The Circle, February 16, 1995.xml
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Part of The Circle: Vol. 46 No. 11 - February 16, 1995
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·SPECrRUM
. MCTV get~ political
·-page 3
-
page3·
CHAMPS
• Women's swimming
• wins title •
-page12 •
Stud6nt Body President carididates embark on campaign trail •
-.-by ~STINA
WELLS
Editor
On Sun., Feb. 12, the Student
Government Association announced
the four candidatesrunning.for Stu-
dent Body President.
.Mikael
Carlson,
Timothy
Hannon, Philip Mason; and Jennifer
Nocella will be campaigning all this
week until elections on Feb. 20.and
21. .
•· .. ' . ..
.. '
Speaking with The· Circle _this
week, the candidates focused mostly
on the prevalent issues the student
body will be faced with in the up
0
~ming year.
•
Carlson, vice president of aca,
demics for SGA, said 'the most im-
portant issues right now are the cap
on clubs and the freshmen curfew.
"These are two concerns that
have come to the forefront in the
last semester to SGA," he said.
Mason, a sophomore communi-
cation and english • major, said the
l
The four candidates for Student Body Presldent(from left to right) -Tim Hannon~ Junior, Mikael Carlson, Junior, Jennifer Nocella,
Junior, and Phil Mason, sophomore. The presidential debate will
be
broadcast
Uva
on MCTV tonight at 10:00 p.m.
current policy needs to be eliminated . be a problem with· extending . the • be lifted but rather changed to meet
from administration to help solve the
altogether.
.
.
curfew hours on the weekends."
the needs of the students.
cap problem.
According to • Hannon, if a club
has proven itself for years that it is
a benefit to the community, then the
cap should be lifted to allow them
membership.
"Why can't adults.in the eyes of
"Raising the cap on clubs to a
"The campus is expanding and
the law, .18-years-old, 19-years-old,
Acco~ding to Nocella, the great-
level that serves the students needs
growing;. there is a need for more
have people over when they want?"
est task facing the elected official
and wants is what needs to be done,"
choice an_d if the administration is
he said, ''The policy should be elimi-
will be working with the committee
he said.
not in support -of it; it makes it dif-
nated."
.
to
~~d
support for the proposal.
.
ficult," she said. "I would hope
~'A
Greek organization should be
Hannon, a junior computer in-
"F"
~
•
d t
•
k.
"th th • ... Nocella, currently speaker of the
whomever was elected to the posi-
allowed on if they
will
benefit the
formation systems major, said the
rfi
U:~
' ;;
nee•
0
w't{ wi
ii/
.
Sen.ate, also cit~d the _cap on clu~s
tion would try to gain support by
college,~• he said; "Tl,e cap should
current freshmen curfew policy
~u ew, as. or sufrpport
• ut_not It .. de
__
as a concern. which needs to be rah-. fixing-things like management
fl-
be·lifted·if- the club in 'question is
• .
. .
1t over - let the eshmen mvo ve
r·
d •
. -
• •
• • ' • ,.
•
,.
• " · ,
·
' '· h -
•
· •
L"
_n:eds_toberahfiedm_someway._
sliow'.tiie···ro osal,"she.said.'ffhe
_
ie ·-~-:·,·;.,·;
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MoceIIn
who h"~been-the pres1-~,=~-•· -~-
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••
·•
dent- of, the Class of---~'96;for. two
.
-·
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•
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.
,. • ..
•
.
.
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• .
.
.
. -· .-
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years said there is. currently a·coin, • port co~nttees m any '?._apa<?~1!:·
• ···some: ~efi!11t~
0
s(!lut1ons,n.
s~e said:
. . M~?f! s3.1d
-ht:_
fe~ls tfie. ~al? does _-. . : ?<\ccordmg to l\f~son, one
?f
the
mitte~ made-u· .•
rimaiit·
of fresh-
The either is~ueat hand,-accord~ "If
tpif
is~ut:;1sn'!
settled by the.eno
not neces~anly_h~ve
tobe,hftedbut
issues· he•se_e~
as-~--conce171:1s
·!he·
-: • • ' k.
• pp · •. • •• y
ii(
hi
h
_ing._'t_o
m_ost_·
candid_ates,_._is_th_e
__
._cap·... of the year;.1t will be.held over for
rather-worked with to better serve student-admm1strat10n
relat1onsh1p
•
.n1:en,,wor
mg <>n
a prop~s w
C
.
h ' ' .• 'd .• ;
·1· ·1· •.. ·
"d•· th
the community
'
would offer a compromise to the • on dubs, particularly the' cap on
t e next a. -~
11
_1
1sra ion an . m e
·
•
•
"The ·main issue is getting the
standing curfew·policy:
• Greekorgan~ations.
n~arJutu~~ hftmg tµe cap win be a
"I
don't·think· you. need· a club
Marist faculty and administration to
''The proposal does not extend -
Carlson, ajuniriraml me111ber
of
big ISS_Ue.
cap, per se; but rather the student - Iistesn more to the student's wants
· to sopµomores and it offers a change
the business fraternity Alpha Kappa
. Nocella; ajunior political science body should regulate the amount of
and needs," he said. "Then we can
on weekends," ·she ·said. "If_·quiet Psi,said the cap on·me·ekcirganiza- . major, said she sees a need for
SGA·
clubs,. not necessarily put·a cap on
work on the .curfew;· parking and
hours are enforced, there shouldn't
tioris does not necessarily have to
and the students to pushfor support .· it," lie said.
•
security problems."
Junior remembered.by friend&, memorial
BSD celebrates
service· and. pO§~ible :academic ssh9\t1rship. Bl(;l,~k
1-Jistory.
Month
byRO!JERT G. TARGOS
• StaffWriter ·._..
•
_
Gainory said that black history
encompasses .different cultures all
over the world; February allows for
The
month of February allows
the appreciation of the influence of
the· Marist community to realize• the
black people on America, but people
_m_)J·
(!r~_co_
ntribution_s
of __
b_
lack ind
__
i-
tend
to
'learn only about the Europe-
.
ans.most of the time. .
;~tr::rto the history of the Uni!ed
"If
(February) is also negative
·A_ccordin
__
g to_
T_
im G_
amory; pfe_si- . because·. the history of any people
·
·
shouldn't be limited to one month
dent ·or the Black Student Union~ of the year," lie said.
.
Black History ~fonth started long
before Martin Luther King Jr. deJiv-
He said the unity rally, held last
ered his inspirational wisdom in the sp~g in respo~s·e to a letter s~b-
1960s during the Civil Rights move-
nutted to The Circle,. se~e~ an tm-
ment. , ·• .- _ . _ . , .
.
.
·- port:3"t·purpo~e
alJho1;1gh_1t
didn't es-
•
Gamory said between the 1930s tab~!sh an,ythmg •~stituhonally • ,,
and
1940s, a black schobµ· and his-
• •. The r~II~, raise_d aYlarenes~,.
·torian
named Carter G. Woodson Garno!)'
sat
d. An~ it got to a cnti-
started-Black History Week which cal pomt ~.here things needed to be
eventually • turned· into . the current expbess~h·. · · h.
d t
monthly observance.
•
_
..
•.
ne . mg e. recommen s . o
"It
creates a window for people . • <:?~bat igriora~ce would be for
in-
to recognize and celebrate our con-
dividuals to pick· up a book by a
tributions," Gamory, · a senior, said. black author. . ..
.
"It's serving its purpose, but it's not
Gamory. said people develop
-the· end all be all."_
•
many false images and stereotyp:5
. Gamory said tlie events the BSU about bl3.ck people from the m:d•_a
have already sponsored included the becau~e it _portrays them. as cr1m1-
Minneapolis Gospel Sound with the ~als smce 1t deals only with surface
Student Programming Council.
issues.
. .
"Not only BSU members come
;f
elev1S1on
should_ 1!-ot be our
to the events, but all students par-
ma1or .~gent !3f !earnm~ about
ticipate," he said. "Sp we are get-
people, . he said. Our ma1or. way
ting across an expression of our of !earning should be through mt~:-
culture and our background."
action an~ first-hand_
kno'!Iedge.
Future events to be sponsored by
. He said the way
m
wh1ch
~~y
the BSU for February include a lee- blacks are portrayed on telev1S1on
ture by Minister Yusuf Muhammad ~uses ~pie
to become xenopho-
in the theater on Feb. 21, and Black bt~ afr~d of strangers or strange
History Jeopardy next Thursday
in
things.
Donnell room 225.
See BSU page 3
.
.
Z.
THE CIRCLE,
FEBRUARY
16, 1995
'The Quick and the Dead'[lbt.w91"th reviving dt.;tlteater.
In the end,it is betwe~n':her ~nd • films.
, In other movie
new~,
•~Toe
B~th-
ers • McMullen" 'just won tlie
•
Sundance fl.Im
festival award for best
by CHRIS DAMIANI
Circle Film Critic
As I was leaving th.e theater, I
stopped to look at the movie poster
to see who directed the film I just
saw when someone commented to
me that it was Sam Raimi, who used
to direct horror movies.
I said he should go back to it,
when this person actually asked,
"What, you didn't like it?"
With people like this, it's no
wonder that bad movies make
money.
I can honestly say that there are
almost no redeeming qualities about
"The Quick and the·Dead," starring
Sh'aron Stone and Gene Hackman.
I have three hopes; first, that the
person who liked "The Quick and
the· Dead" hasn't seen a. movie in
20 years; second, that this movie
doesn't kill the western; and third,
that John Wayne isn't turning over
in his grave.
•
It's too bad, really, because the
story had potential.
Sharon Stone, who is known as
"The Lady,'' is out ·to get revenge
against John Herrod (Hackman),
who killed Stone's father when she
was young.
Herrod owns this town which is
hosting a quick draw • tournament
which Stone enters to exact her re-
venge.
,.
There is no sheriff or marshall
in this town because Herrod is the
onl re resentation of law, and noths
Herrod, and the two ·have a show-
·
. The. directing was awful, his
down that-everyone in the theater
choice of shots was terrible and the
knows is coming.,
. . .
...
. acting· was second rate.
..
"The Lady" niust test her skills • .
This leads nie to another ques-
against Herrod, whois the' best; and • tion, why would .Gene Hackman do
she is the typical Uilderdog
who .has
this_
movie?_
pdes he need the money
almost no shot at-winning.
• •
or. was;he possibly blackmailed?
Take a guess who wins.
Hackman was outstanding in
This movie uses. every western
"Unforgiven," which if you haven't
cliche ever used, and every charac-
seen, you should, instead of trekking •
ter is stereotyped;
..
out to the. theater to see this gar-
You have the ruthless bad guy, a
bage.
•
gunslinger who has never killed but
The sole bright spot was
is out for revenge, a gunslinger who
Leonardo. DiCaprio as "The Kid."
is trying to "go good" but can't
. .. DiCaprio is one of Hollywood's
escape his old lifestyle, a young,
hottest young actors, currently off
arrogant kid who thinks he can't be
the heels of being Oscar-nominated
:-:---,~~==:,::::::===:;:::;:::::i~---'
out-drawn, the tough as nails hired
for "What's Eating Gilbert Grape?'.'
• ing in this town happens without his gun,. a Native American who hates
. Stone, who has yet to ·prove she
say-so.
white men, a card-playing hot shot
is_ an actress and. not just another
Stone's character comes off as who really just makes his stories of
pretty face, has struggled since her~
this tough, mysterious woman while grandeur up and finally; a cowardly
fluke performance in ."Basic In-
inside she is a frightened little girL bartender and townsfolk who don't
stinct" with stiffs like "Sliver,'' "In-
"The Lady" has never killed stand up·to anyone.
tersection" and "The Specialist."
before and is unable to kill Herrod
All of these are forced into one .
Surprisingly enough, she doesn't
even when she has the chance; she bad movie.
appear naked in this movie, so
just can't bring herself to do it.
I know what the story is; Raimi
maybe she's trying to earn respect.
"The Lady" decides to leave, was probably a big fan of westerns
Please do myself and all other
realizing she can't kill, until the his whole· life and, after gaining
movie lovers a favor and do not go
• doctor who was there when her
fa-
enough clout directing horror flicks,
see this movie, so· that the studios
ther was killed convinces her that decided to do a western.
will no longer make'movies like this.
this is the only way she'll ever find
Like I told the guy in the theater,
I felt real physical pain after see-
peace.
·Raimi should go back to horror
ing ''The Quick and the Dead."
film.
•
•
This is the film f~stival held in
Utah and sponsored by Robert •
Redford for films that are made
outside the major studio system.
Past winners of this award in~
elude "Reservoir Dogs," so it -is a
safe bet that "The Brothers
•
McMullen" is a good flick;-it can't
be any worse than "The Quick and
the Dead."
If you are one of the people an-
• ticipating Tristar's
big-budget
"Godzilla," you may be waifing a
while.
Jan De Bont ("Speed") has bailed
as director, and with the studio cur-
rently looking for a new person to
take the helm of the $100 million
monster, it's. doubtful that· this' one
will be out before 1996.
,
The best news; however, is that
the yet untitled fourth Indiana Jones
film is set to roll this summer with
Harrison Ford back as the man with
the hat.
•
Break out your whip.
Kravitz gets down for Unpluggedi -Seventh House shines
by TOM BECKER
Circle Music Critic
As for trying to let the reader-
without violating anyone.
ship know where such recordings can
Of course, no Kravitz perfor-
be found, that's a bit harder.
mance would be the same without a
Pure, unadulterated head shaking,
I buy most of my s~uff back final, uptown, field dancing, mara-
eye-rolling, jive-clapping, groove-
home, but I can say that these rare thon of the song "Let Love Rule,"
laden funky music.
items can often be found at the little, which loses nothing in this version
To find the above simply seek out of the way businesses - places and gains from the abundance of
out and purchase the hard
to find that still carry a good deal of vinyl. complementary instruments and the
Lenny Kravitz acoustic performance
Now back to Lenny.
backing vocals of the Washington
on MTV's moneymaking machine
The recording contains eight
Temple Choir.
Unplugged show.
.
·
tracks from the performance, with
The best thing about this disc.is
While many people have caught half of them coming from his third that it has restored my faith in what
Lenny strumm,ng out a raw, stripped and latest album, "Are You Gonna the Unplugged show can do when
down blues-backed kick of"Are You Go My Way?"
the acts get creative and do more
Gonna.Go My Way," which so~nds
Kravitz manages to add spice than justunplug their instruments.
nothing like the high~juiced hit of with his acoustic tools on the.more
,Speaking oLlive performances;
two years ago,on MTV; finding
the upbeat tracks
'like "Always
on ~The· ,,the,P)ttsb.urgh,,nati".e,,_threesqm.e.,of
actual disc is a little harder to do. . Run," where a torri~ guitar solo from SeventhHouse broughftheirno-friJls.
However, after hearing that tune, the studio recording is replaced with combination of progressive and ret~
which happens to eIJcompass
the true some liquid-dripping flavor from a rospective rock to. the Cactus Club
meaning of what acousticism can do Hammoild organ.
.. .
in Poughkeepsie on Friday. night.
to a song, how it can change its vibe
.. The lighter, more reflective songs •
Having never heard of this band,
so incredibly yet manage to house like "Rosemary" and "Sister" thrive I kind of stumbled upon them while
the same message, one can get pretty in the unplugged atmosphere and are entering the establishment.
determined while skipping along the capable of grabbing the listener-and
The band was successful in get-
booHeg scavenger path.
touching their souls just enough ting the sometimes stiff-legged
crowd to respond to their friendly,
catchy tunes, and by the end of their
first set, the crowd was willing to
wait around a little while for some
more of that Seventh House stuff.
This weekend I_had the opportu-
nity to give their self-produced de-
but disc a listen and it ain't bad.
When listening to them, the first
band that comes to mind is • Omi-
nous. Seapod, an independent label
group. from the Albany a~ea.
..
' • •
'
However; I can also say that there
is· a hint of Phish without the 'psy-
.
chedeHc glow, and of the Dead with
a kick 'from the popcorc::,
J?and
.AIL
.· .Man,,.Lwonder
if.
even
,I
know
what l'm.tliinking.·
• ,. ,., '
· Highlights on· the disc. are "-!(ooi
Aid" where si11ger/bassist Sky
pounds out a cascading riff and the
mellow "Things I Didn't Know."
-Most of the band's songs- are
lighthearted numbers dressed.with a
catchy groove that helps the music
serve as a good backdrop.
Letus
combine
all
your
debts
into one
easy-:'to-mauage
payment.
Bad credit
~
problem.
AIL
accepted
based on
ability
to
pay.
FAST
H■ua
Is
JuST
A
PHaNI!
CALL
Arr,Yi
Call
day
or
night
1-305-537.-3617,
(24 HR RECORDING}
. However, thereis a kick missing
on the recoded material that was
omnipresent at their live show on
Friday.
Without that kick, songs like
"Song For Psycho" and "Shabatu"
suffer a bit.
Seventh House will be back in
the area in March and will probably
give anyone who got caught. danc-
ing: at the Cactus Club a better rea-
son for repeating that act than their
disc could.
for
your
FREE
APPUCATION
or write:
4:J11,Ji3:jj,•,,;.J.ii=li•.
BOX 645, HOLLYWOOD,
FL 33022
800/2·REVJEW
.
.
.
.
~
.
......
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1o·1~•
\'
11fl•
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t
f.;;,,
'-r'\
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l'in1,,t.,,~1\•I\\
r...11;,1 1lr1I1.1t...~I,\
fli,: j,,;,
'
J'1u,•ri•
HJ
.
~
r
I
THE·CIRCLE,
FEBRUARY
16, 1995
3
\Spring
1995
'~ltib
buclgets-
,Where
does..1hecl9ugh.go?
·Marist
hit with first snow storm of '95
.
munity/ie
·ne1:d
to put. outmor,
by MEREDITH
KENNEDY.
•
.
issues," she said.
'•'To•do'
that, The
:
•
•
Staff Editor
•
'
Circle needed to'iequcst a little more
•
•
·
•
than usual.
If
we have more issues,
•
•
The. Spring '95 budgets have
there
wiU
be a more frequentoutlet
been allocated, leaving some clubs
of news available
10
the commu-
more content than others.
•
•
_nity.'!.
.
... ·
.·
.
.
.
Some of the largest amounts re-
quested were from the Black Stu-
.
·Produc_tion
of th~ paper, includ-
.:,d·
nt
u
•.
(BSU) El A
1 . , mg the pnnter and llm.
e spent there
•
••
e
mon
,
• rco ns
· •
•
•
·
1
·
$10 000
·
Laf
·
·
d Th
·c·
1
.
.
.
costs approximate y
.
,
per
mo an ;
e. ire_
e.
semester.
·
•.
.
, ·
.
According to Lisa Goddard, trea-
"On the ave~age The Circle
s~rer of the BSU, th~y are happy
spends anywhere froi'n $14,000 to
with the amount of money they were
$15 000
.
··
th
·
d
·
1
•
·
f th.
allocated.·
, ,, on
e
_pr~,
uc
_ion
o
..
e
"We'll always
·lake
more, be-
paper, Wells said. The remammg
•
·cause
..
the more we
.
take the more ~4,00.0
to.
~5,0~0
we need, we make
•
.
•
·
•
•
h
.
.
·
.
,,
m
advert1smg
.
.
.we can serve t e community,
One club
t
II
•
1
d
Goddard said.
.
~as no a oca e a~y
A large percentage of the money money' MartSl College Radio
•
h
•
BSU h
•
·ct
·11
.•
(MCR).
t e
as receive w1 go to-
A
d.
t La •
R
bb
rts
.
• d
•BI
•
k H'
M
h
ccor mg o
une o , spo
war s
.
ac
ist ory
ont
'
direct of MCR th
l b h d. d
Goddard said.
.
.
?r
,
.
e c u
an
~
•
•
.. •
The BSU budget requests funds m theu budget r~qu~st ~ate and did
•
for activities.
'like.
an International not have an adv1~or s s1gna!ure:
.
•
.. •
,.
•
.•
.•
"It was a m1scommumcahon,
•
.•.
Day, alan Afrkican Dance Troop and there is only one sheet of guidelines
.-sever
spea ers.
d
th·
·
h 'f h
·d
·
••
•
Th BSU
fi
d
·u
I
t
an no mg says t at i t e a visor
•
.
e
~n. s w, a so go
?·
doesn't sign it you will not be allo-
The snow that fell on Marist last Saturday has students wishing for spring
•
war~ a c~ltura_l
dmner dan':C hel~
m
cated any funds
,,
Robb said.
break.
conJunctton
with El Arco Ins Latmo,
.
'
Photo
by/Daingerfield
.Goddard
said.
,..
.•
Robb admits the club. made a ~==============-c:sa:iimne;;:.;w~aivy:-.
---------"°"tith:;-;a;iti;h;e-;diiio;es!:nnniot;--:tiiih~in:;ikfhl,;e::U:wriiilli°Jnmi'linndti
0
.
•
E_l Arco Iris Latino requested
mistake, but said theyare'trying to
by BRIAN FRANKENFIELD
"I'm
going to Florida for spring
the wind down there as much.
$13,200
and was allocated $6,150.
rectify the situation.
•
Staff Writer
break," Santana said. "I can't wait
Lorenzo Verdejo, treasurer of El
for the warm weather, the beach, and
•
Arco Iris Latino, said the money was
Additional allocations have al-
After the snowstorm and cold
a nice tan."
·mainly
for Latino Week,· which is
ready been ruled upon by the Finan-
weather last week, most Marist stu-
Both students said they are be-
the last week in March.
. '.cial
Board, but have not bee:n ap-
dents are hoping the groundhog is
ginning to sense 'cabin-fever' set-
"lt's meant to promote the Latino . proved by the Senate and the Ex-
right, and spring is coming early.
ting in around campus.
culture on campus,' Verdejo said.
ecutive Board.
•
On Feb. 4, the northeast was hit
"Because of the cold weather I
A great deal of the remaining
.
with its first major storm of the year.
find myself less willing to go out,"
_money
will go towards the Cultural
.
Anthony Bayer, chief financial
Six to eight inches of snow fell
Santana said. "It's too cold and too
•
Dinner Dance; which is scheduled
officer, explained that each year
inland, while higher regions saw
much of a hassle now.''
•.
for· April· 1s, Verdejo said.
.
there is $l 50,000 available for allo-
•
amounts of up to a foot or more,
However, junior, Chrissy Bisirri,
The second largest budget to be
cation.
..
according to the National Weather
is not letting the cold weather keep
allocated was The
-.Circle's,
who
•
.
Service.
her inside.
asked for $11,0:30 and received
Sports clubs, like i_ce
hockey and
The storm was immediately fol-
'Tm not going out any less,"
$10,630.
. ·•
.
.
..
·
· ..
·
. .
,rugby,
automatically re'ceive $60,000 lowed by a cold front which, with
Bisirri said. "I still manage to_
get to
.
According to Kristina Wells,
•
as a yearly budget.
•
the wind chill, dropped temperatures the parties and the bars."
editor, the request, was not unrea-
into the single digits during the day,
While students are already tired
soitable arid
'the
.amount
allocated
All
other clubs have
·a
$90,000
arid below-zero after,sunset.
.
of the"·low temperatures, most of
Even though most students
viewed the cold weather as a bur-
den, some said they enjoyed the
winter weather as compared to the
high temperatures of summer.
"I like a little winter," said jun-
ior, Joe Marranca.
"I
like the snow.
During the ..yinter you can always
put on another layer, but in the sum-
mer you can't do much else to avoid
the heat accept wear a t-shirt and a
pair of shorts and stand still."
The only problem Marranca said
he has with the winter temperatures
is playing guessing games as. to
whether his Townhouse will have
warm water in the morning.
?was
quite sufficient
•
: ,
•
...........
••
.
.
pool ofmoney which they receive
.
The bitter. temperatures no~ have
•
them referred to the high winds
•
•
•
?;,'
'?·'?p..ot1Jrt~>~~~!#;~~!Ye
the co~,.
•
'allocaticit(from;'Bayer,soi.d,-'~··;
·:
••••
,
••
,,students:;
bundling,
,up;,.and,.Jonging
•
"when'
asked· wbadhey
•
felt
was·
the ;•·.
,
£,_;en.though
.our.coldest
weather
.
•
·BSU
.
·
..
; .. continued from page 1
Gamory said television
•
.shows
such as "Martin" have given posi-
tive exposure to black people, but
the shows tend to concentrate on one
aspect of a personality, like humor.
"Television should be second-
ary," he said. "(But) this is such a
fast paced world that we have less
and less time to deal with each other
as individuals."
He said the BSU has displays in
the library and the student center.
"I think Black History Month
should be re-evaluated as real his-
tory so we won't need a separate
month. It (history) should include
everyone."
•
The college activities office has
been the most receptive branch of
the school, according to Gamory,
l;,ecause it helps the Black Student
Union organize its events.
by DARYL RICHARD
.
Associate Editor
who will be the technical crew chief
of Spectrum, said the talk show is
more of an exercise of good televi-
sion than anything else.
has been
·said
to
be·behind us, :Stu-
dents had better not pack their win-
ter coats away just yet.
The cold pattern will remain for
at
least a couple more weeks, bring-
ing light flurries and the possibility
of a few small storms, according to
the National Weather Service.
nication, said he thinks the new talk
show is an excellent example of
dedicated students motivated to do
what they love.
;
M~ri~t College's Communica-
tions Department, in. conjunction
with members of Marist College
Television, issponsoring a new po-
litical affairs talk show aimed at
using resources from all stretches of
the coll~ge community.
