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The Circle, April 28, 1994.pdf

Media

Part of The Circle: Vol. 44 No. 9 - April 28, 1994

content

· Ma.rlstcollege~ Poughke.epsle,
N.Y.
NBC
news
hOsr
named speaker
bv
JOH.
N. D.
o.U ..
GH.ERTY·
NewYorkGovemo"r Mario Cuomo· .
.,
in 1983 and 1984. -
. · · ·
.·.staff·Writer
Russert has been wHh '.'Meet the
Press" since December, 1991. ·.
The
·
Jatest rumor ripping across
He is also the national political'
campus, claimed a . well-known
analyst for both ''Today''ana.
news · anchor would be this years
"NBC Nightly News. with Tom
48th Commencement speaker.
Brokaw."
·
. . "I heard a rumor it was going to
Russert is also the. anchor of a
be Tom Brokaw," said senior
·
weekJy program on CNBC; ..
. Chuck Eirish 'of Poughkeepsie. It
"The Tiin Russert Show," ex-
was wrong like the other rumors at
amines the· role of the media in
Marist. ·
.
American society today,.
.
.
President Dennis
J.
Murray
will
Maringoff .·. attributes Russert's -
announce Timothy J. Russert,
success to his smooth transition
senior vice
president
and
from political advisor to journalist.
Washington bureau chief of NBC
"From. a professional · s_tand-.
news, as .the. Commencement
point, Tim Russert is held in high
speaker for the class of 1994.
respectin the journalism field,"
Russert is widely regarded as one
said Miringoff.
. ·.
. . ·
· of America's most astute political
"Meet the Press," has been on
analysts; he is host of <'Meet the
the air since 1947 and is the longest
. Press," a Sunday morning news
running show on television.,
:
· show on NBC. · · ·
·
. · TV Guide has called "Meet the
Lee Miringoff;· director of the.
Press'', "a weekend habit for
Marist ·lristitute for Public Opi-
millions of Americans ... just like
nion, praised the decision.
the Sunday morning_newspapers. ·
"He is well respected because of
·
"For its age and grace, Ws the
his skills, and _who he is as a per-
pre-eminent political talk show.''
son," Miringoff .. said, ''Marist
MiringofLsaid .. Russert re:
should be proud to nave hini'as the
energized. the show · when he
speaker .. ''
·
. .
.
.•·
>

-became host in 1991.,
.
,.
,
;
..
..
,,
.
, ,,g~or,.Jo,)9lnt~$ ~B.f;_; -h~ >".as
'C;N ·.
Mrringoff.~aicl the chc,i~
~as
~p~~
, Spec1alp::iu,n.se!'an~.tgep. Gf!~ef
()f
.
propfiate
Jor;.\Xhat Manst stands
Staff
'
to United· States ·Senator
for
'
~
:
.,'-(;~
:
··~::':
:,
;'7'·,<t.
;:·>~,}i,: .·. . . . .•·... .. . .··· . .. . . . . ... . . . . . .. , .
>
. .
. ......... ·..
.· .··
.. , :• .
. .. .•
Daniel ,Patrick' Moynihan: from
· ..•.• :Ru;;~rt;J~
·
t,dese~irig. ,ar''tiie'
i:fi'm;~RUsiert';oF'.'.Meirrna::·Press'\Wm~be]he\speaket'•;
19
ii/~s~!;~;d as Counselor to
·:
·
.see
SPEAKER
page
g►
'•.
atthe:,is:th,C6ri'.i'rri·~~~eme~t~~~r~i~~~~-; . .
'
GLBSA
seeks tolerant
st'1dent body
by
COLLEEN· MURPHY
Staff Writer
· Cultural and diversity issues have
taken over the campus lately in
club, programmiJ1g and · govern-
ment problems.
One group in particular has had
trouble gaining acceptance on
cam-
pus - the Gay Lesbian Bisexual Stu-
dent Association.
The GLBSA has existed at
Marist since 1978, as a group, not
a club. They have
a
phone mail box
and an E-mail account, but not a
charter.
According · to SaJ Sorbello, a
senior member, the group would
like to become a recognized
member of the council of clubs .
However, the GLBSAwould fall
into the Social Service Council,
which is currently capped to new
. organizations.
·
The, GLBSA has had problems
becoming chartered. in · the past
because .. Student Government·
As.sociation- . regulations .. require
dubs,to/have .. n·ames ,aµd social
: security~ nutnbers ,
l,•L
at··. least
10
·:
mefubers'of
·
tne"
·
group
·
. ;
c· ·
~
·
;;;The;.gr:oup.has· enough~m.erilbei;:s; ..
-:6fiY::Hecafise''.of:"th'e''iikeliff6od''of•·.
ahuse'."irito1erant. :people,··· some
· · · : '\.s~~ ·
GLBSA
page
g ►
Preselltation
of ·
LT ·awarµ
·
d_elayed:
for Nixon's funeral
bx PA JRIClk s·MITH-.
. . POMALES
. Sawyer hadworkedfor,Nixon in.
ABC's . .'.'PtiriieTime Live,''
arid
ap~
Sawyer
is.
also known for. her
. Past
.
recipients include Walter
1974 and1975 as a member of his
pears
oil
''Day One•~ ana "Turn-
niney'ears with'CBS news; She
_
was
Cronkite, Howard K: Smith, David
trai1~ition team·, and aided himili
ing Poii:it." · .· .
.
.
the first womari correspondent on: . Brinkley, Harry Reasoner, and
writing his memoirs.
.
.
..
·
. •
C
Throughout her career, Sawyer
.
"60 Minutes," as well as co-anchor
John Chancellor. _
Only
i
the second woman to
has
interviewed such world leaders
on the CBSshow~ .. ' . .
.
. .
. . · Usually; one person is selected as
The te~th • annual Loweli . receive the Lowell Thomas· Award,
as J;<'idel Castro, Margaret Thatcher
She worked as a co-anchor of the · the award winner; But in 1992, for
Thomas Award which was. to be · Sawyer
is
tlie 14th recipient; The
and ·saddain Hussein'. Her rep or- -CBS' 'program . ''Morning with
the 100th anniversary of Thomas'
. 'bi~:ts!.~e~~~idfuet ~plo~i!
f~:1
l~:Ct1t!~
0
tJ:i~~:~itt:
.
'~it:k~ictides ·. manr• __ .. firS
t
',
fil!1:!~
igi~t~:s~~~:es~;;~~
~ri~:ft:!~:
't:i~:!
ft~~ie~!?:i
Club in New York City Wednesday
198L Barbara Walters, host of the
'
:
·: sh~,was grat1ted the first.Western
ment
'
corresporicient, She also
Awards, Hynes said.
was . postphoned because of the broadcast newsprogram 20/20 was · interview ·'with 'Hussein; after·· a
covered the . Democratic and
cleath'of former President Richard the.·· first woman °to.· receive; the . decade of silence.' Wheri former
Rep11blican National C:onventions
··Nixon;'.
;
·.,
,;
, ,
·
~
; ·.•
. . . .
award: . ·.
·
.· ,
.
.
.
. .
. . ·..
,
, .
Sovief Foreign Minister . Eduard
in .1984 ·-arid J988;
as
well as the
Edmyn~s,_clirector,of college
Marist
.
. awards' the Lowell· ~hevarduadze~resignel:1/she e9n-· 1980 DemocraticCcjnvention.
·
·. relati.ons, said that.Sawyer.would Tholllas.
ii
ward to,. an iµ5i,ividual
ducted the first interview with him.
• The list of the'Lowell Thomas
. be,aueriding.Nixon's'funeral and who reflects Thomas'.• career as.a
: Sawr~r•s meetirig.w~thVlagiriiir
Award recipients •.•fooks like a
that the presentation would. pro: journalist,·· adventurer, ·explorer
;
A; Kyuchkov established her
as
the
Who's ,Who fronithe··broatl'cast
. bably •take. place in·. May· or• June, ·. and·. entrepreneur. : .
.
. .
. . .
· first American TV jou,rnalist to in- · journalists' fraternity or sorority,"
but the details were very vague.
· Sawyer is • cui:r~ntly · hostin~
terview the KGB· head;
Hynes saicl. · ·
· ·
''In 1981, Thomas received an
honorary Doctor of Human Letters
· degree fro·m Marist as a commence-
ment speaker,'' Norman said .
. Thomas is knciwn for.hi~ use of
shortwave radio, movie cameras
and explorations.
A
goo4
tiffre
IJad
l:)J
alf
at
annugl
Riverfest
. .
. . fouiyearsat
Marist.
, .· .·.
.
tended
the
Riverf~ti~ai ~d com-
Jen Poccia's picture. .
by
ANDREW
J.
HOLMLUND
BiU Hassan;· a 22-year-old from
merited tliatitprogressed each
year · · ..
Crane added. that .the one thing
Associate Editor
Glen.Rocic,N.J.,:saidtheonething
into,·a· better, more controlled
Maristmust doin the very
.
near
. he has liked about Maristis its
event~,
.
· . . · .
future is to curtail all senior week
Many Marist students would .. location.
.
"I think it's -great," Murray
expenses. . ...
agree April is a distinctly wonder- . ··. '.'The site of this school · is
said. "There have been times where
«Senior week events are far
ioo
fulmonth since it conveys the pie~
perfect/'
Hass11n . said.
.
experisi','.e," Crane said. "Some
turesque features Qf Mother
"(However,) the sewage wastage
"I.· . . , · .
.
schools don't charge anything, but
Nature: sun, flowers, and warm
treatment plant has to go~ If Ihad
think
ll S
(Riverfest) ·
at Marist, · we have to . pay for it
temperatures.
smelled that the firsnime I came
·
. -

ourselves."
·
However, the best .thing .it
to this campus, I.would not_ have
great b{!cause my capping
Although Sanchez saiq she ad-
brought for Marist students for the
gone her~."··
paper. has · held
me
in the
mitted she will miss the friendships
seventh consecutive year was
One senior said the . most
·
·
·
.
< .:

· .
she made at Marist, the two things
Riverfest '94.
memorable and dissatisfying
things
computer centerf
or eight
she would like to· forget concern
. Last Friday, students who were
about the college related to. the
hoursadayforthelastweel!.'
parking and security,
21 years and older had the oppor-
policies on parties and alcohol.
.

C
''I'm not going to miss the pro-
tunity to celebrate with friends, eat,
Chris Gioffre, a 22,year-old

teve rane
blems I had with parking and
eYJjoy the sunshine, and drink
from East Brunswick, N.J., said - - - - - - - - - - - - - - security,'' Sanchez said.
alcoholic beverages in what is
even though he will ll!,iSS the social
it has gotten out of hand, but the
Not every senior had one fond
usually· known as a dry campus
aspect of college life, he believes
students have developed a system memory about Marist.
environment.
Marist could increase the number
of good behavior."
Pam Clinton from Somerville,
Riverfest took place under sun-
of its students if it adjusted its
Steve Crane, a 21-year-old from N.J., said the only positivething
ny skies and a brisk breeze in the
alcohol regulations.
Exeter, R.I., said Riverfest could that she received from Marist was
Hoop lot from 3 p.m. until 7 p.m.
"I spent the best times of my life
not have come at a better time.
studying abroad for a year.
While the intention of Riverfest
at the 9-G party house," Gioffre
"I think it's great because my
Clinton, 22, who traveled to
is to usher in spring and start the
said. "Marist has very strict alcohol
capping paper has held me in the Dublin, Ireland, to study at Trini-
final social process for the
policies. I think (the policies) have
c.>rnputer center for eight hours a ty College for her entire junior
graduating class, many seniors
hurt the enrollment."
day for the last
week,''
Crane said, year, said the one thing she will not
spend the day reflecting on their
President Dennis
J.
Murray at-
as he took Barbara Sanchez's and miss
about Marist is its
bureaucracy.
"To do a research project, you
haveto go through human subjects
first," she said: "Then you have to
sweat fo get it approved."
Bob Lynch, coordinator of stu-
dent activities,·. said Riverfest '94
had the perfect elements for
· everyone who participated.
"It's a festival," he said. "There
(was) music, there (was) food be-
ing served, there (was) music.
Everyone (had) a fun time
. celebrating."
Riverfest '94 was not just for the
seniors.
Some members of the junior
class who were 21 years old also
had the opportunity to participate
in the annual event.
Tony Galvin, 21, of Bedford,
N. Y., said he enjoyed his first-ever
Riverfest.
"I got to meet President Murray,
hang with my friends, and enjoy
the beautiful weather," Galvin
said. "(Next year,) they have to get
a band or something to make it
even better."













































































































































































































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THl:CIRCLE,': APRIL 28;
1994
;
,
\
:':
. .
-
-
-
-
U{fretj
.
:
{h,ey!re
biltI,
·
they/re
'
ceitllY .
.
~
'Baa .
..
.
(ilirlS''
up
h~r
:
prostitute friend Anita
,
"pro-female''
'
filtn; like
a
~
:
'Thelma ,
:/:
for
?
details on
-:
Barrympre•s
'
:
from th~ir- wictoJs>- .,
·

b.f
JUSTIN SEREMET
_
"Bad Giris"
'
will disappoint guys
.
who
--
go to see this
-
movie
-
in
-
the
hope of drooling over their favorite
(Masterson),
·
and is -the · self-
·
&
Louise" or "Alieris:''
·
_
shady
.
past, you may want to pick
··
·
·
• "' ·
~ppoillted
·
_
1eader
or

.-
this
motley
·
.
:

With
On1y
·
~
t,vo
·
e?C¢ep
.
ti0ns;
,
.
the
Up
a
·
.
book
called
.
"Little Girl
.:
·
· .
.
.
.
:·.·
.
.
_
.
::
-
.
·
.-~
.
.,.\
.
;
..
-
- -
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Director
J
onatlia.~
:
Kapian
.
al~o
-
--
-
crew.
_
._-
_
_
_
.
, _
_
_
male characters are all_ sleaze and
:
Lost."
.
--
.
_ _
.- _
.
_
:
:
shows the difficulty
·
the
_.
girls haye
actresses in the buff.
·
In fact, this film may disappoint
anyone going in the hope of seeing
a good action
.
movie, period.
_
After escaping from
a
·
hanging
·
are-just plain ann~yirig:
<,
,
:
-
, · ·
'
Her LiUy; iriJact, is the feistiest
.
·
trying
_
:
to shake
C
--
their
.
past;
__
-
_
sentence, with the help
'
of Anita,
Robert Loggia even
·
shows tip as

(lf these
·
whores
-
of the wild; wild
-
-
throughout the
_
film
.
they are con-
:
Eileen (MacDowell),
.
and Ully_
one 'of the members of
_
the Kid's
west.
,
'.
·- ___
-
.
.
.
.
stantly called ''whores;" ''
,
wori :
Following the box-office success
of such westerns as "Unforgiven"
and "Tombstone," Hollywood is
spitting
_
out these sltoot 'em up
cowboy
(er,
in this case, cowgirl)
movies with out a care, trying to
revive that :American love for be-
ing
fo
the saddle.
-
-
- -
-
Trying
·
to rekindle that long iost
feeling are Madeleine Stowe, An-
die MacDowell, Mary Stuart
Masterson,
·
a
_
nd Drew Barrymore,
four prostitutes on the run from the
law.
·
Stowe plays .Cody
_
Zamora, a
woman who is wanted for the
murder of a man who was beating
(Barrymore), thefour decide to use
-
gang, his most useless role since
His also difficult to understand thless," and otherwords unsuitable
what money they have in savings to
_
"Over th
_
e Top" and "Gla
_
dfator.'
_
'
.
how the gi
_
rls become
_
s
.
uc
_
hgood
·
-
-
for pririt
_
.
-
move further west to start a
·
saw
·
_
The only
_
male characters
·
ofany
'
·
·
,
shots
as
the film never explains how
·
.
mill in Oregon.
·
_
_ _
_
worth are McCoy
·
·
(Dermot _ they got' such good aim_.
_
_
·
_
However,whiletryingtogetthe
Mulrmiey) and William
-
(Jaines
·
·
For serious Stallone fans, the
money that theyare owed;Cody
,
Legros); the two "love interests"
·
music of ''Bad Girls" may seem
and the gang stumble upon Cody's
·
of the bad gfrls.
__
_
-_
·
· vaguely familiar.
·
<

In fact; these same adjectives
·
seem to be used
_
a
·
Jot lately to
-
describe Ms. Barrymore.
__
old partner, Kid Jarrett (James
However, these relationships are
· That's because the score is by
Russo), who steals their money.
·
·
.
so sketchy, both
_
are
-
pretty
Jerry Goldsmith, the composer of
_
.
.
For the rest of the film, the "bad
worthless.
_
·

