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The Circle, November 3, 1994.pdf

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 45 No. 5 - November 3, 1994

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Volume45)Number 5, ...
t
College,'Poughkeepsie, N~
I
Two.MORE'A.RREsTEDiN
CONNECTION
WITll
'93
RAPE
.. j<J.f0URTQ<Sl]SQECtFN0T-:YET.A.J>PRE!li.ENJJED -
..
Fonn~;Marist
s~d~~ti~Jui' T~s~ . Di~trici
'
Attoin,~y;· said a f~urlh
SU~-
said the nationi hea'dqtlarters \Vas
'taxicab with, the woman, but said
. >:
by KRIS'IJNAWELLS
.
.
was .. arrested. earlier : on·· similar
pect, ,whom au_thorities •have·. riot
infonned of th_e investigation ~ut said . they wentthefr separate· ways when
Editor
<
charges_ aFhis.' ,home in Brooklyn; ~named; has.·riot been apprehended.
he knew little' aboutthe arrests~ .
,
they arrived on campus. Tasso's
'I\vo mcire men were arrested in
N.Y.
He was'.released from jail after
The suspect allegedly aided iri hold- .
"We had heard of some ·sort of
statements to police have not been
'connectio
.
n with the gang. rape of a .. posting $25,000' baiL Tasso's ar-: . ing down 'the victim. as the three men
investigation
last week, but we have.
made public.
Marist, student in September 1993.
raignment is scheduled '.for. next raped her ... ·
<
·
not officially. been notifit!d of-any
. Dr.· Dennis J, Murray, college
·. To date,
two
former Marist stti-
M<>flday.
.
.
.
. .
\
s
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.J\c::cording to Sinith~
·
all thret! men. arrests," Brown said..
·.·
.
president, also. could not cominent
dents. and one. current student have
·. The three men were arrested as a . arrested were· affiliated with the Tau
According• to, Brown, the frater:.
on the continuing investigation or the
beenarieste_cl and charged with three · result' .of a year-long investigation · Epsilon'P4ifratemity.
>
< .
<
.> .
nity is looking into the. motives of
iirrests. Murray did say that the col-:
felony _counts of rape in the first
·
conducted. by TO\vn of Poughkeep7 : , '. :"My understanding is thaUhey
its affiliates.
, · ·
.
·
.
lege is cooperating fully with the
deg~ee which>carries a maximum
sie detectives,": : . .. .·· ·
. . • ,.':.
· are-aftiliatedwith Tau Epsilon Phi,
~•To
rriy
knowledge; there has
District Attorney's Office and the
sentenc,t? of 75 years
in
~tate prison. . ,.
Aci;:ording .· to police re,ports;. the
·
.. · either as, IJl~dges or memberst Smith
been no infe~~nce this was a chapter
,Shane ~Conry;
19, and Kdstian
victim
·
,and the, men .\Vere at an.off~ . said'.
:
:>.-;, .. ,
. .
>.: . . ,
event; he saidi
"I am confident this
Town.of Poughkeepsie Police.
Grizelj, 20, were arrested, over·.the, ·cainpuitpartyand:retuined;to•cani-.::.,·>:.(Brett,,Minieri;.pre.sident ·of
.
. Tau
was.not a.chapter e':'ent.There have
Jeffery· Graham, Comy's attor-
. course of the weekend and arraig~ed • p\ls via
'
cab. Tile victim. began\valk- · Epsilon -Phi; said
.
the,· fraternity .. has
been· no . allegations. of this./'
.
Monday in Dutchess ColintyJ:o\lrt.> ing t~ward·herdorniitofy froillJhe _ been not !Je~n kept irifonried of the
Smith said she would riot com~
.
.
Both men, who wer~ r~presented . Chapel· when : 01:ie of the m,ales
case's ongoings. , . ,' . .
ment on this aspect of the case.
by separate counsel, pleaded "not . gra~bed her and dragged her:toward
"Ifs
a p(_)lice invesdgation. We
According to an article in the
guilty" to the charges. .
,
. . the LoweU Thomas Communication . are not told anything about it.They're
Nov.
1 issue of the Poughkeepsie
They are being :held in.the
.Center
building
~here . the
handlingitWe're completely in the
Journal, court docmnents state that
Dutchess Couiityjail. Judge George. threepro_ceeded tci take turns raping· dark," Minieri said. , .
·
Conry. and GrizelJ were both ques-
Marlow has set bail at $25,000 cash . her. · · · . ·
. _
.
. .. .
. Executive .Djrector of Tau Epsi-
tioned two days after the incident.
bail or $50,000 bond.
M "orie Smith, senior assistant

lon Phi Nationals, Michael
J.
Brown;. Both men conceded- they took the
riey'. had, no comment on' the, case or
his client. Attempts to reach Tasso's
· counsel, Larkin and Axelrod in
·Newburgh, N.Y.,.were unsu.ccessful.
Grizelj was repre,sented by Ron
Landers, public defender;
SEA.L OF.APPROVAL
Marist
student
victi:in
in,-~45t1J
.
city
sho9ting
-
,.
-·"
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.
','A
~22,is
a$di:lngefous
a
buUet as you want inyou.
Th,is
man,,
is,
e:Xtremely lucky., He has '!,,guardian.
angeL"::}>1.
,t
·
-~·JoeLeary, director of Security
Street
-i.11.
th~, City of Poughkee~~ie
just
·
after
8 ·
p.m. The jtudenL was
l~ter released from St Francis Hos-
pital. . : . .· .·..
. ... · ... · .. ·.
,
.
>
, Sirice·
no
arrests ave oee'n made, .
the indi~idual's name is being with-
held.
.

. .
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·
... Accprding
)<>
Detective Ron
Knapp, two blac;k nfales .and on~
Hispanic
;
male . followed .. the victim
to. his home where he was shot in
the right shoulder after they de-
mariaed· his wallet.
o · .. ,.• ..
,
.· ..

.
..
The student said he had walked
to .'the
·
store· and
:was
·fciUowed by
humorand doing well.
"I w,as joking with the ambu- ·
lance technicians," the victim said. ,
.
· ·Rams~y •·· Whitworth, .
a.
friend;.
went to.the hospital Friday night and
said he was doing well. .. ·.
"Wheri we first saw him he was
. pretty ·good," Whitworth. said. "He
wanted to make ·sure everyone was
not tooupset...
.·..
'
' ''
. Peter Faustino also went. to the
hospital and said _the victim was jok-
ing and .in a good mood:
. ·
"He was in good shape ,and in
good spirits," Faustino said,·
,, . ,
.·.
·
·: ·.
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.. - ·.· <·
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,.::>:.>C<Y,''
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:three'individuals; who had seen him
The seal
In
the
entrance
way
of Dorir1~.llyJiall
Y1a~
;do_r1~tf!d
~y
~t~\f,nya.r1.~
,l;S!~!le-_D9bo;J1at_l'(e -· -··
t~e·'money out of his wallet.> .
- The shooting was the 45th con-
firmed in the city this year, accord-'
Poughk~ps~-r~sld!~~(S!e·r~l~j~~}~~l~J,,~a~e ~) : ,~;--
·
. .
·
·•.:\~::{/)<,}•i:)
·
=::~➔io1Kciui;:~·k·'.; wh~~;i~~~~~!h~~i~!~;~~
·
, see
Shooting
page
5
Racli0-TY;_F'i1D.1_Illay
OreakOff
from Comm. Division
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by
MICHAEL-,;J. LaCUGNA ·
. Staff Writer
.
The division· of Communication
·and the ArtS may
be.
dividing ·into
several distinct departments as early
as
the fall semester of 1995.
The move would create·
a
sepa-
rate department for the radio, televi-
sion and fllm · division and a · mass
media division that consists ofpub-
lic. relations, advertising and journal-
ism.
·
. .
.
Chairperson for Communication
and the
Arts
Augustine Nolan said
there was talk of breaking. up the ·
division into separate departntents.
"There
are
discussions underway
about reorganizing the division of
Communication and the
Arts, espe-
cially in the communication area,"
said Nolan. "A proposal has been
made to separate the comm
area
into
two distinct'areas."
- .
-The Art and Fashion depart-
ments, although part. of the Com-
munication . and the
Arts division,
would not be included
in
the depart-
mental reorganization.
Assistant professor of communi-
cations Douglas· Cole said this re-
structuring is needed if the division
is to get anything done.
. .
. "When it comes to solving prob-
lems of curricula, nothinggets done,"
said Cole.· ~'The_ reason not enough
gets done
is
that we will discuss
problems specific to radio,
TV,
and
film at
a
meeting that includes fac-
ulty members who don't have the
slightest of what we do and what
our problems are."
Cole also said, "By the same
token I'm in no position to really
· understand the. specific problems· of
the journalism faculty, P,R. faculty,
etc." Some of the advantages of the
restructuring would includemore
foundation courses earlier on for stu-
dents
in
specific majClrs, such as
radio, TV, and film. ·
Another benefit would
be
the in-
stituting of a specific capping course
geared to~ard the major oL a stu-
dent iii a· department. '
Currently, there are no capping
courses that deal exclusively with
radio, TV and film, journalism, pub-
lic relations and advertising. ·
Cole said with the new structure
there would be a new sequencing of
classes.
"With the new structure, we
would have suggested sequencing of
classes so that students could study
material in a logical order and that
doesn't exist now," Cole said.
Cole said that the new formal-
ized capping course would be an
asset to the students and it makes
more sense to have.
The capping course should be di-
rectly related to theconcentration. of
the student," Cole said.
.
Nolan said that the restructuring
would . take a distinct shape.
. "The first area would be the
study of the m!lss media, which
would include radio, TV and film,"
Nolan said. "Currently there are 295
students enrolled
as .
majors
in
this
area. The second area would be
dedicated to the study of other com-
munication areas,· including organi-
zational .communication and public
relations, advertising, journalism and
speech communication theory." .
There are currently 310 students
enrolled in the othercommunication
concentrations.
Under the new setup, the Com-
munication and the
Arts department
would no longer. have a chairper-
son.
Instead, they would have a dean
of
communication; the independent
· departments would have a distinct,
rotating chairperson who would an-
swer to the dean of the division.
Nolan said the new plan has mer-
its, but also has some finite. details
that have to be worked out before
the new plan can be implemented.
One problem for professors who
are qualified to teach
in
more than

one field of communication would
be crossing over from one depart-
ment to another.































































































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-
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( , . , Plumnier and
'.
Tilll Roth ("Dogs:"s. . h.~r a- fo~t m,,assa~e., )'.{ ;, . . . . .
;
:;'
r· :
·
:
the head:
off
<>fa
9apt1ve
1D
the back it's go\Jo.:~~ '!ai:~~!l: \\'.~9s(c~.ai:~:
by JUSTIN
SEREMEt,
:
•Mr. Orange)as.a. couple trying. to , ·-. What ensues 1s. a,htlanouscon-. · seat ofthe1r carand must find a way-· actercomes fullc1r~Ie.:,,,,;
1:,.:,
>,,-;:,:~. _ •·
Circle Film·. Critic
> ·
decide whether
or
not to rob the diner . veisatiori -on Jhe intimacy and: iµi: . to clean,up
tl,le
gory mess. . ·
-· · -
_
. Jackson's-Jules ·,_wiU'dazzle
,you
_
, •.
·
-
they're eating at · . _
. . . ·.
,
portance .of ~iving fo<>~/mass~ges:.
. .· Enter
·
Wolf (Harvey Keitel), _a
·
with the~jiv~ and folll:tn~ut~ed !alk:' · ·
. Ladies· and gentlemen; nci more
Then we have the two· hitmen; . ·. · .. The mght out on !he to~µ. 1s
faµ.~
mob man who dashes away !rom his that he spews; bu~ cap
_
twates;as well;·
calls please. We have a winner: _ . ·Vega and Jules Winnfield (a rousing
t~s.tic, including· a
:
h~~o
.
rous dance; · cock.t~H party at 8_ a.m. in _his tux tQ he draws you}n: .· _ ::; .
:
~::):. :\),
·
:/:
· Quentin Tarantino is the undis-
performance by Samuel L. Jackson),
twist betwee~ Thul!1lanandTrav?l~,
help out the boys m moppmgup the ·
.
It's T~r~ntI!!o's :~aY{.~r_putHpg
puted champion, and has proven that
a,--,-,..,...,=
and a scene mvolvmg alargesyrmge
red stuff.
down the v10lence that looms over
he is no fluke with his latest filin,
th<!,~ creates more chill~ .th?°n the '.'ear''
: i.:ook:for Tarantino to appear in all the characters.
of
the film :and
.
·
"Pulp Fiction."
.
· ·_ . • .. ·•
seen~ in "Dogs." _ . :, ...
· ... · ·-..
this scene as a buddy. of Jules who. pointing out one of them tha~ ~ees
. If
you're in a daze righrnow,
it
,
Travolta_ shine~,. e~en 1f _h~,
h~~
· simply wants the dirtied,up g~ngst~rs
through i_t-aH., •· : , ,; ~:, ,-·
,>
< '. ;
might be because you have failed to
become a.bit pudg1,~r smce his ,Sat-
out ·e>f his h(?USe before• his \V1fe
. "Pulp F
_
icHon'.\ is,exactly .~hy'
see Tarailtino's last film, the-1992
ur~ay Night Fever days.
_..
_
..
comes home.· .
. .
_
. movies ·can be
so
fun.-.
:.,: \:· .
cult hit, '.'Reservoir Dogs.".
Btit we have to cut away from ,
This is where Tarantino lets the
But like the.recent uNaturalBorn
Ifso, go out and rent it, an~ then
the.hitmen, as we s'Yi~ch to _a st<>I')'
iiiughs run wild, although if you've
KiUers," thisis not:a nioyie ·for all;
continue reading when you 're done;
invol.ving_
~o~e~
!3ut
_
ch : Cooli_dge _ seen "Dogs" alrea_dy, rou may pick·
·
. you . may" see a. fe)V: pe<>ple':"_in'. the.
"Pulp Fiction" was last· May's
(BD,1ce Wdhs,m his best role smce up on more of his brand of black aisles in.fri:mt gettmg upto)eav~.
:
winner at the Cannes Film Festival;
''Die Hard'.'.) who accepts cash from . humor throughoufthe movie. · -· ·
. . Some wiH not be able t~·get past
and ifthere's any justice in the free
.
Marcellus to throw his ~ext fight;
>what is-so amazing about ''Pulp
the, violence itself/ which
a
few
world, you'ltsee ple\ltY of gold stat-
who begm their portion of the story , _but defies the crime boss, wins the Ficti_on" is. the way .Jara~tino ~u-. peopi~ have ii.ke~dy called excessive
ues bearing its name next April. .
talking aboutAmsterdam's version
fight and leaves town.,
mamzes. these otherwise d1sgustmg
and overdone.·
c ·, .. :
.
To put it simply, "Pulp Fiction"
of the Quarter Pounder, the Royale:
~fter mee!ing hJkg_irlfri~nd characters thr_ough conversati~n;
Any way you cut it, "Pulp Fie~
is three stories written.by Tarantino
with Cheese (it's the typicalbrilliarit
Fab1eime _(Ma~1a de ¥ede1re>s}. m.a they all talk hke .you an~_ I, with
tion" really:packs quite a wallol'.
about two hitmen, a couple that at-
Tarantino dialogue).
.
. . .. moteJ.durmg his esc~pe;;Butch finds-, maybe. a few more vulgant1es. .
It's a doozy.
tempts to rob a. restaurant, and a
The two,.dressed in "Dogs•~-like
,outthat Fabienn~fqrg9!·~?·Pack·hi~:
.
Then again, Tarantino has been
(Grade: A+) ·
boxer's attempt to recover a lost suits, must perform a hit, but Vega
deceased father'. s :.goldi-;n waJch; ·~called '!The Shakespeare of the Four-
·
golden watch. ··
-
·• · - '.
reveals his latest dilemma to Jules
something he holds yery~~e~
t?
hifi1:, ·;-teuer Word.'' . . .
As a· side note;
for
,
mote
:
.
With the return of • 70s fashions,
prior to the kill;. he· must "entertain"
B~.t~h must go back:t? Jus :c1part.;; ·_ • · .. · By the. end -of ?Pulp Fiction,'' Tarantino int111~nce,/Y.ou ~ay \yaht ·
what better time to resurrect the
their boss · Marsell us 's wife Mia
ment for it, and the -
·
<!vents , that Tarantino examfoes his mostinter~.- to' see ~•True Romance," which
>
he
career of disco legend John Travolta,
(Unia.
Thurman) bi taking )I.er ·out' :: takepface .

t~ .• geJ
n:,·are .
bi{a.r~e, • estingi charii5-!ter,· Jules;
a
.nia~:wh<>'. j'fro.te, as-well as',he ~ecent~'Killing -
who stars as hit man Vincent Vega for
a
'night on the town. -
·
'
bloody, ancl nauseatingi ". . :' '·••· .·· · .has
:
cJe_cided:tltar he;wants no m.~re Zo~,'•,w~ich'.he
.
piocluced/( •
·
.::; ; ::
in this roller-coaster ride of drugs;.
The rumor is that the last man .
But "Pillp;FictiCln'~ !ieve~·lets
·
up,
-
··' ~f:the• fcimng after.lj(! experie[!ces a:
:
·Yo~'ll be. seeing\no'i-e Qu~iitin' .
romance, blood, aridmayhem.
·
who took care of Mia ended up be-
as we again go back toWincent andi "momerirof <ilarity.>J ...
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.
·
in
the years_ to· come. •
. '. · .
.
The film begins with Amanda ,ing thrown out a window for giving
Jules, who·have accidentally blown .
Ifthere's a standout in this film; ·..
.
·
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Longer nights Signal timeff oi.:lhe Yocfing c}illir
blues
.
.... ·
..
by
TOM
BECKER
.
The_ co:lection re~ches way b~ck ·. However, .not all of ~g's tu~es
. ·
As
always, the_ band reH~ heavily that the_°dr~F-fla~ored. spells ~f pa~~ ..
Circle Music Critic·
mto Ki~g s _past with· tracks l~ke - ar~ meant .to. be heard._111·:a rock.mg
an the tale.ntedvocals of Simon Bye. songshke •. Dea!~ s Sweet_Rehg1qn ... -
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - "Hummmgbird" an9 "Sweet Six- chair.
. .
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·
.
·
·
· ·.
·. ·
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and "And I You are leftw1thout any •
Now that the weather is chang-
teen,'' which evoke the pure, unadul:
"So Excited" is an upbeat toe-:
., Bye makes his Jresen~ ~own new, track that carries a similar ·
ing, the days becoming a bit cooler,
terated 'amen' feel of the classic · tapper and theJiye "Why I Sing The
on· every tack, whether by.lament-
sound:
.
. .. _
the nights a
bit
longer, and the
blues.
.
.
Blues"
is
a cascade·of runaway guk . ingin a song like ''HeartofAnother
-
It
seemsithat\vith ''Cift', This
memories of summer being replaced
. O!le of the. rel asbon~ thishcollech-
tar; pac;ed by open high\V_ay dru!]is
~F~n" IorThby pHicking .~P the. pace in - P.icture. ' .. was. ,Jo.<>king to · .. ii.r.od·u···.·.ce· • a ..
,
WI
.th the·acti·v
1
·t1·es ofwi·nter,··I &eel
1
·t
lion 1s so .spe.c1a .. .- es1des .t e hi.g
in .. w.·
.. _hi .. ch .. ·,Ki.·ng-.add. s. se.ve.
r ..
a1_;calls .. of .. - _. rre· n .-
e. ouse. ·
·
·
·
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.. arrang. e. me
.. _nt. ~.o·. ··s. ongs
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at.· ..
l
·s ti·me to talk about the blues.
qu. a 1ty of the production, is the pres-
"on~ more. tim.: e'" to continu(t)t~ tale .. ·
-• ·
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I · d
h
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"City" strays from the eccentric .
flirted.}
wit.h
_
the
i
•mi-;m,e>ries:of the
Sometimes it is just necessary to
en
Cf O
ta ente . entertainers wit
.,
,·or
course no collection ,of B.B. ..soul~!; yarying ~ysten.·oufchann
of ,
perfect {'.Naked Rain".found on
•1m; .
sit in a rock.ing chair,· choice. of. ·.drink
King.and the sever~l live fracks.. .
~.·•_iig
ie> ..
n.gsvioul.db(co,
· 1!1Pl.~te
:
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t rt
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l
tr
k 'Th Th 111
··'.'.I
.. m
.. press.ion" in tha.t t e
.. · songs
... s. e
.. e
... m..
press1on.. ·•
.,,:.; · ·
in one's h;md,,_whether Ws eight/,
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11
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some straight-cut; god-fearing blues. : King.:.
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1
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:~ow. tharth,e. clasSic '?lues have _ · . However,
on
~~City,''.
.This Picture : ·-

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:managc'.to be pieaj;ing;to_ /:
.- for such an
occasion
comes
from
one.,:
.
cl'!S..
51
C.
_
Cham.s arct
7!1
1
!1:gs,.
'.c·? sa.ng .·· _be~n
.talked·.· a!'a.ut
for.
a /ew · pa~a-
seems to be trying .to grasp ll. poppy,.
the
ear, e'spedally on'tracks:Iike "The_
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d Ch
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matchtherr,sp.ec1afty?{:wea\'mgan .... t.h.e.·.·.e_ar_··
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ks. -·.·.1 .. i.ke
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tions of King's mus. i.c, th. e on.e I fin. d. · .. ·
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assortment of sounds m and around
--
most pleasing is .. appropriate
.
ly. titled are t~e k.!ndof_ s91.1gs,,that.are a~leJo . ·
.. ··. Th
.. e rel.easeen_titl. e.d.·
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;=Ict;.
Sing The Blues," on MCA
[if~;~
u;jci~i:::~:h
to
~:h;
~hi '·
Vii~;n~~:r;~l~!it~~t{~
9
l
's..·
'·A
· ·
'.
"Citv" was a disappo~tinent'in _',·
· ·
,efforts.··.
-
.
·c•··

·
·_·
.
:•. (
,
· '.,.,
.
· · . ::
_
i.' ·· ·
Helrnet-QUifkS<Jrill, .. · .· prepane ..
tJ
crash into
.
JJhe
6haizCe · .......
.
...
·
..
:~dillte~at~d liv~:as it does on
·
dis~.

..
i1
feauy
·
go'i)d *~ugh:l-ii~e
it
11J6{,
.cid~ what's &?in~ to.be popular
·
and
_C:
.
Is _ther,e . a ~ert~in,.song .. Qr,
'
. : : ,
.
.
. . by TOM BECKER.
Circle
Music
Critic
In fact, the very energy tele11Sed ·It's better than ''Meantime," because. what pe_ople wdl hsteµ to .. I mean,
if
·.record which you think ~s ~hllt Rel-
bf the· band , during
a·.
performance '., to me "Meaji'fi~e;' was
.
j\ist 1.ike :,one
.
';ban~·• does· n<>t make. it
in
MTV; :
met is ~1 ~l>qrit?,~ an~elri .~~Jorts?:
:
. . .
November 9 promises to be a. combines ~iththe earspFtting vql~, 'big song.
•. -
.
·
_:: ·
>
ll
s
&
0
mg to be
a_
lot ~arder on them,
.
_JS:; S~atra, .No, ~ctu~y,
B,o.n:i
::
~:.
night of soaked shirts, sore limbs and
ume.oftheir sou~d to hterally
.
grab .
,
' .
. .. · _ ; , '.
h , . .-
·.•
f .,
to go anywhere. Thats notgoo~L
Aruloymg. -
·
~ringing ears.
_ .
• . _
the hstener and sliov~ the tunes down
· : C. One ~<>~g
mt
e f;n~e
O
a
:i.
·. . .
_
.
, .
.
. :
. .. .
.
.
. ..
In
other words, that Wednesday,. their·throat.
t~e:m~ or. the.actual mus_ic.
· .. _·
.
'?·
What are some of your m~1-'
. C: Why's.that?((\ :
._
:(.
-:•,:< ,-··
the crew cut bruisers of Helmet will
.. .
.
.. .
. .
. . JS.yeah, both I guess. They had
cal influences? .
... - .
.
. · .. · . -. . -
JS: It waf Jhe
·
fi~t song .we
_
ev~r
come to town with the razor-edged
That's something I think is good. ·the~same. feei·to .theni. There's more·
<
JS: When .Lwas·.younger'f lis-· did and it's th~lasfsongwe'llev~r.
assault of Quicksand and Orange 9
The Cfrance show will·be:the .variety on "B~tty".
tened to a lot·ofRush arid basic do:, ·
.. -
. ...
'. .
. .
-
-
.
band,s first itf the
st8tes
·since-totlr-·
-
.
-_
. ,. .
. liardCOre..
:
MM.
.
. .
. . .
.
C: With
.. the rel
.
ease
.. of "Betty" it.,
C:
Whatdo you mean
'
bfthe l.ast
The event promises to be one of ing ~n Japan just recently.
seems that Helm···e· t has b"eco· me more
-
..
?
.. ·
.
.
.•
the more notable shows to make its
·
· · -
.
.
• .
• . C: What about now? .
.•
song,·
<.: ... · .· .... · • . . . .· .·
way into the small.,
cozy
cofrfines o.f
Anyone who attends the concert .we~l-kriown irithe
~
I ~ate this word
' JS: Now
I
listen tq: pretty·much
JS: It's. a ·great_
sopg.
When we .•
will most li)<ely be welcomed by a "
:
.mainsfream scene> M()repeople everythin.g. I'm sort of getting sick- · did'it we'di
_
d. the b~stsong:~e co)Jld ·.
The Chance Theatre, -
6
Crannel.S
t
., .. full men·u·ofHelmettreats,•from the,·knbw.who·Helmef is;·. S.ome. ban.d.s
f
·
-
d
N h. .
·11
b b tt
'
Ji.
Poughkeepsie. .
. ·
.