•
"The objectives are to get stu-
dents more aware of what our capa-
"I've
discovered that the only
bilities are," McDowell said. "It's way to get the best students involved
certainly more complex {than the is to tell them that there is not any
other shows} and it
•
will involve money or academic credit involved,"
work outside of the studio."
said Cole. "This way you get the
The show, Spectrum, is an at-
tempt to.bring together students from
·an
areas of study and use each of
their abilities to produce a profes-
sional show.
In order to give the program a students who are genuinely inter-
t'/
want one show that will be like a bond the
makes all of the classes students take make
Marist senior Jim Gorham, who
sense."
•
will produce Spectrum, said the
show will give students a chance to
-Jim Gorham, producer of 'Spectrum'
apply what they learn in the class- ____
.:...:,.:.:.:,__:_
__
__::.....!.
____
~__;:__ _______
_
room to real life.
professional touch, McDowell said
"I want one show that will be the crew is building a set on which
like a,· bond that makes all of the they will film Spectrum "so when
classes students take make sense," you· see it you'll know right away
Gorham said.
what show you are watching."
The half-hour show will consist
In addition to a new set that will
of four panelists and a host who will bran~ish the school ~olors a~d. use
discuss current political events. Se- momtors propped ~p m a s~mi-c,rcle
nior Greg Bibb, who currently hosts ar?und the pane~1st to view news
MCTV's Pressbox, will also host .chps, the show wdl use news reports
Spectrum.
previously recorded by students to
To ensure there is ample debate introduce each topic.
on each of the topics, Gorham said
he carefully selected the panelists
"We're checking out the legali-
according to their political orienta-
•
ties of taking clips from other stas
tion.
tions like CNN," McDowell said.
"There will be a panelist from
According to Gorham, the video
each side of the political spectrum," packages introducing each topic will
Gorham said. "One will be on the incorporate
student
reaction to the
far left, then moderate left, the far issue, localizing the events discussed
right and then moderate right."
each
week.
Mike
McDowell, a sophomore
Doug Cole, professor of commu-
ested in what they are doing.'' Cole
said the students are not producing·
the show to gamer more viewers for
MCIV, rather they are striving for
a realistic program that mirrors what
students see everyday on network
television.
"What they are doing
is
a real
show," Cole said. "We're trying to
make this a show in, of and for the
students."
Gorham, who said he has had the
idea for the show since his fresh-
man year, was motivated to trans-
fo~ his vision into reality after in-
terning at a television station in
Hartford, Conn., last semester.
"I had to apply what I learned at
WFSB to the show here," Gorham
said.
4
•
THE CIRCLE,
FEBRUARY
16,
·
1995
.
•
•
.
MONDAY
GREEK
NIGHT
Bring your Frat or Sorority
For the Berties
Olympi_cs
Doors
Open
at 8pm Games
at 9
. ·
Drafts
start at a Quarter.
.
.
No Cover
•
•
WEDNESDAY
Mid-Week
Ladies·
Night
Ladies
get Free Drafts 9-12 pm
.
Guys Get
1
Pitchers
-
-
•
4-Guys
In Disg;uise
_-
•
-
:
Play An·ything
You Request
.
.
.
.-
·.
•
TUESDAY
MENS
N.IGHT
·.
• ··:
•
''
'
''
•
.
·.'
..
.
'
..
Guys_
its your turn at .
.
•
•
•
ALL YOU CAN
DRINK
FOB
$8.010
..
·.•
•
Ladies
Get Free Drafts
•
..
·
•
•
·
-
_9pm-12pm
.
Reservoir
Square
and Rood Mood:
FRIDAY
HAPPY
HOURS
4PM~8PM
.
.
Buy One Get One Free
.
Any Drink in
-
the House
•
Free
Buffet from Emillianos
..
-
-
Members·
of 4-Guys
In Disgu·ise
•
-
-·
•
No Cover
21'.;and-Qver
please
..
··THURSDAY·
tS"'t'YbUR}'~Ilflt!,!i'
1
·
··
·
·
.
.
·•.
1 srFour
Kegs
Are FR.EE
..
·
••
.·
·
•
•.
•·
<
>
•
t.75 Zimas
•
••
•
·.
.
$1.00ShotS
•
·
...
Berties
also presents
Bring
Ye>llt
BudcJy
Night
ii
•
Simply
show up
.
•
at Berties
on Thursday
INith
tliis adantla
•
.•
..
friend and the two of ya get in for the price of one.
.
.,
.
.
•
~
-
,•
-~---~----------------------
•.
.,
.
.
.
.
-
.•.
.
Don't forget March 8th.·
•.
·•··.··
.
.
.
Berties Bash
•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
..
THE CIRC~
f
E1\TURE
-----~
_______________
..:__
FEBRUARY
16, 1995
5
1\tl(SCTA asks - Who's afraid-of the big, bad Woolf?
by HOLLY DIAZ
Staff Writer
The. experimental theater· group
of Manst College Council· on The-
ater Art's will perform,. Edward
Albee's, "Who's Afraid of Virginia
Woolf?" starting tonight in the Per-
forming Arts Center.
The story is centered.around two
. couples, Martha and George, and
Honey and Nick, who meet one
night after a college faculty party at
Martha and George's house in the
New England
town of New
· Carthage.
• During the course of their meet-
ing many secrets are revealed over
discourse and hysteria.
The play is being produced by a
small cast of only four people;
Shelley Curran, playing the part of
Martha, J.D. Lewis, playing the part
of George, Rachel Carter, playing
the part of Honey, and Jimmy
Johansmeyer, playing the part of
Nick.
During rehearsals, the cast has
come across many difficult tasks
including memorization, Latin pro-
nunciation and character involve-
ment.
Stage Manager Andrea Had!tazy,
said that she feels memorization of
lines is something they are still
working on, but it is also something
that has to be expected.
"I know it's production week but
considering the dense amount of
information in the lines itself - in
the dialogue, it ·is understandable,"
said. Hadhazy,. "We still. have thre;
dress rehearsals so, no problem."
According to. Director Tauren
Hagans, a lot of time and effort has
, been put into this production.
•
«We've been up here since Jan.
6,"
said Hagans. "We practiced ev-
ery day over break."
Lewis said he was having trouble
with the fact that his role calls for
some memorization of Latin in this
performance.
"Last night I had a friend help
me with the pronunciation of cer-
tain words. It's hard because I don't
know the language," said Lewis.
Carter said that her role as Honey
has also been a challenge.
"In high school I always played
an older character and now I play a
much younger one," said Carter,
"Honey is also kind of dumb and a
ditz and she is someone I'd never
want to be or have to do with."
Curran, also finds her role as
Martha to be a difficult one.
"Martha has been described in
most literature as psychotic," said
Curran. "She goes through a gamete
of all emotions in the span of three
hours. She goes through these emo-
tions in each act."
Overall, Curran said she feels it
is a very. difficult and tense play to
be a part of.
"It's hard in the sense that we
have to listen to all these secrets
about one another," said Curran.
According to Hadhazy, the play
is about "those who see themselves
as failures, and this is the cause for
a lot ·of psycho-babble."
.
:
According to Carter the charac-
ter of Honey can serve as a comic
relief.
"My favorite scenes are when
I'm drunk," said Carter. " They're
the most fun."
In
addition,
the
general
concensus is that the cast appears to
work well together.
"We kind of bonded. We prac-
tice in the Performing Arts room
which is a comfortable and close
setting," said Curran.
Carter said she agrees that the
cast works well together and that
they have developed a good work-
ing relationship.
"I
didn't know anyone because I
came in as a freshman and now I
know everyone pretty well. We all
help each other out," said Carter.
As for the costumes, the cast has
mentioned that either the articles of
clothing have just been bought or
they are from their own wardrobe.
"My costume is kind of modern
and plain, but I'm supposed to look
plain so that's okay. It's brownish
green; it's an outfit I have from
home," said Carter.
According to Carter, it is the
acting that matters more than the
costumes in this particular plav.
This production hopes to raise
money for the Jenn Dressel Schol-
ars~ip Fund.
There is no admission charge for
the performance, however, a
$3
donation is suggested.
The play will be held in tne Per-
forming Arts Room, therefore, lim-
ited amount of tickets will be avail-
able.
Call extension 3133 to reserve a
ticket.
Upcoming
MCCTA perfor-
mances include, Michael Frayn's,
"Noises Off!," Shakespeare's,
"Love's
Labour's
Lost," Tim
Kelly's, "Robin Hood," and finally,
A.R.
Gurney's, "Love Letters."
New exhibit of NY State abstract artists
scheduled for Marist gallery Feb. 23
The Marist Art Gallery, located In the· Rotunda, will feature a new exhibit on
February 23.
by NORIE MOZZONE
Staff Writer
On Feb. 23, a new exhibit in the
Marist College Art Gallery will fea-
ture three internationally known art-
.
ists from the Hudson Valley and the
Catskills.
According to Donise English,
professor _of fine arts,the gallery _will
be showing the works of Alan Cote,
William_ Tucker, and John Walker.
English said the exhibit will con-
sist entirely of very abstract works.
''These will be very big, big, big,
big, works," she said.
•
This is the first show that will be
announced to the general public,
which will result in a better turnout
than the past exhibit.
The first exhibit consisted en-
tirely of works from Marist fine arts
faculty, where a variety of mediums
and styles were represented.
Nisaluk Chantanakom, a sopho-
more who works in the gallery, said
anywhere from 20 to 50 people
come to the gallery a day, mainly
students and tour groups.
"By opening a gallery on cam-
pus, . Marist looks more well
rounded," Chantanakom said.
"Most everyone who comes in is
very impressed with the faculty
works and I just wish that more stu-
dents would come and see what great
artists we have here."
Chantanakom said she feels there
is not enough appreciation for the
arts at Marist.
"This saddens me because some-
day some of these faculty may be-
come famous and Marist students
would have missed out on the op-
portunity to see their works."
• Josh· Wood, junior, said he has
noticed the works in the gallery but
• hasn't stopped in for a closer look
yet.
"I've walked past it," he said.
"I've been meaning to stop
by.
I just
haven't had the time."
•
Liza Casatelli, a junior, said she
visited the gallery with her class and
Photo by/Daingerfield
was intrigued to see how professors
spend their free time.
"I thought it
was interesting to see what else
teachers do besides teach," she said.
Casatelli, an .art minor, said she
thought it would be more interest-
• ing when the works of Marist stu-
dents will be on display.
Sherile~ Newton, junior, said she
believes· the space could have been
used for something more significant.
"It's really not necessary, I
thought something else could be
done with the space," Newton said.
Newton said the look of the gal-
lery does not lend itself to attract
people.
•
''It is kind of empty looking and
therefore doesn't attract much atten-
tion. Many pass by and don't know ,,,,,,.,.
..................................
---
......
----------...-.----=----==---
........
~
what it is. People expect more ex-
FREE FINANCIAL AID!
Over $6 Billion in private
hibits."·
sector grannts & scholarshops is now available. All
The art gallery will be closed
during the week of Feb. 13 to Feb.
20 and will re-open with the abstract
displays until Apr. 2.
students . are eligible regardless of grades, income, or
parent's income. Let us help. Call Student
Financial Services: 1-800-263-6495
ext. F51941
;.,I
.,.
THE
CIRCI.E,EDITORIAL
'FEBRUARY
16,.1995
MARIST
COLLEGE,
POUGHKEEPSiE,
NY 12601
THE STUDENT
NEWSPAPER
Kristina Wells,
editor
Dana Buoniconti,
senior editor
Justin Seremet,
senior editor
Teri L. Stewart,
sports editor
Meredith Kennedy,/eanue
editor
Dawn Martin,
associate editor
Lynn Wieland,
associate editor
Daryl Richard,
ass~ciate edit~r
Larry Boada,
editorial
page editor
Matthew Dombrowski,
distribution
manager
Jen Forde,
advertising
manager
G. Modele
Clarke,faculty advisor
• PUBLISHED
EVERY
THURSDAY
Edukashun?
Think back to your high school days.
-
. For some of you that· may be as recent as seven months ago, for others
it inay be as far away as almost four years ago.
Now, think about what it was like to apply to colleges.
. Y_es, it 'Y~s a little nerve racking at times, but overall, you have to admit,
it was excitmg.
The agony of typing out those annoying applications and then composing
an essay about yourself or one of your greatest accomplishments drove you
mad.
Despite all the heartache of rejections, you survived and came to Marist
College.
You came here with the expectation of nothing short of excellence.
For many of you, that excellence had a costly price, however.
Financial aid was the only way to go.
For others, with the help of the Higner Education Opportunity Program
(HEOP), you made it here to strive for that excellence. . .
.
. . · • _ .
_Now, con~ide~ what it.would be like. if su_ddenly you fin4 yourself faced
wit.
h the_reabzat10n_
t_hat m a year.,_that fund_
m_
g. _fro.
_m theT_
u_1t_1_o_n
Assis_
t_a_
n
___
ce __
_
Pr()_gram
(TAP) and HEOP ~ay oe gone.
.•
.
.· ..
·. •
.
..... .·· • '.
Unfortunate1y, for many at Marist and for_many in high s_chool,
this.-coulcl
become a reality .
. , ,-, ,,,,,,,-
•-_ ., •
··"'
•
·o·: ·."''.
• •;
.s:
,,;p:i:;-,:;
Recently, New York State Governor, George Pataki, came up with a
hard-hittfng budget. proposal which is likely to affect··many current· and
pro!lpecttve Manst students.
-
_
•
G~v. Pataki;s proposeq budge:t plans to cut or decrease the amount_of
__
fundmg to various eaucat10n assistance programs.
,
_ .
This propos~l. would _reduce the maximum amount. of money awarded
through the Tuition Assistance Program (TAP) from $4,050 to :t,3,575.
On the surface ·_·this.·
amount of mon~y may not look_ like .a l9t, but to
many who depend on TAP-for the maximum amount, this reduction could
mean the difference between staying in a New York college or transferring.
In addition, this could be catastrophic to those high scfiool students con-.
sidering New York colle_ges. .•
_
• •
•
-
.-
_,,
By reducing the maximum am_
ount_._in
TAP, ther_e will_·_be-less
overal_l
money available ~o th9se applying for the program.
.
,
So, not only will. this affect current students but also those who want to
get a college education.
.
-
.
·.
_.
•
•
Also in J>ataki's proposal,.is a plan to cut funding for HEOP.
..
.
This
~22
million state program fielps students financially; personally, _and
academically.
. -
•··
.
•
. .
. . . • _
..
_
. · . .
·
Gov. Patak.i's proposal to cut this funding is part of a three-percentre-
duction in the state budget.
•
•
If
this flan is appr_
ovecl, HEOP at Marist and at colleges across New-York
State _wil be elimmated ~d those students will be left with nothing.
.
This three_:Percent cut •
m.
the budget would also . affect the Economic
Opportunity Vrogram (EOP), same as HEOP but for state colleges.
~pproximately
57
students-at Marist are enrolled in HEOP.
• These
57,
if the budget it approved, will lose their financial aid from the
program.
• _ . _
·
- In addition to those c;ollege students in·HEOP, the students in EOP will
also face the same''dilemma.
• •
•
It is. truly unfortunate. to_ think that
57
bright St\!dents may have to give
up theu education at Manst because Gov. ""Pataki wants to decrease the
budget by three-percent.
·
•
. As if this part of the Rroposal was not enough Gov. Pataki's Rlan also
intends to raise tuition at State University of New York (SUNY) schools by
$1,000 next year.
•
Aren't college students and their parents paying enough to get a college
education already?
According to Gov. Pataki's plan, no.
Education is so.important to the future of this country.
•
How do we expect tomorrow's leaders to excell if they cannot afford
college?
Does Gov. Pataki realize how difficult it is for students in today's society
to afford a decent college education?
Will this proposed budget, if approved, lead to less and less enrollment
in New York colleges simply because there is no hope for financial assis-
tance?
All of this for the love of saving money.
Money makes the world go 'round.
Sadly, this statement is true.
.. The
'Circle encourages students, faculty and staff to write to Gov. Pataki
with
concerns.
.
• Everyone has
a·
rightto
an
education, regardless of economic status.
Write to
local
Senators
and
urge them not to approve
these
budget
cuts.
M
C
MARIST HEALTH SERVICE'S DREAM COMES TRUE-
AS A TRUCKLOAD
·oF PENICILLIN, HEADED FOR
ST. FRANCIS HOSPITAL, LOSES CONTROL AND·
CRASHES DIRECTLY IN FRONT OF THE SCHOOL!
The Republican View
\Vatching Henry Foster going through the
It forced the White House and Foster to be·
nomination process is beginning to make me clear about his record.
•
cringe.
But it was not a job that should have been
I keep having all of these images floating done by Right to Life.
through my mind: a soldier walking through a
It should have been done by the White
mine field or a drowning victim trying to keep- House;
•
_
his head above water, either image seems ap-
Because it wasn't, his chances of being con-
propriate for Foster.
firmed, for better or for worse, have been
The initial uproar over his nomination was threatened.
•
•
his record on abortion. Apparently after 38
The White House didn't do its homework:-
years as a practicing OB\GYN •
he performed·
It has surrendered the confirmation process
39 abortions in cases of rape, incest, or when to "gotcha journalism" and overzealous politi-
the life of the mother was at risk.
cal groups only seeking to gain.
It has since been discovered that during .
The. seeds of doubt have. been planted not
that time he also directed a studf.oii·dfugs· ·only in the minds of Senators but in the hearts
which induced abortions performed by the of the ~erican
public. . • . .
mother. Foster has also said he performed hys, .. · .. _ BuJ. if Henry Foste~ does_
Join the ranks of
terectomies on severely retarded women in the _th~ unce>Af_irmed,
he will be
m
good company.
1950's.
·• '
•
' -
• •• • • •
'
He's noftl.iefirst Clinton nominee to be inis~
Although
I
m~y have :,ideological differ~ . hlip;dled,,
~nd if history proves right, he won't
ences with the choices he niade.and:the be- be the lasr.,. .••
:· .. -.·_·.•
..
liefs)ie:has/
I
,tliiillc_
there is a greater
·issue
at
i.<·
•
'IJ:1~:l~t;~o
~~
~Ja!f)c:ars __
9fthe. C~ton_;;:
'li:and°":.
h6w·the)V1iite House has handled it. adnumstration prove that it may be 1he onfy
·PrJsicient
Clinton is protesting .that.Foster's: administration rem;1:mJ;,ez:ed
for having nomi~. •
_
entire body of work is not being judged. •· _ nated. more people than were actually con- .
• . He argues that the entirety
of his work js firmed. . . .. < .· •.. _
..
being overlookecl by right wing anti-abortion
Case
lll
pOillt was the position of Attorney ••
extremists v,,hoare utilizing Foster's choices Ciene~al. , . . . •.. ;
_ . • . ·:·.-
, ,
to further their o\VU
beliefs and causes. •·-·. . • ....
•
Clinton s first cho!ce, Zoe Barrd,_~eneral
ThaU will agree with Clinton on. But it Counsel _for
_Aetna _Ltfe Insurance, wit~drew_
was Clinton who left the door wide open for her nomination after two ~ays of testunony
attack.
. .. .
•
_
_
. _ . • _ . . .
•
__
·.
•
_ . b_efore
~h~
Senate. Hw~s discovered that _she·
.
When Foster was introduced toOihe nation ~d ~er h~sband,_
wh~ _is also a lawyer, 11.ire~
.•
he,was introduce.d as man who had made.a rpairormegal
immigrants to care for theJ.T.
great contribution to prevei}ting teenage
.-.~?n;;
.
;
.
-_
•. . . ,,
> . _.
. . . • :
piegancy_lhrough a prograII1 he designed,J
C<
N_annygate also daimed another:viftm1,
__
Have a Future; that has proved to be an effec~ Ki111~a
_Wood,
_who was ch~sen as _Baird s ~ea
tive solution for preve11ting
tee,nage pregnancy. :/pla~II1~%-Wood_had
also hired~ d~egal alien.
. _ In fact,. ironically enough, Fosterwas des- ~o care for hef child, but at t~e time it w_as
not
ignated by President Bush as a ~'l,000 Ppint ill_egaL D~spite th11t
_fact Clmton felt.
,it
~as
_
of Light" during his -administration.
: _·
•.
-•.
• _ ~t~l. ,11netlµcal.
an~. withdrew her nom~nat~on
•. •
He developed a program that has encom~
/
Eve.J!tually Cl!~ton ":'as able to sµcces~~
passed job tr~in:ing;
educat_i<>.n,
and ~amilylife . fully_ i~l the l'°titi?µ with J~et Reno who,
classes,
I
Have a Future not only sho~ed those \ l~ckily for Clin on, had no c~ddren.
teenagers that they had a future but it showed
•
. Bobby Inman, former ~
01
pmee for De!ense •
them a way to get it Foster preached absti- . Secr:ta17, was another victim of the Clinton
nence and futures;
-
-
•. nomination process.
.
.
Clinton is ·right·.
that _the.
man . should, be
., Inm~ • h~d to be • C?erced mto. accepting
judged by his whole record. But the only per- the nommat10n ~er_Cbnton had been ?nsuc-
son who's stopping us. from learning about cessful _appro~ch1~g
~o oth~r candidates.
that record is Clinton.
•
• . Upon his no1;11mat10n
it was discovered th_?t
. Cas<in point is Foster's record o!1
_abor- ::e~~-n:::~~~~,°:!i:::ri!~!~:s:;
tion which has undergone several rev1Sions. was the head of an investment group that
peJ!rin~~to!c:°a.6~rt:~ t~att°:a~e; 1:te~:1! bought.·out ,a. major defense· manufacturer,
mother was dying of All)S.
Tracor, after it decl~ed _ban~ptcy.
The second account waslhat he perfonned
These failed nomi~at10ns m
~~ of t~e~-
"less than a dozen" abortions, all being in cases ~elv~~ reflect the Clinton ~dmm!stratlon s
of rape, incest, and ":'hen· the mother's life
~~~o/ to have one of their nommees con-
was endangered.
Lan•
Q • •
h
The White House then ceased commenting·
i Ulmer can attest to t at. .
until it had organized and then analyzed
As one of_ her support~rs descnbed the
Foster's record.· Both Foster and the· White process when sh? was nominated! supported,
.
~
•
.
. . and then later withdrawn as nommee for As-
-
:~:i~e now say he peuormed 39 abortions in sista~t Attorney General, "W_e were o~ our
B
•
• d h •
h N • al Righ own m a waiped canoe treading water •.
_ear
10
mm. t at lt was t e ation .
t
Henry Foster m·ay fmd himself in that same
t? _Life Committee !hat uncovered_ evidence • body of water.
Citmg what Foster did, not ~e White. House.
Al.Gore recently said, "We are not going
It has p~oduced documentation proving !hat to let the extremists defeat this man." But he
Fost~r did perform more than
OlJC
abortion, may find that they will defeat themselves.
J>?SStbly
even more th~ the 39, and that he
Thinking back to the particular battle that
directed a study exanunmg ~ow drugs ~uld
caused the Clinton Administration not one but
enable women to per!'orm th~ir own 9:bortions. two casualties was the nomination process for
. Although_
the ~ational Right to Life Com- . Attorney General. The first appointee if you
m1t!ee only mvest1~at~
~ a m~s to serve recall was Zoe Baird. Her nomination process
therr own ends, their d1ggi~g !nh,ht;ned all hatched the
egg
"Nannygate."
of us
as
!o what_ Dr. Foster
s.
entire record
_
Mary Diamond
is
The Circle's political
was, not JUSt the parts the White House knew ·colum·nist
or the· parts
they
wanted
us
to hear.
VIEWPOINT·
FEBRUARyt6, 1995
7
Surfing'.·Marist's
Infofox for a Living
Editor:
Want to· get up-to-date informas
tion about jobs, careeMelated ~o·rk-
shops, • internships and_
0
graduate
school preparation? Welltake a ride
on the infomiation superhighway and
stop at Career News on Infofox.
Go to the mainframe and pull up
that Marist fox. Then punch in
Infofox. Afterwards, you'll .get a
menu and you will see Career News.
Roosevelt
· Internship
In Career News you will see jobs,
_
workshops and other career-related
items availible through the Center
for Career Development and Field
Experience, which is located in
Donnelly Hall Room 226.
If ·
you require additional infor-
matkm, feel free to contact us at 575-
. 3543/3547 or just "surf the internet."
Center for Career Development
and Field Experience
Chess.Club
Updates
r--~-------~------~----,
• Con·struction ·
·
·
I
I
I
I
and Destruction
I
1
1
_ I_
know that I'm not mechanically in Jap~nese a11:d
photocopies and
I
mchn~d-
. •
.
sends 1t to milhons.
I
I
This apphes to anythmg from
Somewhere, the daughter of a
l~rs
to those damn refillable pen-
deceased craftsmen is holding these
I
lcilsS.
f
h
I
b
directions to a lawyer demanding the
I
o o course w en
uy any-
h
&
h
I
f h
I
Ith
.
"th
bl
. d
money er 1at er e t er.
mg w1 some assem y require ,
II
panic.
_
Well, I lay out the di_rections
and
I
I
I
figure they should come with see that
I
have everything.
I
•
little people inside to put it together.
I start to question the illustration·
I
I look at these instructions and - and after twisting my head to look
I
lthere's
always some damn "cute"
at it from all directions, resembling
lstick
figure smiling on each step to Linda Blair from The Exorcist, I I
show you how easy it is.
conclude: "Well it seems strange, but
I
I
If I ever meet that little guy -
I guess the the lamp does screw onto
I
lhe's
going to require some assem-
the bottom of the chair."
