The Circle, September 29, 1994.pdf
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Part of The Circle: Vol. 45 No. 2 - September 29, 1994
content
Volume 45~
Number
·
2
/
·
·
September 29, 1994
TwQ .. StQ.dellt~
sq.spep~~cJ.JJltowiihouse
.
.
incident
males fro~ East Haven, Conn
·
., :were
suffered a possible fractured fib, said · me
.
"
.
.
·
·
·
·
and residential life, said he could not
by
··
MEREDITHKENNEDY
·-:
Staff
.
Editor
inv<>lvedin
.
the_incident, Le~ry said
.
she was thrown across the B7 living
Jarju.ra
:
and Muni's suspension comment about the incident.
M:uni and )arjura have
.
been
·
room by Jarjura
.
,
]
.
_
. .
were placed by
·
Peter Amato, asso-
·
J
a
rjura
.
said he went to B7 that
placed
.
on suspension. for on
(
yea~,
.
· '
''.Iwent
:
behindJo
e,
to tiy
)
o
.
stop
ciate dean.
·
.
.
·.
night in response to a fightthat oc-
Two male Marist
.
.
students
.
re-
.
and
_
_Dubois' on-campus Jioilsing has
i
tli~
·
fightiiig
i
and
,
he turite9
~
around
.
Ja
r
jura said he met with Amato curred
.
earlier involving student Chris
ceiyed a
_:
()~e,
~
year suspensio
~
follow
:
.
.
·
bee
.
n revoked.
"
•
.: ·
.
•
·
.
·
.
.
..
-
..... ,
•
.
andJoC>ke,d at
,'i
iie and then threw r_ne
voluntarily on
}
~fon SepL
~
l2 and was
·
Cullinan
.
.
.
.
· ·
.
ing their
'
•
arr~ston Mon
;
Sept
.
12.
>
:
.·
·
Jarjura
.
said he d
.
oes no
t.-
~Iider-
:
.
a~~ss
•
the
•
room," Reilly s
.
aid
.
. : . .
treated as guilt
y
·
from the beginning.
"As' far
.
as I know
·
when a guest
·
Joe Jarjura, 19, and Rob
.
Muni,
staµd why he is beirig p~nished for
·
\:.,.
Jarjura
·
s~id he did not r~ca,11,how
-
.
"Dean Amato told me
·
that be-
gets into a fight they have to leave,
20,
w'ere
·
formally
.
charged
w
ith
.
as-
prot~g hin.iself ~ca11Se
_
he did not
•
.
~~i~lt
•
\11_~
·
inj"iired, but tho
_
se at
·
~he
fore
I
·
said anything, I should know those guests. were unregistered. They
sault iri the third degree, a
i
m,i
_
sde-
throw
,
the first
.
punch
..
;•:.>·
.·
.
.
.
.
.
c;
fight_t9ld
.
him sh~ had jumped on
that
I am in serious trouble, and that should have been escorted off cam-
meario(according•io Joel.eary, di-
.
"l
got hit and
.
a fight qccurre~,>) hi(back,
'.
< ·
..
:
,:
.
>
:
,
this was a serious matter," Jarjura pus. They
.
beat up a Marist student,"
rector of safety iuid
.
secudty
,·
>
·
. .
·
Jarjurasaid."I defended myself and
·
: ."They're telling
)
ne
:
Nlltasha . said.
Jarjura said.
Jarjura was also charged with
my' friends defended me.'
'.
•
jumped in; on my bade,'
~
Jarjura said.
· Amato said he could not com-
Cullinan said he had no comment
harass!°ent, and appearance tickets
·
Reilly said she
.
walked
_
into the "I swung my back around to get her
merit on
.
tlie incident because
it
in-
about
_
the in~ident.
w~re issued for a later date, Leary
middle of the fight and saw people
off
and that) how she got
,
hurt."
.
volves the disciplinary process of the
Re!IIY said she was aware that
said
.
.
.
.
.
• .
:
.
. ·
·.
•
...
·
:
>
..
.
..
everywhere.
,.·:
'·,,
-:
.
. .
·•
··
:
:
.
.
.
.
;,;,-.-
,,,,/
ReHJy~~!Jie
·
~~hat'she
jurripe<J,
on
·
·
.
college; and the case is confidential.
·
a? incident
_
had occurred earlier that
.
The_
:
c:onfrontallon o~c,urre
.
d.
;
:
at
•::
i
'~
:
,j/
!
;By:
•
.tne
·
:
time
· .
!:,got dovmstairs
;
-
:
<Jarjurii's
:
back
:
~ntfsaid
'
she believes
. ·
·
Dubios now resides off
-
campus mght ~ut d1~ not ~now_ the details.
approxllll
_
ately
·
1:45
.
a.111
.
Sat Sept.
.,
there were people all over the place
,
"
.
.
he knew wliarhe
\
vas doing.
-
,
·
.
and is banned from the townhouse
.
JarJura said he1s trymg to ap~al
10, in townhouse B7.
.
•
··•
·.
Reilly said;
(
"'.fhey were o'n the
~"
This makes me
.
mad, because
section of ca111pu
(
because her three the suspension but will have to wait
·
;
Two junior. female residents,
·
kitchen table and the
.
couch. Onewas people keep saying it," Reiliy said.
male guests were not registered with to see if Gerard Cox, vice president
El~beth Dubois, 20, and Natas~a
(lying) on the floor!'
.
.
·
··
"I did not jump on Joe's back He
housing, ReHiy said.
.
.
and de~n for student _affairs, will
Reilly, 20, and three non
-
Manst
-
Reilly, who according to Leary,
looked ri t at me and then threw
Jim Raimo, director of housing allow him to resent his
New
RDs
bring
freSh
·
ideas
to
Gampus
lif~
-
·
·
by BLYTHE MAUSOLF
.
Staff Writer
.
.
In addition
to
cla~ses
'
a~d
aii
i~
>
temship,
.
she worked
'
as assistant
.
director in a resident hall for approxi
-
·
.
mately 700 first year studenK
.
.:
The Office <>f Housing amtResi-
':..
;
On,,fer 4~cis~?~ to
,
lea
y
~,
¥.
a.
.
rt.~!1
<
dentialLife hired
'
not one buUive said,
,
J,was
.
ftm
_
shed w1t~
;.
grad
ne"'.
;
~e~i
.
de11ce Direct.ors
·.
this
·.
yeax
/:
:
Sf.P.
.
0.()kp!u,s
~YI~
-
~~
-
B[i~g
~
~~!Y
l
,f
gt:
i,j
,,.--,
·
.
.
.
•
.
.
because
.;
the
.,
staff.
was- reduced
~
to
:.:.:
l!l).C
:.
Y.ears, and
I
needed
.
to
)
eave.
,
.1
.
,,, .
.
~
,~
-
=
~;~11
f
~!I!\!¾i
~!'i!l
~
t
li1!f
'°~~t;tt(lf
t
i:f
1.
ing
:
staff
:
differ in eiperien
c
e
and
:
·
s
_
tudi~s~
.
Jo.u
~
r~ just
,.
turni~
-
~
your
.
~ac~1~1f
i
.
(
Direc;~i
-
~
:
i°:J6jj
i
i i
•
•
,
:J
:
.
~f~
t:ft
:
;~~
r~ally
.
·
~
!
ttmg
.
~
~y-
,
.
.
John
.
Padovani
.
said
·
''We fook
:
t6
,
. '. ;:
Afte
.
r
;
i!1
.
~e.fviewi11g
:
for
.
pta!}'y
:
•
..
•
bti~ld
:
a
•
J
e~
m
:
of
:
peopl~
i
vi
itil
'.'c
tiff~r-
'.:
riiidc.IJe
:
s~~~l
:
giJida~cepP~!l~()ns?
,
she
:
'.
ent
.
taji::~~s
an~
;
exp~~i~~ce
;·
Sq
'.
th
i
y
:
:·
P~t
9~t
.
a Jew housmg
:
llpphcatI<>ns;
<
c:omftog_ether
·
and each
as a
unique butnone of ~eID
_
~e~med to
.
be a
·
~~~~u;:i~~H1iistll~;~
\ t
9ugh
i
::
t
rt::f<>~
-
)~{firlr
.
tin1~
,
}
(
g
rit
/
~n
·
•
.
.i..;..:;__:;__:;__:;__:;__ ___ ........... _ _
:;__:;__ _ _
---....,......c...-----
out
,
the
•
campu~
Sain
-Johrisori is
iri
·
,
ca
_
mp
_
us"
J
;
JUSt
_
laugllc;d
.;~J
fey
.:
~o
.
.
'
~w,York
.
G~~~na~orl~l
candidate George Patkl
tal
,
ked
with
Marlst
studentsWednesd.y,
September
21st
·
Cln:le
photo/
Xathy Link
Sheahan; S
'
ean McGuirk
·
'.
is
\
in
·
.
cornrorta~le.
·
)\'he\l I le~ h~re)
_
said,
:-
Champagn~t; Kelif ¥arti11 is i~
1.
.
~~ve to. ~r,a,t
;.
Maris!
t
,
,M~iri said
:
.
Marian; Jeanine Belcastro
i
s
•
on
·
the
'
C
'VV,hen
_
its
_
a good ma
.
~ctbetw7en
·
s
·
..
·
a
·
:
.
·,
.
:
·
·
1
·
d
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
-
~~i~~Jld
_
ay3mG
.
ari,l
1
~
\
is
·
~
~fiy"
.
·
:
~~~riiO.~~~~t:~r=~tn
!
~ht~~~:
·
.
.
••
Ju
e}.1-t
.
,
ea
.·
•
~rs
,
-
~~pr~ss
:
,
concern-
.
Last
;
y~
~,
at~t!113e
/
Sa,m
.
John
~
::
way~length~don~
.
tha
~
pap~DS
s
.
·
.
.
.
.
-
·
b
.·
.
d
·
..
.
. .
. .
. '
·.··
.
•
.
. .
·
w:~;~
~~:11fu7~~
8
~cit~\rl~e:~
.
t
.
~A;rf~~n~
0
.
:~;y%~~=~ti
.
-
:
:
·
-
~ClJ.ttty
·
.
·
. ·.
,
u
.··
.
get
·
.
··
Quts
>
··.
·
·.·
an
.
·
.
issue
sity,
·
with a
·
major in
.
Human Re~
:
~re_ek)ife:~
t
Bri~gewate
.
r,
,
she
)
s
.
·
:
··
.
-
.
.
.
.
..
-
·
-
sources Management .
. ·
.
-
, _
-
·
....
tntcr~ted 01n offenng ~ome
·
of _her
.
in The Hoop Lot were replact!d, and
ation is still
.
·
being worked on, a~d
He
·
was an active participant
·
of c:xpcrience t9
.
the Greck
.
orgamza-
byBRIANFRANKENFIELD
emergericyphcinesiriallparkinglots
students have
-
to understand that it
st~dent government and a resident tl<>ns
Oil
campus.
·
.
.
.
.
. · •
·
.
Staff Writer
-
.
have been repaired and weather-
takes tirile.
.
assistant.
<
.
. .
·
.
....
· ... ·
·
.
:
Although, Sheiihan woul~ hll,Ve
proofed.Security
has
also added two
-
Despite ~II these improvements~
.
.
.
Johnson
.
said
·
he caoie
td
Marist
.
·
.
been)
1
er. first choice Martin
}s
ex-
,
MariSt students making progress
fuU
time camptjs foot-patro]s,. and a
upperclassmen may find some things
...
for
a
few
reasons,
·
"The
·
size
of
the
•
:
cite_d ~bout il!aking some changes in.
.
is what the Stu~ent
·
Gov~mni~nt's
·
five hour foo
.
t~patrol at Beck's Place. missing. 'the student
-.
escorts have
·
sc~ool{th3:tis; ihe on campus
_
pop
~
~
.
·
M_a!'}an:
.
·
.·
·.·
.
.
-
.
. ..
:
.·
.·
.
·
'.
Safety and Secunty Committee
IS
all
Leary said he is pleased with the
.
·
been eliminated from MarisCs secu-
Jatio
.
n 1s bigger . .And I worked
'in'a
•
·
· ·
.
!_like to be _1_nvolve<
t
m
,
m?re
--
al>out.
.
· .
.
..
.
concern for safety
,
•
.
rity team due to the New York State
.
public institution and
-
Marist
·
is
pri-
: .
that1 Just the ho~mg area of M.anst.
.
.
..
··
..
C>n
·
N°":
·
11
1
~9
93
.
~e lZ-mem-
.
·
'
'.
The Student
.
Body Government
.
Security Guard Act of 1992. The Jaw
vate, so
.I
wanted to
·
get a
.
~en
:
~n duty! Im usuaUy ~e 9ne
··
·
l>er
:
.
1:ommntee .f!led a
_
safety and
shows excellent awareness ofsafety
.
went into effect in the 1994 school
differe~tperspective.'
'
.
·
.
·.
·
•
.
._
.
. '
•
d_omg _1t
.
by bike. I make
:
a
.
lot
:
.
of
.
s
.
ecurtty r1;port
WI$
fo~er st~dent
on campus," states Leary. ''.In work-
year, and states that any person do-
He said
•
he feels
·
hii youth was
'
time
_
.
/
fo,r
students
·
·
11nd
; ·
try
·
.
body presi~ent,
·
Kent R;mehart. The
ing with the students, veryseldom are
ing any type of security work must
an asset
iri
Marist's selection
·
ofh
i
m.
toincorporate Jhat into who
Lamt
reP?rtoutbned everylhmg fro~ se-
their requests irrational. Most con-
_
be a registered Security Officer.
Johnson
'
described himseif
as
·
"a Martin said
; '
_
. .
.·
.
<:_uritr faot~patrols to th~ quabty of
cerns are
very
legitimate.''
Registration in
N.Y.
state could cost
young fresh mind with lots
·
of ideas
·
··
·
..
·.
l'...ike
.
Martin, Jeanil}e Belcastro
bghFtmlgl
·
ar?~dth
.
c:ampus
.
rt
.
:
:
.
.
Leary said that the lighting situ-
Please
see
TO~R
p.
8 ...
and energy".
·
.
.
.
comes fresh from the completi~n of
· o owing
.
1s
lepo , .
a memp
.
He said
.
he was looking forward ~duate school at ~ston
.
Uruver-
w~ sent to Ex~t1ve .V~ce Pres1-
to working with the freshman in
·
.
s1ty,
-_
where
.
she
..
ma1ored m Vocal
dent~fark Sulhvan,
.
and D_rrector of
Sheahan.
·.
,
·
·
Music Performance;
Secunty Joe Leary requesting a tour
.
He said he sees it as a challenge
After graduating in May; she s~d
of campus problem areas. The tour
and his goal is to keep
·
his students she
.
wanted,
·
to
.
Jook foi: a housing
•
was
.
agreed upon, a~d _conducted o~e
active and on top academically.
.
pos!~on similar to the supervisory
..
early Thursday evening last Aprd.
.
He would like to
·
help Marist
.
pos1!1on shehel~ as. a student, and
Student Gove~m
_
en
t
officers J~n
buUd as a community, on an educa-
Manst was her choice.
.
Nocella, Matt Gdh~, Rebecca Ry:113
tional social and cultural level in
. ·
''I
wanted to look at a pnvate
and Holly Olson cucled
.
the entrre
order to help students open up to' the
school because of the quality of the
campus, fr~m The McCan_n ~n~er
real world.
.
.
students. I feel there is a difference
to G~and
s
Hoop
Lot,
pomtmg oul
About himself Johnson said "I
in
the mentality of the students of-
potential dangers.
·
am approachabl; and passioriate
ten times. They tend to be a little
. Th<: tour was extremely eff~ye
about who I am and what I do
.
I
more into their studies because
m ~ettmg a !esponse from admm1s-
believe its impoi:tant to know who
th
7
y're paying a lot more," Belcastro
tra~on officials
.
.
you are and where you come from.
said
.
.
I was very pleased to see ~-
And also I am still learning and I
She explained that she had cho-
provements when I came back th1S
will aJ~ys be learning so~ething sen the North End after originally
year,~ Nocella said.
-
.
new."
·
being placed in Sheahan.
Smee then, the steps behind
Leo
Kelley Martin comes to Marist
Her past experience had been
Hall have been removed, snow
from Bridewater State College,
guards were
.
placed . on the ~ew
where she went
to
graduate school.
Please see
RDs p. 9... Townhouses, the fencmg and hghts
The Circle
non-scientific poll
The Circle conducted a non~scientific
poll
from Sept.
20th.
to
Sept
27th.
Almost
1,100
students responded
to
this question:
Do you feel the U.S. should be intervening in foreign politics,
such as the conflict in Haiti?
Yes= 430
No =636
TV
·
scandal
·
exposed in
.
p:iennes-driven
;
f
.
Q
,
~i~
.
~
\.
root for.
·
ible ratings dominance of''Twenty~.
who plays young lawyer
·
Di~k -Through It" had theJook of a great
by
JUSTIN SEREMET
Circle Film Critic
po
you ever feel like Alex
Trebek and the whole "Jeopardy!"
.
crew
.
_
is
.
jerking your chain?
··
.
Tiiey may
.
be, and
·
after seeing
·
"Qu~
__
Show,.,you might not find
it
very surprising.
.
.
.
.
Robert Redford's latest
film car-
ries us back to the 50s - a time when
.
paranoia was being created by
·
McCarthyism and the launch of the
Russian's Sputnik - and all Ameri-
cans
had
to be proud of was its popu~
Jar new V-8 engine.
It
was also the dawn of televi-
sion, and the game show
'
of choice
was "Twenty-One," a
·
game
·
of
knowledge that was eventually
proven to be a fraud.
This was the first time that TV
was actually proved to be lying, and
its viewers would never have the
same trust again.
.
·
NBC presented this game show
with the intent to sell its sponsor,
Geritol, by using charismatic
braniacs that American viewers can
Ralph Fiennes returns to the
One" (which at one tirn~ had more
Goodwin/the man responsible· for
film with its s\lper.b
.
cin~mato~aphy,
screen
·
( after • his ·incredible
..
perfor~
that 55 million people .watching): · .. discovering· that
·
the
'
quiz show is•
.
a
it lacked character depth,. aJ1d the
.
end
mance as "Schindler's List"'sAmon
But one mlghfask how this tnan
fake;
.
'
·
.
result was a
lot
of
yawns. .
.> ..
Goeth
:
for which he was robbed an can go on living like
_
this when he is·
Goodwin follo~s
::
Van
-Doren
·
.
However, R~dford h~/truly out-
'
.
.
Oscar)toplayCharlesVan
·
Doren;a
·
beingfed the answ
_
ers and winning
throughout the film
as
welras tlie
done
-
himselfwith
:
"Qi.Jiz Show/'
:
a
college professor whom NBC se-
dishonestly?
.
.
. .
nervous, twiiching Stemp~l,
·
a man
film
.
that not only is as timeless
·
as
··
.
cretly
'
chooses
.
to become the neict
Van Doren secretly
-;
ay~ that
_
b~-
.
who still feels ripped off for having
..
the characters in
.
it,
but also ques~
.
·
champion of''.Twenty~One
:
"
can't
re.fuse
an offer like this when
to lose intentionally.
· ,.
tions our trust
in
the mosfi><;)wertul
After defeating the geeky Herbie
it meant instead fame and a desire
Look for cameos by Tim"6tli{
·
fonn
of comm~riicatio~ in
the
.
w?rd:
Stempel (John Turturro); Van Doren to live up to
.
father" Mark Vari
Dlisfield
·
as
a poker buddy anq Mar~
.
the boob tube; (Grad~:
A)
.,
··
goes on to be
"champion"
for the
next
14 weeks, has his face on the
cover of Time,
·
and is mobbed by
fans on the street.
All the time, he is given the ques-
tions and answers ahead of time so
that
NBC
can coniinue
.
the
.
incred
_
s
.
.Doren's
(Paul Scofieldrexpectations.
.
tin Scorsese
'
as the head of Geritol.
• ·
It
seems
.
unclear at
.
first.• how..
.Where
Reiit~;d
re~lly.s~~eds is
In film news...
.
Charles Van Doren can
.
do this, but· ·in capturing the fe~l for.the 5Qs, no!
,
~e
Ric6
,i
h~s-fciiniiilly:\ip~fo~
.
after seeing the relationship between
only. with the
.
clothes, but
_the
colo~
.
gizedlofpublidy. bl3:5ting the c}ioi~
'.
·
·
he and his father, you start to under-
as well.
.,
of castirig Tom Cnuse as Lestat
m
.
stand Van Doren's motives.
Somehow, Redford is: actually
the adaptation of her ','lntervi~w 'Yith
·
·
Scofield is excellent
:
as a· man
able
-
to
:
make the boring
-
and bland
.
the Vam
.
pire" (C~niilig
NpyJl).
·.
undaunted by the birth of
.
the "evii''
:
colors of blue and
:
gray (that were
''.Candyman
11"
has just com-
media that is television, and look for
·
so very prominent in
:
this time pe-
pleied filming ~nd will ?J>en
~
De~.
a fantastic
.
scene
.
between he and
riod)
_
seem almost majestic.
.
:
28 with Tony Todd retummg to play
Fiennes as the two go back in
'
forth
He also moves the camera with
the man with the hook.
.
in a duel of poetic quotes.
gra
_
ce, especially in thequiz show
.
·
And fans
.
;
of
·.
Quentin
.
Tarantino
We actually feel somewhat sorry
scenes where
.
his
·
zooining in and o\lt
,·
are drooling
-:
as they anticipate the
for Van Doren by film's end wlien ·,gives the audience the feeling of
Oct. ?release of
:
"Pulp Fiction,"
his
.
the show must go to court to deferid
claustrophobia that the contestants
follow~up to tlie
i992
cuit hit,
"Res~
.
.
itself from
its
accusers.
·
feel in· their sound- proof boxes.
ervoir
..
Dogs"
·
(l WILL·
review
this
Another standout is Rob Morrow
While his last film
"A
River Runs
·
movie).
Vets' Killing Joke-Consolidated back with more nQise
by
TOM BECKER
Circle Music Critic
The world of music stretches far
and wide, and for
that
matter, so
does the tastes of thiS ]x{xus.
At least, I'd like to think so.
With that in mind, I would like
to say that this column will attempt
to include a wide variety of music,
from jazz to hardcore, and from
techno to blues.
This week centers on two
longstanding members of the fo.dus-
trial community.
·
Consolidated, the veteran rap ar-
tisans of industrial likeness recently
delivered "Business. of Punishment'?
to the listening world.
ish funk of"Woman Shoots John,"
variety
·
or music it touches upon.
an upbeat groove to accomplish its
"Business" serves as a forum for
the bluesy sounds of "Recuperation,''
The equally experienced Killing
task.
.
.
.
·
.
.
·
·
the band's political agenda; a 15-
and the radio friendly, ironic "Wor~
Joke
.
recently released "Pandemo-
At times however, the album
track political poem of angst that thy Victim".
nium", the band's first effort in sev-
seems monotonous and predictable,
confronts everything from
·
the issue
Consolidated manages to produce
eral years.
·
as
if
the band had some difficulty in
of abortion to that
.
of legalizing some excellent concoctions with the
Most noteworthy of the
10
track creating enough quality tracks for an
drugs, as well as sexual harassment head-nodding, slow-grooving«Crime
album is the first release entitled album.
. .
of women.•
and Punishment.,and "Dog and Pony
"Millennium".
·
·
"Jana" sounds curiously like
..
a
While the lyrics are sometimes Show" which proves the band is
The song
·
is a classic mosh-
1980's
a1ternapop tune with
overbearing and seem to
_
take the
indeed capable of straight- centered
·
marching, boot-stomping tune which
.
distortionthat brings to mind the
tone of a self-righteous preacher,
rap.
·
.
climaxes into a catchy chorus over ancient sounds of the Psychadelic
they can be dismissed in favor
·
of
''Todayls My Birthday" offers a
business-like guitars.
.
Furs.
.
the wide variety of musical tricks
Led
Zeppelin-esqile rhythm to back
The album as a whole varies
It's a pleasant addition
:
to the ·
that play in the background. ·
··
·
up
_
the hopeless feel of the lyrics
.
greatly in its quality.
,
-
sometimes tiresome sounds.
There are several tracks on the
about a man searching for a future
Killing Joke is creative on tracks
On Tuc:sday, R.E.M., Slayer, The
·
album that offer the listener totally
while battling a sexually transmitted
like "Mathematics of Chaos" where Police; Big llead
,
Todd
.
and the
different sounds.
