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Part of The Circle: Vol. 47 No. 1 - September 21, 1995

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_·?•,rtS--~:N~ews.t=:,·
• •
,
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Dept.:;
·,.
:··receive'ilieAP'\V1tlsetvice~.
.·'."'PAcE2··
.·:
Volume
47.
Numbed.
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,-
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:.;
ARfs)&Jl~mERTAINNfefu:.
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•.
·
·
ec out: u,e
new


•••
..
section
-
·



,_;for.entertaihfue11ih~~-~iiid
re~iews
..


. :.·:.-:::
.··'.·.:·;.}'.t:).:_·:y

:)::;::
PAciE1Q
:.······;.
'i'tji_e
,Student
NeWspape{bf-1\1arist
'College

.---
-. ·SPORTS'.~
Jtisa
changing
of
the
guard

·
at the McC.ann
Centet
'."'PAGE16
Sept~iliber
21, 1995
'$tu.del).ts
-••iilr~i~ij,(l'\'etJf!lla~~ial.a.id
.f
oul--U.p
byJ~fEREDITH
J{ENNmY;


file'.
~~~ajn~d ~n~o,~plete
,~nt
•.
lie
~ew,
I had
.\V~¥~)iar.di~()
cial 11eecl,".,.FenneH
~aid.
_"I
re~ for Financial Aid(MAPP). the
Managing
Editor
• •
.
therefor~. they'?Jay ri?t
~have •
ge~:a.?d IJlaintaiil my:scholar.;
..
gret all ~eproblem.s it caused."' Free· App!ication for. Federal
b~!l. ~bJ~_tg
receive_
tlleir schol-
ship'.
.
,_ -,
..
·.
..
_
.
.
t.i,ccordmg
to Fennell, the cer-
Student Aid (FAFSA) and have
..
A,pp~xilll~~e1_i·2()Q
re.turning-. ~h.i_P~;;~~,:;:J;;?//•'~·.
;;./--; /;:.<:
..
:_:/'.Cf.~~'fe~i\~!I;
~t'efto(gf Fi_~
.
.
tif1ed)etters were supposed· to
a copy of a parent and student
Marist ~(udents \\lere wrongly.·
..
Semor Nohe:Mozzone has_ nancialAtd,saidh~didsendthe

be sent:to.those··who.had:not
federalandstatetaxreturn;
infonned that their merit schol-
ma1ritt,uµecf
ari~
acltlevt:d Decl!l~
••
certifie(}'
leµers;:but
:explained
completed. t~e.infotrnation.
nee,-•
Accord~ng
Jo
the

guidelines
arships were not being rene\Ved
.•

List statµs but. rec~ived
.a.
l.etter that a mistake. was made in the
essary for ~~iying aid•.
for· fi-. for the four year merit scholar-
during the summer vacation.


sometime in early;A,ugllsti
;
·.··
mailing pfocess.
.
. . :
. . .
nancial reasp~~-:,L,·
·
.
.

ship. the' student's only respon-,
The students were. each sent
''MY father ·went througl{the
"I
made a mistakewheri.hvas
:
H~
expl~ine<t,that,all need
sibility is to maintain a GPA of
ac~fiedletter,postrnarkedJulY.
roof aridblan1,ed
m~,"Mozione
...
sending,out·.notice.s to.'clhose. basedapplfoaritsmustcomplete.

25,
that stated their financial aid said. "H~
.~as·
enraged bec:a~se
·.

who received aid_
due to· finan~: the MaristCollege Application Please.
see Financial, page 4 •••
B.rokawgiven.
the
Lowell•-•·
ThomasaWanl
Tass.o
found
not guilty
ill'1993 rape Of sfuderit
by
DARYL
RICHARD
the ground outside the Lowell
by STEPHANIE
Si\LVATI
•.
Editor,:in-Chief
Thomas building while a fourth
·s
,I+
TIT. •
suspect allegedly raped her .
.
-
ta11 "nter
.
A
Dutchess County Jury
Toe· three other defendants ,.
..
;NBC
News anchor 1,<>m
found former Marist student
Shane Conry;· Kristian Grizelj
Brokaw received the
·eteverith
John Tasso nqt guilty
on
all
three
and Craig Morcom - have pro-
.'.ailnuill
Lowetl Tocm:ias
Award
charges offirst-'Clegree
rape
ofa
fessed their innocence since
•·
,~srit}AaristColleg!.;~(,
.
.;:z:t~~:n~::n1:~t~

~r:t~~;!~t'lice
after the
sented the award to Brokaw at
:.·
.terinSeptemberl99~.
·'
..
How.ever,·according the re'-
.•
the Explorers Club in
New'
York,
>
/Jne
yel'dictwas handed ~()wn ports iri
the
lloµghkeepsie Jour-
City.
.

.

.
. •
,
_,.
·.011Ji:me
I~. afte(eight hours of
nal, whe~ Tassp took the wit-
: i
.
M:arist. President. Dennis.
J'.)
)
·,.t.'i.~~f_1jl,!{4\~!;f
y,-i1aige'
3:
ri~s.s:
~t~~~;-~itjng.:
!he tfial he
:,'.;
Mumi·y:'spo1fe7irthe'awai-d
Iun::··~:
.
. .
·. . .
.
. ....
· ..
· _
. y .
.
··.
.. _
...
·· .
• ,
said, his .confossiori
"wasJorced

<
ti::::t:~.,
c-:1~Jjf
lilt17."'i~f
$~ii~~~

·
Brokaw's 'nose for, news'
.•
iarid ...
,
"-",..;....;..;-"-;__;-"-'----'-'-------'-'--~---'-'--'-----'----"--"~~,:..;_--........;.._J
••
to conv1ctmost.sex'Cnmes;':<
.
·,
Ing¥f<!Sl~ •.
f
w~ \,\'lllmg
to
do
skills
as
an
intefviewe?hi~e
:.
Nicrr·
-..
,
h,'·1r
B.
ka
..
·.
ed
ih
'1ith:i:'.
~
Lo
"II
•.
.
/•'ThflawJs
set
iiff6{thf~e-.'
aitY~hi,?-g'..just
iio.t
to
be ar-
.
bce,ronut'.g
..

..
ho;•·.
rthl·.··.d·.ehm1·.·s:.atuo·oryr
•.
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n
.•.

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:.·.

.
fondants notthe
:victims
·i•

re~ted.;
:;-
,:: ' :

C

-
Smii:hsaid'.·\
••.
-

.'.
',

••
,
•:
Sirice1)i~'i~cfs
acquittal, there

the horn~ of millions 9f J\iµl!ri~
.
editor_
of''NBC News wi,th To~
:
during Operation _l)~ert Stonn.

.

Strtith saicfihe wouid not
c~m;:: .
ha,s
been a diyers~ reaction from
caits,each night," Murray said,
.'
B,rokaw."l-Iewm:marlchi!i30th
·.13rokaw,:W~the9p.}Yl~pot1e.rat
meiifon why she thciught the
the.Maristc:ommunity.
.
The
·Lowell
.Thomas'
awant;

year with 1'IBCN~ws in
il
9.96,
.• .
thl\sce11e ~hp. ~_itri_essed
the jury delivere(J the
not
guilty \i~r~ . Director of Safet~ and Secu-
established by;Maristinl983;
.
Brokaw began his career:.at
.
fallingoftbeJ3erli_nW.~1L
• _
diet·
_

. ..
•·.·.
_
nty,Joe Leary, said students
recognii:~
·w~n!e<l
inµivi.du,~s- KMTV in Oinah~ ~fob.,
in 1962..
-.
Bro~a\V
J~·.a1so
a J9ng_tim.e
po-

·The
trial concluded
'almost
hav~ confr()nted
~Ill
with feel-
.
i~.th~ ~~mmuruc3:tioi:ls,Ji~ld..
}'o
.
·,
. H~_
co~g~cte4_.~e
fir~t exc~u-·
'}i~ic?I
rep_orter: ~~~~f.1968.i
~f
.
twci'ye¥5 afterthe itjcident'11as i~gs·of ~oth agree~enno great
~--~hgi~l~ fe>r
the a\V~d~
~e.m-
si~e o~e,.on-?ne i~te~i~"."'..Y'.'i,th_
:·.
c9-v~req
eyery ~eri~?.Jl
.P~i-
:iniiialiy::repo~;
;
.
.
.
J,.,
.
d!sappomtmem with the ver-
diviqual must exemplify the am-
.

~ai_l
~orbechev'.
:
:-\,'
·, ,.
dentta}-~lecti9n.
:
}:!e ancho~ed
.
Acc<>rdiiig
to a testirtjony that
•.
di.ct.

.

..
··.
.
.....
·
_
bitiori; imaginatioµ;
courage
~d
.
: _:'Il_r~k,~\\',
also repot1ed.
rlU~er~:
~tgf
1!1e,
~~
Ne~s ~9Y~:11ge,
·Tassp
gaye,< t<?
••
Town·\ of
_
•.
· ..
"Students
\V~O
have spoken

r~rii~nify }l(Jeg~n~~; bro:ad~
.o~s
~?les from h<?t~
d~ger<:lUs
.
mcludm~., pntl}af1:eS,-
llalloAal Poughkeepsie detectives'before to me have expres~ed anywhere
c11Stet.~..yel!Th9inas.
'. •::::
.•

an<l
timely locations, suc.h.as· co_nve11t1on~.
·an<l:_election
tothetrial,hearidtwootherstu-
.,!TOW
Broka\V is best !cnotn
a.s
.
rne
_White ·House
lawn;.toof-
nights in 1984, 1988, and 1992.
dents held the woman· down oli
the sple anchor.~d;managlng

topsin,BeruitandinsideKu.wait

• •
•• • •

Students.r~portip~t,eµanc~prople~·With
_fp.¢ir\hoij~iµg;.·hQl~s.fu
W'aU~
,~
faultywirjrig-
-


·:· · .. ·-;:.•_-
-
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·:_ .
.
,
:·•_.-~.
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.,··-~--
-··.-.
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.. :
. •
'
~
.:·
..
>
.
:~
·-
_,
:-.


..
·
byF:~ETH
l:JROPIIi
said he
~~
surprised when· he
. ,contiac~ci(~ .
. .. ··.
.
'
•••• •·
..
-
:staif.f'
•.
Wi.
·.n.·ie
..•.
r
.·.:.
·_
saw. his
·apaninent
C
··•
::.




<
How,ever; O~13tien
said that
While many Marist stridents
and faculty took'their summer
break, workers for the Division
of Physical 'c®unds
were
break-·
ing a swe.at as they rushed to
restore. the conditions of the
buildings on.campus.
.

Angry students are· still won-
dering· if anything had been
done.
Students from various resi-
dence halls, especially the
.
Gartland Commons Garden
Apartments, haye been com-
plaining about the maintenance
problems they faced when they
moved back
to
campus.
Joshua Krueger, a junior liv-
ing in the Gartland Commons,

·.
"All the air conditioners were
·.
pre-season camps, which stay
broken,light bulbs·~ere ini~s-
on campus ovei'the summer,
••
ing and there was plaster in· the enter rooms that have already
sink." Krueger said.
been checked_ bY maintenance

Timothy O'Brien, supervisor and contribute',to so~e of the
of mechanical services at
damages that exist in the resi-
Marist, said all the rooms in ev-
.
dence halls. when the academic
ery residence hall on· campus
semester begins.
.
.
had been visited and restored
"In addition, there are certain
by the Di vision of Physical
-
conditions that make restoration
Grounds.
of the rooms more difficult,"
"Over the summer, all the darn~ O'Brien said.
"Phosphores-
age done during the school year cence from laundry detergent
was fixed," he said. ''This is the left on the walls can delay· the
first year that all the rooms have re-painting of rooms."
been painted, and the batteries
Timothy Daly, director of
in all the smoke alanns have
physical plant. said Marist
.
been changed. Any other niain-
spent over $60,000 redoing the
tenance of smoke detectors is
.
handled by an outside, certified
Please
see
Problems.,
page
3 •..
Numerous students have complained about the condition of their
housing this year, like this bathroom is Gartland Commons.



















































































































THE:CiR~t.E,
:September
21, 1995
.
New.·cuie:foi.ihe
coriimori:'201dt).
.
'sAN00NcISC6<AP>\
Sorry:.:
n6s~/ihe'
;chini'
liius·~;;'·.
the; common cold. stiU has. no

the s'ore throat and.•
all the
,
cure. B'ut the next best thihg is
:,
resi'rrom striking in
the
firsf
·in
the works: a simple na~al
-place.
.
.
.
.
.
.
,'.
spray to protect people from
The
latestapproach is in~···
catching the sniffles.
.
tended to protect vulnerable
,
If this treatment works out
-
nasal passages from inva-

and it's still far from proven and sion by. the
.rhinovirus.
IL
years· away from· drugstore
seems· to work
-
at
·1east
in·
shelves - it will be a rare victory chimpanzees,
• •
_
against an exceptionally wily
The precise dosage for bu.,
enemy.
.
.
mans is a future matter, too,
No medicine can make the

but scieritists believe they can
ubiquitous head cold go away, develop a spray tha_t will be
not even chicken soup;

And
squirted in the nose just once
nothing can keep the runny
or twice a day to keep cold~
away through ~ewor~t season.
Ruby Ridge_
tes~ony

WASIDNGTON(AP)7TiieFBI
field commander at Ruby Ridge
told a Senate panel :fu~s-
.

:
Hours
'a&~/
th;
·otcter
was
:ap~
.
.
day he was a '.'tuna" thrown·,.:·.,
...
"
.d.
·:·
..
··FB·--1·
.. •·
..
~•

ki·-·1-l"d'
·.th·,,-·

.
_
..
..
.
.
....
,.
·.. .
•.
.
.
,
pro"~ ,
.~n
.
..
_srupe~
..
_ e
. .
e
Jo_"hungry sharks,,,andun-'·. wife
of
.white'
separatist'Randy
·•
f~_ly
b~~~
.~<>~
~~
~e~ly

~eay~r.'. ~~y_e~'.s J~year~old
s.1e8.e
-~h1l,e_.
h~gher-_ups ·so_n
"and
a
depuiy-Dlarsliafalso
:_
wer~' nev~r ad.t:quately_
,,n~ died iri'theAugJ 2h· 1992, gun~
. vestig~ted,Fourmore col:-
.


,.,
.•
... •
.

. .

leagues declined to testify fight;
:which'.
broke'
'out
as
f~-:
..
ori consiitutlonal grounds. era.I
.agents pursued Weaver on
.
Eugene Glenn told the
a weapons ch~_
ge.

'senators:
thaf now-sus-

:

·:

,
pended FBI Deputy Direc-
..
Potts received a ligh~ puiiish-:
,
tor
Larry
Potts appiov,ed a
ment for his role in the.shootout
and was promoted to be
the
No:-.
unique shoot;-on-sight order to
fire a~ any)nned adult inan at
2
man in tfieFBLGlenn was cen-

the siege site in northern Idaho.
sured and suspended.
. Potts denies ever

approving
the plan.·

New York Times and Washington Post.publish U nabomber's
matrif
est9
NEWYORK(AP)-Joumalists
will argue for years about the
.
agonizing decision by The New
York Times and The Washing-.
ton Post to publish the 35,000-
word manifesto of the terrorist
known as the Unabomber.
In the din of debate Tuesday,
though, there was one patch of
quiet agreement. Editors and
scholars around the country
shared a sense of relief that they
weren't the ones on the hot

seat.
"I'm glad, as most editors in
the·country are, that it wasn't

my decision to make," said
Sandra Mims Rowe, editor of the
Oregonian in Portland. She
added: " I think they made the
right decision."
" I instinctively oppose it,.,
said Doug Clifton, executive
editor of The Miami
.Herald.
Still, he added, "it's a heck of a
.
.
_';
.
lot easier to say that in ~he
abstract. .. They have had to deal
·
with a real situation; while the
rest ofus are dealing withatheo-
;He
also demanded:
that the printed
this document
forjour-
and the lives of Anierican
sol-
newspapers print three manual nalistic reasons," Graham said
'diers
(:Ould
be. at stake. I
mean,
.
follow-up publications.

in the Post. "We thought there we have
a
history pf that."
/

He gave the newspapers a
was an· obvious public safety
.
John Seigenthalei, a former
three-month
.deadline.
Five
issue involved and Jherefore
editor ancl. publisher who now
days short of the deadline, the sought the advice ofresponsible heads a ne.ws industry thi_nk
Post published a special, eight-
federal officials; We are print-
tank in Nashville, The Freedom
page s_ection
in Tuesday's edi-
irig it for public safety reasons, Forum First Amendment Center,
tions. contai_ning
tile entire text not journalistic. reasons."
called the decision "a sad pre-
ofthe Uriaboinber's
_essay
on
That made'sense to some edi'-
cedent". that
.was
unavoidable
retical one."
-

.
In the theoretical debate; the
lines were drawn between those
who said the two· newspapers
were acting in the public inter-
est, and those who said the
Times and Post had sacrificed
their journalistic independence
and set a dangerous precedent
by caving in to a killer and ex-
tortionist.
The Unabomber, who is
blamed for killing three people
and injuring 23 others in a 17-
year. campaign· of bombings,
sent the manuscript to the Times
and Post in June, two months
after issuing a demand: If at
least one of the newsp~pers
would pri_nt tjis
-·manifesto,
he
would stop killing'.


the evils of incfostrialization. tors and· scholars:·
-.

under the circumstances.
The sectionwas published uri~
.•
William Ketter, editorofThe
.
?I
hateJt-as;a precede~t, but
deran agreement by.both the
••
PatriotLedgerofQuiricy;Mass.,
•.·
asmuchaslhateit,Iwouldhave
Post and the Times; and
paid
for

••
and president
of
the 'Alnerican made the same decision/ he

by
the
two newspapers jointly.
Society of Newspaper Editors, said.
-

.
.

.

The Post,esiimated the cost said he probably would'have
Se.veral editors expressed ad-
at $30,000 to $40,000.
done the· same.

rniraiion. for the apparently rig-
The publi~hers of the news-
"I worry about the implication _ orous decision-making process
papers, Doria.Id Graham of the of the decision, of course,'but I
that led to the publication .. "I
Post and Arthur Sulzberger Jr. can't fault-'ttie newspapers
·for-
respect the struggle they've
Of the Jinies, sajd. they had
cooperating wi_th the Justice
_
been through, and I respect the
agreed topnnt the manifesto at Oepart!fle'n.t.
.. I ci<>n'rtllinkit's decision that they've made,"
the urging ofAn~rney.-,General: un}ike the hist()ry
:pf
the press
said Lois Ureneck, editor of the
Janet Reno and FBI Director
in.,!!tls
cQuntry coo,perati11g·with Portland Press Herald in Maine.
Louis Freeh.
:
.
. .
....
·
..
· .·
.
the government during wartime,

••
Critics lamented what they saw
"Neither p~p_e~
\\'.<>uld-·have_

becau·se·:.Jhe natfoi-tal int~rest
as
a dangerous precedent.
••
Clinfu.ij
))~girls
flJ
~d~i&s.f'
Qr
'9,~0qi.npfqgq
JACKSO~;~ii'.(AP)--
·inode~i'.}~1id~J;i~{:_li¢igqbor-
_
~~efits of~lderly Medicare re-'
.
Airning)o ass~~ie)he finan-
hO<>d
n?.~:p.fJ~~¥011viHe_ac- Cl~~~n~'. .
'· .
.
..
.
da!i-~~H.d.}!lg'_l>lc;>cks·.6f
his.re-
compan1~,b.:x;4_tto~~YS,,~ner.tl
··.
_Do
~~mo~
have.th:-~bd1ty._
I
;~:~!!~!~:::~~~~'.

:,-:;q~~~i,;r~:tld
;1~,~ii~~tt'::';1t:::~~
II
_
':hon'm
a cr~s~"'.~~:nJntry
,tour
of
shaking hands \\'.1th
_rt!Stderts.
theyhav~_thea~1hty
t~.
do
~L


four stat.es central:Jo his 1996
Lateratabaseballfield,het<>ld. the. pre_~ulentasked. !}hmk
poliJical.~trate~y._
<
..
·
.
.
_
several hun3/ed of the r~s.id.e11!S
ypu
~~Jl
111
~~ that case.__
.
_
.•
,
•/Top aides say. the aim is to ei-
..
·•that. the_ cnme ~eat(!· m: their
Clint?µ ajso re~e"'.ecl
_his as~

ther freeze O\lt ()r:
_SllCS~sfu~ly
:~~ighlior~p.~d_
had dropped no-
.
Salll_t
9-~}p~. R,epu?h_can
Con-
take
on
any,possi~I.e.:
ch~l.eng~
.
ticeabl)'.;
~~~~eJJe. pass,age l_ast
_gr'75s:
~~ymg,_
'.Tlus is
.not
an
by Democratic candidates in
year of the, adnun1stration.:.sup- el~ctIC>~
1
th~t can
,be
~~n by
..
•·
party-primaries or in. indepen-
·.
ported anti::crime
bill,.
.
.
.
so~~,d.
bite~; or,
,_t~e
~<?ht1c~
of
·
dent races in the
•generalelec-