I
lbly.
.
I guess it's revolutionary because
I
I
To me, s~eakers :;vithout the laces after I built the desk it was lopsided
can ?e c?,ns1dered some assembly and everything just fell on the floor
I
I
required.
under the chair - where the lamp is!
I
I .
That's why I, for one, want to .
What gets-me is the fact that I
I
I
brmg back velcro.
·
f
I. t
d
t·t·
b t I h
always. have pieces le t over.
I
s arte a pe i 10n, u
ave a
.
•
Editor:
Editor:
I
little setba~k- I can't fig~re out how
This always happens.
I
The Franklin and Eleanor
The Marist College Chess Club
I
to refill this damn pencil.
No matter what you do there's
I
Roose~elt Institute (FERI) recently
made its annual West Point trip on
I
Now the real trouble for me starts always that little plastic bag with
I
created the William R. Emerson
Saturday, • February 11, and, in a
I
with_ directions for putting together screws left over.
• internship for Summer 1995.
closely played match, lost to USMC.
furniture.
.
.
I build the desk and it's being
I
The intern will be paid $7.00 per
Graduate student Rich Hutnik
I
Of course, furniture that reqmres held together with at most 2 and a
I
hour and will be required to work a
collected his frrst win as a Marist
I
p~tting together ~sually says some-
half screws. Then all that's left to
I
minimum of 20 hours per week.
chessman, defeating Cadet Lo with
I
thing abo~t one s financial back-
put together is the pencil holder and
I
Interns will assist the library staff
an impressive attack on Lo's strong
M1·
non·
ty
I
ground and taste.
there's still 24 screws 3 nuts and 15
with current processing, reference
defensive position.
,
I
mean,
I
don't think royalty in washers left.
I
and.museum pr_oiects.
• Club president and senior Mike
I
England build their own desks and
B . 11 th d k .
1
b
I
•
I
b
ds
asica y
e es 1s rea wo -
The 'intern for
1995
will. serve .Murray was able to muster a draw
In
h•
e
b
h'
·1 h Id
•
against Cadet Brad_
ley as well as club .
·
terns Ip .
I
Although they wouldn't need to
ly, but t is P,enci
O
er is going
I
.nexfsummer and will be chosen by
nowhere baby
May 8, 1995. The deadline to apply vice-president. and sophomore Jeff
• • , build their own beds because it al-
•
I
for this internship is April 15, 1995. Wiater, who drew with Cadet Walsh.
ways seems that Prince Charles and
We can have an earthquake and
I
For more
inforniation
01
to re-
Our next event will be this Sat-
Editor:
I
Lady Di are always using any bed this thing will still be holding my
I
ceive. an application,
contact • urday, February 18, at high noon
The College of Insurance is
I
but their own.
pencils.
Desmond Murray at 575-3543, or
with our Fifth Annual Marist Spring
launching its Minority Honors In-
I
But anyway - back to my furni-
I really want to know who they
I
Raymond Teichman, Supervisory
Tournament.
ternship Program for 1995 to attract
I
ture building.
get to design these desks.
I
Archivist, at the library at (914) 229-
All are invited to attend and·com-
Native American, African American
My project is a desk, a chair and
I hope they aren't people who are
I
8114.
•
pete:
for
trophies which will be
and Hispanic students to professional
I
a lamp.
.
. .
using this engineering job as a small
I
Desmond Murray handed ourto 'the top three finish-
careers in the insurance and finana
I
I look at these direct10ns and I step to finally work for the govern-
ers.
• cial services industries.
I
see that t~ey ass~me you can co~nt, ment on the space program or in the
I
_For niore information call Mike
Eligibility requirements consist
I
yo.
u are liter.ate m Jap.anese - smce military.
I
Mu.rray at ext.4151 or Jeff Wiater at··· of goo.d academic standing .and the
the American directions always seem
•
• .
k
•
5698
I
I
b.. •
.• 1 t. •• . •
d
h
.
_
. I can 1magme our tan s gomg
I
....
, ~}f·f,h,
,,1,,/;:1im
• ,; . • ,, .. ,
! ,~,,,, ---~
,:,'.
•. ,,,,..;: -...
<;q!]Jpl~~j_o~_:
:~f at\J~ast . ·
!51J
.credits.
i
I
sdrt
~irii~~~~~j i~~Iina:~~-some
into
battle
falling
apart_
a
but
t1_1e
little
I
•
•
.
.•
•
.
along
with
a demonstrated strong
I d
.
cup holder for
the
dnver
wd1
stay
work ethic.
I
o.
•
h
h
h'
I
Read The Circle
··• ... ,-··,_'•.c-:
.. , ..
:,r--.
__
~.-,.-::?-
._~·,.._._-
..
_: .-,
... ~.;--
..
·-_·,,-,
every Thursday.
Ml.chael
J
M
I have the i·ncl1'nat1·on
to ·AVOID mtact t roug anyt mg.
•
urray,
Candida_tes
should complete the
I
Chess Club President
application by March l, 1995_
I
anything mechanical.
I
guess the people designing the
The program combines academic
I
I think the method of thought is: . tanks are awa~e th~t they
won't have
I
course work with a 20-30 hour per
I
This is so cheap, you're going to to actually dnve m them.
I
week paid intern experience with
have to do your part - build it!
Then of course when the enemy
I
one of the world's most prestigious
I
I look at the other side of the beats us the engineer will be home
insurance brokers. The program runs I directions and they are in Japanese thinking, "I knew I should've put an
I
during the.fall and spring semesters.
I
and I seem to have a better chance extra screw on the ~offee holder!"
I
For more information or to re-
I
there.
,
.
.
Well I'm going to finish this
I
ceive an application,
contact:
~ctually
!
m
not sure if the di- column now because I'm getting a
I
Desmond Murray at 575-3543 or
I
~ections a~e m Japanese - I'm really cramp in my neck from typing this
I
Christopher H. Ross at the College
I
JUSt guessmg. .
.
, under my chair.
of Insurance at (212)-962-41
i
1.
I .
I~ could have bee1:1
the bml~er s
I still think it's a stran e lace
I
I
smcide note and wdl all wntten f: th 1
g p
I
while he was brain hemmoraging . or e amp.
.
I
causing it to look illegible and the
Frank
La
Perch is The Circle's
I
Desmond Murray •
■
manufacturer iust assumes that it's huinor columnist.
J
------------------------
Rand.Om
thoughts
on selected ideas
lllillfillf&t~liliilfll
;"(-,:;~~n.t:'.:t()Jieii1ffrpm
..
y;ou
..
!.
_Sriggestio~s~
•
-:?i;-fi",_-
...
~o#ip_llm.ents.
~r ·complaJnts
are_·_
•
.. •
·The.other day, the strangest thing would go again. It was strange, but
happened to .me.
I knew I would find them.
I · lost something.
What it was wasn't important,
and.how it happened doesn~t mat-
ter; _but I've come to
a
greater ap-
preciation about listening to my in-
stinct.
-
Sometime on Sunday I dropped
my keys somewhere and didn't re-
·aJize i(until Monday. Now
I
did a
lot of things on Sunday and went to
a lot ofdifferent places -
I could
have lost them a.l}'Where.
I went to brunch in New Paltz,
went to a friend's house on Wash-
ington Street and walked across
campus a few times. Throughout the
course of my day, my keys could·
have .been in at least two different
counties.
But for some strange reason, I
knew they weren't lost. I knew that
they were somewhere nearby and
that they would show ·up soon
enough. It was almost as if I could_
sense them, hear them calling me, I
knew they were around someplace I
When I realized they were ·1ost
on Monday, I began to search. First
I
went through every possible spot
. in my house.
I
looked in places
I •
hadn't been for months _; like
where
we
keep the cleaning prod- ·
ucts.
I
even looked in places
I
had
never been before -
under a box
behind my housemate's bed.
I even had recruits helping me·
look for my keys, and we all came
up empty
But' there was that gnawing in-
side of me that kept telling me that
they were going to show up. And
on Tuesday it happened.
I
was walk-
ing along a sidewalk in Gartland,
looking down at the ground (because
there was nobody to look up at) and
I happened to glance to my left at a
snO\vbank.
Bam. There they were.
Now, it's not so much that I was
finally able to trace my steps back
to the moment that I bounded over
a snowbank in an effort to trim a
couple of seconds of wal_king time
off -0f a journey back to my apart-
ment -
no. What the moral is here
is that my second sense told me that
they were there. An area of my cra-
nium knew that my keys were lay-
ing right there in that snowbank the
whole time.
Why· is that?
Why is it that there was that
voice in· my head? Does everyone
.have that voice? Does it sound like
mine? (If I could have chosen what
my voice sounded like, I would have
opted for the James Earl Jones ver-
sion.)
I
don't know the answers to these
questions, and I bet not even that
Astonishing Neal guy would know.
(A Clint Eastwood voice would have
been cool too.)
What I do know is that I will
always listen to my inner instinct
from now on about anything, I'm
making it a rule -
but not a reso-
lution.
Larry Boada
is the all-lmow-
ing editorial page editor
1iiiiiMiiiiilriit1ilt
lltlll{llltlii
L
r
I
I
I
I
l
8
THE CIRCLE, FEBRUARY
16,
._1995
MONDAY
PINT NIGHT
FRO!IBr1s1s17z.>
::1.00 OFF
ALL
PINT
DRAFTS
lvtJtJ!)PE(Jtt'ER
•
TUESDAY·PITCHERS·&.WINGS
.$3.00
PITCHERS.&
1/2
PRICE WINGS
WEDNESDAY
NICKLE BEER NIGHT
. 05
eEAIT 1eE oR,,1-r1s>
WHILE
sllPPLlesLAST
LADIES
$1.0
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0
WELL
DRINKS
EVERYONE
$1.s·o
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WOLF
BTLS
DIFFERENT
PARTY
E'J\CH-
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18
&
UP
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THU
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DAV
NO
5CREWIN'
AROUND
COLLEGE
NIGHT
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&
UP
•
•
•
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H011Ri9pi,t~,o,m
¢:5oR7kL/):,f)(,;V$g
¢.50 CEN"f DRAFTS
•
..
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MODERN ROCK
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~fl'la,.
SATURDAY
•.•
LAD1Es·.N1GHT
LADIES $1.50 WELL DRINKS ALL_ NIGHT
$1.SO
BUD
UGHT
BTLS
FOR
EVERYONE
all
Hi
,ae,t;{}if't
~fll/(UJ(
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7
l~N'l
1
S
FRIDAY
2/17
THE
DEADBEATS
GRA1EFULDEADCO\IER5
WEDNESDAY
2/22
otostWoot~
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PART¥
'-~ WITH
DJ
H-BOMB
BRAN D NE
w
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COVER
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I.D.
•
EVERY
FRIDAY
&
SATURDAY21
1,
o~ER
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i
'
,
•.
.
1
.
.
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'.:
'
.
,.
~
•
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j'
.
i
l
!'
!
i
Monday·
:
·Free
Refill Night
•
-
$5.oo·oomestic
Draft
All You Can Drink
9·12pm
Tuesday
Bud Draft 50¢ Mug
Ladies
Well Drinks
$1.50
Wednesday
Rotating
Bottle Night.
50¢ Domestic
$2.00
Well Drinks
·9.12pm
Thursdays-Marist College
Senior Night
~~;-~~~i~-
'.
\
~
•
(21
& over)
$1.50
Well .Drinks
50¢Drafts -
$1
.00 Test
Tube
Shots
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Friday
.. 2 for 1 Happy
Hour
••
Dance·to
the greatest
-musical
hits
Saturday-
2/25
.Live
Mu.sic
• T~Bone
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Night
Bud $4.00
Sunday
-Hang
Over Noon Pay
75¢
·Dom
.. Drafts
Bloody Mary
$1.
75
Screwdrivers
$1.50
-
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,
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Darts
TROLLEY'S
96 Main
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Pok., N.Y.-
485-3887
21 and Over
• THE CIRCLE,:FEBRUARY16;·-t995
Student (;overnn1ent
Elections 1995
February 20 & 21, 1995
Go Out and Vote
YOU HAVE THE POWER!
The Student Government Association is very
busy this time of year. Elections are coming up,
but there is still some old work to finish.
I am currently working withJ ennNocella on the
Safety and Security Committee. We have met with
the head of Security, Joe Leary, a number of times
last semester to discuss campus safety, parking
problems, lighting concerns and the new elec-
tronic security equipment currently being used in
the dorms. Many of the Committee's requests have
been granted and we will continue to push for a
safer campus.
Live
Presidential Debate!
Tonight
MCTV Channel 12 10:00 PM
Watch To Be Informed
YOU HAVE THE POWER!
Student Programming
Council Update:
Looking ahead with S.P.C.
for the month of February
Friday, February 17,.1995
9
At 8:00 PM in the Cabaret come out for a night
of high rolling and gambling with Jim Karol.
The night offers everyone to come in forget
your worries and try to
win
some great prizes.
No money is needed, all is provided for and
the prizes range from gift certificates to CD's
to CD players, a T.V. and a VCR. So take a
chance. What have you got to loose?
As a fellow Greek, I have been meeting with
members of the Greek· Council to discuss the
ramifications of Alpha Phi Delta becoming a
recognized fraternity atMaristCollege. Currently
the members ofSGA are reviewing the status of the
club cap requirements. If the cap was raised or
eliminated, then Alpha Phi Delta will be allowed
to become a chartered organization. A vote is
expected on this issue within. the next couple of
Tuesday, February 21, 1995
weeks.
.
At 8:00 PM in the Theatre, B.S;U. and S.P.C.
lfyouhaveanysuggestionsformyselforanyof
•
are• proud to present Minister
Yusuf
the other ,nembers of S<;JA,
please s_top by the .-
N,u:tia~~lld.
~
~
.. }~S!l'!e.r
(.)I}
~oll_ege cam-
i'bffice.
In
addition>·ni'et!tingsare
iljiilr[io
ihe
pub':.?
'puses
arid high schoolsYusufMuhammad
has
lie, so please attend them if you would like to be
been enlightening our youth by speaking about
heard..
how to survive and become productive in a
. In closing,· I would like _to encourage ev:ry
hostile environment. By focusing on the im-
stude!'t to pay cl~se attention to the upcoming
portance of Black history, the community and
elections. T~ere
Wlll
be a deb~te on M~TV. Many
the use of economics Min. Muhammad shows
of the candidates have very different ideas about
•
'
.
how campus should be
run.
If you want things
that knowledge of self and the strengt~e~mg
changed, or
if
you feel strongly about certain
of ~ur cul~ral roots are the. keys. L1m1ted
issues, get involved and please vote.
seatmg so pick up your FREE ticket at College
Activities today.
Kevin Straw
Senator
Friday, February 24, 1995
1-------------------f
TGIF Comedy Club featuring Brad Lowery
Students are once again trying to "tap the bottle and
twist
the cap/'
The Student Government Association is currently
investigating the club~cap
issue, because students are
expressing that they are not fully benefiting from their
tuition. At this time, the main group of students
fighting to raise or lift the cap are members of the
!}nrecognized
fraternity Alpha Phi Delta. APD has
been on campus for over four years, but they are still
trying to be recognized by Student Government.
A committee made up of students within and out-
side of student government are exploring the different
viewpoints of this i~ue.
with the HuMarists opening. Sponsored by
B.S:U. • and S.P.C. Brad has been seen on
NBC' s Showtime at the Apollo and promises
anightfilled with laughter. Doors open at 8:30
PM with the show beginning at 9:00 PM.
Admission is free for all Marist students and
five dollars for any non-Marist students.
For any additional event information, call
the S.P.C. event information line at x4SPC.
• And we hope to see you there!
On one side, the student body points out that they
'------------------1
should be entitled to participate in any club that they
wish. The activity fee that all students pay is designed
for students to partake in extra-curricular
activities
.
Student Government
points out that there are man-
agement problems that would occur if the club-cap
were raised or revoked. The operation of a dub
requires
ii
great deal of work. All the clubs that are at
the college now talce up a lot of time to keep them
running efficiently.
Also, the club review that is conducted every
semester is designed to "weed out through the dead
weight." Clubs that have not been keeping up with
their agreements of filing paper-work and holding
events, or those that suffer from a lack of interest can
be
put on probation, suspension or even have their
charters revoked. The problem with this is that the
latter does not happen too frequently, and students do
not want to wait any longer for an opening.
At this time, the committee to investigate the club-
cap is still gathering information on the topic.
A similar situation occurred in the end of the spring
semester of 1994. El Arco Iris Latino and The Black
Student Union expressed their complaints
of having to
live under the "cap." At that time, Student Govern-
ment decided_that
raising or lifting the cap would have
detrimental effects to the organization of the
SGA.
SENIORS
Attention Seniors:
There is precious time left to become involved
in the upcoming senior events.
The Senior Class Officers will be holding a
meeting Wednesday, February 15, at 12pm in CC
348A.
The topics covered will include:
• Class
T-shirts
• Senior week alumni 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 cqll
ex.
?995.
10
_THE
CIRCLE,
SPORTS·
FEBRUARY.16,
1995
.
T-h-e
•
Mall
-Behincl
tlre
Mask - Brad
Karri:()\
.
___
b_y_J_I_M_D_E_RI_V_AN
____
and eight:
.
.·.·
isJast season's
5-2
victory
Staff Writer
"I used .to watch hockey on TV
leaguerival'Siena College'.·
> ,
with· my father, and it looked really
.•. "It was the firs(game of last
If
one is to mention the name neatt Kamp said.
"I
tried it and
I
se~sor., w~ beat Siena 5-2,'' Kamp
Brad Kamp to anyone associated reallf liked it."
•
said: I,thmk I hadmy .best game."
with the Marist hockey team, that
Kamp said he enjoys the game
He· also mentioned last seasons
person will hear the words hard because it is a limelight position.
win over Rutgers University, .who
worker and team leader.
"You can make the big save, and
came· into. the• match up undefeated.
. "Brad has neyer missed a prac-
be the hero of the game, and on the
Kamp and the Red • Foxes sent
tice due to sickness, or anything," other side you seem responsible for • them packing
with
a 3-2 Joss.
fourth-year head coach Kevin Walsh the game," Kamp said. '.'.Thosetwo
Walsh. said he. thinks it was
said. "He is one of the best players pressures make it really exciting." •. Kairip's best performance'.
.
I have ever coached." Kamp's dedi-
"You can't .blame a loss· on one . . "He made _46
saves,''. Walsh said.
cation has paid off over the last four person," Kamp said. " A team wins "He was just phenoniinal."
•
years.
or loses a game."
.•
Kamp said he always paid_atte~~
During his freshman year, Kamp
Kamp's attitude towards the
tion to professional goalies, espe- •
led the Red Foxes to their first game has rubbe.d off on the 0ther
cially Johri• Vanbiesbrook.
•
. .
Metropolitan Conference champion- players on the team.
. _He has fried to incorporate cer- •
ship.
"Brad is the backbone. of our
tain aspects ofVanbiesbrook's game
He was also named to the all- •
into his owri. •
•
. . .. . . ' . .
star team each of hi three full-sea-
Profile of the Week '
"I used to
be
more,ofa stand~up
sons and was chosen league Most __
:;....;;;;"""";..;;;........:::-=._:;.;:=..:::.......:._:-=...:=:.::=
goalie," Kanip said. "Now I fmd the
Valuable Player last season.
team,'' -jumor forward Kris Rojek butterfly more successful."
• Most likely. he will be picked to
said. "He works hard, and keeps the
The goalies influence earned him
the all-star team again this season, guys up."
. . the nickname, "Beezer."
which will make him the second
Sophomore Joe Accisano. said
Kamp's participation in hockey
Marist player to achieve the honors Kamp. is a big team leader.
will not end after his career at
all four years on the team.
"He works hard," Accisano said. Marist.
•
Kevin Walsh was the first.
"We see that, and
it
pushes us
He has a try-'out set in North
Bill Kamp, Brad's father and
harder."
•.
••. Carolina for the East Coast Hockey
~ssistant coach for the Red Foxes,
According to freshman Jesse
League, and if that falls through he
said Kamp has been playing hockey Robertazzi, Kamp's talent on the ice will try for the Sunshine League. •.
since the age of five, and has al-
also motivates the· other players as
"If
I'm not playing ther:e," Kamp
ways been a hard worker.
well.
said. "I will be playing in a league
"When he was young I made him
"He has integrity in the locker somewhere."
•.
•
a little
15x40
rink," Bill Kamp said.
room, and_
also_
inspires us with the
Kamp also has a chance to be·a
"When he would. come home from
crazy saves he · makes," Robertazzi referee at hockey camps in. Lake
practice he would go out and skate
said.
Placid for USA Hockey.
•
for a couple of hours more."
Kamp has had a great career at
The senior also referees at home
Kamp played for New Milford Marist. •
and teaches a goalie clinic in Pough-:
High Scool, in New Milford, Conn.
During his
1993-94
MVP season, 'keepsie.
.
.
and was named to the Division II
Kamp had a
93
shot percentage.
This seasons team has. a chance
All-State second teani.
His overall shot percentage is 96 to win another Metro championship.
Kamp decided to become a
percent.
• "We have a lot of young players .
goaltender arou=
age of seven
Kamp's most. memorable game learning the college . game; but, I
..
:~EFOX~EIOX
RES\ll1URQNfEIUJOfEB.]4
MEN'S BASKETBALL
( 14-7;10·3
NEC)
2/9 • St. Francis (PA)
2/11 • Robert Morris
•
2/14 • Sf.
Francis
(NY) .
(63-53W)
(80-77W))
(80-66W)
WOMEN'S
BASKETBAU:(8:;
12;6-7 NEC)
2/9 • St.
Francis
(PA)
(58-53W)
2/11 - Robert Morris ·
(77-60L)
2/15 - st. Francis
(NY) Unavallable
HOCKEY
( 8· 12-2; 4-S MEI)
2/10. - Albany State
(3•3T)
2/8: - Hofstra
·
.
(5-1
L)
MEN"S
VOLLEYBALL
(1-4)
-
'
.- --~-.
2/10-Oneonto(ll-15,
10-15,8-151.)
2/11 - Holshots (15-7; 15-SL)
2/11 -OutterRotatlon (15-6, 16-14L)
2/11 Geneseo Comm. (15-13. 15-SW)
2/11 -Canisus College (15-13. 15-SW)
UPCQMINGWEEK
MARISISCHEDULE;
2/15-Wcmen·s bmketbdl w. St. Frcrlcls
CNY)
7:30 p.rn.
2/16-Men·s ~etbdl
vs.
LIU
7:30pm.
2/16-2/18-Men's
swimming
at Metropolital
Chanplonslips
•
2/17 • Hockey
II!.
Albany state 9:15
.
UPCQMINGWEEKMARISISCHEDUlE;
.
• 2/18Merl'~aldwomen;sbcisketbdlatWogner
.
7:30p.rn.&5:00p.rn. • •
. 2/18·2/19·1ndoortmckatNECChcmps
2/19 -Hlockey at
Siena
7:00 p.rn.
2/20 •
Men·s aid women's basketbdl at
Monmoulh 7:30 end 5:00
p.rn.
S_enlor
netmlnder Brad Kamp takes a break during action.
think we might be able .to get
OD
a
hot streak in the playoffs," Kamp
said: "A team only has to \\'.in four
in a row, I'd love to win another
one."
.
There was a chance that Kainp
miglit not ha~e b~~n_a player here,••
ClrcN
epo,ta
pholo/Cllrla
Berlnalo
his father'sSlfSt choice was Siena,
but Brad chose Marist.
"I like the fact that Brad is wear-
ing Red and White and not Green :
and_(}oldtsaid Walsh .•
::'-fhe
·Associa.tecf
Press
Top·
25 Polls
.
·•·.-
'
..
,
'
·•
,le;r.r
~fre!! '=~~1r~o~atfi~t;ii:;
The
Top Twenty Five teams in Th~ Associ;
:
votes )n ~entheses, records through Feb.
ated. Press' women's,college·
basketball poll;.
12, total points based on 25 pbintsfor a first-
with first-place votes In parentheses, record
•
J
ot th
h
•
through Feb. 120' total points based ·on 25 •
P ace
v
e roug one point for a 25th-place
points.
for a first-place
v.
ote through one point
vote, and previous ranking.
.
.
.. : ·
: . .
·.
. . Record
.
Pis Prv
for a first-place vote and last week's ranking:
1. Connecticut (50) .... : ...... 19-11 626 ::
·necord
•
Pts Pva
·2. North Carolina
(6) ........
19_21 .. 527 1
1. Conn~cticut (31) .. , ...... ,. 21-07 ,99
1,
3 .. Kansas (3) ...... ,., ... : ....... 18-31 •· 464 :;_
2. Tennessee;(1) ..... ; ........ 23-17., :69
2 ••
4.'l<entucky (6) .:;; ... :., .. : ... ; 17-31 - 441 5
•
3. Colorado·.,
...................
,. 20-27 24
•
3:
. s. Massachusetts.:.:;:
....... : 18_21 . 431 4 . • 4.,
~~~a
Tech ... , ......... 20-36 • 87
5.
6.-UCLA .................
;; ..... , ... 1a:.21
,
354
.
6
5;
r .•
,; ...... : .... ,, ........ 19-26 .73
6
•
. 7. Maryland (1) ........
, ........ 19-4
1 306 8
6. Virginia.,, •••
,.: .... ,.: •••
, ...... 20-38., 28
8,
8. Michigan SL .............
, .. 17_31 099
f.
