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Part of The Circle: Vol. 44 No. 7 - April 14, 1994

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VOLUME.44,
.
NUMBER
t
Marlst
College,
Poughkeepsle,N.Y~
He_arihg
set
for
Ledyard
's
iµipe~chinent
-- by
MERE_DITH KENNEDY
Associate Editor
by
KRISTiNA)\fEL~~.
-• _
l\ssociate :Editor
Running away .
problems.'? he sai~. '
1
Inmy tbret; .. boundaries and problems, butthere
years _at
_
Marist, tµifis tl:ie first I · ·is n~. racisin ~orf il,lis campus, just
Iiave
:
ever
;
heard of,any ·cultural
differentclicks/' he said..__
·
.
The Marist.
·
College Mission . problems/' _
.
.
. .:
·
. -_-_ . • .
· -Acc6rdirig to ·Heather Curatolo,
Statement says that it .aims
to
ex~ .
Many students said the different ,a junior ,the problem with cultimil
pose students to. different cultures
ethnic and cultural groups separate
diversity
is
that Marist does not
other than their own and to values
themselves from other clubs. - .
prom9te or have any cultural
that link those_different cultures.
· According
io
Claudine DeSola,
groups on campus •.
.·However,
it
seems students have
a sophomore;· the-
.
. problem 'lies -
''There are no cultural groups on
taken an apathetic attitude ·toward · within the different groups· and
campus beside the BSU and Latino
cultural diversity. _
-
. _ _
_
_ _ their differing .attitudes.
-
Club. I just think Marist isn'fthat
Anne Henry, a freshman, said
. ''lthink thatthe whole problem - kind of institution where culture is
the r •dents at Marist don't care
-
lies within their, own attitudes: _ represe
_
nted,'' she said._
_
about 'he different cultures on
Meaningthatif.blacks,hispatlicsor . Curatolo-said Marist does not
campu~
whatever nationality want to join
depict a true world culture because
"I think the school tries to pros
.
. ariy club, fraternity or sorority they
it does· not incorporate culture in-
mote cultur~, but it just doesn't
arewelcome," she said. "They are - to everyday life.
.
work,'' she said. "I don't think - being · biased by segregating
"Marist is a little piece of the
that too many people care on this · themselves and wanted to be on
world. There are hundreds of
campus, people should be more
their own."
cultures in the world. Marist is not
aware of things."
Tom Holmes, a freshmen, said
a microcosm of today's society,''
With the recent Black
.
Student
a majority of clubs and groups pur-
she said.
Union and El Arco Iris Latino (The
posely separate themselves from
Yessina Cruz, a junior, said the
Hispanicpub)rally,somestudents
other groups.
problem with trying to open peo-
said they were not even aware of
"The different groups do tend to
pie up to different cultures is that
the protest and were unaware their
stick together, but the majority of
people are impatient and apathetic.
was a cultural problem on campus.
them don't give anybody else a
"I think that a lot of people are
Noel Smith, a junior, said the
chance to hang out with them," he
impatient, apathetic and misin-
rally was the first he had heard of said.
formed about the different
any cultural problems on campus.
Holmes said there is no blatant
cultures," she said. "A lot of peo-
"Up until this point, Ihad never
racism on campus, but there is a
pie don't want to learn."
heard of cultural diversity. I had
feeling of segregation.
Cruz said the issue of cultural
never heard of any complaints or
"There are definite culture
diversity at Marist is turning into
a black arid white thing and is Ieav- .. because. of similarities.
ing Hispanic
·
groups out of the ... "Some groups of people don't
. picture.
.
.
._ _
want to· • be diverse. But some
."People listen
to
stereotypes. I groups have.things in common so
dori'tlikeusingtheterm 'black' or they stick together,'' he said.
•~bite>, but it ·is .turning into a ·
.Curatolo said part of the pro-
black and whiteissue, :Where do
blem lies _with the administration
Hispanics fit-in?" she said.
and ~dmissio·ns policies.
_
·. Laci Beckett, a freshmen; said
"Marist administration only
she believes·the cultural groups on takes the people who can afford it,
campus do not promote diversity~
the ones .with the money,'' she said.
•~The cultural groups segregate <'That is why this campus is most-
themselves from· the campus life,
ly white, upper- to middle-class
they don't promote diversity," she -students."
said. "By taking in anyone, they
Recently, a flyer was posted on
raise self-esteem." · ·
·
campus addressing 'the issue of
Beckett, a· member of Kappa cultural diversity at Marist.
It
said
Kappa Gamma, said the different culture is a wonderful
aspect
to life,
ethnic groups should heal the racial but shoul_d not be forced upon
wounds and join all clubs on people.
·
campus.
"Why does culture have to be a
"I think they should -end the reason for conflict? Why do we
wounds instead of segregating segregate ourselves according to
themselves," she said. "I could our respective cultures?" the flyer
have -joined a black sorority at said. "Culture can
be
a great thing,
Vassar. There aren't really many but ramming it down the throats of
minorities in the greek organiza-
others can only serve to alienate.
• tions here .. That is why I joined the
"We are all Americans. We are
-one I did, it was my choice not bas-
all Marist students. Prejudice
does
ed on my race."
not belong here. Black, white,
According
to
Fernando Hispanic . . .
shut up and talk to
Braithwaite, a freshmen, some each other. Have dinner together.
groups -of people click together Get loaded together. "





























































































































2
Full
'f
roritalsJ:tte.one
,ofth½jJef;KS'
()f
'$ite{!S!.\, ..
·
... · . >
. ·
· ,
·
, . - · ·
In movie new,c;, ''Tre!!1,0rSJ)t"c- w1H be.
. by
JUSTIN ?EREMET
(MacPherson),,
.,_-.·-.
_
_ _
_
,,
neat and cor,~y,h':Jsband
~
ways and the loosy
released later this year, a setjuerto_·the.1989
While Tony tries to persuade Lindsay to
goosy,behav1or of th~ men~-- .. _
· .·
B-rriovie, .with the· original cast oLKevin-
Attention all males and pre-pubesent boys:
alter his art, Stella discovers this freedoin
The film does h~ve its lesbmn _undertones
Bacon Fred Ward, and Michael· Gross
tha( the sireris have, from their naked
as weH; there are a· few. scenes where the
returning.
_
• _ _
·•· ._
· .. ·-
·
_
"Sirens" features Elle MacPherson stark
raving naked, coincidentally the same month
that she is featured ina layout in "Playboy."
bathing in the· pond to ignoring the disrespect
women caress each other by the pond.
.
.
· .
.
,
. · . __ ·
. ··, .·
they· receive within town. ,
.
This causes some difficulty for Stella,'who
. i:ox is _
loo~i,ng: ~t .' r~~ghly _20. differfnt ·.
Although ('Sirens" is .,being toted as a
is seen participating in this exercise in strok-
scnpts fo_r an Aben 4, li!ld
IS
also t~ymg
romantic comedy, there seems to be more
ing by her husband.
to lure Sig(?urney w_eaver into __ retu_rmng.
But there's a lot more to "Sirens" than
just the luscious nudity.
meaning than huinor.
MacPherson, incidentally, was quite sur-
. T~ere aresonte_senous bomb threats lurk-
Director John Duigan does an excellent
prising in her debut as the head siren.
mg m the world ?f hom>r; beware pf
"Sirens" is a tale of a modern day artist
named Norman Lindsay (Sam Neill), who'.s
paintings are deemed "blasphemous" by the
general public and the Catholic Church,
especially one that portrays Venus being
.job capturing the dreaminess and eroticism
Elle nowjo1ns the ranks of Kathy Ireland
•:~ra!~scan•:, ·starnng Ed~ard Furlo_ng
of the sirens, especially in a particular scene
("National Lampoon's Loaded Weapon
1 ")
(
T2 ) and Lep!echaun
2, .
the sequel_to
in which Stella floats in a pond and is sur-
-and Cindy Crawford (annoying commercials
the _1992 mega-d1sa~ter star.~m~ W~~wick
rounded by the naked temptresses as the
for Pepsi-Cola and _
Charlie perfume) as
pavis (remember hnl} as
Wicket
the
moonlight glows upon them. _
former Sports Illustrated models who have
Ewok?).
_ . _ .
crucified by a group of men.
.
The church sends priest Tony Campion
(Hugh Grant), along with his wife Stella
(Tara Fitzgerald), to convince Lindsay to
make his works a little less controversial.
Much of the humor of the film stems from
gone_ Hollywood.
_ Another needless sequel,
0!1
the hon~on 1s
Grant, who perfectly plays the. the old
Sam Neill while notin much of the film
"Halloween 6: The _ Ongm of Michael
fashioned Tony.
·
·
gives a witty and somewhat smug per for:
Myers," a
filin
Mira~ax is try~ng to ~ush f?r
Tony, who cutely calls Stella 'lPiglet,"
mance as the ·scrutinized artist.
release on everyones favonte holiday m
After meeting Lindsay, the two come in
contact with Lindsay's "sirens," three
beautiful models who are posing for his most
current painting.
while she refers to him as "Pooh," is
· "Sirens" is an entertaining and mean-
October.
.
._
'hopelessly naive to his wife's liberal
ingful film that should not be seen simply for
Apparently Donald Pleasance will not.be
transformation.
its bountiful nakedness.
·
back as Dr. Loomis; meaning that_there is
A classic scene is \~hen T~ny asks _Stella
It's about sexual freedom, and after wat
0
virtually no hope for this doomed series.
What strikes Tony and Stella is the incredi-
ble sexual freedom that the sirens_ possess,
led · by
the
brown-haired
Sheila
if she feels like having sex. After she says no,
ching it, viewers themselves may actually feel
he replies, "wake me up
if
you do."
Hberaied enough to frolic outdoors. (Grade
Didn't we learn enough from "Jason Goes
to Hell"?
Tara Fitzgerald's Stella is torn between her
: B
+}
·
.
.
Hey, did you hear about ..
?
-
Well, whatever, nevermind
by
DANA BUONICONTI
ed
"If
I
Only Had A Brain,"
"Coma," "Someone To Pull The
Here's a question.
Trigger," and "Head Like A
Have you ever had someone you
Hole."
genuinely cared about, someone
Their reasoning and justification
you identified with who affected
for their "tribute": Kurt's death is
your life by making you the person
funny.
you are today, die?·
I don't know about you, but I'm
Evidently Gabe Demma and
not laughing.
Jami Fregosi haven'•.
Their actions demonstrate that
Because if they had, they
they have no respect for Nirvana
wouldn't have been mocking Kurt
fans,-and no respect for music fans
Cobain on their radio show, on
in general, because if they did,
WMCR, Monday night.
Monday. night wouldn't have
There is nothing funny about
happened.
death.
Obviously they don't understand
Period.
the emotional ·connection between
Still, Demma and Fregosi had a
a band and _its fans; a connection
grand old time on the air for two
evident by the thousands of people
hours giggling at Kurt blowing his
who participated in a vigil for Kurt
brains out.
in Seattle over this past weekend
Oh yeah, they played songs tit\-
and th_e people whose lives Kurt
~---·
·
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,
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..... _._.
,
· . _.,/
.
. ·.,,.;_-_. __ :
_
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·•c"•··
·--
'
- -
_
. eena Davis·
1s
by
JENNIFER GIANDALONE
s_ide her that she must fill to be truly
happy.
_
.
The Walt Disney Company has
Angie soon realizes that she can't
been cranking out ·movie after
do it alone.
.
movie and shows no signs of slow-
She believes that the. primary
ing
·
down.
·
·
cause of her unhappiness is her
Walt Disney Pictures has releas-
mother, who left when Angie was
ed "Cool Runnings," "Iron Will,"
only3-years
0
old. _

· -. . ·
"Blank Check," and
"D2:
The
Angie swears to one
.
day find her
Mighty Ducks" in a very shor_t
mother and get theans\vers to the
amount of tiine.
·
many questions she has.
_.· .
Their upcoming films include ihe
. Her father remarried soon a'rter
guaranteed blockbuster
of
the sum-
her mother left arid she' does not
mer, "The Lion King''. (the word
like.her steplllother Kathy at all.
.is that it will beat "Aladdin" in
· The problems between Angie
total profit).
.
.
.
.
and Kathy naturaHy causefriction
Disney is not lacking in the area· between her and ·her father; -:.
of video either,'with "Aladdin" -
As if thingS\'vere11'tbad enough,
still one of the hottest rentals right
Angie then finds out that she_ is
behind "The Fox and the Hound;" · pregnant, and as a result, decides
Coming this· fall, Disney's first
to marry her_ longtime boyfriend
animated feature becomes the last
Vinny.
on video when "Snow White and
To further complicate things,
the Seven Dwarfs" hits the shelves.
Angie meets Noel (Stephen Rea,
A division of the Disney Com-
"The Crying Game") in the
pany, Touchstone Pictures, had the
Metropolitan Museum of Art, and
great comedy "The Ref," and the
although she is not attracted to him
not-so-great comedy "My Father
right away, the two eventually
the Hero."
.
become a couple.
And finally, Buena Vista Pie-
Her relati'>ns_hip with Noel
cures, a third .division of Disney,
makes her realize that she does not
has "Angie," starring Academy
love Vinny the same way that she
Award winner Geena Davis
("A
used to and definitely do~s not
League of Their Own").
.
want
to
marry him.
"Angie" is a comedy/drama
This,
of course, shocks
about a young woman from
everyone, especially her best friend
Brooklyn who does not really know Tina.
----
.
.
touched or changed through his
-That is a fact.
·· and Rush Limbaugh.
music and lyrics.
.
You want your MTV?·
We can relate
to
Kurt.
Since Kurt's death, I have read
You wouldn't be able to have it
Yes; Kurt took the easy way out.
many comments from peoplewho
orsee your Nine Inch Nails, your
Yes, Kurt had no consideration
identified\vith who he was, what
Sciundgarden, your _Smashing
for his wife and child:
·
he stood for, and the confusion he
Pumpkins, or your Beck on that
And yes, Kurt had no considera-
faced in his life.
channel if Nirvana had never
tion for his fans, who cared about
Without Kurt Cobain, bands
existed.
him.
such as Pearl Jam would not be
Kurt restored the punk ethic, as
Whether we like to· admit it or
where they .are today.
. tainted as it may be now, to a scene
not, he. mirrors our society, aild
Vedder even said so himself dur~
that was on the verge ofextinction
now he has created a void that will
ing Pearl Jam's performance at
when it crawled out of the '80s.
not be filled, with the. hope of
Boston Garden last Friday night.
.But it wasn!tjust Kurt's music
greater . things yet to _come
Demma ·. and .Fregosi call
that made hiin·important;. it :,vas
extinguished,
themselves· Pearl· Jani fans, but_ if· the combination· of the music, the
We cannot- possibly. understand
it were Eddie Vedder that had died,
lyrics, and the man himself.·
his death and answer "why?"
the situation would be much much
What makes Kurt,the man, im-
_ Nou don't have to like hii:n, but
different.
·
· ..
portant, is that he e~bodied _feel-
youhave to empathize; you'.and
Kurt, Krist Novoselic, and Dave
r~1gs t~at our ge!1erat1on can 1den-
Kurt have shared·similar feelings.
Groh!, Nirvana, are responsible for · t~fy with: cc:mfus1on, anger, frustra- .
.
Kurt Cobain's death is a iragedy.
the mainstream , acceptance of ; uon, rebelhon...

