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Part of The Circle: Vol. 45 No. 4 - October 13, 1994

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Volume
.
45,
Number4
MaristCollege;
_
Poughkeepsie,
·
N.
Y.
·
October 13, 1994
Stlld.ents,·staifftefu~111P~r

cafeteria worker
-
·· ·
.
·
· •
·
·
-
.
I>eter Haight, a JUntor,
.
re111em-
by DAWN
·
MARTIN
Assistant Editor
ceived
a
police badge and a pair of
·
bered

how
·
she
·
would talk
to
him
hendcuffs
;

·
.
·
.
·
.
.
.
·
_
.
. ·.
·
while he
·
was on line in the cafete-
.
..
...
.
··
. .
. .
"She loved everybody, but_,she ria.
Members of the Marist College
.
wouldn't let them get away with
"When the meal-line was
·
short,
community joined together yesterday
anything,"
_
Pacheco said.
"c


·
. . .
.
.
she ·would often ask me how l was
to say a final farewell to a long-time
.
Anne Rifenburg
,-
who has worked doing,
11
Hafght said, ushe alwayi re-
member of the dining facilities staff
at the Marist dining facilities for membered how I
-
was, and the next
.
-
.
Magdalena
.
B. Sadowski,
.,
the
.
almost 12 years, said sheJhoughtit tfrne she
.
saw me;she would ask
if
I
cafeteria's I.D. checker for
11
years,
.
was
,
impottant
for
the dining facili
0
had solved
_
my big
.
crisis
.
.
·
...
died on Friday at Yale-New Haven
tie~ to close yesterday morning for
"M
·
·
Hospital due to complications dur-
the funeral;but also said Sadowski
· ··
· arge a
nd
1
have known each
ing heart surgery, co-worker Diane
would have worried about the stu-
other since my freshman year,' and I
Benjamin said.
_
dents.
·
·
_ ·
,
~
-
wiU always miss her,"Haight said,
·
Sadows
··
ki'
.
s co-worke""
.
·_
calle
·
d
"M
·
Id h
be
h
fl
_·.
Senior Andrea Murphy said she
..,
.
. _
arg1e wou
ave
en t e ust
her Margie, buLst
_
udents simply
person to say
-
·
_
'youcan'tdo that tci
i.e::ili~~~ed
_
_
~adowski as being like
.
knew her as Marge.
.
.
the kids'," Rifenburg said. "She
.
was
'
.
'She
·.·
w
.
·
ouid always te
.
ll me to.
Jo
.
e
.
Binotto, director of·dining extre
·
me· ly con
·
cemed
·
about
·
the
·
stu
·
den
·
ts
.

.
·
"
.
.
·
-
wear warmer clothes when it was
services, said · Sadowski

was affec
.;;
·.
tionately called "the police" by her
Sadowski is rememberedfondly
~~f~:
or ~
9
put a jacket on," Murphy
colleagues
;
.
.
.
.
not only by
:
her co-workers, but also
·
M
_
u
_
rphy
·
·
.
_
is not the only
_
one
_
wh
_
o
_
"She always gave (the students)
by the students.
a hassle,
.
but always with a smile,''
C
_
urt Schm
_
idt, a
_
senior, remein-
.
rem~mbers
.
Marge in that type of
B'
'd ·
·
manner.
motto sa1 .
.
,
. ·
.
.
.

bered encounters with Sadowski
"I loved M
. _
argie_. She
.
w~
like m_ y
..
"W~
_
used to give Margie a gag
·
during his freshman year
·
·
. · ·
.
.
·
.
·
second mother
.
,"
.
Shirley O'Hagan,
gift
.
every Christm
_
as,"
J
ea
_
nirie
"Even though my
I D
card would
·
·
· ·
·
·
·
· ·
· -
·
·
·
se
_
cretary of din
__
ing
·
services, sa1'd.
Pacheco, aco~worker of Sadowski's,
·
.
never sea
·
she
·
· ·
Id
·
1
·
h
.
.
.
n,
.
wou
.
a ways ave
"I was alw
_
ays
.
amazed by how
said.
·
a
smile on
.
her face
_
as she typed my
·
·
.
Pacheco said among those gifts code into the computer,'' Schmidt
she kriew so many students by their
from her co-workeIB., Sadowski re-
said.
first names, and by how many stu-
dents wenqo her for advi
_
ce," Presi-
.
"
. '
:-Plih11m
t
;
..
===
~nl~~Flel(Jls
_
~,P
.
~iyJhe~lghtfortlte
tiomecomlhg
.
f~otball
game
on
Alµrnnl
weekend
;
·}towever,dU!9
.
to
~ed~l(ngcor!f!lc~thtfootball18amp!ay
,
eda~ayla~t~"~ll(t
:
·
.
.
·:
:
,
,-
·
:-.-
.
.
;
~ e ~ l ~ ~ U , k
Mari:1e Sadowski,
a
cafeteria worker for 11 years, died
.
on Friday •
Most students will remember Sadowski as the kind lady who scanned
meal cards each
day.
Cilcle Rle
PIIOIO
dent Dennis
J.
Murray said
_
.
.
Calling hours were held on Tues-
day at Sweet's Funeral Home, arid a
Christian burial service was
··
held
yesterday at St. Peter's Church.

There
will
be a memorial service
for Sadowski on campus on Thu Oct.
27, at 7 p.m., in the Chapel.
Students
.
intrigued
by
:.\:
liomiciae
...
..
conference
:
.
. .
. .
.- . .

. .:,,;
·
::
.
,.
~
"
'
:•
,
.

..
·c ·:
~
-
-
: '

' , . , •
.
• •
.•
.
.
. .
•. ·_.
.
·
.

.
.
.

:\;:<\;
by
.
SUSANNE
r
YANUSZ
·
: ,
.
,:
·
·
an-
H~O
specia(d
_
evoted to big
·
cases
-
-
-
-

~:'
:
~
~
:
:_<
\
?'.?:"
si~tt
·
wri
t
e
f
:
:
~:
-
i
:,,
;::>
~~
;:
··.
-~;i
i
~
;
XiJi;;e:;~
,
;~~~
-
,
~
-
;ci
~l~
tioke
·
on
·
¥aristCollege
.
\Vas ove,rnl~
:
with
·
·
detemiining the ti01e of a person's
··
homicide inve~tigators,
.
forensic
.
pa• death, and
_•
afao drug-related deaths.
thologists and
_
prosecuters recently.
.
.
Alt~ough ~ome people
.
feel
_ • ,
·
Last Th!Jrsday
.
and Frid~y, the
Badens s work 1s gruesome, he does
}.farist.College Criminal Justice
.
De
~
not, agree
.
.
..