7. Texas.Tech ................... 22-36 08
4•:
.9 .. Missouri .........................
18-3 971
,
13
.
8.'·Vanderbilt
.......... ::: ......... 20-55 69
7
10. Arkansas ....................
;;. 19-5 965 12
9. North· Carolina .... : ...... ; •• 22-35. 51 .• 11'
·. 11.,Syracuse .. , ... , ..... ; .. , ... ;, .. 17-4 ·. 956 10
10. Washington, ................
,. 19•54 • 74
12 •
1.12•:Af!zona
.. : .........
, ......
,.: .... :15;5 -.. 91
f
9
-11
J·
GP':::,~gs,.at.
.......... ;, .. :, .. ,·:•.,·
118-449.
24· • 6628 1103
3.·,Ari:tona
Sl ................
: ... 18·5, 889- 14 •.
•
......................... -
• •
14, Wake ForesL ... ,,.; ........ 15-5 .819 11
13. W. Kentucky ; ....
,: ........... 1~
13
9 •
15 .. Vlll8!1~va
....... ; ............
, .. 17_5 , _805 16
14. Florida ., .........................
18-63. 57
18,
16. Virg1ma
............
; .. ,., ... .,.:. 16_6 . ,.706 . 17
15. Purdue .....................
: .... 18-63.
55
17: •
-
17,
Stanford, ........
:'.:
........
: ..
: 15-5 , 3
n·
15 ,
•
16.'Mississippi
... , ...........
:.:.:: 18-43
33
·.14
1.8. Alabama ....... , ........
; ....... 17-S
360. 23
17,cGeorge
Washington .,, .. 16-42 68
16.
19. Oregon ..........................
14-5 . 344 .
22
..
_
18 •. Arkansas ....................... 17-52 20 20
20.:Georgia Tech, ............... 15-8
298 ,-18 . 19.Ala_bama
•••••••••••
, •••••
, ...... 16-72 12 19
21. Iowa st. .............
, .......... 18_6 , 289 .19
20.
Kansas: ... ; .....................
16-71
.n
1s.
22
23
.. 0~la!Jo~a.St.. .... , ........
,.16-7 _265 24
21.0regonSt. ••
, ••••
, .... ,, .... :.15-41 54 23 •
. M!851SS1pp1
St ... ,. .......... 15-S ,· 218 21
22. Duke ..............................
17-51
.. 31 21.
24. Mmnesota ; .............
, ...... 16-6 : _ 1
63
. _
•
23. Texas A&M .: ....... ;; .. :: .... 15-67'·
•
6
••
25,
Purdue .........................
: 16_6 .. 151 25
24. Southern Cal .................
13-65 ; 6 •·22
Other receiving votes: Brigham Young 134
25. San Diego St .... , .........
: •. Hl,44
c
1... ....,.
.
Georgetown 130, Xavier, Ohio 62 . Utah 52•
Others receiving votes: Oklahoma 30; DePaut
W. K~ntucky 42, Utah st. 32, Okllilioma 31 •
29, Old Dominion 23, Clemson 19,' Florida
California
29,
Penn
23,
Memphis
21; St; Louis
International 17, WISCOnsin
17,
Auburn 11 •
21, N.C. Charlotte 17, Virginia Tech 15, Santa
St •. Joseph's
9,
Virginia Tech
9,
Memphis 6: •
C!ara.14, Texas 14, New Mexico St. 11,
Ohio U: 4, Drake 3, Seton Hatt 3, Southern·
T~~e 11, Auburn 10, GeorgeWashingion 9,
Methodist 3, Villanova 3, Wichita SL,' Okla-
l!!mois 9, Manl:lattan 8, Florida:5;-TexSS:EI
homa 2, Grambling St. 1, Lamar 1, Notre·
Paso 5. Miami, Ohio 3, Tulsa 3, Nebraska
2
Dame 1,. Ohio. St. 1.. • •
• •
I
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can have ~o of the
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deserve and need
for-
lD--BOOK~DEPARTMENT
I
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accepted
credit
cards In the
world-Vasae
and MastetCarde
credit cards."•tn your name."
EVEN lFYOU ARf;.NEW IN·.
CREDIT
or
HAVE BEEN 1URNED DOWN BEFORE!
SfORES-TµITJON-ENTERTAJNMENr-
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THE CIRCLE,
SPQRTS
FEBRUARY
16, 1995
1t
Cagers·
••
c6Iltill11e
-
t(l·.·.r()ll
-.il1'..\.;.:N"E€
..
'
'
•
•
•
•
'·
--·-•
-,-.,..,..--,-
____
...;.__,;
byGREGBIBB
SiaffWriter
.
':.When
Gregg Chodkowski scores
in double
,
figures, the Red Foxes
win. It is that simple.
_
•
.
•
. .
.
Marist made it 11 wins out of
the_irJast .12 games Tuesday night
as they defeated St, Francis (NY),
80-66, at the McCann Center.
Marist's (14: 7 overall, 10-3 in the
Northeast Conference) moved to 10-
0 when Ch·odkowski
•
scores in
double digits as the senior swingman
pumped in 10 points.
.
The Red Foxes have now won
their last: seven games and aie in
second place in the conference, trail-
ing Rider by
·half
a
game.
.
Head coach Dave Magarity. said
St. Francis (7-15_overall, 3-11 NEC)
played their
'usual
stingy defense.
"St.
Francis plays
•
some of the
best defense in the league," Magarity
said;
St. Francis held a 31-30 halftime
advantage, holding the Red Foxes
to 38 percent field goal percentage
in
.
the opening stanza.
.
Marist responded by shooting 58
percent in the second half while
outscoring the Terriers 50-35.
Alan Tomidy led all scorers with
23 points while grabbing 14 re-
bounds.
Danny Basile added 19 points
and Dexter Dunbar score 11.
On Saturday, Marist completed
its Pennsylvania trip with an 80-77
victory at Robert Morris College.
The Red Foxes were led by
Dunbar, who scored a career-high
28 points.
-
_
Magarity said the effort displayed
the leadership the senior guard brings
: .
·
MARIST
00, ST.
_FRANCIS
(NY)
M
•
IIARIST(IO):
·,
_
..
·
,
• •
,
..
.
Hil_O-O
9-12
e:Chodkowski
4-5
1-1
10, Tomidy 8-147•
1123,8asill7-134-419,0Unbar3-10ff
11,Pi>an::Zyk
2-61·2 5,
Encamaeion
0.2 3-5 3, Taylo,
0-0 0-0
0,
W1o111e
o.o·o--0 O. Totals 24-50 29-4180.
·_,
.•
sr:
FRANCIS (NY) lee)
•
.
.
.
Sllatp
3-11
1-2.8, Ayala 2-6
0-0
◄,.i.e,,;,.1.1
·0-0.2.
8aaey
S-11°2-213,Allel 1-SS-77, Patt0f10n S-13
i-411,
T°'"""" 8·15 1-2 21,
McG,egc,
0-1 0-0 0. Tolala
2$-63
. ••
10.17 68.
•
•
,
Holfllmo ocon:
SL Francis
(NV)
3i,
Maris!
30.
l!Uff.polnl gool1:
Marls!
•
Chodkowald,
Besile, Durll>M.
SL. Frands
(NV)
'Tom>nc:e (4), Sharp, Baloy.
'
•
Toam
......-da:
Maris!
14-7, 10-3 NEC; Sl Ftancis
(NV)
7-15. 3-11 NEC.
'
to the. court.
•
<lHe (Dunbar) stepped it up big
time for us
_as
his experience really
showed,'' Magarity. said.
•
Dunbar
.was
:8~for-12
from the
field, including 4-4 from three-point
range.
.
.
. .
Dunbar's backcourt mate Basile
scored 26, matching his career-high.
Marist led. by as many as 10,
holding a 70-60 advantage with 3:02,
left in the game,
_
but Robert Morris
cut into that advantage as the
_lead
shrunk to two with 20
•
seconds left.
The Colonials had a
.chance
to
send the game into overtime but a
three-point
attempt
by
Hal
Koenemund was blocked by Dunbar
as
the Red Foxes picked up the win .
On Thursday, the Red Foxes
opened their Pennsylvania string
with a 73-63 win at St. Francis (Pa).
Bas_ile scored
•
18 points while
Chodkowski added 16.
The Red Foxes trailed with less
than 13 minutes to go in the second
half, but a Basile jump shot knotted
the game at 42 and his_
three-pointer
with 12:11 left gave the Red Foxes
the lead, 45-42.
Marist would
·not
look back as
they outscored the Red Flash, 28-
21, from that point on· to earn the
•
win.
Swimmers
look to
capture title
by JASON FARAGO
Staff Writer
The time has come for the men's
swimming and diving team to show-
case 21 weeks worth of work.
Starting today (Thursday) and
continuing through Saturday, the Red
Foxes will attempt to capture the
Metropolitan Collegiate Conference
Championship at Trenton State Uni-
versity in New Jersey.
"We (Marist) are the odds-on-
favorite to win the Metros," head
coach Larry Van Wagner said. "Our
only real competition comes from
our chief adversary Rider."
A sense of bad blood seems to
be brewing as the two rivals meet
once again.
Last season, Rider beat Marist in
the regular season by 30 points, then
edged the Red Foxes in the Metros
by nine.
Marist answered the call this sea-
son by beating Rider by 40 points
and are primed to beat Rider once
again.
Junior guard Danny Basile puts back a rebound with junior
Kareem Hill looking on. The Red Foxes have won 7 In a row.
"We (Marist) knew last year that
we did not possess the potential
fi.
nalists," Vanwagner said. "This
year, those weaknesses have been
eliminated.''.
The Red Foxes host Long Island
University tonight at
the
McCann
Center.
FOX
NOTES
Gregg
Chodkowski was named to the Dis-
trict I Academic All-America team
this past week.
The senior is a three-time mem-
Clrclo •~
photo/Chrl•
Borlnolo
oer of the Northeast Conference
Commissioners Academic Honor
Roll.
The Biology major received a
perfect 4.0 gpa last semester and has
been a member of the Dean's List
all seven semesters he has been at
Marist.
Regardless, Vanwagner said he
and his swimmers are looking for-
ward to the Metros, especially swim-
ming against Rider.
"I
am looking forward to the
Rider-Marist rematch," VanWagrier
said. "We have all the pieces to the
puzzle and are ready to win."
S_pikers
_
lose upstate
by STACEY DENGLER
•
_-Staff
Writer·'.-~':
--
The men's volleyball team lost
its first conference game against
Oneonta University in Oneonta,
N.Y.
last Friday.
The Red Foxes got off to
a
slow
start, losing in three straight games,
11-15, 10-15, 8-15.
Senior middle blocker Jason
•
Letendre contributed 6 blocks, while
junior outside hitters Pete Blaney
and Sean Stam each had 14 kills.
Junior setter Francisco Jimenez
chipped in with 25 assists.
Letendre said the team did not
haye
one
of its usual_ solid perfor-
mances.
''We
did not play well," Letendre
said ..
"We·
beat ourselves."
Saturday's tournament at Buffalo
provided the team with tough com-
petition, however the Red Foxes
completed the toumament with only
one win and three losses.
Two of the three losses came
from
•
Alumni club teams. The
Hotshots downed Marist, 15-7, 15-
8, and Outter Rotation won, 15-6,
16-14.
-- The third loss was. against
Geneseo Community College, 15-
13, 15-8.
The only win of the Bison Tour-
nament for the Red Foxes was
against Canisius College.
Marist won the match, 15-13, 15-
8.
Sophomore
coach
Ellen
Schuerger said this weekend was
going to be challenging, but with
different results.
"We
_were
put into a very diffi-
cult poo_l;"
·Schuerger
said. "We
played against alumni's, it was good
practice for us.''
"Before
Canisius
we were
streaky,"
_Letendre
said. "We
couldn't
sustain a solid effort
throughout all of our matches."
Blaney led t_he
team with 12 kills
and 6 digs and Letendre added two
aces against Canisius.
The Red Foxes host Ramapo
College on Saturday at the McCann
Center.
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..
:.•.·.
:;:-,
r ;.~...:·
,,
)
......
·-----
...
:: ''
•
:_
--·STAT
Of THE WEEK:
.
•• ;
When
•
Gre·gg
Chodkowski
spores In
..
"lVe_
are
s6
re[itived
ihat
we
got'!,i(tite'
-.·
'
:
,
cliarnpio~hip),
we
'wantedit
soibtzf!ly:
~--
• ;
::
.•
}/
;~U\l<:(::'.·::/:·::\:.:
-:'Jeannie
~guire',
,i'~c;ti
SP<>.i.i
s,~b~11{l#~ •
d~ubl~:~~:-i~~-1*~~~aJI.
win· MetroS<for second ye~n 1qa row
•
::
,
-··
·•
•
•
men(after.::l:tl.l'·his team
did
·t,reak
·
..
by MARTY,SIN~CC>LA
• •
..
•
•
-Staff
W,rUer
•
•
•
the sweersm~ll of\ictory.
The women's swimming and.div-
ing team did not smell the chlorine.
.this past weekend enroute to·another
unprecedented victory;
.
•
The· Red Foxes
.returned
to the·
Merchent Marine Academy· in Long.
Island on Friday, Saturday:and Sun-
•
day and became the first swim tea_m
in Maristhistory to win back-_to~back
Metropolitan:
Collegiate· Conference.
titles.
•
. . ·.-
.
•
• ·
• •.·.
•
The Red Foxes·.outswani:
the en-
tire field by an impressive margin,
including_
downing··
second-place ri-
val· Rider College,· 672-536.
·
The· much awaited victory topped
off goals that had been set by the
.
•
team early in the seasori.
_
•
The first goal was to swim well,
arid consistently, and from that the
second goal of repeating as Metro
champs would· hopefully fall irito
place.
_
How right they were.·
.
teo··schoo}:iecoids.
•
_:·.
•
.•
Out of the ten, four were set by
ret'ay.ieams:·.
••
·:
.
O(the·
_six
individual records,
sophoafofo Stephanie Raider. t~ok
-
.three;··sophomore
Alyson MonJla
·broke·
two~•:
and
·sophomore·.
Becky
•
Tatllm seized one.
.
'.The. relay
:.
records came in the
200-yar.d·freestyle;
.the 400 medley,
the 800
·
freestyle, and the 400
-
freestyle.;
>
•.
·/ •
-<
•
.
.
•
. •
...
The timtn>f 4:07.35. in the 400
'.
medley· relay
V!il~
·a·.
conference
record as: well as a school record.
Raider, who continues to rewrite
the school s\vimming records,
notched two victories-(lllld records)
in the 200
·and
500 freestyle.
·
•
she picked up. her third, which
was also a conference-record in the
400' individual medley; with a time
of4:40.4L
•
.•
Marilla gained· her •.
two records
in-'the .50_ and 100 freestyle and
.Tatum
1:>rcike
a
long held record in
.
the 1650 freestyle ..
·
Jeannie Maguire said she was
. happy at finally winning the. cham-
The_ team saved its best perfor-
mance for the-last and most.impor-
tant riteet of the year.
•
Despite the success of the swim-
mers, who broke ten school records,
the divers annihilation· of the
·com-
petition stands above all accomplish-
•
The nien's
·and
wome,is swimming te~ms;eagerly
await
the results of a recent dlvl~g
-~mpetitlon.
• •.
-The
women's team captur:.ed
their second.
Metro_
title on Sunday'and the men go for lttoday.
pionship.
•
_
·.•
_
•
"We are so relieved that we got
it (the championship), we wanted it
so badly," Maguire said. "Everybody
stepped up to
:what
their potential
was, and everybody improved on
their times, which
is
obvious because
we broke so many records?'
•
ments.
Senior Jen McCauley,juniorJan
Martin and sophomore Danielle
DiGeronimo placed 1-2-3 in both the
one and three-meter ·dives.
"The divers· have been major
•
contributers: all year," head
.
coach
.Lloyd
Goldstein said. "I have t~ giv~
Melanie (Melanie Bo_lstad, diving
coach)
all
the credit.
As
long as she is here atMarist,
they will continue to be very com-
petitive."
•
Skaters iced on bad
.call
against t\.l~~p.f
··•
•
•
•
•
of wheth~r the
puck
pas_sed thii goal
o:byJIMDERIVAN_
0
d f
•
1 •
..
_Staff
Wr{ter'.
<·
;
"
;,-;·.
lirie efore·the en o
·'regu
at1on
••
•-
:Thfref~~ee(~aid
1_1e>;,
/·:\. :·
T}ie liockey tearil battled the State
"I'm thfJastone' to'. blame the
University
of
New ;York at. Albany
referees,-but
.they
·took
.tha(goal
onFdday to. a· 3-3. tie at the Mid-
away," Walsll said. • .
.
,"
.•
.
Hudson CivicCenteri
•
•
_··
•
• _Junior.'
forward
:Kris
Rojek,said
:
According to
_fourth~year
head
hehad,no doubt in his mind about
·
hK
• W l h. b d II b th
th
e
goal.
•
,
-.
:
·
.
· ·
•
·
coac
.•
evm
.
as •
_a
·
ca s
Y
e
. '_"T_
ha_t was
__
def_in
__
it_
ely· a. goa_l;''
'ref
er~~- pfayed
a
pa~ in-the tie .
.
•
.Jn
Hie last Tilimifos
_C>f
the game,
Rojek said/,.
•
. ••
~-
..
_,' ..
•
..... __
.
-with tlie Red Foxes' ahead 3-2; Al-
\Val~h and the players also ques-
bany:'-ha~.
a6-4
player, adv11ntage
ti9
tio.J.!ed
a_missed
call
o.n Jh1: t_11~edown
a power play and pulled the.goalie'..
_ofJr~shinan
George Macy~s partial
.
:
•
:With 31 seconds:'
remaµii11g,;
tJ~
· ..
·-
breaKa'!¥!iY)ri.:
!heJhird, p~riod:_,
_
0:
-
·•-
• · • ·
•
•
• ·-
·
·
·
,
Freslinian
'Jesse·
RobeitmLsaid
bariy slid a loose. pµ-ck in:front_of
•
:he\yas
also displeased with.the of-
-~~t1;t;~t:6~~-toleavetheg~e.
ficiating.
/:.\
_ /./ :•
,::.c_:
__
.:<
.
•
_According
to
;\Valsh,
the game
:
.
~'The._referees
'Yer~j~e'>iiurplJer
had its share of controyersy.
.
••
•
sey~n arid ~ight players on.·the
,ice
•
••
·'
$.ophomore for:ward
Joe A.ccisano for Albany State,'\ he,Said.
:·
_:
_,
,
••
had driverithe_puck down ice:and
-···
•
'fhe,R,~ Foxes out shot:)\11:>~ny
shot:fr past tlie Albany'goaltender,
.
41~22, and kept the· puck:in. their
for. what _appeared to
.·be
. a· Marist
zori~ for.
t~e'.
majority o(the, game.
goaiiowever,. t~~~e\~,a~
:/questi~n
·
...
; ..
see:
PUCI<
page
:11
.btls-ke·t
.--.-
Th~
m~n•s baslcJtball team.have
in thej-~fhalves of.lriost ~~Js.'
.
won)l of their)ast12-gaines
sirice
.
;The
Red F'oxes siart their games
Jan.7-when they wei-e.3-6.
•
slO\vly;It-takes them time to adjust
This ~eam
•
(14~
7
,oyeraU,
10-3
to·ih_e
.other
team and by the begin-
.
NEC) has won· seven in
_a
row'. and
nirig
·
of t,he second· half,
·
they. take<
are. in; strong contention for the
-charge>.
,
-
:
_·
•••
••
•
.
.
•
••
.
.
• . •
.•
Northeast Conference Title.'
...
On Tuesday.night, when·the'·Iled
---·
Most importantly, they-_are
a
half
Foxes crushed
.St.
Francis (NY)·8o-
game behind first-place Rider in the
66, they sh1:>t
a 35percent field·goal
conference.
•
•
percentage and_ bounced
__
back
-after·
Witbthe
;way
Alan Tomidy,
-
a 31-30 deficit at halftime to shoot
Dexter:Dunbar, Danny Basile and
.
58 percent'.
• .·
.
•
.
.
•
Gregg 01<xllcowski
•
are playing,. the
..
_·
This inay
•
_be
cutting
•
it in the
Red Foxes seem unstoppable.
games against the lower ranked
• They are definitely starting·. to
teams, but it will not work against
feel the pressure, though.
•
.
Rider and the Mount.
Two of the most important games·
This is a problem this late· in the
of the season are next Tuesday and
season, because practices cannot be
Thursday and the pressure is on.
run hard with only one day off in
The team is feeling it aQd.there between games.
is a question of whether or not the
At the beginning of the season,
team
is
on the floor to win or not.to
even this writer thought the
-Red
Jose.
•
Foxes would not. even· get close.
•
Ac:x:ording
to Head coach Dave
The season has progressed and
Magarity, his team is not having fun
it's a different picture.
while playing the game and he is
The confidence of. the team· has
stressing to. them about the fun fac-
made them unbeatable and the· hot-
tor.
test
·team
in the NEC.
This may seem like a problem,
But does this untouchable
team
but it bas not hurt them yet, except
_
really know what it is like to go all
McCauley said. she was. happy
with her and her fellow divers' con-
tributions to
-the
victory:_
'.'It was a great victory for us, we·
went in wanting to take 1-2~3 in both
events and we did," she said. ·''We
•
didn;t open any doors for-anyone to
Cln:I•
_
■poc1■ pholo/Chrl1 llerlnato
·:
sneak in."
.
When asked if this past weekend
was the best he. had. seen his team
perform this season, Goldstein did
n_ot hesitate saying, "There is no
question about - by far."
Goldstein is right-in. his assess-
One key to
-
success
•
for tile
... see
WSWIM
page 11
it·••·tf~:l!ll
:tl'1~;;}~&~~:
NEC, but it may end sooner than· program;·
>
.· .
•.
_ ...
·..
.
.
_
e
s
later.
-.-·_.·
Women's basketball
. -
..
.
·,
..
• ...
·.
:Backtoback.
..
.
..
/Th~-
women--are
:iiµproving
'
The women's swimming and oiv-
•
slowly b~t. Sl,lrely
·and·
seem to be
.
ing team became the first swimming
_
regaining. their·
_confidence
iri
their
teain in Marist history 'tq win a >title shooting.
.··•·
:
..
·
,
.
.
· -
tw.o years in a rO\v.
Freshman Liz MacDougall . is
•
The teain swept through the.com-
quickly maturing as fplayer and is
petition, breaking ten schoolrecori:Js_
·now.a
dominanffactor in the team's.
on the ~eekend. and qualifying nine success.
'-th_e_w_a_y_?_·
_..:.... ______
__, swimmers and divers and five relay
•
Darrah Metz/had a great road
Can
·the
junior recruiting· class
teams for the ECAC'.s.
·.
•
.•··
trip. The talent is there, itjust-takes
cany this team to "March Madness?"
,
Third-year head coach Lloyd
time to conie alive.
-
Time will tell.
•
Goldstein has
•
conie to Marist and
.
.
FYI ·•
.
Th f:
•
brought excellence to his athletes
-
The ESPY'swere on late:{
Tues-
.
e ans
-
..
.
th
.
.
.
Toe·crowd at the McCann Cen-
and to e program.
.
_
day night._ Steve Young,. lawyer
tei-on J'uesday was pretty slim.
The men's team will be in New
-
extroidinaire and_ Most Valuable
Apparently, nest week's games
Jersey this weekend and will
:have
Player in th_e Super Bowl, received
are almost sold out. Where are those
as much success as the women.
the top male . athlete of the year
fans this week. Just because St.
•
It's the University of Corinecti- award.
·•
•
Francis and LIU are· not big
·games
cut at .Marist in swimming.
.
Where's that new Athletic Direc-
(they are really) like Rider and the
College basketball
tor we were promised?Like it's been
Mount, fans should still go·and sup-
It'.s about time.·
.
•
said before, Mike Malet is doing a
port the_ team. _
_
.
••
-
d
•
~atdit must be like to be a stu-
fine job, but any athletic program
The.· fans that were =there were
ent, an a sports fan.· at the Uni-
should not be left in flux, especially
high supportive, though.
versity of Connecticut.
-~th the outstanding sports Marist
The Foxes did not seem to need
Both the men and women's bas-
JS
home to.
-
it because they're on a streak.
ketball teams are now number one
Teri L Stewart
is
The Circle's
The Red Foxes are bot and bum-
in tbe Associated Press Top 25 polls.
Sports Editor.
. MCTV get~ political
·-page 3
-
page3·
CHAMPS
• Women's swimming
• wins title •
-page12 •
Stud6nt Body President carididates embark on campaign trail •
-.-by ~STINA
WELLS
Editor
On Sun., Feb. 12, the Student
Government Association announced
the four candidatesrunning.for Stu-
dent Body President.
.Mikael
Carlson,
Timothy
Hannon, Philip Mason; and Jennifer
Nocella will be campaigning all this
week until elections on Feb. 20.and
21. .
•· .. ' . ..
.. '
Speaking with The· Circle _this
week, the candidates focused mostly
on the prevalent issues the student
body will be faced with in the up
0
~ming year.
•
Carlson, vice president of aca,
demics for SGA, said 'the most im-
portant issues right now are the cap
on clubs and the freshmen curfew.
"These are two concerns that
have come to the forefront in the
last semester to SGA," he said.