1
--..
-
--
1

h" -
.
·
"alternative'' mu
'
sic.'
'W
_
e·_~an't relate to GeorgeEfosh
t
I_S
no aug mg matter ..
·
'Aiigie'.
Tina is the mother of two boys
and is married to a man that treats
her like trash. .
.. . .
Her marriage is the_ subjectof the .
arguments that she_ and. Angie
have.
.
.
Tina does \Vhat she can t() help
Angie through her most difficult
problems.
Basically, "Angie' is abouforie
woman's struggle
to
findotit what
she wants out of her life and \vhat ·
kind of relations
hi
pl she needs, ..
Madonna wasorigiriallyasked to
play Angie, but she would·· have
been miscasted: . _ . .
. _ _
Madonna may have co
0
starred :·,
with Davis if"
A
I,.eague of
,
Their ·
Own," but she never would have
been able to carry the lead role.
After her appearan
·
ce on '.'Late
Show," -who knows whether .she
will ever be asked to play a serious
pan again.
-
·
Geena Davis was perfect and
. avoided overdoing it in
an
emo-
tional role; there's a reason ,vhy she :
has an Oscar and Mad·onna
doesn't.
·
One thing Angie learns. is that
life is far from perfect and you
have to take the good with the bad;
The movie focuses on the things
that are really importani in life and
the way family and friends play a
major role in someone's happiness.
''¥OU·
.·CAN
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fr~o~-tJ~i1(j/~u2~ss
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stait:1:
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flnanclaFsectirlty,
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·
what she wants
to
do with her life.
.
.
.
The film was shot on location in
Bensonhurst because the film-
makers wanted to capture the
essence, the look, of a very close-
knit, very Italian community.
(If
you're Italian, you will ap-
preciate a lot of the jokes.)
Davis plays Angela Scacciapen-
sieri, a young woman who is hav-
ing trouble determining the course
of her life, and tries
to
get help
from the people around her.
Angie is _very independent and
thinks she can handle any situation
and any person with a tough at-
titude and a few smart remarks.
As the movie progresses, she
_finds that there is an emptiness in-
Touro;
EaW-Center:
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.
.
INVITING APPLICATIONS FOR FAll-1994
· ..
._
'
..
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CONVENIENT LOCATION
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is easily reached
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Huntington. New York 11743

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l
THE CIRCLE, APRIL 14,
1994
3
.ijlti.~k:
We~K
'94
a
suceess in unity, education
by
JEANINNE,AVll.ES.
· : .. ·. :< : .
'
Staff Writer
, :stude~ts of color.• inspired
cultur~~ awareness on campus,by
educatmg
and . entertaining·
students,, faculty, and staff last
week,·
Members of the Black, Student
Union sponsored a week of ac-
tivities for students to celebrate uni-
ty; education arid tolerance.
Dance., c
.
.
~'Thereweren't. many activities,
so we needed· to expand," Cross
said.
.
· · ·
..
The celebration was expanded to
a week and c
.
oi-responds with both
the. Cultural Dinner Dance and
Latino ,veek, which is sponsored by .
El Arco Iris Latino.
Although this is not a national.
event, it.is an important event for
the organizations· on campus.
Cross explained that because
of
· histOrical reasons, people of color
"Black Week is a celebration .
and
awareness of African
Afoerkans and peopleofcolor on
campus," said Marshalita Cross
:president• .of the. Black Student
Union. and a junior majoring in
·'need fo,stay together., .
.
.
"The events are geared towards
our O\Vn likes. We need to remain
unified;" Cross said.
.
medical technology.
.
•.
In the past, the BSU sponsored
a
Black Weekend that correspond- ·
· ed wit.h the annual Cult
_
ural Dinner
. Cross also said that these.events
are educational since they show
aspects of all the different cultures.
Although events ai:e geared
Organizations
<may
be·
out
by
TOM QUINLAN
.required to perform two activities
and two Jundraisers a year.·
Staff .Writer
"There are clubs that are not
. A five member senate committee
fuifiUing their duties; and the com~
,vas formed to evaluate the forma-
mittee has decided to look at these
iion of clubs on the Marist campus,
and · possibly · eliminate them,"
This commiuee ,vas designed to
Nocella said. '
.
'Last year there were
look spedficaHy >at the dub
two .clubs that. had their charters
membership
:
· limitations and
.
to . taken away, one of them had no
make recommendations regarding
members in it.''
these limitations, according. to a
The committee has decided that
repoi:t compiled by the committee.
the problem with the club ·limita-
"We went into the meeting 'to
tions being increased does not come
ask why these clubs had· a cap on
from any administration or fun-
them, and why this could not be ex- · ding problems, but rather from the
panded," said Jennifer Nocella,
current clubs themselves.
the presid.em of the class of 1996,
The managementof these clubs ·
and a member of the selected
needs to be corrected before any
committee.
new clubs can be added,'according
Mp.rist has a limit for the amount
to the committee's report of the
of clubs it allows to function on
decision.
campus. This was the topic discuss-
Currently, there are approx-
ed by. Nocella ·and· the. four: other
imately
64
clubs organized on the
niembers of this committee. These
campus which will be looked at by
members included Coordinator.of
the senate committee,
Student Activities Bob Lynch; Vice
Honorary fraternities which.are
president, for,J::;lubsJ~eJlit Ljcari,;
7
ga,s~.d p1131.sag~mJ<;. rn~rfo.1"111anc;~. go.•
anct· ·senators ·scott Graves and
not have limitations on them. •
Holly Olson:·

'-
>
'.
',
:
:·t:"' . . :: ,.: ; ·
~
6tH~rcJub{~ud{a$SQdals'ervices,.
· The conclusion reached·'.by\the ,. '.
'
sports,· arid_
·
· Greek o_rganizations •
committeewas the decision to keep
will be looked into by the .
the dub limits t_l1e way they ate and
committee;
to _look:auhe operations of the cur-
"We areic,okingto get rid of the
rent clubs ,more closely:
.·,
clubnhat do not· do as much as .
; !~We
looked at }he facts and_n;e
they should do, that is_the purpose.
d~c1ded that_ th_e problem w_a~~
t
of the committee," said .Jason
with the p
_
otenuaLdubs, but with
LoMonaco, speaker of the senate.
the clubs .that- are currently. here.
We have toquestio·n whether they .
should remain here or not,"·
NOcella said.
·tAccording to Nocella, the pur~
pose' of the , cap is to keep the
amount: of clubs to a reasona6Ie
leveLCiubs that are chartered are
. According to the committee's
-report of their decision, the senate
will attempt
to
take a "stronger
stance" when it comes to penaliz<
ing the current clubs that are not
performing up to what is expected
of them.·
·
toward African American students,
Black Week is not justfor students
of color.
·
·
·
·
''We warit peopie to: become
aware .. . people see the word
'black'.and they feel excluded and
we· ,,·ant to erase ihat," Cross said.
"We want to·encourage people in
the future to come out and be
a
part of it alL We want them to see
what's going on and if they feel
comfortable taking pan in Black
Week events," Cross said.
The first event of Black Wr.ek
was the coronation of the king and
queen on Monday. Helena Hender-
son . was crowned queen for the
week, while Desmond Ebank5 had
the privilege of being king.
"(They are) two members of the
BSU who have shown dedication
and support, as well as academic
a_chievement. They've helped the
club· to progress."
Tuesday, they sponsored The
Lyricist Lounge by celebrating
Nyabingi, which was a night of ex-
pression, Cross said.
"It
was a night of urban music
and expression through song,
poetry, prose, etc," she said.
Wednesday was Movie Night
where the film Cabin in the Sky
was shown.
Thursday at 5:00 p.m. was thi:
basketball game against El Arco
Iris Latino.and faculty members.
At 9:00 p.m. the B.S.U. spon-
sored a Comedy Night with Gerald
Green and Mr.C in the Campus
Center room 349 .
The Alumni Reception, which
welcomed African American alum-
ni was held on Friday followed by
a fashion show.
The fashion show, which used to
be part of the Cultural Dinner
Dance,
was
held by the
BSU
with
the help of El Arco Iris Latino.
Clothing from local stores was
modeled.
Saturday was the annual
Cultural Dinner Dance, This is a
semi- formal event where not onlv
is the African American communi-
ty
on
campus able to celebrate
and
share there culture with others: but
111.111y
different nationalitic~ at
Marist arc also givi:n that
opportunity.
Poetry readings, musical perfor-
mances, and the recoirnition
of
alumni and faculty arc
;111 part or
this annual even!, Cross said.
Member
of
NYPD
teaching public relations
by
BLYTHE MAUSOLF
Staff Writer.
· Above. a desk cluttered with
students' papets··and New York
daily newspapers; hangs·anelegant-
lf framed picture of Paul B,rowne
arid President Clinton. •

· · ..
iBeyond the· gold .. frame-and
careful matting are the intentJaces
of the two men,. and· the memory
ofthefoineeting and the engaging
conversation that'ensued.
: Browne,
a
visiting adjunct pro-
fessor of communication arts at
. l\1arist, explained that the picture
was
"a
pleasant ~urprise" sent to
him
by
Clinton after they discuss-
ed a police officer featured in the
NewYork Times, who Browne was
familiar with.
• He later arranged for Clinton to
meet the officer.
As the assistant commissioner of
the NewYork Police Department,
· Browne remembers the meeting as
yet anqther interesting point in his
colorful career.
Browne knows that when
it
· comes to career choices, he has
been lucky.
,
He admits that he has not had
jobs thatnecessarily paid very well,
but that he has always · enjoyed
· what he's done.
"I've always liked my
job,"said
Browne.·
Gus Nolan, Chairperson of
Communication Arts; agrees that
Browne is one of the most dynamic
and interesting stories around.
"He has a very interesting life,''
Nolan said.<'He gets up and he's
never bored; That beeper goes off
all. the time."
As' a professor, Browne brings
his experience in politics, jour-
nalism, travel and crime fighting to
the students as a source for them
to learn from.
Nolan said Browne is on the cut-
ting edge of very interesting and
significant events and it is a tremen-
dous opportunity for students to be
able to learn from his wealth of
~xperience.
Browne teaches at Marist in his
spare time, commuting from New
York.
Initially Marist invited Browne
to
be a full-time professor, and
when David. Dinkins was not re-
elected, it was understood that
.
Browne would be leaving also.
But when the new commissioner
arrived, he thought that Browne,
with his experience, should stay on
the job.
Browne had to limit himself to
teaching only· two courses in in
order to be able to have the time
to do it.
"He's coming here. at great
sacrifice because he's doing two
jobs; he's commuting from the ci-
ty and his family is up in Colum- .
bia County and he goes up there on
the weekend," said Nolan.
Browne is no sirariger to a busy
lifestyle; he started his work ethic
back in his college days at Marist.
Nolan recalls Browne as a stu-
dent, not because he had him in
class, but because of his involve-
ment in many activities.
Browne became the editor of
The Circle as a sophomore and
spent a large amount'of time mak-
ing the transition from a monthly
to a weekly publication.
According to Nolan, hewas also
very innovative in developing the
internship program.
However, he still had time to
devote to his major, which was
american studies.
Browne said he chose it because
it fit with his real love; Latin
America.
Before he graduated in 1971,
Browne spent a year abroad in
Bogota, Columbia.
Browne entered into a Peace
Corps-like program and and went
to Samoa to teach for a year with
some of the Marist Brothers.
After he retl.lrned, Browne didn't
immediately use this experience.
Instead, he furthered his educa
0
tion at Columbia -University and
got into journalism.
He became a political reporter,
working for papers such as the
Watertown Dai)y Times, Daily
News, and. the New• York Law
Journal as well as doing free lance
·work for the New York Times.
Eventually, Browne became
more anchored in New York state
politics.
He stancd out as a traveiing
writer with Governors Carey and
Cuomo .
In 1984, Browne became the
press secretary for Sen. Daniel
Patrick Moynihan, and four years
later became his chief of staff.
Browne briefly left politics for
two years and worked in Marist's
external affairs as Vice President
for College Advancement.
He went back to work for
Moynihan for a year before he
took his current position as assis-
tant commissioner of the New
York Police Department in 1990.
Browne said that over the years
he has stayed in touch with the
faculty and felt close to the college.
Although he had and option as
an alumnus of both Columbia and
Marist, Marist was the na: ural
choice for Browne to come bark to
and share his experience.
"My heart's at Marist," he said.
Browne said he is enjoying this
opportunity to come back especial-
ly because his personal experience
is applicable to the course material.
Browne is teaching public speak-
ing, something he is very familiar
with after writing speeches for
Moynihan and the three police
commissioners he has worked
under.
In addition, he is teaching a
special topics course called "Crisis
Situations Interfaced with the
Press". Browne brings experience
and immediacy to this course as he
discusses his involvement with
events such as the World Trade
Center bombing and the shooting
of the Jewish students on the
Brooklyn Bridge.
As Nolan points out, Browne is
an asset to the school, not only a,
a professor, but also as a rok
model.
"Paul Browne is an example