·:
He vowed to fight Republican ~sentmf~~'.
,'..:
..
,
;
.
_
.


lion,
•-
.
.
• •
.. • •
_,
.

--
efforts
to
tinra\;'el
the legislation,

1!1
a conyers,t~Qn
w1tll re.J)Ort-
.•.
In
a
nod to the adage
'tliat
all which called for eventually put-
ers?.~o~d,A1r,For~e C>n_e
~n
politics is local, Clinton walked

ting 100;000 more police on the· ro~tf! h~_re_
fwm_ P~ila~elph.1a,,
.
about a half block through a
nation's streets.

.
Chnton said
_he
1sn t o/orrymg
.
Dt)
you
think this
Gartland
bedroom
crui
hanclle
three people?·

.

·
''This
,is
not.· about partisan _ -
ab?
11
,.
~

PR~~lble.
·.
~an~clac:y-
by
·
-
-

· ·
-
politics:,We are IClwering the
re.~~y_~n:_~ol1nPowell,
C_
ire.le/Comm
...
Arts
.•
··- •...
-·.·
..•.
·.·_
d_ivisio_·
..
·.n
..
·. :.·
•..
·g··
et-AP
wire,
s_
e.·_rv
....
··
..
ice
crimerateinAmerica;'~Clinton

__
riwn~•
...
J~ay~_no~c>ntr°:l
over
said
,
·:
what anyqn~ else1s gomg to

le.
v.elofprofessio.nalisminboth.



··
·
.
··ct
..
,,

,.,-,
.
-
·
by BEN
AGOES
·.
"The instant.access· to up-
·
Clinton-got his cash harvest
o. .
.,,
..
·;
:
:
,
.
·
The
Circle and the classroom.
dated, world news gives the rplling in Phi!adelphiaMonday
Clinton asc_nbed
muc~ ~f the
.
.
.S!ajf
Wryter

.
"The
AP wire cbnnects the college news room in Lowell nightataClin~on~Gore96cain-. flUllJofpubli~!llldmediamter-
TtieCircle has joined the ranks college. newsroom
-
to
the
o·ut-

Thomas the-same f~f as_
a real pai~
-g~a,
whi,<;h
~~.· aj>Qut
··
..
~t,
JD,,(!~~
;_1:eh~
general as
·a
of national newspapers.
.
side world."
news room," said Clarke. "The $600,000 for his campaign cof
:-
'
product of. the unsettled natur

,Until this year,
the
paper cen-
Marist college receives )he
addition of the AP wire brings fers.
.
of the times.
.
.
tered on local, college and re-
-
same basic service· from the
Matjst that much closer to. pre-
lri his speech;, the president
~•In a tipi~,C?(
-~}!an~e,
~pl~
gional news. Now its capabili-
-
Associated Press as other SIIlall paring professional quality jour-
appeared' to suggest
1:ie
is open
are o~r
~
_a,}1
kinds of things,'
ties are global.

newspapers. As a result, Stu-: nalists."

to the idea of means testing the Clinton said.
The installation of an Associ-
dents have the opportunity to
Providing the level of profes-
ated Press wire service over the receive articles over the wire at sionalism and opportunity that
summer has made it possible for the same time as professionai the AP wire offers does not
the college to instantly receive news editors.
come cheaply.
world wide news.
''This· allows my
·classes
to
"The basic service for this year
Every couple of minutes, ar-
compare [their
1
work· with the will cost the college $6,000 plus
ticles anywhere from Argentina larger papers~ and to see how additional software," said Pauli.
to Zaire are sent to a new satel-
they handle it," Pauli said. ''The
"An agreement between the
lite dish installed on top of the AP wire service is being used Communications Department
Lowell Thomas building.
for instruction in radiorrv writ-
and the Student Government
The new wire service will be
ing, broadcast, and print
Association allowed ~he two
used by both The Circle and journalism classrooms.":,
departments
to
split the cost
communcations classes.
Moclele Clark, assistant pro-
evenly between themselves."
Carol Pauli, assistant prof es-
fessor of communication, also
Student Government provided
sor of broadcast journalism at
~xpressed excitement with the jin emergency allocation of
Marist College, said she thinks. immedi~cy at which students
fund$ to help The Circle pay for
the AP service enhances the
-
will receive news.


their share of the bill.
..
.
The Weekend·Weather •

Friday:·
Saturday:
Partly
sunny
and continued
chilly.
~ghs in
the
50s,
lows in
the
30s.
_Sunday:
Variab!e
clouds,
breezy
Sunny.
Highs 50 to 60,
and chilly.
Chance
of
-
-
lows 2S-30:
.
-
.
sh~wers.
Highs
only
in.the

