The Circle, February 17, 1994.pdf
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 44 No. 3 - February 17, 1994
content
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Arts
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eel ,vhich issues would b
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Center;
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and the panelists directed their own
. "aajptis, th~
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three ~aildidates :for
,
;
questions
'
to
th(candidates
:
'
.
.
student body
.
president
.
debated
.
The status ofdubs was
.
discusss
.
campus issues in Maris
t
College
ed, . specifically the cap on the
televisiori;s first Jive broadcasting
.
_
number of club~ chartered by ~GA
· evenL
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on campus.
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Nick Capuano~ Matthew Gillis,
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All three candida~es agreed
.
that
and Anthony Mignone discussed
the cap could be re-evaluated
.
in
their positions on issues
.
such as
.
order
.
.
to
,
make room for more
-
·.
club caps/co'mriluriication between
.. ·
organizations which would
·
like to
studerit(arictthejriei>_resentatiyes
;-'
become
·
a
'.
part
·
of
.
th~
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college
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anc(
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fundinif
'for
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coiniminity.
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media on campus
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Migriorie
.
said
;·
that the
.
only
.
~'This is the firsttime the Maris
t'
restraint)mthat issue is tha
_
t all
·
community is able to see the ~an
;;
clubs are functed through the activi-
didates debate the issues;''
:
Joseph
ty fee which students pay every
Salvayori
;
:
SGA
'
eie¢tiqi
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conuriis-
.
semester
'
as part of their
.
tuhi,on.
· sioner; said
.
''Previously: they had
The candidates also agreed that
to
.
rely oil. speech
.
night to learn
:
alternative funding was necessary
about and
·
undersfand the positions
.·
for the campus m~dia;especially
·
of the
'
candidaies." Jim doi:ham,
.
after SGA froze the funds of The
vi¢e president of MCTV arid direc:-
·
Circle last semester.
tor
'
of the debate, gave the evenfa
"We should not be The Circle's
grade of A<
··
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. ·
·
·••···
·
publisher," Gillis said. "lt'sacon-
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I
can
think
·
tlict of interest."
.
.
·
of a million things J would do
,
diF
. Mignone said that this was
ferently next tii:ne,''. Gorham said.
.
something U-iathad to
.
be worked
"But we were working with
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see
DEBATE
·
page
9
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cited to be meeting for the debate
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Parerits weeke~d is
no
longer
.
~ri
.
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DiCaprio saidJhat parents don'.t
'/'
Students had.the op
·
porturiity to
-
·
·
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everit
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exclusive
to.
f
resbmen;
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have
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much opportum
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"t:r'io
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fo'.r
tlie
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if
dassin
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ates from a µ_st
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•··
:
February°
18-20
will
be
'
f~ed
with
:·
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)'
freshman
>"
activities
.
and
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subinitted ~d :C0mpiled by various
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r;t!~r;f:ornor;,
:
juniots
.
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Th~leverits
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indude,
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comedian
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don'.t"come as often,'.';GiJlis
·
·
a!lded.
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.
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An
award will also be presented
.
three one.act plays, arid
.
a Winter
..
'-
-
_ci5:s
·
a
result~ activities\vefe plann-
\
to
•
th~i jllnior,.. with
'.
the . highest ·
Wonderland dance.
.·
·•
•
:
ed
so
that'parents e<>tdd spend time
.
·•
cumulative average.AI~ awards
_
are
The highlight of the weekend for
with the students while also obser
.:.
presepted by Dean
Cox.
,
'. .
juniors
will~
their
Ring
Ceremony
·.
ving more of what Marist College
• •
~ornially
·
the
'
·
~lass
,
advisor
and semi-formal. . ·
•
.
.
.
·
.
is like.
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.
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·
.·.
•.
•
.
,
presides as master of ceremonies;
.
.
_
· ..
A¢cording
to
Sophomore Class•
.
·,
·
:
•The
dance
Saturday night is
.
open
·
'
however~ Linda Cool
_
is unble to do
PresidentJehniferNocella, plann-
to parents and students
..
There will
·:
so this
·
year.
.
.
.
.
'
ingfor the
.
weekend started :three
0:~
:
:
a cash bar and
.
other
Dicaprio
.
cited John Doherty~
•
nionths age:,.
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refreshments while the disc jockf!y
professor of crimina) justice, as a
-~--
The\veekend is aresul~ of efforts
plays turies from the 70s, 80s and
.
likely candidate to
_
fill the role:
of both sophomores andjuniors,
90s.
·
.
·.
·
.
.
·
·
-
Dennis Murray will be
·
out of
who puttogether a schedule which
· .
The dance starts at 9 p;m. and
. ·
town and unable
.
to give the address
.was designed to ''allow parents to
will
be held
in
the cafeteria, and the
he ordinarily would
,
at such
.
a
see what kids do well," according
baclc rooni
will
also be ope~ for the
.
·
ceremony. No replacement speaker
to Deborah DiCaprio, the assistant
occasion.*** The
·
three one act
·
has been nanied.
.
_
.
.
..
·
·
.
dean of student affairs.
.
plays are being performed both Fri-
·
Brother Rancourt and Brother
DiCaprio
.
also noted that
day and
'
Saturday nights of the
.
Williams have been chosen forthe
February was
,
an-ideal
:
time; with
·
weekend starting
at
7 p,m.
·
· ·
.
Invocation and Benediction, which
many campus activities underw~y.
·
,
The
;
junior class officers have
·
·
make up th~ oth
_
er portion of the
Mau 9illis;'jtinior class presi-
been
.
busy
·
preparing
.
for t~eir
ceremony, according to DiCap
_
rio'.
dent, explained t~a~ the weekend
Junior
. _
Semi-forn.iaI and Rmg
In
:
prior years,
·
a talented
was created
..
to
·
lirrut the ~rowels
Ceremony, both wdl take place on
classmate -has performed at the
usually found on a universal
February
_
19
,
.
•
.
.
.
•
.
ceremony, either singing or playing
parents ":eekend.
.
The ~ng Cer~mony 1s held ~n
the piano, according to DiCaprio.
In preVIous years_;the weekends
the Chapel wh~re Father Luke wdl
.
Jim Gerace, junior class vice presi-
were scheduled s1D1ultaneously,
bless
.
the rings and Marc
dent said that no one has been
creating long lines and waiting lists
vanderHeyden will present to an
selected yet this year.
·
·
for planned activities.
estimated
150
juniors.
·
"If
you offer something, you
Dicaprio said that in past years
.
Any
student who ordered a ring
want everyone to be able to par-
the response from both parents and
but is not attending the ceremony
ticipate," DiCaprio said.
students has been favorableto the
may pick up their ring Monday,
Events this year include are both
hour Jong ceremony beginning at
February
21
in Dicaprio's office.
Circle
non-scientific poll
.
In
a recent survey, more than
300
Marist
students were
asked
to respond Yes or No
to the following question:
.
Do
you
intend to vote in the upcoming
.
SGA
elections?
Yes - 171
No-138
.
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~
.
.
in'.
-
hi~
l~test rol~/based on~a tiu~
;
~toit;
0,
.
hlis
lost'all
belief
-
in
the justice
:
of the British ·~ df his jiillni~tes.h~ a p~e
.
b~ard.~tl~'(,a6h
.·
.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
·
--'-
·
' ' Day~Lewis plays Gerry Conlon:
'.
·
aJi)rish hip-
>
:
court
:system
·
;
<:
.
-
~
i.
.
.
{_
;'.
.
>'.
'
.
:
;:
·
-
~
>
iil.diviciual
pie~e
~
i~ce~
\\jtli
tsD
:
~:
:
/{
.-f
.
:
',:
I>.~el
_
Day-Lewis is on
:
a
.
roll,
:
ancl
that
pie who happens to be
_
in
-
.t.o~don, in
_
the
'
.
.
A(
the
'
'.
'
sanie
,
~ifu.e
;
.
wt(
see
·
'
two
·
·fam!lY ·, ' ·There
.
~e·
al~o
s~~e
-
~u~otou~
~
el~nietits:
·
, .,
-
may
.
be a bit of ari undersµ\temerit;
;
·,
,
·:
;-
:::
·
.
:
·
,
~rong pl.ace ~t the wrong tun
_
e.-
,
<
;/
:
.
.
:
..
.
·
.
··
~embers
_
broughttogether after ye.µ-s,of
_
m-.
.
.
as_0er-ry am~
.9!~~~1.'~!~
~~~~~
ll~~~t
_
c~~
: .
.
.
_
Aftei: wiiming an Oscar
·
inl
989 for
.
'
'Mt:
' ·
:
-
-
~
·
:
That
:
time 1s
~
974~ wlien the
~~
(lnsh
:
·
·
:
:
<,lifference
_
t<>;wards. eac!t
,
other
,
•
:
.
;
j
,,
.'.
;
_
;
.
..
. ,
.
,
'.
t.µI_l c.hil4h~od
~~~9.1;i~:
:
:
.
.
~~~
o~r
Pp
.
~s1
;
,
_.
_
Left Foot,'' the 36-year-old Britisliactor
'
has:
.
Republican Army) bombs two Bnt1sh pubs.
i)
·
;
:, ,
One scene
,.
m particular show~;tl:l,i$;
~
D,~y~
,:,
l?~e
.,
~~lc
link
co'!Ia be
·
~~a
-
,
~~mpson,
:
starred
:
as an
·
Indiari~raised s'coiit
fu
'.
"Last'
of
·
·
•
:
..
The
-
British
'
police,· desperate
to
·
make
at--
:-.
,Lewis'
:
-just-con"'.icted
1
~haracter,
:
scr~
~L
·
:
,
'Y
_
ho:1~l~ys
an
_
att.9.giey
\V~oJ~J?<:~
:
t~
-
~
-
~C>~::
_
.
..
the Mohicans,J> a
·
maihoni between two
.
re~ts for, the bombings; take in Conlon, his
~
fatherf?rbringing himself into t~e situa~
Ion case
_;
:
,
:
-
,
.
.
.
:;
'
.>· ;_:, '.
·
.
.
•
: _::
.
:
·.
.
·
:
women in "The Age of Innocence," and
fne~ds,'Conlon•~ f~ther, and,
fe~
<;>~her
tionan~J:mngsupoldandpamfulchildhood
.
.
.
The
·
problem.isn'.t
:
her
;
.
il~t~g,
)
,ut
_
her
.
now,
a
man wrongly accused ofIRA crimes
relatives for questiorung and eventualjailing.
_
memories.
.
_ .
_
·; .
.
.
.
.
character, who seems a b1t
,
underused.
.
in "In the Name of the Father " for which
The interrogation scenes are very intense
It's a situation where father and son must
. ,
Her attorney charae:ter ~<>esn'
.
t really come
he's just received another Osca/ nommation.
as
_
we see Conlon hit, screamed at, and
.
p~t asid~ past differences if they are to sur-
.
in~o play
.
until thre_e.: ~mirths o_f ~he fi1m. is
Day~Lewis could
·
.
have
;
easily been
threatene
.
d by officers;
_
_
.
.
·
.
vive'.the1r or~eal.
.
._
.
.
·
.
.
_ .
.
.
overandatthatpomt,.the!llov1~
.
1sd~pm-
nominated for
,
"Innoc
.
cmce" as
·
well.
.
. _
·
·
For
1~
years, C<>;nlon and
_
ot_hers do time
p1rector)un_ Shen~an
.
(''My Lef~ Foot") to Gerry and Gmsepl)1e.5'
;
f_~~r~ct~f:h
,ii
,
'.
,
i
,:
He was even.offered thepartoftheAIDS
for a cnme they didn't commit.
:
.
.
bnngs the au~1ence mto an upsetting tale,
.
.
·
G<>p:t
_
P,ared to
.
these two, Thomps~n;~
,,
,i
·
victim in "Philadelphia," but turned it
While in priso~ with his.father
-
~iuseppie
inaking a moviegoer feel_ helpless towar~ !he ch~a_~~~r se~p.
_
s
1~$11
Jrye\9.1W
,
~
f.
,
,
1
,
w,,)
"
}:t
down.
.
_
_
· ·
.
. ·
·
(Pete P~stlethwaite, w~o 1s ~onunated Jor oppress~ fharacters while carefully ~voiding
_
,,.
-J:io';".~ver ,}~R~~
r
tfeONJ>JRHi~~
-
~~f~
.
ffin
u
.
¥C?[).i~y_enm1g~, .T,orn Hanks, who took
Supportmg ~ct~r), we
sec:
therr ~rustrat1on.
·
,
the
:
·
P«?lit1cal
·
troubles
·
.
surrounding . the
,
·
:
th~
-
film, she'.s
.
~t!o~g,
,
~~p~1~y dllr,m
,
~
}
1.~t
,.
thaf"role
'
'.
~
lias
'
'
feceived
·
i
'
'
Best Actor
'
·
Postlethwaite
IS
excellent
as
a sickly father
Catholics and Protestants
.
.
.
:
: ;
.
_
.
-
-
.
fiecy
.
cqu1troom appearance;
:
.
·
..
,;
,
.
·
. '
nolfilliatfol
_
:-:.:1
::
:
:·
;
(
;.-
:
;·
•:.:-
:
'
;'
'
.
. ··
.
who seems the most innocent of all.
:..
.
.
;j
Sheridan; by the way; has received a Best
.
.
·
,
In
an,'
"In
:
th~ Name of the Fath,er•i r«eiv.:
.
·
oa'y~tewis'\vfibtlsc?6~1.11g
'
corisiderecfto
· :
·
'.
Although I can't recalJ: Postlethwaite
·
be~
·
Director nomi~ation
.,
·
..
<
:
. .
.
,
.
.
,
ed
-
seven nominations.
.
_
·
:,.
. . .
.
·
,
.
play Lestat in the
,
upcoming adaptation of
·
ing ~n many f~Ims, he
·
di~ play a prisoner
,
~hile
-
"lnJhe Name of the Father" is a
_
,
Oscars asi~e,_ th!_s is_ an ex.cellent film t~at
-
Anne Rice's "Interview ,vith
·
a Vampire "
(again) on a pnson planet m the underratf,!d
senous drama, there ¥e some scenes where
portrays true m1ustice ma court system, \\:Ith
but was for some reason passed over in fav~r
"Alien 3/'
..
·
.•
.
.
..
·
one can't help but laugh;
:
.
_ -·
·
.
·
real emotion, proving fuithe( that Daniel
of Tom Cruise~
'
_·
.
Gitiseppie wants Gerry to keep the faith
One such
_
scene is when drug-user Gerry
Day-Lewis is one of
.
the best actors in
·
that their name will be cleared, while Gerry
becomes pleasantly surprised to find_ that one Hollywood. (Grade:A-)
·
·
·
No
prize this
·
we<ik~Justsomejaded
.
,
,
Valetitine
-_
cheer
by
DANA
BUONICONTI
:
·
-·
..
·
_
'
_
'Alohct"
·
opens
\
vith ''Geiger:;"
.
sounding
·
soriiewhere betweenLed . ~fi~i
-
~na~o.
·
~~
;
i
e~en
:
YO~l.:
-
:
~~er;~gi
:
:
'
for
:
.
ti~ket~.
:
.
:
,
'
.
:
..
~
:
~
,
;:
: ~
\
.
:
/:
_:
;
,:'
.
,
..
..
.
..
,::,
'
, ,
:
:
:
'
·
:·
.·.•
.
·
p~tA~If'.a;
_
pe'rf.e~dii'st track
/
but
.
Zeppelin and
,
Rollins
,
Band.
~
;
n;
,-
,
.
altery,ative
,1:
J~e.
;
yqµ
:
,
o
.
,ye
,
::.
ild~
::
.
Your:
.
only chance
{
tO see
-
,
theni
;
,;
;
Stuc.~ m, your
,
r~_cjn}"
'.
b<>r~d
_
to'·
'
'
lqfoteiitiaHirst hit,
'
:
aHvell
:'':
''
!
'
:!
r;
'
Clocking
iti'
,
:_;
at
·
12:
19
:;
the
'
, yourself;to
_;
check
;
qut
,
Po.<;:li9PP!';r;;,
:
,
)ive:
.
inay,beloO'A'.prj)
,,
l6
,
wheq
?
they
,
;
;;:
te~u~
,
W,i~h
/
a
c
.
~~~
'·
c:,~
_l<
~h
'
e
'
:
'
,
wiilt~
t~
·
'
:
!
'Moxie"
t
:
and
'
J
"tlown,"'
,;_,tiav~
feedback-induced excursion
1
starts
.
Yol!
·
can o~tain a copy of poc will be on "Saturday Night Live,"
.
blahs?
.
:
•
.,
'
,
.
'
.'
'
·
'
.
'
·
: '
' '·
:
,
,
.
'
:
.·
-'
gilitar'Hffs
"
thafremin
'
d
ni,fa
:
'JOfo(
_
off g904 ~nough, but furthe,r
.
info
!l,<>~P.~~J<>.r ~mkh~le)Jrom ~1!g~
->
~o
,,
set
,,
r.f>ur
VJ::~
-
atcqrdii:igly
_:
--
t
'Ji
-
~ -
Well, I've got Just t
_
he band for Ratt, and believe me, that's
not
as
·
;
the
:
· iong
,·
tilings: become
'
:
father
mg
,
:
~ar ~~cords:;
.
9
¥apI~c,r~stj
·
..
.
;
'
~s
.
o,
1
keep
}iii
~ye ptit
'
f?lr: the
'\.
~
you._
·
·
bad as it sounds.
.
overindulgent.
_
,
_
·
-
-
'
Newmarket, NH 03857~140I
·
or
·
bt
<
new
·
Niiie Inch Nails;
·
called "Th~ ;
J?irect from the backwoods of
"Clown," in particular, with its
·
Had the song
.
been shorter, it
,
_
calling (603) 659-7516. .
.
.
,
,
.
, .
.
,Downward Spiral,
.
'.~ due
.
March..8._
Mame comes Doc Hopper.
Helmet-style chorus is a knockout.
probably would
_
have. worked
.
:',~d
_
t<;> fi
_
ni~h t
_
hin,gs 9ff;'.here'.J>
.:
~nd
:
i( t~aql~y was-n!textjtirtg,
1
,
_
\
-
And even though their new
AJsoontherecordareinteresting
better.
·
·__
·
.. :
_
ahttlerecord/tourupd~te,t~keep
.
enough, with the
.
-
release
.
of NIN
recor~? "Alo.ha," is ~ar from the c<_>vers of "Homeward Bound;'' by
M
_
inor complaints aside, Doc
,
you cl~e~ in on
:
wh
_
at~s hip
_
and
'
.
and the new
.
Soundgard~n,
.
the
.
..
!fawauan holiday the title suggests, Simon and Garfunkel, and "Head
Hopper are
.
a real kick ... ayuh; they
happenm .
.
.
.
·
long-awaited return of David Lee
It does make you feel warm all Over
-
Heels/' by
·
the
;
Go-Gos
;
.
.
· -
.,,
are.
·
,
:
.
·
·
·
.
.
.·
.
.
Ti~ketsfor two Pea1Uam shows
Roth will happen that day too .
.
over
.
.
.
.
"Homeward Bound" gets the
Another band on the same label
at the Boston Garden, on April 10
.
Yes, good-old Roth, hair weave
Thelf old record company call-
average rave-up, double-time treat-
.
as Doc Hopper though
.
they aren't
and
11,
and
a
s~ow in Springfield,
and all, has
_
recovered from his pot-
.
ed them "Black Sabbath meets the merit, making it sound cool, but
as good, is Sin'khole.
MA on the 6th, went on sale Tues-
related arrest and will attempt to
Monkees on ~cid," but I think they not terribly inspired.
_
.
.
Their
·
new
.
one,
.
"Groping For
day at 3:30 pm.
.
revive his career with "Your Filthy
soun~f!lore~keRattmeetsHel~et
_
"Head_
.
Over Heels,'' on
.
the
Trout,"hassomegoodsongs,but
·
They
.
were sold out by
5.
Little Mouth."
·
on p~xie stick~
; :
.a_ far m~re
m-
·
other hand, comes complete
:
with
·
itlacks.the immediate catchiness of
Best of luck to you
all
killing
God bless him.
·
·
tere~tmg combmat1on,
I thmk..
cheesy hand
·
claps, making it the
- •
Doc Hopper
:
.
··
.
·
Either way you ~a:p.na describe stronger of the two songs.
•
.•
.
< .
. ·.
·.''Make
..
Me
.
Better
'
'
·
has the
.
;
-
-
~
~
-
em, th~y•~; da~n g~o1:L
:
.
·
·
·
.
.
Belin~a and Co.
,
wo~ld
Jle
pros
'
poteµtial
:
to
:
,
\:1e a Jeal croY>'.d
0
:
.
nvo
·
u·
r
A
'
N
.
BE'
A
'
i>
,
. ·
,
featuring (:;h
r,
1s
·
Of!
_
:
vocals
_
and
J
•
•
ud;
J
.
thmk,
,
..
:
,
.
. :
'-'"--
··-'
:--
.
"~
'
,
,;:
.:.;_
,
;
_
,_
,
"'_
,
... ;
..
~
...
-
pleaser;
;
while
/
'Canker '
}
when
·
it
.
· ·
·
'
·
;
,
I
.
,
'
·
•
'-'n,
·
·
·
:
·
.
,
gm
tar,
'
Scott
-.
on
··
guitar,
'
Jon
·
on
·
.
. '
Finishing off
the
recordi.s
'
_'
Post
.
getsg°oing
;
-
.'
Jias' a
·
-
beat srimewfrere
.
'..
'.::
.
' ·
'.
,
. ·
·
'.
·
.
.>
.
·.!
" ..
'
·
' '"
·
.
•
·
.
'
. '
::'o~p.~":,1~~ ~:
:~:'io~~'.
~·.:~?'W~~·r.~~;
D~~:":
·
cl~:~~~:.:
\~'i!~\~~
a
pu~k
.
'
Si·OCKeRO
Ki
Rn
'
:,
1:,,;t,c::ijiJ~Jg7ecgg::if/dy
~
by
.
JENNIFER
GIANDALONE
:Jri~;:n;:~!r
{!,J~),\~~~~:
de!:!~ni•t~~~!ie~n~~\t;~~~
A
_
,:
0
_·-
~tyn~~:
.
t~
_
;uwp
·
pe;;o,
·.
~
--
-
y~~~
-
~;ty~
_
t
_
s
_
:pe
.
o
__
-
~
_
-
1h!
.
~
.
an
_
·
_·
_.
ta
_
~
_
_
ang!
_
·
:
.
.
This w~ek I wanted tt>
see
a
.
know the
'
extent of the plot;
:
.
.
Tone Loe, who has done voices for
.
stupid,mindlesscom!!dy:
. .
.
There
·
are no deep, hidden
_
·
·
character:Sintheanimatedmovies
..
:
-···
·_.·
' ·
·
.
,
.
,
. :-
'
.
:
.
::.·, ·
.
.
;
._
,.,
.
.
__ .. ,;
..
. :
:
,:
··
..
.
;_ '
.
I didn't want to
.
see anything
_
messages and
-
everything in
':
this
-
«Feingully" and
.,'
'Bebe's
Kids;':
._.
_
. _
.
,
·
.
-
·
.
♦
.. .
.
.
~
-
.
..
\
heavy,_depressin~, or
:
co~plicated.
-
movie should be taken at '_f.ac~
_
.
:
<
.
,
,
/
'
,
:
~
_
;
:
\
>
)
;
<'
.
•
<·
:
:
'.
:
6ur
~
~Pald
Trttl;,;;._:.,.
·
c:6ursi
produces
_.
p.
rl~l~
,
rJs01ts: Y~u
wf1
t
ieifu
·
,
So,1fyouaremthe
.
samemood
·
value.
·
·
·
·
·
:c
;,,
.
,
.;
/
;
'..:
·,
,
H1spart
__
1snot-ab1g
·
one
.
e1ther
-
.
·
,,
,
~
•
·
·
•~-o.
•
·
~
-
·
,
·
-
· ··
r
,
·
•·
·
I was, l've
'
got the riiovieJor
:
ycni
:
:
'///
1':i\ce Ventura" is one of
-
tfioje
_.
,
~d it is obvious that the movies'
:
rroni'ane*e
.
gr9upo~topproducersona6mf::to-<>nel:5asls-ean1salruy
;
.
·
first~time dir~or'f
o~
Shadyac
.
¥0\iies
~~~t
.
!Htd more than ~alfqf:
(
:
cr~tors ~~~~d
·
to f?cus
\
on
:
Ace,
'"
&.~
-
~n~
w~ley9u
l~;iYOU~ll
be
groo~~X<E}iii(J?i'~Y;q<f
ttP%•'1@
:
and producer James G
;
·
Robinson
::
its
·
funny
~<-
,
parts shown
·
m
',
the
;·
_.
and
•
onlyAce.
~.
-;;
,
~";
·
>
t·
:
:
,
,:
,
::
.
.
~
management.
,
Youwtll
·
haVe the
full
support of a
P.rofesslonal team,
.
it:~i~~~
;~:~~?::ro~:;~
•
·
prwi~;sthe exception of a
-
i:
::
l
:
s~
'
i~t~s
/
w11~
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scenes,you ways neww at was
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This movie
is
almost as simple as
coming next.
·
senous _as
·
L1eutenant-~inhorq, •but
n.11
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•
•
3
Montll
Tr.~s
Progranf
·
: ;
·
.
they come.
.
.
.
.
.
·
.·.
.
-
.
The kids
·
in the
.
theater were
evei,:
:
time she opens her mouth,
.
,
.
♦
Professional
Offl~
♦
Sal;izy
Wlillc
You
Lew
.
.
'
'
James Carrey(TV's"in Living
quotinglinesrightbefore
.
theywere
her
.
lines seem forced.
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kind). he's ,the man to call.
,
.
.
·
.
.
.
.
·.
managed to keepsomeofthejokes
to this Oscar
_
_
winner.
.
·
.
Now he's bired
,.
by
:
'.
the
.
Mianii.
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fresh even though you knew
.
what
;
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was going to happen before i
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'sfield
;
go,)it:
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kicking
•/.
·-'
Everything he did was so stupid
dolpl§
;
rianied
'.
Snowflake, who
.
I couldn't help but laugh.
has been kidnapped; or in this case;
.
With n;ferences from "Star
petnapped~
·
•
. .
Trek'' to "The Crying Game,"
Ace is referred to as Dr. Dolittle
"Ace Ventura" is similar to films
by Lieutenant Einhorn from
.
the
like "The Naked Gun."
local police
·
department (Sean
These movies get almost no
Young,
.
"Fatal Instinct") and is
critical acclaim but do well at the
never taken seriously, mainly
box office.
because of what he does.
With very few movies out for
He is also very good at his job
kids, this one will do very well.
and is always one step ahead of the
It sold out when I saw it open-
Tom Shadyac'sTirit movie cowd
·
have been made just
as
easily by
the
Zucker brothers ("The Naked
'
Gun," "Airplane).
It probably would have been bet-
ter if they had made it.
They
would have
tried
to squeeze
more jokes into every scene.
"Ace Ventura" did keep
._
me
entei:tained throughout
its
mere
ninety minutes, though.
·
police.
·
ing weekend and the sneak preview
The person who hires Ace is
the
.
week before sold out as well.
Movies like this rarely last longer
Miami
Dolphins' employee Melissa
Parents should, however, pay at-
than that.
.
.
.
.
Robinson
.
(Courtney
Cox,
tention to the PG-13 rating.
"Masters of the Universe").
Although
•
the verbal jokes may
In all detective stodes (no mat-
go right over kids' heads, the visual
ter how ridiculous they are), the
ones will need some explaining.
hero needs a girlfriend.
Miami Dolphins quarterback
That is
.
basically the only role
Dan Marino, who has been out of
that Melissa plays.
..
work for an awfully long time,
What the sfory boils down to is
makes his movie debut playing
a race !,etween Ace and the police
(you guessed it) himself.
to see who can find Snowflake
,
Big surprise.
first.
It's not really a major role, but
So, throw in a murder, and a
more like a cameo appearance;
If you
·
are in the mood for a
stupid
(I
can't think of another
word to more accurately describe
it) movie that will make you laugh,
go see "Ace Ventura ... Pet Detec-
tiv~.•
-
•
.
But do not expect a gr
_
eat com-
edy
,
like "Mrs. Doubtfire."
·
.
Just' make sure you go to a
·
matinee and don't pay full price.
.
,
..
:
__
,
.
J~lri
'
a
·
\Ylnnl{\g
~earn
and
:
be
:
a
part
of our success,
:,
We'.re offering
an
Invitation to visit
us and
tour ourofflces
and
speak
to
recent
graduates
who are estabilshlng
a
life
time career
for
themselves'
at
<::onttn'ental
Broker
Dealer
Corporation.
·
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For
Immediate
lnformatton
please call
_
l_v\lchael Hasho
_
at:
·
.
-
516,!1'741.-,.5400
.:
....
...
.
.
.
C(INTl~NTAL
ESTABUSHED 1982
~
MEMBERS
NASD.,
MSRB., SIPC
•
t;l,EARNING 11/ROUGH DPPENHEiMER
&.
CO, INC.
MEMBERS N,Y.S.E.
:
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,.
THI; CIRCLE,
FEBRUARY
17,
1994
'
:
' •
.
.
.
"
•.
•,
• .
3
..
·
When
:
a student receives a grade
carry
.
between
·
12 to 13 credits, in-
•·
h/
.
MEREDITffKENNEDY
: ·.
·
of: 2:0 !)flower for either a single
;'
stead of the average
·
15,
.
.
:\
;;<i/)
siat(
Wri!~r
.
i
:
'.
:
:
\
;'
·
,
.
.
semester or as a cumulative
·
gracl~
.
:,
..
The faculty board may also re-
pqi~l'
_
average th~y may be placed
quire them to enroll in the learn-
Tiie
'
figures ·for acacleII1ic ex~
oh probation.
·
.
.
:_
·.
·
.•.
•
.·
•
ing theory
·
course.
.
..
.
,
celle~ce, and ac:ademk probation
.
Thestudent must thenmeet with
·
Vice president of Academic Af-
are
:
similar.
·
>
..
:.
·
.
.
..
.. ·
·
..
..
·
·
_
the
.
Fac::ulty Academic Review
.
·
fairs, Marc variderHeyden, said the
··
·
/
On the Dean's list
·
for the fall
Committee to review the situation
decisions of the faculty board are
seines,ter 37Kstudents held
a
grade
and decide on what steps will be
.
based on each individual case.
·
point average of at least
a
3;25 and
taken to help the student improve.
,
·
••Tlie board evaluates the sit
.
iia-
72
students achieved a 3.75 or
.
The committee consists of three
tion and the conditions surroun-
high~r.
"
.
.
-:'.
·.
_
..
..
· .
_
.
faculty members that serve a three
.
ding the student and then decide
· ·
.
Ho
.
w
.
e
.
v~r,
,
._
Marist
·'
granted 323
.
year
·
term, but there is
·
a
.
new
··
:
what
.
actions
..
to
.
·
take,"
undergr~dua
.
te
.-.
s
.
tu'dents
'
a~ade~ic_
'
.
i:neinber
·
every year:
.
<
'
.
.
.
vanderHeyden
·
said.
.
.
.
.
probationary statusJastseinester/
·
Molloy sai
.
d
.
the faculty want to
.
· ·
~
A first semester senior
•
granted
·
·
which figures to be approximately
·
help
•
the: students find a
.
way
·
·
to
probation can
.
be
.
placed
·
under
~
ten
'
'
percent· of
.
the college
recover their academic standing;
I
term limitatiO!} if the faculty board
·
community.
.
.
.
.
·
•~The
·.
faculty
-
take
-
this
·
·
very
believes it is necessary, but Molloy
. .
.
Out of this figure
·
155
are
·
seriously, They want the students
said thaU_trarely
·
happens.
.
.
freshmen and approximately
30
are
:
to
~
do
:
well arid
·
to use all
-
the
·:
:
•mie committee hopes that by
seniors~
'
'. ·
·
_
.
.·
.
.
resources Marist
·
has to offer/' addressing the situation early the
· D~ector
·
of Student Aca~emic
Molioy' said.
·.
,
. _.
.
.·
;
.
students wil! noJ h~ve academic ~if-
Af~rurs,
_
Rosem~ ~olloy said she
:
·
Tiie
C
faculty
·.
can p~ace: certam
.
ficuitr,. their Jun_1or. and
·
semor
believes
.
prob~t1on 1s there to help
restrictions upon a student if they
·
year,
.
Molloy said.
the students. .
.
.
.
feel itis justified.
.
·
.
.
.·
A student who has been on pro-
•~The
-
probat1op_-proces~
-
1s not
Students
·,
niay be
.
required
'
to
:
:
bation for two consecutive
meant to be penalizing; but 1s a way
·
·
meet with their advisor and men-
semesters can be prohibited from
to draw the student's attention and
· ·
tor
at
various times throughout the participating as .an officer in any
have
:
them :take .:their
•
acade~ic
.
semester or could be placed under org~ed extracurricular activities,
standmg senously/'
·
-Molloy said.-
·
credit limitation allowing them to or ui a varsity sport.
Marist
~
Jashion
·
ifejjt.
.
.
~
.
.
prepa
"
res-for show
by
BARRY KEENAN
Staff Writer
The extravaganza the Marist fashion program has been preparing is
quickly approaching.
.
·
The Silver Needle Fashion Awards show is coming to IBM's Mid-
Hudson Valley Conference Center on April 28, 1994.
"This is something that I have been looking forward to ever since
freshman year/' AnnKucipeck, a senior from Lake Placid, N.Y. said.
"It's a chance to put everything I've learned in the last four years into
a collection that is actuaUy going to be viewed by the public."
Months before the show, each student is paired with a designer- critic
that studies their sketches and tries to decide which would be their strong
point.
"They match you
·
up with designers that have styles that are similar
.to your own," Natalie Blasi, a senior from New Rochelle,
N.Y.
said.
Sometimes you can get a designer that you end up spending a lot of time
with."
Students choose a theme then design a collection that centers on it .
Most collections range between four and seven garments.
Tracey Mabe, an Adult Education student from Syracuse, N.Y.,said
she has been working constantly for the last five months on her western
style collection.
"I don't know how regular students balance Core classes with the heavy
work load that
is
required of us. It's really kind of hectic," she said.
.
According to Elizabeth Csordas, director of the fashion program, this
is the first year Marist students will model the garments.
"We chose
to
use students over professionals because we want the show
to become more of an all-Marist affair," she said.
·
''Students will be seen in every aspect of the show this year."
w
.·
..
·
..
.
1\
_:·
1
·
..
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.·
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·
.
.
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.
.
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.
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.
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e
.
.
·
g
·
··
.
ih
..
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.·
.:
t
·
o
•·_
·
·
.
s
··
:
P
..
.
·
1 ·
.
·
n
fo
··.
·•
r
··
_
•'
·:"
s
'
p
·.
ring
·
·
co:!::-i~
-
dshejsbot~nervousandexcitedaboutherfuturisticfashion
"I am
·
kind of nervous.
·
I have a hoop skirt that is six feet wide and
radio station;
two medium rotations and one
uses wires for support. It's pretty difficult to walk in, butl think the
by
CYL,INDA A .. RICKERT
:
.···
He came back with ideas to
:
light rotation, plus DJ's picks,,, she
student models are getting enough training to handle it," she said. Ac-
:
Staff
Writer
organize WMCR.
.
added.
cording to students, the exposure is a great opportunity but said the feeling
"Andrew decided we needed
Ranking the music is the job of
.
of success is greater.
The sounds of
.
'
.
'Poughkeepsie's
more of a fonnat in terms ()f the
Music Director Aimee LaMarch.
"There will be a lot people looking at our work," Blasi said. "That's
best modern rock"
.
are back.
·
·
music, as in which songs to play at
·
"Aimee stays in contact with
great, btit the real satisfaction comes from the sense of accomplishment
"Last semester, we
_.
opened
what times," Smith said.·
:
record companies and gets reac-
that I will feel when I see my outfits on the runway."
·
earlier than ever before," said·
Boris started the station on a
tions from other colleges to find
Some students just said it would be nice to finish the extensive pro-
senior Rachel Smith; president of rotation clock, which is a schedule
out what students like," Smith
jects on time for the show.
campus radio station WMCR.
for the DJ's to follow.
·
·
said.
·
·
·
"l'Ujust be happy if I get everything done on time," Kucipeck said.
"But this semester, the seniors are
The rotation clock lists
.
what
·
Right now, it's modem rock.
"I've pretty much forgotten what it's like to have a social life."
going nuts with capping courses
songsto play, when to play them,
For those with different tastes,
Candice Chestnut,
_
a senior from Germany, said she knows al\ about
and internships. The station had a
.
and the times for station identifica-
the station offers several specialty
what goes into such a extravagant undertaking such
as
this.
slow start.''
.
.-.
.
. .
.
·.
.
tion,
,
commercials, . . an-.
shows.
. .
••
.
"I
had the oppqrtunity to do the, sho~ during my junior year. I'm
. But.after a three-week lull;
the
noi.mceriients news; and weather.
'.
The specialty shows still have to
really g}ad) took_ 1t? bt:cause ldon t thmk
I
woul~
b~
abl~ to handle
.
j~P'?IJ,
!¥'t><:i_l~,i.~_4~rs
'
:M911d:iy~
. '
):
"It
'
(tlle r6tatiowclock) mllkes
.
.
-
follow the
·
rotation docks for
.
news;·-
•-
SO?,Jseth1_ng
.
lihke
~
thk
.
1
.
s
.
Ig
,
m~c._tlo8§!t
.,
s.et
_
mh
.
~si:i:.t
.
aht
.
coltlheg~d·
<
,
~li_e
srudt
.
h
•
.•
• ,
_. ..
·
.,
·
t
··
·-
·
1
starting
-
.the
·
.
semester
:
by
,"
playing
·.
the
'
:'
sound
:
of
:
the
•
.
station
."
more
,:
•
bannt o
1
uh
·
riceD
..
mJ~nts! ank
·.
~~otmmh
•
erci~c•
·
ph;si~~~~
0
t~~~;:k
1
tha/
ttey
ed~
fs
~::~oin:n:t:f:::S;he
:if:~u':i~
·
Valentine's
.
dedicati!)hS a:s
:
a
..
'
unifomi/'
>
Smith said .
.
f'People
.
u
.
e
.
s pie
iSJJ
e
MUSI ,
f .
h
h
.
.
b
.
,, Ch t t
"
d "Wh
t
fundraiser
·
·
·
·.
·
·
·
· ·
h
.
Ii
1
·
··
I I
·11 k
·
all
-
1
·
fit th th
f the
o time t att ey put
m
1s o scene,
_
es nu sai .
en we are a
•
.
•
•
•
•
· ..
•
0
•
•
w
O
sen regu ar
Y
.
WI
now ex-
uhsu
.
Y
_
o
.
1
e
eme
O
the show in April, we will be watching what has been created out of
What's new
_'
this spring?
. .
•
actly when
-
the Jicws and
·
an-
s ow.
.
h.
h
bl
d
d
t
"
. C'We mape a lot of clianges last
nouricements will be."
.
.
.
According
to
Smith, this
not
mg
more t an
oo , sweat, an
ears.
semester that arc
.
car,rying
The rotation clock also helps
semester there will be,
.
among
through," Smith said;
·
. . . · .
organize the music
:
•.
others, three metal shows, a jazz
. .
.
Ac~qrding to
.
Sm.itJ.l,
,
Andrew
''We Iiow play aboudiveheavy
.
show
.
with Mi
.
ke Gordon, and
.
Boris; the station's prograrn direc~
·
rotation (most popular) songs an
...
see
WM• c
·
·
R
·
page
·
8
►
tor, had a ~wnmer internship at a
hour," said Smith. "There are also
:
~dmlssions office look·s
+
tP.lJllpi-ov~
·
ca111pus .
.
tours
..
,
if:Bi.:.YTHif
MAUSOLF
i
.
:
_,,
<·
:
siattwriter
:
,
·
i
How d
_
o you make a goqd thing
better?
