a female student reporled that she wiis a victim of an attempted rape that had occurred at approximately 1:1.') a.m. in ;i student room in Kirby House. A suspect has heen identified. T h e xictim declined fill ther investigation .ii ihis time. (K. Hinl) Tampering with Fire Apparatus 4/24/05 At 9:52 a.m., student reported ii lire extinguisher outside of the Watson Courts area. Ofhcer found tlie extinguisher intiu t M\(\ placed it back in the pmper W^atson Courts location. Incident under inxestigalion. (C. Snyder) Burgiaiy (Attempted) 4/24/05 At 1:22 a.m., student reported someone damaged their door frame in the 200 Bloi:k of McCiirtney Street. It iippeiirs no items were removed from the residence. Incident under inxestigation. (M. Nesheiwat) This security log is compiled by the Office of Public Safety and submitted to T/ie Lafayette. It is an account of all crimes handled by Public Safety officers and does not cover non-criminal reports. All reports printed here have been listed and also submitted to the Easton Police Department. Page 4 the Laiayette Ne-ws Aprii29,2b65 A 'hole' i n o n e At 9 a.m. Monday morning, a backhoe and three constrtiction x'ans backed into Uic drive separating Badey Health Center and Gates Hall to investigate a hole Uiat had opened in the ground. After an hour of digging, Uie hole had been enlarged and steam rose from the ground. "As far iis we know, Uiere is a hole in the steamline," said Fred Quivey vice president of business affiurs. Though Uiere will be no major diagnostics or repairs before commencement, Qiiivey siud that the pipe will be temporarily patched. "We try to have a renewal and repliicement program [for pipes]," he said. He explained that pipes have a certain lifespan, so Uie college routinely replaces or fixes about 250 feel of pipeline a year. The cjuestion now is whether Uie steamline break caused the hole or if it is Uie larger problem of a sinkliole. According to Quivey, a smaller sinkhole had been filled in on the souUiwest side of Kirby House Uiis year. A sizeable sinkliole near Soles Hidl hiid been stabilized 14 years ago. "They're pretty stiible [now]," said Quivey, "[but] there are a couple places we watch pretty closely." I'uoro i!X' .\Ii;<i.\N ZARODA Will 'peace' meet approval? ~ conlinuedfrom page 1 like Professor Sanborn's human rights course will be offered," said Pollaci. She explained that there are already several colleges that have a variation of a peace and conflict resolution program. The Princeton Review lists sixty-one institutions that olfer a degree in peace studies, including fellow Patriot League schools American University and Colgate~"University. "A career after achicxing a degree in peace studies would not be limited to the Peace Corps," said Polliici. She explained thiit graduates could possibly xvork in the corporate xvorld, pursue a degree in law or education, or seek a po.sition xvitii a huniiin rights organization. "Exeryone thinks peace is a hipjiie thing, but il's not,"' said Pollaci. "Our xvorld just isn't used to peace." Although Pollaci and SSJ hax'c received numerous signatures in support of their effort, nolhing has yet been finalized xvithin the administration. Sanborn, xvho has .sjioken with Polliici about the idea and supports a peace sludies niiijor, is nol optimistic idiout iichiexing the jirogiiini ill the nciir future. He explained lliiU in order lo crciite a new ni;ijor. students would need the support of bolh llic j)i()X()si iind the president, iis well iis iidditioiiiil funding from the college. ••Prolissors here iire cii|i;il)le of teacliing tliis subject," said Siiiiborn, "1)111 then their time has to cither be dixc'il<-(! from tluir existing cliisses or new ])i()lessois need to be hired." Sanborn iilso siiid that incoming presidenl Diiniel Weiss ex])ressed interest in exiilualing the existing ])rogriuiis and was recc|)tix(' to the idea of such ii niiijor. Polliic i siiid lilill S.SJ is ;ilso pliinning a conference next year lo promote [leace sludies. The cx-ciii will iiKludesjieiikersdenioiislrating wliat can be done with this degree. |)oets. iind ii b;ind. SSJ has idso h(i])ed begin ii c hiiplcr of .\inncsty liiurnatioiKil at Lafayette. "Groups like SSJ, Engineers W^ithout Borders, and now Amnesty show that there is interest in peace at this school," said Pollaci. Pollaci is scheduled to meet with Dean of Studies Gladstone Hutchinson about a peace studies program later this week, but does not foresee its debut next year. Sanborn added, "W^e'll be hearing more discussion about this, but it's not something you'll see tomorrow," he said. I'lioro BX' Ai.i'RKi) BRONAKOWSKI L e o p a r d a v i a t o r s p l a c e at e n g i n e e r i n g c o m p e t i t i o n The Leopard Aviation team dropped into Deland, Florida, April 8-9, for the Society of Automotive Engineers AeroDesign East competition. Under the guidance of advisor Lou Hayden, the nine-member team entered their plane into the competition that, according to tiie team's website, "inx^olved submitting [tiieir] fmal design report, presenting a ten-minute oral presentation on [Uieir] aircraft, and flying the airplane." Leopard Aviation placed first in Oral Presentation and second in Overall Design, a category that accounts for boUi Uie Oral Presentation and Uie Design Report. The team placed eighUi overall after Uieflyingportion of Uie competition was added to Uieir score. "The flight requirements were that the plane had to take off the runway wiUiin 200 ft., make a complete circle and land within the 400 ft. runway without losing any part of the aircraft," according to the website. "The object was to lift the maximum load possible." The team chose to construct a triangular-shaped "delta" plane so that it had enough surface area to accomplish the team's needs. Seven task forces necessary for the construction of the plane included aerodynamics, weight and center of gravity, propulsion, stress, controls, flight dynamics, and the inventor modeling. "I don't know if I can [describe the experience] in one sentence," said Brian Hauser '05. However, he said that the competition was a great way to bmld a team. ~ Tripp Williams Cy Fleck: retirement is still not goodbye BY B R I A N MASON fixim students. The longtime administxaioY said he still sees room s a child, Cyrus Fleck spent liis for change. "In Uie future, I fi^ee time playing .siindlot basewould like to see the college ball and touch football on Lafayette's encourage more interdi.sgrounds. More Uiiin hidf a century ciplinary coursework Uiat imd 50-plus I^ayette-Leliigh fcxitbaU inccrporates engineering, games later. Fleck willretirefrom a 44Uie sciences, and Uie arts," year tenure of service to die college. Fleck ;aid. "I would also like to inx olve students more Fleck graduated from Lafayette in with the life of Easton in iui 1952 wiUi a degree in government effort to make the commuand law. After graduate school and nity more attractive." two years of service in the army. Fleck As Meckprepiires to re'tire% iriurned in 1961 as an iissistant cUrcche staled Uiat his greatest lor of dexelopment. four yciirs kilcr, contribution to the college he became the college's regisiiiu; ii w;i,s xxxirking with students po.sl he occupied luitil liLs lirst retireto help dieiii reach their ment in 1997. /\fter resigning his goals. "BoUi when I xvas duties iis registrai; he continued liis diiit ii sl IK lei lis sil idv ill )n Kid. Uie rcgistiar iind die study employment ;it Liia\-ette, serving its wiien they go into a job iibnuid dine tor, I tried to a speciid iussistai ii l<) the pmsident, a inteniew their expeiiencc liush students to pursue Uie member of Uie cumculum commit- in iinoUier country will give iircits that xxoidd be most tee, iuid most recendy; iis stiidv' abixiiid them agix^at advantage," he Sidd. "It's a grciil maturation chidlenging," he siud. director. After a life-long caA lifelong citizen of Easton, Fleck [inxess." reer of .senice to Lafiiyette, explidned Uiat his decision to attend Since he took Uie {xisition I'IKJIO liv KlAIN BARRY Fk:ck pliuis lo spend some laiiiyetle xvas bitsed on Ids fiuiiily's as study abroad direcior. Cy Fleck, who has been employed at Lafayette of his .second retirement loyalty to and liis own comfort xxiUi Fleck has also witnessed ii for 44 years, will retire his duties as the study triixxiing iuid to continue Uie .school. As i» sludenl. Fleck both rise in interest ibr .shorter abroad director at the end of the semester. to xxilunteer al the college. comniuled to l.,iif;iyelle and en- iibroiid programs during He would like to become joyed his fratc-riuty exjxnience, xvits interim and summer sesinoiv inxoKed xxiUi C^iireer Senices il memlx'r of Uie Kirby Scxiety of si( ins. He foresees a continued iucreiise stiuidiuxls of students. Cioxemment iind I^xv, iind xxante Ibr ill these programs becaase they are Fleck hits idso seen a growing interest and matching siudenls wiUi idumni Tlw hfnyt'Ue, Flee k n*cidls his faxoiite conducix'e toIxith adiletes iind .stuckiits in internships, moiv engiiged ix>seaixii cxintiicts. ciits-scrs were Fjiglish, economics and xxilh ligorouscoiiiM; schedules. I'lecks decision to retire wiis nol througii Uie ILXCJELprogi-am iuid selalxii; and Aneiic^n diploniiic y In addition lo the iiurcitsed piii- nior Uiesc% iuid more students choc ising iidluenced \y)' the simultaneous ix^tireThe Fleck Iamily h;is liecn iiixolxied ticipiilion numbers in the stiicly aliniiid todoulile niiijoi; esjieciidly in ;i Ilin igii nieiit of Preskknl /Vithur Rothkopf '55. He idso Siiid tluit he will nol with l*da)cnie l()r the niiijoiityof the program, fleck hits ;dso seen diiinges laiiguiigc. pitsi ceniuiy. Fleck's father gradii- to the oxenill college iilincjsphere. "' 1 here ;iix- new ex|X'nences Uiai aiv pursue a ])osition on the bo;ird of iited in 1920 and sertcd its a college "The biggesi cluuige in Uic- time Uuil much ini|Dixjxxcl since mx lour yciiiN,"' liuslees. tmstei- liil" 17 xc'iiiN Ixiciix' becoming I've vxoiked here xvits the decision to siud Meek. " rhere iux- more courses, "It's time lo luni Uie study idiioiid iill idumni tnistee. .