. .
. .
.
.
..
0 music._ Someone's always hands
o. ot mg
WI
e e er
ru;
_ar llS.
Helmet is headlining the show af- . gargantuan licks of "Repetition''. on·· say thatthllt's goo9 b~Clluse ofthe ing you something t<> listen
to:
we
we're conc~med.
· · ··•
·
·
·
ter releasl·ng thei·r thi·rd · •aibu
·
m,
1990's "Strap It On" to the building ·.exposure· it bri.ng. s, others
.
. dislike_it were just in Japan and this guy gave .
.
. . .
.
.
··.•·
h.
I t . .
f "I Th · b
h
-
· h h · ·
b
·
O
d'
·
C: What's Helmet's plans for_ the
"Betty," back in June.
smas mg e ec nc1ty o
n
e ·· ecause t ey want.to stay wit t e1r me a out 2
iscs
·
of Japanese bands.
li

h
Meantime" on
.
1992's "Meantime"to core· following and want nothing to
future? ·How·lorig··wn\ .. you be
.
on
"Betty" presents its
st
ener wit . brand new material.
·do with. the mainstream; Where do
. C: Where did you thin!c you
tour? .
.
-
- .
a slightly new flavor for thi; band.
- .
.
. . . .
. - I
you stand on that?
.· ..
-
. . would be today'
.10
ye.ars ago?
i
JS: Forever. Actually/we have a
There is much more to this disc
With Helme_t commg to to~, .
JS: I think that's bull~t. I think'.
JS: I didn't know:with who or - week off before the (Poughkeepsie)
than the st~ne crushing, runaway was lq~ky enough to have a phone . that people should Hke music forwhat where, but I knew I was de~nitely
show and that's our longest vacation"
groove of "Milquetoast," which has chat with drumm.er ~o~.n Stamer.
it is;
If
you like R.E.M. then you going to be in a band. 1 guess I .got
since· June. Before.·this bi:eak the
found its way onto many a radio
lik;e R.E.M:J honestly know a lot of lucky.
Iongeslwas a two,day break after
a
playlist.
.
Circle: There's definitely a no-
people that will buy: th.e new
show with Rollins. I think that after
Sounds on the disc vary from the ticeable difference in the sounds of
(R.E.M.) record, listen to it at home,
C:
What direction is Helmet
the tour ends, I'm going to take the
blues grooving "Street Crab" to the "Betty" as opposed to t.hose fot1nd
like it, and never
·
admit .it in public.
headed in with. the next record?
summer off.
winding, cascading bass riffs on "Bis-
on "Strap" and "Meantime." How
s
cuits For Smut."
1
d
.b h
'f&
It's only music> Music's· important
J : l don't know where we are

wou d you e_scn e t e di ierence to
and all but people think it s.hows their
headed.
It
won't be like the obvious
However, Helmet hali not alto-
someone who hasn't heard the new
personalitv It's kind of stupid that . change of going to a. more skilled,
gether abandoned their trademark disc and how ·would you explain
J.
·
· .
sounds for the new highly produced
h
?
people think that way. It's stupid that
highly produced sound. It's hard to
t em.
someonewon't like something be-
say, but I guess it'll be more of a
and processed ones.
John Stanier: First off, two of the · cause it's. not supposed to be cool. · natural progression than a written
;.Vaccination" and "Tic" both ex-
I
hibit the guitar jabbing and musical songs were written by Henry
-
.
p
an:
hesitations that mark a Helmet song. (Bogdan, bass). Besides that I think
the main difference is that "Betty"
Having had the opportunity to sounds better. We had a real pro-
view Helmet in the flesh, I am not ducer this time and the disc came
really going out on a limb when I out a lot slicker. It's also darker.
say that their performance is clini-
cally outstan~i~g.
I say "climcally" because their .
music remains as tight and as un-
C: Darker in what way?
JS: The songs themselves just
have a darker feel to them. The disc:
C: How do you fee!' about M1V?
Does it help or hurt music? .
JS: It has absolutely helped
us.
There's parts of MTV I like and
parts
I don't like. It helps a Jot of bands
get . exposure and videos are not a
bad thing. But it's bad because some-
ti_mes it acts like· Big Brother. It de-
C: How has the loss of guitarist
Peter Mengede and the addition of
Rob Echeverria on guitar affected
Helmet?
,
JS: We've
definitely gained a lot.
He's so much easier to get along
with. Things go a lot smoother. He's
also a hell of a betterplayer.
C: Where's Helmet going to be
in 10 years?
JS: We'll be dead by then.
C: OK·How about
m
five?
JS: We'H still be playing and
hopefully we'll stay true to what we •
originally set out to do.
C: What's that?
JS:
It's a band secret.
C: Fair enough.
.
For more information on the Hel-
met concert, call The Chance at 471-
1966.















































































































































































.::
~
...
·'
THE CIRCLE, NOVEMBER 3,
-
1994
3
8¢tH

briqgs
..
art
.
awareness
to Marist shores
; .

;
·,
'.
.?.YA
~
½AArE.·-Bd?AD~
·
>
.
aftei" being
'displayed
for
.
over 50 . in nature.
.
ho1!!~~r b~s~d~:a,\hcre's
a
seal there
Marist that will sec more art being
represented and enjoyed on campus.
·. · ·
·
.
•·
sszstant
ztor
.
, ..
··
years.
·
. "If you run your hand down the
b k
·
·
·
t
II "
·
1
h ·
already,'
.
' Lewis said, ref erring to the
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
.
..'~]'his
piece was actually
.
in their
ac , you can ac ua y ,ee t e ver-
"I think we'll also begin to see
more donations like this uow that
we have a gallery," Lewis said.
.
;
'.
Th~
·
rumors and
•-
misconceptions
·
home.
It
was like an old friend of
tebrae in its spine,"
·
said Shaileen
Marist logo on the floor of the ro-
abou
_
t the seal•inthe
_
entrancew~y to
theirs·, peo
.
pie would p
·
at
1

1
o
·
n
.
the
Kopec, vice president of the office
tunda .
.
·
o
·
·
·
11
·
H
·
11
·
b
·
d
"
·
11
·
·
d
·
·
··
1
··
·
·
The donation comes at a
·
time

onn~
.
y a can e stoppe .
·
head when they visited
.
the Dobo's,"
,or co ege a vancemen
.
,
.
.
.. :·
Jt
is
1101
·
a replacement for the
·
"Whatis remarkable
is
that it which closely coordinates with the
·
h
·
1
·
·
·
·
b
Lewis said.
·
·
·
·
·
·
II
·
h
opening of the ne
.
w student art gal-
The new gallery is a place that
the thousands of artists between
Albany and New York City
will
be
choosing to display their work .
.
·
.
·
.:
.
sc oo mascot
,
ut rather represents
The seal
.
was sculpted by Furio
happens to go very we
wit the
.
· .
th
.
e
~ginning of professional artwork
Piccirilli,

one of five brothers who
black slate that
is
already in there,"
lery in the rotunda.
be·ng d'
·
1
d
d
·
d
Le ·
'd "The
k
f
·
tl
The gallery brings with it the
.
1
.
1sp aye an en1oye on cam-
came to Ameri
.
ca fro'm Italy in 1888_
w1s sa1 .
y wor per cc
y
P
t
t
·
he "
solution to a longstanding problem
us.
·
Piccirilli also designed the sculp-
oge
r.
·
·
·
·
Steven and Estelle Dobo, native
.
tural decoration of.the Parliament
The decision to put it in the en-
concerning art,vork;
"Artists
need access to a major
city to sell their work," Kopec ex-
plained, "and that's going to be our
niche."
.
Poug~keepsie residems, recently
House in Winnipeg; Canada,
in
1920_ trance to Donnelly Hall was made
"It's
.
been a problem for us be-
donated the sculpture to Marist so
The work that Marist College has
after considering the factors in-
cause we haven't had a place to dis-
that
.
«it
could
.
be appreciated a
.
nd
.
.
.
volved.
play artwork or even properly store
.
. .
d" "d R" h d
.
is one of a t~ree part series that was
"W1"th sculpt
.
ure,
·
you w
·
ant 1·1 to
it," Kopec
.
sai
_
d. "Now that we have
·
.· ,
.
en1oye , sa1
1c ar Lewis, coor-
d
b
p· ·
·11·
d.
one
Y
iccm
I;
b
·
·
I
h
·
·
b
"
.
agallery, it will hopefully encour-
.
matoi: of studio art and design.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
em apace w ere 1t can e seen,
Most students who were asked
about the seal didn't know what it
was there for.
· .
The sculpture now resides in
has
;
a version in its collectio
.
n,
·
and
Lewis said, "but also not in the way
age
.
people to provide art to us."
D
II
aft
h
·
·.
·
ft
ffi
·
h
·t
·
·11
b d
·
d "
The gallery will have a rotating
onne y
er avmg JUSt come back
there is another
.
that
.
resides in
o ra 1c w ere 1 w1
e amage .
fro
_
m being restored.
.
.
.
Since the donation was made
schedule of fine arts and plans to
Brookgreen Gardens.
.

h
·
1
·
f
v· ·
9
4
have at least eight exhibits per year.
"I wondered what it was," said
junior Laura Engstrand,
"I
was con-
fused why it was in the middle of
Donnelly Hall."
·

Its surface, made
·
of Belgiari
The seal c
.
o
.
.
ntains many details
before
.
t e p annmg o
1s1on
,
·
bl
h
d b
d
11
d d"
th
t
d
as ot co "de ed a •
It
will feature the work of local
mar e,
.
a
ecome u an
·
irty
to enhance the realism of the an
.
imal
ero un a w
n
nsi
r
r--'--'-..c...-...;_ _ _
.;,_ _ _ _
__:.__.:;:~====--=::,::..::.:.::=:;_:.:..::==-===-----,.---r.c,----------i
·
Hudson Valley artists and will rep-
,,.,..,,,.,
-
,,;-·
resent a full range of media from
.,.._#,,r""'
the fine arts.
,.;;,~..,.,,✓
"We want the gallery to be very
.,,;,,,-
"'
hands-on," Kopec said, "so that it
,.,.,
can be
used
to
educate
and instruct."
The combination of the donation
and the gallery may start a trend for
Giving Tree
Junior Jenn Fox said,"I walked
by it a few times and didn't know
what
it
was, but it was interesting to
see that there'
.
s a seal in Donnelly,"
said junior Jenn Fox.
offers hope
to
25
needy families
by
KATHRYN LINK
Staff Writer
Donnelly, Lowell Thomas, Dyson,
the Campus Center and the Chapel.
Lynch said that this year, a sixth
When many
.
people had not even
tree might be added and placed in
thought of sugar plums dancing in
the Student Center.
,
their heads, members of the Student
However, Lynch said clearance
Government Association's Giving
had not yet been given.
Tree Project were already planning
Allison Guarda, a
senior
history
for Christmas.
.
major from Bristol, Conn said,
"The
Lisa Valentini, a senior from
trees are going up on November
17,
Edison, NJ and head
.
of the Project,
that gives the Marist Community two
said work began in late September.
weeks to take an ornament and buy
"We got
a
late start last year so
a gift."
this year, we decided to have every-
Guarda said she feels that
all
of
thing rolling by midterms," Valentini.
the time that is put i.nto making lhc
,
,
·
·---
-
S#
.
~
-
~tructlo
_
i:1
pn
fl~ut~
:
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9
·
v.rll(bi(
causing
,
co~g!~tj°'n f~r four
add'-
.
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.
a""','-
:,
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,:
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_
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.
:!3--
:
_p_r-
:
o'-je-,b-t--ll
sai<;,he Project was
.
founded by
Yt
01
e1:~
a
success is. definite\y wort\\
la
scheduled te>

be
.
~~ple!!'d.
,'.
l?Y
.
~
.
ugust
:
1£195~
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·
sollle
:::~l~}r.~::.·s~~:~?~~:d~~i~::;
!!;~:~y~~::~i::::;:~!J[J:cl::
to Maris!- with desires and needs of
they know are for them," Guarda
by DARYL RICHARD
·
Staff Writer
The
·completion .
pf\videning'
Route
9
has suffered a four month
delay .
.
·•

.
.
.
.
.
Problems with rebuilding a bridge
over
·•.
C6rifail tracks near Marist
College•~ south entrance has delayed
. ,
finish
.
iilg tl!e construction until Au-
.
gust
1995.
,
.
.
. .
. ·
.
.
·
.
·
·
··
· ..
.
Yic;tocSepe;
a
con~ulting
.
en~i-
neer with Shah Associates, which
oye~ees
·
the project for the state De-
partment
-
of Transportation, said
ther~ were delays in getting approval
froni Coiuail for the
:
new bridge
design; pushing back the completion
.
date.
.
-,
.
.
.
•~ehridge isacritical part of
tlie project," he said .
.

About one-
third of the reconstruction is finished
and Sepe said he expects tqe bridge
to be done by next spring.
.
.
,
He
.
added that the approaching
winter conditions will not slow work
on
.
the bridge. "There's a possibility
that even with winter temperatures,
we can continue work on the bridge.
We
will
work until we can't work
anymore."
.
.
Several other projects remain
before Route 9 will be completed.
Workers are currently placing
water mains, some of which will feed
Marist, preparing for paving, work-
ing on drainage and installing new
lighting.
·
·
.
.
·
.
Sepe said the lighting has become
a priority because Marist officials
have expressed concern with the lack
of lights along Route 9 near
thecollege.
"There have been complai
.
nts
about the cui:rent status of lighting
coming from people who park by
·
Route
9,"
director of Physical Plant
Tom Daly sai~.
.
.
The construction has also affected
the ride to school for Marist com-
muters. "I think it's awful and
po-
tentially dangerous,"said sophomore
:
Beili;dette Go;bel
/
doebei lives in
their own personal vision.:'
said.
Wappingers· Falls but leaves at least
Lynch said Thompson wanted to
Valentini agreed and said she had
a half-hour before class because of
show the community that Marist had
children grab onto her legs one year,
increa.sed traffic,
i
..
·

.
.
,
more to offer than academics and
thinking that she was one of Santa's
freshman Un# Harding;
a
com-
sports.
.
'
. .
.
elves.
.
muter from Kingston, expressed
He said many people were over-
Meghan Lee,. a freshman from
similar
.
displeasure with the construe-
whelmed by *e thoughtfulness of
Keene, NH, said that her church
tion:
·
"It's a pain,"'
.
she said, "It gets
the Marist community.
sponsors
an
event similar to the
on everybody's nerves. One
.
.
time,
.
I
Jennifer Nocella, president for
.
the
Project.
was a half-hour late to class because
Class
·
of 1996
,
said
she
is glad SGA
''It
really is rewarding and there
I sat in tra.ffic for 20 minutes
:
"
supports
the Project
.
.
is no other way to experience this
The construction has not affected
"(It)
is
.
one of the great gifts
feeling,
"
Lee
said
.
"You're giving
everyone thoi.igh
.
Marist gives to the community. The
so little, but it is such a big feeling
."
Freshman Joe Divincenzo, who
amount of
support
it receives every
Trips to the Galleria Mall
are
commutes
.
from Newburgh, has not
year illustrates the kind of unity that
being sponsored by the college the
been delayed by theroad work
'.
"It's
brings
_
Marist College together,"
first weekend of December to allow
not that much of a hold up. I haven't
Nocella said
.
students
10
·
buy gifts for the Project
needed any extra time, but I wish it
However, Nocella said she be-
and to do their own Christmas shop-
wasn't there of course."
lieves that the needy should be re-
ping
.
When completed, the new high-
membered all year long, and not just
The ceremony, which kicks off
way
will
give the Marist campus
at the holiday season.
the Christmas
season
with the col-
borderingRoute 9 a facelift
.
.
"It's
In conjunction with the SGA, the
lecting of the presents and the light-
really going to enhance the entrance
Project also receives help from out-
ing of the Marist tree, will take place
and
.
the area fronting Marist Col-
side sources
including
Dutchess
on the evening
of
Sunday, Decem-
lege," Sepe said.
Outreach, the United Way and Spe-
ber 4 at 8
:
15
.
The new four-lane divided high-
cial Services of Poughkeepsie.
Valentini said she encourages
way will have a median filled with
Each organization chooses a few
anyone, including clubs who are
bushes and plants and blue stone
families that are needy and would
interested in helping out, to call her
sidewalks bordered with red brick
benefit the most from being a part
at ext. 4647.
and decorative lighting.
of the Project
.
"It's
such an incredible feeling
"Some of the materials in the
Valentini said the-Project is sup-
.
at the end of the project," Valentini
project are being used to enhance
porting 25 families this year.
said, "knowing that a little kid will
the historic district," Marist College
Over a thousand ornaments will
see a gift under the tree, when they
Vice President Mark Sullivan said.
be placed on the trees located in
weren't expecting one to be there
."
Included in the historic district
from Maris! are Greystone, the Gate
House and St. Peter's.
Marist officials worked closely
with project engineers from the start
.
to help design a highway that would
best enhance the area.
"There's a lot of history on the
Marist campus, so this will dress the
area up," Sepe said.
At the college's south entrance
workers are installing a traffic sig
-
nal that will form a T-intersection,
making the traffic flow safer.
Last year, traffic exiting from the
south entrance had a stop sign and
was
turn.
The
-
Circle
non-scientific poll
The Circle conducted a non-scientific poll from Oct. 11th to
Oct. 25th. Just under 1,000 students were asked the following
question:
Are
you satisfied
with what
the new
Cabaret
has
to off
er?
Yes= 495
No =467









4
Marist R.adiO
}i3.Ving €otliniul1iCati0n
COI1ee1nns
That's us.m
.. ·
.
. • ·;
. .
·, . .
. At the same time, some mem- · doing stuff with -The Chance. and
like
to•gef a Hitle further avvayJrofu
by JUSTIN SEREMET
Senior Editor
It's not easy being one tenth of a
watt.
But Marist College Radio, like
MCTV,
is simply trying to do the
best with what they've got.
Since last ye·ar's change of
elected positions, the new people in
charge at
WMCR
are looking to
loosen things up a bit, but not so
much that people don't take them
seriously.
And this means not getting bent
out of shape about lack of an FCC
license.
"We just want to get the name
around," said senior Neil Kelly, the .
general manager of
WMCR,
who
also runs his show "Off the Beaten
Path." "Most of us realize that a lot
of people don't even know that this
school has a radio station. I have to
- say, 'yeah, you know that closet you
guys walk past in Champagnat?
~or WMCR, 1t doesn t really he.Ip .·hers have questions as"to how iri-
we're working . on doing .-,a
.overplayed MTV. sludge•·an(have
~eemg ':'assar ~olleg
7
r~~ently hav~
volved the communications depart-
Valentine's Day dance, which we've
some more.independent.music. ·
mg their radio statt<>n s wattage. ment is. with. the ongoings of never done before. The focus is less
"What we'd reallyJike
to
.do -is'
bo~~ted up _to !5,000 watts._
, ·,,
WMCR.
on the FCC problem. We all know
io
s
·
ay 'hey, here's some stuff that
Yeah, it kind of bothers me,
"You'd think thatit would be a it's not gonna happen while we're
you'll be hearing on- MTV a
few•
;elly said. "But if we were FCC
nursing relationship be~een us and here."
weeks from now," he said;
.
·-
hcensed, a lot of DJs wouldn't like
communications," said junior
WMCR has music directors Beth
And Kelly does not believe that
what c?mes with_ it. I,, f<>r o~e,
Desmond Ebanks, program director Dooley and Scott Grav
7
s with record
no one is listening.
·
·
wouldn _t be too t~nlled with havmg
atWMCR. "I don't think anyone is companies in the station's attempt
"There are still
_a Jot
of listen-
the Christmas shift, or_ the summer
really looking out for .MCR. It's to mix things up a bit.
ers," he said. "A lot of them aren.'t
one for that matter."
.
.
entirely a student-run station."
"We even almost had a country
participating · in caHing
up,:
but
Like MCTV, WMCR wishes it
Regardless of activities or com-
show " Ebanks said ..
"But that
they're there. We've_ also .gotten
a:
had been more included in some of. munications, WMCR is trying some never:eally materialized."
few comments . from listeners on
the construction that has gone up
newpromotions to get the campus
However, Ebanks doesn't want
certain DJs."
· . .. . . .
. ·;
ove,r, th, e summ
7
r.
.. .. . .. .

more in,volved, as well as getting t.he fun getting in the way t_oo much.

It
S
f
t t
t
V
94
h
As for the s.tation's • recepti.o. n,
.
rus ramg o see 1S1on. .
some more·attention.
"It's a little too loose ng t now,
and that communications has no part
Kelly has worked with The but at the same time
.I
don't really
Kelly says that theifs.gooddays and
of it," Kelly said. "It doesn't really
Circle to have WMCR's Top 20 want to restrict them."
bad days. "I know: that some build-
make a whole lot of sense.
chart printed in issues and has set
Kelly said that one of the
ings a:re blocking the, receptiont. he
"I think there's a wall of mis- · up a conference list on the main-
station's goals is to have a wide
said. "But it seems to be coming in
communication between activities
frame that can be used for sugges-
variety of shows for students with
for the most part on campus."
and clubs. It's not anyone's fault.
tions by typing "Confwmcr" at the
humor shows, two sports shows, a
"I think the rotation's been a lot
But they (activities) have to realize
main menu.
metal show and the regular rotational
more appealing," said senior Dave
that a lot of the money that is spent
"We're having a Jot more spon- · shows.
Whitehead of Ardsley, NY, the
is necessary."
sored events," Ebanks said. "We're
But Kelly also said that they'd station's sports director.
'
• 8
rlst pep and pictured at a weekend footbaUgame. Membership in th
since last year.
,,
·
·

Campus violence a concern
by JEANINNE AVILES
Staff Writer
·,
According to Marist Security,
violence on_campus is not as preva- ·
lent this year as it has been in past
years. security.
"I don't even like to say that be-
cause Ws like waving a red flag at
a bull. Everything's going great and
then the roof caves in," said Joseph
Leary, director of safety and secua
rity.
.
In
a city like Poughkeepsie
where you have approximately
22,000 people, not having any fights
is unusual, according to Leary.
He said there has only been one
down because there's more security
walking around and the lighting is
better than last year," Brown said.
Although the . students · co-exist,
there is still occasion for arguments,
Leary said.
"I think generally the students
get along pretty well together, but
the setup is there for some tempera-
ment, which might result in· some
minor assaults,· but fortunately we
haven't had any problems in that
area," Leary said.
·
When fighting does occur, it is
. usually because there is alcohol in-
volved, Leary said.
Leary explained that in his ex-
periences in both security andlaw
"When you
lose the ability to.think
objectively then that's when
it
starts.
The first man or woman to throw a
punch, the first one to·
use foul lan-
guage
is the one that's losing the
arguement. "
- Joe Leary;
director of security
case -of violence on campus this
year.
''This semester, we've had one
report of assault. It
WG
a minor
assault. It went from a loud verbal
to one punch thrown, no damage
done." Cyndee Brown, a resident
assistant in Gartland, said compared
to last year there has been a lot less
violence.
"I think the violence has gone
enforcement, altercations take place
usually late at night, on weekends
and when people have more than
likely been drinking.
All of this creates fights that are
inconsequential.
"When you lose the ability to
think objectively then that's when
it starts. The first man or woman to
throw a punch, the first one to start
usirig foul language is the 6ne that's
losing the argument," Leary said.
_ Leary said the people who "start ·
swinging or swearing" are usually
the. people who are losing the fight
verbally.
··When situation Hke this occurs,
security has to go· through certain
procedures in .. order to ·.handle· the
situ.ation correctly, Leary said.
A patrol is assigned to a certain
area of campus, and when security
receives information about a fight
or some other violent act, the patrol
must respond.
The people involved . are sepa-
rated if the altercation isstill in
progress by the time security arrives.
All
individuals involved are
questioned regarding their version
of what happened.
"Almost all the time, one person
says it happened this way and the
other person says it happened ex-
actly at 180 degrees the other way.
So you spend a lot of time. trying to
get other disinterested witnesses to
say w~at happened," Leary said.
Accgrding to
Leary,
everyone is
given the opportunity to give a state-
ment and whatever information se-
curity obtains is handed over to
Student Affairs for disciplinary ac-
tion.
When an assault occurs, the in-
vestigation is written up by the in-
vestigating officers. _ . ·
If
it has occurred in one of the
housing buildings, the Office of
Housing and Residential Life has
their own reports they' turn in.




































