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The Circle, May 5, 1994.pdf

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 44 No. 10 - May 5, 1994

content

·
Circle
non-scientifi~
--
poll
-
··
·
In thewe~kofApiil 29
-
~
May3, over
200 Marist students were asked the
following questio11:
.
.
Does the campusmedia·satisfy
·
your
needs?
Yes: 91 No: 134
::
llichard
to
retire;
.
Wells
takes
..
·
ov¢r
·
by
CAR~
OLESKE~ICZ
.
·
,
:
Managing Editor
.-
·
,
'
Ii



















































































. THE c,Rcte,.•
'
MAi
s/1994
.
.
t-:>;ertat
life·
isetes
.
T)ll?ittj
of
uctiOn
ed the .Outsiders; a group that enjoys
bodkh.is based on, the producers went for
coming finals (Grade: B)'.
.
.
.
. . . •.·
.
The year:.
2022.
.
. ·themselves through behavior that includes. the'.more simple title for reasons that don't
In closing, Circle readers
·
wm be pleased
torture and sadism;
.
· ·
.
need•to be.explained.
>
to know thatthis is the absofotelast issue

by
JUSTIN P. SEREMET
Huge prisons are big business ·in the U.S.
and are a final outlet for hopeless criminals.
· This is the premise for "No Escape," a
ridiculous, b.ut quite entertaining, ultra-
violent film starring Ray Liotta.
Robbins escapes the dutches of the dirty
Sci-fi fans of "Aliens" or "The Ter-
with a two movie review format.
Outsiders and comes across a colony of minator''·
will
notice that "No Escape" is
It has always been·a pleasure to hearpeo-
"normal" prisoners made up of meri that . produced by Gale Anne Hurd, one of the co-
pie say "why do you guys have two reviewers
work togetheras a community, led by a
d~velcipers of those James Cameron
when no.one reads either?"
.
priest, played by Lance Henriksen spectaculars. .
.
.
Well; no longer.
.
The plot is as thin as can be, but fans of
blood, gore, and action will not be
("Bishop" from the "Aliens" series).
. The
filin
was most likely filmed in Hawaii, '
It's
a
new bali game; folks,aiid next year's
Robbins, a disturbed and discontent man,
showing off great waterfalls, a rocky coast, . Circle will have a pristine look and a fresh
also makes acquaintances with yoµng and in-
beautiful blue water, and often looks like it · cast.
·
disappointed.
·
Liotta plays Robbins, a condemned
military prisoner who is convicted for
shooting a superior officer in the head at
point blank range, · who has previously
escaped from two other facilities.
nocent Casey (Kevin Dillon)and colony con-
was stolen from "Jurassic Park."
.
. .
.
· ·
.
· ·
structor Hawkins (Ernie Hudson).
. The FX are top quality, not only with the
Unttl ~hen, enJ~Y,the mce, cool. feeling of
He is sent to an island prison, from which
there is no escape; the island· is monitored
by
satellites
above Earth that watch the
prisoners' every move.
Unsatisfied with his lifestyle as a prisoner,
futuristic prisons and outrageous jungle
the movie the~tre
m
that god-awful ~um,mer
Robbins spends most of the film working •traps, but with
the
make-up as well.
blaze,?f humidIFY, be..yar~,of anythmg that
with the otl]ers, during on-and-off battles
"No Escape" prides itself on showcasing
says "yab?a ~~f?ba doo, . and remember
with the Outsiders, trying to find a way out. heads beingdecapitated, bones being broken,
that matmee IS the onl~ _way.
.
.
Not one woman shows up . in "No and bodies·being impaled by sharp objects.
A.nd at all costs, remember that one bucket
After being dumped on the island, Rob-
bins is attacked by an army ofsavages call-
Escape," avoiding the. obvious• traditional
The film is not thought-provoking, but it's
of popcorn with butter is the equivalent of
romance that has showed up in bad films of great for a good.dose of blood, high-speed
six Big . Macs, two McRibs, a Shamrock
this type, such as "Cyborg."
actfon, and graphic violence, and is certain-
shake, and one after-dinner mint.
Originally titled "Penal Colony" for the ly a good "escape" from the stress of·up-
Stay cool.
(:'That need be
all ... '';
critic to lead cheese movement!
by
DANA
BUONICONTI
Once in a blue moon a record
comes along that is so unbelievably
creative, so far out, and so devoid
of singular categorization that
unless you actually go out and buy
it, you'll probably never hear it. •
It
is usually a recor.i:l that will
never achieve. massive sales or be
openly
embraced
by . the
mainstream; you'll never hear a
song on a popular radio station or
see a video on MTV.
It's one of those reco_rds you
want to keep to yourself. so that
you (and maybe two or three select
others) can cherish it as much as
you want, for
as
long
as
you like,
in 'the confines of your own room.
So• why am I about to share it
with you now?
For three reasons:
1)
this record
has absolutely no chance of becom-
ing a hit,
2)
you owe it to yourself
to listen to it
in
its entirety, and 3)
it's difficult to stay·mum about a
record this terrific.
The name' of the band and the
record ... Pigeonhed.
Pigeonhed is a collaboration bet-
ween singer Shawn Smith (you may
remember him as the singer
in
Brad, Stone Gossard's side project)
and producer Steve Fisk (he's done
work with Screaming Trees), and
it is· nothing short of genius. .
Pigeonhed's music is next to im-
possible to describe, because every
song on the recorp is unique; a
plend of pop, souI;·R&B, dance,
techno, industrial, arid psychedelia.
There· are barking dogs,
thunderstorms, race cars, hooting
owls, and guitar
sty
lings from Mr.
Kim Thayil, as welt
Oh yeah, Pigeonhed is on Sub
Pop, a label which has pulled itself
out of a recent slump to start
releasing some
vefy ·
eclectic and
very good material. ·
Pigeonhed can be•sinister, as.in
"Salome"; relentless in its groove,
as in "Cadillac''; hopelessly
romantic, as in "Her''.; or wholly
and divinely pure, as in "Grace."
Shawn Smith ·may be the world's ..
best kept singing secret; it's hard to
believe a guy could have as much
soul as he does.
·
Smith is both emotive and sub-
tle; he's a truly gifted singer.
Currently, heis working on the
debut record of his band, Satchel,
which includes Brad drummer
Regan Hagar, for Epic Records.
As forSteve FisL.let's just say -
it's not too often that a musician
Jen picks summer flicks
' . . '
threatens to tear them apart. ·..
The Sllmmer',s · .. guaranteeg.
.
,
b)'
JENNIFER GIANDALONE .
,:_This.~will,inost.,likely.:.be aJ~ar~; -blockbustpr-~iUbe.Walt oisney's
- Have no fear, movie-goers, this 'jerker, so be prepared. ·
.
.
"The Lioi1Kirig." • -
. ' . . •·•·
spring and summer should be good
Next on the movie release list is
The soundtrack will also be a hit
for more than one decent movie.
"The Flintstones'' from.Universal
with the majority of its songs com-
First, Martin Lawrence stars in
Pictures, and produced by Steven
ing from music heavyweights Elton
"You
.
So Crazy,>) imctit .and
Spielberg's Amblinl:lntertainment.
John and Oscar-winner Tim Rice.
uncensored at a theater near you.
John Goodman stars as Fred,
The amazing animation'will help
"You So Crazy" is supposed to
and Elizabeth ''.Big'' Perkins plays
make this one of the most sue-
be like ~•EddieMurphy Raw" arid
Wilma.
. .
.
.
cessfulDisney movies ever,.if not
may be just as funny.
The Rubbles are played by Rick
the most successful - a spot now
•Moranis. (''Ghostp.us.ters"). and
held. by
·
''Aladdin .. "
You just have to like M a r t i n ( ,
Lawrence's sense of humor.
Rosie ·o·•oonnell ·
"A
League of
Disney is also set for the summer
Joe Pesd ("My <:ousin Vinny''), . Their Own''); ·
of
1995,
a.s they are already in the
Brendan Fraser ("School Ties"),
Oh yes, I can't forget that one
process of filming "Pocahontas."
and Moira Kelly ("The Cutting
of those ann·oying "Full ·House"
.
Other. summer films include
Edge") star in ~'With Honors."
twins is ·Pebbles.
"The Wolf'' with Jack "The Shin-
"With Honors'' is the story of
Halle Berry also makes an ap-
ing" Nich6lson and Michelle ''The
four Harvard.University students
pearance, wearing very little, as a
Age of Innocence" Pfeiffer ..... -
whose lives are affected by a
character named Sharon Stone.
Tommy Lee Jones 'and Susan
homeless man.
The makers of the film tried to · Sarandon also star · in. "The
. Fraser loses an 88~page thesis
get Sharon Stone to play the role,
Client," froni "The Firm" author
down a sewer drain and it is found
but for some reason she said no.
John Grisham. .
.
.
b
·
f
-c-
Y 6u can definitely tell that «The
Fran. cis Ford Coppo. la,.
t.
he.
by Pesci who starts to urn It or
heat.
Flintstones" has the. Spielberg
maker of "Bram. Stoker's
. Fraser winds up making a deal
touch just by watching the
Dracula," brings us "Frankens-
with Pesci to return the paper one
previews.
tein," starring Robert DeNiro.
pag~ at a _time in exchange for
This summer Amblin Entertain-
I heard that DeNiro is in the
food, a place to stay, etc..
ment also produces "The Little.
movie for maybe 20-- 25 minutes
It looks like a pretty good movie
Rascals," whose cast has yet to be. and is getting
$5
million for it ..
and sounds like
it
will have an
named.
That averages out to over
l
d
d
k • h -
Harrison Ford is back as CIA
$200,000
a minute.
_equal y goo • soun trac wit . Its
.
theme song, "I'll Remember," by
analyst Jack Ryan in Tom Clancy's
Now that's just a little bit
Madonna, already topping the
"Clear and Present Danger."
ridiculous, don't you think?
charts.
·
This is Clancy's third Jack Ryan
In May, however, the summer
story, following the hit films "The
movie push really starts..
Hunt for Red October" and
"Patriot Games."
-
Eddie Murphy is back as Detec-
Harrison Ford never makes .
a
tive Axel Foley in the third install-
bad movie, so this one will definite-
ment of the "Beverly Hills Cop"
movies from Paramount Pictures.
ly be a hit.
Back as his sidekicks are Judge
Reinhold as Rosewood and John
Ashton as Taggart. ·
Bronson Pinchot also returns as
Serge, the gay . art museum
employee from the original movie.
From the looks of it, "Beverly
Hills Cop· III" should be just as
good
as
the first two.
.
Murphy's comedic style will
make sure of it.
TOuii
..
JNV

CONVENIENT LOCATION
Huntington, long Island campus
is easily reache<1
by
public or private
transportation ..

DAY AND EVENING CLASSES
Select either a Full-Time Day,
Part• nme Day. or Part• Time Evening
sche<1ulo.
Don't let the rising ticket prices
scare you away, and
if
a movie
looks good, go see it, even if the
cast doesn't contain any big names.
Enjoy the upcoming releases and
have a good summer.
II yOu wish to receive admission
materials and/or arrange for a campus
visil. you are encouraged to conlact:
Office of Admission
Jacob D. Fuchsberg
Law
Center
300
Nassau Road
Huntington.
New
York 11743
Also in May,· "When a Man
Loves a Woman" will be released
starring Andy "The Godfather
III" Garcia and Meg "Sleepless in
Seattle" Ryan.

ACCREDITATION
The
Law
Center is Fully
Appr011ed
by
the American
Bar Association.
TOURO COLLEGJ;
JACOB D.
[fi ..
FUCHSBERG
~ -
Phone
(516) 421-2244
ext.
314
Garcia and Ryan play a husband
and wife that seem to have a
perfect life until Ryan's alcoholism
-
LAW CENTER
an
affirmative aclion /
equal oppollunity ins,~ution
or producer creates a sonic
playground this much fun to romp
in.
So, there's not much more I can
say about Pigeonhed without fall-
ing all over myself.
Like I said before, you owe it to
yourself to give the record a listen.
Pigeonhed is so amazing and so .
original, it's sick.
. And with that in mind, my role
as music columnist comes to an
end.
To say that I am· choked up
about it would be a lie.
· _
To say that I will miss .it is the
truth.
Filling this space on a weekly
basis for nearly two and a half
years · has been both educational
andrewarding; both fun and a
chore.
Hopefully, my column has ex-
posed people to new music; and en-
couraged them to dig deep and to
not be content with
the
mainstream.
Those of you that·have helped
and encouraged me have my
thanks.
Those of you that haven't ... well,
you know who you are.
Most ofall, though, this column
has captured people's attention
and made them think.
And that's all myself, or any
writer, can hope to do.
All these and other words
brought to you in partby the in-
itials F.P.
''Have a good time
all
the time.''
11
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I
THE
CrRCLE,
MAY
5;
19_94 -•
3
-Mari.st campus aroused
by
new dome erection
gym,» Simpson said.
by
RON
'
JOHNSON
'. Staff
Writer
It's the King Kong of all erec-
tions and believe it or not it's right
here on the Marist College campus.
view the erection of. the . dome
please come and· enjoy our
growth," the announcement said.
This announcement, as well as
the erection itself, was met with
varying student reactions.
"I was like, _'who _cares it's a
piece of glass and metal'," said
Paul Pedinotti, a sophomore from
Schenectady, N.Y.
,
Peter Petricca, Pizzagalli project
manager, said he
was
unaware of
the phonemail message. However,
he said he believed students would
be happy with the finished product.
"When I get an erection it looks
a lot different than that," said
Richard Smith, a sophomore
chemistry major.
pus," Petricca said.
The symbolism appeared to be
evident to some of the students,
while it escaped some others.
"I
think it will be symbolic of
Marist College's new expanding
image, and
I
think that students
should take pride in it/' said John
Sacchetti, a senior communications
major from Astoria, N. Y.
It took nearly two weeks to reach
fruition· but .now that it's up, it
could remain erect for years.
Some of the students found the
message to be helpful.
"I thought the announcement
was quite informative," said Jon
DeRise, a freshman history major
from Queens,
N.Y.
"I
never really got close to the
erection but I felt its impact," said
' Joe Rose, a senior political science
major.
,
Ori Wednesday April 20,
1994,
the Pizzagalli construction crew
began.erecting th.e dome on top of
the new student center.
Other students found the
message to be rather misleading.
"I
think everyone will be im-
pressed with it," Petricca said.
-Yet, _now .that the dome is fully
erect there is still a mixed reaction.
Many· of the students questioned
made comments which could be
construed as either humorous or
derogatory.
Nevertheless, there were a few
people who said they were
impressed.
"It's not symbolic. They just
raised a piece of metal onto the
roof," Pedinotti said.
To ceiebrate the event,
a
general
announcement was sent over
phonemail to all Marist. College
students, faculty, and. ad-
ministrators from the office of
Marist Executive Vice President
Mark Sullivan.
"I
thought it was kind of funny
with that 'share in the growth'
·message.Haven't we been sharing
in this thing the whole year
through," said Jackie Simpson, a
freshman communication major.
"It
becomes more and more of
a sight to see each day,'' DeRise
said.
Rose said he believed it was sym-
bolic, but he said that was not the
most important parL He said mere-
ly having the dome was the best
part.
"It's a little bump, it's not big,
it just looks like a wart on top of
the building," Pedinotti said.
Petricca said, in addition to its
· impressive image, the dome could
serve as a symbol for Marist
· College.
"All Marist students, faculty,
and administration are welcome to
Still, other students chose to ig-
nore the phonemail message.
"I
wasn't that impressed with it,
·
it basically looked like a jungle
"The dome is an elegant state-
ment for the college. It ties together
the north and south ends of cam-
"I
wish they had this cools--
when
I
was a kid," Rose said.
'One Life to Live' cast andcrew
loses big to Marist Class of 1994
by
CHRIS BERINATO
Staff Writer
Beware of Marist students bear-
ing gifts.
only getting to see one of the most
Part of the proceeds will go to
axing, enjoyable softball games the Class ofl994 to help reduce the
played at Marist all season, but also · cost cost of senior week. The rest
in seeing some of their favorite of the money taken in will be
soap opera celebrities play ball.
donated to the Jennifer Dressel
Despite the two official umpires
involved in the game, the structure
was relatively loose.
Theater Scholarship.
Prior to the
26-18
route by the
Class of 1994 over the cast of the
ABC soap opera "One Life to
Live,'' the members of the Marist
team_ presented the· opposing
players with souvenir Marist hats.
Dressel was a . 1991 Marist
graduate and one time president of
the Marist College Council on
Senior Mike Gordon picked up · TheaterArts. The fund was created
and began to run off the field with in her memory.
President Dennis J. Murray jok-
ingly insinuated that it would en-
sure a Marist victory.
The seniors would not need that
kind of incentive, however:
· Breaking the softball game open
the bag marking second base, go-
ing for a steal in the purist sense. _
Teammate Hobie Armstrong
added humor to the game by
threatening to transfer to the other
team several times throughout the
seven innings.
in.the
-
-first 'two innings; the Class
Jason LaScolea, who played se~
of 1994 scored 10 runs iind would
cond base and then was shifted to
remain in the lead for the entire
first in the base in the middle of the
game runs game.
game, 9isplayed some _interesting
.·.
•·
·,_,
. <, :. _.
:
.
oase-n1nn_ing teclmiques by occas:c
- :· Maiisf!'egaii;pn tlle -field,\"'i.tff, si9fially)ciC!cid.ing notJo
run
to the
Murray pitcliinif for>the Class of ,; ·
next
·
base when the· bases were
.
94. -. He- remained strong untilJhe
already loaded.
last three innings, when Matt
Mar-
1
·
tin· was called in to relieve him. ·
Allof this keptthe crowd enter-
tained for about two hours. _
•·
'
,
· "One Life to Live" showed
somefaintsigns oflife iri the fifth . Rachel Smith, secretary of the
· inning, bringing the scc,re as close · Class of
1994,
and Nella Licari, co-
as
16-t 15
at one poillt in the .game.
organizers of the event; said they
Marist would regain control of the were pleased with the• turnout.
situation in the fifth after quick
arid scoreless three-batter third and
•'No· matter. how many people
· foµrth innings.
· come here, it's going to a worthy
_ Marist scored the remainder of •. cause,'' Smith said. ·
. ' their runs in the bottom
of
the fifth
and sixth.innings, which brought
up a combined total of 22 batters
for the Class ofl994.
The real. winner, however, was
not the team of the Class of 1994.
The spectators got a-real treat, not
Al Needleman, stage. manager -
· for "One Life to Live" and coa~~
. of the team, agreed:that the event
was one that merited support. _
"It's not a fly-by-night charity;''-•
he said.
·
In order to be recognized as a
scholarship by the school, $10,000
dollars needs to be raised.
Mark Brettschneid.::r, a pitcher
for the "One Life to Live" team
who, played injured during the
game, said charity was one of the
reasons why he came to Marist to
take part in the game.
"We get to spend some
together~•• he said,;_