\hliough Fleck's iidmit women in 1970," sidd Fleck. morc inde|x"iideiit xxxiik, iuid excellent ollice oxer to a new person," .siiid liiUier oxMied ii ])niilingcom]);iny in He exphuncd thiit Uie iicklition of fe- ciiix-ei sci\ices." .'Vlthough Meek did Fleck, "'liut die cxillege is definitely IvLslon, I'k'l k iiex'er considered xx'oik- niide stuck'iits niiide I.idiiyelle a more nol piirticipiite in iui iibroiid program hciiding [in] Uie right diixxtion, ;ind inteiesring learning environment Uuii its il student, he has visited prognuus ii i it's the students that are nuiking it ing ibr die fiimily busiiu-s.s. prompted iin incrciLse in Uie iiciicknidc- I i indon iind iVustrcdiii t() seek feedl liick hiipix'ii." During his tenure ill Uie college, A Fleck said Uie greatest aspect of his jobs has been liis intc^raction with studenis. "I've met so miuiy dilfeicnt and very interesting jx^ople," he said. "I love working widi students l)ecau.se each one has very diflc^rent ideas imd irtspirations." Fleck boasted alxiut the college's prominent study abroad record, citing that Lafayette ranks in Uic top 20 liberal arts colleges in terms of Uie numlx;r of studenis who study abroad. For Uie jjast seven years, he has iuded die school in promoting iibroiidyirogTiuiis. "I Ix^liexc April 29, 2005 Arts and Entertainment Page 5 New horizons: Lafayette^s emerging film culture Smith. Smith and O'Kcclc directed up to dial point. "I ligxircd il xxould be come a concentration xxiUiin English the film's nine chapters, and some of a nice challenge," Moss said. Vhe iis- and exentuidly its oxvn major. "'Fhe Smith's former siudents are helping sistiince of John O'Keefe, idong with libnuy- isfilledwilh xideo editing softt is no secret that Uiere is a groxving xxitli camera work iind the editing the encouragement of Professor Lex\- warc and ,\pple Ci5 computers, iind interest in film studies on campus. process. The visibility of this project Minter in die iirt department and Pat Uiere are many cameras on resene. One needs only to look iit the popuis yet another sign of hoxv much film Faceiponli in Skillman Libnirx; liiis 4"lie tools iire all tliere~x\c"re just ii larity of Uie documentarx- film and studies are adxancing al Lalav ette. been veiy helpful in Moss's crciilixe few more steps from hiixing a film screenwriting courses, the abundance The English department's brand- and challenging endeaxor. major on campus," Marchettii. He of powerful computer technology new screenwriting class, taught by Richie Adoniiiko '06 has tiiken his thinks it xvdl help dnixv in prospectixe at die nexv Skillman library, and the Assistant Profes.sor /Mix Ohlin, has interest in fdm exen further by starting students xvho xvoidd xvanl the arts emergence of ii film club ofTeiing a contribuled nexv insight for students Lafayette's first film club, the Lafayette department of a school like NYU, network for those who wish to share into story creation and filmniiiking. Film Society. About 50 students haxe bul also xvant a sniall college experiideas and show their moxies for Ohlin, who was hired as a .sjiecialist expressed interest, and Adomako ence. According to O'Keefe, the feedback from their moxie-making in fiction and creative writing last hopes to get the club running.as an art department has also contacted peers. The ease and avadabdity of fall, came to Lafayette xvitii a strong official organization by the beginning Instructioiiid Technology iibout the new technology, whether software-, interest in screenwriting. Upon see- of next semester. "I have a back- possible creation of film facilities in hardware-, or camera-based, have ing the growing popularity of film ground infilm- I've been doing video downtown Easton. Professors Smith allowed the first-time filmmiiker a reid on campus, the English department production for over six years, and I'd and Ohlin agree that interest in film chance to execute artistic possibilideveloped Uie screenwriting class wiUi like to share some of my experience is continuing to grow, but seriously ties that were previously unavadable her last semester. "It xvas designed as well as learn from others," he said. doubted the possibditx- of establishing to someone with litUe training at a during the first week I was at Liifay- "In die recent liberal arts college. It is evident that ettc, and I'm very happy to be doing two years, I've "In recent years I've seen more film coursa cidture of film has tndy begun to it," Ohlin Siiid. The class is designed seen more film es...the Film Society would be a good idea form at Iafayette. to be very hands-on, simdar to the courses being for students taking those classes." Documentary Fdm course. Ohlin offered, and I - Richie Adomako 06 teaches the craft of screenwriting: thought [the ^^^^^^^^^^^ how to budd a story, dex'clop char- Film Society] acters, and think visually. "You can't would be a good idea for students either a fdm studies niiijor or minor learn xvriting in isolation, so I hiive tiiking Uiose cliisses to giiin experience in the near fiilure "Liifiiyette is not siudents watch movies and read and iipply the skills they're leiirning." and xxill not likely be a film .school," scripts," she siiys. The class discusses The club will lie informal and proj- Smith Sitid. xxhat they see and read, noting the ect-based, xxitli students working in lb xxiiiji up the siMiieslci; the projxvciiknesses and strengths. Fhis gix es groups of cameriimen, screenwriters, cxts of the Documentiuy Fdm eiitss the students the abUity to create their and directors to creale oiigiiiiil fdnis. and the Towers of Shadow and Light oxxn stories, as xvell as lo iinalyze their .Adoniiiko said thiit so fiir, the school DYD will be screened in the Oechsle oxvn x\x)rk. "We hiixe the sexds leir ii has been xeiy supportive, and the aiidilorium al 8 p.m. on Mondiix; tremendous amount of film activities Instrtictioiiid 'Fechnology department May 9 and 'Fuesdii)', May 10, respecon ciimjius, belween Uie courses and hits given them iiccess to professiouid tixely. Opportunities for film studies ec[uipiiieiit. You can learn hoxx' to eciuipment. Iri the future, he hojies xxill be ex en more iibundant next year. casl and direct a xvhole movie and that die sociely xxill eiiidile students to Ohlin xxill be teiiching Screenxvriting individuids can do the tech work on enter Idm fcstixids, sulimit .scripts for iigain in the fall, iis xvell as a course on I ' l i o i o s \>\ . \ \ I A \ 1 ) A 1 . I \ ( 1 k their oxxn. I he technologv' these days jiroduction, and get recognition for film and literature. The library has recently acquired new technology and software is so iixculablc." Smith thiinked /Vssociiite Proxost their xxxirk. Adoniiiko ;ilso outiined for students to use on class and independent film projects. One student wlio is looking to tiikc other plans, 'ddopefull)' next year, Diixid Johnson, O'Keefe iind the Professor Andrexv Smith's DocuLiist spiing, the c lass xvas much advantage of the iix'iuhibility of fdm xve'll he iible to do ii documentaiy Instruclioiiiil Technology staff, mentary Film cliiss, which had its more dilhcult to conduc-t, its students studies cjii ciimpus is English nuijor I iiboul] the campus itself iUid future the director of the library, and the trial run last spring, xvas the firsl luid Old)' a sniiill lal) in Piirdee and .Ardin Maixhetta '06. He will lie students will continue to do this to entire English depiirtment for their course to catiipult stuclenl interest just a few cameras to work xvith. XX orking on an independent study next shoxv how the school hits progressed support; Ohlin wiis ciiiick lo thiink in film into the ciimpus spotlight. Howexer, since the reopening of senic\sterxxiUi Ohlin upon eonijiletion iind changed oxer time," he said. Smith for his iremendousK helpful Smith, iissistant profe.s.sor of English Skillniiin Libniiy iind its iiccjuisition of her screenwriting course. Oxer Students inleresled in joining the attitude iind note the "enthusiasm and chair of American studies, hiid of Apple G5 computers and Fiiuil the course of llie yciir, Miiix hettii x\ill lilm societx' should send iui eniiiil lo in the English depiirtment" ;is ;i a jiersoiiid intc-rest in the iircii exen Cut Pro soflxviire, filming, editing, iuid w rite a 120 piigc sciccnjihiy biised on liifiiyetlefdms(>ciety@,gniiiil.coni. positixx' drixing force in the dexelbelbre he presented the jiilot ckiss to scoring are no longer logisticid jirob- an original idea;iiidpossibly jirodiice Moss and Miirchetta are excited opment of the nexv classes. The the English department, its he believes lems. "Fhe director of the libniiy it into a film. "I've considered two about the groxxth of fdm studies on hiird xxork of niiiny indixiduals thill documentaiy filmniaking is one helped supply the technolog-y and xxiis niiiin topics lor the fdm: either draniii campus and beliexe that the incred- and a healthy, crealixe, iind iipof Uie mo.st exciting iind dix erse fields interested enough to imjilement the in the real xvorld, regarding iidjusling ible iicx\- eciuipment iind resources preciatixe iiltitude from students, today. According to Smith, docu- computer labs...we went from two to life iifter college or the process Uiat a found at the library will continue faculty, and administration keeps mentary offers a depth of interest cameras to txventy cameras, complete student undergoes xvhen undertaking to driixv attention to il. Marchetta this nexv field on campus groxving anci seriousness Uiiit is often hard to xxitli xxireless microphones," Smith il large pioject in college. I'm curious beliexes thiit film studies will likelx be- and expiinding find in Hollywood feature films, the said. John O'Keefe '96, maniiger of lo .see how a professor would help and complexity and freedom of the art InstiTictioiiid Technology; has helped hoxx- the student xxould do it," he says. form eniibling directors such as Mi- siudents with video production and Fhe flexible and dyiiiimic nature of chiiel Moore to shape it in |ioxverliil, taught them hoxv to use Final Cut the English miijor idloxvs Miirchetiii unexpected ways. "Moore sluitlered Pro and other film software. SmiUi a new way of shoxving his crciitixx' the expectations of documentary was "ecstatic" at what students xvere story to the world. "41ie images and film in pop culture iind jxiliticized the able to accomplish last year and is sxinbols hold the stoiy together, iind il nature of doc fUnis since the relcitse exen more enthusiastic about this xxill be e:xcitiiig to do it Uirough fdm." of Falirenheil 9/11. I can't think of .semester's films. Marchetta, Idee other students tiiking anx' other time xxlieii students xxould Smith and (^'Keefe hiiv e idso been fdm courses, phiiis to shoot his prciject flock to see ii documcntiiiA Idmniiiker spciirheiiding the creation of ii D\'l) on Ciimpus: "'(jilbert's could sei-xe ;is speak like xxhen they [x\x'nl| to see film, Tiwers of Shadow and hght as a a diner, or ;i dorm room could be iin Moore on his cam]ius tour hist lidl," coni]iiinioii piece to.Vrt Spiegelman's iijiiirtme-nt." Miiixhetta is exliemcly he .Sidd. gnilihic iioxxi, /// The Shadow of .