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Part of The Circle: Vol. 47 No. 7 - November 30, 1995

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.
>-_:

..
-~
News._-_·:-
s·tud~niis·_·c~r
1S
stbl~n from
·.
RivervieW~pBfldng
lot~
Volume 47, Number 7

ART$:&'.~E~rea:h~AINM.ENT:
:-
•.
,.Brady·Buitch'_Wins·th~'.
Junior
~l~ss 'iip
synch._contest.
.
_
..


..
-·-•·

~•-·_
,:.pAGE8
Viruses still
plagfr~
school's cOmputerlabs
by
STEVE LINDEMAN.

stroy µte entire boot
.sector
of
.
Staff
__
Writer
the:
computer; Iorio said;,_
'
• .
.

Thousands of viruses exist.
~SPORTS.
,
Men's basketball wants title

before
leaving
the NEC


•.
-PAGEll
November 30, 1995
Bridging
the gap
in capping
By the year 2000; hundreds of. Some \'iruSes can help
the'
user,
thousands of computers will be othe.is callscrairible'and"desttoy.
.
by
MICHAEL
Goc>T

infected by a computer virus, ac-
disk files, according to Chris

\;};;,wt!/!f.ilP
Staff
Writer
cording to Chris Bramfeld, train-

Bramfel~.
.
.

.
·:,_
>
Some seniors view capping as
ing coordinator for the Donnelly
"When
a
computer is making a
a helpful bridge between college
coinputerlab,
.
b_.
a_ckup_
for
ari
exi_
·sting fi_
il
__
e,
1_·_1_
's a
.
.
and the real world, but others
Marist students may have en-
goodcomputer virus," Bramfeld
.
.
hav~ found it to be a frustrating
..
countered a vtrus, but few kno~
sai~;
.
. .
_
._..
.
.
.
.. .
_
experience.
.
what they ate or how th,f·v!ru~
·
..
-,
·Some
viruses
_can•
cause
instantly destroys weeks
.\\'orth
/
:iqeptt1i.ih1e,<1amiigetd
the com::
.
st~:n~'i::aj~~::;k~~:P~
of computer files, he added.
.
.
.
puter disk/and as
a
result,._
tend_.
.. <
.
>

••. .
-

.
_
_·_
.
-
.
.
File
pho,ii
fessor envisions the course.
A computer virus is a d~ument
to grab
·our·
attention, he added.
Students
.using
the computerlabs must be careful of contracting
Senior Michael Stanet, a psy-
that is carded

'through •
the
•.
Bramfeld said.
the'
Gen
B_virus.


one of the many viruses infecting numerous terminals.
chology major, said the ~apping
·
Internet \\'hen som~ne i~ pro-
,
(Anti
EXE)isapopuJa{virus
pro-
computer)."·
off the Internet just like any other co~irse helps bring his other
~ed
o~to the path w~ch the gram that has . cause?· wide-
.
One of the newest. viruses
virus," said Iorio. "The virus puts courses into• focus.
vtrus ts ca~ned, James lono, pro-
spread damage m Manst com-
found on Marist campus is the up a wall so that ypu can't use
''This is the only course that
gr~~patrteammember,satd.
puterprograms.
. .
monkey virus, adeadlyptogram
the machine. it's very rare on
tried to pull the courses I took
V~ses_are d~veloped by com-
The virus d~sn:oys the com-
that runs through the boot sec:- campus."
together," he said.
puter whizzes and programmed . puter files by sticking to the boot tor, destroying every file
on
the
Paul Pedinotti said he has en-
Senior Debra Saal, a communi-
li~e ~y com~ut~rprogram; The

sector.

_
co~puter disk; Iorio said.

.
.
countered over thirty viruses.
cations major concentrating in
virus is very surular to other pro-
'The boot s~tor's the orga-
Th.e monkey virus destroys the
.
"I got one virus that totally de-
.
advertising said she fails to see·
grams,_
but has the cap~bility to nizert said Bramfeld.-"If you program that allows the com-
leted my disk and erased the boot the course's relevance.
attach itself to thefileorthe J:,oot loose the boot sector, then you puter to run, he added.
•. •
.
sector," Pedinotti said.
"I've heard it's a helpful class
drive. More complex viruses de:-
.
can't.do a~ything_.with.
i_t
·(t_he
.
-'.'.It
·(themonlP,Y,._Yirus)
comes
once you get out·ar,d have a job,
-Hot
..
-waterpip¢,-,break&tirt,~.~o.:.:lfall,ifl<10.ding:-dotri1-r60111s
_~;►tg~:~1·
1
i~:!~::,?.~~~
.
by
(}RAI<;
MUIUtAY
•.·.
·.
.

•.
·.
imst,
said:;she·woke
·upiarqund

',.'
.~-·~siri~eiiif
oh'thifitst'.flo6r)it
:
~.'.·B~other.To111
saicftiitwaieire~-:.~
\ ;. Capp1nf coufses. qav~ been
,.···_·
·f
siait
Wrfrej

:_::;.·
-::
':"iigh(d'•c}~'ck'to
:area.ily\o\1d
_:.:a:11\vou~d
:up-·
on
-~y_fl~rir/'.
<ajly.didn~tdo-~ny:d~;ge;in:ws·
.
requi~ed_aiMaristCoJiege.sin,fo




rioJ~~..
._
.
>

. _
..
.
Delaney saiclt_
;-
.
/'

_
·apartment!
_

_
_
19~4,
v,vhen
the ~ore.course. re-
··•
Ev~ry moming,mos(6fus_get.
·'
"It
was.like
the sound. of
ri.m:
·
·
Melissa· Hotaling, Maureen·.

<"It
was
nice. clean hot w_ater;" qmreinen~ were
1
nslit_uted. B~-
up; grab our towels-'and-go fo
.
ning water,"she sruc!>"I walked

Finnegan, ancl Jennifer Cleary, aJl
/he
said:
'T
got iny floors all
cause maJors
__
are so different
m
take
a
shower.

out irito
the·
living ro·om
..
of
my wtio Hve.ori
ihe•fuurth
floor, were washed for the ~olidays."
content,
th
e
st
ructure of
th
e
Unfo_rtu_
•.
na.
__
ti_
ey,
·s_Ome
Stu_.
_d.
e_
nts
.
_apartm_ent,
and it was c
___
ove_·
red in also affected.
.
..•
Maintenance was called, the
course. varies.


·
·
·
·
·
According to JohnKelly, dean
.
who
_live
in Leo llallwere stand-
several incheS of hot water."



;
Hot watercainen.ishing out of

water in Leo
was
sh~t. off while of the school of management, the
ing underdryfau_cets one mom-
11ie heating
pipe
had'brok~n

their medicine chest, located on the pipe was fixed, and running purpose of the capping course

ing
fast
week. _

in the li:ving room wall of Frost's
.
the wall where the pipe burst; and water was then restored to the is to integrate the knowledge stu-
_
·•
A pipe that delivers hot water

sfrth,fl.oor ap_artmel).tand sent covered their floor with several residence·area.
.
.
dents studied
·in
foundation
for the heating system in L~
.
wa.terinto every apartmt!_nt
be-
inches of water;
'.'

Frost said_ the housekeeping courses such as philosophy and
broke the Wednesday_.before low Frost's; all the way do~trto
Lu~kily the only damage to any and- physicaFplant staff re-
ethics with their majors. The cap-
Thanksgiving; leaving theahall
.
the,frrst
floor:
of. the· rooms were some wet
spondei;i"very
quickly to get ev-
ping. course helps the student
.
without waterforaJniostan hour.
Most ofthewater wound up in floors, soaked rugs and the tow-
erything
all
cleaned up.


'
link

the_ know ledge from the
Assistant Resident Director of
Brother Tom-Delaney's apart-
els usedJo try to sop up the
. "Allof
us in Leo thank them courses.
the freshman residence, Casey merit oil th~
first
floor.


for that," she said.
Please
see
Capping,
page
3 ..
:
Studerits
return
to the aiiw~ves
Marist College l.{adio is batk,-
broadcasting

from n,ew home_·
byBENAGOES
.
Staff
Writer
'

. •
For those interested in radio,
resuming broadcasts over Marist
College ~o
(WMCR) has been·
a struggle.
IIowe~er, on Nov.
8,'WMCR
opened the airwaves with a
schedule that includes numer-
ous music programs ranging
from punk to country.

In previous years, WMCR was
located on the first floor of
Champagnat But this summer,
money from the Student Govern-
ment ,Association and College
Activities inade it possible for the
station. to relocate.
According to Erik Molinaro,
WMCR general manager, the
move was necessary and has
doubled the space for the radio
station.' T,he equip~ent that
was
once kept in one small
room
now
·


occupies ~osoimd
·proof
stu-
dios in the Student Center.
.

<
"We are still-working out the
kinks," said Molinaro, '.'but there
is finally enough space for the
station to grow."
The station is aj.so growing_in··
its broadcast capabilities, Before
this year, WMCR would not come
in
·clearly
near Gartland,· said
Molinaro.
And according to Jacqueline

.
.

...
.
Cin:le pholo/Kim Garrell
Simpson, junior and WMCR WMCRmemb_erRyanOsswaldDJ'sfromoneoftbenewbroadcastboothsintheStudentCenter.
.
news director, the antenna was .. Mccann Center all the way. to Marist College Radio to compete tion has 160 members and is one
relocated
to
increase
the
Gartland, and according to
with IocaJ radio stations for co}:. of the largest clubs on campus.
station's range.
Molinaro, within a two mile ra-
lege listeners.
"We are no longer broadcast-
dius outside of campus.
It is the college listeners and
ing into a brick wall," she said.
Charles Melichar, WMCR pro-
WMCR participants who make
"Our goal is to improve the qual-
ity of WMCR, and to expand,
and to become more well known
This has made it possible for gram director, said these new ca-
up the station, said Molinaro.
the station to
be
heard from the pabilities make it possible for
According to him, the radio sta-
across campus," Molinaro said.




































































---·-
·-··--------·-·····--·-··
-·i
.
2
. THE CIRCLE,
November 30, 1995
Pataki
wants
to· see
Republicarigovemorsaid.
'..


• •

Pataki said he wanied a state
plans
;~~r
new
~asinos
.
paJ1el_.that
_would
set special cri~.
N.Y. (AP) -·Gov. George P~taki teria the state wants before ap-
sald
he wa"nts·
to set up a special
proving any casino plan
anci
re-
panel to review any proposals that

view specific proposals.
~~!t~:i:i!e~asino
gambling in
Sign
'kills
motorist:
Pataki's statement at a news con-
RANCHO CUCAMONGA,
ference Tuesday threw cold water
Calif. (AP) -
.
Fierce wind

on a plan by St. Regis Mohawk
knocked down a 5ston freeway
Tribe and Sullivan County officials
message sign; crushing a pickup
to build a casino at the Monticello truck driver to death.
--
Raceway, a harness horse-racing
Donald Post, 52, of Twin
track in the Catskills.
Peaks, was killed instantly Monday

Organizers need the governor's ap-
evening.·
proval to go ahead with the plan.
Post·was driving alone Monday
"I'm not prepared to do a deal with
night in the slow lane on Interstate
anyone on casinos at this point," the
15 about 60 miles east of Los Ange-
N-Y r,-eservists being
deployed to. Bosnia
By MARK E ..
JOHNSON
Associated Press Writer
NIAGARA FALLS, N.Y. (AP)-
Reservists from the Niagara Falls
Air Force Reserve Base are be-
ing deployed to Europe to assist
the NATO peacekeep!ng mission
in Bosnia, but most New York
military personnel will be stay-
ing home.