.
.,
disease.
.
.
a fast, techno beat moves the song Monsters,
:
the soon-to-be imprisoned
Songs range from the
,
industdal
'/Business" proves itself to be . along; and on the title track which
Dr.
Dre, Green Jelly, and Alabiqna
speed of "Cutting/' the Beastie Boy-
quality material through the
,
·
wide
uses grindy, stone-cutting guitars and
all
released new material.
'
------,--------~---,--~:;._
__
,,__
__
. . . : : . . , . _ ~
SUN
~
*FOOTBALL*
12
NOON -
?
WITH
$1.SO
BTLS.
• tSfi'
.·
OF BUD OR
BUD
'llGHT
&
1/2
PRICE
WINGS
MON
*FOOTBALL*
WITH
$LSO
BTLS.
OFHUD
OR . .
. .
• BUD
LIGHT
&
$LOO BAR
BURRITOS
.r.41'
·
TU ES
-~
-
*$3.00
PITCHERS* BUD OR MICH. LlGHT
.
• i##'
&
t/2
PRICE WINGS
·
THUR.
*COllEGf NIGHJ*so
CENT BUD DRAFTS, SHOT SPECIALS
. •
.
~OWf
~ ~0ij~9pm -10pm
W
.
ITH
_
so
·
cENT WELL DRINK
.
.
s""i--:--
~-
.
18
&
UP W/ VALID COLLEGE
IDD
.J ·
RI\Q~
~ ~
·
$3
UNDER,
$1
OVER
·
~
.
FR
I
*MODERN ROCK.LIVE*,
$3
COVE~-'.•·
• $1.50
BOTTLE BEER SPECIAL
&
A
LIVE MODERN
ROCK
BAND
SAT.
~1.50
WELL DRINKS FOR
lADlfS
·
-~EVERYONE
$1.50
BOTTLE BEER
_
SPECIAL
~
ALL
EEQU~ST DJS
TIM
&
ED,
~3
COVER
1.
2.
3.
4.
.
5.
·
s .
7.
8.
·
s.
10.
·
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
BEASTIE BOYS
:
GET
if
TOGETHER
LUSCIOUS JACKSON
.
.
CITY SONG
.
.
. . .
.
WEEZER
.
UNDONEnHESWEATER SONG
THEY MIGHT BE GIANTS
THERMOSTAT
:.
.
·
STONE TEMPLE PILOTS
-INTERSTATE
LOVE SONG
JUDY BATS
·
HAPPY SONG
·
.
.
DINOSAUR JR.
FEEL
.
THEPAIN
LOVE SPIT LOVE
AM I WRONG?
.
BLUES TRAVELER
HOOK
SKY CRIES MARY
SHIPWRECKED
.
.
.
REM
Vt/HA
rs
THE°FREQUENCY, KENNETH?
STEREO LAB
PING PONG.
•
.
MAGNA
POP
$LOWLY,SLOWLY
DADA
·
ASK THE DUST
·
LETTERS TO CLEO
/
SEE
DAVE MATTHEWS BAND
RECENTLY
THE FARM
COMFORT
L7
SHffL/ST
SMALL
FACTORY
_
VALENTINE
WEEN
/
CAN'T PUT
MY
FINGER ON
IT
This is the top 20 taken from
9/13/94
to
9/25/94
Thank
You,
Scott Graves & Beth Dooley
THE
CIRCLE;
SEPTEMBER 29, 1994 ·
3
Garttana Cotrimons become wet·
·
residence
,,·
·
.
···•
... ·
..
·
..
,.
·,'
..
.
.
.
.
..
'
.
'
area
by:RON
JOHNSON
Assistant. Editor
. .Drinke~. at' Marist rejoice,• there
1s a change m the campus drinking
policy.
.
.This· year, apartments within
_Gartland Commons housing students ·
of both legal age and below legal
age are now considered wet resi-
dences.
. ·.
· Lastyear, only apartments whith
students who were of legal drinking
ag~ fell '!}nder the heading of wet
residence. ·
Director of Housing, Jim Raimo ·
said the chang boiled down
to
com: ·
mon sense ..
· "If .you we.re 21, wouldn't you
wantto drink?," Raimo said.
Students residing within Gartland
have . responded positively to the
change of policy.
.
·
A majority of the Gartland resi-
dents, felt the shift was only natural.
Showing enthusiastic support for the
change.
.
. .
.
Natasha Parker, a senior business
marketing· major· was among . those
who welcomed. the change.
.
· · "I'm pretty anxious- to sit down
after a hard day and have a beer
without worrying about an
R.A.
or
R.D.," Parker said.
Kevin O'Neill, 22,
a
senior.com-
munications major, explained why he
Marist cable still not
satisfying community
Gerberich also said that if they
by MICHAEL
J.
LaCUGNA
were to pull another· NBC· affiliate
Staff Writer
off of a satellite, they would get one
that was of another state that not
.
many students would be frorn.
Marist College:isexperiencing. ·.',.In-other., words, it's not;i!i .the·• .
technical difficulties when. itcoines . students' best interest to. have a sta- ..
to student satisfaction with the choice lion that would feature news that the
of cable stations and the quality of students had little interest'in,
if
ariy.
reception.
·
· ·
Sansola said that the solution. to ·
Students are starting to wonder the problem would be to·gera stron-
why they only have ·,a certain ger antenna.
amount of channels. ..
.
.
Students who would like to have
Some are also annoyed with the . other channels are encouraged by
reception from some of the channels, Sansola . to · contact their Student
especially channel four.
Government Association representa-
Marist has
15
channels; includ-
lives.
ing Marist College Television.
"Student government is the fo-
Steve Sansola, assistant . dean of rum if students want to raise• issues
housing and activities said . that the • of the kinds of channels they want,"
selection of channels was based on
Sansola said.
:
supported the change ..
.. "Just for the fact that I am of age
and that I should be able to drink
without getting· hassled from those
who dictate power from us," O'Neill
said.
:
.
.
Elizabeth Donohoe, 20, a junior
communications major, has her own
reasoning for supporting the change.
"Cause, I'll be 21 in four
months," Donohoe said.
Still, some preached a word of
caution. Greg Williams, 21, a senior
accounting major, stated there could
be some·problems.
"Sure, I support these changes.
As long as, people handle them re-
sponsibly," Williams said.
Raimo noted the shift was not so ·
much a change in policy as it was a
loosening of restrictions.
He said there would be more
drinking in Gartland, because there
would be more people of legal age
within Gartland.
"The North End is mainly com-
prised of juniors and seniors," Raimo
said, ''.We encouraged sophomores to
reside in the Mid-Rise."
According to Raimo, the Hous-
ing Office has a loosely constructed
plan for. four-year residents.
Raimo likens his plan to a "rights
of passage".
"Rights of passage means you're
going to be going through some
changes. We will be there to present
you with different challenges and
experiences which we hope will help
you to grow as a person," Raimo
said.
However, sophomores would
now be contained to the dry Mid-
Rise and Champagnat building as
best as possible.
This would leave the wet North
End, open to juniors and seniors .
The trouble lies in discerning how
realistic this goal of maintaining dry
residences for under-age students
really is.
Gartland residents had their
doubts. Barton Ng, a junior commu-
nications major, was one resident
who voiced his doubts.
"It's not really realistic, but it's
better than it was," Ng said.
what the administration thought was
. One student followed the advice
a wide variety of channels that in-
::,f Sansola and sought the help of
eluded news both local and national, .
·
'the ~GA and as a result, the campus
entertainment, sports, and educa- · ,now carries the Black Entertainment
· The Marlst College Seal Has been placed In the center of the rotunda.
It
ls part of the
tional programming.
· . .
.
Television, channel· 23.
$27 million renovation plan.
C1n:1ep11o1o1Ka111y
link
. The channels that Maristhas'fall . Faiza Brown; a senior, went to
.ijitotwcfqi_t~gor,ies:,the,~~anne)s_that,,.:13ob~ynfh,t~f!~.-coordi11~~Qrofstu- .-.·· ..
·:~e.
·•c.
··•r·et'ar·
1•e·
"-s·. '
' M ·
. . ,,
·a"":n·
-•s•1·
·-a·b•
l·e•' •
to cotne to.
are received by,satellite
·
an9theoijes
'
':lent .activities and Sa_nso11,1,
who
0
that are transmitted 'to the antenna· :1dvised her to start
a
.petition, .get
on.·top:of.Ghampagnat.H:~~., .
i,etween,500ai:1d600signatures,and
t
•
b security
rece~forih!~~~/!:e~a;:?~~b~:~-
th
e?.~~:to~aili~ ~able channels ca-.
an agreem.en . over .
JO .
ceived. by the ariten~ae.
< .. . . . · ··
tered to the black and hispanic popu-
security for those who might be af-
. For ins.tarice; chaiirielfour NBC
lation,''. Brown said. "lthought that
by SUZANNE YANUSZ
fected.
fa
transmitted from Nev, York City · ..
was
wrong, so I. started a petition
Staff Writer
Betty Jaycox, administrative sec-
and it is received by the Champagnat
md the majority of students who
retary for the division of science, and
antenna.
.
.
, _ ·• ..
_ ·•· .·
,igned it were white."
This . past summer, the one of the negotiators for the union,
.
•
,
There ·are are large amounts of
Brown began her questto acquire
.
secretary's union at Marist agreed said any company is going to try to
jnterference .bi,:tween NewYorkCity
BET in the middle .of the 1992 fall
they would not accept a contract if save money, but they should think
.and Poughkeepsie andthe reception
,emester.
.
.
-
it did not guarantee them job secu-
about people who work at the school
often has static and an unsteady pie-
In .thespring of the 1993, there
rity.
while doing these things.
ture.
were many meetings that involved
This situation could have ulti-
"We were not asking for job se-
CarlGerberich, vice president of
administration, SGA members, and
mately led to a strike if terms were curity for a lifetime," said Jaycox.
Marist College Information Services, . Brown,
·
not agreed upon.
"There is no such thing. We were
sa.id there was a way to solve the
The end result was BET being
The secretaries decided they just asking for job security for the
p~oblern of the reception on channel
introduced to the campus at the be-
would push for job security in their life. of our contract, which is three
four, put it poses oth_er problem~jf , :ginning ~fthe fall semester of that :contract when they learned of the years."
it were to be rectified.
..
.
la.ine
year," .·
. ·..
. . .
college bookstore "outcasting."
Three quarters of the union's
,'~Vie
could.pull in another NBC
"If
you want something on this
This occurs when an area of work meeting~ from March through July
a.ffiliate,fromA}b;mi:qff the antenna ·, campus, a petition is the way to go,"
is sent to an·outside agency. At least dealt.with the issue of job security.
and it would be less interference than
Br(ll,Vn said.
.
. . .·
. . -
four positions were lost at the Marist During that time, the secretaries wore
channelfour,'' he said. :'But we have
·
She also said that starting at the
bookstore when it was taken over red on some Thursdays, and wore
a lot
of
students from the
·
New York
_
begil)lling of the semester is betii,:r
if
by Barnes and Noble.
black on one Friday in June when
City area who like to
kn<>W
what is
.
yoµ are trying .to get the station by . · Although the
_
se people regained they were in danger of not having a
going on: athome. Another option is
tlie next semester.
their positions at the bookstore, this contract. These actions symbolized
to pull anotlief NBC affiliate in off
caused the secretaries tQ want a pro-
the secretaries' solidarity and illus-
a satellite, but whenever. yoll pull
"Bob (Lynch) and Steve
vision in their contract, so if another trated that all of the unions' mem-
another channel.off of the satellite,
(Sansola) were very supportive and
situation similar to the bookstore hers wanted job security.
it
costs more money."
cooperative,'_' Brown said.
should occur, there would be job· ·
Two of the main negotiators were
Glen Carter, executive vice
presidentof the union, and Carol
Coogan, who represented the school.
Sometime in mid-August, both
the secretary's union and the school
came to an agreement.
Some of the additions to the sec-
retaries' contracts were that they
would be notified if a situation were
to occur that might threaten their
jobs, and that the school would mini-
mize the impact of subcontracting
on bargaining union members.
"The new contract was not all that
we wanted, but better than nothing,"
said Jaycox.
If
the situation was not resolved
after informational picketing, then
the secretaries would have gone on
strike.
However, Jaycox said that strik-
ing is the last thing any union would
want to do, and they were not plan-
ning to go on strike unless it was a
last resort.
The Circle apologies
to Jim Raimo for the
typo In his name last week.
\
4
11IE
CIRCLE,
:
'
sEf'IEMBER 29, 1994
•
:nn:clRcU.
f£ATUR£
SEPIEMBER29, 1994
5
Former New
·
Jersey High School principal gives
motivational lecture to Marist community
by
DARYL RICHARD
Staff Writer
Fo~er East Side High principal
Joe Clark, after whom the movie
"Lean On Me" was modeled, spoke
to students last week, inspiring them
with messages of determination and
power of the individual.
''The purpose of your existence
on this planet is not to make a living
but to make a life
...
a useful life, a
significant life. Thus, do all the good
you can," said Clark, reciting the
words of16th century preacher John
Wesley.
Students packed the campus the-
ater last Wednesday, sitting on the
floor and standing in the foyer to
listen to his speech.
Clark
is
best known as the sub-
ject of the movie
"Lean
On Me,"
the story of a man hired to clean up
an inner-city high school plagued by
violence and drugs.
.
.
.
.
However, having a Hollywood
movie modeled after him is just one
example of Clark's extensive public
recognition.
.
He has appeared on the covei of
Time magazine, been on two
seg-
ments of "60 Minutes,"
.
written two
books and received a Presidential Ci-
tation. His response to receiving all
the attention: "That's irrelevant to
the process."
REVIEW
by SCOTI SIGNORE
Food
Guy
In his speech, Clark stressed the
idea that one individual can make a
difference in the world. He told the
audience that fear is the biggest thing
holding people back from doing what
they think is right.
"Fear is nothing more than false
expectations appearing real," Clark
.
said.
·
According to Clark, no person is
free if
.
they are afraid to speak the
truth. He said sticking up for what
you believe in is extremely impor-
tant in life.
Clark told students to "stand on
your principles and take the conse-
quences."
He added that after conquering
your
.
fears comes the most impor-
tant task in life - developing a posi-
tive mental attitude.
"The person who has removed
"can't" and "impossible" from their
vocabulary is a conqueror," Clark
said. "You're looking at a con-
queror."
,
Clark repeatedly emphasized that
it is essential to make the most of
life,
and when striving for your goals
never be afraid to fail because "suc-
cessful people fail more often
·
than
unsuccessful people."
Most of the people attending the
speech were impressed with Clark's
words.
"I found it highly motivational,"
said graduate student Terri
burgers, PhB!y cheese steaks,
reubens and grilled chicken.
. .
I sampled a "chicken cordon
bluewich," served on a bulky roll,
This week's review is
_
hased
consisting of a chicken breast, ham,
upon my
.
vi.sit
.
t
.
o the Easy Street swiss and· dijonaise dressing.
,
PCafia_r
,
k~;"}(jca
.
}fcl
.
j;t:>ii
.
~:
Route
_
:.
~
,
:
iii
,
_
Hyde
_
·
:
:,,:
.
With)f:fev/minor exceptio!ls, it
,
was eicce11ent.
·
..
,
. .
The
Easy
Stl'~ei
'
eaf'e pro~ides a
I was disappointed that my sand-
•
peaceful
.
atmosphere
·
amidst the. wich
·.
was covered in the dijonaise
.
chaos of Route 9. (That is, the
dressing. (I strongly recommend ask-
.
amount of peace
O
must depend on
ing for it on the side.)
your time
.
of visit. On this particular
Also, rather than serve either po-
Saturday afternoon,
·
l was lucky
tato chips or french fries, the Easy
enough to have just a few distraca
Street has cole slaw accompany the
.
tions from my meal.)
.
sandwich. I would have enjoyed
-.
The walls are cluttered with items
something other than the cole slaw.
thatare supposed to remind the cus-
.
Sandwich prices range from
tomer of the 1920s (ie: pictures of
$4.95, hamburger, to $7.95, barbe-
.
Model A's).
·
·
,
·
.
cue chicken sandwich. Dinners start
..
.
.
··
.
On one wall hangs a sign
-
that
at $11.95, chicken parmesan, and go
reads ''relax and enjoy." It's an ap-
up to $17.95
for
barbecue chicken
propriate sign and it's been appro-
and ribs.
·
priately
_
placec:I.
:
.
.
·
.
.
.
This is riot a place where one
Upon entering the restaurant, the
should spend $17.95 for one dinner.
i
c:ustonier
·
is greeted with
·
two
.
deci-
I should mention that as an appe-
.
sions that are significant to his or
tii~r, I sampled the pizza bread and
her visit: the
.
first is' the
.
preference
a
·
cup ofonion soup.
:
-
.
ofsmoku:tg, the
·
second'is the bar.
.
.
T~e bread, cajun spiced and
.
•·
Your answers will undoubtedly , topped with onions and marinara
affect your dining experience.
sauce, was a great choice. The mini
·
.
For example, if you choose to sit
pizza was generously portioned and
in
a smoking section, you are forced
generously priced ($3.95.)
..
to
'
sit in a booth, or near the bar.
•
My visit was affected by two sig-
(Unfortunately, if you make this
nificant events.
choice, yourbooth is accompanied
My first negative feelings were
by a win~ciwseat of Route 9
.
)
based upon the size of my beverage.
If you choose not to smoke, then
I ordered a Coke, and when it
you can sit iri either a booth or at a
came, I couldn't get over how small
table in a place tha
.
t is completely .it was. By the time I had left, I had
isolated from the bar. I chose not to
ordered three more.
smoke.
Also, I was disappointed with the
Now, in regards to where to sit..J
service.
don't think it really matters except
My waitress was nowhere near
foi
the booths!
being a pleasant individual. She
The
·
booths in the Easy Street
didn't even act as if she cared
if
I
Cafe are, without a doubt, the most
was enjoying myself. (And this is
uncomfortable seats in Dutchess
before I ordered the three Cokes.)
County.
.
In
terms of an overall evaluation,
.
I sat down for about one second
it was below average.
and then immediately moved to a
I was disappointed in the service,
table with relatively comfortable
the dijonaise dressing, the booth and
chairs.
the size of my coke.
Easy Street's menu may have the
And although I was pleased with
most diverse options in the area. You
the pizza bread and the onion soup,
can get almost anything.
what was bad outweighed what was
They have a ton of reasonably
good.
priced appetizers and sandwiches.
At some point in the future, I may
They also have a great number
go there again, but when I do, I will
of dinners, but they weren't as rea-
enjoy some more appetizers and
sonably priced (ie. chicken
again sit at a non- smoking table.
parmesan, $11.95.)
I will continue to avoid the over-
Some of their sandwiches include
priced dinners and I
will
order a
turkey and roast beef clubs, cheese-
larger drink.
Fitzgibbons.
She added that his message reas-
sured her that it is alright
fo
be alone
when searching for success in life
because your views may not always
agree with others'.
·
"His speech was structured so
well.
It
reminded us that you have
to be the best you can be,'' said
sophomore Carolyn Sutton.
Sutton was also very impressed
with Clark's stage presence. She said
she felt his presentation grabbed the
audience.
Clark is viewed by many as a
very charismatic speaker. He paces
up and down the stage while deliv-
ering his speech, combining the
words of such worldly figures as
Charles
Dickens,
William
Shakespeare and Martin Luther King
Jr. with his own insight on life.
His extensive vocabulary, includ-
ing words like pertinacious (inflex-
ible, persistent) and ostensible (pre-
tended, not real), made his speech
not only entertaining, but educational
as
well.
Before his closing, Clark toucheci
briefly upon his views on race rela-
tions. He said he feels we should
not judge people by their ethnicity,
skin color or any other physical trait.
"We should judge people by the
content of their character and let our
true feelings out. Then we will be
able to blend this dichotomy and we
can be one."
Americans last." Clark added that
Clark said there is too much con-
when we reach this goal he feels we
cenlration on every individual's char•
will have the best country anyone
acteristics and needs and that what
has ever seen.
·
we need to do is work together as
In his final words he urged ev-
one and recognize our similarities
eryone to never give up in their life-
before we focus on our differences.
long endeavors and to always put
"It's time for us as a nation to
100 percent into everything they do.
come together as one. We must stop
"Never accept mediocrity. A dia-
ethnomania and race consciousness.
mond is nothing more than a piece
We are all Americans first and
of coal that stuck to its job."
Here comes the rain. Dark clouds hang over Marist this week,
drenching the campus.
Circle phn!o/ Kattr/ un;,
Peace C9rps offers
graduates
different employment opportunities
by
CHRISTINE WOOD
Staff Writer
Two Peace Corps representatives
visited Marist on Mon, Sept. 19,
hoping to recruit graduating seniors
for their 1995 mission.
The Peace Corps, which began
under the Kennedy administration in
1961, hopes to promote world peace.
They help the people of interested
countries and areas meet their need
for trained manpower and promote
a better understanding of Americans.
In the past 33 years, more than
145,000 Americans have been Peace
Corps volunteers.
Peace Corp volunteers get to
travel, help fight hunger and pov-
erty, and other social ills.
They have served in more than
100 countries in Africa, the Middle
East, Asia, the Pacific, South
America,
·
Central America, the Car-
ibbean and Central Europe.
"The Peace Corps gives people
the opportunity to see the world and
get something back at the same
time," Penny Anderson, a Peace
Corps representative, said.
Serving at least 27 months in the
community level, Peace Corps vol-
unteers can work in fields v:irying
from: small business and coopera-
tive development, agriculture, for-
estry and environment, fish culture,
health and nutrition, education, en-
gineering and industrial arts.
"You don't have to be an expert
in any particular field to join the
Peace Corps," Anderson said.
Volunteers receive eight to 12
weeks of intensive language, cultural
and technical training prior to their
community work.
Members periodically attend in-
service
workshops after entering their
rural or urban communities.
Volunteers receive a monthly
allowance for housing, food, cloth-
ing, and incidentals during service.
Medical and dental care are free,
as well as, transportation to and from
overseas sites. Twenty-four vacation
days are given to each volunteer.
Most student loan payments are de-
ferred for the duration of Peace
Corps service and a partial Perkins
Loan cancellation is available.
Following Peace Corps service,
volunteers receive a re-adjustment
allowance of approximately $5,4000.
Job-hunting assistance is avail-
able, and volunteers are eligible for
federal employment on a non-com-
petitive basis.
Over 50 institutions offer special
scholarships and financial aid for
returning volunteers, including the
.
Fellows/USA Program which offers
assistance for employment and
graduate school.
Four Marist graduates are cur-
rently serving in the Peace Corps.
Other Peace Corps alumni in-
clude Cabinet Secretary Donna
Shalala, author Paul Theroux, and
TV show host Bob Villa.
Applications for the Peace Corps
are available in Career Development.
Peace Corps representatives will
return to Marist on Tue, Oct. 4, for
interviews.
I
.
I
t
f
l
!
6
THE
CIRCI.E,:£01'f
ORIAL
~EPrEMBERZ9, 199~
THE CIRCLE
.
MARIST;
W_ET?"ff!ROOH
W;SS
THAN
ADf~UA!§:f.
MARIST COLLEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE, NY 12601
·
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER
Kristina Wells, editor
Dana Buoniconti, senior editor
Justin Seremet; senior editor
Andrew Holmlund, sports editor
ON
$O
ET'5 1-Rv\
c.vJ.
M\OR
•
✓
Meredith
Kennedy,feature editor
Teri L. Stewart,
editorial page editor
Tom Becker,
colwnns editor
John Dougherty,
assistant editor
Dawn Martin,
assitant editor
Ron Johnson,
assistant editor
Larry Boada,
assistant editor
Lynn Wieand,
assistant editor
Matt Dombrowski,
distribution manager
G.
Modele
Clarke,faculty advisor
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
Take A
t
• ·
Political thoughts.ofthe.·week
. c. •
1
0
n
Welcome back to all !he up. perclass.--~en
The health.. car.e deba.te which fi.11 ed th. e
nd women. (I am workmg on my political
media airwave.s for the ·past. two . and a half
irrectness), to yet another year at Marist:
years has slowly come to an end.
.
.·.
To all those«first-year students", V(elcome •· , Her(?'S !ilookb~y~nd .the ~edia sensaJion~
The soil is down, the newly-paved sidewalks have come to life, the
to the _most enjoyable four (or five) years of· ·a1is1n: ru.id_;artl;tf}ario..¥s r~~sims the ~ealth
glass panes in the Student Center are sparkling, and it appears as though
your life. .