\'o piissioiuite iibout his x\x)rk iind looks to the pos.sibility of seeing mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm ToWClS, w l l i cll)iA\;irel ll "Michael Moore shattered the expec- will be Liifiiy- one of his lilnis exxMituidly ixiciised. Aiother student, Siepluiiiie Moss tations of documentary films in pop e t t e ' s 2 0 0 5 Olien tiition '05, is utUizing her interest in iuiiniiiculture and politicized their nature." book. I h e lion in an honeirs thesis tluit eoni- Professor Andreiv Smith film includes bines hand-driiwn iind stoji-moiion interxiexx'sxviUi iininiiition, green screen xxxirk, and In Smith's chtss, studc-nts Ciin expect laeitlly. students, iind Sjiiegelman lix-c-iiclion Iboliige inlo a short fdm. to wxnk with docunientiiry filmniiik- himself, shoxxing the* xiiiying intel- Her internship in the summer of ing in numerous wiiys, such as reading lectuid and per.se)nid reactions people 200 I at Po.ssible Workls .Vidmation criticid articles about film histoiy iind liiixx" hiid toxxiirds the lext. This xxiiy, Studio in Nexv \bik City, idong xxilh form, xiexxing numerous ck)cunien- "wx- x\ill shoxv a community idrciidy her childhood loxe of Walt Disney liiiies, iind pulling xvhiit they luive engiiged in the study of the book " to Idms, sparked her interest in ii lield in learned into their oxvn films. The the chtss of incximing freshmen, siiiel xxliich .she luid luid no IJirnud tr;iiiiiiiu \iY DANIEL FAST I cliiss learns about fdnis dating from the beginning of the medium's inception in Uie 1890s to the present diiy, touching upon World Wiir II propaganda, postmodern, mockumentary and rock documentan' sub-genres. Fhrough viewing films wiUi a wide range of content and style, students both gain a sense of how vast the areas of documentary fdm iire and are able to combine both traditionid and original elements in their ovx'n projects. The .students creiite 5-10 minute short films, complete with scores, to be screened at a film festixid during finals xveek. The first showing last spring created such a buzz on campus Uiat Oechsle Hall was fiUcd to its capacity as people crowded into the auditorium to catch a glimpse of their peers'work. The added pressure of "worrying about what 250 people xvdl think" proxides extra motix'ation for the students, according to Smith. Artsand-^^^.^^^^^^ t h e Lafiiverte Page 6 (OlDPS JU/ Aprit29,20b5 lEMPS in "President Emmit" Part Eleven MURROW .'f / riittd." ^u>AHflHflHAi Bv Allan Amanik - '06 ^ m i ^ IT'S ^ what's Your Sign'r^7 A^tA.'^ABLC -fee m^ oe^jcj<d YOUR WEEKLY (4/29 - 5/4) HOROSCOPE 5^»M.i. ftt. £ : > - r o u . £ > . fl^ <ti£ SoftE - T H f t - r /jbAit 8tn" ARIES: THEIVIE CROSSWORD FLOW CHART By Robert Zimmerman 39 Ancient 40. Rumple 41. Pal of Larry ar)d Curly 42. Hilkwk 43 Strauss calleej it beautiful 45 Latin farewell 46. Lazily 47 Plagiarize 48 Tribute in verse 49. Initiation participaiit 50. Work unit 51. Matodic passage 53 Pink Floyd's •- Barrett 54. Commotions 55 Hearing loss 57 Salinger's "Franny and —" 59 Acid important in diet 60. Stroke of tuck 61. South African settlers 62 Fitted ACROSS 1, News tidbit 5. Where or — "; RocJgers & Han 9. Actress — Dench 13. Swagger 18 - Alto 19. Shakespeare schemer 20. Blood Bank visitor 21. Kind of finish 22. Ready for business 23. City in Ukraine 24 Choais member in Wagner opera 26. Sword ot 28. Takes it easy 29. Be in the red 30. Ache s companion 31. Shrewd 32. Conferences 36. Relishes 20 Yakked monotonously 25 Loyal Order ot ~ 27. Saganor Sandburg 28. Take on cargo 31 Suit 32. Third power 33, Cyber show3ing center 34 Ravel hit 35 Wise guys 36, Entered a slalom 37 Conductor - Previn 38 Subject of Russian folk song 39 Mixtures 40. Like the Missouri, by reputation 43 Lively 44 The Highwayman" DOWN 1. Music player 2. Appetizer in Avita 3. School desig. 4. Real estate game 5. Shepherd's "Moonlighting" co-star 6. Sanctuary 7. Sensitive selves 8 Thanksgiving mo 9, SWISS author 10 11. 12 13 14. 15. 16. 17 -Spyn Integrate Puts on Hot temper Produces offspring Purse-snatcher 16 5 feet Native American Lots and lots ? 1_• ?3 « n <•<! ••^^^^Hio 37 3B 3« • •r 42 J6 SO ••pi f,!i SS 1 5* j« 96 58, Mulli-vol, diet, 61. Cleopatra's boat, according to Shakespeare 62. It consists of 3.000 islands 63 Dwarf tree 64 AAA siiggestiCTi 65 Disjiey attraction 66. Site of the Kaaba 67 Wild plums 68 Magnetism measure 71. Subject for debate 74 Be ill with 76 Partofadynanx) '' '" ^^KlS m :,i,s WtF^ ^^•4S M ii M sa "^V''' • •• _ 86 72 ••j.'o S7 ^1"' 1 eij ^^•it.: m ,.._,— ••tif.' _ • k* 1 _• " • mr M 1 1 101 100 104 10» :,« LIBRA: (Sept. 24 - Oct. 23) Learn to recognize xvhen you are finished with a particular venture iind mox'c on...resolve lo try an-d do belter next time. Plan a family exent xvhere eve r y o n e p a r t i c i p a t e s . All xvill appreciate your efforts. Taking lime for yourself this week will be important. TAURUS: SCORPIO: (April 21 - M a y 21) O t h e r s m a y not notice your h a r d work d u r i n g t h e week. M a k e sure to satisfy yourself first, for you will never be able to c o u n t o n o t h e r s for y o u r happiness. Be cautious a b o u t spending too much money. Try not to make hasty choices until you'xe thought further. (Oct. 24 - Nov. 22) Love is o v e r f l o w i n g . E i t h e r a c u r r e n t m a t e will rekindle your flame, or you may be introduced lo a new and exciting love. W h i c h e v e r o c c u r s , you are noxv essentially in a new relationship—for the rules have c h a n g e d . A positive a t t i t u d e will lift your spirits. GEMINI: (Miiy 22 - J u n e 21) Get help xvilh money matters - possibly bank statements a n d t r a n s a c t i o n s . Vour financial footing may be much more stable than ex'cn you expected. I n v e s t i g a t e all financial tips before t a k i n g a n y a c t i o n . If it seems to good to be true, il probiibly is. SAGITTARIUS: (Nov. 2 3 - D e c . 2 1 ) Opportunities abound for you. If the altitudes of those around you are holding you back, it's lime to b e a little bit m o r e self-centered in order lo move yourself closer lo your goals. A nexv financial circumstance is xery likely lo present itself (|uile soon. CANCER: (June 22 -July 23) Learn from a friend this week — sometimes spontaneity is the best course of action. Don't be so quick to judge others; you truly do not know xvhat nifitixates and inllucnces others to do xvhat they do. Fiike on the leadership role xvhere money is concerned iind use ;i Iirm liiind. CAPRICORN: (Dec. 22 - J a n . 20) Don't try so hard to keep everyone in your sniall circle happy. Any iittempis to jiiitch uji iin old relationship that is on the rocks xvill b(" met xvitii frustration. Work niiix' be ii welcome relief from ihe xvorries you can't seem lo leaxe behind. Use your l a d iind cliiirm. LEO: July 24 - Aug. 23) Piiy iittcntion to your intuition, piirticuliirly xvhere loxe and roniiince is concerned. Vou may feel x'oursell being diiixvn into a xery unusual relationship, but one thiit will keep your interest for niiiny years to come. Focus your energies on diffusing any anxieties you may feel. AQUARIUS: J a n . 21 - Feb. 19) It's time lo acl on the plan you hiixe been formuliiting for ini|iroxing your s u r r o u n d i n g s in the home. Money might be tight, b u l c u l l i n g c o r n e r s in some other areas will make the liroject possible. Vou and your life-mate a r e on exactly t h e same tiiick. VIRGO: (Aug. 24 - Sept. 23) If \()ii keep your feelings under wriip. il xvill creale emotional uphciixals, exen though there is iin illusion of control. It's O K to share your feelings xvith someone you care for. Vhe feminine side of your nalure is strongly present a n d it niiiy niiike you feel il bit uncomfortiible. PISCES: (Feb. 20 - March 20) Life is nol wilhoul llaxvs, and the sooner yon conxince the ]ierfeclionist attitude in yourself, the hap|)ier you iire going to be. Fhere are some silualions, wliiili xvill always be chiinging, iind iii'xcr jierfecl. Keep triuk of the difference betxveen Iriilli and illusion. 41 40 59 ''' !•:, ^^•k-;* 44 ^Htu W 56, Cavort 78 Buddhist doclnne 79, Cigars 80. Congo tributary 81 Penods 82. Musical finale 84 Aircraft safety device 86, Cohan, on film 88, Paddler's craft 89 Offer a view 90 Bicuspids 92 Bump off 93 Sodal r^ormer, b, 1849 94, 1954 sci-fi flick 95, Gemian export 96 Injection 97 Hubbub 98 Tub 99 Many times 100 Doctor of Laws 101. Wharton degree l?5 " " ^H'" poet Not all alike Wrinkle Not proud Sickly Womsome layer Regretful More impartial of jazz 85. Circa 86. Periods with a tail 87. Unaffected 89. Elliptical 90. Expression of triumph 91. Draw a bead 92. Goes across 93. Races on the wafer 97. Summons to the door? 101. Comportment 102. No 103. Actor W i l t e m 104. Neightior of Maui 105. Fisherman's wish 106. Change the decor 107. Web-looted mammal 108. Henna, etal, 109. Pallid 110. Send out 21 ^H?4 •jjj^^^^Hsi 103 45. 47. 49, 51, 52, 53, 54 6S 87 97 l,U Wtjtil) ^^•/a -- " 10 ^^^H ••' 77 53" ^n'K ' ^^Kt 73 10/ I» •-1- - 18 63, Prosperous times 54 Time off from a combat zone 65 British honors 68. Guardian in hockey 69 Shipment from Mesabi 70 Shoul of joy 72. - Aviv 73 Huxley's '•— Hay" 74. Embrace 75. Injury's aftermath 76. Paperclip m ^ e r since 1903 77 Leathernecks org. 78, -Raising Helen' star 82. "Leroy Brown" singer 83 Return-mail provision 84. Brubeck (March 21-April 20) Vour plans may go completely iivvry ihis week. Make the best of the situation and some good m a y c o m e of it. S o m e t h i n g xery promising may come from a missed opportunity. It's hard for you to show your feelings, since they've been hurl so many times. 5!> 36 102 lUi 106 109 no last Week's Answers ?WJ;') Un^'..Hl Ftia'tjio Synjicale In Find out what is going on around campus by clicking on t h e ^^Calendar of Events" link a t http://www.iafayette.edu Artsand£jj^gj-|.