More than 200 members of the
I 07th Air Refueling
Wing
will
ar-
rive in Pisa, Italy, next Monday
to provide support for fighters
flying missions over Bosnia.
Their assignment is a continu-
ation of the role they have played
in enforcing the no-fly zone over
the war-torn area for the past 30
months, Lt. Col. Dan Bristol said.
''This is. exactly what we train
for every day," Bristol said. "We
ar~ lOOpercent ready. It's like a
fireman's job - when you're

cailed, you're ready to doit."·<
Bristol wpuld not specify how•
many of the KC-135 planes from
the Niagara Falls base: would
make the nine-hour flight over-:-
seas. The planes will not fly into
. Bosnian air space, Bristol said.
Reservists were e<c1ger
to help
in the NATO mission and didn't
seem concerned about th.eir
safety.
"I'm excited that I finally get to
get my feet wet," Master· Sgt.
Dave Wohleben said.'
"I'
11
take
all the training that I've had and
put it to good use.".
Wohleben.is a crew member on
a KC-135, an aircraft which can
carry 200,000 po~nds of fuel. The
airmen will serve in Italy for two
weeks, then new troops will take
their place..

.

Meanwhile; soldiers ~t Fort
Drum in northe_rn
New York re-
ceived some welcome news this
holiday season. "We're going to
,,stay
home this Christmas," Maj.

1es when gusts up to 60 mph blew
the sign down.
-
.
.
.
.
.
.
.. .
•:He didn't know what hit him,"
California Highway Pat~ol Sgt.
Charles Chellew said. "If lie was a.
second faster, he would have
men in a passing ~.poli«;fsaid..
:
.
made it.'.'
..
'.fhe J'urkish news agency Anatolia,
. '
The sigrtcollapsedatthe base
said securi~fforcesireceived-an
'.of.its.post·
California Depart-
anonymous:claim o(responsibiHty.
-rnent-
ot\Transportation engi-
.
-',.
The c~~r· sai~ the;ldlling was in.-
neers
f~ed·out'across
South-
retaliationJoqhe_ slaying of Fathi

em··.
California today. t~· check
Shakaki; leader'c,fthe militant group
.the
stability
of
similar signs,
lslami~'J_ihad.

.



-
.
••·which
warri
motorists of acci-


Shakaki
•.
was kiHed in Malta· 1ast ·
dents and delays.
month .. Hisgroup blainedthelsraeli
:Attacks
on_ Jews
secret service.
·
·

·•
· .·
·
-
·
There aie 25,000 Jews in this pre-•
~Qntinue.
in
Turkey
dominantly Muslim country. of 60
BURSA, Turkey (AP)- In t~e
million.
-
second attack on Jews in recent
In June, a car.bomb inj~{ed the
months; a businessman was gunned
leader of the Jewish community in
down Tuesday in this city in west-
Ankara.
em Turkey.
.
The attack. was claimed by a radi:
Nesim Malki was killed by three
cal
Islamic group.
Boy.sold to
:pay
mother's
drug debt
·By. BRIAN
S. Am
Associated Press Writer

-
-
.
DEfROIT (AP)-A IS-year:-0ld
boy who was missing for at least
six months had been handed by
liis mother over to a drug dealer
to settle her $1,000 crack cocaine
debt; police said after finding the

boy Tuesday.
A serviceman preparing for deployment ~ets his innoculations.
Investigators sorted through
conflicting accounts of whether·
he went voluntarily,·sold drugs,
was used as a sex slave or was
forced to smoke crack himself
when he was hungry so his cap-
tors could save on food.
Gen. Thomas Burnette told· his
troops last week.

In recent years, the 10th Moun-
tain Division based at Fort Drum
has often been one of the first
outfits to
be
deployed in a crisis.
-
Fort Drum's soldiers spent
Thanksgiving 1994•in Haiti and
many stayed for-Christmas. The
914th Airlift Wing, also stationed
in Niagara Falls, has:n<ltreceived

orders to go to the former Yugo~
_
slavia, according'tci'Maj. Gordie
Elewell.
,
.
President Clinton has pledged·
U.S. forces will make up one-third
of the 60,000-troop peacekeeping
mission, knowri as IFOR, but

most of them
will
be drawn from
units stationed_.in
Europe;

Acting on an anonymous tip,
police found the boy in a smaU,
-
run-down house in a neighbor-
hood thick with drug dealers ~d
Recentpo1ls done by CBS and

prostitutes. His grandmother
ABC found more than 50 percent
said he appeared addicted to
of Americans disapproved of the
.crack.
• •
:•
'

United States sending troops to
••
·:
He'had-lost a'k>t of weight but
Bosma.

seemed otherwise
0~
she said.
.
.
-

.
.
-
-
Clinton
signs
bill giyffig
states power
tr>
set ·own
sp~
limits
"He's crying a lot. I think he's all
right., he said he's all right," she
said. ''He's as sweetas he can
be. He's g6t one hangup: It's his
By
RANDOLPH
E.
SCHMID
"I am deeply disturbed by the
"Without_
question these laws
froJ!l:safety and consumer..~~vo- mother. He loves her."
Associated Press Writer
repeal
of
both the natio11al'·maxi- have saved lives," the president
cates, who foresee carnage on
..
Inspector l\,,fichaelHal~
said al~
WASHINGTON(AP)-President
.
mumspeedlimitlawand the law
.said.
He urged the states to,'act
the na_timfstoads.
though police believed the boy
Clinton signed a $6 billion road
encouraging states to enact mo-
responsibly and added: ''My ad-
.
The White House had said ear-
was sold to settle his mother's
bill Tuesday that ends the fed-
_torcycle helmet use laws,'.'
ministration will redouble our ef-
lier Tuesday thatit was a reluc.c debt, ''We have an indication that
eral 55 mph speed limit that has
Clinton
·
said in

a written state-
forts to protect those who travel
tani
Cliiiton who would wave the
at some point, he became a will-
beenin place since 1974 and · ment;
_
_
.
on the nation'sJ1ighways.'.'.
starter's flag
.in
frontofAmeri-
ing partnerin drug dealirig."
gives states the power to set
He said he also was troubled.
He instructed the Transporta-
can ffi()torists.

The boy appeared injuveni}e
-
- . .
.
.
.
-
court and was charged witl,i'de-
th_
eir own, startt..
ng in 10 days,
th_at.
the law. potential_
ly exem_
pts
tion
__
Departm_.
_ent
to.
·_(level_
o_._
0.
an
-.
B_
ut;
whil.
e being· "very c.
o_
n-
·
f
t".
livery of cocaine, possession o
But Clinton made clear that he
large number of small-
·and
me.:
:action
plan topromote highway cemed. about highway fatalities," cocaine with intent to deliver_and_
had serious misgivings about the
di um-size trucks and their driv-
safety.

.
...
Clinton felt
a
veto could cost
tru,ancy.
measure, fearing that its provi-
.
ers from saf~ty
••
regulations
-
iti-
Overall, Clinton~igne<f
the
mea,:.
-~4tt~t n~!lflY.
$6-.bi1lioqci~?n~-
••

:~i;
'nex(coint appearance was
sions will lead to more accide~ts, volvingdriver qualific:ations and su~e becau~e he belie~~s i(wi.Ii
-essary
highway>improvement
sdioouied
for Dec.13; The 33-
highway deaths and injuri~.
truck maintenance.
--
-
. strengthen the nation's transpor-
projects," including finishing
·year-0ld
mother w~ alrea9y in
----------------'-----,----...,.....--
..... tation system, providing jobs
missing links in•:the. Interstate
jail on an unrelated burglary
I
Marist
Win:ter
lntetsession
and economic
·opportunities,
_Highwaysystem,McCurrysaid.
charge"ancl could face charges
said White' lfouse spokesman
..,
A
half~dozen states have laws
·
over her son.
.
·
-

January·
2-17'
1996
Mike McCurry.
that raise their speed limits auto-
A nian found with the teen-
'.'Delighted," was the response
matically when the federal cap
~ger, described by police as a
drug dealer with a long record,
26 Courses
offered
+
of D. Gail Morrison of the Na-
comes off.

was arrested. He wasn't ideriti~
travel courses to Barbados and Russia
tional Motorists·,-Association
-:. -
The_rn:day wait in the federal
.
ti¢
by authorities, butpolicesaid
who battled forprpvlsions end~ -legisi'ation isintendeo to give

the mother gave her son to a dif-
ing the federallyfoandated speed
them time to change their minds.
ferent. dealer, who was:,being
.
Register
early
to avoid
being
closed
out
of
limits and motorcycle helmet re-

Other states
are
expected to raise
.
sought.
..
the
course
you
want!

quirem~nts,

.
.
their limits in the coming months.
·
''He was supposed to~ work-
..
( course schedules are available (or pickup)
MUS 392L-234 ST: Women in Choral Performance has
been added to
the
schedule
REGISTRATION
continues every business
day
until January 2
atthe
School of Adult Education
Dyson Center 127
Call 575-3800 for additional information.
1/3 tuition ($343) due at registration
Housing discounts for reStdential students!
Appalled, was

the reaction
ing to pay off his mother's debt,"
The:Weekend
Weather·
~!~~~ds:~~=::~1/~~:rn;
Friday:
Saturday:
~
Partly sunny. Highs in the
upper 30s to low 40s. Low
25 to 35.
~
.,
j
J
_.
Sunday:
Chance of rain or snow.
Highs
35 to 45. Lows in the
20s.
Chance of rain or snow
Highs in the 40s and lowe1
50s. Low 25 to 35.
Source: Associated
Press
along to protect his mother, a

common response in neglect
cases involving drug-addicted
parents, she said.
''They've learned to protect
their parents. It's all they have,"
Foy said.
The boy denied his mother sold
him to settle a
$1,900
crack debt,
but other evidence indicated it
was true, Hall said.

''He's definitely
a
victim, re-
gardless of what the circum-
stances were," Hall said.














































1,
,:;
I
..
T~ C1~~LE,
No~ember30,
1995
Cappirig
courses·
bridge·
classes ..
'
'
.
.
.
:.'.contin~edfrom
page·
J. .
not.expected to interact withth,at
"We study k.nowte.'dge i.n .. infonnijtiori,:' he said. "Capping
provides that opportunity.''
pi~es, but it really is one thing,"
Douglas Cole, professional lee-
Kelly said. "We have to study it
turer. of communications<arts,
in pieces in order to deliver it."·
shares th.
e view that th~~.cap'pi.ng·
:·.'
Kelly said the business stu-
·
dentstacklereal-worldproblems course· sh.ould . bri~g\,the.·' ••
in their classes.
In
manag·
ement student's .total academic. career:
into perspective.
.
strategy and policy, the business
"It
should give the student
an
capping course, students listen
to a few lectures, and then at-
opportunity to pull together and .
temptto solve problems from real integrate some of the heart of the .
businesses. Accounting stu-
new knowledge relating to the
major," Cole said.
dents discuss issues concerning
Cole's capping class deals pri-
ethical and 'legal standards in
. their capping class and do re-
marily with impediments to the
communications process, He
search projects. Economics stu-
hopes his students will see the
dents are required to write a term problems of the professions they
paper that addresses an issue,
will be going into.
for example, what is the most eq-
, ''I hope they will realize that the
uitable or most efficient way to
communication
process is an iffy,
levy taxes.
chancy and easily manipulated
Ramon Hache, a business stu-
business," he said.
3
dent currently taking capping, is
· The communications capping
doing· a project about· the
class is different because it has
Chrysler Corporation. The class
to be relevant to so many differ-
is divided into groups and each
ent concentrations within the
those tracks.
other majors," Ippolito said.
lie relations said there should one
one is assigned a company. The
major. . . .. ,·
> .
, . ,. . ,_. Wtlliam Olson, assistant prof es-
Senior Joanna Kelly, majoring capping course for communica-
groups have to make a presenta-
.. ~'Altheiugh ·bis' course is de::. •
·sor-0fhistoty;
said the history in business, said the course was tions majors, but it should in-
. tionaddressingfinancial,inarket- signed primarily for students in, department is satisfied with its beneficial, but belated.
elude more elements from the
ing, public relations problems
the radio/ TV/ film.tracks, Cole capping requirement.
"They should have a course advertising and radio/TV /film
·facing the company and they
said it is equally relevant' for stu-
·.,
Students read about the era of
like this sooner," she said.
tracks.
pretend
itis
real-life situation.
• dents pursuing-careers in jour-
Franklin Delano Roosevelt and
Communications students, in-
Whether beneficial or not, the
Hache said he favored the
naHsm, advertising, and public then formulate a thesis question. eluding senior Kelly Dunne, have requirement has become an inte-
structure of the class,
relations.
They use research materials from a less positive view of the
gral part of Marist's curriculum.
''Instead of going for a textbook
Gus Nolan, chair of the commu-
the FDR library to attempt to an-
course.
Dean Kelly said the course helps
approach, it's more hands on,"
nications department,
also
swerit. Attheendofthesemes-
"lthinkthewholedesignofthe
to put a 'capstone' on every
he said.
agreed •that the capping class
ter, students present their find-
course needs a lot of help,"
student's academic career.
Hache agreed that the capping unifies everything.
ings to their classmates and fac-
Dunne said.
"I
think it makes us somewhat
course brings everything into fo-
!'It's a senior level course that ulty.
In her capping class, the stu-
unique among colleges and uni-
cus.
attemptsto capture the total edu-
• Olson said he believes the
dents are attempting to solve the
versities," he said. "Many col-
"It
seems that [professors]
cation experience and briiig it to-
course brings seniors together.
communications problem of
leges talk ab'Out a capstone de-
have been giving you pieces to
h " h
•d·
"There ·is a sense of shared multi-culturalism
on college cam-
vice, but very few put a require-
get er, e sai •