- _
-
.
__ - _
-
-.
-
the music for the "Rambo'
J'
films.
_
While "Bad Girls'~ has an emp-
girls" attempt to get their money
.
·
The four women, in fact, are the
_.
"Bad Girls'' does
_
succeed
_
iri
_-
ty plot; dull characters, and villains
back while at the same time frying
most underdeveloped
·
of all the
showing the female struggles of the
·
that you'll swear
.
you've seen
-
--
to avoid the law.
·
charactersin the film.
_ _ __
-
time, especially irione scene where before, it can be viewed simply to
It's a silly, cliche-ridden filin that
Cody is sick of the dirty men she
Anita: tries to dose her bank ac-
see how society was back then.
might be well-suited for men-haters
must deal with; Anita vows never
count but cannot because when her
or girls who have just been 'dumped
to kiss a man after the death-of her
husband died, the account died
that want to see the opposite
sex
get
one
true
love; and Eileen
·
grew up
with
it.
theirs
.
as
a
poor farmer's datighter
,
who
In
.
that .time, women weren't
It's not even that good of a
ended up in prostitution.
allowed to collect inherited money
.
,
_
That is, if you're into that sort
of thing. (Grade:
C)
Warning: prolonged sun exposure hasfried aged brains
-
by
DANA BUONICONTI
Maybe we should start with the
Makes you wonder if someone
True, this Lollapalooza seems
Eagles, who have decided to resur-
emptied outthe old age home for
more like the first one, with the acts
Right now, I'.m looking at the
rect their '?Os-rock drivel by moun-
has-been rockers._
.
varying a bit· more than the fast
backpageoftheartssectionor'the ting a tour that will include a
For the college youth of two,butit'sthephonyfans(unlike
last "Boston Sunday Globe," and
5-night stand at Great Woods in
America, both artistically and
myself, the true "alternative" fan),
ing it that much harder to
see
them.
-
-
Pm not sure that
i
agree :with in-
-
timacy over a frolic in the open
breeze, but that's the band's
I'm baffled by what
I
see.
August.
·
·
monetarily,
.
the
·
summer concert
suretobeinflanneledattendance,
On this back page is a huge
Ticket price for this
_
holy
,
reu-
scene looks like a washout.
-
·
that make me not even have to
prerogative .
.
-
·
What concert promoters need to
do is to take risks and offer more
shows that are geared towards
younger audiences.
calendar of summer concerts for
nion:
$97
for reserved seats.
·
·
Pearl Ja.m cancelled their sum-'
think once about whether to go.
the
1994
Great Woods Popular
Ar-
Yo
_
u'd think they were Pink
mer tour because of continuous
So, I guess we're left with a sum-
tists Series at Great Woods in
Floyd and only in it for the money.
hassles with promoters over ticket
mer of sun, fun, and silence unless
Mansfield, Mass.
But I guess the Eagles aren't the
prices; can't say I blame them.
· some shows with a pulse are
And what's got
.
me baffled is
only ones
,
_
There's
·
Lollapalooza again,
scheduled soon.
why this schedule for Great
Meat Loaf, Moody Blues, Steve
featuring
·
Smashing Pumpkins,
After all, youth canriotJive on
·
Woods, and for
·
every other out-
Miller Band, Traffic, Crosby, Stills
·
Beastie Boys, The Breeders,
A.
classic rock alone, or at least in my
More young
.
bands
+
cheap
_
ticket prices
+
_
sun
=
beaucoup
dollars; Lollapalooza is proof
positive of that equation.
door venue it seems, is bloated with
&
-
Nash, Lynyrd Skynyrd,
Tribe Called Que~t; L7, Nick Cave
case, at all.
-
So why aren't there more
classic rockers who are way past a .
.
Foreigner, TheDoobie Brothers,
&
The Bad
·
Seeds, George Clinton
Bands such as Soundgarden and _ Lollapalooza-type shows?
prime many of them never had.
and Steely Dan will all be appear-'
and The P-FunkAll Stars;·and The
Nine Inch Nails (for all of you
The summer of love?
ing atGreat Woods in the coming
Boredoms, but it's hard to get ex-
keeping score, this is the second
Dunno.
.
-
_
Try the summer of Geritol.
months.
.
-
cited about this ro~ter.
-

column in whichJ
_
've used them
as
_
(guess promoters think we're
' '1)2 ' '
.will
.
.
qUaci
~f
Y:<:Jift
,
:~J!J.
~;:;f
,~i~
~
~~;i?:i;~'.'.~~
5
~:t,t~_,,
~v
J
_
ENNIFER GIANDALONE
_
They also meet the tearn that is
He yells at the kids and puts
_

favored to win the gold medal in
thein through anall-nighfpi:adice
·
"\'OU CAN
·
BE
·
A

"02:
The Mighty Ducks'' pro-
ves that no inatter how predictable
a movie is, it can still be fun to
watch.
·
·
·
·
·
wait Disney Pictures' sequel to
the surprise hit
_
starring Emilio
Estevez ("Judgement Night") is
-
even
-- _
better than
.
the original
"Mighty Ducks."
Estevez reprises his role as Gor-
aon Bombay, the

lawyer
-
turned
hockey coach who did what no
·
orie
thought possible when he turned
a
team of misfits into champions:
In this movie, Gordon almost
fulfills his dream of being a profes-
sional hockey player until a knee
.
injury prevents him from getting
his big chance,
·

.
_•

-
_
·
-
He is asked by a sports equip-
ment company executive (Michael
Tucker
;
"L.A. Law") to coach the
U.S.A. hockey team
iii
the Junior
Goodwill Games.
--
.
-
-
Gordon is also offered a hefty
contractto promote sports equip-
ment, which helps him make up his
mind.
·
·
·
Gordon gets started by bringing
the original championship Ducks
back together, with the hope that
they will be winners once again
.
One problem: the Ducks forgot
to practice in the off season, so
they are a little rusty.
Joining them are young hockey
players from all over the country
with a variety of different abilities.
_
One has amazing puck control,
one is an Olympic figure skater,
and one has incredible speed but
does not know how to stop.
Now, Gordon has to try to get
them to all work
·
together as a
team, which proves to be quite a
task.
_
Team U.S.A. heads to Los
Angeles for the international com-
petition and is greeted by the press
and hundreds of fans; a lot more
attention than some of them are us-
ed to.
Since the Walt Disney Company
is supposed to have children's best
interests in mind, a tutor is sent to
make sure that training for the
games does not interfere with the
team's education.
the Gamesat
a
pres~ conference,
right afterfhe game, causing them
where Gordon does al(the talking
to sleep right through class the nexf
-
at the request of his new employers.
day.
·
·
·
·
·
·
This group o(teenagers
,
from
'
.
C
<
.
:
'
Iceland, who are extremely big for
-
The team thinks
,
Gorci<:>ri
<
~11
-
their
-_
age
,-
fit
-
the
·
stereotypes of
never go back to the way
:
i:ie used .
-
typical Walt Disney bad guys.
to be, the kind ofcoach'thatsaid
They are coached by an
_
ex-
hockey should befun
'.
---- ·.
-
·
professional
-
hockey player who
was
_
banned from the sport in the
United States because of his at-
titude; his inability to play fairly,
and his excessive use of violence.
. So, they take it upon themselves_
-
to prepare forthe medaJ.round:
_
·
With a little belp
Jt~n
l
~
:
b'~nch ,
of street kids on rollerbla:dei
;'
wh
·
o
play hockey at
a
iocai playground
/
-
-
Team U .S.A; learns how
to
'
play
'
.
.
.
..
--
-
STC>CKBRC>KERII
.
·

•·


.
.
~

:
-
·
.

-
.
••
r
.
,
-
.-
A
'
.
.-
tC:Oncln,eritaI,
we
groom you
for
success from
the
start
;
and
·
_
_ -
offer
'
y~u
full
.
support,
_
financial security
&.
special
~dvantages.
• _
Naturally, the teain's uniforms
are black, which is .the only color
they wear off the ice as well.
·
Gordon also has a confrontation
_
on the
_
ice with the Iceland coach,
ancl does the whole good guy/bad
gtiy thing, which draws a clear line
between who we are supposed to
roof for and root against.
·
like their opponents from Iceland,

rough and
_
unafraid.
,,
· ·-
·
·
-
-
-
-
-
- - --
-
-
·_
,
---- -
··
·
.
,
. -
-
.
_
,,
-
'Our
~ratq
Training Course· produces priceless results.You wllil
.
1_'hrough the t~m reJ)resen!ing
3 .
'
from
an
~lite group oftop
·
producerson
a
one-t~ne
basis.;.
earn
sal
t~eir
_
country, . these street
,
sm_art
&:
bonus·whlle you learn. You
will
be
groomed_for fast promotions
Int
~~:s b~!~ll
th
eir dreams
0
~
_
b
,
emg
?llaAagement
.
You
,
~lll
have ~he full
suppc>r_t
_
of~ professl~nal
'
team,
Just as the Ducks are advancing
in the competition and working
well together, Gordon loses sight of
what is important and focuses on-
ly on his growing bank account.
Team U.S.A. also gets s
_
ome new
uniforms foi: the final
:
game;
becoming the
'
Mighty Ducks once
again, and wearing the uniforms of
the NHL team.
-
Here's where the movie starts to
get predictable ... but in no way
bqring.
_
They also play the medal round
Team u.~.A. plays the Iceland
in Anaheim on the Ducks' home
team and, you guessed it, loses big
ice
.
time.
_
_
,
-
Gordon becomes very angry
because the company that gave
him
his contract is the same one that
sponsors the team and will pay
more
if
Team U.S.A. wins the gold
medal.
1TOuv
,
,
,
INV

CONVENIENT LOCATION
Huntington. Long Island campus
is easily reached
by
public or private
transportation.

DAY AND EVENING CLASSES
Sele
.
ct either a Full• Time
Day.
Part• Time Day, or Part• Time Evening
schedule.
·
I won't tell you how the moyie
ends, but I know you can
easil}
figure it out.
If you liked the first "Might}
Ducks," you'll love this one, whict
is even funnier.
II
you wisli
to receive admission
~3:terials and/or arrange for a campus
v,s,t, you are encouraged to contact:
Office of Admission
Jacob
0
.
Fuchsberg
law
Center
300
Nassau Road
Hunlington. New York 1\743

ACCREDITATION
The
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Center is Fully
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by
the American
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.
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ext.
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i
t ·
!.
. .
.
THE CIRCLE, . APRIL 28,
,1994
3
Ifii"Sf
\yard nibets about origins of river stench
by
DONNA BONSIGNORE
Staff Writer. ·
..
Stand on the
hill
overlooking the
McCann parking lot ·on a. warrn
spring day when the wind's com-
ing off the Hudson and breathe
deeply.
. .
·
·
Smell the stink. It wafts over the
whole South end of campus.
They
can
smell it in parts of the
City of Poughkeepsie, too.
Heated · discussion about the
stench eminating·from the sewage
plant made for an interesting ses-
sion of .the First Ward City of
Poughkeepsie meeting, Thursday
April 21.
The First Ward residents, who
meet every month at Our Lady of
Mount Carmel Church, had . a
panel of city officials and sewage
plant employees speak about. the
odor problem that permeates much
of the city and Marist College
cam-
pus. "The odor is terrible.
Soinething must be done
im-
mediately to stop
·
it," Paul
Sullivan, a representative of the
First W~rd, saict'. The problem has .
existed . for many years and still
· nothing has been done to alleviate
it. ·outraged residents raised. their
complaints and often their voices
at Joseph Chiseri, the manager of
· the City o( Poughkeepsie. Many
residents questioned the sincerity of
the officials' attempts to address
the problem. According to Douglas
Smith; a manager at the sewage
plant run by E.O.S., the odor can
be attributed to an obsolete system
of treating the sewage.
The present system has been in
operation. since 1977, and
Poughkeepsie is one of the last
cities who continue to use it. The
sludge is cooked in a liquid format
which produces acids and odors.
"Absent the odor, it is an effi-
cient unit which reduces costs,"
Smith said.
"The plant does spray an odor
equalizer which neutralizes the
odor. It seems to be working fair-
ly well," he said.
Chiseri identified two stages of
problems surrounding· the sewage
plant. The. short-term problem was
caused · by sulphates which were
found in• the sewage system. These
caused an intensified stench in the
month of February, which was
then identified and taken care of by
plant officials.
The long-term problem·, accor-
ding to Chiseri, involves the plant
. itself. The system used to dispose
of the waste must be replaced.
· Dick Maurino, the city engineer,
estimates that complete replace-
ment of the system would cost the
city roughly $1 million.
Chiseri offered good news and
bad news to the residents.
"The good news is that the next
operator of the plant is going to
have to commit to a new odor con-
trol system.
"The bad news is I don't see a
way the city can make that kind of
capital investment this summer."
The company which currently
runs the paint is on a contract
which comes up for review every
five years. This December will
mark a fifth year, and requests for
Marist's poor vaccination record
tp.ay cost the school thousands
. by
JOHN DOUGHERTY
Staff Writer
themselves, then that could raise a
question about the legitimacy of
the law.
Yourinstructororyourresident
"It's kind of a crazy law,"
assistant could have measles,
Raimo said. "The diseases do not
mumps, or rubella because they are
discriminate between the classroom
not held to the same standards as
and the dormitory."
students.
The situation became serious
Marist and New York · Health
when Marist College failed to pro-
Department policy requires all
ve to the NYHD that every student
students to show proof of vaccina-
was vaccinated against measles,
tiort against measles, mumps, and
mumps, and rubella.
rubella. Instructors and· RAs are
Approximately 150-200 students
rtot · obligated· to have proof of have not proved they have been
· vaccination:· , .. • •
,
.::, ..
.
vaccinated.
. · ·
J7eMafist 'Policy
.'
states~ "any stu~ .
·
•··•·. The >NYHD ·threatened· Marist
dent taking six or DlOre credits must.·.·. with:
a
$2000 '. fine
.
for each unvac-
show proof ofvaccination." .
.
.
. cinated studenC
Instructors and RAs are i:J.otin-
· Nurse Jane <YBrien, director of
'duded in this policy; even though
health services, said the problem is
students are in contact with them
not with the unvaccinated students,
for most ofthe day and night, if the problem is with the proof the
theylive on campus.
students must show.
·
"Resident directors do riot have
"Many students were vaccinated
Jo .be vaccinated," Jim Raimo,
as young children, they must now
director of housirig and residential show proof," O'Brien said.
life, said.
.
Raimo said 100 percent of the
The state law leaves some ques-
resident students have shown pro-
.
tion of whether or not there is any of of vaccination. The 150-200 un-
. effectiveness at. all of• getting the vaccinated students are commuters,
· vaccination.
adult students, and graduate
, If
the instructors and
RAs
are ex-
students.
·empt from the law, and they spend
Even though very few of these
just as much time with the students students live in college housing,
they are required to be vaccinated
if they are taking six or more
credits, which many of them are
taking.
O'Brien said any unvaccinated
students or students who could not
show proof of vaccination should
come to the Byrne House for vac-
cinations any time during nurse's
hours.
Raimo said the excitement about
.vaccinations occured when Rutgers
University detected a few cases of
measles.
"The oµtbreak at Rutgers
, started the panic," Raimo said ..
"The
I~w
h~s left some student;
wondering why Marist allowed
stm;lents taking six or more credits
to attend class, if they have not
shown proof of vaccination.
• .. "Since it's
a
health issue, Marist
s~ould give it full priority," Amy
D1Lullo, a junior from Melrose,
Mass., said.
Dilullo said she felt a health
issue was more important than a
financial issue .
Dilullo was referring to students
.
not being able to attend class if
their bills were not paid at the start
of every semester.
proposals, or bids, are being sent
to other corporations as well as
E.O.S. E.O.S. has controlled the
plant for
15 years.
Many residents voiced concerns
that ifE.O.S. retained control, the
problem would not be addressed,
as it has not been for the past 15
years.
Chiseri was quick to respond
that the blame should not be plac-
ed on the company.
"It
is the·system we chose at one
time, not the people running the
plant.
It
has nothing to do with the
contractors,"he said.
Maurino, however, said that the
city had no . particular system in
mind to replace the old one.***
"There is no preferred solution
at this time. It is too preliminary
at this point," he said.
"We must address the problem
and address it properly.
It
should
have been replace years ago: It's
obsolete," Sullivan said.
Alderman Fed Buonaito agreed.
"The most important thing is to
get the job done," Buonaito said.
All decisions about who may be
running the plant and what system
may be chosen have not been made
as of yet. No plans will be made
before the summer largely due to
financial questions.
"One way or another the money
has to come from the users. Sewage
rates will go up," Chiseri reluctant-
ly ~aid.
Buonaito assured residents that
he would keep them informed on
a monthly basis of any new pro-
gress made on the issue. He also
stated that the city had all ready
recieved inquiries from contractors
about the plant.
The 30 residents who attended
the meeting expressed their
dissatisfaction with the proposals
thus far.
As one persistant woman said,
"This is the same stuff you've been
saying since 1990. What is going to
happen in the next seven months to
make it better?"
Thongs, tattoos, bods all part of Toughman
by
TERI L. STEWART
Staff Editor
It was 8:30 on· Saturday night
when two men in their mid-20s,
probably not . Marist students,
strolled casually across campus,
each carrying 40-ounce bottles of
malt liquor.
· They Were heading toward the
McCann Center for an evening of
enjoyed it and the people who par-
tions out of the event.
"Kill
that m---
f---,"
yell-
made until you all sit down and
ticipated
in
the event itself, enjoyed
The fight continued and the an-
ed a beer-guzzling fan.
stop acting like a bunch of jerks."
it," Diehl said.
nouncer yelled atthe crowd to get
In the background were shouts rowdy and yen: He also urged on
and hoots from the crowd as they . the fighters in the ring to fight
watched in excitement the fight in tougher.
the ring.
. Then the most exciting match of
The crowd seemed to.get even the night.
more excited with the appearance
A 300-pound Hawaiian looking
of a ring card girl.
man jumped into the ring with a
At the begining of round three,
Tina, a ring card girl, took her pro-
vocative stroll.
"Your round-three ring card girl
is Tina," screeched the all-famous
ring announcer.
The unanimo~s decision was
made - the white guy won and the
crowd chanted "Bulls--."
"It allows the average everyday
guy to get in the ring and mix it
up," Alongi said.
"The event will provide a safe
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - environment for students and
recreation at the "Combat on the
"Your round three ring card girl is Tina. She is a secretary in
Campus," the Toughman Contest.
adults 18 years and older to com-
pete."
Inside the
gym,
banners on the
h .-F
[
,.1,
d
tatt
fi
th th

...1
•-Fh
"th
wallsproniotedBudweiserandTat-
Searc OJ QSOU mu,,e,an a
00
Or eo erszueOJ erass,
e
. "Oh saliva, he's spewing
spooge," said the announcer.
too Fantasy, and the ring an-
announcer said.
nouncer urged the 1,500 spectators
And the winner of the
to "get rowdy."
In the eastern sky, somewhere
over the Mid-Hudson .Psychiatric
Center, a full moon was rising.
The Toughman Contest was held
at Marist for the first time and ac-
cording to promoter Mark Alongi,
it will not be the last.
Tom Diehl, the assistant athletic
director said nothing has yet been
determined if whether the event
would return to Marist next year.·
There are many factors that go
into the decision of having the
event again, including the timing of
the event.
Diehl also said the event was not
anything different than what he
had expected.
"I think the people who came
__
H_e_r_n_am_e_w_as_M_e_li_ss_a_an_d_s_h_e_2_09
_ _ _
d_h
______
h
___
lk_d _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Toughman/Toughwoman com-
strolled around the Outskl
·rts
of the f -poun w ite guy w
O
wa e
"She is a secretary in search of
petition is .....
unny.
a soulmate and a tattoo for the
Who cares.
ring with a large card in her hands
The intensity of the crowd grew
other side of her
ass.,,
promoting Fulton Street _Cafe.
with every kick, bear hug and miss-
Decked in a Budweiser thong ed punch.
That would be for the left cheek
bathing suit, she waved to the
The noise of the crowd pro-
to match the Anheuser-Busch tat-
crowd to cheer her on.
hibited the fans from hearing the
too on her right cheek.
The lucky winner of a contest
held at Foley's Square
in
New Paltz names of the two contestants.
When the referee, a black belt in
walked slowly in her 3-inch high
As time wore down in each
karate, pulled the fighters apart at
heel shoes.
round, the crowd became rowdier
the end of the bout, he threw one
According to _Tom Diehl, the and rowdier.
across the ring.
event was supposed to be a com-
Each punch got harder and
Suddenly there.
was
a scuffle.
munity activity.
harder, with the crowd urging the
The crowd jumped to its feet as the
"It
will be beneficial for the fighters on.
trainers, managers, and promoters
community, and the students will
II
fl
·
t th ·
enjoy it," Diehl said.
The pounds on the bleachers, the
a
ew
m
O
e nng.
Diehl also said they would be chants of "go, go, go," and final-
The announcer yelled, "The
getting a lot of community rela-
ly the bell.
decision for the fight will not be
Eight days before the "Combat
on the Campus," the reporter in-
·terviewed Mark Alongi, a pro-
moter of the
Toughman-
/Toughwoman Contest.
As the reporter asked a question
about the effects the event W(luld
have on the community, suddenly
the sound of water went rushing
and flushing through the phone.
The reporter asked, "Are you do-
ing what I think you're doing?"
Alongi replied, "Sure, that's
what cordless phones were made
for."















































































































































I
I
i
4
THE CIRCLE/ APRIL 28,
.
1
.
~94
-
.
.
Seniors
plan
to lll.oVe
··
.
·
ofi

.
tomas
.
ter's
,
~~gt~~:~
·
,
'
· :
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·

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·
·:
h
.
.-
:,
.
·
,_-
-
·
,
·
·
taiil/i-
·
.
·
·
.,
·
·
"For one year,
I'll
be attendmg
- - - - - - - , - - - - -
"It better be worth 1t,
_
Sm.it
cnmmol?&Y•
• . .
.
.
,.· •
.
.