what Marist students can become, ..
said Nolan.
Browne said that Marist was key
in his success thus far.
I
I
I
I
I
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4
THECIRCLE;
··-
A·PRfl
-
14,
.
199.4
.
Grads hoping
-
for
surt to avoid ticket probl~VIS
-
·
"I think that six tickets are
who was
'
goirig:to coine0to s~~
-
ine
.
by
TOM QUINLAN
Staff Writer
With the 48th Commencement
quickly approaching,
·
seniors are
preparing and ,vorrying about the
usual graduation things; caps and
.
gowns, family, post-graduation
festivities, and tickecs.
"The time (at Marist) went by so
fast, I can't believe I've ·been here
for four years already,'' said Scott
Lamphere, a senior from Albany,
N.Y.
The Commencement will take
place on May 21, and be held at
Leonidoff Field. Seniors will
receive six tickets to give to their
families and friends to witness the
event.
Two of those six tickets will be
colored differently. These tickets
wiU guarantee seating inside
.
the
Mccann center, where. the
ceremony would be moved to in
case of severe weather conditions.
The possibility of the ceremonies
being moved to Mccann ,s highly
unlikely to happen as the seating
there is limited and the Office of ·
the Vice President
will
try to avoid
moving them there
-
as much as
possible.
"I
have been to previous gradua-
tion ceremonies and they (the Of-
fice of the Vice President, which is
in charge of the ceremonies} do a
really good job," said Barbara
Sanchez, a senior from Staten
Island,
N. Y.
"Last year it was rain-
ing, and we stayed at Leonidoff
Field with our umbrellas. They
handed out garbage bags to cover
the seats, but you can't do much
about the rain."
:
.
..,
.
.
Some students feeLa problem
with the cerernonies is that
.
they do
not receive enough tickets to satisfy
their families
.
requests .
.c
.
"I
wanted
to
invite more than six
people to
.
my graduation,'' said
Scott Russell,
·
a
-
senior
·
from
Schenectady,
·
N. Y.
''This is my col-
lege graduation, and its a big event
for me and I wanted more of my
relatives to share in
it."
Leonidoff Field also has limited
seating, and six tickets is the most
that could be given to each senior.
The tickets that will be giveri
out
are not numbered or given any
specific
.
assignment to any par-
ticular spot. This makes it possible
for seniors to give extra tickets that
will not be used to
.
other students
that want to invite more people.
Students participate_ in UN
trip
Resolutions
_
were debated wuhm
said.
·
· ·
-
by
DONNA BONSIGNORE
committees and time was spent at
According to Anthony Fusari,
Staff Writer
the United Nations building taking
co-faculty
.
advisor for
.
the dub,
The Model U.N
.
club took its
fir.st trip to the National Model
U.N. Confere1!..:c in New York Cic
ty, independent of the Political
.
Science club.
·
The
group
spent four days at tile
Grand Hyatt Hotel, focusing on
how
international relations work.
Internship
·
·
·
A\va~d
.
.
·
.
.
to be
presented
to
·
member of
Circle
Poughkeepsie Journal Intern
Selected for Marist College A,vard
Poughkeepsie,
NY -
Matthew Mar-
tin, a resident of Connecticut and
senior English major concentrating
in writing, will. be given the col-
lege's second lnternship/Coaop
Student of the Year Award during
.
the
annual
Faculty
Coor-
dinator/Employer
. Contact
Meeting, Wednesday, April
20
at
11:00
a.m.
·
·
Martin; who has double minors
in Fine Arts an
_
d Communications,
worked as
.
· an
·
intern for th·e
Poughkeepsie Journal during the
_
-
Spring 1992 an
.
d Spring 1993
semesters. During his stintaMhe
Poughkeepsie Journal he wrote
stories, set-up photo assigninerits
for stories, had over 60 photos
published and operated the
Associated Press Leafdeskto input
assignments.
·
.
He is currently an intern for the
Spring 1994 semester with the Col-
umbia Journalism Review as ,veil
as the photography and feature
editor of che Circle
-
Newspaper at
Marist College. Martinis also the
captain of the varsicy track team,
disc jockey st WMCR (90.1), a
member
·
of varsity track team,
photography editor of Marist Col-
lege yearbook and a dean's list
student .
.
In acldition to the award presen-
tation, Christina Fara, president"of
the New York State Cooperative
Experiential Education Association
(NYSCEEA) and director of
Career Services and Cooperative
Educaiton at Manhanan College,
well be the guest speaker at the
meeting.
·
The award is given annually to
a graduating senior to recognize
outstanding student achievement in
experiential education, which in-
cludes internships, co-ops, student
teaching
experiences,
and
externships,
final votes on the issues discussed.
"The students did a lot of work in
This
.
year, Marist represented
the last couple of
.
weeks to gear up
Mozambique, a poor nation in
for the conference."
.
Southern Africa.
The better prepared
a
team is,
Th1: trip beganTuesday, March
the better their chances
.
of getting
29 and ended Saturday, April 2.
resolutions passed in their favor.
"I enjoyed the Model
U.N.
trip
Preparation
;
Fusari said, in-
and I'd do it again next year,"
Matthew Dombrowski; a freshman
... see
MODEL
page
a ►
ATTENTION
-
:
·
FRESHMEN AND
:
·
SOPHOMORES
WANTED
.
.
Hardworking, dedicated students
.-
to work on the
.
Marist FoxnetNet-
work Support Staff. Positions in Tele-
communications and DataCom-
mupications available. Applicants
·
must be prepared to
.
work allvear
-
long, including Winter Intersession
and Summer Break.
Applications are being accepted
at the Information Services Recep-
tion Desk, directly opposite the PC
Support Center, in Donnelly 258.
Deadline
for
applications is
Friday, April 22nd, 1994
enough,'' Sanchez said .
.
"You can · gntduate;'
\
Lamptiefo
,
saidi
''I'll
·
bring more with you, but" they are
leave that for my parents to decide.
·
not guaranteed seating."
·
·
·
·
I'm just concerned wit~
·
finishing
-
The 48th Commencement will
-
this semest~r. putting on the cap
bring an end to the class of '94's
a
_
nd gown in May, and then finding
time at Marist and send them out
a job,''
·
.
.
·
·.·•
·
·
·
into the real world for the first
May 21 is
the
date. 11:30 ani is
time.
.
.
.
"I'm excited about graduating,'
'.
Russell said. "The
·.
tickets, the
weather, whatever, will not really
matter ori May
21."
·
...
"I
haven't even thought about
the time. Leonid off
·
Field

is the
place as long as the weather is not
too bad.
·
"Pm looking
.
forward to it,"
Sanchez said;
'.
"I
have spent four
. ·
years here, but
-
I
am looking for-
ward to my future."
.
MaristSiimmer
.
Session
• •
'

-
<


:


- - ~
· -
. ,

'
.
-


· : .....
' ,



- -



-May
3,-Augusi
19;
1994
·
.
Three·Week Ses~ion
.
Sh:
w~~k
l
&
II
.
.
Twelve WeekS;ssion
.
.
Two
new c9uises added:
Session I- May 3
r-
July
8
MUS343L-202
·
Music inAmerica
Tuesday/Thursday, 6:00~9:
,
15pm
-Instructor: RuthanneSchempf
Session
II -
July
11 ,.. August 19
MATH 250L-203 Discrete Math
I
Tuesday/Thursday, 6:00
:.
9; l
5pm
Instructor: Dean Nataro
Registration now
·
underway
--
at the School of Adult Education
pyson Center. 127, Main
Campus,
Fishkill Extension Center,
and the Goshen Extension Center.
1/3 payment required with registration.
Call 575-3800 for
.
more information.




























I
!
,'
l°HE;CIRCLE,·
VIEWPOINT
APRIL14;
1994
7
Ral)e victim cQilfideS
·iil
caniplls· -
;;tftel" ·fiVe years
She iS
a
survivor; now she ·urge$ others
to speak up
My.story· is not at all that dif-
When I beganto shudder, Joe
ferent from that of many others.
wrapped his arms around me and
I
was a first year student, excited
kissed me.
.. . _
about my new-found freedom and
At first,
-I
liked it: But it wasn't
making the most of my first exer-
long before he began tugging at my
tion away from my over-protective
clothes. · .
.
parents; •
· . · ·
His hands were all over me and
One cold night in early spring; a
I
tried to po}jtely. push them away.
bunch of friends and I went down
. He did not stop.·
to a local bar. Along with hordes
Feeling unexpectedly vulnerable
of other students anxious to make
and
a
little frightened,
I
asked him
the most
of
Thursday night,
we
to stop: He ignored me and push-
squeezed into an already packed
ed me to. the ground.
bar.
.
The earth was cold and wet
· I
can remember playingdrinking
beneath me as
I
struggled to get up.
games, dancing with my friends,
But Joe was standing over me and
and thinking I was really cool for
dim bed on . top
bf
me before
I
. being served . despite the "under
could do anything ..
21" stamp sprawled across the
Atthis point,
I
was crying and
back of my hand..
begging him to stop. Still he ig-
By the time last call rolled
nored me.
around, I was very drunk and very
He .then raped me:
infatuated with a good looking up-
In retrospect;
I
realize that it
per classman .who had sat next to
wasn't very good judgm_ent on my
me and re-fiUed my cup all night.
part to · go off with someone
I
My newfriend, Joe, was very at-
didn't know. But trusting isn't a
tentive and charming...
.

.
. · . crime.
I
can . remember telling my
Raping someone, or sex without
friends liow interested I was in him
consent or against a person's
,viii,
andasking if they thotighthe Iik-
is.
,
ed ine.
·
Rape is not only a crime, but a
As we made our'way to the door,
felony which is punishable by
I
lost my friends in the crowd. Joe
imprisonment.
took my hand and reassured me
Isuppose Joe was lucky that
I,
that. "it would be okay" and that
like the other estimated 95'of rape
he would take.care ofme.
victims, did not report the assault.
When we arrived back on cam-
Atthe time, just 19:years:old, I
·
pus, Joe asked me if
I
liked adven-
was . too afraid of. what people
tures. Though
I
found his question
would think and too afraid that it
strange,
I
laughed and said that I • really was my fault.
did. . .·
.
·
That. self-blaming and shame
He 'then. took .my, hand and
stayeq with ·me for many. years. I
brought me to a place .on campus
refused,.to allow people
Jq
!1elp me.
which. was not familiar to ine., .
I
allowed him to continue to vie~
It
was. dark and cold.
ti~i~e. me by ·keeping silent.
Production Schedule
April 21, 28
May
5
That night he had robbed me of
control over my own body, of my
freedom to choose, and of a
trusting, innocent part of me which
may be lost forever.
But ihen something began. to
change.

.
.
· · ·· Fighting my overwhelming fear
of being rejected and blamed, I
began to confide in a few close
friends.
Their responses were not that of
disgust or condemnation, but in°
stead, support and concern.
They told me that it was not my
. fault; he was the only one who
should feel guilty and he was sole-
ly responsible for what · he had
done.
Some friends, to my amazement,
even said that this had also happen-
ed to them. Even incredulous, they
all had remained silent about their
assaults.·
As the feelings of guilt and
shame have dissipated over the
years, another emotion· emerged.
And that is anger.
Not only anger a! Joe for hur-
ting me like he did, but anger at a
society which perpetuates harmful
stereotypes and myths which allow
~nd even encourage rape to
continue.
We bring up our boys to be
tough and strong.
Boys musn't be "cry babies"
and often are discouraged from
owning dolls or other toys which
might teach nurturing skills.
They are taught from an early
age· that they should be active in
.. their pursuit of conquest and that
·having· sex is equated with
manliness.
Men arc considered "studs" for
having many sexual experiences
and are encouraged to do so, while
women who arc involved in the
same behavior arc more likely to be .
referred to as "sluts."
Unlike their male counterparts,
females are brought up to be
passive and polite.
Even as a man pushed me down
on the ground and was assaulting
me, I was asking him to "please
stop."
Furthermore, both sexes receive
so many confusing and conflicting
messages about sexuality and
gender
communications,
everything becomes distorted.
The media often portrays women as
teasingly saying no wtien really.they
mean yes.
How many times, on T,Y. or in
the movie have we seen scenes
where the woman is ranting and
raving at the man, he grabs her and
gives her a long and passionate
kiss, and the next thing we see is
them together in bed?
Messages we receive from the
media not only distort our percep-
tion of the
other
sex, but con-
tributes to the confusion in what
people perceive and expect from
one another in regards to sexuality.
My anger at the way things are
coupled with seeing too many
women I care about devastated by
sexual violence has fueled my fight
on sexual violence prevention.
Many people know me as being
active on this campus as well as in
the community on this topic.
As such,
I
debated ·whether or
not I should include my name in
this article. I have decided, in the
hopes that other people will come
forth and share their experiences,
to reveal my identity.
When I say that I hope others
come forward,
1
mean in any way
that each individual feels comfor-
table with, although I do urge every
survivor of sexual assault to tell
someone.
I would suggest starting by tell-
ing either a trusted friend or by
calling the counseling center on
campus.
Unfortunately, it doesn't just go
away. I hoped and pretended
for
a very long time that it would and
know now that it can't possibly go
away on it's own.
If you were sexually assaulted,
know that you have a right
10
share
your experience and get the support
from others that you deserve.
You also have the right to get on
with your life and allow.'yoursclf to
be freed from guilt, shame, anger
or whatever damaging emotions
you are inevitability carrying with
you.
The longer you carry it with you,
the harder it is to make go away.
Today marks the anniversary of
the day I was sexually assaulted.
It
has been five years since I was
raped.
Today also marks the day I tell
my story, refusing to allow my
perpetrator to silence me and refus-
ing to hide in shame for something
which was not my fault.
After many years of struggling to
recover,
1
no longer consider
myself
a
vil:tim.
Today I am a survivor.
Robbin Loonan
Students say they deserve
,
,
same respect
as
everyone
else
Editor:
Respect is such a fine word in the
English language, hell it even made
the name of a popular song.
We consider ourselves like other
students here at Marist. We arc
really no different at all.
·we are here to command an
education and mature. And we can
say we learned a lot at Marist,
which is why we are writing this
letter.
Let us describe one of two par-
ticular incidents we have faced.
We would like
10·
state that we
are not citing this particular event
to cause trouble but to give an ex-
ample of similar events that are an
everyday occurrence.
On the weekend of April 9, a
group of students from
a
particular
organization were working their
routine way, in their traditional
place.
An administrator rudely told
them they·were not to be carrying
on their activities in that area.
The students were not informed
• by their supervisor that they were
not supposed to be in their area at
that time.
Lack of communication caused
,the situation, but does that allow
· a staff or faculty i.1ember to treat
students
in
a degrading manner?
Not one student on this campus
deserves to be treated in this man-
ner.
If
a student is being rude or
disrespectful, then we could
understand a situation where a
staff member would have to ask
them
to
stop what they are doing.
Faculty and staff should not talk
down to students, but speak to
them as equals.
We are speaking generally which
is not fair to all staff and faculty
members. We would personally
like 10 thank those members thal
treat students like adults.
· 1n general Marist should think
about
how
they 1rea1 their srudcnb.
We all know that if a student spoke
to a staff member in this manner
they would be disciplined for
I
heir
actions.
Our parents invest approximate-
ly $!00,000 into our education (it
adds up to $60,000 but figure
travel, food, books, etc.). But
money is not the only issue here,
personal well being should also be
considered.
Everyone earl vouch that when
something needs to be done it re-
quires a parental phone call to cut
through the red tape. Students are
here to command an education and
mature into young adults.·
How can this be possible if we
are constantly being treated like
children who need our hand held
throughout our lives?
Maybe it is time Vision '94 not
only look at the visible aspects of
the college but also the quality of
life on campus.
If
Marist is truly considering
change, maybe a total quality im-
provement program could be in-
stituted for faculty and staff.
Sure you can spend approx-
imately $27 million to make it pret-
ty, but without necessary change
for the better of student life on
campus who knows where it
will
go.
John Daigneault, senior
Craig M. Chandler, junior
How to reach us:
• Mondays: 11
a.m. to
5
p.m.
• E-Mail: LT211, HZAL
• Phone Mail: X2429
NO LETTERS AFTER 5 PM ON FRIDAYS
J .. ,
I
I
I
I
1

