I
-
THE CIRCLE,
NOVEMBER 3, 1994
.
virus terrorizing
e-
bY
MEREDITH
-
KENNEDY
.
Deanna Mc Graham, Donnelly lab nuisances.
·
·
·
.:-.
-::
·
:, ·
Sta/fEditor
·
staff
.
coordinator,
.
said it is hard
·
to
-------;.;;;;;:;"-,;;;;.;;;,;,:,:::.:...,..___ controf what goes on in the Donnelly
The
two
most prevelant viruses are
.
"
Ncomp~ter yirus is plaguing the lab at night .when
.
there
·
are no lab being called GenB and GenP.
Mansi community
:
assistants
.
on d~ty.
. .
.
.
GenP affects the
.
partition
.
table
·
·
There
.
are approximately four vi-
"We
can't control what happens within the computer, which controls
ruses_
·
infecting the computer labs in at night time so there is no .way
·
of the set up of the hard disk.

Donnelly and Lowell Thomas.
regulating the customers," McGraham
.
Dennis W. Creagh, manager of said
.
When the partition table is de-
the Jnformation Center said the vi-
stroyed the computer must be refor•
·
ruses can be contained
if
students scan
Students can check their own disks maned, Creagh said.
their disks before and after th
·
at night by using the computer desig-
.
ey use a
"GenB is a boot sector virus,
computer.
: .
nated specifically for scanning, Balza


~
•If we
.
protect the lab machines it said.
which
·
means it resides in the boot
·
won't fu
_
rther spread, buti·r the stu-
sector part of memory," Creagh said.
A program called VSheild is now
dents check their disks now itWon't· b
·
·
·
II h
h'
GenB will affect the co
_
mputers

emg run on a t e ·mac mes.
·
cause any damage," Creagh said
;
abiHty
to run programs until the virus
..
"The longer the virus resides ori
It
will not allow the user to con
-
is cleaned out.
the diskette the w
·1
·11
·
b
tinue until the virus is cleaned from
. .
.
'
.
.
orse
I WI
..
pro -
.A
virus can be brought into the
.
ably get." Deanna Balza, the student the disk, McGraham said.
labs in two ways.
staff coordinator, said the virus is hard
McAfee An
t
i-Virus programs have
to contain because some people have been reinstalled on all of the comput-
A student might have brought a
computers at home that are infected.
f F · d
O
21 C
h
·
d contaminated diskette in without
"If
you have the virus on disk it ers as
O
n ay, ct.
' reag sa~
·
knowing
.or
they could of come off a
spfeads it to the computer," Batza
McAfee is designed to prevent the bulletin board.
said
.
virus from spreading and further con-
·
·
·
People whose home computers are
·
taminating the machines;
According
1
°
Creagh, "One per-
. i
d
son will put a virus on a
·
file off the
m ecte ~hould put in a problem re-
Creagh described some of the vi- bulletin

board, and then create the
port at t e Help Desk
in
Donnelly, ruses as destructive, while others are spread from there."
Batza said.
·
.
.
5
Marist communit
Safe
computing Is necessary since a virus has infested the
·

computer labs
in
Donnelly and Lowell
Thomas. Students are
.
advised to scan their disks.
ChclePhotol lir,k
Friday, November 4th, 11th
&
18th at
.
10:00 P.M:
18 & Over Drink Specials Including: $1;50 Bottles
K
TTY"
Poughkeepsie:
Sub City,
246
Main Mall • 185-3579
Chestnut Mobil,
416
S. Rd •
485-8630
·
Arlington:
Arlington Getty, 813 Main St. • 454-3530
• • Does your roommate sing the greatest hits of Ethyl
Merman at the top of their lungs in the middle of the
night?
• • Is your boyfriend cheating on you with a luscious
harem?
• • Do you have trouble remembering your name at
any given time of the day or night?
Need Advice?·
Let Betty help you with your problems.
She's no Jackie Stallone - hell, she's no Dionne Warwick - but
she's perfect for Marist students, faculty and'staff.
Send your questions and/or problems to
·Ask Betty·
c/o The
Circle by either campus mail or e-mail at HZAL. Betty knows
what's best for you!

















































6
. THE
CIR~ .. NOVEMB,~Jl 3,J 994
Marist
conunuriity.
reacts
,h-)
;i'f
¢sf
Jraq1 .
lJ:!,ilit~-
w.OYe
,
b~,
SUSANNE
y
ANUSZ
, . \~
·ha~f h,o~;
~!O
the. futtii~.
·~
·
;yi~l
i{ ·:
{ing'.to co~side~ what ~oi~: 1~:m 'iniiht / : :
tf
~we. hav~ no interest. goingJ~to
sho~ici
i,i
·a_Ii. over the ~lace, as well .
S,taffWriter
is not necessary_ to _use·•aIHlie·ens 'play.
·
:: ,~apn•-Husse~. Tuer; woul?l?~
po- _
as our.own country.· ..
-
.
·
~-->
>-.,·:.
. . ... '· .·
.·.
. . .
ergy we do and 1t. 1~11ght take ~,;very
' .•
.
. .
. •
.
. . ._
htical .~haos
Ill
Ira~, he sa~d·;
•. . ·. Mar)>et~i:R~citil/ pr~fe;s~ri>f
Nearly
:
four years after the Per- · ser~?us en.ergy ~rlSls to .a~ak~~ l.!S· , . . '.Altbough. sol:~-mi~tJeel rres_i · . · . H~~ever, C~nmto feels it should.· ::'religious ··studies; said· whateverJhe
sian Gulf.War, Saddam Hussein

re-
.·.
Americans like to think tpe ,ele_v~
,
. dentBush_ shou.
_
.· ave on~ more m
.
··be a Uruted Nallons effort rather.than
United States chooses to.do has
'
iin:.
Su
. -"ac·ed ··maki·n·g
h d
enth commandment should b. e thqu
order to put an end to Hussem, Olson · 1·ust the U.S..
1.cat·ons ..
.
·.
-
11,
,
newspaper ea -
h II h
h
,,,A
ki
ct·
.
. ,
.
. .
.
.
p 1 1
.
lines· once again.
.
.
!a~. ave c eap energy,
t . ns
tsagrees.
,
•,.
•·
· .
. . ·•~:This wil~ lessen the animosity
On Oct.6, H1.1ssem ordered some
K .
S ·th
. ;
.
rr .
I
"People who said .Bush made a . that the Umted States has over
"Our policies and actions that are ·
of his• best troops to move toward
. evm
!11
1
f:
a sc:1
0\P
0
l~ca
mistake not going alLthe way
·10
theret Cannito said. "People will
often self-s.erving· contribute to
'
'the
the Kuwaiti border again.
~;nee ma1°.~ . ro~.
ti a
b
~~ d
&f· .
Baghdad and taking out Hussein lack' realize other people are helping de-
. crisis, that erupts. We
are
then ,faced
The American mHitary rebuffed Unit:r;~?I
1
.s
r
1c ~- e 1
!1
the
a fundamental understanding of poli-
mocracy too."
. ·.·
'witli'choices on intervention, bu(the .
the troops and perhaps reminded the . .
·.
a es m erven ion m
e
tics in the region," he said.
UJt
could
. .
.
larger qlies!fonJs the question:,of
·world of the sanctions imposed on Mtddle EaSt·
· ·
·
have destabilized Iraq and caused
· Joanne Myers, professorof,po-
be.in.
'
g:·1·us.·t .. :.'.a.nd mo
.. r
.. a. I.rro. m th.e .. b ... e~.· .. ·.·'
Ira b the U •t d N
f
"The United States has made it
further conflict." ·
-
litical science,·claims that the,.U.S.
ginn.
·
. in. g·.'in
.
.
·· all
.... · our .. glob.a.helatio.n~•-
qMoYs. t·
ntil e K a
1
~tns.
·ct
th
its job in the Middle· East to protect
·
·
·
assumed the role of policeman
of
the
Wl
·11 allowrect. heenUyn' 1·teudwSat1atessa1to steay-
our
o_
ii
_inte. re_sts. I_f,
it
is s.ucha bu-
Greg CalUlito, asenior
.
political
world after World War II...
. .. ·. ships, to' !espect· human rights: and
m n t
· th
t f
h
th
.science major from Highland, NY,
to ·stand ·ror thein as a matter
of·'
tion a squadron of.warplanes in their · a
1
ar!an \~g.
1
s .un!ly ow · e_
also feels harming Husseiri is not the
. According to Myers, if the
U:S.:
'po.l!cy,_)mcl:nofonlyi_whe11it s,e.~es -
country in order to curb Iraqi mili-
mternatmnal commum!y 1!fiPOsed_ an
believes in true human rights, we
our interest," Peter-Raoul said.
tary powe ·
..
. embargo on Iraq wh1ch1s causmg 'answer.
There :~e currently almost 9,000 their people to suffer," Smit~. said.
American ground ·troops in Kuwait
For the most part, ma_ny, people
d
s
ct·
Ar b.

d
•c
.
t d feel the U.S. should have mtervened
ahn
au 1 a ta, an. 1 is exp_ec e
and were happy with the way Presi-
t at 13,000 troops will be stationed d t
·c1·
t •h di d th
·t 1·
.
. .
.
en
m on · an e
e s1 ua 10n.
there before startmg to return m De-
cember;
"It was good that we inoved so
Some people feel the reason quick on
!t
becau~e a lot of- people
Hussein sent troops to Kuwait's were sta!tmg to
·
thmk we woulp not
border is because of the• current eco- . take action anymore, that
·
,\V~
.
w~re
nomic hardships
it's
facing.
.
ju~t going to make ,a lot_<?{; thr~a~,"
-Louis Zuccarello; professor of sa1_d Marc ~ele, a semor-:I?oht1cal
Political Science, feels Hussein's science ma1or from Burlmgton,
actions were ·more of an attention Conn..
.
getter than a threat to invade.
Mele feels Iraq is seeing \Vhat
"Saddam Hussein's move was they can get away with, \yhat will_
largely motivated to get the world's be tolerated, and that Hussein is
attention · to his belief the sanctions acting for the benefit for himself and·
should be relieved," Zuccarello said.
and his nation.
Zuccarello feels the suffering of
thelraqi people is real and the world
community has to do something
about it.
·
Richard Atkins, professor of his;
tory, feels the United States is once
again involved because of American
interests and the county's depen-
dency on oil imports.
"We don't see how we use our
energy and we make ourselves vul-
nerable," Atkins said.
"It
is our own
fault we are susceptible to Hussein/'
According to Atkins, Americans
are short sided and unwilling to look
There are some who believe the
U.S. is morally. obligated to protect
Kuwait.
"It
would be ideal,
if
the Persian
Gulf states themselves could assume
that responsibility (to protect Ku-
wait), but it does not seem likely ·
because they don't have the military
or man power to go up against Iraq,"
said William Olson, professor
i•
of
history.
·
·
Olson says it is a complex situa-
tion. involving balance ,. of. pmver in
the region imd· it might be interest-
•. ·•·
a
, ' , , , . ·• ;, ·,~;,. ..
• -' •
. • •·. •
__ _.'. ·._;
Attention:
.
.
.
Marist Students!
.
'
Winter Intersession Registratio·n
/
continues
at the
0
Sch()ol of
Adult
E<lucatiori,
Dyson 127
One-third tuition ($328) is due at registration.
Catch up on credits! Graduate on time!·
Twenty-eight courses will be offered between
January 3 and 18
(including Saturday, January 7)
New travel course added:
Art History in New York City
Course schedules are available
NOW for
pickup at the School of Adult Education,
Dyson 127.
•.·.
·
pA(ll',S
'"
-
';>
t
._.·-
· Mom~:.~S.i,.::;IJil .. ~·•~·
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:Poughkeepsie1 NY
12601'_
·-----------------·
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: All Labor Charges :
: W/Valid Marist I.D. :
·-----------------·












































































-
.
..;,,
.
TJIE
CIRCLE,
.
FEATURE
NOVEMBER 3, 1994
·
.
7
RESTAURANT
La Parmigiana, located on Route
_
These, of course, can be topped
9 in Rhinebe
_
ck, provides some of
-
with a host of sauces. They are as
the finest Italian cooking in Dutchess
follows: pesto genovese, porchetta,
County.
.
..
·
bolognese, pomodoro, gamberetti,
The large variety of quality Ital-
scollopine and aglio & olio (oil and
ian dishes, combined with the unique
garlic.)
·
atmosphere, cr
_
eates success.
The cost of the pasta and sauce
The restau
·
rant itself is actually
ranges from $6.50-$9.50. With re-
within an old church, and although I
gard to both being homemade, I con-
have no clue about how this came to
sider that reasonably priced.
be, I am sure that it was a great idea.
There is also a pretty good vari-
The designer and interior deco-
ety of pizza to choose from.
rator, without a doubt, deserve
·
Ranging from the giana, a pizza
praise. Everything has been arranged
topped with tomatoes and eggplants,
so the customer feels nice and re-
lo the rustica, spinach and mush-
Jaxed; the decorations, supporting the
rooms, La Parmigiana doesn't miss
Italian theme, are perfect. (One wall
a
thing. The pizzas run from five to
L-
- - - : : - - : - - - - - - - - - - - - , - - - . . : . . . . . .
_ _ _ _ _
. : _
_ _
...:_ _ _ _ _ _ _
__:_ _ _ _ _ _ _
JI
of the dining room isopened to a real,
nine dollars. Again, for a thin, brick-
pizza cooking, brick oven.)
oven baked pizza topped with a
MCCTA's
production of "I
Hate
Hamlet" took place In the Marlst Theater on
Oct
27th to the 29th.
MCCTA asks 'To
-
b
·
e or not to be'
.
-
.
Food
Guy
homemade sauce, I consider this to
be reasonably priced.
La
Parmigiana also offers a great
number of sandwiches and calzones.
in
_
production of
··
''I
_
Hate Hamlet''
Scott
Signore
My only complaint may lie in the
limited number of salad choices.
Although both seemed appealing, the
customer is limited to either a greek
salad or a pasta salad.
by HOLLY DIAZ
agent, and Greg Locker as actor John
Staff Wriier
.
Barrymore.
.
,
Although the cast agreed that they
Picture modern-day
·
New York
had a lot of fun during rehearsals,
City with a
TV
star
-
playing Hamlet
they came across some difficult tasks
being coached by the ghost of John
before the actual performance.
Barrymore, a previous "Hamlet,". to
Locker, MCCTA's managing di-
play his part in "Shakespeare in the
rector of main stage, said the special
Park:"
· ·
·
·
.
·
effects were the hardest to work with.
.
This was the premise of Marist
"There's a Iot of abstract light-
College of Council Theater Art's first
ing, hydro-technics, and also a fog
performance of the semester, Paul
·
machine," Locker said.
Rundnick's "fHate Hamlet," which
Director Richard Weissman, a vet
·
ran from Oct. 27 to the 29.
in the business, spent thirty years in
Se~or Sean Ryan starred as
TV
the theater as an actor and director.
·
star Andrew
.
Rally in this spoof cin
Weissman received his under-
Shakespearean

tht!atre.
graduate degree for
.
Theater Arts at
.
Other cast members that partici-
Hofstra University and his graduate
pated in this comedy were Shannon
degree for Theater History at Hunter
· .
Fitzpatrick, playing the part
·
of
·
-
College:
.
·
.
Andrew's
'
girlfriend, Defrdre
·
He has also directed shows in the
McDavey, Tom Privitere as
TV
pro-
past for "County Players," in
ducer
_
Gary Peter l#kowitz; Jessica
Wappingers Falls.
.
·
.
Byrµe_~ a
_
Queen_s eal estate agent,
..
. Weissman said he foresaw chal-
Felicia Dantine, Monica Fusco as
lenges in the production.
.
.
.
an impression of Barrymore," he
said.
"It
is difficult for a young ac-
tor to act with this time period. It
has to be handled well so
Shakespeare is served in the best
·.
way."
·
.
·
Another area of difficulty that
Weissman pointed out dealt with the
role of 70-year-old Lillian Troy,
played by 20-year-old, Monica
Fusco.
"I had to work with Monica on
how to stand and walk," Weissman
said.''There's a different quality of
movement of an older woman. Your
legs aren't as good, and your walk
shouldn't be too bouncy."
Shelly Curran, president of
MCCTA's executive board and pro-
ducer of
C'l
Hate Hamlet," said that
the sword fight posed other chal-
lenges.
.
"Because w,e are using real foils,
the fencing scene has to be precise
From what I understand, during
warm days and nights, a patio is
filled with customers. (I took a quick
look at the patio and it. too, seemed
to
a
be a great place to enjoy dinner,
lunch or just a drink.)
(I also found out that in terms of
a night spot, a great deal of custom-
ers, mostly a post-college crowd,
flock to La Parmigiana on weekend
nights.)
And for the best part - the food.
La
Parmigiana provides a large
variety of food, at a very reasonable
price.
·
The appetizers range from lentil
soup ($2.50) to pasta di Mare, a pasta
salad with vegetables, shrimp
and
scallops ($5.75).
I
would recommend either the
athenian pizza, a pizza topped with
olives, onions and peppers, or the
parma-hero.
I
caught a glimpse of the parma-
hero and it looked superb: freshly
sliced salami, prosciutto, mortadella
porchetta, provolone, tomatoes and
lettuce cover an enormous torpedo
roll.
The next time I eat at La
Parmigiana,
I
will have a parma-
hero.
It
looked incredible.
In terms of an overall evaluation,
and as I've already stated, I think
La Parmigiana is one of the finest
restaurants in Dutchess County. The
atmosphere, the variety of the menu
and the quality of the food combine
to form aR exceptional restaurant.
As
I've
_
mentioned
La
La Parmigiana deserves 4 rounds
Parmigiana specializes in pi;za and
o[ applause. (This, of course, is based
pasta. Pizza dough, seasoned with
.
a
upon a scale or
l - 5.)
_
Lillian
Troy,
Andrew's German
,
· ·
"Most challenging is
,
to recreate
;
'
1

~

--·
>
.

..
.

.
.
,
.
_
se.e
.
HAMLET page
10
vadety
-
'
~f di
_
fferei1t spices; is listed
· ·
·
Excluding the. limited number
ot:
several times; the seasoned bread a
.
..
salad <:;h':'ices;
I
don't have}oo many
very generous portion; is
_
only thr~e
bad
things
to say.
·
·
.•
·
:
or four
-
dollars, and makes a greal
I strongly recommend La
appetizer if your dinner is something
Parmigiana .
hasreached 80 percent. Despite this, other than pizza.
La Parmigiana 37 Montgomery
-------COMMENTARY--
.
_.,,
_
.
.
'
Saddam Hussein's renewed men
~
acing of Kuwait has prompted nie to
reexamine
·
the
·
political
·
naivete
·
that
characterizes discussion of American
intervention in the Persian Gulf, and
to question anew the efficacy of
United States fo_reign policy.
.
.
Here
at Marist,
,
as across the
country, the events have
_
served tci
·.
demonstrate
_
the common propensity
.
towards
,
knee-jerk emotional re~
·
sponses
·
and the shallow understand-
ing pf the
_
situation most people have.
:
During a class exercise, I spent
-
:
time questioning
·
students and fac-
.
ulty regarding their opinions on
_
fur-
ther courses of action against Iraq.
Many of the comments were shock-
ingly simplistic.
From a
·
senior political science
major; someone. who should know
.
be~ter
;.
came one of
the worst.
.
.
-
.
"I
_
support what the President said
.
in his speech last night,'.' he said.
.
When asked what he thought the
next step towards Iraq should be he
replie~ "
_
I don't think it's my place
·
to question what the President does."
And so the uninformed mandate
of the masses
.
continues.
,
.
Many people, harkening back to
the dominant attitudes from the time
·
of Desert Storm, confuse support for
U.S. troops with approval for the
foreign policy which carts them
abroad.
·
:
Support for troops and support for
policy are two concepts which can,
and must, remain distinct in order
for effective public.debate to occur.
It is erit"irely possible to tie a
yellow ribbon around your old oak
tree in the morning, and march
against military interventionism in
the afternoon.
.
.
A CNN/Gallup/USA Today poll,
taken the day after: President Clinton
authorized the movement of thou-
sands of troops to Kuwait, found that
over 80 percent of those polled fa-
vored either invading Iraq to remove
Hussein from power, or maintaining
a
·
presence in the region until he is
·
removed.
.
·
The roie of the amateur armchair-
:
general
·
is not played solely
.
by
Marist students or the general pub-
lic,
-
however.
Republican spokespersons heart-
·
ily supported Clinton's measure,
while democrats went even further,
claiming that
·
there wo1,1ld be no
problem- today had
we
only "taken
care of
him
the first time."
.
·
.
''Removing Hussein" is a euphe-
mistic way of describing what would
be a long and bloody occupation of
Iraq by U.S. forces. The Iraqis would
·
not allow us to occupy Baghdad
.
with
·
the relative ease with which we re-
:
took Kuwait.
_
·
An invasion and occupation of
the greater portion of Iraq would be
necessary because the United States
is barred by an executive order from
"Engaging
iri, or conspiring to en-
gage in, assassination."
·
The intent of the order was to
prevent the government from adopt-
ing the morally questionable role of
bo!h judge and executioner for for-
eign political undesirables.
In practice, its effect is
devastatingly ironic:
·
it is illegal to
target Saddam Hussein alone, but
"fine"
to kill untold numbers of Ira-
qis to punish Hussein's actions.
Is this
·
a more moral, a more
"just"
resolution?
-
It is time we also looked criti-
cally upon the effectiveness of our
foreign policies; especially upon our
favorite method of meting out pun-
ishment:
the economic sanction.
Politicians, searching for relief
from public outcry over situations
such as Bosnia, tum to sanctions in
an effort to appear they have
"got-
ten tough" on the issue .
Sanctions, however, have proven
completely worthless, and in fact,
ultimately prove effective only in
punishing ourselves.
.
In Haiti, U.S. sponsored sanctions
destroyed the country's economic in-
frastructure. Unemployment there
-
Lt.
·
Gen. Raoul Cedras remained
La Parmigiana offers linguine,
St. Rhinebeck,
(914) 876-3228
firmly entrenched.
fettuccine and ravioli and cheese
Rounds of applause
=
4
Only after an expensive buy-out ...__.ag""n_o_lo_t_ti_. _
-
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
.-1
.
were we able to prompt him to leave.
of the many such comments I heard
The $60,000 per-year lease we will
about campus.
pay to rent Cedras' residences for
When I asked the contributor of
the indefinite future was one of the
-
the first comment
if
he could find
smallest entries on the debit side of Iraq on an unmarked world map, he
the ledger.
,
could not
The United States, the lntema-
Perhaps our collective memory is
tional Monetary Fund, and the World
so short that we forget the hundreds
Bank have pledged over $550 mil-
of Americans and hundreds of thou-
lion to resurrect Haiti from the hor-
sands of Iraqis who died during
rible state of disrepa_ir our sanctions
"Desert Storm".
helped to create.
(A name which to me sounds
Imagine the relief when
·
the ad-
more like the name of some grade
ministration disclosed that the ma-
"B" action movie than a military
jority of these funds would come not
operation. Then again, it came on
from U.S. coffers, but from the
the heels of "Just Cause.")
above-named multinafional organiza-
One student, when asked
if
the
tions.
·
loss of life was justified, replied
What the public was not
re-
"Well, they chose to fight us, they
minded ofwas that the United States paid the price."
-
is the major contributor to these or-
Perhaps if this individual had the
ganizations. Again we pay.
opportunity to bury a 15- year-old,
·
When sanctions fail~ as they did
shoeless and gaunt Iraqi conscript in
in Panama, Haiti, and Iraq, our an unmarked grave in Kuwait, his
elected officials "get
-
tougher" and
opinion would be different.
send in the troops. Lives are lost,
I say this not to elicit a "bleed-
and we end up footing the bill for
ing-heart" response, but to remind
reconstruction.
people that the numbers we discuss
If
we were to occupy Iraq and with relative flippancy represent
remove Hussein from power, as so lives, both American and foreign.
many citizens and politicians appar-
If delineation of the human costs
ently think we should, the monetary of military intervention fails to move
and human costs would dwarf all
someone, perhaps the fiscal effects
these operations combined.
will be more compelling.
As
a recent United Nations de!-
Secretary of Defense William
egation to Iraq noted, "The recent Perry now estimates that the latest
conflict has wrought near-apocalyp-
emergency deployment of troops to
tic results upon the infrastructure of the region will cost over $1 billion.
what had been, until January 1991,
Although the administration will
a rather highly urbanized and mecha-
surely scamper about in search of
nized society."
pledges and donations from other
Speaking to students and others,
countries
10
defray the cost, most
I was appalled by the ruthless man-
political analysts believe little will
ner in which people discussed a
be received.
possible second battle with Iraq's
Even when donations are made,
forces.
they often amount to America pay-
"We should go in there and ing itself. The United States forgave
squash them," and
"We should bomb Egypt billions of dollars in loans in
the hell out of them," were only two
return for their support during Desert
Storm.
Egypt was then nice enough to
"donate"
approximately $15 million
back to us. We applauded their gra-
ciousness publicly.
America needs to ponder care-
fully the terms of our commitment
to the defense of "friendly" Arab
states.
Both Kuwait and Saudi Arabia
are strongly against the permanent
garrisoning of U.S. troops on .their
soil, yet are unhesitating in their calls
for assistance when facing Iraqi ag-
gression.
Last week, Kuwait consented to
the temporary stationing of one U.S.
tank brigade on their soil, though the
troops to man the equipment would
.
have to remain elsewhere.
These few men would be able to
offer only token resistance to Iraqi
forces. Now the U.S. has a line of
sacrificial
"speed-bumps"
in the sand
should Hussein attack again.
We should be forever indebted
to the Kuwaitis for allowing us to
defend their soil in this manner.
Some people will undoubtedly
take issue with the points I make,
and that is exactly my purpose.
Those who read an article such as
this without reaction frighten me
more than Tammy Faye Baker.
We can bemoan governmental
policy all day, but it is only through
well-reasoned public discourse that
our voices are heard and changes are
made.
Sadly, that level of discourse does
not seem to be happening very much
at ~arist_. ~ven more frighteningly,
at times
11
1s almost non-existent in
our hallowed halls of government.
Dan Wager, Special to The
Circle, served in the Persian Gulf
War






