.
.
.
.
.
w
·
cstVir · ·auniversity
··
"saidBill
by
KEVIN O NEILL
add
_
ed "I wo
_
n't know th
_
_
ou_ g
_
h un-
"If I like the field, I'm gomg to
·
Others, will be attendmg alter-
·
H
..
·
.
P.
guu
·
·
--

'ti
·
.
... ··
·
·
• •
·
·
·
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·
·
·
·
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·
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·
·
·
t
·
f rth
·
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anscam a commuruca ons ma-
.
Staff Writer
til I've tned."
.
,
.
go on for a Ph.D," Ba uma a -
na 1ve. programs o u
er
err
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.
. .
.
·ir
.
k
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.
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.
.
· .
..
•.·
- - - - - - - - · - - - -
Other graduating seniors will be
·
e<tC'lf~I
that once
011e
has hitthe
.. '.
education'.
Jor rom ac e own,
.
· ·
·
As many seniors are frantically
attending law school.
,-
,.

,
. .
work force, it's ~ard for.them to
--·
searching for jobs, others are put-
"I'm either going to Americian;
go back to school
.
after bemg away
·
ting the real world, "the twlight
University of Florida or
:
my dream
from college for a while."
.
.
zone" on hold and are attending
school Georgetown," s~d ~at-
Stili, other graduating seniors
graduate or law school.
theYI'. Fowl~r, a com_mu!11cat1on/
were going to c;ontinue an educa-
Many thought that graduate
public relations organizational ma-
tion so they could
.
teach.
school would get them the job they
J. or
.. · .
from Newburgh, N
_
. Y. "A
·
·
·
·
II
d
"I'm deciding
_.
between the
rea Y wante •
bachelors degree now is like a high
"With my B.A. in psychology I
school diploma forty years ago.
University of New Hampshire or
Id
l
b
t t
f
the University of Massachusetts at
wou on y get a urn ou
.
ype o
Everyone
.
has o
_
ne, i
_
t's
a
nec
_
cesity."

· b "
"d T · h
M k
.
Am
·
herst right n
_
ow," said Mar1-
Jo ,
·
sa1
ns a
oc er, a
"I've wanted to be a lawyer for
h l
·
·
·
f
E
·
t
Anne
Carpenter, a psychology
_
psyc o ogy. maJor rom
as
a long time,". said Gabe Hidalgo,
Quogue; Long Island who will be
a
.
political science/pre-law major
special education major
,
fron.
attending William and Mary col-
from Jackson Heights, N.Y. "I'm
Boonville, N,Y. "I want-to get my
I
·
v· · · "s·
1
masters and a permanent teaching
ege m 1rgm1a.
mce want to
going to the U
_
niversity of D_ ayt
_
on
·

I'll
d
certificate so I can • starf either
.
go mto counse mg,
.
nee
a
in Ohio and
.
by ge
_
tting
_
a

law degr
_
ee
masters."
their, I will
_
raise my earning poten-
teaching preschool or another
"I 'II get more of an education,"
tial."
.
area."
said Robert Smith, a biology ma-
"I've heard from those seniors
"I want to get my masters in
.
..
. ,
jor from Anasonia, Conn., who
who went to graduate school last
english," said Mike Gordon, an
plans on attending the University
year and they said the experience
english major from Attleboro,
of New Haven. "I eventually want
has made them more mature
,
" said
Mass. "I'm debating between the
to work for the FBI and without
Michelle Baftima, a criminal justice
University of
.
New Hampshire,
the graduate school experience, I
major from Southington, Conn.
Bridgewater State or Rhode Island
won't know how to get in touch
"Personally,l'm going to Indiana
College for my degree. rhe cost
with people from my field."
State Univ~rsi
_
ty for a masters in
will be outweig?ted by what I ob~
Marist. holds lecture to discuss
current violence in Poughkeepsi
by
RON JOHNSON
Staff Writer
of handgun control is to have han-
dguns in the hands of the police
and no one else."
through which community leaders
and
·
police officers develop
strategies

for colllitering crime pro-
blems. Community policing also
requires the police to be more visi-
mct11w~~
rP11®~11&1IDllllfiui~
~IJ)l1fiID~
J1
~
-
~~
.
WEEKDAY LINE~UP
.
6:00 AM to 9:00 AM
9:00AMto 10:00AM
10:00 AM
to
12:00 PM
12:00 PM to 12:30 PM
12:30PMto 1
:
00PM
1:00 PM
-
to 3:00 PM
3:00 PM to 3:30 PM
3:30 PM
to
5:30 PM
5:30 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"
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GREATEST lilTS
"CONVERSATION"
SPECIALS
NEWS
.
MOVIEl
MOVIE2
STATIONID
WEEKEND LINE~UP
According to recent nationwide
polls, more Americans are worried
about crime in the U.S. than the
economy or health care.
Yet, Newman did agree with the
concept of community policing and
its importance to crime-fighting in
general.
ble within the communities being
9:00 AM to 12:00 PM
STATION ID
protected.
12:00 PM
to
2:00 PM
SPORTS 1
"In a perfect world, we would
not need community policing; the
community would police itself,"
said Sheila Newman, mayor of the
city of Poughkeepsie.
Nevertheless, this is not a perfect
world and one need only look at
the figures to. prove
_
such.
.
.
.
According
to Detective AndreW
·
Kutchma, a spokesinan for the
ci-
.
ty of Poughkeepsie Police Force,
1,204
cases of petty larceny,
J
72
robberies, 434 burglaries, and
128
car thefts occurred last year in
Poughkeepsie alone.
.
.
· .
.
Perhaps, this is why approx-
imately 250 people attended a lec-
ture on
·
crime
·.
·
arid
·
·
coinmunity
policing
as
given by Raymond Kel
0
ly, a former New York City Po
.
lice
.
Commissioner; For; as .Kelly
.
said
.
in his speech, people have become
frustrated
.
·
.
:
-
.
. . .
"If
there was one word to sum
up Americans feeling
·or_
crime in
general, it is fri.istration,'' Kelly
said.
.•
. ·
·
·
.
. :
·
.
:
Kelly said that Americans have
become
·
frustrated by both
..
the
government ai,.d the police forces'
inefficient
·
handling of criminals.
Kelly noted that there were three
key factors necessary to thbreduc-
tion of crime; These included ear-
ly drug They include early drug
prevention training with children,
meaningful handgun control, and
community policing.*** Kelly said
that an overwhelming increase in
out of wedlock births created a
large numbers of young individuais
on the street.
These young individuals would
have to receive positive and effec-
tive messages at an extremely ear-
ly age, especially messages which
deter substance
.
abuse.
Kelly said that they have to make
drugs less appealing to young
people~
However, Newman offered a
countering viewpoint in which she
said that the messages Kelly spoke
of would more than likely have lit-
tle effect on most children.
"I don't think it's meaningful to
young children, other than to scare
them," she said.
Newman also said she believed
handgun control to
be
a nice con-
cept, but not a very realisticone.
·
"I think, at first look, mean-
ingful handgun control seems
plausible. But when you look at it,
you
begin
to say who
is
getting con-
trolled, and what's really being ac-
complished," Newman added.
"I think the most effective form
In fact, she approved of it so
much, she helped the Common
Council to adopt a strategic action
plan for community policing back
in
_
late January ofthis year.
Newman and
Kelly
describe
community policing ~
-
-
a
mean~
·
2:00PMto5:00PM
STATIONID
"The
.
police can't do it alone,"
5:00PMto7:00PM
SPORTS2
Kelly added,
«
The
_
police don't
_
7:00PMtoS:OOPM
STATION ID
have allthe answers."
s:oo
PM to 10:00 PM •
MOVIE 1
10:00 PM to 12:00 PM
MOVIE 2
''This way the police get'better
12:00PMto6:00AM
STATIONID
information, and
·
the community
..
Any
suggestions
.
or or questions about prC>grammlng, call MCTV at
X2423 .
.
gets better protection/' Newµian
.
··•
·
·
.
Any questions regarding the evening movies call XJ279 •
.
.
· ·
.
said
;
.
.
-
._
__ .;... _ _
..;...;... _ _
..;;._..;;. ________
,
...
_
-
-
-
<
-
.
-
.
-~------
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1
.
:
I
[J
J
l
i
..
tHe
.
c,RCLE,
FEATURE
APmL2s. 1994

,
w
"




RiVei-fest
·
reflections
Qy
the
gra,duating
Clc:l.ss
Of
'94
·.
·
·
·
.
·
. .
Award for the second consecutive
.
hoop lot.
.
.
·
.
.
by
ANDREW J. HOLMLUND
time in four years.
.
·
• ·
Former Student Body President
.
<
Associate Editor
No other class has ever received
Kent Rinehart, who attended
the award more than once.
Riverfest, said he was pleased with
As the Spring 1994 semester is
about to conclude, members of the
graduating dass are preparing to
say their final goodbyes before they
part their separate ways into the
real world.
.

.
Riverfest started the beginning of
the end last Friday as the drinking
and eating extravaganza was the
first of many events that lie ahead
for this year's senior class.
However,
·whenMarist
College's
48th graduating class departs for its
final time next month, they can
walk away proudly.
For the first time ever in Marist's
history, the Class of 1994 was the
recipient of the Class_ of the Year
Class President Jeff Schanz said
the overall performance of his ad-
the time put into Riverfest conveys
ministration this year.
how_ diligently the class officers
"Everyone in the administration
work to make ita rewarding year
did what was best," Rinehart said.
for all graduating students.
"I don't think anyone had any
"The officers and I have met
ulterior motives.,,
with Bob (Lynch) and Steve (San-
sola) regularly," Schanz said. "We
President Dennis J. Murray said
have put in a lot of work in the past
he considers the seniors as a a
month. That just goes to show
special contingent of students.
how much time this class puts ef-
fort into other events."
Like the Class of 1994, Riverfest
made
·
its own history as com-
memorative hard plastic mugs were
used for the first time, instead of
the usual plastic cups that would
create litter on the ~rounds of the
"They are a super group of men
and women," Murray said.
Murray said he also hopes the
graduating class will stay involved
with Marist because he wants to
welcome them as members of the
.
College's alumni.
5
KPsi-honor
s
.
enior Russel
by
JENNIFER FORDE
Staff Writer
Scott Russell, a senior from
Schenectady, NY, has been award-
ed the Golden Key Scholarship
Award for academic achievement
as a member of Alpha Kappa Psi.
The award is given annually to
the graduating senior in the frater-
.
nity who achieves the highest grade·
point average. The award is na-
tionally sponsored and honors a
senior from each chapter of Alpha
Kappa Psi.
"It was definitely a great honor
to win," Russell said. "But it real-
ly came as a shock to me."
What came as a shock to Russell
was no surprise to his friends and
fraternity members.
"His dedication is second to
. none and he always put his best
·
W
_ :
··

.. ·C1R
.
..
·
.
to
·diversify
itself with urban music
~:;:~~:f~~;:~J:.~.fi::::t~!%~r
\.:..;,
"As vice president of human
by
DANA BUONICONTI
Staff Writer
"Keep on skankin' to the beat,"
she says, in between a juggling act
of playing CDs, answering the
phone, flipping dials, and bopping
around the
WMCR studio.
.
.
.
The "she" in
·
question is
MaryBeth Moscarello, better
known to radio listeners
as
M2,
one
of the "urban"DJs on
WMCR.
ing a DJ gives her a chance to ex-
pose people to ska, a kind of sped-
up reggae, and; not coincidentally,
her favorite music.
"There wasn't a ska show on
WMCR when I came here, so I ask-
ed Desmond to let me do one, and
lately it's been really popular with
requests," she said.
·
"I just started DJing at WMCR
resources, he always had great
this semester, but I had an intern-
ideas about how to get people in-
"I also DJ on the side at parties
ship at Syracuse last summer volved."
and help do promotion for a club
DJing, and their station is huge and
President, Scott Sullens, said he
· in New Paltz," he added. "As far
really popular," he said.
is happy for Russell and said he
as the music goes," Glover said, "I
feels he deserves the award.
try ancl stay away from the hard-
"Most of all, I try and bring a
"I'm really happy for him. He
core. rap by playing bands like A
positive message to my show• tell-
has been very active and dedicated;
Tribe Called Quest and Brand Nu-
ing people to hang in there and
he's really made the most of his
bian."
keep trying," Torres said.
college career," Sullens said.
·
scene, Glover said.
Nelson Torres' Friday night
''We'd like to get WMCR played
With the amount of extra-
Chris Gesue, a sophomore DJ
show pffers listeners a chance to,
in the caf," Ebanks said, "and
curricular activities Russell has
known as G-Money, plays modern
as he puts it, "get into a groove have lots of people listen to certain
been involved in, it would seem
R&B, hip-hop, and soul music such
b
f

,,
shows rather than a few people
that he had little time left to devote
e ore gomg out.
as Jodeci, Boyz II Men, and SWV.
listening all the time.
to academics. However, his gpa of

Moscarello's show,
·
which is
·
Torres, a freshman, who plays
3.24 suggests otherwise.
-
'
.
.
'This i·s my
·
s
_
ec
.
ond semester do-
d
"N t semester we're open·1ng
dev
.
ote
.
d predominantly to
.
ska
.
new urban, hip-hop, house, an
ex

"The thing is, Scott really
i·ng the show and people seem to
DJ'
h'
DJ spots to anybody whoi
·si
·n
music, is an attemptby
WMCR to
d
latin music, started
mg at 1s
-
doesn't study a lot, but he max-
really like making dedications an
·
terested " he added
spice
.
up their
.
programming.
h
.
th .
e
O
er the radio
high school radio station.

·
imizes his study time because he
.
·
.
. .
·
.
. .
.
.
.
, .· ..
.
·
,
earmg . eir nam
v
'
.
·
.
knows how to study," said Carroll.
''Our goal at WMCR is to get
as
.
·.
Qesue smd.
·
·
·
E h •
.

h
·
"lt's just
a matter of doing the
·
.

.. ·
·•··
.
.
01
·
,
·
a~
.
'r
.
p~o.pl~as:pos_s·
·.
i·b
·
le
.
.
~~
~
.
st
.
e
..
n
··
..
to
.··

.
"
.
'
·.
'
.:
_;.J~I~do·a.
-
.
m

ello
.
~
.
,kind
,
o
.
f show,-.-
... •··' ...
·
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a
... ··.
·
s
.
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..
.
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·
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.
o
..



··
.
.
n
..
.
:::
·
.
- . m . .
•. •.·
aJ
-·-
.
·
..
·. -
.
o
.. ·.
·
·
.
f


,
·.
:-
.
s
..
ows
'\york,'.' RusseU said. "But using
a
1_'
-
"ti~
_
pesm.o~~ Ebanks, pr()gram
_
__
kind of like Slo
_
w Jams on MTV;-

·
...
··•
\
'
,'
i
.
:
' ;
.
·.·
: '
.
:
,.
··
.
.
:'.
'
. )
·•
.
.
. .
.
C
little
common sense.
helps
a
lot,
.
1
d~~~~~thi~
.
;~i\
.
-~2;1
fly~itii~:I
-6~
-
dr~~~~7;s:;~
1
\~1}~f~::r~t!~:J
.
·ct··

.
·
·
e
·
·
S
··
1
·
·
g
:
C
n
·
>
.
s
·
· .
..
.co
··
.
r t
'
.
·
h
.
·
e
r
·
utur·
to~~~rt
from his studies, Russell's
iversi Y, an
·
-
··
·
· • _
_
moods " he said.
l
1
.

