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Part of The Circle: Vol. 44 No. 6 - March 31, 1994

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VOLUME.44;NUMBER
6
Marl
sf
Colieg~, _P~ughkeepsle,
N. Y.
Students ·· gather· to protest cultural disrespect
by CARI OLESKEWICZ
..,._,,,,___
"""---:r---
calendar, insufficient programming
for students of color and the ad-
ministration's reluctance to remedy
· Managi~g Editor .
Members of El Arco Iris Latino
this.
and· the Black Student · Union
The rally follpwed a meeting bet-
organized tw·o rallies in the. past
ween. the club officers and Presi-
week to protest a lack of respect for
dent Murray, which Camilo said
their cultures and an unwiHingness
went well.
of school administrators to pay at-
. "He seemed concerned and said
tention to their needs and diversity.
-· he would address the issues,"
The.two organizations gathered
Camilo told the crowd. "He is a
on .Wednesday, . March 23, in
nice man and I'm glad he took the•
response to an in¢ident which 0C•
opportunity to meet with us, but-he
cur~d the previous night, and on
had no solutions. He really had no
Tuesday, March 29 for a "Unity
idea any of·this was going ori."
Rally."
·
.
Both Camilo and Cobham said
According to Isobel Camilo, vice
they were glad that the administra-
president of El Arco Iris Latino,
tion was finally paying attention to
cultural music was being played in
their concerns.
the dining hall during dinner on
"lam not satisfied with the ad-
March 22 as part of a celebration
ministration," Cobham said,
of Latino Week. Some students did
"because it has had to come to this
not like the music, and turned
before they listen."
·
down the radio, which belonged to
"The administration is scared," .
a member of the group.
Camilo said. "They don't know
"It
turned ugly when people felt
how to approach this, and they are
they had a right to touch our pro-
frightened."
perty,»Camifo said. "Our culture
· -··
·
·
·
·
·
Raul De La Rosr,, president of
was not respected.
I have accepted
Isabel Camilo speaks tq :students gathered _for Unity Rally..
Circle
photo/Matt Martin
El Arcp Iris Latino, said that there
other cultures when they were ex-
h_·ave _been t_ol_erant,· but being a
.
--
.
.
is a problem with ignorance on
P
ressed."
·
pleJogether, said Afena Cobham,
many feel need
to
be addressed on
d ·
h ·
Id H
11
rrii_nority o_ n campus is not easy.
. b
f
h
II
d
campus an m t e wor . e ca -
M
b
f th
• t·
a. niem er. o .. t e co ege a - . campus:
d
b
r
h
d
em ers o
e orgamza 10n T. lie_ r_ e_ is.a., d_ i __ s_re_·gar_d.fo_r'the_ L_ a_ti_no ,
.
e on mem ers o t e .crow to
"d th t th· · "d t · · · · t ·
-m
__ inistratiC>n_ and graduat_e of_ t_he
Th. ·
· 1 d
Af ·
h
·
·
SaJ
a
IS
mc1 en' was
JUS
·a community and people of color iri 'Class of1992. .
.
e issues me u e
ncan-
s are experiences or concerns.
)
sympto~ of a deeper problem at
the.Marist_.,community." _
. -· -
-
-
~merican
History
Month,
SherRon Williams,
a
first year
MarisL .
.
.
_· .,
•· .·· .•· ._ -.
The Unity. R·auy_helcl"this week :,;<.t\:fact'-she5!t w~s d.isidbuted to
Women's History Month, and
student, said she wanted to see
,
'.;
, _
: "This is the strawthat,broke the ··was organized because students felt . ..
:_t~9s_e
~i:i.·
a!!!!n'dan~e. -"".~ich ·!isted.
Hj~P.ani5
.
Herit~ge> Month.·. be~~g
more_ campus
.
<}C~ivities
>
geared
:,f
···
_
··se:n.ate cb~rges•
·
.tJedyitd"·

_-
:
··A.d.ffilnrstratio·n·
ifi(Jp~e~s\:·to:··.c·ontain '
.
tuition increase for upcoming year
bu
C
__
HRIS_ ·-_B_ E
_
R. IN __
A_
TO
income. There is much more of a
Certain mandated changes, suc_h
·
-
repeate1:lly.byL0Monaco and Stu-
J.
cost factor involved than there was
as taxes, insurance, and amortiza~
by
MEREDl"TH KENNEQY
dent B,odyVice PresidentAnthony
. Staff .Writer ,
·
four years ago.
_
tion, can be easily predicted in
·• Associate Edi!or: .
·_
.
fytignone that the investigation was
Lik_ e sprin_ g
·
fever, ru_·_m_ o_rs
of
a
'.'As_ co_sts
__ go, up,·we're driving
terms of cost each year.· 1n addition
· · ·
-· · · ·
·
·
··
nof'f9cused on him(but he __ ·n_o_ w
·
I
· h
·
11
th
t II bl .
t
h
The -Student Gov'ernment
·
tuitionincrease·havebeenrunning
peope tote public co eges,"· - econro a ecos,suc aspaper
A
·s
· .. t
.. • · t d·t . , . h
·t
believesdiffer:ently.•>. .. .
ra· __ m_ p·_a·_nt.·_L
__ i"ke_·sp_r_1·ng_1•t·s·e1f, actual--
Wood said..
and.maintenance are factors.
socia ion VO e
OJmpeac
.IS
"Iliad no reason not tobelieve
·
Th
.
f
.
. h b d
director of publiuelations;'Daryl _
thl!_m, but Lwa_ s lied_- to. I_twa_ s_to_
figures have been hard to come by
For example, the tuition cost qf
· . - e, bihggest actoarres ifini tane . ul ~det
Ledyard, with qnly'twoweeks lef~
.i111plic
__ att!,-
.
m
__ e;''_.
·
,;
_
Le_ d_yard. s_aid,
so·f;u._ · ,',
..
.
< .. _
,• ·• . :
au~riding theU~iversity of Con-
process, owever,
n - cm m •
to his_-_te_r_
ffi
i_n._o_ ffice. . . _ ·
· ·
·
·
·
· "l
·_•_m_
ight_ n_ ot b_ e
·
co_ m_ ing ·_her_e if· n_ e
__ cticu_ tfor one
·
y_e_ arJo_ r a_ Co_ rine_ cs.
a nd salary and wage increases.
.
'ff_
he_y __ w_._ e_ re looking fo_r b_lood an_d'
·
· •
·
·
.
· "Th · h e 1·tera· 11y consu
.. med
Student Body President' Kent
it had my-name on it.''·
itdoes(increase),-" said freshman
ticutresidentwould be$3,780,ac-
··

.
ey av
1

'
Rhinehart_ sa,i_d Le_d_ ya_r_d w_a_
s_
ch_ arg-
·
fytike·F_ o_u
__ mie
__
r;.
r,_e!lj)ondirig_· to_.
a ..
co_._rd111g .. _·'to •
__ 't_
.
_h __ e I_ 9_93 Peters_on's
the ·majority in any raise in tui-
.
,
Mign_ on
__ e_ sai
__ .dhe be_ liev_ed_t_h_eim~ .

·

'"C
·1·· a· ·ct
ed with gross negligence,_ which. peachmentw'as unnecessary at this . runior thaLtuitioniw'ould be, in-. Guideto.·Four Year Colleges.The
10
n,
ampi
11
s
1
'
.
stemmed from his failure
to
issue
·
·
d
·
. creased in,upward of'$20,000 for
same book listed Marist's
tuitiori at
According to Campi\jj, Vision.
··the ··comm·tt
..
. S _ .. I
late ate.>.
.,. ' --
·
.,.
th_en __ e_x_·t_a_c __ a
__
de_m
__
i_c_-year.
·
_._. ··_ ·_.-·,
$9,
:
8··1
·
3_·
'94wili'havenoaffhectontfuiti_ol.n.
.
. ',. ·.
.··
.. I
ee - on .. exua
.
.
',_'_U __ ee_l.thatat thi_s, .-_point __ i_n
.
_ti_m_,_ .. e
· ·
'
..
·

·
The op

·
or t e new ac11ty
A_ W_a_ r_ enes
__ s' su_r __ v
__ ey _t,h_ 'e sec_ ond
__ day
·
h ·
· · ·
·
A_nd
t_
lia
.
___ t_· is exa_ ct_ly_· th __ e_rea_s_o_ n_·
··o·'
b"
f ·
· -·
·d·
· · ·
. .era ion
·
·
t e 1ilvest1ga_tiori .was unne_cessary·
.
.
.
- ne · 1g actor,. ·accor mg to
-11 -b th
h. f d th t
Id
of_·votin_g:
0
,
_duri,ig the.st_udent
·
d' ·-·ba1· -·.·
ct·-,-.
·
whyitwon'ttakesu_cha-drastic
·
w
··d· ''-th···1·· · ·
·
· ·ct'··A·.
wi _-_e.roug
un s
a wou
an aver' r:epnman 'was all that
h
.
' . . '
.
.
'
. ' 00 '
IS
e oss
m
state a1 .
t ...
_ha_ve gone to_C_anterbu, ry Garden
:government elections on Wedness
- d d,, M" · ·
·ct ,,
·
B ·
. ike,accord_ing to Harold W_ ood,
one
·nt' bet
t t'
a· t
d
.
was nee , e ·'.
ignone sai ' . ut
- . .
.
·ct· .
f.
-
.
p01 '
weens a e gr n s a11 .
A_ pa_rtm_ ents_ ne_ xt ye_ar_·._,
.
day;'Feb. 2t . ·. .
. -, __ . •. . . .
the Senate made a decision and I
.v1ce-pfes1 ent o admissions and
Bundy Funds, the school received
A
l
h
.
The. charge will be hro:ught
supportit,"
- .
._· enrollment. .
. . . .
.
.
approximately $L mil)ion. Marfat
" nd.thenyou ook at t e pie
beforethe __ J_ud_ic_fa_ry·_. __ B.o_a_r_
.
_d __ ,._·w_h_·.o
.
"We'd be cutting our own
I
.
.
.
d$300000
andseehowmanypiecesitcanbe
·
· ·
• ·
LoMonac_o. said he believes the·
current
Y
receives aroun
· • •. - ·
·cu_t .up 'i_nt· o," · s· aid C_ampilii.
will decide
oii' a_ny further actions
throat," Wood said.
in the·ca
_
se.
. . .
Senate would not have made such
Wood said·· because
of
the
Anthony
V ..
Carripilii, <:hief
"The, final decision is actually
Ledy_ ard,_ who manned the
an important decision without
schools Marist has to compete
financial officer for Marist, points
made in May by the Board of
. .
-
-
good_ rea_son.
. h
·
1
· .-.-
.
Id
out thatMarist is·a tuition inten-·· T_ rustees·,--a·fter the"ir·finance com-
nomina_ tion t_able-fo_ r the _Facu~ty of
·
,
wit ,· a arge tmuon mcrease wou
· ·
·.
the Year Award, said he was never
''Yealt there are only two weeks
not be in the school's best interest
siv_e school, meaning that moS
t
of
mittee and the president give their
directed to issue the COSA survey
_
left but are we being responsible if
and in addition, the students could
th
e money
th
e· school uses_. comes
input.
and ·assumed ·11 was not h1"s
we don't · follow through,"
not af~o· rd it.
from what students pay. According
All th"
·
·ct
d
·h
to Campilii, some large universities
mgs consi ere , neit er
responsibility.
.
LoMonaco said.
Wood said the admissions
receive approximately $65 million
Campilii nor Wood expect to see an
"I had absolutely no intentions
L
.. d
d.
:d,
h .
• ·
d
dep_artment, · being · particularly
1
-
11
state a·n· d resea·rch'grants, thi"s ·is _ unusually large increase in tuition.
.
, e yar .. sa~ · e :was_concerne
· · f h ·


Th"
. of tampering with the survey. or
about LoMonaco's part in the deci-
aware o t e s1tuat1on of mcoming
the amount . in Marist's entire
1s would amount to an increase
sabotaging the results; I can'.t show
sio_ n to impeach
·
him because he
students, _is a supporter of nominal
budget.
ranging between 4 and 6 percent.
negligence in something that was
increases in tuition.
"0
· ·
·
·
·

·
·..
. .
,
was present the· Wednesday . the
·
- ·
·
Campilii said there are numerous
ur tu1t1on mcrease 1s gomg to
never asked of me,,, Ledyard said.
survey
Wl!,S
not issued. Ledyard said
Families are facing a situation
factors that affect. the increase in
reflect what other schools are go-
Senate
Speaker
: Jason
LoMonaco;· a member of COSA,
where they have less digressionary
tuition:
ing," Wood said.
LoMonaco said he asked for the in-
asked . him where. the survey ·was
vestigation, that lead toLedyard's
and -he knew it was not being
impeachment, to find out what
issued.
·
happened. and prevent something
similar from happening.again.
· "It is my feeling that if anyone
"It started out to try to get a
was delinquent that dayOit was Jay
greater idea of-what had happen-
LoMonaco and he should have
ed but all the testimony pointed to
been the one to·act. He is on the
negligence on Daryl's part,,,
committee and should have
LoMonaco said.
known,". Ledyard said.
The investigation was conducted
. LoMonaco, who was working at
by Joe Salvayon, the Elections
the Student Government election
Commissioner, and Colleen Egan,
the Parliamentarian.
·
table, said he was too busy · to
notice the actions at the table
Salvayon said the investigation
Ledyard was supervising. .
was looking at the whole picture
and not just at a particular
Ledyard
said
he
now
individual.
·
understands wtiy students do not
Ledyard said he was told
seem to care or get involved.
Circle
non-scientific
poll
In a recent survey, more than 300 Marist students were asked to res-
pond yes or no to the fallowing question: ,.
.
Do you feel earning a Bachelor's degree makes you a marketable com-
modity in today's workforce?
Yes - 147
No.- 190









































































































































































































































































































2
M

rr
..
Jtthaa
·.
·
irtlitates
·
tt.fe
·.
<trt
>
ne~,:

·
·
·
,
.•
~Pa1>1er
,
~?Yffte1<;
.
..
. .
.
b;
JUS;IN S~REM~l--
.
:
..
·
. ,;
.
(Duv
.
all),
-
a~d his
<
arch-vnia;n;
·
111~nagi~g
-i
-h~itl
/-
,
·.

·
..
-:<
,
> .
.
,
·:_:·,
, :. ::
.
.
:
\
.
.
: ·•
.
...
-
ni111s
:
o
·
~
\
11
?
w~
~
i
t
~.
:
:
:i{t-;;
;
f
.
L:
'
:
:
:
;J
\/\::j
.
.
editor
'
Alicia Clark (Close)
>.
The enti~e
111m . ,',
tThe Paper!' is st{Hftin l<>
,
watch, the>ugh,
.
'

: . After
.
a bungled:"atiempt:ai a
·
ca( burgla
'
i-y;
·

It'~
tough to d
'
ecide which was more over~
revolves aroun~
·
the murder
·
o.f_ twp \vhit~
·
because
,c
it
'
rar~ly)ose
s'
it
(-
1:
·
ornic
_,
~dge
:
·
·
i:,
_
·•
L~ary needs
a
'
quick escapi
·
'
anfu~~(
.
Ca~9l(n,
(
·
.
done
·
in
.
Ron HO\vard's
<
latest
fihn
"The
·:
businessmen in New York City; their deaths
_ .
ff
here's
_
a
hiladous
~
:
fight
.
s~e11e
,
~et\veen
_
:
·
and
,
Uoyd
:
Chasse
'
u/(Jl,ldy Davis and,J(evin
Paper": the mini soap operas between each
suspected
:10
be
?
~racial"
-
homicicles
.
.
·
~
::
.
Ke~t<?!}
a~~ Cl9sein the pri_ritiniare~ as they
. :
spacey) t'o hide o"~t
.'
i!!
:
i
u~~r
-
~~
-
i(
¢~
-
~~
~c,
iW~t
· .
.
character cir Marisa Tomei's phony pregnant
The pohce arrest two black men; who hap
~
.
.
deb~te wh1
_
ch front page will run
;
with more
and eventually figure
.
Ol!ta way to
,
escape.
.
belly.
.
.
..
:
pe~
H)
be
.
i~nocent'. arid Cl~rkv,
1
ants to pr!rit
gr§a
_
t f,i.~tic~ffs betwee~
·
McD?ugal(Qtiai
_
~)
:
_
-
~e
.
ary's
_
burg~ar ~o<>~ fi
_
tj
~s
.
that
~
-
~
!s
·
more
..
The film certainly has
.
star power,
·
with
.,
the story \~llh the_.two m,~n
m
han?cuffs with
and Jason
:
Al(!~~nder of ''Seinfeld'.
.
' ~ame. · presoccup1ed .~1th}h~ gh~SSfUf;,f~
_
'!l!!Ypr.9,
:
Glenn Close~ Michael Keaton, the always
the word 'GOTC
_
HA! below 1t.
.
·
.
.
·
Howard has never been a huge
_
favonte of blems than plannmg how
:
_
tcr
-
get:away.
\
>.
,
·
.
.
talented Robert Duvall, Randy Quaid arid
Hackettmeanwhilefeelsthereisn'tenough
:
critics
:
as
,
he received a few_Iashings·for
.
.
·
As
,
you i:ans·ee:
:
the plot
,
isn
_
'ttciocom-
.
Tomei
,
who is popping up all over the place
evidence to have such
,
an implicating
.
"Backdraft" and
-
"F)fr
.
~hdAway."
'
·
.
plicated
,
yet
:
thei-t:'s plenty of:one-J
_
iiiers and
after she won an Oscar last year.
.
~e~dline
,
.
s<> ~e attempts to find,; eno~
_
gh
: :
But
••
'
'.
The
:
~ap~r~•
.
doe
5:
provide
-
a_
l
ood
·'
bizarre situ
.
ations (o~e havi
_
ng _
_
Le~ry
j
JQ~~
-
as
"
The slight flaw lies in Howard's tendency
evidence
.
to prmt_ a _more
,
"honest story.
look
~
t
-
the d1rt-d1ggmg apd t~e feelmg _of
·
Dr. Wong; the c1;n1phfs
_
marnage
·_
cop~selor
..
·
to blow certain characters out of proportion,
"The Paper'' has mte!lS!! moments, mostly
anxiety that proves why newswnters must 1
_
n- .
· ·
during a
i
family Christmas gathering) to.k
e
ep
much like he did in ."Parenthood."
taking place within
,
the
.
newsroom, but loses
deed
'
love
.
what they do to s,tay iil the
the
·
audienceJaughing.
:
(Grade: .B
..:).
i
.<
,
·
.
Nevertheless
;
Howard does succeed in cap-
some of its ground, getting a little too deep
business
.
(Grade: B)
.
_
,
.
·
·
_ ,·
.
.
.
_
In movie news Trekkers are now
·
assu
r
ed
turing the fast paced
-
fury of
a
daily city
into certain characters.
.
,
.
.
-
,
Denis
'
Lec1ry,
'_
on the
·
other hand
;
continues
~f "Star Trek
:
.G~ne
r
ations
/
' wflich
.
~eg
a
n
_
tabloid, and this is where "The Paper''
_-
Howar~ throws in unnecessary subplots
~is mov
}
!! o~slaiight
.
with "~he Ref,"
_
a c~m-
.,
filining last ~eek
:
arid
:,
will_
,
* r
/
Pair
!
c~
.
shines most.
·
hke Berm e's J:!rostate cancer
-
and problems
.
·
edy about. a
·
burglar who kidnaps a f1ghtmg
Stewart as Picard
·
and -William Shatner
.
as
·
Keaton plays metro editor Henry Hackett
with his daughter, while Tomei has her pm-
.
co
_
uple.
\
·
_
_
·
,.
.
.
.
·
.
, ·
.
.
·
Kirk;
.
·
. ·
_
_
·
·
_
·
· · ·
:'.:'
·