.
·
.
·· ·.
· ·
The Ad.missions Office is facing
this question
as
it tries to revamp
its toui:
:
'
giiide program this
·
semester
:
.
.
·
.
.
Cll.rol
.
Mulqueen, assistant to the
director
of
Admissions,
·
said
·
that
. the Admissions staff is trying to
·
refine the tour guide program by' .
improving communication with the
student tow: guides.
.
•
"We'i:e now trying to find ways
to evaluate our guides
.
better,
,
to
have
,
a
,
}itde .closer
,
touch, with
ihem/Csai~ Mulqueen'.
.
.
· .
. ..
At the suggestion of President
Murray, David Grassmick, a com-
munications faculty member, has
been working with the Admissions
staff on the tour guide program
based on his previous experience
with a program in Virginia.
Grassmick suggested an "evalua-
tion sheet" - basically
a
three page
quiz to test ~tudent knowledge.
"Most of the information was
taken from the tour guide manual,
but we did throw in a few questions
that were really
·
sort of common
sense things," said Mulqueen.
The quiz
will
be
used
to help the
Admissions staff determine what
the guides know, and to make the
guides understand the importance
of ~hat
·
they say to prospective
families. It will not
be
used as a
dismissal
tool.
·
,
,::
Lisa Schuster,- a senior in charge
.
.
·· ·
and it'will help provide a heritage
.
of the tour guide program, sajd stu-
·
.
·.
for the college;'' agreed Mulqueen.
dent reaction was positive to
.
the
.
·
A
.
few
·
other details
.
that
·
evaluation.
Grassmick has singled out are
.
the
·
·
"They were all game," said
·
.
times and positioning of tours.
Schuster.
.
.
·
.
Mulqueen explained that the
Mulqueen added that· the
tourstakeaboutanhour,an4t6urs
students were even appreciative
are given when students aFe
in
class
that the Admissions staff had
the entire time.
devoted tbe
,
tinie to the program.
"If
you don't see any motion, it
"It was interesting. None of
sort of leaves you with a cold feel-
.
them said, 'Oh, forget it, if I have
ing, but if there's a lot of student
.
to take that I'm not going to be a
movement and
·
your tour guide
tour guide.' There was really
knows people there's a warmth that
.
alniost enthusiasm that we would
grows automatically,"
·
said
take the time to spend to do that
,
Mulqueen.
.
.
·
.
.
·
with
.
them/' said Mulqueen.
Also, as insignificant as it may
· .
Another thing that they are try-
.
seem, the positioning of the tour
iilg to start is an evaluation card
group itself, is important.
that families would fill out at the
"If
people have to walk right
completion of their tour, said
through the middle of a tour
Mulqueen
.
because of wher~
it's
positioned,
The Admissions staff would then
the group and the students will get
be able to get direct feedback about
annoyed," said Mulqueen.
the tours and the tour guides.
All of these improvements are
In addition to improving the ac-
part of the program that they've
curacy of the tours, Mulqueen says
tried to set up to better evaluate the
that they're trying to improve the
tour guides aJ!d improve the tours.
style.
. .
·
Mulqueen said that the way the
Grassmick said that Manst has
program worked in the past was
a lot of history from the Marist
advertising in the freshman dorms
Brothers and that there are many about the tour guide program.
· interesting stories that should be
in-
They realized that this
·
was not
corporated into the tours.
the best system because although
He said that Admissions take the the students were enthusiastic, they
time to interview some people
on
didn't have the necessary
campus and put together a port•
knowledge.
·
folio of stories, from which
"We would get all these people
students
can
pick
a
couple to incor-
that were interested but they didn't
porate into their tours.
.
·.
"Families like bearing stories
••.
see
TOURS
page
a ►
he unkindliest cut!
Freshn:ian s~imm~r Marshall Badu takes the final step to
champ1onstups w,t~ "bootcamp" haircut courtesy of
freshman
.
Jason Damgerfeld.
Circle
photo/Matt
Marth
.
.
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New appliCations·
·t11iiefan ~he set:•
dQWµ
this, y¢ar
.. by
TERI L
STEWART
'!
Staff
Wfii~f; .
.
~
.. ' , . ''. :~ --· :· ·~ -
Two weeks before the appli_cation:dea<lline, "the admissions office has
only received approximately 3700 applications.
_
_ . . -
According .to Vice President for Enrollment Planning and Admissions
Harry Wood, there are a few reasons that may have caused this decli~e,
including the alleged rape in. September.
"I think the incident on campus (the alleged rape) did not help because
the larger decline in applications is from young ladies," Wood said.· "The ·
word got out in different parts of the northeast.and when that happens
it certainly is not a help, obviously."
· ·
·
.
Wood added that people may be apprehensive because there were a
lot ofquestions about the incident.
·
·
·
· ·
.~!We-heard that !!arlier this fall, a lot of people were questioning that
.whole siiuatfon,"-· Wood said.
__
_
· ·
_
. -
... Another, factorin .the current decline, according to Wood, is the
lackadaisical attitudes. from the students. .
- .
"I think the young people don't feel any. urgency in applying to col-
leges right now," Wood said, "They will apply when they get around
to it."
He added that the number of high school graduates this year is at the
lowest in the last
20
years;
·
·
· · Wood also said that the entire process of admissions began to slow
down last year.
·
Despite the decrease in applications this year, down from a record 4700
last year, the admissions·office is noi:alarmed; according to Woo
·
d. •
"There's no urgency in.the fact that we only got 3700 applications,"
Wood said "In the. nexttwo weeks,.we'll reach 4,000 plus,,,
MCTV :director Jim Go.rham issues final instructions)o the studio audience before the live
_presidential debat~.-T_uesdav.
·circle
pho~o/MattMartin'
,,
.
-
:._,
_:,·;
,;_:
....
One
yea,t
sinc_e <J.Iinton's .. visit···-
:
1
R.ap_ejnve·~tigatioti· cciritifiti;s, ·:: ·
had a good view of the event, but
"I saw alot of cars pass by and
by
CHRIS BERINATO
he was
·
most ·unpressed· by the
the shape of President Clinton in
by
KRISTINA
WELLS
Staff Writer
Secret Service's "absolute crowd
one of them," Custer said;
Associate
Editor ·
control."
Many people who lined Route 9
.
Although it's _
not your typical
Nick Capuano, a junior who was . had a similar view to Custer's if
According to - Town of
drive by, President Clinton's wav-
also at the everit, agrees with
they actually saw the president at
Poughkeepsie
'
police, the
in-
ing pass through the
area -
last Baumgardner,
saying
he . all. Custer said she thinks that
vestigation of the alleged rape
February is still quite clear in the - remembered them examining the _ Marist hyped the event a little too
on Sat.~ Sept. 11
is
st
ill
going
minds of many people.
roof of Champagnat Hall for
much.
strong. _ .
· · _- _ -
.
On Feb .. 19, 1993, President security reasons.
·
·
''Itwasn'ttoo big of a deal. He
"We• cannot comn1.ent on
Clinton drove by Marist College on
"I was impressed by all the
didn't stop -or anything, he just
anything other than ther~ is still
his way to make a speech at security," Nick said. "They were
passed right through,
n
Custer said.
a very active ·investigation,"
Haviland Middle School in Hyde very
organized
and
very
Leland Boutilier, a sophomore
Sergeant Thomas Mauro said.
Park. Many Marist students lined thorough."
·
w_ho was also atthe event, said he
· The alleged - rape of
an
Route 9 on that Friday afternoon,
The area may have been swarm- _- thinks Marist should have taken
18-year-old female student oc~ :,
only to get a glimpse of passing · ing with security, people, and the
different measures to infoim"the -
cuq~n~,t~eLoweUThomii!i ·
camera
crews and,_ eventually, the press, but sophomore
KenyCuster - .. students,·. .,
_
:
, _·
~
·
:;
• :
'
i:: .
.:
<::ofil?lu~c:at1on Ce1_1.ter, _on
t~~
president.
·
_ .
had a good enough view to see th'e
·
> .
·
, .. _
>".
.
. . :
·,,
~
'
·mght: of Sept~· 11_.
•
:
·
· /·:.
Ju'nior Jeff Baumgardner said he. president.
--
. :
...
see
.DRIVE
page
s ►'
.
The
victim ·was
.
returning·
Security. Briefs
Be a Peer
II
-
•
•
•
Career Assistant
Have fun helping others
and_
:ledihing· tips
for career success!
, ' .
,
-
Information Sessions:
Feb. 28 (Mon) 4:3Q-S
-
DN211
Mar. 2 (Wed) 11:3_0-12 DN2_11
Mar. 3
(Thurs) 5~5:30·· DNl00 ·.,.
For more information,
contact
.
Kate Pileggi, DN226 x3547
IIW
llr~
~i~
•ll~~
lilli~ •
IIW
JIR!J
,And.
Many
O,ther- De.s.ti.natio.os!
IJ. ,
at_
tdkt
/J~ {/; .. _
«
JfM".. .
1
gJerr,aa _ : _
._
Jt!-/P.aa
fW._
-
.
·
Poughkeepsie: -
,ub
City,
246
Main Mall •
485-3579
rxli
.f _
Arlington ·
1iHORTl..fNE' ·
Arlington Getty, 813 Main St.• 454-3530
from an off campus p~. when
an -unidentified• male -grabbed ,
berfrom behind and thiew~her.
to -the ground .. According· to
reports, the victim did not know
the three -perpetrators.
Sergeant
Mauro said there are
two active detectives still on the
case. ·Detective Paul Holt and
Detective Paul Lecomte are in-
vestigating the -alleged• rape.
The Dutchess County District
Attorney's office _- refused to
comment on the details of the
MCAT:begilis 2/26 .
GREbe. -
4/21
-•
-
';C.
gI11S .:,-• -..
. LSAT begins 4/30
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read
the
fine
prmt.:,Smart
people_:
want
small
ctasses.(fewer
tha1'1'
15
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;4
proc\ored
diamostic exami-
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exfu1tielp
wiih'ibe'i~tructor,
and
excellent ~re imprt>vrnents'.·:
· Smart i>'<!Ple prepare
with.~
THE,
Neilhtt Princeton University nor Educational Testing
sem.,,
is
affiliated
with
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• I • \ I \ • '
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THE CIRCLE,
·FEATURE
FEBRUA8Y_17,
1994
--.
:
'\\':anted: New Marist~-Illasccit·
:_' _by
ROt(jQf1NSON
~ti~~~ading coach Kathleen
-- :·,\?;:'.-;._Staff Writer'..· .,.
Tryouts were held last semester.
·_·, . . .
.
., ... ·" : . ....... , .·..
.
· .. · ,Unfortunately, the amount of -
. _ c·.-}V~t~d: .c;>ne· M_i:m,st s~udent,~
:
:voltinte~rs -.yereJacking; In fact,
must. - be . capable - of- moderate
_
th~~e _was only one participant at .
· physical. exercise; tremendously ex- . . that last tryout.
-
treme portio·ns of good cheer, and
· Why ·• were there . a lack of
h.ave no adverse. reaction to. fur;
volunteers?"
No, this is not a personal ad.
"I just'don't know. I mean it's
·
This is an offer to any and all
a fun job,»said cheerleader cap-
Marist.students ~ho might like to
tain Tracy Smith.
become th(next Marist mascot.
Fortunately; the student proved
'., .
i
-\The/'jol:, • is}
·
no\V open and
capable of the task. However, pro- -
\ , avail_!il:>le)C:,)econie the. Red Fox.
blems arose once more when the
.
.
/inte.r~{e4 :stud,ents'willperform _
student transferred to another col-
in a·tryoubvhere'tliey
wm
display
lege at the beginning of the 1994
both their physical skills and
spring semester ..
upbeat_ nature. ·
, This left Marist without a fox,
.- Be forewarned - the position of and the fans with one less reason
the fox is not always a simple one.
to cheer;
Participants will be expected to do
According to Rogan, the fox
more· than just walk around and
serves a very important duty.
wave.
"In general all school mascots
''Our last mascot -tumbled · and
create a feeling of unity. They bring
did a lot of physical stunts," said
people together," said Rogan.
Smith added that she believed'
there was a real need for a fox.
"It
helps to bring more spirit to
the crowd," said Smith .
Previously, the fox appeared on-
ly _at men's basketball games but
now Rogan says she would like to
expand upon its duties.
"Ideally we would like to have
the mascot available at all athletic
events," said Rogan.
The next s~t of tryouts are ten-
tatively scheduled for some time
during this semester. This .will
allow the fox to be available for the
start of the football season.
· In addition
to
sporting activities,
the fox will occasionally make
special appearances at other func-
tions, serving as
a
symbolic
representative of the school.
In fact, Rogan says experience in
community service and theater are
big advantages for any candidate
looking to become the fox.
"The fox serves as a kind of
goodwill ambassador for, ·the
school," said Rogan.''
. Rogan noted that the Jox _has
received more attentio11 and respect
since the arrival o(its new costume.
.The. new .costume was purchased
over the summer for approximate-
ly $1,500.
.
According to Rogan the new
outfit is quite an improvement over
the last costume.
"The new uniform looks more
· like a real fox and I think more
people like that," said Rogan.
Rogan explained that the old
costume appeared goofy, and that
made it difficult for it to garner any
respect.
-"The
;
mascot ought to be a
source of unity, not something sil-
ly," said Rogan.
Rogan said that the new costume
. helped to make a distinction, that
was lacking with the old costume.
"We want people to think of it
as the Red Fox. Not as Joe Smith
... $einf eldoffers.perfect after dinner mint
__
~
•· .:. ~-lkt~i~i{iht{i_n~s ______ .
_
_ ~~~l~h;,:~!f~-i~~-1~!s\~~1r~a~s~
by
MA
TT
MARTIN
_
ing, ~ecause the doggie b?g means
Jerry" Seirifeld
i'ias
offi'ciaii/fn•- '.; i_e(th,er;,ygu~r~:,qurJit f,f
:
r~staurant
herit_ed the mantel l~ft vacant by
when you're not.hungry, o_r you've
Bill'~!2osby ·as th~'reining:king: of
chose'J t1Jr~tup11,~~t f?()SS,1,ble way
com_eaf;· . . _'.:- ;
•
,,. ; - -_ ·--~--- : .:- :;
there
IS
·to get d0J!:, food.
·•L1ke fbsbf
before him,- Seinfeld
is·the star of a top
-
~rated; self-titled
sitcom and now, a member of the
New York Times· bestseller list with·
his.'
first ·
endeavor-
"SeinLanguage." · (Bantam,
$19.95)
-
In - his preface, Seinfeld pays
tribute to the former champ,
revealing the influence Cosby had
on:_his life, and career.
''!was proud
to
be the only kid
in my neighborhood with a-·com-
plete Bill Cosby album _collection ..
He~WITu-:-rriy~ravoi'ite;c6medianfa11d,
the·
:first'. black actor"· to.
staijri
'a
••
series. But to me, he was the fir.st
adult on TV to wear sneakers on ·
a regular basis. I know that af-
fected me, but I '.m not sure in .what
way."
· Now a multimedia fixture,
(S~infeld, the TV: series, holds at
fourth in the Nielsens. while
Seinfeld, the book;falls to number
eight,) Seinfeld _is flooding the
American continent with his unique_
brand. of .. insight into North
American -culture.
,;{''Whenever you ask for the dog-
gie bag at
a
restaurant, there's a
certain sense of failure there, isn't
there? Peopl~al):Vays »rhi~per it to
the
waiter, 'Uh
-
, excuse me. Can
I_
Dog Food? Who? What? Yes,
most comedians make their living
by pointing out to the lay observer
the nuances of human existence,
but Seinfeld has brought that skill
to a new level. From casual glances
into the psyche to staring at the
base elements that drive our inner
workings.
. ''Men and women; all in all,
behav.e just like our basic sexual
· el~fu.erits: Ifyoil. watch single men to give ·you t_hat. You can go now.
-on-a weekend night they really act If you want'fo go out next week,
very -~~1ic4 iH~e .. sp~rlll~ ._,.- . all,
.fl!,
giyenou~,a short .rqlJr. that
disorgariized;~btimpin/f intq' their-~ matches:·,,_, __ .-:::
.. ·:
.
, ·_-\ :, ?:· -: - '
friends,. swimming in· the wrong . - ·sei~feld
1
s light and easy humor
direction,'_'
.
.
makes for effortless reading. While
'_'I
was first."
the book runs a
180
pages, a
"Let me through."
serious reader could easily finish
"You're on my-tail."
the entire work in an hour and a
"That's my spot."
half.
·
"We're like the Three Billion
Stooges."
I'm sure that you can identify a
few of your friends that fit this
stati;ment to a T, or maybe the bar
scene at Berries or Sidetracks.
The book makes for great
reading before bedtime;travelling,
or in the male library, not to men-
tion during class. That is if you can
keep your laughs to a dull snicker.
This is the strength of Seinfeld's
It's_ the perfect book of instant
.humor -
stretching the reach of
dinner conversation starters
i(
believability.
you're in a bind for material.
It'~, like S~eyen S~~elberg's dino
"Life is truly a ride. We're all
_
fib:1_1-
Jurass1~ Park,· . you ma~ not . strapped in and no one can stop it.
. beheve whats on the
screen;-,but--~,-when,..thC'
"
'doctor·,,.,slaps~your
iC~,
one hell
of
a show._
behind, he's'rippingyourticket and
·
I
once had a leather1acket that
away you go. As you make each
got ruin~d in th~ rain. Now wh:
passage from youth to adulthood
does m01st_ure rum leather? A~en ;
to maturity, sometimes you put
cows ~u.ts1d~
~
lot of the time. _ your arms up and scream,
When 1t s rammg, do c?ws go to
sometimes you just hang on to that
the farmhouse, 'Let us ml We're
bar in front of you. But the ride is
all ';earin.g leather_! Open the door!
the thirig. I think the most you can
We re gomg to rum the whole out-
hope for at the end of life is that
fit here!':
.
.
.
your hair's messed, you're out of
One might even classify Semfeld
breath and you didn't throw up."
as a written "Far Side." He's got
'
the cows, the characters, and
On the other hand, you may
senseless-humor.
want to save that one for some
"I've always wanted to invite a
other time.
woman up to my apartment for a
nightcap then just give her one of
those little hats that flops over on
the side.'That's all. I just wanted
Matt Martin is The Circle's
feature editor. His book review will
appear periodically.
5
Restaurant
·Review
'Tfils headline has no relation to this column
N:ew Yorkers no longer have a
monopoly on deranged activity.
Amy Fisher and
,
Joey· Buttafucco
made a good· case· for continued
dominance in the event, however,
the Bobbitts proved to be to great
a force to overcome.·
John Wayne and his wife Lorena
proved that the rest of the world
can be just as ridiculous, as well as
' ;-;,raising1°the·1 stockHofrthe•,word
! ,_;
'"penist-';to:an1all4ime,,high;,:•;
1
i
·'i: "
1
Evliiyc1af; iho'iisaiids
'of
people
· pick 'up their . favorite tabloid
· newspapers with headlines that
literally scream DAN QUAYLE'S
ALIEN LOVE CHILD (Exclusive
photos inside) while they wait in
line at the supermarket. -This in
their never ceasing. quest for
''new.s.~';
, /
u '·,
. . '
- :<froth Lis, jhat there
·
are even
. more bizarre events happening just
down the street in every town from
Boston to Hicksville, and just
as
entertaining.
Hell, we live in Poughkeepsie
after all.
THE WORLD OUT THERE is
a weekly sampling of these lesser
publicized events.
Driver
of
the week On October
1,
Mike Sproul, age
3,
made na-
tional news when he com-
mandeered the family car, which
had one flat tire, and cruised down
U.S; 41 near Tampa,.Fla., hitting
two parked cars and narrowly miss-
ed '.several moving ones. Mikey's
assessment:_ "I go zoom." On Nov.
11;using a cigarette lighter, Mikey
burned down his family's house,
sending his father to the hospital
with second and third degree burns.
Mikey's comment: "Now I have no
more house."
tied over his head, arid a small,
empty paint bucket attached to his
penis.
A Commencement suggestion In
October in Bogota, Columbia,
rowdy students jeered the president
of Columbia's prestigious National
Uniyersity, Antanas Mokus, as he
was· delivering a speech. After
withstanding several shouts,
Mokus stepped to center stage,
turned around, lowered his trousers
and underwear and bent over. He
subsequently apologized and · of-
fered, to resign.
Worth its weight in bacon
'
Emergency dispatchers in Weld
County heard only heavy breathing
when they answered a
911
call.
Convinced the caller was a
"woman in distress," they dispat-
_ched a rescue squad to a house in
Nun. Paramedics arrived to find a
puzzled woman watching TV. Her
vietnamese pot-bellied pig, Gallate,
had pushed the receiver off the
hook and pushed an automatic dial
button for 911 with her snout.
How many housewives does it
take to change a light bulb? A
Cherry Hills Village woman called
police when she discovered that a
light she had turned on in her house
The World.: Out There -by Matt Mai;tin
Pardon me, but do
you have any Grey Poupon?
· In Augusta, Ga., in September,
Dr. Keith Dale Rose, 31, resigned
from the hospital staff and left
town after pleading guilty to public
indecency. The events: Two female
neighbors sighted the good doctor
emerging from his apartment nude
with his mouth gagged, his hands
Her name
was
Tonya A Denver
man and his twelv_e-year-old
daughter went from classroom to
classroom -at Martin Luther King
Jr. Middle school looking for a•girl
the daughter had had a fight with
a few days earlier. The father
allegedly instructed his offspring to
"go get that girl and kick her ass,"
and held back teachers who tried
to break up the ensuing fight.
was no longer on. Officers
responded and informed the
woman that the light had burned ·
out.
The jury used the insanity
defense as well In Bay Minette,
Ala., Raymond Giadrosich, 39, on
trial in September for killing his
wife and mother-in-law near the
end of a stormy divorce pro-
ceeding, was convicted on one
.
.
. .
.
count. Although Giadrosich shot
his wife, and then,
IO
seconds later,
·
Thejury found him not
guilty by reason of insanitv for the
first killing but sane and gmlty for
the second.
STATS
*Chances that
a
pedestrian
-
kill-
ed by an automopj},e_ip._tll.~ lJn_ited
States last ye~fr was di-u'tik:: 1 iii 3.
*Amount the U.S. Department
of Transportation
will
spend next
year on a study of drunk walking:
$370,000.
Pages of forms an applicant
must fill out to be considered for
the position of elf at Macy's: 10.
Price of an authentic coroner's
toe-tag key chain from the Los
Angeles Coroner's Office gift shop:
$5.
Ratio of incidence of intentional
head-banging among infant boys
to
the incidence among infant girls:
3
to
I.
*Average number of infants
abandoned in U.S. hospitals each
month last year: 1,000.
Matt Martin is The Circle's
Feature editor and compiles these
events from regional newspapers
across the country. Sources can be
obtained by contacting the author
through The Circle.
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THE CIRCLE·
-_ MARISf. COLLEGE, PQUGHKEEPSIE, NY 12601
-THE ·.STODENT
:NEW$PfiPEI _
Julie
Martin,senior editor:
S.J. Richard,
editor
Ted Holmlund,
sports editor
Cari Oleskewicz,managing
editor
Matt Martln,feature editor -
Kristina Wells,
associate editor
Justin Seremet,
assistant editor
· Andrew Holmlund,
associate editor
Dana Buonlconti,
col~ editor .
Meredith Kennedy,
associate editor .
K.lreII A~ L~khman,
assistant editor_.
.
Jennifer Ponzinl,
advertising manager
Teri L. Stewart, editorial page editor
James ~~king,
(!istrib~tion ~nager·
·. Dennis
Glldea,facully adviser
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
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i_-:,-\;~;J;..,
,•:•;;
LL:!',,,
. .--({~J:. : .·
.
~
•· :_
~~,~.
Ro
_
· eking T.he_ B_ .oa.
t
:
.
He's
-
bothered, she'S·VQt,ing.
Let me first say thatlreally enjoy going
. First and foremostitwowe~ks agoTllla'de
Only three people in this entire school want to b.e.studen~ body presiden(next
to Marist. .··
·
. . • · •. · ·. · ·.
'
·a
whopping mistake. Much to. my surprise;
· There is no other school or university that . · .. seniors_ are permitted to• vote in th,e· upc_o,ril~ · ,
year.
·. :J would want to go'to; • · ·. ·
·
-·
'ing elections. I hope aHmy:~l~slll~tes'wUI
Not too surprising, consider;ng what it takes to get most people fired up about
I am very anxious t<>. write this column due. make the effortfo g<>:out aµ_cl
1
y_t>t~:
,(Try
t9 __
anything on this campu~-
-
, • ·
.
'.·
·
·
.
·,, .. ·.
.
. .
--.. ·, ,, : ">to:~he·nature of its C0f!!en~;, , '.-:•: :;: \
'tw.11.~,!?f
it_,'.~.I,~~~ihg ~o-~'etNis-:.B.O:siti~~;,:
The' m:ajoriifot: the ~Iebtions taking place next week'are uncohtested.':S.ome: ... '.' .·
>
10
s~ver~ of ~he past issues ?f1J~ 9~rc~~'-'
J?i;Wr~_,,;-
not, ?_S l,2~~p-~s~~e.!}t£~rfot~!i1i; .
• · , ; ··, .,. ·- .. , • ·,,. ·, _..,, ... ,..
·,, · •
.
,;· • .-, · -,:,. ,-, . .,.,,:,· . •; -
,
,.
,
_, ,. -·,.
·
,·" people.have wnuen to.the editor commen• Manststudents.)
positions do not eyen have anyone runmll:g.for them ancl
Vv'IH
have to be ap-
-ting
oh
the good as well as the bad things .
Second, I had a few problerp.s last. we~k,
pointed at a later date.
_
.
.
_ .
. ... ·· .
. .
, h_ere at Marist._ . . . . _ . . , .
; .
with Scott's colu.n:m aJ:i<>.}1l.~Pli!ical co.i:~~c~~
This type of apathy has been a problem at Marist. For some reason people
. ' I have ·remamed qmet all·through .these ness. Anyone who knows anything about me
have no desire to
·
n for offic
·
.
'
issues however,
L
was_ very ~sturbed this kno.ws-politi~al correctnes.s is soxnetQi.l}&J,;l
.
. .
.
. .
ru ·.
e.
. . . .
. .
'
.
.
week and I thought it was. unportant. to take-very senousiyand hammer ~way at. ·
Most students here do not even have the m1t1attve to vote for their SGA
· discuss some of things that have hothered
. What! found th¢ most offe~sive abcitit. '.
representatives.
.
.
.
.
. .
..
me.
. .
. •.
Scott's column was the, term. "sexually
And why should they, if there are so few candidates who want to serve them
This week as lwas sitting inthe cafeteria; challenged" ·instead of homosexual. What•·.
and want to work°'for
~
;tud~nt voice at Marist? .
·.
:
.
·
several students were mocking .arid down ''.se~ually.challenged''.indicates, at leastto
·
·
·-
·
right ridiculing one of the employees. •.. . nie, is that the individual is trying to over~
Studentsat Marist are
sb
satisfied with the statuS"quo thatthey have no desire
The employees'. name \Vill' remain come some sort of problem: _ . .. . .
to serve in the Student G.overnment Association.
,arioymous but I_ think we all know who.we .. Homosexualitydoesiiotin~icatethatthere
That is prettyimpiessive, considering there is'
·
always someo1u~ complaining.
are talking.abcmt.
.
.
..
. is a problem beyo11d the c~ntrolof the
in<
about something~ parking, security, the library, registration;iheadminisfration.
To those.fifteen or so people who were dividualthat maYneed correcting; (I'll have ·
The problem is, welike.to whine andwe·donorliket:o
ad: ...... .
·. ' There are some notable exceptions, Sometimes, sfodents~ ·as wen aftaculty
_-
·-. ~-•--,.,:-.~•_: •:-. .•. ;;;_.\ : ....
•
· .. -.. _::·:=-,.-·, "
,
--::i-:--;
::
__ -
..
· ..
··,r.
,·.,
:
~·- .
.:
:~.,
:1·. ·•·~--• · /
... ..-·
.
,,.,--;:_·.
,
-:r •.
·f·'~:.-!•,.--,.-~
decide to do somethmg; Grq1:1ps on campus sqch
a5
Students Eilcou.ragmg G!obal .. ·
•
· .
. Awareness, Campus
Mi11iitry,
Black·
Student· Union,
ind
·:maiif
oiher~:,··c{iten> :: '.·~-: '
. put their words info actions. .
.
.
What about the others?. . . . ·. .·· . ·.·.
. ..
·
•·..
.
: •
. . '..
,
· . ·.
.: ' .
. . This apathy is distressing because there if so. little. on this campus. that we, · ·
the. students, the sources
of
tuition, ;actually have control over; . .. ·.
. . . • .
====::=::::::::.-'-_-__ -..... -..... :... ..... ""' ~--..,. ---_:.....,.. -.... ---..., ..,.. __ --...,.. --._;;._.;.;..,... ... .:.:.:.:.::::-__
.;___ -:.:._
="" ::._
=
... =~
=._
=_
=...,
=-_ -::._
=..,.=----...,. --.
______ '-.,... ---_ -..:._.;....., --..,.. :......,. ...,_ .:....--:,-..,_ -_-..., -"-_ ..,._..,.-: --._
We often have our chances, yet. they pass by· because we}1ad other;.th_ings; ,:', tJ:i,e~.e;th,ai afte~
... ·• ~on;~ancl to:.uI of.you who>.···• mor. e.
·
... ·
•
io'
s. ay·J.bo···utJh
.. i
.
. s .. ri.ext ..
,v···
ee.Itf .: .. ,. :.
•
• ;
to do, or we were afraid.
. ·
·
.
.
·
.
• do 1t ev_eryday,cloes 1t.m~Jse_yo_yf'"el I?etter-
.
:· •.·· .. _·. ·•·.· .· .. , ; .·.·
,
.,d·<_.·
·
./_ .-.-
.
•M·.··
c r ·
·
·v•T···
·
d'
·1
W
· ·
t ldth"
·
cl
·. · ·;
th"
Ad · ·
t·t l
·
'
·.
.
to cut ons.onie.o. ne'?.·.>:,· ....
\:;····•·.·.·.·.·.<•.: ..
•
.;>
•:
..
·.-~lnFaseyo,u
....
1111
s_s~·.
·
.. 1ton ... •
.. · ... ·.
11
es_.
~y
e are
o .
mgsan we are given . mgs.
n
we accep
i:
n
many_case.s
Welcome
io
college and grow up! .· .
.
·
... mght; .ther~ was -a .h".e debat~ amo_ng Jhe
we. atcept thatthe school would rath~r treat us as children_
and
·rtiake
oµi
d~~i:C ..
J'vloving on~:, ••
-
..
'.
>.-
:
"
<
· . . . :
< . .
<
thre~ cand1da~~.s- ru_nnn~g, for. St?den~ 1)9d¥,
·sions for ·us.· .
.
.
.
. ..
. . ·.·
·
·• •·. . . .... ·.. . . ·
·
• ·.
1·find it very hard ,to
,
understand '.why president. (Don t worry ifyo~ !91Ssed it,
!C?!-1, -
It ·
·11
k
h
·
th
·
t I
·11
I
h
·1
1·1
th
·
t· d t.
d . .
·
···
· · · ·
·k ·
d. . · .h
. can catch it again on MCTV at
3:30
p.m. for ·
w1
eep . appenmg
~
ose m con ro w1 .a ways av,e
t
~~
1 . es_~ e~ s
.
_
_st~ e9-ts cannot go on~ w~e. en _wit out : he remainiri :da
i;
untirthe election~)
':,8.•_,;
empower themselves and demand that we make the key dec1s1onsthat shape
dnnkmg.
. ··
·
--
;-.
t
g
Y
.
. . ·
_
..
,.;v.
!.c•-J
our collegiate lives.
·
.
.
_
. W~_ap-kno_w that.1,t snov.;~ last ~nday and
As pn€: of the paqelists, _I thi~k the debaJ;e
. . . •·
.
.
.
- . .
.
that stud~nts .w,~re . stuck m their rooms.
went" well: .It was, lackmg m one area-:,
_ These dec1S10~~ c~m~d mea~ anythmg_ fro!ll 'Yha!c~.I~sse~
~~e
reqm:ed ~o
W~fi!. - . .
That ~as ok "?th _the stud~nts because they · tnough ... actual debate. _-::: \-:~- ·. ,. -~- _ :;.:
.
::dJ
·courses are off~red to.who the graduation speaker-will-be to what proJect
our:
,
:- ...
mov~d-the_p¥fies mto their rooms.
-~•,·::•<,:' . ,-, ....
_
._;,,._,_
;._..-,,,-,.,,,i ,·.
·-·.+:-H
·
tuition dollars will pay for next. ·
· •
-
-
- _.... " -·. __ - ·
~·~
-
·
···
> "
·
Why?- Because that is what you are;,"sup:.:> .. :-~TJi~; con~e_~s';!s· }';!:11;
00
¥~!g~
.-~a~?-~1:!t~L:-.:.
. .
. .. . . .
.
_
. posed to do at college?"
.... · . . .· ·.:.,
:
. · ,,N1~k .<;apuano!· MaJ,t Q1ll!~-'- ~n-~-~1,1t~9nr,
1::
We have-~ nghtt~ give .s1gI11f1~antmput; ().n
!~fSf
r11a~te,;s:
·
.
:
.
. .
·_:
:
, · ::-qi_y~h
'inf
Saturday or Sunday morning Mignone~ shoulg_ notJJ.t,:_, ~1.1
-
m~w~~qn fA3:t•'
. The Board of Trustees makes ~ost of the dec1s1onsthat affect 11s, Who are
·>.down in the'cafeteria,youcarihearxnen and cth~re'a~e no·prob!~ms l)~r,e at MansF
.
•••
«: .,
ihese people? And how could they possibly know whatis bes(Jc;ifus? · ·
women talking about
thefr
1
'hook~ups. ;, .. Puring·
the. dt:bate~
:Antlloriy Mignone·
Run for office. Hold
a
raliy. Join a club; Start a new club; Write letters.
Sometimes·! won,der if anyone knows what said; "We all get alo.ng her!! pretty weU
011_
.
·
· · · ·
·. · ·
h.
-
·
·
·
k ··
···
1
·
1
.
·. ·
0
1
h.·
.
the word inonogomous mea,ns., :
. . .
camp11s," I think Jllany stud~nts,wouldbeg
Prmta newsletter,_do
W
atever 1snecessaryto ma e peop ~·· 1~t~n.
n
Y
t en
How can I forget all of you who "r ,, to differ.
· ·· · · ·
shcmld complaining.bejustified; when something is being ~one to ~lleviate the
on security? ·
.··. .
.
· .·
·.·•
ag .
ff~e all get along so wen; why did alfthe
problems and
to
reform whatever is wrong.
Why ri.ot?
.
.
.
.
·· I find tha{most of.yo_u
\vl).o
talk down candidates
·
.
, stress •the·
need '. for
Is
it a f car of rocking the boat?
·
abo~t securitr are the people who are beirig communication?
If
h
. ·
~
· ·
·ri
d b.
· -
k"
h ·b
•
.
•
h
.
· pu_t m the ambulance on your way to .St.
· •··· . . .
. ..
.
.
.
. .·. . ..
. .
· • . ~o, t 1s 1ear
ISJUStl
1e , ecause roe mg t e oat 1s not an action t at many
Francis to ''dry-out."·_
.
, .. · . ..
_ ... !fall three candidates really believe this·
peopl~;take ki~dl)'. to·around here;
·
.
·.·.
.
· ·...
· >There"area~fewofyou whoprobabiydid toJ:ie true, it would only'seem logical that··
·
tii''fuci~Jhis_
'is
probably the first time you have ever heard it encouraged.
not like that last statem.ent but it's probably the.qi:de n~~~i:_llave its fuqds frozen again'.
'iiow~ver
this is an encouragement.
because you were ~ot put
}n
the .ambulance .. IC'we all get aiong here pretty well;" was- .
· ·
' . · ·
• .
.
.
but got ''buste<i" either wi~h alcohol, drugs_ the rape on campus last temester an isolate~_
~
Do somethmg that will give you a v01ce.
or jtist a violation you did not agree with. incident?, AreHhere no· other, iustanc~ of
t
Do something that
,viii
make a difference.
Now for those of you who still have a pro-
violence on campus? '' ..., ..., ...
..,-.;
0
- ! ' ...
Most of the students at Marist are at a stage in their lives where it is now
blem with_secru!~•_why.don't you_voiceY.our
When deciding where· to attend collegek
or never. Still yoimg still not faced with all of the extra responsibilities that
concemsm a CI~zed manner and
0
?t m a (aimost four years ago now) one reas'on
r
.
.
.
,
. .
. .
.
·
.
cartoon; a "bashing-letter''· to the editor or
·
b
·
·
1
k d
will take over once graduation day comes and goes. .
"bitching" at them when you. have been picked Manst was . ecause; !O me, it oo e ..
There are problems at Marist. Everyone has their own priorities as· far as what
caught.
, .
.
·
. ·
· uke the. typical college. '·
·
· .
. ·, · _
is wrong, and what needs to be addressed.
.
_The list could go ori ·bui
r~
'
afraid I
~t ~ad some ol~ bu~l~ngs and some new
Addr · th
bl
might offend someone.·
t\_
community; is budd1_ngs~ It.had trad1t1on,a~d perhaps th:
,
. ess
e pr_o ems.
. ma:de up of the people ,m it. Not the __ proro.1s~.<?f a future._
: ·'"
·...
·
Address them m whatever way you feel best. .
_ .
,
buildin~, the'roads or the landscape, but the
Tod~y,
1
see ·a ~~h-o~(th~t
·
0
J~ci;\~l~k
Do not be told that there are others who willworry'abotit these things. Do
people. · . ·.
.
.
. .
to the future again. .
not be told that you really have no option in cert~in matters. You always have
T~e a look~ at your ~mmunity fyfa~st .
• · ,.
options
and 1f I have said something you agr~ with,
rm notgoirig to·tell you who to vote for.'.
·
.
. .
.
.
then change
it.
If
you do not agree with what
·
.
·
·
Ask to be a part of solvmg the proble~s, of making thi~gs b~tter .,
1
have said, you must. think that Marist is
~ Rea<! the article about the gebate. 'Yatch_
And
if
asking does not get you anywhere, it is okay to demand.
perfect and there is no reason to change.
the debate on MCTV. Call the cand1dates
Do not be af. raid to demand the attention of the administration the faculty
If you ch?se the last answer, you have pro-
and talk to them.
· ·
'
'
ved my pomt
Do whatever you have to do. Just vote. ·
government officials, anyone who is supposed to be working for you.
· Scott Sull~ns is one of The Circle's
Caroline Jonah is one of the Circle's
Occassionally they ha".e to be reminded of this - they are wor~ing for us.
political c
_
o!umnists.
political columnists
\)
I!
---.,-----------------------~----~------
-
-
- - - - -
--
.
• . I ,
·
r
l
•
-
1
I
I
I
I
, ,
,
, ·
,
I •
,
I
•
,
·
, - • . • •
I ,
t '
I
I
I • •
I
7
.
NRA
edilPrthl
·
1'rl.isses
·
·
targ¢t
..
•
·
·
.·•.
·
Don't
yoi{be
my
Valentine!
.
.
•
..
•
.
.
•·
~dlt~r
_
:
,
_
_
,, ...
-•
·.·
.
. .
... .
.
.
.
.
.,
'
·
;i~lit~
:
to 9
_
\\in guri~.
_;,<
.
.
.
:
'
.· . .
J\~other'ei~ment
'.:
tii~
'·
editJriJ( '
.
·
... ·
In
,
.
re~porise
.
_to
·
1ast
>:.
week's
.
_
.
,
;M<?repver, tlje o~ga:n~iationJn- failed to offeris thafthe NRA
·
i's
ed
_
iforfal
·
entit
_
led
;
"Up in
'
Ar!lls,"
vests
,
hundreds
·
of- thousands
.
of macle
_
up
of
primarily licensed
.
