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The Fairfield Mirror Thursday, January 30, 1997/1 FAIRFIELD UNIVERSITY IRROR Volume 21 Number 11 The Image of Fairfield Thursday, January 30, 1997 In Memoriam: (B^ntkony ©Magliocco Eulogy Sometimes words from one individual can' t quite encompass or capture all that there is to remember. We remember today because it is impossible to for-get. Anthony Magliocco was not only a brother, but also a son, an acquaintance, and most impor-tantly, a friend. Those who are here today are a testament to that fact. Somehow or someway we are different people, better people for having known someone so special, so unique, and so full of life. We are here not to dwell on that which we have lost, but td remember and to embrace ev-erything that Anthony stood for, and that which he believed in. There is no single person, place, institution or convention that better symbolized Anthony than those he was with day to day and night to night. It goes without saying Ant's life and the lives of all his friends are somehow in-terwoven and inseparable. There is no better way for those of us here together today to reflect than to hear it from all those who he chose to be with, those he grew up with, hung out with, and loved being with. To Ant our friend, I like to think I taught my little brother everything he needed to know before kinder-garten, his ABC's, his numbers and how to write his name. From then on he taught me the rest, about love, family, loyalty and friendship. He kept all his friends to-gether. He was someone we all looked up to and thought highly of. He opened his home to all of his friends. He always had a simple explanation to a hard question. I enjoyed cutting his hair be-cause he always had his own Continued on page 3 Fairfield University Junior Anthony Magliocco 6126176-116197 Van Eron, Cipriano win primaries; Pitucco, Fattorini are off the ballot JoAnn Gometz News Editor The milling of people in the Campus Center eased after a tense hour Tuesday night as the Elec-tion Commission called the can-didates for Fairfield University Student Association President into a back room. All but one entered the hallway. Two emerged triumphant. The third, by a slim margin, left in defeat. With the conclusion of the pri-mary election, the student body determined those two students who will go on to the final elec-tion on Tues., Feb. 4. The front-runner, with 355 votes, was Natalie Van Eron, who was barred from Monday's primary debate due to a violation ofcam-paign code last weekend. In a very close race for the second position, Christopher Cipriano took 300 votes, leading Matt Pitucco's 288. Dark-horse can-didate Joe Fattorini garnered a respectable 152 votes, as he ran from outside the FUSA ranks. Cipriano, a double major in Communications and History, hails from Watertown, CT. He said, "I'm running to continue to make a difference at Fairfield. We have proven that anything is possible, and we have a lot more to do." The current FUSA Vice Presi-dent for Student Activities cited the following three points as those that are central to his campaign. *The creation ofaFUSATown Relations Branch including an Emergency Beach Task Force to bring student and town residents of the Beach together in order to work toward a cooperative solu-tion. *The continuation of improve-ments to campus technology and student services by instituting class registration by phone and expanding campus to town shuttles to include a Beach stop. *The continuation of diversi-fied FUSA programming and an Continued on page 4 Inside This Wedc fr ^ Marijuana and its effects on college stu-dents p.6 fr A welcome to the new Uni-versity Librar-ian, James Estrada. p.9 fr JJ A look at your favor-ite Soap p.12 ^ ^\ Women's Basketball continues to soar p.16 ^ JJ
Object Description
Title | Mirror - Vol. 21, No. 11 - January 30, 1997 |
Date | January 30 1997 |
Description | [PLEASE NOTE: the academic year 1996-1997 is for reasons unknown broken up into two separate volumes but contains continuous chronoligical issue numbers. January 30th is that last issue of Volume 21; the rest of the academic year continues with Volume 22. The following academic year (1997-1998) continues with Volume 23. We have not altered these dates in any way as the indexing was not affected.] The Mirror (sometimes called the Fairfield Mirror) is the official student newspaper of Fairfield University, and is published weekly during the academic year (September - May). It runs from 1977 - the present; current issues are available online. |