!,
• According to B~ettschneider,
some people.think
.
that since they··
work tpgether, t_he cast gets to see
each other frequently. This
is
not
the case, he said.
·
LaScolea . said that there were
similar
;
reasons wliy

··he thought
. there was such a good turnout from
• the Class of 1994.
"
''.It was really the last time the
senior class could come out
together .athletically," he said .
LaScolea also thought that it was
remarkable that the cast and crew
from of "One Life to Live" came
out so. enthusiasticajly for the soft-
ball game, giving up time and pay.
Senior Week to be inclusive and low in cost
.
.
.
.
-
.
by
BLYTHE MAUSOLF
Staff
Writer
With this goal, the class officers went to
work on planning their senior week which
would be low in cost and inclusive.
·
·
"Every year the officers present programs
With Riverfest having come and gone, and
for the seniors to enjoy and take part in,"
Jess than 20 days until graduation, senior said Lynch.
week is quickly approaching. .
·
k b ·
"th
h k · t th
The five days of activities are scheduled
The wee
egms wi
a c ec
-m
O
~
residence
areas
at noon on Tuesday, May 17.
to start on Tuesday, May 1
7
at noon and
After that, there
will
be outside activities and
continue untiLSaturday, May 21.
·
b b
d
-
While it may seem that its impending
ar-
sporting events, a semor ar ecue an
rival has come without anyone noticing, · __
fii_rew_o_r_k_s_d_i_sp;...l_a.;.y_._ - - - - , - - - , - - - -
there has been a lot of planning and
preparation.
. •-
The senior class officers: Jeff Schanz,
Cari
Oleskewicz, Rachel Smith and Kirstin Rinn
along with Bob I,.ynch, coordinator of Stu-
dent Activities and Steve Sansola, assistant
dean of Student Activities, have been prepar-
ing all year.
"It's been a long time in the mak~ng.
We've met every Thursday at
4
p.m. ~mce
· January,
as
well as meeting a couple of times
during the fall," said Lynch.
One of the main concerns in the decision
of what activities to include was the hope that
as many seniors as possible would
participate.
"We wanted to be able to make sure that
everyone was able to take part
in
senior
week,'' said Smith.
''/,is
a time for reflection and
transition.Itgivesstudentsachance
to
get together in a positive wayo1!'1-
recol/ect on their years experience
here as well as move on to
their
futures.''
- Steve SansoJa,
~lstant
dean
students activities
All of Tuesday's activities ar.e free of
charge because there is enough money in the
class budget to pay for them.
On Wednesday, May 18, the day starts
with the Student-Faculty brunch, a buffet
style brunch that allows students and some
faculty and administration to say goodbye.
The cost of the all-you-can-eat spread is $7.
That afternoon the officers have rented
out Fun Central, an amusement center in
Wappingers Falls. Students can get tickets
to this event for $10 per person.
The class officers came up with the idea
of Fun Central, as opposed to Great Adven-
ture (which had been planned in past years)
because of its convenient location and
cheaper cost.
"We suggested Fun Central because it's
right down the road and students will
be.
able
to have fun, while getting a good deal,'' said
Smith..
. ·
While this seems like a logical argument,
student participation may be limited.
Michael Cote, a senior from Bridgewater,
Mass.,
said he did not think that anyone
would go to Fun Ce~tral.

The last planned activity on Wednesday
is the River Cruise. The boat ride will have
an open bar, entertainment and catered
food. The cost to students is $30 per person
and they have a choice of going on the after-
noon or evening cruise.
The "booze cruise" as it is known by the
students, is a perennial favorite. Many
students decide that it is worth the cost and
take part in it.
On Thursday, May 19, the senior formal
is scheduled. Seniors are invited to help
decorate, but the formal itself starts at
8
p.m.
and goes till 1 a.m. The cost of the formal
is $80 per couple and $40 per person. The
price includes transportation to and from the
Villa Borghese, an open bar, dinner and
dancing.
This event has received mixed reviews
from the seniors because of its expi:!nse.
"I
feel that
$80
per couple is a great deal
and I'm sure that everyone will have a great
time," said Michele Idema, a senior from
Hopewell Junction.
Senior Daryl Ortiz agreed that the formal
was worth the charge.
"I
have no problem with the expense. The
price is really reasonable considering all the
things that are included,'' said Ortiz.
However, not everyone is as pleased with
the cost.
"I
still think it is very expensive,'' said
Cote.
The week is rounded out with preparation
for and then the actual graduation ceremony,
which is scheduled for Saturday, May 21 at
10:45 a.m.
The overall expense for the four events
carrying a charge is $127. This is comparable
to prices of past years.
... see
SENIORS
page
9

,
....
i
1
·f
'




































































































































































































































































.
I
Cla~s P#~Is
.
a!tit.llPe
.
s_oQ
:
s~~1
-:_-
-
_
_
_
.
:
-
·
.
who don't believe
.
there is '
.
'such a
·
·· ·
by
ABBI ·NORI
·
.
·
··
thing
·
as '.safesex'
'
'.
.
' do
'
practice it.
.

.
·
...
·
. " Staff .Writer.
·
\
. .

. . .
940/o
of
total respon~ent(ihink .

. .
.
.
. . .
.
.
.
-.
. .

.
.
. . .
.
.
condoms should be made available
Polling.!lt Marist was never
S<>
·
·
in the bookstore.
. •
.
.
·
..
:
sexy.
-.
.
_-
.
·
.
_
, .
.
.
.
.
:
,
191 respondents b~lieve
in
the
~pproved
_
by
. _
Gus
-
Nolan,
-
.
a
.
-
..
use ofbirth
·
conti:ol
'
but 13don't
.
Marist
.
publi
_
c <>pinion group
.
pr~c.tice
:
"safi sex'~ (3 !ltaie
~
10
cr~ted and ~onqucted
a
poll of 200

female).
,
Out of the 7 respondents
:
on
~.
~ampusstudef!tson the,su,~ject
·
-
wh~
repor~ed
:
h
_
aving ha~
.
an
S'_f_D;
of College Sex m
-
the 90 s.
.
.
.
2 don't practice ~•safe
.
sex."
·
... ·· _
-
The purpose of the survey
was
to
-
..
_
The poll asked the current "sex
~
lear~ the number of stu
.
de
,
nts at uaUy actiye" respondems if they
M3:nst who are not onlysexu~lly
are. monogamous.
·
69
·
males
.
active; but to learn who
.
uses birth
responded "yes"
as
did
67
females.
co
,
11trol,
.
and who wants condoms . 97% · of those who Claimed not
_
available in the bookstore .
.
·
·
.
.
to be monogamous practice "safe
The r
.
esults should not surprise
sex,"
·
but
IOo/o
of
·'.
those
students; but may be an eyeaopener
respondents don't believe there is
for
theadministration.
"stich a thing."
-
.
.
-
-
With a salllple
.
error of (
= /-
·
. ·
· ·
·
.
.
.
)2.5%,
the group tallied the total
180
.
respo~den_ts ,~eheve th_at
s~~
.
respondents
·
or 92 males
.
and 103
before marriage is
-
appropriate.
females. Of the
-
195
.
respondents, Only 33% believe that s~x partners

153 are
.
Catholics, while the other
42 claim their faith to another
should be ''very close/love." 31
o/o
religion.

·
of the 330/o are females.
·
The ancmymous multiple~choice,
Each gender
-
was
·
~sked to
uthinker" poll asked the students
-
whether or riot they believed «there prioritize n_ot only
,
what they think
is such a thing as 'safe sex'."
.
147
.
are the most important qualities in
respondents believe there is "safe
..
the opposite sex, but what they
sex,'' while
48
don't.
·
·
think the opposite sex thinks about
However, the
·
10
respondents
-
h
. --
- --
- -
.
t
em
.

BEA
'-
_
GOOIJ
:
NEIGHBO
:
R
During these last weeks
of
the.Spring Semester
Whether you live bff campu~
or
not
·_
Consideration fort~e gd~d p~ople of the area,

In
·
their homes
.
and in their
,
neighborhoods,
···
·
Is iiripc:>rtant
?
_
·
The
MarisftraditioA
.
includes
> , -·
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.
·
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&
WPDH'S
.
GREG GAIBNE
FRI,
HAPPY HOUR 4~7, $1.00 OFF DRAFT PINTS,
.·-
__
$1.60 WELL DRINKS, $2.50_ FROZEN
·
MARGS.
&
A FREE BUFFET
..
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POST MODERN DANCE, $1.00 WELlDRINKS FOR
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-
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worli~ even
·
harder for you. Down the
.
don't take act
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b
tage
:
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tax
-
,
d~(er
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~ and
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-
make a dramatic difference
~ihd
up
serd
.
i~g
'
Unde
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rnoney
)
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·
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inyoui:- quality
of
l
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-
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could be
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·
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foi"
retirement'.
. _.
_
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.
-
.
·
-
What else makes
-
SRAs·so spe~i.il? .
. ..
Fortun
'
ateli rhat's amis
'
takeyou
'
cari
·...
.
'
A r:ange of allocation choices-from the
easily avoid withTiiA-CREf
sR'.A,{
··
•·-
·'.:
gµ_arariteed security
'
ofTIAA to the
·
sRAs
nof o!'lly
.
e~seyour curr~nt
-
j
ax-
--•·
·
.
.
di
-
versified investme~t accounts of
bit~, they offe~ a remarkably ~asyw.ay
·
.
·
_
CREF's variable annuity-all backed
.
to build reti~eni'e~t income-especially
·

_
.
by the nations number one retirement
for the "<:x.tras" thatyour regular pension system.
. _
_
.
.
.
.
_
.
arid Soc.ial Security benefits~ may n~t
..
-
· :-
Why write
_
off the chance for
a
more
_
_
co~er
:
Be
-
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r
e
·
·
rewarding retirement
.
? C~Htoday and
-
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you
pay less
.
,
learn more about how
TIAA~CREF
·
taxes now
.
And since all earnings on
.
-
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·
happy returns.
ii
Benefit
now
from
tRx
deferml.
Oul
our
SRA hotline 1800-842-2733, ext. 8016.

Ensuring the future
-
-
for
those
who shape it:"






























J

.
· S_ex should be capitalized iri our
society.
·
·
We are obsessed with the act and
ever~thi~g

that surrounds the
physical mtimacy between a man

and woman.
,.·
Pick up almost any magazine
~nd ~he!e will invariably be an ar-
tl~le ms1de detailing, "How to im-
prove your love life" or "10 steps
to better Sex.!'
.
;Most of our products are sold
with a
.
sexual element.
·
However, has anyone ever realiz-
ed
·
how
.
ridiculous we
are
in
this
-
constant pursuit of pleasure?
.
The gullibility factor
Last April, Della Dobbs, 31, the
woman the police call "the snow
-
queen," was arrested for theft in
Ste~ens Point! Wis. According to
pohce, she twice met men in bars
tciok them
·
outside to her pickup
truck (how appropriate) to have
sex, and, in the meantime, convinc-
ed them to take off their clothes
get out of the truck and rub sno~
on themselves as foreplay. She then
drove off with their wallets.
Hard Lovin'
An Arvada, Co., man "likes to
have sex with picnic tables," in
Memorial Park near City Hall ac-
cording to police. The man's pas-
sion, said one officer, "is
knotholes."
It
was an out-of-body experience
co·ach Phil Padilla of South
Harrison High School in Bethany,
Mo., asked at his sexual abuse trial
(he
.
was acquitted) in August
whether he had ever had an ex-
tramarital affair: "Not that I'm
aware
of."
Using college to your advantage
_
Charles Swayne, a junior at
Virginia Tech, has discovered a
new way to fill his little black book.
During registration at nearby Rad-
·
ford College. for Women,
-
it is
reportedthat he set up a table in
.
,
the post office lobby with
a:
sign
:
'
reacling:
'
.