. ,TH
.
I;
GIRCLE,_: AP.RIL>14,
.1JJ,94
.
·•·.
·.
.
.
,.,,·
._,,_.
,
.....
·;
•·
..
'
..
.-
..
,
:
~
..
'···
,.··
....
·1nteirl?C!ti()/iiil-Stiii:JeiitS{f.fhtrfg·J:-,Jlftli/¢·
·
··KO£Ci{ij/i,jf£itls
"
'
choice to go was easy:
He is curr~~trY uri~Jcided o.~
~
has divided_
'
" his" time qetween;!
·
f'r~n~h, "Eriilish
~it~
~~bi(i.1\i~r~
by
JOHN. DOUGHERTY.
He:. said ·that .'iti111ike : the
major; but says he.would eventual" . tfa~elling across Eurqpe1md ~ork-t -ma1, H!! s.aiqits bee_n;a whi.le ~ince
·Staff Writer
Americans. _when -,they · bombed'.. ly like _to study international law:
ing'for one of his· father's busin·ess -he's- conversed•• with, , anyorl:e'.';in
International st_udents bring ne~
cultures · and experiences from
around_ the.:,vorld to Marist .... , .
Instead of talking about sports
and the movies with one of our in-
ternational students, a more fitting
topic would be the Iran-Iraq con~
flict or the former Yugoslavia.
· ··Keyvan Zahedzadeh is an
18-year-old freshman from Iran.
. He. left his home
in
Iran
to
attend
school in Switzerland during tl;le
Iran-Iraq conflict.
.
His parents felt it would be safer
for
him if he left Iran, because the
bombs were beginning to land too
close to their apartment.
"The bombing was indiscreet,"
Zahedzadeh said. He had two
cousins in Switzerland and his sister
had also graduated from the same
high school ih Switzerland, so the
Iraq,' the lraqis·dropped· bombs on
Zahedzadeh said he "plans to _go
partners in
·
oermany. .·-•
Iranian,_
·
· -
. '
:
-. ·
< .. · .• • ..
any · target in Iran-· regardless of back to Iran and workt"hopefolly
"The former Yugoslavia was
Dino· Quintero'·is
:a'
25-yearcold
whether oi- not it was ·militarily
with his father who is in the'import
beautiful •and, the people
.
. were
Panamanian'stµd~nt:He ifin his
related.
business. He has not been back to
nice" Zahedzadeh said, although
final year of graduate. studies"in
Zahedzadeh spent
-7
years
at
Iran
since
he left for
sch_~ol
seven
London
was his favorite European
computer inf\>rn1atidn sys'tems. He
schools in Switzerland, going from
years ago.
spot to visit.
.
. · · ·
·
·.
·
·
·
:
:
, ·
n,
>·
middle school through high schooL
'
For the past seven summers he
Zahedzadeh is fluent in Iranian,
•:···
58,9
STUDENTS·
page
g ►
'While in Switzerland he met James
O'Hara, assistant director of ad~
missions for Marist.
·
· · He eventually made the choice to.
come
to
Marist
with the
informa-
tion from O'Hara and his teachers
advice in Switzerland. Zahedzadeh
said
it
was a good choice.
"The teachers are nice and they
know their stuff," he said, referr-
ing' to his teachers. at_ Mari
st:
Zahedzadeh said the text books
are the same but the teachers are
different in Switzerland; "The
teachers · are tougher and expect
more:'' he said.
'
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------~-----~-~---------------------------~-------
-
--
--
--
--
-
5
Ciett1Ilg·
~
caug
_
·
·t
;:g.~~t~n
.
Fulto~
·
street
·becoming·
rte·w
off~
arid
ge{ti~g;luCltY haiigcnit -
still tniss Skinners
Timing is everything .
.
--
.
rdi-)ciice_· w'i111 i·oreig11 languages
_.;.._ ______
·
.....;._
·
- ' - - - - - - -
Good
,
ti111ing
-is•
the
·
difference
and hiis
llC\"CI"
traveiled farther
.
by
BARRY !(EENAN
between getting caught,
.
getting off,
from
.
hi~ home
_
t
_
han New Jersey.
Staff Writer
and
gelling lucky.
According _to neurologist Dr
.
Ma-
In some cases,
.
il means all three.
jaz Moonis, the inan
suffers
from
~ad timing, Part
L
Foreign Accent Syndrome, a r~rc
I
M
h t
NH
·
·
1
neu
_
ro
_
lo!!ica_l disor
_
der"th
_
ai
·
usu_all~;
n
.
anc cs er,
.
.
,
-
11
_
,
September, a purse-sriatcher·grabb-
occurs after a head injury or
ed
_
_
a purse .just
"·
as
.
a
_
gir
_
ls'
·
high:
·.
stroke. Only about
.
two-dozen cases
-
school
cross
~
cou11try team
·out
for
have been reported
iin<e
!907.
_
a
irainiiJg run happeneg by.
_
They
--
.
:
_
Uli.
righ(;
-
.
_
chased
.
the thief until he goi scared
'.
In
'
July
·
;
·
the police chief of
and dropped the purse:
--.
Manila, Col., Generoso Necesito.
Another
:
hard~working American
told
reporters
t hm the reason
11101~·
Keron Thomas, 16, pleaded guil-
than $25,000 worth of marijuana
ty to stealing a 10-ca
_
r New Y()rk
and cocaine were
!!)issingfron1
the
Cjty subway train
from
a rail Y;lrd
-
police evidence
.
room recently
·
after
·
showing a bogus
-
,
Transit
·
was that rats and cockroaches had
Authority identification card. He
eaten it.
made 85 stops

safely along
'
the
345-mile trip
'
and carried abbut
2,000 passengers. He was just two
stops
away
_
from
·
completirig
._
a
regulation run when he rounded a
curve too fast, tripped the emergen-
cy brake$ and couldn't reset them.
Thomas .learned how to operat_e a
train by hanging around
.
motormen
and studying the manual, said
'
Transit
Authority
police
spokesman
Al O'Leary, who ex-
·
plained,
"He
just has this consum-
ing interest in subway trains."
Brain dead
Longstanding calls for reform of
New Jersey's county medical ex-
aminer system were rencwedin
Q<:,
tober when "The New York
Times" reported that examiners
in
Cumberland and Ocean counties
had recently erred in making cause-
o f-deat h
reports.
-
In
the
Cumberland
-

case, the county
med
_
ical examiner, Dr. Larry
Mapow, failed to see a bullet lodg-
ed in a man's skull
and
instead at-
tributed death to a blow by a blunt
The basis for "Home Alone,.
instrument. Mapow did see a sc-
Last October in Maidenhead,
cond
_
bullet, in the man's brain,
but
England; the
.
Society for the
merely removed
'.
il
'.
and
_
noted it
Prevention of Cruelty to Animals
without attribu
_
ting significance to
·
brought 'ctiarges of pet
abandoi1-
it.
, -
-
-
-
men(against
-
David Shardd; who
Bad timing; Part
HI
had left
.
his
l\\'O
fish • a South
.
In Baton
'
Rouge,
_
La., in Oc-
American sucking loach
and
suck-
tobcr, Larry McKee, 42, was ar
-
ing
·
plec
{
-
alcfoc in their tank
--
for
--
~
-
~s~ed and chaq~~d
"
\~ith ~<?~bi1l_~.a
,
~
~{t~~iaJJ
{
;
~/~i~~f
1
r:i~tfii,:~
_
i
_:
_i
{~;tJJ
,
ii~~ft~
:
t~J~
)
-
;[ohti
t
·
:~~~i~~
•_·:
of$12,000 to conduct the trial, arid
>
robber thus was not aware that a
-
Sharod $3,000 to defend himself.
camera crew fromWBRZ
0
TV was
He was acquitted in-Juriewhen he
taping a feature on
.
crime in the
dted the Society's own literature to
front of the store.T~e tape clearly

showthat
-
fish-can·live comfortably
-
shoi.\'S the robber rµnning through
on algae in a
·
tank for up to two
1he
-
~tore
~nd
out the: front door.
weeks.
.
· .
· ·
.
·
.
.
_
_
A real head case
.
Spcakin~
of
animals
In October in
'
Los Angeles,
A judge in Los.Ange(es sentenv
·
H um~erto
,Amaya;
-
:
3,2, at first
ed Yu-ie Chen·- 27 of Tahv
.
an to
.
bragged to customers and staff at
30 days in jail 'in September
.
after.:-

~
the
~
,
Quaternalteca
}v1arkeuhat
he
federal agents foupd 52 snakes 1ls
·_
had j'ust killed a man, but when
legally in his
_
possession
as
hear~
they Jailed to take him seriously, he
tempted to board a flight home
,
became angry, went home a11~
from, Los Angeles lnierriational Tetu
.
riled
with_ a
_
fres!Jly severed
Airport. Most were'found in~
-
a
:
head;. which
-•he
.
began waving
carry~pn bag, but 18_,vere strapped
.irnund
·
the· marke!
·
'
and
·
then sa.t
to his biceps
·
and ankles.
-
· -
do
.
wn next to the pastry case, to the
-
.
'
FamilfValues
.
_
:
horror p(-9nlook,ers
.
.
Testifying in Conway,
South
,
.
.
f,~ourlh of
~ul_y
-
.
Carolina, iwApril on behalfof
:
her
- .
-_
111
·
:
,
_
·
Lakewood,
'-
Col., Larry
brother, who was,.uhimately ~on-
D~etsch, 33, wa
_
sd1ospitalized i~
victed ofcriininal negligence in.the
critical condition after suffering
dro,vnirig
-
death of

·
,voman
,
burns over 65
-
pcrcent of his body
,_
despiie
_
_
hi
'
s
;
being
·
:severely
int
.
ox-
He'
_
d
.
had ;di ~ficulty
_
lighting ~is
icated at the time. Janet
·
Kolbasook
charcoal gnll
Ill
the ram and dec1d~
told the courl that her brother ,,•as
ed to get the fir.e
.
going by sprinkl~
very dear to her: ."We're
-
a tight
ing the charcoal \Vi\h gunpowder,
familv.
Wt'r~
alra'icoliolics.
'!

Bad timing, Part' IV
--Bad
liming, Parl
II
_
In October
111
Lexington, N.C.,
·

Maris! students are beginning to
discover that there is once
again
a
bar
·
across the street from the
Lowell Thomas Center.
While it
.
may lack the rariiWari-
ty of Skinners,
,
the Fulton Street
Cafe it's own niche among students
who venture in.
_•~Having
a
_
bar across the street
·
is ideal because it's always such a
'hassle trying to find someone will-
ing to drive anywhere,"
said
Matt
Hannon, a sophomore from
Rockville Center, N.Y. "You could
cross the street for a draft after din-
ner and be back in time for Jeopar-
dy."
The establishment features a
large dance floor with an elevated
D.J. booth, two·bars, lots of lights,
and something that Marist students
aren't
_
used to in Poughkeepsie
bars: plenty of
space.
"I like it here because it's just
about the only place around where
you can actually dance," said Cyn-
di Stalzer, a senior from Baldwin,
·r-:tv.
"There just isn't enough
room anywhere else."
·
"The
18
and
over
on
Wednesdays really makes it more
of an all-Marist night,'
-
'
said senior
Steve Parrett, a bouncer from New
Cannan, Conn.
'"There
,
is a better mix of people,
instead of the usual groups of
underages at one b
'
ar and
21
and
over people at another, you can see
everybody in the saine place," he
said.
"Y
ou could cross the
street for a draft after dinner
and be back in time for Jeop-
ardy.
Matt Hannon, Sophomore
"The night usually
ends
kind of
early if your older friends go out
to the bars and you don't have any'
I.D.,"
said
Jen Pesce,
a sophomore
from Bordentown, N.J.
"At
least
you
can
come here and have a good
time without having to be 21."
The
atmosphere
on Wednesday
nights is usually pretty
active,
much
like Skinner's used to by on 25 cent
draft nights.
_
"Fulton
street
_
is a good place for
the kind of. bar
.
that it is,'.' said
Frank Russo-Alesi, a senior from
Spring lake Heights, N.J. "It's
definatcly°not Skinners. Skinner's
had
.
character,
and
that's
something that rnmcs with time:
:

"It
always used to be such
a
big
deal to gel into Skinner's when we.
were younger,"
said
Margo Dem-
ski, a
senior from Mountainside,
N
.J.
"I
wish
we
had a place like
Fulton Street when we were
freshmen."
"When the weather gets nice
they throw
some sand
on the floor
like they used to for the beach party
at
Skinners,"
said
Kevin McCar-
thy, a sophomore from Staten
Island. "If they had more specials
and
.
events like that, I would be
over there every day."
"Probably one or the best thii1gs
about our location is thai it keeps
a
lot of students off of the roads."
said Parrett. "They're
1101
going to
'
be
endangering
anybody's lives if
they're just crossing the street."
:
-
_
-
When
an
.
Air Force
·
practice
Efram George Colson, 23, alleged~
bomb fell ou1 oft he sky and
'
near-
.
_
-
ly sto
_
le a bag of cigare11es from a
ly hit him. Darrell Joner., 41, of store and ran away. His escape
Columbia. S.C.,
-
became a local
route led him onto the Lexington
news celebrity. Jones owes his wik Senior High School grounds, where
more than $26,000 in overdue child
the football team was practicing:
support, and she had not knO\fo
..
.
He
was tackled by about 30 players
·
his whereabouts until his face pop-
_
and held for police.
bisposal of Oregon whale up in the air
ped up on the television and in
ST ATS
newspapers.
*Estimated annual spending on
Be prepared
medical treatment for foot dcfor-
The Boy Scouts of America mities caused by women's ill-rittin_g
banned 1,416 adult Scout leaders shoes: $2,000,000,000.
for child sex abuse from 1971
w
*Amount spent each year on
1991, according to court records in
emergency hospital care for non-
a California case. During
·
that
-responsive
heart-attack victims:
period, at least 2,071 Scouts said $500,000,000.
that they had been molested.
*Amount IBM will spend this
Voila
year on parties for its top
A 46-vear-old man from employees: $20,000,000.
Worcester: Mass., survived a car
*Value of the equipment NASA
acddenr with only one !>ide effect: has blown up or lost this year:
He began speaking with a
'
French $567,000,000.
accent. "At fir~t it bothered me
Matt Martin is The Circle's
ycry much because I can't make Feature Editor. He has paid for his
myself wdl understood," the man
1
education
by
pimping for his room-
~aid e:-; lainin1nhat he has
no
ex-
mate -
a com utcr rostit
IP.
by
MATT
-
MARTIN
Feature Editor
Blow up a 45-foot-Iong, eight-
ton whale and what do you have?
Take out sushi for 30,000.
It
seems the highway department
in Oregon, ideally the most capable
government office for disposing of
large mammals, was put to task on
the animal, with explosives.
These are men that should not be
trusted with marbles, much less
dynamite.
Their brainstorm was
10
blow up
the whale, littering the area with
tiny pieces of whale meat which
would then be devoured by
scavengering seagulls and other
animals.
So, as the charges were placed,
and with spectators and media in
force, the highway Einsteins had a
go at it.
Smoke and names were accom-
panied
,vith
"Oohs"
and
"Aaahs," until the first pie<.es fell.
They had disposed of the whale
all right, trouble was that the
smallest chunks were the size of
small
childrep,
overweight
teenagers to be exact.
:screams were drowned out by
"spluds"
as the blubber rained
down on the hapless crowd.
Apparently, a large chunk cav-
ed in the roof of a car a quaner-
of-a-milc away, while hunks the
size of Volkswagens littered the
beach.
No
signs of seagulls anywhere.
I've got to see this videotape.
Special Thanks to Jennif<-r
Traver for providing bonus
coverage of The World Out There.