.50s,
lows
in
the40s.
&>u~:
~~~-
Piess·
..













































THE CIRCLE,
September 21, 1995
3
Students ieaCt to rape
case
Verdict
' · by
~DITB
KENNEDY

:
vivdr had to say
i~.
her- testi-
• Managing Editor
Whenwe.heai-
acquit.:.
mony." ·.·..
'.
Two years after a reported
rape occurred on campus, and
with the acquittal of the defen-
dants in the case this summer,
people are still trying to cope
with the out come.

Roberta Staples, head· of the
campus counseling center, said
she believes that it is a credit to
the survivor that so many stu-
dents have openly showed sup-
port for her.
. "I heard ll great quote the
other day, 'the -truth is some-
times larger than the law',"
Staples said.
Desmond Ebanks, ·senior, said
he fears that the verdict will
cause other victims· of rape or
assault to • hesitate in· reporting
incidents.
"I think he was guilty," Ebanks
said,
"I
don't think anyone
would accuse someone and go
through what it would take un-
less he was guilty.''- .. •
Staples wants people to real-
ize that guilt or innocence was
not decided in this case:
"When we hear acquittal it
means not enough evidence,
not innocent or guilty," Staples
tal •
..
Task Force, an on campus
lt
means·
not
group. headed by Staples, pro-
enough evidence.
vides thr.ee services. Support
for anyone victimized sexually
. - Roberta Staples, head or physically, education to pre-
of campus counse/irig
vent future assaults, and it holds
accountable anyone who af-
flicts pain on others, Staples
said.
said.
.
' Tim Massie, director for the
office of co11ege
relations, said
the college·can no.ttake a posi-
tion on the verdict but that it is
important to support the victim.
.· "It brings to mind the whole
issue of vigilance on campus,"
Massie said. •~Everyone needs
to be-aware of issues like date
rape or acquaintance rape.''
Staples said that while rape is •
always an awful-thing some
good has come from it.
''The junior and senior class
seem to be more aware and cau-
_ tious in a none paranoid way,"
Staples said.
Kristina Wells, class of
'95
and
-resident of Fishkill, cov_ered
the
case for The Circle for the past
two
years.
''Personally, I'm disappointed
with the verdict," Wells said.
"I
think the jury should of taken
more into account what the sur-
Some _members of the Task
Force are participating in a pro-
gram,
Rape
Crisis Counselor and
Advocates, that wm allow them
to become better able to work
with rape survivors, Staples
said.
Family Services, Inc., located
in Poughkeepsie, is offering this
course and also has a Rape Cri-
sis Hotline at (914) 452-7272,
Staples said.
Peer Advocate Volunteers,
which came out of Task Force,
provides a one on one support
system with people who have
personally been impacted by
rape or assault.
Staples • said the Peer
Advocate's said, '.'We are in
complete support of the survi-
vor. We commend her and we
support her. We believe her."
Jennifer Nocella, senior and
ifiat
.~~~~a~~JT~t
t\;:~:•
egf~,:.itr~???~!-
..
T(?WI)
of Poughkeepsie
·d
a hell of a job, "·said
;'Ope again,
they
got
i~,i:·
~l
~h
dra\\'~rs'
the safes were':found
.~.,-!,
,,
,,~'
7.,,,
t{
~~\;a~!~
former head of the Safety and
Security Council, said, "I'm ap-
palled and disgusted with the
verdict. But at the same time
that's why we have courts to
decide guilt or innocence."
the new dean of communication
and the arts, has been described
by his colleagues as a leader
who is collaborative, logical, re-
sourceful, and innovative.
New deans take helm
in
Comm Arts
&
Humanities
dept.
Dr. Lometti , who was a pro-
fessor of journalism at the Uni-
versity of South Carolina, said
he came to Marist because of
its tremendous advancement in
technology.
by TOMMY
SCHWAB
Staff Writer
This summer, two new names
werb-addecftb
itii
"dean~ list"
at Marist College.
After a nationwide·search
. _
conducted by faculty. and· the
• academic administration, Dr.
Reginetta _ Haboucha .was
named the new dean of l:iu-
rn.anities and Dr. Guy Loinetti
--the new dean of communica-
tion and the arts. The search
involv~ over 200 applicants.
"In
addition, we, as a faculty,
took a day to develop a mission
statement for the department,"
Lometti said. "We tried to out-
line a series of goals and objec-
-tives that we think are important.
I am in. the process of revising
that list."
Dr. Haboucha was a professor
Spanish at Lehman College, and
eventually became chair of the-
department of romance lan-
guages ..
The new positions were cre-
ated when ..
·the.acadeIDic .ad-
ministration and faculty de-
Dr. Guy Lometti and.Dr.
Reginetta
Haboucha
recently
started their new positions
atMarist.
Lometti
is
dean of the Comm/Arts
deptartment
andHaboucba
the Humanities
department.
She received her bachelor's at
Queens College, and her mas-
ters and doctorate in Spanish at
JHU in Baltimore. In 1993, she
served as Acting Special Assis-
tant to the President at Hunter
college.
cided fo reorganize the six a.ca-
are comparing the school of
demic divisions ofthe college
business within the university
along academic lines inl992.
with the school of business in
The reorganization also ere-
another institution.
.
ated.
a.
business• management
''This reorganiz;ltion will make
the students at Marist feel part
pro-=·
vanderHeyd~n. ·_a.ca-·
-··
-of
a group that has its own iden-
demicvice-president at Marist,
tity," said vanderHeyden.
said s.tudents. today are not
. VanderHeyden said the admin-
comparing • colleges··and uni-
istration was looking for two
versities :with one ano,~er; but
people who would help the di-
visions join together to project
a better image and reputation for
Marist:
''The two new deans are aca-
demically respected, appreci-
ated and have demonstrated
their leadership abilities," he
said. "I recommended both
choices to the president of
Marist.."
VanderHeyden said that
Haboucha, the new dean of hu-
manities, demonstrates sincere,
MCTV :donated·
news_
set
from local
TV
station
by Michael Goot
-William Ryan, Director of
· •


Marist's Media Center, received
Staff Writer._
•. •
a call from
WTZA.
chief engi-
It is lights, camera, action, for
neer, Rick Rodda.rd~
asking him
Marist College Tele\'.ision
rnem- _ if M~st would like the old set.
bers whose news ·aepaitnient • • ••
• Ryan quickly took advantage
will be enhanced by equipment
of the opportunity.
obtained from locals television
"The Media Center
wiU
pay for
station WT'ZA..
it because I believe it to
be
a
"When I was a freshman last
worthwhile venture, if for no
year, I was told that a news pro-
other reason [than~ to give
gram was impossible, and here I
Merv
~
real, prof ess10nal set,"
am beginning a full-scale news
Ryan said..
.
.
show,"
said
sophomore
Ryan said to butld a set hke
MeredithEngler,MCfV'snews
WTZA's would cost about
director.•
$3000, including labor and ma-
Over the smrimer,.W'fZA re-
terial. . .
designed their news set and .. The ~uipment w~ stored in
threw everything out - lights,
the M~st East fac1hty across
risers and the.anchor desk. Dr. Rt..9until Sept.1,w,~_e~Mcrv
moved the materials into their
studio.
''They're retiling the other
room down there [in the stu-
dio]," said MCTV vice-presi-
dent Michael Onorato. "Once
they finish, then we will get our
set down."
After their recent general meet-
ing, MCTV and its news depart-
ment has begun organizing
teams of editors, camerapersons·
and anchors needed for the
news show.
"We're putting together
worldwide news, Marist news
and local Hudson Valley news,
and we're bringing it to 3,000
people on a weekly basis, which
is pretty exciting," said Engler.
enthusiastic and active interest
in faculty and student develop-
ment.
Dr. Haboucha said one reason
she came to Marist is her fond-
ness for the core curriculum.
"I want to
try
and focus our
efforts on enhancing certain
programs," she
said.a
VanderHeyden said Lometti,
Dr. Lometti was also an Asso-
ciate Director of Social Research
at the ABC television network
and has a doctorate in mass
communications.
He has also taught at the Uni-
versity of West Virginia and the
University of New York in Al-
bany.
Problems plague student housing
... continued from page 1
"Hopefully, we will be able to
answer their calls within three
days instead of taking up to
two weeks just to change a
light bulb," he said.
the Gartland Commons Garden
Apartments, has been waiting
over two weeks for his mainte-
nance request to
be
answered.
"I called maintenance,"
Fiordalisi said, "But they never
"All the air conditioners were broken, light
bulbs were missing and there was plaster
in the sink."
Robert Farrier, assistant su-
pervisor of physical plant at
Marist, said the ultimate goal
is to have students E-mail their
requests.
In spite of these changes,
John Fiordalisi, a junior from
- Junior Joshua Krueger
showed. I think my parents pa
enough money to
Marist-
main
tenance should at least com
and fix things."










































































































































































t
I
'
4
THE Cmc~,
September
21, 1995
.
.
.
. .
.
.
-

Fihaftciaraid·
,.
:


-no~:t~:!::~:;i1~/.
'Tasso;
·acquitted

WMCR
gets.i.iew·--p1ace'
·to
catil11lrrte
·
... continued from page 1
for third year students now, but
.:

:-
:
'
.-
,
.
'_::

- •
.i.

_


we may raise the."GPA
f«~<iuiie-/ ...
contrnue'd.from
page_l
;:-;.

-
"

ences,
made
it possible to rel~
2.5 or higher, if he or she.fol-
.
lows that stipulation their schot.:
arship is automatically renewed.
Mozzone said,<'I freaked when
I got the letter because I knew I
had maintained my
.end
·of
the
bargain and I knew
l had filled
·everything
out.":
.
-,,
,;
Fennel said the mailing was
originally done to insure that
students got their financial aid
information in, which he says
seems to be.a problem.


Harry Wood, vice-president of
admissions, said there may be a
change in the policy for renew-
ing student's scholarships but
• th "'
-
··-
"
UT~;.;.-.a·---
·ct·
·-·,,
·:-:
-•
-

-
:
by'
qIANE
KoLOD
cate.,'.'
Molinaro.said.,.·
.
''.We are
m~~t~dd~
:i':!~:e
lrt;;;;;:esf
·rro~:~grooingwiih
~~eroicC
Staff
Writer
very pleas~ with the:new loca-
theFinancial Aidoffice institute
disagreeing with it and vio-
MaristColl~geRadiofound·a
tion."
··,'.,,;•:,:-·:,·:,,!>r·<,
'·:
a more segmented way of com-
lently
'disagreeing
with the
new home this summer.
Molinaro said he thinks the·
-
miinicating'with the students ..
_
verdict," Leary said.
-
.
_
WMCR;
'originally
located
station·will'be:
up'
and runni~g
:,
Allnierit students who
re-
Learysaitllhatfollowiilg the
near thcf-Champagnat Breeze-
·-intw(?or-threeweeks.:i
'
·:
;
.
ceived
the
letter· received their
sexual assault in 1993, MariSt
way, has moved behind the Ac-
~ong with the~_new lcicatio_n,
-
scholarships~ Admini~tration
has beefed up its security
ti vi ties Office near Dean Gerard·
·
WMCR has received some new
cane~ each student to notify
force.
·
cox's old office.
...

·equipment:·;•::
...
·'-
·
!'·
·
.
them thaf the mistake was recti-'
"After having requested ad-
Eric Molinaro, president of.
·
•.
The broadcast ant~nna on t<?P
fled and a letter was also sent.
ditional personnel fora while,
WMCR; said Student Activities ofChampagnat was adjusted ~Y
"Harry Wood caJled my house
w~ got Some more following
helped a lot in finding the new
'
a ~rofessional sound e~pert.
one evening and explained what
the incident," saict Leary.
location.
·
._
This allows \YMCR· to-broad-
happened," Mozzone said. "My
He reported that five new
"Bob Lynch; the head·of ac-
cast across the whole
·campus,
parents arid I were· glad that I
foll-time guards were hired
tivities and Steve Sansola, as-
rather:than being confined to a
got the money, but it was a
andl2part-time.
sistant'for activities &confer-

smallarea.·_·
'hassle
for over a week."
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THE
CIRCLE,
Septembef2l, i995
5
SGANEWS
Dear Und~rgrad~ates, •
• • • .. • Wel~ome back! I hope that everyone.had an enjoyable suml1)er. With classes now back
into full swing, I hope that you all have recovered from the mother of all hangovers called summer
break.
I ~efuse to go into details of what we have done in your absence. I will save that for another
day. I do wantto convey a few things to you though.
.
To all incoming Freshman, I want to welcome you with this advice. You do not, cannot? ~nd
probably won't realize how lucky you are. The Senior Class is the
last class to remember pre-V1s1on
94. The change that has_ taken place at.Marist is phenomenal. Exploit everything this school has to
offer. Take advantage of everything we can give to you. You have more here now than I could have
dreamed of three years ago. Your years here go by too fast not to enjoy all aspects of college. I
never thought I would miss classes and academics until I realized that in two semesters, my days
here will end. My quest for undergraduate knowledge will meet it's end by a double-barrel shotgun
called employment. Don't waste it away.
.

• To all Sophomores aild Juniors, you're on the way. Enjoy it. Don't spen? th_e
r~st of yo~r
days here accentuating the negative with an the positive thins around us. Every mstJtution has its
faults. Marist has many benefits as well. I challenge you to find them. They .may not be as hard to
find as you think.
_
,
For the Class of' 96, we have some great things planned in our last year together. Our Class
President, Nicole Montipagni has great things in mind for us. Please don't miss out. College only
happens once. (}rad school doesn't count. Let's celebrate our Senior year together.
So to end the risk of this sounding like a farewell speech, I dare to boldly go where no Pres.
has gone before. Student Government has always seemed to have problems communicating with
• students. No matter how hard we try, we never seem to deliver what you really want: This year, we
try to change that We are focusing this year on giving you what you want. He~ng yo~r com-
plaints, praise, suggestions, and criticism, and addressing th~m. ~e want to ~ak~ this year m SGA
to be as participative as possible; And with your help, we will dehver. I promise tt.
As VP for Stuaent Programming Lynn Russo said, this needs to be SGA's "year of re-
sponse". This needs to be the year that we come through. For the students, for _the faculty, for the
administration, and for Marist. We plan to make this year one for the books. Jom us.
Dear Class of 1997,
I just wanted to let our class
know how good it is to see
everyone back after the long
summer. I am sure the first few
weeks of life back at Marist
has been very hectic and
strange for us all, especially
now that it seems we are scat-
tered all over the north end
Off and Running,
Mikael T. Carlson
Student Body President
and throughout Poughkeepsie.
I have a feeling that this year
will be a great experience for ev-
eryone. Although Junior year
may have a very different look
and feel to it just remember the
more things change, the more
they will stay the same. It is hard
to believe that we have come so
far so fast in our college years.
This should be the ear when
our class takes a big step closer
to
tl1e
real world, but at the same
time an even bigger step iowards
our friendships in our class.
On that note I would just like
to stress that Chris Kadus, Dave
De Vito, Patrick Mara and myself
have been working hard these
last couple of weeks to get
things together for the class. We
reall can't do this alone and we
Well, by now we're about three
weeks into the semester, and
I'd like to welcome you all
back. Hopefully you're all
settled in by now, and on your
way to a fine semester at Marist
College. For you returning stu-
dents, I'd like to welcome you
back. Student Government has
made some great leaps since
the end of last semester, tying
-
up some loose ends Jike the
Club Cap and the Freshman
Visitation PoJicy. With issues
like that already addressed,
we're excited to start up some
new projects.
For all freshman and
transfers, I'd like to welcome
you to Marist College. Hope-
fully your years here can be as
rewarding as they've been for
me. This is a wonderful institu-
tion, one that can offer you a
great deal of education and ex-
perience. Remember ~at this is
your college, and although you
have to follow rules and regu-
lations, you are also entitled to
possible change some issues
that need to be worked on. •
I see that I'm in the
third paragraph and I have yet
to introduce myself (great writ-
ing for a journalism major,
huh?). I'm Todd Lang, and I
hold the Senate Speaker. My
fellow senators have invested
their confidence in me to be a
spokesperson, and I intend to
do my best at that role.
What I'd like to say
mostly is that Student Govern
ment is here for you. You are th
people who voted us into thes
positions, and it is our job to fol
low up on what you ask. As
resident senator I a m designat
to represent students living o
campus. So if there's anythin
out there you want to kno
about, please let me know. M
extension is 4052, and I'm a resi
dent assistant in wonderfu
Marian Hall.
Please remember tha
Student Government is workin
for you and for a better Maris
College. When you walk by th
SGA office, stop by, say, "hi"
ask us some questions, get t
know the people you've electe
into office. The office is almos
always open, and although w
work in a professional atmo
sphere, we try to make it as light
hearted and down-to-earth as w
can.
On behalf of myself
and all of Student Government
let's try to make 1995-96 anothe
monumental year for Marist Col
lege and ourselves. You're pay
ing a lot of money to stay here
Make sure you get your money'
worth.
Like I said, give me
call, or stop by the Student Gov
emment Office anytime. We'll b
glad to help.
Todd Lang, Senate Speaker
Attention 'Seniors!!!!
SENIOR CLASS PICNIC
Sunday Oct. 1, 12:00 - 5:00pm
On the New Campus Green
Food!!! Music!!! Games!!!
and
Friends!!!
THE YEAR OF RESPONSE
Attention!
Any students interested in joining the
committee of safety and security
please call Emily Chu at x.4263 or
The Student Govt. Office at x.2206.
Student Academic Coucil NEEDS YOU
*
Get to know the faculty
*
Plan socials for your major
*
Voice student concerns to the faculty
*
Help improve academics at Marist
Contact Theresa Mottola at x. 4253.
need your help so if you have
any ideas on how to make this
year different from the past tow
please just let us know. You c3:11
call us anytime and my door is
always open to listen to you. I
will get back to you on definite
dates of meetings that we are
going to hold and where they
will
be.
Sincerely,
Chris J. Laline, President
Christopher
Kadus, Vice-
President
David De Vito, Treasurer
Patrick Mara, Secretary



































































\
-·-
.
.
THE
CiRcur
:FEATURES
.::·sept~mber2l,:
1995
Students del>a.te
p~os a:nd cons
Qf
living
Off
~~!!'Pl.1.~
/
as to other admini;ira:. .-------------------------------,
. .
_Junior
p~s Ylcci:thfmaturity itlook to
.
by
BLYTHiMAusoLF
Staff Writer
The number of students liv-
ing off campus may not have
increased, but attitudes about·
housing have changed ..
According to
.Martin
Rule, as-
sistant director of Housing and
Residential Life, students are
becoming reluctant to move off
campus.
"Retention
is causing

attrition,.,Jt.used to be students
would leave voluntarily, they
couldn't wait to move off cam-
pus. Now it's turning around,
everyone wants to stay on cam-
pus," Rule said.
Rule said that due to this
year's limited housing, the
housing office relied on the pri-
ority point system to make the
difficult decisions. Although
the point system has not
changed from previous years,
students are accumulating more
points than in the past.
This year, students needed an

average of 24.55 priority points
to live on campus. This was a
considerable increase from last
year's 21.55 average.
"The
average was much higher
~han anyone thought it would
be," said Rule.
After· the final calculations,
Rule said 169 students were
turned away from Marist hous-
ing. The cuts were made in two
waves: one in the first week of
June, and one in the last.
The denied students received
a letter stating they were not
able to receivehousing; They.
alS(?received
_a'p;ickage
of.other
available residential options.
Many of the

students chal-
lenged Marist and complained
to the Housing Office,
as
well
tors.
According to senior.
Amy Capozzolo, com;.
plaints arose because
students
received
housing denials too
late.
Capozzolo explained
that it was inconve-
nient to try to find time
to search for housing
over the summer.

Capozzolo saicl_ she.
and her mother had to
take time off from
work to locate an

M i_c h·e I I e • ~·inciep¢n~en_t:
-;: .
,·,2:
/
frosc~ ex-.-
,-~•n•~
a
Iofmoi:e responsibiHty.

plained that· You have·to pay:for.your bills.
.
~·-
l_~_vJng.
off-:·;fou,¥.com~:lllO~~lectri~tt)'.-
.
j:ampus·was
consc10us::.c)'otfdon!t.rtin out


rilucb'easier.
,
:
and_leavfeyery lighto'n' in the

"I.wanted
house:
::::•anyµiore,".'
said

to
move off
Capozi.olo.
·.·.;,:
_



·•cmn,pui°be~·


Mongr.iinadde<l,."Here, you
--~ause_
J
.
can'tcallyourRA'o(S~untyif.
.didn't
want • the~'s a'pfobleriti you have fo
to
<
go
deal w~thit,. gef ~bold of y~ur
through the
landlord.
~e~
you live on
ha$sl~.--':_of campus everything is very ac-
housing
or'
••
cessible tcfyou;"

••

..
.

-
-
of security...
••
•••




;~~~~~::;sie.
in
:~w:;~~~
•-_
IQte:rriships
"I accepted their de-
own," said

·






cision, but to find out
by Brian
Frankenfield
./
Frosch;
gi.
·.
ve.
s. em
ors
in the middle of July
According.
:::n;.e:~~;t
:~:~I~
~c::rr~~mo~s:::::
~~!:!;
.::::e-:!!=/~:.
i1ongrain~
pe,ek,into.
had found out sooner," said
Despite the echoing com-
most students live in
the
vicin-c·

··ar·.
·e·.
e--···r·
•..
fi·

·eld
Capozzolo.
plaints, some students who
ityof other students, so they cio

.
· •• •
.
However, not all students were moved off campus, including
not feelisolated from their peers
s.
t.@.
e_
Tit~'
a,:e
·;p
•.
la.
ced.
_
as understanding as Capozzolo. CapozzoJo, have begun to en-
or the Marist comm:unity.
Kristie Pena, a senior from joy it.

"Where
I live;it's like Marist.

anywhere
froin psych

Queens, fought Marist's deci-
"It's quieter and you get to
Myendoftliebk>ckisallMarist.
hiisp__ii~lto the Wtzco
..
sion from the beginning.
choose when you want to see
people, so thatmakes it better,
Pena did not receive housing people. rm getting my
.work
too. I'm still surround by Marist,
hearings
in· Congress_
because she lost priority points
done a lot faster. There's not
as
but in a different location," said
as a result of room damage fines. many interruptions with people
Mongrain.