RadfordsTech
.
. -
Student
-
Directory' Registratiofr
'
for all new
students. When the freshman and
transfer students came by, Swayne
.
had the girls fill out 3x5 cards with
their names, addresses and phone
·
numbers and then
.
proceeded to
grade them from Ato Fon looks,
personality, and sex appeal. He got
.
over 350 names, all graded.
That's why they call it Swiss
Lakewood/Co., police arrested
a naked ·man for performing an
·
obscene
_
act with a piece of cheese
in
a:
King Snoopers store,
·
Maybe she should
·
·
have patented the idea
k
Glenwood,
·
Co, Springs
woman was arrested for
.allegedly
wrapping her husband's penis· in
twelve inches of duct tape and
threatening to cut it off with a but-
cher knife.
·
·
·
The American Male
'
"
In Lafayette,
a:
man charged with
raping his wife was acquitted when
hislaWYer succeeded in convincing
the jury that the 24,year-old was a
"wimp'' incapable·of such an act. ·
Next time, say i(with flowers
Worried about the safety of pa-
tients and staffers, the emergency
room at Denver General Hospital
·
began conducting security scans of
people entering the facility.' Guards
confiscated steak knives, road
flares, smoke
·grenades,
cans of
Mace, automatic weapons, a pit-
chfork, and one dildo, which was
in use at the time.
Yet another Bobbit clone
Bejing's official Heilongjiang
Legal News publication reported in
January that the wife of Zhang
Jingui, following the advice of a
fortune-teller on how to improve
marital relations, cut off his penis
with a pair of scissors. The fortune
teller had concluded that the pro-
blem in the relationship was
Zhang's faulty organ and that the
wife's only hope was to remove it
so that a new one would grow in
its place.
Wh-ere would they stuff the $20's
Wayne David Sorg, 29, was ar-
rested in January in St. Petersburg,
Fla., and charged wit~ vari~u~ in-
·
_
.
.
• ;;:::c
FEATURE
5
stances of exposing his genitals to
women and
to
girls as young as 13.
According to police investigators,
Sorg said he did it because he used
to be a sexy show dancer and miss-
ed the attention he used to get while
The· Final Farewell
on stage.
.

·
How does
·
this grab you?
As_reported
·.
in Newsday thispast
,
February, Saridra A11dinq, 39, was

arrested and charged wfrh
·
-
first-
.
.
degree assault
·
and fourth-degree
criminal possession of a weapon -:--
her fingernails -
after tearing the·
scrotum of a Bronx man. "They
were having consensual sex and she
.
had him chained by the ankles,"
said a police
·
spokesman. "He
woke up around nopn

and he
wanted to leave and
·
she didn't
want him to." The man made it to
·
the door before Andino grabbed
hold, tearing a half dollar-size piece

of skin off. He got awaYand call-
ed

.
police. His wound
··
required
·
several stitches to close.
·
. Starved for love
After "Penthouse" magazine
published a
,
cartoon showing a
lrinely Princess Diana and a made-
up
.
phone number (1~800- BUCK-
INGHAM) which readers could
·
call
.
to offer her companionship,
the King' Ranch Saddle Shop in
'
Kingsville,
,
TX;, was deluged with
calls asking
··
for_ "the lonely
princess"
on
its
line
1
°800-282-KING.
He .was just doing research
·
.
.
Harris County, TX., Coun-at-
Law judge Al Leal apologized for
appearing to read "Penthouse"
magazine while he presided over a
public lewdness case.
·
Love not required
Article
441
of Quebec's Civil
Code, recently rewritten; now lists
the only obligations of married per-
sons as "respect, fidelity, care, and
help." For the first time in
22
years, love is not required.
.
STATS
(based on a recent Esquire poll
of
1,000
women, figures in percent)
*
Are you more sophisticated
sexually than your father? -
Yes:
56.7.
*
Have you ever faked an
orgasm? -
Yes:
52.0.
* Who would be hotter in bed?:
Al Gore (67.4)
Bill
Clinton (26.8).
*
"Size does matter": 51.6.
.
.
·
Matt Martin is The Circle's
Feature Editor. Contrary to
popular belief, he is not the second
coming Fabio.
What a long, strange trip it's
been.
Rubber chickens, walking
.
on
ledges, bungee jumping,
.
skydiving,
115 mph, and commuting to New
York City three days
a
week ..

'
-Arid,
-
those
·
aie;Jus.t,
'
ji1sampling
.
of:some of the craz.y things that I
have partaken in while at Marist.
Everyone who knows me
will
be
leaving with some colorful anec-
dote about my behavior, which will
probably make
i(
into
.
someone's
memoirs.
Thus, it's a safe guess that I will
never run for
.
public office.
·
However, I'm not finished yet.
No brain, no pain
In October, Mohammed Jafari
was shot poin~-blank between the
eyes with a .22-caliber pistol du"rs
ing
a:
convenience store robbery in
Memphis, Tenn., but the bullet
failed to penetrate his skull. Jafari
·
was back at work the next day,
with only a nine-stitch wound. Said
Jafad, "I have a hard head."
U-R-A Nut
Wesley Nunley of Pleasant
Grove, TX., spent $10,000 for a
concrete slab on his property in-
scribed with large red letters
welcoming Jesus and reading "U-
F-O LANDING BASE
l."
"Barney is GOD"
A public-access TV channel in
Athens, Ohio, aired an episode of
the PBS show "Barney and
Friends" that featured slogans and
images superimposed over the pro-
gram, including "Submit to
Barney," and "Barney is next to
godliness."
It
must be something in the water
A Lakewood man arrived at the
Veteran Affairs Medical Center
emergency room complaining
a~out a bad headache, doctors
found a bullet in his head. The man
said that he didn't remember being
·
shot. Police found "quite a few
empty beer cans" in his apartment,
along with a .25-caliber pistol.
More wonders of phonemail
An Arvada, Co, woman called
police after a man left a message
on her answering machine asserting
that Jerry Lewis was the Devil, ·and
signing off with the observation,
"Ding, ding
a
dong."
Shots just weren't enough
The February issue of the "Jour-
nal of the American Medical
Association" reported that a
23-year-old Israeli man required
surgery to repair his small intestine
after it ruptured following a com-
petition with his brother in• which
he ate 25 chili peppers in 12
·
minutes. Capsaicin, the burning
her family's home when her father
discovered them. Allegedly, he (the
father) forced Blake at knife-point
out onto the balcony and made him
jump .
:
agent in chi\i
-
peppers,
-
0
had eaten
·
through the intestine wall.
The headline
·
First things first
·
Eugene
·
LaPorte, 34; boarded a
bus
in
Costa Mesa,
Calif.,
and
threatened to strangle the driver
·
,
the only person on the bus, who
fled.According to police Sgt. Gary
McErlin, LaPorte
took
the wheel
and led police on a 35 mile chase
before they finally apprehended
him when he drove off a freeway
exit and stopped at a bar for a beer.
The Circle should have ran
SGA be
.
warned. Editors of the
University of California at Santa
Barbara's "Daily J\{exus" manag-
ed to missJhis ditty: ~•Budgetary
Problems Postpone Erection;'' It's
·
a good thing that Vision '94 is on
time and on budget.
Marital
.
bliss
In Sewall's Point, Fla., Marlene
Lenick, 60, shot her husband twice
when he changed the television
channel to watch a football game
between Dallas and Philadelphia.
Police Chief Louis Savini explain-
ed that the wife wanted to watch
the news, telling Michael Lenick,
63, she "had enough of that foot-
ball." She went to the bedroom
and returned with a .38-caliber
handgun, then sh
.
ot him in the ab~
·
domen and shoulder. "Both of
them had been drinking," Savini
said. "God knows what went on
before she shot him."
·
Love hurts
ln
.
November,
.Carmen
Friedwald-Hill, 26, was sentenced
·
to 20 years in prison in Frederick,
Md., for shooting her boyfriend,
Ryan Gesner, to death. She shot
him in the stomach during an argu-
ment over who loved the other
more.
Dead wrong
Archie Calvin Whitehurst, 28,
was arrested at the Mission
Boulevard Convalescent Hospital
in San Jose, Calif., in August, and
charged with having sex with the
body of a woman who had died
eight hours earlier. According to
police, Whitehurst at first appeared
not to have known the woman
was
dead; when police asked him what
he had done, he blurted out that he
had not raped the woman but that
she had consented to sex.
Screwed
David Blake, 22, suffered a
broken leg, hip and internal in-
juries in Toronto in September
when he jumped from a fifth- floor
balcony. Blake had been naked
with his girlfriend in her room in
Your way, right away
In Grand Junction, Col., in
Ju-
ly, firefighters called to a potential
suicide scene were successful in
talking a 42-year-old man down
from the courthouse roof, but they
made backup preparations in case
their negotiations failed by borrow-
ing a
.
huge, inflatable hamburger
.
from
.
a nearby Burger King to
break the man's fall.
Creature from the deep
In February, a squirrel apparent-
ly fell into a small vent on the roof
of Kim Richardson's home in
Lawrenceville, Ga., and got into
the plumbing pipes. Richardson
reported that she discovered the
animal when she sat down on the
toilet and felt a scratching on her
derriere. She '
.
'almost
died," she
said later.The squirrel drowned by
the time help arrived .
.
STATS
**** *
Ratio of the average
alcohol consumption of a college
fraternity-house resident to that of
a male college student: 3 to 1.
. * Average duration of a yawn,
m
seconds:
6.
* Number of Taco Bell outlets in
Mexico City: 3.
*
Percentage of economics ma-
jors at Ivy League colleges who say
at
least one of their parents has
smoked marijuana: 23.
*
Percentage of English majors
who say this:
41.
*
Ratio of the number of
Americans who prefer toilet paper
to unroll off the top to those who
prefer the bottom: 3 to
I.
. Matt Martin WAS The Circle's
Feature Editor. He will now be Bill
Ointon's liaison to Kentucky Fried
Chicken.
I
I
I
I
.)
I


























































6
THE CIRCLE
.
. · MARIST COL~E<;E, POU~H~EEPSIE,.NV:.12601
T"E STO~ENT.
,
N~WSPRPER
:
·
.
. SJ.
Rich~d,
~dii~/ . .
Ted Holmlund,
:.pbris
editor
Carl Oleske~lcz,
·managiilg
ed,ior.
J~Ue Martlnisenioredit~i
Kristina
Wens,
associate editor .
· Justin
Seremet,
assistari!
eclitor
T
_
erl L. Stewart;
editortal
page editor
James
Hocking,
distribution f1Ul!Ulger
· . Matfl\1artin,
feature editor
Andrew H~lmlund; associale
editor
Dana
Buonlcontf,
·colunw editor
Meredith Kennedy,
associate _editor
Jennifer Ponzlnf, advertising manager
DennJs Glidea, ·
faculty advis'er
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY·
Leftovers
~Y4:/J_n(Z!ftf£'lfr:'lt;i));;~;J.
y
----------.:._
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,
.
.
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M
-So_13s.
,o
Political cotumnists. :
say-· fare
well
This wili' sound more like a story than an editorial,. but following rules
·
·
, W~ll, this is it, the last .week of scho.(ll. . ···Right after '.'What .ar~ yJ{i going to do
has never been this columri's strong points. Why start now?
,That is right, no more tests, quizzes,parties, after graduation?" the next most aske<fques-
lt's a quaintstory about a group ofseniors, a parental visit, a refrigerator
communal showers or midnight football tionlatelyis: "Wliatdidyougeto4to(your
and the College. Don't worry, it's not as kinky as· it sounds.
games.
.
four years at Marist?"
· This group of seniors has basically resided together for their tenure at Marist
Some would say that this is an end, but
Easy, . . . · . .
· · . . .
.
. ·
College. They hadca pretty slick idea recently; they invited their parents here
lam here to tell you that it is .only the
I
learned how to go out
aiid
find my own
k
h
d
.
·
f
• •
f
h
1
.f
· •
beginning.·
·
- ·
opportunities: . . : .
.. .. . .. · · · . . ..
to ta e t em out to mner as a sign o appreciation or t e ast our years.
There have been a lot of emotions building
._
r
realized complaining isn't enough.
0 .K.,
hold on to that.
It
may be symbolic before .this is finished.
up for our distinguished seniors. Some are · . Unless you go cmt and fry to 11-1ake a dif-
Now, rewind to the day before the _parents arrived. They''decided
to clean·
readyto conquer the world while others are. ference, nothing :wmchange. ''
..
• ·
their house. One of the more ominous task- was cleaning the refrigerator·.
ready to move back in with their parents.
- Most importantthough, I've madefriends
One of these young men valiantly plunged into tliat chilled shop of horrors. .
I
could sit here and. quote phrases from who are equally ambitious about trying to
Not surprisingly, it was a culinary death trap. More than once he .asked,
"Oh, The Places You Will Go", .. but
I
1
;hange things.
·
·. - .. ·.
"Where did all this come from?" .and "How long has this been here?"
thought
I would try and give you some .of'
.
These ar.e a few of our favodte things: .
No one knew.
No
one claimed ownership: to most of the decay either.
my advice. .
.
.· .
. . . . . ..
Hedgehog Day
·
·
·
That's kind of what has happened
011
campus this year.
· This is not the end.It is the .beginning.
· Atlantic City
Things that have bee. n sitting ont_he shelf for too l_o_ ng have b_ een dis_ c. overed. ·
Alth':mgh you are saying goo_dbye, you are
Philadelphia, ., .

ri:ally saying .. l'm outta here.•r . :· · ..
.
, .
. "lwantto be you."
Some of them are as funky at. those jars of chunky, green mayonnaise. .
,·Your days at Marist)iave,ended;:but
the ,
·insect Club :
.
,
.·.
.
In the last four year, not a lot has changed at. Marist. Th~re a~e a few new
.. trumpeter is not playing Taps;-Ws Revele; . · "Massive,,:parties .
buildings; confirmable rumors say there
will be a fe,w more l:ief_ore n~xt,winter ., ,
>.
>
:·You,.have al\:madejt through
,
the
··
most· - • ..
120
m.p.h .· .. ·•: ·
_
·
.
·
(we'll
Vision'94 the benefit of the doubt). -.
.
- •
. . •. ·. . _·
,
. .\ _,,. / ., memorable four
.
(foi s6me it is';'five·.or
six)
<spank / · ·
t .
.
,
. -

< -,-: :
.. -~ :tl1i~Jeine~~e{?,t1:1,eissu~
.
of;culturatdiversity,-\\as-maqe}tself ~ore
vi~i_b\~;\~~~·\::
;))'.e,a,r~:~t:,Yo,~r lJfe'. . , ., .
'
: :.
:
'
.. ,.,. , . . . : .
.
. . .
·_ :~~t~y'.~
.;;,;;~:i.-,:::.ff;A;;?;~\i..f:1~,;'½C:(1)/-f:ff
_
isitanewproblem?
·
< .•
.. - ·•
< ... : ·
.
.
·:·
::)ff~'.
:.
-
Yollw1Jl11:o.ttel1lem1Jeran~hmg~111ucll
'!HurtMe''
::pnck~,~oy;/
.
It is about as n~w as the almost~evaporated
·
head of lettuce pulled froniJhe;,· ·
as you will, rem~mber your college,years..
,,Mr. Bagel· ~- ''Spin the
B9tt1e• ·
b_ack
ot
that refrigerator.
. . . . . , · .. · ....
- ; ... ,_,,: .. .
, ··.·. :·.:•.
·.
,,;. •_,,;,:
~- I_tseemsJ~stlikeyeste:daywh~n you_pllll- ·
.
Put thatdown.and
help.me."
The items pulled from the depths of the fridge should not.surpnseanyone.
'
·.
. din ChlUilp!gnat
P~!kmg \
0
!
~itll
~l Yflllr .
_
Breezers.
.
, , :
··•··•·
··•.·.
.
-· . .
·
.

·.
. .
·.
·
·• ··
<,

-:

.,
-
,
.••
·
.