~
I
I
,.
THE CIRCLE
MARIST COLLEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE: NY 12601
THE STUDENT' NEWSPAPER
S.J. Richard,
editor
Ted Holmlund,
sports editor
Carl Oleskewlcz,
managing editor
Julle Martln,
senior editor
Kristina Wells,
associate editor
. Justin Seremet,
assistant editor
Teri L. Stewart,
editorial page editor
James Hocking,
distribution manager
Matt
Martin,feature editor
Andrew Holmlund,'
associate editor
Dana Buonlcontl,
columns editor
Meredith Kennedy,
associate editor
Jennifer Ponzlnl,
advertising manager
Dennis
Glldea,faculty advisor
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
Remodeling
T
Jft - ..
t>A
Y
CAF
.
ETA~rA
T#Ei
roob
Tenure? Keep waiting profs;
she expects a lot from Gillis
Well, there are only four weeks left.of
As we draw ever closertOthe end of the
school. The anxiousness for graduation and
year - 37 days until graduation and one week
summer vacation are felt allafound campus.
until River Festival - much is happening
The large m~ss in what used to be the Champagnat parking lot is finally
. We as students are not.the only ones feel-
around campus.
star ting to look like something.
ing · anxiety because there are a handful of
Last Friday,. April
8, the SGA had their
The crane is gone, and the rotunda is visible, not to mention that brick siding.
professors who are up for t.enure.
·
Transitional Dinner·at the IBM Country
It is even possible that students planning to reside in the new dorm will not
· Tenure is a long drawn out process in · Club. (This after the
'
Junior. Class Semi-
have to spend the first month of next semester at a local hotel.
which the college decides to either keep or
Formal fiasco on Feb.
18.).
·
· reject the faculty member.
If
the professor
Matt Gillis is now the official student body
Is Vision
'94
being realized?


is kept, the'job is theirs for as long as they
p·residentat Marist College. And as much as
It depends on which vision. Watching official-looking executive
1
s in suits
wish.
. .. ·. .
.
.. .
.
1
may have criticizedformer-Piesi.dent Kent
parade through Dyson with their easels and layout plans, one wou d believe
On the other hand; if rejected; the college
Rinehart in the past, I thank hiin for his
that the vision had arrived. Their faces are smiling and smug with anticipation
gives the professor one year to find another
effort.
·-.
.
..
and self-gratification. They think their money has been well-spent.
'
job. .
·
·
. . ., ·..
In making his new appointments, Gillis
But when you really stop to consider what we are getting, it is only a building.
This process includes evaluations by both
has' .made an appropriate move by appoin-
That' s it; a building. Lots of hallways and rooms and lights and stairs.
A
faculty and students. Maristis very strict in
jing the two other student body president
cabaret, a fitness center, suites instead of dorm rooms; 1.t all sounds very. ap-, ,, '.: . making sure ti,e' faculty _get their Phd's as
candidates, Anthony Mignone and Nick Ca-
pealing. But it is still only a building.
\Vellas publish different artides in clifferent
pi.tano,. to positions .in his ·administratiori.
Has anyone stopped to consider what lies inside?
publications. ..
. . . · : ,
Very diploinatic.Ihope you can continue the
.
Ther.e are professors who are up_ for.tenure
trend ·
·
·
· ··
The ~_ost important remodeling project needed right _now is not the ca11;pfs
wh.? proyab}tv.i~ft get-i\b,eca
_
use t~er do
,
_)'.q~f;_riexi,9rct~r ofbJsihes{sh<:>uld
~~·~d~
center.
. . ..
.
,;c~
·
.> . ·•·
nothavt! their
Pnd.
and have not pubbshed; ,.dn:s.sm. g .the
_
co,ncerns • of membe.r~: of the
.
For some reason, people are not. happy at Marist.
; : · ·
..
,;if.,,;,•.,~
r..•i'
,
·,
.
:,
,l,',can understand'thatl\1~ristislooking
~pr,:~;:
Black,',StudenF-.Union-.. '.and.
1
:,El
,
A,rccl';:lris.;:::
.,
Professors who teach us the
most
are leaving.
· ·
·
-
· ..
,;s'trong pro't'(!ss6rs but'.ir'thoseprofessors•can: · Latino'.:
'
i'
i ...
·
0


·•· • • • ·
• •
.

. · . •
· : \ . ; ~ :. •
·
Administrators
who
help us the
most
are
leaving.
. .

. .
. ·. . \ .
not
teachand touch the students, what good
Students need
to
be ·expos~d. io diversity'
Seniors who are leaving question whether or not Marist College has lived up
are they besides facts ·in: the admissions .
·

.
•.· .. ·.· ·• .. · ., .•
.
< ..
..
.... •
.. ·
·
· ...... · ..
· ..... •.·
to its part of the bargain.
. .
.
..

.
book? • · .
.
.. · .. · .. ••· ·.·.
. .·
·
·.. . .
.· . · .· .
(fhr_ough<speakers an.ct prngrams perhaps)
You see, when we hand over that check, we are supposed to get something
.. This semester; tfind it very depressing that and be ~ade m?r.e aw~re .of. cultural_ dif-
in return. It is called an education.
·
.
·
·
·
·
. several9ft~e facµlty.niembersthatl know . .ferences
m
C>ur com1111Jmty and (sometimes
That does not mean a degree. It does not mean sittingthrough the required
\viii
not be returning; not because they can . distance)-outs1de world_.
courses and pulling a decent grade.
It
means more than tha( but most ofus
are satisfied.
·
Because most of us are satisfied, and willing to settle
for
what we are haqd-
ed, those who have failed us are breathing a big sigh
·
of relief that we do not
notice what is lacking.
·
It is too bad we s.ettle for this, because Marist has the potential to be something
outstanding. Once the institution is· able to get it'.s priorities straight, Marist
will be able to offer students a superior education.
But other things are getting in the way, like profit and power.
We can place the blame in a variety of places; the invisible board of trustees,
and the administratorswho see the problems but are too frightened or too brain.:
washed to act. We can certainly place some blame on the president of the school,
who truly just does not get it.
.--..
But some of the responsibility must fall on us - the. students. -The students
who are giving in becauseit's easier, because it's not worth
it;
because there's
drinking to be. done, because
if
there's really a problem, mom or dad will just
call; because it's scary, because it's Just too hard.
Because it may mean learning something.
.
It
is maddening. We settle. '.We sell out, just like the administrators and the
faculty who keep their mouths shut and their minds dosed.
.
People constantly disappoint us, but we excuse it and plod on in our boring
lives. Pretty soon, we begin disappointing ourselves.
And that, too, becomes acceptable.
Congratulations to the:Black Student Union and El Arco Iris Latino.
Members ofthis student body should be inspired by the protest they have
launched in order to better this institution.
They are not ready to be so accepting.
They see something which is flawed, and they are determined to do something
about it.
·
In
37
days, Marist will graduate another class.
.
A
big public relations event. The goal here is to make the parents think their
money was well spent and show the trustees that they can indeed pat themselves
on the back.
The graduation ceremony has little to do with the hundreds of students who
will make up the commencement. These young lives are but an afterthought,
it seems.
Why does it seem that way? For one thing, there is no speaker
as
of yet. Time .
is running out. Maybe if the process of obtaining
a
speaker was opened to in-
clude more than one person, progress would be made.
But that would be a change.
Perhaps
if
the senior class president was allowed to speak at the ceremony,
the graduates would feel more a part of what was going on.
But that, too, would be a change.
Change is too scary for those in power at Marist.
. ·
We are only allowed to change when
it
involves hammers and nails and is
backed
up
by millions of dollars.
It
is about time
we
picked up our hammers.
He
said
She
said
==::::;::::::==:::::==::;:::::::::::::=:::::==== -'-. ;;;;..,_,-;;;;. __ ;;;;._ ';;.: .. ,.;;;.;....,. ~-
=
__ =_
=
__ ~-'-_-_ ----;..;._ --.,.. -..,. --_ ----_ -_ -_ ----------_ .;.;._ ----_ .:.....:....
nodeachi but _beca1fse they have nofredev-
.. )t's_notenough to saydisrespecfis wrong·
ed their)Phd: ·
...
. •. . .
.
.· ... . ..
. ...
.
. · .. , . and form a committee:
.....
,
.
The·. sitident
:
e?ah1ati()nS .
·
. sho1;1l,d/be Jhe
/~.-Al
tho.ugh· action is ofteri>a harct'thing to
most importarit. aspect of this process:.
It
is
.
. inspire here at Marist, it is. possible .. ·'•
not t~e. admiriistrati?'} wl1<? sits{~ dass,

·.
. Two weeks ago :the Senate took action
It
IS.
n<>t .the ~dmm1.sti:a,.t1011 .who. w.e' ~el!
.
. against its direct<>r of pllb}ic relations, Daryl
\yhen \Ve.are h_avrng prob!em~ ~11~er~taTTdmg
.
)-LedY.ard,.aridvotecFto impeach him.
a .con1;~PL It
IS
not.the adi_nm1s~rauon who
>
.
Ledyard. ,vas charged wi.th gross negligence.
teHs us thatwe are stru~ghng and offersus
for his failure to distribute asurvey by ihe.
a hanq. · .. : ·· .. ·••
.
, -, ·:
<·
.
· . ; ·
Committee on Sexual Awareness on these-
. What 1s wrong with t~1s pictur<:? Manst . cond day of SGA, elections.
·
1s always so concerned with how ~hmgs look
The Se
.
nate voted to impeach Ledyard,. but
•and not as _they.a~e. ..
.
. .. . ..
··•. .
. in order to do that, the Judicial Board inust
. T~ trye comnnttee. who selects th_ose. · also vote to impeach him.
d1stmgmshed ~acuity members
for
temire,J
· Fine ..
If Ledyard is guilty of gross.
hop
7
you _realize that good professors are
negligence, he deserves to be impeached.
leavmg this year.
·.
.
. .
· When the Judicial-Board doesn't vote until
J
ho~e you remember that the purpose ~f
after his term is finished though, what's the
college 1s for the student to get the best poss1-
purpose?
ble education and that does not mean t~at
In other news :
.
the professor must have a Phd. or be publish-
*I (a so called femi-nazi) attended Tau
ed.
..
.
Kappa Epsilon's Escort Extravaganza last
The profe~sor n:iust be able
to
teach.
If
y~u
Wednesday night.
:
(the _admm1strat1on) do not agree with
.i
* And, if someone would like to explain to
teachmg ~tyles or format~ then open your
ine the difference between bidding on an in-
eyes t~ d1!feren1 l?erspecuves.
.
. .
.dividual and buying a ticket ro be raftled-
'94MaLns,t is changmhg exte_rnaly w,nhb Vk1S1on
off, I'd love to hear it. But, as long as no
. . et s start to c ange mterna
Y Y
eep-
one was raffled-off against their
will
so be
it
mg good professors who are here for the soul
· *Marist has hired a new female professo~
purpose to educ~te th~ students..
to teach women's studies. Not that men can't
If
anyone reachng this has
~
professor up
be feminists, but this is a good m
b
for tenure and you want to wnte a recomen-
Marist
ove
Y
dation, they s~ould be sent to Marc
*La;t weekend's Open House seems to
vanderHeyden.
have been a success And 1·f noth"
I
Pl
·
h
d · ·
·
mg
e
se at
.
ease wnte tot ea mm1strators express-
least the speed bumps around ca
;
mg your concerns about good professors not
repaired.
mpus \\ere
getting tenure. Remember that this is our
• Joseph A Salvayon ·1s and ,.
.
11
ct
·
ct h
·
· · h
·
·
,
1
orever
wt
e ucauon an
ow important 1t 1s t at we
be, the •one and only "Commish"
express our concerns.
Scoll Sullens is one of The Circle's
political columnists.
Caroline Jonah is one of The Ci 1 ,
political columnists.
re
e
s
-








































































































































_.
THE CIRCLE,
-
·
APRIL
.
14,
1994
9
¥ed.ia
is
m.akifig
too
mhch of
Whitewatet
.-.
{i°ffair,
.
s;tuden(s
.
s~y
by
PATRICIAiSMI
.
TH-
·
POMALES
·
· :
·
statt
write(
·
·

· .
:
•·
·
.
·

.
Risky real

estate
.
loan
'
s
;
made
.
s
9
,<>00
(:(·.

..
.

·
.
·

.
• ./

.,
·
._
t
_
h
_
r
.
o
_
ugh
_
the thr
_
ift
_
hav
_
e
_
co
_
s
_
t
.
tax-
.
'· .
/
'The sit~ation
·
has cast

if
lot
.
of
shadows,''
,
said
.
:.
Dali
~:
Sanchez;
payers an estimated loss
~f
$68
'
Marist
.
visitorand first~year st'tictent
miUion.
. •.
.

·
.
.
·
·
Whitewater is
'
an issue that
·
at

-
bi.atcliess
.
County Conimunity
.
·
i
The Whitewater
.
investigators
·
makes many thirst·for facts and
College
.
.

