The Circle, April 21, 1994.pdf
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 44 No. 8 - April 21, 1994
content
- - - -
- - - - - ~ - - - -
-
--
.
.
VOLUME 44,~UMBER 8_
Mar.1st CollegetP<>ughkeepsle,
N. V.
Third protest held
·to address letter
by
CIRCLE STAFF -
A.Jetter to the editorin the April
14
issue of The Circle prompted yet
another student rally, this one on Sunday; April 17, increasing visibility
ofracial tension on campus. It was the third rally in two weeks..
.
Desmond Ebanks, co-chairman of the urban programming council
within the Black Student Union, said he does not believe the majority
of the campus is racist, though,
''I know there is an element of racism," Ebanks said, a sophomore.
"There is a lack of appreciation of culturalissues." .
He cited the letter, which refereed -to multiculturalism and div!;!rsity
as "nonsense," as proof that there is some level of intolerance on campus.
Raul De La Rosa; president of El Arco Iris Latino, said the was ofs
fended by the letter.· .
_
_
_ .
.
· "When I saw that (letter), I cried," he said. "I don•~ usually cry in
public, but I cried when
I saw that. .. Tcan'tunderstand ho_w anyone-
can say multiculturalism is nonsense.
"It's just one person's view, but I'm offended," he added.
Marshalita Cross, president of the BSU, said she was disappointed the
author of the letter, Jon DeRise, a freshman, did not attend the rally
in the Champagnat Hall breezeway.
_
_
.
"It is unfortunate that an.individual has such ideas and is not able
to come out and defend them," Cross said. ··
·
DeRise did not return The Circle's phone calls.
The issue of the cap on clubs was also addressed at the rally.
A
flier distributed by the rally's organizers accused _the Student Govern-
ment Association and the College's administration of making no attempts
to lift the current cap on dubs.
. _
·
The flier states: "Supposedly .our SO.f\ representatives pµtthis cap in
place. We are here to have them remove it-'.' ,
_ ..
·
_
_ ·
Another burst
iThe flier goes on to state t
.
hatseveral.groµp,s,l!ketheOay,,LesbJa11
,
. ____ .. · a11d Bisexual
Stud'<nt,.t\.ssqciation,
.~{II
noJ _be. ch~i::t¢j~d.
~tit?
to 'the cap
:
~-,,,,~,,.;_,,
;
.
,
.,-=..~and.J!because
,
theii·
0
·cl.ll)kes··are •·not accepted by' few.'? .. · :-· ·'
,
,
f.•,;,7,:,-•,:c·
. -
Matt Qillis;-SdA pl'esident',
-
s8:id he
:
agfeecEwith
'
inuendf.what;pe-ople.
at the rally saicl; ,howevi:'i:,/changing policies
was· not
a
•
simple process
.. I
and there were otlier consider~tions .
.
:·
<. _
....... _
i _
• _
... · .
"We don't have unlimited resources atMarist," Gillis said.
"If
the•·
scriate V()tes
_
to remqve or expand the club cap; then there will be open-. _.-.'
-rwo
constructioh.We>rk~rr; attempt to contain damagedone
by
ttie
fifth
water main bre~kthis ·
.
.
··ings foi:. other_clubs<For the
-
tiine being/our resources are
·
nmited.
»
year.
·
See re_ lated_
story;_··· ___ .-. ·•_·
_
·
-
.
-
. · · . _
· _ ·
The following reporters contributed to this report: ChfisBerinato Ted
Holmlund, Kathyrn Link, Julie Mai-tin
·
·and S.J.
'"Richard.
.
Circle
photo/Matt Martin
WMf.;~
to
Q¢gi11>ne\1/
program
JO
,;qi.lnselcallers ()1).love
. by
B_L.ffHE MAlJS.OLF>
.
~elationship-type questi()ri~as op-
ino~tl}': relatfoilship:.orientecl
the press.
tion.is not responsible
~~r
what
Staff Writer
posed to more explicitly sexual questions.
·
:, . .
__ ____
•
·
_
.
. .
·
·
Kellysaidthanheyfeelthisis.a
they
say
on the show, "said
questions. . . ·. ·.
-
.. ·-·-
.
'
. Wright andCuratola_ said
0
they
relevant issue thaf'needs to be
Ebanks; ,
.
.
, .. _
.
Y<>u'.ve thought ~b.out it, h~ard ,
aboutitand maybe even llad it -~.
and now is the time to talk about it.
What is it?
·
·Se;(at Mafist. College. · _-
_ ,
On
·
J\pril,'P; cluring;thelunch
time activity hour,
from
rioon
i:0·2
p.m., WMCR will be- haying •ihe.
"sex line". _ . . _ _ _
'
• Juniors Michelle· \Vright a~d
HeatherCuratola will host the calls' ·
in program. _
·- •
·
/ ·.
·
·
i
· ·
"We plan to have peoP.\e call in,
to ask quc;stions ancl ·we'll 'play
some music between calls," said
Wright.
Curatola said _she came up with
the idea after listening to the !'Jove"
phones", a similar program on
Z-100, a radio station out of the
Empire State Building.
But unlike the "love phones",
the sex line will deal· more· with
:Wright said thatthey approach-
wiUha".e control. O\Ter
\\Thai
they
discussed. Kelly also inentioned
To encourage students participa-
ed Neal KeHy, the general mariager . answer .... _
.
_..
.
tliatWMCR is _the only medium .tion, Curntolamentioned that
of the station, and he was receptive
''\Ve won't an.s~er things
we
feel--.
able to do it, because they can get
they've put
tip
posters to advertise .
to the idea, so it developed from
unco,mforfable
'
talking about.
a:ri
immediate response from. the upcoming show. The signs are
there., • / -__ ·. __ -_ ,
.... .
.
We're:~Iooking more for
:
imy
people.
-
.
designed to attract attentton, by
Ther.e will· bf
~
meeting right . boyfriend broke _up with me, what
. :Ebanks said
_
he agreed with Ke!~
specifically mentioning ''sex".
befdre·:'. the: show airs between . do ti:tortype questions than 'what
ly about the need to discuss sex and
In order for the show to be
a
suc-
Wrightr Ctiratola;KeHy and Des: positionjs best?';'t said Wright.
mentioned that there would be no
cess, there must be students who
· in<>rid Ebanks, the program direc
7 • ·_
.
Kelly
.
saidthiit ifthe administta-
censorship· on . the part of the : call in, aswelf as listen. Many peo-.
tor, to discuss the show and the fact
tion shC>Uld question the sh~w. the
station .
.
-
.
pie know about the show and are
that. tliere-.wilLbe
a
lot
pf
people ·station wot1ld use,,the same argu-
- "They have total freedom to say
... s~e
SEX
p_
age
9 ►
Iisteriin°gtoJt: : : :· . •
~ent
as
The ,Circle has, freedom of
whatever they want. The radio sta~
: The :· administration may be
sofuewliai·-
·
apprehensi,;e:abcut- the
show. Curatola said thatthey may
thinkthat the show_ will be obnox~
ious or disgusting due to the natµre
·or the topic.
·
.
..
.
However, Curatola said•· that
they would try to keep the show
.. from getting out of hand by main-
taining a mostly question and
answer type format and discussing
Fifth water main break impairs campus
roughly 20 workers who were at the
·
/Jy
KEVIN O'NEILL
site were startled when they realiz-
- Staff Writer
-· ed that the main electrical, ga~ and
...;.;.. _ _
...;.;.....;.;.._....;. _ _ _
- ' - _ telecommunication· lines. were all
The fifth water main break this
nestled together in the same comer .
year· temporarily· impaired main
Taking no chances, the laborers
electrical; gas, and telecommunica-
took action and asked for securi-
tion lines on campus last week.
ty's help.
An area approximately six feet
deep and 15 feet wide_ was dug out
to get to the water main. Workers
then stood in four inches of mud
as. they worked on· the ruptured
pipe which had a circumference of
nearly -three inches.
Circle.
· The water main break this year
"At 9:30 a.m. security went door
occurred behind Donnelly Hall (ac,t-
to door and told us to turn off the
jacent to route 9) early last Friday
computers;'' said Linda Dabonna,
morning.
. . . · • .
of the payroll office. ''They knew
. The weather may
be
to blanie for
there was a break and didn't know
this latest break, according to
what would happen, they thought
With the main gas line running
across the splintered pipe and the
electrical and telecommunication
lines neighboring, the workers tem-
porarily clamped the ruptured pipe.
non-scientific poll
More than 200 studen~ were asked to respond
to the following question~
Do you watch MCTV? ·
Yes
-105
. No-87
Do you listen toWMCR?
Yes -
95
No - 97
Do youread The Circle?
Yes -158
No-34
' members of the construction team.
there would be a surge."
''After the terrible winter we
The Computer Center in Don-
had, when the weather warmed up
nelly was closed from noon until
the pipe cracked," said a Pizzagali . 12:30 p.m. for fear of a surge.
source who wished to remain
Nothing happened to the com-
anonymous.
Another factor which didn't help
was the fact that "the pipe was old
and deteriorated," said Tom Da-
ly, director of physical plant.
The break was discovered at 7:00
~.m. and secured by 2:30 p.m. after
Pizzagali workers put aside some of
the surprises they encountered.
While digging to get to the
broken pipe with a back hoe, the
puters and the rest of the day went
on as normal.
After their discovery, the
workers had to "hand dig," accor-
ding to Daly the rest of the way to
get to the pipe which took a vast
· amount of time.
"By using the machine (the back
hoe), one scoop takes what would
normally take one hour to do by
hand," said the anonymous source.
The right sized clamp was not in
stock and had to be picked up in
Fishkill on Monday morning which
is when work was to be completed
on the pipe.
·
. Town of Poughkeepsie water in-
spectors were instructed to ensure
that the city water was not con-
taminated.
Workers said it is possible that
the pipe could have been leaking all
winter.
J
THE
CIRCLE,
,
APRiL
21,
1994
·
.
:
.-·
·
'
..
Miilgets
peqple tOd,
,
in
·
·
·
"Lepfethiliin 21'
·
commercial in ~hich he gives Bridget
·
a nice
.
·
A
rna
i(
~itting near me had a tendency of "Leprechaun 2" seemed to b~ bordering on
.
.
. .
by
JUSTIN SEREMET
.
One might actually feel sorry
for' midgets
after viewing the latest bad horror movie
'
to
come out of Hollywood
;
"Leprechaun
2/'
tongue kiss on her cheek, leaving a long line
.
laughing throughout the film; gigglingat the
an
·
orange tin~.
·
of drool.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
leprechaun's devious actions.
.
·.
. .
Not only were th~
FX
not too
·
good; but
Of course, Bridget's boyfriend
,
a dork
•
During one scene in which the leprechaun the editing left something to be desired.
·
_
named
·
Cody (Charlie
-
Heath), will
·
do
.
yeUs
'
out,
•
":¥ ou can't escape! It's hopeless!",
·.
.
-
· .
.··
- -
·
·
.
·
-·
·
,
-·
everything in his power to save his busty lov-
,
the man nearby repeated "he said it's
There are scenes in
'
which
.·
the actors;
Warwick Davis, who
.
has starred in
"Return of the Jedi " "Willow " and of
course, the originaJ ~lassie "Lep;e~haun,"
might be better employed if he was involved
·
in midget bowling;
it might be more
respectable.
ed one in every cliched way possible.
hopeless!i'
.
.
..
•
.
mouths are clearly not moving, yet the voices
He is assisted by his elderly friend Morty
·
The mari also brought the wife and kids seemed
to
come out of nowhere.
_
.
.
(Adam Biest), who advises Cody
_
of the an-
along for this. geek show.
·
cient powers of the leprechaun;
Another scene involving Bridget punching
The camera also appears
.
to be bouµcing
Biest gives the only somewhat convincing
a man in the chest got
a
girl in the back row
performance sjnce Davis's Irish tongue (pun
to yell out "You go girl!"
.
in' some parts of the
fiJm.
·
Davis, who plays the repulsive, poorly
made-up leprechaun, attempts tq frighten his
audience by biting off fingers, hanging peo-
ple, and jumping out from behind corners.
· Here's the story: after
1000
years of hiber-
nating, the evil leprechaun emerges to find
not intended) really gets on your nerves.
For a brief moment,
I
actually thought
I
The
film
also showcases its abundance of
was attending
an
advanced screening of Mar-
If you couldn't figure o~t by now, ~ne ~n
watch "Leprechaun
2"
even without wat-
ching the original.
. midgets, who are seen in a scene at a bar on
tin Lawrence's NC~l7 "You So Crazy/'
St. Patrick's Day, conveniently the
Maybe it was the midgets in the film that
It's still hard to believe the firstone made
enough money for there be a sequel.
.
.
a
_
bride and is willing to do whatever
unspeakable acts that he can to find her
.
leprechaun's birthday
:
.
.
·
.
.
brought out the best in people.
·
By the way, is it "midget," "dwarf," or
Maybe members of the audience are begin-
.
His desired female is named Bridget
(played by the unknown Shevonne Dunkin),
the typical dumb but beautiful blonde who
doesn't resist in showing off her bare chest.
"vertically challenged?"
·
·
ning to notice that there aren't enough
·
With all this talk of being politically cor-
dwarfs in the movie/TV industry, especial- ·
Nevertheless, "Leprechaun
2"
is perfect
for viewing at
4
a.m. on "USA Up
All
Nite,"
and might be more enjoyable under the in-
fluence of drugs or alcohol w
_
hile telling
midget jokes.
rect, have midgets received their own fair
ly after
_
the suicide of Herve
.
Villechaize
·
shake?
·
("Tattoo" of Fantasy Island) and since the
.
Let's give credit where credit is due.
.WWF ended midget wrestling.
She is kidnapped by the leprechaun and
endures his nauseating sexual advances, in-
·
eluding a scene you may have seen in the
·.
Surprisingly enough, there was a fair
B-grade horror movie fans usually view
crowd of ethnic diversity at this Sunday even-
·
films like this for the gore, yet the FX of the
ing showing of "Leprechaun
2."
movie were very mediocre; the blood in
Sun,
by
DANA BUONICONTI
First off, thanks to all who had
comments about the words that oc-
cupied this space lastweek; they
were appreciated .
.
·
Second things second, summer,
.
believe it or not, is creeping up on
us ever so quickly.
_
And, of course, you need some
tapes to bring with you on all those
lost beach trips with your closest,
most personal friends
.
The following are a couple of
platters that will probably be ac-
companying me on my adventures.
He's built like a mack truck, il-
lustrated with tattoos, has coffee
surf,
and the
sizzle
for
blood, and \Yrites poetry in his
spare time.
·
.
.
Man or machine, he's Henry
Rollins.
The new Rollins Band record,
"Weight," is a
·
sure-fire aid to help
you vent aggression.
If
you're angry, Rollins can help
.
Chock full of tight hardcore rif-
fing and a newfound sense of
groove, Rollins waxes loud about
everything from self-denial to
human
weakness
to,
well,
self-denial.
New bassist Melvin Gibbs adds
a bottom-end schwing to the
deconstruction at hand, while
guitarist Chris Haskett smears the
icing on the cake with some meaty
soloing
.
.
. •
"Liar," the first single
,,
from
"Weight," is currently being ex-
.
ploited on MTV.
.
.
Catch it if
•
you can, because
Rollins wears a Superman costume;
a blessed moment of sheer rock
power .
My pal
_
Chris describes The
Grays, a new band on Sony, as a
cross between Jellyfish and Joe
•
Jackson; a perfect description of
their debut record, "Ro Sham
Bo."
.
Featuring two former guitarists
for Jellyfish, Jason Falkner and
Jon Brion, it's easy to see the
likeness.
.
.
The Grays are pretty heavy on
-
Videos
·
·
.
for
all
occasions
If
you love Disney
,
it is probably· suspected of malpractice, starring
worth going to.
·
Alec Baldwin and Nicole Kidman.
Coming soon to a video store
Disney's sleeper hit "Cool Run-
On May 25, the Academy Award
near yoii...
·
·
nings" also comes
_
to video this
winning film "The Piano," starr-
"Mrs. Doubtfire," the top spring.
ing Oscar winners Holly
.
Hunter
grossing comedy of 1994, hits the
John Candy stars in this en-
and Anna Paquin, comes to home
shelves later thi!> month
.
joyable comedy about the first
video.
.
.
.
.
Robin Williams stars as Daniel
Jamaican bobsl
_
edteam to compete
hvouldn't expect this to do too
by
JENNIFER GIANDALONE
OU
·
,erwise, forget
it.
(Grade: F)
·
of summer
·
songs
the Beatles
·
influence;
·
with some
very
·
McCartney-sounding vocals
·
on a few songs.
·
.
The
.
production, by Jack Joseph
Puig (surprise!
_
he's produced
Jellyfish), is impeccable; with head-
.
phones, "Ro Sham Bo"is total ear
candy.
·
·
·
The best songs
·
are written by
Falkner, such as "Oh Well
Maybe," "Friend Of Mine," and
the first single, "Very Best Years."
·
If
-
retro with a '90s spin sounds
good, you may want to give The
Grays a listen.
.
.
.
Green Day has recently released
the Feel-Good Record Of
-
The
Year.
.
"Dookie," th~ir major~label
debut
.
for Reprise
;
features
14
songs in something like
~5
.
rriinutes.
One of the
·
:
awesomest things
about it is
.
just
·
geuing to say the
word
·
'
-
'dookie" over
.
and over.
·
Try it yourself.
If
I remembe
_
r correctly, the pop-
core
trio,
Billie Joe on
·
guitar, Tre
on drums, and
Mike
oil bass, hail
from Los of Angeles
:
What makes these guys
so
much
fun is their passion and plucky
spirit, and their pop appeal and
'
swell harmonies.
Reprise should be shot, though,
·
for releasing "Longview"
as the first video.
Not only does it have the inost
language out of all the songs on
"Dookie," but it's not even one of
the better songs on the record
;
My
,-.
faves
.
are "Burnout,"
"Welcome
ro
·
Paradise,''
'
.
'Basket
Case,'
.
'
-
and "Sassafras
:
Roots."
.
.
Enjoy
.
"I)ookie".
w
_
ith
·
a
friend .
. •
·
11
YOU
:
CAN
'
BE
-
A
.
,
·
~
-
-
..
·
·
•
.
-
STOCKBROKER
11
,
.
.,
.
.
.
.
.
.
~
Hillard, a divorcee who is limited
in the Winter Olympics.
-
much rental business, but people·
;~r~~a;;~~:;;~~:~;:;;
·
!~i1i.L~{~f
:~~:~::~:i;:::
~~~~~f!d:::~~:::.:::.::
·
..
~
as Mrs. Doubtfire and becomes his
"Ace Ventura: Pet Detective."
animated feature film becomes its
children's nanny so h
_
e can see them
Jim
.
Carrey!s brainless comedy
fast to come to video when "Snow
everyday
.
.
: ..
.
.
about the man \Vho finds the
White and the Seven Dwarfs" is
Williams is hilarious in this film
Miami Dolphins; stolen mascot is
released.
_
.·
, .
-
.
•
.
·
·
.
.
.
that should not only be rented; but
being released to video with added
On October 4, the biggest movie
.
bought and taken home.
footage that wasn't seen in the
of all time becomes th
_
e biggest
·
In May, Walt Disney pictures
theaters.
.
home video event of all time.
"
releases their first animated movie
.
I
·
can't think ofwhat could be
Steven Spielberg
'
s Academy
that goes straight
.
to video.
added, and
I
won't even fry to
.
A,vard wiimer "Jurassic Park"
will
:
This sequelto "Aladdin," the
guess what wasJeft out.
.
dominate the fall rental market
.
most successfulDisney full-length
On the
mote
serious side, Brian
Fresh off"Schindler's Lisi"
:
and
(ilm, is attempting to dominate this
Deraima's ''Carlita's y,tay" comes
"The
·
Flintstones"
.
(Spielberg's
spring's rental markeL
our way in a few weeks.
·
company Amblin Entertainment
"The Return of Jafar'
_
' brings
·
Al Pacino plays a drug dealer
produced it), Spielberg
·
stands to
·
back
all
of the original characters,
wh
_
o \van ts
.
to get out of the
mak¢ even inore money with this
but not ail of the original voices.
business after serving a prison
video release.
.
,
..
·
·
Unfortunately, the person who
term; but has a hard time doing it.
Don't expect many othefreleases
made" Aladdin" as good
·
as it was,
·
.
Does this sound a little familiar?
in September or October, though .
.
will not be returning
,
to give his
Kind of like ,"The Godfather
Other video
_
companies won't
talents to the second
film.
III,''.
don't you think?
bother
.
to compete with these two
You guessed it, Robin Williams
The only difference is that
huge movies and may rush some
is not the voice of the Genie this
.
Michael Corleone didn't go tojaiL
titles out
_
in August, or
.
hold off on
·
time around.
.
Anyway, ge~ting back to the
some releases until November.
·_
Dan Castellaneta, the voice of topic at hand; "Carlito's
·
way"
Retailers will spend their money
Homer Simpson, will take over as
was a good movie and worth the
on
·
"Jurassic Park" and "Snow
the voice of Williams' legendary
price of a rental.
White,'' and won't have much left
character.
Next on the .list is "Malice,
"
a
to stock their shelves with anything
The movie is only an hour and suspense thriller about a doctor
else.
·
-
six minutes and definitely won't be
··
the same as its
.
predecesi;or.
Just rent it before you die-hard
Disney fans buy it
.
Disney also releases the sound-
track to its upcoming movie "The
Lion King" on May 31.
With five songs by Elton John
and Oscar winner Tim Rice, it's
guaranteed to dominate the music
·
categories at next year's Academy
Awards, as well as be successful on
the charts this summer.
·
"The Lion King" is scheduled
for release on June 24.
If you want to see it before then,
Radio City Music Hall is showing
the film June 16 through June 23.
Each show is being preceded by
a rribute
to
Disney's best music
.
-
-
.
Touro
-:
LaWCenter
:
--
-
INVITiNG
-
APPLICATIONS FOR FALL-1994
-
-
-
-
.
-
-
__
.,,
_
.
-
■
CONVENIENT LOCATION
Huntington, Long Island campus
is easily reached
by
public or private
transportation
.
■
DAY AND EVENING CLASSES
Seleel e
i
ther a Full- Time Day.
Part
·
Time Day
.
or Part• Time Evening
schedule,
·
·
If
you wish to rece
i
ve admiss
i
on
materials and/or arrange lor a campus
visit. you are encouraged to contact:
Office of Admission
Jacob 0
.
Fuchsberg
law
Center
300 Nassau Road
Huntington. New York t t743
■
ACCREDITATION
The Law Center
is
F~lly
Approved
by
the American
Bar Association
.
TOURO COLLEG~
JACOB D
.
rlf
.
FUCHSBERG
~
-
Phone
(516) 421-2244
ext.
314
LAW CENTER
an alf~ive aaion /
equal
oppo,lunity inst~ution
.
.
.
.
,
A
,
~
Co~tlnental. "!e
groom
you
for
success
fromthe start
and
,
.
.
offer
YPU.
fiill
s't.ipport,
~clc\l
security &.
~~dal
~dvantages.
Otir
"Paid
Training
9>mse"
:
produces
'
prt~e~
i:esuits.
,
You
will
I
frorrian
elite
gro'\-IP
oftqp pre>ducers <>ri
·
a
one-to"<>ne basis
.c
eam
_
sal
..
_
g._
bonus while
yotjlearn.
)'ou
wlll
~
gro9.m~.fof
~t
pr~r#.ottons
Int
.
management.
You
will
have
the full
support
of
a
:
professional
team,
and:
·
·
'
·
·
·
'
··
·
·
♦
-
QJ.iallfled
Leaders
·
·
♦
Rapid
Prom~flons
,
♦
_
Profession.ii
Qffl~
,
·
♦
G,en~rous
75% Payout
•
•
3
Month
l'ralnlng
Program
.
♦
Salary
Whtie You
learn
-
♦
J~;ln a
~Inning
t~
ruid
~
a
pm,
,
()f
C>U~ ~iiccess.
We're
offering
Invitation
to
visit
us and four
our offices and speak to recent graduat
.
:w.Jlo
are
estabilsh.f
_
ng
a_
life
time
career
for themselves at
Conttnen
Broker
Dealer
Corporation.
·
♦
For
Immediate
Information
please call Michael
Hasho
at:
516-741-5400
C.NTINENTAL
BROKER DEAL.ER CORPORATION
ESTABUSHED t98Z- MEMBERS NASD- MSRB -SIPC
a.EARNING THROUGH OPPi:NllliMER &.
CO,
INC.
.
MEMBlRSN.Y.S.E.
I
,
'
!
',i
{.!
:1
I
l
I
.
THE CIRCLE, APRIL 21,
1994
3
Greeks hear story
Of
mother's loss to
hazing
by
JOHN· DOUGHERTY
president
of
Kappa. Kappa Gain-
seen him abuse alcohol before. This
Sigma Phi Epsilon and the Greek
Some hard-line greek members
Staff Writer ·
ma, hazing has no place in Greek is why she was suspicious of the ex-
Council. In order to participate in
said nothing is important enough
peath by hazing is · not
life.
,
cuse the school gave her· about a , Greek week activities new fraterni-
to break the code of secrecy. Bue,
"You could lose a person who
drinking accident and that it was no
ty and sorority members had to at-
honorable.
·
Eileen
'Stevens
_ lost her s~n
Chuck Stenzel to a hazing incident
at Alfred University in upstate New
_York. On Feb. 24, 1978, her son
was given a pint of bourbon a fifth
of wine and six-pack of b;er and
told to finish it before he got out
of the trunk of the car.
could be an asset to your sorority
one's. fault.
tend the speech by Stevens.
or fraternity," she said.
Stevens eventually got a call
After being. told by Alfred of-
from Stenzel's roommate who was
ficials that her son died from <'con-
in the fraternity that he was pledg-
suming too much alcohol,'' Stevens
ing. His roommate told Stevens
decided she· had to find out for
about the trunk incident and she
herself.
took over from there.
Stevens was told by a pathologist
Stevens has been campaigning
The members of Klan Alpine
fraternity drove around · for 45
minutes with three people in each
trunk. When they stopped the cars,
most of the boys were vomiting,
Chuck ,vas unconscious. He never
woke-up.
that her son died of acute alcohol
ever since, trying to convince
poisoning. His lungs had filled up
lawmakers and greeks that hazing
with fluid and he drowned, accor-
has no place in society. Hazing is
ding to Bruce Hornbuckle, author
illegal in 32 states, including New
of "Death By Hazing," a report
York.
published by Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Richard said Steven's speech was
Fraternity.
powerful and moving.
The pathologist said when they
"It
was great how she could
Eileen Stevens addressed the
greek organizations of Marist Col-
lege on Wednesday April
6. She
gave a speech about the events on
the night her son died.
cut Chuck's body open he could
make a powerful statement out of
smell the alcohol. His body went
a terrible tragedy," she said.
into.shock because of his lack of
Hazing can be in the form of
drinking experience.
mental or physical abuse and the
Stevens
'said
her son was not a
effects of both· are damaging.
According to Kimberly Richard,
heavy drinker and she had never
The speech was sponsored by
Student one step closer to goal
of b~coming professional writer
by
RON JOHNSON
Staff Writer
In fact, Murphy said this venture
has inspired her to submit more
work to contests and publishers.
It
was Andrea Murphy's first
Driven by this newfound sense of
time. She had never before en-
purpose Murphy said she now
countered
·
this type of experience,
writes all the time.
but once she tried it she could not
However, it takes more than
go back.
determination to be a successful
"Oh,
If
only
I
could live off do-
writer, it also requires talent.
ing this," Murphy said.
Which according to Tina Tortora,
Thanks, to her first published
vice president of Reading and
poem she is indeed one step closer
Writing Interactions, Murphy has
toward the ultimate goal of writing
plenty.
professionally.
"She pumps out metaphors like
Murphy was recently notifie_d
there's no tomorrow," Tortora
that her poem, "Father Time",
said, "I'm sure it's not the last
would appear in a collection of
thing she'll have published."
poems en tided
"A
Far Off Place."
Tortora said Murphy's abilities
·_ Publication resulted
from
Mur-
:extended beyond -the mainstream
·· phy's
setni~final placement within.
ofcollege,poetry, thus.reaching a
a co11test sponsored•· by. the · higher level.
publisher. Notification of further
·.·<'Her poems are really effective
advancement or lack thereof is still
cause most poems of people her age
pending.
are .just streaming of con~
Whether she wins the contest or
sciousness, yet she's
..
got poetry
not, Murphy said the contest as
down pat," Tortora said. ·
·
well as the·subsequenCpublication
As a· founding member and
had a
major impact on her life.
secretary for R.A. W. Interactions
· "It's very important to me
Murphy also helps others _to get
'cause I'd like to keep on writing
their poetry down pat.
·
.
ih the future," Murphy said.
"She is a wonderful person, ,vho
"Before this, I didn't know I could
really gives a lot of herselfto peo-
be published."
·
ple," Tortora said.
Murphy said that her formula
for success, which she passes on to
others, includes many revisions and
personal reflection.
"You have to have your own
voice, "'Murphy said. "One great
way to do this is to revise, to be
succinct. It's good to go over it
again and again, until each word is
in its proper place.
"I see what people write and
myself, and you know everyone
draws themes from their life."
One theme that Murphy has ex-
tracted from her life, is the impor-
tance of time. Murphy said time
has become doubly important to
her following the death of her
. father last 'year. ·
·
·
"A
lot of the poetry
I
wrote was
'about him," Murphy said.
She said her viewpoint of time
has become a bit more complex
than most people.
"I
see time as a constraint like
a drug and people are like, addicted
to it," Murphy said, "I know, I am
definitely a time junkie."
Murphy is quick to note her
work is filled with the influences of
other writers, She states that she
appreciates the style of Emily
Dickinson.