_8
THE
CIRCLE.
MARIST COLLEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE, NY-12601
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER.-
Kristina
Wells,editor
··
..
Dana Buoniconti,
senior editor
Justin Seremet,
senior editor
Andrew Holmlund,
sports editor
Meredith
Kennedy,feature
editor
Teri L. Stewart,
associate editor
Tom Becker,
columns editor
John Dougherty,
assistant editor
· Dawn Martin,
assitant editor
Ron Johnson,
assistant editor
Larry Boada,
editorial page editor
Lynn Wieland,
editorial page editor
Matthew Dombrowski,
distribution manager
G. Modele
Clarke,facultyadvisor
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
EETllE HAPPENINGS
Did anyone see "Ghostbusters" and "Ghostbusters
II"?
Think back to the scenes where the evil spirits of the netherworld rise up from
. below the streets of Manhattan and wreak havoc on the city.
It
was not a very pretty sight.
Demons and
spirits
were roaming the streets of the city possessing weak indi-
viduals, turning them into red-eyed, devilish dogs.
This was quite similar to the events surrounding this year's Festival of Samhain.
Or for those not educated in Druid practices,- Halloween.
Unfortunately, many of us were unable to celebrate it in true splendor because
it was on a Monday.
/
But the demons don't think or operate on the same weekly schedule, and we all
found out that they don't seem to care either way.
Let's recap the weekend from hell.
Over the weekend, a Marist student was shot outside of his home in Poughkeep-
sie.
What do you suppose possessed these individuals to commit a random and
senseless act like this'?
·
·
• ·.,,,. · ·
Shooting a fe\lo~(9,~1:1'"-ll. '?eing at poil.lt
bl~nk tange·w_ith
f.22-talibre gun
for.
. --.aafew-
.
dollars'?-_-'
.c
·,
'
.
•:..~,,'."~0"'$rc-,.,,,

)>.i-';c,,•
:
.i<:,.
·
":'-',
t•c:'•"~'.'\~·•
:
'·':'r•~'· ·· -
·
'::
·
"rt
is unfortunate that the shooting had to happen to a
Marist
student to realize
that
this kind
of
violence happens so close to us everyday.* Fortunately, the victim
surviyed.
_
·
·.• ..
•· .. ·.
.:
But the
Jra~ma:
of the event will haunt him for the rest of his life.
No longer _win he feel safe walking the streets of his college town.
Nolonger will:he feel a sense of security knowing his perpetrators have not
been caught;
·
But· there were. other' spooks about.
· Another real.:life.hc>rror story is
stiU
unfolding but
with
an added
twist.
We told you
it
wouldn't go away.
The, plot still thickens in. the September
1993
rape.case.
More arrests.· wf!re. made. this•· past weekend.
·
Shan_e Conry; Marist strident, and Kristian Grizelj, a former student, were ar-
rested and arraigned on three counts of rape in the first degree.
Both were affiliated with a well-known· greek · organization on this campus, not
to mention that John-Tasso; the first to-be arrested, was also
a
part of this orga-
-nization.
.
It doesn'tmatter who they were, either as members or pledges, thecrime was
. still committed.
Be assured there will be more scares in store for them.
Seventy-five years in prison sounds awfully frightening.
But wait. ..
We still have more demons to. excise.
On Sunday night, Oct.
30,
Chicago and Detroit resembled a cut from the movie
!!,'£he Crow".
The citieswent up in a blaze. like a funeral pyre.
A
series of fires were set in crime-infestecl areas of the cities, and in some cases
the firemen couldn't keep up with them.
·
They had to simple let the fires burn the buildings to the ground.
In this case, the ghouls won.
On Halloween, Oct.
31,
a frightening tragedy unfolded at-4 p.m. near Gary, Ind.
Sixty-eight unsuspecting and innocent passengers perished on a American Eagle
commuter plane as it crashed to the·ground.
.
American. Eagle . said it would not speculate on the cause of the crash.
Did they think it may havebeen something ripping the wing to shreds
as
the
plane cruised along in a heavy rainstorm.
Yet another resemblance to a horror movie.
Could the rain have been conjured up by something?
Were they trying to tell us that the horror of Halloween
can
come in small and
large doses?
Finally, perhaps the strangest of "spookers"-a disappearance.
On Oct.
8,
a friend of a Marist student mysteriously disappeared somewhere
near Church St.
Was he grabbed by some poltergeist walking the streets searching for a victim?
Did he just vanish into thin air?
Police
are treating .this
as
an important matter.
He was
in the military. Could he have gone AWOL?
Who
knows how any
of
these hauntings
or
mysteries
will
turn out.
Just
hope
Thanksgiving goes better.
. . .
.
..
• . o :: .
.
:
· .- : •
• : .

·o
...
olitica
..
.
wee ·.
·.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Since all of us Marist students have just · . The 1992 election pr6yed j~st how adept
a
.gone through the agonizing ordeal. of midterms politician Bill Clinton is; ..
.
> ,-. ·· .......
·
·.·
and midterm grades, I think that it is a good
· lJnfortunately for the American public, two
idea to give our president a midterm grade for years later he has pro:v~n.'i
_
t ~veil znor~'. .... ·.
the first
tw()
years.
. . . ·
. •
.... • ·
. .
·
Now
\Ve
see the ~ichotomy betwee_n candi-
In terms of foreign policy, Clinton certainly date Bill Clinton and President• Bill Clinton.
got off
t<>
a horrible sta~.
...
.
.
.
. .
.
.
Am4:>ng
.
!he numerous j>ledges Clinton
Bosnia was an indecisive disaster,· which made·. to the · American public was his theme
deserves an unqualified
D,
however little by pledging to be
·
a "New Democrat," a Demo-
little, Clinton· has been earning better grades. crat who did not believe
.
that you can
The Rwanda situation als<f got off to
a
sol~e any problem by just thrmving money
rocky start, but gradually improved to a C.

Clinton's swift action to deny Cubans into at
%
a~ ~'agent of ch~ge" he promised to
the
U.S.
during the Cuban crisis, which· can be reform everything from campaign fµiancing
questioned as to its correctness, earned
him
a to welfare reform, but not by the .traditional
B.
·
· ·
· · ·
·
Democratic solution - tax.
and
spend:
_More swift action, this time in Iraq, when.
Part of what Clinton pledged was a request .
Saddam • started moving troops near the Ku-
.
that people judge him by his own words, \Vhat
_wait border, got Clinton a B.

h h h
d
r
d
The most recent foreign crisis in Haiti he promised versus
·w
at e as e ivere : .
shows Clinton's gradual. improvement in for-
By.• breaking·. down . his . theme
.
a~ . well_ as
.
eig· n policy.
. .. _
..
. ·.·· .
.
•· .
.
· .. .
> .. · ._ . . . _
two of his. specific proposals, you can see he
can'r measure up to his own· criteria. .
.
. . · .. ~resident Aristide was. returned to power
Clinton's platform .was based on a domes-
willi
·
il'ininimaLloss of
:U,S.
soldie~ .. ·
< .
tic._agenda
whi(:h·
was
a
cunning, strategic .
'. ..
·.
;_.Thatfo .itselfdeseerved
an
A.
0
.however tb.k
. was·
nioie
·of. a 'group project grade, . with . a .. move.

·
·
great deal of the workdone by good'old Jimmy
. He"keye'd. into the·. temperature of Jhe
American electorate, knowing they were more
Ca~J~ra_ ging·alf_of these_:·grad_es,·_cl_int. on_ has_·. concerned.about issues.at home,.than abroad,
issues such
as
education.for their children, jobs, .
achieved . a
.
steadily. improving
C+
in . foreign crime and\ health insurance.. . ..
po!icy,
Sf
,
no~Jo the homef~ont ·,; . . . . .
,

Hi~
cainpaignfocu~ed on _the mipdle class.
. i;>esp1te havmg to deal with an.mcred1bly
.. Whether it be they. were workmg- longer.
~1fficult Cop~ess ~d an unswervmg Repu~~ . hours for.less money ot that millions of Ameri-
hcan oppos1t1on, Clmton gets a D for the fad- cans were uninsured, Clinton cited that· the
ure of Health Care. .
.
.
. . . middle ·c1ass was being overlopked.
. Health Ca~e w~nt _do'"'.11. 1n flames. t_han~s
>
Thus he

put forth an agenda«putting gov- .
m
pa_rt
t?
Clmton s mab1hty_ to. explain his einment on the side of the ordinary Ameri-
plan m simple terms.and to d1sm1ss. the scare
.,,
· ·
·
· · · ·•
,
.
-
· ...
tactBics ?df Rehpubltlhicacns.
··c1· t . ' d .·
t"
.
canTwo years later,.i~ his'owriwords, Ptesi~
esi es . ea
• are, . m on s omes 1c d . .
er ·
h · , · ·
d ·
·
·.·· · . ·
successes have been plentifuL
.
.
ent
tn!on . asn t measu~e up_. . , . ' •
· Th M t
y
t
Bill th ·
F
•i ·
Le ·
1be middle class tax cut. Prom1smg to make
e
o or
o er.
, . e am1 y
ave . . •.
fi .
· ·
· d
· ·
1
-.
h · · h"ld
·
B"H ·.
d
NA.Ff A • ·
ff
· •·· _
it easier. or parents to e uca e,t e1r c i ren,
1, , an
• a~e • very
P.«?;
5
1 ive accom · ave ·for their future and live an easier
.Ufe,
phshments of the Clmton preJtdency .. _. .· ..
Iinton promised a tax cut for the middle class'.
. i:11e first gets a
~+,. the second gets an _A-
. But what was conceptualized as a tax cut
, whd~ _NAFrA, wh~chcamt:
µ
nder very high ecame the largesttax increase in history.
:
opposition, eams_c::Imton
an
A: . . ·
;
. .·
.
Clinton not only changed his mind that
The !esurrect1on of. the Cnme Bill also
eople . should ·be
.
· taxed; •· but the number of
earns Clmton another
A.
.
.
1 ·
h
"d
d · h · ·
"ddl
l · ·
To pass
an
extremely controversial l:!!ll,just
~op e / cons1 ere nc versus m1
e c as~
about a week after it was declared dead in
a~.
g:h. · gh
er
t
. · .
1
·
• • ··
t
Congress was· a surprising achie~ement . for
th . o_uh·
m
0
~
waths at wh ayd~·dpromt tdsm~ to
er
t
. .

· · , · .

-
ax e nc , a prom1s~
a
e
i
no . ev1a e
mMo~.t- • .·
De
0
·
at·c··
•ty
"th·
'
t' h
rom, his definition of just who is rich ·com-·
am ammg
m er 1 . um
wi m . e d .
"ddl · ·•
1
·
l
·.. d ·
:
.
s
t b
hind
th·
c ·
•B"ll
lik
1 ·
are to m1
e c ass pnor to e ectton ay, ·.
. ena e e_ . .
e
run~ .
1 , y;as as
.
. e_y as
eviate.d after-. election day.
. . ·
Tepdy Kennedy becom~~g the new Pope, but
Not surprisingly, middle income families
CJmt~n helped_ to pul~ it off.
ere suddenly categorized as rich to tax more
With th~ five of these ~ades 31yeraged.
eople.
>, . , .
·
together Chnt~n has. a domestic pohcy-grade ·

•· Tax a.nd spend has become the cornerstone
of B+
f h
er
.
"d
.
w;
can't forget the reason why Clinton
t e
mton pres1 ency:
was elected president in the first place- ''.It's,.
·
-
1
.
at_
e..~
1•
th_ ·. Ga~e. R~formth. The. cr~x. otfdt.
4
h_
0
e
th
tu
"d,,
·
·
·· · .-
m
on campaign were
e approx1ma e
e economy s pt .
.
•ir
1 .
h d"d
h
h Ith·
After passing his budget in the summer of
1 ion
peop
e
w
O
1 not ave ea msur-
·· 19?3,_a. _budget that _Republican ~epub~~ . ,c;~oinisin to rovide "health
insurance
for
said would;.send this country to hell
m
a · : · · ··•Am·· _g_ ;,Pd
.
• · ·
·· , · '9"
·a·
·t
h db k
·
all
• . d.
every
encan
unng campaign
~
·
m
on
an.
as
et, v1rtu y every economic m tea-
couldn't provide Americans with any other
tor This upd. fi .
·1·
·s at the lowest th
t "t h be
way ·to pay for it, other than employer man-
.
e e
1
c1 1 .
a
1
as
en dates or higher taxes.
m
12.
years and .
it
has lowered. for th_ree con-
. Health care reform proves Clinton wants
secut!ve years for the first time smce the to expand the government to talce care of
1950
s.
I ,
bl
In terms of turning around the economy, peo~
~ s pro ems.
.
. .
Clinton seems to have done his job, which
. C_hnton su~porters
cry
that his admm1stra-
earns him an
A.
t1on 1s under siege because he has undertaken
With a foreign policy grade of a C+, a such a !o~gh agenda.
.
.
domestic policy grade of B+, and a grade of
But 1t 1~ not the agenda he chose that is his
A for his job with the economy, Clinton has problem, 1t was the agenda he chose not to
recieved a B+ for his midterm grade.
keep.
Ken Urben is one of The Circle's politi-
c.al columnists.
Mary
Diamond is one of the Circle's
political
columnists.


















·. THI
mcii.VIE.l,\'POINT
NOVEMBER 3, 1994
9
C,orriplaillts
answered
Editor: ... . .. .
only 01.1es who can change them.
>
As
Maris(CoJlege :Dining Ser-
·· More requests made
foi:
a par-
. vic_e employees; , we .• would like to tici.llar item increases the chances of
respond··.to the: ''.Not ·satisfied with it becoming partofthe regular menu.
the cafe'.'.Ietter that appeared in the ·.
If an item .is served that is poor
October.'l3th issue of The Circle.
qualitybecause it is undercooked or
In the Jetter three areas were J>in-
whatever. it should also be. brought
· • poiµ(~:.
as ...
"in dire need of drastic. to the atte1:1tion of the Sodexho man-
improveriient": selection, q~antity, agement team.
<
· .
and· employee attitude. ·
.•
> , · .·
·
They will try to correct the prob"

. There
is'
a.
minimum of six en-
lem as soo.n as posssible:
·
trees·offerecl atlunch and dinner.
No one wants anyone to get sick.
.
.. ·. In addition to. these a full deli
The.policyofliiniting the amount
bar and salad bar are available.
of food per. person is. set by. the
· This seems to be a lot to be pro-
Sodexho·management to en~ure the
duced outofone kitchen for a thou-
customers of prompt service.
sarid·students twice a day.
·.
If
every student was. given as
If
the. student body' feels thi.s is . much as they wanted others would
inadequate please discuss.it with the
have.to wait longer for more food to
management and
fill
out comment · be cooked.
·
.cards. · . . .
.
. • . .
, Please. feel free to. go back for
.
' 'The;,rnanagement resp·onds more more after· you've eaten'. .
'quickly.to a i::usto.mer'.s ~equest.than ··
This also avoids a .lot of waste
. to the comments of the staff.
when "your eyes are bigger than
Responsestci the·comment cards your stomach."
·. .
. .
· are posted in the cafeteria shortly · . "The downright rude and obnox-
after they are turned in. No vulgar .ious .behavior of the employees" is
language please.
almost too general a comment to
· Entree items specified in the let-
respond to.
·
.
ter, and' any other items students
Most of the staff are hardworking,
would like to. have,. should .be re-
friendly professionals who will go
quested from the Sodexho manage-
out of their way to accomodate the
ment. , •
. . ..
students whenever possible.
The
Ian the menus and are. the
by
cafe
These people are limited by the
regulations set by the Sodexho man-
agement and Marist administration .
Writing a letter to The Circle may
enable a person to vent. their feel-
ings but it is more productive to deal
with a situation as it happens with a
person in position to correct it.
No one knows now who or what
the problem . was at the deli. bar so
no one can correct it.
Students may now be approach-
ing the deli bar expecting a problem
without knowing who the employee
was who upset the customer.
This makes it more difficult for
all who work that area.
We would like to make it clear
that the customers deserve what they
pay for.
If
anyone feels that they are be-
ing slighted, speak with one of the
six Sodexho managers available
throughout the day.
Most of them are new to Marist
and need to be told what the student
body wants.
They are at Marist to provide a
service, please give them th~ oppor-
tunity to do what they can.
Marist College Dining Service
employees
Let the cap stand
HOW TO REACH US:
Editor:
.
.
The committee on club caps was
dosed on September
26, 1994:.~/
Thifdecision of the Student Sen-
ate was
lo
1et the cap stand. .
.~ Mondays
2pm to 8pm;LT211 Ext.2687
• E~Mail: HZAL
This;was not an easy decision by.
. any means lllldjtwentunder close'
investigation._

. .
.
• .· ..
Last year; the committee . was
~opened to see if .there \Vas a pos-
sibility of raising the limit of clubs
.... -,, . ,,. , .... ·J>,t}9pe ..
~f:iil:
>
E.~h,?:4?~," ,,.:· . _
'.J•
·
-
·:·NO
I.ETTERS
AFTER 5PM ON
SUNDAYS
currently
·
allowed on campus'.
·
· · Last year's committee consisted
of myself, former Resident. Senator
Danny Glover, President of the class
of
1997
Scott Graves, Resident Sena-
torTodd Lang, and was chaired by
former ·Resident Senator Holly
Olson.
·
· The reasons the senate believed
the cap should remain are the same
concerns
as·
the• previous· C()tnmittee
had.
..
.
. The· cap is designed to ensure· a
suitable number of clubs for the stu-
dents, the management
.
of such dubs
:_by SGA, administrative · and finan-
cial concerns.
·
Presently it would be irrespon-
sible for the senate to lift the cap
because we cannot accomodate an
unlimited number of clubs.
However, when
SGA
manages
the cap properly, all clubs within the
cap will· be. working to the advan-
tage of the Marist community.
While the committee was closed
arid
the ·decision
was
to allow the
cap to remain,.know that the efforts
Theriding team needs
your supp~rt
of last year were not in vain.

.
The senate is aware of the call
for active and better club life here at
Marist.-
We
will
be watching to see how
we are able to improve our
campuslife.
·
As
always, we are interested in
any feedback.
· ·
Our door is always open.
Jennifer Nocella,
Speaker
of the Senate
Editor:
· . My name is Jennifer
Crawford.and
I
am ·a member of the
Marist College Equestrian Team.
Surprisingly_ enough, ~any
Marist students don't even know
there is· an equestrian team.
This.·is the reason for my letter.
Because
it is a club, we are not
given as much recognition.
However, we do compete
intercollegiately against
15
other
neighboring colleges. .
Last year, the team did extremely
J::=======:::;:====~
well and placed third overall.
This is a tremendous accomplish-
lllf.
ClRC.U. -
ment considering the relatively small
Production Schedule
fall -
'94
size of our team.
·
1 0
Marist competes against other
November
teams with over
100 members.
November
17
.
One of the team goals this year
is to gain recognition.
December
l
We are a team and we are very
competitive.
December
8
We compete against ten other
L..-------------
neighboring schools.
We have
a
large interest in our
team this year.
We hope that this interest will
continue.
The unique thing about the team
is that little or no experience is re-
quired.
There are different levels of
competetion ·at the horse shows al-
lowing each member to develop
showing experience.
· We have already participated in
two intercollegiate horse shows and
placed second overall at the previ-
ous show.
We would like the Marist com-
munity to be aware of our team and
its accomplishments over the past
few years.
.
We thank all those who have
shown interest and· support for our
team.
We would appreciate your sup-
port.
Jennifer
R.
Crawford,
sophomore
The cost of air,
fumes are nothing
It's good to know that people
care about you.
For example, my car's tailpipe
fell off.
I guess it decided it had enough
of breathing all of those fumes and
it was time for me to breathe them.
Since this is just the latest in a
Jong string of problems, I've decided
to sell this car.
Preferably to someone who
knows nothing about automobiles.
BUYER: Excuse me, the bumper
and left door just fell off.
ME: Oh yes, it's an efficent car.
It now has less weight and gets more
miles to the gallon.
BUYER: Really? I'll take it!
This is the level of intelligence
I'm looking for in a buyer, so if you
know anyone Jet me know.
·
To get back to the 'concerned'
part - I had called my dear 'ol mom
to ask her if l should spend money
to fix the tailpipe since
I
was sup-
posed to be getting a new car in the
near future.
Of course I've been getting a new
car in the near future for two years
now.
I'm beginning to wonder if
Nostradamus said, "Listen, there's
going to be a big earthquake on the
coast in the near future." And ev-
eryone moved, and then two centu-
ries later he appeared to Shirley Mc
Clain and said, "See I told you so!"
I am basically confused on the
concept of "near future".
Would it be when Cleveland had
a winning baseball team?
Would it be when Madonna de-
cides to wear underwear?
Would it be when Roseanne opts
for the salad bar?
I don't know, but I'm betting all
of these things happen before
I
get
new wheels; but anyway ...
• · It's the "concerned'''part - that's
what I'm getting
to. .
I asked mom and she.said, "No,
don't fix it - just drive with the
windows open and you'll be fine;
those fumes are nothing."
I
asked
if
it would be okay, since
at the prese~t time there is an c~tra
car at the house, if I could switch
with my Dad and her response was:
"No way!!
I
don't want your father
driving around in that death trap!!!"
It
makes me happy to know that
people are concerned for me.
It's the same kind of concern a
boyfriend or girlfriend would have
if
they decided to cheat on you and
told you not to stop by their house,
since they wouldn't want you to sec
anything and hurt your feelings.
It's this kind of concern that
makes us really human.
What's great about these fumes
getting in the car is the fact that it's
the one problem you can have with
a car, and be in it, and not care.
If
your engine was smoking
you'd be ticked; but with a carbon
monoxide leak you relax, and you
don't get upset.
Actually, you gradually get more
mellow and it helps you deal with
other problems.
"Oh, is that my tire that flew off
- oh well it was sort of low anyway
-Wait!! Look at the sun
-It's
purple!!'"
Really, these fumes are harmless
... so what were we talking about..?
It's great -
if
you sit in traffic
long enough you forget where you
were going.
The scary thing is the mecha11ic
that works in the garage fixing these
leaks.
I'm not sure if they get enough
ventialation in there because he said
to me:
Mechanic: Well, Frank, I've got
to take this pipe out Then what I'm
going to do, Tim, is replace it Oh
wait -
I
Forgot to hand in my book
report!! l hope mom put· cookies in
the. lunch b.ox.
l
Uke ·cookies.
Sensing his remaining
brain
cells
were turning against each other, I
decided to leave.
Me: I'll come back another time.
Mechanic: All right, Dave. Don't
forget to write!
Yeah, those fumes arc harmless.
Frank La
Perch
is The Circle's
humor columnist.
Marist students:
come on down
Editor:
As
of today's date, October 20,
there are 98 employers scheduled
to attend the Career and Employer
Expo on Nov. 3,
1994.
All we need now are bodies.
We need the Marist students to
come to the expo in
full
force to see
these employers.
.
Any help you can give us would
be appreciated.
·
Desmond Murray, director of
career development and field
experience
MARIST DANCE CLUB
PRESENTS:
MO-v-E
I I
GROO-v-E
I I
Saturday, Nov. 5
8 pm in the theater
free
with
Marlst
ID
1--------------------------













































































































































































10
THE CIRCLE,
·
NOVEMBER 3,

1994
~
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·

ergy
.
m the music caused ones mmd
·
- - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - -
present Jyncs of reahty's blea~ess.
e<-:r;ee!l
:
~ust,'
\
along '\Vlt~
:
oth~r radio
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,
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.
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·

·
.
.
·


·

·
·
· ·
by TOM BECKER
.
"The songs !flay seem mus1cal!Y
c
_
l~ss1~
_
suc~ as
"f
.
ar
O<lne an~ Out.''.
\
!'lot

_mmd!ng
c1b?u,'
:
the abse~ce
to wander;
:
>.
·
.. ·
·
·
,
.
<>
:C
·,c;
,
Circle Music Critic
bnght, but lyrically not so," said
·
·: The crowd was'constantly enthu-
·
of the Mary Cham s duet '\Vtth
_
Mazzy S
_
tar _would_ b~}. much
William Reid, co-founder of the
~iastic either by swimming
.
ne
.
ar the Mazzy Star's Hope Sandoval on the
better- act in a small,-dimly~ht club,··
.
Once
.a
band whose music was
fun
·
of morbid lyrics of the abyss
and echoing soul-digging guitars
,
The Jesus and Mary
·
Chain brought
their recently released low-calorie
package of songs to the Walker Field
House at Vassar College on Sat, Oct
.
29.
.
The tour comes
·
on the heels of
the band's latest release, "Stoned and
Dethroned," on American Record·
ings.
The newest record is a collec·
·
tion of soft, bright-sounding melo-
dies that contrast with the widely
Choose from 3
different fundralsers
lasting either
3
days
or
7
days.
No bvC$1111cnt.
Earn$$$$
fot
yoor group plus
penooa1
cull
bonuses !or
yourselL
For
details,
call:
!-SOC-93
1
Ext.
65
band with his brother Jim.
stage
.
'
or by dancing
'
at the
·
cornets,
·
single ''Sometimes Always."
.
withcomfortable chairs and
a
cozier
·:
.
.
.
·
·
·
·
1

feel than
.
~ey ~er~
in
,
th~
\
sp~¢ious
.
The
Mary
_
Chain played before a
esp~ci~lly
_
to t
_
he rhythms of the
.
.
-
~-
Mazzy
.
_
St~r,
.
the co°:t~mp allw
:.
warehouse

appearance
_
of
·
the
··
field
.
sellout crowd of several hundred
songs of old.
.
.
band of
-
tnppmg acoust1c1sm, was
house.
.
.
.
.
,

r

:
.
.
fans, adorning everything from Rage
The band also sprinkled several
supposed to serve as a crowd prepa-
.
·
.
··
.
·
h
Rh
d
Against The Machine and Helmet
of their new songs on the crowd,
ration
.
device for the
Mary Chain.
Opening the show was
_
t e
..
.
0
e
shirts to ruffled velvet jackets
.
such as "Till it Shines" and "Bullet
· ,
However, their set was cut short
Island pop quartet Velyet
Cr:u~P•~ ·.
·
·
From their first note, the Mary Lovers."
.