. .
. .
· ·..
.
car~~d!~te~llnton tried to do too much,
Marist College is truly a sight to see
The reason 1 queStion the four. years .is
too soon: Changing ·the health
-
care system
•
because some "first-year students" could not
·
. ·
· .
•
· ·• • · · ·. • • ·
.
And hey we've got Barries and Noble too.
handle three hours;.
.
. . .
woul~ h~ve b
.
e~n the.largest domestic soci~
' ·
·
·
· ' " $
·11·
·
change smce. Lyndon Johnson's
Great Soc1-
B_ut there 1s_ so!llethmg at Manst that w1ll take more than 27 m1 ion
But, I do not get paid to rag on the stu-
ety.
to fix and rev1tabze.
dents, it is my job to fill you in on what is
It
was not an easy challenge and Clinton
And I'm not talking about the library.
happening around the world and i~your back-
wanted tC? _plc::as~ _too many pe~ple. without
The issue ~t han? is studen_t apathy.
ya
rd
·
.
· ..
. ·:·,
·.
.
·. ·.
co7;6i::;~~s~·fuajor issues; affordability
Let's face
It.
This campus JUSt doesn't care..
. .
Bubbaand.th~Presidenthavc::bee~.":'ork-
:of care (premiums),·cost- sharing; benefits,
Last week The Circle broke a story on an arrest made in the one-year-
mg verr. hard to get so~e form of nat!onal
medicaid, quality assurance.aiid
.
<::o,nsUIJ1er pro--
ld
,
healt~ care passed, but sm<:e (:;on~ess .i_s. on .. tection and access. for. underserved c:ommuni-
0
rape ~ase.
.
. .
..
.
vacation, health care ha!l b~en put on ·hold:
ties, health
care
reformers ,could'.not obtain
You might have expected at least one person on t~s. campus, either a
National health car~ would give (that's m~jority support.from Congress.·
·
. _, ·.
student or a member of the faculty, would have written a letter to the
right, give) everyone health care. 1 know your
-The plan. w:as. t~o con;ip~eheps1ve. and
editor regarding the article or the editorial.
next question; who is going to:pay: for it?,·
· contr~versial.
~ ~illary_ Chn.~on ~nd Ira
W ll
h
f
lk
?
··
· · · ·
~.
Magazmer, the pnglllal designers of.the health
e guess
W
a~,
~
S.
.
.
Look'in the mirror. I! i.s that s~pl~.
.. care plan, tried to an~idp~te,fhe prqple!115 of
There was nothmg m our mailbox Monday mornmg.
..
.
The taxpayers are going to.be picking-up• health care reform with the help of therr 500
Were we surprised?
·
'·
..
.
.. ; '.
·!
,. _,,,. ; '
.....
the bill ·SO'everyone c,µj!have:f~it: and equi!} :: J>.ersoil'task f<?ts«::d
.:"i
:,:<»:,;
;!i!
.1:'v''.>'1!'"~
N t
11 .
coverage. , ' •. · ·
·
· · > ·: .,;
·,
,,·>
ra
•. •
:The problem
.
~ w,ith m~erest group~ spen<l-
O
~ea y.
.
.
.
.
. .
·
.
. ·.
ing over $300 million'figliting:against it and
Luckily, some helpful students came to our rescue and handed m letters ..
I
have thought about it and realize th_at
with the ongoing partisan<bickering in the
minutes before deadline.
after I graduate, I really do not need a joo.
House and Sen.~te,Jt was impossible for them
But, we shouldn't ha':e _to p~rsuade people to write letters to the editor. .
Follow mefor
a
second. Ifl do not work,· to
~:;~~
~~!~~-the original 1,342 page
And what about adm1mstrahon?
.
.
·
I can collecttmemployment,lcould apply f~r
health .care proposa}Jo( its complexity,
.
And
They should have. at least had a tiny bit to say about the article,
the
~~~~~er::e:id
I
wo.uld have co.mpl,ete medi-· freside1:1tCl~to~ l~ite~_.his:scope. ~y
refu~-
ediWtorhiat1, orthjusdt thle Mfirst_ is?sue in general.
.
This plan does not give_peopl~ ~ny incen-
_
~~:n:i~!11Jg~ll ~at .did not guarantee 100
·
a
S
e e~ ,
anst.
.
.
!!Ve t~ go out an~ get a JOb.Jt_g1ves them
.
>The
pubUc is:noLready
for
such a
re-
The sad truth 1s no one on this campus cares enough· to react to any
mcenhve to 1I1ooch off the government as well
form. Although a poU conducted ·by 'fime/
story or any issue.
as the taxpa!ers. . .
i
,
.
, . .
. : . .
.
CNN
_on ~u~. 4show:d that 77 percent of
It is truly unfortunate.
.
Some wo.uld say I am a cold heartless . Americans sttllv:ant universal cov~rage, only
,.
A
· f f
· ,
•
.
.
person y,ho does not think about the thou- , 49 percent wanted the
_
gove~entto re~late
s a m~tter
O
act, it s pathet~c.
. .
.
.
sands and thousands of people who
.
cari-
not
the
C()!i~.. .
. ·· •.
• . • • ·.
. . · .. ·• .
Everythmg that happens on this campus md1rectly or d1rectly affect.s
afford the astronomical prices of medical at~
.
c
'l'here i~
~<:>
~an~ avoid
_
t~~
fi.S~~•
_
.llni:v~r-
you the students
tention. Nottnie., -
· .
sa_! coyerag~.,w1H1n~olye ~:~istribu.tionJ>fm-
'
·
, •
. .
•·.
.
.
.
come and.d1Sruptsatisfactc,ry arrangements for
So, why don
t
you care?
~Just do not be.heve that Ishould get stuck : .many Ainericans and this
is
not something
You cared about parking. You cared about the cafe hours. You cared
;,aymg
!
0
r so1I1e9ne els~
_
who :slacks off.:: ; : , . ,most Ameri~s
:
advocate. ·.
.
. . .
b
.s:
d .
.
.
. . .
I believe that compames should be required::· •"-Now· •tha·t •s·o· m·e ·causes• ·o· f. the f:ailed plan
a out tax on
.100
1tems. You cared about cultural d1vers1ty.
. ·
. ·
· . ·· · ·
·
·
. . ..
. .
. ·
.
.. · · ·. .
•
•
.
.
. .
. • .
. .. . .. .
. ·.
. . .
.
. have been addressed, where do we go from
So why not care about other issues, hke rape and v10lence.
to give their employees some· form of health
·
here? · .
·
.
·
•
C
·
· ·•
·
• ·, ... · · ·. · .. ·
Sure these topics are taboo and shocking, but they do affect this cam-
care.IknowthatPizzaHutandJvkDonald's
'Let'sstartbyrecognizingthreecompeUing
us
have taken a lot. of abuse b_e~use they do. not : reasons why. health care reform should be re-
p . .
.
.
. .
.
have health benefits for therr employees.
·
,
examined next year. .
.. . .· ..
All we ask 1s that the students of Manst College give up the apathy and
In the United states 38 million Ameri-
start reacting to issues that affect you.
Bolh of these companies make millions of .. cans lack hea
.•. · 1th
ins.
uran~e
.• These. Americans
dollars a year and they should be responsible d
h
•
Hey Marist-The Circle is your newspaper. Itis for the Marist commu-
for providing care.
·
•
0
not ave the b8;iic services of unpiuniza-
nity, about the Marist community, by student .members of the Marist
Basically, 1 am saying that there is a prob- tionA.~J!r~~
1
t!~P~agnti:/;:f;:;~:e
~~4
community.
.
lem with our system. I just do not think Bubba Human Development Report, every industrial
The students on this campus.like to complain about subjects such·as the
has the answer.
' ·
na~ion, except the Unit~d States,. considers
d · ·.
·
1· ·
h
·
b
·
·11
·
·
d
What troubles me is the hard push to get universal health care an inherent nght.
a mm1strat10n, po 1c1es, ousmg, ut no one
WI
wnte m an express
something passed soon.
. More than 22 milli~n Americans will lose
their views.
insurance temporarily
by
switching or los•
Why not just give it a shot?
We all -know that Ointon based a good ingjobs next year. Face it, jobs are not guar-
Th
. • .
t
I.
part of her
(I
am sorry, I meant his) campaign anteed.
IS IS
no a po ice-state.
of getting national health care and
if
he does
In the same manner health insurance is
Administration is not going to have security hunt you down in the
not, election
'96
could be very interesting.
not guaranteed. Ameri~s that float from job
middle of the night and dispose of you in the. Hudson River1·ust because
Should there be a regulation on the cost of !o jofib
0
have to find altem_ative m_ eans o_f_pay-
medical attention?
health
d
th
al
you have something t? say a,bout_ the rape article or any other story.
~~-
•.
care urmg
err transition
Take our word for 1t. We re still here.
Should an aspirin COSt $S while you are in
Medical choice
is
decreasing for Ameri-
the hospital?
Part of the education process is to learn how to stand up for yourself,
.
cans with h~Ith insurance. In 1988, 71 .~r-
d to lea n how to react to issues which bother you or concern you
~hould the taxpayers_ be responsible for
cent of Amencans could go to any physician
an
r
·
paymg someone else's bills?
they wanted.
You are at Marist to get an education. Use what you have learned so
.
In 1993, only 49 percent could, because
far and start caring about your college.
These are all quest_ions that need to
be
companies forced workers into health mainte-
•
.
·
addressed and not burned through.
nance organi·zati·ons (HMOs)
How can you be happy here
1f
you constantly cotnplam but never do
.
·
•
·
This idea of national health care affects
Clearly, the American health care system
anything about it?
:veryone and Clinton is in a rush to get some-
still has problems. Any health care reform bill
Now is your big chance to make a difference and to get rid of the
thing passed so 1996 w~n't.
be
hard.
passed before Congress adjourns on Oct. 7 will
a ath
not address these concerns.
P Y · .
.
. .
Something needs to be done but it is cer-
Let's hope that the 104th Congress can look
The Cucle
IS g1vmg you that chance.
:ainly not this.
beyond the political rhetoric and propose real-
Run
with
it.
istic solutions to provide the uninsured with
This is
your time to get things off your chest.
Scott A. Sullens is one of The Circle's
bas~:~:~:S•~~\~h~~~h~~
1
'it
ic1:::,~
Just
do
it.
political columnists.
*
political columnists.
.
DIE
CIRCU,
VIEWPOINT
SEPrEMBER29, 1994
-
1
·
.
Nfarist
·
students, faculty need to
exercise their writing skills
_
Take a look afthis page. How
'
cultural diversity was the main
many letters to the editor do you see?
issue that people could not stop talk-
.
We were
'
disappointed to fmd no
ing about.
.
one
_
in the
·
.
Marist
-
community
.
had
Did we
.
see a
.
change
.
occur be-
even a thought about anything.
cause of any complaints?
Last week, The Circle published
Someone on this campus was
its first issue.
.
d
What did you read at the top of
rape
·
.
the front page?
·
.
.
.·
One of the most horrifying expe-
.
"f'.
ormer Marist Student Arrested
riences that could happen to some-
on Rape
;
Ch~rges."
one
__
and
.
it was done by a former
For the three or four years that
member
·
of our
.
community.
we have been here, Marist has been
Last September you rallied for
built up as a community school, yet
..
safety. "Take back the night" it was
where
is
the community participa-
called.
tion that is needed to bring about
change and answers?
We came togeth~r. We were a
•
"community" in every sense of the
We hear the
·
complaints in the
word .
.
hallways, in our
'
dorms, and when
we're
-
out with friends,
.
.
yet very
What happe~ed after t~e rally?
rarely does someone make an effort
·
.
Did you just forget about it or maybe
to get answers, make changes or
you_ ~on't care anymore?
question why?
.
·
Did you find a solution to this
Last year various topics set off
tragic problem and forget to tell The
an onslaught of comments.
Circle?
Editor:
In our opin
_
ion, people should be
asking "how did it happen?"
·
Could it have been prevented?
• Are there others?
·
What does a community do about
this problem?
·
Ignore it for another
year, wait till some new piece of evi-
dence shows up or the investigation
is closed.
No. Talk to administration, talk
to your peers, write a letter
io
the
editorto let the Marist "community"
know exactly how you feel about this
·
incident or any other topic you feel
strongly about.
We deemed it important enough
to inform you, the students.
.
Now would
.
be a good time to
take some positive action of your
own.
Teri
L.
Stewart is The Circle's
editorial page editor and Lynn
Wieland is an assistant editor.
Last weeks article regarding the
Editor:
the Student Uovemment Association
rape that took
;
place this past year
·
In the Sept. 22 issue of The· will be seriously considered.
brought to mind some changes that
Circle, two similar letters were pub-
The solution must be an efficient
Marist had implemented
'
to ensure
lished expressing students' frustra-
one
;
benefiting all students: upper-
the safety· of-its students.
·
ti
_
oils with the parking poli~y on
classmen, underclassmen, residents
These'. measures included
·an
es-
;
campus
;
.
'
.
.
.
and commuters.
.
cort sen:ice
and
campus van at night .
.
·
These two students are not alone.
·
.
Let SGA know how you want it
This year these two services have
.
}dariv
students are upset about the
'
to be revised and we can work to-
been eliminated due
'
to budget cuts.
•
,
gether to improve the parking policy
I
understand that campus beau ti-
·;
.
parking
.
policy.·
·
.
.
..
fo!
all Marist
.
students.
fication efforts are important
;
for
re-
,
··
'
The question is, how do we want
.
.
.
cruitiiig purposes and for its
'
students'
·
·
it to be resolved.
We are your
SGA,
here to he.~
enjoym~nt· and pride in their
cam~
.
•
.
. .
.
.
.
.
.
all students.
.
_
..
pus.
··
·
·
•
·
-
·
•
: .
.. •
.
·
f-1att ~il!~s,_the
;
S~u~ent
_
bqdy
.
We have an_open door pobcy and
!f9
,
~~~e.r;
,.
~~e
;
<\~Sth
.
~tt«?
.
be_ai!tx
:,{
Pr~1~en!, lS
.
~t~r~sted lllalmprovmg
.
"
..
are
.
always
·
Y.,lllmg to talk to any
can
.
~<!t
_
compensate
·
ror
·
'
aU
'
the
"
cut-
·
·
!he- parkin~ s1tuati<;>n
.
and would be
student.
backs in safety precautions that have
.
interested
Ill
your mput.
Rebecca Kuchar,
Director of Public Relations,
SGA
occurre:itzabeth Shamal
unior
Any
_
solu~itms offered to Matt and
.FJnal
-
Letters to the Editor
·
_
are due Sunday,
.
Oct. 2 at 5pm.
Letters should
·
be no more
-
..
.
.
.
.
than
.
600 words.
CHECK THIS OUT:
SPC EVENTS
:
_
Natural born
_
psycho
There is that old saying that life is
Well
isn't 'that what rich people
not always fair.
.
do - make a lot of money?
This is supposed to mean some-
Could you be rich and not make
thing - it is supposed to explain any money?
something.
.
Well if it's so accepted that life
isn't always fair, how come people
sue over the stupidest things? And
don't say it's because life isn't fair.
There'.s a kid from my town
who's going to Harvard but is suing
his high school because he wasn't
made Valedictorian.
Poor baby.
I'll tell you that
if
I sit down and
think about that long enough
I might
just get upset ... to my stomach!
It just goes to prove an old theory
that says book smarts never go hand
in hand with street smarts
.
I never used to believe this, but
this kid is floating down the river of
common sense with no paddle ... or
boat.
I
used to think that the whole
book smarts doesn't equal street
smarts theory was just a
way
for
dumb people in school to feel better
and say, "WeJJ, he's just book smart
- he's got no common sense."
Of course exaggerated cases of
this theory probably don
'
t produce
the same degree of success, for
ex-
ample: "Well that illiterate guy over
there who can't tie his shoes, yeah
well he's street smart though."
Only once did I meet a man on
the street who claimed to be rich and
didn't have any money at alJ -
he
also claimed to be Elvis and then
some men in white suits took him
away and told him he had puzzles to
finish.
To me it wasn't worth being book
smart if you were then going to have
no common sense and be street
dumb.
Although it was never a valid
excuse to my parents why I wasn't
studying
.
Mom: Why aren
'
t you studying?
Me:
I
don't wanna get dumb, ma .
.
Mom: Don't get smart with me!
~~:
Okay,
I
won't study then
.
This was usually the kind of ver-
bal exchange that prompted my mom
to see if I could catch various kitchen
utencils thrown at high speeds.
I couldn't.
I'd duck and they'd hit a win-
dow and break and it'd be all my
fault because it didn't hit me.
This really made
an
impression
on me.
I hope no one out there who is
illiterate took offense to what they
just read ...
People always brag that they're
I was once a hostage in a bank
street smart.
robbery
.
and the guy started to fire
What exactly does this mean?
randomly_ and missed me but ~hat-
You've memorized a map of the te~ed a wmdow and the first thmg
I
city or something?
_
.
.
said to the bank, manager was:
"My
Is it that on the street you don't fault - should ve taken that hit
step in dog doo?
...
sorry."
You see a man in a ski ma~k with
But I seriously thought it was
a
gun ;nd deduce there might be stupid to be book smart, make a lot
trouble
•
of money and then be too stupid to
If this is street smart, what ex-
actly
~
would consti1u~e street dumb?
Js
"
street
dumb,
people who look
at the homeless on the sidewalk and
ask them for a quarter?
Is that street dumb?
I don't know?
Am I street dumb for not know-
ing the answer?
Teachers would always point out
the straight A kids and say that they
were-
"going
to grow up
and
be rich
~d make a lot of money."
spend it.
You might actually do the smart
thing and save it.
That's
'
no
fun.
We've
also
neglected
the most
unfortunate people of all.
Those who are both book dumb
and street dumb.
What do they do when they grow
up?
Oh yeah, they wind up hosting a
day-time talk show.
Frank LaPerch
is The Circle's
humor columnist
HOW TO REACH US:
• Mondays 11 am to 5pm
• E-Mail: LT 211, HZAL
• .Phone Mail: X2429
NO LETTERS AFTER 5PM ON SUNDAY
ENTION ALL FACUL
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29TH
LEITERS TO CLEO
THE CLUB COUNCILS ON MARIST COLLEGE CAMPUS
ARE SEEKING FOUR FACULTY ADVISORS
WITH COW POETRY OPENING
9:30 CABARET ROOM
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30TH
COMEDIAN DAN HORN
IN THE THEATER AT 9:30
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4TH
SHARON LUND
LECTURE ON AIDS AWARENESS
8:00
THEATER
ALL EVENTS ARE FREE WITH MARIST I.D.
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 4SPC
TO DONATE THEIR TIME AND EFFORTS
TO'OVERSEE COUNCIL MEETINGS
THE ORGANIZATIONS THAT NEED A FACULTY ADVISOR ARE:
PRODUCTION/PERFORMANCE ORGANIZATIONS
SOCIAL/SERVICEORGANaAnONS
CO-CURRICULAR ORGANIZATIONS
SPORTS CLUBS
MEETINGS ARE HELD ONLY ONCE A MONTH AND WILL
ALLOW YOU TO INTERACT ON A MORE PERSONAL LEVEL
WITH THE STUDENT BODY.
IF INTERESTED CONTACT
NICK CAPUANO, VICE PRESIDENT OF CLUBS
AT
X2699
OR Y.7105
-,,
.
.
.
8
TifE
CIRCLE,
SEPI'EMB~R 29, 1994
Marist in search Of
a
nein
.
of CommuniCcltiQn
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
ad went out, the return
was
noto;er-
.
_appli~ts
frcim ~iilch
·
tO ~hoose.
'
t~ be
.
hired.
.
-
.
.
'
.
rig~rous.
•
'
..
·
.
-
,
.
,
.
.
. .
<
__
·
,
:
<
:
by MAURA BROUILLE'ITE
whelming."
.
-
.
. .
_
_
·
"In most ofolir ads we generally
.·
Nolan's list of qualifica~ions,
·
in':,
·
All ofthe resumes
:
are reviewed
Staff.Writer
At this time, approximately
AO
·
get over
_
a hundred people reply_ing. eluding 28 years of teaching
.
.
~t
by' a seai~h
·com
'
mittee coilsisiirig
0
<>f-
applications have been collected.
We had
.
170 people apply last year Marist, begins with his undetgradu-
five or six communication
_
_
.
depart-
The communication·
.
depart-
-
This low number can be
_
attributed
for
·
a
-
journalism position,". Nolan ate work
.
in English, completed)n
ment faculty member~: Tli
_
is
'
te
_
arn
ment is looking for a few good re- to the· fact that the academic com-
said.
.
_
1952 when he graduated
'
from
works by eliminating candidates until
sumes.
munity is not very active during the
Nolan ~inks the more timely ad Marist.
.
·
-
. .
·
.
.
there are appr«;>ximate,IY 10 remain-
During the summer of 1993, an summer.
will facilitate more interest in a job
The
,
·communication department
ing.
.
·
_
.
.
'
.
.
·
ad went out to the college commu-
,
The small number of candidates
of this caliber. Since
_
the academic is aiming to have a final candi~ate
These resumes
.
are
_
presented
·
_
to
·
nity in the Chronicle for Higher has forced a continuation of the
community
is
more active during the selected for the job by the first of the administration for their approval.
Education announcing the search for search.
fall, the response should be greater. the year. The upcoming months will
The appl
_
icants
·_
are then
·
contacted
a new Dean of Communication and
The ad has been resubmitted for
Nolan was asked to fill the posi-
be busy ones for the selection com-
and invited to visit Marist until a
.
the Arts.
distribution beginning in October. It
tion after the department's former mittee.
.
·
final decision is inade.
·
According to Gus Nolan, acting is the !ntention of the departmentto
chairperson, Sarah S. King, left with-
The process
·
by which the com-
"The
ideal candidate would have
·
chair of the department, "when the bring in a substantial amount of new
out enough time
.
for someone new mittee arrives at a single person is
a doctorate in
a
field to show he is
a scholar, that they have accom--
plished the academic credentials•
themselves that we are looking for
on our staff, that they have been
active in scholarship and have writ-·
ten and published something, that
they are aware of developing trends
in communication, .and that they
would have a grasp of the total pic-
ture of communication," Nol;m said .
TO UR
cont. from
p.
1
. - - - - - - - - - - - - -
.
Nolan will continue as acting
chairpers,:m until January:
·
Earn $500 - $1000 weekly stuffing
envelopes. For details - RUSH $1.00
When a replacement is decided
upon, he will return to teaching two
GROUP AV
sections of organizational communi-
57 Greentree Drive, Sulta 3
cation and two sections of public
with SASE
to:·
.
.
Dover,
DE 19901
opinion.
_
.
.
SELL
~
TRIPS,EARNCASH
.
& GO
FREE!!!
anywhere from
$BO
to $150 dollars
per person.
Also eliminated was the campus
van, which transported students be-
tween parking lots.
According to Student Body Presi-
Maris! College Student Government
dent Matt Gillis, the question of is still working on making the cam-
safety is an ongoing topic, and the
pus a safer place for its students.
Student Travel Services is now hiring campus
representatives. Lowest rates
_
to Jamaica,
Cancun, Daytona and Panama
·
City Beach.
Call 1-800-648~4849
She pointed out that the Mccann
Center is open until 2 a.m. andthat it
is a long walk from there to Gartland
at that hour. Nocella felt that there
should be an option open to the
·
stu-
dents to go a safer way than by foot.
Bo
.
I~ the.escorts and the campus van
SPRlf1G
.
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THE
CIRCLE;
.
SEPl'EM~ER 29; 1
~4
WelcomesAII MaristStudents
and Their Families ·
..
914-691-6011
/
FRANK
GUIDO
HIGHLAND, NY 12528
Gracious Riverside Dining
·
· _
_
2 Minutes from Mid-Hudson Bridge
.
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10
THE
CIRCLt
SEPitMBER
29, 1994
.
..
'
~..
-
,
_
:
,;.';.
;
.
.
.
r-----~--------~-~-~~--~~~~~-----------,
I
I
1
-
·
.
·. .
.•
.
,
.
..
. :
'
·
I
·
:
·
HOW
:·
TO
HANG ON TO
YOUR
DOUGH.
:
I
.
.
.
.
I
·
·
1
-
·
·
,;·
_
.{w1tHouT
CRAMPING
v.plirtsTYLE.)
