The Circle, September 22, 1994.xml
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Part of The Circle: Vol. 45 No. 1 - September 22, 1994
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Volume 45, Number 1 ·
Former Marist Student Arreste On ~as;,e Charges
--
·
Arrest Made After CJne-Year 1nvest1gafion
Lucheite.
·
•
..
.·.· .
state prison.
ary:- Leary would not comment on
tending Pace University, in
New
York
by KRISTINA
.. JVEL. LS
The indictment was handed up
According to Grady, Tasso, who
whetherTasso's withdrawal was re-
City. ·
.
.
· Editor
· · ·
by a Dutchess County Grand Jury
was represented by counsel; was ar-
lated to the investigation.
The rape occurred on Saturday,
.
..
.
•.• ..
.
and a berichwarrant was issued for
raigned in the Town of Poughkeep-
· Leary also said he was told of the
Sept. 11, 1993, near the rear of the
On Aug. 2; New York State Po-
Tasso;s arrest, Luchette said.
.
sie Court onAug;3, \Vhere he pleaded
arrest and of the on~going investiga-
LowellThomas Communication Cen-
Iice arrested a foriner Mari st. College
"Fie did. not: resist arrest and was "not guHty ." The Brooklyn resident . tfon bf the District Attorney's of-
ter, according to Town of Pough-
student in connection with the rape
turned over to the Town of Pough-
was held in the Dutchess·County Jail
fice.
.
.
keepsie Police reports.
of a co-ed that '.occurred on campui; keepsie Police Department," Luchette until his release on Aug. 4 when he
.''I was -informed that there had
According to police, the victim,
just over ayear ago. · _
·
said.
. .
.
posted
a
$25,000 surety bond;
been one arrest made and that the
who was
18
at the time, returned by
.· John
A.
Tasso, 20, was arrested
William Grady, Dutchess County
"The Dutchess County Grand Jury
investigation was continuing by the
taxi to the College from an off-cam-
in Brooklyn,
N.Y.,
by the Violent district attorney, confirmed Tasso was
is still investigating the entire inci-
DA's office," Leary said..
pus party at ab_out 10:30 p.m. She
Felo'ny Warrarir Squad, and was . arrested·and charged with the Class dent," Grady said.
.
At Marist College, administrators
then began walking to her dormitory
charged with three counts of rape in
B felony.
If
convicted of three counts
Joe
Leary, directof of college
declined to comment on the arrest
from the chapel area.
the first degree, a felony, according ofrape in the first degree, Tasso could safety and security, said Tassowith-
becauseit is being handled by state
As she approached the rear of the
to State Police Investigator Alan receive between 25 and 75 vears in drew from MaristCollege in Janu-
and local police officials. President
Lowell Thomas. building, she was
Dennis
J:
Murray said he was unable
grabbed from behind by an unknown
to give a statement because the case
male and thrown to the ground, po-
has not yet been settled.
lice said.
·
In
addition, Detective Paul Holt,
The victim told police three white
Town of Poughkeepsie Police, said
males each forced her to engage in
. he would.not compromise the inves-
sexual intercourse.
~
ligation by commenting on the case
According to police; the three
· at this time.
-
males fled in. a westerly direction
The Circle made several unsuc-
toward the Hudson River. ·
cessful attempts to contact Tasso and
The victim was treated at St.
his attorney.
.
.
Francis Hospital in Poughkeepsie for
Luchette said Tasso is now at-
minor. injuries and· bruises and was
rclcnscrl.
no
lice said.
F.reshmen
:·curfew
cause
:·•··oriancef
rr·ort·iam~us
. Director
of
Safety and Security
by MEREDITHKENNEDY
Joseph Leary said he supports the
.F~ature Editor·._
plan but believes it will be difficult
to enforce.
.
.
.
Housing and Residential Life calls
"I
really don ',t see a squad of
SC-
it. a· freshmen visitation policy, but
curity guards wandering up and down
some freshmen· say it's a curfew.·
the halls throwing out students, Leary
·. According to the policy~ "All
.
said.
Marist students visiting from other
"Wejust don't do that."
areas must vacate.the host's room by·
Padovani said the visitation guide-
12:30 a.m. (Simday-Thursday) and
2
lines changed in reaction to com-
L:c._;_;...;....;..;...;..;.~_.:.:....;..;.;...;.._;__ _ _ _
..;..;.__,. _ _
.;..;_; _
_;_-"---'--'-----'--'--'-"--"-'-'---'--'--'-__;_;'"--'-----'---'--....;J
a.m. (Friday-Saturday) and return to
plaints from students, and their par-
. - R.. . • ·.d.
· .
.
· ·
·
·d· · · · · · · · · ··.
-
•
·
· · ·.· · · ··
'
· · · ·
their own area or room." .
ents about people being on their floor
. esi ·. ent· stu ··• ... ents
·-comment on.
Joh~~!~~S!nr~=i~~~e
0
:e~~~~~~~
th
a~~:~emne~~~~~ea~~~Je~~s~:~~d
pro.·
.
.
~·
·
....
.
.
ll
_
_
n
_
.. _
/ ...
d_....
cij@S.i·•.()f
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_
,i ..
s.
~
U.t:e ·
:~~~;=:,::,:::,::,;:
~tEii~f:1;:£~:!il~E
by
JACQUE~SIMPSON :
Staff.
Writ.er
·
.
.
·Feeling clau~µophobic? .
.
Even with the construction of the
new t.fid~Rise' and the·· new
Townhouses; some students are hav-
ing to live :in tight quarters. . .
·
Each·of the new Townhouses and
· the suites in the new Mid-Rise are
required fobe built-up to accommo~
date a11 · of the resident students .
.
The new Townhouses have nine
students residing, rather than its origi~
nal eight and the recently completed
Mid-Rise suites has seven students,
as opposed it its original six.
Most of the "A" rooms seem to
be of adequate size for two people,
while some seem to be too small to
house two students coinfor:tably.
The "C" bedrooms in the
Mid-
Rise are all different sizes ranging
from cramped to spacious.
The students in both the new
Townhouses and the Mid-Rise living ·
in a built up area will each receive an
additional $100 in thrifty cash as
compensation for the extra person
.The three students living in .the
built-up rooms are being promised a
$300 reimbursement, along with $100
in thrifty cash.
"The col1ege isn't really profit-
ing from the build-up in the new
Townhouses and the Mid-Rise
suites,"said Jim Raison, director of
•
the freshmen halls and will be. us~d
tant on duty.
Housini "The college· is returning
CO!lles a proble171;
.
.
.
.
.
as a guideline forother students when
· No action will be taken if the guest
$1,600 per built-up suite."
·
C
So far;
10
built-up rooms in the problems occur," Padovani said.
leaves .
. . :
.
·· .. Meanwhile, because· each new
Mids Rise have been broken down.
. Padovani said it is not a curfew
Guests who remain after being
. Townhouse has nine students rather.:
. , «Housingwill ask
for
volunteers because students do not have to be in
notified will receive a written wam-
than eiglit, Marist is reiurning $1,800
tomoveifyacanciesareavailable;or
·
their rooms and are free to use .the
ing,Padovoni said.
per l:>uilt~up Townhouse.
.
-iCa.compatibility. ·problem arises McCann Center and the_Student Cen-
Margaret McArdle, a resident as-
The Mid~Rise houses328 stu~
among roonimates,"said Raison,
ter.
sistant, said she think_s the policy is
dents, . but with·. the elimination of
'
By riextyear, there are e"pected
.
Freshman Amy Bria said she does
putting off the inevitable.
Canterbury Gardens, whicli housed
,
to -be six. people ill each Mid-Rise not mindthe new regulations but dis-
.
425 students,' there was"a riet loss of suite !and eight people in t.he new agrees with the term policy.
"They're not being given the
103 housing spots:
. . ..
.
· .. ·. . ~: .
Tc:>wit Houses.
. ·. ..
. ·
"They told us we didn't have a . chance to prove themse~ves respon-
. . At the same time, many juniors
..
·
The. recent elimination of the curfew when we got here, but you sible .. So when they are given a
and seniors are living in Gartland
CailterburyApartm.erits ·in the Town have to be in your dorm on your own chance, they're just gonna want to
· ·Commons and the Townhouses 'due
,
of Poughkeepsie has been a factor in floor by 12:30 a.m., so that is·a cur-
have guests over all the time,"
fo
the elimination of the Canterbury . the overcrowding on campus.
few,'' Bria said.
McArdle said.
Apartments;
" .
.
.
· "Housing cannot be blamed for
· ... \Vliile.housing is guaranteed for
the amount of students accepted by
freshmen arid sophomores, housing
Admissions,'' .said senior Stephanie
placement is determin!!d by the num-
Paleo.
.
ber of priority points accumulated .
Housing in 1978 was seen as a
overthecourse·oftheyearforothers.
"rite ofpassage," according to Jim
However, Housing doesn't have
Raison.
a clear idea of how
.
many resident
c
The Townhouses and .Gartland are
students will beretuming.
designed to ·introd~ce. independent
-At the present time there are no·
living, and through . this. passage, a
plans
to
break. down .
.
the built-up
development of . class unity takes
rooms.
.
·.
, · .
. . . • . .·
place. The first two years are seen as
· "I think that the housing situa-
transition years, living with new ··
tion
was
poorly
planned," said sopho-
people, mentors, and adjusting to the
more Dianne Guarnera. "Adminis-
college atmosphere.
tration should have.· thought more
carefully about how inany students
were to be admitted and how many
students that had housing for."
. The difficulty surrounding this
is determining which student is to
move out of the tripled room in the
Townhouses or the Suites if it be-
This new arrangement allows for
the first time since 1978, all class
residents to live on campus at the
same time.
Many students expressed interest
in being informed when Vision 94
will be comoleted.
The Circle
· non-scientific poll
The Circle conducted a non-scientific
poll from Sept. 13 to
Sept.
20.
Almost
1000
students responded
to
this question:
Do you support the new freshman curfew in the dorms?
·Yes= 92
No =857
2
TIIE
Clllai;SEPttM8ER2.z."1994 · ·
Oliver Stone's 'Killers' cause b()tt'L Shock
811d
delight
;,r ..
·
.
.
.
.
· Le~is) fr~m beginning to ,encl in their
making Mickey
anci
M.a1.·1Jcy,
into'p<>p . ,· ·.
•
• , We'r~ being programmed to la~gh
, See
this
min
and
you'll
know what
by JUSTIN SEREMET
d_emerited path of murder as they end . figures and· eventually- bringing' the at soniething' even tliough: it's
.
.'s1ck
·
I'm talking about)(Grade:I\) .,
.
. ·We can always expect to~;~ an -~~ub~tfting nationalc~Iebrities, if :i:r~!clc:;t~~e:;;!!6~-t~:s:f;i·. ~~~i:.r~~ti
0
~~tilb~~:r.::~~:~r
,·,111fiim:rie~g::WPre'.~ll:;eeliiig'
Oliver Stone
fi1in
and leave the the-
, But in an ''Ap~calyp:Se No'I.V". type
Bowl Sunday;,
. _
.
·
.
/' Ultimately (th!!re are three. big
over;Micliael Keaton being 'passed
ater feeling enlightened, educated, Way; they seem to encounter people
, Th. en there's·
..
Dw. ight, the_·. ·pri_s_o_n_ reasons'why you should see "Natural
ove_
.r·
fo_ r '.·'.B. atmari .F.oi:'eve. r/i but __ get
confused, or maybe even.nauseated. along the road who are just as sick
warden {Tommy Lee Jone~); who .Born Killers." <
;· .
,
over it. Besides:this sequel,- Holly-
, Such· is the case with "Natural
loves to pick his ear a~cl nose, an(l ·...
i.
The acting. Hai:relson is sur:.
wood already has next su·mmer's
Born Killers,'' an intense look at our-
■■■I
isn't afraid to take out some out;of-
prlsingly'good, Lewis plays her usual
blockbusters planned.
' ' ... ; .
· selves and the media that is so over-
line prisoners.: · ·
· , .... ·
·>.
·
·
crazy.role (see.-'.'KaHfornia"),.-and
.
'whe~ming, so briHiant, 'that.I had to
t - - -
"Natural Born Killers" is=irroller
Robert Downey
Jr-•.
has the TV host.·
Bruce. WBlis
win
go.against
see
it twice
to take it all in.
coaster ride that Stone. ~rings us us-
role down to an.art. And'J;'~mmy Lee badd1e Jeremy Iroris in "Die_Ha~cl 3."
Stone takes the story of two ina-
- ~ •
irig strange t~ch11icjues, __ s\\'itchil!g
Jones is;well,'Tommy'l.ee Jones.,.
· ·
··· , ,:-
' ·
· ·
niacs on a 52-people killing spree,
back and forth between black
·
and
.
,
;
2.
The cinematography._,Rarely
· - Jiil(C~rrey •is' ~ignel·on _to do
who are caught and later escape from
white, color, Super-8, grainy,'cartcioii;
wiil :you. see a. film so outlandishly
"Ace. Ventura 2."
jail, and turns it into a sermon on
16mm and 35mm film ..
>
.< ._ , ·
topsy-turvy . .It's the most_ creative
how sick society has become.
And that's aUdone in a span·of
film
I've seen.
.
.·
Is
it
a bloody film?
·five minutes.
· , ;, .
, . . 3,_The message. It's a comment
Yes.
·
Sonie may say Stone's gone over~
(a
rather .sad one)_'on s_ocietY, that
But unless you specifically· tune and twisted as. they a~e. .
board this time, maybe singling out
really hits home, especially for·some
out the nightly news or can't admit
Th_ere's the cliched sleazy cop,
the way he explains how Mickey. and
of us that wquld actually like to be
to watching O.J. Simpson's white author. Ja,ck Scagnetti_ (Tom Mallory first meet
·
in an'
"I
Love
part of the media. What other couns
Bronco driving down the California Sizemore) who is more concerned Mallory" TV sitcom format.
try makes s~ch darlings out o_f people
highway (I did), this movie affects with becoming famous for catching
. This scene (with a continuous
such as Charles Manson, Jeffrey
you and makes you ask yourself"why the two monsters alive and writing
laugh track) is where Stone comments
Dahmer, Tonya Harding, and Joey
are we fascinated by such sadism?" about it than saving their victims.
on s·ociety as we watch Mallory's
Buttafuoco?
, ·
Confused?
There_'s Wayne· Gale (very con~
father (Rodney Dangerfield) sexually
· As-Mickey tells one of his soon:.
I'll do my best to explain.
vincingly played by Robert Downey
abuse his daughter and threaten to
to-be victims who begs for mer~y,
· .- . Sylvester 'Stallone'.'.wiHfgo· big:
oudget action again in "Judge Dread,"
a·mm version 'of the popular British
comic book:· ' · -
· ·
. ·
·
·And firially, Kenneth'Btanagh,
who
will
star in ,November's ''Mary
Shelly's. Fi'ankenstein,"js .• rumored
to be George Lucas' choice to play
young Obi-\Van·Keilobi-in the Star
Wars prequels, the firi;t.of which is
'supposedl}'.slatedforreJeasein 1997.
We follow Mickey and Mallory Jr.), the host of TV's ''American
beat up his wife.
·
"If
l don't kill you, there won't be
Knox (Woody Harrelson and Juliette Maniacs,'' who is resoonsible for
The point?
anything to talk about."
Next week: "Quit Show."
.
Murderous rampage accentuatedbymusicc.o!fa,ge
by TOM BECKER
The soundtrack for the movie
"Natural Born Killers" is a collage of
sounds which successfully supports
the movie with eerie love songs and
fast-paced, unexpected violent surges.
The album is a showcase for_
music in that it does not rely on one
particular sound. The tunes range
from soft blues and tribal cries to
slow grooving rap and industrial ter-
ror.
We are carried through Mickey
and·Mallo~y's mad maze with tunes
from Dr. Dre, Nine Inch Nails, Bob
Dylan and over 20 more artists on
this 27-track CD.
.
Several songs on the soundtrack
- include dialogue from the film, like
the· classic
"Eenie Meenie
Minie
. Moe" diner scene.
Most noteworthy are the strange
love songs that populate the disk.
The Cowboy Junkies contribute
their classic cover of Lou Reed's
"Sweet Jane," a song that is pre-
viewed by a conversation between
Mickey and Mallory about their place
on Earth as angels.
Nine. Inch Nails provide three
tracks on the album with· their most
appropriate being "Pretty Hate
MUSIC
REVIEW
directed love sounds flowing.
.
Cline, famous for her tune "Crazy,"
However, some of the highlights
which seems to find its way onto
on this album stray from that sound. . every diner jukebox, winds up on the
L7 occupies track two with soundtrack with her happy, bouncy,
"Sh· list," a grindy, guitar-drenched
"Back In Baby's Arms" which ac-
song that is typical of the alternapunk centuates the queer quality of this
band.
.
· movie. · . -
·. ·
For those who've seen the movie,
There is no doubt that the«Natu~
the prison riot scene is catapulted by . ral Born Killers Soundtrack"is an
the industrial assault of Lard, the Jello
album that offers a wide variety
Biafra-led brother of industrial demi-
of music.
·
gods Ministry. ·
..
However, it makes for a better
"Forkboy" encompasses all_ of · background disc than a sing-a-long
the uncontrollable flashy violence that
album.
. .
,
✓'
,
fills the movie, with.the crashing lo_-
•
·
Of course,. this being the first•
comotive. guitars_· and.·. the .cries of issue of the year, a summary of the
Biafra over brick-smashing drums;
·gocid. · and the
·
bad.· of .the summer
Also worth noting are ,the instru-
would not be. totally out of line.
·
·
· ·
mental tracks on· the album. , _ .·
·
· ·
·
· · · ·
·
· Machine"'s sad, dark tragedy-''Some-
• , .·•· P-eter ·Gabriel and Nusi:at Fateh
Howeyer, sad to. note,. it seems
thing I Can Never'liave."
· ·
there wjs mor~ med,io~rlt}'.,tlt~n any-
. · .. Juliette. I.,ewis showcases
any
tal~ '
;.\l~~o;?. P:;:1uit!::b~~1;t;n.;g~
thing else, save. for·
a
few
exceptjons.
ent she may have in her attempt at
Trembler" uses a westem .. riff and
.
.
sultry blues with "Born Bad"; \Vhile
liurricane. winds to produce the
The-one exception that.win find
Lewis doesn't exactly have the voice
sounds,ofa cowboy on add.
its way into the paper is Helmet's
of an . angel, the song works on th_ e
lb
· t"tl d "B tt · "
, Somehow,_ some way,. Patsy new a um en 1 e
e y. .
soundtrack in_kee in° the bleak, mis-
___,.==,..,.
The piece is the band!s third al-
bum, and shows_ definite signs of
expansion for the R.O.
T.C
look-
alikes.
·
. Helmet uses some pr9cessed vo-
cals arid winding bass riffs that were
· not found on their previous material
to expend upon their hardcore flavor
on songs like "Biscuits for Smut"
and "Rollo."
However; Page Hamilton man-
ages to maintain the sounds that mark
Helmet with his quick, jabby guitar
pli_nches featured mi tracksJike "Vac-
cination" and "Wilma's Rainbow."
All
in all, the album is a must
b~y.·ror. Helmet· fans., and·. a ~efinite
bet to draw
in
some nev,r blood, with
''Milsuetoast" getting heavy airplay .
-:,i• .. :•_,,,,,-,·-~-,
:-~,~
r_·_.·_•-
•. , . •
.c;_~·•
•
·
.
."·-.".<.
•~-:·•;
It
also serves as a curiosity piece
iri that
ii
leaves the listener wonder-
• in~ just where• Helmet. will_ go· next.
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-
THE CIRCLE,
SEPTEMBER 22, 1.99.4
3
Build~up
results inmoney
&
reimbursements
:
··
••fifk~
'
bein{in our o~n
H;tle
Kel~y Reiss,
a
sophomore from
Since
.
some room~ ar~ more spa-
by the color combination.
by
LYNN WIELAND
•
Staff w_riter
h~~·" Piskura said .
•
··
··
Longlsland,N.Y.~islivinginatriple
cious then others, and the Mid-Rise
·
one of the
.
problems facing
.
suite and has to fight for
_
the bath-
does seem bigger then it looks, it is
.•.
•.
'
Marist students have been'watch~
ing
the Mid-Rise grow for months, ii
·
is
90%
.
finished
-
and students have
Piskura,
.
her roommates; ·and many
room.
no surprise many students are find-
others is
.
.
that they were tripled
·
in
-
·_
·
·
·
· ·
•
·
·
·
-
ing it hard to find the
_
ir way around
moved i1L
·•
·
-
rooms meant
_
for doubles.
·
.
..
If
one of us
_
is in there, the other
the n
_
ew building.
·
six are pounding on the door," Reiss
.
On
Labor
.
Day,
372
students
moved into the latest addition
·
at
Mari.st
·
and besides a
few
minor prob-
lems, students
are
adjusting well.
"It's not your traditional dormi-
tory style," soph.omore Sonya Mello
said,- from upstate Ne_·v York. "It i~;
,
more homely."
,
.
.
··•
Mello J.ikes having more space tc
.
li'f'.e
in
than the traditional dormitory
•
double and she also likes the idea of
living
in
the newest building.
·_
.-
.
. ,
Reside
'
nt Carie Piskura
-
-
from
.
Washington,
Conn;,
has ha<,i a few
·.
problems so far but
·
already agree~
the new Mid-Rise is a lot better.than
the
.
dormitories and twice as com-
fortable.
"You
can
live with il but it t~kes
-
a
Jot
.
<>(
working out since it
was
meant
for"
rooms of two,
·
two
·
and
two," Piskura said.
.
·
-
-
.
1Jomenica Perrupato, a sopho-
more from Weatherfield, Conn., also
lives in a triple and although
Pcrrupato enjoys being connected to
the
~pus
center; she said more
room would'be nice
.
.
·
.
·
-
.
".
·
We
did not expect it to be this
·
_
small,''. Perrupato said. " Not at all."
·
.
.
Adding to the p~obl~m ~f tripling
.
are bathrooms designed for one per-
-
son usage.
In
some bathr1:>oms the shower,
toilet and sink are all separated, but
in others·, everything is in one room.
·
said.
.
The bathrooms are not the only
thing different.
· ·
_
.
· .
Walking_through the suites
·
it be-
comes clear the rooms differ in size
and color.
·
·
'
John Padovani,
.
assistant director
of housing, said the Mid-Rise build-
ing
is
different from any other build-
ing Marist has had.
·
_
"There is definitely some varia-
tion,"
_
Padovani said.
Part of the variation is the suites
on the third floor are handicap acces-
sible which accounts for the different
bathrooms.
SGA
.
holds Leadership Conference to
S(Jeak With
.
stud8ntC/ub leaders
By DAWN MARTIN
--
,
Assistant Editor
best to give students niore
,
opportu-
nity to show leadership.''.
·
·
For Devin Vignali, the vice presi-
dent of the Italian American Society,
The leaders of the various clubs
the speech by Matt Gillis was a guide-
of Marist College attended ~
-
leader-
line for leadership.
ship conference on Friday
'
evening
Vignali said that Gillis's speech
hosted by the Student Government
-
"told us how to present ourselves as
Association.