·
'"
d
·
the puzzle and now you geUo . Nolan said some teachers have purpose," he said:· "Students are puses. Dunne, whose concen-
ment 1or every stu ent m every
make sense of it,''. he said, .. • . been very· innovative in what
working on something similar."
tration is in advertising and pub-
major."
•. Kelly said other discipHnes they have d_o.ne'in'the c.apping

·ch¢mistrymajo):S .-:.....'--'-'--'-------------------------
: have been .. less suc.cessful ·at
·
· · ·· · - ,
•·
-
• · . - - • · • · · ·· • •
- • · -
course.:, , · · •
.
al·so have
a'.
'capping
ping experience. •
.. .
example, had students work in , with the ethical c.om-
achieving: the aims of the cap-
Professor David Grassmick, for course that deals
ti·o· "·:
·.
h
"Stu
1
de?ts dh9:
nobt
alt
ways shee groups ~it_h:
th~
pn>cess_.
of ere-: • ponents of the fi~ld ..
. t e. re at10ns 1p e ween t e
ating a fictional candidate who
According to Mat ...
: c:apping
course and the core," he
would run agaJnst Senator
thew Poslusny, as-
said:
Alfonse D' Amatoin
an
election. sistant professor of
•• Dan Okada, an assistant pro-
Students who were skilled· with chemistry,
the
• fess()r
of
criminal justice who
persuasion worked in that area, course looks at ethi-
. teaches capping~
said the course those in.advertising helped write cal decisions arid
proyides the opportunity forstu-
the.promotional spots, and oth-
their ramifications.
dents to think critically about
ersinradio/IV/filmpi:oducedthe
Students have
. what they have le~ed.
commercials. _ . •
mixed reactions to
• , , "My
philosophy is that.this is
Although
it
was rumored that the capping experi-
the· course where the student
separate cappingcourses for dif-
ence. • Senior ·psy ...
• should show me \Vhat they've
ferent tracks.· would be· imp le-
chology major Tif-
learned in the two or three years mented, this is not true. _:
fariy. Ippolito said
.
that they've been here," h~ sai4.-
According to Nolan, the media she thinks the cap-
•. Okada said aprobleminunder-
arts
depaitment·is going to have ping_' courses are
graduat~ education. is. sfud~n!5 a•capping course .tvailable·for 'benef:idAf:
., •
are not expected ioworkwith the students in the radioff.V/film
"It
helps you to in-
••
infonnation that they learn, .
tracks. Students with those con-
tegrate everything
"Someone opens a doorin your centrations wiH not: be iegu!red you've learned so
h~ad, pours in all this infonna- • to sign up for that section, but it
far and you get to
tion in your br~n, and you're
may be reserved for people in talk about it with
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4
The
Circle'·
:
..
Features.
Looking past graduation~ son1e
students prepare to
by BLi'mE MAusoLF
Staff Writer
While many students wonder
what their future holds, some
Marist undergraduates have al-
ready worked out one very impor-
tant detail.
Although most of their peers are
still searching for a love connec-
tion, a small number of students
are engaged.
Kelly Magee,a senior from
Portchester,
NY, has been engaged
since she graduated high school.
She says that she knew that en-
gagement was the right decision
because she wanted to go to col-
lege, so she was not ready for
marriage, but that she felt she
needed something more.
"I wanted to go to school and
finish my education, but I felt that
we needed a stronger commitment
to each other than just being girl-
friend and boyfriend," said
Magee.

Freshman Cardi Kramer, of
Pittsburgh, PA, who has been en-
gaged a year arid a month, also
felt that the college years were a
good trial fora relationship.
If we can withstand being in
college and apart. then we have
every right to get married," said
-
Kramer.·
Beth Dooley, a senior. from
Bricktown, NJ, said that being at
college didn't affect her decision
to get engaged a month ago.
"I just think we were both ready
for it, so we went to look at rings
and it happened," said Dooley.
For Karen Landry, a junior of
North Reading, Mass, becoming
engaged was a natural progres-
sion. At first, her fiancee was her
best friend, and engagement was
just part of the evolution of the re-
lationship.
"First we were best friends and
then we solidified that and it
starte~ to move toward, yes, I
want to be with this person for the
rest ofmy life," said Landry.
Junior Beth Torres, of
Middletown, NY, said she has
been through a lot with her fian-
cee. She believes that her engage-
ment in March was the right
choice. She said that they have
spent time apart, but the great
amount of trust, communication
and commitment in their relation-
ship brought them together.
"I just knew I wanted to be with
him after splitting up and seeing

who else
was
out
there. l missed
.
him too mucht said Torres:
Kramer said that she knew im-
me'diatelydial' her
7
fianc~
was.
the
'orie
for herJ
'
. ..

••

.
" I came home from our first

daie·ancl ltoldj:ny iriomTwas
going to marry this kid arid a year
later.we got engaged. When
you meet that. one person
you just
know,'' said
Kramer.
The engagements have
changed their experience
at Marist. Although it is a
willing sacrifice, it does place
some limits on their li\'es.
"It
definitely linuts your circle
of friends, and there are certain
things that girls
who
are engaged
just shouldn't do," said Kramer.
Torres and Dooley agreed that
they received a chilly reaction
from some of their male peers.
"A l_ot
of guys are more aware.
They don't want to talk, instead
they step back, like 'Uh oh, she's
taken'," said Torres.
"It's like an omen,
I
think
a
lot
of people are afraid to just talk
to you.
I
don't have as good of a
time as I used to; but that's the

sacrifice I choose to make," said
Dooley.



November.
30, 1995
. •
Landry said that there was defi-
nitely
a
sacrifice involved.
"It's hardto manage your time
between your friends and the
person you're
.engaged
to," said
Landry.
Kramer said that it is more re-
stricting, because instead of
thinking of herself, there's an-
other person she must always
worry about.

"You have to think is this some-
thing that if it were the other way
around
_would
I like it if he did
it?" Kramer said.
Magee, Landry and Torres are
planning on being married in
1997, and Dooley and Kramer in
1998.
...
Most of the students. wanted
to wait until after they graduate
from either Marist or graduate
school.
••

Adult survivor educates students on still silentissu~ of sexual-violence
~a~;:~!:·
.
"Donahue," and "Jenny Jones,"
Education is also important for
"I don't
~6i\i,b:t,;
0~
guys,
••
tims'. This, rapist'\vas c:los~ to
to speak of her experience. Fur-
families of victims, she said, be-
but in college guys/don't ask
graduation. He was studying to
It could destroy your room-
thennore, she was profiled in cause there is no rule-book titled, you out/' she said. "You just
become a teacher. He is now
mate or best friend. It could
''Glamour''
magazine.
.
.
uWhat To Do When My Daugh-
kind of meet somewhere."
working at Denny's iri Southern
haunt your little sister for life. It
McMillan said .hat she is on a
·
ter Gets Raped."
.
Sh~
_said
she·''thought" she
Florlcla;


• •
••
could even happen to you.
mission to educate others.' "As
Many people, she said, do not
:could
trilst this
man,
since he
was

:
.According to McMillan, he was
A8::kboanlpariel stood in
the
:wedu~::?
.~=:
in ine,
1
::ai-:
~f~JJ!"."
tllef are
~lt
am~•i."(u¥11i:?~
1
1°r
),uit:i1J,'1it:=
foreground of a ]ecture entitled,
Clearing up rnyths,,about
rapists

McMillan said. when she told

.
.
"H/t&>k' iri~tri.llis'piice· and
.
··•···
~l~;
sl~p~jaifat~g~t, ~ork.
"A Survivor's Story," which took and rape victims; she said; is one her mother she
:was
..
inappropri-' asked
me
Jor'.
it°driri1c.
trellised
·•
:-
in
~e-~y.
•.
~ai~ McMillan.
:'.For
place on Monday Nov. 6.
of her aims of educatioi{
• .

ately touchedn byhermalebaby:- •• • urt.til ~t,:~¢:ca#~;·#f
batT~s.i~g,"
::~J~i?~1i:~:::~
never felt
These anonymous quotes be-
"Rape has notlung to.do.with
·~itterattheageof4,
herreaction
saidMcMillan.
.
.
.•
...
·
...
_
••.
• ••••
•·
••
low, written by Marist students,
someone being oyercome with
~
was Sill!nce:::
;
.··•
..
A.f~~ f~i!~g grC>ggy,
slle said
"While, M:cMilJan said s~e
appeared on "The Wall of Silent
-
passion/'
..

M_cMiliari
:,
..
s·aid.
-

''Her ~ish
and
hope ana prayer
;.~,-i~.
cCluld b_ately keep her eyes
,
th
ought
th
e sentenc"?gwas
~a.tr,

.
Screams."
. •
,
.: .
·. .
...
)What's
so
.attractive
about a· 90:
,.
would~ to forget about it," said
-
open; and he pulled her jeans
a fe~ale Sludfnt said thatitwas
"My best friend w~ raped by
-
year
~ici:wo#ten:
or·
a·4.
year
oicf.
Mc~an, "but I remember it like

down, pulled lier undergarments unfair tl)e ~udience was 99.9 per-
her two brothers._Inever cc,uld boy?'\asked McMillan;
·.;'.!Cs
it was yesterday."

.
.
..
.
.
to.the side, andrapedhef
.•
~nt_fem~e.-:
•••
,

.
look at them again. 1 also was
about making another human
Unfortunately, M:cMijl@'~two

.
Som~ time after, McMillan said
<
•.
:~!Jes~~
w~ sh9t1Ici
be edu~at-
forced to have. sex wh_eJl
l
-~as
,;
being feel less than· a human be-
other sexual-violent ~~P,~riences it W:as
•an.
amazing cqincidence. m~
~~
':11.e.~
who
~
rei;ponstble
drunk. I hate a guy I neyer knew." ing."
.

.
.•

remain vivid for her,
as
well, she that the s~e ~an raped her best

,fo.rc:vtol!ltmg
us_: .
.
,
.•
._
•.
"I
know a 17 year old.young
:
Inaddition; she said thatcastra-
said.
.
.
·.·
.·.
,.
.
friend;Annette.
. .

.
'What good 1s 1tto educate all
man who was sexually assaul~
t.iop does not ensure safety for the
McMillan
said
that she was in
;

Years before McMillan said

tpe~e wpme~
?"
The student
by his younger cousin.·H~is
victim, since it isn't about sex.
10th gradewhen she passed:out
sheinitialiy.ouirlght refused to 3;',~e<i.
,
.: ,.