.
friends said there is not a
more
the urban shows."
·
·
'
·
·
-
·
·
·
h
'
·
·
·
·
·
-
·
asked me who some famous
deserving person to receive
.
t e
.
.
Danny Glover, a sophomore,
,:/
....;......;.. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
_
·.
Currently, there are five shows
plays hip-hop, reggae,
.
and
.
R&B
_

·
by'
CYLINDA RICKERT
designer was and I looked at him
award.
O
n
WMCR that feature "urban"
with a blank look on my face,"
"Scott is always there for you,
classics on his show to try and ex:
·
Staff Writer
II
music; a mixture of R&B,
:
hip-hop,
pose oe
.
oole to
·
new music.
- - - - - - - - - - - - -
MacKay sajd.
to help you out," agrees Carro .
rap, reggae, classics, house music;
"One of the hats
.
the junior
"He'll always put his time aside to
and ska.
·
·
·
·
"F6r me, DJing is more than a
fashion major designed was a
"He gave me one night to learn . help others."
hobby; it's a way
to
give informa-
giant, colorful fish that sheplann-
everything I could about 12 dif-
With his degree in Business Ad-
Fo
.
r M· oscarello,· afreshman,be-
tion to eople about the hi -ho
· dt ·
b b
·
b1
·
bl
t fth
ferent designers."
.,.__:.::.,.:::::=:;::..:=.:..::.-=-:.:.:.-_:_-:--..,.:::=..=-:=:..L==-====..:=-=~:=..,
7
e o ng so u
es ew ou o
e
ministration and experience work-
·
1· -
ct·
·
B
·
·

kl
,
'
·
1
·

f
mou
th
·
The director considered MacKay
ing as an intern with Merrill Lynch,
J
·
oe
·
a·n
·.
.
r1n ey sp
I
.
"Fashion to me is being able to
to be so far behind because she
Russell said he hopes to return to
·..
·
..
. .
·
.
··
·
. _
:
.
.
·
·
.
push the
·
Hmits by using my
came from "that state," commonly
the capital district and become a
:
·
·
·

creativity to try to make something
known as New Hampshire.
financial consultant. His friends
ml.
X
·
ed
·
r
·.
eact1· on
that
.
will enharyce someone's ap-
said they don't doubt his ability to
causes
. .
.
pearance," Kim MacKay, the
"I
live in Danbury, N.H., in a
succeed.
·
·
-
designer said.
·.
·
town with 823 people,
10,000
COWS

by
JEANINNE AVILES
.
Staff Writer
.
One of the most unusual mar~
riages in
_
the public spotlight has
come to an all too ususal en~, as
most star-studded relationships do.
.
.
·
.
.
,
The nine year marriage between
singer-songwriter Billy Joel, 44,
and supermodel Christie Bri1_1kley,
'40,
is
_
over;
It
was recently announced
through a joint statement
!O
Mit-
chell fink, a People Magazme col-
umnist, th_at Joel and Brinkley will
soon be getting a divorce. foel and
Brinkley have an 8-year-old
daughter named Alexa !lay.
·
,;I was shocked to hear they
broke up ... I couldn't believe
'it.
They seemed to be this big
_
~lovey
dovey' couple, and then they broke
up," said Maggie Goudy, a
sophomore from Syracuse,
N.Y.
it's unfortunate, but everything
happens for a reason,"
·
said Rob
Farrier, mechanical services
dispatcher.
Some students did not even
know that they couple had broken
up.
·
.
~
and a bunch of deer," she said.
Michelle Buebendorf, a semor,
"Did they really
.
break up? I
M
·
acKay is one of the designers
"But I always dressed different said Russell is a reliable friend and
think they were a cool couple and
who will be featured in Marist Col-
than anyone else did in high school. will succeed in whatever he does.
they should have stayed together,"
lege's eighth annual Silver Needle
"Scott really took on a lot this
sophomoreMichelle Bourque said.
Fashion
·
Show
·
and Awards on
"I w~rked in a mall an hour year, with an internship and his
Thursday, April 28 at the IBM· away.I'dseesomethingtherethat campusjobatthestudentaccounts
"They broke up? They made
Mid-Hudson Valley Conference
I thought was cool and I'd wear it.
office and has done very well,"
such a good couple. They weren't
Center.
Everyone would pick on me, and said Buebendorf.
th
.
e right height for each other, but
·
·
in about a month, everyone would
· d
Despite the
.
wildness of her
they made a good couple," sai
designs, MacKay is realistic about
be wearing it."
Erin Early~~ sophomore from New
her future and abilities.
MacKay said she was also lucky
York
·
City.
to travel out of the country several
.
.
d
.
"I
know I'm not going to go out
ti'mes i·n high school.
Other students di not concern
in the industry and become a
themselves with what has happen-
designer," she said. "You have to
ed between the two stars.
start at the bottom and work your
"I really don't care ... Does this
mean he won't sing the songs that
he wrote about her in concert now
too," said Jesssica Nagle, a
political science maior;
Nagle is referring to the rumor
·
that during concerts Joel does not
play the certain songs that he wrote
for his first wife.
"I
don't care.
It's j1,1st
another
one of those celebrity couples
breaking up," said Cyndee Brown,
a criminal justice major.
"I
don't care
as
long
as
he plays
the concert
I
have tickets to ...
Celebrities break up all the time.
It's none of my business and it's
none of anybody else's either,"
said Elizabeth Shamaly ·
way up.
"I love millinery (hat making),
but I also lovejewelry. And I also
love dressmaking or being able to
fit the perfect suit. I love it all, but
unfortunately one of these days I'm
going to have to pick something."
MacKay
.
has a wide range of
clothes herself, everything from her
treasured gray suit with the perfect
fit to blue jeans she reconstructs
herself.
She also has sophisticated clothes
that scream New York City and the
character to carrv them off.
Considering her roots, she has
come a long way.
"I remember when I started col-
lege the director of the program
"I
was never meant to be in a
small town," she said. "~ ew
Hampshire is a beautiful, beautiful
place but unfortunately, it just
does~'t have fashion in it."
Even if MacKay said New
Hampshire does not have fashion,
it does have one thing that started
her on the road to fashion design:
her mother.
"I was in fourth grade, and we
had to write letters to our moms,
and
I
wrote
'I
love my mom
because she taught me how to sew.'
I've been sewing since I was four,"
she said.
Even with
16
years of sewing ex-
perience, MacKay still sees every
project, and fashion in general, as
a challenge.
"Everything's been done at one
"I
believe that Scott will be very
successful in
·
whatever he chooses
to do," said Sullens.
·
Russell
will be presented with the
award, which consists of a cer-
tificate and a golden key, at the
fraternity's Demit Ceremony in
which graduating seniors become
fraternity alumni.
time or another. The challenge is
changing it so everyone will notice
it again," she said.
Struggling to express herself, she
finally blurted, "It's the coolest."
On Thursday, six pieces of
MacKay's work will be modeled
.
.
They include a skin-colored dress
with sequined fish on it and a mat-
ching bubble-blowing hat, a jacket,
a necklace, another hat and a ba~
..
They are designed to show off
her junior year work, which was
mostly with accessories.
"All
of my pieces get their in-
spiration from the ocean," she
said.




























































.6
THE
c1RCLE,
Eol'telR1Ai.. ..
APRit
28;
1994
THE CIRCLE
MARIST COLLEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE~ NY 12601
THE
STUDENT NEWSPAPER
·
S.J,RJchard,editor
Ted
Holmlund,
:.ports editor ..
Cari Oleskewlcz,
managing edilor._
Julie
Martin, st;nior edilor
Matt Martln,feature edilor
Kristina Wells,
.associate editor
Justin
Seremet,
assista~ editor ,
Teri
L.
Stewart, edilorial page edilor
James
Hocking, dJStribution manager
Andrew Holmlund,'
associate editor,
Dana
Blionlconti,
columns editor
Meredith Kennedy,
associate edilor
Jennifer Ponzfnl,
advertising manager
Dennis GIidea,
faculty adviser
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
Grow up
Everyone is welcome regardless of race, color or religion. That goes for every
club and organization on campus.
· Or does it?
Apparently, an article in the April 14 issue about student reaction to cultural
diversity made many people upset.
··
It is about time something got reaction.
The students interviewed in this article were from different cultural, ethnic
and religious backgrounds. The opinions expressed were of apathy, anger and
concern. The article was not meant in any way to separate or to point the finger
at any particular· organization.
Culture is a wonderful thing. Believing in your roots and backgrounds· are
very important and can be enlightening. However, segregating yourself from
other groups because of religion, race or sex is detrimental.
Above everything, we are all human.
If we want to join an organization we
should be allowed based on the principle that we all have something to con-
tribute regardless of our race or religion. This campus has a tendency to har-
bor, encourage if you will, cliques. Groups which tend to have similar~
backgrounds or.interests stick together.
_
·
This is not a bad idea. But be open to other~cliques. Go out.
and
see.what .
each group has to offer. Don't shut'yourself off from other groups because
you don't
think you are one of them. Just because you may not dress the same
or have the same ethnic or religious beliefs doesn't mean you cannotopen your
mind to new ideas.
As for the people already secure in their cliques,.dori'tpush others away.
Let different people into your group. Everyone needs people:-Don'tbe afraid
to open your doors to others.
· ·
·
There are groups and organizations, including cultural ones, on this campus
which have many positive contributions to make to this institution.

Stop complaining.
·
·
Give up the attitude of apathy and self-segregation.
Go out and join.
What a
·
weeken.d
.
:
·a
.
//
i!
c).
,·£::>
or·
/JJxrtrs./r
; • ·
·.·
'·.·
;,
, , ,
..
,
He
Said
·
·she
Said·
,
.
·•
.
Well; we are down to' only two weeks left . . Rum.ors. Oh how they
fly
atMarisL
in the year. So much has happened on this
And yes, even I participate and allow
campus that
I
thought it might_ be inte.resting
myself to get sucked-in by them - sometimes.
fo
do a "Year_-in- Review." •
, 11iis past weekthenimors·have'run ram-
-
Women's Swim Team: Congrats. on -. pant. And this time !_admit
I. was sucked-in
winning Metro Championships.·
withoµt ·even: giving it a
'
second thought.
· - Bob Lynch: Grel'lt job on programm-
If
I
get a phone~mail message from a
RD
ing this year.
·
though,
I
jusfassume it's true ..
-Tim O'Brien and staff: Thank you for
When
'
will
I
leatn·not to make assump-
ajob weUdone. .
· . . · · ·
tions? I'm supposed to ~e a journalist. I'm
-Joe Binotto and staff: The cafeteria is
supposed to question everything. So much-
. looking and tasting good.
for that.
- Matt Gillis: The only expectation
I
have
· Great
I
thought. Al Sharpton is coming
is that you do your best. .
.
to Marist.
- Upper Champagnat staff: Thank'you
How did they finagle that? Doesn't mat-
for a great year.
ter.
If
someone says he's coming than it must
- The Circle and staff: You are not un- · · be true.
·
·
··-
. touchable, SGA was right andlhope you
But''why would
Al
Sharpton come to
recognize that.'
·. . .
· - . ·· . _ Marist? Doesn'tmatter.
If
someone says he's
- President Murray: TI.1artk you forV1-
. coming than it must
be
true; ·
~ion
'94
an~ all your hopes for Marist and ·
·
Whata great story I'm thinking.•What a
its commuruty.
. .
way to shake-up the Marist community.
Peo-
.
~
~tt
Buc~an~:
I
have
1m
idea what he, .. ··•pl~,
~11.
be outraged
I
t~o,ught. And they
1s
_
dcnngon tWi;.
_
list._ •·.••
·
.
,
·
·
.. ,; .- .·
,
.. _,. :-,were:
,
.
.
. ··· ..
·
.. ··•;.-: · -· ..
:
. _ ·'··•-.
·.·: .
. -'- Ismay Force: Thank youartd'lwishyqli {., ,} ··-ta1illtg tppeop)e'aooiif
it;
hoCone'Marisf'°" '.
all the best. . .
.
.
student'~ or one. white"'Marist studen( I
~. Tim Lawton: How 'bout those
shoul_d say -
l
spoke witli was tl}.riHed.
erections?,
. . ..
Some students were mad because it would
.·· -
PizzagalliConstruction: Watch· those
be a distraction from Earth Day:·
water and gas lines. .
. .
_
· Others keptusing words Hke «incite" fear-
•· -=--::
Hock~yT~: Thank you fo~
,
those en-
iI1g a '.',mass protest» wouldd~velop and pro-
- Joyable Fnday
,
~ghts._ . . .
. . .
. .
ceed across campus .
.
·. .· --• · .. · ·
-
Lynn Magee: Thank you for "Take
Go'c,d luck inciting anything at Marist, I
Back the Night." . .
. • _ . .. . . . . .
thought. But maybe via
Al
Sharpton it could
- .Childrens Theatre: Aj(?b wen dcme. . be done ..
.
_
' . .· ·
.
.• _.·
,
'fown~qu~eI-3'.J wish you ltll the best .
I
was
0
just happy.I'd have something to
for a. successful Juture.
·
_ . . ... ·.·.
write about nextweek.
.
. . ·
· -:-WMCR: I hope_you get tlle equipment
_
·. I was remarkably impressed that ~harp-
y9u_ deserve.
< .
> . •··... . :
;
' :
.
tori would
.
venture
'all
.
ilie 'way, out to
-
MCTV: Congra~_on ~he pres1d~nt1al
.
Poughkeepsie

to address the. issues of
debate .. You are prnV111g
tp
be .. a valuable .culturai"diversit{and respect at Marist. -
asset to ~his comm~nity~
:
..
.
.. .- .· ... _ . . ,
; Could this be the.wakeaup cal}necessary
-
Congrats to . all . stude11,ts who IJ1ade
to finally- get the ball moving for the BSU
Dean's List.
.
: · . - ·
.··-.· .. · ... · ·.
. . _·
and Latino Clubs?
· ·
·
·
·
.- ..,... Th~nk yo~ to .~ Jhe du~s. for yo~t
No. Wrong. Too good to be true. __
.
.
_
_
.
. _ _
. commumty service here on campus and m
Al
Sharpton)sn't coming ,on: Saturday.
This past weekend was a banner one for the Marist College community .. : · the area.
· ·
.
<-
-
. .
> •

.It was just
a
iumot;
·
·_· _·
.
On Friday, there was the alcohol-filled Riverfest. On Saturday, there
·
_was · · . -, J'hank you to the Ho,usmg,and ~eside~~
. What does this mean fpr the BSU arid
Sunfest with drug confiscations and all.
A lot of "festing" going on for our
tial Life Office for all the programmmg.tbis Latino _qubs that it.
was
all a lie?
.
so-called dry campus.
.
_
_.
_ .
· year.
·
. .
.
_
.
And 1f1twas start:<! by t~e B~U or Latino
·Joining the festivities,· was the sexist,. tacky, Toughman competition which
d;ne~~~gr;:v~!~Jt::S~rs for a job well
_Clubs ~e tlley hurting their. own ca~$~?
took place Friday and. Saturday nights.
. .
. -
.
_Thank you to
all
o(you ·who make Maiist
~s J~se t!6t"nly way left to get attention?
. What's the big deal? Good, clean, wholesome beatipgs are very entertain.:.
a great place t<> live, tolearn and grow. .
P
·
ing. Don't forget the thong-clad, tattoo-bearing, bimbos prancing around for
Scott Sullens
is
one of The Circle's
CaroJine Jonah is one of The Circle's
drooling, male chauvinist. How's that for amusing?
political columnists.
"
political columnists.
Apparently, the ring card girls were the highlight of the evenings.
How can an institution which claims to pride itself on a "good" reputation
and social standing in the community allow a flesh-fest to take place on her
hallowed grounds? How can a college which doesn't allow condoms to be sold
on campus sponsor an event like Toughman? All that sex being promoted and
no one prepared? Unbelievable. Marist also frowns upon alcohol consumption.
Yet they -qm condone this type of event.
How's that for hypocritical? The Marist administration does it again.
The competition was apparently filled with lots of sexual innuendos with an
abundant amount of alcohol consumed.
·
Did the male spectators actually think they could score with Tina, the ring
card girl with the tattooed ass?
But protection was unavailable for these hopeful fools. They certainly could
not get condoms from outlets on campus.
Sex and alcohol-two things not found on Marist campus. Maybe this is a sign
of what lies ahead for this institution. Could there be hope that next year
Toughman will come again to Mccann? Here's an idea. Next year, invite the
board of trustees to Toughman II.
Marist administration should set aside the best seats in the house and supply
a plethora of condoms and alcohol to be used at the board's discretion.
The trustees may be so impressed with the hospitality, they may decide to
up the funding for the Marist community.
Yet another way for Marist administration to bring in the dough.
Just a suggestion.
THE CIRCLE
is proud to announc'e
Kristina Wells
Editor-in-Chief
-
for.1994-95
Editorial Staff:
Dana Buoniconti
Teri Stewart
Justin Seremet
John Dougherty
Andrew Holmlund
Ron Johnson
Meredith Kennedy
Tom Becker

























THE:
CIRCLE;
VI EW
P:
0
I
NT
;
APRIL 28,
1994
7
B$IJ' delegate demands fair representation· in SPC,:
Editor:. ,
>.. .
. .
.
His editorial was . one of the
this campus do not promote diver-
the cap on the number. of clubs,
Thefollowingletterisaresponse. primary reasons for this past Sun-
sity" and "The culturairgroups
organizationS,
a
nd
Greek
to many of the recent articles, and
!Jay's Unity Rally Part II.
segregate themselves from the cam-
Organizations in particular.
editorials in The Circle, and events
· After upsetting, insulting, and
pus life, they don't promote diver-
Racism on
thi
s campus was also
that have happened on campus.
humiliating so many students on
sity."
.
an issue, and a radio show devoted
As
a student on this campus,
this
this campus, he could not even stop
Ms. Beckett, . all we do is pro-
to that topic. became a voice box
past week has proven to be a fry-· to speak with:us.
mote diversity on this campus.
for
th
e rally.
ing one.
·
·
, I personally. appro·ached him in
If it were not for the program-
During this Unity Rally~ students
Recent ·racial· tensions on this
the cafeteria durin th all · d h ·
·
· d
Sal
signed a petition and loudly ex-
.
. .
g er Yan .. e
mmg we
0 ,
our
arengues, our
pressed their opposition to the club .
campus were given new fire by the
acted as
if
he wanted to sick bis dog
BSU Parties, our Comedians, our
editorialwritten by Jon P. DeRise,
on -me .. He did not even want to
Cultural Dinner Dances, many
cap.
a freshman student. ·•·
.-
~ .
take.a fact sheet.
students may not even know what
We stated that it needs to be
In his article, Jon seeined to p~r- __ . At first;, I gave him credit for ex-
diversity is.
:
lifted so that women's groups, Gay
sonify the type of. ignorance and
pressing his opinion~ now I dismiss
Ms: Beckett you are a young
Lesbian groups, Black and Latino
lack of- intelligence that often
him
as a racist;'
.
black woman on this campus.
Fraternities and Sororities, and
plagues'this campus. · ·
·
I hope,ratherl know,·he-'does
You are not a member of the
0ther, yet unrecognized groups
In his opening paragraph, "One
n2t
represent ~he ".i,ews of
all
the
BSU. You do not attend BSU or El
could be formed a
nd
recognized.
of the reasons I
_
chose Marist was
white students
9n
_this campus.
Arco Iris Latino events. ·
It became painfully obvious to
because .it
.
look. ed. to. me like ... I
As
for Mr. DeRise, in the future
Y
d

th
is writer, that it is not our
.
ou my ear• are segrega mg
representatives who can remove
would not have to put up with such
know .that every action has conse-
yourself from us.
non-sense as multiculturalism and
quences~ if you are unwilling to ac-
Again, I obviously am highly of-
th
is cap.
.
diversity.", he insulted the entire
cept the consequences and respon-
fended by the implication that the
Even
th
ough it was supposedly
Marist community.
sibilities of an action, be advised
Urban Programming Council's
put in place by
th
em. ·
·
·
He insulted people
of
color
not
t9 take it.
,
Lyricist Lounge did not promote
They tried to tell us all
th
e in-
because we do not believe our
· On the front page of The Circle,
diversity.
tricate details of why students
culture and our diversity to be
there were several things that were
!'felt like crying when I saw
a:II
should be forced to suffer• while
non-sense.
upsetting to myself, as well as to
those different races and faces
th
ey pondered the possibilities of
He either. insults or . exposes
many members of the minority
crowded in with standing room on-
expa
nd
ing SGA.
MaristCollege, for somehow-giv-
community. .
. ·
ly, into CC349.
Many of our suggestions were
ing him. the impression that he
T. he impression that. Kristina
That night we all shared,· we all
met responses such as "let me talk
d
-
to Steve" and "let's see what Bob
woul not. have to deal with our
Wells and some interviewed
appreciated, and enjoyed an Urban
says."
cultures here.
. •
.
students gave was that the. Black
Culture, and you my dear, were not
I am beoinning to think that it
I also believe he insults those
Student Union and El Arco .Iris
there.
O'
students on the campus who are ap-
Latino are separatist groups. ·
Ms. Beckett's and other stu-
is not our representatives who want
preciative. of diversity . and
They seem to be claiming that
dent's statements are direct
thi
s cap, but people like Bob Lynch
mult. It all
h
h ·