-
.
officers," and that
acting
appropri-
An
estimated
151 students at-
ately is.important for maintaining a
tended theconference which was or-
club's image.
·
.
•
-
. · .
ganized by Nick Capuano, Vice Presi-
:
Melissa DellaBianca, treas
·
urer of
dent of clubs for Marist SGA.
Kappa Kappa Gamma, said
·
she
he said.
.
..
.
..
Capuano, who is in his fourth year
.
as a member of the student govern-
.
ment, said that he was pleased with
how the evening went
"I was very pleased with the atti-
tude· this year," Capuano said.
"It
shows that they're ready to
get
into
the y·ear.''
Capuano said the gathering re-
minded him of a mini-United Na-
.
tions because
"all
the leaders of
!'It
is a little bit of a maze at first "
said Mello.
'
Mello adm
_
its finding your way to
the cafe, mail room, or main entrance
can be a little tricky and Piskura has
had the same problem.
"It's kind of confusing. We can't
find our way around," said Piskura.
Although the color scheme has
been called bright, awful, and ob-
noxious, they are a great help in find-
ing _your
room.
Some of the colors
include
bright
purples, pinks and greens, and a
yel-
low orange.
Students seemed a little surprised
_
-
Capuano, a
'
senior from Wyckoff,
thought the conference was a success
N.J., wanted this event to be a.sue-
·
and that it helped her
_
understand
cess because hewanted
to
see all the
things better than she
_
did hist year.
·
·
Marist College were assembled in
,,
clubs start off in the
_
righi direction
"Now
1 have
a
better understand-
.
"I want to see everyone nave a
ing of what we have to do to make
fair
.
shot,
:
~n equal opportunity,"
our club better known on campus,"
Capua110 said.
. -.
.
.
.
•
. .
.
.
..
.
.
DellaBianca said.
. ·
.Orie
suchdub\vhich needed
.
the
·
·
·
·
L
·
h. "d·th·a
·
t
·
-
.•
f
'
t
.
h
·
..
.
ls
.
,
,
;
..
.
,
.,
_
_. _
,
,
_
... ,,
__
,.,.
.
.
,
.
,
.
, .. ,,_,
,
....
_
..
-
.
,
.
--
,
.. :..
..
..
Y._n
_
c
~
:s~t ....
.
..
_,
on
_
e
_
o
....
e gl)a,
Jarr
shot was the newly fonned Manst
they
hopecfto feach
·
from
~he
confer-
·
·
Band.
.
.
·
ence was for club leaders and SGA
·
Jennifer Trenary, the president of leaders to get acquainted with each
the club; said that ihe conferenc:e was
.
other.
·
·
·
.
·
.
a gre?t help for het since she was
· · ·
ctia~lie Melichar treasurer and
·
1_
unfa~iliar with
_
·
soine of t~e proce-
-
promotional director ~f WMCR; said
__
dur~s
~a~h
cl_ub
_
mu
.
st
foll~_'N·
. .
.
· .·
he was glad that he got the oppoitu~
.
If
_
they_d1dn't ha~e. t_h1s, I would
.
_
nity to get acquainted with the other
_
_
have been
·
m the acttv1t1es office or
·
leaders.
·
·
>
SGA a~~i~g questions every day;"
.
\his is Melichar's first year
as
a
Tren~ry said
_
.
. .
.
club leader and he was glad to get the
.·
.
Bob Lynch, Pt~~ctor of Student numbers of some people who could
Activitie~ •
.
s~id "We want to do our help.
"Now
I know who to turn
to,'.'.
one area."
Lynch said that he felt the confer-
ence was a "team building experi-
ence" and that he hopes the goals
.
which were reached are continued .
:
.
·
-
·•l'ilii~k-11•~
a
b.~giimiiig,_''.
he
_
tiid.
"We
.
touched upon
otir
goals
.
We
hope
_
they will be
·
successfully
reached goals for the entire year."
This event was important for the
club
_··
leaders
:
of Mari
st
College,
Capuano said, so that SGA will be
tougher on the clubs this year.
"You're going to se
_
e
a
crackdown
on clubs not doing well because a lot
of new clubs
·
want to come in,"
Capuano said.
,
,
"I think they were color blind or
something," said Sarah Strouse, a
sophomore from Vermont. "These
colors are pretty bad."
Resident
Assistant
Helen
Schryver,
a
senior from New York,
said things are going well and the
few comolaints have been small
maintenance concerns, or complaints
over the colors.
·
"You have over
400
students. Not
everything will be to everyone's
lik-
ing,"
Schryver said .
Schryver has already planned ac-
tivities for the students and hopes it
will be a fun living environment.
So tar, tor the students, it has been
a good start.
"I think it is going well in this
building. We
are
all new here,"
Schryver said.
Students
enjoy mock•bungee Jumping at the Activities on Fri., Sept 9.
Circle photo/ Xathy link
Fireworks go awry;
Explanation unknown
By JEANINNE A VILES
Staff Writer
The Class of
1998
received a big
welcome when
a
-
fire started
·
during
the annual fireworks display
.
The event was held on Monday,
Sept. S, by CollegeActivities as part of
the annual Block Party.
As those present
enjoved
the music
and light show, the fire~orks set off a
small fire behind the maintenance barn
near the Riverview Parking Lot.
Bob Lynch, Coordinator of Student
Activities, said this kind of accident
has never happened before.
"This is the first time this type of
thing has happened
to
my knowledge
and we've been doing this for four or
five years.''
Although past firework displays
have been safe and fire-free,the col-
lege invites the fire department to at-
tend the event in case of an emer-
gency.
"We always have the fire depart-
ment down because anytime you 're
playing with fireworks of this magni-
tude, the possibiliiy (of starting a fire)
is there," said Joe Leary, Director of
Safety and Security.
The Fairview Fire Department at-
tended and quickly responded when
the fire broke out.
"It
wasn't
a
huge fire, but appar-
ently
ii
look
a
whole gang of soaking
to get it
completely
out," said Leary.
Although the fireworks were the
cause, the reason the fire started is not
_
yet totally understood
.
Leary said the fire may have started
from debris from the fireworks.
He
explained
that when the fireworks
are
set off,
a
canister, just like a
shell-
casing from
a
military weapon, is
dropped.
The canisters are extremely hot
and
are supposed to drop in the river, which
is where the fireworks are to be aimed.
Lynch said the cause of the fire
could have been an ember from the
fireworks that set a bush or something
else flammable on fire.
Whether or not this is the cause of
the flames is yet to be determined.
Many of the other spectators who
were on top of the hill in front of
Champagnat did not notice that any-
thing had gone wrong with the fire-
works.
"I
didn't even know there was a fire,
said freshman Kelly Tate of New York
City. "They did take care of it very
quickly."
For other students, the fire caused
inconvenience.
_111
flRE page 6
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CIRCll,
F
E.ATURE
SEPTEMBER 22.' 1994
·
Barnes
&
·
Noble .takes
.,
·,.
.
•,
' '
..
•'
over d0ll8ge bookstore
.
.
. .
By
LARRY BOADA
Staff Writer
.
.
-
more features than its predecessors'.
.
Christopher Hane; manager of tlie
new b
_
ookstore, discussed many _of the
A-journey tothe new Marist book- new additions.
.
.
store begins with a walkdown a set of
"
. .
.
-
.
freshly
poured concrete steps which
We ~ow,, offer a ?ai,~y book buy- •
leads to the Rotunda where the fresh-
_
bac:k service, Rane said. Students can
r,-
ness of stained wood doors contrasts
_
now sell books b~ck at any time during •
with the
·
dust and debris that remains
.
the seme~ter.Th1s new systein also \
on the
'
floor.
<
shortens hnes for book buy-back
!ii
the
,
.
.
-
.
-
-
-
-
.
.
end of thesemester."
.
.
Entering the majestic edifice, light
,
.
· .
_
-
_- _
-
-
_
·:
·
-
1
·
cascades down
·,
through the green
Students taking advantage of this
.
·
domed glass
_
that tops
-
the newly cori- service
will
save themselves from wait-
,.
structed Rotunda and draws attention ing on long l~nes, Rane
_
said.
· .
to the new bookstore.
-
.
.
.__-====;;;:;
·- ·
. .
-
.
·
·
.
.
.
For the avid reader who is inter-
The new bookstore has been the latest
·
,,
Re.si~ing
10
the first left hand c?r- ested in
·
adding to
a
book collection,
attraction to the
$27
million renovation.
ner
,
be~u~d a row of wood doors,hes there are non-course related books .
the ()asis amongst the chaos, wh~re the available which include many of the_ .
A
line of personal computer soft-
order <>f b?oks shares spa:e with the same titles available at the other Barnes ware has also been added to the book-
.
pandemomum of construction.
__
.
and Noble located on Route 9,
store lineup. "This software is avail-
.
·
:
·
, books
·
h
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
.
.
able to Marist students at a special aca-
This year s
tore as once agam
·
There is also a "bargain book" table d
·
II
·
d
· "
R
·
'd
·
d ·
1
·
·
·
b
·
&
·
•h
1
tt·
em1ca v-a1me pnce,
anc sa1 .
move
.
-
Its ocatlon, uhor
.
e as ime. located at the front of the store which
Clrcl& pnota/ Kathy link
coming football and basketball games
as
well and will have a stand promot-
ing Marist sports by offering game-
related clothing and sports parapherna-
lia.
After
.
sp~nding years in the ba~e- features reduced price_favorites .
.
·
. The size of the snack and conve-
Planned for a mid-October intro-
ment of Champagnat and one season
iri
·
"B
d
.
-
f
•
1
•
.
mence area has also been enlarged.
duction is a system that will allow stu-
..
.
.
h
~
-
-
.
-
-
h .
·
y now most stu ents are am1 1ar
d
a section oft e ca1etena, t e bookstore with the self-service method
of.
ur-
.
_
ents to purchase books and any other
has found apermanent home.
h •
b ks ., R
.d
.
P
.
Chmces can now be made trom book
_
store items simply by running their
c asmg oo
anc sa1
th"
·
f
·
· ·
t
_
_
.
,
_
_
·
_
every mg rom various JU1ces o sun- ID card through a scanner.
The. Barnes and Noble t~keover of
•
This approach allows students
·
to flower seeds.
the bookstore comes at a time when pick and choose among books and
.
.
Rane also said plans are in the works
.
Marist is seeing new changes.
decide between those tliat are required
Ra_nc pomte? out this year_'s larger for this format to bin1sed on soda ma-
.
_ .
selection of shirts, sweat shirts, and ·hines
0
.
Hames and Noble, which curren~ly and those recommended.
jackets, all emblazoned with the Maris! "
.
n campus as well.
has
~~0
stores across the country, gams
.
"The self-service way of buying College logo.
"Bemg a part of Vision
'94
is won-
addiho~al g~~wth.
_
books also results in shorter lines,"
.
derful," Rane said."We're really see-
Manst adds a bookstore
.
that offers
Rane
said.
Rane said he plans to attend up- ing the campus come together."
MariSt
College students recall Woodstock
·,94
.
by HOLLY DIAZ
Staff Writer
.
On ThJr~d~y
:
night; August
.
fr,
·
fiv~ girls
•
from Long Island
·
packed
·
.
intc:>
a
bhieJsuzu Amigo and drove to
Sauge~ies, New York in the pouring
rain.
· ·
·
-
Beth Bou
·
naguro, a junior
·
at
Marist,recalled the anticipation of
waiting to arrive at the biggest con-
cert
· _
festival of
·
;the
-decade;
Woodstock
'94 .
.
_
.
.
'
.
·-._
· ·
: __
_
"We decorated the.jeep with signs
that r~ad, "High ho, high ho, off to
Woodstock we go ... " and honked
_
at
fe1lo~ Woodstock goers that passed
us on the Thruway," Bounaguro said.
For Bounaguro and
·
her
.
friends,
pla~s had been made weeks in ad-
.
vance; while for others, like Laurette
Lapadura, a senior, this event was
more spontaneous.
"My sister and I were watching
MTV
·
Saturday afternoon and we
thought, 'damn, we should be there,'
said Lapadura.
"So with
·
five· dollars
·
in my
__
pocket,we left. We even wound up
hitch-hiking eight miles from tbe lot
to the actual site."
On the other hand, Mark Jeary, a
junior, said that he bought his tickets
the day they went on sale.
"I knew I had to go," he said.
"The best artists gathered at one spot
for the best price. If you think about
it, you'd pay $30 just to see one of
those headlining bands."
After actually arriving, some
seemed pleasantly surprised at the
lack of security.
Lou Reyno!~, a sophomore, sa
_
id
tha.t there weren't any dogs sniffing
performances.
tor drugs and metal detector~ weren't
even hooked up.
"Stills and Nash captured the
c
-
--
--
·
-
-
·
·
_
spirit of the first one because they
J'he security, thaqh~ media hyped
:
were orie of the originals and Blues
up to be extremely stringent, was
·
•-
Traveler made an unforgettable trib-
virtually non-existent.
.
.
.
·.
·
··
ute toJi~iHendrix, playing the Star
"I even met a guy
from
_
CaHfor-
·
Spangled Banner on the harmonica,"
nia at the rave that smoked up with
Jeary·said. "It was a touching mo-
the Peace Patrol guy," said ~eynolds.
·
ment."
"Another lady popped her head out
For those who wanted
15
min-
_
of her tent and said, 'Have a good
utes of fame in their life, Woodstock
Woodstock,' and handed us an un-
gav:
_them a rime a
_
nd a place for it.
opened liter of vodka. I
.
was im-
pressed."
Although security was grossly un-
derstaffed, much
.
illegal substance
abuse was underway, Jeary said he
felt that there wasn't any need for
·
tight security.
"There were over 500,000 people
there arid not one fight the whole
weekend. Everyone was real civil to
each another," Jeary said,
"It
liter-
ally was three whole days of pure
peace and fun and music."
And what abOut the music? Some
would testify that the bands are what
made it such a phenomenal event.
Buonaguro recalls Sheryl Crow; Red
Hot Chili Peppers, and Violent
Femmes as her three favorite.
"Sheryl Crow was so peaceful,"
she said. "I just listened to her, ly-
ing in my tent. Red Hot Chili Pep-
pers were great because they're one
of my favorite bands and the Violent
Femmes were crazy. The crowd was
·
mud moshing and crowd surfing, and
this was when I was closest
to the
stage," she said.
Jeary enjoyed Crosby, Stills and
Nash as well as Blues Traveler's
Richard St. Arromand and Kati
Apuzzo, both juniors, were inter-
viewed by MTV.
"I even met Kennedy," said_ St.
Arromand. "I was with her at 8 a.m.
walking around, waking people up.
I also sang the National Anthem with
her and I took a picture with Bill
Bellamy."
Fortunately for these concert
goers, their ticket and their food for
the whole weekend were free,
Apuzzo said.
"We volunteered to work at one
of the concession stands, the sausage
and pepper one, so we didn't pay for
anything."
Other Marist students were quite
disappointed that Woodstock was
such a high priced event with corpo-
rate logos and commercial promot-
ers.
Scott Campbell, a junior, said he
felt strongly against the overbearing
vendor representation and did not buy
any souvenirs.
"What I brought out of the
expe-
rience will be the memories, not any-
thing that can i,e bought," Campbell
said.
Close by, some of Campbell's
friends went to the Woodstock me-
morial in Bethel.
Campbell said his friends found
that there was more of a "sense of
community" because it was "less
congested and commercialized."
..
Huonaguro said it was easy to
lose track of spending money due to
the conversion of U.S. currency into
silver coined Woodstock money.
"It
seemed like they didn't have
much value, like if we were playing
with monopoly money," she said.
John Nauke,
a
junior, didn't give
into the corporate representation that
the first Woodstock lacked.
He said instead he hopes that he
helped a poor man get home; that is,
"if he's telling the truth."
"I bought a cool silver Indian head
necklace for $5 off this Indian guy
with tribal tattoos all over his body,"
Nauke said. "He said he needed to
get back to his reservation in Ari-
zona since he only bought a one way
ticket."
In addition, others had a tough
time getting home due to the massive
amount of mud that accumulated over
the past 48 hours.
St. Arromand and Apuzzo left
Sunday night but found their car stuck
in inches and inches of mud.
"We had to pay $30 to get our car
towed. Every single car had to be
towed out of the green lot," said
Apuzzo.
REVIEW
by SCOTT SIGNORE
Food Guy
5
·
In each issue of The Circle, I
will
be
'
reviewing my experience at a lo-·
cal restaurant.
I
will evaluate food quality, price,
atmosp~ere, service, and, perhaps,
other
_
m1scellaneous categories.
At the conclusion of each review,
I
will be rating the restaurant by
rounds of applause.
That
_
is, a scale from
1
to
S
will
give an overall and accurate idea of
how
I
rate each establishment.
.
I've begun my column by review-
ing o~e <;>f the are_a' newest eating
and drmkmg attractions: Trainers Bar
and Grille, located at the Colonial
Plaza, Route 9, Hyde Park.
·
As far as atmosphere, Trainers is
a better than average, all-American
sports bar.
The walls are covered with all
types of recent and not-so-recent
sporting memorabilia.
(They even have an extended col-
lection ofMarist memorabilia. I liked
that; made me feel as though
I
had
the right to be there.)
The sporting atmosphere is sup-
ported by six color TVs.
During my visit, I was lucky
enough to have their 46 inch TV tuned
into the Michigan State/Notre Dame
football game.
When you' re not watching a game,
you're more than invited to play some
darts, or perhaps a game of pool.
It's very difficult not to realize
that Trainers is first and foremost a
bar; the hard wood and brass trimmed
bar controls the setting.
Basically, if you don't take
a
seat
at the bar, you only have seven other
tables to choose from.
lncidenta\ly, you can eat and
en-
joy the atmosphere even if you 're not
2\.
Fortunately, being 21-ycars-old, I
_
had
_
the
opportunity to choose
·
a
Beck's
draft over a wide variety
of
others.
I passed on drafts of Heineken,
joncy Brown Lager, Coors Light,
and
Budweiser, as well as an exten-
sive wine collection.
In terms of food ...
It's necessary to understand that
my experience was much different
than what I had expected.
Previous to my visit, I didn't real-
ize that Trainers was so much of a
bar and so limited as a restaurant.
I wasn't disappointed, just sur-
prised.
Their menu consists of grille food,
ranging from a roast beef
sandwich
to a turkey club to burgers.
They offer the usual appetizers:
buffalo wings,
·
chicken fingers, moz-
zarella
·
sticks, fries and gravy, etc.
1 sampled the wings and a bacon
cheeseburger which were very good
choices.
·
The wings were just as hot and
spicy as I expected, and I'm even
willing to stick my neck out and de-
clare them
"outstanding."
And
the
bacon
cheeseburger. .. what a truly excellent
bacon cheeseburger!
Not only did the burger taste great,
but it was huge.
In addition, I enjoyed a monstrous
plate of french fries.
(Now, this is a compliment to the
establishment. I happened to notice
the size of the other sandwich por-
tions and they appeared to be just as
generous.)
In terms of an overall evaluation,
I was extremely pleased
.
I can honestly say that I will visit
Trainers again soon.
About that second visit?
I think I would try the Grilled
Chicken sandwich.
I happened to see one and it was
served on a bulky roll with melted
swiss (it, too, was huge).
I would also re-order the wings,
but wash them down with good-old
American Bud instead. (If I wasn't
21, perhaps a Diet Coke.)
Trainers Sports Bar and Grille
deserves 4 rounds of applause; I was
completely satisfied.
;;
I'
.
.
.
;
-
.
.
·
.
.
_
:
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-·
·_
.. ·
-
-
·
·
LsE
·
·
·•-
·
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_-
.
·
:•
MARIST COLLEGE, POUGH,KEEPSIE, NY 12&01
·
-
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER
·
Kristina Wells,
editor.
.
.
Dana Buonicouti,
senior editor
Justin Seremet,
senior editor
Andrew Holmlund,
sports editor
Meredith Kennedy,feature
editor
Teri L~ Stewart,
editorial page editor
Tom Be,;:ker,
columns editor
,
:
John
-
Dougherty,
assistant editor
Dawn Martin,
<UJ!lant editor
Ron Johnson,
assistant editor
~
-
~
Larry Boada,
assistant editor
Lynn Wieland,
assistant editor
G.
Modele
CJarke,Jaculty advisor
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
Justice?
Politicalthoughts ofthe
Week
The story may be old, but the problem hasn't gone away~
Sure, most sophomores, juniors, and seniors can recall
where they were at 10:30 p.m~ on Sat., Sept. 11, 1993, when
the rape occurred, but it seems that most students have put
it in the back
of
their minds and have tried not to think about
For all of us Marist students who feasted on
"Operation: .... Resto
rt;
:
Democra~y''. should
MTVvideos and the O.J. Simpson trialrather have been called "Operatfon: Lucky Break!'
than glance atCNN or
8-ill
and Hillary during
.
Ori Sept. 15, President Clinton addressed
.
our summer vacation, here is a politics recap
.
the nation, declaring that an invasion
.
in Haiti
.
.
Speaking
of
good old Bill, the president was
('
to stop thebl'\ltal atrociti~s that threaten
should be thanking O.J. for
_
taking all of th0se tens of thousands of Haitians; to secure our
Page 1 Whitewater and Paula !_ones scandal borders and to prese_ rve
·
sta
_
b
_
ili
_
ty and promote
headlines from him;
·
·
-
·
·
·
·
democracy iri our hemisphere.''
. .
.
·
• .
Every very sun filled day was a new
-
crisis
~ut,
_
does the United States have the right to
for Bill to handle. There were several foreign promote democracy in
.
a country that never
crises at the same time~ namely Haiti, Rwanda
,
fully had it?
.
_
.
_
_
_
.·
_
_ ·
_
and Cuba.
·
Has Clinton even outlined his tnie motives
He also had domestic troubles to beworricd to the American people?
·
about,
.
like the passages oJ the
Crime
BiU
and
Regardless of his reasons, Clinton has been
Health Care Reform by a hostile
.
Congress
.
lucky.
.·
_
,
·.
·
-
._
It was extremely amusing to see Republi-
The diplomatic accord, led by former Presi-
can senators, especially New York'sRepubli-
dent Jimmy
·
caner which convinced the Hai-
can Senator, Al D' Amato, rant and
.
rave about
--
-
.
•
•
p
·
.
it
memory lapses
_
and
_
abuses ofpow
_
er dunn
_
· g tian miJitary leaders to return power to res1-
•
dent
·
Jean
~
Bertrand Aristide, was
·
_
being dis-
And a lot of questions are
,
still being .asked.
WhDit~Amwatert
,,
,heharindsgs
.
have been caught in the cussed as American planes were eri route to
a
O 5
an
.
.
.
.
··
·
Haiti,
.
ready to 1,egin the
.
invasion.
·
:.
·
S
h
"d
·t
•
t
•
cookie jar rnore times than
-
anyone
•
since the
al
"thti
·
G
Col" p
.
ll
ome
,
ave sai
_
i WaS acqu
_
ain ance rape.
__
d
_
e
_
a
_
rly
_
de
_
parted
_
_
R
__
ich
_
ard Nixon. What a hypo-
Carter, ong
_
w1
orrner en;
·
m owe
and Sen
.