_
·.
.
,
.
•
.
,
I
- - - - - - - - ~ ~ ~ - _ _ _ _ , .
. ''"'
I
·
·
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.
.
· :
:
.
'' ·
.
I
·
.
I
·
·
,
I"
·
.
:
_(6
Separate "needs" from
''wants."
:
·
_
I
.
. .
Hint: A bed is a need. A
Mr:
Microp
·
hone
I
.
I
I
1
·
is
.
a want.
1
I
·
I
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.
~
.
,
;
'
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bill but
>
only p~y
-
yoor
-
share~
1
:
.
Why put in for s,o.meone el~e·s
:~wordfish
·
. :
;·
·
,
if
all
;
you gotvvas soup?
-
.
.
.
-
.
· --'
,
•
'
:
,
.
_
·
·
I
I
I
I
I
·
·
·
I
·
:
.Cl:n
·
Set aside n,oney for
:
emergencJes.
-
-
·
-
:-
1
Unless you'd r~t0er
.
da,ll_.
your pareri\s
.
.
·
·
1
:
·
for it ·instead.
-
.
.
. .
.
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'
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·
_
6
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Keep
·
your
.
.
eye
,
on
your
:
wa.llet.
:
:
Have a Citib
.
ahk
·
(]assiccard in case you
·
:
..
:
.·
lose it.The Lost:Wallet
5
M
Service can get you
:
:
.
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·
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~
-
a new card usually within ·.
·
-
:
.
:
·
·
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24
·hours aricLhelp replacing vitard6cuments.
:.
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on
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~----~--------~----~----~~----~-~~-~--~~
TH£
CIRCLE,
SEPTEMBER 29, 1994
tt
· BOoters lose . again;
in·
·
·.conn.
on Sat.
Rugby club
looks forward
to fresh start
by TERI L. STEW ART
Staff Writer
The men's soccer team collected
another·defeat in the loss column on
Monday afternoon in Loundonville,
N.Y.
The Red Foxes (1-7 overall; 1-3
in the Northeast Conference) lost to
the Siena Saints, 2-0, in double over-
time.
After being locked in a scoreless
battie at the end of regulation, the
Saints scored two quick goals within
four minutes of the second overtime
to secure the win.
Head Coach Howard Goldman,
who has not seen a Marist soccer
· team lose more than twice to Siena
in 20 years, said this was the best
Saint team he has ever seen.
"Usually we own Siena," the 32-
year head coach said. "They just had
a.really good day."
Freshman goalie Brian Edmonds
had a solid defensive effort for the
Red Foxes by recording 15 saves.
Senior captain Neil Massey said
the team came out strong in the
beginning of overtime, but then it
all fell apart.
'
"We come out from the kick-off
strong," Massey said. "A couple of
minutes later they scored."
According to Goldman, his team
could have had a better game at
midfield.
"With a minute to go, we had a
couple clear shots and we couldn't
put it away," Goldman said. "We
could have ended the game there
The Associated Press
Top 25
College Football Poll
Rank Team
1st-Place Votes
Record
without overtime."
Last Saturday, Marist notched its
first win of the season by defeating
St. Francis
(NY),
2-1, at Leonidott;
Field.
Freshman Cary Smith opened the
scoring gates 30 minutes into the ·
game off a pass from sophomore
Kevin Hardy.
The goal started when the Red
Foxes took the ball from the Terri-
ers at midfield. Hardy made a run
towards the center of the field; while
Smith went to the front post.
Hardy passed the ball past the
Siena defender, and Smith took the
shot and scored.
Junior captain Steven Horsfall
then scored with 43:48 remaining in
the first half.
Goldman said Horsfall's goal
came on a second effort.
"Horsfall took a shot and hit a
defender," Goldman said. •~He got
the rebound and hit it with his right
foot, and it slipped right by the goal-
keeper."
Goldman said his team• gave a
solid effort.
by JASON FARAGO
Staff Writer
If
football is considered to be
the sport of kings, then rugby can
be known as the sport of princes.
Although there are certain dis-
crepancies, rugby is basically simi-
lar to America's version of football.
It is a gentleman's game that was
brought to the United States from
England, and has been trying to
become a main-stay sport at certain
colleges and universities across the
nation.
Marist College is no exception.
The rugby club opened its 1994
campaign last Sunday against
Hofstra University in Uniondale,
N.Y.
The Red Foxes were stopped by
Hofstra, 24-
7.
Marist's only score came in the
second minute of the game when
junior fly-half Christopher Damiani
scored on a 40-yard run.
"We finally got · off our losing ·
streak and put it together," hesaid.
Last Wednesday, the Red Foxes
Sophomore Josh Krueger attempts to control the ball
in a .
That was the only offense Maris!
was able to muster as Hofstra tallied·
24 unanswered points.
wer~ shut down by St. John's Uni-
recent game. Marist fell to 1-7 on Monday.
. vers1ty, 5-1.
.·
· ·
. ·
Clrele
photo/
Kathy
Link
Despite dropping the match, jun-
ior tri-captain Andrei Gisetti said he
Goldman said the Red Storm
Sophomore Judd McMullen in-
were able to capitalize off of Marist's
jured his ankle against St. John's,
err~:5-
.
.
.
and sophomore Josh Krueger
We Just made sdly mistakes at
strained his knee versus the Terri-
the back, and you can't do that witli
ers.
a team like that," he said.
Horsfall did not play because he
Three players sat out Monday's
received his fifth red card against
game.
St. Francis.
National Collegiate Athletic
As-
feels optimistic about the upcoming
sociation
(NCAA) rules state that games.
when a player receives five cards,
"We played a good game,"
he must sit out in the next game.
Gisetti said. "We had a couple of
On Saturday, Marist will be at
guys playing the game who never
Centra_l Connecticut St~te to face-
played before. We will improve."
offagamst the Blue Devils at
7
p.m.
Gisetti said the problem was the
Gridders fall t,o·
Seahawks,
forwards were not able to support
3 0 8
the backs when they got the ball.
•
"Hofstra had a good defense,"
Gisetti said. "They were always in
ference) answered with a safety with
"Our offensive line did great out the right place against us. We did
1 Florida
(31)
by ANDREW HOLMLUND
10:47 remaining in the opening quar-
there for us," he added. "We didn't some things wrong but had our share
3-0
Sports Editor
t_er.
It.
was the third safety Marist
have enough opportunities offen- of good plays as well."
4
_o
recorded in as many games.
sively ."
After a mediocre 4-4 record a
2 Nebraska
(22)
3
Florida St.
(4)
4
Penn St.
(3)
5
Colorado
(1)
6
Arizona
•(1).
7 Michigan
8
Notre.Dame
4_0
Even before the football team's
Wagner increased its lead to
10-
· \ M:~rist ran only 56 plays, com- year ago, the 1994 edition of the
4
_
0
non-conference clash against Wagner
2; when Carl Franke connected
on a
pared to Wagner's
87.
rugby clubis
out to improve on last
3
_
0
College . took place, everything
28-yard field goal, capping off a six-
According
10
Parady, his team season's mark, and
will
attempt to
3
_
0
, seemed to be running perfectly for
play, 27-yard drive.
knew they were facing a very
for-
maketheir sport more rec_ognized on
Head_ Coach Jim Parady.
The Red Foxes closed the gap to
midable opponent.
campus.
2-
1
His team was coming off a stel-
10-8, when junior quarterback Pete
"They're the defending champi-
"As far as Marist is concerned,
3-1
lar 37-19 thrashing over pre-season · Ford found freshman wide receiver
ons in their conference," Parady said. we are just another club," Gisetti
9 Auburn
4-0
conference pick, Iona College. Then,
Jon Reed on a 25-yard pass play.
"We knew going in they were going said. "With the help of Mike Milai,
10
Texas A&M
3°0
two days later, Parady's wife,
That was all the scoring Marist
to
be a very tough opponent. Take (head of club sports), we are trying
11
Alabama
4-0
Kristen, gave birth to their first child,
was able to muster as the Seahawks
away the turnovers, it's a different to clean up our image as
a
bunch of
12 Washington
2-1
Sarah Jane, who weighed in at eight
racked
off
20 unanswered J'Oints.
game."
hooligans who do nothing for the
13 Miami
2-1
pounds, 10 ounces.
Parady once again went with two
Parady said despite the Joss, he school."
14
Virginia Tech
4_
0
A win on Saturday would have
quarterbacks.
believes his team can rebound from
"This club has gone from just
l5 Wisconsin
2_1
put the punctuation mark on what
Ford was S-'14 .for
101 yards;
Saturday and try
to capture the playing to playing to win," Damiani
16 Texas
3
_
0
seemed to be an enjoyable week for · while senior Bob Delponte was 3-14
MAAC trophy.
said. "We played to win each game
17 Washington St.
3
_
0
the third-year head coach.
for55 yards.
"We're looking to get the MAAC before, but now there is a different,
Unfortunately for Parady, his
· Parady said part of the reason for
championship," he said. "Right now, better attitude."
18 North Carolina
2-1
h
b k
d
h h" h
team was handily defeated by the
t e set ac was ue to t e 1g
we are 1-0 in the MAAC, and we
"Not a lot of people know too
19 Southern California
2-1
Seahawks, 30-8, at Fischer Memo-
number of turnovers.
still have seven more MAAC games much about the game," junior
20 Ohio.St.
3-1
rial Field.in Staten Island,
N.Y.
"We turned the ball over seven
to play."
Vincent Nelan said. "We are trying
21.Oklahoma
2-1
Wagner (1-2) was able to click ·times," he said. "We weren't so
to get younger people introduced to
·
· h
(
f~
)
Marist will be back in conference
22 North Carolina St.
3-0
first when running back Lynn Parker
muc as stagnant on o 1ense as we
the game."
·
·
·
,,
action this Saturday afternoon _when
23 Kansas·St
3-0
scampered into the end zone from
were error prone.
The rugby team will be back in
P
d
I
'd h
1 · d
it entertains the Red Storm of St.
24 Colorado St.
4-0
30 yards out.
ara Y a so sa1
e was P ease
action on Sunday afternoon when
Th R d .., ·
(1 2
11
o
'th h.
f~
·
1·
·
t th
f
John's. Unive_ rsity (noon; WKIP ra-
25
Illinois
·2-1.
. e e roxes
- overa ; 1-
w1
1s o 1em;1ve me, ou
e o -
they host Manhattanville College at
1
L111!!·
wt!!lhl!,;e..!!.lxll!L!lwailli!·
~uw&ll!·
~&l.11=-;:::£::ens=:iv:::e:::c::h::a::n::ce:::s::::w:::::::er=e=·=us::t::::n::o::t:::th=e::re=.==d=io::::;=
4
:::p::::.=m=. =WfZA=====-TV===• t=a=p=e=d=el=a::::y:::.)!..'.:N~o~rt~h Field at
1
p. __
m_. _ _ _ _ _
_
.. .continued from page 12
"I
moved lier in and then back,"
Zegers said.
"I
found that her fore-
hand was weaker than her back-
hand."
.
On Saturday, the Red Foxes fell
victim to a different scoring format. -
The team was forced to play
under rules which only awards the
best- of-three winner in doubles
one
point.
Marist swept the doubles 3-0, but
fell short, 2-4, in the singles matches.
This resulted in a 5-2 loss, in-
stead of a 5-4 normal win.
Zegers said she thought the scor~
ing system was unfair to both teams.
·
· "It
is like they are saying doubles
is
less important than singles, which
is not
true,"
she said.
Marist hosted the Fordham Rams
· on Tuesday. Results were unavail-
able.
at
press time.
The Red Foxes will travel this
afternoon to play conference rival
Long Island University at 3:30 p.m.
MC'fV PROGRAMMING ~~LL 1994
CHANNEL12
WEEKDAYS
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STATIONI.D.
FOX FITNESS
SPORTS
1
BACKTALK
MCTV CLASSICS
ENTERTAINMENT AND SPECIALS
SPORTS
2
UP-CLOSE
MCTV INFORMATIONAL
MOVIE
I
MOVIE2
EKEN DS
STATIONI.D.
SPORTS
I
STATION I.D.
SPORTS2
STATION I.D.
MOVIE
1
MOVIE2
i
I
j
...,,,,.,)
1
1
I
--
"
ti
1·
,
,
.
..
_
_
;;
I
r
l
l
.
.
:"We
.
are
trying ,o
c1e.an
""ow image
as a
bunch
of
lwoligans
who
diniothing for
the
schooi."
..
.
.
.
·
:
·STAT·
OF
-
-
THE
.
WEEK:
.
.
.
.
:
_.
.
,
.
~
.
.
..
•
.
.
.
-::
:
.
;::
..
_.
··
·:,..
"'.
-
':;
.
-.·.-
·
,
.
.
,
:
,-:,-·
,
.
.
·
·
·
·
.
:
r,u/Women;Sisnnis'team is
5 - 0
in the
TH£
CDlCLE,
SPORTS
s~mM!lti½f
19')4
L
··
~N,~ort_
-
h;.;;,e_as_t
eo_·
·;..,;n;...fe_,e_
·
nce_
..
_: - - - - - - -
by
:
GERARP
:
c~~:v
.
-
Staff'Writer- .
"We could have
.
played better against
Lehigh, but we
.
didn't know what we
were. doing
.
wrorig/'
·
..
Marist was
in
Fairfield; Conn.,
Piior
·
to
.
the 'Seton.: llall
.
In✓ita~
--
last Tuesd\ty;
:
battling Fairfield Uni-
tional
'
iast
·
weekend,
·
ihe w'omen'
.
s
·
versity;
'
·
.
.
voHeybi!li team
.
had
:
a
3-f overall
The Stags blanked the Red Foxes,
record,
'.
and was riding a three-game
·
15-3, 15,-13, and 15-2.
.
winning streak.
.
-
·
·
·
·
··
· ·
·
Sophomore outside
.
hitter Tara
.
However; wheil
-
_
the tournament
.
Damra
_
u said the team could not get
concluded, the Red Foxes were wish-
·
· ·
their
.
minds
·
into. the contest.
ing they could get on,the bus and
r
«It-
was just a disaster. We came
get
-
out
'
ofSouth
.
Orange; N.J;, as
out flat," Damrau
·
said. "We came
quickly as ~ssible.
'
·
·
•
.
.
.
.
·
.
out with no emotion or intensity, and
-
Marist (4-7
,
overall;_
O~O
in the
it just ,did not seem we came out
Northeast Conference) dropped three
.
ready-to play."
ofJts four matches
.
at
-
Seton Hall
Damrau, a transfer from Tucson,
·
·University lastSaturd~y
~and
SuridaY..
Ariz.,
:
said
-
she
·•
and
--
her
.
teammates
.
The
.
Red Foxes first
..
wenf
'
up
,
:
are not overly conc
_
emed about their
against
·.
the.
·
host school,-. SetQn Halt. present status.
_
The Pirates shelled Marist, 15-5,15-
"We'
_
ve
.
played some tough
O,
·
and 15~6.
_-
__ ·
_
_
·
_·
.
schools early; Seton Hall for one,
_
-
·
Marist then faced
.
Lehigh Univer-
.
but we will be fine." Damrau said.
sity. The Red Foxe~ were taken care
"We have a
/
tough team ourselves.
:
of:by
.
the
:
Engineers in four se~,
JS-
.
We can playhetter."
·
7;5'-15;-
.
JS~l; andd5
_
-10,
.;
,
·
,,
>
:c:
,..
.
.
Maristwas able to defeat its two
,..
The tournament was not a
'
com~
toughest
:
opponents, the University
·
plete
.
failure for
>
Marist. The
·
Red
of Hartford on Sept. 14, and
.
.
Foxes were able to benefit-from their Fairleigh Dickinson on Saturday.
final match of the invitational by
Accordi11g to Northeast Confer-
-
===
.
====
'.
sweeping
.
past
•
Fairleigh Dickinson ence regulations, all teams in the
SC>phc,more Tammy Terc makes
8
set ~s Assistant Coach Randy Desrosiers looks on.
_
Marlst
University,-15-13, 17-15, and 1s~10.
league make post-season play; which
wlll
·
be In Penns
_
ylvanla this weekend.
·
Sophomore
,
mid-hitter
_
Liz
·
gives each team a legitimate chance
Herzner said despite the results, the
at the conference title
,
tournament
was
•-
a
foaming experi-
ence for the entire
.
team .
.
.
.
"Seton Hall is just
.
a powerhouse,
·
simply
a
better team," Herzner said.
Herzner also said she believes
Marist has the capability to take the
·
_,see
VSALL
page
11
Netters
·
snap skid;
iiµpr,pve mark
-
to
6-2
·
-
·
·
-
-
-
·
·
·
·.
The Red Fox
.
tandem fell, 6-0, 6-4.
,
by JAMES J; DEI_UV AN
O'Neil and Zegers teamed up to
. :_
·
'
Staff Writer
.
.
·
_
win their doubles match 6,2,
·
6-L
·
·· ·
·
.·
··
·
·
· ·
·
-· -··
-
·
·
-
·
·
Senior Lisa Maynard and Robinson
.
The
.'
~omen'~
_
tenriis tea~ was
.
volleyed to a 6~ 1, 6-1 win.
abl
_
e to snap a
-:
twosniatch losing
··
Head Coach Charles Hardman
streak fast
:
Sunday
·
~fternoon
.
by said he was impressed with the win.
downing the Manhattan_ Jaspers, 8-
"The team played the best they
1, at the Dutchess Racquet Club.
·
played all season," Hardman said.
·
.
•
The Red Foxes (6-2 overall; 5-0 "They played solid."
_
.
in the
'
~ortheast
;
Conference) were
O'Neil said her offense made the
1ed by
.
a trio
<>f
sophomores: Jen difference in her win.
0
1
Neil, Cara McCaffrey and Katie
_
Zegers.
, .. _
_
_
_
. _
.
.
.
.
·
O'~eil started t
_
he R.ed Fox at-
"My forehand was on," she said.
"I wasjus(ripping (the ball.)"
tack
-
with a
64,
.
6.2
,
win iri number-
Robinson said she was not
fo-
one singles; .while
_:
M~Caffrey fol-
cused in the
.
first set of her match.
-
lowed WitJi. a 6~l/6-2triwnph.
·
Zegers t;tllied
·
a
6-3.,
6
~
1 victory
__
-.
"I just did
.
not have my head in
.
in
number-fou(singles;
·
·
_
. it/' she said.
"I
was a little tired from
.'. In
n\l!llber~three singles, freshman
.
t.he match ihe day before. Sh~ ran
:
HQ]ly
,
Rol?insciri 11e~e~fthree sets to m~ arq_u~d quite a bit."
_
·
rock off her opponent; 2"6, 6•2,
6-
.
Zegers said she found a weak-
The
;
()rily
·
1_os~ of-the day for
ness
in her opponents game and
used
Marist came from the
.
doubles team
·
,
it to her
.
advantage.
_
.
_
_
_
of Anne
,
Hemy m.id S$a I.ignori.
-
...
See TENN
page
11
1l11t
·
e ·
..
.iSstatting
c
to.
'
l'-lll'J
>
,
<JUl
·
or,
:
fiJ.iiliJrnan,
's
·
.
team
.
__
Despite
~am4lg a
2-1 wiQ last ning to t~e
:
a tolh:i~
:
the:
t?ID
:
::
,
·•
-
_
-•
·
.
proposal which}ncluded a tax_
·
plan
players.
__ --
.
_
Sa):U~!iay against
-
st.
Francis
(NY),
·.
·
-
· .
..
~opl).omores
'
J11d McMullen and
-
,
-
.
to ~e!p finance s~alhmarket organi-
ONE-QUARn,R
of the Na-
.
the 1994 men's soccer. season lias
-
Josh Krueger did
·
ri<>t suit up
_
for
·1.
Andrew Holmlund
. ·
zattons; howev~r, the NHL Players
..•
tional Football League's season has
been absolutely ~iseriible.
-
.
Mopday's game against Siena.
·
·
Ass°5
_
iation shot down that idea:
just completed.
·
_
_
_ __
·
,
Afterf111ishing
its
19.93 schedule
McMullen apparently suffered a
-
·
.
VVQULD~~T
IT
.
BE
.
·
with
.
that in
.
mind, here are
·
your
with a paltry 4
_
-12-2
·
showing,
·_
the sprained
•
llJ}kle
·
agaiµst
-
-
St. Jqhn~s;
STRAN~E.
if
:
th~
-
NHL and MLB
1994 divisional, conference and Su-
Req Foxes ~ently st~d at
a·
dis-
while K.rueger injured his knee
..___ _ _ _ _ _ _
....c...
both ceased work?
_
·
-
per Bowl champions.
_
mal 1~?-overall record.
·
against.St
.
, Francis
(NY).
-
. __
Everi though their seasons are
In
the
AFC
East, there is no sur-
Why hasn't Howard Gol(!man's
Gold~an and
_
his players had
It's right here
mostly played
in
differenf months,
prise, the
_
Buffalo Bills will once
team begun to move towards the better come up with answers real
the NHL cannot afford to shut down.
again take
iL
winning direction?
soon before the ~eason and the play-
.;__====--:.......c...______
Besides finaJ:1cialfactors, they are
-
Sorry Jet fans.
,
The answ~r is plain and simple. offs kick right by: them.
o ~ e
Northeast Conference title.
the least known,
compared
.
The Cleveland
·
Browns will win
No offense.
_
THE WOMEN'$ TENNIS
WE ALREADY KNOW
that
tofootball, baseball
-
and basketball.
-
a very weak
AFC
.
Central·
while Joe
In
eight games, the Red Foxes team is the one t ~ men's soccer Major League Baseball has made the
S
_
ince baseb~ll has struck out,
Montana's Kansas City Chiefs
will
have orily been able to
tally
six goals. should
try
to m?'1eJ.
.
biggest mistake in its his!ory.
n?w is the perfect time for profes-
out-dual the San Diego Chargers for
Unfortunately for tl!e Red Foxes,
The women s tenms team has
It seems
·
the National Hockey
s1onal hockey
_
and other sports to
·
the
AFC
West crown.
they have played six o
_
f their first served a,nd volleyed their way to a
League would like to follow them.
establish more
·
popularit)'.
_
_
·
The
Giants
will take the NFC
eight games at Leonidoff Fiel~.
6-2 overall
·
standing thus
·
far, com-
The NHL is in jeopardy of lock-
ON SUNDAY,
approximately
East, Detroit
will
win
the NFC Cen-
-
Marist has
.
also played almost pared to last season's impressive 13-
ing out the
start
of its 78th season
if
50,!)00 fans packed St. Louis' Busch
tral and the San Francisco 49ers will
one-half of its schedule. The good 1 record,
the owners and players cannot re-
Stadium to commemorate what
grab the NFC West title.
·
news for Marist is that there are still
Marist is a]so undefeated in
solve the dispute over salary caps.
would have been the Cardinals final
Kansas City will defeat Buffalo
10 games remaining
tltis
season.
Northeast-Conference play,
(!;-0).
It
is
the same ridiculous situa-
game of the season.
in the AFC Championship and
However, eight of those 10 games
They have received solid efforts
tion, only in a different sport.
Fans in attendance were able to
SanFrancisco will beat the Gi~ts for
will
be
played away from Pough-
from sophomores K;nie Zegers, Cara
League Commissioner Gary
~alk on the field, throw in a fast-
NFC top honors.
keepsie.
McCaffrey and Jen O'Neil through-
Bettman has met with the players'
pitch contest, and take a tour of
Montana will face his former
The only two_ remaining home out most of this season.
union in Toronto and New York for
Busch Stadium.
team
in
-
the Super Bowl; and will
games are against Northeastern on
First-year Head Coach
·
Charles
the past few weeks to
try
to come to
This
was
all just a reminder that
earn another championship ring.
Qct.
5,
and Adelphi on
Oct.
29.
Hardman
is
hoping his team can
win
an agreement
baseball should be mainly for the
Andrew Holmlund
is
The
·
._,.d
t
_
also
seems injuries
:
are be~
;;
.ia•Grand~lam. toumament of
.
~
~ :
,
:.
;--:,
.On~Tuesday,
the
NH;L
.
01ade,
_
~-
::'
,
~~~ ~d
_
;i:tpt
,
j~J9r
_
~e.9c~e.~
.
?:D~
-",··
~•~
c
C:·.~~~
:
~tor.
,
ur.
-
i-.;e
::,
:,
.
,.·
.
