The Circle, February 9, 1995.pdf
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Part of The Circle: Vol. 46 No. 10 - February 9, 1995
content
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.Februar
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Black Hist()ry Month: (Calendar_ of Events, p.3)
HOME
MCTV
fin~
~pace
- page
3
Volume
46,Number10
'
....
THE
lllCIJE
Marist
College,
Poughkeepsie,
N.
Y.
STREAKED
Men's_ B-ball
w~n
8 of last 9 outings
• - page 12
February
9, 1995
Pataki's prqposecl budget may
cut Marist's HEOP program
Budget
sidebar
by DARYL RICHARD
Staff Writer
by CRAIG D. GOTTILLA
Staff Writer
Gov. George Pataki's budget pro-
posal has many college students
worried about their future.
•
The plan unveiled on Wednes-
day includes cutbacks in government
employment, "'.elfare and education.
The reduction of funds allocated
to education -results in increased tu-
ition and • less assistence from the
state Tuition Assistance Program.
Freshman Jennifer Smith, a
Syra-
cuse, .New York, resident lives with
her single mother and three sisters.
She said she depends on Tap to at-
tend Marist.
"TAP was the only way I could
afford school," Smith said. "If I don't
get as much next year, I won't be
back."
Reducing the maxium TAP
award from
$4,050
to
$3,575
is not
the only affectPataki's proposal has
on college students. He intends to
increase tuition at SUNY schools by
$1,000 next year.
Patrick Tully, a senior at SUNY
New Paltz, said students at his
school were• outrag1.;d
by the new
proposal,
.·_
.. ':'.'We,:ai:e.already paying too
much;~~;Tully'said,rI
can't affordto
:: pay-aiicitlier:$1;000:-•"·;·--:-~.,,:><-•·•
·.0:
( _-
• Helen Hadfi<:ld, a Poughkeepsie· -,
resident· working ·in, the Marist: Li~
brary, said she strongly opposes the
cuts in education.
•
• - "College students are already
paying-too much for their educa-
tions,., Hadfield said. ''The gover-
nor' shoilld find other areas -to cut
back."
- One area Pataki proposes· cut-
backs -is in government employees.
-He.intends to eliminate 11,000 jobs.
>
:Bil[ ~oore, a part time student
from Rhinebeckwho has worked for
Ta.sk
• FOi-Ce
on,SexualViOlence Prevention
~~!•~:~;:;:.
• SJ;>pnsors
Wey!( of Ed.µcaHonal
Programs ,
e18!i:::::::}:,
by_:ioo_·
S_TIN_A_W_.
ELLS_-_._
J?eing'.raped and being
bit.
on the
events will help increase awareness .is surprising to some on campus
graduatedfrom Marist last year and
.
-
.
·Editor
_ .
.
ankle -by
_a
raW.esnake except that
on campus.-
•
-
•
• because you·don't normally see ex-
is entering Boston College Law
•
people'.ask you if·your skirt was
"Those involved in the Task
cops and counselors working as a
School in the fall. He said that cut-
Las~ Sunday
/an
estin1ated 100
students arid faculty members braved
the below-_zero
tempe(atures.to par-_·
ticipate_in the "Take Back the Night
March" beginning Campus Violence
. _ short_ and why you \yere out alone '-}:'orce
art: about making our little p~
._
telilll," he s!lid. "I'm just involved ting back state employees is a good
anyhow. ' • _--.
. •---•
•
- of_
the world
a.
safer place,''. Staples
as a concerned individual."
- idea.
•
- •
. ",J'4ere is_
no differerice between
said. ''.We· need to increase the
Theweek of ·events included a
"There are too many 111iddle
bei_Iig
·•
raped
•
and gc,ing -hea_!i
• first • awareness.'' -
. self-defe!}se
demonstration co-spon--. managerial positions -that just i}.ren
't
~hrough a windshi~ld except that
. Siaplessaid the purpose ofopen-
sored by the members ofKappa
necessaey," Sorbello said. "They
'afterwards you are afraid not of
cars
ing the week 'with th_e '_'Take B!ick - Latnbda Psi, a lecture on how to. should be trimmed down.
-
but of half the hunirui race.''
The Night" _
march was the strong
report
a
sexual crime sponsored by
Rick Angelo, a senior from Lake
H!ll1Sen
said when she was up
sense of tradition and symbolism
the CriminalJustice department and • George, said he supports Pataki's
Prevention Week.
. ... . ·,
The week of programming, spon-
sored by the Task Force on Sexual . ,
· Violence Prevention, is designed to ~--,--,--------------~--------_...;.-
a video presentation dealing with the
cutting of state jobs.
media depiction of violent
crimes.
"There. are a lot of useless gov-
better educate students and faculty
members about violence on
cam-
puses and in. communities.
The students and_
filculty marched· .
from the Chapel to the Rotunda in
the new Student Center. where. the
ceremony co)!.cluded with junior
Jennifer H!UlSen
reading a poem by
Marge Piercy, describing the feel-
ings of a survivor of rape.
Hansen, a member of Sigma
Sigma Sigma, stood on the second
floor balcony of the Rotunda and
read aloud the powerful poem to the
crowd assembled below.
"There is no difference between
being raped and being pushed down
a flight of cement steps except that
the wounds also bleed inside," she
began.
"There is no difference between
being raped and being run over by a
truck except that afterwards men ask
you if you enjoyed it.
"There is no difference between
;'Violence,,:has
no place on ou,r campus.
"
. There. were also informational
emmerit departments that should be
tables setup;in.Donnelly with lit-
elimin~ted," Angelo sa_id. "The
erature and videos on violent and
money could be utilized elsewhere.''
- Roberta Staples, director of counseling • • sexual crimes. -
above the crowd reading the poem
she felt scared, but felt the poem
served its purpose.
"It was helpful because it gave a
different, shocking kind of viewpoint
of rape," she said. "It was a shock
tactic."
According to Hansen, the
poem
was not only powerful for those
present in the crowd but it also gave
her a sense of self empowerment.
"I guess it riled a lot of emotions
in me. It raised a feeling that more
people have to be more_ educated
about it {sexualviolence}," she said.
According to Roberta Staples,
director of the counseling center, the
Task Fo~ce hopes that the weeks
behind the event.
, .
.
•~t•s a_ tradit~onal, standard pro-
gram you often see on campuses and
in communities { concerned about
violence}. It is called 'Take Back
The Night' because that is usually
the time in which incidents take
place," she said.
Joseph Leary, director_of safety
and security, said he hopes that by
participating in the week's events
and by serving ·as a member of the
Task Force, he will encourage more
male students and faculty members
to get involved in what is happen-
ing on this campus and in the com-
munity.
"The fact that I did get involved •
Hansen said the march .was one
of_ the • most powerful parts of the
week, but also said that she feels it
may not have the -impact upon this
campus that it should.
"Honestly, I think the people that_
needed to go {to the march}didn't,"
she said. "To some point it will help.
It is unfortunate that some people
just walk by the infqrmation tables.·
and don't· give the stuff a second
glance."
Staples said her hope, ultiniately,
is to get the message across that
violence and sexual crimes do not
belong at Marist or in this commu-
nity. •
"Violence has no place on our
campus," she said.
I
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modem. times. where horror'fiction
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novelist. Suuer Cane, played by
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on
the case(Trent b~¢ollles
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a_Jit~~
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t~~s. ~e iil<?vic:
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ghouls, an eerie
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some
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thoroughlf e1!t~rtammg
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New England town~ and a horror most widely reac:l author."
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Cane's. books...
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~esk, but a p~tmg·o!1 tµe_~~U that
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who·apprec1_at~s
C~ent~r s sty1~
..
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fiction novelist whose books drive
His writing is said to have dan-.
<.Ashe
reads, more werrd thmgs
seems to keep changmgform. •:.
:
Sam Neill~ performance was
his fans ins~ne; it all a~ds u~,to John gerous effects on "hlS less stable begin to happen.
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convincing: a:s.' he
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Carpenter s latest,,f1l~,
In the
•
readers."
.
..
.
. .
.
Although aU.the pl9tss_eem
sliili~.
poitrayed be>th
!l
confident bus~ess
Mouth of Madnes~, which opened
..
Although the idea of Cane might
•
Jar to Trent, there is som~thing dark
.
sight gags within the mm that keeps
·
m~ and a· torment~~
·hero
c=a~~t
at the~te~s last Fnday.
sound like a Stephen King rip-off and alluring about the st()ries<·\
,
•
you
011
your toes.
•
.
up m th,~:lu~acy
,of
.M_adn~ss
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This 1s Carpenter's first horror~-*****··*·*•-·.
L.. ••
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Cane's ston.
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s have a. haunting •
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fu
the center of Hobbs Erid Hes
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Th.·
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of Industn.
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reader; and as his fans become m-
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cross engraved above· it's doorway
Group were very effective and grue-
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His last effort, "Memoirs.of an·'7'
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·creasinglycrazedandobsessedwith
andplentyofvidousdobeimanpin~.
some at~imes..
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Invisible Man," was ~ot received
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his work, ~ey ~tart t~ !eplace <?Y- schers to heighten the evil mood.
.
An~_cinfwh~ appi:ecia!esboi'ror
we~ at the
b~~ offi':e 1~ 1!>92..
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fichtJOJ5
hqITor;
.
This is where Sutter Cane resides
.
~ows ~hat ~: great SPf':ial effe<:ts
. Madness
.
re~mtes Carpenter~
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Trent begms to expenence_ tor~.
.
along 'Yith 'tan evilolder
than"
man~
Job-can ~nly be11efit
a.p1c~re'.
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with.actor Sam Neill? w~o.h~? a co-
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and wider than the.known uni-
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role as the v1Ham m
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human.
s lurk in.
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John·.·
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past·m
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ovies;. you.i:n.1gh
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mrs. .
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ter-esque alleyWays.
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The plot heightens and begins to
b~ d1sa~pe>mt
7
d by t,he alma.st anti~
•
In his !atest ro1e,_Ne!ll
plays John
i(*********
.
.
Cane's latest novel "In the Mouth
make a little more sense when Trent
..
climactic ~ndmg of
.••~.adness:"
•.
Trent, an insurance m~est1gator
who
•
•
.
.
.
.
,
.
.
.
· .
.
of Madness" takes. place in· Hobbs
comes face to face with Cane and·
,
.
In movie news.;. Fdm fans:were
embarks on an assignment that with his creepy New England set-
End N.H.
.
.·
..
·.
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.
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discovers that he.has been part. of a
sad to lellrll of the passing of movie
changes his life and ultimately the tings and mass appeal, Carpenter
When Trent's suspicion leads
sinister plan that will ravish the.earth
vet Donald P1easence,who di_ed
1ast
world.
makes note eady that the Cane ve-
him to travel to the:creepy,-_all
too
with an evil "madness" all along.
'f!lursday at.the.age of75;
; .·.
;
As the. ~lm opens, we _se~
Trent hicle is indeed bigger than King and
familiar New· England town where
Sure there are a Jot of creatures;
Most Americans will. remember
locked up m an asylum; 1t 1s from more influential.
.
. .
he suspects Cane is staying; the story
dark. rooms
•
and disorienting
him. as the
_crazy
Dr
..
Loomis from
this cell that he explains to a psy-
We soon learn that the famous becomes even more mind-bending. p1ottwists, but at one. level,
the"Halloween" series, and he had
chiatrist just what happened on his horror fiction novelist has disap-
.
Accompanied by Cane'.s editor
•
Ca'ipenter's "Madness" asks the
just wrapped shooting-"Hallowi;en
last as_si~nment.
.
..
. .
.
peared as part of a publicity stunt.
Linda Styles (Julie Camien),
•Trent
.
movie-goer to Jook beyond all the
6" last nionth.
.
.·
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.
.,
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·
•
.
This 1s when the ~lot starts to
When Trent is hired by Cane's
is soon drawn in and spun around in
standard spooks. and jQlts and ex-
He had. been hail~d by critics as,
take off and where thmgs get real publisher Jackson Harglow (Charlton a world. of "madness."
.and
horror:
•
amine the underlying. issile0of the
··one.
of the all-time
.
great British
weird and interesting, much of the Heston) to investigate the
•
case of.
While looking for Cane in H~bbs
•
effect mass-market fiction has 9n its
•
·
·actors.
•
•
•
•
•
•
••
•
•
•
•
Ray Parker Jr .. or hard·core, 'Ghostbus.ters' roe.ks ori
'
',"
'
_,
-
.
by TOM BECKER
Circle Music Critic
stream of consciousness music col~ was good at substituting similar 1yr-
ward hardcore, all originals if l re-
umn without some colorful poetic ics.
•
•
member correctly.
genius.
Thing 'was, Wesley kind of an-. ,
Once again I am faced with the
Obviously, I have something on noyed me, he was·always ·hanging
obligation to write something about
my mind.
around my end of the
_blllck,
calling
music that students on this campus
I hope you don't mind if I at-
for my brother and shooting the
might be interested in.
tempt to share it.
mailman with his gun, which•was
Some weeks are harder than oth-
Remember that· Ray Parker Jr. pretty funny.
..•
..
.
• .
. .
ers.
'80s anthem "Ghostbusters"?
.
But it was that song; that infer
7
I mean, there is so much out
Well, when
I
was
·a
little guy nal racket which annoyed me most.
there, more music than I could pos-
bac:k home on Long Island, there
I would have fovedto have given
Well, it came time for them to
break for a bit and this big bald guy
••
from. the band,· the bassist; comes
over to the bar for a beer;
•
•
.
He looked right at me and snill~
Wesley.
.
.
.
.
:
·-
And that point is that music stays
with you, it becomes part of you.
.
That goes for everyone who dug
that Cyndi Laupei: song about girls
and fun, whether they)ike it or·not,
that damn song is pait of their soul's
make~up.
•
•
.
.
-
•
. .
At'Ieast;_ that's :my.
theorr..
.
.
sibly handle or do justice to.
was an even littler guy named him· a little. whack in the. head to
•
But.I dig it because music is a
Wesley ~ho lived down the block straighten him out.
,>
..
•
..
•
•
Enough.~fthat
..
special thing.
from my:house.
.··
.
As.the years went bylsaw and
\<\.
little whiJe· late~··the band
•
·
•
·
•
-
,_
••
_.
·
·.·.·,It'.can
gtab_
you anclp~ll you in
.•
Wesley·.was a strange,kid who
'heard'less
ofWesley and theii,'he
••
started up'with
a:co°".er;
a·hai-dcore
·.:
.:
ji~ib;s
~haf's, lliitirig;llie
ie~rd
diied.ioris you did'ri.otknow existed·
:
was;_
ahvays ; ~:nI_ling:-;up
'a~d\down
-
,;f'mally
move\} away fioin: oµr_
neigh~
•
Nei'sioii'
of '-'Ghostbilsters,'";
:'
•
: .:
.
'
stores
,
on3fuesday; F~b; ]: ~iriiple; ..
•
ifcardhr~w'you'int(j'a biaclfcabys~·· the block w1thh1s.water pistol.
.,
borhood.··,
I
•
,
L·
•
_
. ,
.
:
,
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,
.,.
</,
....
,,,.
,
Minds,
.{fhe,,:Wat.~~l>oy-s,
)995, ·
or raise you into a rainbow of glory..
•
I'm talking 333,days of the\Ji~
,,:
.•
:
I
hcip~-ibis
isi:(t
b_~tjng
you_ too
•
:·.
The.only ~tng
'different
besides
.•.
Grammy
•nontin~es,
_and
L.A:·
,G~ns.
I guess what I am trying to say endar, 100 degrees or 10 degrees, much.
•
•
.·
, : •
.•.
•
..
••.
•
..
the, iristruinentatioii was
.
that this
·,
are all releasing ne~ discs.
•
is that music is a p~rt of all our lives, that kid was constantly cruising the
•
So now we come to 1995 and
•.
time, Wesley
was
not s4igfug.
•• •
.;
•
•
:,
.
.
.•"
..
whether it's top 40, rap, industrial, small,· subtle confines of Hungry
•
I'm home at a bar during Christin.as
.
.
.
.
.
,,
.;:Also,
Je
_on(the
Jook~u(for
techno, funk, or anything else, it's
Harbor Road.
•.
.
·.
break.
Man, itblew my·mind.
Slas_h's.Sual{~pit_-\Vlio
release:"It'.s
in everyone's bones.
•
.
.. •
•
AnyWay; Wesley really loved to
·.
:
A few friends and Iarejust wast-
..
.
. . .
. ...
,
...
•'
Five·O'.Clock Somewhere>Joii Feb.
I should shut. up -with this vibe. belt. <>ut that.· "Ghostbusters" song,
•
ing time when some guy announces
So now that you've re31d
this:~ap
/'.14l
Just.'µi:'timeJor,:tlie big d_ay,
jt.
But,· hey, I guess
·rm
in soine knew every·single word, at least, I
that the band is ready to play.
fo~SOOwords or so, I give you ..
my:_
.makes.a.
great.gift.•fqr ym1r.lovey-•
kind of flow· right now, sort of a think he did, but if he didn't he sure
Th~y played pretty straight for-
...
point.
•
•·
doveyya1e~~ine's J:?ay s\Ve<?_theart,
·:
..
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.!
THE
CIRCLE,
FEBRUARY
9, 199.5
;Nf.CTV
finds home
with adequate space
by DANA BUONICONTI
• •
Senior Editor
There's no place like home.
• There's no place like home.
ties, could cost between $4 000 ·and
$8,000:
•
' '
· "I've been working with Chris
Berinato, from MCTV, to assess the
lighting needs," Sansola said. "He's
putting t9gether a proposal based on
what their needs are."
Sansola described the work that
was done recently to accommodate
MCTV's·needs, some of which was
covered with college activities' bud-
get.
.·.. That's· what the members of
Merv
are saying these days after a
two-year
•
struggle • to move from
cramped quarters in a lighting booth •
abo~~ _the theater to spacious new
fac1ht1es near the mailroom in
Cha~pagnat,
a· task that proved
considerably more challenging than
simply_ tapping their heels together
"We were busy over break con-
three times.
.
structing walls creating a studio with
3
~ell, the ~ove is now complete, a control roo~ that's secure and a
We obtained the space last se- • large room for taping, relocating
mester
anp
when we came back from • pipes, putting phones in and laying
brea_k (this semester), i.t was made new tiles," he said.
After being treated to a mild winter, snow covered the campus last weekend.
available
to us," said Gina
Becconsall, president of MCIV.
"It's
definitely a lot bigger than
our previous space, and we now
have separate rooms for automation,
a studio and storage and editing."
. Becconsall said the only detail
still not worked out is more lighting
for the studio area, which according
to estimates given to her from Steve
Sansola, director of student activi-
Becconsall hopes that with the
new facilities Merv can do more
in-house production and one-camera
shoots.
"We're going to work on school
closings and try to have a news
anchor do live class cancellations "
she said. "We've also got our li~e
elections debate coming up, but that
Poughkeepsie received approximately half a foot of snow
c·
I f"I
h t
•
irce1epoo
won't take place in the new area.
"We're
all very pleased,"
Becconsall said. "Housekeeping and
maintenance, in particular, did an
excellent job with everything, espe-
cially with painting the studio black
and putting down black tile for the
studio floor."
MCTV's
former predicament in-
volved a space that was not only
inadequate for housing their equip-
ment, but contained a leaking venti-
lation shaft as well. In a past Circle
story, Sansola blamed the constant
~elays fQrthe move and the comple-
tion of prep work on the area to
construction difficulties.
Now, however, both Sansola and
Merv seem to be pleased with the
outcome.
"It's great that things finally got
resolved after fighting for two
years," said Sue Yanusz, secretary
for Merv. "We deserve it."
"Our ultimate goal is to make it
into a small studio, and now we're
off to a good start."
T icke ts Anyone?
r---r-----:------------------------.
UNIFORM
TRAFFIC
TICKET
33210
MARIST COLLEGE
by ROBERT MOYER
Staff Writer
Over the past several months, the
alleged inconsistencies over parking
ticket distribution has been ·an issue
of controversy and concern among
the Marist community.
•
According to Joseph · F. Leary,
director of safety and security, they.
have made no changes in how secu-
rity distribute parking tickets from
week to week.
"We
try
to spread it evenly along
the
campus," Leafy said. "We do
lo9k _strongly at the Townhouse, •
Dyson,.
Lowell'
••
thonias,
•.
and'
Donnelly lots-not necessarily
·in·
. that order."
•
The purpose for focusing on
those. areas, according to Leary; is
the number ofcars that flow in and
ouf of the lots. With a constant
stream of students using the lots,
security needs to make sure parking
is available to people who have been
assigned that designated area.
''These are the most spaces we
have ever had," Leary· said. "There
are
4,700 members of the Marist
community and only 1,800 spaces,
so then~ is one space for every four
cars."
•
Also, Leary said that parking lots
distract from the beauty of the
·school.
"We•
have one of the most at-
tractive ·campuses. in the country,"
Leary said.<(People
have an idea that
we have all these spaces and we
aren't letting them use it."
Whether the number • of tickets
seem to increase or decrease from
week to week, there are no set num-
, ber of tickets handed out. Accord-
ing. to Leary, the tickets. are distrib~
uted by security personnel duri~g the
week and occasionally on the week-
ends.
Leary continued to state that the
security personnel tend to go easy
on ticketing, trying to focus on the.
areas that get hit hard during the
week, especially the commuter lots.
"The commuter lots get attention,
while we try to cut some slack on
the weeke~ds," said Leary. "People
just have to break the habit of park-
ing in other lots."
Lots such as the North End and
Hoop lot, are·resident lots and cars
just sit during the week, so there is
no point to focus a lot on those ar- .
eas, ·Leary· said.
However, some students said . it
is unfair that they have to park at
Beck Place, eve.n though they are
residents .
Amy Patenaude, a junior resident
of the Townhouse section, said se-
curity should not make residents
park •
at
Beck Place because some
people live on the-other end of cam- -
pus.
"That's unfair. Why are they·
making residents park ·at Beck,"
Patenaude said. "There is always
extra. spaces at the Hoop lot"
One student, who wished to re-
main anonymous, expressed his frus-
tration with the parking ticket pro-
cedure in a more direct tone.
"They are analand abusive with
their power," he said.
"I mean, if
you are parked in a space for five
minutes, they are there giving you a
ticket a minute later."
Leary said the main reason why
tickets are handed out is because it
is a safety feature. For example if
the fire department were called in
and a car was parked next to an
island, this could prevent the _truck
from getting into the lot
.
As for the pricing of the tickets,
Leary said they were made to leave
an impression on the receiver of that
ticket.
OFFICE OF SAFETY AND SECURITY
POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y. 12601 (914) 471-1822
FIRST
You are directed
to a0pear
at the Business
Otti@ Donnelly
Bro
20s
within
10
days and oay Jhe 0ena1Jy
;ndjcated
Failure to do
~
may result in an additional fine. withdrawal
ol parking privilege, and/or towing.
SEE REVERSE FOR
VIOU.llONS AHO
FINES
l
l--
MOTORIST COPY·
Ticket to ride--Marist security has heard complaints about unfair
tl~ketlng from unhappy students.
"Years ago, fines were $5 for a
majority of them. I would pay that
anytime," Leary said. "We make
fines realistic in order to get the
person's attention."
Fine prices include; $25 for park-
ing in a restricted area, $50 for park-
ing in a Fire Zone and $75 for park-
ing in
a
Handicap space or ramp,
according to the Parking and Vehicle
Registration Policy pamphlet.
Complaints such as "I was late
for my class" or
"I
was parked there
for only five minutes," are not go-
ing to cut it, Leary said.
Students need to have a valid
excuse, in writing, detailing the rea-
sons why and the time they were
parked there.
Any verbal complaints will be
handled by Lisa Hamel, his admin-
istrative assistant, in Donnelly
201
between the hours of 8 a.m. to 4
p.m. Monday through Friday.
If there are any questions or un-
certainties about where to park dur-
ing the week or on the weekend,
students can contact the security
office at ext. 2282.
THE BLACK STUDENTS• UNION
AND S.P.C. CELEBRATE
BLACK HISTORY MONTH
~&US
at MARIST COLLEGE
B.S.U.
mtg -
Discussion
"Sex&Love"
..
.,
.....
I I I I I I
4.
-
.
-·
..
•..
•.
MO_NDAY
GREEK.·NIGHT
•
-
•
.
·,
Bring your Frat or SorQrity·
For the Berties Olympics
·
•
Doors Open
at 8pm.
Games
at 9
.
__
Drafts start at a Quarter.
No Cover
.
WEDNESDAkY
-
Mid-Week
Ladies·
Night
Ladies
get Free Drafts 9-12 pm
Guys Get 1 Pitchers
_
4-Guys
In
Disgiuise
-
Play Anything
You
·Request
~
.·
.
.•
;-
,:.
.
'·
..
.
•
.
.
'.
.
..
··.
.
•.•
....•
TUESDAY
MENS.NIGHT
_
G_1.1ys
its your turn
_
at
.
_-
._.
_
-
ALL YOU
CAN DRINK
FOR
$8~0l0
_
:
Ladies
Get Free·
Drafts
-
9pm-12pm.
·
•
·_-:
Square
and·
Rood.
_Mood_··-
FRIDAY
HAPPY
HO.URS
4PM-8PM
Buy One Get One Free·--_-.
·
•
·_
Any Drink in the Ho.use,
__
-
Free Buffet from.
Emillianos
-_.-
•
.
-·.
Members
of 4-Guys
In Disguise
;
-
__
·
.-No~Ci:,ver:2-1:and·over;please·.
_:
•
·
'
.
:
•
,·
..