__
of the New York Sun, a paper that's.always
blems worrying
·
abou
r
whether or not her
_
·
It's
_
directed by Tec:IDemme, broth~r
.
of
. "Generations" will be a joining of
tM
two
.
on the
·
brink
·
of shutting down (remind you
.
busy journalist husband
will
be a goodfather
Jonathan ("Philadelphia''-)
.'_ ·
. ·
:
~
·
.:,
·
casts,
.
but apparently
will
not feature
of The Post at all?).
to th~ir future child.
.
_
.
.
,
After his hJlarious spots on MTV;
:
Leary Leonard Nimoy, who did notlike the script
Hackett is constantly burdened with a
.
lnst¢ad of getting the audience sympathy
has g_one on to starin such filn;is
as
!
,
'l)ell_,lo
_
li-
.
he
.
was· given
°
but is not ruling out future
.
number of things: his wife and her pregnan
~
that Howard
.
wants,
·
the extra
.
character
.
tion Man
;'

,
•~Judgn'ient"Night/' ''Who's the
··
''Trek"
,
involvement
,
c
:
'
·
.
·
·
.
cy (Tomei),
_
his hacking
·
editor B
e
rnie
development slows
.
down the speed of the
Man?'', and ''.The Sandl
_
ot»with many more
.
Stay tuned
:
·
Feel·
theprimar urge
to go
beyorfd
with
Souitdgdfdi!n
Fortunately, l didn't have t~ dig
Dumb Se
x,
" ai:ld
'
it has
.
a somewhat
.
song
.
on
,
;
Sup
.
erunknown," is
.
Arid
last, bu
(
certainly not
,~
~
~t;
by
DANA BUONICON.TI
The new Soundgarden record,
"Superunknown," besides being
near-perfect
,
gives me a good in-
dication
that
I've been occupying
this space for
tqo long
.
After all, the first record I
reviewed.for The Circle was Soun-
dgarden's "Badmotorfinger," in
the fall of 1991.
Like it or
·
not, though
,
I'm here
through the end of the semester to
rant and rave about all the bands
you've probably never heard of
before (and probably should care
· a lot about.)
Yeah ... sometimes I dig pretty
deep to find the good new stuff,
and let me tell you, it gets increas-
ingly harder to find music that's
even remotely
·
cha\\enging,
too deep to find "Sliperuriknown"
Beatlesque (as much
.
as
Soun-
"Like Suicide."
... ·
,
.
-.
.
'
is drummer extrao:rdinaire Matt
.
to
be able to tell you
.
that°iiis ab-
dgarden can
·
be Beatlesque
;
I sup-
"Lik~Suidde''
_
isaimiidgen over
.
Cameron.
-
.
sotively posilutely their best record
·.
pose) melody
:
·
.
_
. .
.
.
seven minut
_
es long; but'it sure
··
yet
.
'
.
·.
.
As
.
a
,
result
;
_
I hope ~hey never
doesn't seem
'
Hke
it;
because it has
Cameron pulls off some amaz-
.
Even though "Badmotorfinger'
.
'
-
playit ori the radio
.
or niake a
·
_
video
one
'
of Thayil's best solos ever.
ing stuff on this record; not only
had a couple dud songs
;
and
I
,
vas
·
for it; because
'
that would just
.
ruin
Song
·
wri
__
ti
_
'rtg
·
di.It
_
ies,
·
.
·_
t
_
hou
_· ·
gh
·
do all of his fills sound effor tless;
·
·
·
.
· ·
.
and his beats rhyt
_
hniically tricky,
kinda disappointed with th,.eir per~
a beautiful song (and gee, like that
mostly d
_
one b
_
y
_
Co
_
·
.
r
il
ell,
_.
were
_
'
also
_
:
"
tL
11
·
1
··
·
2
Ih d
h
··

h
.
-
d
1
·
·•
1
·
·
b
_
uthe
_
finallygetsthegreatso
_
und
,ormancea
o apaooza ,
a
.
as
·
n t
appene
·
·
ate y
or donebybassistBen
_
S
__
h
_
ep
_
h

erd,who
·
d
f
I.
b
.
·
h'
?)
out
·
of his drum kit he
_
deserves
a
goo
ee mg
·
a out
anyt mg.
.
wrote
·
'.'Head Down'
:
' (excellent
"Superunknown" before
I
heard
Also,
I
have to mention guitarist
song) and "Half," ,vhii::h is a weird
(thanks to producer Michael
it.
.
Kim Thayil, who tooksdmeserioils
·
Arabia11-sounding number that is
·
Beinhorn,
I
imagine.)
Featuring a mixed bag of songs
guitar
·
lessons before making
'
this
-
pretty good for a laugh.
.
.
.
·
soundgarde~, currently
.
touring
that includes the typical ultra-heavy
record, I
-
think; he really sounds
·
The
.
·
·
real
.
.
reason
.
·
_
Europe if.I remember correctly,
riff ones Soundgarden are famous
good on
it.
.
"Superunknown"is sucha killef will kick off their
·
U.S. tour on
for, the record also has some very
One of my favorite songs at the
record is that while a Jot of the
Memorial
·
oay
:
·
n(
;
>n-Soundgarden songs, like
.
moment is "Let Me Drown,"
songs are heavy, there's a definite
"Black Hole Sun" and "Head
which has a terrific bridge that
pop underbelly to
·
them
,
_
_ _
:
What could be a better way
:
to
Down
.
"
sounds a little like the
'
bridge for
·
.
Gornell continues tc,
1
gi:ow
·
as a
.
.
w
elcome th
e
sullimer than with the
"Black Hole Surt," written by
"Otitshiiled
,
" but "Let Me
-
songw~iier; the rmisic
_-
is more
.
firs
C
inust~see
·
concert t
_
our
of
the
singer Chris Cornell, is their closest
Drown" is
_
a better song.
.
focused and his lyrics continue to
·
·
year•
.
.
·.
_
.
.
·
.
.
.
_
-
.:
.
..
attempt at
a
pop hit since "Big
·
·
My
other favo~ite, and t'1e best improve, as weU.
-
.
_
>
· :
<
.
1
can't. wait
:
'
,
.
:
..
·
pox
Dares
rear
·'
[it
'
lllteffjf)t
;
\
.
.
.
t

-
i-y~d
~~,
>
!~c
3
~
JI
to save
floundering
Stlt:e?r
.
.
.
.
.
·
·
.
.
' .
•.
_
:
,
.,
.-
•.

_
. ,
·- • .:.·-·
. ,
>
·,
.
• .

·
-
~-
.

by
JENNIFER GIANDALONE
· ."Whe~e there's a will, there's a
relative."
.
.
Or in this case, a few relatives.
That's the idea behind Imagine
Entertainment's "Greedy."
.
Writers. Lowell Ganz and
Babaloo Mandel, the writing team
that brought us such comedies as
"City Slickers," "Splash," and
. "Parenthood," pair up again for
this
.
story about good, old-
fashioned American greed
.
. -
Uncle
·
Joe
.
McTeague (Kirk
Douglas, "Spartacus") is a very
rich old man in a wheelchair who
owns and runs his own
·
scrap metal
business.
As you
·
can probably guess
,
it
doesn't
.
take long for
·
the money-
hungry relatives to converge _on
their wheekhair~bound uncle in the
hopes that they wilt'get a
·
share of
his fortune.
They
·
don't
.
want the money
.
-
because they have
_
earned it, but
.
because they are related to the man
'
who worked his ,vhole life
.
·
for it.
·
These noisy, obnoxious relatives
include Phil Hartman ("Saturday
Night Live"), Ed Begley
_
Jr. ( "St.
Elsewhere"),
·
and Colleen Camp
("Clue").
·
This group is about as subtle as
a sledgehammer as they shmooze
Uncle Joe and try to convince him
that they are looking out
·
ror his
best interests and not after his
millions of dollars.
Everyone tries to best everyone
else and make each other look bad
in front of the man they believe is
no longer competent to control his
own money.
:
They definitely make an effort to
make sure that Uncle Joe knows
about each other's failings, like
drunk driving, unemployment, and
adultery
.
The situation becomes even
worse when they meet Uncle Joe's
new ''friend'
.
' M~lly
-
·(Oii
~
i
a
.-:
:
e11ds iip
:
g
_
~
i
'
t
f
rig
i
iii~dl\i~d \V_i!itthe
)
.
d
'
Abo), a sexy young w~m1~nwh9
,
-
.

gree~
·
th~t
-
~
,y
_
allo,3/~
J
1is.
'
r
e!ati
~
~s
\
i
came to Joe's
.
house one
.
night
•.
Michael J
.
-
F
_
ox
_
perforJ11s with
delivering pizza atjd since
'
then has
..
the sitme
.
_
eh~rg
f
he'_s used
:
_
in
.;.
hi~
_
stayed on as his ''nurse:!'
:
·
: ,.
other :roles
;
,
but }t,l
_
so
:
d2es
The family believes
:
tluifshe is a
:
.

somethmg
-
h~
.
h~s
,-
never
,
.
d~11e
-
.
gold-digger andUncle Joeis
:
going
before,
::
-
.
' .
)
· .
. .
:-
>;
••;
_;,,
_
;_-
to leave her all of his
.
money.
'

He
~~s
h1~ ~
r
st
_
n_u~
.
e
,
sc~ne
,
com
~
-
Little do they know, Ui).de Joe
P!ete :,v1~h a
.
bowluig ~1i;i tatto() on
_
knows exactly wha:fthey'ri
:
up to
'
his rear.
_
·.·
._ .. :
.
. :
· ,
.
,
.
.
_ .
.
and sees right 'through them from
..
:
Some <>f t~e
,
fa1m1est_mo01ei;its m_ .
the minute they
.
walk through
.
his
the film co'TTe from Phil ~~rt'1}an.
·
front door bearing birthday gifts.
·
·
He h
_
as a
.
yery- bl
_
at~nt
:r
ay
:
·
of
_
~o
,
the cou
s
ins bring out their
_
·
portra}'.mg
-;
his chai:a1;:ters
i
_
:
wh1ch
·
seer
.
et w
_
eapon
:
the only relative Joe
woi:__ks Just ~s wel
_
l here as 1t
.
does
·
ever liked.
.
.
on "Saturday Night Live.'.'
'
Danny McTeague (Michael
J.
When yo
lJ
'
tat<e aw~y lllI
:
the·
Fo
x,
"Back to ~he Future") is the jokes ~ndlook into the meaning of
son
,"
of

the only nephe,v that the scnpt, y()u wiUfind a real; sim-
·
disagreed
·
,vith Uncle
Joe
about pie message.
.
_:·
.
__
_
.
everything and never wanted one
Everyone \"vant
s
things hahdecltci
;
.
cent: from him.
.
.
them ori a silver platter
,

.
:
.
Danny is an unsuccessful
~
Deep down, even though
·
they
meijiber of
the pro-bO\vlers tour don't admit
it, no one ,vants to
who needs $300,000 to invest in a
work for it.
·
.
.
.
bowling center.
. .
And when they finally get it
Reluctantly
{
Da~ny and his (w!tateverit i
_
s)
_
t
_
h<,y don't w~nt to
_
gfrlfriend
;-
art
,
ABC S1forts producer shar
_
e; and
_
they
·
always vlan~ ~ore.

.
.
named
.
Robin
·
(Nancy Travis.
AlthOugh

"Greedy•~
_;
has
,''
a
'
·
.
"Three Men and
A Baby") go
to
predictable ending, it's som~times
the mansion in the country to see hard to figure out when
·
certain
Uncle Joe.
characters are telling the truth and
Danny isn't like his cousins
,
but when they are not.
·
·
·
·
-
Touro
Law
Center
-
.
.
'NVITl~G APPUCA~JQNS FOR FALL 1994 .
_

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

DAY AND EVENING CLASSES
Select either a Full-Time Day,
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.
.
If
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visit, you are encouraged to contact
:
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Jacob 0
.
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Huntington, New York 11743