45.2.1
45.2.2
45.2.3
45.2.4
45.2.5
45.2.6
45.2.7
45.2.8
45.2.9
45.2.10
45.2.11
45.2.12
Number
·
2
/
·
·
September 29, 1994
TwQ .. StQ.dellt~
sq.spep~~cJ.JJltowiihouse
.
.
incident
males fro~ East Haven, Conn
·
., :were
suffered a possible fractured fib, said · me
.
"
.
.
·
·
·
·
and residential life, said he could not
by
··
MEREDITHKENNEDY
·-:
Staff
.
Editor
inv<>lvedin
.
the_incident, Le~ry said
.
she was thrown across the B7 living
Jarju.ra
:
and Muni's suspension comment about the incident.
M:uni and )arjura have
.
been
·
room by Jarjura
.
,
]
.
_
. .
were placed by
·
Peter Amato, asso-
·
J
a
rjura
.
said he went to B7 that
placed
.
on suspension. for on
(
yea~,
.
· '
''.Iwent
:
behindJo
e,
to tiy
)
o
.
stop
ciate dean.
·
.
.
·.
night in response to a fightthat oc-
Two male Marist
.
.
students
.
re-
.
and
_
_Dubois' on-campus Jioilsing has
i
tli~
·
fightiiig
i
and
,
he turite9
~
around
.
Ja
r
jura said he met with Amato curred
.
earlier involving student Chris
ceiyed a
_:
()~e,
~
year suspensio
~
follow
:
.
.
·
bee
.
n revoked.
"
•
.: ·
.
•
·
.
·
.
.
..
-
..... ,
•
.
andJoC>ke,d at
,'i
iie and then threw r_ne
voluntarily on
}
~fon SepL
~
l2 and was
·
Cullinan
.
.
.
.
· ·
.
ing their
'
•
arr~ston Mon
;
Sept
.
12.
>
:
.·
·
Jarjura
.
said he d
.
oes no
t.-
~Iider-
:
.
a~~ss
•
the
•
room," Reilly s
.
aid
.
. : . .
treated as guilt
y
·
from the beginning.
"As' far
.
as I know
·
when a guest
·
Joe Jarjura, 19, and Rob
.
Muni,
staµd why he is beirig p~nished for
·
\:.,.
Jarjura
·
s~id he did not r~ca,11,how
-
.
"Dean Amato told me
·
that be-
gets into a fight they have to leave,
20,
w'ere
·
formally
.
charged
w
ith
.
as-
prot~g hin.iself ~ca11Se
_
he did not
•
.
~~i~lt
•
\11_~
·
inj"iired, but tho
_
se at
·
~he
fore
I
·
said anything, I should know those guests. were unregistered. They
sault iri the third degree, a
i
m,i
_
sde-
throw
,
the first
.
punch
..
;•:.>·
.·
.
.
.
.
.
c;
fight_t9ld
.
him sh~ had jumped on
that
I am in serious trouble, and that should have been escorted off cam-
meario(according•io Joel.eary, di-
.
"l
got hit and
.
a fight qccurre~,>) hi(back,
'.
< ·
..
:
,:
.
>
:
,
this was a serious matter," Jarjura pus. They
.
beat up a Marist student,"
rector of safety iuid
.
secudty
,·
>
·
. .
·
Jarjurasaid."I defended myself and
·
: ."They're telling
)
ne
:
Nlltasha . said.
Jarjura said.
Jarjura was also charged with
my' friends defended me.'
'.
•
jumped in; on my bade,'
~
Jarjura said.
· Amato said he could not com-
Cullinan said he had no comment
harass!°ent, and appearance tickets
·
Reilly said she
.
walked
_
into the "I swung my back around to get her
merit on
.
tlie incident because
it
in-
about
_
the in~ident.
w~re issued for a later date, Leary
middle of the fight and saw people
off
and that) how she got
,
hurt."
.
volves the disciplinary process of the
Re!IIY said she was aware that
said
.
.
.
.
.
• .
:
.
. ·
·.
•
...
·
:
>
..
.
..
everywhere.
,.·:
'·,,
-:
.
. .
·•
··
:
:
.
.
.
.
;,;,-.-
,,,,/
ReHJy~~!Jie
·
~~hat'she
jurripe<J,
on
·
·
.
college; and the case is confidential.
·
a? incident
_
had occurred earlier that
.
The_
:
c:onfrontallon o~c,urre
.
d.
;
:
at
•::
i
'~
:
,j/
!
;By:
•
.tne
·
:
time
· .
!:,got dovmstairs
;
-
:
<Jarjurii's
:
back
:
~ntfsaid
'
she believes
. ·
·
Dubios now resides off
-
campus mght ~ut d1~ not ~now_ the details.
approxllll
_
ately
·
1:45
.
a.111
.
Sat Sept.
.,
there were people all over the place
,
"
.
.
he knew wliarhe
\
vas doing.
-
,
·
.
and is banned from the townhouse
.
JarJura said he1s trymg to ap~al
10, in townhouse B7.
.
•
··•
·.
Reilly said;
(
"'.fhey were o'n the
~"
This makes me
.
mad, because
section of ca111pu
(
because her three the suspension but will have to wait
·
;
Two junior. female residents,
·
kitchen table and the
.
couch. Onewas people keep saying it," Reiliy said.
male guests were not registered with to see if Gerard Cox, vice president
El~beth Dubois, 20, and Natas~a
(lying) on the floor!'
.
.
·
··
"I did not jump on Joe's back He
housing, ReHiy said.
.
.
and de~n for student _affairs, will
Reilly, 20, and three non
-
Manst
-
Reilly, who according to Leary,
looked ri t at me and then threw
Jim Raimo, director of housing allow him to resent his
New
RDs
bring
freSh
·
ideas
to
Gampus
lif~
-
·
·
by BLYTHE MAUSOLF
.
Staff Writer
.
.
In addition
to
cla~ses
'
a~d
aii
i~
>
temship,
.
she worked
'
as assistant
.
director in a resident hall for approxi
-
·
.
mately 700 first year studenK
.
.:
The Office <>f Housing amtResi-
':..
;
On,,fer 4~cis~?~ to
,
lea
y
~,
¥.
a.
.
rt.~!1
<
dentialLife hired
'
not one buUive said,
,
J,was
.
ftm
_
shed w1t~
;.
grad
ne"'.
;
~e~i
.
de11ce Direct.ors
·.
this
·.
yeax
/:
:
Sf.P.
.
0.()kp!u,s
~YI~
-
~~
-
B[i~g
~
~~!Y
l
,f
gt:
i,j
,,.--,
·
.
.
.
•
.
.
because
.;
the
.,
staff.
was- reduced
~
to
:.:.:
l!l).C
:.
Y.ears, and
I
needed
.
to
)
eave.
,
.1
.
,,, .
.
~
,~
-
=
~;~11
f
~!I!\!¾i
~!'i!l
~
t
li1!f
'°~~t;tt(lf
t
i:f
1.
ing
:
staff
:
differ in eiperien
c
e
and
:
·
s
_
tudi~s~
.
Jo.u
~
r~ just
,.
turni~
-
~
your
.
~ac~1~1f
i
.
(
Direc;~i
-
~
:
i°:J6jj
i
i i
•
•
,
:J
:
.
~f~
t:ft
:
;~~
r~ally
.
·
~
!
ttmg
.
~
~y-
,
.
.
John
.
Padovani
.
said
·
''We fook
:
t6
,
. '. ;:
Afte
.
r
;
i!1
.
~e.fviewi11g
:
for
.
pta!}'y
:
•
..
•
bti~ld
:
a
•
J
e~
m
:
of
:
peopl~
i
vi
itil
'.'c
tiff~r-
'.:
riiidc.IJe
:
s~~~l
:
giJida~cepP~!l~()ns?
,
she
:
'.
ent
.
taji::~~s
an~
;
exp~~i~~ce
;·
Sq
'.
th
i
y
:
:·
P~t
9~t
.
a Jew housmg
:
llpphcatI<>ns;
<
c:omftog_ether
·
and each
as a
unique butnone of ~eID
_
~e~med to
.
be a
·
~~~~u;:i~~H1iistll~;~
\ t
9ugh
i
::
t
rt::f<>~
-
)~{firlr
.
tin1~
,
}
(
g
rit
/
~n
·
•
.
.i..;..:;__:;__:;__:;__:;__ ___ ........... _ _
:;__:;__ _ _
---....,......c...-----
out
,
the
•
campu~
Sain
-Johrisori is
iri
·
,
ca
_
mp
_
us"
J
;
JUSt
_
laugllc;d
.;~J
fey
.:
~o
.
.
'
~w,York
.
G~~~na~orl~l
candidate George Patkl
tal
,
ked
with
Marlst
studentsWednesd.y,
September
21st
·
Cln:le
photo/
Xathy Link
Sheahan; S
'
ean McGuirk
·
'.
is
\
in
·
.
cornrorta~le.
·
)\'he\l I le~ h~re)
_
said,
:-
Champagn~t; Kelif ¥arti11 is i~
1.
.
~~ve to. ~r,a,t
;.
Maris!
t
,
,M~iri said
:
.
Marian; Jeanine Belcastro
i
s
•
on
·
the
'
C
'VV,hen
_
its
_
a good ma
.
~ctbetw7en
·
s
·
..
·
a
·
:
.
·,
.
:
·
·
1
·
d
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
-
~~i~~Jld
_
ay3mG
.
ari,l
1
~
\
is
·
~
~fiy"
.
·
:
~~~riiO.~~~~t:~r=~tn
!
~ht~~~:
·
.
.
••
Ju
e}.1-t
.
,
ea
.·
•
~rs
,
-
~~pr~ss
:
,
concern-
.
Last
;
y~
~,
at~t!113e
/
Sa,m
.
John
~
::
way~length~don~
.
tha
~
pap~DS
s
.
·
.
.
.
.
-
·
b
.·
.
d
·
..
.
. .
. .
. '
·.··
.
•
.
. .
·
w:~;~
~~:11fu7~~
8
~cit~\rl~e:~
.
t
.
~A;rf~~n~
0
.
:~;y%~~=~ti
.
-
:
:
·
-
~ClJ.ttty
·
.
·
. ·.
,
u
.··
.
get
·
.
··
Quts
>
··.
·
·.·
an
.
·
.
issue
sity,
·
with a
·
major in
.
Human Re~
:
~re_ek)ife:~
t
Bri~gewate
.
r,
,
she
)
s
.
·
:
··
.
-
.
.
.
.
..
-
·
-
sources Management .
. ·
.
-
, _
-
·
....
tntcr~ted 01n offenng ~ome
·
of _her
.
in The Hoop Lot were replact!d, and
ation is still
.
·
being worked on, a~d
He
·
was an active participant
·
of c:xpcrience t9
.
the Greck
.
orgamza-
byBRIANFRANKENFIELD
emergericyphcinesiriallparkinglots
students have
-
to understand that it
st~dent government and a resident tl<>ns
Oil
campus.
·
.
.
.
.
. · •
·
.
Staff Writer
-
.
have been repaired and weather-
takes tirile.
.
assistant.
<
.
. .
·
.
....
· ... ·
·
.
:
Although, Sheiihan woul~ hll,Ve
proofed.Security
has
also added two
-
Despite ~II these improvements~
.
.
.
Johnson
.
said
·
he caoie
td
Marist
.
·
.
been)
1
er. first choice Martin
}s
ex-
,
MariSt students making progress
fuU
time camptjs foot-patro]s,. and a
upperclassmen may find some things
...
for
a
few
reasons,
·
"The
·
size
of
the
•
:
cite_d ~bout il!aking some changes in.
.
is what the Stu~ent
·
Gov~mni~nt's
·
five hour foo
.
t~patrol at Beck's Place. missing. 'the student
-.
escorts have
·
sc~ool{th3:tis; ihe on campus
_
pop
~
~
.
·
M_a!'}an:
.
·
.·
·.·
.
.
-
.
. ..
:
.·
.·
.
·
'.
Safety and Secunty Committee
IS
all
Leary said he is pleased with the
.
·
been eliminated from MarisCs secu-
Jatio
.
n 1s bigger . .And I worked
'in'a
•
·
· ·
.
!_like to be _1_nvolve<
t
m
,
m?re
--
al>out.
.
· .
.
..
.
concern for safety
,
•
.
rity team due to the New York State
.
public institution and
-
Marist
·
is
pri-
: .
that1 Just the ho~mg area of M.anst.
.
.
..
··
..
C>n
·
N°":
·
11
1
~9
93
.
~e lZ-mem-
.
·
'
'.
The Student
.
Body Government
.
Security Guard Act of 1992. The Jaw
vate, so
.I
wanted to
·
get a
.
~en
:
~n duty! Im usuaUy ~e 9ne
··
·
l>er
:
.
1:ommntee .f!led a
_
safety and
shows excellent awareness ofsafety
.
went into effect in the 1994 school
differe~tperspective.'
'
.
·
.
·.
·
•
.
._
.
. '
•
d_omg _1t
.
by bike. I make
:
a
.
lot
:
.
of
.
s
.
ecurtty r1;port
WI$
fo~er st~dent
on campus," states Leary. ''.In work-
year, and states that any person do-
He said
•
he feels
·
hii youth was
'
time
_
.
/
fo,r
students
·
·
11nd
; ·
try
·
.
body presi~ent,
·
Kent R;mehart. The
ing with the students, veryseldom are
ing any type of security work must
an asset
iri
Marist's selection
·
ofh
i
m.
toincorporate Jhat into who
Lamt
reP?rtoutbned everylhmg fro~ se-
their requests irrational. Most con-
_
be a registered Security Officer.
Johnson
'
described himseif
as
·
"a Martin said
; '
_
. .
.·
.
<:_uritr faot~patrols to th~ quabty of
cerns are
very
legitimate.''
Registration in
N.Y.
state could cost
young fresh mind with lots
·
of ideas
·
··
·
..
·.
l'...ike
.
Martin, Jeanil}e Belcastro
bghFtmlgl
·
ar?~dth
.
c:ampus
.
rt
.
:
:
.
.
Leary said that the lighting situ-
Please
see
TO~R
p.
8 ...
and energy".
·
.
.
.
comes fresh from the completi~n of
· o owing
.
1s
lepo , .
a memp
.
He said
.
he was looking forward ~duate school at ~ston
.
Uruver-
w~ sent to Ex~t1ve .V~ce Pres1-
to working with the freshman in
·
.
s1ty,
-_
where
.
she
..
ma1ored m Vocal
dent~fark Sulhvan,
.
and D_rrector of
Sheahan.
·.
,
·
·
Music Performance;
Secunty Joe Leary requesting a tour
.
He said he sees it as a challenge
After graduating in May; she s~d
of campus problem areas. The tour
and his goal is to keep
·
his students she
.
wanted,
·
to
.
Jook foi: a housing
•
was
.
agreed upon, a~d _conducted o~e
active and on top academically.
.
pos!~on similar to the supervisory
..
early Thursday evening last Aprd.
.
He would like to
·
help Marist
.
pos1!1on shehel~ as. a student, and
Student Gove~m
_
en
t
officers J~n
buUd as a community, on an educa-
Manst was her choice.
.
Nocella, Matt Gdh~, Rebecca Ry:113
tional social and cultural level in
. ·
''I
wanted to look at a pnvate
and Holly Olson cucled
.
the entrre
order to help students open up to' the
school because of the quality of the
campus, fr~m The McCan_n ~n~er
real world.
.
.
students. I feel there is a difference
to G~and
s
Hoop
Lot,
pomtmg oul
About himself Johnson said "I
in
the mentality of the students of-
potential dangers.
·
am approachabl; and passioriate
ten times. They tend to be a little
. Th<: tour was extremely eff~ye
about who I am and what I do
.
I
more into their studies because
m ~ettmg a !esponse from admm1s-
believe its impoi:tant to know who
th
7
y're paying a lot more," Belcastro
tra~on officials
.
.
you are and where you come from.
said
.
.
I was very pleased to see ~-
And also I am still learning and I
She explained that she had cho-
provements when I came back th1S
will aJ~ys be learning so~ething sen the North End after originally
year,~ Nocella said.
-
.
new."
·
being placed in Sheahan.
Smee then, the steps behind
Leo
Kelley Martin comes to Marist
Her past experience had been
Hall have been removed, snow
from Bridewater State College,
guards were
.
placed . on the ~ew
where she went
to
graduate school.
Please see
RDs p. 9... Townhouses, the fencmg and hghts
The Circle
non-scientific poll
The Circle conducted a non~scientific
poll
from Sept.
20th.
to
Sept
27th.
Almost
1,100
students responded
to
this question:
Do you feel the U.S. should be intervening in foreign politics,
such as the conflict in Haiti?
Yes= 430
No =636
TV
·
scandal
·
exposed in
.
p:iennes-driven
;
f
.
Q
,
~i~
.
~
\.
root for.
·
ible ratings dominance of''Twenty~.
who plays young lawyer
·
Di~k -Through It" had theJook of a great
by
JUSTIN SEREMET
Circle Film Critic
po
you ever feel like Alex
Trebek and the whole "Jeopardy!"
.
crew
.
_
is
.
jerking your chain?
··
.
Tiiey may
.
be, and
·
after seeing
·
"Qu~
__
Show,.,you might not find
it
very surprising.
.
.
.
.
Robert Redford's latest
film car-
ries us back to the 50s - a time when
.
paranoia was being created by
·
McCarthyism and the launch of the
Russian's Sputnik - and all Ameri-
cans
had
to be proud of was its popu~
Jar new V-8 engine.
It
was also the dawn of televi-
sion, and the game show
'
of choice
was "Twenty-One," a
·
game
·
of
knowledge that was eventually
proven to be a fraud.
This was the first time that TV
was actually proved to be lying, and
its viewers would never have the
same trust again.
.
·
NBC presented this game show
with the intent to sell its sponsor,
Geritol, by using charismatic
braniacs that American viewers can
Ralph Fiennes returns to the
One" (which at one tirn~ had more
Goodwin/the man responsible· for
film with its s\lper.b
.
cin~mato~aphy,
screen
·
( after • his ·incredible
..
perfor~
that 55 million people .watching): · .. discovering· that
·
the
'
quiz show is•
.
a
it lacked character depth,. aJ1d the
.
end
mance as "Schindler's List"'sAmon
But one mlghfask how this tnan
fake;
.
'
·
.
result was a
lot
of
yawns. .
.> ..
Goeth
:
for which he was robbed an can go on living like
_
this when he is·
Goodwin follo~s
::
Van
-Doren
·
.
However, R~dford h~/truly out-
'
.
.
Oscar)toplayCharlesVan
·
Doren;a
·
beingfed the answ
_
ers and winning
throughout the film
as
welras tlie
done
-
himselfwith
:
"Qi.Jiz Show/'
:
a
college professor whom NBC se-
dishonestly?
.
.
. .
nervous, twiiching Stemp~l,
·
a man
film
.
that not only is as timeless
·
as
··
.
cretly
'
chooses
.
to become the neict
Van Doren secretly
-;
ay~ that
_
b~-
.
who still feels ripped off for having
..
the characters in
.
it,
but also ques~
.
·
champion of''.Twenty~One
:
"
can't
re.fuse
an offer like this when
to lose intentionally.
· ,.
tions our trust
in
the mosfi><;)wertul
After defeating the geeky Herbie
it meant instead fame and a desire
Look for cameos by Tim"6tli{
·
fonn
of comm~riicatio~ in
the
.
w?rd:
Stempel (John Turturro); Van Doren to live up to
.
father" Mark Vari
Dlisfield
·
as
a poker buddy anq Mar~
.
the boob tube; (Grad~:
A)
.,
··
goes on to be
"champion"
for the
next
14 weeks, has his face on the
cover of Time,
·
and is mobbed by
fans on the street.
All the time, he is given the ques-
tions and answers ahead of time so
that
NBC
can coniinue
.
the
.
incred
_
s
.
.Doren's
(Paul Scofieldrexpectations.
.
tin Scorsese
'
as the head of Geritol.
• ·
It
seems
.
unclear at
.
first.• how..
.Where
Reiit~;d
re~lly.s~~eds is
In film news...
.
Charles Van Doren can
.
do this, but· ·in capturing the fe~l for.the 5Qs, no!
,
~e
Ric6
,i
h~s-fciiniiilly:\ip~fo~
.
after seeing the relationship between
only. with the
.
clothes, but
_the
colo~
.
gizedlofpublidy. bl3:5ting the c}ioi~
'.
·
·
he and his father, you start to under-
as well.
.,
of castirig Tom Cnuse as Lestat
m
.
stand Van Doren's motives.
Somehow, Redford is: actually
the adaptation of her ','lntervi~w 'Yith
·
·
Scofield is excellent
:
as a· man
able
-
to
:
make the boring
-
and bland
.
the Vam
.
pire" (C~niilig
NpyJl).
·.
undaunted by the birth of
.
the "evii''
:
colors of blue and
:
gray (that were
''.Candyman
11"
has just com-
media that is television, and look for
·
so very prominent in
:
this time pe-
pleied filming ~nd will ?J>en
~
De~.
a fantastic
.
scene
.
between he and
riod)
_
seem almost majestic.
.
:
28 with Tony Todd retummg to play
Fiennes as the two go back in
'
forth
He also moves the camera with
the man with the hook.
.
in a duel of poetic quotes.
gra
_
ce, especially in thequiz show
.
·
And fans
.
;
of
·.
Quentin
.
Tarantino
We actually feel somewhat sorry
scenes where
.
his
·
zooining in and o\lt
,·
are drooling
-:
as they anticipate the
for Van Doren by film's end wlien ·,gives the audience the feeling of
Oct. ?release of
:
"Pulp Fiction,"
his
.
the show must go to court to deferid
claustrophobia that the contestants
follow~up to tlie
i992
cuit hit,
"Res~
.
.
itself from
its
accusers.
·
feel in· their sound- proof boxes.
ervoir
..
Dogs"
·
(l WILL·
review
this
Another standout is Rob Morrow
While his last film
"A
River Runs
·
movie).
Vets' Killing Joke-Consolidated back with more nQise
by
TOM BECKER
Circle Music Critic
The world of music stretches far
and wide, and for
that
matter, so
does the tastes of thiS ]x{xus.
At least, I'd like to think so.
With that in mind, I would like
to say that this column will attempt
to include a wide variety of music,
from jazz to hardcore, and from
techno to blues.
This week centers on two
longstanding members of the fo.dus-
trial community.
·
Consolidated, the veteran rap ar-
tisans of industrial likeness recently
delivered "Business. of Punishment'?
to the listening world.
ish funk of"Woman Shoots John,"
variety
·
or music it touches upon.
an upbeat groove to accomplish its
"Business" serves as a forum for
the bluesy sounds of "Recuperation,''
The equally experienced Killing
task.
.
.
.
·
.
.
·
·
the band's political agenda; a 15-
and the radio friendly, ironic "Wor~
Joke
.
recently released "Pandemo-
At times however, the album
track political poem of angst that thy Victim".
nium", the band's first effort in sev-
seems monotonous and predictable,
confronts everything from
·
the issue
Consolidated manages to produce
eral years.
·
as
if
the band had some difficulty in
of abortion to that
.
of legalizing some excellent concoctions with the
Most noteworthy of the
10
track creating enough quality tracks for an
drugs, as well as sexual harassment head-nodding, slow-grooving«Crime
album is the first release entitled album.
. .
of women.•
and Punishment.,and "Dog and Pony
"Millennium".
·
·
"Jana" sounds curiously like
..
a
While the lyrics are sometimes Show" which proves the band is
The song
·
is a classic mosh-
1980's
a1ternapop tune with
overbearing and seem to
_
take the
indeed capable of straight- centered
·
marching, boot-stomping tune which
.
distortionthat brings to mind the
tone of a self-righteous preacher,
rap.
·
.
climaxes into a catchy chorus over ancient sounds of the Psychadelic
they can be dismissed in favor
·
of
''Todayls My Birthday" offers a
business-like guitars.
.
Furs.
.
the wide variety of musical tricks
Led
Zeppelin-esqile rhythm to back
The album as a whole varies
It's a pleasant addition
:
to the ·
that play in the background. ·
··
·
up
_
the hopeless feel of the lyrics
.
greatly in its quality.
,
-
sometimes tiresome sounds.
There are several tracks on the
about a man searching for a future
Killing Joke is creative on tracks
On Tuc:sday, R.E.M., Slayer, The
·
album that offer the listener totally
while battling a sexually transmitted
like "Mathematics of Chaos" where Police; Big llead
,
Todd
.
and the
different sounds.