.
. .
.
bright, dynamic, but devastated
'
Rape, she said, is about control. at a party after drinltjng._

.
.
.
brin~
:
l!.er. llSsailant to
.trial
be-
.
,
;McMi1lan,
how.ev~r, said s~e
and full of anger."
. .
.
Rape victims
can
be penetrated by
"The next thing !knew. was I
cause she
·said
she knew how
po
d
ed
th
e few men m the audi.-
"I was raped by a student ath-

genitalia or an object.
was alone in someone's house, "
"they rape the victiffi all• over ence;
lete here at Marist in April. To-
••
''There was a case where a frat said
.McMillan.
"I. had a large. again• in court." But
·now,
she
••
S_he·reminded everyone that
day he walks around as if noth.:
·
gang brutally raped a girl with a football player on.top of me.No
said,. Annette gaye her the cour-

women can be sexually violent
ing happened, while I walk
pump bottleofCoJgate. It's about longer did I have rny_clothes on·.

age to press charges against


as welt· She said assailants can
around with my head down. I
degradingsomeoneissomeway," Nolongerwaslayirgin."
theirassailant.
..
..
beanysize,shape,or'color.
hate him very much but eventu-
said McMillan.
Mc~llan s~d her first experi-:
"It·
w~ no. l?nger about me. It
ally I will move on once again. I
More than anything, McMillan ence with sex was not the· soap-
was about
rny
very best friend in
will hold my head up high.''
said she wants people to avoid opera roman~ iniage she had an-
the whole' wiqe. world. It was
.. Sex was forced upon me more
making sexual violence a taboo lief pated,
~or~~~
it a c~o.ice.
aro.utthe women.
who stood asmy
than once. I felt dirty and sinful
subject
.
'My ftrst tilD~ wasn t m front maid of honor in my wedding a
.
that I didn't refuse more: My
"I want the vicious cycle to ofa cozy ftrepl~ce like I'd imag-
few years later,". said McMillan,
mind said no but my body dido 't
stop .. I want people to identify ined. It w_asn•~

'let me wait 'til

"and I r~ized when everyone
fight."
what it is," she said.
I'm married," said
McMillan,
"I, stays silent and suffers, another
Sue Lozinski, Champagnat
McMillansaidthatmosttimes,
didn'thaveachoice. Mychoice
oneisvictimized."

_
mentor and member of the Task
even the jury box isn't educated was take away from me.''
According
to
McMillan she was
Force for Sexual Violence Pre-
about rape.
This all occurred on her 16th one of 700 victims of this serial
vention, coordinated this pro-
"They think, 'this guy's [the birthday.
rapist.
gram.
.
assailant] a clean-cut guy, he's
According to McMillan, she
''That means there were 699
Presenter,ChristineMcMillan, good looking, whywouldhehave
was raped a second tim~ while other silent women out there,"
shared with the audience her ex-
to rape, he could get any girl he
~ndingAoridaState University said McMlllan, "and I was the
periences with sexual-violence
'Yanted. And what was she doing m 1989. Recently broken-off from firstto report iL"

after she was one of 700 victims
in his
apartment?"
said
a marriage engagement, she said
Upon investigation, it was dis-
of a serial rapisL She has also
McMillan. "'They judge the vie-
she was flattered that someone covered th'at this)nan kept a com-
appeared on ''Larry King Live,"

tiin.".
asked her out.
puter file cataloguing
a11
his vie-











































































i
i
Th~
~ircfe/~~veiiiber'
30,

1995
s
Dance ell.lb nieniberS bop 'til
the)'
clrOp
during their tµghto(fame


.,


.
.
.
.•.
-
~--
.

...
·.
.
.
.
.
;
·
..
·'
. .
·-
.
.

-·•: ..
by
CHARLorrE
PARTRIDGE
throbbing modern dance beat in
S iff
'.'.You
Kn.ow
Yi.
ou Want Me."
ta Write,:
Everybody seemed to have a
The Marist College Dance Club
different favorite routine ..
·.

recently filled the Nelly Gole_tti
Sarah
Lawrence-said; "I-liked
Theater with40 years of Ameri-

the Michael Jackson '.Beatit'
ro6-
can music and dance.
tine."

_
_
-
From "The Hop" to ''.Show Me

Kathleen Wisniewski
1rud
she
Love," the Marist College Dance
• .
preferred "Mortal Kombat" \\lith
.
Club recently "Danced Through· qieglow-in~the-<larkeffects,
while
the Decades."



.-.-

Tom Van Vranken said he enjoyed

_
The Theater was packed for the
"Flashdance."
.
Nov. 4 show, which .was the
._
"I khew··the people in it and I
club's first performance this se-
helped them with it," Van
mester.
Vranken said.
_
__-
The music went from a flirty
This was the first year that the
swing in "Sing, Siilg, Sing," to a
finale was split up because the
"N~ onein·the
·c1ub-.has
to have
·experience~·but
many do. One dancer in the club. even went to
Fame High School;''
-Melissa·McCaffrey, co--presidem
of Dance Club
club's 50 members could not fit
on stage all at once.
Christy McCormack, a dance
club member, said the club hav-
ing so many members this year
is not
a
problem.
"This way everyone was able to
dance to the different decades.
Also, we even have a guy in the
club this year," McCormack said.
According
to Melissa.
orlds
McCaffery,
a
co-president of the
dance club, experience is not a
requirement for membership.
"No one in the club has to have
experience, but many do. One
dancer
in the club even went to
Frune High School," Mccaffery
said.
Arianna Ali is one of the mem-
bers who has had dancing expe-
rience.
----- -
----
- --
--
-
__,.
__
-
--
---
- - -
----
==-=
7
=
®
:•rve
been dan~ingp.:Ofession-
--
·a11y
since
I
was
-four.
I went to
the Performing
Arts
Higll School,
like the one in the tnovie
FAME,"

Alisaid.
However, some Freshmen club
members said they just learned
how much w9rk dancing entails.
Brenda Bertolini said that the
club involves a great deal of
team-work, hard work and prac-
tice.
The audience seemed to appre-
ciate their work, as they clapped
along and screamed for their
friends.
Kerry Peterson, a student who
attended the performance, said she
especially enjoyed the show's va-
riety.
"I
like that there are so many
different forms of dances, and
there is a lot of talent," Peterson
said.

Erin Darmody is one student
who came to watch
a
friend dance.
"They had some good mov~s."
said Darmody.
Even the dancers, including
Megan Lacomchik, said they en-
joyed the show.
"It was
my
first time, and
I loved
it.
I am so happy to see all the
people here," Lacomchik said.
The Dance Club chose a new
advisor this semester, Nadine
Lewis from the HEOP office. The
club's former advisor, Vicki
Sarkisian from the Academic
Learning Center decided to give
the position to someone else, since
she had it for many years.
Nadine Lewis said she knows
the responsibility involved with
the club.
·"I
hope
I
can
fill
her shoes
well," Lewis said.
.
Lewis said she knew
about the
club before she became its advi-
sor.
"I admire the community ser-
vice they do, like
their
perfor-
-
mances with young people in the
community," Lewis said.
Lewis said she is happy she was
chosen to advise the club.
;
-·a~'ijiJ's,
i?J.f
:S\l)l~'{Jtt}}·1r···
:::
!':euy,
?ouetii
r~a!~
in
~~
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i























































....
·.•,_·--
.
6
..
.
TmiCIRCLE

Entr_r()R:li\t.-.-November30~1995
.
TH£.CiRCE£
The Student Newspaper of MaristCollege
·oacyl
Richard,
-Editor-in-Chief
Meredith Kennedy,
Managing Editor
Teri L. Stewart,
Spons Editor
Sue Fischer,
News Editor
Larry Boada,
A&E Edito_r
Holly Diaz,
Feaiure Editor

Brian Frankenfield,
Opinion Editor
When Newt Gingrich
closed down the
government two
Jen Forde,
B_usiness
Manager

weeks ago,was

G. Modele Clarke,
Faculty Advisor
he making a point
regarding··
government
policies or making
The Circle is published
every
Thursday. The opinions and views of this

newspaper do not necessarily reflect those of the Mari.st administrati~n
..
© Copyright, The Circle, 1995
his
own
holiday?
Editorial
Newt Gingrich: egotistical, selfish ...
_effective?
Enough work
already!
..
The Republican Agenda has come barreling into Wash-

Newt Gingrich and the new Hou~ Republic~s prom-
'Tis the season •••
for endless amounts of work!
ington like a runaway freight train, crushing everything
ised sweeping change. They promised. to pass· more
It seems that every year returning from Thanksgiving
in its path. In the black-and-white striped engineer cap is
legislation in the first hun~.days
of the 104th Con-
breaksymbolizes a lot more than just the beginning of
NewtGingrich,aman·whohasrnadea~areeroutofsquash-
gress than any befqre: them .. -In many respects, they
the Christmas season. It is more like the beginning· of
ing everything in his path.

•.
.
were successful. .
.
.
.
the all-nighter season.
For those not entirely clear on the matter, 1994's e1ec-
Mr. Gingrich was effective in getting his party to sup-
Professors use the last two-and-a-half weeks of the
lions put Gingrich's party back in power, puttjng Newt in
port and vote in favor of most of the legislation collec-
semester between Thanksgiving break and final exams
the position of Prime Minister of the United States. Per-
lively known as The Contract with. America. The rea-
to assign all of their papers and projects to fill their
haps that's not an entirely accurate account, but it sure
.
son that most voters believe that this Congress has
grade book.
seems to be the way N_ewt sees it.
been ineffective is that most of this Jegislation did not
Why is it there always has to be a mad rush of assign-
There has been a great deal of media attention about an
get any further than the House. Most was either de-
ments at this time of year?
increasing number of Americans who dislike Gingrich,•. feared in the Senate, or has not been
·voted
on yet. This
I will acknowledge the minority out there, the few pro-
despite all of the "good work" done by the-104th Con~ is one reason I believe that this Congress is losing sup-.
fessors who purposely design their syllabus so most of
.
gress under his Spe_akership.
.

port, because people do not see the ultimate end result:··
the workload is completed during the first thiee-quar-
•.
For one thing, "good work" is a relative term. If you are
the legislation being signed by the President.
.
ters of the semester.
I
thank you for that.
.
••
in~theminority of the population who makes enough.. IcaI,l not say that
I
agree with all of Gingrich's id~on
But now forthe majority. It's as if all the teachers hold
money to be affected by the elimination of the capital
politics .. Mr. Gingrich and, indeed, mQst of the
.new
·
a summit before adjourning for Thanksgiving to plan
gains tax,:you probably support Newt: (Especially if
Y':>U House Republicans represent the views of the far:-ryght
each student's fate.

own a gun.)



wing of the Republican Party:
•·
.
.
It is a way for the professors to get even for all of
On the other hand;if, like most people; you
.
Balancing the Federal Budge_t
issoI11e-
those homework assignments· we didn't bother doing
actually have to work for a living, are not
thing·thatneeds to be doneifwe do'not
.
and for snoring d_uring
those long
lectur~s in
our 8_;9()an:i
.
. able to,make ends meet, are a
_seniQr
citizen;
·
want to find America bankriipfor seriously· --
classes: ·.'
,.
••
,
;.



''" ··,:"'
c..·'·
••
,.



hav~chlidreniiipublicsch(}()ls;pranycom:.
'iiideb(fot'the
next SOO'years:Tdo'not
.•.
The last two weeks of the semester areone big,
"I
told
bination thereof, it is likely you' think·.
he is
feel, however, that balancing the budget

you so!"
doing a prettyrnttenjob,
• , •
,
.

.
at the expense of the elderly, which Mr.
I told you to budget your time.
A key provision of the GOP's "Contract with America"
Gingrich and his band of right-hand men seem to think
I told you to keep up with your reading.
is to balance the budget by 2002, ensuriiigthattrillionsof.
is okay,'is the way to do it. Cutting Medicare by $270
I told
·you
not to miss class.
dollars worth of debt is not passed ori to future genera:-
billi9n, when jt has
'been
figured out that cuts of only
Now that the annual 'J\.11
Work and No Play' summit
••
tiohsofAmericans. It is a·truly admirable goal that can
:$9C>°6mfori
aie~necessary to_saveJhe prograni,.is a bit
has concluded, the all~nighters will begin. As the snow
hopefully be achieved. The methods being used to meet
extreme'.
<
•.
..
.•.
.