·
·.
tw
·
ould like
to correct some
of
the
.
--
dollars
--
each
.
yea
r
to prcimote gun hunters, competitive shooters
_
·
and
•
miscon
·
ceptfons a~d
:
·
ractless opi-
safety;
:
·
·
.·
-·· ·
:
.
. .
·.
--
·
.
·
.
-
·.
marksmen and women.
·
.
,
.
riions
·
raised.
:
·
·
,
·.
. .
·
.
·
Since g~tting ~id ~f ai(6(
'
the
·
F
·
urt
.
herm
-
ore,
-
th~
.
NRAh~s
\:
_
on-
Your
-
.
editorial
,
stated the Na
~
·
guns in the world is
·:
an impossibili-
.
_
tiq~al
-
Rifle Association
.
is
:
_
'.
'an ty,
·
the NRA singlehandedly takes sisteritly been pro-environment and
.
·
organization which believes that
-
we on
,
the charge of teaching law-
•
supported countless pro
~
land bills
have the constitutional right to pur-
.
·
abiding
citizens
safe
gun and even offered many state and
chase;
·
own,
-
and use cop-killer
ownership.
.
. .
.
natio
1
nal
foreS t
regulatory
bulletsi
1'
..
_
.
.
••
··
,
.
.
..
·
•
•
Iri
fact,
the
-
Institute
•
.
for legis ation.
.
.
.
.If
the
.
editorial staff had taken
Legislative Action, the
·
NRA's
Finally, asa co-fourider of the
the time to
..
res
'
earchany
•
legislation !egislative liaison, has introduced
.
Marist College National Rifle
the NR:A
:
supports
as
f.~gar~
S:
the countlessbills and proposals which Association, I encourage anyone
so-called
,
cop-kiUer
'.
bull
_
ets
,
'
they
.
·
would make it impossible for
COD·
interested in the passion-heated
would
·
have
·
realized
:
the
•·
NRA.
.
victed felons to purchase a firearm. issues
.
0
f
gun control and the Se-
helped write legislation iha
(
lecf to
.
.
·
·
~oritrary to popular opinion, the cond Amendment to consider join-
the
,
general prohibition
;
ofthis
.
~RA
~oes support instant ing our club.
•.
specialized teflon-coated armor-
·
background
·
.
checks which would
As budding scholars in a college
.
piercing bullet.
embrace
.
law-abiding hunters,
·d
The
-
ediforial
•
also daiin
s
the
.
marksmen and handgunners and
.
setting, we muS
t
not let
·
act
.
NRA
.
is
.
''an organization
•
that deter
··
violent and predatory
·
~~~~~;~~:~~~~~i!~e~i~'~!!g:;d
·
would prefer to arni everyone;''
criminals.
.
,
.
a chance to meet.
.
Again
)_
the author of the editorial
.•
Orie
,
other allega0on proposed
.
.
.
made the comnion and understan~
·
that the NRA-"feeds the American
To this
·.
end
I
challenge the
dable mistake of trusting the
.
liberal public with.fear/'
.
•
.
. .
.
editorial .staff of The Circle-or
mainstream niedia and politicians
.
01
would argue that it has been the any other individual or party-to
who have
_
magically become gun inedia
_
which have for years
.
ex- debate the issues surrounding gun
experts
}
·
.
_;
,
.. -
_
.\_. ·
.
.
_
:
,.
:
:
.:
: ,
ploited :the fears of the
·
American
.
ownership gun control and violent
•
i
~'!t~ any
j
riiµirb~ ~iggi~g. prie
.
s~d~ti,
>
,._:_
,,
,,
,
,
_
.
·
.
-,.
•
·
!>
·
-;
:
.
crime in the United States
.
-
·
~4.
•;
-
Well Monday
'
wasValentfo~'s
Day,
··
the stupidest ho
_
liday
known to mari.
·
·
.
,
Did
.
anyone ever
,
n9tice that
-~
the initials for Valentines Day
'
·
are
.
VJ).?
·
'
Wow, that puts
.
me in a
romantic mood .
.
What do you get the girl? -
flowers, candy and the number
of a really good gynecologist?
And the whole flower thing is
really dumb.
.
.
.
You give someone flowers to
show your love
_
for them and
what do they have to do to
them'?
:
throw water at them
every
few
days arid
'
then they
shrivel up and DIE!
There's a symbol for a long-
lasting relationship.
·
Then there's
·
candy
.
I've never known a girl to
'openly', key word here, pig out
on junkfood, yet on this day
you
~
re expected to get a
WHOLE BOX
.
OF CANDY!
If
you don't get it they're
mad and can say "What'?! Am
I
fat or something'?"
.
·
would
.
disfover
,
ijjatthe NRA
'
fights
:·
.
The
.
NRA
informs the
.
P-Ubhc
.
,
: :
>
,
,
.
·
Daryl Ortiz, senior
.
ea:cl).'
\'
c1a:y.
~
r
fo
f )
'he
'
:
ia
~:
abjfiing
'.
.
tqr,q°µgh
..
d
_
ocumc;nte
'
q
\
r
edeial
:;:
'u
.
' .
·. •:
. The
Marist College .
'
.
citize~s
'
,
aiicl
"
iti'eir
,
··
coiistitutiorial
'
..
statisiii;s aila
,
studies
'
;
.:
,:r .
< :·
,
,
. '
~
·
,.
-;
National-Rifle As
s
ociation
Then if you do get it, wait a
few days until they tell you
they've fini~IJ,ed
it
:
.
.
.
.
Of course they probably
finished it that day, but girls
never want to seem like they eat
a lot.
.
' ·
l
•
.
,
;
l
.
·
•
,;
•
,
.·
.
,
•
1 :. •
•
:
·
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4 •
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_
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'.
,
,
.
Mi~si~g
,
point
well
taken
.
'
·
Edit~i
(
1
'.·
•
'·
?'
·
:.c:,
,,
·'
·
:
.-
Editor:
·
·
loss along time ago.
WJ~i
{
'
SGA''
electi'oris
·
·
.'
ap
~
·
' '
This letter is m
'
respons~ to Dan
,
If
I
was in fact a sore loser, do
proaching,
'
it is my hope
_
thanhe
.
Veltri's "Sour Grapes/'
.
you think I would have taken the
·
student
·
body
'
will be informed
·
Mr. Veltri, I believe you missed position
.
of Vice President for
about.all the candidates
.
they have
·
_
the point of iµy lette
r
, whi_ch was Clubs'?
.
to
'
ctioose froni
:
.
.
.
_
·
.
to merely hum
.
o!~usly p~mt out
A sore loser would have said
To assist in this,
I
have decided
·
some ofth~realities thateXISt ~hen
·
"later'; and walked away, Mr.~
to
:
writethislettertotalk about one
·
.
one
-
chooses to _undertake
.
the Veltri.
·
ofthe
·
candidate for stu
'
deritbody
.
challenge ,of running for student
I
did not
-
just settle
for
my cur-
president
.
·
.
.
..
0
.
-
.
body prestden!. .
, ·
··
.
.
.
··•
rent position, but rather look for-
-
Anth<>nY Mignone
.
has been
•
ac-
J
was not ~npmg ~bout my loss ward -to working
·
under Mr.
.
tively involved in the Commuter
_
·
and neyer did
I
,
comment on Mr. Rinehart's administration and en-
Union, helping feUoe commuters ~nehart's perforII_lance
:
,
)__,_
-
.
suring that his year as president
get involved with campus life
·
~~
fi_;:·
A5/ar
.
as:the iriiJ?'i~
_
tiQ
f
.that
I
.
runs smoothly
in
respect
.
to clubs.
.
·•
•
":
.
~~~l~
i
~berbtt1tbsula
~tlf1!
i~
~~~Jt?t~~c
~
~~gJt~
?
\.!e!
m:::rs
:;.~n;::t:~:~~f~t~~u!~
·_
:
·
.
'
Council;
.
'.
Anthony
:_
conce
r
n
e
d
-
'
'.
mad~anyailegatioru ifnothing had that it shows
a
lot of character to
.
himself with inany aspects
.
of stu
>
.
occurred.
,-
.
. :
:
· . -
..
ha:vestayed 'involved with the Stu-
dentJife.
,,
·
"
,
_·
.
.
.
..
..
--
.
-
·
Maybeyoushouldhavetakenon dentGovernment Association.
-
·
While
,
temporarily. serving
--
as
.
the challenge of rwuiing in
an
elec-
I hope this clarifies my initial let
-
chief financial
-
officer
:
of Student
:
·.
tion to see what
itis
really about
;
ter to the editor for you.
.
Government
,'
he
·
:
w:is'iii charge
.
of
· ·
•
Perhaps yoti have sonie growing
,
Let's
·
notiiisulf the English pro-
all
club finances arid transactions
.-
up todo with
·
respectsofnotjudg-
fessors
>
by
-:
miss1ng
t
he author's
It's like the first date where
they hardly eat and say: "Oh,
I'm not really hungry." and
.
then in a few dates they're
,
raiding YOUR
_
plate
as
if she's
eating for two people .
Which of course could entail
a whole new problem a guy
doesn't want to think about.
But when she does finish the
~dies you WILL be plagued
with the: "Am
I
getting fat?"
routine.
This is a given
.
·
u
,
.
-
And
,
ydtl
L
women you do~'t
have too rriariy sure things, but
·
this one you can bank on, trust
Irie.
Then there's the whole gift
giving process on Valentine's
Day, which really depends on
the
,
stage of your relationship.
..
This is wh~re guys must
.
evaluate it and become scared
.
because they don't want to give
the impression of a commitment
if there isn't
·
one already .
.
·
Why ask for trouble?
We find enough on our own.
The word 'commitment'
wields so much power.
No one word should have this
much power
.
To guys this is really a four-
letter word.
Of course one we choose not
to say too much.
When a guy hears this word
it's over.
He prepares constantly for
this situation but when it comes
-
.
up, everything goes out the win-
~ow
.
and all
·
emergency routes
·
are closed.
It's alot like the deer caught
in the headlights of an oncom
-
ing car,
He
.
has plenty of time to go
left or go right, but instead what
does he do?
He
heads right for it - head
first.
This of course being much
like a guy's resppnse.
_
.
:
He could've said this or he
could've saici'ihat, but instead
he goes head first'
'
for
'
the
commitment.
And as we all know - the deer
usually
.
winds up dead.
And in the interest of Valen-
tine's Day, I think they should
bring back the game show -
The
Newlywed
-
Game - and use
media personalities.
You could have Harding and
Gillooly, the Bobbits, and the
Buttafucos_
And it would be a little like
Monopoly
~
the Grand Prize
would be a 'Get Out of
Jail
Free' card.
_
So m
_
any people are worried
. .
.
,
·
thatth_t;
_
divorce rate is.so
_
high.
. .
.
·
_
N~t
rrie
'.
..
.
.
.
.
With tht:'se dysfunctional
couples
,
some literallY., (sorry
John Bobbitt),
I'm
starting to
worry about th
_
e marriage rate
.
That's what's too high!
Frank La Perch is The Cir-
cle's
humor columnist.
.
_
:
Currently~ Anthony
.
holds
;
the
.
ing people without kriowllig what
·
.·
point.
position
•·
of
.
student body
'.
,
vice
<·
it is like to be in their position.
.
pr~id!i~~
-
·
\
. ·
~
,
. • ·_
.,
..
•
·._
.
.
:
_
: ,
.
,
:
.
'
·
.
.
·
.
.
I
_
have
.
obviously ac~epted my
.·_
Nella
Licari
VP
for
'
Clubs
The Circle's Production Schedule:
.
)n
._
t
_
his
:
po.s1tio!},Je 1s m
.
~~arge
,
._
.
:
,
•
•·
.
·
_
.
.
·.
,__ _____________ ..;... _ _ _
....
·
·
~-~:i
-
~~~
0
~t4~~
:
~~;~(J;~
_:
,
:
Sorf.i,
Ro~eahrie
·-·
·
-
How;-to reach us:
-
?
~rr:tres!d~n!,
:
:
ktho
~
y
i
~i
_
t
_
s
··.
fAit~~;
-
-
•
. ..
.
,,_:
~
,-
.
.
.
-
_
·
.·
•
M~ndays:
.
11a.m.
to
·
s
p.m.
·
·
~i~~~~!!rf:JJ~~iv~
:
.
~~
f;
~
1
~
J
-;:·.-,
_
:
J
{
iii~{
::,
·
~o
rii
e
;,'
:t
hings
\-~
n
;
ve
(
•
E-~aU
_
:
LT 211, H~L
·
•·
. ;
Beirig
:
so involved With siiiileiit chani~-
'
- ::
.
.
··
}':,c;:.
'
:
::,
i, •::,
•
'
PhonefMail· X2429
.
.
'
o
'.
ve~~nt
t
Alltiioh:>1
:
iai'ow
s'
(
ii:i
t t
?',
W~
1
!l<?SeaJ!ne ~a.ra~no.
•
"!':';:,'
.
'.
,
,
·
:
.
'
·
' . :
'
•
.
fn"s-
'
:ffi,fouts'~fOttl~
'
or
·
anizatfon:
-
····
:
N~
!
-
~_oman~
~
rs .
..
_
>
,
.
..
..
-
·- .
NO LETTERS AFTER
°'.
::
Thls
;
'
2ombin~\vith
~\vorking
,
.
'
i~;~~ne
Sanice
_
no;
.sop
,
~omort:
-
,
,5PM ON FRIDAYS
'
relationship
'_
with the college
_
ad-
.
.
.
ministration, allows :Anthony to get
things done.
.
·
.
·
.
.
Aritho
·
ny has_'inariy' ideas to
-
help
student
,
government
·
run more
·
'smoothly
and
efficiently
.
·
·
·.
Editor:
·
.
.
·
fensive players
'
to "pick
'
up the·
·
:
·
.'
Finally,Anthonyhas expressed
·
-
.
As
a
-
~emb~r of th
.
e hockey
slack for a spotty defense."
a desir:efor improved communica- team,
I
wnte tbis
.
lett~r to clear up
The writer d~es not realize that
.
·
tion
·
a11d bringing student govern-
-
a f~w misc~mcepttons
~
last week's
all
_
players
_.
(both forwards and
-
ment
.
back to the students.
:
.
article which was wntten by Ted
:
defense) aie responsible for an ef-
.
--
·
·
·
.
·.
.
\;_';
·
Holnilurid in his "Talkiri
•
It"
f~tiv_· e teaJ!l defense .
.
-·
Tony Bayer,
J·unfo~
:
coiumn
:
_
.
.
.
··
.
,
.
·
·
.
This
.
year
-
'.s
_team
,
has the least
, .
.
,
.
.
·.
,
·
.
. •
-
-
.
.
.
-
Th~ first nuscpnception is that_ goals scored against
.
it in the entire
.
,,,
_:,,
:
~,,"
,
,..
,
._ ,
,,
:,
:
,,
,.
•
.
;
,
_,
,,,
•
'
i;
_
.1-.:-;
-
,
.-
this year's team is not as good due
Metropolitan Collemate Hockey
The
)i
secret,'s
·
·
out-
::
to
'
'
ad0-8-1 record
.
compared to
Conference.
b-"
_
·
'.',;,;.,::
:
·
·,.
·
team'ii'inthepast.
FAltor:
.
.
.
•
·
_
,
_
-::
.
.
This year's team could be 16-2-1
The
_
best kept
.
secret this past if we had the schedule that we had
wee,C
.was
the MCCT A production
in
the past, however; Head Coach
of "Lend Me A Tenor" by Ken Kevin
-
Walsh has made the non-
Lud~g.
.
league
,
schedule more competitive
·
It
.
was a quality
.,
produc:tion by to help prepare for the league
Marist students and alumni offer-
playoff~ and the national
.
ing
an
evening of laugh~e
'
r
·
and tournament.·
:
' .
,
.'.
. .
·
·
__
,
.
~
-
entertainment. .
,. '
.
'
Look at our
'
scheduie.
I
was proud to
be
a
member of
You
will
find that we plat s
·
ome
.
the Marlst
Community as
I witness-
.
of the best teams in the
-
northeast. ·
ed Marlst students interpret and ex-
I assure you that
this
year's team
•
press the written word i
_
n a creative is one Qf the most disciplined and
production.
·
·
skilled teams in recent Marist
Well done, MCCTA.
Hockey history,
-
-
Chris VertuUo
•
Second, Mr. Holmlund states
CS/MAtb Division
that
.
Marist is fortunate to have of-
· Chuck Eirish, Tom Regan, Dave
Closinski, Kris Rojek, Schuyler
·
Woods, and Grayson Dewitt are
considered
·
among the premier
defensemen in the league.
·
I
w~uld like to thank all the fan~
arid ·
:
The Circle for support
throu~ho~i t~e year.
Their support continues to show
us
why they have been voted "Best
Fans in the League" year after
year.
We hope to see ~veryone
at the
-
game on Saturday, Feb. 26 versus
league
enemy
Siena
at 10
.
p.m.
in
the Civic Center.
'
Thank
you.
Thomas
C.
Fitzgerald, sophomore:
;
.
February 17
·
_
February 24
March
3
-
}Aarch
24.
April 14
April 21
_
_
April 28
_·
May
·
5
i
I
_
.
'
(
.
'
.
,
...
,'
/'
,, ,, •• ,. ;,
,•
,,
,, ,
,
,
.
,, ,
,
•
'
,
..
'
,
' .
, ' t i ' , •
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•' \',. ;,· •'
\,.,,,•
.
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\
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• , , •
' .
• •
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I ' ,
8
THE CIRCLE, FEBRUARY 17,
1994
·
l!Qi1it1~
•-
•
Jij~f
:
99i~~e~
\
L~~li£_
)
()Ptioµ
•
arplic_;a_~i~P.
-
· ..
.
_
.
·
.
,
·
· ·
-
;
· ·
.
bec~u~f.r~Jl~
)
~roup'.s llV<:r11ge
choice
·
<>f
hou~ipg; but one
_
set of
"We'.re trying to
'
give die
.
ne"". option is Just
-
tha~; an opt10~'.
.
by
J
_
ENNlf:~~- FO,,DE
.
• ·
-
nu
_
m~er:,0J.pqo1:i~Y pe>mts
.
~as not
roommates
fa
the group does have students
as
many options
as
possi-
_
I t!rink.th.~ stu~ents "".
1
ll be ecSlatic
·
·
.
- StaffWr,1ter
)
,
.
.
-
.
e~e>ugh.,f_f>r ~hep1to
_
b~ a~tte~ to
a_higb enough
_
poJnt
,
a,verage to get ble," Rai,mo said.
_
·
·
a~?ut it,
•
·
· ~ ~
0
/
rud
: :-·
.
> _
.
:
,
•
.
1t
.
is neari11g "inir-iiine of
'
year
th~
-
~eaw~e_re they :,Vl~lle~ t~
-
~ve,
into the first cho
.
ic~.
·
. .
.
.
.
.
Skeptics
fo~y
worider how these
·
.
Sarah
_
French, -ajuilior froin
.
when the und.ergracfµates at Marist
.
.
.
....
Y.ei _m_~;
-
students
·'
complained
That pair
•
may
•
,
be abl~ to split splits
.
will work
·
.
out and if spme
_
SprJi:ig{~~Iµ,
·
.
.M~.s~.,
·
.
.
·
$aid,
'
..
•
/
'.
J
.
areissued yet anotliefc[orm to
'
fiU
.
.
that :their
'
OWn humt>er
•
:
of point~
.
from their group iri order to get in-
students may have more problems
wo~l~
:t
:
~
~~t
;
t~t~PJ.\h.}
;
-.yoWd
Ql;lt.
·
·
_
~
-
,
.
•
.
:
.-
;
~
: ,
>
,
:,
~
,
>
:
.
·
v,,~
,
higli~npugh; but \V
_
her(ayerag-,
;
to thcfhousirig they wanted.
:
·.
.
.
adjusting
-
'
'.
-
to
.
·
the
.
:
living
rhia!hkerhhv~ _'~vith~)ny_J9e~ds: I
.
do
'
.
.
.
,
.
. ,
,
.
.
'
d
'
'"th
"
lf .
.
f . d
I
. .
..
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.
·
.
_
_
-
Th
.
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··
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--
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e
· .
li
•
;s
'
te
,:
d
. ·
·
-.
o
--·
n
,'
t'i:e
arrangements
;
' :
,
'
:
:
,
1~
•
.
d
-
ena·.
·
.
,
-
-
·
,
--
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~Y.l!lg t
.
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<>PtlO!l
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-
go9d
.
ca~~!:t:j:;:;;f~Pt~r
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~n
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{hijroJpt;r:v~~:g: &ijtp~f
t
? . reyised application forin.
.
.
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.
m
'.
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oir
.
anne
'
.
·
di
·
~of
_-
fi
,
1
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udml
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t\t
·
fso
'
·
. ·.
atdhJ~UtS
'
th,·
:
b
·
rituat
_
Y
.
-.
s
.
. aby':'es
'
·
.
Sop
..
~o~~r~
\
·
K
_
:
~~l
'
~
'.:}'
~i:;;;~
-
P
-
,
·
·
.
However; thisyear the Office
of
·,
.
'
so
working togeth~r
/
.
the
H~us-
There
will be a new category on
he believes things will work out
from Cary, N.C.; agrees, C<If.it's
Housing and Residential Life has
ing Office and Student Affairs ·the
form
labeled "split," under ·well.
·
·
an
option then I guess it's good.
added a new twist.
came up :with an option that they
•
which each set of roommates can
You might as well have it.''
·
.
·
··
·
·
·
·
·
believ
.
e
will pleas
.
e most of· the d
·
h th
·
·
t th
"The reality 1·s that grou
·
ps
·
may
·
In past years.when campus hous-
.
students at Marist.
etermi~e
w
e er or no
.
ey
·
·
·
All
opinions aside, th. e
_
Housing
irig was assigned, t.herehas alw
.
ays
wou. ld like to be separat~d fr?m
st
ill
get split up," Raimo said. "It
Office says in order to·avoidall th
.
e
·
·
U
·ct
th
I
h
·
will
th
h Id th s tuat1on
1·usi
isn't possible to always please
been many disgruntled
.
students
. n er e new Pan, ousmg
~•r. group
S OU
e l
evervone."
potential
'
problems;- involved
''
iµ
who were upset that they had not
·.
determine the average number of arise.
hou
'
sirig
/
assignment.st:stµ~en,s
received their first
·
choice of priority points for each pair of
Raimo says that the new option
Raimo said he and his housing
should caiefully'clioose·"tne' friends
housing.
_
,
•
;-
_
.
_
,
roommates in every group.
.
.
will empower the students, though
team are trying.
·
·
they want to live with
'
ana
'friake
,.
.
.. ;
·
Jim Raimo; director of housing,
.
For example, a group's average it does spell more work for the
.
"We always try
'
to keep groups
'
sure that their number
of
priority
:
·
·
,
\
said
'>
tha
E
-
this
;'
Often
:
occurred
is not enough to get into their first Housing Office
.
as close togeUier as pos~ible. This
points
·
are similar~
'.
J~<Sk
'-'
,
:F:tbSt
·
·
unkind
·
to
Marist'
s
outdoor smoking Joe Camels
usual areas. These areas are
passed onto thems
_
elves as
by
RON :J(?t:fN~ON
situated outside; near the entrances
individuals.
·
·
.
.
.
.
.
Staff
Writer
.
.
to the buildings on campu~:
.
.
.
.
.
Some smokers said they
.
,
. :
··
.
Th~
-
;-
~arttbecfb'J~d
;
i1
{
frciii't:or
;
:
,
(
:'.ff~.m.~~s
;
tra
(
~A~Y
_
.
Sludents
t~:~~~~s
:
:r::ted:_~~~:t~i~J~e
.
.
·
:
ooim~Y,
_
?t'perhiipsoffto
.'
ifi
t
sicii
f>·'
·
~~~l~PfJi61c~(l~hfuh
"
t
~i{~
b'
:
''W~'_r
e,
'.
~~lY
_
,
:·
,
~~
;
,
~
~i~
:
~•
~:
~e
;
,
,
of.
·
Dyson
(:_j
f
\
'
-
'.::C
,;.G
;
;
.:
:i,':>
•;;:•;-,
'.
::0
(
0
:
-'.~
novtavoid
-
iriclo&s,
1;
,
t;
;_-
,
,
i
~
.,
.
:
::
smell. It's tlie same stereotypes
Th:Y are frostbitten, alone; and
.
These
;
·
students
,
give
.
a
:
i
varying
·
associated ~th alcoholics
_
and
(l~g
smokmg.
_
.
.
reaction when itcomes to smoking,
dealers,'' said Murphy~
.
. .
-
Temperatures ~ave ~ropped to
ranging from
a mild
disHking
to
Some
·
smokers
.
-
also
,
see
record lo~s th1~
· ·
..
wmter, yet
outright disgust.
·
themselves being portrayed
~
rude
s!°okers will contmue to ?e out-
"I
just don't like
it.
H's
a dirty
or cailous. They are seen a~ uncar-
s1de. Sm?kers are left with few
habit,'' said Tim Sheehan, a junior
ing as to the effe~ts their srrioke
other options. . .
history major.
·
·
might have upon others.
.
. .
All of the bmldm~s up~n cam-
"I
find it repulsive. I don't li~e
Michael Fournier, a freshman
p~s ru:e smo~e-free, mclud1f!g dor-
anything about it.
-
n•s
'
detrimerital
majoring in nissian and com-
m1_tones, with the exception of
to everyone's healt~," said
-
Anne
munication arts, believes that this
private rooms.
.
Xanthis a senior social work
portrayal is just another example of
.
So, with all these _d~fficulties,
major
.
'
·
_
·
· · ·
'.
, ,
a group being judged for the ac-
why do smokers persist.
.
There are also some who believe
tions
'
of an individual.
. "It:~
·
e~joyablf and
)t's
.
my
that
'
smokers' do have rights.
-_.
''You have to 1:>e considerate,
right,
said J~~mfer. NoceUa_, a
"!think people have the rightto
-
and Ithink sometimes people just
so~!1?more ppliu~ sc1:nce ma~or.
smoke in public, as long as it's not
aren't,'' said
.
Fournier.
.
·
·
_ •·
..
.
.
.
:::
.
•'Jt
..
p
.
J~
.:.
!:
.
.
~~~~.·-f
.
.
.
:r
._
,PO
·.
lf
·
t
··
~
.
.
id
·
~
.
a
.
· .•
..
t
.
~~
.·.
:
;~
..
f
.
;;
,
__
i~~~::ngs~:;~;~
0
:C~\~~rs~~ _
p~fu~w6~~f\:afc:~;;Jm4;k~o~~
WMCR -
_
_
.
-
.
.
'
'
.
.
' :
major.
·
,
... :
'
.
' .
"
'
·;
·
·
,,
_
,
-,
.
' . .
sm<>kers
,
can
.
,
b
,
e
,
qµ1te rude to
-~·qor:it!h~ed rforn
page
3 ►
"
It
appears
certain thai
·
atleast
Many smo
_
kers riotecl
'_
thaf the
:
· smokers~
.
-
..
.
,,
.
.
-
.
"F
·
·
·
1
·
·
·
as
·
h
,
.·
b
·.
a
·
·:
c
.·
k
so•~••
carried-
·
ove"r
'
·
these
.
·
smokers will contin
'
ue to
negative connotation associated
·
- · · ·
'
·
·
· -- ·
· ·
smoke, and they will do soin their
a been e uall
...
seef
s
·
MC>KING
a
e
g►
f~~o~~:s~ri~efet}t;iha:~h Jay
D
.
R
.
1
-
v
.
.
'
.
E
-.
a very go
_
od idea, saying it would
C
_
apua110 ~ites
_
·
·
.
a
·
.
co
_
'
~Pi
,
e
_·
-
··
of
.
The
next
goal
.
for WMCR is a
·
change of location.
_ _
.
.
. .
_
.
.
.
.
. . ·.
·
.-
►
help, ''to get the future
:
generations reasons to go
_
out" again. First, he
-
· ·
·
d
.
.
·
C
·
ont•,
·
nued from page
4
·
t
·
t
·
d ·
·
1
·
·
·
d
·
"d
-
t
-
h
.
at
·
e
·
veryone 1·s
··
pat
·
r1·0
··
11·cally ·
.
--
The sta
.
.
tion is lo91t_e_ m C
_
h
_
am
.
-
·.
·
·
:!'J~st letting
·
us know
,
wo~ld
:~~:,2ng6i~~ ~
-
o~mit~~~~:d ~~ligated
to
suppe>rtthe president.
·
pagnat now becaµse it is
th
e moS
t
have
.
been
_
..
fine,'.
_
' sw
.
·d
.
Bo
.
.
u
.
ti
.
lie
.
r.
around them.''
.
·
·
. ··
.
-
·
.
·
a
:
ccessible place ayaila~le.
>
> •·
M
-
·
··
·
·
1
·
·
·d h
,
.
·
r
·
1
·
·
h
·
"There
.
'
.
s
.·· ...
alw
.
ays
.
a
>
c
.
hari
_
ce
·
I
·
1
'Iv.o
.
uld li
.
·
.
k
.
e
.--
.
-
.
to
.
g
..
o in an
.
·
d
._
.
spea
.
k
According to
a
Feb:16,
1993,
ar~
,
any
.
peop e
·
sai
t
ey et t at
··
·
.
.
-
-
·
·•
.
·
.
ticle in the Poughke
.
epsie
.
J
.
ou
..
rn
.
al,
.
Clinton, as Presidenthas only ini-
migh
.
t see hin1;''
·
said
.
Capuan
_
o.
_with I>r~si~ent
_ :
Murray
•
this
d
.
·
f
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
· ·
·
·
·
·
·
· ·
semester about 111oving the station
Marist College
was
:
a
,
potential
prove rilarginally,j
.
at all; bet-
-
·
Theeffectofanothervisitevokes
into the new Student Center. We
stopping poinHor the presidential
ween thetii:ne he drove byMarist diffe!ent r,es~~n
,
s~s,thcn,igh; ·.
-
could
.
reach
_
more
-
people that
motorcade. Except for the crowd
and this year. ''Hjllary's doing a
."ldon'tthiillcitwouldlllaketoo
way,''
Smith
-
said:
.
and
-·.
s
_
ome st
_
udent
_
s as
..
·
.
sisting
.
the
.
goo
_
d
job ninning the country,''
.
.
B
d
·
·
muc
_
h
_
__
of
_
a
difference," Custer
s m
_
·
_
d
_
.
motorcade, Manst never made the
aumgar ner said.
·
.
.
..
.
.
.
.
.
agerida.
. . .
·
.
·
.
.
..
.
.
.
Bmitilier said he would go outto
.
Batiingarclner ~aid it ~ouldo
·
Capuano said he thought a Cliri-
·
attempttQ see the pr~ident again,
·
.
I-
the President because it m
·
tonsto at Maristwould have been
·
"if
-
it wasn't so cold."
.
.
.
;
. CONVENIENTLOCA.TION
.
Huntington. Long Island campus
is easily reached by public or private
.
transportation,
.
■
DAY
.
AND EVENING CLASSES
Select either a Full-Time Day,
Part
-
Time Day. or Part-Time Evening
schedule
.
.
·
.
,
Overall,
;
Smfrli stresses how
,
mucll WMGR has impre>ved in the
pastfew
;
,
years: ,,
r_
'
.
·
.
·
•
.
/f
We'renotZIOOorWPDH,but
that doesn't matter/' she said;
'
.
'We're
-
a
·
college station, we're
supposed
.
to be different. Our
·
members have a reputation for be
~
·
ing radio
-
geeks
;
" she added .
.
•
·
Smith said the DJ's were more
prqfession,al on
-
the
ait
and had a
greater
-
sense
•
.
of teamwork than
ever before .
.
·
'~Jbey're working with the s~e
people
all
the time; so it's a lot like
a
.
tearn set up," Smith said.
.
. ,
J\ilother
·
change is tlielen,gth of
the shows.
.
_
.
·
u
you
wiih
io
recei~e' ad;;;i;siori
,
.
.
r!;ll;IE!r
i
als
and/or
arrange for
a
campus
:
v
.
IsI
.
1. you are encouraged to contact
:
Office of Admission·
Jacob D
.
Fuchsberg
Law
Center
·
300
.
Nassau Road
.
•
.
.
Hun1ing1on; NewYo~k 11743
• ACCREDITATION
The
Lavi Center is Fully
Approved
by
the American
~ar Assoc
i
at
i
on
.
.
. ·
TOURO
COLLEGE
Phone
•,.
(516) 421-2244
ext314
Now
)'OU
._
c,an have
two
of the most recognized
and
accepted credit cards In
the \\Orld-Vlsa9 and
MastcrCanf9
c~lt
cards._·1n your name: EVEN IF YOU ARE NEW IN
CREDIT
.
or
HAVE BEEN 1URNED DOWN BEFORE!
VJSA9
and MasterCarde
the
c~ll cants
you
deserve and need for_; ID-BOOK~DEPARTMENT
.
STORES-1UITION-ENTERTAINMENT-
.
,
EMERGEfCY
;
Q\SH-TICKETS-RESTAURANTS-
-
,
'
.
-
.
HQTEL&-MOTE~OA~AR RENTALS-
REPAIRS-AND 1'0 BUllD YOUR CREDIT
RATING!
JACOBO
.
.
•
.
. _-
ll
FUCHSBERG
.
·
S,~
·
,LAW. CENTER
an affiriilative
a~io~;
·
.
equal Qpp011unily inst~ution
- - -
·
- -
.
-
~
~
-
~
-
~
:
~~~
.
~
~
~
~
~
·
~
\
~
1
t
t
t
\
~
t~
~
:
~.'.
-
~
:
• - - -
,
-
EZ__;CARD, BOX
-:
1~516,
~
A.'.I.'.
J;
l(ij{1/Jf~~ ..
GA:•;~3
,
032 l
i
'llTVS'
_
.
:
:
c:
tV
\
'
r
rt
·
.
'
.
t_
:"'-'_
,
,:,,.~.: _
__
.
.
. .
i
.
I ~ •-
IwantV1SA9/MASJ'ERCARoeCredtt
'
Canis.approved Immediately.
1000/o OUARANTEEDI
·
NAME
ADDRESS
CTIY
- - - - - - STATE _;___ZIP _ _ _
_
STUDENT? Yes
No
S.S~ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
SIGNA1URE - - - - - - - - - - -
.
N01t::
MasterCard
ls•
rqt!steml trademark
a
MasterCard
fnbematlonal.
roe.
Visa
IS.
nglst.eml tr.idemarlc clVISA USA. Inc. and VISA
tn~ma!lonal
l:'J.1i.i:ifJ:t•i;lf1:l•M
1
i:M:IM•t·\J
--~------------~-----------'-------------------------
I
(
·
~
.
.
.
.
..
.
'
.
·;
•
•
•. •
t
• ..
• •
...
.
:
_i
·---
~
'
. -
~
-
.
.
,
...
.
,
_
-
-·
--
THE
CIRCLE,
·
f;E~f:lUA,R'\' 17,
-
1994
Hiid.S:CJri
.
Valley
.
_
:
:_
-
·
!
.
'
~!~~~~•u•
'
f
-
·
_.
Pllilr>li~
>
R.era.ti.Oils
·-
·
-
~::
·
;~:"i~.~~~~·!.~~ot~~~~
·
;.;,··<'·
·
-
·
-.,,
;,,
.
:
,.-
,;
i
-~-
-
::
-
,
:
_,
__
'.
.
,
>:._
.
·
·
,_
·
-·
.,
BoardoLTrustees:
-.
·
•
·
.-
Jjj
.
COLLEEN
.
MURPHY
.'-':'-
diidiris"
:
s~r~r~~ri~
ru:1~
c.i~zeiis;
•
.·.
:
;'.
'Who kiiows
:
tiett~r
:
wha.t hap-
·
·
·
.
-
·
·
-
.-,
.
-
.
.
..
.
, . .
.
.
..
,
.
.
..
.
·>
;
Jh
.
~ Hu~on
:
,
Valley
'.,
Ftlm
,
&
penstbanthesti.idents,
'\
Qillissaid.
:
/
(
:
-
,
\
.,
:
·
t
:
$i~tt
;
~ilter,
/~
~
'.,
,_'
·
t
;;
i
/,
Vi~eo
;
Offi~e
·
has fQ':1P~
.
~~~!
-
~h~
.
"There is
.
no wayJcould.run things
'.Tlie
:
Htidson Vall~y
.
Fiini')
'
&
l~~
,
~us_in~s~
.
~d
.
go~ernment
wli:hout
'
·
'
the
<
opini~ils
·.
of the
.
.
.
are agreeable to the
filin
industry,
students."
"
·
'
·: · ..
,
.
. -
' :
·
.
Video Office,
,
Inc. has
.
been work-
'es
_
pe
__
cially b
_
e
_
cau_s
_
e
·
o_fthe
_
·
_
money
·
a
-
,
_.
Mignone
__
_
resp
·
onded
.
.
. ·
tha
.
t
·
he
·
ing to se)J
J
h,e.area
.
to
.
production
housesfor videos, movies; and TV feat
.
~r~
l::ail
brmg mto the com-
would try to increase the involve-
.
h
·
c-
·
·
·
a1
··
-
• ·
-
mumty.
,
:
.
·
·
_ _
.
·
ment of freshmen by app9inting
s ows
_
ior sever
.
years now.
-·
'fhe most recent feature to
call
more to the
-
executive board in
. .
The office, located
_
on
Garden
.
the area home is "Nobody's Fool," SGA
;
·
.
·
. Street in
.
Poughkeepsie;is
a
not-
film
·
p l N
·
··
Jor;pi;~f.i
.(
9rg~~iiori ~upporfe~
~ru~e
w!~~
1
~!ct
J~sica
t':n":i~·
"y~:~~t~~o~~!t~ldaf!f;~n~~!
:tr;i~JN
0
i:~1i~1!
,
~Jfl1
;
eW!6~
.
.
.
The
-
film
:
and video office pro-
executive board and that com-
J:>evelopmen
L
~
·
.
:
,
;;
'.
"
,:
'
'.
'.
'
:.·:
'..-.:-
·;:
Vides the location directors and
.
md
_
uniccation ~lith the Resident Stu-
·
,
·the
.-
organization
'
publicizes
'
i:iie
.
crews with everything from mobile
ent
ounc1 s was necessary for
merits of the
.
Hudson Valley
·
as
:
a
·
honiest<> coupons for restaurants
proper representation.
.
.
prime lo<:ation through letters
ancl
to
'
production equipment.
Kent Rinehart, current student
phone
calls
to music and entertain;
~•we like to provide one-stop
body president, was present in the
t · d
.
t
1
· ·
d
-
·
·
· ·
.
shopping," Meyer said,
_
"We want
studio audience and said that a live
men
.
m
us ry s u 10s
;
_
, ,
•
, .
·
'
:
'Ou.r
a,im
is to show the studios
to let the filmmakers know that if debate such as this was very
h
·
ffi ·
b
'
.
they
·
co·m
·
e
··
__
-
here, we can take care
stressful for
-
the candidates.
t at we
can
o er Just
a
outevery
setting
there
is _
except a seashore;" of them/~
.,
• 'This requires
a
lot <>f research,
Frank Meyer' acting
.
.
executive
The office uses local technicians
and clearing up what each can-
director
:
of th~ office said
.
during ~d.equipi:nenfsupplicrssothatthe
didate wants to say," Rinehart
hislecturelast week.
·
•·
·
-
•
-
th . 0 d
.
1
said. "This may only be one hour
. .
.
.
studios
can
keep
.
err
·
u gets ow.
·
on television, but it includes many
,·
The studios
can
require various,
.
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
.
sometimes o_dd,
:
set~ings and con
~
The
office
will
·
also
·
use local
hours of preparation."
I f I
I
I
I ,
I
I
I f I
,
• I
'
I
I • I
I
<
I
9
4-itJ~~;
~ne
.
eren hr.ought in its own talent'ror extras and small roles.