Sam Nuiln have only laid the founda-
Some say security is too tight n9:yv for'it to
_
hap
_
_
P
_
. __
en again
_
.
-
crit\vhen
tal
,,
.
ki~
_'·
g
·
°ab
b
u
, _
t po
.
litics of
_
~~rs
·
e, no
tion:
for a restoration of democracy.
. ·
.
:
··
•·
1
-
_
.
.
·
Lieut
Raoul
Cedras
arid Brig. Gen
;
Phillippe
Or is security tight at aH? Others have ca led the
.
whole
9n
,
e can
_
~orget the "J1:-tSayNt' can:ip~n th~~ Biamby have until Oct. 15 to
fulfill
their agre~-
thing a hoax.
.
:
.
,
-'
:!Wh~~ess1:~: ~e~du~~
~
;3c
:,-
ns1
~
/1~}t~
;
\
d
,
:
)t~d:
:
.
.
tlarin~~!J!l't??wt:~
J
o ~~
;
~
-
-
~~~~~;;
-
~a1-
I
h
d
h
· ·
·
-
atever Pres1 ent
mton propose or sat
·
• ·
.
,,
·
,
_
_
_
t
never appene ,
t
ey say.
·
this summer ~as rnet by a chorus of rio, no, no
-
.
:
The
;
e is
·
a
:
p
9
ssi~ility
_
that the a¢cor~
:
will
Does anyone really
·
know? Or even care?
fr
_
o
.
m Republu:anop
,
ponents:
,
.
, .
.
-
· . .
·
..
riot
,
l?
f
successfuL Aft
e
r all, Gen
~
.
Cedr~s re-
.
If
Clinton .wen~ on telev1s1on and s!1d that
_
neged on an agre~ment th
_
athe signed a~
C,,<;>y~
·
Well wake up
•
Manst.
he W:~!ed to see
,
a ~re
for
cancer th15 year,_
,
ernorsJsland; caµingforhim to cede
_
p<>'\yerto
,
·
.
'
.,
.
.
:
-·
• .
·
.
...
-
•
..
• ,
..
·
...
·
.
.
.
.
..Republ1cansV1<>uld
,
likelyfmdarea
,
s01poop- Rey.AiistidebyOct
:C
lS,1993. Will_he
'
hold
An arrest has been made 1nthe case and
It
a1n t over yet.
·pose~
_
attoo.
-
·
>
•
--
_
:
:
:
.-
, ·
:
·
i'
:
_
oufagain?
:
.
_,;
-··
-
·
.·
·
·
•
,
.
..
.
,
>
··
·
-
.·.
•
·
This was very
.
evident with the
,
Cnme Bill
,
·
,
<
: ·,
·:
. _
::.,<
·,:o
_
.
.
Former Manst
·
student John Tasso has
·
been charged with
and Health <:::ar
f
debat
~s_
in Congress.
·
·
> .•.····
•
·
. _
Even
:
if
'
he
;
doc:s11't
;
,'
wh~bvill
.
~ ~ and
,
.
·
h
f
·
- -
· h .
·
"d
-
'
h
. ·
-
d l
.
-
-
·
__
n
makes riosense
·
to
_
me howopponen~pf
,-:_
Biarnby'. doaftefthat date?
'"
<·
··
.
·
.
.
:·
·
t
ree COUntS O rape ln
t
e inci entt
at OCC~rre ast year.
·
the Crim1fBiUwanted to
:
get rid
.
of midnight
.-
•·
0
·
O;
><
·
:
. ·
·
•·
.
·__
_
_
..
.
. ·
_
•-
·
..
You know the one
-
everyone is trying very
·
hard to forget.
baskelb~ll
,'
~urliolclon
)
ig1:Uto~aul
(
~~~'.
·
..
.
·
.
:::
M
0
tii~r_i~~uew~i<:h
'
$hQuld~11ceni
;
~ep-
.
.
,
.
•
.
.
-
·
.
•
,
•
-
__
.
..
.
-
Is midnight ba~ketb~I more ~allgcrous ,to can_ troops 1s
_
what
will
happen
m,
the
·
1nterun
_
We
at
The
Circle have felt that It IS our duty
to
keep you
thepeopl;ofi}men~th~
-
Al(47 s31.1d
.
S~eet- penod;
·
·
.
_
-
.
_
..
...
_
.
·.
. -
informed of the on-goings of this tragic incident in which
s~~~~y
reaso~ ~ifRepubiie!lns
opposed
.
;
Although
!
he aw,rcf rnin!111izes t!te deadly
~
1
.
d
f M
,
. h d h
1·
~
h
d
,
~
,
.
thlS b1llm such great numbers
w~
.
to keep nsks
_
of.Amencan forces, which consist of cons
a 1.ema e StU ent
O
·
artSt a
er ll.e C ange .tOrever
lfl President Qlinton from achieying any
.
type of tingerits
·
Jrolll 24 riations, uncertainties and
the
.
worst
_
po
_
ssible way.
.
,
,
.
!egislati~e
.
victory and to
,
try
,
_.
to sho
,
.·
w
~
as
~
an
.
_da~g~
.
~
~
till
_
exist.
,
.
..
-
,
.
·
.
, .
meffect1veleader.
.
-.
..
.,
.
.
.
. . . · -
..
·
H . .
•
·
·
·
1
.
·
· ···
d t
·
onitor
't"IT'
.
,
:
,
•
•
•
-
~
-
.
,
·.
,
•
·
1 h
,
Healthcare
'
hascoineundervirtually
'
the
_.
·.,
The aJtl<Ulpoi~aresuppose
_
_
om
.
'
vve
.
re not tr_ying to ln~ite 1.ear, Or. Create a panic.
·
n t e
same set of circumstances .
..,
:
:
_
>
.
-
_
;
thetensioils am.ong its -people. But t_he
~~~;
newspaper business we hke to call it facts.
How can anyone be aga~t.the ~bd1ty
_
of
<=3:~
!orces ~e responsible for momtonng
_
,
.
•
'
.
•
. _
.
•
.
.
•
•
,
every American to be able t<? gomto/ hospital Ha1t1an pobce.
,
.
.
_
There
S
no Pulitzer Pnze for this one, and this isn t the
and pay forthe careJhat they nee~. .
.
•.
.
_
Let's hope that the ad01inistrations plans to
k .
',
d
,
f
,
.
,
1 ·k
,
d.
.
~owever, Rep~?hcans hit~e sp~nt mto
_
tbe
'
reduce the 15,000 person
:
muhinationalforce
Ill O
story one
I
es to
1g
up.
mtlhons for tel~VlSIOO advert!Selllents aga~st
-
to
a United Nations peacekeeping for~e con-
·
It's downright
d
_
isgusting
any type of_Umversal Health
_
Caire Refolrmh
;
_
·
taining6,000soldiers
,
<ioesoccursticcessfully
.
.
.
.
.
.
•
.
Why? Sunply because the on y peop e
t at
·
·
·
.
_
..•
..
•
_
.
· .·
_
_ _
It's taken a very long time to investigate into a crime that
~o not want to ~ee heal
th
carereform?~e
th
e
Ifitd
_
oesnot, Cli
_
ntonm
_
'
, _
a
.
yhav_e
_
endanger
_
ed
_
,
.
· ·
·
·· .
.
msurance agencies, so they protect therr
_
mter-
no other form of media has taken the time to look at, and
ests by lining Republicailpockets
fuH
of _re- American forces at the expense of a
.
failed
•
•
_
•
.
·
•
.
.
election money to keep any 1eform from bemg agreement.
we thought it
-
might Just be worth your while to read up on
ma<te.
·
_
Christine Wood is one of The Circle's
it
Ken Urbin
is
one of The Circle's political
political columnists.
•
columnists. .
Shame on us for being concerned.
_
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
You haven't heard anything from the Poughkeepsie
Journal. You haven't heard a peep from
WTZA.
Administration has kept quiet.
So let us ask you, the students: Do you feel vindicated?
Safer? Mad?
How about frustrated that no one will say a thing about
this crime that has gone unsolved?
Hey freshmen-do you have a clue about what we're
talking about? You better. Because rape exists on every
·
campus in America, even at Marist
·
And guess what? It could happen to you.
But ssshhhh-we don't like to talk about these things.
THE CIRCLE
66
Production Schedule fall - '94
September
September
October 6
October 13
October 27
22
29
November
November
December
December
3
10
17
l
8
THE
CIRCll,v
IE WPOINTstPTEMBER
22. 1994
7
Credits determine
parking.Why?
~itor: . . . .
.
.
·Forinstance the Commons Park-
one circlefthe place occasionally.
I
am a junior at Marist, but. ac-
ing Lot is for. commuters when Beck
What good . does that security is
c~rdingto my credits,
I
am consid-
Place would be more. convenient elsewhere, numerous things could
ered a sophomore,
sinceit is closer to the academic build-
happen in the meantime.I do not think
. Therefore when it came· time-to
ings.
I
need to remind anyone at Marist
get· a parking spot,
l
was almost at
Also, since
I
am not on a meal what happened last year due to lack
!he end of the line in terms of park-
plan,
I
am counting on my car for of security.
·
mg
lots.
.·
.
groceries.
Common sense would tell you to
I
reside at Gartland Commons
Parking at Beck Place makes put people's cars close to where they
while my car resides at Beck Place.
grocery shopping more tedious by live.
.
J
understarid that there are many · . having to
carry
bags halfway across
S_ince
I
am paying the sa!lle
cars to place and they- can not please
campus.
. amount of money as everybody else
everyone, however
I
think the whole
As
for security
I
was told that to go to this college, my car should
thing could have been thought out
there is a guard at Beck Place from
5 ·
be in the same place that I am, on-
better. ·
·
p.m. to
10
p.m.,and after that some- campus.
·
Heather Kowadla, junior
I'm
over here,
my car's there
Editor:
Having a work study position
within admissions,
I
spend hours each
day discussing how• Marist College
was a great decision for me to make
for undergraduate studies.
I
find
it
difficult, however,
complementing areas of this school
which do not, in my opinion, take the
student's needs and well-being into
consideration ..
I
am a junior who is Jacking two
============..
credits, therefore I was placed with
_SGANotes
Two more years
Editor:.
Editor:
The . Student· Government · Ass-
Attention
all
juniors: This is an
ociation would like to welcome the important year.
Class of1998 .and all returning s
.
tu-
Why? Because not only is it one
dents to the 1994 falJ semesi~K .... , y~ar~~e.for~ ~e!lior year, but we ~ave
_-
,
The SGA hopes to makel994-95 a
Jot
of'act1V1t1es·pJanned
for
the
up-
a productive and positive year. ..
coming year.
sophomore standing when it came to
the issue of pa_rking permits.
It
is ridiculous that I Jive in
Gartland Commons and must walk,
across campus, to Beck Place to park
while sophomores with only 30 cred-
its are parking all around my house.
Natural born psycho
Well it's time to go back to schoor
after another summer.
My
summer was basically the
same as last summer - it started in
June, went to August and was sort of
hot.
I
also had
a
girlfriend and
a
job.
I
realized one thing - that
I
would
never commit myself to· the same
task, day in and day out taking orders
from the same person,and not getting
paid what you should in return .
But enough about her, my job was
boring too.
.
My boss drove me crazy and I
really wanted to quit, but I know you
should never quit anything.
So I fired him as my employer.
He would not even budge on my
request for a 2 month paid vacation-
so
I
had to compromise -
I
got two
momhs off. I just didn't get paid.
Then there's the case of the girlfriend.
Not to get into particulars - let's
just say it was a really bad idea.
Let's clarify a bad idea: walking
over to pirahnna infested water think-
ing, "Maybe I'll go swimming."-a
really bad idea: "I'll go skinny-dip-
ping."
.
The story on the girlfriend is: we
had dated before - it was terrible -
she was psycho - she dumped me.
Now I come home months later
and she wants to go back out and
using reason, I logically say,
"Uhhh ... sure."
Now
if
you have a relationship
that didn't work the first time and
was painful why would you do it
again?
To me this is dumb.
I mean if you fell down a flight of
stairs, would you climb backup and
think - I'm not sure if that really hurt
maybe I should try it again? But this
time it'll be different - I'll go head
first.
So of course this relationship
didn't end on the best of terms.
If
I
were to make a political
parrallel maybe it would be Iran and
Iraq - but we don't get along quite as
ell.
· Now between firing my employer,
nd the relationship ending on a bad
note - wait - a bad note? No this
wasn't just one bad note - it was
a
bunch of bad notes, like maybe a
Madonna song.
But these experiences remind me
of something my Dad told me -
"Never burn your bridges"
Ha.
I
don't just burn my bridges - I
tear them down and break them into
little pieces - and then I take the tiny
pieces and throw the mat the people
on the other side.
To me you can't leave things like
jobs or relationships up in the air
because if you leave something up in
the air it's going to come down and
fall
on your head.
If
you're not sure if someone's
mad at you, next time you see them-
wave - but real lazily- like with one
finger - now you know they're mad.
There is no doubt, nothing to con-
template, and security like that is
comforting.
Many people struggle to get ev-
eryone to like them. Not me.
I figure if you're trying to get all
these people to have one opinion of
you, make them dislike you - it's so
much easier to do and a Jot more
fun."
What? You have 50 friends?
Ha. I've got 347 enemies you stu-
pid?$#@
! ... where you going? All
right ... 348.
Now much of this is just a joke
but many people think
I believe what
I write and that I'm crazy.
Well I'm not crazy - I've been to
so many concerts that those voices in
my head arc so dulled I can hardly
hear them.
Another thing is that many might
think my reference to my ex is sex-
ist, but
it is all in fun.
I repeat I am not sexist, but I do
have to end this column because it's
Monday night and I have to pick up
my friends to watch football at
a
top-
less bar .. .later.
Frank LaPerch is The Circle's
humor columnist.
The f~ll994 elections will be
Your class officers have been
~ept. 27 and 28 .. Polls
will
be open working hard -to make each year a
m
I>onnelly HaU from
11 a.m. to 1 · more successful one in terms of your
p.ID .. and. in. Cam1>us Center from 5. student life.-
.
·
p.m,
to 7
p.m. . .
. .
.
· · . ·
This year, your officers would iike
The parki~g'policy at Marist Col-
lege is in dire need of revision, it
should be given according to the lo-
eatOO~::::,:~d:::~ing
is
spread
I
across inner campus, when it is ap-
parent that Beck Place is closest to
the academic buildings.
Final Letters to the Editor
are due Sunday,
~e four. freshmen class officer to inspire more unity into our class.
po~ttions are open, . as well as two
If
any junior wishes to assist with
resident _senator seats ..
We
encourage ~ither 5.uggestions or being physically
all full-time undergraduates to come mvolved with these. events do not
~ut and vote.
If
you ~ave any ques-
hesitate to contact myself at '2206, or
t10ns. or concerns for the. SGA,
_aµl
your other class. officers.
us at ext. 2206.
·
·
Good luck on ·this term.
The whole point of having a car
on campus, for me, was to use it in
aid of my studies.
Now, it is in my best interest to
·
not use my car whatsoever, due to
Rebecca Kuchar
safety and convenience.
Director of Public Relations
Jennifer Nocella
.---------·-:s,:G;:;A;_:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;P;;re;;s;;id;;e;;n;;t;;C;;l;;as;;s;;o;;f;;l;;99;;6;;;;~---,:S,:co:,;t;,;,,.t Campbell, junior
Sept. 25 at 5pm.
Letters should be no more
than 600 words.
STUDENT CENTER ACTIVITIES
HOW TO REACH US:
• Mondays 11 am to 5pm
STUDENT HEALTH CLUB
(SC 149A)
FITNESS CENTER AND AEROBICS FACILITY HOURS:
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday 12pm-2am
Wednesday 11am-2am
Saturday & Sunday 1 pm • 2am
Please note that intramural aerobicS classes
wr11
be
scheduled at this
facility
during center
hours
through
the
inramural
office.
In
order to use fibless center equipmen~ students must first complete an orientation. Orien-
tations are offered every hour during fitness center hours.
If
required, coin lockers are avaHable
for
student use.
Looking for something to
do
at night? Come to the student center,
check
out one of
the
games
available from
the
activities office with your Marist ID and play in one of our many lounges.
Also available with Marist ID are movies tor late night use in the student center. Come on down
arid
check out our listings. We11 set you and your friends up with a TV
and
VCR to watch
the
movie
of your choice.
Watch for signs advertising
the
GRAND OPENINGS of the Student Center Caberet Room and
Recreation Center!
• E-Mail:
LT211, HZAL
• Phone Mail: X2429
t_JO
LETTERS AFTER 5PM ON SUNDAY
8
VISION
.
'94
cofltil'IU~S; MicJ'-iRf se still under. constrqfti~1.;
.
..\;
.·. ·
.
.-
It is the largest.and most com- .· .
'It
is·~ ~ffoit:to ~dvertise tofu.
tion.
: ... .
· .. · . ·. . · ··.. . ·
.
l<We wanted to
:
~reate a}pace
THE
·oaa.E,·si:PTEMBER
22~ 1994
by
CHRISTINE MINCHAK
plex constru
.
~tion project Marist has · ture students and show ·current stu~ ·.
. . · .• The _campus green will be ~e:
,
that 'fould serve as.a
.focal,
pomtJor ·
-
Staff Writer ·
ever taken on.. .
. . • .
_ .
.
· .
·
. dents how, much Marist is growing· .. layed until lat: fall.or early sprmg the campus,a place.~here a.]I_melll-
If
you forgot to set your alarm
clock this morning, don't worry.
Chances are the noise from -the con-
struction will get you up in plenty of
The project, which·has a budget . and changing..
.
.
.
. :
-
due to a delay ma
$200,0QO
federal bers of the college community -
of
$27
million, has been funded by
- .· ''.Probably the biggest (project)
IS1;;EA grant.
·ici· .·
e amon
students, faculty, a,nd staff--. would
the sale of construction bonll:5 through
is
.
the ccinstruction of
th~
new Stu-
. i;11e. _ne~ bm mgs
r
terms oi be dr~wn to inter!ct and enjo->: each
the New York State Dormitory-Au-
dentCenter, the ne\V residence hall,
the eSt m
.1
e country
':u
1
t'
·
others company. Murray said.
time for class.
thority as well
_
as funds from tuition,
the. campus green, and the renova-
r1dem des~g~ an~
:r~ce
s ~';
0
~~~~
The new Student Center includes
fees, an_d the_ release of Canterbury,
tion of_ th~ old Campu_s Ce~ter," D!. ·.
t . ar exec~ ; fipic .
~r •·
an
art
gallery, multimedia presenfa-
y
h
'gh
the off-campus apartment complex
Mark ~ulhvan, Executive Vice Presi-
campuses, . u ~van sa · · "
tion rooms, multimedia classrooms,
.
es,.t at's n t. Vision ' 94 is _ which has housed Marist students in
dent of.Marist College, said.
Th: Mid-Rise has ~ulfilled the a student- cafe, a
recr.
~ation room,
still going on at Marist.
the past . ..
.
.
The construction of the n
.. ew expectations of the Manst commu- -
al tud ·
1
1 . .. -
d .
. ,
Vision '94 is the major construe-
Visi~~- '9. 4 encompas. ses all. that
building sho. · uld be comple. ted.
by
the · nity in terms of creating functional sev~r d
1
:t ·
oungh~; :~ Tole\
·
·
·
ha.sheen ·.do· neat Mari·st m·
-
the past
end of th·e month
·
·w·1th a fiew·m,·.nor
space for studentlife on campus.
pthran e •
00
1
ore,thw itch · isldab oks
hon proJect currently· gomg on at
·
..
,
.
1
d ·
1
th-M . t
ee times arger an. e o
oo -
Marist.
two years.
adjustments
to
make after comple-
· n a memoran um
O
e
ans
· ·
·
·•
College community President Den-
store.·
. • · • .
- , .
nis Murray summarized the theory
"Wedi$'tjustbuildanewbuild-
behind the design of the new Student ing, .we reconfigured· the face of the
Center.
entire campus," Murray said.
6 Delafield Street, Poughkeepsie
ff
RE
_contJnuldfrompag13_
473
2510
Mike Pappagallo, a junior advertise
r--,T"=e'I. "9~1"4;;-) ~4,.'.62..--4-=-54-:-:5=---------F-ax-#-
4
-
5
-
2
-_
2
-
4
-
1
-
7
- -
ing major, said he and some of his
462-4546
:,.....
friends were driving down the hill to-
..--.J
WE SPECIALIZE . IN
PRECISION HAIR CUTS
ward the lower Townhouses when se- ·
CA
pp
u, (
I N
o
curity told them there was a fire and
that they couldn't go down
to
the
Riverview Parking Lot.
8 .
Y ·
C
O
P P
O L
A- • S
Men's $11_.00 (reg .. $13.00)
and Women's $14.00 (reg. $16.00)
They waited about
10-20
minutes
before security started Jetting cars go
/TA l I AN· AMEN I (AN BIS TN O
_
down there again.
Owned and Operated
by
568
South
Rd.
A meeting between Security and
"The Coppola Family''
Poughkeep· sie, NY .
12601
College Activities is to. take place so
that .the cause of the problem can be
Your Hosts John Coppola & Vincent Coppola
determined and future accidents can
be prevented.
.. 10% OFF ALL SERVICES
'GALL
Now
FORAN APPOINTMENT
with_ THERESA, SILVANA or ANNIE
(Gift C
_
ertificatEls
& Products
Available).
■
en
Cl)
I
\
'
Cl)
cc
.
Footba1liS~11day
Free Brea.kfast•Bnffet
• Ne-w Satellite' SY'stefu,
_, • Watch any
Gatne
-
• $1-.50 Doiµestic Bottles
• 1
o
cent
-whig~
.
•.
.
,·
.
Monday
Night
Football
.
• 1st Quarter
25
~
Drafts
• 2nd
Quarter
50~ _
Drafts
• 3rd
Quarter
75~
Drafts
• 4th
Quarter $1
Drafts
Call: 452-BERT
Berties
\
• I
CD
en
■
THE CIRCLE,
SEPIEMBER 22,
t 994
.
·
Sttictent11etiti0Ilf Orces charige Of hours
in
caf es
.
'
•.
•
·,
,.
.
.
.
,
, '
..
.
.
'
; . , ·
.
'
.
.
.
'
·
·
·
·
,
,
.
Sodexho
is
trying.to
.
please asinany
By
__
CHRISTIN_E )VOOD
·
p~ople
·
as possible_.but
.'.'it
•
isjust not
.-.
:
.. .
Stp.ff Writer
.
economically feasible to keep all
.
four;
·
_
-
•·.
_
·
1
;
·
·
•
•
,.
,
,
·
.-_
.
·
·
,
. ,
.. _
·
,
.
,
·
·
_
.,·
.
·
dining
.
operations .open all day,"
t\
_
p~t1t!on cre
_
a!ed
b}'.
Man~t. stu- Binotto said.
__
.
_
. . .
.
·
.
de~t~
,
an4
.
f!iculty
.
~.i~
__
changed t
_
he
.
.'
The' second· concern addressed in
·
De>
_
nilelJy C~_fe
:
a.~~ Dyso~
_
~afo hoii~ .
.
the
-
petition was
·
the increase in
,
~t~r ~evi
.
~wmg th_e petition s~11t
to foodprices/
.
.