.
..stuff" that you could not.live without.
·
j
-
"Happiness in Slavery"
We know they _are ther~; m·fact~ w~ are. the pnes who p11t tht:mth_~re.c> .
r>
·
Now, foiir years later,•
you
are·gCJing
home··
:· . .
a_.m. . ·' ··.
··· · ·. ·. · · · ···
.
But we are still surprised, and not always prepared to deal with them when
in a dume
·
hag; · .. • •·,· •.. ·· ·.· _····.
· ·
·
_· · •- Elv1! . . .
. .
_ they do surface:
·
. . - .
.
. .
. -
. . . . .. . . . .
.
,
,
. .
: Some,of you have.told me that you are not
P~kmg
tickets .
. WhenremovaLof the.offending objects in inevit_abl.e,~there are various op:-,
ready to venture ofatto the world. Some of
-
· Jail ..
tions on how _to deal with them. ,, ' · ..•. ·
.. ·•·.
.
;
<'
. . '
.
' . :.·
you are right. Ho
_
wever, inosfofyou are
Riverfest .
.
·

Choice numberJ:Toss them. They cannotbe:saved • . , ,
.
. ·.·
_
~ron?:.
. · ..
.
:
,.
..··. ,. ·
i
,
·
the blue,tlling .. · .. ·· ..
' Cho!ce numb.er 2: Ke_eB, them the~e.:,rotal ,_ex:~)iration
l:ia:f
not yer qccurred:-.
; Jh1s 1S your tl~Ci\r Oll
J:i~y~
:paid)•our
< .
ti
~ed
~o.~
~~; Yan~e~s
Ch01ce number 3: Recycle them ,mto' so!Jietl11ng else. . .
. . .
.
. .
d11
es, passed_ Y'?l!r c\asses and !1ffD()~leady
,
~.
~~iid~
s
and
Wednesda
This is thetime to. individually examine everything chat comes out of there.
_tO_lCf1Ve the InShtutu;m.that you have caUed . '
'

·.
y .
. .
. .. ,
y
No gen~r~lizations' are _allmved,
YO,U
·can't toss allthe vegetc1bles because they
. ho::e~IJ:iwrii~lii~w~s~lumn, th~rearea
few
O
.•·
:
~~!!day_s
'and· Th~rsday~
look wdte?. ·.· ' . ·. •··
.
.. · .... ,' . '
·
' •.' . .•
.
.,
.
. . '
. '
.
'
' ,
'

seniors I would like say' goodbye to: .
"Sell~out'.'i .
_ . ~veryth1t1g needs t? be looked
~t,.
~qns1d~red,_thought about thornughly. It
· .
B~5,
my big brother;Doc; Nella, all
iny . . ..
''Pm
bli11d"
1simportant to cons1derthe poss1b1ht1es for. each:
. ·..
.
fraternity brnthers, Kent/Sue, J~y; John,
--d_6nut hol':s,
.
···Pirates
The only thing being thrown out now is the. GI.=iss of 1994 .. A,fter four years,. · · .Gabe,'Mike,'Matt; Jeff, Gerry,a~dSaL ·..
~
"The Paper"
this group has become preUyftinky. The time.has come. ··.· .
.
.
.
I
wish you'all tlie best ~oria co~tim.ied '.
.
Toxit;
Nach9s
. It
is time for the graduates to clean out their own refrigerators (some, literal-
success, · .•
.
. . .
. .
·· ... •··
.·.
- Fruitcake
.
ly)s Some of what is found niay be worth· keeping. These may be friends,. tex-
. To_ all the other se~io:s, cong~atulations.
3:~~~3333333~:, .
.
.• ..
.
·
. . . \,
tbooks . information or just memories. These are the things that
will
endure
on aJo
_
b well done. It 1s t1meto move on and _ . • · }
l1
~owJt whe11 I .see 1t ..
noIDatter_how oldth~y-are.There ar~ no expiration dates and no need to recy,,'
co~i::r~1:i1:::1
1~
one
of
The
Circle's
rara:::e~!ntr!l~t~e
of
The
Circle's
cle them mto somethmg n10re pr~chcaL
.
.
political columnists. ·
·
· political columnists:
·
. For those of you who .are hangmg on and fOndermg, the refrigerator was
·
· ·
·
salvaged; after a tremendous :and successful cleaning job.
It was a quality effort.
Parting thoughts
Things this column was never able to mention, but for one reason or another
could not· because of time, space or taste constraints: ·
·
·
·
Marist is not a dry campus, it is a parched· campus.
Condoms, condoms, condoms, condoms, condoms. There, now there are con- ..
doms on campus. .
.
,

.
The Student Gover~ment had no business. shutting down- the paper._
.
The phonemail message about "Erection
'94"
was a stroke of genius. A lot'
of people have poked fun.at it. We could, but we won't. It's too hard to come
up with sometime that hasn't already been said. We played with the id.ea but
fell sort
.
of our expectations. We were flat out of snappy things to say.
All kidding aside, The Circle editorial board is proud to attend Marist Col-
lege. The editorials have been harsh, but that's because we believe the College
can be better. Would we spend this much money on a place we didn't think
was worth it?
.
Deconstructive criticism sells newspapers. The Circle has never been for sale.
Did we mention SGA was in wrong?
There are two kinds of people at M,arist: those who pay to be here and those
who are paid to be here. Find out which one you are folks and you
will see
where the real power is~
To the Class of 1994: Good luck, you'll need it.
Have a little faith. The sun will come out tomorrow.
·congrats·
and-
Go~d
-
Luck
to
-

· the
·Circles·
Seniors:
s'.J .•
Richard
Julle Martin
Cart
Oleskewlcz
.. Ted Holmlund
Matt Martin
A/so Special Thanks To:
James Hocking
candace Frick
John Sacchetti
John Metzner
Mike Cote
Paul Parrish
Jenn Glandalone
Thanks to Dennis Gildea. for standing
by
us
foF
the last two years.


























































































Sail
·
away
Editor:
_
.
.
'Please include in your last paper
of the year this little blurb a.bout
the Sailing Club.
"Come sail away with the Marist
Sailing Club in the Fall of '94. No
experience is necessary, we'll teach
you how to sail. We have four
regatta,s planned for our coming
season."
Jonathan Churins, president
\l1eWP01NT
>
MAv
s;
1994
:
.
.Activities office
not to
blam.e
.
.
:
·..

.
.
,'
.
'
:
..
:,
,
·
.
.
.
~-
.
'
"
.
.
'
·
.
.
'
'
-
:
• '
..
.
Editor:

. ·
·•
.
incredible
:
.
.
:" ·
·
.
. ..
.
.
Thave been a neutral bystander
..
Another point
I
would Hke to
-
in
'
the
:
''diversity
.
crisis"
'.
that has
.
bring up is
.
the controversy about
·
been going
'
on lately.
·
the recent SPCappointments.
.
J
have supported the BSU and
As \Ye can see in his letter, Mr.
other clubs that have been fighting
Ebanks is
.
not too fond of Lynn
for more diversity on campus,
Russo, the SPC president
.
.
•·
.
unde't'standing their need to
.
Why? Supposedly b
.
ecause she
celebrate and recognize their
appointed her friends
·over
heritage - thatis
.
their right.
"qualified applicants of color".,
.
However,
J
cannot support a
Mr. Ebanks,
.
if they
·
were so
group that resorts to mudslinging
qualified, why didn't they get the
and holding rallies to insult people
job?
·
.
who don't agree with them.
·
Lynn Russo made an informed,
After reading Desmond Ebanks'
educated choice about who would
letter to the Editor in
last
week's
be the best person for the job, and
edition; I sat down promptly to
that p_er~on happened to be her
write this;
.
.
friend.
.
There are several things in this
That person also happened to be
letter I would like to address.
a dedicated SPC member who

The
.
first
..
was, why did Mr.
.
knew the workings of the club and
Ebanks feel the need. to publicly in-
would be an asset to the
suit Laci Beckett just because she
organization.
was black and not a inember of the
But, because the person ap-
BSU?
·
..
,
.
.
.
pointed was not of color, Mr.
· '
.That is her personal choice and Ebanks is crying "radsm" and
not a matter for the public to know
"favoritism".
about.
.
·
.
·.
·
Is Mr. Ebanks going to go after
The second was the way Mr.
all the other clubs on campus who
Ebanks insinuated that it is not the
do not have minorities on their ex-
student representatives that want
ecutive boards?
the cap on the clubs, but people like
.
·
If appointing the person who is
Steve Sansola and Bob Lynch, who
"Lynn
-
Russo's friend" to the SPC
just want'to avoid more work for
board means that we will have
themselves.
more excellent programming like
I can't even imagine this college we did this year, then I'm all for it.
without Steve
and
Bob here.
·
.
I have enjoyed more cof-
.
'
It is not unusual to see Steve and feehouses, comedians, and musi-
Bob in their offices at
9
P:M. and cians this year, all through SPC.
on weekends.
·
One thing that I
.
can't under's-
·
.
There have been days that I have tand, Mr. Ebanks, is there are peo-
seeri Bob iri his office at
9
A.M:;
ple on this campus that are
typing away at his computer, and downright racist - and
I
have heard
then again at
~1 P.M.
supervising them.
breakdown of tech equipment after
·
Why riot go after them instead
a coffeehouse.
.
_
. . .
of hardworking people like Steve
;
It is the dedication of people like Bob,
.
·
and Lynn, who are
.
giving
Steve and Bob that makes this col-
·
more to this college than we should
lege nin, and to even assume that,
.
ever ask of them.
·.
.
.
.
they would think that selfishly is
·
·
·
~
Erica Feick
so
homore
Editor:
•·
.
.
·
·
·
I would
like
to voice my opinion
·
.
about the article in last weeks Cir-
.
cle regarding the poor vaccination
record here at Marist.
·
.
I am appalled that some students
here have not gotten the MMR
vaccination.
It is well known thafany student
enrolled in six or more· credits must
have
·
this vaccination.
I understood this to mean that if
you do not have this vaccination
you can not attend classes or live
on campus.
.
.
Granted, many of these students
may
.
be commuters or adult
students, but they are still on cam-
pus almost as much as the resident
students.
·
This law was put into affect in
order to protect
-
all students.
-
If
someone who has not had this
vaccination
.
does get measles or
mumps nothing is stopping them
from giving it to ot~er stu~ents.
An outbreak or measles or
mumps is a serious situation.
This situation is
·
extremely
serious for people who can not get
this
·
vaccination because of other
medical reasons.
r
myself am in this situation.
I have a doctor's waiver explain":.
ing that it is not in my bes
·
t interest
to get the
MMR
vaccination.
If there is
an
outbreak of measles
or mumps on this campus, I will
have
.
to go h_ome.
I think this is completely unfair
that some students can walk
around campus jeopardizing other
people's health.
Robyt1 Lefkowski, junior
Marisf
·
fails to
~.
prqperly
_
-
.
address
.
d
_
iversity
·
:;,,.{.
;.;
.
/
.
......
:
.
·
~ .
·.•
,
·
,,
,
'
.
•·· .
'
..
·.
:
\
j~
;
~lilied'
subd~ecf racisrit
'
tlia
'F
ar~
; ';
,.
'
Tht
f
"
Black
''
'
Sfodeh't
.
'
lJiiiort
.
.
.
~~;h
tl}~ponlio'ihi
:
~~fok
.:
fecis'
.
every
.
minority student
.
;
at
.
Latino <;lub and t~o International
·
on
.
Cultural Divei:si.ty dat~cf April
MaristCoUege. My six years ex-
Cl_ubs did everythmg ~eces~ary to
14;1994
byKristina Wells
:
:
.
.
.
perience at the institutionproved
bn1_1g about cult~ral d1vers1ty but
·
l
was surprised to
.
read thatin-
.
that; little
·
has been done to en-
theJr ef~orts we;e 1_gnored. A_nother
_
.
.
terviews conducted by The Circle
courage cultural diversity by those
cas~ I wish
.
to Cite
IS
t~e contmuous
·
indicated that the failure of cultural
in higher authority,
.
.
·
..
.
·
demal for the ~stabhshment
o~
a

diversity on campus is notthe in-
·
As organizer and _former pres1-
black_ fi:atermty

and. sorority
-
stitution's fault
.
.•
·
.
.
.
.
·
dent of the International Student
orgamzat1on on campus smce
19~7.
••
The so-called interviewees noted
Union and Amnesty International,
.
I
wa~ shocked to h:ar of a white
that the failure
.
of.
such diyersity
I was confrpnted with several dif-
fratermtr and soronty
.
group on
was
·
either the
·
fault of cultural
ficulties in
reaching
my programs'
campus m t~e last_ t~o year_s.
.
.
groups or people who
.
wish to
_
not
o,bjectives due to
_
the
lack
·
of
In address1i:ig this issue, d1vers1-
.
.
associate with the rest of the col-
·
-
cooperation from the all-white stu
0
ty s~o1;1ld b~gm at
.
the faculty and
lege
.
fainily.
.
. .
. .
.
.
.
.
.
dent governmen_t
·
and ~ctivity
Of-
admm1strat1ve
.
_
levels because eve~
. The response
.
fr()m students 1s a
flee
.
that were msens1t1ve to our a~<?ng the facu.lty a1_1d ~d
clear
indication that Marist College
diversity programs.
.
.
mimstrators, there 1s. n? d1vers1ty.
.
has failed.jn the teaching of diver-

Activity fees were paid but when
.
Not only s~ould_ t~1s issue be ad-
sity on campus.

·
..
·
·
.
.
it came dow
_
n to funding diversity
dressed
·
by ad
,
mm1strators and
It
is a shame thatstuderits didn't
programs, we were always told that
faculty, there sh~mld be a pledge to
even know anything about other
there wasn't enough funds for the suppo_rt ~
1
vers1ty P1:ograms
~Y
.
cultural groups
on
campus.
·
.
.
.
programs;
·
. .
.
.
.
those
m
higher authonty at Manst
Of
·
course there is

no blatant
. ·
Several attempts were made to College.
racism on
carilpus;
as stated by one
discuss this issue with those ad-
.
of the
.
interviewees.
.
miriistrators in charge but nothing
.
But there
i~
something else which
came ·out of
it.
.
.
.
.
Joseph
B.K. Camara,
.
graduate student
t
'
edyl;J.f
d
mi~
up
,
was a waste of time
Editor:
C
What the Senate and Anthony
Fir
_
st, out of nowhere; I was ac-
.,
Mignone did to me was wrong and
;
ci.ised
.
of sabotaging 'the SGA
irresponsible.
"Condom Survey."
·
.
lam outraged that I have been
After a discussion proved I was
wrongly persecuted due to the ig-
,
:
not responsible for the mix up,
,
the
norance and immaturity of these
Senate
still
ordered an investigation
so-called "student leaders."
·
·
to look into what happened
-:·
·
·
This whole situation has been
A thorough investigation con-. ridiculous from the start, yet these
eluded my innoceric~; however the·
·
people wished to push it to the very
Senate refused to accept the
·
end, and even beyond my term of
findings.
·
office.
I was charged with gross
What were these students trying
negligence and impeached by the
to prove?
Senate with just over a week left in
Well, I heard one student senator
my term.
.
say that pressing for this "would
.
The ensuing hearing reversed my
be good, because it will let us try
impeachment and found me again
out the impeachment process."
innocent of all charges regarding
Ridiculous. This would be like
the C0SA survey.
setting fire to Donnelly
.
Hall just to
I am insulted to say the least.
see how the fire department would
After three years of public service
respond.
in student government, I have been
Except in this case, I'm the one
unfairly singled out and victimiz-
getting burned.
ed by group thinking, head strong
Someone once said, "You
Senators in the SGA.
should never point the finger at so-
meone else, because by doing so,
you point three back at yourself."
In this case, the people primari-
ly pointing the finger at me, were
really the ones to blame for what
happened and what didn't happen
with regards to the. survey
.
Thanks to the good sense of our
Student Judicial Board, this is a
bitter-sweet moment for me
because I am finally getting justice
for something that should never
have come this far in the first place.
In short, this whole situation has
cost me (and others) a lot of un-
necessary time and agony.
And though it's over now, it is
·
sad to say that I am leaving my ex-
periences in student government
with a great deal of resentment and
displeasure.
Thanks to all who stood by me
through all of this mess.
Daryl
Ledyard, junior
Thanks
everyone
Editor:
I am taking this opportunity to
say thank you to all those who gave
their time and efforts so that the re-
cent Marist College Greek Week
could be a success.
Steve Sansola, the Greek Coun-
cil and
.
the members of all the
Greek organizations on campus
deserve praise.
The combined effort created an
enjoyable week.
A great deal of preparation was
needed, and none of it went
without notice.
We
greatly
appreciated
everything.
Scott Signore, junior
Sigma Phi Epsilon






























































































r
-.-'
,
-
..
l
8
.
THECIRCLE,
VIEWPOINT
MAYS,1994
<
llinehart
offers
·advice
to
-
-
M Eb
-
-
k I d
-
.
·
-
-
-
---
.
,- ·
,
·
Save
r.
'
an
s,
''
l~agre
.
~