Scott Haywood, a member of
. Tau Kappa Epsilon and Greek
Council, said new members are
who keep the fraternity alive.
"You have to evaluate what you
are doing," Haywood said. "New
members are the life blood of the
fraternity." He said it's important
for the new members to carry on
the un-tarnished tradition of
brotherhood and they must do this
by example.
Members of greek organizations
and Stevens said they find the issue
of secrecy of fraternity initiation
difficult to discuss. Some op-
ponents have argued for the right
to keep the secrecy intact.
Haywood and Richard said thev
don't feel that mood ·exists a't
Marist.
Hazing is an issue that manv
people like to avoid because of th~
brutality of it. Doing calisthenics in
a sauna with heavy clothing on be-
ing passed around in a circle d;unk
and "trunk drinking" are only
a
few of the potentially dangerous
activities involved in the pledging
process.
According
to
Steve Sansola,
assistant dean for activities and
housing, Marist handles any pro-
blems with the Greek organizations
internally. He declined to comment
on to what extent Marist has had
to deal with such hazing events.
HOlocaust awareness includes
•
•
film
by
JEANINNE AVILES
.
.
_AND
.
PATfUCIA SMITH'.'POMALES
· Staff Writers
Two of Oskar Schindler's
rescued victims came to Marist
campus on April 11 to tell students
of their personal experiences dur-
ing · the period known as the
Holocaust.
"I
am a Holocaust survivor,"
said
Helen Beck, a victim who lost
her four brothers and two sisters in
concentration camps.
Because there are very few peo-
ple who lived through this time,
Mrs.
Beck wants to "remind the
world of what happened during the
20th century."
Mrs. Beck worked with one of
her sisters· in a camp as "cheap
labor" making marble tombstones
before she was called to Schindler's
factory.
Beck lives with her husband
Kuba in Poughkeepsie and they
both frequently lecture at high
schools, churches, and colleges
about the horrors they witnessed in
concentration camps.
Kuba Beck was 17 when World
War II began, living with his two
brothers and his parents, when one
day he came home to an empty
house.
· "The Nazis decided to make a
•selection, and my family was
selected," he said. He never saw his
\
\
\
surv1v1ors,
family again. Kuba worked as a
machinist in the labor camps and
was sent to Schindler's factory in
. 1943 .. ·
.
,"I
don't know why my-name
came up," he said. When he was
being moved, h,e said_ he thought he
would be killed..
.
During this process of selection,
the Nazis would take many . of
the
Jews and shoot them. "We
lived from hour to hour,'' he said.
"Thereare no words to describe
the daily routines and what we
questions from the audience and
there were readings and poems read
by members of Marist Theatre.
Violinist Rudolph Efram finish-
ed with a solo, followed by a clos-
ing prayer by Father Luke
Mccann.
Meanwhile, Marist scheduled
events for Holocaust Awareness
Week and last Monday a group of
students and staff from the media
center presented a documentary of
· reactions
by
students
to
"Schindler's List."
faculty, and staff with actual
footage of the movie which was
provided by Universal Pictures .
Susanne Yanusz, Allison Martin,
and Margo Campbell were the stu-
dent interviewers for the documen-
tary while Theresa Hardaway and
Ed
Strother
handled
the
cinematography.
"The students put a lot of effort
into the project," Lawler said.
"They have to do their own
research and then get reactions
from their peers."
"I
was greatly moved to stand in the presence of two people who went
· through this terrible torment through a time that people today are still
saying never existed. "
witnessed," Mrs. Beck said, telling
how Nazi soldiers performed hor-
rors "just because they had fun do-
ing so."
"Remembering is a human
necessity," said Brother Joseph
Belanger, who told the audience
that the Holocaust is not necessari-
ly a Jewish problem but a Christian
one as well.
"I
was greatly moved to stand in
the presence of two people who
went through this terrible torment
through a time that people today
are still saying never existed,'' said
Ben Diamant, a Computer Infor-
mation Systems professor.
The Becks stayed to answer
- Ben Diamant, professor of CIS
The powerful movie became the
focus of this year's Holocaust
Awareness Week.
Janet Lawler, the Media Center
AV /TV operation manger and
editor and producer of the
documentary, said it is basically a
reaction to the film.
"Students commented on scenes
they found most powerful; if they
knew much about the holocaust
before seeing the film;
if
they knew
who Oskar Schindler was,'' said
Lawler. "Just a general review
moved them most from the
movie."
The documentary is a combina-
tion of reactions from students,
The creators went throughout
campus and asked students, facul-
ty, and staff who had seen the film
three questions:
who
was
Schindler, what was the most
memorable scene in Schindler's
List, and why did Schindler risk his
life to save others?
The responses varied, yet there
was one unifying feeling: it was an
extremely powerful and touching
film.
"I was sort of shocked when
asking people around campus
about the responses," said junior
Susanne Yanusz, who talked to
students.
"It
seems as though hard-
ly anyone has seen the film."
Lawler intends to continue the
struggle for awareness even after
Holocaust Awareness Week is'
over.
"We're also trying to get a group
showing of the movie (Schindlcr's
List) locally," Lawler said.
According to Lawler, Steve San-
sola in activities plans on setting up
transportation so students will be
able to get into a private showing
of the movie as a community.
Lawler said she is adamant about
Holocaust awareness because to-
day's generation really doesn't
know much about it except what
they read in a couple of historv
books.
·
"If
they (the new generation) get
to actually hear survivors in person
speak about what happened and
they see this film, I think they'll get
a pretty good idea of what really
happened.
"It's also just important to let
students know it could happen
again and it can happen to any kind
of religion or group. We see
it
every
day today; just not on such a
scale."
A copy of the documentary can
be found in the library for any
students who may be interested.
t
t
I
i
4
. -
THE CIRCLE,
·
·APRIL2.1,
1994
:.
Frosh Often Unprepared
ror
Marist
.
exJ)eri~h<±¢.
>
.
-·
ning i~
_
not necessarily from a
·
text
..
tion, ''
.
said
.
.
fresh
.
jnan
··
Angela
.
·
.
in the c;ifcteria, nor did
_
l
expect t
.
o
·
year
.
_"
~nd
•
.
srn
.
ile
.-
:.
~~~
,
e
.
\y
ill
/
etn
·
by
'
JENNIFER FO~DE
book.
.
.
.
·
·
Romeo,Jrom.Onconta! N
.
Y~
"~en
·
.
.
.
be cursed at by
·.
the cafet~n~
:
la~fh out loµd
_
~t
.
t
..
eirc1:~cc1P.a
.
e~ ..
Staff Writer
''In freshman year, you learn a
years from now, I'll still be paying
workers because l was upset by 1t,
We learn~~no~ to dnnkb~
,
~r.m
lot about patience and ~ole~ance.
·
off those student loans."
. .
said freshman
J0Am1
Piczzo,
from
the elevator,
·
said
-
D~Bett~f
~~~
,
Many high school seniors
·
who
have been accepted to and plan to
attend Marist hold many expecta-
tions as the first year of college rolls
around.
For
·
many, these expectations
will be met and surpassed. For
others, the future may not be as
bright as it seems.
Stephanie Poggi, assistant
residence director of Leo Halli
al\d
Wendy Fell, resident assistant for
Leo, are both seniors who have
worked with a lot of freshmen in
the past few years.
Poggi and Fell said they agree
that freshman year is a huge learn-
ing experience, although the !ear-
You really learn m
·
ore
·
about
"I expected to
:
become -more
Westerly,
R.t
"Perl~~us the lack of
freshma~ pal Jf-e!ly \Y~ls~i ..
_
r'?1!1 ·
yourself than about academics,"
mature
,
" said
·
freshman
.
Deb
.
respect that we rece1vt!(,is students
Marl ton,
N!
:
•
.
.Ii
s al~3dot
,
~~~.t.
said Poggi.
DeBetta, from Levittown, NY.
is the
r
eason some students ~on't
to
~e runm~g
up
~n
..
own re
"A lot of students come to col-
"But I think I've gotten worse
.
"
return after freshman year.'
Residence Direct~;
.
~ floor ye!lmg
lege expecting to learn a1?out the
"I was just trying to get out of
Fell said she beljeves that so~e
to,~n_d
•
a fu~m
;
L
.
. ·
·
.
·
·
·
'
real world,
but college 1s really
the house," said
.
Noel Griffen,
·
a
freshmen do not return to Manst
. .
. Like
I
said!
Y?,U
le_arn a lo~ that
more of a transition that teaches
freshman from Bronx, NY. "So
for their sophomore year because
1s not academic,
·
sa~d Poggi .
..
them about themselves," said Fell.
was my friend, but he felt like his
it ,vas not really their choice to
However some
.
th_mgs of
.
real
Many students look f~rward to
mother came with him with all the
come here in the first place.
value are learned durmg freshman
their first year at college as a real
security around here."
·
"A
,
lot offreshmen
·
come here
year.
.
. .
·
·.
:
·.
·
,
chance to be on their own for the
First year students are also fac-
because a friend is coming too or
.
"I
:
didn't expect to form such
first time .
.
However, some of this
ed with some situations that they
because their parents wanted them
strong relationships with ~he 1_>eo-
·
year's freshmen have found that
never expected. Some complained
to," said Felt "They come here to
ple here," said
_
Walsh.
,"
But since
being on your own is not always as
that they still didn't have enough
please someone else and then they
we livelogether and see each other
glorious as it may seem
.
freedom. Others felt that they were
realize that Marist really is not
every day, we've become
_
like a big
"l
expected complete freedom,
often treate
.
d disrespectfully by
what they wanted for themselves."
'
family
.
I
think the friendshipsl've
but I've found that you're never
some college employees
.
However
,
some students will be
made here are really going to last."
completely free from college tui-
"I
didn
'
t expect to find a mole
able to look back on their freshman
Earth Day-:--f ood, fun and music
··
.
Jill
<t
'ITW '~ IP&@
~l1&[il}w:ifim
~
.
.
-
~I})J1fi~~
u
~~41
:
by
TOM QUINLAN
Staff Writer
The Student Programming
Council (SPC) and Students En-
couraging Global
.
Awareness
(S.E.G.A.) will be hosting Earth
Day activities on April 30 in the
Champagnat mall.
The activities will start at 11 a
.
m.
and continue throughout the day.
There
will
be music, games, and in-
formation on environmental issues
·
for students at the festivities.
"Signs of Life, Sally Mudball,
and a steel-drum band will provide
the musical entertainment, and T-
Bone Stankus
will
·
be the MC,"
said Lynn Russo, vice president of
-
the SPC.
Most of the activities
will
be free
for Marist students
,
however there
will be a dunking booth which
students will need to pay a small
fee
to soak someone. According
,
to
Russo
,
the people in the dunking
GO
A.S.E.
CERTIFIED
booths
will
be ordinary students, as
opposed
.
to having
,
the chance
.
to
dunk a professor
or a
resident assis-
tant. "Some of the activities will in-
clude a moon-walk, speed pitching,
.
and human bowling, which wili be
free to the students," Russo said.
In addition to the music and
games available to the students,
there will be vendors
,
face painting,
caricature artist~d food.
"We are really hoping for a Jot
of people to come out because it is
going to be a really good time,"
said Patricia Clark
,
publicity of-
ficer of the SPC. "There will be a
barbecue and about five or six
events." These events are being
held in honor of Earth Day, and
there will be plenty of information
regarding the conditions of the en-
the event to speak,
.
arid also
members of S.E.G.A
.
.
will be
reading other environmental infor
-
mation that we have received for
the students," saicl Aaron
Astorino, vice president of student
life.
According
to
Astorino,
S
.
E.G
.
A. has sent away for and
received information from various
environmental
organizations
around the
-
country which the
students attending the lectures will
find interesting.
Astorino said other clubs on
campus su
_
ch as Amnesty Interna-
tional would also be providing in-
formation for the students during
the activities on Earth Day
.
VCR4
VCRl
VCR2
VCR3
VCRl
VCR2
VCR3
VCRi
VCR2
7:30-8
:
00
IO
VCR4
VCR4
VCRl
VCR4
VCR2
VCR4
VCR4
WEEKDAY LINE-UP
6
:
00 AM
to
9:00 AM
9
:
00 AM
to
10:00
AM
10
:
00 AM
to
12:00 PM
12:00 PM to 12:30 PM
12:30 PM
to
l :00 PM
1 :00 PM
to
3:00 PM
3
:
00 PM
to
3:30
PM
.
3:30 PM
to
S:30 PM
S:30 PM
to
7:30 PM
8:00 PM to 10
:
00 PM
.
10
:
00PMto 12:00AM
12:00 PM
to
6:00 AM
.
STATION ID
FOX FITNESS
SPORTS
"BACKTALK"
·
"ONE-ON.ONE" - OR - "PRESS BOX"
MCTVS GREATEST HI'FS
"CONVERSATION"
SPECIALS
NEWS
MOVIEl
·
MOVIE2
STATIONID
·
WEEKEND LINE-UP
9:00 AM
to
12:00 PM
12:00 PM
to
2:00 PM
2:00 PM
10
5:00 PM
S:00 PM
10
7:00 PM
7
:
00PM'to 8
:
00PM
.
8:00 PM
to
10:00 PM
·
l 0:00 PM
to
12:00 PM
·
12:00 PM
to
6:00 AM
•
.
·
STATIONID
SPORTS 1
STATIONID
SPORTS2
STATION ID
MOVIEl
MOVIE2
·
.
STATIONID
.
.
vironment throughout the after-
noon
.
"We are going to provide
environmental facts for the
students throughJocal environme11~
.
tal groups ihat \~i!l
,
be coming to
"People should come out for.the
day b
e
cause it will be a fun time
,
"
Astorino said; "There
will
be lec-
tures and
a.
lot of activities for peoa
Any suggestlonsfor or questions about programming, call MCT at X2423.
.
·
.
,
Any questions regarding the evening movies call X3279 •
.
pie
to
participate in."
.
.
.
YOUR COMPLETE TIRE AND SERVICECENTER
North
.
Road
-·
·
471-8255
·
.
·
·
256 North Road, J.>oughkeepsie
..
(O:pp6s
_
ite
St.
Francii
Hospital)
Formerly RC>ckland
Tire
.
Official N.Y.S.
l~sp~ction Stat,on
.-~···----·~~··~~~-··-~·---·-~·~~~·~~~~··~········~~
I
.
.
.
.
. .
.
.
·
·
•
.
. ..
.
.
.
.
.
.
. · ..
.
•
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
:
·
·
AFTER A HARSH
>
WINTER,
·
.
!
:
Co
,
me in· for a
FREE
s_a
·
tety
·
check.
:
_
:
·
I
.
.
.
-
•
We'll che
·
ck:
:
I
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
I
: . Suspension
--
•
.
Brakes • Tires • Dr
.
ive
.
Train
-
·
,
·
etc.
.
:
···-·-·········-·-···-··-
-
-•-
.
•··------·-···--··--····
·····-··-··--··----····-··--···--·-·-·-··-----·---··
I
.
.
·•
.
.
:
.
FREE ALIGNMENT
!
I
I
:
w/purchase of
2
or more Tires,
:
I
I
!
.
Cooper, Goodyeat
:
.
I
·-----·-------·----·-··-·-·-·----·--··-··--·-··-····
.
THE
.
CIRCLE,
_
.
FEATURE
.
.
APRIL 21,
1994
5
Freshman Hudson comes to the
Huds
.
on
to
play softball at Matist
by
SCOTT RONAGHAN.
pitches, which includes a screwball;
athletes who have difficultv ad-
.
slider, change-up, and rise ball.
.
justing not only to the level
of
com-
Staff Writer
"Michelle is a very smart pitcher
petition, but the college at-
.
because
.
she thinks about each pitch
.
mosphere as well, Hudson said she
One of the maJ·or factors mak-
.
carefully,'' Degatano said; '
.
'She is
had little difficulty adapting to her
ing the softball team contenders in
.
.
.
a professional kind of pitcher; very
new situation.
th: Northeast Conference is the pit-
·
down-to business when she is out
C'My first semester at school
chmg they are receiving from
on the mound."
took some getting used to, but the
Michelle Hudson.
.
·
Hudson said her best pitch is her
.
res. t of the players on the team were
·
Hudson, who hails from s
·
a
·
n
.
·
..
.
·
.
screwball, which she
·
is able to
real friendly, and let the younger
Diego, CA, is having a phenomenal
move inside and out on the batters.
players feel welcome," Hudson
season. As of
·
April 10;
·
the
"I don't throw the fastball that
said:
fres
_
hman
·
hurler had thrown two
h
I
·
h
1
·
h
muc , so
·
ave to re y on t e
Patricia Southworth, senior co-
no-hitters against Northeast Con-
screwball
to
be effective," said
captain and pitcher, said Hudson
ference rival Long Island Univer-
Hudson.
.
fit right in with the rest of the
"M11nicipal Bondage" a tale
for the Renaissance Man
Truth is stranger than fiction.
Just look at Congress.
Select any street in New York Ci-
ty,
ANY.
Chances are an excursion down
one of those roads will provide an
eyeful of eccentric musings.
Jerry Seinfeld has made a career
out of it, Henry Alford has made
a book of it.
"Municipal Bondage; One
and potato chips.
He received the chips a week
later.
Between trips to clown school or
working as a motorpool driver for
the Democratic National Conven-
tion, Alford exits his psychic con-
finement by asking "what if. .. "
What if the Pope was a dog?
What if the Bronte Sisters had
:,een
.
a heavy metal band?
What if your mother lived at the
Between the Lines
sity, and compiled a 8-1 record with
As for
.
the no-hitters, they are
pla·yers on the team
1
·40 ERA~
h
1
d
·
'Man'• Anx1·ety-Produc1·ng Adven-
Playboy mansion?
a
·
,or t e
4-7
Re Foxes.
·
·
nothing
··
hew to
··
·
Hudson. As a
"Everyone on our team gets
.,
She was also named Northeast
·
tures in the Big City" (Random
Or, What if the cast of "The
C
f
P
. h
f
.
k
seriior at
-
Madison
High
School,
alongwitheachotherreallywell," House,
$lB,
231 pgs) not
·
onl_v
McLaughlin Group" were Jiving
on erence ltc er
O
the Wee
Hudson threw
·
seven no-hitters and
Southworth said. "Michelle fit in satisfies the Curious George •in all
inside your bathroom? (This is a
for the week of March 28 to April
compiled a 19-3 record with a 0.20
with the team right from the start "
·
4.
'
ERA.
·
of us, but the Three Stooges as
can't miss lmgering, worth the
B
"Michelle came in with a team well.
price of the book.)
ased on her performance so far
Hudson said she is not concen-
con
t
d
·ir
t
h I th
'
this season, the rookie pitcher
.
does
·
cep an wi mg
O
e P
e
Bluntly, it is The Jerky Boys for
Alford's success with such
trating on her personal statistics for
team any way she could She ·1s a
·
d
not seem to be having a hard time
·
those who have passed puberty.
matenal pro uces the question,
adJ·usting to the college level of
the year, but rather striving at help-
real team player, which is just how
Alford, in short, who admits
why "Saturday Night Live" has
play.
ing the teani go as far as they
you want a freshman to come in
that his behavior, chronicled
falleri so deep into the doldrums
"The one thing l have noticed
possibly can.
.
like," Degatano said.
with material this good so close to
b
.
11
"In order to get to the NCAA
The freshman pitcher said hav-
their fingertips.
a out co ege softball is that
Tournament we have to w1·n the 1·ng
f
·1 o t h
-
th E
everyone
l
·s more
·
aggre
·
ssx·ve,
ami
Y
u
ere m
e ast•
Is there anything less interesting
.
Northeast Conference Tournament which was the main reason Hudson
in the city than the current SNL
especially defensively," Hudsori
first.
I
t
·
h1"nk o
·
ur
·
team has
·
a good
·
t M ·
I
d ·
·
.d
came o
anst, a so ma e 1t easier
cast?
(I
now digress)
saiA. f
chance because
·
we still haven't
for her to get used to her new
Along his way, Alford has held
·
·
s or the offensive part of the
1
d
·
b t
ftb
II
t "
"d
t
h
·
game, Hudson
·has
shown she can
~~~eso~.ur es so
a ye , sa1
a mosp ere.
every odd job from psychic friend
k
.
f
Keeping her current success in
to cement mason and taken every
ta e care o the opposing hitters.
D
·1
th
t
h"
·
·
H d
·
espt e
e recen coac mg proper perspective,
u son said
civil service test in between.
In 58 innings pitched, the freshman
situation distraction
·
s, Hudson said she real"zes sh · onl
f
h
h
I •
.
1
e 1s
Y a res man
Toll taker, r1·sk maker, sub•·vay
as
on y given up nine earned runs,
th t
· d
·
J t b tt
d
·11 h
·
•
while striking out 50 and walking
ch!t :~:y
1
~hi~gmfsase~led~ er now an
st1
fahs to improve on some
maintainer, and general peruser of
only four.
aspects
O
er game.
German classified advertisements,
"The team is really happy with
Hudson modestly attributes her
the coaches now' and are playing
"I need to be able to get the ball
herein, exhibits a more-than-
searching for meaning and help
success to her ability to set up the
a lot better than we ever were,,,
to move inside and outside better.
occasional Jack of decorum, takes moving newspapers and setting
opposing hitters.
Hudson said.
I
also need to geLstronger, so
I
what Dave Lettermen's writers glue traps in hard to reach places.
"I try to set up the hitters the
Although Hudson is having an have been lifting weights to help conjure and puts it into practice on
He even crashed the fifth annual
best I can. I'm not overpowering,
extraordinary year, she said the
with that," Hudson said.
a daily basis.
World of Poetry convention pen-
so I have to outsmart t
.
he hitters;''
play
.·
of
·
her teammates are
·
what
.
Although she probably will not
Dave just has more money.
ning the verse -
''
1
am in the Egg;
Hudson said.
·
wins ball games.
.
admit it, whether or not Marist
A strong case could be made for Hello? Hello?"
(l
am yolknes
5
/l
Hudson's
·
battery
mate,
-·
"Our hitting has been great, and
softball continues to have a great Alford as comedy's Renaissance amAolff ydo\k/Ybo~ks ftohr
sa\e)t
1
·
· ·
p
·
h
.
·
-
·
t h
·
A gel a
·
.-
t
..
•
1
·
.
.
.
Ma
·th
th t
1
,
or com mes e rare a ents
so
omore
-
cac er
,
•
•
n
-
·
'he
defense
·
makes all the pays
·
-
0
seasonwdldependonthenghtarm·
·
... ·
_
n,
_
,
e,_ er a
.
oran
.
ernpoy_er..s
.
,
..
.
r •
.
.
:
,
·
-
-
•
,
·
d
•
Degatario, has the privilege of cat-
b h.
·
d h
. h
.
,, H. d
·ct
f f
h
h
M" h
11
worst mghtmare
o
sarcasm, smcenty,
an
senous
.
h
.
e
m
t e p1tc ers,
._
u son sa1 .
o
res man p enom,
1c e e
.
.
.·
.
.
·
fun
into an entertaining
1
·aunt
chmg t e fres
_
hman's repertoire of
un
·
1·k
th
JI
Hud on
To sample his resume·
.
1 e many o er co ege
s ·
.
·
through the underbelly of the
A Wilfred Beauty Academy-
,
.
.
Politicians amo~g those most
likely
·
to commit stupid crimes
:
I have a theory that our leaders
that no Canadian company could
inspire our behavior.
do the job on short notice.
PoliticaHigures should be role
.·
Hose-her
.
models, instead they lead the pack
:
":
.
/
A Lakewood woman trying to
of stupidity.
_
.
·
·
put out a kitchen grease fire set her
The CQQlic strip
HShoe''.·
·
may
- .•
en.,ti!e house ablaze when she threw
.
have put it
·
best
:
· ·
·
·
·
the flaming pan out the window
.
When
-
the local senator was ask-
·
arid ignited a roof overhang.
ed if he had a good time at his big
Taking a byte out of crime
fund raiser, the senator replied, "I
In Houston, computer enthusiast
must have. They've appointed a
Sh~wn Kevin Quinn,
17,
pleaded
special prosecutor."
works in a mask, colorful tights,
and a cape under the name Super
Animal, has taken to charging in-
to Mexico City slaughterhouses in
costume to challenge workers to
treat animals humanely
.
Said one
worker, "We just.wish he would
fOme in
.
a respectable suit."
:Another
costumed wrestler, Super
Barrio, similarly defends tenants'
rights and works in AIDS
accredited cosmetologist.
worl?
~
most _d1~erse ec~system,
The creator of the snack food
provtdmg a pamtmg that nvals the
NUBBINS.
character of a Norma!1 R~ckwell
Professional earlobe model.
frame fro_m a weat,~ermg Satur-
Proprietor of a Greenwich
day Evemng P?st.
Village dog salon called RUFF
.
A rea~er can ~.help b~t c~!11e up
TRADE.
with the~r own What ifs_
What 1f Mayor McCheese penn-
ed a tell-all
autobiography?
One glance and it is certain that
nuance was never a problem for
Alford_
For his factual soirees, Alford
prefers to call himself an in-
vestigative journalist, obsessed with
the sublime, ridiculous, and insane .
.
He's hired nude housekeepers,
taken dog-grooming examinations,
and self-registered as a single at
Bloomingdale's bridal registry.
Maybe take a week off from
work to fulfill the childhood fan-
tasy of working for a chinese dry
cleaner to see what really goes on
in the steaming room.
Fly to Aruba as
a
professional
Calypso dancer.
"
The perks of politics
:
.
Former Oklahoma Rep
;
Kenneth
Converse testified in July that he
had witnessed Gov. David Walters,
when Walters was a candidate for
goxernor in I 990, promise a state
j<>b
to
someone in exchange for a
$5,000
contribution. Converse said
he told the grand jury that what
Walters did
was
"highly unethical.
·
l.Jsually you have someone else do
it for you."
His list of desirables: one white
:.
<
.
::'
:•
:
_,
=i::h
:
e
-
.·
,
.
w
...
0-
.
r
,
.
ld"
o
.
u
.
t
.
The
'
re
plastic mug, (?':?o?'t
~OU
have
___ ;...±.-.~_=:A.:=_K........;~~~~~~-~~~.!:...-~~~~~!.--~lanyone
over.
·
. •
Jnqmres
,
the
Based on two principles, what
can one do to add spice to life, and
is
it cheap provide springboards for
mayhem.
Matt Martin
.
is The Circle's
·
Feature Editor
·
Waste not, want not
The White House spent $60,000
· to print 14,000copies of Vice Presi-
·
dent Al Gore's report on making
· government more efficient.
If
the
National Performance Review
pamphlet had followed govern-
ment regulations in not using top-
grade paper, a multicolored layout
and slick graphics, according to
House minority leader Robert
Mickel (R-Ill.), it would have cost
only $15,000.
Government at its best
Michael Balagus, director of
communications for the leader of
Canada's New Democratic Party,
resigned after the disclosure that he
used a
U.S.
finn
to
produce a video
criticizing the Canadian govern-
inent
·
for exporting jobs to the
United States.· Balagus explained
that he hired a Washington,
D.C.,
firm to make the $535,090, six-
minute video because he believed
no contestto
a
'd_t
_
arge t)Jat he
,
hacl education.
.
tried to hire
,
a hit-man/for
:
$5.30
'.
Adams Family Values
and seven compu
'
ter games;
'
to
•
kiii
Ronald Raymond Carr, 37, was
the boyfrien of a girl he had a crush given a suspended sentence in Nor-
on.
-·
He wasJined $500, received
,
10
.
walk, Calif.
}·
in October to the
.
years probation
.,
arid was ord~r~ ~o
·
·
·
(;barge o(furnishing drugs to a
reduce his -daily computing ·time minor. He had admitted to giving
from eight hours to
90
minutes:
his daughter methamphetamines
as
The rite stuff
often as twice a day when she was
An airport police · officer
.
at age
11,
12, and
13
so that he would
Washington National Airport, in-
have company while he did drugs.
vestigating a report_of a fire, found
Musta been a hell of a pen
a burning shoe box containing a
Thom!!,S Joseph Cummings, 24,
mouse, a banana peel and a con-
shot himself to death in August in
tainer of lighter fluid. Standing
Norfolk
Va., with police closing in
beside the box was James E.
on him, five hours after he had kill-
Mercer,
44,
who explained that he
ed a man in a doughnut shop in
started the fire for religious
Severna Park, Md. Cummings had
reasons.
borrowed the 21-year-old victim's
Anti-criminals
inexpensive ballpoint pen five times
In Mebane, N.C., in August, a
to make notes, returning it each
man reported that someone stole
time, and finally offered to buy it
his dog from his backyard but left
for $2. When the owner declined
another one in its place. Also that
because the pen had sentimental
month, in King, N.C., Steve Szabo
value, an insistent Cummings pull-
reported that someone broke into
ed out a 9mm handgun and shot
his house, took his VCR and 15
him five times.
tapes, and ·took 34 comic books
I'm
150 hungry I could eat a •••
from his collection and replaced
In September, Richard Ramirez,
them with 34 others.
the notorious "Night Stalker"
Caped crusaders
mass murderer, failed a mental
Cox News Service reported in
detector test at San Francisco
August that Mexican profassional
County jail, and X-rays detected
wrestler Gerardo Palomero, who
items in his rectum. A subsequent
saleswoman. Garfield under ants
·
stoolse;rch'~evealed a small hand-
cuff key, all empty syringe; the cap
of a pen, and a small piece of
cellophane on which was printed "I
like chocolate."
Ring it up
In separate incidents in March,
police in Washington D.C., and
South San Francisco, Calif., ar-
rested men they encountered run-
ning down the street ~vho aroused
suspicion because they happened to
be carrying cash registers. One was
charged with robbing a conve-
nience store and the other with
burglarizing a bakery.
Can we have a
secluded cell in the
back?