Mason, a sophomore communi-
cation and english • major, said the
l
The four candidates for Student Body Presldent(from left to right) -Tim Hannon~ Junior, Mikael Carlson, Junior, Jennifer Nocella,
Junior, and Phil Mason, sophomore. The presidential debate will
be
broadcast
Uva
on MCTV tonight at 10:00 p.m.
current policy needs to be eliminated . be a problem with· extending . the • be lifted but rather changed to meet
from administration to help solve the
altogether.
.
.
curfew hours on the weekends."
the needs of the students.
cap problem.
According to • Hannon, if a club
has proven itself for years that it is
a benefit to the community, then the
cap should be lifted to allow them
membership.
"Why can't adults.in the eyes of
"Raising the cap on clubs to a
"The campus is expanding and
the law, .18-years-old, 19-years-old,
Acco~ding to Nocella, the great-
level that serves the students needs
growing;. there is a need for more
have people over when they want?"
est task facing the elected official
and wants is what needs to be done,"
choice an_d if the administration is
he said, ''The policy should be elimi-
will be working with the committee
he said.
not in support -of it; it makes it dif-
nated."
.
to
~~d
support for the proposal.
.
ficult," she said. "I would hope
~'A
Greek organization should be
Hannon, a junior computer in-
"F"
~
•
d t
•
k.
"th th • ... Nocella, currently speaker of the
whomever was elected to the posi-
allowed on if they
will
benefit the
formation systems major, said the
rfi
U:~
' ;;
nee•
0
w't{ wi
ii/
.
Sen.ate, also cit~d the _cap on clu~s
tion would try to gain support by
college,~• he said; "Tl,e cap should
current freshmen curfew policy
~u ew, as. or sufrpport
• ut_not It .. de
__
as a concern. which needs to be rah-. fixing-things like management
fl-
be·lifted·if- the club in 'question is
• .
. .
1t over - let the eshmen mvo ve
r·
d •
. -
• •
• • ' • ,.
•
,.
• " · ,
·
' '· h -
•
· •
L"
_n:eds_toberahfiedm_someway._
sliow'.tiie···ro osal,"she.said.'ffhe
_
ie ·-~-:·,·;.,·;
.·'.::i...2··.
·-
. ...:
...
n!!!!_~.1~!:C.Onf.e~an~·w1ll~oi:,:~~\
,_,d?111~g?~d-.,~~-~~
7
-~1_1~~~-~~~-~~:
MoceIIn
who h"~been-the pres1-~,=~-•· -~-
P_ .-R_.--
.. · . . . ,·-. -·. ~. """""'"_,._....,,..,.~---
~-~·,·,. -...---~
.....
,, -~''j!<,•admm1stration-on,a.so)utJon.---"•-·-·-••n1tv
.• •• •-" •··-· - • . . ,
•·~. ..
!:,,,·,-.,,: ,."--~~~-
--
..,, •• _.
~
:·- -
.
• .-.· , .....
•:.:,tutlentBotlyires1dcnrshould:sup~":"'-.~5i3A:'hasbeen''comin'g~4:i'p"'with~~--
~
·,-.-.-.. -_,·.·:-:·"'-,--"".,-
Q',•,····•:,•,.,,.::
•
,:·:•,;'-:'.;:~:_,;:,:;r>;~.
··---:~"•:
·•·· • ·-:-;·:
••
·•
dent- of, the Class of---~'96;for. two
.
-·
•• - .
•
... -- • • •• -· ·•·• • ,,. . .
.
,. • ..
•
.
.
_., ...
-· ..
•
•· -. • ·
.•
..-
,•-··
• .
.
.
. -· .-
•
.•·• . -.,_
•.•.
· , •
• •• ··-
•
years said there is. currently a·coin, • port co~nttees m any '?._apa<?~1!:·
• ···some: ~efi!11t~
0
s(!lut1ons,n.
s~e said:
. . M~?f! s3.1d
-ht:_
fe~ls tfie. ~al? does _-. . : ?<\ccordmg to l\f~son, one
?f
the
mitte~ made-u· .•
rimaiit·
of fresh-
The either is~ueat hand,-accord~ "If
tpif
is~ut:;1sn'!
settled by the.eno
not neces~anly_h~ve
tobe,hftedbut
issues· he•se_e~
as-~--conce171:1s
·!he·
-: • • ' k.
• pp · •. • •• y
ii(
hi
h
_ing._'t_o
m_ost_·
candid_ates,_._is_th_e
__
._cap·... of the year;.1t will be.held over for
rather-worked with to better serve student-admm1strat10n
relat1onsh1p
•
.n1:en,,wor
mg <>n
a prop~s w
C
.
h ' ' .• 'd .• ;
·1· ·1· •.. ·
"d•· th
the community
'
would offer a compromise to the • on dubs, particularly the' cap on
t e next a. -~
11
_1
1sra ion an . m e
·
•
•
"The ·main issue is getting the
standing curfew·policy:
• Greekorgan~ations.
n~arJutu~~ hftmg tµe cap win be a
"I
don't·think· you. need· a club
Marist faculty and administration to
''The proposal does not extend -
Carlson, ajuniriraml me111ber
of
big ISS_Ue.
cap, per se; but rather the student - Iistesn more to the student's wants
· to sopµomores and it offers a change
the business fraternity Alpha Kappa
. Nocella; ajunior political science body should regulate the amount of
and needs," he said. "Then we can
on weekends," ·she ·said. "If_·quiet Psi,said the cap on·me·ekcirganiza- . major, said she sees a need for
SGA·
clubs,. not necessarily put·a cap on
work on the .curfew;· parking and
hours are enforced, there shouldn't
tioris does not necessarily have to
and the students to pushfor support .· it," lie said.
•
security problems."
Junior remembered.by friend&, memorial
BSD celebrates
service· and. pO§~ible :academic ssh9\t1rship. Bl(;l,~k
1-Jistory.
Month
byRO!JERT G. TARGOS
• StaffWriter ·._..
•
_
Gainory said that black history
encompasses .different cultures all
over the world; February allows for
The
month of February allows
the appreciation of the influence of
the· Marist community to realize• the
black people on America, but people
_m_)J·
(!r~_co_
ntribution_s
of __
b_
lack ind
__
i-
tend
to
'learn only about the Europe-
.
ans.most of the time. .
;~tr::rto the history of the Uni!ed
"If
(February) is also negative
·A_ccordin
__
g to_
T_
im G_
amory; pfe_si- . because·. the history of any people
·
·
shouldn't be limited to one month
dent ·or the Black Student Union~ of the year," lie said.
.
Black History ~fonth started long
before Martin Luther King Jr. deJiv-
He said the unity rally, held last
ered his inspirational wisdom in the sp~g in respo~s·e to a letter s~b-
1960s during the Civil Rights move-
nutted to The Circle,. se~e~ an tm-
ment. , ·• .- _ . _ . , .
.
.
·- port:3"t·purpo~e
alJho1;1gh_1t
didn't es-
•
Gamory said between the 1930s tab~!sh an,ythmg •~stituhonally • ,,
and
1940s, a black schobµ· and his-
• •. The r~II~, raise_d aYlarenes~,.
·torian
named Carter G. Woodson Garno!)'
sat
d. An~ it got to a cnti-
started-Black History Week which cal pomt ~.here things needed to be
eventually • turned· into . the current expbess~h·. · · h.
d t
monthly observance.
•
_
..
•.
ne . mg e. recommen s . o
"It
creates a window for people . • <:?~bat igriora~ce would be for
in-
to recognize and celebrate our con-
dividuals to pick· up a book by a
tributions," Gamory, · a senior, said. black author. . ..
.
"It's serving its purpose, but it's not
Gamory. said people develop
-the· end all be all."_
•
many false images and stereotyp:5
. Gamory said tlie events the BSU about bl3.ck people from the m:d•_a
have already sponsored included the becau~e it _portrays them. as cr1m1-
Minneapolis Gospel Sound with the ~als smce 1t deals only with surface
Student Programming Council.
issues.
. .
"Not only BSU members come
;f
elev1S1on
should_ 1!-ot be our
to the events, but all students par-
ma1or .~gent !3f !earnm~ about
ticipate," he said. "Sp we are get-
people, . he said. Our ma1or. way
ting across an expression of our of !earning should be through mt~:-
culture and our background."
action an~ first-hand_
kno'!Iedge.
Future events to be sponsored by
. He said the way
m
wh1ch
~~y
the BSU for February include a lee- blacks are portrayed on telev1S1on
ture by Minister Yusuf Muhammad ~uses ~pie
to become xenopho-
in the theater on Feb. 21, and Black bt~ afr~d of strangers or strange
History Jeopardy next Thursday
in
things.
Donnell room 225.
See BSU page 3
.
.
Z.
THE CIRCLE,
FEBRUARY
16, 1995
'The Quick and the Dead'[lbt.w91"th reviving dt.;tlteater.
In the end,it is betwe~n':her ~nd • films.
, In other movie
new~,
•~Toe
B~th-
ers • McMullen" 'just won tlie
•
Sundance fl.Im
festival award for best
by CHRIS DAMIANI
Circle Film Critic
As I was leaving th.e theater, I
stopped to look at the movie poster
to see who directed the film I just
saw when someone commented to
me that it was Sam Raimi, who used
to direct horror movies.
I said he should go back to it,
when this person actually asked,
"What, you didn't like it?"
With people like this, it's no
wonder that bad movies make
money.
I can honestly say that there are
almost no redeeming qualities about
"The Quick and the·Dead," starring
Sh'aron Stone and Gene Hackman.
I have three hopes; first, that the
person who liked "The Quick and
the· Dead" hasn't seen a. movie in
20 years; second, that this movie
doesn't kill the western; and third,
that John Wayne isn't turning over
in his grave.
•
It's too bad, really, because the
story had potential.
Sharon Stone, who is known as
"The Lady,'' is out ·to get revenge
against John Herrod (Hackman),
who killed Stone's father when she
was young.
Herrod owns this town which is
hosting a quick draw • tournament
which Stone enters to exact her re-
venge.
,.
There is no sheriff or marshall
in this town because Herrod is the
onl re resentation of law, and noths
Herrod, and the two ·have a show-
·
. The. directing was awful, his
down that-everyone in the theater
choice of shots was terrible and the
knows is coming.,
. . .
...
. acting· was second rate.
..
"The Lady" niust test her skills • .
This leads nie to another ques-
against Herrod, whois the' best; and • tion, why would .Gene Hackman do
she is the typical Uilderdog
who .has
this_
movie?_
pdes he need the money
almost no shot at-winning.
• •
or. was;he possibly blackmailed?
Take a guess who wins.
Hackman was outstanding in
This movie uses. every western
"Unforgiven," which if you haven't
cliche ever used, and every charac-
seen, you should, instead of trekking •
ter is stereotyped;
..
out to the. theater to see this gar-
You have the ruthless bad guy, a
bage.
•
gunslinger who has never killed but
The sole bright spot was
is out for revenge, a gunslinger who
Leonardo. DiCaprio as "The Kid."
is trying to "go good" but can't
. .. DiCaprio is one of Hollywood's
escape his old lifestyle, a young,
hottest young actors, currently off
arrogant kid who thinks he can't be
the heels of being Oscar-nominated
:-:---,~~==:,::::::===:;:::;:::::i~---'
out-drawn, the tough as nails hired
for "What's Eating Gilbert Grape?'.'
• ing in this town happens without his gun,. a Native American who hates
. Stone, who has yet to ·prove she
say-so.
white men, a card-playing hot shot
is_ an actress and. not just another
Stone's character comes off as who really just makes his stories of
pretty face, has struggled since her~
this tough, mysterious woman while grandeur up and finally; a cowardly
fluke performance in ."Basic In-
inside she is a frightened little girL bartender and townsfolk who don't
stinct" with stiffs like "Sliver,'' "In-
"The Lady" has never killed stand up·to anyone.
tersection" and "The Specialist."
before and is unable to kill Herrod
All of these are forced into one .
Surprisingly enough, she doesn't
even when she has the chance; she bad movie.
appear naked in this movie, so
just can't bring herself to do it.
I know what the story is; Raimi
maybe she's trying to earn respect.
"The Lady" decides to leave, was probably a big fan of westerns
Please do myself and all other
realizing she can't kill, until the his whole· life and, after gaining
movie lovers a favor and do not go
• doctor who was there when her
fa-
enough clout directing horror flicks,
see this movie, so· that the studios
ther was killed convinces her that decided to do a western.
will no longer make'movies like this.
this is the only way she'll ever find
Like I told the guy in the theater,
I felt real physical pain after see-
peace.
·Raimi should go back to horror
ing ''The Quick and the Dead."
film.
•
•
This is the film f~stival held in
Utah and sponsored by Robert •
Redford for films that are made
outside the major studio system.
Past winners of this award in~
elude "Reservoir Dogs," so it -is a
safe bet that "The Brothers
•
McMullen" is a good flick;-it can't
be any worse than "The Quick and
the Dead."
If you are one of the people an-
• ticipating Tristar's
big-budget
"Godzilla," you may be waifing a
while.
Jan De Bont ("Speed") has bailed
as director, and with the studio cur-
rently looking for a new person to
take the helm of the $100 million
monster, it's. doubtful that· this' one
will be out before 1996.
,
The best news; however, is that
the yet untitled fourth Indiana Jones
film is set to roll this summer with
Harrison Ford back as the man with
the hat.
•
Break out your whip.
Kravitz gets down for Unpluggedi -Seventh House shines
by TOM BECKER
Circle Music Critic
As for trying to let the reader-
without violating anyone.
ship know where such recordings can
Of course, no Kravitz perfor-
be found, that's a bit harder.
mance would be the same without a
Pure, unadulterated head shaking,
I buy most of my s~uff back final, uptown, field dancing, mara-
eye-rolling, jive-clapping, groove-
home, but I can say that these rare thon of the song "Let Love Rule,"
laden funky music.
items can often be found at the little, which loses nothing in this version
To find the above simply seek out of the way businesses - places and gains from the abundance of
out and purchase the hard
to find that still carry a good deal of vinyl. complementary instruments and the
Lenny Kravitz acoustic performance
Now back to Lenny.
backing vocals of the Washington
on MTV's moneymaking machine
The recording contains eight
Temple Choir.
Unplugged show.
.
·
tracks from the performance, with
The best thing about this disc.is
While many people have caught half of them coming from his third that it has restored my faith in what
Lenny strumm,ng out a raw, stripped and latest album, "Are You Gonna the Unplugged show can do when
down blues-backed kick of"Are You Go My Way?"
the acts get creative and do more
Gonna.Go My Way," which so~nds
Kravitz manages to add spice than justunplug their instruments.
nothing like the high~juiced hit of with his acoustic tools on the.more
,Speaking oLlive performances;
two years ago,on MTV; finding
the upbeat tracks
'like "Always
on ~The· ,,the,P)ttsb.urgh,,nati".e,,_threesqm.e.,of
actual disc is a little harder to do. . Run," where a torri~ guitar solo from SeventhHouse broughftheirno-friJls.
However, after hearing that tune, the studio recording is replaced with combination of progressive and ret~
which happens to eIJcompass
the true some liquid-dripping flavor from a rospective rock to. the Cactus Club
meaning of what acousticism can do Hammoild organ.
.. .
in Poughkeepsie on Friday. night.
to a song, how it can change its vibe
.. The lighter, more reflective songs •
Having never heard of this band,
so incredibly yet manage to house like "Rosemary" and "Sister" thrive I kind of stumbled upon them while
the same message, one can get pretty in the unplugged atmosphere and are entering the establishment.
determined while skipping along the capable of grabbing the listener-and
The band was successful in get-
booHeg scavenger path.
touching their souls just enough ting the sometimes stiff-legged
crowd to respond to their friendly,
catchy tunes, and by the end of their
first set, the crowd was willing to
wait around a little while for some
more of that Seventh House stuff.
This weekend I_had the opportu-
nity to give their self-produced de-
but disc a listen and it ain't bad.
When listening to them, the first
band that comes to mind is • Omi-
nous. Seapod, an independent label
group. from the Albany a~ea.
..
' • •
'
However; I can also say that there
is· a hint of Phish without the 'psy-
.
chedeHc glow, and of the Dead with
a kick 'from the popcorc::,
J?and
.AIL
.· .Man,,.Lwonder
if.
even
,I
know
what l'm.tliinking.·
• ,. ,., '
· Highlights on· the disc. are "-!(ooi
Aid" where si11ger/bassist Sky
pounds out a cascading riff and the
mellow "Things I Didn't Know."
-Most of the band's songs- are
lighthearted numbers dressed.with a
catchy groove that helps the music
serve as a good backdrop.
Letus
combine
all
your
debts
into one
easy-:'to-mauage
payment.
Bad credit
~
problem.
AIL
accepted
based on
ability
to
pay.
FAST
H■ua
Is
JuST
A
PHaNI!
CALL
Arr,Yi
Call
day
or
night
1-305-537.-3617,
(24 HR RECORDING}
. However, thereis a kick missing
on the recoded material that was
omnipresent at their live show on
Friday.
Without that kick, songs like
"Song For Psycho" and "Shabatu"
suffer a bit.
Seventh House will be back in
the area in March and will probably
give anyone who got caught. danc-
ing: at the Cactus Club a better rea-
son for repeating that act than their
disc could.
for
your
FREE
APPUCATION
or write:
4:J11,Ji3:jj,•,,;.J.ii=li•.
BOX 645, HOLLYWOOD,
FL 33022
800/2·REVJEW
.
.
.
.
~
.
......
•t •
1o·1~•
\'
11fl•
,ff•\"
t
f.;;,,
'-r'\
~:,,,,1qf,
•
••t•
,.lln
l'in1,,t.,,~1\•I\\
r...11;,1 1lr1I1.1t...~I,\
fli,: j,,;,
'
J'1u,•ri•
HJ
.
~
r
I
THE·CIRCLE,
FEBRUARY
16, 1995
3
\Spring
1995
'~ltib
buclgets-
,Where
does..1hecl9ugh.go?
·Marist
hit with first snow storm of '95
.
munity/ie
·ne1:d
to put. outmor,
by MEREDITH
KENNEDY.
•
.
issues," she said.
'•'To•do'
that, The
:
•
•
Staff Editor
•
'
Circle needed to'iequcst a little more
•
•
·
•
than usual.
If
we have more issues,
•
•
The. Spring '95 budgets have
there
wiU
be a more frequentoutlet
been allocated, leaving some clubs
of news available
10
the commu-
more content than others.
•
•
_nity.'!.
.
... ·
.·
.
.
.
Some of the largest amounts re-
quested were from the Black Stu-
.
·Produc_tion
of th~ paper, includ-
.:,d·
nt
u
•.
(BSU) El A
1 . , mg the pnnter and llm.
e spent there
•
••
e
mon
,
• rco ns
· •
•
•
·
1
·
$10 000
·
Laf
·
·
d Th
·c·
1
.
.
.
costs approximate y
.
,
per
mo an ;
e. ire_
e.
semester.
·
•.
.
, ·
.
According to Lisa Goddard, trea-
"On the ave~age The Circle
s~rer of the BSU, th~y are happy
spends anywhere froi'n $14,000 to
with the amount of money they were
$15 000
.
··
th
·
d
·
1
•
·
f th.
allocated.·
, ,, on
e
_pr~,
uc
_ion
o
..
e
"We'll always
·lake
more, be-
paper, Wells said. The remammg
•
·cause
..
the more we
.
take the more ~4,00.0
to.
~5,0~0
we need, we make
•
.
•
·
•
•
h
.
.
·
.
,,
m
advert1smg
.
.
.we can serve t e community,
One club
t
II
•
1
d
Goddard said.
.
~as no a oca e a~y
A large percentage of the money money' MartSl College Radio
•
h
•
BSU h
•
·ct
·11
.•
(MCR).
t e
as receive w1 go to-
A
d.
t La •
R
bb
rts
.
• d
•BI
•
k H'
M
h
ccor mg o
une o , spo
war s
.
ac
ist ory
ont
'
direct of MCR th
l b h d. d
Goddard said.
.
.
?r
,
.
e c u
an
~
•
•
.. •
The BSU budget requests funds m theu budget r~qu~st ~ate and did
•
for activities.
'like.
an International not have an adv1~or s s1gna!ure:
.
•
.. •
,.
•
.•
.•
"It was a m1scommumcahon,
•
.•.
Day, alan Afrkican Dance Troop and there is only one sheet of guidelines
.-sever
spea ers.
d
th·
·
h 'f h
·d
·
••
•
Th BSU
fi
d
·u
I
t
an no mg says t at i t e a visor
•
.
e
~n. s w, a so go
?·
doesn't sign it you will not be allo-
The snow that fell on Marist last Saturday has students wishing for spring
•
war~ a c~ltura_l
dmner dan':C hel~
m
cated any funds
,,
Robb said.
break.
conJunctton
with El Arco Ins Latmo,
.
'
Photo
by/Daingerfield
.Goddard
said.
,..
.•
Robb admits the club. made a ~==============-c:sa:iimne;;:.;w~aivy:-.
---------"°"tith:;-;a;iti;h;e-;diiio;es!:nnniot;--:tiiih~in:;ikfhl,;e::U:wriiilli°Jnmi'linndti
0
.
•
E_l Arco Iris Latino requested
mistake, but said theyare'trying to
by BRIAN FRANKENFIELD
"I'm
going to Florida for spring
the wind down there as much.
$13,200
and was allocated $6,150.
rectify the situation.
•
Staff Writer
break," Santana said. "I can't wait
Lorenzo Verdejo, treasurer of El
for the warm weather, the beach, and
•
Arco Iris Latino, said the money was
Additional allocations have al-
After the snowstorm and cold
a nice tan."
·mainly
for Latino Week,· which is
ready been ruled upon by the Finan-
weather last week, most Marist stu-
Both students said they are be-
the last week in March.
. '.cial
Board, but have not bee:n ap-
dents are hoping the groundhog is
ginning to sense 'cabin-fever' set-
"lt's meant to promote the Latino . proved by the Senate and the Ex-
right, and spring is coming early.
ting in around campus.
culture on campus,' Verdejo said.
ecutive Board.
•
On Feb. 4, the northeast was hit
"Because of the cold weather I
A great deal of the remaining
.
with its first major storm of the year.
find myself less willing to go out,"
_money
will go towards the Cultural
.
Anthony Bayer, chief financial
Six to eight inches of snow fell
Santana said. "It's too cold and too
•
Dinner Dance; which is scheduled
officer, explained that each year
inland, while higher regions saw
much of a hassle now.''
•.
for· April· 1s, Verdejo said.
.
there is $l 50,000 available for allo-
•
amounts of up to a foot or more,
However, junior, Chrissy Bisirri,
The second largest budget to be
cation.
..
according to the National Weather
is not letting the cold weather keep
allocated was The
-.Circle's,
who
•
.
Service.
her inside.
asked for $11,0:30 and received
Sports clubs, like i_ce
hockey and
The storm was immediately fol-
'Tm not going out any less,"
$10,630.
. ·•
.
.
..
·
· ..
·
. .
,rugby,
automatically re'ceive $60,000 lowed by a cold front which, with
Bisirri said. "I still manage to_
get to
.
According to Kristina Wells,
•
as a yearly budget.
•
the wind chill, dropped temperatures the parties and the bars."
editor, the request, was not unrea-
into the single digits during the day,
While students are already tired
soitable arid
'the
.amount
allocated
All
other clubs have
·a
$90,000
arid below-zero after,sunset.
.
of the"·low temperatures, most of
Even though most students
viewed the cold weather as a bur-
den, some said they enjoyed the
winter weather as compared to the
high temperatures of summer.
"I like a little winter," said jun-
ior, Joe Marranca.
"I
like the snow.
During the ..yinter you can always
put on another layer, but in the sum-
mer you can't do much else to avoid
the heat accept wear a t-shirt and a
pair of shorts and stand still."
The only problem Marranca said
he has with the winter temperatures
is playing guessing games as. to
whether his Townhouse will have
warm water in the morning.
?was
quite sufficient
•
: ,
•
...........
••
.
.
pool ofmoney which they receive
.
The bitter. temperatures no~ have
•
them referred to the high winds
•
•
•
?;,'
'?·'?p..ot1Jrt~>~~~!#;~~!Ye
the co~,.
•
'allocaticit(from;'Bayer,soi.d,-'~··;
·:
••••
,
••
,,students:;
bundling,
,up;,.and,.Jonging
•
"when'
asked· wbadhey
•
felt
was·
the ;•·.
,
£,_;en.though
.our.coldest
weather
.
•
·BSU
.
·
..
; .. continued from page 1
Gamory said television
•
.shows
such as "Martin" have given posi-
tive exposure to black people, but
the shows tend to concentrate on one
aspect of a personality, like humor.
"Television should be second-
ary," he said. "(But) this is such a
fast paced world that we have less
and less time to deal with each other
as individuals."
He said the BSU has displays in
the library and the student center.
"I think Black History Month
should be re-evaluated as real his-
tory so we won't need a separate
month. It (history) should include
everyone."
•
The college activities office has
been the most receptive branch of
the school, according to Gamory,
l;,ecause it helps the Black Student
Union organize its events.
by DARYL RICHARD
.
Associate Editor
who will be the technical crew chief
of Spectrum, said the talk show is
more of an exercise of good televi-
sion than anything else.
has been
·said
to
be·behind us, :Stu-
dents had better not pack their win-
ter coats away just yet.
The cold pattern will remain for
at
least a couple more weeks, bring-
ing light flurries and the possibility
of a few small storms, according to
the National Weather Service.
nication, said he thinks the new talk
show is an excellent example of
dedicated students motivated to do
what they love.