'
--
tirtderclassnf~ri
ancfi'rieiids
<
Editor:
~h~~~h~~~h~~i~p~~Tn~~~~~:i~r-
'
~-
.
-
mirioti ties
re:po~!~
t~?:;~~~~
!~!~t}:~e~a!~ whom ,vere not <:ven members at
Editor:
Seco~d. you chose to attend
'
a
:
Editor:
pus concerning diversity and to
'
the allThey have sho,vn their
'
dedica~
:
l will be graduating from this in-
private coJlege.
_
__
.
.
:
,
This is to address any and all per-
letter written by Des111ond Ebanks
·
·
stitution
_
in
-
-
ap
_
proximately
.
two
You know private schooltuition sons who feel that multi-
,vhich was published in the April tion
'
to SPC, a
nd
hav
·
e
.
proved
weeks, and I have some random
is higher than state school tuition;
culturalism
·
at Marist College is
28, 1994 issue of The Circle.
th
emselves as more qualified for
thoughts to share with you, and the
however, there are still complaints.
"nonsense" or "unimportant."
First of all,
I
would like to de-
th
e positions.
-
·
·
·
·
Marist community.
.
-
_
·
Just because thousands are pllid
Imagine, if you will~ another
·
·
.
fend Laci Beckett, who I feel was
The fact
th
aL
th
e people
_
Ms.
-Let's start at the beginning.
for you to attend Marist, doesn't world; on this campus and beyond:
unjustly attacked in Mr. Ebank's Russo appointed happened to be
.
Freshmen: Cherish your time
mean that everything should be
Every morning when you read
letter.
her friends is inconsequential.
,
.
here at
·
Marist. It
,vm
be gorie
served to you on a silver platter.
the newspaper, it is written by and
Ms.
_
Beckett has every right to
Are you
-
frie
nd
s wi
th
all
.
of
th
e
befdreyouknowit.
··
They always say, the grass is
about
-
AfricanAmericaris.
join whichever
.
clubs and attend
membersa
nd
officersof
th
eclubs
Remember, you are only a cql-
greener...
When you walk to class, hun-
whichevereventsthatshechooses. you belong to Mr; Ebanks?
lege student for four (or in some
If you have a legitimate
.
gripe dreds of blacks pass you by.
.
Just as you, Mr. Ebanks, have
I
agree whole heartedly
th
at their
cases, five) years.
· ·
with anything at this college, then
.
Some are genuinely
-
friendly.
.
chosen to be
.
an active member of should be diversity awareness and
-For all the people who feel the
do something about it.
Others who are not,
·
wonder
the
·
Black Student Union and programming on
th
is campus.-·
·
need to bitch and whine about
Talk
lO
·
the
.
administration, or what scholarship brought you here
WMCR, Ms. Beckett has chosen to
Our culture is
·
beautiful
a:
nd
President Murray, grow up.
roll Matt Gillis in the Student - a scholarship that probably
be involved in other clubs.
should be shared wil
h
everyone
;
.
Justbecauseyourm:mressisun-
Go,-ernment Office
at ext.
2206-
should have gone to a black
I, too, am a member of the
However, Mr. Ebanks, you are
=
comfortable, or you get a parking
and e.xplain the situation.
student.
African-Ame~ican community, but
going about it all wrong
;
-
ticket, it doesn't mean that Dr.
Your Student Government
As you sitthrough your classes,
I do not belong to the BSU.
_
False accusations
'
and mud sling-
Murrav doesn'l cart:' about
n..~tath~--s
are
there for you. your professors are all black.
This does
·
not mean that
I
am
ing only adds to
th
e problems.
·
students.
On that note, good luck to the

You are the only white student
any less aware of the factthat there
How can you expect people to
Unfortunately
,
some people
new SGA. Work hard and vote in the room.
_
is a need for diversity on campus;
want to work wi
th
' a
nd
for you; if
don't realize that Dr
.
Murray
is
nor
"ith vour heart.
You are
·
taught
,
that your
or that the world we live in is a
every time
th
ey try to communicate
responsible for the day-to-day
run-
.
-A
special
thanks to all the fans ancestors were animalistic, un-
r
_
acist one.
.
with you,
·
you turn
·
around
-
and
ning of the college. If you'll look
of the
ice
hockey team.
civilized until blacks shared their
1 have made a choice to devote
twist their words or stab
.
them in
at what he has done in his 14
vears
You ha,
:
e made playing ice knowledge with them, and everi
my time to different clubs
.
the back?
·
·
at Marist, you'll see progress and
hockey for Marist College then your ancestors profited from
My race should not dictate which
You are so concerned with SPC,
advancement of the college's
unforgettable
:
_
·
·-
a slave trade;
.

·
clubs
I
belong to.
·
but
I
still don't see you at events
reputation, and an improvement in
-Thank
_
you, Scott Sullens, for
You desperately want
.
your
;
lsn?'t that what you are trying to
or at general meetings.
the quality of the students that at-
your Circle column
·
this year.
culture to be recognized for all the
fight.
.
,
.
I am happy to see that many peo-
tend it.
The column was always
·
well-
wonderful things it truly is, but it
Who are-you to tell anyone what
pie involved with the BSUand EI
During his administration,
written, original, and
a
pleasure to is not.
clubs they should or should not be
Arco Iris
'
Latino have shown in-
Marist has built Gartland Com-
read.
-
After classes, you eat in the
.
involved in?
_
terestand applied to be on the Pro-
·
mons, Townhouses(bothnewand -
-Thank
.
youtotheClassofi994 cafeteriawiththreeofyourfriends,
1 would also liketo respond to
grammihgAwareness committee;
old), Lowell Thomas, Dyson
officers Jeff Schanz;
.
Cari
·
·
who just happen to also be white.
_
the accusations made by Mr.
they are trying to meeLSPC half
Center, and renovated Donnelly
Oleskewicz, Rachel Smith,
·
and
Here,
:
you are accused of
Ebanks about Lynn Russo's ap-
·
way.

Hall.
Kirstin Rinn. You made the Class segregating yo~rselves.
pointments to the SPC Board.
Did you apply to be on the PAC,
After next year, a new mid-rise
of 1994 the epitome of a well-run
When
-
you·· get back to your
-
_Mr: Ebank~, did you see the ap-
Mr·
.
Ebanks?
residence hall and student center
class.
residence hall and tum on the TV,
phcauons which were turned in?
No, you did not.
will
also be added.
_
-There are many special
,
you see
·
a black
.
anchorwoman on
I
think you should get your facts
You cannot expect SPC to meet
Since Dr. Murray arrived at
members of the staff and faculty the news,
which
only shows white
straight before you start telling
all of your demands while you sit
Marist, the student enrollment has
here.
·
·
people when they have committed
people who is
.
more qualified for
back and watch them do all of the
doubled, and the SAT score of the
However, the following
.
par-
a crime or excelled in a sporting
something you know little about.
work.
average incoming student increas-
ticular indi"'.iduals go above and event.
Here is a hypothetical situation·
. SPC is doing its best to see that
.
eddramatically. Not bad for four-
beyond their duties.
Now, how do you feel?
if a white student, who was not~
a problem like this does not arise
teen years.
·
_
·
.
1
would Hke _to commend
.
and
If
you say that you are comfor-
member of the Black Student
·
again.
,
~
Congratulations
_-
to the Ice
-
th~k the followmg people for their table with this idea then I believe
Union,
·
walked
·
into the election
However, it must
-
be a
Hockey
Team
for winning the Club
dedi~atio!} to all
.
the students of. you are lying
fo
y~urself.
-
meeting and ran
for an
office of the
cooperative effort, and you, Mr.
of the
,
Year award; El Arco Iris ManSt College: Anthony_Campilii,
For those ofyou who
are
honest
_
BSU; wcmld you vote for him?
.
.
Eballks
_
,
are not holding up your
L
_
atirio
for winnirg Social Service Herber~ ~\\~rman; Ma
_
rty Rule, . mayl?,e now :you_wiU
.
understand
;
lwouldhopethat yoµ wouldn't,
'
end of the bargain.
_
·
C
t
.
:
c;:.iub
C?Hh(: '{ €:p,r; _a~~to the
:
c::.1ass
___ -
Deb D1Capno; S~e Lozins_k~; Joe, that
;j
nor~ college programming
;
_
not because he
·
was white,
:
but
Stop being pii.rt of the problem
..
.;.~
.
.
..
__
,
.
--
·
-
,
..
;~
ot
;
l99
.
4
,
for
:
,
~1~mng
.
.
~lass
~
o(.J\1.~
-
~~
:_Lea~_,
_
Brother
_
M1c1!_a~l ~1ll~~ms,:
.
gear
_
ed towards' miriorities
ori
·this
.
_
because he was
·
not a meinber c:if
,:
and start being part
·
of the solution.
,
Year
'.
All
your hard work paid
off:
and•.of
·
course,
·
BooT,ynch .
.
,
-
.
campus
'
s1fo
'
utd
bewe1¢omed:
'·'
.
'
t~e
BSU, and therefore did not
.
;
Eyerytifue
j
you
,
rriake
,
false
,
ac~
i
-".;.but I pay
.
$17,000ayear."
-
-:FmaJJy,
I
would like to say
MoreAfricanandLatinofacuJ
.:
··
!!_avetheexperienceandqualifica
s
cusations
_
andcomments
·
whichare·
I have heard this quote so often thank you to everyone who
_
touch-
ty and staff should be invited here,
tions to represent the club.
·.
·
_
·
uncaUed for,
-
you spread the gap
when something isn't exactly ed my h~art here at Marist;
A core requirement in African
To my know1¢dge, the people
.
even more.
·
-
·
r
perfect here at Marist.
·_
A
special t~anks to the brothers and Latino American history
who were appointed to the
·
SPC
- Tauren
.
L.
Hagans, sophomore
First of all-, many students of AlphaPh1.PeJta, members of should
_
be
enthusiastically
·
receive financial aid so the actual the hockey team, and members of established.
·
R
·
·


· '·
·

·
amount paid is
:
act~ally lower.
- -
_
SGA.
Certainly; you should
"
not be
_
.
e
.
co
Illllllttee1ng
'
c
·
ap
JS sue
_
l
threatened
'
by
-
any
<
/'Greek»
'
'
',
'_-.·'
'
'
,
'
organization suctui.s Delta
:
Signia
·
'
'
Ed't
--
·

·
Theta Sor
.
ority, In
_
corporated that
,·,
'
,
I
or:
'
/
'
''
semest~r.
'
·
__
'
: . .
_
,
'
,
'
"
_
_
<
The Marist
·
community has voic-
The
·
go.al we have s"efisto have·
·
promotes
·
cultural,
:
educational
;'-
·:
ed
·.
their concern on the issue
of
ad~isi~n b
__
_
y
_
-
_
theen
__
d
_
ofS
_
ept
_
e
__
m
_
b_er,·
and pub
_
lic
_
servi_ce
.
a
___
Cti
_
'viu
_
·es
_
through
'
'
·
C
·
-
-
·
c1

-
b
:

·
.al h
,,
-
- -
--·
.
.
aps
·
on
·
u s.
·
·
·
_._
_
-
whethertltereisapossibility
.
tolif-
soci
_
c ange.
-:
:
· -
-
,
-
•.
·
.
Onf\pril 22, the Senate m~tion
:
ting
·
the
caps
or is
·
our previous
Research h~s
.
shi,)~ t)lat mariy
.
ed
_
and . passe~ unanimously to decision will stand,
I
realize
·
this is
!Oinority
_
students go
_.
tnrfo1gh
:
an
.
:
rec9m11!1tte~the
.
issue to the Com-
not
11
quick resolution.
·
,·- ___
.
_
."
identity crisis on
:
predominantly
::
.
mittee~ (S!G)
·s· :, .
·
. __
-_.
.
But making arty decisioniri' haste
white
·
campuses

·which may
·
'
in-
·
The original"committee, ch
_
air
_
ed will only c
_
a
_
use
Ju
__
·rt
_
her
_
'
p

robl
_
enis.
terfere with their academic
b
s
H II QI
·
performance.
·
Y
enator o
Y
son's findings
,
For tl,le MarisL community,
-
It is activities and
_
organizatio~s
were t'1,at the cap simply cou\d
'
not
-
-
·
know that the
,
Senate
.
has
heard
.
like Delta
_
Sigm
_
a
_
Th
_
-
.
eta, B.
_
S
_
'.U
.
_
and
.
~e li~teg at.the
·
p~e~enttime:
(SIC)
your co
_
ncems, and is working
,EI
Arco
Iris Latino thatcari ''save;'
,
'
l'4ese C_()nc~~s1oµs
;
were reached towards a
·
decision. -
.
some
.of
our African and Latino
-}?Y
the seil~!ors
5>11
thi
,
s ~onunittee.
A.ny further questions, or con-
.
American
'
~tude~ts and
_
encourage
'
' .. ·
ReCOffi.Illlttet:,111g the issue means
cerns
'
m~y
,,
be,' directed
:
:
to
'
the
them
'
to
.
achieve
.
their initial

-
.
we
!11:~
mten~m~
--
!<?
:
.further
·
_
in-
-
!llembers of this coII_lmittee which
bachelor's degree;
,:,
.<
.
.
-
-
-
:,:es!1gate tJie
:
p
_
oss1b1littes concern-
includes
_
myself, Jennifer Nocella,
_I
knowthey
'
savect'.me.
.
mg the
_
dub
,
~?-JS~C)
.
;
DannyOlover,ToddLang;andTJ
-
Tara
_
L. P
_
arker
·
,
i
c1
·
ass
·
··
o
-
-
f
-
-

.
91
• --
.
T~e conmut~ee; st1U _chaired by Clark at
·
EXT. 2206.
.
Senator Holly Olson, Will be work~
Mentor, Sheahan Hall
ing on this ~roblem for the re-
Jennifer Nocella, soph(imore
President of Cl
_
ass of 96
_
·
Thanks
·
drivers
Editor:
.
.
I
am writing this letter
-
because
the end of the year is near and that
means the end of Canterbury
Gardens (at least we think it is).
For some of us, the vans are the
only transportation back and forth
to campus, and sometimes the food
stores.
.
.
·
I
would just like
·
to ask my fellow
Canterbury neighbors to thank all
of the drivers who put up with us
for so long.
·
It
would
be
nice if at the end of
the year when they
will
be leaving
they could
get
a
word
of thanks
from us.
After all, they deserve a lot more
than a thank you.
Don't you think'?
Gina Becconsall, junior
Canterbury resident




































































































































































































































































































































i
f
.
!
.
·
·
·,
:
:'.
'
.
.
:
_.
.,:}:
'.
;_:.><.
::
'
. ·'
.
,; ~;
.
,
~
i
..
~
>::
,
·

.
.
THe
-:
CiRCLE
/
MAY
5~
:
1994 ·
.
9
•:·
N
·
·.•
.
:
··
.'
1
'.
.
~
.
•·
·
.
c
/
.
(1.'1~ .•
.
!
:

\~~~~~fs~!~!1it~:ot~fth~~
:
.
~
I.~
Daily)aid; "Nixon aiid Secretary
· }
.. Jci'ritirlti~d-,trrirri'
pi~e
.
.
3.
:
.
.
·
·
.
b!s~f~!:.f pry· Kissi
.
nger
·
'f,~(e. ~he
••·
, g~ourid, calling lµs
·
inetho'ds ''unora
:.
·
aut 1f Nixon were defied abroad,
thcidoJt'
·
'
.
bilt:comparinghis
.
effec~
:
.
at'home
:
there are still sonie who
·
.
·
>
Jiveness
'.
with.
i
one of
;
the .. great
.
cannot
.
.
:
forgive and . forget',.his
·
leaders of the'20th
·
century.
· .
.
·:
.
. .
W,aterg~te
.
siris(
>
<<;
<
:
;:
· ·
·
'
.
'He
·:
,
got
.
t
_
he job
.
·
done,"
/ . ::'
'
,
'Nixon'.S:life is
'
simply an(?t
_
he
.
r
.
Denofrio said,-
·
~'kind of Uke FDR
-
>
.
classic example
:'
of
·
how
/
corrupt
·
·
did during
-
the)~ew I>_eal t:ra/'
·\
.
·
.
politics are
in
this' country,,, said
··

As
·
did
,
th1t
.
media
'
in
·
the
days
·
political science major
,
Kevin
.
·
following his death; manyat
-
,Marist
Blake.
..
·
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. , .
.
praised Nixon's,ability
as
arllnter:.
.

i
''Nixon's presidency held the key
nationarstatesman,
·
a talent
.
they
.
.
to one of the most famotisscandals
·
fe:el President Clinton: lac.ks ..

