The Circle, April 27, 1995.xml
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 46 No. 15[16] - April 27, 1995
content
··April
27~
1995
Colleges across couritiy
miS1eadpoplllar•.gll1debooks
IN
:MEMORY
()F:
OKLAH()MA
CITY~-
-·.
'
.. .
.·.-
.•.
'•'
-
-
...
-·.
.
.
'•
by KRISTINA
WELLS
Editor.
•
· Marist Colleg~ ·~as •
a~ong ·a· 11st
of about 50 colleges and universities
· across the country .who have either
fudged· their SAT scores or gradua-
tion rates in college ,guidebooks,
according to a, study done by. The
Wall Street Journal.
. •
.. . . ._
.
. In
the_ April .4 article~ it' was
alleged· -that Marist • increased their
average SAT scores with the intent
of attracting. more students. •
The .. guidebooks consistently
publish these sometimes· erroneous
statistics. These publications, such
. as Barron's and·.U.s.-.News-and
World Report, have a significant
see
a
lowered ~uniber of applicants.
if-the data.is significantly less tlian
other schools,
• •
•
•
Even. though the~e is no penalty
for
,·fudging
numbers· .. when
submitting '~ata t~ publishers, me,
coUege'--or:university· iriay, be.
penalized if t4e data is' tampered witl(
.
•
when filing with a· debt~rating
agency, th,~
_article said._ .
•• :
"Lying ,.
to the . rating~ agencies
violates. federal ,securities laws and
can expose , schools . to
•
huge ..
, liabilities," .The Journal said.
.'
••
Exchiding low~scoring;'students .
from the SAT numbers is just one
of the most common tactics used by .
colleges across the co~try.
.-
. Thereasortthese. two groups are ex-
cluded is it just skews the average, and
i('~. pot accurEJte
for kids. who ar~ trying
to figure out
if
they're admissible ·or not.
-
---
--
.
-':H-arry
Wood.,
.VP
of .Admissions
Wells,:retifes; D~•Richard takes helni
influen.ce,.on",parents and _students·
·Woodtold·The.Circle,that tliese
by MEREDITH KENNEDY
app~ying ~o coJlege.
A5:.J!c
re~.u.It, learning . disabled
.
and . . the·
•
• Staf/Bditor •
•
·c_olJegesf~d"~niyersi_Hes·~i~crctase
' in~er~ationaC stud~iits·
.·iue.:.not
'.:
. .• , • •• . .. .
.
.
. _ .
• SA+\
S!=Qr~s
!ill~,
~!l~uatjQ!.1
.. r~!~:11:!.:;:
.;i~q,*¢~Jo ..
subini~
_theifSAT
scores-
·-c '
,The.
G1Icle staff-has elected a n~'_V·
attract' mo.re students/·:
t:,
:.
: : ::
·7 : ;·
·1¢.d,\tnat:.
js/why(they";-are
• excluded • ••
editol'for next year. . . .
. -
,•·,The Journal reportep..that ~ew. from·:the'ituinbers; .. ' ,
•
•
·, Dai-yl
.. Richard: ··a· sophomore··
York
:Univ.ers_ity
• excludes fr_
om_.-
cits..
·
·
•
·
journalisnf major/will take over for
·'_'_Special
S
___
erv_'
i_ces_··
students_·
are
not •
Kri
t· •
w·
·11 •
•
• h
O
• •
•
SAT scores:.soine economically •
... si.na. e s
~
O)s agraduatmg
disadvantaged students who··. are
required to take the SAT. They do • senior. .
. • • •
:
. : .. • •
<
.
iner,nbers. -o~. a state-spoI1sored .. tak_e a11
other exam wh!ch·,.helf to
. Richar~ said he _has
defmite plans
. program.' Marist Coll_ege,
the report evaluate them .{academically}, he •. for The C1Icle for next year.
·:. said; incluc_les
the.
se students, :but· said. ·."They do take
a
tes(given by
"It's going to. be a new Circle
·
·
Speci.
·a1,_
Se.rv1·ces."
··
-·.• ·.
. '
••• • • • •
"R
0
h' ·d • •
•
excludes about 25 who ·are learning
next year, .• 1c ar said.: "If will be
disabled.
Marist also. excludes • _ · Wood a!so_ added tharSpecial
done on PageMaker and there will
international-· students
from
.
these· ••
_Service
-. students: are : required
•
tci . ,'be new · pages; like an Arts • and
:SAT
statistics.
•
•
•
subinifo pseudo-IQ test, but stressed Entertainmentpage_;,
._
.,,-•
•. _
.
.
.
·
Harry .Wood. vice president ·tor that i(was not use_d
in any.academic : The pllperwilladd the use 9f
in
· · admissions, told the.Journal thei:e is eligibility decisio11:
•
Assqci~ted Press wire service next.
'a
legitir.nate fiason\\'{hy~tht:se N/o
. .
< .
,. _
.. ·._. ,••..
. ••• .
·..
y~ • .-The servi~ should be l!P and
group~·.ar~· excl~ded .from·.-the>,·: .. ''{SpedaiServices}·stridents are· __
g01
11
g_by ~ugust 1 ~d_the.cost of
numbers.- . _
.. _. • ...•. : • .
. .
requiredfo pr~sent the results
of
ilie th~
~l!f
\Vill
be spht betw~en~'I'he
'_.·
~e.,r~~-n ~ese two gro\lpS are w~skler.scale of academ,icability to :.G.1ffle, a11.d,t~e' com1¥umcahons
eJecluded
1s 1t Jui;tsk~\Vs
the average,
.
get iµto ~pecial Services.13ut,. if is : depar}!D~n.t,
Iucpard said. . ..
.
· and it'tnot accurate for _kicls
w4_o not. used fo(adritissjo1t)Iecisions. •• .; Jl1~harc_l, _said he v.ranted_ the
.
. are. !IY~g, to figure • o\lt, 1f. ~hey'.re Therefore; tµey '{ the studellts} are> _editor,~
~s1ho11 \>ecause
lie wa~ts a
·' adm1ss1b!e
pr n,ot,''.·
\\';ood_
s,aid,
:c; -
nofincluded in the SAT numbei:st· ~eer m 1ournahs!11
• and _he enJo~s
Pubhshers:pLJhes~_.,popular
Wood said.. •
working on The_ Cucle, where he 1s
guidebooks, try to tailor thefrsurvey •• •·
__
,
iri
term.s of. Marist's policy on.. cu~,en~y_J111
ass1~ta11t
ed~tor.
> .-•
questions
_
to . minimize
•
the
Being a sophomore, it's a great
.• oppo_
rtu
...•
ru_
·ty_·.
to_.
fu<l.
ge the __
. num
__
·bers.. inclt!ding or excluding •international opportunity to just dive into the paper
students/ according
:to
Wood,
b
I h
tw
t
k
Bl!t,,if • the m1mbers llie iricimect, . international"· students are, not
.
~~_e ..
ave. o years o wor on
. there is notJDu.ch the publishers can ie_qriire_·c1_
-_.
io_·
take the_
SAT, . , .
it,: R!chru::d.
said. '
. . .
legally do about it. Ther.e
i~
no
:W~Us,
an Enghsh ~d 1ournahsm
punishment.for the colleges with
• "Because
these
students
ma~or, agreed that Ri~hllld has an
regard to "'.hat is printed • in {international} are. not. required to , advzmta~e
beca~Sf he IS _young. .
·tiary/
Rh:liiird,
Class of
'97,
/s:resdy
to
take
the
helm of the Circle
guidebooks. .·· ..
.
,
• . take: th~ SAT, they do not have to • · _
• 1 thinkhavmgyou th m power
is
this
Fall, He looks forward to the ever changing challenges
On the flip~side, coileges' and ·submit their results even if they <lo important," Wells ~id.-"He'll have
awaltlng_hlm.
•
universities that provicie accurate, take it," he said, "SomeStudents do two years t~ work a~d it will help. ----.....,.------..,....----,---------,-----------'
imd sometimes unflattering, numbers take it and submit their score; and • keep The Clfcle co1ts1stent.u
. ,
Along with Richard the new staff
"We're looking for a more
.tend to be almost penalized f<>rbeing
.
,..
, Well~ adde~ that she belit:ves includes Teri Stewart, sports editor, structured newspaper next year,"
honest. The admissions offices may
..
~
see
SAT
page 4 • Richard 1s the nght man for the JOb. and. Larry
Boada,
arts
.
and . Richard said.
•
•,, ...
•.•·•··•·•··•
•···~·-•··•· •··•··•·•··•·•··•·•·•·•·•·•··•--•···•--·•··•··•··•--·•.-•·~L•
. "Darylknowswhathewantsand • entertainment editor.
Wells cites her biggest regret is
~;;:;:I
·LOOK IN.
s10·
E
IN;
;~w::~~:~gfj~lt•~:;~n~fs~!
s~~~~~,~~~~~~t:xe;Je~::o~:
~i:~:~~~e~te~f~~:r~l~~;::·
•n
. .
.
.
.
,:·:•
but' he has a good senior staff. I will help with the larger coverage supports seeking for different status
e:i,_
• • •
_·,·•
hope he uses them."
he is planning.
. . •
•
(or the paper.
. "The more people that get
"I don't see how a paper can run
involved the easier -everyone's job under the government when one of
. will be," Richard said.
its functions is to check the
:A · meeting
was held
in government," Richard said. "With
preparation for next year and a new dean of communications next
approximately 43 people attended, year, it is the time to seek alternative
Richard said he believes this is a club status."
good sign because· people came out
Richard added that he would like
early and showed an interest.
to work with Marist College Radio
(WMCR)
and Marist College
Television (MCfV).
"I want to make sure that
whenever there is a big news event
on campus that someone will always
be there to cover it," Richard said.
'
r
.I
I
\.
I
i
.h
l
i
.l
'
'
J
·,.J .~
··~-~.'.°:
~
r
r
!
2
THE CIRCI.E,.APRIL
27, -1995 _
. _
_
__
_
by TOM BECKER.
Circle Music Critic·
- the false skin of terror is pulled back "Trust", an of which represent the _ included_
on this disc to make it fly:
hours and hou~ oflistening pleasure.
in favor of the sarcastic· humor of talents of_ industrial demigods En
Rather, Orange 9MM's intense
_
_
_ _ _
.
the band.
• • Esch and • Sascha Konietzko, from assaults; mixed with jabbing bass _
There is no doub! _
that_ Or~nge
KMFDM has come a long way
Now, for the disc.
• po\Ver surges to mellow grooves.
riffs, are sound enough to create • 9MM has the potent1~l
_to achie".e
since the days of old when their soft-
Unlike earlier works, _
which
There is no stalling on this disc, excellence on their own; producing all good things, as exh1b1ted
on thlS
core industrial bleeps cascade~ and sometimes lacked the power of their each song is spiced with either a a feel that is reminiscent. of both. disc.
collided with asbestos dripping from industrial brothers and the occasional Hammond_organ,
a Pantera-type riff, Quicksand and Jawbox, with a little
Let me make . it simple for
the ancient lead pipes found in the speed· metal flashback of th_e
classic _ some of those Ginsberg vocals, or a bit of Rage
.
Against -The • Machin~
•
steel factories that housed Germany's "A Drug Against War'' and<(Glory" Nitzer Ebb-esque_
beat.
added in for good measure. ___
·• . .
you ... buy this one, too. ••
underground dance scene.
on the '93 disc, "Nihil" is the perfect
. "Nihil" proves that a quality disc
The· first track, "Glistening",
One more_ time,_ KMFDM's
The angry, smarmy Deutschland union of the two, a culniination of _
~
be produced and released onlt a : actually allows one to feel the walls
"Nihil" .is ori
Wax
Trax and Orange
natives have traced a career of the band's ambition.
•
•
ye·ar after an album that was crumble on every, side, as'the'raw
9MM's "Driver Not included"_is on
industrial evolution through revolu-
The first release; entitled "Juke excellent in its o~, hard-i:dged rite
,
energy qf the song keeps propelling
EastWest Records, so save your.
tionin the darker edges
of
unknown. Joint Jezebel" brings
the
'sy_4th· in«Angst''.
•
the tune further and further ahead.
pennies and_buy. them both~ You'll
radio, including earlier works such sounds back, but in
a
much_meatier • Buy it>·<___
·"High Speed'Changer'~ exhibits
thank me for it
as "Piggybank" and "Split" leading portion.
_ _ . _ _ ,.
. .
Unlike'KMFPM's
.computer
·
theband'srhythm.:changipgabilities,
into 1993's "Angst" and the latest, •
Like. many, of the songs on_,
the prQq11~dJqu11i!s,,Orange,9MMu~es
goipg-from:static to frantic to light-
"Nihil".
_
disc, "Juke"·takes·a little'gehmg·used instruments, with the result ·.bemg speed. ,, . : ·:
·
.- ·-_
: : ··
And, it is this• Jaiest work· which -• to,
hilt
after two or three Jistens;
_the
power. with purity. , _ .
_
• _ .
• The band -exhibits -a •
!ighter hold
is perhaps tlteir best, forging the ever beat ingrains itself into your brain,
The debut .: album from the. on the· music in· sorigs< Hke
so delicate embrace of mayhem and allowing you to recaJl the extra f111vor hardcore foursome is entitled "Driver "Disclaimer'' and "Sacrifice", where
melody.
•
splashed in by the efforts of backing Not Included", a reference-
to
the. repeatingphras~ intertwine with the
For those_ riot familiar with the vocalist Jennifer Ginsberg.
. song that got them on the scene'and
growing_ferocity to an armageddon_
band, KMFDM's urgent _beats
What makes this disc great is th~ in the heads of many a couple of
climax.
meshing witli a inyriad of musical plethora of stand-out tunes, inchlding years ago. •
-
__
.-
·
. -· ·
It
is simply one of those discs
samples are less intimidating when "Flesh", "Beast", "Brute", and •
However. "Driver'',need not be
that commands respect and offers
········································~·
•·
•
•
•
LAST CHANCE
Ill
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
'■
.•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
SENJIOR
SENI)-OFF!
$
1.
00
• ••
•
•
•
•
•
•
-·•
'
:_·,.,;
, -,._
--.
_
..
_
:-,
,.'..·•;
-::
...
~
,·:._:
.
• Happy l1stenmg: • • • . ' _ . __
_ ... '."
,.,,~-.:•~
0
···?L•i
i :-::, -::;-- . ~-.
'.->·::_.-
'_ ,·.,.
Since this is
0
the eild of the
column: and I'm not sure where
something like this. should go, I'd
just like· to· take .a line or two to
• reflect on what happened . in •
Oklahoma City and·-pray that
something similar -never happens
again. •
•
3
...
..
:.-·
:g,~;J$)"
'~E~S,:iasnare
'Cl1li5'
Of'the
Year AWaid'
•
:·.byBRIAN.FRANKEIIIBJELD
·.''.Child;in·.
Need" jn
·Ecuador,•
•
:
:[;<,<.?:.:::·,:;
Staff.T/(riter_r:
_:,,
..
:L
,,.
comn.iunkatiµg'
..
ari_d
•·''
'sending
.
..
..
..
.
. .
.
,.
. .
.
doilations·to the child and the child's
:
<
':
~e~.e~t.l
r,
'
th~, M~ri_s~,
Soll7ge : family
·on
:a
regular basis.
·_
·
..
··,
. •
•.
C9~~~tY,.~xpe.nenced ·a h1stoncal-
·
',,
"We ar'e a nationally recognizecr
c
f1~~L'>Vh.e,n
:.
the Club :c,f t.he Year
•
sorority; but I think
we
see olirseives·
Aw~r.9>fas, presented Jo ,two
as more of a service-oriented ihaiia
·
•
organizations •..
:'
. >,
•
,
_
.·
,
..
;
.
,
_
social. sorority,. jusr because
•
we do
..
/:
~o_t~)he_:.BI.~c~)~tude~t
Union so m11ch community service,"
-
-and_
the n~~lyformed sorority Alpha· Oloffsori said.
•
·
· ·
Sig~a !au
~ied_
fc:,r}heJo~~f:
.-
'. •
.,
.
.
Although both organizations iire
•
.
•·..
.
:To
my knowleage,
this· 1s the enthusiastic about being named to the
·.first
year in the school's'bistory that
•
Club of the Year Award each' said
.
ther~: bas been.~-tie for the. award,"
•
that it is working to ~ake. their
_Bo~
~yn~_h,; d!~ector of_ Student._ individu_al_
organization and
.the
A:ctiy1tte~,
said.
H
demon~trates the Marist community even better.
ki~d o! ~ork_these c_lubs
have been
"We want to try and get ourname
d~mg_::
.
.
.
_ .
.
out to the majority of people on
.
•
Lyn~~. sa1~ th~t. the ai~ount of
.
•
campus and try to appeal to. a lot of
.events,aµ~
commumtr serv1ce_d~ne
•
the people
'on.-
campus
-besides
the
by every club made 1t
·hiud
t~ g!ve
.
minoi:ity
community," Lisa Goddard,
the-award to any one orgaruzahon treasurer of the BSU said.
._
this year.
•
-
:
•
.
•
-
-
'
•
"It was very difficulfthis year to
Gamory agrees; and said the BSU
'
select {the recipient}because ihere
exists for a greaterpurpose than-to
were
:.quite
a
few clubs that did
serve
'the
needs of the African-
:e>utstanding
work," he said.
•
American
·community
on campus
·I-'-'----
••
Both· the BSU and Alpha Sigma
alone:
•
Alpha Sigma Tau was the co-reclpelnt of the Club of the Year Award. The. Black Student Union also received
Tau· vie.re; grateful that their hard
•
the awarcL T-bfs
Is
the first time
In
Marlst history that two clubs have been recnonb:ed.
wo~k ~as recognized, but both made
"Not.· only is• BSU beneficial to
~
..
it a ppint to say thatreceiving·this
African.:Americanstudents, but to all
'
f .
h
.
d.
·,
award.was
not their goal.in
students, because we're exposing
F-·
__
o·
_·F·
....
·1-t's
-a
r.1g
tenmg
1sease
organizing ihe
•
services and
-
.
events
something that• ihe school itself does
th
•
d'd
•
•
ilotprov. ide," Gamory said.
••
•
ey
l_,
•
·.·
·
·
•
•
'-'It'-._w.·
asn't_ so_·
mething·w_e
·set out·
•
·
•··
...
•
Just thinking of this word causes
.
grateful that finals were coming up
.
.
"T.he
education_
s_'
ystem is not set
by SARA KRAEMER
·· ·
to try. and get,'' ~n,Qloffson,
of
-
-
·
·
the stomach acids to violently slosh because it meant the end of another
Alpha Sigma Tau/ said: "As
a
group,
•
up
.to
expose people to African~......
Staff Writer
about and the heart rate to fluctuate semester and then vacation.
it was jusf something we wanted to
Ameri~ culture. 1 t~ink BSU does •
I left mfkeys in the door for the wildly.
Others said that finals had come
do. We wanted to get involved and_ a _good JOb of expasmg peop!~, to • third time this week.
.
If you fe~l that you have a case· all too quickly, and there was no time
really help the community, both
thmgs ihe school itself doesn
_t.
A friend of mine turned to me in of FOF, there are some ways to at all to prepare.
Marist. and the outside community."
Gamory added that hewould_ like.
.
the middle of philosophy and sleepily alleviate the stress which goes along
Still others claimed that the only
_Alpha
Sigma Tari and the BSU
.
to see more people of different
muttered that she had brought the with it.
way to face finals was to ignore
each performed.a number of services cultural backgrounds participate in
wrong book to class.
.
At the beginning of the year, them.
this past year, ranging from campus the BSU's events, anli feels ihat this
•
Yesterday, the girl in the shower somebody told me to always set a
Some students say that they
events to world-wide involvement.
•
is lacking at the present time.
stall next to mine was playing her long-term
.goal,
something to look prefer multiple choice tests because
•
The BSU members· have done
•
biology notes.
forward to after tests are over.
"they are easier to take."
'
.programs' in
.
local
.
correction
..
-
Alpha Sigma Tau is hoping that...
Wh_at
is making students do such.
This reward should be followed
However, the most dreaded kind
fac~iiie~, ~ave ~ro1:1ght
to camp!-1s
a
the
_receiving
of this aY:'ard
will help
,
odd thmgs?
through even
if
you don't get an A
of exam is the ugly cumulative test;
number: ~f nationally recognized. them,-to be accepted m·the Greek
•
Since there isn't a
fu]l
moon over
This way, whenever s_tress and most students feel that they can't
guest sp~akers and rece,nt_lr,c
held,
'.-
community on campus as: being a
Marist, and Sodexo hasn't added anxiety begin to
,creep
into your remember much of what they learned
what Bo~ Lyne~ la~eled·as, on~. of
legitimate sorority dedicated to
some strange potion to the cafeteria mind,
.you
can relax by picturing
·1ast
week, much less way back in
the most ~press1ve and well pl~ed
.
•
community service,
.
.
.:
-
food, the only logi~
,answer
i~ t~at yourself with that reward; always
.
January.
cultural dmner-dances•~
·he has ever-
•
.
-
.
.
•
students are developing the terrifying · focus on the positive and there will
,The
most important thing to
seen..
•
•••
->·
..
:
·•
~M~;be
thiswillhelpus get-~or~ diseas~:. ~ear of
_Finals_
g:oF).. .
.
be no mom for stress.
".
.
:
.
. .
remember
'around
this time of year,
•
Currently, seven -~~,ip.~i:,rs
.'?~J~e respect within the Greek community'':" :-It-is: pressure
-and
-a~1e~;
_which
•
If there is rio:
stress,' then you wi!l
.
is to respect your fellow students and
BSU are working every week.with. on campus," Leah Shelton,said.
~.
·.'
.,drives
st_udents
m~d;
•.
•
-beless
likely
to get a_~se ofFOF.
their individual study habits.
three; four and • five'"year."olds
'
.
•
'
·'
•
''
Leavmg keys
ID
doors
JS
only a
Hov.rever,
some students actually.
There
.
are some who will be
involved in the Head Start
:pmgram
In the mean-time, however,: the mild symptom.
-
•
,
woikbetter under stress.
.
cramming both day and night to get
at the:Astor_Cente_dn
Poughkeepsie.
, •
sorority. is' just learning abouf the
-
Remembering that you are using
They feel thaf when there are all of their work done by fmals week,
.
''We-just had a:wide:variety:of
-
.
demands of.. being
.a·
newly
...
the wrong text 45 minutes into class
•
restrictions put upori them, they
and others who feel that they can
events iuld piograms this year, from
•
establjshed Greek organization; and is a more severe side effect.
achieve more.
••
just breeze through with a minimum
•
enter_tain~elit to· educatioria~ Jo
is trying to continue to provide
But when students are driven to
·
Perhaps the slogan
"If
it
.weren't
of study
.
•
community service/', Tim. Gamory, events. and services both for the bring their notes to tlJe oddest of for the last minute a lot of things
WhHe certain students prefer total
_president
of the BSU, said.
•
.
••
·.
Marist
.•.
community
and. the places (including the bathroom), then would never get done" is true.
quiet for effective study, others work
Among Alpha Sigma Tau's major
community of Poughkeepsie'.
you know that they have a full-blown
Perhaps that is also why the better with loud music.
events thi!i
year
',Vere
a
$1,50,0 fund-
. •
..
.
cases of FOF.
•
library and computer rooms are
Just relax and try. not to get
raiser
:for
the· American_ Cancer
"We are just starting toiearnhow
The causes of FOF are those
packed during finals week.
stressed out, or you too will develop
~()ciety;
,
their
•
Valentine's
for
things work," Mariluz Santan~ said.
.
tegifying tests and term papers
When asked their feelings about .FOF.
.
.
Veterans prpgram, and tlie co~
"We. hop~ to. kee_P makmg:,a
'(which
al_l
seem to be due the same the upcoming finals, student
Also, if you see my keys
sponsorship
·of
bringing
,the·:
locat.,.;,difference
m
the Manst community,
__
day).
_
_
•.·..
.
..
,
.
responses ranged from nervousness anywhere, could you please return
Gii:lscoutson campus tosell:cookies;
--Xand
.stay
on track for •qub/oJ the
•. ,,
However the common factor m to stress to panic.
them to me?
•
•
Tlie' sorprifY:, als9 sp9.:iisors
a
·/'Year',!!ext
year'."
'
•
•••
.
.,
.all
of these cases ~s stress.
.
Some students felt that they were
SdA
to
holdJ(?int 111:Ceting
to decide on club cap issue
-
•
•
as ~liarters·
her~ at Marist.
.'~:<-
•
•·.,
·,
•
.
During the last student body
As the next.· eligible fraternity, possible for Marist students and
By SIMON. COTE
.The
current issue is a result of\. election, the ~reek cap _issu~
was the
Alpha Phi ~elta's goal i_s to ha".e admi~ist_rato,~s to handle more
Staff Writer.
'
thefact that there are openings in all most I?redommant ~op1c aside fr~m the ~ap. raised, allo~mg their organizations._ _
the councils except the greeks.
the Higher Educa!•?n Opp~rtumty organizat10n to be recognized by the
If
the
c,3P
1s raised as
~
~esult_
of
..
•
..
Qn
•
May 3,
a
first-ever joint
session of the Student Government
Association.will be held with-.both
the Executive Board and the
·senate.
-
-The
major issue that· will be
discussed under new business is
•
whether
the
•
cap on·. Greek
organizations at Marist will be raised
from eight Clrgani?:3-µoris
to ten.
•
At
.this
meeting, the Se_nate
will
take a
vote
ori whether the cap should
be rais.ed and if so; under what
conditions;·_
•
."It's·
the Student Government's
desire
•
to make
•
sure that whatever
decision we make, it is in the best
interest' of the students,'! Student
BQdy President-Elect Mikael Carlson
said. "lt's,an issue not
·only
for the
greeks but for the rest of the students
here at Marist."
The
·current
cap, limiting the
amount of cluos on campus to·. 64,
was imposed three years ago under
Nella Licari, when SGA was fairly
new.
The original purpose for the ~p
was to ensure that the Manst
community was not hit with an over-
abundance of clubs that SGA and
administration could not handle and
that students could· not fill.
For each council, there is a limit
as to the amount of clubs that exist
"The cap's theory is that it would Program and Tu1t1on
.
Assistance
school.
the Senate s vote, the adm1mstrat10n
allow for interest," Jennifer Nocella Program cuts, an~ !he_ re-ev~u~tion
This raise wou_ld
also create room will ultimatc:I~ have the power to
•
said,.-vice president-elect for clubs. of the school s v1s1~t1on
pohc1es.
for another soront~ as well.
veto the dec1S1on.
.
.
•
SGA's concern 1s that the cap be
"It's a complex issue that
IS
much
·
N
-_
·
•11
th"• •
•
b h
•
representative of the student's
deeper than it looks," Carlson said.
•
0
more
WIii
IS
issue e ang,ng
concerns as well as the students who "All possible options will be
•
•
•
wish to pursue a fraternity or ••
addressed to solve this problem."
around the Student Government.
sorority.
•
'
.
According to Nocella, no matter
.
.
.
The concern coming from the what happens at the meeting, it is
It's going to the Senate.
administration is whether they_ will important that the issue is finally.
.
be able to manage the two add1t1onal gomg to be settled.
J
••
en Noc·
e·•
Ila VP of Clubs - elect
Greek organizations on campus.
"I'm
·not
sure what i~ going to
-
,
•
"A lot of work from the happen, but I'm confident that
on the cap·
on Greek organizations
administration goes into managing every.one at th~ meeting wi!I be very
-
·
·
·
· ·
···
·
·
·
• •
the organizations as it is," Nocella well-informed m order to discuss the
"The point of the cap .means that it
•
is cyclical so you will have enough
-. •
clubs and enough interest because of
the membership requirement"
•,
After two years of investigating,
this will be the. first time the cap
issue will come to the table.·
·
In· the past, the issue has been
bounced around from committee to
committee.
It bas reached the Senate floor
before, but not as such a serious issue
as
it currently exists.
"It's been around a while and we
·
have been doing a lot of work on
it," Nocella said. "Basically, we are
just proposing it out to the Senate to
lift the cap."
"It is a predominant issue because
of the interest of the greeks who
ma_!ce
up 12 percent of the student
body," Carlson said.
"The main thrust is coming from
the Greek organizations simply
because that is the only council that
has been capped."
According to Carlson, SGA and
administration does not want to take
on more than they can handle.
At next month's meeting, the
joint session will determine not only
if the cap should be raised but if so,
by how much, given the current
restrictions placed on issues like
financial
and
administrative
management.
said. "We understand the adminis- issue," Nocella said. "No more will
tration's standpoint,"
this issue be hangin~ ar~und the
Carlson
said
he
feels student government. It s gomg to the
administration has a Jot of reasons Senate."
for not wanting the cap raised. ''TIiey
Being a student issue, the joint
have stated their side and have session next month will be open to
addressed some important points," he the public where anyone can have
said.
"I
don't think there is anything
.
impossible to work out though."
SGA
now
must
try
to
compromise the interests of the
administration and the student body.
"There are two sides to the issue,"
Nocella said.
"While we are looking to do what
we can for the students and bring
the.issue to the table, the debate May
3 will determine whether it is
4
•
THE
CJRci:E;
APRILZ?,
1~5
-
Fofll1.et
Strident:
spot
j1tiN"YC
•
c0Rtti:CQ6NS/Ar{OEQ'GI~$~-~
..
_-
• •
by ~STINA
WELLS
-~capon
before·~~y·e~chflfed
~O:
Jhisili_clllapol~gylJ(>;~u.i¢~,DlG~NN~~/~-~- tlt_e-:·
.--
' _-
;
-'
Editor
•
•
:
____
--
=~~;g~je:i-~:J~;;:;:~~:!'.~~l!~
_
_April
·l~pt
~~tio1to~Th~f
ircr,e~,
itst()~ffnti~~<i
'."~~~t:
A
-
•
d.
-
t ··
·a11··
(··
th
F ,
_
two hours later_
•
at Columbia>
Students Right to
Know: was placed on ~e fro11t
page
_
Apr. ~\s~!e
irthe i~:i~; Jew~~: P~esbyt_eri~ Med_ical
Center,
'
.
•
with an incorrec(~yJine~;.The
~cle was not:wn.~en by.
Kathurima Mwaria~ a fo_imer
t.farist
•
~~hce fou nd f~ur
.
ba_~s
•
~f.
-MEREDITH
KENNEDY
buf b
.
ALICIA.:.The Circle
--
student, was shot'and killed by two
.
m!'-1'iJuana
on ~waria s bo~y 3:1ong
-
_
_
.
.
:
•
-~
__ .
Y
_
.
_
.
;
_
.
_
_
New York City
-
police
•officers;_ .
_
wdh the -2?-calibre au!omauc pistol,
_-
staff would like to_
apologize for any gnef this mistake>,-_·
Mwari_
a 25 was shot four times
.
reports said. The pistol chamber
.
h
-
-
.
.
-
'd
h-
.
_
. •
'
'
• d
d
d
•
-
ds
may ave cause er.
---
-
Wed. Apr.
12
in Washington
~ntame on~ roun an two roun
Heights. He was shot after reports_ m the magapne.
.
that. he had terrorized residents
The pohce are defe:ndmg the
IN RESPONSE
toRANl>oLPH
BASS .• .'flje'Circle
including a pregnant wonian, with
~
shooting, but the'f~ily ha~ retained
-
.
-
_
.
. .
.
. _ __
.
_
_
__
.25-calibre pistol.
•
.
-_
legal. counsel to myestigate the
feltUsting the crime you
were
serving. time in'pdson for
-
A
police spokesman said Mwaria shootmg.
was not
·damaging
to your piece in
·the
March 30th
had Wpulle
1
d
5
-
6
a hgusn
on sedveral
wdomhen Mwaria headed the audio-visual
issue: ..
_Ra_
th
___
-_
e_r
__
we_
be_-_"
lie_
v_
e_
it_
p_
roved_-.
that son.ie_
on_-_
e
con-_
on
'
t
t." an wave t e departnien_
t at_ Dal_·
to_
n Pre_
p_ Schoo_L
•
·-
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
we
• -
t
t
b
fi
VI_
·_c_ted_
fio._r-.su_ch_._a·c_
rim_·
ec:an-improv·
·e
hirilself_and
de-
-
_
_.
apon a
_
some youngs ers e ore He obtained this job after he dropped
i
approaching a_ nearby car.
out of Marist three credits. ~hy of
:s~rires.ah"c~ducatio~\inci
aihance:
.
•
-_
·_
According to police; more than a
•
graduation.· He was a communica~·
dozen. witnesses heard two officers
order Mwa~ia to put down the
_
tions major;.
.
•
•
•
•
____________________________
_.
:Get
Involved
/:1
•
-
Earn Priority Points
·•
on
_
Sunday,-April 30th
from
__
7pm-10pm
_
_
at Poughkeepsle All Sport
Use of: Pool, Racquetball Courts, Basketball Co~rts, Whirlpool, and more!!
I
!
!
.
i
.
5
by
MEREDITH KENNEDY
Features Editor
There's nothing in the world quite
like a nice cold, wet beer.
After a crystal clear Thursday
with temperatures in the 60's, Friday,
April 20 proved to be far from
picture-perfect when it came to the
weather.
Yes, it rained on River Day, but
that did not seem to damper the
spirits of the 21 and
.older
Marist
crowd.
The
beer
flowed
freely
throughout the afternoon, though
some students sought shelter under
the two giant tents set up in the Hoop
Lot.
While non-alcoholic beverages
were available the drinks of choice
proved to be beer and wine coolers.
Some students decided to brave
the rain (most after a few brewskis)
and danced to the "Electric Slide".
Music was provided by Awesome
Audio.
Food was served under one of
the tents and included hamburgers,
bot dogs and chips; the favorite
appeared to be the cookies.
River Day, being the only Marist-
sponsored function where all 21-
year-olds attending the !=()liege
are
invited to attend and allowed to
drink, is a much-awaited event and
seemed to go off this year without a
hitch.
The only problems seemed to be
the large line for beer, and some
students complained that the beer
truck left early. No one seemed to
mind the rain.
..
.
.
.
.
.
lHECIRa.E,
OPINION
APRIL 27,
t~S:'
.
•
·-
.
•
'
.
.,
'
,
:
:
,
•.
•
~
••
_
-~
! •
-..
·'.
••
__
,
:.----
_, -.-·
:
•
•
.·
,
-·
•
-
MARIST
COLLEGE,
POUGHKEEPSIE,
NY 12601
THE STUDENT
NEWSPAPER
_
Kristina Wells,
e<!itor
Dana
Buoniconti,·senioreditor
:·-
Justin Seremet.
senior editor
-
Teri
L. Stewart.
sports editor
Meredith
K:ennedy,featWeeditor
Dawn Martin,
associate
editor
.
Daryl
Richard,
associaie
editor
Larry
Boada,
editorial
page editor
•
Matthew Dombrowski, disiribution
manager
Jen Forde,
advertising
manager
G. Modele
Clark~,faculty advisor
PUBLISHED
EVERY
THURSDAY
--
_
: _
_
:
'".\~,;
.-:·1-.;#ff,
=?,4
t(
.IN
THE FACULTY. LOU~GE,
TEACHERS
·PLAN
HOW
.-TO
FtUIN. THE
:S_MALL'
AMOUNT OF NICE WEflTHER WE ACTUALLY: GET/HERE
AT MARIST~
~
•.
•
•
_·Political·
Thoughts.
·-of-if{e>Week-'·
__
.
.
Dear· Diary, •
_
.
·What
happened wh~n the .bomb-ex- · ..
> _
·1have
a
diff~r~rit topic tci~sp~a.k
<>n'
Boy howdy, today was a day like no other. I mean, like that guy in Smashing Pumpkins ploded in' Oklahoma City reminds. me of- today;'one that is•m:uch less political yet if
says, "Today is the greatest day I have ever known."_·
.
._
.
.
an earthquake in California; b~ause_even, soimpoitant thatweas'·Americans-must
Now,Ididn'texactlysmearfluorescentpaintallover"theplaceliketheydointhevideo,
·
·
1
"f:
•
··1head
··,--,
•.
'-,.·i,
' ,
•.
,
·
b11t
if
I
did_
have fl11orescetjt
paint
I
probably would have.
-
.
- -·_.
'
;
•
though the big
:explosion
a ready hap-
ace
I
. .
~m;, ."
: :,
.
,.
.
,
,
•. ·_.
So, anyway, I got up this morning at around
8:30
to get ready for my9:30 class, took
pened·, the aftershocks
are
still to·conip,-·
'-_
liderronsthimJs,sqm~thibec_
ng that'fu.reat-
a shower, and got dressed.