~
;:-
-
.
.
.
,'
.
•
·'
. •
.
.
.
.
.
-•.·
•
•
.
,
;
:·;,:':-,
..
• :_: ·.::· .•
••
·,,
:;
••••
,'.
J -·~:-
,·•...
..
,.:--.:
';•··
:
THURSDAY
IS
YOUR NIGH'tll!
•·.·.··
..
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<
.......
·.•··.·
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1st-FOurKegsAreFREE
.......
•
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Zimas
.
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<$1.00
Shots
.
x: ·
...
•
.•
••.
Bertie$
also presents
Briri.g
Your BUddy
Night
;
·•
Simply
show up at Berties
on
Thl.lrsday
with thiS ad and
a·
• •
• •
:
friend and th~ two otya get In foFthe
price of one.
.•
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•
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• •
•
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•••
Don•t forget March 8th
-
·
Berties Bash
1
95
•
. • •
Kick Off Your Spring Break
the right way with
4
Bands
and FREE
Drafts
all night.
Doors open at 8pm
.
.
Sta tuned for more details.
•
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..
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......
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··~·"··-·""
··--·--,-
..
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·-··
-
-•····
.................
"
'·-··
..
•··
••••
THE
CIRCLE,
}
f
EJ.\TURE
.
FEBRUARY
9, 1995
s
/·:Will,iaiij~-
spills
·guts·
to .. Marist 'crowd about·n,Growing Up Brady"
byJUSTIN SEREMET
.
Williams came ou~ followi~g the·. if I could/-he· said.-...
.-?,
• Senior Editor •
video to a near-st~dmg ovation.
Williams talked about how when
~•1 don't really know ~hat to • he first gotfo:the set his main in~
_ Some childhood actors fade away say," _hf said. "Groovy, I_ guess."
terest was. Maureen' McCormick
after stardom in their teenage years.
. Wd~tams went on to g1_ve
a brief (Marcia), but the object of his de-
Others hold up video stores .or . h1sto~ of.the show, tellmg about. sire soon became. Henderson, with
are _even brought up on murder how it's be~n on TV ~or almost four whom Williams went on a date.
charges.
decades (1t began m the '60s),·
And some write books about their through six presidents and eight
past, sell T-shirts and spend 90 min-
separate Brady reunions.
utes telling college audiences about
"It's kind of like the show that
their sexual experiences.·
•
• won't go away, somewhat like the
• Such was the case with Barry OJ. Simpson trial," he said.
Williams, who played Greg Brady
He also talked about the _
way
on TV's now legendary "The Brady· things ·were. -be it· words, styles in
The proceedings quickly evolved
into a recollection of pre-pubesent
fantasies, with Williams describing
his lusts and constant embarrassment
on the set.
••
Williams also talked about his
"There was a long embrace and that turned· into a long kiss.
That's as far as things went .. ; that night. "
- Barry Williams, a.k.a. Greg Brady
Bunch," when -he gave a lecture cloiiies oi: the niany different atti-
recently to a full house of Maris{ tudes of the times.
st~dents, a group dying to·_
get a
• Williams noted that somehow,
ghmpse of a star from their own through it all,
...
The Brady Bunch"
childhood days.
has remainedas popular as ever, a
But some may have been caught cult phenomenon that has spawned
a bit off guard.
•
•
• an army of t-shirts, a satire movie
on-again, off-again relationship with
McCormick and how he first hooked
up with her on a beach during the
taping of the famous Hawaiian epi-
sode.
"I only had sex with Florence and of· course, Williams' own
Henderson once," Williams boasted. "Growing .Up Brady: I Was.a Teen-
"It's amazing what a teenage fan.: • age :Greg." .
"It was a beautiful night, there
was a full moon reflecting in the
water, there was a warm breeze, and
I was with Marcia," he said. "Now,
I would've been some kind of idiot
not to do anything."
Barry Williams offered Marist students a flashback to thier
childhood with his lecture, "Growing Up Brady:
I
was a teenage
tasy can do with an 8 x 10 glossy
(Audience members that hadn't
and a bottle of Wesson Oil."
read it had the opportunity to buy
Greg".
•
Circle photo/Jen Betz
This was greeted ·by· a loud the.book after the show.)
• • ·_.-
•
ruckus of cheers and laughs from a
crowd not expecting Andrew "Dice"
After giving the historical ele-
Clay.
ments around "The Brady Bunch,"
Maris( students at .this point were
either engrossed in the story, con-
fused by the confession, or maybe
thoroughly amused.
The show began . innocently
Williams continued his presentation
enough, with the lights dimming m, by poking fun at everyone in the
a video montage of little clips from cast ( except himself), and then
the favorite show of the '70s; Peter changed the subject to what was
"There was a long embrace, and
in a fight at schoo1, Marcia getting clearly his favorite topic: sex.
that turned into a long kiss," he said.
hit by a football, Greg smoking a
.
..
"That's as far as things went...that
ci~aref!e and so on.
•
"I'd like to clear up the rumors, ,.night."
--.RESTAURANT
REVIEW
•• by SCOTI SIGNORE
Food Guy
,
salads, _sandwiches, dinner entrees . to get ,the most _out of your meal,
and desserts. •
•
this is a sure bet).
•
,This,•
week's_·.
review • is bas~d.
upon my visit to Banta'sSteak and
Stein, located on Route
9 •
South iri
Wapp~~ers Falls;
• •
Steak and Stein; as it is known,
is the most appropriate winter din-
inp; location
in
,the area,
. _
-
...
·
.. Some • of the appetizers were
Some dinner entrees include a 13
: steak._fried potato skiris ($3.95), :
.
ounce New York strip. sirloin
shrimp cocktail ($4.95) and stuffed
($15.95), a 16 ounce prime rib
mushroom caps ($3.95),:In addition
($15.95), a 13 ounce prime rib
to the cheddar cheese-soup ($2.25)
($i3.95), a 10 ounce club steak
and the French onion soup ($2.50),
($9.95) and baked stuffed shrimp
Steak and Stein offers a soup of the
($10.95). Also available are a beef
day (I passed on the cream of mush-
kabob ($7 .95), swordfish ($10.95)
room).
•
and a baked scrod ($7.95) (there are
The restaurant and lounge is de-
signed to make the customer feelas ,
I~ regard to salads, in addition
though he or she hasentered _a
_ , to
a
grilled cajun chicken salad
snowed-in winter cabin; the wooden
($4.50), . a seafood salad ($4.95), a
tables and chairs, the fireplace and
caesar salad ($3.95) and a shrimp
the lights slightly dimmed helps to
scampi salad ($5.75), Steak and
support 'the outdoorsy atmosphere
Stein offers a well-stocked salad bar
(the wooden floor also supports'the - (this is som·ething that one. should
rustic environment).
not miss).
If
there is a restaurant mad,e for
. The salad bar is outstanding!
winter, thi~is it.
,-. :Every. possible addition to •one's
• • ---.
_ . . . _·_ .
. . . · .. · -·___
.
salad is available, Not only are the
The atm_osphere ts equaled no
items available, but at the rate tlie
where els~ m Dutchess County.
workers restock the salad 1:>ar,
each
The items on the menu are well- • it~m is asfresh as it comes.-(With
varied, moderately priced and· one· any dinner entree, the salad bar
can
can choose from a long list of soups,
replace· the vegetable. If you want
Marist College Council on the Theatre Arts
presents
"WHO's AFRAID OF
VIRGINIA WOOLF?"
By
Edward
Albee
Thursday, February 16, 7pm
Friday, February 17, 7pm
Saturday, February 18, 8pm
Sunday, February 19, 2pm
in the Performing_
Arts Center
suggested donation of..
$3 will ,go to the
Jen Dressel scholarship
Jund.
Call
x3133
for
reservations
many other choices).
As
I've mentioned, each dinner
entree· is served with a po~ato and
the choice of a vegetable, soup or
the salad bar (again, that's the sure
bet.salad bar.) During lunch, Steak
and Stein offers a whole bunch of
different sandwiches: Some sand-
wiches are the seafood melt ($4.75),
the prime rib dip ($6.95), an open-
faced club steak ($6.50) and a tav-
ern turkey sandwich ($5.25).
The tavern turkey sandwich is
sliced turkey, bacon, melted swiss
and russian dressing on rye. If I do
say so myself, that sounds like some-
thing that I may look into in the
future.
_
.. In_ regard to the "intangibles",.
those little things that make a· meal
just a little bit better, I was extremely
impressed with my waitress. Her
timing was perfect and she didn't
miss a thing. Her dinner recommen-
dation was exceptional.
It isn't often when I confer with
my waiter or waitress, but rather than
go with a steak, she recommended
the beef kabob. The beef cubes
skewered with onion, green pepper
and tomato was perfect.
Again, I was extremely pleased
with the service. Finally, in terms of
an overall evaluation, I loved Banta's
Steak and Stein. I've said it before,
but I'll say it again, there is no bet-
ter place to enjoy dinner on a cold,
winter night.
I was EXTREMELY pleased
with Banta's Steak and Stein.
In regard to the rounds of ap-
plause, Steak and Stein deserves the
highest I will give .... 4. 75 out of
5 •
(again, even the best may have room
f9r improvement).
He showed some more_
clips and
gave out more anecdotes, including
his description of Christopher
Knight (Peter) and Eve Plumb (Jan)
getting caught by the police while
having a little too much fun in the
back of a truck.
Before bringing the evening to a
close, Williams came out on stage
decked out in his infamous '70s
"hippie" outfit and invited people
to come up and join him in doing
the Brady dance.
When it was over, those who
weren't scared away stayed to have
Williams sign autographs, buy t-
shirts with the Brady kids on them,
or simply get a closer look at the
living Jegend.
Greg Brady, we hardly knew ye.
FREE FINANCIAL AID!
Over $6 Billion in private
sector grannts & scholarshops is now available. All
students are eligible regardless of grades, income, or
parent's inc.ome. Let us help. Call Student
Financial Services: 1-800-263-649S ext. FS1941
MARIST
COLLEGE,
POUGHKEEP$iE,
NY 12601.
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER
Kristina Wells,
editor
Dana Buoniconti,
senior editor
.
Justin Seremet,
senior editor
Teri L. Stewart,
sports editor
:
.
.
.
.
•
Meredith Kennedy,/eature
editor
Dawn Martin,
associate
editor
Lynn Wieland,
associate
editor
Daryl Richard,
associate editor
Larry Boada,
editorial
page editor
Matthew Dombrowski,
distribution
manager
Jen Forde,
advertising
manager
G. Modele
Clarke,/acu/ty
advisor
PUBLISHED
EVERY
THURSDAY
The snow-covered sidewalks glisten in the moon light.
A young man and won;ian walk casually along, hand-in-hand, wrapped in the
warmth of their loving gazes after a romantic dinner.
With eyes locked, they continue to walk in the blustery, snowy
atmosphere.
They lean toward each other and engage in a passionate embrace.
Suddenly, the love birds are blindsided by a runaway Marist golf cart and their
bodies fly helplessly into the snow banks.
·
Soon good ol' cupid will be waiting with bated breath to strike our skin deep
.
with the arrow of love.
.
.
St. Valentine's Day is a time-honored tradition, especially among those helpless
romantics.
.
.
We all know that despite the importance of this holiday, class is still in session.
However, our hoJ?eless romantics would opt for missing
a
day of classes to rest
up for the night which awaits.
The man, of course, would take this opportunity to run out to the nearest Wal-
Mart and find a card and an appropriate gift.
•
Ladies, don't be fooled, that gold necklace probably will tum green in about
,
three months.
The woman would spend the whole morning ~etting ample beauty rest.·
•
•
•
Of course, because it is Valentine's Day, shew1U walce up w_ith a_sC()rching
case
of zits \Vhich infest her chin ;in~ forehead.
: ·
•.
/,,·:;,;
.. ,
•
,X, :
.
•
-
..
So. much for beauty ~leep.: ;f1II1e
Jo
:goJor
the
.cover-up.,
_
....
,
.
,
f
...
-
Jc
,..,.
• •
The night \vould
'almost
definitely include dinner
ar
a fancy restaurant.
.
.
.
This forces the woman to starve herself all day in order to fit into that sexy black
dress she has been dying to wear for just such an occasion.
.
.
Never mind that she will have dizzy spells all day and feel like a small animal
is tearing at her stomach demanding nourishment.
Ah, love:
.
•
..
. . . .
.
•
._
- -Meanwhile, back at the bachelor pad:.!
.
-·
.
.
.
.
••
.
•
The man·is.lying around; watching television and drinking a beer with the guys.
It's only, 5:30 p.m. He has~plenty of time before dinner at severi. .
•
.
By now; the woman has already showered and proceeds to rummage like a mad-
woman _through her closefand dresser to find pantyhose without rips and lingerie
that screams sexy but feels comfortable.
• .
•
.
.
•
She brings her roommates in, and asks their honest opinion as she stands in front
of the mirror disgusted with·
.the·
way she
_
looks in
.
that dress she· starved herself to.
ru~
,
_·
;
•....
_·
.
Finally, after a lot of quick changes, her roommates convince her to wear. the
dress.
•
.
.
.
•
·
,_.
.
·_.
.
._
.
•.
.
..
.
After.we'tting and re-wetting her hair 18 million times,_ shese~Ies for pulling it
back off her face.
•
•
.
.
•
.
•
._
•
•
..
•
•
• Butnow she must painstakingly cover-up those annoying blemishes.
.
··
The man realizes the time, and many beers later, decides to take a shower and
get
.ready
for the '(qig n_igbt".
•
•
.
.
.
.
•. .
.
•
After much deliberation, be regretfully" decides to shave.
•
Suddenly, as· be cuts
.himself,
he remembers he forgot to get flowers.
Valentine's Day is not complete without roses.
.•
He quickly.finishes shaving, gets dressed and runs out the door; knowing he has
IS.minutes to find roses at ShopRite:
•
He arrives at her house five minutes late.
•
Fashionably late, that is.
.
.
•
-
.
-
:
She is finally dressed and walks.into the living room all done~up and ready for
the romantic evening which lies abe~d.
.
•
.
.
She smiles and he gives her the red rose, still fresh.
•
They go to a nice, ~xpensive restaurant complete with. the intimat~ a11!1-osphere.
The guy, remembering a scene from "Fast Tunes at R1dgemont High,' does the
.
gentlemanly thing and orders linguini with clam sauce and two Cokes with no ice
for the both of them.
· .
•
•
·
. He also remembers that
if
it ends up getting hot and hot and heavy between the
two of them to put on side one of Led Zeppelin IV.
After dinner, he slides the card and· gift over in her direction.
She smiles as she reads the card and her eyes well up with tears of strong
emotion.
•
She opens the package, her heart pounding, and pulls out an 18-inch gold neck-
lace and a heart charm with "I love you" inscribed on it.
The tears are now flowing more micontrollably than before.
She gives him bis card and an unwrap})¢ gift.
The card was mushy, but he accepts it with a warm smile and kisses her gently.
Matrimony, she thinks.
Late-night hijinks is all that's on bis mind.
Thus, it brings our story to where we left off-in the snow banks. The two had
'taken such a fall they had to be rushed to St. Francis Hos~ital by Marist security.
1
They spent the rest of the night waiting for five hours
in
the emergency room
lying in hospital beds in those white gowns which expose your backside to the
whole world.
•
At least they were wearing clean underwear.
The moral of the story-Love
is blind.
Or blindsided in this case.
Watch out for Cupid and speeding golf carts Tuesday.
.
·,
-:
'••
RI.AL
FEBRUARY9,1#s·
U
Rights
Nov-•
ht'•in
,th•
Vletn ..
sol vec:i'
'the
Watitr-Qate
al ••• but I-rec:kon
I'll
er •••
an·'end
to· the
truc:Uon
in· and around
Narlst:_Coll•Q•!
••
'
UPON
HEARING
ABOUT PLANS TO E)I_PAND
THE LIBRARY, EVEN FORREST GUNP DOUBTS
HE'LL EVER SEE THE END
TO l'IARIST'S
CONSTANT
RENOVATI~S.
The Republican
•
View·
Harry Truman once said, ''There is
.
noth~ this ~untry
•
would be bound by a d~cument
••
ing sacred about the pay~as-you-go idea so and not by its needs.
far as I am concerned except that it represen\s
America could find itself in that position
••
the soundest principle of financing that I once again. The looming Balanced Budget
know.': Creating sound financing is what Amendment requires. that Congress rell.ch a
ch~pmns of a Balan~d Budget ~endment,
three-fifths majority if it wants to raise ta,ces
bemg mostly Republicans, are trymg to do. or run a deficit.· By creating this "super-ma-
in response to the oyerwhelming deficit as
•·
jority" it would make it more difficult for
it stands, and as it niay grow, Republican Congress to respond to emergency situations,
representatives have initiated legislation that such asmilitary maneuvers or natural disas-
would force the federal government not
.
to ters, because funding would be locked behind
spend more than it earns per year, balancing bureaucracy.
•
.
the budget by 2002.
•
Considering th~ state of the elect~rate and
•
In theory this sounds right, but what it the deficit,
.
iris not difficult to see why the
stands to change would reverberate through- Republicans would try to push this legislation
out the country for years to come. An ame~cl-. thrqugh. One reason alone, a
$5.
trillion defi-
ment such as this would change the :COre
of·.
cit
with $176,billion ofit accounting for this.
America.as we know it because it would
-year
alorie,;reflectsthat-the.problem needs to
change the Constitution.
..
.
.
.
,
••
be solved. That is an American issue not. a
.
. ·.•
•·••
When.·
the ~IistitutionaL Co°iivention
con-i•:
partisa11.
issli~.
•
••
.venedJn,l'hiladelpµia·for-'Jd.ur.
months,
·our}
. ,,.;.
:~>
..
_'.c
.
•
F•c
,.
,.,
,,
..
,,
,·.
Founding Fathers knew of the great task that
It w~ also a conscious_
ch01ce of the fram-
lay in front ofthem. They needed to create a ers to uico~rate means
:
so_ that an ame~d-
document that embodied. freedom_
but· con- ment C?illd_
be made p~ss_ibl_:•
but n~t easily,
straints, the voice of the. majority yet the say• for a Slh.\at~on
such as this.
•
of the minodty,and the right.of society com-
A.s
ifstarids today, an amendment can only
parative
to
the
-right
of the individual.
be passed
if
it has a two-thirds majority in
That. is what America was· known
as
tlien, Congress,. and
.
then· is ratified by three• quar-
and is still what America i_s
known as today'.
•
ters of the
'states.
This degree of difficulty
It is a country that is called upon in time of indicates that the ·framers intended for the•
•
crisis and it is a country that responds in a Constitiltion to be
•
used as a framework for
time of crisis.
• ••
•
•
•
•
governing, and not as a means to
·settle
ideo
7
,
logical
'disputes.
.
•
•
.
Ainericahas had the power to bring peace
or show force/ to
•
offer aid
'and
give aid.
The
budget
can
bd
bal~ced without an
.
America has had the
1
power to stand on its amendment to the Constituti01i..
•
own and stand with others, because the Con~.
·•
stitution has_.
ma~e it
a
viable cou_
n_
try'.
•
-•·••
It can be bal~ced if Americans
sacrifice
:
and politicians are unselfish. It cari be bal-
That framework enabled Am~rica to be-
anced if both politicians and voters begin
·to '.
com: the collDtry
we, and others; ~o": tod~y. realize that the deficit is more than an imagi,-
Not 1ust as a coun~ th~t e~bod1es life, lib~
,
nary looming figure,
_but
a. restriction more•.
_e~,
~d the pursmt o_f
Justice, but a force -
binding on our futures than any constitutional
md1tarily and economically.
amendment.
•
•
•
It was a conscious•
choice by. the. framers...
By trying.
to.
incorporate a Balanced Bud~
to include inthe Constitution inore fiscalJree- get Amendment,
Republi_sans
are going against
dom.
•
•
• •
•
•
the fabric ofthe Constitution by trying to ptit
The Articles of Confederation,.
which in-
.•
fiscal restrictions around the gove~ent, and_
_
•
eluded
.
f'IScal restrictions,
:
pr(}Ved
.•
fo
.
be an
•
using the amendment pr~ure
to. do so. But
.·
unsuccessfu_l. frame of· government for that. change would not only alter the frame of
America. It limited_
the government's freedom our government but its structure as well.
to govern fiscally, by not giving the govern-
America was founded on a system ~f
ment the power to tax as situations deemed. checks and balances using three branches of
The Constitution,-.on
·the
otherhand, was government: legislative, judicial,
·and
execu-
created with the intention of dissolving that tive, all equal and all with a separate function.
handicap. It was formed under the premise of A Balanced Budget Amendment would change
giving people certain inalienable rights as in- all three.
divid_uals
and not as a pre-determined ~et of
It would.shift the present equal power and
solutions for problems that may occur m the role of the three branches of government be-
future.
cause it would replace the role of legislators
with the role of judges. Instead of fiscal policy
being introduced
in
the House it would be
ruled on
in
courts.
That is why the Constitution did not in-
clude fiscal restrictions. The Founding Fathers
knew that a lasting framework for the country
had to be one thatcould respond to the events,
The Amendment would force fiscal deci-
of the
•
country regardless of the time
·
they siotis to be made by the courts instead of rep-
occurred.
resentatives. Representatives, that we the
After all, the Founding Fathers could no
more predict the Persian Gulf War, California's
earthquakes, or the floods of the Midwest any-
more than this generation can predict how
America will be tested in the· future.
people elect, and that we the people hold
accountable. It would detract not only the
power of the legislature, but our power as
citizens: That, if for no other reason, should
be cause enough to stop the Balanced Budget
Amendment.
Because of the framework of the Constitu-
tion, America has the capability to respond to
Mary Diamond is one or The Circle's
those crises regardless of their weight. If not, political columnists
TI1E.Clli~
VIEWPOINT
.FEBRUARY9,
1995
7
.
. .
·.·
'
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.
'
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r,••-i:-------------------,
I
Flying the
•
I
Letters to the Editor ...
I
•
•
friendly skies
I
.
.
.
.
.·,
.
·
·
I
·
•
d
'
h. k
·1 ••
·
-:
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•
·•
• .
-·
·.
·:
.
:
-• '
-·
.
-·
=:
-··•
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I:
Some things I'd rather not
I mean, I on t t m a pt ot
A~missiOI)~ int~rnship sh~ws r.eal ~orl~1:t~o=•fe=o~
;~~'E:?;
0
:1!::1.::ez;
1
Editori
.
•
·.
Jersey, Pennsylvania, ~nnect1cut
po~ty,
'!1e Adm~ss1ons
O~ce 1s
I
we have no control over them.
I guess after a few airplane
I
As graduation day closes
and Massachus~tts -
m
fact, be-
holding
an
informat10nal
meet!Dg
on_
I
Orie of these things is this new crashes they recovered that little
I
in, we seniors realize that these past
tween the four interns, we covered Febf1;1ary
16, at 7:00 PM m the
program that airlines have started black box and listened to the last
I
:four
years have flown by quicker
every state on the Eastern se_aboard Admissions OffiC?
m
Gr~ys!one.
I
that evaluates a pilot's alertness.
words of the pilots in the cockpit.
I
than we ever could have imagined.
and _more -
as representatives of
Although the. 1Dtern~hip
1s only
I
.
.
1
CO-PILOT: Uhhh Sir, wake up.
•
The ''real world" looms large as May
•
Manst.
.
•
.
open to prospective seniors, class of
I
Th~t seems !ike a good idea:
SIR!
WAKE
UP!
PILOT:
I
appi:oaches.
•
.
.
•
•
....
We met with. prospective stu-
1996, all students are welcome.
the ~g
I don t want to know 15 ZZZZZ ... huh? What? CO-PILOT:
I
This past summer, Vince and
I
•
,dents,
their parents and guidance
If this sounds like something you
I
that this was ever a problem.
That mountain . it's not on our
were fortunate enough to have been
counselors, and we- met up \vith
would like to learn more about, but
I
It seems that other than drugs
,and
course. PILOT: This is what hap-
I
able to take advantage of a 15 credit
alumni, swapping
•
st_ories about
you are unable to attend, you can
I
alcohol, fatigue is a major problem pens when I forget to bring my
I
µitemship offered by the Admissions Marist - the Marist they knew and
•
call J_ody
Sanford ~t ~xt. 2188,or just
I
that is causing pilots to make mis-
alarm clock- (CRASH)
I
Office that gave us a taste of "real
.
the o~e we call home. It was a great stop b_y the A~m1ss1ons
•
Office for
takes.
The preceding was an assumed
I
life" work experiences.
-~xpenence.
.
more information.
I
Don't tell me this!
possibility - it doesn't mean it ever
The internship allowed us to
.
If you want to find out more
Jane-Alyse Schaffner and
I
It's something they should fust
happened this way but unfortunately
I
travel throughout New York, New
about this exciting and unique op-
Vincent Hummel, seniors
I
go and take care of. If they let us
it probably has. '
I
I
know it's a problem, then ~e, as
One other thing - that little black
I
Internships • available
Editor:
Just One Break, Inc.
(JOB), a non~profit employment
service for people with disabilities,
will be.
at
Marist College on
Wednesday, February 15, 1995 to
interview Marist students with dis-
:
abilities.
The positions are for summer
1995 internships. Students in their
sophomore
·and
junior years are.eli-
gible for an interview.
•
The positions are with Fortune
500 companies and they include
opportunities iri flDancial
•
services,
accounting, public relations, com-
munications, law, corporate real-
estate; human resources and hotel
Library
·
I
passeng~rs, should_
have the n.ght to
box which is ,very inexpensive to
I
go up into that little cockpit and
make always remains undamaged in
I
I
make sure the guy's not ta~ng a
a plane crash, and all the contents
In
lil
•
g
I
snooze.