.
.,
disease.
.
.
a fast, techno beat moves the song Monsters,
:
the soon-to-be imprisoned
Songs range from the
,
industdal
'/Business" proves itself to be . along; and on the title track which
Dr.
Dre, Green Jelly, and Alabiqna
speed of "Cutting/' the Beastie Boy-
quality material through the
,
·
wide
uses grindy, stone-cutting guitars and
all
released new material.
'
------,--------~---,--~:;._
__
,,__
__
. . . : : . . , . _ ~
SUN
~
*FOOTBALL*
12
NOON -
?
WITH
$1.SO
BTLS.
• tSfi'
.·
OF BUD OR
BUD
'llGHT
&
1/2
PRICE
WINGS
MON
*FOOTBALL*
WITH
$LSO
BTLS.
OFHUD
OR . .
. .
• BUD
LIGHT
&
$LOO BAR
BURRITOS
.r.41'
·
TU ES
-~
-
*$3.00
PITCHERS* BUD OR MICH. LlGHT
.
• i##'
&
t/2
PRICE WINGS
·
THUR.
*COllEGf NIGHJ*so
CENT BUD DRAFTS, SHOT SPECIALS
. •
.
~OWf
~ ~0ij~9pm -10pm
W
.
ITH
_
so
·
cENT WELL DRINK
.
.
s""i--:--
~-
.
18
&
UP W/ VALID COLLEGE
IDD
.J ·
RI\Q~
~ ~
·
$3
UNDER,
$1
OVER
·
~
.
FR
I
*MODERN ROCK.LIVE*,
$3
COVE~-'.•·
• $1.50
BOTTLE BEER SPECIAL
&
A
LIVE MODERN
ROCK
BAND
SAT.
~1.50
WELL DRINKS FOR
lADlfS
·
-~EVERYONE
$1.50
BOTTLE BEER
_
SPECIAL
~
ALL
EEQU~ST DJS
TIM
&
ED,
~3
COVER
1.
2.
3.
4.
.
5.
·
s .
7.
8.
·
s.
10.
·
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
BEASTIE BOYS
:
GET
if
TOGETHER
LUSCIOUS JACKSON
.
.
CITY SONG
.
.
. . .
.
WEEZER
.
UNDONEnHESWEATER SONG
THEY MIGHT BE GIANTS
THERMOSTAT
:.
.
·
STONE TEMPLE PILOTS
-INTERSTATE
LOVE SONG
JUDY BATS
·
HAPPY SONG
·
.
.
DINOSAUR JR.
FEEL
.
THEPAIN
LOVE SPIT LOVE
AM I WRONG?
.
BLUES TRAVELER
HOOK
SKY CRIES MARY
SHIPWRECKED
.
.
.
REM
Vt/HA
rs
THE°FREQUENCY, KENNETH?
STEREO LAB
PING PONG.
•
.
MAGNA
POP
$LOWLY,SLOWLY
DADA
·
ASK THE DUST
·
LETTERS TO CLEO
/
SEE
DAVE MATTHEWS BAND
RECENTLY
THE FARM
COMFORT
L7
SHffL/ST
SMALL
FACTORY
_
VALENTINE
WEEN
/
CAN'T PUT
MY
FINGER ON
IT
This is the top 20 taken from
9/13/94
to
9/25/94
Thank
You,
Scott Graves & Beth Dooley
THE
CIRCLE;
SEPTEMBER 29, 1994 ·
3
Garttana Cotrimons become wet·
·
residence
,,·
·
.
···•
... ·
..
·
..
,.
·,'
..
.
.
.
.
..
'
.
'
area
by:RON
JOHNSON
Assistant. Editor
. .Drinke~. at' Marist rejoice,• there
1s a change m the campus drinking
policy.
.
.This· year, apartments within
_Gartland Commons housing students ·
of both legal age and below legal
age are now considered wet resi-
dences.
. ·.
· Lastyear, only apartments whith
students who were of legal drinking
ag~ fell '!}nder the heading of wet
residence. ·
Director of Housing, Jim Raimo ·
said the chang boiled down
to
com: ·
mon sense ..
· "If .you we.re 21, wouldn't you
wantto drink?," Raimo said.
Students residing within Gartland
have . responded positively to the
change of policy.
.
·
A majority of the Gartland resi-
dents, felt the shift was only natural.
Showing enthusiastic support for the
change.
.
. .
.
Natasha Parker, a senior business
marketing· major· was among . those
who welcomed. the change.
.
· · "I'm pretty anxious- to sit down
after a hard day and have a beer
without worrying about an
R.A.
or
R.D.," Parker said.
Kevin O'Neill, 22,
a
senior.com-
munications major, explained why he
Marist cable still not
satisfying community
Gerberich also said that if they
by MICHAEL
J.
LaCUGNA
were to pull another· NBC· affiliate
Staff Writer
off of a satellite, they would get one
that was of another state that not
.
many students would be frorn.
Marist College:isexperiencing. ·.',.In-other., words, it's not;i!i .the·• .
technical difficulties when. itcoines . students' best interest to. have a sta- ..
to student satisfaction with the choice lion that would feature news that the
of cable stations and the quality of students had little interest'in,
if
ariy.
reception.
·
· ·
Sansola said that the solution. to ·
Students are starting to wonder the problem would be to·gera stron-
why they only have ·,a certain ger antenna.
amount of channels. ..
.
.
Students who would like to have
Some are also annoyed with the . other channels are encouraged by
reception from some of the channels, Sansola . to · contact their Student
especially channel four.
Government Association representa-
Marist has
15
channels; includ-
lives.
ing Marist College Television.
"Student government is the fo-
Steve Sansola, assistant . dean of rum if students want to raise• issues
housing and activities said . that the • of the kinds of channels they want,"
selection of channels was based on
Sansola said.
:
supported the change ..
.. "Just for the fact that I am of age
and that I should be able to drink
without getting· hassled from those
who dictate power from us," O'Neill
said.
:
.
.
Elizabeth Donohoe, 20, a junior
communications major, has her own
reasoning for supporting the change.
"Cause, I'll be 21 in four
months," Donohoe said.
Still, some preached a word of
caution. Greg Williams, 21, a senior
accounting major, stated there could
be some·problems.
"Sure, I support these changes.
As long as, people handle them re-
sponsibly," Williams said.
Raimo noted the shift was not so ·
much a change in policy as it was a
loosening of restrictions.
He said there would be more
drinking in Gartland, because there
would be more people of legal age
within Gartland.
"The North End is mainly com-
prised of juniors and seniors," Raimo
said, ''.We encouraged sophomores to
reside in the Mid-Rise."
According to Raimo, the Hous-
ing Office has a loosely constructed
plan for. four-year residents.
Raimo likens his plan to a "rights
of passage".
"Rights of passage means you're
going to be going through some
changes. We will be there to present
you with different challenges and
experiences which we hope will help
you to grow as a person," Raimo
said.
However, sophomores would
now be contained to the dry Mid-
Rise and Champagnat building as
best as possible.
This would leave the wet North
End, open to juniors and seniors .
The trouble lies in discerning how
realistic this goal of maintaining dry
residences for under-age students
really is.
Gartland residents had their
doubts. Barton Ng, a junior commu-
nications major, was one resident
who voiced his doubts.
"It's not really realistic, but it's
better than it was," Ng said.
what the administration thought was
. One student followed the advice
a wide variety of channels that in-
::,f Sansola and sought the help of
eluded news both local and national, .
·
'the ~GA and as a result, the campus
entertainment, sports, and educa- · ,now carries the Black Entertainment
· The Marlst College Seal Has been placed In the center of the rotunda.
It
ls part of the
tional programming.
· . .
.
Television, channel· 23.
$27 million renovation plan.
C1n:1ep11o1o1Ka111y
link
. The channels that Maristhas'fall . Faiza Brown; a senior, went to
.ijitotwcfqi_t~gor,ies:,the,~~anne)s_that,,.:13ob~ynfh,t~f!~.-coordi11~~Qrofstu- .-.·· ..
·:~e.
·•c.
··•r·et'ar·
1•e·
"-s·. '
' M ·
. . ,,
·a"":n·
-•s•1·
·-a·b•
l·e•' •
to cotne to.
are received by,satellite
·
an9theoijes
'
':lent .activities and Sa_nso11,1,
who
0
that are transmitted 'to the antenna· :1dvised her to start
a
.petition, .get
on.·top:of.Ghampagnat.H:~~., .
i,etween,500ai:1d600signatures,and
t
•
b security
rece~forih!~~~/!:e~a;:?~~b~:~-
th
e?.~~:to~aili~ ~able channels ca-.
an agreem.en . over .
JO .
ceived. by the ariten~ae.
< .. . . . · ··
tered to the black and hispanic popu-
security for those who might be af-
. For ins.tarice; chaiirielfour NBC
lation,''. Brown said. "lthought that
by SUZANNE YANUSZ
fected.
fa
transmitted from Nev, York City · ..
was
wrong, so I. started a petition
Staff Writer
Betty Jaycox, administrative sec-
and it is received by the Champagnat
md the majority of students who
retary for the division of science, and
antenna.
.
.
, _ ·• ..
_ ·•· .·
,igned it were white."
This . past summer, the one of the negotiators for the union,
.
•
,
There ·are are large amounts of
Brown began her questto acquire
.
secretary's union at Marist agreed said any company is going to try to
jnterference .bi,:tween NewYorkCity
BET in the middle .of the 1992 fall
they would not accept a contract if save money, but they should think
.and Poughkeepsie andthe reception
,emester.
.
.
-
it did not guarantee them job secu-
about people who work at the school
often has static and an unsteady pie-
In .thespring of the 1993, there
rity.
while doing these things.
ture.
were many meetings that involved
This situation could have ulti-
"We were not asking for job se-
CarlGerberich, vice president of
administration, SGA members, and
mately led to a strike if terms were curity for a lifetime," said Jaycox.
Marist College Information Services, . Brown,
·
not agreed upon.
"There is no such thing. We were
sa.id there was a way to solve the
The end result was BET being
The secretaries decided they just asking for job security for the
p~oblern of the reception on channel
introduced to the campus at the be-
would push for job security in their life. of our contract, which is three
four, put it poses oth_er problem~jf , :ginning ~fthe fall semester of that :contract when they learned of the years."
it were to be rectified.
..
.
la.ine
year," .·
. ·..
. . .
college bookstore "outcasting."
Three quarters of the union's
,'~Vie
could.pull in another NBC
"If
you want something on this
This occurs when an area of work meeting~ from March through July
a.ffiliate,fromA}b;mi:qff the antenna ·, campus, a petition is the way to go,"
is sent to an·outside agency. At least dealt.with the issue of job security.
and it would be less interference than
Br(ll,Vn said.
.
. . .·
. . -
four positions were lost at the Marist During that time, the secretaries wore
channelfour,'' he said. :'But we have
·
She also said that starting at the
bookstore when it was taken over red on some Thursdays, and wore
a lot
of
students from the
·
New York
_
begil)lling of the semester is betii,:r
if
by Barnes and Noble.
black on one Friday in June when
City area who like to
kn<>W
what is
.
yoµ are trying .to get the station by . · Although the
_
se people regained they were in danger of not having a
going on: athome. Another option is
tlie next semester.
their positions at the bookstore, this contract. These actions symbolized
to pull anotlief NBC affiliate in off
caused the secretaries tQ want a pro-
the secretaries' solidarity and illus-
a satellite, but whenever. yoll pull
"Bob (Lynch) and Steve
vision in their contract, so if another trated that all of the unions' mem-
another channel.off of the satellite,
(Sansola) were very supportive and
situation similar to the bookstore hers wanted job security.
it
costs more money."
cooperative,'_' Brown said.
should occur, there would be job· ·
Two of the main negotiators were
Glen Carter, executive vice
presidentof the union, and Carol
Coogan, who represented the school.
Sometime in mid-August, both
the secretary's union and the school
came to an agreement.
Some of the additions to the sec-
retaries' contracts were that they
would be notified if a situation were
to occur that might threaten their
jobs, and that the school would mini-
mize the impact of subcontracting
on bargaining union members.
"The new contract was not all that
we wanted, but better than nothing,"
said Jaycox.
If
the situation was not resolved
after informational picketing, then
the secretaries would have gone on
strike.
However, Jaycox said that strik-
ing is the last thing any union would
want to do, and they were not plan-
ning to go on strike unless it was a
last resort.
The Circle apologies
to Jim Raimo for the
typo In his name last week.
\
4
11IE
CIRCLE,
:
'
sEf'IEMBER 29, 1994
•
:nn:clRcU.
f£ATUR£
SEPIEMBER29, 1994
5
Former New
·
Jersey High School principal gives
motivational lecture to Marist community
by
DARYL RICHARD
Staff Writer
Fo~er East Side High principal
Joe Clark, after whom the movie
"Lean On Me" was modeled, spoke
to students last week, inspiring them
with messages of determination and
power of the individual.
''The purpose of your existence
on this planet is not to make a living
but to make a life
...
a useful life, a
significant life. Thus, do all the good
you can," said Clark, reciting the
words of16th century preacher John
Wesley.
Students packed the campus the-
ater last Wednesday, sitting on the
floor and standing in the foyer to
listen to his speech.
Clark
is
best known as the sub-
ject of the movie
"Lean
On Me,"
the story of a man hired to clean up
an inner-city high school plagued by
violence and drugs.
.
.
.
.
However, having a Hollywood
movie modeled after him is just one
example of Clark's extensive public
recognition.
.
He has appeared on the covei of
Time magazine, been on two
seg-
ments of "60 Minutes,"
.
written two
books and received a Presidential Ci-
tation. His response to receiving all
the attention: "That's irrelevant to
the process."
REVIEW
by SCOTI SIGNORE
Food
Guy
In his speech, Clark stressed the
idea that one individual can make a
difference in the world. He told the
audience that fear is the biggest thing
holding people back from doing what
they think is right.
"Fear is nothing more than false
expectations appearing real," Clark
.
said.
·
According to Clark, no person is
free if
.
they are afraid to speak the
truth. He said sticking up for what
you believe in is extremely impor-
tant in life.
Clark told students to "stand on
your principles and take the conse-
quences."
He added that after conquering
your
.
fears comes the most impor-
tant task in life - developing a posi-
tive mental attitude.
"The person who has removed
"can't" and "impossible" from their
vocabulary is a conqueror," Clark
said. "You're looking at a con-
queror."
,
Clark repeatedly emphasized that
it is essential to make the most of
life,
and when striving for your goals
never be afraid to fail because "suc-
cessful people fail more often
·
than
unsuccessful people."
Most of the people attending the
speech were impressed with Clark's
words.
"I found it highly motivational,"
said graduate student Terri
burgers, PhB!y cheese steaks,
reubens and grilled chicken.
. .
I sampled a "chicken cordon
bluewich," served on a bulky roll,
This week's review is
_
hased
consisting of a chicken breast, ham,
upon my
.
vi.sit
.
t
.
o the Easy Street swiss and· dijonaise dressing.
,
PCafia_r
,
k~;"}(jca
.
}fcl
.
j;t:>ii
.
~:
Route
_
:.
~
,
:
iii
,
_
Hyde
_
·
:
:,,:
.
With)f:fev/minor exceptio!ls, it
,
was eicce11ent.
·
..
,
. .
The
Easy
Stl'~ei
'
eaf'e pro~ides a
I was disappointed that my sand-
•
peaceful
.
atmosphere
·
amidst the. wich
·.
was covered in the dijonaise
.
chaos of Route 9. (That is, the
dressing. (I strongly recommend ask-
.
amount of peace
O
must depend on
ing for it on the side.)
your time
.
of visit. On this particular
Also, rather than serve either po-
Saturday afternoon,
·
l was lucky
tato chips or french fries, the Easy
enough to have just a few distraca
Street has cole slaw accompany the
.
tions from my meal.)
.
sandwich. I would have enjoyed
-.
The walls are cluttered with items
something other than the cole slaw.
thatare supposed to remind the cus-
.
Sandwich prices range from
tomer of the 1920s (ie: pictures of
$4.95, hamburger, to $7.95, barbe-
.
Model A's).
·
·
,
·
.
cue chicken sandwich. Dinners start
..
.
.
··
.
On one wall hangs a sign
-
that
at $11.95, chicken parmesan, and go
reads ''relax and enjoy." It's an ap-
up to $17.95
for
barbecue chicken
propriate sign and it's been appro-
and ribs.
·
priately
_
placec:I.
:
.
.
·
.
.
.
This is riot a place where one
Upon entering the restaurant, the
should spend $17.95 for one dinner.
i
c:ustonier
·
is greeted with
·
two
.
deci-
I should mention that as an appe-
.
sions that are significant to his or
tii~r, I sampled the pizza bread and
her visit: the
.
first is' the
.
preference
a
·
cup ofonion soup.
:
-
.
ofsmoku:tg, the
·
second'is the bar.
.
.
T~e bread, cajun spiced and
.
•·
Your answers will undoubtedly , topped with onions and marinara
affect your dining experience.
sauce, was a great choice. The mini
·
.
For example, if you choose to sit
pizza was generously portioned and
in
a smoking section, you are forced
generously priced ($3.95.)
..
to
'
sit in a booth, or near the bar.
•
My visit was affected by two sig-
(Unfortunately, if you make this
nificant events.
choice, yourbooth is accompanied
My first negative feelings were
by a win~ciwseat of Route 9
.
)
based upon the size of my beverage.
If you choose not to smoke, then
I ordered a Coke, and when it
you can sit iri either a booth or at a
came, I couldn't get over how small
table in a place tha
.
t is completely .it was. By the time I had left, I had
isolated from the bar. I chose not to
ordered three more.
smoke.
Also, I was disappointed with the
Now, in regards to where to sit..J
service.
don't think it really matters except
My waitress was nowhere near
foi
the booths!
being a pleasant individual. She
The
·
booths in the Easy Street
didn't even act as if she cared
if
I
Cafe are, without a doubt, the most
was enjoying myself. (And this is
uncomfortable seats in Dutchess
before I ordered the three Cokes.)
County.
.
In
terms of an overall evaluation,
.
I sat down for about one second
it was below average.
and then immediately moved to a
I was disappointed in the service,
table with relatively comfortable
the dijonaise dressing, the booth and
chairs.
the size of my coke.
Easy Street's menu may have the
And although I was pleased with
most diverse options in the area. You
the pizza bread and the onion soup,
can get almost anything.
what was bad outweighed what was
They have a ton of reasonably
good.
priced appetizers and sandwiches.
At some point in the future, I may
They also have a great number
go there again, but when I do, I will
of dinners, but they weren't as rea-
enjoy some more appetizers and
sonably priced (ie. chicken
again sit at a non- smoking table.
parmesan, $11.95.)
I will continue to avoid the over-
Some of their sandwiches include
priced dinners and I
will
order a
turkey and roast beef clubs, cheese-
larger drink.
Fitzgibbons.
She added that his message reas-
sured her that it is alright
fo
be alone
when searching for success in life
because your views may not always
agree with others'.
·
"His speech was structured so
well.
It
reminded us that you have
to be the best you can be,'' said
sophomore Carolyn Sutton.
Sutton was also very impressed
with Clark's stage presence. She said
she felt his presentation grabbed the
audience.
Clark is viewed by many as a
very charismatic speaker. He paces
up and down the stage while deliv-
ering his speech, combining the
words of such worldly figures as
Charles
Dickens,
William
Shakespeare and Martin Luther King
Jr. with his own insight on life.
His extensive vocabulary, includ-
ing words like pertinacious (inflex-
ible, persistent) and ostensible (pre-
tended, not real), made his speech
not only entertaining, but educational
as
well.
Before his closing, Clark toucheci
briefly upon his views on race rela-
tions. He said he feels we should
not judge people by their ethnicity,
skin color or any other physical trait.
"We should judge people by the
content of their character and let our
true feelings out. Then we will be
able to blend this dichotomy and we
can be one."
Americans last." Clark added that
Clark said there is too much con-
when we reach this goal he feels we
cenlration on every individual's char•
will have the best country anyone
acteristics and needs and that what
has ever seen.
·
we need to do is work together as
In his final words he urged ev-
one and recognize our similarities
eryone to never give up in their life-
before we focus on our differences.
long endeavors and to always put
"It's time for us as a nation to
100 percent into everything they do.
come together as one. We must stop
"Never accept mediocrity. A dia-
ethnomania and race consciousness.
mond is nothing more than a piece
We are all Americans first and
of coal that stuck to its job."
Here comes the rain. Dark clouds hang over Marist this week,
drenching the campus.
Circle phn!o/ Kattr/ un;,
Peace C9rps offers
graduates
different employment opportunities
by
CHRISTINE WOOD
Staff Writer
Two Peace Corps representatives
visited Marist on Mon, Sept. 19,
hoping to recruit graduating seniors
for their 1995 mission.
The Peace Corps, which began
under the Kennedy administration in
1961, hopes to promote world peace.
They help the people of interested
countries and areas meet their need
for trained manpower and promote
a better understanding of Americans.
In the past 33 years, more than
145,000 Americans have been Peace
Corps volunteers.
Peace Corp volunteers get to
travel, help fight hunger and pov-
erty, and other social ills.
They have served in more than
100 countries in Africa, the Middle
East, Asia, the Pacific, South
America,
·
Central America, the Car-
ibbean and Central Europe.
"The Peace Corps gives people
the opportunity to see the world and
get something back at the same
time," Penny Anderson, a Peace
Corps representative, said.
Serving at least 27 months in the
community level, Peace Corps vol-
unteers can work in fields v:irying
from: small business and coopera-
tive development, agriculture, for-
estry and environment, fish culture,
health and nutrition, education, en-
gineering and industrial arts.
"You don't have to be an expert
in any particular field to join the
Peace Corps," Anderson said.
Volunteers receive eight to 12
weeks of intensive language, cultural
and technical training prior to their
community work.
Members periodically attend in-
service
workshops after entering their
rural or urban communities.
Volunteers receive a monthly
allowance for housing, food, cloth-
ing, and incidentals during service.
Medical and dental care are free,
as well as, transportation to and from
overseas sites. Twenty-four vacation
days are given to each volunteer.
Most student loan payments are de-
ferred for the duration of Peace
Corps service and a partial Perkins
Loan cancellation is available.
Following Peace Corps service,
volunteers receive a re-adjustment
allowance of approximately $5,4000.
Job-hunting assistance is avail-
able, and volunteers are eligible for
federal employment on a non-com-
petitive basis.
Over 50 institutions offer special
scholarships and financial aid for
returning volunteers, including the
.
Fellows/USA Program which offers
assistance for employment and
graduate school.
Four Marist graduates are cur-
rently serving in the Peace Corps.
Other Peace Corps alumni in-
clude Cabinet Secretary Donna
Shalala, author Paul Theroux, and
TV show host Bob Villa.
Applications for the Peace Corps
are available in Career Development.
Peace Corps representatives will
return to Marist on Tue, Oct. 4, for
interviews.
I
.
I
t
f
l
!
6
THE
CIRCI.E,:£01'f
ORIAL
~EPrEMBERZ9, 199~
THE CIRCLE
.
MARIST;
W_ET?"ff!ROOH
W;SS
THAN
ADf~UA!§:f.
MARIST COLLEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE, NY 12601
·
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER
Kristina Wells, editor
Dana Buoniconti, senior editor
Justin Seremet; senior editor
Andrew Holmlund, sports editor
ON
$O
ET'5 1-Rv\
c.vJ.
M\OR
•
✓
Meredith
Kennedy,feature editor
Teri L. Stewart,
editorial page editor
Tom Becker,
colwnns editor
John Dougherty,
assistant editor
Dawn Martin,
assitant editor
Ron Johnson,
assistant editor
Larry Boada,
assistant editor
Lynn Wieand,
assistant editor
Matt Dombrowski,
distribution manager
G.
Modele
Clarke,faculty advisor
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
Take A
t
• ·
Political thoughts.ofthe.·week
. c. •
1
0
n
Welcome back to all !he up. perclass.--~en
The health.. car.e deba.te which fi.11 ed th. e
nd women. (I am workmg on my political
media airwave.s for the ·past. two . and a half
irrectness), to yet another year at Marist:
years has slowly come to an end.
.
.·.
To all those«first-year students", V(elcome •· , Her(?'S !ilookb~y~nd .the ~edia sensaJion~
The soil is down, the newly-paved sidewalks have come to life, the
to the _most enjoyable four (or five) years of· ·a1is1n: ru.id_;artl;tf}ario..¥s r~~sims the ~ealth
glass panes in the Student Center are sparkling, and it appears as though
your life. .