Notes | A timeline for Fairfield University student newspapers is as follows: The Tentative, Nov. 7, 1947 - Dec. 19, 1947; The Fulcrum, Jan. 9, 1948 - May 20, 1949; The Stag, Sept. 23, 1949 - May 6, 1970; The University Voice, Oct. 1, 1970 - May 11, 1977; The Fairfield Free Press & Review, Sept. 10, 1970 - Apr. 24, 1975; The Fairfield Mirror, Sept. 22, 1977 - present. |
Type of Document | Newspaper |
Original Format | Newsprint; color; ill.; 11.5 x 17 in. |
Digital Specifications | These images exist as archived TIFFs, JPEGs and one or more PDF versions for general use. Digitized by Creekside Digital through the LYRASIS group. |
Publisher | Fairfield University |
Place of Publication | Fairfield, Conn. |
Source | Fairfield University Archives and Special Collections |
Copyright Information | Fairfield University reserves all rights to this resource which is provided here for educational and/or non-commercial purposes only. |
Identifier | MIR19970130 |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
SearchData | The Fairfield Mirror Thursday, January 30, 1997/1 FAIRFIELD UNIVERSITY IRROR Volume 21 Number 11 The Image of Fairfield Thursday, January 30, 1997 In Memoriam: (B^ntkony ©Magliocco Eulogy Sometimes words from one individual can' t quite encompass or capture all that there is to remember. We remember today because it is impossible to for-get. Anthony Magliocco was not only a brother, but also a son, an acquaintance, and most impor-tantly, a friend. Those who are here today are a testament to that fact. Somehow or someway we are different people, better people for having known someone so special, so unique, and so full of life. We are here not to dwell on that which we have lost, but td remember and to embrace ev-erything that Anthony stood for, and that which he believed in. There is no single person, place, institution or convention that better symbolized Anthony than those he was with day to day and night to night. It goes without saying Ant's life and the lives of all his friends are somehow in-terwoven and inseparable. There is no better way for those of us here together today to reflect than to hear it from all those who he chose to be with, those he grew up with, hung out with, and loved being with. To Ant our friend, I like to think I taught my little brother everything he needed to know before kinder-garten, his ABC's, his numbers and how to write his name. From then on he taught me the rest, about love, family, loyalty and friendship. He kept all his friends to-gether. He was someone we all looked up to and thought highly of. He opened his home to all of his friends. He always had a simple explanation to a hard question. I enjoyed cutting his hair be-cause he always had his own Continued on page 3 Fairfield University Junior Anthony Magliocco 6126176-116197 Van Eron, Cipriano win primaries; Pitucco, Fattorini are off the ballot JoAnn Gometz News Editor The milling of people in the Campus Center eased after a tense hour Tuesday night as the Elec-tion Commission called the can-didates for Fairfield University Student Association President into a back room. All but one entered the hallway. Two emerged triumphant. The third, by a slim margin, left in defeat. With the conclusion of the pri-mary election, the student body determined those two students who will go on to the final elec-tion on Tues., Feb. 4. The front-runner, with 355 votes, was Natalie Van Eron, who was barred from Monday's primary debate due to a violation ofcam-paign code last weekend. In a very close race for the second position, Christopher Cipriano took 300 votes, leading Matt Pitucco's 288. Dark-horse can-didate Joe Fattorini garnered a respectable 152 votes, as he ran from outside the FUSA ranks. Cipriano, a double major in Communications and History, hails from Watertown, CT. He said, "I'm running to continue to make a difference at Fairfield. We have proven that anything is possible, and we have a lot more to do." The current FUSA Vice Presi-dent for Student Activities cited the following three points as those that are central to his campaign. *The creation ofaFUSATown Relations Branch including an Emergency Beach Task Force to bring student and town residents of the Beach together in order to work toward a cooperative solu-tion. *The continuation of improve-ments to campus technology and student services by instituting class registration by phone and expanding campus to town shuttles to include a Beach stop. *The continuation of diversi-fied FUSA programming and an Continued on page 4 Inside This Wedc fr ^ Marijuana and its effects on college stu-dents p.6 fr A welcome to the new Uni-versity Librar-ian, James Estrada. p.9 fr JJ A look at your favor-ite Soap p.12 ^ ^\ Women's Basketball continues to soar p.16 ^ JJ |