.
.
_
·
__
.
partment arid the City of Potighkeep
~
,.
.
'There 1s ,?othmg g~es~nte, abo~t
-
si~ Police Department presented a
.
.
a
d_ead bo~y,
,
Baden said.
~y P!lm
homicide investigation seminar.
.
.
. ·
or suffenng
:
that you 're
.
.
thmkmg
11te seininarw~ first offerc;d by
.
a~out oc~um:d before the person
*e,
-
Pougltkeepsie Police Department
:
dies. My Job
.
1s
.
to see
w~~~
we can
and the Distikt Attorney's office in
learn from ~he dead body
.
~1JprJfat~t
fiiid
lle\V
(.)€lffl.Plls
.1Pok
a
treat during .Alumiil
Weekelld
·
1986; butcriever surfaced.
·
·
..
Another person who spoke at the
•.
.
.
Numerous people
·
from police
.
seminar
'
was Dr. L?well Levi~e who
departments and
:
district attorriey
:
s
.
gave a ~alk ~bout bite n_iark ey1dence.
offices through011t the country were

·
I;evm~
.
1
_
s the co~dnector of Po-
invited to attend the seminar.
,
·
rens1c
.
Sciences for the
.
New York
:
:
·
• · )
It
.
ran fo,r
·
two fuil days and was
-
-
·
State. fpli~ and w~rked with
.
MIA
offered a,s
··
a voluntary course
·
for
remams from the V1etnan_i
War.
people, who work
.
in the ~riniinal
.
Barllara Wolf, the d1~ector
o(
.
Paur Beckerle, clas~ of.-19~4
~
.
by
··..
-
-
.
·

...

.
_
SOLF
·
from
-
Pearl
.
River,
.
N.Y.; s
.
aid h
.
e
·
·.
·
StaffWriter
: ·
··
· ·
·
·
·
·
f
h
.
h
.
·
·
they've do11e and 1tow they've done
. it."
.
.
.
.
' ..

missed not being
a
part o t
_
e c ang~
.
Man
_
;
~
t~
_
Jriirii
_
w
_,_
'
_
e
_
_'re
·
~
·
p
-
r

ess
_·_
·.
e
_._
d
__
b
_
y
..
_

ingJace
of
0
Marist:as well.
'
;
:>
·
:_
:.
:··
:I>owcf~greed
\Vlth
his ~lassmate.
the inlprovements on the
C?IDPUS
at
:.>.
~r~
·
jeJ6us,
;
~
_:
h
t
:
s
.
aid.
\ f
~ish
••
·
r:
;'
,
;
i
~~
:
iyre~o~ri~e~~e
:
ca~~~~
:
..
.
Hom~ming 1994,
·
<
·
·
w
· .
e

ha_
·
d•

. 1·.t
_
.
th1·
.
s
-.
·
-
n
·
1·c
·
.
e.
·
·_
'
_
:
__
_
Th
... e
·
re
·.
·,.
·
ar
·.·
·
·
e
·
·,
..
s
·
o
·· ·
h
.
· ·
"d
"I
.
· ·
··
·
·

·
·
···
d I
think
.
· e sa1 ·

am very impresse ,
_
_

l~eactforis
of
am~ement · were
many
·
changes; this is: great:yn1 glad
·
·. that over
·
the • last
10
years,
·
there
wides

p

read
_
•-
_
t
_
_
h
_
r
_
oun'-out
·
the
_
_
-
.
c
_
_
l
_
asses
_
my Marist
.
Fund money is going to
·
•·
;

·
·
:'
.
·.
·
·_.
·
6''
·
-
something good
.'
'
.
··
·
·
·
, .
.
·
·
··
_.:
clearly has been some 'liilue added
·
.
from 1969 to those who had
'
gradu~
.
_ :
.
.
,
.
. ·..
.
. .
.
1 think the school has diversified.
ated as recently as lastMay.

Workingasafreelancetelevisi<ln
They've grown, and they're clearly
N
. .
cameraman, Berkerle said he
occa-
moving in the right direction."
.
.
ella Licari, of Wappingers

sionally visits Marist, b1;1t that he was
Falls and Class of 1994, said she saw
not aware of the extent of
,
the con-
a significant difference from when
structign.
she left last year.
·
·
"I
come to
·
a
·
few bii'sketball
"I'm totally amazed by ~hat it's
.
games a year,
so
I
was aware of
.
come .to," Licari said. "I'm shocked
so!}le of the things that were chang-
by the change. It was a good vision."
·
ing,'' he said.
Licari is
_
currently
·
working
as
a
personal assistant for Robin
Strausser,
an
actress on ABC's "One
Life To Live."
Although, sh~ is happy to be an
alumna, Licari would have liked to
be able to get more use out of the
new campus.
"I
wish
I
was here another year
or two, to take advantage of the gor-
geous campus center
.
with all that it
has to offer, such as all the space,
the activities, the cabaret room, the
cafeteria and the bookstore," Licari
said.
.
Berkerle said
_
although he at-
tended basketball games at the
.
McCann Center, he rarely explored
the rest of the campus.
.
"It
looks
great;
It's such a shocker
to go into the Campus Center,
I
don't
even
.
recognize it," Beckerle said.
·
The impact of the changes were
not lost on Tom Dowd and Bill
Snyder, graduates of the class of
1969.
"This
is
a campus now," Snyder
said. "When we went here, it was
not a campus. It's incredible what
Dowd, who
~
the directoi' of sales
and marketing
·
at Keyst_one
.
Honie
Health;
in
Arlington
,
Texas, saifhe
felt the changes enhanced their di-
plomas.
"The changes have
.
been very
positive," said Dowd.
,
"Change just
,
for the sake of change doesn't do
any good
.
I
clearly think there's a
vision here, and that they've articu-
late
_
d !hrough t~eir growth
·
plan."
. Snyder, the owner of an adver-
tising
firm
in
Highland Mills, N.Y.,
said
.
~e saw an improvement in the
Marist students and the image of the
school.
·
"My degree is definitely worth
more because the kids that go here
_ see
ALUMNI page 8
justice
·
field.
:
.
.
.
·.
.
.
.
pathf)logy at Albany Medical Cen-
:
The two main
._
coordinators of the
.
ter and the Forensic Pathologist in
seminar were
Lt.
Ron Knapp of the
.
.
~bany County,. spoke about fore~-
.c.;
Poughkeepsie Pol\ceDep~ntentang.

.
.
.
sic aspects of.
,
c~ild abuse, auto acct-
Mark
,
Loughran;
·
assistanf: professor dents,
.
and su1c1des
,
.
.
.
·
of criminal jusiice at Marist.
. ·
·
_
Other speakers included Keith
·
·
,
<-
Loughran
'
formerly woi-ked
:
with Coonrod, the assistant director of the
,
th·e
:
district attorney's_ office in
-
:
Ne\V York State P_olice Crime Labo-
.
Poughkeepsie and
.
said he
felt'
the
ratory for the Mid-Hudson region,
·
s
7
·
minar
.
would be a good oppo~u-
.
and J?r. Werner Spitz, t~e medical
-
_
.
mty to have them work m~re closely
.
ex~m~ner for McCoomb s County,
with Marist.
·
.
M1ch1gan.
·
.
. .
.
..
Although the seminar was prima-
Among thosi: ~tudents
;
who at-
..
rily designed
.
for homicide investi- ·
.
tended the hom1c1de semmar was
··
gators
·
and prosecutors, Marist stu-
J?ennis. Rau, a ju~ior criminal jus-
.
dents were also invited to attend.
t1ce maJor from Milford, Conn., and
.
.
..
With more than 250 students ma-
the president of the Criminal Justice
.
joring in Crim_inal Justice, Loughran Society.
~aid
the
school
was
hoping to get as
Rau helped Loughran organize
many students to participate in the the seminar and s~id he found it to
seminar as possible.
be very
·
interesting, especially the
A
·
few teachers cancelled
classes
speech on bite marks.
and strongly suggested the students
''The whole seminar was great for
attend.
students because they didn't have to
There were many
.
well
s
known
·
pay and there was a lot of interest-
professionals who spoke at the semi-
ing stuff," said Rau.
nar, including Dr. Michael Baden,
According to Rau, students were
co-director of Forensic Sciences for
able to gain a lot of insight into tech-
the New York State Police.
niques from the seminar that they
In his 35-year career as a foren-
didn't know before.
sic pathologist,
.
Baden has taken part
Erika Leone, a senior psycology
in the reinvestigations of John
F.
major from Wethersfield Conn
.
, went
Kennedy and Martin Luther King
~o the seminar because she is inter-
assasinations, and is more recently
ested in forensic psycology.
known for his pathology work in the
Loughran is going to attempt to
OJ.
Simpson murder case.
hold a seminar at Marist dealing
with
Baden has also written a book the topic of violent crime sometime
entitled "Unnatural Death," and has next year.




































