^jj^jjjgjj^ Aprii29, 2005 the Lalavt;tt:e Page 7 Revealing reflections: wrapping up poetry montli gathered in the Marquis Faculty dining room to hear Doty talk about his work. Doty spoke of n t h e L a f a y e t t e c a m p u s how he got started wriling in high and other academic institu- school as a way to cope with some tions around the country, April of the difficult things going on in is poetry month, and the events his life, relating how he came to calendar has been peppered xvith know a local poet who became a poetry readings and guest poets. mentor to him. The M a c K n i g h t Black Poetry D o t y also answered s t u d e n t reading, which took place this questions about where he looks past Wednesday is, along xvith the for i n s p i r a t i o n , e x p l a i n i n g to Jean Corrie Poetry Competition an a u d i e n c e filled with aspirheld earlier this month, one of ing writers lhal he often starts the central events of Lafayelte's from words, phrases, and images celebration. that stick out in his mind a n d "Both the J e a n Corrie Poetry builds around them. Hoxvex'cr, Competition and the MacKnight he xvarned the group that xvhat Black Poetry Competition show- works for him xvouldn't xvork for case the vitality and iiwentixeness cx'cryone, encouraging students of our sludenl poets and bring to to dex'clop their oxvn processes. campus award-winning poets who To say that the students enjoyed inspire the campus community," his visit to campus would be an said Professor of English Lee underslalement. Perhaps one of Upton, xvho directed the organi- the most remarkable things about Mr. D o t y is his d e m e a n "It's excitingfor all ofUS to see new student or. D e s p i t e poets share the podium with poets who h a v i n g xvon have achieved considerable reputations." n u m e r o u s - Professor Lee Upton axvards for his w r i t i n g , including the /iition of jioetry month. "It's ex- N a t i o n a l Book Critics C i r c l e citing for all of us lo see nexv stu- Award and Notable Book Award dent poets share the podium xvitii by The Mew York Times Book Review, poets xvho hiixe already achiexed Doty remains xery doxvn-lo-earth c o n s i d e r a b l e r e p u t a t i o n s . " and approachable. "I really liked T h e day of the M a c K n i g h t him il lol; he [xvas] really inlerBlack reading, the festix'ities be- esled in xvhal you had to say," giin with a question and ansxver contest xvinner Alexis Siemons session xvilh c e l e b r a t e d p o e t '05 said of him. "He came across iind contest j u d g e M a r k Doty. like he didn't realize hoxv famous Students and faculty m e m b e r s he xvas." BV A L I C I A V E R G N E S O Toni Alirens '05, who received honorable mention, agreed. "Mark Doty is a brilliant poet and to hear him read his work was truly inspirational," she said. "He writes about things that I can relate to, xvhich makes his poetry even more meaningful to me." After the question and ansxver r e c e p t i o n , a select g r o u p of students and faculty had dinner with Doty before reconvening al 7:30 p.m. for the poetry reading. Alirens, a double miijor in English and Psychology, started the evening by reading her poem "Sea Shell," full of questioning voices and echoes that gave the work a tone of haunting uncertainly. "This was the lirsl poem I exer wrote in college," she said of her work. "Basically, whal inspired me xxas the leeling that my life is being pushed and pulled in differenl directions after graduation and that I am not always in control." T h e second reader, Michelle Marinucci '05, read a poem about her frustration wilh the ignorance of scientists a n d politicians in protecting a treasured x'acation .spot. Long Beach Island, from the effects of erosion. In explaining xvhy she xvas drixen to xvrite the poem entitled "Inlet Axersion," M a r i n u c c i also expressed h e r annoyance with seasonal xisitors' apathy. "In the siiniiner lime I xvatch many xacalioners abuse the island and then up-iind-leaxe without ever gixing thought to real issues the island faces," she explained. Erin Mirocha '05 read the third is about talking on instant mespoem of the night, a unique work senger and how void it is of any entitled "Re(a)d Dy(e)ing." T h e personal contact," she said of her title made one think about difwork. "I think I wrote it oul of ferenl aspects of the poem, highfrustration." T h e poem vividly lighting both the deatii theme and captured the sad irony of isolattlic brilliant tie-dye colors that ing one's self and tapping axvay at a p p e a r t h r o u g h o u t the p o e m ' s a keyboard as a means of reachimagery. Despite the fact that she ing out to another h u m a n being, earned an honorable mention in Afler the four s t u d e n t s h a d the contest and received w a r m read. Doty read some of his own applause at the reading, M i r o - works. In addition to his other cha admitted ' ' ' ' "•'• that she was "I really liked Mark Doty; he was a s,o m e w ll a t really good speaker and really knowls u r p r i s e d at edgeable across artistic genres." the reaction - Erin Mirocha that the poem receixed. " G e l l i n g recognized for this talents, he is a true performer, caught me off guard because this a n d xvhen he r e a d , the xvords particular poem is nol a strong came alive. His xvriting already p i e c e , " she said of her work. had a very personal feel, as if he "It's not even my style." She xvere confiding in the reader, and was, however, quite enthusiastic in oral form the feeling of conabout the opportunity to .spend necledness b e c a m e exen more lime with Doty. "I really liked profound. Mark Doty; he was a really good Through his poetry, Doty not speaker and reidly knowledgeable only invites his audience to view across artistic genres. It was vain- the world through his incredible, able to have him," she said. c o m p a s s i o n a t e , a n d insightful Siemons, xvho xvas the contest perspective, but fearlessly gix'cs winner with her poem " G h o s t his readers and listeners what feels Writer," was the last student to like jirixilcged access to him iis an read. H e r poem was a thoughtindixidual, s t a n d i n g before his provoking c o m m e n t a r y on In- audience stripped of any of the lernel communication a n d the edifices xve use lo keep our inner ncxx', less personal xvays xve noxv lixes safe from the outside xvorld. communicate xvith one another. It is as if he trusts his listeners and "I'm very interested in the xviiy readers xvith his deepest secrets, in xvhich o u r generation com- sharing exerx'lhing lhal is impormunicates xvitii one another, xia tant lo him. 'Fhis candidness and cell phone, lext messaging, and generosity made him a xvelcome Instant Messenger. T h e poem guest at Lalayette. just-get-me-through-exams coiviiryG saai\i! caption contesti O^^'C MARQUIS V&^eatm EASTON PA win a $25 Wawa gift card Write a caption for this photo and e-mail it to blatta no later than Thursday, May 5. The composer of the funniest, cleverest, or just plain best (obscenity is discouraged) caption, as decided by an impartial panel of judges, will be awarded a $25 Wawa gift card, just in time to buy exam-time , study snacks. Enter as often as you wish. Contest limited to lifayette College students. See the photo in color at the Williams Center for the Arts or on the bulletin board in the Farinon basement. Write for A&E next semester. E-mail mynameisdistance @hotraiail.com ^ / 03 m^^ 175 South 3rd St. Faston 610-923-9300 w'ww.maniiiisthcatve.iiifo On Screen April 29-May 5 FREE WIRELESS INTERMET ACCESS! Drink O u t s i d e t h e Baxi Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy XXX: State ot the Union Kung Fu Hustle The Amityville Horror Sahara <434B Cattell St. Easton. PA $5.75 at all times with the FEATURING FAIR TRADE & ORGAMIC BLEIMDSI MnwMi.cawniccupcoffBe.cann Utfciyetie stiulcnt I.D. Ushers needed for Baccalaureate & Commencement sponsored by the La/ayette College Arts Society with best wishes for a successful exam pericxl and a wonderful summer! Saturdayy May 21, 2005 For more information please contact Marie L. Enea Manager of Scheduling and Events Planning eneam@lafa\ 'ette. edit Arts and Entertainment Pages April 29, 2005 Levy's Blue Lakex a manifestation of absence B^ JENNY BOYAR S tacy lA^xy's Blue Lake proxes thill iirtistic representations of enxironmcntal entities need not be entirely realistic in order to exoke an audience response. L^pon eniering the Williams Center for the Arts gallery, the obserxer is met xxitli multiple blue vinyl discs, all of xxhicli rest ujion a total of 3,000 waist-high steel rods skillfully held in place by means of a particleboard Hoor. Whereas most works of art require only visual speculation, Levy's piece d e m a n d s hands-on interaction, and xisitors are encouriiged to xvalk through the exhibit in order to attain the full extent of its aesthetic experience. However, the title of the piece is somexvhat misleading. Though the composite materials slightly resemble a lake, Lexy's sporadic placement of blue xinyl atop thin steel rods suggests the ab.sence of licpiid rather than the presence of it. Fhis ominous xoid signifies the lack of clear blue xvater in the modern landscape. Indeed, Lex"yde.scribes her piece as being "like a mirage representing a longing for xvater, and the absence of a perfect blue lake." Through a poignant display of raw materials, Lexy hopes to arouse an environmental axvareness within her audience. Lexy's unique piece has had an undeniably profound effect. "I think it's really bciiutiful," ob.serx'ed Preeza Shrestha '08. "There is so much contained energy, yet the exhibit still appears undisturbed." Michael Favara '08 found the piece similarly captivating. "You would a s s u m e that the e n v i r o n m e n t would be portrayed using a canvas and piunt," he said. "The fact that this is so unique makes it a really memorable xvork of art." /\ renoxvned artist and sculptor, Lexy is a graduate of the Tyler School of Art al Femple Unixersit)': A niiijor in sculpture and a minor in forestry enable her to combine art xvith science, producing compelling environmental statements through crealixe works of art. "I haxe a profound love of water—its surfaces, the way it meanders," said Lexy of her artistic focus. "It has tremendous power and is truly an extraordinary miiterial." Water is in fact a recurring theme throughout Levy's other works, which include Hidden River, Waterlines, Cornerstones, and Watercourse. Her work has been showcased in galleries at John Michael Koliler Arts Center, the Unixersity of Texas at San Antonio, the Santa Fe Art Institute, the Heinz Architectural Center, and the Institute of Contemporary Art. But Lexy's passion for the environment extends