Each candidate was given time
snow
:
for
.
a
.
.few scenes
.
shot in • Now the office is setting up
:
a
for a dosing statement to discuss
fishkill
las~,:y~.
<
·
:.
·
.,
·
·
,
database
system thatwill eventually
·
their priorities. for the next ad-
/
,
{~rm
_
:
nc;,
_
tJr<>m thi(area,
·
so I allow
,
.
its
,_,
employees
,
to enter
·
a
ministration and what they would
Candidate
Matt
Gillis discusses the issues as candidate Nick
.
didii't
_
kno~ howJnucb
.
-.v~ really
-
specific task
a
studio needs into its
·
do· if
.
elected student body
.
·
Capuano looks on~
here.I think it's great
that
they
can
computer
and
get
a
list of all perii-
president:
-
..
_ _
__,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
,
transform a town
info
anytlung nent businesses in the area.
·
Capuano said
-
his main goal
will
come to you rather than you
they
:
want,"
··
'Lynn
·
:
Russo; a
-
"We hope that these location
would be to increase school spirit
coming to me. SGA_is for the peo-
sophomore from.Toms River, N.J .-
people
will
go back to Hollywood
·
and improve the channels of com-
pie."
said.
• ·
·
·
and tell their friends how grat it is
munication between s
·
tudents,
Gillis said the most important
Meyersaidthatthekeytoattrac-
to work in the Hudson Valley,"
SGA,
clubs,
and
the
objective of his administration
ting any
type
of business
to
an area Meyer said. "Reputation is
adminiStration
.
would be to give the students a
is
_
a
cooperative community,
-
-
in-
everything in
-
this industry."
"Communication is the mo5t im-
voice and make them happier with
_
.
portant aspect," Cap~ano said.
"I
Marist.
.
Mignone said he should be
elected because he has a good rela-
tionship with the administration
and has the ability to get things
done.
.
.
The election for student president
will be held Feb.
22
and Feb.
23
in
Campus Center and Dyson.
New peer counseli
_
ng service offers support to students
by
PETE
:.
TARTAGLIA
···
Staff W
_
riter
Counseling Center to try to reach
those students who may be more
out to a different part of the stu-
inclined to use peer counseling then
dcrit population .
.
,
.,
. .
coming in and talking to
a
profes-
"The hope is thatstudents VfhO
sional adult.
. There is a new counseling service
wouldn't necessarily come to the
., .
T~e support line, which is
•
available forMarist stlidents
;
wlio
Counselihg Cente
r
'
for
'
orie
'
i:easoJ?,
•
.
.
available from Sunday to Thursday
neect'totalkorneedhelpwithpro-
ora:riotherwouldhavesoniewheie
.
·
from
'.
i0pm to lam, is
·
being
·
blems they might be having.
to tum with their problems," said
operated by
25
volunteer graduat
The Peer Support Line,
·
which
Nash.
students and their underclassmen
·
'
goes into
~
service on Feb
>
6, is an
Not all students fall under the
assistants.
anonymous support line for
category of coming _into the
·
·
"The training and education in-
students to can and receive peer
counseling center arid
.
speaking
volved took nine hours in which
counseling from trained volunteers;
with
a
counselor,
.
saic:l Nash.
students dealt
-
with different
_
_
_
The support line is being spon-
·
.
The support line will hopefully
.
scenarios ranging from suicide in-
.•
sored
·
by
-
the
·-
Marist
·
Counseling
·•
be
the
avenue to take forthose who
·
terverition to ta,lking to people who
·
Center.
: \
. .
.
.
_
.
•
.
.
feel that fa.ce
to
face counselingis
have alcohol problems/' Nash
The suppotfline
was
developed
·
for them.
.
·
·
·
said. "The training has made the
-
by Brother
-
John Nash of
.
the
According to Brother Nash, it's
.
student workers ready to handle
·
·
·
,.
·
·
-
··
· -·
·
·
·
nion a,bout
·
people
.:
who smoke,
-. '
$
M ()
.
Kl N
Q
.
then they're entitled to that.
If
they
any type ot situation
.
"
In the future the undergraduate
assistants that are training now will
develop into the people that will be
taking phone calls next year and
training new workers
... ·
·
.
·
Although a pilot program, the
-
support line has received much
.
backing
from
school
administrators.
"In speaking to some of the
school administrators they also
believe that there may be a certain
segment of the school's population
who could
be
in such n~d of a sup-
port line," said Nash.
The students who volunteered to
take phone calls were very in-
terested to hear of such a new
.
project.
"I
saw the signs in the graduate
student lo\lnge looking for
volunteers for
·
a pilot peer support
program, so
I
got
in touch
\vith
Brother
Nash,"
said
an
anonymous student phone worker.
"If
there is a good response to
the support line in the next few
months, the program will be mov-
ed off of being a pilot program and
become
a
fully supported pro-
gram
,
" said Brother Nash
.
Brother
Nash also stressed
-
that the Peer
Support line is something that
shouldn't be used to make jok
e
s or
crank calls.
•
.
•··• >, .
.
,
.
r
.
.
.
.
:a
.
.
.•
•
, _.
..
_
are ip.different, then they are entitl-
{'
~;
~continu~d
,
from
:i
iJ
_
agi
~:
s ►
.
:
·
,
:·
..
/
e~
·
t<>
;
iltat: Smqking
j
luiih~althy,.
'
?
ft)
x~
b
ih
;
r
·
;~~;iJ;
J
b;ha
½
;/?~
if
/.
:.:
~u!
t
i_f:
p~pple~
·
i
-
~ilt
}
o,.
h1.1J1
·
Hie!~
,,
,1;
k ·,
,
r
·
"'
''
ir •'
·
'
,-,
,:
.-
;
'Id'' . :
,
.-
.
tiodies
Jts
theirnght to do
•
that,
J
I
~.r
.
w~~
t,
\
i&
I
t
~
:;
f!
W~m?;3,
f
1
~
~
-
JJ~;
\;r
f
f
:1f
W!:~t
1iJ
•
~d
:
~~{;~;~~rs
.
0
1;:
;
tha,t,
_
,:
.
SaJ.ci
.
No~lla.
,,
:
·
"
.
::
•·
·
.
.
.
C.
agreed that-the situation could be
.
·
.
.
S~~l, some students
_
look to find
.:
improved
if
•
the administration
·
yo
.the
·
·-
~
i
tt
'1
'v,e,
o~
lov~,
.
a nuddle ground.
.
.
·
were
to
create a designated area for
'~If
people have a negative op1-
smoking.
·
-
·
· 1HOlLIDAY <COACJHI
·
Thursday
-
--
-
O{A.ICiERS
.
-\ND
lOURS
Februa~
-
~4.
:·:,
_
~.
,
.
_
,°
;
.
_ _
_
_
_
_.
_
_
,:
.
·
.
'1.,S'I.,~
Afun-fillecl
day
and
night on
the
mountain •.
One
Jew
price
indudes:
Round trip Holiday
coach
·
Bus tr;>
from Poughkeepsie
and
New Paltz to Cortin~
Valley, a full
day
of sla-1119 (rentals
extra);
a
fabuws
buffet <f1t1ner at Ice Station 23
,
Huntets
hottest
r£N
restaurant
and
bar;
followed
by
a
si:z2fing
show
cy
Perfect Thyroid
,
a band taking the Valley by
Sloon.
Call Free Time at CfBS-2711 or 876-3002 ·
lo
reserve
seals for
011
ond
Ollf
friends!
a
it's
·
.
:
Tc,
pfo~
;
:
~
·
,t
'.
a.1itins+Afo5
a
Pd
other
·
·
s7o
·
s
'.
, ...
.
;
~twa'/S
use
latex
condorns.
'
For a free, full-colo
_
r
pos~er
(18" x
24"),
.write:
·
AIDS
Poster
3,
Pox
2000,:S.\lba~y. N~V'!1222O
N.Y.S. Health
oe·partinent
.
T
-
_
.
.
,
,
~
:
·
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-
-
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·
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't-
10
THE
CIRCLE~
FEBRUARY 17;1994 ·
·
•·
: . A _
•
··
·
:
·
s
··
-
-
h
·
,
,,
_
.r ·
:
_·
·
e
·
-
-
-
d
·
-
-
•
-
-
-·
n
·
···
e
-
-
•
s
; -
-'
:;.:1
_
-_
,
_
'.
_
i
a
·
: ·,
_
·-,
-.:
·
·
-
-
-.
-
Y
:
V
:
--
-
-
U
-
J
celebrates
.
~
-
~~ii
/
,
bj,ICEVINO'NEILL
.
. .
Staff Writer:
;
:.
·
,
,
.
_
·
.
'"H.istorically
t
~en~
:
has
.:_
alway~
:
·
.
.
_
.
been pieci:decl by
}
fat 1'tiesday' :or
:
..
·
Mardi Gras, as medievalserfs tried
.
.
tog$
a
few
po'un~
in
;
a fin
_
~
fling
:
-
Do' you have
~
tile indulgences before the
AO
days
of
penitence;''
-
outofyour
·
system?
.
..
.
.
·
said Sister Jeaime
Hamilfori.
•· ..
'
·
·
Let's hope so, because it's Len~.
. Minus 'the serfs',~ori
:
'(u~day;
'
.
.
As of
·
yesterday, Ash Wednes-
Marist
.
celebrated with
·
.
:•
campus
·
·
day, Lent has begun and will last ministry's
'
9th
.
,
amiuai_
.
pancalce
·
for
40
days ending on Easter Sun-
meal
/
.
_- . · :
.
·
.
·
.
:
.
,
.
:
:
:
·
.
day, AprU
3.
.
Tliis'included
'.
coordfuator John
• .
-·
The.rec~iving of ashes on o~e•s
.
·canorroin chef's
.
hat;'and
·
api:on
·
.•
.
·
forehead w~ supp?sed to relllll!-d
doing calories amid chocolate
.
chips
;
,
,
;
.
_
one
·
of therr baptismal
_
comnut~
and
·
:
blueberries
'
with
i
;
whipped
:
'
ment:" ''Turn
'
away from sin and be
·
.
cream
_
.
and
·
cholesteroL
~
..:
'.
,
,
.
·•
·
<'•.
·.'.
.
.
·
faithful to the gospel/'
.
Sodoxho, the Marist.food ser"'.
.
·
The ashes received came
fr?m
vice; will be serving
a
fish
.
and
·
a
-
·.
_
.
.
the
_
palms used
·
last year ~un!lg
vegetable entree
every
Friday
dur"'.
·
Palm Sun_day (the celebration of ing Lent:
•
·
'
.
.
·
.
·
· •
..
.
.
·
.
C.hrist's ~ntr3!1ce into
_
Jerusalem to .
They will also be serving special-
'.
accomplish his pas~hal mys~ery).
ty
foods fioni New Orleans ac~or"'.
.
·
.
Through r~e~t years, many
..
ding
according
_
to
.
FOO<!
·
Service
'
,
have heard Manst so~ Rev. Luke
Manager Alan
'
AbramoVIch. _
,
Mccann ~ay, "If God r~y loves
"Why not 'just do
:
what you
you, he gives you an It~an grand-
came here to do
·
learn and study
.
·
mother;
_
_
one .who loves wi
_
th<?ut
.
but do it better'than ev!=t dunn;
•
·
.
.
reserv
_
atlon, _stuffs you . with
Lent?'
.
' said~ Mccann.
;
"It's not
.
·
I~agn~, and giv~ g~od ~olid
a.~-
what we do but
_
w~y
w~
do,i(that
:
·
.
vice
without f~rcmg 1t on you.
._
courits with God:Does the person
••·
·
"
.
Th~n h: ad~,
f
:~~t•s w~at the
-
~
-
you love
care
whether you bnnfa
·
.
.
.- ..
, - ,
.
.
.. .
. .
•
.
. ..
teaching ~hurch
IS
~ke; a
'
go
_
od
_
bouquet of red roses
'i
Or
'
.;_
white
,
_,
L. _ _ _
___; _ _ _ _
~...:::..; _ _;__.._....,;__ _ __:_-'-_ _
.:,_.....:....:,_=====.,;:;,;=-"-'----'--"~-'---"---...,_,
.
~dmoµ.ter~ R ~ ~ g your
free
lillies?
.
It's not
.
the
·
gift
:
but'.the
·,
.;
,
.
..
Ground keepers
·'go
.
abo
_
ut
.
the
·
daily task
of
__
rem
_
_
~ving snow
_
.
,
will,
she
·
offers -ad~ce
.
~ased
·
on
.
motivation that counts with those
·'
't
·
,
~--------_;_....,;__--'-~-...;...._~....,;__ ........ _ _
__:__;_ _ _:,:_--'"'"-___;_.;...__:_C:::::..:.lr=c.::le::..,.
.
i::;Ph;.;:o::to:::./.:.:.M:.:a.:.:.tt
.
..:;M:a,:
.
a:::.
.
rt:::in.:.:.
•
...J
·
,
2
00Oyears ,Of
,
_
expen~~c~,
.
and you
who love
us
ratherthail our
.
gifts
;
"
•··
-
·
can take
,
her r~velat1ons or
·
_
.
·:
. ·
:
·
.
. .
.
•
.
..
disregard them at your
own
risk.,.
In keepmg
'YI~
tradition, _one 1s
.
· .
Lent
_
is
·
part
of
:
that
.
ancient
suppo~ed to give up_ somet~m~ ?r
'
.
_
Winter
games
begin
in
-
NQt
:
w,ay
_
wisdom . .It's the time of the year
.
prom1~e
to
·
·
do
somethmg
·
- - - - - - - - - - - -
.•
favorites
,:
and this .is probably the
this year
_
in Lillehammer
:-
Brian when the church asks one to do a
beneficial.
by
TOM QUINLAN
·
.
only chance most people get to
·
see
Boitano has returned
to
the
Olym-
little self-. analysis and find out who
Bes.ides meat on Fridays,
·
Staff Writer.
them.
.
pies, after winning a gold medal in or what is in charge
.
of our lives.
students• had different' items they
''Ilovethe luge," Brian Corbett;
•
.
Calgary, and hopes to take it again
'
In old cnglish, the word "Lent"
will be giving up or doing during
The Winter Olympics ar~ here,
.
senior
.
said.
"It
·
reminds me of
in. men's figure skating
~
-
·
meant "springtime!' As the
Lent
.
·
- ·
·
·
and Marist students are gearing up
sleigh riding.»
·
·
_
.
.••
·_.
·.
The United States team is full of church's
As
the church's tradition
for the excitement from Lilleham-
.
-The games offer something for
talent, which
.
will
help keep the in-
·
grew in the west, the word took on
mer, Norway.
everyone, and
this
is the athlet~'.
terest or:its viewers. One person
·
the added m
,
eaning of penitence
"Beavis
and
Butthead;" said
Michael LaCugna, a sophomore
communications major
·
from the
•
Bronx,
N.Y.
"They've gotta go; at
'
least for Lent.••
.:
·
,
.
"I won't 'watch them, they'll in-
chance to shine.
0
These men
'
and
·
that U
;
S; fans will definitely want and preparation for the celebration
terfere with Days
.
of Our Lives,"
•
womenfrom allaround the
\
vorld
.
to s~
is
Trace Worthington.
of resurrection and
.
ren.,ewal
Tim Sullivan, senior, said.
·
have trained for years~ to ge( a
'
shot
.
Trace Worthington?
.
·
_
·
brought on by the season's cycle.
-
Well, altnost everyone. Students
·
at glory.
.
·
·
·
·
·
0
_
·
.
.
.
.
.
·
·•.
._
·
·
·
.
_ _ _
_;,.;.;_.._...;....~.;_..-----"--'-------------....
have been treated to plenty of Win-'
.
"The
competition
is
-
-i
tremeri
-
C
Yes,
fo!
th()Se )hat haye
-
~.
10
t
try
weather,
to
put
them iri the
.
dou ,, Ann Cullen
,
fie
h
. .
.
hearclofhim;
'
he.wdlbe
;
competing
mood
for
the
g
··
ames, and soap fans
.
•
d
·
5
',
·
•p
·
-
·
--
-
-·
1
·
ti
dif•fi
·.
r st
.
01~
0
~
·
in
the
:
freestyle
.
skiing aeri
_
als
.
J•:Jis
. ·
s3;1 •
eop e rom
.
ere
11•
~o
.
un
.
claim to fame is three
.
back flips
can get their fill with the Kerrigan-
tnes, and th~
u~s.
are aUgomg [;or
:
and four twists, which he
'
does ii)
·
Harding affair.
the same thin~, a gold medal.
.
.
three and one-half seconds
.
while
But the Winter Olympics are
Nancy Kemgan and Tonya Har-
-.
.
r
45
f
· :
· th
-
· -
·
·
more than that. There are· many
ding, are not
_
the oilly people
approximate
Y
.
eet
m
:
e ~r ·
.
·
events, including
.
speed
_·
skating,
representing the United States.
.
•
Then,
.
he fin~s
.
~. way ~o
.
land
hockey, ice dancing, and-ski'jum-
..
In
_
t~e m~n•s downhill ·skiing,
~~~~~tly
on,his
:
sk1 s, back
.
on the
ping. "Ilovetoski,solenjoywat-
A.J.
Kitt from Rochester,
'tll'.'Y.
_
,
. _
...
·
.
.
-.
_ .
.
_
_
..
•
ching that," Nicole
.
Trupia;
has
a
·
good
-
chance at winning a
These aerjals will
·
be
·
a
·
_
mecial
·.
freshmen, said.
-
.
.
.
·
·
medat Dan Jansen, who i~ unfor-
sport fcir the .frrsttime atLillehani-
·
·
. Skiing
·
can
be found almQs(any
tiinately remembered for his
faU
at
mer~
-
•
·
and should prove to be an
day of the
16
day competition. For
the
'88
games in Calgary just hours
entenaining everiL
·
_
·
fans, the downhill, slalom;
after learning of the death of. his
·
·
·
·
·
biathlon, and crosHountry skiing
·
sister, has rebounded
·
and is a ma-
Of course
;
if
none
·
oniiis
'
sounds
are just some of the events plann-
.
jor
.
favorite in Jhe
_
men's
SOOni
exciti~g, the
-
women's figure
ed for Lillehammer.
.
.
.
·
speed:skating competition.
,
..
_
_
_
skating competition is still being
The
traditional activities of
.
Bonnie Blair
is
the favorite in the
·
·
held.
,
.
.
.
.
winter are not the only eventsfans
.
.
women's
500m
speed skating coni-
:
The Wintei
.
0
0lynipi~s fr'om
..
can
watch. Unique events, stich as
.
petitioti..
·
Blairwoli th
'
egold in
'92,
.
.
Lillehammer, N:orway,
·_'
can
·
.. _
-
be
.
the luge and tlie
.
bobsled
;-°
ar~ ·. and looks for a repeat performance
found on CBS thro11 h Feb.
27~
Marist
-
pr9gr,am
-
in
-
area
Junior
-
.
_
-
~ing
.
:
The weekly television
_·_
program
"CON
·
seen
.
on
·
U.S .
.
--
Cableyisionin. the Mid-
Hudson
for
four years and on
WTZAin 1993, has been selected
·
for broadcast
by
.
public
·
affairs
l
Jt1ttion
.
WHAi,
Hridgeport,
;
§<:>nn.
.
..
•
..
~'~'
~f
·coNVERSATION"; prciqu<;;
ed
'.
by the Marist Colleg~ Media
Center, began airing weekly
_
in
January on
.
WHAI's College and
University Showcase, which is car-
ried by cable companies
.
in N.Y.,
N
;
J. and Conn.
Themes and guests vary
_
and
cover a
_
broad range of interests.
Some notable guest of "CONVER-
SATION"
have included Robert F.
K~nnedy, Jr., Geraldine Ferraro,
author Michael Korda and folk
singer Pete Segar.
Upcoming guests include broad-
caster Ernie Anastos of WCBS in
New York City. Among topics
discussed on "CONVERSA-
TION" are comic book writing,
stress management, the economic
situation in Dutchess count and the
homeless.
..
Ten
Mank
students comprise the
technical crew.
-.
'
Janef L.awler;
Ay~TV
O~era
.:·
;
lions Manager,:
,
directs
,
the
:
,
pro-
.
grams,
The hosfof ''CONVERSA~
·
TION'' isMaristgraduate student
Jack Cahill.
.
VERSATION .. ,
:
SPRING BREAK
From
$2.99.
Inciud~:
•Afr,
7
nights
Hotel,
•
Transfers,
·
.
Parties
and
Morel Nassau/Paradise Is-
land,
Cancun; Jamaica,
San
Juan.
Earn
FREE
trip plus commissions
·
as our campus rep!
·
1-800-9-BF..ACH
.
-1
Weekend
·
has
-
arrived!
Feb. 18-20
NEVERTOO LATE.
Think
you
missed the Graduate Record
Exa~
deadline? Thinlc ag2in
.
With
the new on-demand GRE,• you cou_ld
~
taking the test tomorrow. And
:ice
your scorc the instant you finish
.
Score rcporu are mailed 10 to 15 days
later, in plenty
of
t
i
me
for
most
schools'
deadlines.
Call
now
for
instant
rcglsmt
i
on
.
@ Educ:ati0n2l Testing Se~ice
.Sylvan TechnolOQY
Cenlerse
Pt,,rtfa.s,t....
r.-m,6-1{.-t
1-800-GRE-A.S.A.r
-
-
--
INFOR1\1ATION
-
•
...
Senior
Pllrfraiti
·
·
,
'
.
'
'
..
..
'·
-
'
.
:tf
_
:
ycn(dq
.
nb~
_
Choose
''
a
:',.
p
-
◊it.r
:
~it
tp
;
go
i.ri
·
the
_
_
;
yearbook
·
~y
/.
th:i.s
.
·
date,
.
one
.
will
·
'-
be
·-:-:
chosen
. .
:
.
~or
.
yqu.
\~~
:
~~~~,
.
,
>-\~~&\
.
-
'
~ ~ 6 : :
:
..
-
:,
_._
.
-
.
·
()i~
.
"~'
.
~
~\)~1
·
\flll!
ZT!-
41-;s~
oif
t:Am
.
""L·,J
;:J
r1.ui:se.
"-•----"""-••-·---
:::-.. :;:= .. :::::::::.:::::.~--
==::.::.-:::::.-=-:-::~
:
:
..
~.:-
_
....
__
._
....
_
:=--.:--~::=t=~~~-:~
-
THE CIRCLEi FEBRUARY 17,,:I
994
byTERfL>STEWART
.
.
~tltlet~, under co~petiti.re condi-
medleyandiourthin
:
the1650~yai-d
-
.
,
,
,~-
,.,.-
·
· ·
.u
ons •
.
,;.
.
,, •· ·
··•-
•
freestyle.
. .
.
.
.
·
-_
.
· .. ·.
·:
..
.
-
.
.
..
st~ff;\A{ri~~r
. ,; .
.
..
..-o:,
,:
:"·}
~~s :~eson~ go~l isfoi_the
:
t~aiii
.
..
.
According to Yan Wagner; all
·
.
_
__
The men's swimming and di~i~g
·
;
·
.
to
;
r~
.
a~~~~
-
~~
:8~_'PC_~<:e~~
.
1~l.'~?~e~
_
...
three swimmers are ~aster_ than they
teM,tS ..yilL
•
be
·
•
tooking-
J
for
-.;·
the
-
_,,,
f:;v~per~:<?1rl·0 ~sv.!"l;s,
.
•
•
b
.
,
l
-
"!ere
,
last year at this pomt of the
months
.:
of
i
trainirig to pay
.
off as
:
i;
.
IS~~
·
r
\1~/t.s
_.
~eas1 e
seas9n.
.
.
;
.
.
they
_
fravel:to
1
Ti-enton State College
.:'.
'
,
.
ec;~s.~
__
y
_
~
--
~P
.~
s
-
~
-
1
~2~\~-~
~ur
_
..
..
S°'phoniore Kyle O'Neill, who
to take
·
parfiri
"
the
•
·
Metropolitan
~
v.er P.[!r~
,
~C~fr.
-
0
.~~r
,,
}
,
t,
,
3;5
1
_
-
/5
,
was
f
seeded
_
_
lSth in the 500-yard
Conference Championships today seas~ns
;11l
.-
m_
the
,
maJontr, of
_
fr~tyle, _firushed second la~t y
_
ear.
through Saturday in Trent
.
on -N
·
J
·
cases,
we.dverealized that goal, th,e
O Neill 1s ranked 10th m
"
the
Head cgach Larry Van W~g~e;
.
coachsai ·
·
,
·.
-
.
,
.
·•
· ·
.
.
200-yard freestyle and second in the
said ~ai:ist is basically putting its
..
He added that at_tammg these
100-y~rd freestyle this year.
eggs all in one basket.
.
goals would be the pmnacle of the
Van Wagner named other
'':We're gearing 2lweeks ofour
·
se~~on.
·.
.
members of the team that will be
~easo~:qown;to_a threeaday, perfor~
•
.
.
-·
-
I _feel that if you can !lc-
key fac~ors, including j~niors Matt .
.
man~;.\':!
~1;
,i
o?oib
bim,:
c:ilwfi:·.i
•
,
.
,.;._ •
~OlllJ?.~
.
s~
your ~oals, then I thmk
Bluestem and cp-captam Brett Ar-
Theil,ead
,
coach, has se
_
t-,two:ob-
·· .. -,
your pr,ogram is more successf!-11,
nold, and freshman Jon Churins.
-
jectives for his!team.
,i,,,;~,
r,;,::
"
'
'~
,_
/«:¥J
1
,
e}~ ofwh~
_
the~mdma~fimsh
.
."I've never been on a champion-
-
·
The Jirstis to
.
,
acc
.
omplish
'
their
··
Wa ea
.
0
-
·
-
~ds or
-
C.
m
u~,
Van
ship team so
.
I'm going
.
to do
. -
-
.
.
-·
agner
.
.
sa1
.
·
h'
I
d
seasonaLbest times
;
-
.
,
·
.
,
_
,
.
·
.
.
,
' -
..
--
-
..
_.
'
,
-
:
.
,
.
everyt mg can o to do my best
_
"lv1y
-
individu
.
al.
-
goal for
'
-
my
·
th
-
Marh
_
~St ts
;
seedh~d
1
?
J?lac~ th
_tr~
m
and help the team to
win
the cham-
·
th!
. h .
-
.
.
.
-
..
e c amp1ons ips
.
pionsh 'p " A
Id
"d
-
a
_
etes 1st at m each event swum
_
Al
w•ui
tli
h.
h
.
i
·
_
-
1
,
rno sai •
.
.
-
_
_
at the conference championships;
.
.
ong 1
-
e ig
.
see mg ~f
:
Va1_1 Wa~ner has been momtor-
every athlete realizes their season's his_ team, many
0
i
~a~. ~agner s
mg his ~w_1mmers these past two
best .time 100 percent,"
.
Van
.
swim11_1ers are see e
-
ig_
•.
.
.
weeks, g1vmg them a performance
Wagner said.<CThe only thing that
.
Jumor
_A1_1gel
'[omala is picked
test ev~ry _other day ..
..
would
.
interfere. with that
·
goal
·
to place stXth
1
!1
the SO
-
yard
_
·
"This gives me an mdication of
should
.
be an
.
Act. of. God;'
-
'
·
_.·
freeStyl~, sec~n? 11.1 the 100
-
yard
where they are," he said.
..
Although Van Wagner. feels the
,.
g~!!:i~Y
a
nd
'
h1rd
m
·
the 200-yard
.
Exp~ctations are also high for
dual meets during the year cause a
,
y.
-
, -
.
.
.
.
, ·
.
:
the divers, freshman Grove
hindrance with training, he said the
.
:
·
·
Jum~r
.
Ro1!
·
.
Gagne
__
.
1
s
-
.s~ede!i
Ras11_1us~on and Brenden Leddy,
contests
1
are
•
still-tmportant
·
.. ,:
_
_fourth
t~
-
th~
4
00:r~i:dmdivi
_
dual
and Jumor Peter Welch.
'
t
Yoit
ci
n~ed
,~
the
•
.
duai~m
·
e
-
'
e
-'
·
t
.'.
:
mb edJ7tsXt•
:,
~keye!}~hd
_
-:
1
!1
th~7,,tthoo
_
~"yard
Both Rasmusson and Leddy are
:-
.
·
-
;
·
· ·
-.
·
-
·.
·
reas ro e an s1xt
·
m
·
e
·
200-
·
d d
·
·
·
·
seasons-
-
because1t!s·r--
..
·
-
11
ythere
-
that
1
r
1
~
'
d
.'i:."
''
'
t
'
:-,.·
k:
;
0
-
-
· , , , .
,
-
•
• . •
see e m the top five
m
the one-
-
. .
. .
.
·
.
=.u
.
.
,.
•
yar ureas stro e.
--·
"
: .
..
·
-
,
.
.
..
•
-· ·
·
·
·
·
·
·
•
-
e3:clr
1
,
athlete1.
~
learns
,.~-
!rom
!
his
,
_
;
/:i
J:.:
->
;;
-!,
6
•='•'t•J
j'T'
'
'"
.
-,~-
;
;·
,
c,-,,
,
,
:
:
_
p1eter
.
an~ three-meter
:
d
.
1ves
.
..
..
mistakes,!.'
;
he said~
,
lt's
:
there that
,;:
ei
Jt
1
r•
,
th9UJoo~
e~
l
'.
fe
.
e
,
~ed
,,
'
.
Acc?rdmg to head d1vmg coach
the
·
coach :is able'to. observe
.
the
,.
flth
'
'
·
nth e
400
,
-Y~d
,
.
rd~e~dt~Ie,
1
.-
.
Mela!11e Bolstad! Marist ~as a
-
1
. ,
,
m
.
e
. __
~rar
m
1
:
y1
_
ua
chance at winning both boards.
11
i
SPikf
tf
fclll
to
Siena,
record drops to
.
3.:.2
Red F
·
oxes fall to LIU, 61--41
by
GREG BIBB
Staff Writer
The club's other defeat was to
·
Albany State (3-1).
by
ANDREW HOLMLUND
defense did not stop them at the
other end."
Carroll, a guard, said the
Win one. Lose one.
.
Blackbirds played strong, but
That has been the
story
for the
Marist
·
could have responded
women's basketball team for
better.
Staff Writer
Marist's game
_
against con-
While hovering at the
.SOO
mark
·
roughly the past three weeks.
"I'm sti
.
11 annoyed,"
-
Carroll
r-
thus far, Desrosiers feels the club
·
·
1erence r
_
iyal
·.
Siena_ was a ga
.
me
-
The latest
_
result in the win-loss
said. "Against LIU the last 5-6
h
.
will improve because
_
·
th
_
ey
·
have a
·
coac
.·
Nicole Silenzi and some of
dilemma was a 61
,
41. defeat to
games, we have had a tough time
the players
.
thought would be put
solid nucleus of returning players. Long Island University
_
in Nora
matching up with them. They jump
in the win column·:
.
Along with Desrosiers
·
some
·
theast Conference action last Satur-
great and run fast, It was a poor
\
That was not-the case.
.
.
returning
_
mem~ers for· the Red day in New York .
.
,
.
-
.
performance."
.
..
.
-
Siena had dif,ferenf feelings
on
·,
Fo_xesinchide, defensive specialist
-
Thiscon,test was a
mirrot
image
St?ce{'Denglei-, a
'
sophomore
the matter recently defeating
_
the
·
.
Bnan Corbett, outside hitter Doug
·
to the game Maris(played
·
against
center;· said she was disappointed
Red Foxes, three games toone
:
Porrell and middle hitter Jason Siena on Feb. 7.
-
· ·
.
withloss and does not like how the
:
Individual game scores for any
Latendre. The top newcomers for
The Red Foxes trailed the Saints
·.
team has struggled this year in the
of the matches
:
were not available
-
the
.
club ar.C outside hitters Steve by
·
a mere
·
four points at halftime,
second half.
t press time.
·
,.
'
.
..
.
-
Graham and Sean Stam.
·
but then went on tci lose, 80-60.
"We played terdble. It was not
The defeat did not sit well
With
..
.
.
This time was
_
not any different
a good game,,, Dengler said. "We
team
.
captain Randy Desrosiers.
The Red Foxes opened the as Marist (7-14, 6~7 NEC) was on-
play
_
20 minutes and then don't
The junior setter said he was
season on Jan. 29 with the annual ly down by two at the half, 30-28.
play for the second half."
disappointed with_ ·the foss, but
Army Tournament.
·
·
· ·
However, the Red Foxes'
The result wasbetter for the Red
believes the squad will recover.
shooting went sour in the second
Foxes last Thursday as Marist easi-
'
u1
feel we are definitely better
. MariSf finished_with adisappoin-
half. The team shot a dis
,
mal 16
ly cruised past NEC foe, St. Fran-
han them,'' he said. "Overall we
tmg 2•6 record m the individual
percent in the final session and 26
cis
(NY),
90-67, in New York.
are
a be~rer
,_
cl9bJh
.
a11 ]iist ye~r .~ •
:
·
game
·
format.
.
percent for the game, compared to
Tile 90 points garnered by Marist
·
i
Despite the Red Foxes defeat,
Despite the sub~partourna~ent
LIU's 45 percent.
.
was t
_
he highest point total this
Marist still isin
_
contention in the
f
-
h
Marist was led by
·
senior co-
season.
·
,
P
.
State
:.
Eastern
'
Volleyball'
,
~;\~~;i:;c;;;e:t~a~dh~f~~:i
~aptain Cindy Carroll with 12
:
Carroll paced Marist with 18
'l
9-r°lr2~1i
:
ti~bet~
W
i
(~
-/i
on
~:
,\
.,
}~%1~t:~tl~~
-
::
.
::~~~Jf:g co~~
r~~t~~:Se~~;elt~~i%
_
~~~~~ptain
·
~~;ro~
0
rf
i1J~~~i1J~S-fn
:
;~~h'.1~~
f~rence along with Hartwick Col-
,
.
Desrosiers
.'
-,_
'.
,
.
$ead
.
coach Ken
_
Babineau
.
w
·
as
:
whd~
.
sopllo,m:Ofe
.
gµal.'d Melissa
lege,
.
Colgate
-
University, Albany
out
·
of town
·
and was
·
Unavailable
-
m.~us
.
er netted
JO
points andgrabb~
State/Oneonta, HamiltonCollege
If
Marist is SUCC!!5sful in its quest.
f
or
.-
coniment.
_
:
·
--
.
,
~
-
·
:
-
·
· · -
·
ed. 8 rebounds.
.
-
and
'
Siena.
:
'
-
• . -,_-.
·
·
._
. ·
for a championship, they will ad-
,:
;A~sistant coach Pam Dezago
Junior forward Andrea Macey
.
Currently, the Red Foxes are 3-2
vance to compete in the, Up
.
State
said lt was
fl.
game she and the team
~ame off the bench to score 12
ov
.
erall and 2~2 iri the conference
R~g
_
ional Championships.
'
•
would like'to forge{:
·
·
points.
:
Maris
_
t's three
~
victbries
.
includ~
-
·
·
. "We did
_
n't pla
.
y very well," s
_
he
D,ezago said she was glad to see
·
-
Marist's n
.
ext home
·
match is
~ins over Hamilton College (3-1),
.
.
said. "We felt pretty go
:
gd about
everyone contribute to the win.
Sac
_
r
_
ed Heart University (3~1) and
'
againSl Nyack Community College
being down by
.
two
:
(at halftime.)
'
"We played really well. We shot
-
.... o.,..n_e;;.;o:.::;n:.::;ta::...:.(::;3
.
--=0~)-:_
·
·
·
- -
-
~ ~ - - _ ; .
·
_
0
_n_F_e_b_._24
.;..
-
_· _ _ _
-
_
·
..:.......:.....
·
...;...~
-
_ . . J
The second half we were flat. Our
50
•
percent," she said. "We had
WBALL
..
-
.
.
.
Iiltramu:ra1s
TRACK
·
... continued from page
12
►
_
five people in double figures. The
good things were that everyone got
to play and were able to play a lot
of minutes."
Dengler said she liked how the
Red Foxes were able to play strong
throughout the game.
"(Last) Thursday was a great
win," she said. "The first half we
shot (61) percent and 50 percent for
the game. It was a good team win.
We played as a team."
Carroll
said everything fell into
place again
.
st the Terriers.
"We came out all pumped up.
_
We were just clicking," Carroll
said. "Our shots fell. Everything
felt good."
·
"It
(the season) feels like a roller
coaster," she said.
It is not to the
point where.it is discouraging; it's
Just confusmg. I don't unders-
tand."
Marist battlecl NEC nemesis
Wagner last night. Results were not
available at press time.
_
Blackbirds 61, Red Foxes
4i
MARIST
,
(41)
Carroll 3-115-712. Keys 3-12 4-5 10. Dengler
1-6 1-2 3, Presnell 1-1
1·2
3, Hauser 3-10 1-1 9
Macey 1-6
0-0
2
,
Heller
1
:
2 0-
t
2.
Walsh
0-2
0-0
0. Horwath
0-0
0-0
o.
:
'rotals 1
·
a:so
12-18
41.
:,
·
·
L.I.U.
(61)
.
-
<.
'
·
ButlerS-11 0-210, Randolph 7-120:-015, f'erguson
1-4
1-1
3.
Owens
4'-11
2-2 10, Thonas 3-5
0-0
1.
Leacock
0-0 0-0
o, Weems
4-10 4-8
12, Cham-
pagne 0-2
0-0
0, XiOules 2·9
0-0
4, Black
0-0
0-0
0,
De La Begassiere
0-0
0-0 0-0.
Totals 26-59 7-13
61.
Halftime acore:
L.1
.
U. 30. Marist 28
3-polnt
goals:
Maris!· Hauser
(2).
Carroll. LI.U.
• Randolph. Thonas, XlOules
.
Offldala:
Steve
Cohen.
George
Bandies.
A-WA.
:
Men's basketball action began
on Monday, Feb: 7 .. -
..
<
·
:
··
:
Uncoln
,
L¢gend's; ,'.Few Good
¥en, TMBobbitis/Redmen;Thee
~ilicans and
4ihitl
Weapon's
.
.
all
scored first-game victories;
· ·
... continued from page
12
►
half ahead of Monmouth (10- 4:,.
·
--
.
However, Magarity said he
is
not
interested in scoreboard watching,
just in his team's play in the next
weekend,
it was
·
not the best part
of the season, according to the
head coach.
MCTV'S
In Wednesday action, Phlip
Flops (by forfeit), Big Country,
Grafton Park, NPG
.
and Celtics
also notched wins.•• Women's
basketball play started on Tuesday.
~esults were not available at press
time.
Volleyball
.
action·
started last
Thursday. The
·
following teams
won the opening best of three sets
matches: Marian Tigers
(2-0),
Mur- ·
phy's Law (2-0);
Leo
Spikes (2-0),
Who Cares (2-0); Super Spike (2-0)
and Corduroy Gods (2-1).
The~e are now two hour-long
Aerob1~ classes on Wednesday.
Class
times
run from U:15 a.m _
l~:15 p.m. and 12:15 p.m
••
1:15
p.
_
m.
four games.
·
"We can't worry where we're
going to be or who we're going to
play," Magarity said. "We control
our own destiny."
·
After Monmouth, the Red Foxes
will host Wagner Saturday night at
the McCann Center.
Marist's first place finish in the
Stoneybrook Invitational on Jan.
23 was the season's high point.
.
It was the first in the school's
history atthe Division I level ac-
cording to Colaizzo.
.
'
-
Colaizzo said he felt the victory
was well earned .
. "We had a lot of depth in the
distance races as our runners
ran
in
.
:
two or three races in the same
day," he said.
, . Along with the Stoney brook
trmmph, Colaizzo said he believed
Dave Swift's 4:22.7 mile in
December was another highlight
for the indoor track program.
·
-
~•David trained very hard over
the summer, putting in more miles
than anyone in recent memory " he
said.
'
Marist will travel to race
in
-the
.