by KRISTIN RICHARD
Pena said the college
_claimed
stopping by on their way home·
However, according to Frosch,

-
Sfaff Writer
that the curtain rods were miss-
from class," she said.
off cam_
p.
us hou.
sin.
'g
do.
e_
s invoke

-
·
:
·
Pain snorkeled in the
ing from her room, although
Some students, including
more concerns for the students~
Hudson.C.Matt talked to a
they were not. Upon a re-exami-
Allyson Mongrain, voluntarily including crime, bills and main-

·
·
,
·
·
.
-
·
· ·
nation of the room, the rods
chose
to
move
into
tenance. As
a:
result,-she said

child, moleSter:.,-AinY:<1t-
were found, and. Marist apolo-

Poughkeepsie.
. .
.
they are forced to. be. more re-.
ten~ed

tbe
•W~~o
hea,firigs.

gized for the mistake. However,
Mo.ngr·
ain chose to live o.
ff

spons1ble and• s·elf.::
sufficient.·
)-
I{i~ led grc:>tip
th~rapy.
·
·
·
>
TheseMarist seniors have
Pena still had to fight for her
cainpus and loves the differ-
"Our phone has beeri shut off-
orte'·thi.
• ••
ng.·
jri
comm.·
on: This
..
housing.
ence.
twice already, but it's getting··
·
·
· ,
·
·
·
.
·
• ,
.

-
.
-

• -
year
..
'· t
..
h.
ey be
..
·.
gan
...
to exp lo
..
re
"We started fighting at the top··

''Hike coming.home
..
to. m.
y· eas.
ier as tim.
e
..
goes
o.
n
..
·•"
Fros.
ch
·
·
·
·
·

·
·
·
the working' v,r_orld
through
and threatened to go to the me-

house a.t. night; espec.
i.a.
uy·
:-.be-
said. "Atfifst itwas a little hec- .
··
·.
·
· ·
their seniodntemships:
>
dia; Intheend,Iendedupwhere
cau.
seit'.smy· seniorye.ar,Ithink tic, butour.r.e.
ntincludese.vecy-

·
·
·
·
·
·
-
.
Every year, students from
I
was supposed to be, but it was this was the best choice for me.
thing . We only pay for. cable
ali maiors search for intern-
at the expense of a s.
u.
riuner of
At first, I didn't
.w.·
ant tO move

an.d th.
e.pho
..
ne_·
.".
: ·•·
....
••.
-
..
. . .
.
~
.

-
·
shipsto fulfill their gradua-
fighting and aggravation," said off campus, but boy am I glad I.
.
..
c.·
...
apozzolo sa.id
'she
felt
the
big.
-
·
·
·
lion reqtiiiernents at Marist.
Pena.
did it!" ~aid Mollgrain.

,
gestdifferenceof_livingoffcam-.
For some, including Mat-
Gate House and St. Peter's:
thew Stevenson, the experi-
ence gained through intern-
ing is invaluable.
preservingthe
Maristtraditio.n\
by NoRIE MozwNE
Staff Writer
No matter howclose the con-
struction on Route 9 comes to
campus: certain buildings can-
not be touched.
. The United States Department
of the Interior has placed two of
Marist's buildings on the Na-
tional Register of Historic
Places.

These buildings, the Kieran
T.
Brennan Gatehouse and St. Pe-
ters Cottage, are the two small
stone buildings between Lowell
.
Thomas and Donnelly.
These buildings were con-
structed around 1870 and origi-
nally belonged to the Bech Es-
tate, which the Marist Brothers
purchased in 1908.
.
Through the years, they have
had a wide variety of uses.
According to Brother Paul
Ambrose, St.Peter's served as a
residence for the Marist Broth-
ers until 1969. Before that, the
gardener of Bech's Estate used
it
Ambrose said St. Peter's was
named for the Marist Brothers
who Jived there from 1909 to
I 936, and who taught classes at
St.
Peter's
School
in
Poughkeepsie.
.
-
Today, Ambrose uses the
Gatehouse as a residence and

workspace.
.
.
.
.
He is the· Coordinator of
Maiist's Foreign Missions, an
organization that carries out the
Mari.st Brothers' original mis-
sion statement. This includes
a dedication to the principle of
service and a pursuit of higher'
human values.

_Marist's
Foreign
.Missions
programs extend around the
globe to over 72 countries and
846
schools.
Ambrose also· assists many
of Marist's foreign students,
and he often visits their fami-
lies all over the world.
However, the programs at
work inside St. Peter's Cottage
do not only benefit Marist stu-
dents. They also benefit the
youth
in
the area.
.
'I\vo of these'J)rograms, Lib-

erty Partnerships
Program
(I.PP)
and Upward Bound, are fo-
cused on the futures of
America's youths.
LPP is designed to provide
students in grades five through
12 with a broad range of ser-
vices and activities. These ser-
vices
.are
aimed at increasing
St. Peter's
is named after Marist brothers who
once
lived ther~ .
students' motivation togradu-
them. The youthht this program
ate from high school and col-
have been blessed," Kenney
lege. and to be successful in the
·•·
said.
.
.
.
work world.
.
St.Peter's also houses Upward
--Denise
Kenney, Associate Di-
.
Bound, a similar program Jhat
rector of LPP, said the students

has been at Marist for 'over
30
chosen for this state- funded
years.
_ . . .. _
.
..
.
program are at risk, but through

The program serves high
no fault of their own.
school students in Dutchess,
In LPP, risk is measured by stu-
Orange, and. Ulster counties.
dents' academic performance,
Unlike LPP, Upward Bound is
school attendance, behavior,
a federally-funded prograni.
and other factors affecting their
_
Congress mandated that two-
school work.
.

.
thirds of the students in Upward
LPP has been at Marist for
Bound come from families with
about five years, and it helps
incomes below
$24,<XX>
(forfami-
children and young adults in the
lies of 4), in which neither par-
Poughkeepsie and Kingston

ent has graduated from college
.

districts.

David Greiner, the Program Co-
lt
has established a variety of
ordinator for Upward Bound,
programs, including tutoring,
said the students receive tutor-
_career
exploration, personal de-
ing in all subjects throughout
velopment, and cultural and so-
the academic year, and they par-
cial activities.
ticipate in an intensive six week
"'This program allows us to in-
residential

program during the
tervene early in children's Jives summer.
and develop a relationship with
"I
learned more this sum-
mer tl!aniil any <>f"ly
Marist
classes," Stevenson· said.
"There's riothing better than
hands~on experienee.''.
...
Stevenson·interried this
summer at the John Umstead
Hospital,
a
state
mentalfacil:
ityin North C:a.rolina/
• •
•.
_
Stevenson, a p'sychology
major, worked
"With
ado}~'."

cents in the long-temi uriit of.
the· hospital
,
for: over· 500
hours;·.
,ffi{&sponsibiUties
i11clugediteac~ing
physical
education cours~,' counsel~
ling
a
young· sex.:offender,
and Cworking as a rehab
technician.
. _
;
.
Stevenson-said he did as
much_
at
the hospital_ as he
could legally do, and the in-
ternship
:tested
his abilities.
"It was a tremendous chal-
lenge for me, and
I
wanted to
make sure
l
could live up to
that challenge,"
he
said.
Political science major Amy
Carpino said her internship
alsochallenged_her. Carpino
worked in the marketing and
development department of
the American Enterprise In-
stitute (AEI), a conservative
think-tank for public policies
in Washington,
o:c ..

At AEI, a non-profit orga-
nization, Carpino said her du-
Please see
Int.em,
page
7 ...
l
j
I
!



























llli
THE.-CIRCLE,.September:21;

1995
7
orlds

S~perhuIDan
_cuisine
-at 'The Daily Planet'
by CRAIG
GoTIILLA
Food Critic
Three brothers now own
three restaurants.
The Vanikiotis brothers,
Teddy, Peter, and Dino, have
owned and operated the Palace
Diner since 1981. In 1990, the
Brass Anchor became the
family's second establishment
The Food
Guy
in the Mid-
Hudson Val-
ley. Three
months ago,
they opened
a third restaurant, the Daily
Planet,
on Route
55 in
Lagrange ville.
The Daily Planet is billed as
"an American diner." An in-
scription on a wall tells people
the diner was inspired by the
movies, television, music, and
historical events that dominated
the 20th century. The restau-
rant is decorated with memora-
bilia from the 40's through the
-----
-
----
-
------
-
---
--
-
-.·
---
- --
-----
==-= ':'

70's.
My table was located in the
70's section, an area dominated
by pictures of the Partridge and
Brady families. A copy of
The
New York Times from March 23,
1976 hung above my table.
I was not given much time to
absorb the nostalgia, because a
courteous waitress promptly
took my order.
The nostalgic theme on the
walls is also reflected in the
menu, since many of the items
listed are renamed.
Appetizers at the Daily Planet
include Kryptonite Sticks, a.k.a.
mozzarella sticks ($4~85), and
Speedy
Gonzales
Nachos
($4.85). Another interesting
choice is the Fu Manchu
Dumplings, which are pork-filled
dumplings served with a ginger
soy sauce ($5.85).
A variety of salads, ranging
from $3.25 to $6.85, and soups
are also available.
I opted for the Bionic Buffalo
Wings ($4.85), a plate full of
plump and tender chicken wings
smothered in a spicy sauce,
served
with blue cheese
dressing and vegetables.
There is also a vast selection
of entrces, including Aunt Bea's
pork chops ($9.95) and Yellow
Submarine Sole ($11.25).
This
"American
diner" also
includes !he Jitterbug ($5.95), a
classic
char-broiled
patty
served open-face on white
bread with brown gravy.
Several burgers are offered,
arid
i
decided to try the Fonz
Burger ($3.50). This is a huge
patty, piled high with toppings,
and served with Daily Planet
secret sauce.
A vegetable burger, the Joe
Friday ($3.50), is available for
the health-conscious customer.
For an additional $1.95, a
burger will be accompanied by
a
hearty portion of french fries.
The Daily Planet has its own
bakery and freshly bakes a
variety of pies and cakes daily.
!finished my meal with a cup
of coffee ($0.75) and a gigantic
slice of Chocolate Mousse Cake
($2.75).
The restaurant also offers old-
fashioned soda fountain favor-
ites, including a classic banana
split ($3.45) and extra thick milk
shakes, such as the Elvis ($2.25)
and the Roll Over Beethoven
Banana Shake ($2.85).
For customers 21 and over, a
full bar, an extensive wine list,
and a wide selection of beer are
available.
The Daily Planet is open for
breakfast,
and it serves
traditional breakfasts, such as
eggs and pancakes. Captain
America ($2.65) is two eggs
served with potatoes and toast,
and Magilla cakes are an
interesting
combination
of
buttermilk pancakes covered
with bananas and chopped
walnuts.
At the Daily Planet, good
food, good service, and a great
atmosphere
make for an
enjoyable
meal. If you like the
Palace, you'll Jove the Daily
Planet.
~
Rating: 4 of 5 Forks







































8
THE
CntcLE
•.

EDIT()RIAL
September2l,l995··
T'H£
CIRCLE
The Student Newspaper of Marist College
Daryl Richard,
Editor-in-Chief
eredith Kennedy,
Managing Editor
Teri Stewart,
Sports Editor
ue Fischer,
News Editor
arry Boada,
A&E Editor
Holly Diaz, Feature Editor
Brian Frankenfield,
Opinion Editor
Jen Forde,
Business Manager
(;. Modele Clarke,
Faculty Advisor
The Circle is published every Thursday.
The opinions
and views of this
newspaper
do not necessarily
reflect those of the Mari.st
administration.
© Copyright, TheCircle, 1995

~,,·
.
~~,;~
..
A»t
·•·
--o
0
.
··..
.
..
....
:I·
.••
.
'fir,"
..
.
·--.
Editorial
.
Pataki reinstates the·death'.
pe11alty
Oust apathy, get involved!
PRo
CoN
It has been three weeks since the death penalty
New York has a new governor- Georg~ Pataki.
"I
wish Marist would get more computers in the Donnelly lab~" became law again in the state of New.York.
:A
cen-
New York has a new lease on life - lethal injec-
"I can't stand using our library. It's so unorganized and never
tral
issue in the last gubernatorial campaign, it has tion.
.
_
...
has what I need."

transcended party lines and created new coalitions
. •
Gov; Pataki'. promised to reinstate the death
'The
administration never listens to the students."
from every region of the state. But, is New York penalty in New York in his campaign against
If I had a dime for every time I heard a student complain about ready for the death penalty?
fonner Gov. Mario Cuomo.·. He was successful.
some aspect of student life at Marist, next year's tuition bill would
The answer, quite humiliating for the
He. won the election·, he passed the -
already be paid off.
Pataki aaministration, is no. The already
law· reinstating capital punishment,
It is a natural reaction for a person to vent their feelings when
overburdened judicial system in New
andhasmadeNewYorkthe38thstate
something bothers them. H~_wever,
Marlst students all too often York is by no means equipped to deal
with this law. This controversial de-
vent, but then do not do anything about what is bothering them.· with capital cases because we haven't
.
·cision
brougQ(soinething'.else
to New
Most people on this campus, students and faculty alike, are had any in such-a· long time.
Yooc.

• •

probably tired of hearing about this recurring apathy, but it is an
The death
·penalty
is often used by poll-
-
It has brought
mote
violence to our
issue I want to address.

ticians~ Gov. Pataki included, to make
·

.
state. With this decision to bring the
Not because I want to complain about people complaining (which themselves appear tougher on crime than their op-

death penalty back to_NewYork,<:iov.
Pataki
J:ias
most people do when they talk about apathy), but because1 have ponent. Numerous studies show thatcapital pun-

ariswered violence ~ith y_ioienc:e/Clianging
the
a personal success story that illustrates how being proactive pays ishmentisnotadeterrent. Recidivismiatesinstates punishment from the el~tric:c~air to lethal in-
off.



which have the death penalty prove that it is not jection
.does
not soften his d~ision.

Does it
Years ago during ~Y first semester as a fr~hman, I often sat our salvation from crime;
.
..
soundlikeamorecivilwayofkillingsomeone?
down :,vith my friends· arid eniiles~ly.
complaj~ed _
~bout_
the com-

--·•
The death penalty is an emotional i~sue, and we

_.·
The answer is no ..
·.
There is.
no
civil
,Vfay
of
..
,
..
munications clubs on campus:·-·"·"'"'-
-
''
,
:-' -.,
''.1>:·'.
-:,:
-::must
respect those' who·disagree with this,vie:w
-k.HliJtg
anyone. I~-is called ctu.~Faii'ifurtiisua:i'·-·:·
'··
The newspaper was stuck in a quagmire with Student Govern.:
·because
they have reasons for supporting the punishment., It is cruel te>
take anotJ}er
human's
ment regarding the integrity of their coverage, MaristCollege
claimsofpeoplelikePataki;
•.

life,.no one has'.the nghtto
·do
that. So why
Television did not even have their own studio
and
WMCR ~ould
The m~n problem, however, with-the reinstate-:
.should
the government have the right to decide
barely be heard on the other side of campus.
_
.
.
.
.
. _
_
ment of the.death penalty by the Pataki administra--; who should be killed for what crime?

In the middle of one of my tyrants I had
an
idea .. \\Thy nottfy_and
_tion
is that
the
governorfailed
in
his r.esponsibiUty,
0:
The decisionto change from the electric chair

fix the problem? I had four years ahead of me to tackle the issues:. to make sure. thatthe court systeID was prepared JO
;
to)etllal injection is confusing .. We know that
Well, my letter campaign to
.administrators
quickly lost stea,m
·.handI,e.
de.ath penal~y c_~es.

The· language of the·

use of_ the el~ctric
-
chatr costs, the taxpayers
after being told they wouldn, distinto me until I Illet witli ~GA'and bill.
that
he signed·was bad enough in
tenns
ofits
-:
money. It is expensive,' It. is also
a
very disturb-
tried to solve the problems with their.he.Ip'.
:
<
...
_
... _,
.
,>
...
_
..... ,
ability.¢,be.~nde.rstooft·even by members oqhe
ing wayt<>.
die. I~ invokes fear,
:
_


.
.
__
.
So
I
did the next best thirig - lbecame·an active part of the clubs: bar/but in .idditiorfto that, the governor and his
Death by lethal injection has the.same affect. •
After a year with MCTV, I decided to focus on my stronger area of
team .left New .YorWs62 district attorneys ill pre;,
.Is
it
an
easier, less painful way
to
r:lie?
The
crimi-
journalism ... print..

_
_.
.
• •
pared to
try
capital cases.: Their· offices have. spent

nal is still going to die,
,Changing
to lethal injec-

As.
a result, The Circle provides me with· an outlet to induce the
_su~e,r
preparing °foi:
these new responsibili~:
_
tion has no impact on the issue; There wiilstill
change;asdomostoftheclubsoncampus.
Sincejoiningthestaff-
ties,withUttlehelpfiomtheAlbanyelite.·.,
·:becleath
......
,
_
-_....
_
_
:
·.·,
:
-

at the beginning of last year, I have been fortunate enough to be
-
Public defenders are another piece of the puzzle

·
Mayt>e
Gov. Pataki was trying to please those

offered the position of editor-in~chief.
that Pataki either failed to consider orsirnply chose who.oppose tJ:ie_
d~ath penalty
fodts
cruelty.'
]f
The combination of
a
dedicated staff and good timing (just as I
to ignore. They are not trained to deal with clients
.wm
not work.,
H_
there
·is_
a complaint
-
that the

became editor, The Circle got new desktop publishing software) who may be facing the death perialty. The office
·electric
.chair
is too harsh and.cruel. than_you
started· the newspaper on the road to a more professional and that was set up in Albany at the last minute to help J1ave to complain about killing'so_meori_e·no
inat-
respectablepublication.
_..
.
_
_ ..
.
with this situation
is
both understaffed and seri:- ter what the means.
.
_
_ _ __
_ _
<
.
__
i
There is a lot to be said abo~tthe other clubstoo.
_.
.
ously afflicted with bureaucratic slowdowns.


N~w York has not baa'
a
:capitafpunishment
MCfV
got their own studio Ias.t ye;µ-and were recently donated
The poor of New Yor~
are
entitled to a fair trial law
since
1977.
Itis tiueihatcrirneandviolence
a working news set from W1ZA, a news station in Kingston.
-
just as much as the friends of the governor, but · have risen since theri,.bufrioi' beca~µtere
has
WMCR will soon
be
moving into·their new home, gi.ving them a Pataki, it seems, was iµ.ore concerned with g~tting
_
116r~1t: a d~th penalty ... a<?.riiic.id~
ra~J1ave
lot more space and the capacity to work in a more professional the death penalty in place more
-quickly,
insteaa of
:no_t
proven to d#ease
in.
siaies'
wiih the ~eath
manner.
_
.
.
_
_
_·._.
creating a furn foundation forits implementation.

penalty. The death penalty·can·11ot ~rve the
I
would run down theaccomplishm~nts of the oth_er
61
clubs· on
The death penalty's most immediate effect on "Joe•
_purpose:of
de~erring crime: w.lii1i
~~re~_
roo
campus too; but
I
would need this whole page to myself.·

_

taxpayer" will be the huge costs that the state will many people with psychologicarproblems
.who
However, evidence is routinely visible of their impact. Fund rais.;. incur in trying death penalty cases; These could
.
can not think rationally. Jeffecy:Dahmer would
ers, club sponsored events; community service, student panels on range from several million dollars for the first few not have feared the death penalty'after hisTtrSt
administrative concerns (student were an integral factor in the re-
cases, to at least
a
million thereafter, while the is-: murder nor
_after
his 12th..
_
,
..
:
,,
... '..

__
·•
cent screening of the candidates for the new Dean of Cornrnunica- sue is tested in· the-courts. And
-
you can bet the
Governor Pataki Js making an effort to
tions).
The
list goes on.
Governor's Mansion
.on
the.
fact that the Pataki_ cut down
crime
in New
Ycirk:
He deserves
credit
In addition, becoming a leader in any field, be it journalism or administration will raise your taxes to deal with this for thaL He did not make the
right
decision in
fashion design, gives you
a
foot in the door when entering the littlesideeffect. (Ortheycouldjusttakethemoney
reinstating the death penalty, even with lethal
career world.
from the college students again. We can afford it, injection. He knew that New Yorkers were
.tired
Faculty, administrators and professionals are well aware of the right?)

of fonner Governor Marlo Cuoino refµsing the
students who are taking initiative to induce change. Unfortunately,
My message to Governor Pataki is this: If you bills for the death penalty. He may have used
not every student who is active in campus events is recognized for must implement the death penalty to make up for that knowledge, put it in his campaign platform
their hard work and dedication.

.
your Jack of substance on other issues, than do it and won votes.
But remember that is not any single person, but the Marist com-
properly. Make sure that the state bureaucracy
It would be a shame if that was all he was think-
munity as a whole that will make student life everything that stu-
has the tools and staff it needs to deal with the ton ing about. Politicians should stop answering
dents want from it.
of unnecessary problems you have just dumped violence with violence and start concentrating
So get off the couch.join a ct_ub
(or clubs) and tackle the prob-
on them.
on fixing our legal system.
lems at Marist from the inside.
Students can make a difference if they are willing
to
put in a little
time and elbow grease.
Sean White, Political Columnist
Lauren
Guerriero,
Political Columnist
'v,




















THE CIRCLE·
VIEWPOINTS
September21, 1995
9
Change:-
atMarist ...
in life ••
_Computers,
Confidence
and Candy
Bars
.
• niJ
year
is
1992.
J,
a long with most other upperclassmen
llOW,
am
a freshman at Marist College...
. .
There is no such thing as The Student Center or The Midrise
there is. no green .. ;only
}l
~arge black~topped
parking
Jot fo;
commuters ... The ~ew Townhouses are nothing more than
a
pile of •
rock and an outcropping of trees and shrubs ... All traffic enters
Marist throllghonly two entrances, one right next to the baseball
field and the other near The Bank of New York .
Bertiesjs not the happening place on Friday.nights, instead it is
a dance club in downtown Poughkeep~ie called Let's Dance ... and
oiiFriday afteinoons·a littlebar.across the street from The Lowell
Thomas Center
mu11#J:
Skinner)Js jam packed '"'.ith_students
of all
ages .. ;
. •
..
·, •
. • . .. . .
. .
_
After you get ~ack ·rroll!.
a mugll .Friday' or· Saturday night out,
you do not head to _tlle
Cabaret: .. y()u go toJ'he River Room in the
bottom of Champagnat Hall.

Here you c_an get a slice of pizza and a Snapple for a couple
bucks all the· way up\mtil
iwo
in the morning.
-

The parking lot behi~d G¥tiandCoIDmons, ironically named Hoop
Lot,
is not a parking lot at all, but rather a set of two outdoor
basketball courts.

. · You can go· any decent day of the year and find. a game
there ... along with a couple of fow hoops for dunking purposes ...
Parking· in • Beck Place does not exist. . .instead, there are houses
there; some student occupied and some occupied by residents of
Poughkeepsie.
Across the street from Dyson is Marist East, then Fulton
Street. .. now Walmart?.
Anyone could take a walk downbehind Champagnat Parking Lot
to the tennis courts and play a decent game of tennis, and if you