___
2_-
----~..;.;..;.;,:;;----

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__
A.,::;.:},-=:1..:.:,1·~-,.:...f
~~~-.-:;.;~~~~"=--"..;.:,_:__;_:........:.._:_
Burton pays tribUte to.•
19§(1&
,grqi{.e:--z.· fn:O.~f~}W/i,JJ~er
by
JUSTIN _SEREMET
do· his di~ect!ng
in
his_ favorite An- his girlfriend (Sarah Jessica Parker) •. len,;phonyrub~e~_octop:u~.~-a fa_lfs, ·thetin:emi_er,9f .f'.Plari;9.;fyoril Outer
Circle Film Critic
gora·sweaters..
. '
.
.
. Even though a bunch of the jokes ·ma.rah;~
<•--. ~-
-
,- . -·
:•}::> ,_ ~-: {
Spiice~',in front of~'t\!Uhous~}:VloM
. Holl~wood_ seem~
·to
love glori-
fying p~ople _ m
_
society· who have
extraordinary talent and shows their
p~siori for them by capturing their
tnumphs on· film.
/
·
_ But since when does anyone care
to __ make a two hour plus movie on
the worst director of
all
time in black
and white no less? .
'
Tim Burton, one of Hollywood's
more bizarre directors has done just
that, and "Ed Wood" demonstrates
his own personal love for losers (see
"Edward Scissorhands" and '.'Batman
Returns.")
In case you know absolutely
n?thing about 1950's low-budget
directors, Ed Wood was, in real
life
master of Z-grade monster flicks'
putting out such masterpieces (that'~
sarcasm) as "Glen or Glenda "
"Bride of the Monster," ''.Orgy of the
Dead," and what is hailed as the
worst film of alHime, "Plan 9 From
Outer Space." .
·
- Johnny Depp stars as the wildly fall a bit flat, there's
·
more ineaning --.--
:The
problem
.
isithat_ someone: sits back in-his seat/proud arid
com~
energetic Wood, who,always seems behind the comedy aspects.
':forgot·to:stealthemofor to;ihe octo~'. pla?ent, and·fsays·_~'.Tliis''.if\vhat
ultra- proud of his creature features
We also see the birth
of
Wood's . pus as·.well; and-the r~su!Us:soi:Iie ~people: will_re~ember me.by:''.
·
-\ -
that show off rotten special. effects oddly touching friendship with ; ofwe· inost embarrassingf~llllllS~.:,._ _. H~rli1~s
th~-
v]~~(t'ilmiiiakei'cif,
and washed-up actors.
-
.Dracula himself; the··aging,-mor- ;- ing ever.,·
-
.,,,
. ·:-.·:':
''<- -
.
all-time '{Grade;·A+-
,. -
Johnny Depp
as Ed Wood
It's a differeiltstep for Depp, who
seems to focus many of his roles on
pretty-boy kinds of roles (let's all
_
hope he had that "Winona Forever''
tattoo removed.)
·
Burton follows Wood from the
beginning of his first film, "Glen or
Glenda," based upon his own trans-
vestite experiences in a role of a man
who doesn't know how to explain
his fixation of Angora sweaters to
p~ine-addicted Bela Lugosi (played __ ·; ~ut.all __ tbewhile,Wood,has his
.
. -
-
---
with Oscar~ caliber'•brilliance by __ contmuous sleazy film, always look-
Iii
movie news:·• .;-. _
.·> . ___ .
.
_ ._
Martin Landau. .
irig like he's got a masterpiece on
. First, apologiesfornot getting
to
The -two feed off _each other;
his· hands (he never does more than see "Wes Craven's
.
New_ Nightmare."
Wood needs a well-known actor for · one take, no matter how.bad the first
his flicks (even if he is washed-up),
one)s);
>
·
-
It's a longexplanati~n; and I sim-
while Lugosi needs work and moneY.
, And \Vhat Burton carefully poU1ts ply __ don't h_ave the ;space for it.
for his next fix.
-
.
• out is:that he's being himself; even - , H's. rumored tllat "Star Trek:
Along the way, Wood picks up - -if- he's directing in a wig, pumps, Generations" just did smile really
other niinrods for his weirdo pictures,
and his lovely Angora sweaters.
last-minute_ filming after the. test
like wrestler Tor Johnson (WWF vet
You've got to admire Burton for screenings were reportedly not .to the
George "The Animal" s.teele, his adgration for the strange.
d'
, · •
&

-
I
-
h
.
au 1ences sati~. 1acti. on.
.
_
Vampira (Lisa Marie) and _the
n any ot er picture, any sort of
strange
transexual
Bunny cross-dresser would be viewed as•
_ 'f!le complaint? Not cmough Kirk!
Breckinridge (Bill Murray).
some sort of freak.
-
. . . •. This is looking like the- most
They all fit quite nicely into
Yet
~e
all have skeletons in· our problem-plagued "Trek" film yet.
Wood's campy world.
closet, and after· a while of seeing
How low budget are the films
Ed Wood's odd behavior,we accept
Bruce Willis was in Dutchess
you ask?
-
' him f~r his queer tend<?ncies arid County last week on the Taconic
Let's just say that there's a scene recognize _that everything he does is Parkway filming crash scenes for
during the filming of "Bride of the for that hfe-long purpa,se: tomake next summer's "Die Hard 3."
Monster'' in which Lugosi must pre-
yourself happy.
- Aild speaking of Willis ...
tend to be attacked by a studio- sto-
And by the end of the film, at
·
Next week: "Pulp Fiction."
Bile · uses force while 'Ladies'
seem
barely alive
by TOM -BECKER
gently floating toward a chorus pop.
derous -guitars,. garbled screams and the sometimes monotonously lengthy
He was also a cross-dressing
transvestite who liked to, at times,
Circle
Music
Critic
fraught with background vocals and
computer bleeps.
introductions _
that many industrial
a variety of instruments.
Overall, Barenaked Ladies' sec-
For those_ •familiar with-the Long bands attach to their songs. -
This week we'll take a look at
ond release is a plain collection of 1 1
two new bands t I
t
However, the music lacks power, songs that is either is too afra1·d to
s and club scene, Bile is a regular
Bile manages to pull of different
a a mos separate
not in the sense of volume, but in
of Voodoo in
Dix.
Hills, and their
ends of the musical spectrum:
. all
.
1
take a step toward creativity or too
debut was .actually ·produced by DJ aggressive feels on songs like"Burn",
Barenaked Ladies and Bile.
over
musica power.
paralyzed in the inability to do so.
SI
_where a constant "ping" noise is
Now, a decision must be made
Although the songs are about
ave.
accentuated by a skyscraper crash-
on what news to break first, the good
relationships and the like, the lack
Surprisingly, the majority of the
From the start, ·the music is a ing rhythm that brings to mind a
or the bad.
·
of energy on this disc makes it hard Ladies' recent concerts· have been
storm of_ rage; a combination of sweat covered man running aimlessly
- Let's go with the bad, that way I
for the listener to sympathize with ~~t~~~~/ccording to singer Ed
Ministry's.power and En Esch's evil through crowded city streets, perhaps
can get through it and feel cleansed
the songs' characters.
lyrical- lust.
coming off abad trip.
by the time I get to the good:
One cannot help but wonder if