NEC championships this weekend.
"One-on-One with
Jay LaScolea"
+ "Press Box"
Weekdays at 12:30 p.m. on
Marlst Channel 12
A Whole New Perspective on
Marist Sports.
-
-
>
}
~~iR:tf
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'
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.
~
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w111tery
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year:
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GREG
.
BIBB
.
Staff Writer
.
·
.
·
.
44.3.1
44.3.2
44.3.3
44.3.4
44.3.5
44.3.6
44.3.7
44.3.8
44.3.9
44.3.10
44.3.11
44.3.12
.
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·
eel ,vhich issues would b
-
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Center;
.
and
;
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.
across
'
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and the panelists directed their own
. "aajptis, th~
:
three ~aildidates :for
,
;
questions
'
to
th(candidates
:
'
.
.
student body
.
president
.
debated
.
The status ofdubs was
.
discusss
.
campus issues in Maris
t
College
ed, . specifically the cap on the
televisiori;s first Jive broadcasting
.
_
number of club~ chartered by ~GA
· evenL
..
•
..
·
·
·
..
.
·
.
·
on campus.
·
.
.
.
.
.
Nick Capuano~ Matthew Gillis,
·
All three candida~es agreed
.
that
and Anthony Mignone discussed
the cap could be re-evaluated
.
in
their positions on issues
.
such as
.
order
.
.
to
,
make room for more
-
·.
club caps/co'mriluriication between
.. ·
organizations which would
·
like to
studerit(arictthejriei>_resentatiyes
;-'
become
·
a
'.
part
·
of
.
th~
:
<
college
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anc(
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·
fundinif
'for
<
the
·.
·
coiniminity.
.
.·
.
.
·
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· .
.
·.
- .
··
_.
media on campus
:
.,
:
;
·.
_,
:
_
_
·
-
Migriorie
.
said
;·
that the
.
only
.
~'This is the firsttime the Maris
t'
restraint)mthat issue is tha
_
t all
·
community is able to see the ~an
;;
clubs are functed through the activi-
didates debate the issues;''
:
Joseph
ty fee which students pay every
Salvayori
;
:
SGA
'
eie¢tiqi
i'-
conuriis-
.
semester
'
as part of their
.
tuhi,on.
· sioner; said
.
''Previously: they had
The candidates also agreed that
to
.
rely oil. speech
.
night to learn
:
alternative funding was necessary
about and
·
undersfand the positions
.·
for the campus m~dia;especially
·
of the
'
candidaies." Jim doi:ham,
.
after SGA froze the funds of The
vi¢e president of MCTV arid direc:-
·
Circle last semester.
tor
'
of the debate, gave the evenfa
"We should not be The Circle's
grade of A<
··
·
_
. ·
·
·••···
·
publisher," Gillis said. "lt'sacon-
' 'As with ariythirig;
I
can
think
·
tlict of interest."
.
.
·
of a million things J would do
,
diF
. Mignone said that this was
ferently next tii:ne,''. Gorham said.
.
something U-iathad to
.
be worked
"But we were working with
a
:
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. .
.
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oufbetw.eeri SGA
;
The Circle, and
-;
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novice
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-
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see
DEBATE
·
page
9
'.
.
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'
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?bl
.
'
cited to be meeting for the debate
-
aw~re.
-
.
_IS IS
a,
so a goo
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Parerits weeke~d is
no
longer
.
~ri
.
::;_
DiCaprio saidJhat parents don'.t
'/'
Students had.the op
·
porturiity to
-
·
·
'
everit
.
exclusive
to.
f
resbmen;
:
i
'
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.:
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·
.
have
.
.
much opportum
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"t:r'io
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o
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fo'.r
tlie
.
if
dassin
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ates from a µ_st
..
•··
:
February°
18-20
will
be
'
f~ed
with
:·
ween
)'
freshman
>"
activities
.
and
:C
subinitted ~d :C0mpiled by various
-,
~~~~=~
r;t!~r;f:ornor;,
:
juniots
.
·
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Th~leverits
.
indude,
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comedian
;
,
.. •
·
don'.t"come as often,'.';GiJlis
·
·
a!lded.
• '.:
.
. ,
An
award will also be presented
.
three one.act plays, arid
.
a Winter
..
'-
-
_ci5:s
·
a
result~ activities\vefe plann-
\
to
•
th~i jllnior,.. with
'.
the . highest ·
Wonderland dance.
.·
·•
•
:
ed
so
that'parents e<>tdd spend time
.
·•
cumulative average.AI~ awards
_
are
The highlight of the weekend for
with the students while also obser
.:.
presepted by Dean
Cox.
,
'. .
juniors
will~
their
Ring
Ceremony
·.
ving more of what Marist College
• •
~ornially
·
the
'
·
~lass
,
advisor
and semi-formal. . ·
•
.
.
.
·
.
is like.
"
.
.
·
.
.
..
·
:
.
.
·
.·.
•.
•
.
,
presides as master of ceremonies;
.
.
_
· ..
A¢cording
to
Sophomore Class•
.
·,
·
:
•The
dance
Saturday night is
.
open
·
'
however~ Linda Cool
_
is unble to do
PresidentJehniferNocella, plann-
to parents and students
..
There will
·:
so this
·
year.
.
.
.
.
'
ingfor the
.
weekend started :three
0:~
:
:
a cash bar and
.
other
Dicaprio
.
cited John Doherty~
•
nionths age:,.
'.
' :·
.
.
,
•
,- ,_
:
..
, .
.
·
-·.
.
.
refreshments while the disc jockf!y
professor of crimina) justice, as a
-~--
The\veekend is aresul~ of efforts
plays turies from the 70s, 80s and
.
likely candidate to
_
fill the role:
of both sophomores andjuniors,
90s.
·
.
·.
·
.
.
·
·
-
Dennis Murray will be
·
out of
who puttogether a schedule which
· .
The dance starts at 9 p;m. and
. ·
town and unable
.
to give the address
.was designed to ''allow parents to
will
be held
in
the cafeteria, and the
he ordinarily would
,
at such
.
a
see what kids do well," according
baclc rooni
will
also be ope~ for the
.
·
ceremony. No replacement speaker
to Deborah DiCaprio, the assistant
occasion.*** The
·
three one act
·
has been nanied.
.
_
.
.
..
·
·
.
dean of student affairs.
.
plays are being performed both Fri-
·
Brother Rancourt and Brother
DiCaprio
.
also noted that
day and
'
Saturday nights of the
.
Williams have been chosen forthe
February was
,
an-ideal
:
time; with
·
weekend starting
at
7 p,m.
·
· ·
.
Invocation and Benediction, which
many campus activities underw~y.
·
,
The
;
junior class officers have
·
·
make up th~ oth
_
er portion of the
Mau 9illis;'jtinior class presi-
been
.
busy
·
preparing
.
for t~eir
ceremony, according to DiCap
_
rio'.
dent, explained t~a~ the weekend
Junior
. _
Semi-forn.iaI and Rmg
In
:
prior years,
·
a talented
was created
..
to
·
lirrut the ~rowels
Ceremony, both wdl take place on
classmate -has performed at the
usually found on a universal
February
_
19
,
.
•
.
.
.
•
.
ceremony, either singing or playing
parents ":eekend.
.
The ~ng Cer~mony 1s held ~n
the piano, according to DiCaprio.
In preVIous years_;the weekends
the Chapel wh~re Father Luke wdl
.
Jim Gerace, junior class vice presi-
were scheduled s1D1ultaneously,
bless
.
the rings and Marc
dent said that no one has been
creating long lines and waiting lists
vanderHeyden will present to an
selected yet this year.
·
·
for planned activities.
estimated
150
juniors.
·
"If
you offer something, you
Dicaprio said that in past years
.
Any
student who ordered a ring
want everyone to be able to par-
the response from both parents and
but is not attending the ceremony
ticipate," DiCaprio said.
students has been favorableto the
may pick up their ring Monday,
Events this year include are both
hour Jong ceremony beginning at
February
21
in Dicaprio's office.
Circle
non-scientific poll
.
In
a recent survey, more than
300
Marist
students were
asked
to respond Yes or No
to the following question:
.
Do
you
intend to vote in the upcoming
.
SGA
elections?
Yes - 171
No-138
.
.
'
I
i
i
:
I
.
!
I
.
..
...
·
,
'
,
.
,
.
\
.
..
~ ~
'
'
·
.
'
:
.
·
'
'
'
•
.
' .
'
.
'.
•
•
•
•
'
,
,
0
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•
•
0
0
,
•
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•
..
•
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•
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O
O
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,
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In
the
,
r,iOrn:e
Of
.Day:.£e:w)$,
:
ne
,s
exCell~nf
,
"'
r
..
.
·
•
·
.....
..
.
,
:
.
.
~
,
'
---
~
.
.
in'.
-
hi~
l~test rol~/based on~a tiu~
;
~toit;
0,
.
hlis
lost'all
belief
-
in
the justice
:
of the British ·~ df his jiillni~tes.h~ a p~e
.
b~ard.~tl~'(,a6h
.·
.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
·
--'-
·
' ' Day~Lewis plays Gerry Conlon:
'.
·
aJi)rish hip-
>
:
court
:system
·
;
<:
.
-
~
i.
.
.
{_
;'.
.
>'.
'
.
:
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·
-
~
>
iil.diviciual
pie~e
~
i~ce~
\\jtli
tsD
:
~:
:
/{
.-f
.
:
',:
I>.~el
_
Day-Lewis is on
:
a
.
roll,
:
ancl
that
pie who happens to be
_
in
-
.t.o~don, in
_
the
'
.
.
A(
the
'
'.
'
sanie
,
~ifu.e
;
.
wt(
see
·
'
two
·
·fam!lY ·, ' ·There
.
~e·
al~o
s~~e
-
~u~otou~
~
el~nietits:
·
, .,
-
may
.
be a bit of ari undersµ\temerit;
;
·,
,
·:
;-
:::
·
.
:
·
,
~rong pl.ace ~t the wrong tun
_
e.-
,
<
;/
:
.
.
:
..
.
·
.
··
~embers
_
broughttogether after ye.µ-s,of
_
m-.
.
.
as_0er-ry am~
.9!~~~1.'~!~
~~~~~
ll~~~t
_
c~~
: .
.
.
_
Aftei: wiiming an Oscar
·
inl
989 for
.
'
'Mt:
' ·
:
-
-
~
·
:
That
:
time 1s
~
974~ wlien the
~~
(lnsh
:
·
·
:
:
<,lifference
_
t<>;wards. eac!t
,
other
,
•
:
.
;
j
,,
.'.
;
_
;
.
..
. ,
.
,
'.
t.µI_l c.hil4h~od
~~~9.1;i~:
:
:
.
.
~~~
o~r
Pp
.
~s1
;
,
_.
_
Left Foot,'' the 36-year-old Britisliactor
'
has:
.
Republican Army) bombs two Bnt1sh pubs.
i)
·
;
:, ,
One scene
,.
m particular show~;tl:l,i$;
~
D,~y~
,:,
l?~e
.,
~~lc
link
co'!Ia be
·
~~a
-
,
~~mpson,
:
starred
:
as an
·
Indiari~raised s'coiit
fu
'.
"Last'
of
·
·
•
:
..
The
-
British
'
police,· desperate
to
·
make
at--
:-.
,Lewis'
:
-just-con"'.icted
1
~haracter,
:
scr~
~L
·
:
,
'Y
_
ho:1~l~ys
an
_
att.9.giey
\V~oJ~J?<:~
:
t~
-
~
-
~C>~::
_
.
..
the Mohicans,J> a
·
maihoni between two
.
re~ts for, the bombings; take in Conlon, his
~
fatherf?rbringing himself into t~e situa~
Ion case
_;
:
,
:
-
,
.
.
.
:;
'
.>· ;_:, '.
·
.
.
•
: _::
.
:
·.
.
·
:
women in "The Age of Innocence," and
fne~ds,'Conlon•~ f~ther, and,
fe~
<;>~her
tionan~J:mngsupoldandpamfulchildhood
.
.
.
The
·
problem.isn'.t
:
her
;
.
il~t~g,
)
,ut
_
her
.
now,
a
man wrongly accused ofIRA crimes
relatives for questiorung and eventualjailing.
_
memories.
.
_ .
_
·; .
.
.
.
.
character, who seems a b1t
,
underused.
.
in "In the Name of the Father " for which
The interrogation scenes are very intense
It's a situation where father and son must
. ,
Her attorney charae:ter ~<>esn'
.
t really come
he's just received another Osca/ nommation.
as
_
we see Conlon hit, screamed at, and
.
p~t asid~ past differences if they are to sur-
.
in~o play
.
until thre_e.: ~mirths o_f ~he fi1m. is
Day~Lewis could
·
.
have
;
easily been
threatene
.
d by officers;
_
_
.
.
·
.
vive'.the1r or~eal.
.
._
.
.
·
.
.
_ .
.
.
overandatthatpomt,.the!llov1~
.
1sd~pm-
nominated for
,
"Innoc
.
cmce" as
·
well.
.
. _
·
·
For
1~
years, C<>;nlon and
_
ot_hers do time
p1rector)un_ Shen~an
.
(''My Lef~ Foot") to Gerry and Gmsepl)1e.5'
;
f_~~r~ct~f:h
,ii
,
'.
,
i
,:
He was even.offered thepartoftheAIDS
for a cnme they didn't commit.
:
.
.
bnngs the au~1ence mto an upsetting tale,
.
.
·
G<>p:t
_
P,ared to
.
these two, Thomps~n;~
,,
,i
·
victim in "Philadelphia," but turned it
While in priso~ with his.father
-
~iuseppie
inaking a moviegoer feel_ helpless towar~ !he ch~a_~~~r se~p.
_
s
1~$11
Jrye\9.1W
,
~
f.
,
,
1
,
w,,)
"
}:t
down.
.
_
_
· ·
.
. ·
·
(Pete P~stlethwaite, w~o 1s ~onunated Jor oppress~ fharacters while carefully ~voiding
_
,,.
-J:io';".~ver ,}~R~~
r
tfeONJ>JRHi~~
-
~~f~
.
ffin
u
.
¥C?[).i~y_enm1g~, .T,orn Hanks, who took
Supportmg ~ct~r), we
sec:
therr ~rustrat1on.
·
,
the
:
·
P«?lit1cal
·
troubles
·
.
surrounding . the
,
·
:
th~
-
film, she'.s
.
~t!o~g,
,
~~p~1~y dllr,m
,
~
}
1.~t
,.
thaf"role
'
'.
~
lias
'
'
feceived
·
i
'
'
Best Actor
'
·
Postlethwaite
IS
excellent
as
a sickly father
Catholics and Protestants
.
.
.
:
: ;
.
_
.
-
-
.
fiecy
.
cqu1troom appearance;
:
.
·
..
,;
,
.
·
. '
nolfilliatfol
_
:-:.:1
::
:
:·
;
(
;.-
:
;·
•:.:-
:
'
;'
'
.
. ··
.
who seems the most innocent of all.
:..
.
.
;j
Sheridan; by the way; has received a Best
.
.
·
,
In
an,'
"In
:
th~ Name of the Fath,er•i r«eiv.:
.
·
oa'y~tewis'\vfibtlsc?6~1.11g
'
corisiderecfto
· :
·
'.
Although I can't recalJ: Postlethwaite
·
be~
·
Director nomi~ation
.,
·
..
<
:
. .
.
,
.
.
,
ed
-
seven nominations.
.
_
·
:,.
. . .
.
·
,
.
play Lestat in the
,
upcoming adaptation of
·
ing ~n many f~Ims, he
·
di~ play a prisoner
,
~hile
-
"lnJhe Name of the Father" is a
_
,
Oscars asi~e,_ th!_s is_ an ex.cellent film t~at
-
Anne Rice's "Interview ,vith
·
a Vampire "
(again) on a pnson planet m the underratf,!d
senous drama, there ¥e some scenes where
portrays true m1ustice ma court system, \\:Ith
but was for some reason passed over in fav~r
"Alien 3/'
..
·
.•
.
.
..
·
one can't help but laugh;
:
.
_ -·
·
.
·
real emotion, proving fuithe( that Daniel
of Tom Cruise~
'
_·
.
Gitiseppie wants Gerry to keep the faith
One such
_
scene is when drug-user Gerry
Day-Lewis is one of
.
the best actors in
·
that their name will be cleared, while Gerry
becomes pleasantly surprised to find_ that one Hollywood. (Grade:A-)
·
·
·
No
prize this
·
we<ik~Justsomejaded
.
,
,
Valetitine
-_
cheer
by
DANA
BUONICONTI
:
·
-·
..
·
_
'
_
'Alohct"
·
opens
\
vith ''Geiger:;"
.
sounding
·
soriiewhere betweenLed . ~fi~i
-
~na~o.
·
~~
;
i
e~en
:
YO~l.:
-
:
~~er;~gi
:
:
'
for
:
.
ti~ket~.
:
.
:
,
'
.
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.
:
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'
·
:·
.·.•
.
·
p~tA~If'.a;
_
pe'rf.e~dii'st track
/
but
.
Zeppelin and
,
Rollins
,
Band.
~
;
n;
,-
,
.
altery,ative
,1:
J~e.
;
yqµ
:
,
o
.
,ye
,
::.
ild~
::
.
Your:
.
only chance
{
tO see
-
,
theni
;
,;
;
Stuc.~ m, your
,
r~_cjn}"
'.
b<>r~d
_
to'·
'
'
lqfoteiitiaHirst hit,
'
:
aHvell
:'':
''
!
'
:!
r;
'
Clocking
iti'
,
:_;
at
·
12:
19
:;
the
'
, yourself;to
_;
check
;
qut
,
Po.<;:li9PP!';r;;,
:
,
)ive:
.
inay,beloO'A'.prj)
,,
l6
,
wheq
?
they
,
;
;;:
te~u~
,
W,i~h
/
a
c
.
~~~
'·
c:,~
_l<
~h
'
e
'
:
'
,
wiilt~
t~
·
'
:
!
'Moxie"
t
:
and
'
J
"tlown,"'
,;_,tiav~
feedback-induced excursion
1
starts
.
Yol!
·
can o~tain a copy of poc will be on "Saturday Night Live,"
.
blahs?
.
:
•
.,
'
,
.
'
.'
'
·
'
.
'
·
: '
' '·
:
,
,
.
'
:
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-'
gilitar'Hffs
"
thafremin
'
d
ni,fa
:
'JOfo(
_
off g904 ~nough, but furthe,r
.
info
!l,<>~P.~~J<>.r ~mkh~le)Jrom ~1!g~
->
~o
,,
set
,,
r.f>ur
VJ::~
-
atcqrdii:igly
_:
--
t
'Ji
-
~ -
Well, I've got Just t
_
he band for Ratt, and believe me, that's
not
as
·
;
the
:
· iong
,·
tilings: become
'
:
father
mg
,
:
~ar ~~cords:;
.
9
¥apI~c,r~stj
·
..
.
;
'
~s
.
o,
1
keep
}iii
~ye ptit
'
f?lr: the
'\.
~
you._
·
·
bad as it sounds.
.
overindulgent.
_
,
_
·
-
-
'
Newmarket, NH 03857~140I
·
or
·
bt
<
new
·
Niiie Inch Nails;
·
called "Th~ ;
J?irect from the backwoods of
"Clown," in particular, with its
·
Had the song
.
been shorter, it
,
_
calling (603) 659-7516. .
.
.
,
,
.
, .
.
,Downward Spiral,
.
'.~ due
.
March..8._
Mame comes Doc Hopper.
Helmet-style chorus is a knockout.
probably would
_
have. worked
.
:',~d
_
t<;> fi
_
ni~h t
_
hin,gs 9ff;'.here'.J>
.:
~nd
:
i( t~aql~y was-n!textjtirtg,
1
,
_
\
-
And even though their new
AJsoontherecordareinteresting
better.
·
·__
·
.. :
_
ahttlerecord/tourupd~te,t~keep
.
enough, with the
.
-
release
.
of NIN
recor~? "Alo.ha," is ~ar from the c<_>vers of "Homeward Bound;'' by
M
_
inor complaints aside, Doc
,
you cl~e~ in on
:
wh
_
at~s hip
_
and
'
.
and the new
.
Soundgard~n,
.
the
.
..
!fawauan holiday the title suggests, Simon and Garfunkel, and "Head
Hopper are
.
a real kick ... ayuh; they
happenm .
.
.
.
·
long-awaited return of David Lee
It does make you feel warm all Over
-
Heels/' by
·
the
;
Go-Gos
;
.
.
· -
.,,
are.
·
,
:
.
·
·
·
.
.
.·
.
.
Ti~ketsfor two Pea1Uam shows
Roth will happen that day too .
.
over
.
.
.
.
"Homeward Bound" gets the
Another band on the same label
at the Boston Garden, on April 10
.
Yes, good-old Roth, hair weave
Thelf old record company call-
average rave-up, double-time treat-
.
as Doc Hopper though
.
they aren't
and
11,
and
a
s~ow in Springfield,
and all, has
_
recovered from his pot-
.
ed them "Black Sabbath meets the merit, making it sound cool, but
as good, is Sin'khole.
MA on the 6th, went on sale Tues-
related arrest and will attempt to
Monkees on ~cid," but I think they not terribly inspired.
_
.
.
Their
·
new
.
one,
.
"Groping For
day at 3:30 pm.
.
revive his career with "Your Filthy
soun~f!lore~keRattmeetsHel~et
_
"Head_
.
Over Heels,'' on
.
the
Trout,"hassomegoodsongs,but
·
They
.
were sold out by
5.
Little Mouth."
·
on p~xie stick~
; :
.a_ far m~re
m-
·
other hand, comes complete
:
with
·
itlacks.the immediate catchiness of
Best of luck to you
all
killing
God bless him.
·
·
tere~tmg combmat1on,
I thmk..
cheesy hand
·
claps, making it the
- •
Doc Hopper
:
.
··
.
·
Either way you ~a:p.na describe stronger of the two songs.
•
.•
.
< .
. ·.
·.''Make
..
Me
.
Better
'
'
·
has the
.
;
-
-
~
~
-
em, th~y•~; da~n g~o1:L
:
.
·
·
·
.
.
Belin~a and Co.
,
wo~ld
Jle
pros
'
poteµtial
:
to
:
,
\:1e a Jeal croY>'.d
0
:
.
nvo
·
u·
r
A
'
N
.
BE'
A
'
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. ·
,
featuring (:;h
r,
1s
·
Of!
_
:
vocals
_
and
J
•
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ud;
J
.
thmk,
,
..
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.
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pleaser;
;
while
/
'Canker '
}
when
·
it
.
· ·
·
'
·
;
,
I
.
,
'
·
•
'-'n,
·
·
·
:
·
.
,
gm
tar,
'
Scott
-.
on
··
guitar,
'
Jon
·
on
·
.
. '
Finishing off
the
recordi.s
'
_'
Post
.
getsg°oing
;
-
.'
Jias' a
·
-
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by
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JENNIFER
GIANDALONE
:Jri~;:n;:~!r
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de!:!~ni•t~~~!ie~n~~\t;~~~
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an
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ta
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ang!
_
·
:
.
.
This w~ek I wanted tt>
see
a
.
know the
'
extent of the plot;
:
.
.
Tone Loe, who has done voices for
.
stupid,mindlesscom!!dy:
. .
.
There
·
are no deep, hidden
_
·
·
character:Sintheanimatedmovies
..
:
-···
·_.·
' ·
·
.
,
.
,
. :-
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.
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.
.
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.
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:
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.
;_ '
.
I didn't want to
.
see anything
_
messages and
-
everything in
':
this
-
«Feingully" and
.,'
'Bebe's
Kids;':
._.
_
. _
.
,
·
.
-
·
.
♦
.. .
.
.
~
-
.
..
\
heavy,_depressin~, or
:
co~plicated.
-
movie should be taken at '_f.ac~
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produces
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p.
rl~l~
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rJs01ts: Y~u
wf1
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ieifu
·
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So,1fyouaremthe
.
samemood
·
value.
·
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·
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r
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·
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·
I was, l've
'
got the riiovieJor
:
ycni
:
:
'///
1':i\ce Ventura" is one of
-
tfioje
_.
,
~d it is obvious that the movies'
:
rroni'ane*e
.
gr9upo~topproducersona6mf::to-<>nel:5asls-ean1salruy
;
.
·
first~time dir~or'f
o~
Shadyac
.
¥0\iies
~~~t
.
!Htd more than ~alfqf:
(
:
cr~tors ~~~~d
·
to f?cus
\
on
:
Ace,
'"
&.~
-
~n~
w~ley9u
l~;iYOU~ll
be
groo~~X<E}iii(J?i'~Y;q<f
ttP%•'1@
:
and producer James G
;
·
Robinson
::
its
·
funny
~<-
,
parts shown
·
m
',
the
;·
_.
and
•
onlyAce.
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,
~";
·
>
t·
:
:
,
,:
,
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.
.
~
management.
,
Youwtll
·
haVe the
full
support of a
P.rofesslonal team,
.
it:~i~~~
;~:~~?::ro~:;~
•
·
prwi~;sthe exception of a
-
i:
::
l
:
s~
'
i~t~s
/
w11~
'
,
'i::c~id~
,
the.
"
andi
'
·
•
.
·
•
.
:~al
-
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·
.
;
l
'.
ff'e
i
d
:
;,
le
·
.
ad
'
,:
.ers;
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·
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.
.
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-
.
-
·
·
-
·
·
·
,,
·
·
·
·
·
·
al
·
k
h
world s worst actress
·
tries to be
·
,
"
.._
·
•
Geiler'oiis
·
75%
·,
payout
' ::,
0
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t1ve.
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.
.
scenes,you ways neww at was
.
·
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.
. . . .
,
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,
♦
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·
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tlo
.
ns
·
·· ·
·
.
·
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·
·
•
·
'
This movie
is
almost as simple as
coming next.
·
senous _as
·
L1eutenant-~inhorq, •but
n.11
n
•
•
3
Montll
Tr.~s
Progranf
·
: ;
·
.
they come.
.
.
.
.
.
·
.·.
.
-
.
The kids
·
in the
.
theater were
evei,:
:
time she opens her mouth,
.
,
.
♦
Professional
Offl~
♦
Sal;izy
Wlillc
You
Lew
.
.
'
'
James Carrey(TV's"in Living
quotinglinesrightbefore
.
theywere
her
.
lines seem forced.
'-
,
.
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:
.
.
.
_:
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kind). he's ,the man to call.
,
.
.
·
.
.
.
.
·.
managed to keepsomeofthejokes
to this Oscar
_
_
winner.
.
·
.
Now he's bired
,.
by
:
'.
the
.
Mianii.
\
fresh even though you knew
.
what
;
J:>olphjns
_
9r~_tjg
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tc{fnid
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,
was going to happen before i
_
t did.
:
m,il.~cot
;
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t
'sfield
;
go,)it:
:
:
kicking
•/.
·-'
Everything he did was so stupid
dolpl§
;
rianied
'.
Snowflake, who
.
I couldn't help but laugh.
has been kidnapped; or in this case;
.
With n;ferences from "Star
petnapped~
·
•
. .
Trek'' to "The Crying Game,"
Ace is referred to as Dr. Dolittle
"Ace Ventura" is similar to films
by Lieutenant Einhorn from
.
the
like "The Naked Gun."
local police
·
department (Sean
These movies get almost no
Young,
.
"Fatal Instinct") and is
critical acclaim but do well at the
never taken seriously, mainly
box office.
because of what he does.
With very few movies out for
He is also very good at his job
kids, this one will do very well.
and is always one step ahead of the
It sold out when I saw it open-
Tom Shadyac'sTirit movie cowd
·
have been made just
as
easily by
the
Zucker brothers ("The Naked
'
Gun," "Airplane).
It probably would have been bet-
ter if they had made it.
They
would have
tried
to squeeze
more jokes into every scene.
"Ace Ventura" did keep
._
me
entei:tained throughout
its
mere
ninety minutes, though.
·
police.
·
ing weekend and the sneak preview
The person who hires Ace is
the
.
week before sold out as well.
Movies like this rarely last longer
Miami
Dolphins' employee Melissa
Parents should, however, pay at-
than that.
.
.
.
.
Robinson
.
(Courtney
Cox,
tention to the PG-13 rating.
"Masters of the Universe").
Although
•
the verbal jokes may
In all detective stodes (no mat-
go right over kids' heads, the visual
ter how ridiculous they are), the
ones will need some explaining.
hero needs a girlfriend.
Miami Dolphins quarterback
That is
.
basically the only role
Dan Marino, who has been out of
that Melissa plays.
..
work for an awfully long time,
What the sfory boils down to is
makes his movie debut playing
a race !,etween Ace and the police
(you guessed it) himself.
to see who can find Snowflake
,
Big surprise.
first.
It's not really a major role, but
So, throw in a murder, and a
more like a cameo appearance;
If you
·
are in the mood for a
stupid
(I
can't think of another
word to more accurately describe
it) movie that will make you laugh,
go see "Ace Ventura ... Pet Detec-
tiv~.•
-
•
.
But do not expect a gr
_
eat com-
edy
,
like "Mrs. Doubtfire."
·
.
Just' make sure you go to a
·
matinee and don't pay full price.
.
,
..
:
__
,
.
J~lri
'
a
·
\Ylnnl{\g
~earn
and
:
be
:
a
part
of our success,
:,
We'.re offering
an
Invitation to visit
us and
tour ourofflces
and
speak
to
recent
graduates
who are estabilshlng
a
life
time career
for
themselves'
at
<::onttn'ental
Broker
Dealer
Corporation.
·
_
,; ,
;
,
..
~;
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:
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~
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'.?'.
"
:,~
-
~:
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-
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~
~
~
,
-
♦
For
Immediate
lnformatton
please call
_
l_v\lchael Hasho
_
at:
·
.
-
516,!1'741.-,.5400
.:
....
...
.
.
.
C(INTl~NTAL
ESTABUSHED 1982
~
MEMBERS
NASD.,
MSRB., SIPC
•
t;l,EARNING 11/ROUGH DPPENHEiMER
&.
CO, INC.
MEMBERS N,Y.S.E.
:
I
I
I
I
,I
-
.
'
.
\
'
.
'
\
.
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'
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·
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,
,.
THI; CIRCLE,
FEBRUARY
17,
1994
'
:
' •
.
.
.
"
•.
•,
• .
3
..
·
When
:
a student receives a grade
carry
.
between
·
12 to 13 credits, in-
•·
h/
.
MEREDITffKENNEDY
: ·.
·
of: 2:0 !)flower for either a single
;'
stead of the average
·
15,
.
.
:\
;;<i/)
siat(
Wri!~r
.
i
:
'.
:
:
\
;'
·
,
.
.
semester or as a cumulative
·
gracl~
.
:,
..
The faculty board may also re-
pqi~l'
_
average th~y may be placed
quire them to enroll in the learn-
Tiie
'
figures ·for acacleII1ic ex~
oh probation.
·
.
.
:_
·.
·
.•.
•
.·
•
ing theory
·
course.
.
..
.
,
celle~ce, and ac:ademk probation
.
Thestudent must thenmeet with
·
Vice president of Academic Af-
are
:
similar.
·
>
..
:.
·
.
.
..
.. ·
·
..
..
·
·
_
the
.
Fac::ulty Academic Review
.
·
fairs, Marc variderHeyden, said the
··
·
/
On the Dean's list
·
for the fall
Committee to review the situation
decisions of the faculty board are
seines,ter 37Kstudents held
a
grade
and decide on what steps will be
.
based on each individual case.
·
point average of at least
a
3;25 and
taken to help the student improve.
,
·
••Tlie board evaluates the sit
.
iia-
72
students achieved a 3.75 or
.
The committee consists of three
tion and the conditions surroun-
high~r.
"
.
.
-:'.
·.
_
..
..
· .
_
.
faculty members that serve a three
.
ding the student and then decide
· ·
.
Ho
.
w
.
e
.
v~r,
,
._
Marist
·'
granted 323
.
year
·
term, but there is
·
a
.
new
··
:
what
.
actions
..
to
.
·
take,"
undergr~dua
.
te
.-.
s
.
tu'dents
'
a~ade~ic_
'
.
i:neinber
·
every year:
.
<
'
.
.
.
vanderHeyden
·
said.
.
.
.
.
probationary statusJastseinester/
·
Molloy sai
.
d
.
the faculty want to
.
· ·
~
A first semester senior
•
granted
·
·
which figures to be approximately
·
help
•
the: students find a
.
way
·
·
to
probation can
.
be
.
placed
·
under
~
ten
'
'
percent· of
.
the college
recover their academic standing;
I
term limitatiO!} if the faculty board
·
community.
.
.
.
.
·
•~The
·.
faculty
-
take
-
this
·
·
very
believes it is necessary, but Molloy
. .
.
Out of this figure
·
155
are
·
seriously, They want the students
said thaU_trarely
·
happens.
.
.
freshmen and approximately
30
are
:
to
~
do
:
well arid
·
to use all
-
the
·:
:
•mie committee hopes that by
seniors~
'
'. ·
·
_
.
.·
.
.
resources Marist
·
has to offer/' addressing the situation early the
· D~ector
·
of Student Aca~emic
Molioy' said.
·.
,
. _.
.
.·
;
.
students wil! noJ h~ve academic ~if-
Af~rurs,
_
Rosem~ ~olloy said she
:
·
Tiie
C
faculty
·.
can p~ace: certam
.
ficuitr,. their Jun_1or. and
·
semor
believes
.
prob~t1on 1s there to help
restrictions upon a student if they
·
year,
.
Molloy said.
the students. .
.
.
.
feel itis justified.
.
·
.
.
.·
A student who has been on pro-
•~The
-
probat1op_-proces~
-
1s not
Students
·,
niay be
.
required
'
to
:
:
bation for two consecutive
meant to be penalizing; but 1s a way
·
·
meet with their advisor and men-
semesters can be prohibited from
to draw the student's attention and
· ·
tor
at
various times throughout the participating as .an officer in any
have
:
them :take .:their
•
acade~ic
.
semester or could be placed under org~ed extracurricular activities,
standmg senously/'
·
-Molloy said.-
·
credit limitation allowing them to or ui a varsity sport.
Marist
~
Jashion
·
ifejjt.
.
.
~
.
.
prepa
"
res-for show
by
BARRY KEENAN
Staff Writer
The extravaganza the Marist fashion program has been preparing is
quickly approaching.
.
·
The Silver Needle Fashion Awards show is coming to IBM's Mid-
Hudson Valley Conference Center on April 28, 1994.
"This is something that I have been looking forward to ever since
freshman year/' AnnKucipeck, a senior from Lake Placid, N.Y. said.
"It's a chance to put everything I've learned in the last four years into
a collection that is actuaUy going to be viewed by the public."
Months before the show, each student is paired with a designer- critic
that studies their sketches and tries to decide which would be their strong
point.
"They match you
·
up with designers that have styles that are similar
.to your own," Natalie Blasi, a senior from New Rochelle,
N.Y.
said.
Sometimes you can get a designer that you end up spending a lot of time
with."
Students choose a theme then design a collection that centers on it .
Most collections range between four and seven garments.
Tracey Mabe, an Adult Education student from Syracuse, N.Y.,said
she has been working constantly for the last five months on her western
style collection.
"I don't know how regular students balance Core classes with the heavy
work load that
is
required of us. It's really kind of hectic," she said.
.
According to Elizabeth Csordas, director of the fashion program, this
is the first year Marist students will model the garments.
"We chose
to
use students over professionals because we want the show
to become more of an all-Marist affair," she said.
·
''Students will be seen in every aspect of the show this year."
w
.·
..
·
..
.
1\
_:·
1
·
..
@
.·
:
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·
.
.
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.
.
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.
.
·
g
·
··
.
ih
..
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.·
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·
o
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·
.
s
··
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..
.
·
1 ·
.
·
n
fo
··.
·•
r
··
_
•'
·:"
s
'
p
·.
ring
·
·
co:!::-i~
-
dshejsbot~nervousandexcitedaboutherfuturisticfashion
"I am
·
kind of nervous.
·
I have a hoop skirt that is six feet wide and
radio station;
two medium rotations and one
uses wires for support. It's pretty difficult to walk in, butl think the
by
CYL,INDA A .. RICKERT
:
.···
He came back with ideas to
:
light rotation, plus DJ's picks,,, she
student models are getting enough training to handle it," she said. Ac-
:
Staff
Writer
organize WMCR.
.
added.
cording to students, the exposure is a great opportunity but said the feeling
"Andrew decided we needed
Ranking the music is the job of
.
of success is greater.
The sounds of
.
'
.
'Poughkeepsie's
more of a fonnat in terms ()f the
Music Director Aimee LaMarch.
"There will be a lot people looking at our work," Blasi said. "That's
best modern rock"
.
are back.
·
·
music, as in which songs to play at
·
"Aimee stays in contact with
great, btit the real satisfaction comes from the sense of accomplishment
"Last semester, we
_.
opened
what times," Smith said.·
:
record companies and gets reac-
that I will feel when I see my outfits on the runway."
·
earlier than ever before," said·
Boris started the station on a
tions from other colleges to find
Some students just said it would be nice to finish the extensive pro-
senior Rachel Smith; president of rotation clock, which is a schedule
out what students like," Smith
jects on time for the show.
campus radio station WMCR.
for the DJ's to follow.
·
·
said.
·
·
·
"l'Ujust be happy if I get everything done on time," Kucipeck said.
"But this semester, the seniors are
The rotation clock lists
.
what
·
Right now, it's modem rock.
"I've pretty much forgotten what it's like to have a social life."
going nuts with capping courses
songsto play, when to play them,
For those with different tastes,
Candice Chestnut,
_
a senior from Germany, said she knows al\ about
and internships. The station had a
.
and the times for station identifica-
the station offers several specialty
what goes into such a extravagant undertaking such
as
this.
slow start.''
.
.-.
.
. .
.
·.
.
tion,
,
commercials, . . an-.
shows.
. .
••
.
"I
had the oppqrtunity to do the, sho~ during my junior year. I'm
. But.after a three-week lull;
the
noi.mceriients news; and weather.
'.
The specialty shows still have to
really g}ad) took_ 1t? bt:cause ldon t thmk
I
woul~
b~
abl~ to handle
.
j~P'?IJ,
!¥'t><:i_l~,i.~_4~rs
'
:M911d:iy~
. '
):
"It
'
(tlle r6tatiowclock) mllkes
.
.
-
follow the
·
rotation docks for
.
news;·-
•-
SO?,Jseth1_ng
.
lihke
~
thk
.
1
.
s
.
Ig
,
m~c._tlo8§!t
.,
s.et
_
mh
.
~si:i:.t
.
aht
.
coltlheg~d·
<
,
~li_e
srudt
.
h
•
.•
• ,
_. ..
·
.,
·
t
··
·-
·
1
starting
-
.the
·
.
semester
:
by
,"
playing
·.
the
'
:'
sound
:
of
:
the
•
.
station
."
more
,:
•
bannt o
1
uh
·
riceD
..
mJ~nts! ank
·.
~~otmmh
•
erci~c•
·
ph;si~~~~
0
t~~~;:k
1
tha/
ttey
ed~
fs
~::~oin:n:t:f:::S;he
:if:~u':i~
·
Valentine's
.
dedicati!)hS a:s
:
a
..
'
unifomi/'
>
Smith said .
.
f'People
.
u
.
e
.
s pie
iSJJ
e
MUSI ,
f .
h
h
.
.
b
.
,, Ch t t
"
d "Wh
t
fundraiser
·
·
·
·.
·
·
·
· ·
h
.
Ii
1
·
··
I I
·11 k
·
all
-
1
·
fit th th
f the
o time t att ey put
m
1s o scene,
_
es nu sai .
en we are a
•
.
•
•
•
•
· ..
•
0
•
•
w
O
sen regu ar
Y
.
WI
now ex-
uhsu
.
Y
_
o
.
1
e
eme
O
the show in April, we will be watching what has been created out of
What's new
_'
this spring?
. .