;
M~ri~t College's Communica-
tions Department, in. conjunction
with members of Marist College
Television, issponsoring a new po-
litical affairs talk show aimed at
using resources from all stretches of
the coll~ge community.
•
"The objectives are to get stu-
dents more aware of what our capa-
"I've
discovered that the only
bilities are," McDowell said. "It's way to get the best students involved
certainly more complex {than the is to tell them that there is not any
other shows} and it
•
will involve money or academic credit involved,"
work outside of the studio."
said Cole. "This way you get the
The show, Spectrum, is an at-
tempt to.bring together students from
·an
areas of study and use each of
their abilities to produce a profes-
sional show.
In order to give the program a students who are genuinely inter-
t'/
want one show that will be like a bond the
makes all of the classes students take make
Marist senior Jim Gorham, who
sense."
•
will produce Spectrum, said the
show will give students a chance to
-Jim Gorham, producer of 'Spectrum'
apply what they learn in the class- ____
.:...:,.:.:.:,__:_
__
__::.....!.
____
~__;:__ _______
_
room to real life.
professional touch, McDowell said
"I want one show that will be the crew is building a set on which
like a,· bond that makes all of the they will film Spectrum "so when
classes students take make sense," you· see it you'll know right away
Gorham said.
what show you are watching."
The half-hour show will consist
In addition to a new set that will
of four panelists and a host who will bran~ish the school ~olors a~d. use
discuss current political events. Se- momtors propped ~p m a s~mi-c,rcle
nior Greg Bibb, who currently hosts ar?und the pane~1st to view news
MCTV's Pressbox, will also host .chps, the show wdl use news reports
Spectrum.
previously recorded by students to
To ensure there is ample debate introduce each topic.
on each of the topics, Gorham said
he carefully selected the panelists
"We're checking out the legali-
according to their political orienta-
•
ties of taking clips from other stas
tion.
tions like CNN," McDowell said.
"There will be a panelist from
According to Gorham, the video
each side of the political spectrum," packages introducing each topic will
Gorham said. "One will be on the incorporate
student
reaction to the
far left, then moderate left, the far issue, localizing the events discussed
right and then moderate right."
each
week.
Mike
McDowell, a sophomore
Doug Cole, professor of commu-
ested in what they are doing.'' Cole
said the students are not producing·
the show to gamer more viewers for
MCIV, rather they are striving for
a realistic program that mirrors what
students see everyday on network
television.
"What they are doing
is
a real
show," Cole said. "We're trying to
make this a show in, of and for the
students."
Gorham, who said he has had the
idea for the show since his fresh-
man year, was motivated to trans-
fo~ his vision into reality after in-
terning at a television station in
Hartford, Conn., last semester.
"I had to apply what I learned at
WFSB to the show here," Gorham
said.
4
•
THE CIRCLE,
FEBRUARY
16,
·
1995
.
•
•
.
MONDAY
GREEK
NIGHT
Bring your Frat or Sorority
For the Berties
Olympi_cs
Doors
Open
at 8pm Games
at 9
. ·
Drafts
start at a Quarter.
.
.
No Cover
•
•
WEDNESDAY
Mid-Week
Ladies·
Night
Ladies
get Free Drafts 9-12 pm
.
Guys Get
1
Pitchers
-
-
•
4-Guys
In Disg;uise
_-
•
-
:
Play An·ything
You Request
.
.
.
.-
·.
•
TUESDAY
MENS
N.IGHT
·.
• ··:
•
''
'
''
•
.
·.'
..
.
'
..
Guys_
its your turn at .
.
•
•
•
ALL YOU CAN
DRINK
FOB
$8.010
..
·.•
•
Ladies
Get Free Drafts
•
..
·
•
•
·
-
_9pm-12pm
.
Reservoir
Square
and Rood Mood:
FRIDAY
HAPPY
HOURS
4PM~8PM
.
.
Buy One Get One Free
.
Any Drink in
-
the House
•
Free
Buffet from Emillianos
..
-
-
Members·
of 4-Guys
In Disgu·ise
•
-
-·
•
No Cover
21'.;and-Qver
please
..
··THURSDAY·
tS"'t'YbUR}'~Ilflt!,!i'
1
·
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·
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.
.
·•.
1 srFour
Kegs
Are FR.EE
..
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t.75 Zimas
•
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$1.00ShotS
•
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...
Berties
also presents
Bring
Ye>llt
BudcJy
Night
ii
•
Simply
show up
.
•
at Berties
on Thursday
INith
tliis adantla
•
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..
friend and the two of ya get in for the price of one.
.
.,
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.
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~
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.,
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.
Don't forget March 8th.·
•.
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.
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.
Berties Bash
•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
..
THE CIRC~
f
E1\TURE
-----~
_______________
..:__
FEBRUARY
16, 1995
5
1\tl(SCTA asks - Who's afraid-of the big, bad Woolf?
by HOLLY DIAZ
Staff Writer
The. experimental theater· group
of Manst College Council· on The-
ater Art's will perform,. Edward
Albee's, "Who's Afraid of Virginia
Woolf?" starting tonight in the Per-
forming Arts Center.
The story is centered.around two
. couples, Martha and George, and
Honey and Nick, who meet one
night after a college faculty party at
Martha and George's house in the
New England
town of New
· Carthage.
• During the course of their meet-
ing many secrets are revealed over
discourse and hysteria.
The play is being produced by a
small cast of only four people;
Shelley Curran, playing the part of
Martha, J.D. Lewis, playing the part
of George, Rachel Carter, playing
the part of Honey, and Jimmy
Johansmeyer, playing the part of
Nick.
During rehearsals, the cast has
come across many difficult tasks
including memorization, Latin pro-
nunciation and character involve-
ment.
Stage Manager Andrea Had!tazy,
said that she feels memorization of
lines is something they are still
working on, but it is also something
that has to be expected.
"I know it's production week but
considering the dense amount of
information in the lines itself - in
the dialogue, it ·is understandable,"
said. Hadhazy,. "We still. have thre;
dress rehearsals so, no problem."
According to. Director Tauren
Hagans, a lot of time and effort has
, been put into this production.
•
«We've been up here since Jan.
6,"
said Hagans. "We practiced ev-
ery day over break."
Lewis said he was having trouble
with the fact that his role calls for
some memorization of Latin in this
performance.
"Last night I had a friend help
me with the pronunciation of cer-
tain words. It's hard because I don't
know the language," said Lewis.
Carter said that her role as Honey
has also been a challenge.
"In high school I always played
an older character and now I play a
much younger one," said Carter,
"Honey is also kind of dumb and a
ditz and she is someone I'd never
want to be or have to do with."
Curran, also finds her role as
Martha to be a difficult one.
"Martha has been described in
most literature as psychotic," said
Curran. "She goes through a gamete
of all emotions in the span of three
hours. She goes through these emo-
tions in each act."
Overall, Curran said she feels it
is a very. difficult and tense play to
be a part of.
"It's hard in the sense that we
have to listen to all these secrets
about one another," said Curran.
According to Hadhazy, the play
is about "those who see themselves
as failures, and this is the cause for
a lot ·of psycho-babble."
.
:
According to Carter the charac-
ter of Honey can serve as a comic
relief.
"My favorite scenes are when
I'm drunk," said Carter. " They're
the most fun."
In
addition,
the
general
concensus is that the cast appears to
work well together.
"We kind of bonded. We prac-
tice in the Performing Arts room
which is a comfortable and close
setting," said Curran.
Carter said she agrees that the
cast works well together and that
they have developed a good work-
ing relationship.
"I
didn't know anyone because I
came in as a freshman and now I
know everyone pretty well. We all
help each other out," said Carter.
As for the costumes, the cast has
mentioned that either the articles of
clothing have just been bought or
they are from their own wardrobe.
"My costume is kind of modern
and plain, but I'm supposed to look
plain so that's okay. It's brownish
green; it's an outfit I have from
home," said Carter.
According to Carter, it is the
acting that matters more than the
costumes in this particular plav.
This production hopes to raise
money for the Jenn Dressel Schol-
ars~ip Fund.
There is no admission charge for
the performance, however, a
$3
donation is suggested.
The play will be held in tne Per-
forming Arts Room, therefore, lim-
ited amount of tickets will be avail-
able.
Call extension 3133 to reserve a
ticket.
Upcoming
MCCTA perfor-
mances include, Michael Frayn's,
"Noises Off!," Shakespeare's,
"Love's
Labour's
Lost," Tim
Kelly's, "Robin Hood," and finally,
A.R.
Gurney's, "Love Letters."
New exhibit of NY State abstract artists
scheduled for Marist gallery Feb. 23
The Marist Art Gallery, located In the· Rotunda, will feature a new exhibit on
February 23.
by NORIE MOZZONE
Staff Writer
On Feb. 23, a new exhibit in the
Marist College Art Gallery will fea-
ture three internationally known art-
.
ists from the Hudson Valley and the
Catskills.
According to Donise English,
professor _of fine arts,the gallery _will
be showing the works of Alan Cote,
William_ Tucker, and John Walker.
English said the exhibit will con-
sist entirely of very abstract works.
''These will be very big, big, big,
big, works," she said.
•
This is the first show that will be
announced to the general public,
which will result in a better turnout
than the past exhibit.
The first exhibit consisted en-
tirely of works from Marist fine arts
faculty, where a variety of mediums
and styles were represented.
Nisaluk Chantanakom, a sopho-
more who works in the gallery, said
anywhere from 20 to 50 people
come to the gallery a day, mainly
students and tour groups.
"By opening a gallery on cam-
pus, . Marist looks more well
rounded," Chantanakom said.
"Most everyone who comes in is
very impressed with the faculty
works and I just wish that more stu-
dents would come and see what great
artists we have here."
Chantanakom said she feels there
is not enough appreciation for the
arts at Marist.
"This saddens me because some-
day some of these faculty may be-
come famous and Marist students
would have missed out on the op-
portunity to see their works."
• Josh· Wood, junior, said he has
noticed the works in the gallery but
• hasn't stopped in for a closer look
yet.
"I've walked past it," he said.
"I've been meaning to stop
by.
I just
haven't had the time."
•
Liza Casatelli, a junior, said she
visited the gallery with her class and
Photo by/Daingerfield
was intrigued to see how professors
spend their free time.
"I thought it
was interesting to see what else
teachers do besides teach," she said.
Casatelli, an .art minor, said she
thought it would be more interest-
• ing when the works of Marist stu-
dents will be on display.
Sherile~ Newton, junior, said she
believes· the space could have been
used for something more significant.
"It's really not necessary, I
thought something else could be
done with the space," Newton said.
Newton said the look of the gal-
lery does not lend itself to attract
people.
•
''It is kind of empty looking and
therefore doesn't attract much atten-
tion. Many pass by and don't know ,,,,,,.,.
..................................
---
......
----------...-.----=----==---
........
~
what it is. People expect more ex-
FREE FINANCIAL AID!
Over $6 Billion in private
hibits."·
sector grannts & scholarshops is now available. All
The art gallery will be closed
during the week of Feb. 13 to Feb.
20 and will re-open with the abstract
displays until Apr. 2.
students . are eligible regardless of grades, income, or
parent's income. Let us help. Call Student
Financial Services: 1-800-263-6495
ext. F51941
;.,I
.,.
THE
CIRCI.E,EDITORIAL
'FEBRUARY
16,.1995
MARIST
COLLEGE,
POUGHKEEPSiE,
NY 12601
THE STUDENT
NEWSPAPER
Kristina Wells,
editor
Dana Buoniconti,
senior editor
Justin Seremet,
senior editor
Teri L. Stewart,
sports editor
Meredith Kennedy,/eanue
editor
Dawn Martin,
associate editor
Lynn Wieland,
associate editor
Daryl Richard,
ass~ciate edit~r
Larry Boada,
editorial
page editor
Matthew Dombrowski,
distribution
manager
Jen Forde,
advertising
manager
G. Modele
Clarke,faculty advisor
• PUBLISHED
EVERY
THURSDAY
Edukashun?
Think back to your high school days.
-
. For some of you that· may be as recent as seven months ago, for others
it inay be as far away as almost four years ago.
Now, think about what it was like to apply to colleges.
. Y_es, it 'Y~s a little nerve racking at times, but overall, you have to admit,
it was excitmg.
The agony of typing out those annoying applications and then composing
an essay about yourself or one of your greatest accomplishments drove you
mad.
Despite all the heartache of rejections, you survived and came to Marist
College.
You came here with the expectation of nothing short of excellence.
For many of you, that excellence had a costly price, however.
Financial aid was the only way to go.
For others, with the help of the Higner Education Opportunity Program
(HEOP), you made it here to strive for that excellence. . .
.
. . · • _ .
_Now, con~ide~ what it.would be like. if su_ddenly you fin4 yourself faced
wit.
h the_reabzat10n_
t_hat m a year.,_that fund_
m_
g. _fro.
_m theT_
u_1t_1_o_n
Assis_
t_a_
n
___
ce __
_
Pr()_gram
(TAP) and HEOP ~ay oe gone.
.•
.
.· ..
·. •
.
..... .·· • '.
Unfortunate1y, for many at Marist and for_many in high s_chool,
this.-coulcl
become a reality .
. , ,-, ,,,,,,,-
•-_ ., •
··"'
•
·o·: ·."''.
• •;
.s:
,,;p:i:;-,:;
Recently, New York State Governor, George Pataki, came up with a
hard-hittfng budget. proposal which is likely to affect··many current· and
pro!lpecttve Manst students.
-
_
•
G~v. Pataki;s proposeq budge:t plans to cut or decrease the amount_of
__
fundmg to various eaucat10n assistance programs.
,
_ .
This propos~l. would _reduce the maximum amount. of money awarded
through the Tuition Assistance Program (TAP) from $4,050 to :t,3,575.
On the surface ·_·this.·
amount of mon~y may not look_ like .a l9t, but to
many who depend on TAP-for the maximum amount, this reduction could
mean the difference between staying in a New York college or transferring.
In addition, this could be catastrophic to those high scfiool students con-.
sidering New York colle_ges. .•
_
• •
•
-
.-
_,,
By reducing the maximum am_
ount_._in
TAP, ther_e will_·_be-less
overal_l
money available ~o th9se applying for the program.
.
,
So, not only will. this affect current students but also those who want to
get a college education.
.
-
.
·.
_.
•
•
Also in J>ataki's proposal,.is a plan to cut funding for HEOP.
..
.
This
~22
million state program fielps students financially; personally, _and
academically.
. -
•··
.
•
. .
. . . • _
..
_
. · . .
·
Gov. Patak.i's proposal to cut this funding is part of a three-percentre-
duction in the state budget.
•
•
If
this flan is appr_
ovecl, HEOP at Marist and at colleges across New-York
State _wil be elimmated ~d those students will be left with nothing.
.
This three_:Percent cut •
m.
the budget would also . affect the Economic
Opportunity Vrogram (EOP), same as HEOP but for state colleges.
~pproximately
57
students-at Marist are enrolled in HEOP.
• These
57,
if the budget it approved, will lose their financial aid from the
program.
• _ . _
·
- In addition to those c;ollege students in·HEOP, the students in EOP will
also face the same''dilemma.
• •
•
It is. truly unfortunate. to_ think that
57
bright St\!dents may have to give
up theu education at Manst because Gov. ""Pataki wants to decrease the
budget by three-percent.
·
•
. As if this part of the Rroposal was not enough Gov. Pataki's Rlan also
intends to raise tuition at State University of New York (SUNY) schools by
$1,000 next year.
•
Aren't college students and their parents paying enough to get a college
education already?
According to Gov. Pataki's plan, no.
Education is so.important to the future of this country.
•
How do we expect tomorrow's leaders to excell if they cannot afford
college?
Does Gov. Pataki realize how difficult it is for students in today's society
to afford a decent college education?
Will this proposed budget, if approved, lead to less and less enrollment
in New York colleges simply because there is no hope for financial assis-
tance?
All of this for the love of saving money.
Money makes the world go 'round.
Sadly, this statement is true.
.. The
'Circle encourages students, faculty and staff to write to Gov. Pataki
with
concerns.
.
• Everyone has
a·
rightto
an
education, regardless of economic status.
Write to
local
Senators
and
urge them not to approve
these
budget
cuts.
M
C
MARIST HEALTH SERVICE'S DREAM COMES TRUE-
AS A TRUCKLOAD
·oF PENICILLIN, HEADED FOR
ST. FRANCIS HOSPITAL, LOSES CONTROL AND·
CRASHES DIRECTLY IN FRONT OF THE SCHOOL!
The Republican View
\Vatching Henry Foster going through the
It forced the White House and Foster to be·
nomination process is beginning to make me clear about his record.
•
cringe.
But it was not a job that should have been
I keep having all of these images floating done by Right to Life.
through my mind: a soldier walking through a
It should have been done by the White
mine field or a drowning victim trying to keep- House;
•
_
his head above water, either image seems ap-
Because it wasn't, his chances of being con-
propriate for Foster.
firmed, for better or for worse, have been
The initial uproar over his nomination was threatened.
•
•
his record on abortion. Apparently after 38
The White House didn't do its homework:-
years as a practicing OB\GYN •
he performed·
It has surrendered the confirmation process
39 abortions in cases of rape, incest, or when to "gotcha journalism" and overzealous politi-
the life of the mother was at risk.
cal groups only seeking to gain.
It has since been discovered that during .
The. seeds of doubt have. been planted not
that time he also directed a studf.oii·dfugs· ·only in the minds of Senators but in the hearts
which induced abortions performed by the of the ~erican
public. . • . .
mother. Foster has also said he performed hys, .. · .. _ BuJ. if Henry Foste~ does_
Join the ranks of
terectomies on severely retarded women in the _th~ unce>Af_irmed,
he will be
m
good company.
1950's.
·• '
•
' -
• •• • • •
'
He's noftl.iefirst Clinton nominee to be inis~
Although
I
m~y have :,ideological differ~ . hlip;dled,,
~nd if history proves right, he won't
ences with the choices he niade.and:the be- be the lasr.,. .••
:· .. -.·_·.•
..
liefs)ie:has/
I
,tliiillc_
there is a greater
·issue
at
i.<·
•
'IJ:1~:l~t;~o
~~
~Ja!f)c:ars __
9fthe. C~ton_;;:
'li:and°":.
h6w·the)V1iite House has handled it. adnumstration prove that it may be 1he onfy
·PrJsicient
Clinton is protesting .that.Foster's: administration rem;1:mJ;,ez:ed
for having nomi~. •
_
entire body of work is not being judged. •· _ nated. more people than were actually con- .
• . He argues that the entirety
of his work js firmed. . . .. < .· •.. _
..
being overlookecl by right wing anti-abortion
Case
lll
pOillt was the position of Attorney ••
extremists v,,hoare utilizing Foster's choices Ciene~al. , . . . •.. ;
_ . • . ·:·.-
, ,
to further their o\VU
beliefs and causes. •·-·. . • ....
•
Clinton s first cho!ce, Zoe Barrd,_~eneral
ThaU will agree with Clinton on. But it Counsel _for
_Aetna _Ltfe Insurance, wit~drew_
was Clinton who left the door wide open for her nomination after two ~ays of testunony
attack.
. .. .
•
_
_
. _ . • _ . . .
•
__
·.
•
_ . b_efore
~h~
Senate. Hw~s discovered that _she·
.
When Foster was introduced toOihe nation ~d ~er h~sband,_
wh~ _is also a lawyer, 11.ire~
.•
he,was introduce.d as man who had made.a rpairormegal
immigrants to care for theJ.T.
great contribution to prevei}ting teenage
.-.~?n;;
.
;
.
-_
•. . . ,,
> . _.
. . . • :
piegancy_lhrough a prograII1 he designed,J
C<
N_annygate also daimed another:viftm1,
__
Have a Future; that has proved to be an effec~ Ki111~a
_Wood,
_who was ch~sen as _Baird s ~ea
tive solution for preve11ting
tee,nage pregnancy. :/pla~II1~%-Wood_had
also hired~ d~egal alien.
. _ In fact,. ironically enough, Fosterwas des- ~o care for hef child, but at t~e time it w_as
not
ignated by President Bush as a ~'l,000 Ppint ill_egaL D~spite th11t
_fact Clmton felt.
,it
~as
_
of Light" during his -administration.
: _·
•.
-•.
• _ ~t~l. ,11netlµcal.
an~. withdrew her nom~nat~on
•. •
He developed a program that has encom~
/
Eve.J!tually Cl!~ton ":'as able to sµcces~~
passed job tr~in:ing;
educat_i<>.n,
and ~amilylife . fully_ i~l the l'°titi?µ with J~et Reno who,
classes,
I
Have a Future not only sho~ed those \ l~ckily for Clin on, had no c~ddren.
teenagers that they had a future but it showed
•
. Bobby Inman, former ~
01
pmee for De!ense •
them a way to get it Foster preached absti- . Secr:ta17, was another victim of the Clinton
nence and futures;
-
-
•. nomination process.
.
.
Clinton is ·right·.
that _the.
man . should, be
., Inm~ • h~d to be • C?erced mto. accepting
judged by his whole record. But the only per- the nommat10n ~er_Cbnton had been ?nsuc-
son who's stopping us. from learning about cessful _appro~ch1~g
~o oth~r candidates.
that record is Clinton.
•
• . Upon his no1;11mat10n
it was discovered th_?t
. Cas<in point is Foster's record o!1
_abor- ::e~~-n:::~~~~,°:!i:::ri!~!~:s:;
tion which has undergone several rev1Sions. was the head of an investment group that
peJ!rin~~to!c:°a.6~rt:~ t~att°:a~e; 1:te~:1! bought.·out ,a. major defense· manufacturer,
mother was dying of All)S.
Tracor, after it decl~ed _ban~ptcy.
The second account waslhat he perfonned
These failed nomi~at10ns m
~~ of t~e~-
"less than a dozen" abortions, all being in cases ~elv~~ reflect the Clinton ~dmm!stratlon s
of rape, incest, and ":'hen· the mother's life
~~~o/ to have one of their nommees con-
was endangered.
Lan•
Q • •
h
The White House then ceased commenting·
i Ulmer can attest to t at. .
until it had organized and then analyzed
As one of_ her support~rs descnbed the
Foster's record.· Both Foster and the· White process when sh? was nominated! supported,
.
~
•
.
. . and then later withdrawn as nommee for As-
-
:~:i~e now say he peuormed 39 abortions in sista~t Attorney General, "W_e were o~ our
B
•
• d h •
h N • al Righ own m a waiped canoe treading water •.
_ear
10
mm. t at lt was t e ation .
t
Henry Foster m·ay fmd himself in that same
t? _Life Committee !hat uncovered_ evidence • body of water.
Citmg what Foster did, not ~e White. House.
Al.Gore recently said, "We are not going
It has p~oduced documentation proving !hat to let the extremists defeat this man." But he
Fost~r did perform more than
OlJC
abortion, may find that they will defeat themselves.
J>?SStbly
even more th~ the 39, and that he
Thinking back to the particular battle that
directed a study exanunmg ~ow drugs ~uld
caused the Clinton Administration not one but
enable women to per!'orm th~ir own 9:bortions. two casualties was the nomination process for
. Although_
the ~ational Right to Life Com- . Attorney General. The first appointee if you
m1t!ee only mvest1~at~
~ a m~s to serve recall was Zoe Baird. Her nomination process
therr own ends, their d1ggi~g !nh,ht;ned all hatched the
egg
"Nannygate."
of us
as
!o what_ Dr. Foster
s.
entire record
_
Mary Diamond
is
The Circle's political
was, not JUSt the parts the White House knew ·colum·nist
or the· parts
they
wanted
us
to hear.
VIEWPOINT·
FEBRUARyt6, 1995
7
Surfing'.·Marist's
Infofox for a Living
Editor:
Want to· get up-to-date informas
tion about jobs, careeMelated ~o·rk-
shops, • internships and_
0
graduate
school preparation? Welltake a ride
on the infomiation superhighway and
stop at Career News on Infofox.
Go to the mainframe and pull up
that Marist fox. Then punch in
Infofox. Afterwards, you'll .get a
menu and you will see Career News.
Roosevelt
· Internship
In Career News you will see jobs,
_
workshops and other career-related
items availible through the Center
for Career Development and Field
Experience, which is located in
Donnelly Hall Room 226.
If ·
you require additional infor-
matkm, feel free to contact us at 575-
. 3543/3547 or just "surf the internet."
Center for Career Development
and Field Experience
Chess.Club
Updates
r--~-------~------~----,
• Con·struction ·
·
·
I
I
I
I
and Destruction
I
1
1
_ I_
know that I'm not mechanically in Jap~nese a11:d
photocopies and
I
mchn~d-
. •
.
sends 1t to milhons.
I
I
This apphes to anythmg from
Somewhere, the daughter of a
l~rs
to those damn refillable pen-
deceased craftsmen is holding these
I
lcilsS.
f
h
I
b
directions to a lawyer demanding the
I
o o course w en
uy any-
h
&
h
I
f h
I
Ith
.
"th
bl
. d
money er 1at er e t er.
mg w1 some assem y require ,
II
panic.
_
Well, I lay out the di_rections
and
I
I
I
figure they should come with see that
I
have everything.
I
•
little people inside to put it together.