"We're having a great time on
The first single, "Ura Pekin'
"Get Out" Is a·n in-your~face
Barenaked Ladies has recently - the lack of flavor on this release is tour," said Robertson. "At one show
Loser,"· is a torturously gear- grind-
battle hymn that uses brief pauses to
released "Maybe You Should Drive"
a result of MTV dreams and we played in Ventura, California,
ing tune, with .volcano- erupting enhance the bone crushing chants of
on Sire Records.
'
Grammy goals or
if
the band just is
there was an old fatly with a cane
drums and a curiously sing-a- long~. the title.
The disc contains 12 tracks of soft
not all that creative.
dancing -with a. 9-yeai:~old .girl. We
type chorus.
I
·
try to approach our live shows with
-· It has already found
_
its wayinto .
regular plav at area il!dust~i!ll den.s,
Some of the songs do fail to iden-
tify themselves completely, however,
and- for. thar matter, _they -make· the
better oh~ ·starid·out that much more.
a temative piano dancing beside light
a sense of h. limo. r, so it was_ great to
feathery drums and thin acoustic
It
can be said, however, that not
see that."
.
strings.
ev~rything on "Maybe'.' is bad. ·
It
is apparent from the first'i~~ck,
One_ track which 'stands apatt rec~i
th
:{s!~\i!1~Jie~:s~:n!t~1~
·one. strength of"Suckpiiinp'; .i~
the fact that.
the·
majority'' 6{' songs
are intertwined;• going from· track. to
irack with rare breaks inthe mm~ic.
. ~-'.
~
;·:·'. '··:'":::: ~: ·-; :?i'
1· ~;~:-;~•· '. ·, ~. :_'.~ :::
-,~.,_;'I" •• :'.
-.l: .
entitled "Jane," that the band has
from the rest is "Alternative Girl-
with its presence is Bile.
radio airplay on its mind.
fri~nd," w~ich uses a_ catchy, upbeat
.
<
1:Io:weyer, t§uclqiuIDp''Js simply -
a great inpustrial-mefal disc.
-
~1tar to direct the listener through
. ~e ban~'s debut, "Suckpunip,"
rvfost of the songs b~gin softly,
Just over four minutes of soft, simple
1s
an.
mdustnal barrage ofloud, thun- -
Ano!her strengtfis that it lacks
It
is sure to please the most fin-
icky fans of both genres.
Y
Students witness local murder during
1,988
Sh0pping:trip
CIRCLE ARCHIVES R
By the time they left, a woman
.
----
.'
, ·
_
_ .
. _
'-
_-
.
.
d f
O
e-
was lying stabbed to death in the and poh~e repo~t~, t_he suspect then. I ~vt:rheard him ask if anyone
_
gr\!
-
~_ murder ,and: h~ld without bail.
pnnte . rom ctober 6, 1988
parking lot.
charged with the killmg, 16-year-'old was gomg to
call
the police.
-
' ' · · - ·
·
-
·
·-__ · -
'
' · · . · · -· · · --- , · -.-
Aft
fi • h'
h
Walter Anderson of.Main St _ had
Anderson apparently fled. the
·
by
JAY_ REYNOLDS
Staff Writer
, .
er mis mg er grocery shop-· b ·
1
. .
. -- _
-
·• .·
"I went.out, and as I approached. scene after the stabbing·. only·. to
P
mg_ at.Edwards Carol K_ ant_or 51
een 01tenng around the plaza for th
. f
I
th
-_ --.--
&
_- •_
• . - - -_-
..
- .

-
.
' -
-
,
, · ove
h
b
fi
•h
1
.
e group o peop e ga ered around retuma 1ew mmutes later to watch
ofWappmgersFalls was"randomly
ran our eore-,es_aymg.
thecarto.th
.. e .. left_.o_fours,Itho·u_·..:.1,t K. · ··t --bl •.d·t· d ·h
-
· · •·. --
l
d"
_ -
'
-
-

&-<
,
anor ee . o eat , accordmg to
For many Marist students, last s~ ect~
and murdered as she ar-
"We must have seen n.im on the an old inan had a heart attack; I eyewitnesses.
0
_

Sunday evening was another routine ,nvedm her car around 6 p.m.
way in," sai~ Vail. "I jusfwasn't wasn',t expecting a murderAt was
- · -'.
· ·- '
-
end to a weekend.
.
Inside the i.tore, waiting in line, paying attention to notice.
.
really horrifying."
.
--
"For now,
I'ni
trying not'tcithink
·
-
-
were Zahnke, a junior from Bristol,
about it," Zahnke said. ''When!
do
For twostudents though, it was Conn., and Vail, aJ·unior from
"When it happened, :we were sec-
· "Seeing death like that really does lget d~pressed. But I'm nof going'
a day they. won't soon forget; they G ii& d
Co

ond in line. Five minutes_ e.arlier and
wonders· for · th·e
h ,, t b
h
· b ·
u 1or ,
nn., both :whom live at
-
... --· - .. ..
_
_
psy_c e,
o _ ecome a erm_1_t_._e_ cau. se_of_this
__ .
saw woman die.
-
. it could have b_ een'us:'Tdon't think Zahnk · 'd "I
Id' t I · s· -
I
fr ak
·
the Canterbury Apartments less than
esai ·
cou no s eep un-
t was a _ -~
thing and it was ter-
While most Marist students were half a mile away.
-
he would have gone after a guy. We
day night The sight of (Kantor) Iy-
rible that it happened."
•._
·.
-
watching television-or studying, Wes
·•-·. ___
"It
was_ extremely scary to find may _have been witnesses." ·
ing in all that blood just stuck in my
Zahnke and Mark Vail were in·
· d
d I d"d 't kn
"f th
1-
''This is the first time l had ever
Edwards Food War
. ehouse· •·n· ._
4
-
4
. out it was a 'rando_ m_ killing,"' said
"We __ w. ere_wai_ting in line wh_ e.n a
mm .. an
1 n - ow.1
e po ice -
d th'
I
,
. - -
h d
h th kill
,,
-
seen ea soc ose, 'Va.
ii
said;"Sure •
-Zahnke. "He was1·ust searching for -_kid came·ru_ nnin_
·g into the store and
a caug t e - er.
.
.
I
h
-
Plaza, Poughkeepsie, when the com-
watc the New York newssome-
motion started.
.
a victim;" -
.
.
-
started talking to the manager," said
.. Anderson was arresied Sunday times. But seeing something like this
· According to eyewitness_ accounts Zahnke. "I thought he worked there; mght and. charged with second-de-
is -s~ocking, to put
_
it mildly."
Attention: Marist Students
!'
.
.
_,
.
Winter Intersession llegistratioil
_
begins October.17 at
tbe _.
-

'

C
-
· , -
• • ,,
:
,
·
-_
I
'
School of Adult Education, Dyson 127
.
-
One-third tuition. ($~28} is, d0:e at-~~gistration.
Catch up on credits! Graduate on time!
Twenty-eight courses will be offered _between
January 3 and 18 (including Saturday,' January 7)
Course schedules are available NOW for
pickup at the School of Adult Education, Dyson 127,
the Goshen and Fishkill Extension Centers,
and in student mailboxes.








































































































THE CIRCLE,
'.
OCTOBER
13, 1994
3
.
MCTV

has location complaints,
find
,
11eW
-headquarters inadequate
__,
.
.
.
:
.
.

.
.
.
. .
Mccann Center weight room has suffered over
the
years. Holes In the floor
are
a
.
_
result of weights being repeatediy dropped.
Clrde Pbotoi Kalhy\Jnk
Marist Weight r
:
oom
:
clo
.
se~
due to
floor
conditions-
by
RON JOHNSON
,
·
Assistant Editor
.
The door
_
opens and bangs against
a
·
hanging wire; trash obstructs the
path and the soung of foot steps on
the metal staircase resounds through
the stairwell.