·

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.
~~:
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I
I
THE
CIRCLEi} MARCH
31,
1994
3
.A.Cid.
·-vp·
.
tO. take position at Union
-"".'""'.""------------
. _:by_PETE "fARTAGLIA,
. . • Staff Writer.
degree in Anthropology from Bryn
Mawr College and her Doctorate in
Rec~ntly, Dr.' Linda Cool
an-
Anthropology
from
Duke
_nou~ced she willbe resigning' from
University.
her position as Associate Academic
·
Vice ~resident to take a similar job.
. .. Her career. in education began at
at Umon College in Schenectady, · Santa Clara University as
a
Assis-
NY . . ,
, ·
'.·.
.
. tahntPhrofibessor·ofhAncthhr~po,ogy,
Cool will becomeiheAcademic'
t en·s e ecame t e.
a1rperson
Vice Presidenf and the.• Dean · of
of the Anthropology Department
Faculty'at Union College.
at die:university, before coming to
"It,
s all so new to me, the deci- . Mari st
,
in 1987'
sion to take the job at Union was
'in her years· atMarist,
Cool
has
very recent.,,
.· . ,
. . .
;'
seen -the college gr<>W in it's
Cool began her job as Assistant
academics and the quality of stu-
Academic Vice President at Marist
.
rt
· ·
in 1987.She bec.ame'the Associate . dent,
1
e.
Academic Vice Presidentlasf surri-
,·, '-'Thfs institution really has
mer. Originally from Missouri,
tightened it's academic programs
Cool received a Bachelor of Arts . and really improved upon the sup-
porf servi~es in which we offer our
. students," ·she said .. · ·
One of the most important deci-
sions or choices she feels-the school
has made in her years at Marist was
the cap on the enrollment of the
college.
"I think that putting a cap on
our enrollment was a tough deci-
sion for this school, but in the end
we · will remain a small college
who's standards as a whole have
gotten bigger and better and avoid-
ed just increasing numbers, not
standards." Some of the things she
said she has been happy to see at
Marist is the development of the
college as a truly united campus.
"Whenl first got he.re the cam-
pus ,vas. spread . out with. students
having to cross· the street to go to
classat MaristEast, now with the
Dyson Center and the construction
of the new campus center I think
that Marist is finally going to have
the unified campus which the
students need and deserve," Cool
said.
Cool said in her time at Marist
she, along with many others, real-
ly strived to provide better
academic and support services for
Marist students.
"l ·like to think of myself as a
team . player who recognizes good
ideas and then goes about suppor-
ting them," she said. "I'm really
Housing' revises new application format
by
~COTT RONAGHAN
. Staff Writer
The 1994-1995 academic year
housing selection forms have
brought new chariges to the reser-
vation process for students apply-
ing .. for on campus housing at
Marist.
Each Spring semester for the
past 12 years Marist students have
had the opportunity tO apply for on
campus housing. And each year it
seems as though the Office of
Housing and Residential L_ife adds
a few changes to the reservation
process,
·
Lasfyear the availability ofthe
new eight person Townh.ouses ,vas·
added to the selection process. This
year Marist has added. the new
M{d~Rise,· but also · 1ost. the
availability or.· the Canterbury ·
Garden Apartments.
According to Jim Raimo, ~ifec- ·
. ·
·
by
COLLEEN .MURPHY.
:.Staff Writer.:
Abou{ihis time every year
t
.Bob
.
Lynch can
·
be; found staring
hopelessly at his computer screen,··
surround.ed by: paperwork, and
usually:
·
talking.to himself:.
)t
must be priority points season.
As the Coordinator of Student·
Activities; Lynch is in charge of .
pu'tting priority pqints from stu-
dent dubs into a database for the
• college housing system.
.
·
:'I'm only :working. for about
another half houf on this;'' Lynch
said one evening at s.:30.
·
.
But it was 8p.m. before Lynch
cl<:>sed 'up; his./office, grumbling
,
about a dub that 'didn't have its list
of.pofots•-inyet.
·_It
is not unusual to see him after
business hours; sometimes he is in
his office untit midnight or. later.
.\Veekeiids are:common too, if
there is a campus center event or
ev.e!n
a
basketbalLgaIDe.
' "He's , always here . when
something'_s going on,'' said Nick
tor of housing and residential life,
the Joss of the Canterburv Garden
Apartments will not cau·se severe
problems for students, mainly.up-
perclassmen, requesting on campus
housing.
'.'The loss. of Canterbury will
result in 100 students Ouniors and
seniors) losing housing spots,"
Raimo said. "However, the new
Mid-Rise houses approximately 350
students who request on campus
housing."
.
Raimo said another, positive ef-
fect of the building of the new Mid-
Rise is more housing facilities are
available to juniors and seniors.
"Juniors and seniors will win out
the. most. They_ now have the op-
portunity to request housing in the
Townhouses,. the . Mid-Rise; and
· also theGartland.Co111monsApart-
ments,''. lfaimci said .. , ..• ·.
'I"he. addition· of the new Mid-
Rise . brings up the probl~m of
whether or riot it will be ready for
the fall semester. Last year Mari st
had to relocate 20 to 40 students
because the new Townhouses were
not ready by the time students ar-
rived on campus.
.
"The Mid-Rise should be ready
by August 1," said Raimo. "This
year we are sending the housing
assignments out on July 15 so the
students will know where they live
early, and can make arrangements
if they do not get housing."
Moreover, Raimo said it was
· much easier to relocate 20 to 40
students than it will be to do the
same to almost 350 students.
Another addition
to
the reserva-
tion process is the new feature of
students being able to break off
from their respective housing
· groups.
This year students will not only
receive their group average for
priority points, out they will also
get their own sub-average based on
'· roommate pairing. A_ student and
Capuano, a junior duty manager at
knows where everything is.
the Office of College
·
Activities,
.:He was;a biology major while a
"He doesn't gQ home until · student :at Marist, and then a
everyone'else does.'.'
·
· teacher for eight years at St. Mary's
Lynch is also the administrative
School in Poughkeepsie.
adviser to the Student Government
But he was never too far off
Association's. Executive Board,
campus, as he worked in Marist's
working closely with the Student
Little People Summer Program
Programming Council and the Of-
since he. was an undergraduate.
fice of Student Affairs.
This program .brought children
'.Lynch is a Maristalumnus and
to campus for day-camp activities
has been in the Activities Office for
such as arts and crafts; athletics
about eight years.
and summer theatre.
"I've been in this position since
"The program is on hiatus due
1990, before. that, the assistant
to the construction, which is· a
director of activities under Betty
shame, but you can't have kids and
Yeaglin for about four years,''.
construction in the same area; it's
Lynch said. ·
just not safe," Lynch said.
His own.office is a bit cramped
Much of his free time was spent
this year, but he is hoping :to gain
.in the Theatre Guild and Children's
some space· in the new campus
Theatre, now the Marist College
center; It's
·
cluttered with video
Council on Theatre Arts.
tapes It's full of performers, lots of
And he still helps out MCCTA
paper early.this semester, with un-
by building sets and doing lights for
wanted textbooks in his window.
its productions.
Rather than see them thrown
One of his big jobs· is putting
out,Lynch will donate them to a
together campus activities.
school in need.
"The SPC really does a great
He fits right in though, and he
J9b, I enjoy working with them,"
his or her' roommate will have the
opportunity to break away from
the group, but must fill out the ac-
cording sections on the housing
forms.
Raimo said he thinks the new
system should be able to help in-
dividual students get the housing
they request.
"Students choose their own
housing spots, so breaking away
from the group might help some
students receive the housing they
requested without worrying about
their group average,'' said Raimo.
Raimo said he.believes the priori-
ty· point system has been very ef-
fective in determining. which
students should receive on campus
housing,
"The priority point system has
been good because it rewards those
students who have the campus in-
volvement, the good discipline, and
the high gpa," said Raimo;
he said .
Lynch and Vice President for
Student Programming Lynn Russo
·attend conferences where acts are
showcased for college perfor-
mances to make contacts with
agencies and promoters.
"We work with a good core of
individuals in the SPC that has
great ideas and can work as a
team." Lvnch said.
So Lynch is used to the construc-
tion, but more excited about the
Vision '94 project.
"I can't wait for it to open,'' he
said, "l'.m excited about the
cabaret and more space for the
whole building."
Lynch hopes that the new cam-
pus center will provide an at-
mosphere that wiU attract students,
faculty, and staff to congregate and
talk together, as in a real student
union.
"It's so important for both the
teachers and the students to meet
out of the classroom, and out of
classroom behavior," Lynch said.
proud of the job we have done with
the HEOP program, the Learning
Center, the Marist Abroad pro-
gram and many others."
Cool said she recognizes that.the
school has made some significant
improvements, but still believes
that there are many areas such as
the library which need to be work-
ed on in the future.
She said she is excited about star-
ting_ her new job at Union College
in July but will miss the people that
she knows
as
the Marist
communitv.
"It
will be difficult to leave this
place (Marist), it's so different then
other places that I've been, I'll miss
it a lot," she said.
B,in0tto hopes to add spice to Marist dining
75 can prepare an attractive meal
for those students and faculty,
by
JOHN DOUGHERTY
Staff Writer
Most schools have never had a·
. reputation for serving good food,
• and most students consider Marist
College having -a below average
quality of food.
The new student center is not the
only beneficiary of the remodelling
process. The blueprint for the new
cafeteria is on the wall in the cur-
rent cafeteria. The plans are expan-
sive and the end product will be a·
more modernized and capable
cafeteria for the students.
Joe Binotto was hired to improve
the quality of food and find out
what the students want. Seiler's has
changed their . name
to·
Sodexho
and Binottowas hired to upgrade
the food services department at
Marist.
"Marist has a lot of room for
improvement," Binotto said. He
said he was referring to the quality
of food now being served .
Binotto was previously director
of food services at Fordham
University in New York. He said
that Fordham had a similar pro-
blem with the quality of food when
he first arrived there.
Binotto said the best progress
was made with the input of the
·
students and he feels that technique
can be used just as effectively at
Marist.
"We are here for the students,
but we don't know what they want
unless they talk to us,'' Binotto
said.
..
He stressed the interaction bet-
ween students and staff because
both need to work together to
make the end product attractive.
He is not only concerned with the
appearance of the food, but that is
the first attraction the students look
for.
"My door is always open to the
students for their ideas,''. Binotto
said. His office- is located in the
corner next to the beverage area.
Binotto has plans to let the cooks
be creative to make the dishes more
palatable. The new attitude
towards preparing the meals will be
enhanced with the addition of new
food stations and upgrading of the
kitchen facilities.
Every food station on the outer
edge of the existing cafeteria, in-
cluding the salad barand beverage
area, will be relocated around the
new courtyard under construction.
The existing space will be need-
ed for the residents of the new stu-
dent dorms that are under con-
struction adjacent to the cafeteria.
The need to accommodate those
students was · the drive behind
remodeling the cafeteria.
A new grill station will be located
next to the traditional stations
around the courtyard. This grill
station will offer hamburgers and
french fries among other things.
This station will offer breakfast,
lunch and dinner.
The serving lines will also be
remodeled. One line will handle the
entrees and the other _line wil han-
dle specialty cooking such as
sauteed foods.
The cafeteria serves approx-
imately 1625 students and faculty
daily. Binotto believes the staff of
Binotto stressed the need for
cooperation between students and
staff. "It will take money, effort,
knowledge to improve and time,''
he said.
• Binotto is quick to point out the
need for student interaction as a
means of dramatically improving
the quality of food. A new menu
is also in the plans which will reflect
student input. A recent survey done
by food services indicated that
quality and menu selection are im•
portant to students.
A new cabaret is also included in
the plans to replace the Red Fox
Den formerly located on the first
floor of the Campus Center. It will
be in the new Student Center.


























































4
Mid-rise may be the best choice at
,
Afarist ·;
·by
RON JOHNSO~
substance.
. .
. . security caiibe thereafo:f be
efrec:
''The walls can act
as a
fire par- :- live," ·Petricca said .. '
: ·..
•·
thion,'' •Petricca.said.
·
·The first entrance wilfbe located
Staff Writer
Empty sodacans litter
.
the floor,
covered iri dust· and grime.
quote which hangs on a conference
room wall amorig'photographs and
construction· schedules; In it
William Arthur Ward states,
"Wise are those who learn that the
bottom line doesn't always have to
In the new.residence hall, rooms
are gathered together informations
'
known as suites. Suites are com-
prised of two to three bedrooms,
one bathroom, and one . living
room.
Extra safety can be found in the
on the botto11f floor; adjace11t to
tight ~ecurity measures employed at • the ne_w parking lot. The new park~
the new residence hall. For exam-
ing lot will be constructed at ·the
Sounds like the ~verage student's
dorm room, except this dorm room
belongs only to construction
be their top priority."
·
·
Petricca said he believed students
would find this new setup
preferable to the old. dorin
structures ..
workers.
·
Within a Pizzagalli trailer is a
"The whole intent is to make it
as good for the students as possi~
ble," Petricca said.
"These suites are a lot more
private," Petricca added .. "We
tried to make it as 'homey' as·
. possible."
There is no kitchen within any of
these suites. Thus, students who
reside within them will be forced to
use the meal plan.
There are approximately
,_S4
suites, accommodating 480 beds.·
These suites are divided up between
five different floors.
The first and second floors will
hold the residence suites as ,veil as
mechanical portions. The third
floor will be split between residence
and administrative offices. Mean-
while, the fourth and fifth floors
will be 100 percent residential.
Each floor contains approx-
imately two lounges. While a laun-
dry facility will be located on the
third floor for all ofthe new dorms
residents to use.
The rooms within the suites will ·
also possess a unique structure. In
these new rooms, closets will be
situated in the middle. This will
provide a separation between· the
beds of the roommates.
Petricca said this particular
feature would probably heighten
most students' sense of privacy.
"It's almost like having two
separate rooms," Petricca said.
In addition, the new residence
hall is also adequately prepared for
safety measures. Not only is the
building fully equipped with
sprinklers, but the steel beams have
also been sprayed with a fire-proof
· plc, access to the new residence hall
will be restricted to only · two
entrances.
Petricca stated that this ,vould be
beneficial to both lhe students and
to security guards.
"The limited access is so that
base towards the bottom of the :iill.
The second entrance will be located
on the third floor and will be
a
con-
necting corridor with the new stu-
dent center.
Petricca commented that con-
struction of the new residence hall
has been slightly hampered by the
extremely harsh winter.
"Well, of course general produc-
tivity drops in the cold. Plus,
snowstorms keep covering up out-
side materials," he said.
However, Petricca said the con-
struction was pretty much on
schedule. He even went on to say
that difficulties now affecting the
New Townhouses wiU pose no
danger to the new residence hall.
"We'll have no shrinkage orany
problems like that," Petricca said.
SUMMER INTERNSHIP/CO~()p: ti.STING.
.
.
FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT:
.
Desmond Murray,. Assistant Director of Field Experience,
:
DonneHy
Hall
226~
,Extension 3543
Compil~ by: Carole Salamone, Peer Caree'r Assista11t .
·
ACCOUNTING/FINANCE
Aetna Life
&
Casualty
Hortford,CT
.
students interested in lnsurance/•anorice may apply.
App&catlon deodfine: n/o
·
Arthur Ande,son
&
Co;,-,pony
NewYork,NY.
.
_ . .

Audit ond Tax internships ore offered.
Application deadline: n/o
·
Chemical Bonk
NewYork.NY
.
Internships for Junior
oncl Senior minority students ore offered.
Application deodfine: n/o
· ·
Coopers
&
Lybrand • •
NewYork.NY-
..
Internships ore offered in the Auditing Deportment. only Accounting
Majors ore considered.
Application deadline: n/o
Deloitte
&
Touche
NewYork.NY
After a training
program.
interns
ore assigned to wori< with two highly
visible crients.
,
Application deodfane: n/o
Dow Jones
&
Company
New York. NY
:
·
.
·
For
Juniors With
on
interest
in
Finonclol Journalism. one full-lime copy-
editing internship
is
offered.
·
Application cleadrane: n/o
Emst&Young
NewYork,NY
Juniors
who ore Accounting Majors
may apply.
Application deadline: n/o
Merel<
&
Company
Whitehouse Station. NJ
Internships
ae
offered
rn
this
phCllmoceuticol
com;xiny's Accounting.
~ c h
and
Manufacturing
Deportment.
Application
deadline;
n/0
BUSINESS
AblOhom
&
st/OU$
Brooklyn.
NY
Port-time
store Management
internships
are offered
Application
deadline:
n/a
AT&T
Momstown.NJ
Computer
Science.
MIS. AccOI.Slting. Economics. Finance. Morlceting.
International Business.
and
Engineering
majors
may apply.
Students must
be
rn
the
top
50'I.
of
their
c1oss.
ApplicOlion
deadline:
Jau:Jry 31, 1994
Automatic Dato Processing
Roseland.
NJ
Senior
Marl(etk1g
and
BusiooSS
mojols
with
o 2.0 G.PA or higher
moy
apply.
ApplicOlion
deadline:
n/a
Generol
Electric
Bridgeport,
CT
Internships aeoffered
in
HLrTlOll
Resolrces. Engineering
and Technicol
aeos.
.
-
.
Application
deadline:
n/o
Pepsi-Colo's Summer Intern Program ·
Somers. NY
.
. . . ,
_ . . .
.
.,. .

Students interested in pursuing o _career
in
Soles.
Manufacturing. or
Personnel/Employee Relations may apply. minority students encour-
aged.
. .
.
,
.
.
Application deadline: n/o .
SmithKline Beecham
Philoclelph!<J. PA
~
_
.
.
. . .. .
.
'ADrnojorsmayopply.SophomoreondJuniorswitho3.0G.PAorhigher
ore preferred.
·
. ApprJCOOOn deadline: February 1994 · ·
.
.
.
COMMUN-ICAllONS/ADVERllSING/PUBUC RElAllONS
Burson-Marsteller
· · · · ·
NewYork.m
students interested in Public Relations
should
apply .

Application
deadline:
n/o
Creston
&
Assocloles
_NewYork.NY
.
.
. •
.
...
_
En8fgetic detail-oriented appl"iconfs
with
goad
communlcOtions
skills
and joumorism backgrounds ore preferred. Interns work
in
too field of
Marketing. Advertising and Pubric Relations.
·
. Application
deadline:
n/o
Hony N.
Abrahams,
Inc.
New York.
NY
.
.
:
• .
Internships
ore offered
in
Ecfitoriol. Marketing and
Soles
Deportments.
Cfi9nls
include
bookstores. universities
and
museum stud9nls INith Art
lflS!ory backgrounds ore preferred.
MacMillan
Publishing
Company
NewYork.NY
Internships ore offered to minority students
in
the
Creative. Editor!CJI.
F'nonce.MorketingondPublishing Departments.JuniorsondSeniorsore
preferred.
·
Applicalion deadline: n/o
Magazine
Publishers
of
America
NewYork.N'f
Internships oe offered
in
.Advertising
ond
Business.
The
Mmli!y.
Advertising
rntem
Program sponsored
by
the
American
Associa1ion
of
Advertising
Agencies
NewYorl<.NY
Thisprogomseekshlghly-motMJtedminoritycoDegestudenlswhohave
an interest
n
Comrm.nications.
Applicaliondeodline:Jonuoly28, 1994
YOU'lQ
&
Rubicam
NewYOII<.
N'f
Sfudenls with
Conmt.nicofions
t>o:Jcgrounds oe preferred
App6caHon
deadline:
Man::h 15. 1994
IAW
Notional
Lawyers
Glild
Summer
Projec1$
Progn::m
NewYork.NY
studenls
ilterested
in
Low
rTIO'f
apply.
minority
students
ore
8flCOU'•
aged
AppGcaHon
deadline:
February
l.
1994
NON-PROFIT
Phip
Morris
Summer
Jobs
Program
NewYorl<.N'f
ThePhiip
MorrisSoovner JobsPn,gramprovide$60«momNewYolfcCily
c:olege-leowl
students
with
jobs.
some
of
the
non-profit
agencies receiv-
ing
the
Philip Morris unmer WO!lcers
inckJde
the
Alvin
~
Amerlcon
Dance Theatre and Meals on Wheels. AD majors may apply; minority
students
are en<:ouraged.
·
Apprication decdDne: n/o .
,··.·
.
.
.
·,·:
.
.
·

.
• · '
.
-;
,··
PUBLISHING
-. .. .
Com
bridge University
Press
. New-York.
N'(.
. _
... . . "
.
,

.
.
,
,
: Internships ore
"
offered
in the
areas of Editing. Marketing and General
.Writing; English majors ore prefened and computer
knowledge
ls
helpful
Application decdfine: n/o
.
·
.