..-
_
.
.
them l~s.t ~ndaj\ va~wus
·
members of
•
.
-·
•
-
isome
items have increased
_·
in
the a~~l~J~tra11or opted
:
to h
_
~Ip calm
:
price,'! Binotto said.
;,
!'But, what the
'
.
the frustt3:ho11s o.fall_concerned
: : ·
·
customers are not aware of is that
in
_
C'We_ are
_
tryiil*
!<>
"!~ke_ tliings
"
as the past they were not charged
:
for tax.
con\'~!}!ent
?S
pass1ble, • said Ger~td This year they are/1
.
.
;.
.
.
..
,
Cox, v\ce:pre~!~ent of stu_dent affa_ir_~,
_ .
LasLyear Sodexho was charged
after mee_tmg with N.1thony C~mpiln;' $37,000.i_n tax. Although Maristis tax
.
v1ce-pres1~ent ~fb_usiness affaus, and exempt, Sodexho is:not. .,..
-
,
'.,
;
,
:
Joseph Bmotto;duector ,of-Sodexho
.
!'If
customers looked· at the food
Din~rig S
7
rvices on ~onday
'.
to ~!scuss itent by, item,
.
theyw~uld reaiize that
the 1ssues
:·
~~d~:ss~d
111
the _pettt10~'.
.
the increases are not that large,'' Binotto
The
·
petition
-
reflected complaints said
/
.
.
·
.
~
-
·
.
.
·.
·.
·
.
:
.
:
·
about the new coffee shophours which
·
"We did a Jot of market research
'
.
.
are sc~eduled to
ta!<~
effect o~ 5.ept.26, before pricing the food," Binotto added
;
_
··
"".hen th~ Ca~aret, th~ ne'Y d1nmg ser- "Our prices are comparable to the food
.
vice, opens 1n the M1d-R1se~
:
:
::,rices cin Route
9."
'
.
.
,
The
-
~afes,_ which were inte~ded ~o · Though the petition may seei:n dis-
:
close fr?,m
.
1.30 p.m .
.
to
5
p.m.,will couragirig for Sodexho,. the expansion
now
.
be clo_sed from
2 p.m .. to 5 p.m.
_
of the dining se,;vices is not a total
·
In
-
p~ev1ous
·
years, the cafes wei:e disappointment.
·
9
.
· openf~om 7:30 ~.m. to &:15 p.m.Th1s
·
·
"I like
it
I think there is a good
year, the cafes wtll be open 7:30 a.m. variety of food," sophomoreCourtney
·
•
Newly constructed dining hall attracts students to new St~ent
Center.
Circle
photo/
Kathy Link
to
2
p.m. and from5p.m. to 8:15 p.m. Blair said.
_ _
d
_
f
f
-
"The coJlege's mission is to estab-
Blair
compared Sodexho to dining an T1 trRry._d
-
o- .
H
n·
-
lish t~
_
e student c~nter as afoc~l point seivices at college's herfriends attend.
:
.
.
e es1 ent
inmg a
.
1s open
w~ere students will be able to interact
~•My friends don't seem to like theirs
•
Monday thro~gh Thursday' 7 a
.
m. to7
w~t~ other students; faculty, and ad- (cafe) as much as I like ours here."
p.m., and Fnday 7 a.m. to 6 p
.
m
.
SPRING BREAK '95
mm1strators,"
-
Bin?tto said_.
,
·
The Cafeteria has expanded to a Brunch hours o~ Saturday and Sunday
SELL TRIPS,
,
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.
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·
The Cabaret will contain two fran- t
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.
d'
.
_
de
_
s
_
·grted to sat are 11 a.m.
_
to 1.30 p.m. and weekend
chises Nathan's F
_
amous arid Baguett
_
e .efn-s a
11
1
t
0
':1
_
mmfgt artea
·
1
•
·
and dinner hours are 4:30p.m.
·
to
6
• .
.
.
.
1s
y
a
.
ypes o as es.
·
Expressions, as well as Manst p12Za,
-: ·
"Vegan
,,
Flavor" and "Especially p
.
m.
_
.
•
health snacks, desserts, and hot and For You" are the two new stations
A~yone with further co_n~erns or
co
_
l
_
d bever
_
ages
_
,.·
h' h
.d
·
1 •
d"shes pasta questions about the new dming ser-
.
w 1c prov1 evege anan 1
,
, •
T
h B
'
It will be
_
open Monday through
vices can contact . ose
motto.
Friday,
9
a.m
.
to midnight and Satur-
day and Sunday 11 a.m. to midnight.
Call 1-800-648-4849
"It
is
_
a. good idea to have a new
dining area where faculty, staff, and
stud_ents can intermingle," said Joan
Nies, secretary of Maris! Institute of
Public Opinion. "Unfortunately, it's
just not accommodating for the faculty
and staff when the coffee shops close
and when some people only have a
15
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■
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►
-
I
-
-
■
I
•
_
_
September 22, 1994
is The One Year
ANNIVERSARY
-
-
PARTY
ofttte
.25 CENT DRAFTS
Ltntil
1 OPM
,,.
•
.75 CENT DRAFTS
until Close
.50 CENT JELLO
SHOTS
all Night
,
►
■
efi
..!.
,\.
,
.
I
10
r----------------------~--------------~~-,
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
,
.
I
I
I
I .
I
I
I
I
I
I
. I
I
I
HOW TO SAVE A FEW BUCKS. ·•·
(YOU CAN'T LIVE OFF PSYCH EXPERIMENTS ALONE.)
·
~
· B'uy
pizza at closing time. '. · · _· · · ·
Haggle for slices they'd otherwise just throw ~way.
Eat Ramen noodles.
Make friends with a Senior.·
Come
June,
they'll be more
thari
glad to give'you
their old Poly Sci books
and
couches.
Donate blood.
.
.
'
.
'
'
.
.
Save a life
anc\get a
free
\Linch
to"
boot.
\:
Pick up a Citibank Classic card.
There's no annugl fee.
I
i
I.
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
:
._.,_,,
....
I .
I
I
I
I
I
,
I '
I
I
I
I
I
~-------------~--------------------------~
---
THE CIRCLE,
SEPTEMBER 22, 1994
11
Offen~e
Sputters
.
.
as hooters
fall
to Mountain_eers
·
·
·
·
·
.'
.
·
. .
·
·
"We're
averaging _six or seven
by-TERI L. STEWART
.
-·-""''''"
":i,.fyH,-+
•"~'"'"'"'t1-·
shots a game, which is not nearly
.•
, ·
:,:
·
'.
·
'
:'
Staff Writer
·
·
enough," Goldman said. "When we
:
· · ·
·
do shoot, we're not always testing
.
:
.
A
mirror
·
iinage of last season
'
is
.
the keeper."
beginning to
.
surface for the men'
.
s
Goldman said that there have also
soccer teani;
...
.
..·
.
, .
.
been inconsistencies with the defense.
·
~ter finishing the 1993 season
•·
"We've
done some very good
4"12-2
overall;
0-7~1
in the
:
North·
things, and some people have done
east Conference, things have not fared
.
some very silly ihings, (in terms of
well for Head
,
Coach
·
Howard
controlling the ball)," Goldman said.
Goldman's team this fall.
"Sometimes there arc lapses, and
·
Marist saw its losing streak in-
when lapses occur, dangerous things
crease to five games as the Red Foxes
happen."
were blanked by Mt. St. Mary's
Goldman also .said that he has
(Md.), 3-0, at Leonidoff Field on
been sa1isficd with the play from
Sunday afternoon.
.
sophomore sweeper Jud McMullen,
The loss marked the third time
junior mid-fielder Garret Golisano,
Maris! has been shutottt this season.
and senior back Harold Laird .
..
Marist dropped to 0-5 overall; 0-3 in
The Red Foxes have not scored a
the NEC.
.
·
·
.
.
goal since losing
10
Robert Morris,
The Mountaineers had 13 shots
·
3-1, on Scpi. 11.
on goal; compared to Marist's nine
"If
you don't put the ball in the
for
•
the game
,
.
general direction of the goal, nothing
Goldman, who is now in his 32nd
is going to happen," Goldman said.
season as head coach, said his team
Despite offensive difficulty,
hit some glitches.
Goldman said he plans on working
"We made two or three mistakes
his team in the same usual style.
and it
.
cost us," he said.
"When things aren't going well,
Last Wednesday, Marist hosted
you tend to lose confidence and let
NEC foe
.
Fairleigh Dickinson Uni-
down," he said. "They have to be-
versity. The Red Foxes were stopped,
lieve that they can."
4-0.
Goldman
said
he continues to have
The Red Fox offense was basi-
confidence in his players .
.
cally non-existent as Marist collected
·
"I have no doubt that we can fin-
just two shots on goal.
Senior Jim Ulbrich (22) looks
to
dodge dtfl~r
81
Gary O'Brien (23) looks on. The Red Foxes fell to
ish strongly, but it has to be done
Edmonds started the game in goal
Mt St.
_
Mary's
3-0.
between the lines by the players," he
and was quickly removed because of
C1,e1e
photo/ Kathy link
said.
a bruised foot.
sure, but that was due more to frus-
freshman Brian Edmonds since the
of offense.
Two seasons ago, the Red Foxes
Five penalties, four yellow cards
tration," he said.
beginning of the season, has recorded
In five games, Marist opponents
stunned nalionally-ranked St. John's
and one red card were handed out
Goldman said he does not place
37
saves in five games.
·
have scored 14 goals; while the Red
University, while finishing eighlh in
against Marist.
·
his team's slump on any one player;
"Aaron is a leader, a hard worker
Foxes have only been able to muster
New York State rankings.
Goldman said his team was not
especially not on his goaltenders.
and has a good work
ethic,"
Goldman
three tallies.
Yesterday
,
Marist hosted St.
completely focused.
Senior Aaron Lefkowski, who has
said. "He is doing his job."
In those five
contests,
Marist only
John's yesterday. Results were not
"We lost a little bit of our compo-
been sharing the goalie duties with
The glaring weakness for the Red
has put 39 shots on goal.
available at press lime
.
·
Intramurals
-
Softball games began yesterday
afternoon at the North Fields.Results
were not available at press time:
.
Currently, there are 15
.
teams par-
ticipating in the program.
.
.
There is also an
·
aerobics training
camp
.
in session for .those who are
interested in becoming an instructor .
.
The session began on Monday and
win go through Monday, Sept. 26.
Classes will start on Wednesday,
Sept. 28.
Sign-up sheets for volleyball and
basketball are due in the Intramural
Office by Monday, Oct. 10.
Figure skating will be held on
Mondays and Fridays from 11 a.m.
tol p.m., and transportation will be
provided.
The instructor will be Dr. Billy
Ng. The total cost is $5, which in-
eludes entrance fee and skate rental.
Aqua aerobics will occur on Mon-
days
·
and Wednesdays from 9:30 to
10:30 p.rn. Aqua aerobics will begin
Monday, Sept. 26.
For more infonna1ion on these
activities, please call the Intramural
Office at extension 2584.
Foxes this season has been the lack
"We're
a
much better team,"
by
ANDREW HOLMLUND
Johnston also said. "lt was hard (to
Sports Editor
win) because of the level of play.
We just barely did it."
The women's volleyball team
Last
Wednesday, the Red Foxes
pushed its winning slreak to three traveled to Hartford, Conn., to do
games
last Satur.day
'.
by knocking
off
b_!lttle with
.
the
University
of Hart-
.
Fordham University
;
3-2;
in
'
New ford.
·
York City.
Marist was able to stave off a
After dropping the first Syt
_
which two
0
sets-to-one disadvantage by de-
went down to the wire, 14-16, the feating Hartford, 15
-
5, 4-15
,
9-15,
Red Foxes took three of the next four
15-4,
and 15-13.
s
_
ets by scores Clf 15,9, 17-15, 9-15,
Johnston said the match was an
and 15-13.
important win because Hartford was
.
The Red Foxes now stand at 3-4 a formidable foe.
overall this season.
"Caliber-wise, Hartford is better
.
Marist also faced Holy Cross in · than any team in
.
·
our conference,"
the tri-match. This match, like the Johnston
said.
·
swept by Marist, 15-4, l5-4, and l 7-
15.
It
was
all
down hill from there for
Marist as the Red Foxes were
knocked out by CCU, Siena, and
UVM.
The Red Foxes
lost to
the Blue
Devils, 1-15, 15-10, 1-15, and 3-15,
and 1hcn were blown away by the
Saints, 3-15
,
6-15, 0-15
.
Marist dropped its fourth straight
match when they losl 10 Vermont,
6-
15, 13-15,
and
5-15.
This year, Johnslon brings back
two seniors, six sophomores and three
freshmen
.
Senior co-captain Cindy Malo
said she
sees
a lot of plus signs for a
program that finished with a medi~-
cre 13-16 mark last year.
one against Fordham, wentlhe dis-
On Sept. 9 and 10, the Red Foxes
lance as the Red Foxes came away were once again on the road as they
victorious with a 15-3, 15
-
12, 12-15,
.opened
.
up their 1994 campaign at
14°16, and 17-15 result
.
the Yale Invitational in New Haven,
Head Coach Sally Johnston, who Conn.
"We have a really young team
_
is returning for her third
season,
said
Marist's weekend featured
~ight now," Malo
sa
id
.
'.
'
Fro~ what
her club jusl go
.
rby in the matches matches against host Yale Univcr-
•_can
sec;
the progr~m Itself ts get-
because of a contrast in playing styles. sity, Central Connecticut State Univer- tmg much stronger.'
·
"Unfortunately. Fordham and sity,
·
Siena College
and
the Univer-
Marist played Fairfield Univc·rsity
Holy Cross (weren't) up to our cali-
sity of Vermont.
·
on Tuesday.
Results were not
ber of play," she
_said
_
. "
We played
Yale used its home-court advan-
available
at
press time.
,~·::u~st:::w:::e~l~l !e~no~u~~=~===:::::==~~~~~~ll~e~st~as~th!;!!e~B~u~l~ld~o~s=========:::::::::::::::=====;
____________
::
_________ _
122:lMatist
EWl1ball
·
RAI.
~
OfPQHENT DNE,aESULT
Sat Sept 10
Cenlral
Conn.
l.,24-22
Sat. Sept. 17
Iona
w,
37-19
Sat Sept24
at Wagner
.1:30 p
.
m.
Sat
Oct
1
St.John's
12p
.
rn.
Sal
Ocl8
atStPetMs
7p
.
m.
Sal
Oct 15
at
Duquesne
1:30 p.m.
Sat. Oct22
Canisius
12p
.
m.
sat.
Ocl29
at
Georgetown
1:30 p.m.
Sat.
Nov.5
St Francis
(Pa) 1 p
.
m.
Sat
Nov. 22
at Siena
.
1 p
.
m
.
THE TOW TRUCKS
ARE COMING
As Of 12:01 A.M.
Monday
September 26, 19941
All vehicles which are parked on campus
in
lots other than their assigned lot,
will be towed
away
at the
owner's expense.
......:
r
I
~
:~
..
.
. ,
...
\
.
,
,
~
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•-.
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•
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.
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f,
i
l
I
I
.
.·
·:
.
:
·
. .
·
'
ion~ i-o~n~~d<i~t
:
its sc6nrigw1ten
·
Proudian rushed the ball in from four
yards outto mak:e it 30-19.
:
fona's
attempt' for
a
:
two-point conversion
failed.
·. >-
.
?
.:-:-
\
_:•
_
.
_-
-.-
-
:
..
:
:
· ..
.•.
_
:.
.
.
-
.
~
.
.
i;
Wneii~as
atte01p
i
i
~
g
t6
prog-
.
rµn bJ"Brian McCq\lrt.
,
.
_ .
.
nosticate
:
the
.
forecist
'
ofthe
•
~aiisf
·
,
.
.
Freshman
•
Jovan Rhodes
:
and
.
se-
.
fooib~
team; I hoiiestlfdid nofiiw.tlc
nior Matt
:
McDonhld
.
are
fHling
:
tlie
.
they
would far.e
1
too welJ
>
< ..
•
.
>
.
voids left
:
by
:
oiAiuto
.
and
former
·
·
After finishing its 1993 s~hed~le
tailliackJulian Wyse
;
·...
.
. .
·.
.
.
·:
with
a
.SOQ
mark (5-5), the Red Fox~
...
The offensive
.
line
;
•·
which is
led
·
·.
·
were losing a hosfof players t~ gradu-
·
>
by
senior
_
Rex
.
Dixon
:
apd
•
junior Jini
·.
:O:
ation;· irtcludirig· the franchise's all:
·
Coughlin; has done a solid job pro-
.
,
.
time leading rusher; Don D' Aiuto.
. tecting Ford
_
and Delponte when they
. _
·
.
However, after Jwo
:
gani~,
.
the
are 'in the pocket.
.
.
. . .
--:-°
1994 edition
of
Red
·
Foxes .is
·
not
LfflINK
:
that
.
Para:dy and his
.<
anything°f h11d expected.
.
_
._
coaching staff are going to have to
-':·
. ,
.
Currently, the team is 1-1 and is
·
make a decision on who their num-
·. ·
'.
.
·
.
coining
off a win against Iona Col~
.
·
ber-one quarterpae;k i~ going
to
·
be.
.
·
:
lege, 37-19,
.
_/
.
.
.
According to Parady, both play-
.
.
·
,
.
,
Surprisingly, Marist could have
·
·
ers have been supportive and have
.
been 2-0 if they
.
had
-
been able to
encouraged one another .
.
·
.
·
'
·
hold off Central Connecticut State's
However, there will
be
upcoming
final drive in their season opener two
games where Marist win be fighting
weeks ago.
to
·
survive down the
·
stretch.
Head Coach Jim Parady seems to
I
think Ford and Delponte ought
be
.
pretty . content with his team's
to know who the
coaching staff
will
performance thus far.
,
_
·
choose to run the offense in these
The third-year head coach
is
·
in
situations.
'
·
·
the process of rebuilding on the of-
Week 1 against the Blue Devils is
fensive line and at the quarterback
a perfect example.
and running back positions
.
.
Parady used
-
Ford during crunch
ltight now, junior Pete Ford and
time when Marist was trailing, 18-
.
.
senior Bob Delponte are platooning · 15. Ford scored on
a
4-yard run to
at quanerba~k, which
was
previously
give the Red Foxes a 22-18 advan-
· ·
hY: GREG BIBB
Staff.Writer
:
.
The women's ·and men's
·
cross
country teams finished in seventh and
14th
·
place last Saturday at the
,;
·
Fordham Invitational in
·
Van
Cortland
;
N.Y.
,'
·
Junior quarterback Peter
Ford
drops back
to
pau
I!" a recent
game. Marfst stunMd
·
rIvaI Iona, 37-19,
·
on Saturday~
.
.
.
.
.
C1rc1e
photo.'
Kalhy
link
·
·
Sophomore Kathleen-Woodson
paced the
:
.
way for
.
th~ Red F()x~s by
·
completing the J.l~mde
.
course
m
20
.
minutes, 40 seconds; \Vhile fifth~year
senior
.
David Swift led the men's team
.
by running the five-mile course
in
·
26:30.
·
>
Swift finished.eighth out of300
runners, and Woodson came in 25th
out of 163 competitors.
Swift's time was the besr result
by
•
a
.
Marist-runner in
_
eig~t years.
·
Women's Head Coach Phil Kel!y
·
_
said he was pleased with Woodson's
effort.
"Kathleen
.
ran
·
her
,
usual-a very
steady and consistent race," Kelly
said.
·
Men's Head Coach Pete Colaizzo
said he is enjoying having Swift back
on. the
·
.
team this
Fall.
Swift was a
redshirt during the 1993 cross coun-
try season.
.
"Dave
·
could run on any team in
the country right now," Colaizzo said.
"I'mjilst glad he is running for us."
The women also
.
had solid perfor-
mance
.
~ from sophomore Karen
Mangan and junior Alexis Bequary.
Kelly said Mangan and Bequary
have been solid contributors to the
team thus far this season.
.
.
. ....
"Karen and Alexis l;>oth ran
.
very
·
good races for us," Kelly said
.
·
Senior Patsy Schneider; who is
returning to the cross country circuit
for her second consecutive season,
·
also had a solid outing at the Fordham
Invitational:
·
·
·
.
·
Schneider posted
·
a
personal best
time of just over three minutes .
. .
•
_
Kelly said
.
he
-
was pleased
'
with
the women's overall performance in
NewYork .
.
. .
·.
.
. . .
.
•
•·
··
"\Ve ran against very good teams
.
while
·
:
beating the schools we
·
were
supposed to beat," Kelly said .
..
·
..
Also in men's acticm, senior Andy
Baird legged out ·a time of 28:57
.
.
Golaizzo said he was pleased with
Baird's
effort
:
Baird returned
·
to the
.
.
R
_
ed Foxes
:
this season still r~cuper
,
at-
_
ing fiom
,
a fcioUnjury.
.
::.
"Andy ran a good race
·
consider-
·
'
inghis lack of training this summer,"
.
he said.
.
Despite the_ result, CoJaizzo
.
said
.
his team went.up against formidable
--888
XCOUN
page
11
quarterback
·
1994
season. '
.
.
_
·
It
-
was
:
a
.
cryirig
.
sha1t1e·
.
to learn
·
·
that there wouldn't be any post-sea-
·
son play
.
for the first time in 90 years
.
Baseball was even played through
two World
Wars,
but the selfish own-
ers and greedy players could not come
- - - - - - - to a resolution.
· ·
The
game
·
is
in
trouble. It is in
jeopardy of heading towards
"America's former pastime."
•
_
·
.
'
·
Andrew Holmlund
·
It's right here
tage.
.
.
.
.
.
•
·
Obviously, Ford
was
used in that
key situation, but who
.
will be used
the next time?
·
Will Marist go with Ford ~gain or
give Delponte
a
shot?
·
Right now, it's too early for me to
tell how .Parady is going to handle
his quarterba~ks. It's also
too
soon
for me
to figure out where this Marist
team is headed.
They are playing well as of late,
but they still have a long road ahead.
Stay tuned.
LAST
WEDNESDAY, on the
34th day of the Major League Base-
ball strike, Acting Commissioner Bud
Selig cancelled the remainder of the
This was
.
the
best
season
I
have
seen in a: long time. So many records
-
could have
.
been shattered, but the
only thing shattered now is millions
·
or hearts
;
I
.
WONDER HOW MUCH
LONGER we
will
have to hear about
OJ
,
Simpson and
his
saga to build
up a defense scheme to clear himself
from the murder charges of ex-wife
Nicole
Brown and Ronald
Goldman.
Just like many other millions of
Americans, I watched in disarray as
the events unfolded on that shocking
June night.
.
I
couldn't believe "The Juice" was
having a nervous breakdown-hold-
ing a pistol to his head.
The trial was supposed to have
begun on Monday; however, it bas
been delayed .
.
If
is now Sept
:
22, and the case
against O.J; stil
.
l lingers on
,
·
It is time for America's judicial
system
·
to be put to probably its big-
gest test ever to find out whether OJ.
is innocent or not .
As
·
of now, the Hall of Farner is
innocent of all charges, but it will be
interesting to see
·
how the jury will
weigh out the case and come up with
a verdict
.
·
.