·-
•
••
•
• ·
·
•
We've·all::eady.had,to experience
e~~t<> estroy
sco~ntry.
ause_wehave
When
I
headed downstairs for a. quick bite,
I
found my_
housemates scampering around
some of them. In fact, .it seems like as the._· had a complacent attitude toward it for too
the kitchen cooking. What was everyone doing up so early?
._
.
tragedy.-unfolds it grows greater in scope
•
many ye~.
;'•
-'
-.
:.
· •
• •
·
••
Well, when my roommate told me to sit down and that they were making breakfast for
everday when you hear
about
the children.
.--
"
_
This-at~tude ~tarted to chang_e 'Yhen
me, my jaw hit the floor.
. .
.
·_ - .
·
one of Aipenc:a,'s mo.st famousJ?~Jdings,
"For me? Why?"
I
asked.
or tbe parents, the
ffilSSmg
?r !he
_d~ad. _
New york 9ty'sWor,l~ Tra,de~qe_11ter,
was
"Well, it's your day, of course," they all replied.
.
.
The after~hocks:~e Slill-gouig.,to_ bombed by a group of.Arab fundaniental-'-
"Yeah, you didn't know that?" my roommate queried. "President Murray has declared
npple not only m the pam ,we fee,lor.-the •
•
••
__
.
,.•
·
..
_•.
__ ··•
• •
___
·_·
•
•
_·
-_--·
•
•
·'
today in honor of you - no dasses, no exams, no. ~uthin' ."
_
_
_
_
•
p~n we'U s~ but-wi~-th~ i,ssu~~ it is
go::
IS;.
:_
S~'.p~pJe_ili~
ih_
th~(e?(plC>!iicin'as
'Yell, needless to sat I was flabbergastedat t!te idea
_ofa
d_ay
all_
for me. I must be the. mg
tq
challenge Arilenc:~:-~l~-j,:·.
:_·
'
;-_;
i
< '."; ·
America wafohed the· oestructlonunf old in
luckiest person around.
_
.
_
•
._
,
.
.
.-.
-
•
_,·
_
.: •
-
.
->.
Oklahoma,City has.rais~,th~ issue
:
h' ·
·-1·--
~
,~·:·
•,
·'
·•••
>th -
,.,
r
··--:
·
j
·
So, l sat down to a scrumptious breakfast of bacon and eggs·, and pancakes with IPY of
dolllestic
p. arainilit<int•group•
;:
;
Waco::
.
t ~1.T:A
~lThng
,~o._p~s
•.
\:11 '.!!fi.
·,}lab_.
i_9nh,
.•
w_edas
name drizzled on them With maple syrup; a· total feast
"
·
· - •
'.
__
•
• •
•
> .
. .
\
_ . <
. .. •.
-- •
:.
- •
-
.
·
__
· - ··
_
.
,
,
_'"m"'
.
.
'
-
.
>
:
'• .
~tu11n~.-.
;
_.
,.
e~-~
\Ver:
_f
~
~-, ~I'., t?~g.
Jen
,
..
After breakfast,had hit the spot, I offered to:do'the dishes bt:cause my hciusem#eshacl
,::
~:•:1:1-1~-p.~ht
to b~~,~~_,Jh~.~~Je~~cy,
!S~S~.r~~i:-.~~-~-
~9f~?t,1te~,~19~al
_
_1~t~lh_;
been so nice to cook for me. .
,
,;
.....
, ...
,.,~
-r,,:;°•,"'
,:-~~i'r:,'«~
,,..;,;r:·:,;
:'ir
~>t9pi:.-?r~s~dent;:;.1.r~Y~.C?'-'?•"()_fl19~.t11~-Y~~--
gence;.:
-,
-·-- 1 -:···
. •
-''
·"
·.:
·-.' ·:
1
:
'.
.
•
•
•
'"No_wayi;•-they
!i"aid>'We'~e
gonna do
_all
~e
dishe;
for you.~;-.-:
.·:
•
•
•. -·
..
• ,.
•
tracks domestic militiagroups[and ~we_
: •'· : ·'-"'Did'we
leariHt.'lesson':from,the
..
Unbelievable, I thought to myself..
•.
• ."
..
_.
.
•
:
.
going to have toforsake soineofourlil;ier-"
.
World TradeCentei:boiiil:>_iiig?.
.•
•
·- • .:
,
•
-~ext,
they asked !°?e to come outsid~·wi~ them.~ ~~rpris~
"'.'~-wait_ing
for_
me:_._:-··
. :_
ties i11
order to p~otect them?
.
, -;
: •
•
..
,
'_!llarqu~sti<>n/has,quite_
~•-f~~ ~-
Close your eyes,
.
my r~ommate s~id.
_ ..
_
.....
_
,.
;
__
:.
·_. ..
.
·: . •
.
..
. .'/
.,
"''.
Jthascatapult~ tht!S~Jssues 1~to the S\_Yer;s;:~epending1Jntwh.p
you ask,';>c•
'.. •
Well, when I stepped outside, and they told me to ~pen my .ey~, J.~as J_llSt
~umbfou~~f~·
•
forefront of our minds and the inedia; Even ,-,~-
,J/A,sk_.~yonejifQ}ga\loma:
Cjty-that
•
me~~t6~~d~n-):<:r;~~g~~t;;~;t~\;i:~i~4~ii~-Jtr~u?:~.:~~R~t\...
~p~g~·
its,Jt~nii~ifk~;-¥g_~--a~o'..
kJifo'J(
}}U~~o~-:¥:d:~fY(~m\~ff
yo\i'th~KJ~corn:
Theywere all holdmg ~igns with my n~e pn them; and they
all
shouted
''We
~~ye
you!":.-._
tml}d what
}!~e.d
tC>
,_be
.1~.
that_·
same~ ~pat.;
.
p,a.c~~~Y:.
1
8:-:
~ti}l
.<Pf~ye~_~llg.
µs_:frt>J.Il,.d_~
:::s~~ir,J;."ili
t:;p~~blyjj•;;,}w~
~,1~
~"'~i]oi,~':~~i/
[1$W~~~i~f
~
;~~
'~!tiiiliiiiiii~
,
•
Well, my friends brought me ove!to
_thi~s·b1g
st~ge ~ey had s~t up and
_asked
~e,.~o sit
• _·_•
feri~i~,4i
h
9
,\y.l,ll4iet!o.,}Y.~
lla_n4ifog:,ilie
}:h1ddf
P~.1A,~?Jrl!,tP~.~
9~al!~m~S~!Y
last
mfrontofeveryone.
•
_
..
·.
,
•
..
·
..........
·.·.-·
,
_:
·
,
?'JC
···••=
0
··roklah .•
c·w··,
_
•week1s.theworstterronstattack:mU.S.
thiss~i~:.·;~c::i:e
0
t!e~=~~!ww~~r~e:;!~t~~a:'.
eve~
9
_ne
I·kllst.?~-;t~--~~
..
:./
;7;~1-~;~;:~~it\\fi
111
i[il~€ti§{iii'
--~~fyj,'.P1£Tu~tAtffiiit~:!?~tt1:
.
. Murray said thar
I
was the• greatest studen.t to ~ver attend Manst,
'and.
then he ga!e Ille
~~IJp~; ~llat
~~
~e1~g}9~!!~?P~~ ()f try.,.
ftiWs
right:'Xi¥t~rfoa' Anfericaris
are
:; ::r
~~gand h~ded me an_FAF
fo~
offenng nie-a fyU.sc~~larship
becaus~!\·7f-
, 0r:5:~~:1Nf16dy
.in·._ciJiiliiiiiilEii{te~
te!f°.#s~J~;J-::B?L:it}t)::
...
;
<
\0:'
"AU you have to do is sign the. dotted line" he said
-
"and a Manst education·cari be~-;
,-:-1::ds"
'ih
1ifi
;•
fi
,
'T
'if
''
·at"•.:
.,
•,:,:::·Spev~cy:oµeJf.iiit:f!-!Sh¢4to-~llUile~e
yours~ on us_!'
_,··-••
.
,
•
<·,
...
·'_;
~
·
:'
'·>
''
_
•.
\.
, .•·.
.
/;
<L
~A---:~
~t
~.;!J,-;-f<lg!
e'.s-,U~)!,,J?~e:-
•-~dqI~:~t/~g@E(iP-:Y:~~lf.Jnc,lti,d~)~~
Several of i:ny teachers were 11ext
to follow, and they· said that in honqi of my:·day;J~
/
:1,1
11
'.1.~tys tlla.~
ess~p.tiallY./~Iµ,7p.c~
!~.
g~
J>ettefd_o
a
qlll~k r~cy.;cht&lc~:We. ll~ve
,a
•
would get an A in all of my Classes because I was the greatest student that
·Milrist.
had evei-
.:
at ~~-:Jbat
thert~;!l[e
fu.~~
~Ii~
g? ll;lt()
[Il~:W,
pioblemj,ii"Wr:
,h~<is)uid
it is c~ed-
•
had;
,
'
,_.
.
. _ .
.
.
,
,
_
.
_
..
·_
,
•
_-
.__
.
'>·- :
t,lle:wreckage ofa coll_apsed
bwJdiI)g
~Q
a d9niestic:teironsm:{,)/:'.:\ft_·~.,-
...
:.
:
>
•
-Next up. v.:ere·
all:my friends, who not only g~vt: m~ ~ack all the_
~oney
that
I hadl!~f
•
1:>a.~fMY
can -pe
rt~~
tp
~f~~~JJ!5
..
_if
_ ·,
·\'.
·,.~s.Ht-~~}fi\f6~Yi.t?fdf.iw)ogeth~r-
.1oaned
them, but _said
I
was the most bestest ,fri~nd ~.friend _could ever have.
_
"
:;:·,.
_
_: P_U.lY,}O
b.e buned:
;
,:_:
.'·:.:(
/?
:·
}
,. ,
·/.,; '.
;as~
!l;ati911
ip, ~~pJ?9rtofp~f eJ,.10V1.Aajen:,
Then, my family came up on stage fora b1ggroup h~g wi~me, and my
fo~
told-~~.--/
;/-::.:·
That there ar~ hu11dreds•of fe4,e~-- cansin Oklahoma ...
-:-
,;,~:t~i:'C..
,--:, .-
...
:,
that they woul4 ne~er m~ke,m~ clean up my r~m agam, or nag ~e aboutgettmg a
JO~,
..
W6rkersCwhoeventho~ghthey'clic(rtot'go·
}c},?),Ji~~itlie~i~v~(ig1{on-:lrover~,We
.
when I graduated.
_
_.
_
·· ---
__
.
_
_ ,,.
,O·•.
•
-
-a-
..
·.-.
••·
.
-
.-
.:·.
•.
··•-•.-.
·.-
.. ,_,.,___,_
••••
,
.••
-
••
•
c.·-
..
=--,.--•,,.-,
....
·•·.
-
•,-·
•
•
So
·fior
the res·
t
·of
the
·da·
-Y
.
I·
s1"gned·
__
•
au·
tographs
-
an·
d
·h·
ad· m.
·y·
·_
p1·ctur·
e
•
~.;.'·e·
n·
-·wi"th·_peo·
·_
.p-le
•
••
in_tcr
war,_·
still lost llleir hves ser.vmg tlleir
-
_:n~.
to·~o~e~w@yJo~~n~t:n.e.wJegisla-:
-'
•
·
.
·'
,
'
·
·
,
.-
·
.......
·.
:_.,
··
_.,_.
__
._ ·-__
·
•
•-.··-.---'· -
•
,,,_-.--·
..
·,.•
:_tic>1lto.e£'imd.llie
.. ·weci.ofthe·FB1and_·
and got dates with all the people I ever want_ed
to,<iate smce Id.been at Manst.
.. .
cmmtcy.
,_.
.
..
-.,-.-.~
'.
:·.,.~".
,:
·,: .. :
•,
:--
--.•-·
_-..,
.
.-.
_p
..
_
.....
,po,,
..
,
..
_'.
.. ,
_
~--•c•
..
•
.. ;
Well, it got to be:pretty
-
late; and
l
was gett~g
_tired
from all_
1che
p<;<>ple,
but my friends
•
;-
Along with the suffering, the explo-
other:agenc1~ Jo
.~_9mbat
terrons111~"
f?oth
a11
•
!aid, "You ~•t. call it
-
~-night just yet;, We'~e
:t~~g
you ou!· ~Qr drinks."
ston
_i~
Okl,ahom~.
¢JJY,.:
alsct_
raj_s~
•
~-(!~~,
_dome.s~~
an~
in~fil~O~~-J]~J>i:~~~eiif
s
.
I
really don t have ~y,money on me,
I said.
_
,
,,
._
_
..
· .
.__
..
:
issuesthataregoingto·challelig'eAn'lerica.
·()mmb~s
Col!nt~*rro~~R.l~~c_t
<;>f)995
_
"N~
probk1mo,"
my fri_ends
responded,
_"because
_all
rour dri_nks
ai:e on
us!'·.
•
.
-·._
".-._
The
memt>~
ofwha(happeriecf in
Olcla~·
-_should]~ p~se'tf~thouf~elay;·;:
·-:··
:
:'\
,
S<>!.we
~eaded o~t
__
to
th~
bar, andwhenwe-g~t. there it
:,v~
totally Jam-packed. I mean,
h.
-
f:~.i
·b
·th·
··hal.
-
1
-_-
-·
·t--l-
-
•. .
.
,; -This-wdl:enaple
tij~:Attomey-Gen-
·there
were people lmed up around the block-waiting to:get m.
9mamay i'.llle,~
ut ec
enge.i eaves.
ra1·
,"fti
..
,, __
..
.,
.......
,.
~-
.
-
B
fri ds b
.
·
gh.
•
"gh
·
·
h
·
• "d
d 1ik· th
•
f ·
•
us· will noL They will need•to·be··addressed
•
• e
to steP up e orts ~amst terronsm to
ut my en
ro_u ~_me-n _t.,up_
to,t_ e:entran~ to go msi ~.
an
e e partmg o
•
'
..
_
.
. .
,
-
-
•
;
..
_ ...
,
reduce the-likeliliood-'of.'anoth
:.'
ttack.
the Red Sea, everyone' stepped as1d~_.so
11).at
there was. a clear path.to the bar.
bec:ause'.m,some cases they will prevent
·
·
-•
·
-·
.
•·
.
·.
.
-
er a,
-
.
.
Everyone.
that Vt'.as
there sho?ted out rnf~~e
and
,~d
"Co_~gia¥a-tions!"
, ·
.
.
._
.
·c:
•
ai10~er Oklahoma· City: from happening !anet
.R.-~?qJl~
~d.
s~e w!U
~-~ ~
~XlSl~
•
Even the bartender leaned over the counter to shake my hand and said "What'll ya have?
•
•
.
;
.,
,_
.
•
.
•
mg prov1s1pn
_mJ~t_
Year-~
cnme ~ill to
It's on us "
, •
•
.
•
.
•
agam.
'
.
.
,
-.
•
·
-
.
-
.
·
·
·
ask for the death penal!y for the madmen
So/I g~i mydrink'and this'buge cake is wheeled out .:chocolate, with those edible pinic:
-
•
::
,,Butm
the words 9~ Billy
?rabam,
who
de.stroyedso
many
lives.·,
:
...
;
•
blue and yellow frostedflowers, and my name written ori it in gigantic letters - and we
whQ spoke at the memonal service:
__
tbat·
•
J~pp~audhereffortstopro~utethis
partied with -cake and
tasty
beverages into the wee· hours of the morning.
,
re~ar<!}ess
of th~ chall~nge
~
•••
the spmt of.
case
to•
the fullest· extent
'of
the law. We
By
·aroun~
5 or so,· 1 was thoroughly ~xhausted, and wanted
t?
call it_a_night.
this c1~ and this nation will not
·be
de-
-
11eed
to give lier and hercoll~gues_in law
So, my friends_and I_ went home by lim~, and I headed upstairs to get mto my PJs.
feated.
.
.
.
.
_
.
_
_
enforcementmorepowertodeal with these
I was about to J~P mto
be?
when I noticed. that my_
bedspread had been turned down,
Even m the media we know its
go-
acts before people are dead instead of later
and ihere was a mmt on my pillow.
• t be th l d •
th TV
•
•
·
•
•
•
·
H
_
•
g1
1 h d this
da
bee ?
.
.
mg o
e ea -m on e
news or on
-
as under current laws.
r::..
8fh::1d
:O::
co:motion !utsid: iny window, so I pulled back the curtain to see
the cover of the newspaper. ~ut the
dif--
We cannot afford to let this issue set
what it was· and there was the whole school and all my family and friends - outside on the
ference between Oklahoma City and
_the
on the back burner for another second.
green betw~n Lowell Thomas and Dyson again.
'
trial of OJ. Simpson is that this is worthy Americans shouldn't have to lose their
·
"Sweet dreams and don't let the bed bugs bite," they shouted. "We love you!"
of America's attention.
•
lives
at the hands of citizens who choose
Which brings me to now, as I write down these thoughts.
-
to
break the
Jaw:
I
think every student at
Marist
deserves their own day.
••
Mary Diamond
is The· Circle's
Sean White is
The Circle's Demo-
Nighty-night, diary.
Republican political columnist.
crat columnist.
•••
I
I'
VtEWPOINTAPRIL27,
1995
'
.••
'
..
,..
.
•
·.
••
.
'
,
'
----------------------,
1
Somebody give this
I
I
I
I
guy a hand...
I
Letters to the Editor ...
1
· Potatoes
With. a
Sin.ile:
Thanks Jeff
I
It's always great when an him up and return him to his mother.
I
I
insignificant event can lead to a
You get back to your friend and
I
cataiitrophic situation.
• • he says, "Where did you go?"
I
Sort of like the time I left the
You say, "Did you see that?"
I·
I
seat up on the toilet when my
His response: "See what?"
I
I
friend's
baby sister was just
But then twenty minutes later,
I
beginning toilet training.
after you just get done talking to a
I
I
But it turned out all right, she pretty girl you know, the same
Editor:
•
.
.
I
was potty trained and learned how observant friend will say: "Did you
I
I
guess ymfcould say that this is simply made my day. For my S6metimes I feel, that I do not
I
to swim all in _orie
day.
_
know you have some ketchup on the
I
a kind ofappreciaticin letter. -
roommate's birthday, he made her des~rve all of the things that he does
1
,,
But what happened to me wasn't side of your face?"
I
As a college student,
I
do not an eno~ous· birthday_
cake that he for nie and my friends.
as educational. ·
''Thanks."
. usually appreciate the things around brought out to "our. tabJe. •
•
Next time he does something for
I
I simply scratched my nose with
See, this advice is a little too late.
I
me unless they directly deal with ' Each day he_
is
there behin? the you or any of your friends, please
I
the wrong finger.
_
It's sort oflike the advice to the
I
partying, my friends and sleep. But, kitchen or walking'around making- thank him. I am sure that he has not
I
How is.that dangerous you ask? family in Poltergeist - "Oh by the
I
I have decided to ask recognition for • sure that_
everything is to his liking heard those· words as much as he
Well if you were holding a gun way the house is on an Indian burial
one particular person-wlio•.deserves for "his kids,»:as.he_likes
to call us. 'should.have. . •
•
I
and you. did it with your trigger ground."
•
I
• it-the mosr out of all-the· rest.•
I am al\\'ays asking for more ceJery
·._so· from everyone who eats in the
I
finger you might have a bigger mess
But back to my situation.
I
:You probably know him as Jeff, or better potatoes, and through all of, cafeteria and kn?ws Jeff and from
I
on your hands, and on the floor_-
Why was it so important to this
I
the cafeteria man;
•
-' •
my whining amt pestering, Jeff is the "back table ~uls," we thank you
I
but that '":as· not t~e. case.
.
,
guy for me to see his finger?
I
We all hate to -think· of the there with a smile giving me what I Jeff for everything!
I was sunply dnvmg, had an itch,
I know he has one, I'm sorry I'm
cafeteria food and how
it
barely ~ked for. . .·. .
•
. . .
.
.
•
.•
-.- .
'
.•
I
scratched with my middle finger and not impressed.
I
co-mpares'.tcvour mother's honte-
:. Another one:of triy friends hurt
'
Tara Juwa, sophomore
I
so~efellow citizen with border !ine
I have finally come to a solution.
I
cooking, but Jeffthis·year has _made her anklefro_m
a fall imd bad t~_wear
•••••.
• ••••••
;• •••••
I
samty and_
way too much free time
If he thought it was a big deal to
I
it more more bearable-for us all. He -~ cast and use crutches. Jeff would:
Like to wnte?
:
I
continued to follow me for three show you his one finger - you show
istherealmosteverydayoftlii;week;'
go over,to her and-?Sk what she.
, _
L"1ke·
·to go •to
••
miles because he thought I flipped him all five. Just wave.
I
wearing a smile and usually:dressed
_wanted
to. eatarid th_en proceed to•
•
.
•
him off and wanted to return the
Nothing drives someone more
I
hysterically- for-. the upcoming
go
.and
·geUt'.for her.
.
- •
.
concerts?
•
I
favor.
crazy than if you cut them off, nearly
I
holiday. •
• _ •
• • : • •
• ,_These
are just-a few examples of• -.
.
: -_ .
•
1
The first thing that bothers me is kill them, and then just say hello
I
·-He.goes oufof his way to'get
what,he has d?ne, but the list ~oes•Just
the combmat1on•1
~hy 'Yas someone around fo_r that with a wave.
students what they need; He has eve~ on,
I
know-there are plenty of you:
- • •
1
•
•
:
ms1gm~cant moment of my hfe -
It's much more creative than just
I
gone so far as to ,;e:member our out there.who know exactly, what.I.
I
m looking for. •
I
scratchmg my nose?
giving one finger.
I
names even though: there are close am talking ~bout and I ~ow that•
•
I
How co~e nobod~ is ever around . B~t I didn't want to escalate the
I
to 1500 students thateat in tlie - you_'Ypuld
Jike to thank hun too< • Come ride the new
A&E
page. •
I
for_ someth1~g co?l hke when I get situation.
I
cafeteria throughout the day; •
Without Jeff, the atmosphere.
m • :
Give 3 shout out to
•,
a high score ma video game or make
Instead I tried to communicate
ForValentine's:Day \\'hen I was the cafeteri_a
would not be as half as• .
Larry
B d
@
4313
-
•
that really hard basket?
to him that it was a misdirected
I
upset and· needing
a
valentine; "he ex.citing and enj~yable.J am writ~g:
__ . .
oa a
-
:
I
But no, they're there when I finger. It was an unintentional foul
I
made me a heart shaped cookie that this t()_Jeff_
beca~~e
_he.
~eserves 1t. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
I
sc_r~tch my_ nose and . get to on my part. •
I
It.'s.a
,/Festif
at:·
Editor:
•
• • · •
I
m1smterpret 1t and try to kill me.
That's why we should just make
• •
• • • •
• ·- •
• •
•
•
•
It seems the car is the place the next finger a referee finger that
I
;Stick :_With;
:Tradition
I
where you're always caught at the can just corre<;t the fouL
I
- -
I
awkward moment, whether it's
But while I tried to tell him he
I
Editor: :: ,· . ,
_. _,. ,
.
-_
.
I
scratching your nose at the wrong was an ineligible receiver to my
I
Recently I was visited.by a feJlow refuge from the heat and sun
I
time or singing along to a song and finger, I found out he was a bad lip
gradu~ting senior bearing a petition
4.President's reception: Having it
looking like you're having some sort reader.
I
calling f!)r_
the graduation ceremqny
•
• on the
mall
in front of Marian makes
I
of seizure while trying to hit a high
He just thought I was· further
I
to be moved from Leonidoff Field , it easily .accessible fromLeonidoff
I
note.
_ _ _ _ • .
~e~ling him off, adding insult to
I
_,;ffhis:is•artjnvit~tfcinto-allMarist, t\X;:1.:J~~~giJe:pbrpose
of
~;.~t
lian~foa{acces~: lNort1f'~ie1d
I
·peo~~th~!
s~~~~:
Jt61:-~:!p:~~
_
mJ~~-
~~w
• he
roll~d
_-~own· the
I
students, faculty/and.,staff to.·the this?Anyonewho has spent time at
is not easily accessib1~,J-eoni_doff
is
I
help, but ju_st drive away so you window and
told
me off.
I
19Q5 ,Festival of Student,_:written Marist knows that this
.field
is. not
Needless to say I did not sign the
I
don't crash ·mto them.
Well now I've had enough and
I
Plays. • •
,,
"
easily. acce·ssible; .especially for
petition, and I'm. sure there are other
I . _
!think i~'s just a law_ of natu~e finally ~ave
~i~
what I should've
·: :Tiicnestiv~· is ·fj,rodu~ti~n of
pi;oplC?
like my ~other who do not
reasc>ns
not to move the ceremony
that man misses everythmg and is from the begmmng ... the finger.
I
the :Theatre :Workshopciass: • •• ·-_, walk as easily as ·the rest of us. .
• thatih11:ven't ~nsi~ered.
_ .
I
oilservant at a!l)he wrong times.
And it's !rue - it's better to give
I
'"I offer some reasons why the
.-
·_ Leomdoff Field IS a convement
I
Example: .
. .
than to receive.
I
Plays will •. be performed on-_ ceremony should.not be moved:·
place to hold the ceremony. l ask
I
You're waJkmg down the street
Frank
La
Perch
is
The Circle's
I
Thursday, April27th~ and Friday,
1.
bathrooms -
.c..
the authors of the petitiori tci consider -with a friend and see a baby crawling humor C(llumnist
... his name used
April 28th, at
7
:00 PM and Sunday,
2.
seating availability: aside from
the above, and unless there are more
I
·into the middle of traffic about to to be
J
oh9 Doe. and records show
I
_April 30th; at 2:00 PM in the Marist
the folding chairs Leonidoff has the
compelling reasons to move the
I
get hit.
he's died 1400 times and is a
I
Theatre located in the Campus
large bleacher section; North Field
cer:mony, I a~k the g~ad_uating
L
You dash out avoiding cars scoop suspect in 1206 murders.
J
Center.
'
__.d<>es
~i.Ot _ __ •
.. __ • _
seniors to abstam from s1gmng the
------------•---------
.
,'. >.'.'.
• ., , •
/ - 3,_,~ha<l~:
n();,shade ~(the North- petition.
••
•
. Roseanne Saraceno
and.
Debbie... Field; Leonidoff is flanked by trees.
••
· UI1derdown,
publicity cre)V
on the bleacher side offering people
Minotjty Recruitment Day
The Office of Minority' Affairs
and the· Black· and • Latin . Student
Organization of the College of
Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia .
University will sponsor its annual
Minority
Recruitment
Day
Conference on Saturday, May
6,
1995 from
8:00 AM
to
5
PM at the
Pand S. Alumni Auditorium located
at 650 West 168th Street. .
Workshops
will
include
"Fundamentals of Financing and
Budgeting for Medical Education:',
"The
P
& S Admission
Process,"
"Coping
with
Medical School" and
"Life as
a Medical
Student".
An advance registration
form
is
required in order for students to
attend the conference,
but there is
no fee.
For more information contact
Gerald E.Thomson.
M.D., Associate
Dean for Minority
Affairs,
at (212)
305-4157
or
6826
or
contact
Desmond Murray at Marist at 575-
3543.
Kevin
J.
Smith, senior
by.KB WELLS
The Voice of Reason
On Wednesday, April· 19, two-
years to the day after Waco, a car
bomb exploded in front of a federal
building in_
Oklahoma City.
As I watched the rescuers fish
through the nibble looking .for
. survivors, I couldn't help but cry.
W~thin t4e federal building was
a children's day care center.
• My stomach turned as a w_oman
appeared on television
saying:
"I've
lost a
seven-year-old
and
a twelve-
year-old,
I
hope.you are
happy ... " as
her eyes welled-up with tears. .
, :
.
Imagine how
this woman
felt
as
she poured
her heart
out to the
b3:5tards,
who, committed
~is
crime.
She will never see her
children
again: •
She
will
never hug them or
ki~ them
again. She
has lost her
own flesh
and
blood.
This woman is among the many
parents, spouses, family members
who have lost their loved ones to
this tragedy.
I was in
shock, absolute horror,
that someone could be so cold and
disrespectful
of human life.
As
the story unfolded
on Friday,
I
watched
the FBI
surround
the house
of
a man whom they thought had
connections to this abominable
tragedy.
.
Every newspaper
in
the country
showed
the sketches
of the two "Iohn
Does'"
who witnesses claimed were
the bombers.
government hate group.
The day the FBI ~eized this
These hate groups aren't even
house, they also arrested Tim targeting the ones they hate. They
McVeigh (one of the John Does), a are targeting innocent lives. Sadly,
innocent children had their lives
demolitions expert in the United robbed from them.
States Military and absent without
leave (AWOL).
As if the loss of human life
The most recent number of bodies wasn't tragic enough, now President
found in the rubble is estimated to Clinton seems to be taking harsh
criticism
from
political party
be
86
as of Tuesday. Rescuers members for his sensitive and heart-
estimate that more than 100 people felt speech at the memorial service
are still missing.
on Sunday. .
- This tragedy has hit America and
Clinton's speech reassured the
its citizens hard and deep.
-
• •
f Oki h
c·
h
h
- It has inade children all over the· citizens
O
a oma ity t
at
t e
government is here. for them in a
country scared to go• to school or their time of need.
day care. -It has made parents afraid
ciinton also •spoke with so_
me of
for their children.
. -. .
. •
the children of the city comforting
~e bonib!11g
is_ somethmg that them and telling them they should
~\!f!~S
thmk
qi.n
never happen-;. not be afraid to go to school because
m . 'The Ian? '?,f
the free and the home of the bombing.···
of the brave'.
.
The deaths 1n the Oklahoma City
Unfortu~atel~, and at a great cos. bombing will forever be remembered
of human life,-1t has happened. It in the hearts of Americans across the
~appened at the ~o!ld Trade Cent~r . country regardless of whether certain,
m New York City m 1993. Now it political party members believe it or
has occurred in the heartland of not
America; ~klaho~a. .
This country should be mourning
The reality which stiJl faces many the lives of these children and adults
in this country is that it can happen • not criticizing our government fo;
again.
.
•
.
showing compassion.
The Umted States of Amenca. has
This is a truly unfortunate·
found: through _ these homble
situation.
trage<!1es,
that we are vulnerable to
The Circle mourns the lives of
terronst attacks.
these feilow Americans
and
The sick irony of the situation is encourages everyone to do the same.
that the alleged men are Americans.
Hate has reared its ugJy head
in
They have served in our military and, this country at the cost of innocent
yet, they are members of an anti-
lives.
a.
.
THE
CIRCLE,
APRIL Z.7,J995
.
.
-·
.
.
.
'
'
·.:.
••
,.
~~:-·-
__
•
.
·,
·.,
.
.'
~-......
.
_-:_
•
..
.
.
.
.
.
·
..
:.
•_--._
--.-
~.
•
..
:·_·
•
.,.
_
....
•
•
•.•
.
.
•
-
.
.
.
.
~
.
•
.
.
.
.
-
'
'
'
.
.
.
.
.
.
'
'
..
:·,·
..
'
•.
·-
_:1,•~:,;
•
--.:W•
-·
..
·1·T··.·
..
•
.......
H····
•
...
\
IAiL)t··.D·•··
•...••.
·c.
>o·
·•·••·.·.··.··L
......
L···•···E·'-
c;
.1
•....
"·~<
.
,~11r~'J·
·.
·
..
.
. :.
.
.
.
.
.
.
V r\
.
.
..
.\.../.
r:z
-~•
L.I •
.,...
"
. ·.
.
: .
4
:?:c::,,-;-;,:.
••
.
.
..
.
.
.
'
'.
,·,·.
,,·.
-
...
•
•
•
.
.
.·
·'
•.
.
'
:·
.
.;,,
.
.
'
.
.
~
'
.
'
---
•
•••
.
·
•
·.
··
.5b
<p
EC
l
A L.
o
E:.\lf[<f'~l""I·~·
> ·.·•
.
.
\
.
.
,·
.
.
'
,•·
-
.
.
.
.
.
•
•
..
SUNDAY4/30··
.·.
·
·•
.·.····•·•
•···
··•
•.
··•·.
••
•....
·.•·.·
.......
•.
•
......
•
- '.
.
.
.
,
.
_·-
-
.•.•
·.
'
•
.
.
-
.
•
~·
·•
THU
RS
DAY
4/21
REtERl/0/R
tt/_Ul'rRE
:·
.
•
I
.
.
-
.
.
-
.
•
.,
FRIDAY
4/28
PULL MY DAISY
•
•
-
•
·.
'
:
.
-
.
.
.·
..
/
.
,..
.
.
'
•
~
•
--~
•v
•
•
'
'
;.-l
-
......
,
..
···---
..
--------------·--
··------------------··
··--
-·-
·-·-
-··-·-··-·--····
••
-
-
I
'.STOCKBROKER
TRAINEE.
:
En~r
the
-~,c_citing
field
~i
fuves~e~t.B~g!
:
L.C
Wegard·&
Co~,'lnc/Wa
36
yr~'oldfull
service
broker~
•
•.
ag~
tum
seeking aggressive; career'oriented indiv.
for
••
.
our Westchester expansion. Send Resume
to:
'
•
•
'·
Marc V arricchione
•
•
•
•.
220 White Plains Rd.
4th Fl ..
·
Tarrytown, NY 10591
pr call
1-800~845-7171
•••••••••••••••••••••
•
••••••••••••
•··
•.
•
.J
•
•
:\ Tired
of
vour
wardrobe?
..
• Jt1andee
-
•
•
•
•·
.
,_.
.
•
..
·
•
.:
· •
.
:".·ID·lhlJflJSCUIJI!
:
P11ughltt18/JSill·
••
•
•
•
•
•
•
Plaia/Jfall~
:
_.*1BringthisJldtortD%
f
• •
•
1/iSi:iJunl*'*
·
•
:-:
:~wtiiilhl'uilllltatb
** ~·
■
■
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
••
◄.•
..
··:·
-
•
:
--~-·,
••
*'
• '5
·•···:·:
.
.
....
•
:•·-
··-;;
•·po
►
Corne
-♦
Mid
445
• 69
*
KEEPSIE/HIGHLAND •
Exit
&
Bridge
1
1HE CIRCLE,
APRIL 27, 1995
.
..
.
Now that you're going to
graduate school,
how·
do you plan to
pay
for
it?
Ask us .
you study or w~ ere you c~r-
rently bank, you can count
on Citibanlr, the.nation's
For Graduate Students
(pursuing
all types of advanced
degrees
suchas law, engineering,
nursing, etc.),
The Citi-
Graduate Loan_Program
offers Federal Stafford Loans
and our exclusive Grad-
Assist Loan.
And,
all
of the Citibank Grad-
uate Loan Programs offer:
• easy repayment,
■
low.interest rates,
number one originator of.
■
no application fees,
student loans,to help finance
..
■ an~
application process,
•
your education.
· ·
•
-
■
fast approvals,
.
For Medical Students
(pursuing allopath
:,:
and
osteopathic
medici~tP.)
The
CitiMedica! Loan Program
offers Federal Stafford
Loans and our exdusive·
MedicalAssist Loan.
Foi' MBA Students
The CitiMBA Loan
Program offers Federal
Stafford Loans and our
exclusive MBAA.ssist
Loan .
■
and one toll-free number
to
call
for an:)wers to all
yo\lr ques~?ns.
For more
information
and an application for a
Citibank Graduate Loan,
•
call 1-800-692-8200,
and ask for Operator 256.
CITIBAN<O
Yes!
I want more information.
and·an application. for the following
Citibank Graduate Loans:
NameofS1ude1.t_.
____________
_
Address ___________
Apt.
____
_
City _________________
_
0
All Federal ~tafford Loans
0
·Citibank MedicalAssist
Loan
(for stude1•!~
of allopat/iic a11d
oste,patlzic medicine)
0
Citibank.MBAAssist
Loan.
(for b1:si11ess
students)
D
Citibank GradAssist Loan
.
(for grcicluate
st11de11ts)
Mail tltis coupo11
·10:
.
.
Citibank Student Loans
P.O. Box 2:.?:948
Rochester, NY
14692,2948-
State ___________
.Zip
___
_
•
Telephor.e _____________
_
StuC:ent's
Socid Security#
____________
_
Cf(.!'
•~ltcr
Y.r"Vio:·.
f;.