.
.
.
when their radio mainstay, "Fade
The Crush quickly
.
got the
-
crowd
Chain had the crowd enthralled.
These
,
songs
·
vier~
·
met with a
lrito You,» was played halfway
involved witli loud;
'
driving guitars
Opening
.with "Sugar Rayt off
·
quieter acceptance
;
with most of
·
through
-
with an abrupt ending.
·
and
a
free-flowing musical barrage.
of "Honey's Dead,» the band took
thecrowd
·
restfully inhaling the
• .
.
·
·
It
-
.
is possible
-
that the
.
band was
:
However; they
fo
st solll.e
.
of
their
the listeners on a brief but entertain-
lighter inelodies
·
while some made
-
experiencing
.
some problems
following because
-
of
·
the; constant
ing tour of their 5-album
-
history
.
.
for the
.
bathrooms.
.
.
onstage_.-
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
remarks from
·
outspoken
·
drummer
hi . h
Th
Ric Menck
.
.
Hig 1g ts of the show include
.
d


e
grinding,
\
nail-biting
. .-
"Fadf' was lacking the tightness
the groove-laden, waist-twisting
.
smokescreen of '!Rever.ence" served
it possesses on the disc "So Tonight
.
Beginning with complaints
'
a~out
"Head On," and the lustful
;
tortuous
·
as the encore, leaving the
'
crowd
Thatl Might
_
See."
·
mashing, which were somewhafap~
-.
·
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The w
_.
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.
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_
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_
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..
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complaints of the resulting
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..
,
.
·
.
~esides the abrupt endiJlg, which crowdinvolvemerit near the set's end .
.
came about
six
songs into the set,
.
-
,
.
·
·
·
Mazzy
·
Star was
having problems
.
.
Besides the interruptions
,:
-
the
.
·
capturing
.
the audience with Crush were not bad, but theirniusic
theirhypnotic sounds.
did lack some variety and
.
it was easy
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. .
·

·
-·--.
-----------------------------------------
~ - CIRCLE;
NOVEMBER
3~ 1994
YEARBOOK.
SEEKS STAFF
. Keeping the
,
Marist Cimununityln:formed
Dear. Undergraduates,
New
Appointments
'Jonathan' Sorelle, President of the
Classof1995,wouldlike toanriounce
thatthecwl'eritRenyardStaffis seek.:
Hello! How
is
your semester going so far? I hope your mid-term exams went well.
·If
not, I at least
ing creative enthusiastic and · moti-
hope you had a nice relaxing break last weekend. Before I begin I would like to congratulate our football
vated ;individuals
Jo
join the 1994-
team on~ excellent~on th~ far. ~ey
are 5
and2 ove~ and are undefeated in the MAAC. ltreally
1995.yearQO<>k~taff.Withotit willing
!
00
ks
as if they are gomg to
wm
the conference. I know thts is a little premature, but its time to
call
the
and committed staff members to as- . Jewel~r.
These
guys need some rings!
The Student Academic Council is
moving ahead at full steam with the
appointment of several divisional
representatives. Theserepresentatives
will be the intermediary between the
students and· faculty of a particular
division in an effort to facilitate com-
munication between them. We are
stillcurrentlyscekingindividualswho
are
willing to work with the Social
and Behavoiral Sciences Division and
the Division of Humanities. We will
also welcome those individuals who
are
interested in representing theh
sist with the publication of
this
year's
.
~
_constan.t roccurin~ issue d~ng SGA elections last Spring was communication, and the need for
yearbook,·
}t •
will NOT· be printed.
it
be unproved_. SGA will be usmg a half page in
The Circle·
each week to keep the student body and
TheRenyard needs talented students
r~t of the ¥~st community more informed
as
to what we do as your student leaders. We also have an
with, knowledge· of lay-outs, copy;
open doorP?licy
fo~
all
members of th~ Marist com~unity. The SGA office, located in
cc
34 7, is open
pho19~phy;,~~g~dAldusPage- · Mon~y through Fnday from 9 am. to4 p.m. Senate and Executive Board meetings are held in the SGA
~aker~ P'?W~v~; any mterested
indi-
office weekly ._The~~natemeetson Wednesdays at 11 a.m. and theExecutiveBoardmeetson Thursdays
v1duals with no experience arewel~ • at
5
P-~-
~oth_ me~tmgs are open to all the members of the Marist Community.
come
to
join the staff.
· .
.
What
'f~.
_have. we done lately? So ·far this semester SGA has completed the Activities Fair, The
T~e ~enyl:lrd. is ajso bµientl{ · Student Leade~shtp Conference, Clu?. Budget ~locatio~s, Club Reviews and Freshman Elections.
seeking a fma.n~Wl ~tor to handle . Some campus tmpro:vements are addiuonaj refrigerators m the Old Townhouses, snow guards on the
the budget, bill$, and. fund raising
roofs of the Ne\1/:Tmynhouses, the convf?rS!on of the wooden steps behind Sheehan Hall into a slanted
ac~~ties.Responsible,organizedand
walkway,;-m?re hghtmg_on c~pus and.more secµrity patrols; The majority of accomplishments made
efftc1ent'i:nembers of the Marist .by.SGA are.mcoope~uon with a num}?er of our college administrators.
.
· major in other divisions.
The Student Academic Council
will also be setti11g up a committee to
address student concerns about the
library, which includes the possibil-
ity of extending the hours during
weekdays. The library committee will
meet once a week at a date not speci-
fied as of yet Separate meetings with
library officials may also be required.
Co~unity::are .needed
~
;order to,:
~aJ
are ~e wqrk:ing 5m?
r
ou n~e
it,
and
if
~tudetns can accomplish it, or help accomplish, then
facdttate
we
pIUduction of the_
-~-~95.
weprot?~1
Y.
ha~~ people fOrkiilg ?n
IL
If you are _wondering ~bout something, want to see something
Renyard. · . · ,,
··
, ,
··· ··
cll~ged; or i!Youw9uld li~e.to get mvolv~d, come and see me mthe SGA office. The best way to make
In
addition, the Renyard Staff
is
a diffe~ence ~s
~
be
prn~c~ve and prp<Iucuve, complaining and whining will get you nowhere here on
seatchingfor a fa~ulty advisor with. .
~P,~
~d it proba~ly will n?t get you much farther in the outside world. I will do my best to get any
knowledge and experience in year- . enthusias~c pe~_so~ mvolved _m SGA. .
.
.
·
.
lJ<?ok publication. We need someone
; If Y.ou_~e ~Jllmor or a sem01: and are interested in an int~mship with the New York State Assembly
with strong leadership abiliti~ and
m ~b~y, come and see me dunng my office hours. All ma3ors
are
welcome, but hurry, I only have two
dedication.
,
. applicaU<:>ns._ ,
. Anyone· interested in any of the
aforementioned positions should
contact Kelly at x5386 or Heather
and Carolyn at x5753 as soon as
possible. ·
@ENTION ALLFACU~
THE CLUB
COUNCILSt)N
MAR1sr'cori:Ede'cAMPUS
ARE SEEKING FOUR FACULTY ADVISORS
TO DONATE THEIR TIME AND EFFORTS
TO OVERSEE COUNCIL MEETINGS
THE ORGANIZATIONS THAT NEED A FACULTY ADVISOR ARE:
PkODUCTJONJPERFORMANc;EORGAN!ZAnONS
SOCIAL/SERVICE ORGANIZAnONS .
-
CO-CURRICULAR ORGANIZATIONS
SPORTS
CLUIJS
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
ATX2699 ORX7105
STUDENT LIFE COUNCIL
ANNOUNCEMENTS
AND
EVENTS
ARE YOU INJERESTED
IN
BECOMING A MEMBER
OF
m:E
STUD£NT OOVF.RNMENT ASSOCIATION?
TiiE SIUDENf LIFE COUNCIL HAS FNE COMMUTER POSITTONS AVAILABLE.
IF INfERESfED
CONTACT AARON ASTORINO
IN
1HE
SIUDENf GOVERNMENT OFFICE. ATX2206
ALL SPORT NIGHI'
ON SUNDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1994, FROM 8 PM-11 PM
lHE STUDENT LIFE COUNCIL IS SPONSORING ALL SPOITT NIGHf.
THE POOL, HOfTUBS, GYMNASIUM
RACQUOBALL COUIUS WILL BE AVAILABLE FOR USE
BY ALL MARISf STUDENTS.
ADMISSION IS FREE. WITH A VALID MARISf I.D.
STUDYBREAK
TAKE A STUDY BREAK DURING FINALS.
ON WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 14, FROM 12 PM-2 PM,
TI-IE STUDENT LIFE COUNOL INVITES ALL SIUDENfS
TO COME TOlHE CAMPUS CENTER FOR FREE FOOD
AS YOU TAKE A BREAK FROM STUDYING.
Sincerely,
Matthew
J.
Gillis
Student Body President
Anyone interested in the above
positions or becoming a member of
the library
.
committee, please contact
me at
the
SGA office, ext. 2206.
Mikael T. Carlson
VP for Academics
CLASS OF 1996
EVENTS & NEWS:
-INTERESTED IN THE L YP SYNC?
·,:AL!-'.COtlTESTANTSPt.EASE-CALL
JEN
AT X4698 BY NOV. 4th
REMEMBER ALL NON-CONTESTANTS:
COME SUPPORT YOUR FRIENDS ON
NOV.
7 IN THE CABARET ROOM- 9:30pm.
-REMINDER: NOV. 14th IS THE
. RING 1:>REMIERE. A REPRESENTATIVE
WILL BE IN THE PERFORMING ARTS
CENTER FROM
11-2pm.
ORDER YOUR RING NOW!
-THE WINNER OF THE 50/50 RAFFLE
DONATED THE MONEY TO PURCHASE
A GIFT. FOR THE GIVING TREE.
-KEEP
IN MID
THE ROOMMATE GAME
. IS ON NOV.
28.
INTERESTED?
CALL JEN - X4698 OR LAURIE - X4188
S.P.C. Update:
(Student Programming Council)
Friday: November 4th
T.GJ.F.
Comedy Club with Glenn Farrington
Glen Farrington can easily
be
described as a "'comet
in
the sky ..• uh ... a comic with a tie
... uh .•• a
comic
and a
nice
guy! He
is
a personable perfonner. Glenn's unique style of
comedy covers a wide range and he
is
skilled
in
the art of improvisation. It promises
to
be
a
big laugh.
Doors open at
8:30
pm with the show beginning at
9:00
pm
in
the
Campus Center rooms
348, 348a, 349.
Admission is
free
with Marist
I.D.
Thursday: November 10th
Lecture
with
Jane Elliott:
"Eye
of the Storm"
Jane conducted the infamous experiment with the blue eyed/brown eyed students. Her
results have had dramatic results with children
and
adults
alike. This
powerful lecture
will leave you speechless.
Lecture begins at
8:00
pm
in the Theatre.
Friday: November 11th
T.G.I.F.
Comedy Club with
Billy
Martin
Bill
has established
himself
as
one of the kookiest
and most
clever stand-up comics
working the colleges nation wide. Martin walks
a tightrope on
the fine line
between
silliness
and brilliance.
Doors open at
8:30
pm with the show beginning at
9:00
pm
in
the 'Cabaret Room.
Admission
is
free
with
Marist I.D.



















tz
. THE CIRCLE,·
NOVEMBER 3, 1994
Cap on clubs decidbd: at September meeting, it stands
by BRIAN FRANKENFIELD
Staff Writer
The Student Senate recently de
0
tennined the cap on clubs at Marist
will stand at
64, ·
despite previous
interest to have it raised.
On Sept.
26,
the Senate found
the cap to be reasonable in compari-
son to the student population; and
members voted to close the Senate's
Club Committee.
The meeting took place as a fol-
low-up on a report compiled last
spring detailing a strong campus in-
terest for more clubs.
"Originally, we wanted to look
at the possibility of having an un-
· limited amount (of clubs), but we
found through research we couldn't,"
said Jen Nocella, Club Committee
president. "It would not be manage-
able or financially acceptable."
Bob Lynch, Student Activities
cocfrdinator, feels that the present
number is more than adequate for
the amount of students.
"We feel that we've met our
limit," Lynch said.
He stressed three main reasons
as to why the cap was installed, and
why it will remain.
.
The first is a problem of man-
agement.
The Student Government Asso-
ciation manages all clubs, with some
help from the Student Activities
Office.
According to Lynch, more clubs•
would require much more time on
the part of SGA, time which SGA
doesn't have.
This is time SGA doesn't have.
The second reason is an increased
demand for more meeting spaceand
a larger budget, and the· third in-
volves competition among clubs.
"You have to realize that you're
drawing from the same population,"
said Lynch. ''There's a certain com-
_µetitive
aspect
thete."
Clubs are divided into six cat-
egories: co-curricular, greek council,
honorary, production council, social
service and sports club council.
There are certain procedures and
regulations that must be taken in
order to start a club in any one of.
these categories.
Clubs must first have at least ten
members, afaculty advisor and have
a legitimate budget.
The members must then submit
a list of by-laws to the Student Sen-
ate.
Tlie Senate reviews the by-laws
and, if space is available, votes on
whether to award the club a charter.
If
it is granted a charter, the club
is put on probation for six months.
After that period the club is re-
viewed and, if it is doing well, is
allowed to manage its own affairs.
Clubs are required to schedule at
least two activities per semester and
have meetings on a regular basis.
All clubs are presently capped
with the exception.of one spot under
:2)
:ttc
·$
:~
--~~-
\ ~
~,
<:J'ir:;
1
od·nts) Gracious
·-~
·~"
J'o"1,Dhlu~·t,
Jve,v
TO'l"i 1~?601
91◄1•473•5570
/
l~verybunrw
LOY4=J
Our Bas k:ets
.,."!,
"'C:,.utom Madle" for
Every
Occasion
--~,
Look for the l!unny i.n
the
Yellow
i•~
gel
in '95
~-tc _
C.Al~tLOGS
.A V,rt
it.t~BLF,-PL.EAS.:
C/LU, ...
' ~, •• i
.a~ • -
fl• . ,.,,
<
111•
.NI! ·~.
fl~
"' " "h'
1
0' ·
'ft' ~,,_
1
tt'
v"
the Sports Club -Council.
A Women's Awareness Club is
now being chartered to
fill
the last
spot under Social Service.
,
"I'm· very pleased to see the
Women's Awareness _Club get a
charter," Lynch said.
Despite its title, the club will be
open to males.
The Society of Professional Jour-
nalists
is
also trying for a charter
under the Honorary Advisory Coun-
cil.
Students involved in greek orga-
nizations inak~- up about
.12'.
percent
of the student body and at this time,
two sororities and one fraternity. are
also on the waiting list for a charter.
The admittance· of dubs -into a
council works in a cycl_ical process.
When a club drops out, it opens
up a spot for a club to move
.in.
If
a club is reviewed and ·round
not to be following SGA regulations
or their own by-laws, its charter may
be revoked.
· Campus Interviews
November 15, 1994
OLDE, America's Full Service Discount Broker™ is _
looking for motivated people to establish a career in
the brokerage business.
·
·
OLDE offers:
12-18 month paid training program
Potential six-figure income
Excellent benefits
If
you possess excellent communication skills, general
market knowledge and the desire to excel, sign up for
an on-campus interview on November 15, 1994 in the
Career Center.
If
you are unable to arrange an interview call:
1 800 937-0606
or send resume to:
OLDE Discount Stockbrokers
National Recruiting
751 Griswold
Street
Detroit, MI 48226
~OLDE
DISCOUNT STOCKBROKERS
Member NYSE and SIPC
-"':- _,::An Equal Opportunity Employer
1994
G A.R.E,J~;R A·N·D
EMPLOYER
EXPO
A Great Opportunity For:
SENIORS and ALUMNI -
A chance to discuss your qualifications with a variety of
employers. Find out about the job market, full-time job possibliities, tips about job lmnting,
and more.
JUNIORS -
Information about internships, part-time, and summerjobpossibilities. Learn about
different organizations and job opportunities, and to make contacts for your senior year job
search.
FRESHMEN and SOPHOMORES -
Advice on choosing your major and career direction
from Marist faculty_ Information about careers, part-time and summer job possibilities
from employers.
AT THE EXPO YOU/LL FIND EMPLOYERS REPRESENTING:
Business
Communications
Computer Science
Education
Psychology
Social Work
GovernmentllMilitary
Legal/Law Enforcement
Retail/Fashion
Science
Professional dress recommended.
Resume not ready? Use the Professional Data Sheet available at Donnelly 226.
For further information call 575-3547.
-













THE CIRCLE, NOVEMBER 3, 1994
r---------~------------------------------------,
MACARONIAUFROMAGE
.. (EAT WITH GUSTO FOR ABOUT 51¢ PER SERVING)
2 cups macaroni (pinwheels are fun)
1 cup
milk
1
cup sharp· cheddar (grated)
3
tbs flour
1/2
stick butter
1 tsp pepper
1
tsp Worcestershire (if you like)
1
tsp salt
Cook macaroni in 5 cups salted, boiling water for 15
minutes or until al dente. Drain. In a separate pot, melt
butter and mix in flour over low heat. Then, stir in milk
until smooth. Add cheese, salt, pepper and Worcestershire.
Stir well. Smother macaroni. Serves 4.
I
I
I
I
13





































































































































































.5
'

~
·
'>

'
\'
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elablissement d'etisf!igneme~! ~
_
upe~i~!,'r
Prive,
.
·.
:
.··
Aif
Pprepates us
i
st4
'.
denl¥
~}
'/
'
to be a
p
_
ar-Jpf
.iin_}'lfcreasitigly
.

·
·
·.globql
~ofi£?ty.
·
...
·
·
·
i
Bach~lor deg
;
r~e
pt~gfa~
:
~
.
i~ii~ij
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. ;
Fully-accredited
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by Middle Sta~es;
.
..
. ·
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Traditional Junicir;.Veaf Abroiid
.
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' .
Special Visiting Programs, which
.include
·
study
at
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·
other
Frencll
.
·
·
institutions.
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-
·..
·
:
:
.
·
·
·
.
FµII
range
of
Summer
.
Programs!
.
Contact
our U.S.
Office:
B.P.130,
:
BDE. i1th
St.,
Stiite'434,
New York,
NY'10003-6000
.
.
Tel.
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Fax
(212) 475-52()5
9th
_
A.NNU.AL
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.
ER
,
N
'
EED
,
L
,
E
AWARDS-
&
FAS
.
HION' S
,
How·
The
Fashion Program Is Looking For Female & Male Models
For The
9th Annual Silver Needle Awards & Fashion Show
To
Be Held On Thursday, April 27, 1995
Models
should be at least
5'8"
tall
Anyone interested in modeling
for
the
SNA Show
should stop by the Fashion Department
Applications will be accepted through December 1, 1994
Being
a model for the SNA Show
entails long hours and hard work.
Only those willing and al,le to make a commitment should apply.
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!
.
AMERICAN EXPRESS/DISCOVER
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.
.
...
'
,.·
:
·
.
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'
·.
...
1
~
994
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C/\
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R
i
E
··
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AND
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EMPLOYER
EXPO
.
A
.
GREAT OPPORTUNIT'r'
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,,
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JUNIORS, SENIORS AND '."~YMNI
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·
.
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Bernard Kit~fofjhfMt.
.
St Mary's
.,
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Stci[tWriter
.

:
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ount~i~~e~;
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·
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·.•:.
-
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,
_ .
·
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Swift s
,
time·of:.
_
26:51'.7 helped
.
.
.it
is\i1w
:
ayi
#i~ft<i
coin
'
e
'c
holrie
;
·
Miist
·
garner
i
lJH j>oi~ts,. Fellow
· even
-
ifitdoes take awhile
;.
Just ask
<'
classmate Andy Baird placed 10th
.
the
,
med's "and womeh's cross
coiui>
·

with a ·~im~
.
~f 27:so.-s.
·
:•
.
1ry
·
1eims
:
.
.
·
..
...
.
.

. -- , .
.
:
·;
·<-
,
"·
·
·
·
.:
· ·
>
·
.
Af~ej
·
l;iyeat~ filled with con-
Since Swift
:
and
.
Balrd
;
finished
stan
f
;
yail
:,t.
rip
_
s,
~-
hotel rooms, and
·
in !he top
·
1e
'
n; :they
_
wer~
:
named to
unfamiliar terrain,
.
Marist finally
·
the All-NEC team
.
_.
IL.was
\
the first
'
camido
.
a place
.
it could call its own
·
.
time Marist had two
·
runners named
ori SEturd11y'·mpryiing .
•.
· .
_:
,
•.
·
all-league
·
atthe
.
same meet.
·
·
:
·
The
Red
Foxes
·
hosted the North,
.
·
,
,
·
.
.
·
,
east
.
Conference: fhampioriship~ at
;
Swift's selection
..
'Ji~rked his
.
third
.
: '
Bowdoin Park in nearby Wappingers
ti~~ ?n
.
the
:
.
~ll
;
N~C
.'
roster, while
Falls.
·
.
'
:
,
B
.
~
~
r~
,:
made• h
_
1s
_
first appearance on
• ·
.
The women's tea
.
ni
'r
.i'n toa third-
.
tlifh~t
;·'
·
.>}
.
/?t
,
place finish, while the men
·
came in
.
.
,
. .
.
.
•·'
.
.
.
·
'
.
:
fourth out of nine othedeams
.,
~
·
L :
,
:
:
:
.
.He.ad
;
Co.ach Pete Colaizzo said
'
The
:
women ended the iotirna~
:
'
he
·
was pleased with Baird's effort.
. _
meri~ with 6
.
6 points
.
Mt:si. ~ary's
·
:
-:
,:
;{
Axid~'~race was; phenomenal
(Md) w~n t~etschampionship
.
by
:
·
effortcorisidei:ing the injuries he has
_
e~m~
.
pom
·
·
.
. ..
.
r-
had
_
to dealwith
.
this
.
:
year," Colaizzo
·
:
.
Jumor
.
Colleen <::arson
:
sp~a
said. "He set an example for every-
head;d Jhe Red
.
Fox
·
attack
bf
re-
body
·
'oii
'
thfteam."
,
cordmg a 10th
-
place result with a
·
;
.
·
.