· b
t
kl b ·
evi·dence that ·Man"st needs a defim·-
and steve Sansola who would be
1cu . ur sm, w en . e imp 1es . ecause we mee on a wee y as1s
·
that
O
It
d
t b l
. t d"
.
1· t
t. l
t1·o·n o· f terms· and a d1·st1·nct1·on bet-
forced to do more work if the caps
ur cu ure oes no . e ong
o. 1scuss our issues, 1s en o ec-
here, and that our history .is not
tures, lefout steam, and plan pro-
ween segregation, and cultural ar~~ft~Y student government
"regular history", and that we are
gramming, we are ·segregating
identity.
not African-Americans, Italian-
ourselves.
White students should not be in-
representatives,
1
speak for many
.
Americans,
and
They want to say that becaus· ewe . t· "d t. d
. '
people when I say, prove that you
1m1 _a e or assume It s segrega-
are not 1·ust pawns in the game and
German-Americans.
lo. ve ourselves and our beautiful · t1·on w· hen a gr
f bl k
d
oup o
ac an
lift this ridiculous cap.
If he considers himself to be just
cultures and we want to expose
Latino students are together.
Your constituents do not want it,
"American" that is his prerogative.
wllite students to .that beauty,
That is an ignorant point of view
so you must vote against it.
He has no business telling us
something is wrong with us, ·
and · Marist College needs to
A confrontation between Lynn
what we are.
I take harsh personal offense in
educate you ·
Russo and Michael LaCugna turn-
Furthermore, IfindMr . .DeRise
particular to Laci Beckett's state-
This past Sunday, April 17,
ed ugly after Student Programm-
to be cowardly and irrespon~ib~e.
ments that ",Cultural· groups on
students g!lthered to ra:lly against ing Council President Lynn
My attack on the coaches.here is
Russo's apparent favoritism in ap-
pointing was publicly exposed. .
Ms:
Russo was all choked up and
Mr. LaCugna was furious, but
what else could have been expected
· after her obvious bumbling.
In light of two rallies and a per-
sonal discussion with myself all
directed at the lack of her commit-
tee's diversity in programming,
how can Ms. Russo justify conti-
nuing to appoint her friends over
qualified applicants of color?
Mr. LaCugna's qualifications
far exceed that of the freshman she
appointed, and no explanation was
given as to why she appointed him.
The fact of the matter is she
chose her friend.
Student Government is plagued
with favoritism on all levels, even
in the face of controversy.
· How many students even knew
that there were open positions in
the SPC?
Hardly any. Why is it obvious.
So that Ms. Russo can continue
to appoint her friends and ignore
the needs _for diversity in program-
ming on this campus.
There should be someone besides
Lynn and possibly all of SGA that
reviews these appointments.
The purpose for this article is to
let the Marist community on this
campus know what is going on.
To let every one know that SGA
is a two man show and that we are
All suffering because of that.
When President Murray himself
says there should be no caps.on ac-
tivhies and organizations, it
becomes obvious that ad-
ministrators below him are the ones
instituting these unfair policies.
Sign the petition. Lose the
apathy. Give Marist back to the
students.
Desmond Ebanks, sophomore .
Black female athletes have been female athletes here. Of course,
overlooked at MaristCollege for a this may not be true of a:11 coaches,
.. yep, .!c:>n._g
~';Ile:.
'The a~~l~~ii;,d,\!J?~k •,
~Jn
certainly, receh-;ed,th!lt impr~-
ment, ha:5 .. succeed~d .m ... recruitmg · s1onfrom my former coach,· Phil
well deserved and certainly long
R
d
.
1
overdue.Thecoachesneedtowake.-. · ..
u._
.. •. fifief..,f.espon
S
.to art1c e.
up·and look' for the black female
talent out there. You can count all
the black female team members on
one hand. And consequently not
one . ,has an athletic scholarship
from Marist. This is the problem
that if we allow to continue, will
just ·· get harder and harder to
several. white female .. athletes.. Kelly;
·
· ·
. . . .
. ·
~o~ever, the word recruit has no
While on his team last year, I
s1gmficance or relation to black realized several things. To start; he
female athletes. .
.
only recruits with his main interest
The athletic department has being cross country runners, hop-
made no effort in . tryirig to sue-
ing that they will· be exceptional
ces~fully ·· recruit black· female enough to perform well during In-
athletes. They neglect and fail to door and Outdoor Track: The fact
realize that there are black female that he does not broaden his
athletes who have good grades and horizon when looking for recruits
athletic.
. .··
ability. is shown with his outstanding per-
. To blame.the athleti~ departinent
formance dudng ,Cross Country
directly would.be wrong. In reali-
season in comparison to his slump
ty it is the coaches who do the
during Indoor · and Outdoor
recruiting and make the decisions
seasons. I also realized that he does
on who gets what amount of not really pay you any attention as
!11-om:y if.any money atall. The way
an
athlete
if
you are just a ~alk-on.
tt wo!ks IS that
~e
:oach each team
Wha( I • was ]poking for as an
1s given a certam . amount . pf athletes at Marist College, Phil Kel-
scholarship money to workwith.
Jy was no capable of giving me.J-Ie
The he/she
·
_recommends who
did not care if I practiced or not
should receive the scholarship· to
because
I
was not receiving scholar-
Financial Aid, who have th,e final
ship money_ from the athletic
say. ~ut of course, history shows
department.
that · no
·
recommendations have
The experience I just described
been. turned down yet.
. . .
helped to bring to my attention that
To bring this to a personal stand
there is a problem at Marist con-
point for a moment, _I was a
cerning black anything in order to
member of the Track · and Field
look bad. I feel that if the coaches
team here. during my freshman
are willing to go out and convince
year, 199i-I993. And to be honest, . white female athletes to attend
I feel that 111ost of the coaches here
Marist, why can't they do the same
at Marist do ·not give a hoot about
for black female athletes.
the insufficient number
nf
hforlr
·
·
correct.
This article Is reprinted from the
Black Student Union Newsletter;
written by Karen Legree
Editor:
I am writing this letter on behalf
of the Marist women's and men's
Track & Field and Cross Country
teams.
This is in response to a recent ar-
ticle that appeared in the Black Stu-
dent Union newsletter regarding
the lack of black female athletes.
l understand and can sympathize
with your point of view, to an
extent.
It is true that all coaches are
allotted a · certain amount of
r-;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;i
scholarship money to recruit per-
1•
sons that will benefit their
·Fin.al Letter
to Editor
due on
April 29
at
5 P.M.
programs.
The true fact of the matter in this
instance is that Marist has a strong
Cross Country program yet a
weaker Track program merely
because the latter has been in ex-
istence as a varsity program for on-
ly three years.
Also, recruiting primarily track
runners here would be like buying
a VCR and not possessing a televi-
sion set.
We simply do not have a track.
As a walk-on, I found it difficult
to gain attention at once; however,
this should be used as motivation
for achievement.
This can
only
be achieved
through hard work and dedication.
Phil Kelly is not solely responsi-
ble for his athletes' success.
More often than not, it comes
from within. As the saying goes,
you have to be in it to win
it.
However when attendance at
practice is minimal this is quite
impossible ..
Phil is here to coach us, to train
us, and to help in whatever he can.
He is not a babysitter.
He cannot force you to come to
practice; you must come of your
own free will.
Please do not let this article
discourage anyone interested in
coming out for the team in the
future.
I am sure you have seen twenty-
two women .working hard everyday
out in Donnelly parking lot with
Phil at their side.
There is always room for more
dedicated athletes here at Marist
regardless of color, race, or
ethnicity.
Patsy Schneider, junior
Marist College women's
and men's Track and Cross-
Country Teams
Director says they were mocking media
·Letter to
Editor page
continued on page 8
Editor:
Being at the right place at the right
I would like to respond to Dana time.
Buoniconti's article in the April 14
They did not pave the way for
issue of The Circle criticizing the
other grunge bands.
manner in which two
WMCR
DJ's
Before Nevermind was recorded,
treated the suicide of Kuri Cobain.
the Seattle scene had been
Although many mourned the
discovered and major record labels
loss of the Nirvana frontman,
were scrambling to get a piece of
Dana seemed to take the nature of the action.
the show too seriously.
If
it wasn't Cobain, it would
Yes, people did identify with Co-
have been someone else.
bain, but he was not the spokesper-
Dana's statement about Nirvana
son of our generation, nor the
bringing about the acceptance of
christ figure Dana made him out to
alternative music is inaccurate.
be.
Alternative music has been
- Cobain was just a victim of the penetrating the mainstream since
industry. Live fast, die young.
the mid-80's.
Rock -n- Roll.
Once known as the "darlings of
The secret of Nirvana•~-~u_ccess_? _ college r_adio_,~•- _ U2 and REM
became so popular on the alter-
native scene that they had no other
place to go than Top 40.
As for college radio, it was
created for students so that we have
an outlet to hear music and pro-
grams that would not normally.be
found on the dial.
· In saying this, I am not justify-
ing Gabe Demma and Jami
Fregosi's show.
I feel that they were not laughing
at Cobain and the problems he fac-
ed during his last days, but mock-
ing the way media and his fans put
him on a pedestal, and the way a
"great person"fell.
Aimee LaMarch
Music
Director,
WMCR
Final Circle
issue of the year -
Mays.



























































































































·.
-
.,
-
.
·
;
:
~proriiy

\facts
!
I
:
.,1
•"
.•
'
•.
~
•...

..

';
,
, •


;
I
,

,
,
.'.
,,.
:,-

_.
_.
.
EditOr: ·,
-:>.~ -..
•·
.
.
..
.
.'
.
·
'-
After being at this institution fcir.
sv,c years, I now have come to ac-
.
'
.
cept that some members of the
.
.
·
·.
~lass of
'97,
are not interested in
:
'

~owing all the facts before writing
-
:
:
·
tc,
'
·
the school's newspaper.
·
.
·
_
.
·
•·
.
.
·
:=

:
,:
·
In the April
21
issue of The Cir-
·
.. ·
cle, an editorial written by Kenneth
Urben, of Sheahan Hall; definite~
.
.
lY: brings the definition 9f the words
·
· .
.
.
moronic and ignorantto an entirely
·

new dimension.
·
·
:.
t
·
;
_
,
Ht>w could Urben, possibly draw
.
~onclusions. or
.
come to a bottom
,
line when he obviously has
,
no
..
··
.
f~cts, has only been at this colleg<(
·
·
·
.
Jo
_
r
nine months and has definitely
.
taken no· initiative to utilize
,
liis
·
parents
$17,000 to its full capacity .
.
·
:
·
The C<school" has made it very
.
clear thatthe "cap" is in place not
because
·
of financial restrictions,
bµt because of management stru
·
c~
ture within SGA and the need to
.
\Veed out .those clubs, who are not

taking care of their responsibility.
I question Urben's ability to
·
make the decision that black and
Latino's are not excluded from
·
greek life.
.
.
If
these students feel this way he
,
should accept that.
·
.
.
, , .
·

·
.
.
Those students of color, who
·
·
don't even make up the number
·
C'
10", who have decided
·
to be
black or Latino and join
.
"predominately white" greek
organizations, did with me.
·
.
Most black and Latinos at
Marist College do not feel that they
have a choice in the greek orgaiiiza:
·
.
tions that currently exist.
.
Urben, continues by stating that
.
-'.'the quote also fails to mention
. ·
.
that not only can't minority clubs
·
.
exist, but the cap
·
also affects any
other possible candidates
for
riew
'
,.
clubs."
·
·
.

;
Ma)'be the quote didn't address
.
. ·
that issue, butthe fact sheet at the
.
April
17
rally did.
·
.
.
.
However,
·
Urben was
·
occupied
playing
the role of bodyguard for
Jon DeRise; therefore he wouldn't
know this.
.
. .
·
·
.
·
Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, In-
corporated, founded in
1913
..
at
·
Howard University by
.
22
women
·
dedicated to academic excellence;
·
public service and christian values
is seeking a charter from Marist
'
College, and nothing more.
.
The organization is and will
.
re-
,
main predominately black, dtieto
.
the fact that very few women
·
of
. .
eurocentric, Asian, and Latina
·
origin
_
choose to pledge an
()rganizatiori whose foundation,
.
legacy and rituals are afrocentric.
·
·
.
.
We presently consist of. 870
.
chapters and have 270,000
·
members.
.
.
·
The purpose and. the formation
of
any and all black "greek" let-
.
·
tered organizations was an issue of
'
.
exclusion.
·
·
,
.
·
'
Because of the color of
iny
.
atfcestors skin, they were not allow-
.
-
ed to join "greek" lett.ered
organizations whose membership
·
consisted of white people.
.
,
;
Delta Sigma Theta Sorority; In~
·
corporated is responsible for over
·
40 national public service organiza-
.
tio
_
ns and activities, and setting
highacademic standards for their
membership.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Urben asks "why can'tsonieone
with a 2.5 or a 2.0 contribute just
as much to a sorority?"
To answer his questirn I'ILgive
him two points.
.
.
.
I. This
.
is not "a sorority," this
is Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc .
.
2; In order for someone to
.
con-
tribute effectively to any "greek"
chapter; they
·
have to
·
remain iri
·
college.
·
· :
A
person with a C- (2.0) would
·
have a hard time doing
.
.this,
b
_
ecause their time would be spent
"niaking the grade."
·
.
,
,
For some strange reason that
doesn't seem to be an issue with
some Marist College "greeks."
B. Afena Cobham, '92
.
Student
·
for u
,
nification
·
Editor:
··
·
1
am utterly
·
shocked
·
about
previous articles written by my
fellow college students about
cultural diversity.
.
.
.
.
..
..
.
. ..
.
.
·To
think; that
_
peop\~ s·o
.
b:r_ight
and young could be so narrow
minded.
.
.
I feelthat everyone on this col-
lege campus should recognize and
appreciate not only their cultures
but other people's cultures
.
.
·
....
.
College is supposed to be a lear-
ning experience.
·
·
·
. ·
Cultural
.
experie11ce,
.
as well as
the
·
_usual
classroom
•·
experience,
should be a part of Marist College
campus life.
·
.
.
.
Cultural groups on this campus
could never be considered a form
of segregation.
Cultural groups are beneficial
because they bring forth a\Vareness,
education, arid entertainment
·
to
everyone.
<:,
:
.<
. ' :
'
'.
·
:
'
...
> .
:,
.. With the
'
rece~t'rallies by The
Black Student Union and El Arco
Iris Latino here at Marist; students
are realizing
'
that no
'
persqri; race,
.
or group likes to be overlooked and
disrespected
.'
C
·
·
,
:
..
_
.
_
_
·
,
·
.
_
As a
_
Marist
community~ the
students,
::
adininistrafors; and
faculty must
.
be unified and deter.:
mine
_
d to
_
bri~g a,bout change
.
for
the better
'
•·
/
:
.·.·
·
'
·
·
·
., ·
·
Sbevone
TashaAdanis;
fr~~bman

',
.
.
...
··
·,
.
:
,
·
:-;-
.
--.-·_
/
·.-
. :
·
·
_
,·-

_
·.,
1
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.,, .

•.•·:·
Thank
yQu
f
pr
your
letf~r
.
·
.
: '
,
.
1
'
·
·.-
··
.
.
·
.
"'."
. .
• .