.
.
.
_
.. •
·.
.
.
falls outside our bedroom window and we wish we were
this goal, however, are highly objectionable.
.
. .
.
.
.
.
.
J
do agree witll Mr. Gingriph that the Welfare pro
gr-~
home putting up Christmas decorations with the family,
The budget is being balanced by cutting social pro-
,
is one· of the central causes of America's family-11;11d
piles of work sit on our desk.



grams, deep cuts in.edu_cation,
and other detestable acts.
_homeless.problems.
Welfare leads people to become
This is what I have to look forward to bewteen now

These cuts are necessary to make up for all the tax breaks
· ·what
is kriown as dependent. They depend
on
'the
gov-·
and final exams. I am sure niost of you have.~ similar if
given to the v.ealthy andl:>ig·business,
and various kick.:.· ernmeJit for money, the payments 9f which will. prob-
·
not tougher schedule than this. Good luck and try to
backs
t9
special interest groups, As repo~ed in
_last
week's
.
ably never stop and, therefore, they become apathetic.
enjoy the snow falling outside you window, even if you
-
issue of Ne\Vsweek,
the Republican plan offers a tax cut
They lose their sense of responsibility as a citjzemand
have clear the pile of books off your desk to see it.
twice as generous as
iheon~
proposed by the president.
usually pass that value on to:their children;
..
.........................
~
Fraternity hazing gone too far
The hazing process has long been part of the tradition
initiating new members. into fraternities and sororities.
However, hazing can sometimes be taken tooJar. There
are numerous stories circulating out there of college stu-
dents who end up· in the hospital, or even worse have
died, from these acts. I was recently infonned of an im-
pending hazing act at Marist that may endanger not stu-
dents, but animals. The following letter was sent via e-
mail warning theMarist community of a possible hazing
tragedy:

"I am a college student at Moravian College in
Bethlehem, PA. Tonight, it has come to my attention
that one 6f the fraternities on your campus is.
involved in hazing activites. I do not know the name
of this fraternity, but
I
know that they have gotten
into trouble-recently for hazing. On Hell Night, they
plan to lock their pledges overnight in
a
closet with a
fork, a knife, and a cat. Over the course of the night,
the pledges have to kill the cat. This is unethical,
disgusting, and undennines the concept of education
and the Greek system. Please do whatever is in your
power to stop this."
l
hope initiating new fraternity members does not have
to require such grotesque measures. This is indeed to
slap in the face to the Greek community at Marist. I do
not want to misrepresent the fraternities that are not in-
volved in such hazing, but
I
hope this letter stops the
ones that are.
••
This is where theoig government shutdown comes in.
The present welfare system is also: losing Jarge
To actually see Newt Gingrich say that a major reason for
·
amounts of money to fraud; If something is not done to
the shutdown was because he gof snubbed aboard Air
revamp this system, not only will Anierica
be
in finan-
Force One was the proverbial nail in his coffin. When this
cial trouble, it will be iri moral trouble also;·
...
theory was just speculation, it could be chalked up ~o
The_
House Republicans, as an entity, has been very
The Daily News trying to make some money for a change.
effective: It is not very often in American politics that a
But, when he actually verified this, even the GOP faithful
party bec~mes so unified behind: one ptlrp()se
•-:--:'.°
that
couldn't stand by their man. Republican Rep. Dave
purpose being to rework the way America works, to
.Weldon
of Florida said that the speaker "needs to
·go
make it more efficient and prosperous. J'l]at being the
home and take
a
nap".
.
ultimate task, The Contract with America also contains
Never before has a rev9l_utiori
been led by such an ego-
legislation that. would lower our
taxes
significantly.
tistical, selfish, self-loving individual. (With the possible
I;ower taxes has always been a staple of Republican
exception of the MTV Revolution.) To all the dittoheads
platfonns. Why?
with their blinders firmly in place, Gingrich truly is the
Becauselowertaxesaregoodfortheeconomy. It gives
solution to America's woes. Can this country's problems
more back to the people to invest in American busi-
possibly be solved by !l person who w_ill
shut down the
ness, and also promotes people to spend more on prod-
government because he had to ride
_in
c.oach?
ucts

sold by those businesses. Another target of the

His
stubborn temperament is not the only reason he
Contract was to make government more efficient. I,l the
should not be in charge of the budget. The Speaker's
first hundred days of the .I 04th Congress, the Republi-
office spent nearly $70,000 more in the first quarter of
cans eliminated several excess committees, saving the
1995 than previous Speaker Tom Foley spent in the quar-
taxpayer money.
.
ter immediately prior io that. Also, according to the At-
The Republicans in Congress, including Mr.
lanta Journal-Constitution, Newt's home district of Cobb
Gingrich, have been constantly criticized for trying to
County Georgia receives almost twice as_
much money as
make America a better place for our children. Now, like
all of New York City. I suspect thatNewtcouldn'tbalance
I said before, I do not think that Newt or the other Re-
his own checkbook, much less the federal budget.
publicans in Congress are gods, or that what they say
The whole budget debate conies down to this one point:
is right all the time, but I do believe that the basic phi-
Politicians can not balance the budget. Not as long as
lo:;ophy of the Contract is good for us.
·they continue to vote for retro-active pay-rasises, hand
I also believe that one reason that.the Democrats are
out money to special interests, and are more concerned
so quick to criticize Newt and the things that the Re-
with how they'll be portrayed on the evening news, as
publicans in the House are trying to do is that they did
opposed to actually getting some work done.
not think of them first.
-----------------
Christian Bladt is
The Circle's
political columnist
Matt
Wolpert is
The Circle's
political columnist















THECIRCLE
VIEWP.OJNTS
November 30, 1995
7
Letters to the Editor
Thanksgiving,
BlackFnday,
and
that Special
Christmas
Spirit
We are tired of eating off out floor!'
Editor:
Since the last week in August, the ten residents in Townhouse
A3 have ~n eating our meals at a table that barely seats half of
• us. There 1s, however, another table in our house but unfortu-
nately, it Jacks the fourth leg needed to make use ~fit.' This table •
presents a danger
as
it has fallen many times;_ We have coniacted
the appropriate personnel regarding the situation and have been
told on several occasions that a new table is on the way. However,
four months later, we are still taking turns at the kitchen table and
fighting for a seat. Is this task of getting a kitchen table too big for
Marist to handle?

The seniors of Townhouse
A3
Update: Before the paper went to print, we were informed· that the
residents received their table, and would like to thank Housing for
being so·prompt
Since when do we have to check our bags
at the dooru,pon
entering
dorms?
F.ditor:
Upon entering the Champagnat dorm on the of November 20,
_ 1995; I
was asked by the security guard to open my book bag.
Being a reasonable .person,
I preceded to open my bag. When I
realize.<J
the persm~ before nie
did not have .to open their bag,
I
asked the security guard why he in".estigated my bag. To-my
amazement he answered because
I
can do that.
I
was very
offended.
First, by the fact that I have had the sam~ book bag since I came
to Marist in Fall 1993, lived in th~ dorms for two. years and not one
_
of the security guards have ever asked what's in my bag. My bag
looks the same today as it has looked the past two years.
Then,
I was -offended because I picked to have my bag checked_
and others were not. If Marist security is so concerned about
what people are going to bring into the· d9rms then every single
person that ·enie~ the dormi; sJ:tould have 'their bag checked.
It
should µot
be
one person here'and there'. .
Okay, here it goes ... Welcome • The Thanksgiving holiday also
back from Thanksgiving break sets up another important day
everybody! Hooray for turkey! here. in America; Black Friday.
Three cheers for stuffing! Hip- The day after Thanksgiving al-
filp for mashed potatoes! Hur.:. waysmarksthebeginningofthat
rah for pumpkin pie and cherry commercial monster known, sim-
pie and apple pie! (No cheddar ply as the dreaded "Christmas
cheese with my apple pie, thank Seaso~" to retailers.
you very much.)
If you live anywhere within
Let's hear it for those darn in- proxirnityofaretailcenter(amall
ventive ·pilgrims who had the preferably) than you know what
smarts to invent a holiday that
I
mean when
I
say Black Friday,
simply focuses around eating! because it
is like some sort of hell
Let's give it up for gluttony! Give on earth.
proper praise to extra poundage!
What happens on this fateful
Put down that well-worn copy day is the stores open extra early
of
War and Peace and think so this mass of temporarily in-
about it for just a minute. Who sane and excessively caffeinated
• else but us crazy Americans
moms and dads (mostly moms)
would invent a holiday that is can run around like it's 1983 and
completely based on eating?
they are trying to buy the last
There are no gifts exchanged·, Cabbage~Patch kid on earth. It's
no vows taken, no candles re-
absolutely bananas.
quired to be lit, no special ser-
The traffic comes to a stand-
vices to attend ... essentially no still for miles around any com-
rules at all except the ceremonial mercial retail area. Buyers' eyes
feeding of thy face, and ( depend- • gloss over and lose their ability
ing on the anal retentiveness of to read anything except "Sale"
the mother) getting a little
and "50% Off."
dressed up for eating the bird.
Normally civilized elderly
The gorging of oneself at the women elbow each other out of
family through and maybe the the way like it was the Stanley
dressing up part are the only Cup Finals.just to get at the rep-
rules for Thanksgiving, and yet Iica Dr. Who scarf that would be
somehow this is number two on perfect for cousin Larry or that
the chart of important American new pair of tube socks Uncle
holidays.
Finisher has been eyeing since
Thirdlr, I ani very'upsetat the answer I got from the s~urity ,.
__
gmµ;gy~p~~
I
~1£~.V!.hY.~l!>~gJX?fi-:~~~p_g_
ch~lc~_:_:c.1f~~-ll!!!tis
:C>.
ioing to exercise _their
r:ight to:check the bags o"r/students'iiierle:-'\tf:;'¥
they should know why they are and. be able to explain to the:

studen(why. The security guards should learn this when they
leru:nthat they can check bags.
_
Another security guard from the security office told me that the
onlfpersbn tharcould ten me why
this happened is the guard that
-""~ on duty but since he could not tell me, I guess. this means I am
out of luck onan explanation. While this guard also said he was
sorry"this happened, s_orry
does not take back the situation I went
through.
• _
__
I, as a_
stude11t
at Marist College, feel thatl pay too much money
to be treated this way and not get an explanation. I do not want an
apology or anything of that nature because it does not solve
anything. All I want is for other students not to have to go
through the same situation.
Carla Pollard, Sophomore
Be aware of your rights regarding
The Priv~cyAct of 1974
Editor:
I would like to inform all students about the 197 4 Privacy Act
and how
it may affect them. ·The Family Educational Rights and
Privacy Act of 1974 specifically provides that a school may safely
provide what is termed "directory infonnation," such personal •
- facts as name, ad~,
telephone number, etc., to third parties.,
Matjstwm release at various times the following information
unless requested in writing not to do so by the s_tudent: student
name, address, telephone number, date and place of birth, major
field of study, degrees and awards, dates of attendance, participa-
tion in officially recognized activities and sports, weight and
height of members of athletic teams, and most recent previous
educational institution attended.
Students must notify the Office of the Registrar in Writing
should they not want information made available. A form can be
obtained from the office should you not wish
this information to
be released.
-
Judy Ivankovic,
Office of the Registrar
Letters to the Editor can be submitted by
e-mailing The Circle at HZAL or drop-
ping them
in campus mail addressed to
The Circle
summer basketball season.
Ori Black Friday that Christ-
mas spirit that you see in all
those old movies is out the
window; no room for any
pleasantJimmy Stewart-isms like
"Nice weather today, Mrs.
Jones," or even the polite "Ex-
cuse me, Mr. Feltcher." It's more
like "Hands off that cardigan
Reverend Smith or you'll be
giving
this weeks' sermon with
a lot less teeth!"
If you listen real close you can
often hear the cries of "Take no
prisoners" emanating through-
out the mall. It's also great fun
to see the folks at the ATM ma-
chines around
this time.
People get so delirious when
they are in this buying frenzy
that they start to think the A1M
is a slot machine that has just
hit big.
"Look! Look!
I just punched
my birthdate on this keypad here
and money comes out! Free
money! Freemoney! Outtamy
way! This machine is pa yin' off!
These slots are looser than on
my honeymoon in Atlantic City.
I've
got to get back to
Brookstone so
I can buy even
more expensive useless gad-
gets!"
-------
Scott Wyman
is
The Circle's
humor columnist.












































I:,

November 30, 1995
.........
'.