;1tr~
16
fill in the Social Security
1\·umbcr
i,aVl,,n·.J
Stu<leut
is
currently in
D
College
D
Gr~duatc School
Year
of
GrJduation
___
!-ield of
Stu,,y
______
_
Name of Collri;e/Graduatc School
t\rc
you
a prevmus
student
1,,an borrower?
D
Yes
O
No
Or for faster service,
call
1-800-692-8200,
and
,:JSk
for
c
1
IT/D
AN✓
l/lfll
Operator 256.
f
w
li;IM
, ..,
USHERS
NEEDED
FOR
BACCALAUREATE SERVICE AND COMMENCEMENT
IF YOU WOULD LIKE
TO USHER FOR THESE TWO SENIOR CLASS
EVENTS,
PLEASE
CONTACT
DEBORAH
DICAPRIO,
ASSISTANT
DEAN
OF SnIDENr AFFAIRS,
ROOM 388 IN THE MID-RISE,
OR CALL EXII.NSION 2517.
c:~--=---
r
1
I;
4/12- Hartford postponed
_
4/14.: Mt. St. Mary's (13-7W;;
9-2L)
4/15.Mt.St.Mary•s {14-750
'.4/18-Falrfleld
_
{18-oW)
4/20 -ARMY
-(3-Sl,)
4/ZZ.. Long Island U. (10-9L;
7-2L)
4/23 - LONG ISLAND
U.
(S-3W)
4/25 - C.W. Post
(16-61.)
Softball (25-7-1: 10-1-1 NEC)_
4/ 12 •
HARTFORD
P0lfponed
4/17 • RIDER
( 8·0W;2-01,)
4/18 -
ST.
PETER'S (2-0W; S~W)
4/20 - SIENA
-
(5· lW; 4-3W)
4/22~
MT.ST.
MARY'S
(5-lW; 11-7W)
4/23 • Iona
(8-61.;
14-3W)
Men's Lacrosse
(4·7 overall)
4113 • Sacred Heart (10-:12W)
4119
•
Stony Brook
(1·18L)
4/19 - WAGNER
-
postponed
_
_
_
-
4122-23
• NEC Championships
(2nd
place)
-
•
•
•
•
•
Women'•
and
Men'•
crew·
4/22 - President's
C14>
•
MV8·2nd;
WV8-1st; MVL8·2nd; WVLa-111;
MV4-
'
lsf: WF/N8
A·
Tlf, MVIA
•
2nd;
WWVIA•
lst, B-2nc1
MF/N4·Sth
.
Letus_
combine
all
-
•
your
·debts
bito
o~e
-
-
-
•
-
easy-to-manage
payment.
Bad credi!
no
problem.
~
accepted
based on
ability
.to
pay.
FAST Hl!LP
Is JusrA
PHollE:CALL
Awavf
Calldayornlghtl-305-53!.~3617;'(~~
HR RECORDING).
-
• -
for.your.FREE
APPllCA':(tON
9rwnte:
·_
.
.
_
■ :ilf•Xd=il6tA-iia;e,
B0'X:,645-,-
..
~0lLY\I00D;_ FL
·330~2
-
STlJDENT
J¥0RKt··.:
$10.00/START
-_-
_·
LOCAL COMPANY
WILL FILL SEVERAL
POSITIONS
IN
-
HUDSON
VALLEY
AREA.
•
'.
NO EXPERIENCE
REQUIRED
EXCELLENT
TRAINING
PROVIDED
FUN CUSTOMER CONTACT
-
•
:
·RESUME<EXPERIENC·E
•
•
'
.
COMPANY~SCHOLARS~
cAt~~~J~;l;/f~~~Ats
·-·
•
-
·--'.
.: ;
'.
(914)-,298-768$'
:···,
.
.
_
..
:.:.-:;
__
'A•'•
;-
.
--~,*ATTENTl'Oii~•:;:E':,,,.,
Tue
FinmicialAid
office
is currently accepting
·applications
f~r•sev~~prifately:~ioris(?¼
S¢tlllI~hlJ~itff~id
tbfullgh'tli'
·college.
These scholarships·
m~y
.be'
~warde_d
on.
the basi·s_
of
academic p~gorril~ce;financiaf/ne~d;tnaj~r:Jielci of
studyt:
location of permanent residence,
_<>r
-
a
coinbim1tion
of tllesejtellls.
•iA;;:lisJ~<>f
t)i'.e.:'sclJ.olar~liips
6:ff
~fe(i
aild.:fl.ieir
eljgibijity
•·:
••
r~quireinents
_is·
provided
in the
Marist College undergraduate·-cata1og~-:Mtd:is'·ayii1~~1e.:#i)li¢:Fmaticial-Aic(Office~::,A11:
--
,:.
••
_
.. ·
-.
_
·..
-
_
students
returningJor
the 19?5:.96
'a.cad~nii¢
year·.
~:eligibie.t~
:applyi./}'.:
..
,.--t
.-
•
.
:-
<··).·,::_.-,'.--~-
'{-
--._
· ..
-
To
be
considered
·for
these scholarships~·
students must s~bmit_thefoll<iw_mg;_fo
·-th¢
fiatitfiif.Afdi)ffice'.
<DN-?00}_:by
:~/l'?,/95
:_,
1. A completed APPLICATION·FOR PRIVATELY SPONSORED
0
:SCflOLA.RS~S:}qr'.~~cii
schtjla,shlpjiou· are:-!nterested
fo;
•
2. A
_letter
from
-
you, addressed
..
to'
,the :co~E
FO:~::PRIV
J\.1"£4¼"
stQ~~()liE,_1:tsO:iotAR.sHIPs;·
(.foµinlllg•·why:yo_u
•.
feel you should
be
considered for-the. particular. scholarship:
fu
ques~9~} (NO~:
~
sep~~te_lette!
_is
tequried foteach scholar.:
-
··
...
__
.
_
. .
_
..
.
.
_:
_ship
y9u.are_interestec:tin);'and
.:-:-
\
,
-
•
_
-
_
.
__
-
__
..
•
_
>
_
.,
••
•
.
_
;_:.
·•
3. A coinple_ted-S:PONSORED
SCHOLARSHIP RECOMMENDATION-FORM:(for ~ach
·scholars.hip)
to ensure rull:considera~
-
.
,
_
-
_
-
tion from the scpolarship cormnittee.
-
•
-
-
•
-
-
- -
__
.
_
_-
-
-
•
APPLICATIONS AND RECOMMENDATION FORMS ARE AVAILABLE IN THE:FINANCIAL AID OFFICE.
-
-
·-
-
..
•
I·
•
-
-
r,
~
..
-
...
-
-
-
-·
.!
.
THE
ClllCI.E,
SPORTS
APRIL 27, 1995
tt
.
Soptiomor~ defenseman. Martin· Farrell (?7) gets boxed in by
Lafayette defenders as he· gives chase Saturday at Leonidoff
Field.
•
•
ClrtM
apoc1a pllGIQ/CM&
BlrlnllO
•
••
Hardman honored as men
ta](e sebond in Mary land
by MARTY SINACOLA
,
.
more excited about that than Nussbaum placed third in the 'B'
•
·staff
Writer
:
•
anything."
.
•
flight, junior Probodh Chiplunkar
. "The team was willing to work, captured the second spot in the 'C'
Toe trophy shelf
in
the
Mc6iin.
it's as much theirs as it is ours," flight, and freshman Tony Yacobellis
Center is starting to get a· little
Fanning ~aid.
placed :,1 the fifth spot of the 'D'
crowded..
•.
,
.
Hardman and Fanning coached flight, rounding out the singles.
First,.· basketball coach Dave
the Red
_Foxes
to a second-place
In
doubles,
Graves
•
and
Magarity walks away with.Coach of
finish at the Northeast Conference sophomore Adrian Zajac captured
the: Year~accolades.
-Now,
men's
tournament
last weekend
in the third spot.
tennis coach Charles Hardman can Emmitsburg, Maryland.
"The whole team really stepped
add his name to that list.
Marist placed behind Monmouth up," Fanning said. "They came to
.
Hardman's achievements were . and one point ahead
·of
third place play, I knew they would. It was just
recognized over the weekend as he Robert Morris, earning Marist it's
a great effort by everyone."
was awarded Northeast Conference highest ever placing at the tourney.
"Without
the performance
Coach of the Year honors.
Leading the Red Foxes was everyone put in, we don't finish
•
..
"I was surprised," Hardman said;
.
•
senior Martin Byrne, who remained second," Hardman
•
said. "Martin
"It•· is. a great honor, but like any u~de~eated , w?il~ on his way to played outstanding, but.we only won
coach, I think I could· have done wmmng the A flight of the tourney. second place by one point, so
more."
Byrne's victory in the flight was everybody's points counted.
·
..
Keeping his modesty
up;
the first. time_ a Marist player had
"I
can't stress how important
Hardman credited his assistant Frank ever won a fhght.
everyone's points were to the cause,
Fanning.
·
•
His final match was a thrilling it was our best tennis of the year as
"Without Frank I could not have one, involving three tie breakers.
a team."
won Coach of the Year, he did so
.
After falling behind 5-2 and
"The tourney was the best tennis
much for the team and for me,"
already having lost the first set, of the year both personally and as a
Hardman said.
Byrne came back to win in three sets, team," Graves said."
"We were so glad to hear that he
6-7(7-5), 7-6(7-5), 7-6(7-4).
Coach Hardman had nothing but
had won it," sophomore Scott Graves
.
The whole team played an praise for the efforts of Graves and
said. "Coaches
.
Hardman
·
and
integral role in its success however. Zajac.
Fanning are so great to us. We were
Senior
..
·co-captain
Marc
"They played quality tennis, all
the work they put in this season paid
off," the coach
..
said. "They played
outstanding tennis."
Laxmen
rebound, down
Siena. on Sat., 21-12
"The
showing we had· at the
tourney is great for our school,"
Graves added. "For us to do as well
as we have all season long says a lot
about our team, considering we have
no facilities on campus."
·
They take on Hofsffa University
today and St. Peter's College on
Sunday.
••
by
JIM
DERIVAN
affect ori the outcome of the Siena
Staff Writer
•
game on Monday, according to
--~--_;.--~_....;.__
Schneider.
.•
'.
,Aft\r
losing a· nail-bit~r t~
.
''Corning inwe Knew we h~d to
,Lafarette
University on Saturday, the be_
·fired
up," Schneider said.
"We
•
..
mens lacrosse team turned it around
.h~d
to-beat.this team, we: couldn't
and·crushed the Siena Saints
·21-12
handle another loss."
•
•
on Monday~
•
.
,
. .: •
•
·
•
'
;
•
• '
He added that both the defense
•
:
~ophon:ioi:e
:mi.qfielder
Greg and offense worked equally well.
.
.
~_chneider
led the charge/ garnering
.
''.The defense played rear good;,
·five-•.
goals
•
and five assists.' and· the offense worked· well in.>
.
'
~ophoin~re attackmanDave Kiddney movingthe ball, and we scored when.
chipp~_d
m
five goals as well.
·•
we had the opportunities,'' Schneider
•••
•••
.
The_winsnaps atwosgarne losing S?-id
••
streak, and ups,MarisCs record to. 4-
Junior
midfielder
John
7 6\lerall.
•
• •
•
•
•
DiLeonardo started the scoring
with'
Barron· ranked No. 1 as team falls
With four seconds remaining
in
.·a
goal 18;seconds into.the con~est
the Lafayette game,
•
Marist found
•
~chneider scored twice, and
themselyes down _16
7
15, and with
.
Manst Jed, 6-2, after the first quarter.
one more chance to tie,
.
The Red
_Foxes
continued their
by TERlL. STEWART
last four games.
Four Marist pitchers combined to
<
Kiddney took the
in
bounds pass dominan~ in the second
,quarter,
•
•
Staff Writer
Barron, who has continually
give up 14 hits, including two hit
dire~tlf in front (!f the goal arid. outscoring their opponents
.8s4.
expressed feelings of surprise, said batsman, one balk, five wild pitches
outplayed the Lafayette goaltender.
:
Closinski tallied two goals and
Things are looking very familiar he • was exuberant about his and two passed balls.
..
The ball went
·in
but the official Schneider added two goals arid three. for Marist athletics and the baseball accomplishment.
•
Not to mention the three errors
w_ho calle/f'"ff was
·overruled
by. assists..
•.
•
•
.
team (10-20-1 overall, 6-9 Northeast
.
"I watch guys on ESPN and see the defense committed.
another--':-tune
ran out.··.·
.
.
.
.The
Red Foxes ended the half
Conference).
•
guys crush balls. They're the elite,,
In postgame comments at Pioneer
,
"It's
_tough,
I'd.like
.to
have
.the
.
leading, 14-6..
.
.
.
.
Mark Barron bas become the
he said. "To think I'm ahead of the:n Field on Long Island, assistant coach
opportunity back,'' Kiddney sa.id.
.
•
According to Mariano, consistent
•
second ~thlete in the junior class to
is beyond any expectations."
Joe Bruno said he threw a lot of the
"I'm just going to have to live with defense was a big factor.
b~ !anked N:o. 1 in the country in
But for every positive, there is a younger guys on Tuesday.
it."
.
.:
.
.
•
.· .
,
•
•.
,
·
."They
really hustled out there, hittmg.
,
.
.
negative.
•
.
•
•
''They
didn't concentrate (on
'
'First~year
heacf.coach
·To~
_and
the team c6mmunicate·d well/'
As of Monday, the junior aJI-
;\ 16-6 loss to C.W. Post (14-22 three
errors),"
he said. "Those are
M~iari~ called the game a great one, M_ari_ano
said; "T~; offe~se was·, arounder is boasting a .470 batting overall) of the Mid-Continent
plays we have to make to end innings
saymg it \Vas. hard foss but agreed
•
cl1~king_today:also..
.
•'
'. ..
·
average, is in the hub of a 20-game Conference on Tuesday added to the but instead they kept innings alive."
with the call.
•
·
•
-We played together and moved hitting streak, and is 9_for-15 in his baseball blues.
On an up note, the Marist offense
·;"ltwas
tough, but it was the right the ~.an _well. Th: offense played
·pounded out 14 hits, but left
13
men
call,''. Mariano said.
.
well, Kiddney said.
"It
was an all
on base.
•
•
Schneider also agreed :with the •• around effort."
·.
•·
Bourne went 2-for-5 with two
calt
:
.•.
,
·
.
_
,
.
•·
•
_-.
.
.
,.·.,
. :
..
As .far as
__
th~ remainder of.th~
.
runs. scored and Brandon Tierney
..
·.~•It
was a great ending: It was·a
.
se~~n, Kiddney said the team has a·
was 3-for-5 with two doubles.
fa~ call,'' Schneider said. "Kiddney:- pos!,tive,outloo~.
. .
.
.
Barron continued his hitting
made a great:effort getting to the
.
We relooking~owm_therestof.
WEEKD#l~S
ways, going 3-for-5 with two RBI.
ball. It _was a tol!gh game:"
:
·
..
.
ol!r ~ames and I think w.~,
~
put a
•
•
•
•
On Sunday, senior starter Scott
.,
Semor captam and attackman wi_nnmg
season together, Kiddney 17-~:.f:· :::.
·""·======~==·
=~·.;··,,,,.;.,'
•::,,,,.;,.,.,--..._;.,..:..·__,..;·,..:.·~·~=;.,,.;,--""",.,.,.I
Ronagha11 (2~3) went the distance,
Dave Closiilski
.led
the charge for said ..
•
.
. ..
H{±tfiitsll:-=:~00
7
•
·•~:AJ~.M:.;.
•+';:~l;:0:~·oo~·
;:;A!!M~···
4
7
4
:J+i+f+f+>+f+f'f/
4
fgtµ•\;.fµfµf;:;;;;(:EST.!;.!!A:,!T.!:1O~·
·~NwlD~);;;;;?-::;;;<
~~:I
giving up just three hits and walking
the Red Foxes·w.ith four goals· and
Manst traveled. to· H~rtford,.
\}'/10:00AM:'PU:OOPMW!V
•:t:ttl
.
2'-'Y}MC'f:VCLASSICS{
'••
four as the Red Foxes caught a 5-3
three assists.-
.
.
Conn., yesterday .. Results were
•
@i'frl2:0(fp'M_§Z:OOTPM:T:f%
)f,}t}ENTERTAINMEN'f:,&iSPECIALs
revenge on the Long Island
The Lafayette loss had
a
direct unavailable at press t_ime.
•
•
::;:;;:;:;:;:;~~:::~:;;:;;::;;::;:;:1::::::;:;:
:::::;[i;i::;:;;.;::::;:
:i::::;::;
::~ci~~!~J~:::::.::::::::::::::::::::;
~~~~~~~ril:~~!~;~~i~~: ~~~~~
:::~;;:ll:t~:::ii:::::::::::;:::::;
''j';;:i:;I;'.1:::::,1:::::ii:'.i;~i'i,iissnoxr/
seas~~ Red Foxes scattered seven
iii&~~i?~iiiii
;liifi7f.~~~~~~:
WEE
Ill
up two six run leads to fall, 10-9,
.
~ENDS
~:~e~i:\~~-hits
but leaving eight
t,
0
f~').c:-l2::-:,:::00-:-.•·.•':"'.'AM~.
·.":-···•---P,...,.12:""··~
.....
oo""p':'"M,...,.
..
.,,..\~:-:,,,:
0
\"":Y""'{..,..\
0
\'
0
/ ......
:c.:
.....
::·---,
.....
:-:--->
.....
<,...:s,...··T
~A"""n,_
.
.,.,.o'""N..,.ID
___
.,._,.,..,...,.,,.,..-,.,...1
"Disappointing," Bourne said of
:::n:t:12:·::00~~AM~~:;;~2~iOO~~•P~M~-
~::iy~,::~::,t·
=i::!=~~;~?i)dt;?s:P~O:R:;t~S~t::~:;•
;;~i==!
::ti~~s:f~:g~:eb!~l~:fd:.:r~:
1c••:
7
i\
7
/2==:~00?P::dM~·~:~•'=S~:OO:;
•
.;P~M¥i+<+Y+>-l+~+f,;.;;;;;4~C~ST~li.~Tl~O~N!a:ID~.
•·•.;;;;;·••.>
4
:
4
<
~4:-1
'em down."
'/\$:OOPM47:00PM/('\.
/(::::•t'?/fSPORTS2
.
.
.
..
·.
.
Foster went 2-for-2 and Barron
:::(7:00PMP&:OOPM/
.,t '
:::,::•\:}:r::::r:•tSTATIQNID•:=)?K':F:(
was 3-for-4 with
·a
double.
l"./~:::;:::::'-;\8;:;:00;.;;.
~P~M~::.P.t~O:~OO';:e'-;;PM~\'+;:+F~4++¥4+~;;/;;M~O~VIE;;;,
~l~/::
4
,
:::µ~¢:I
FOX NOTES:
:?
10:00 PM
•:12:00
PM/:
:
:. : :;::•:
MOVIE 2,
Ronaghan was named NEC
..., .... .,....;....;..,.:-:;,;.;~::.,...i.,..,..,.....,;..;;;;~ .... ;;;;;.;.~~~~~~~~U
pitcher of the week for the week
ending April 23.
'ft!.;
"
:.'~
n
;~
;l
·14
.
,
•
··•
••·
STAT·.,OF
THE WEEK:/\.
.•
Patsy:'.~Ch_n~lc:ferhas.
br9.kein)h(:J/:
:
..
.
·,,
schooi:fec:ord:'.;n
:'the
400..:mete,:\'
·
•
•
.
:~:
hurdlesUtiree
-imes:
in. the
:fast';tour·
. .'
:i{~f
/·
. .:·
·:::·)<.,;weeks
..
:
.•
•••
•
•••
··,
JJ;av~(arin
.
~ill
gg
.
·~·~s.·
E~~· WillS;;;tl[fe~·
<£
oycruised
'the
resfof the game;,not
:)1y
JASON ii:A.RAGO
.
allowing
a·
run and winning 14~3
..
•
.
::~,-,
•
.'Staff
Writer
.
•
.
.
As fodhe'ciffense>the Red Foxes'
.
.
.
.
.
.
.,,;
.
'
.
.
.
were paced by thirdbaseman Melissa',
There comes·,: a/time ill an
·
Fanelli
••
( 4~fo~'~:4,:
.--3
:).ml) .
and
athlete•s·lue· thafyou
,have
to--ask. Degatano'.(3.~for~4;3
RBI).
.,
...
,,
-.
theµ:d~
'grow
oi matiu~
a little fM.ter
._.··
On Satllrday, in a key NEC game,:
.
than
~usual.·
•
•
•
Marist hosted the Mount St Mary's·
•.
.F9(pitcher.Bridg~tte,
foy, that
Mountaineers and downed them.S~l
time w,asJast wee~en,d.
:
,._
and 11-7/''.:·
'
...
_
.
. .
.·
:>
After being c;uled. lln to pitch two
:
"If-we/did not,\vin Saturday; we
.
ga111~s\on.
•
Satun;lay; Foy·, (4sl)
would ha:ve Iiad
a
tough go' of.iLat
·
)¢tume~ to the hill·_
on Sunday to
Robert Moms for the No; l seed in
throw both ends of.a
.twinbill
against the NEC foumamerit," Burgin said.
Iona.;._,.
.
..
\,:
•
•
.
·.
·
Foy started the opener and -..vent,
,
•
.
In,game one, Foy picked µp her.
•
.the
distance::giving
up
one nin while
'
firstfoss
.of
the seas.on; 8-6.
•
.
scatteriilgseven hits;
.· •.
·
·
·
·
•,
•
Marist (25-7-l,pyeraIJ, 10-1~1
.
_·
The Mari~t offense banged out
Northeast Conferenc~) entered the
five
runs
on
·13
hits.
.
sev.enth inning clinging to a one,iun
•
:
•
Outfieider Courtney Sleight went
Jead.
,Bl,it
Foy co~_Id not escape~ 3-for4 with·2 RBI as sister: Laurie
:giving·.
up a
·three-run·
homerun for
•
had
•
two· hits
·and
two·
runs
scored ..
·
the loss;
·;
:,.
Righ( fielclet Roseaime Daly
•
Head cpach G:Corge Burgin
added her
-
first homerun of the
Freshma~ Bridgette Foy lets one fly against Motilrt St .• Marys.
0~
Satuid-~~
·~
Nert~ field •
•
brought ~is rookilltback for. the
season.
secon~ gam~. After
a
rough go in
•
In the second game, Burgin
'. 'cii.:t,
-
phOIO/CIIIII
a..inoto
thefirst,givirigupthi_eeruns,Burgin decided:
__
t_o
·go_w.
_ith
__
sopho.more_
·
·.
•.
• ..•
·
··:
·
;.-.
·ca11·
·
,.
··
·
·
··
•
·
-·:
·
·
·
·
.: ··_
.....
·,-.
,·.:-:.,
...
·.<•>:,
,•:·
•
d
• •
f
•
•
d"
•
•
•
••
•
,
up early, prompting· Burgm to
Leading the hit brigade·. was
Mai:ist
-was··
w1tbout starter
ma ..
~
l\ia~w:
~t~,e!?th
Ang' el
Amber Bevilacqua, who was making on Foy.
- ••
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
••
.
•.
Fanelli, who had three hits and three Michelle Hudsonf or weekend action
••
':
• ·-·•
•
a
'·
..
a
her'first career start.
•
·
,,-His._starte_rJumed
int_o a stopper
__
runs soored.
·
•
because she:contracted the chicken
•
(Degatano~catcherfaftei the first
"We_.worked out-with
__
hei all
.
.
.
.
I
.
•.
·.
: .
.
•
.
inningt Burgin said.: "We decided
week and threw to give the staff a as Foy picked
up
her second win on
Degatano also· had three hits to
pox. The sophomore 1s out at least
t J
t B "d tt thr
h
the'day.
.
.
.
.
go with fm1r RBI. Daly and center ·one week. maybe more.
•
0
e
•
n ge e
. •
ow a c ange-up little break,·" Burgm··
•
•
said.
. .
,
Th b'
u··
d
as behind her fi Id
P
A k
h h d
Fanelli" was named
·.NEC
.Player
·th·
d
&
urth·
•
"t h "
•
..
e. a m
__
g o_r er_
w_.
•
.
1e er atty c ennann eac
a
every.
rr
ono
p1 c • .
.
Bevilacq·
ua's outing w.
ould not
·
·
Th
h
·ty·· I
•
• d ff
as they took advantage of six Mount two hits a piece.
of the Week for the week ending
~ c ange
m
~-
.
e pa1 o as
.
prove memorable as she got roughed errors to score
U
times.
'
FOX NOTES:
April 23.
Wom~n's crew team drinks from President's
·cup,
again
day, the women's varsity boats-were. rmished in):30.00.
Lehigh University.
.
.
.·
.. :.-··
perfect, winning each of their
_three
.
. ..
Binghamton crossed• the line
·
races,
: •
•.
••
.
·:
.
·
.
.
.
•
• ·
.
•
second in 7:43:19 and
:_UVM
-came
•
:•.
•
·•
•
.
•·
.. . .
•
•
The varsity.lightweight
eight shell in third (8:4t31).
.
.
•
_
Marist
·
B. crossed the
.
line in a
tinie of 8:03.78i.
Vassar.
B finished
~econd in· 8:23.05
•
and
.
Lehigh third
in 9:36.99.
_
.
.
,
.
_ .
. .
...
:,'fh.;~·.!-fari~t
A:noyice eight shell
.
finished ·second behind UVM while
Citing tlle teams' efforts, Werwin
said she was pleased with-Saturday's
They came;-ther_sa_w, but they . edged past Itllaca by 1.9s·seconds;
.
· __
Iri.
.·
no_vi_ce_.
•·.
a_c_
tio_
n,:_ M_.arist.
co_uld_:_no_
t_conque_r_;·_._:_,;_•.:._.
·.
·..
•
th·1·
• 8
·
• t
•
56
•
•
..
•
d.
••
·ha·
•
od.
c1a·
.
crossmg e• me m_ n.i~u es
•
•.
contmue.}~
ve a.go_
,
Y•.
.·
results.
•
•
."I]i~_wom,en~s
crew team will join_
the men's team in the Patriot League
.Anny
was
here;,,Itha~:Q>llege
•
secon~.,:·.,:,
,:
>
.·
•
•
.
< .•
·.·
:.·
..
~~
Red.Foxes won;-the,·•novice
•
was ~ere an.d even Nassar
•College'
Junior co-captain Vickie Werwin ·
"Jour
ra~' by downing·
UVM
and
.
Marist
B
came
iii .fourth.
..
Regatta
on Saturday
.
made
.the
cioss-tOW!J'.
trip,
but not one
said the
race
was a
true test for her
.
•
•
:team could stop M~t College·crew
.
team.\:
..
\:;-
:
:
,
,
·:;:
.
_·
.
..
,
..
froilt>.'successfully::defendirig the'
-
.·,
,"It
was•·a very. tough race, ...
•
•
Ptesid~nt's Cup ..
;:
\::
•
.
•-·
•.
•
•
·.<
..
•
Werwin saicl, '"Ithaca.
is
a
very. good
J'lle-Red Foies kept'the.Herbert'. creV{ and the race took eyerythirig
•
J:
Haight Trophy
:o~
the banks: 9f
out of
us."i:
<
.
.
.·..
,. ,·
the Hudson River
:by•
winning.
the.
.
•.In.
heavyweight eight a_ction,
-overall;t~mpoint
competiti~nwith.
·Marist
pulled:away•·ftom Anny in_-_·
iii
fini31
..
score_of27(::.\.
::-
/\
i
..
•:: .
-the •·middle
of· the
·race,for
{a··.
•
·,
··Array
finished
J;econd.
with
J~.
•
•
ccmvindng·,victory over the
.
<::adets
.
point!l('WQile the
:l!~iversity
'<:>f
for the second tim(:_
tllis
.seasc,n:
•··
Vermo_11t
(UVM)/a,~d the State..
The.Rec\ Foxes stopped the de>ck
, /University_.
of,
~e,:w.·
York. af
at· 8:33.29 an,d. Army finished
. :•BWI.~th-ghrun~eto.~{s_~.L~.i~d
for third
in
9 :04_
70.::
_ .-:
< ,
:
....
· ..
•
•
•
•
• ·
•
Boat member Jen
'PeUi:
said·.
•
.•
-:The'
Red°
Foxcs•/effort drew
•
:
Marist felt
g(?bd
during;tll.e race.
•
..
praiselr<>m
Mansi College Pr~iderit.
,
"We·•·
started
.off
neck-and-neck
•
_Denni~
J. MurraY>:)::/.
·_c_
<
.•.
•·-with
ArmytPelli
said. "W~just
••-··
•
. .
}'Tiiis
was a gI'~a~'everit
because·.• were relax_ed
·and
pulled-~way from.:
..
of the high calil;,er.
pf:
participating them."
/:
·
·:
.
.
<
•·
•
.
:
; .
•
_schoolsand.itwasg<;iodtoseeMatjst
.. ·The
Red Foxes made,it3~for~3
•
.
aJ,)long
,Jhem;''
Murr?Y
•
said. "Since..
•
by defeating SUN)"-Birighaajton
and
·
itwru(such a great ev~nt,•it
was good·
UVM
.inJightweight
four.
;
• . ;
...
to see the team was
iable
to keep the
.
•
The team of co~ptains W,ei:wiri
.
Clip il,t Marist."-
.
•::_"
•
. .-\,·
••
•
·
and Heather Alexander· along\vith.
•
,···Syrilbolic
of the~uccess ofthe'
Je.n Paupini:.a!Jcl.Cathy'Acunto
·
·
8portS
fVdijlcl/
,mou
• .
Ev;; child ~o~f upwith a hero.·.
,
Howar~
tsell'di~d
atth~
~ge bf
or a Jamous figur~': in, which· they 77-a uniqueJegend.
.
.
.
admire and look up to.,·
••.
•
.·
..
.
<J)penilig
Day.
.
•·
.
Oil' Sunday,- a legend passed
.•
The emergence·or~ajoi League
away.: One. of the rnost famous and
•
Baseballisfinally. upon us. After 257
influential sporis .'journalists iri
..
·.
Jong days, "Baseball Tonight" )s:
.
history has· moved
.QD,
but will not buzzing
aitcl
Ralph Kiner is pumped
be forgotten.
. .....
•
.
.
.
_for ·progress: on WWOR-TV
•
He_.
\Vas witty,
..
controversial,
(Channel9),
• ,
.
•
....
•
.
.-
·
•
•
melodramatic, gutsy, h~h, arrogant
Tliere is
·much·
talk about teams
and most of all admired. Even though
·
picking up
_where
tlley left off, but it
.
in his elder y~
he became resentful seems this se_ason
will be different,
of the sports worl<l, ~e will always different'"m
the way _that
most teams
have·a place in sports history,
.
have .matured, acquired, and all-
•
"'This is Howard Cosell," we used around repouped.
.
. .
.
•
to
.
hear when
·
we put ABC
.
Sports
•
One· team that
.
should return to
on; And after the fust t~e many of
.
excellence is the Bronx
.
Bombers ..
:us
heard the famous bark we never Yes, the New YorkYankees would
•
stopped mimick,ing it.
definitely have gone all the way last
•
•
He was loved yet hated, but
year and look to continue on the
always aclmired..
.
•
same path this· year.
It seemed that no matter what he
Jack McDowell comes from
•
.
said or did, people always listened Chicago
as
a "free
•
1ook" for the
. to
him. They wanted to hear what Yankees during his one-year
he had to say because he knew his contractual obligation.
sports.
•
•
.
The 1993 American League Cy
We watched and listened like Young Award winner was tp-9 last
.
,there
was nothing.~rroupdi,ng
us-
¥~
(3.73 earned run averag~) and
just Cosell's voice and those
will be the No. 2 starter
10
the
.
headphones.
Sta~.
·;·
i
:~·.
\
-.~
\
'.. •
•
•
•:
.
·: ·.'
::.;
••
_:,
•
•
•
•
•
e
.••
,
(.;)),?~
.
.
·O
summer return
·above
.300. last year, the te~m
'scholastic"
lllld
collegiate rowing
in
obviously. needs some more batting the Mid-Hudson· Valley,
•
practice:
..
·
. • . • .
•
•
.
.
·
•
·
Tradition is·thickin this area and
•
<
'Streaked
. ••
-~-
•• ~-
.
for. thefo~
year in-a-row, Marist·
.
One
:of.
the most· talked about has trained some skilled rowers to
bappt:nJngs in baseball
this
year is get on thafriver and conquer.
Cal
·Rip!cen,
Jr. Can he do it?
•
•
.
There are three· races left in the
•
• 'He
has made it this far....:.,;..
battling
•
season and since the women's varsity
;through.
the-·
strike
.and
coming just
heavyweight eight shell is undefeated
s
.
_days
short of being shafted of his th~ season, they are ~ure to be in
str~.
.
strong contention at the New ):'ork
l-'-_-P-i-tc-h-in_g_·_i..:.s-'i'-m-p..:.o_r_ta_n_t_f,....o_r_t_h_e__,
••
Ripken has 12~ gam:s left until
.
State Rowing Championships on
Yankees·
so:
McDowell will be a
be reaches Lou Gehrig's 2;131
May; 6-7.
•
•
games played streak.
•
·
Predictions:
strong· contribution in th
e
•
pennant
.
Cooperstown should already have
As much
as
this writer wants to
race, not to. mention the fiye
h
•
I
d
·
·
returning starters who hit over .300
t. e P. ate m_a
~
out for the board say that Chicago. will win the
•
ups~.
This 1s sure to be a-huge National· Basketball Association
•
lastNseason._
.
Fl
·h.
attraction.
.
•
Championship, no way,
••
ow across town to
us mg,
.
Would love to be there when they
Michael Jordan is an elite athlete
where the New .York Mets will open
h
•
after a surprisingly success(ul
c ange
it.
•
but he can not
carry
the team alone.
shortened spring training.
. End ~oughts
Dear Knicks: Camp Riley will not
The
.Mets
will take
·to
the field
ManSt ~w
~
hot.
.
_:_
~ork this year.
.
with Brett Saberhagen, who was by
•
The ~esident s
';UP.
was a total
The Indiana Pacers will finally
far the most talented hurler on the
success
Wi
th .the men sand women's win the. big show.
d ( hich
Id
h
teams garnenng enough point to take
Their time has come and they are
squa w
cou not even reac
home tll.
e H_
erbe_
rt J. Haight Trophy. playing outstanding basketball.
.500) last season.
Thi h t
h h
In order for them to get anywhere
. . s is one trop
Y
1!8
3
true Reggie Miller and Rik Smits are the
or be somewhat consistent this year,
meanmg to be proud of. It
15
named dynamic duo. and cannot be stopped.
they need to hit the ball more.
after• the man who played a large·
Teri L Stewart
Is
The Clrde's
With only one player hitting.
part m the start and development of Sports
Editor.
..;
------------------------------------
-
·1T
1
S A HITI
________
-
_
Majo,;.League Baseball
-_
t
It'~ a·strange world outilierel.Supplement4
RIGHT
TO
KNOW
--Mari.~t
students deserve info.
-Salvages
Sea8C>J{
C'
•
·
..
:
.•·,
•
•
•
~
-·
.
,
• ---
_\
:Supplement3
_-
t -
Students-Vehfure•·a~roadlsunplement3
on campus crune
_
- S1;1pplen:ien1:
2 -
MarisfCollege~,
Poughkeepsie,
N .Y.
April 27, 1995
10~Si~e~h.ilie3teEilliJpb;ins
fOr. Wal--Mart center
. ·.
. <.~:-::
..
_· '
. -;'
·:.
~
., -~:,;
· ..
:_'.:
·:-
•
.._,:;--
.•. - ,-
.i>"'."·
.
,~
..
~
•
by DaryLRichanl
th~ ~hQpping
c~nteris concernedjt
--Associate Editor
may decrease the safety o(the
~~-
As Marist students were head-
ing
_home
for.Easter break on April
i3,
developers were unveiling their_
plans before theTown Planning
Board for the new Wal-Mart shop-
ping 'center.
.
The latest addition to the plans
calls for a I0°screen movie theater •
_to be a part
of
the 30 acre site, Jo-
cated across the street from Marist
College.
"I have a concern for the safeiy ---_
of children on· [Fulton] Street:-_the
traffic and the noise;'' N_orman
Berard said in theJournal article.·
Likewise, at a Students Encour-
aging Global Awareness (SEGA)
meeting onApriH0, regardintthe
Wal-Mart center, most students
were excited about the project.:
Of the 20 students in atten-
dance, many saig}t would be a great
convenience to have a shopping
center within-walking distance.