'
-
Editor:
:
fuovies·, i~I~Vi~iou;
~d
:
videos;
-
.
Dear Robbin,
. .
.
As women, all we can do is
con
3
Thank
>
you
.
for
·
yoU:r
-
~
·
very

tintie
,
to
:
speak
.
out andfet~'the
.
courageous and important article iri
powers tliat be'.; know hbw
off
en~
:
The Circle.
.
.
,
.
. .
,
~
sive these messages
are
to
all
ofus
f
I was greatly touched by
'
your
'
We also
_
need ~o stop making ex~
honesty
·
and disclosure about
.
the
._
cuses
·'
for
'
criminals
·
and
·
blaming
violent crime
.
committed against
victims.
· ·
:
·
' ·
.
you while at college
;'
Women shoul~ be able
.to
jog
l particularly agreed with your
wherever they like; wear the clothes
statements about'the media and
they want; or
go on
a blind date,
how they send a message to i:nen
without th.e consequences and fear
that women enjoy being dominated
of beirigraped or ki,lled
/
arid coerced
·
into having sex.
·
·_
·
Thank you again
for
coming for-
Myself, and many women, have
wardt<:i shed light
-
on how young
bee~
in
.
potentially dangerous situa-
women
,
·
are
-
being
-
:
assaulted and
tioris at one time or another, but then conditioned to stay quiet
by chance, were fortunate enough
about it.
to escape unharmed
,
·
As
we have learned from past
in-
In today's world, there is
'
less
justices in the world, silence is our
and less ~hance of escaping danger.
own worst enemy.
While we cannot blame the
media for the violence and moral
decline of American values, studies
have shown that people are af-
fected by visual communications:
.
Janet Lawler
AV
/TV
Operations Manager,
Media Center
:
·
L
~
~-~
.
._
,
::
7"
•·
·
~,..:
~
.. -
.
.
_
r;
·--
:•
:
_:
~-
-
1-
_
-.
:
I1t·
::
ctefense
.
of
_
the
·
SPCJ.
--
-
-
Editor:
:
,
:
: .
,
.
.
.
. .
ideas.
'
.
. . "d
.
.
.
h
.
.
.
I would like to express soine
,
'
.
Some people have· sa1 'thar t e
:
.
viewpoint$ 'regarding several
.
in-
.
PAC
is
.
just' an aftemptto appease
.
cid~nts
.
that
.
have happene~
·
on
.
the minoritf-students
;
on
:
_campus
c~r;i:;:fti~ui~, the rallies thaiwere ant;;thu;h~hecii:r~~:
-
:
·
;e~t~I~i; ;
,
,
held
W
the
·
Black Student Union everything
·
SPC does
·
will
be view-
and El Arco Iris Latino
·
clubs.
.
ed in this light
;
arid
-
if SPC does
At the first rally
I
uiiderstood
.
nothing; we wiUalso be criticized
,
whatthey
.
,
were saying and agreed
for that.
with
.
them o·n some points and
Let me say that this is'
ari
honest
, .
disagreed withothers.
attempt
'
to
.
better SPC
:
and
·
its
·
I
realized that they had chosen
prngr
.
amming.
,
' ' ;
,
<<:'·'.

rallies in order to get their message
.
.
Pm happy· to say that some in~
across.
dividuals who were involved with
·
However
.
there
·.
are : other the rallies have a.ppliedforthe com:.
methods.
mittee and
I would like to
·
tha.nk
·
To mfknowledge, very little ef
0
them for doing so. ·
,
fort has been made on their part to
However, there are others
:
who
'
use the proper channels.
.
have
·
had the committee explained
·
In fact, at the time of this writing
·
.
_
·
to
-
·
them and

'
then conveniently
·
only one individual has approach-
forgotten about its existence once
·
ed the Student Programming they got out into the public to try
·
Council with their ideas.
.
and
.
further their cause:'
·
Everyone else is using the rallies
My suggestion is that if anyone
to try and force changes
in
has any ideas to go talk to the PAC
. 'programming.
oric
.
e it is formed cir talk to any
At the rally on April
17, things member of the SPC board.
began to
·
get out of hand.
.
Believe it or not, the
·
board is
Certain individuals were per-
very receptive to people who have
sorially attacked arid brought
to
.
serious ideas
.
and are willing to
tears by accusations that were made work
.
.
with
.
.
them arid
··
follow
by people who did not know all of
.
·
through on
·
their ideas;
.
the information.
.
.
. .
.
On·a final note,
I
would like to
First,lwould like to defend the
point out one thing that is being
Student Programming Council
·
ignored.
·
..
(SPC).
.
.
,
.
That is the cause of the tension
Being
a:
high profile organization
on calllpus that is prompting most
that deals with what the students
of the actions that are occurring.
want ori a regular basis makes it a
·
Yes, tension exists on this cam-
·
very appealing scapegoat for pro-
·
pus, however it is groups such as
blems that occur.
the BSU and El Arco Iris Latino
.... ·
The major frustration appears
to
·
that intensify this tension to an ex-
be the current appointments to its
tieine degree.
.
.
.
board.
·
If it
,
is tnie th
.
at people in these
S_o!11_e peol)le believe that these
_
groups.want evei:yoneto get along
dec1S1ons were made based on the
·
and be friends with one another
candidates' color of skin.
,
;.
.
then
_
why
'
are they segregating
As an officer on the the SPC
__
themselves in these groups?
.
.
boar~, I. c~n say that based
.
on the
.
To me, it looks like they don't
-
apphcationsand knowledge of the wantto get along.
..
.
·.
·
majority
.
of
.
people. involved;
.
tlie
· :
Do
.
they actually
.
want
··
to be
best c
.
andidates
.
for each posit
_
io~
~eparate?
.
_ ·
··
·
:
'-:
were chosen, and if it were to
be
.
Do
.
·
they believe they should
·
be
.
done again today, the results wo-uld
grantfd
_
more ~ights because they
be the same.
.
.
are different?
·
· · ·
.
..
.
.

···
Next
.
is
.
th!!
·
Prngrammjng
.
I think
.
they should be given the
Awareness <;ommittee
·
(PAC) .
. ,
.
same chance as everyone else.

·

The purpose of the PAC is
;
to ad-
'.'.
.
·
In the future, I beg yoti to con-
.
".ise the Sl'C b
.
oard
'
about what sider what you do, because if yciu
·
types
.
of progra01llling studeµts
·
·
d~n't
;
this campus is going to
be
.
want ~o.that SPC may become even
·
tom
·
apart:
.
.
.
,
.
more div~rse than it a_lready is
;'
,· ·
:
I
know this wm happen because
The commi~teewill consistofsix
I know
_
that there is a growing in-
people who are selected from ap~
.

.
terest
Oil
this campus to
J
orm a
.
plicat~<>
.
n~
_
rec~ived from clubs ~d-
.
'.
-
~hit<: Student Union in response
orgaru.zations on campus. an4fro
,
m
.,
to
·
eyel)'.thing that has been going
the student body.

._
·
.
_
·.
'
·
<
.
:
on
;-
·
.
·
.
.
_
_
·
,:
The colllmi\tee wiUthen
,
pe
·
re~
..
I don't want
to
see this happen,
·
quirep to }told ;m operiforuni every
.
do you?
·
.
,
.
0:
.
:
·
·
·
·
,
two
we~ks'where
:
·
anystudeiltcan
.
·•.
Anthony
P~ Bayer,
·
juruor
come and-Voice their
_
progranimirig
.
·
·
·
·
· ·
'
·
· · .
"\>Y
,
~if
coilSfituteS
CfiVersitY?
.
:
~
-
-
.
..
-
~
'
.
'
',
.
.
Editor:
.
.
.
.. , .
/:
S~11dly, why were only blacks;
Sunday,
·
April
-
17, ,1994;
.I
·was
.
.
l,,atino
.
~ ~d ~ians ~nsidered
peo-
ask~d by.pJ1oneifl would be will-
·
pie
·
.
of diversity?
.
.
.
..
.
:
,
ing to p~icipate
iri
a school poll.
. Ai-en't Italians, Gaelics, C~a~
,
.I
a<;~pted and was told thatmy
,
dians, Russians,Poles, Hebrews
name
,
was
obtained from the Stu-
-
:
and Na~ive Apiericans, to
·
name
~
'
derit. Government
.
Association
'
as
_few' considered diverse?
.
·
Literary
'
Arts$9~i'ety
p~esident.
··.
According Jo Webster's New
.
:,
I was then asked how manfac-
Vvorlg Dictionary of the American
tive members I had
_
in
·
my club~
Language, diversity means Ldif~
I responded that I had fifteen.
.
feren~e of 2. variety.
·
..
·
·.
· ·
.
Then the person asked, out of
.
I
would like to assume that from
those fift~n, how many, were peo-
t!>,is de
_
finition we.all fit the descrip-
ple of <livei:sity?
·
·
tion 9f diverse people.
·
.
.
.
I answered that we had people of
Lasf but not least, what is this
many nationalities.
·
·
poll supposed to measure?
-
The
-
person stopped me· there,
.
·
·
)t seems as· if it is to gauge how
saying. that they meant
.
black,
ma~y blacks,_Latinos, and Asians
.
L~tino, or Asian
·
students.
-
;
>

,
a_re mvolyed m clubs.
,
.
.
.
·
.
.
I
told them
.
none
·
'
were,

arid
.
.To take these res~lts and parallel
before I could ask who was con-
t~em _to

any club· to determine
ducting
·
this poll an~ why, they diversity ~ould b
.
e a mistake.
thanked me for my time and hung
·
:
Marist clubs are open to the
up.
whole campus.
·
Now there are a few reasons why
It;
!s up
_
to th~ students to
this poll
·
bothers me.
participate:
· · ·
_ .
First and foremost, who was this
I niay be overreacting, but
_
I am
mystery caller, and what other offend~d by_ the poll, the lack of
clubs were polled?
professionalism in the way
'
it was
Was this a Circle poll, or an in-
conducted, and what it could mean
dependent attempt at gathering to life on campus.
information?
Brian
James Elias, president,
Literary Arts Society












































































































GL.BSA
,
.
.
through a
.
faculty
-
and staff
.
sup-
.
port
group called
.
'-'Out of.the
:
•.
co
·
ntinued
from
page
1
:
· ·
Margins''.. This group centers
·
on
.
would•
:,
prefer

·
to
.
:
remain
.
·
.
sexual preference and racial arid all
anonymous.
.
cultural diversity issues.
.
.
·
Now/Sorbello saidt it.
has
.
15
·. :
.•
\'Out
:
of
·
the Margins Js
.
.
,
our
rirunes and
c;m
get :UP"'aids of 50
.
,
'parent group'," .Sorbello said,
people to lerid,their names to the
·
"Everything
:
we
.
d<> is with and
cause
;
of, getting chartered.
<\
through them/'
.
,
.
.
·
"We have a lot of support from
A Pluralistic Carnival is plann-
the RP's and mentors, but not so
ed by "Out of the Margins for the
much from administrators," he FallFall 1994
.
semester. It will be
said:
.
.
.
.
hosted by the GLBSA
as
a social
Currently the GLBSA functions
council for minority e>rgani_zations.
Marist Summer Sessions
May
31-August 19, 1994
Three
·
week Session Six Week
I
&
II
Twelve
Week Session
Do you need to finish your degree more quickly?
Catch up on
·
credits? Graduate on time?
Over
JOO
courses to choose from! Registration
begins March 21 at the School
of
Adult
.
Education, Dyson Center 127
or at the
·
Fishkill
.
Extension Center and
.
.
the GoshenExtension Center
The summer brochure
is available
.
·
:
.
/:'_:
,
·
at tJi.i
';:
.
;
SchoC>lof.Adulf Education
.
.
~
.'
.
.
.
Dyso~ Center 127
575-3800
1/3 tuition due at
.

.
:
:
--
.
·_
..
,.
.
registration
..
.
Take a summer course and still have
time
for
vacation· .
.
Call
575-3
.
800
for more inform~tion
or· directions on where
we
are
in Dyson.
~IW
f
lffl
tiij •
ll~~
Iii~~~ '
~,w
J1rHJ
And
Many
Other Destinations!

~tr
ht
!)
.
al
ttalat
_v,1;
a
f
tt,.r/e.ra
~
g,Jtld~aP.
.
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(,a.laP.
.
. ,
.
Poughkeepsie:
ub City, 246 Main Mall • 485-3579
rxfr
.J
·
.
Arlington
WHORTJJNE
Arlington Getty, 813 Main St.• 454-3530
I
,I
THE CIRCLE, APRIL 28,
1994
,
9
·
students .
Sorbello.
:.
,
,
The ~nivJ1 isa
type
'of
.
a~tivity
the GLBSA would like to host
as
their own club event.
.
...
,
"We want to
be
visible; We want
·
to provide ed~cation for people
"It seems
·
like we've been push-
ed to the Byrne House so that we
can be cured through counseling,
as
if
we have mental disorders,"
Sorbello said.
Coordinator of Student Ac-
tivities, Bob Lynch, said the group
has not approached him about a
charter this year.
·
who don't
.
understand our
lifestyl_e;" Sorbello said~ "It's time
people realize that they can't make
.
fun
of
gay people anymore.''
Currently the group
.
has a
mailbox in the Byrne House
.
with
.
the counseling center. Some
·
members said this is not the image
they want to present to interested
The
.
GLBSA is now working on
·
perfecting its
.
by-laws for SGA.
This is not the first time the group
has
·
attempted to become a
chartered club. Three years ago two
members had a club constitution
and by
-
laws that were held up by
administrators, according to
CALLTofl-FREE 24 Hours for a BrochLi're:
1-800-457-0089
Ext.
Vice President for Clubs, Nick
Capuano, said the cap on the
Social Service Council is not likely
to be removed this year.
"The best we can do right now
is to put them on a waiting list once
all of their paperwork is approv-
ed," he said, "I'm willing to work
with them."
How is STUDENT
SERVICES, Inc.
Different from a
Financial Aid Office?
STUDENT SERVICES, Inc.
specializes in private
sector funding from
corporations, memorials,
trusts, foundations,
religious groups. and
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As state and federal
funding sources continue
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private sector funding is
expected to grow even
faster than in the past.
RESULTS GUARANTEED!
STUDENT SERVICES. Inc. has a databank
·
;
of over 180.000 listin
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We
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priate to your background and educational goals.
Student Services. Inc.
6124 North Milwaukee Avenue• Chicago, II 60646
STUDENT SERVICES. Inc.
has current, up-to-date
information that provides
an intelligent alternative
to traditional state and
federal funding sources;
at the very least, they
represent a significant
supplement to
government funding
.
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.,
:,
·
1.
:
10
;
t'
.
~-.-
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~
-
THf
:
:
c1RCLE,
·
·
A~R1L
·
2s~
:
_1994
.
·
.
i. -
~
,
.' •:,
Libert¥
.
.
·-;
'
.
k~~P~
>
·
·
Stu'ctents
·
'
.
.
',,
,•
.
'
,,
'
.
.
.
,
by
PETE TARTGALIA
.
.
said Wright,
>_·
.
.
_
,:
:.
;
.
..
•·
.
.
"Liberty Partnerships provides
after schooLcoi.mseUng~ tutoring
recreation
.
and other support ser-
vices to the
225
'
students iri three
·
separate schools in Poughkeepsie
·
and Kingston,
'
t
said Wright .
.
computer
'
graphics and multimedia· · which prepares them for the future .
equipment:

· .
<
:
·
·
·
... · . · . '
Wright said the achievement of
have
.
dropped out oftheiiberty
·
Program. We were also asked
_
by
·
Staff Writer
,;
;
·
Every sunday, froni+4pm, in
Lowell Thomas 211 at risk youth
from around the area
:
:,
get the
chance
to
explore the universe in a
space ship without having to leave
the building.
·
The Liberty Partnerships Pro-
gram. which is a state funded pro-
gram that works with students in
grades
5-12
who are considered
to
be at risk of dropping
·
out of
school, is utilizing the technology
of Marist College to develop a
multimedia educational program
for students in the partnerships
program.
·
Marist College is the host institu-
tion for the grant given by the NY
State Department of
.
Education,
said program director Robert
Wright.
The Liberty Partnerships Pro-
gram, which has 225
.
students in-
volved, draws at risk students
through guidance counselor refer-
rals, from the Poughkeepsie and
Kingston area
·
school
.
..
districts.
Right now we
.
have about nine
students working
with
the
multimedia side of the program,
The
·
multimedia portion of the
partnerships program has been
developing for
.
almost
'
a year,
·
said
director of
:
the multimedia
·
pro-
gram, Joe·N. Stokes .
..
··
.
·
''The kids are working on
developing
a
foll
motion video of
a space exploration mission
in
which they develop using the latest
technology including, virtual reali-
ty, computer
:
graphics design and
audio and video equipment", said
Stokes.
·
-
·
,

·.
.
.
·
. .
. .
.
Computer
.
graphics teacher, Ron
Greene, said
·
he
·
believes the pro-
gram has very positive advantages
for the kids.
·
·
"The response from the students
has been very positive; I think they
will be able to use these much need-
ed skills in such a technological
world," he
.
said.
·
For Marist junior Kristine
Lopez,

from Rockland County
N.
Y,
the multimedia program is
a
chance to work hands on with kids
and an opportunity to learn about
"This is a really good program;
the program speaks for itself in
these kids
are
learning about com-
most ways~
puter programs and equipment that
• 'Ninety~nine
·
percent
·
.
of
·
our
graduating seniors don't have the
·
students continue on in school and
the state to service the Ki~gston
area due to our
·
success with kids
in this area;" he said.
knowledge
of;''
she said.
:
-
in the last two years no
students
·
Lopez said some of the kids are
·
- - - - - - - - - - - - - ~ - - - - - - - - - - - - .
a
bit apprehensive at first because
the programs and equipment are so

·
·
.
advanced;
-
but
.
they seem to have a
·•
·
lot of fun working with the all of
the equipment.
.
. .
.
Stokes said the multimedia pro-
ject rims through the school year
· and culminates with
·
an awards
ceremony for
:
the kids on the last'
day.
.
.