. _
inside are safely protected and in-
I
creas
I
If we're not allowed to do that,
tact. Yet the plane itself is very
I
•
I
then don't let us know he might be
expensive to make and in a crash it
I
Editor:
up there napping.
is terribly damaged and all the con-
i
I've got a simple solution.
tents inside are severely destroyed,
I
The animals ride in the back in· except the little black box.
I
The ~ead article
~
the ~ebruary 2,
cargo, right?
Does this make any sense_?
I
1995 issueoffheCuclediscussedthe
So how about we just put the ba-
I think I want to travel
ID
the
I
preliminary plans for a new library. bies up front in the cockpit, that way, little black box - it might be more
I
Lynn.Wieland,thereporterandAsso-
there's no way the pilot will be
crowded than coach but at least I'll
ciateEditor,didconsiderableresearch getting any sleep and just maybe the
live.
I
on the article, iricludirig havirig sev-
rest of us might.
.
_One might ask why they don't
I
•
aldi
•
·th
I
ldlike
That might actually be the root
bmld the whole plane out of the
I
er
scuss1ons
wi me. wou
.
• h bl k b
•
d
f
of most peoples' anger over findmg
material t e ac
ox 1s ma e o -
1
to correct one critical error iri an oth-
II • ' b
h
Id b
out that pilots are dozing off in the
.
we 1t s e~use t ~t wou
e too
erwisehelpfularticlereponingoncur-
cockpit . they're not mad because
cheap and inexpensive.
I
rent library activity. The library adds of the danger they're in, but just a
You might live but I guess they
I
services.
an average of 6,600 new book title;
little jealous that he can sleep and
think we feel safer if the cost of the
I
For more information contact
per year, not 600.
they can't.
plane. and safet~ devices are close
I
Desmond Murray, Assistant Direc-
..
.
•
In USA Today, one pilot when
to nat10nal deficit numbe~. No one
.
tor of Field Experience at (914) 575-
•
While one is always hopeful that re-
I
asked about this problem was quoted
~ould be happy that they d be safer
I
3543 or James Ryan, Coordinator/
_
.
sources can
be
improved and budgets
I
as saying, and 1 swear I'm not mak-
ID
a pl~ne that only cost $19.?S
I
Counselor of Special Services at•
E.
·1·.
•
T•
.
.
.
ent
.
f
. .
I
ing this up: "I feel passengers are
•
What bothers me the most is the
I
(914) 575-3000 ext. 3274.
.
ect1on,;
.rme,
1?-~e~ourcun
..
T_ateo
acqum~
saferwhenl'mr~~t~<1~'1~Wht:n~'~. -~a~t,\~at
~~i~g
a pilo,t_is_
~me C)rthe
Desmond
Murray__
,
,.,,.,
,:·:·.
•
·,
.•,
.,,,,
--~~~
15
adequate,!oracollegeofour
I
fatigued ... I'm a lot better pilot·
fewprofess1onsonecouldsleeponl
·Editor:
.
.
,..
•
'•:
.size
~d
type'.
It~ the depth ofo~
I
when I'm alert."
the job, yet the most d~ngerous.
I
IBM
is coining·
·..
.
.
•
I am wri~ing to urge
·a11
~llecnonofmatenals thatperhaps
1S
I
Wow, well there's a news flash!
I mean, tak~ a cabb1e - we se_e
I
•
.
·Mari~t-
stu·d.ents
to vote in the SGA madequ~_
e_.
Books that were not col-1
I guess fatigue fo~ pilots while
them, _they c:in t fall asleep, and if
I
Editor:·
_elections
to be held February 20-21. lected
ten,
fifteen and twenty years
flying is a very senous problem
they dtd th
.e
nde probably could only
I
._· ,
I know_
that the
____
members ?f my ago ma_y
be
the source of dissatisfac-
1
because the responsibility of flying
get safer.
.
I
A represe~tative cif International
.
class, the CJass of 1998, obviously lion
m
some areas.
.
can really interrupt a good sleep.
In ~n ?ffice the phones are
al-
Business
_Machines_
.(IBM).
will be
•
did not take the elections seriously
•
Wh· t I d
't
derstand is that
ways rmgmg to keep you up.
I
I
, ·
•
-
a
.
on un
A door to door salesman
at Marist College on Friday, Febru-
ast semester,. when we were given S~dents can help remedy this situ-
I
these commercial pi_lots, .~ho fly
couldn't u~less he was a slee _
I
ary 17; 1995 to interview students the. opportumty to e_Iect our, class anon by usirig theOOBIS e-mail util~
I
hundreds of tax-paying citizens a
'
P
.
I
for accounting internships/co-ops officers for the irrst time. The voter ity to ·d tify book titl
b. ts
week are dopey dozing idiots. Yet
walker.
I
.
beginning this summer 1995.
turnout iri that election was ridicu-
1
en
es or su.
!JCC
I
the pilots for Air Force One who
But in a plane you're secluded
Ious.
that can be added to the collecuon to
I
nl fl
h dful f
1
d th
with the onl_
y consequence being the
I
In order_
to_ be eli
0
ible stud.
en_
ts·
... th
h
d I
the"
k This kind
ft--.J
O
Y Y
a an
°
peop e an
e
·b·1·
f
1
f:
1·
d
,,,.
~o o~e w o vote ast seme~- s~rt
rrwor •
o
uNu-
I
President a week, from work to the
p~ss1 11ty o
~
arge ata 1ty - :in
I
.
musf have a 3.0 cumulative grade
ter, keep _it up.
'!'o
those who did back
18
always helpful, we enjoy pur-
golf course to McDonald's and back
with that there s no one left to snitch
I
point average.
,
not, consider this: How can you
has"
-
•a1s
d
k
I
k,
h
•1
d
on you anyway.
Subinit a resume to the Field
.
• tify
1 • •
bo
•
•
c
mg new maten
an see stu-
I
to wor are eavi y screene •
And
h
ii
h '
I
.
.
.
•
.
.
-
-
JUS
,comp
ammg a ut issues you dent
•-d
f: ul. .
-"
Wh
?
you ave a co-p ot w o s
Experience· Office immediately.
.
.supposedly
care
.
about
.
when you
.
an ac ty mput to moS
t
cuec-
I
.
y.
.
looking up to you and sees you
I
.
For more information contact·. have done nothing to make your vote
.tivelyputo~budgeted~llarstowork
I guess 1t comes d~wn to the fact snoozing and thinks that's what he's
I
Desmond Murray, assistant director,··
..
count?
.
_
.
for the Manst commuruty.
I
that our gove~ent, in general, can supposed to do when he's the head
of field experience in Donnelly Hall
·
,,Pleasehsten
to speeches, watch_
'
I
only have a_hnuted amount of rules pilot.
I
•
226; (!)14)575-3543.
,
.
.
the debate, read this newspaper, and
John McGinty,
1
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and regulations. .
.
_
_ ..
So when he becomes one the
I
••
•
•
•
make your choice in the election.
Library Director
So I guess a citizen. can't t:111 problem never gets s~lved.
I
.
Career Development
.
Sean White, freshman
I
asleep on a park benc~
ID
t~e _city
But
_don't
be womed next time
I
I
after ~0:0~ PM - but .1! hes !n a yo~'re on a
.plan_e,
possibly on
I
cockpit fly1Dg
a plane 1t s all nght.
Spnng break, Just sit back and relax
I
I
As a matter of fact, we'll even
and try to get some sleep - chances
I
stuff the thing with piUows, wine
are you won't be the only one.
I
I
and a movie.
I
I'm also confused as to when
Frank
La
P~rch is The Circle's
I
■
they realized this was a pro_blem. humor colummst
J
------------------------
Feb.9
Feb.
16
Feb.23
Mar. 2
Mar. 9
Mar. 30
Apr. 6
Apr. 13
Apr. 27
May4
oUR
SPRJNG
UNEUPI
8
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:.-·;,.-
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..
-
_: ::<\ ' ' ',_ .·
Monday··
Free
Refill Night
$5.00
Domestic
Draft
Tuesday
Bud Draft 50¢ Mug
Ladies
Well Drinks $1.50
Wednesday
Rotating
Bottle Night
$1.50
Domestic
$2.00
Imports
Thursdays-Marist_
College
Senior Night
(21 &
over)
$1.50
Well·Drinks
50~ Drafts
_ $t.00
TestTube_Shots
··,
•
Friday
2 for 1 Happy
Hour
..
•
Dance
with D.J. Jimmy
Saturday
Pitcher
Night _.
Bud $4.00
Sunda~
. , _ _
. Hang
Over Noo_n
Day
50¢ Molson
Ice Drafts
••
•
'
.
·Bloody-Mary
$1.75
.
:
Screwdrivers
$1.50
Pool Table
Darts
TROLLEY
1
S
96 Main Street
Pok., N.Y.
485-3887
21 and Over
· THE CIRCLE,
FEBRUARY
9, .1995
.
-
FEBRUAR-Y
1995
Elections Calendar:
Feb.· 1 Mandatory
.. Informational Meeting
9:30pm SGA OFFICE
Feb.
3
DELARATIONS
DUE IN THE SGA OFFICE
12:00pm
Feb.
6
Pick Up PeHtions
SGA Office 9:00 ani -•4:00pm
Feb. 10 Petitions Due SGA
• Office 9:00am - 4:00pm
Feb. 13 Campaigning Begins
12:00am
Position Papers Due in SGA Office
9:00 am - 4:00pm
Feb.1S SPEECH NIGHT 9:30 PM
STUDENT'ACADEMICCOUNCIL'<
THEATRE
~ai~~Jlear~::t/Jtit\n~rii!b11ceagain--
Feb.
·16
PRESIDENTIAL DEBATE.'
for ihe Faculty of the Year Award .nominations.
•
·10:00PM (MCTV)
--
Students can fill out a ballot for-their nomination at
the SGA voting tables on Feb. 20th and 21st .·
F b. 20 POLLS OPEN
Simply write. the name of. a professor, eith~r
e •
.
•• • . . . . .• •
.
·
•
adjunctorfulltimefacultymembe.r,thatyoufeelhas
_-
Dyson10:30am·~l2:30pm
inspired and mo~v~
yo~ academically or person--
Donnelly 1:30pm • 3:30pm
ally. These nommattons will be cotinted, and the top
-
Student- Center
S
:OOpm - . 7 :OOpm
two faculty from each division will be C!)DSidered
b_y
the SAC for the· award. · The SAC
WIil
base their
decision.on interviews~ exfontofinvolvement with
·Feb·.
2lLr\ST DAY
OF
POLLS
students oncampus, availabUity and otherfactors.
••
-
Dyson 10:30agi-12:pm
The final results willbe announced at a ceremony in
_
Donnelly 1:30pm ·3:30pm .
~c4~i:e
published in t.Jle_follo;'~g~sue.e>,f
:
Student C~11ter 5:00pm
~
7:00pm
TheFaculty,oftheYear Award was
started.three
•
_IJnoffici.~
lles.:.-
9:30pm
years ago by J?aryl Ledyard and h~ steadily evolved .
mto a presug1011~s
evenL Th.e award was dey~loped •
ii "
k
to honor those faculty_
who shoW·outstaIIding
coiµ..
.
,
. •··• :;
.
;
.
.'
~-
S: .
•
.
.
,
..
•
mitment and dedication
tQ
the students of MarisL •
:
•
-0,IJ.
behalf
of_the SAC and the $cience Division
It is our hope
this
yeartoµnprov,e.both faculty and}
Representiffves,I
wollld like_
to.thank
thefaculty
and·
student participation in nominations and attendance •
studentsof theScienceDivisionfor
their suppori
and
::::a:~e;i~ro
lie~
rd
er
tq
~}ll'e'
th
is
m,e mo
st
attendartc,e)n
t~Breakjast Social helddufingftnals
week ltist,~~me.ster.
Your participation
milfle
this
Mikael
T.
Carlson
prograrri)"~hefirst
ojits
kina,
a great success and a
VP for Academics·
vital grol}J'ldworkfi:,r
continued
social events both in
1---------,-=:G~A.t.,-------,.IYOur
division
and in
others.·
Thank
You.
SENIORS·
1J:~~ft'J::eDi~.Reps.,SAC
Attention
Seniors:
There is precious little time left to become involved
in the upcoming senior events.
The Senior Class Officers ~beholding
a meet-
ing Wednesday, February 15th, at 12:00pni in CC
348A.
•
The topics covered will inciude.
•An
• Class T-shirts
• Senior week alwnni mixer/clam boil
• Senior week booze cruise
• Senior week fireworks
• Senior formal
• and numerous fund-raisers
This is your chance to become involved. If you
are interested or have ideas for senior events
please call ex. 7995.
Mikael Carlson
VP o Academics,
SGA
JUNIOR WEEKEND
February 17, 18 & 19, 1995
: Semi-Formal
Ring Ceremony
And
More
Any Questions Contact Jenn at X4698
LM PRESIDENl1Al DEBATE
FEBRUARY
16, 1995
MCTV 10:00 PM
LEARN
ABOUT THI CANDIDATES.
BE AN INFORMED
VOTER.
:-
~
. THE°
CIRCLE/FEBRUARY
9, 1~5
9
•·:
__
:":'.?··.:.
•
'
.-
.
-<"·
.·
.• •-.
• ]lfESDAY
<
<i •
_.·
••.
-
MARIST
STUDENTS·
·
• • HAPPY
HOUR
4p.111
~
8pm .-.·
•• ••
·
~'CACTUS
CLUB
•
, _FREE
FOOD
CHEAP
BEER
WANTS
. BUILD
·YOUR.OWN
TACOS· •
$1
OF
f
Alt
Pl NTS
•
•.
·-·•
••
·
•
·
••.
· .•
.
-
•
&·WELL·DRl:NKS.:
.
· ·
.
.
.
·.;
.
•
••
•
.
• 8pm - 4am
$3 PITCHERS
OF BUD
OR
·
_
MlCH.
LIGHT
&
1/2
PRICE
WINGS
•
j
~
•
'_r,
•
.
.
.
.
-
...
•.
• ·JHURSDAYS
la & UP
••.
;,'
;
•
•
•
•
:
•
•
•
/
~j .
'
•. '.. -
•
'
'
•
-
~:.
-_ . ,. ' •••
~
•
•
·• • NO
SCREVllN'
AROUND.
OLLEGE
NIG
•
.
POWER
HOUR
9P.m-10pm
.SO
WELL
DRINKS.
•
>
•
,
~.
.
.
.
.
.
. ¢
.so
CENT
DRAFTS8pm-2am.
.
•··
.
.
>,::
~
. : :\ \. \
_·> . . . . • ::-.
. ·
..
..,.-,.•.
THE CIRCLE,
SPORTS:
FEBRU~Y 9, 1995
t
!
,f.
'•
i'
i
i .
Poolside With
Stephanie
R[aiclef.;{
.
'
.
.
'
,
by MARC LESTINSKY
Staff Writer
Competitive.
Hard-working.
Dedicated.
This may or may not be the for-
mula for success.
For Stephanie Raider it is, and
judging by her success for the Marist
swim team this year, it seems to be
working quite well.
Raider, a sophomore from
Southington, Conn., has helped to
lead the Marist women's swimming
and diving team to a 6-4 (3-0 Met-
ropolitan Conference record), while
breaking several individual records
in the process.
In fact, Raider has shattered four
individual records and five team
records.
Her indiviaual honors have come
. in the 200 and 500-yard freestyle and
the 200 and 400 individual medley.
Her team records are in three free
relays (200, 400 and 800) and two
medley relays (200 and 400).
Raider, however, said she did not
envision herself as having such an
impact in this, only her second year
of college competition.
"I just wanted to improve and
have a better season than I did last
year," Raider said.
Raider's coach, Lloyd Goldstein,
said he was also surprised by how
well his sophomore has swam to
date.
"I knew Stephanie was going to
improve, but I didn't expect this
much this early," Goldstein said.
RESULlS
fROM
JAN,
31 JO FEB,
Z
MEN'S
BAS\C.EtBl,.\l(
ll-7; 7-3NEC)
2/4 _:
fo,~10
2/6 - FDU
{<>S~W)
•
(74-68W)
WOMEN'S
BASKETBAll
(7-11;4-6 NEC)
2/5 -FDU
(63-42W)
MEN'S SWIMMING & DIVING ( 10-0)
1/30- Fordham
(l30-90W)
WOMEN'S SWIMMING & DIVING ( 7-4)
I/30-Fordham
{132-83W)
HOCKEY ( 8-11-1; 4-5 MET)
2/3 - Rutgers
2/5 - Binghamton
(6-2L)
(6-4W)
MEN'S VOLLEYBALL
(1-4)
Games
were
canceled due
to Inclement
weather.
_.·.
Jn· 'quickly rewriting the•· Marist
record books, Raider, and Goldstein,'
pointed out that one of the reaso1,1s
for her success is her dedication and
knowjng what it. takes to be a com~
petitor.
•
• • . •
"She is one of the few girls that
have a strong competitive back-
ground,'' Goldstein said. "She knows
what it· takes to be successful and
she doesn't like to lose."
Raider, in_ addition, is a very
modest young lady who would rather
talk about herself in the context of
the ·team arid downplay her indi-
vidual success.
• She instead gives her· teamm~tes
equal credit for her accomplishments
by supporting her and spurring her
on in every meet.
• "The whole team is real support-
ive of each
other,"
Raider
sai~."Everybody pulls for one· an-
.other and helps them get ready for a
race.".· •
.
Raider~s most memorable mo-
ment at Marist is what she enjoys
talking about rather than herself.
It was not breaking any record
or finishing first in any race, but
instead; of her and her team win-
ning the Metropolitan Conference
crown last year.
•
In terms of personal goals, Raider
admitted that a ·top three finish at
the Eastern CollegiateAthletic Con-
ference championship meet (March
9 through March 11) would be a nice
cap to an incredible sophomore sea-
son.
Besides her teammates, Raider
also attributes her successes to her
.......
Sophomore sensatlo'n Stephanie Raider taking off
In
a recent women's swimming and dlv'lng meet.
Raider holds four Marlst records
In
swimming.
·
• • .
family for their support, and
Goldstein for his guidance.
"I really look up to him
(Goldstein)and trust him for every-
thing he has done for me," Raider
said.·.
•
. Raider may be equally as impres-
sive outside of the pool as she is in
the water.
Fellow sophomore swimmers
Becky Tatum and Alyson Morilla,
two of Raider's closest friends, have
nothing but good things to say about •
their friend.
Morilla described Raider as a ·
~
UPCOMING
WEEK
MARISJSCHEDULE;
2/9-Men·s
Cl"1d
women's basketbdl
at St.
Frax:is
(PA)
7:30 p.m. and 5: 15 p.m. .
2/10-HockeyotAlbonyState9-.15p.m.
Merl'a voDeybdl at Oneonta
2/11-Men'saidwomen·sbaskelbcll
at
Robert Morris 7:30p.m. a,d5:00p.rn.
Men's \/Olleyboll ct Buffdo Touricment
• 2/15•Women'sbosketbollvsSt. Fraids(NV)
7:30p.m.
Clrclo
lporla
photo/Chrla llerlnoto
very outgoing person who is a laugh mates and ·mends, Raider has taken
to be with.
time out in the past
to
volunteer at
"Stephanie is just a fun person Vassar Hospital and visit children
to hang out with and be around," at local schools.
Morilla·said.
.In the future, Raider hopes to
Tatum portrayed Raider as car- • graduate with a degree in Psychol-
ing and inspirational.
. ogy/Special Education and teach
"She helps to get me psyched up
mentally disabled children.
for my races and she is always so
Raider's swimming career began
• positive," Tatum said."She makes
at the age of 10, wheri she used to
me think
I
can win every race." .
go to the pool with her sisters, Jamie
According to Goldstein,· Raider
and Meghan.
hasgone out of her way to help
Jamie swam four years at
others.
Fordham while Meghan spent a time
Along with some of her team-
swimming here at Marist.
Th.e Associat~d °:Press Top 25 Polls
.
.
The.
t0p
25. teams In The· Associated Press• .The fop 25 teams in )he Associated Press•
women'.s college. basketball POii, _with first. ·colltKJe
basketball po~. with llrst•place votes In
place· voles In parenthe1es, record throuoh parenfheses. records
through
Feb.
s,
fotal
Feb.
s,
total p0lnls. based on
25
paints tor. a points based on 25 p0ints for
a
first.place vote •
tlrst•Ptace. vote through one· p0tn! tor·
a.
25th• lhrouoh one paint for a 25th•place vole, and··
•
place vot~ and last wee~'s ranking:
-' previous ranklno: •
.
.
. '
. record pts pvs
••
• I.
Connecticut (32) .... ; ........ 19•0
800
1
2.
_Tennessee
.................
; ....
21-1 768 2 •
3. Colorado ••• , •. ,: ••••
;:: •• "··'·· 18·2
721
4
.4. Texas Jech : .... :.: .. ,, ...... :.21·2
680 6
s.
Louisiana Tech· .: ......•..... 18-3
650
7 •
6. Stanford .. :: ....... , ..
~
..... ; •... 17•2
634 3
7. Van_derblll •.. : ................. 19•4
611 8
8. Vlrolnia ... : ......
~
.... ; ......... 18·3. 561 12
: 9. W. Kentucky .................. 18·1 •
553
9
10. Georgia.·
....... :., ................ 18;1
526
11
11.
Nor1h.Carollna .........
o.;
•..
20-3 • 502
s
12. Washlnoron ......... ; .. ;; ... , .. 17·5 • 419 13
13. Penn SI; .. ' ........... ; ........... 16-4
404
.
10
14.
Mississippi ..................... 17·3
358
11
15.
Kansas ......... , ............. : ...
16-5
322' 19
16. George washlnolon • ........
IS:3
313 • 18
17. Purdue ... : ........... , ....•. : ... 16-6
286 21
.18. Florida .......................... 16-6
259 15
19. Alabama ... , ........•...........
15-6 .•
223 16
20.
Arkansas .. , •.• :., ... ;: ... : ... ; .• 16'4
216. ·,22
21.
Duke , .......... ; ..•...........• : .. 16-4
141'·
14
22.
Southern
Cal. .. : ...............
12·5
84
24
23.
Oreoon St .•. , ........... ,;., .... 1A·4 ,
78
24:
Oklahoma .: .... ; ...............
15-5
74' 25
~. Wisconsin .......... , ..... ;: ... ,
IS-S
56
Others receiving votes: TexasA&M 26, OePaul
21, Seton Hall 20, Old Dominion 17, San Dleoo
st. -16, Clemson .14, Southern Mlsslsslpi •.10 st
Joseph's 9, Oreoon 8; Fla. tnlernallona'1 1;
Ohio, U. 5, Virginia Tech~. North Corollne St.
.2, Tulane 1, Villanova
I. • .
·
• • • ·., •
.
.
record PIS DrY
•
1 .. North Caroline
UBI , ... ;...
18·1
1;629 •
2
2.
Kansas (171 .... ,.............. 17-2 1,598
J
3.
Connecticur.: ...... : ............ 17•1 1,486
4
4.
Massachusetts ............... 17•2 1,,20
I
5.
Kentucky
fll ............... ;..
15·3 1,396
6
6; U.C.L.A .........................
1'·2 1,318 7
7. Michigan SI. ...... ,........... 16•2 1,251 9
8.
Marvland ........ : .............. 17-4 1,168
S
• 9.
Arizono .......................... 17.4 1,112.12
10. Syracuse ........................ 16-3 1,009 10
11:Wake Forest ............. : ....
14-4
910
14
12. Arkansas ....................... 17•5
889 .
8
13. Missouri ............. : ........... ·16·3 705 18
14.
Arizona
SI .. , ............. ,.....
l6-5
693
16
15. Stanlord ......................... 15-3 688
17
16. Villanova·.; ..................... 15-5
601 •
19
17.
Vlroinlll .,;.,. ................. ., 13-6
600
15
·18. Georgia Tech : ................ 15-6
580 21
19. Iowa St. ...... ,.................. 17·5 425 11
20.
Georgetown ................... 14-5 401 13
21. Mississippi St ................ ,
1' ◄
364 --
n.
Oreoon ,.; ...... , ...... :.......... 13·5 . 211
•
22
23.:
Alabama ............. ,: ....... ;. 15:5
•
146
20
24.
Oklahoma SI. ................. 15-6 .•
142 --
25. Purdue· ....... ,: ......... : ........ 15-5 114 --
Olhers receiving voles: Memohi·s 101, Minne•
·sofa 9S;Oklahoma 91, Brloham,Youno
46.
w. •
Kentucky
23.
-Tulane· 21. Penn· 17,.'Utah
11,
Xavier, Ohio 16, Utah S1. 15, Nebraska 13,
Florida 12, Georgia 12, California 11, Tulsa
11.
Mississippi 10, Cincinnati 9, Texas
9,
s1:L<iuis
8. George Washington 7, New Mexico St. 6,
Penn St: 6, Virginia Tech 6. Ohio u.
s,
Santa
-Clara 5,-Clemson 4, Manhattan 4, N.C. Char•
lolte 4, Marquette 3, Miami. Ohio 3, Michigan
2, Auburn 1, Louisville
1..
•
·, , :-.
THE.CIRCLE,
s,oRTS
FEBRUARY
9; 1995
.~~it!~rJ~ot.;~.i.'*~.L.;.-.~.~~-t
.. ; : • ,by.TERI:(.;
STEWART
:
·:•
"W . d, . . . . .
.
.