.-
•.
..
. ..

Takihg--a
Closer
Look·at
. News
and
'.fieviews
••
Junior
ClaSs
lip.sync
shoW
wows
'em
with
five
Sl}pera~.ts·

• • •
•~,;.,

"It was hard to decide be-
everyone had
~
goodtinie."
by
KARA
FLYNN
Staff Writer
l'he audience is full. The spot-
light is on. Five guys are doing a
kick line, dancing and fanning the
letters to the song "YMCA."
These guys aren't The Village
People, they are members of the
Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity.
This is just one of the five acts
that participated in the Junior
.Class
Lip Sync contest on
Wednesday, November 15.

The Cabaret was filled with
members of the junior class and
others from the Marist commu-
nity who enjoyed free food and
a raffle.
Patrick Mara, junior class sec-
retary and a participant in the
contest said that it was good to
see such a large turnout..
"I hope that people retain the
energy froni this lip sync contest
and apply it to helping the junior
class," Mara said.
Pat Reynolds and Chris Kadus
did numerous "high fives.,_

tween
.
the acts," said

Dressed in plaid bathrobes and

Nocella "I'm glad they all slippers, Katie Trifilettj.,'and
Cara
got prizes."
>
McCaffrey danced andJaughed
The contest was hosted as they perfonned the song ~~Re:-
by Chris Merrow who liv-
spect" by Aretha Franklin.
_
ened up the crowd with
Trifiletti. said. the contest was
·each•
act he introduced.
fun and it was a good opportu-
-
His comical attitude added nity for her.

.
to the fun and entertaining
"I transferred here and I wanted
acts of the evening.
to get involved," said Trifiletti.
-
One act gave the audi-
"It was good to do something
ence a flashback to the 70s
and not just sit and watch."

as they perfonned
••sun-
Other judges were Anna
shine Day" by the Brady Kuczynski, Mid-Rise resident di-
Bunch.
In
their bell bot-
rector, and Mary Murphy from
toms and polyester suits,
Student Activitie_s.
the participants played the
parts of all the favorite
A group of juniors stole the show lip synching the Brady Bunch theme. Bi;ady characters and even
Laline drew the winning raffle
·ticket
John Flaherty was entitled
.
to a free class ring donated by
Jos.tens. He also won four tick-
ets to the Blessid Union of Souls
shook hands and danced around
Denise Tomasetti as she pre-
tended to sing the song "Hand
in My Pocket" by Alanis
Morrisette.
This original act wort first prize
and a check for $97 dollars which
was donated by Jostens Com-
pany._ Local businesses from
Hyde Park donated prizes for all
the p_articipants.
The acts were judged on.four
categories: originality, lip sync,
creativity, and choreography.
Judges gave each act quality
points for how well they fulfilled
each category.

Jennifer Nocella, vice president
of clubs and a judge of the con-
test said she thought all the acts
were great.

did the famous Brady
wave.
One duo decided on Bjork's
.
song
."It's
Oh So Quiet," a track
off of her latest album.
Chris Laline, junior class presi-
dent and an organizer of the con-
test said that contest was much
better than he ha~ expected.

"We put a lot of work into the
contest,'' Laline.said. "I'm glad
concert .
Laline said that he thought that
the members of the junior class
were really special.
"This was clearly demonstrated
tonight," he said.
Pierce Brosn9n revivesJames Bond's spy action and adventure
by AMIE LEMIRE
Staff Writer
"Shaken ... not stirred."
·There's
a new Bond in town
·and
his name
is.Pierce Brosnan.
After years
of trying to break
into the HoUywood A-List, with
attempts like 'Remmington
Steele',
'Mrs.
Doubtfire,' and
'The Lawnmower
Man,'
Brosnan
Movie Review
finally succeeds with this latest
.
addition to the James Bond
legacy.
.
'Goldeneye' opens with Agents
007 and 006 lurking around a
Russian chemical plant Their
intrusion is quickly discovered
and a spectacular gunfight
breaks out, complete with close-
·ups
of Russian soldiers getting
shot and falling over rai1ings. 006
is captured by the enemy, but
Bond narrowly escapes, running
for his life as the plant erupts in a
fiery explosion.
Right after this, the opening
credits
run,
and
gasping
Rather, Brosnan'sperfectly hand-
tuned to Tina
whh each at-
.
some good looks and icy blue
Turner belting
tempt to lock
..
eyes give hiln
a
cool, aioof atti-
out the title
Bond between. tude: Yet, he has the face that
·song as naked
'.her
legs. • .
was born to be Bond. He looks

girls dance atop··
.
-
The other

as gorgeous in a tuxedo playing
g
o
l
d
Bond girl
.
is· blackjack in Paris, as he does in
guns(lovely!)
Tz
a.:b
ell
•a

dirty khakis rappelling the side
The movie
.
Scorupco who
of a building in the jungles of
flashes forward
.
plays Natalya, a
Cuba.
-



nine years, and
Russian com-
Bond's arch enemy in 'Golden-
Bondis called to
.
puter'.program-
.
ey~'Jshisformerfriend006, who.
his most dan-
mer~ Natalya is
somehow managed to survive
gerous mission
Bond's love in-

thatexpfosionin~ussiawithonly
yet. The Rris-
.
'·terest,
but she
rnirior scarring; 006 enipl9ys Xe:-
sian government·..
also keeps
himiri.
nia Onatopp.to help him
.destroy
has stolen a

•.
line, matching
13ond; he's !)ever forgiven Bond
nuclear. bomb
his one~liners
fordesertinghirnnineyearsago.
aptly
:
named
,
withsomeofher
006 has the Goldeneye, and the
Goldeneye, and
own.
two agents fight to the death for
it'sBond'.sjobto

Pierce Brosnan pQssession ofit. Xenia wants to

get iL back in-
is dashing
as
the have Bond, only to kill him when
tact. As he sets Brosnan, Pierce Brosnan, as the impeccable James )fond.

latest addition
she'~ finished with him. Yet, the
about his jour-
••



• •
-
• •
'
0
••




to the ranks of
harder he battles her, the more
ney to find Goldeneye, he en-
tims to deaih with. her thighs,
007 men, taking his placenextto
..
excited she gets, the more she
counters a Russian
femme
fatale . reaching her. sexual pinnacle as
Sean Connery,
,George
Lazenby, wants

him; in one scene; he
who has a fondness for S&M the la.st breath of air passes
Roger Moore,- and Timothy
flings· her onto a scald!ng grate
foreplay. Famke Janssen is deli-
through her victim's lips. She
Dalton .. Brosnan makes a better
(the kind that are in saunas), and
ciously wicke4 as the· Russian finds a challenge in Bond, and Bond· than Moore; Lazenby, or
inst~ad of crying out in pain, she
assassin Xenia Onatopp; she
tries to put the squeei:e on him
Dalton, but· he lacks Connery's
has a habit of squeezing her vie-
.
every chance she gets, snarling devilish chann and sexuality.
Please see
Bond
on page 9.
Attention procrastinators:
Val-Kill a gr.eat
way to f'kill" a·lazy.stlldy clay
At last.
_There
is finally a place
nearby for procrastinators to
spend a mindless afternoon
away from studying.
Val-Kill, on Route 9G in Hyde
Park was the home of Eleanor
Roosevelt from 1945 until her
death in 1962. In 1977, the home
became open to the public, and
tours are given through the cot-
tage.
The cottage actually
began as a furniture factory, run
by Eleanor and her. friends,
Nancy Cook, Caroline O'Day,
and Marion Dickennan during
early 1920's.
The women were trying to help
fann workers learn manufactur-
ing skills in addition to agricul-
ture,
.
However; the factory
closed during the Great Depres-
sion because people could no
longer afford to buy their goods.
After the business folded,
Eleanor converted the building
into two apartments for herself
and her secretary, as well as sev-
eral guest bedrooms to handle
the
overflow
from
the
Roosevelt's
main
home,
Springwood.
After Franklin Roosevelt's
death in 1945,Eleanormoved into
Val-Kill permanen~y. In the years
prior to her death in 1962, she en-
tertained a variety of guests rang-
ing from Adlai Stevenson to John
F.Kennedy.


At the beginning of the tour,
there is a very infonnative 20-
minute movie. on the life of
Eleanor Roosevelt. It tells of the
variousroles she played through-
out her life, including wife, politi-
cian and most importantly, hu-
manitarian. This rµovie is defi-
nitely the best pan of the tour.
The tour of the home itself is
rather dry. Due to fire hazards,
only the first floor is open to the
public. So, one winds up only
seeing part of_ the secretary's
apartment, the Jiving and dining
rooms, and the porch.
However, they do have pictures
of her bedroom so that one has
an idea of what it looked like.
Most of the furniture_
pieces in
the house are rep~uctions be-
cause a lot of it was sold after
her death.
. On a niore positive note, the
cottage
is filled with original pho-
tographs, which give visitors a
greater insight to Eleanor's pri-
vate life. Although much of the
tour guide's talk was reiterated
from the movie, he did have some

bad thing after all.

.
The Eleanor Roosevelt National
Historic Site is open seven days
a week from May through Octo-
:t>er,
from nirie a.m. to five p.m ..
The site
_is
closed from Thanks-
giving Day through the last day

of February.
During November, March anct
April, the site is open on week-
ends only, also from nine to five.
Admission to both the grounds
and the cottage
are
free, but do-
nations are welcome:-
original anecdotes from the
r------------.
former first lady's life.
Upcoming
Events
Overall, one could learn just as
Gilded Age Christmas-Mills
much from watching the movie
Mansion Historic Site. De-
and then wandering the grounds
cember8-31.
on his own. In fact, the procras-
Site is decorated in turn-of-
tinator might even decide that
the-century style. Call (914)
studying for a test isn't such a
889-8851 formoreinfonnation.
1












































-··
·-··
-···-··----------------------------
by
.CINDY
BoTICELLO

Staff Writer
rnately $300.
.
gamers with high speed parallel
According to the corporate fact processing
and enhanced
sheet of Sony Computer Enter-
memory storage," stated the fact
Sony has brought the future of tainment of America (SCEA) on· sheet.
video

game pl~ying to the
the

World
Wide
Web,
·•
PlayStation users like Gina
present with its launch of Sony PlayStation was created by Sony Trapani; Student StaffCoordina-
PlayStation, a 32-bit, compact because they believed in bring-
tor of the Donnelly Computer
..
disc-b~ed .system that reflects

ing the video game experience to Lab, said they were very im-'
the experience of arcade gaming.
.
a new level.
pressed with SonY PlayStation.
·
PlayStation, like its competitors
''The PlayStation was created
'The PlayStation is 32-bit," said
Sega Saturn and 3DO, employs
because ofthe comp.llny's
b!!lief Trapani. ''Thus; it is faster, has
CD-:-ROM
technology and 32-bit that consumers we~ ready,foi:'the better graphics;:" great sound
processors to enhance graphics 'next·.
genei:ation',:,,:.,of
·quality
and mo.re.options·be~·
and.stereo sou.nd quality. Btit"is
:systems
... The CD~b¥ed-·sy$tem
_
cause it processes 32 bits of in-
<:heap~r, selHng for ap~roxi-
creates a true 3-D environinentfor
.
formation ~ta thrie:'.'..:
:
,
··•.
''There is a lot more hand-eye
coprdination required. It is not
abput hitting the right button, it
is abou_t
hitting the right combi-
nation of buttons depending on
the game."