•··
o.
:.
;
.
·
.
in
•.
American.· history,"
.
he
:
·saj4.
·
.
'/Since the new .presidency, our
.
·
'• Although !>resident Nixoh~as a
·
·
-
riatiori's leaders have concentrated
:
gifted

man, sowas every pfesiden.t
.
their pCllicies on domestic issues,"
·
before and after>hini.That's how
. said
.
Ger~lldPallor, an adjunct pro
0
,
they got into office iri the first
fessor
'
of'commtinication.
"c
,
.
plac<:t
.
.
.
.
.
.
· ..
·
··
J~rry
'
MacDonald;
'a
construe-
·
.
·
don work
.
er
on
the Marisi campus,
.

.
~These issues are certainlyini-
.
.
·portant;
.
·
but
·
~here tias
.'
bee'ri
-i
a
:
neglect of foreign relations,
_
whii:h
is important to
a
presidency," he
said
·
, "The late President Nixon,
said;
·
.
·
. •
.
.
: ·.
'
·
·
·.· .
/
·.
·
god rest his soul, is better off where
"Richard Nixon's presidency ins
'
.
.
.
.
corporated ~qual amounts, and this
he
,
is now. The man simply got
is
a
quality an effective president
.
caughtup in the corrupt w6rl4 of
·
'
rieeds .' '
.
>
:
·
·
·
·
·
· · ·
R
.
o
.
b
.
·
.
No

rton, a sophomore com
..
~
..
politicians; which, judging bypast
·
and present, .is unavoidable.
munications major, called Nixon a
·
.
''sma'r( guy,''
.
:
who forg<;d
'
so.lid
· ..
''Richard Nixon will
b
.
e
kno~n
·
relatioris
.
withChina and the Soviet
·
.
.
.
by college students
·
and
.
faculty
Union;
·
as
,veil
as.''practically (pull~
·
:
across the country as the Watergate
iiig)
:
.Ainerica out oLyietnani..' •
,
.
p~~sideilt
/
'
.
MacDonald sai~.
.
·
~
,
R~
·
NS

l
'
.
'TlON
...
..
. .
' '
.
.
.
·
.
.
-.
·
..
,
·
.
.
.
,
:
,
:co~t.inued
.
from page
1
.
·
..
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
..
.
Richard
·
s.aid she is confident that
.
WeHs
.
said
· .
.
.
that
.
The·.Ci~cle
·
wiii riext_year'screwwould do just fine,
also have a foreign c<>rresporident
.
i:md wished them the ?estofluck .
.
in England, and
·
she hopes to
.
.
"l
have beetl lucky to have such
change the
'
format for assigajrig
:

a
·
productive staff and have made
and receiving stories<
.
.
some

very dose friends through
··
/
'We are going to have a
:
this
·
experience," Richard said.
.
legitimate working staff ofwriters
:
"There are lots of memories
I
have
,
as
opposed ti:nelying, on tht
{
Ad-
·
.
which are completely unprintable
.
"
van~ J?urnalism ~lassfor copy,'?
·
.

Richard said she will continue
··
Wells sa1cL
i
i
~;;::;
.
.
.
··
<.
·
,
/
.:
·'
.
her .work in the writing field and
. 'Yells Jaid she_is also
:
pl~ning!P
.
plans to attend graduate school in
.
.
mtem
·
n~
_
xt
..
spnng~
·
-
he>pef~~ly
;
m
·
a couple of years.
«I
will get my
.•
MP/>S
.
:
!le\V~
(,
departnienti
..
J\~ter
.
....
J>.h
_
:o.
·•.·
.
eventually,''
··
she said.
'
.
'I
.::
cpni~le!i_ng.h:r-.la~.t ye~r
_
atl\_1ap~_t,
>.<
have
/
al~ays wanted to
.
be called
WANi-ED:
Circle StafF
·
.
heeds severai
'.
'
additions
for
·
n~xt
year.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Positions
·
are open for:
.
pol.itical and music columnists,
.
Photographers, advertising,
distribution, and
.
'
.
.
.
general
stciff writers.
Please contact The Circle at Ext. 2429.
.
.
.
·
.
CALLToll-FREE 24 Hours for a Brochure:
l-800~457-0089
Ext.
RESULTS GUARANTEED!
STUDENT SERVICES,'
Inc. has a databank
·

o. fo
··


ve
.
·
r•
·
·
··
·
1
·.
8
.
0
.

o
.
0
.
.
o.i
.
·
is
·
ti
·
ngs for sch
·
o
·
l
·
a
.
.
.
rs
.
hip
.
s
;'
fel
·
l
.
ow
..
s
.
hips. grants a. nd
_loans. representing BIWONS of dollars
.
in
private
sector
funding.
We can provide you with a list of funding sources most appro-
·priate to yotir background and educational goals .
.
· Student
.
Se~ices, Inc.
6124 North Milwaukee Avenue• Chicago, II
60646
,

··
, " •·
'
··.
,
.
.
"


I
,
• ' , ,
.
·
....
.-
. ·
,
,'
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
many other philanthropic
organizations.
·
As state and federal . ,
'
funding sources continue
to face serious cutbacks,
private sector funding is
expected to grow even
faster than in the past.
STUDENT SERVICES; Inc.
has current, up•to•date
information that provides
an intelligent alternative
.
to traditional state and
federal funding sou~es;
at the very least, they
.
represent a significant
·
supplementto
··
·
government funding· •
.
~
e_Us
,
.
~~~
sh~

~Oul~
Ii~~
to
.
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'
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NOUJ
bj/ek
'
?Days
·
x
'
Weeki
<·\
.
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·
~~~~r.c;l.
,
frc>"m:
.
··_
St~
:
_=
Mbajis~
·
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y
.
t
~
,
.
·
·
·-
·
·
·
·
·
·:~•_
:
...
·
-
_.
:
:
>'-
-
---
-.'·
-
.
-
..
. ·
·
.• ...
-.
had served iis
,
assistaO:ti.e'ditorarid
<
·
.
'.-.
::.
':·
·•
staf(write
(
befoie
'
beihg
:-
eJected
. . . .
"
E
:
:
·
l'u
··
··
.
...
,ERM
:
:
,
itw:/ftJ:;:;6;iwitltst{~1t
·
·
::·
.:· ·
'?
•.
·
~
'..I-
~ •
.
.
·
Un~riin,idusly
.
reelected last year;
_
'•
'
..
.
·
· .. ·.·•··· ...
··
,
·.·1115
.
·.·
·
·.
.
.
·· .
.
:··
.
.
.
·.
·
·
..
.
··.
·
M
· . . .
·
a
··
.
¥E
·
D
..
·
.
>.
Richard said she prided herself
.

.
.
··
·
on
;
·
getting
.
~v~ty

issue: ou
r'
and
'
'
:
:
.
:i;$~J:it!=:
i
·
•·
.
·
.
,
<
:
NEAR MARISI!
'
tarit
:
ones,
ailyway.''
.
;
.
.
.
.
-
.
.
.
.
·L
sENlO
:
BS
'
.
::<c
:
/
.,
-
•·
.••·
,
.
.

. .
..
.
·
.
.
·
·
.
· :::
:
\
t<>
.
n.W~
'
~eci
'
trpm},~g~
3
.
,
..
·
'fThere's'afew dollars variance either way
:
in
the
events, b~t·basically_ the costs are very
-
similar
.
to
·
last
:
year,":said,Sansola.
.
,
..
·,
.··
.. ,
He
.
.
explained·
.
th~t·ther~
·
are
;;
a
'
lot
.
of
:
.
variables ~hatJ1-elp

to
.
make upthe
.
pric~;
,-,
.
F
Sansol~ sajd
/
tt\ lot depends on inflation
/
:
'
a
·
siillple
.
exan_ipJeJftJ:ief act
.
t4at there is mori
~
.
__
,
,
t~ 9n a,c~,hol
.
!iq\V
;
·
s<> it a(fects prices in the
·
.
·
eyents ,where
_
alc<ll}.o!_is involve~l.'.'
: .
.
..
.
\
.
:
·
·
.
,
Last
year
/
the seniors had scheduled
·
a trip
_
t6
.
GreaeA.dventiliiarida hiking trip aci<>ss
'
....
the river~ howeyer: there was very
'
little
'
par:
ticipatio11
.
'tx:cause,
,
of
'
the
·
expense
·
and
:
the
·
traveli(l.g il!volye~k
< . .
.
.
.
'
. ..
·
Th
.
e
·
dass of.,94

officers planned accor~
dinglyancl ttjed.to_'fo'cu$ on activities
.
.
that_
were in~xpensiveand
·
attractive to the ma-

jority of students.
.
;
·.
.
.
·
/
·
"You can't make everyone happy
alt
of
'
the time, wejust
tried
to
give people what
-
.
they
wanted,
'
t
said
Smith.
·
Lynch agreid that the officers have put hi
.
a lot of hard work.
.
.
'
..
·
.
.
:'l
think the class of ~94 should be pleas
~
ed.
with the activities the officers have plan(l.-
ed,'; Lynch s
.
aid.-''The spirit
of
the officers
is reflected in the events, and I think they'll
have a great week."
,
..
Sansola added that there is more to senior
,
week than just fun.
"It is a time for reflection and transition.-
It gives
·
students
.
~
chance to get together in
a positive way and recollect on their years
and experiences here, as well as move on to
their futures," said Sansola.
~AI
.
R
:
c
:
u
T
t {;

.
Rs
Ttil: £U
I
11:12.,,,
.
wit
far
Appoilllll/1!11/:
117t1/k111.~
1rHcm11<;:
OjfC'T' /,li11i1<'ll
·
264
NORTH
Rn.,
POUGHKEEPSIE
454•9239
jusl
past
Al/Sport: Opposite SI. Francis Hospital: Free Parking
Opell 11~klfa_rs
9
-
7
:
·
Tburs.
.
·1;/ H: .'i<1I. H-
5
:
Su11 ..
,I/rm
.
10

5
·
1ytarist Suminer Sessions
May31-August:l9,
.
l994
Three Week Session Six Week I
&
ll
.
-
Twelve Week
.
Session
··-·
··.·.
Two new courses
added
;
~ession
I - May
31
-July 8
MUS 343L-202 Music in America
Tuesday/I'hursday, 6:b0-9: l5pm
·
Instructor:- Ruthanne Schempf
SessionH
_
-
Julyl 1 -August
19
MATH 250L-203
·
Discrete Math
I

Tuesday/fhursday,
6:00-9:
l
5pm
·
Instructor: Dean Nataro
Law Office Management has been
changed
to
Summer Session II- July 12-,August 18-T/R
Registration now underway
at the School of Adult Education
Dyson Center 127, Main Campus,
Fishkill Extension Center,
and the Goshen Extension Center.
1/3 payment required with registration.
Don't forget to register before you leave campus!
.
Call 575-3800 for more information.
"t-






























































































































r
·

.
,
,
,
·., ··
· .·.
·
.
·--
·
...,.,
·
s
,
.;...,
·
:.r
-
·
r , , , ~ ' t ?
-
J:;.;,.,1',iW"'':r~...r•;;,.
.;,
·
•,·
·
-
Y
'
Cd41lte_,.,.,._
.
~
-
---
· -
>-
~,
:
)

r
}
:
~10~ _ _
_:_ _ _ _
__:__.:..__ _ ___:__~--~TH~E:,;_

~C~IR~C~LE:!.,~
·
M~A~V~S~,
1.!.:9::.::::94~
·
_ _ _
_,;._ _ _
~ - - : - - - - - , . . - - - - - : - - - : - : - : - -
)
.
-
.
.
.
·
·
.
Attention
·
Marist
stuctel1ts:
:
Saturday, July 30th
.•···
·
.
·
·
·
.
.
-
is
vourctate
·
·
in The Hampton
.
st:
-
.
.
.
.
.
/
-
'
·
'
FREE ADMISSION
·
after
.
6:00pm
on your
-
college's date;
.
with College.LO
.
and proof of 21 <and
·
over>. Marist Alumni Identification alsd accepted.
'
THE
BOARD¥ BARN
.
. .
.
. .
..
·
.
._
.
.
. -
_
.
.
·
.Establish
.
ed
-
1
.
970'
..
' ·
-
270
west
Montauk Highway,
·
Hampton Bays • <~16> 728-57_60

,'
••
,'
-
-i994
'
COLLECE DATES
·
.
·
June 4
-
cortland
.
.
.
·
June
11
·
Sler,a
&
Fafrfield
.
.
·
June 25 Manhattan
&
.
.
·
Mount
Saint
Vincent
·
JUIY2 Albany
·
&
· ·
-:
.
-
.
.
.
.
·
.
Geneseo
&
Plattsburg
July 9 Iona & College
-
·
of New Rochelle
July 16
New
Paltz
July 23
·
FOrdham
JUIY
30 Marist
.
August 6 oswego
August 13 Oneonta
·
_
·
If
you
require
lodglng
for an
_
overnight
stav, contact
these nearby c11~111bers
of
commerce
·
.. -
september
3 Saint
John's
&
RIVERHEAD
.
HAMPTON BAYS
SOUTHAMPTON
·
·
.
:
HOfstr~ & Stony
Brook
(516) 727-7600
-
(516)
728-2211
(516) 283-0402
.

t . ,
I
'


,
II





















































·
THE CIRCLE,
.
MAY 5,
1994
11
================-----------
.
piefil
resigns aS
·
.
Jstr:XIl:1~11
end.
at
6-7
.
·_
.
b
.
TE~I
.
L.
STEWA~T
.
. :
~
fight a~d threw Cl
.
osinski out of
Men, women
race
well
at
·
Y
,
.
.
,
,
·
.