•
actly when
-
the Jicws and
·
an-
s ow.
.
h.
h
bl
d
d
t
"
. C'We mape a lot of clianges last
nouricements will be."
.
.
.
According
to
Smith, this
not
mg
more t an
oo , sweat, an
ears.
semester that arc
.
car,rying
The rotation clock also helps
semester there will be,
.
among
through," Smith said;
·
. . . · .
organize the music
:
•.
others, three metal shows, a jazz
. .
.
Ac~qrding to
.
Sm.itJ.l,
,
Andrew
''We Iiow play aboudiveheavy
.
show
.
with Mi
.
ke Gordon, and
.
Boris; the station's prograrn direc~
·
rotation (most popular) songs an
...
see
WM• c
·
·
R
·
page
·
8
►
tor, had a ~wnmer internship at a
hour," said Smith. "There are also
:
~dmlssions office look·s
+
tP.lJllpi-ov~
·
ca111pus .
.
tours
..
,
if:Bi.:.YTHif
MAUSOLF
i
.
:
_,,
<·
:
siattwriter
:
,
·
i
How d
_
o you make a goqd thing
better?
.
·
.
·· ·.
· ·
The Ad.missions Office is facing
this question
as
it tries to revamp
its toui:
:
'
giiide program this
·
semester
:
.
.
·
.
.
Cll.rol
.
Mulqueen, assistant to the
director
of
Admissions,
·
said
·
that
. the Admissions staff is trying to
·
refine the tour guide program by' .
improving communication with the
student tow: guides.
.
•
"We'i:e now trying to find ways
to evaluate our guides
.
better,
,
to
have
,
a
,
}itde .closer
,
touch, with
ihem/Csai~ Mulqueen'.
.
.
· .
. ..
At the suggestion of President
Murray, David Grassmick, a com-
munications faculty member, has
been working with the Admissions
staff on the tour guide program
based on his previous experience
with a program in Virginia.
Grassmick suggested an "evalua-
tion sheet" - basically
a
three page
quiz to test ~tudent knowledge.
"Most of the information was
taken from the tour guide manual,
but we did throw in a few questions
that were really
·
sort of common
sense things," said Mulqueen.
The quiz
will
be
used
to help the
Admissions staff determine what
the guides know, and to make the
guides understand the importance
of ~hat
·
they say to prospective
families. It will not
be
used as a
dismissal
tool.
·
,
,::
Lisa Schuster,- a senior in charge
.
.
·· ·
and it'will help provide a heritage
.
of the tour guide program, sajd stu-
·
.
·.
for the college;'' agreed Mulqueen.
dent reaction was positive to
.
the
.
·
A
.
few
·
other details
.
that
·
evaluation.
Grassmick has singled out are
.
the
·
·
"They were all game," said
·
.
times and positioning of tours.
Schuster.
.
.
·
.
Mulqueen explained that the
Mulqueen added that· the
tourstakeaboutanhour,an4t6urs
students were even appreciative
are given when students aFe
in
class
that the Admissions staff had
the entire time.
devoted tbe
,
tinie to the program.
"If
you don't see any motion, it
"It was interesting. None of
sort of leaves you with a cold feel-
.
them said, 'Oh, forget it, if I have
ing, but if there's a lot of student
.
to take that I'm not going to be a
movement and
·
your tour guide
tour guide.' There was really
knows people there's a warmth that
.
alniost enthusiasm that we would
grows automatically,"
·
said
take the time to spend to do that
,
Mulqueen.
.
.
·
.
.
·
with
.
them/' said Mulqueen.
Also, as insignificant as it may
· .
Another thing that they are try-
.
seem, the positioning of the tour
iilg to start is an evaluation card
group itself, is important.
that families would fill out at the
"If
people have to walk right
completion of their tour, said
through the middle of a tour
Mulqueen
.
because of wher~
it's
positioned,
The Admissions staff would then
the group and the students will get
be able to get direct feedback about
annoyed," said Mulqueen.
the tours and the tour guides.
All of these improvements are
In addition to improving the ac-
part of the program that they've
curacy of the tours, Mulqueen says
tried to set up to better evaluate the
that they're trying to improve the
tour guides aJ!d improve the tours.
style.
. .
·
Mulqueen said that the way the
Grassmick said that Manst has
program worked in the past was
a lot of history from the Marist
advertising in the freshman dorms
Brothers and that there are many about the tour guide program.
· interesting stories that should be
in-
They realized that this
·
was not
corporated into the tours.
the best system because although
He said that Admissions take the the students were enthusiastic, they
time to interview some people
on
didn't have the necessary
campus and put together a port•
knowledge.
·
folio of stories, from which
"We would get all these people
students
can
pick
a
couple to incor-
that were interested but they didn't
porate into their tours.
.
·.
"Families like bearing stories
••.
see
TOURS
page
a ►
he unkindliest cut!
Freshn:ian s~imm~r Marshall Badu takes the final step to
champ1onstups w,t~ "bootcamp" haircut courtesy of
freshman
.
Jason Damgerfeld.
Circle
photo/Matt
Marth
.
.
·
·
.
,
,
.~
•
'•
•
· i
{
'
,
I
1
,
I
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I
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I
.
,
I
I
·1
I
l
I
4
New appliCations·
·t11iiefan ~he set:•
dQWµ
this, y¢ar
.. by
TERI L
STEWART
'!
Staff
Wfii~f; .
.
~
.. ' , . ''. :~ --· :· ·~ -
Two weeks before the appli_cation:dea<lline, "the admissions office has
only received approximately 3700 applications.
_
_ . . -
According .to Vice President for Enrollment Planning and Admissions
Harry Wood, there are a few reasons that may have caused this decli~e,
including the alleged rape in. September.
"I think the incident on campus (the alleged rape) did not help because
the larger decline in applications is from young ladies," Wood said.· "The ·
word got out in different parts of the northeast.and when that happens
it certainly is not a help, obviously."
· ·
·
.
Wood added that people may be apprehensive because there were a
lot ofquestions about the incident.
·
·
·
· ·
.~!We-heard that !!arlier this fall, a lot of people were questioning that
.whole siiuatfon,"-· Wood said.
__
_
· ·
_
. -
... Another, factorin .the current decline, according to Wood, is the
lackadaisical attitudes. from the students. .
- .
"I think the young people don't feel any. urgency in applying to col-
leges right now," Wood said, "They will apply when they get around
to it."
He added that the number of high school graduates this year is at the
lowest in the last
20
years;
·
·
· · Wood also said that the entire process of admissions began to slow
down last year.
·
Despite the decrease in applications this year, down from a record 4700
last year, the admissions·office is noi:alarmed; according to Woo
·
d. •
"There's no urgency in.the fact that we only got 3700 applications,"
Wood said "In the. nexttwo weeks,.we'll reach 4,000 plus,,,
MCTV :director Jim Go.rham issues final instructions)o the studio audience before the live
_presidential debat~.-T_uesdav.
·circle
pho~o/MattMartin'
,,
.
-
:._,
_:,·;
,;_:
....
One
yea,t
sinc_e <J.Iinton's .. visit···-
:
1
R.ap_ejnve·~tigatioti· cciritifiti;s, ·:: ·
had a good view of the event, but
"I saw alot of cars pass by and
by
CHRIS BERINATO
he was
·
most ·unpressed· by the
the shape of President Clinton in
by
KRISTINA
WELLS
Staff Writer
Secret Service's "absolute crowd
one of them," Custer said;
Associate
Editor ·
control."
Many people who lined Route 9
.
Although it's _
not your typical
Nick Capuano, a junior who was . had a similar view to Custer's if
According to - Town of
drive by, President Clinton's wav-
also at the everit, agrees with
they actually saw the president at
Poughkeepsie
'
police, the
in-
ing pass through the
area -
last Baumgardner,
saying
he . all. Custer said she thinks that
vestigation of the alleged rape
February is still quite clear in the - remembered them examining the _ Marist hyped the event a little too
on Sat.~ Sept. 11
is
st
ill
going
minds of many people.
roof of Champagnat Hall for
much.
strong. _ .
· · _- _ -
.
On Feb .. 19, 1993, President security reasons.
·
·
''Itwasn'ttoo big of a deal. He
"We• cannot comn1.ent on
Clinton drove by Marist College on
"I was impressed by all the
didn't stop -or anything, he just
anything other than ther~ is still
his way to make a speech at security," Nick said. "They were
passed right through,
n
Custer said.
a very active ·investigation,"
Haviland Middle School in Hyde very
organized
and
very
Leland Boutilier, a sophomore
Sergeant Thomas Mauro said.
Park. Many Marist students lined thorough."
·
w_ho was also atthe event, said he
· The alleged - rape of
an
Route 9 on that Friday afternoon,
The area may have been swarm- _- thinks Marist should have taken
18-year-old female student oc~ :,
only to get a glimpse of passing · ing with security, people, and the
different measures to infoim"the -
cuq~n~,t~eLoweUThomii!i ·
camera
crews and,_ eventually, the press, but sophomore
KenyCuster - .. students,·. .,
_
:
, _·
~
·
:;
• :
'
i:: .
.:
<::ofil?lu~c:at1on Ce1_1.ter, _on
t~~
president.
·
_ .
had a good enough view to see th'e
·
> .
·
, .. _
>".
.
. . :
·,,
~
'
·mght: of Sept~· 11_.
•
:
·
· /·:.
Ju'nior Jeff Baumgardner said he. president.
--
. :
...
see
.DRIVE
page
s ►'
.
The
victim ·was
.
returning·
Security. Briefs
Be a Peer
II
-
•
•
•
Career Assistant
Have fun helping others
and_
:ledihing· tips
for career success!
, ' .
,
-
Information Sessions:
Feb. 28 (Mon) 4:3Q-S
-
DN211
Mar. 2 (Wed) 11:3_0-12 DN2_11
Mar. 3
(Thurs) 5~5:30·· DNl00 ·.,.
For more information,
contact
.
Kate Pileggi, DN226 x3547
IIW
llr~
~i~
•ll~~
lilli~ •
IIW
JIR!J
,And.
Many
O,ther- De.s.ti.natio.os!
IJ. ,
at_
tdkt
/J~ {/; .. _
«
JfM".. .
1
gJerr,aa _ : _
._
Jt!-/P.aa
fW._
-
.
·
Poughkeepsie: -
,ub
City,
246
Main Mall •
485-3579
rxli
.f _
Arlington ·
1iHORTl..fNE' ·
Arlington Getty, 813 Main St.• 454-3530
from an off campus p~. when
an -unidentified• male -grabbed ,
berfrom behind and thiew~her.
to -the ground .. According· to
reports, the victim did not know
the three -perpetrators.
Sergeant
Mauro said there are
two active detectives still on the
case. ·Detective Paul Holt and
Detective Paul Lecomte are in-
vestigating the -alleged• rape.
The Dutchess County District
Attorney's office _- refused to
comment on the details of the
MCAT:begilis 2/26 .
GREbe. -
4/21
-•
-
';C.
gI11S .:,-• -..
. LSAT begins 4/30
: Smart.people
read
the
fine
prmt.:,Smart
people_:
want
small
ctasses.(fewer
tha1'1'
15
· stud~nts),
;4
proc\ored
diamostic exami-
nations:tree
exfu1tielp
wiih'ibe'i~tructor,
and
excellent ~re imprt>vrnents'.·:
· Smart i>'<!Ple prepare
with.~
THE,
Neilhtt Princeton University nor Educational Testing
sem.,,
is
affiliated
with
n.e
Priao:ton Remw
· ,·· 800/· ·
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.
' I \ \ • ' < ·1
• I • \ I \ • '
>
o
•
·,
•
•
•
l
• I •
•
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• • I o l
•
•
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•
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l
THE CIRCLE,
·FEATURE
FEBRUA8Y_17,
1994
--.
:
'\\':anted: New Marist~-Illasccit·
:_' _by
ROt(jQf1NSON
~ti~~~ading coach Kathleen
-- :·,\?;:'.-;._Staff Writer'..· .,.
Tryouts were held last semester.
·_·, . . .
.
., ... ·" : . ....... , .·..
.
· .. · ,Unfortunately, the amount of -
. _ c·.-}V~t~d: .c;>ne· M_i:m,st s~udent,~
:
:voltinte~rs -.yereJacking; In fact,
must. - be . capable - of- moderate
_
th~~e _was only one participant at .
· physical. exercise; tremendously ex- . . that last tryout.
-
treme portio·ns of good cheer, and
· Why ·• were there . a lack of
h.ave no adverse. reaction to. fur;
volunteers?"
No, this is not a personal ad.
"I just'don't know. I mean it's
·
This is an offer to any and all
a fun job,»said cheerleader cap-
Marist.students ~ho might like to
tain Tracy Smith.
become th(next Marist mascot.
Fortunately; the student proved
'., .
i
-\The/'jol:, • is}
·
no\V open and
capable of the task. However, pro- -
\ , avail_!il:>le)C:,)econie the. Red Fox.
blems arose once more when the
.
.
/inte.r~{e4 :stud,ents'willperform _
student transferred to another col-
in a·tryoubvhere'tliey
wm
display
lege at the beginning of the 1994
both their physical skills and
spring semester ..
upbeat_ nature. ·
, This left Marist without a fox,
.- Be forewarned - the position of and the fans with one less reason
the fox is not always a simple one.
to cheer;
Participants will be expected to do
According to Rogan, the fox
more· than just walk around and
serves a very important duty.
wave.
"In general all school mascots
''Our last mascot -tumbled · and
create a feeling of unity. They bring
did a lot of physical stunts," said
people together," said Rogan.
Smith added that she believed'
there was a real need for a fox.
"It
helps to bring more spirit to
the crowd," said Smith .
Previously, the fox appeared on-
ly _at men's basketball games but
now Rogan says she would like to
expand upon its duties.
"Ideally we would like to have
the mascot available at all athletic
events," said Rogan.
The next s~t of tryouts are ten-
tatively scheduled for some time
during this semester. This .will
allow the fox to be available for the
start of the football season.
· In addition
to
sporting activities,
the fox will occasionally make
special appearances at other func-
tions, serving as
a
symbolic
representative of the school.
In fact, Rogan says experience in
community service and theater are
big advantages for any candidate
looking to become the fox.
"The fox serves as a kind of
goodwill ambassador for, ·the
school," said Rogan.''
. Rogan noted that the Jox _has
received more attentio11 and respect
since the arrival o(its new costume.
.The. new .costume was purchased
over the summer for approximate-
ly $1,500.
.
According to Rogan the new
outfit is quite an improvement over
the last costume.
"The new uniform looks more
· like a real fox and I think more
people like that," said Rogan.
Rogan explained that the old
costume appeared goofy, and that
made it difficult for it to garner any
respect.
-"The
;
mascot ought to be a
source of unity, not something sil-
ly," said Rogan.
Rogan said that the new costume
. helped to make a distinction, that
was lacking with the old costume.
"We want people to think of it
as the Red Fox. Not as Joe Smith
... $einf eldoffers.perfect after dinner mint
__
~
•· .:. ~-lkt~i~i{iht{i_n~s ______ .
_
_ ~~~l~h;,:~!f~-i~~-1~!s\~~1r~a~s~
by
MA
TT
MARTIN
_
ing, ~ecause the doggie b?g means
Jerry" Seirifeld
i'ias
offi'ciaii/fn•- '.; i_e(th,er;,ygu~r~:,qurJit f,f
:
r~staurant
herit_ed the mantel l~ft vacant by
when you're not.hungry, o_r you've
Bill'~!2osby ·as th~'reining:king: of
chose'J t1Jr~tup11,~~t f?()SS,1,ble way
com_eaf;· . . _'.:- ;
•
,,. ; - -_ ·--~--- : .:- :;
there
IS
·to get d0J!:, food.
·•L1ke fbsbf
before him,- Seinfeld
is·the star of a top
-
~rated; self-titled
sitcom and now, a member of the
New York Times· bestseller list with·
his.'
first ·
endeavor-
"SeinLanguage." · (Bantam,
$19.95)
-
In - his preface, Seinfeld pays
tribute to the former champ,
revealing the influence Cosby had
on:_his life, and career.
''!was proud
to
be the only kid
in my neighborhood with a-·com-
plete Bill Cosby album _collection ..
He~WITu-:-rriy~ravoi'ite;c6medianfa11d,
the·
:first'. black actor"· to.
staijri
'a
••
series. But to me, he was the fir.st
adult on TV to wear sneakers on ·
a regular basis. I know that af-
fected me, but I '.m not sure in .what
way."
· Now a multimedia fixture,
(S~infeld, the TV: series, holds at
fourth in the Nielsens. while
Seinfeld, the book;falls to number
eight,) Seinfeld _is flooding the
American continent with his unique_
brand. of .. insight into North
American -culture.
,;{''Whenever you ask for the dog-
gie bag at
a
restaurant, there's a
certain sense of failure there, isn't
there? Peopl~al):Vays »rhi~per it to
the
waiter, 'Uh
-
, excuse me. Can
I_
Dog Food? Who? What? Yes,
most comedians make their living
by pointing out to the lay observer
the nuances of human existence,
but Seinfeld has brought that skill
to a new level. From casual glances
into the psyche to staring at the
base elements that drive our inner
workings.
. ''Men and women; all in all,
behav.e just like our basic sexual
· el~fu.erits: Ifyoil. watch single men to give ·you t_hat. You can go now.
-on-a weekend night they really act If you want'fo go out next week,
very -~~1ic4 iH~e .. sp~rlll~ ._,.- . all,
.fl!,
giyenou~,a short .rqlJr. that
disorgariized;~btimpin/f intq' their-~ matches:·,,_, __ .-:::
.. ·:
.
, ·_-\ :, ?:· -: - '
friends,. swimming in· the wrong . - ·sei~feld
1
s light and easy humor
direction,'_'
.
.
makes for effortless reading. While
'_'I
was first."
the book runs a
180
pages, a
"Let me through."
serious reader could easily finish
"You're on my-tail."
the entire work in an hour and a
"That's my spot."
half.
·
"We're like the Three Billion
Stooges."
I'm sure that you can identify a
few of your friends that fit this
stati;ment to a T, or maybe the bar
scene at Berries or Sidetracks.
The book makes for great
reading before bedtime;travelling,
or in the male library, not to men-
tion during class. That is if you can
keep your laughs to a dull snicker.
This is the strength of Seinfeld's
It's_ the perfect book of instant
.humor -
stretching the reach of
dinner conversation starters
i(
believability.
you're in a bind for material.
It'~, like S~eyen S~~elberg's dino
"Life is truly a ride. We're all
_
fib:1_1-
Jurass1~ Park,· . you ma~ not . strapped in and no one can stop it.
. beheve whats on the
screen;-,but--~,-when,..thC'
"
'doctor·,,.,slaps~your
iC~,
one hell
of
a show._
behind, he's'rippingyourticket and
·
I
once had a leather1acket that
away you go. As you make each
got ruin~d in th~ rain. Now wh:
passage from youth to adulthood
does m01st_ure rum leather? A~en ;
to maturity, sometimes you put
cows ~u.ts1d~
~
lot of the time. _ your arms up and scream,
When 1t s rammg, do c?ws go to
sometimes you just hang on to that
the farmhouse, 'Let us ml We're
bar in front of you. But the ride is
all ';earin.g leather_! Open the door!
the thirig. I think the most you can
We re gomg to rum the whole out-
hope for at the end of life is that
fit here!':
.
.
.
your hair's messed, you're out of
One might even classify Semfeld
breath and you didn't throw up."
as a written "Far Side." He's got
'
the cows, the characters, and
On the other hand, you may
senseless-humor.
want to save that one for some
"I've always wanted to invite a
other time.
woman up to my apartment for a
nightcap then just give her one of
those little hats that flops over on
the side.'That's all. I just wanted
Matt Martin is The Circle's
feature editor. His book review will
appear periodically.
5
Restaurant
·Review
'Tfils headline has no relation to this column
N:ew Yorkers no longer have a
monopoly on deranged activity.
Amy Fisher and
,
Joey· Buttafucco
made a good· case· for continued
dominance in the event, however,
the Bobbitts proved to be to great
a force to overcome.·
John Wayne and his wife Lorena
proved that the rest of the world
can be just as ridiculous, as well as
' ;-;,raising1°the·1 stockHofrthe•,word
! ,_;
'"penist-';to:an1all4ime,,high;,:•;
1
i
·'i: "
1
Evliiyc1af; iho'iisaiids
'of
people
· pick 'up their . favorite tabloid
· newspapers with headlines that
literally scream DAN QUAYLE'S
ALIEN LOVE CHILD (Exclusive
photos inside) while they wait in
line at the supermarket. -This in
their never ceasing. quest for
''new.s.~';
, /
u '·,
. . '
- :<froth Lis, jhat there
·
are even
. more bizarre events happening just
down the street in every town from
Boston to Hicksville, and just
as
entertaining.
Hell, we live in Poughkeepsie
after all.
THE WORLD OUT THERE is
a weekly sampling of these lesser
publicized events.
Driver
of
the week On October
1,
Mike Sproul, age
3,
made na-
tional news when he com-
mandeered the family car, which
had one flat tire, and cruised down
U.S; 41 near Tampa,.Fla., hitting
two parked cars and narrowly miss-
ed '.several moving ones. Mikey's
assessment:_ "I go zoom." On Nov.
11;using a cigarette lighter, Mikey
burned down his family's house,
sending his father to the hospital
with second and third degree burns.
Mikey's comment: "Now I have no
more house."
tied over his head, arid a small,
empty paint bucket attached to his
penis.
A Commencement suggestion In
October in Bogota, Columbia,
rowdy students jeered the president
of Columbia's prestigious National
Uniyersity, Antanas Mokus, as he
was· delivering a speech. After
withstanding several shouts,
Mokus stepped to center stage,
turned around, lowered his trousers
and underwear and bent over. He
subsequently apologized and · of-
fered, to resign.
Worth its weight in bacon
'
Emergency dispatchers in Weld
County heard only heavy breathing
when they answered a
911
call.
Convinced the caller was a
"woman in distress," they dispat-
_ched a rescue squad to a house in
Nun. Paramedics arrived to find a
puzzled woman watching TV. Her
vietnamese pot-bellied pig, Gallate,
had pushed the receiver off the
hook and pushed an automatic dial
button for 911 with her snout.
How many housewives does it
take to change a light bulb? A
Cherry Hills Village woman called
police when she discovered that a
light she had turned on in her house
The World.: Out There -by Matt Mai;tin
Pardon me, but do
you have any Grey Poupon?
· In Augusta, Ga., in September,
Dr. Keith Dale Rose, 31, resigned
from the hospital staff and left
town after pleading guilty to public
indecency. The events: Two female
neighbors sighted the good doctor
emerging from his apartment nude
with his mouth gagged, his hands
Her name
was
Tonya A Denver
man and his twelv_e-year-old
daughter went from classroom to
classroom -at Martin Luther King
Jr. Middle school looking for a•girl
the daughter had had a fight with
a few days earlier. The father
allegedly instructed his offspring to
"go get that girl and kick her ass,"
and held back teachers who tried
to break up the ensuing fight.
was no longer on. Officers
responded and informed the
woman that the light had burned ·
out.
The jury used the insanity
defense as well In Bay Minette,
Ala., Raymond Giadrosich, 39, on
trial in September for killing his
wife and mother-in-law near the
end of a stormy divorce pro-
ceeding, was convicted on one
.
.
. .
.
count. Although Giadrosich shot
his wife, and then,
IO
seconds later,
·
Thejury found him not
guilty by reason of insanitv for the
first killing but sane and gmlty for
the second.
STATS
*Chances that
a
pedestrian
-
kill-
ed by an automopj},e_ip._tll.~ lJn_ited
States last ye~fr was di-u'tik:: 1 iii 3.
*Amount the U.S. Department
of Transportation
will
spend next
year on a study of drunk walking:
$370,000.
Pages of forms an applicant
must fill out to be considered for
the position of elf at Macy's: 10.
Price of an authentic coroner's
toe-tag key chain from the Los
Angeles Coroner's Office gift shop:
$5.
Ratio of incidence of intentional
head-banging among infant boys
to
the incidence among infant girls:
3
to
I.
*Average number of infants
abandoned in U.S. hospitals each
month last year: 1,000.
Matt Martin is The Circle's
Feature editor and compiles these
events from regional newspapers
across the country. Sources can be
obtained by contacting the author
through The Circle.
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THE CIRCLE·
-_ MARISf. COLLEGE, PQUGHKEEPSIE, NY 12601
-THE ·.STODENT
:NEW$PfiPEI _
Julie
Martin,senior editor:
S.J. Richard,
editor
Ted Holmlund,
sports editor
Cari Oleskewicz,managing
editor
Matt Martln,feature editor -
Kristina Wells,
associate editor
Justin Seremet,
assistant editor
· Andrew Holmlund,
associate editor
Dana Buonlconti,
col~ editor .
Meredith Kennedy,
associate editor .
K.lreII A~ L~khman,
assistant editor_.
.
Jennifer Ponzinl,
advertising manager
Teri L. Stewart, editorial page editor
James ~~king,
(!istrib~tion ~nager·
·. Dennis
Glldea,facully adviser
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
.
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Ro
_
· eking T.he_ B_ .oa.
t
:
.
He's
-
bothered, she'S·VQt,ing.
Let me first say thatlreally enjoy going
. First and foremostitwowe~ks agoTllla'de
Only three people in this entire school want to b.e.studen~ body presiden(next
to Marist. .··
·
. . • · •. · ·. · ·.
'
·a
whopping mistake. Much to. my surprise;
· There is no other school or university that . · .. seniors_ are permitted to• vote in th,e· upc_o,ril~ · ,
year.
·. :J would want to go'to; • · ·. ·
·
-·
'ing elections. I hope aHmy:~l~slll~tes'wUI
Not too surprising, consider;ng what it takes to get most people fired up about
I am very anxious t<>. write this column due. make the effortfo g<>:out aµ_cl
1
y_t>t~:
,(Try
t9 __
anything on this campu~-
-
, • ·
.
'.·
·
·
.
·,, .. ·.
.
. .
--.. ·, ,, : ">to:~he·nature of its C0f!!en~;, , '.-:•: :;: \
'tw.11.~,!?f
it_,'.~.I,~~~ihg ~o-~'etNis-:.B.O:siti~~;,:
The' m:ajoriifot: the ~Iebtions taking place next week'are uncohtested.':S.ome: ... '.' .·
>
10
s~ver~ of ~he past issues ?f1J~ 9~rc~~'-'
J?i;Wr~_,,;-
not, ?_S l,2~~p-~s~~e.!}t£~rfot~!i1i; .
• · , ; ··, .,. ·- .. , • ·,,. ·, _..,, ... ,..
·,, · •
.
,;· • .-, · -,:,. ,-, . .,.,,:,· . •; -
,
,.
,
_, ,. -·,.
·
,·" people.have wnuen to.the editor commen• Manststudents.)
positions do not eyen have anyone runmll:g.for them ancl
Vv'IH
have to be ap-
-ting
oh
the good as well as the bad things .
Second, I had a few problerp.s last. we~k,
pointed at a later date.
_
.
.
_ .
. ... ·· .
. .
, h_ere at Marist._ . . . . _ . . , .
; .
with Scott's colu.n:m aJ:i<>.}1l.~Pli!ical co.i:~~c~~
This type of apathy has been a problem at Marist. For some reason people
. ' I have ·remamed qmet all·through .these ness. Anyone who knows anything about me
have no desire to
·
n for offic
·
.
'
issues however,
L
was_ very ~sturbed this kno.ws-politi~al correctnes.s is soxnetQi.l}&J,;l
.
. .
.
. .
ru ·.
e.
. . . .
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week and I thought it was. unportant. to take-very senousiyand hammer ~way at. ·
Most students here do not even have the m1t1attve to vote for their SGA
· discuss some of things that have hothered
. What! found th¢ most offe~sive abcitit. '.
representatives.
.
.
.
.
. .
..
me.
. .
. •.
Scott's column was the, term. "sexually
And why should they, if there are so few candidates who want to serve them
This week as lwas sitting inthe cafeteria; challenged" ·instead of homosexual. What•·.
and want to work°'for
~
;tud~nt voice at Marist? .
·.
:
.
·
several students were mocking .arid down ''.se~ually.challenged''.indicates, at leastto
·
·
·-
·
right ridiculing one of the employees. •.. . nie, is that the individual is trying to over~
Studentsat Marist are
sb
satisfied with the statuS"quo thatthey have no desire
The employees'. name \Vill' remain come some sort of problem: _ . .. . .
to serve in the Student G.overnment Association.
,arioymous but I_ think we all know who.we .. Homosexualitydoesiiotin~icatethatthere
That is prettyimpiessive, considering there is'
·
always someo1u~ complaining.
are talking.abcmt.
.
.
..
. is a problem beyo11d the c~ntrolof the
in<
about something~ parking, security, the library, registration;iheadminisfration.
To those.fifteen or so people who were dividualthat maYneed correcting; (I'll have ·
The problem is, welike.to whine andwe·donorliket:o
ad: ...... .
·. ' There are some notable exceptions, Sometimes, sfodents~ ·as wen aftaculty
_-
·-. ~-•--,.,:-.~•_: •:-. .•. ;;;_.\ : ....
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decide to do somethmg; Grq1:1ps on campus sqch
a5
Students Eilcou.ragmg G!obal .. ·
•
· .
. Awareness, Campus
Mi11iitry,
Black·
Student· Union,
ind
·:maiif
oiher~:,··c{iten> :: '.·~-: '
. put their words info actions. .
.
.
What about the others?. . . . ·. .·· . ·.·.
. ..
·
•·..
.
: •
. . '..
,
· . ·.
.: ' .
. . This apathy is distressing because there if so. little. on this campus. that we, · ·
the. students, the sources
of
tuition, ;actually have control over; . .. ·.
. . . • .
====::=::::::::.-'-_-__ -..... -..... :... ..... ""' ~--..,. ---_:.....,.. -.... ---..., ..,.. __ --...,.. --._;;._.;.;..,... ... .:.:.:.:.::::-__
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We often have our chances, yet. they pass by· because we}1ad other;.th_ings; ,:', tJ:i,e~.e;th,ai afte~
... ·• ~on;~ancl to:.uI of.you who>.···• mor. e.
·
... ·
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.. i
.
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to do, or we were afraid.
. ·
·
.
.
·
.
• do 1t ev_eryday,cloes 1t.m~Jse_yo_yf'"el I?etter-
.
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to cut ons.onie.o. ne'?.·.>:,· ....
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es_.
~y
e are
o .
mgsan we are given . mgs.
n
we accep
i:
n
many_case.s
Welcome
io
college and grow up! .· .
.
·
... mght; .ther~ was -a .h".e debat~ amo_ng Jhe
we. atcept thatthe school would rath~r treat us as children_
and
·rtiake
oµi
d~~i:C ..
J'vloving on~:, ••
-
..
'.
>.-
:
"
<
· . . . :
< . .
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thre~ cand1da~~.s- ru_nnn~g, for. St?den~ 1)9d¥,
·sions for ·us.· .
.
.
.
. ..
. . ·.·
·
·• •·. . . .... ·.. . . ·
·
• ·.
1·find it very hard ,to
,
understand '.why president. (Don t worry ifyo~ !91Ssed it,
!C?!-1, -
It ·
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·
t· d t.
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·
···
· · · ·
·k ·
d. . · .h
. can catch it again on MCTV at
3:30
p.m. for ·
w1
eep . appenmg
~
ose m con ro w1 .a ways av,e
t
~~
1 . es_~ e~ s
.
_
_st~ e9-ts cannot go on~ w~e. en _wit out : he remainiri :da
i;
untirthe election~)
':,8.•_,;
empower themselves and demand that we make the key dec1s1onsthat shape
dnnkmg.
. ··
·
--
;-.
t
g
Y
.
. . ·
_
..
,.;v.
!.c•-J
our collegiate lives.
·
.
.
_
. W~_ap-kno_w that.1,t snov.;~ last ~nday and
As pn€: of the paqelists, _I thi~k the debaJ;e
. . . •·
.
.
.
- . .
.
that stud~nts .w,~re . stuck m their rooms.
went" well: .It was, lackmg m one area-:,
_ These dec1S10~~ c~m~d mea~ anythmg_ fro!ll 'Yha!c~.I~sse~
~~e
reqm:ed ~o
W~fi!. - . .
That ~as ok "?th _the stud~nts because they · tnough ... actual debate. _-::: \-:~- ·. ,. -~- _ :;.:
.
::dJ
·courses are off~red to.who the graduation speaker-will-be to what proJect
our:
,
:- ...
mov~d-the_p¥fies mto their rooms.
-~•,·::•<,:' . ,-, ....
_
._;,,._,_
;._..-,,,-,.,,,i ,·.
·-·.+:-H
·
tuition dollars will pay for next. ·
· •
-
-
- _.... " -·. __ - ·
~·~
-
·
···
> "
·
Why?- Because that is what you are;,"sup:.:> .. :-~TJi~; con~e_~s';!s· }';!:11;
00
¥~!g~
.-~a~?-~1:!t~L:-.:.
. .
. .. . . .
.
_
. posed to do at college?"
.... · . . .· ·.:.,
:
. · ,,N1~k .<;apuano!· MaJ,t Q1ll!~-'- ~n-~-~1,1t~9nr,
1::
We have-~ nghtt~ give .s1gI11f1~antmput; ().n
!~fSf
r11a~te,;s:
·
.
:
.
. .
·_:
:
, · ::-qi_y~h
'inf
Saturday or Sunday morning Mignone~ shoulg_ notJJ.t,:_, ~1.1
-
m~w~~qn fA3:t•'
. The Board of Trustees makes ~ost of the dec1s1onsthat affect 11s, Who are
·>.down in the'cafeteria,youcarihearxnen and cth~re'a~e no·prob!~ms l)~r,e at MansF
.
•••
«: .,
ihese people? And how could they possibly know whatis bes(Jc;ifus? · ·
women talking about
thefr
1
'hook~ups. ;, .. Puring·
the. dt:bate~
:Antlloriy Mignone·
Run for office. Hold
a
raliy. Join a club; Start a new club; Write letters.
Sometimes·! won,der if anyone knows what said; "We all get alo.ng her!! pretty weU
011_
.
·
· · · ·
·. · ·
h.
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k ··
···
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1
h.·
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the word inonogomous mea,ns., :
. . .
camp11s," I think Jllany stud~nts,wouldbeg
Prmta newsletter,_do
W
atever 1snecessaryto ma e peop ~·· 1~t~n.
n
Y
t en
How can I forget all of you who "r ,, to differ.
· ·· · · ·
shcmld complaining.bejustified; when something is being ~one to ~lleviate the
on security? ·
.··. .
.
· .·
·.·•
ag .
ff~e all get along so wen; why did alfthe
problems and
to
reform whatever is wrong.
Why ri.ot?
.
.
.
.
·· I find tha{most of.yo_u
\vl).o
talk down candidates
·
.
, stress •the·
need '. for
Is
it a f car of rocking the boat?
·
abo~t securitr are the people who are beirig communication?
If
h
. ·
~
· ·
·ri
d b.
· -
k"
h ·b
•
.
•
h
.
· pu_t m the ambulance on your way to .St.
· •··· . . .
. ..
.
.
.
. .·. . ..
. .
· • . ~o, t 1s 1ear
ISJUStl
1e , ecause roe mg t e oat 1s not an action t at many
Francis to ''dry-out."·_
.
, .. · . ..
_ ... !fall three candidates really believe this·
peopl~;take ki~dl)'. to·around here;
·
.
·.·.
.
· ·...
· >There"area~fewofyou whoprobabiydid toJ:ie true, it would only'seem logical that··
·
tii''fuci~Jhis_
'is
probably the first time you have ever heard it encouraged.
not like that last statem.ent but it's probably the.qi:de n~~~i:_llave its fuqds frozen again'.
'iiow~ver
this is an encouragement.
because you were ~ot put
}n
the .ambulance .. IC'we all get aiong here pretty well;" was- .
· ·
' . · ·
• .
.
.
but got ''buste<i" either wi~h alcohol, drugs_ the rape on campus last temester an isolate~_
~
Do somethmg that will give you a v01ce.
or jtist a violation you did not agree with. incident?, AreHhere no· other, iustanc~ of
t
Do something that
,viii
make a difference.
Now for those of you who still have a pro-
violence on campus? '' ..., ..., ...
..,-.;
0
- ! ' ...
Most of the students at Marist are at a stage in their lives where it is now
blem with_secru!~•_why.don't you_voiceY.our
When deciding where· to attend collegek
or never. Still yoimg still not faced with all of the extra responsibilities that
concemsm a CI~zed manner and
0
?t m a (aimost four years ago now) one reas'on
r
.
.
.
,
. .
. .
.
·
.
cartoon; a "bashing-letter''· to the editor or
·
b
·
·
1
k d
will take over once graduation day comes and goes. .
"bitching" at them when you. have been picked Manst was . ecause; !O me, it oo e ..
There are problems at Marist. Everyone has their own priorities as· far as what
caught.
, .
.
·
. ·
· uke the. typical college. '·
·
· .
. ·, · _
is wrong, and what needs to be addressed.
.
_The list could go ori ·bui
r~
'
afraid I
~t ~ad some ol~ bu~l~ngs and some new
Addr · th
bl
might offend someone.·
t\_
community; is budd1_ngs~ It.had trad1t1on,a~d perhaps th:
,
. ess
e pr_o ems.
. ma:de up of the people ,m it. Not the __ proro.1s~.<?f a future._
: ·'"
·...
·
Address them m whatever way you feel best. .
_ .
,
buildin~, the'roads or the landscape, but the
Tod~y,
1
see ·a ~~h-o~(th~t
·
0
J~ci;\~l~k
Do not be told that there are others who willworry'abotit these things. Do
people. · . ·.
.
.
. .
to the future again. .
not be told that you really have no option in cert~in matters. You always have
T~e a look~ at your ~mmunity fyfa~st .
• · ,.
options
and 1f I have said something you agr~ with,
rm notgoirig to·tell you who to vote for.'.
·
.
. .
.
.
then change
it.
If
you do not agree with what
·
.
·
·
Ask to be a part of solvmg the proble~s, of making thi~gs b~tter .,
1
have said, you must. think that Marist is
~ Rea<! the article about the gebate. 'Yatch_
And
if
asking does not get you anywhere, it is okay to demand.
perfect and there is no reason to change.
the debate on MCTV. Call the cand1dates
Do not be af. raid to demand the attention of the administration the faculty
If you ch?se the last answer, you have pro-
and talk to them.
· ·
'
'
ved my pomt
Do whatever you have to do. Just vote. ·
government officials, anyone who is supposed to be working for you.
· Scott Sull~ns is one of The Circle's
Caroline Jonah is one of the Circle's
Occassionally they ha".e to be reminded of this - they are wor~ing for us.
political c
_
o!umnists.
political columnists
\)
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NRA
edilPrthl
·
1'rl.isses
·
·
targ¢t
..
•
·
·
.·•.
·
Don't
yoi{be
my
Valentine!
.
.
•
..
•
.
.
•·
~dlt~r
_
:
,
_
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;i~lit~
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to 9
_
\\in guri~.
_;,<
.
.
.
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'
.· . .
J\~other'ei~ment
'.:
tii~
'·
editJriJ( '
.
·
... ·
In
,
.
re~porise
.
_to
·
1ast
>:.
week's
.
_
.
,
;M<?repver, tlje o~ga:n~iationJn- failed to offeris thafthe NRA
·
i's
ed
_
iforfal
·
entit
_
led
;
"Up in
'
Ar!lls,"
vests
,
hundreds
·
of- thousands
.
of macle
_
up
of
primarily licensed
.
·
·.
tw
·
ould like
to correct some
of
the
.
--
dollars
--
each
.
yea
r
to prcimote gun hunters, competitive shooters
_
·
and
•
miscon
·
ceptfons a~d
:
·
ractless opi-
safety;
:
·
·
.·
-·· ·
:
.
. .
·.
--
·
.
·
.
-
·.
marksmen and women.
·
.