happened to become sick or ill you didn't go to The Midrise to find
the infirmary, you traveled to a small building between Champagnat
• and Leo Halls...
.
And the construction on Route 9 has just gotten underway, coin-
ing the term ''Vision
'94" ... then "Vision '96" ...
Withi:iut a doubt, there has been an enormous amount of change
here since those care-free days of freshman year ... some for the
better and some for the worse.
Often, being involved in so much change can be confusing, dis-',u,
turbing, and sometimes overwhelming.
It makes it easy to get caught up in the inconsequential, the
unessentials,. and many times even easier to lose track of the im-
. The worid sure has changed
·a. lot since the so-called
"good-old days".
Back in the "old" days, the
really cool thing to own was a
sports car.
You know, a
454 big block
engine, dual exhaust, fuzzy
dice hanging from the
rear view
for that special look. -
The car was the real Ameri-
can status symbol.
.And if I've learned anything
'from Happy Days re-runs and
American Graffiti it is that if
your car is the fastest you
could win the admiration of all
the girls.
"Hey Betty Sue!! If
I beat
BillyBobinadragraceonSui-
cide Curve will you be my
girl?"
And the girl would swoon -
"Oh Johnny!!"
But today the status symbol
is the· personal computer.
These are the only things
that compare with the muscle
car of yester-year.
You know, Pentium Proces-
sor, Windows
95 for "multi-
tasking",
five color laser
printer.
These are today's status
symbols.
But unfortunately women
cannot, as far as I can tell, be
tricked into going out with you
because of your computer
prowess.
"Hey Sally! If I download
these files faster than Jenkins
over in Cubide 7, wiU you go
out with me?"
poitant_thirigs i~ Hf~. .
. _ •
-
,.·. •
, . . _ .
To upperclassiiie11:
,Doil•·~
gft
caught up.: Take the iinie'to reinern~
: • ber, to recall,. what is important to you ... Don 't forget where you
come from, how you gothere; and who helped to get you here.
·: • -- Itjustdoesn't worli;
Recognize the people who were there for you ... are there for
you ... and appreciate them. · Thank them.·
To underclass~en: Be carefuL • You wiUchange, it is inevitable.
It is also
O.K.,
as long as you keep clear in your mind your sense
of who you arei
. • •
.

Change because you want to, not because others force youto.
Most i~p<>rtantly,
never forget those who were there for you, those
wl10 helped bring you here.
'I'hey deserve your respect-at the very least. Learn all you can,
not just academically, but practically.
.
. Many peop~e say change is a scary thing. It can be if you let it
be;
.
.if
it controls you'. Uowever, it can also work to your benefit. It
can make you stronger, it can bring you knowledge: It isup to you
to determine which way it will work ... if you are passiveit will con-
trol you without a doubt, but if you are active you can use it to
work wonders. Whichever you decide, keep in mind...
'
... You will experience change everyday for the rest of your life; ...
Britin Frankenfield,
Opinion Editor
Don't lose the. innocence
• A long time ago~
·as
I sat
at the kitchen table of our
typical suburban home
refusing to eat the spinach we
were having for dinner, my
mother asked me what seemed
to be a rather simple question:
My
Turn
''What
do you
want to
be
when you grow older?'
It
didn't appear to be a
trick question.
When you're in
elementary school, everyone
knows
their choices. •
My occupation would
either turn out to be that of a
policeman, a doctor, or a
fireman.
As time progressed,
however, I began to learn that
it was not exactly a trick
question, but certainly a
difficult one, and it was far
from simple.
Lastweek I woke up to
the sounds of the train
running behind campus, the
scratchy voices of the water
plant workers over their
outdoor intercom ... and that
same question running
through my head.
Being only eight
months away from graduation
and my entrance
into the 'real
world', and having approxi-
mately sixteen years of
education behind me, I am still
left without an absolute
answer ... but maybe that's how
it's supposed to be.
Whenever I'm called up to
Whatever the case, I
still do not know the answer.
I do know that if
there's one thing , one feeling ,
that I would want to carry with
me for the rest of my life it is
most certainly the innocence
ofmy childhood ... when the
world was simple and
unthreatening.
When
I
had all the
answers I needed, yet hardly
knew anything at all.
Now, it seems that the
more educated
I
become, the
less I understand.
The more questions I
ask, the further away I move
from the answer.
The more I try to figure
things out, the more compli-
cated they become.
Often I wonder if the
people who are most happy in
speak in front of a large group
of people,
l
get nervous.
The amount of nervousness
is a direct result of the amount
of time I've known about the
speech I must give.
.
The more time to worry, the
more worried
I become.
But the only thing that calms
me down is that
I read some-
where that Americans fear pub-
lic speaking more than anything
else.
Speaking in public number
1,
death number
2.
I
find it hard to believe that if
someone was on stage pointing
a gun at your head right now,
you wouldn't gladly change
spots with that guy simply be-
cause he's on a stage in front of
people.
I mean, bullet in the head, or
podium.
Die of embarrassment or die
from severe head trauma?
Seems simple enough._
If it's a choice between deal-
ing with a coroner or dealing
with an audience, I'll gladly take
the audience.
I would like to talk about candy
bars.
Big ones
=
bad.
Small ones
=
good.
This is how candy bars work.
The Snickers bar is the small-
est one out there.
There are three - maybe four
dainty bites in a Snickers bar.
Because everybody loves
Snickers, you've got to eat it in
big bites.
. . T.hese things are the midgets
of the candy bar world.
But it's a different story with
life are those who are content
with what they know, those
who do not want to be made
aware of the world around
them ... those who are able to
retain the characteristics
common to that childhood
innocence.
I find it sad, espe-
cially at this stage in our lives,
that so many people lose sight
of this feeling. It is often held
back, or sometimes even
completely abandoned to
make room for things like
responsibility, and academic
knowledge. It is difficult
to
keep in touch with this
innocence when we are
preparing to enter an atmo-
sphere that shuns such
simplicity.
I have learned a great
many things in my last three
those Almond Joys.
Or those Mounds.
These things are huge!!
Almost the size of your ann.
• And nobody likes them.
It must be a huge vicious
circle with these things.
I mean since nobody likes
them, they must have great
stockpiles of the stuff Almond
Joys are made from just sitting
around waiting for a sudden
resurgence its popularity.
So the boys at the factory sit
around at executive meetings
and say things like, "Hey Mac,
what are we gonna do with all
this extra Almond Joy stuff!"
"Well, let's make these pup-
pies huge!"
But the problem with this
idea is that people still don't
like Almond Joys.
No matter how big they are.
So now they just sit around
in the vending machine.
Imagine the conversation in-
side of that vending machine.
"Hey you! Yea, the guy
about to put the dollar in the
machine.
Buy me! I'm huge! I've got
almonds and coconut.
I'm way bigger than that
Snickers bar."
And all the other candy bars
just laugh.
Even the 0-Henry laughs.
Because they know that the
people on the outside say "Al-
monds and coconut!!??
What were they thinking?
A,n,yway, got any change?
I'm hungry and
I
need
a
Snickers."
Scott Wyman
is
The Circle's
Humor Columnist.
years at Marist College,
however, the most important
of them were not taught in a
classroom nor gotten out of a
textbook ... they are not figures,
formulas, nor facts.
I called my mother
just the other day, and she
asked me, "Have you figured
out what you want to do with
your degree yet?" I told her
no, but
I figured out what I
want out of the rest of my
life ... to forever be a kid deep
down inside ...
Brian Frankenfield,
Opinion
F.ditor














.
'
JO
THECIRCLE
taking a __
Closer Look
at
Gafcia IncOtporated
by LARRY
BOADA
A&EEditor.
Hanging,out mostly on the
streets of Haight and Ashbury
in the early- to mid sixties, the
Grateful Dead were enjoying·
themselves; creating a band and
dabbling in the psychedelics
that could only lead to the lyr-
ics they wrote. These lyrics and
the jam sessions ·that acc:ompa-
nied them kept Deadheads danc-
ing for hours on end.
Garcia and the boys made their
first performance debut in July
of 1965 and quickly went on to
become the best known and
most
influential · of San
Francisco's rock pioneers. •
Over the many years since
their inception, the Dead's
highly recognizable s0und has
been described as lyric, melodic
and psychedelic. These terms
cording. eqtfipment • into shows
with
them; These "bootleg" re-
cordings became a major so'!}rce
of income for many Deadheads,
as well as spreading the band's
sound further than the few al-
bums the/released would take
it
Also for the benefit of their
audience, the band would play
multiple. nights at one arena .. -
This allowed plenty of peopl~
to attend their shows.
Each night's performance was
always diff~rent and often_guest
performers were asked to jam
along with them. _
Merchandising, a l_arge
part of
the band's income, became cen-
tralized through a,phone service.
Prices were set lower than the
privateers.
who
were selling
lower quality items.
The band also treated its em-
ployees better than most em-
do no justice, however, to mu-
Garcia and the boys
sic that culminated
many
genres: rock, blues, jazz and
made their perfor-
country.
mance debut 'in July
In a time when this country
was going through the crises of
of 1965 and quickly
segregation, the
Dead
were pull-
went on to become
ing sounds of every origin and
the best known and
culture togeth~r.
Not only was the music origi-
most influential
of
nal, but the band's ideology was
San Francisco's
rock
a revolution for the entire music
community. The Grat~fui'Dead '
pioneers.
became the creators oCmanyp --Io-y·
-e--rs-.-V-ie-te-ra_n_'_ro_a_d-ie,_s_a-:-,
n-d
• firsts in
the
music industry.
office workers who had been
Customer satisfaction i.s what mainstays with the company for
their philosophy narrows down
many.years are reputed to have
to.For the first time customers
eamedsix-figuresalaries. •
could mail~order tickets for a
Lighting and .sound techni..:
concert. Minimum prices were. ciaos, possibly scnne·of the ITIOst
always set for tickets and this
important people

the bands
.
quality and popularity, were al-
method allowed people to 1,1vo.1d ways given free controlof con~
the long lines and lottery sys-
cert set.:up;
• .·
• _
tern that usually accompanied
In effect the Dead employed
buying Dead tickets.
many customer and employee
The Dead were very much live
satisfaction tactics· that Fortune
performers, often switching up
a song and always blending se-
500 companies are only now
beginning to realize.• The Grate-
lections together to create an un-
ful Dead was in itself a large cor,.
interrupted improvisational
concert. More· importantly,
poration with Jerry .Garcia head--
though,. they were. the• first. of
ing up the CEO poStition.

many bands to allow showgoers
Wi
th the passing of this· soft-
to make recordings
of shows
spoken messiah, Deadheads
At the time·most performers
across .the world wait in· hopes
and arenas. had been banning
tha.t their favorite company
concertgoers from bringing re-
hasn't gone beJly~up.


Lee'S· "Clockers"·packs rftadn_e:at
by
SIMON COTE
Asst. A&E Editor
Thought you had heard the
terms "gat" and "capped" a few
too many times while watching
films
like
'Men.ace
II
Society; or
while listen-
As a relatively small time
mover, Strike works for big-time
drug lord. Rodney, played· by
Delroy Lindo.
Lindo, who·also appeared in
Lee's 1994 film "Crooklyn," is
otftective 'Rocco Klein(i,~ey
Keitel)
I
and:hi~ P¥tner pl~yed
by
John Turturro'whohas
a
ha.bit of sho\Ving up
0
in SpikeLee
movies,
,
During an intense questioning
scene filmed withintefrog~tion-
• Iike
si:yle,Victor
·surprisingly
confesses
to
the
murder.
• Opus 40: an environmental
sculpture like eighth \Yonder
of'the world
Just across the river, there is
an artistic creation which could
be considered the eighth won-
derof the world.
Opus 40 is an environmental
sculpture whicll covers seven
acres of land in Saugerties, New
York. Harvey Fite, who created
the piece, originally planned
to
use it as an outdoor gallery to
display his other sculptures.
The piece received its name
from the Latin word for "work",
and Fite's presumption that it
would take him 40 years to com-
plete the project.
Built upon an abandoned blue-
stone quarry, Fite fitted stones
together, using keystones to
hold them in place, creating a
series of circular pedestals to
hold his finished artwork.
About 20 years into the
project, Fite placed a nine-ton
piece of rectangular bluestone
on the center pedestal, planning
to carve a sculpture out of it. It
was at this point that Fite real-
ized his creation was more than
an art gallery.
Tad Richards, an English pro-
fessor at Marist; is the stepson
ofFite.
''My
stepfather realized that
what had started.out as the back
drop for sculpture had literally
become the sculpture, and the
carved pieces weren't relevant
to it anymore," said Richards.
So Fite decided to leave the
monolith untouched, and re-
moved the other sculptures
from· their pedestals. He then
spent the next 17 years of his
life working around the slopes
and natural springs of the land-
scape, continuing to create the
natural masterpiece.
"It was an incredibly coura-
geous thing to do," said
Richards, "to make such a com-
mitment to this immense, ab-
stract piece."
Fite died in 1976, three years
before his estimated completion
date. Fite's wife chose. not to
have another stone mason fin-
ish the sculpture because
tt
was
Fite's creation alone.
Richards said, " No one be-
lieved that he would actually
end his work after 40 years. It
was the product of his cease-
less imagination that could only
have been stopped by his
death."
About 10,000 people visit
Opus 40 each year. There is a
Quarryman's Museum on the
grounds which holds tools in-
digenous to the area, many of
which are handmade. In addi-
tion, there is a variety of enter-
• tainment
held . at the site
throughout the season, includ-
ing jazz concerts, poetry read-
ings and book sign!ngs.
Melanie Hayes,• a senior En-
glish major at Marist, recently
visited the site.
• •
"Words cannot describe the
beauty of the grounds. You can
see the painstaking effort put
into it. I was really taken aback
by it," said Hayes.
Both the grounds and the mu-
seum· are open Friday through
Sunday, from Memorial Day
through the end of October.
Admission is five dollars per
adult, four dollars for students
and seniors.
I
I

























THE _CIRCLE,
Sept~mber.21,.J995
. Sti1JUh¢t
teleases··give·
mix
of°ifuish·arid
alienlati~e.

.:
.
, ..
'
.
!
;.. byScorr
Wnwi . . ·.
best song fii:st'has always been
• ?
Sta.ff flrzter ;
·'
a
smart move as
r.tl-
as ·rm con-
• cemed) but even this song is
Well kids, whether you like it
certainly no. great leap forward
or not, the summer is just about in popl:Jlar
~usic. 'It typifies the
over.

Tha(being the: case it's • remainder of the CD, which con-
time to.do some housecleaning sists of the hackneyed pop
and get to some CDs' that have hooks stolen from the "Let's all
been patiently waiting for re-
sound like Nirvana" school of
view,·
CD Review
guitar playing,.whining "I'm so
The first emotive" vocals, and weak
• UP,;
is· a tongue~in-cheek lyrics. _
. b a· n d • This disc isnothing short of a
called Marilliori whose-.CD
yawn-fest, arid Gren's popular-
11
• "Afraid of Sunlight" jusi caine ity is yet another sign of the
out on the El Dorado label. This pathetic state of popular "alter-
bands' inusic has to raise the native" music today. (Even the
Marist hopes to so_c:,n
us.efhe new. campus green for outdoor concerts and graduation exercises.
question,C'DoesGod-theBig
cover art stinks.)·

Cheese himself -
like to rock
But if you are into every other.
out?" Because if he does, thi_s so called "alternative" band on
would have to be his favorite the radio and you think MTV
Nothi~g usual about 'The Usual Suspects'
band, hands down.
• and Kennedy are doing a swell
Newcomer Benicio Del Toro is
Marillion is all about dreamy job of playing some great vid-
by
AMmLEMIRE
excellent
as
Fenster,
pop-rock. Well, what the hell eos,thanmaybeGrenisforyou.
Staff Writer
McManus's Latino partner. He
• does that mean, I'm sure you're
Okay, now that we have that
stalks around like a caged ani-
asking.

Imagine Chris Issac on out of our way, let's move onto
• Okay, ask yourself this: what mal, muttering gibberish in an
valium after getting too much something good.
would happen iffive crooks met accent so thick, his scenes
Nitrous at the dentist· Real mel-
This past week one of the most in
a
New York police lineup and
should have subtitles. Gabriel
low: So mellow_
that everything successful independent/under-
decided to work together? That
Byrne is Dean Keaton, an ex-cop
kind of nms together into some ground punk bands in recent
is the opening question to The
turned thief, who is so cool, a
. sort of celestial jam session.
years released their major label Usual Suspects, a thriller by
shield of aloofness surrounds
Add to this ·some ambient/
debut The band is Jawbreaker, . Brian Singer guaranteed to
him
trance beats and you've got a the CD is called "Dear You",

knock
Lastly, there is Verbal, played
style of music that performs
and the label that is presenting
Y
O
u r
by Kevin Spacey. Verbal is
verywell~backgroundmusic,
this to the uninformed and un-
socks
crippled-hewalkswithalimp
if nothing else. •
washed masses is non-other
O
f f
and his left hand is curled up.
The best.tracks ar~-''.Cannibal than David Geffen Redords
faster than you can say P~lp
He's also timid, and is easily
Surf Babe'', where a tip of the
(DGC). -----...
.
, .
Fiction.· The nio~ie begins with pushed around. The others are
hat is given to The Beach,B9ys
With three independent re-
theNe~YorkPolice~epartment colder, harder, unafraid to shoot
surprisingly
enough, -and • leases unclertheirbelt this.three·•' roundmg up five thieves and
first; Verbal, in_ comparison,
"King" which sounds so fari_ul-• piece sold almost'as many
~auling them downtown for a
clearly doesn't fit in-with this
i3::
th_at
you'U ~wear you '3eard • records as.'Fugazi, {nearly
lmeuP.. . . . .
.
.. .
group.
this 011a rno_v1e
smmdtra~~ at
1,000,000 units) so it's no won-
Kevui Pot~ackpl~ys
ff~kney,
After the lineup, McManus
.,,.R?~:~?}~t
~~
~notA7r·
..
~~~t
10
n ..
_der
thetv~ been snatched up ,;,,.°.1~,
~;,~-~~;~ti;.?~~'
1
,11,
~;, b?:?c~;
J••
proposes the.five of them·work
•• -~~r~·1s-~~1~g·
theu; O\\'n thmg, c'Zby a· major: -Jawbreaker •hails Jiis vo.ic~_J>C>S_Itlvelrdrips
It ;, together; he has an easy job; an
tt s JustI m not sure exactly what fronLthe San Francisco Bay-
whene_v~r
lie. speaks. St~p?en ,_ emerald heist, that only needs
that is.
_
.
area,. which is quickly turning ~~dwm is McManus, ~e snurk-
five men. Everyone is ready to
Ab~d you mi~ht have heard into the newhot::spot for the."al-
mg show-~ff, a hothead prone
go, but Keaton•is reluctant; he's
over. However, he can't resist
one last job.
These partners in crime embark
on a thieving spree, beginning
with the emerald job, and end-
ing with an enormous explosion
on a dock where they were sup-
posed to accost a boat that was
unloading
$91
million in cocaine
.
At this point, the film flashes
forward
six weeks, and Verbal is
in San Pedro being interrogated
by Kujan, a U.S. agent, played
by Chazz Palminteri.
The acting here is magnetic;
each _actor carries his own
weight. Del Toro lightens up
scenes, mostly because viewers
can't understandwhat he's say-
ing. Baldwin and Pollack mouth
off and shoot insults to each
other most of the time, also pro-
._
vigi~g comic _relief._
__
"Keaton
is cool and ·calm
throughout the entire film, never
losing' his composure, even
Please see
'Suspects'
page 12 ...
-soniethi~g about m the I_astfew , tema_tive"
scene, what with the to throwmg punches and
been trying to keep clean, start
months 1s
I.RS.
recordmg art- _riseofRancid,BadReligion,and curses.
·ists Greri, and their debut_CD of course, every twel_ve year
r----~~---------------------------,1
_ _ "Camp Grenada.'' They have olds favorite, Green day.
b_een
lucky enough to hav.e their
But Jawbreaker has always
smartly titled single "pop s~ng" leaned towards a more de-
. inclu?ed on ~e heavy ~~fition · pressed angst-filled style than
playhstofmostso-call~ al.ter- ··the•aforementioned bands, and
native" stations across this :"Dear You" is no exception to
great land.
.
this rule. Tracks like "million",
~d that'sjust one side_ of
"jet black .. , and "bad sc~ne,
these three fellas-recent strin_g everyone's fault" are classic
of good luck. Apparently this Jawbreaker; depressing, pissed
band got their recorging dealby
off and loud.··
winning a nation-wide contest ·
This is truly one hell of a CD,
put on by I.R.S. an(l, a well-
no matter what label its on, the
known Canadian beer company. "sell-out'' controversy aside. If
But theJe inte~estin? ~p~ts
you get into this band and this
of Gren aside, therr_m~1c.1s
with-
great CD because of this or any
out·. any real· s1gmf1canc~.
other review, good for you.
"Camp Grenada" starts off with
But remember, I was there first.
the best tune, the aforemen-
tio_ned
"pop song" (putting the
Peace. Corps
at Marist
.
Monday,
September25th .
• Information Meeting:
7~8:30pm
Dyson Center, Ro9m
l
13 •
Apply
NOW forassign1neflts leaving
riextsum1ner .-·
For 35 years, 150,000 Peace ·corps
Volunteers have put their idealism into action.·
Now it's yourtum.
For more information call: 1-800-424-8580
. SPRING BREAK
'96
SELL TRIPS, EARN CASH & GO
FREE!!
Student Travel Services
is
now
hiring campus representatives.
Lowest
rates to Jamaica, Cancun, Daytona and
Panama City Beach.
Call 1-800-648-4849.
LARGESTSTUDENTTRAVELPLANNER
on East Coast looking for Campus Rep. to
remote Kodak SPRING BREAK trips
•Guarenteed• lowest package prices and
best incentives. You handle the sales ... we
handle the bookkeeping. Cancun, Nassau,
Jamaica, S. Padre, Orlando & Key West.
EARN
BIG
$$$
and/or
FREE
TRIP(S) ... GREAT FOR RESUME!!
Call 1-800-222-4432.
-







































































