,
·the
.
game..
.
_
• .
.
.
:'
·
·.
,
..•
.
.
.
Staff Write(
;
.
.
.
::
freshmai:i Pav~ :Kidd~ey~
j~nior
..
The men's lacross
·
e
·
teaiti'°ended
·
Dave Closinski and Doug
·
Closin-
.
its season Sunda
_
y-, falling Jo
_
·
Holy
ski scored two goals each to lead
Marist
.
·
Cross;
22-9.
The game also mark~
.
.
.
_
On Ap
.
ril 30, Marisf
"
defeated
..
ed the end of
·
·Head Coach
.
Tom
.
Diehl!
~
Jour-ye~f coaching career:
Hartford University,
15-14.
···
Diehltold·TheCircleonTuesday
·
• .
"We played a good gam
e
and
he was felinquishing his coaching
:
played better than they did," Diehl
duties due to time conflicts with his
said. "We.did what we had to do
·
·
· .
·
to win the game."
.
.
·
.
position as assistant athletic<lirec-
Doug Closinski nofohed
_
severi
tor. Diehl.said the athletic depart-
·
goal
__
s and four assists on the
.
day,
me
_
nt is in the proc
_
ess of looking
.
for someone to
rm
his position.
.
the most in one game this season.
'
'.
Basically
I
find that l
_1
cfon't
·.
According to Diehl, seven goals
·
·
Brown-Penn
by
GREG BIBB
Staff Writer
The women's track team had
another successful performance
this past weekend at the Penn
Relays, while the men's program
fared well at Brown University.
·
·
·
is probably a school
·
reco
r
d.
have what I consid
_
er eriougll time
.
Closinski, Diehl'
_
s
'.
best overall
.
·
to do both my
.
duties,,. Diehl said.
The team of Patsy Schneider,
Dawn Doty
,
Alison Murray and
Pam Gooltz broke
_
the school
record in the 400
~
meter relay with
.
a time of
4
minutes, 18.8 seconds.
The result proved to have extra
incentive for Schneider as th
e
junior ran
·
)ler fastest opening leg
of the year at 1:01.
'
-
'I came here in 1990 to be the
player, will be graduating
_
along
assistant athletkdirector, and now
wilh John O'Brien, Ray Mahoskey
we've added five new sports.
and Brett Clifford.
.
"With all the factors involved,
·
"He (Closinski) did a lot of good
I
feelthat
I
don;t have the time to
things for the team," Diehl aid.
"I
continue to do this,,, he added.
think he brought big time lacrosse
D h
.
·
'
to the players."
.
.
.
.
ie
I
said
,
that mo5t people do
:
Closinski finished his career at
not realize how much time a
.
coaching position takes up
,
Marist with 70 goals and
64
assists.
"It
was the right decision, but
i
t
O'Brien topped off his career
In men's action in Rhode Island
,
Mitch Madarish and Chris Kick
had solid outings.
Madarish threw the javelin at
158; and Kick's best throw
measured
·
at 155.
·
with
64
goals and
41
assists .
..
·
was
something I thought about fo
r
;
Marist played twelve Division 1
.
a long time,'
.
' he .said
:
,
.
·
·
I
d'
h
·
·
The Penn Relays, which are held
annually in
.
Philadelphia
,
have been
·
regarded as the
·
premiere track
event in the world
.
Unfortunately for
.
Diehl and the
games, me u mg t ree agamst top
·
Red Fpxes, tl)e loss to Holy Cross
·
:
20
teams
:
.
·-.
· ·
· ..
The meet has traditionally drawn
world-class runners from across the
country as well as around the
world.
.
·
Diehl said that it is hard tcnell
dropped their final record
fo
6•
7 ·
what the future holds without his
.
Senio
_
r captain
·
Doug
·
Closinski
'

graduating seniors.
was involved in
a:
mix
up in front
·
·
·
ofthe goal.
.
.
·
.
"We had a competitive season;''
The men and women will return
to action this weekend at the Nor-
the'.1st Conference Cpampionships.
The referee viewed the scuffle
as
_
he said. "That's what we hope for
in the future."
AMarist player battles for a loose ball in a recent lacrosse
game.
·
Circle
photo/~att Martin
lntramurals
-
-
The finals
·
of
the
.
basketball
playoffs w~re held
on
Monday.
The game was between Flex and
·
A
·
Few
Good
men.
Results were unavailable at press
·
time.
In volleybalf action, Los Locos
was crowned champion last Thurs-
day.
.
Los Locos, the wfoner of the
Tuesday league, defeated Murphy's
Law,
the number-one team in
Thursday competition.
The Swingbags won the softball
.
championship game on Sunday
.
They defeated Seek and Destroy.
There are aerobic T-shirts in the
intramural office for any student
who participated in at least 16
classes.
The list of students who are
eligible is Posted in the fitness
center.
Crew rows in third,
fi-f
th place
by
GERARD CARNEY
Staff
.
Writer
Junior oarsman Shane Riordan
and it is good for Marist."
said despite Jhe
.
·
dismal result, he
Paquette said she also believes
said he feels the team will be rea~y
the level
of
intensity h
·
as drastical-
The women's crew team record-
for the New
..
York State Invita-
ly improved
.
ed a surprising third-place finish
tionals next
\
veekend.
'Wm really going to miss (the
while the men's .team ended in ari
"We did not row our best (race)
cori:ipetition) because it's getting
unimpressive fifthpla,:;e at the Ar-
on Sunday," the 21
~
year-old from
better," Paquette said. "The com-
Iny _Patriot Meet ill,
;
,
\\'
,
~st Point, Brookfield, Con~,;; said. "We can
·
p~tition and our pract!ces have got-
N.Y
;
.;
0
on Sunday.
~
-

·
.,,
,
. .
.
do much better.
·
·
·
ten
,
better and faster." ..
. ,,·.y
·
:
CoI:Sifre
~
wontne rice
.
withatime~·
-
-,. -
Riordan
saii:rthfleam
·
Jias
'
beeii'
;
-:
,
,
·
~
~-·
::
,
··
.
· ·
-
~
:-:
·
.
,,
,.. ".'

_
..
--
:
· · - ···
·
·
.
·of6:37.6
:
Army tbo
i2
se
l!""
orid place
.
working harder
·
ai practices this
:.
.· '
:
Th~sem'?r als_o said sh~ feels the
'
·
:
!:>y
finisllirig
:
with
'
.
8;'
6:.59 mark.
week in
·
order to prepare for
-
'this
. ;
c_oachmg s1tuatwn ha~ 1mprove_d
:.'
·
-.
,
-'flt~

wome_Ii'i
(
teairi
:
was led
_
by
weekend
'
s race.
·
,
.
stn
ce the departure of Larry Davis
·
_
;."
sel)ior:
~
}'J!ichelle
<:
;
Paquette, who
As its 1994 spring season is about
l
_
aSL.Year.
·
"<,
~;elJ)ed
'
t~!IY t~e
;-.
women's ~arsity
to draw _to a conclu~ion, th~ Red
·
·
''Ano
t
her major difference this
•·
eight boat to
·
a
·
t1me of 7-mmutes
Foxes will not be gomg out
m
an
year was tha
t
Coach Sanford and

··
-A
seconds
; .
. ·
.
·
'
easy fashion
. ,
.
.
(wom
e
n's
·
~
ea
d) Coach (Ed) Clark
.
First-year
·
Head Coach Scott
Marist's will have to out-row .have their own boats," Paquette
·~
-
,
Sanford was una
v
ailable for
nationally-ranked teams like Col-
said. "(Now,) one person does not
·
cbmm~ht.
·
: ~
-
·
·
gate and Bucknell.
have to look after everybody at
·
:
,
:
· Paquette
;
said she
.
·
was pleased
Certain team
.
members like the
every practice
.
"
·
.-
:
\
with
.
how
·
the team was able to
ideifof going head-to-head against
Another positive the Red Foxe
s
finisli"seven seconds faster from
extr~mely
,_
cl.ifficult competition
can look forward to is their novice
last weekend's outing at the Presi-
towards tlie en~ of
_
~he year, which
teams
.
dent's Cup Regatta on the banks of was uncharact~ristic
_
in previous
the Hudson River.
·
·
·
crew
,
programs
:
.
.
.
"They are going to be
"We 'did extremely well," Pa-
Seriio~
-•
Qw
.
~n McGovern said he
awesome"
,
said Jake Reardon, a
quette said.
"I
was happy with how
agrees with
'
this new system.
former Marist College crew stan
-
we raced against our competition."
"The
,
crew program here at
dout. "They have a lot of young
·
·
· ·
,
..
.
.
·
.
.
l\1arist is definitely
·
on the rise,"
talent, and they will be tough to
The men
s
varsity e1ght
·
boat did . McGovern sa
i
d. "Things have
beat in the coming years."
·
not row
as
well as the men's novice begun
_
to cl}ange for
.
the best•slfi~e -
.
The ~ed Foxes travei to Lake
.
team.
.
(Head) Coach Sanford has stepped
Casonovia to take part in the New
.
The men marked a second-to-
in.
York State Invitationals.
l~t-plc,ice result out of six boats
"Never before have we faced
The following weekend Marist
.
an_d the
n
_
ovi
_
ce
.
eight fini"shed 1·n' such stiffcompetition," McGovern
·
·11
·
1
p
'
w1 trave to ennsylvania to row
third place.
·
-

said. "It is good for
_
the program,
in the Dad Vail Championships.
,----,----:-------.;;;..;..-------------.
Make Your Reservations
.
Now
For Grad nation Dinner
·
!
DA NINO RESTAURANT
Owned by
rite
Licari Family
·
Fine Italian Food
& Pizza
Phone (914) 297-7969
Open Wednesday to Sundav
From 4:00 pm to 9:30 pm ·
41 Middlebush Rd
Located 20 minutes
Wappingers Falls, NY
South
or
Marist
MCTV wo
.
uld like to thank its
_
mem~ers for their support, en-
thL1siasm, and .participation.
·we would also
.
like to thank
you, the viewers, for making
MCTV one of
,
your main
sources for information and
entertainment during the
1993-94 academic year. We
look forward to your contin-
ued support
·
next year.
-





























































































































































































































14ti:t'le't'.S
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i~ik
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i
compl
~tt_
:
-
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game
'
,
>
giving up j~st
.
one ear~ed
.. -
: _
Staff Writ~r
-
:
.
< '.
;_/
'
r
rtin
?
and
:
alfowed:Cive
<
hits,
·
,;
·
.
--
·-

·
-
-
· -
-
·
-
·
·
-
·
--
-
· ·
--
-
-
Sophomo
r
es· Angela
'
Degatano,
>
-
-
Af
t
er
.
splittini. its las
L
-
.
hvo
-
·
-
a catche.r,
:
atjd
'
firs
(
ba_s
~
man L'ai11
:
ie
_
_
!?1~t~
.
~~
-
i~;•t
_
J!!Jittf
~~ ~
:
Sleight each' :w:e~t 2~3
'
at the
·
pJate
:
:
,
--
-
'
d
··
-In the nighicap
/
Monniouth
'
had
paign on
:
a .winning
:
notflo
_
~Y
-
·
-
its wafwith freslimanreliefpitdier
,:
The
.
Red Foxes
·
will
hos
f
Siena
Rob
i
n•Stohrer·as the Hawks~ click~
·
.
this" afternoon
·
,
at'-
'
the
.
GartlancL
.
.
,
,
.
··
·
-
·
-
-
-
-
·
-
-
·
ed
'
forfourrnris
_
iiithe
·
tiji
f
dand
;
-
Cominons
_
AthleticFields in a 3:30
_
_
two in the
:
sixth
J
,
·
•i
.:
·
.
,
/ : :
<
•<
·
_
. ·
P·~-
.
s!art.
·
.
.
.
.
'
.
.
The Red·foxe
i
were
·
unaoleto
·
,
,
_ .
Manst (24-13
,
overall
,
10-2
.
11
.1
!~e
,
ptocluce
on
the othe
(
end
of
_
t~~
.
·
.
.-
N<;>rtheast Confe_r
,
~n~e)
,
spht a
-
-.
,
field
.
as
,
Marist
·
:was
·l
orily able to
:
doupl
_
~hea(Jer agam~t Monmouth
.
muster
-
four
·
hits
/
,:
.->:
:
,:
>:
.;
.
:
:
·
,
College on
-
Saturday;
:
_
.
.

>
..
''Oui:
·
fieldirig and
,
pitching are
,
:
The Red
___
·
Fox
_
es
_
edge
_
d
,
__
the
·
..
_
.
:
_
b
-·- -
.
-
·_
·
·

--
t.:
· -
·
.
·
-
_
-

__
·
_
·
_
·
·
·
.

.
·
_-
-
_
- __
t
'
.
,
_
,
_: '
_
_
·
'
.
, -
·c-
.
_ .
.
.
..
6
_
0
.
.
-
h
-
-
.
great, ut ouruats ~re
,
stagnan ,
.
H~wks, 2
~
1, and.Jost,
•mt
_
e
·
Burgin said
;

''We
;
are too ag..:
_
-:
non-l~~gue cont~st.
.
..:
_ -
-
_
gressive atbaf..We need to become
Manst's offense was stagnant
-
- -
-
-
-
·
f
-
t ,,
.
_
· •·
· _ _
•··
·
:
,
·
,
·
:
STAT
::
O.F
>
TH.E
:
--
\'VEEK
.
:
·.
Patsy:Schneicler,
:
Dawn Doty/Alison
Mur~
ray and
_
Pam
~ooltz br<>ke
-
t~e sch~I r
_
ecord
Jn
·
·
the
4-oo~mete
_
r relay
·
with
:
a trme
of
4
minutes
;
.'
18.8
seconds
.
·;
a
.
·
fo(mosFOf ~he ga~e u
·
ntil jun~C?r
,
'
'
m;~ia
-
:~d
'
\;::
Foie~
·
,
:
spli
(
/
a
. _
·
_
ut1hty
·
player
·
:
Darra~
.
M
_
etz
.
and
/
doubleheade
,
r agaii1sr
N~w
-
,
-X
tjrk
..
sop~omore
-
-
_
short~top
.
Beth
,
eac~
.
-
.- .
Tech
·
1astWed6:esday
{
wirining
'
3"
r
:
·
drove home !u~s
m
the bottom of
·
and 1
9
sing
_
6
7
3;
iii
-
non-conference
<
'.
.
·
·
··
--•
-
·
-
-
-
-
-
- · ·
·
'
-
·
·
..
-
_
·
.
-
-
.
.
·-
_-
-
the seventh mnmg
.
_
.
,
'
:
·
> _
,i
action i1
i:'.
Poughkeepsie
/
·.
:
:
,
Sophqmor&Beth Kershaw warms up
·
)
n c
t
rece!lfgam~>The softball te?m hosts
.
Siena to:
_
_
Co
~
Head Coach
·
G~orge Burg1,n
_
_
In
·
the
'
fir
_
st
:
garne,
.
Hudsm'i·h
·
ad
day
.
at. 3:30
~
;
_
.
·
-._ . -

.
-
·
-
·
. --
:
-
-
-
-
-,
-
·
·
_
_
-
·
.
.
_
_ ·
.
_
-
-
:-
,-
Circle
photo/Matt Martin
said ~e
.
w~ pleased wi~h the team s
a:nothef solid perfoi:r/iarice
'.
.
.
-
-
.
.
·
--
· · -
-
-
_.
--_
.
-
_
-__
.
-
---
· '
approaching, Burgin said hitting is
-
work ethic
-
·
·
-
d
.
.
ld d
f
-
·
h
·
-
-
,
The ~ecqrid
:
game
'
did
:
not go in
· _
-
Burgin said
,
the

defeat was
.
due
·
-
"The
fi~st
game was great,
;
;
_
· _
-
·
l-lu son
r~~ e
_
,
.
ollr
: .
1~•
.
one
.
Marist's favor
as
New York Tech
·
__
fo
a
·
mental brealcdown with the
the one area in which the
·,
club
B
:
.
.
- .
d "Th
-
,
k"d
·
_
-
.
Id-
-
•t•

run and recordetJ
_
seven,
.
stnkeouts
.
.
. .
.
.
.
1
.
-
-
d
.
-
·
-
h
·
.
·
·
needs to improve
_urgu~
~~1-
.
e } s
\V~U
n
_
.
in seven fuJJ inriings.
,_
. :
_ ,
·<

,
was
able to get
_-
fo
.
senior pitcher P ayers
all
coac es.
·
.
_
_
·
-
-
-
·
gtvFe 1::1Ph:
·
'
•t
'
h
.
M
:
h' JI
litid
,
Sleight and Metz ignited the Red
;
Tricia.
'
Southwoithearly. '
.
·
'
.
'
' .
.
''We didn't plafwell;" Burgin
"I
would like to get.our hitting
.
~es
man pl c er
IC
e
,
:
·
,
-:.
Fox attack by
'
each
-
'
going 3~3
_
;
·
.
-
.
.
Sou
,
thworthfolinq¢shed one
nm
said. ''The teani and!'made men-
shoes back," Burgin said.CC It is
son (~4-3) was once 8:gai
_
n
,
J~e
:
Junior
:
second baseman
·
Marge
'
·
in the fop of the
'
first and
.
:
three
tal er~ors/'
. ,
·
·
very important t~atwe also get our
defensive spark forh M~n~t-
i
'
•-
-
-
'.