However, a few peopledid raise
concerns. -
The developers from The Dagar
Group, the firm in charge cif leas- -
ing and developing the project, said
the theater would most likely be
filled by Hoyt's Cinemas and would
face Marist. Earlier plans ·for a
Foremost on their minds -was
the accessibility of the· shopping
Wal-Mart and a 10-screen theater are planned for the ne~ MidHudson Center.
-shopping center were abandoned.
President of The Dagru-Group,
David Livshin, said the response to
the proposed shopping center has
been :very positive.
. . "Since we announced thesign-
ing of \\'al-Mari last fall the inter-
est in the remaining retail space has
been tre~endous:" he said.
- . : Atthe Planning ~_oarl;f
meeting
April
0
13, orily two local residents -
expr~ssi:d ·opp:osi~ion
_
to the -
$20.
million project. -
•
_ _
__
-•-
_ . _ ....
-• -
The_ Poughkeepsie Journal re-
ported that a would-be neighbor of
center with the new four-lane high-
Poughkeepsie Journal that this
way being constructed. Students
would give the center. a "vmage-
also questioned the affect Wal-Mart
type" design.
and other tenants will have on area
"At the_ front, we would have
businesses and whether or not
smallscale wall; like the architec-
safety on campus will suffer.
ture ofMarist," he said: "We're try-
In. an attempt' to make the
ing to marry the two sides of the
- MidHuclson Center blend in with
roadway,"
Marist, Livshin saicl they w~ incor-
According to preliminary plans!
-porate extensive landscaping, in-
he said Wal-Mart and the cinemas
eluding llerms and stone -walls like
will be about 580 feet. from.
Rt
9,
the ones tbe'college uses to screen: •• with the parking lot lyirig between
its parking lots.- • • _ •
•
the shopping center and the high-
John Cole, a Massachusetts ar-
way.
chitect working on the proposal,
To the disappointment of some
said in an interview
in the · people, the facade of the existing
Two students take a smoking break on tlleif way to· class last
week.
-Smoking
in·college
is -
second-hand
by Sue FJSCber
Staff Writer •
At age 11,Alicia DiGennaro
was curious about something.
"I
wanted to
see
what it was
like to smoke,"' she said. "So
after school, my best friend and
I sneaked some cigarettes and
tried thein."
DiGennaro, now a senior at
Marist College,said she
became
a regular smoker during her last
year of high school..
"All my friends smoked,"
said DiGennaro. "We discov-
ered beer and cigarette~ went
together."
•
Young adults are smoking as
much as they did a decade ago,
-despite efforts to warn them
away from cigarettes, according
. to a recent study by the p-niver-
sity of Michigan.
Jane. O'Brien, -director of
health services -at -
Marist
Col-
lege, said the problem is that
-young people believe they are
invincible.
' "That age group thinks they
are invulnerable to the dangers
-of alcohol, drunk driving, smok-
ing and sexual activity," said
-O'Brien, sitting behind her desk
at the student health center.
DiGennaro agreed that she
hasn't worried about the health
risks of smoking.
''I've been living a little more
reckless since I've been in col-
lege," said DiGennaro. ''How-
ever, I've started to think about
the warnings."
Lisa Piedimonte, also a se-
nior at Manst, ~aid she has been
smoking since she was 18.
• "I don't think about the
warnings," Piedimonte said~ .
curled up in a chair, smoking a
cigarette. "I
see
so many people
my age smoking - it can't be too
bad."
DiGennaro and Piedimonte
are just two of the 3,000 young
people who become regular
smokers each day, according to
the National Academy of Sci-
ences' Institute of Medicine.
Cigarette companies spend
millions of dollars on advertis-
ing campaigns, trying to recruit
see SMOKING
page 2
85-year-old -building will not be
the center should be an improve-
saved. The Mid-Hudson Business
ment on the current shopping cen-
• Park will be demolished, except for
ters in the area."
a small portion of the building in
The Poughkeepsie Journal re-
the back, which Hoyt's will use for
ported April 14, that "as proposed,
part of their theater.
the Poughkeepsie store [Wal-Mart]
Jeff Anzevino, a waterfront spe-
would look almost nothing like its
• cialist and planner for the local en-
counterpart in FishkilL.
vironmental organization Scenic
However, Livshin•said there are
Hudson, said he was disturbed by
no guarantees yet as to the archi-
the news that the building was not
tecture of the shopping center itself.
going to be saved.
It should be brick to some degree,
"I'm disappointed the applicant
he said, but the final plans are sub-
couldn't fitthe current facade into jec·t to the town's and Wal-Mart's
the plans," he said. "However, ac- _ approval.
cording to the plans he_ submitte~,
-Students -discontent -
with registration
·by Jenni Drusendabl
•
Staff V(riter
The -registration process -is
supposed to make life easier for
students.
The process is designed -to
give seniors priority, except in
circumstances such· as major,
minor ·or other pre-requisites
given by the department.
The department chair de-
cides how many courses the de-
-
partment will offer and how
many sections of each class. The
registrar then decides how many
roollls they have and if they can
offer each section that is re-
quested.
The next step is pre-registra-
tion. Students meet with their
advisors, decide which classes
they need to take and then sub-
mit the form. The computer
does the rest.
It decides by credits, major,
minor, pre-requisites, ect., which
seniors get the course first. If
you have 90 credits and the class
you requested is in your major,
you are the first to get the course.
However, many seniors, like
Gloria Daniel, say they feel they
are not getting the courses they
request.
Daniel, a senior" at Marist,
said she feels she is being short-
changed by the current system.
"Only juniors
get their
classes," she said. "Everyone
else suffers. I can't get any of
iny classes that I need to gradu-
ate. As ajunior
l
had no prob-
lem getting my classes, but sud-
denly as a senior I'm not getting
my classes."
Judy Ivankovic, a worker in
the Office of the Registrar at •
Marist, said it may not be the
-registration process at all that is
the problem. She said there are
always constraints with time
slots and facilities.
'We only have so many slots
and so many classrooms and stu-
dents seem to only want to get
the perfect schedule," Ivankovic
said.
Vice President for Academic
Affairs, Mark vanderHeyden,
said he agrees.
•
"'There is no such thing
as
the
perfect schedule,"
he said.
"Even when chairs correctly of-
fer the right. number of seats,
there are problems. It might be
because they [the students] don't
like the course at that time or
with that teacher.
''If
you want to be accommo-
-dated, but only on your terms,
then you're going to have re-
strictions." he added.
Students are upset for rea-
sons other than that they are only
looking for the 'perfect' sched-
ule and cannot find it.
see SCHEDULE
page 3
.
•
Supplement 2
TheJrtrier Circle,
:April27,
1995
•
•
•
Senior
Art·
History
1najor.
.
.
.
.
.
na~ed Intern of the Year
by Elizabeth Brophy
Staff Writer
_
Zanetti, an Art History ma-
jor, completed her internship at
The Strom King Art Center. The
Both faculty and students centeris an internationally
agree that internships have
be-
known s·culpture museum.
come an essential part of the col-
Aside from her internship,
lege experience.
Zanetti also. spent. a· semester
"I'm· convinced that most
.
studying in Paris and had her bi~
students who get involved in in-
ography published. in Who's
.
temships consider_
the experi-
Who Among America's College
ence an experience of a life
Students.
time," said Dr. Lee Maringoff,
Zanetti was chosen. for.the
·
Director of the Marist Institute award after receiving letters of
for Public Opinion.
recommendation from her em-
Recognizing the importance player, faculty members and
of internships, the Marist Col-
·herself.
One-hundred and six
lege Field Experience Program
•
other Marist ::;tridents;
who in-
recently announced the intern of
.
terned this year, competed with
the year.
Zanetti for the award.
At the Field Experience's
''This internship helped me
April
12
meeting, senior Jenni-
figure out what
I
wanted to do
.
fer Zanetti received the Third and could do with my major,"
Annual Marist College•
Intern-
said Zanetti.
"I
felt both elation
ship/Co-op Student of the Year and guilt at receiving an award
Award.
•
for an experience that
I
enjoyed
Senior Jennifer Zanetti receives·
the lnterr,
·of
the_
Y.e.ar
award. from Desmond Murray~
so much.".
starti~g Jhe Fi~ld Experience
••
Ill~~e into their career,'' she said.
Communications intern co-
.·Programin
1969.
. .. .
:.->
Z_an~tti saidagtees
with
ordinator Bob Norman; who will
'D.eidre
Sepp, Director. of·
.·s~pp•s·_a.,s~~sment
of the value
be retiring at the end of this aca'." Career· Development and
.
Field
, . -
of
a.n
internship.
demk year, also received ari Experience, saidintemships are
'
..
·_
·.
"I
feel'that prospective em-
award at the meeting.
a valuable part of college edu-
•
ploye~
·:will
be more Hkely to
Nornian, said by many fac- • cation.
•
;hiresomeonewhohasinterned,"
ulty members and studentsfu be
_.
"Field experience helps our she.said. ''The internship gives
one of the most valuable assets students to,stay motivated, to you more confidence when you
Marist has, was responsible for
·complete
their.-degree and to
·go
out into the working world."
.
Marist ignoring the Student Right to
KrioW
and
··campus_
S_ecurity Act
•
-
•
,._
•
'
.•
•••
,
·a__
•
·'
.•
,···.
;
by Alicia DiGennaro
_
•
seem a bit low and withgood
concerning the Act.
lege said this
_is
not true.
other crimes. to securityto up-
Staff Writer
.
reason- the schoolis not report-
The compromise, accord-
"Crimes
of
sexual as-
date the distributed statistics.
ing all of them.
•
irig to the Chronicle of Higher , sault," said Leary, "must be re-
•
They do not llave io report the
Marist College appears to
In Marist's last pamphlet Education, requires rape-crisis ported to security by the victim name of the victim, unless the
be ignoring important regula-
listing the required statistics, it advisers and other counselors to in order for it to be reported
in
'\,ictim
wants action· tak:en
tions of the Student Right to stated that there were no arrests, report to the school authorities the year,-t,nd
statistics."
_
:against
the assailant.
.
.
Kno_w and Campus Security
from 1991 through I 994, for the number, not the names; of
.
. :
Leary,'. and )\1arist,. is
This includes sexual as-
Act.
drug violations, weapons pos-
victims that had come to them
,
wrong, accord,ing
to
tfie
Federal sauit,~Hussefman
said:
'.
.
·
The Federal Student Right session, or alcohol violations.
over a given period of time. This· Department of Educatiori.
.
..
•
··•
..
•.
.
••
"~ the tiniely reports $at
to Know and Campus Security
It also stated that within time frame is determined by the
PaulaHusselmari~
the De-. are submitted
·in
addition to the
Act is aTederal act that w~ put this time
frairte;
there was'
a'
to-
school.
.
partment of Ed~~ati~n
's
special-
yeai-e~d report, counselors:and
into effect in 1992 and requires talofonerapeatMaristCollege.
"The
compromise
ist on the Act said arrests do hcnisingoffici~~~ayet~s1:1l:>~t
collegestopublis!lreportsabout
WiththeAct
•
ethe ·sk
•
-
[
•
·•
•
1··
h·. h.
•
•
·-
•
-
.•·
-• ••
•
•
"
,
numberson:howdnany "'"Opie
.
.
.
. '
• ••
. 1 ;,
.,
..
.
.
c?:'11.
.
p_ .
·
..
reqt;ti~es.:.
an.Ys~!le
,w
9
..
as_
s1,g- n~ to .be made m.cnm~s such ;
...
,
".
"'., ,
..
ii:•
i' ,
.. ,.
''
•..
,,-k
.:
·!'"" ·.
•
crime on their campuses:.
-
• '.
•. :of
sexu~l-as~ault v1ct1ms;-pn-
-''"rii'ficarifresponsi6ility
Ior
·stu-'
as
"afcoiiol
~d'drug\~folati6niin
;~~y~-:~
0~~~-tQ'~th,e~.
to·:r~p~It:a
As required by the Act, vacy bemg v10Iated.
.
dent and campus activities" to brder for them
tC?
~ppear'i4,the
.
p:ini¢(13ii:'n3:"1es·.~<>.
not have
Marist releases an annual pam-
A compro~ise
was reportthese numbers t.o the
.report.
··•
..
·,.
_
_
. ____
}~ be,µsed,
-;~aid
Husst!lm~:
phlet with a list of crimes and reached in May of last year to school, accordirig Jo the same
··.-. , .
;
Bµ(::;h(~~~µ~u.e<i'~o
i;ay
-
.
:
..
Al~ou,gl:l
-~e-1~t~~
o~n
their occurrence on the campus rectify the risk, and was released
•
-article.
-
.
.
.
.... ·. ..
.
. ·.
~afcoririse~oij ~d,housing
of.:
n~
eff~t.f?r. two y~
and.tl!e
over the preceding three years.
as the Federal
·Department
of
<
ButJoeI.eary;D~ectorof
/ficials;:i~C:J_lidi~g·resici~ll(assis~-
:~orp_pro~t$t/or:a_l?1o~t?,?~,
.
•
But the rape numbers
Education'sJinaln:gulations
Cainpus Security at MarisfC01.:
•
tants
an9·du:ectors,:·inusLrepgrt'
';
M~~t-~~u.s~~-~y lts:1'9Sl~o,n
•.
• · ,,<.
•·'
· ',_
,:·:
··<··,.·
'.•··''.·
... ··
-
_-~·,,,,_,-,
•
-.
thar1ts:counselorsdonothave.
•
Sm9king---co_n_t-in_u_e_d_fe_o_m_p_a_g_e_l_• _______
""""!"
_______
--------
........
:
....
:.,,-
.•
-<'■.':::-.:;--.,-,,,--.:--
.....
--.:l~t-.,-.--
-:~~ite~it~c~;a~
aiiftjll!e_.
new young smokers.and.con~
.
Cancer Society,.•said teenage
..
Piedinion~e/;~cllir'father
:··
-•;•'t6~:}tj1~{fr~ii1·~~-~~;,
:·
vince long-term smokers to
,girls;
headed forindepertdence, has tried to stop.smoking,
..
, •
sniokersxand:,,non-'siriokers'
continue, the Tobacco-'Free
.
want to be like_thesewomen in
"He \Vore the i>.i.!~h
for one.
;jep~rat_e/\
::O,W}i~il
sai.d.
Action Coalition (TFAC) of
•
the ads.
year,'' sa_id Pi.e~im~nte_'.,
.
'~It
-;
"HoWever/peop~e
.have
to
be
Dutchess, SuUivan and Ulster
"Smoking looks glamoroust didn't work. He'(ookit
off
and
••
...
honeston the:questionnaire."
• ..
•
coimties reports.
Scheying said.
"It
is an irid_epen- started
'to
smoke agafo.":
/,
.
,
~:
/
;ornrieiFsaid
that Madst
Evelyn Kaufmann, To-
•
dent statement for them.''..
•
••
O'Brieiqa1.d she_ also be-
has: been considering makinl
bacco-Free Action Coalition
O'Brien said that she would lieves
_that
wqrneh1.1se
cigarettes •
_
the entire
c~pus
~smpke.:fr~:
Chair, said studies show that like to see the advertisements as a method of weight control.
•
.
-
-
"I think tpatwould,be hard
this advertising is very effec-
curtailed.
"They feel successful not to enforce," sh~ said>
<
, .
tive.
"I cannot understand.why
snacking and
·eating
so•inuch,"
-
The'.college also.partici-_
''1\vo-year~olds
recognize youpg men or women smoke said O'Brien. ~mtey seeit as a pates,iwthe. Great Ariierican
·Joe
Camel before they do
__________________
-
_. ____
.
• Smol(eoµre.very year. Marisi
Mickey Mouse," Kaufmann
Th·
e.
eve··
n·
·np·ort·
e·d.·tJ,.~t
'7.
..
o·p·
·en.'/'e·
nt·
.•
supplies.studeritswithkitscoil-
said.
C,
/tu
/
I
l.,
taining inform~tio~ al>ol;lt
th~
The Joe Camel advertising
if
k
dangers
;of
'smoking
'an:<I
'sec::
campaign, according to a
•
0 SmD ers Want to Stop.
0119hand:smoke, ~orig \Vith
newsletter published by Com-
tips·for'quittjng:.-;;;:,~:·,:--~:::{i,'-
--,
munity Health Plan, increased
.
.
••
In 1990,theCDCestimated
Camel cigarettes' share of the now,'' she said. "We didn't hear temporary thing to keep weight that 61,000 \Vomen in_ the
illegal, or underage~
children's all the concerns about smoking down."
United States died fronicaidio-
and teenage market from less that they do."
.
DiGennaro said she has lost vascular disease because of
than one percent to over 32
Jenny Wesley, a junior at
10 pounds and is afraid she will cigarette smoking.
;
One year
percent.
Marist, said she· ag·rees with gain it back if she quits smok-
after
qui_tting,
the risk for my~
However, the• biggest in-
O'B.rien.
ing.
cardial
·
infarction can be re-
crease in smoking has been
. "Because we kno\\'. how bad
''I
don't know whatI would duced by 50 percent.
among female teenagers, the smoking is, I can't understand do when I'm stressed," said
Piedimonte said she thinks
Dutchess County Department why so· many people· my age DiGennaro. "When I'm hungry, about quitting:
•
of Health reported. Kaufman, smoke," Wesley said. "And, I need to do something with my
"Maybe
_tbis
May, when I
who is also Injury Prevention from what I've heard, it's very hands, so I smoke."
graduate from college," she
Program coordinator for the hard.to quit."
Currently, Marist bans
said, staring at the ashtray.
health department, said that
-
The Centers for Disease
smoJdng in public buildings. In "Another. stage in my life is
~igarette ads use healthy, slen-
Control and Prevention (CDC) addition, when students apply to coming up
-
maybe this would
der·and sexy women to attract reported that 70 percent of the college they are asked to fill be a good time to quit."
these young teens.
sm9kers want to stop. While 34 out a survey about their interests, •
Di Gennaro said she is defi-
Valerie C. Scheying, pro-
percent attempt to stop each dislikes and whether or not they nitely quitting after Labor Day.
gram director for the Dutchess year, only 2.5 percent are sue-
smoke.
County Unit of the American cessful.
The Inner Circle,·April27, 1995
Supplement 3
The Inner Circle Staff
The Inner•Circle is an aµnual sul?
plement for
some of the· incoming staff members to' get their feet
wet" at producing a newspaper. Look for these p~ople
and many more on next y:ear's Circle staff. The· fol-
lowing people contributea to this year's Inner Circle:
Daryl Richard
Larry
Boada
Sue Fischer. •
Jenni Drusendahl .
Jane Noblet .
Melanie Fester
Elizabeth
Brophy
Alicia DiGennaro
*Special thanks to Chris Berinato, who spent many
• tedious hours.in the phot lab developing the pictures for this
section, as well as the sports section.
.•
l\tlajOr
league Baseball salvages
its/s~on after a 232 day strike
by Melanie Fester
Staff Writer.
• It looks like the only strikes
. being called· this summer will
be by the umpire behind home
plate. •
: Jus.t weeks after. a . tempo-
rary injunction was filed in
New York to restore order be-
tween the feuding players and
owners of Major League Base-
• ball, it looks like everything has
gone back to normal.
After almost eight months
of striking, countless negotia-
tion meetings, and even an in-
tervention by President Bill
Clinton, Major. League Base-
ball is back where it started.
Dick Wagner, former base- •
ball. commissioner, said he
thinks the injunction didn't re-
solve a great deal.
"I'm not sure anything was
accomplishedt said Wagner, "I
think the jury is still out on
that."
For the next year, both sides
of the baseball debate will be
operating under the same agree-
ments as before the strike,.in-
cluding salaries for the players.
Wagner, who was also the
general manager of the Cincin-
nati Reds and the Ho.uston
Astros, said he wasn't willing
to speculate what will happen
when the year is over.
"I don't even want to venture
a guess as to what will occur,"
said Wagner.
What Wagner does seem to be
• sure about, however, is the way
the negotiations were handled.
He said he thinks that both sides
are equally to blame for the strike.
''The players belong to one of
the few industries that hasn't had
to tighten its belt," Wagner said,
"Baseball players just keep
marching on, not paying atten-
tion."
.
Wagner said that because of
this attitude, players are refusing
to accept an agreement that
would yield less money.
The former. commissioner
also said that the owners are also
at fault for contributing to the
players' attitude.
''The owners are late in do-
ing this (reviewing contracts).
They should have done it four or
five years ago and stuck to their
guns," said Wagner.
Bill Patterson, a former base-
ball player for Marist College,
said he is dissapointed with both
parties involved.
"I think the whole thing is dis-
gusting," said Patterson. "Every-
body involved has just killed the
whole love of the sport. They
have contaminated America's
pastime."
Patterson said he thinks the
blame lies mostly on the play-
ers' shoulders for the failed ne-
gotiations.
"It's ultimately the players'
faults, they get paid way too
much," said Patterson.
There was speculation that
talk of replacement players
would shock the regular players
into agreeing to the owners'
terms. But it took several games
with replacement players to con-
vince them that it was for real.
Wagner said he thought the
replacements came in with bet-
ter attitudes than the regular
players.
''They were friendly, and I
felt the players really hustled,"
said Wagner, ''They came to play
and went in with their eyes
open."
Wagner said there was no
question that the major leaguers
are better players, but that the re-
placements did a good job.
Patterson, on the other hand,
said that he had no desire to
watch the replacement players.
"It would mean settling for
less. No one wanted to see those
guys play," said Patterson, "I
think it was more a thrill for the
players than anybody else."
Marist students travel abroad for
edu~atiQnal
.and
life experiences
by
Jane Noblet
Staff Writer
for American students.
Fahnestock, Marist Abroad Co-
Carpenter said that since she ordinator, said the program
has come back, she feels more
started 35 years ago when stu-
Students do not have to stay mature, like she is a different per-
dents would stay with Mari st
at Marist College all four years son.
Brothers at schools in other
to graduate with a Marist de-
"It was a bit harder than I ex-
countries.
Pected," Carpenter said.
"I
Since then, she said, an av-
gree.
The Marist Abroad Pro-
thought I would assimilate easier
erage of 40 students a semester
gram gives students the oppor-
than
I did, but I adjusted. The
have gone abroad.
tunity to study and earn credits biggest lesson I learned was that
Pettengill-Fahnestock said
transferable for a Marist degree people are not the same.
the program interviews about 55
at colleges around the world.
"People think the American
students a semester and about 85
Terri Donnelly, a senior
culture is everywhere, but it is
percent of those follow through
Spanish major, said she spent not ...
lt
was the best year of my by going abroad.
ter junior year in Spain at the life, no doubt about it. I hope
The program, she said, ex-
University of Madrid taking
more people go, it's really worth
_
pects applying students to have
• rine classes taught entirely in • it," said Carpenter.
a minimum grade point average
Spanish. She said now she feels
of 2.8 and the majority of for-
-----------------------
• eign schools expect a 3.0.
After spending a year abroad, If eel
like I can go anywhere, do anything. •
she has more confidence.
"At first it was tough,"
Donnelly said. "I took a one-
month intensive course which
taught grammar, history, art,
and government. It was tough.
After spending a year abroad, I
feel like I can go anywhere, do
anything."
Maria Carpenter, a senior
French major, said she spent her
• junior year studying at two
schools in southern France.
While attending the Insti-
tute for American Universities
in Avignon the first semester,
she said she took six classes
taught entirely in French. She
said during the second semes-
ter she attended the Centre des
Etudes Francaises in Aix-En-
Provence, a school primarily
Terri Donnelly, senior
Deborah Debertolis, a sopho-
more Medical Technology major,
said she is leaving for the Uni- ,
versity of Wollongong in Austra-
lia, on July
5.
There she said she will take a
semester of chemistry, biology,
history and literature courses.
Debertolis said she is
a
little
nervous about going, but she is
in contact with
a
student at the
university who is giving her ad-
vice on what to expect.
"I know the classes are dif-
ferent," Debertolis said. "It'll be
a different type of studying, more
independent rather than the
teacher telling you what to do.
When I come back I think I'm
going to be a different person than
when I left."
Amy
B.
Pettengill-
According to Pettengill-
Fahnestock, the most popular
countries chosen by students are
England, Ireland, Australia,
Spain, France, Italy, and Austria.
However, the.re are countries
chosen that are less common.
''We have a· student in Zim-
babwe and one in Russia," she
said. "Next year we'll have stu-
dents in China, Puerto Rico, and
Ohana."
Pettengill-Fahnestock said
students interested in going
abroad are primarily majoring in
the Humanities.
''There is a clear majority
from communications, business,
English, and
a
smattering from
the languages," she said.
~:'.Read'ThetCircle
}~v~ij(:f~'.~'rsday_.
L-
•
-•:..:..
!
• ..
.
,
,,,
'.
Supplement 4
->
. .
·
..
;--·- .....
•.· :'>. -
...
,
·.·:·
··• ..
,·... .
Tb~
$Je~pin,g
g1ant
•···•
Ahistorical-Iook:atthe
MidlHiid~t111-
Business--Park
'
'
'
• '
·:. < '-~•:';
'•
'
'•
by Daryl
Richard· ·
Associate Editor. :
·the pifult to produce Fiats.
•
. .Between 1910 and 1917
• about
Z:OO<>'
of the custom~built .
. •
The fact~ry floors n?W stand . luxury'cars rolled off the assem-
e~pty, • serving as a sdent~re-
bly line;: Howev~r, the
cars
car:
m!n~er of the once_,bu~tlmg_ riedah~ftypricetagfoi:~e.time,
pnnttng COfDpany
that e1!1~.l~yed
_: :selling'fof $4,50Q iD }914.
• -
as mat1y
~
1,5-00I~al-~_
1
de1.1ts.
•
The building's use from·the
Even though the buddmg, lo-
_
time Fiat left in
1918
until West-:
cate,d across the str~et from" ;-ern arrived -16 yelfi"s lateris
hJ.in.s.t
College, h~ ~°.:Y.~Cil!1t
• : sket~hY: ·Somlfoi:mer W:estem
smce 1983, th~ air msJde_Sttll_;-
• Printing employees said it ifru-
- reeks of machmery_ 01
!.·:
·Th.e mored ·_that
a supermark.et _used
worn out wood floors giye ey~'." the space for
a
period of time.
dence ~o decades of ~buse fr_om
. But the most well know oc.:
!orklifts, assembly lme~, pnnt:-, : cupant ·•
of the· 648,000 square
!ng presses and workers · pound- • foot. building (enough· space to
mgfee!.
. ._ . .
.
build 14.4 football fields) was
This b':tldmg, -t~e, ~td-
the printing company .. While in
Hud_son
Bu~mess Par~, provides • Poughkeepsie, Westenf Printing
a wmdow mto the history and
was the place to work.
-
~ulture ~f the Hudson :VaHey.
"Everyone and their _uncle
Once a Fiat car fac.tory an~ l~ter worked at Western Printing,"
home to the_ West_em.
P~ntmg
sai_d Bill McPeck, .a Marist se-
<::o., t~e busm~s park gives _a curity guard. Mi.:Peck's,_mother-
histoncal look mto the Amen-
in-law, father-in-law,· grand-
can ,!abor forpe. .
.
mother and every aunt and uncle
. It was,,a fami_ly-run
type of
worked at the flourishing pub-
busmess,
said
Edward
Usher.
·
•
H~ls~pple, a form~f. Western
"I cannot think· of anybody
Printing employee. You _knew • who did not like working there,"
everybody you ~orked with on
he said. "Western was kind to
a first name basts, from the bos~ its employees."
on do_wn
to the guy next to you, .
Holsopple said the company
he said.
-
had a· tradition· of paying well
Ho~soppl~ worked at West., and-giving good benefits. «It
e~ Pnnttng for l 7 years
:t5.
a
was one of the better payingjobs
b01ler .operator and machm1st at the time,, he said. Theaver-
un!il its closing in ~983. • ~e
agewage_for;_its~lllploy~s-dur-:
pomted to cost effective~ess as
ing the 1950s was $1.75
an
hour'.
the reason for the plant s clos-
Robert Brown
.
another
ing, explaining ,at the company . former· Western Printing em-
n~
to consol_1date
t~ several
ployee who worked at the plant
different locations around . the
for 38 years, praises·. the com-
country.
• panyforits treatment of employ,..·
However, the building'.s
·
ees. '.'lwasal:>le to buy a house,
legacy lives on today. : Before
raise my children and send them
Western bought the space in
to• coHege because of my job,"
1934, an Italian auto-maker used
bf Larry
Boada-
Editorial Editor
Look at the student next to you .
If
-it was . discovered that • he or
she -was
admitted into this.school by
forgipg :_a/transcript,
_
how· ·,would it
make',you fee}?
. .,-
:
.<· .
• .. Nowwhat.if;you also found out
thaf this . _student had. received
enonrious,_aniounts
of financial aid
money_
in<the
-process?
. : on-April6, only a month away
from gr!3duation,. Lon Thom~s
Gra.mmer, a senior -at Yale s
Davenport
-C<>Uege,
was· arrested on
• charges·
of larceny
..
·
•
..
• . /. Grammer had managed t9 attend
Davenpcirt,
where he_and
his lawyer
said , he : recorded a
B
average, by
• forging a transcript that inflated his
grades from a
C
to an
A
• The charges of larceny were filed
by Yale College, . accusing him of
receiving $61,475 in financial aid by
•
.
.
_
·._.
·" -,
. . ,
. Cin:Ic
PJIOtolDaryJ
Richan!
giving the college false information
Ninefy-five percent of the· 648,000-square foot business
::C:!::nt8t:s~~:a~fe~~
park.will be leveled to make way for a Wal-Mart center.
Grammer has. been expelled from
he
said:
presses ran in ancJ out of the
YalX: related story inv~i~es a girl
A big difference between
building.
·
who was.admitted to Harvard then
factories then and today is the
. "Sixteen to 18 million comic
declined when it was discovered
that
working conditions. People lost
books per month were being
she had been convicted of
limbs, fingers and 'toes in the
shipped out of Western," Brown
manslaughter in the murder ·of her
machinery, forklifts were buzz-
said. "It was a busy operation."
mother.
•
ing around the factory floor
.. • But the
20
rooms, some of
She had been convicted as a
moving bundles of comic books
which are about three times the
juvenile and Harvard became aware
. . •
. ,
. when someone called and told the
and employees, surrounded by
s!ze of Man~t s Mcann gymn_a- admissions office of her record.
loud, roaring printing presses,
smm, now lie empty. The rm.I-
These stories provoked varied
clid not wear ear protection.
road tracks have . been filled
m
views from Marist students around
. "I don't remember any per- • .with concrete. The rooms have
campus.
.
s.on who worked_•
in . the "press been stripped of.then: machinery.
. ''.More . po-:ver
_ to
him,"
,room that doesn't have a hear-
• ''It's kind'.of discouraging for
f.
0
m~ented, sen~or Dave ~trong.
• •
-· • •
• ,, • -
.. 1 "d "I
·thi
Obv1ously•the
aid helped
him
out.
ing aid today," McPeck said. • me, • IJolsopp e sat . • ·• saw . s
It's one thing
if
he did it and flunked
According to Holsopple, the
place m full ()peration and ?,OW out, though."
·
factory was running 24 hours a
all that space stands empty. .
But Strong_
pointed out that the
day, seven days a week_. In ad-
Browri said_he_"will
hate like
admissions office should be at fault
dition to forklifts running
all helL to·see that building be·
around,freighttrains unioa.ding tom down. There are a. lot of
rolls of paper six feet high and people who put their life in
five feet in diameter for the
there."
. see
YALE
page
2
Cows, sweaty underpants fflld btillet-proof igloos It's a:-strange world_
.
-
·-'
-
._
.
.
byDaryl
Richard
Associate Editor
• deaths and le_aving 880 people
homeless.
•
.
The-Daily Newsreporied
It's a strange ~o.rld out there. earlier, this year. that aicow
0
in ,
. Lifojnay
seem boring and Velez, -~olombia is in critical.
repetitious a(times - students
condition after being shot in the
falling asleep in their 8:00 a.m. , head by another cow.
class and others counting the
''The bovine suspect stepped
·ceiling tiles during mo.notonous on the trigger of aloaded rifle·
lectures. But at the same time
left in a field by a farm worker,"
we are all in an academic trance, the article said.
_
half".'way arp1.1nd 'the, world,
.· RCN Radio, l>roadcasting
some weird things are going on.
out of Bogota, "coloinbia, said
Cows are shooting other
the ill).pact _of the co~ stepRing
cows, the Japaµese are -invent-
on the rifle caused the weapon
• i_ng
sweat-laced underpants and
to fire, sending a bullet straight
Sweden •is experimenting with
into the head of the other animal
bullet-proof igloos.
.
grazing nearby.
. _
.
Life doesn't sound as boring
Colombia,_which has 01_1e
of
now~ does it? If you're not con-
the world's Iughest murder rates,
vinced yet, read on and you will
has never seen violence spread
be surprised at some of the
to farm animals, thestati011said.
things that go on while the kid
Cows were not the only ani-
in front of you in literature class , mals getting violent last week.
makes origami sculptures out of
A mouse in a small Vietnam-
notebook paper.
ese village sparked a fire that
Violence Among An~
is Rising
As President Clinton tries to
pass his anti-crime bill through
Congress; he should think about
making a provision that would
make it easier to convict violent
fann animals.
Recently, a cow and a mouse
have been responsible for two
killed an infant and set most of
the village ablaze. .
A newspaper in Hanoi re-
ported that the mouse knocked
over an oil lamp, causing the
fire.
"The fire spread, killing • a
13-month-old child, destroying
193 thatched houses and leaving
880 people homeless," the ar-
ticle said.
Igloos: Defense
of
the
Looking to spice· up your
•
Future?
loveJife?
Try.
swea~-lace<l
un-
.
derpants.
Tha~ks to state of the art
According to the April 12,
technology, m.ost nations' de- • issue· of·
The Daily News Jhe
fense • systems have become al-
Japanese have fpund inspiration
most superhuman.. .
• in-perspiration, marketing un-
Laser
guided
missiles
der:wear that already· has that
(LOMs), undetectable stealth
sweaty smell.
. .· __
aircraft thatevade'the most seh'-
Apparel
and cosmetics
sitive radar and now igloos.
. maker Kanebo said thatmillions
-That's right, igloos,· The
of tiny <!apsules
in thefabri~ COll:'.
Swedish Army has been per-
uµn-a'synthesiied ·pheromone
forming tests to_ determine how found in the sweat of a man's
impermeable igloos are to mod-
underanri. •
,
.....
- . . ..
•
•
em artillery.
Friction breaks the capsules,
The article, in a January edi-
releasing the supposedly attrac-
tion of
Newsweek, reported that tive scent. -• ..
-
.
the walls of an igloo can
be
a bet-
•
According· Webster's Col-
ter defense against bullets than lege Dictionary, a pheromone is
concrete walls.
. "any. chemical .substance re-
Col. • Pelle Mohlin, a Swed- - leased by an animal that serves
ish Army commander, was per-
to influence the physiology or
forming the tests on igloos to see behavior of other. members of
how they stacked up as a new the same species."
form of defense technology.
Working
011
_that theory, sci-
"lt's like chewing gum, it
entists used sweat as the human
absorbs the blast," Mohlin said. equivalent of an animal phero-
Igloos are also safe from air
mane, added a musk scentto
attacks because they are almost intensify the effect and ended up
invisible from aircraft and can
with what they are.hoping will
not be detected by infrared sen-
be a new trend in apparel.
sors that guide missiles.
''Those opting for full phero-
Sweat Appeal for
Sex Appeal
monal assault will also be able
to get neckties and handker-
chiefs made of the fabric," the
article said.
. An Ivy League Cybersex
Scandal
Travelers on the information
highway have found exits to
some interestjrig places.
•
Students
cruising
the
Internet at Harvard University
recently fourid therilselves'at the
center of a cybersex scandal.
'l'wenty-eight students at the
Ivy ,League scJ).oor have: been
_ usingthe Internet to_.coll~t por-
nographic pictures, the Daily
News recently· reported.
. · "Folks at Harvard were
· blushing over the disclosure that
28 • students downloaded more
than 500 pornographic pictures
from the college's computer bul-
letin boards in just one week,"
the article said.
Making things worse for the
students, the campus newspaper,
the Harvard Crimson, had com-
piled a list of names and sexual
preference of everyone who col-
lected the mat~rial. However,
the newspaper did not publish
any of the names.
"One graduate student was
. terrified his wife would find out
he'd downloaded 100 porno-
graphic pictures - of men," the
Daily News reported.