. .
. .
· ·..
.
car~~d!~te~llnton tried to do too much,
Marist College is truly a sight to see
The reason 1 queStion the four. years .is
too soon: Changing ·the health
-
care system
•
because some "first-year students" could not
·
. ·
· .
•
· ·• • · · ·. • • ·
.
And hey we've got Barries and Noble too.
handle three hours;.
.
. . .
woul~ h~ve b
.
e~n the.largest domestic soci~
' ·
·
·
· ' " $
·11·
·
change smce. Lyndon Johnson's
Great Soc1-
B_ut there 1s_ so!llethmg at Manst that w1ll take more than 27 m1 ion
But, I do not get paid to rag on the stu-
ety.
to fix and rev1tabze.
dents, it is my job to fill you in on what is
It
was not an easy challenge and Clinton
And I'm not talking about the library.
happening around the world and i~your back-
wanted tC? _plc::as~ _too many pe~ple. without
The issue ~t han? is studen_t apathy.
ya
rd
·
.
· ..
. ·:·,
·.
.
·. ·.
co7;6i::;~~s~·fuajor issues; affordability
Let's face
It.
This campus JUSt doesn't care..
. .
Bubbaand.th~Presidenthavc::bee~.":'ork-
:of care (premiums),·cost- sharing; benefits,
Last week The Circle broke a story on an arrest made in the one-year-
mg verr. hard to get so~e form of nat!onal
medicaid, quality assurance.aiid
.
<::o,nsUIJ1er pro--
ld
,
healt~ care passed, but sm<:e (:;on~ess .i_s. on .. tection and access. for. underserved c:ommuni-
0
rape ~ase.
.
. .
..
.
vacation, health care ha!l b~en put on ·hold:
ties, health
care
reformers ,could'.not obtain
You might have expected at least one person on t~s. campus, either a
National health car~ would give (that's m~jority support.from Congress.·
·
. _, ·.
student or a member of the faculty, would have written a letter to the
right, give) everyone health care. 1 know your
-The plan. w:as. t~o con;ip~eheps1ve. and
editor regarding the article or the editorial.
next question; who is going to:pay: for it?,·
· contr~versial.
~ ~illary_ Chn.~on ~nd Ira
W ll
h
f
lk
?
··
· · · ·
~.
Magazmer, the pnglllal designers of.the health
e guess
W
a~,
~
S.
.
.
Look'in the mirror. I! i.s that s~pl~.
.. care plan, tried to an~idp~te,fhe prqple!115 of
There was nothmg m our mailbox Monday mornmg.
..
.
The taxpayers are going to.be picking-up• health care reform with the help of therr 500
Were we surprised?
·
'·
..
.
.. ; '.
·!
,. _,,,. ; '
.....
the bill ·SO'everyone c,µj!have:f~it: and equi!} :: J>.ersoil'task f<?ts«::d
.:"i
:,:<»:,;
;!i!
.1:'v''.>'1!'"~
N t
11 .
coverage. , ' •. · ·
·
· · > ·: .,;
·,
,,·>
ra
•. •
:The problem
.
~ w,ith m~erest group~ spen<l-
O
~ea y.
.
.
.
.
. .
·
.
. ·.
ing over $300 million'figliting:against it and
Luckily, some helpful students came to our rescue and handed m letters ..
I
have thought about it and realize th_at
with the ongoing partisan<bickering in the
minutes before deadline.
after I graduate, I really do not need a joo.
House and Sen.~te,Jt was impossible for them
But, we shouldn't ha':e _to p~rsuade people to write letters to the editor. .
Follow mefor
a
second. Ifl do not work,· to
~:;~~
~~!~~-the original 1,342 page
And what about adm1mstrahon?
.
.
·
I can collecttmemployment,lcould apply f~r
health .care proposa}Jo( its complexity,
.
And
They should have. at least had a tiny bit to say about the article,
the
~~~~~er::e:id
I
wo.uld have co.mpl,ete medi-· freside1:1tCl~to~ l~ite~_.his:scope. ~y
refu~-
ediWtorhiat1, orthjusdt thle Mfirst_ is?sue in general.
.
This plan does not give_peopl~ ~ny incen-
_
~~:n:i~!11Jg~ll ~at .did not guarantee 100
·
a
S
e e~ ,
anst.
.
.
!!Ve t~ go out an~ get a JOb.Jt_g1ves them
.
>The
pubUc is:noLready
for
such a
re-
The sad truth 1s no one on this campus cares enough· to react to any
mcenhve to 1I1ooch off the government as well
form. Although a poU conducted ·by 'fime/
story or any issue.
as the taxpa!ers. . .
i
,
.
, . .
. : . .
.
CNN
_on ~u~. 4show:d that 77 percent of
It is truly unfortunate.
.
Some wo.uld say I am a cold heartless . Americans sttllv:ant universal cov~rage, only
,.
A
· f f
· ,
•
.
.
person y,ho does not think about the thou- , 49 percent wanted the
_
gove~entto re~late
s a m~tter
O
act, it s pathet~c.
. .
.
.
sands and thousands of people who
.
cari-
not
the
C()!i~.. .
. ·· •.
• . • • ·.
. . · .. ·• .
Everythmg that happens on this campus md1rectly or d1rectly affect.s
afford the astronomical prices of medical at~
.
c
'l'here i~
~<:>
~an~ avoid
_
t~~
fi.S~~•
_
.llni:v~r-
you the students
tention. Nottnie., -
· .
sa_! coyerag~.,w1H1n~olye ~:~istribu.tionJ>fm-
'
·
, •
. .
•·.
.
.
.
come and.d1Sruptsatisfactc,ry arrangements for
So, why don
t
you care?
~Just do not be.heve that Ishould get stuck : .many Ainericans and this
is
not something
You cared about parking. You cared about the cafe hours. You cared
;,aymg
!
0
r so1I1e9ne els~
_
who :slacks off.:: ; : , . ,most Ameri~s
:
advocate. ·.
.
. . .
b
.s:
d .
.
.
. . .
I believe that compames should be required::· •"-Now· •tha·t •s·o· m·e ·causes• ·o· f. the f:ailed plan
a out tax on
.100
1tems. You cared about cultural d1vers1ty.
. ·
. ·
· . ·· · ·
·
·
. . ..
. .
. ·
.
.. · · ·. .
•
•
.
.
. .
. • .
. .. . .. .
. ·.
. . .
.
. have been addressed, where do we go from
So why not care about other issues, hke rape and v10lence.
to give their employees some· form of health
·
here? · .
·
.
·
•
C
·
· ·•
·
• ·, ... · · ·. · .. ·
Sure these topics are taboo and shocking, but they do affect this cam-
care.IknowthatPizzaHutandJvkDonald's
'Let'sstartbyrecognizingthreecompeUing
us
have taken a lot. of abuse b_e~use they do. not : reasons why. health care reform should be re-
p . .
.
.
. .
.
have health benefits for therr employees.
·
,
examined next year. .
.. . .· ..
All we ask 1s that the students of Manst College give up the apathy and
In the United states 38 million Ameri-
start reacting to issues that affect you.
Bolh of these companies make millions of .. cans lack hea
.•. · 1th
ins.
uran~e
.• These. Americans
dollars a year and they should be responsible d
h
•
Hey Marist-The Circle is your newspaper. Itis for the Marist commu-
for providing care.
·
•
0
not ave the b8;iic services of unpiuniza-
nity, about the Marist community, by student .members of the Marist
Basically, 1 am saying that there is a prob- tionA.~J!r~~
1
t!~P~agnti:/;:f;:;~:e
~~4
community.
.
lem with our system. I just do not think Bubba Human Development Report, every industrial
The students on this campus.like to complain about subjects such·as the
has the answer.
' ·
na~ion, except the Unit~d States,. considers
d · ·.
·
1· ·
h
·
b
·
·11
·
·
d
What troubles me is the hard push to get universal health care an inherent nght.
a mm1strat10n, po 1c1es, ousmg, ut no one
WI
wnte m an express
something passed soon.
. More than 22 milli~n Americans will lose
their views.
insurance temporarily
by
switching or los•
Why not just give it a shot?
We all -know that Ointon based a good ingjobs next year. Face it, jobs are not guar-
Th
. • .
t
I.
part of her
(I
am sorry, I meant his) campaign anteed.
IS IS
no a po ice-state.
of getting national health care and
if
he does
In the same manner health insurance is
Administration is not going to have security hunt you down in the
not, election
'96
could be very interesting.
not guaranteed. Ameri~s that float from job
middle of the night and dispose of you in the. Hudson River1·ust because
Should there be a regulation on the cost of !o jofib
0
have to find altem_ative m_ eans o_f_pay-
medical attention?
health
d
th
al
you have something t? say a,bout_ the rape article or any other story.
~~-
•.
care urmg
err transition
Take our word for 1t. We re still here.
Should an aspirin COSt $S while you are in
Medical choice
is
decreasing for Ameri-
the hospital?
Part of the education process is to learn how to stand up for yourself,
.
cans with h~Ith insurance. In 1988, 71 .~r-
d to lea n how to react to issues which bother you or concern you
~hould the taxpayers_ be responsible for
cent of Amencans could go to any physician
an
r
·
paymg someone else's bills?
they wanted.
You are at Marist to get an education. Use what you have learned so
.
In 1993, only 49 percent could, because
far and start caring about your college.
These are all quest_ions that need to
be
companies forced workers into health mainte-
•
.
·
addressed and not burned through.
nance organi·zati·ons (HMOs)
How can you be happy here
1f
you constantly cotnplam but never do
.
·
•
·
This idea of national health care affects
Clearly, the American health care system
anything about it?
:veryone and Clinton is in a rush to get some-
still has problems. Any health care reform bill
Now is your big chance to make a difference and to get rid of the
thing passed so 1996 w~n't.
be
hard.
passed before Congress adjourns on Oct. 7 will
a ath
not address these concerns.
P Y · .
.
. .
Something needs to be done but it is cer-
Let's hope that the 104th Congress can look
The Cucle
IS g1vmg you that chance.
:ainly not this.
beyond the political rhetoric and propose real-
Run
with
it.
istic solutions to provide the uninsured with
This is
your time to get things off your chest.
Scott A. Sullens is one of The Circle's
bas~:~:~:S•~~\~h~~~h~~
1
'it
ic1:::,~
Just
do
it.
political columnists.
*
political columnists.
.
DIE
CIRCU,
VIEWPOINT
SEPrEMBER29, 1994
-
1
·
.
Nfarist
·
students, faculty need to
exercise their writing skills
_
Take a look afthis page. How
'
cultural diversity was the main
many letters to the editor do you see?
issue that people could not stop talk-
.
We were
'
disappointed to fmd no
ing about.
.
one
_
in the
·
.
Marist
-
community
.
had
Did we
.
see a
.
change
.
occur be-
even a thought about anything.
cause of any complaints?
Last week, The Circle published
Someone on this campus was
its first issue.
.
d
What did you read at the top of
rape
·
.
the front page?
·
.
.
.·
One of the most horrifying expe-
.
"f'.
ormer Marist Student Arrested
riences that could happen to some-
on Rape
;
Ch~rges."
one
__
and
.
it was done by a former
For the three or four years that
member
·
of our
.
community.
we have been here, Marist has been
Last September you rallied for
built up as a community school, yet
..
safety. "Take back the night" it was
where
is
the community participa-
called.
tion that is needed to bring about
change and answers?
We came togeth~r. We were a
•
"community" in every sense of the
We hear the
·
complaints in the
word .
.
hallways, in our
'
dorms, and when
we're
-
out with friends,
.
.
yet very
What happe~ed after t~e rally?
rarely does someone make an effort
·
.
Did you just forget about it or maybe
to get answers, make changes or
you_ ~on't care anymore?
question why?
.
·
Did you find a solution to this
Last year various topics set off
tragic problem and forget to tell The
an onslaught of comments.
Circle?
Editor:
In our opin
_
ion, people should be
asking "how did it happen?"
·
Could it have been prevented?
• Are there others?
·
What does a community do about
this problem?
·
Ignore it for another
year, wait till some new piece of evi-
dence shows up or the investigation
is closed.
No. Talk to administration, talk
to your peers, write a letter
io
the
editorto let the Marist "community"
know exactly how you feel about this
·
incident or any other topic you feel
strongly about.
We deemed it important enough
to inform you, the students.
.
Now would
.
be a good time to
take some positive action of your
own.
Teri
L.
Stewart is The Circle's
editorial page editor and Lynn
Wieland is an assistant editor.
Last weeks article regarding the
Editor:
the Student Uovemment Association
rape that took
;
place this past year
·
In the Sept. 22 issue of The· will be seriously considered.
brought to mind some changes that
Circle, two similar letters were pub-
The solution must be an efficient
Marist had implemented
'
to ensure
lished expressing students' frustra-
one
;
benefiting all students: upper-
the safety· of-its students.
·
ti
_
oils with the parking poli~y on
classmen, underclassmen, residents
These'. measures included
·an
es-
;
campus
;
.
'
.
.
.
and commuters.
.
cort sen:ice
and
campus van at night .
.
·
These two students are not alone.
·
.
Let SGA know how you want it
This year these two services have
.
}dariv
students are upset about the
'
to be revised and we can work to-
been eliminated due
'
to budget cuts.
•
,
gether to improve the parking policy
I
understand that campus beau ti-
·;
.
parking
.
policy.·
·
.
.
..
fo!
all Marist
.
students.
fication efforts are important
;
for
re-
,
··
'
The question is, how do we want
.
.
.
cruitiiig purposes and for its
'
students'
·
·
it to be resolved.
We are your
SGA,
here to he.~
enjoym~nt· and pride in their
cam~
.
•
.
. .
.
.
.
.
.
all students.
.
_
..
pus.
··
·
·
•
·
-
·
•
: .
.. •
.
·
f-1att ~il!~s,_the
;
S~u~ent
_
bqdy
.
We have an_open door pobcy and
!f9
,
~~~e.r;
,.
~~e
;
<\~Sth
.
~tt«?
.
be_ai!tx
:,{
Pr~1~en!, lS
.
~t~r~sted lllalmprovmg
.
"
..
are
.
always
·
Y.,lllmg to talk to any
can
.
~<!t
_
compensate
·
ror
·
'
aU
'
the
"
cut-
·
·
!he- parkin~ s1tuati<;>n
.
and would be
student.
backs in safety precautions that have
.
interested
Ill
your mput.
Rebecca Kuchar,
Director of Public Relations,
SGA
occurre:itzabeth Shamal
unior
Any
_
solu~itms offered to Matt and
.FJnal
-
Letters to the Editor
·
_
are due Sunday,
.
Oct. 2 at 5pm.
Letters should
·
be no more
-
..
.
.
.
.
than
.
600 words.
CHECK THIS OUT:
SPC EVENTS
:
_
Natural born
_
psycho
There is that old saying that life is
Well
isn't 'that what rich people
not always fair.
.
do - make a lot of money?
This is supposed to mean some-
Could you be rich and not make
thing - it is supposed to explain any money?
something.
.
Well if it's so accepted that life
isn't always fair, how come people
sue over the stupidest things? And
don't say it's because life isn't fair.
There'.s a kid from my town
who's going to Harvard but is suing
his high school because he wasn't
made Valedictorian.
Poor baby.
I'll tell you that
if
I sit down and
think about that long enough
I might
just get upset ... to my stomach!
It just goes to prove an old theory
that says book smarts never go hand
in hand with street smarts
.
I never used to believe this, but
this kid is floating down the river of
common sense with no paddle ... or
boat.
I
used to think that the whole
book smarts doesn't equal street
smarts theory was just a
way
for
dumb people in school to feel better
and say, "WeJJ, he's just book smart
- he's got no common sense."
Of course exaggerated cases of
this theory probably don
'
t produce
the same degree of success, for
ex-
ample: "Well that illiterate guy over
there who can't tie his shoes, yeah
well he's street smart though."
Only once did I meet a man on
the street who claimed to be rich and
didn't have any money at alJ -
he
also claimed to be Elvis and then
some men in white suits took him
away and told him he had puzzles to
finish.
To me it wasn't worth being book
smart if you were then going to have
no common sense and be street
dumb.
Although it was never a valid
excuse to my parents why I wasn't
studying
.
Mom: Why aren
'
t you studying?
Me:
I
don't wanna get dumb, ma .
.
Mom: Don't get smart with me!
~~:
Okay,
I
won't study then
.
This was usually the kind of ver-
bal exchange that prompted my mom
to see if I could catch various kitchen
utencils thrown at high speeds.
I couldn't.
I'd duck and they'd hit a win-
dow and break and it'd be all my
fault because it didn't hit me.
This really made
an
impression
on me.
I hope no one out there who is
illiterate took offense to what they
just read ...
People always brag that they're
I was once a hostage in a bank
street smart.
robbery
.
and the guy started to fire
What exactly does this mean?
randomly_ and missed me but ~hat-
You've memorized a map of the te~ed a wmdow and the first thmg
I
city or something?
_
.
.
said to the bank, manager was:
"My
Is it that on the street you don't fault - should ve taken that hit
step in dog doo?
...
sorry."
You see a man in a ski ma~k with
But I seriously thought it was
a
gun ;nd deduce there might be stupid to be book smart, make a lot
trouble
•
of money and then be too stupid to
If this is street smart, what ex-
actly
~
would consti1u~e street dumb?
Js
"
street
dumb,
people who look
at the homeless on the sidewalk and
ask them for a quarter?
Is that street dumb?
I don't know?
Am I street dumb for not know-
ing the answer?
Teachers would always point out
the straight A kids and say that they
were-
"going
to grow up
and
be rich
~d make a lot of money."
spend it.
You might actually do the smart
thing and save it.
That's
'
no
fun.
We've
also
neglected
the most
unfortunate people of all.
Those who are both book dumb
and street dumb.
What do they do when they grow
up?
Oh yeah, they wind up hosting a
day-time talk show.
Frank LaPerch
is The Circle's
humor columnist
HOW TO REACH US:
• Mondays 11 am to 5pm
• E-Mail: LT 211, HZAL
• .Phone Mail: X2429
NO LETTERS AFTER 5PM ON SUNDAY
ENTION ALL FACUL
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29TH
LEITERS TO CLEO
THE CLUB COUNCILS ON MARIST COLLEGE CAMPUS
ARE SEEKING FOUR FACULTY ADVISORS
WITH COW POETRY OPENING
9:30 CABARET ROOM
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30TH
COMEDIAN DAN HORN
IN THE THEATER AT 9:30
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4TH
SHARON LUND
LECTURE ON AIDS AWARENESS
8:00
THEATER
ALL EVENTS ARE FREE WITH MARIST I.D.
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 4SPC
TO DONATE THEIR TIME AND EFFORTS
TO'OVERSEE COUNCIL MEETINGS
THE ORGANIZATIONS THAT NEED A FACULTY ADVISOR ARE:
PRODUCTION/PERFORMANCE ORGANIZATIONS
SOCIAL/SERVICEORGANaAnONS
CO-CURRICULAR ORGANIZATIONS
SPORTS CLUBS
MEETINGS ARE HELD ONLY ONCE A MONTH AND WILL
ALLOW YOU TO INTERACT ON A MORE PERSONAL LEVEL
WITH THE STUDENT BODY.
IF INTERESTED CONTACT
NICK CAPUANO, VICE PRESIDENT OF CLUBS
AT
X2699
OR Y.7105
-,,
.
.
.
8
TifE
CIRCLE,
SEPI'EMB~R 29, 1994
Marist in search Of
a
nein
.
of CommuniCcltiQn
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
ad went out, the return
was
noto;er-
.
_appli~ts
frcim ~iilch
·
tO ~hoose.
'
t~ be
.
hired.
.
-
.
.
'
.
rig~rous.
•
'
..
·
.
-
,
.
,
.
.
. .
<
__
·
,
:
<
:
by MAURA BROUILLE'ITE
whelming."
.
-
.
. .
_
_
·
"In most ofolir ads we generally
.·
Nolan's list of qualifica~ions,
·
in':,
·
All ofthe resumes
:
are reviewed
Staff.Writer
At this time, approximately
AO
·
get over
_
a hundred people reply_ing. eluding 28 years of teaching
.
.
~t
by' a seai~h
·com
'
mittee coilsisiirig
0
<>f-
applications have been collected.
We had
.
170 people apply last year Marist, begins with his undetgradu-
five or six communication
_
_
.
depart-
The communication·
.
depart-
-
This low number can be
_
attributed
for
·
a
-
journalism position,". Nolan ate work
.
in English, completed)n
ment faculty member~: Tli
_
is
'
te
_
arn
ment is looking for a few good re- to the· fact that the academic com-
said.
.
_
1952 when he graduated
'
from
works by eliminating candidates until
sumes.
munity is not very active during the
Nolan ~inks the more timely ad Marist.
.
·
-
. .
·
.
.
there are appr«;>ximate,IY 10 remain-
During the summer of 1993, an summer.
will facilitate more interest in a job
The
,
·communication department
ing.
.
·
_
.
.
'
.
.
·
ad went out to the college commu-
,
The small number of candidates
of this caliber. Since
_
the academic is aiming to have a final candi~ate
These resumes
.
are
_
presented
·
_
to
·
nity in the Chronicle for Higher has forced a continuation of the
community
is
more active during the selected for the job by the first of the administration for their approval.
Education announcing the search for search.
fall, the response should be greater. the year. The upcoming months will
The appl
_
icants
·_
are then
·
contacted
a new Dean of Communication and
The ad has been resubmitted for
Nolan was asked to fill the posi-
be busy ones for the selection com-
and invited to visit Marist until a
.
the Arts.
distribution beginning in October. It
tion after the department's former mittee.
.
·
final decision is inade.
·
According to Gus Nolan, acting is the !ntention of the departmentto
chairperson, Sarah S. King, left with-
The process
·
by which the com-
"The
ideal candidate would have
·
chair of the department, "when the bring in a substantial amount of new
out enough time
.
for someone new mittee arrives at a single person is
a doctorate in
a
field to show he is
a scholar, that they have accom--
plished the academic credentials•
themselves that we are looking for
on our staff, that they have been
active in scholarship and have writ-·
ten and published something, that
they are aware of developing trends
in communication, .and that they
would have a grasp of the total pic-
ture of communication," Nol;m said .
TO UR
cont. from
p.
1
. - - - - - - - - - - - - -
.
Nolan will continue as acting
chairpers,:m until January:
·
Earn $500 - $1000 weekly stuffing
envelopes. For details - RUSH $1.00
When a replacement is decided
upon, he will return to teaching two
GROUP AV
sections of organizational communi-
57 Greentree Drive, Sulta 3
cation and two sections of public
with SASE
to:·
.
.
Dover,
DE 19901
opinion.
_
.
.
SELL
~
TRIPS,EARNCASH
.
& GO
FREE!!!
anywhere from
$BO
to $150 dollars
per person.
Also eliminated was the campus
van, which transported students be-
tween parking lots.
According to Student Body Presi-
Maris! College Student Government
dent Matt Gillis, the question of is still working on making the cam-
safety is an ongoing topic, and the
pus a safer place for its students.
Student Travel Services is now hiring campus
representatives. Lowest rates
_
to Jamaica,
Cancun, Daytona and Panama
·
City Beach.
Call 1-800-648~4849
She pointed out that the Mccann
Center is open until 2 a.m. andthat it
is a long walk from there to Gartland
at that hour. Nocella felt that there
should be an option open to the
·
stu-
dents to go a safer way than by foot.
Bo
.
I~ the.escorts and the campus van
SPRlf1G
.
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THE
CIRCLE;
.
SEPl'EM~ER 29; 1
~4
WelcomesAII MaristStudents
and Their Families ·
..
914-691-6011
/
FRANK
GUIDO
HIGHLAND, NY 12528
Gracious Riverside Dining
·
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_
2 Minutes from Mid-Hudson Bridge
.
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10
THE
CIRCLt
SEPitMBER
29, 1994
.
..
'
~..
-
,
_
:
,;.';.
;
.
.
.
r-----~--------~-~-~~--~~~~~-----------,
I
I
1
-
·
.
·. .
.•
.
,
.
..
. :
'
·
I
·
:
·
HOW
:·
TO
HANG ON TO
YOUR
DOUGH.
:
I
.
.
.
.
I
·
·
1
-
·
·
,;·
_
.{w1tHouT
CRAMPING
v.plirtsTYLE.)
_
·.
.