'.,·},;:'f\)\i'!Spoffe}f?i(cf);':
\
);~·})
; ..
e:; ommated. all facets
•
of the ••
••
..
•••·:·
;.}fhJti;;rii;;J;l\~1~iiJ·u~Jt:
ti~J-•:
--~~f
r}~its::~~1~:;~l~i}t~f
<:_~iit11e•
•.
•.•
• •.
made ·a;_st~p'tqiv~dJmpfoyen1intb)!
7
~as
4
!
~!ce
11
t '.YVhil;e
a~~~
1J
r,- •
Sunday·m:feaneck;-N.J;;··: .,
..
, .. bounds)(),the~tatlille.:,
'/ .... :
./flle_'.v\f~'pufthe
Red
,F~xes
on~
....
,
Sentor,..forward. ~diea
~acey ••
·.•.
•.·
po mt) o~r of; fourth place
.
in• the •. made her re.tu!D.
to ac_t1_on
3!ter a fo11r
NortheasfCorifererice>
.
>
<:
..
·
••
_ ·•··
•
game. s~pens1on. for violating a.team
·
·
>The
Re<l Foxes crushed
NEC
foe
rule.
•.
,· ::' •• . ...
. • , , • . •· ...
Fairleighr>iclcinson/.63,:42;:to mi~
•. • Th~ Anriapohs, ¥d; native .was
prove their:'record to
1~11
overall,
the ~d Red Fox
1;11
_the g~e to
. 4,:6 iii the·NortheasfConfererice;
sc<;>re
m
do.uble d1g1ts, with 12
'
Senior guard _Lori Keys and jun~ - points. ; . . .· .
• . . . . , . .
•
• . . . • .
iof guifrd,Melissa Hauser .both .. ; !3abme_au
said
-Mac~y
s double:
Plllll:ped.'
in, 13 points for_.the ••
Red •. digit J>erformance
was- important !O
Foxes .. Keys also pulled doWn a
th_e
team s play, not only no'Y but
m
team-high:12 rebounds..
. ..
•· . .
the,!uture,
•···· _ .• •
•••... ·:. •... .·
•
Aside
.
froni, a, 5.4. deficit at the
If
'Ye can· get three or four.
18:3~ mark of
the
first' half, Marist
.
people_
m
doubles,. than we hav~
jumped ·.out.to a 21-9 lead over the • bett~r chan~es down the road,
.
next
10
minutes.
•.
•
. . .• . . .
Babineau said. • ,
.
.
There was ncf looking back the
. · • All of Macey s points came m
resf of the way:
.
.
<
.. ·• •
• . . .
the first half.
. Lea<iing;:39~24,
at ,the. half, the
The Red F.oxestook to the road
Red Foxes went irito the locker room
yesterday on their way 'to Loretto,
with
'a
·confidence boost.
•
P~nn; to face St. Francis (Pa.) to- •
In
thdastfour
minutes of the -mght and Robert Morris College on
game, FDlJbegan to.fall apart. The
Saturday.
Marist defense allowed no points in
...------M-•rl_at_63_,_FD_U
_42
___
_
that time:
•
·
': •.
•.
·
•
MARIST (63)
•
According· to
'head·coach
Ken
~~~~~~~re~ ~u~ ~
9~
1~~~;
Babineau.; histeain ·P·.layed
a skillful
0-2 2-2 2, Macey s-13 2-212. Heller 1-2 0-1 2. King
0-3 0-0 O, Metz
1·2 0-0 2, Horwath 1-1 0-0 2. TotalS
game.· .
22-53 14.19 63 .
.
"We played a very smart, intel-
~~c~i
3-4 7, Reas 5-13 1-3 11, Staten 5-8 f-1
ligent game," he said.
"We
did a
11,MahoneyM00-03,Snyder1-110-03,Mltchell
good job. hitting shots made avail-
~~-~-~~;~~~!a~~-"
1-5
o-o
2
•
able to· us."
Halftime acore: Marlst
39, FDU 42.
•
Babineau added that the win was
~:::i~ ~•:
::..;..~.:';cf!,_<31,
Presnan,
key for the futur.e of
.. the team.
T ..
m
Recon1a:
Marfst (7-11 overall, 4-6 NEC), FDU
(4-14 overall, 2-8 NEC).
"The game ·was a confidence
Officials: Vince
Bonini, Rick Trilone.
·MCTYPROGRA.MMING
SPRING·l9?5CHANNEL 12·
W>E-cE
K·;D A Y S
"12:00
A~rvt:.
,.9:ooA.~
9:00 A.M. - 10:00 A.M.
10:00 A.M .. ~.12:00
P.M. -
12:00 P.M. -il2:30 P.M.
J~:30:P.M. : 1:00
P:M.
•
1:00 P.M . .; 3:00 P.M.
:3:0()P.M.
~
5:00 P.M.
5:00
p
.M. ;. 7:00
p
.M.
7:00P.M.
~
7:30.P.M.
7:30 P
.M. -
s:o<>P
.M. •
. 8:00 P.M. - 10:00 P.M.
10:00 P.M. - 12:00 A;M.;
STATION
I.D.
FOXFITNESS
S~RTSI
•
BACKTALK
0ne·on
One OR Pressbox
MC1Y CLASSICS •
ENTERTAINMENT
& SPECIALS
SPORTS2
UP-CLOSE
MCTV INFORMATIONAL
MOVIE 1
MOVIE2
WE
E·K-.-E ND
S
12:00 A.M. ". 12:00
P.M:
12:00 P.fyt._;.
2:00 P .M .•
2:00 P.M. - 5:00 P .M.
S:OOP.M.
-7:00 P.M.
7:00 P.M. - 8:00 P.M.
8:00 P.M. - 10:00 P.M.
10:00 P.M. - 12:00 A.M.
STATION I.D.
'SPORTS 1
.
STATIONI.D.
SPORTS2
STATION I.D.
MOVIE 1
·MOVIE2
Senior forward Lori Keya puts up a shotwhlle freshman forward
Courtney Blore prepares for the rebound In a recent game. The Red
Foxes pummeled Fairleigh Dickinson University on Monday, 63-42.
Clrcll aporu photoJChrla
llarln■to
• Snow halts spikers;
Oneonta, Buffalo. next
by STACEY DENGLER
Staff Writer
ers and senior middle blocker Pat
Brenn'iin will be· key;
Brennan had taken his junior year
Saturday~' snow fall temporarily off.
.
sidelined the men's volleyball team,
• 'The starting Une-up consists of
• '.fhe ,:squad was . scheduJed
'to.;:;
!ll\ ~pper~lassme{!
\inci~ding senior
tr~yel t(?Biena College to face host . ?uts1de httter D?tJg P?rrell andjun-
S1ena and LeMoyne College.
1or s_etter Francisco Jimenez.
.
While a make-up date has not yet
J"l'!enez.fee1s confident with the
· been scheduled, the Red Foxes are _returning players and believes .that
preparing for a grueling weekend of
bard
work
and. dedication
·will.
pay
competition.
off.
•.
Sophomore
coach,
Ellen
"Overall the starting six are re- .
Schuerger expects . the team to do
tumi?g," _Jimen~z said. "V'(e. can.
well this weekend.
defimtely improve more, but 1t looks
"It'.s going to be a difficult week-
like it is going to be a pretty good
eng, a lot of good teams will be at
year for us.': _ •
the toumamen.t/' Schuerger said. "If
_ The addition of four freshmen
we play like we can play, then it
bnng new talent and added depth to
should be a good weekend for us."
the line up.
,Thcf.Red
Foxes (1-4) enter this
Freshman defensive specialist
,we~kend with plenty of experience and setter, Ralph Fiasco, is the
.• and depth, despite the loss of two
team's seventh man.
key players.
. .
According to Sch4erger, Fiasco,
Seni9r • Randy
Desrosiers
along with the three other freshmen,
Marist's all-time leading setter, opted ~ill ~ee a s~bstantial amount of play-
. not to play this yeat because of an
mg time this year.
. •
. internship and Steve Graham, the
:nie ~ed Foxes travel to Oneonta
team's leading hitter, graduated.
Umvers1ty tomorrow and then tc
However, the return of six.play-
Buffalo on Saturday.
Iritramurals
Volleyball
and Basketball
leagues are beginning this week.
The·. two leagues in basketball
play on Mondays and Thursdays.
There are three; leagues for vol-
leyball - on Tuesday, Thursday and
Sunday.
•
Aqua Aerobics startecl on Mon-
day.
The new times for the program
are Monday from 9 p.m. to 10 p.m.
and Wednesday at
8
p.m. to 9 p.m.
Aerobics classes are in full
swing.
.
The
class
scheduled from
5
p.m .
to 6 p.m. is reserved for faculty and
staff only.
Students are welcome to attend
if
there is room left in the class.
Be sure to sign the attendance
• sheet before taking any class to ac- •
crue attendances (16 are needed)
toward a priority point or a free t-
shirt.
Aikido classes are set to begin
on Feb. 9.
The time slots wm be Thursday
from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. and Saturday
from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m.
For more infonnation, call the In-
......,.:;-:;;;.;.;;J.
tramural Office at ext. 2584.
11
katers fall to
Rutgers in
New Jersey
by JIM DERIVAN
Staff Writer
This weekend had its good points
and bad points for the Hockey team.
On Friday, the Red Foxes (8-11-
1 overall,4-5 in the Metropolitan
Conference) defeated Binghamton,
6-4, at the Mid-Hudson Civic. Cen-
ter.
They had no such luck in New
Jersey on Sunday, when they fell
victim to Rutgers University.
.
The Scarlet Knights defeated
Marist 6-2.
This was the first time these
teams met since Rutgers visited
Poughkeepsie, when the Red Foxes
lost
a defensive struggle, 1-0.
Rutgers scored the only four
goals of the first period, and scored
36 seconds into. the second period,
giving them th'e 5-0 advantage.
According to fourth-year head
coach Kevin Walsh, the 5-0 deficit
was too much to surmount.
"We had a slow start, and got
too far behind to catch up," Walsh
said.
Marist did manage to score a
couple of goals.
Freshman forward Jef Freydl
scored at 14:16 of the second period
with an
assist
from freshman forward·
George Macys.
At 17:22 sophomore forward Joe
Accisano gave Marist its second tally
with an unassisted goal.
However, hopes of a come back
were thwarted, the only score in the
third period came from Rutgers at
1:42.
Marist had a better result in
Friday's contest, but could not avoid
a slow start then either.
"It
was horrible, it was like they
forgot to come out of the locker
room,". Walsh said.
Binghamton scored the only goal
of the first period.
·
Things changed after the first,
according to Walsh.
"They woke up after the first,"
Walsh said. "Then we outhustled
them, and ran them into the ground."
The Red Foxes were led by se-
nior goaltender Brad Kamp, who
made
36 saves,
and junior
defenseman Kris Rojek who scored
the hat trick.
"Rojek also played solid de-
fense," Walsh said.
Sophomore Dave Pennington got
things started with a goal at 1:27 of
the second stanza, the assist went to
Accisano.
Rojek gave Marist the 2-1 ad-
vantage at 11:37 with assists from
Macys and Accisano .
Binghamton took a
3-2
lead at
18:38, but
11
seconds later Marist
knotted the score with a goal by
Accisano with an assist from Fredyl.
Less than a minute later Rojek
scored to give Marist the lead, with
assists from freshman forward Jesse
Robertazzi and junior forward Todd
Corriveau.
At 6:29 senior forward Noel
Smith scored to put the game out of •
reach, with an assist from Fredyl.
Binghamton scored again, and
Rojek finished off his hat trick get-
ting assists from Corriveau and
Robertazzi.
Marist traveled to Hofstra Uni-
versity yesterday, results were not
available at press time.
The Red Foxes host SUNY Al-
bany tomorrow night at 9:15 p.m. at
the Mid-Hudson Civic Center.
SPORTS CORRECTIONS
In last week's issue, The Circle
incorrectly reported the following:
- Alan Tomidy is a center on the
men's basketball team, not a guard
as reported.
- Kareem Hill's point total for the
Monmouth game was 16 points, not
14 points in overtime as
reported.
- The men's swimming and diving
team defeated Fordham 139-90, not
130-90
as
reported.
>
i
i
I
I
"[t·was horribie,
.it
was likitheyforgot to
co,;,e out of ti,e locker rootiL
~,
·
(:·'\\/ .
·
.
• •
·
·
••
•
·
•
•
·
-
•
·
-
••
iz
•
•
-Kev~!~
,,
,.
1HE
1
ait~SPORTs:
FEsRLJP.Jt)'9;
t~S
.
~~~er§
••••.
,~~!~~i,;,~¼t~}~
g~¥;
rs.
afte_r,
.
74
.:O~
..
,~r111
...
i··l->Jv_e.F-::
EID::lJ-.
•
by
GREG
BIBB
Staff.Writer
.
.
The men's basketball team made
it eight wins out of nirie.outings_as
they topped Fairleigh·
.Dickinson
University, 74-68, in Teaneck,
N.J.,
on Monday.
•
•
The win put the Red Foxes in
sole possession of third place
·in
the
Northeast Conference, behind Rider
and Mt. St Mary's (Md.).
•
•
With the victory, the Red Foxes
avenge~ a}oss earlier this season to
FDU when Mai-ist
fell to the Knights
in overtime at the McCann Center.
On Monday, junior center Alan
Tomidy scored 22 points,.grabl,ed 8
rebounds,· and had 5 blocks
.to
lead
the way for Marist (11-7 overall, 1~
3
NEC). .
.
.
Guard Antwan Dasher paced
FDU (10-8 overall, 64 NEC) with
a game-high 25 points.
.
.
lllt!ior gu!lldDanny Basile a.dded
15 points
.
and senior point guard
Dexter Dunbar scored 12 to pace the
Red Foxes.
Senior
swingman
Gregg
Chodkowski also reached the double
digit plateau, tappi_ng in
•
for 12
points.
..
..
•
.
.
•
•
Marist scored the.first basket of
•";
____
,._--.~,.-,_
..
·_
·•
.
.
-:,·
.
•
-~
.
,
..
•-~
"·
::.
....
-
••
;,•.·
_---·_._·.
-~
·-,·
.
_'.
'.
_-,·.·
..
_.~;
;·;.-
).
:
......
·:
·,
.
;
-
...
-':.•_
..
·.
•,•
;-
_
•.
··
__
the.,ganie o.n
a·
Gregg: Chodkows~
.··•
said/~'\We're: playmg·•·m.~c~·;.~etfer,
.
·layup:and)ed:byas
many as:J0 m.-
1fow;
with.inore corifidence.t,
::;:_,,·
_tile
firstihalf
..
·.···.
·•
•••••
:.·,:_<<
•.
:
•
'
,:
..
,.
On Satu~day;; Maris(defeated\
.
•.
:
fDU,responded latem tlle,open.- Fairfield University; 65~53; It was·
• •
fug stanza by going
.on
a 14 to 2 run
.
the second year' in-a-row Marist beat
.
over:the·last 3-x11inute~,
24seconds the Stags at Madison Square Gar-
ofthe first half.
, ,
.
. . .
.
den.
.
.
.
<
.
.
•
•
• • A three-pointbasket:with 28 sec- ·
Alan Tomidy-again led the
.wa,y
..
on,ds left in.the half gave FDU a30-
for Marist; scoririgt7 points n1 in',
•
28 lead going in~o the locker room. the second half) arid grabbing 8
•
It wa.s !he first lea.d of the game for., boards while logging
a
game-~igh
the Kmghts.
.
>
.
. .
.··.··
.·.
39 minutes.
'.
<
.
••.
·
.
.
.
.
.
.
.• ·
•
ButMarist :would regain the lead
..
Danny
·Basile'
added
il~
points.
at the 17:12 mar~ qf the se_cond
h~lf while Gregg
,Chodkowski •
contrib-
•
on
a, Chodkowski thre~-pomter, giv- uted 10 in the
•Red
Fox effort.
•
ing, Marist a 36~34 lead.
.
.··
. ·.·•
Fairfield (11-9 overall, 5-3 i11the.
The Red !-'oxes,
held the advan- Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference)
tage until ~e 4:lfmark~~en FDU was Jed by sophomore guard Greg
_guard David
.Freem.anb1t
a.three-
Francis with 16 points and 6 re-.
pointer off a pass from Dasher.
bounds.
·.
•
•
·..
. .
••
'
• •
.
• J1t.e Red. Foxes. regained.
the lead
Marist found.· themselves down·
atJ:19 on
a
ju?1p lu;>ok
from.sopho- early at Th~. Garden, trailing 11-4,
.
more Lucas P1sarczyk.
. .
five minutes into
.
the game.
Marist would never trail again as
Head coach Dave Magarity. said
•
t~e RC!d
Foxes wer~ perfect from the he had been weary of the week lay-
hn1: over the ~ast mmute of the game off prior to. the game.-
.
to seal the victory.
·,··
..,
.
>·
.· .
"We had a real slow start (in the•.
~-----Im..-'-"-=~'-'=
·Tomidy
said he
..
feels_the.recent
•
first·half) and showed signs of tJ!e
··•Junior
guard Danny Baslle drlves·for a layup against.Fairfield
on
~ucces~
of the Red Fqxes m,thedos-
lay-off,'' Magarity said.
.
Saturday. The Red
.
Foxes. defeated the Stags. at Madison Square
mg 1111nutes
_ofga111es
can be con-
The Fairfield lead would grow
Garden, 74-68.
~
_,.
plloto/CIUta
Blftnato
tributed to numerous factors.
.
t<> 12 points in the first half, but
"We're showing. a lot of poise Marist answered with an 8-0. run to
and n.iaturity,
ju,st as a junior and
•
senjor laden tea111
should," Tomidy
... see
MBALL
page 11
Snowy slopes of Vermont
play home to S'.ki
Team
by JASON FARAGO
.
Staff Writer·
The-,lack,'of;sriow has-'yet:'to
_
hirider theMarisfCollege Ski Team
from,weeke11d·competitions.,
•
•
•
,
.·
The· squad,· which is• compris¢d
of six. women and nine men (along·
with two alternates for each side)
·travels+91,.each weekend to the
slopes of .Vermont.
,
. , .·
..
•
Mid-way thiough'the·
0
five-week
·
~t:c1.son,
the.:.woinen·are
,currently
seeded second
in
the: McBride I>ivi-
.
sion of the United States College Ski
Racing
.Association.
The men are in
sixth place,
.
"We (Marist) held the clinic to
help us· compete with the other
.
schools, such as URI and Tufts,"
1'-unne
said. "They have 10 days of
'training and it helps them
-a•
lot."
.
Dunne said the goal for this
year's squad is to make the
.skiing
regionals.
.
..
"The. competitip_n
~s,Jairly.
com-
petitive,". Dunne. said.
·<'In
order· to
g~t in the regionals, we have. to place
·in
the top. two
..
Therefore, vie need
to finish second i~ ~very race."
I~)he early. going( the
-
women
are. having· an easier time than· the
.!llen,
who are a fairly inexperienced
bunch;
l;ven though Marist recogniz~
the ski teamas.a club, they compete
among Division III schools.
.
·•··
•
The team, now in its sixth-sea-
S()n,
is
slowly gaining more popu-
larity.:
• •
•
•
•
•
Tli.t:first three weeks of conipe-
The women's
.team
is bolstered tit.ion saw:.the men place sixth each
,by
senior. Kirsten'. Oswald andjun~
time,
.
whereas the women finished
fois
:
KeHy Dunne
and
Kri~tin
•.
in botJ;i secoriq and third-place.
Werig1:rt.
,
•.
•
.
··
..
·•
_'
·
·•
•••
•
•
'.
Seniors Trqy Conterfc:>rd
ajid Jo~
,
Never~the-fess, both teams are
N_eubig
top off the.men's
team.
l~ok,ing
·towardthe
stretch run.
-
.·••
Iri preparation for the. upcoming
. . .
.. .
. ... ..
and·. no'N apparent season,
.
Marist
••
"I
..
(both teams).
·am
,anticipating
held
a
winter ski
.camp
in Vernon
..
the·fast two weekends," Dunne said.
Valley,
N.J.
•
·
~
"I-hope.it keeps snowing."
·First
snow storm brings outgoOd and bad
The men•s·b~Jc~tball
te'arp
s~c-
N.Y.,
produces blocks as if th~y
.ing
out on competition.and practice
tion for the matter'!
.
•
cessfµ\ly compl~ted their t_rip to
•
were
,dinner
at th~ cafeteria. ~e had
V.
is hardly good news for
:any
tea,m
..
•
•
This may very
wc)l
occur and
•
11,_{adison
Square.Oarden'on Satur-
•
5.blockson Monday, and four blocks
.
Als.p, the four buses which were· thank heavens for high powered fig-
day.
c
•
on Saturday:
:. ••
...
•
T
scJiedul~d to travel to· Madison
·ur.es.
•
From my court-side view during
Kareem Hill see.ins. to. be in a
h
1
Square Garden on Saturday for
.the
.
4:8
•
GAMES IS NOT
.·
the g~e. the team appe!!fed to be a
·
slump at this po~t
_and
time.,
e
men's bas_ketball.
team were also
•
LONG ENOUGH
ljttle weak and sl,10ok~up
for_niost of
T~e junior forward has only
.~anceled due to the
·inclement
.
Tlle"National HockeyLeague is
the first half.
.
.
. .
.
•
scored seven points
·
in the: l~t . two
-
e
w
·weather.
.
.
.
,
•
play~g a shortened 48 game sched-
A 19 to
.O
11;1n
thr,ough the ~nd of
games. This does not seem. to
be
too
•
CLJNT()N. AND BASEBALL
•.
ul~ and it· is affecting. the. play of
the first half and begillning
.of
the
big !lf a factor in recent games, but
S
.
It seeins
.
that President Clinton
many teams.
second half gave the Red Foxes. a
in order to compete with the top ..._ _ __,,,--____
;.._...;...;..__~
and the.,federal government have
The New York-Rangers (by the
new outlook for the contest.
.·
NEC teams, there must be some
some how gotten their claws into
•
way, t_he baIU_lef
looks okay) are .
_This
new outlook just may.be
prodµction on his part.
•
and
if they pounce on Rid~r (their the baseball strike disaster.
.
·strugglinginthirdplaceoftheEast-·
what
·
the_ m_en
's
_te~m
ha_s bee.n
• • ·
If Hill continues to n.ot play up
_
toughest competition in the champi~
This is certainly good news. This
.
.em
Conference
'Atlantic.·
Division
searching for
th_is
season.
•
to par, then the rest of the team, onships), there
is
sure to be another strike has gone on long enough.
·
afterjust nine games.
.
••
•
They have won the last eight of
whi~h wiU anyway,' needs to step
crown;
August of 1994 began a year of
.
The
long delay before the start
nine games and with eight games
up ar~und him. This includes seniors
These swimmers have been prac-
let-downs and disappointments in
of the season is the problem.
remain.ing, ar:e in strong <=9ntetition Gregg Chodkowski and D.exter
•
ticing since October or November not only the world of baseball but
•
How can any team be expected
for a'Northeast Conference Touma-
Dunbar and junior Danny
.Basile.
(maybe earlier for some)' and
·have
also·sports.in general (OJ.).
•
to prepare for a season, enter the
ment bid.
DEFENDING
.THE
TITLE
fmally gone through the taper and
It is obvious that the Player's
s~on, peak during the season and
A
comeback would by far hit the
The women~s
swimming arid div-
are ready for prime-time action.
Union and the owners of the ball
peak
after the season, if it is still
history books and m~k a truly
_sue-
ing team are competing in the Met-
THE FIRST· "REAL"
clubs
·
may continue the so called
entering the season in the first place.
cessful season for the Red FoJtes.
ropoJitan Conference Championships
SNOW STORM
"negotiations" for a long time.
Cert!linly not the Stanley Cup
There are a few factors that may
this
weekend.
.
•
The rrrst big snow storm. of the
Most baseball fans do not. want
Champion New York Rangers or the
decide what achievements they can
Stephanie Raider, who now holds
year hit the East on Saturday· and to wait till Babe Ruth turns 200 to
Nevi Jersey Devils.
pull-off.
four·. Marist swimming school
unfortunately stunted play for the watch another Major League player
FYI - There is still no decision
Alan Tomidy needs to keep pro-
records, is sure to be leading the way
men's volleyball team and the play 'ball in a major league park.
on the appointment of the Athletic
ducing and scoring in the high teens
for the Red Foxes'.
women's and men's indoor track
The two sides are unable to form
Director.
to middle 20's.
.
The women, as well as the men,
teams.
an agreement, so why not involve
Teri L
Stewart
is The Circle
• The 6-foot
11
.iunior from Leroy, have strong depth in their swimmers
The snow
was
exciting, but miss-. the government and make legis]a-
Sports Editor .
--------
\"·
·
.•
)
I
;·
.Februar
_-is
Black Hist()ry Month: (Calendar_ of Events, p.3)
HOME
MCTV
fin~
~pace
- page
3
Volume
46,Number10
'
....
THE
lllCIJE
Marist
College,
Poughkeepsie,
N.
Y.
STREAKED
Men's_ B-ball
w~n
8 of last 9 outings
• - page 12
February
9, 1995
Pataki's prqposecl budget may
cut Marist's HEOP program
Budget
sidebar
by DARYL RICHARD
Staff Writer
by CRAIG D. GOTTILLA
Staff Writer
Gov. George Pataki's budget pro-
posal has many college students
worried about their future.
•
The plan unveiled on Wednes-
day includes cutbacks in government
employment, "'.elfare and education.
The reduction of funds allocated
to education -results in increased tu-
ition and • less assistence from the
state Tuition Assistance Program.