I start to question the illustration·
I
I look at these instructions and - and after twisting my head to look
I
lthere's
always some damn "cute"
at it from all directions, resembling
lstick
figure smiling on each step to Linda Blair from The Exorcist, I I
show you how easy it is.
conclude: "Well it seems strange, but
I
I
If I ever meet that little guy -
I guess the the lamp does screw onto
I
lhe's
going to require some assem-
the bottom of the chair."
I
lbly.
.
I guess it's revolutionary because
I
I
To me, s~eakers :;vithout the laces after I built the desk it was lopsided
can ?e c?,ns1dered some assembly and everything just fell on the floor
I
I
required.
under the chair - where the lamp is!
I
I .
That's why I, for one, want to .
What gets-me is the fact that I
I
I
brmg back velcro.
·
f
I. t
d
t·t·
b t I h
always. have pieces le t over.
I
s arte a pe i 10n, u
ave a
.
•
Editor:
Editor:
I
little setba~k- I can't fig~re out how
This always happens.
I
The Franklin and Eleanor
The Marist College Chess Club
I
to refill this damn pencil.
No matter what you do there's
I
Roose~elt Institute (FERI) recently
made its annual West Point trip on
I
Now the real trouble for me starts always that little plastic bag with
I
created the William R. Emerson
Saturday, • February 11, and, in a
I
with_ directions for putting together screws left over.
• internship for Summer 1995.
closely played match, lost to USMC.
furniture.
.
.
I build the desk and it's being
I
The intern will be paid $7.00 per
Graduate student Rich Hutnik
I
Of course, furniture that reqmres held together with at most 2 and a
I
hour and will be required to work a
collected his frrst win as a Marist
I
p~tting together ~sually says some-
half screws. Then all that's left to
I
minimum of 20 hours per week.
chessman, defeating Cadet Lo with
I
thing abo~t one s financial back-
put together is the pencil holder and
I
Interns will assist the library staff
an impressive attack on Lo's strong
M1·
non·
ty
I
ground and taste.
there's still 24 screws 3 nuts and 15
with current processing, reference
defensive position.
,
I
mean,
I
don't think royalty in washers left.
I
and.museum pr_oiects.
• Club president and senior Mike
I
England build their own desks and
B . 11 th d k .
1
b
I
•
I
b
ds
asica y
e es 1s rea wo -
The 'intern for
1995
will. serve .Murray was able to muster a draw
In
h•
e
b
h'
·1 h Id
•
against Cadet Brad_
ley as well as club .
·
terns Ip .
I
Although they wouldn't need to
ly, but t is P,enci
O
er is going
I
.nexfsummer and will be chosen by
nowhere baby
May 8, 1995. The deadline to apply vice-president. and sophomore Jeff
• • , build their own beds because it al-
•
I
for this internship is April 15, 1995. Wiater, who drew with Cadet Walsh.
ways seems that Prince Charles and
We can have an earthquake and
I
For more
inforniation
01
to re-
Our next event will be this Sat-
Editor:
I
Lady Di are always using any bed this thing will still be holding my
I
ceive. an application,
contact • urday, February 18, at high noon
The College of Insurance is
I
but their own.
pencils.
Desmond Murray at 575-3543, or
with our Fifth Annual Marist Spring
launching its Minority Honors In-
I
But anyway - back to my furni-
I really want to know who they
I
Raymond Teichman, Supervisory
Tournament.
ternship Program for 1995 to attract
I
ture building.
get to design these desks.
I
Archivist, at the library at (914) 229-
All are invited to attend and·com-
Native American, African American
My project is a desk, a chair and
I hope they aren't people who are
I
8114.
•
pete:
for
trophies which will be
and Hispanic students to professional
I
a lamp.
.
. .
using this engineering job as a small
I
Desmond Murray handed ourto 'the top three finish-
careers in the insurance and finana
I
I look at these direct10ns and I step to finally work for the govern-
ers.
• cial services industries.
I
see that t~ey ass~me you can co~nt, ment on the space program or in the
I
_For niore information call Mike
Eligibility requirements consist
I
yo.
u are liter.ate m Jap.anese - smce military.
I
Mu.rray at ext.4151 or Jeff Wiater at··· of goo.d academic standing .and the
the American directions always seem
•
• .
k
•
5698
I
I
b.. •
.• 1 t. •• . •
d
h
.
_
. I can 1magme our tan s gomg
I
....
, ~}f·f,h,
,,1,,/;:1im
• ,; . • ,, .. ,
! ,~,,,, ---~
,:,'.
•. ,,,,..;: -...
<;q!]Jpl~~j_o~_:
:~f at\J~ast . ·
!51J
.credits.
i
I
sdrt
~irii~~~~~j i~~Iina:~~-some
into
battle
falling
apart_
a
but
t1_1e
little
I
•
•
.
.•
•
.
along
with
a demonstrated strong
I d
.
cup holder for
the
dnver
wd1
stay
work ethic.
I
o.
•
h
h
h'
I
Read The Circle
··• ... ,-··,_'•.c-:
.. , ..
:,r--.
__
~.-,.-::?-
._~·,.._._-
..
_: .-,
... ~.;--
..
·-_·,,-,
every Thursday.
Ml.chael
J
M
I have the i·ncl1'nat1·on
to ·AVOID mtact t roug anyt mg.
•
urray,
Candida_tes
should complete the
I
Chess Club President
application by March l, 1995_
I
anything mechanical.
I
guess the people designing the
The program combines academic
I
I think the method of thought is: . tanks are awa~e th~t they
won't have
I
course work with a 20-30 hour per
I
This is so cheap, you're going to to actually dnve m them.
I
week paid intern experience with
have to do your part - build it!
Then of course when the enemy
I
one of the world's most prestigious
I
I look at the other side of the beats us the engineer will be home
insurance brokers. The program runs I directions and they are in Japanese thinking, "I knew I should've put an
I
during the.fall and spring semesters.
I
and I seem to have a better chance extra screw on the ~offee holder!"
I
For more information or to re-
I
there.
,
.
.
Well I'm going to finish this
I
ceive an application,
contact:
~ctually
!
m
not sure if the di- column now because I'm getting a
I
Desmond Murray at 575-3543 or
I
~ections a~e m Japanese - I'm really cramp in my neck from typing this
I
Christopher H. Ross at the College
I
JUSt guessmg. .
.
, under my chair.
of Insurance at (212)-962-41
i
1.
I .
I~ could have bee1:1
the bml~er s
I still think it's a stran e lace
I
I
smcide note and wdl all wntten f: th 1
g p
I
while he was brain hemmoraging . or e amp.
.
I
causing it to look illegible and the
Frank
La
Perch is The Circle's
I
Desmond Murray •
■
manufacturer iust assumes that it's huinor columnist.
J
------------------------
Rand.Om
thoughts
on selected ideas
lllillfillf&t~liliilfll
;"(-,:;~~n.t:'.:t()Jieii1ffrpm
..
y;ou
..
!.
_Sriggestio~s~
•
-:?i;-fi",_-
...
~o#ip_llm.ents.
~r ·complaJnts
are_·_
•
.. •
·The.other day, the strangest thing would go again. It was strange, but
happened to .me.
I knew I would find them.
I · lost something.
What it was wasn't important,
and.how it happened doesn~t mat-
ter; _but I've come to
a
greater ap-
preciation about listening to my in-
stinct.
-
Sometime on Sunday I dropped
my keys somewhere and didn't re-
·aJize i(until Monday. Now
I
did a
lot of things on Sunday and went to
a lot ofdifferent places -
I could
have lost them a.l}'Where.
I went to brunch in New Paltz,
went to a friend's house on Wash-
ington Street and walked across
campus a few times. Throughout the
course of my day, my keys could·
have .been in at least two different
counties.
But for some strange reason, I
knew they weren't lost. I knew that
they were somewhere nearby and
that they would show ·up soon
enough. It was almost as if I could_
sense them, hear them calling me, I
knew they were around someplace I
When I realized they were ·1ost
on Monday, I began to search. First
I
went through every possible spot
. in my house.
I
looked in places
I •
hadn't been for months _; like
where
we
keep the cleaning prod- ·
ucts.
I
even looked in places
I
had
never been before -
under a box
behind my housemate's bed.
I even had recruits helping me·
look for my keys, and we all came
up empty
But' there was that gnawing in-
side of me that kept telling me that
they were going to show up. And
on Tuesday it happened.
I
was walk-
ing along a sidewalk in Gartland,
looking down at the ground (because
there was nobody to look up at) and
I happened to glance to my left at a
snO\vbank.
Bam. There they were.
Now, it's not so much that I was
finally able to trace my steps back
to the moment that I bounded over
a snowbank in an effort to trim a
couple of seconds of wal_king time
off -0f a journey back to my apart-
ment -
no. What the moral is here
is that my second sense told me that
they were there. An area of my cra-
nium knew that my keys were lay-
ing right there in that snowbank the
whole time.
Why· is that?
Why is it that there was that
voice in· my head? Does everyone
.have that voice? Does it sound like
mine? (If I could have chosen what
my voice sounded like, I would have
opted for the James Earl Jones ver-
sion.)
I
don't know the answers to these
questions, and I bet not even that
Astonishing Neal guy would know.
(A Clint Eastwood voice would have
been cool too.)
What I do know is that I will
always listen to my inner instinct
from now on about anything, I'm
making it a rule -
but not a reso-
lution.
Larry Boada
is the all-lmow-
ing editorial page editor
1iiiiiMiiiiilriit1ilt
lltlll{llltlii
L
r
I
I
I
I
l
8
THE CIRCLE, FEBRUARY
16,
._1995
MONDAY
PINT NIGHT
FRO!IBr1s1s17z.>
::1.00 OFF
ALL
PINT
DRAFTS
lvtJtJ!)PE(Jtt'ER
•
TUESDAY·PITCHERS·&.WINGS
.$3.00
PITCHERS.&
1/2
PRICE WINGS
WEDNESDAY
NICKLE BEER NIGHT
. 05
eEAIT 1eE oR,,1-r1s>
WHILE
sllPPLlesLAST
LADIES
$1.0
..
0
WELL
DRINKS
EVERYONE
$1.s·o
RED
WOLF
BTLS
DIFFERENT
PARTY
E'J\CH-
·WEEK
••
18
&
UP
._
THU
RS
DAV
NO
5CREWIN'
AROUND
COLLEGE
NIGHT
.18
&
UP
•
•
•
•
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POWER
H011Ri9pi,t~,o,m
¢:5oR7kL/):,f)(,;V$g
¢.50 CEN"f DRAFTS
•
..
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FRIDAY
MODERN ROCK
1-1\/E.
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$1.50
•
BOTTLE
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~fl'la,.
SATURDAY
•.•
LAD1Es·.N1GHT
LADIES $1.50 WELL DRINKS ALL_ NIGHT
$1.SO
BUD
UGHT
BTLS
FOR
EVERYONE
all
Hi
,ae,t;{}if't
~fll/(UJ(
SPl~(1l1I.I ...
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·
l~l
7
l~N'l
1
S
FRIDAY
2/17
THE
DEADBEATS
GRA1EFULDEADCO\IER5
WEDNESDAY
2/22
otostWoot~
~
PART¥
'-~ WITH
DJ
H-BOMB
BRAN D NE
w
REDUCED
COVER
WITHMARIST
I.D.
•
EVERY
FRIDAY
&
SATURDAY21
1,
o~ER
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'
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•.
.
1
.
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'.:
'
.
,.
~
•
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j'
.
i
l
!'
!
i
Monday·
:
·Free
Refill Night
•
-
$5.oo·oomestic
Draft
All You Can Drink
9·12pm
Tuesday
Bud Draft 50¢ Mug
Ladies
Well Drinks
$1.50
Wednesday
Rotating
Bottle Night.
50¢ Domestic
$2.00
Well Drinks
·9.12pm
Thursdays-Marist College
Senior Night
~~;-~~~i~-
'.
\
~
•
(21
& over)
$1.50
Well .Drinks
50¢Drafts -
$1
.00 Test
Tube
Shots
~~~~/·
•
--~~:::~-
• ~•/·.
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,
Friday
.. 2 for 1 Happy
Hour
••
Dance·to
the greatest
-musical
hits
Saturday-
2/25
.Live
Mu.sic
• T~Bone
• Pitcher
Night
Bud $4.00
Sunday
-Hang
Over Noon Pay
75¢
·Dom
.. Drafts
Bloody Mary
$1.
75
Screwdrivers
$1.50
-
~-
.
..
,
...
-Pool Table
Darts
TROLLEY'S
96 Main
Street
Pok., N.Y.-
485-3887
21 and Over
• THE CIRCLE,:FEBRUARY16;·-t995
Student (;overnn1ent
Elections 1995
February 20 & 21, 1995
Go Out and Vote
YOU HAVE THE POWER!
The Student Government Association is very
busy this time of year. Elections are coming up,
but there is still some old work to finish.
I am currently working withJ ennNocella on the
Safety and Security Committee. We have met with
the head of Security, Joe Leary, a number of times
last semester to discuss campus safety, parking
problems, lighting concerns and the new elec-
tronic security equipment currently being used in
the dorms. Many of the Committee's requests have
been granted and we will continue to push for a
safer campus.
Live
Presidential Debate!
Tonight
MCTV Channel 12 10:00 PM
Watch To Be Informed
YOU HAVE THE POWER!
Student Programming
Council Update:
Looking ahead with S.P.C.
for the month of February
Friday, February 17,.1995
9
At 8:00 PM in the Cabaret come out for a night
of high rolling and gambling with Jim Karol.
The night offers everyone to come in forget
your worries and try to
win
some great prizes.
No money is needed, all is provided for and
the prizes range from gift certificates to CD's
to CD players, a T.V. and a VCR. So take a
chance. What have you got to loose?
As a fellow Greek, I have been meeting with
members of the Greek· Council to discuss the
ramifications of Alpha Phi Delta becoming a
recognized fraternity atMaristCollege. Currently
the members ofSGA are reviewing the status of the
club cap requirements. If the cap was raised or
eliminated, then Alpha Phi Delta will be allowed
to become a chartered organization. A vote is
expected on this issue within. the next couple of
Tuesday, February 21, 1995
weeks.
.
At 8:00 PM in the Theatre, B.S;U. and S.P.C.
lfyouhaveanysuggestionsformyselforanyof
•
are• proud to present Minister
Yusuf
the other ,nembers of S<;JA,
please s_top by the .-
N,u:tia~~lld.
~
~
.. }~S!l'!e.r
(.)I}
~oll_ege cam-
i'bffice.
In
addition>·ni'et!tingsare
iljiilr[io
ihe
pub':.?
'puses
arid high schoolsYusufMuhammad
has
lie, so please attend them if you would like to be
been enlightening our youth by speaking about
heard..
how to survive and become productive in a
. In closing,· I would like _to encourage ev:ry
hostile environment. By focusing on the im-
stude!'t to pay cl~se attention to the upcoming
portance of Black history, the community and
elections. T~ere
Wlll
be a deb~te on M~TV. Many
the use of economics Min. Muhammad shows
of the candidates have very different ideas about
•
'
.
how campus should be
run.
If you want things
that knowledge of self and the strengt~e~mg
changed, or
if
you feel strongly about certain
of ~ur cul~ral roots are the. keys. L1m1ted
issues, get involved and please vote.
seatmg so pick up your FREE ticket at College
Activities today.
Kevin Straw
Senator
Friday, February 24, 1995
1-------------------f
TGIF Comedy Club featuring Brad Lowery
Students are once again trying to "tap the bottle and
twist
the cap/'
The Student Government Association is currently
investigating the club~cap
issue, because students are
expressing that they are not fully benefiting from their
tuition. At this time, the main group of students
fighting to raise or lift the cap are members of the
!}nrecognized
fraternity Alpha Phi Delta. APD has
been on campus for over four years, but they are still
trying to be recognized by Student Government.
A committee made up of students within and out-
side of student government are exploring the different
viewpoints of this i~ue.
with the HuMarists opening. Sponsored by
B.S:U. • and S.P.C. Brad has been seen on
NBC' s Showtime at the Apollo and promises
anightfilled with laughter. Doors open at 8:30
PM with the show beginning at 9:00 PM.
Admission is free for all Marist students and
five dollars for any non-Marist students.
For any additional event information, call
the S.P.C. event information line at x4SPC.
• And we hope to see you there!
On one side, the student body points out that they
'------------------1
should be entitled to participate in any club that they
wish. The activity fee that all students pay is designed
for students to partake in extra-curricular
activities
.
Student Government
points out that there are man-
agement problems that would occur if the club-cap
were raised or revoked. The operation of a dub
requires
ii
great deal of work. All the clubs that are at
the college now talce up a lot of time to keep them
running efficiently.
Also, the club review that is conducted every
semester is designed to "weed out through the dead
weight." Clubs that have not been keeping up with
their agreements of filing paper-work and holding
events, or those that suffer from a lack of interest can
be
put on probation, suspension or even have their
charters revoked. The problem with this is that the
latter does not happen too frequently, and students do
not want to wait any longer for an opening.
At this time, the committee to investigate the club-
cap is still gathering information on the topic.
A similar situation occurred in the end of the spring
semester of 1994. El Arco Iris Latino and The Black
Student Union expressed their complaints
of having to
live under the "cap." At that time, Student Govern-
ment decided_that
raising or lifting the cap would have
detrimental effects to the organization of the
SGA.
SENIORS
Attention Seniors:
There is precious time left to become involved
in the upcoming senior events.
The Senior Class Officers will be holding a
meeting Wednesday, February 15, at 12pm in CC
348A.
The topics covered will include:
• Class
T-shirts
• Senior week alumni 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 cqll
ex.
?995.
10
_THE
CIRCLE,
SPORTS·
FEBRUARY.16,
1995
.
T-h-e
•
Mall
-Behincl
tlre
Mask - Brad
Karri:()\
.
___
b_y_J_I_M_D_E_RI_V_AN
____
and eight:
.
.·.·
isJast season's
5-2
victory
Staff Writer
"I used .to watch hockey on TV
leaguerival'Siena College'.·
> ,
with· my father, and it looked really
.•. "It was the firs(game of last
If
one is to mention the name neatt Kamp said.
"I
tried it and
I
se~sor., w~ beat Siena 5-2,'' Kamp
Brad Kamp to anyone associated reallf liked it."
•
said: I,thmk I hadmy .best game."
with the Marist hockey team, that
Kamp said he enjoys the game
He· also mentioned last seasons
person will hear the words hard because it is a limelight position.
win over Rutgers University, .who
worker and team leader.
"You can make the big save, and
came· into. the• match up undefeated.
. "Brad has neyer missed a prac-
be the hero of the game, and on the
Kamp and the Red • Foxes sent
tice due to sickness, or anything," other side you seem responsible for • them packing
with
a 3-2 Joss.
fourth-year head coach Kevin Walsh the game," Kamp said. '.'.Thosetwo
Walsh. said he. thinks it was
said. "He is one of the best players pressures make it really exciting." •. Kairip's best performance'.
.
I have ever coached." Kamp's dedi-
"You can't .blame a loss· on one . . "He made _46
saves,''. Walsh said.
cation has paid off over the last four person," Kamp said. " A team wins "He was just phenoniinal."
•
years.
or loses a game."
.•
Kamp said he always paid_atte~~
During his freshman year, Kamp
Kamp's attitude towards the
tion to professional goalies, espe- •
led the Red Foxes to their first game has rubbe.d off on the 0ther
cially Johri• Vanbiesbrook.
•
. .
Metropolitan Conference champion- players on the team.
. _He has fried to incorporate cer- •
ship.
"Brad is the backbone. of our
tain aspects ofVanbiesbrook's game
He was also named to the all- •
into his owri. •
•
. . .. . . ' . .
star team each of hi three full-sea-
Profile of the Week '
"I used to
be
more,ofa stand~up
sons and was chosen league Most __
:;....;;;;"""";..;;;........:::-=._:;.;:=..:::.......:._:-=...:=:.::=
goalie," Kanip said. "Now I fmd the
Valuable Player last season.
team,'' -jumor forward Kris Rojek butterfly more successful."
• Most likely. he will be picked to
said. "He works hard, and keeps the
The goalies influence earned him
the all-star team again this season, guys up."
. . the nickname, "Beezer."
which will make him the second
Sophomore Joe Accisano. said
Kamp's participation in hockey
Marist player to achieve the honors Kamp. is a big team leader.
will not end after his career at
all four years on the team.
"He works hard," Accisano said. Marist.
•
Kevin Walsh was the first.
"We see that, and
it
pushes us
He has a try-'out set in North
Bill Kamp, Brad's father and
harder."
•.
••. Carolina for the East Coast Hockey
~ssistant coach for the Red Foxes,
According to freshman Jesse
League, and if that falls through he
said Kamp has been playing hockey Robertazzi, Kamp's talent on the ice will try for the Sunshine League. •.
since the age of five, and has al-
also motivates the· other players as
"If
I'm not playing ther:e," Kamp
ways been a hard worker.
well.
said. "I will be playing in a league
"When he was young I made him
"He has integrity in the locker somewhere."
•.
•
a little
15x40
rink," Bill Kamp said.
room, and_
also_
inspires us with the
Kamp also has a chance to be·a
"When he would. come home from
crazy saves he · makes," Robertazzi referee at hockey camps in. Lake
practice he would go out and skate
said.
Placid for USA Hockey.
•
for a couple of hours more."
Kamp has had a great career at
The senior also referees at home
Kamp played for New Milford Marist. •
and teaches a goalie clinic in Pough-:
High Scool, in New Milford, Conn.
During his
1993-94
MVP season, 'keepsie.
.
.
and was named to the Division II
Kamp had a
93
shot percentage.
This seasons team has. a chance
All-State second teani.
His overall shot percentage is 96 to win another Metro championship.
Kamp decided to become a
percent.
• "We have a lot of young players .
goaltender arou=
age of seven
Kamp's most. memorable game learning the college . game; but, I
..
:~EFOX~EIOX
RES\ll1URQNfEIUJOfEB.]4
MEN'S BASKETBALL
( 14-7;10·3
NEC)
2/9 • St. Francis (PA)
2/11 • Robert Morris
•
2/14 • Sf.
Francis
(NY) .
(63-53W)
(80-77W))
(80-66W)
WOMEN'S
BASKETBAU:(8:;
12;6-7 NEC)
2/9 • St.
Francis
(PA)
(58-53W)
2/11 - Robert Morris ·
(77-60L)
2/15 - st. Francis
(NY) Unavallable
HOCKEY
( 8· 12-2; 4-S MEI)
2/10. - Albany State
(3•3T)
2/8: - Hofstra
·
.
(5-1
L)
MEN"S
VOLLEYBALL
(1-4)
-
'
.- --~-.
2/10-Oneonto(ll-15,
10-15,8-151.)
2/11 - Holshots (15-7; 15-SL)
2/11 -OutterRotatlon (15-6, 16-14L)
2/11 Geneseo Comm. (15-13. 15-SW)
2/11 -Canisus College (15-13. 15-SW)
UPCQMINGWEEK
MARISISCHEDULE;
2/15-Wcmen·s bmketbdl w. St. Frcrlcls
CNY)
7:30 p.rn.
2/16-Men·s ~etbdl
vs.
LIU
7:30pm.
2/16-2/18-Men's
swimming
at Metropolital
Chanplonslips
•
2/17 • Hockey
II!.
Albany state 9:15
.
UPCQMINGWEEKMARISISCHEDUlE;
.
• 2/18Merl'~aldwomen;sbcisketbdlatWogner
.
7:30p.rn.&5:00p.rn. • •
. 2/18·2/19·1ndoortmckatNECChcmps
2/19 -Hlockey at
Siena
7:00 p.rn.
2/20 •
Men·s aid women's basketbdl at
Monmoulh 7:30 end 5:00
p.rn.
S_enlor
netmlnder Brad Kamp takes a break during action.
think we might be able .to get
OD
a
hot streak in the playoffs," Kamp
said: "A team only has to \\'.in four
in a row, I'd love to win another
one."
.
There was a chance that Kainp
miglit not ha~e b~~n_a player here,••
ClrcN
epo,ta
pholo/Cllrla
Berlnalo
his father'sSlfSt choice was Siena,
but Brad chose Marist.
"I like the fact that Brad is wear-
ing Red and White and not Green :
and_(}oldtsaid Walsh .•
::'-fhe
·Associa.tecf
Press
Top·
25 Polls
.
·•·.-
'
..
,
'
·•
,le;r.r
~fre!! '=~~1r~o~atfi~t;ii:;
The
Top Twenty Five teams in Th~ Associ;
:
votes )n ~entheses, records through Feb.
ated. Press' women's,college·
basketball poll;.
12, total points based on 25 pbintsfor a first-
with first-place votes In parentheses, record
•
J
ot th
h
•
through Feb. 120' total points based ·on 25 •
P ace
v
e roug one point for a 25th-place
points.
for a first-place
v.
ote through one point
vote, and previous ranking.
.
.
.. : ·
: . .
·.
. . Record
.
Pis Prv
for a first-place vote and last week's ranking:
1. Connecticut (50) .... : ...... 19-11 626 ::
·necord
•
Pts Pva
·2. North Carolina
(6) ........
19_21 .. 527 1
1. Conn~cticut (31) .. , ...... ,. 21-07 ,99
1,
3 .. Kansas (3) ...... ,., ... : ....... 18-31 •· 464 :;_
2. Tennessee;(1) ..... ; ........ 23-17., :69
2 ••
4.'l<entucky (6) .:;; ... :., .. : ... ; 17-31 - 441 5
•
3. Colorado·.,
...................
,. 20-27 24
•
3:
. s. Massachusetts.:.:;:
....... : 18_21 . 431 4 . • 4.,
~~~a
Tech ... , ......... 20-36 • 87
5.