The "Salt Lake City Tribune"
reported in December that police
officer N.S. Hall had recently ar-
rested two men for engaging in sex
in a car in Ogden, Utah, and had
taken them to a police station. Due
to a miscommunication at the sta-
tion, the men were locked in the
same cell, and immediately began
having sex again.
Cough it up
In July, a 17-year-old boy, sitting
alone on some steps in Manchester,
N.H.,
was approached by a police
officer on patrol who wanted to
stop and chat_ According to the of-
ficer, the boy evaded several ques-
tions and then began coughing
violently. As the officer rubbed his
back to ease the coughing, the boy
finally spat out $200 worth of co-
caine that he had swallowed when
he saw the officer approaching.
They needed change
for
Disney World
In Orlando, Fla., three men us-
ed a blowtorch to break into an ar-
mored truck and steal 400,000
quarters while the driver was asleep
in the cab. Secret Service agents
who arrested the thieves said they
were puzzled
as
to how they carried
out bags of quarters weighing 2
tons without waking the driver.
STATS
* Federal funds spent last year to
study the sexual habits of the
Japanese quail: $29,534.
*
Hours the average Chinese
worker must work to
earn
the price
of an ice-cream cone at Bejing's
new Baskin-Robbins:
7.
*
Number of words in the new
"Shorter Oxford English Dic-
tionary" that are Japanese: 2,500.
Matt Martin
is
The Circle's
Feature Editor.
His
name in
Japanese is .
!
6
~1:C1RCLE,)Eb1TdR1~t ..
A;:,L21•~!!94
,
'
'
'
.
'
'
..
'
.
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
,
, ,
'
'
'
,
,
THE CIRCLE
MARISTCOLLEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE, NY 12601
T"E ST<li)ENT NEWSPfl_,Elt
S.J. Richard,
editor
Ted Holmlund,
:,po;ts editor
Carl Oleskewicz,
managing editor
_ Julie Martln,
senior editor
Kristina Wells,
associate editor
Justin Seremet,
'assistant editor
Teri L. Stewart,
editorial page editor
James Hocking,
distribution manager
Matt
Martin,feature edhor
Andre'!'. Holmlund;
associate editor
Dana Buoniconti,
columns editor
Meredith Kennedy,
associate editor
Jennifer Ponzfnl,
advertising manager
Dennis Gildea,
faculty advisor
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
No frills
·'N\JMTb[K,OrJE
A50
u. i-
~Ii
t:
C,-.fl2-CL
€:
'
,
-
~
.:r
T.
::r...
'°\'E'
W.At.~i~.
fof..
trv,ft.
~•R
'
-:.
A 1'1,<.,--,tr»'
•
M,W
tJOT E
'fo
R.t)
b
E:
I< :
ALL
HJ Fol
fYJATloN
I<;
gA>~t
OIJ
I\EJtlY
M>,V-SCIHtTif:rc
foll
s
She's trying prose
He's attemtping
humor:_
Marist's 48th Commencement ceremony will be memorable.
·
As I sit here for yet another week, placed
·
·
, · · ·
Except for the speaker, that is. There isn't one.
between th.e two most morbid columns in this
Once upon a
,
time, .la
5
l·,
Saturday night,
·
1
d
b
h
I h
1
there. wa. s a liberal columnis. t.,'a
.. ·p' ar. ty a.nd,
This is the best advancement in commencement exercises ever, though.
paper, pon er a out w at· s ou d write
about.
of course, there was a fight. ,
. . .
Marist is truly on the cutting edge here.
. .
If
you want to hear about all the expecta-
, As· I stepped to the balcony to get some
Think about it, remove the time taken to introduce, wait for applause,
t1ons of the new student body president look fresh air, I was cornered by a Republican
end the speech, applause again, and you have shortened graduation by
to your right.
If
you want to hear the ~eek-
who didn't have a care.
,
·at, least an hour.
.
ly "bitch" session about all the "terrible"
'I know you,' he said with a smile. 'You
th.
M ·
l k
were on that debate. Your behavior quite
What has the Class of 1994 done to deserve a commencement speaker
mgs at
anst;
00
to your left.
It
is so boring to me to read the same ar-
vile.'
·
anyway?
tides every week. Ok, the words get chang-
'That was me,' I said and braced for the
The class had the audacity to feel slighted when the phone system was
ed around but the jist of both columnists is '.Horst. 'Andwhatever you're thinking
I
can't
installed in the dorms. They were told no phones were part of the
the same every week.
be coerced.'
-·,
·.
-
<
· '.
"freshman experience." Being a frosh iri 1991 is different from being
.
So, it is myjob to either add humor or ac-
'Oh it
was
fine,' he said with a coriser-
tual ·1·ns·ght t
h t · h ·
·
,
·
.
v. a .. tive.·.ton.e. 'Because I; of course, was sup-
one in' 1990. Apparently they didn't read the mem· o.
:
1
0
w
a is appemng around the
,
world and
h
· · , , ·
· ·
porting Anthony Mignone.'
. ,
,
They had theunmitigated gall to whine when their parking was taken
,,,·Ther~we~:e:o ii~i:~~tifthJthappen-
With
that the ,conver:sationtook quite
a
away_. Once again, they
did not take change well.
.·
.. ..
(;!d last week that almost seem poihtless t<> tum,
frOill
SGAelectionsto social concerns.
Some-where they began.to. turn
it around.''The
_first
sparks of enlighten-
·.·
mimtion oecause it.was a week ago, btfrsince ,:,; ,He_ tens me)he.homeless- au. want to. be.,.
ment could be seen when they were awarded Class
of
the Y ear'in 1993. :,
most of you• do not: read newspapers'.or
.
th
ere;_'.fhey're drunk a
ndth
ey'fo
1
~
getting?~'"'' -
Now, they are ready.
·
.·,
wat~h CNN; this might be a good catch..'up" :many<a'. glare. · · ... · . ,
:
.
i
.·
·
,, .
·
. •
•·
session
,
, Of those who steal and rob, well there's
Deprived and emaciated of privileges, they welcome the challenge of ,_
Lt~irik the oply word th~t could possibly simply no excuse_;They should be-out
work~.:'- .
braving commencement without the oh-so-relevant words of, a respected
descnbe the.UrutedStates AirForC(! shooting • iiig
~
notdrinkirig
up
liooi~. •
.. '• .. •-
,t
J
\
individual with wisdom to im. part . . . ·.
·. ·'.
.
.
·. .
do_wn
,
an American helico.Pt.er would. be; . /'Andthos.eonwelfai'~he.couldgo
·
onabout.
·
·
,
t
h
'fofever;He'll
never'feel bad for them. Never.
They
will
suffer stoically through the banal dissertations of those ad.:
ngger- appy ·
· . .
<
i< .,·
.
. · .....
ministrators with whom they .have so. much.in common-,-namelya Marist
College parking sticker and perhaps (for those more liberal authorities)
a T-shirt with the Marist logo~
.·.
_
After all what do seniors really want?. ,,· Aclassy ceremony worthy
of the hard work, endless homs and colossatamounts of money they
, have poured into this institution of higher education?
Hell no. They wan(put.It's that simple. • ·
.
While we're economizing on time for the exercises, why even call each
g:raduate up individually? Why notjust say: "All rise.
If you paid your
bills, you ca.ri go. Hnot, seethe business officein Donnelly, then go."
That's· professional.
It's time to thank all the little people who made this possible.
Let's have a rousing round of applause for Shaileen Kopec for all the
hard work she's
'putin
on this endeavor. Why the Class officers must
be beside themselves with gratitude for being excluded from this obviously ·
arduous process.
'
,
Of course, she is not alone in this innovative programforgraduation.
Still her uninformative ,,style should not go without commendation.
However, for those seniors who are so obstinate to change and are
spoiled enough
·to hold to the delusion that they want a graduation ,
speaker, a quick word of advice: call mommy and daddy.
We are not mature enough in the eyes of those in charge to participate
in the format of our own commencement-you know the one which is
given in our honor-much less important enough .to the proceedings to
merit the occasional update on the non-speaker status.
Let the 'rents do the talking. They are the ·only ones who count at
here because they sign the checks. And you thought you weren't a number
at Marist.
Wait a second. The Circle is about to revolutionize the new
Marist
non-speaker format-make it more elegant if you will. Follow closely,
especially
if
you are
a
soon-to-be-graduate4 senior.
In the interest of the environment, save this page and pass it on to
underclassmen for their own future use-think globally act locally, right?
Read the following anytime after midnight on May 21. (If you want
to be formal, get into groups, invite parents, stand up, wear something.
Basically, spice it up as you please).
Hear ye! Hear ye,
all
with
120
credits. If the checks have cleared, you
are now an alumnus. Congrats, now take your place on the unemploy-
ment line. (Notice how it resembles those registration lines we used to
wait in).
He said
I have nevef been in the
military
arid T
have
a tremendousamoimt ofr~spect for those
, who are currently serving as well
as
veterans
but come on'. Shooting down
an
American
helicopter is a tragedy and concern. .., .. . ·
Clinton has started an inyestig;itioh butthe
real answer is, "We are truly sorry for our
stupidity."
·
Moving on ...
Two words, Izett Buchanan. Using basket-
- ball _lingo that everyone should understand,
"you fouled out man.''
I am sure thateveryone on, campus knows
abou.t the events that took place last week
· when Izett decided to go shopping with so-
meone else's credit card.
One of the. top Marist basketball players
is facing four years, not in the
NBA,
riot in
the classroom, not in any league outside the
states, but in prison.
·
·
Not only.has he brought embarrassment
to himself, but to our college. It would please
me to see him expelled from Marist · arid I
would be surprised
if
the administration has
the backbone to do it.
I know that I already talked about Bub-
ba, but he has yet another big decision to
make. No. Not whether or not to tell Hillary
to get away from his desk, but to nominate
another Supreme Court Justice.
Instead of watching stand-up comedians,
you can watch CNN for complete coverage
of the nominations and be just as satisfied
when Bubba comes out and . says, "My
fourth nomination is ... "
There are only three weeks left of college
for our distinguished seniors. For the rest of
us, we have three weeks left with another
year under our belts.
Scott Sullens is one of The Circle's
political columnists.
She said
}le
goes on and on as I try to cut in. But
his intent was so that no words of mine
would persuade him.
The,homeless I told him are not justlazy
derelicts. S.ome are women and soine are
children - many just down on their luck' a bit.
, And those who steal and rob, ~ell maybe
it's not just for fun. Maybe it's because
they're starving or living on the run. ·
And the welfare system I admit has s~rrie
flaws.H's notenoughn:ason though, to ban
the entire cause.
But taxes he won't payto support these
programs. They're wasteful and expensive,
at.least that's how they seem to him.
.
.
To him, sure, they all seem useless. He'll
never be homeless or on welfare. Middle-
class, he'll always be there.
. At Marist here we often forget. For many
it's our parents who pay the bills and it's our
parents who get the respect.
The problems of Marist he then tries to ex-
plain. But really Mr. Conservative can only
complain.
.
, It's too much money and too. few chances.
Opportunity he wants and it should be his.
It's out there I tell him. It's yours for the
taking. Just open your eyes and ears - it's
phone calls you should be making.
So the moral of the story (you must have
known there'd be one): Stop complaining
and open your eyes. College is about more
than just fun.
Take advantage of opportunities and don't
wait for offers. Learn what you can and
respect the way of others.
Caroline Jonah is one of The Circle's
political columnists
THECJF!CLE,
VIEWPOINT
APRIL 2.~,
.
1994
.
7
No respect. f or
:i
Cobain
.
Kurt
.
Cobain
·
should have been
Editor:
·
.
·
on hi~ knees 2~7 thanking God
l
am
:
writing this
.
letter in
that he knew people in the recor-
·
response to an article by
,
one of ding _business four years ago
•
..
.
your own, Dana BuonicontL
·
And while we're on the subject
You are right; Dana, death is not of music, Dana,
.
if Nirvana never
funny; rio death
is
funny.
.
.
existed?
_
And when given the opportuni-
Yes,
·
.
·
Pearl. Jam would be
tylo laugh at the thought of a guy popular
·
today; yes, Soundgarden
with a gun i~ his mouth and new
w~>Uld
'
be popular today.
,
grey matter wallpaper, well, it's
· ·
I'll
let you in on a secret - They
just not a pleasant image. And it have talent.
is tragic.
·
·
·
Nirvana
is
just a
.
really loud,
.
However'
I
do fully reserve the really bad, high school barid with
,
right to
·
laugh at his life; it;s really good equipment.
.
·
something l have been doing for
''But they symbolize teen-angst,
nearly two years now.
.
.
dude."
, ·
•
I
reserve the right to laugh at a
Oh, great, something new.
guy who was handed everything in
.
''But Kurt brought back punk,
life (recording career, supermodel
.
dude'."
·
wife, beautiful baby girl, money;·
Good; maybe itwill follow him.
money, money, fame, fanie, fame)
.
.
to the grave .
.
and turned to drugs and then threw
·
.
.
it all away .
.
.
·.
·
I do not respect Kurt Cobain.
''But he was a tormented artist,
I
do not respect his MTV geared
·
don't you feel for him?"
()Op-punk music.
Um, ...
No.
I've got two tests and three
I respect all of you
·
out there in
papers due in the next seven days. Marist-land who struggle and toil.
You want to · talk about
All of you who do not have
tormented?
·
supermodel wives
.
but somehow
Also,
I am very insulted that this
.
persevere.
no talent punk, who should be flip-
1
respect all of you musicians on
ping
·
burgers and asking me what campus who don't try to embody
sauce I'd like with
my
McNuggets, that cliched "teen-angst," but try
·
blows his brains out because life is
sodarnn hard; while you ahd I are to make good music.
here at Marist ,College busting our
·
I
don't respect Kurt Cobain,
I
pi-
asses, drug free, trying
·
to earn a ty him.
good career and a good life
for
our
families.
NOTICE:
Letters to the edi-
tor are the views of
the authors only.
These are not nec-
essarily the opin-
ions of The Circle
Thanks for campus events
Editor:
·
.
become an annual
.
fixture at
There have been so many fine
·
.
Marist, following upon last year's
events on campus recently that
I
King Lear and recalling The Miser
would like to congratulate and
and A Midsummer Night's Dream
thank the people involved.
of too many years ago.
First there was the entertaining
Saturday evening of choral singing
And just last week we had three
a few weeks ago.
very line Holocaust Remembrance
Sincere thanks to Dorothy Ann
Days and another heartwarming
Davis, faculty, and students for a
Children's Theatre production, this
most relaxing evening.
time The Glass Slipper, rejoicing
Then there was the exhilarating
·
the hearts of thousands of
and roisterous Taming of the
youngsters-and their teachers and
Schrew.
parents.
Masterfol direction by Sue
Thank you, one and all. Keep up
Lozinski
•
and inspired student the good work.
performances.
Hopefully Shakespeare has now
Bro.
Joseph
L.R.
Belanger, fms
Sororities
are
inclusive
Editor:
judging people for the content of
I'm writing this letter in response
their character and not the color of
to two
.
things written in the last
their skin makes me a sell out, then
issue of The Circle.
make me a big sign because I'll
First is the article on the first
wear it with pride.
page about the school denying the
The second thing
l
want to ad-
sorority Delta Sigma Theta.
dress, is the letter written by Jon
I personally think it's unfor-
P. DeRise.
tunate that this sorority can't be
First the only thing he proved in
chartered but l strongly disagree
his letter is how much of a
with the statement about blacks
freshmen he really is, because I
and Latinos being left out of grcck
have never read so much ignorance
life.
in my life
.
If there are blacks and and
You believe that not recognizing
Latinos who feel left out it is by
Black History Month and Hispanic
their own choice.
Heritage isn't a great loss?
There are eight very fine greek
First of all you obviously have
organizations on this campus.
no clue as to the struggles that
I
happen to be a member of one
blacks and Latinos have had to en-
of them and
I
am a Latina.
dure, and still have to endure.
The only reason that some blacks
l
didn't appreciate your little
and Latinos don't join greek life is
reference to Dominicans, I'm
because in their eyes they see it as
Dominican and last time
r
check-
"white". The reason I know this
ed I didn't kill a cop nor did any
is because when I pledged my
of my Dominican friends.
freshmen year I was referred by
You came more than close to
many as a sell out and an oreo.
sounding \ike a bigot .
.
,
. Not to mention
.
other names that
·
T.he first thing you need to do
is
.
are'riof
'
t'i(to
he
·
pdritei:L'
.
.
··
'
·
go
·
co ·
·
che library and educate
I'm sorry but I
·
personally was
yourself, then maybe you can write
offended and disgusted
by
the fact
an intelligent Jetter to The Circle
.
that people who didn't even know
A wise person is someone who
me were making judgments on my
knows about many things not just
character all because
I
pledged a
the
things
he believes he can
"white" sorority.
understand.
My response is grow up. I love
It
is obvious that there are a
my sisters and I don't ever
regret
great many things you are in-
pledging, in fact if I had to do it
capable of understanding.
all over again I do it in
a
second.
Saggy Rudecindo, junior
If accepting people for who they
Latina and proud member
are and not what they look like, if_
of Sigma, Sigma, Sigma
·
8
THE CIRCLE,· APRIL 21
1
1994·
•
·
student§.
lOokfQrcasn.;
illt~l'ilsb.,ip~for
.
S1J.fflmer
·
·
...
-
·
.,
-
.
.··
: '
·
"
.
·
,
<
·
,
' :· .
;
\y
;. · :
_
·
·
·
since
she
·
\vas
:
abotiftweive The
,
"It's hard for us toJake summer money
:fi
· ·
.
. ·
l :
· - .
·
....
·
··
·.
.
·
.
·
.
'
by
CYLINDA RICKERT;
.
'
'
'
'
L
don ,t
·
;~a11t
:_
t~
;
r~tu~n
;
to .funerhl
.:
horit'e:
'
is
\
on.Jhe
,
gioi.ind
'
.yacadons~·
because
:
my dad, is the
'
·
'
Jenru ~r Doo~
Y._lS
ii
co~u!11ca-
Staff
Writer
.
·
McDonald s,
.
Slie sru~:
::
:
.
•
._ level; aridtheJamfly lives above ii.
·
only ftirieral directoi:lf someone
!
1ons ~aJOf. This summer
.
she
JI
pe
. Even thou
.
gh the apphcat1on pro-
"I'
li
,· •
d
.
.
.
,.
h
: ..
. 'h
die
.
5
he
..
'
has to. come ho.me My
.
mtermng at Channel
12,
a cable
.
With shmmer ~omes warm . cess may be the most reliable
··•
·
way
..
h
.
ve
_
v\. ml
.
·
:
9
·
t
e sa!11e. odusepar
.
·
e'n
·
ts
.
fi
.
ig
·.
u
.
red
·
,•
.
r
·
they··em·· pl·o
·
y
·
•
.
ed station
.
in her hometown, F
..
airfield;
·•
··
·
.
t fi d · b
.
.
yt
.
h.
·
·
·
-:
R• h
'
wit corpses 1or
.
years, so 1t oes
.
. .
..
.
.
. .
.
. .
C
-
.
.
.
. ·
.
. •
.
.
,
,
.
:
weather,
·
no school for four
.
0
.
m . a JO '. an .
..
.
mg goe~.
.
ic
·
.
b
·
h
.
·
·
.
11
•
"
·
h
. ·
"d
their children they'd always have
onn.
.
.
·
.
.
;
•
.
·
'
·
m
_
onths,and-,-hopefully-ajob.
_
- Cocch1ara aJumorfromPortJef~
not ot
.
~rmeata' se.sai ·
.· ..
·
•
·
·
·•
'
·
·
.
:
,,
.
"l'm
'
gomgto·do'a
·
httle
.
of
~
·
·
N'Y
t
·
d
· .
.
•
1
-
·.
"f
.
"It's great; because
.:
youcanteU
staf(peopie:i-rcmnd . .
_
..
·
•
h·
·
_ k
"•
·
..
•
-
f~
··
·
·.
d
.
.
At Marist, students' summer
.
,erso~,
_
. .
_
,
.
oun a
~1~e
~~s, 1
.
people ghost'stories an:d they ac~
. One steppmg-stone
_
_
i~to _a ne~
.
e~eryt
_
mg ma e some_c_~ ,e~ an,,
'jobs
are
as
varied
as
the students
·
qu~st~onable, way
t?
a ?,ew
JO?-
tually believe
·
you."
.
.
_
"'
•
..
>
_
_
hfe and a better career is an mte~n-
pick up g~~ts at the train station,
themselves. They range from
.
the
" ; It
_
s cal!ed !1epot1srn,
·
.
h~
said
.
. •
Apparently, the
.
only drawback
ship, which is working hands-on}n she s~d.
,
At the end
?t
t_he sum-
.
paid
to
the unpaid, the normal to
..
I
_m_
workm_g m Jers
,
ey <;tty~~ SFI
. th .
d t
f
.1
.
•
.
-
.
a chosen field usually for
.
no mer, I
11
get to produce one of my
the bizarre: There are those who
Scemc Designers
>
My hr
.
other
IS
e jeopar y O anu y vacations.
·
·
'
·
·
own shows
;
"
must scrape their paychecks
works th~re: and thdob isn't per-
.
together to get back to school, and
·
manent.Thars abou~
aUI
knb\\;/'
_thos·e
who work to fill in the long
·
Carolyn Suttori; a
·
freshman
hours of summer.
from Nortli._Con'faY, N.H., also
.
.
"What am.I doing this summ~r? · ·works for her family .
.
Her
_father
·
'
Right now, I am searching foi: a
.
;operates th~ only [uileral h<;>me in
job," said Judy Reid, a freshman
!?wn, and his famlly helps him run
from Dover, N.H. "It's hard, and
ll,
everyone looked at me funny when
"Basically, I'm a secretary. My
I applied in April for a job to start
~ather's computer il~~erate; so I J?Ut
in May. I should have started
.
m all the accounts,
-
Sutton said.
·
sooner;"
·
"Sometimes I host a visiting hour
·
Reid's eleventh-hour search for
or stay down there at night to make
a new job sprang from her hatred
sure things are OK."
·
of polyester.
Sutton has been.in
.
the business
TOUGH
... continued from page 3
good experience."
Michelle Pontecorvo, a business
finance major from Kirkville,
N.Y., has taken a job in Stamford
Conn., after sending out only three
resume)>.
.
. ·
"The interview was intense. It
lasted five hours, and I guess I
made a good impression,"
Pontecorvo said
.
For seniors still
Of!
a job search,
the Center for Caree'r Development
and Field Experience offers
workshops
.
concerning resume
writing and intervii,wing skills. The
workshops involve'makiiig resumes
stand out from the
;
crowd, and
Senior Survival Workshop to q(fer
support to the job
,
hunters.
:
·
·
·
.
..
~
. .
.
~IW
,~m
~I~
•
l~~~
Iii~~~ •
~~w·
JIHll
·
1.
And Many Other Destinatrons!
.
n-'¢aKtt hr
f
w,t, • /
f
t<,./ut
tJ!f<
I ~.
f
tp./£-Ktf
'<r.ra
IJderraaaa.w
/J.
~(I,~
''1,
\
-fiti,a
aa
Poughkeepsie:
,ub
City, 246 Main Mall • 485-3579
Arlington
_
Arlington Getty, 813 Main St. • 454-3530
CALLToli-FREE24 HoursJora Brochure:
1•800-457-00
.
89.
Ext~
.
RESULTS GUARANTEED!
STUDENT SEIMCES, Inc. has a da~bank
·
· ,
of over
.
18
.
o
·
__
;oo
__
.
o
,
_
i
_
s
_·_
-
tl
_.
"
_
g
___
s
_
fo
.
r scholarship
.
s, fellowsh
·
i
--
p
-
__
s. grants and
.
loans. representing BIWONS of dollars In private sector funding.
.
We can
provide you
with
a list of funding sources most appro-
.
prlate to your background and educational goals.
.
-
·
·
Student Se~ice~. Inc.
6124
;
N~rth Mnwa~kee A~enue. Chicago,
·
I;
60646
How is STIJDENT
SERVICES, Inc:
:
·
.··
Different from
a
.
,
Financial Aid Office?
STUDENT SERVICES,lnc.
specializes
in
private
·
sector funding from
,
·
·
corporaUo~s, memorials;
.
trusts, foundations,
..
religious groups, and
.
,
·
many
'
other philanthropic
·
.
organizations.
,;
.
..
·
As state and federal
..
funding sources continue
to face serious cutbacks,
private sector funding is
expected to grow even
faster than in the past.
STUDENT SERVICES, Inc;
has current, up-to-date
·
Information that provides
'
a
.
n intelligent alternative
to traditional state and
federal funding sources;
at the very least; they
represent a significant
supplement to
govemmentJunding.
P R I
~
C I I' I. E S
of
S O l .
~
I)
R E T 1 R E .\ \ E :'\ T l N \. l~ S T I N G
:
·
~
.
.
;
.
.
.
.
·v
.
.
.
.
.
'i'te.'l>s
.
J
--
:_.
:,
',
.
E'h:~;~;,;:;:~r,1:r:::;:t;:.y
.
· •.
·
;i;i;;~:t;}f
ii!{~~,J£~
;f.
.
don't
·
.
take advantage of tax deferral and
·
.
-:
r?ad,
~~at
~an
_
~
make a dramai)c_'clifference
wind up s~nding Uncle Sam
rr19
.
ney)hey
··
iify~ur
.
quillity
;,,
<>flife .
...
_-:
;.i
.
•..
·
could
be saving for retirement.
?\
.
.
.
·
_
·
.
W-hat else ma.kes S
,
R'As
.
so special?
Fortunately, that's a mistake you
:'
can
A range of all.oca'.tion choices:__froin the
easily avoid with TIAA-CREF
,
SRAs.
guarante_ed security of TIAA to tlie
SRAs not only ease your cu,rrerit .tax-
,;Ii versified i~yestment accounts of
;
bite, they offer a remarkably
.
easy way
CREF'.s variable annuity....'..all back~d
to build retirement income-espe~ially
by the nation's number one retirement
for the "extras" that your regular pension system.
and Social Security benefits may not
Why write off the chance for a more
cover. Because your contributions are
rewarding retirement?
Call
today and
made in before-tax dollars,you pay less
.
learn more about how TIAA-CREF
tai:,:es now. And since all earnings on
SRAs ca,n help you enjoy many
your SRA are tax-deferred ~s well, the
happy returns.
Benefit
,ww
from
tRJc
deferml.
Call our SRA hotline
I
800-842-2733, ext. 8016.
Ensuring the future
for those who
shape
it~
.
'
CREF
mlifir•lts •rt Jittrii111tJ
by
TIAA-CREF lnJi.;J,,.,,/
anJ
lruti1111i,114/ Smiru.
F;,
IMrt ,ompklt
i,,f•nnati,n, ;,.,LuJi,,J
,/,,,,yu dnh~pt/lJU
,.II/ 8(1(1..8-12-27JJ.
a.I.
80/6
f•,.,,
p,wp«lu,.
Ru} IN
pro,p,,l,uwef,J/y
kf•rt ~" im-ut
11n1nJ
IMII~
'
,•
'
-
-
---
-
-
-
·---
-
-
---
-
·-···
-
-
-
-
-
-
"
•
-
···
·
···--·
•
...
-
--
.
--
.
-·
-
--
·-
·--·
--.
--
-
-
--·---·
---
--
-
-
-
-·
--~
-
·
·
-
--
---
-
-
--
·
·
-~-·-
--
-
-
-
•
--
-
---
-----
--···-
·
•
-
-
-
--
-
---·
·---·-
-·•
-~
·
-
··-
-
..
-
--
-
~·
·
-¥•-
·
·
··
-·•
·
·•
..
·····--
-
·
·
-
~
...
,
_
.., __
.
......
.
.
......
.
.
- .
.
..
..
..
.
.
. •
· ..
.
.
.
'
··
··
•'"
.,
.
, •.. , ~-
THE
,
CIRCLE;
_
APRIL 21;
.
1994
rc.)'qgp.m<:1,!1,
£plI).IJ,ytition - is
it
sexist or not
.
.
. . -
_
_
_
- -
·
.
·
.•
.
:
:
. :
.
.
.
:
.
·.
·· ·
~he
°',:
saf~tf ge
_
ar
.
iw:It1de~
;
heaf
•
focal econtimy in two
:
days;" he
There will ~e
,
thr5!e ~ounds
for
c01;npe_te
m
the event, according to
by
TERI
.
L.
J~J'l:\V
AF.ff
.
,
/
.
gear
;
:
oversized
:
)6
·
oz
.
_;:
gloves,
·
added/
.
·
each fight lastmg one mmute each.
Along,.
Staff Editor ·
_·
.
:
:_.
·.
:.; ·
·
· mou,~hpie~e1(groin P
-
~~t~~t9r,~and
. ·
,
·
.
-
.
The wiriner receives $1000 and
'
. the e~ent begins at 8_p.m. both
.
.
The
_
Toughmari
_
Contest
~
'Com-
.·
·
fooAlt
,
P
,
~<i
.
4Jr.i~d
<:
t
i
h
:.-:
'
·
:':°
:
-
-:.'
t
•
~ ,
·
:
1
\
·'·· .-::, ·
_
..
.
.
·
.
b
: •
At
.
~chotr~rigttho Diehlt; security will
continues to the national finals in
5
mghtsdw1th the finals bemg held on
., .
..
).
~µgi
:
sai
..
e
.
~~~"
-
w1 ~
_
pr9-
e
.
1g
~or
e eyen •
.· .
Atlantic City,
N.J.
·
atur ay .
.
bat on the
,
Campus
_
•
will ~ak~
.
1ts
, .
vide
·
a
:
·
sare-
·:.
environment for
.
-
~
-
.
. -.
.
.
.
_
·
: .
-
-
·
·
-
·
way to
_
the
:
Mc~an~
,
R~crea~io
_
n
: :
stiiderits
>
and 'aduits
18 years arid
,
.
CCUmformpolicemen
as
~ell
.·
as
.
fifty to 70
:
COlllpetitors usually
.