Forrer.
Strt:ius
&
Giroux
NeWYoi1<; NY .
. . . .
.
.
. Interns rotate through
the
firm's various deportments: Editorial. F'anonce
and Marketing,
_ .
·
·
Appl"ic:aliori deadline: n/o
John
Wily
and Sons .
N_ewYork.NY. ·
. .
:
,
. .
.
· Interns
ore exposed
to
_the Ecfllorlal. Rnonce
and
Marketing Operations
• of
the
furri. Juniors and Seniors ore preferred.
Application deadline;
n/o
Random House·
NewVorl<.m _.
_

·...
.
.
.
. Interns ore
exposed to
every
focet of pubrishing business.
ApprlCCllion cleodrane: n/o
··
·
Simon
&
Schuster
NewYork.NY
.
.
.
.
Interns
ae
assigned
to work
in
the Ecfrtoriol, F'anonce. and Marketing
Deportments. .
'
Apl)lical!on
deodine:
n/0
THE SCIENCES
AT&T
. Moolslown. NJ
.
. . ._
.
,.
,
. Computer Science, MIS, Accounting. Economics. Rnance,
Marketing,
lnternotiona
Business.
Engineering majors rooy
apply.
students
must be
·
in the
fop
50%
of
their
class.
Appocation
deadline:
Jonuory 31, 1994
Broolchown
National lobs
Upton,N'f
.
lntemshipsoreofferedlnChernistry.Engineering.Biology,NuclearMeci-
cine,
Applied
Mathemollcs,
High-
and
low-fneigy
Physic$. Solid-State
~
and
Science
Wntng.
Applicallon
deodline: Vories
with
the
program
CIGNA
Bloomfield. CT
JunlorMoth.AdualolScience.ComputerScience. MISmojorswitho3.2
G.PA
or
higher
may
apply.
Applicoliondeodline: Maleh 1.1994
Hoffman-1.aRoche.
Inc.
Nutley.
NJ
.11.nior.
5eniorChemisfrY.
Biology, Chemicol Engineering. Computer
Sci-
ence. Malceting. F'nonce.
Pharmacy
majors with a 3.0 G.PA or higher
mayapply.
Applicoliondeodine:
Mai
1, 1994
Merel<&
Company
WhltehoUS8
Stolion.
NJ
Internships Cll9 offenx:l
In
the
phormoeeuticol company's Accounting.
Research
a,d
Monufochmg
Oeporlmoot.
.
App6calion
deodine:
n/O
.













































































THE CIRCLE,
The
network battle
'
·
over late
'.
,,
Ilight
<
tV
.
/
it\~~s
'
the biggest 'ev~nt in televi-
which ever wounded hose NBC ~as
sion history iri the past year.
.
.
to
·
spuni'and then ehtcr the high-
..
·
.
N9, it wasn't the "Last Call" of
stakes late-n,ight scene.
_
And it was
"Cheers," but the defection of
·
.
no~win
for
NBC; as the network
David Letterman
.
to CBS.
... •
,,
'"'.a~ alm
_
ost guaranteed of losing its
..
·
Not since Nadia
-
Ccime~ibhe
monopoly
-
in the market .
.


.
defected from Romania has politics
.
·

,
.
King JohQny Carson, ,yho ruled
played such a large par(iri
_
the
,
.
the lafocevening ai
_
r"'.ayes for 30
relocation of such
a
prominen
'
t
years on)'JBC's ''Tonight Show,"
·
talent.
.
.
.
.
.
·
_
put tne wheels in motion when he
:
''The Late
'
••s11m: Letterman,
·
n-iade his surprise retirement an-
Leno;

and the Network Battle for
·
nc>'uncenientin~May 1991.
.
theNighC'by ''New York Times''.
'
·
This;sei,the s
_
tageJor one of the
TV-reporter BiU Carter (Hyperion,
·.:·
nas
,
tiest sagas
.
i_ri
TY
!)ist!)ry
as
·
299
_
p~ges, $24.95) offers a portrait

.
woul_dsbe dauphin~

.
Jay Leno and
~f
two contrasting political styies
~
David Lefterman, abetted by their
that suggest a r_eversalofthe cliche,
minions, squared off to become
''politics is a branch of show
Carson's successor.
.
business."
.
The riveting deceit and intrigue
·
Leno played an inside game,
that follows would ironically be a
building friendly relationships with
dynamite movie of the week -if on-
.
NBC executives, local affiliates
ly the networks had the nerve to
(whose support was crucial) and
broadcast it.
.
advertisers.
"The Late Shift" is
a
reporter's
He was the guy everyone liked,
.
book, unfailingly balanced,
·
and he was
.
always
.
willing to help
thoroughly researched, filled with
.
out: with a
.
free promotional spot,
scoops and fresh details with all the
a
few
minutes of stand-up at an af
-
makings of a John le Carre nail-
filiates meeting, an interview with
.
'
biter. That may have something to
.
the local press.
·
do with all the dollars at stake.
FEATURE
When Carson announced his
knew less than we thought about
retirement, Leno stood as the heir
• ......,
what was really going on.
.
to
·
the throne, a vice-presjdent
.
if.~
Jay Leno and David Letterman
riding on the coat-tails of a vastly
•~;;.
first crossed paths
in
1975. Letter-
successful presidency.
man, an ex-TV weatherman and
Bui as recent American elections
would-be comic from Indiana, had
·
haveshown,machine politics mat-
l!PJl;:J
journeyed to California where he
ters less and less in the media age.
found Leno, from the Boston area
Candidate Letterman, without
by way of New
.
York City, comfor-
quite realizing it, had
:
played
-
:
an
,- .
tably enthroned as the king of the
outside game; brilliant in its way.
·
young stand-up comics.
He wanted the ''Tonight"
sho,v
as
·
·.
"fay filled in a huge blank for
badly
as
Leno did, since childhood,
me/
1
Letterman says of his first-
in fact.
brush with Leno. "What
I
learned

Letter~anCould_n<?tstomach the
.
.
.
. . ·
.
. .
..
from Jay was you can do almost
s~~~.<J.Cl
_
~p
_
1
g},t.~h•_~~

.heno,,
.
ex..f~~h
,,
c
."
·'
cino~he:111i<k~0's,NB<3
had
:
been
;
:
'-
anything if
,
you have·
·
a
consistent
e~. Inste_ad,
_
he;~ttempted.
to
cir•
racking '9P,annµal
,
pcofits o(
-
.
$500
attitude:'
1
,,
_
·
t
:-
_:,
c'
.
,
~
-=
-:,;-;
j~i'
c
_
wnvenfthepoht1cal machm~w
.
1th
/
milli<Jn
:
~\with

C;af~op's
i
''Tqnig~r
j
\
J_ronically,
··
·
:n
;
\v
·
as
-
Leno's
a
,:
~upenor performance on

Late
·
Show" accountmg for a gross of numerous appearances on Letter-
N1gh~.':
.
. .
.
.
· ..
.. ,
_
$1()0 million:
.
-
,

·.
.
·
_
man's. "Late Night" show that
.
-
Outside_ <?f profess1on~l
.
s1;>0rts,
·
·
The players that Car
,
te
_
r reveal~
.
e_ventuaHy vaulted him
.
to the guest
.
th
_
e most ~1s1ble and reg~lar display
are mud:i more poignariftliardhe
..
hosting
·
seat ori
"The
.
'
Tonight
of talent m
~It
ofArnencan culture
on-screen personalities, and equally
..
Show,"
·
m~y be ~A~1d Leuerma!l's c~medy strange, taking us deep into the
Thus,
·
CBS
·
initially
.
pursued
mmd at
_
wotk •
.
.
.
· .
·
.
-
.
.

,
-
bizarre high-stakes world of broa~-
Leno to move on to their late- night
·
It
.
was no-lose for CBS,
-
:as the
casting, making
·
it dear th
_
at,
couch, assuming that NBC would
network was prepared to pick up despite the enormous publicity, we
hand the "Tonight Show" reins
MARCH 31,
1994
over to Letterman ..
However, into the fray entered
Leno's
·
obsessive, Machiavellian
manager Helen Kuslmick, who was
somehow able to out-maneuver
NBC as she planted stories that the
network was about to du.mp Car-
son; making NBC insecure about
the prospect of Leno jumping to
CBS, and consequently succeeded
in landing Leno the "Tonight
Show" gig
·
- before Carson an-
nounced his retirement.
Letterman was crushed that
Len9 was hal)deq the "Tonight
Show" befote
'
he could even apply:
.
-;/
Bu(rarhe'f:irhan
·
a/lov/Leiterman
;
(0
whither
-
a\vay in a
·
corrier,:his
handlers took the offensive and
triggered a monster bidding war
among all the
.
networks for their
.
client's services.
·
Enter Hollywood super-agent
Michael Ovitz.
In their first meeting, in the sum-
mer of 1991, Mr. Ovitz told his new
client he ,vould indeed have ail
5
11
:30
show, if that was what he
wanted and lucrative offers from
every network and entertainment
company, including NBC. After-
ward, Mr.Letterman was giddy.
"I've been to
see
the Godfather!"
Ovitz, seeing Letterman's enor-
mous potential appeal, promised
his fretful client that the deepe
s
t
pockets in broadcasting would line
up to bid for him.
So they did, transforming him
from outcast to icon in weeks. Let-
terman
·
was now entertaining a
$14
million-a-year offer to host his own
late-night show on CBS.
,
.
Career gives us the.key toLetter-
;;;.
.....
.
.
..
, .
·•

.
...
.
,
man's office in September
1991
to
·.
eavesdrop on a phone call from an
ABC executive whom he does not
name, telling the star that ABC
wants 'Letterman and thal the ex-
ecutive's bosses are willing to scrap
Ted Koppel and "Nightline" in
order to
get
him.
Matt Martin is The Circle's
Feature Editor.
·
where dotl1.ey·£ind these accordion playing
·
people
-
«Nb,
I
did NOTmake this up
.-'.
'
'
store in
'
the waistband of her
service are~. They detained him
·
·
.
You'd be hard-pressed to find
-
shorts,'and anoth_er was accused of and summoned Maryland state
.
_
writers capable of formulating this
.
.
stuffing 57 packs of cigarettes into
police, who charged him with driv-
?

am
·
ount of lunacy, although the:!
her bra and walking out of another
-
ing while intoxicated.
_
Letterman team might come a~ful-
store.
.
Jim Bakker
has nothing on this guy
ly close:
··
.
.
.
··
Put your dress back on please,
-
sir
Debra Jane Lowenstein, 40, told
~
Everyone is c~pable of a
.
high
Missouri
.
state police in-
police in Timonium, Md., that she
degree_ of stupidity.
·
.
vestigating reports of a man chang-
w:;i.s sitting in t~e smoking section
Just look at the person sitting
.
ing out of women's clothing out-
.of.a.restaurant when a stranger at
next
'
to
·
you.·
.
.
. .
.
side of the Hatton Fireworks Stand
another table in the same section
It's entirely possible that their
name will one day be the answer to
.
. the trivial question: Name the per-
son who exploded while attempting
to selthe world record for consum-
ing cottage cheese:
. ,
.
·
.
.
'
This week's sign that the
'
'
apocalypse is upon us
.
Ellen Gartland, 65, of Newark,
NJ.,
was convicted
_
of reckl~s~
manslaughter two week
_
s ago
·
for
.
shooting her husband during a
fight over where the couple's televi-
sion remote· control
Proof that justice isn't blind
.
In Jonestown, Pa., District
Justice William E. Schadler
dismissed speeding charges against
model Vera Cox, 30, because her
good looks made him believe her
story that she was fleeing "four
scruffy guys" who followed her
from New Jersey. Schadler admit~
ted that he wouldn't have believed
Cox, who was ticketed for driving
122 mph, if she were
"fat
and ug-
ly" or "an ugly broad."
·
Shopping:
the "Animal House', way
Police in Taylorsville, N.C., ar-
rested three women for a one-night
shoplifting binge on Aug 13. One
woman was charged with smuggl-
ing
.
a .V~R out of a
_
western A_uto
·
located just that. The man explain-
.
asked hei"to put out her cigarette.
ed that he wanted to go into the
Lowenstein refused, explaining
store but didn't know if it was okay
that she had waited 45 minutes for
to enter dressed in women's
a table in the smoking section just
clothes.
so she could smoke. She said that
There wasn't a taxi fast. enough
the man then grabbed her by the.
.
Paul Fritze, 23, was charged with
neck with one hand, struck her on
boarding a bus in West Orange,
the head three times with the other
N:J., pointing a handgun at the
hand and shouted "HEAL!" like
driver and ordering him to drive to
a television
.
evangelist while his
Newark without picking up
companions tied
·
her legs to the
passengers.
.
Prosecutor Harold
chair. Attorney Abraham Paul
Mynett explained that Fritze, an
Korotki,
·
47, w.as charged with
Essex County Courthouse worker,
criminal assault.
apparently was afraid that he'd lose
Cigarettes don't kill, smokers do
his job if he was late.
.
In Baltimore, Ellsworth Briscoe,
More
bus hyjinx
46, was sitting in
a
city water truck
Charter bus driver Woodrow
when a stranger asked him for a
Wilson Jackson, 53, was returning
cigarette. The two men exchanged
to New York City after a late night
words, according to police, then
baseball game in
.
Baltimore when
the stranger pulled out a gun and
the bus began weaving across the
shot Briscoe to death.
lanes of Interstate 95 and running
Defending her rights
vehicles off the road. His
to carry fire arms
passengers were 40 New York
In San Pablo, Calif., Rachell
police officers, who were unable to
Rashan Houston, 20, complained
convince the driver to pull off the
to the manager of a restaurant
road. Finally, they persuaded the
when a patron lit a cigarette in the
driver that several of the officers
non-smoking section. After the
were
ill,
and Jackson pulled into a
manager ordered the woman to
stop smokiQg, she left, then return-
-
ed with a 12-gauge shotgun and
shot Houston in the head. Police
arrested Daphnye Luster, 22, a
mother of four.
·
eeware the garbage syndicate
New York's Department of
Sanitation launched an investiga-
tion into a rash of garbage-truck
thefts -
11 over a five-month
·period. Department spokeswoman
Anne Canty said that in the past
~he department had a problem with
joyriders stealing the $11,000
trucks and collecting garbage for
kicks, but they usually turned up,
full of garbage, in a day or two.
She said during the current theft
wave, none of the trucks had been
seen again. Police
·
Lt.
Richard
·
Kuberski theorized that the thieves
may be hoodlums "dressed up in
clothing that would resemble a
sanitation worker" in a kind of
elaborate trash-collecting sting.
He thought he had nothing to hide
A 48-year-old convicted sex of-
fender in Mesa, Ar., invited his
probation officer to join him at a
sex offenders' support-group
meeting in June to demonstrate
how much progress he had made.
During the meeting, the man ad-
mitted to the
group that he had
recently broken into the homes of
three
women
and
stolen
-underwear. The break-ins were
news to the probation officer and
local police, who revoked the
man's probation and returned him
to prison.
They captured the Leprechaun
Norman Alafriz Toro, 32, of
Silver Springs, Md., was arrested
in October and charged with
counterfeiting. Toro allegedly tried
io pass off twelve $100 bills to
undercover cops, who found
5000
more $100 bills at his home. The
bills, produced on a copying
machine, were lime green in color.
The cops put the squeeze on him
A
Wheat Ridge man called
police to report a neighbor playing
the accordion "very badly.''
.
Criminal insanity
On Oct. 29, two men approach-
ed a teller at the Harbor Bank in
Baltimore with a note reading:
"I
have a gun
.
Gimme me (sic) your
money or else." According to a
witness
,
the teller looked at the
note, which was written on the
back of a deposit slip for another
bank, and replied, "This is a
Maryland National (Bank) transac-
tion -
you have to go to Maryland
National." The men looked at each
other, panicked and ran off.
Sticky fingers
Edilber Guimares, 19, was ar-
rested in Belo Horizonte, Brazil, in
November for attempted theft at a
glue factory. According to police,
as Guimares stopped to sniff some
of the glue he was stealing, he
knocked over two large cans, spill-
ing their contents. When the police
arrived at the factory, Guimares
was sitting immobile, glued to the
floor.
·
Matt Martin is The Circle,s
Feature Editor. His greatest
criminal achievement to date has
·
been cashing
qut
26
items in a
"Four items
.
or less
lane."






