beyond her artwork—in 2002, You ^11 Rebel to Anything I'llOK) \\\ W \l RI IA J \ ( kS()\ Stacy Levy's Blue Lake makes a Strong environmental statement about the absence of clear water in the modern landscape. she participated in a renowned acid mine drainage project in Vintondale, PA. Lexy discussed her artistic experiences with the enxironment, including those that directly led to the creation of Blue iMke, at a xvidely attended broxvn bag luncheon on Friday, April 22. The debut of the exhibit coincided with Earth Week, and the exhibit will be showcased in the Williams Center for the Arts galleiy through May 8. not quite as mindless iind industrial dance bciits? Mindless il follow-up lo the prex ions lowbroxv Wiis its nixx soiigxx riling. While listenSelf-indulgence (MS'F), of course. miisterpiecc, approjiriiitely tilled ing, you could lell that the band had In 2000, XXC ' were given Frankenstein Tou 11 Rebel lo Anything. "Shut Me Up"just thrown in all of the things they hiit do you get xvhen you (iirls I \ Id Seem Strangely Sexy, an idbunistarts il iill ofl' wilh a bang, opening found extreme or amusing, xvithout combine ofiTcnsixe humor, im- that found the balance between be- xvith down-tuned guitars and one any regard to the conseciuences. mature punk antics, fast-paced raps, ing funny and being good, as well as of x'ociilisi Jimmy Urine's profound However, the new album seems like Miuilyn Manson-esque shock-rock. hiixing a 30-soiigtriicklisl xvith iiiimes statements: "The ba.ss, the rock, the so much effort had been put into like "Dicks Are for My mic, the treble/I like my coffee black bringing the band to a higher lexel, Friends" and "I Hate just like my metal." Fhe .second that part of the immature energy jimmy Page" arranged tnick, "1989," gels things moxing xxas lost. Il's hard to criticize a biiiid in alphabetical order. even more xvith its diinceable beats for tiying to achiex'C loftier goals, \ o doubt shocking to and clever lyrics. Less chiiotic and but nonetheless MSI is a band that piirents, the elderl); iind more streiimlined, the other song's rexcls in its oxvn brilliant iiwfulness. just iibout iinyone xxilh sound fairly similar siixe for a fexv Flic music is catchy tlii^ lyrics are slill good taste, it also man- ihroxxbiicks such as "2 Hookers iind funny but .something is just nol quite aged to achiexe a cult iin Fighlball." the same. liilloxving iimong goodUnfortunately, il's hiird not to no'ITie s(H'ond jiroblcm xvith You'll humored misfits. tice thiit }ou'll Rebel lo Anylhingha^ txxo Rebel to Anything is thiil it clocks in al .\])parcii(ly haxing niiijor problems. 'Fhe firsl is thiit the only 28 minutes. 'Fhis is the band's iici'dcd lixe years to iilbum is just too "good."" inciining lirst niiijor release since 2000 iind (omc up with 28 min- loo jiroduced iind stiidio-tx\caked. ihey could only come up with 28 utes of material, the Piirt of xx'hiit niiide Frankenstein (iirls minutes? Nol only is it short, but IM \( .1. (()\\n \.s\ Ol CI )M m.(( IM band liiis liiiiillv rclciiscd Will Seem Strangely Sexy so aniiizing it iilso hiis some soiies thiil could be H^ J T C O L E W considered fillers. Either the band members exhausted their creativity on die last album, spent far too much time touring, or are just phiin liizy Whiilex'er the reason, any band charging full price for under a halfhour hiid better deUver a tracklist thill is iiirlight. It seems that MSI truly beliexes thiit xx'c'll ivbcl to iui\thing... Uldmately, though, if x'oii liked tlic first iilbum, xou'll like this one, jii t not as much, (iixe it a listen even il you hiix'en't heard the first one (or heard it and didn't liki' it) lieciiuse tl \c styk> has chiinged enough to make ii more iuxessible to the niiiinstreaii. ll xvill be a slight disiippointmenl w die-hiird fans of Franken.slein Cirh, but it xvill also undoubtedly increase MSl's audience. The humor is dieii", the industrial dance is there, so buy a copy and start rocking. Mander Sails a pleasant but forgettable album ii^ JARED KOZEMKO I ts hiird lo rexiexx- iin iilbum like this. Ihe Siiiiki^ the Cross, the Croxxn is obxiously a xeiy laJeiited band. Fhe songs on their debut iilbum, Mander Salis. slioxx' il xxide xiiiiely of musiciil influences. Fhe production is to]) notch, x'cry textui-cd iind di-ep. I/-iid singer Kexin Jones" xoice is x'ciy plcitsiint imd fits the swirling giiitiirs iind kcyboiirds xeiy xxell. The instruments iill lit together nicely to create lush soundsciipes ihioughoiit the entire iilbum. Ihc biind sei'ins to luixe all the j)ie(es ncces.siiiy to niiike iin e.xiellent rock iillnim in ])liu'e. /\rid yel, thex liiil. TIK' album leiixes you emotionless, exoking no feeling and leiixing you with nothing lo Uike iiwiiy x\heii yoifre linished listening, presenting you with iui experience thiil is plciisiint, yel ultiniiitely unfulfilliiig. Fhe opening track, "An Honest Misiippro]iriiitio!i of Funds," starts oil interestingly enough, with ii spiicey keyboard line thiit is ciuickly joined by il franticiilly strummed guitar iind Jones's soli x'oi ills. It soon enipls into il chorus of ringing guitars and duiil x'ociils, sounding iilmost like a Midwestern Coldpkiy. 'Fhe song continues in a quiet-loud-quiel piittern for the rest of its duration, cliiiiiixing at the end xxidi almost cacophonous guitars before abmpdy stopping. As it ends, something mystiMious hiippens. \'ou, the listener, forgel exeiy thing iibout the song. Not one clexer lyric, not one guitiir melody, not one drum bciit slicks xvitii you once it's oxer llic next song, "F.mpires," oilers a little more. .\n iilmost biinjo-sounding guitar line kicks things olf xxith Joiiessooiuri Mining oxer il. Fhe song progresses in a iNiiiciil x'crse-choru.sxerse niiinnei; propelled bv ii wonderful bridge iis pounding drums diixe il simple guitar line xxitli bciiuliful keylioiird swells beliire crashing biick down into the chorus. 'Fhisportion is too short, hoxxcxer, iuid )et iigiiin one Iciixes the song fi'eling i-nipty. 1 could continue xxitli the iilbum liiick by tiiuk, but the xxhole thing sadly falls into the piittern set by these txvo songs. All the following tiiicks offer pleasiinl xet liirgettiibli' guilar lines, soolhing yel bkind x'o- cals, and far-too-sparse keyboards. Fhis xvould iill be forgix'able if the band oflered .some .sort of change along the way, but most of the songs just sound the same—same tempo, same structures, same genenil sound. 'Fhe only niiijor change on the album is found in the epic track "Echolalia." Fhis nine-minute n u m b e r shoxvs the biind really reaching their full potential. A .sloxv build of keyboiirds ;ind soli guitars start tilings out, soon triiiisl()rming inlo il droningxxall of sound. Filings stop suddenly before a genuinely ciilchy iind liouncy xerse portion kicks in. Fhe song hiis an energ)' lo it thill the band cannot seem to find on any other tnick, and xxilh it comes an earnestness that niiikes il feel like they iire actuiilly alixe. Fhis song sliinds in stark contrast to the slci-p-inducing inicks preceding il iuid shows a Ion of potential thiil lluy unlorluniilely could nol iiitiiin elsexx'here on the iilbum. .Mander Salis conies lo a close xvilh the c|uiil iind calm number "Fhe Fields of lus," ii mostly atoustic number. While the vocals are quite pretty, shoxvingjones as xeiy xulnerable and iilmost Elliott Smith-like, the rest of the band can't match up. Fhe result is a siippy and predictable ballad, and die forced string arrangements manage to rip off Radiohead without being interesting in the Iciist liit. It seems lilting thill such a 1 loiiiig song xxould close an eqiiiilly boring iilbum. Fhe Siiiike, the Cross, the CroxxTi shoxv p r o m i s e , they really do. Kexin Jones' xocids iir(> doxvnright beiiuliful ill times, iUul the biincFs M i d XV e s t e r n sound could reidly set them iipiiil in the future. Hut with lluir debut, the b a n d gels Ciiughl in the imp of n'petition iind HHIP*" cliche. 'Fhis xvouldn't be too bad if Uie idbiini hiid something memorable about it, bul die band simply fails iit projecting any sort of energy. The finid product is a nidier inoffensixe and boring record that I cannot iniiigine ever listening to again. Sports April29,2005 Page 9 Women's lacrosse ends 2005 vs. Lehigh, Columbia National Championship in 1980. T h e mark of 14 losses is the most in school history. T h e Patriot League T o u r n a ment will commence this weekend and will include the league's top four teams. Colgate xvill host the tournament and xvill play fourth p l a c e L e h i g h in t h e o p e n i n g round. Holy Cross and American will face-ofi' in the second matchup. The Championship game will be played on Sunday at 1 p.m. Colgate won the 2004 Patriot League Championship, only to fall lo Princeton in the first round of the NC-AAs. American won the league championship in 2003. Lafayette has won ten of the Iciigue's 14 championships. T h e Leopards last won the league title in 2002. BY J A C K I E F I T Z G E R A L D AND J O H N R A Y M O N D T he Lafayette Women's Lacrosse Team closed out Patriot L e a g u e a c t i o n this p a s t Saturday against archrival Lehigh xvith a 17-7 defeat on a dreary Saturday afternoon at Metzgar Fields. T h e Leopards (1-14, 06) started oul strong by keeping the game close. Lafayette cut the M o u n t a i n Hawks' lead in half, 2-1, with a goal by S a m a n t h a Ziegler '06 five minutes into the game. Soon afterwards, though, Lehigh took control of the game by scoring the next eight goals to end the first half with a 10-1 lead. T h e first t h r e e goals of the contest were scored in the first four m i n u t e s of the first half. About 2:30 into the game, Barrie Cominsky tallied her first goal in xvhat proved to be a four-goal performance. Cominsky would strike the back of the cage on two other occasions for a first half hat trick for 33 goals in 2005. Amy C h a m berlain, Lehigh's most prolific scorer, boosted Lehigh's margin lo a 2-0 lead just a minute later. Chamberlain would top Cominsky's performance by scoring six goals in the game. She presently leads Lehigh with 47 goals. Ziegler struck 40 seconds following C h a m b e r l a i n ' s goal to bring the Leopards to within one goal. However, the scoreboard became lopsided in favor of the Mountain Hawks as the first half progressed. Cominsky scored three goals in an 8-0 Lehigh run to close out the first half with a 10-1 advantage. T h e Leopards valiantly struck