27~
1995
Colleges across couritiy
miS1eadpoplllar•.gll1debooks
IN
:MEMORY
()F:
OKLAH()MA
CITY~-
-·.
'
.. .
.·.-
.•.
'•'
-
-
...
-·.
.
.
'•
by KRISTINA
WELLS
Editor.
•
· Marist Colleg~ ·~as •
a~ong ·a· 11st
of about 50 colleges and universities
· across the country .who have either
fudged· their SAT scores or gradua-
tion rates in college ,guidebooks,
according to a, study done by. The
Wall Street Journal.
. •
.. . . ._
.
. In
the_ April .4 article~ it' was
alleged· -that Marist • increased their
average SAT scores with the intent
of attracting. more students. •
The .. guidebooks consistently
publish these sometimes· erroneous
statistics. These publications, such
. as Barron's and·.U.s.-.News-and
World Report, have a significant
see
a
lowered ~uniber of applicants.
if-the data.is significantly less tlian
other schools,
• •
•
•
Even. though the~e is no penalty
for
,·fudging
numbers· .. when
submitting '~ata t~ publishers, me,
coUege'--or:university· iriay, be.
penalized if t4e data is' tampered witl(
.
•
when filing with a· debt~rating
agency, th,~
_article said._ .
•• :
"Lying ,.
to the . rating~ agencies
violates. federal ,securities laws and
can expose , schools . to
•
huge ..
, liabilities," .The Journal said.
.'
••
Exchiding low~scoring;'students .
from the SAT numbers is just one
of the most common tactics used by .
colleges across the co~try.
.-
. Thereasortthese. two groups are ex-
cluded is it just skews the average, and
i('~. pot accurEJte
for kids. who ar~ trying
to figure out
if
they're admissible ·or not.
-
---
--
.
-':H-arry
Wood.,
.VP
of .Admissions
Wells,:retifes; D~•Richard takes helni
influen.ce,.on",parents and _students·
·Woodtold·The.Circle,that tliese
by MEREDITH KENNEDY
app~ying ~o coJlege.
A5:.J!c
re~.u.It, learning . disabled
.
and . . the·
•
• Staf/Bditor •
•
·c_olJegesf~d"~niyersi_Hes·~i~crctase
' in~er~ationaC stud~iits·
.·iue.:.not
'.:
. .• , • •• . .. .
.
.
. _ .
• SA+\
S!=Qr~s
!ill~,
~!l~uatjQ!.1
.. r~!~:11:!.:;:
.;i~q,*¢~Jo ..
subini~
_theifSAT
scores-
·-c '
,The.
G1Icle staff-has elected a n~'_V·
attract' mo.re students/·:
t:,
:.
: : ::
·7 : ;·
·1¢.d,\tnat:.
js/why(they";-are
• excluded • ••
editol'for next year. . . .
. -
,•·,The Journal reportep..that ~ew. from·:the'ituinbers; .. ' ,
•
•
·, Dai-yl
.. Richard: ··a· sophomore··
York
:Univ.ers_ity
• excludes fr_
om_.-
cits..
·
·
•
·
journalisnf major/will take over for
·'_'_Special
S
___
erv_'
i_ces_··
students_·
are
not •
Kri
t· •
w·
·11 •
•
• h
O
• •
•
SAT scores:.soine economically •
... si.na. e s
~
O)s agraduatmg
disadvantaged students who··. are
required to take the SAT. They do • senior. .
. • • •
:
. : .. • •
<
.
iner,nbers. -o~. a state-spoI1sored .. tak_e a11
other exam wh!ch·,.helf to
. Richar~ said he _has
defmite plans
. program.' Marist Coll_ege,
the report evaluate them .{academically}, he •. for The C1Icle for next year.
·:. said; incluc_les
the.
se students, :but· said. ·."They do take
a
tes(given by
"It's going to. be a new Circle
·
·
Speci.
·a1,_
Se.rv1·ces."
··
-·.• ·.
. '
••• • • • •
"R
0
h' ·d • •
•
excludes about 25 who ·are learning
next year, .• 1c ar said.: "If will be
disabled.
Marist also. excludes • _ · Wood a!so_ added tharSpecial
done on PageMaker and there will
international-· students
from
.
these· ••
_Service
-. students: are : required
•
tci . ,'be new · pages; like an Arts • and
:SAT
statistics.
•
•
•
subinifo pseudo-IQ test, but stressed Entertainmentpage_;,
._
.,,-•
•. _
.
.
.
·
Harry .Wood. vice president ·tor that i(was not use_d
in any.academic : The pllperwilladd the use 9f
in
· · admissions, told the.Journal thei:e is eligibility decisio11:
•
Assqci~ted Press wire service next.
'a
legitir.nate fiason\\'{hy~tht:se N/o
. .
< .
,. _
.. ·._. ,••..
. ••• .
·..
y~ • .-The servi~ should be l!P and
group~·.ar~· excl~ded .from·.-the>,·: .. ''{SpedaiServices}·stridents are· __
g01
11
g_by ~ugust 1 ~d_the.cost of
numbers.- . _
.. _. • ...•. : • .
. .
requiredfo pr~sent the results
of
ilie th~
~l!f
\Vill
be spht betw~en~'I'he
'_.·
~e.,r~~-n ~ese two gro\lpS are w~skler.scale of academ,icability to :.G.1ffle, a11.d,t~e' com1¥umcahons
eJecluded
1s 1t Jui;tsk~\Vs
the average,
.
get iµto ~pecial Services.13ut,. if is : depar}!D~n.t,
Iucpard said. . ..
.
· and it'tnot accurate for _kicls
w4_o not. used fo(adritissjo1t)Iecisions. •• .; Jl1~harc_l, _said he v.ranted_ the
.
. are. !IY~g, to figure • o\lt, 1f. ~hey'.re Therefore; tµey '{ the studellts} are> _editor,~
~s1ho11 \>ecause
lie wa~ts a
·' adm1ss1b!e
pr n,ot,''.·
\\';ood_
s,aid,
:c; -
nofincluded in the SAT numbei:st· ~eer m 1ournahs!11
• and _he enJo~s
Pubhshers:pLJhes~_.,popular
Wood said.. •
working on The_ Cucle, where he 1s
guidebooks, try to tailor thefrsurvey •• •·
__
,
iri
term.s of. Marist's policy on.. cu~,en~y_J111
ass1~ta11t
ed~tor.
> .-•
questions
_
to . minimize
•
the
Being a sophomore, it's a great
.• oppo_
rtu
...•
ru_
·ty_·.
to_.
fu<l.
ge the __
. num
__
·bers.. inclt!ding or excluding •international opportunity to just dive into the paper
students/ according
:to
Wood,
b
I h
tw
t
k
Bl!t,,if • the m1mbers llie iricimect, . international"· students are, not
.
~~_e ..
ave. o years o wor on
. there is notJDu.ch the publishers can ie_qriire_·c1_
-_.
io_·
take the_
SAT, . , .
it,: R!chru::d.
said. '
. . .
legally do about it. Ther.e
i~
no
:W~Us,
an Enghsh ~d 1ournahsm
punishment.for the colleges with
• "Because
these
students
ma~or, agreed that Ri~hllld has an
regard to "'.hat is printed • in {international} are. not. required to , advzmta~e
beca~Sf he IS _young. .
·tiary/
Rh:liiird,
Class of
'97,
/s:resdy
to
take
the
helm of the Circle
guidebooks. .·· ..
.
,
• . take: th~ SAT, they do not have to • · _
• 1 thinkhavmgyou th m power
is
this
Fall, He looks forward to the ever changing challenges
On the flip~side, coileges' and ·submit their results even if they <lo important," Wells ~id.-"He'll have
awaltlng_hlm.
•
universities that provicie accurate, take it," he said, "SomeStudents do two years t~ work a~d it will help. ----.....,.------..,....----,---------,-----------'
imd sometimes unflattering, numbers take it and submit their score; and • keep The Clfcle co1ts1stent.u
. ,
Along with Richard the new staff
"We're looking for a more
.tend to be almost penalized f<>rbeing
.
,..
, Well~ adde~ that she belit:ves includes Teri Stewart, sports editor, structured newspaper next year,"
honest. The admissions offices may
..
~
see
SAT
page 4 • Richard 1s the nght man for the JOb. and. Larry
Boada,
arts
.
and . Richard said.
•
•,, ...
•.•·•··•·•··•
•···~·-•··•· •··•··•·•··•·•··•·•·•·•·•·•··•--•···•--·•··•··•··•--·•.-•·~L•
. "Darylknowswhathewantsand • entertainment editor.
Wells cites her biggest regret is
~;;:;:I
·LOOK IN.
s10·
E
IN;
;~w::~~:~gfj~lt•~:;~n~fs~!
s~~~~~,~~~~~~t:xe;Je~::o~:
~i:~:~~~e~te~f~~:r~l~~;::·
•n
. .
.
.
.
,:·:•
but' he has a good senior staff. I will help with the larger coverage supports seeking for different status
e:i,_
• • •
_·,·•
hope he uses them."
he is planning.
. . •
•
(or the paper.
. "The more people that get
"I don't see how a paper can run
involved the easier -everyone's job under the government when one of
. will be," Richard said.
its functions is to check the
:A · meeting
was held
in government," Richard said. "With
preparation for next year and a new dean of communications next
approximately 43 people attended, year, it is the time to seek alternative
Richard said he believes this is a club status."
good sign because· people came out
Richard added that he would like
early and showed an interest.
to work with Marist College Radio
(WMCR)
and Marist College
Television (MCfV).
"I want to make sure that
whenever there is a big news event
on campus that someone will always
be there to cover it," Richard said.
'
r
.I
I
\.
I
i
.h
l
i
.l
'
'
J
·,.J .~
··~-~.'.°:
~
r
r
!
2
THE CIRCI.E,.APRIL
27, -1995 _
. _
_
__
_
by TOM BECKER.
Circle Music Critic·
- the false skin of terror is pulled back "Trust", an of which represent the _ included_
on this disc to make it fly:
hours and hou~ oflistening pleasure.
in favor of the sarcastic· humor of talents of_ industrial demigods En
Rather, Orange 9MM's intense
_
_
_ _ _
.
the band.
• • Esch and • Sascha Konietzko, from assaults; mixed with jabbing bass _
There is no doub! _
that_ Or~nge
KMFDM has come a long way
Now, for the disc.
• po\Ver surges to mellow grooves.
riffs, are sound enough to create • 9MM has the potent1~l
_to achie".e
since the days of old when their soft-
Unlike earlier works, _
which
There is no stalling on this disc, excellence on their own; producing all good things, as exh1b1ted
on thlS
core industrial bleeps cascade~ and sometimes lacked the power of their each song is spiced with either a a feel that is reminiscent. of both. disc.
collided with asbestos dripping from industrial brothers and the occasional Hammond_organ,
a Pantera-type riff, Quicksand and Jawbox, with a little
Let me make . it simple for
the ancient lead pipes found in the speed· metal flashback of th_e
classic _ some of those Ginsberg vocals, or a bit of Rage
.
Against -The • Machin~
•
steel factories that housed Germany's "A Drug Against War'' and<(Glory" Nitzer Ebb-esque_
beat.
added in for good measure. ___
·• . .
you ... buy this one, too. ••
underground dance scene.
on the '93 disc, "Nihil" is the perfect
. "Nihil" proves that a quality disc
The· first track, "Glistening",
One more_ time,_ KMFDM's
The angry, smarmy Deutschland union of the two, a culniination of _
~
be produced and released onlt a : actually allows one to feel the walls
"Nihil" .is ori
Wax
Trax and Orange
natives have traced a career of the band's ambition.
•
•
ye·ar after an album that was crumble on every, side, as'the'raw
9MM's "Driver Not included"_is on
industrial evolution through revolu-
The first release; entitled "Juke excellent in its o~, hard-i:dged rite
,
energy qf the song keeps propelling
EastWest Records, so save your.
tionin the darker edges
of
unknown. Joint Jezebel" brings
the
'sy_4th· in«Angst''.
•
the tune further and further ahead.
pennies and_buy. them both~ You'll
radio, including earlier works such sounds back, but in
a
much_meatier • Buy it>·<___
·"High Speed'Changer'~ exhibits
thank me for it
as "Piggybank" and "Split" leading portion.
_ _ . _ _ ,.
. .
Unlike'KMFPM's
.computer
·
theband'srhythm.:changipgabilities,
into 1993's "Angst" and the latest, •
Like. many, of the songs on_,
the prQq11~dJqu11i!s,,Orange,9MMu~es
goipg-from:static to frantic to light-
"Nihil".
_
disc, "Juke"·takes·a little'gehmg·used instruments, with the result ·.bemg speed. ,, . : ·:
·
.- ·-_
: : ··
And, it is this• Jaiest work· which -• to,
hilt
after two or three Jistens;
_the
power. with purity. , _ .
_
• _ .
• The band -exhibits -a •
!ighter hold
is perhaps tlteir best, forging the ever beat ingrains itself into your brain,
The debut .: album from the. on the· music in· sorigs< Hke
so delicate embrace of mayhem and allowing you to recaJl the extra f111vor hardcore foursome is entitled "Driver "Disclaimer'' and "Sacrifice", where
melody.
•
splashed in by the efforts of backing Not Included", a reference-
to
the. repeatingphras~ intertwine with the
For those_ riot familiar with the vocalist Jennifer Ginsberg.
. song that got them on the scene'and
growing_ferocity to an armageddon_
band, KMFDM's urgent _beats
What makes this disc great is th~ in the heads of many a couple of
climax.
meshing witli a inyriad of musical plethora of stand-out tunes, inchlding years ago. •
-
__
.-
·
. -· ·
It
is simply one of those discs
samples are less intimidating when "Flesh", "Beast", "Brute", and •
However. "Driver'',need not be
that commands respect and offers
········································~·
•·
•
•
•
LAST CHANCE
Ill
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
'■
.•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
SENJIOR
SENI)-OFF!
$
1.
00
• ••
•
•
•
•
•
•
-·•
'
:_·,.,;
, -,._
--.
_
..
_
:-,
,.'..·•;
-::
...
~
,·:._:
.
• Happy l1stenmg: • • • . ' _ . __
_ ... '."
,.,,~-.:•~
0
···?L•i
i :-::, -::;-- . ~-.
'.->·::_.-
'_ ,·.,.
Since this is
0
the eild of the
column: and I'm not sure where
something like this. should go, I'd
just like· to· take .a line or two to
• reflect on what happened . in •
Oklahoma City and·-pray that
something similar -never happens
again. •
•
3
...
..
:.-·
:g,~;J$)"
'~E~S,:iasnare
'Cl1li5'
Of'the
Year AWaid'
•
:·.byBRIAN.FRANKEIIIBJELD
·.''.Child;in·.
Need" jn
·Ecuador,•
•
:
:[;<,<.?:.:::·,:;
Staff.T/(riter_r:
_:,,
..
:L
,,.
comn.iunkatiµg'
..
ari_d
•·''
'sending
.
..
..
..
.
. .
.
,.
. .
.
doilations·to the child and the child's
:
<
':
~e~.e~t.l
r,
'
th~, M~ri_s~,
Soll7ge : family
·on
:a
regular basis.
·_
·
..
··,
. •
•.
C9~~~tY,.~xpe.nenced ·a h1stoncal-
·
',,
"We ar'e a nationally recognizecr
c
f1~~L'>Vh.e,n
:.
the Club :c,f t.he Year
•
sorority; but I think
we
see olirseives·
Aw~r.9>fas, presented Jo ,two
as more of a service-oriented ihaiia
·
•
organizations •..
:'
. >,
•
,
_
.·
,
..
;
.
,
_
social. sorority,. jusr because
•
we do
..
/:
~o_t~)he_:.BI.~c~)~tude~t
Union so m11ch community service,"
-
-and_
the n~~lyformed sorority Alpha· Oloffsori said.
•
·
· ·
Sig~a !au
~ied_
fc:,r}heJo~~f:
.-
'. •
.,
.
.
Although both organizations iire
•
.
•·..
.
:To
my knowleage,
this· 1s the enthusiastic about being named to the
·.first
year in the school's'bistory that
•
Club of the Year Award each' said
.
ther~: bas been.~-tie for the. award,"
•
that it is working to ~ake. their
_Bo~
~yn~_h,; d!~ector of_ Student._ individu_al_
organization and
.the
A:ctiy1tte~,
said.
H
demon~trates the Marist community even better.
ki~d o! ~ork_these c_lubs
have been
"We want to try and get ourname
d~mg_::
.
.
.
_ .
.
out to the majority of people on
.
•
Lyn~~. sa1~ th~t. the ai~ount of
.
•
campus and try to appeal to. a lot of
.events,aµ~
commumtr serv1ce_d~ne
•
the people
'on.-
campus
-besides
the
by every club made 1t
·hiud
t~ g!ve
.
minoi:ity
community," Lisa Goddard,
the-award to any one orgaruzahon treasurer of the BSU said.
._
this year.
•
-
:
•
.
•
-
-
'
•
"It was very difficulfthis year to
Gamory agrees; and said the BSU
'
select {the recipient}because ihere
exists for a greaterpurpose than-to
were
:.quite
a
few clubs that did
serve
'the
needs of the African-
:e>utstanding
work," he said.
•
American
·community
on campus
·I-'-'----
••
Both· the BSU and Alpha Sigma
alone:
•
Alpha Sigma Tau was the co-reclpelnt of the Club of the Year Award. The. Black Student Union also received
Tau· vie.re; grateful that their hard
•
the awarcL T-bfs
Is
the first time
In
Marlst history that two clubs have been recnonb:ed.
wo~k ~as recognized, but both made
"Not.· only is• BSU beneficial to
~
..
it a ppint to say thatreceiving·this
African.:Americanstudents, but to all
'
f .
h
.
d.
·,
award.was
not their goal.in
students, because we're exposing
F-·
__
o·
_·F·
....
·1-t's
-a
r.1g
tenmg
1sease
organizing ihe
•
services and
-
.
events
something that• ihe school itself does
th
•
d'd
•
•
ilotprov. ide," Gamory said.
••
•
ey
l_,
•
·.·
·
·
•
•
'-'It'-._w.·
asn't_ so_·
mething·w_e
·set out·
•
·
•··
...
•
Just thinking of this word causes
.
grateful that finals were coming up
.
.
"T.he
education_
s_'
ystem is not set
by SARA KRAEMER
·· ·
to try. and get,'' ~n,Qloffson,
of
-
-
·
·
the stomach acids to violently slosh because it meant the end of another
Alpha Sigma Tau/ said: "As
a
group,
•
up
.to
expose people to African~......
Staff Writer
about and the heart rate to fluctuate semester and then vacation.
it was jusf something we wanted to
Ameri~ culture. 1 t~ink BSU does •
I left mfkeys in the door for the wildly.
Others said that finals had come
do. We wanted to get involved and_ a _good JOb of expasmg peop!~, to • third time this week.
.
If you fe~l that you have a case· all too quickly, and there was no time
really help the community, both
thmgs ihe school itself doesn
_t.
A friend of mine turned to me in of FOF, there are some ways to at all to prepare.
Marist. and the outside community."
Gamory added that hewould_ like.
.
the middle of philosophy and sleepily alleviate the stress which goes along
Still others claimed that the only
_Alpha
Sigma Tari and the BSU
.
to see more people of different
muttered that she had brought the with it.
way to face finals was to ignore
each performed.a number of services cultural backgrounds participate in
wrong book to class.
.
At the beginning of the year, them.
this past year, ranging from campus the BSU's events, anli feels ihat this
•
Yesterday, the girl in the shower somebody told me to always set a
Some students say that they
events to world-wide involvement.
•
is lacking at the present time.
stall next to mine was playing her long-term
.goal,
something to look prefer multiple choice tests because
•
The BSU members· have done
•
biology notes.
forward to after tests are over.
"they are easier to take."
'
.programs' in
.
local
.
correction
..
-
Alpha Sigma Tau is hoping that...
Wh_at
is making students do such.
This reward should be followed
However, the most dreaded kind
fac~iiie~, ~ave ~ro1:1ght
to camp!-1s
a
the
_receiving
of this aY:'ard
will help
,
odd thmgs?
through even
if
you don't get an A
of exam is the ugly cumulative test;
number: ~f nationally recognized. them,-to be accepted m·the Greek
•
Since there isn't a
fu]l
moon over
This way, whenever s_tress and most students feel that they can't
guest sp~akers and rece,nt_lr,c
held,
'.-
community on campus as: being a
Marist, and Sodexo hasn't added anxiety begin to
,creep
into your remember much of what they learned
what Bo~ Lyne~ la~eled·as, on~. of
legitimate sorority dedicated to
some strange potion to the cafeteria mind,
.you
can relax by picturing
·1ast
week, much less way back in
the most ~press1ve and well pl~ed
.
•
community service,
.
.
.:
-
food, the only logi~
,answer
i~ t~at yourself with that reward; always
.
January.
cultural dmner-dances•~
·he has ever-
•
.
-
.
.
•
students are developing the terrifying · focus on the positive and there will
,The
most important thing to
seen..
•
•••
->·
..
:
·•
~M~;be
thiswillhelpus get-~or~ diseas~:. ~ear of
_Finals_
g:oF).. .
.
be no mom for stress.
".
.
:
.
. .
remember
'around
this time of year,
•
Currently, seven -~~,ip.~i:,rs
.'?~J~e respect within the Greek community'':" :-It-is: pressure
-and
-a~1e~;
_which
•
If there is rio:
stress,' then you wi!l
.
is to respect your fellow students and
BSU are working every week.with. on campus," Leah Shelton,said.
~.
·.'
.,drives
st_udents
m~d;
•.
•
-beless
likely
to get a_~se ofFOF.
their individual study habits.
three; four and • five'"year."olds
'
.
•
'
·'
•
''
Leavmg keys
ID
doors
JS
only a
Hov.rever,
some students actually.
There
.
are some who will be
involved in the Head Start
:pmgram
In the mean-time, however,: the mild symptom.
-
•
,
woikbetter under stress.
.
cramming both day and night to get
at the:Astor_Cente_dn
Poughkeepsie.
, •
sorority. is' just learning abouf the
-
Remembering that you are using
They feel thaf when there are all of their work done by fmals week,
.
''We-just had a:wide:variety:of
-
.
demands of.. being
.a·
newly
...
the wrong text 45 minutes into class
•
restrictions put upori them, they
and others who feel that they can
events iuld piograms this year, from
•
establjshed Greek organization; and is a more severe side effect.
achieve more.
••
just breeze through with a minimum
•
enter_tain~elit to· educatioria~ Jo
is trying to continue to provide
But when students are driven to
·
Perhaps the slogan
"If
it
.weren't
of study
.
•
community service/', Tim. Gamory, events. and services both for the bring their notes to tlJe oddest of for the last minute a lot of things
WhHe certain students prefer total
_president
of the BSU, said.
•
.
••
·.
Marist
.•.
community
and. the places (including the bathroom), then would never get done" is true.
quiet for effective study, others work
Among Alpha Sigma Tau's major
community of Poughkeepsie'.
you know that they have a full-blown
Perhaps that is also why the better with loud music.
events thi!i
year
',Vere
a
$1,50,0 fund-
. •
..
.
cases of FOF.
•
library and computer rooms are
Just relax and try. not to get
raiser
:for
the· American_ Cancer
"We are just starting toiearnhow
The causes of FOF are those
packed during finals week.
stressed out, or you too will develop
~()ciety;
,
their
•
Valentine's
for
things work," Mariluz Santan~ said.
.
tegifying tests and term papers
When asked their feelings about .FOF.
.
.
Veterans prpgram, and tlie co~
"We. hop~ to. kee_P makmg:,a
'(which
al_l
seem to be due the same the upcoming finals, student
Also, if you see my keys
sponsorship
·of
bringing
,the·:
locat.,.;,difference
m
the Manst community,
__
day).
_
_
•.·..
.
..
,
.
responses ranged from nervousness anywhere, could you please return
Gii:lscoutson campus tosell:cookies;
--Xand
.stay
on track for •qub/oJ the
•. ,,
However the common factor m to stress to panic.
them to me?
•
•
Tlie' sorprifY:, als9 sp9.:iisors
a
·/'Year',!!ext
year'."
'
•
•••
.
.,
.all
of these cases ~s stress.
.
Some students felt that they were
SdA
to
holdJ(?int 111:Ceting
to decide on club cap issue
-
•
•
as ~liarters·
her~ at Marist.
.'~:<-
•
•·.,
·,
•
.
During the last student body
As the next.· eligible fraternity, possible for Marist students and
By SIMON. COTE
.The
current issue is a result of\. election, the ~reek cap _issu~
was the
Alpha Phi ~elta's goal i_s to ha".e admi~ist_rato,~s to handle more
Staff Writer.
'
thefact that there are openings in all most I?redommant ~op1c aside fr~m the ~ap. raised, allo~mg their organizations._ _
the councils except the greeks.
the Higher Educa!•?n Opp~rtumty organizat10n to be recognized by the
If
the
c,3P
1s raised as
~
~esult_
of
..
•
..
Qn
•
May 3,
a
first-ever joint
session of the Student Government
Association.will be held with-.both
the Executive Board and the
·senate.
-
-The
major issue that· will be
discussed under new business is
•
whether
the
•
cap on·. Greek
organizations at Marist will be raised
from eight Clrgani?:3-µoris
to ten.
•
At
.this
meeting, the Se_nate
will
take a
vote
ori whether the cap should
be rais.ed and if so; under what
conditions;·_
•
."It's·
the Student Government's
desire
•
to make
•
sure that whatever
decision we make, it is in the best
interest' of the students,'! Student
BQdy President-Elect Mikael Carlson
said. "lt's,an issue not
·only
for the
greeks but for the rest of the students
here at Marist."
The
·current
cap, limiting the
amount of cluos on campus to·. 64,
was imposed three years ago under
Nella Licari, when SGA was fairly
new.
The original purpose for the ~p
was to ensure that the Manst
community was not hit with an over-
abundance of clubs that SGA and
administration could not handle and
that students could· not fill.
For each council, there is a limit
as to the amount of clubs that exist
"The cap's theory is that it would Program and Tu1t1on
.
Assistance
school.
the Senate s vote, the adm1mstrat10n
allow for interest," Jennifer Nocella Program cuts, an~ !he_ re-ev~u~tion
This raise wou_ld
also create room will ultimatc:I~ have the power to
•
said,.-vice president-elect for clubs. of the school s v1s1~t1on
pohc1es.
for another soront~ as well.
veto the dec1S1on.
.
.
•
SGA's concern 1s that the cap be
"It's a complex issue that
IS
much
·
N
-_
·
•11
th"• •
•
b h
•
representative of the student's
deeper than it looks," Carlson said.
•
0
more
WIii
IS
issue e ang,ng
concerns as well as the students who "All possible options will be
•
•
•
wish to pursue a fraternity or ••
addressed to solve this problem."
around the Student Government.
sorority.
•
'
.
According to Nocella, no matter
.
.
.
The concern coming from the what happens at the meeting, it is
It's going to the Senate.
administration is whether they_ will important that the issue is finally.
.
be able to manage the two add1t1onal gomg to be settled.
J
••
en Noc·
e·•
Ila VP of Clubs - elect
Greek organizations on campus.
"I'm
·not
sure what i~ going to
-
,
•
"A lot of work from the happen, but I'm confident that
on the cap·
on Greek organizations
administration goes into managing every.one at th~ meeting wi!I be very
-
·
·
·
· ·
···
·
·
·
• •
the organizations as it is," Nocella well-informed m order to discuss the
"The point of the cap .means that it
•
is cyclical so you will have enough
-. •
clubs and enough interest because of
the membership requirement"
•,
After two years of investigating,
this will be the. first time the cap
issue will come to the table.·
·
In· the past, the issue has been
bounced around from committee to
committee.
It bas reached the Senate floor
before, but not as such a serious issue
as
it currently exists.
"It's been around a while and we
·
have been doing a lot of work on
it," Nocella said. "Basically, we are
just proposing it out to the Senate to
lift the cap."
"It is a predominant issue because
of the interest of the greeks who
ma_!ce
up 12 percent of the student
body," Carlson said.
"The main thrust is coming from
the Greek organizations simply
because that is the only council that
has been capped."
According to Carlson, SGA and
administration does not want to take
on more than they can handle.
At next month's meeting, the
joint session will determine not only
if the cap should be raised but if so,
by how much, given the current
restrictions placed on issues like
financial
and
administrative
management.
said. "We understand the adminis- issue," Nocella said. "No more will
tration's standpoint,"
this issue be hangin~ ar~und the
Carlson
said
he
feels student government. It s gomg to the
administration has a Jot of reasons Senate."
for not wanting the cap raised. ''TIiey
Being a student issue, the joint
have stated their side and have session next month will be open to
addressed some important points," he the public where anyone can have
said.
"I
don't think there is anything
.
impossible to work out though."
SGA
now
must
try
to
compromise the interests of the
administration and the student body.
"There are two sides to the issue,"
Nocella said.
"While we are looking to do what
we can for the students and bring
the.issue to the table, the debate May
3 will determine whether it is
4
•
THE
CJRci:E;
APRILZ?,
1~5
-
Fofll1.et
Strident:
spot
j1tiN"YC
•
c0Rtti:CQ6NS/Ar{OEQ'GI~$~-~
..
_-
• •
by ~STINA
WELLS
-~capon
before·~~y·e~chflfed
~O:
Jhisili_clllapol~gylJ(>;~u.i¢~,DlG~NN~~/~-~- tlt_e-:·
.--
' _-
;
-'
Editor
•
•
:
____
--
=~~;g~je:i-~:J~;;:;:~~:!'.~~l!~
_
_April
·l~pt
~~tio1to~Th~f
ircr,e~,
itst()~ffnti~~<i
'."~~~t:
A
-
•
d.
-
t ··
·a11··
(··
th
F ,
_
two hours later_
•
at Columbia>
Students Right to
Know: was placed on ~e fro11t
page
_
Apr. ~\s~!e
irthe i~:i~; Jew~~: P~esbyt_eri~ Med_ical
Center,
'
.
•
with an incorrec(~yJine~;.The
~cle was not:wn.~en by.
Kathurima Mwaria~ a fo_imer
t.farist
•
~~hce fou nd f~ur
.
ba_~s
•
~f.
-MEREDITH
KENNEDY
buf b
.
ALICIA.:.The Circle
--
student, was shot'and killed by two
.
m!'-1'iJuana
on ~waria s bo~y 3:1ong
-
_
_
.
.
:
•
-~
__ .
Y
_
.
_
.
;
_
.
_
_
New York City
-
police
•officers;_ .
_
wdh the -2?-calibre au!omauc pistol,
_-
staff would like to_
apologize for any gnef this mistake>,-_·
Mwari_
a 25 was shot four times
.
reports said. The pistol chamber
.
h
-
-
.
.
-
'd
h-
.
_
. •
'
'
• d
d
d
•
-
ds
may ave cause er.
---
-
Wed. Apr.
12
in Washington
~ntame on~ roun an two roun
Heights. He was shot after reports_ m the magapne.
.
that. he had terrorized residents
The pohce are defe:ndmg the
IN RESPONSE
toRANl>oLPH
BASS .• .'flje'Circle
including a pregnant wonian, with
~
shooting, but the'f~ily ha~ retained
-
.
-
_
.
. .
.
. _ __
.
_
_
__
.25-calibre pistol.
•
.
-_
legal. counsel to myestigate the
feltUsting the crime you
were
serving. time in'pdson for
-
A
police spokesman said Mwaria shootmg.
was not
·damaging
to your piece in
·the
March 30th
had Wpulle
1
d
5
-
6
a hgusn
on sedveral
wdomhen Mwaria headed the audio-visual
issue: ..
_Ra_
th
___
-_
e_r
__
we_
be_-_"
lie_
v_
e_
it_
p_
roved_-.
that son.ie_
on_-_
e
con-_
on
'
t
t." an wave t e departnien_
t at_ Dal_·
to_
n Pre_
p_ Schoo_L
•
·-
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
we
• -
t
t
b
fi
VI_
·_c_ted_
fio._r-.su_ch_._a·c_
rim_·
ec:an-improv·
·e
hirilself_and
de-
-
_
_.
apon a
_
some youngs ers e ore He obtained this job after he dropped
i
approaching a_ nearby car.
out of Marist three credits. ~hy of
:s~rires.ah"c~ducatio~\inci
aihance:
.
•
-_
·_
According to police; more than a
•
graduation.· He was a communica~·
dozen. witnesses heard two officers
order Mwa~ia to put down the
_
tions major;.
.
•
•
•
•
____________________________
_.
:Get
Involved
/:1
•
-
Earn Priority Points
·•
on
_
Sunday,-April 30th
from
__
7pm-10pm
_
_
at Poughkeepsle All Sport
Use of: Pool, Racquetball Courts, Basketball Co~rts, Whirlpool, and more!!
I
!
!
.
i
.
5
by
MEREDITH KENNEDY
Features Editor
There's nothing in the world quite
like a nice cold, wet beer.
After a crystal clear Thursday
with temperatures in the 60's, Friday,
April 20 proved to be far from
picture-perfect when it came to the
weather.
Yes, it rained on River Day, but
that did not seem to damper the
spirits of the 21 and
.older
Marist
crowd.
The
beer
flowed
freely
throughout the afternoon, though
some students sought shelter under
the two giant tents set up in the Hoop
Lot.
While non-alcoholic beverages
were available the drinks of choice
proved to be beer and wine coolers.
Some students decided to brave
the rain (most after a few brewskis)
and danced to the "Electric Slide".
Music was provided by Awesome
Audio.
Food was served under one of
the tents and included hamburgers,
bot dogs and chips; the favorite
appeared to be the cookies.
River Day, being the only Marist-
sponsored function where all 21-
year-olds attending the !=()liege
are
invited to attend and allowed to
drink, is a much-awaited event and
seemed to go off this year without a
hitch.
The only problems seemed to be
the large line for beer, and some
students complained that the beer
truck left early. No one seemed to
mind the rain.
..
.
.
.
.
.
lHECIRa.E,
OPINION
APRIL 27,
t~S:'
.
•
·-
.
•
'
.
.,
'
,
:
:
,
•.
•
~
••
_
-~
! •
-..
·'.
••
__
,
:.----
_, -.-·
:
•
•
.·
,
-·
•
-
MARIST
COLLEGE,
POUGHKEEPSIE,
NY 12601
THE STUDENT
NEWSPAPER
_
Kristina Wells,
e<!itor
Dana
Buoniconti,·senioreditor
:·-
Justin Seremet.
senior editor
-
Teri
L. Stewart.
sports editor
Meredith
K:ennedy,featWeeditor
Dawn Martin,
associate
editor
.
Daryl
Richard,
associaie
editor
Larry
Boada,
editorial
page editor
•
Matthew Dombrowski, disiribution
manager
Jen Forde,
advertising
manager
G. Modele
Clark~,faculty advisor
PUBLISHED
EVERY
THURSDAY
--
_
: _
_
:
'".\~,;
.-:·1-.;#ff,
=?,4
t(
.IN
THE FACULTY. LOU~GE,
TEACHERS
·PLAN
HOW
.-TO
FtUIN. THE
:S_MALL'
AMOUNT OF NICE WEflTHER WE ACTUALLY: GET/HERE
AT MARIST~
~
•.
•
•
_·Political·
Thoughts.
·-of-if{e>Week-'·
__
.
.
Dear· Diary, •
_
.
·What
happened wh~n the .bomb-ex- · ..
> _
·1have
a
diff~r~rit topic tci~sp~a.k
<>n'
Boy howdy, today was a day like no other. I mean, like that guy in Smashing Pumpkins ploded in' Oklahoma City reminds. me of- today;'one that is•m:uch less political yet if
says, "Today is the greatest day I have ever known."_·
.
._
.
.
an earthquake in California; b~ause_even, soimpoitant thatweas'·Americans-must
Now,Ididn'texactlysmearfluorescentpaintallover"theplaceliketheydointhevideo,
·
·
1
"f:
•
··1head
··,--,
•.
'-,.·i,
' ,
•.
,
·
b11t
if
I
did_
have fl11orescetjt
paint
I
probably would have.
-
.
- -·_.
'
;
•
though the big
:explosion
a ready hap-
ace
I
. .
~m;, ."
: :,
.
,.
.
,
,
•. ·_.
So, anyway, I got up this morning at around
8:30
to get ready for my9:30 class, took
pened·, the aftershocks
are
still to·conip,-·
'-_
liderronsthimJs,sqm~thibec_
ng that'fu.reat-
a shower, and got dressed.