t

: •••
'

,
'~
;]2
.•.
THE
CIRCLE;September21;.1995
'Suspects'
... continuedfrompage 10
when things go awry ..
·
Verbal
plays the role of the observer
-
because he is crippled, he is
usually overlooked or excluded
by the Qthers.
However, he shouldn't be dis-
missed as a minor character;
rather, Verbal is the star of the

show. The whole film is told by
Verbal, from his perspective, the
way he saw things; he is the sto-
ryteller. His performance here
will shock and haunt you.
Director Bryan Singer has a
blockbuster
of a suspense
thriller here; he plays each char-

acter off one another with bril-
liance, all the while turning the
screw;
winding the plot,
as
well
.'as
your nerves,
.
toward its ex:-
plosive ending.·

The final
scenes deliver an unbelievable,
"knock
you on your butt" end-
ing that will take your breath
away ..
Unfortunately, this film won't
get as much attention as 'Pulp
Fiction,' but it's just as good.
The
Usual Suspects will linger
in your mind long after its over.
My only advice is to bring a
jacket when you go to the the-
ater, because when this movie
ends, whether there's air condi-
tioning or not, you will have the
chills.
(Grade: A?).
GEAR UP FOR
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You've got questions. 'We've got answers
...































































.
.
.
.
THE CIRCLE,
Septeml>er.
2J
t
1995
13
.......
,.
•-
....
-
.
.
.