Sylvia
was
1-3 with
f
RBL
·
more in the second to take the loss.
-
With the NEC Championships
hitting eyes back."
TbeS-foot,,-m, pdqr
,om
.
.
.
. .
. .
·
.
Netters· lose
final match,
8-1
_ -
.
_
,
-
.
.
6-4, 6-l.
-
-
In the first match,
'
Nussbaum
by
_
JINI
·.
l:)E
_
FIIYAN
In
·
't
he second singles
-
match,
-
_
and Pramberger came up short;
Staff Writer
juniorKevinMcGovem was blown
8-6
.
-
·
The inen's t;;nnis
'
'
ended an
.
in~
out6°2,
'
6
~
2;
,
.
·'
:
.
The only bright.spot for the
team
:
coilsistent seasoifwHh
,
a s
~
7te~ord
-
.
:
Pramberger
.
did riot
-
have much
came in the secorid doubles match
.
afterl<>s
_
ing
,
~~L
J
p
.
C~n~ral Connec
~
luck
-
in the third· match either los-
when McGovern
'
arid Ilardi com-
·
:
ticut

lastWednesday at thel)ut
~
ini~;~btte
~
slti
i
he b~H~
-
~~
-
he
bined
.
for
an
8
~
4
win.
,
2
,
%
_
it~i
~
th~
_
J
_
i
1
~
_
J~
fdt
·
a
_
:
.
~i
ju
;
ni
~
r
-
_
•·
was not going
.
to
-_
play
.
as weJI as he
:
th:ltte
_
iri
_
~:!i~~~~~s pie
_
ased with,
.
·
-
.
.
.
-~
-
:'.
K~vin
:
McGoverh
combiri~d
-
for
die
· •
usually does
:
bllt·did
riot
expec
t.
to
.
.
__
.
.
. .
.
.
,
.
--,.
--
-
,
,~
cl
'
·

hr
,
.
,
,
.
li
.
playasJJ~dly
.
ashedid.
·
.
.
''Ke
v
iriaridl
'
p
ia~edr'ealiYweh
''
i~:~
'.
{
t
\~f;f:
:.
;:?:j}!
_
1,:;
}~
,
/
-_
·
.
'
,
'Fhad a
\
Jot.of
.
.
work, so I
·
together.'.'he
-
said.
,
,
·--
-. :· --
,
_
.
_-_
-_
___
_
-The Red Foxes were Wlthouttwo
·
'
coti)dii'fpractice
~
too
,
much/'
·
said
·

Accordihg
.
to
:
Ilardi,.
'
ther~
'
wa
·
s
cj
_
f
·
its
'
ke{~iayeil
:
again
;
/;.-;
,
)
J:,. ·
.
Ptamperger
·
'f
tw
_
as
expecµIig a-Jet-
·
one thing thatirispired them to play
·
.
. ,:
Missing
juruo
r
Martifr Byrrtc{ruid
down
;'
but not- that
.
niuch
:
c>f:
a
=
Jet
-
even betrer .

.
senio
i:
BnariLaSusa'.had ari
e
gative
·
dqwi
:i';
'.
'.
.
'
,
·
:-
\

_.,
.:·_
'd
.
_,
·
h
--
·
·
>
.
'
'
.
Th
-
e
_
'y
(Central Conne~
_
ticut)
,
effe
_
ct, a
_
ccord
_
-
_-
_
i
_
ng
·
·:

101'u
_
·nl6tHea
_
th
::
,
·
prambefger Sal
.•
_
e
,
was
'
eall
'
k b
h
·
p
·
-
b
-
·
-
-
·
-
- ..

·
.
--
·
··
-•
·
.
disgusted
i
witl
\
tlie
_
r
_
es
_
ult:
,
_
·
.
__
werer_
.
ycoc
Y
_
ecause~ er_
_
we~e
ram
_
etger
,
-·;
:
,,,
,
;
+
-
,>
}
-..
-
:
•.
:
·

_
-
_
.. _
-
''llosirnytemper, a11dthr_ewmy
.
swee1_>1~g
us
up to that pomt,
,
.
s~d
.
__ -··
••1r
:
.
Marc
·
{1'ius
'
sba~in)
_
didnH
. -·
:
water
·
bottle
/
(
saichh
e
junior
/
''.lt
.
Ilardi;
.
/
'So we started playmg
·
have
.t
o
·,
play
:
n
iiml>~
r
./
<i~~
';:,
ari~
.
was·vei-y
,
fru~trating.''
;/
,
/
,
.
<
h
.
arder
/
'
:
_
_
_
__
__
. .
_
played the nulllbe(tiu-~_e
·
rmHch, ~e
.
-
r'
Ilarai
-
played
:'
the
:
_foui:th
.
match
Marist forfeited the final inatch.
~~~:l~~~~~
'.
q
-
~~
r
~
>r~~c
said,
,
;
faliing
'.
6-Z, 64
·
>
:
,
.
..
·

,
,
.

_.·
.
· _
_
-
_
:
The team did no~ have the best
'
"
Ilardi had similar feellngs
:
:
.
:
.
.
:
Ilaicli
.
said
,
he
,
belte
v
eshisoppo
;:
·
ofseasons
·
, and it was not the way
·
>
"Our top
:
two
·
gu
·
ys

:
were · not
·
nentjust played, th~
-,
bett~r m~t~h
.
:.
Ilardi'. wanted to erid his tennis
·
th
.
er
·
e
·
"
·
sa
·
1
·
d
1
·
1ar
·
di
.
·'.
"They~
·
w
.
;ere.
·
.
/'.1'he
ldf
>
wa
f
p9uncliiig the
·
·
·
·
. ·
.
·
·-
·
·
·
.
· -
-
·
-
·
'
·
·
·
ball "
..
d
h
·
·
'
.
"H
as
·
~~~i:
·
;
...
>,
<
.
'
_
.
·
g~
_
r~i
-
~~~r
_
·-
-
-
~
t
-
~<lIIl
_
,
_
-~:
:
.
~
s~~
_
.
u
_
1
_
:
~
_
·
h
_
a
_
-
-
~
~
. -_
._
'
\
,ou
_ij
di
_
;rH
·
1~lrt::I
_
.
1
~lii
_
\
_
:
H:
_
}
~n
_
~
:-
...
'
'1tJeft with
,
a
bad ta.stein my
-
·
···
-
·
-
·
·
• .
.
,
.....
_
,
_
··
·,
·
·•·
·-
trolledthepomts"
··
·
•'
-
-
-
·
.
m~uth
/
'said
J
lardi
,
."l'mgladl
·••
t1
itts.
11
g~:~!
0
~
J
t
s.
,
;
J
_
~id
.
) f
'
.
pi~
:
~ea
f'~~~
·
i¥_
~
ited
)
Ii~
p
rt1i
' ·
_
started
'
:
playing
·
tennis,
,
but I'm
:
fiorfieit
-'·
_-
a
-
_;
_
..
s
_
ingl
_
e
_
s

m
·
·
a
_
·
tc
_
_
fi
_
_
·-
,
:_.
a
_
_
nd
·
·
a
match an
.
_
d defaul
_
t
__
ed th
_
~
-
sixth one.
-
.
definitely
'
not
-
satisfied
·
with the
season we had,
.
:. ·
-
:
:
·
-
qc,ubl~
match.
:
<
<
:~
/
:
.
i
.
_ _
·
Marist
·
wenf one for
.
tw9 in the
_
·
-
·
--
-
-
.
--
-
·
· ·
-
·
<:
:'.'
Junior

Mai¢
~
Nussbaum
,
·
.
_was
·
·
two doubles matches that were ac-
'
'There
·
was

a
-
lack\,f dedica-
.
_
_
.
.
.
. .
_
_
_
.
. ,
.
defeated in tne
'
firsi

singles match,
.
tually played.
:
._
.

-
._
'
tio?/'
_
sru,<
f
t~e
-
·
sen
~
or.
:
.
.
,
.
.
1it'A~~
:.
·
!~fll~~!~
'.
~
~~(
0
te


ni?(Jeli71~ ..
l~!..~Y
J
!!~~!ii•to~f.~t!
.
b'e~
F
':
hl
(
;
tided die Year of_
·
the
_ :
-:::
basketball
·_
t~ain
.
,
f Pr
~
puttn1g
:_
;
T
~d
·
,
.
:
:
·
schqol
has
tb
gei a new studentgyni
.
-
stand
,
by
.:
o
·
ne's
:
convictions,
· ·
:
·
·
Women
,
.
_
__
-
>
..
.
-
,
·

;,.

:
Jc::igethefa
15"14
rec9r,d
·_
·
th¢
J
itst
,
Holmlund
-
-.
'
(thought
I'd
mention that one more
- Speaking o
f.
character
.
..
.
_
·:
,'.
.
Curieiitly
;
:

_
the

sq,f\bal
l}
te~iµ
;E;.
p~ie the, ,squad has
.
9~¢n 6ye
(
.
s~
,
·
.
.
time).
.
-

·
-
.
.
-
-
-
.
-
I also waritto say thank you to
,c24
:
fJ:
'.1
0~2 iri theNor~heast f~ri..:
;\
-,111
-
fouTY~
.
s~desp1
_
te all t~~
·
c~:m-
.
:
:
However, believe it or not, we
_
.-
out
-
adviser,-
-
Dennis Gildea,

for
-
fereilce)
'
is having a strong
yea~;
,;
:,
ti:ov~rsy
:
_
;
that
:
was
,
.
surroµ11dmg
.
are
~
iri, _college.to
.
learn.
·
.
st
.
anding by us during
i
this tough
The
'
Red
.
Foxes
·
have
:
a legi'timate
·.:
'!:lead Coac
_
h Dave Magarity's cqn-
So a new

libraiY would be nice.
.
time
.
Marist
·
is losing
.
a good
-
shof a
fr
winriirig theNEC Touma-
-
.
>
trac(sittiatio
'
n.
- -
.
_ : -
_
.
;
.
>
:
__;_.;.;__;.___.--'-_
ff students
'
ever get a library, it teache.r
;
·
You won't be forgotten.
menfiater this month:
_
.

·
_

\;
·
_
.
-
-:
.

··-
<
.
The
·
College m!lde a good

deci
-:
:
would
be
nice
if i~ha9 a better ven-
'.
.
'

To next year
y
seditors_: Continue
,
·
The
\
voni
'
e
n's iennis
.
and
'
so
c~
er
'
''
/
sion in keepiilgMagarity.
:
Hegives
-
-,--,--.:.,..:.....:.c,..:..
·
.
tilation system.
"
.
, '
,
.
.
.
.
to strive to report the
·
news ac-
teain•~
\
vere the othef top
·
teams
:
~
)
.
hepro~!~
,
~lass a1_1d stab
_
ility
,~
_
:
·
-
·
-
·
-
..
,
·
--
-
-
.
,
Having the ability to jump from
curately arid fairly
. .
.
-
Head Coach Ken Harrison led
:,,_.
-
After 1umpmgouttoa2-0start
,
i
They°are s'tudentstoo.
'
Scholar§hips
subject to subject was the nicest
·
-
l
also want to thank Teri
-
-
his
.
squad to ari
·
.
impr~sjve
:
13~1
":
th~{oo~ball team (5-5) struggled
·
or llot,
-
these athletes are not pro
:..
,.
thing about having a columri this
Stewart, __ Jini
·
.
Derivan, Gerard
inark
; \
vhile
>
the
'
soccer team
.
_'.-'
the rest of the season.
-
:
.
.
fessiorials arid
·
should be
·
credited
C
last year and a half;.. Here comes
Camey and Greg Bibb for all their
recor
_
ded
.
a strorigJ()_-2 record.
;
.
·
·•
,:':
·
The absence
_
of, s~nior mnn-
.
for putting the tinie
'
and
_-
dedicatiQn
<
th
-
e
_
sappy,
·
1:>ut il~cessary part of
·
·
hard work
.
this year. Your stories
-
Ifit
\
vere notJor the wonien•s
::
-ingback Don D' Aiut.d in the last
·
toward school and
sports.
:"
;
·

·
·
·
:
·
-
;t
his farewell
_
address
.
.

.
.
.
-
improved every week.
·
Keep up the
sports
.
teams; the Red Fox sports
;
five, games of- the year hurt the
.
Speaking
~f
jobs~ this is
-
~
he}ast
.
First, I've bad an enjoyable four
good '\fork.
·
- -
.
teams
.
this
year
would have a record
,
te3Jll's

_
offense
_
trem~'ndou~IY.
:;
.
·
column for
·
-
.
this
_
·
sp<>n_swnte
.
r
·
years at this institution of higher
S.J; thanks for your help editing
weUurider :soo
;
..
.
.
·
.
.
·
_. ·
Whenat
_
eamlosesaplayerwh
_
o
before
-
heretiresJromTh(Circle. learning;
_
Believe it

_
or not,
-
this
·
sports copy on Tuesday nights. It
The men's and women's basket-
.
-
.
gained 3,721 yards and
_
s1:ore~ 29
·
'working .for The
.
Circle
-
has
-•
space criticized the school at tinies
was much appreciated.
·
-
.
ball team's were
·
unable to make
.

touchdowns in
·
his career, it
-
was
·
given nie a lot of in$ight about_the
-
.
-
because it wants to see this school
Andrew you wer~ my right hand
an'y
,
Jnroads iri
the NEC
_
~~tined
.
thaftheRedFoxeswould real world. It.is not aUfun and
get better.
_
_
ma
_
n this year (how's that for a
Tournament.
end the season on
l!-
-
sour note.
games. It's serious business.
.
However, sometimes att~mpting
cliche)
.
The help you gave me on
Both teams were knocked out in
_
Arguably,
I>'
Aiuto has been the
That's why we have to continue
to find a higher truth does not
this section was invaluable.
the
_
first round of their respective
.
-
best halfback in the school's to encourage
.
th
_
e growth
_
of
please people;
.
_
You don't need luck next year.
tournaments
.
history...
.
_
.
_
athletics in society and here at
.
With that in
·
mind, it was a
You'll
_
do a gr~t job as Sports
_ Neither squad had a reliable
_
"'
·--
~is year was a con~is
_
tently
·
in-
Marist.
·
·
·
'
pleasure working with the editing
Editor ..
leadei; who could
be
guaranteed to consistent year for Manst sports
If
nothing else, sports provide a
staff this year. When SGA shut-
Finally, good luck to the Class
score .the big points or make the
·
teams;
diversion for people
.
from their
do..yn the paper, we stood by our
of '94. The "real" world is waiting.
key defensive play in the final
However, we must remember
everyday lives and the world's
·
beliefs because we knew we were
Ted Holmlund was The Circle's
minutes of a ballgame.
these athletes have another job.
problems.
right.
Sports Editor.


44.10.1
44.10.2
44.10.3
44.10.4
44.10.5
44.10.6
44.10.7
44.10.8
44.10.9
44.10.10
44.10.11
44.10.12