..
see TOUGH page 8
►
Center at
8
p.m. on
_
Apnl
22 a!}d
,
oidefio compete.
-
_
:
i
·
•
.
·
·
·
b?uncer type pe~ple
supplie~
by - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
23. .
·
.
·
;
_
.-._ _
_
__
Ac¢ording
·
to Diehl, the event is
th~ promoters wdl be there, he
.
_
·
The event 1,s
:m
.
amateur kickbox-
.
·
.
a community
•
activity.
.
said.
mg compet1t1on for men and
"It
will be beneficial
for
.
the
·
women.
·
·
;
·
·
.-
-
"
·'
.
.
'
.:'
/
·'
.
coniiin
i
nity,
'.
and
,
the stui:!,ents will
-
·
The
-
college
·
is charging a stan
~
.
Accor~mg
:
_t
.
o
{
'I'om
.
:
Diehl
;
.
•
•
ei:ijoy
_
it
/t
D._iehl
:
saic,l .
.•
•
>
.
.
:•·
. ;
dard
.
rental
:
charge for the event
McCann 1s rentmg
,
the
srm
to the
:
_
.
>
Aiongi'saidthat by
-
holding this ranging in the
.
thousands, accor
-
Toughm~ Cont~t. TW.s
.
will
,
be
·
even
f
they are. helping the college dirig t~ AlongL
.
the firs~ time the event wdl be h~ld 'by e~ployirig
.
studci11ts.
_
.
_
< \
.
.
-
. /
.~
· -
.
•
·
-
-·
·
.
-
-
-
.
..
at
-
Manst
'.
,_
..
.
.
,
. _,
.
•
.
-
_
.
_
.•
...
__
.··
_
':
·
-
?U:
.
a,lso
:
h«!lps
:
ben,efit
:
the
,
Red
•
,:
: .
It
1s enoug~,to ~over ~s a,~d to
However,
_
th1s
.
1s t~e t~lf~ co1_1~
.
Fox'Club
''.
he said. "We'remajor
.
!Ilake a p~ofit,
_.
Diehl said. See-
secutive year it is being held
]11. th~
--
_
supporter~ ofthe
'
college
)
irid<>f.the
:
•
m;S _how its the
:
first
.
event, we're
Hudson Valley, the past
.
t.wo y
_
ears
.
Red Fox Club so that was one of
.-
,
w11hng to
_
work with the pro-
being i'!-
_
the Mid
;
Hu_~~qrrCivic
,
the major reasons why w~de~ided
.
moter."
WE BRING
ADDSPACE
TO
YOU!
Center m P.oughkeeps1e.
·.-• :: ,
...
to haveJhe event at Manst.'!
·
The night of. the competition
.
Diehl said the administratio
11
at:
_
The McCann· Center
.
also
..
holds each
.
participanL undergoes
a
McCann kn~w~
\
Bria~L
:
Stir~¢
/ .
niore
people th~ the Civic Center
,
·
physical. If he or she have
·
no o
_
b·
Trac~ Pattersoµ
.
s
.'._
Jlla,n.ag~!' ,
;r,
a11.d
,
_
_;
:.
:
-
:_:
Alongi
_
sai<i_
<
that h~ Je_els
,
:
the
.
.
vious pro!,l_ems, they get put into
that
IS
h()W
·
the contest arnved at
i
event
;
will bring more awareness to
·
ohe of two V.:!!ightclasses:
160a 175
.
·
M~,rist.
··
,
. -
:
·
·
··
.-
:-:
-
>
:
._..
the
'
college .
.
_
,
:
:
'
:·
___
_ .
_
---
,
pounds
_
or 175 pounds and over.
It allows th~
,
average ~vecyday
.
:!We spent $15,000 locally
to
.
_
-
.
.
guy to _get in th~
_
ri11¥
an~
.
O:UX it
promote the cori\est," he
/
said.
·
The compettt~rs ar~ then pa~red
.
up," said Mai:k -t\).<>ngi, a l)romoter
"The beer
:
comes
,
from Dutchess ~p and compete ma single ehmma-
fo! the event with ~on
,
Spehce
pros
Beei:
Distributors, the ring is rented
.
ti~n process.
.
ductions
.'
"We
:
pr,ovide all
·
the
.·
loi;all_y in
.
Newburgh, and we use
all
The fighters are required to have
necessary safety gear to ensure that
·
·
1ocal.people.
.
_
amateur status and less than five
there are
·_
no injuries_."
,,:
·
••we
·
wili pump in $60;000 to the wins in their career.
Now you don't
have
to
coordinate summer storage
with classmates.
·
.
ADDSPACE
makes it
as easy
asJocking yourlndividual
·
Storage Bin in the parking
lot of your dprm build,ing.
You
store yoifrgoods .
.
· .
You lock
the door
.
You keep
the
key.
You forget it until fall.
ADDSPACE
INDOOR SELF-STORAGE
l■l■l■l■l■l
-
,1■1■1■1
1 800
Xtra
Room
Sign Up Campus Center
Thursday
&
Friday
April 28
&
29, 1994
11AM-5PM
.
~
QI
u.
..,.
(914) 297-1500- Markel Street Industrial P
a
rk,
Wappingers Fa\ls, NY 12590
THURSllAV
PIG
ROAST
M
.
ARIST ·_
.
NIGttT
at
.
.
i3E~TIES
, ·
$3
COVER
·
WJMARISTJD
BEER
1ST 4 KEGS
FOOD
GIVEAWAYS
·
DRINKING GAMES
.
$1.50
Goldschlager
Shots •
$1.50
Zima
Bottles
$1.25
Jumbo B
·
eers
-
• $3.00 Pitchers
18
&
OVER • CALL= 452-BERT
-··
I
I
I
I
I
~
!
I
I
I.
---
•
10
THE: CIRCLE, .. APRIL 21,
1994
AND NO #2 PE.NCII-S>l~QUJRED.
THIS DEFINITELY ISN'T
·· A TEST. In
fact, it's just simple
· math. You get the
:•~-;?i-
1\1/-.·. - -.. :_.--_-~-·
;
_;
'.
_· .•·
__ ; ... -.. ~.
2
Put your photo on the ~a~d. and "" .. replace many iniporta,~t documents.
it's harder for anyone else to use :
SECURE YOUR.PORCHASES~- ·
it. Lost your ·
too. Wit.h
Citlb~nk:
Piice Prot~qiot>
· Citibank Classic
card, and then
YOU PAYNO
,
....
__
··
·
•
"
-,
. . . .
CALL TO APPLY:
1-800-CITIBAN K,
EXT
32
wallet? Well,
y~u'II always pay the best p'dce.
don't worry.
And
Buyers Security protects -yoyr
Our lost
· purchases from theft. accidental
~
;
~-
.ANNUAL FEE.
Zippo. Add that to
.
_a\,&ry ._.
·-:
. .
. competitive
15.4% varia,bte anriuaf
:percentage rate'.
and xou·v~ ·got
a great deaJ. You don't have to be
a calculus major to figure trat .out.
And it's easy to see, you're secure.
WallefM
Service
darnage·;;or:-fire; When you
is there to provide you with
think of it, getting a Citibank
EMERGENCY
card could very well
:
CASH,
a new
be the easiest
card usually
addition you'll
within 24 hours,
do this year.
and even help you
NO QUESTION.
Our insom~7!!acs are waiting for
)'OU
with all the answers.
WE'RE LOOKING OUT FOR YOU!"
.· Hurlers
nip.·
.
IoUa;
.
·
· recbrll
RC)M' 1r, ...
9 .·
by
ANDREW- HOLMLUND·. ·
,B;tii_:Mu:rphy ~~ffr~h~an'pitcher
Staff:Wiiter'i
.
Ro~:r;Jt;:~t·2~3~ith'o~e RBI.
The softball
,
teini'.wiU be look~· Stofi.rfr; pitched
a
complete'ganie
in¥ to begin anpther 'Yiiµring streak
allo\Vmg only two hits.
.·.
this afternoon ·when. it' hosts
sr.
·•·
.Sophomore catcher OAngela
John's University at the Gartland
Degatano .and, Junior:. third
·
Commons AthleticHeld at 3 p.m. ·baseman ,Melissa· Fanelli'b.1d one
On Monday, Marist (16-9
hit apiece.
.
. .. .
overall, 7-1 in the Northeast Con-
Co-head coach Jonnah O'Do~:
ference) was sw~pt by Iona College,
nell said she saw a well~rounded
12-2 and 2-0,
10
non-conference
performail.ce·from her players: · :-
doubleheader action; •
.
. "They did
.
a lot better than
In the first game;Jreshman pit~
against. ,Hartford,)' .O'Donnell
cher Michelle Hudsori once again
said. ''We made adjustments
in
led the Red Fox charge.
base running. They played really
In five innings work~ Hudson
good."
(9-2) relinquished· three hits, two
O'Donnell also said she was
walks and fanned
u
Gael.batters.
pleased with Hudson's outing.
Hudson said she was · pleased
"She pitched her typical game,"
with her pitching performance.
the first-year coach _said. "Every
11
''I. felt pretty
.
good,'' Hudson
game she throws, she gets better."
said. "I came;info the game wan-
·Last Thursday, Marist travelled
ting to accom~lish ,one thing_;t<>. fo New Britain, Conn., to take on
get as many stnke(?1,1ts as possible.
the University of Hartford.
First baseman Laurie Sleight takes a: s~ing in a Red Fox softbali game this week:
My ball was moving well."
· The Red· Foxes were swept by
Offensively, Marist was paced by
Hartford,_ 1-0 and
5-2,
in a non-
sophomore right· fielcler· Courtney
league twinbill.
scoring one run in the second inn-
Sleight . and senipr 'left fielder
In the first contest, Marist was
ing, three in the third and one in
Janine O'Connor;:.
only able to muster one hit, while
the· fifth.
Sleight went' 3-3' with one RBI
Hartford. clicked for its first and · ·.
Hudson said the team would like
while O'Comior was 2-4with fou;
only run in the bottom of the first.
to. put those losses behind them:
RBI's.
'. ·
_
Murphy ·was the only Red Fox
"We weren't in the game at all "
Four other Red Fox batters not-· player who was able to garner a hit.
the San Diego, Ca. resident said
ched one hit apiece. .
Hudson took the loss for Marist
"I
was kind of glad we got that out
In the nightcap, .the·Red·-Foxes
despite pitching a four-hitter.
'
of our system because we felt like
were led by sophorn.ore· shortstop
In the finale, the Red Foxes saw
we could win every game. Our
Hartford connect for
11
hits, while
heads were ·ust not in the game."
Peacocks kill netters;
NEC
Charln:>s .. next
.
.
-
·.,
,.
.
.
_
~.
.·;
·'
. . .
.
'
.
~'
by
JIM, ,DERIVAN
.
.
,
.Junior
Kevih
McGovei~
lost the
Staff Write~
f~rirth match, 6~2·, 6-2.
_ .
.·. <_·
•
.. .
· · '
. . . . . • . . .
· •
·.,,;,;~~tJJ#iffo,llrth .. patc:q,,s(ipho~ore
•-Themen!stenn.is.team defeated __ ·.Heath pramp:erger•fost6-3;.·6°1,·
Rhode Island, 5-4; at the Dutchess
and seIIior·chris IHardi suffered the
Racquet
_
Club .. on'Saturday; ....
·
.·
loss in the final singles match, 6-2,
Could they puttwo wins
6~2;··
. .
· ·
.
back-to-back? ·
· ·
In ct,oubles,the Red F:oxes played·
· No.
tough,but came up short,_losing
all
Marist
(5-5
.
overall, 3-0 in the .. three games. .
.. · .
Northeast Conference) dropped
an •
J:Iarrison was pleased with the
8-1 decision to St. Peter's College . -effe>rC
on Sunday. .
.
"The doubles matches were real-
O'Donnell said the team has a
difficult schedule for the rest of the
season.
"We are looking at everything as
tough," O'Donnell said.
Hudson said it is important for
the team to play together during its
final stretch of the season.
Circle·
photo/Matt Martin
"We just have to learn little
things about eacl1 other," she said.
"We have to play as a team."
After today's games, the Red
Foxes will go on a three-game road
trip, swinging through Wagner
Siena and Seton Hall before retur:
ning home to face New York Tech.
The Red Foxes lost to a team
ly exciting," Harrison said. "Ilike
which has
.
won the Metropolitan • my doubles teams to play like that
Athletic Conference the past two
all
th~ time. They were . really
years;
smackmg the baH and were taking
Sp1·
ker· s (0 5)
t
I ' .
A .
,
Junior Marc Nussbaum record-
good shots."
·.
. .
-
_
S
rugg
.
e In · r1zona
ed the only Red Fox point, winn~
.
Th_e closest Marist canie to win-
ing 7-5,
6-4.
·
ning in doubles was in the first
by
TERI L. STEWART
Desrosiers finished with 27 assists.
.freshman Sean Stam had four ..
"He
·
(Nussbaum) played a
match.
Staff Writer
After a 15-6 and 15-12 defeat to .Desrosiers collected 28 assists.
·
perfect match against•
'a
good
The team of senior Brian LaSusa
Lamar College, · Marist Jost to
Senior head coach Nicole Silen-
player," head coach Ken Harrison
and Nussbaum Jell, 4-6, 6-4, 6-3.
The men's volleyball team finish-
Mankato College, 15-6 and 15-10
zf.said she was pleased with the
said: «Both players made good
Marist is now focusing on the edits 1994 campaign last weekend
in its final first-round game. · ' · team's performance.
shots,· and it was a real'.exciting ;NEC ch~pi_ons~ips this weekend.
on a sour note by losing five mat-
Since Marist was unable to ad-
"We played awesome," she said.
match;''
.
·'
·
·
1
'They'regeanngupforthecon-
ches at the National Club
vance to the next round, the Red
"They moved on the court as a
Junior Martin Byrne lost his first
fe~en~; championship," Harrison Volleyball Championships in
Foxes were placed in a consolation Jeam.
H
was a little late in the tour-
match ~f the season, 6-2, 6~4. ·
said. They're psyched up to go,
Tempe, Ariz.
round.
. riament for that, but their adrenalin
Harrison said Byrne was unable
but they need to 11:et on the court
Marist ended its season at 9-9.
Marist ·ra.ced the University of :'was juS
t
crazy."
to perform to his caliber because of
more.,,
In first-round action, Marist fac-
Vermont
ari9 ·:
Howard Payne
/i
"'Silenzi also said she thought it
an illness. .
.
.
Marist faced Wagner yesterday.
ed Teikyo Marycrest·College·and. College;
·
._
: .
.
.. '
was a really great way for the team
Byrne, who missed Saturday's
Results were unavailable at press
lost, 15-12 and 15-5:
·
Matistdosno Vermont, J5s12
'io
e
nd
a bad outing.
match. now has
a
7-1 record.
time.
In the match, senior/ Steve
and 16~14.
·
:
· "We didn't get a lot of time in
~~~T----:----::---r=============-~G~ra~h~a!!n~1]h!:a~d[·~l6~k~il~ls~,ja~n~d~R~an~d~v~
Graham had . 11 k_ills, while
th
e gym," she said. "They played
Intramurals
w··
A·NTED
·
.·
,;anywellfocbeingunprepared."'
·. In men's basketball action, A
Few G,ood Men leads the Monday
league with a 7-0 record. Linc's
Legends, Syracuse and the Bobbits
an~ in a three-way tie for second
with 5-2 marks.
. In Wednesday league play, Flex
1s in first place with a 6-0 record.
Big Country and NPG are tied for
second with 6-1 marks.
Playoffs begin April 25.
In women's basketball action,
the Marion Hall Tigers won the
league with
a
5-1 record.
Boom, There It Is, Los Locos
and Natural Emissions have 5-1
records in Tuesday league play.
MCIVC and Leo Spikers lead the
Thursday league. Both teams only
have one loss.
No games were held last Thurs-
day due to Greek Week events.
Softball action has started.
<?am~ are scheduled everyday un-
td Apnl 29. There will
be
no games
on April 23 and 27.
Circle staff needs several ad-
ditions ·for, next year. Posi-
tions· are .. open for political
and music columnists, pho-
.
tographers, advertising, dis-
tribution, and general . staff
writers. Please contact The
Circle at Ext. 2429.
The Final ,
11
0ne--On~One ·
:.With
.
.
'
_· .. •-.~ ·. Jay .laScblea.".•.· :_:· .... ' ..
.. \\f
e:~'g1;~:~•z:}~C
•. ·· Camp.Us
C-ab,le .
·.·.·_.·
· ..
. · ·-._ ... · Chann·e1 :
11 · _: •.· :: :
.
......
-----
n
;,;j
.. ,i-·
h
ii
f?
r:
.
'
k
~
. ' • >~•. .
'
•
. . .
. '·.· . '
. . . . ..
·. ('.
·
-·E]"
,2
1:··-t,
_
.t
-
···i:e·
::·r.:
:
·
s·: -
·:£ai'.:,
.
1--
J,>_
··-J':•1<t-11}t
' . .£l.:. :~ ..
·>·
.
. __ ·• ~;:
,
: ,~ ..
/1::,
.
/
'·-1.:
.:.;4':,
. plai
Afffli
t~a.tt:Y- .··
·-by_TED.f:l()Lr.,LUND ·_
·
Spor:ts-Edito(: -: .
. The gan_ie 'Yas c_fose·until·t~e ~lxth 1rinirig. The R.edF.tixt;s_\\'.ere trail-
mg
2-0 as Jumor pitcher Jeff Goodin was Jocked in a pitcher's duel with
Joh11 DiMarti110.
_
. _
_ . . ·_
.
,
____ ,-._- · ·•
> :
,
-••. -- _H<;>wever_,_ N_orthea~t Conference· (~e _Lo~g Island Univei:sity exploded -
for eight runs m th~ sixth and seventh mrungs en route to an,
1 1
~2 romp
over ~aris~ • on Mond.ay afternc,on in Poughke_epsie; _- ; _ ___ _
c _
_
_
-
. _ Mar_~st w_dl look to get bac~ on the winning trac~ today against Army.
Any chance_ of a victpry against
UU
was lo~t _
after the sixth inning.
,The Blackbu·ds scored five ·runs in the sixth and three in the seventh
to clinch the ·win.
-
·
·
·
. Goodin ended up ·giving up fiye runs i_n
5
}/3 inni~gs pitch~d ..
.
Di.Mar~
!m<?, onthe _other hand, held Marist to two runs on six h_its over eight
mnmgs._ '
·
·
__ . _ _
__
.-
__
_
-
The defeat drops Marist's record t~ 4-19 (3-9 iri t~e NEC).
S~phonioreright fielder MarkB~onandfreshman shorts~op George·
S~tlag? were the only players who made any significant hea~way against
D1Martmo.
.
_
_
.
·
.
· ·· · __ · ·
~
Barron wenf2-5 with a homerun, a single and ari RBI. Santiago also
was 2-5 .}Vith a double and
a
single.
-
_
-
·
·
·
Even when Marist had scoring opportunities, the team was not able
to co!lvert. The Red foxes stranded ·IO runners in the game. _. __
Th1s·w_as the fifth consecutive defeat for Marist. The team had won
three of four games before· this latest losing str!;!ak began. - ·
He~d coa~h Art Smith sai4 he cannot find any answers -on -why the
t~am1s pJaymg poorJy.
· _
' "I
honestly don't know why we're not playing well," the third~year
head coa~h said. "Once things go bad, you expect the worst. Right now,
we don't have any confidence."
·
Junior captain Mau Bourne said the pitching, offense and defense are
all failing to execute at one time or anotht::r during the course of the games.
"We haven't been able to put it together," the third baseman said.
"We've been getting down.e~ily; It's hard to come back when you're
down
6~8 runs."
· -
•
_
.· -
The Red Foxes looked to regain winning form against Fairfield (Tues-
~ay) and M~nhattan (Wednes~ay). Results were not available at press
ume.
-
APRIL
21,
1994
STAT OF THE
WEEK:
Soph~more goalie ~-raig Greveld-
ing made 34saves lasfSa~urday.
.
,,
~
•'·
'
.·..
..
.
,
'
'
'
.
,
.
.
.
'
:L·ainien
lose
to
:N.Y
Tech;.
,Jl1a.rk no·w 5~4
. by
TE~l L.
STEWART
· Staff
Writer
The
_
men's lacrosse team fell to
New York Tech, 19-10, on
Saturday.
Head. coach Tom -· Diehl said
Marist
·
(5-4) had
a
difficult time
matching up with their opponent.
"They did better than us one-on-
one," Diehl said. "They were able
to shake us _and get free. We left
people open and ,didn't follow the
flow Of the game."
Sophomore _ goalie
Craig
Grevelding collected 34 saves for
Marist.
~'He faced a lot of shots " Diehl
"d ••1·
- -
'
sai . - t could have been a blowout
if he didn't play well."
Junior Dave Closinski led Marist
with a team-high four goals.
Junior-shortstop Vinny -Roberto throws to first.base in a
ecentgame.
-
-The
Red
Foxes ._ hosted
Stonybrook College yesterday.
Circle
photo/Matt
Martin
Results were unavailable at press
time.
·.·Buchallan ~rreSted, .faces charges
-•-
.
- __ .
_ - - . .
We re hopmg that he isu
L
guil-
· .
J,
._. -
. ,
-- _ • _
_
by_MA.tT,.~#\RTI~. -
ty at this point/' said Marist's
Still, Buc~an~ns future anhe
• StaffWritef; •
Athletic.Director Gene Doris.
"If
college.remams m doubt.
·
-
he is, itcertainly isn't something
"It
doesn'tmake it any easier to
·
When)zett Buchanan steps foot
we'.ll be proud of." . - _ , _
.
_
graduate,'' said Doris.
_
.
_
.
.
__
irito: the ccnir(on .l\foiiday, April
. After _a, year unrivalled
bf
any . ll~~hana1?,, a scholars}Iip~atplete,
25,:itwon'tbe as
·
.a rookie on an _ pn!
_
vious player
at
Marist, gar-
1s tohave his scholarship rev1e~ed
NBA team·
as
he had froped, -but as
nishing __ the NEC.- ~coring·'. title, ~t the ~nd of !he year, to determme
an alleged felon'.
·,
·
·.
•
- _. _
. ,
Player of the Year honors and this 1f he is makmg satisfactory pro-
.Buchanan, 21,
from
(ioshen, . past Monday;the HaggertyA~ard ~es.s towards his_degree i~ c~n~
NY, and Calvin Cooper Jr., 23, of as the outstanding player. in the Justice to ~llow h~m to n_iaintain his
· Poughkeepsie;
fa~e
criminal , metropolitan area -it seemed that scholarship desp1tehavmg used all
charges of grand larceny, a felony;
Buchanan had turned himself four years of his eligibility .
. _criminal- possession 9f stolen pro-
around after.the disappointment of
_''It's n?t an automatic r1:newal,''
perty, also·
a
felony;· and con~
sittingoutthefinallSgamesofhis said Dons, who, along w1th_three
spiracy; a miscleineanor~'stemming
junior season ·due to. academic others, would make tJ}at decision.
from their alleged theft and use of probation. -
_
·
__ ___
· ·- _ _
"Th
7
re are
:t
number of factors in-
stolen credits car<is April
7,
~ccor-
«we felt that he was on the right cludmg ethical conduct." _
ding Jo
_
-_ Town_ of Poughkeepsie track,". saidDoris. "Butthis leaves
__ Buchanan ~d his teammates
polic~: ;, , : .
:
.. /
:> - -
adoud of doµ~thangi~g over him.
have be~n ad~1sed not_to comm~nt
-_ The cardsOpried from a locker_ He hasn't left him
'
self'niuchrnom on the situation pendmg the tnaL
at AIISpoi:t : health club _ in _to workwith.'.' -
«I
feel devastated," said Head
Poughkeepsie,
·
were.used
at
seven-__ -- ·p_escriptions of the two _men by Coach_ Dave _
Magarity.
"Ap
t~e
sto_res i.n _the: Ppughkeep~ie Oall~Iia . retailers _
Inatch -those -of_ descrip-
adv
7
~sity an~ ~hen to e~? up m this
to purchase over,$1,000 worth C>f
tio11S ofthetwogiveit.by attendants position,, ..
1~
s awful. _
-
merchapcijse iii!=hicling sportswear, - atAllSp<>rt that I1ight, according
to
_
Asf
~)T
!he effe~~ of then_ews on
srieakt;rs,Je
.
w~Iry and stereo equip-
the Secret Service. _
· _
_
_
-
Maga~ity s recrmtmg, Dons said,
ment, police said. - -_ -
-
-: -- •- _· -:
-
To _date,' Marist has taken no ''It certainly doesn't have a positive
If
convicted, the two could face
dis<;iplinary
action
against effect, but it's tough_to judge ,~hat
a sentence of up
t!)
four years in Buchanan pending the result of the peo~!e. on the outside are thmk-
pris_on. -
·
· -
upcoming trial_.
mg.
··
fliWi~t1.1,Ho~evl~.kgruI1:'!!@cen=·
t,...........,."·
-,---u',---,--,.ntil
proven
guilty
SetOIFH
_
all's Arturas Karnishovas; a P.ers?n is mnoc.e11t untH Pf<>ven
about the up9>nung NBA playoffs
Here's some classics.
was -named a
.
co-winner' . of' g111lt~ ·
:
B~cha_n~11.'s
_
.
coµrt. ap-
as tbere-wasJasf year.
.
_
L
Win one for the Gipper: (Is
the
/
1993~1.994 Haggeriy:'Award -Peai:ance \~ not,'s~he,duled ~til
It se,e_!ll~ thaCmost fans
-
and
that a fish'?).
·
~
on Morid.ay in East Rutherford,·
Apnl 25. B_ot~ h~ve bee,i i-eleased
sports commentators have not been
- 2, It's not over until it's over
N .J.
, ·
-
·
without ball.,. _
> _
-
!oo enthusiastic about the upcom-
(Really'?). _ _
_-
, Tht{~war4 is give
11
to the niost ·
~a.~baU btin~ling
. _
•
_
mg NBA playoffs,
,
3. \\Then the going gets tough,
_
outstanding playei: among· 18 Divi-:
_ The baseb.~
t ~
~
lHl \oss to
. Grant~d; !he baseball season is
the tough get going ( unless they
sion I 16 Division II/NAIA and:31
Long Is!an~:LUIUversity Monday
J~st
begmrung; _and the h_ockey
Iose ... then see number four).
Divisioii III in the New York~New
has been i.ndicaµ_ve of the squ~d's
playoffs are m full swing.
4. The better team won (It's not
Jersey-Fairfield(Conn.) region;_
season; _ - •. -- _ __ _ _ ,
However, the main reason basket-
rocket science ... there's my own
H
9
weyer, t~t: hP.nor ofreceiving
. The Red foxt;s (4-17., 3-9u~the
~all
is
losing its notoriety is because
cliche).
the award was inost lik~ly ~he fur-
Northeas_t Conference).c~mnutted
-This year, ESPN carries 48 it does not have a marquee player
. 5. It's not over until the fat lady
thestthingfrom Buchanan's mind.
s~v€:n errqrs, stranded ten runners
playoff games, while ESPN2 airs anymore.
_
. _
smgs (Is that sexist'?).
Buchanan was arrested 1Jmr,sday
and ~alked eno.ugh runnei:s to start
an additional 12 games.
-
-
No more Michael Jordan. No
6.
ESPN
(Turn -
on
on cii'arges
-
h_~
an? another. a, ~le ~alkat~~~-
.
· _With greater media ~verage,
m9re ~agic Johnson. No more
SportsCenter).
·
Poughlc~psi~ ~an used stolen
-
. Ri~t now, ~s.tearn_is not.play-
sports fans should gain a better
Larry
Bird.
_
7. We weren't clicking (Is this
credit -cards to buy mor~ fhan
mg with any spmt_ or mt~ns1ty:
understanding of a sport that· is
Charles Barkley is. a. big-time
tap dancing'?).
$l,OOQ of merc11andise, acc_ording __
If t~: t ~ 1s not playmg with
usually identified with violence.
player, but he has not reached the
8. We weren't on top of our
to Town of Poughkeepsie poHce.
any dnve, baseball becomes a
There's is more to hockey than
legendary status of the Big Three
game (How do you get on top of
J>o.li~e said the 2f:.year-old
chore.
_
. .
.
violence.
because he plays on the west coast.
a game?).
Buch.an.an pried o~n
~
locker at
. Thf: only remedr to this _illness is
Hopefully, the increased visibili-
If
the NBA is going to regain its
9. It was a tough loss but we
AllSpoit health cJub in Poµghkeep-
victopes. IfMan~t contmue:i to
ty will inform people that hockey
popular!tY, Commissioner David
played hard (That's nice).
sie on April 7 and stole two credit play poorly, they
will
only continue
is a sport with many nuances, not
Stern will have to hope Shaquille
10. It-does not matter if you win
cards; a watdh and $14.
to pum:h in the time card and pray
just a boxing ring on ice.
O'_Neal. can fully take over the
or lose, but how you play the game
If convicted Buchanan could
for the season to end.
Oh, by the way, her:e's one easy
pnme-time m~tle.
~If
that was the case, many people
face up to fou; years in ·prison.
_ .
NHL Revival
hockey prediction. The New York
_
01ches
m the sports business including
Some_ofthe_talk around campus
The mcreasedtelevis!on coyer~ge
Rangers will not win the Stanley'
_I~ this columnist listened to the
this columnist, would° be out of
already·
has declared Buchanan of !he NHL playoffs is ~gmmng Cup.
millions of sports cliches, he would
work).
guilty.
-
to
increase the populanty of the
NBA fantastic?
have something more enlightening
Ted Holmlund is The Circle's
-
11:ame.
There has not been as much talk
to write about than cliches.
Sports Editor.
44.8.1
44.8.2
44.8.3
44.8.4
44.8.5
44.8.6
44.8.7
44.8.8
44.8.9
44.8.10
44.8.11
44.8.12
- - - - - ~ - - - -
-
--
.