Freshman Jennifer Smith, a
Syra-
cuse, .New York, resident lives with
her single mother and three sisters.
She said she depends on Tap to at-
tend Marist.
"TAP was the only way I could
afford school," Smith said. "If I don't
get as much next year, I won't be
back."
Reducing the maxium TAP
award from
$4,050
to
$3,575
is not
the only affectPataki's proposal has
on college students. He intends to
increase tuition at SUNY schools by
$1,000 next year.
Patrick Tully, a senior at SUNY
New Paltz, said students at his
school were• outrag1.;d
by the new
proposal,
.·_
.. ':'.'We,:ai:e.already paying too
much;~~;Tully'said,rI
can't affordto
:: pay-aiicitlier:$1;000:-•"·;·--:-~.,,:><-•·•
·.0:
( _-
• Helen Hadfi<:ld, a Poughkeepsie· -,
resident· working ·in, the Marist: Li~
brary, said she strongly opposes the
cuts in education.
•
• - "College students are already
paying-too much for their educa-
tions,., Hadfield said. ''The gover-
nor' shoilld find other areas -to cut
back."
- One area Pataki proposes· cut-
backs -is in government employees.
-He.intends to eliminate 11,000 jobs.
>
:Bil[ ~oore, a part time student
from Rhinebeckwho has worked for
Ta.sk
• FOi-Ce
on,SexualViOlence Prevention
~~!•~:~;:;:.
• SJ;>pnsors
Wey!( of Ed.µcaHonal
Programs ,
e18!i:::::::}:,
by_:ioo_·
S_TIN_A_W_.
ELLS_-_._
J?eing'.raped and being
bit.
on the
events will help increase awareness .is surprising to some on campus
graduatedfrom Marist last year and
.
-
.
·Editor
_ .
.
ankle -by
_a
raW.esnake except that
on campus.-
•
-
•
• because you·don't normally see ex-
is entering Boston College Law
•
people'.ask you if·your skirt was
"Those involved in the Task
cops and counselors working as a
School in the fall. He said that cut-
Las~ Sunday
/an
estin1ated 100
students arid faculty members braved
the below-_zero
tempe(atures.to par-_·
ticipate_in the "Take Back the Night
March" beginning Campus Violence
. _ short_ and why you \yere out alone '-}:'orce
art: about making our little p~
._
telilll," he s!lid. "I'm just involved ting back state employees is a good
anyhow. ' • _--.
. •---•
•
- of_
the world
a.
safer place,''. Staples
as a concerned individual."
- idea.
•
- •
. ",J'4ere is_
no differerice between
said. ''.We· need to increase the
Theweek of ·events included a
"There are too many 111iddle
bei_Iig
·•
raped
•
and gc,ing -hea_!i
• first • awareness.'' -
. self-defe!}se
demonstration co-spon--. managerial positions -that just i}.ren
't
~hrough a windshi~ld except that
. Siaplessaid the purpose ofopen-
sored by the members ofKappa
necessaey," Sorbello said. "They
'afterwards you are afraid not of
cars
ing the week 'with th_e '_'Take B!ick - Latnbda Psi, a lecture on how to. should be trimmed down.
-
but of half the hunirui race.''
The Night" _
march was the strong
report
a
sexual crime sponsored by
Rick Angelo, a senior from Lake
H!ll1Sen
said when she was up
sense of tradition and symbolism
the CriminalJustice department and • George, said he supports Pataki's
Prevention Week.
. ... . ·,
The week of programming, spon-
sored by the Task Force on Sexual . ,
· Violence Prevention, is designed to ~--,--,--------------~--------_...;.-
a video presentation dealing with the
cutting of state jobs.
media depiction of violent
crimes.
"There. are a lot of useless gov-
better educate students and faculty
members about violence on
cam-
puses and in. communities.
The students and_
filculty marched· .
from the Chapel to the Rotunda in
the new Student Center. where. the
ceremony co)!.cluded with junior
Jennifer H!UlSen
reading a poem by
Marge Piercy, describing the feel-
ings of a survivor of rape.
Hansen, a member of Sigma
Sigma Sigma, stood on the second
floor balcony of the Rotunda and
read aloud the powerful poem to the
crowd assembled below.
"There is no difference between
being raped and being pushed down
a flight of cement steps except that
the wounds also bleed inside," she
began.
"There is no difference between
being raped and being run over by a
truck except that afterwards men ask
you if you enjoyed it.
"There is no difference between
;'Violence,,:has
no place on ou,r campus.
"
. There. were also informational
emmerit departments that should be
tables setup;in.Donnelly with lit-
elimin~ted," Angelo sa_id. "The
erature and videos on violent and
money could be utilized elsewhere.''
- Roberta Staples, director of counseling • • sexual crimes. -
above the crowd reading the poem
she felt scared, but felt the poem
served its purpose.
"It was helpful because it gave a
different, shocking kind of viewpoint
of rape," she said. "It was a shock
tactic."
According to Hansen, the
poem
was not only powerful for those
present in the crowd but it also gave
her a sense of self empowerment.
"I guess it riled a lot of emotions
in me. It raised a feeling that more
people have to be more_ educated
about it {sexualviolence}," she said.
According to Roberta Staples,
director of the counseling center, the
Task Fo~ce hopes that the weeks
behind the event.
, .
.
•~t•s a_ tradit~onal, standard pro-
gram you often see on campuses and
in communities { concerned about
violence}. It is called 'Take Back
The Night' because that is usually
the time in which incidents take
place," she said.
Joseph Leary, director_of safety
and security, said he hopes that by
participating in the week's events
and by serving ·as a member of the
Task Force, he will encourage more
male students and faculty members
to get involved in what is happen-
ing on this campus and in the com-
munity.
"The fact that I did get involved •
Hansen said the march .was one
of_ the • most powerful parts of the
week, but also said that she feels it
may not have the -impact upon this
campus that it should.
"Honestly, I think the people that_
needed to go {to the march}didn't,"
she said. "To some point it will help.
It is unfortunate that some people
just walk by the infqrmation tables.·
and don't· give the stuff a second
glance."
Staples said her hope, ultiniately,
is to get the message across that
violence and sexual crimes do not
belong at Marist or in this commu-
nity. •
"Violence has no place on our
campus," she said.
I
2
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"Madne·sslJtakes· place during
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plot staits:tomake:sense'.
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Circle Film Critic.
modem. times. where horror'fiction
•
But:lJ.ot for Jong.
•
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c:.
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woman;,;.:::··/:::\:··
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:., .,leave
so~e question IIlarks and gc:ts:•
•
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•
•
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·
·
·
novelist. Suuer Cane, played by
;
<
On~.
on
the case(Trent b~¢ollles
i
,J1i~
e,eries(thing ab?uf the h9tel_
.
a_Jit~~
.sanfusll_liat
t~~s. ~e iil<?vic:
..
• • 'Slime-coated
ghouls, an eerie
•
Jurge,q Prochnow, is the "century's
•
curious. and
_starts.
to• re_ad
some
-of
..
·.:
is not the'.old
,~a~
w._h_o.runs
~~
front
•
_,is
thoroughlf e1!t~rtammg
f~r the (an
•
New England town~ and a horror most widely reac:l author."
. .
Cane's. books...
.·
.: ,
.
;
.
:;
.·
..
··
,
~esk, but a p~tmg·o!1 tµe_~~U that
•
who·apprec1_at~s
C~ent~r s sty1~
..
·•
fiction novelist whose books drive
His writing is said to have dan-.
<.Ashe
reads, more werrd thmgs
seems to keep changmgform. •:.
:
Sam Neill~ performance was
his fans ins~ne; it all a~ds u~,to John gerous effects on "hlS less stable begin to happen.
:>
\:.
•
••
<
\
•.·,
<.~:Th{s.,
i.s.··.•·1·:~~t.·
ano,'t.her
o.
ne_·
••
of.'.ih.e,
..
very so,lid
:an~.
convincing: a:s.' he
.•
Carpenter s latest,,f1l~,
In the
•
readers."
.
..
.
. .
.
Although aU.the pl9tss_eem
sliili~.
poitrayed be>th
!l
confident bus~ess
Mouth of Madnes~, which opened
..
Although the idea of Cane might
•
Jar to Trent, there is som~thing dark
.
sight gags within the mm that keeps
·
m~ and a· torment~~
·hero
c=a~~t
at the~te~s last Fnday.
sound like a Stephen King rip-off and alluring about the st()ries<·\
,
•
you
011
your toes.
•
.
up m th,~:lu~acy
,of
.M_adn~ss
..
:
::
•
This 1s Carpenter's first horror~-*****··*·*•-·.
L.. ••
•
Cane's ston.
·e.
s have a. haunting •
•.
fu
the center of Hobbs Erid Hes
..
• •.·.
Th.·
e spec.ml eff:<?cts
of Industn.
al
..
mm !inc~ 1987's "Prince of Dark-~
•
..
·······--·
•
..
~.
power
_abou~
the~ that possess t_he
•
a'dark c~urch_with an upside
_down-
••
Liglit.~11d
~agic_andt~e
KN.B
EFX.
ness.
·.
.
• .
.
•
•
•
~
•
.~
reader; and as his fans become m-
·
•
cross engraved above· it's doorway
Group were very effective and grue-
.
His last effort, "Memoirs.of an·'7'
·~
·creasinglycrazedandobsessedwith
andplentyofvidousdobeimanpin~.
some at~imes..
·.::
..
:
.•
•
.. •·
·•'·
Invisible Man," was ~ot received
i(
i(
·
his work, ~ey ~tart t~ !eplace <?Y- schers to heighten the evil mood.
.
An~_cinfwh~ appi:ecia!esboi'ror
we~ at the
b~~ offi':e 1~ 1!>92..
·~
~ eryday reahty;-w1t~
fichtJOJ5
hqITor;
.
This is where Sutter Cane resides
.
~ows ~hat ~: great SPf':ial effe<:ts
. Madness
.
re~mtes Carpenter~
.~
,
Trent begms to expenence_ tor~.
.
along 'Yith 'tan evilolder
than"
man~
Job-can ~nly be11efit
a.p1c~re'.
:·
·
with.actor Sam Neill? w~o.h~? a co-
i(
i(
·
menting flashbacks where disfigured
·kind
and wider than the.known uni-
•.
•
•
And if,you are.11o~famil1ar
:'Y1th
st_arr.~~g
role as the v1Ham m
..
Mem-
.~
.
.
~..
.
•
human.
s lurk in.
·d.ark,
John·.·
·.Carpe
..
n-. verse." ..
.
.
.
~ente~
~
past·m
....
ovies;. you.i:n.1gh
..
· t
mrs. .
.
.
~
.
.
~
ter-esque alleyWays.
:·
..
·, .
. .
The plot heightens and begins to
b~ d1sa~pe>mt
7
d by t,he alma.st anti~
•
In his !atest ro1e,_Ne!ll
plays John
i(*********
.
.
Cane's latest novel "In the Mouth
make a little more sense when Trent
..
climactic ~ndmg of
.••~.adness:"
•.
Trent, an insurance m~est1gator
who
•
•
.
.
.
.
,
.
.
.
· .
.
of Madness" takes. place in· Hobbs
comes face to face with Cane and·
,
.
In movie news.;. Fdm fans:were
embarks on an assignment that with his creepy New England set-
End N.H.
.
.·
..
·.
•.
•.
.
·..
discovers that he.has been part. of a
sad to lellrll of the passing of movie
changes his life and ultimately the tings and mass appeal, Carpenter
When Trent's suspicion leads
sinister plan that will ravish the.earth
vet Donald P1easence,who di_ed
1ast
world.
makes note eady that the Cane ve-
him to travel to the:creepy,-_all
too
with an evil "madness" all along.
'f!lursday at.the.age of75;
; .·.
;
As the. ~lm opens, we _se~
Trent hicle is indeed bigger than King and
familiar New· England town where
Sure there are a Jot of creatures;
Most Americans will. remember
locked up m an asylum; 1t 1s from more influential.
.
. .
he suspects Cane is staying; the story
dark. rooms
•
and disorienting
him. as the
_crazy
Dr
..
Loomis from
this cell that he explains to a psy-
We soon learn that the famous becomes even more mind-bending. p1ottwists, but at one. level,
the"Halloween" series, and he had
chiatrist just what happened on his horror fiction novelist has disap-
.
Accompanied by Cane'.s editor
•
Ca'ipenter's "Madness" asks the
just wrapped shooting-"Hallowi;en
last as_si~nment.
.
..
. .
.
peared as part of a publicity stunt.
Linda Styles (Julie Camien),
•Trent
.
movie-goer to Jook beyond all the
6" last nionth.
.
.·
•.·:
: .
,,
.
.,
..
·
•
.
This 1s when the ~lot starts to
When Trent is hired by Cane's
is soon drawn in and spun around in
standard spooks. and jQlts and ex-
He had. been hail~d by critics as,
take off and where thmgs get real publisher Jackson Harglow (Charlton a world. of "madness."
.and
horror:
•
amine the underlying. issile0of the
··one.
of the all-time
.
great British
weird and interesting, much of the Heston) to investigate the
•
case of.
While looking for Cane in H~bbs
•
effect mass-market fiction has 9n its
•
·
·actors.
•
•
•
•
•
•
••
•
•
•
•
Ray Parker Jr .. or hard·core, 'Ghostbus.ters' roe.ks ori
'
',"
'
_,
-
.
by TOM BECKER
Circle Music Critic
stream of consciousness music col~ was good at substituting similar 1yr-
ward hardcore, all originals if l re-
umn without some colorful poetic ics.
•
•
member correctly.
genius.
Thing 'was, Wesley kind of an-. ,
Once again I am faced with the
Obviously, I have something on noyed me, he was·always ·hanging
obligation to write something about
my mind.
around my end of the
_blllck,
calling
music that students on this campus
I hope you don't mind if I at-
for my brother and shooting the
might be interested in.
tempt to share it.
mailman with his gun, which•was
Some weeks are harder than oth-
Remember that· Ray Parker Jr. pretty funny.
..•
..
.
• .
. .
ers.
'80s anthem "Ghostbusters"?
.
But it was that song; that infer
7
I mean, there is so much out
Well, when
I
was
·a
little guy nal racket which annoyed me most.
there, more music than I could pos-
bac:k home on Long Island, there
I would have fovedto have given
Well, it came time for them to
break for a bit and this big bald guy
••
from. the band,· the bassist; comes
over to the bar for a beer;
•
•
.
He looked right at me and snill~
Wesley.
.
.
.
.
:
·-
And that point is that music stays
with you, it becomes part of you.
.
That goes for everyone who dug
that Cyndi Laupei: song about girls
and fun, whether they)ike it or·not,
that damn song is pait of their soul's
make~up.
•
•
.
.
-
•
. .
At'Ieast;_ that's :my.
theorr..
.
.
sibly handle or do justice to.
was an even littler guy named him· a little. whack in the. head to
•
But.I dig it because music is a
Wesley ~ho lived down the block straighten him out.
,>
..
•
..
•
•
Enough.~fthat
..
special thing.
from my:house.
.··
.
As.the years went bylsaw and
\<\.
little whiJe· late~··the band
•
·
•
·
•
-
,_
••
_.
·
·.·.·,It'.can
gtab_
you anclp~ll you in
.•
Wesley·.was a strange,kid who
'heard'less
ofWesley and theii,'he
••
started up'with
a:co°".er;
a·hai-dcore
·.:
.:
ji~ib;s
~haf's, lliitirig;llie
ie~rd
diied.ioris you did'ri.otknow existed·
:
was;_
ahvays ; ~:nI_ling:-;up
'a~d\down
-
,;f'mally
move\} away fioin: oµr_
neigh~
•
Nei'sioii'
of '-'Ghostbilsters,'";
:'
•
: .:
.
'
stores
,
on3fuesday; F~b; ]: ~iriiple; ..
•
ifcardhr~w'you'int(j'a biaclfcabys~·· the block w1thh1s.water pistol.
.,
borhood.··,
I
•
,
L·
•
_
. ,
.
:
,
:.
,
.,.
</,
....
,,,.
,
Minds,
.{fhe,,:Wat.~~l>oy-s,
)995, ·
or raise you into a rainbow of glory..
•
I'm talking 333,days of the\Ji~
,,:
.•
:
I
hcip~-ibis
isi:(t
b_~tjng
you_ too
•
:·.
The.only ~tng
'different
besides
.•.
Grammy
•nontin~es,
_and
L.A:·
,G~ns.
I guess what I am trying to say endar, 100 degrees or 10 degrees, much.
•
•
.·
, : •
.•.
•
..
••.
•
..
the, iristruinentatioii was
.
that this
·,
are all releasing ne~ discs.
•
is that music is a p~rt of all our lives, that kid was constantly cruising the
•
So now we come to 1995 and
•.
time, Wesley
was
not s4igfug.
•• •
.;
•
•
:,
.
.
.•"
..
whether it's top 40, rap, industrial, small,· subtle confines of Hungry
•
I'm home at a bar during Christin.as
.
.
.
.
.
,,
.;:Also,
Je
_on(the
Jook~u(for
techno, funk, or anything else, it's
Harbor Road.
•.
.
·.
break.
Man, itblew my·mind.
Slas_h's.Sual{~pit_-\Vlio
release:"It'.s
in everyone's bones.
•
.
.. •
•
AnyWay; Wesley really loved to
·.
:
A few friends and Iarejust wast-
..
.
. . .
. ...
,
...
•'
Five·O'.Clock Somewhere>Joii Feb.
I should shut. up -with this vibe. belt. <>ut that.· "Ghostbusters" song,
•
ing time when some guy announces
So now that you've re31d
this:~ap
/'.14l
Just.'µi:'timeJor,:tlie big d_ay,
jt.
But,· hey, I guess
·rm
in soine knew every·single word, at least, I
that the band is ready to play.
fo~SOOwords or so, I give you ..
my:_
.makes.a.
great.gift.•fqr ym1r.lovey-•
kind of flow· right now, sort of a think he did, but if he didn't he sure
Th~y played pretty straight for-
...
point.
•
•·
doveyya1e~~ine's J:?ay s\Ve<?_theart,
·:
..
<·
·1.e·••·.•···.•t··us··-···
....
:.
. comblne:-all·
your-~ebts
intQ
one
_
-
easy-to-manage
pa~~t.
Bad
credit
no
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AIL
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.!
THE
CIRCLE,
FEBRUARY
9, 199.5
;Nf.CTV
finds home
with adequate space
by DANA BUONICONTI
• •
Senior Editor
There's no place like home.
• There's no place like home.
ties, could cost between $4 000 ·and
$8,000:
•
' '
· "I've been working with Chris
Berinato, from MCTV, to assess the
lighting needs," Sansola said. "He's
putting t9gether a proposal based on
what their needs are."
Sansola described the work that
was done recently to accommodate
MCTV's·needs, some of which was
covered with college activities' bud-
get.
.·.. That's· what the members of
Merv
are saying these days after a
two-year
•
struggle • to move from
cramped quarters in a lighting booth •
abo~~ _the theater to spacious new
fac1ht1es near the mailroom in
Cha~pagnat,
a· task that proved
considerably more challenging than
simply_ tapping their heels together
"We were busy over break con-
three times.
.
structing walls creating a studio with
3
~ell, the ~ove is now complete, a control roo~ that's secure and a
We obtained the space last se- • large room for taping, relocating
mester
anp
when we came back from • pipes, putting phones in and laying
brea_k (this semester), i.t was made new tiles," he said.
After being treated to a mild winter, snow covered the campus last weekend.
available
to us," said Gina
Becconsall, president of MCIV.
"It's
definitely a lot bigger than
our previous space, and we now
have separate rooms for automation,
a studio and storage and editing."
. Becconsall said the only detail
still not worked out is more lighting
for the studio area, which according
to estimates given to her from Steve
Sansola, director of student activi-
Becconsall hopes that with the
new facilities Merv can do more
in-house production and one-camera
shoots.
"We're going to work on school
closings and try to have a news
anchor do live class cancellations "
she said. "We've also got our li~e
elections debate coming up, but that
Poughkeepsie received approximately half a foot of snow
c·
I f"I
h t
•
irce1epoo
won't take place in the new area.
"We're
all very pleased,"
Becconsall said. "Housekeeping and
maintenance, in particular, did an
excellent job with everything, espe-
cially with painting the studio black
and putting down black tile for the
studio floor."
MCTV's
former predicament in-
volved a space that was not only
inadequate for housing their equip-
ment, but contained a leaking venti-
lation shaft as well. In a past Circle
story, Sansola blamed the constant
~elays fQrthe move and the comple-
tion of prep work on the area to
construction difficulties.
Now, however, both Sansola and
Merv seem to be pleased with the
outcome.
"It's great that things finally got
resolved after fighting for two
years," said Sue Yanusz, secretary
for Merv. "We deserve it."
"Our ultimate goal is to make it
into a small studio, and now we're
off to a good start."
T icke ts Anyone?
r---r-----:------------------------.
UNIFORM
TRAFFIC
TICKET
33210
MARIST COLLEGE
by ROBERT MOYER
Staff Writer
Over the past several months, the
alleged inconsistencies over parking
ticket distribution has been ·an issue
of controversy and concern among
the Marist community.
•
According to Joseph · F. Leary,
director of safety and security, they.
have made no changes in how secu-
rity distribute parking tickets from
week to week.
"We
try
to spread it evenly along
the
campus," Leafy said. "We do
lo9k _strongly at the Townhouse, •
Dyson,.
Lowell'
••
thonias,
•.
and'
Donnelly lots-not necessarily
·in·
. that order."
•
The purpose for focusing on
those. areas, according to Leary; is
the number ofcars that flow in and
ouf of the lots. With a constant
stream of students using the lots,
security needs to make sure parking
is available to people who have been
assigned that designated area.
''These are the most spaces we
have ever had," Leary· said. "There
are
4,700 members of the Marist
community and only 1,800 spaces,
so then~ is one space for every four
cars."
•
Also, Leary said that parking lots
distract from the beauty of the
·school.
"We•
have one of the most at-
tractive ·campuses. in the country,"
Leary said.<(People
have an idea that
we have all these spaces and we
aren't letting them use it."
Whether the number • of tickets
seem to increase or decrease from
week to week, there are no set num-
, ber of tickets handed out. Accord-
ing. to Leary, the tickets. are distrib~
uted by security personnel duri~g the
week and occasionally on the week-
ends.
Leary continued to state that the
security personnel tend to go easy
on ticketing, trying to focus on the.
areas that get hit hard during the
week, especially the commuter lots.
"The commuter lots get attention,
while we try to cut some slack on
the weeke~ds," said Leary. "People
just have to break the habit of park-
ing in other lots."
Lots such as the North End and
Hoop lot, are·resident lots and cars
just sit during the week, so there is
no point to focus a lot on those ar- .
eas, ·Leary· said.
However, some students said . it
is unfair that they have to park at
Beck Place, eve.n though they are
residents .
Amy Patenaude, a junior resident
of the Townhouse section, said se-
curity should not make residents
park •
at
Beck Place because some
people live on the-other end of cam- -
pus.
"That's unfair. Why are they·
making residents park ·at Beck,"
Patenaude said. "There is always
extra. spaces at the Hoop lot"
One student, who wished to re-
main anonymous, expressed his frus-
tration with the parking ticket pro-
cedure in a more direct tone.
"They are analand abusive with
their power," he said.
"I mean, if
you are parked in a space for five
minutes, they are there giving you a
ticket a minute later."
Leary said the main reason why
tickets are handed out is because it
is a safety feature. For example if
the fire department were called in
and a car was parked next to an
island, this could prevent the _truck
from getting into the lot
.
As for the pricing of the tickets,
Leary said they were made to leave
an impression on the receiver of that
ticket.
OFFICE OF SAFETY AND SECURITY
POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y. 12601 (914) 471-1822
FIRST
You are directed
to a0pear
at the Business
Otti@ Donnelly
Bro
20s
within
10
days and oay Jhe 0ena1Jy
;ndjcated
Failure to do
~
may result in an additional fine. withdrawal
ol parking privilege, and/or towing.
SEE REVERSE FOR
VIOU.llONS AHO
FINES
l
l--
MOTORIST COPY·
Ticket to ride--Marist security has heard complaints about unfair
tl~ketlng from unhappy students.
"Years ago, fines were $5 for a
majority of them. I would pay that
anytime," Leary said. "We make
fines realistic in order to get the
person's attention."
Fine prices include; $25 for park-
ing in a restricted area, $50 for park-
ing in a Fire Zone and $75 for park-
ing in
a
Handicap space or ramp,
according to the Parking and Vehicle
Registration Policy pamphlet.
Complaints such as "I was late
for my class" or
"I
was parked there
for only five minutes," are not go-
ing to cut it, Leary said.
Students need to have a valid
excuse, in writing, detailing the rea-
sons why and the time they were
parked there.
Any verbal complaints will be
handled by Lisa Hamel, his admin-
istrative assistant, in Donnelly
201
between the hours of 8 a.m. to 4
p.m. Monday through Friday.
If there are any questions or un-
certainties about where to park dur-
ing the week or on the weekend,
students can contact the security
office at ext. 2282.
THE BLACK STUDENTS• UNION
AND S.P.C. CELEBRATE
BLACK HISTORY MONTH
~&US
at MARIST COLLEGE
B.S.U.
mtg -
Discussion
"Sex&Love"
..
.,
.....
I I I I I I
4.
-
.
-·
..
•..
•.
MO_NDAY
GREEK.·NIGHT
•
-
•
.
·,
Bring your Frat or SorQrity·
For the Berties Olympics
·
•
Doors Open
at 8pm.
Games
at 9
.