,
.
riions
·
raised.
:
·
·
,
·.
. .
·
.
·
Since g~tting ~id ~f ai(6(
'
the
·
F
·
urt
.
herm
-
ore,
-
th~
.
NRAh~s
\:
_
on-
Your
-
.
editorial
,
stated the Na
~
·
guns in the world is
·:
an impossibili-
.
_
tiq~al
-
Rifle Association
.
is
:
_
'.
'an ty,
·
the NRA singlehandedly takes sisteritly been pro-environment and
.
·
organization which believes that
-
we on
,
the charge of teaching law-
•
supported countless pro
~
land bills
have the constitutional right to pur-
.
·
abiding
citizens
safe
gun and even offered many state and
chase;
·
own,
-
and use cop-killer
ownership.
.
. .
.
natio
1
nal
foreS t
regulatory
bulletsi
1'
..
_
.
.
••
··
,
.
.
..
·
•
•
Iri
fact,
the
-
Institute
•
.
for legis ation.
.
.
.
.If
the
.
editorial staff had taken
Legislative Action, the
·
NRA's
Finally, asa co-fourider of the
the time to
..
res
'
earchany
•
legislation !egislative liaison, has introduced
.
Marist College National Rifle
the NR:A
:
supports
as
f.~gar~
S:
the countlessbills and proposals which Association, I encourage anyone
so-called
,
cop-kiUer
'.
bull
_
ets
,
'
they
.
·
would make it impossible for
COD·
interested in the passion-heated
would
·
have
·
realized
:
the
•·
NRA.
.
victed felons to purchase a firearm. issues
.
0
f
gun control and the Se-
helped write legislation iha
(
lecf to
.
.
·
·
~oritrary to popular opinion, the cond Amendment to consider join-
the
,
general prohibition
;
ofthis
.
~RA
~oes support instant ing our club.
•.
specialized teflon-coated armor-
·
background
·
.
checks which would
As budding scholars in a college
.
piercing bullet.
embrace
.
law-abiding hunters,
·d
The
-
ediforial
•
also daiin
s
the
.
marksmen and handgunners and
.
setting, we muS
t
not let
·
act
.
NRA
.
is
.
''an organization
•
that deter
··
violent and predatory
·
~~~~~;~~:~~~~~i!~e~i~'~!!g:;d
·
would prefer to arni everyone;''
criminals.
.
,
.
a chance to meet.
.
Again
)_
the author of the editorial
.•
Orie
,
other allega0on proposed
.
.
.
made the comnion and understan~
·
that the NRA-"feeds the American
To this
·.
end
I
challenge the
dable mistake of trusting the
.
liberal public with.fear/'
.
•
.
. .
.
editorial .staff of The Circle-or
mainstream niedia and politicians
.
01
would argue that it has been the any other individual or party-to
who have
_
magically become gun inedia
_
which have for years
.
ex- debate the issues surrounding gun
experts
}
·
.
_;
,
.. -
_
.\_. ·
.
.
_
:
,.
:
:
.:
: ,
ploited :the fears of the
·
American
.
ownership gun control and violent
•
i
~'!t~ any
j
riiµirb~ ~iggi~g. prie
.
s~d~ti,
>
,._:_
,,
,,
,
,
_
.
·
.
-,.
•
·
!>
·
-;
:
.
crime in the United States
.
-
·
~4.
•;
-
Well Monday
'
wasValentfo~'s
Day,
··
the stupidest ho
_
liday
known to mari.
·
·
.
,
Did
.
anyone ever
,
n9tice that
-~
the initials for Valentines Day
'
·
are
.
VJ).?
·
'
Wow, that puts
.
me in a
romantic mood .
.
What do you get the girl? -
flowers, candy and the number
of a really good gynecologist?
And the whole flower thing is
really dumb.
.
.
.
You give someone flowers to
show your love
_
for them and
what do they have to do to
them'?
:
throw water at them
every
few
days arid
'
then they
shrivel up and DIE!
There's a symbol for a long-
lasting relationship.
·
Then there's
·
candy
.
I've never known a girl to
'openly', key word here, pig out
on junkfood, yet on this day
you
~
re expected to get a
WHOLE BOX
.
OF CANDY!
If
you don't get it they're
mad and can say "What'?! Am
I
fat or something'?"
.
·
would
.
disfover
,
ijjatthe NRA
'
fights
:·
.
The
.
NRA
informs the
.
P-Ubhc
.
,
: :
>
,
,
.
·
Daryl Ortiz, senior
.
ea:cl).'
\'
c1a:y.
~
r
fo
f )
'he
'
:
ia
~:
abjfiing
'.
.
tqr,q°µgh
..
d
_
ocumc;nte
'
q
\
r
edeial
:;:
'u
.
' .
·. •:
. The
Marist College .
'
.
citize~s
'
,
aiicl
"
iti'eir
,
··
coiistitutiorial
'
..
statisiii;s aila
,
studies
'
;
.:
,:r .
< :·
,
,
. '
~
·
,.
-;
National-Rifle As
s
ociation
Then if you do get it, wait a
few days until they tell you
they've fini~IJ,ed
it
:
.
.
.
.
Of course they probably
finished it that day, but girls
never want to seem like they eat
a lot.
.
' ·
l
•
.
,
;
l
.
·
•
,;
•
,
.·
.
,
•
1 :. •
•
:
·
·.!.
4 •
· , :
. , .
, •
:
, ,
.
"
. ,
.
-
,..
{ _
•
•
•
•
•
-
•
•
1
,
.
Y9t~
'.,:
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~3ifh~~x
~:
;.
~·:
_
__
:,=:,
>
:: ·)
'.
,
,
.
Mi~si~g
,
point
well
taken
.
'
·
Edit~i
(
1
'.·
•
'·
?'
·
:.c:,
,,
·'
·
:
.-
Editor:
·
·
loss along time ago.
WJ~i
{
'
SGA''
electi'oris
·
·
.'
ap
~
·
' '
This letter is m
'
respons~ to Dan
,
If
I
was in fact a sore loser, do
proaching,
'
it is my hope
_
thanhe
.
Veltri's "Sour Grapes/'
.
you think I would have taken the
·
student
·
body
'
will be informed
·
Mr. Veltri, I believe you missed position
.
of Vice President for
about.all the candidates
.
they have
·
_
the point of iµy lette
r
, whi_ch was Clubs'?
.
to
'
ctioose froni
:
.
.
.
_
·
.
to merely hum
.
o!~usly p~mt out
A sore loser would have said
To assist in this,
I
have decided
·
some ofth~realities thateXISt ~hen
·
"later'; and walked away, Mr.~
to
:
writethislettertotalk about one
·
.
one
-
chooses to _undertake
.
the Veltri.
·
ofthe
·
candidate for stu
'
deritbody
.
challenge ,of running for student
I
did not
-
just settle
for
my cur-
president
.
·
.
.
..
0
.
-
.
body prestden!. .
, ·
··
.
.
.
··•
rent position, but rather look for-
-
Anth<>nY Mignone
.
has been
•
ac-
J
was not ~npmg ~bout my loss ward -to working
·
under Mr.
.
tively involved in the Commuter
_
·
and neyer did
I
,
comment on Mr. Rinehart's administration and en-
Union, helping feUoe commuters ~nehart's perforII_lance
:
,
)__,_
-
.
suring that his year as president
get involved with campus life
·
~~
fi_;:·
A5/ar
.
as:the iriiJ?'i~
_
tiQ
f
.that
I
.
runs smoothly
in
respect
.
to clubs.
.
·•
•
":
.
~~~l~
i
~berbtt1tbsula
~tlf1!
i~
~~~Jt?t~~c
~
~~gJt~
?
\.!e!
m:::rs
:;.~n;::t:~:~~f~t~~u!~
·_
:
·
.
'
Council;
.
'.
Anthony
:_
conce
r
n
e
d
-
'
'.
mad~anyailegatioru ifnothing had that it shows
a
lot of character to
.
himself with inany aspects
.
of stu
>
.
occurred.
,-
.
. :
:
· . -
..
ha:vestayed 'involved with the Stu-
dentJife.
,,
·
"
,
_·
.
.
.
..
..
--
.
-
·
Maybeyoushouldhavetakenon dentGovernment Association.
-
·
While
,
temporarily. serving
--
as
.
the challenge of rwuiing in
an
elec-
I hope this clarifies my initial let
-
chief financial
-
officer
:
of Student
:
·.
tion to see what
itis
really about
;
ter to the editor for you.
.
Government
,'
he
·
:
w:is'iii charge
.
of
· ·
•
Perhaps yoti have sonie growing
,
Let's
·
notiiisulf the English pro-
all
club finances arid transactions
.-
up todo with
·
respectsofnotjudg-
fessors
>
by
-:
miss1ng
t
he author's
It's like the first date where
they hardly eat and say: "Oh,
I'm not really hungry." and
.
then in a few dates they're
,
raiding YOUR
_
plate
as
if she's
eating for two people .
Which of course could entail
a whole new problem a guy
doesn't want to think about.
But when she does finish the
~dies you WILL be plagued
with the: "Am
I
getting fat?"
routine.
This is a given
.
·
u
,
.
-
And
,
ydtl
L
women you do~'t
have too rriariy sure things, but
·
this one you can bank on, trust
Irie.
Then there's the whole gift
giving process on Valentine's
Day, which really depends on
the
,
stage of your relationship.
..
This is wh~re guys must
.
evaluate it and become scared
.
because they don't want to give
the impression of a commitment
if there isn't
·
one already .
.
·
Why ask for trouble?
We find enough on our own.
The word 'commitment'
wields so much power.
No one word should have this
much power
.
To guys this is really a four-
letter word.
Of course one we choose not
to say too much.
When a guy hears this word
it's over.
He prepares constantly for
this situation but when it comes
-
.
up, everything goes out the win-
~ow
.
and all
·
emergency routes
·
are closed.
It's alot like the deer caught
in the headlights of an oncom
-
ing car,
He
.
has plenty of time to go
left or go right, but instead what
does he do?
He
heads right for it - head
first.
This of course being much
like a guy's resppnse.
_
.
:
He could've said this or he
could've saici'ihat, but instead
he goes head first'
'
for
'
the
commitment.
And as we all know - the deer
usually
.
winds up dead.
And in the interest of Valen-
tine's Day, I think they should
bring back the game show -
The
Newlywed
-
Game - and use
media personalities.
You could have Harding and
Gillooly, the Bobbits, and the
Buttafucos_
And it would be a little like
Monopoly
~
the Grand Prize
would be a 'Get Out of
Jail
Free' card.
_
So m
_
any people are worried
. .
.
,
·
thatth_t;
_
divorce rate is.so
_
high.
. .
.
·
_
N~t
rrie
'.
..
.
.
.
.
With tht:'se dysfunctional
couples
,
some literallY., (sorry
John Bobbitt),
I'm
starting to
worry about th
_
e marriage rate
.
That's what's too high!
Frank La Perch is The Cir-
cle's
humor columnist.
.
_
:
Currently~ Anthony
.
holds
;
the
.
ing people without kriowllig what
·
.·
point.
position
•·
of
.
student body
'.
,
vice
<·
it is like to be in their position.
.
pr~id!i~~
-
·
\
. ·
~
,
. • ·_
.,
..
•
·._
.
.
:
_
: ,
.
,
:
.
'
·
.
.
·
.
.
I
_
have
.
obviously ac~epted my
.·_
Nella
Licari
VP
for
'
Clubs
The Circle's Production Schedule:
.
)n
._
t
_
his
:
po.s1tio!},Je 1s m
.
~~arge
,
._
.
:
,
•
•·
.
·
_
.
.
·.
,__ _____________ ..;... _ _ _
....
·
·
~-~:i
-
~~~
0
~t4~~
:
~~;~(J;~
_:
,
:
Sorf.i,
Ro~eahrie
·-·
·
-
How;-to reach us:
-
?
~rr:tres!d~n!,
:
:
ktho
~
y
i
~i
_
t
_
s
··.
fAit~~;
-
-
•
. ..
.
,,_:
~
,-
.
.
.
-
_
·
.·
•
M~ndays:
.
11a.m.
to
·
s
p.m.
·
·
~i~~~~!!rf:JJ~~iv~
:
.
~~
f;
~
1
~
J
-;:·.-,
_
:
J
{
iii~{
::,
·
~o
rii
e
;,'
:t
hings
\-~
n
;
ve
(
•
E-~aU
_
:
LT 211, H~L
·
•·
. ;
Beirig
:
so involved With siiiileiit chani~-
'
- ::
.
.
··
}':,c;:.
'
:
::,
i, •::,
•
'
PhonefMail· X2429
.
.
'
o
'.
ve~~nt
t
Alltiioh:>1
:
iai'ow
s'
(
ii:i
t t
?',
W~
1
!l<?SeaJ!ne ~a.ra~no.
•
"!':';:,'
.
'.
,
,
·
:
.
'
·
' . :
'
•
.
fn"s-
'
:ffi,fouts'~fOttl~
'
or
·
anizatfon:
-
····
:
N~
!
-
~_oman~
~
rs .
..
_
>
,
.
..
..
-
·- .
NO LETTERS AFTER
°'.
::
Thls
;
'
2ombin~\vith
~\vorking
,
.
'
i~;~~ne
Sanice
_
no;
.sop
,
~omort:
-
,
,5PM ON FRIDAYS
'
relationship
'_
with the college
_
ad-
.
.
.
ministration, allows :Anthony to get
things done.
.
·
.
·
.
.
Aritho
·
ny has_'inariy' ideas to
-
help
student
,
government
·
run more
·
'smoothly
and
efficiently
.
·
·
·.
Editor:
·
.
.
·
fensive players
'
to "pick
'
up the·
·
:
·
.'
Finally,Anthonyhas expressed
·
-
.
As
a
-
~emb~r of th
.
e hockey
slack for a spotty defense."
a desir:efor improved communica- team,
I
wnte tbis
.
lett~r to clear up
The writer d~es not realize that
.
·
tion
·
a11d bringing student govern-
-
a f~w misc~mcepttons
~
last week's
all
_
players
_.
(both forwards and
-
ment
.
back to the students.
:
.
article which was wntten by Ted
:
defense) aie responsible for an ef-
.
--
·
·
·
.
·.
.
\;_';
·
Holnilurid in his "Talkiri
•
It"
f~tiv_· e teaJ!l defense .
.
-·
Tony Bayer,
J·unfo~
:
coiumn
:
_
.
.
.
··
.
,
.
·
·
.
This
.
year
-
'.s
_team
,
has the least
, .
.
,
.
.
·.
,
·
.
. •
-
-
.
.
.
-
Th~ first nuscpnception is that_ goals scored against
.
it in the entire
.
,,,
_:,,
:
~,,"
,
,..
,
._ ,
,,
:,
:
,,
,.
•
.
;
,
_,
,,,
•
'
i;
_
.1-.:-;
-
,
.-
this year's team is not as good due
Metropolitan Collemate Hockey
The
)i
secret,'s
·
·
out-
::
to
'
'
ad0-8-1 record
.
compared to
Conference.
b-"
_
·
'.',;,;.,::
:
·
·,.
·
team'ii'inthepast.
FAltor:
.
.
.
•
·
_
,
_
-::
.
.
This year's team could be 16-2-1
The
_
best kept
.
secret this past if we had the schedule that we had
wee,C
.was
the MCCT A production
in
the past, however; Head Coach
of "Lend Me A Tenor" by Ken Kevin
-
Walsh has made the non-
Lud~g.
.
league
,
schedule more competitive
·
It
.
was a quality
.,
produc:tion by to help prepare for the league
Marist students and alumni offer-
playoff~ and the national
.
ing
an
evening of laugh~e
'
r
·
and tournament.·
:
' .
,
.'.
. .
·
·
__
,
.
~
-
entertainment. .
,. '
.
'
Look at our
'
scheduie.
I
was proud to
be
a
member of
You
will
find that we plat s
·
ome
.
the Marlst
Community as
I witness-
.
of the best teams in the
-
northeast. ·
ed Marlst students interpret and ex-
I assure you that
this
year's team
•
press the written word i
_
n a creative is one Qf the most disciplined and
production.
·
·
skilled teams in recent Marist
Well done, MCCTA.
Hockey history,
-
-
Chris VertuUo
•
Second, Mr. Holmlund states
CS/MAtb Division
that
.
Marist is fortunate to have of-
· Chuck Eirish, Tom Regan, Dave
Closinski, Kris Rojek, Schuyler
·
Woods, and Grayson Dewitt are
considered
·
among the premier
defensemen in the league.
·
I
w~uld like to thank all the fan~
arid ·
:
The Circle for support
throu~ho~i t~e year.
Their support continues to show
us
why they have been voted "Best
Fans in the League" year after
year.
We hope to see ~veryone
at the
-
game on Saturday, Feb. 26 versus
league
enemy
Siena
at 10
.
p.m.
in
the Civic Center.
'
Thank
you.
Thomas
C.
Fitzgerald, sophomore:
;
.
February 17
·
_
February 24
March
3
-
}Aarch
24.
April 14
April 21
_
_
April 28
_·
May
·
5
i
I
_
.
'
(
.
'
.
,
...
,'
/'
,, ,, •• ,. ;,
,•
,,
,, ,
,
,
.
,, ,
,
•
'
,
..
'
,
' .
, ' t i ' , •
f t
•' \',. ;,· •'
\,.,,,•
.
I ' "
\
\ I
• , , •
' .
• •
\ • ; , • , , , \
'>.t
I ' ,
8
THE CIRCLE, FEBRUARY 17,
1994
·
l!Qi1it1~
•-
•
Jij~f
:
99i~~e~
\
L~~li£_
)
()Ptioµ
•
arplic_;a_~i~P.
-
· ..
.
_
.
·
.
,
·
· ·
-
;
· ·
.
bec~u~f.r~Jl~
)
~roup'.s llV<:r11ge
choice
·
<>f
hou~ipg; but one
_
set of
"We'.re trying to
'
give die
.
ne"". option is Just
-
tha~; an opt10~'.
.
by
J
_
ENNlf:~~- FO,,DE
.
• ·
-
nu
_
m~er:,0J.pqo1:i~Y pe>mts
.
~as not
roommates
fa
the group does have students
as
many options
as
possi-
_
I t!rink.th.~ stu~ents "".
1
ll be ecSlatic
·
·
.
- StaffWr,1ter
)
,
.
.
-
.
e~e>ugh.,f_f>r ~hep1to
_
b~ a~tte~ to
a_higb enough
_
poJnt
,
a,verage to get ble," Rai,mo said.
_
·
·
a~?ut it,
•
·
· ~ ~
0
/
rud
: :-·
.
> _
.
:
,
•
.
1t
.
is neari11g "inir-iiine of
'
year
th~
-
~eaw~e_re they :,Vl~lle~ t~
-
~ve,
into the first cho
.
ic~.
·
. .
.
.
.
.
Skeptics
fo~y
worider how these
·
.
Sarah
_
French, -ajuilior froin
.
when the und.ergracfµates at Marist
.
.
.
....
Y.ei _m_~;
-
students
·'
complained
That pair
•
may
•
,
be abl~ to split splits
.
will work
·
.
out and if spme
_
SprJi:ig{~~Iµ,
·
.
.M~.s~.,
·
.
.
·
$aid,
'
..
•
/
'.
J
.
areissued yet anotliefc[orm to
'
fiU
.
.
that :their
'
OWn humt>er
•
:
of point~
.
from their group iri order to get in-
students may have more problems
wo~l~
:t
:
~
~~t
;
t~t~PJ.\h.}
;
-.yoWd
Ql;lt.
·
·
_
~
-
,
.
•
.
:
.-
;
~
: ,
>
,
:,
~
,
>
:
.
·
v,,~
,
higli~npugh; but \V
_
her(ayerag-,
;
to thcfhousirig they wanted.
:
·.
.
.
adjusting
-
'
'.
-
to
.
·
the
.
:
living
rhia!hkerhhv~ _'~vith~)ny_J9e~ds: I
.
do
'
.
.
.
,
.
. ,
,
.
.
'
d
'
'"th
"
lf .
.
f . d
I
. .
..
..
tt"fl
.
·
.
_
_
-
Th
.
·1
'
s
··
.
o
··'
p
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t
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0
--
·
'
·
n
'
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..
w
·
·
·
.·u
·
.-
,b
:
·
e
· .
li
•
;s
'
te
,:
d
. ·
·
-.
o
--·
n
,'
t'i:e
arrangements
;
' :
,
'
:
:
,
1~
•
.
d
-
ena·.
·
.
,
-
-
·
,
--
·
_
~Y.l!lg t
.
~
.
<>PtlO!l
_.
)~ ~
-
go9d
.
ca~~!:t:j:;:;;f~Pt~r
t
~n
:
fo
('
'
{hijroJpt;r:v~~:g: &ijtp~f
t
? . reyised application forin.
.
.
_
u
.
m
'.
:
oir
.
anne
'
.
·
di
·
~of
_-
fi
,
1
.
~c
:
udml
~
t\t
·
fso
'
·
. ·.
atdhJ~UtS
'
th,·
:
b
·
rituat
_
Y
.
-.
s
.
. aby':'es
'
·
.
Sop
..
~o~~r~
\
·
K
_
:
~~l
'
~
'.:}'
~i:;;;~
-
P
-
,
·
·
.
However; thisyear the Office
of
·,
.
'
so
working togeth~r
/
.
the
H~us-
There
will be a new category on
he believes things will work out
from Cary, N.C.; agrees, C<If.it's
Housing and Residential Life has
ing Office and Student Affairs ·the
form
labeled "split," under ·well.
·
·
an
option then I guess it's good.
added a new twist.
came up :with an option that they
•
which each set of roommates can
You might as well have it.''
·
.
·
··
·
·
·
·
·
believ
.
e
will pleas
.
e most of· the d
·
h th
·
·
t th
"The reality 1·s that grou
·
ps
·
may
·
In past years.when campus hous-
.
students at Marist.
etermi~e
w
e er or no
.
ey
·
·
·
All
opinions aside, th. e
_
Housing
irig was assigned, t.herehas alw
.
ays
wou. ld like to be separat~d fr?m
st
ill
get split up," Raimo said. "It
Office says in order to·avoidall th
.
e
·
·
U
·ct
th
I
h
·
will
th
h Id th s tuat1on
1·usi
isn't possible to always please
been many disgruntled
.
students
. n er e new Pan, ousmg
~•r. group
S OU
e l
evervone."
potential
'
problems;- involved
''
iµ
who were upset that they had not
·.
determine the average number of arise.
hou
'
sirig
/
assignment.st:stµ~en,s
received their first
·
choice of priority points for each pair of
Raimo says that the new option
Raimo said he and his housing
should caiefully'clioose·"tne' friends
housing.
_
,
•
;-
_
.
_
,
roommates in every group.
.
.
will empower the students, though
team are trying.
·
·
they want to live with
'
ana
'friake
,.
.
.. ;
·
Jim Raimo; director of housing,
.
For example, a group's average it does spell more work for the
.
"We always try
'
to keep groups
'
sure that their number
of
priority
:
·
·
,
\
said
'>
tha
E
-
this
;'
Often
:
occurred
is not enough to get into their first Housing Office
.
as close togeUier as pos~ible. This
points
·
are similar~
'.
J~<Sk
'-'
,
:F:tbSt
·
·
unkind
·
to
Marist'
s
outdoor smoking Joe Camels
usual areas. These areas are
passed onto thems
_
elves as
by
RON :J(?t:fN~ON
situated outside; near the entrances
individuals.
·
·
.
.
.
.
.
Staff
Writer
.
.
to the buildings on campu~:
.
.
.
.
.
Some smokers said they
.
,
. :
··
.
Th~
-
;-
~arttbecfb'J~d
;
i1
{
frciii't:or
;
:
,
(
:'.ff~.m.~~s
;
tra
(
~A~Y
_
.
Sludents
t~:~~~~s
:
:r::ted:_~~~:t~i~J~e
.
.
·
:
ooim~Y,
_
?t'perhiipsoffto
.'
ifi
t
sicii
f>·'
·
~~~l~PfJi61c~(l~hfuh
"
t
~i{~
b'
:
''W~'_r
e,
'.
~~lY
_
,
:·
,
~~
;
,
~
~i~
:
~•
~:
~e
;
,
,
of.
·
Dyson
(:_j
f
\
'
-
'.::C
,;.G
;
;
.:
:i,':>
•;;:•;-,
'.
::0
(
0
:
-'.~
novtavoid
-
iriclo&s,
1;
,
t;
;_-
,
,
i
~
.,
.
:
::
smell. It's tlie same stereotypes
Th:Y are frostbitten, alone; and
.
These
;
·
students
,
give
.
a
:
i
varying
·
associated ~th alcoholics
_
and
(l~g
smokmg.
_
.
.
reaction when itcomes to smoking,
dealers,'' said Murphy~
.
. .
-
Temperatures ~ave ~ropped to
ranging from
a mild
disHking
to
Some
·
smokers
.
-
also
,
see
record lo~s th1~
· ·
..
wmter, yet
outright disgust.
·
themselves being portrayed
~
rude
s!°okers will contmue to ?e out-
"I
just don't like
it.
H's
a dirty
or cailous. They are seen a~ uncar-
s1de. Sm?kers are left with few
habit,'' said Tim Sheehan, a junior
ing as to the effe~ts their srrioke
other options. . .
history major.
·
·
might have upon others.
.
. .
All of the bmldm~s up~n cam-
"I
find it repulsive. I don't li~e
Michael Fournier, a freshman
p~s ru:e smo~e-free, mclud1f!g dor-
anything about it.
-
n•s
'
detrimerital
majoring in nissian and com-
m1_tones, with the exception of
to everyone's healt~," said
-
Anne
munication arts, believes that this
private rooms.
.
Xanthis a senior social work
portrayal is just another example of
.
So, with all these _d~fficulties,
major
.
'
·
_
·
· · ·
'.
, ,
a group being judged for the ac-
why do smokers persist.
.
There are also some who believe
tions
'
of an individual.
. "It:~
·
e~joyablf and
)t's
.
my
that
'
smokers' do have rights.
-_.
''You have to 1:>e considerate,
right,
said J~~mfer. NoceUa_, a
"!think people have the rightto
-
and Ithink sometimes people just
so~!1?more ppliu~ sc1:nce ma~or.
smoke in public, as long as it's not
aren't,'' said
.
Fournier.
.
·
·
_ •·
..
.
.
.
:::
.
•'Jt
..
p
.
J~
.:.
!:
.
.
~~~~.·-f
.
.
.
:r
._
,PO
·.
lf
·
t
··
~
.
.
id
·
~
.
a
.
· .•
..
t
.
~~
.·.
:
;~
..
f
.
;;
,
__
i~~~::ngs~:;~;~
0
:C~\~~rs~~ _
p~fu~w6~~f\:afc:~;;Jm4;k~o~~
WMCR -
_
_
.
-
.
.
'
'
.
.
' :
major.
·
,
... :
'
.
' .
"
'
·;
·
·
,,
_
,
-,
.
' . .
sm<>kers
,
can
.
,
b
,
e
,
qµ1te rude to
-~·qor:it!h~ed rforn
page
3 ►
"
It
appears
certain thai
·
atleast
Many smo
_
kers riotecl
'_
thaf the
:
· smokers~
.
-
..
.
,,
.
.
-
.
"F
·
·
·
1
·
·
·
as
·
h
,
.·
b
·.
a
·
·:
c
.·
k
so•~••
carried-
·
ove"r
'
·
these
.
·
smokers will contin
'
ue to
negative connotation associated
·
- · · ·
'
·
·
· -- ·
· ·
smoke, and they will do soin their
a been e uall
...
seef
s
·
MC>KING
a
e
g►
f~~o~~:s~ri~efet}t;iha:~h Jay
D
.
R
.
1
-
v
.
.
'
.
E
-.
a very go
_
od idea, saying it would
C
_
apua110 ~ites
_
·
·
.
a
·
.
co
_
'
~Pi
,
e
_·
-
··
of
.
The
next
goal
.
for WMCR is a
·
change of location.
_ _
.
.
. .
_
.
.
.
.
. . ·.
·
.-
►
help, ''to get the future
:
generations reasons to go
_
out" again. First, he
-
· ·
·
d
.
.
·
C
·
ont•,
·
nued from page
4
·
t
·
t
·
d ·
·
1
·
·
·
d
·
"d
-
t
-
h
.
at
·
e
·
veryone 1·s
··
pat
·
r1·0
··
11·cally ·
.
--
The sta
.
.
tion is lo91t_e_ m C
_
h
_
am
.
-
·.
·
·
:!'J~st letting
·
us know
,
wo~ld
:~~:,2ng6i~~ ~
-
o~mit~~~~:d ~~ligated
to
suppe>rtthe president.
·
pagnat now becaµse it is
th
e moS
t
have
.
been
_
..
fine,'.
_
' sw
.
·d
.
Bo
.
.
u
.
ti
.
lie
.
r.
around them.''
.
·
·
. ··
.
-
·
.
·
a
:
ccessible place ayaila~le.
>
> •·
M
-
·
··
·
·
1
·
·
·d h
,
.
·
r
·
1
·
·
h
·
"There
.
'
.
s
.·· ...
alw
.
ays
.
a
>
c
.
hari
_
ce
·
I
·
1
'Iv.o
.
uld li
.
·
.
k
.
e
.--
.
-
.
to
.
g
..
o in an
.
·
d
._
.
spea
.
k
According to
a
Feb:16,
1993,
ar~
,
any
.
peop e
·
sai
t
ey et t at
··
·
.
.
-
-
·
·•
.
·
.
ticle in the Poughke
.
epsie
.
J
.
ou
..
rn
.
al,
.
Clinton, as Presidenthas only ini-
migh
.
t see hin1;''
·
said
.
Capuan
_
o.
_with I>r~si~ent
_ :
Murray
•
this
d
.
·
f
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
· ·
·
·
·
·
·
· ·
semester about 111oving the station
Marist College
was
:
a
,
potential
prove rilarginally,j
.
at all; bet-
-
·
Theeffectofanothervisitevokes
into the new Student Center. We
stopping poinHor the presidential
ween thetii:ne he drove byMarist diffe!ent r,es~~n
,
s~s,thcn,igh; ·.
-
could
.
reach
_
more
-
people that
motorcade. Except for the crowd
and this year. ''Hjllary's doing a
."ldon'tthiillcitwouldlllaketoo
way,''
Smith
-
said:
.
and
-·.
s
_
ome st
_
udent
_
s as
..
·
.
sisting
.
the
.
goo
_
d
job ninning the country,''
.
.
B
d
·
·
muc
_
h
_
__
of
_
a
difference," Custer
s m
_
·
_
d
_
.
motorcade, Manst never made the
aumgar ner said.
·
.
.
..
.
.
.
.
.
agerida.
. . .
·
.
·
.
.
..
.
.
.
Bmitilier said he would go outto
.
Batiingarclner ~aid it ~ouldo
·
Capuano said he thought a Cliri-
·
attempttQ see the pr~ident again,
·
.
I-
the President because it m
·
tonsto at Maristwould have been
·
"if
-
it wasn't so cold."
.
.
.
;
. CONVENIENTLOCA.TION
.
Huntington. Long Island campus
is easily reached by public or private
.
transportation,
.
■
DAY
.
AND EVENING CLASSES
Select either a Full-Time Day,
Part
-
Time Day. or Part-Time Evening
schedule
.
.
·
.
,
Overall,
;
Smfrli stresses how
,
mucll WMGR has impre>ved in the
pastfew
;
,
years: ,,
r_
'
.
·
.
·
•
.
/f
We'renotZIOOorWPDH,but
that doesn't matter/' she said;
'
.
'We're
-
a
·
college station, we're
supposed
.
to be different. Our
·
members have a reputation for be
~
·
ing radio
-
geeks
;
" she added .
.
•
·
Smith said the DJ's were more
prqfession,al on
-
the
ait
and had a
greater
-
sense
•
.
of teamwork than
ever before .
.
·
'~Jbey're working with the s~e
people
all
the time; so it's a lot like
a
.
tearn set up," Smith said.
.
. ,
J\ilother
·
change is tlielen,gth of
the shows.
.
_
.
·
u
you
wiih
io
recei~e' ad;;;i;siori
,
.
.
r!;ll;IE!r
i
als
and/or
arrange for
a
campus
:
v
.
IsI
.
1. you are encouraged to contact
:
Office of Admission·
Jacob D
.
Fuchsberg
Law
Center
·
300
.
Nassau Road
.
•
.
.
Hun1ing1on; NewYo~k 11743
• ACCREDITATION
The
Lavi Center is Fully
Approved
by
the American
~ar Assoc
i
at
i
on
.
.
. ·
TOURO
COLLEGE
Phone
•,.
(516) 421-2244
ext314
Now
)'OU
._
c,an have
two
of the most recognized
and
accepted credit cards In
the \\Orld-Vlsa9 and
MastcrCanf9
c~lt
cards._·1n your name: EVEN IF YOU ARE NEW IN
CREDIT
.
or
HAVE BEEN 1URNED DOWN BEFORE!
VJSA9
and MasterCarde
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you
deserve and need for_; ID-BOOK~DEPARTMENT
.
STORES-1UITION-ENTERTAINMENT-
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,
'
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-
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.
.
•
.
. _-
ll
FUCHSBERG
.
·
S,~
·
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an affiriilative
a~io~;
·
.
equal Qpp011unily inst~ution
- - -
·
- -
.
-
~
~
-
~
-
~
:
~~~
.
~
~
~
~
~
·
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EZ__;CARD, BOX
-:
1~516,
~
A.'.I.'.
J;
l(ij{1/Jf~~ ..
GA:•;~3
,
032 l
i
'llTVS'
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:"'-'_
,
,:,,.~.: _
__
.
.
. .
i
.
I ~ •-
IwantV1SA9/MASJ'ERCARoeCredtt
'
Canis.approved Immediately.
1000/o OUARANTEEDI
·
NAME
ADDRESS
CTIY
- - - - - - STATE _;___ZIP _ _ _
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roe.
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1
i:M:IM•t·\J
--~------------~-----------'-------------------------
I
(
·
~
.
.
.
.
..
.
'
.
·;
•
•
•. •
t
• ..
• •
...
.
:
_i
·---
~
'
. -
~
-
.
.
,
...
.
,
_
-
-·
--
THE
CIRCLE,
·
f;E~f:lUA,R'\' 17,
-
1994
Hiid.S:CJri
.
Valley
.
_
:
:_
-
·
!
.
'
~!~~~~•u•
'
f
-
·
_.
Pllilr>li~
>
R.era.ti.Oils
·-
·
-
~::
·
;~:"i~.~~~~·!.~~ot~~~~
·
;.;,··<'·
·
-
·
-.,,
;,,
.
:
,.-
,;
i
-~-
-
::
-
,
:
_,
__
'.
.
,
>:._
.
·
·
,_
·
-·
.,
BoardoLTrustees:
-.
·
•
·
.-
Jjj
.
COLLEEN
.
MURPHY
.'-':'-
diidiris"
:
s~r~r~~ri~
ru:1~
c.i~zeiis;
•
.·.
:
;'.
'Who kiiows
:
tiett~r
:
wha.t hap-
·
·
·
.
-
·
·
-
.-,
.
-
.
.
..
.
, . .
.
.
..
,
.
.
..
.
·>
;
Jh
.
~ Hu~on
:
,
Valley
'.,
Ftlm
,
&
penstbanthesti.idents,
'\
Qillissaid.
:
/
(
:
-
,
\
.,
:
·
t
:
$i~tt
;
~ilter,
/~
~
'.,
,_'
·
t
;;
i
/,
Vi~eo
;
Offi~e
·
has fQ':1P~
.
~~~!
-
~h~
.
"There is
.
no wayJcould.run things
'.Tlie
:
Htidson Vall~y
.
Fiini')
'
&
l~~
,
~us_in~s~
.
~d
.
go~ernment
wli:hout
'
·
'
the
<
opini~ils
·.
of the
.
.
.
are agreeable to the
filin
industry,
students."
"
·
'
·: · ..
,
.
. -
' :
·
.
Video Office,
,
Inc. has
.
been work-
'es
_
pe
__
cially b
_
e
_
cau_s
_
e
·
o_fthe
_
·
_
money
·
a
-
,
_.
Mignone
__
_
resp
·
onded
.
.
. ·
tha
.
t
·
he
·
ing to se)J
J
h,e.area
.
to
.
production
housesfor videos, movies; and TV feat
.
~r~
l::ail
brmg mto the com-
would try to increase the involve-
.
h
·
c-
·
·
·
a1
··
-
• ·
-
mumty.
,
:
.
·
·
_ _
.
·
ment of freshmen by app9inting
s ows
_
ior sever
.
years now.
-·
'fhe most recent feature to
call
more to the
-
executive board in
. .
The office, located
_
on
Garden
.
the area home is "Nobody's Fool," SGA
;
·
.
·
. Street in
.
Poughkeepsie;is
a
not-
film
·
p l N
·
··
Jor;pi;~f.i
.(
9rg~~iiori ~upporfe~
~ru~e
w!~~
1
~!ct
J~sica
t':n":i~·
"y~:~~t~~o~~!t~ldaf!f;~n~~!
:tr;i~JN
0
i:~1i~1!
,
~Jfl1
;
eW!6~
.
.
.
The
-
film
:
and video office pro-
executive board and that com-
J:>evelopmen
L
~
·
.
:
,
;;
'.
"
,:
'
'.
'.
'
:.·:
'..-.:-
·;:
Vides the location directors and
.
md
_
uniccation ~lith the Resident Stu-
·
,
·the
.-
organization
'
publicizes
'
i:iie
.
crews with everything from mobile
ent
ounc1 s was necessary for
merits of the
.
Hudson Valley
·
as
:
a
·
honiest<> coupons for restaurants
proper representation.
.
.
prime lo<:ation through letters
ancl
to
'
production equipment.
Kent Rinehart, current student
phone
calls
to music and entertain;
~•we like to provide one-stop
body president, was present in the
t · d
.
t
1
· ·
d
-
·
·
· ·
.
shopping," Meyer said,
_
"We want
studio audience and said that a live
men
.
m
us ry s u 10s
;
_
, ,
•
, .
·
'
:
'Ou.r
a,im
is to show the studios
to let the filmmakers know that if debate such as this was very
h
·
ffi ·
b
'
.
they
·
co·m
·
e
··
__
-
here, we can take care
stressful for
-
the candidates.
t at we
can
o er Just
a
outevery
setting
there
is _
except a seashore;" of them/~
.,
• 'This requires
a
lot <>f research,
Frank Meyer' acting
.
.
executive
The office uses local technicians
and clearing up what each can-
director
:
of th~ office said
.
during ~d.equipi:nenfsupplicrssothatthe
didate wants to say," Rinehart
hislecturelast week.
·
•·
·
-
•
-
th . 0 d
.
1
said. "This may only be one hour
. .
.
.
studios
can
keep
.
err
·
u gets ow.
·
on television, but it includes many
,·
The studios
can
require various,
.
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
.
sometimes o_dd,
:
set~ings and con
~
The
office
will
·
also
·
use local
hours of preparation."
I f I
I
I
I ,
I
I
I f I
,
• I
'
I
I • I
I
<
I
9
4-itJ~~;
~ne
.
eren hr.ought in its own talent'ror extras and small roles.
Each candidate was given time
snow
:
for
.
a
.
.few scenes
.
shot in • Now the office is setting up
:
a
for a dosing statement to discuss
fishkill
las~,:y~.
<
·
:.
·
.,
·
·
,
database
system thatwill eventually
·
their priorities. for the next ad-
/
,
{~rm
_
:
nc;,
_
tJr<>m thi(area,
·
so I allow
,
.
its
,_,
employees
,
to enter
·
a
ministration and what they would
Candidate
Matt
Gillis discusses the issues as candidate Nick
.
didii't
_
kno~ howJnucb
.
-.v~ really
-
specific task
a
studio needs into its
·
do· if
.
elected student body
.
·
Capuano looks on~
here.I think it's great
that
they
can
computer
and
get
a
list of all perii-
president:
-
..