"We invite
.
the parents and the
.
kids show
.
,
their 10 minute pro~
.
grams
in
which they have worked

probably about four months to
·
prepare/
.
' Stokes said .. "Then when
their done we present the kids with
awards that state the achievement
of their space mission."
According to Stokes the Liberty
Partnerships program, which has
been going on at Marist for a about
·
four years,
has
provided the young
'
students the opportunity to see col-
lege institutions, use computer and
multimedia equipment, and the op;.
porttinity to be part of a
·
program
WE BRING
-•-··
ADDS
PACE
·
TO YOU!
.
Now you don't have to
coordinate summer storage

·
with classmates.
ADDSPACE makes itas easy
as locking your Individual ·
Storage
Bin
in the parking
.
lot of your dorm building.
You store your goods.
You lock the door.
You
keep the key.
You forget it
until
fall
.
Sign
Up Campus
Center
Thursday
.
& fiiday
.
April 28
& 29, 1994
11 AM-5PM
Seniors
.
vs. soap stars in .softbal1
by
CHRIS BERINATO
"It
was hard to plan around
Admissionforthefundraiserwill
Staff Writer
·
·
that," Licari said.
.
be
$4
for students showing
rn;
$6
For some graduating seniors,
.
their immediate field of dreams
lies
just outside their back door.
On Saturday, some members of
the senior class will march to their
first test of strength and endurance,
armed only with pin~ tar; cowhide,
and maybe some Skoal Bandit,
they
will
slug it outagainst some
.
o~ the best in their
le:1g,ie
at
North
.
Field.
.
·
i'"°":
:
-
.
·
·
But these are no(your everyday
fellow softball
players
:
.
·
The cast of the
ABC daily
soap
opera
.
"One Life toLive
;
, will don
·
·
gloves and caps
:
,
to take on
members of the Class of 1994 in a
softball match
:..
up this Saturday at
1
p.m.
.
However, the only scorecard you
.
will need at this soap opera will be
the scoreboard because all romance
.
will be off the field,
.
,
.
Antonella Licari;
·
a
senior and
one of the organizers of the event,
said the idea evolved from an in~
ternship she had at the show last
semester.
·
.
The idea came upJast year, but
it was delayed due
.
to
situations
beyond anyone's
·
control;
.
Wortham Krimmier; who plays
-
Reverend Andrew Carpenter, was
contacted but was unlible due to his
wife's pregnancy.
::
·
This semester's event was
for the gerieralpublic.
·
scheduled ahead of time
:
Licari
Money will benefit
.
two causes.
handled the details
·
With the cast
Part of. the proceeds
will
go to
and crew in advance.
the Jennifer Dressel Theatre
·
"I'll
work ou
·
t the Marist
·
end,
Scholarship fund.
you work out the cast,'' she said to
Dressell
;
a-1991 gr~duate; ~as a
Krimmier ·
.
one-time president of Marist Col-
Another
·
factor was Robert S
.
Woods andMarist College Presi-
lege Council
.
on Theater Arts who
·
dent DennisMurray went to Long
passed away last May.
.
Beach State CollegeJogether dur-
. A
.
memQriaJ scholarship was
ing their undergraduate years, ac-
developect
._
py
,
het
.
fi:i,ends·to keep
·
cording to
,
Ucari
:
'
.
.
-
'
. her memor
_
Y
·
81:iVe.
- . ,• .








• •
.
..
..



-
.
..
,
• •
.

·-

:~:~.
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.
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.
'-
· .
.
'

. ·
.
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Btidg<?
south of Galloria
>
Lawre~~ farms
·
·
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·
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·
.
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.
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471-4111



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. .
'
·
;
,
. ·.
.
'.
:
'
":
,
,
,
..,
...

......
.
.. ·-
~
.
,
.
....... - ....
.
... ·.···•·"',,.~-
,
,~
.
- -
,."
,
.....
.
·
....
...
.. , ..
. ,
......
..
.
-.
Circle
·
staff
·
.
needs
several
·
additions
:
..
.
.
.
.
'
~
. .
.
~
-
·,
-
'
'
.
.
for:r1ext
year.
p
·
ositle
ns

are
.
•"
.
,
..
·
.
'
.
'
open for:
.
pplitical and
'
.
..
rn~sic
coltlrl)nists,
photo.grapher~,
:
~dvertising,
·
distribut
·
ion,
and
general
staff
writers .
Please contact The
Circle at Ext. 2429.
!
i























































































































.:·. ·b,r.°TERI._L
_S,JEWART
:
··StaftWriter
'
;
.

-
The mert~s lacrosse team losUwo gami
:
1~t
.
week;.induding
a
21~7.
,
setback to Stonybrook College Sunday. The defeat drops ~arisi'srecord
to 5,6.- . .
-
.
.,
.. .

-
·
.
_
. .
_
. ; .
.-
·
.
_
_
·
.
_
,
·\·
::
·
·
.

<
:
--
. ·
Head
.
Coach Tom Diehl said he expected'Stonybrook
:
to
,
be a difficult
gaII)e
/•
=:
·
.,
--_:
,-~
_
-
-
.
..-
·.
_.
·. ·
·-:
.
~
~
-
··
·:
~~
~
~:..
-
:
.
-
·-
.-l
·\
!
<·
·

1.
·
\
:_
·
:--
>
-
-
.
·
/
.
':·
-
.. _
...
.
·
.
>
·-.
_
:
-__
.,
''They werea stronger and deep_er team,» he saicf

.
-
·
;
_
.
·
•··
~-

.
'
A.
ke{to theMarist loss was the
·
mistakes made !,y
.
the defense; Diehl
said .
..
,c
.
.
0:
.
.

;

_
0:
<'
:
'
,:
-·,
.
.
:
':.•
.
-
:~.
:
-?
'···
.

"We overreacted to the offensive players' moveineilts';''·
:
Diehhaid;
"It
caused us to gefout'Qf posjtion/•·
,,
-
-
.
-
':
_.
,
·,
,
.
·
.

"
.
·
'
Diehl added
'
that the defensive mistakes allowed Stonybrook to have
.
easy shots on goal.
.
·
"Nine time out of ten they scored a goal,'' he said.
.
Despite losing 22-9 Saturday to Lehigh, a top 20 teani, Diehl said the
squad cut down on its mistakes it was making earlier in the week.
·
However, it was not enough as the Red Foxes were overpowered by
tht: stronger squad.
-
- ·
·
·
·
.
.
.
Diehl said Lehigh
.
moved the ball well aitd was
_
a disciplined team.
"Theylook (or weakpesses and deficiencies or something they can take
advantage of," Diehl said. "Every time you adjust, they-adjust."
Despite the defeat,
.
there
_
were some positive signs for Marist
.

Freshman Greg
·
schneider was the leading scorer inJhe game.
,
Schneider led the Red Foxes with three goals. The freshman currently
-has 15 goals this year.
.
Diehl said the squad has the capability to be a diversified offense with
players who can score given the right opportunity.
"Our
offense is set that
-
anyone wm score if they're in the right place
at the right time;" he said.** Senior captain Doug Closinski added two·
goals and four assists fqr the Red Foxes.
-
Sophomore goalie Craig Grevelding had 20 saves on the day.
"Craig played a good
.
game," Diehl said. "He didn't make as many
saves, but a lot of that should be credited to Lehigh's offensive ability."
Diehl said the team played a better game fundamentally.
The Red Foxes host Hartford University on Saturday
.
and travel to
Holy ,Cross University on Sunday.
.
Hurlers sweep Siena·
as Hudson
·
·_
wins
11th
In the nightcap, Marist was pac-
.
by
ANDREW HOLMLIJND
ed by senior outfielder Janine
Staff Writer
_· _
.
.
_
_
O'Connor, who went 2-3
.
with 2
,
_w
,
.
_
-
_
_
.. ,
-
.
..
.
.
.
-
_
.
_
·
_
._
RBI's; while Sleight-. and
·
Fanelli
:
.
The'softbal~
tefam
wdri itsfouith
'
..
each
O
collectea triples.
' '
~
·
·
•·
·
:_
'
ganie in.a row
.
and
six
ourofits
l~t
:.
,
. _,:
~
Freshman pitcher Robin Stohrer
eight by soundly defeating tl:ie
earned "her seventh win

of• the
Siena S~nts, 10:0 and 8~7, in non~
season in four innings work; Senior·
conference
.
})lay
.
in.;Lqu
_
~onvi!le,
right:."hander Tricia Southw9rth pit~
N.Y., on Sunday afternoon.
.
ched the
'
final three
-
innings to
Marist
(20c
11 overall, 9-l in the secure the victory.
Northeast C~nference) was once
O'Donnell said team put
again _led by
·
freshman Michelle together stellar performances in
·
-
Hudson in the first game.

·
_
·
.
..
both
_
games .
.
-
.
.
.
Hudson, a 5°foot-3~inch pitcher;-
·

''I
was pleased. The kids did
improved her record to lls3 by pit-
well,"- she said.
''In
the second
chiilg a one~~tter an~ recording15
-
~
game, Siena hit the btill well but
strikeout~in six
:
scorele~s iIJning~ .
.
wefought
·
baclc and
'
di°d
'
wh;t we
·
·
Co-Head Coach Jonnah O'Don-
had to do to win."
·
·
neU ~aid she thoug~t Ht1dsop, thr_ew
.
.
The }led Foxes
-
also swept
a solid game but was not phased by Wagner College, 9-2 and 5-2, last
her outing.
·
.
Saturday in New York.
.
,
"I was pleased," O'Donnell
-
Marist earned the second win
·
sclid .
.
"Michelle doesn't surprise me without the services of its center
\Vith anything anymore."
fielder Patty Ackermann.
.
_
_
Sophomore first baseman Laurie
Ackermann injured her left
·
Sleight, catcher Angela Degatano
.
ankle iµ
·
the fifth inning in the first
and junior thitd b~ei:rian M~li~sa
·
;
game
_
:
wheri she slid into
·
second
.
Fanelli
-
were the· offensive sparks base.
.
· ·
for the Red
'
Foxes.
.
.,
.
Currently, Ackermann is listed
Sleight and Fanelli both went 2-3 as !tay
;
_
to-day and was unable to
with 3 RBl's, while Degatano went travel for
-
last Tuesday's game at
3-4 with a single, two do11bles and Seton Hail.
11
unners
break
--
school marks·
at
Columbia
·
by
GREG BIBB
Staff Writer
.
The men's and women's track
.
team
-
visited Manhattan this past
weekend for the Columbia Univer-
sity Invitational and ran away with
many school records.
In women's action, Marist set
five· outdoor school records.
Patsy
-
Schneider, who set a new
school mark in the 400-meter in-
termediate hurdles, led the the Red
Foxes.
·
Schneider was joined by Clayon
Huggins, Carolyn Mercury and
Alison Murray in the school record
books.
Huggins set a new mark in the
100-meter dash,
.
while Mercury
established a new record in the
100-meter hurdles.
Murray set an outdoor school
record in the 400-meter dash.
Murray, Schneider and Huggins
had more
·
one more record to
break. Joined by Dawn Doty, the
group set a new outdoor school
mark in the
4XIO0
relay.
""-";........:'--=""'-~'
·.
In men's action, Dave Swift and
Senior captain Ray Mahoskey looks to dodge def
.
ensemen
in Marty Feeney both broke the out-
-
~nday's game. The Red Foxes fell to Lehigh 22-9.
.
door school record in the
Circle hoto/Matt Marfin 1500-metei- run.
Red Foxes
third
at NEC's
by
.
JIM
DERIVAN
Staff Writer
guy
IO
times, Martin would have
"ln the the sing!~ what happen-
beaten him eightout of
IO
times."
ed should have happened," Har-
·
"I was disappointed that Martin
rison said.
didn't win in the finals," Harrison
.
In doubles, the team of
The men's tennis team will be
·ct
sai
·
Pramberger and senior Chris liar
-
looking to
_
tum around its mediocre
Senior Brian LaSµsa came up
di handily defeat their opponents
performance
_
at l~st weeke1:1d's
one win short to making it into
the
from Wagner,
6-1, 6-l.
,N?rtheast
C?nfe~e11~~ <;:hampion-
,
finals in the
B singles bracket..
Pramberger and Ilardi lost to a
ships wh~n_ 1
t
trave}s to Hof.Slra
.
·
LaSusa
Jost
.
'to
Genuan
doubles tandem from Mount SL
tpday.
_

.
,
.
• .
.
.
.
-
. -
Gun
_
iwarchana
of
Mount
St.
.
Mary's,
6-1, 6-3.
The
_
Red Fo_xes took a 3-1 con-
Mary's;
:
6~1, 7-6 (6-4.)
Pramberger said he believes the
f<:renc~ recqrd
mto
the
NEC_Chml!-
Harrison said he
had
higher
semifinals match could have had-a
p1onsh!ps and
_cam~
:
awa~ with a tie
hopes for the senior~·
different outcome.
-
1~ a t~1rd-place fimsh with Robert
"I thought
.
Brian LaSusa could
"We could
·
have
_
beaten them,"
Moms College.
have woti it
,
.
but he had
·
no com-
.
.
Monmouth College took the mitm
·
e
·
nt ,, Harr1·son
:
s
·
a
·
1·d.
. .
.
he said. "They just played really
,
good, and we came out
a
litile
Championships with 24 total
C<Brian could have won "
flat."
points.
_
Pramberger said.
"If
it weren't for
Harrison said he was not
-
·
He~d coach ~en Harrison said
his shoulder injury, he would have
satisfied with his team's o~erall
~
-
e belieyed Man~t could have come gotten 11).0re practice and might
performance
in
the
NEC
.
away w~t~ the title_.
..
have won it all."
tournament.
.
.
"T~e
teru_n didn'.t f~~I they could
Marist had another player make
"I would have liked it if we
-
wm; Hamson said. (However,)
it to
.
the semifinals.
finished in sole possession
cif
third
I thought they had a chance."
Junior Marc Nussbaum fell short
place or second place," Harrison·
·
The Red Foxes (5-5 overall) were in C Singles
,'
competition losing
.
said. "We could have done it if we
led byjunfor .fv.fartin Byrne, who 6-1, 6-3 to the number-fo;r seed,
pll;lyed up to our potential."
·
~nocked o!f tlje
·
number-one ~eed
Neil pc:,ldsby
.
pf Monmouth; the
m the A smgles bracket, SanJaya eventual winner in the finals.
Harrison said he felt his players
Wijem~ne of Mount St. Mary's in
A(ter w,inriing 6-3, 6-3
'
in the
lost their concentration to focus on
.
the semifinals, 6-2, 6-4.
quarterfinals, junior Kevin
tennis .
_.
.
Byrne was t~en
.
stopped
·
by
McGovern also lost in the
_
"~ couple
_
ofyla7,er~ didn't ~ave
second-seed Ricatdo Langre of semifinals.
_
_
·
_
_
:
~~nms
~
a pn?nty,
.
said Hari:is~n.
Monmouth, 6-2, 6
0
4.
_
McGovern w~s defeated by·the

T~nmsw_asn tash1g~ffapnonty
_Sop~omore Heath Pram berger number-one':-:.see
_
d: 'Andy Winfield
as 1t was m the past.
-
.
s~d ~is team~ate•~
_
loss
,
was a
of Monmouth; 6
.o,
6~1.

The ~ed Foxes played Centra~
~
.
urpnse. .
··
·,
:.
"'
--
:
· _
_
Harrison said he was not surpris-
·
Connecticut yesterday at the Out-
_
·
"Mart1
_
n could
·
have won," ed
with
the
outcome
'in
::
chess ~acquet Club. ~esults were
_
}:'ram.berge_~
_
said.•"Ifhe played this
McGovern's bracket.'
·
unavailable at press time.
r--:--"."""--,------==-=:----~=-,--~...;;;.,-------
.
.
:a:~;~=~~~~:et
a triple.
,
,
.
.
Intram1.iials··
-
The men~s
_;
.l>?.Sketb~ll league .
began its playqffac1ion
:
April 2_5.·
·: .
Eight tefuns
·
from both
'
leagues
played. Semi-final action took
place on April 27. Results were nqt
available at press time:
·
_
·
.
_
':
,
.
The finals will be played on May
2. The top eight seeds are as
follows: A Few Good
·
Men, Flex,
NPG, Big Country, The Bobbits,
Linc's Legends, Grafton Park and
Syracuse.
·
·
Softball action is well underway
.
Seek and Destroy is leading Divi-
sion I play with a 3-0 record. Jacks
is in first place in Division II with
a 4-0 mark.
M,M,&M
is atop Division Ill
with a 4-0 record. Cappa Fats lead
Division IV with a 3-1 mark.
In volleyball action, Murphy's
Law
_
won the Thursday league
playoffs. Tuesday league playoffs
were held on April 26. Results were
not available at press time.
The winner of each league
will
compete for the intramural title
today.
More students take Kaplan's courses every year than any other
test prep company's. Call us today to find out why.
1.-800-KAP-TEST
KAPLAN
n..
..,•••r
I• •"-
'••t .._,,,_.
The final
-
11
One-On-One
'
'
With
· · · ;
- Jay LaScolea"
. _
·
-
w~ekdctys
at
Ji;~o
.
·

.··
.
ii>•·.
OnMCtv.
i·.•.·'./·,c>
Campus
-CabJe
• ··
..
·.
·
..
··•·
Challnet

1
:
z
·
-:- ·
:r
-
-























































































































































































i
j
i.,-~
.
·
·
_
'
.
' '4
.
·
-
~~lpi~
i1¼1Jzfi/,s'.
'
Ji4~i
-
STAT
-_
Qf
.
!fll:
WEI;~ .
Junior pitcher Jeff Goodin
gave
up
_
two
e~rned
run~ in
8 1 /3
-
innings:
· ·
·
·
·
· ·
·
·
··
· ·
·
have
::
tennu
r
as
.
:a.
priori.tY~
-

Tennis
·
·
-_
·..
.
Wasi,r1
ijsi,_;fhofa
Pf!'>ri_'Yc"!!t~
·
·
•·

.
·
•.
.
..
S
p
Q
RJ'S
1.2
i
.
ir,
'-
tt,e
:
Pas~~
-
':'
.
. .
'
.
>
~en
Harrison
;
{
Ttnl¢
i
~
~
¢:Le;
·
.
.
· .
·
.
·•
'::"
: .
.
..
APRIL 28~
1994
Hitters
faif
Xf
~
f
f
i
·l<
·

~fteJ7
..
fhree;:iK
'.
~fB
.
:
•..
.
':
!;
.