· .
·
,
.
.
~ti~!
ascertain whether any
reaso
.
ns.
" ·

·
.
..
.
;
:
.
•.
.
.-
:
.
.
,
:
·
.
•~No
,
one knows at this point,
a. ison money was used in the
"The investigators
·
should geUo
·
ancfthatis why
:
an
.
investigation i
_
s
.
Whuewater venture
;
Investigators
the seed of the situation, and find
.
needed," Sanchez said.
.
·
·
must also determine wh_ether funds
out where the money went," said
~
- _-
·:the CHntons originaliy cll!imed
we!eused
!
0
pa~ debts mcurred _by
Richard Iavarone, a freshman
·
en
~
.
•·
th~yl~st niostoOhefr
$6_8,900
in-
·
:.:
C:hnto_n
1"..
his gubernatorial
vironmental science major
,
at
·
,
vestmenL They .later <;lai111ed a loss
ca1;1,1pmgn; .
'
.
.
.
.
Marist
:
.
.
·
.
.
·
·
:
.
of:approximlltely
$2(),000.
_

.
I don t t~mk th~ mvest1gat1~n
"The leading factor' abo
'
ut
·
·
Republicail
,
s argue the loss may
.
is a
~!
0
Y
to_ dig
_up
dirt about Chn-
Whi
_
tewater is probably to hurt the
·
.
no
t>
have
:
be.en an:r-th
_
ing
,
Close
:
10
ton, ManS t vis!ror an? Dutchess
president," said Abi Sharma, a
·
:
these figures;
;
..
.
.
,
st uqent P~ula Little s~1d.
junior English major: '
.
'The sec
.
oild
According to Joanne duarente,
P.~cor~(ng to
.
Debbie Neser, a
factor; to discover the truth
/
'
·
Marist visitor and graduate student

Manst
v
1s1tor and sec?nd
~
y~ar ~tu-
.
Whitewatef.
:
Development
'.
Co.,
of
.
PalJTier College, Davenport,
·
~ent at Dutchess, the mvest1g~t1on
Inc.,
a
land development venture,
·
Iowa
;
the White,va.ter investigation
is an attempt to, get the_ president
was
·
formed in
I 978
by then-
· ·
is
·
an attempt
.
to prove Presi
_
dent
ou,t b
:
ec~use they re afraid of what
Governor
.
.
Clinton
·
and
·
Hillary
·
Clinton guilty before they know all
he
l
·
d~mg
.
t?
the country· .
Rod
.
ham Clintcm,along with James
,
the facts.
·
He. s gomg to destroy 11 (t_he
'B.
and Susan
_H.
McDougal.
..
"Whitewater may prove to be a
country), a~d they ~ave to get him
The
.
Clintons held .a 50 percent.
deflection from the health care pro-
some way, sh_e said.
stake and invested $68,900. Their
gram,'..' Guarente said.
.
"
.
. McDougal lured the Rose ~aw
friends and equal- partners, the
McDougal purchased
"
a
rid
Ftr!11
to_ represent
.
th
e
Madison
McDougals, invested $92,200.
.
managed the now-failed thrift,
th ~1ft. First Lady Htll~ry ~odl~am
TheMcDougalsclairri the Clin
-
·.
Madison Guaranty
.
sa,;ings and
Clinton was a_Partner
Ill
~Ills LJttle
tons invested
<
.
approximately
. :
Loan.
.
Rock law office at the time
.
·
-
SECURlrfY
· .··
.;.
continued ffori
{
page
3
•·
. .
·
: :
.
·
escort
,
Kris
Fatsy
,_
said
:
,
I-'atsy:
:
.
b
e
came an escort whenihe Seci.tri
~
ty office hired professioria(guards
,
for residence hall entry instead of
student guards.
·
·
·
·
·
•~We've been getting more calls
.
now that the weather is warmer
.
We get afew3 night," she said
.
According to Fatsy, the service
is ve
r
y neglected on
.
the
8
p.m

to
111idnightshiftbecause those are the

hou
'
rs of the campus van.

She says she thinks the escorts
.
are a good
.
idea for anyone uncoins
.
fortable walking alone.
·
.
.
"Security can't do everything,"
she added,
The security committee is ready
to show the administrators who
helped
••
them . complete
.
the
report:Dean
·
Cox, Marc Adin,
assistant _vice president, Mark
Sullivan, executive vice president,
Tom Daly, arid Joe
.
Leary, Jirec-
tor of Safety and Security where
the improvements need to be made.
When asked whether he thinks!
the students' concerns
will
be taken
care of. Gillis was realistic.
"We· don't expect all of the
lighting that we suggest to be in-
.
stalled, but we would like to see
some improvement," he,
_
said .
.
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.
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--
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'
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Route 9Wapplngers Falls 297-0027
·
.
Professors publish in Art
· by
PETE TARTAGLIA
.
Staff
Writer
.
Marist College
·
ca~now boast of
two more members of the faculty
who are newly published authors.
One of the things which makes this
different however,
.
is that it is a
husband and wife team.
Professor Richard Lewis and
Professor Susan Lewis have recent-
ly completed work on an introduc-
tory art appreciation textbook en-
titled, "The Power of Art".
Mr. Lewis is the Studio Ari
Coordinator and Mrs. Lewis is an
adjunct professor of history here at
Marist College.
According to rhe authors, this
book is necessary because there is
a need for an
an
a!)preciation tex
-
tbook which is accessible to and
directed at the students
.
"Regular art history texts tend to
be very encyclopedia oriented and
art appreciation books tend to be
fluffy in their ideas," said
Mf.
-
Lewis ..
"It
was our hop
e
that we could
make an art appreciation textbook
which connected art to the rime
period and culture in which it was
developed," said Mrs. Lewis.
In reaching the Arts and Values
course at Marist since 1984, Mr.
Lewis said he feels that the tex-
tbook connects art appreciation to
the liberal education which Marist
gives their student
s
.
According to Mrs. Lewis, the
book contains a stronger focus in
areas which other textbooks
haven't covered as much.
"We have a more in depth study
of twentieth century art, such as
performance art, and the inclusion
of more chapter
s
on women artists
and global perspectives on art,"
she said.
This was the first book the two
ha
v
e ever writ1en and both said that
it could possibly be the last as well.
"This book took us almost
six
years and three re-writes, to com-
plete
,
it wa
s
diffil.:ult at times for
u
s
", said both professors.
The book, which is published by
Hardcourt Brace: will be available
in book
s
tores on
.hily
I, 1994.
"Ladies, start
your
engines ... "
GOOD LUCK
TO
CARIE PISKURA
of
The Piskura Racing Team
With Her 1994 Season
Behind every great man is a
_
,
worr,oh-whQ
.
is,qbo.ut to
-
pass
him.
.
MARIST. VS ONE
·
LIFE
..
TO LIVE
DATE:
TIME:
PLACE:
SATURDAY, APRIL 30TH
11:00AM TO 1:00PM
J\THLETJC
FIELD
-
TBA
---
-
-
-
-
-
·
-
·--
- - -
--
- - -
- -
·
·
-
-
-
-
-
---
-
- - -
----
-
-
- - - -
-
-
-
M1
1
Hq'r

SCJJEDULED TO APPEAR
0
r4
To7L;VE
DENNIS MURRAY
Maris! College President
CLASS
or
'94 MEMBERS:
I\IATT I\JAlfflN
JAY Li\SCOLEA
<:Alm IIIDAI.GO
·
ROBERTS. WOOl>S
"Bo
U11drn111111"
WORTHAM KRIJ\,11\Um.
"Reverend Andrew
Cnrpcnter"
(ex-Cal Winlcrs.
DA YSJ
OTHER ACTORS TO J\Pl'F./\R
ADMJSSJON: $6.00/ $4.00 w/Marist ID
Proceeds will benefit Class of '94 Senior Week
and
771e Jellnifer Dressel 771ea/re Scholarsh(o
FOR. IIORF. 11/FO C/\LI, IIELI,/\ l,ICARJ OR RhCIIF.1
,
S1111'II
/\1'
X21.06
SPONSORF.D BY '.rllE CL,/\S
S
OF
·
1994
.
bo
You·want VISA & MasterCard.Credit Cards?
~-~-------------------~--
Now
you
c:an
have
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.,
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THE.
CIRC.LEF APRIL
14,;
1994.
_.;;,....;......:.;~......:--a. ....... __,.:...:.....;. ...... _.;.:'----:,=..:.;._.....;..;..:,· __
·---·--·--·~---,------===
Hitters explode,
d:o\M:1r_:~~Jlfl:~t?~{S··•··
· .. ·-
· · .· .. · · : •) .. ·· .. ·.:~P,espiteJhe-oµtbu!st;$pi!hsaid
· by
TED H.OLMt\JNl?.,. ·· ., ..
-~the.offense·could nave been more
SportfEditor . :·
,,· ·'.:';effictive:t/~ ,,··: •'
·>c-: .' . . . ....
---------'----'-.
------,-_ .,... . >"We' 'didn'.t hit the
'
way ,ve
: . J
ti11ioi- :pitcher. Jeff: Go<:idiii"and
'fo6uicf
have/'· he said; ''We didn't
the other members of the pitching , . pick" realgood. pitches:"..
·
staff ~ope ~he .o.ffe~siv_e :suppprL :_ tjespite possible 6ffensiy_e in_con-
Goodm rece1v~d _ag~n~sLNortheast · . sistencies, Goqd!
,
n pitched sohdly.-
Cc:mference foe .1s a sign of better : • •.. ,The ju'niohvas able to keep th,e
thmgs to come.
. .
. ·:Red ·Foxes in the,'gaine until the:
Trailing 2_sl, _the l_{ed foxes
:X.~. ·
team·•hif its 9ffe11sive spur(. The_.
ploded for ftveruns m the fifth-m-
Mountaineers ·11ever:scored· more·
ning enrout: to
~ 9-5 victory over tha.n
a
run in any given inning.
the ~ountai_neers
_
. . '. . . . . . .
. . Goo.din
(1
~2) pitched a complete··
. With the victory, M,-anst raises its
garrie allowing onlY: four _ean_ied
record to 4-14 (3-6 m·the._NEC).
runs on
11
hits>
; · · - ·
·
The Red Foxes are}ched!,lled to
Smith said .the lefthander put.
face NewYo_rkTech (Tuesdar)and
together
another
good
Hartford
.m
.a d?.~.bleh~a.der
performance. ·. -. . . .
~"",·~.eatf%.•·
(Wednesday) \Veath~r pe~m1ttmg.
"He's very dependabje," ,the
-~~
11
~esults were not ava1lable a_t press
thirdayear ·coach said. "When_ he
.
Mark Barr.on attempts to pick off Mount St. Mary's runner. The R.ed Foxes defe~ted the
time.
. .
.
..
..-., -
goes to the Ji!Ound, you're going to
M
t ,
·
9 5
Mo
day
.
. : . · . .
.
.Ctrcle.,photo/Matt Martin
, After takmg
th
e
l!!ad
m
t~e fifth,
be in the game."
.
oun amee_rs -
n .
.
Foxes to "victory. Foster also con- . Despite· the team's improved
Marist's o_ffense add~d~hree more
Goodin, who was not
as
impress-
.The. Red
F<;>xes
spilt
a
tributed two hit!i and an RBI t6 ·pla,y lately'. ~mith said he still
runs t? clmc~ tl)e w¼n• . . : .
. .
ed.with his performance, said he
d~ubleheader agamst ~he Moun-
balance·.the attack..
believes the squad has a lot of work
J
umor Mic!<.: Foster- Jed the ·: wls'·Ygrateful for the offensive , tameers Saturday. Manst won the
·
· ·
·
·
ahead
Marist charge with two doubles,
showcase.
opener 8-4, before falling 3-l in the
The run~ seemed to disappear for
·
two walks and __ a.sc(?red run .. TJ;ie.:
.
·
'·'It
was_ nice pitching with a
second contest.
the Red Foxes in the second game
. "We still have along way to go,"
Red Foxes pounded ~ut 11 hits m •·iead ;, ·h·e said. ''I wasn't as sharp
In the first game, junior second
as Andy Fisher held Marist t.O a
he said;. "We're . still making
the ballgame. ·:
.
/ ..
,,.
as
I
\1sually am."
baseman Vinny .Roberto went 3-3
meager one run on three hits.
mistakes we shouldn't make."
, .
.
.
·with two RBl's to lead the Red
PerfeSt Hudson leads Crew tops Vassar and Albany
Red<f oxes by
LIU
by
GERARD CARNEY
Staff Writer
Yonkers,
N.Y.,
was one of those
everyone,"saidjuniorShaneRior-
dan. "He's a good guy."
members.
"I
was very dissatisfied,"
Riordan said he feels the team
McGovern said. "Our boat rowed
will put together a good season.
by_~ANDREVV HOLMLUN~
Despite rough waters in
poorly. We felt coming in that we
"Its
very early," he said. "We
>, .. " ·
:_.staf(Writer ·
Poughkeepsie this past weekend,
would win outright."
have a few things to work on, but
·.·.·The softbairteam wiU belookihg;to have anoth~r piclure-p~rfect per-
~~~ti;;wo~e~~e
st
;~!~~
1
~:::a~~~;
However, McGovern did say the
we should do well. ..
formance this.afternoon ~hen it trayels to:Connecticutto
40
~attle with
Vassar and SUNY Albany.
team had a new enthusiasm.
In other meets, both the men's
non-conferencdipporient.JiartfordUnjv~rsity.
>
.
: ._ · .:' • . · ·
.
Someoftheplayersattributethis
and women's novice teams finish-
On Monday,"Mai:ist
(1.4-7
ovirall, ~-rin the;Nor_theas~:
.
Conference)
The Red
Foxes
took two vie-
newfound spirit to first-year head
ed second in eightmen competition.
swept past NE~ foe Eong IslandJJniversity, 6-0 and"8s4 .atth~ Gartland
tories, slipping in by two feet in the
coach Scott Sanford who left
Due to rough water,
all
fourm~n
Athletic Field{
. . .·
.
. . . .., . . . . ·. . .
·.
. • ,:
.
..
men's varsity eight.
Vassar.
events were cance\\ed.
. The RedFoxes .. we~e·l~d)rth_e·opening cpnteSlby fre.shmanriglt~:hand .
Marist won again in the women's
The coach has implemented a
.
.
.
P!tcherMichelleH~dsonr·'Y~q
_
t~~e\V a per~~~\g~ipe: t~spr.stf~':~~'~:,_. varsity ~ight.
. series of out of water programs, Jo . <<:The Red F<?xes
will
be rnwmg m
history
qf
~he.threea,Y~I::Pr~g~!:!P1Y'i.":'.~,:-:>c:_:;7~
::
-:!;::r.,:.J
::C
.'.'.2""-<'•
~;,,;:ff;fi, ... ;.,;-
_
'..
·.·
. •.
·
.
.. ·•··•··
.
.
.
condition in the offseason;'Hehas
·{\VO
meets
t/11s
weekend .
. ThisisnottheJirst~tirneffudson··hllS had;sµccess againsi:.tl,IeBlackb1ras. : . Both
,
teams have
1-0
marks.
also,
focus·ed his auention
on . . .
Marist
\vill
travel
to
face
Skid- .
. . Hudson (8-1),.
·
pJt~heg,a:hoshjtter against"LIU ·orfM~rch:JO;_:. ·. _:
.
_-
·oespite ihe victory,•·· some
freshman recruiting, .. someth,jng_
·
more on Saturday and Holy Cross
· Junior.walk
0
011Darrah Metz'WllS the off~nsive spark; goingl:
3
with
members of the team were disap-
that.was mainly handled by the col~
on:Sunday.
.
3 RBI,.whilejunior_\\4arge_Sylvia,junior.MeHssa F;melli a11d.sophomore
poirit.ed with'iheirperformance.
1 ·
d · ·
off in the past
·
·
Angela Degatano each:re~ordeifRBI~.
. . '. .
:
.. .
. .
. . . .
>
. •
ege a .n,llSslOnS
.ice.. ...
. ·.· ·.
The Red Foxes will then host the
. ·1n the nightcap, the Red Fo'xes·were paced by junior co-captain ~atty.
President's Cup on April
23.
Ack_ermann . ancl,sophqinore. G{iur~ney Sleight,:,whq eagh • went3-4: ·.
Ackermann ·arid freshman°ShaimorfStohrer also·collec~ed two .RBIs ..
apiece.
·
· .
< \ ..
> \ . .
< · .·
.
· . . ,
.
. . . . . .
,
<,
Freshman Robih ,·Stohrer was:the. winning.· pitcher. for :-Marist, ··
<
. Newl;,'~named managers Cieorge Burgin and Jonnah O'Donnell could
not: bereached for comment:, , . .
. ..
. . . .
.
>Seniorco~captain Tricia Southworth said pitching
and
hitting were keys
to'thesweep;
·
·........ .
. ·

.
.
-
('.MicheHe pitchedreallyweU, _and ~e.also,hit reaj.ly \Veil/'. Southw_orth
said.
·
''LIU is a good,· quality. team.• We
_
knew
,
we would· h~ve to· play
one'.step•higher."

.· ...
.
. ,
.'
. ; ·
· ·
.
·
·· ··,
.
' ·
The Red Foxes hosted Manhattan College last Friday splitting a
doubleheader with.the Jaspers,·winning.2-Land losing
5-4. ·
0
··

Sopholllores B.eth Murphy and Courtney Sleight highlighted Marist's
offense in the second.gameby going 2-4 and 2-3, respectively.
;. Senior .Janine O'Connor said she is pleased with the; ~e~m's success
thus
far.
·
,!'I think
we
are playing well,,, O'Connor said. ''We have made ·some
. adjustments, and people have been jumped around (in the line-ups,) but
everything has been going pretty well.for us."_
Marist was at Army yesterday. R
Intramurals
In men's basketball action, A
Few Good Men lead the Monday
league with a 6-0 record. Flex leads
the Wednesday league with a 5-0
mark.
Basketball playoffs will be held
the week of April 25.
.
Marion Hall Tigers have a 4-1
record to lead the women's league.
There is one more game remaining
in league play. ,
In vol.!_eyball play, Boom, There
it is, Los Locos and Natural Emis-
sions have 5-1 records and are bat-
tling for playoff spots.
MCIVC and Leo Spikers are
leading the Thursday league. Both
teams only have one loss.
Softball action was scheduled to
begin on Sunday April IO but was
postponed because of rain. There
are 20 teams in the league.
There are two new aerobic
classes on Wednesday and Thurs-
day from 4:30 - 5:30 p.m.
"Year In Review"
Monday - Friday
at
5:30 P.M. on
l'dCTV
Campus Cable
Channel 12
I
.,I~-~
,
...
~
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•·
,.
·
ST.AT
:
OF
_:
·
.
THE
,
WEEK:
-
...
-
.
I
.
have no
.-
regrets
,
at
all."
·
.
, ·
.
:
'.
,.
_
·-·
1~
]J[i\,?
'j~
!
1
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Jiif
\

:,
;t~{¢i~i;'lf .
..
'..
S
.
PORTS
i
A;RIL
14,
1
~~
F~~shmar
L
pifohe~
Mi~helie
'
Hudson
hurled'}
f
p~ifect
·
game against
LIU
on Monday;
~
<: . ,
.
--
-
--
.
:
:
@11
~
i
}
8tMe
;
Il'.i\
~:.
fi1
f
e
,
m
n/
..
·

~§§.J~~~~~~
\%
~~~i~
0
,
;
~i~
~
~~
:
:
-
liY:
ANDREW.
:
HOLMLUND
.
,
.
<
;;
Friday.:(Mardi" 1
.
8)
/
l
said (gettjtig·
-
--
_
-
_
-
-
-
·
-_.
-.
-:>
:
~
~t~ff
~r
i
tet
·
r
,,
j
~i