.
VOLUME 44,~UMBER 8_
Mar.1st CollegetP<>ughkeepsle,
N. V.
Third protest held
·to address letter
by
CIRCLE STAFF -
A.Jetter to the editorin the April
14
issue of The Circle prompted yet
another student rally, this one on Sunday; April 17, increasing visibility
ofracial tension on campus. It was the third rally in two weeks..
.
Desmond Ebanks, co-chairman of the urban programming council
within the Black Student Union, said he does not believe the majority
of the campus is racist, though,
''I know there is an element of racism," Ebanks said, a sophomore.
"There is a lack of appreciation of culturalissues." .
He cited the letter, which refereed -to multiculturalism and div!;!rsity
as "nonsense," as proof that there is some level of intolerance on campus.
Raul De La Rosa; president of El Arco Iris Latino, said the was ofs
fended by the letter.· .
_
_
_ .
.
· "When I saw that (letter), I cried," he said. "I don•~ usually cry in
public, but I cried when
I saw that. .. Tcan'tunderstand ho_w anyone-
can say multiculturalism is nonsense.
"It's just one person's view, but I'm offended," he added.
Marshalita Cross, president of the BSU, said she was disappointed the
author of the letter, Jon DeRise, a freshman, did not attend the rally
in the Champagnat Hall breezeway.
_
_
.
"It is unfortunate that an.individual has such ideas and is not able
to come out and defend them," Cross said. ··
·
DeRise did not return The Circle's phone calls.
The issue of the cap on clubs was also addressed at the rally.
A
flier distributed by the rally's organizers accused _the Student Govern-
ment Association and the College's administration of making no attempts
to lift the current cap on dubs.
. _
·
The flier states: "Supposedly .our SO.f\ representatives pµtthis cap in
place. We are here to have them remove it-'.' ,
_ ..
·
_
_ ·
Another burst
iThe flier goes on to state t
.
hatseveral.groµp,s,l!ketheOay,,LesbJa11
,
. ____ .. · a11d Bisexual
Stud'<nt,.t\.ssqciation,
.~{II
noJ _be. ch~i::t¢j~d.
~tit?
to 'the cap
:
~-,,,,~,,.;_,,
;
.
,
.,-=..~and.J!because
,
theii·
0
·cl.ll)kes··are •·not accepted by' few.'? .. · :-· ·'
,
,
f.•,;,7,:,-•,:c·
. -
Matt Qillis;-SdA pl'esident',
-
s8:id he
:
agfeecEwith
'
inuendf.what;pe-ople.
at the rally saicl; ,howevi:'i:,/changing policies
was· not
a
•
simple process
.. I
and there were otlier consider~tions .
.
:·
<. _
....... _
i _
• _
... · .
"We don't have unlimited resources atMarist," Gillis said.
"If
the•·
scriate V()tes
_
to remqve or expand the club cap; then there will be open-. _.-.'
-rwo
constructioh.We>rk~rr; attempt to contain damagedone
by
ttie
fifth
water main bre~kthis ·
.
.
··ings foi:. other_clubs<For the
-
tiine being/our resources are
·
nmited.
»
year.
·
See re_ lated_
story;_··· ___ .-. ·•_·
_
·
-
.
-
. · · . _
· _ ·
The following reporters contributed to this report: ChfisBerinato Ted
Holmlund, Kathyrn Link, Julie Mai-tin
·
·and S.J.
'"Richard.
.
Circle
photo/Matt Martin
WMf.;~
to
Q¢gi11>ne\1/
program
JO
,;qi.lnselcallers ()1).love
. by
B_L.ffHE MAlJS.OLF>
.
~elationship-type questi()ri~as op-
ino~tl}': relatfoilship:.orientecl
the press.
tion.is not responsible
~~r
what
Staff Writer
posed to more explicitly sexual questions.
·
:, . .
__ ____
•
·
_
.
. .
·
·
Kellysaidthanheyfeelthisis.a
they
say
on the show, "said
questions. . . ·. ·.
-
.. ·-·-
.
'
. Wright andCuratola_ said
0
they
relevant issue thaf'needs to be
Ebanks; ,
.
.
, .. _
.
Y<>u'.ve thought ~b.out it, h~ard ,
aboutitand maybe even llad it -~.
and now is the time to talk about it.
What is it?
·
·Se;(at Mafist. College. · _-
_ ,
On
·
J\pril,'P; cluring;thelunch
time activity hour,
from
rioon
i:0·2
p.m., WMCR will be- haying •ihe.
"sex line". _ . . _ _ _
'
• Juniors Michelle· \Vright a~d
HeatherCuratola will host the calls' ·
in program. _
·- •
·
/ ·.
·
·
i
· ·
"We plan to have peoP.\e call in,
to ask quc;stions ancl ·we'll 'play
some music between calls," said
Wright.
Curatola said _she came up with
the idea after listening to the !'Jove"
phones", a similar program on
Z-100, a radio station out of the
Empire State Building.
But unlike the "love phones",
the sex line will deal· more· with
:Wright said thatthey approach-
wiUha".e control. O\Ter
\\Thai
they
discussed. Kelly also inentioned
To encourage students participa-
ed Neal KeHy, the general mariager . answer .... _
.
_..
.
tliatWMCR is _the only medium .tion, Curntolamentioned that
of the station, and he was receptive
''\Ve won't an.s~er things
we
feel--.
able to do it, because they can get
they've put
tip
posters to advertise .
to the idea, so it developed from
unco,mforfable
'
talking about.
a:ri
immediate response from. the upcoming show. The signs are
there., • / -__ ·. __ -_ ,
.... .
.
We're:~Iooking more for
:
imy
people.
-
.
designed to attract attentton, by
Ther.e will· bf
~
meeting right . boyfriend broke _up with me, what
. :Ebanks said
_
he agreed with Ke!~
specifically mentioning ''sex".
befdre·:'. the: show airs between . do ti:tortype questions than 'what
ly about the need to discuss sex and
In order for the show to be
a
suc-
Wrightr Ctiratola;KeHy and Des: positionjs best?';'t said Wright.
mentioned that there would be no
cess, there must be students who
· in<>rid Ebanks, the program direc
7 • ·_
.
Kelly
.
saidthiit ifthe administta-
censorship· on . the part of the : call in, aswelf as listen. Many peo-.
tor, to discuss the show and the fact
tion shC>Uld question the sh~w. the
station .
.
-
.
pie know about the show and are
that. tliere-.wilLbe
a
lot
pf
people ·station wot1ld use,,the same argu-
- "They have total freedom to say
... s~e
SEX
p_
age
9 ►
Iisteriin°gtoJt: : : :· . •
~ent
as
The ,Circle has, freedom of
whatever they want. The radio sta~
: The :· administration may be
sofuewliai·-
·
apprehensi,;e:abcut- the
show. Curatola said thatthey may
thinkthat the show_ will be obnox~
ious or disgusting due to the natµre
·or the topic.
·
.
..
.
However, Curatola said•· that
they would try to keep the show
.. from getting out of hand by main-
taining a mostly question and
answer type format and discussing
Fifth water main break impairs campus
roughly 20 workers who were at the
·
/Jy
KEVIN O'NEILL
site were startled when they realiz-
- Staff Writer
-· ed that the main electrical, ga~ and
...;.;.. _ _
...;.;.....;.;.._....;. _ _ _
- ' - _ telecommunication· lines. were all
The fifth water main break this
nestled together in the same comer .
year· temporarily· impaired main
Taking no chances, the laborers
electrical; gas, and telecommunica-
took action and asked for securi-
tion lines on campus last week.
ty's help.
An area approximately six feet
deep and 15 feet wide_ was dug out
to get to the water main. Workers
then stood in four inches of mud
as. they worked on· the ruptured
pipe which had a circumference of
nearly -three inches.
Circle.
· The water main break this year
"At 9:30 a.m. security went door
occurred behind Donnelly Hall (ac,t-
to door and told us to turn off the
jacent to route 9) early last Friday
computers;'' said Linda Dabonna,
morning.
. . . · • .
of the payroll office. ''They knew
. The weather may
be
to blanie for
there was a break and didn't know
this latest break, according to
what would happen, they thought
With the main gas line running
across the splintered pipe and the
electrical and telecommunication
lines neighboring, the workers tem-
porarily clamped the ruptured pipe.
non-scientific poll
More than 200 studen~ were asked to respond
to the following question~
Do you watch MCTV? ·
Yes
-105
. No-87
Do you listen toWMCR?
Yes -
95
No - 97
Do youread The Circle?
Yes -158
No-34
' members of the construction team.
there would be a surge."
''After the terrible winter we
The Computer Center in Don-
had, when the weather warmed up
nelly was closed from noon until
the pipe cracked," said a Pizzagali . 12:30 p.m. for fear of a surge.
source who wished to remain
Nothing happened to the com-
anonymous.
Another factor which didn't help
was the fact that "the pipe was old
and deteriorated," said Tom Da-
ly, director of physical plant.
The break was discovered at 7:00
~.m. and secured by 2:30 p.m. after
Pizzagali workers put aside some of
the surprises they encountered.
While digging to get to the
broken pipe with a back hoe, the
puters and the rest of the day went
on as normal.
After their discovery, the
workers had to "hand dig," accor-
ding to Daly the rest of the way to
get to the pipe which took a vast
· amount of time.
"By using the machine (the back
hoe), one scoop takes what would
normally take one hour to do by
hand," said the anonymous source.
The right sized clamp was not in
stock and had to be picked up in
Fishkill on Monday morning which
is when work was to be completed
on the pipe.
·
. Town of Poughkeepsie water in-
spectors were instructed to ensure
that the city water was not con-
taminated.
Workers said it is possible that
the pipe could have been leaking all
winter.
J
THE
CIRCLE,
,
APRiL
21,
1994
·
.
:
.-·
·
'
..
Miilgets
peqple tOd,
,
in
·
·
·
"Lepfethiliin 21'
·
commercial in ~hich he gives Bridget
·
a nice
.
·
A
rna
i(
~itting near me had a tendency of "Leprechaun 2" seemed to b~ bordering on
.
.
. .
by
JUSTIN SEREMET
.
One might actually feel sorry
for' midgets
after viewing the latest bad horror movie
'
to
come out of Hollywood
;
"Leprechaun
2/'
tongue kiss on her cheek, leaving a long line
.
laughing throughout the film; gigglingat the
an
·
orange tin~.
·
of drool.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
leprechaun's devious actions.
.
·.
. .
Not only were th~
FX
not too
·
good; but
Of course, Bridget's boyfriend
,
a dork
•
During one scene in which the leprechaun the editing left something to be desired.
·
_
named
·
Cody (Charlie
-
Heath), will
·
do
.
yeUs
'
out,
•
":¥ ou can't escape! It's hopeless!",
·.
.
-
· .
.··
- -
·
·
.
·
-·
·
,
-·
everything in his power to save his busty lov-
,
the man nearby repeated "he said it's
There are scenes in
'
which
.·
the actors;
Warwick Davis, who
.
has starred in
"Return of the Jedi " "Willow " and of
course, the originaJ ~lassie "Lep;e~haun,"
might be better employed if he was involved
·
in midget bowling;
it might be more
respectable.
ed one in every cliched way possible.
hopeless!i'
.
.
..
•
.
mouths are clearly not moving, yet the voices
He is assisted by his elderly friend Morty
·
The mari also brought the wife and kids seemed
to
come out of nowhere.
_
.
.
(Adam Biest), who advises Cody
_
of the an-
along for this. geek show.
·
cient powers of the leprechaun;
Another scene involving Bridget punching
The camera also appears
.
to be bouµcing
Biest gives the only somewhat convincing
a man in the chest got
a
girl in the back row
performance sjnce Davis's Irish tongue (pun
to yell out "You go girl!"
.
in' some parts of the
fiJm.
·
Davis, who plays the repulsive, poorly
made-up leprechaun, attempts tq frighten his
audience by biting off fingers, hanging peo-
ple, and jumping out from behind corners.
· Here's the story: after
1000
years of hiber-
nating, the evil leprechaun emerges to find
not intended) really gets on your nerves.
For a brief moment,
I
actually thought
I
The
film
also showcases its abundance of
was attending
an
advanced screening of Mar-
If you couldn't figure o~t by now, ~ne ~n
watch "Leprechaun
2"
even without wat-
ching the original.
. midgets, who are seen in a scene at a bar on
tin Lawrence's NC~l7 "You So Crazy/'
St. Patrick's Day, conveniently the
Maybe it was the midgets in the film that
It's still hard to believe the firstone made
enough money for there be a sequel.
.
.
a
_
bride and is willing to do whatever
unspeakable acts that he can to find her
.
leprechaun's birthday
:
.
.
·
.
.
brought out the best in people.
·
By the way, is it "midget," "dwarf," or
Maybe members of the audience are begin-
.
His desired female is named Bridget
(played by the unknown Shevonne Dunkin),
the typical dumb but beautiful blonde who
doesn't resist in showing off her bare chest.
"vertically challenged?"
·
·
ning to notice that there aren't enough
·
With all this talk of being politically cor-
dwarfs in the movie/TV industry, especial- ·
Nevertheless, "Leprechaun
2"
is perfect
for viewing at
4
a.m. on "USA Up
All
Nite,"
and might be more enjoyable under the in-
fluence of drugs or alcohol w
_
hile telling
midget jokes.
rect, have midgets received their own fair
ly after
_
the suicide of Herve
.
Villechaize
·
shake?
·
("Tattoo" of Fantasy Island) and since the
.
Let's give credit where credit is due.
.WWF ended midget wrestling.
She is kidnapped by the leprechaun and
endures his nauseating sexual advances, in-
·
eluding a scene you may have seen in the
·.
Surprisingly enough, there was a fair
B-grade horror movie fans usually view
crowd of ethnic diversity at this Sunday even-
·
films like this for the gore, yet the FX of the
ing showing of "Leprechaun
2."
movie were very mediocre; the blood in
Sun,
by
DANA BUONICONTI
First off, thanks to all who had
comments about the words that oc-
cupied this space lastweek; they
were appreciated .
.
·
Second things second, summer,
.
believe it or not, is creeping up on
us ever so quickly.
_
And, of course, you need some
tapes to bring with you on all those
lost beach trips with your closest,
most personal friends
.
The following are a couple of
platters that will probably be ac-
companying me on my adventures.
He's built like a mack truck, il-
lustrated with tattoos, has coffee
surf,
and the
sizzle
for
blood, and \Yrites poetry in his
spare time.
·
.
.
Man or machine, he's Henry
Rollins.
The new Rollins Band record,
"Weight," is a
·
sure-fire aid to help
you vent aggression.
If
you're angry, Rollins can help
.
Chock full of tight hardcore rif-
fing and a newfound sense of
groove, Rollins waxes loud about
everything from self-denial to
human
weakness
to,
well,
self-denial.
New bassist Melvin Gibbs adds
a bottom-end schwing to the
deconstruction at hand, while
guitarist Chris Haskett smears the
icing on the cake with some meaty
soloing
.
.
. •
"Liar," the first single
,,
from
"Weight," is currently being ex-
.
ploited on MTV.
.
.
Catch it if
•
you can, because
Rollins wears a Superman costume;
a blessed moment of sheer rock
power .
My pal
_
Chris describes The
Grays, a new band on Sony, as a
cross between Jellyfish and Joe
•
Jackson; a perfect description of
their debut record, "Ro Sham
Bo."
.
Featuring two former guitarists
for Jellyfish, Jason Falkner and
Jon Brion, it's easy to see the
likeness.
.
.
The Grays are pretty heavy on
-
Videos
·
·
.
for
all
occasions
If
you love Disney
,
it is probably· suspected of malpractice, starring
worth going to.
·
Alec Baldwin and Nicole Kidman.
Coming soon to a video store
Disney's sleeper hit "Cool Run-
On May 25, the Academy Award
near yoii...
·
·
nings" also comes
_
to video this
winning film "The Piano," starr-
"Mrs. Doubtfire," the top spring.
ing Oscar winners Holly
.
Hunter
grossing comedy of 1994, hits the
John Candy stars in this en-
and Anna Paquin, comes to home
shelves later thi!> month
.
joyable comedy about the first
video.
.
.
.
.
Robin Williams stars as Daniel
Jamaican bobsl
_
edteam to compete
hvouldn't expect this to do too
by
JENNIFER GIANDALONE
OU
·
,erwise, forget
it.
(Grade: F)
·
of summer
·
songs
the Beatles
·
influence;
·
with some
very
·
McCartney-sounding vocals
·
on a few songs.
·
.
The
.
production, by Jack Joseph
Puig (surprise!
_
he's produced
Jellyfish), is impeccable; with head-
.
phones, "Ro Sham Bo"is total ear
candy.
·
·
·
The best songs
·
are written by
Falkner, such as "Oh Well
Maybe," "Friend Of Mine," and
the first single, "Very Best Years."
·
If
-
retro with a '90s spin sounds
good, you may want to give The
Grays a listen.
.
.
.
Green Day has recently released
the Feel-Good Record Of
-
The
Year.
.
"Dookie," th~ir major~label
debut
.
for Reprise
;
features
14
songs in something like
~5
.
rriinutes.
One of the
·
:
awesomest things
about it is
.
just
·
geuing to say the
word
·
'
-
'dookie" over
.
and over.
·
Try it yourself.
If
I remembe
_
r correctly, the pop-
core
trio,
Billie Joe on
·
guitar, Tre
on drums, and
Mike
oil bass, hail
from Los of Angeles
:
What makes these guys
so
much
fun is their passion and plucky
spirit, and their pop appeal and
'
swell harmonies.
Reprise should be shot, though,
·
for releasing "Longview"
as the first video.
Not only does it have the inost
language out of all the songs on
"Dookie," but it's not even one of
the better songs on the record
;
My
,-.
faves
.
are "Burnout,"
"Welcome
ro
·
Paradise,''
'
.
'Basket
Case,'
.
'
-
and "Sassafras
:
Roots."
.
.
Enjoy
.
"I)ookie".
w
_
ith
·
a
friend .
. •
·
11
YOU
:
CAN
'
BE
-
A
.
,
·
~
-
-
..
·
·
•
.
-
STOCKBROKER
11
,
.
.,
.
.
.
.
.
.
~
Hillard, a divorcee who is limited
in the Winter Olympics.
-
much rental business, but people·
;~r~~a;;~~:;;~~:~;:;;
·
!~i1i.L~{~f
:~~:~::~:i;:::
~~~~~f!d:::~~:::.:::.::
·
..
~
as Mrs. Doubtfire and becomes his
"Ace Ventura: Pet Detective."
animated feature film becomes its
children's nanny so h
_
e can see them
Jim
.
Carrey!s brainless comedy
fast to come to video when "Snow
everyday
.
.
: ..
.
.
about the man \Vho finds the
White and the Seven Dwarfs" is
Williams is hilarious in this film
Miami Dolphins; stolen mascot is
released.
_
.·
, .
-
.
•
.
·
·
.
.
.
that should not only be rented; but
being released to video with added
On October 4, the biggest movie
.
bought and taken home.
footage that wasn't seen in the
of all time becomes th
_
e biggest
·
In May, Walt Disney pictures
theaters.
.
home video event of all time.
"
releases their first animated movie
.
I
·
can't think ofwhat could be
Steven Spielberg
'
s Academy
that goes straight
.
to video.
added, and
I
won't even fry to
.
A,vard wiimer "Jurassic Park"
will
:
This sequelto "Aladdin," the
guess what wasJeft out.
.
dominate the fall rental market
.
most successfulDisney full-length
On the
mote
serious side, Brian
Fresh off"Schindler's Lisi"
:
and
(ilm, is attempting to dominate this
Deraima's ''Carlita's y,tay" comes
"The
·
Flintstones"
.
(Spielberg's
spring's rental markeL
our way in a few weeks.
·
company Amblin Entertainment
"The Return of Jafar'
_
' brings
·
Al Pacino plays a drug dealer
produced it), Spielberg
·
stands to
·
back
all
of the original characters,
wh
_
o \van ts
.
to get out of the
mak¢ even inore money with this
but not ail of the original voices.
business after serving a prison
video release.
.
,
..
·
·
Unfortunately, the person who
term; but has a hard time doing it.
Don't expect many othefreleases
made" Aladdin" as good
·
as it was,
·
.
Does this sound a little familiar?
in September or October, though .
.
will not be returning
,
to give his
Kind of like ,"The Godfather
Other video
_
companies won't
talents to the second
film.
III,''.
don't you think?
bother
.
to compete with these two
You guessed it, Robin Williams
The only difference is that
huge movies and may rush some
is not the voice of the Genie this
.
Michael Corleone didn't go tojaiL
titles out
_
in August, or
.
hold off on
·
time around.
.
Anyway, ge~ting back to the
some releases until November.
·_
Dan Castellaneta, the voice of topic at hand; "Carlito's
·
way"
Retailers will spend their money
Homer Simpson, will take over as
was a good movie and worth the
on
·
"Jurassic Park" and "Snow
the voice of Williams' legendary
price of a rental.
White,'' and won't have much left
character.
Next on the .list is "Malice,
"
a
to stock their shelves with anything
The movie is only an hour and suspense thriller about a doctor
else.
·
-
six minutes and definitely won't be
··
the same as its
.
predecesi;or.
Just rent it before you die-hard
Disney fans buy it
.
Disney also releases the sound-
track to its upcoming movie "The
Lion King" on May 31.
With five songs by Elton John
and Oscar winner Tim Rice, it's
guaranteed to dominate the music
·
categories at next year's Academy
Awards, as well as be successful on
the charts this summer.
·
"The Lion King" is scheduled
for release on June 24.
If you want to see it before then,
Radio City Music Hall is showing
the film June 16 through June 23.
Each show is being preceded by
a rribute
to
Disney's best music
.
-
-
.
Touro
-:
LaWCenter
:
--
-
INVITiNG
-
APPLICATIONS FOR FALL-1994
-
-
-
-
.
-
-
__
.,,
_
.
-
■
CONVENIENT LOCATION
Huntington, Long Island campus
is easily reached
by
public or private
transportation
.
■
DAY AND EVENING CLASSES
Seleel e
i
ther a Full- Time Day.
Part
·
Time Day
.
or Part• Time Evening
schedule,
·
·
If
you wish to rece
i
ve admiss
i
on
materials and/or arrange lor a campus
visit. you are encouraged to contact:
Office of Admission
Jacob 0
.
Fuchsberg
law
Center
300 Nassau Road
Huntington. New York t t743
■
ACCREDITATION
The Law Center
is
F~lly
Approved
by
the American
Bar Association
.
TOURO COLLEG~
JACOB D
.
rlf
.
FUCHSBERG
~
-
Phone
(516) 421-2244
ext.
314
LAW CENTER
an alf~ive aaion /
equal
oppo,lunity inst~ution
.
.
.
.
,
A
,
~
Co~tlnental. "!e
groom
you
for
success
fromthe start
and
,
.
.
offer
YPU.
fiill
s't.ipport,
~clc\l
security &.
~~dal
~dvantages.
Otir
"Paid
Training
9>mse"
:
produces
'
prt~e~
i:esuits.
,
You
will
I
frorrian
elite
gro'\-IP
oftqp pre>ducers <>ri
·
a
one-to"<>ne basis
.c
eam
_
sal
..
_
g._
bonus while
yotjlearn.
)'ou
wlll
~
gro9.m~.fof
~t
pr~r#.ottons
Int
.
management.
You
will
have
the full
support
of
a
:
professional
team,
and:
·
·
'
·
·
·
'
··
·
·
♦
-
QJ.iallfled
Leaders
·
·
♦
Rapid
Prom~flons
,
♦
_
Profession.ii
Qffl~
,
·
♦
G,en~rous
75% Payout
•
•
3
Month
l'ralnlng
Program
.
♦
Salary
Whtie You
learn
-
♦
J~;ln a
~Inning
t~
ruid
~
a
pm,
,
()f
C>U~ ~iiccess.
We're
offering
Invitation
to
visit
us and four
our offices and speak to recent graduat
.
:w.Jlo
are
estabilsh.f
_
ng
a_
life
time
career
for themselves at
Conttnen
Broker
Dealer
Corporation.
·
♦
For
Immediate
Information
please call Michael
Hasho
at:
516-741-5400
C.NTINENTAL
BROKER DEAL.ER CORPORATION
ESTABUSHED t98Z- MEMBERS NASD- MSRB -SIPC
a.EARNING THROUGH OPPi:NllliMER &.
CO,
INC.
.
MEMBlRSN.Y.S.E.
I
,
'
!
',i
{.!
:1
I
l
I
.
THE CIRCLE, APRIL 21,
1994
3
Greeks hear story
Of
mother's loss to
hazing
by
JOHN· DOUGHERTY
president
of
Kappa. Kappa Gain-
seen him abuse alcohol before. This
Sigma Phi Epsilon and the Greek
Some hard-line greek members
Staff Writer ·
ma, hazing has no place in Greek is why she was suspicious of the ex-
Council. In order to participate in
said nothing is important enough
peath by hazing is · not
life.
,
cuse the school gave her· about a , Greek week activities new fraterni-
to break the code of secrecy. Bue,
"You could lose a person who
drinking accident and that it was no
ty and sorority members had to at-
honorable.
·
Eileen
'Stevens
_ lost her s~n
Chuck Stenzel to a hazing incident
at Alfred University in upstate New
_York. On Feb. 24, 1978, her son
was given a pint of bourbon a fifth
of wine and six-pack of b;er and
told to finish it before he got out
of the trunk of the car.
could be an asset to your sorority
one's. fault.
tend the speech by Stevens.
or fraternity," she said.
Stevens eventually got a call
After being. told by Alfred of-
from Stenzel's roommate who was
ficials that her son died from <'con-
in the fraternity that he was pledg-
suming too much alcohol,'' Stevens
ing. His roommate told Stevens
decided she· had to find out for
about the trunk incident and she
herself.
took over from there.
Stevens was told by a pathologist
Stevens has been campaigning
The members of Klan Alpine
fraternity drove around · for 45
minutes with three people in each
trunk. When they stopped the cars,
most of the boys were vomiting,
Chuck ,vas unconscious. He never
woke-up.
that her son died of acute alcohol
ever since, trying to convince
poisoning. His lungs had filled up
lawmakers and greeks that hazing
with fluid and he drowned, accor-
has no place in society. Hazing is
ding to Bruce Hornbuckle, author
illegal in 32 states, including New
of "Death By Hazing," a report
York.
published by Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Richard said Steven's speech was
Fraternity.
powerful and moving.
The pathologist said when they
"It
was great how she could
Eileen Stevens addressed the
greek organizations of Marist Col-
lege on Wednesday April
6. She
gave a speech about the events on
the night her son died.
cut Chuck's body open he could
make a powerful statement out of
smell the alcohol. His body went
a terrible tragedy," she said.
into.shock because of his lack of
Hazing can be in the form of
drinking experience.
mental or physical abuse and the
Stevens
'said
her son was not a
effects of both· are damaging.
According to Kimberly Richard,
heavy drinker and she had never
The speech was sponsored by
Student one step closer to goal
of b~coming professional writer
by
RON JOHNSON
Staff Writer
In fact, Murphy said this venture
has inspired her to submit more
work to contests and publishers.
It
was Andrea Murphy's first
Driven by this newfound sense of
time. She had never before en-
purpose Murphy said she now
countered
·
this type of experience,
writes all the time.
but once she tried it she could not
However, it takes more than
go back.
determination to be a successful
"Oh,
If
only
I
could live off do-
writer, it also requires talent.
ing this," Murphy said.
Which according to Tina Tortora,
Thanks, to her first published
vice president of Reading and
poem she is indeed one step closer
Writing Interactions, Murphy has
toward the ultimate goal of writing
plenty.
professionally.
"She pumps out metaphors like
Murphy was recently notifie_d
there's no tomorrow," Tortora
that her poem, "Father Time",
said, "I'm sure it's not the last
would appear in a collection of
thing she'll have published."
poems en tided
"A
Far Off Place."
Tortora said Murphy's abilities
·_ Publication resulted
from
Mur-
:extended beyond -the mainstream
·· phy's
setni~final placement within.
ofcollege,poetry, thus.reaching a
a co11test sponsored•· by. the · higher level.
publisher. Notification of further
·.·<'Her poems are really effective
advancement or lack thereof is still
cause most poems of people her age
pending.
are .just streaming of con~
Whether she wins the contest or
sciousness, yet she's
..
got poetry
not, Murphy said the contest as
down pat," Tortora said. ·
·
well as the·subsequenCpublication
As a· founding member and
had a
major impact on her life.
secretary for R.A. W. Interactions
· "It's very important to me
Murphy also helps others _to get
'cause I'd like to keep on writing
their poetry down pat.
·
.
ih the future," Murphy said.
"She is a wonderful person, ,vho
"Before this, I didn't know I could
really gives a lot of herselfto peo-
be published."
·
ple," Tortora said.
Murphy said that her formula
for success, which she passes on to
others, includes many revisions and
personal reflection.
"You have to have your own
voice, "'Murphy said. "One great
way to do this is to revise, to be
succinct. It's good to go over it
again and again, until each word is
in its proper place.
"I see what people write and
myself, and you know everyone
draws themes from their life."
One theme that Murphy has ex-
tracted from her life, is the impor-
tance of time. Murphy said time
has become doubly important to
her following the death of her
. father last 'year. ·
·
·
"A
lot of the poetry
I
wrote was
'about him," Murphy said.
She said her viewpoint of time
has become a bit more complex
than most people.
"I
see time as a constraint like
a drug and people are like, addicted
to it," Murphy said, "I know, I am
definitely a time junkie."
Murphy is quick to note her
work is filled with the influences of
other writers, She states that she
appreciates the style of Emily
Dickinson.
Scott Haywood, a member of
. Tau Kappa Epsilon and Greek
Council, said new members are
who keep the fraternity alive.