·-
•
••
•
• ·
·
•
We've·all::eady.had,to experience
e~~t<> estroy
sco~ntry.
ause_wehave
When
I
headed downstairs for a. quick bite,
I
found my_
housemates scampering around
some of them. In fact, .it seems like as the._· had a complacent attitude toward it for too
the kitchen cooking. What was everyone doing up so early?
._
.
tragedy.-unfolds it grows greater in scope
•
many ye~.
;'•
-'
-.
:.
· •
• •
·
••
Well, when my roommate told me to sit down and that they were making breakfast for
everday when you hear
about
the children.
.--
"
_
This-at~tude ~tarted to chang_e 'Yhen
me, my jaw hit the floor.
. .
.
·_ - .
·
one of Aipenc:a,'s mo.st famousJ?~Jdings,
"For me? Why?"
I
asked.
or tbe parents, the
ffilSSmg
?r !he
_d~ad. _
New york 9ty'sWor,l~ Tra,de~qe_11ter,
was
"Well, it's your day, of course," they all replied.
.
.
The after~hocks:~e Slill-gouig.,to_ bombed by a group of.Arab fundaniental-'-
"Yeah, you didn't know that?" my roommate queried. "President Murray has declared
npple not only m the pam ,we fee,lor.-the •
•
••
__
.
,.•
·
..
_•.
__ ··•
• •
___
·_·
•
•
_·
-_--·
•
•
·'
today in honor of you - no dasses, no exams, no. ~uthin' ."
_
_
_
_
•
p~n we'U s~ but-wi~-th~ i,ssu~~ it is
go::
IS;.
:_
S~'.p~pJe_ili~
ih_
th~(e?(plC>!iicin'as
'Yell, needless to sat I was flabbergastedat t!te idea
_ofa
d_ay
all_
for me. I must be the. mg
tq
challenge Arilenc:~:-~l~-j,:·.
:_·
'
;-_;
i
< '."; ·
America wafohed the· oestructlonunf old in
luckiest person around.
_
.
_
•
._
,
.
.
.-.
-
•
_,·
_
.: •
-
.
->.
Oklahoma,City has.rais~,th~ issue
:
h' ·
·-1·--
~
,~·:·
•,
·'
·•••
>th -
,.,
r
··--:
·
j
·
So, l sat down to a scrumptious breakfast of bacon and eggs·, and pancakes with IPY of
dolllestic
p. arainilit<int•group•
;:
;
Waco::
.
t ~1.T:A
~lThng
,~o._p~s
•.
\:11 '.!!fi.
·,}lab_.
i_9nh,
.•
w_edas
name drizzled on them With maple syrup; a· total feast
"
·
· - •
'.
__
•
• •
•
> .
. .
\
_ . <
. .. •.
-- •
:.
- •
-
.
·
__
· - ··
_
.
,
,
_'"m"'
.
.
'
-
.
>
:
'• .
~tu11n~.-.
;
_.
,.
e~-~
\Ver:
_f
~
~-, ~I'., t?~g.
Jen
,
..
After breakfast,had hit the spot, I offered to:do'the dishes bt:cause my hciusem#eshacl
,::
~:•:1:1-1~-p.~ht
to b~~,~~_,Jh~.~~Je~~cy,
!S~S~.r~~i:-.~~-~-
~9f~?t,1te~,~19~al
_
_1~t~lh_;
been so nice to cook for me. .
,
,;
.....
, ...
,.,~
-r,,:;°•,"'
,:-~~i'r:,'«~
,,..;,;r:·:,;
:'ir
~>t9pi:.-?r~s~dent;:;.1.r~Y~.C?'-'?•"()_fl19~.t11~-Y~~--
gence;.:
-,
-·-- 1 -:···
. •
-''
·"
·.:
·-.' ·:
1
:
'.
.
•
•
•
'"No_wayi;•-they
!i"aid>'We'~e
gonna do
_all
~e
dishe;
for you.~;-.-:
.·:
•
•
•. -·
..
• ,.
•
tracks domestic militiagroups[and ~we_
: •'· : ·'-"'Did'we
leariHt.'lesson':from,the
..
Unbelievable, I thought to myself..
•.
• ."
..
_.
.
•
:
.
going to have toforsake soineofourlil;ier-"
.
World TradeCentei:boiiil:>_iiig?.
.•
•
·- • .:
,
•
-~ext,
they asked !°?e to come outsid~·wi~ them.~ ~~rpris~
"'.'~-wait_ing
for_
me:_._:-··
. :_
ties i11
order to p~otect them?
.
, -;
: •
•
..
,
'_!llarqu~sti<>n/has,quite_
~•-f~~ ~-
Close your eyes,
.
my r~ommate s~id.
_ ..
_
.....
_
,.
;
__
:.
·_. ..
.
·: . •
.
..
. .'/
.,
"''.
Jthascatapult~ tht!S~Jssues 1~to the S\_Yer;s;:~epending1Jntwh.p
you ask,';>c•
'.. •
Well, when I stepped outside, and they told me to ~pen my .ey~, J.~as J_llSt
~umbfou~~f~·
•
forefront of our minds and the inedia; Even ,-,~-
,J/A,sk_.~yonejifQ}ga\loma:
Cjty-that
•
me~~t6~~d~n-):<:r;~~g~~t;;~;t~\;i:~i~4~ii~-Jtr~u?:~.:~~R~t\...
~p~g~·
its,Jt~nii~ifk~;-¥g_~--a~o'..
kJifo'J(
}}U~~o~-:¥:d:~fY(~m\~ff
yo\i'th~KJ~corn:
Theywere all holdmg ~igns with my n~e pn them; and they
all
shouted
''We
~~ye
you!":.-._
tml}d what
}!~e.d
tC>
,_be
.1~.
that_·
same~ ~pat.;
.
p,a.c~~~Y:.
1
8:-:
~ti}l
.<Pf~ye~_~llg.
µs_:frt>J.Il,.d_~
:::s~~ir,J;."ili
t:;p~~blyjj•;;,}w~
~,1~
~"'~i]oi,~':~~i/
[1$W~~~i~f
~
;~~
'~!tiiiliiiiiii~
,
•
Well, my friends brought me ove!to
_thi~s·b1g
st~ge ~ey had s~t up and
_asked
~e,.~o sit
• _·_•
feri~i~,4i
h
9
,\y.l,ll4iet!o.,}Y.~
lla_n4ifog:,ilie
}:h1ddf
P~.1A,~?Jrl!,tP~.~
9~al!~m~S~!Y
last
mfrontofeveryone.
•
_
..
·.
,
•
..
·
..........
·.·.-·
,
_:
·
,
?'JC
···••=
0
··roklah .•
c·w··,
_
•week1s.theworstterronstattack:mU.S.
thiss~i~:.·;~c::i:e
0
t!e~=~~!ww~~r~e:;!~t~~a:'.
eve~
9
_ne
I·kllst.?~-;t~--~~
..
:./
;7;~1-~;~;:~~it\\fi
111
i[il~€ti§{iii'
--~~fyj,'.P1£Tu~tAtffiiit~:!?~tt1:
.
. Murray said thar
I
was the• greatest studen.t to ~ver attend Manst,
'and.
then he ga!e Ille
~~IJp~; ~llat
~~
~e1~g}9~!!~?P~~ ()f try.,.
ftiWs
right:'Xi¥t~rfoa' Anfericaris
are
:; ::r
~~gand h~ded me an_FAF
fo~
offenng nie-a fyU.sc~~larship
becaus~!\·7f-
, 0r:5:~~:1Nf16dy
.in·._ciJiiliiiiiilEii{te~
te!f°.#s~J~;J-::B?L:it}t)::
...
;
<
\0:'
"AU you have to do is sign the. dotted line" he said
-
"and a Manst education·cari be~-;
,-:-1::ds"
'ih
1ifi
;•
fi
,
'T
'if
''
·at"•.:
.,
•,:,:::·Spev~cy:oµeJf.iiit:f!-!Sh¢4to-~llUile~e
yours~ on us_!'
_,··-••
.
,
•
<·,
...
·'_;
~
·
:'
'·>
''
_
•.
\.
, .•·.
.
/;
<L
~A---:~
~t
~.;!J,-;-f<lg!
e'.s-,U~)!,,J?~e:-
•-~dqI~:~t/~g@E(iP-:Y:~~lf.Jnc,lti,d~)~~
Several of i:ny teachers were 11ext
to follow, and they· said that in honqi of my:·day;J~
/
:1,1
11
'.1.~tys tlla.~
ess~p.tiallY./~Iµ,7p.c~
!~.
g~
J>ettefd_o
a
qlll~k r~cy.;cht&lc~:We. ll~ve
,a
•
would get an A in all of my Classes because I was the greatest student that
·Milrist.
had evei-
.:
at ~~-:Jbat
thert~;!l[e
fu.~~
~Ii~
g? ll;lt()
[Il~:W,
pioblemj,ii"Wr:
,h~<is)uid
it is c~ed-
•
had;
,
'
,_.
.
. _ .
.
.
,
,
_
.
_
..
·_
,
•
_-
.__
.
'>·- :
t,lle:wreckage ofa coll_apsed
bwJdiI)g
~Q
a d9niestic:teironsm:{,)/:'.:\ft_·~.,-
...
:.
:
>
•
-Next up. v.:ere·
all:my friends, who not only g~vt: m~ ~ack all the_
~oney
that
I hadl!~f
•
1:>a.~fMY
can -pe
rt~~
tp
~f~~~JJ!5
..
_if
_ ·,
·\'.
·,.~s.Ht-~~}fi\f6~Yi.t?fdf.iw)ogeth~r-
.1oaned
them, but _said
I
was the most bestest ,fri~nd ~.friend _could ever have.
_
"
:;:·,.
_
_: P_U.lY,}O
b.e buned:
;
,:_:
.'·:.:(
/?
:·
}
,. ,
·/.,; '.
;as~
!l;ati911
ip, ~~pJ?9rtofp~f eJ,.10V1.Aajen:,
Then, my family came up on stage fora b1ggroup h~g wi~me, and my
fo~
told-~~.--/
;/-::.:·
That there ar~ hu11dreds•of fe4,e~-- cansin Oklahoma ...
-:-
,;,~:t~i:'C..
,--:, .-
...
:,
that they woul4 ne~er m~ke,m~ clean up my r~m agam, or nag ~e aboutgettmg a
JO~,
..
W6rkersCwhoeventho~ghthey'clic(rtot'go·
}c},?),Ji~~itlie~i~v~(ig1{on-:lrover~,We
.
when I graduated.
_
_.
_
·· ---
__
.
_
_ ,,.
,O·•.
•
-
-a-
..
·.-.
••·
.
-
.-
.:·.
•.
··•-•.-.
·.-
.. ,_,.,___,_
••••
,
.••
-
••
•
c.·-
..
=--,.--•,,.-,
....
·•·.
-
•,-·
•
•
So
·fior
the res·
t
·of
the
·da·
-Y
.
I·
s1"gned·
__
•
au·
tographs
-
an·
d
·h·
ad· m.
·y·
·_
p1·ctur·
e
•
~.;.'·e·
n·
-·wi"th·_peo·
·_
.p-le
•
••
in_tcr
war,_·
still lost llleir hves ser.vmg tlleir
-
_:n~.
to·~o~e~w@yJo~~n~t:n.e.wJegisla-:
-'
•
·
.
·'
,
'
·
·
,
.-
·
.......
·.
:_.,
··
_.,_.
__
._ ·-__
·
•
•-.··-.---'· -
•
,,,_-.--·
..
·,.•
:_tic>1lto.e£'imd.llie
.. ·weci.ofthe·FB1and_·
and got dates with all the people I ever want_ed
to,<iate smce Id.been at Manst.
.. .
cmmtcy.
,_.
.
..
-.,-.-.~
'.
:·.,.~".
,:
·,: .. :
•,
:--
--.•-·
_-..,
.
.-.
_p
..
_
.....
,po,,
..
,
..
_'.
.. ,
_
~--•c•
..
•
.. ;
Well, it got to be:pretty
-
late; and
l
was gett~g
_tired
from all_
1che
p<;<>ple,
but my friends
•
;-
Along with the suffering, the explo-
other:agenc1~ Jo
.~_9mbat
terrons111~"
f?oth
a11
•
!aid, "You ~•t. call it
-
~-night just yet;, We'~e
:t~~g
you ou!· ~Qr drinks."
ston
_i~
Okl,ahom~.
¢JJY,.:
alsct_
raj_s~
•
~-(!~~,
_dome.s~~
an~
in~fil~O~~-J]~J>i:~~~eiif
s
.
I
really don t have ~y,money on me,
I said.
_
,
,,
._
_
..
· .
.__
..
:
issuesthataregoingto·challelig'eAn'lerica.
·()mmb~s
Col!nt~*rro~~R.l~~c_t
<;>f)995
_
"N~
probk1mo,"
my fri_ends
responded,
_"because
_all
rour dri_nks
ai:e on
us!'·.
•
.
-·._
".-._
The
memt>~
ofwha(happeriecf in
Olcla~·
-_should]~ p~se'tf~thouf~elay;·;:
·-:··
:
:'\
,
S<>!.we
~eaded o~t
__
to
th~
bar, andwhenwe-g~t. there it
:,v~
totally Jam-packed. I mean,
h.
-
f:~.i
·b
·th·
··hal.
-
1
-_-
-·
·t--l-
-
•. .
.
,; -This-wdl:enaple
tij~:Attomey-Gen-
·there
were people lmed up around the block-waiting to:get m.
9mamay i'.llle,~
ut ec
enge.i eaves.
ra1·
,"fti
..
,, __
..
.,
.......
,.
~-
.
-
B
fri ds b
.
·
gh.
•
"gh
·
·
h
·
• "d
d 1ik· th
•
f ·
•
us· will noL They will need•to·be··addressed
•
• e
to steP up e orts ~amst terronsm to
ut my en
ro_u ~_me-n _t.,up_
to,t_ e:entran~ to go msi ~.
an
e e partmg o
•
'
..
_
.
. .
,
-
-
•
;
..
_ ...
,
reduce the-likeliliood-'of.'anoth
:.'
ttack.
the Red Sea, everyone' stepped as1d~_.so
11).at
there was. a clear path.to the bar.
bec:ause'.m,some cases they will prevent
·
·
-•
·
-·
.
•·
.
·.
.
-
er a,
-
.
.
Everyone.
that Vt'.as
there sho?ted out rnf~~e
and
,~d
"Co_~gia¥a-tions!"
, ·
.
.
._
.
·c:
•
ai10~er Oklahoma· City: from happening !anet
.R.-~?qJl~
~d.
s~e w!U
~-~ ~
~XlSl~
•
Even the bartender leaned over the counter to shake my hand and said "What'll ya have?
•
•
.
;
.,
,_
.
•
.
•
mg prov1s1pn
_mJ~t_
Year-~
cnme ~ill to
It's on us "
, •
•
.
•
.
•
agam.
'
.
.
,
-.
•
·
-
.
-
.
·
·
·
ask for the death penal!y for the madmen
So/I g~i mydrink'and this'buge cake is wheeled out .:chocolate, with those edible pinic:
-
•
::
,,Butm
the words 9~ Billy
?rabam,
who
de.stroyedso
many
lives.·,
:
...
;
•
blue and yellow frostedflowers, and my name written ori it in gigantic letters - and we
whQ spoke at the memonal service:
__
tbat·
•
J~pp~audhereffortstopro~utethis
partied with -cake and
tasty
beverages into the wee· hours of the morning.
,
re~ar<!}ess
of th~ chall~nge
~
•••
the spmt of.
case
to•
the fullest· extent
'of
the law. We
By
·aroun~
5 or so,· 1 was thoroughly ~xhausted, and wanted
t?
call it_a_night.
this c1~ and this nation will not
·be
de-
-
11eed
to give lier and hercoll~gues_in law
So, my friends_and I_ went home by lim~, and I headed upstairs to get mto my PJs.
feated.
.
.
.
.
_
.
_
_
enforcementmorepowertodeal with these
I was about to J~P mto
be?
when I noticed. that my_
bedspread had been turned down,
Even m the media we know its
go-
acts before people are dead instead of later
and ihere was a mmt on my pillow.
• t be th l d •
th TV
•
•
·
•
•
•
·
H
_
•
g1
1 h d this
da
bee ?
.
.
mg o
e ea -m on e
news or on
-
as under current laws.
r::..
8fh::1d
:O::
co:motion !utsid: iny window, so I pulled back the curtain to see
the cover of the newspaper. ~ut the
dif--
We cannot afford to let this issue set
what it was· and there was the whole school and all my family and friends - outside on the
ference between Oklahoma City and
_the
on the back burner for another second.
green betw~n Lowell Thomas and Dyson again.
'
trial of OJ. Simpson is that this is worthy Americans shouldn't have to lose their
·
"Sweet dreams and don't let the bed bugs bite," they shouted. "We love you!"
of America's attention.
•
lives
at the hands of citizens who choose
Which brings me to now, as I write down these thoughts.
-
to
break the
Jaw:
I
think every student at
Marist
deserves their own day.
••
Mary Diamond
is The· Circle's
Sean White is
The Circle's Demo-
Nighty-night, diary.
Republican political columnist.
crat columnist.
•••
I
I'
VtEWPOINTAPRIL27,
1995
'
.••
'
..
,..
.
•
·.
••
.
'
,
'
----------------------,
1
Somebody give this
I
I
I
I
guy a hand...
I
Letters to the Editor ...
1
· Potatoes
With. a
Sin.ile:
Thanks Jeff
I
It's always great when an him up and return him to his mother.
I
I
insignificant event can lead to a
You get back to your friend and
I
cataiitrophic situation.
• • he says, "Where did you go?"
I
Sort of like the time I left the
You say, "Did you see that?"
I·
I
seat up on the toilet when my
His response: "See what?"
I
I
friend's
baby sister was just
But then twenty minutes later,
I
beginning toilet training.
after you just get done talking to a
I
I
But it turned out all right, she pretty girl you know, the same
Editor:
•
.
.
I
was potty trained and learned how observant friend will say: "Did you
I
I
guess ymfcould say that this is simply made my day. For my S6metimes I feel, that I do not
I
to swim all in _orie
day.
_
know you have some ketchup on the
I
a kind ofappreciaticin letter. -
roommate's birthday, he made her des~rve all of the things that he does
1
,,
But what happened to me wasn't side of your face?"
I
As a college student,
I
do not an eno~ous· birthday_
cake that he for nie and my friends.
as educational. ·
''Thanks."
. usually appreciate the things around brought out to "our. tabJe. •
•
Next time he does something for
I
I simply scratched my nose with
See, this advice is a little too late.
I
me unless they directly deal with ' Each day he_
is
there behin? the you or any of your friends, please
I
the wrong finger.
_
It's sort oflike the advice to the
I
partying, my friends and sleep. But, kitchen or walking'around making- thank him. I am sure that he has not
I
How is.that dangerous you ask? family in Poltergeist - "Oh by the
I
I have decided to ask recognition for • sure that_
everything is to his liking heard those· words as much as he
Well if you were holding a gun way the house is on an Indian burial
one particular person-wlio•.deserves for "his kids,»:as.he_likes
to call us. 'should.have. . •
•
I
and you. did it with your trigger ground."
•
I
• it-the mosr out of all-the· rest.•
I am al\\'ays asking for more ceJery
·._so· from everyone who eats in the
I
finger you might have a bigger mess
But back to my situation.
I
:You probably know him as Jeff, or better potatoes, and through all of, cafeteria and kn?ws Jeff and from
I
on your hands, and on the floor_-
Why was it so important to this
I
the cafeteria man;
•
-' •
my whining amt pestering, Jeff is the "back table ~uls," we thank you
I
but that '":as· not t~e. case.
.
,
guy for me to see his finger?
I
We all hate to -think· of the there with a smile giving me what I Jeff for everything!
I was sunply dnvmg, had an itch,
I know he has one, I'm sorry I'm
cafeteria food and how
it
barely ~ked for. . .·. .
•
. . .
.
.
•
.•
-.- .
'
.•
I
scratched with my middle finger and not impressed.
I
co-mpares'.tcvour mother's honte-
:. Another one:of triy friends hurt
'
Tara Juwa, sophomore
I
so~efellow citizen with border !ine
I have finally come to a solution.
I
cooking, but Jeffthis·year has _made her anklefro_m
a fall imd bad t~_wear
•••••.
• ••••••
;• •••••
I
samty and_
way too much free time
If he thought it was a big deal to
I
it more more bearable-for us all. He -~ cast and use crutches. Jeff would:
Like to wnte?
:
I
continued to follow me for three show you his one finger - you show
istherealmosteverydayoftlii;week;'
go over,to her and-?Sk what she.
, _
L"1ke·
·to go •to
••
miles because he thought I flipped him all five. Just wave.
I
wearing a smile and usually:dressed
_wanted
to. eatarid th_en proceed to•
•
.
•
him off and wanted to return the
Nothing drives someone more
I
hysterically- for-. the upcoming
go
.and
·geUt'.for her.
.
- •
.
concerts?
•
I
favor.
crazy than if you cut them off, nearly
I
holiday. •
• _ •
• • : • •
• ,_These
are just-a few examples of• -.
.
: -_ .
•
1
The first thing that bothers me is kill them, and then just say hello
I
·-He.goes oufof his way to'get
what,he has d?ne, but the list ~oes•Just
the combmat1on•1
~hy 'Yas someone around fo_r that with a wave.
students what they need; He has eve~ on,
I
know-there are plenty of you:
- • •
1
•
•
:
ms1gm~cant moment of my hfe -
It's much more creative than just
I
gone so far as to ,;e:member our out there.who know exactly, what.I.
I
m looking for. •
I
scratchmg my nose?
giving one finger.
I
names even though: there are close am talking ~bout and I ~ow that•
•
I
How co~e nobod~ is ever around . B~t I didn't want to escalate the
I
to 1500 students thateat in tlie - you_'Ypuld
Jike to thank hun too< • Come ride the new
A&E
page. •
I
for_ someth1~g co?l hke when I get situation.
I
cafeteria throughout the day; •
Without Jeff, the atmosphere.
m • :
Give 3 shout out to
•,
a high score ma video game or make
Instead I tried to communicate
ForValentine's:Day \\'hen I was the cafeteri_a
would not be as half as• .
Larry
B d
@
4313
-
•
that really hard basket?
to him that it was a misdirected
I
upset and· needing
a
valentine; "he ex.citing and enj~yable.J am writ~g:
__ . .
oa a
-
:
I
But no, they're there when I finger. It was an unintentional foul
I
made me a heart shaped cookie that this t()_Jeff_
beca~~e
_he.
~eserves 1t. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
I
sc_r~tch my_ nose and . get to on my part. •
I
It.'s.a
,/Festif
at:·
Editor:
•
• • · •
I
m1smterpret 1t and try to kill me.
That's why we should just make
• •
• • • •
• ·- •
• •
•
•
•
It seems the car is the place the next finger a referee finger that
I
;Stick :_With;
:Tradition
I
where you're always caught at the can just corre<;t the fouL
I
- -
I
awkward moment, whether it's
But while I tried to tell him he
I
Editor: :: ,· . ,
_. _,. ,
.
-_
.
I
scratching your nose at the wrong was an ineligible receiver to my
I
Recently I was visited.by a feJlow refuge from the heat and sun
I
time or singing along to a song and finger, I found out he was a bad lip
gradu~ting senior bearing a petition
4.President's reception: Having it
looking like you're having some sort reader.
I
calling f!)r_
the graduation ceremqny
•
• on the
mall
in front of Marian makes
I
of seizure while trying to hit a high
He just thought I was· further
I
to be moved from Leonidoff Field , it easily .accessible fromLeonidoff
I
note.
_ _ _ _ • .
~e~ling him off, adding insult to
I
_,;ffhis:is•artjnvit~tfcinto-allMarist, t\X;:1.:J~~~giJe:pbrpose
of
~;.~t
lian~foa{acces~: lNort1f'~ie1d
I
·peo~~th~!
s~~~~:
Jt61:-~:!p:~~
_
mJ~~-
~~w
• he
roll~d
_-~own· the
I
students, faculty/and.,staff to.·the this?Anyonewho has spent time at
is not easily accessib1~,J-eoni_doff
is
I
help, but ju_st drive away so you window and
told
me off.
I
19Q5 ,Festival of Student,_:written Marist knows that this
.field
is. not
Needless to say I did not sign the
I
don't crash ·mto them.
Well now I've had enough and
I
Plays. • •
,,
"
easily. acce·ssible; .especially for
petition, and I'm. sure there are other
I . _
!think i~'s just a law_ of natu~e finally ~ave
~i~
what I should've
·: :Tiicnestiv~· is ·fj,rodu~ti~n of
pi;oplC?
like my ~other who do not
reasc>ns
not to move the ceremony
that man misses everythmg and is from the begmmng ... the finger.
I
the :Theatre :Workshopciass: • •• ·-_, walk as easily as ·the rest of us. .
• thatih11:ven't ~nsi~ered.
_ .
I
oilservant at a!l)he wrong times.
And it's !rue - it's better to give
I
'"I offer some reasons why the
.-
·_ Leomdoff Field IS a convement
I
Example: .
. .
than to receive.
I
Plays will •. be performed on-_ ceremony should.not be moved:·
place to hold the ceremony. l ask
I
You're waJkmg down the street
Frank
La
Perch
is
The Circle's
I
Thursday, April27th~ and Friday,
1.
bathrooms -
.c..
the authors of the petitiori tci consider -with a friend and see a baby crawling humor C(llumnist
... his name used
April 28th, at
7
:00 PM and Sunday,
2.
seating availability: aside from
the above, and unless there are more
I
·into the middle of traffic about to to be
J
oh9 Doe. and records show
I
_April 30th; at 2:00 PM in the Marist
the folding chairs Leonidoff has the
compelling reasons to move the
I
get hit.
he's died 1400 times and is a
I
Theatre located in the Campus
large bleacher section; North Field
cer:mony, I a~k the g~ad_uating
L
You dash out avoiding cars scoop suspect in 1206 murders.
J
Center.
'
__.d<>es
~i.Ot _ __ •
.. __ • _
seniors to abstam from s1gmng the
------------•---------
.
,'. >.'.'.
• ., , •
/ - 3,_,~ha<l~:
n();,shade ~(the North- petition.
••
•
. Roseanne Saraceno
and.
Debbie... Field; Leonidoff is flanked by trees.
••
· UI1derdown,
publicity cre)V
on the bleacher side offering people
Minotjty Recruitment Day
The Office of Minority' Affairs
and the· Black· and • Latin . Student
Organization of the College of
Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia .
University will sponsor its annual
Minority
Recruitment
Day
Conference on Saturday, May
6,
1995 from
8:00 AM
to
5
PM at the
Pand S. Alumni Auditorium located
at 650 West 168th Street. .
Workshops
will
include
"Fundamentals of Financing and
Budgeting for Medical Education:',
"The
P
& S Admission
Process,"
"Coping
with
Medical School" and
"Life as
a Medical
Student".
An advance registration
form
is
required in order for students to
attend the conference,
but there is
no fee.
For more information contact
Gerald E.Thomson.
M.D., Associate
Dean for Minority
Affairs,
at (212)
305-4157
or
6826
or
contact
Desmond Murray at Marist at 575-
3543.
Kevin
J.
Smith, senior
by.KB WELLS
The Voice of Reason
On Wednesday, April· 19, two-
years to the day after Waco, a car
bomb exploded in front of a federal
building in_
Oklahoma City.
As I watched the rescuers fish
through the nibble looking .for
. survivors, I couldn't help but cry.
W~thin t4e federal building was
a children's day care center.
• My stomach turned as a w_oman
appeared on television
saying:
"I've
lost a
seven-year-old
and
a twelve-
year-old,
I
hope.you are
happy ... " as
her eyes welled-up with tears. .
, :
.
Imagine how
this woman
felt
as
she poured
her heart
out to the
b3:5tards,
who, committed
~is
crime.
She will never see her
children
again: •
She
will
never hug them or
ki~ them
again. She
has lost her
own flesh
and
blood.
This woman is among the many
parents, spouses, family members
who have lost their loved ones to
this tragedy.
I was in
shock, absolute horror,
that someone could be so cold and
disrespectful
of human life.
As
the story unfolded
on Friday,
I
watched
the FBI
surround
the house
of
a man whom they thought had
connections to this abominable
tragedy.
.
Every newspaper
in
the country
showed
the sketches
of the two "Iohn
Does'"
who witnesses claimed were
the bombers.
government hate group.
The day the FBI ~eized this
These hate groups aren't even
house, they also arrested Tim targeting the ones they hate. They
McVeigh (one of the John Does), a are targeting innocent lives. Sadly,
innocent children had their lives
demolitions expert in the United robbed from them.
States Military and absent without
leave (AWOL).
As if the loss of human life
The most recent number of bodies wasn't tragic enough, now President
found in the rubble is estimated to Clinton seems to be taking harsh
criticism
from
political party
be
86
as of Tuesday. Rescuers members for his sensitive and heart-
estimate that more than 100 people felt speech at the memorial service
are still missing.
on Sunday. .
- This tragedy has hit America and
Clinton's speech reassured the
its citizens hard and deep.
-
• •
f Oki h
c·
h
h
- It has inade children all over the· citizens
O
a oma ity t
at
t e
government is here. for them in a
country scared to go• to school or their time of need.
day care. -It has made parents afraid
ciinton also •spoke with so_
me of
for their children.
. -. .
. •
the children of the city comforting
~e bonib!11g
is_ somethmg that them and telling them they should
~\!f!~S
thmk
qi.n
never happen-;. not be afraid to go to school because
m . 'The Ian? '?,f
the free and the home of the bombing.···
of the brave'.
.
The deaths 1n the Oklahoma City
Unfortu~atel~, and at a great cos. bombing will forever be remembered
of human life,-1t has happened. It in the hearts of Americans across the
~appened at the ~o!ld Trade Cent~r . country regardless of whether certain,
m New York City m 1993. Now it political party members believe it or
has occurred in the heartland of not
America; ~klaho~a. .
This country should be mourning
The reality which stiJl faces many the lives of these children and adults
in this country is that it can happen • not criticizing our government fo;
again.
.
•
.
showing compassion.
The Umted States of Amenca. has
This is a truly unfortunate·
found: through _ these homble
situation.
trage<!1es,
that we are vulnerable to
The Circle mourns the lives of
terronst attacks.
these feilow Americans
and
The sick irony of the situation is encourages everyone to do the same.
that the alleged men are Americans.
Hate has reared its ugJy head
in
They have served in our military and, this country at the cost of innocent
yet, they are members of an anti-
lives.
a.
.
THE
CIRCLE,
APRIL Z.7,J995
.
.
-·
.
.
.
'
'
·.:.
••
,.
~~:-·-
__
•
.
·,
·.,
.
.'
~-......
.
_-:_
•
..
.
.
.
.
.
·
..
:.
•_--._
--.-
~.
•
..
:·_·
•
.,.
_
....
•
•
•.•
.
.
•
-
.
.
.
.
~
.
•
.
.
.
.
-
'
'
'
.
.
.
.
.
.
'
'
..
:·,·
..
'
•.
·-
_:1,•~:,;
•
--.:W•
-·
..
·1·T··.·
..
•
.......
H····
•
...
\
IAiL)t··.D·•··
•...••.
·c.
>o·
·•·••·.·.··.··L
......
L···•···E·'-
c;
.1
•....
"·~<
.
,~11r~'J·
·.
·
..
.
. :.
.
.
.
.
.
.
V r\
.
.
..
.\.../.
r:z
-~•
L.I •
.,...
"
. ·.
.
: .
4
:?:c::,,-;-;,:.
••
.
.
..
.
.
.
'
'.
,·,·.
,,·.
-
...
•
•
•
.
.
.·
·'
•.
.
'
:·
.
.;,,
.
.
'
.
.
~
'
.
'
---
•
•••
.
·
•
·.
··
.5b
<p
EC
l
A L.
o
E:.\lf[<f'~l""I·~·
> ·.·•
.
.
\
.
.
,·
.
.
'
,•·
-
.
.
.
.
.
•
•
..
SUNDAY4/30··
.·.
·
·•
.·.····•·•
•···
··•
•.
··•·.
••
•....
·.•·.·
.......
•.
•
......
•
- '.
.
.
.
,
.
_·-
-
.•.•
·.
'
•
.
.
-
.
•
~·
·•
THU
RS
DAY
4/21
REtERl/0/R
tt/_Ul'rRE
:·
.
•
I
.
.
-
.
.
-
.
•
.,
FRIDAY
4/28
PULL MY DAISY
•
•
-
•
·.
'
:
.
-
.
.
.·
..
/
.
,..
.
.
'
•
~
•
--~
•v
•
•
'
'
;.-l
-
......
,
..
···---
..
--------------·--
··------------------··
··--
-·-
·-·-
-··-·-··-·--····
••
-
-
I
'.STOCKBROKER
TRAINEE.
:
En~r
the
-~,c_citing
field
~i
fuves~e~t.B~g!
:
L.C
Wegard·&
Co~,'lnc/Wa
36
yr~'oldfull
service
broker~
•
•.
ag~
tum
seeking aggressive; career'oriented indiv.
for
••
.
our Westchester expansion. Send Resume
to:
'
•
•
'·
Marc V arricchione
•
•
•
•.
220 White Plains Rd.
4th Fl ..
·
Tarrytown, NY 10591
pr call
1-800~845-7171
•••••••••••••••••••••
•
••••••••••••
•··
•.
•
.J
•
•
:\ Tired
of
vour
wardrobe?
..
• Jt1andee
-
•
•
•
•·
.
,_.
.
•
..
·
•
.:
· •
.
:".·ID·lhlJflJSCUIJI!
:
P11ughltt18/JSill·
••
•
•
•
•
•
•
Plaia/Jfall~
:
_.*1BringthisJldtortD%
f
• •
•
1/iSi:iJunl*'*
·
•
:-:
:~wtiiilhl'uilllltatb
** ~·
■
■
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
••
◄.•
..
··:·
-
•
:
--~-·,
••
*'
• '5
·•···:·:
.
.
....
•
:•·-
··-;;
•·po
►
Corne
-♦
Mid
445
• 69
*
KEEPSIE/HIGHLAND •
Exit
&
Bridge
1
1HE CIRCLE,
APRIL 27, 1995
.
..
.
Now that you're going to
graduate school,
how·
do you plan to
pay
for
it?
Ask us .
you study or w~ ere you c~r-
rently bank, you can count
on Citibanlr, the.nation's
For Graduate Students
(pursuing
all types of advanced
degrees
suchas law, engineering,
nursing, etc.),
The Citi-
Graduate Loan_Program
offers Federal Stafford Loans
and our exclusive Grad-
Assist Loan.
And,
all
of the Citibank Grad-
uate Loan Programs offer:
• easy repayment,
■
low.interest rates,
number one originator of.
■
no application fees,
student loans,to help finance
..
■ an~
application process,
•
your education.
· ·
•
-
■
fast approvals,
.
For Medical Students
(pursuing allopath
:,:
and
osteopathic
medici~tP.)
The
CitiMedica! Loan Program
offers Federal Stafford
Loans and our exdusive·
MedicalAssist Loan.
Foi' MBA Students
The CitiMBA Loan
Program offers Federal
Stafford Loans and our
exclusive MBAA.ssist
Loan .
■
and one toll-free number
to
call
for an:)wers to all
yo\lr ques~?ns.
For more
information
and an application for a
Citibank Graduate Loan,
•
call 1-800-692-8200,
and ask for Operator 256.
CITIBAN<O
Yes!
I want more information.
and·an application. for the following
Citibank Graduate Loans:
NameofS1ude1.t_.
____________
_
Address ___________
Apt.
____
_
City _________________
_
0
All Federal ~tafford Loans
0
·Citibank MedicalAssist
Loan
(for stude1•!~
of allopat/iic a11d
oste,patlzic medicine)
0
Citibank.MBAAssist
Loan.
(for b1:si11ess
students)
D
Citibank GradAssist Loan
.
(for grcicluate
st11de11ts)
Mail tltis coupo11
·10:
.
.
Citibank Student Loans
P.O. Box 2:.?:948
Rochester, NY
14692,2948-
State ___________
.Zip
___
_
•
Telephor.e _____________
_
StuC:ent's
Socid Security#
____________
_
Cf(.!'
•~ltcr
Y.r"Vio:·.
f;.