__
Drafts start at a Quarter.
No Cover
.
WEDNESDAkY
-
Mid-Week
Ladies·
Night
Ladies
get Free Drafts 9-12 pm
Guys Get 1 Pitchers
_
4-Guys
In
Disgiuise
-
Play Anything
You
·Request
~
.·
.
.•
;-
,:.
.
'·
..
.
•
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.
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.
..
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•.•
....•
TUESDAY
MENS.NIGHT
_
G_1.1ys
its your turn
_
at
.
_-
._.
_
-
ALL YOU
CAN DRINK
FOR
$8~0l0
_
:
Ladies
Get Free·
Drafts
-
9pm-12pm.
·
•
·_-:
Square
and·
Rood.
_Mood_··-
FRIDAY
HAPPY
HO.URS
4PM-8PM
Buy One Get One Free·--_-.
·
•
·_
Any Drink in the Ho.use,
__
-
Free Buffet from.
Emillianos
-_.-
•
.
-·.
Members
of 4-Guys
In Disguise
;
-
__
·
.-No~Ci:,ver:2-1:and·over;please·.
_:
•
·
'
.
:
•
,·
..
~
;:-
-
.
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•
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. •
.
.
.
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.
-•.·
•
•
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,
;
:·;,:':-,
..
• :_: ·.::· .•
••
·,,
:;
••••
,'.
J -·~:-
,·•...
..
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';•··
:
THURSDAY
IS
YOUR NIGH'tll!
•·.·.··
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1st-FOurKegsAreFREE
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Shots
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•
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Bertie$
also presents
Briri.g
Your BUddy
Night
;
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Simply
show up at Berties
on
Thl.lrsday
with thiS ad and
a·
• •
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friend and th~ two otya get In foFthe
price of one.
.•
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•••
Don•t forget March 8th
-
·
Berties Bash
1
95
•
. • •
Kick Off Your Spring Break
the right way with
4
Bands
and FREE
Drafts
all night.
Doors open at 8pm
.
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Sta tuned for more details.
•
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··--·--,-
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"
'·-··
..
•··
••••
THE
CIRCLE,
}
f
EJ.\TURE
.
FEBRUARY
9, 1995
s
/·:Will,iaiij~-
spills
·guts·
to .. Marist 'crowd about·n,Growing Up Brady"
byJUSTIN SEREMET
.
Williams came ou~ followi~g the·. if I could/-he· said.-...
.-?,
• Senior Editor •
video to a near-st~dmg ovation.
Williams talked about how when
~•1 don't really know ~hat to • he first gotfo:the set his main in~
_ Some childhood actors fade away say," _hf said. "Groovy, I_ guess."
terest was. Maureen' McCormick
after stardom in their teenage years.
. Wd~tams went on to g1_ve
a brief (Marcia), but the object of his de-
Others hold up video stores .or . h1sto~ of.the show, tellmg about. sire soon became. Henderson, with
are _even brought up on murder how it's be~n on TV ~or almost four whom Williams went on a date.
charges.
decades (1t began m the '60s),·
And some write books about their through six presidents and eight
past, sell T-shirts and spend 90 min-
separate Brady reunions.
utes telling college audiences about
"It's kind of like the show that
their sexual experiences.·
•
• won't go away, somewhat like the
• Such was the case with Barry OJ. Simpson trial," he said.
Williams, who played Greg Brady
He also talked about the _
way
on TV's now legendary "The Brady· things ·were. -be it· words, styles in
The proceedings quickly evolved
into a recollection of pre-pubesent
fantasies, with Williams describing
his lusts and constant embarrassment
on the set.
••
Williams also talked about his
"There was a long embrace and that turned· into a long kiss.
That's as far as things went .. ; that night. "
- Barry Williams, a.k.a. Greg Brady
Bunch," when -he gave a lecture cloiiies oi: the niany different atti-
recently to a full house of Maris{ tudes of the times.
st~dents, a group dying to·_
get a
• Williams noted that somehow,
ghmpse of a star from their own through it all,
...
The Brady Bunch"
childhood days.
has remainedas popular as ever, a
But some may have been caught cult phenomenon that has spawned
a bit off guard.
•
•
• an army of t-shirts, a satire movie
on-again, off-again relationship with
McCormick and how he first hooked
up with her on a beach during the
taping of the famous Hawaiian epi-
sode.
"I only had sex with Florence and of· course, Williams' own
Henderson once," Williams boasted. "Growing .Up Brady: I Was.a Teen-
"It's amazing what a teenage fan.: • age :Greg." .
"It was a beautiful night, there
was a full moon reflecting in the
water, there was a warm breeze, and
I was with Marcia," he said. "Now,
I would've been some kind of idiot
not to do anything."
Barry Williams offered Marist students a flashback to thier
childhood with his lecture, "Growing Up Brady:
I
was a teenage
tasy can do with an 8 x 10 glossy
(Audience members that hadn't
and a bottle of Wesson Oil."
read it had the opportunity to buy
Greg".
•
Circle photo/Jen Betz
This was greeted ·by· a loud the.book after the show.)
• • ·_.-
•
ruckus of cheers and laughs from a
crowd not expecting Andrew "Dice"
After giving the historical ele-
Clay.
ments around "The Brady Bunch,"
Maris( students at .this point were
either engrossed in the story, con-
fused by the confession, or maybe
thoroughly amused.
The show began . innocently
Williams continued his presentation
enough, with the lights dimming m, by poking fun at everyone in the
a video montage of little clips from cast ( except himself), and then
the favorite show of the '70s; Peter changed the subject to what was
"There was a long embrace, and
in a fight at schoo1, Marcia getting clearly his favorite topic: sex.
that turned into a long kiss," he said.
hit by a football, Greg smoking a
.
..
"That's as far as things went...that
ci~aref!e and so on.
•
"I'd like to clear up the rumors, ,.night."
--.RESTAURANT
REVIEW
•• by SCOTI SIGNORE
Food Guy
,
salads, _sandwiches, dinner entrees . to get ,the most _out of your meal,
and desserts. •
•
this is a sure bet).
•
,This,•
week's_·.
review • is bas~d.
upon my visit to Banta'sSteak and
Stein, located on Route
9 •
South iri
Wapp~~ers Falls;
• •
Steak and Stein; as it is known,
is the most appropriate winter din-
inp; location
in
,the area,
. _
-
...
·
.. Some • of the appetizers were
Some dinner entrees include a 13
: steak._fried potato skiris ($3.95), :
.
ounce New York strip. sirloin
shrimp cocktail ($4.95) and stuffed
($15.95), a 16 ounce prime rib
mushroom caps ($3.95),:In addition
($15.95), a 13 ounce prime rib
to the cheddar cheese-soup ($2.25)
($i3.95), a 10 ounce club steak
and the French onion soup ($2.50),
($9.95) and baked stuffed shrimp
Steak and Stein offers a soup of the
($10.95). Also available are a beef
day (I passed on the cream of mush-
kabob ($7 .95), swordfish ($10.95)
room).
•
and a baked scrod ($7.95) (there are
The restaurant and lounge is de-
signed to make the customer feelas ,
I~ regard to salads, in addition
though he or she hasentered _a
_ , to
a
grilled cajun chicken salad
snowed-in winter cabin; the wooden
($4.50), . a seafood salad ($4.95), a
tables and chairs, the fireplace and
caesar salad ($3.95) and a shrimp
the lights slightly dimmed helps to
scampi salad ($5.75), Steak and
support 'the outdoorsy atmosphere
Stein offers a well-stocked salad bar
(the wooden floor also supports'the - (this is som·ething that one. should
rustic environment).
not miss).
If
there is a restaurant mad,e for
. The salad bar is outstanding!
winter, thi~is it.
,-. :Every. possible addition to •one's
• • ---.
_ . . . _·_ .
. . . · .. · -·___
.
salad is available, Not only are the
The atm_osphere ts equaled no
items available, but at the rate tlie
where els~ m Dutchess County.
workers restock the salad 1:>ar,
each
The items on the menu are well- • it~m is asfresh as it comes.-(With
varied, moderately priced and· one· any dinner entree, the salad bar
can
can choose from a long list of soups,
replace· the vegetable. If you want
Marist College Council on the Theatre Arts
presents
"WHO's AFRAID OF
VIRGINIA WOOLF?"
By
Edward
Albee
Thursday, February 16, 7pm
Friday, February 17, 7pm
Saturday, February 18, 8pm
Sunday, February 19, 2pm
in the Performing_
Arts Center
suggested donation of..
$3 will ,go to the
Jen Dressel scholarship
Jund.
Call
x3133
for
reservations
many other choices).
As
I've mentioned, each dinner
entree· is served with a po~ato and
the choice of a vegetable, soup or
the salad bar (again, that's the sure
bet.salad bar.) During lunch, Steak
and Stein offers a whole bunch of
different sandwiches: Some sand-
wiches are the seafood melt ($4.75),
the prime rib dip ($6.95), an open-
faced club steak ($6.50) and a tav-
ern turkey sandwich ($5.25).
The tavern turkey sandwich is
sliced turkey, bacon, melted swiss
and russian dressing on rye. If I do
say so myself, that sounds like some-
thing that I may look into in the
future.
_
.. In_ regard to the "intangibles",.
those little things that make a· meal
just a little bit better, I was extremely
impressed with my waitress. Her
timing was perfect and she didn't
miss a thing. Her dinner recommen-
dation was exceptional.
It isn't often when I confer with
my waiter or waitress, but rather than
go with a steak, she recommended
the beef kabob. The beef cubes
skewered with onion, green pepper
and tomato was perfect.
Again, I was extremely pleased
with the service. Finally, in terms of
an overall evaluation, I loved Banta's
Steak and Stein. I've said it before,
but I'll say it again, there is no bet-
ter place to enjoy dinner on a cold,
winter night.
I was EXTREMELY pleased
with Banta's Steak and Stein.
In regard to the rounds of ap-
plause, Steak and Stein deserves the
highest I will give .... 4. 75 out of
5 •
(again, even the best may have room
f9r improvement).
He showed some more_
clips and
gave out more anecdotes, including
his description of Christopher
Knight (Peter) and Eve Plumb (Jan)
getting caught by the police while
having a little too much fun in the
back of a truck.
Before bringing the evening to a
close, Williams came out on stage
decked out in his infamous '70s
"hippie" outfit and invited people
to come up and join him in doing
the Brady dance.
When it was over, those who
weren't scared away stayed to have
Williams sign autographs, buy t-
shirts with the Brady kids on them,
or simply get a closer look at the
living Jegend.
Greg Brady, we hardly knew ye.
FREE FINANCIAL AID!
Over $6 Billion in private
sector grannts & scholarshops is now available. All
students are eligible regardless of grades, income, or
parent's inc.ome. Let us help. Call Student
Financial Services: 1-800-263-649S ext. FS1941
MARIST
COLLEGE,
POUGHKEEP$iE,
NY 12601.
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER
Kristina Wells,
editor
Dana Buoniconti,
senior editor
.
Justin Seremet,
senior editor
Teri L. Stewart,
sports editor
:
.
.
.
.
•
Meredith Kennedy,/eature
editor
Dawn Martin,
associate
editor
Lynn Wieland,
associate
editor
Daryl Richard,
associate editor
Larry Boada,
editorial
page editor
Matthew Dombrowski,
distribution
manager
Jen Forde,
advertising
manager
G. Modele
Clarke,/acu/ty
advisor
PUBLISHED
EVERY
THURSDAY
The snow-covered sidewalks glisten in the moon light.
A young man and won;ian walk casually along, hand-in-hand, wrapped in the
warmth of their loving gazes after a romantic dinner.
With eyes locked, they continue to walk in the blustery, snowy
atmosphere.
They lean toward each other and engage in a passionate embrace.
Suddenly, the love birds are blindsided by a runaway Marist golf cart and their
bodies fly helplessly into the snow banks.
·
Soon good ol' cupid will be waiting with bated breath to strike our skin deep
.
with the arrow of love.
.
.
St. Valentine's Day is a time-honored tradition, especially among those helpless
romantics.
.
.
We all know that despite the importance of this holiday, class is still in session.
However, our hoJ?eless romantics would opt for missing
a
day of classes to rest
up for the night which awaits.
The man, of course, would take this opportunity to run out to the nearest Wal-
Mart and find a card and an appropriate gift.
•
Ladies, don't be fooled, that gold necklace probably will tum green in about
,
three months.
The woman would spend the whole morning ~etting ample beauty rest.·
•
•
•
Of course, because it is Valentine's Day, shew1U walce up w_ith a_sC()rching
case
of zits \Vhich infest her chin ;in~ forehead.
: ·
•.
/,,·:;,;
.. ,
•
,X, :
.
•
-
..
So. much for beauty ~leep.: ;f1II1e
Jo
:goJor
the
.cover-up.,
_
....
,
.
,
f
...
-
Jc
,..,.
• •
The night \vould
'almost
definitely include dinner
ar
a fancy restaurant.
.
.
.
This forces the woman to starve herself all day in order to fit into that sexy black
dress she has been dying to wear for just such an occasion.
.
.
Never mind that she will have dizzy spells all day and feel like a small animal
is tearing at her stomach demanding nourishment.
Ah, love:
.
•
..
. . . .
.
•
._
- -Meanwhile, back at the bachelor pad:.!
.
-·
.
.
.
.
••
.
•
The man·is.lying around; watching television and drinking a beer with the guys.
It's only, 5:30 p.m. He has~plenty of time before dinner at severi. .
•
.
By now; the woman has already showered and proceeds to rummage like a mad-
woman _through her closefand dresser to find pantyhose without rips and lingerie
that screams sexy but feels comfortable.
• .
•
.
.
•
She brings her roommates in, and asks their honest opinion as she stands in front
of the mirror disgusted with·
.the·
way she
_
looks in
.
that dress she· starved herself to.
ru~
,
_·
;
•....
_·
.
Finally, after a lot of quick changes, her roommates convince her to wear. the
dress.
•
.
.
.
•
·
,_.
.
·_.
.
._
.
•.
.
..
.
After.we'tting and re-wetting her hair 18 million times,_ shese~Ies for pulling it
back off her face.
•
•
.
.
•
.
•
._
•
•
..
•
•
• Butnow she must painstakingly cover-up those annoying blemishes.
.
··
The man realizes the time, and many beers later, decides to take a shower and
get
.ready
for the '(qig n_igbt".
•
•
.
.
.
.
•. .
.
•
After much deliberation, be regretfully" decides to shave.
•
Suddenly, as· be cuts
.himself,
he remembers he forgot to get flowers.
Valentine's Day is not complete without roses.
.•
He quickly.finishes shaving, gets dressed and runs out the door; knowing he has
IS.minutes to find roses at ShopRite:
•
He arrives at her house five minutes late.
•
Fashionably late, that is.
.
.
•
-
.
-
:
She is finally dressed and walks.into the living room all done~up and ready for
the romantic evening which lies abe~d.
.
•
.
.
She smiles and he gives her the red rose, still fresh.
•
They go to a nice, ~xpensive restaurant complete with. the intimat~ a11!1-osphere.
The guy, remembering a scene from "Fast Tunes at R1dgemont High,' does the
.
gentlemanly thing and orders linguini with clam sauce and two Cokes with no ice
for the both of them.
· .
•
•
·
. He also remembers that
if
it ends up getting hot and hot and heavy between the
two of them to put on side one of Led Zeppelin IV.
After dinner, he slides the card and· gift over in her direction.
She smiles as she reads the card and her eyes well up with tears of strong
emotion.
•
She opens the package, her heart pounding, and pulls out an 18-inch gold neck-
lace and a heart charm with "I love you" inscribed on it.
The tears are now flowing more micontrollably than before.
She gives him bis card and an unwrap})¢ gift.
The card was mushy, but he accepts it with a warm smile and kisses her gently.
Matrimony, she thinks.
Late-night hijinks is all that's on bis mind.
Thus, it brings our story to where we left off-in the snow banks. The two had
'taken such a fall they had to be rushed to St. Francis Hos~ital by Marist security.
1
They spent the rest of the night waiting for five hours
in
the emergency room
lying in hospital beds in those white gowns which expose your backside to the
whole world.
•
At least they were wearing clean underwear.
The moral of the story-Love
is blind.
Or blindsided in this case.
Watch out for Cupid and speeding golf carts Tuesday.
.
·,
-:
'••
RI.AL
FEBRUARY9,1#s·
U
Rights
Nov-•
ht'•in
,th•
Vletn ..
sol vec:i'
'the
Watitr-Qate
al ••• but I-rec:kon
I'll
er •••
an·'end
to· the
truc:Uon
in· and around
Narlst:_Coll•Q•!
••
'
UPON
HEARING
ABOUT PLANS TO E)I_PAND
THE LIBRARY, EVEN FORREST GUNP DOUBTS
HE'LL EVER SEE THE END
TO l'IARIST'S
CONSTANT
RENOVATI~S.
The Republican
•
View·
Harry Truman once said, ''There is
.
noth~ this ~untry
•
would be bound by a d~cument
••
ing sacred about the pay~as-you-go idea so and not by its needs.
far as I am concerned except that it represen\s
America could find itself in that position
••
the soundest principle of financing that I once again. The looming Balanced Budget
know.': Creating sound financing is what Amendment requires. that Congress rell.ch a
ch~pmns of a Balan~d Budget ~endment,
three-fifths majority if it wants to raise ta,ces
bemg mostly Republicans, are trymg to do. or run a deficit.· By creating this "super-ma-
in response to the oyerwhelming deficit as
•·
jority" it would make it more difficult for
it stands, and as it niay grow, Republican Congress to respond to emergency situations,
representatives have initiated legislation that such asmilitary maneuvers or natural disas-
would force the federal government not
.
to ters, because funding would be locked behind
spend more than it earns per year, balancing bureaucracy.
•
.
the budget by 2002.
•
Considering th~ state of the elect~rate and
•
In theory this sounds right, but what it the deficit,
.
iris not difficult to see why the
stands to change would reverberate through- Republicans would try to push this legislation
out the country for years to come. An ame~cl-. thrqugh. One reason alone, a
$5.
trillion defi-
ment such as this would change the :COre
of·.
cit
with $176,billion ofit accounting for this.
America.as we know it because it would
-year
alorie,;reflectsthat-the.problem needs to
change the Constitution.
..
.
.
.
,
••
be solved. That is an American issue not. a
.
. ·.•
•·••
When.·
the ~IistitutionaL Co°iivention
con-i•:
partisa11.
issli~.
•
••
.venedJn,l'hiladelpµia·for-'Jd.ur.
months,
·our}
. ,,.;.
:~>
..
_'.c
.
•
F•c
,.
,.,
,,
..
,,
,·.
Founding Fathers knew of the great task that
It w~ also a conscious_
ch01ce of the fram-
lay in front ofthem. They needed to create a ers to uico~rate means
:
so_ that an ame~d-
document that embodied. freedom_
but· con- ment C?illd_
be made p~ss_ibl_:•
but n~t easily,
straints, the voice of the. majority yet the say• for a Slh.\at~on
such as this.
•
of the minodty,and the right.of society com-
A.s
ifstarids today, an amendment can only
parative
to
the
-right
of the individual.
be passed
if
it has a two-thirds majority in
That. is what America was· known
as
tlien, Congress,. and
.
then· is ratified by three• quar-
and is still what America i_s
known as today'.
•
ters of the
'states.
This degree of difficulty
It is a country that is called upon in time of indicates that the ·framers intended for the•
•
crisis and it is a country that responds in a Constitiltion to be
•
used as a framework for
time of crisis.
• ••
•
•
•
•
governing, and not as a means to
·settle
ideo
7
,
logical
'disputes.
.
•
•
.
Ainericahas had the power to bring peace
or show force/ to
•
offer aid
'and
give aid.
The
budget
can
bd
bal~ced without an
.
America has had the
1
power to stand on its amendment to the Constituti01i..
•
own and stand with others, because the Con~.
·•
stitution has_.
ma~e it
a
viable cou_
n_
try'.
•
-•·••
It can be bal~ced if Americans
sacrifice
:
and politicians are unselfish. It cari be bal-
That framework enabled Am~rica to be-
anced if both politicians and voters begin
·to '.
com: the collDtry
we, and others; ~o": tod~y. realize that the deficit is more than an imagi,-
Not 1ust as a coun~ th~t e~bod1es life, lib~
,
nary looming figure,
_but
a. restriction more•.
_e~,
~d the pursmt o_f
Justice, but a force -
binding on our futures than any constitutional
md1tarily and economically.
amendment.
•
•
•
It was a conscious•
choice by. the. framers...
By trying.
to.
incorporate a Balanced Bud~
to include inthe Constitution inore fiscalJree- get Amendment,
Republi_sans
are going against
dom.
•
•
• •
•
•
the fabric ofthe Constitution by trying to ptit
The Articles of Confederation,.
which in-
.•
fiscal restrictions around the gove~ent, and_
_
•
eluded
.
f'IScal restrictions,
:
pr(}Ved
.•
fo
.
be an
•
using the amendment pr~ure
to. do so. But
.·
unsuccessfu_l. frame of· government for that. change would not only alter the frame of
America. It limited_
the government's freedom our government but its structure as well.
to govern fiscally, by not giving the govern-
America was founded on a system ~f
ment the power to tax as situations deemed. checks and balances using three branches of
The Constitution,-.on
·the
otherhand, was government: legislative, judicial,
·and
execu-
created with the intention of dissolving that tive, all equal and all with a separate function.
handicap. It was formed under the premise of A Balanced Budget Amendment would change
giving people certain inalienable rights as in- all three.
divid_uals
and not as a pre-determined ~et of
It would.shift the present equal power and
solutions for problems that may occur m the role of the three branches of government be-
future.
cause it would replace the role of legislators
with the role of judges. Instead of fiscal policy
being introduced
in
the House it would be
ruled on
in
courts.
That is why the Constitution did not in-
clude fiscal restrictions. The Founding Fathers
knew that a lasting framework for the country
had to be one thatcould respond to the events,
The Amendment would force fiscal deci-
of the
•
country regardless of the time
·
they siotis to be made by the courts instead of rep-
occurred.
resentatives. Representatives, that we the
After all, the Founding Fathers could no
more predict the Persian Gulf War, California's
earthquakes, or the floods of the Midwest any-
more than this generation can predict how
America will be tested in the· future.
people elect, and that we the people hold
accountable. It would detract not only the
power of the legislature, but our power as
citizens: That, if for no other reason, should
be cause enough to stop the Balanced Budget
Amendment.
Because of the framework of the Constitu-
tion, America has the capability to respond to
Mary Diamond is one or The Circle's
those crises regardless of their weight. If not, political columnists
TI1E.Clli~
VIEWPOINT
.FEBRUARY9,
1995
7
.
. .
·.·
'
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'
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r,••-i:-------------------,
I
Flying the
•
I
Letters to the Editor ...
I
•
•
friendly skies
I
.
.
.
.
.·,
.
·
·
I
·
•
d
'
h. k
·1 ••
·
-:
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•
·•
• .
-·
·.
·:
.
:
-• '
-·
.
-·
=:
-··•
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I:
Some things I'd rather not
I mean, I on t t m a pt ot
A~missiOI)~ int~rnship sh~ws r.eal ~orl~1:t~o=•fe=o~
;~~'E:?;
0
:1!::1.::ez;
1
Editori
.
•
·.
Jersey, Pennsylvania, ~nnect1cut
po~ty,
'!1e Adm~ss1ons
O~ce 1s
I
we have no control over them.
I guess after a few airplane
I
As graduation day closes
and Massachus~tts -
m
fact, be-
holding
an
informat10nal
meet!Dg
on_
I
Orie of these things is this new crashes they recovered that little
I
in, we seniors realize that these past
tween the four interns, we covered Febf1;1ary
16, at 7:00 PM m the
program that airlines have started black box and listened to the last
I
:four
years have flown by quicker
every state on the Eastern se_aboard Admissions OffiC?
m
Gr~ys!one.
I
that evaluates a pilot's alertness.
words of the pilots in the cockpit.
I
than we ever could have imagined.
and _more -
as representatives of
Although the. 1Dtern~hip
1s only
I
.
.
1
CO-PILOT: Uhhh Sir, wake up.
•
The ''real world" looms large as May
•
Manst.
.
•
.
open to prospective seniors, class of
I
Th~t seems !ike a good idea:
SIR!
WAKE
UP!
PILOT:
I
appi:oaches.
•
.
.
•
•
....
We met with. prospective stu-
1996, all students are welcome.
the ~g
I don t want to know 15 ZZZZZ ... huh? What? CO-PILOT:
I
This past summer, Vince and
I
•
,dents,
their parents and guidance
If this sounds like something you
I
that this was ever a problem.
That mountain . it's not on our
were fortunate enough to have been
counselors, and we- met up \vith
would like to learn more about, but
I
It seems that other than drugs
,and
course. PILOT: This is what hap-
I
able to take advantage of a 15 credit
alumni, swapping
•
st_ories about
you are unable to attend, you can
I
alcohol, fatigue is a major problem pens when I forget to bring my
I
µitemship offered by the Admissions Marist - the Marist they knew and
•
call J_ody
Sanford ~t ~xt. 2188,or just
I
that is causing pilots to make mis-
alarm clock- (CRASH)
I
Office that gave us a taste of "real
.
the o~e we call home. It was a great stop b_y the A~m1ss1ons
•
Office for
takes.
The preceding was an assumed
I
life" work experiences.
-~xpenence.
.
more information.
I
Don't tell me this!
possibility - it doesn't mean it ever
The internship allowed us to
.