"You have to evaluate what you
are doing," Haywood said. "New
members are the life blood of the
fraternity." He said it's important
for the new members to carry on
the un-tarnished tradition of
brotherhood and they must do this
by example.
Members of greek organizations
and Stevens said they find the issue
of secrecy of fraternity initiation
difficult to discuss. Some op-
ponents have argued for the right
to keep the secrecy intact.
Haywood and Richard said thev
don't feel that mood ·exists a't
Marist.
Hazing is an issue that manv
people like to avoid because of th~
brutality of it. Doing calisthenics in
a sauna with heavy clothing on be-
ing passed around in a circle d;unk
and "trunk drinking" are only
a
few of the potentially dangerous
activities involved in the pledging
process.
According
to
Steve Sansola,
assistant dean for activities and
housing, Marist handles any pro-
blems with the Greek organizations
internally. He declined to comment
on to what extent Marist has had
to deal with such hazing events.
HOlocaust awareness includes
•
•
film
by
JEANINNE AVILES
.
.
_AND
.
PATfUCIA SMITH'.'POMALES
· Staff Writers
Two of Oskar Schindler's
rescued victims came to Marist
campus on April 11 to tell students
of their personal experiences dur-
ing · the period known as the
Holocaust.
"I
am a Holocaust survivor,"
said
Helen Beck, a victim who lost
her four brothers and two sisters in
concentration camps.
Because there are very few peo-
ple who lived through this time,
Mrs.
Beck wants to "remind the
world of what happened during the
20th century."
Mrs. Beck worked with one of
her sisters· in a camp as "cheap
labor" making marble tombstones
before she was called to Schindler's
factory.
Beck lives with her husband
Kuba in Poughkeepsie and they
both frequently lecture at high
schools, churches, and colleges
about the horrors they witnessed in
concentration camps.
Kuba Beck was 17 when World
War II began, living with his two
brothers and his parents, when one
day he came home to an empty
house.
· "The Nazis decided to make a
•selection, and my family was
selected," he said. He never saw his
\
\
\
surv1v1ors,
family again. Kuba worked as a
machinist in the labor camps and
was sent to Schindler's factory in
. 1943 .. ·
.
,"I
don't know why my-name
came up," he said. When he was
being moved, h,e said_ he thought he
would be killed..
.
During this process of selection,
the Nazis would take many . of
the
Jews and shoot them. "We
lived from hour to hour,'' he said.
"Thereare no words to describe
the daily routines and what we
questions from the audience and
there were readings and poems read
by members of Marist Theatre.
Violinist Rudolph Efram finish-
ed with a solo, followed by a clos-
ing prayer by Father Luke
Mccann.
Meanwhile, Marist scheduled
events for Holocaust Awareness
Week and last Monday a group of
students and staff from the media
center presented a documentary of
· reactions
by
students
to
"Schindler's List."
faculty, and staff with actual
footage of the movie which was
provided by Universal Pictures .
Susanne Yanusz, Allison Martin,
and Margo Campbell were the stu-
dent interviewers for the documen-
tary while Theresa Hardaway and
Ed
Strother
handled
the
cinematography.
"The students put a lot of effort
into the project," Lawler said.
"They have to do their own
research and then get reactions
from their peers."
"I
was greatly moved to stand in the presence of two people who went
· through this terrible torment through a time that people today are still
saying never existed. "
witnessed," Mrs. Beck said, telling
how Nazi soldiers performed hor-
rors "just because they had fun do-
ing so."
"Remembering is a human
necessity," said Brother Joseph
Belanger, who told the audience
that the Holocaust is not necessari-
ly a Jewish problem but a Christian
one as well.
"I
was greatly moved to stand in
the presence of two people who
went through this terrible torment
through a time that people today
are still saying never existed,'' said
Ben Diamant, a Computer Infor-
mation Systems professor.
The Becks stayed to answer
- Ben Diamant, professor of CIS
The powerful movie became the
focus of this year's Holocaust
Awareness Week.
Janet Lawler, the Media Center
AV /TV operation manger and
editor and producer of the
documentary, said it is basically a
reaction to the film.
"Students commented on scenes
they found most powerful; if they
knew much about the holocaust
before seeing the film;
if
they knew
who Oskar Schindler was,'' said
Lawler. "Just a general review
moved them most from the
movie."
The documentary is a combina-
tion of reactions from students,
The creators went throughout
campus and asked students, facul-
ty, and staff who had seen the film
three questions:
who
was
Schindler, what was the most
memorable scene in Schindler's
List, and why did Schindler risk his
life to save others?
The responses varied, yet there
was one unifying feeling: it was an
extremely powerful and touching
film.
"I was sort of shocked when
asking people around campus
about the responses," said junior
Susanne Yanusz, who talked to
students.
"It
seems as though hard-
ly anyone has seen the film."
Lawler intends to continue the
struggle for awareness even after
Holocaust Awareness Week is'
over.
"We're also trying to get a group
showing of the movie (Schindlcr's
List) locally," Lawler said.
According to Lawler, Steve San-
sola in activities plans on setting up
transportation so students will be
able to get into a private showing
of the movie as a community.
Lawler said she is adamant about
Holocaust awareness because to-
day's generation really doesn't
know much about it except what
they read in a couple of historv
books.
·
"If
they (the new generation) get
to actually hear survivors in person
speak about what happened and
they see this film, I think they'll get
a pretty good idea of what really
happened.
"It's also just important to let
students know it could happen
again and it can happen to any kind
of religion or group. We see
it
every
day today; just not on such a
scale."
A copy of the documentary can
be found in the library for any
students who may be interested.
t
t
I
i
4
. -
THE CIRCLE,
·
·APRIL2.1,
1994
:.
Frosh Often Unprepared
ror
Marist
.
exJ)eri~h<±¢.
>
.
-·
ning i~
_
not necessarily from a
·
text
..
tion, ''
.
said
.
.
fresh
.
jnan
··
Angela
.
·
.
in the c;ifcteria, nor did
_
l
expect t
.
o
·
year
.
_"
~nd
•
.
srn
.
ile
.-
:.
~~~
,
e
.
\y
ill
/
etn
·
by
'
JENNIFER FO~DE
book.
.
.
.
·
·
Romeo,Jrom.Onconta! N
.
Y~
"~en
·
.
.
.
be cursed at by
·.
the cafet~n~
:
la~fh out loµd
_
~t
.
t
..
eirc1:~cc1P.a
.
e~ ..
Staff Writer
''In freshman year, you learn a
years from now, I'll still be paying
workers because l was upset by 1t,
We learn~~no~ to dnnkb~
,
~r.m
lot about patience and ~ole~ance.
·
off those student loans."
. .
said freshman
J0Am1
Piczzo,
from
the elevator,
·
said
-
D~Bett~f
~~~
,
Many high school seniors
·
who
have been accepted to and plan to
attend Marist hold many expecta-
tions as the first year of college rolls
around.
For
·
many, these expectations
will be met and surpassed. For
others, the future may not be as
bright as it seems.
Stephanie Poggi, assistant
residence director of Leo Halli
al\d
Wendy Fell, resident assistant for
Leo, are both seniors who have
worked with a lot of freshmen in
the past few years.
Poggi and Fell said they agree
that freshman year is a huge learn-
ing experience, although the !ear-
You really learn m
·
ore
·
about
"I expected to
:
become -more
Westerly,
R.t
"Perl~~us the lack of
freshma~ pal Jf-e!ly \Y~ls~i ..
_
r'?1!1 ·
yourself than about academics,"
mature
,
" said
·
freshman
.
Deb
.
respect that we rece1vt!(,is students
Marl ton,
N!
:
•
.
.Ii
s al~3dot
,
~~~.t.
said Poggi.
DeBetta, from Levittown, NY.
is the
r
eason some students ~on't
to
~e runm~g
up
~n
..
own re
"A lot of students come to col-
"But I think I've gotten worse
.
"
return after freshman year.'
Residence Direct~;
.
~ floor ye!lmg
lege expecting to learn a1?out the
"I was just trying to get out of
Fell said she beljeves that so~e
to,~n_d
•
a fu~m
;
L
.
. ·
·
.
·
·
·
'
real world,
but college 1s really
the house," said
.
Noel Griffen,
·
a
freshmen do not return to Manst
. .
. Like
I
said!
Y?,U
le_arn a lo~ that
more of a transition that teaches
freshman from Bronx, NY. "So
for their sophomore year because
1s not academic,
·
sa~d Poggi .
..
them about themselves," said Fell.
was my friend, but he felt like his
it ,vas not really their choice to
However some
.
th_mgs of
.
real
Many students look f~rward to
mother came with him with all the
come here in the first place.
value are learned durmg freshman
their first year at college as a real
security around here."
·
"A
,
lot offreshmen
·
come here
year.
.
. .
·
·.
:
·.
·
,
chance to be on their own for the
First year students are also fac-
because a friend is coming too or
.
"I
:
didn't expect to form such
first time .
.
However, some of this
ed with some situations that they
because their parents wanted them
strong relationships with ~he 1_>eo-
·
year's freshmen have found that
never expected. Some complained
to," said Felt "They come here to
ple here," said
_
Walsh.
,"
But since
being on your own is not always as
that they still didn't have enough
please someone else and then they
we livelogether and see each other
glorious as it may seem
.
freedom. Others felt that they were
realize that Marist really is not
every day, we've become
_
like a big
"l
expected complete freedom,
often treate
.
d disrespectfully by
what they wanted for themselves."
'
family
.
I
think the friendshipsl've
but I've found that you're never
some college employees
.
However
,
some students will be
made here are really going to last."
completely free from college tui-
"I
didn
'
t expect to find a mole
able to look back on their freshman
Earth Day-:--f ood, fun and music
··
.
Jill
<t
'ITW '~ IP&@
~l1&[il}w:ifim
~
.
.
-
~I})J1fi~~
u
~~41
:
by
TOM QUINLAN
Staff Writer
The Student Programming
Council (SPC) and Students En-
couraging Global
.
Awareness
(S.E.G.A.) will be hosting Earth
Day activities on April 30 in the
Champagnat mall.
The activities will start at 11 a
.
m.
and continue throughout the day.
There
will
be music, games, and in-
formation on environmental issues
·
for students at the festivities.
"Signs of Life, Sally Mudball,
and a steel-drum band will provide
the musical entertainment, and T-
Bone Stankus
will
·
be the MC,"
said Lynn Russo, vice president of
-
the SPC.
Most of the activities
will
be free
for Marist students
,
however there
will be a dunking booth which
students will need to pay a small
fee
to soak someone. According
,
to
Russo
,
the people in the dunking
GO
A.S.E.
CERTIFIED
booths
will
be ordinary students, as
opposed
.
to having
,
the chance
.
to
dunk a professor
or a
resident assis-
tant. "Some of the activities will in-
clude a moon-walk, speed pitching,
.
and human bowling, which wili be
free to the students," Russo said.
In addition to the music and
games available to the students,
there will be vendors
,
face painting,
caricature artist~d food.
"We are really hoping for a Jot
of people to come out because it is
going to be a really good time,"
said Patricia Clark
,
publicity of-
ficer of the SPC. "There will be a
barbecue and about five or six
events." These events are being
held in honor of Earth Day, and
there will be plenty of information
regarding the conditions of the en-
the event to speak,
.
arid also
members of S.E.G.A
.
.
will be
reading other environmental infor
-
mation that we have received for
the students," saicl Aaron
Astorino, vice president of student
life.
According
to
Astorino,
S
.
E.G
.
A. has sent away for and
received information from various
environmental
organizations
around the
-
country which the
students attending the lectures will
find interesting.
Astorino said other clubs on
campus su
_
ch as Amnesty Interna-
tional would also be providing in-
formation for the students during
the activities on Earth Day
.
VCR4
VCRl
VCR2
VCR3
VCRl
VCR2
VCR3
VCRi
VCR2
7:30-8
:
00
IO
VCR4
VCR4
VCRl
VCR4
VCR2
VCR4
VCR4
WEEKDAY LINE-UP
6
:
00 AM
to
9:00 AM
9
:
00 AM
to
10:00
AM
10
:
00 AM
to
12:00 PM
12:00 PM to 12:30 PM
12:30 PM
to
l :00 PM
1 :00 PM
to
3:00 PM
3
:
00 PM
to
3:30
PM
.
3:30 PM
to
S:30 PM
S:30 PM
to
7:30 PM
8:00 PM to 10
:
00 PM
.
10
:
00PMto 12:00AM
12:00 PM
to
6:00 AM
.
STATION ID
FOX FITNESS
SPORTS
"BACKTALK"
·
"ONE-ON.ONE" - OR - "PRESS BOX"
MCTVS GREATEST HI'FS
"CONVERSATION"
SPECIALS
NEWS
MOVIEl
·
MOVIE2
STATIONID
·
WEEKEND LINE-UP
9:00 AM
to
12:00 PM
12:00 PM
to
2:00 PM
2:00 PM
10
5:00 PM
S:00 PM
10
7:00 PM
7
:
00PM'to 8
:
00PM
.
8:00 PM
to
10:00 PM
·
l 0:00 PM
to
12:00 PM
·
12:00 PM
to
6:00 AM
•
.
·
STATIONID
SPORTS 1
STATIONID
SPORTS2
STATION ID
MOVIEl
MOVIE2
·
.
STATIONID
.
.
vironment throughout the after-
noon
.
"We are going to provide
environmental facts for the
students throughJocal environme11~
.
tal groups ihat \~i!l
,
be coming to
"People should come out for.the
day b
e
cause it will be a fun time
,
"
Astorino said; "There
will
be lec-
tures and
a.
lot of activities for peoa
Any suggestlonsfor or questions about programming, call MCT at X2423.
.
·
.
,
Any questions regarding the evening movies call X3279 •
.
pie
to
participate in."
.
.
.
YOUR COMPLETE TIRE AND SERVICECENTER
North
.
Road
-·
·
471-8255
·
.
·
·
256 North Road, J.>oughkeepsie
..
(O:pp6s
_
ite
St.
Francii
Hospital)
Formerly RC>ckland
Tire
.
Official N.Y.S.
l~sp~ction Stat,on
.-~···----·~~··~~~-··-~·---·-~·~~~·~~~~··~········~~
I
.
.
.
.
. .
.
.
·
·
•
.
. ..
.
.
.
.
.
.
. · ..
.
•
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
:
·
·
AFTER A HARSH
>
WINTER,
·
.
!
:
Co
,
me in· for a
FREE
s_a
·
tety
·
check.
:
_
:
·
I
.
.
.
-
•
We'll che
·
ck:
:
I
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
I
: . Suspension
--
•
.
Brakes • Tires • Dr
.
ive
.
Train
-
·
,
·
etc.
.
:
···-·-·········-·-···-··-
-
-•-
.
•··------·-···--··--····
·····-··-··--··----····-··--···--·-·-·-··-----·---··
I
.
.
·•
.
.
:
.
FREE ALIGNMENT
!
I
I
:
w/purchase of
2
or more Tires,
:
I
I
!
.
Cooper, Goodyeat
:
.
I
·-----·-------·----·-··-·-·-·----·--··-··--·-··-····
.
THE
.
CIRCLE,
_
.
FEATURE
.
.
APRIL 21,
1994
5
Freshman Hudson comes to the
Huds
.
on
to
play softball at Matist
by
SCOTT RONAGHAN.
pitches, which includes a screwball;
athletes who have difficultv ad-
.
slider, change-up, and rise ball.
.
justing not only to the level
of
com-
Staff Writer
"Michelle is a very smart pitcher
petition, but the college at-
.
because
.
she thinks about each pitch
.
mosphere as well, Hudson said she
One of the maJ·or factors mak-
.
carefully,'' Degatano said; '
.
'She is
had little difficulty adapting to her
ing the softball team contenders in
.
.
.
a professional kind of pitcher; very
new situation.
th: Northeast Conference is the pit-
·
down-to business when she is out
C'My first semester at school
chmg they are receiving from
on the mound."
took some getting used to, but the
Michelle Hudson.
.
·
Hudson said her best pitch is her
.
res. t of the players on the team were
·
Hudson, who hails from s
·
a
·
n
.
·
..
.
·
.
screwball, which she
·
is able to
real friendly, and let the younger
Diego, CA, is having a phenomenal
move inside and out on the batters.
players feel welcome," Hudson
season. As of
·
April 10;
·
the
"I don't throw the fastball that
said:
fres
_
hman
·
hurler had thrown two
h
I
·
h
1
·
h
muc , so
·
ave to re y on t e
Patricia Southworth, senior co-
no-hitters against Northeast Con-
screwball
to
be effective," said
captain and pitcher, said Hudson
ference rival Long Island Univer-
Hudson.
.
fit right in with the rest of the
"M11nicipal Bondage" a tale
for the Renaissance Man
Truth is stranger than fiction.
Just look at Congress.
Select any street in New York Ci-
ty,
ANY.
Chances are an excursion down
one of those roads will provide an
eyeful of eccentric musings.
Jerry Seinfeld has made a career
out of it, Henry Alford has made
a book of it.
"Municipal Bondage; One
and potato chips.
He received the chips a week
later.
Between trips to clown school or
working as a motorpool driver for
the Democratic National Conven-
tion, Alford exits his psychic con-
finement by asking "what if. .. "
What if the Pope was a dog?
What if the Bronte Sisters had
:,een
.
a heavy metal band?
What if your mother lived at the
Between the Lines
sity, and compiled a 8-1 record with
As for
.
the no-hitters, they are
pla·yers on the team
1
·40 ERA~
h
1
d
·
'Man'• Anx1·ety-Produc1·ng Adven-
Playboy mansion?
a
·
,or t e
4-7
Re Foxes.
·
·
nothing
··
hew to
··
·
Hudson. As a
"Everyone on our team gets
.,
She was also named Northeast
·
tures in the Big City" (Random
Or, What if the cast of "The
C
f
P
. h
f
.
k
seriior at
-
Madison
High
School,
alongwitheachotherreallywell," House,
$lB,
231 pgs) not
·
onl_v
McLaughlin Group" were Jiving
on erence ltc er
O
the Wee
Hudson threw
·
seven no-hitters and
Southworth said. "Michelle fit in satisfies the Curious George •in all
inside your bathroom? (This is a
for the week of March 28 to April
compiled a 19-3 record with a 0.20
with the team right from the start "
·
4.
'
ERA.
·
of us, but the Three Stooges as
can't miss lmgering, worth the
B
"Michelle came in with a team well.
price of the book.)
ased on her performance so far
Hudson said she is not concen-
con
t
d
·ir
t
h I th
'
this season, the rookie pitcher
.
does
·
cep an wi mg
O
e P
e
Bluntly, it is The Jerky Boys for
Alford's success with such
trating on her personal statistics for
team any way she could She ·1s a
·
d
not seem to be having a hard time
·
those who have passed puberty.
matenal pro uces the question,
adJ·usting to the college level of
the year, but rather striving at help-
real team player, which is just how
Alford, in short, who admits
why "Saturday Night Live" has
play.
ing the teani go as far as they
you want a freshman to come in
that his behavior, chronicled
falleri so deep into the doldrums
"The one thing l have noticed
possibly can.
.
like," Degatano said.
with material this good so close to
b
.
11
"In order to get to the NCAA
The freshman pitcher said hav-
their fingertips.
a out co ege softball is that
Tournament we have to w1·n the 1·ng
f
·1 o t h
-
th E
everyone
l
·s more
·
aggre
·
ssx·ve,
ami
Y
u
ere m
e ast•
Is there anything less interesting
.
Northeast Conference Tournament which was the main reason Hudson
in the city than the current SNL
especially defensively," Hudsori
first.
I
t
·
h1"nk o
·
ur
·
team has
·
a good
·
t M ·
I
d ·
·
.d
came o
anst, a so ma e 1t easier
cast?
(I
now digress)
saiA. f
chance because
·
we still haven't
for her to get used to her new
Along his way, Alford has held
·
·
s or the offensive part of the
1
d
·
b t
ftb
II
t "
"d
t
h
·
game, Hudson
·has
shown she can
~~~eso~.ur es so
a ye , sa1
a mosp ere.
every odd job from psychic friend
k
.
f
Keeping her current success in
to cement mason and taken every
ta e care o the opposing hitters.
D
·1
th
t
h"
·
·
H d
·
espt e
e recen coac mg proper perspective,
u son said
civil service test in between.
In 58 innings pitched, the freshman
situation distraction
·
s, Hudson said she real"zes sh · onl
f
h
h
I •
.
1
e 1s
Y a res man
Toll taker, r1·sk maker, sub•·vay
as
on y given up nine earned runs,
th t
· d
·
J t b tt
d
·11 h
·
•
while striking out 50 and walking
ch!t :~:y
1
~hi~gmfsase~led~ er now an
st1
fahs to improve on some
maintainer, and general peruser of
only four.
aspects
O
er game.
German classified advertisements,
"The team is really happy with
Hudson modestly attributes her
the coaches now' and are playing
"I need to be able to get the ball
herein, exhibits a more-than-
searching for meaning and help
success to her ability to set up the
a lot better than we ever were,,,
to move inside and outside better.
occasional Jack of decorum, takes moving newspapers and setting
opposing hitters.
Hudson said.
I
also need to geLstronger, so
I
what Dave Lettermen's writers glue traps in hard to reach places.
"I try to set up the hitters the
Although Hudson is having an have been lifting weights to help conjure and puts it into practice on
He even crashed the fifth annual
best I can. I'm not overpowering,
extraordinary year, she said the
with that," Hudson said.
a daily basis.
World of Poetry convention pen-
so I have to outsmart t
.
he hitters;''
play
.·
of
·
her teammates are
·
what
.
Although she probably will not
Dave just has more money.
ning the verse -
''
1
am in the Egg;
Hudson said.
·
wins ball games.
.
admit it, whether or not Marist
A strong case could be made for Hello? Hello?"
(l
am yolknes
5
/l
Hudson's
·
battery
mate,
-·
"Our hitting has been great, and
softball continues to have a great Alford as comedy's Renaissance amAolff ydo\k/Ybo~ks ftohr
sa\e)t
1
·
· ·
p
·
h
.
·
-
·
t h
·
A gel a
·
.-
t
..
•
1
·
.
.
.
Ma
·th
th t
1
,
or com mes e rare a ents
so
omore
-
cac er
,
•
•
n
-
·
'he
defense
·
makes all the pays
·
-
0
seasonwdldependonthenghtarm·
·
... ·
_
n,
_
,
e,_ er a
.
oran
.
ernpoy_er..s
.
,
..
.
r •
.
.
:
,
·
-
-
•
,
·
d
•
Degatario, has the privilege of cat-
b h.
·
d h
. h
.
,, H. d
·ct
f f
h
h
M" h
11
worst mghtmare
o
sarcasm, smcenty,
an
senous
.
h
.
e
m
t e p1tc ers,
._
u son sa1 .
o
res man p enom,
1c e e
.
.
.·
.
.
·
fun
into an entertaining
1
·aunt
chmg t e fres
_
hman's repertoire of
un
·
1·k
th
JI
Hud on
To sample his resume·
.
1 e many o er co ege
s ·
.
·
through the underbelly of the
A Wilfred Beauty Academy-
,
.
.
Politicians amo~g those most
likely
·
to commit stupid crimes
:
I have a theory that our leaders
that no Canadian company could
inspire our behavior.
do the job on short notice.
PoliticaHigures should be role
.·
Hose-her
.
models, instead they lead the pack
:
":
.
/
A Lakewood woman trying to
of stupidity.
_
.
·
·
put out a kitchen grease fire set her
The CQQlic strip
HShoe''.·
·
may
- .•
en.,ti!e house ablaze when she threw
.
have put it
·
best
:
· ·
·
·
·
the flaming pan out the window
.
When
-
the local senator was ask-
·
arid ignited a roof overhang.
ed if he had a good time at his big
Taking a byte out of crime
fund raiser, the senator replied, "I
In Houston, computer enthusiast
must have. They've appointed a
Sh~wn Kevin Quinn,
17,
pleaded
special prosecutor."
works in a mask, colorful tights,
and a cape under the name Super
Animal, has taken to charging in-
to Mexico City slaughterhouses in
costume to challenge workers to
treat animals humanely
.
Said one
worker, "We just.wish he would
fOme in
.
a respectable suit."
:Another
costumed wrestler, Super
Barrio, similarly defends tenants'
rights and works in AIDS
accredited cosmetologist.
worl?
~
most _d1~erse ec~system,
The creator of the snack food
provtdmg a pamtmg that nvals the
NUBBINS.
character of a Norma!1 R~ckwell
Professional earlobe model.
frame fro_m a weat,~ermg Satur-
Proprietor of a Greenwich
day Evemng P?st.
Village dog salon called RUFF
.
A rea~er can ~.help b~t c~!11e up
TRADE.
with the~r own What ifs_
What 1f Mayor McCheese penn-
ed a tell-all
autobiography?
One glance and it is certain that
nuance was never a problem for
Alford_
For his factual soirees, Alford
prefers to call himself an in-
vestigative journalist, obsessed with
the sublime, ridiculous, and insane .
.
He's hired nude housekeepers,
taken dog-grooming examinations,
and self-registered as a single at
Bloomingdale's bridal registry.
Maybe take a week off from
work to fulfill the childhood fan-
tasy of working for a chinese dry
cleaner to see what really goes on
in the steaming room.
Fly to Aruba as
a
professional
Calypso dancer.
"
The perks of politics
:
.
Former Oklahoma Rep
;
Kenneth
Converse testified in July that he
had witnessed Gov. David Walters,
when Walters was a candidate for
goxernor in I 990, promise a state
j<>b
to
someone in exchange for a
$5,000
contribution. Converse said
he told the grand jury that what
Walters did
was
"highly unethical.
·
l.Jsually you have someone else do
it for you."
His list of desirables: one white
:.
<
.
::'
:•
:
_,
=i::h
:
e
-
.·
,
.
w
...
0-
.
r
,
.
ld"
o
.
u
.
t
.
The
'
re
plastic mug, (?':?o?'t
~OU
have
___ ;...±.-.~_=:A.:=_K........;~~~~~~-~~~.!:...-~~~~~!.--~lanyone
over.
·
. •
Jnqmres
,
the
Based on two principles, what
can one do to add spice to life, and
is
it cheap provide springboards for
mayhem.
Matt Martin
.
is The Circle's
·
Feature Editor
·
Waste not, want not
The White House spent $60,000
· to print 14,000copies of Vice Presi-
·
dent Al Gore's report on making
· government more efficient.
If
the
National Performance Review
pamphlet had followed govern-
ment regulations in not using top-
grade paper, a multicolored layout
and slick graphics, according to
House minority leader Robert
Mickel (R-Ill.), it would have cost
only $15,000.
Government at its best
Michael Balagus, director of
communications for the leader of
Canada's New Democratic Party,
resigned after the disclosure that he
used a
U.S.
finn
to
produce a video
criticizing the Canadian govern-
inent
·
for exporting jobs to the
United States.· Balagus explained
that he hired a Washington,
D.C.,
firm to make the $535,090, six-
minute video because he believed
no contestto
a
'd_t
_
arge t)Jat he
,
hacl education.
.
tried to hire
,
a hit-man/for
:
$5.30
'.
Adams Family Values
and seven compu
'
ter games;
'
to
•
kiii
Ronald Raymond Carr, 37, was
the boyfrien of a girl he had a crush given a suspended sentence in Nor-
on.
-·
He wasJined $500, received
,
10
.
walk, Calif.
}·
in October to the
.
years probation
.,
arid was ord~r~ ~o
·
·
·
(;barge o(furnishing drugs to a
reduce his -daily computing ·time minor. He had admitted to giving
from eight hours to
90
minutes:
his daughter methamphetamines
as
The rite stuff
often as twice a day when she was
An airport police · officer
.
at age
11,
12, and
13
so that he would
Washington National Airport, in-
have company while he did drugs.
vestigating a report_of a fire, found
Musta been a hell of a pen
a burning shoe box containing a
Thom!!,S Joseph Cummings, 24,
mouse, a banana peel and a con-
shot himself to death in August in
tainer of lighter fluid. Standing
Norfolk
Va., with police closing in
beside the box was James E.
on him, five hours after he had kill-
Mercer,
44,
who explained that he
ed a man in a doughnut shop in
started the fire for religious
Severna Park, Md. Cummings had
reasons.
borrowed the 21-year-old victim's
Anti-criminals
inexpensive ballpoint pen five times
In Mebane, N.C., in August, a
to make notes, returning it each
man reported that someone stole
time, and finally offered to buy it
his dog from his backyard but left
for $2. When the owner declined
another one in its place. Also that
because the pen had sentimental
month, in King, N.C., Steve Szabo
value, an insistent Cummings pull-
reported that someone broke into
ed out a 9mm handgun and shot
his house, took his VCR and 15
him five times.
tapes, and ·took 34 comic books
I'm
150 hungry I could eat a •••
from his collection and replaced
In September, Richard Ramirez,
them with 34 others.
the notorious "Night Stalker"
Caped crusaders
mass murderer, failed a mental
Cox News Service reported in
detector test at San Francisco
August that Mexican profassional
County jail, and X-rays detected
wrestler Gerardo Palomero, who
items in his rectum. A subsequent
saleswoman. Garfield under ants
·
stoolse;rch'~evealed a small hand-
cuff key, all empty syringe; the cap
of a pen, and a small piece of
cellophane on which was printed "I
like chocolate."
Ring it up
In separate incidents in March,
police in Washington D.C., and
South San Francisco, Calif., ar-
rested men they encountered run-
ning down the street ~vho aroused
suspicion because they happened to
be carrying cash registers. One was
charged with robbing a conve-
nience store and the other with
burglarizing a bakery.
Can we have a
secluded cell in the
back?
The "Salt Lake City Tribune"
reported in December that police
officer N.S. Hall had recently ar-
rested two men for engaging in sex
in a car in Ogden, Utah, and had
taken them to a police station. Due
to a miscommunication at the sta-
tion, the men were locked in the
same cell, and immediately began
having sex again.