PlayStation user· Heather
Rodriguez, a Marist College jun-
ior, said the various camera
angles that are used in games
like Toshinden set PlayStation
apart from game systems like
··Nintendo.

SCEA
.
announ~ed
.
that over
300,000: Sony Play_S_tati~~
con-
soles have been sold since its
United States release on Septem-
ber 9.
Peter Roithmayr, merchandising
director at The Electronics
Boutique said on the World Wide
Web that PlayStation is among
the top-selling video game con-
soles.

'.The Sony PlayStation contin-
ues to be the dominant video
.
game hardware at our stores,
by
far outselling the Sega Saturn,"
said_
Roithmayr.

iiliiisit~)f
'fh'
th~1iQ1e
Willi'iiiti~ttlt
~t¢
1
f.''
•.
1,;,swo,«.:Ol)l

~~~~~~~':'11!/;:id
'Ace,·
::~··~~~t:~;.~::~~
.
Nite. Cap Tavern
;
:
Staff
Writer
·

,
-
Hollywood has had
a
craving for noying than funny or: stupid./'
•••
The
-:p~fcouple
C>f
years have
Mr.
i
Carey, anJLthe:s~pid
coin~
• .
As dumb
~
th_e
s~ory is sup-

provided nof.est for the wickedly edy._
You know what? It $ell$.


posed to be m this k1~d of film,
funny JimCaiey.
·
Directed by Steve Oedekerk, 'Ace II's' plot wasn t even a
ffis: current release, • Ace
'Ace II' begins by mocking the. slightly clever or zany as th
Ventura Pet Detective: When
opening scene from Renny
original.
.
, .
NatureCalls 'isforsomereason
,
llarlan
1
s 'Cliffhanger' to an
Youcan'ttakeanythiogseriot1s
one of the' season's fnostly
equally diso?enti~g degree. .
about a stupid coTedy like this
.
'
• •

.However,
JUSt hke Stallone m but when the story lacks
'Cliffhanger,' Ace CaJ!not
hold on zaniness and the jokes are fla
.
'to
the rescued. -
and recycled, it's kind of
It seems· that. the sacred
·great.
downer.
65 Washington St.
Poughkeepsie, NY
486-9195
·:-~~!:.~!t::s~~:i~~eu~~~.
c1::;~:t~~e~;u;!1:;i!
Tuesday Night - $.75 drafts
s~meonecangetitback;thetribe
,the
big screen !O let go a~d ex-
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will for some reason,
be
destroyed plode as a physical comedian. It
··.
.
by another local ~ne.
was original and fun. U~fortu-
Monday & Sunday Nig•
ht - $3. 00
It makes sense nght?
nately, 'Ace II' does not p1ck-u
.
Most of the new humor was ei-
where the first one left_
us off,
pitchers 9pm on.
ther beaten to death by the com-
Grade: C-
'
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in
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',
......
11.
M~t,t,:§:;~~$~tl?ijll~
W~ri.ftQJe~ve:NEC
with a championship
.

'bjt~~tSffe.i_u·
;
•.
·-e:
;:?~~~Ji~in,g':tp
j4rt}9~_
p~in~.
goard'
:

ye~: aridJ triedJo replace th:11!
·,
'
'
··•
'
'._'We
can play against any
~($ia.ff,Writtr..'.
. .
·:
.
·,tRandY..~~carn.~£•,~~{-'.:,
'· •
·•-·
_
a~_~est as poss~bl~,
<·Maganty
teamifourdefcnseistherc,".
.
~-_,·,
:),~:::,•
---·._
.·-·::·-.·
.
.-:
'.'We.mt1st:t,~lce_th_~sse~onstep
said ..
-·'

..

.. _-_
·
Encarnacionsaid. "Offense
Tuey aie:preclicted
to
.fiQfsh,
.,_·b.y<s(ep/and~fi?.f_getahead'of
::
.•
_
The c~ac~ng staff brought in
will al\l.'.ays
be there. We
thirdintheNoitli~t'Cortfe~.iice
..
••
0Li_rselves;•~:-'En¢arna~i9p:said
.. three newcomers
to the
mu_st play defense every
but this· \Von't' s·atisfy'
the Me11
;_s<
·_
':'~@i~f
7
1y,:~e-~e
looking ~t
:the
_
backc?urt iii: sophomore Tomar
game-every time.''.

Basketball team th_is
:y~~:·
~ey

,natt_~nal
:toufllru:p_en~_.::

: • •

Kami, fre~hn:ian B?bb~ J pe
Magarity felt that the
want to go airthe'way·to_·the.
•.
This_w!ll
no! ~ean easy_t~k to

Hatton_,andJumor_ChrisOnll.
.
team justhas to step it up
NCAA Tournament. .

..
•.
-',
.
• ~c~~phsh with ~e competition

Kami who shares control of the
another level, especially the
After finishing i~ s~ond place'·
·-:~at
~~,sq~ces.
:.
.·,
.
point with Ra~dy Encarnacio~ is
more experienced players.
last season when predicted. to:,~
• "{
A~cor~1ng to, Magan!y,
-
the. the first Israeh to play at_
Marist.
Kareem Hill feels that the
finish fifth
arid
the previous
·sea:-'
team$: that are ~uppose~•.
to
be
:Hat~on.
played onthe Puerto
team will be more exciting
son finishing fourth after
-
being·.
:go_o~
are actually goo4·this Y,ear. Rican National Team the past two
to watch.
predicted to end up in the sevi

Hew~ referring to Rider Univer-

years.
.
"We
control ourown des-
enth spot, head coach
-Dav·e-.
sit}'. <ll!d
¥on01outh'University..
Dav~on Bethea is the only
tiny," Hill said. "We just
Magarity hopes the trend will

,"~d~~
is,retumillg four out of
newc~mer to the frontcourt:
·:
have to be hungry."
continue this year. Marist is pre-

th~rr fly~ starters fro111
'last_
year
..
S~mor guard Danny Bastl_e
is
.
The Red Foxes will be
dieted to finish third.
,
ani:t Monmouth has the same
commgoffanall-conferenceJun-
playing tough teams this
"There has been
ic\.
gradual
startingpve.
_
_
.
i?r y~ar. Basile is six_th
in the na-
season • outside of the
climb,
a
natµraJ progression over
Man~t l~st

tw<? starters to
hon
1
?
free throws with 8~. l %.
Northeast Conference·.
the past two years," Magarity
graduation
m
forward Gregg

Semor center Al.an Tomidy was
They travel to
LSU
on Dec.
said. "Hopefully this year will Chodkowski and guard Dexter given a unanimous selection to
29 and play Manhattan Col-
be the payoff."
Dunbar.
..
.

the_ pre-season all-conference
lege at home on Jan. 3.
The team must remain focused
"We lost two key_
players this team.
"Every game is tough, so
Tomidy has high expec-

.
Ci rcle phoro/ Chris Bcrinalo
we must take one game at a
NOAH'S
ARK
ANTIQUE BAR
-&
EATERY
--
ffl
PoUCIHKEEPSJ&
1
9 fl'AYOlllft
GATHERING
PLACE 19 ALSO A GREAT PLACK TO GIET
TOGIETH&lt
l"OR L.UNCH. THERE
IS SOMIETHING.
ON OUR NEW MENU
TO
PLEASE
IEVICIIY PALA.TE.
OUR
KITCHEN UI NOW
0
0Pl:N
LATER
POil
YOUR
·CONVENIENCE
•.
EN.JOY'
DINNER· BIQl'ORE
OR~
A SHOW Oil .JOIN
ua
POil TH'- GAME

ON ONE OP' OUR BIG SCIUEIEN T.V.S
EN.IOY
NOAKS
,SOON--TO-BE
FAMOU■
HAPPY
.
HOUJt-JWKRY' Wl:DNDDAY
THRU l'RIDA.Y PROM
•••
A:30.TO
7:30
FEATUIUNG
1/2
-~CIE
DRINKS.

·
AND COMPLIMENTARY HORS DOIUJVRD.
135 )(ILL ST~iPOlf~.
486-9295
tations for his personal
Alan Tomitlyduringp~s~on;
time,"Tomidy said.

goals this
.year.
all times for this to happen."
Marist beat.Northeastern Uni-
"l'm hoping to be just
This team is:basically a
·power
versity, 73-55, last Saturday night
under Rik Smits in every-
team with good rebounding skills in Boston.
thing," Toniidy said.
• •
according to Magarity.
.
_
Magarity was pleased with this
Tomidy is in contention
"We are not
a:
very q~ick team win.
for third in a1l-time scor:-

so we must
:use
our size to ac-
"We
are very pleased consid-
ing, third in all--time re-

commodate th.is,'' Magarity said. ering that it was the first game,
it
bounding, and second in
.
"Our interior game is our top pri-
was on the roild, and Northeast-
all-time blocked shots at
ority so me must get the ball to em wori eighteen games last
Marist.
.
our big people sq they can get year."
Kareem Hill; also a se-
the shots."
••




Marist will host the Pepsi-
nior, is l:>ack
at forward
'
He said that they.will_-focus
on Marist Classic this weekend.
and is expected to hav~ thjs interior game since they can't
Marist will play Hampton Univer-
an outstanding senior
rely on a steady-_diet of the pe- • sity Friday night.
year.
.
.
.
rimeter game.
-
• •
.
Niagara University will take on
The junior who will run

An aspect that the R~d Foxes Brown University .. The champi-
the poin_tmost of the
must concentrate on is thatof
_
·onship and consolation games
time, Randy Ericarnaciori; team defense.
will take place on Saturday.
is setting high go'als'thjs
_.
. _.
.

.
se~~o?·
---
....
:
,

:
=;\,
.
)Vomen,have. somethip.g to prove
goo1J;i~;1;~lii
1
mr<
:,CTcs:·~,.-UJok'lo5·~1f6undafteFJ0:.11seasc/it
·!·
•••
team· and win every

by-Mile
LEST~SKY
The Marist backcourt also
night," Encarnacion said.
.
·

'We must give 11()%
_at_·-
Staff Writer·

looks to be strong.
Last year was a time to grow.
Without Lesko, then freshman

_This
year is a timeto win.
Liz MacDougali was pressed
Easy· Street Cafe
At
least· that's what· the
into a startin·g role sooner than
women's basketballteam hopes Babineau would have liked.
as they prepare for another rig-
She responded by being
orous season of college hoops. named to the NEC All-New-
EveryThursday Night at
Easy-.Street.
9
pm
to Midnight

$5 all domestic drafts
you can drink
Located about 3 miles north
of Marist <;ollege on Route 9


(next
to
Subway)

First of all, the Red Foxes wel-
comer Team after finishing Jhe
come back two key players Jost season as the team's second
last year to injury -form.er first-
leading scorer at 8.'~ points per'
team All-Northeast Conference

game.
center Stacey. Dengler and
Melissa Bauser led the team
guard Jean-Marie Lesko.
• in three-point field goals with
Without them, head coach 45 in the 27 game schedule.
Ken Babineau said thaihi~·team
She also finished third on the_
wasn't the same.

_
team
in scoring at 7.7 ppg ..
''They were two big fac~ors in
Jill Heller looks to assume the
how we did last seas(?n,"
starting point guard position
Babineau said. "We just didn't
left by the departed Amy
have
as
much offensive punch." Presnall.
.
Dengler suffered a broken
HeJler is an excellent ball ban-
bone in her foot during the pre-
dler who finished second on the
season while Lesko went down team in assists with 58.
• •
eight games into the season
"I am really counting on Jill
with a knee injury.
Heller
.to
have a good season
Dengler's return should help for us," Babineau said. "We
fill the void left by two-time All-
need her to be a solid floor.
NEC selection Lori Keys.
leader."
:
.
.
She had 13.8 points per game
Freshman Beth Shackel looks
and 6.4 rebounds per game in to be the ideal backupfor Heller.

'93-'94.
Shackel was an Honorable
Keys (13.0, 9.7) was one of the Mention All America pick by
lone bright spots on last
USA Today after averaging
season's squad that finished a 26.1 points per game for
sub-par 10-17 overall, 7-11 irithe ,Schreiber High School in Port
NF.C.
Washington,
NY
last year.
Other than Keys, much of the
Other guards vying for play-
Red Fox frontcourt was either ing

time this season will be
young or inexperienced.
sophomores Colleen King and
As a result, players such as ShelleyWintersandjuniorKim
freshman Cortney Blore and Horwath.
junior Tara Walsh were called

The freshman are a year older
upon to make significant con-
and the injured Lesko and
tributions.
Dengler are healthy again.
"I think we are a sleeper team,"
Rounding out a well-balanced
Fox frontcourt are
5•
11" senior Dengler said. "I feel we're go-
captain Darrah Metz and 5' IO" ing to surprise a lot of people
freshman Torie Anderson.
this year."
....
....













































I.
1-
i
I.