;1tr~
16
fill in the Social Security
1\·umbcr
i,aVl,,n·.J
Stu<leut
is
currently in
D
College
D
Gr~duatc School
Year
of
GrJduation
___
!-ield of
Stu,,y
______
_
Name of Collri;e/Graduatc School
t\rc
you
a prevmus
student
1,,an borrower?
D
Yes
O
No
Or for faster service,
call
1-800-692-8200,
and
,:JSk
for
c
1
IT/D
AN✓
l/lfll
Operator 256.
f
w
li;IM
, ..,
USHERS
NEEDED
FOR
BACCALAUREATE SERVICE AND COMMENCEMENT
IF YOU WOULD LIKE
TO USHER FOR THESE TWO SENIOR CLASS
EVENTS,
PLEASE
CONTACT
DEBORAH
DICAPRIO,
ASSISTANT
DEAN
OF SnIDENr AFFAIRS,
ROOM 388 IN THE MID-RISE,
OR CALL EXII.NSION 2517.
c:~--=---
r
1
I;
4/12- Hartford postponed
_
4/14.: Mt. St. Mary's (13-7W;;
9-2L)
4/15.Mt.St.Mary•s {14-750
'.4/18-Falrfleld
_
{18-oW)
4/20 -ARMY
-(3-Sl,)
4/ZZ.. Long Island U. (10-9L;
7-2L)
4/23 - LONG ISLAND
U.
(S-3W)
4/25 - C.W. Post
(16-61.)
Softball (25-7-1: 10-1-1 NEC)_
4/ 12 •
HARTFORD
P0lfponed
4/17 • RIDER
( 8·0W;2-01,)
4/18 -
ST.
PETER'S (2-0W; S~W)
4/20 - SIENA
-
(5· lW; 4-3W)
4/22~
MT.ST.
MARY'S
(5-lW; 11-7W)
4/23 • Iona
(8-61.;
14-3W)
Men's Lacrosse
(4·7 overall)
4113 • Sacred Heart (10-:12W)
4119
•
Stony Brook
(1·18L)
4/19 - WAGNER
-
postponed
_
_
_
-
4122-23
• NEC Championships
(2nd
place)
-
•
•
•
•
•
Women'•
and
Men'•
crew·
4/22 - President's
C14>
•
MV8·2nd;
WV8-1st; MVL8·2nd; WVLa-111;
MV4-
'
lsf: WF/N8
A·
Tlf, MVIA
•
2nd;
WWVIA•
lst, B-2nc1
MF/N4·Sth
.
Letus_
combine
all
-
•
your
·debts
bito
o~e
-
-
-
•
-
easy-to-manage
payment.
Bad credi!
no
problem.
~
accepted
based on
ability
.to
pay.
FAST Hl!LP
Is JusrA
PHollE:CALL
Awavf
Calldayornlghtl-305-53!.~3617;'(~~
HR RECORDING).
-
• -
for.your.FREE
APPllCA':(tON
9rwnte:
·_
.
.
_
■ :ilf•Xd=il6tA-iia;e,
B0'X:,645-,-
..
~0lLY\I00D;_ FL
·330~2
-
STlJDENT
J¥0RKt··.:
$10.00/START
-_-
_·
LOCAL COMPANY
WILL FILL SEVERAL
POSITIONS
IN
-
HUDSON
VALLEY
AREA.
•
'.
NO EXPERIENCE
REQUIRED
EXCELLENT
TRAINING
PROVIDED
FUN CUSTOMER CONTACT
-
•
:
·RESUME<EXPERIENC·E
•
•
'
.
COMPANY~SCHOLARS~
cAt~~~J~;l;/f~~~Ats
·-·
•
-
·--'.
.: ;
'.
(914)-,298-768$'
:···,
.
.
_
..
:.:.-:;
__
'A•'•
;-
.
--~,*ATTENTl'Oii~•:;:E':,,,.,
Tue
FinmicialAid
office
is currently accepting
·applications
f~r•sev~~prifately:~ioris(?¼
S¢tlllI~hlJ~itff~id
tbfullgh'tli'
·college.
These scholarships·
m~y
.be'
~warde_d
on.
the basi·s_
of
academic p~gorril~ce;financiaf/ne~d;tnaj~r:Jielci of
studyt:
location of permanent residence,
_<>r
-
a
coinbim1tion
of tllesejtellls.
•iA;;:lisJ~<>f
t)i'.e.:'sclJ.olar~liips
6:ff
~fe(i
aild.:fl.ieir
eljgibijity
•·:
••
r~quireinents
_is·
provided
in the
Marist College undergraduate·-cata1og~-:Mtd:is'·ayii1~~1e.:#i)li¢:Fmaticial-Aic(Office~::,A11:
--
,:.
••
_
.. ·
-.
_
·..
-
_
students
returningJor
the 19?5:.96
'a.cad~nii¢
year·.
~:eligibie.t~
:applyi./}'.:
..
,.--t
.-
•
.
:-
<··).·,::_.-,'.--~-
'{-
--._
· ..
-
To
be
considered
·for
these scholarships~·
students must s~bmit_thefoll<iw_mg;_fo
·-th¢
fiatitfiif.Afdi)ffice'.
<DN-?00}_:by
:~/l'?,/95
:_,
1. A completed APPLICATION·FOR PRIVATELY SPONSORED
0
:SCflOLA.RS~S:}qr'.~~cii
schtjla,shlpjiou· are:-!nterested
fo;
•
2. A
_letter
from
-
you, addressed
..
to'
,the :co~E
FO:~::PRIV
J\.1"£4¼"
stQ~~()liE,_1:tsO:iotAR.sHIPs;·
(.foµinlllg•·why:yo_u
•.
feel you should
be
considered for-the. particular. scholarship:
fu
ques~9~} (NO~:
~
sep~~te_lette!
_is
tequried foteach scholar.:
-
··
...
__
.
_
. .
_
..
.
.
_:
_ship
y9u.are_interestec:tin);'and
.:-:-
\
,
-
•
_
-
_
.
__
-
__
..
•
_
>
_
.,
••
•
.
_
;_:.
·•
3. A coinple_ted-S:PONSORED
SCHOLARSHIP RECOMMENDATION-FORM:(for ~ach
·scholars.hip)
to ensure rull:considera~
-
.
,
_
-
_
-
tion from the scpolarship cormnittee.
-
•
-
-
•
-
-
- -
__
.
_
_-
-
-
•
APPLICATIONS AND RECOMMENDATION FORMS ARE AVAILABLE IN THE:FINANCIAL AID OFFICE.
-
-
·-
-
..
•
I·
•
-
-
r,
~
..
-
...
-
-
-
-·
.!
.
THE
ClllCI.E,
SPORTS
APRIL 27, 1995
tt
.
Soptiomor~ defenseman. Martin· Farrell (?7) gets boxed in by
Lafayette defenders as he· gives chase Saturday at Leonidoff
Field.
•
•
ClrtM
apoc1a pllGIQ/CM&
BlrlnllO
•
••
Hardman honored as men
ta](e sebond in Mary land
by MARTY SINACOLA
,
.
more excited about that than Nussbaum placed third in the 'B'
•
·staff
Writer
:
•
anything."
.
•
flight, junior Probodh Chiplunkar
. "The team was willing to work, captured the second spot in the 'C'
Toe trophy shelf
in
the
Mc6iin.
it's as much theirs as it is ours," flight, and freshman Tony Yacobellis
Center is starting to get a· little
Fanning ~aid.
placed :,1 the fifth spot of the 'D'
crowded..
•.
,
.
Hardman and Fanning coached flight, rounding out the singles.
First,.· basketball coach Dave
the Red
_Foxes
to a second-place
In
doubles,
Graves
•
and
Magarity walks away with.Coach of
finish at the Northeast Conference sophomore Adrian Zajac captured
the: Year~accolades.
-Now,
men's
tournament
last weekend
in the third spot.
tennis coach Charles Hardman can Emmitsburg, Maryland.
"The whole team really stepped
add his name to that list.
Marist placed behind Monmouth up," Fanning said. "They came to
.
Hardman's achievements were . and one point ahead
·of
third place play, I knew they would. It was just
recognized over the weekend as he Robert Morris, earning Marist it's
a great effort by everyone."
was awarded Northeast Conference highest ever placing at the tourney.
"Without
the performance
Coach of the Year honors.
Leading the Red Foxes was everyone put in, we don't finish
•
..
"I was surprised," Hardman said;
.
•
senior Martin Byrne, who remained second," Hardman
•
said. "Martin
"It•· is. a great honor, but like any u~de~eated , w?il~ on his way to played outstanding, but.we only won
coach, I think I could· have done wmmng the A flight of the tourney. second place by one point, so
more."
Byrne's victory in the flight was everybody's points counted.
·
..
Keeping his modesty
up;
the first. time_ a Marist player had
"I
can't stress how important
Hardman credited his assistant Frank ever won a fhght.
everyone's points were to the cause,
Fanning.
·
•
His final match was a thrilling it was our best tennis of the year as
"Without Frank I could not have one, involving three tie breakers.
a team."
won Coach of the Year, he did so
.
After falling behind 5-2 and
"The tourney was the best tennis
much for the team and for me,"
already having lost the first set, of the year both personally and as a
Hardman said.
Byrne came back to win in three sets, team," Graves said."
"We were so glad to hear that he
6-7(7-5), 7-6(7-5), 7-6(7-4).
Coach Hardman had nothing but
had won it," sophomore Scott Graves
.
The whole team played an praise for the efforts of Graves and
said. "Coaches
.
Hardman
·
and
integral role in its success however. Zajac.
Fanning are so great to us. We were
Senior
..
·co-captain
Marc
"They played quality tennis, all
the work they put in this season paid
off," the coach
..
said. "They played
outstanding tennis."
Laxmen
rebound, down
Siena. on Sat., 21-12
"The
showing we had· at the
tourney is great for our school,"
Graves added. "For us to do as well
as we have all season long says a lot
about our team, considering we have
no facilities on campus."
·
They take on Hofsffa University
today and St. Peter's College on
Sunday.
••
by
JIM
DERIVAN
affect ori the outcome of the Siena
Staff Writer
•
game on Monday, according to
--~--_;.--~_....;.__
Schneider.
.•
'.
,Aft\r
losing a· nail-bit~r t~
.
''Corning inwe Knew we h~d to
,Lafarette
University on Saturday, the be_
·fired
up," Schneider said.
"We
•
..
mens lacrosse team turned it around
.h~d
to-beat.this team, we: couldn't
and·crushed the Siena Saints
·21-12
handle another loss."
•
•
on Monday~
•
.
,
. .: •
•
·
•
'
;
•
• '
He added that both the defense
•
:
~ophon:ioi:e
:mi.qfielder
Greg and offense worked equally well.
.
.
~_chneider
led the charge/ garnering
.
''.The defense played rear good;,
·five-•.
goals
•
and five assists.' and· the offense worked· well in.>
.
'
~ophoin~re attackmanDave Kiddney movingthe ball, and we scored when.
chipp~_d
m
five goals as well.
·•
we had the opportunities,'' Schneider
•••
•••
.
The_winsnaps atwosgarne losing S?-id
••
streak, and ups,MarisCs record to. 4-
Junior
midfielder
John
7 6\lerall.
•
• •
•
•
•
DiLeonardo started the scoring
with'
Barron· ranked No. 1 as team falls
With four seconds remaining
in
.·a
goal 18;seconds into.the con~est
the Lafayette game,
•
Marist found
•
~chneider scored twice, and
themselyes down _16
7
15, and with
.
Manst Jed, 6-2, after the first quarter.
one more chance to tie,
.
The Red
_Foxes
continued their
by TERlL. STEWART
last four games.
Four Marist pitchers combined to
<
Kiddney took the
in
bounds pass dominan~ in the second
,quarter,
•
•
Staff Writer
Barron, who has continually
give up 14 hits, including two hit
dire~tlf in front (!f the goal arid. outscoring their opponents
.8s4.
expressed feelings of surprise, said batsman, one balk, five wild pitches
outplayed the Lafayette goaltender.
:
Closinski tallied two goals and
Things are looking very familiar he • was exuberant about his and two passed balls.
..
The ball went
·in
but the official Schneider added two goals arid three. for Marist athletics and the baseball accomplishment.
•
Not to mention the three errors
w_ho calle/f'"ff was
·overruled
by. assists..
•.
•
•
.
team (10-20-1 overall, 6-9 Northeast
.
"I watch guys on ESPN and see the defense committed.
another--':-tune
ran out.··.·
.
.
.
.The
Red Foxes ended the half
Conference).
•
guys crush balls. They're the elite,,
In postgame comments at Pioneer
,
"It's
_tough,
I'd.like
.to
have
.the
.
leading, 14-6..
.
.
.
.
Mark Barron bas become the
he said. "To think I'm ahead of the:n Field on Long Island, assistant coach
opportunity back,'' Kiddney sa.id.
.
•
According to Mariano, consistent
•
second ~thlete in the junior class to
is beyond any expectations."
Joe Bruno said he threw a lot of the
"I'm just going to have to live with defense was a big factor.
b~ !anked N:o. 1 in the country in
But for every positive, there is a younger guys on Tuesday.
it."
.
.:
.
.
•
.· .
,
•
•.
,
·
."They
really hustled out there, hittmg.
,
.
.
negative.
•
.
•
•
''They
didn't concentrate (on
'
'First~year
heacf.coach
·To~
_and
the team c6mmunicate·d well/'
As of Monday, the junior aJI-
;\ 16-6 loss to C.W. Post (14-22 three
errors),"
he said. "Those are
M~iari~ called the game a great one, M_ari_ano
said; "T~; offe~se was·, arounder is boasting a .470 batting overall) of the Mid-Continent
plays we have to make to end innings
saymg it \Vas. hard foss but agreed
•
cl1~king_today:also..
.
•'
'. ..
·
average, is in the hub of a 20-game Conference on Tuesday added to the but instead they kept innings alive."
with the call.
•
·
•
-We played together and moved hitting streak, and is 9_for-15 in his baseball blues.
On an up note, the Marist offense
·;"ltwas
tough, but it was the right the ~.an _well. Th: offense played
·pounded out 14 hits, but left
13
men
call,''. Mariano said.
.
well, Kiddney said.
"It
was an all
on base.
•
•
Schneider also agreed :with the •• around effort."
·.
•·
Bourne went 2-for-5 with two
calt
:
.•.
,
·
.
_
,
.
•·
•
_-.
.
.
,.·.,
. :
..
As .far as
__
th~ remainder of.th~
.
runs. scored and Brandon Tierney
..
·.~•It
was a great ending: It was·a
.
se~~n, Kiddney said the team has a·
was 3-for-5 with two doubles.
fa~ call,'' Schneider said. "Kiddney:- pos!,tive,outloo~.
. .
.
.
Barron continued his hitting
made a great:effort getting to the
.
We relooking~owm_therestof.
WEEKD#l~S
ways, going 3-for-5 with two RBI.
ball. It _was a tol!gh game:"
:
·
..
.
ol!r ~ames and I think w.~,
~
put a
•
•
•
•
On Sunday, senior starter Scott
.,
Semor captam and attackman wi_nnmg
season together, Kiddney 17-~:.f:· :::.
·""·======~==·
=~·.;··,,,,.;.,'
•::,,,,.;,.,.,--..._;.,..:..·__,..;·,..:.·~·~=;.,,.;,--""",.,.,.I
Ronagha11 (2~3) went the distance,
Dave Closiilski
.led
the charge for said ..
•
.
. ..
H{±tfiitsll:-=:~00
7
•
·•~:AJ~.M:.;.
•+';:~l;:0:~·oo~·
;:;A!!M~···
4
7
4
:J+i+f+f+>+f+f'f/
4
fgtµ•\;.fµfµf;:;;;;(:EST.!;.!!A:,!T.!:1O~·
·~NwlD~);;;;;?-::;;;<
~~:I
giving up just three hits and walking
the Red Foxes·w.ith four goals· and
Manst traveled. to· H~rtford,.
\}'/10:00AM:'PU:OOPMW!V
•:t:ttl
.
2'-'Y}MC'f:VCLASSICS{
'••
four as the Red Foxes caught a 5-3
three assists.-
.
.
Conn., yesterday .. Results were
•
@i'frl2:0(fp'M_§Z:OOTPM:T:f%
)f,}t}ENTERTAINMEN'f:,&iSPECIALs
revenge on the Long Island
The Lafayette loss had
a
direct unavailable at press t_ime.
•
•
::;:;;:;:;:;:;~~:::~:;;:;;::;;::;:;:1::::::;:;:
:::::;[i;i::;:;;.;::::;:
:i::::;::;
::~ci~~!~J~:::::.::::::::::::::::::::;
~~~~~~~ril:~~!~;~~i~~: ~~~~~
:::~;;:ll:t~:::ii:::::::::::;:::::;
''j';;:i:;I;'.1:::::,1:::::ii:'.i;~i'i,iissnoxr/
seas~~ Red Foxes scattered seven
iii&~~i?~iiiii
;liifi7f.~~~~~~:
WEE
Ill
up two six run leads to fall, 10-9,
.
~ENDS
~:~e~i:\~~-hits
but leaving eight
t,
0
f~').c:-l2::-:,:::00-:-.•·.•':"'.'AM~.
·.":-···•---P,...,.12:""··~
.....
oo""p':'"M,...,.
..
.,,..\~:-:,,,:
0
\"":Y""'{..,..\
0
\'
0
/ ......
:c.:
.....
::·---,
.....
:-:--->
.....
<,...:s,...··T
~A"""n,_
.
.,.,.o'""N..,.ID
___
.,._,.,..,...,.,,.,..-,.,...1
"Disappointing," Bourne said of
:::n:t:12:·::00~~AM~~:;;~2~iOO~~•P~M~-
~::iy~,::~::,t·
=i::!=~~;~?i)dt;?s:P~O:R:;t~S~t::~:;•
;;~i==!
::ti~~s:f~:g~:eb!~l~:fd:.:r~:
1c••:
7
i\
7
/2==:~00?P::dM~·~:~•'=S~:OO:;
•
.;P~M¥i+<+Y+>-l+~+f,;.;;;;;4~C~ST~li.~Tl~O~N!a:ID~.
•·•.;;;;;·••.>
4
:
4
<
~4:-1
'em down."
'/\$:OOPM47:00PM/('\.
/(::::•t'?/fSPORTS2
.
.
.
..
·.
.
Foster went 2-for-2 and Barron
:::(7:00PMP&:OOPM/
.,t '
:::,::•\:}:r::::r:•tSTATIQNID•:=)?K':F:(
was 3-for-4 with
·a
double.
l"./~:::;:::::'-;\8;:;:00;.;;.
~P~M~::.P.t~O:~OO';:e'-;;PM~\'+;:+F~4++¥4+~;;/;;M~O~VIE;;;,
~l~/::
4
,
:::µ~¢:I
FOX NOTES:
:?
10:00 PM
•:12:00
PM/:
:
:. : :;::•:
MOVIE 2,
Ronaghan was named NEC
..., .... .,....;....;..,.:-:;,;.;~::.,...i.,..,..,.....,;..;;;;~ .... ;;;;;.;.~~~~~~~~U
pitcher of the week for the week
ending April 23.
'ft!.;
"
:.'~
n
;~
;l
·14
.
,
•
··•
••·
STAT·.,OF
THE WEEK:/\.
.•
Patsy:'.~Ch_n~lc:ferhas.
br9.kein)h(:J/:
:
..
.
·,,
schooi:fec:ord:'.;n
:'the
400..:mete,:\'
·
•
•
.
:~:
hurdlesUtiree
-imes:
in. the
:fast';tour·
. .'
:i{~f
/·
. .:·
·:::·)<.,;weeks
..
:
.•
•••
•
•••
··,
JJ;av~(arin
.
~ill
gg
.
·~·~s.·
E~~· WillS;;;tl[fe~·
<£
oycruised
'the
resfof the game;,not
:)1y
JASON ii:A.RAGO
.
allowing
a·
run and winning 14~3
..
•
.
::~,-,
•
.'Staff
Writer
.
•
.
.
As fodhe'ciffense>the Red Foxes'
.
.
.
.
.
.
.,,;
.
'
.
.
.
were paced by thirdbaseman Melissa',
There comes·,: a/time ill an
·
Fanelli
••
( 4~fo~'~:4,:
.--3
:).ml) .
and
athlete•s·lue· thafyou
,have
to--ask. Degatano'.(3.~for~4;3
RBI).
.,
...
,,
-.
theµ:d~
'grow
oi matiu~
a little fM.ter
._.··
On Satllrday, in a key NEC game,:
.
than
~usual.·
•
•
•
Marist hosted the Mount St Mary's·
•.
.F9(pitcher.Bridg~tte,
foy, that
Mountaineers and downed them.S~l
time w,asJast wee~en,d.
:
,._
and 11-7/''.:·
'
...
_
.
. .
.·
:>
After being c;uled. lln to pitch two
:
"If-we/did not,\vin Saturday; we
.
ga111~s\on.
•
Satun;lay; Foy·, (4sl)
would ha:ve Iiad
a
tough go' of.iLat
·
)¢tume~ to the hill·_
on Sunday to
Robert Moms for the No; l seed in
throw both ends of.a
.twinbill
against the NEC foumamerit," Burgin said.
Iona.;._,.
.
..
\,:
•
•
.
·.
·
Foy started the opener and -..vent,
,
•
.
In,game one, Foy picked µp her.
•
.the
distance::giving
up
one nin while
'
firstfoss
.of
the seas.on; 8-6.
•
.
scatteriilgseven hits;
.· •.
·
·
·
·
•,
•
Marist (25-7-l,pyeraIJ, 10-1~1
.
_·
The Mari~t offense banged out
Northeast Conferenc~) entered the
five
runs
on
·13
hits.
.
sev.enth inning clinging to a one,iun
•
:
•
Outfieider Courtney Sleight went
Jead.
,Bl,it
Foy co~_Id not escape~ 3-for4 with·2 RBI as sister: Laurie
:giving·.
up a
·three-run·
homerun for
•
had
•
two· hits
·and
two·
runs
scored ..
·
the loss;
·;
:,.
Righ( fielclet Roseaime Daly
•
Head cpach G:Corge Burgin
added her
-
first homerun of the
Freshma~ Bridgette Foy lets one fly against Motilrt St .• Marys.
0~
Satuid-~~
·~
Nert~ field •
•
brought ~is rookilltback for. the
season.
secon~ gam~. After
a
rough go in
•
In the second game, Burgin
'. 'cii.:t,
-
phOIO/CIIIII
a..inoto
thefirst,givirigupthi_eeruns,Burgin decided:
__
t_o
·go_w.
_ith
__
sopho.more_
·
·.
•.
• ..•
·
··:
·
;.-.
·ca11·
·
,.
··
·
·
··
•
·
-·:
·
·
·
·
.: ··_
.....
·,-.
,·.:-:.,
...
·.<•>:,
,•:·
•
d
• •
f
•
•
d"
•
•
•
••
•
,
up early, prompting· Burgm to
Leading the hit brigade·. was
Mai:ist
-was··
w1tbout starter
ma ..
~
l\ia~w:
~t~,e!?th
Ang' el
Amber Bevilacqua, who was making on Foy.
- ••
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
••
.
•.
Fanelli, who had three hits and three Michelle Hudsonf or weekend action
••
':
• ·-·•
•
a
'·
..
a
her'first career start.
•
·
,,-His._starte_rJumed
int_o a stopper
__
runs soored.
·
•
because she:contracted the chicken
•
(Degatano~catcherfaftei the first
"We_.worked out-with
__
hei all
.
.
.
.
I
.
•.
·.
: .
.
•
.
inningt Burgin said.: "We decided
week and threw to give the staff a as Foy picked
up
her second win on
Degatano also· had three hits to
pox. The sophomore 1s out at least
t J
t B "d tt thr
h
the'day.
.
.
.
.
go with fm1r RBI. Daly and center ·one week. maybe more.
•
0
e
•
n ge e
. •
ow a c ange-up little break,·" Burgm··
•
•
said.
. .
,
Th b'
u··
d
as behind her fi Id
P
A k
h h d
Fanelli" was named
·.NEC
.Player
·th·
d
&
urth·
•
"t h "
•
..
e. a m
__
g o_r er_
w_.
•
.
1e er atty c ennann eac
a
every.
rr
ono
p1 c • .
.
Bevilacq·
ua's outing w.
ould not
·
·
Th
h
·ty·· I
•
• d ff
as they took advantage of six Mount two hits a piece.
of the Week for the week ending
~ c ange
m
~-
.
e pa1 o as
.
prove memorable as she got roughed errors to score
U
times.
'
FOX NOTES:
April 23.
Wom~n's crew team drinks from President's
·cup,
again
day, the women's varsity boats-were. rmished in):30.00.
Lehigh University.
.
.
.·
.. :.-··
perfect, winning each of their
_three
.
. ..
Binghamton crossed• the line
·
races,
: •
•.
••
.
·:
.
·
.
.
.
•
• ·
.
•
second in 7:43:19 and
:_UVM
-came
•
:•.
•
·•
•
.
•·
.. . .
•
•
The varsity.lightweight
eight shell in third (8:4t31).
.
.
•
_
Marist
·
B. crossed the
.
line in a
tinie of 8:03.78i.
Vassar.
B finished
~econd in· 8:23.05
•
and
.
Lehigh third
in 9:36.99.
_
.
.
,
.
_ .
. .
...
:,'fh.;~·.!-fari~t
A:noyice eight shell
.
finished ·second behind UVM while
Citing tlle teams' efforts, Werwin
said she was pleased with-Saturday's
They came;-ther_sa_w, but they . edged past Itllaca by 1.9s·seconds;
.
· __
Iri.
.·
no_vi_ce_.
•·.
a_c_
tio_
n,:_ M_.arist.
co_uld_:_no_
t_conque_r_;·_._:_,;_•.:._.
·.
·..
•
th·1·
• 8
·
• t
•
56
•
•
..
•
d.
••
·ha·
•
od.
c1a·
.
crossmg e• me m_ n.i~u es
•
•.
contmue.}~
ve a.go_
,
Y•.
.·
results.
•
•
."I]i~_wom,en~s
crew team will join_
the men's team in the Patriot League
.Anny
was
here;,,Itha~:Q>llege
•
secon~.,:·.,:,
,:
>
.·
•
•
.
< .•
·.·
:.·
..
~~
Red.Foxes won;-the,·•novice
•
was ~ere an.d even Nassar
•College'
Junior co-captain Vickie Werwin ·
"Jour
ra~' by downing·
UVM
and
.
Marist
B
came
iii .fourth.
..
Regatta
on Saturday
.
made
.the
cioss-tOW!J'.
trip,
but not one
said the
race
was a
true test for her
.
•
•
:team could stop M~t College·crew
.
team.\:
..
\:;-
:
:
,
,
·:;:
.
_·
.
..
,
..
froilt>.'successfully::defendirig the'
-
.·,
,"It
was•·a very. tough race, ...
•
•
Ptesid~nt's Cup ..
;:
\::
•
.
•-·
•.
•
•
·.<
..
•
Werwin saicl, '"Ithaca.
is
a
very. good
J'lle-Red Foies kept'the.Herbert'. creV{ and the race took eyerythirig
•
J:
Haight Trophy
:o~
the banks: 9f
out of
us."i:
<
.
.
.·..
,. ,·
the Hudson River
:by•
winning.
the.
.
•.In.
heavyweight eight a_ction,
-overall;t~mpoint
competiti~nwith.
·Marist
pulled:away•·ftom Anny in_-_·
iii
fini31
..
score_of27(::.\.
::-
/\
i
..
•:: .
-the •·middle
of· the
·race,for
{a··.
•
·,
··Array
finished
J;econd.
with
J~.
•
•
ccmvindng·,victory over the
.
<::adets
.
point!l('WQile the
:l!~iversity
'<:>f
for the second tim(:_
tllis
.seasc,n:
•··
Vermo_11t
(UVM)/a,~d the State..
The.Rec\ Foxes stopped the de>ck
, /University_.
of,
~e,:w.·
York. af
at· 8:33.29 an,d. Army finished
. :•BWI.~th-ghrun~eto.~{s_~.L~.i~d
for third
in
9 :04_
70.::
_ .-:
< ,
:
....
· ..
•
•
•
•
• ·
•
Boat member Jen
'PeUi:
said·.
•
.•
-:The'
Red°
Foxcs•/effort drew
•
:
Marist felt
g(?bd
during;tll.e race.
•
..
praiselr<>m
Mansi College Pr~iderit.
,
"We·•·
started
.off
neck-and-neck
•
_Denni~
J. MurraY>:)::/.
·_c_
<
.•.
•·-with
ArmytPelli
said. "W~just
••-··
•
. .
}'Tiiis
was a gI'~a~'everit
because·.• were relax_ed
·and
pulled-~way from.:
..
of the high calil;,er.
pf:
participating them."
/:
·
·:
.
.
<
•·
•
.
:
; .
•
_schoolsand.itwasg<;iodtoseeMatjst
.. ·The
Red Foxes made,it3~for~3
•
.
aJ,)long
,Jhem;''
Murr?Y
•
said. "Since..
•
by defeating SUN)"-Birighaajton
and
·
itwru(such a great ev~nt,•it
was good·
UVM
.inJightweight
four.
;
• . ;
...
to see the team was
iable
to keep the
.
•
The team of co~ptains W,ei:wiri
.
Clip il,t Marist."-
.
•::_"
•
. .-\,·
••
•
·
and Heather Alexander· along\vith.
•
,···Syrilbolic
of the~uccess ofthe'
Je.n Paupini:.a!Jcl.Cathy'Acunto
·
·
8portS
fVdijlcl/
,mou
• .
Ev;; child ~o~f upwith a hero.·.
,
Howar~
tsell'di~d
atth~
~ge bf
or a Jamous figur~': in, which· they 77-a uniqueJegend.
.
.
.
admire and look up to.,·
••.
•
.·
..
.
<J)penilig
Day.
.
•·
.
Oil' Sunday,- a legend passed
.•
The emergence·or~ajoi League
away.: One. of the rnost famous and
•
Baseballisfinally. upon us. After 257
influential sporis .'journalists iri
..
·.
Jong days, "Baseball Tonight" )s:
.
history has· moved
.QD,
but will not buzzing
aitcl
Ralph Kiner is pumped
be forgotten.
. .....
•
.
.
.
_for ·progress: on WWOR-TV
•
He_.
\Vas witty,
..
controversial,
(Channel9),
• ,
.
•
....
•
.
.-
·
•
•
melodramatic, gutsy, h~h, arrogant
Tliere is
·much·
talk about teams
and most of all admired. Even though
·
picking up
_where
tlley left off, but it
.
in his elder y~
he became resentful seems this se_ason
will be different,
of the sports worl<l, ~e will always different'"m
the way _that
most teams
have·a place in sports history,
.
have .matured, acquired, and all-
•
"'This is Howard Cosell," we used around repouped.
.
. .
.
•
to
.
hear when
·
we put ABC
.
Sports
•
One· team that
.
should return to
on; And after the fust t~e many of
.
excellence is the Bronx
.
Bombers ..
:us
heard the famous bark we never Yes, the New YorkYankees would
•
stopped mimick,ing it.
definitely have gone all the way last
•
•
He was loved yet hated, but
year and look to continue on the
always aclmired..
.
•
same path this· year.
It seemed that no matter what he
Jack McDowell comes from
•
.
said or did, people always listened Chicago
as
a "free
•
1ook" for the
. to
him. They wanted to hear what Yankees during his one-year
he had to say because he knew his contractual obligation.
sports.
•
•
.
The 1993 American League Cy
We watched and listened like Young Award winner was tp-9 last
.
,there
was nothing.~rroupdi,ng
us-
¥~
(3.73 earned run averag~) and
just Cosell's voice and those
will be the No. 2 starter
10
the
.
headphones.
Sta~.
·;·
i
:~·.
\
-.~
\
'.. •
•
•
•:
.
·: ·.'
::.;
••
_:,
•
•
•
•
•
e
.••
,
(.;)),?~
.
.
·O
summer return
·above
.300. last year, the te~m
'scholastic"
lllld
collegiate rowing
in
obviously. needs some more batting the Mid-Hudson· Valley,
•
practice:
..
·
. • . • .
•
•
.
.
·
•
·
Tradition is·thickin this area and
•
<
'Streaked
. ••
-~-
•• ~-
.
for. thefo~
year in-a-row, Marist·
.
One
:of.
the most· talked about has trained some skilled rowers to
bappt:nJngs in baseball
this
year is get on thafriver and conquer.
Cal
·Rip!cen,
Jr. Can he do it?
•
•
.
There are three· races left in the
•
• 'He
has made it this far....:.,;..
battling
•
season and since the women's varsity
;through.
the-·
strike
.and
coming just
heavyweight eight shell is undefeated
s
.
_days
short of being shafted of his th~ season, they are ~ure to be in
str~.
.
strong contention at the New ):'ork
l-'-_-P-i-tc-h-in_g_·_i..:.s-'i'-m-p..:.o_r_ta_n_t_f,....o_r_t_h_e__,
••
Ripken has 12~ gam:s left until
.
State Rowing Championships on
Yankees·
so:
McDowell will be a
be reaches Lou Gehrig's 2;131
May; 6-7.
•
•
games played streak.
•
·
Predictions:
strong· contribution in th
e
•
pennant
.
Cooperstown should already have
As much
as
this writer wants to
race, not to. mention the fiye
h
•
I
d
·
·
returning starters who hit over .300
t. e P. ate m_a
~
out for the board say that Chicago. will win the
•
ups~.
This 1s sure to be a-huge National· Basketball Association
•
lastNseason._
.
Fl
·h.
attraction.
.
•
Championship, no way,
••
ow across town to
us mg,
.
Would love to be there when they
Michael Jordan is an elite athlete
where the New .York Mets will open
h
•
after a surprisingly success(ul
c ange
it.
•
but he can not
carry
the team alone.
shortened spring training.
. End ~oughts
Dear Knicks: Camp Riley will not
The
.Mets
will take
·to
the field
ManSt ~w
~
hot.
.
_:_
~ork this year.
.
with Brett Saberhagen, who was by
•
The ~esident s
';UP.
was a total
The Indiana Pacers will finally
far the most talented hurler on the
success
Wi
th .the men sand women's win the. big show.
d ( hich
Id
h
teams garnenng enough point to take
Their time has come and they are
squa w
cou not even reac
home tll.
e H_
erbe_
rt J. Haight Trophy. playing outstanding basketball.
.500) last season.
Thi h t
h h
In order for them to get anywhere
. . s is one trop
Y
1!8
3
true Reggie Miller and Rik Smits are the
or be somewhat consistent this year,
meanmg to be proud of. It
15
named dynamic duo. and cannot be stopped.
they need to hit the ball more.
after• the man who played a large·
Teri L Stewart
Is
The Clrde's
With only one player hitting.
part m the start and development of Sports
Editor.
..;
------------------------------------
-
·1T
1
S A HITI
________
-
_
Majo,;.League Baseball
-_
t
It'~ a·strange world outilierel.Supplement4
RIGHT
TO
KNOW
--Mari.~t
students deserve info.
-Salvages
Sea8C>J{
C'
•
·
..
:
.•·,
•
•
•
~
-·
.
,
• ---
_\
:Supplement3
_-
t -
Students-Vehfure•·a~roadlsunplement3
on campus crune
_
- S1;1pplen:ien1:
2 -
MarisfCollege~,
Poughkeepsie,
N .Y.
April 27, 1995
10~Si~e~h.ilie3teEilliJpb;ins
fOr. Wal--Mart center
. ·.
. <.~:-::
..
_· '
. -;'
·:.
~
., -~:,;
· ..
:_'.:
·:-
•
.._,:;--
.•. - ,-
.i>"'."·
.
,~
..
~
•
by DaryLRichanl
th~ ~hQpping
c~nteris concernedjt
--Associate Editor
may decrease the safety o(the
~~-
As Marist students were head-
ing
_home
for.Easter break on April
i3,
developers were unveiling their_
plans before theTown Planning
Board for the new Wal-Mart shop-
ping 'center.
.
The latest addition to the plans
calls for a I0°screen movie theater •
_to be a part
of
the 30 acre site, Jo-
cated across the street from Marist
College.
"I have a concern for the safeiy ---_
of children on· [Fulton] Street:-_the
traffic and the noise;'' N_orman
Berard said in theJournal article.·
Likewise, at a Students Encour-
aging Global Awareness (SEGA)
meeting onApriH0, regardintthe
Wal-Mart center, most students
were excited about the project.:
Of the 20 students in atten-
dance, many saig}t would be a great
convenience to have a shopping
center within-walking distance.