6
-THE .CIRCLE,
Eo
ITOFU
ALL
,,..:RCH
a1.)99f
THE
CI
· MARIST COLLEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE, NY 12601
TttE STODENT · NEWSPfiPE~
SJ. Richard,
editor
Ted Holmlund,
sports editor
Carl Oleskewlcz,
managing editor
Julie Martin,
senior edilor·
Kristina WeJls,
associate editor
Justin Seremet,
assistant editor
Matt
Ma~ln,fe~;,,.e editor
Andrew Holmlund,'
associate editor
Dana Buonlcontf,
columns editor
Meredith Kennedy,
associate editor.
Jennifer Ponzlnl;
advertising manager
Teri L. Stewart;
editorial page editor
James Hocking;
distribution manager
Dennis Gildea,
facuiiy advisor
: PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
O.ne small step
News flash: a group of students are dissatisfied with iife at Marist College.
Hot off the wire: the administrators say they' will make an honest eff9rt to make things
better.
Circle exclusive: there will be a change, in spite of them.
.
Members of El Arco Iris Latino (the Hispanic Club) and the Black Student Union
are insulted by the intolerance other members of the student body show them on a daily
basis.
They were not able to hold an open forum about .their grievances without one of the
typical Marist braintrusts wandering by and willfully offending all those gathered.
What can one qo, though? People are going to say and do whatever they like. Students
are powerless to make changes, right?
Wrong.
lt
is now the responsibility of all students to begin
to
make amends.
The administration is not going to do it. We have to.
.
The Circle is going to try to help, Our job is to inform, so we will.
Last year, according to critics, we beat the condom issue to death covering every possible
angle we could think of. If a gum-sized wad of latex can hit the front page every week,
the atmosphere and direction of cultural diversity and racial relations on campus should
make it there, too.
Admitting things are not as chipper as tour guides tell prospective students is the easy
part. Following up with some action is harder;
* *
~
* * * *· * * .* *·* * * *
*
* * *
Any change is a big.step
ontliis campus.
The
irony is,'such·i(r'elativ'ely 'inonumental
accomplishment,
in reality, is simpler
than
filling out a ho.using request form.
.
How. hard is
it
to treat fellow students with respect and accept the differences in· our
backgrounds? Marist College is not on the verge of
a
revolution.
Maybe it should be. Today is a good day for a peaceful revolution:
*
* *
*
*
*
* * * *
*
* *
* *
*
* *
Normally, this is the space where the editor writes that the campus
,Js
comatose and .
needs a kick in the proverbial ass·so people will wake up and do something, anything
to affect a change.
·
Not this time.
Why?
.
·
.

··
Because words do little but' occupy this space for aweek or so, just enough time for
people to read them, make a. i;om~ent in agreement or ,in opposition andJhen forget them.
Most people at Marist jusfdon't care to know if there· is cultural h~rmony on campus
or not because they believe it doesn't affect them.
·
· · ·
·
That's a good excuse for not doing anything, too.
.
·
. • · :.
.
. -
Why sh9uld students act like t_he intelligent, understanding, sensitive human beings
open to diversity .the admission~ .office claims we are? Why ,succumlno the
PR
many
students so astutely refute?•'
.
·
·
0 K ,
enough with the amateur attempt at reverse psychoJogy. .
Put.simply, t_here's a group of students on the this' c;unpus ,vhofeel they have been
deprived of their rights to celebrate their heritage'.
· · ·
In. sgme places, that's called r~pression.
Here it's called business
as
usual.
.
. .. · .
Most of the College's apathetic population will say nothing is going to change because
the situation is not dire enough to damage the sclfool's illustrious, stellar reputation as ,
an institution of enlightenment,
a
beacon for those who strive to quench their insatiable.
thirst for knowl~dge.
.. '·
· _. ·
· · · · . ,
,
:: · , , · · . .. .
. •
It'would take a rigt foqpe majority of the camp1:1no realize,.that Marist is not a
carefree haven to hide·fromthe problems plaguirig society: Thjs is not Oz: We're not-
somewhere over the rainbow -
we're in Poughkeepsie .. ·
· · ·
This is Marist College, not the Emerald City.
, , .
The
·
Wizard can not
fix
everything just by saying it.isn't so.
*
*
* *
* ·-: *
*
*
* *
*
~
*
*-:
*
For the:record, the mlssion stat~ment of.Marist. College; printea on p~ge 16 of the
Student Handbook,.states, "The C9Heg~ aims to expose st!1dents to _cultu~;s other than
their own and to the values thatlmk and transcend particular cultures.
On
the sam'e page, just below the mission statement, is another section with the
subheading "The Evolution of the Campus."
The irony is astounding. ·
* * * * * *
* *
*
* *
*
*
*
*
*
* *
Now, back to our movie.·. Oz was about to. be invaded by Kansas.
Glinda, the Good Witch of the North, had resigned because she ·had seen the man
behind the curtain.
.
What remained was a rag-tag crew complet,ely bewildered by the impending onslaught
of reality. The only hope for survival was to rely on themselves.
In other words, the members of these clubs have a legitimate gripe and we, as member
of the same community, have ·to pull together.
There is little tolerance for diversity on this campus. Finally, some people have taken
steps to voice their complaints. This is like the preamble to a declaration for change.
Now, lights! Camera! Action?
* •
*
* * * *
*
*
*
*
*
*
* * *
*
*
Marist is not the Emerald City; however, it's time to take a lesson from a few of her
famed tourists.
We must have a heart, like the Tin Man.
We must use· our brains, like the Scarecrow.
We must show some courage. like the Lion.
~R~.9/1¾,u,
. 111:C S
,.{'9o!,-r
A
A'r
o ·• "
~wxi+-
. ,(/.'1',in
_.! ....
He's·skeptical, she's defending
Believe it or not, the world has not come
While most of you were in Cancun or
to a complete stop over,Whitewate~,- ex_cept
Florida, I was at home in Nashua; New
maybe in Washington, D.C. ·
·· •
Hampshire:
·.
.
And from the time the original questions
· Big deal right?'Well actually, it was a big
about Whitewater were raised during Clin-
deal because my favorite president came to
ton's""run for office and now, only one thing
visit.
· has· remained constant • there is still no pro-
No, not Hillary but Bubba. (For those of
ofof any illegal wrongdoing by the president. .
you who do not know, that is what some of
What Whitewater'- has. turned .into is a -
us call Bill.) That is right, Bubba came to
preview for the 1996 race for the presiden-
Nashua, New Hampshire for a town
cy. The whole Whitewater investigation
meeting. .
.
·
began and remains one fueled only . by
This technique was used extensively
political motive .led by Senator Jim Leach,
throughout his campaign and was praised for
. the Republican from Iowa. .
.
it. Reaching out to the "average person."
Whitewater is no longer so much :about a
Learning what concerns the "average Joe-
real estate deal gone bacl in Ark;msas more
Shf~~;ly. feel it is my job to tell you 'the . .than 15years ago as-itisabimq~eqfrestion
. truth. These.to• wn meet. ings
.. that are suppos-
·. of influence and a Wllite House cover-up,
·, Did the President exert influen·ce
ed .to be for everyone are really only;for a
·
unethica,lly?
. ·
.
. .,
·
select Jew..
• .· ... · . ..
. ·. . . . Did, members'of the White House staff,
. ~hen lgotJ1ome and _learned of ~ubba'.s.
<.'
durltlg various meetings:and tel<;})ll<>ne c~m~ .
visit,_ l was _really an~1ous Jo attend.,the
versations, Pil.~ftc!pat~.i?;.a,c9yef;.l}I?? _ .. ,,,·~
meetmg and hst~n to what _he h_ad to sa:y. O,k,
1 don't kn·ow .' · . · ·
.
· :
· · .
.
.
maybe not
anxw~s;
but mtere~ted .. ··
·
. And by the lackof evidence
to
turnup:l
I read the morm~g paper only_to learn th<1t
don't know if anyone does~
.
.
. you ha~ to ~ave ~ckets to,get
111, ?k, how : ~)
As R.W. Apple,'Jr. said inlastFriday's
can I g~t a t~ckeL Well,} c9.~ldn t. .
. . New York Times; ": .. Politics dispenses a
The tickets.had alrea
.
dy,be g1venpu~
fO ,~
,,rough' justice
of
its own: .. "
.
; ·.
·.· .
sel~ctep · .!800 ••·· people .1
1;1 ·
t be. area. My
· :, . So;.regardless··of \\'hat any investigation·
Democrat~c Congres~n1aµ w.as g~ven seyeral
by special counsel Robert B. Fiske;J r: turns
hundred ~1ckets to give. out.
up or what hearings in Congress discover,
He
said
.. The Mayor wa~ given 200huiidred tickets : . 'the political ·q11mag~ ha~ .be
.
en do11e. · ....
.
''that
weniall fosenior dtizens'andtl\e re~:. .
'
The.
LA ..
Times :reports ,"4, out
:OL5
'inainder went to local D~mocraikleadei-s
as· .. ·
Americans think . .the \Vhit,ewater affair
.
is
well as the public school ~ystem.,, -.: .. , . . disr~pth1g the Government's effectiveness.!'
.:
···11··f
· ' b·t.
th
(NewYorkTii;nes,,3/25/,94)•,f:,
, ~8
\)as1c~
Y
~ 1 . you we~e not . e, ween .. e. . ·, Not. c,,nly is Whitewater disrupting the ef-
ag~s
<>~}3-17
or., 55-70, ifyou•were not a .. .' fectiveriess of gdv~i:n,ment,
~ur'it
ari,d the:
Q,e,mocrat ~nd.y~u were notan elefted of,'·' cov~rage·'of it, is keeping us 'from hearing
ficial,- I;)emRc.rat of course, you were not
abo'utthe
·recent
progress and other impor~· .
allowed·to attend:
·:.
:L.,.
. ,;.,
'··tant eventsgoing on arourid .the world;· ..
Soun,~s like a town me~~(nfof uaverage .. ·. ·. As'Pi-esident Cli'nton pointed .out i~,his
'Joe-Shmos,, to me. Not! These' town ·· conference last Thursday night: other everits
meetings ·are just s.hows. What is going to
have· taken ~place .·'dui;ing :'.Hie.
·
whole
look good on camera.
I watc~ect: the Hve _' Whitewater affair.' · .
. .
broadcast and saw . the, . diffete'nt" .. Good and bad, this is what we have been
demographics represented. Give irie a break!
missing : ·
.. . .
·
.
,
,
Bubba spoke fora while before he t~ok-
*
Luis .Donaldo Colosia; Presidential can-
any questions. And what . about .
.
those . didate of the Institutional . Revolutionary
questions?.·
Party in
Mexic~;
w_as assassinat~cl. .
·• u.::,.
·troops in Somalia returned home
He took eight questions, four dealing with
o·ne week earlier than scheduled, as Clinton
health care (do not get me started); one" deal;
pr()ITlised.
· ·
· . . .
ing with college students being overworked · ·
• The budget is moving through Congress
and uriderpaid (welcome to ihe real world
and,if passed irwiU produce three years of
seniors),. a Marine who wanted him to sign
deficit, reduction for the first time since
his certificate and a 67-year-old woman who
Harry Truman.
said, "White-Water is for rafting and canoe-
• The economy produced two-miHion jobs
ing."
.
last year.
·
Real tough questions. I wonder if those
*
The House passed legislation to limit the
were thought provoking questions written by
influence of lobbyists.
·
his advisors or if those people really came
*
And, Congress was presented by Presi-
up with them on their own?
dent Clinton with a plan to retrain the
This is just a show. Not a town meeting
of the locals but a stacked deck of the
demographics that best represent "him."
The lights were on, the camera was roll-
ing and Wolf Blitzer yelled "action."
Scou Sullens is one of The Circle's
poUtical columnists.
unemployed.
There is life beyond Whitewater. Unfor-
tunately, we only continue to see the
bureaucratic red tape that is tangling up the
president and the Congress more and more
everyday.
Caroline Jonah is one of The Circle's
political columnists.




























THECIRCLE,
VIEWPOINT
MARCH31,1994
7
''Don't,Drink
And
Drive''
ke)'chai1i:'
Seems
pf'
0
b1ef11; everywhere,
backwards.
to
sophomore; what's next?
especially at the -m~chanic
Editor:
How manYof you have the same
keychain as me? .
You know, the bottle openerone
that you can buy at the,bookstore
that'says
"MARIST
COLLEGE-
Don't DrinkAnd Drive."..
.
.
Does anybody else realize· how
idiotic and ironic
it ·1s. to. have a
'-'Don't Drink.And.Drive" bottle
opener /keychain?
You might as well invent a solar
powered flashlight so you can see
during the day time.
And how about flame retardent
matches, a Phillips-head hammer,··
two-sided playing cards, glass fly
swatters, Brail · l;>umper stickers,
and a '$ing Along With The Mute
People" CD?
I
mean, the next thing you know,
we'll have. Iife
0
si_zed road rpaps,
helicopters with ·an .ejector seat
(watch out for the spinning blade),
- Save· some
energy~ lowe
the heat.
and
.raise the air
and . Sherman
tanks
with
kickstands.
We,d(?n't need theses· things.
They don't make any sense, and
neither does a ''Don't Drink And
Drive" bottle opener/keYchairi.
Let's analyze this, so that we can
maybe get' a firmer grasp oh the
topic at hand, and maybe we can
. figure o~t what ~as going on in ·the
factory when. this one was invented:
· O.K., first issue- The·college is
trying toinstill
tis
with responsibili-
ty, . so they tell us. "Don't
Drink ... ," Okay? Fine, but to help
you "not" drink, here's a bottle
opener· to help open those pesky
bottles. And by the way, if you flip
it over~ it helps to pop the tabs on
beer cans too.
Issue number two-
If
you do
drink, " ... Don't Drive." But, in
. case you do decide.that this.bottle
· opener was put into a lot of use
tonight, and you are tired, well,
here's a keychain. And on the
end ... KEYS.
Wow,all you need to do is stick
your "Don't Drink And Drive"
bottle opener/ keychain in the ig-
nition and off you go.
Would you like a cocktail weenie
with that?
I mean, c'mon:
It may just be me
here, but this steps way over the
boundaries of stupid things to do.
It's like creating roller blade
cleats, or
13-
four-legged tripod.
These things don't serve any
purpose.
·
Of course, this is just my opi-
nion, excuse me while I pop on my
"Kick Me"· belt buckle, air-tight
. gas mask, and bell bottom boxers
and go for a ride in my submarine
.
with screen doors.