If you want to find out more
Jane-Alyse Schaffner and
I
It's something they should fust
happened this way but unfortunately
I
travel throughout New York, New
about this exciting and unique op-
Vincent Hummel, seniors
I
go and take care of. If they let us
it probably has. '
I
I
know it's a problem, then ~e, as
One other thing - that little black
I
Internships • available
Editor:
Just One Break, Inc.
(JOB), a non~profit employment
service for people with disabilities,
will be.
at
Marist College on
Wednesday, February 15, 1995 to
interview Marist students with dis-
:
abilities.
The positions are for summer
1995 internships. Students in their
sophomore
·and
junior years are.eli-
gible for an interview.
•
The positions are with Fortune
500 companies and they include
opportunities iri flDancial
•
services,
accounting, public relations, com-
munications, law, corporate real-
estate; human resources and hotel
Library
·
I
passeng~rs, should_
have the n.ght to
box which is ,very inexpensive to
I
go up into that little cockpit and
make always remains undamaged in
I
I
make sure the guy's not ta~ng a
a plane crash, and all the contents
In
lil
•
g
I
snooze.
. _
inside are safely protected and in-
I
creas
I
If we're not allowed to do that,
tact. Yet the plane itself is very
I
•
I
then don't let us know he might be
expensive to make and in a crash it
I
Editor:
up there napping.
is terribly damaged and all the con-
i
I've got a simple solution.
tents inside are severely destroyed,
I
The animals ride in the back in· except the little black box.
I
The ~ead article
~
the ~ebruary 2,
cargo, right?
Does this make any sense_?
I
1995 issueoffheCuclediscussedthe
So how about we just put the ba-
I think I want to travel
ID
the
I
preliminary plans for a new library. bies up front in the cockpit, that way, little black box - it might be more
I
Lynn.Wieland,thereporterandAsso-
there's no way the pilot will be
crowded than coach but at least I'll
ciateEditor,didconsiderableresearch getting any sleep and just maybe the
live.
I
on the article, iricludirig havirig sev-
rest of us might.
.
_One might ask why they don't
I
•
aldi
•
·th
I
ldlike
That might actually be the root
bmld the whole plane out of the
I
er
scuss1ons
wi me. wou
.
• h bl k b
•
d
f
of most peoples' anger over findmg
material t e ac
ox 1s ma e o -
1
to correct one critical error iri an oth-
II • ' b
h
Id b
out that pilots are dozing off in the
.
we 1t s e~use t ~t wou
e too
erwisehelpfularticlereponingoncur-
cockpit . they're not mad because
cheap and inexpensive.
I
rent library activity. The library adds of the danger they're in, but just a
You might live but I guess they
I
services.
an average of 6,600 new book title;
little jealous that he can sleep and
think we feel safer if the cost of the
I
For more information contact
per year, not 600.
they can't.
plane. and safet~ devices are close
I
Desmond Murray, Assistant Direc-
..
.
•
In USA Today, one pilot when
to nat10nal deficit numbe~. No one
.
tor of Field Experience at (914) 575-
•
While one is always hopeful that re-
I
asked about this problem was quoted
~ould be happy that they d be safer
I
3543 or James Ryan, Coordinator/
_
.
sources can
be
improved and budgets
I
as saying, and 1 swear I'm not mak-
ID
a pl~ne that only cost $19.?S
I
Counselor of Special Services at•
E.
·1·.
•
T•
.
.
.
ent
.
f
. .
I
ing this up: "I feel passengers are
•
What bothers me the most is the
I
(914) 575-3000 ext. 3274.
.
ect1on,;
.rme,
1?-~e~ourcun
..
T_ateo
acqum~
saferwhenl'mr~~t~<1~'1~Wht:n~'~. -~a~t,\~at
~~i~g
a pilo,t_is_
~me C)rthe
Desmond
Murray__
,
,.,,.,
,:·:·.
•
·,
.•,
.,,,,
--~~~
15
adequate,!oracollegeofour
I
fatigued ... I'm a lot better pilot·
fewprofess1onsonecouldsleeponl
·Editor:
.
.
,..
•
'•:
.size
~d
type'.
It~ the depth ofo~
I
when I'm alert."
the job, yet the most d~ngerous.
I
IBM
is coining·
·..
.
.
•
I am wri~ing to urge
·a11
~llecnonofmatenals thatperhaps
1S
I
Wow, well there's a news flash!
I mean, tak~ a cabb1e - we se_e
I
•
.
·Mari~t-
stu·d.ents
to vote in the SGA madequ~_
e_.
Books that were not col-1
I guess fatigue fo~ pilots while
them, _they c:in t fall asleep, and if
I
Editor:·
_elections
to be held February 20-21. lected
ten,
fifteen and twenty years
flying is a very senous problem
they dtd th
.e
nde probably could only
I
._· ,
I know_
that the
____
members ?f my ago ma_y
be
the source of dissatisfac-
1
because the responsibility of flying
get safer.
.
I
A represe~tative cif International
.
class, the CJass of 1998, obviously lion
m
some areas.
.
can really interrupt a good sleep.
In ~n ?ffice the phones are
al-
Business
_Machines_
.(IBM).
will be
•
did not take the elections seriously
•
Wh· t I d
't
derstand is that
ways rmgmg to keep you up.
I
I
, ·
•
-
a
.
on un
A door to door salesman
at Marist College on Friday, Febru-
ast semester,. when we were given S~dents can help remedy this situ-
I
these commercial pi_lots, .~ho fly
couldn't u~less he was a slee _
I
ary 17; 1995 to interview students the. opportumty to e_Iect our, class anon by usirig theOOBIS e-mail util~
I
hundreds of tax-paying citizens a
'
P
.
I
for accounting internships/co-ops officers for the irrst time. The voter ity to ·d tify book titl
b. ts
week are dopey dozing idiots. Yet
walker.
I
.
beginning this summer 1995.
turnout iri that election was ridicu-
1
en
es or su.
!JCC
I
the pilots for Air Force One who
But in a plane you're secluded
Ious.
that can be added to the collecuon to
I
nl fl
h dful f
1
d th
with the onl_
y consequence being the
I
In order_
to_ be eli
0
ible stud.
en_
ts·
... th
h
d I
the"
k This kind
ft--.J
O
Y Y
a an
°
peop e an
e
·b·1·
f
1
f:
1·
d
,,,.
~o o~e w o vote ast seme~- s~rt
rrwor •
o
uNu-
I
President a week, from work to the
p~ss1 11ty o
~
arge ata 1ty - :in
I
.
musf have a 3.0 cumulative grade
ter, keep _it up.
'!'o
those who did back
18
always helpful, we enjoy pur-
golf course to McDonald's and back
with that there s no one left to snitch
I
point average.
,
not, consider this: How can you
has"
-
•a1s
d
k
I
k,
h
•1
d
on you anyway.
Subinit a resume to the Field
.
• tify
1 • •
bo
•
•
c
mg new maten
an see stu-
I
to wor are eavi y screene •
And
h
ii
h '
I
.
.
.
•
.
.
-
-
JUS
,comp
ammg a ut issues you dent
•-d
f: ul. .
-"
Wh
?
you ave a co-p ot w o s
Experience· Office immediately.
.
.supposedly
care
.
about
.
when you
.
an ac ty mput to moS
t
cuec-
I
.
y.
.
looking up to you and sees you
I
.
For more information contact·. have done nothing to make your vote
.tivelyputo~budgeted~llarstowork
I guess 1t comes d~wn to the fact snoozing and thinks that's what he's
I
Desmond Murray, assistant director,··
..
count?
.
_
.
for the Manst commuruty.
I
that our gove~ent, in general, can supposed to do when he's the head
of field experience in Donnelly Hall
·
,,Pleasehsten
to speeches, watch_
'
I
only have a_hnuted amount of rules pilot.
I
•
226; (!)14)575-3543.
,
.
.
the debate, read this newspaper, and
John McGinty,
1
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and regulations. .
.
_
_ ..
So when he becomes one the
I
••
•
•
•
make your choice in the election.
Library Director
So I guess a citizen. can't t:111 problem never gets s~lved.
I
.
Career Development
.
Sean White, freshman
I
asleep on a park benc~
ID
t~e _city
But
_don't
be womed next time
I
I
after ~0:0~ PM - but .1! hes !n a yo~'re on a
.plan_e,
possibly on
I
cockpit fly1Dg
a plane 1t s all nght.
Spnng break, Just sit back and relax
I
I
As a matter of fact, we'll even
and try to get some sleep - chances
I
stuff the thing with piUows, wine
are you won't be the only one.
I
I
and a movie.
I
I'm also confused as to when
Frank
La
P~rch is The Circle's
I
■
they realized this was a pro_blem. humor colummst
J
------------------------
Feb.9
Feb.
16
Feb.23
Mar. 2
Mar. 9
Mar. 30
Apr. 6
Apr. 13
Apr. 27
May4
oUR
SPRJNG
UNEUPI
8
.
:.-·;,.-
."'-
..
i '.
,
·,
.
'
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_: ::<\ ' ' ',_ .·
Monday··
Free
Refill Night
$5.00
Domestic
Draft
Tuesday
Bud Draft 50¢ Mug
Ladies
Well Drinks $1.50
Wednesday
Rotating
Bottle Night
$1.50
Domestic
$2.00
Imports
Thursdays-Marist_
College
Senior Night
(21 &
over)
$1.50
Well·Drinks
50~ Drafts
_ $t.00
TestTube_Shots
··,
•
Friday
2 for 1 Happy
Hour
..
•
Dance
with D.J. Jimmy
Saturday
Pitcher
Night _.
Bud $4.00
Sunda~
. , _ _
. Hang
Over Noo_n
Day
50¢ Molson
Ice Drafts
••
•
'
.
·Bloody-Mary
$1.75
.
:
Screwdrivers
$1.50
Pool Table
Darts
TROLLEY
1
S
96 Main Street
Pok., N.Y.
485-3887
21 and Over
· THE CIRCLE,
FEBRUARY
9, .1995
.
-
FEBRUAR-Y
1995
Elections Calendar:
Feb.· 1 Mandatory
.. Informational Meeting
9:30pm SGA OFFICE
Feb.
3
DELARATIONS
DUE IN THE SGA OFFICE
12:00pm
Feb.
6
Pick Up PeHtions
SGA Office 9:00 ani -•4:00pm
Feb. 10 Petitions Due SGA
• Office 9:00am - 4:00pm
Feb. 13 Campaigning Begins
12:00am
Position Papers Due in SGA Office
9:00 am - 4:00pm
Feb.1S SPEECH NIGHT 9:30 PM
STUDENT'ACADEMICCOUNCIL'<
THEATRE
~ai~~Jlear~::t/Jtit\n~rii!b11ceagain--
Feb.
·16
PRESIDENTIAL DEBATE.'
for ihe Faculty of the Year Award .nominations.
•
·10:00PM (MCTV)
--
Students can fill out a ballot for-their nomination at
the SGA voting tables on Feb. 20th and 21st .·
F b. 20 POLLS OPEN
Simply write. the name of. a professor, eith~r
e •
.
•• • . . . . .• •
.
·
•
adjunctorfulltimefacultymembe.r,thatyoufeelhas
_-
Dyson10:30am·~l2:30pm
inspired and mo~v~
yo~ academically or person--
Donnelly 1:30pm • 3:30pm
ally. These nommattons will be cotinted, and the top
-
Student- Center
S
:OOpm - . 7 :OOpm
two faculty from each division will be C!)DSidered
b_y
the SAC for the· award. · The SAC
WIil
base their
decision.on interviews~ exfontofinvolvement with
·Feb·.
2lLr\ST DAY
OF
POLLS
students oncampus, availabUity and otherfactors.
••
-
Dyson 10:30agi-12:pm
The final results willbe announced at a ceremony in
_
Donnelly 1:30pm ·3:30pm .
~c4~i:e
published in t.Jle_follo;'~g~sue.e>,f
:
Student C~11ter 5:00pm
~
7:00pm
TheFaculty,oftheYear Award was
started.three
•
_IJnoffici.~
lles.:.-
9:30pm
years ago by J?aryl Ledyard and h~ steadily evolved .
mto a presug1011~s
evenL Th.e award was dey~loped •
ii "
k
to honor those faculty_
who shoW·outstaIIding
coiµ..
.
,
. •··• :;
.
;
.
.'
~-
S: .
•
.
.
,
..
•
mitment and dedication
tQ
the students of MarisL •
:
•
-0,IJ.
behalf
of_the SAC and the $cience Division
It is our hope
this
yeartoµnprov,e.both faculty and}
Representiffves,I
wollld like_
to.thank
thefaculty
and·
student participation in nominations and attendance •
studentsof theScienceDivisionfor
their suppori
and
::::a:~e;i~ro
lie~
rd
er
tq
~}ll'e'
th
is
m,e mo
st
attendartc,e)n
t~Breakjast Social helddufingftnals
week ltist,~~me.ster.
Your participation
milfle
this
Mikael
T.
Carlson
prograrri)"~hefirst
ojits
kina,
a great success and a
VP for Academics·
vital grol}J'ldworkfi:,r
continued
social events both in
1---------,-=:G~A.t.,-------,.IYOur
division
and in
others.·
Thank
You.
SENIORS·
1J:~~ft'J::eDi~.Reps.,SAC
Attention
Seniors:
There is precious little time left to become involved
in the upcoming senior events.
The Senior Class Officers ~beholding
a meet-
ing Wednesday, February 15th, at 12:00pni in CC
348A.
•
The topics covered will inciude.
•An
• Class T-shirts
• Senior week alwnni mixer/clam boil
• Senior week booze cruise
• Senior week fireworks
• Senior formal
• and numerous fund-raisers
This is your chance to become involved. If you
are interested or have ideas for senior events
please call ex. 7995.
Mikael Carlson
VP o Academics,
SGA
JUNIOR WEEKEND
February 17, 18 & 19, 1995
: Semi-Formal
Ring Ceremony
And
More
Any Questions Contact Jenn at X4698
LM PRESIDENl1Al DEBATE
FEBRUARY
16, 1995
MCTV 10:00 PM
LEARN
ABOUT THI CANDIDATES.
BE AN INFORMED
VOTER.
:-
~
. THE°
CIRCLE/FEBRUARY
9, 1~5
9
•·:
__
:":'.?··.:.
•
'
.-
.
-<"·
.·
.• •-.
• ]lfESDAY
<
<i •
_.·
••.
-
MARIST
STUDENTS·
·
• • HAPPY
HOUR
4p.111
~
8pm .-.·
•• ••
·
~'CACTUS
CLUB
•
, _FREE
FOOD
CHEAP
BEER
WANTS
. BUILD
·YOUR.OWN
TACOS· •
$1
OF
f
Alt
Pl NTS
•
•.
·-·•
••
·
•
·
••.
· .•
.
-
•
&·WELL·DRl:NKS.:
.
· ·
.
.
.
·.;
.
•
••
•
.
• 8pm - 4am
$3 PITCHERS
OF BUD
OR
·
_
MlCH.
LIGHT
&
1/2
PRICE
WINGS
•
j
~
•
'_r,
•
.
.
.
.
-
...
•.
• ·JHURSDAYS
la & UP
••.
;,'
;
•
•
•
•
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•
•
•
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~j .
'
•. '.. -
•
'
'
•
-
~:.
-_ . ,. ' •••
~
•
•
·• • NO
SCREVllN'
AROUND.
OLLEGE
NIG
•
.
POWER
HOUR
9P.m-10pm
.SO
WELL
DRINKS.
•
>
•
,
~.
.
.
.
.
.
. ¢
.so
CENT
DRAFTS8pm-2am.
.
•··
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>,::
~
. : :\ \. \
_·> . . . . • ::-.
. ·
..
..,.-,.•.
THE CIRCLE,
SPORTS:
FEBRU~Y 9, 1995
t
!
,f.
'•
i'
i
i .
Poolside With
Stephanie
R[aiclef.;{
.
'
.
.
'
,
by MARC LESTINSKY
Staff Writer
Competitive.
Hard-working.
Dedicated.
This may or may not be the for-
mula for success.
For Stephanie Raider it is, and
judging by her success for the Marist
swim team this year, it seems to be
working quite well.
Raider, a sophomore from
Southington, Conn., has helped to
lead the Marist women's swimming
and diving team to a 6-4 (3-0 Met-
ropolitan Conference record), while
breaking several individual records
in the process.
In fact, Raider has shattered four
individual records and five team
records.
Her indiviaual honors have come
. in the 200 and 500-yard freestyle and
the 200 and 400 individual medley.
Her team records are in three free
relays (200, 400 and 800) and two
medley relays (200 and 400).
Raider, however, said she did not
envision herself as having such an
impact in this, only her second year
of college competition.
"I just wanted to improve and
have a better season than I did last
year," Raider said.
Raider's coach, Lloyd Goldstein,
said he was also surprised by how
well his sophomore has swam to
date.
"I knew Stephanie was going to
improve, but I didn't expect this
much this early," Goldstein said.
RESULlS
fROM
JAN,
31 JO FEB,
Z
MEN'S
BAS\C.EtBl,.\l(
ll-7; 7-3NEC)
2/4 _:
fo,~10
2/6 - FDU
{<>S~W)
•
(74-68W)
WOMEN'S
BASKETBAll
(7-11;4-6 NEC)
2/5 -FDU
(63-42W)
MEN'S SWIMMING & DIVING ( 10-0)
1/30- Fordham
(l30-90W)
WOMEN'S SWIMMING & DIVING ( 7-4)
I/30-Fordham
{132-83W)
HOCKEY ( 8-11-1; 4-5 MET)
2/3 - Rutgers
2/5 - Binghamton
(6-2L)
(6-4W)
MEN'S VOLLEYBALL
(1-4)
Games
were
canceled due
to Inclement
weather.
_.·.
Jn· 'quickly rewriting the•· Marist
record books, Raider, and Goldstein,'
pointed out that one of the reaso1,1s
for her success is her dedication and
knowjng what it. takes to be a com~
petitor.
•
• • . •
"She is one of the few girls that
have a strong competitive back-
ground,'' Goldstein said. "She knows
what it· takes to be successful and
she doesn't like to lose."
Raider, in_ addition, is a very
modest young lady who would rather
talk about herself in the context of
the ·team arid downplay her indi-
vidual success.
• She instead gives her· teamm~tes
equal credit for her accomplishments
by supporting her and spurring her
on in every meet.
• "The whole team is real support-
ive of each
other,"
Raider
sai~."Everybody pulls for one· an-
.other and helps them get ready for a
race.".· •
.
Raider~s most memorable mo-
ment at Marist is what she enjoys
talking about rather than herself.
It was not breaking any record
or finishing first in any race, but
instead; of her and her team win-
ning the Metropolitan Conference
crown last year.
•
In terms of personal goals, Raider
admitted that a ·top three finish at
the Eastern CollegiateAthletic Con-
ference championship meet (March
9 through March 11) would be a nice
cap to an incredible sophomore sea-
son.
Besides her teammates, Raider
also attributes her successes to her
.......
Sophomore sensatlo'n Stephanie Raider taking off
In
a recent women's swimming and dlv'lng meet.
Raider holds four Marlst records
In
swimming.
·
• • .
family for their support, and
Goldstein for his guidance.
"I really look up to him
(Goldstein)and trust him for every-
thing he has done for me," Raider
said.·.
•
. Raider may be equally as impres-
sive outside of the pool as she is in
the water.
Fellow sophomore swimmers
Becky Tatum and Alyson Morilla,
two of Raider's closest friends, have
nothing but good things to say about •
their friend.
Morilla described Raider as a ·
~
UPCOMING
WEEK
MARISJSCHEDULE;
2/9-Men·s
Cl"1d
women's basketbdl
at St.
Frax:is
(PA)
7:30 p.m. and 5: 15 p.m. .
2/10-HockeyotAlbonyState9-.15p.m.
Merl'a voDeybdl at Oneonta
2/11-Men'saidwomen·sbaskelbcll
at
Robert Morris 7:30p.m. a,d5:00p.rn.
Men's \/Olleyboll ct Buffdo Touricment
• 2/15•Women'sbosketbollvsSt. Fraids(NV)
7:30p.m.
Clrclo
lporla
photo/Chrla llerlnoto
very outgoing person who is a laugh mates and ·mends, Raider has taken
to be with.
time out in the past
to
volunteer at
"Stephanie is just a fun person Vassar Hospital and visit children
to hang out with and be around," at local schools.
Morilla·said.
.In the future, Raider hopes to
Tatum portrayed Raider as car- • graduate with a degree in Psychol-
ing and inspirational.
. ogy/Special Education and teach
"She helps to get me psyched up
mentally disabled children.
for my races and she is always so
Raider's swimming career began
• positive," Tatum said."She makes
at the age of 10, wheri she used to
me think
I
can win every race." .
go to the pool with her sisters, Jamie
According to Goldstein,· Raider
and Meghan.
hasgone out of her way to help
Jamie swam four years at
others.
Fordham while Meghan spent a time
Along with some of her team-
swimming here at Marist.
Th.e Associat~d °:Press Top 25 Polls
.
.
The.
t0p
25. teams In The· Associated Press• .The fop 25 teams in )he Associated Press•
women'.s college. basketball POii, _with first. ·colltKJe
basketball po~. with llrst•place votes In
place· voles In parenthe1es, record throuoh parenfheses. records
through
Feb.
s,
fotal
Feb.
s,
total p0lnls. based on
25
paints tor. a points based on 25 p0ints for
a
first.place vote •
tlrst•Ptace. vote through one· p0tn! tor·
a.
25th• lhrouoh one paint for a 25th•place vole, and··
•
place vot~ and last wee~'s ranking:
-' previous ranklno: •
.
.
. '
. record pts pvs
••
• I.
Connecticut (32) .... ; ........ 19•0
800
1
2.
_Tennessee
.................
; ....
21-1 768 2 •
3. Colorado ••• , •. ,: ••••
;:: •• "··'·· 18·2
721
4
.4. Texas Jech : .... :.: .. ,, ...... :.21·2
680 6
s.
Louisiana Tech· .: ......•..... 18-3
650
7 •
6. Stanford .. :: ....... , ..
~
..... ; •... 17•2
634 3
7. Van_derblll •.. : ................. 19•4
611 8
8. Vlrolnia ... : ......
~
.... ; ......... 18·3. 561 12
: 9. W. Kentucky .................. 18·1 •
553
9
10. Georgia.·
....... :., ................ 18;1
526
11
11.
Nor1h.Carollna .........
o.;
•..
20-3 • 502
s
12. Washlnoron ......... ; .. ;; ... , .. 17·5 • 419 13
13. Penn SI; .. ' ........... ; ........... 16-4
404
.
10
14.
Mississippi ..................... 17·3
358
11
15.
Kansas ......... , ............. : ...
16-5
322' 19
16. George washlnolon • ........
IS:3
313 • 18
17. Purdue ... : ........... , ....•. : ... 16-6
286 21
.18. Florida .......................... 16-6
259 15
19. Alabama ... , ........•...........
15-6 .•
223 16
20.
Arkansas .. , •.• :., ... ;: ... : ... ; .• 16'4
216. ·,22
21.
Duke , .......... ; ..•...........• : .. 16-4
141'·
14
22.
Southern
Cal. .. : ...............
12·5
84
24
23.
Oreoon St .•. , ........... ,;., .... 1A·4 ,
78
24:
Oklahoma .: .... ; ...............
15-5
74' 25
~. Wisconsin .......... , ..... ;: ... ,
IS-S
56
Others receiving votes: TexasA&M 26, OePaul
21, Seton Hall 20, Old Dominion 17, San Dleoo
st. -16, Clemson .14, Southern Mlsslsslpi •.10 st
Joseph's 9, Oreoon 8; Fla. tnlernallona'1 1;
Ohio, U. 5, Virginia Tech~. North Corollne St.
.2, Tulane 1, Villanova
I. • .
·
• • • ·., •
.
.
record PIS DrY
•
1 .. North Caroline
UBI , ... ;...
18·1
1;629 •
2
2.
Kansas (171 .... ,.............. 17-2 1,598
J
3.
Connecticur.: ...... : ............ 17•1 1,486
4
4.
Massachusetts ............... 17•2 1,,20
I
5.
Kentucky
fll ............... ;..
15·3 1,396
6
6; U.C.L.A .........................
1'·2 1,318 7
7. Michigan SI. ...... ,........... 16•2 1,251 9
8.
Marvland ........ : .............. 17-4 1,168
S
• 9.
Arizono .......................... 17.4 1,112.12
10. Syracuse ........................ 16-3 1,009 10
11:Wake Forest ............. : ....
14-4
910
14
12. Arkansas ....................... 17•5
889 .
8
13. Missouri ............. : ........... ·16·3 705 18
14.
Arizona
SI .. , ............. ,.....
l6-5
693
16
15. Stanlord ......................... 15-3 688
17
16. Villanova·.; ..................... 15-5
601 •
19
17.
Vlroinlll .,;.,. ................. ., 13-6
600
15
·18. Georgia Tech : ................ 15-6
580 21
19. Iowa St. ...... ,.................. 17·5 425 11
20.
Georgetown ................... 14-5 401 13
21. Mississippi St ................ ,
1' ◄
364 --
n.
Oreoon ,.; ...... , ...... :.......... 13·5 . 211
•
22
23.:
Alabama ............. ,: ....... ;. 15:5
•
146
20
24.
Oklahoma SI. ................. 15-6 .•
142 --
25. Purdue· ....... ,: ......... : ........ 15-5 114 --
Olhers receiving voles: Memohi·s 101, Minne•
·sofa 9S;Oklahoma 91, Brloham,Youno
46.
w. •
Kentucky
23.