At the top of those stairs is a
small
.
room, and within that small
room is a closet.
. Welcome to Marist College Tele-
'
vision Headquarters.
According to Gina Becconsall,
president of
.
MCTV, the current
headquarters is inadequate for club
duties.
·
·
"We're located in the lighting
booth above the theater, which is
basically
.
a storage closet we share
with WMCR," Becconsall said.
According to Steve Sansola, as-
sistant dean of Student Affairs, the
amount of spaces available to MCTV
were limited due to construction dif-
.
by BRIAN FRANKENFIELD
ficulties.
lighting and flooring, and time.
.
"That was the only space I could
·
·
Meanwhile, students are suggest-
come up with to.give
to
them at this
ihg forming a groupto help move
moment," Sansola said.
.
Staff Writer
'
Unsafe floor condition; in the
the weights to a racquetball court or
Becconsall said that the headquar-
:
McGlnn Cent~r weight room force
_
d
the Fifoess Center.
.
.
ters is not' only too small to fit
McCann Center officials to close the
McCann officials have not con-
MCTV equipment, but it also con-
facility on Sept. 27, according to
firmed these ideas.
-
tains a leaking ventilation shaft.
Tom Diehl, assistant to the athletic
Students who used the facility
Sansola responded to MCTV's
director.
.
·.
said they are fruStrated.
·
dilemma with a question.
·
-
A
man entered
·
the facility and
Greg Der Calousdian,
·
a senior,
"Can the machinery be moved to
demanded that everyone leave
·
im-
is disappointed with the status of the
another location during the period
mediately.
room.
of use and then be moved back when
Following the evacuation,- the
"Lifting was my out)et," he said.
finished?" Sansola asked.
_
·
facility was shut down and a sign
"It
was how I let out the pressures
· Becconsall said she was not at
was posted saying that it would be
of school work."
·
all pleased with the circumstances.
closed temporarily.
_

The closing of the weight room
"Basically, I think it's a disgrace
'
It has
·
been two
·
weeks and the--
has forced students and student alb-
to MCTV and to the Cominunica-
.
weight room is still ilosed;
·
letes to seek 0ther outlets for
.
fitness.
tions Department
_
in general,"
According to Diehl; the floor
in
All Sport fitness Club and World
Beccorisall said
..
the weight room is made up of three
Gym are two alternatives.
. .
MCTV members are also un-
·.
layers.
;

.
_
.
·
.
.
:
·
,
_

A school year at All Sport would
happy with the situation.
.
-,.
The firstlayer ifa mc,:sltnetting,
~0st. th
$
average
_
,student
apprri-
Amy. Chiapetta said the current
t~¢'1>.e¢Qtjd is aJayc,:r,9fcot1crett: a~d
mately 312, a:ccmding to th
l!
39 space does not fit the club's needs.
tl,i!!,J!\fr~tJciy~~)s.!! /i.t!{~J:,plc1t~:
;

,
:,
.
:/
pef month fee.'
<
,
•'
'
i:
·

,•
.
·
·
:
/•
..
:
,,
•.
·

·
"I'm
..
really disapp
'
ointectwi
.
th
..
it,"
· ·
·
.
.
·
.
.
.
'A
..
-,'s.
c
... h.o_o ..
1
.
·
._
ye
.
.
.
a
.
r
·.•
.
.
a~
;
_
W
_
.
.
..
o
...
.
rld
.
...
·
-
.
·
.
o
.
..
Y
.
m
·
·

;It;was_gi~covered_tpat'thelayer
.
!-...

-
Chiapetta said. !'We
-
go for an edit-
~f concrete naa been
·
prolc~ii'up
;
·
a11d
_
wouJd·cost
·
a
,
Sludent
:
$z3z;
·
accrird-
·
·
.
irig. tC>om aJ!d
.
weget
·
a closet."
.
pieces of it had falleri through seams
·
ing to
nie

$Z9
'
per mt)µlb
:
fee.
.
.

.
·
Accordin.f to MCTV News Di-
'
cr~ated
iil
the steel plating'.
Todd Lincoln is one student who rector Melanie Fester, part of her
.
.
:.:
,:
l'he room also contiiined several
cannot afford the extra expense.
disappointment stemmed from not
large
.
holes in the walls, broken
.
"Jdoil't have tbe
_
moriey to spend having a new headquarters ready.
.
rµachines; and studc,:nts complaine
'
d
on
·
All SporLot
'
World Gym,". Lin-
.
Fester said the administration
,
o( IJ90r
_
yentilation.
_
. :
;
:
,
.
.
.
.
'
cqlnsaid
.
.
"Everiifldid;
·
I dc;m'thave promised MCTV
.
a new headquar-
R. h
·
d S Arr
·
d
· ·
.
·
ariy transportation."
·
'
:
.
.
.
..
'
. :
ters w1"th1"n the locat1·on
·
of
.
the old
, .
1c ar
t
.
oman , a
--
JUmor
d
.
. .
,
who
,
ui;irj
the fac\lity at least (ollr
.
The newly constructe
.
Fitness bookstore as sqon as construction
.

.
.
..
·
,
..
k
.d- h thought there
Center in the· Student Center is an-
bega
·
n to slo
·
w
·.
down.
.
1mes a wee , sa1

e
.
.
.
:
was something wrong with the floor.
.
0ther alternative while
'
the weight
"It's a
·mon
,
th into school, and we
:
;'
.

•<
..
Thefloor'was a,problem," !Je
room is under repair.
still don't
.
have
·
the space that we.
.
said .
.
'./
'-You could definitely
·
reel it
However,
Ill~Y
studdenfa saiddthe were promised," Fester said.
.
••
when
:
yoii walkel ori
it."
.
.
Fitness Center
IS
.
ge.ire towa
.
r s a
Salisola said he had passed· on
.
.
He added· that in the
.
.
early fall
'
different crowd andis not the
_
same sketches
'.
,
he had received from
anr;l
spting)t was of}en difficult to
type of atmosphere;
.
·
.
.
·
-..
. -
,
MCTV to
_
:Physical Plant earlier, and
The renovatad storage closet that now serves as MCTV headquarters.
Staffers complain that It also contains a leaking
.
ventilation shaft
that he remmded Physical Plant of
MCTV's plight more recently.
"I have worked as diligently and
best as I can with MCTV," Sansola
said.
Members and officers of MCTV
are not the only ones expressing
discontent.
Janet Lawler, who left Marist last
Friday for a job in Arizona, said the
organization is in a difficult situa-
tion.
Lawler said the club members
have been tolerant
.
about problems .
"I'd say they've been extremely
patient,'! Lawler
.
said. "I'm an
alumni, so I can really understand
their frus\ration~-''.
. , . .
.
.
Merv
.
members cited
·
various
difficulties arising from the current
location.
·
Transition, as a result of moving
has resulted in the temporary disap-
pearance of equipment and ari over-
all sense of disarray.
.
"We're
pretty much scattered
right now," Fester said:
_
'
_
Lawler said the ability to edit has
become limited to the free time
within the Media Center .
The Media Center's hours pre-
vent access on weekends and re-
stricted
·
access at
.
night.
According to Becconsall, location
pro ems are not a new problem.
"Since I've been here, every year
we have had to fight with the ad-
ministration," Becconsall said.
"It
seems that no matter how hard you
try, there seems to be inches of more
red tape to go through.''
Various MCTV members said the
club
,
was still progressing, even
though they felt the administration
was not giving it enough support.
Becconsall said that membership