However, a few peopledid raise
concerns. -
The developers from The Dagar
Group, the firm in charge cif leas- -
ing and developing the project, said
the theater would most likely be
filled by Hoyt's Cinemas and would
face Marist. Earlier plans ·for a
Foremost on their minds -was
the accessibility of the· shopping
Wal-Mart and a 10-screen theater are planned for the ne~ MidHudson Center.
-shopping center were abandoned.
President of The Dagru-Group,
David Livshin, said the response to
the proposed shopping center has
been :very positive.
. . "Since we announced thesign-
ing of \\'al-Mari last fall the inter-
est in the remaining retail space has
been tre~endous:" he said.
- . : Atthe Planning ~_oarl;f
meeting
April
0
13, orily two local residents -
expr~ssi:d ·opp:osi~ion
_
to the -
$20.
million project. -
•
_ _
__
-•-
_ . _ ....
-• -
The_ Poughkeepsie Journal re-
ported that a would-be neighbor of
center with the new four-lane high-
Poughkeepsie Journal that this
way being constructed. Students
would give the center. a "vmage-
also questioned the affect Wal-Mart
type" design.
and other tenants will have on area
"At the_ front, we would have
businesses and whether or not
smallscale wall; like the architec-
safety on campus will suffer.
ture ofMarist," he said: "We're try-
In. an attempt' to make the
ing to marry the two sides of the
- MidHuclson Center blend in with
roadway,"
Marist, Livshin saicl they w~ incor-
According to preliminary plans!
-porate extensive landscaping, in-
he said Wal-Mart and the cinemas
eluding llerms and stone -walls like
will be about 580 feet. from.
Rt
9,
the ones tbe'college uses to screen: •• with the parking lot lyirig between
its parking lots.- • • _ •
•
the shopping center and the high-
John Cole, a Massachusetts ar-
way.
chitect working on the proposal,
To the disappointment of some
said in an interview
in the · people, the facade of the existing
Two students take a smoking break on tlleif way to· class last
week.
-Smoking
in·college
is -
second-hand
by Sue FJSCber
Staff Writer •
At age 11,Alicia DiGennaro
was curious about something.
"I
wanted to
see
what it was
like to smoke,"' she said. "So
after school, my best friend and
I sneaked some cigarettes and
tried thein."
DiGennaro, now a senior at
Marist College,said she
became
a regular smoker during her last
year of high school..
"All my friends smoked,"
said DiGennaro. "We discov-
ered beer and cigarette~ went
together."
•
Young adults are smoking as
much as they did a decade ago,
-despite efforts to warn them
away from cigarettes, according
. to a recent study by the p-niver-
sity of Michigan.
Jane. O'Brien, -director of
health services -at -
Marist
Col-
lege, said the problem is that
-young people believe they are
invincible.
' "That age group thinks they
are invulnerable to the dangers
-of alcohol, drunk driving, smok-
ing and sexual activity," said
-O'Brien, sitting behind her desk
at the student health center.
DiGennaro agreed that she
hasn't worried about the health
risks of smoking.
''I've been living a little more
reckless since I've been in col-
lege," said DiGennaro. ''How-
ever, I've started to think about
the warnings."
Lisa Piedimonte, also a se-
nior at Manst, ~aid she has been
smoking since she was 18.
• "I don't think about the
warnings," Piedimonte said~ .
curled up in a chair, smoking a
cigarette. "I
see
so many people
my age smoking - it can't be too
bad."
DiGennaro and Piedimonte
are just two of the 3,000 young
people who become regular
smokers each day, according to
the National Academy of Sci-
ences' Institute of Medicine.
Cigarette companies spend
millions of dollars on advertis-
ing campaigns, trying to recruit
see SMOKING
page 2
85-year-old -building will not be
the center should be an improve-
saved. The Mid-Hudson Business
ment on the current shopping cen-
• Park will be demolished, except for
ters in the area."
a small portion of the building in
The Poughkeepsie Journal re-
the back, which Hoyt's will use for
ported April 14, that "as proposed,
part of their theater.
the Poughkeepsie store [Wal-Mart]
Jeff Anzevino, a waterfront spe-
would look almost nothing like its
• cialist and planner for the local en-
counterpart in FishkilL.
vironmental organization Scenic
However, Livshin•said there are
Hudson, said he was disturbed by
no guarantees yet as to the archi-
the news that the building was not
tecture of the shopping center itself.
going to be saved.
It should be brick to some degree,
"I'm disappointed the applicant
he said, but the final plans are sub-
couldn't fitthe current facade into jec·t to the town's and Wal-Mart's
the plans," he said. "However, ac- _ approval.
cording to the plans he_ submitte~,
-Students -discontent -
with registration
·by Jenni Drusendabl
•
Staff V(riter
The -registration process -is
supposed to make life easier for
students.
The process is designed -to
give seniors priority, except in
circumstances such· as major,
minor ·or other pre-requisites
given by the department.
The department chair de-
cides how many courses the de-
-
partment will offer and how
many sections of each class. The
registrar then decides how many
roollls they have and if they can
offer each section that is re-
quested.
The next step is pre-registra-
tion. Students meet with their
advisors, decide which classes
they need to take and then sub-
mit the form. The computer
does the rest.
It decides by credits, major,
minor, pre-requisites, ect., which
seniors get the course first. If
you have 90 credits and the class
you requested is in your major,
you are the first to get the course.
However, many seniors, like
Gloria Daniel, say they feel they
are not getting the courses they
request.
Daniel, a senior" at Marist,
said she feels she is being short-
changed by the current system.
"Only juniors
get their
classes," she said. "Everyone
else suffers. I can't get any of
iny classes that I need to gradu-
ate. As ajunior
l
had no prob-
lem getting my classes, but sud-
denly as a senior I'm not getting
my classes."
Judy Ivankovic, a worker in
the Office of the Registrar at •
Marist, said it may not be the
-registration process at all that is
the problem. She said there are
always constraints with time
slots and facilities.
'We only have so many slots
and so many classrooms and stu-
dents seem to only want to get
the perfect schedule," Ivankovic
said.
Vice President for Academic
Affairs, Mark vanderHeyden,
said he agrees.
•
"'There is no such thing
as
the
perfect schedule,"
he said.
"Even when chairs correctly of-
fer the right. number of seats,
there are problems. It might be
because they [the students] don't
like the course at that time or
with that teacher.
''If
you want to be accommo-
-dated, but only on your terms,
then you're going to have re-
strictions." he added.
Students are upset for rea-
sons other than that they are only
looking for the 'perfect' sched-
ule and cannot find it.
see SCHEDULE
page 3
.
•
Supplement 2
TheJrtrier Circle,
:April27,
1995
•
•
•
Senior
Art·
History
1najor.
.
.
.
.
.
na~ed Intern of the Year
by Elizabeth Brophy
Staff Writer
_
Zanetti, an Art History ma-
jor, completed her internship at
The Strom King Art Center. The
Both faculty and students centeris an internationally
agree that internships have
be-
known s·culpture museum.
come an essential part of the col-
Aside from her internship,
lege experience.
Zanetti also. spent. a· semester
"I'm· convinced that most
.
studying in Paris and had her bi~
students who get involved in in-
ography published. in Who's
.
temships consider_
the experi-
Who Among America's College
ence an experience of a life
Students.
time," said Dr. Lee Maringoff,
Zanetti was chosen. for.the
·
Director of the Marist Institute award after receiving letters of
for Public Opinion.
recommendation from her em-
Recognizing the importance player, faculty members and
of internships, the Marist Col-
·herself.
One-hundred and six
lege Field Experience Program
•
other Marist ::;tridents;
who in-
recently announced the intern of
.
terned this year, competed with
the year.
Zanetti for the award.
At the Field Experience's
''This internship helped me
April
12
meeting, senior Jenni-
figure out what
I
wanted to do
.
fer Zanetti received the Third and could do with my major,"
Annual Marist College•
Intern-
said Zanetti.
"I
felt both elation
ship/Co-op Student of the Year and guilt at receiving an award
Award.
•
for an experience that
I
enjoyed
Senior Jennifer Zanetti receives·
the lnterr,
·of
the_
Y.e.ar
award. from Desmond Murray~
so much.".
starti~g Jhe Fi~ld Experience
••
Ill~~e into their career,'' she said.
Communications intern co-
.·Programin
1969.
. .. .
:.->
Z_an~tti saidagtees
with
ordinator Bob Norman; who will
'D.eidre
Sepp, Director. of·
.·s~pp•s·_a.,s~~sment
of the value
be retiring at the end of this aca'." Career· Development and
.
Field
, . -
of
a.n
internship.
demk year, also received ari Experience, saidintemships are
'
..
·_
·.
"I
feel'that prospective em-
award at the meeting.
a valuable part of college edu-
•
ploye~
·:will
be more Hkely to
Nornian, said by many fac- • cation.
•
;hiresomeonewhohasinterned,"
ulty members and studentsfu be
_.
"Field experience helps our she.said. ''The internship gives
one of the most valuable assets students to,stay motivated, to you more confidence when you
Marist has, was responsible for
·complete
their.-degree and to
·go
out into the working world."
.
Marist ignoring the Student Right to
KrioW
and
··campus_
S_ecurity Act
•
-
•
,._
•
'
.•
•••
,
·a__
•
·'
.•
,···.
;
by Alicia DiGennaro
_
•
seem a bit low and withgood
concerning the Act.
lege said this
_is
not true.
other crimes. to securityto up-
Staff Writer
.
reason- the schoolis not report-
The compromise, accord-
"Crimes
of
sexual as-
date the distributed statistics.
ing all of them.
•
irig to the Chronicle of Higher , sault," said Leary, "must be re-
•
They do not llave io report the
Marist College appears to
In Marist's last pamphlet Education, requires rape-crisis ported to security by the victim name of the victim, unless the
be ignoring important regula-
listing the required statistics, it advisers and other counselors to in order for it to be reported
in
'\,ictim
wants action· tak:en
tions of the Student Right to stated that there were no arrests, report to the school authorities the year,-t,nd
statistics."
_
:against
the assailant.
.
.
Kno_w and Campus Security
from 1991 through I 994, for the number, not the names; of
.
. :
Leary,'. and )\1arist,. is
This includes sexual as-
Act.
drug violations, weapons pos-
victims that had come to them
,
wrong, accord,ing
to
tfie
Federal sauit,~Hussefman
said:
'.
.
·
The Federal Student Right session, or alcohol violations.
over a given period of time. This· Department of Educatiori.
.
..
•
··•
..
•.
.
••
"~ the tiniely reports $at
to Know and Campus Security
It also stated that within time frame is determined by the
PaulaHusselmari~
the De-. are submitted
·in
addition to the
Act is aTederal act that w~ put this time
frairte;
there was'
a'
to-
school.
.
partment of Ed~~ati~n
's
special-
yeai-e~d report, counselors:and
into effect in 1992 and requires talofonerapeatMaristCollege.
"The
compromise
ist on the Act said arrests do hcnisingoffici~~~ayet~s1:1l:>~t
collegestopublis!lreportsabout
WiththeAct
•
ethe ·sk
•
-
[
•
·•
•
1··
h·. h.
•
•
·-
•
-
.•·
-• ••
•
•
"
,
numberson:howdnany "'"Opie
.
.
.
. '
• ••
. 1 ;,
.,
..
.
.
c?:'11.
.
p_ .
·
..
reqt;ti~es.:.
an.Ys~!le
,w
9
..
as_
s1,g- n~ to .be made m.cnm~s such ;
...
,
".
"'., ,
..
ii:•
i' ,
.. ,.
''
•..
,,-k
.:
·!'"" ·.
•
crime on their campuses:.
-
• '.
•. :of
sexu~l-as~ault v1ct1ms;-pn-
-''"rii'ficarifresponsi6ility
Ior
·stu-'
as
"afcoiiol
~d'drug\~folati6niin
;~~y~-:~
0~~~-tQ'~th,e~.
to·:r~p~It:a
As required by the Act, vacy bemg v10Iated.
.
dent and campus activities" to brder for them
tC?
~ppear'i4,the
.
p:ini¢(13ii:'n3:"1es·.~<>.
not have
Marist releases an annual pam-
A compro~ise
was reportthese numbers t.o the
.report.
··•
..
·,.
_
_
. ____
}~ be,µsed,
-;~aid
Husst!lm~:
phlet with a list of crimes and reached in May of last year to school, accordirig Jo the same
··.-. , .
;
Bµ(::;h(~~~µ~u.e<i'~o
i;ay
-
.
:
..
Al~ou,gl:l
-~e-1~t~~
o~n
their occurrence on the campus rectify the risk, and was released
•
-article.
-
.
.
.
.... ·. ..
.
. ·.
~afcoririse~oij ~d,housing
of.:
n~
eff~t.f?r. two y~
and.tl!e
over the preceding three years.
as the Federal
·Department
of
<
ButJoeI.eary;D~ectorof
/ficials;:i~C:J_lidi~g·resici~ll(assis~-
:~orp_pro~t$t/or:a_l?1o~t?,?~,
.
•
But the rape numbers
Education'sJinaln:gulations
Cainpus Security at MarisfC01.:
•
tants
an9·du:ectors,:·inusLrepgrt'
';
M~~t-~~u.s~~-~y lts:1'9Sl~o,n
•.
• · ,,<.
•·'
· ',_
,:·:
··<··,.·
'.•··''.·
... ··
-
_-~·,,,,_,-,
•
-.
thar1ts:counselorsdonothave.
•
Sm9king---co_n_t-in_u_e_d_fe_o_m_p_a_g_e_l_• _______
""""!"
_______
--------
........
:
....
:.,,-
.•
-<'■.':::-.:;--.,-,,,--.:--
.....
--.:l~t-.,-.--
-:~~ite~it~c~;a~
aiiftjll!e_.
new young smokers.and.con~
.
Cancer Society,.•said teenage
..
Piedinion~e/;~cllir'father
:··
-•;•'t6~:}tj1~{fr~ii1·~~-~~;,
:·
vince long-term smokers to
,girls;
headed forindepertdence, has tried to stop.smoking,
..
, •
sniokersxand:,,non-'siriokers'
continue, the Tobacco-'Free
.
want to be like_thesewomen in
"He \Vore the i>.i.!~h
for one.
;jep~rat_e/\
::O,W}i~il
sai.d.
Action Coalition (TFAC) of
•
the ads.
year,'' sa_id Pi.e~im~nte_'.,
.
'~It
-;
"HoWever/peop~e
.have
to
be
Dutchess, SuUivan and Ulster
"Smoking looks glamoroust didn't work. He'(ookit
off
and
••
...
honeston the:questionnaire."
• ..
•
coimties reports.
Scheying said.
"It
is an irid_epen- started
'to
smoke agafo.":
/,
.
,
~:
/
;ornrieiFsaid
that Madst
Evelyn Kaufmann, To-
•
dent statement for them.''..
•
••
O'Brieiqa1.d she_ also be-
has: been considering makinl
bacco-Free Action Coalition
O'Brien said that she would lieves
_that
wqrneh1.1se
cigarettes •
_
the entire
c~pus
~smpke.:fr~:
Chair, said studies show that like to see the advertisements as a method of weight control.
•
.
-
-
"I think tpatwould,be hard
this advertising is very effec-
curtailed.
"They feel successful not to enforce," sh~ said>
<
, .
tive.
"I cannot understand.why
snacking and
·eating
so•inuch,"
-
The'.college also.partici-_
''1\vo-year~olds
recognize youpg men or women smoke said O'Brien. ~mtey seeit as a pates,iwthe. Great Ariierican
·Joe
Camel before they do
__________________
-
_. ____
.
• Smol(eoµre.very year. Marisi
Mickey Mouse," Kaufmann
Th·
e.
eve··
n·
·np·ort·
e·d.·tJ,.~t
'7.
..
o·p·
·en.'/'e·
nt·
.•
supplies.studeritswithkitscoil-
said.
C,
/tu
/
I
l.,
taining inform~tio~ al>ol;lt
th~
The Joe Camel advertising
if
k
dangers
;of
'smoking
'an:<I
'sec::
campaign, according to a
•
0 SmD ers Want to Stop.
0119hand:smoke, ~orig \Vith
newsletter published by Com-
tips·for'quittjng:.-;;;:,~:·,:--~:::{i,'-
--,
munity Health Plan, increased
.
.
••
In 1990,theCDCestimated
Camel cigarettes' share of the now,'' she said. "We didn't hear temporary thing to keep weight that 61,000 \Vomen in_ the
illegal, or underage~
children's all the concerns about smoking down."
United States died fronicaidio-
and teenage market from less that they do."
.
DiGennaro said she has lost vascular disease because of
than one percent to over 32
Jenny Wesley, a junior at
10 pounds and is afraid she will cigarette smoking.
;
One year
percent.
Marist, said she· ag·rees with gain it back if she quits smok-
after
qui_tting,
the risk for my~
However, the• biggest in-
O'B.rien.
ing.
cardial
·
infarction can be re-
crease in smoking has been
. "Because we kno\\'. how bad
''I
don't know whatI would duced by 50 percent.
among female teenagers, the smoking is, I can't understand do when I'm stressed," said
Piedimonte said she thinks
Dutchess County Department why so· many people· my age DiGennaro. "When I'm hungry, about quitting:
•
of Health reported. Kaufman, smoke," Wesley said. "And, I need to do something with my
"Maybe
_tbis
May, when I
who is also Injury Prevention from what I've heard, it's very hands, so I smoke."
graduate from college," she
Program coordinator for the hard.to quit."
Currently, Marist bans
said, staring at the ashtray.
health department, said that
-
The Centers for Disease
smoJdng in public buildings. In "Another. stage in my life is
~igarette ads use healthy, slen-
Control and Prevention (CDC) addition, when students apply to coming up
-
maybe this would
der·and sexy women to attract reported that 70 percent of the college they are asked to fill be a good time to quit."
these young teens.
sm9kers want to stop. While 34 out a survey about their interests, •
Di Gennaro said she is defi-
Valerie C. Scheying, pro-
percent attempt to stop each dislikes and whether or not they nitely quitting after Labor Day.
gram director for the Dutchess year, only 2.5 percent are sue-
smoke.
County Unit of the American cessful.
The Inner Circle,·April27, 1995
Supplement 3
The Inner Circle Staff
The Inner•Circle is an aµnual sul?
plement for
some of the· incoming staff members to' get their feet
wet" at producing a newspaper. Look for these p~ople
and many more on next y:ear's Circle staff. The· fol-
lowing people contributea to this year's Inner Circle:
Daryl Richard
Larry
Boada
Sue Fischer. •
Jenni Drusendahl .
Jane Noblet .
Melanie Fester
Elizabeth
Brophy
Alicia DiGennaro
*Special thanks to Chris Berinato, who spent many
• tedious hours.in the phot lab developing the pictures for this
section, as well as the sports section.
.•
l\tlajOr
league Baseball salvages
its/s~on after a 232 day strike
by Melanie Fester
Staff Writer.
• It looks like the only strikes
. being called· this summer will
be by the umpire behind home
plate. •
: Jus.t weeks after. a . tempo-
rary injunction was filed in
New York to restore order be-
tween the feuding players and
owners of Major League Base-
• ball, it looks like everything has
gone back to normal.
After almost eight months
of striking, countless negotia-
tion meetings, and even an in-
tervention by President Bill
Clinton, Major. League Base-
ball is back where it started.
Dick Wagner, former base- •
ball. commissioner, said he
thinks the injunction didn't re-
solve a great deal.
"I'm not sure anything was
accomplishedt said Wagner, "I
think the jury is still out on
that."
For the next year, both sides
of the baseball debate will be
operating under the same agree-
ments as before the strike,.in-
cluding salaries for the players.
Wagner, who was also the
general manager of the Cincin-
nati Reds and the Ho.uston
Astros, said he wasn't willing
to speculate what will happen
when the year is over.
"I don't even want to venture
a guess as to what will occur,"
said Wagner.
What Wagner does seem to be
• sure about, however, is the way
the negotiations were handled.
He said he thinks that both sides
are equally to blame for the strike.
''The players belong to one of
the few industries that hasn't had
to tighten its belt," Wagner said,
"Baseball players just keep
marching on, not paying atten-
tion."
.
Wagner said that because of
this attitude, players are refusing
to accept an agreement that
would yield less money.
The former. commissioner
also said that the owners are also
at fault for contributing to the
players' attitude.
''The owners are late in do-
ing this (reviewing contracts).
They should have done it four or
five years ago and stuck to their
guns," said Wagner.
Bill Patterson, a former base-
ball player for Marist College,
said he is dissapointed with both
parties involved.
"I think the whole thing is dis-
gusting," said Patterson. "Every-
body involved has just killed the
whole love of the sport. They
have contaminated America's
pastime."
Patterson said he thinks the
blame lies mostly on the play-
ers' shoulders for the failed ne-
gotiations.
"It's ultimately the players'
faults, they get paid way too
much," said Patterson.
There was speculation that
talk of replacement players
would shock the regular players
into agreeing to the owners'
terms. But it took several games
with replacement players to con-
vince them that it was for real.
Wagner said he thought the
replacements came in with bet-
ter attitudes than the regular
players.
''They were friendly, and I
felt the players really hustled,"
said Wagner, ''They came to play
and went in with their eyes
open."
Wagner said there was no
question that the major leaguers
are better players, but that the re-
placements did a good job.
Patterson, on the other hand,
said that he had no desire to
watch the replacement players.
"It would mean settling for
less. No one wanted to see those
guys play," said Patterson, "I
think it was more a thrill for the
players than anybody else."
Marist students travel abroad for
edu~atiQnal
.and
life experiences
by
Jane Noblet
Staff Writer
for American students.
Fahnestock, Marist Abroad Co-
Carpenter said that since she ordinator, said the program
has come back, she feels more
started 35 years ago when stu-
Students do not have to stay mature, like she is a different per-
dents would stay with Mari st
at Marist College all four years son.
Brothers at schools in other
to graduate with a Marist de-
"It was a bit harder than I ex-
countries.
Pected," Carpenter said.
"I
Since then, she said, an av-
gree.
The Marist Abroad Pro-
thought I would assimilate easier
erage of 40 students a semester
gram gives students the oppor-
than
I did, but I adjusted. The
have gone abroad.
tunity to study and earn credits biggest lesson I learned was that
Pettengill-Fahnestock said
transferable for a Marist degree people are not the same.
the program interviews about 55
at colleges around the world.
"People think the American
students a semester and about 85
Terri Donnelly, a senior
culture is everywhere, but it is
percent of those follow through
Spanish major, said she spent not ...
lt
was the best year of my by going abroad.
ter junior year in Spain at the life, no doubt about it. I hope
The program, she said, ex-
University of Madrid taking
more people go, it's really worth
_
pects applying students to have
• rine classes taught entirely in • it," said Carpenter.
a minimum grade point average
Spanish. She said now she feels
of 2.8 and the majority of for-
-----------------------
• eign schools expect a 3.0.
After spending a year abroad, If eel
like I can go anywhere, do anything. •
she has more confidence.
"At first it was tough,"
Donnelly said. "I took a one-
month intensive course which
taught grammar, history, art,
and government. It was tough.
After spending a year abroad, I
feel like I can go anywhere, do
anything."
Maria Carpenter, a senior
French major, said she spent her
• junior year studying at two
schools in southern France.
While attending the Insti-
tute for American Universities
in Avignon the first semester,
she said she took six classes
taught entirely in French. She
said during the second semes-
ter she attended the Centre des
Etudes Francaises in Aix-En-
Provence, a school primarily
Terri Donnelly, senior
Deborah Debertolis, a sopho-
more Medical Technology major,
said she is leaving for the Uni- ,
versity of Wollongong in Austra-
lia, on July
5.
There she said she will take a
semester of chemistry, biology,
history and literature courses.
Debertolis said she is
a
little
nervous about going, but she is
in contact with
a
student at the
university who is giving her ad-
vice on what to expect.
"I know the classes are dif-
ferent," Debertolis said. "It'll be
a different type of studying, more
independent rather than the
teacher telling you what to do.
When I come back I think I'm
going to be a different person than
when I left."
Amy
B.
Pettengill-
According to Pettengill-
Fahnestock, the most popular
countries chosen by students are
England, Ireland, Australia,
Spain, France, Italy, and Austria.
However, the.re are countries
chosen that are less common.
''We have a· student in Zim-
babwe and one in Russia," she
said. "Next year we'll have stu-
dents in China, Puerto Rico, and
Ohana."
Pettengill-Fahnestock said
students interested in going
abroad are primarily majoring in
the Humanities.
''There is a clear majority
from communications, business,
English, and
a
smattering from
the languages," she said.
~:'.Read'ThetCircle
}~v~ij(:f~'.~'rsday_.
L-
•
-•:..:..
!
• ..
.
,
,,,
'.
Supplement 4
->
. .
·
..
;--·- .....
•.· :'>. -
...
,
·.·:·
··• ..
,·... .
Tb~
$Je~pin,g
g1ant
•···•
Ahistorical-Iook:atthe
MidlHiid~t111-
Business--Park
'
'
'
• '
·:. < '-~•:';
'•
'
'•
by Daryl
Richard· ·
Associate Editor. :
·the pifult to produce Fiats.
•
. .Between 1910 and 1917
• about
Z:OO<>'
of the custom~built .
. •
The fact~ry floors n?W stand . luxury'cars rolled off the assem-
e~pty, • serving as a sdent~re-
bly line;: Howev~r, the
cars
car:
m!n~er of the once_,bu~tlmg_ riedah~ftypricetagfoi:~e.time,
pnnttng COfDpany
that e1!1~.l~yed
_: :selling'fof $4,50Q iD }914.
• -
as mat1y
~
1,5-00I~al-~_
1
de1.1ts.
•
The building's use from·the
Even though the buddmg, lo-
_
time Fiat left in
1918
until West-:
cate,d across the str~et from" ;-ern arrived -16 yelfi"s lateris
hJ.in.s.t
College, h~ ~°.:Y.~Cil!1t
• : sket~hY: ·Somlfoi:mer W:estem
smce 1983, th~ air msJde_Sttll_;-
• Printing employees said it ifru-
- reeks of machmery_ 01
!.·:
·Th.e mored ·_that
a supermark.et _used
worn out wood floors giye ey~'." the space for
a
period of time.
dence ~o decades of ~buse fr_om
. But the most well know oc.:
!orklifts, assembly lme~, pnnt:-, : cupant ·•
of the· 648,000 square
!ng presses and workers · pound- • foot. building (enough· space to
mgfee!.
. ._ . .
.
build 14.4 football fields) was
This b':tldmg, -t~e, ~td-
the printing company .. While in
Hud_son
Bu~mess Par~, provides • Poughkeepsie, Westenf Printing
a wmdow mto the history and
was the place to work.
-
~ulture ~f the Hudson :VaHey.
"Everyone and their _uncle
Once a Fiat car fac.tory an~ l~ter worked at Western Printing,"
home to the_ West_em.
P~ntmg
sai_d Bill McPeck, .a Marist se-
<::o., t~e busm~s park gives _a curity guard. Mi.:Peck's,_mother-
histoncal look mto the Amen-
in-law, father-in-law,· grand-
can ,!abor forpe. .
.
mother and every aunt and uncle
. It was,,a fami_ly-run
type of
worked at the flourishing pub-
busmess,
said
Edward
Usher.
·
•
H~ls~pple, a form~f. Western
"I cannot think· of anybody
Printing employee. You _knew • who did not like working there,"
everybody you ~orked with on
he said. "Western was kind to
a first name basts, from the bos~ its employees."
on do_wn
to the guy next to you, .
Holsopple said the company
he said.
-
had a· tradition· of paying well
Ho~soppl~ worked at West., and-giving good benefits. «It
e~ Pnnttng for l 7 years
:t5.
a
was one of the better payingjobs
b01ler .operator and machm1st at the time,, he said. Theaver-
un!il its closing in ~983. • ~e
agewage_for;_its~lllploy~s-dur-:
pomted to cost effective~ess as
ing the 1950s was $1.75
an
hour'.
the reason for the plant s clos-
Robert Brown
.
another
ing, explaining ,at the company . former· Western Printing em-
n~
to consol_1date
t~ several
ployee who worked at the plant
different locations around . the
for 38 years, praises·. the com-
country.
• panyforits treatment of employ,..·
However, the building'.s
·
ees. '.'lwasal:>le to buy a house,
legacy lives on today. : Before
raise my children and send them
Western bought the space in
to• coHege because of my job,"
1934, an Italian auto-maker used
bf Larry
Boada-
Editorial Editor
Look at the student next to you .
If
-it was . discovered that • he or
she -was
admitted into this.school by
forgipg :_a/transcript,
_
how· ·,would it
make',you fee}?
. .,-
:
.<· .
• .. Nowwhat.if;you also found out
thaf this . _student had. received
enonrious,_aniounts
of financial aid
money_
in<the
-process?
. : on-April6, only a month away
from gr!3duation,. Lon Thom~s
Gra.mmer, a senior -at Yale s
Davenport
-C<>Uege,
was· arrested on
• charges·
of larceny
..
·
•
..
• . /. Grammer had managed t9 attend
Davenpcirt,
where he_and
his lawyer
said , he : recorded a
B
average, by
• forging a transcript that inflated his
grades from a
C
to an
A
• The charges of larceny were filed
by Yale College, . accusing him of
receiving $61,475 in financial aid by
•
.
.
_
·._.
·" -,
. . ,
. Cin:Ic
PJIOtolDaryJ
Richan!
giving the college false information
Ninefy-five percent of the· 648,000-square foot business
::C:!::nt8t:s~~:a~fe~~
park.will be leveled to make way for a Wal-Mart center.
Grammer has. been expelled from
he
said:
presses ran in ancJ out of the
YalX: related story inv~i~es a girl
A big difference between
building.
·
who was.admitted to Harvard then
factories then and today is the
. "Sixteen to 18 million comic
declined when it was discovered
that
working conditions. People lost
books per month were being
she had been convicted of
limbs, fingers and 'toes in the
shipped out of Western," Brown
manslaughter in the murder ·of her
machinery, forklifts were buzz-
said. "It was a busy operation."
mother.
•
ing around the factory floor
.. • But the
20
rooms, some of
She had been convicted as a
moving bundles of comic books
which are about three times the
juvenile and Harvard became aware
. . •
. ,
. when someone called and told the
and employees, surrounded by
s!ze of Man~t s Mcann gymn_a- admissions office of her record.
loud, roaring printing presses,
smm, now lie empty. The rm.I-
These stories provoked varied
clid not wear ear protection.
road tracks have . been filled
m
views from Marist students around
. "I don't remember any per- • .with concrete. The rooms have
campus.
.
s.on who worked_•
in . the "press been stripped of.then: machinery.
. ''.More . po-:ver
_ to
him,"
,room that doesn't have a hear-
• ''It's kind'.of discouraging for
f.
0
m~ented, sen~or Dave ~trong.
• •
-· • •
• ,, • -
.. 1 "d "I
·thi
Obv1ously•the
aid helped
him
out.
ing aid today," McPeck said. • me, • IJolsopp e sat . • ·• saw . s
It's one thing
if
he did it and flunked
According to Holsopple, the
place m full ()peration and ?,OW out, though."
·
factory was running 24 hours a
all that space stands empty. .
But Strong_
pointed out that the
day, seven days a week_. In ad-
Browri said_he_"will
hate like
admissions office should be at fault
dition to forklifts running
all helL to·see that building be·
around,freighttrains unioa.ding tom down. There are a. lot of
rolls of paper six feet high and people who put their life in
five feet in diameter for the
there."
. see
YALE
page
2
Cows, sweaty underpants fflld btillet-proof igloos It's a:-strange world_
.
-
·-'
-
._
.
.
byDaryl
Richard
Associate Editor
• deaths and le_aving 880 people
homeless.
•
.
The-Daily Newsreporied
It's a strange ~o.rld out there. earlier, this year. that aicow
0
in ,
. Lifojnay
seem boring and Velez, -~olombia is in critical.
repetitious a(times - students
condition after being shot in the
falling asleep in their 8:00 a.m. , head by another cow.
class and others counting the
''The bovine suspect stepped
·ceiling tiles during mo.notonous on the trigger of aloaded rifle·
lectures. But at the same time
left in a field by a farm worker,"
we are all in an academic trance, the article said.
_
half".'way arp1.1nd 'the, world,
.· RCN Radio, l>roadcasting
some weird things are going on.
out of Bogota, "coloinbia, said
Cows are shooting other
the ill).pact _of the co~ stepRing
cows, the Japaµese are -invent-
on the rifle caused the weapon
• i_ng
sweat-laced underpants and
to fire, sending a bullet straight
Sweden •is experimenting with
into the head of the other animal
bullet-proof igloos.
.
grazing nearby.
. _
.
Life doesn't sound as boring
Colombia,_which has 01_1e
of
now~ does it? If you're not con-
the world's Iughest murder rates,
vinced yet, read on and you will
has never seen violence spread
be surprised at some of the
to farm animals, thestati011said.
things that go on while the kid
Cows were not the only ani-
in front of you in literature class , mals getting violent last week.
makes origami sculptures out of
A mouse in a small Vietnam-
notebook paper.
ese village sparked a fire that
Violence Among An~
is Rising
As President Clinton tries to
pass his anti-crime bill through
Congress; he should think about
making a provision that would
make it easier to convict violent
fann animals.
Recently, a cow and a mouse
have been responsible for two
killed an infant and set most of
the village ablaze. .
A newspaper in Hanoi re-
ported that the mouse knocked
over an oil lamp, causing the
fire.
"The fire spread, killing • a
13-month-old child, destroying
193 thatched houses and leaving
880 people homeless," the ar-
ticle said.
Igloos: Defense
of
the
Looking to spice· up your
•
Future?
loveJife?
Try.
swea~-lace<l
un-
.
derpants.
Tha~ks to state of the art
According to the April 12,
technology, m.ost nations' de- • issue· of·
The Daily News Jhe
fense • systems have become al-
Japanese have fpund inspiration
most superhuman.. .
• in-perspiration, marketing un-
Laser
guided
missiles
der:wear that already· has that
(LOMs), undetectable stealth
sweaty smell.
. .· __
aircraft thatevade'the most seh'-
Apparel
and cosmetics
sitive radar and now igloos.
. maker Kanebo said thatmillions
-That's right, igloos,· The
of tiny <!apsules
in thefabri~ COll:'.
Swedish Army has been per-
uµn-a'synthesiied ·pheromone
forming tests to_ determine how found in the sweat of a man's
impermeable igloos are to mod-
underanri. •
,
.....
- . . ..
•
•
em artillery.
Friction breaks the capsules,
The article, in a January edi-
releasing the supposedly attrac-
tion of
Newsweek, reported that tive scent. -• ..
-
.
the walls of an igloo can
be
a bet-
•
According· Webster's Col-
ter defense against bullets than lege Dictionary, a pheromone is
concrete walls.
. "any. chemical .substance re-
Col. • Pelle Mohlin, a Swed- - leased by an animal that serves
ish Army commander, was per-
to influence the physiology or
forming the tests on igloos to see behavior of other. members of
how they stacked up as a new the same species."
form of defense technology.
Working
011
_that theory, sci-
"lt's like chewing gum, it
entists used sweat as the human
absorbs the blast," Mohlin said. equivalent of an animal phero-
Igloos are also safe from air
mane, added a musk scentto
attacks because they are almost intensify the effect and ended up
invisible from aircraft and can
with what they are.hoping will
not be detected by infrared sen-
be a new trend in apparel.
sors that guide missiles.
''Those opting for full phero-
Sweat Appeal for
Sex Appeal
monal assault will also be able
to get neckties and handker-
chiefs made of the fabric," the
article said.
. An Ivy League Cybersex
Scandal
Travelers on the information
highway have found exits to
some interestjrig places.
•
Students
cruising
the
Internet at Harvard University
recently fourid therilselves'at the
center of a cybersex scandal.
'l'wenty-eight students at the
Ivy ,League scJ).oor have: been
_ usingthe Internet to_.coll~t por-
nographic pictures, the Daily
News recently· reported.
. · "Folks at Harvard were
· blushing over the disclosure that
28 • students downloaded more
than 500 pornographic pictures
from the college's computer bul-
letin boards in just one week,"
the article said.
Making things worse for the
students, the campus newspaper,
the Harvard Crimson, had com-
piled a list of names and sexual
preference of everyone who col-
lected the mat~rial. However,
the newspaper did not publish
any of the names.
"One graduate student was
. terrified his wife would find out
he'd downloaded 100 porno-
graphic pictures - of men," the
Daily News reported.