6.-UCLA .................
;; ..... , ... 1a:.21
,
354
.
6
5;
r .•
,; ...... : .... ,, ........ 19-26 .73
6
•
. 7. Maryland (1) ........
, ........ 19-4
1 306 8
6. Virginia.,, •••
,.: .... ,.: •••
, ...... 20-38., 28
8,
8. Michigan SL .............
, .. 17_31 099
f.
7. Texas.Tech ................... 22-36 08
4•:
.9 .. Missouri .........................
18-3 971
,
13
.
8.'·Vanderbilt
.......... ::: ......... 20-55 69
7
10. Arkansas ....................
;;. 19-5 965 12
9. North· Carolina .... : ...... ; •• 22-35. 51 .• 11'
·. 11.,Syracuse .. , ... , ..... ; .. , ... ;, .. 17-4 ·. 956 10
10. Washington, ................
,. 19•54 • 74
12 •
1.12•:Af!zona
.. : .........
, ......
,.: .... :15;5 -.. 91
f
9
-11
J·
GP':::,~gs,.at.
.......... ;, .. :, .. ,·:•.,·
118-449.
24· • 6628 1103
3.·,Ari:tona
Sl ................
: ... 18·5, 889- 14 •.
•
......................... -
• •
14, Wake ForesL ... ,,.; ........ 15-5 .819 11
13. W. Kentucky ; ....
,: ........... 1~
13
9 •
15 .. Vlll8!1~va
....... ; ............
, .. 17_5 , _805 16
14. Florida ., .........................
18-63. 57
18,
16. Virg1ma
............
; .. ,., ... .,.:. 16_6 . ,.706 . 17
15. Purdue .....................
: .... 18-63.
55
17: •
-
17,
Stanford, ........
:'.:
........
: ..
: 15-5 , 3
n·
15 ,
•
16.'Mississippi
... , ...........
:.:.:: 18-43
33
·.14
1.8. Alabama ....... , ........
; ....... 17-S
360. 23
17,cGeorge
Washington .,, .. 16-42 68
16.
19. Oregon ..........................
14-5 . 344 .
22
..
_
18 •. Arkansas ....................... 17-52 20 20
20.:Georgia Tech, ............... 15-8
298 ,-18 . 19.Ala_bama
•••••••••••
, •••••
, ...... 16-72 12 19
21. Iowa st. .............
, .......... 18_6 , 289 .19
20.
Kansas: ... ; .....................
16-71
.n
1s.
22
23
.. 0~la!Jo~a.St.. .... , ........
,.16-7 _265 24
21.0regonSt. ••
, ••••
, .... ,, .... :.15-41 54 23 •
. M!851SS1pp1
St ... ,. .......... 15-S ,· 218 21
22. Duke ..............................
17-51
.. 31 21.
24. Mmnesota ; .............
, ...... 16-6 : _ 1
63
. _
•
23. Texas A&M .: ....... ;; .. :: .... 15-67'·
•
6
••
25,
Purdue .........................
: 16_6 .. 151 25
24. Southern Cal .................
13-65 ; 6 •·22
Other receiving votes: Brigham Young 134
25. San Diego St .... , .........
: •. Hl,44
c
1... ....,.
.
Georgetown 130, Xavier, Ohio 62 . Utah 52•
Others receiving votes: Oklahoma 30; DePaut
W. K~ntucky 42, Utah st. 32, Okllilioma 31 •
29, Old Dominion 23, Clemson 19,' Florida
California
29,
Penn
23,
Memphis
21; St; Louis
International 17, WISCOnsin
17,
Auburn 11 •
21, N.C. Charlotte 17, Virginia Tech 15, Santa
St •. Joseph's
9,
Virginia Tech
9,
Memphis 6: •
C!ara.14, Texas 14, New Mexico St. 11,
Ohio U: 4, Drake 3, Seton Hatt 3, Southern·
T~~e 11, Auburn 10, GeorgeWashingion 9,
Methodist 3, Villanova 3, Wichita SL,' Okla-
l!!mois 9, Manl:lattan 8, Florida:5;-TexSS:EI
homa 2, Grambling St. 1, Lamar 1, Notre·
Paso 5. Miami, Ohio 3, Tulsa 3, Nebraska
2
Dame 1,. Ohio. St. 1.. • •
• •
I
··.cn-c,rj.··.··
I
.]
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and
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lD--BOOK~DEPARTMENT
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accepted
credit
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world-Vasae
and MastetCarde
credit cards."•tn your name."
EVEN lFYOU ARf;.NEW IN·.
CREDIT
or
HAVE BEEN 1URNED DOWN BEFORE!
SfORES-TµITJON-ENTERTAJNMENr-
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EMERGENCY CASH-TICKETS-RESTAURANTS- ·
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THE CIRCLE,
SPQRTS
FEBRUARY
16, 1995
1t
Cagers·
••
c6Iltill11e
-
t(l·.·.r()ll
-.il1'..\.;.:N"E€
..
'
'
•
•
•
•
'·
--·-•
-,-.,..,..--,-
____
...;.__,;
byGREGBIBB
SiaffWriter
.
':.When
Gregg Chodkowski scores
in double
,
figures, the Red Foxes
win. It is that simple.
_
•
.
•
. .
.
Marist made it 11 wins out of
the_irJast .12 games Tuesday night
as they defeated St, Francis (NY),
80-66, at the McCann Center.
Marist's (14: 7 overall, 10-3 in the
Northeast Conference) moved to 10-
0 when Ch·odkowski
•
scores in
double digits as the senior swingman
pumped in 10 points.
.
The Red Foxes have now won
their last: seven games and aie in
second place in the conference, trail-
ing Rider by
·half
a
game.
.
Head coach Dave Magarity. said
St. Francis (7-15_overall, 3-11 NEC)
played their
'usual
stingy defense.
"St.
Francis plays
•
some of the
best defense in the league," Magarity
said;
St. Francis held a 31-30 halftime
advantage, holding the Red Foxes
to 38 percent field goal percentage
in
.
the opening stanza.
.
Marist responded by shooting 58
percent in the second half while
outscoring the Terriers 50-35.
Alan Tomidy led all scorers with
23 points while grabbing 14 re-
bounds.
Danny Basile added 19 points
and Dexter Dunbar score 11.
On Saturday, Marist completed
its Pennsylvania trip with an 80-77
victory at Robert Morris College.
The Red Foxes were led by
Dunbar, who scored a career-high
28 points.
-
_
Magarity said the effort displayed
the leadership the senior guard brings
: .
·
MARIST
00, ST.
_FRANCIS
(NY)
M
•
IIARIST(IO):
·,
_
..
·
,
• •
,
..
.
Hil_O-O
9-12
e:Chodkowski
4-5
1-1
10, Tomidy 8-147•
1123,8asill7-134-419,0Unbar3-10ff
11,Pi>an::Zyk
2-61·2 5,
Encamaeion
0.2 3-5 3, Taylo,
0-0 0-0
0,
W1o111e
o.o·o--0 O. Totals 24-50 29-4180.
·_,
.•
sr:
FRANCIS (NY) lee)
•
.
.
.
Sllatp
3-11
1-2.8, Ayala 2-6
0-0
◄,.i.e,,;,.1.1
·0-0.2.
8aaey
S-11°2-213,Allel 1-SS-77, Patt0f10n S-13
i-411,
T°'"""" 8·15 1-2 21,
McG,egc,
0-1 0-0 0. Tolala
2$-63
. ••
10.17 68.
•
•
,
Holfllmo ocon:
SL Francis
(NV)
3i,
Maris!
30.
l!Uff.polnl gool1:
Marls!
•
Chodkowald,
Besile, Durll>M.
SL. Frands
(NV)
'Tom>nc:e (4), Sharp, Baloy.
'
•
Toam
......-da:
Maris!
14-7, 10-3 NEC; Sl Ftancis
(NV)
7-15. 3-11 NEC.
'
to the. court.
•
<lHe (Dunbar) stepped it up big
time for us
_as
his experience really
showed,'' Magarity. said.
•
Dunbar
.was
:8~for-12
from the
field, including 4-4 from three-point
range.
.
.
. .
Dunbar's backcourt mate Basile
scored 26, matching his career-high.
Marist led. by as many as 10,
holding a 70-60 advantage with 3:02,
left in the game,
_
but Robert Morris
cut into that advantage as the
_lead
shrunk to two with 20
•
seconds left.
The Colonials had a
.chance
to
send the game into overtime but a
three-point
attempt
by
Hal
Koenemund was blocked by Dunbar
as
the Red Foxes picked up the win .
On Thursday, the Red Foxes
opened their Pennsylvania string
with a 73-63 win at St. Francis (Pa).
Bas_ile scored
•
18 points while
Chodkowski added 16.
The Red Foxes trailed with less
than 13 minutes to go in the second
half, but a Basile jump shot knotted
the game at 42 and his_
three-pointer
with 12:11 left gave the Red Foxes
the lead, 45-42.
Marist would
·not
look back as
they outscored the Red Flash, 28-
21, from that point on· to earn the
•
win.
Swimmers
look to
capture title
by JASON FARAGO
Staff Writer
The time has come for the men's
swimming and diving team to show-
case 21 weeks worth of work.
Starting today (Thursday) and
continuing through Saturday, the Red
Foxes will attempt to capture the
Metropolitan Collegiate Conference
Championship at Trenton State Uni-
versity in New Jersey.
"We (Marist) are the odds-on-
favorite to win the Metros," head
coach Larry Van Wagner said. "Our
only real competition comes from
our chief adversary Rider."
A sense of bad blood seems to
be brewing as the two rivals meet
once again.
Last season, Rider beat Marist in
the regular season by 30 points, then
edged the Red Foxes in the Metros
by nine.
Marist answered the call this sea-
son by beating Rider by 40 points
and are primed to beat Rider once
again.
Junior guard Danny Basile puts back a rebound with junior
Kareem Hill looking on. The Red Foxes have won 7 In a row.
"We (Marist) knew last year that
we did not possess the potential
fi.
nalists," Vanwagner said. "This
year, those weaknesses have been
eliminated.''.
The Red Foxes host Long Island
University tonight at
the
McCann
Center.
FOX
NOTES
Gregg
Chodkowski was named to the Dis-
trict I Academic All-America team
this past week.
The senior is a three-time mem-
Clrclo •~
photo/Chrl•
Borlnolo
oer of the Northeast Conference
Commissioners Academic Honor
Roll.
The Biology major received a
perfect 4.0 gpa last semester and has
been a member of the Dean's List
all seven semesters he has been at
Marist.
Regardless, Vanwagner said he
and his swimmers are looking for-
ward to the Metros, especially swim-
ming against Rider.
"I
am looking forward to the
Rider-Marist rematch," VanWagrier
said. "We have all the pieces to the
puzzle and are ready to win."
S_pikers
_
lose upstate
by STACEY DENGLER
•
_-Staff
Writer·'.-~':
--
The men's volleyball team lost
its first conference game against
Oneonta University in Oneonta,
N.Y.
last Friday.
The Red Foxes got off to
a
slow
start, losing in three straight games,
11-15, 10-15, 8-15.
Senior middle blocker Jason
•
Letendre contributed 6 blocks, while
junior outside hitters Pete Blaney
and Sean Stam each had 14 kills.
Junior setter Francisco Jimenez
chipped in with 25 assists.
Letendre said the team did not
haye
one
of its usual_ solid perfor-
mances.
''We
did not play well," Letendre
said ..
"We·
beat ourselves."
Saturday's tournament at Buffalo
provided the team with tough com-
petition, however the Red Foxes
completed the toumament with only
one win and three losses.
Two of the three losses came
from
•
Alumni club teams. The
Hotshots downed Marist, 15-7, 15-
8, and Outter Rotation won, 15-6,
16-14.
-- The third loss was. against
Geneseo Community College, 15-
13, 15-8.
The only win of the Bison Tour-
nament for the Red Foxes was
against Canisius College.
Marist won the match, 15-13, 15-
8.
Sophomore
coach
Ellen
Schuerger said this weekend was
going to be challenging, but with
different results.
"We
_were
put into a very diffi-
cult poo_l;"
·Schuerger
said. "We
played against alumni's, it was good
practice for us.''
"Before
Canisius
we were
streaky,"
_Letendre
said. "We
couldn't
sustain a solid effort
throughout all of our matches."
Blaney led t_he
team with 12 kills
and 6 digs and Letendre added two
aces against Canisius.
The Red Foxes host Ramapo
College on Saturday at the McCann
Center.
MCTV PROGRAMMING
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19-95_-CHANNEL
12
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12:30 P.M. - 1:00 P.M.
1:00
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5:00 P.M. - 7:00 P.M.
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8:00 P.M. - 10:00 P.M.
10:00 P.M. - 12:00 A.M.
WEE
12:00 A.M. - 12:00 P.M.
12:00 P.Mi. - 2:00 P.M.
2:00 P.M. - 5:00 P.M.
5:00 P.M. - 7:00 P.M.
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..
:.•.·.
:;:-,
r ;.~...:·
,,
)
......
·-----
...
:: ''
•
:_
--·STAT
Of THE WEEK:
.
•• ;
When
•
Gre·gg
Chodkowski
spores In
..
"lVe_
are
s6
re[itived
ihat
we
got'!,i(tite'
-.·
'
:
,
cliarnpio~hip),
we
'wantedit
soibtzf!ly:
~--
• ;
::
.•
}/
;~U\l<:(::'.·::/:·::\:.:
-:'Jeannie
~guire',
,i'~c;ti
SP<>.i.i
s,~b~11{l#~ •
d~ubl~:~~:-i~~-1*~~~aJI.
win· MetroS<for second ye~n 1qa row
•
::
,
-··
·•
•
•
men(after.::l:tl.l'·his team
did
·t,reak
·
..
by MARTY,SIN~CC>LA
• •
..
•
•
-Staff
W,rUer
•
•
•
the sweersm~ll of\ictory.
The women's swimming and.div-
ing team did not smell the chlorine.
.this past weekend enroute to·another
unprecedented victory;
.
•
The· Red Foxes
.returned
to the·
Merchent Marine Academy· in Long.
Island on Friday, Saturday:and Sun-
•
day and became the first swim tea_m
in Maristhistory to win back-_to~back
Metropolitan:
Collegiate· Conference.
titles.
•
. . ·.-
.
•
• ·
• •.·.
•
The Red Foxes·.outswani:
the en-
tire field by an impressive margin,
including_
downing··
second-place ri-
val· Rider College,· 672-536.
·
The· much awaited victory topped
off goals that had been set by the
.
•
team early in the seasori.
_
•
The first goal was to swim well,
arid consistently, and from that the
second goal of repeating as Metro
champs would· hopefully fall irito
place.
_
How right they were.·
.
teo··schoo}:iecoids.
•
_:·.
•
.•
Out of the ten, four were set by
ret'ay.ieams:·.
••
·:
.
O(the·
_six
individual records,
sophoafofo Stephanie Raider. t~ok
-
.three;··sophomore
Alyson MonJla
·broke·
two~•:
and
·sophomore·.
Becky
•
Tatllm seized one.
.
'.The. relay
:.
records came in the
200-yar.d·freestyle;
.the 400 medley,
the 800
·
freestyle, and the 400
-
freestyle.;
>
•.
·/ •
-<
•
.
.
•
. •
...
The timtn>f 4:07.35. in the 400
'.
medley· relay
V!il~
·a·.
conference
record as: well as a school record.
Raider, who continues to rewrite
the school s\vimming records,
notched two victories-(lllld records)
in the 200
·and
500 freestyle.
·
•
she picked up. her third, which
was also a conference-record in the
400' individual medley; with a time
of4:40.4L
•
.•
Marilla gained· her •.
two records
in-'the .50_ and 100 freestyle and
.Tatum
1:>rcike
a
long held record in
.
the 1650 freestyle ..
·
Jeannie Maguire said she was
. happy at finally winning the. cham-
The_ team saved its best perfor-
mance for the-last and most.impor-
tant riteet of the year.
•
Despite the success of the swim-
mers, who broke ten school records,
the divers annihilation· of the
·com-
petition stands above all accomplish-
•
The nien's
·and
wome,is swimming te~ms;eagerly
await
the results of a recent dlvl~g
-~mpetitlon.
• •.
-The
women's team captur:.ed
their second.
Metro_
title on Sunday'and the men go for lttoday.
pionship.
•
_
·.•
_
•
"We are so relieved that we got
it (the championship), we wanted it
so badly," Maguire said. "Everybody
stepped up to
:what
their potential
was, and everybody improved on
their times, which
is
obvious because
we broke so many records?'
•
ments.
Senior Jen McCauley,juniorJan
Martin and sophomore Danielle
DiGeronimo placed 1-2-3 in both the
one and three-meter ·dives.
"The divers· have been major
•
contributers: all year," head
.
coach
.Lloyd
Goldstein said. "I have t~ giv~
Melanie (Melanie Bo_lstad, diving
coach)
all
the credit.
As
long as she is here atMarist,
they will continue to be very com-
petitive."
•
Skaters iced on bad
.call
against t\.l~~p.f
··•
•
•
•
•
of wheth~r the
puck
pas_sed thii goal
o:byJIMDERIVAN_
0
d f
•
1 •
..
_Staff
Wr{ter'.
<·
;
"
;,-;·.
lirie efore·the en o
·'regu
at1on
••
•-
:Thfref~~ee(~aid
1_1e>;,
/·:\. :·
T}ie liockey tearil battled the State
"I'm thfJastone' to'. blame the
University
of
New ;York at. Albany
referees,-but
.they
·took
.tha(goal
onFdday to. a· 3-3. tie at the Mid-
away," Walsll said. • .
.
,"
.•
.
Hudson CivicCenteri
•
•
_··
•
• _Junior.'
forward
:Kris
Rojek,said
:
According to
_fourth~year
head
hehad,no doubt in his mind about
·
hK
• W l h. b d II b th
th
e
goal.
•
,
-.
:
·
.
· ·
•
·
coac
.•
evm
.
as •
_a
·
ca s
Y
e
. '_"T_
ha_t was
__
def_in
__
it_
ely· a. goa_l;''
'ref
er~~- pfayed
a
pa~ in-the tie .
.
•
.Jn
Hie last Tilimifos
_C>f
the game,
Rojek said/,.
•
. ••
~-
..
_,' ..
•
..... __
.
-with tlie Red Foxes' ahead 3-2; Al-
\Val~h and the players also ques-
bany:'-ha~.
a6-4
player, adv11ntage
ti9
tio.J.!ed
a_missed
call
o.n Jh1: t_11~edown
a power play and pulled the.goalie'..
_ofJr~shinan
George Macy~s partial
.
:
•
:With 31 seconds:'
remaµii11g,;
tJ~
· ..
·-
breaKa'!¥!iY)ri.:
!heJhird, p~riod:_,
_
0:
-
·•-
• · • ·
•
•
• ·-
·
·
·
,
Freslinian
'Jesse·
RobeitmLsaid
bariy slid a loose. pµ-ck in:front_of
•
:he\yas
also displeased with.the of-
-~~t1;t;~t:6~~-toleavetheg~e.
ficiating.
/:.\
_ /./ :•
,::.c_:
__
.:<
.
•
_According
to
;\Valsh,
the game
:
.
~'The._referees
'Yer~j~e'>iiurplJer
had its share of controyersy.
.
••
•
sey~n arid ~ight players on.·the
,ice
•
••
·'
$.ophomore for:ward
Joe A.ccisano for Albany State,'\ he,Said.
:·
_:
_,
,
••
had driverithe_puck down ice:and
-···
•
'fhe,R,~ Foxes out shot:)\11:>~ny
shot:fr past tlie Albany'goaltender,
.
41~22, and kept the· puck:in. their
for. what _appeared to
.·be
. a· Marist
zori~ for.
t~e'.
majority o(the, game.
goaiiowever,. t~~~e\~,a~
:/questi~n
·
...
; ..
see:
PUCI<
page
:11
.btls-ke·t
.--.-
Th~
m~n•s baslcJtball team.have
in thej-~fhalves of.lriost ~~Js.'
.
won)l of their)ast12-gaines
sirice
.
;The
Red F'oxes siart their games
Jan.7-when they wei-e.3-6.
•
slO\vly;It-takes them time to adjust
This ~eam
•
(14~
7
,oyeraU,
10-3
to·ih_e
.other
team and by the begin-
.
NEC) has won· seven in
_a
row'. and
nirig
·
of t,he second· half,
·
they. take<
are. in; strong contention for the
-charge>.
,
-
:
_·
•••
••
•
.
.
•
••
.
.
• . •
.•
Northeast Conference Title.'
...
On Tuesday.night, when·the'·Iled
---·
Most importantly, they-_are
a
half
Foxes crushed
.St.
Francis (NY)·8o-
game behind first-place Rider in the
66, they sh1:>t
a 35percent field·goal
conference.
•
•
percentage and_ bounced
__
back
-after·
Witbthe
;way
Alan Tomidy,
-
a 31-30 deficit at halftime to shoot
Dexter:Dunbar, Danny Basile and
.
58 percent'.
• .·
.
•
.
.
•
Gregg 01<xllcowski
•
are playing,. the
..
_·
This inay
•
_be
cutting
•
it in the
Red Foxes seem unstoppable.
games against the lower ranked
• They are definitely starting·. to
teams, but it will not work against
feel the pressure, though.
•
.
Rider and the Mount.
Two of the most important games·
This is a problem this late· in the
of the season are next Tuesday and
season, because practices cannot be
Thursday and the pressure is on.
run hard with only one day off in
The team is feeling it aQd.there between games.
is a question of whether or not the
At the beginning of the season,
team
is
on the floor to win or not.to
even this writer thought the
-Red
Jose.
•
Foxes would not. even· get close.
•
Ac:x:ording
to Head coach Dave
The season has progressed and
Magarity, his team is not having fun
it's a different picture.
while playing the game and he is
The confidence of. the team· has
stressing to. them about the fun fac-
made them unbeatable and the· hot-
tor.
test
·team
in the NEC.
This may seem like a problem,
But does this untouchable
team
but it bas not hurt them yet, except
_
really know what it is like to go all
McCauley said. she was. happy
with her and her fellow divers' con-
tributions to
-the
victory:_
'.'It was a great victory for us, we·
went in wanting to take 1-2~3 in both
events and we did," she said. ·''We
•
didn;t open any doors for-anyone to
Cln:I•
_
■poc1■ pholo/Chrl1 llerlnato
·:
sneak in."
.
When asked if this past weekend
was the best he. had. seen his team
perform this season, Goldstein did
n_ot hesitate saying, "There is no
question about - by far."
Goldstein is right-in. his assess-
One key to
-
success
•
for tile
... see
WSWIM
page 11
it·••·tf~:l!ll
:tl'1~;;}~&~~:
NEC, but it may end sooner than· program;·
>
.· .
•.
_ ...
·..
.
.
_
e
s
later.
-.-·_.·
Women's basketball
. -
..
.
·,
..
• ...
·.
:Backtoback.
..
.
..
/Th~-
women--are
:iiµproving
'
The women's swimming and oiv-
•
slowly b~t. Sl,lrely
·and·
seem to be
.
ing team became the first swimming
_
regaining. their·
_confidence
iri
their
teain in Marist history 'tq win a >title shooting.
.··•·
:
..
·
,
.
.
· -
tw.o years in a rO\v.
Freshman Liz MacDougall . is
•
The teain swept through the.com-
quickly maturing as fplayer and is
petition, breaking ten schoolrecori:Js_
·now.a
dominanffactor in the team's.
on the ~eekend. and qualifying nine success.
'-th_e_w_a_y_?_·
_..:.... ______
__, swimmers and divers and five relay
•
Darrah Metz/had a great road
Can
·the
junior recruiting· class
teams for the ECAC'.s.
·.
•
.•··
trip. The talent is there, itjust-takes
cany this team to "March Madness?"
,
Third-year head coach Lloyd
time to conie alive.
-
Time will tell.
•
Goldstein has
•
conie to Marist and
.
.
FYI ·•
.
Th f:
•
brought excellence to his athletes
-
The ESPY'swere on late:{
Tues-
.
e ans
-
..
.
th
.
.
.
Toe·crowd at the McCann Cen-
and to e program.
.
_
day night._ Steve Young,. lawyer
tei-on J'uesday was pretty slim.
The men's team will be in New
-
extroidinaire and_ Most Valuable
Apparently, nest week's games
Jersey this weekend and will
:have
Player in th_e Super Bowl, received
are almost sold out. Where are those
as much success as the women.
the top male . athlete of the year
fans this week. Just because St.
•
It's the University of Corinecti- award.
·•
•
Francis and LIU are· not big
·games
cut at .Marist in swimming.
.
Where's that new Athletic Direc-
(they are really) like Rider and the
College basketball
tor we were promised?Like it's been
Mount, fans should still go·and sup-
It'.s about time.·
.
•
said before, Mike Malet is doing a
port the_ team. _
_
.
••
-
d
•
~atdit must be like to be a stu-
fine job, but any athletic program
The.· fans that were =there were
ent, an a sports fan.· at the Uni-
should not be left in flux, especially
high supportive, though.
versity of Connecticut.
-~th the outstanding sports Marist
The Foxes did not seem to need
Both the men and women's bas-
JS
home to.
-
it because they're on a streak.
ketball teams are now number one
Teri L Stewart
is
The Circle's
The Red Foxes are bot and bum-
in tbe Associated Press Top 25 polls.
Sports Editor.