was comprised of approximately
90
persons.
·
Fester described a greater sense
of enthusiasm accompanying the
larger membership, yet there are stjll
hurdles to overcome.
"I think under the conditions that
·
we're working, there's not a lot
we
can do," Fester said. "We need bet-
ter equipment and that can only be
done through the support of the ad-
ministration.''
Lawler said that she believed
additional support for MCTV would
be necessary.
"I think that for the future of the
college, MCTV must get stronger in
terms of equipment and location,'
_
'
Lawler said.
"We're doing the best we can,"
Sansola said. It's been a difficult
transition."
.
breathejn
·
the foorn;
.
.
.
·
"It's a different type of workout,"
McCaim officials stressed that at
Lincoln said. "There's no free
no tilrie
:
w,as
:
the safety of any stµ-
·
weights there,

and the nautilus equip-
den
.
t
.
i n
.
_
·
·
d
.
.
a
.
.
ng
·
er
-
-w
..
h
.
ile
..
the
.
room was
ment they have is
_
limited;-''
,
The Fitness
·
Center contains
in use.
:
: ·
·
.
·
·
·
·
stairmasters, treadmills; bikes,

some
.
.
According to Diehl, an a
_
rchitect
and eitgineer both lookedat the floor
rack weights and an aerobics room·.
H~lp for troubled writers is here,
Writing Center opens
·
doors to all
~nd
·
said-the facility would not
_
pe
JuJJ.ior Scott Wyman su!'}im~d up
·
able to
.
be·. re-opene4 as
a
·
weight
the feeling ·of m~nv students
.
. _
·
by .J~IN!llE A VILES
-
room
-
again.

·
·-
··
:
Staff Writer
·.
rr
·
a
:
\Veight room facHity has to
"The state of the gym before was
,.
be
·
buil\.in a different location, Marist
an embarrassment," he said. "Now
For thos~ who ~re having trouble
,
wants to be sure it.is do11e properly,
the facrthat it c.in't be useq at all is
with the pad and pen, fear not.
·.
Diehl said.
.
·
.
:
·
. ·
.
just a slap in the face to the ath1ete
The Writing Center has recently
That means new ventilation,
at Marist."
opened to help students, faculty and
_...;;,;;.;...;..;;,;;:...;;.;.. ............ _ .... _ _ _
.;... _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_,staff with any writing assignments
The Circle
non-scientific poll
The Circle conducted a non-scientific poll from Sept. 28th. to
bet
4th. More
than 1,000 students respond Yes or No to the following question:
.
Do you think the progress of Vision'94
is
living up to it-, expectations?
Yes= 367
No= 699
they may have.
_ The Writing Center is "a place to
talk, to write, to learn, and to grow"
according to the brochure.
Evan
·
Rivers, assistant professor
of English· and the person in charge
of putting the Writing Center to-
gether,- described it as a service de-
signed to help all writers, not just
remedial work.
Rivers said there has been talk of
putting together a writing program
for a long time because a lot of stu-
dents need support with their writ-
ing.
"Teachers frequently complain
that students don't write well," Riv-
ers said, ''but they also don't have
the time to give them one-on-one
attention, which is really the best
way to teach writing."
At the Writing Center, students
receive the one-on-one attention that
they need, Rivers said.
·
"We will work with a student
who mighlcome in with an assign-
ment and just be starting off,'' he
said. "We will help them at any point
in the writing process if they want
help.''
.
.
This policy is unlike the Learn
-
ing Center, since they deal with fin-
ished work and proof reading. The
Writing Center will not proofread
any student's work.
."We
won't proofread your paper
for you but we will be glad to show
you how to proofread ... there's sort
of an ironic goal of the Writing
Center," Rivers said. "What we try
to do is teach something so that the
next time around we might not be
needed.''
The mission of the Writing Cen-
ter, as stated in the brochure, is "to
help all members of the Marist Col-
lege com~unity to become more
versatile, more successful, and more
self-sufficient writers.''
The intent of the Writing Center
is not to get the student in and out
as quickly as possible; the intent is
to give people as much time as they
need to get the assignment done
correctly, Rivers said.
Rivers said he would like to get
the message out to students that the
Writing Center is not intimidating
and that students are able to find
support for their writing.
"They're going to find some
people who are going to try to help
their confidence as writers and to try
to teach them how to handle writing
tasks," he said.
Rivers has had experience with
writing centers before. He created a
writing center at Skidmore College
before he came to the Hudson Val-
ley.
"I took it from scratch to a pretty
large and successful writing center,"
Rivers said.
He also
·
did a lot of writing cen-
ter work with tutoring and training
tutors. He even ran a national con-
ference on
_
peer tutoring.
Currently, members of the _f~c-
ulty are the tutors for the Wnt!ng
Center. Rivers said they are trymg
to get more n.1e~b~rs f~om aero~
the different d1sc1phnes mvolved m
this project.
"Right now we have a skeleton
crew on," Rivers said, "We're try-
ing to have two people on during all
the scheduled hours. Well, it doesn't
take too many people to keep two
people busy."
- see
RIVERS
page
8



























































































































































































































































4
,
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't
....
---
--
·-·
·
- - - - - - - - - -
-
-
-
- -
- - - -
by
·.
LYNN
,
WIELAND
Staff Writer
.
TH£Clllhi.
,
fEATlln~oBER13.
1994
Journalists may have
new campus society
by
Kerry Connors
Staff Writer
grass-roots campaign to aid in the
struggle for journalists in gaining
access to government records
.
The Society of Professional Jour-
Another undertaking of the soci-
nalists, a renowned national organi-
ety is working to ensure that
.
the First
zation for journalists, may
·
soon have
.
.
Amendment ri~ht
--
0£. the press
-
is
a
local chapter at Marist College
.'
.
,
upheld by wagmg court battles.
·
,
-
}~~n
Everage, chapter relations
S.l".]'s presence is
_
p_rominent
in
_coordmator ofSPJ, said the society Washmg~on D.C., where they oper-
provides an
-
excellent networking ate the Fus_t Amendment Center.
system of employment for students
The society also seeks to recog-
and professionals.
nize excellence in journalism.
Everage estimates that there are