CONGRATULATIONS to the
1994 Stanley Cup Champions, the
New York Rangers. Boy, did that
ever feel good to write.
After
54
painstaking years of at-
tempting to capture Lord Stanley's
Cup, the "Broadway Blues" finally
conquered their quest with hard work
and detennination night in and night
out.
Andrew Hoimlund
is The
Circle Sports Editor.
45.1.1
45.1.2
45.1.3
45.1.4
45.1.5
45.1.6
45.1.7
45.1.8
45.1.9
45.1.10
45.1.11
45.1.12
Former Marist Student Arreste On ~as;,e Charges
--
·
Arrest Made After CJne-Year 1nvest1gafion
Lucheite.
·
•
..
.·.· .
state prison.
ary:- Leary would not comment on
tending Pace University, in
New
York
by KRISTINA
.. JVEL. LS
The indictment was handed up
According to Grady, Tasso, who
whetherTasso's withdrawal was re-
City. ·
.
.
· Editor
· · ·
by a Dutchess County Grand Jury
was represented by counsel; was ar-
lated to the investigation.
The rape occurred on Saturday,
.
..
.
•.• ..
.
and a berichwarrant was issued for
raigned in the Town of Poughkeep-
· Leary also said he was told of the
Sept. 11, 1993, near the rear of the
On Aug. 2; New York State Po-
Tasso;s arrest, Luchette said.
.
sie Court onAug;3, \Vhere he pleaded
arrest and of the on~going investiga-
LowellThomas Communication Cen-
Iice arrested a foriner Mari st. College
"Fie did. not: resist arrest and was "not guHty ." The Brooklyn resident . tfon bf the District Attorney's of-
ter, according to Town of Pough-
student in connection with the rape
turned over to the Town of Pough-
was held in the Dutchess·County Jail
fice.
.
.
keepsie Police reports.
of a co-ed that '.occurred on campui; keepsie Police Department," Luchette until his release on Aug. 4 when he
.''I was -informed that there had
According to police, the victim,
just over ayear ago. · _
·
said.
. .
.
posted
a
$25,000 surety bond;
been one arrest made and that the
who was
18
at the time, returned by
.· John
A.
Tasso, 20, was arrested
William Grady, Dutchess County
"The Dutchess County Grand Jury
investigation was continuing by the
taxi to the College from an off-cam-
in Brooklyn,
N.Y.,
by the Violent district attorney, confirmed Tasso was
is still investigating the entire inci-
DA's office," Leary said..
pus party at ab_out 10:30 p.m. She
Felo'ny Warrarir Squad, and was . arrested·and charged with the Class dent," Grady said.
.
At Marist College, administrators
then began walking to her dormitory
charged with three counts of rape in
B felony.
If
convicted of three counts
Joe
Leary, directof of college
declined to comment on the arrest
from the chapel area.
the first degree, a felony, according ofrape in the first degree, Tasso could safety and security, said Tassowith-
becauseit is being handled by state
As she approached the rear of the
to State Police Investigator Alan receive between 25 and 75 vears in drew from MaristCollege in Janu-
and local police officials. President
Lowell Thomas. building, she was
Dennis
J:
Murray said he was unable
grabbed from behind by an unknown
to give a statement because the case
male and thrown to the ground, po-
has not yet been settled.
lice said.
·
In
addition, Detective Paul Holt,
The victim told police three white
Town of Poughkeepsie Police, said
males each forced her to engage in
. he would.not compromise the inves-
sexual intercourse.
~
ligation by commenting on the case
According to police; the three
· at this time.
-
males fled in. a westerly direction
The Circle made several unsuc-
toward the Hudson River. ·
cessful attempts to contact Tasso and
The victim was treated at St.
his attorney.
.
.
Francis Hospital in Poughkeepsie for
Luchette said Tasso is now at-
minor. injuries and· bruises and was
rclcnscrl.
no
lice said.
F.reshmen
:·curfew
cause
:·•··oriancef
rr·ort·iam~us
. Director
of
Safety and Security
by MEREDITHKENNEDY
Joseph Leary said he supports the
.F~ature Editor·._
plan but believes it will be difficult
to enforce.
.
.
.
Housing and Residential Life calls
"I
really don ',t see a squad of
SC-
it. a· freshmen visitation policy, but
curity guards wandering up and down
some freshmen· say it's a curfew.·
the halls throwing out students, Leary
·. According to the policy~ "All
.
said.
Marist students visiting from other
"Wejust don't do that."
areas must vacate.the host's room by·
Padovani said the visitation guide-
12:30 a.m. (Simday-Thursday) and
2
lines changed in reaction to com-
L:c._;_;...;....;..;...;..;.~_.:.:....;..;.;...;.._;__ _ _ _
..;..;.__,. _ _
.;..;_; _
_;_-"---'--'-----'--'--'-"--"-'-'---'--'--'-__;_;'"--'-----'---'--....;J
a.m. (Friday-Saturday) and return to
plaints from students, and their par-
. - R.. . • ·.d.
· .
.
· ·
·
·d· · · · · · · · · ··.
-
•
·
· · ·.· · · ··
'
· · · ·
their own area or room." .
ents about people being on their floor
. esi ·. ent· stu ··• ... ents
·-comment on.
Joh~~!~~S!nr~=i~~~e
0
:e~~~~~~~
th
a~~:~emne~~~~~ea~~~Je~~s~:~~d
pro.·
.
.
~·
·
....
.
.
ll
_
_
n
_
.. _
/ ...
d_....
cij@S.i·•.()f
M
_
...
i(l~~.-.·
_
,i ..
s.
~
U.t:e ·
:~~~;=:,::,:::,::,;:
~tEii~f:1;:£~:!il~E
by
JACQUE~SIMPSON :
Staff.
Writ.er
·
.
.
·Feeling clau~µophobic? .
.
Even with the construction of the
new t.fid~Rise' and the·· new
Townhouses; some students are hav-
ing to live :in tight quarters. . .
·
Each·of the new Townhouses and
· the suites in the new Mid-Rise are
required fobe built-up to accommo~
date a11 · of the resident students .
.
The new Townhouses have nine
students residing, rather than its origi~
nal eight and the recently completed
Mid-Rise suites has seven students,
as opposed it its original six.
Most of the "A" rooms seem to
be of adequate size for two people,
while some seem to be too small to
house two students coinfor:tably.
The "C" bedrooms in the
Mid-
Rise are all different sizes ranging
from cramped to spacious.
The students in both the new
Townhouses and the Mid-Rise living ·
in a built up area will each receive an
additional $100 in thrifty cash as
compensation for the extra person
.The three students living in .the
built-up rooms are being promised a
$300 reimbursement, along with $100
in thrifty cash.
"The col1ege isn't really profit-
ing from the build-up in the new
Townhouses and the Mid-Rise
suites,"said Jim Raison, director of
•
the freshmen halls and will be. us~d
tant on duty.
Housini "The college· is returning
CO!lles a proble171;
.
.
.
.
.
as a guideline forother students when
· No action will be taken if the guest
$1,600 per built-up suite."
·
C
So far;
10
built-up rooms in the problems occur," Padovani said.
leaves .
. . :
.
·· .. Meanwhile, because· each new
Mids Rise have been broken down.
. Padovani said it is not a curfew
Guests who remain after being
. Townhouse has nine students rather.:
. , «Housingwill ask
for
volunteers because students do not have to be in
notified will receive a written wam-
than eiglit, Marist is reiurning $1,800
tomoveifyacanciesareavailable;or
·
their rooms and are free to use .the
ing,Padovoni said.
per l:>uilt~up Townhouse.
.
-iCa.compatibility. ·problem arises McCann Center and the_Student Cen-
Margaret McArdle, a resident as-
The Mid~Rise houses328 stu~
among roonimates,"said Raison,
ter.
sistant, said she think_s the policy is
dents, . but with·. the elimination of
'
By riextyear, there are e"pected
.
Freshman Amy Bria said she does
putting off the inevitable.
Canterbury Gardens, whicli housed
,
to -be six. people ill each Mid-Rise not mindthe new regulations but dis-
.
425 students,' there was"a riet loss of suite !and eight people in t.he new agrees with the term policy.
"They're not being given the
103 housing spots:
. . ..
.
· .. ·. . ~: .
Tc:>wit Houses.
. ·. ..
. ·
"They told us we didn't have a . chance to prove themse~ves respon-
. . At the same time, many juniors
..
·
The. recent elimination of the curfew when we got here, but you sible .. So when they are given a
and seniors are living in Gartland
CailterburyApartm.erits ·in the Town have to be in your dorm on your own chance, they're just gonna want to
· ·Commons and the Townhouses 'due
,
of Poughkeepsie has been a factor in floor by 12:30 a.m., so that is·a cur-
have guests over all the time,"
fo
the elimination of the Canterbury . the overcrowding on campus.
few,'' Bria said.
McArdle said.
Apartments;
" .
.
.
· "Housing cannot be blamed for
· ... \Vliile.housing is guaranteed for
the amount of students accepted by
freshmen arid sophomores, housing
Admissions,'' .said senior Stephanie
placement is determin!!d by the num-
Paleo.
.
ber of priority points accumulated .
Housing in 1978 was seen as a
overthecourse·oftheyearforothers.
"rite ofpassage," according to Jim
However, Housing doesn't have
Raison.
a clear idea of how
.
many resident
c
The Townhouses and .Gartland are
students will beretuming.
designed to ·introd~ce. independent
-At the present time there are no·
living, and through . this. passage, a
plans
to
break. down .
.
the built-up
development of . class unity takes
rooms.
.
·.
, · .
. . . • . .·
place. The first two years are seen as
· "I think that the housing situa-
transition years, living with new ··
tion
was
poorly
planned," said sopho-
people, mentors, and adjusting to the
more Dianne Guarnera. "Adminis-
college atmosphere.
tration should have.· thought more
carefully about how inany students
were to be admitted and how many
students that had housing for."
. The difficulty surrounding this
is determining which student is to
move out of the tripled room in the
Townhouses or the Suites if it be-
This new arrangement allows for
the first time since 1978, all class
residents to live on campus at the
same time.
Many students expressed interest
in being informed when Vision 94
will be comoleted.
The Circle
· non-scientific poll
The Circle conducted a non-scientific
poll from Sept. 13 to
Sept.
20.
Almost
1000
students responded
to
this question:
Do you support the new freshman curfew in the dorms?
·Yes= 92
No =857
2
TIIE
Clllai;SEPttM8ER2.z."1994 · ·
Oliver Stone's 'Killers' cause b()tt'L Shock
811d
delight
;,r ..
·
.
.
.
.
· Le~is) fr~m beginning to ,encl in their
making Mickey
anci
M.a1.·1Jcy,
into'p<>p . ,· ·.
•
• , We'r~ being programmed to la~gh
, See
this
min
and
you'll
know what
by JUSTIN SEREMET
d_emerited path of murder as they end . figures and· eventually- bringing' the at soniething' even tliough: it's
.
.'s1ck
·
I'm talking about)(Grade:I\) .,
.
. ·We can always expect to~;~ an -~~ub~tfting nationalc~Iebrities, if :i:r~!clc:;t~~e:;;!!6~-t~:s:f;i·. ~~~i:.r~~ti
0
~~tilb~~:r.::~~:~r
,·,111fiim:rie~g::WPre'.~ll:;eeliiig'
Oliver Stone
fi1in
and leave the the-
, But in an ''Ap~calyp:Se No'I.V". type
Bowl Sunday;,
. _
.
·
.
/' Ultimately (th!!re are three. big
over;Micliael Keaton being 'passed
ater feeling enlightened, educated, Way; they seem to encounter people
, Th. en there's·
..
Dw. ight, the_·. ·pri_s_o_n_ reasons'why you should see "Natural
ove_
.r·
fo_ r '.·'.B. atmari .F.oi:'eve. r/i but __ get
confused, or maybe even.nauseated. along the road who are just as sick
warden {Tommy Lee Jone~); who .Born Killers." <
;· .
,
over it. Besides:this sequel,- Holly-
, Such· is the case with "Natural
loves to pick his ear a~cl nose, an(l ·...
i.
The acting. Hai:relson is sur:.
wood already has next su·mmer's
Born Killers,'' an intense look at our-
■■■I
isn't afraid to take out some out;of-
prlsingly'good, Lewis plays her usual
blockbusters planned.
' ' ... ; .
· selves and the media that is so over-
line prisoners.: · ·
· , .... ·
·>.
·
·
crazy.role (see.-'.'KaHfornia"),.-and
.
'whe~ming, so briHiant, 'that.I had to
t - - -
"Natural Born Killers" is=irroller
Robert Downey
Jr-•.
has the TV host.·
Bruce. WBlis
win
go.against
see
it twice
to take it all in.
coaster ride that Stone. ~rings us us-
role down to an.art. And'J;'~mmy Lee badd1e Jeremy Iroris in "Die_Ha~cl 3."
Stone takes the story of two ina-
- ~ •
irig strange t~ch11icjues, __ s\\'itchil!g
Jones is;well,'Tommy'l.ee Jones.,.
· ·
··· , ,:-
' ·
· ·
niacs on a 52-people killing spree,
back and forth between black
·
and
.
,
;
2.
The cinematography._,Rarely
· - Jiil(C~rrey •is' ~ignel·on _to do
who are caught and later escape from
white, color, Super-8, grainy,'cartcioii;
wiil :you. see a. film so outlandishly
"Ace. Ventura 2."
jail, and turns it into a sermon on
16mm and 35mm film ..
>
.< ._ , ·
topsy-turvy . .It's the most_ creative
how sick society has become.
And that's aUdone in a span·of
film
I've seen.
.
.·
Is
it
a bloody film?
·five minutes.
· , ;, .
, . . 3,_The message. It's a comment
Yes.
·
Sonie may say Stone's gone over~
(a
rather .sad one)_'on s_ocietY, that
But unless you specifically· tune and twisted as. they a~e. .
board this time, maybe singling out
really hits home, especially for·some
out the nightly news or can't admit
Th_ere's the cliched sleazy cop,
the way he explains how Mickey. and
of us that wquld actually like to be
to watching O.J. Simpson's white author. Ja,ck Scagnetti_ (Tom Mallory first meet
·
in an'
"I
Love
part of the media. What other couns
Bronco driving down the California Sizemore) who is more concerned Mallory" TV sitcom format.
try makes s~ch darlings out o_f people
highway (I did), this movie affects with becoming famous for catching
. This scene (with a continuous
such as Charles Manson, Jeffrey
you and makes you ask yourself"why the two monsters alive and writing
laugh track) is where Stone comments
Dahmer, Tonya Harding, and Joey
are we fascinated by such sadism?" about it than saving their victims.
on s·ociety as we watch Mallory's
Buttafuoco?
, ·
Confused?
There_'s Wayne· Gale (very con~
father (Rodney Dangerfield) sexually
· As-Mickey tells one of his soon:.
I'll do my best to explain.
vincingly played by Robert Downey
abuse his daughter and threaten to
to-be victims who begs for mer~y,
· .- . Sylvester 'Stallone'.'.wiHfgo· big:
oudget action again in "Judge Dread,"
a·mm version 'of the popular British
comic book:· ' · -
· ·
. ·
·
·And firially, Kenneth'Btanagh,
who
will
star in ,November's ''Mary
Shelly's. Fi'ankenstein,"js .• rumored
to be George Lucas' choice to play
young Obi-\Van·Keilobi-in the Star
Wars prequels, the firi;t.of which is
'supposedl}'.slatedforreJeasein 1997.
We follow Mickey and Mallory Jr.), the host of TV's ''American
beat up his wife.
·
"If
l don't kill you, there won't be
Knox (Woody Harrelson and Juliette Maniacs,'' who is resoonsible for
The point?
anything to talk about."
Next week: "Quit Show."
.
Murderous rampage accentuatedbymusicc.o!fa,ge
by TOM BECKER
The soundtrack for the movie
"Natural Born Killers" is a collage of
sounds which successfully supports
the movie with eerie love songs and
fast-paced, unexpected violent surges.
The album is a showcase for_
music in that it does not rely on one
particular sound. The tunes range
from soft blues and tribal cries to
slow grooving rap and industrial ter-
ror.
We are carried through Mickey
and·Mallo~y's mad maze with tunes
from Dr. Dre, Nine Inch Nails, Bob
Dylan and over 20 more artists on
this 27-track CD.
.
Several songs on the soundtrack
- include dialogue from the film, like
the· classic
"Eenie Meenie
Minie
. Moe" diner scene.
Most noteworthy are the strange
love songs that populate the disk.
The Cowboy Junkies contribute
their classic cover of Lou Reed's
"Sweet Jane," a song that is pre-
viewed by a conversation between
Mickey and Mallory about their place
on Earth as angels.
Nine. Inch Nails provide three
tracks on the album with· their most
appropriate being "Pretty Hate
MUSIC
REVIEW
directed love sounds flowing.
.
Cline, famous for her tune "Crazy,"
However, some of the highlights
which seems to find its way onto
on this album stray from that sound. . every diner jukebox, winds up on the
L7 occupies track two with soundtrack with her happy, bouncy,
"Sh· list," a grindy, guitar-drenched
"Back In Baby's Arms" which ac-
song that is typical of the alternapunk centuates the queer quality of this
band.
.
· movie. · . -
·. ·
For those who've seen the movie,
There is no doubt that the«Natu~
the prison riot scene is catapulted by . ral Born Killers Soundtrack"is an
the industrial assault of Lard, the Jello
album that offers a wide variety
Biafra-led brother of industrial demi-
of music.
·
gods Ministry. ·
..
However, it makes for a better
"Forkboy" encompasses all_ of · background disc than a sing-a-long
the uncontrollable flashy violence that
album.
. .
,
✓'
,
fills the movie, with.the crashing lo_-
•
·
Of course,. this being the first•
comotive. guitars_· and.·. the .cries of issue of the year, a summary of the
Biafra over brick-smashing drums;
·gocid. · and the
·
bad.· of .the summer
Also worth noting are ,the instru-
would not be. totally out of line.
·
·
· ·
mental tracks on· the album. , _ .·
·
· ·
·
· · · ·
·
· Machine"'s sad, dark tragedy-''Some-
• , .·•· P-eter ·Gabriel and Nusi:at Fateh
Howeyer, sad to. note,. it seems
thing I Can Never'liave."
· ·
there wjs mor~ med,io~rlt}'.,tlt~n any-
. · .. Juliette. I.,ewis showcases
any
tal~ '
;.\l~~o;?. P:;:1uit!::b~~1;t;n.;g~
thing else, save. for·
a
few
exceptjons.
ent she may have in her attempt at
Trembler" uses a westem .. riff and
.
.
sultry blues with "Born Bad"; \Vhile
liurricane. winds to produce the
The-one exception that.win find
Lewis doesn't exactly have the voice
sounds,ofa cowboy on add.
its way into the paper is Helmet's
of an . angel, the song works on th_ e
lb
· t"tl d "B tt · "
, Somehow,_ some way,. Patsy new a um en 1 e
e y. .
soundtrack in_kee in° the bleak, mis-
___,.==,..,.
The piece is the band!s third al-
bum, and shows_ definite signs of
expansion for the R.O.
T.C
look-
alikes.
·
. Helmet uses some pr9cessed vo-
cals arid winding bass riffs that were
· not found on their previous material
to expend upon their hardcore flavor
on songs like "Biscuits for Smut"
and "Rollo."
However; Page Hamilton man-
ages to maintain the sounds that mark
Helmet with his quick, jabby guitar
pli_nches featured mi tracksJike "Vac-
cination" and "Wilma's Rainbow."
All
in all, the album is a must
b~y.·ror. Helmet· fans., and·. a ~efinite
bet to draw
in
some nev,r blood, with
''Milsuetoast" getting heavy airplay .
-:,i• .. :•_,,,,,-,·-~-,
:-~,~
r_·_.·_•-
•. , . •
.c;_~·•
•
·
.
."·-.".<.
•~-:·•;
It
also serves as a curiosity piece
iri that
ii
leaves the listener wonder-
• in~ just where• Helmet. will_ go· next.
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-
THE CIRCLE,
SEPTEMBER 22, 1.99.4
3
Build~up
results inmoney
&
reimbursements
:
··
••fifk~
'
bein{in our o~n
H;tle
Kel~y Reiss,
a
sophomore from
Since
.
some room~ ar~ more spa-
by the color combination.
by
LYNN WIELAND
•
Staff w_riter
h~~·" Piskura said .
•
··
··
Longlsland,N.Y.~islivinginatriple
cious then others, and the Mid-Rise
·
one of the
.
problems facing
.
suite and has to fight for
_
the bath-
does seem bigger then it looks, it is
.•.
•.
'
Marist students have been'watch~
ing
the Mid-Rise grow for months, ii
·
is
90%
.
finished
-
and students have
Piskura,
.
her roommates; ·and many
room.
no surprise many students are find-
others is
.
.
that they were tripled
·
in
-
·_
·
·
·
· ·
•
·
·
·
-
ing it hard to find the
_
ir way around
moved i1L
·•
·
-
rooms meant
_
for doubles.
·
.
..
If
one of us
_
is in there, the other
the n
_
ew building.
·
six are pounding on the door," Reiss
.
On
Labor
.
Day,
372
students
moved into the latest addition
·
at
Mari.st
·
and besides a
few
minor prob-
lems, students
are
adjusting well.
"It's not your traditional dormi-
tory style," soph.omore Sonya Mello
said,- from upstate Ne_·v York. "It i~;
,
more homely."
,
.
.
··•
Mello J.ikes having more space tc
.
li'f'.e
in
than the traditional dormitory
•
double and she also likes the idea of
living
in
the newest building.
·_
.-
.
. ,
Reside
'
nt Carie Piskura
-
-
from
.
Washington,
Conn;,
has ha<,i a few
·.
problems so far but
·
already agree~
the new Mid-Rise is a lot better.than
the
.
dormitories and twice as com-
fortable.
"You
can
live with il but it t~kes
-
a
Jot
.
<>(
working out since it
was
meant
for"
rooms of two,
·
two
·
and
two," Piskura said.
.
·
-
-
.
1Jomenica Perrupato, a sopho-
more from Weatherfield, Conn., also
lives in a triple and although
Pcrrupato enjoys being connected to
the
~pus
center; she said more
room would'be nice
.
.
·
.
·
-
.
".
·
We
did not expect it to be this
·
_
small,''. Perrupato said. " Not at all."
·
.
.
Adding to the p~obl~m ~f tripling
.
are bathrooms designed for one per-
-
son usage.
In
some bathr1:>oms the shower,
toilet and sink are all separated, but
in others·, everything is in one room.
·
said.
.
The bathrooms are not the only
thing different.
· ·
_
.
· .
Walking_through the suites
·
it be-
comes clear the rooms differ in size
and color.
·
·
'
John Padovani,
.
assistant director
of housing, said the Mid-Rise build-
ing
is
different from any other build-
ing Marist has had.
·
_
"There is definitely some varia-
tion,"
_
Padovani said.
Part of the variation is the suites
on the third floor are handicap acces-
sible which accounts for the different
bathrooms.
SGA
.
holds Leadership Conference to
S(Jeak With
.
stud8ntC/ub leaders
By DAWN MARTIN
--
,
Assistant Editor
best to give students niore
,
opportu-
nity to show leadership.''.