I;
,,.
::
....
'STATOF,THEWEEK:·
,,·
·'"
..

..
'
•·
..
'
Gradiuttirig
r~tbaUphlyers
-finished. 2Z:.17~
1
ilt~t
their
.··
.foury~
ail\hrist '
• •

.• ·•_c'
'
'
/:,
;. r~

'··
• _, • •:'.'
;•,"


Sl(at~f~S'iCeiW~gneratj~·$ie~ff
.·.
bf~RTf
SINACOLA'
hock~)': scoring; •. •
__
••·.
·-•,
. .
The plan seemed't<?
work~~u,:-
.
• \•we recruited a lot.of scoring •••
tifully
as
Maristwas able.to take •
Staff' Writer
in the off-season,t' head f9ach
advantage of Siefra penalties ·
Well,
another. game, and an-' Kevin Walslf. said; .That may be • late in the secorid period and the
other' victory for the Red Fox
one of the biggest understate-
third penod, ·en route to a
·6-3
vie-
Hockey club. This game, how-· inents:.

•••
tory.
ever, was not a lopsided affair
The Red Foxes'have been de.:
''We wanted to play a complete
that the Marist faithful is used
.
rriolishing almost' every: oppo- · game and realty hustle/' Walsh
to; but a rather close garne at
nent, and-have scored doubk
said;.
•. ..
• '
'
Wagner University.
• • •
digits'a number,of.times with a
"Thisgame(Sie11a)meansalot
Maristfeil behind"earJy
1.,0, but
.
high ofl5goalsagainstFordhain
to us, so we wanted to put ev- -
eventually overcame that deficit. University.
_
. • •
erything· into getting this· vie-
Despite taking-the lead, Wagner
The mai11
culprit behind aHthis ·tory,"

sophomore
Jesse
hung in the game until the end,
is Warzecha who has beeh light-
Robertazzi.said. •
In fact
Mafist
did riot put the ing up the lamp at an extraorcli-
The_
victory also nieant a great
game away until the final sec-
nary rate. Through eleven games deal, coming right on the heels
onds of the game· for a 9-7 vie- . he hasscor~d 29 goals.
.
of their first defeat to Rutgers. •
tory. The Red Foxes were able

.
'Warzecha led. the way against
"Tonight was make or break for
to push their record to 1
o~
l
with. Wagner with a hat trick, and also us," Warzecha said. "We wanted
that win despite uncharacteristi:.. had. a hat trick the game before to show Siena and everyone in
cally getting out-shot 54-44.
against much despised arch rival ,the conference that we are (or
"Even though it was a close Siena;

real."
game. we found a way to win,"
:•we(thefreshmeri)wereaware
Indeed this young team.is for
freshmericenterBrianWarzecha. of the riva_lry;"
Warzecha said. real, but don't think this t~'s
said. 'That shows the heart and "Our garn~plan·was to notretali.. youth.will g~t in the way.of how
detenniriation-ofthis team;"
ate to Siena~s chippy play, draw they play.
Another word can also describe penalties, and capitalize on the
''We have a young team by age,
this year's edition of Red Fox • power-play."
but by age only,'' Walsh said.
Football wins their w11ylnto-record
book
by
MARTY SINACOLA
Staff Writer
''This year's seniors will always
hold a special spot with me,"
Parady said. "We came in to-
The rain may have been . gether, andit was the perfect end-
drenching everything in site that ingfor them."
day, but mother nature could not
The Red Foxes also broke three
dampen the day of the Red -Fox other school records in the
footballteam.
. trouncing.
_ _ ___
_
The season closed out on Sat-
Jovan Rhodes' 94-yard touch~
urday,November 11 with a49-6
clown-'run w'as thelongestever
demolishing of arch rivals Siena run from
$e
line of scrimmage;
• at Leonidoff field, in one of the the Red Foxes scored the most
more emotional wins this season. points in a_ game with-
49,:
and
The Red Foxes came out with a· quarterback Pete Ford's four
goal, and something to . prove: _ touchdowri passes in the game
The seniors wanted to go out
was al.so
a
schoolrecord:
-with• their names in ttie Marist
.. Coach. helped me a lot. and
history books, .
told
me
to _stick with it:(during
This win over the Saints would tough times) and it paid off," Ford
secure theigraduatingclass the said: "Thereceivers··made_nice
distinction of being tlleniost
catches to help1rteout"
winning class in Marist football
••
What Ford didn't say.that
history ove_r
a
fouryear. p~riod . Parady later elaborated. on, was
at 22--17"
1, ~d they h~ no prob- .. that he played with two cracked
lem grasping that goal.. . .
ribs:ftfrthe1ast four games.
. ''.It {eels good (To
be
the most
'
"Petejs
a
tough kid," Parady"
winning dass)," said senior tight said,
''He
is a
tellfu
player and will ..
end J~.evin
To.
•~~
w~rked r~-
dQ
anything the. coaching staff
ally hard ori offense and defense, asks,him to do for the team."
and we really came together."
_· Marist rode.the crescendo of
This·· class wiil always -be· re-
the. last two games
to
end a beau-
membered by head coach Jim tiful season on a high note.
Parady.
The Red Foxes outscored the
opposition
87-6 in the Jast two
games, while the team as a whole •
played its best ball all year.
.
• 'The ~ast two games were .our
most complete games of the
. y~," Parady said. "We were at
.500 and could have gone either
way, but we bounced back."
Marist's tiacieniark·
closeness
was-never' mo~e _·
evident than
against· Siena!•:
After -the game
-was over, the whole team rushed
-
on to the fieldtfo~ludiog the
coaches for
a
long celebration: .
•• ''We arelikea bigJamily,'' se-
• nior captain Jeff Saccomanno
-said. "We want to see each other
dowell."
_ .
To
was
quickto·creditParady
for the te·am•s togetherness ..
"Coach emphasizes thefamily
atmosphere, and
as
you get older .
it means.that much more fo you."
• On the·surface, the 6-4 record
.-may not look like too much of a
success,
but•. _·Saccomanno
doesn't agree. • • _
. "It was an excellent season, we
were resilient an y~ar.
:We
1
c~e
out, arid' never backed down.· I
am proud of everybody here, and
I hope in::arries on after I am
gone."
QuorEOFT.fiEWEEK:
I think we are a sleeper team: • I
feel we ~re going to surprise a wt
·.ofpeopie. -
Stacey Dengler·
.
.
Circle photo/Chris Bcrioato
Brian Warzecha
shoots
OD
Siena during Marist's 6-3 victory.
''We have a lot of quality hockey
players.on thissqU:ad." _

Marist's outstanding play thus
far this season has earned them
a national ranking of six by the
American Collegiate Hockey As-
sociation. The ACHA ranks 130
hockey· teams for coHeges at
which .they are not a yarsity
sport.
... '
.... • ,· ' .
Ahead ofMarist is theUniver.:.
sity of Indiana, Stanford,Univer-
sity of Kentucky, Rutgers, and
the University of South I:t.orida.
- The team's goal is to get into
the national tournament, but they
wo~ld also like to see tf they can
go higher in the rankings.
~'We would like to try to get to
that • number
one
spot,"
Robertazzi said.

The next home garr.ie
is tomor-
row
night ,when. the Red Foxes·
• take on Seton Hall at theMcCann
Ice Arena. Game time is 9: 15.
This.~ouldbethe R~dFoxeshestchance for th~ir-own SportsCenter highlight
It has ·been seven years, seven plated a seas9n that could, have spot. Are these additions the key porting cast can emerge an~ if
academics, leaving a void in the
years since .their13:§t
Northeast been and how the window was to Marist making itto ESPN? • their lack of size cari be compen-:- middle; Phelan is going to look
Conference title, never mind the closing as their once vaunted re-
This· can be Marist' s best
sated by their quick defense. But
to 6" I 1 sophomore Gerben Van
eight years since their last Na--· cruiting class of three years ago · chance but the road to March
if Smith and Hames get some
Drope to come through. If not,
tional Collegiate Athletic Asso-
had only a single year left. A lot Madness is not easy. 1\vo other help, Bannon can lOQ.k
to play in
the Mount can • have problems
ciationappearance. Notsincethe
to think' about on the five hour schools could make things cliffi- its fourth consecutive league
111at,ching
up with bigger teams
days of Rik Smits ~Marist been trip back hom.e to Poughkeepsie. cult for the Red Foxes.
championship game.
in •the paint.
to the tourney.
And a lot to think about com-
It will be difficult to upsetlast
And it was Mount St. Mary's.
As for who is left, Marist has
Andthis_willbetheRedFoxes
ing into·the se~on. With the_ yearscharnpRider.J~ve~though t~at stopped Rid_er's streak of
to keep its eye on Monmouth
_last
chance to clinch a league title departures of pomt guard Dexter they lost to the Mount m the fi-
tnps to the tournament last year. · with their experience, three point
before they find a new home in Dunbar and Greg. Choclkowski, nals, they captured the confer-
The Mount boasts arguably the
shooting and team defense. But,
the Metro Atlantic Athletic Con-
Marist was left with two holes that ence title. Kevin BannQn
will try best backcourt in the NEC in se-
like other teams in the·NEC they
ference. But before they move, needed to be filled. Dunbar ran to lead his team back and he has niors Chris McGuthrie and Riley
too lack a. proven_ big m;n; a
they stiU have some unfinished the offense and was the defen-
a ~ented squad to do it with.
Inge. Last year, the two com-
weakness Marist needs to ex-
business. .
sive stalwart in the backcourt. • The Broncs are led by pre-sea-
bined to average 35 points and
pose.
After their trip south last year While.in Choclkowski,
he was the son league Most Valuable Player are going to be called upon once
And Wagner cannot be over-
to Emmittsburgh, Md., in last man Magarity's offense ran
Deon Hames and junior forward again to lead coacl}Jim Phelan's . looked when you have the likes
_ years NEC tournament, Marist through. ~ese were two
PT?b-
Charles S!1"th. But that is where offense. That is not to say they
of a Tony Rice, the league's most
:eft
~
few baskets short of m~-
lems Ma~anty had to deal with. the e~penence ends as Bannon are _the ~nly two on the team.
versatile player but they too
. mg 1t to the finals and shaking And he did.
has his youngest team ever. He Unlike Rider, the Mount has that
have problems in the front court.
their heads at a season that al-
He brought in Chris Grille, a jun-
is hopefully looking for sopho-
supporting cast in forward Jeff
So where does all this leave the
most could have been. While ior college transfer from Kansas more center Kevin McPeek to
Balistrere and Silas Cheung, last· Red Foxes. If they play their
Mount St. Mary's eventually
toplaythethreeaswellasBobby
growupratherquicklyandfillthe
_yearstoumamentMVP.
cards correctly on ESPN and
captured the NEC crown only to Joe Hatton and Tomar Kami to lane at center though he is un-
But Mount St. Mary's is going hopefully CBS. '

lose to Kentucky in the NCAA try and press incumbent
Randy
dersized. ButalotofRider'ssuc-
to have their problems as well.
Jason Farago
is The Circle's
tournament, the men contem
7
Encarnacion for the ~int guard cess will hinge on whether a sup-
Lost is center Randy Edney_ to
Assistant Sports Editor