}
,
\
-
u~
;g1:~Jtt~i~l56tk~~~~
?
'.
100
t
:
:
_
Suspe~ded _soft~alLhead· c~~ch
~:
·
/
According
_
)
to
;;
Clii~vem
;
·
:
J
he
,
.
Toni Ch1avelh was
_
f1re~
_
(j~
r~11.rs~
-
,
·
play~rs
-
did
'
rip
_F
want
_
to
·
:
pl~y
_;
the
i
day;
-
l\-1arch
·
.
~l
.
,
-
by
,
coll~ge
•·
ad•
· .
numl:ier
·
of gariles
:
:
beca1J~e
'
.
they

ministrators,.
_
Chia
_
veUi
,
-
said
,
\
,;/
.
.
,
:;
.
'
wereJired
'.
_
or injured
>
:,
,
:) -
.
/\,,: _
-'
-
George
.
Burgin
:
'.:
aild

·
Jorinah
_
-
:; :,
"When
-
=
I wa's"
'
al:>Ie:to· getthem
.
_
◊'
_
Do~nell
.
will
,
share
J
lie
-
head
:
.
out-of
-
the game
;

they
:
dc~ided
_.
tc
{
go
:
."
coaching duties on an interim basis
;
.
-
to
-
the beacti
,!
;
:
he said
:
0
I
_
didn't'.
i
accord~ilg
'
to
-
:
a
;;
M
_
cCarin
·
_
-
press
:
thinkthafwas
'
a
·
goqcl idea
;'
Uhen
-
release dafed March
.
31
-
,
:'
- . :
·
_;:,
.
·
met
·
:
with then
f
inoivid
_
ually
/
:
!
! :
-,,;
.
-
-
''.They (admiriisfratqr's) wanted
·
:

_
J>Jayer
s°-
The
O
Cirde
f
was
able
to
>:
me to
·
resign,
-
l:iut
_
I felt it was
_'
'
c
ontact
dediried
to
;
coirim
e
nlcin
-
the
·
wrong
/
(
Chiavel)j toldTh
f
Circle
~
-
_
_
-
:
c6achi!l&
:
,
situ
~
tio11
'
.
.
'::
i-
>
;'
·
<>:'
-
:
iO::
-
Director of Athletics Gene Doris

-_
.
__
Chiave111
-
also said

he was
,
uriable
-
.
could
·not
-
tie i'ea¢hed forcoriini"tint.
:
-
'i
o
contact."Aillsc,if Sexton
J
assist~ilt
}
According to the press rel~ase,
:
:
to
<
the direcfor
::
6( athl~tics;
-
to
;
_.
Chiavelli
\Vas
«relieved
-
of his duties

.
discuss the
'
incidi:"nt
'
.
>
·-.
-
.
i
>-
-
_
-
· -
as head
.
coach•·• b
.
ecause
·
o('~ir.
~
_
-.
-
"I called-A,llison to try
-
to
·
e~plain
_
reconcilable philosopliical d~f~
_
what had
·
happened; biiU
-
didn't-
ferences
/
'.
.
,
-
-
_
_
_
_
--
_
_ -
.-
·
hear from her/' he
·-
added .
.
.
>
:
.
ChiaveHi said
=
he
-
was
·
_
fii'ecl
' -,:
However,
_
-
chiavelli
_
.
said
:
the
_
_
because the administraticm did ~ot
,:
players were able to
.
reach
-
~ex.ton
-.
-
-
appro~{
:.
of h~s c~a~hing
,_
st)ile
,
:
,>
-
<
:
wtjiki~ Fl<Jrid,t They met with ~er
·.
_
f
~'.They felt that
.
I wasn't
-
teac~1ng
-
ort Monday,
-
March 21.
-
.-
_
:
·
-
_
'.
_
'
(the players) enough/
.
'
_:
Chiave,Hi
:
.
-;
According to seriior
,
co
~
capfaii1

said.
-
'
,'
l
guess I
_
recruite~ wrong;
Tricia"Southworth, theon
_
ly impor-

-
but yoif'c
-
an't letthe kids ruri the
--- '
tant issue
for
tlie team
:
is to con-
show
)!
~
--

.
. -
-
-
-
-
·

'
tiriue winning.

-
,
-
-_ - -
-
-
_
.
Chia:veHi said he believed an
_
in-
_ .
-
"I°t's over now," Southworth
cident
_
,vhic._h occurred during the
-
-
said. "We are not dwelling on
ji:,
F
_
l<?i;~da trip
-
also led to
_
his
Currently,
-
Marist is having
:
its
-
d1sm1ssaL-
_
.
-
,
best start ever. The Red Foxes ar"e
According to Chiavellj,
-
t
.
~e
-
14~7 overall and 7-1 in
_
the Nor~
players
•,
di
_
d not like playipg three theast Conference.
_
_
_
Senior
·
outfielder Janine O'Connor" takes a
·
swjng last" Friday
-
schedule~ games dudrig the week-
.
:
Chiavelli"maintains he did
-
an ef-
_
-
·
againstManhSttan
.
'college;
See rel~ted
game
·
story pag~
;
11.
.
10
~f
trip
: .
-
-
.
-
__
: _ -:
_-
•-
-
fective Job.
_ _ -
-
_
,
--
_
--
-
-
-
.
-
Circle
photo/Matt Martin
:
.
by
,
GREG
BIBB
-
-
Staff·Writer
::
:
J:iead"
coach Pete Colaizzo has
-
been
-
saying
_
all
'.
year tliat Marist is
-
a
-
good distancernnning program.
\
This
_
weekend his runners prov-
-
eel
that in
'
the Blue Devil Invita-
-
tirinal
at
Centraf Connecticut State
· University
:
_
_
-
_
-
-
The
-
Red Foxes ran
-
away with
three distance wins and numerous

pers
_
qnat bests in a meet that did
-
not have team scoring.
Heading the Marist effort was
·
·
Josh Wood who ran a personal best
-
in
the 10,ooo~meter run.
.
Wood
'
finished fourth with a
·
time
.
ofJ°fminutes
~
43
.
3 seconds.
_ -
Colaizzo
.
said
.
he was pleased
'
with Wood's outing,
_
:-
-~
-
"Josh
·
ran
-
a
-
good
,
race where his
second
-
half times were
_
actually
'
faster than his first' half times,"
Colaizzo said.
-
Matt Pool and Todd Counsel
also had good performances in the
:
10;000 meters.
Pool stopped the c
_
lock at
35:14.2, while
.
Counsel ran the
_
event in 35:30.3.
-
... see
TR~CK.
pag~ 11

_ ___
Thepvanted to
_
~~t o'-!t o~
,
some
<
·
CCI
have
_
no
-
regrets at all,''
- -
-
-.
,
-
·
-
.
-
-
· -.
-
-
-
.
~~~i1i~:::t
:
;h;!
1
6~~
1
~r~a~d.
:
:~ Chiavelli said.
_
-
L
-
~Cf
(isse -
_
-
d,
·
f
¢ats
·
:.
Si'ena'
_
-
14-
·
10
rsr
.
:
·
et
·

.
·
·
1er
.
-
.
s
·
=
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to
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a
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·
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l
wfui
~
·
the i~
~
c~rri;~fthe
i~e
:
~f
-
th
~
tw~
-
.
~nd
'
cover thein during
-
_-
-
-
f) '.
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0
,
-
-
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"I.Ta
·
.
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.
;~~e~~~~~
:~gt:t:itt~~~;{;~!r
_

_
tt~~~~!t!~t:~bi;
_
s;t:~\~e~J~
·-
-
-
ace
:
'
:VY
:
,
.
-
·
,
·
_
-
.
_-
'
,
·,-
.
---
·
-.
-
.
:
J
:
·
.
Theinen's
'
lacrosse
'
teamimprova
to
-
eightgoals/
t
Diehlsaid.
_
game.
__
-
-
-
-
' -
-
·
-
-
-
--
·-
-
-,-
'
Th
.
...
-
·urieswereafactor
'
iit"the
edits"record
.
tci5~3with-a.1~10vic~
; i:
C\o,~ins~i
:
sai
,
d
·
t~~~efense
·
con-
_ ,
,
'.
'1'µ.cy
_
can'tstop
,
bothof,them
' --
f1Y'PJl}>E~l\l~t,l
,
y
-
: '
"
_\
; ;
l~ss;
~
~~~~rdiilg !
.
o
-
1--i_
~
rris~
f
/
.
:<
tory ~v
_
e
(
~_i!?~!l
_
Coll
~
~€:
~
~~W!-~a.r
_
:
~ai~e~ S.
_
i<;na.
-
<
,::-:
,
_
:
:
-
..• -
.
~
__
,
.
.
unless
·
__
they
.
have
_-_
two good
_ -
_
-•
-
-
-
.
. ,,
,
,\.
~taff
Yfnte~
-
_
'. ,, ·
:
_,
_,-,
-
-
\
•~M1ssmg your 11umbe
_
r
,
t\\'.<> and
·
-
.

The wm
_
was Manst's second
10
_
<
-.•_
S1~n~
;
s offense ~asl!t aole to
- -
players, ••
-
_
he
-
sai
_
d.
_
:
.
:
_
_
_
.
:
·
·
.
,
-
:,
~
-
·
:
_
; .
.
.
>
.
.
,
.
~
-
-
,
-
.
·
-
<_
S
nuriibc:
r'.
thtee
'
play_ers
'i
(
goi!'i to
:_
foui: yea(s
:
over.
:
the
_
S
~
ni's
;
,~
(::
mov_e
,
th,e
·
~.a!l
a
_
~?
-
get 1!1to
-
good
Dave
-
Closinski said
'
he has no
-
_
.