·
·
For Devin Vignali, the vice presi-
dent of the Italian American Society,
The leaders of the various clubs
the speech by Matt Gillis was a guide-
of Marist College attended ~
-
leader-
line for leadership.
ship conference on Friday
'
evening
Vignali said that Gillis's speech
hosted by the Student Government
-
"told us how to present ourselves as
Association.
-
.
officers," and that
acting
appropri-
An
estimated
151 students at-
ately is.important for maintaining a
tended theconference which was or-
club's image.
·
.
•
-
. · .
ganized by Nick Capuano, Vice Presi-
:
Melissa DellaBianca, treas
·
urer of
dent of clubs for Marist SGA.
Kappa Kappa Gamma, said
·
she
he said.
.
..
.
..
Capuano, who is in his fourth year
.
as a member of the student govern-
.
ment, said that he was pleased with
how the evening went
"I was very pleased with the atti-
tude· this year," Capuano said.
"It
shows that they're ready to
get
into
the y·ear.''
Capuano said the gathering re-
minded him of a mini-United Na-
.
tions because
"all
the leaders of
!'It
is a little bit of a maze at first "
said Mello.
'
Mello adm
_
its finding your way to
the cafe, mail room, or main entrance
can be a little tricky and Piskura has
had the same problem.
"It's kind of confusing. We can't
find our way around," said Piskura.
Although the color scheme has
been called bright, awful, and ob-
noxious, they are a great help in find-
ing _your
room.
Some of the colors
include
bright
purples, pinks and greens, and a
yel-
low orange.
Students seemed a little surprised
_
-
Capuano, a
'
senior from Wyckoff,
thought the conference was a success
N.J., wanted this event to be a.sue-
·
and that it helped her
_
understand
cess because hewanted
to
see all the
things better than she
_
did hist year.
·
·
Marist College were assembled in
,,
clubs start off in the
_
righi direction
"Now
1 have
a
better understand-
.
"I want to see everyone nave a
ing of what we have to do to make
fair
.
shot,
:
~n equal opportunity,"
our club better known on campus,"
Capua110 said.
. -.
.
.
.
•
. .
.
.
..
.
.
DellaBianca said.
. ·
.Orie
suchdub\vhich needed
.
the
·
·
·
·
L
·
h. "d·th·a
·
t
·
-
.•
f
'
t
.
h
·
..
.
ls
.
,
,
;
..
.
,
.,
_
_. _
,
,
_
... ,,
__
,.,.
.
.
,
.
,
.
, .. ,,_,
,
....
_
..
-
.
,
.
--
,
.. :..
..
..
Y._n
_
c
~
:s~t ....
.
..
_,
on
_
e
_
o
....
e gl)a,
Jarr
shot was the newly fonned Manst
they
hopecfto feach
·
from
~he
confer-
·
·
Band.
.
.
·
ence was for club leaders and SGA
·
Jennifer Trenary, the president of leaders to get acquainted with each
the club; said that ihe conferenc:e was
.
other.
·
·
·
.
·
.
a gre?t help for het since she was
· · ·
ctia~lie Melichar treasurer and
·
1_
unfa~iliar with
_
·
soine of t~e proce-
-
promotional director ~f WMCR; said
__
dur~s
~a~h
cl_ub
_
mu
.
st
foll~_'N·
. .
.
· .·
he was glad that he got the oppoitu~
.
If
_
they_d1dn't ha~e. t_h1s, I would
.
_
nity to get acquainted with the other
_
_
have been
·
m the acttv1t1es office or
·
leaders.
·
·
>
SGA a~~i~g questions every day;"
.
\his is Melichar's first year
as
a
Tren~ry said
_
.
. .
.
club leader and he was glad to get the
.·
.
Bob Lynch, Pt~~ctor of Student numbers of some people who could
Activitie~ •
.
s~id "We want to do our help.
"Now
I know who to turn
to,'.'.
one area."
Lynch said that he felt the confer-
ence was a "team building experi-
ence" and that he hopes the goals
.
which were reached are continued .
:
.
·
-
·•l'ilii~k-11•~
a
b.~giimiiig,_''.
he
_
tiid.
"We
.
touched upon
otir
goals
.
We
hope
_
they will be
·
successfully
reached goals for the entire year."
This event was important for the
club
_··
leaders
:
of Mari
st
College,
Capuano said, so that SGA will be
tougher on the clubs this year.
"You're going to se
_
e
a
crackdown
on clubs not doing well because a lot
of new clubs
·
want to come in,"
Capuano said.
,
,
"I think they were color blind or
something," said Sarah Strouse, a
sophomore from Vermont. "These
colors are pretty bad."
Resident
Assistant
Helen
Schryver,
a
senior from New York,
said things are going well and the
few comolaints have been small
maintenance concerns, or complaints
over the colors.
·
"You have over
400
students. Not
everything will be to everyone's
lik-
ing,"
Schryver said .
Schryver has already planned ac-
tivities for the students and hopes it
will be a fun living environment.
So tar, tor the students, it has been
a good start.
"I think it is going well in this
building. We
are
all new here,"
Schryver said.
Students
enjoy mock•bungee Jumping at the Activities on Fri., Sept 9.
Circle photo/ Xathy link
Fireworks go awry;
Explanation unknown
By JEANINNE A VILES
Staff Writer
The Class of
1998
received a big
welcome when
a
-
fire started
·
during
the annual fireworks display
.
The event was held on Monday,
Sept. S, by CollegeActivities as part of
the annual Block Party.
As those present
enjoved
the music
and light show, the fire~orks set off a
small fire behind the maintenance barn
near the Riverview Parking Lot.
Bob Lynch, Coordinator of Student
Activities, said this kind of accident
has never happened before.
"This is the first time this type of
thing has happened
to
my knowledge
and we've been doing this for four or
five years.''
Although past firework displays
have been safe and fire-free,the col-
lege invites the fire department to at-
tend the event in case of an emer-
gency.
"We always have the fire depart-
ment down because anytime you 're
playing with fireworks of this magni-
tude, the possibiliiy (of starting a fire)
is there," said Joe Leary, Director of
Safety and Security.
The Fairview Fire Department at-
tended and quickly responded when
the fire broke out.
"It
wasn't
a
huge fire, but appar-
ently
ii
look
a
whole gang of soaking
to get it
completely
out," said Leary.
Although the fireworks were the
cause, the reason the fire started is not
_
yet totally understood
.
Leary said the fire may have started
from debris from the fireworks.
He
explained
that when the fireworks
are
set off,
a
canister, just like a
shell-
casing from
a
military weapon, is
dropped.
The canisters are extremely hot
and
are supposed to drop in the river, which
is where the fireworks are to be aimed.
Lynch said the cause of the fire
could have been an ember from the
fireworks that set a bush or something
else flammable on fire.
Whether or not this is the cause of
the flames is yet to be determined.
Many of the other spectators who
were on top of the hill in front of
Champagnat did not notice that any-
thing had gone wrong with the fire-
works.
"I
didn't even know there was a fire,
said freshman Kelly Tate of New York
City. "They did take care of it very
quickly."
For other students, the fire caused
inconvenience.
_111
flRE page 6
4
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CIRCll,
F
E.ATURE
SEPTEMBER 22.' 1994
·
Barnes
&
·
Noble .takes
.,
·,.
.
•,
' '
..
•'
over d0ll8ge bookstore
.
.
. .
By
LARRY BOADA
Staff Writer
.
.
-
more features than its predecessors'.
.
Christopher Hane; manager of tlie
new b
_
ookstore, discussed many _of the
A-journey tothe new Marist book- new additions.
.
.
store begins with a walkdown a set of
"
. .
.
-
.
freshly
poured concrete steps which
We ~ow,, offer a ?ai,~y book buy- •
leads to the Rotunda where the fresh-
_
bac:k service, Rane said. Students can
r,-
ness of stained wood doors contrasts
_
now sell books b~ck at any time during •
with the
·
dust and debris that remains
.
the seme~ter.Th1s new systein also \
on the
'
floor.
<
shortens hnes for book buy-back
!ii
the
,
.
.
-
.
-
-
-
-
.
.
end of thesemester."
.
.
Entering the majestic edifice, light
,
.
· .
_
-
_- _
-
-
_
·:
·
-
1
·
cascades down
·,
through the green
Students taking advantage of this
.
·
domed glass
_
that tops
-
the newly cori- service
will
save themselves from wait-
,.
structed Rotunda and draws attention ing on long l~nes, Rane
_
said.
· .
to the new bookstore.
-
.
.
.__-====;;;:;
·- ·
. .
-
.
·
·
.
.
.
For the avid reader who is inter-
The new bookstore has been the latest
·
,,
Re.si~ing
10
the first left hand c?r- ested in
·
adding to
a
book collection,
attraction to the
$27
million renovation.
ner
,
be~u~d a row of wood doors,hes there are non-course related books .
the ()asis amongst the chaos, wh~re the available which include many of the_ .
A
line of personal computer soft-
order <>f b?oks shares spa:e with the same titles available at the other Barnes ware has also been added to the book-
.
pandemomum of construction.
__
.
and Noble located on Route 9,
store lineup. "This software is avail-
.
·
:
·
, books
·
h
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
.
.
able to Marist students at a special aca-
This year s
tore as once agam
·
There is also a "bargain book" table d
·
II
·
d
· "
R
·
'd
·
d ·
1
·
·
·
b
·
&
·
•h
1
tt·
em1ca v-a1me pnce,
anc sa1 .
move
.
-
Its ocatlon, uhor
.
e as ime. located at the front of the store which
Clrcl& pnota/ Kathy link
coming football and basketball games
as
well and will have a stand promot-
ing Marist sports by offering game-
related clothing and sports parapherna-
lia.
After
.
sp~nding years in the ba~e- features reduced price_favorites .
.
·
. The size of the snack and conve-
Planned for a mid-October intro-
ment of Champagnat and one season
iri
·
"B
d
.
-
f
•
1
•
.
mence area has also been enlarged.
duction is a system that will allow stu-
..
.
.
h
~
-
-
.
-
-
h .
·
y now most stu ents are am1 1ar
d
a section oft e ca1etena, t e bookstore with the self-service method
of.
ur-
.
_
ents to purchase books and any other
has found apermanent home.
h •
b ks ., R
.d
.
P
.
Chmces can now be made trom book
_
store items simply by running their
c asmg oo
anc sa1
th"
·
f
·
· ·
t
_
_
.
,
_
_
·
_
every mg rom various JU1ces o sun- ID card through a scanner.
The. Barnes and Noble t~keover of
•
This approach allows students
·
to flower seeds.
the bookstore comes at a time when pick and choose among books and
.
.
Rane also said plans are in the works
.
Marist is seeing new changes.
decide between those tliat are required
Ra_nc pomte? out this year_'s larger for this format to bin1sed on soda ma-
.
_ .
selection of shirts, sweat shirts, and ·hines
0
.
Hames and Noble, which curren~ly and those recommended.
jackets, all emblazoned with the Maris! "
.
n campus as well.
has
~~0
stores across the country, gams
.
"The self-service way of buying College logo.
"Bemg a part of Vision
'94
is won-
addiho~al g~~wth.
_
books also results in shorter lines,"
.
derful," Rane said."We're really see-
Manst adds a bookstore
.
that offers
Rane
said.
Rane said he plans to attend up- ing the campus come together."
MariSt
College students recall Woodstock
·,94
.
by HOLLY DIAZ
Staff Writer
.
On ThJr~d~y
:
night; August
.
fr,
·
fiv~ girls
•
from Long Island
·
packed
·
.
intc:>
a
bhieJsuzu Amigo and drove to
Sauge~ies, New York in the pouring
rain.
· ·
·
-
Beth Bou
·
naguro, a junior
·
at
Marist,recalled the anticipation of
waiting to arrive at the biggest con-
cert
· _
festival of
·
;the
-decade;
Woodstock
'94 .
.
_
.
.
'
.
·-._
· ·
: __
_
"We decorated the.jeep with signs
that r~ad, "High ho, high ho, off to
Woodstock we go ... " and honked
_
at
fe1lo~ Woodstock goers that passed
us on the Thruway," Bounaguro said.
For Bounaguro and
·
her
.
friends,
pla~s had been made weeks in ad-
.
vance; while for others, like Laurette
Lapadura, a senior, this event was
more spontaneous.
"My sister and I were watching
MTV
·
Saturday afternoon and we
thought, 'damn, we should be there,'
said Lapadura.
"So with
·
five· dollars
·
in my
__
pocket,we left. We even wound up
hitch-hiking eight miles from tbe lot
to the actual site."
On the other hand, Mark Jeary, a
junior, said that he bought his tickets
the day they went on sale.
"I knew I had to go," he said.
"The best artists gathered at one spot
for the best price. If you think about
it, you'd pay $30 just to see one of
those headlining bands."
After actually arriving, some
seemed pleasantly surprised at the
lack of security.
Lou Reyno!~, a sophomore, sa
_
id
tha.t there weren't any dogs sniffing
performances.
tor drugs and metal detector~ weren't
even hooked up.
"Stills and Nash captured the
c
-
--
--
·
-
-
·
·
_
spirit of the first one because they
J'he security, thaqh~ media hyped
:
were orie of the originals and Blues
up to be extremely stringent, was
·
•-
Traveler made an unforgettable trib-
virtually non-existent.
.
.
.
·.
·
··
ute toJi~iHendrix, playing the Star
"I even met a guy
from
_
CaHfor-
·
Spangled Banner on the harmonica,"
nia at the rave that smoked up with
Jeary·said. "It was a touching mo-
the Peace Patrol guy," said ~eynolds.
·
ment."
"Another lady popped her head out
For those who wanted
15
min-
_
of her tent and said, 'Have a good
utes of fame in their life, Woodstock
Woodstock,' and handed us an un-
gav:
_them a rime a
_
nd a place for it.
opened liter of vodka. I
.
was im-
pressed."
Although security was grossly un-
derstaffed, much
.
illegal substance
abuse was underway, Jeary said he
felt that there wasn't any need for
·
tight security.
"There were over 500,000 people
there arid not one fight the whole
weekend. Everyone was real civil to
each another," Jeary said,
"It
liter-
ally was three whole days of pure
peace and fun and music."
And what abOut the music? Some
would testify that the bands are what
made it such a phenomenal event.
Buonaguro recalls Sheryl Crow; Red
Hot Chili Peppers, and Violent
Femmes as her three favorite.
"Sheryl Crow was so peaceful,"
she said. "I just listened to her, ly-
ing in my tent. Red Hot Chili Pep-
pers were great because they're one
of my favorite bands and the Violent
Femmes were crazy. The crowd was
·
mud moshing and crowd surfing, and
this was when I was closest
to the
stage," she said.
Jeary enjoyed Crosby, Stills and
Nash as well as Blues Traveler's
Richard St. Arromand and Kati
Apuzzo, both juniors, were inter-
viewed by MTV.
"I even met Kennedy," said_ St.
Arromand. "I was with her at 8 a.m.
walking around, waking people up.
I also sang the National Anthem with
her and I took a picture with Bill
Bellamy."
Fortunately for these concert
goers, their ticket and their food for
the whole weekend were free,
Apuzzo said.
"We volunteered to work at one
of the concession stands, the sausage
and pepper one, so we didn't pay for
anything."
Other Marist students were quite
disappointed that Woodstock was
such a high priced event with corpo-
rate logos and commercial promot-
ers.
Scott Campbell, a junior, said he
felt strongly against the overbearing
vendor representation and did not buy
any souvenirs.
"What I brought out of the
expe-
rience will be the memories, not any-
thing that can i,e bought," Campbell
said.
Close by, some of Campbell's
friends went to the Woodstock me-
morial in Bethel.
Campbell said his friends found
that there was more of a "sense of
community" because it was "less
congested and commercialized."
..
Huonaguro said it was easy to
lose track of spending money due to
the conversion of U.S. currency into
silver coined Woodstock money.
"It
seemed like they didn't have
much value, like if we were playing
with monopoly money," she said.
John Nauke,
a
junior, didn't give
into the corporate representation that
the first Woodstock lacked.
He said instead he hopes that he
helped a poor man get home; that is,
"if he's telling the truth."
"I bought a cool silver Indian head
necklace for $5 off this Indian guy
with tribal tattoos all over his body,"
Nauke said. "He said he needed to
get back to his reservation in Ari-
zona since he only bought a one way
ticket."
In addition, others had a tough
time getting home due to the massive
amount of mud that accumulated over
the past 48 hours.
St. Arromand and Apuzzo left
Sunday night but found their car stuck
in inches and inches of mud.
"We had to pay $30 to get our car
towed. Every single car had to be
towed out of the green lot," said
Apuzzo.
REVIEW
by SCOTT SIGNORE
Food Guy
5
·
In each issue of The Circle, I
will
be
'
reviewing my experience at a lo-·
cal restaurant.
I
will evaluate food quality, price,
atmosp~ere, service, and, perhaps,
other
_
m1scellaneous categories.
At the conclusion of each review,
I
will be rating the restaurant by
rounds of applause.
That
_
is, a scale from
1
to
S
will
give an overall and accurate idea of
how
I
rate each establishment.
.
I've begun my column by review-
ing o~e <;>f the are_a' newest eating
and drmkmg attractions: Trainers Bar
and Grille, located at the Colonial
Plaza, Route 9, Hyde Park.
·
As far as atmosphere, Trainers is
a better than average, all-American
sports bar.
The walls are covered with all
types of recent and not-so-recent
sporting memorabilia.
(They even have an extended col-
lection ofMarist memorabilia. I liked
that; made me feel as though
I
had
the right to be there.)
The sporting atmosphere is sup-
ported by six color TVs.
During my visit, I was lucky
enough to have their 46 inch TV tuned
into the Michigan State/Notre Dame
football game.
When you' re not watching a game,
you're more than invited to play some
darts, or perhaps a game of pool.
It's very difficult not to realize
that Trainers is first and foremost a
bar; the hard wood and brass trimmed
bar controls the setting.
Basically, if you don't take
a
seat
at the bar, you only have seven other
tables to choose from.
lncidenta\ly, you can eat and
en-
joy the atmosphere even if you 're not
2\.
Fortunately, being 21-ycars-old, I
_
had
_
the
opportunity to choose
·
a
Beck's
draft over a wide variety
of
others.
I passed on drafts of Heineken,
joncy Brown Lager, Coors Light,
and
Budweiser, as well as an exten-
sive wine collection.
In terms of food ...
It's necessary to understand that
my experience was much different
than what I had expected.
Previous to my visit, I didn't real-
ize that Trainers was so much of a
bar and so limited as a restaurant.
I wasn't disappointed, just sur-
prised.
Their menu consists of grille food,
ranging from a roast beef
sandwich
to a turkey club to burgers.
They offer the usual appetizers:
buffalo wings,
·
chicken fingers, moz-
zarella
·
sticks, fries and gravy, etc.
1 sampled the wings and a bacon
cheeseburger which were very good
choices.
·
The wings were just as hot and
spicy as I expected, and I'm even
willing to stick my neck out and de-
clare them
"outstanding."
And
the
bacon
cheeseburger. .. what a truly excellent
bacon cheeseburger!
Not only did the burger taste great,
but it was huge.
In addition, I enjoyed a monstrous
plate of french fries.
(Now, this is a compliment to the
establishment. I happened to notice
the size of the other sandwich por-
tions and they appeared to be just as
generous.)
In terms of an overall evaluation,
I was extremely pleased
.
I can honestly say that I will visit
Trainers again soon.
About that second visit?
I think I would try the Grilled
Chicken sandwich.
I happened to see one and it was
served on a bulky roll with melted
swiss (it, too, was huge).
I would also re-order the wings,
but wash them down with good-old
American Bud instead. (If I wasn't
21, perhaps a Diet Coke.)
Trainers Sports Bar and Grille
deserves 4 rounds of applause; I was
completely satisfied.
;;
I'
.
.
.
;
-
.
.
·
.
.
_
:
-
•·
-·
·_
.. ·
-
-
·
·
LsE
·
·
·•-
·
·
_-
.
·
:•
MARIST COLLEGE, POUGH,KEEPSIE, NY 12&01
·
-
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER
·
Kristina Wells,
editor.
.
.
Dana Buonicouti,
senior editor
Justin Seremet,
senior editor
Andrew Holmlund,
sports editor
Meredith Kennedy,feature
editor
Teri L~ Stewart,
editorial page editor
Tom Be,;:ker,
columns editor
,
:
John
-
Dougherty,
assistant editor
Dawn Martin,
<UJ!lant editor
Ron Johnson,
assistant editor
~
-
~
Larry Boada,
assistant editor
Lynn Wieland,
assistant editor
G.
Modele
CJarke,Jaculty advisor
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
Justice?
Politicalthoughts ofthe
Week
The story may be old, but the problem hasn't gone away~
Sure, most sophomores, juniors, and seniors can recall
where they were at 10:30 p.m~ on Sat., Sept. 11, 1993, when
the rape occurred, but it seems that most students have put
it in the back
of
their minds and have tried not to think about
For all of us Marist students who feasted on
"Operation: .... Resto
rt;
:
Democra~y''. should
MTVvideos and the O.J. Simpson trialrather have been called "Operatfon: Lucky Break!'
than glance atCNN or
8-ill
and Hillary during
.
Ori Sept. 15, President Clinton addressed
.
our summer vacation, here is a politics recap
.
the nation, declaring that an invasion
.
in Haiti
.
.
Speaking
of
good old Bill, the president was
('
to stop thebl'\ltal atrociti~s that threaten
should be thanking O.J. for
_
taking all of th0se tens of thousands of Haitians; to secure our
Page 1 Whitewater and Paula !_ones scandal borders and to prese_ rve
·
sta
_
b
_
ili
_
ty and promote
headlines from him;
·
·
-
·
·
·
·
democracy iri our hemisphere.''
. .
.
·
• .
Every very sun filled day was a new
-
crisis
~ut,
_
does the United States have the right to
for Bill to handle. There were several foreign promote democracy in
.
a country that never
crises at the same time~ namely Haiti, Rwanda
,
fully had it?
.
_
.
_
_
_
.·
_
_ ·
_
and Cuba.
·
Has Clinton even outlined his tnie motives
He also had domestic troubles to beworricd to the American people?
·
about,
.
like the passages oJ the
Crime
BiU
and
Regardless of his reasons, Clinton has been
Health Care Reform by a hostile
.
Congress
.
lucky.
.·
_
,
·.
·
-
._
It was extremely amusing to see Republi-
The diplomatic accord, led by former Presi-
can senators, especially New York'sRepubli-
dent Jimmy
·
caner which convinced the Hai-
can Senator, Al D' Amato, rant and
.
rave about
--
-
.
•
•
p
·
.
it
memory lapses
_
and
_
abuses ofpow
_
er dunn
_
· g tian miJitary leaders to return power to res1-
•
dent
·
Jean
~
Bertrand Aristide, was
·
_
being dis-
And a lot of questions are
,
still being .asked.
WhDit~Amwatert
,,
,heharindsgs
.
have been caught in the cussed as American planes were eri route to
a
O 5
an
.
.
.
.
··
·
Haiti,
.
ready to 1,egin the
.
invasion.
·
:.