They offer several awards to jour-
200 student chapters nationwide an nalists, such as the Sigma Delta Chi
important part of the 13,500 t~tai A~ar~s, the ~ulliam Fellowship
_
for
members of SPJ
.
.
·
Ed1tonal Wnters, and the Mark of
__ .
Randy Hayman, visiting assistant Excell_en~e Awar~s.
.
professor of communications will be
Paid mternsh1ps are available
21st CENTURY JOURNALISM: Bill Ma, col1'1)Uter lab
technician,
demonstrates the editing
_
one of
_
three faculty advisor; for the through the society, in which stu-
capabllltea
.
of some new col'f1)Utlng equipment
In
the Charles r.tinay Journalism R~m.
so~iety when
.
it
-
gets underway.
dents research, study and write about
Looking
~
are G.
~•le
Clarke,
l~
_
malism
professo~ Roger
Murray
who donated the

·
.
{
'This will lend recognition for Freedom of Information issues.
equipment and Shalleen
!(opec,
vice president,
College
Advancement.
Circle Phoio
I
Link
Marist 's journalism program on a
A few of the little known perks
:
·
.
-
.-
.
_ ·
.
-
. .
n~tional level,"
.
Hayman said. "It ?f membership include_ the SPJ's
NeW
Sorority now
at Ma

t
wdl be good for Marist, but it's also msurance plan and credit card pro-
.
rIS
good for students. Having a chapter gram.
·
.
·
-
·
.
·
lends
·
credibility to the school you
.
Hayman hopes to see Marist stu-
.
,
-
.
.
.
Russello
_
said.
,
:
.
.
_
·
.
.
.
.
·
studied
.
journalism at."
dents organize panel discussions and

~!.
~
~ Y B ~ JACCA-
_,

_
She
·:
and
__
the,
~
other memb~.i's
R
_
obert Lynch, student activities guest speakers on campus, which
·

· -
Staff Writer

st~ed_ their

campaign
_
to
,
briIJg)he
.
,
coordinator, also seemed excited at
could be attended by local chapters
·
:
· ', •
·
:
,
-

·
sorority to
.
Marist i~ the th~ Spring
the J?bssioiHty of having a chapter at from other area schools ..
.
Afier
;
almost eight Jllonths,
of1993 .
.
_
.
,
.
.
·
.
,
-
.
Manst
.
·
Hayman called attent10n to the
M~t's most recent sorority is carv~
_
Steven Sa'nsola, assistfil!fdean
_
"I thi~ it's a nice organization... fact that being a member bolsters a
·
·
ing
a
niche for itself on campus;
·
f
d
aff: ·
I ·
·
d h
d. ·
· h d
h. h h
d
h
. ·.
·,
c
·
Thirty
_
--
...
sO
_
_
_
-
n
_
ewo
_
_
m
_
enwere
_
.
recentl_y
O
Stu ent
,
_
~rrs;_exp<!llle t
_ataiJy.
a
_1strngms
e organization,"Lynch
resume,
.
~ IC.estate as t e rea-
-
Greek orgamzat1on attemptmg to
said.
-
_
·
·
son he 1omed m college.
pinned and will pledge to the na-
·
gain recognition at Marist mu~t go
H~ added thi,lt on a student level,
Th_ere. are still a few hurdles the
tiona! body of Alpha Sigma Tim next
through the same
.
process as every
the society could help students to
orga~12at1on must overcome before
·
month·
-•

·
·
;
·
other club or organizati~n.
learn integrity in journalism and earning campus recognition.
·.

Alpha Sigma Tau was officially
Some of the initial
.
requirements
develop a sense of ethics.
'
The status of SPJ
at
Maris!,
accepted in January, by the Student
include having
10
or more students
Blythe Mausolf is one of the stu-
whether an honorary society or club,
Gov~rnment
·
Association, as
_
the
as perspective members, and a fac-
dents responsible for attempting to
is still yet to be determined.
fourth
_
sorority recognized on cam-
ulty advisor.
organize the Marist chapter.
As
an honorary society at Marist,
pus by
·
Marist
.
College.
.
The cl'1b must then present itself
She became interested in the so-
the organization would be indepen-
~hortly after Marist gave its ap-
and its purpose to the s.G.A.,
.
and ciety last year when her journalism
dent and ineligible to receive col-
proval, the national officers of Al-
explain how this purpose fits into the
professor, G. Modele Clarke, sug-
lege funding for activities.
pha Sigma Tau also granted accep-
academic standards at Marist. The gested it to her.
Mausolf feels this factor should
tance.
:.
.
-
-
SGA then decides on acceptan~.
.
Mausolf took the initiative to join
not yase
~
_problem. .
As
·
stated in their constitution,
In December, 1993, the national
and then spoke with Everage about
SPJ 1s self-sufficient. In order
"The purpose of Alpha Sigma Tau
representatives of ~pha Sigma Tau organizing a student chapter.
to hav~ a chapter you hav: to have
is to
.
p
_
romote the ethical, cultural,
presented the sorority to
.
SGA, Bob
"I'm pretty serious about journal-
a certam number of fund raisers. We
and social development of the mem-
Lynch, director of Student Activi-
ism, so Cfigured this would be a
should be able to be self- sufficient
hers."
ties, and Sansola.
good way to get started and get the
if
it is run correctly," Mausolf said.
The founder and the president of
The SGA had ruled earlier that show on the road," Mausolf said.
In addition, the Marist chapter
the ¥arist chapter, Susan Russello,
there
.
was room for eight Greek or-
Mausolf said she feels there
would be under probationary status
said she first became familiar with
ganizations at Marist _ four fratemi-
should be no problem in getting the
for on_e year, until
_it
has proven its
Alpha Sigma Tau through a mem-
ties, and four sororities.
.
ten members needed to organize a
worthmess, accordmg to SPJ.
her of the Seton Hall University
Alpha Sigma Tau was colonized chapter on campus.
"Regardless of whether or not we
chapter.
on May 1 1994.
Other benefits of membership to
are part of a chapter, journalists who
Russello said her
_
interest height-
Thirty-~me girls were pinned on the.society i~clude a subscription
10
are seriou~ should join anyway,"
ened when she began corresponding
Sept. 17, 1994 and are currently Quill Magazme, the opportunity to
Mausolf said.
.
with the national officers.
pledging to the Nationals, Russello attend national and regional confer-
_Studen_ts from any ma1or related
"After meeting with the women,
said.
ences held each year, as well as low
!o JOUm~hsm, or those who have an.
and seeing videos of other chapters
The pledges will be installed as priced writing workshops, according
mtere~t m the ~el~ are welcome to
of the sorority, I knew I wanted to
members during the first week of to Everage.
submit an_ apphcatJon.
bring ~pha Sigma Tau to Marist,"
November.
SPJ s nsors Pro· ect Sunshine a
There 1s a registration fee of $32.
5
Scott Signore
Food Guy
(Mussels ala posillpo are steamed
clams with a touch of marinara sauce
and white wine.)
In terms of appetizers, Coppola's
offers a great number of Italian and
American choices from the land and
the sea.
There
is also an extensive col-
lection of soups