,
.
•
.
,
I
- - - - - - - - ~ ~ ~ - _ _ _ _ , .
. ''"'
I
·
·
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.
.
· :
:
.
'' ·
.
I
·
.
I
·
·
,
I"
·
.
:
_(6
Separate "needs" from
''wants."
:
·
_
I
.
. .
Hint: A bed is a need. A
Mr:
Microp
·
hone
I
.
I
I
1
·
is
.
a want.
1
I
·
I
'
.
~
.
,
;
'
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bill but
>
only p~y
-
yoor
-
share~
1
:
.
Why put in for s,o.meone el~e·s
:~wordfish
·
. :
;·
·
,
if
all
;
you gotvvas soup?
-
.
.
.
-
.
· --'
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•
'
:
,
.
_
·
·
I
I
I
I
I
·
·
·
I
·
:
.Cl:n
·
Set aside n,oney for
:
emergencJes.
-
-
·
-
:-
1
Unless you'd r~t0er
.
da,ll_.
your pareri\s
.
.
·
·
1
:
·
for it ·instead.
-
.
.
. .
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·
_
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Keep
·
your
.
.
eye
,
on
your
:
wa.llet.
:
:
Have a Citib
.
ahk
·
(]assiccard in case you
·
:
..
:
.·
lose it.The Lost:Wallet
5
M
Service can get you
:
:
.
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·
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~
-
a new card usually within ·.
·
-
:
.
:
·
·
'
24
·hours aricLhelp replacing vitard6cuments.
:.
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~----~--------~----~----~~----~-~~-~--~~
TH£
CIRCLE,
SEPTEMBER 29, 1994
tt
· BOoters lose . again;
in·
·
·.conn.
on Sat.
Rugby club
looks forward
to fresh start
by TERI L. STEW ART
Staff Writer
The men's soccer team collected
another·defeat in the loss column on
Monday afternoon in Loundonville,
N.Y.
The Red Foxes (1-7 overall; 1-3
in the Northeast Conference) lost to
the Siena Saints, 2-0, in double over-
time.
After being locked in a scoreless
battie at the end of regulation, the
Saints scored two quick goals within
four minutes of the second overtime
to secure the win.
Head Coach Howard Goldman,
who has not seen a Marist soccer
· team lose more than twice to Siena
in 20 years, said this was the best
Saint team he has ever seen.
"Usually we own Siena," the 32-
year head coach said. "They just had
a.really good day."
Freshman goalie Brian Edmonds
had a solid defensive effort for the
Red Foxes by recording 15 saves.
Senior captain Neil Massey said
the team came out strong in the
beginning of overtime, but then it
all fell apart.
'
"We come out from the kick-off
strong," Massey said. "A couple of
minutes later they scored."
According to Goldman, his team
could have had a better game at
midfield.
"With a minute to go, we had a
couple clear shots and we couldn't
put it away," Goldman said. "We
could have ended the game there
The Associated Press
Top 25
College Football Poll
Rank Team
1st-Place Votes
Record
without overtime."
Last Saturday, Marist notched its
first win of the season by defeating
St. Francis
(NY),
2-1, at Leonidott;
Field.
Freshman Cary Smith opened the
scoring gates 30 minutes into the ·
game off a pass from sophomore
Kevin Hardy.
The goal started when the Red
Foxes took the ball from the Terri-
ers at midfield. Hardy made a run
towards the center of the field; while
Smith went to the front post.
Hardy passed the ball past the
Siena defender, and Smith took the
shot and scored.
Junior captain Steven Horsfall
then scored with 43:48 remaining in
the first half.
Goldman said Horsfall's goal
came on a second effort.
"Horsfall took a shot and hit a
defender," Goldman said. •~He got
the rebound and hit it with his right
foot, and it slipped right by the goal-
keeper."
Goldman said his team• gave a
solid effort.
by JASON FARAGO
Staff Writer
If
football is considered to be
the sport of kings, then rugby can
be known as the sport of princes.
Although there are certain dis-
crepancies, rugby is basically simi-
lar to America's version of football.
It is a gentleman's game that was
brought to the United States from
England, and has been trying to
become a main-stay sport at certain
colleges and universities across the
nation.
Marist College is no exception.
The rugby club opened its 1994
campaign last Sunday against
Hofstra University in Uniondale,
N.Y.
The Red Foxes were stopped by
Hofstra, 24-
7.
Marist's only score came in the
second minute of the game when
junior fly-half Christopher Damiani
scored on a 40-yard run.
"We finally got · off our losing ·
streak and put it together," hesaid.
Last Wednesday, the Red Foxes
Sophomore Josh Krueger attempts to control the ball
in a .
That was the only offense Maris!
was able to muster as Hofstra tallied·
24 unanswered points.
wer~ shut down by St. John's Uni-
recent game. Marist fell to 1-7 on Monday.
. vers1ty, 5-1.
.·
· ·
. ·
Clrele
photo/
Kathy
Link
Despite dropping the match, jun-
ior tri-captain Andrei Gisetti said he
Goldman said the Red Storm
Sophomore Judd McMullen in-
were able to capitalize off of Marist's
jured his ankle against St. John's,
err~:5-
.
.
.
and sophomore Josh Krueger
We Just made sdly mistakes at
strained his knee versus the Terri-
the back, and you can't do that witli
ers.
a team like that," he said.
Horsfall did not play because he
Three players sat out Monday's
received his fifth red card against
game.
St. Francis.
National Collegiate Athletic
As-
feels optimistic about the upcoming
sociation
(NCAA) rules state that games.
when a player receives five cards,
"We played a good game,"
he must sit out in the next game.
Gisetti said. "We had a couple of
On Saturday, Marist will be at
guys playing the game who never
Centra_l Connecticut St~te to face-
played before. We will improve."
offagamst the Blue Devils at
7
p.m.
Gisetti said the problem was the
Gridders fall t,o·
Seahawks,
forwards were not able to support
3 0 8
the backs when they got the ball.
•
"Hofstra had a good defense,"
Gisetti said. "They were always in
ference) answered with a safety with
"Our offensive line did great out the right place against us. We did
1 Florida
(31)
by ANDREW HOLMLUND
10:47 remaining in the opening quar-
there for us," he added. "We didn't some things wrong but had our share
3-0
Sports Editor
t_er.
It.
was the third safety Marist
have enough opportunities offen- of good plays as well."
4
_o
recorded in as many games.
sively ."
After a mediocre 4-4 record a
2 Nebraska
(22)
3
Florida St.
(4)
4
Penn St.
(3)
5
Colorado
(1)
6
Arizona
•(1).
7 Michigan
8
Notre.Dame
4_0
Even before the football team's
Wagner increased its lead to
10-
· \ M:~rist ran only 56 plays, com- year ago, the 1994 edition of the
4
_
0
non-conference clash against Wagner
2; when Carl Franke connected
on a
pared to Wagner's
87.
rugby clubis
out to improve on last
3
_
0
College . took place, everything
28-yard field goal, capping off a six-
According
10
Parady, his team season's mark, and
will
attempt to
3
_
0
, seemed to be running perfectly for
play, 27-yard drive.
knew they were facing a very
for-
maketheir sport more rec_ognized on
Head_ Coach Jim Parady.
The Red Foxes closed the gap to
midable opponent.
campus.
2-
1
His team was coming off a stel-
10-8, when junior quarterback Pete
"They're the defending champi-
"As far as Marist is concerned,
3-1
lar 37-19 thrashing over pre-season · Ford found freshman wide receiver
ons in their conference," Parady said. we are just another club," Gisetti
9 Auburn
4-0
conference pick, Iona College. Then,
Jon Reed on a 25-yard pass play.
"We knew going in they were going said. "With the help of Mike Milai,
10
Texas A&M
3°0
two days later, Parady's wife,
That was all the scoring Marist
to
be a very tough opponent. Take (head of club sports), we are trying
11
Alabama
4-0
Kristen, gave birth to their first child,
was able to muster as the Seahawks
away the turnovers, it's a different to clean up our image as
a
bunch of
12 Washington
2-1
Sarah Jane, who weighed in at eight
racked
off
20 unanswered J'Oints.
game."
hooligans who do nothing for the
13 Miami
2-1
pounds, 10 ounces.
Parady once again went with two
Parady said despite the Joss, he school."
14
Virginia Tech
4_
0
A win on Saturday would have
quarterbacks.
believes his team can rebound from
"This club has gone from just
l5 Wisconsin
2_1
put the punctuation mark on what
Ford was S-'14 .for
101 yards;
Saturday and try
to capture the playing to playing to win," Damiani
16 Texas
3
_
0
seemed to be an enjoyable week for · while senior Bob Delponte was 3-14
MAAC trophy.
said. "We played to win each game
17 Washington St.
3
_
0
the third-year head coach.
for55 yards.
"We're looking to get the MAAC before, but now there is a different,
Unfortunately for Parady, his
· Parady said part of the reason for
championship," he said. "Right now, better attitude."
18 North Carolina
2-1
h
b k
d
h h" h
team was handily defeated by the
t e set ac was ue to t e 1g
we are 1-0 in the MAAC, and we
"Not a lot of people know too
19 Southern California
2-1
Seahawks, 30-8, at Fischer Memo-
number of turnovers.
still have seven more MAAC games much about the game," junior
20 Ohio.St.
3-1
rial Field.in Staten Island,
N.Y.
"We turned the ball over seven
to play."
Vincent Nelan said. "We are trying
21.Oklahoma
2-1
Wagner (1-2) was able to click ·times," he said. "We weren't so
to get younger people introduced to
·
· h
(
f~
)
Marist will be back in conference
22 North Carolina St.
3-0
first when running back Lynn Parker
muc as stagnant on o 1ense as we
the game."
·
·
·
,,
action this Saturday afternoon _when
23 Kansas·St
3-0
scampered into the end zone from
were error prone.
The rugby team will be back in
P
d
I
'd h
1 · d
it entertains the Red Storm of St.
24 Colorado St.
4-0
30 yards out.
ara Y a so sa1
e was P ease
action on Sunday afternoon when
Th R d .., ·
(1 2
11
o
'th h.
f~
·
1·
·
t th
f
John's. Unive_ rsity (noon; WKIP ra-
25
Illinois
·2-1.
. e e roxes
- overa ; 1-
w1
1s o 1em;1ve me, ou
e o -
they host Manhattanville College at
1
L111!!·
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~uw&ll!·
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4
:::p::::.=m=. =WfZA=====-TV===• t=a=p=e=d=el=a::::y:::.)!..'.:N~o~rt~h Field at
1
p. __
m_. _ _ _ _ _
_
.. .continued from page 12
"I
moved lier in and then back,"
Zegers said.
"I
found that her fore-
hand was weaker than her back-
hand."
.
On Saturday, the Red Foxes fell
victim to a different scoring format. -
The team was forced to play
under rules which only awards the
best- of-three winner in doubles
one
point.
Marist swept the doubles 3-0, but
fell short, 2-4, in the singles matches.
This resulted in a 5-2 loss, in-
stead of a 5-4 normal win.
Zegers said she thought the scor~
ing system was unfair to both teams.
·
· "It
is like they are saying doubles
is
less important than singles, which
is not
true,"
she said.
Marist hosted the Fordham Rams
· on Tuesday. Results were unavail-
able.
at
press time.
The Red Foxes will travel this
afternoon to play conference rival
Long Island University at 3:30 p.m.
MC'fV PROGRAMMING ~~LL 1994
CHANNEL12
WEEKDAYS
12:00 A.M. - 9:00 A.M ..
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WE
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12:00 P.M. - 2:00 P.M.
2:00
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5:00
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5:00 P.M. -7:00 P.M.
7:00 P.M. - 8:00 P.M.
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STATIONI.D.
FOX FITNESS
SPORTS
1
BACKTALK
MCTV CLASSICS
ENTERTAINMENT AND SPECIALS
SPORTS
2
UP-CLOSE
MCTV INFORMATIONAL
MOVIE
I
MOVIE2
EKEN DS
STATIONI.D.
SPORTS
I
STATION I.D.
SPORTS2
STATION I.D.
MOVIE
1
MOVIE2
i
I
j
...,,,,.,)
1
1
I
--
"
ti
1·
,
,
.
..
_
_
;;
I
r
l
l
.
.
:"We
.
are
trying ,o
c1e.an
""ow image
as a
bunch
of
lwoligans
who
diniothing for
the
schooi."
..
.
.
.
·
:
·STAT·
OF
-
-
THE
.
WEEK:
.
.
.
.
:
_.
.
,
.
~
.
.
..
•
.
.
.
-::
:
.
;::
..
_.
··
·:,..
"'.
-
':;
.
-.·.-
·
,
.
.
,
:
,-:,-·
,
.
.
·
·
·
·
.
:
r,u/Women;Sisnnis'team is
5 - 0
in the
TH£
CDlCLE,
SPORTS
s~mM!lti½f
19')4
L
··
~N,~ort_
-
h;.;;,e_as_t
eo_·
·;..,;n;...fe_,e_
·
nce_
..
_: - - - - - - -
by
:
GERARP
:
c~~:v
.
-
Staff'Writer- .
"We could have
.
played better against
Lehigh, but we
.
didn't know what we
were. doing
.
wrorig/'
·
..
Marist was
in
Fairfield; Conn.,
Piior
·
to
.
the 'Seton.: llall
.
In✓ita~
--
last Tuesd\ty;
:
battling Fairfield Uni-
tional
'
iast
·
weekend,
·
ihe w'omen'
.
s
·
versity;
'
·
.
.
voHeybi!li team
.
had
:
a
3-f overall
The Stags blanked the Red Foxes,
record,
'.
and was riding a three-game
·
15-3, 15,-13, and 15-2.
.
winning streak.
.
-
·
·
·
·
··
· ·
·
Sophomore outside
.
hitter Tara
.
However; wheil
-
_
the tournament
.
Damra
_
u said the team could not get
concluded, the Red Foxes were wish-
·
· ·
their
.
minds
·
into. the contest.
ing they could get on,the bus and
r
«It-
was just a disaster. We came
get
-
out
'
ofSouth
.
Orange; N.J;, as
out flat," Damrau
·
said. "We came
quickly as ~ssible.
'
·
·
•
.
.
.
.
·
.
out with no emotion or intensity, and
-
Marist (4-7
,
overall;_
O~O
in the
it just ,did not seem we came out
Northeast Conference) dropped three
.
ready-to play."
ofJts four matches
.
at
-
Seton Hall
Damrau, a transfer from Tucson,
·
·University lastSaturd~y
~and
SuridaY..
Ariz.,
:
said
-
she
·•
and
--
her
.
teammates
.
The
.
Red Foxes first
..
wenf
'
up
,
:
are not overly conc
_
emed about their
against
·.
the.
·
host school,-. SetQn Halt. present status.
_
The Pirates shelled Marist, 15-5,15-
"We'
_
ve
.
played some tough
O,
·
and 15~6.
_-
__ ·
_
_
·
_·
.
schools early; Seton Hall for one,
_
-
·
Marist then faced
.
Lehigh Univer-
.
but we will be fine." Damrau said.
sity. The Red Foxe~ were taken care
"We have a
/
tough team ourselves.
:
of:by
.
the
:
Engineers in four se~,
JS-
.
We can playhetter."
·
7;5'-15;-
.
JS~l; andd5
_
-10,
.;
,
·
,,
>
:c:
,..
.
.
Maristwas able to defeat its two
,..
The tournament was not a
'
com~
toughest
:
opponents, the University
·
plete
.
failure for
>
Marist. The
·
Red
of Hartford on Sept. 14, and
.
.
Foxes were able to benefit-from their Fairleigh Dickinson on Saturday.
final match of the invitational by
Accordi11g to Northeast Confer-
-
===
.
====
'.
sweeping
.
past
•
Fairleigh Dickinson ence regulations, all teams in the
SC>phc,more Tammy Terc makes
8
set ~s Assistant Coach Randy Desrosiers looks on.
_
Marlst
University,-15-13, 17-15, and 1s~10.
league make post-season play; which
wlll
·
be In Penns
_
ylvanla this weekend.
·
Sophomore
,
mid-hitter
_
Liz
·
gives each team a legitimate chance
Herzner said despite the results, the
at the conference title
,
tournament
was
•-
a
foaming experi-
ence for the entire
.
team .
.
.
.
"Seton Hall is just
.
a powerhouse,
·
simply
a
better team," Herzner said.
Herzner also said she believes
Marist has the capability to take the
·
_,see
VSALL
page
11
Netters
·
snap skid;
iiµpr,pve mark
-
to
6-2
·
-
·
·
-
-
-
·
·
·
·.
The Red Fox
.
tandem fell, 6-0, 6-4.
,
by JAMES J; DEI_UV AN
O'Neil and Zegers teamed up to
. :_
·
'
Staff Writer
.
.
·
_
win their doubles match 6,2,
·
6-L
·
·· ·
·
.·
··
·
·
· ·
·
-· -··
-
·
·
-
·
·
Senior Lisa Maynard and Robinson
.
The
.'
~omen'~
_
tenriis tea~ was
.
volleyed to a 6~ 1, 6-1 win.
abl
_
e to snap a
-:
twosniatch losing
··
Head Coach Charles Hardman
streak fast
:
Sunday
·
~fternoon
.
by said he was impressed with the win.
downing the Manhattan_ Jaspers, 8-
"The team played the best they
1, at the Dutchess Racquet Club.
·
played all season," Hardman said.
·
.
•
The Red Foxes (6-2 overall; 5-0 "They played solid."
_
.
in the
'
~ortheast
;
Conference) were
O'Neil said her offense made the
1ed by
.
a trio
<>f
sophomores: Jen difference in her win.
0
1
Neil, Cara McCaffrey and Katie
_
Zegers.
, .. _
_
_
_
. _
.
.
.
.
·
O'~eil started t
_
he R.ed Fox at-
"My forehand was on," she said.
"I wasjus(ripping (the ball.)"
tack
-
with a
64,
.
6.2
,
win iri number-
Robinson said she was not
fo-
one singles; .while
_:
M~Caffrey fol-
cused in the
.
first set of her match.
-
lowed WitJi. a 6~l/6-2triwnph.
·
Zegers t;tllied
·
a
6-3.,
6
~
1 victory
__
-.
"I just did
.
not have my head in
.
in
number-fou(singles;
·
·
_
. it/' she said.
"I
was a little tired from
.'. In
n\l!llber~three singles, freshman
.
t.he match ihe day before. Sh~ ran
:
HQ]ly
,
Rol?insciri 11e~e~fthree sets to m~ arq_u~d quite a bit."
_
·
rock off her opponent; 2"6, 6•2,
6-
.
Zegers said she found a weak-
The
;
()rily
·
1_os~ of-the day for
ness
in her opponents game and
used
Marist came from the
.
doubles team
·
,
it to her
.
advantage.
_
.
_
_
_
of Anne
,
Hemy m.id S$a I.ignori.
-
...
See TENN
page
11
1l11t
·
e ·
..
.iSstatting
c
to.
'
l'-lll'J
>
,
<JUl
·
or,
:
fiJ.iiliJrnan,
's
·
.
team
.
__
Despite
~am4lg a
2-1 wiQ last ning to t~e
:
a tolh:i~
:
the:
t?ID
:
::
,
·•
-
_
-•
·
.
proposal which}ncluded a tax_
·
plan
players.
__ --
.
_
Sa):U~!iay against
-
st.
Francis
(NY),
·.
·
-
· .
..
~opl).omores
'
J11d McMullen and
-
,
-
.
to ~e!p finance s~alhmarket organi-
ONE-QUARn,R
of the Na-
.
the 1994 men's soccer. season lias
-
Josh Krueger did
·
ri<>t suit up
_
for
·1.
Andrew Holmlund
. ·
zattons; howev~r, the NHL Players
..•
tional Football League's season has
been absolutely ~iseriible.
-
.
Mopday's game against Siena.
·
·
Ass°5
_
iation shot down that idea:
just completed.
·
_
_
_ __
·
,
Afterf111ishing
its
19.93 schedule
McMullen apparently suffered a
-
·
.
VVQULD~~T
IT
.
BE
.
·
with
.
that in
.
mind, here are
·
your
with a paltry 4
_
-12-2
·
showing,
·_
the sprained
•
llJ}kle
·
agaiµst
-
-
St. Jqhn~s;
STRAN~E.
if
:
th~
-
NHL and MLB
1994 divisional, conference and Su-
Req Foxes ~ently st~d at
a·
dis-
while K.rueger injured his knee
..___ _ _ _ _ _ _
....c...
both ceased work?
_
·
-
per Bowl champions.
_
mal 1~?-overall record.
·
against.St
.
, Francis
(NY).
-
. __
Everi though their seasons are
In
the
AFC
East, there is no sur-
Why hasn't Howard Gol(!man's
Gold~an and
_
his players had
It's right here
mostly played
in
differenf months,
prise, the
_
Buffalo Bills will once
team begun to move towards the better come up with answers real
the NHL cannot afford to shut down.
again take
iL
winning direction?
soon before the ~eason and the play-
.;__====--:.......c...______
Besides finaJ:1cialfactors, they are
-
Sorry Jet fans.
,
The answ~r is plain and simple. offs kick right by: them.
o ~ e
Northeast Conference title.
the least known,
compared
.
The Cleveland
·
Browns will win
No offense.
_
THE WOMEN'$ TENNIS
WE ALREADY KNOW
that
tofootball, baseball
-
and basketball.
-
a very weak
AFC
.
Central·
while Joe
In
eight games, the Red Foxes team is the one t ~ men's soccer Major League Baseball has made the
S
_
ince baseb~ll has struck out,
Montana's Kansas City Chiefs
will
have orily been able to
tally
six goals. should
try
to m?'1eJ.
.
biggest mistake in its his!ory.
n?w is the perfect time for profes-
out-dual the San Diego Chargers for
Unfortunately for tl!e Red Foxes,
The women s tenms team has
It seems
·
the National Hockey
s1onal hockey
_
and other sports to
·
the
AFC
West crown.
they have played six o
_
f their first served a,nd volleyed their way to a
League would like to follow them.
establish more
·
popularit)'.
_
_
·
The
Giants
will take the NFC
eight games at Leonidoff Fiel~.
6-2 overall
·
standing thus
·
far, com-
The NHL is in jeopardy of lock-
ON SUNDAY,
approximately
East, Detroit
will
win
the NFC Cen-
-
Marist has
.
also played almost pared to last season's impressive 13-
ing out the
start
of its 78th season
if
50,!)00 fans packed St. Louis' Busch
tral and the San Francisco 49ers will
one-half of its schedule. The good 1 record,
the owners and players cannot re-
Stadium to commemorate what
grab the NFC West title.
·
news for Marist is that there are still
Marist is a]so undefeated in
solve the dispute over salary caps.
would have been the Cardinals final
Kansas City will defeat Buffalo
10 games remaining
tltis
season.
Northeast-Conference play,
(!;-0).
It
is
the same ridiculous situa-
game of the season.
in the AFC Championship and
However, eight of those 10 games
They have received solid efforts
tion, only in a different sport.
Fans in attendance were able to
SanFrancisco will beat the Gi~ts for
will
be
played away from Pough-
from sophomores K;nie Zegers, Cara
League Commissioner Gary
~alk on the field, throw in a fast-
NFC top honors.
keepsie.
McCaffrey and Jen O'Neil through-
Bettman has met with the players'
pitch contest, and take a tour of
Montana will face his former
The only two_ remaining home out most of this season.
union in Toronto and New York for
Busch Stadium.
team
in
-
the Super Bowl; and will
games are against Northeastern on
First-year Head Coach
·
Charles
the past few weeks to
try
to come to
This
was
all just a reminder that
earn another championship ring.
Qct.
5,
and Adelphi on
Oct.
29.
Hardman
is
hoping his team can
win
an agreement
baseball should be mainly for the
Andrew Holmlund
is
The
·
._,.d
t
_
also
seems injuries
:
are be~
;;
.ia•Grand~lam. toumament of
.
~
~ :
,
:.
;--:,
.On~Tuesday,
the
NH;L
.
01ade,
_
~-
::'
,
~~~ ~d
_
;i:tpt
,
j~J9r
_
~e.9c~e.~
.
?:D~
-",··
~•~
c
C:·.~~~
:
~tor.
,
ur.
-
i-.;e
::,
:,
.
,.·
.
45.2.1
45.2.2
45.2.3
45.2.4
45.2.5
45.2.6
45.2.7
45.2.8
45.2.9
45.2.10
45.2.11
45.2.12