Can of Hquid spam anyone?
Mike Pappagallo, sophomore
Recently I had a run in with my
give me a . thorough list of
mechanic.
everything wrong with the car and
Well I didn't actually run into
any possible ailments the factory
him with my car _ I haven't done
workers who helped build it have
that in a month or·so.
and how much it'll all cost me.
Don't laugh because your
This-magic number was $600.
mechanic is much more willing to
Then for the 15 minutes it took
negotiate a cheaper price on fixing
to find this out, he charged me $15.
your engine
if
he's actually stuck
Then he proceeds to joke about
inside it.
·
how he wishes his knowledge was
My problem started up at school
worth more than just $15.
when my engine light went on.
That's a dollar a minute pal.
Of course this car doesn't have
If you made that all the time
an oil or radiator meter to let you
you'd make $124,800 a year and
know ahead of time there's a
with that I don't think you'd be
problem.
· hanging around in a garage - so
No, there's just a light that goes
SHUT UP DORK!
on maybe 10 seconds before your
Then when l leave they start in
car actualJy. explodes.
with the courtesy crap again·.
As if in another
10
seconds when
They actually say to me, "Conie
again."
your car did explode you wouldn't
have·any idea that somethir:ig was
It's not a bakery -
1
don't want
wrong unless the light went on just
, to come again!
prior.
I wasn't sure if this guy was
This light is really just a pull over
honest, so
I wanted a second
light - the light goes on and it gives
opinion.
you
JO seconds to find a nice spot.
I brought the car to my mechanic
to pull over and try to sell your car
at home, whom I trust since 1 have
to a nearby hitch-hiker.
a reserved bay there.
It's an easy sale _ they're in
110
I
tell him that
I
supposedly have
position to negotiate.
a rear something or other leaking
Well I brought my car in to the
and it's supposedly $600 and it just
local Good Year - yeah - good year
can't be.
for who? If I'm bringing my car
He looks it over and confirms
here all the time_ It's not a good
my thought telling me it's not a rear
year now is it?!
something or other for $600, but a
First let's cut the courtesy crap!
main something or other for $1500.
Editor:
1
walk in and they say, "It's nice
Sometimes being right i~n't so
I
would lik_e to address the prn-
to see you again."
great.
blem of conser.vatiori on the rvtarist
I
only come here when my car's
Then
I
was really ticked because
College Campus; specifically, con--
broke and it costs me money_ sorry
not one of the people behind me
servaticin of energy.
··
pal, b_ut it's NOT nice to sec YOU
made a move to catch me when
I
. Many students are aware of the
again!
fainted.
extreme warmth in thedorms and
Then they follow with "ls there
I just went - CRASH - right on
classrooms on this 'campus:
anything wrong with your car?"_
my head .
. · Most of the classrooms in Don-,
No,
1
came to tell you my car works
I even got a cut, but my
. nelly have an open window just to
.
fine so you owe ME money!
mecha~ic was nice - he ga:,-e_me a
bring the. temperature down to a
Of course there's something
\'>and-aid f?r
$22.50
and sa~d
1t
was
co~~~l~'ibJ~e':ti~tilfoo'wathl~~iit{
,,,n,:;::~''' . ,
K·e·
'
e,:
·p· ·:
:c·
·1· ·u· ·.b\• ..
:c·:
·a·p·.
, .. , ,:,"
.,}Vrt~!nt·::1,Ttd~alb~~i'the'iightt·-'
I~!t,N':;:~
:~gi~·i~~J
1
tdit~~1
stude11ts to sleep.
.
.
.
· ·
.
. , · · ·
.
-
and smoke an'd they respond with,
consultation.
.
Anyone 'who has ever be~(in ,,.
Edito~:
.
.
These requirements are very sim-
"Gee that sounds bad." No?-!*!
ChampagnatJnows thilt.the wm-
A Vision '94 wish... new
pie and straight forward.
That's why I'm here!
Frank LaPerch is The Circle's
dows are kept open f?r most of the clubs/organizations
Jo
be recogniz-
Unfortunately, many clubs do
Now.the mechanic comes
over
to
humor columnist.
day because the heat 1s m1b_earable ... ed by Jhe ·college and Student
not follow them.
. The cl~ssrooms are wuch c_older Government. . .
. Perhaps club officers are not
m the. sum~er tha!1. m,, wi!1ter,
The recent election candidates
able
to · handle the · time-
because the air conditionm~ is s~t wish ... to change the club cap
.
to
management of school and club
too Iow'.. ~nd_ people co~i~g m
.
allow more clubsi.nto the system." duties.
·
from 90 degree weather ~it
m
60
.
I. would like to present. this
Or
it
could be that previous
degree _classroo:ns and shiver.
sceilarioto Marist students;:What
leadership did not tell them what ..
. I . fmd this. e~cessiveness if admissions raised the number of
to do.
unreasonable, . .
.
. . . .. undergraduates from 3100 to 3500?
Sadly enough, sonie officers ac-
If th<!· heat is l?wered.
I_
Q~
2; .:, I q:mld envision-th~ problems:
cept the title, but not the ·
de~rees, and t~e:-a1r. conditiom~gi" overcrowding in the classrooms,
responsibilities.
·
raised
2
or Jdegrees, not only will". cjoi-llls/cafeteria.
.
.
How can Student Government
all that evergy ,output be consery,) .,,_,'Overall, all student services wiU
logically accept more clubs when a
ed; but the college can save,; he ·greatly affected in .a negative
majority of the clubs are not func-
t)lousands of dollars ~· year ... · ·_ ~- way.· · ··
·
'
tioning properly now?
·That-money sayed -c~n -be put
. Now, this scenario applies to the··
lylaybe mqre pressure should be
tewards ne~essa~msulation ofthe ,situation at hand
witl_l
the clubs: ' placed on existing i:Iubs that many
basement~ o~-tli~ old t~~nhouses,
: .
If more 'dubs are .allowed into, : new clubs would like to get into the
t~ere~yehmmatmg the
ICC
chopp-
'
· the 'system, iCwould caIJSe
pro- .
system. .
pmg to getout.?f bed. ",
'.' · blems•ir1:a negative way for club
':·.;
Jenmfer Kraus; sen,aor' operations.
,: , "•·.
Tlie management system·would
riciibe
0
abie
to properly support ad-
Goqdj,ob .sports
: ·ditlorial ·dubs. ,.
Editor: . ,
.. · ·.. .'"''.::..~.· . . .
. This ·management system is
I am-t~kirig thjs oppgrtunll}'.' tb
mainly comprised of Stu.dent
comme~:t on
~he
aitkl~s produced
Government· arid· the Activities
by Sports Editor Ted Holmlund
Offic~.. .
. .
i
,
and . staff• \vrifei Andiew
Student Government grants
Holmlund.
'
· · ·. charters.to clubs which give them
Week after. 'week, iliese
in-
·special privileges to us~ the name .
dividuals take. the. time to giv_e the
of Marist College, to recruit new
Marist · commu_nity · accurate
members, to use College facilities .
descriptions of our college sports:" for events, to advertise events; to
They are, as they have been· for · ·apply for financial requests, and to
some time, well focused and ex-
represent the College.
tremely successful in their respec-
Other requirements are.to hand
tive posjtions.
. iri organizational reports, event_
The most recent issue of our col-
evaluations, priority points, have a
lege newspaper provides ·an ade-
faculty advisor, and to follow all
quate example of their dedication
Marist rules and policies.
Other things_ to take into con-
sideration would be membership.
HO\\'.. m·any dubs would an
.
average student be involved with
,vith_otit". their grades being
affected?
.· '
.. Many clubs do not have faculty
· advisors, so how can SGA let more
clubs in and properly find advisors
to assist them?
If
you are stfll not convinced that
SGA should not change it's present
club capping model, I invite you to
speak or write to your represen-
tatives in Student Government.
While many students wish their
new club.to be recognized
in
the
Marist community, the aforemen-
tioned reasons may delay their
wishes from becoming reality.
Antonella Licari, senior
to the Marist community.
.
In a combined effort, the
Holmlund brothers produ~ed
twelve articles related to Marist
sports. (These, of course, were
written while the two writers suc-
cessfully maintain a full amount of
Freshman gives T9p Ten
classes.)
Again, I commend Ted and An-
drew Holmlund for their hard
work and dedication.
I wish them a great deal of con-
tinued success.
Scott D. Signore,' junior
Editor:
Just to be of some help, here is
a list of Top Ten possible new
names for The Circle.
. 10) The Wish We Were A Real
Newspaper.
9) Hooked On Phonics.
8) The
"If
we spelled a word
wrong, will we be put on proba-
tion?"
7)
The Grapevine. •
6) The Campus Kleenex.
5) The Gillis Grill.
4) The Circle Jerk.
3)
The Negative Newsletter .
2)
The Rag.
. .. and the number one possible
new name for
The Circle ...
I)
The Campus Crier.
Christopher J. Laline, freshman
Chess club finishes third
at tournament
Editor:
This past weekend, the Marist
College Chess Club sponsored a
Tmirnament in which four teams
took place in a "Final Four" type
competition.
Marist, West P.oint, .. Dutchess
cc;
and a last minute· Marist
II
team replacinglhe absent Vassar
College team, battled for three
beautiful marble trophies.
In the first round, the team from
Dutchess CC with Peter, Oloye,
and Ebony Cooper swept Marist
II,
comprised
Q~.
freshman· John
Brickman, and juniors Ron Gagne
. and· Rich Coocchiara: · . ·· , .
·
Steve Giampeolo was grarited a ·
forfeit victory be~ause Dutchess ar-
. rived with only three players mak-
ing the score 3-1. .
·
. ,
Also in the first round, West
Point defeated Marist 2 1/2 to I
1/2.
Cadets Kan and Odell posted
victories over Jon Pacut (physical
plant employee) and freshman Jeff
Wiater.
Cadet Labar and junior Ed Ryan _
ended in a draw, and in Marist's
only legitimate win.
President and junior Michael
J.
Murray posted a victory over Cadet
Lo..
'
After losing both matches,
Marist and Marisi
II
agreed
to
col-
lectively take the third-place
trophy, rather than.play each other
for
it.
.
. .
.
· In the finals, West Point took
the win over Dutchess 3-1 .
Next . event: April · 9, Chess
Master Challenge.
Michael
J.
Murray,
, Chess Club President
PRODUCTION SCHEDULE
April 14, 21, 28 • May 5

























































































































































































































THE
,
CIRCLE, MARCH 31;
1994.
.
..
.
.
.
.
.
.
'
.
·
.
.
,
.,
. .
-
...
~
.-
,
....
.
NeWs:briefs------
-,-

.,!111111•
-•
·
...
-
.-
...
,
.....
...
,
.
--
:
.
..
·,
...
--
:;
...
·:
/
■...
'
~:
-
....
,
_
.
. sh~f~~r;fi~:
:
~in:rl~f;~t
·_
:
·
;g;o~~;~~i:i~~!~h~o~i~~~~
•.
-~~n.;.e~e~;de/~y~teryThe~i~{Will
.
.
.
.
.
.
:_·
F
.
·

..
,•
>.1
>
·•,
·
:
d
'
t
'
.
:
veridor
,
WhC'runs
,
theCo~ie{~ric~
.
.
Offfia_
..
Up a e
. :
:
Center, and discussed the situation.
· •
~
.

.•
> , •
• ·:
·
'
·.

·
. .
. .
;

·

·He:. pointed out
·
to them the
.,
·
An 11!-~e~t1gat1~n ~as C()nducted •
,:•:
po~itives
·
of the
.
evening
·
and
'
they
receptt<>,n \\'di ~ake P!ace
m_
the
Valley region:
.
_
:
· ..
,
.
be presented on AprH
17.
,
~
- :
·
.
,
Campus
_
Center, room 349 -at
6
.
. .
.
·
.
.
.


.
._·

.
:
The Theater: will: be
:
a

·
;
oin;
·
•·

...
1~ relation to the 11~c1dents that o<;-
·

are still willing to continue to host
p,m: Thefashion
.
sti6w will ~lso
Inc!u
.
d~d
'
m
.
t
_
he pl~ns of ~on-
ner/Mystery nightin
·
a-Ballroom
·
.
take
.
place i
·
n
:
tbe
·
.
caroi>Us
·
Center
·
;
.
s_tru~tto~
·
ar
_
e
_
l~n
_
dscap1n~, seatn~g,
setting&
.
·~
-
_
.
_-
·
;· _.
_
_
·
.
· ·.
:
_
....
.
.
_
curred at, the.
J
umor
.
Class Semi~
,.
Marist events.
.
.
,
.
_,
.
.
.
_
Formal on Fnday, feb.
_
l~ at t
.
~!!
.
:
: ., .
Sansola said the few

isolated in-
IBM
.
Con~erence Center
.
10
cidents should not reflect how the
·
Poughkeepsie.
.
-
.
.
,'
•.
whoh;
·
.
evening went
·
or how this
room 3
_
48-349
at?
p
:
m.'

_
·
__ -
hghtmg( p~thways andb1keways all
Ticketswill
'
be $5
·
a couple or$3

At8 p.m. Saturday;theCampus
·
aroun~ t~~
-
~reen.
_
.
.
.
·
a person:
'
,
:
,
t
;
{>
:
_
Center Dining
Hall
will
be
the scene
·
$ulhva_n sa1~ the DOT com~ll-
'According
·
to SPC
·
President

'
·
for
a cultural dinner dance:Tickets
tee handling this program was very
Lynn Russo,'students
\\'ill haye
,
t9
.
-
·
·
:
Students who attended cla1.~~d
,.
·
renects on the junior class:
.
.
-
that other students were vom1tmg
. ·
'
on the floor and in the restrooms
'
.
and also seeing male students dan
~
·
.
.
Black
·
.week
:-
' 94-
dng in their boxers.
..
. ,

)
/
·
.
·
•.

·
:
··
·
·
-
;
..

·
.
· -
will be
$
I
5 per person and will in-
·
plea~ed with the proposal _for f ?ur
:
dress up '.for
,the
event and
·prizes
elude dinner, a
·
cultural perfor-
·
reasons: !he are~ hJls public access
·
"will be awarded to the people who
mance and a dance p~rty.
.
..
.
·
to
.
~he liud~on,}t m~lu_des Pfese!"
can figure out the murderer. ·
"Black Week 1994"
will close on
.
vat1on of-htstonc
·
bmldmgs,1t will
"I
tis a chance
for.
the students
·
.
Sunday with
a
gospel choir concert
:
enhance the -beau~y of the· river
to have a good tjme 'and
,
be
:
so-
.
_
and step show.· Both
will
be held in
·:,'.
bank;:and it tie!i directly to the con-
meone else for the night/! she
-
said;
:
the Performing Arts Center in the
:
s
,
tructi<>'l.
,
~n°8:~mte 9. ·· •.
·
· •
SPC alsq plans.Jo
c
assist
.c
'Vith
Campus Center. The
_
concert
will
;
,
Accqrding to Sull_ivan~ the
_
fun-
Earth Day ~ctivities on'Aprii
29-3L
b~gin at
_
_
2 p
.
m. and the step show
:

ding was inade possiq!e thrpugh ~n-
.
Russo said
,
there
_is
a
.
possibility
~

According to Steve
'
Sansola;;
'
.
A_
week l~ng c<;leor~tlo~ ,
·
of
assistant dean for activities,
90
pera
' ·
Afncan~Amencan
.
cul\ure
,
w11l_- be
cent to 95 percent of those who
'
at'-·
_h~ld
at Marist
,
Colle~e
,
Monday
tended had a wonderful time
..
·, /
_through
Sunday,
:
Apnt4s10.
·
'.
The other
5
percent to 10 pe~cert
-
-
&<Bla<;k ~Veek;I 994/
'.
sponso~cd
_
were spoken to about their actions.
_
by Mans!· s_ Black Stude
,
nt U~1on
Sansola said he asked the junior
.
-
(BSU), w1ll.mclude a ~Im f~st1val,
class officers to speak to the peo-
·
.
a step sh_ow, a fash19n show,
:
a
pie
'
who had been involved in the
.
·
cultural dm~!!r.dance ~o
.
:sponsored
.
few isolated incidents that by the
.
BSU and lv1anst s EIArco
occurred.
.
_
·
Iris Latino (formerly known as the
will begm at 4 p;m.
:
;
:
dorse~ents by Senator
·;"
Patnck
,
that·a
,
comedian
will perform on
,
-··
,
Moymhan,

Senator ~teJ?hen
·
April 29.and
:
a possib!e concert per-
He said the students ·,vere told
Hispanic_ C,lub) a.ndpth~r eyents.
their behavior was inappropriate
_ ,
·
. The kick~offevent
.
will be _t
.
he
and it would not be tolerated.
;· '_
kmg aIJf1
.
queel?
co_ronatwn
.
Sanso la has since been in touch
·
~eremony Monday_ m tl~e Perform-
with the Marriott Corporation, the
mg Arts Center m the
.
Campus
Mo
·
ne
·
·
'
d
'
on
-
·
1
'
d
_
.
S~land, Assemblywoman
-
Eileen
formance on
'
April'31.
..
_
:
,
.
Y
-
·.
.
a
e
.
.
..
·
Hickey, and othe~
_
supporters.
.
"Werelookirig to niake
'
Earth
:
Marisfhas
.
also received grants
Day a whole
~
weekend ofeventsfoll
-
-
.
from other organizations in the
of'
'
thjngs
fo°i-
students
io
do,"

·
Mari st College
·
recently
·
received
a
.
$200,000 grant'for
tit~
Campus
Green Overlook Project .
.
.
-
area.
.
.
.
Russo said.
..
.
·
The Central Hudson Gas & Elec-
-
.
SPC Has-instituted a newsletter
.
·
Center at
8
p.m
.
.
.
·
"NYABINGI" - Night of ex-
pression
will
take place
at
·
8
p.m.,_
on .Tuesday in the Campus Center,
·
·
room 349.
.
.
A black film festival and social
is scheduled for Wednesday at 8
p.m. in the Performing Arts Center
of the Campus Center.
On Thursday there
-will
be a
basketball game and comedy night.
The Black Student Union Basket-
ball Squad wil
_
l pta
'
y
a
team
-
of
Marist faculty and
staff
in the
James
J.
McCann Recreation
Center at
5
p.m.
According to Executive _ Vice,
President
.
Mark Sullivan, the pro-
ject was eligible for funding.under
the Surface
.
Transportation
Enhancement Program which was
established by
the
federal Inter
0
model Surface Transportation Ef-
ficiency Act (!STEA).
:
.
. ,
:
..
"It
is federal money under
·
the
.
!STEA that conies to the
·
state ancf
the state sub-divides into regions,"
.
Sullivan said.
.
.
.

.
The Enhancement
.
Program·. is
sponsored
·
by the New York State
Department of Transportation.
The DOT
awarded
$5.9 million
for 31 projects
_
in
·
the
Hudson
Valley and Marisrwas the only col-
tric Corporation
·
gave a $125,000

·
which North End residents, com-
grant along with a $100,000 grant'
routers, and Canterbury residents
from State Senator Stephen
receive.
.-
Saland.
-
-
~
-
·_,,
"It
is a greaFaddition toother
grants we've
i
received
:
to support
_
the project;" SulHvan said
.
The overlook pr
_
ojectis schedul-
·
ed to
be
conip
_
Ietecl tl\i~
·
r~u. ·
,

,
.
.
The St~~~nt:
.
Programmi_ng
'
Council has
.
an array of events
'
coming up to close out the 93-94
.
school vear._
SPC is hosting a new event this
LSAT
GMAT
GRE·
MCAT
*
·
ATTENTION
_
·
·
*
The Financial Aid Office is currently aCcepting applic6ti6nsJor
'
severai
Privately Spol)se>fed
_
Scholarships

()ffered)hrougt) thE;fGolleg~.
Th
.
~se
,
. scholarships
maybe awarded onthe basis ?{acaciemi~ performance,
:

.
Prepat;itioh
for
·
up~tilrijrig_'Jj~m~:
financial
-
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_field
·
otstu
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dy anq
:
10;~6tion
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_-
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p¢.r.t:nQ!)~Qt!~
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dence, or a combination of these
.
items/
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A
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'
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UnderJjraguqte
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TO ••_be considered, for.· these
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ich81a~ihfB;:::~;Gdents
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(D9rinel!y:
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A com~l~t~tJ APPLICAT16~
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9
.L~!!l>it;·p1ge
1
,.'.fhey das~ify us .as
'
on·e. group,
minorities.!(,.
c . . . · .
· E1,1ropeari art,:•. Lurry. said. .
to be educat,eq_ on
t~~
<;.ultures of .
others, that whtt\! people fear black
be worked out.
· rhe rally began with· ·mostly .
toward people of.different cultures;
· "We pay a $75 activity fee,."
Williams. said.
/'I have attended·
maybe five activities here. I'm pay-
ing.for something that I don't want
to go to and am not interested i11,"
WiJiiams was met with applause
when she announced she would no
longer. pay her .activity fee.
· •
.Students spoke at the Unity Ral-.
ly ,.to ·share: incidents . of. racism
which.had occured recently.and in
the last few years. . . '. ·.-.. ,

'. ·. C()rine Lurry, a junior; told of
her.. sophomqre .• yea('. •. Arts and
.
Values class, which
.
revolved
around European art. She liad ask-
ed. to
qo
a paper on Egyptian art,
and.the pr9fessor sai.d no, because
she was not educated .on that type
of art.
"I
want• to . know ;:why this ·
woman was teaching Arts. and .
Values if she was not educated in
"They•feel since we are at Madst
College, we should leave our
culture.behindµ~," Liz Ann Bar~.
boto, a junior. from Brooklyn,
N. Y., said. '~'they don't classify us
as blacks, Latinos, hindus, etc. · Egyptian or. African art, only
.
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, Another. student said .she was
told by. a psychology teacher that
she;.would have .to work twice as
hard .because. she was black.
· people because of what is seen and
heard·in the media.•
members of the two clubs which
organized it, but attracted atten-
tion, drawing passing students of
all races, who stood and listened,
and occassionally participated.
De La Rosa.·said he was concern-
ed with .the portrayal o( blacks and ·
Latinos in the media.
"All '
people see . are the
stereotypes in movies and on t. v.,"
he said. ''In the city, Dominicans
are being called 'copkillers.' I'm
not a cop killer."
Matt Gillis, student body
president-elect, answered questions
and made.suggestions, telling .the
students gathered that he was not
a representative of white students,
but of all Marist students.
Kevin Smith, a junior, sa;ci he
did not know about the rally, and
thought clubs should inform each
other of their activities.
De La Rosa said people needed
Gillis said that it was good to see
students not being apathetic and
there was room for many things to
"It
seems like it's black versus
white on this campus, and we need
to come together," Smith said.
How is STUDENT
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yiJU
inrut •NtnJ
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I
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THE
·
'
CiRCLE
:,'
MARCH31, .
.
1994
.
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· .
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not~ - ~
.·· ·
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wltb
Cod. wltb'inen
and
with
blmsdf.
Anburllen:l,eJB .
·
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WednesdayAprill31994,l:00p
~
m.-Room348A,
·
CC
.
-
,
.
.
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!'RO~RAM
'
O F
1<f:T_n.'IT_l8~
,
.