Cough it up
In July, a 17-year-old boy, sitting
alone on some steps in Manchester,
N.H.,
was approached by a police
officer on patrol who wanted to
stop and chat_ According to the of-
ficer, the boy evaded several ques-
tions and then began coughing
violently. As the officer rubbed his
back to ease the coughing, the boy
finally spat out $200 worth of co-
caine that he had swallowed when
he saw the officer approaching.
They needed change
for
Disney World
In Orlando, Fla., three men us-
ed a blowtorch to break into an ar-
mored truck and steal 400,000
quarters while the driver was asleep
in the cab. Secret Service agents
who arrested the thieves said they
were puzzled
as
to how they carried
out bags of quarters weighing 2
tons without waking the driver.
STATS
* Federal funds spent last year to
study the sexual habits of the
Japanese quail: $29,534.
*
Hours the average Chinese
worker must work to
earn
the price
of an ice-cream cone at Bejing's
new Baskin-Robbins:
7.
*
Number of words in the new
"Shorter Oxford English Dic-
tionary" that are Japanese: 2,500.
Matt Martin
is
The Circle's
Feature Editor.
His
name in
Japanese is .
!
6
~1:C1RCLE,)Eb1TdR1~t ..
A;:,L21•~!!94
,
'
'
'
.
'
'
..
'
.
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
,
, ,
'
'
'
,
,
THE CIRCLE
MARISTCOLLEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE, NY 12601
T"E ST<li)ENT NEWSPfl_,Elt
S.J. Richard,
editor
Ted Holmlund,
:,po;ts editor
Carl Oleskewicz,
managing editor
_ Julie Martln,
senior editor
Kristina Wells,
associate editor
Justin Seremet,
'assistant editor
Teri L. Stewart,
editorial page editor
James Hocking,
distribution manager
Matt
Martin,feature edhor
Andre'!'. Holmlund;
associate editor
Dana Buoniconti,
columns editor
Meredith Kennedy,
associate editor
Jennifer Ponzfnl,
advertising manager
Dennis Gildea,
faculty advisor
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
No frills
·'N\JMTb[K,OrJE
A50
u. i-
~Ii
t:
C,-.fl2-CL
€:
'
,
-
~
.:r
T.
::r...
'°\'E'
W.At.~i~.
fof..
trv,ft.
~•R
'
-:.
A 1'1,<.,--,tr»'
•
M,W
tJOT E
'fo
R.t)
b
E:
I< :
ALL
HJ Fol
fYJATloN
I<;
gA>~t
OIJ
I\EJtlY
M>,V-SCIHtTif:rc
foll
s
She's trying prose
He's attemtping
humor:_
Marist's 48th Commencement ceremony will be memorable.
·
As I sit here for yet another week, placed
·
·
, · · ·
Except for the speaker, that is. There isn't one.
between th.e two most morbid columns in this
Once upon a
,
time, .la
5
l·,
Saturday night,
·
1
d
b
h
I h
1
there. wa. s a liberal columnis. t.,'a
.. ·p' ar. ty a.nd,
This is the best advancement in commencement exercises ever, though.
paper, pon er a out w at· s ou d write
about.
of course, there was a fight. ,
. . .
Marist is truly on the cutting edge here.
. .
If
you want to hear about all the expecta-
, As· I stepped to the balcony to get some
Think about it, remove the time taken to introduce, wait for applause,
t1ons of the new student body president look fresh air, I was cornered by a Republican
end the speech, applause again, and you have shortened graduation by
to your right.
If
you want to hear the ~eek-
who didn't have a care.
,
·at, least an hour.
.
ly "bitch" session about all the "terrible"
'I know you,' he said with a smile. 'You
th.
M ·
l k
were on that debate. Your behavior quite
What has the Class of 1994 done to deserve a commencement speaker
mgs at
anst;
00
to your left.
It
is so boring to me to read the same ar-
vile.'
·
anyway?
tides every week. Ok, the words get chang-
'That was me,' I said and braced for the
The class had the audacity to feel slighted when the phone system was
ed around but the jist of both columnists is '.Horst. 'Andwhatever you're thinking
I
can't
installed in the dorms. They were told no phones were part of the
the same every week.
be coerced.'
-·,
·.
-
<
· '.
"freshman experience." Being a frosh iri 1991 is different from being
.
So, it is myjob to either add humor or ac-
'Oh it
was
fine,' he said with a coriser-
tual ·1·ns·ght t
h t · h ·
·
,
·
.
v. a .. tive.·.ton.e. 'Because I; of course, was sup-
one in' 1990. Apparently they didn't read the mem· o.
:
1
0
w
a is appemng around the
,
world and
h
· · , , ·
· ·
porting Anthony Mignone.'
. ,
,
They had theunmitigated gall to whine when their parking was taken
,,,·Ther~we~:e:o ii~i:~~tifthJthappen-
With
that the ,conver:sationtook quite
a
away_. Once again, they
did not take change well.
.·
.. ..
(;!d last week that almost seem poihtless t<> tum,
frOill
SGAelectionsto social concerns.
Some-where they began.to. turn
it around.''The
_first
sparks of enlighten-
·.·
mimtion oecause it.was a week ago, btfrsince ,:,; ,He_ tens me)he.homeless- au. want to. be.,.
ment could be seen when they were awarded Class
of
the Y ear'in 1993. :,
most of you• do not: read newspapers'.or
.
th
ere;_'.fhey're drunk a
ndth
ey'fo
1
~
getting?~'"'' -
Now, they are ready.
·
.·,
wat~h CNN; this might be a good catch..'up" :many<a'. glare. · · ... · . ,
:
.
i
.·
·
,, .
·
. •
•·
session
,
, Of those who steal and rob, well there's
Deprived and emaciated of privileges, they welcome the challenge of ,_
Lt~irik the oply word th~t could possibly simply no excuse_;They should be-out
work~.:'- .
braving commencement without the oh-so-relevant words of, a respected
descnbe the.UrutedStates AirForC(! shooting • iiig
~
notdrinkirig
up
liooi~. •
.. '• .. •-
,t
J
\
individual with wisdom to im. part . . . ·.
·. ·'.
.
.
·. .
do_wn
,
an American helico.Pt.er would. be; . /'Andthos.eonwelfai'~he.couldgo
·
onabout.
·
·
,
t
h
'fofever;He'll
never'feel bad for them. Never.
They
will
suffer stoically through the banal dissertations of those ad.:
ngger- appy ·
· . .
<
i< .,·
.
. · .....
ministrators with whom they .have so. much.in common-,-namelya Marist
College parking sticker and perhaps (for those more liberal authorities)
a T-shirt with the Marist logo~
.·.
_
After all what do seniors really want?. ,,· Aclassy ceremony worthy
of the hard work, endless homs and colossatamounts of money they
, have poured into this institution of higher education?
Hell no. They wan(put.It's that simple. • ·
.
While we're economizing on time for the exercises, why even call each
g:raduate up individually? Why notjust say: "All rise.
If you paid your
bills, you ca.ri go. Hnot, seethe business officein Donnelly, then go."
That's· professional.
It's time to thank all the little people who made this possible.
Let's have a rousing round of applause for Shaileen Kopec for all the
hard work she's
'putin
on this endeavor. Why the Class officers must
be beside themselves with gratitude for being excluded from this obviously ·
arduous process.
'
,
Of course, she is not alone in this innovative programforgraduation.
Still her uninformative ,,style should not go without commendation.
However, for those seniors who are so obstinate to change and are
spoiled enough
·to hold to the delusion that they want a graduation ,
speaker, a quick word of advice: call mommy and daddy.
We are not mature enough in the eyes of those in charge to participate
in the format of our own commencement-you know the one which is
given in our honor-much less important enough .to the proceedings to
merit the occasional update on the non-speaker status.
Let the 'rents do the talking. They are the ·only ones who count at
here because they sign the checks. And you thought you weren't a number
at Marist.
Wait a second. The Circle is about to revolutionize the new
Marist
non-speaker format-make it more elegant if you will. Follow closely,
especially
if
you are
a
soon-to-be-graduate4 senior.
In the interest of the environment, save this page and pass it on to
underclassmen for their own future use-think globally act locally, right?
Read the following anytime after midnight on May 21. (If you want
to be formal, get into groups, invite parents, stand up, wear something.
Basically, spice it up as you please).
Hear ye! Hear ye,
all
with
120
credits. If the checks have cleared, you
are now an alumnus. Congrats, now take your place on the unemploy-
ment line. (Notice how it resembles those registration lines we used to
wait in).
He said
I have nevef been in the
military
arid T
have
a tremendousamoimt ofr~spect for those
, who are currently serving as well
as
veterans
but come on'. Shooting down
an
American
helicopter is a tragedy and concern. .., .. . ·
Clinton has started an inyestig;itioh butthe
real answer is, "We are truly sorry for our
stupidity."
·
Moving on ...
Two words, Izett Buchanan. Using basket-
- ball _lingo that everyone should understand,
"you fouled out man.''
I am sure thateveryone on, campus knows
abou.t the events that took place last week
· when Izett decided to go shopping with so-
meone else's credit card.
One of the. top Marist basketball players
is facing four years, not in the
NBA,
riot in
the classroom, not in any league outside the
states, but in prison.
·
·
Not only.has he brought embarrassment
to himself, but to our college. It would please
me to see him expelled from Marist · arid I
would be surprised
if
the administration has
the backbone to do it.
I know that I already talked about Bub-
ba, but he has yet another big decision to
make. No. Not whether or not to tell Hillary
to get away from his desk, but to nominate
another Supreme Court Justice.
Instead of watching stand-up comedians,
you can watch CNN for complete coverage
of the nominations and be just as satisfied
when Bubba comes out and . says, "My
fourth nomination is ... "
There are only three weeks left of college
for our distinguished seniors. For the rest of
us, we have three weeks left with another
year under our belts.
Scott Sullens is one of The Circle's
political columnists.
She said
}le
goes on and on as I try to cut in. But
his intent was so that no words of mine
would persuade him.
The,homeless I told him are not justlazy
derelicts. S.ome are women and soine are
children - many just down on their luck' a bit.
, And those who steal and rob, ~ell maybe
it's not just for fun. Maybe it's because
they're starving or living on the run. ·
And the welfare system I admit has s~rrie
flaws.H's notenoughn:ason though, to ban
the entire cause.
But taxes he won't payto support these
programs. They're wasteful and expensive,
at.least that's how they seem to him.
.
.
To him, sure, they all seem useless. He'll
never be homeless or on welfare. Middle-
class, he'll always be there.
. At Marist here we often forget. For many
it's our parents who pay the bills and it's our
parents who get the respect.
The problems of Marist he then tries to ex-
plain. But really Mr. Conservative can only
complain.
.
, It's too much money and too. few chances.
Opportunity he wants and it should be his.
It's out there I tell him. It's yours for the
taking. Just open your eyes and ears - it's
phone calls you should be making.
So the moral of the story (you must have
known there'd be one): Stop complaining
and open your eyes. College is about more
than just fun.
Take advantage of opportunities and don't
wait for offers. Learn what you can and
respect the way of others.
Caroline Jonah is one of The Circle's
political columnists
THECJF!CLE,
VIEWPOINT
APRIL 2.~,
.
1994
.
7
No respect. f or
:i
Cobain
.
Kurt
.
Cobain
·
should have been
Editor:
·
.
·
on hi~ knees 2~7 thanking God
l
am
:
writing this
.
letter in
that he knew people in the recor-
·
response to an article by
,
one of ding _business four years ago
•
..
.
your own, Dana BuonicontL
·
And while we're on the subject
You are right; Dana, death is not of music, Dana,
.
if Nirvana never
funny; rio death
is
funny.
.
.
existed?
_
And when given the opportuni-
Yes,
·
.
·
Pearl. Jam would be
tylo laugh at the thought of a guy popular
·
today; yes, Soundgarden
with a gun i~ his mouth and new
w~>Uld
'
be popular today.
,
grey matter wallpaper, well, it's
· ·
I'll
let you in on a secret - They
just not a pleasant image. And it have talent.
is tragic.
·
·
·
Nirvana
is
just a
.
really loud,
.
However'
I
do fully reserve the really bad, high school barid with
,
right to
·
laugh at his life; it;s really good equipment.
.
·
something l have been doing for
''But they symbolize teen-angst,
nearly two years now.
.
.
dude."
, ·
•
I
reserve the right to laugh at a
Oh, great, something new.
guy who was handed everything in
.
''But Kurt brought back punk,
life (recording career, supermodel
.
dude'."
·
wife, beautiful baby girl, money;·
Good; maybe itwill follow him.
money, money, fame, fanie, fame)
.
.
to the grave .
.
and turned to drugs and then threw
·
.
.
it all away .
.
.
·.
·
I do not respect Kurt Cobain.
''But he was a tormented artist,
I
do not respect his MTV geared
·
don't you feel for him?"
()Op-punk music.
Um, ...
No.
I've got two tests and three
I respect all of you
·
out there in
papers due in the next seven days. Marist-land who struggle and toil.
You want to · talk about
All of you who do not have
tormented?
·
supermodel wives
.
but somehow
Also,
I am very insulted that this
.
persevere.
no talent punk, who should be flip-
1
respect all of you musicians on
ping
·
burgers and asking me what campus who don't try to embody
sauce I'd like with
my
McNuggets, that cliched "teen-angst," but try
·
blows his brains out because life is
sodarnn hard; while you ahd I are to make good music.
here at Marist ,College busting our
·
I
don't respect Kurt Cobain,
I
pi-
asses, drug free, trying
·
to earn a ty him.
good career and a good life
for
our
families.
NOTICE:
Letters to the edi-
tor are the views of
the authors only.
These are not nec-
essarily the opin-
ions of The Circle
Thanks for campus events
Editor:
·
.
become an annual
.
fixture at
There have been so many fine
·
.
Marist, following upon last year's
events on campus recently that
I
King Lear and recalling The Miser
would like to congratulate and
and A Midsummer Night's Dream
thank the people involved.
of too many years ago.
First there was the entertaining
Saturday evening of choral singing
And just last week we had three
a few weeks ago.
very line Holocaust Remembrance
Sincere thanks to Dorothy Ann
Days and another heartwarming
Davis, faculty, and students for a
Children's Theatre production, this
most relaxing evening.
time The Glass Slipper, rejoicing
Then there was the exhilarating
·
the hearts of thousands of
and roisterous Taming of the
youngsters-and their teachers and
Schrew.
parents.
Masterfol direction by Sue
Thank you, one and all. Keep up
Lozinski
•
and inspired student the good work.
performances.
Hopefully Shakespeare has now
Bro.
Joseph
L.R.
Belanger, fms
Sororities
are
inclusive
Editor:
judging people for the content of
I'm writing this letter in response
their character and not the color of
to two
.
things written in the last
their skin makes me a sell out, then
issue of The Circle.
make me a big sign because I'll
First is the article on the first
wear it with pride.
page about the school denying the
The second thing
l
want to ad-
sorority Delta Sigma Theta.
dress, is the letter written by Jon
I personally think it's unfor-
P. DeRise.
tunate that this sorority can't be
First the only thing he proved in
chartered but l strongly disagree
his letter is how much of a
with the statement about blacks
freshmen he really is, because I
and Latinos being left out of grcck
have never read so much ignorance
life.
in my life
.
If there are blacks and and
You believe that not recognizing
Latinos who feel left out it is by
Black History Month and Hispanic
their own choice.
Heritage isn't a great loss?
There are eight very fine greek
First of all you obviously have
organizations on this campus.
no clue as to the struggles that
I
happen to be a member of one
blacks and Latinos have had to en-
of them and
I
am a Latina.
dure, and still have to endure.
The only reason that some blacks
l
didn't appreciate your little
and Latinos don't join greek life is
reference to Dominicans, I'm
because in their eyes they see it as
Dominican and last time
r
check-
"white". The reason I know this
ed I didn't kill a cop nor did any
is because when I pledged my
of my Dominican friends.
freshmen year I was referred by
You came more than close to
many as a sell out and an oreo.
sounding \ike a bigot .
.
,
. Not to mention
.
other names that
·
T.he first thing you need to do
is
.
are'riof
'
t'i(to
he
·
pdritei:L'
.
.
··
'
·
go
·
co ·
·
che library and educate
I'm sorry but I
·
personally was
yourself, then maybe you can write
offended and disgusted
by
the fact
an intelligent Jetter to The Circle
.
that people who didn't even know
A wise person is someone who
me were making judgments on my
knows about many things not just
character all because
I
pledged a
the
things
he believes he can
"white" sorority.
understand.
My response is grow up. I love
It
is obvious that there are a
my sisters and I don't ever
regret
great many things you are in-
pledging, in fact if I had to do it
capable of understanding.
all over again I do it in
a
second.
Saggy Rudecindo, junior
If accepting people for who they
Latina and proud member
are and not what they look like, if_
of Sigma, Sigma, Sigma
·
8
THE CIRCLE,· APRIL 21
1
1994·
•
·
student§.
lOokfQrcasn.;
illt~l'ilsb.,ip~for
.
S1J.fflmer
·
·
...
-
·
.,
-
.
.··
: '
·
"
.
·
,
<
·
,
' :· .
;
\y
;. · :
_
·
·
·
since
she
·
\vas
:
abotiftweive The
,
"It's hard for us toJake summer money
:fi
· ·
.
. ·
l :
· - .
·
....
·
··
·.
.
·
.
·
.
'
by
CYLINDA RICKERT;
.
'
'
'
'
L
don ,t
·
;~a11t
:_
t~
;
r~tu~n
;
to .funerhl
.:
horit'e:
'
is
\
on.Jhe
,
gioi.ind
'
.yacadons~·
because
:
my dad, is the
'
·
'
Jenru ~r Doo~
Y._lS
ii
co~u!11ca-
Staff
Writer
.
·
McDonald s,
.
Slie sru~:
::
:
.
•
._ level; aridtheJamfly lives above ii.
·
only ftirieral directoi:lf someone
!
1ons ~aJOf. This summer
.
she
JI
pe
. Even thou
.
gh the apphcat1on pro-
"I'
li
,· •
d
.
.
.
,.
h
: ..
. 'h
die
.
5
he
..
'
has to. come ho.me My
.
mtermng at Channel
12,
a cable
.
With shmmer ~omes warm . cess may be the most reliable
··•
·
way
..
h
.
ve
_
v\. ml
.
·
:
9
·
t
e sa!11e. odusepar
.
·
e'n
·
ts
.
fi
.
ig
·.
u
.
red
·
,•
.
r
·
they··em·· pl·o
·
y
·
•
.
ed station
.
in her hometown, F
..
airfield;
·•
··
·
.
t fi d · b
.
.
yt
.
h.
·
·
·
-:
R• h
'
wit corpses 1or
.
years, so 1t oes
.
. .
..
.
.
. .
.
. .
C
-
.
.
.
. ·
.
. •
.
.
,
,
.
:
weather,
·
no school for four
.
0
.
m . a JO '. an .
..
.
mg goe~.
.
ic
·
.
b
·
h
.
·
·
.
11
•
"
·
h
. ·
"d
their children they'd always have
onn.
.
.
·
.
.
;
•
.
·
'
·
m
_
onths,and-,-hopefully-ajob.
_
- Cocch1ara aJumorfromPortJef~
not ot
.
~rmeata' se.sai ·
.· ..
·
•
·
·
·•
'
·
·
.
:
,,
.
"l'm
'
gomgto·do'a
·
httle
.
of
~
·
·
N'Y
t
·
d
· .
.
•
1
-
·.
"f
.
"It's great; because
.:
youcanteU
staf(peopie:i-rcmnd . .
_
..
·
•
h·
·
_ k
"•
·
..
•
-
f~
··
·
·.
d
.
.
At Marist, students' summer
.
,erso~,
_
. .
_
,
.
oun a
~1~e
~~s, 1
.
people ghost'stories an:d they ac~
. One steppmg-stone
_
_
i~to _a ne~
.
e~eryt
_
mg ma e some_c_~ ,e~ an,,
'jobs
are
as
varied
as
the students
·
qu~st~onable, way
t?
a ?,ew
JO?-
tually believe
·
you."
.
.
_
"'
•
..
>
_
_
hfe and a better career is an mte~n-
pick up g~~ts at the train station,
themselves. They range from
.
the
" ; It
_
s cal!ed !1epot1srn,
·
.
h~
said
.
. •
Apparently, the
.
only drawback
ship, which is working hands-on}n she s~d.
,
At the end
?t
t_he sum-
.
paid
to
the unpaid, the normal to
..
I
_m_
workm_g m Jers
,
ey <;tty~~ SFI
. th .
d t
f
.1
.
•
.
-
.
a chosen field usually for
.
no mer, I
11
get to produce one of my
the bizarre: There are those who
Scemc Designers
>
My hr
.
other
IS
e jeopar y O anu y vacations.
·
·
'
·
·
own shows
;
"
must scrape their paychecks
works th~re: and thdob isn't per-
.
together to get back to school, and
·
manent.Thars abou~
aUI
knb\\;/'
_thos·e
who work to fill in the long
·
Carolyn Suttori; a
·
freshman
hours of summer.
from Nortli._Con'faY, N.H., also
.
.
"What am.I doing this summ~r? · ·works for her family .
.
Her
_father
·
'
Right now, I am searching foi: a
.
;operates th~ only [uileral h<;>me in
job," said Judy Reid, a freshman
!?wn, and his famlly helps him run
from Dover, N.H. "It's hard, and
ll,
everyone looked at me funny when
"Basically, I'm a secretary. My
I applied in April for a job to start
~ather's computer il~~erate; so I J?Ut
in May. I should have started
.
m all the accounts,
-
Sutton said.
·
sooner;"
·
"Sometimes I host a visiting hour
·
Reid's eleventh-hour search for
or stay down there at night to make
a new job sprang from her hatred
sure things are OK."
·
of polyester.
Sutton has been.in
.
the business
TOUGH
... continued from page 3
good experience."
Michelle Pontecorvo, a business
finance major from Kirkville,
N.Y., has taken a job in Stamford
Conn., after sending out only three
resume)>.
.
. ·
"The interview was intense. It
lasted five hours, and I guess I
made a good impression,"
Pontecorvo said
.
For seniors still
Of!
a job search,
the Center for Caree'r Development
and Field Experience offers
workshops
.
concerning resume
writing and intervii,wing skills. The
workshops involve'makiiig resumes
stand out from the
;
crowd, and
Senior Survival Workshop to q(fer
support to the job
,
hunters.
:
·
·
·
.
..
~
. .
.
~IW
,~m
~I~
•
l~~~
Iii~~~ •
~~w·
JIHll
·
1.
And Many Other Destinatrons!
.
n-'¢aKtt hr
f
w,t, • /
f
t<,./ut
tJ!f<
I ~.
f
tp./£-Ktf
'<r.ra
IJderraaaa.w
/J.
~(I,~
''1,
\
-fiti,a
aa
Poughkeepsie:
,ub
City, 246 Main Mall • 485-3579
Arlington
_
Arlington Getty, 813 Main St. • 454-3530
CALLToli-FREE24 HoursJora Brochure:
1•800-457-00
.
89.
Ext~
.
RESULTS GUARANTEED!
STUDENT SEIMCES, Inc. has a da~bank
·
· ,
of over
.
18
.
o
·
__
;oo
__
.
o
,
_
i
_
s
_·_
-
tl
_.
"
_
g
___
s
_
fo
.
r scholarship
.
s, fellowsh
·
i
--
p
-
__
s. grants and
.
loans. representing BIWONS of dollars In private sector funding.
.
We can
provide you
with
a list of funding sources most appro-
.
prlate to your background and educational goals.
.
-
·
·
Student Se~ice~. Inc.
6124
;
N~rth Mnwa~kee A~enue. Chicago,
·
I;
60646
How is STIJDENT
SERVICES, Inc:
:
·
.··
Different from
a
.
,
Financial Aid Office?
STUDENT SERVICES,lnc.
specializes
in
private
·
sector funding from
,
·
·
corporaUo~s, memorials;
.
trusts, foundations,
..
religious groups, and
.
,
·
many
'
other philanthropic
·
.
organizations.
,;
.
..
·
As state and federal
..
funding sources continue
to face serious cutbacks,
private sector funding is
expected to grow even
faster than in the past.
STUDENT SERVICES, Inc;
has current, up-to-date
·
Information that provides
'
a
.
n intelligent alternative
to traditional state and
federal funding sources;
at the very least; they
represent a significant
supplement to
govemmentJunding.
P R I
~
C I I' I. E S
of
S O l .
~
I)
R E T 1 R E .\ \ E :'\ T l N \. l~ S T I N G
:
·
~
.
.
;
.
.
.
.
·v
.
.
.
.
.
'i'te.'l>s
.
J
--
:_.
:,
',
.
E'h:~;~;,;:;:~r,1:r:::;:t;:.y
.
· •.
·
;i;i;;~:t;}f
ii!{~~,J£~
;f.
.
don't
·
.
take advantage of tax deferral and
·
.
-:
r?ad,
~~at
~an
_
~
make a dramai)c_'clifference
wind up s~nding Uncle Sam
rr19
.
ney)hey
··
iify~ur
.
quillity
;,,
<>flife .
...
_-:
;.i
.
•..
·
could
be saving for retirement.
?\
.
.
.
·
_
·
.
W-hat else ma.kes S
,
R'As
.
so special?
Fortunately, that's a mistake you
:'
can
A range of all.oca'.tion choices:__froin the
easily avoid with TIAA-CREF
,
SRAs.
guarante_ed security of TIAA to tlie
SRAs not only ease your cu,rrerit .tax-
,;Ii versified i~yestment accounts of
;
bite, they offer a remarkably
.
easy way
CREF'.s variable annuity....'..all back~d
to build retirement income-espe~ially
by the nation's number one retirement
for the "extras" that your regular pension system.
and Social Security benefits may not
Why write off the chance for a more
cover. Because your contributions are
rewarding retirement?
Call
today and
made in before-tax dollars,you pay less
.
learn more about how TIAA-CREF
tai:,:es now. And since all earnings on
SRAs ca,n help you enjoy many
your SRA are tax-deferred ~s well, the
happy returns.
Benefit
,ww
from
tRJc
deferml.
Call our SRA hotline
I
800-842-2733, ext. 8016.
Ensuring the future
for those who
shape
it~
.
'
CREF
mlifir•lts •rt Jittrii111tJ
by
TIAA-CREF lnJi.;J,,.,,/
anJ
lruti1111i,114/ Smiru.
F;,
IMrt ,ompklt
i,,f•nnati,n, ;,.,LuJi,,J
,/,,,,yu dnh~pt/lJU
,.II/ 8(1(1..8-12-27JJ.
a.I.
80/6
f•,.,,
p,wp«lu,.
Ru} IN
pro,p,,l,uwef,J/y
kf•rt ~" im-ut
11n1nJ
IMII~
'
,•
'
-
-
---
-
-
-
·---
-
-
---
-
·-···
-
-
-
-
-
-
"
•
-
···
·
···--·
•
...
-
--
.
--
.
-·
-
--
·-
·--·
--.
--
-
-
--·---·
---
--
-
-
-
-·
--~
-
·
·
-
--
---
-
-
--
·
·
-~-·-
--
-
-
-
•
--
-
---
-----
--···-
·
•
-
-
-
--
-
---·
·---·-
-·•
-~
·
-
··-
-
..
-
--
-
~·
·
-¥•-
·
·
··
-·•
·
·•
..
·····--
-
·
·
-
~
...
,
_
.., __
.
......
.
.
......
.
.
- .
.
..
..
..
.
.
. •
· ..
.
.
.
'
··
··
•'"
.,
.
, •.. , ~-
THE
,
CIRCLE;
_
APRIL 21;
.
1994
rc.)'qgp.m<:1,!1,
£plI).IJ,ytition - is
it
sexist or not
.
.
. . -
_
_
_
- -
·
.
·
.•
.
:
:
. :
.
.
.
:
.
·.
·· ·
~he
°',:
saf~tf ge
_
ar
.
iw:It1de~
;
heaf
•
focal econtimy in two
:
days;" he
There will ~e
,
thr5!e ~ounds
for
c01;npe_te
m
the event, according to
by
TERI
.
L.
J~J'l:\V
AF.ff
.
,
/
.
gear
;
:
oversized
:
)6
·
oz
.
_;:
gloves,
·
added/
.
·
each fight lastmg one mmute each.
Along,.
Staff Editor ·
_·
.
:
:_.
·.
:.; ·
·
· mou,~hpie~e1(groin P
-
~~t~~t9r,~and
. ·
,
·
.
-
.
The wiriner receives $1000 and
'
. the e~ent begins at 8_p.m. both
.
.
The
_
Toughmari
_
Contest
~
'Com-
.·
·
fooAlt
,
P
,
~<i
.
4Jr.i~d
<:
t
i
h
:.-:
'
·
:':°
:
-
-:.'
t
•
~ ,
·
:
1
\
·'·· .-::, ·
_
..
.
.
·
.
b
: •
At
.
~chotr~rigttho Diehlt; security will
continues to the national finals in
5
mghtsdw1th the finals bemg held on
., .
..
).
~µgi
:
sai
..
e
.
~~~"
-
w1 ~
_
pr9-
e
.
1g
~or
e eyen •
.· .
Atlantic City,
N.J.
·
atur ay .
.
bat on the
,
Campus
_
•
will ~ak~
.
1ts
, .
vide
·
a
:
·
sare-
·:.
environment for
.
-
~
-
.
. -.
.
.
.
_
·
: .
-
-
·
·
-
·
way to
_
the
:
Mc~an~
,
R~crea~io
_
n
: :
stiiderits
>
and 'aduits
18 years arid
,
.
CCUmformpolicemen
as
~ell
.·
as
.
fifty to 70
:
COlllpetitors usually
.