.
.
·
:
time of21 minutes,
JI
seconds
'.
.
..
,
J'he 111en's
,
squad .was also paced
·
·
Juniors Kathleen Woodson and
.
.
by junfor Josh Wood and Jason
Alexis
.
Bequary also ran well for
Kenny.
'
.
'
Marist.
-
·
:
·
:
: ·
.
.
.
. . .
·
Woodson finished 12th overail in
:
Wood placed 28th with a time of
21:21, whi_le Bequary placed 13th
.
29:29, an~ ~en~y came in 26th with
.
with a time of 21:25.
..
·
a 29:18.4 showing.
·
.
. ·
In the men's competition, fifth-

:
·
'
·
·


:
year senior Dayid Swift continued
Fairlei'gh
·
Dickinson
·
University
to impress
,
by
;
marking a second
: ·
was the overall men's champion as
'
place finish
:
Swift was edged out _by
,
.
. the Knights concluded the meet with
·
Bo
:
oters
defeated
·
2,-0;
.
.
·'
.':
a.is:rrial
·
,:
season
:
.
ended
by TERl
L.
STEWART
:
·
'.
Staff Writer
·
·
.
Freshman Ori~rino
·
·
Mazzella
scored his third goal of the season at
the 33-minute
·
mark of the
·
first half.
·
.
The weather
,
.
matched
th;
men•;
.
:
.· .
.
Goldman said his te.amwas aJ:i~ad
soccer
,~~IP
~
sJiit:31 g
~
me of the sea-
·
: .•.
!Do
s
t
.
of the
.
ga~e
,
~nhl
.
~del~~1t1ed
.
son on Tuesday
.
afternoon.
.
.·.
·.
.
it and force?
.
o erhme.
.
.
.
.
':
.
. ·
·
:
· .
·

:
·
• .
·
·
.
·
·
.
·
The sconng went back and forth


.

The
.
Red Foxes {3~15
-
overall, 1-
·
·
.· •.
··
·
u
·

··
·
·
·
chri
·
·
R
'
··
·
·
·
'
· ·
·
d
.
th
·
·
·
1
.
:
:

.
,
,
•.
1h
·
e
'
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·
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)
•.
lo
'
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·
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.
.
,
~:
unt Junior

s 1v1ezzo score
e
.-
m.,
.
·
.
;
Qf
eas
~Ill!
r
,
,
, ' •
'
_
;
·
::'
game-winniµfifoaJ
'
for
:
l\,faiist
it
'
(
t~eir fm~ boupo
.
_
qn;onta _Umver
,
.
,
G kl an said that if his team had
;
s1ty 2-0,
m
the
·
dnzzhng ram:
.
.
.
·
0
m
.
.
·
1
.
. t
.
The Red Foxes out-shot Oneonta,
notv.ron the ~ame, he wou d
.
~ave
·
22-9, but_were still unable t9 eam
-'
b~e~Wupsd~t
-
~,
:
.
-
d
t.
·
;
·
th
1
·
;
·
the win.
: ;
·.
<
..
,
.

·
:
·
,.
,
i
,:
.
. ·
,.
e
.
.
.
_
eserve .. o wm,, a
_
ga~e,
:
·
C:
j\cccirding
.
to Head c~:iach
·
.
. :
~
.
ecause we played
.
;,.yell, he
,
said
.
.
Howard Goldman,
.
his team spent
70
..
W1:..had
_
the bl!tter
·
.
~
.
~ the play, more
.
minutes
.
in Oneonta
~
s
·
.
haif of the
. .
dangl!rous opportunities, and control
:
·
·
·
.-
· ·
·
·
· ·
·
of the game:''
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
field.
·

.
.
. .
..
La
· ·
Th
'
d ·
·
h
. ·
·
R
d F
·
,:
, '.
!
It
didri;J
pay
off,'!
_
Q(!ldman
_
said
:
.
·
..
.
sL
.
urs ay
"
te e
.
oxes
~
-
They
.
$9<>,red
two goals on our n:iis-
.
tr~veled to Manhattan College, o~ly
iakk
aiid
::
that:was
'
tlie end of'the
..
t~
J
ose, 1~~-

.
·

.
.
·

.
seaso'n."
:
r
:
,
·
i::
·
:'
>
•·
·
.
.
..
. .
•· .
. •
.
:
.
·
.·.
: :
,Acco
_
r~mg to Goldman, the
.
team
,;
-
TheR~d Foxes
'
.
defeated Adelphi
.
·
sho~ld ha\'e ~<>n.
.
,,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Universi
_
ty
';
3~2,
,
on
··
Saturday
J
ii
·
.;,
.
That
~as
a travesty,
.
he said.
·
··
.
·
Le
.

.
·
·d
·
·
ff·F· ld
·
.
·
·
.
"
·
.
·
·
· ·
, •
.
.
,
,
·
..
·
.
We domma!ed t,he game for 70 of
oru
O
1e
. ..
.
.
.
.
· ..
, .
th
'
..
·
o
.
·
,,
·
·
.
.
·
.
·
-
·:
·
A,croiding
:
t<
{
Goldman
;
·
theteam
.
j
9
,
minutes
.
.
.
·.
.
.:.
·
.
.
·
began playingveryv.rell after the first
· .

.
Manhattan scored _tl!,e only goal
15
:
minutes
:
of
:
the game .
.
·
.
.
:.
•.
Wl~h 23 secon~ left
m
th~ game.
.
\/
'It
tookus
a
while
.
to geton track,
·
.
·•
~oldman s~1d he foll his players
but
:
then
'
again
'.
it
.
always does,''
I
he
dommated
.
the
.
game,
?Ut
were
_
.
un-
.

·
'd
·
:
·
>
. .
.
:
.
,.
.
.•
.
.
.
.
able to produce the wm
.
sa1 .
·
..
• .• .
.
.
..
. .
.

·
·
··
.
MCTV]>rogramming •
Fall 1994
Channel12
·
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.
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15
Skaters beat
LaSi1lle,
3-1;
now
:
at 2-2-1
bfJIM DERIVAN

Staff Writer
After losing
to
Rutger
s
last Fri-
day
·
at the
·
Mid
-
Hudson Civic Cen-
ter, 1 aO, ihe hockey team got back
on the\vinning track behind the play
of fresh.man goalie Dave Pennington.

Pennington made 27 saves as the Red
Fo
x
es defeated LaSalle Univer
s
ity,
3-1,
on Sunday in Philadelphia.
The win moves their record to 2-
2-1, and 1-1-1 in the Metropolitan
Coriference
.
.
·
Sophomore
·
Grayson De Witt
scored Jhe first Red
.
Fox goal
,
u_nassis~ed
,,
at ~:50
in
the first pe-
nod .
.
··
.
. It marked the team's first goal in
.
two games,
.
.
·
.
Sophomore
.
.
forw·ard
Todd
Corriveau scored the gam
e
winning
goal at the 13:36 m
a
rk in the final
period.
.
·
Freshman Mark A,vagliano re-
ceived the
.
assist.
·
Fr~shinan
forward
J
e
sse
Robertazz, scored the final goal of
the game
.
with
4
4
seconds rcmain-
.ing in.the
;.
game.
According to
.
Head Coach Kevin
Walsh, Marist did nClt start out very
good in the game but put it together
in time for the victory.
"We started out very sluggi
s
h
,
but
played strong in the third period,"
Walsh said
.
"We did what we had to
do."
The ice surface played a factor
in th
e
team's slow start, according
to Robertazzi.
"
The ice was wet and slushy,
;
,
Rob
e
rtazii said. "Th
a
t wa
s
one rea-
son we c
a
me out slow.
"
.
Marist had no luck getting
a
ny-
thing goirig i11
.
the game against
·
Rutgers
,
pn Friday.
.
.
··
wrush
'
said
nie low score w
a
s ex-
: ,
'pei:ilc1.
,:f \
.,
,
-:•
.

·
·
··
.

-.
-
:
• .
·
·
,
.
·
··
'
..
"
I.
knew
i(
was
going
to
be
a
low
scoring game,"
.
Wal
s
h said.
"It
was
a battle between two great
goaltenders.,-Senior goalie Brad
Kamp stopped
34
shots, but could
not stop
a
screen shot from the point
,
7:37
i
.
n
.
to
·
the
third
period
.
Acco,rdirig to Robertazzi, Kamp
·
.
played
'.
an outstanding game.
"Brad re
.
ally kept us in there," the
fresh111an
.
said.
"
He was still making
saves in
,
·
the locker room after the
.
gam
e
/
c
:
:
·.
Walsh
·
:
said that the puck was in
the Maris
(
ione often duririg the
gam'?·
"We had
:
a hard time breaking
out
,
" said Robertazzi.
·
The
R~d
Foxes will take on
LaSalie at
.
the Mid Hudson
Civic
Center tomorro\v night at 9
:
15
p.m.
"One-on-One
with
.
Mike O.norato
11
and
"Press
.
Box
11
weeknights
on
MCTV
Channel 12
l
!
'
l
.
....



































































































































































































~ ~
i.':
;
·
j
r:
r_:
~·!
p
.''The ice. was
wet and
slushy.
_.
.
·
·.That was.one reason
~;·
:
t,11ni
.
··o~islow.
_
"
>
·
.
.
.
·
·
_
·
·.-
,

:.'.
\::-
::.·
'., .
.
. . .
.
.
.....
..
.
.....
·
----·
•···
·
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....
----
.
-
·
-
·
· H

..
- · - •
••
- • - •
••
·••
..
•-


'
-
- •
• • - - • - • - -
••••
- - - -
••• •
'
'
'


.
STAT
1
.
0F
'
TltE
(
:WEEK:
.
·
.
.
The
.
meri~S
-
s<ic~ef,tea~
:
ended
'
·

..
.
~~~
:
SPollis
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jtjii
:i
m~;;;;;;;;i;
. by ~DREW H(!LMLUND
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-Sports Editor
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,
i-
PIJ;iit{i
f
th~
\
nati~n's
!
61pital-did not pfove

to
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be
:
beneficial
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to
th~
.
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football
.
teanion
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Saturdataftemoon.
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· ·.·. Th~
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Red'.Foxes (5:"3 <>verall;
_5
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-l in
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th
_
e Metr~
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Atlantic
:
J\thlet1c Confer-
,
:
ence
)'::
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sa~
:
their
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four-game ~inriing stre_ak ~~a~ped a
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t
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th~ hands of
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Georg~t
.
owri}Jniv~rsity,
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35-
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2;
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atJ<eh~e Field,
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Th~
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Hoyas
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(3~4
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overall, 2~3
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in
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the
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;MP0,C) got on the board first,
'.cappingafour~pl~y/2.3-yard
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dr~v~to
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make 1t
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After Georgetowinncreased its ~ea
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d to 14~~; ;Manst _was able to record
,
its.firsiscore
<
when
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senior qu
,
arterbac~
:
Bob Delponte chcked on
,
a 62-yard
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pass
,
play to_~e#ior wide re~iver
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Hea~-
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The
,
Red

Foxes were unable to gam any
,
I11,omentum as Georgetown
respoiided
·
5
.
minutes, 4 seconds later
to
~ake
•it2_I:-6.
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...
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Pelpo~te
\v~
,
abl~
.
to fmd freshman
:wide
receiver Jon Reed ~n an 8-
.
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yard
:
strike·with
6:20
remaining in the thud quarter to. cut the
.
defied to 21
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12
·~;
:
ftoya~
.

~n~ agaili
'
~me·ba~k,
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re~ching
th~
·
end· zone twice from 21
yards aw~y to cl~se
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out the g~e
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s
,
scorin
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g.
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Head
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.
Coach Jim
,
Parady
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said
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he \Vas

d1sappomted
_
with
_
the setback.
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"Th~r~
vv~~en'tre&llfanybright spots/' the third-ye~r ~ach said.,,"We
·.·
knew

ge>mg,m
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we
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had to
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play.good
,
,football,
_
butwe didn t
.
do that.
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Senior defensive back' and kick
returrier
Bruce A. Harris said the team
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was ready fo
'
play, despite
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the length of the bus trip, but penaltiesplayed an
>
adverse effect
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"\Ve \Vere prepa_red physically and
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mentally on the field," H~rri_s ~aid.
Marlst had Jts 4:gam
_
e

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,
:,'~The
·
main thing that hurt us was penalties; We have to be more d1sc1phned
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and cieail-that up:''


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L....:.:...:;~-'-"-.:.,.;. _ _,.;__.;.:,.,;._,.;_ ____ :.:...._......,;-'-'---,-.:...,;,,__;_; _____
,......:.;_;;.;.;__;_;...,_~....,.,-'--'--'--'--;,_-'---'-~~--,---.---,--:--!
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Marisnvas pe_nalized
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times for 129. yards, compared to the Hoyas'
'
65 penalty-yards.
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Parady
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also saicl'he and
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his club knew Georgetown would be a formi-
:
dable opponent.
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"You
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look at them;
,
the scores of their games have
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been within three to
four r,oints
·
against every opponent," Parady said.
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Mafist will host St. Francis (Pa.) on Saturday in Poughkeepsie (1
.
p:m.,
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ers excel
in
MSC's
,\'anWagner
said it was a good
·
chance to watch his teanL perform
:..... ................. - " " - - - - - - - , - - -
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under ~inimal pressure.
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2
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ili~rn~iVs~~oiing
team en-
Van
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Wagner has recruited his
ters tlie
:
:
:i994
~
95
season,
they know
large~t fyeshman class. A total of,
11
success
'
liafbi:eri
,
on theinide:
.
·
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.
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swimmers
and
·
divers have been
{
.
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, ~ft4t:
past
~even
years;
'
ihe Red
added to
.
ihe team'.s roster.
:
foxes
:
have finished in
.
at least third
.
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It
is accompanied by one
.
o( the
,
{
piace
,
o(~ett¥r; an_d
have Won a
·
Met-
best senior classes he said he has
~
fop~l~t~n
:
SWJrp,IDing
:
conference
.
ever coached.
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tiUeti;iA9~
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Combined; they are one of the
,
:
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~atu,rdiiy•s
-~
perforIDance
,
m
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it~
most talented classes/'. Van Wagner
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seasoii
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~ebu(may hav~ been
:
an in-
said.
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,
dicaiioi
i'o
f what will
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lie
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ahead
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for
.
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The 2~-mail
:
squ~d is

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bolstered
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,·~.fari~(~hisiye~~-
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by senior tri-captain Matt Bluestein .
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Jri
'/
an
ope
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in
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vilatiori
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that was
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Bluestein; w.ho swims the breast .
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extd:ided
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fo
:
other schools~
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Marist
.
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stroke,was
a
second-place
:
finisher
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capturecl firsi
:
i,Iace
~
eyery swHri:
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.
in the last three conference diampi-
'.'._
IDmg
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fefay•an:d
_
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diving•event
:
at. the
·
onships, as wen
·
as
.
plllcing second
·
MSC
Relay Championships in the
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at the E
_
CAC Regionals
a.
year ago.
McG_ruµt pool
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Sophomore diver Brenden

"Witli
_
an
'.
open
,_invitation;
you
_
Ledcly;
'
wh'.9 finished second in both
_never
.
know "'.hat you are going to
.
.
diving
,
ev~nts, and
·
freshman Chris
'
\tet/
1
?
He~d'
:
Ci:>
"
ach
·
Larry
·
van
Blackwell,
:
who was a high school
:;•
Wagtjer ~ajd
/ '
Ov~rall, th:~ugh,J.was
' ·
all
0
American swimmer, are also
:
pleased
·
_
with
-i
thidreshmen.
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It
·
a1so
.
·
exp¢cted to
.
.
excel.
·
:

:ij~~~e
·.
a
}h~rice
~
to
~see
~
·them
.
·
i~
whe!1tres:;:i~;!v~l:e:
0
i;:i~~~=fl
:.
~e
'
~~ttinJ,tt~~t k~pt
:
~e~~
:
~~o
_
f
for_its ftrsidual m~et.
MlagatitN
i•
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•·
.
.
as
a
neWs
.
edJ
/ip
nytJ}fJJf a clean slllte
---
-~
Af,Da~'e°
-
Magarity
0

prepares
·
io·
::'
c
,
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.
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_
,
.
.
lifetime
·
opportunity
j

r.;
Mag~ty-
>'.=:
~int:g1Y!ifd
_
slqt.
_-
.
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:
_.
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·
---
Barring
'
the injury su
'
s
.
tained to
enter his ninth sease>n as head coacJi
F
'.
.
.
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Since _this
,
is
a ~ll1Nk<X>Ue~e,
·
:
i_n
\'
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Expe
_
~
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Magapty
,
to start Dunbar
_
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~cCabe, if Marist
can
stay healthy
.
. ·
·
,
og~e
.
Ill~ri'.
S
basketball

teatn; he ~as
j:
··-
,
terms of its
.
~1¥"~llt,n~Jl!f:J~fagari~
.
l~
.
::
in
the
:
~~:rlY::gq__fu,g~ even though
'the
and ·work as a. cohesJve unit,
.
then
.
.
a
.
returning cast of players who were
,,
-
unable to bnng ID
j
n~y9~ally~recog~
:
senio~
,
sa_tcout,Jast
_
year.
.
.
.
.
.
·
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'.they
should fmish in third place in
p~
9(~,spli~
14:13overall program
-
~
nized. big~name
:
~M~~I
~
t~
-
S~-
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'.:
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/
.
D_uiifim:
~
s·i:~tjetice and 1iisde~
· '
the
,.
NE
_
C,
.
just
.
behind Fairleigh
;
a ye~
·
ago.
i

.· ·.
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:
:_,
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·,
:,·{
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-
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He has ~a~:
:
~'?"'
-
~~~r,
a
-
stron.g
/
fensiJe }'>resen~
~hould_giv
_
e
·
him an
·
Di~kins?~University and then Rider
...
,
:
·_
lie lils~rhas the luxury of work-
,
,
'
--'----'-'-".:..:....---1
.
cast of players m
f!l~
:
P.
,
~t,
and th~
,t
-advantage:·
.
?
/
,
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.


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UruversitY,'.

.
itig'sc:1,1iqrguard Dexter Dunbar,w~o
·,-_
year could be not
-
~y
_;j;
lifferent.
<
/
>,
·
It se~ms eviqent ~ho
.will
be
.
An overaHrecord of 16.:10 and a
·
.
W.c!S
.
an
academic redsbiit
'
last
year,
'
·
It's
_
right
·
h~re
:
:
.
~~
-
ONE'
W
.
c:;>l.{S
/
at this
\
Magarity)
,
gc;Ho
:
~en
•.
in the
·
low
-
conference mark of 12-6 is certainly
into the
:
Iineaup.
.
. ·.
.
year
s edition of Red
~-:>xes;
it looks
:
:
post,
especiajlf itow
.
with
'
theal:>sence
attainable.
.
.
·
·
)i·-:
AJtho1;1gh
·
Magarity may not ad~
·

• ,
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.
:
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t
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o be a iood team .
.
·:tf-'.'{
:
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-:·
.\
,ofjuniorJorwai~Scou:-McCabe,
who
THERE
.
IS ONE other thing
.
,
.
IIlitit
;'.:
ijis'biggestthrilUor the
UJ>:-
..
.

spect~l
:
l0-8 mar~ last year and
.
.
_Besides
_
the ~ ~

of_Dunbar,
;-:_
is out for
\
~fleast
·
four weeks be-
that coilld play an integral factor in
: .
,
·
co~irig ~o,n is ha~~g 2t least.two
_.
:
en~ed
1;ll
_
fifth
place
1D
the lll~rtheast
.
Manst has b~c~ se~ior
.
~ptain
Gregg
;
:_
cause ?fa frac=tured
.righthand.
,

the team~s year-student fan support.
mor~
.
years of coachittg at Manst
·
--
Conferen~-
·
.
.
;
.
·
Cµo~kowski, JUru?r
-
~ard Danny
.
·
Juru~
.
r Kareem Hdl and Tomidy

:
No one expects students to be
,
,
M~garity,
_
who came to contro
_
l
·
Just
think
of the _POSSibdity of
.
Basile . and
JUnIC>r
/
center
:
·
J'ere
_
t~f team's leaders in'block~d
·
able to attend home games when
the
·
s
_
idelines before the
.
start of the
how 1!1uch better Manst_ could_ have
AlanTom~dY;
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•.
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shots and have
·
done good things
they are home on breaks, but when
1?8_6-87seasor., went thrQugh all of
·
bee~
-
i~he had been re-s,gnedll) the
_
.
. Maianty s b1gg~~
-
1~lemma
hes when !~ey have received
.
the ballin
Marist
_
holds a
.
home game.
·
most
last season not knowing whether be
.
begmnmg.
with hiS back co~rt'.
·
-
~

the pamt.
.
.
.
students should be in attendance~
would return to coach Marist this
.
PE~!LE
~HO ..
DOUBT
.
-
He has to _dec~de wh1~h pla_yer or
In
tenns
·
of th~
·
-club's de
.
th
The games are usually
.free
of
year;
,
..
·

.
_
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.
Ma~a~ty s coachi~~ ~b1hty ne~d to
player combmation ~e 1s &omg to Marist will most
'
lik
1
h
·
P :
charge and are usuall excitin
.
·
.
He
.
was closely analyzed by the
realtZC ~e ~ns
~
pivmon-I program,
use between Dunbar,
·;
Bas~e, and nior, two juniors,
·
a ~fho!:~e~ : d whether Marist wins
.
or ~ot.
g,
local
·
media; the fans,

and college
not a Di\:'Jsion I pc:,wer.
,
·
_
spphon:iore_ Randy Enca_maci?n.
·
·
·
two freshmen coming off
th
b
ch
If
.
the students can make the
administration.
.
·
.
Understandably, that can be
,
eas-
This wdl have to be a quick de~
·
· ·
.
e en :
McCann Center as loud
th
ak
· .
Wh

ile
.
the press- and
_
the people
·
Hy forgotten when there arejust
·cision on Magarity's
_
part because
.ilN
.
ORMALbeL~ 1 LbeIKE to wrut
the Mid-Hudson·
·
c·v· asCeeyt m
~
e
d
4 000
l tu ·
t
'
to
M ·
·
l h
·
h
.
ib" •
unt a season
gms
.
fore I make
.
.
1
1c
n er
1or
who filled the McCann Center each
un er ,
peop e
mmg ou
anst on Y as t)vo ex i
ition
con-
d"ct·
·
·
Marist hockey games
't
Id ak
home game had every right to
specu-
·
watch ~d rou_te for
t~e
t ~
.
tests before
the
regular season
tips
a pre i ton.
. .
.
·
;
_
-
.
life a living hell
fi '
!
~u t m e
late
his
return, Marist
officials
should
-
Havmg coached Rik Smits, who
off.
·
However,
_after
analyzing this
·
or visi mg earns.
have signed Magarity before the start
went on
.
to play for the Indiana Pac-
Basile will probably have more year's squ~d, this writer thinks he
Go.for it. The ball's
in
your court.
of the season.
ers in the National Basketball Asso-
of a shooting-guard role, and Dunbar has a good idea where this team will
Andrew Hol
I
d
i
Th
The Red Foxes compiled a re-
,
ciation, may have been a once-in-a-
and Encarnacion will vie for the head.
Circle
Sports Edi:r~n
5
e







































































































































































































































JNS/DE:
·
·

Men's
i
Preview
>:
--,
Ken
B~Qin~au~s
·
.
r~crui_tir1g
::
ct,~5-s
-:
:
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,
.
.
~

'·•·
!
. :~ t
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:, ;_
·
.·/
i
'
:
Dexter'
~
Dunbar
:
prepar~~ffbrfinaLyear
-
·'

(?a'l~
l\lf~garity·~
:
rj
.
ew6brijers
·
'
,
,
...
1
.
9
.
~~t?S
MA!tj~i
¢.~~L~GE
MEN
]
.
s , ·
.
,
t
~~KETBALLSCllli:DULE
.
':

-
:
-
i
DATE
'
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'.":~:-
OPP.ONENT
.
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No.,mbff
S
..
USDBLALL-STARS•
'. ,
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1
,
q
NOTcmbtr 15
.
Li'rcra
(ULbuaall)•

·
,
'.-
No•rmb<rlS
PEPSl•MARISTCI.ASSIC
.
,
.
.
.
B1ilclmtll
'l'1o.
Vcnnont:~
:
,-i_."/
(
.
Colllfllbla
l'~
Martst'(l'V)
·
.
· ·:
.

J'io.,mbrr26
:
PEPSl

MARISTCI.ASSIC
·
·.
·
.,-.
,
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,
;
Coasoladoa Cllmt
.
-
.
.
·"
-:-;
· , \ :
. \
ClwnplolUlalpp-(TV)
'
.
'WN!Dnday
,:
Nonmbu
JO
at
VllllaoY■
·
·
.
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·:
.:
:
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.
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·
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·:
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.
.
:.
·
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.,
Tb~nda1
..
··
·.
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:.
:
>_
J~ia~ry S
at
Mt.
·
st. Mary•s
(Md.)
I
Saturday
.
:
.
:;_\
J1t111W11'.
·
F~&)I Dlcklnsoo•(TVJ
·
Thonday
;:
,
·
.
··
Janua1Yl2_
RobntMorrlst(TV)·,.:
.
S.tunt,y
· :
·

.

Jllllua.,.14
_
·
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SLFrands(Pa.)•CIY>
·'
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·
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'
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_
·
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·
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·
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-
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~aaiUl')'26
·
MoamoaUal(TV)
Salunlay
··
:<
Jaaaary
28 W•-•
(TV)
·
S.tri~y
,;
,
./
;.
~..:
FC'brva.,- 4
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·
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.
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.
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:
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farms laYltatloaal
·
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·
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January 7
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·
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-:
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, January
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·
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.
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dbne •
by:
·
Teri
L.
·
-
,
·
.
-
.