,
.
.•
\ .
Th/orf~~se'
.
sputte{ed. ~gahi~t

by°T.ED
HOl;;ML,UND
.
C.W
>
Post
.
managing
::
a 'meager
;:_
.
Sports Editor
·
_fo~r
.>
hiis.'
:
.
D;Aut~rio
::
·
scored
_,·
__ ...;... ___ ..;__......,
·
--
·
---'---,.~
·

Marist's
·
tone run m the
·
fifth
·
After eight full innings,ju
_
nior
.
inning.
. ..
.
· ..
·
.:·,,
·
·
·
·
:
_.
.
·.
w
-
solidly
at
r~sident Cup
,
-
by
GERARD, CARNEY
Staff Writer
Jeff Goodin was locked in a 1~1
,.
pit-
.
·,
,
Head
'
coach Art
·
smith
'
was
.
not
dier's duel.with ~ke Scheindler
of
·
,
in any hurry to
·
creditS
_
c~eio'd~er'.s
·
C. W
;:
~ost.
._
_
.
_ __
-.
.
:
pitching perfonitance as tile reason
On a beautiful day
for
racing this
Once one ofthe pitc
_
h
_
ers blink-
:
'
for the squad's offeµsive
:
~ough(;
,
past Saturday, the crew team cap-
ed, it seemed clear
,
the outcome
·
qr-
.
••He didn't have
;
any
·
,
br~akirig
tured the Herbert Haight Point
the game\vould be
·
decided •
. ·
.
.
stuff "
'
tlie
'
tbird-year
:
co~ch said.
Trophy in the President's Cup
·
·
Unfo
·
rt_unately )or the
.Red

.
•iwe'just ~dn't
:
hit;•~
:J
·
::
:.·.
_
·
_
Regatta.
.
.
.
Foxes, Goodin
-
flincµed .first as
_:
Earlierlast\Veek,theRedFoxes
NamedinhonorofthePresident
c.w;
Post scored three runs in the
.
,
had bee1Li>Iaying
·
.good
s
baset?all,
·
.

of
.
the Mid-Hudson Schoolboy
top of the ninth inning in route to
·• .-
scoring vict<:iries
:
over
:
Fairfield and
·
·
Rowing Association, the trophy is

a 4-1 vicfory at McCann-Field on
:
sweeping
.
a doubleheader
:
over
i
awarded
.
to the President's Cup
Tuesday;
_
.
·-Manhattan
· ·
_.
_
-'

.
-.
·
"<
:,
overall team champion
.
.With one out in t~e ninth,
;
'
;
However·
.
whatever-
.
mo~~ntum
:
.
· ·.
Led by senior captain Pete Tar-
..
Goodin
·
·gave
·
·.
up
.
back-to~back
. •·
·
Marist
.hal
estabHshed
:
Ii~
:
·
now ·
taglia and senior Owen McGovern,
'triples to JamieApicella and Dolll
.:'
.
been

~topped after los~~g
.:
foui
.
of>
the
.
Red Foxes, the host
:team,
Fanelli, followed
·
by
·
a double
'
by
·
.
its.last five; including droppirigtwo
,
;
finished the day with a total
·
of 17
Paul Tinelli. Suddenly the score
:
of three to
·
NEC foe
.
Rider this
c
points,
·
edging out a victory over
was 3-L
_
-
·
· .
...
i
·
weekend.
· ·
.
·
_-
. ·
·
·
Army,
.
who had
15
points.
Stan P,orzio
.
ended the·-scoring

The Red Foxes were drubbed
by
The woinen's novice eight sur-
spurt with an
R~l
si~gle.
.
·

:
>
:
'the
Broncs, 7-3,:sunda}'..
.
··
.
·
prised many with its :49 second win
.
Sopholl!,ore-Mick Foster led ~he
Marist trailed 3-0 early in ·
.
the
in the third race of the day.
bottom
of
the ninth with a single,
game and were ne'w'.er able to come
CCI was extremely happy with our
but sophomores Chris D~ Autorio,
·
back as the Broncs
.
scored at least
\
performance,'• said Michelle

Eric Saritqs and Rob Sayegh \Vere
one run
'
iri theJirst six innings to
Lamere, a freshman from Long
mowed qown in order to stop the
clinch the victory. ·
Island,
.
N.Y. "I felt that we are
rally.
·
_
Sophomore right-hander Dennis
starting
to
.
row together well."
.
Th~ defeardrops Marist to 8-.23
_Butfiloski
(lsl}'picked up
.
the los~,
The men's varsity eight also put
(4-11
m
the Northeast Conference).
allowing four runs, two earned,
m
together a solid effort finishing se-
The Red
,
Foxes hosted New York
_
three innings.
_
.,_
.
_
·
.
_
cond with a time of 7:40.
I.
Army
Tech yesterday. Results were not
.
·
.
·
Freshman George
:
Saritiago
.
was
.
:
JuniorToddHorgan
'
heads
·
toward
:
first base in a recent game.
finished first with a time of7:31.l.
available at press time.
.
the
-
main
.
offensive threat for
·
·
-
·
C W
·
. ·
p
·
·
·
4-
· -
1
T
-
d
-
· ·
·
D
·
e
·
sp
·
1
·te
_
the seco
·
nd-pl
.
ace
·
firu
·
·sh,
Th
h d 1 k G d.
· · ·
·
· ·
Marist
.
lost to
.
. .
·
ost_,
, on
.
ues ay.
·
.
e
-
ar - uc
.
. oo
m
ga
_
v~ up
Marist, going2-4 with
.
an

RBI and
Tartaglia said he felt the team put
only two ear~ed runs in
8
1/3 mn-
_
a scored run. Sopi\om_ore Mark
1---------'-'-'--------.;__..;.C..;.lr
...
c;;;;l,;;;.e..=.h..;.o ...
to..;./M:..;.;;;.a..;.tt..;.M
... a..,.rt_i_,n ·together
a
solid performance.
ings
C>f
work. With the Joss, the
::i3arron; wli:o was leading the team
In the opener, Johii'Long pitch-
.
Freshman
'
-
Chris Webb pitched
"We rowed a good race right to
junior's rec
_
ord falls
_
to 1-5.
with a .360
'
batting average going edthe complete
·
game, allowing on-
the final two innings and picked up
the end," the senior said.
·
"Army
:
This latestsetback was
.
·
another
,
into the
C.W.
J>o~t game, alSQ\Vent
'
ly
two earnec:I runs over
:
seven inn-,
.
the
,
save;
.'.,:
·<
.
:-
,
,
:
:
.
..
.
.
.
was just the better crew on this
exampieof thd
.
inconsistency the
,,
2
~
~,
.
,
.
.
>
__
.
.
.'
••
-
~

_
_
irigs
·
to
.
lead Rider to
'
the win.
The Red
.
Foxes
·
travel to Pace
day.''
.
_.
..
.
Red Foxes have been exhibiting.
.
·
·
:
The Red
:_.
Foxes spht
,
1
_
ts
-
:
:
Goodin, on·the other harid, was
.
Friday
.
before
'
facing NEC
_
rival
Originally being considered as a
Marist has a
4~4
record in its last
.
.
doubleheader against theJ3roncs
·
shellacked, giving up
six
earned
Fairleigh Dickinson in a three-game
tune up
for
the Dad Vail
.
Regatta,
eight games.
.
.
.
Saturday, losing the fast' game,
runsinJ 1/3, innings
of
w_ork.
weekend series.-
..
.
.. .
.
.
the President's Cup
.
Regatta has
·
.
.
.
:
l+,4,
and
.
winning the second,
,+I.
over the last few
yeari;
developed
B
-
UCbanan
indicted
·
on
fetQ11y
'
Ch.a1;ges
:
.
:!f?E;:if-t~~
cards to ~uy:merchand)se a.t
:.
seven
process would start O\'.er-again, ac~
Conference
,
scoring title,
was
'.
the
has aJqng history with the school.
by
IVIATT
MARTIN
.
.
:
Staff Editor
.
··
Po1,1ghkeepsie
,
G.~Heria
:

s
_
tores,
cording to the office of.the district NEC Player of the Year ~d
.
w
.
as
.
~barging
.
over
,
$
1
;ooo
in d~~hing,
attorney.
.
.
·
·
·
·
.
~lso given the Haggerty Award as
sneakers, jewelry arid
,
'
s
_
tereo
~'Nothing
is set in stone at this the outstanding player in the
Senior
'.
b~!c~tball
.
player
,
Izett
'
equipme~t.
.
'
.

.. ·
.
.
:
.
.
point," said a DA ~e>urce.<C.We're
.
metropolit~n
·
area two weeks' ago;

Buchanan~
·
21, froni Goshen,
.'N~
Y:;
·,
:_
Pergainent set a
M.~Y
9;court ap-
.
just
:
waiting
:
fo
·
see what the d
_
efense
·
Similar circumstances have oc-
<
was
.
·
arraigned of ,felony charges
.
pearanc~ c:Iate .for
.
Buchanan who
·
·
.
prepares/' Bu~hana
.
n
;'
a
.criininal
~urred before
.
with potential
.
draft
.
Monday·.·._. _in
tJ:te
Tri'Yn
..• •
·
of
·,
also 'faces
·
a mis~~meanor
·:
con-
.
j1:1sHcemajor,isu11.del'.
.
~dvis~ment
.
picks, but it is tinclearwhetherthe
.
Poughkeepsie court_.
_
. .
: .
_
spiracy
·
ch~ge~
_
____
.. ·.
_
. ,
,' .
_
.
noLto
':
coniment on
i
bis
.
pres~nt

criminal proc¢~dings will have an·
.
·
.
.
Judge
'
.
.
Ira
-
·-
__
Pergament .foupd
.
:_ _
•·
If c~nvicted; the
·
~o
.could
:
face
_
·.
·
situation
·••
and
·
·
.
has
.
.
retained
-
legal
·
eff ecfon
·
Buchanan's
.
draft
.
status.
enou~t
_-
eyid
_
enc~ to
.
charge
.
a s1;_nt.eri¢~ of
:iip
to
-
four
'
ye.1i:s in
· ,
couri~elJor ~s upcoi:Jµng trial.
;.
.
.
.
.
"lt's
'
hard
to
say atthis
.
point,"
Bucha~at1 and Cal~n Co~per, Jr.,
_
priso.n.
_:
·
·.
.
•·
:
:
.
,
_
.
_
_
·
••
'
"\Ve're hopirigth~the is11'(guil-
: ~
said
Doris .
.
'ilt certainly doesn't
23, of
;
Poughk~ps1e_, with grllild
<
·
No plea was entered
as
of Moh~
.
ty
·
'at this point,,,
.
:
_
said Marist's
have a p:ositive.effect;"
.
-·· .
-
larceny aJ?.d crimin~ possessiol!
<>f
:
qay_since
.
$eriiorAssista'nt :Oistrict
.
·
.
Athletic
:
Dire~_tor
'.
:Qeile -Dorjs.
Se dale
"
Threatt
·
of the
.
.
Los
-
st
_
~len
/prop~t1Y,
,
boJh • (el~iµ~,
.
Attorney W:ayn~ .Wi~erw.ax; who
.
. "We're waiting µk;e ey¢ryone else.u
.
Angeles_· Lakers was a projected
stemmin~
.
fro
.
m their
·
Ap~l
.
14
.
is proseci.itingthe caseJs' on vaca-
.
Marist
·
-._
has
·
yet
·•
..
to
.
take
'
.
any
·.
high first-i:oui:i.d draft pick in
_
1992
·
arres~;
}y
. .
.
,
·.
·
·
·
>
·
-:
tipµ
·
u11tiH\fonday
_
May
.
~.
::·
';' _
disciplinary
.
action
·

against
u
_
i,itilcriminalcharges
·
madehima
·
Th~

tw.o illl~gedly PQ~d ope11.
.
~
Buchanan is free ori his
own
·
Bu~
_
._
h
_
an
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.
.
_

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_
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e
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-
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liability,
.
.
-
·_
·
_·_
· . _
·
:
·
lock~r)t t~e
.
AllS.p9_rt h~th
.
c:lub
>
.
recognizance
.
until th~ trial
.
date.
...
.
. ·
The
'
Lakers
;

then
.
with picks
·
to
in
Poughkeepsie. on
,
April 7 ~4
-
::/
From
,.
here/ Buchanan
;
could
.
.
Bu~hanan
,
was
·
beihg
·
evaluated
sp~e, took
:
a chance on him.

stolet~~ ~i'~dif cards_,
:t
wat
_
cp
an.d
'.
pos.sibJy plea°i,t!fgain Qr enier:into
·
by NBAScouts t~ough~uthis
inl,
Tinie will tell whether or not
$~4;
:
3:~9.rclpg tp police.
·
.;''
·
agr~~jµryarraigm.n.eilto,ffelony: pr~ssi\'.e s~pn.
.
.
.
_
.
.
Buchanan
'
<
will have a similar
.
"The Presidents Cup is
.
one of
the oldest regatta's in the East,
dating all
_
the way back
·
to 1963,"
Sullivan said;
·

Named in
.
honor of former Col-
lege President Linus Foy, in 1964,
then
·
Director of Athletics Dr .
Howard Goldman established the
third Saturday.in April as the per-
manent date for the race:
This
coming weekend Marist will
lopk
.
to
_
duplicate its performancf
.
when the team travels to Wes
Point to race in the Patriot Leagut
meet; In this race, the Red Foxes
·.
will
face
.
Fordham and Bucknell,
two crew powerhouses.
The foilo~g ~eekend Marist
will face a tougher test as the New
York State Invitationals
·
begin.
-
·
.
po~~
I
sa.id ~he
,
_two
used
,
W:e
.,
cht1rgc;s i11
·
county collrt; where the
The senior won
t~¢

Northeast
- '
:
OJ>J?O~nity.
· ·
f(!J</,~l/ClJiln.
;
~~lf!Jp'Us''
·
••·
a
.
··
tou.gh
·
.
viSl<Jn to
sell
.
.
.

.
~
_
q9
_
p,,,bat
.j
on
:
.
~anipuf'·
.•
to~
.
K
f
tion~
-
.
clrICpt iciqlfajs
_
<>
.:
s~rve
.
·
tlie
;
'
'\tt
1:i•~·
:..
. .
.
·_
age, the sch~ol can take pnde m Its
Hamson: the second-y~ coac~
_
place o.nj\ppl~ ancl ~lnghther~
:,,:
cpffi.Illumty'.s 1µterest.
<
_
:
,,
:
,
,
·
·

crew
.
t ~ .

. .
-
__
.
.
.
of the mens and womens tenrus
.
oil
_

the
\
I?,fi~pµc cimipu~

<>f
¥,arist
'
\
_.-
·
·'-
?i
!=On~~tive~cltf~Y~ less
.
·.
_
:

·
·
T~e
.
squad
·
".Von the President teams, has helped turn the two pro-
College,
'
off the
·
p~ush banktofthe_

th~
:SQ
Mari~t stt1~eI_1t§J~~~ncled
•:
Cups
,
Re~t18:_
.,
and the Herbert grams ar
.
ound.
,
_
.
.
.
Hudson:
·
.
·

·-
.
.
_ . .
.
-
..
the eventonSaturday
;
ruglJ.t
:
.
Haight Trophy last weekend.
Although the mens program 1s
'
\
Hµhf
;
~µice w~~n
·

di? Marist
.-·
_:
:
/Stµden~
w~re not exctctlyflock-
.
This victory is even m?r~ special a little
.
further behind, it is heading
College bec,ome
.
~ war zone?
-
:
.
£' .··•-·
.
:ing
to
.
see this lively~eveilt
·,
.
.
for the squad because this 1s one of in the right direction under Har-
.
Since;·
;
the
j
ames
J. McCann
.
.
.If community interest was defin-
,,..',-----,,--...-,;-
the most prestigious regattas in the rison's tutelage.
Recreatio,n'
Center
'.
was the
l?
·
!ii:.
.
.
ed. soleiy
by
economics, the C'Gom-
.
Northeast; Th~ rreside?t's Cup
.
·
.
Knicks vs. Nets
tlefield as
·
nieri
arid
women in the
:
,
bat
·
on Campus» contest
·
could
Regattahas been a meet smce 1963.
The upcoming local battle bet-
local aieacompeted in an amateur
·
.
.-
·
have been effective.
.
_
.
.
-.
.
_
- - " - - - -
·:
so
dori't be
:
surprised if
.
the ween the Knicks
_
and Nets
.
in
_
the
kickboxm.g competition. This is the
·
According
·
.
to Mark
·
Alongi~ a
.
.
our academi~
.
irilage
,'
.
~e
·
would
·
President's
·
Cup
champions are NBA playoffs has many interesting
firsttime the competition·, imw
in
.
promoter for the event with Ron allow ourselves to
·
be associated
shown in admission's books row-
story lines.
its third·
year'
in the Hudson Valley,
Spence :i>rcxhictions; the event was with something that ultimately con-
ing
_
over the beautiful
-
Hudson
The second-seeded Knicks, who
has been held
.
atMarist,
.
.
going to pump
·
$60,000
to the local dones violence;
.
:
drinking
_
and
River one sunny morning.
have been inconsistent all year,
~Y did M_arist ~gree to h
_
ost this
economy.
· ·
_
motive destructive actions,',
.
This team, y,:hich does not get as know this could be their last year
event?
:: ·
_
.
. Great. However, an event that Goldpaugh said;
·
_
much recogrut1on as other sports to have a legitimate chance at cap-
Let's
·
find
out:
.
promotes violence does not serve
Marist lost a public relations bat-
on this campus, deserves its mo-
turing the NBA title .
.It surely does no_t seem to fit the
Marist's community interests. The tie by hosting the ''Combat on
ment in the sun.
The Nets, on the other hand, are
Judeo-Christian image the College
Mid-Hudson Civic Center or Campus." IfMarist was ~ing con-
Tennis volleys
looking to establish some identity
tries
·
~o har9to portray.
.
another local arena· could have held
sistent with its prior images, this
The ~en•~ tennis team's third-
and make inroads into the Knicks'
A kickboxing CQmpetiµon titlCli
this event.
.
_
_
.
competition would never have been
place firush m th~ Nof!heast Con-
fan base in the New York
"Combat on Campus" tells quite
Assistant English Professor Tom
held here.
f~rence. Champ1onsh1ps was a metroJ?Olitan area.
a different story about a college
Goldpaugh said in l~t w~k's Cir-
What's next? Vince McMahon
disappom!ment to Head Coach
It will also
be
interesting to see
that
'
calls its construction proj~
cle that Marist would lose some of and the World Wrestling Federa-
Ken Hamson.
if the stingy Knick defense can con-
Visiori '94.
·
.
i~ integrity_ as
.al?
institution ~f tion? Or maybe the American
Even though the Red F?xes h~d tain All-Star point guard Kenny
In last week's i~ue of The <;1r-
higher leanµng, 1f ~t promoted this
Gladiators?
f?ur players go_ t? the sem!finals !n Anderson and fellow All-Star for-
cle,-
·
Tom
Di~hl,
assistant to tlw
competition.
.
Crew wins
sm~es compet1t1on, Hamson still ward Derek Coleman.
director
·
or athletics, sai4 the
"It seems very unusual that at a
While the "Combat on Cam-
believed the team could have per-
Ted Holmlund
is The Circle's
.
students would
enjoy
,
thecomt,etf:.
~
:
·
:~
tinie
that
we're
so
concerned about
:
0
·
pus" may be hurting Marist's
-~:-
f~?1:1~~
-
~t~~~-
,_
.
_
.
_.
.

·
_
._
,
,
,';
~!°.TI:5-~~'?,f,·,,:
: ·
~
i
•.


44.9.1
44.9.2
44.9.3
44.9.4
44.9.5
44.9.6
44.9.7
44.9.8
44.9.9
44.9.10
44.9.11
44.9.12