-Tulane· 21. Penn· 17,.'Utah
11,
Xavier, Ohio 16, Utah S1. 15, Nebraska 13,
Florida 12, Georgia 12, California 11, Tulsa
11.
Mississippi 10, Cincinnati 9, Texas
9,
s1:L<iuis
8. George Washington 7, New Mexico St. 6,
Penn St: 6, Virginia Tech 6. Ohio u.
s,
Santa
-Clara 5,-Clemson 4, Manhattan 4, N.C. Char•
lolte 4, Marquette 3, Miami. Ohio 3, Michigan
2, Auburn 1, Louisville
1..
•
·, , :-.
THE.CIRCLE,
s,oRTS
FEBRUARY
9; 1995
.~~it!~rJ~ot.;~.i.'*~.L.;.-.~.~~-t
.. ; : • ,by.TERI:(.;
STEWART
:
·:•
"W . d, . . . . .
.
.
'.,·},;:'f\)\i'!Spoffe}f?i(cf);':
\
);~·})
; ..
e:; ommated. all facets
•
of the ••
••
..
•••·:·
;.}fhJti;;rii;;J;l\~1~iiJ·u~Jt:
ti~J-•:
--~~f
r}~its::~~1~:;~l~i}t~f
<:_~iit11e•
•.
•.•
• •.
made ·a;_st~p'tqiv~dJmpfoyen1intb)!
7
~as
4
!
~!ce
11
t '.YVhil;e
a~~~
1J
r,- •
Sunday·m:feaneck;-N.J;;··: .,
..
, .. bounds)(),the~tatlille.:,
'/ .... :
./flle_'.v\f~'pufthe
Red
,F~xes
on~
....
,
Sentor,..forward. ~diea
~acey ••
·.•.
•.·
po mt) o~r of; fourth place
.
in• the •. made her re.tu!D.
to ac_t1_on
3!ter a fo11r
NortheasfCorifererice>
.
>
<:
..
·
••
_ ·•··
•
game. s~pens1on. for violating a.team
·
·
>The
Re<l Foxes crushed
NEC
foe
rule.
•.
,· ::' •• . ...
. • , , • . •· ...
Fairleighr>iclcinson/.63,:42;:to mi~
•. • Th~ Anriapohs, ¥d; native .was
prove their:'record to
1~11
overall,
the ~d Red Fox
1;11
_the g~e to
. 4,:6 iii the·NortheasfConfererice;
sc<;>re
m
do.uble d1g1ts, with 12
'
Senior guard _Lori Keys and jun~ - points. ; . . .· .
• . . . . , . .
•
• . . . • .
iof guifrd,Melissa Hauser .both .. ; !3abme_au
said
-Mac~y
s double:
Plllll:ped.'
in, 13 points for_.the ••
Red •. digit J>erformance
was- important !O
Foxes .. Keys also pulled doWn a
th_e
team s play, not only no'Y but
m
team-high:12 rebounds..
. ..
•· . .
the,!uture,
•···· _ .• •
•••... ·:. •... .·
•
Aside
.
froni, a, 5.4. deficit at the
If
'Ye can· get three or four.
18:3~ mark of
the
first' half, Marist
.
people_
m
doubles,. than we hav~
jumped ·.out.to a 21-9 lead over the • bett~r chan~es down the road,
.
next
10
minutes.
•.
•
. . .• . . .
Babineau said. • ,
.
.
There was ncf looking back the
. · • All of Macey s points came m
resf of the way:
.
.
<
.. ·• •
• . . .
the first half.
. Lea<iing;:39~24,
at ,the. half, the
The Red F.oxestook to the road
Red Foxes went irito the locker room
yesterday on their way 'to Loretto,
with
'a
·confidence boost.
•
P~nn; to face St. Francis (Pa.) to- •
In
thdastfour
minutes of the -mght and Robert Morris College on
game, FDlJbegan to.fall apart. The
Saturday.
Marist defense allowed no points in
...------M-•rl_at_63_,_FD_U
_42
___
_
that time:
•
·
': •.
•.
·
•
MARIST (63)
•
According· to
'head·coach
Ken
~~~~~~~re~ ~u~ ~
9~
1~~~;
Babineau.; histeain ·P·.layed
a skillful
0-2 2-2 2, Macey s-13 2-212. Heller 1-2 0-1 2. King
0-3 0-0 O, Metz
1·2 0-0 2, Horwath 1-1 0-0 2. TotalS
game.· .
22-53 14.19 63 .
.
"We played a very smart, intel-
~~c~i
3-4 7, Reas 5-13 1-3 11, Staten 5-8 f-1
ligent game," he said.
"We
did a
11,MahoneyM00-03,Snyder1-110-03,Mltchell
good job. hitting shots made avail-
~~-~-~~;~~~!a~~-"
1-5
o-o
2
•
able to· us."
Halftime acore: Marlst
39, FDU 42.
•
Babineau added that the win was
~:::i~ ~•:
::..;..~.:';cf!,_<31,
Presnan,
key for the futur.e of
.. the team.
T ..
m
Recon1a:
Marfst (7-11 overall, 4-6 NEC), FDU
(4-14 overall, 2-8 NEC).
"The game ·was a confidence
Officials: Vince
Bonini, Rick Trilone.
·MCTYPROGRA.MMING
SPRING·l9?5CHANNEL 12·
W>E-cE
K·;D A Y S
"12:00
A~rvt:.
,.9:ooA.~
9:00 A.M. - 10:00 A.M.
10:00 A.M .. ~.12:00
P.M. -
12:00 P.M. -il2:30 P.M.
J~:30:P.M. : 1:00
P:M.
•
1:00 P.M . .; 3:00 P.M.
:3:0()P.M.
~
5:00 P.M.
5:00
p
.M. ;. 7:00
p
.M.
7:00P.M.
~
7:30.P.M.
7:30 P
.M. -
s:o<>P
.M. •
. 8:00 P.M. - 10:00 P.M.
10:00 P.M. - 12:00 A;M.;
STATION
I.D.
FOXFITNESS
S~RTSI
•
BACKTALK
0ne·on
One OR Pressbox
MC1Y CLASSICS •
ENTERTAINMENT
& SPECIALS
SPORTS2
UP-CLOSE
MCTV INFORMATIONAL
MOVIE 1
MOVIE2
WE
E·K-.-E ND
S
12:00 A.M. ". 12:00
P.M:
12:00 P.fyt._;.
2:00 P .M .•
2:00 P.M. - 5:00 P .M.
S:OOP.M.
-7:00 P.M.
7:00 P.M. - 8:00 P.M.
8:00 P.M. - 10:00 P.M.
10:00 P.M. - 12:00 A.M.
STATION I.D.
'SPORTS 1
.
STATIONI.D.
SPORTS2
STATION I.D.
MOVIE 1
·MOVIE2
Senior forward Lori Keya puts up a shotwhlle freshman forward
Courtney Blore prepares for the rebound In a recent game. The Red
Foxes pummeled Fairleigh Dickinson University on Monday, 63-42.
Clrcll aporu photoJChrla
llarln■to
• Snow halts spikers;
Oneonta, Buffalo. next
by STACEY DENGLER
Staff Writer
ers and senior middle blocker Pat
Brenn'iin will be· key;
Brennan had taken his junior year
Saturday~' snow fall temporarily off.
.
sidelined the men's volleyball team,
• 'The starting Une-up consists of
• '.fhe ,:squad was . scheduJed
'to.;:;
!ll\ ~pper~lassme{!
\inci~ding senior
tr~yel t(?Biena College to face host . ?uts1de httter D?tJg P?rrell andjun-
S1ena and LeMoyne College.
1or s_etter Francisco Jimenez.
.
While a make-up date has not yet
J"l'!enez.fee1s confident with the
· been scheduled, the Red Foxes are _returning players and believes .that
preparing for a grueling weekend of
bard
work
and. dedication
·will.
pay
competition.
off.
•.
Sophomore
coach,
Ellen
"Overall the starting six are re- .
Schuerger expects . the team to do
tumi?g," _Jimen~z said. "V'(e. can.
well this weekend.
defimtely improve more, but 1t looks
"It'.s going to be a difficult week-
like it is going to be a pretty good
eng, a lot of good teams will be at
year for us.': _ •
the toumamen.t/' Schuerger said. "If
_ The addition of four freshmen
we play like we can play, then it
bnng new talent and added depth to
should be a good weekend for us."
the line up.
,Thcf.Red
Foxes (1-4) enter this
Freshman defensive specialist
,we~kend with plenty of experience and setter, Ralph Fiasco, is the
.• and depth, despite the loss of two
team's seventh man.
key players.
. .
According to Sch4erger, Fiasco,
Seni9r • Randy
Desrosiers
along with the three other freshmen,
Marist's all-time leading setter, opted ~ill ~ee a s~bstantial amount of play-
. not to play this yeat because of an
mg time this year.
. •
. internship and Steve Graham, the
:nie ~ed Foxes travel to Oneonta
team's leading hitter, graduated.
Umvers1ty tomorrow and then tc
However, the return of six.play-
Buffalo on Saturday.
Iritramurals
Volleyball
and Basketball
leagues are beginning this week.
The·. two leagues in basketball
play on Mondays and Thursdays.
There are three; leagues for vol-
leyball - on Tuesday, Thursday and
Sunday.
•
Aqua Aerobics startecl on Mon-
day.
The new times for the program
are Monday from 9 p.m. to 10 p.m.
and Wednesday at
8
p.m. to 9 p.m.
Aerobics classes are in full
swing.
.
The
class
scheduled from
5
p.m .
to 6 p.m. is reserved for faculty and
staff only.
Students are welcome to attend
if
there is room left in the class.
Be sure to sign the attendance
• sheet before taking any class to ac- •
crue attendances (16 are needed)
toward a priority point or a free t-
shirt.
Aikido classes are set to begin
on Feb. 9.
The time slots wm be Thursday
from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. and Saturday
from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m.
For more infonnation, call the In-
......,.:;-:;;;.;.;;J.
tramural Office at ext. 2584.
11
katers fall to
Rutgers in
New Jersey
by JIM DERIVAN
Staff Writer
This weekend had its good points
and bad points for the Hockey team.
On Friday, the Red Foxes (8-11-
1 overall,4-5 in the Metropolitan
Conference) defeated Binghamton,
6-4, at the Mid-Hudson Civic. Cen-
ter.
They had no such luck in New
Jersey on Sunday, when they fell
victim to Rutgers University.
.
The Scarlet Knights defeated
Marist 6-2.
This was the first time these
teams met since Rutgers visited
Poughkeepsie, when the Red Foxes
lost
a defensive struggle, 1-0.
Rutgers scored the only four
goals of the first period, and scored
36 seconds into. the second period,
giving them th'e 5-0 advantage.
According to fourth-year head
coach Kevin Walsh, the 5-0 deficit
was too much to surmount.
"We had a slow start, and got
too far behind to catch up," Walsh
said.
Marist did manage to score a
couple of goals.
Freshman forward Jef Freydl
scored at 14:16 of the second period
with an
assist
from freshman forward·
George Macys.
At 17:22 sophomore forward Joe
Accisano gave Marist its second tally
with an unassisted goal.
However, hopes of a come back
were thwarted, the only score in the
third period came from Rutgers at
1:42.
Marist had a better result in
Friday's contest, but could not avoid
a slow start then either.
"It
was horrible, it was like they
forgot to come out of the locker
room,". Walsh said.
Binghamton scored the only goal
of the first period.
·
Things changed after the first,
according to Walsh.
"They woke up after the first,"
Walsh said. "Then we outhustled
them, and ran them into the ground."
The Red Foxes were led by se-
nior goaltender Brad Kamp, who
made
36 saves,
and junior
defenseman Kris Rojek who scored
the hat trick.
"Rojek also played solid de-
fense," Walsh said.
Sophomore Dave Pennington got
things started with a goal at 1:27 of
the second stanza, the assist went to
Accisano.
Rojek gave Marist the 2-1 ad-
vantage at 11:37 with assists from
Macys and Accisano .
Binghamton took a
3-2
lead at
18:38, but
11
seconds later Marist
knotted the score with a goal by
Accisano with an assist from Fredyl.
Less than a minute later Rojek
scored to give Marist the lead, with
assists from freshman forward Jesse
Robertazzi and junior forward Todd
Corriveau.
At 6:29 senior forward Noel
Smith scored to put the game out of •
reach, with an assist from Fredyl.
Binghamton scored again, and
Rojek finished off his hat trick get-
ting assists from Corriveau and
Robertazzi.
Marist traveled to Hofstra Uni-
versity yesterday, results were not
available at press time.
The Red Foxes host SUNY Al-
bany tomorrow night at 9:15 p.m. at
the Mid-Hudson Civic Center.
SPORTS CORRECTIONS
In last week's issue, The Circle
incorrectly reported the following:
- Alan Tomidy is a center on the
men's basketball team, not a guard
as reported.
- Kareem Hill's point total for the
Monmouth game was 16 points, not
14 points in overtime as
reported.
- The men's swimming and diving
team defeated Fordham 139-90, not
130-90
as
reported.
>
i
i
I
I
"[t·was horribie,
.it
was likitheyforgot to
co,;,e out of ti,e locker rootiL
~,
·
(:·'\\/ .
·
.
• •
·
·
••
•
·
•
•
·
-
•
·
-
••
iz
•
•
-Kev~!~
,,
,.
1HE
1
ait~SPORTs:
FEsRLJP.Jt)'9;
t~S
.
~~~er§
••••.
,~~!~~i,;,~¼t~}~
g~¥;
rs.
afte_r,
.
74
.:O~
..
,~r111
...
i··l->Jv_e.F-::
EID::lJ-.
•
by
GREG
BIBB
Staff.Writer
.
.
The men's basketball team made
it eight wins out of nirie.outings_as
they topped Fairleigh·
.Dickinson
University, 74-68, in Teaneck,
N.J.,
on Monday.
•
•
The win put the Red Foxes in
sole possession of third place
·in
the
Northeast Conference, behind Rider
and Mt. St Mary's (Md.).
•
•
With the victory, the Red Foxes
avenge~ a}oss earlier this season to
FDU when Mai-ist
fell to the Knights
in overtime at the McCann Center.
On Monday, junior center Alan
Tomidy scored 22 points,.grabl,ed 8
rebounds,· and had 5 blocks
.to
lead
the way for Marist (11-7 overall, 1~
3
NEC). .
.
.
Guard Antwan Dasher paced
FDU (10-8 overall, 64 NEC) with
a game-high 25 points.
.
.
lllt!ior gu!lldDanny Basile a.dded
15 points
.
and senior point guard
Dexter Dunbar scored 12 to pace the
Red Foxes.
Senior
swingman
Gregg
Chodkowski also reached the double
digit plateau, tappi_ng in
•
for 12
points.
..
..
•
.
.
•
•
Marist scored the.first basket of
•";
____
,._--.~,.-,_
..
·_
·•
.
.
-:,·
.
•
-~
.
,
..
•-~
"·
::.
....
-
••
;,•.·
_---·_._·.
-~
·-,·
.
_'.
'.
_-,·.·
..
_.~;
;·;.-
).
:
......
·:
·,
.
;
-
...
-':.•_
..
·.
•,•
;-
_
•.
··
__
the.,ganie o.n
a·
Gregg: Chodkows~
.··•
said/~'\We're: playmg·•·m.~c~·;.~etfer,
.
·layup:and)ed:byas
many as:J0 m.-
1fow;
with.inore corifidence.t,
::;:_,,·
_tile
firstihalf
..
·.···.
·•
•••••
:.·,:_<<
•.
:
•
'
,:
..
,.
On Satu~day;; Maris(defeated\
.
•.
:
fDU,responded latem tlle,open.- Fairfield University; 65~53; It was·
• •
fug stanza by going
.on
a 14 to 2 run
.
the second year' in-a-row Marist beat
.
over:the·last 3-x11inute~,
24seconds the Stags at Madison Square Gar-
ofthe first half.
, ,
.
. . .
.
den.
.
.
.
<
.
.
•
•
• • A three-pointbasket:with 28 sec- ·
Alan Tomidy-again led the
.wa,y
..
on,ds left in.the half gave FDU a30-
for Marist; scoririgt7 points n1 in',
•
28 lead going in~o the locker room. the second half) arid grabbing 8
•
It wa.s !he first lea.d of the game for., boards while logging
a
game-~igh
the Kmghts.
.
>
.
. .
.··.··
.·.
39 minutes.
'.
<
.
••.
·
.
.
.
.
.
.
.• ·
•
ButMarist :would regain the lead
..
Danny
·Basile'
added
il~
points.
at the 17:12 mar~ qf the se_cond
h~lf while Gregg
,Chodkowski •
contrib-
•
on
a, Chodkowski thre~-pomter, giv- uted 10 in the
•Red
Fox effort.
•
ing, Marist a 36~34 lead.
.
.··
. ·.·•
Fairfield (11-9 overall, 5-3 i11the.
The Red !-'oxes,
held the advan- Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference)
tage until ~e 4:lfmark~~en FDU was Jed by sophomore guard Greg
_guard David
.Freem.anb1t
a.three-
Francis with 16 points and 6 re-.
pointer off a pass from Dasher.
bounds.
·.
•
•
·..
. .
••
'
• •
.
• J1t.e Red. Foxes. regained.
the lead
Marist found.· themselves down·
atJ:19 on
a
ju?1p lu;>ok
from.sopho- early at Th~. Garden, trailing 11-4,
.
more Lucas P1sarczyk.
. .
five minutes into
.
the game.
Marist would never trail again as
Head coach Dave Magarity. said
•
t~e RC!d
Foxes wer~ perfect from the he had been weary of the week lay-
hn1: over the ~ast mmute of the game off prior to. the game.-
.
to seal the victory.
·,··
..,
.
>·
.· .
"We had a real slow start (in the•.
~-----Im..-'-"-=~'-'=
·Tomidy
said he
..
feels_the.recent
•
first·half) and showed signs of tJ!e
··•Junior
guard Danny Baslle drlves·for a layup against.Fairfield
on
~ucces~
of the Red Fqxes m,thedos-
lay-off,'' Magarity said.
.
Saturday. The Red
.
Foxes. defeated the Stags. at Madison Square
mg 1111nutes
_ofga111es
can be con-
The Fairfield lead would grow
Garden, 74-68.
~
_,.
plloto/CIUta
Blftnato
tributed to numerous factors.
.
t<> 12 points in the first half, but
"We're showing. a lot of poise Marist answered with an 8-0. run to
and n.iaturity,
ju,st as a junior and
•
senjor laden tea111
should," Tomidy
... see
MBALL
page 11
Snowy slopes of Vermont
play home to S'.ki
Team
by JASON FARAGO
.
Staff Writer·
The-,lack,'of;sriow has-'yet:'to
_
hirider theMarisfCollege Ski Team
from,weeke11d·competitions.,
•
•
•
,
.·
The· squad,· which is• compris¢d
of six. women and nine men (along·
with two alternates for each side)
·travels+91,.each weekend to the
slopes of .Vermont.
,
. , .·
..
•
Mid-way thiough'the·
0
five-week
·
~t:c1.son,
the.:.woinen·are
,currently
seeded second
in
the: McBride I>ivi-
.
sion of the United States College Ski
Racing
.Association.
The men are in
sixth place,
.
"We (Marist) held the clinic to
help us· compete with the other
.
schools, such as URI and Tufts,"
1'-unne
said. "They have 10 days of
'training and it helps them
-a•
lot."
.
Dunne said the goal for this
year's squad is to make the
.skiing
regionals.
.
..
"The. competitip_n
~s,Jairly.
com-
petitive,". Dunne. said.
·<'In
order· to
g~t in the regionals, we have. to place
·in
the top. two
..
Therefore, vie need
to finish second i~ ~very race."
I~)he early. going( the
-
women
are. having· an easier time than· the
.!llen,
who are a fairly inexperienced
bunch;
l;ven though Marist recogniz~
the ski teamas.a club, they compete
among Division III schools.
.
·•··
•
The team, now in its sixth-sea-
S()n,
is
slowly gaining more popu-
larity.:
• •
•
•
•
•
Tli.t:first three weeks of conipe-
The women's
.team
is bolstered tit.ion saw:.the men place sixth each
,by
senior. Kirsten'. Oswald andjun~
time,
.
whereas the women finished
fois
:
KeHy Dunne
and
Kri~tin
•.
in botJ;i secoriq and third-place.
Werig1:rt.
,
•.
•
.
··
..
·•
_'
·
·•
•••
•
•
'.
Seniors Trqy Conterfc:>rd
ajid Jo~
,
Never~the-fess, both teams are
N_eubig
top off the.men's
team.
l~ok,ing
·towardthe
stretch run.
-
.·••
Iri preparation for the. upcoming
. . .
.. .
. ... ..
and·. no'N apparent season,
.
Marist
••
"I
..
(both teams).
·am
,anticipating
held
a
winter ski
.camp
in Vernon
..
the·fast two weekends," Dunne said.
Valley,
N.J.
•
·
~
"I-hope.it keeps snowing."
·First
snow storm brings outgoOd and bad
The men•s·b~Jc~tball
te'arp
s~c-
N.Y.,
produces blocks as if th~y
.ing
out on competition.and practice
tion for the matter'!
.
•
cessfµ\ly compl~ted their t_rip to
•
were
,dinner
at th~ cafeteria. ~e had
V.
is hardly good news for
:any
tea,m
..
•
•
This may very
wc)l
occur and
•
11,_{adison
Square.Oarden'on Satur-
•
5.blockson Monday, and four blocks
.
Als.p, the four buses which were· thank heavens for high powered fig-
day.
c
•
on Saturday:
:. ••
...
•
T
scJiedul~d to travel to· Madison
·ur.es.
•
From my court-side view during
Kareem Hill see.ins. to. be in a
h
1
Square Garden on Saturday for
.the
.
4:8
•
GAMES IS NOT
.·
the g~e. the team appe!!fed to be a
·
slump at this po~t
_and
time.,
e
men's bas_ketball.
team were also
•
LONG ENOUGH
ljttle weak and sl,10ok~up
for_niost of
T~e junior forward has only
.~anceled due to the
·inclement
.
Tlle"National HockeyLeague is
the first half.
.
.
. .
.
•
scored seven points
·
in the: l~t . two
-
e
w
·weather.
.
.
.
,
•
play~g a shortened 48 game sched-
A 19 to
.O
11;1n
thr,ough the ~nd of
games. This does not seem. to
be
too
•
CLJNT()N. AND BASEBALL
•.
ul~ and it· is affecting. the. play of
the first half and begillning
.of
the
big !lf a factor in recent games, but
S
.
It seeins
.
that President Clinton
many teams.
second half gave the Red Foxes. a
in order to compete with the top ..._ _ __,,,--____
;.._...;...;..__~
and the.,federal government have
The New York-Rangers (by the
new outlook for the contest.
.·
NEC teams, there must be some
some how gotten their claws into
•
way, t_he baIU_lef
looks okay) are .
_This
new outlook just may.be
prodµction on his part.
•
and
if they pounce on Rid~r (their the baseball strike disaster.
.
·strugglinginthirdplaceoftheEast-·
what
·
the_ m_en
's
_te~m
ha_s bee.n
• • ·
If Hill continues to n.ot play up
_
toughest competition in the champi~
This is certainly good news. This
.
.em
Conference
'Atlantic.·
Division
searching for
th_is
season.
•
to par, then the rest of the team, onships), there
is
sure to be another strike has gone on long enough.
·
afterjust nine games.
.
••
•
They have won the last eight of
whi~h wiU anyway,' needs to step
crown;
August of 1994 began a year of
.
The
long delay before the start
nine games and with eight games
up ar~und him. This includes seniors
These swimmers have been prac-
let-downs and disappointments in
of the season is the problem.
remain.ing, ar:e in strong <=9ntetition Gregg Chodkowski and D.exter
•
ticing since October or November not only the world of baseball but
•
How can any team be expected
for a'Northeast Conference Touma-
Dunbar and junior Danny
.Basile.
(maybe earlier for some)' and
·have
also·sports.in general (OJ.).
•
to prepare for a season, enter the
ment bid.
DEFENDING
.THE
TITLE
fmally gone through the taper and
It is obvious that the Player's
s~on, peak during the season and
A
comeback would by far hit the
The women~s
swimming arid div-
are ready for prime-time action.
Union and the owners of the ball
peak
after the season, if it is still
history books and m~k a truly
_sue-
ing team are competing in the Met-
THE FIRST· "REAL"
clubs
·
may continue the so called
entering the season in the first place.
cessful season for the Red FoJtes.
ropoJitan Conference Championships
SNOW STORM
"negotiations" for a long time.
Cert!linly not the Stanley Cup
There are a few factors that may
this
weekend.
.
•
The rrrst big snow storm. of the
Most baseball fans do not. want
Champion New York Rangers or the
decide what achievements they can
Stephanie Raider, who now holds
year hit the East on Saturday· and to wait till Babe Ruth turns 200 to
Nevi Jersey Devils.
pull-off.
four·. Marist swimming school
unfortunately stunted play for the watch another Major League player
FYI - There is still no decision
Alan Tomidy needs to keep pro-
records, is sure to be leading the way
men's volleyball team and the play 'ball in a major league park.
on the appointment of the Athletic
ducing and scoring in the high teens
for the Red Foxes'.
women's and men's indoor track
The two sides are unable to form
Director.
to middle 20's.
.
The women, as well as the men,
teams.
an agreement, so why not involve
Teri L
Stewart
is The Circle
• The 6-foot
11
.iunior from Leroy, have strong depth in their swimmers
The snow
was
exciting, but miss-. the government and make legis]a-
Sports Editor .