.
..
Local
mediaJorecasf ori
;
men•s
··
and
:
~omen•~
·
seasons
.
.
.
.
"
.
.
.
:
~
'
'
.
.
.
.
..
'
.
.
'
.
.
.
.
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.,
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~ Close
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Chod~owskf
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I




>





•'
,_
:
·
.••
.


, •
••••
• • ; :
:
:

· •
-




~

,
,
~ Spotlight on
~dr(Keys
Circle
pho1CI/Kattwyn
Link
THE CIRCLE'S INSIDE GUIDE TO
THE t994
..
95
SEASON
·
/
I
'
l
·

;
,
'
i
I
I
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·
;,Whilte~~;
time'(
they)'get, ( th~j
j
better
'.
..
·.
·
sho
.
w me (they)
c~n
~lay~''
.
·:>· ,
'. ·
··
-Head
·
C<>~ch
_
DaVe
Magarity
Supplement 2
·
.
The Circle,
.
rrevtew
.
.,
'
,•, .
.
,._
::-: .

1
.
HOOPSCOOP
·
Cagets 1odk to im.pt,ove
dti
i
li;l§f
season's perf ormaµce,
reCQr9;
.
\
.
by
ANDREW HOLMLUND
.
·
.
.
;,I think V:,~•ve g~t some interest-
·
shotitingperce11tage
i
n
~
i~e
-
~as°also
'.
Circle Sports Ediior
.
ing possibilities," he said. "We're not
the
.
first-eve~
:
NCAA'sophOJ!lOre
·
to
:
settling into anythingjust
yet,''
establish thiViecord
.
.
:..
i
.
: .
.
Oct.15 and Nov
;
1 may be two
Marist'sback court is led by se-
.
·
·
.
Jhe StR~ymond's
'
High School
similar dates for the average person
.
nior captain Gregg ChodkowskL
·
graduate av.1:raged
.
1
_
5.6 points and
each year, but for the men's basket-
.
.
Chodkowski; a 6~foot
~
4
;
.
198-
-~
4
.
3
.
assists per game
.
·
.
. . ..
<,
.
baH program, the time in between
·
pound guard/forward, averaged 5.3
..
.
Th~
.
Red
.
Foxes:
.
f~~ri
f
c:qu~
-
w~
I;'
has made a substantial difference
.
points and 5.1 rebounds last year
:
be spearhe<1ded by JU~tor'centerAlan
·
After starting formalpracti~es
Magarity said Chodko:wski
,
will
T?midy and junior foriva~d
.
Kareem-
the last two consecutive years on

be mostly playing the
·
number-three
HtH.
.
.
.
;
..
· ... ··
.
.

.
.
.
Nov.
1 because of National Colle-
spot, which is the swing111an posi-
Tomidy, a
.
6-foi:>t~ll; ~1-pourtd
giate Athletic Association regula-
tion.
.
· ·
.
.
.
.
center averagedl4,
:
8 points and 7.5
lions
,
Marist was able to begin works
.
Chodkowski said play
i
ng as
·
a
boards -per
.
game. To
,
midy also led
ing out on Oct. 15 again.
swi~gman win give him more shoot~
the team with 54 blocked s~ots .
.
.
Forninth
-
year Head Coach Dave
ing opportunities, but he also said
"I think we're looking
·;
pre
.
tty
:
Magarity and his team, this decision
.
he
w,ill
play anywhere to help the
strong,
~
• Tomidy said.
i
'Personally
;
I
reversal could not have come at a
.
team win.
·
.
.

feel pretty
,
good. We are concentrat-
·
better time.
·
.
.
"More
·
shots
\
vm
,
prevent'them-
ing
·
·
on getting
_
the ball inside to pick
While most students and faculty

selves
.
(as
.
a
_
shooting guard,)
"
up
..
the sco
i:
ing l
_
oss
·
of
'.
Izett
Chodkowski said .
.
'~
I think whatever
Buchanan
.
"
" ·
.
- . ·
·
we
r
e off campus two weekends ago
·
on mid-semester break, the men's
coach asks me to do to win is fine."
,
Hill, who was
.
used as the sixth
basketball team was going through
_
The Red Foxes
iH
have another
man -last year; averaged 4
.
6 re-
,
what Magarity called "a mini-camp"
weapon at guard with the return of bounds, while tuminga\Vay 20 shots:.

senior Dexter
.
Dunbar.
However
/
as Magarity's team
in preparation for the upcoming sea-
1
·
·
son.
.
Dunbar,. who was an academic
p ans for their first test in
·
their ex~
"It was three days with rio re
-
redshirt last season, has played sol-
hibition opener on Saturday
'-
night
.
strictions," Magarity said. We used
1dly thus far during
.
the preseason,
.
against the USDBL
.
All-Stars,
·
they
those
·
Th
.
ere were two practices each
according to Magarity.
.
.
·
wil}
,
b: doing it without fu.e service!
·
"Dunbar has
.
had some 1mpres-
·
of1umorfo~ru:d Scott McCabe
i
;<
..
day, and game tapes
'
were viewed if sive
·
.
practices,'
.
'
.
Magarity said.
McCabe, who satoutmost o
.
f
.
last
.
between sessions.
·
i
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
"Dex
.
ter gives us a trem
.
e
.
ndous
se
.
ason <lu
.
e to a knee
_
injury that re-
..
'
Itconclitded with an intra
:
squa
_
d
··
·
-
amount of.ability. We'll
try
to
keep
quired surgery after thidifth
'.
game
,
,
1--
:...
"
:...
·•"
:...
···
·
;;..
··,,
.
__
.,,
_
:..:.~
~
""'""
;.:;;;.~~
;;,;...-----.J
.
_
scri;hmar ~h; Su
nd
ay hnig;.1-
·
h d
,
hiin in tuneJo what we need him
to
aga
.
inst Sl;
'
Frarids,
.
(Pa
,
)
;
~ill
_
be
0~
r
.
So
.
'
p
'
homore
-
fonv
.
ard
.
L
.
·
i1
..
ca
..
'
s P
.
lsarczy
·
k
.
posts up
d
.
·
·
.
u
.
·
rln
.
g
·

·
.
a
.

'-:
.
w
.. ·.·
·.

.
··

. ·
.
ko
.
ut

,
.,
·
· ·
.
e
e
oxes, w O mis
~
.
do.
'.'.
·
the hardwood for at least four weeks
;
.
.
..
·
·
·
·
·
. -
,
.
·. -
··
.
._
.
..
·
.
.
·
.
.
. . . .
, ,
or
.
·
· _
..
,
,
with a 14-13 overall
·
mark; 10-8 m
Junior guard Danny Basile is
according to
._
Glenn Marinelli, coor-
.
Marlsthas
~
-
0
pl'y~rs ret&Jmlng
:
to lt~

sq
:
ua~ thl~
.-_
yeair.
·:c
;
. _
·.
·..
.
·
.
.
· .
·
the Northeast Conference a year a~o,
.
back
·
for another season,
.
and
.
will'
·
dinator·
.
o( Marist sports medicine..
.
..
·.
·
..
·
·
.
.
.
.
.
· .. , · .. ·
.
-,
·
._
.,... .
·
. ·
.·:
,
:
:
·
-,
->

:
:,:
·
a,ciephoto/Kithryiiu~
·•:
·
·
.
·
:
have
~O out of 12 players re~rnm&
: ..
most likely be seeing increased play-
,
McCabe fractured a
·
bone in
-
his
-
.
,
;
..
·
.
.
;<;-:)=:,:•
:,
-
;,\:
> .,,-
:

·
y \

•; :
:
,'<
">'<:C:'•·;
t,;·+
.'
0>
'
· ..
>
·
:.
·
\
:
;-:
·
:'
.
to
the1~ r~ster . . .
·,
·.
·
. · ..
..
.
-· .' ·:.
ing time. ; ,
< ·,
:
::
,
.
.
-.
·
::-:·.
_
.;
·
right hand during a recent practice;
re-exaxp.1n.,~~
,
a~er foll~; w_eeks .
.
,
1 :
_, ;
:

'f
9u~
-
~~~mpn
,
?.ames can b~ild
;:?_
·<
·
.
_.
,·,
l\1agaqty said h~ has
.
a !a,lented
.
,
-
·
Basile; "a
6
-foot off-guard
,'
cap-
Magarity said.
_
.
De~p•t~
;
-
McCabe s
.,
absen_c:, th~~
_
up, ~e i;a1d .
.
Whatever time
_
_
.
.
!
cam,
~~t 1s faced with handl
,
m? wbq
.
:
tured
.
the
NCAA Division
.
I
free-
·
.
:,
"Marinelli said McCabe's hand
·
-
~agar1ty
·
sa1d
~~e pre~~ason exh1b1-
;
;
(t~ey) get;
:
(tlteyk~et~er
.
_ ~how me
·
.
,
lS
startipg five
players are gomg
to

throw
:
crown by tallying
a'
94;4
has beenpufin a
·,
cast,
.
and
'
will':be

tlons
·
_w11I_be
,
;
us~? to
:
a~alyze and
t
(th
_
~y)can
_
p,ay
,
Y,,eWfUlttobecorile
..
be.
.
.
..
.
·
,
·
··
.
.
-
·
>
·
~._
·
·
..
-,
·.
.
·
orgamze h1i;
:
team s
:
talent
,
,
as
·:
_
go~d
a
:
team
:
as
;
We
_
can.
JJ
:
·
Marist looK~ Jo
.
bounc~
.:
o~o~
·
aTute:r
,
J:©Rghyea.1
1

..
by TERI L
o'.
STEW AR;
:
.
: : ,
:
<
j
j
ji
f
yeii
;
-
Babiniati

ha
~}
fr
e
~h,
: .
·
>
·

~ko
.
ay~
~
ag~d
:if
f
·.
po
i
nts pe
r
/,·
hell?
·
fill . ~h_e
·
void
'.
left
by
_
gr;duat
~
d
'f-.
:
wpl
'
el_eva~e
.
th
~
i~
gi~e'~
ail~ givf
;
ik
:· .
_
.
.
·
'
Circle Sports
Wriier
:
:
··
, ..
·
i
:
~~'V
·
:
outlo9
,
k. for
;
his
..
t~
~
111
~y
.vh1clt
_
:
game; and
.
~
.
c;r
,
!liree-P,OIIlt field_ goal
.
.
se111or ~md_.Y. Car,rol~ •
.
wh~ aver~geC
L
.
:_t
he
_
~ml r,r~uctmn tp replace 9m
,
~y
:
~
:
.
i .
. . .
..
··
.
.
.
...
·
.

·
:
;, ,
·
-
<
•·
lncl~d~thri:~ n~~corn,F!S
.
a
n.:
~
.
w
.
re.~
.
percentage
"Yas
,
403 ~r~ntuntd she .
.
12.4 pomts_per
.
gan;ie.
•.
·.
·
.
C_.irr<?ll._
;
..
,
<
.
· ..
.
.
. ·.·
.
·
.
.
>.:.:
:
/
'
. ··
.
·
Af~er finishing·the
·
·
199~~~4
·
s~~
\
'-·
~urt1~g

plaY;~rs;
,
1n
_
clud1~g
._
~e11
I
or
-
tn-
·
·
wa~ forced _oµt
·
o~

the. hne~~P-.
··
.

..
•·•
·

::-.:·
•~-
·
Ma~ist'~
-
~a
_r,
cts,
:.
ju)lior
-
··
.
?-.:feHssa
.
•·
·
·
·
·
?
~ab
.
me~?
:
sa1dth~t.
·
an?~her

;key
_ ,
.
-/,
·
.
son w
.
i_t~ an overall recor~
'
e>fll
,
~6,
'--:
caP.tau1 for1 I<eys an~
_
Jun1or
.
center
.
·
·
~orwat? sust~
.
u~ed a _knc:e
Ill
Jun; · Hauser, fr
,
eshman
.
1:-IZ
_
~~D
.
o~gall,
.
•·

t?
;
his t~~
.
s
:
.
~h,lreis t~e1r ~1.1!1ger._
· :·
:
·
(10s8
m
the Northeast Conference)
;
. _
St~ceypengl~r,
..
_


.
:
.
.
.
.
. ..· .
dimng a p1ck~uP,
:
ga~~
m
••
the, sum-.
'
'and freshl,ll~
·
Colic:;en King will be
,.
.

.
,
B,ab~eau ~a1q the mamthmg that
t
,
·,:
;
-
ninth-year Head Coach KenBabirieau
.
'
Biibmeau
-
1s e~pectmg
:
a lot out mer,
.
.
.
-
. .
••.
·
·•
.
.
..
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.
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cotinted
·
<>nJ<> intine~iately
.
contrib-
.
·:
diff'erc:nti~t~
:.
tlus seliSon from last
],':·
':'
.<
>
·
said his women's basketball
program
.:
of
,
hiH~
_
am this season
,_
mostly. in
.
·
Babineii_u
.
sai<i
;
he
,
·
1s hopefu
,
l
_:
ute
.
to)he te~'s scoring
/
according
. ,
year i~
.
.
the
·
.
team
1
s
will to
wiri,
·
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.
/
'
,
•· ·
.
/
;'.;
_
·
~ea:~~e po
_
tential tq
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Two seasons ago
;
the Re<i
:
foxes
?
Jean
~
1'1:!lfle I..esko cm,d lqm.
,
H~rv:rath
,
<
,
-
,
}?esp!t: ~<tsing
:
two top p\aye~,
:
peopl~ •~ guai;d P9
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11!~n~,Jfe.~
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lJhat
~:
mg t~
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>e
~ tre!11en~<>~tea,.m
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bc:~~~
-
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.
:0
.
rallied into the championship
·
game,
~~o _are
.
unable
.
to
,
pla.y
,
¥u~e 9f
,
Babmeau
c;
confident about hJS sea-
.~e scormg
c;a~ be evened
;
Au
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ancL
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he y~ar ~f~rc:
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?nly to fall to Mt.
-
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:
Mary
?
s (Md.)
m1unes, ~!!,Ve itlready pu~
J.Jf
~t ~n
-
son
.

·
.
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p1cke~
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m<?st'e
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eryb~}'
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~om_ th~t tCaJ:I1
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,
a
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m
the NEC championship game
,
>
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the team.
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··•.
·
,
.
,
.,
.
.
,
·
,
..
,
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feel w
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have the potential
-
to
·
.
.
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~~alsq
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d
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Kers,
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De.n,gle~ an~
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t
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J3~b!µeau
·
sa1d
:

"W~
'."
\Vere
:
.
. ·
·•. ·
Last
·
season, Maris
_
t was picke
_
',i
·
.
. Lesko, whose season ende~iµ the be one of the best te
~_
,
t
_.:
sin the con-
.
•.
JUmor foJ':"Ya
r
d
,
Ja~ W,a~s~
,;
\V1ll
._
be

:
~?
-
~C.IJ,
up
_
tot~~
.
fact that
~e
weren
'-
t
;
_
/
..
to place second in the NEC
;
They
·
eight~ game ?f last year,
~~s
been
·
ference," he said.
·
·
factorsf9
r
M~p~t
~
s
.
f.!:pnt
"
~urt:
,
:<
>-
~
as
t;e>od
as
.
~<?

.
~~u~t ~ew~relast
\

,.
~ad a disappointing fifth-place fin:
·
r~dsh1rted wh1_le she rehabilitates a
Babineau also said he is looking
·
"I
am
-
~Qu
~
tI~g
:'.
0!1-
~
;our:;_insi',i(
_
'.
,
yelir.
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,
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)! .
,sh.
·
·
.
·
ltgament tear
m
her knee.
_
to his veterans and newcomers to - game to b~ more pro~uctive b~twe~n
.
<
:

'.'Jh~
gll'l
_
s ha:ve come back
.
with
:
.
.
players
·
·
HJ<:e
'..-
l(eys
;
De~glfrjuici
.
.:
a
.
bette,r \Vor~
:
·
ethi~," · B_abineau
"-_.; : ..
Ninth-year Head Coach Ken Babineau Instructs his players during a recent practice. Babineau
will
be counting on senior trl-captaln Lori Keys for offensive and defensive production.
Clrde
photo/Kattwyn
Una
Walsh,'
~
.
~e

s~id
.;
'
c'
I
:
_expect
·them
'
to
_
·::,:
a4d¢d
_
:/?}l
ey'
,
r.(? little hungrfe
f
for
:.
:
.
elev
.
ate
·
~eir
.
games
·:
a
,
little
·
bit:and
, ..
:
.
'w'.anting success,
-
~
-
lit!le h11;11grierJor
:
.
.
giveus more
_
productio
_
n from tlic"
·
>
\V
~liting to be_
.
$e
·
number
s
one
·
team
..
.
.
.
-
~it:!gle~
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the
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0
.
t~
;t;L
'.
_
:
.
.
year
,'
averaging 13
:
8 voints (Mir game'-
':
·
ger h~s team)S
'.
CUriently
j
lisplaying
). .
and marked a

.49,8 field
~
goal per~
·
.
·
.
\V~l• hist
.
through the seasqn, which
·
centage
,
··
..
-
·
·

·
.

·
· · ·
'.
·:'
starts
·
'
Mop.day; No:v .
.
21 and
,
runs
'
.
Keys, whose career
i
high 30-point·
·
:
uIIiµ
the
.
.
_
end of regular season. play
effort agains
t
W!!gner CoUege
:
ori
.
on
_,
Thu~day, ¥a,rfb ~-
'· ·

.
.
.
.. ·
.
Feb
,
19, earned her
a
place ori the
.. .
·
·
"Tllat deperids on theplayets and
,_
NEG
.
all-conference
·
first ieam·Jasf their itleiltality of what they want
.
to
·
season.
.
.
. .
ae<:?~plish," he
·
said:."\Ve
ca~
9
_
nly
Key~ ~veraged)2.7
:
p<>ints
.
per
.
coach the!D, and they have to play.
game and a team-high 8
.
2 rebounds.
We're going to cqntinue to be
·
aware
.
Babineau said if
·
.Qengler;
·
Keys,
of that and
.
talk with them about it."
and Walsh

can
.
elevate
.
their abili-
.
.
-
Babineall turns to his tri-captains,
ties, his team will have given him
seniors
·
Keys, Amy Presnall,
-
and
·
the balance he is searching to find.
·
·
Andrea Macey for leadership, and
"If that happens, that we get the
said it will be indicative of how the
balance effect that I
.
am desiring as
team excels.
·
.
·
a coach, I think you make up those
·
"I think with the leadership that
·
points,'
'
he said. "I think we have
we're getting out of the tri- captains,
the potential to become a more high-
the example that certain players are
powered offensive team than we
setting fo{ the underclassman,
·
and
were last year."
.
the hunger I see in their eyes, it.will
According to Babineau, he wants
go a long way toward
.
making it a
four or five of his players scoring in
very successful year," Babineau said.
the double digits at one time.
·
Babineau is ~ticipating a good
"If you have five people scoring
effort by his team
.
.
10 or more points
in
a
·
game, you
'
"We're e~cited about this year,"
are not going to have too many off he said
.
"We look at it as a tremen-
nights," Babineau said."I have total
·
dous challenge
to
improve on last
confidence that Hauser
,
·
and
·
WaJsh
year
.
"






























·-. '.'It will take this/team awiiile:
to.;gel, but"people. shouldn't
freak.':'
· · /

·c.: .. : .;·_
"
· ,,
>
HOOP STAT:
.- Rich
Thomaseni-·
Freshman Liz McDougall scored
1,000 points in her high school
career.
Future
November 3,
t
994
Supplement 3
.
HOOP SCOOP·
.
-·.
'
'
by TERIL. STEWART'·
.. Cii-cle Sports Writer• . .
Th~·w:m~ri•~ b~sk~tti~1I·t~~~ Ji11 begin·.·~tii9Jf
9;
-s~Joii'Jit~-~~~--loss··
·
·
of jus(one player.
·· \
·
. .
. , , ; •·
,:. .
=
,
<;:
> '
·
i• '
.
, - W~th. the graduation, of lone'
.
senior. ~indy · Qirroll, wlio'.·a~erage:ct_ :12.4.
po_ints per game last seas9n/ ninth-year Head'Coach' Ken:Babineau
_
said his
retuming players iuid his newcomers have· the ability to perform well and
replace the loss of Carroll: ; ::
.• ..
_ . . . . . ·:
. .
.
_ , ... _ .
·
. . . . COURTNEYBLQRE<:·:
.
.. ,
... , ,
,.Blore is a 6-foot-1 freshman guard fr9m East Bninswick, N.J'. The East,·
· Brunswick High Sc,hool gr~duate averaged 13.
7
points and 9 .5, rebounds per ..
gal'\le'. , ,
_
.•.
.
_ .•
.''> . . ._·
,.;C:_ ,
, : - : ·.
. . •·
.

_ ·
.
· Blore led her, team to
a
29-3 Jllark, and wo11Jhe .Group IV state title.
Blore '\Vas.an all-countyand an all-area team member. Blore ended her:high_.
school career with 817points. _· _ ., ... · .
,
· .. _
_
>
.
. . .
.
·
''She'.s going to give us versatility of being able
to
play a number of
positions,» Babineau said. "We'll bring her in to play the five position and
also some fo,ur and three." ·
· ·
·
COLLEEN
KING
· King is a 5-f9ot-l0 freshmanand ;was a teammate of Blore's .. _,
Kiilg, a guard, averaged 9.2 points, 4:7 bqards, 4.3 assists, am~ 4.9 steals ..
per game. ·. .
·.-
, . · _ _ . ·.
_ .
.
··.
.
· According to Babineau, King played as a point guard in high school; ~nd
he::_\i{ill be''using her more-as a swing guard.
· .
,
• • :
"A small fony!ird, big-guard type,C>( player at 5-foot-10, she fulfills our
needs in the fact that she's very defensive. minded," Babineau said. ''.We
feel that's a key attribute, to that-position./. ·
.. :
, .. :.
LIZ Mc.DOUGALL-:
McDougall is a 5-foot-7 guard
.
from Ogdensburg, N.Y.
-', ·
The freshman attended Ogd~nsburg Free Academy, where she averaged·
20.0 points, 6.8 r,ebounds, 6.ff•assists, B:Iid$.2 steals per game.
Dunbar ready
to return to
tearµ, court
by ANDREW HOLMLUND
Circle Sports Editor
Although the men's basketball
team has lost Izett Buchanan, they
have regained a player with experi-
ence.
After sitting out the entire 1993-
94 season as an academic redshirt,
senior guard Dexter Dunbar has re-
turned to the Red Foxes, and is try-
ing to work his way into the starting
line-up.
Dunbar, who averaged 7.7 points
per game his junior season, said he
likes the team's make-up and is look-
ing forward to helping Marist win
ball games.
"I like the chemistry," Dunbar
said. "I'm looking forward to con-
tributing. I have to find my role and
fulfill it."
Head Coach Dave Magarity, who
is entering his ninth season, said he
is glad to have Dunbar back and
plans to utilize him in key situations.
The freshman scored 1;000· points' in',hei high school career .. · •· .··
_-:Y
<
. According to 'Babineau, McDougalHs· a quality athlete whor,eminds him
'-,--....;..-==;::::;;.__;....;......;.. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
__:. _ _ _
.:;_ _ _
_J
of Charlene Fields, '\VhO graduated in.1993 .. ·.·-'· .·,, ·.'·
·
,
· :_-
.
• .· __ .·
.
Junior guard
JUI
Heller looks to get the.ball.Inside.
"I'm really pleased with the way
he has come back," Magarity said.
"His experience and toughness give
an added dimension."
Magarity ·also said Dunbar's
strongest . skill on the court iies in
his defense.
· "She's one of the best athle!tes that we've seen here hi awhile,'' he said. ·
Marist ended 11-16 last year .. } ·
·
.
·
"She has the same sk~s, athleticism and explosiveness as a Charlene Fields."
...... ,•. ,,
··'"
.
Circiephoto/Kattvyn
_
lJnk _·
··liOca.l'tfi~di8..·:~f¢dict'
·'f>~11
·
·teants•tiftitttr@s
'.>;:•·•··
:
.
··;.:
:~
,
~
. . .
-;,
....
,•
...
,··
.
.
·.
·._
'
.
.
,
. .
'
-.
. .
·,
·.•
.
by
,ANDREVV
H9I.M1:,UNI)
.. _· /.
"I'm not so sure they need to . _ · .''Cindy Carrqll (a graduate oflast added.-"They took entirely too many
,
Circle Sports Editor· ·
.
get outside shooting,'' he said'. "They
year•~ team).m.ade herself into the
3'-point shots: last.year." . . ·
.. , .... _..
.· .. • .. ·· , . . . . .... ,.
have to go with their strength, and
player that shew.as," he said. "I hope·
Dean Darling, play-by-play an-
.
. Jusf how weU:ar~-fiie ine11's'~nd
gcijnto the basket."
_ .
her-teammates can follow her lead.
nouncer for WKIP radio, said the
·
·
·
·
Sport_s
colum
__ nist
Rich ..
Lo_.
ri. (Keys) h_ .as to_be. the leader of men's team .should fare "in the
women's basketball teams.going to
do this year?
> _ •
_
•· •·.
• .. ·
.
'fhoma.s~lli, Bickel's coUe~~ue, said · this team." ·
middle of the pack," in the North-
The, Circle interviewed areame: .,, the mep steam ~as a pos1t1ve ou_t~
· Thomaselli said Ken Babineau's
e_ast Conference. ··
·dia experts who gave their pr~dics : lo9k, but_ th~y will have to ex~el m
team needs 'to reach the .500 pla-
WTZA Color Analyst Rich
tions ·on the teams' upcoming sea-
th~ early gomg:
. . , . ·
teau in order to have a good season.
Rinaldi disagrees with Darling.
sons; .
; .
_, ·• ··

-
. _
''If
they have an exceptional con~
·
Marist College Television Bas-
Rinaldi said Marist could win the
Mark H. BicJ(el, the men's. and
fererice record compared to,ari'o_ver-
ketball Analyst Chris Damiani said
Northeast Conference.
women's beat writedor the Pough-
all record, they can Still get away
.
the junior class is the foundation for
"I'
think they'll compete for the
keepsie Journal, said· he believes .with::a good· seas<,m/~ -.'I'hQIJlaselli · . ~he men's team, while the women's
title,'.~ Rinaldi said.
··· ,Marist teams can enjoy .su ..
~sit
< ,
s~.~d: "Th.at ,_i~ a brutal :stietcl(th~y iSqu_ad has to focus on their inside
..
"I h'nk th M ·•
, · , b
a~e go_ing to have after. the .. Pep· .si-
game.
. .. --.
.
· WTZA' Sports Director Brian
... ;
t
i
e
anst men s , as-
· K
·
1
.. ,k~tball,team
will
do be~er than most •·· Maris( Classic;
. _ _· •_ .
.
. _ •·
"They have juniors Alan Tomidy
. enny. and p ay-by-play guy said
• people think they will ·do;" Bickel
,
"It
will take a whileJqr the team
and_ Kareem
HiH.
banging the -1'.~01idy's and.Basile's performances
said.
to gel, but people shouldn't freak,''
boards,'' Damiani said, "Alan and. lie inthe team's balance.
As
far as the women are con-·
Thomaselli added.
'
. _(junior) Danny (Basile)" have the
· "The Folies'could finish overall
:cerned, Bickel said the Red Foxes
On the women's end, Thomaselli .. potentiaLtope all-conference.
'
four
·
g~mes pver or under .500,"
: have to get the ball to their inside
said the team needs to have a leader,
· "I think the women need to con-
Kenny said. "Obviously, it depends
people. _
and needs to hit their jump shots'.
centrate on the low-post game," he
on Tomidy and a matured Basile."
"He reaHy. competes defen~
.
.
. / siv_ely,"
;
Afagarity
,
said .. ''He _may be
the
best defensive
guard on the ball
I have ever coached."
·
·.·Dunbar wiH be battling for play-
ing time with junior guard Danny
Basile and sophomore guard Randy
Encarnacion. ·
Dunbar's teammates are also
pleased to have him back in the ro-
tation.
·
· "Dex has a lot of experience,"
senior captain Gregg Chodkowski
said. "I think he hasn't missed a beat.
It seems he really wants to play."
Dunbar, a criminal justice major,
said being away from organized bas-
ketball for a year helped develop his
future.
"I hit the books and worked out
in the weight room and in the gym,"
Dunbar said. "I think it made me
realize that there is more to life after
basketball."
Dunbar said he has an optimistic
outlook on the season.
·Tw·o
freshmen ljop;e to get s01ne ti1ne
by· ANDREW 'HOLMLUND
Circle Sports Editor ·
Ninth-year Head Coach Dave
Magarity did not have to look too far
to find·. his two newest attractions to
the 1994-95 men's· basketball team.
A matter fact/these young Red
Foxes hail from New York state.
Magarity is hoping these players
can contribute offensively and pick up
the scoring slack left by Izett
· Buchanan.
Buchanan was Marist's leading
scorer, averaging 25.4 points per game.
He also led the team in rebounds (169),
steals (63), and minutes (1,000.)
BRYAN WHITTLE
The 6-foot-6, 190-pound freshman
comes to Marist from nearby
Spackenkill High School in Pough-
keepsie.
Whittle averaged 26 points, 12.4
rebounds, and four assists per game
for the Spartans last season.
Sophomore guard Randy Encarnacion, seen In a game from lasl
season, was an all-NEC newcomer selection last year.
Whittle also scored 30 or more
points in nine games, including a 42-
point effort against Rhinebeck. High
..
..
,
.
~ l .
· Circle File
PIIOIO
'
'
For his performance during his se-
nior campaign, Whittle was named
Playerof the Year by the Poughkeep-
sie Journal.
Magarity said he believes Whittle
can make a positive impact for him-
self and for the program as long as he
is able to adapt to the style of play on
the collegia'te rank.
"Bryan has the chance to be a good
player at this level," Magarity said.
"He's got to make the transition from
high school onto Division I basketball.
He's a good player that other people
would have liked to have recruited."
Whittle is slated to play the swing
position for the upcoming season.
JOE TAYLOR
This freshman recruit brings with
him a sectional state title into his rookie
season as a Marist College Red Fox.
Taylor, a 6-foot-3, _175-pound
guard, helped lead Bishop Gibbons
High School (21-5) to the Section II,
Class B state crown last season.
Taylor's senior year was also high-
lighted by a season scoring total of 480
points. He recorded a 54.4 field-goal
percentage and a 40.9 average from
beyond the three-point line.
Taylor is not the kind who plays
the game in a physical manner, accord-
ing to Magarity.
"Joe is a finesse type of player who
has a real good ability to go by people,"
the head coach said. "What he does so
well is that he canshoot off the dribble,
and he sees the floor."
Magarity said his main concern
with Taylor's future lies with balanc-
ing his skills.
"He's got to know when to use (his
skills,)" Magarity said. "He needs to
know what he can and can't do be-
cause we have to limit unforced er-
rors."
Taylor and Whittle will face their
first college basketball test on Satur-
day night_ at the McCann Center.
"Bryan and Joe got the chance to
be very good players," Magarity said.
"They have to learn how to deal with
pressure. They're going to get a chance
to play."
t ..
..









































I
1···
1
.
I.
-:
..

!
.-
.
HOOP-STAT{:
.· :s~JfaFtn-captairiLori
I(eys:has•·
: ,_ sco;ea_s43·:point{·in
-~(?rc<>tlege ·
:.:r~~--·
,•.·.,:•·
·'
,·,,.
-:·,::-.->
-

..
.
~
,",'
.,
...
HOOP SCOOP _ ·
.e1i-oikoWsk1A'sii.?IkieJterfniriafi
·
oia: __ .
ha~;~j~zp~ij,~~il1~~,~~,~~il~~,li;C:,;;;;
. by GREG
Bl'3Bi/ .,, ·
.
.
Thi1r'a:roleJhe;te·run -hafcome to
.
.. : DannY,:;:Biis~_e; ancl;:;Izett-.Bilcharian
. Circle·SportiWrii~r'<·•·-
expect
fr9w.}<;:~W€€v,:s_Id;_'.~i1,tJt
.d_id • ·
.

score_d. ip.~{p9.i11!s;;(;llMk~~s~t~.i~
·
.
,., ...
,
notcome·ov:ermglit,;for him.":;,:;:
.
· _allgf_thehttlilWilgs~at-girv~Manst,
. Gregg Chodkowski,ii;ilil tind of
·. : . Cho~kows~t''A~#.i~Ho:'i-~1arisi as
·.
-
itsJusnyin~g
~.~aijqn)i\
four Ye~i:s;'
guy who dem,ands respe<:t:~:i•.. ,
_a~ust-tea!_ll:~ll:¼>°-M-s.land:sJandout• . ;
-
~:.N_!3uc_h~1-1an,!_lla_cle,the_hea~l1J.1es;
· ,The look ·of interisity?ili1'le,- and .
.
• with
a
:reputa~1,on\~·;someoile. who ·:
:
Ch~d¥o~~~~Aove:{o.r_: loose. _b11Us;:
detennination the sen1or;1:~pfain car-
worked(diligeiltly)m~:school;'and ·
mF
fo.ugh.Ht>~fe_b:OlJnd_s,
·
aj(d plar,~c;l soli4
:~:~i~te~i%i~np:r1{lfr{'.~~f'.c,ourt -
·
•. t~e.-:~1~()!e
1
~Jffit;,~1c~il1J:i~;•th~• •. · .

:~~:~js!0~tt:t~itf.f;~f;re?}f?~;
· lt'
is '. a . · look ·-.:that,-:' makes . classrdom;-•;ct{o'd~owskL,rari<into ...
.
/Mari~t~ms'1ed;\lie; seasC>n,w_ith
~~~k;{o~~! ~:i~h!1};t~iJ!~!!.
th
~t ':~~mth~.~f:i~fr~¥_1t'~°u~\f:--his_.
. _
_
a:}&l~f;tttt~7fuf~fJ~:~;~¥s~ii
-
:
. Junior forward Kareem ·Hill said . fre~hman,.year;Jeaming ,Magarity's
thmg,a,~_i:iut)lje~e statistics 1s.n~ql:le ·
he witnessedChodkowski;s'determi- : ~ystem :aiid.getti,ni:Jg ~o*~';"hat
it
11u_~~~t~ts,t~.a1~·c;~pcl~()W.Ski Jia1/
nation in'a gl!me atRi~er\i#iversity
takes to be:a s<>l\c_iilJai;:k~collrt player
'.noi:;t!_i~
;
~umJ?~r. <>Lt~~erpo111!e_rsJ1e.
last· Febrnary
.
·'·'.\fi;' •;······•.-
inthe'No~theast'.~(iiiferel!C~r ...... ·:•
:
·.· .. ·..
-~adf,;1,'::,•/
i
/j}r,
:).C,:,if-:,c:i::~•
-
;f;
,
.• 1:he gam~ was .Y;~?il~~()~e~; and
~' ' The
-
.6~~9Pf~:J«t~_ard stil)'played,
'.i::
:-1~ is .hO:~~~e ~,S:l!Cf~pt_e!l:~isf,q!t
Hill was. called, o_n :.RY_f.~i_ntn,year. m .25. games;.and;-~ta.!Jed ty.ri~e. He ·.a~.:,_a_c:Ie,a.de8.~ncl\~ t~l!m play_er,,,::_--•..
Head Coach Dave Magarity,to enter averaged L9 poiritS'and 1:4 rebounds
·
.
·••., .c'.GhO:d~o~s,Ci; ~h9 :said
:lie.
.mod-,
the game.
.
·.·•·
< · · -. · ·
that year.·;'.,
::\::\/::c ,:
\-'''> ,. '.
elspi~.g~!?~:~~terfopner'NBAgi'eat;
After a hard foul,
1ii'i1
ti5rnin-~nted
.As a,. sopho~~r~. :_the;,biology . ~ITY,.;l:31fd(,Sc,ll~.he IS notCOll~ll1~t
to. Chodkowski 011 hciw\ihysical. the
major once.- agaiil';'sao/: action in .25, ..
·
-W!~iY~n:011aLnumbers, or- . b~mg
i
m
:.
gaine had become.
.
· ·. ·
·
. .
_ gam_es; splittiilgJi~e at: the ,small,'. c:.:}4~j~P?~hgh,t.:;-,, ·;/
·
: ;,, : '.. ; /-:://
. · · Hiifsaid ChodkowskLiooked at. forward and.offd~U.~!cl positions.,, , . ,-
.
·:. R1ght,here! ~omv~g to h1sfin-
him with determination,' ancl'told him
.. · · Chodk?wski ay~r,aged ~2:p<>irits. _.·, ger).t~ wan~)~- !ln~,;on_ th~ ~~g_er,"
they.would win.
.
. .