' .
.
'
'
.
Dr.
Mi/ion T~ichman, edito; (with D;. _Sharon
Lede~) of the book Truth_and ~nJ~ion:
'
.

.
,
.
':f
o~ay, Apnl ll/J994;'~;~0 P~'fL
'
-:-_Room}46, CC
.
.
.
Storks
and
Poems on the Holocaust will speak about this re_cently published intema11onal
fl_e~n
and
Ku~a Bee~
will slwre !he~ exp~riences
d.f
bemg rescue~, along with
I ,JOO
other
·
collection of litera1ure on the Ho/ccQJ,1St.
v1ct1111S of Nazirule, by _Dscar Schiiuller. ·
·
·
· · ·
MCTV will air four films on the Holocaust:
·
~;i'Revoir
Les
EnfanJs
Thursdirj
/
Aprii
7
The
Paw_n.broker
.
Friday, April
8
.
.
The Garden ofFinzi-Continis
Monday, April
12
TheShoponMainStreet .
.
,
·
.
..
.
Tu,esday,Aprill2
·
All videos will be shown at 4 :00 p.m.
.
.
.·.
..
.
.
.
.
·
A document~ of student reactions to the film Scliiridler's List will pe ~hdwn throughoui the
Campus during Marist College observanc,e of the days a/remembrance,
.
·
.
·. _,
.
.
.
.
Marist students ~ill offer dramatic re~nksf'rom p~ems
and
;tories written duririg and after_
,
theHolocaust.
·
·
·
·
:.·
_
:
:
:
_;
·i
'.
. .
Tuistlay,'April:12:
199~,
8:ooi;.ni.
:
:ihe;e
,
c;c
.
.
Dr. Don wCicero, author of the novel The Twist~d
siiu;
will 'sp~ak about
his novel
and
about
racism and related issues. Dr
:
LoCicero isaprof
esso;
of
ComparativeLitera1ure
at
Cedar Crest
College. His novelTheTwisted Star is
a
compelling story of tl(]ernvµi-Jewishfamily during the
Holocaust.
·
·
-
;: ·
.
·,
.
·
·
. "You
wbo
-
b~ve
b~~d
a
s1;.1e
.man, do not
fed
secure:
for
a
poet
remembers.•
Czeslaw
Mllos.z
.
·
TICKETS FOR
TI:IE
EIGHTH ANNUAL SIL VER NEEDLE
FASHION SHOW AND AWARDS
ARE NOW ON SALE
.
TICKETS/POSTERS/f-SHIRTS
.
.
C~N'-;BE PURCHASED
INTHE FASHION DEPARTMENT
WEEDA YS FROM MONDAY-FRIDAY
FROM 2:00 PM - 4:00 PM
$10.00
for
afternoon show
$5
.
. 00 for
afternoon show
·
(with:Marist student I.D.)
$25.00
for evening show
Posters
$ioo
T-Shirts $12.00
:
~
;;
,
,
.
Expert
-
Teachers
.
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permaneot Centers
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Total Training·
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ENTION!!
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MARCH
9TH
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7PM
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GRE-WED
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Mfi;RCH 30TH-7PM
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CL.ASS ST
ARTS
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~LSAT-TUES.
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APRIL
5TH<6PM
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APRIL
7TH-6PM
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,
FOR ANY-QUESTIONS
-
PLEASE CALL
:
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(914)62~3531
:
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.
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:-
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Fordham's
FineStl
.
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'
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~
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:
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Joe Binottol
From, Fordham Dining Services
and Marriott International
'--..
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,
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1
THE
CIRCLE;
'MARCH
31,
1994 .
11
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f
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·
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.
.
·
by
TED
HOLMLUND
.

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1n~tead,·hc,":aJmow
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AJterpost.fn
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ari

o~f
·
r~cor
.
d in its
·
.
.
·'
thfoiighchit'ihe
e
'
rttire:gami(nianag~
..
.
spring
:i
season,
<·
head
.
coach
·
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(
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.
·
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l
only two runs"
·
on four
.
hits.
·
S
_
mi
_
th and his squafwere looking
..
.
.
. .
.
.
to
. •
break
:
the losing streak
--
in a
·
Ma~isi ~)so s~,i fhise~h~t~lciscore
·
·
.
.
·
doubleheader
·.
against


.
Wagner
six
_
runs
_
·
in
_
th
_
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·nn_
h
_
·
.
inning
to
puf
·
.
Satui-day:
,
~
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.
the game out of reach.
: .
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·
did nb(hajji{en. : ·
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.:
·
..
•·.
.
_
'.
.
.
.
. .
.
.
.
..
.
.
Junior· Vinny
:
Robert()
and
.··
.
:
The
·
.
Red
.
Foxes.(0-9! 0-2
.
in th
_
~ ·sophompreMark.BarI'on were the
Nqrtheast Conference)were hand1°
,

only two players who put up any
ly swept by the Seahawks, 14~tand
·
solid offensive numbers.
:
·
·
.
~2.
.
.
.,
.
.
:
.
}n
the fir~tgame, Marist ~c
.
~re
,
d
.
. Ro~t;ltc(_,vis 2~3~idi a
'
·
douol~;
.
its
;
lone
.mn
:
in the second inning
·
.,
Sl~gl
_
e_a_n~)~n
~~~i
,
:
13ar!of
,
'.\V
,
~S
_
l::.3
.~-
when_ji.lhior Todd Horgan doubl~
with on~
;
~J3
_
1
~-;/t"·
~
::
·
.-:
·
:,
.

·
·
·
·
·
ed
·
driving
:
in·
·
sophomore
Brinclon
:-
:
..
,
,
-
.
~
-
·
:
_
~
--
~

;_
~{.;_
·
..
·._.:i
__
:
-
...
~
..
;
._
: ..
...

·
.
·
,
Tierney . .
· _
"'
.
.
.
~
,
·

..
__
.

..
.
_
. _
!;{e~d f?a~h
·
.A:rt
_:
.~mi!t
.
sa}~
t
he
. .
· .
.
·
... •
·-~
.....
..
·

·

.
.
was d1sappomte9.w1th tlie
·
·
tean'l's
.
The
,
Red Fox.es
.
'y,ere:
,
: <>nly' effort in. both games:
.
·
'

.
:.r
able to muster two ·hus
0
m
-
the
·-·
·.
''-' '":•,:...,
:
..
,.'
'
·
··. •·
.
ballgame~
''Once·-~rgBt b~bi~d
>
~ve
'
:
1~st
:
warming
·UP
·
,
.
"
·
...
•.
'
;
·
.-
.

,;,:
:
..
.
However, the Red Foxes one-run
our intensity,"the third
s
yearcqach
-:~
.
lead was short Hved as Wagner said. "We mighthave
:
beeri gµilty
:
·
scored·two runs'in the second, three
·
of packing it.in.' We, cHdn'tJighftilL
·
.
·
.
••
.
.
·
·
·
.
in the third and seven in the fourth
.
.
the end
in
oudast
two
6allgamesf
' :
Junior captain·
Matt
Bourne practicing in the
gym
because of inclement weather.
to
clinch
:
the
·
victory.
.
J
_
::;r.
,
:_/
-~>
.
:.· .·
:~
>
.
\
i
.
;
.
.
<"
··
.
·
;
.
·
..
.
.
.
Circle
photo/Matt Martin
·
· ·
·
·
A)lhoi,Jgh S.rnith said
:
ne di(not
<
'
•-
. ....:
'.
;
c..;.:_
·
_--'-..,__
_
~-'--~----------------------'-----------1
(
Marist was ~!so woeful
:
in the
.
want to rnake excuses; he did men-
· ·
.
'.
.
•·
.
.
: .
·
.
.
field committing nine errors which
.
tion thafth~·teandias
.
riot had an
·)'.
_
"It
,was-hke

starting all over,"
led to nine unearned runs.
.
.
c>utdoor/prii:'cijce
'-J
his
:
.
Y~~r
:
.
-.
:
~
Smith sai~.
I( Smith was looki~g for a much
The tea~
;
fiiis ri.cit:;Iliy~~i 6ut~ide
,
_
.
;,We h'~y~·ri•t had one practice
better performancejn the second
since getting backfrom
'i
ts
'.
spring
,
O!J
the di~mond. "!1/e're not going
ga~e, he did not get it.
March 17.· .-'
~
··
'
<
-
to get one this week."
LacrOsse
ffllls
:
.l()~?.gJ~S; 17-5
.
·
·
. · . .
.
·
·
On M!lr,ch
'
23,
:;
th~
'
R~
-
~
·
Fo
_
x~s

goals
·
\Ver~di.ie to ommi~iakes and
'.
by
TERI
L.
STEWART
were defeate~ by
:
y~r1pont Coll~ge;
::
no
_
t
:
Jhl!ir ability, so
_
we tightened
.
. Staff Wr!ter
·
·
a~ Divisioll
:;
t~cJt<fol
·
fanke..4
:
in
·
t
_
he
,·.
things
'
up and played
.
better.''
·
top
15
nationally
>
/
·

~;:
:

:.
·
,
.
.
: ' . ·.
,.

.
·
.
.
·
;
After
.
winning
its
first three
The
22;1
-
foss
'
\va~
;
riot
\°i
disap-
,
·
Ev~n t~o
_
ugh
_-all
thr~e te~ms
·
gaines,the men's lacrosseteam has
pointment
'
for.Dj~}).La!ld ~js
'
te!lip. _
. ,
sc~>r~d _often
,
agamst
.
Manst, Diehl
dropped three
-
games in'a row; in~
·
::.'.
Altho·ugh, Vehriont's
·
players
,
sa1c,ithe score does
.
not reflect how
.
~Judirig"
a
17
~
Sloss· to Bosfori
.
Cfoi
t
.
were bigger'/fast'ei'-'aricfmo're
·
exc
·
·
the 'team played·
..
.
~e)ast
o
Saturday;
.
...
,
.
.
.
··.
.
..
.
perienced, Diehl
;.
~aid he was
''I don't think the scores of all
·•
.
'.
'.
_:;
_fourt~
·
year head coa_ch Tgni
-
satisfi<;d
.
\Vith
:".'
!the
,.;i
{
team 's
three: games areindj"ative of· the
.
_.
_I>
,
1e~l
.
s~1~ ~he squad, anJp~~pen~
t

;
p~rf ormarice;·
j:.
·
.
;:
'._·
.::-
',
.
.
<':
;
,_ '.-
garfie', ••~he
·
said,
·
\'The
.
re came
a
,
cle~t D1v1s1<;m Jtea1?;-
·
c2ptp~ted
.
,
}'We:.9icl.
improve through
•.
th~ ·
'.
point in- the games where playing
·
·
s:9h~ly
.
agamst
·
.
.
a h1~h~!,
~•
cal~b~
_
r
:
:''
.
?a
111
e
'
aM
·
·
n;t(de
f
~ece~J~rY.
f
iJd-
-
:
_'<
exp~rie_n
7~
·
_
for;tjle ycifrng
·
kidS-~vas
/5~';1·
..
.-
.
.
-••·
·
;,:'
;,
--
·
:-~\
'
:
t:
·
JUS
,
tlllents
'.i-.
t_h3:t.,m~g
,
e us
._
~at1sQ.ecJ
:
)note
1mporta
_
nt than
·
~he fmal
· · •
\Vepl~yedverywell;· hesa1d
:--
whenweleftthegame,"D1ehlsaid:= score.
·
'
·
·
·
.
'
··
·
.
.
.. They're Just at the next level of
·
·
·
.
.
abilif'."
·
·
··
·
senior captain 'Doug Closinski,
"The outcome was already
.•
\
',
:
f.'rJnmariJamieMcQurk scored
the best overall player on the team
decided so we got accomplished
..
t_wo goals to lead the Marist'<:harge.
-'
according to Diehl, scored two
what we
..
wanted out of those
. <
.
/
McGurk, one o[Diehl's
·
new
goals against V~rrriont.
·
..
t
.
games,"'I:)iehl a
_
dded.
\ecruits,
wasan aHackman in high

.
Closi~skihas·
21'
goal{
,J
:-]
/~
'
"'"cast
te~sJii
(
the
_<
Red Foxes·
s¢hool imd is now playing midfield
·
games and is the leading scorer
.
on
,
Jinished :,yith a di~appointing 2-12
(Clf
:
the Red Foxes.
.
.
._
·
·
. .
·
. .
his team,
"
.
,
record. •
.··
·
.
.
.
.
.
·:..
Diehl
.
said he needed
·
time to
'
·
· ·
·
·
·
·
s.
:
'
·
··
·
·
.
iearn the position,
, .
,
C
:
According to Diehl, the secret to
.
Better conditioning may be a
··
·\
'
.
'We had
_
to
t
_
each him how to
Closinski's success is his superior
reason why this team; six games in-
.
play defense becaus
_
e
·
he hadri't
.
stick handling arid his experience.
.
to the season, has more wins than
played
:
)
nuch defense if!
,
high
.
'.!He is t~e
Joe~! point
or
our
last year's team.
·
.
.
':
scliool;"
_
Diehlsaid.
•~He
adapted
\
defense,'i D1~hl s~1d.
-
"Hfs J_!lst a
_
.
.
'.'~v
_
ery year th~
.
kids have got-
,vell
:
"
·
_. ·
·
_
.
·
_
·
..
·
.
. ·._.
,_
.
;
~:
·,:.
,
good lacrosse player
:
"
.
_
t
-

ten
·
alittlebetteraridwehavecon°
::s·
fyl~Gurk
_
i~ a starter for th~ R~d
/
St.
'
J~
_
hn;
'
s
,
u~iversity
;iso
crtsh-
.
c~ntrated on conditi9ning more,"
Fo
,
x.es \Vllo Diehl saidO)le expectslo
·
··
ed Marist/18-3.
·
•·
•·
· • ·
.
~~~~~t!~~1~~•~;;:/~~~:e~e~~
t,e
·
one of the team's
·
top
·
scorers.
o·iehl sai·d hi·s· team
· .
.
was
·-
a
·
1·1ttle
tremendously and
_
wen
·
ced to'
.
keep
/
McCiurk is not the only player
.
.
that."
,
~he>
is expected to score in_gali!e
.
s,
,
worned about-the strengt~ o[_the
_
.
.
.
.
.-:
::,
According to Diehl, the offense
~
-Red!fien.
. .
•.
.,
.
•·
The Red Foxes take on the Stags
.
is
:
sefup
-
~o
anyone has the chapce·
:
·
:."
,
:'W~
played
:
tent~t'i~e.ly a(fii:st;'
L: .
?fFairfield:lJniversity
Oil
Saturday
-
.
to score
m
games.
:··
he said. '!We ie'alJzed
a
lot
of the
.
~
-
m
Conne~t1c11t.
'
Intramurals
.
.
t
_
e
.
nnis·· b"e'.ats .
:
Terriers,
9-0
.
·
·
.
In MondayJe~gue b~ketball ac-
tion,
A
Few Good Men lead the
l~gue
.
with a 5-0 record.
.
<
Big Country and. Flex are both
undefeated in Wednesday league
play.
:'.,
Three
·
of the four women's
basketball teams have
2-1
records.
f
~n
volleyball action, Los Locos,
Mute Elephants and Froiters are
tied for first place with 2-0 records
in the Tuesday league .
.
.
MCIVC, Murphy's Law
·
and
Marion Tigers are tied for first in
Thursday league play.
Softball sign-up sheets
.
are
available in the Intramural Office.
The deadline to hand in the sheets

is April I.
.
There was a fifth annual recogni~
tfon dinner held on March 28 to
honor the club sports. The follow-
ing clubs were invited: equestrian,
ski, hockey, rugby,
·
women's soc-
cer, cheerleading, sailing, men's
volleyball, racquetball, bane!,
women's lacrosse and Aerobics.
.