...
.

.

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-
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.
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.

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.
.

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.
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..
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........
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.
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.
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.
.
.
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.
.
.
-

11
~
' '

·;

• ::...

.-:
,
;.
.

.,,~
..
'
-·-
/
.








































I
I
t
I.
Men runners off to slow start
BOARD
OF EDUCATION
OF THE CITY OF._NEW
YORK
SCHOLARSHIP
PRO.GRAM
by MARK
SALVO
Sta.ff Writer
The Marist College men's
cross country team made
its
season debut in the Bronx's Van
Cortlandt Park for the Fordham
Invitational.
Of the nine schools at the
event, Marist finished sixth with
151 total points.
The subsequent _winning
school was
St.
Joseph's
of
Phila-
_
delphia.
Head coach Pete Colaizzo said
he
was
quite impressed with not
only the victor's performance
but the rest of the schools as
welt
"St.
Joseph's just dominated,"
Colaizzo said. ''The rest of the
schools· offered good· competi-
tion; it was a good quality field."
The best Red Fox finish came·
in the form of a sophomore,
MikeMelfi.
He placed tenth overallwith a
time 27 minutes 34 seconds on
the five mile course.
Junior Pat Casey finished 26th
overall, Jogging a time of28:25,
while freshman Chuck WiJliams
docked in at 29:40.
_As for what went. wrong last
Saturday, Colazzio said some of
the problems lied in his team's
lack of depth.
"We. did -not have enough
depth," Colazzio· said. ''The top
three ran well but the other po-
sitions needed to be a little
faster.'' •·
.
Colazzio said this would not
get him down since it was only
the first performance
of
the sea-
.
.
Please see
X'-Couniry
page
15 ...
• WE WILL
PAY
YOUR.TUITION!
Shape.
,The
Future
..Teach
New
York!
The New York City. Board of Education needs qu~lified staff
in
a number •
of critical areas: You
may
be eligible·for
a
Scholarship in one of the
areas listed below.

·1ryo'u are interested· in receiving'a fact s~eet:arid application J6r the
Scholarship· Program,
pleas·e.ret11rn the coupon-and a self;.
addressed· stamped envelope (business size) to. include 55J
postage no later than October
2,
1995 to:
Bureau of Recruitment-Programs
65 Court Street• Room 101
, ,Brooklyn, NY _11201 . ••
.
•··
: A.ttn: Scholarship Coo~inator/Pamela. KIiichowski.
1
PLEASE PRINT IN BLACK INK
COLL
1
I
.
.
.
I
:
NAME ___________
.;_______
.....
I
Sulljvan leaving post as· SID
-!
ADDRESS_LA_;.ST....;__ ______
...;..·
-'F_IR_ST....;__....;___·
M_..;.I (S091A) SECURllY#
!
his SID.
.
!
;,
TELEPHONE
t
·. _
!
... continued
from page.
_16
understand the day to day op-
erations of the sports teams on
campus; particularly the men's
and ·women's basketball
teams
as-well
as
lacrosse.
Sullivan.said his job now has
not changed· that much since
his earlier days, gathering sta-
tistics for the teams. :

Also; whi\e attending classes
at Marist, he was a member of
the soccer
team
and was named
the 1987 Sportsperson of the
Year.
• .,

Allison Sexton; .assistant to·
the athletic director, said the
~letic office will be a different-
place when he leav_es.
"He did a lot of work around·
here and will be a tough ~rson
to replace;". Sexton said. • , • -
She
also agreed
with Murray·
in that iris a tough time fo.r an
sports information director to
leave but stated she is confi-:
dent they. will find a. replace-
ment
.
.
.. ,
Murray appraised the work of
"Hedidanexcellentjobforthe
I
CITY
STATE
. ZIP
MOSTRECENTDEGREE
I•
colleg~." Murray said. "He ' • • .
,
, .
is viewed, in hii; pro~ession;~-:

tShortage Areas-Please
checkgnty
one box:
1
the best in the Northeast." •. ,
.
. .. .

I
~
' • •
BILINGUAL ·•
. . .
I . , :
Although the resignation may
j.

BILINGUAL..$PECl~LJ:l>_UCATION*·

I
~:s~~:::u:i:~ll~~~d
••
I

BILINGUAL.SCHOOL.PSYCHOLOGY**
.,
l
it did not surprise him.
. . ...
!

BILINGUAL
SCHOOL
SOCIAL
WOii~~~'
,
'
.
!
.. I
was aware he was involved

;·f ··-
.

BILINGUAL GUIDANCE &·COUNS.~1.ING*,*
I
in a search to advance his ca-
• I
. .
.
.

.
... • . -
.
I


I
MONOLINGUAL/BILINGUAL....
.

I
=~~~~=~~~i;~,sup:-
.. :
i:J
SPl;ECH
&
flEARINCl.tlA.NJ>ICAPPED*·:,
·i
:-_.
Murray also said he was
·., I
-.

DEAF & HEARING IMPAIRED*.
.. .
1
happy to
see
him get the job but
!

VISUALLY IMPAIRED*
•• • • •
f
disappointed to see him go. . _
.
I
"&.:hQ!arships
are
offered at
the
undergraduate (junior
status)
or graduate
level.
l
According. -to. Sullivan,
I
~"Scholarsh~
are
offered at
the
graduate
level only.
. •
I
Monmouth contacted him in late
I


.
."
• -
..
.
, , : .
· •
-
. _-

July to see if he was interested
l :
.
(Chee:~
One): -
Graduate Level _ Undergraduat~ Level· ' .
1

in a new position they had as .
I
If you a~ b.iJ!rl9U8:I
• (written 'and oral), please· indicate the language •.
other
the assistant athletic.director.for
I
t~~n El)ghsh
m
which you are proficient •
. .
.
• .
marketing and promotions .. -
~
I
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••~•••~•••••••••••••••·•••••••••••••••~••••
''My career goal 1·s·
to be an
,
IMPLEMENTATION OF THE SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM. IS CONTINGENT UPON THE
. "c
·1
AVAILABILITY
OF FUNDS AND THE NEEDS OF THE BOARD OF EDUCATION
OF THE CITY
Athletic Director," Sullivan said.
:
Of: NEW YO~K.

''I
Id •
d
th

'
I M
Affirmativ:I
AClien, Equal
Opponunily
Employer.
cou n t tum own e post-
.
I
U.S. Permanent
ReSldenl
Status
0,
U.S. Ciizensh,p
.ed
.••
tfon because
Of
thtfopportunity
I
it presented."

I
~XI
~
1.
.
• Murray said
the
search fore-
' ...
I' : •
!
~?h
u
I
place Sullivan is in fulfswing. • •
..._.;.,;....;.;;,;.....;.L
...... _______
-..;;-;.;,;-~-~-;:;;--:;-:;:•::-:.:-::-:.-=--::-:.:-=:-::-::-:.--::-::-::-::-::-::-=::.:::!:=~::!95::-~J..:..:.:.:...::...:.:..J
B<>ard of Education
of the
Cify
of _Ne~
York ·
.
·
il
,1
<J
.,_'





















THE CIRCLE,
September 21, 1995
Spilc~r,s}gp.Ir:ftilLJI;ve
set~
bllt>faj.Vtq
Knights:
in •.
etld!··
-; by~
LESTINS~Y • • . ~~_foxes·wer~lu_nfor.
·o~tside
. . . :jtaffWi:ifer • • ••• : ~tte~Tara qamrau (l 2·ki_lls,
8
Sometimes a team can learn a . dig~) and-~~ Be_th
Ho~an
lo_
t·Jrom
a
iosing·
a
lot over 'the (~ ki~ls),
~hile ~hman ~ddle
, • • .· • •• ••
• •
• • . • • •
. •
• ,
hitter Heather V1r had 8 kills.
·years:.· F9
r
th~ ManSt wo°!'en s
S()phomore- setter. Ellie
volleyball team, they!may Just
·
S . h. , •· . . - ·
1
· • · · · · d
ha
.'· l •
ec1···
·fl
al.
l h- · • .. •
c uerger •
a.
so 1mpresse
v~.
eru:n
m. y_ owtowm.
. • .... • FDU .. llecti •
36
·_
pespite losing-their seve_n~ a?iu.~st
>. .
co
ng
as
match in as;many.tries against s1sts. • • •. .
.·.. .
th, F • 1 • bti• ki
Kn" hts
In the ear~1.er
match, Manst
~ arr eig ic .. nson . . tg . -
was beaten in ,fnon-conference
15
Men,
can-'t

.find net in·
Maryland
by
JASON FARAGO
Assistant Sports Editor
After better than thirty years,
. Howard Goldman has seen his
share of winning as well as los-
_______
ing. And
o~ Satur4ay, the Red_Fo~es
sa~
affair by a tough Siena Saints
victory c_ould be w1thm the,ir squad;l
3_
15
,
+l
5
,
9
_
1
5
_
grasp.
Ahl.
••
. "d h.
. d
;
. • ·. •
.

· ·

qu1st sa1
er squa
. Mart~t $bowed great promise played tlie· Saints much tougher
. m
Marist
in that
o
time, he
MSM
has de-
M~s
Soccer
3 •
veloped
-------a
simple
mcommgbackfromtwogames
th
·h· • •
·1·
·

• • • •

• •

·
. •
an t e1r m ear 1er meetmg
dow~ bef<_>re
eventually, fallmg (Siena
9
_ 1
5
, 5_ 15, 2_15). •
totheKmghts;6-15,4-15, 15~2, . ''Th.·
, ·.
t h.
·
1
15--J
1 i3-15 in the first North-
.. e sco,res may no . s · ow
1 '
• ' • •
.
.•
but each game was tight and
east <:onference tilt of the.
Y~- . well-played," Ahlquist said'.
.''It
• . F)~-
st,y~ar co~ch Emily wasdefinitelyanimprovedper-
Ahlqmst said. she /S confident fonriance from when we played
~~
FDU match will be_~ step-
them in the Yale tournament."
p1µg stoi;ie for.more positive ef.,
Tara Damrau again led Marist
forts to come. •
in kills with nine and digs with
. )'They (the team),finallyre~l-
18. EllieSchuergeragainsetup
IZed
what they h~d to ~o to wm her teammates well with 22 as-
a match,''. Ahlqmst said. • ,
.
.
Playing well in def eat for the Please ~ee,
Volleyball,
page·
14 ...
Junior Tara Damrau leaps from the McCann floor to block a •
shot in Marist's match against Fairfield Tuesday.
Woinen·_~·al1'ttopple
the mountaineers; lose freshman
by/IM DERIVAN
•. Staff Writer
The loss drops QteRed Foxes
overall record to 1,.5, but Marist
lost more than just the game.
• The women's soccer team
FreshmanMandy Riviezzo,
went into the second half of play who had earned. a starting po-
a~ Mount Saint !viary's • (Md.)
sition, sustained a serious.knee
_______
, -·, with

a
·injury when she was taken· out

~
~=•goal•
:.;.;~:d.rountSt.
Mary',
:
~
MSM
·They
HeadcoachMana·Piechocki
Women's Soccer
2
w Oun d
assessed Riviezzo's injury, say-
'
. _.
. up let-
ingRiviezzowouldmissamini-
tirig that· 1ead slip away and
mum of two weeks, with a pos-
eyentually lpsing 3:}}~_the
sibilitfofmiJsing
·_:_:
Mountaineers in 'their ·first. the entire.season. . ,
. Northeast Conference game.
Freshman {\manda Swid~rek
led the Marist charge with a goal, in the game. We were really fo- ..
her team leading second on the . cussing in the first.half."
season.
Marist has been outscored 8-
But the results of the game were , 2 this season in the second half
not what Piechocki said she • of
its
six games.
would expect from her team.
According to Piechocki, what
''The whole team played well; : went well in the first half just
• we dominated the first half,"
did not happen for them in the
Piechocki said. "But we did not
second half.

play up to our potential."
"After their first goal, we put
Swiderek agreed with her
our heads down," Swiderek
coach; about Marist controlling said. "We fell apart because
the tempo in the first half.
. there was not enough commu- •
"We were communicating well
nication."
and
takinf
advantage'of space,"
Swiderek said. "Our heads were
Womenru.Ililers
finish in middle of pack in Saratoga Springs
by
PAT
REYNOLDS
Staff 'o/rit':r
.. The. women's c_ross
country.
team fell to the Siena Saints iast
_Saturday, 6
4
-15, at the Saint
Rose/Siena· Invitational . in
Saratoga State Park.
·This was the Red Foxes' sec-
ond race of the
.y~ar,
l)~yiµg
traveled. t~ ,Van~
Cortlandt park
-in ~e
Brc:m:x
forJhe Fordham
Invitational last week
. _Despite
,the
loss, sixth-year
coach Phil Kelly said he was
. pleased his team's.perfonnance.
'We ran very well,'' Kelly said.
c''Ifrw.e hold,up without any
more injuries we'll do fine. .
. But in ·upstate'New York; the
• women.· runners ·finished fifth
~~i of
fo
tetiins.
• •
,
Tennis
Wins
With
ease
:,.continued from, pag(! 16 ·
h 8-0
mate , . .
..
.
; pulling ()Ut atie.:.break win; 9..;
•• • ·Holly Robinson took control
: 8(7-5).

in the'first position.with Cara·
These two players
are
only McCaffrey following her lead
·thecuspoftalentthewomen's
in the ~econd ~pot.,.
·"
.
tennis team possesses .. , . :, '., Jlie;iandeiji•~ scqre5 \Vere, 3-.
• "This is the strongest
teain:
,
6, 7-,?_;6-.f~d7'."5~_6-:l;respec.,;
: thatMaristhashad,"Hardnu1n- 'lively; : •• • "
said. ''This team
.has
good • -Bufseniorcaptain KimZilai
depth and has a good chance said she is _tryi~g
to keep ~e
of
capturing the conference. . season, !?us f~mix:rs~ttve.
title."
• •
• • • • " ''The team 1s looking strong
Rounding out the card for and sh~~ld ?o. ve1?' ~ell this
Marist was No. 3 Cara
season, Zdat said . We are
McCaffrey who defeated Me-
just taking one day at a time."
lissaRoberts6-2,6-l.
• ·znai
also
said the team is
Following her in the fourth considered very young, with
position, junior captain Jen
only ·:
O'Neil was viciorious·,6.:.1,
6-
two semors_on the squad.
3 in her match over Colleen
And knowmg that, Hardman
Maloney.
• .~ . •
sai~ ~e i~ counti~g on the new
Katie Zegers and Sarah
recrmts to ~,;mtribute greatly
Lignori were also winners on to the team.
the day.
''Nadja~utkowski),_a ~h-
On Sept~ 9, the Red Foxes .
~
recrui~ ha,s been play1~g
took on Monmouth College
welf ~d wdl hope~l!Y P!ay m
and won •
.
• ...
_· .the.~u~t,ei;onell?s1t!on_~~the
easier than their most
recent
_futu~. Harcfm.an
~d.
• ••
Leading the way for the Red
Foxes was junior Kathleen
Woodson, posting a time of 19
• minutes 34 • seconds on the 3.1-
mile course'. .
That was good enough for
13th place overall in a pack of80
runners.
Senior co-captains Colleen
Carson and Melissa Zobel fol- •
lowed Woodson with times of .·
19:43 and 19:57, res~tively.
Kelly said keeping the team in :
good health could. push them
towards the top of the confer- .
ence standings.
''This is a funny sport,'' he said ..
"People can just get sick and
that could affect the whole sea-
son."
Kelly also said he believes his
team can finish the regular sea-
son in second place behind
Northeast Conference power-
house Mount Saint Mary's
(Md.). .