and
.
&.9
,:
mmutes per;game.· .. ·._ . · Chodko\,V~klsa~d. rwant to win a
Chodkowski's bold.' pre9i
_
dion
, Chcidkowski1s~_~iggest higllJjght-: NEC <::happi_9~_sh.ip._'.'
·:: : .
, proved· right as Marist defeated.the
thatyear.came-:in:,t_h~second. nieet~•'i•
-
•·.•(rW~et,her.,or
·
.11ot.~tht}_:Red.Fo_xes::
Broncs 63c59
· :· ._c-·;;a
>, ':
ing_~gai11~t,Fairle.~W:'Pickin~.on, ac~: · \:V~II•Re·a~l.e..-to accolllplish t?is_f~at
As'.°Chodk~wskj'prepar~i't~
'en-
cordmg to Magar1ty:;·.· .. .;,.,,,.. . .. -.,·std)_;re~1W
,
~s;_to,pe,~een. ,_·
.c· \:\-~
· ter his fin~! collegiate seas9p;·h,e.said ·
.. Chodkowski dfiJled:th.re.e.3:-point-.··
_Ho~\:X~f{i'.1~
5.
·
·
they,·, _do·
·
_ n
_
ot,;
· he is.compatible to he,lpi~g~t:ie• team
ers · in the first half:arid scored wliat ,: · Chodkowski said he mainly• wants
earn•vicfories. . .. :''' '. ...•.
' ·.
. w·as then a career;high 11-points. . toibt;;re.111efobe!C!~ a~'.·Sq~eone.\vho,
.· .tFalways hopeto'.clC>'.\Yh!lt'tlie
.. The'Syosset,'.NX,. na,i".e shot'.>al~ay~'.[tded)n'·ev_erythin_g. he
'
did
te_a~:ne,~ds~:• Chodko~~ki;}aJ~i
•;rvty. .
ov_er,;44>pe.rcent,ft~~: the J}Jld .· filid
;re
-~~!~t: _at}':1.i~i~~-
i · : .
< ,., • .. , . ,
:'.,,< ,
!91.~?1,s:,toJce_e~ t~e:_h~r~.~tHjiip~y'/''l :co~n.ec:t~.d.on,10fl~r,c:~nt_Qf,h1sJh~~~-dt-!>
~~~1:,P,-5WB}e}o~k,,3tllle, ~~_hope
_
.. • ..
..
. . - , ..
< _ .
.
. -'
x . .. · ...• ·. •. .
.
..
, _
_
Ju~t,_h~pe t;o f1ll:m. the
,
·gaps.':'i~c; /,: .. pomt,attelllpt~,for;~th~;.s_e_a~pn. -:,: , .. ;
lf
theyJh1~rQr:~e:}f: ,~pm~q.n.~;w~~, ., ..
~1:Jf~f ,~P,1'f~
and swing man ,~~egg, Ch.~kowsk~ ~as prc:,yen
-
·
Maganty said·he
:
has' always ad- .. .- ,,;,;Lastc.year,, . .Chodkowsk1 saw his:~• W«?rked hard a.t school and m lioops,
he Is a leader on and off the
court:.r,; , \''' ''"'
i
i~.-,
11 ,;,,'.~
~,,..,.,r,~
. . . ?':When
J
was. rec'iuiiingforegg,] , . IlU_J11ber_ 13 asserteci'hifuself
as a
team·.: ' ~yosset • riaHye tak~s, with him onto
iron or listening' to Eric' .Oaptoi
:
. th~'·
b .
h · .·_
.

. · · d · . . .
ll
. ' b · k b II
. Ioted
,
~h
_
is
.
. ~ntensityt-~~~}~fti!~de/'_ :lt:
_
8:~er:,. ··.· . ,· .:
·
IL: ·:, ·\: ::
.
,: . •·' •.
thecourt also:accomparties him.m the·. niu_sic firtist \Vho'Chodko~ski le~~es. a~d :: ::::
e~~~a~~
ege'., ~s .et-~·
~
·
.
Ma~'lntr_sa1d/'H~ · ~ilt~:Prlt:ec:rguy . _ : •• Ch<ldko\VS~1'_5. -~1.°:~f~S }~Cft:~~~,cl. · .· . cfas~r.<;J
.
0.lll ..yhe~~ Ch?.dkow~kl · hQl~s _ -:a ycket f.or. at e".frr :ho!ll~'. game ...
:
_
. . . Per ha
S .
Hili .• · saf
ci
·
it
'\J
.
•: ,
h . ,
to. brmg mto our pr<>grt1m;;,;1; ·., '
"
' A~llrly ~() 28,per:~l!~~;aS h~ ~.~s.uti-
:
;_over a 3J,qrf ~rd_,isian a~~~elll_lC
:
·,
_
1'11:
Se!}!Or,8-a1p ht::<toes not have. taikin about Ch
elk,·
k,e
st
'
w en
/:El~-
says• ~ubtleJth1-~~~,;tln·,the· : )1z~dJor toµ~~es~;in,, the p~mr a11~ :. a~-Ainenc;a: gand1d,tei . . ·.• .·· ;:: . '
any regrets abou! his ~liege life as _
·
· ·· g · -
0
· · o~s.
1
·
-
. . .. lock~_r:,-~oom and oft;:r~~\;fOllJ1 _that , cllltch ~,ho()t~ng d<?~I.Ithe st.retch.':,
.. · · _
Currently,Chodkow.ski IS_Prepar~
he reflected on his prev11:>us years at
·
"He's a great person," Hill said.
m~f~' ~1m the Jeader;~fNHt,tealll;".
_
. ;, .. H(: ayc::ra¥_ed ?.:Ji>6irits pe_r~a_rn_t:
,
!ng,{()r_gradµate: exams,.and .1~. loqk~ _.· M~rist.
. · ·.···
:
. · ... · . . . ... . . . .- .. _
.
·• .
_
... · · _That seems to be the kirid of respect
Magar~ty a4ded.. ·. :
:t";(i~t'
:.1 _.;. · ..
-
:
\V,tI!lt:
~ra~~1ng ::J1:1llt_ove,r,f~vr
'.p~~ _
... '
mg mt?, gra
,
d1J~te:~~h~~l.< OJ?hon~ as
_. · ·
.
"I wo:uld · do -it
·
an- over again if .. ~regg Chodkowski. deserves, andit
!.µn1:°~ center,11an,T~pi_~y.~early .bo1111ds perponte~Efho,qkow~k1aiso>. h~ .• plansf':t a ~~reer\1_n ,physical I had. to/>Chodkows~i-said. ~Tltbe ,.1s. •·•the · ki~d ... of .respect Gregg
echoesh1s coach s·sent1ments; •
·
.· ... ,connect.ed on 20lprec::~pomt shots and
th~rapy,
-
.
,
, -: · ... ,,,::· •
. .
'•: . .

sadwhen basketball 1sover. Basket- Chodkowsk1 has earned.
"H~, is an _unsel~ish 'plai,eia11fa i:ecorde~ 40 _assists;·
·
2
·.• •
.
·_
..
• .: -
1"ben:he do~s :~~ye;time
tg
f~- .·
,qa!J;,has .ah~aY,s :qeen
_a
partcif
my
lead~r!, Tomidy said:;7
:
u· /. ;·,
1:laymg seyeraLpos1t1ons and> Jax, wh1c~ s~ems,,~o :l!e ,_ra!e,
hfe . . ·•: .:
.
·
.
'
• : .. :
·

> •·•
·
SJ:ortsEditorAndrew Holmlund
· · .. · · · .. -·. . . . .. · . . · · ·>::::· ,.
·
\ ' ·· .
.
,.
making a role Jor h.imself as Tomidy,·.· · .. chodkowski_ can :b~ foun~ puR1p1pg • . -. . He foels. 1:9nfiderit in the chokes
c;ontributed to. this profile ,:eport.
Womt11,ls prog13,atn·
·
ht;1,;s;,C/:L~if!€,te~S:yv,~~/j_Q,t···in
.
Ney$
-·.
. >
·
,
;
.
l>y TERI.·
L. STEWART
<: · ..
"Lcarue)n with
mori<>',
\ancfl
-
.
'.'As
an athlete; Lori is sorileone
J
. •·· : -'Circle
:,sporis ·
Writef:< ·
.
• . .
wasn '.t all
_
O\ye4· t,o '. practi~e ,wit~. t~t: · want to . be;'~ _i;~e said, •~Lori·
is.
the::
.
.
·
..
.
. .
.. .
t~a~ ~r• _di)
_
any_ pre~~~a.~011,: so}
type perso~, that'll ~ever say. any-
,-
Nd
'oniJJe'cisJ? fe.ll Lori °:K~y~ - d1dn
;1
geLto. know·_t_he
_
te!}m until
thmg, she JUSt does it. ,
_
how to budget her time. · · .
·
.
late
m
the season;» she said,: ''That
· •,,
: .
. . .
. . · . .
>
. TJle seriior,fr
9
1ll
-
RoJl!e,
N,Y:,'
made it difficult, to adjust.'.'"'-•
·
> . ·.
She is someoneilook up to bot:::,
is. a biology n:iajor/a[tr.H::aptain'on". _ -}'hi51ugh the_roµgluies{Keys
e~-
as.a person,and
as
afriendt .•
-
e,
the women's basketbalHeam, and. perienced early- in her rookie· ·sea~ -• .. · "
·•
·
. :
.
·_· ·.
!
finds time to have a social
likas. •
~on,:slie decided}f slie could
n,i'~de. :,: .·
ftngler,has -been K:eys•· team-
well.
_ . '
'.
;•»
,
. · , · :: .
·
,
1t through thatadJUStment, she could
-rn~
e 0~ two years and recalls some
.. ····A'.
·.
· ·d ..
-<~ ,-. ,-. :_: .. :
.
C
• :
make it.through anything''
..
.
funny,t1mes with her •
. · , ccor mg to
·
Keys, she gets
· ·
·
. · .. · ·. · .
· .

t4roiigh her: qay1>
witlf":
only
a few
· After thr(:~ · years, Keys has
.
:
''Lori
and) liv~
~t
Dairy Queen,"
houi-s,of'sleep eac!i
'
nigh( .·.
_
. ;
·
scored_ 843. pou:its; _an.4 has a,good ·she said. ''We are ahvaysc,:ating Bliz-
.- /'Ponn~lly
._is
niy: first ·home
chanre,, percen~a~~ ~s :476, ,!!nd ~t:r
zards.
If
you can't fmd us on :the
M ~
i_s
IIlY:
secon,fli~l!le,
and
m; ·_.
free-~!3W
sta.t!Stl~,15
':§
38;; ; •
court, we'll be at 'DQ,!"
Gartland .apar_!ment is)ny_; third ,be:'.
Dunng h~r Junior Y~,~pa1gn,
cause I_ am 11ever there,~;Keys said.
I<eys average~.l2,}J>?m~.~~- col- -
"~ometimes you co_me_;)o practice . lected a team-Jead~g:§,2.,febom,ids
\V1th a couple, oJhourf~f sleep.arid
per gaµie. Keys vv.as_ naD1~ to the
you have to pay attentionjust like
Northeast Conference.µ.rs!
_
team last
everyone-else.»
.

.
.
/ ·. ,
.
'c :..
season. .
.
· ·
: .•
0
••


~
Keys,.· who ctirrenOf_.liai
a
3.2
She w~ the ~C Player of the
grade-point ayeia'ge;p· lans on attend-
Week dunng.the week op•eb. 14 to
ing graduates~!iool when she leaves
Feb. 20.
. . · ;;
Marist in May.
>
' .
:
'
Keys scor~d -:1t:car~~t:higll 30
, . T~e . 5-f?ot~ 10 · power
,forward
points. agai11St ·. Wagnet College on
practices WJth her basketball team
Feb. 19 in a 70-58 win at
the
James .
19 1/2 hours a week. Slte·said she
J. McCann Recreational Center.
finds time to study before· and after
practices.
- ·
·
Keys graduated from Rome Free
Academy High School in 1991
where she averaged 16.3 points and
12.7 rebounds per gaine. . .·
·
She finished with ·1,330 career
points and led her team to a 21-2
Ninth-year. H_ead Coach Ken
Babineau said
_
the team
can
always
count on Keys.
: ,De~gler also·explained ·~ .ritual
Keys follows before ·every game.
"She always listens; to her
· walkman before a game-usually Pat
Benatar," Dengler said.
Keys, who is not very tallcative
before games, said · she . uses music
to _drown ev~rything. out.
·
"'!here
is
always one
·
side of a
certam tape that I listen to before a
~ame," she said.
!'By'
the time I get
· mto the lockerroom (the· team) al-
ways hears 'All Fired
Up'
by Pat
Benatar."
.
·.
,:
Keys said the song reminds her
of Charlene Fields, a former Red Fox
standout who graduated in 1993.
~nlor forward
Lori Keys
has
-excelled as
a
colleglate ·
athlete
through
hard work and persistence.·
record her senior year.
===::i
Keys entered her freshman year
at Maristwith mononucleosis, which
she said made it difficult to initially
adjust to playing college basketball.
"She's . our real gci-io · kid," he
said. ")Vhen you get to crunch time
and y~u need a bucket or a basket,
she will step up and get that done
for you."
Keys said that after this season
she will hang up the shoes for g90d'.
UcCam
Ale
Photo
Junior center Stacey Dengler
shares similar_ sentiments about Keys
as a friend. and a player.
. "I'm done," she said. "My body
1s done."


45.5.1
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