. Jum~rM~rtm. Byr~e
_
lll~~ec1Se\'.
L
hurt
'
you,'
!
:
said
·
-
Hamson
:
-
Thetriumph':y;,as the result of the
.
sc~rm~
.
po~lt}O~
;
'.
h~ said,
- -
-
--
P.rob_leni with the
-
situation he and
his ~ecC>r<tt? 7~01
_
n_ t.he
-
~r~t
lllll~~~
-
,.'
,
''Esp¢dally
_
whe1
(
your
-
Pf!lying
:
~
-
.··
'
intens"e
-
-
c'onditionirig program
-
the
':
.
/
t
Cl?SinSkl?d~fd,
:
tJ1at me
_
d~fense:,
_
his
-
brother face on
-
the
-
field:
_
agams,t
:
,
for
_
~ham Qf,l
_
~l!turclaf ,
,::
:
:
--· :
t¢am;Jike
f
~rdham
/
'
'. :
:
><·-
;
.
_
_
>
•":
team
.
has
_
l:,een
go
_
ing
:
through
:
this
:
sto?s
a,
Jc;>t ()f.
.
stiots
,
which enables
-
__
>
'
-
~
•If
_
he's getting doubied
;
-
then I
:
_
,
W_
9~lcl:tli1s trans,I~t
.
e
_
1
11
!o
?
n~t~
.
~~
\ ) \
I~
,
t!}e
:,,
sec<,>~~
-
lll3:tc~
;
\
JU~1or
_ ,
_
seasoll
>:
_
!lccordiiig
_
_
to
;
)cad cqach
:
}h~ t~Ill
·
to get ~he b~ up the
-
~el
.
ct
_
have to do
\V
hat lhave to do
_
to
get
v1ctory
_
f()r,t
_
he
,
men s tenms !~am
:
>
Marc
·
Nussbauni lost m three sets
T
·
D"ehJ'
:
·
: ,:
,

-
:
;
;,
:
,-:
.
,
-

- -
.
qmcker,
_
::.
.
-
.
-
-_ -_
-
• '.
'
-
-.
-
-
-
.
myself open and getthe ball," he
-
'
. N.«:>t thi~ time
'.
--->,:<
-:
,,
_
'..
(
':}/;,/-,
6
.:
2
/
5
~
7,
:
6
~
2 .
.
-,
.
:
>:/;:- \\
·;::
·
:;
_..
obiehisaid fiis play~
t
fhlid nibre
-
.
/-
Diehl a_lso cr
_
~dit~dthe wiri•to his
said, "It is vice- versa for Doug."
-
_

"!'lie
-
R~ms; defe.~te~
:
an
-
1
~),ll
,
~
·
,
'
so-phomore f:leath
-:
Pr
.
arnbei:ger_
-
-.
-
stamina thali
'
the
_
Siena
'
squad.
_
:
fresh
_
ipa.n
:
<
m1d_f1elders, Greg
:
Another key _player for Marist
-
plag
_
l;le1
,
fvfl!r
.
1st
-
tea~;
8
~
h
.
.
.
'
-::
.
.; ,
!C>st tl!e fourth
-
-'
matcn iti
.
another
.
''Our c;oiidWoning
maM
a dif-
Schne1~er
-
and Jm~ Yates:
• .
-
was seriior captain- John O'Brien.
,
:
Wit~Jhe lpss, Ma~st rec()r~Jlll~s
_
three
-
_
setter; 5-7,
_
6
_
: 1 ~
-•
6
,
0,
.

_
-
-
-
,
_
. -
-
. ...,
fereilce because

we
goi:
_
behind
:
at
_
-
,
.-
The
-
,
two cQmbmed for four-
:
-
--_-
O'Brien scored two
·
goals-against
to 4~;3
_
.
q~q
1
~_Jhe Noi:thea~t
,
f911"
;
'
The. twoinfories effe~e,d
}
he R~
'
,
one
,
poiht.butou,tpiaye4
-
tli~m
·
t_he
:_
g9alS.
_
'
'
'
. ,_
--_
.
.
:
-
-
: .
Siena and was key to the team's
J
e.r~nc!!).
/
flle Rf
.
fl
_
i:
0
x~s
.
~
1
~J
J
<>~~
-
';'.:
Fo;ifes
:
jn
:
more ,tllan
i
Pll~
:
y,'.ay
·
,
rest of the game
//
:
_Diehl said:
c,
-•
_
_
:
-_
f~~o
r
4Jn~
• :'
to
.•
-
D1~hl,
_-_-_
the
morale, according to
'
Diehl;:
-
J<;>
ge,t I?,~konJlie wmm~g
-
tracK!?.
:-
:
'
'
because tne players W(!re
J
otced
:
to
. :
:
'
:}
"Junio
r
bave
'.
Closiriks
F:
who
·
hacf
<,
freshma~
-
are
-
~ey
_
c9
_
ntnbutors
-
to
-
-
.-
~'
O'Brien
-
scored
-
two big goals
.
day
..
~~~!nst
:
_N~~
>:
foe
c
W~g
_
f!~r
<'
ciiange
positions
'
;'
in
:
d1e
.
:
rilat~h
,
>
r
our
'
goals
;
agrees
'.
tha
(
the
·
t~aril's
'
'
t
_
he
M~ri-~t" _offen~e.
,
·
:
_
,. _ -
ilfat broughtus back to
-
life," Diehl
_
weat~~~
'
~rm1t
_
tii:ig
.
_
_
_
.. ·
.
.
--
·
'

;
.
-
.
order.
.
.
_
.
_
-
,
_
_
_
'..
_:·
.
-
_
-
\
:onditionin
,
·
togtarn' has
been
-'.:
_
_qosms~•.
_
~h°. ~d1edfourgoals
_
_
said .
.
"One was in i)1e first period
;
-.
~
..
:hJti
Tu
,:t!f:t~!s
\\'.1r
e;
t-
s;m;}
\->?
I'hhi§
was
:
~
ot
the
¥e
y
ijim
t
s~n
."
succes~t\i
t-
l
-
t
,
'::;-
-
t
)}
,/\<,
-
~
;
. -
}
-
:
:
tci
,
the_ eff<>rt,
:
hft~d
hi~
S~<:>n
-
~<>t:31

--
when
we
were dowli 3- I . The team
-
u
,
-
-
-
:
·
.,,-
-:-
-.
,
g
-
P
_
Y
.
..
J
,
·,
_
·
-•,>
-
·d h
bT
"
d
'
·
Nussbaum and
-

,
"In close games
,
wc!re
-
able to at
.
-
thuteen, a
_
tie
_
W!th his twm
_
picked things tip
_
after that."
_
-
B~1~
:
~~
-
~~
_
sa,
,
an,d !l~°'~~qll
_
~~
-
e.
-
.i
sa.i
_
,
e
,-
e
1:
eve
'
,
-
-
--
.
:
··

-
:
·

-
-
-•
-
-
>
-
k
-
·
-
,
cl h
If
-
_
broth~r
,
Doug
-
.
-:!
;
-
.
-'
·
_
__
_ --
.
On April 2,Maristtraveled to
,
an~ ~q1:p,~~1mes ~our_ S!ngle;s ~Iar,~
r
·:
l~~Ill~~~ger ?pld
_
,
~
_
ilye
"".~11:
:; :
;<
·
J~Uiis~
:
,
~;~s/~std~tf6~f:g,"
,
te
,
_
-
~ccord
_
ing t
_
o
:
O,iehl; the Clo~in~
-
Fairfield University
.
and defeated
sen~or
,
}?[9bodh _G,h1plun~e~'.
-
-

-
---
.
:
,
:
_, :'
1!,
_
see~e? a l
_
ot_clos~f.,t~
_
an)t
,
said
(
;": :-··
_
:-
·
:
:,
·
>
.
<
<

·
,
.
·
:-
.
sk
_
1 brot~ers areus_ually the ob1ect
the
-
S
-
tags
~
Il-7 .
.
·-
-
--
_
-
:
_I,,aS!fS
~
a,"Y!lS ~ut ~
J
th
_
_
a ~h()~,~er
_

-.yas,
lfarn
_
s<>n
~~
1
~-
-
~umber
-:-
Another
.
reason for"the"win;
'
ac-
-
ofa)ot of
.
de,fens1ve coverage by
-
6'Brien scored three goals.
mJ1:':ry \
'
J~h1~lun~er \'fa~
.
:
9ut
~
1
~~
,·.
_
two_ ha~ a d~se thi:ee set
~at~~
a~d
cording toT>iehl;
·
is the outstanding
_
other teams,
. -:.
_
·
•-
,
_

_ ·
,
Senior
.
captain Doug Closinski add-
-
what
~~~d.
~
.
oach !(~n l:IliV,1~0.n,s~1
;- '>;'.'
-,
..•
s~e
,
TENN
is
page
\
1t~
·
-
:
.
. -
'.
p)ayilig
capabilitfos or"his defense.
-
.He ~
_
aid that oppdn!?nts pick one
ed
-
five assists.
.
-~~~~~~
.
baseballieain may liiially
.
be
i
u
rii-
-.
·
s!a
_
rting i>itc~er
_
for
,
th
_
e Red
-
F.o~~s
>
:
Hudson also
:
hurled
~
no-hitter
The new realignment structure
ing
,
the
'
c~rneL
:
.
: ·
_
_
:

>
:
:
_.-
,'.:-
_
-
i'!~
'
been Ciool:l1n
~
who~e):~RA
-
!s

against
·
th~ Blac~birdsonMarch
stinks.
.
-
-
-
.
_
Cµrreriily, ihe
>
Red Fo
x
es
:
are
un.d~~- fi~e.)iowev~r
;
the squad S
;
30
_
.
_
_
_
_ _
_
_
_
.
.
_
_
Why are eight teams, instead of
-
4-14
(3c6
'
in
the
-
Northeast
·
Con~
ERA
1s well over ~
1
ne,
_ ·
_
·
-
.
.
.
The Red Foxes
-
are glad the San
four, eligi~le to qualify
-
for
ference) ;_iiid are coming off winn
~
-
".c
:
-
_
i:h~ Red
i:'◊xes can o~ly hop: to
Diego resident
_
decided to come
postseason play?
-
-
ing
two:
of three games again
-
st
-

'
contmt1e
_
to s~e games
·
hke
across the country to play on the
Could it be to satisfy the
:
thirst
NEC nemesis Mourit~i. Mary(~
:
-:"
Monda>:'s.
'
:
-
<
-
_
-
.
·
-
·
..__ __
....;___
banks of the Hudson,
-

. for more revenue by the pr9fit-
Why
.
ii
-
Marist starting to win?
_
-
--
'
If_
th1~
_
S?~1d
·
play
.
con
_
tmues,
_
Ht!d~on's performance is smell-
motivated baseball owners?
·
_
It's
no(
rocket scieri¢e. The
_
~ans~ w1U ~m o~
_
erl_O ga~es for
.
ing sweeteqhan the usual stench of
·
Even though baseball, like either
team'sstartingtoscoresomeruns
.

the first ume
·
10
us
_
hist
5>~Y-
Altllough thetea111(i4-7;1~1 in
'
_
the Hudson Riv~r.
__
sports, has become increasingly
-_
In the
_
Red J:oxes'
9-5 victory
-
Ahhou~~ that may
_
not seem hke
·
the
r:,,EC)
has won fiveof
~ixgain!?S
_
,-
-
_-
_
:
Turning
.
around
commercialized; it did hold
-
onto
_
over the Mountaineers, the team
!lJuch, it is for a program that had under co-coaches Joriiiah O'Dori-
--
The
-
men's lacrosse team is star-
.
some sort of tradition.
-
gave juiti_or pitcher Jeff Goodin
17 wins in i
_
ts first two years.
-
nell and George Burgin, they were
ting to accomplish something it has
Predictions
comfortable leads
.
This makes life
-
_- _
-
_
-
Softball news
_
-
.
• -

.
-
9-6 uriderChiavelli..:
.
__
-
-
nofdon~
_
too often over the past
.
The four teams that will make
easier for any hurler
;
_
_
·
_In_
a Mccann
_
press
-
releas:,
-
-
Here's a philosophy lesson:
few seasons-,-win.
-
the
-
playoffs in the American
_
Mark. Barron, Vinny Roberto,
. -
Di_re~tor of Athletics Gene Dons Head coaches with
.
over
.
:
soo
Head coach Tom
_
Diehl's squad
league
_
are as follows: Toronto,
George
.
S~ntiago arid Mick Foster
_
sai~ su~pended head coach
-
Tom records shouldn't get fired because
is 5-3
-
and is
·
coming off an im-
Cleveland (yes Cleveland)" and
are the four major weapons in
_
the
s~
1
avelh ~as rele~sed be~use ~f of philosophical differences.
p~essive 14-10 victory over the
Texas will win their respective divi-
~cd
Foxes ~rsenal. They are all hit-
irrecor1cliable phliosophical dif-
Despite what the press release
Siena Saints.
sions. Baltimore will get the wild
-
tint
-
ov.er
:
~300.
ferences."
sa.id, Chiavelli wasn't fired solely
_
·
The offense has been one of the
card spot.
_
-
Despite)he team',s gradual im-
Huh?
.
for that reason: .
primary reason's for the team's
In the National league, Atlan-
-
provemept,
they
still have a long
Who
were
these diff
erenc~ bet:
_ _
_
_
Perfection
·
_
success.
-
_
_
ta, Houston and San
_
Francisco
will
way to go
.
before being considered
ween? Were they ~tween Chiavel~
,
Fr~hman pitcher ~ichelle Hud-
Dol;lg and Dave Closinski, Greg
_
be the division winners. Cincinnati
a good team.
-
-
_ _
.
an~ th: athletic department.
_
son has emerged as the leader of
Schneider and Tim Yates have pro-
is the wild card entry
.
Excep(for the Big Fou~, the
_
of-
Ch1avell! and
_
the pla_yers? Or the team and the ace of the pitching
vided Marist with a solid offensive
Toronto versus
_
Atlanta in the
fense
is weak. The next leading hit-
Chiavelh
_
and both parues?
staff.
punch
.
World . Series. Atlanta finally
ter who is
-
seeirig any significant
There muSt ti~ve bee~
_
reaso_ns
Hudson (8-1) pitched a perfect
Any t_eam that has more threats
breaks rts playoff jinx and wins it
"'
-\
playing time is only hitting in the
o ther than P~tlosophical dif-
game on Monday afternoon in the
o~ the offensive end is going~
be
Ted Holmlund is The Circle's
.250 range.
ferences for finng a manager.
first game of a doubleheader ver-
difficult to beat.
·
Sports Editor.
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44.7.1
44.7.2
44.7.3
44.7.4
44.7.5
44.7.6
44.7.7
44.7.8
44.7.9
44.7.10
44.7.11
44.7.12