Ilardi, and the rest of the team
by
GERARD
:
CARNEY
.
will lookJo three new
.
players M
_
ar-
StaffWrjtef
:>,.
·
,
:~
,tin
Bynfe, Marc Nussbaum
.
and
The men's terini!{team is
·
iook-
~robodh.Chiplunkefto make key
·
· · ·
·
-contributions
.
.
ing to improve
from
'last
:
year's'

fourth place finish in the Northeast
"These guys came in, and
it
Conference. They took a step in the
seems like they made everyone else
right dire,ctjon last Satur~ay wtth a .play better,'' Ilardi said. "This and
dominating 9-0
~.
victory
'.
·
over
:
St.
.
the gre~t
,
guidance provided by
Francis N.Y.
--
·
:
-:
·
.
··

'
.
·
>
coach Ken Harrison have made us
With the victory, Marist raises its
contenders.''
.
record to
-
J-1
(1-0
in the NE¢).
;
·
.,
Led by Senior Christopher liar-
_.
.
,Thi~ coming weekend
·
Marist will
di (6-1, 6-0) and Junior Martin
take on Fairfield, a team that has
Byrne (6-1, 6-0), the Foxes pound-
given them trouble in the past.
ed the Terriers 6-0 in singles com-
"There are going to be a number
petition and ~-0 in the doubles
of close matches this time," Ilardi
matchups. .
,
:
.
said.
"It
should be fun to watch.
According to senior Chris Har-
Hopefully, we'll come out on top."
di, the team has high hopes.
In other matches last Saturday,
"We've steadily been improving
Brian Lasusa defeated Richard
over the last years, he said
.
'
.
'This
Sheler, 6-1,
6-1.
Heath Pramberger
year, we feel that we have a very
topped Tomas Gonzales 6-1, 6-0
good chance to win the con-
and Kevin McGovern beat Sean
ference."
Kelsick 6-3, 7~6.
·
·
. ·
Smith said he
·
felt the team
should have picked up a few wins
during its spring trip.
In the first seven games, Marist
had a lead in five of those games.
Smith
found
a
way
to
characterize his team's perfor-
mance to this point.
"It's like building a cake," he
said. "It looks pretty good,
but
it
tastes
-
lousy.''
MCTVNEWS
:
·"Year
In .Review~•
Monday - Friday
at
5
·
:30 P.M.
on
MCTV
Campus Cable
·
Channel 12
...,,






















































































S8f
tbil!lt'
oa-aeR .
gets·
.
susl7)eircI~a;
,
> .
by
ANDREW
t
~dtMLiJNo
·
'
·
,i~;;ri::?~i:.~i=~~~i:in~hr~
<
.
·
.
staff
Wrjter
--
-:
,•·
.
·
ask:''
:
·
\•, ·
·
:
.
,
. .
:
.
·
.
..
.. \ 'OF.THE'WEEK:
..
.
.
STAT
.
.
.
·
.
_.
,
.
._
.
.
P
i.
·
Alis<>n
..
.
Murrayj
,c
Patsy
;
Schneider; am

GC>Oltz; andQ
.
~Wn D~ty ran the.-Jastest-out-
door time for women
:
rn school hrstory! stop-
ping tl:te
c~ock
at4:23;86 in
.
ttie 4x400 r~lay.
.
Hea'd°
~'
softbaU
.•
. coa~h
-
.
Tom
:
.
Team members declined to
.
coin-
.
Chiavelli
.
:
was suspended Friiiay; ·
ril.'ent
on the. coa'cl1's situation;.,
,
.
M.arch 25, by the
,
,
athletjc ad-
·
·
Doris said
'
·:he
-
was
·\
imcertain
/
ministrators
·
, Chiavem said
.
ori
:
wfietlie/or nofchfavelli
\
voukf re~
.·.
Tlfesday.
·
. .
.
.
main the head coach fo.r the rest. of
..
Originally; Athletic pii-ectqr
'
the
·'
seaso~
.
<
">
,:
:
._
.
.
~-
' _
Gene Doris said to The

Circle that'
··
·
"H's very
.
diffii::i.tlUo make
:
a
Chiavelli had
·
left for· persorial
·
·
statemerit·tcfs6rriething1hat hasn't
reasoris
:
J-fowevet, according to Ofe·
.
been
;
resolved
i
yet," Doris said.
Poughk~epsie Journal;
·
Doris later
.
·.
·
As~lsta~t
.
coach°
'
Ge9~ge
.
B
'
ergell
.
said Chiavelli was suspended
said he would be
:
willing to coach
indefinitely.
·
in
· ·
any capacity
'
for the team
The Circle
·
was unable
·
to
·
reach
because of his contract.
·
Doris for further
.
cominenr after
·
Chiavelli spoke to The
·
9ircle:
"There was a leave of absence,"
Doris told The Circle. "We don't
know the
.
situation at th.is ·
.
time.,;
Chiavelli, who
.
is in his third
season as manager, said he could
:
not comment on
·
the reason why he
was suspended. He said
'
he hopes
·
the situation will
·
be
·
resolved as
soon as
.
possible.
"l am
·
s
·
uspended, but it
shouldn't be long," Chiavelli said:
"I have been suspended since Fri
'-
day, but (the suspension) should be
decided
'
in the next few days.'·'
Chiavelli also said he is unsure
whether he is in good standing with
his players.
~'I don't know," he
·
.
said: "I
·
can't answer that. A couple of the
''Whether'it'ishelping coach pit-
ching
;
hitting or
.
carrying the bats
and balls, I have a contract; and
1:
will
honor it, ''said the former pits
·
ching coach at D'titchess Commtini-
·
ty College
.
Bergen said the team is himdliilg
the situation arid has contiriued to
practice on
.
a regular day-to-day
basis;
·
·
"They are
·
ctoing
,_
vei:y well,"
Bergen said
.'
"These are a very fine
group
·
of young
·
ladies. They· are
.
here to play softball
.
"
.
.
.
Mat-ist is off to its best start ever
with an
.
8-5 overall standipg.
This
:
is the
,
second COllSfCUtive
season where strife has hit the soft
-
ball program .
.
Co6rtney Sleight lays down a drag bunt in
:a
recent indoor practice. Se;
'
game,
,
story page 11
_.
.
·
·
·
· ·
_
· ·
_
.
·
·
·
.
.
.
.
·
.
.
Circle
photo/Matt Mart
.
in
Last year, the ed
.
Foxes
·
were
confronted with
a
coaching dilell).-
ma between Ch1avelli and former
assistant coach Bonnie Schilling.
In the April
29,
1993 issue ofThe
Circle, players and Schilling
,
said
there were conflicts with Chiavelli 's
coachirtg style
.
·
Schilling was dismissed from
coaching after the conclusion of the...;
1993 regular season.
Some players·even threatened to
quit the tearri
.
and relinquish their
.
·
scholars~ips,
··
dting
1
the

coac
_
hing
·
problems
.
as
·
reasons
;
.
How~ver;
:
~1orie
_
of. those quoted
as haying
'
reservations about
·
cons
tinuing
·
to
.
play for the Red Foxes
under Chiavelli left the program.
Doris said he could not forecast
Chiavelli's· possible return to
.
the
team.
·
"It's
'
difficult to say," Doris
said. '
.
'I'd like to resolve things as
quickly as possible, but in the in-
terim
;"
everything is running
smoothly,,,
.
Chiavelli said he cannot give any
details on his present situation.

''There is
.
11othing I can ans~er
until a decision has been made, he
said.
·
Trac~
p
'
etf()rnts
:
WeH
at
West
Pt.
of 15:09
.
9-a personal best by 32
seconds.
·
Carson stopped the clock
·
at
by
.
~REG
_
BIB~
10:54:9 crossing the finish iine in
;;._ __
.
·
_

·
_
"
_
:
,_s..,.ta_ff_W_r_
·
it_e_r
·
_
·.
-
_
;
_
: ,
_
, ..
..,
·
_
,
fifth
:
~lace
,
·
.
.
.
'
("
.
Ever heard of
.
the expression:
··o
·
opd things
,
come in
.
thre
·
es?"
.
,
.
Bria~ Ordway finished fourth in
the, steeplechase with a
_
time of
10:01.
-
.
ILappeais
·
t
~
-
e
tri~
'
i
f
The~esa
Hickey,MaryMcQuillail and Alex
Bequ'ary have as the
·
ttiree headHri~
Carolyn Mercury
als~
carved her
name into theMarist history
-
books
by
setting a riew school record
·
in

·
the 109 metei's'
_
with atinie.of 17 _26
.
·
Andy Baird's time of 15:32 in the
seconds.
5000-meter run was only three
- .
.,
•··
>
.
.
.

.
.
_.
·:•.
,
.
,
.. ·
.
seconds _behincL his personal best. .
'
~be
\
i'me itripre~sed
~~ad
'
coach
:~
..
0:
1n the
\
vi1ghteve~ts; Chris Kick
Phi~
·
1<::~lly
who said Mercury had
accompli'shed a
.
personal best
nottramed a greatdeal before the
throwing thejavelin over
165
'feet
.
ed · the Marist effort this past
weekend at the
.
.
West Point
-
·
,
Invitatio
n
al.
.
.
,
H
'i
~key finished
·
j
·
ust
:
three
seconds ah
c:
ad
'
of
·
McQuiUarrand
·
.
four
.
·
seconds ahead
;
of:
Bequary
·
with

a time of
.
19:43 in
.
the
meet.
·
5000-meter run
.
Kelly hact
·
ano.tlier reason
.
to he
pleased
·
when
·
the team of Alison
..
Murray, Patsy' Schneider;
..
Pam
·
Gooltz
:
and Dawn
:
_Doty ran the
·

fastest outdoor time for

women in
.
The time was
'
good enough to
:
school history sfopping the clock at
earn Hickey a fifth
':
place finish.
.
4:23
:
86jn
·
the 4x400

relay.
·
McQujllari and Be<iu!!ry finished
. ._
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
:
sixth
.
and seventh respectively.
..
_The men•~ team also had a solid
:
.
_
_
·
A
.
I
... ·
e-


h
._
h
.
.
-
.
. .
·•.
.
.
·
perforn1ance ar the invitational.
.
.
ong
,
wit
-
t e fine
.
perfor-
.
.
.
·
.
.
.
.
mancesof Hickey,
~
McQuillan and
.
·.
Like
_
the
:
woinen
'
s
,
c~mpetition,
·
Bequary,. C<>lleen Carson ran the
·
team-scoring did· not fake place.
·
.
third
·
fastest outdoor time for a
·• ·
·
woman 'in Marist history in the
·
·
Marty Feeney set a school
,
mark
0
3000 meters. ·
.
Ill
the 5000smete
·
r- run-
:
witli ·a tinie
Mitch Madarish, who com'peted in
his ffrst collegiate rrieet in four
years; tlirew
c
thejavelin
.
·
159 feet, 10
inches;
Jim Luciano also had a good day
irt the
·
weight events throwing the
shotput
38
feet, 2 inches.
·
Head coach Pete Colaizzo said
this. was the
.
first meet he could
remember where he was not disap-
pointeq with any team member
'
s
_
performance
~
The
·
rileri ~nd
·
women both next
run
-
into act
i
on
'
-
on Saturday April
9 at Central' Connecticut.

.
.
;.
ra~/;i/lfl&,
,
iArx:)<hlerils
affect
.
team
.
f)TlCe
·
llgain
.
·
,
According to
··
a
~
r¢Iiable
source;.
s~ftball season would continue just
.
.
._
Fortunatelr
.
for Marist; Murphy
ChiavellLCurtently, the Reel Foxes
-
head coacli Tom Cl!iavelli,
',
head
l*f no.r~al.
·
Ted
,
is still playi~g. Tlie
,
sophomore
.
·
are in firsr;placein the NEC.
·
coach
·
:
.
Toni
,
_
Chiavelli
>
:was
.
fotere~ting._
.
,
_
_
.
-
.
.
.,
shortstop went 4-6 iri Saturday's
·
It
is
a·cr~dit to the players
.
that
suspendect
~_
,,
,
.
.
.
..
.
;
.
. "
.
·.
~ow
:
c
.
o_ulpthi11gs b~ completely
Holmlund
d~ublehead~r sweep
·
oyer
-
St. ~ran
-
they _h~ve
:
.
be
_
e1_1
:
able
·
to play
:
well,
Howevt:r, befo
.
re The Circle talk
_
-
normal \VItlia team
,
thatalso had
-.
c1s,
_
N,I. ~urphy al
_
so droye m the
despite the problems off thefield.
ed to Chia'velli the athletic depart-
to
·
play through coaching problems
·
game-wmn111g
·
runs 10 both iames.

. .
:rhey now have'J)roven they can
rhent said Chiavelli was
'.
only
.
ori a
·
last year w
_
hen C:hiavelli and former
The
_
players interests
·
shouJd not
win with
.
or without him.
·
.
.
leave ofabserice
~
Granted, that's
assistant coach Bonnie Schilling
·
.,....--,------
be the only consider~tion here.
So; what•s
.-
riext?
the truth and noth_ing but the truth,
were feuding over waySin whicl)
Tai
kin! it
Howe~er, if theyst~ll feel the same
.
Will Chiavelli stay, ''resign" or
out it is ncit the whole truth, so help
~h~
tea~ s~ould have been
----,----
way
·
a
.
hour Chiav<:lli this year, the
--
just get fired. It's a good question,
me God..
·
·
·
managed.
·
athletic departtl!
.
ent should Inake a
·
butone we
.
won'tspeculate
00
·
at
If
Athletic Director Qene
·
Doris
Maybe, there are
.
different
nor, now
:
a
·
senior~ said the follow::
·
more thorough attempt ofresolv-
this time until more details are
was able;to be reached for further
definitions
·
to the word normal.
ing of Chiavelli: •~It's a big. pros
ing
.
this situation one· way or
known.
comment after The Cfrcle learrteci
.
Last year, .the
·
players voiced
·
blem because he wants to head anoth~r.
. ·
.
·
.

.
The players have handled
.
these
that Chiayelli was suspended, he
their displeasure about this
coach, and he's not open
to
sugges-
These. kind of ptoblems hurt
situations
as
well as could
-
be ex-
would have suddenly remembered
situati~n
.
·
.
.
tions, whether it will help the team
·
team unity and are a distracti~n for
pectecl
,
. They deserve answers im-
that the coach was
·
suspended
-.
Although this incident
is
dif
-
or not .
.
He wants to call the shots,
the players
.
It negatively affects
·
mediately~ They'deserve to be con-
because
.
he told the Poughkeepsie
ferent, the . players have been
and he gets threatened by someone
team moral?, too,
tinually informed and make input
Journal that he
·
was suspended in
strongly encouraged to remain
else who wants authority.''

~till Successful·
.
.
on this present situation,
time f':'rtheir ~ednes?ay ed
_
it
_
fori.
silent.
.
·
Surpns1ngly, _despit~ having to
Finally, they deserve to finally
Why the ongmal discrepancy?
Wonder
who
did
·
the
Beth
Murphy,
·
now
a
endure another mtngumgsaga for
ger to play a softball
·
season
1rthe athletic department ~as
encouraging?
.
.
sophomore, said many players
the second conse~utive season, the without anymore coaching hassles
.
straight
_
forward from the begmn~
Memones
_
wanted a new coach, according to
~oftball progr31fT! ts currently off
_
to
National Championship
!ng, this
_
ci>lu~n would fi
_
rst be talk-
If
we can loo~ b_ack at the pro: the same story·
its bes! start m 1~s three-yea_r stmt
. Arkansas will win the NCAA na-
mg abo~t the. problems betwe~n
blems last year, 1t 1s safe to make
.
"Most of us want a new head
as an J_nt~rcolleg1ate franchise. .
t1onal championship crown.
Chiavelli 3Jld his pl~yers. More will
a~ educated guess th:it the play~rs
coach," said Murphy last year,
·
M;mst 1s no':" 8-5 overall, (2-0 m
The
Razorbacks have been best
be discussed on this later.
still have problems with Chiavelh's
"but
J don't know if the school's
the Northeast Conference).
team all year
;
.
Doris and assistant coach George
coaching style.
.
going to give it to us.
If
he's not
The team was even able to sweep
Pro baseball picks up next.
Bergen said simultan~ously in an
. In the April 29, 1993 jssue of The
going to change
,
then I don't want
a ~oubleheader
.
last
,
Sat~rday
.
Ted HoJinlund
is
The Circle's
interview
:
with The Circle that the
Circle, outfielder Janme O
'
Con
-
to play here for four years."
agamst
St.
Francis
N.Y. without
Sports Editor.


44.6.1
44.6.2
44.6.3
44.6.4
44.6.5
44.6.6
44.6.7
44.6.8
44.6.9
44.6.10
44.6.11
44.6.12