back in the second half Valerie PHOTO BY K F . V I N BARRX Farrell Sharkey '06 looks to intercept an attacking Columbia player during Wednesday's 18-10 loss at Rappolt Field. The game was the Leopards' last contest of 2005. Simone '07, who had had a career day by recording her first multi-point game, scored a quick goal ten seconds after the start of play to bring the score to 10-2. However, just eight seconds later. Chamberlain reasserted Lehigh's dominance by netting her 44th goal of the season. Patriot League Rookie of the Week Madalyn Booth '08, who led the Leopards with a careerhigh five points, scored a minute later for the second Leopards' goal in 1:10. She collected three assists and recorded two goals during the contest. Lehigh went on a 4-0 run in the middle of the second half to further increase its lead. C h a m berlain and Elaine K i n g each scored two goals to give Lehigh a commanding 15-3 lead. However, the Leopards would outscore Lehigh the rest of the g a m e . Kaleigh M o u n t a i n '06, Ashley Dvorak '05, Booth, and Simone each tallied scores to conclude the Leopards' scoring. Lafayette was out-shot by the Mountain Hawks 34-17. T h e Leopards closed their season on Wednesday in a home loss against Columbia (7-8), 18-10. With the Lions leading 1-0 in the first minute of play, Dvorak knotted the score 1-1 in what proved to be the closest the Leopards would come to taking a lead. Columbia scored six unanswered goals, with Elysee Pultz garnering two tallies en route to a six-goal performance. It was the second consecutive game in which an opposing player scored six goals against the Leopards. Towards the end of the half, Lafayette began chipping away at Columbia's 7-1 lead. Simone, M o u n t a i n , and Lindsay Buiera '07 each scored to bring Lafayette to xvithin three strikes of lying the game. F a c i n g an 8-4 deficit after halftime. Mountain brought the L e o p a r d s to within t h r e e j u s t under a minute after play commenced, as she scored her 12tli goal of the season. O n c e more, though, Columbia went on a devastating 4-0 goal-scoring streak to increase its lead to 12-5. With the score 15-9 in favor of Columbia, BrittanyJes.ser '07 netted her first collegiate career goal to narrow the Lions' advantage to five. However, it would be the closest margin lhal the Leopards would sustain as Columbia reeled off three unanswered goals wilh u n d e r two minutes to play in regulation. Butera, Mountain, and Diana Crai '07 each led the Leopards in scoring xvilh txvo goals. T h e loss to Columbia concluded the worst season in Lafayette Wonien's Lacrosse history. T h e Leopards tied the school-record loxv of just one victory matched by the 1981 squad, xvhich went 1-9-1 following a Division II the 51st (dream) state J" --— - a.k*a. The America Project Electrifying urban performance poet Sekou Sundiata's work-in-progress "dramatorio" is a contemplation of America's national identity, of its power in the world, and of its guiding mythologies. Sundiata and a group of Lafayette students have created an original cycle of songs, poems, and monoh)gues with visual sequences and a live musical ensemble. Friday-Saturday, April 29-30, 8:00 p.m. Williams Center for the Arts (610) 330-5009 student tickets $2 • staff/faculty $4 Dystonia charity a success ~ conlinuedfrom page 12 overall success. Pepsi provided a plentiful selection of beverages throughout the day, and Papa John's delivered a large number of pizzas to feed everyone participating in the event. The Lafayette Basketball family would like to thank these two sponsors for their support in this event. Music was also p r o v i d e d throughout the day by DJ Elliott Broadnax, an assistant for the men's basketball team. As far as continuing this event in the future, Dawson was very optimistic. "Both coaching staffs werc xery happy xvitii the level of participation that we saw from the students here at Lafayette," he said. "It xvas a fun exent for iill, ;ind xve would like to make this iin iiiiiuial exent to helj) fund research lo Iind a i urc for this disciise." Fo help Brogiin in his light, xisit the Dystonia Medical Resciirch F o u n d a t i o n w e b s i t e at xvxvxx. d y s t o n i a - fo 1111 d a t i o 11. o rg. To make a donation through L a f a y e t t e b a s k e l h a l l , phrase send a check made payable to the Dystonia .Mediciil R e s e a r c h F o u n d a t i o n , to Cindy Walleisa, Lafiiyelle B a s k e t b a l l Office. Kirby S | ) o r t s C e n i e r , E i i s t o n P.\ I 8 0 4 2 , o r t h r o u g h c ii m ])us mail to 120 Kirbx- Sports Center. SPORTS.'! Live it. Eat it. Breathe if. Write it!! Meetings Farinon 105. Mondays. 9p.m. Page 10 La favcttc Sports April 29, 2005 SojBtball^s two stellar Baseball team strings together five wins close '05 season straight losses to Bucknell, Rutgers JOHN RAYMOND BY J O H N Ithough il may lax'e been a difficult sciison in terms of aniiissing games in the xvin column, the Lafayette Softball Team finished its 2005 campiUgn in the best possible niiinner: txx'o coiis(X'iitive xictories. Pitching wa.s an iiivaluiiblc ally for the L e o p a r d s as b o t h starting pitchers went the distance in their respectix'c games on 'Fuesday. Megan Ax'crbuch '07 and Lauren Bcloxvich '06 had outstanding peribrniimces Fii.K i>Ho'io BX- KEVIN BARRY that limited Fairleigh Pitching was an intangible asset for the Dickinson Universtity Leopards' last two wins, (10-22) to five runs on while fanning ten batters and issuing the afternoon. Averno walks. buch surrendered five runs in an eight-inning xictory, while Belowich Tactical base running and clutch pitched a shutout in a 1-0 win. hitting scored the only run needed However, both players werc un- for the win. In the second inning, able to secure wins solely through Ellis singled to start the Leopards' their effotls. Eicing a 5-4 deficit in rally before Kristen Ruckno '08 the top of the eighth, Michelle Ellis dropped a sacrifice bunt that moved '07 bounced a hit over the third base- Ellis to second. In the next at bat,Jill man that drove in winning runs Amy Masterton '07 doubled into center Levinson '05 and Samantha Lucas field to drive in Ellis for the RBI. '05. Both runners were able to make FT)U threatened in the sixth by it into scoring position following an advancing a ba.se runner to third, error by the FDU second baseman. but Belowich forced a ground out Averbuch garnered nine strikeouts to Masterton to end the inning. and surrendered nine hits lo earn the Lafayette (11 -34,3-15) will return victory. the core of its lineup next spring. Game txvo proved to be a pitcher's Only three pliiyers, Levinson, Lucius, duel as bodi teams combined for nine and Jackie Fitzgerald, will be lost to hits. Belowich surrendered three hits graduation in May. A! T he Lafayette Baseball l e a m seems as if it cannot find a consistent rhythm. Afler winning six of sexen games the past txvo weeks, the Leopards (15-24, 3-9) haxe dropped five straight contests, including four-straight to league foe Bucknell (14-23, 8-8) this past xveekend. T h e L e o p ards continued their inconsistent streak by dropping a home contest Wednesday to Rutgers 17-1. T h e Leopards scored the first run of the game on Wednesday before the Scarlet Knights (22-16) exploded for 1 7 unanswered runs. Frank C o r t a z a r '07 p r o d u c e d the only Lafayette run of the afternoon by driving in classmate Mike Raible in the bottom of the second inning. Rutgers opened the flood gates in the top of the third inning and went on a seven-run scoring assault. Although the Leopards had two outs in the top of the inning, the team was unable to secure the last out, xvhich alloxved the Scarlet Knights to bat around the entire order. With the score 7-1 in the bottom of the fifth inning, the Leopards missed an opportunity to dent Rutgers' comfortable lead. Lafayette was unable to produce runs with one out and the bases loaded as pitcher Jim Jansen was able to get the next two outs of the inning. Jansen forced Ian Law '07 to pop out to second base, while Kyle Leasure '07 grounded to shortstop Todd Fraizer to force Rob Fioretti '05 out at second base. Rutgers dominated the remaining four innings as the Leopards were unable to call upon their b u l l p e n to stop the bleeding. Jason Morytko '08 surrendered five runs on five hits in Vwe at bats while garnering no outs, and Kevin Reese '08 surrendered one run in txvo innings of work. Doug Lunau '08 finished the game for the Leopards on the mound by gixing up two runs on three hits. T h e Leopards d r o p p e d four games this past weekend at Bucknell, which d r o p p e d Lafayette into a last place tie in the league with Holy Cross. Despite nailing ten hits compared to Bucknell's 1 1 hits, the Bison won the first game of the series 8-1. Although the second game only lasted fix'c and a half innings due to rain, Bucknell xvas given the victory by holding a close 4-3 lead. Lafiiyette held a 3-2 advantage in the bottom of the fourth inning before Matt Capece drove in two Bison runners for a 4-3 lead. Designated hitter J a m e s Conrad '07 had a solid weekend by going five for seven at the plate NBA aUrStar Yaoffven Model Worker award S H A N G H A I , China (AP) It's official: Houston Rockets center Yao Ming is a "model worker." C o m m u n i s t China's cabinet, the State Council, axvarded the honor to both Yiio and Olympic gold medal hurdler Liu Xiang, Z h a o J i a x i o n g , spokesman for Shanghai's Office for Choosing Model Workers said Wednesday. 