• ''The Mt. St .. Mary's team is
on another planet as far as tal-
ent," he said; "Besides them,
we're as good as any othe.r
team iri our conference::'' ,
Their next meet is Sept. 30 at
the Iona
Invitational
at
'
•••
,
·,
.
VanCrn:tland
Park .•
MCty
Program Schedule·
FALL
1995
..
..

12:00amto 10:00am,
·,.
'10:00am
to 12:00pm Sports 1
12:00pm to 2:00pm Entertairiment
Spec_.
2:00pm to 4:00pm
Sports 2
4:00pm to 5:00pm
MCTV Classics
5:00pm to 5:30pm
One-on-One
5:30pm to 6:00pm
Pressbox
6:00pm to 6:30pm
Backtalk
..
6:30pm to 7:00pm
Spectrum
7:00pmto 9:00pm
Movie 1
9:00pm to
i
1 :OOpm Movie2
-11
:()()pm·
to· 1 :OOam Movie3
-
••••·•··
philosophy when it comes to de-
ciding an outcome.
"You need to score in order to
win," Goldman said. "It is as
simple as that."
After getting blanked 1-0
against Fairleigh Dickinson Uni-
versity a week earlier, Marist
dropped another versus Mount
St. Mary's (Md.) over the week-
end.
These two loses have
dropped Marist's record to 1-5
overall (0-3 Northeast Confer-
ence) and have extended its
scoreless games streak to four.
Goldman gave an appraisal of
his team's performance and said
they are not playing badly, but
rather waiting for something to
happen.
"Our players are doing a good
job," Goldman said. "We are just
not finding the inside of the net.
"What is going on is nothing
that can be taught."
At FDU,'the difference be-
tween the two teams was the ef-
fective play of the Knight's goal-
keeper. Marist came out and not
only
outshot
FDU
but
outplayed them·only to lose
I-
O.
"After the game, the coach of
FDU said we should have won
the game," Goldman said. ''Even
as we trailed in the game, we felt
as if we had confidence to come
back.
"We made a couple of mis-
takes and were unable to out
them away."
Goldman honestly said he can
not tell what the problem is.
He asserted the difficulty of
teaching how. to finish a play,
which is what Marist is having
problems doing.
;"You.can teach techniques all
you
want,"
Goldman went on to
say. "But finishing a play off
and shooting are two different
things."
.
The
Red
Foxes traveledto St.
John's University yesterday.
Results were· unavailable at
press time.
.
Afterward, the~
Fox~.open
up a stretch .in which they are
home for eight g~es;
"The home stretch is going to
be
a welcome relief," Goldman
said.
,,_.·::.·-.
parpe
are left
shortro·
arenot
'stied~:
~~~~~~?&D)1n~igiif••
Saturda for dle''Mon ••
1nvimt1%na.
iit
Totum~,

•... ' •... '.
.
. ··.·.-·---·•-•.•·t:=·,,<}":































































t
\:
-~'-•
,.·
\•
'
•'\~
...
....
, : SnToFTHE.Wm: ..
, •
.~--
'.~
:~
;
':):
,;

·.'

.,.;_,
;_,•·.·
',!.
:
>::;.' ",. '
:
'' •
':'
;
:Woinen's··terinis
is ·undefeated
·,:with
an
18~0 rriatbti.
record.
• : t:".: .. -- / '.· :_~
.•
;;.

-
:'.~'.<:>F.,THE'W,EEK:.
:
'l'Youneed to score:in'oriler to:
/winjt·_s}tisf that simple.
II
.-
,,
__
.
,.,.......
.,
..
Mati.Stteaeems
themse1ves•
:beat St.· Francis 20~17
: . . . . ·- ' : .
.
••
• • • •


• •
• . • ·>:
,

:. •
: ' .:.:. .
• •
=-=~"' . .
:tlif
~;i~t\he
season .. ·
'bf MAilTY$INACOi.A
.•
..
,!J:lie_R,~:Foxes
enjoy a bye this
• ' : S{ci.ffW.rii~r
:
.
'weekenct\ .; :
.
: :
..
:.Many.great
coach.es
have
saiil
)Buf
they
can
not·afford to sit·
that:a_gooc1'offerise
'is created
back/however~
as
they will get
by a good defensel •
.c: •
-:
,{iµajor t¢st when they travel to
The defendinf Metro Atlan:.
.·.
·St.·Jofui's on Sept 29 to take on
· tic-Athletic
Confefonce champi-
••
th~ Red Stonn'. •••
ons·have been finding·it·.diffi:-
• \Last year, ·Manst beat ·st.
cult early on to:gettheir offense
:John's for:the MAAC champi-
:in gear, despite an impressive2,.
onship; but the Red Stonn were
1 start
.
able tC>;get the,last laugh by
The •
somehow getting tlte. bowl bid
····, .. ·.:
.. ':··.
'Marist.
••• .• ·•
-~
..
la .. t.:·e.
s_f, •••
overMarist, ·a.move that left
.

.
20
victory
-many people speculating as to
•. .
.,·
Si·Francis'cl at ms
-t~ •
• ·w~e Rcil'Foxes would·like to
. ..

• . as, a
Football .. _:
17
\1r day
get ·ievengeon St. John's, but
.
. w h·e n
..---
Paradyistryingtodown'-playit
the team traveled to:Loretto,
Pa.
• ancl treaf it like just another
to'take-onSt~
Francis College.
game.
The, special .teams kicked
:"We arejust,going totreat it
things off early, wasting no time .
as .another football game, be.,
getting Marist o_n:track for a
==.c......;;;c;.;;;;;.;;==~;;c;_.----------,--,---.......,..----,--,----
--'=-
causewedohavesixmoreafter
score. .
Senior.Paul Decbj'(#20) runs dowlilhe sidellil~ withthe gamC:.winning
interc~pti~n on Sat.
it,''
-Paradf
said;' ''But there is a
Sophomore·Mario
Wilson re~ •
. .
little added

covered a-St. Fraricis·fumble
on garnewas the pl~y of.the :
empty handed.
.
.
. ..
offensive momentum.
.incentive to beat them."
the opening kickoff on the St. defense.
. . .
.
St. Francis would eventually
Even
'ihough
Marist walked
'With the defense shouldering
Francis fifteen-yard line~
A<:cording
to h~ad coa9ll Jim ••
break the. Red, Fox defense· be-
away with a 20.:17 .win, Parady most of.the burden thus far, the
That early miscue led to
Parady/the-defense ·came up • fore the half and cut the lead to said his
team
is still not at the offense needs.to find morecon-
Marist's first touchdown of the with-big plays when. the team
14-10.
level it once was and has work ·sistency, most• notably in· the
game; a two-yard option around .needed them most
The 'Marist defense turned it to do.
passing game.
the right side by senior quarter-
"We didn't totally shut them up again in the second with
an-
''There is definitely room for
The team has used four quar-
back Pete Ford.
down,'' Parady said. ''But our other defensive gem.
.
improvement, butT am pleased terbacks in three games, includ-
·St.~Fiancis
.would then take ad- . red zone defense came up with
Seniof PaulDeckaj took an in-
to be 2-1,"Parady said. "When ing starter Ford missing the sec-
vantage of a Marist.tumover, the big :play whe'n we_ needed terception 64 yards for what you win -the close games like ond game against Fordham due
eventually kicking a field.goal. them (to)."
. . .
would tum oul'to be the game this, it puts .you in a position to to injury.
The Red ·Foxes quickly re-
There were three times in the winning scqre.
have a good season."
The result has been the pass.:.
sponded with a one-yard touch-
first half that St.· Francis· threat-
Up20-17 late in· the game, the
Having • the ••
non.;.coriference ing game coming around slowly.
down· run by junior fullback ened, h~ving the ballinside the Maristdefense once again•held part of their scheduling out of
Last Saturday the Red Foxes
GavinCronin.
Marisnhirty:ayard line., _,And its ground, tw~ce refusing St .• the way~
the
foam
can nowcon.: onlygot77 yards on five of21
:But ultimately, the.story ot)fie , each time:
St:
Francis crune~rit ·. • Francis to estabHsh any type of centrate· on its. conference for ·completions.·

·---~~--
Sul]j_vij1rresjgns
as· sports information -director
.
.
.
'
.
.
.
'.
.
.
~
.
.
-
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
·byMIKE~GENTILE,JR.
opportunity.to ·achieve .the
waytofillthevoid.
_
Sta_.iff.-JVriier
goals· Iihave· set-for ·myself,''

-According
to Murray, there is
Sullivan said.
currently no possible replace-
'Whoev~r:said
timing is every-
According to Athletic Direc-
ment for the position.
thing, sure knew what he oqhe
tor Tim Murray, now that. the

"We are looking for someone
meant. .·

.•.
·. , .. , : •.
.
1995-96 schoolyeaf has begun, with experience,
especially
in the

On Sept.;13,in a MatjstAth'- .. the possibility of-firiditig a re-
Division
I
athletic program,"
le tics·· press release;/ D~n plac~me11r
for the position

is M:urray
said.:· "rN.e need some-
. Sullivan; di.rector
Qf
spo,i:ts
me.;,

going
to
be a lot harder, : .
one) who understands the local
.
dia relations and(pioinotions, •. · ·••·
..
Murray, who has known
and regional New York based •
. :announced thathe is resigning Suilivan·sinceJi.ifurraywas the Metro area."
·his,positionasofOct:·1,:19_95, parMime·,assisfant basketball,
A 1987 -·Maristcgraduate,
..
•• Sullivan, who has ~cep_ted coach for Ma,rist in :1987, said • Sullivan spent. the. second se-
. the position o(assistant athletic . heis happy for hhn. •
mesterof his senior year intern-
• directorformarkelingaridpro-
He.knows of Sullivan's goal. ingin.the Sports Information
motions at Monrimuth Univer-
to
be
an athletic director some
Office. .
sity,,saidthis was.a:v~ry hard • day and' this;Iri~y:be the right
• It was here tharhe grew to .
.
decision to make,,, , , : •
sjep. . ,
.
.. ''However tltjs.gives me the. . ):Iowever,. the search is under-:
Please
see Sullivan, page
14 •••
Reflecting· -on the past-and le~ing. :how. t<)iinprove for the future
· .. .-,
'
' ·. . . .
.
·--.
'
_:
·_
-·' ::;,_
• :_
··<
..
· .
_-.
--- -
,-· ... ' .
'
.
Z.-i. • .
• ·.-
:;;_
:,_~
.: ': '.""
::
'
. '
• . • "

'
' ••
My, :what have -we missed· behind ~he sce_nes,
took qn. a . 'Football has to· embark ori its ·•.•
worthwhile ifitcould
steal
a:
win near and realized the error of
during the summer.

new look. •

mission to.defend its Metro At-
frriiirthe defending ¢hamp~. .
his ways.

He ·possesscil the
••
The··ushering
in of the new
:oan Sullivrut,
th~:~p()~i;for- • -lantk Athletic
.~~n
..
A···
feat •. · ..
·.'
There·'was another.
loss
over courage of his convictions and
•. acadernic'yearsawaninfluxof mation director, sprung one.on. which sounds easierthan it re-:
.•
the summer, but itdid ~othaP-
admitted he had a dire prob-.
new faces that will not only:be the Marist community when htt · ally is. _.
pert.
atM.irist
·.Rather,
it ~ffected lem; •saw what' he had.done to
patrolling the sidelines of their : annou_nced
his ~ignationfrolll
Gone from last: year's squad amition coastto coast. The loss his.family and implored the
respective sports· but upstairs his position effective Qct.
L
.
:are,cfefensive.
stalwarts· '.Bruce · of Mickey Charles Mantle will youth of today to not look
in administration
as well.
• He plans · to move • on • to • Harris and Joe McG~ii.: And . never be ·forgotten.. •
upon him as a role model and
- For starters, programs such • -Monmouth
·university·. to :pur-
the ·offense-is going
:to
have
He was a man who symbolized not follow his ways.
as
baseball and women's vol-
sue his dream of becoming an their work cut out for them.
an era, when America was at-its ·
The magnificent Yankee is
leyball/sports·that:have.had
athletic director, All theiuckto
QuiifterbackPeteFo~,whois
purest and peaceful. ,He'stood
going to be.misse4. There are
harrowed pasts,.will look to re- , him as Marist riuistifill the· va-
already :slowed due to pre- • for something that is· now gone • few athletes that captured the·
verse their fortunes under new cancy rather urgently. •
• season injuries,. will be pro-
·and for those o'f who~ 'gt:ew up game the way he did. And·
coach.es.
And Mike Malet cannot be for-
tected. by· a line. that is slowed• with him~ and learned to switch-
there will be few such as he.
Then.there is the departure gotten. After 25. years, ,Malet by injuries and has lost notables hit because of
him,
·he was the
The'Mick will live in infamy,
ofHowardGoldman,afixture
wants,to-pursue his doctorate .. due to.graduation. Hopefully, finalHnk·to a.time in .which trulyalegendofthegameand
who had . patrolled
the
He may need all the luck he can Jovan Rose can regain the fonn
things were right in this country of this time.- This l~gend will
Leonidoffsidelines
for 32 :get.
,
• ·that.made'him a 1,000 yard ~nd baseball was Americ_a's never die,-living in the hearts
years. "Doc" became synony-
Aside from that, it is business rusher the year before.
game. ~Wh~n
he di~ a part of and . minds of. people every-
mous with rnen's soccer at the
asusualfortheusualfallsports.
The bottom line, though, is peoples chddhoodd1ed along where.
coUege and will be missed.
·one team in particular has some everybody will. be shooting for with him.
Jaso_n_F._a-ra_g_o_is-·t_he
___
as,_s-,.
-spo-rts
As for the administration,
the pretty tough demands in front

the.Red'Foxes.
It
will make an
And even -in death, he ·was
editor.
He will be sharing
the
hierarchy-that runs ·the show ofit.
:undefeated team's season
graceful. Heknewhistimewas
columnwith'TeriStewart.