·
S
h
"d
·t
•
t
•
cookie jar rnore times than
-
anyone
•
since the
al
"thti
·
G
Col" p
.
ll
ome
,
ave sai
_
i WaS acqu
_
ain ance rape.
__
d
_
e
_
a
_
rly
_
de
_
parted
_
_
R
__
ich
_
ard Nixon. What a hypo-
Carter, ong
_
w1
orrner en;
·
m owe
and Sen
.
Sam Nuiln have only laid the founda-
Some say security is too tight n9:yv for'it to
_
hap
_
_
P
_
. __
en again
_
.
-
crit\vhen
tal
,,
.
ki~
_'·
g
·
°ab
b
u
, _
t po
.
litics of
_
~~rs
·
e, no
tion:
for a restoration of democracy.
. ·
.
:
··
•·
1
-
_
.
.
·
Lieut
Raoul
Cedras
arid Brig. Gen
;
Phillippe
Or is security tight at aH? Others have ca led the
.
whole
9n
,
e can
_
~orget the "J1:-tSayNt' can:ip~n th~~ Biamby have until Oct. 15 to
fulfill
their agre~-
thing a hoax.
.
:
.
,
-'
:!Wh~~ess1:~: ~e~du~~
~
;3c
:,-
ns1
~
/1~}t~
;
\
d
,
:
)t~d:
:
.
.
tlarin~~!J!l't??wt:~
J
o ~~
;
~
-
-
~~~~~;;
-
~a1-
I
h
d
h
· ·
·
-
atever Pres1 ent
mton propose or sat
·
• ·
.
,,
·
,
_
_
_
t
never appene ,
t
ey say.
·
this summer ~as rnet by a chorus of rio, no, no
-
.
:
The
;
e is
·
a
:
p
9
ssi~ility
_
that the a¢cor~
:
will
Does anyone really
·
know? Or even care?
fr
_
o
.
m Republu:anop
,
ponents:
,
.
, .
.
-
· . .
·
..
riot
,
l?
f
successfuL Aft
e
r all, Gen
~
.
Cedr~s re-
.
If
Clinton .wen~ on telev1s1on and s!1d that
_
neged on an agre~ment th
_
athe signed a~
C,,<;>y~
·
Well wake up
•
Manst.
he W:~!ed to see
,
a ~re
for
cancer th15 year,_
,
ernorsJsland; caµingforhim to cede
_
p<>'\yerto
,
·
.
'
.,
.
.
:
-·
• .
·
.
...
-
•
..
• ,
..
·
...
·
.
.
.
.
..Republ1cansV1<>uld
,
likelyfmdarea
,
s01poop- Rey.AiistidebyOct
:C
lS,1993. Will_he
'
hold
An arrest has been made 1nthe case and
It
a1n t over yet.
·pose~
_
attoo.
-
·
>
•
--
_
:
:
:
.-
, ·
:
·
i'
:
_
oufagain?
:
.
_,;
-··
-
·
.·
·
·
•
,
.
..
.
,
>
··
·
-
.·.
•
·
This was very
.
evident with the
,
Cnme Bill
,
·
,
<
: ·,
·:
. _
::.,<
·,:o
_
.
.
Former Manst
·
student John Tasso has
·
been charged with
and Health <:::ar
f
debat
~s_
in Congress.
·
·
> .•.····
•
·
. _
Even
:
if
'
he
;
doc:s11't
;
,'
wh~bvill
.
~ ~ and
,
.
·
h
f
·
- -
· h .
·
"d
-
'
h
. ·
-
d l
.
-
-
·
__
n
makes riosense
·
to
_
me howopponen~pf
,-:_
Biarnby'. doaftefthat date?
'"
<·
··
.
·
.
.
:·
·
t
ree COUntS O rape ln
t
e inci entt
at OCC~rre ast year.
·
the Crim1fBiUwanted to
:
get rid
.
of midnight
.-
•·
0
·
O;
><
·
:
. ·
·
•·
.
·__
_
_
..
.
. ·
_
•-
·
..
You know the one
-
everyone is trying very
·
hard to forget.
baskelb~ll
,'
~urliolclon
)
ig1:Uto~aul
(
~~~'.
·
..
.
·
.
:::
M
0
tii~r_i~~uew~i<:h
'
$hQuld~11ceni
;
~ep-
.
.
,
.
•
.
.
-
·
.
•
,
•
-
__
.
..
.
-
Is midnight ba~ketb~I more ~allgcrous ,to can_ troops 1s
_
what
will
happen
m,
the
·
1nterun
_
We
at
The
Circle have felt that It IS our duty
to
keep you
thepeopl;ofi}men~th~
-
Al(47 s31.1d
.
S~eet- penod;
·
·
.
_
-
.
_
..
...
_
.
·.
. -
informed of the on-goings of this tragic incident in which
s~~~~y
reaso~ ~ifRepubiie!lns
opposed
.
;
Although
!
he aw,rcf rnin!111izes t!te deadly
~
1
.
d
f M
,
. h d h
1·
~
h
d
,
~
,
.
thlS b1llm such great numbers
w~
.
to keep nsks
_
of.Amencan forces, which consist of cons
a 1.ema e StU ent
O
·
artSt a
er ll.e C ange .tOrever
lfl President Qlinton from achieying any
.
type of tingerits
·
Jrolll 24 riations, uncertainties and
the
.
worst
_
po
_
ssible way.
.
,
,
.
!egislati~e
.
victory and to
,
try
,
_.
to sho
,
.·
w
~
as
~
an
.
_da~g~
.
~
~
till
_
exist.
,
.
..
-
,
.
·
.
, .
meffect1veleader.
.
-.
..
.,
.
.
.
. . . · -
..
·
H . .
•
·
·
·
1
.
·
· ···
d t
·
onitor
't"IT'
.
,
:
,
•
•
•
-
~
-
.
,
·.
,
•
·
1 h
,
Healthcare
'
hascoineundervirtually
'
the
_.
·.,
The aJtl<Ulpoi~aresuppose
_
_
om
.
'
vve
.
re not tr_ying to ln~ite 1.ear, Or. Create a panic.
·
n t e
same set of circumstances .
..,
:
:
_
>
.
-
_
;
thetensioils am.ong its -people. But t_he
~~~;
newspaper business we hke to call it facts.
How can anyone be aga~t.the ~bd1ty
_
of
<=3:~
!orces ~e responsible for momtonng
_
,
.
•
'
.
•
. _
.
•
.
.
•
•
,
every American to be able t<? gomto/ hospital Ha1t1an pobce.
,
.
.
_
There
S
no Pulitzer Pnze for this one, and this isn t the
and pay forthe careJhat they nee~. .
.
•.
.
_
Let's hope that the ad01inistrations plans to
k .
',
d
,
f
,
.
,
1 ·k
,
d.
.
~owever, Rep~?hcans hit~e sp~nt mto
_
tbe
'
reduce the 15,000 person
:
muhinationalforce
Ill O
story one
I
es to
1g
up.
mtlhons for tel~VlSIOO advert!Selllents aga~st
-
to
a United Nations peacekeeping for~e con-
·
It's downright
d
_
isgusting
any type of_Umversal Health
_
Caire Refolrmh
;
_
·
taining6,000soldiers
,
<ioesoccursticcessfully
.
.
.
.
.
.
•
.
Why? Sunply because the on y peop e
t at
·
·
·
.
_
..•
..
•
_
.
· .·
_
_ _
It's taken a very long time to investigate into a crime that
~o not want to ~ee heal
th
carereform?~e
th
e
Ifitd
_
oesnot, Cli
_
ntonm
_
'
, _
a
.
yhav_e
_
endanger
_
ed
_
,
.
· ·
·
·· .
.
msurance agencies, so they protect therr
_
mter-
no other form of media has taken the time to look at, and
ests by lining Republicailpockets
fuH
of _re- American forces at the expense of a
.
failed
•
•
_
•
.
·
•
.
.
election money to keep any 1eform from bemg agreement.
we thought it
-
might Just be worth your while to read up on
ma<te.
·
_
Christine Wood is one of The Circle's
it
Ken Urbin
is
one of The Circle's political
political columnists.
•
columnists. .
Shame on us for being concerned.
_
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
You haven't heard anything from the Poughkeepsie
Journal. You haven't heard a peep from
WTZA.
Administration has kept quiet.
So let us ask you, the students: Do you feel vindicated?
Safer? Mad?
How about frustrated that no one will say a thing about
this crime that has gone unsolved?
Hey freshmen-do you have a clue about what we're
talking about? You better. Because rape exists on every
·
campus in America, even at Marist
·
And guess what? It could happen to you.
But ssshhhh-we don't like to talk about these things.
THE CIRCLE
66
Production Schedule fall - '94
September
September
October 6
October 13
October 27
22
29
November
November
December
December
3
10
17
l
8
THE
CIRCll,v
IE WPOINTstPTEMBER
22. 1994
7
Credits determine
parking.Why?
~itor: . . . .
.
.
·Forinstance the Commons Park-
one circlefthe place occasionally.
I
am a junior at Marist, but. ac-
ing Lot is for. commuters when Beck
What good . does that security is
c~rdingto my credits,
I
am consid-
Place would be more. convenient elsewhere, numerous things could
ered a sophomore,
sinceit is closer to the academic build-
happen in the meantime.I do not think
. Therefore when it came· time-to
ings.
I
need to remind anyone at Marist
get· a parking spot,
l
was almost at
Also, since
I
am not on a meal what happened last year due to lack
!he end of the line in terms of park-
plan,
I
am counting on my car for of security.
·
mg
lots.
.·
.
groceries.
Common sense would tell you to
I
reside at Gartland Commons
Parking at Beck Place makes put people's cars close to where they
while my car resides at Beck Place.
grocery shopping more tedious by live.
.
J
understarid that there are many · . having to
carry
bags halfway across
S_ince
I
am paying the sa!lle
cars to place and they- can not please
campus.
. amount of money as everybody else
everyone, however
I
think the whole
As
for security
I
was told that to go to this college, my car should
thing could have been thought out
there is a guard at Beck Place from
5 ·
be in the same place that I am, on-
better. ·
·
p.m. to
10
p.m.,and after that some- campus.
·
Heather Kowadla, junior
I'm
over here,
my car's there
Editor:
Having a work study position
within admissions,
I
spend hours each
day discussing how• Marist College
was a great decision for me to make
for undergraduate studies.
I
find
it
difficult, however,
complementing areas of this school
which do not, in my opinion, take the
student's needs and well-being into
consideration ..
I
am a junior who is Jacking two
============..
credits, therefore I was placed with
_SGANotes
Two more years
Editor:.
Editor:
The . Student· Government · Ass-
Attention
all
juniors: This is an
ociation would like to welcome the important year.
Class of1998 .and all returning s
.
tu-
Why? Because not only is it one
dents to the 1994 falJ semesi~K .... , y~ar~~e.for~ ~e!lior year, but we ~ave
_-
,
The SGA hopes to makel994-95 a
Jot
of'act1V1t1es·pJanned
for
the
up-
a productive and positive year. ..
coming year.
sophomore standing when it came to
the issue of pa_rking permits.
It
is ridiculous that I Jive in
Gartland Commons and must walk,
across campus, to Beck Place to park
while sophomores with only 30 cred-
its are parking all around my house.
Natural born psycho
Well it's time to go back to schoor
after another summer.
My
summer was basically the
same as last summer - it started in
June, went to August and was sort of
hot.
I
also had
a
girlfriend and
a
job.
I
realized one thing - that
I
would
never commit myself to· the same
task, day in and day out taking orders
from the same person,and not getting
paid what you should in return .
But enough about her, my job was
boring too.
.
My boss drove me crazy and I
really wanted to quit, but I know you
should never quit anything.
So I fired him as my employer.
He would not even budge on my
request for a 2 month paid vacation-
so
I
had to compromise -
I
got two
momhs off. I just didn't get paid.
Then there's the case of the girlfriend.
Not to get into particulars - let's
just say it was a really bad idea.
Let's clarify a bad idea: walking
over to pirahnna infested water think-
ing, "Maybe I'll go swimming."-a
really bad idea: "I'll go skinny-dip-
ping."
.
The story on the girlfriend is: we
had dated before - it was terrible -
she was psycho - she dumped me.
Now I come home months later
and she wants to go back out and
using reason, I logically say,
"Uhhh ... sure."
Now
if
you have a relationship
that didn't work the first time and
was painful why would you do it
again?
To me this is dumb.
I mean if you fell down a flight of
stairs, would you climb backup and
think - I'm not sure if that really hurt
maybe I should try it again? But this
time it'll be different - I'll go head
first.
So of course this relationship
didn't end on the best of terms.
If
I
were to make a political
parrallel maybe it would be Iran and
Iraq - but we don't get along quite as
ell.
· Now between firing my employer,
nd the relationship ending on a bad
note - wait - a bad note? No this
wasn't just one bad note - it was
a
bunch of bad notes, like maybe a
Madonna song.
But these experiences remind me
of something my Dad told me -
"Never burn your bridges"
Ha.
I
don't just burn my bridges - I
tear them down and break them into
little pieces - and then I take the tiny
pieces and throw the mat the people
on the other side.
To me you can't leave things like
jobs or relationships up in the air
because if you leave something up in
the air it's going to come down and
fall
on your head.
If
you're not sure if someone's
mad at you, next time you see them-
wave - but real lazily- like with one
finger - now you know they're mad.
There is no doubt, nothing to con-
template, and security like that is
comforting.
Many people struggle to get ev-
eryone to like them. Not me.
I figure if you're trying to get all
these people to have one opinion of
you, make them dislike you - it's so
much easier to do and a Jot more
fun."
What? You have 50 friends?
Ha. I've got 347 enemies you stu-
pid?$#@
! ... where you going? All
right ... 348.
Now much of this is just a joke
but many people think
I believe what
I write and that I'm crazy.
Well I'm not crazy - I've been to
so many concerts that those voices in
my head arc so dulled I can hardly
hear them.
Another thing is that many might
think my reference to my ex is sex-
ist, but
it is all in fun.
I repeat I am not sexist, but I do
have to end this column because it's
Monday night and I have to pick up
my friends to watch football at
a
top-
less bar .. .later.
Frank LaPerch is The Circle's
humor columnist.
The f~ll994 elections will be
Your class officers have been
~ept. 27 and 28 .. Polls
will
be open working hard -to make each year a
m
I>onnelly HaU from
11 a.m. to 1 · more successful one in terms of your
p.ID .. and. in. Cam1>us Center from 5. student life.-
.
·
p.m,
to 7
p.m. . .
. .
.
· · . ·
This year, your officers would iike
The parki~g'policy at Marist Col-
lege is in dire need of revision, it
should be given according to the lo-
eatOO~::::,:~d:::~ing
is
spread
I
across inner campus, when it is ap-
parent that Beck Place is closest to
the academic buildings.
Final Letters to the Editor
are due Sunday,
~e four. freshmen class officer to inspire more unity into our class.
po~ttions are open, . as well as two
If
any junior wishes to assist with
resident _senator seats ..
We
encourage ~ither 5.uggestions or being physically
all full-time undergraduates to come mvolved with these. events do not
~ut and vote.
If
you ~ave any ques-
hesitate to contact myself at '2206, or
t10ns. or concerns for the. SGA,
_aµl
your other class. officers.
us at ext. 2206.
·
·
Good luck on ·this term.
The whole point of having a car
on campus, for me, was to use it in
aid of my studies.
Now, it is in my best interest to
·
not use my car whatsoever, due to
Rebecca Kuchar
safety and convenience.
Director of Public Relations
Jennifer Nocella
.---------·-:s,:G;:;A;_:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;P;;re;;s;;id;;e;;n;;t;;C;;l;;as;;s;;o;;f;;l;;99;;6;;;;~---,:S,:co:,;t;,;,,.t Campbell, junior
Sept. 25 at 5pm.
Letters should be no more
than 600 words.
STUDENT CENTER ACTIVITIES
HOW TO REACH US:
• Mondays 11 am to 5pm
STUDENT HEALTH CLUB
(SC 149A)
FITNESS CENTER AND AEROBICS FACILITY HOURS:
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday 12pm-2am
Wednesday 11am-2am
Saturday & Sunday 1 pm • 2am
Please note that intramural aerobicS classes
wr11
be
scheduled at this
facility
during center
hours
through
the
inramural
office.
In
order to use fibless center equipmen~ students must first complete an orientation. Orien-
tations are offered every hour during fitness center hours.
If
required, coin lockers are avaHable
for
student use.
Looking for something to
do
at night? Come to the student center,
check
out one of
the
games
available from
the
activities office with your Marist ID and play in one of our many lounges.
Also available with Marist ID are movies tor late night use in the student center. Come on down
arid
check out our listings. We11 set you and your friends up with a TV
and
VCR to watch
the
movie
of your choice.
Watch for signs advertising
the
GRAND OPENINGS of the Student Center Caberet Room and
Recreation Center!
• E-Mail:
LT211, HZAL
• Phone Mail: X2429
t_JO
LETTERS AFTER 5PM ON SUNDAY
8
VISION
.
'94
cofltil'IU~S; MicJ'-iRf se still under. constrqfti~1.;
.
..\;
.·. ·
.
.-
It is the largest.and most com- .· .
'It
is·~ ~ffoit:to ~dvertise tofu.
tion.
: ... .
· .. · . ·. . · ··.. . ·
.
l<We wanted to
:
~reate a}pace
THE
·oaa.E,·si:PTEMBER
22~ 1994
by
CHRISTINE MINCHAK
plex constru
.
~tion project Marist has · ture students and show ·current stu~ ·.
. . · .• The _campus green will be ~e:
,
that 'fould serve as.a
.focal,
pomtJor ·
-
Staff Writer ·
ever taken on.. .
. . • .
_ .
.
· .
·
. dents how, much Marist is growing· .. layed until lat: fall.or early sprmg the campus,a place.~here a.]I_melll-
If
you forgot to set your alarm
clock this morning, don't worry.
Chances are the noise from -the con-
struction will get you up in plenty of
The project, which·has a budget . and changing..
.
.
.
. :
-
due to a delay ma
$200,0QO
federal bers of the college community -
of
$27
million, has been funded by
- .· ''.Probably the biggest (project)
IS1;;EA grant.
·ici· .·
e amon
students, faculty, a,nd staff--. would
the sale of construction bonll:5 through
is
.
the ccinstruction of
th~
new Stu-
. i;11e. _ne~ bm mgs
r
terms oi be dr~wn to inter!ct and enjo->: each
the New York State Dormitory-Au-
dentCenter, the ne\V residence hall,
the eSt m
.1
e country
':u
1
t'
·
others company. Murray said.
time for class.
thority as well
_
as funds from tuition,
the. campus green, and the renova-
r1dem des~g~ an~
:r~ce
s ~';
0
~~~~
The new Student Center includes
fees, an_d the_ release of Canterbury,
tion of_ th~ old Campu_s Ce~ter," D!. ·.
t . ar exec~ ; fipic .
~r •·
an
art
gallery, multimedia presenfa-
y
h
'gh
the off-campus apartment complex
Mark ~ulhvan, Executive Vice Presi-
campuses, . u ~van sa · · "
tion rooms, multimedia classrooms,
.
es,.t at's n t. Vision ' 94 is _ which has housed Marist students in
dent of.Marist College, said.
Th: Mid-Rise has ~ulfilled the a student- cafe, a
recr.
~ation room,
still going on at Marist.
the past . ..
.
.
The construction of the n
.. ew expectations of the Manst commu- -
al tud ·
1
1 . .. -
d .
. ,
Vision '94 is the major construe-
Visi~~- '9. 4 encompas. ses all. that
building sho. · uld be comple. ted.
by
the · nity in terms of creating functional sev~r d
1
:t ·
oungh~; :~ Tole\
·
·
·
ha.sheen ·.do· neat Mari·st m·
-
the past
end of th·e month
·
·w·1th a fiew·m,·.nor
space for studentlife on campus.
pthran e •
00
1
ore,thw itch · isldab oks
hon proJect currently· gomg on at
·
..
,
.
1
d ·
1
th-M . t
ee times arger an. e o
oo -
Marist.
two years.
adjustments
to
make after comple-
· n a memoran um
O
e
ans
· ·
·
·•
College community President Den-
store.·
. • · • .
- , .
nis Murray summarized the theory
"Wedi$'tjustbuildanewbuild-
behind the design of the new Student ing, .we reconfigured· the face of the
Center.
entire campus," Murray said.
6 Delafield Street, Poughkeepsie
ff
RE
_contJnuldfrompag13_
473
2510
Mike Pappagallo, a junior advertise
r--,T"=e'I. "9~1"4;;-) ~4,.'.62..--4-=-54-:-:5=---------F-ax-#-
4
-
5
-
2
-_
2
-
4
-
1
-
7
- -
ing major, said he and some of his
462-4546
:,.....
friends were driving down the hill to-
..--.J
WE SPECIALIZE . IN
PRECISION HAIR CUTS
ward the lower Townhouses when se- ·
CA
pp
u, (
I N
o
curity told them there was a fire and
that they couldn't go down
to
the
Riverview Parking Lot.
8 .
Y ·
C
O
P P
O L
A- • S
Men's $11_.00 (reg .. $13.00)
and Women's $14.00 (reg. $16.00)
They waited about
10-20
minutes
before security started Jetting cars go
/TA l I AN· AMEN I (AN BIS TN O
_
down there again.
Owned and Operated
by
568
South
Rd.
A meeting between Security and
"The Coppola Family''
Poughkeep· sie, NY .
12601
College Activities is to. take place so
that .the cause of the problem can be
Your Hosts John Coppola & Vincent Coppola
determined and future accidents can
be prevented.
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'GALL
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Football
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en
■
THE CIRCLE,
SEPIEMBER 22,
t 994
.
·
Sttictent11etiti0Ilf Orces charige Of hours
in
caf es
.
'
•.
•
·,
,.
.
.
.
,
, '
..
.
.
'
; . , ·
.
'
.
.
.
'
·
·
·
·
,
,
.
Sodexho
is
trying.to
.
please asinany
By
__
CHRISTIN_E )VOOD
·
p~ople
·
as possible_.but
.'.'it
•
isjust not
.-.
:
.. .
Stp.ff Writer
.
economically feasible to keep all
.
four;
·
_
-
•·.
_
·
1
;
·
·
•
•
,.
,
,
·
.-_
.
·
·
,
. ,
.. _
·
,
.
,
·
·
_
.,·
.
·
dining
.
operations .open all day,"
t\
_
p~t1t!on cre
_
a!ed
b}'.
Man~t. stu- Binotto said.
__
.
_
. . .
.
·
.
de~t~
,
an4
.
f!iculty
.
~.i~
__
changed t
_
he
.
.'
The' second· concern addressed in
·
De>
_
nilelJy C~_fe
:
a.~~ Dyso~
_
~afo hoii~ .
.
the
-
petition was
·
the increase in
,
~t~r ~evi
.
~wmg th_e petition s~11t
to foodprices/
.
.
..-
_
.
.
them l~s.t ~ndaj\ va~wus
·
members of
•
.
-·
•
-
isome
items have increased
_·
in
the a~~l~J~tra11or opted
:
to h
_
~Ip calm
:
price,'! Binotto said.