..
see TOUGH page 8
►
Center at
8
p.m. on
_
Apnl
22 a!}d
,
oidefio compete.
-
_
:
i
·
•
.
·
·
·
b?uncer type pe~ple
supplie~
by - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
23. .
·
.
·
;
_
.-._ _
_
__
Ac¢ording
·
to Diehl, the event is
th~ promoters wdl be there, he
.
_
·
The event 1,s
:m
.
amateur kickbox-
.
·
.
a community
•
activity.
.
said.
mg compet1t1on for men and
"It
will be beneficial
for
.
the
·
women.
·
·
;
·
·
.-
-
"
·'
.
.
'
.:'
/
·'
.
coniiin
i
nity,
'.
and
,
the stui:!,ents will
-
·
The
-
college
·
is charging a stan
~
.
Accor~mg
:
_t
.
o
{
'I'om
.
:
Diehl
;
.
•
•
ei:ijoy
_
it
/t
D._iehl
:
saic,l .
.•
•
>
.
.
:•·
. ;
dard
.
rental
:
charge for the event
McCann 1s rentmg
,
the
srm
to the
:
_
.
>
Aiongi'saidthat by
-
holding this ranging in the
.
thousands, accor
-
Toughm~ Cont~t. TW.s
.
will
,
be
·
even
f
they are. helping the college dirig t~ AlongL
.
the firs~ time the event wdl be h~ld 'by e~ployirig
.
studci11ts.
_
.
_
< \
.
.
-
. /
.~
· -
.
•
·
-
-·
·
.
-
-
-
.
..
at
-
Manst
'.
,_
..
.
.
,
. _,
.
•
.
-
_
.
_
.•
...
__
.··
_
':
·
-
?U:
.
a,lso
:
h«!lps
:
ben,efit
:
the
,
Red
•
,:
: .
It
1s enoug~,to ~over ~s a,~d to
However,
_
th1s
.
1s t~e t~lf~ co1_1~
.
Fox'Club
''.
he said. "We'remajor
.
!Ilake a p~ofit,
_.
Diehl said. See-
secutive year it is being held
]11. th~
--
_
supporter~ ofthe
'
college
)
irid<>f.the
:
•
m;S _how its the
:
first
.
event, we're
Hudson Valley, the past
.
t.wo y
_
ears
.
Red Fox Club so that was one of
.-
,
w11hng to
_
work with the pro-
being i'!-
_
the Mid
;
Hu_~~qrrCivic
,
the major reasons why w~de~ided
.
moter."
WE BRING
ADDSPACE
TO
YOU!
Center m P.oughkeeps1e.
·.-• :: ,
...
to haveJhe event at Manst.'!
·
The night of. the competition
.
Diehl said the administratio
11
at:
_
The McCann· Center
.
also
..
holds each
.
participanL undergoes
a
McCann kn~w~
\
Bria~L
:
Stir~¢
/ .
niore
people th~ the Civic Center
,
·
physical. If he or she have
·
no o
_
b·
Trac~ Pattersoµ
.
s
.'._
Jlla,n.ag~!' ,
;r,
a11.d
,
_
_;
:.
:
-
:_:
Alongi
_
sai<i_
<
that h~ Je_els
,
:
the
.
.
vious pro!,l_ems, they get put into
that
IS
h()W
·
the contest arnved at
i
event
;
will bring more awareness to
·
ohe of two V.:!!ightclasses:
160a 175
.
·
M~,rist.
··
,
. -
:
·
·
··
.-
:-:
-
>
:
._..
the
'
college .
.
_
,
:
:
'
:·
___
_ .
_
---
,
pounds
_
or 175 pounds and over.
It allows th~
,
average ~vecyday
.
:!We spent $15,000 locally
to
.
_
-
.
.
guy to _get in th~
_
ri11¥
an~
.
O:UX it
promote the cori\est," he
/
said.
·
The compettt~rs ar~ then pa~red
.
up," said Mai:k -t\).<>ngi, a l)romoter
"The beer
:
comes
,
from Dutchess ~p and compete ma single ehmma-
fo! the event with ~on
,
Spehce
pros
Beei:
Distributors, the ring is rented
.
ti~n process.
.
ductions
.'
"We
:
pr,ovide all
·
the
.·
loi;all_y in
.
Newburgh, and we use
all
The fighters are required to have
necessary safety gear to ensure that
·
·
1ocal.people.
.
_
amateur status and less than five
there are
·_
no injuries_."
,,:
·
••we
·
wili pump in $60;000 to the wins in their career.
Now you don't
have
to
coordinate summer storage
with classmates.
·
.
ADDSPACE
makes it
as easy
asJocking yourlndividual
·
Storage Bin in the parking
lot of your dprm build,ing.
You
store yoifrgoods .
.
· .
You lock
the door
.
You keep
the
key.
You forget it until fall.
ADDSPACE
INDOOR SELF-STORAGE
l■l■l■l■l■l
-
,1■1■1■1
1 800
Xtra
Room
Sign Up Campus Center
Thursday
&
Friday
April 28
&
29, 1994
11AM-5PM
.
~
QI
u.
..,.
(914) 297-1500- Markel Street Industrial P
a
rk,
Wappingers Fa\ls, NY 12590
THURSllAV
PIG
ROAST
M
.
ARIST ·_
.
NIGttT
at
.
.
i3E~TIES
, ·
$3
COVER
·
WJMARISTJD
BEER
1ST 4 KEGS
FOOD
GIVEAWAYS
·
DRINKING GAMES
.
$1.50
Goldschlager
Shots •
$1.50
Zima
Bottles
$1.25
Jumbo B
·
eers
-
• $3.00 Pitchers
18
&
OVER • CALL= 452-BERT
-··
I
I
I
I
I
~
!
I
I
I.
---
•
10
THE: CIRCLE, .. APRIL 21,
1994
AND NO #2 PE.NCII-S>l~QUJRED.
THIS DEFINITELY ISN'T
·· A TEST. In
fact, it's just simple
· math. You get the
:•~-;?i-
1\1/-.·. - -.. :_.--_-~-·
;
_;
'.
_· .•·
__ ; ... -.. ~.
2
Put your photo on the ~a~d. and "" .. replace many iniporta,~t documents.
it's harder for anyone else to use :
SECURE YOUR.PORCHASES~- ·
it. Lost your ·
too. Wit.h
Citlb~nk:
Piice Prot~qiot>
· Citibank Classic
card, and then
YOU PAYNO
,
....
__
··
·
•
"
-,
. . . .
CALL TO APPLY:
1-800-CITIBAN K,
EXT
32
wallet? Well,
y~u'II always pay the best p'dce.
don't worry.
And
Buyers Security protects -yoyr
Our lost
· purchases from theft. accidental
~
;
~-
.ANNUAL FEE.
Zippo. Add that to
.
_a\,&ry ._.
·-:
. .
. competitive
15.4% varia,bte anriuaf
:percentage rate'.
and xou·v~ ·got
a great deaJ. You don't have to be
a calculus major to figure trat .out.
And it's easy to see, you're secure.
WallefM
Service
darnage·;;or:-fire; When you
is there to provide you with
think of it, getting a Citibank
EMERGENCY
card could very well
:
CASH,
a new
be the easiest
card usually
addition you'll
within 24 hours,
do this year.
and even help you
NO QUESTION.
Our insom~7!!acs are waiting for
)'OU
with all the answers.
WE'RE LOOKING OUT FOR YOU!"
.· Hurlers
nip.·
.
IoUa;
.
·
· recbrll
RC)M' 1r, ...
9 .·
by
ANDREW- HOLMLUND·. ·
,B;tii_:Mu:rphy ~~ffr~h~an'pitcher
Staff:Wiiter'i
.
Ro~:r;Jt;:~t·2~3~ith'o~e RBI.
The softball
,
teini'.wiU be look~· Stofi.rfr; pitched
a
complete'ganie
in¥ to begin anpther 'Yiiµring streak
allo\Vmg only two hits.
.·.
this afternoon ·when. it' hosts
sr.
·•·
.Sophomore catcher OAngela
John's University at the Gartland
Degatano .and, Junior:. third
·
Commons AthleticHeld at 3 p.m. ·baseman ,Melissa· Fanelli'b.1d one
On Monday, Marist (16-9
hit apiece.
.
. .. .
overall, 7-1 in the Northeast Con-
Co-head coach Jonnah O'Do~:
ference) was sw~pt by Iona College,
nell said she saw a well~rounded
12-2 and 2-0,
10
non-conference
performail.ce·from her players: · :-
doubleheader action; •
.
. "They did
.
a lot better than
In the first game;Jreshman pit~
against. ,Hartford,)' .O'Donnell
cher Michelle Hudsori once again
said. ''We made adjustments
in
led the Red Fox charge.
base running. They played really
In five innings work~ Hudson
good."
(9-2) relinquished· three hits, two
O'Donnell also said she was
walks and fanned
u
Gael.batters.
pleased with Hudson's outing.
Hudson said she was · pleased
"She pitched her typical game,"
with her pitching performance.
the first-year coach _said. "Every
11
''I. felt pretty
.
good,'' Hudson
game she throws, she gets better."
said. "I came;info the game wan-
·Last Thursday, Marist travelled
ting to accom~lish ,one thing_;t<>. fo New Britain, Conn., to take on
get as many stnke(?1,1ts as possible.
the University of Hartford.
First baseman Laurie Sleight takes a: s~ing in a Red Fox softbali game this week:
My ball was moving well."
· The Red· Foxes were swept by
Offensively, Marist was paced by
Hartford,_ 1-0 and
5-2,
in a non-
sophomore right· fielcler· Courtney
league twinbill.
scoring one run in the second inn-
Sleight . and senipr 'left fielder
In the first contest, Marist was
ing, three in the third and one in
Janine O'Connor;:.
only able to muster one hit, while
the· fifth.
Sleight went' 3-3' with one RBI
Hartford. clicked for its first and · ·.
Hudson said the team would like
while O'Comior was 2-4with fou;
only run in the bottom of the first.
to. put those losses behind them:
RBI's.
'. ·
_
Murphy ·was the only Red Fox
"We weren't in the game at all "
Four other Red Fox batters not-· player who was able to garner a hit.
the San Diego, Ca. resident said
ched one hit apiece. .
Hudson took the loss for Marist
"I
was kind of glad we got that out
In the nightcap, .the·Red·-Foxes
despite pitching a four-hitter.
'
of our system because we felt like
were led by sophorn.ore· shortstop
In the finale, the Red Foxes saw
we could win every game. Our
Hartford connect for
11
hits, while
heads were ·ust not in the game."
Peacocks kill netters;
NEC
Charln:>s .. next
.
.
-
·.,
,.
.
.
_
~.
.·;
·'
. . .
.
'
.
~'
by
JIM, ,DERIVAN
.
.
,
.Junior
Kevih
McGovei~
lost the
Staff Write~
f~rirth match, 6~2·, 6-2.
_ .
.·. <_·
•
.. .
· · '
. . . . . • . . .
· •
·.,,;,;~~tJJ#iffo,llrth .. patc:q,,s(ipho~ore
•-Themen!stenn.is.team defeated __ ·.Heath pramp:erger•fost6-3;.·6°1,·
Rhode Island, 5-4; at the Dutchess
and seIIior·chris IHardi suffered the
Racquet
_
Club .. on'Saturday; ....
·
.·
loss in the final singles match, 6-2,
Could they puttwo wins
6~2;··
. .
· ·
.
back-to-back? ·
· ·
In ct,oubles,the Red F:oxes played·
· No.
tough,but came up short,_losing
all
Marist
(5-5
.
overall, 3-0 in the .. three games. .
.. · .
Northeast Conference) dropped
an •
J:Iarrison was pleased with the
8-1 decision to St. Peter's College . -effe>rC
on Sunday. .
.
"The doubles matches were real-
O'Donnell said the team has a
difficult schedule for the rest of the
season.
"We are looking at everything as
tough," O'Donnell said.
Hudson said it is important for
the team to play together during its
final stretch of the season.
Circle·
photo/Matt Martin
"We just have to learn little
things about eacl1 other," she said.
"We have to play as a team."
After today's games, the Red
Foxes will go on a three-game road
trip, swinging through Wagner
Siena and Seton Hall before retur:
ning home to face New York Tech.
The Red Foxes lost to a team
ly exciting," Harrison said. "Ilike
which has
.
won the Metropolitan • my doubles teams to play like that
Athletic Conference the past two
all
th~ time. They were . really
years;
smackmg the baH and were taking
Sp1·
ker· s (0 5)
t
I ' .
A .
,
Junior Marc Nussbaum record-
good shots."
·.
. .
-
_
S
rugg
.
e In · r1zona
ed the only Red Fox point, winn~
.
Th_e closest Marist canie to win-
ing 7-5,
6-4.
·
ning in doubles was in the first
by
TERI L. STEWART
Desrosiers finished with 27 assists.
.freshman Sean Stam had four ..
"He
·
(Nussbaum) played a
match.
Staff Writer
After a 15-6 and 15-12 defeat to .Desrosiers collected 28 assists.
·
perfect match against•
'a
good
The team of senior Brian LaSusa
Lamar College, · Marist Jost to
Senior head coach Nicole Silen-
player," head coach Ken Harrison
and Nussbaum Jell, 4-6, 6-4, 6-3.
The men's volleyball team finish-
Mankato College, 15-6 and 15-10
zf.said she was pleased with the
said: «Both players made good
Marist is now focusing on the edits 1994 campaign last weekend
in its final first-round game. · ' · team's performance.
shots,· and it was a real'.exciting ;NEC ch~pi_ons~ips this weekend.
on a sour note by losing five mat-
Since Marist was unable to ad-
"We played awesome," she said.
match;''
.
·'
·
·
1
'They'regeanngupforthecon-
ches at the National Club
vance to the next round, the Red
"They moved on the court as a
Junior Martin Byrne lost his first
fe~en~; championship," Harrison Volleyball Championships in
Foxes were placed in a consolation Jeam.
H
was a little late in the tour-
match ~f the season, 6-2, 6~4. ·
said. They're psyched up to go,
Tempe, Ariz.
round.
. riament for that, but their adrenalin
Harrison said Byrne was unable
but they need to 11:et on the court
Marist ended its season at 9-9.
Marist ·ra.ced the University of :'was juS
t
crazy."
to perform to his caliber because of
more.,,
In first-round action, Marist fac-
Vermont
ari9 ·:
Howard Payne
/i
"'Silenzi also said she thought it
an illness. .
.
.
Marist faced Wagner yesterday.
ed Teikyo Marycrest·College·and. College;
·
._
: .
.
.. '
was a really great way for the team
Byrne, who missed Saturday's
Results were unavailable at press
lost, 15-12 and 15-5:
·
Matistdosno Vermont, J5s12
'io
e
nd
a bad outing.
match. now has
a
7-1 record.
time.
In the match, senior/ Steve
and 16~14.
·
:
· "We didn't get a lot of time in
~~~T----:----::---r=============-~G~ra~h~a!!n~1]h!:a~d[·~l6~k~il~ls~,ja~n~d~R~an~d~v~
Graham had . 11 k_ills, while
th
e gym," she said. "They played
Intramurals
w··
A·NTED
·
.·
,;anywellfocbeingunprepared."'
·. In men's basketball action, A
Few G,ood Men leads the Monday
league with a 7-0 record. Linc's
Legends, Syracuse and the Bobbits
an~ in a three-way tie for second
with 5-2 marks.
. In Wednesday league play, Flex
1s in first place with a 6-0 record.
Big Country and NPG are tied for
second with 6-1 marks.
Playoffs begin April 25.
In women's basketball action,
the Marion Hall Tigers won the
league with
a
5-1 record.
Boom, There It Is, Los Locos
and Natural Emissions have 5-1
records in Tuesday league play.
MCIVC and Leo Spikers lead the
Thursday league. Both teams only
have one loss.
No games were held last Thurs-
day due to Greek Week events.
Softball action has started.
<?am~ are scheduled everyday un-
td Apnl 29. There will
be
no games
on April 23 and 27.
Circle staff needs several ad-
ditions ·for, next year. Posi-
tions· are .. open for political
and music columnists, pho-
.
tographers, advertising, dis-
tribution, and general . staff
writers. Please contact The
Circle at Ext. 2429.
The Final ,
11
0ne--On~One ·
:.With
.
.
'
_· .. •-.~ ·. Jay .laScblea.".•.· :_:· .... ' ..
.. \\f
e:~'g1;~:~•z:}~C
•. ·· Camp.Us
C-ab,le .
·.·.·_.·
· ..
. · ·-._ ... · Chann·e1 :
11 · _: •.· :: :
.
......
-----
n
;,;j
.. ,i-·
h
ii
f?
r:
.
'
k
~
. ' • >~•. .
'
•
. . .
. '·.· . '
. . . . ..
·. ('.
·
-·E]"
,2
1:··-t,
_
.t
-
···i:e·
::·r.:
:
·
s·: -
·:£ai'.:,
.
1--
J,>_
··-J':•1<t-11}t
' . .£l.:. :~ ..
·>·
.
. __ ·• ~;:
,
: ,~ ..
/1::,
.
/
'·-1.:
.:.;4':,
. plai
Afffli
t~a.tt:Y- .··
·-by_TED.f:l()Lr.,LUND ·_
·
Spor:ts-Edito(: -: .
. The gan_ie 'Yas c_fose·until·t~e ~lxth 1rinirig. The R.edF.tixt;s_\\'.ere trail-
mg
2-0 as Jumor pitcher Jeff Goodin was Jocked in a pitcher's duel with
Joh11 DiMarti110.
_
. _
_ . . ·_
.
,
____ ,-._- · ·•
> :
,
-••. -- _H<;>wever_,_ N_orthea~t Conference· (~e _Lo~g Island Univei:sity exploded -
for eight runs m th~ sixth and seventh mrungs en route to an,
1 1
~2 romp
over ~aris~ • on Mond.ay afternc,on in Poughke_epsie; _- ; _ ___ _
c _
_
_
-
. _ Mar_~st w_dl look to get bac~ on the winning trac~ today against Army.
Any chance_ of a victpry against
UU
was lo~t _
after the sixth inning.
,The Blackbu·ds scored five ·runs in the sixth and three in the seventh
to clinch the ·win.
-
·
·
·
. Goodin ended up ·giving up fiye runs i_n
5
}/3 inni~gs pitch~d ..
.
Di.Mar~
!m<?, onthe _other hand, held Marist to two runs on six h_its over eight
mnmgs._ '
·
·
__ . _ _
__
.-
__
_
-
The defeat drops Marist's record t~ 4-19 (3-9 iri t~e NEC).
S~phonioreright fielder MarkB~onandfreshman shorts~op George·
S~tlag? were the only players who made any significant hea~way against
D1Martmo.
.
_
_
.
·
.
· ·· · __ · ·
~
Barron wenf2-5 with a homerun, a single and ari RBI. Santiago also
was 2-5 .}Vith a double and
a
single.
-
_
-
·
·
·
Even when Marist had scoring opportunities, the team was not able
to co!lvert. The Red foxes stranded ·IO runners in the game. _. __
Th1s·w_as the fifth consecutive defeat for Marist. The team had won
three of four games before· this latest losing str!;!ak began. - ·
He~d coa~h Art Smith sai4 he cannot find any answers -on -why the
t~am1s pJaymg poorJy.
· _
' "I
honestly don't know why we're not playing well," the third~year
head coa~h said. "Once things go bad, you expect the worst. Right now,
we don't have any confidence."
·
Junior captain Mau Bourne said the pitching, offense and defense are
all failing to execute at one time or anotht::r during the course of the games.
"We haven't been able to put it together," the third baseman said.
"We've been getting down.e~ily; It's hard to come back when you're
down
6~8 runs."
· -
•
_
.· -
The Red Foxes looked to regain winning form against Fairfield (Tues-
~ay) and M~nhattan (Wednes~ay). Results were not available at press
ume.
-
APRIL
21,
1994
STAT OF THE
WEEK:
Soph~more goalie ~-raig Greveld-
ing made 34saves lasfSa~urday.
.
,,
~
•'·
'
.·..
..
.
,
'
'
'
.
,
.
.
.
'
:L·ainien
lose
to
:N.Y
Tech;.
,Jl1a.rk no·w 5~4
. by
TE~l L.
STEWART
· Staff
Writer
The
_
men's lacrosse team fell to
New York Tech, 19-10, on
Saturday.
Head. coach Tom -· Diehl said
Marist
·
(5-4) had
a
difficult time
matching up with their opponent.
"They did better than us one-on-
one," Diehl said. "They were able
to shake us _and get free. We left
people open and ,didn't follow the
flow Of the game."
Sophomore _ goalie
Craig
Grevelding collected 34 saves for
Marist.
~'He faced a lot of shots " Diehl
"d ••1·
- -
'
sai . - t could have been a blowout
if he didn't play well."
Junior Dave Closinski led Marist
with a team-high four goals.
Junior-shortstop Vinny -Roberto throws to first.base in a
ecentgame.
-
-The
Red
Foxes ._ hosted
Stonybrook College yesterday.
Circle
photo/Matt
Martin
Results were unavailable at press
time.
·.·Buchallan ~rreSted, .faces charges
-•-
.
- __ .
_ - - . .
We re hopmg that he isu
L
guil-
· .
J,
._. -
. ,
-- _ • _
_
by_MA.tT,.~#\RTI~. -
ty at this point/' said Marist's
Still, Buc~an~ns future anhe
• StaffWritef; •
Athletic.Director Gene Doris.
"If
college.remams m doubt.
·
-
he is, itcertainly isn't something
"It
doesn'tmake it any easier to
·
When)zett Buchanan steps foot
we'.ll be proud of." . - _ , _
.
_
graduate,'' said Doris.
_
.
_
.
.
__
irito: the ccnir(on .l\foiiday, April
. After _a, year unrivalled
bf
any . ll~~hana1?,, a scholars}Iip~atplete,
25,:itwon'tbe as
·
.a rookie on an _ pn!
_
vious player
at
Marist, gar-
1s tohave his scholarship rev1e~ed
NBA team·
as
he had froped, -but as
nishing __ the NEC.- ~coring·'. title, ~t the ~nd of !he year, to determme
an alleged felon'.
·,
·
·.
•
- _. _
. ,
Player of the Year honors and this 1f he is makmg satisfactory pro-
.Buchanan, 21,
from
(ioshen, . past Monday;the HaggertyA~ard ~es.s towards his_degree i~ c~n~
NY, and Calvin Cooper Jr., 23, of as the outstanding player. in the Justice to ~llow h~m to n_iaintain his
· Poughkeepsie;
fa~e
criminal , metropolitan area -it seemed that scholarship desp1tehavmg used all
charges of grand larceny, a felony;
Buchanan had turned himself four years of his eligibility .
. _criminal- possession 9f stolen pro-
around after.the disappointment of
_''It's n?t an automatic r1:newal,''
perty, also·
a
felony;· and con~
sittingoutthefinallSgamesofhis said Dons, who, along w1th_three
spiracy; a miscleineanor~'stemming
junior season ·due to. academic others, would make tJ}at decision.
from their alleged theft and use of probation. -
_
·
__ ___
· ·- _ _
"Th
7
re are
:t
number of factors in-
stolen credits car<is April
7,
~ccor-
«we felt that he was on the right cludmg ethical conduct." _
ding Jo
_
-_ Town_ of Poughkeepsie track,". saidDoris. "Butthis leaves
__ Buchanan ~d his teammates
polic~: ;, , : .
:
.. /
:> - -
adoud of doµ~thangi~g over him.
have be~n ad~1sed not_to comm~nt
-_ The cardsOpried from a locker_ He hasn't left him
'
self'niuchrnom on the situation pendmg the tnaL
at AIISpoi:t : health club _ in _to workwith.'.' -
«I
feel devastated," said Head
Poughkeepsie,
·
were.used
at
seven-__ -- ·p_escriptions of the two _men by Coach_ Dave _
Magarity.
"Ap
t~e
sto_res i.n _the: Ppughkeep~ie Oall~Iia . retailers _
Inatch -those -of_ descrip-
adv
7
~sity an~ ~hen to e~? up m this
to purchase over,$1,000 worth C>f
tio11S ofthetwogiveit.by attendants position,, ..
1~
s awful. _
-
merchapcijse iii!=hicling sportswear, - atAllSp<>rt that I1ight, according
to
_
Asf
~)T
!he effe~~ of then_ews on
srieakt;rs,Je
.
w~Iry and stereo equip-
the Secret Service. _
· _
_
_
-
Maga~ity s recrmtmg, Dons said,
ment, police said. - -_ -
-
-: -- •- _· -:
-
To _date,' Marist has taken no ''It certainly doesn't have a positive
If
convicted, the two could face
dis<;iplinary
action
against effect, but it's tough_to judge ,~hat
a sentence of up
t!)
four years in Buchanan pending the result of the peo~!e. on the outside are thmk-
pris_on. -
·
· -
upcoming trial_.
mg.
··
fliWi~t1.1,Ho~evl~.kgruI1:'!!@cen=·
t,...........,."·
-,---u',---,--,.ntil
proven
guilty
SetOIFH
_
all's Arturas Karnishovas; a P.ers?n is mnoc.e11t untH Pf<>ven
about the up9>nung NBA playoffs
Here's some classics.
was -named a
.
co-winner' . of' g111lt~ ·
:
B~cha_n~11.'s
_
.
coµrt. ap-
as tbere-wasJasf year.
.
_
L
Win one for the Gipper: (Is
the
/
1993~1.994 Haggeriy:'Award -Peai:ance \~ not,'s~he,duled ~til
It se,e_!ll~ thaCmost fans
-
and
that a fish'?).
·
~
on Morid.ay in East Rutherford,·
Apnl 25. B_ot~ h~ve bee,i i-eleased
sports commentators have not been
- 2, It's not over until it's over
N .J.
, ·
-
·
without ball.,. _
> _
-
!oo enthusiastic about the upcom-
(Really'?). _ _
_-
, Tht{~war4 is give
11
to the niost ·
~a.~baU btin~ling
. _
•
_
mg NBA playoffs,
,
3. \\Then the going gets tough,
_
outstanding playei: among· 18 Divi-:
_ The baseb.~
t ~
~
lHl \oss to
. Grant~d; !he baseball season is
the tough get going ( unless they
sion I 16 Division II/NAIA and:31
Long Is!an~:LUIUversity Monday
J~st
begmrung; _and the h_ockey
Iose ... then see number four).
Divisioii III in the New York~New
has been i.ndicaµ_ve of the squ~d's
playoffs are m full swing.
4. The better team won (It's not
Jersey-Fairfield(Conn.) region;_
season; _ - •. -- _ __ _ _ ,
However, the main reason basket-
rocket science ... there's my own
H
9
weyer, t~t: hP.nor ofreceiving
. The Red foxt;s (4-17., 3-9u~the
~all
is
losing its notoriety is because
cliche).
the award was inost lik~ly ~he fur-
Northeas_t Conference).c~mnutted
-This year, ESPN carries 48 it does not have a marquee player
. 5. It's not over until the fat lady
thestthingfrom Buchanan's mind.
s~v€:n errqrs, stranded ten runners
playoff games, while ESPN2 airs anymore.
_
. _
smgs (Is that sexist'?).
Buchanan was arrested 1Jmr,sday
and ~alked eno.ugh runnei:s to start
an additional 12 games.
-
-
No more Michael Jordan. No
6.
ESPN
(Turn -
on
on cii'arges
-
h_~
an? another. a, ~le ~alkat~~~-
.
· _With greater media ~verage,
m9re ~agic Johnson. No more
SportsCenter).
·
Poughlc~psi~ ~an used stolen
-
. Ri~t now, ~s.tearn_is not.play-
sports fans should gain a better
Larry
Bird.
_
7. We weren't clicking (Is this
credit -cards to buy mor~ fhan
mg with any spmt_ or mt~ns1ty:
understanding of a sport that· is
Charles Barkley is. a. big-time
tap dancing'?).
$l,OOQ of merc11andise, acc_ording __
If t~: t ~ 1s not playmg with
usually identified with violence.
player, but he has not reached the
8. We weren't on top of our
to Town of Poughkeepsie poHce.
any dnve, baseball becomes a
There's is more to hockey than
legendary status of the Big Three
game (How do you get on top of
J>o.li~e said the 2f:.year-old
chore.
_
. .
.
violence.
because he plays on the west coast.
a game?).
Buch.an.an pried o~n
~
locker at
. Thf: only remedr to this _illness is
Hopefully, the increased visibili-
If
the NBA is going to regain its
9. It was a tough loss but we
AllSpoit health cJub in Poµghkeep-
victopes. IfMan~t contmue:i to
ty will inform people that hockey
popular!tY, Commissioner David
played hard (That's nice).
sie on April 7 and stole two credit play poorly, they
will
only continue
is a sport with many nuances, not
Stern will have to hope Shaquille
10. It-does not matter if you win
cards; a watdh and $14.
to pum:h in the time card and pray
just a boxing ring on ice.
O'_Neal. can fully take over the
or lose, but how you play the game
If convicted Buchanan could
for the season to end.
Oh, by the way, her:e's one easy
pnme-time m~tle.
~If
that was the case, many people
face up to fou; years in ·prison.
_ .
NHL Revival
hockey prediction. The New York
_
01ches
m the sports business including
Some_ofthe_talk around campus
The mcreasedtelevis!on coyer~ge
Rangers will not win the Stanley'
_I~ this columnist listened to the
this columnist, would° be out of
already·
has declared Buchanan of !he NHL playoffs is ~gmmng Cup.
millions of sports cliches, he would
work).
guilty.
-
to
increase the populanty of the
NBA fantastic?
have something more enlightening
Ted Holmlund is The Circle's
-
11:ame.
There has not been as much talk
to write about than cliches.
Sports Editor.
44.8.1
44.8.2
44.8.3
44.8.4
44.8.5
44.8.6
44.8.7
44.8.8
44.8.9
44.8.10
44.8.11
44.8.12