'Fhe model worker nominations of Yao and Liu, a gold medalist in the men's 110-meter hurdles at Athens, had sparked criticism among some Chinese who argued the avxard was meant to honor ordinary workers, not sports stars. Yao described the honor, usually given lo workers in m o r e proletarian fields like industry, m i n i n g and public services, as "one more honor and encouragement from .society," Xinhua News Agency r e p o r t e d , citing Yao's agent Z h a n g Chi. "But compared to the contributions other xvinners had made to the motherland, there is still large room for me to improve," Xinhua quoted Yao as saying. For decades, the model worker iiward has been turning unknown miners, teachers, or factory workers into celebrities in the state media. Yao b e c a m e one of C h i n a ' s biggest sports heroes after joining the National Basketball Association in 2002 as the N u m b e r 1 draft pick. He won prai.se back home by returning during the NBA offseason to pliiy with the national team. Yao alrciidy has twice receixed a local version of the axvard from Shanghai. He also is an ofTicial spokesman for promoting the city. RAYMOND r i l O K I I'.'I l \ l \ l \ BXRRX John Fugett '07 hurls the ball toward home plate in Wednesday's 17-1 loss to Big East team Rutgers. Fugett worked 3.1 innings. on Saturday. Another outstanding batting effort by a Leopard went for naught as Bucknell xvon the first game of Sunday's doubleheader 3-0. Raible went three-for-three at the plate, but Lafayette xvas unable to rally around his singles and drive in a run. Neither the Leopards nor the Bison xx'ere able to muster an extra-base hit, but the Bison were able to take advantage of wild pitches, walks, and singles at key moments to seal the 3-0 victory. In game two, the Leopards were unable to surpass the Bison after tying the game 2-2 in the fifth inning. With Bucknell leading 2-0, Conrad and Fioretti each singled to drove in Cortazar and Dave Drechsel '07, respectively, to knot the game at two. However, Lafayette was could not grab the lead as Bucknell rallied for five runs in the sex'cnth inning. Four Bison singles each drox^e in runners that increiised the lead to 7-2. Lafayette will return to action this w e e k e n d by h o s t i n g two doubleheaders against archrival L e h i g h ( 2 3 - 1 6 - 1 , 1 1-5). T h e M o u n t a i n Hawks are second in the Patriot L e a g u e behinci Army. Following the Lehigh series, the Leopards will face Holy Cross the weekend of May 6. T h e fmal eight games on the schedule will be critical in d e t e r m i n i n g the final playoff spots of the league playoffs. Only the top four teams qualify for the postseason. T h e Patriot League Tournament will commence the weekend of May 14 at the home of the highest seed. Army won the tournament last season by defeating Lafayette in the title game. Patriot League Lacrosse Standings 2005 Navy Men PL Overall 5-1 9-3 Women PL (Dverall Colgate 6-0 11-5 9-8 Army 5-1 10-3 Holy Cross 4-2 Bucknell 5-1 8-4 American 4-2 6-10 Lehigh 3-3 9-4 Lehigh 3-3 7-9 Colgate 1-5 7-7 Bucknell 2-4 4-12 Holy Cross 1-5 3-10 Villanova 2-4 2-12 Lafayette 2-11 Lafayette 0-6 1-14 1-5 2nd Annual EWB 5K Run Sunday May 1st — 1pm Gilberts $10 Entry Fee Includes T-shirt! Sign-t^ in Farinon or the Day of the Race! Free Food and Lots of Prizes to Win! Come Out and Help us Help Those in Need! Sports April 29, 2005 Page 11 * Pards equestrian riders gain Leopards^ surge unr^onal bids, will vie for *06 title able to hold Hawks ~ conlinuedfrom page 12 Aside from q u a l i f y i n g five ing that we could do all that points, while first place Bucknell riders for regionals, Lafayelte xvork and still be able to perform garnered 296 points. Adding to achieved a few 'firsts' during the at the highest level possible." the excitement of a stellar season 2004-2005 campaign. Lafayette's riders knew that was Lafayette placing five points O n F e b r u a r y 2 7, the t e a m this was going to be a special ahead of Princeton in the final hosted its first and only meet of season folloxving the September standings. The Tigers had proved the season at Briarwood in Read- 25 H u n t e r Seat season o p e n e r IO be one of the fiercest com- ington, Ncwjersey. at East Stroudsburg University. petitors throughout the season. Additionally, the Leopards won Aside from being the firsl compeLafayette also finished 14 points firsl place at the meet, the first tition of the season, Lafayetle had ahead of Lehigh. lime that any Lafayette team has to overcome poor event organiza" T h e only team xve did not xvon a meet. Four riders captured tion, Lehigh exent protests, and beat, Bucknell, h a p p e n s to be lirst place in lixe events, xvhich ac- rider disqualifications to finish (hanging regions," said Githens. counted for the greatest number second overall xvith 27 points. "We haxe a really good Bucknell xvon the exent chance to be first next ye'ar. with 39 points, bul LafayThe only team we did not beat, Buck- elte bested Lehigh b)- one f h e r e is n o b o d y in t h e nell, happens to be changing regions. point and defending sealeague coming back that xve did not beal this season." We have a really good chance to be first son c h a m p i o n Kutztoxvn Five L e o p a r d r i d e r s Unix'ersity by five points. next year. qualified for the regional - Erin Githens '06 First place performances by ( ompetition in early April. „_„^ Githens, Mierxaldis, Macri, Team captain Nicole PresDeidre Maher '08, and Emliano '05, Githens, Katie Mier- of first place riders in the spring ily Cholak '08 helped propel the xaldis '07, Allison Ligorano '06, semester. leam to its best showing in its iind Marianna Macri '06 qualiLigorano was first in Interme- short two-year history. fied in their respective events. "We w a n t e d to do well this diate Flats and Novice fences, Githens was third in the open while Githens captured first in year," said C h o l a k , " a n d the fence e v e n t , a n d M i e r v a l d i s Open Fences. rough start at the ESU eompeliplaced eighth in novice fences. Sarah Filone '08 was first in tion got us even more determined Presriano competed in the ad- the Advanced W T C , and Lindsay to succeed this season." xanced walk trot cantor, but did Dennis '07 was first in the Walk T h e 2 0 0 5 - 2 0 0 6 season will not place. Both L i g o r a n o a n d - I'rot event. begin Saturday, September 24, Macri did not compete at region"I don'l knoxv that hosting the xvitii a competition sponsored by als, although they had qualified competition really impacted us East Stroudsburg University. in Reserved High Point R i d e r lhal much except that we had Two weekends later, the Leopa n d a d v a n c e d w a l k - t r o t - c a n - more to do than a normal day ards will once again host a comtor, respeclively. Ligorano was at the show," said Emily Cholak petition. T h e schedule will mirror injured and unable to compete, '08. "It made things more hectic last season's schedule, except for and Macri is studying abroad in for the team because we had a an added competition hosted by lot of jobs to do. It was surpris- Susquehanna on October 22. 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' Sl.i«»>, tt.,1.1 V »tt,J.«». \^f,T ;,-.(.. . » ! *»(**• J.^.,V,.4,.«!.„r,<.„..!a»w. i*v( hr.««.,K-./l<:j^ri 1 .li..:iCi.>i ".(ul , .-,.,> ^ ; „ . . * , v .vv.x.-^. ..,-,.....,„ ^^..^...,,.WK>.» \(^>iV^'***-l»«ij<v\J - i Vt.jl,1' • l i x J . h v x w i i J n J i - , « u . « K i h i . ( < v v « ' j« 4*i> iai^ u.ti>)LHtt}» «>v>. V )siwvvxi^> int^tt^V'«)( '•• wr" vi'tf)>« .. »^ .*\%.t U*i.^.t U-««:f»S -..f»l«Ml. tf^ttv xMh^^ ^ *«M(» ^it.-f *Utl rf «b«s-Ur UWtttr>L«(-t(> ff KXl • U WKr\«4:T tNSta M .|l>^><f>.^l!:>ll>.">:- • «r^ ,<tKi t%-nKl»l» 1) hti.i t>v i 1 s Kfkhr AM V%M\ r.1).: f>xtiik-tt.ai 1.4 X - U i t v . v M l l . l ,<i,j:.i l « » i i i .iftvixij» Hi • : > , . , S i UivVljU- 1 i»fciUl>J SclMvWx. ( I < \ l ! l l y l i t . | . « . ' ! \ t J ( i s \«ii«i< V»^>.«.•> i*d**\*».*.*rf<.rfh,,:».ak; i «Alrt«t: .Si3M,.».H. i J f MHtNWiKk-lx , . ~ conlinuedfrom page 12 the l a s t - s e c o n d scoring dagger to h e a r t , as the squad outseored Lehigh .''i-l oxer t h e n e x t txvo cpiarters. T h r e e minutes ft)ll<>\ving Moran's goal. Leo Stinson 'Oti punched the ball into the cage for his fifth goal of the season and a two-goal deficit. Although Lehigh HI 1. HH<yro BX" G R H ; D.xxis scored less than Mitdfleider Ancjrew Horton '08 sprints upfielcj a minute later to with the ball vs. Marist. build a 5-2 lead, the Leopards reto boost Lehigh's lead to 8-6. Alee sponded in an aggressive fashion HooiT concluded the Lehigh .scorby scoring four unanswered goals. ing blitz, xvith 2:25 lo play lo all bul Over a span of a quarter and a end the Leopards" playoil hopes. half, Mike Scolaro '06, Sean Burek B u r e k gave Lafayette a lasl '08, and two goals by Paulson gaxe breath of hope by scoring his sevLafayette a 6-5 lead heading into enth goal xvith 1:09 remaining in the fourth stanza. the game. But time expired shortly "We xvere all pumped up coming thereafter and ended any Leopard into the Lehigh game, especially thoughts of a scoring surge. after the Colgate win," said PaulP a u l s o n finished the season son, who finished the season xvitii a leading the team in scoring xvith four-game hat trick scoring streak. 19 goals and 21 points, xvliile Bart "We were ready to go at game Seifcrt '07 xvas second with 1 1 time. Even though Lehigh xvas up, goals and 18 points. The Leopards we knew what we had lo do to get (2-11, 1-5) finished the season in a back into the game." threc-xvay Ue for fifth and lasl place 7'he Leoparcls controlled olher wilh Holy Cross and Colgate. portions of play aside from scoring Despite only two xvins in 2005, in the middle quarters. T h e Leop- Paulson is very optimistic in reards out-shot the Mountain Hawks gards to the future of the team. 27-21 and won 12 of 20 face-ofts. The core of the team xvill be reHowever, Lehigh would win the turning next season since only two statistical battle in the category players Matt Lukof and Michael that counted most - goals scored. Koch will be lost to graduation T h e Lehigh tempest erupted in May. in the fourth quarter. Just over a "Wc are playing againsl some minute into the quarter, Morin of the best competition in the buried a shot in the back of the country," said Paulson. "My hope cage for his second of the game to is that we xvill be a more mature tie the score 6-6. Five minutes later, team nexl season. It's hard xvork, Lehigh continued its attack. David no matter whom you are playing Walsh scored his 16tli goal of the against. You have to want il more season for the third lead change than the other team. T h e Lehigh of the game and second Lehigh game could have went either xvay, lead. At 6:07, the Mountain Hawks but we learned this year you haxe started to build a small scoreboard to work for everything, and you cushion. Morin netted a hat trick hax'e to keep wanting to win." Leopard Standings Overall 15-24 Conference 3-9 Men^s Lacrosse 2-11 1-5 Women's Lacrosse 1-14 0-6 SoftbaU 11-34 3-15 Men's Tennis 14-10 0-6 9-9 1-4 BasebaU Wonien's Tennis Golf 3rd of 4 at M o n m o u t h Quad April 29, i0(>5 Home Game Dates Baseball vs. Lelii^^ 4/30 12 p.m., .3:15 jxm. TVack & ¥w\d the Lafavette Softball spotting Baseball xs. leliigh 5 / 1 1 2 p.m., 3:15 p.m. Volume 131 Number 25 Baseball I Lacrosse Lafayette College Leliigh