;,
!'But, what the
'
.
the frustt3:ho11s o.fall_concerned
: : ·
·
customers are not aware of is that
in
_
C'We_ are
_
tryiil*
!<>
"!~ke_ tliings
"
as the past they were not charged
:
for tax.
con\'~!}!ent
?S
pass1ble, • said Ger~td This year they are/1
.
.
;.
.
.
..
,
Cox, v\ce:pre~!~ent of stu_dent affa_ir_~,
_ .
LasLyear Sodexho was charged
after mee_tmg with N.1thony C~mpiln;' $37,000.i_n tax. Although Maristis tax
.
v1ce-pres1~ent ~fb_usiness affaus, and exempt, Sodexho is:not. .,..
-
,
'.,
;
,
:
Joseph Bmotto;duector ,of-Sodexho
.
!'If
customers looked· at the food
Din~rig S
7
rvices on ~onday
'.
to ~!scuss itent by, item,
.
theyw~uld reaiize that
the 1ssues
:·
~~d~:ss~d
111
the _pettt10~'.
.
the increases are not that large,'' Binotto
The
·
petition
-
reflected complaints said
/
.
.
·
.
~
-
·
.
.
·.
·.
·
.
:
.
:
·
about the new coffee shophours which
·
"We did a Jot of market research
'
.
.
are sc~eduled to
ta!<~
effect o~ 5.ept.26, before pricing the food," Binotto added
;
_
··
"".hen th~ Ca~aret, th~ ne'Y d1nmg ser- "Our prices are comparable to the food
.
vice, opens 1n the M1d-R1se~
:
:
::,rices cin Route
9."
'
.
.
,
The
-
~afes,_ which were inte~ded ~o · Though the petition may seei:n dis-
:
close fr?,m
.
1.30 p.m .
.
to
5
p.m.,will couragirig for Sodexho,. the expansion
now
.
be clo_sed from
2 p.m .. to 5 p.m.
_
of the dining se,;vices is not a total
·
In
-
p~ev1ous
·
years, the cafes wei:e disappointment.
·
9
.
· openf~om 7:30 ~.m. to &:15 p.m.Th1s
·
·
"I like
it
I think there is a good
year, the cafes wtll be open 7:30 a.m. variety of food," sophomoreCourtney
·
•
Newly constructed dining hall attracts students to new St~ent
Center.
Circle
photo/
Kathy Link
to
2
p.m. and from5p.m. to 8:15 p.m. Blair said.
_ _
d
_
f
f
-
"The coJlege's mission is to estab-
Blair
compared Sodexho to dining an T1 trRry._d
-
o- .
H
n·
-
lish t~
_
e student c~nter as afoc~l point seivices at college's herfriends attend.
:
.
.
e es1 ent
inmg a
.
1s open
w~ere students will be able to interact
~•My friends don't seem to like theirs
•
Monday thro~gh Thursday' 7 a
.
m. to7
w~t~ other students; faculty, and ad- (cafe) as much as I like ours here."
p.m., and Fnday 7 a.m. to 6 p
.
m
.
SPRING BREAK '95
mm1strators,"
-
Bin?tto said_.
,
·
The Cafeteria has expanded to a Brunch hours o~ Saturday and Sunday
SELL TRIPS,
,
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StudentTravel Services is
DOV{
hiring campus
representatives
.
Lowest rates to Jamaica,
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·
The Cabaret will contain two fran- t
t
f
.
d'
.
_
de
_
s
_
·grted to sat are 11 a.m.
_
to 1.30 p.m. and weekend
chises Nathan's F
_
amous arid Baguett
_
e .efn-s a
11
1
t
0
':1
_
mmfgt artea
·
1
•
·
and dinner hours are 4:30p.m.
·
to
6
• .
.
.
.
1s
y
a
.
ypes o as es.
·
Expressions, as well as Manst p12Za,
-: ·
"Vegan
,,
Flavor" and "Especially p
.
m.
_
.
•
health snacks, desserts, and hot and For You" are the two new stations
A~yone with further co_n~erns or
co
_
l
_
d bever
_
ages
_
,.·
h' h
.d
·
1 •
d"shes pasta questions about the new dming ser-
.
w 1c prov1 evege anan 1
,
, •
T
h B
'
It will be
_
open Monday through
vices can contact . ose
motto.
Friday,
9
a.m
.
to midnight and Satur-
day and Sunday 11 a.m. to midnight.
Call 1-800-648-4849
"It
is
_
a. good idea to have a new
dining area where faculty, staff, and
stud_ents can intermingle," said Joan
Nies, secretary of Maris! Institute of
Public Opinion. "Unfortunately, it's
just not accommodating for the faculty
and staff when the coffee shops close
and when some people only have a
15
SPitlNG
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95
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,..
-
I
,..
I
•
,,.
■
,
►
-
I
-
-
■
I
•
_
_
September 22, 1994
is The One Year
ANNIVERSARY
-
-
PARTY
ofttte
.25 CENT DRAFTS
Ltntil
1 OPM
,,.
•
.75 CENT DRAFTS
until Close
.50 CENT JELLO
SHOTS
all Night
,
►
■
efi
..!.
,\.
,
.
I
10
r----------------------~--------------~~-,
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
,
.
I
I
I
I .
I
I
I
I
I
I
. I
I
I
HOW TO SAVE A FEW BUCKS. ·•·
(YOU CAN'T LIVE OFF PSYCH EXPERIMENTS ALONE.)
·
~
· B'uy
pizza at closing time. '. · · _· · · ·
Haggle for slices they'd otherwise just throw ~way.
Eat Ramen noodles.
Make friends with a Senior.·
Come
June,
they'll be more
thari
glad to give'you
their old Poly Sci books
and
couches.
Donate blood.
.
.
'
.
'
'
.
.
Save a life
anc\get a
free
\Linch
to"
boot.
\:
Pick up a Citibank Classic card.
There's no annugl fee.
I
i
I.
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
:
._.,_,,
....
I .
I
I
I
I
I
,
I '
I
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I
I
I
~-------------~--------------------------~
---
THE CIRCLE,
SEPTEMBER 22, 1994
11
Offen~e
Sputters
.
.
as hooters
fall
to Mountain_eers
·
·
·
·
·
.'
.
·
. .
·
·
"We're
averaging _six or seven
by-TERI L. STEWART
.
-·-""''''"
":i,.fyH,-+
•"~'"'"'"'t1-·
shots a game, which is not nearly
.•
, ·
:,:
·
'.
·
'
:'
Staff Writer
·
·
enough," Goldman said. "When we
:
· · ·
·
do shoot, we're not always testing
.
:
.
A
mirror
·
iinage of last season
'
is
.
the keeper."
beginning to
.
surface for the men'
.
s
Goldman said that there have also
soccer teani;
...
.
..·
.
, .
.
been inconsistencies with the defense.
·
~ter finishing the 1993 season
•·
"We've
done some very good
4"12-2
overall;
0-7~1
in the
:
North·
things, and some people have done
east Conference, things have not fared
.
some very silly ihings, (in terms of
well for Head
,
Coach
·
Howard
controlling the ball)," Goldman said.
Goldman's team this fall.
"Sometimes there arc lapses, and
·
Marist saw its losing streak in-
when lapses occur, dangerous things
crease to five games as the Red Foxes
happen."
were blanked by Mt. St. Mary's
Goldman also .said that he has
(Md.), 3-0, at Leonidoff Field on
been sa1isficd with the play from
Sunday afternoon.
.
sophomore sweeper Jud McMullen,
The loss marked the third time
junior mid-fielder Garret Golisano,
Maris! has been shutottt this season.
and senior back Harold Laird .
..
Marist dropped to 0-5 overall; 0-3 in
The Red Foxes have not scored a
the NEC.
.
·
·
.
.
goal since losing
10
Robert Morris,
The Mountaineers had 13 shots
·
3-1, on Scpi. 11.
on goal; compared to Marist's nine
"If
you don't put the ball in the
for
•
the game
,
.
general direction of the goal, nothing
Goldman, who is now in his 32nd
is going to happen," Goldman said.
season as head coach, said his team
Despite offensive difficulty,
hit some glitches.
Goldman said he plans on working
"We made two or three mistakes
his team in the same usual style.
and it
.
cost us," he said.
"When things aren't going well,
Last Wednesday, Marist hosted
you tend to lose confidence and let
NEC foe
.
Fairleigh Dickinson Uni-
down," he said. "They have to be-
versity. The Red Foxes were stopped,
lieve that they can."
4-0.
Goldman
said
he continues to have
The Red Fox offense was basi-
confidence in his players .
.
cally non-existent as Marist collected
·
"I have no doubt that we can fin-
just two shots on goal.
Senior Jim Ulbrich (22) looks
to
dodge dtfl~r
81
Gary O'Brien (23) looks on. The Red Foxes fell to
ish strongly, but it has to be done
Edmonds started the game in goal
Mt St.
_
Mary's
3-0.
between the lines by the players," he
and was quickly removed because of
C1,e1e
photo/ Kathy link
said.
a bruised foot.
sure, but that was due more to frus-
freshman Brian Edmonds since the
of offense.
Two seasons ago, the Red Foxes
Five penalties, four yellow cards
tration," he said.
beginning of the season, has recorded
In five games, Marist opponents
stunned nalionally-ranked St. John's
and one red card were handed out
Goldman said he does not place
37
saves in five games.
·
have scored 14 goals; while the Red
University, while finishing eighlh in
against Marist.
·
his team's slump on any one player;
"Aaron is a leader, a hard worker
Foxes have only been able to muster
New York State rankings.
Goldman said his team was not
especially not on his goaltenders.
and has a good work
ethic,"
Goldman
three tallies.
Yesterday
,
Marist hosted St.
completely focused.
Senior Aaron Lefkowski, who has
said. "He is doing his job."
In those five
contests,
Marist only
John's yesterday. Results were not
"We lost a little bit of our compo-
been sharing the goalie duties with
The glaring weakness for the Red
has put 39 shots on goal.
available at press lime
.
·
Intramurals
-
Softball games began yesterday
afternoon at the North Fields.Results
were not available at press time:
.
Currently, there are 15
.
teams par-
ticipating in the program.
.
.
There is also an
·
aerobics training
camp
.
in session for .those who are
interested in becoming an instructor .
.
The session began on Monday and
win go through Monday, Sept. 26.
Classes will start on Wednesday,
Sept. 28.
Sign-up sheets for volleyball and
basketball are due in the Intramural
Office by Monday, Oct. 10.
Figure skating will be held on
Mondays and Fridays from 11 a.m.
tol p.m., and transportation will be
provided.
The instructor will be Dr. Billy
Ng. The total cost is $5, which in-
eludes entrance fee and skate rental.
Aqua aerobics will occur on Mon-
days
·
and Wednesdays from 9:30 to
10:30 p.rn. Aqua aerobics will begin
Monday, Sept. 26.
For more infonna1ion on these
activities, please call the Intramural
Office at extension 2584.
Foxes this season has been the lack
"We're
a
much better team,"
by
ANDREW HOLMLUND
Johnston also said. "lt was hard (to
Sports Editor
win) because of the level of play.
We just barely did it."
The women's volleyball team
Last
Wednesday, the Red Foxes
pushed its winning slreak to three traveled to Hartford, Conn., to do
games
last Satur.day
'.
by knocking
off
b_!lttle with
.
the
University
of Hart-
.
Fordham University
;
3-2;
in
'
New ford.
·
York City.
Marist was able to stave off a
After dropping the first Syt
_
which two
0
sets-to-one disadvantage by de-
went down to the wire, 14-16, the feating Hartford, 15
-
5, 4-15
,
9-15,
Red Foxes took three of the next four
15-4,
and 15-13.
s
_
ets by scores Clf 15,9, 17-15, 9-15,
Johnston said the match was an
and 15-13.
important win because Hartford was
.
The Red Foxes now stand at 3-4 a formidable foe.
overall this season.
"Caliber-wise, Hartford is better
.
Marist also faced Holy Cross in · than any team in
.
·
our conference,"
the tri-match. This match, like the Johnston
said.
·
swept by Marist, 15-4, l5-4, and l 7-
15.
It
was
all
down hill from there for
Marist as the Red Foxes were
knocked out by CCU, Siena, and
UVM.
The Red Foxes
lost to
the Blue
Devils, 1-15, 15-10, 1-15, and 3-15,
and 1hcn were blown away by the
Saints, 3-15
,
6-15, 0-15
.
Marist dropped its fourth straight
match when they losl 10 Vermont,
6-
15, 13-15,
and
5-15.
This year, Johnslon brings back
two seniors, six sophomores and three
freshmen
.
Senior co-captain Cindy Malo
said she
sees
a lot of plus signs for a
program that finished with a medi~-
cre 13-16 mark last year.
one against Fordham, wentlhe dis-
On Sept. 9 and 10, the Red Foxes
lance as the Red Foxes came away were once again on the road as they
victorious with a 15-3, 15
-
12, 12-15,
.opened
.
up their 1994 campaign at
14°16, and 17-15 result
.
the Yale Invitational in New Haven,
Head Coach Sally Johnston, who Conn.
"We have a really young team
_
is returning for her third
season,
said
Marist's weekend featured
~ight now," Malo
sa
id
.
'.
'
Fro~ what
her club jusl go
.
rby in the matches matches against host Yale Univcr-
•_can
sec;
the progr~m Itself ts get-
because of a contrast in playing styles. sity, Central Connecticut State Univer- tmg much stronger.'
·
"Unfortunately. Fordham and sity,
·
Siena College
and
the Univer-
Marist played Fairfield Univc·rsity
Holy Cross (weren't) up to our cali-
sity of Vermont.
·
on Tuesday.
Results were not
ber of play," she
_said
_
. "
We played
Yale used its home-court advan-
available
at
press time.
,~·::u~st:::w:::e~l~l !e~no~u~~=~===:::::==~~~~~~ll~e~st~as~th!;!!e~B~u~l~ld~o~s=========:::::::::::::::=====;
____________
::
_________ _
122:lMatist
EWl1ball
·
RAI.
~
OfPQHENT DNE,aESULT
Sat Sept 10
Cenlral
Conn.
l.,24-22
Sat. Sept. 17
Iona
w,
37-19
Sat Sept24
at Wagner
.1:30 p
.
m.
Sat
Oct
1
St.John's
12p
.
rn.
Sal
Ocl8
atStPetMs
7p
.
m.
Sal
Oct 15
at
Duquesne
1:30 p.m.
Sat. Oct22
Canisius
12p
.
m.
sat.
Ocl29
at
Georgetown
1:30 p.m.
Sat.
Nov.5
St Francis
(Pa) 1 p
.
m.
Sat
Nov. 22
at Siena
.
1 p
.
m
.
THE TOW TRUCKS
ARE COMING
As Of 12:01 A.M.
Monday
September 26, 19941
All vehicles which are parked on campus
in
lots other than their assigned lot,
will be towed
away
at the
owner's expense.
......:
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·
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ion~ i-o~n~~d<i~t
:
its sc6nrigw1ten
·
Proudian rushed the ball in from four
yards outto mak:e it 30-19.
:
fona's
attempt' for
a
:
two-point conversion
failed.
·. >-
.
?
.:-:-
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Wneii~as
atte01p
i
i
~
g
t6
prog-
.
rµn bJ"Brian McCq\lrt.
,
.
_ .
.
nosticate
:
the
.
forecist
'
ofthe
•
~aiisf
·
,
.
.
Freshman
•
Jovan Rhodes
:
and
.
se-
.
fooib~
team; I hoiiestlfdid nofiiw.tlc
nior Matt
:
McDonhld
.
are
fHling
:
tlie
.
they
would far.e
1
too welJ
>
< ..
•
.
>
.
voids left
:
by
:
oiAiuto
.
and
former
·
·
After finishing its 1993 s~hed~le
tailliackJulian Wyse
;
·...
.
. .
·.
.
.
·:
with
a
.SOQ
mark (5-5), the Red Fox~
...
The offensive
.
line
;
•·
which is
led
·
·.
·
were losing a hosfof players t~ gradu-
·
>
by
senior
_
Rex
.
Dixon
:
apd
•
junior Jini
·.
:O:
ation;· irtcludirig· the franchise's all:
·
Coughlin; has done a solid job pro-
.
,
.
time leading rusher; Don D' Aiuto.
. tecting Ford
_
and Delponte when they
. _
·
.
However, after Jwo
:
gani~,
.
the
are 'in the pocket.
.
.
. . .
--:-°
1994 edition
of
Red
·
Foxes .is
·
not
LfflINK
:
that
.
Para:dy and his
.<
anything°f h11d expected.
.
_
._
coaching staff are going to have to
-':·
. ,
.
Currently, the team is 1-1 and is
·
make a decision on who their num-
·. ·
'.
.
·
.
coining
off a win against Iona Col~
.
·
ber-one quarterpae;k i~ going
to
·
be.
.
·
:
lege, 37-19,
.
_/
.
.
.
According to Parady, both play-
.
.
·
,
.
,
Surprisingly, Marist could have
·
·
ers have been supportive and have
.
been 2-0 if they
.
had
-
been able to
encouraged one another .
.
·
.
·
'
·
hold off Central Connecticut State's
However, there will
be
upcoming
final drive in their season opener two
games where Marist win be fighting
weeks ago.
to
·
survive down the
·
stretch.
Head Coach Jim Parady seems to
I
think Ford and Delponte ought
be
.
pretty . content with his team's
to know who the
coaching staff
will
performance thus far.
,
_
·
choose to run the offense in these
The third-year head coach
is
·
in
situations.
'
·
·
the process of rebuilding on the of-
Week 1 against the Blue Devils is
fensive line and at the quarterback
a perfect example.
and running back positions
.
.
Parady used
-
Ford during crunch
ltight now, junior Pete Ford and
time when Marist was trailing, 18-
.
.
senior Bob Delponte are platooning · 15. Ford scored on
a
4-yard run to
at quanerba~k, which
was
previously
give the Red Foxes a 22-18 advan-
· ·
hY: GREG BIBB
Staff.Writer
:
.
The women's ·and men's
·
cross
country teams finished in seventh and
14th
·
place last Saturday at the
,;
·
Fordham Invitational in
·
Van
Cortland
;
N.Y.
,'
·
Junior quarterback Peter
Ford
drops back
to
pau
I!" a recent
game. Marfst stunMd
·
rIvaI Iona, 37-19,
·
on Saturday~
.
.
.
.
.
C1rc1e
photo.'
Kalhy
link
·
·
Sophomore Kathleen-Woodson
paced the
:
.
way for
.
th~ Red F()x~s by
·
completing the J.l~mde
.
course
m
20
.
minutes, 40 seconds; \Vhile fifth~year
senior
.
David Swift led the men's team
.
by running the five-mile course
in
·
26:30.
·
>
Swift finished.eighth out of300
runners, and Woodson came in 25th
out of 163 competitors.
Swift's time was the besr result
by
•
a
.
Marist-runner in
_
eig~t years.
·
Women's Head Coach Phil Kel!y
·
_
said he was pleased with Woodson's
effort.
"Kathleen
.
ran
·
her
,
usual-a very
steady and consistent race," Kelly
said.
·
Men's Head Coach Pete Colaizzo
said he is enjoying having Swift back
on. the
·
.
team this
Fall.
Swift was a
redshirt during the 1993 cross coun-
try season.
.
"Dave
·
could run on any team in
the country right now," Colaizzo said.
"I'mjilst glad he is running for us."
The women also
.
had solid perfor-
mance
.
~ from sophomore Karen
Mangan and junior Alexis Bequary.
Kelly said Mangan and Bequary
have been solid contributors to the
team thus far this season.
.
.
. ....
"Karen and Alexis l;>oth ran
.
very
·
good races for us," Kelly said
.
·
Senior Patsy Schneider; who is
returning to the cross country circuit
for her second consecutive season,
·
also had a solid outing at the Fordham
Invitational:
·
·
·
.
·
Schneider posted
·
a
personal best
time of just over three minutes .
. .
•
_
Kelly said
.
he
-
was pleased
'
with
the women's overall performance in
NewYork .
.
. .
·.
.
. . .
.
•
•·
··
"\Ve ran against very good teams
.
while
·
:
beating the schools we
·
were
supposed to beat," Kelly said .
..
·
..
Also in men's acticm, senior Andy
Baird legged out ·a time of 28:57
.
.
Golaizzo said he was pleased with
Baird's
effort
:
Baird returned
·
to the
.
.
R
_
ed Foxes
:
this season still r~cuper
,
at-
_
ing fiom
,
a fcioUnjury.
.
::.
"Andy ran a good race
·
consider-
·
'
inghis lack of training this summer,"
.
he said.
.
Despite the_ result, CoJaizzo
.
said
.
his team went.up against formidable
--888
XCOUN
page
11
quarterback
·
1994
season. '
.
.
_
·
It
-
was
:
a
.
cryirig
.
sha1t1e·
.
to learn
·
·
that there wouldn't be any post-sea-
·
son play
.
for the first time in 90 years
.
Baseball was even played through
two World
Wars,
but the selfish own-
ers and greedy players could not come
- - - - - - - to a resolution.
· ·
The
game
·
is
in
trouble. It is in
jeopardy of heading towards
"America's former pastime."
•
_
·
.
'
·
Andrew Holmlund
·
It's right here
tage.
.
.
.
.
.
•
·
Obviously, Ford
was
used in that
key situation, but who
.
will be used
the next time?
·
Will Marist go with Ford ~gain or
give Delponte
a
shot?
·
Right now, it's too early for me to
tell how .Parady is going to handle
his quarterba~ks. It's also
too
soon
for me
to figure out where this Marist
team is headed.
They are playing well as of late,
but they still have a long road ahead.
Stay tuned.
LAST
WEDNESDAY, on the
34th day of the Major League Base-
ball strike, Acting Commissioner Bud
Selig cancelled the remainder of the
This was
.
the
best
season
I
have
seen in a: long time. So many records
-
could have
.
been shattered, but the
only thing shattered now is millions
·
or hearts
;
I
.
WONDER HOW MUCH
LONGER we
will
have to hear about
OJ
,
Simpson and
his
saga to build
up a defense scheme to clear himself
from the murder charges of ex-wife
Nicole
Brown and Ronald
Goldman.
Just like many other millions of
Americans, I watched in disarray as
the events unfolded on that shocking
June night.
.
I
couldn't believe "The Juice" was
having a nervous breakdown-hold-
ing a pistol to his head.
The trial was supposed to have
begun on Monday; however, it bas
been delayed .
.
If
is now Sept
:
22, and the case
against O.J; stil
.
l lingers on
,
·
It is time for America's judicial
system
·
to be put to probably its big-
gest test ever to find out whether OJ.
is innocent or not .
As
·
of now, the Hall of Farner is
innocent of all charges, but it will be
interesting to see
·
how the jury will
weigh out the case and come up with
a verdict
.
·
.
CONGRATULATIONS to the
1994 Stanley Cup Champions, the
New York Rangers. Boy, did that
ever feel good to write.
After
54
painstaking years of at-
tempting to capture Lord Stanley's
Cup, the "Broadway Blues" finally
conquered their quest with hard work
and detennination night in and night
out.
Andrew Hoimlund
is The
Circle Sports Editor.
45.1.1
45.1.2
45.1.3
45.1.4
45.1.5
45.1.6
45.1.7
45.1.8
45.1.9
45.1.10
45.1.11
45.1.12