_ _
__,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
,
transform a town
info
anytlung nent businesses in the area.
·
Capuano said
-
his main goal
will
come to you rather than you
they
:
want,"
··
'Lynn
·
:
Russo; a
-
"We hope that these location
would be to increase school spirit
coming to me. SGA_is for the peo-
sophomore from.Toms River, N.J .-
people
will
go back to Hollywood
·
and improve the channels of com-
pie."
said.
• ·
·
·
and tell their friends how grat it is
munication between s
·
tudents,
Gillis said the most important
Meyersaidthatthekeytoattrac-
to work in the Hudson Valley,"
SGA,
clubs,
and
the
objective of his administration
ting any
type
of business
to
an area Meyer said. "Reputation is
adminiStration
.
would be to give the students a
is
_
a
cooperative community,
-
-
in-
everything in
-
this industry."
"Communication is the mo5t im-
voice and make them happier with
_
.
portant aspect," Cap~ano said.
"I
Marist.
.
Mignone said he should be
elected because he has a good rela-
tionship with the administration
and has the ability to get things
done.
.
.
The election for student president
will be held Feb.
22
and Feb.
23
in
Campus Center and Dyson.
New peer counseli
_
ng service offers support to students
by
PETE
:.
TARTAGLIA
···
Staff W
_
riter
Counseling Center to try to reach
those students who may be more
out to a different part of the stu-
inclined to use peer counseling then
dcrit population .
.
,
.,
. .
coming in and talking to
a
profes-
"The hope is thatstudents VfhO
sional adult.
. There is a new counseling service
wouldn't necessarily come to the
., .
T~e support line, which is
•
available forMarist stlidents
;
wlio
Counselihg Cente
r
'
for
'
orie
'
i:easoJ?,
•
.
.
available from Sunday to Thursday
neect'totalkorneedhelpwithpro-
ora:riotherwouldhavesoniewheie
.
·
from
'.
i0pm to lam, is
·
being
·
blems they might be having.
to tum with their problems," said
operated by
25
volunteer graduat
The Peer Support Line,
·
which
Nash.
students and their underclassmen
·
'
goes into
~
service on Feb
>
6, is an
Not all students fall under the
assistants.
anonymous support line for
category of coming _into the
·
·
"The training and education in-
students to can and receive peer
counseling center arid
.
speaking
volved took nine hours in which
counseling from trained volunteers;
with
a
counselor,
.
saic:l Nash.
students dealt
-
with different
_
_
_
The support line is being spon-
·
.
The support line will hopefully
.
scenarios ranging from suicide in-
.•
sored
·
by
-
the
·-
Marist
·
Counseling
·•
be
the
avenue to take forthose who
·
terverition to ta,lking to people who
·
Center.
: \
. .
.
.
_
.
•
.
.
feel that fa.ce
to
face counselingis
have alcohol problems/' Nash
The suppotfline
was
developed
·
for them.
.
·
·
·
said. "The training has made the
-
by Brother
-
John Nash of
.
the
According to Brother Nash, it's
.
student workers ready to handle
·
·
·
,.
·
·
-
··
· -·
·
·
·
nion a,bout
·
people
.:
who smoke,
-. '
$
M ()
.
Kl N
Q
.
then they're entitled to that.
If
they
any type ot situation
.
"
In the future the undergraduate
assistants that are training now will
develop into the people that will be
taking phone calls next year and
training new workers
... ·
·
.
·
Although a pilot program, the
-
support line has received much
.
backing
from
school
administrators.
"In speaking to some of the
school administrators they also
believe that there may be a certain
segment of the school's population
who could
be
in such n~d of a sup-
port line," said Nash.
The students who volunteered to
take phone calls were very in-
terested to hear of such a new
.
project.
"I
saw the signs in the graduate
student lo\lnge looking for
volunteers for
·
a pilot peer support
program, so
I
got
in touch
\vith
Brother
Nash,"
said
an
anonymous student phone worker.
"If
there is a good response to
the support line in the next few
months, the program will be mov-
ed off of being a pilot program and
become
a
fully supported pro-
gram
,
" said Brother Nash
.
Brother
Nash also stressed
-
that the Peer
Support line is something that
shouldn't be used to make jok
e
s or
crank calls.
•
.
•··• >, .
.
,
.
r
.
.
.
.
:a
.
.
.•
•
, _.
..
_
are ip.different, then they are entitl-
{'
~;
~continu~d
,
from
:i
iJ
_
agi
~:
s ►
.
:
·
,
:·
..
/
e~
·
t<>
;
iltat: Smqking
j
luiih~althy,.
'
?
ft)
x~
b
ih
;
r
·
;~~;iJ;
J
b;ha
½
;/?~
if
/.
:.:
~u!
t
i_f:
p~pple~
·
i
-
~ilt
}
o,.
h1.1J1
·
Hie!~
,,
,1;
k ·,
,
r
·
"'
''
ir •'
·
'
,-,
,:
.-
;
'Id'' . :
,
.-
.
tiodies
Jts
theirnght to do
•
that,
J
I
~.r
.
w~~
t,
\
i&
I
t
~
:;
f!
W~m?;3,
f
1
~
~
-
JJ~;
\;r
f
f
:1f
W!:~t
1iJ
•
~d
:
~~{;~;~~rs
.
0
1;:
;
tha,t,
_
,:
.
SaJ.ci
.
No~lla.
,,
:
·
"
.
::
•·
·
.
.
.
C.
agreed that-the situation could be
.
·
.
.
S~~l, some students
_
look to find
.:
improved
if
•
the administration
·
yo
.the
·
·-
~
i
tt
'1
'v,e,
o~
lov~,
.
a nuddle ground.
.
.
·
were
to
create a designated area for
'~If
people have a negative op1-
smoking.
·
-
·
· 1HOlLIDAY <COACJHI
·
Thursday
-
--
-
O{A.ICiERS
.
-\ND
lOURS
Februa~
-
~4.
:·:,
_
~.
,
.
_
,°
;
.
_ _
_
_
_
_.
_
_
,:
.
·
.
'1.,S'I.,~
Afun-fillecl
day
and
night on
the
mountain •.
One
Jew
price
indudes:
Round trip Holiday
coach
·
Bus tr;>
from Poughkeepsie
and
New Paltz to Cortin~
Valley, a full
day
of sla-1119 (rentals
extra);
a
fabuws
buffet <f1t1ner at Ice Station 23
,
Huntets
hottest
r£N
restaurant
and
bar;
followed
by
a
si:z2fing
show
cy
Perfect Thyroid
,
a band taking the Valley by
Sloon.
Call Free Time at CfBS-2711 or 876-3002 ·
lo
reserve
seals for
011
ond
Ollf
friends!
a
it's
·
.
:
Tc,
pfo~
;
:
~
·
,t
'.
a.1itins+Afo5
a
Pd
other
·
·
s7o
·
s
'.
, ...
.
;
~twa'/S
use
latex
condorns.
'
For a free, full-colo
_
r
pos~er
(18" x
24"),
.write:
·
AIDS
Poster
3,
Pox
2000,:S.\lba~y. N~V'!1222O
N.Y.S. Health
oe·partinent
.
T
-
_
.
.
,
,
~
:
·
•'.·
•~-
-
-
-r,,:
·
t'-"':
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·
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-
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't-
10
THE
CIRCLE~
FEBRUARY 17;1994 ·
·
•·
: . A _
•
··
·
:
·
s
··
-
-
h
·
,
,,
_
.r ·
:
_·
·
e
·
-
-
-
d
·
-
-
•
-
-
-·
n
·
···
e
-
-
•
s
; -
-'
:;.:1
_
-_
,
_
'.
_
i
a
·
: ·,
_
·-,
-.:
·
·
-
-
-.
-
Y
:
V
:
--
-
-
U
-
J
celebrates
.
~
-
~~ii
/
,
bj,ICEVINO'NEILL
.
. .
Staff Writer:
;
:.
·
,
,
.
_
·
.
'"H.istorically
t
~en~
:
has
.:_
alway~
:
·
.
.
_
.
been pieci:decl by
}
fat 1'tiesday' :or
:
..
·
Mardi Gras, as medievalserfs tried
.
.
tog$
a
few
po'un~
in
;
a fin
_
~
fling
:
-
Do' you have
~
tile indulgences before the
AO
days
of
penitence;''
-
outofyour
·
system?
.
..
.
.
·
said Sister Jeaime
Hamilfori.
•· ..
'
·
·
Let's hope so, because it's Len~.
. Minus 'the serfs',~ori
:
'(u~day;
'
.
.
As of
·
yesterday, Ash Wednes-
Marist
.
celebrated with
·
.
:•
campus
·
·
day, Lent has begun and will last ministry's
'
9th
.
,
amiuai_
.
pancalce
·
for
40
days ending on Easter Sun-
meal
/
.
_- . · :
.
·
.
·
.
:
.
,
.
:
:
:
·
.
day, AprU
3.
.
Tliis'included
'.
coordfuator John
• .
-·
The.rec~iving of ashes on o~e•s
.
·canorroin chef's
.
hat;'and
·
api:on
·
.•
.
·
forehead w~ supp?sed to relllll!-d
doing calories amid chocolate
.
chips
;
,
,
;
.
_
one
·
of therr baptismal
_
comnut~
and
·
:
blueberries
'
with
i
;
whipped
:
'
ment:" ''Turn
'
away from sin and be
·
.
cream
_
.
and
·
cholesteroL
~
..:
'.
,
,
.
·•
·
<'•.
·.'.
.
.
·
faithful to the gospel/'
.
Sodoxho, the Marist.food ser"'.
.
·
The ashes received came
fr?m
vice; will be serving
a
fish
.
and
·
a
-
·.
_
.
.
the
_
palms used
·
last year ~un!lg
vegetable entree
every
Friday
dur"'.
·
Palm Sun_day (the celebration of ing Lent:
•
·
'
.
.
·
.
·
· •
..
.
.
·
.
C.hrist's ~ntr3!1ce into
_
Jerusalem to .
They will also be serving special-
'.
accomplish his pas~hal mys~ery).
ty
foods fioni New Orleans ac~or"'.
.
·
.
Through r~e~t years, many
..
ding
according
_
to
.
FOO<!
·
Service
'
,
have heard Manst so~ Rev. Luke
Manager Alan
'
AbramoVIch. _
,
Mccann ~ay, "If God r~y loves
"Why not 'just do
:
what you
you, he gives you an It~an grand-
came here to do
·
learn and study
.
·
mother;
_
_
one .who loves wi
_
th<?ut
.
but do it better'than ev!=t dunn;
•
·
.
.
reserv
_
atlon, _stuffs you . with
Lent?'
.
' said~ Mccann.
;
"It's not
.
·
I~agn~, and giv~ g~od ~olid
a.~-
what we do but
_
w~y
w~
do,i(that
:
·
.
vice
without f~rcmg 1t on you.
._
courits with God:Does the person
••·
·
"
.
Th~n h: ad~,
f
:~~t•s w~at the
-
~
-
you love
care
whether you bnnfa
·
.
.
.- ..
, - ,
.
.
.. .
. .
•
.
. ..
teaching ~hurch
IS
~ke; a
'
go
_
od
_
bouquet of red roses
'i
Or
'
.;_
white
,
_,
L. _ _ _
___; _ _ _ _
~...:::..; _ _;__.._....,;__ _ __:_-'-_ _
.:,_.....:....:,_=====.,;:;,;=-"-'----'--"~-'---"---...,_,
.
~dmoµ.ter~ R ~ ~ g your
free
lillies?
.
It's not
.
the
·
gift
:
but'.the
·,
.;
,
.
..
Ground keepers
·'go
.
abo
_
ut
.
the
·
daily task
of
__
rem
_
_
~ving snow
_
.
,
will,
she
·
offers -ad~ce
.
~ased
·
on
.
motivation that counts with those
·'
't
·
,
~--------_;_....,;__--'-~-...;...._~....,;__ ........ _ _
__:__;_ _ _:,:_--'"'"-___;_.;...__:_C:::::..:.lr=c.::le::..,.
.
i::;Ph;.;:o::to:::./.:.:.M:.:a.:.:.tt
.
..:;M:a,:
.
a:::.
.
rt:::in.:.:.
•
...J
·
,
2
00Oyears ,Of
,
_
expen~~c~,
.
and you
who love
us
ratherthail our
.
gifts
;
"
•··
-
·
can take
,
her r~velat1ons or
·
_
.
·:
. ·
:
·
.
. .
.
•
.
..
disregard them at your
own
risk.,.
In keepmg
'YI~
tradition, _one 1s
.
· .
Lent
_
is
·
part
of
:
that
.
ancient
suppo~ed to give up_ somet~m~ ?r
'
.
_
Winter
games
begin
in
-
NQt
:
w,ay
_
wisdom . .It's the time of the year
.
prom1~e
to
·
·
do
somethmg
·
- - - - - - - - - - - -
.•
favorites
,:
and this .is probably the
this year
_
in Lillehammer
:-
Brian when the church asks one to do a
beneficial.
by
TOM QUINLAN
·
.
only chance most people get to
·
see
Boitano has returned
to
the
Olym-
little self-. analysis and find out who
Bes.ides meat on Fridays,
·
Staff Writer.
them.
.
pies, after winning a gold medal in or what is in charge
.
of our lives.
students• had different' items they
''Ilovethe luge," Brian Corbett;
•
.
Calgary, and hopes to take it again
'
In old cnglish, the word "Lent"
will be giving up or doing during
The Winter Olympics ar~ here,
.
senior
.
said.
"It
·
reminds me of
in. men's figure skating
~
-
·
meant "springtime!' As the
Lent
.
·
- ·
·
·
and Marist students are gearing up
sleigh riding.»
·
·
_
.
.••
·_.
·.
The United States team is full of church's
As
the church's tradition
for the excitement from Lilleham-
.
-The games offer something for
talent, which
.
will
help keep the in-
·
grew in the west, the word took on
mer, Norway.
everyone, and
this
is the athlet~'.
terest or:its viewers. One person
·
the added m
,
eaning of penitence
"Beavis
and
Butthead;" said
Michael LaCugna, a sophomore
communications major
·
from the
•
Bronx,
N.Y.
"They've gotta go; at
'
least for Lent.••
.:
·
,
.
"I won't 'watch them, they'll in-
chance to shine.
0
These men
'
and
·
that U
;
S; fans will definitely want and preparation for the celebration
terfere with Days
.
of Our Lives,"
•
womenfrom allaround the
\
vorld
.
to s~
is
Trace Worthington.
of resurrection and
.
ren.,ewal
Tim Sullivan, senior, said.
·
have trained for years~ to ge( a
'
shot
.
Trace Worthington?
.
·
_
·
brought on by the season's cycle.
-
Well, altnost everyone. Students
·
at glory.
.
·
·
·
·
·
0
_
·
.
.
.
.
.
·
·•.
._
·
·
·
.
_ _ _
_;,.;.;_.._...;....~.;_..-----"--'-------------....
have been treated to plenty of Win-'
.
"The
competition
is
-
-i
tremeri
-
C
Yes,
fo!
th()Se )hat haye
-
~.
10
t
try
weather,
to
put
them iri the
.
dou ,, Ann Cullen
,
fie
h
. .
.
hearclofhim;
'
he.wdlbe
;
competing
mood
for
the
g
··
ames, and soap fans
.
•
d
·
5
',
·
•p
·
-
·
--
-
-·
1
·
ti
dif•fi
·.
r st
.
01~
0
~
·
in
the
:
freestyle
.
skiing aeri
_
als
.
J•:Jis
. ·
s3;1 •
eop e rom
.
ere
11•
~o
.
un
.
claim to fame is three
.
back flips
can get their fill with the Kerrigan-
tnes, and th~
u~s.
are aUgomg [;or
:
and four twists, which he
'
does ii)
·
Harding affair.
the same thin~, a gold medal.
.
.
three and one-half seconds
.
while
But the Winter Olympics are
Nancy Kemgan and Tonya Har-
-.
.
r
45
f
· :
· th
-
· -
·
·
more than that. There are· many
ding, are not
_
the oilly people
approximate
Y
.
eet
m
:
e ~r ·
.
·
events, including
.
speed
_·
skating,
representing the United States.
.
•
Then,
.
he fin~s
.
~. way ~o
.
land
hockey, ice dancing, and-ski'jum-
..
In
_
t~e m~n•s downhill ·skiing,
~~~~~tly
on,his
:
sk1 s, back
.
on the
ping. "Ilovetoski,solenjoywat-
A.J.
Kitt from Rochester,
'tll'.'Y.
_
,
. _
...
·
.
.
-.
_ .
.
_
_
..
•
ching that," Nicole
.
Trupia;
has
a
·
good
-
chance at winning a
These aerjals will
·
be
·
a
·
_
mecial
·.
freshmen, said.
-
.
.
.
·
·
medat Dan Jansen, who i~ unfor-
sport fcir the .frrsttime atLillehani-
·
·
. Skiing
·
can
be found almQs(any
tiinately remembered for his
faU
at
mer~
-
•
·
and should prove to be an
day of the
16
day competition. For
the
'88
games in Calgary just hours
entenaining everiL
·
_
·
fans, the downhill, slalom;
after learning of the death of. his
·
·
·
·
·
biathlon, and crosHountry skiing
·
sister, has rebounded
·
and is a ma-
Of course
;
if
none
·
oniiis
'
sounds
are just some of the events plann-
.
jor
.
favorite in Jhe
_
men's
SOOni
exciti~g, the
-
women's figure
ed for Lillehammer.
.
.
.
·
speed:skating competition.
,
..
_
_
_
skating competition is still being
The
traditional activities of
.
Bonnie Blair
is
the favorite in the
·
·
held.
,
.
.
.
.
winter are not the only eventsfans
.
.
women's
500m
speed skating coni-
:
The Wintei
.
0
0lynipi~s fr'om
..
can
watch. Unique events, stich as
.
petitioti..
·
Blairwoli th
'
egold in
'92,
.
.
Lillehammer, N:orway,
·_'
can
·
.. _
-
be
.
the luge and tlie
.
bobsled
;-°
ar~ ·. and looks for a repeat performance
found on CBS thro11 h Feb.
27~
Marist
-
pr9gr,am
-
in
-
area
Junior
-
.
_
-
~ing
.
:
The weekly television
_·_
program
"CON
·
seen
.
on
·
U.S .
.
--
Cableyisionin. the Mid-
Hudson
for
four years and on
WTZAin 1993, has been selected
·
for broadcast
by
.
public
·
affairs
l
Jt1ttion
.
WHAi,
Hridgeport,
;
§<:>nn.
.
..
•
..
~'~'
~f
·coNVERSATION"; prciqu<;;
ed
'.
by the Marist Colleg~ Media
Center, began airing weekly
_
in
January on
.
WHAI's College and
University Showcase, which is car-
ried by cable companies
.
in N.Y.,
N
;
J. and Conn.
Themes and guests vary
_
and
cover a
_
broad range of interests.
Some notable guest of "CONVER-
SATION"
have included Robert F.
K~nnedy, Jr., Geraldine Ferraro,
author Michael Korda and folk
singer Pete Segar.
Upcoming guests include broad-
caster Ernie Anastos of WCBS in
New York City. Among topics
discussed on "CONVERSA-
TION" are comic book writing,
stress management, the economic
situation in Dutchess count and the
homeless.
..
Ten
Mank
students comprise the
technical crew.
-.
'
Janef L.awler;
Ay~TV
O~era
.:·
;
lions Manager,:
,
directs
,
the
:
,
pro-
.
grams,
The hosfof ''CONVERSA~
·
TION'' isMaristgraduate student
Jack Cahill.
.
VERSATION .. ,
:
SPRING BREAK
From
$2.99.
Inciud~:
•Afr,
7
nights
Hotel,
•
Transfers,
·
.
Parties
and
Morel Nassau/Paradise Is-
land,
Cancun; Jamaica,
San
Juan.
Earn
FREE
trip plus commissions
·
as our campus rep!
·
1-800-9-BF..ACH
.
-1
Weekend
·
has
-
arrived!
Feb. 18-20
NEVERTOO LATE.
Think
you
missed the Graduate Record
Exa~
deadline? Thinlc ag2in
.
With
the new on-demand GRE,• you cou_ld
~
taking the test tomorrow. And
:ice
your scorc the instant you finish
.
Score rcporu are mailed 10 to 15 days
later, in plenty
of
t
i
me
for
most
schools'
deadlines.
Call
now
for
instant
rcglsmt
i
on
.
@ Educ:ati0n2l Testing Se~ice
.Sylvan TechnolOQY
Cenlerse
Pt,,rtfa.s,t....
r.-m,6-1{.-t
1-800-GRE-A.S.A.r
-
-
--
INFOR1\1ATION
-
•
...
Senior
Pllrfraiti
·
·
,
'
.
'
'
..
..
'·
-
'
.
:tf
_
:
ycn(dq
.
nb~
_
Choose
''
a
:',.
p
-
◊it.r
:
~it
tp
;
go
i.ri
·
the
_
_
;
yearbook
·
~y
/.
th:i.s
.
·
date,
.
one
.
will
·
'-
be
·-:-:
chosen
. .
:
.
~or
.
yqu.
\~~
:
~~~~,
.
,
>-\~~&\
.
-
'
~ ~ 6 : :
:
..
-
:,
_._
.
-
.
·
()i~
.
"~'
.
~
~\)~1
·
\flll!
ZT!-
41-;s~
oif
t:Am
.
""L·,J
;:J
r1.ui:se.
"-•----"""-••-·---
:::-.. :;:= .. :::::::::.:::::.~--
==::.::.-:::::.-=-:-::~
:
:
..
~.:-
_
....
__
._
....
_
:=--.:--~::=t=~~~-:~
-
THE CIRCLEi FEBRUARY 17,,:I
994
byTERfL>STEWART
.
.
~tltlet~, under co~petiti.re condi-
medleyandiourthin
:
the1650~yai-d
-
.
,
,
,~-
,.,.-
·
· ·
.u
ons •
.
,;.
.
,, •· ·
··•-
•
freestyle.
. .
.
.
.
·
-_
.
· .. ·.
·:
..
.
-
.
.
..
st~ff;\A{ri~~r
. ,; .
.
..
..-o:,
,:
:"·}
~~s :~eson~ go~l isfoi_the
:
t~aiii
.
..
.
According to Yan Wagner; all
·
.
_
__
The men's swimming and di~i~g
·
;
·
.
to
;
r~
.
a~~~~
-
~~
:8~_'PC_~<:e~~
.
1~l.'~?~e~
_
...
three swimmers are ~aster_ than they
teM,tS ..yilL
•
be
·
•
tooking-
J
for
-.;·
the
-
_,,,
f:;v~per~:<?1rl·0 ~sv.!"l;s,
.
•
•
b
.
,
l
-
"!ere
,
last year at this pomt of the
months
.:
of
i
trainirig to pay
.
off as
:
i;
.
IS~~
·
r
\1~/t.s
_.
~eas1 e
seas9n.
.
.
;
.
.
they
_
fravel:to
1
Ti-enton State College
.:'.
'
,
.
ec;~s.~
__
y
_
~
--
~P
.~
s
-
~
-
1
~2~\~-~
~ur
_
..
..
S°'phoniore Kyle O'Neill, who
to take
·
parfiri
"
the
•
·
Metropolitan
~
v.er P.[!r~
,
~C~fr.
-
0
.~~r
,,
}
,
t,
,
3;5
1
_
-
/5
,
was
f
seeded
_
_
lSth in the 500-yard
Conference Championships today seas~ns
;11l
.-
m_
the
,
maJontr, of
_
fr~tyle, _firushed second la~t y
_
ear.
through Saturday in Trent
.
on -N
·
J
·
cases,
we.dverealized that goal, th,e
O Neill 1s ranked 10th m
"
the
Head cgach Larry Van W~g~e;
.
coachsai ·
·
,
·.
-
.
,
.
·•
· ·
.
.
200-yard freestyle and second in the
said ~ai:ist is basically putting its
..
He added that at_tammg these
100-y~rd freestyle this year.
eggs all in one basket.
.
goals would be the pmnacle of the
Van Wagner named other
'':We're gearing 2lweeks ofour
·
se~~on.
·.
.
members of the team that will be
~easo~:qown;to_a threeaday, perfor~
•
.
.
-·
-
I _feel that if you can !lc-
key fac~ors, including j~niors Matt .
.
man~;.\':!
~1;
,i
o?oib
bim,:
c:ilwfi:·.i
•
,
.
,.;._ •
~OlllJ?.~
.
s~
your ~oals, then I thmk
Bluestem and cp-captam Brett Ar-
Theil,ead
,
coach, has se
_
t-,two:ob-
·· .. -,
your pr,ogram is more successf!-11,
nold, and freshman Jon Churins.
-
jectives for his!team.
,i,,,;~,
r,;,::
"
'
'~
,_
/«:¥J
1
,
e}~ ofwh~
_
the~mdma~fimsh
.
."I've never been on a champion-
-
·
The Jirstis to
.
,
acc
.
omplish
'
their
··
Wa ea
.
0
-
·
-
~ds or
-
C.
m
u~,
Van
ship team so
.
I'm going
.
to do
. -
-
.
.
-·
agner
.
.
sa1
.
·
h'
I
d
seasonaLbest times
;
-
.
,
·
.
,
_
,
.
·
.
.
,
' -
..
--
-
..
_.
'
,
-
:
.
,
.
everyt mg can o to do my best
_
"lv1y
-
individu
.
al.
-
goal for
'
-
my
·
th
-
Marh
_
~St ts
;
seedh~d
1
?
J?lac~ th
_tr~
m
and help the team to
win
the cham-
·
th!
. h .
-
.
.
.
-
..
e c amp1ons ips
.
pionsh 'p " A
Id
"d
-
a
_
etes 1st at m each event swum
_
Al
w•ui
tli
h.
h
.
i
·
_
-
1
,
rno sai •
.
.
-
_
_
at the conference championships;
.
.
ong 1
-
e ig
.
see mg ~f
:
Va1_1 Wa~ner has been momtor-
every athlete realizes their season's his_ team, many
0
i
~a~. ~agner s
mg his ~w_1mmers these past two
best .time 100 percent,"
.
Van
.
swim11_1ers are see e
-
ig_
•.
.
.
weeks, g1vmg them a performance
Wagner said.<CThe only thing that
.
Jumor
_A1_1gel
'[omala is picked
test ev~ry _other day ..
..
would
.
interfere. with that
·
goal
·
to place stXth
1
!1
the SO
-
yard
_
·
"This gives me an mdication of
should
.
be an
.
Act. of. God;'
-
'
·
_.·
freeStyl~, sec~n? 11.1 the 100
-
yard
where they are," he said.
..
Although Van Wagner. feels the
,.
g~!!:i~Y
a
nd
'
h1rd
m
·
the 200-yard
.
Exp~ctations are also high for
dual meets during the year cause a
,
y.
-
, -
.
.
.
.
, ·
.
:
the divers, freshman Grove
hindrance with training, he said the
.
:
·
·
Jum~r
.
Ro1!
·
.
Gagne
__
.
1
s
-
.s~ede!i
Ras11_1us~on and Brenden Leddy,
contests
1
are
•
still-tmportant
·
.. ,:
_
_fourth
t~
-
th~
4
00:r~i:dmdivi
_
dual
and Jumor Peter Welch.
'
t
Yoit
ci
n~ed
,~
the
•
.
duai~m
·
e
-
'
e
-'
·
t
.'.
:
mb edJ7tsXt•
:,
~keye!}~hd
_
-:
1
!1
th~7,,tthoo
_
~"yard
Both Rasmusson and Leddy are
:-
.
·
-
;
·
· ·
-.
·
-
·.
·
reas ro e an s1xt
·
m
·
e
·
200-
·
d d
·
·
·
·
seasons-
-
because1t!s·r--
..
·
-
11
ythere
-
that
1
r
1
~
'
d
.'i:."
''
'
t
'
:-,.·
k:
;
0
-
-
· , , , .
,
-
•
• . •
see e m the top five
m
the one-
-
. .
. .
.
·
.
=.u
.
.
,.
•
yar ureas stro e.
--·
"
: .
..
·
-
,
.
.
..
•
-· ·
·
·
·
·
·
·
•
-
e3:clr
1
,
athlete1.
~
learns
,.~-
!rom
!
his
,
_
;
/:i
J:.:
->
;;
-!,
6
•='•'t•J
j'T'
'
'"
.
-,~-
;
;·
,
c,-,,
,
,
:
:
_
p1eter
.
an~ three-meter
:
d
.
1ves
.
..
..
mistakes,!.'
;
he said~
,
lt's
:
there that
,;:
ei
Jt
1
r•
,
th9UJoo~
e~
l
'.
fe
.
e
,
~ed
,,
'
.
Acc?rdmg to head d1vmg coach
the
·
coach :is able'to. observe
.
the
,.
flth
'
'
·
nth e
400
,
-Y~d
,
.
rd~e~dt~Ie,
1
.-
.
Mela!11e Bolstad! Marist ~as a
-
1
. ,
,
m
.
e
. __
~rar
m
1
:
y1
_
ua
chance at winning both boards.
11
i
SPikf
tf
fclll
to
Siena,
record drops to
.
3.:.2
Red F
·
oxes fall to LIU, 61--41
by
GREG BIBB
Staff Writer
The club's other defeat was to
·
Albany State (3-1).
by
ANDREW HOLMLUND
defense did not stop them at the
other end."
Carroll, a guard, said the
Win one. Lose one.
.
Blackbirds played strong, but
That has been the
story
for the
Marist
·
could have responded
women's basketball team for
better.
Staff Writer
Marist's game
_
against con-
While hovering at the
.SOO
mark
·
roughly the past three weeks.
"I'm sti
.
11 annoyed,"
-
Carroll
r-
thus far, Desrosiers feels the club
·
·
1erence r
_
iyal
·.
Siena_ was a ga
.
me
-
The latest
_
result in the win-loss
said. "Against LIU the last 5-6
h
.
will improve because
_
·
th
_
ey
·
have a
·
coac
.·
Nicole Silenzi and some of
dilemma was a 61
,
41. defeat to
games, we have had a tough time
the players
.
thought would be put
solid nucleus of returning players. Long Island University
_
in Nora
matching up with them. They jump
in the win column·:
.
Along with Desrosiers
·
some
·
theast Conference action last Satur-
great and run fast, It was a poor
\
That was not-the case.
.
.
returning
_
mem~ers for· the Red day in New York .
.
,
.
-
.
performance."
.
..
.
-
Siena had dif,ferenf feelings
on
·,
Fo_xesinchide, defensive specialist
-
Thiscon,test was a
mirrot
image
St?ce{'Denglei-, a
'
sophomore
the matter recently defeating
_
the
·
.
Bnan Corbett, outside hitter Doug
·
to the game Maris(played
·
against
center;· said she was disappointed
Red Foxes, three games toone
:
Porrell and middle hitter Jason Siena on Feb. 7.
-
· ·
.
withloss and does not like how the
:
Individual game scores for any
Latendre. The top newcomers for
The Red Foxes trailed the Saints
·.
team has struggled this year in the
of the matches
:
were not available
-
the
.
club ar.C outside hitters Steve by
·
a mere
·
four points at halftime,
second half.
t press time.
·
,.
'
.
..
.
-
Graham and Sean Stam.
·
but then went on tci lose, 80-60.
"We played terdble. It was not
The defeat did not sit well
With
..
.
.
This time was
_
not any different
a good game,,, Dengler said. "We
team
.
captain Randy Desrosiers.
The Red Foxes opened the as Marist (7-14, 6~7 NEC) was on-
play
_
20 minutes and then don't
The junior setter said he was
season on Jan. 29 with the annual ly down by two at the half, 30-28.
play for the second half."
disappointed with_ ·the foss, but
Army Tournament.
·
·
· ·
However, the Red Foxes'
The result wasbetter for the Red
believes the squad will recover.
shooting went sour in the second
Foxes last Thursday as Marist easi-
'
u1
feel we are definitely better
. MariSf finished_with adisappoin-
half. The team shot a dis
,
mal 16
ly cruised past NEC foe, St. Fran-
han them,'' he said. "Overall we
tmg 2•6 record m the individual
percent in the final session and 26
cis
(NY),
90-67, in New York.
are
a be~rer
,_
cl9bJh
.
a11 ]iist ye~r .~ •
:
·
game
·
format.
.
percent for the game, compared to
Tile 90 points garnered by Marist
·
i
Despite the Red Foxes defeat,
Despite the sub~partourna~ent
LIU's 45 percent.
.
was t
_
he highest point total this
Marist still isin
_
contention in the
f
-
h
Marist was led by
·
senior co-
season.
·
,
P
.
State
:.
Eastern
'
Volleyball'
,
~;\~~;i:;c;;;e:t~a~dh~f~~:i
~aptain Cindy Carroll with 12
:
Carroll paced Marist with 18
'l
9-r°lr2~1i
:
ti~bet~
W
i
(~
-/i
on
~:
,\
.,
}~%1~t:~tl~~
-
::
.
::~~~Jf:g co~~
r~~t~~:Se~~;elt~~i%
_
~~~~~ptain
·
~~;ro~
0
rf
i1J~~~i1J~S-fn
:
;~~h'.1~~
f~rence along with Hartwick Col-
,
.
Desrosiers
.'
-,_
'.
,
.
$ead
.
coach Ken
_
Babineau
.
w
·
as
:
whd~
.
sopllo,m:Ofe
.
gµal.'d Melissa
lege,
.
Colgate
-
University, Albany
out
·
of town
·
and was
·
Unavailable
-
m.~us
.
er netted
JO
points andgrabb~
State/Oneonta, HamiltonCollege
If
Marist is SUCC!!5sful in its quest.
f
or
.-
coniment.
_
:
·
--
.
,
~
-
·
:
-
·
· · -
·
ed. 8 rebounds.
.
-
and
'
Siena.
:
'
-
• . -,_-.
·
·
._
. ·
for a championship, they will ad-
,:
;A~sistant coach Pam Dezago
Junior forward Andrea Macey
.
Currently, the Red Foxes are 3-2
vance to compete in the, Up
.
State
said lt was
fl.
game she and the team
~ame off the bench to score 12
ov
.
erall and 2~2 iri the conference
R~g
_
ional Championships.
'
•
would like'to forge{:
·
·
points.
:
Maris
_
t's three
~
victbries
.
includ~
-
·
·
. "We did
_
n't pla
.
y very well," s
_
he
D,ezago said she was glad to see
·
-
Marist's n
.
ext home
·
match is
~ins over Hamilton College (3-1),
.
.
said. "We felt pretty go
:
gd about
everyone contribute to the win.
Sac
_
r
_
ed Heart University (3~1) and
'
againSl Nyack Community College
being down by
.
two
:
(at halftime.)
'
"We played really well. We shot
-
.... o.,..n_e;;.;o:.::;n:.::;ta::...:.(::;3
.
--=0~)-:_
·
·
·
- -
-
~ ~ - - _ ; .
·
_
0
_n_F_e_b_._24
.;..
-
_· _ _ _
-
_
·
..:.......:.....
·
...;...~
-
_ . . J
The second half we were flat. Our
50
•
percent," she said. "We had
WBALL
..
-
.
.
.
Iiltramu:ra1s
TRACK
·
... continued from page
12
►
_
five people in double figures. The
good things were that everyone got
to play and were able to play a lot
of minutes."
Dengler said she liked how the
Red Foxes were able to play strong
throughout the game.
"(Last) Thursday was a great
win," she said. "The first half we
shot (61) percent and 50 percent for
the game. It was a good team win.
We played as a team."
Carroll
said everything fell into
place again
.
st the Terriers.
"We came out all pumped up.
_
We were just clicking," Carroll
said. "Our shots fell. Everything
felt good."
·
"It
(the season) feels like a roller
coaster," she said.
It is not to the
point where.it is discouraging; it's
Just confusmg. I don't unders-
tand."
Marist battlecl NEC nemesis
Wagner last night. Results were not
available at press time.
_
Blackbirds 61, Red Foxes
4i
MARIST
,
(41)
Carroll 3-115-712. Keys 3-12 4-5 10. Dengler
1-6 1-2 3, Presnell 1-1
1·2
3, Hauser 3-10 1-1 9
Macey 1-6
0-0
2
,
Heller
1
:
2 0-
t
2.
Walsh
0-2
0-0
0. Horwath
0-0
0-0
o.
:
'rotals 1
·
a:so
12-18
41.
:,
·
·
L.I.U.
(61)
.
-
<.
'
·
ButlerS-11 0-210, Randolph 7-120:-015, f'erguson
1-4
1-1
3.
Owens
4'-11
2-2 10, Thonas 3-5
0-0
1.
Leacock
0-0 0-0
o, Weems
4-10 4-8
12, Cham-
pagne 0-2
0-0
0, XiOules 2·9
0-0
4, Black
0-0
0-0
0,
De La Begassiere
0-0
0-0 0-0.
Totals 26-59 7-13
61.
Halftime acore:
L.1
.
U. 30. Marist 28
3-polnt
goals:
Maris!· Hauser
(2).
Carroll. LI.U.
• Randolph. Thonas, XlOules
.
Offldala:
Steve
Cohen.
George
Bandies.
A-WA.
:
Men's basketball action began
on Monday, Feb: 7 .. -
..
<
·
:
··
:
Uncoln
,
L¢gend's; ,'.Few Good
¥en, TMBobbitis/Redmen;Thee
~ilicans and
4ihitl
Weapon's
.
.
all
scored first-game victories;
· ·
... continued from page
12
►
half ahead of Monmouth (10- 4:,.
·
--
.
However, Magarity said he
is
not
interested in scoreboard watching,
just in his team's play in the next
weekend,
it was
·
not the best part
of the season, according to the
head coach.
MCTV'S
In Wednesday action, Phlip
Flops (by forfeit), Big Country,
Grafton Park, NPG
.
and Celtics
also notched wins.•• Women's
basketball play started on Tuesday.
~esults were not available at press
time.
Volleyball
.
action·
started last
Thursday. The
·
following teams
won the opening best of three sets
matches: Marian Tigers
(2-0),
Mur- ·
phy's Law (2-0);
Leo
Spikes (2-0),
Who Cares (2-0); Super Spike (2-0)
and Corduroy Gods (2-1).
The~e are now two hour-long
Aerob1~ classes on Wednesday.
Class
times
run from U:15 a.m _
l~:15 p.m. and 12:15 p.m
••
1:15
p.
_
m.
four games.
·
"We can't worry where we're
going to be or who we're going to
play," Magarity said. "We control
our own destiny."
·
After Monmouth, the Red Foxes
will host Wagner Saturday night at
the McCann Center.
Marist's first place finish in the
Stoneybrook Invitational on Jan.
23 was the season's high point.
.
It was the first in the school's
history atthe Division I level ac-
cording to Colaizzo.
.
'
-
Colaizzo said he felt the victory
was well earned .
. "We had a lot of depth in the
distance races as our runners
ran
in
.
:
two or three races in the same
day," he said.
, . Along with the Stoney brook
trmmph, Colaizzo said he believed
Dave Swift's 4:22.7 mile in
December was another highlight
for the indoor track program.
·
-
~•David trained very hard over
the summer, putting in more miles
than anyone in recent memory " he
said.
'
Marist will travel to race
in
-the
.
NEC championships this weekend.
"One-on-One with
Jay LaScolea"
+ "Press Box"
Weekdays at 12:30 p.m. on
Marlst Channel 12
A Whole New Perspective on
Marist Sports.
-
-
>
}
~~iR:tf
t
'
tn
.
~
•
·•
w111tery
;
year:
-
;
s~fill.g
'
hhead
. ·
.
.'
.
'
.
,
·
.;
,.
.
-
.
-
,
'
.
.
'
,
.
bi
GREG
.
BIBB
.
Staff Writer
.
·
.
·
.
44.3.1
44.3.2
44.3.3
44.3.4
44.3.5
44.3.6
44.3.7
44.3.8
44.3.9
44.3.10
44.3.11
44.3.12