bounces men^s lacrosse Basketball teams* from Patriot League playofFhunt charity tournament a huge success H^ JOHN RAYMOND H\ KERRY KENNY D espite s t r u g g l i n g in t h e win c o l u m n this s e a s o n , t h e L a fayette M e n ' s Lacrosse 'Feam xvas only o n e xictory axvay from c a p t u r i n g its first-exer P a t r i o t L e a g u e T o u r n a m e n t bid. However, one t e a m stood in the L e o p a r d s ' p a t h to achicxing a b r e a k t h r o u g h season xvitii a p r e d o m i n a n t l y s o p h o m o r e a n d f r e s h m a n scpiad: L e h i g h . In a n o t h e r e p i c b a t t l e betxveen t h e L e o p a r d s a n d M o u n t a i n Haxvks, both teams held a fanatic cont i n g e n c y o f 5 0 0 s p e c t a t o r s in suspense t h r o u g h o u t t h e g a m e last Saturday. In t h e final m i n u t e s of t h e third ciuarter, i h o u g h , Lehigh t o o k c o n t r o l of t h e c o n t e s t for a h a r d - f o u g h t 9-7 xvin. ' F h e xictory gaxe Lehigh a l e a g u e playoff b e r t h , while a L e o p a r d s ' loss closed Lafayette's 2 0 0 5 c a m p a i g n . F h e L e o p a r d s f o u g h t from a 4-1 deficit in the first q u a r t e r to g r a b a 6-5 lead at t h e start of t h e fourth cpiarter. Hovvex'cr, a persistent t h e m e soon e m e r g e d t h a t has p l a g u e d t h e L e o p a r d s this season. .As in sexeral earlier g a m e s , Lafaxelle was unalile to h o l d t h e lead a n d secure a xvin. Lehigh reeled olf lour straight goals in the fourth q u a r t e r to liuild a 9-6 lead lo e n d T i ML riK M( I V,\ \.\ I W 1'|SIII!I,I\ Sean Burek '07 searches for an open attacker vs. Marist the L e o p a r d s ' playolf hojies. " L e h i g h h a s a xery g o o d t e a m , a n d c o m i n g off the C o l g a t e xvin. we knexv xxe c o u l d xvin," said J o n P a u l s o n ' 0 8 . " W e hax'c a g o o d d e i e n s e , a n d we h a v e h e l d a lot of g o o d t e a m s to fewer goals t h a n they w e r e c a p a b l e of s c o r i n g d u r i n g t h e s e a s o n . O u r offense has b e e n a b l e t o p u t t h e ball in the cage. I t h i n k that w e held L(4iigli as best as xve c o u l d . " L e h i g h did n o l possess a slioriage of explosive scorers. .Andrew L u c a s p u t Lehigli o n t h e Iioard firsl after s c o r i n g his 32iid g o a l of the season jusl oxer a m i n u t e into the contest. 'Fhe M o u n t a i n Haxvks a d d e d a n o t h e r before Paulson n o t c h e d t h e lirst Li-ojiards' goal xvith 4:15 to play in the firsl c|iiarier. Hoxx'cxcr, I x h i g h " s p o t e n t olfense struck o n c e a g a i n a b o u t a niinule later when G r e g M o r i n n e t t e d his 24tli goal of the season for a .S-1 e d g e . F h e M o u n t a i n Haxvks xvere n o t d o n e , t h o u g h , as M i k e M o r a n a d d e d a goal xvitii four s e c o n d s to play in; t h e lirst c|iiartcr. A p p a r e n t l y , the L e o p a r d s took ~ continued on page 11 Equestrian team leaps to second in second season; coacli honored i5\ JOHN RAYMOND I t is n o t u n u s u a l for a n e w ly f o r m e d t e a m l o s t r u g g l e i h r o u g h its first sexeral s e a s o n s . W i l h a' iic\\ u-ain c o m e s a s u b s t a n t i a l l e a r n i n g c u r v e for its m e m b e r s . Hoxvexcr, t h e Lafayette College Ecjuestrian C l u b has s u r p a s s e d all e x p e c t a t i o n s in its s e c o n d s e a s o n of c o m p e t i t i o n by c a p t u r i n g s e c o n d p l a c e in R e g i o n 4 al t h e r e g i o n a l c o m p e t i t i o n in R e a d i n g t o n , .\exv J e r s e y in earix' .Ajiril. F h e s q u a d ' s u n s u s j i e e l e d rise lo r e g i o n a l p r o m i n e n c e h a s not g o n e i i n n o t i t e d , t h o u g h , as H c i i d ( i u a c l i H e a t h e r C l a i k w a s axvarded Z o n e 3, R e g i o n 4 C o a c h of t h e Year h o n o r s . F h e c o a c h ' s d e d i c a t i o n of time to help i m p r o x e Lafayelte's r i d e r s h e l p e d p r o p e l t h e t e a m to t h e t o p of t h e region. ".\ lot of o u r i n i p r o x c n i c i i t has to d o xvitii p r a c t i c e s , " said l e a m vice p r e s i d e n t E r i n G i t h e n s ' 0 6 . "We spend about an h o u r a week in o n e - o n - o n e lessons xvitii c o a c h . 1 t h i n k t h a t h e r e x p e r i e n c e as a t r a i n e r h a s h e l p e d us b e c o m e a beller team." In its first s e m e s t e r of c o m p e tition a f l e r a t e n - y e a r h i a t u s as a c l u b , L a f a y e t t e d i d not h a x e a c o a c h a n d xvas r a n k e d sexi-nlh out of 13 t e a m s h e a d i n g i n t o t h e s p r i n g o f 2 0 0 4 . O n c e C l a r k joincfl ihe Lafayette staff, the Icaiifs p e i - f o r n i a n c e rose dramatically. C l a r k h a d b e e n Ciithens' p e r s o n a l c o a c h lieforc shc e n t e r e d Lafayette. .M'tcr o n e s e m e s t e r xvithout a c o a c h , Clark x'olunteered her time a n d nientorcd the team. Fhe team h a d six r i d e r s lasl year, but xvith t h e a d d i l i o n of a c o a c h , t h e t e a m xvas a b l e to e x p a n d to 14 r i d e r s . In t h e fall of 2 0 0 4 , t h e s q u a d fiualified five r i d e r s for r e g i o n a l s by f i n i s h i n g first in i n d i v i d u a l e x e n l s at d i l f e r e n t m e e t s . .As a t e a m , Lafaxetie p l a c e d s e c o n d in t h r e e of lixe m e e t s . F h e s p r i n g s e a s o n s p e l l e d ex'cn m o r e s u c cess, as t h e L e o j i a r d s finished t h e 2 0 0 4 - 2 0 0 5 s e a s o n s e c o n d overall in t h e Z o n e 3 , R e g i o n 4 s t a n d ings. L a f a y e l t e a n u m u l a t e d 2 4 3 - cinilinned on page 11 Lafayette Leopards Men's Golf 3 of 4-Monmouth Quad Match Softball at Bucknell L 8-0, L 12-8 Softball vs. FDU W 6-5 (8), W 1-0 Baseball at Bucknell L 8-1, L 5-3 (5) Baseball at Bucknell L 3-0, L 7-2 Baseball vs. Rutgers L 17-1 he g a m e of basketball is o n e markixl bx [lersexeraiicc a n d releiillcssness. In o r d e r to light through the symptoms broughi on bx' a disease, ihc^se sain(> r|u.ililies must hold sieadlasl a n d true. W h e n tiiese iwo facets of life c a m e togi^thcr this past S a t u r d a y afiern o o n in K a m i n e G y m n a s i u m , il was no surprise to anyone that these characteristics were on dis]ilay in the lirst annual Lalaxcite Basketball Charity Fhrce-on-'Fliree tournam e n t . F h e t o u r n a m e n t was h e l d in o r d e r to benefit t h e D)st()iiia M e d i c a l Research F o u n d a i i o n . Vhe Lafayette^ Basketball p r o g r a m aiifl its supporters ( a m e into c o n t a c t xvith dystonia xvhen f o r m e r M e n ' s A s s i s t a n t "~^|^*-»~-''*~*^~»'"—^^ C o a c ll Pat Bro- m o n e y for r e s e a r c h is greatly a p preciated. F h e cxciit xxas o r g a n i z e d by the Lafayetle M e n ' s a n d Wonien's Basketball Feams w h o dccick'd to gix'e the proceeds lo cUi organization that hil c!os(^ to h o m e . O ' H a n l o n is a firm adxocate of leaxing things b e l t e r t h a n you found i h e m a n d gixing back to the (•ommunily \vith exents such as this a r e a x\av in which that can b e a c c o m p l i s h e d , C u r r e n t .MIMI'S . \ s s i s l a n i C o a c h Drew Dawson, a kex ( u g a i i i z e r o f the e \ « n i . said ih.ii the decision to donate the proceeds to the Dystonia Medical Research Foundation was not a dillicult ilioice. " F h e r e is nol a b e t t e r recipient of the m o n e y that we raised t h a n Pat Brogaii," said Daxvson. " H e cjiiioniizes the xxork ethic a n d characler thai the Lalaxclie Baskelliall p r o g i a n i looks for in its players." V h e e There is not a better recipient or the money that we raised than Pat Brogan. He opitimizes the work ethic and character that the Lafayette Basketball program looks for in its players. - Dreiv Dawson '03 gan was d i a g 11 o s c cl xvilh t h e cl i s e a s i: following a h i t - a n d - r u n a u t o m o b i l e aci idem in 2 0 0 1 . B r o g a n . xxho spent liglii seasons as an assistant u n d e r H e a d C o a c h Fran O ' H a n l o n before IcaxingfoUoxxingthe 2001-2002 season, has since moxed on to lie an assisl a n t coach at lioth Penn State a n d Cicorgia l e c h , a n d most recently was the h e a d coach at Famaciua H i g h School. Brogaii xxas in att e n d a n c e o n S a t u r d a y a n d gax-c his t h a n k s a n d be.st wishes to all xvho c o n t r i b u t e d to a n d partic ijiated in t h e ex'ciit. Dystonia is a neurological m o x e m e n t d i s o r d e r t h a t affects o x e r 3 0 0 , 0 0 0 p e o p l e in N o r t h A m e r i c a a l o n e . As B r o g a n s t a t e d before llie ex'cnt b e g a n on S a l u r d a x , his d y s t o n i a xvas b r o u g h t o n t h r o u g h t r a u m a t h a t he suffered d u r i n g his a c c i d e n l in 2 0 0 1 . Fhe disease causes uncontrolled muscle cont r a c d o n s , w h i c h c a n aflect any p a r t of t h e body. T h e s e c o n t r a i t i o n s interfere xvith e x e r y d a y functions. D y s t o n i a is n o t a fatal d i s e a s e , b u t as B r o g a n said, t h e r e is slill n o c u r e , so a n y event that raises X' {• 11 t itself raised 0 X' e r •S 1 , 0 0 0 , xx h i c h x\ a s i 11 1a r g e p a r t clue to the m o r e t h a n 30 t e a m s that participaicd. E a c h t e a m of tliriHor four players d o n a t e d J?2() to the c a u s e a n d xvas g u a r a n t e e d t h r e e g a m e s in the t o i i r n a i n e n i . Fhe rest of the m o n e y c a m e from d o n o r s in the M a r o o n Chili a n d the Friends of Lafayette B a s k e t b a l l . Fhere were three dixdsions of competitkm, a n d each o n e produci-d an oxerall winner. In the xxonKii's division, Sigma N u < a n i c u p xxith the title, xxliile ilu' Pain Fraiii was the w i n n e r in the IIKMI'S recreational dixision. In the iiKMi'scompentixc dixision, Firsl F l o o r M c K e e n sc|ucaked by t h e Fhree W i s c m e n in the c h a m p i o n ship g a m e . M e n i l i e r s o l First Floor M c K e e n i n c l u d e d M a t t Betley ' 0 8 , Kyle R o e d e r ' 0 8 , M i k e D i P a o l a ' 0 8 , and Chuck O ' M a r a '08. C u r r e n l a n d jiast m e m b e r s of the Lafayette m e n ' s a n d xvomen's p r o g r a m s , i n c l u d i n g f o r m e r AllL e a g u e s t a n d o u t led C o l e ' 9 9 , c o m b i n e d with o t h e r athletes a n d non-athletes to m a k e this exent a n - continued on page 9 re^Jafcl Men's Lacrosse at Lehigh L 9-7 Women's Lacrosse vs. Lehigh L 17-7 Women's Lacrosse vs. Columbia L 18-10