and
salads to choose
from.
I sampled a
·
cup of minestrone
soup and a salad.
I would recommend both.
(With regard to the salad, I would
suggest the Gorgonzola dressing.)
The dressing is a combination of
cruq
_
1l:)led
,
Italian blue cheese and
Italian vinaigrette.
In a positive way, it resembles
no
other dressing
that I had
ever
had.
Again,
in terms of dinner choices,
Coppola's provides a well varied
menu.
Ranging
from
tortellini
ala
biondini ($6.95), to Brazilian lobster
tails ($24.95), Coppola's doesn't
miss
a
thing.
Some dinner choices include
swordfish ($12.95), shrimp scampi
($12.95), veal and eggplant
pa
_
rmigiana ($6.75) and chicken
marsala ($10.95).
Also included are Neapolitan-
style personal pizzas, ranging from
$4.25 - $6.95, sandwiches and every
type of pasta imaginable.
The
·
pasta could be combined
w!th meatballs, sausages, salads,
mixed vegetables or sauteed esca-
role.
I sampled a dish consisting of
scallops and chickens strips broiled
in a touch of white wine.
The dinner was not only ex-
tremely satisfying, but it was well
priced.
The taste of my dinner suggested
that it had been appropriately spiced
with garlic and then a touch of
squeezed lemon.
Although I could taste both, nei
-
ther was overwhelming.
The waitress was extremely at-
tentive and when I became lost in
those big Italian words, she helped
me find my way.
My soup, salad and dinner de-
serve praise.
Notice I have yet to include any
criticism, the reason being that I have
nothing to criticize.
Coppola's Italian/American Bis-
tro has been a successful establish-
ment for the past 30 years.
I strongly recommend enjoying
dinner at Coppola's Italian/Ameri-
can Bistro.
Based upon a scale of 1 -
5
rounds of applause, I would give
Coppola's Bistro four and one-half.
I have given myself half a round
of applause for error.
Coppola's Italian/American Bis-
. tro Route 9 Hyde
Park, NY
229-9113
rounds of applause: 4.5
I
J






































6
THECIRCI.E,
EDIT0RI:Al.
OCTOBER
13, 1994
,.
MARIST COLLEGE, -POUGHKEEPSIE, NY ·12601
THI STUDENT NEWSPAPER
Kristina Wells,
editor
Dana Buoniconti,
senior editor
Justin Seremet,
senior editor
Andrew Holmlund,
sports editor
Meredith Kennedy,Jeature
editor
Teri L. Stewart,
associate editor
Tom Becker,
columns editor
john Dougherty,
assistant editor
Dawn Martin,
assitant editor
.
Ron Johnson,
assistant editor
Larry Boada,
editorial page editor
Lynn Wieland,
editorial page editor
Matthew Dombrowski,
distribution manager
G. Modele
Clarke,faculty advisor
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
GOOD
-
LUCK
---
olitical tho~ghts of the week
A dictator is defined in the Webster New
Newspapers, television and magazines
World Dictionary as one who dictates, espe-
con
5
lantly bombard_ people with national and
cially a ruler or tyrant with absolute power.
international political issues! But how many
Impossible in our democracy right?
0
.f you _are informed of local• politics or of the
Stop.
Different political parties, separation of
political opportunities in this area?
S
h
'
d ·
d h" k
powers, free _elections, and countless other
The
·following
will -
help define some of
- top w at you re omg an t m .
th
-
rtuni" ·
&
-
b
Protections all keep a dictator from· gaining
ose oppo
hes ~or you
Y
listing various
Think about someone you love.
ol1"t"cal
· ·
· t t
d
power right?
P .
1
campaigns, con ac names an num-
Think about why you love them.
Well, in New York City, Mayor Rudolph
hers.
Think about what it would be like without them around.
Guliani is coming extremely close to achiev-
. After all, ~e November ~lections are rap-
Think about them so much your brain wants to explode out of your skull.
ing the above definition of a dictator.
idly approaching, and, numerous campaigI\
Recently, the Marist community lost two people
who
were loved by many: Chris-
The funny thingis that Supreme Dictator
offices need assistance.
-
tine Dussan and Marge Sadowski.
.
Rudy isn't turning out to be all that bad.
GOVERNOR'S
RACE
We all wish they were still here because things don't seem the same without them.
,
Can
anyone stop this budget crunching,
-
Mario Cuomo ·
Democratic incumbent

I
th
I
·1 h
h
city staff slashing, union busting mayoral
running for
his
fourth term. -
·
For some reason, though, we can t seem to va ue
ose we ove untI
t
ey ave madman? Doesn't look like it.
Issues:·
decrease taxes; opposes death
pen,
been taken from us.
alty
h ·
·
His own Republican party can't even con-
, pro-c 01ce
·-
·
-
- .·
··
Much is the case with the death of any loved one.
tain him.
··
· ·
--
.Contact:
Rhonda Lees(914) 96+8300
And there's that word again ...
First, Supreme Dictator.Rudy broke.Repub-
_.
George E_. Pataki·
Republican contender,
Death.
·
Hean
ranks by supporting the Clinton Crime
forined,tate-·senator
·
-
·
Such a simple word, one word, yet impossible to comprehend.
Bill, now Guliani is not only refusing to give
Issues:
·,25 per~nt upper-income tax cut,
Impossible to fully understand why it happens, how. much we will miss who · it Republican New York Gubernatorial candidate
cont~ol spending, increase education and state
steals from us, or be prepared for it when it does. ·. ,:·
·
...
George Pataki his endorsement, but he,is actu- .· services, workfare, ban assault weapons, death
ally attacking Pataki 011 several issues.
, .. ;. penalty
>

:·<( /: .) '
"
..
•_. -.
:
:-
,
We can't accept that they're gone, that they have left us behind to continue
9.p.
by
With aH .the party .politics and gridlock .
.
Contact:
Anthony Ouggiero 452-2191
ourselves, without · them, -without the comfort of knowing they will be, there for .. us. going
(?fl
these, days,Guliani is cert~~y~f
go~'d;:
'.::?~TA TE SEN:f\:TE AA.CE_ . :
.tr,
/'ft'•
+t··., ,
~
when we need them.
change of pace from other politicians.· · - -·

S~ve Saland • Repubhcan mcumbent; third
Maybe
the
one constant
in
our lives
that
means anything, that we
can
depend on,
Many New York State Republicans
·
have
.
term
m
Senate .. _
>
,..

_.
,. .
.
_
that we can love.
called Supreme Dictator Rudy a disgrace
to
Issues:
favors death penalty, welfare _re-
Gone.
the Republican Parfy,which in my eyes is one
form, government should stay out of abortion
Tum on the
TV,
read the newspaper, listen to the radio, because what surrounds ofthe highest honors a Republican can possi-
issue
. --.,
·•
..
·.· • . -... -•
.
us gets reduced to a meaningless statistic.
bly receive.
-
.
.
Contact:
-
Pan Nov1c 454-3360
. -. -
Guliani has been very
swift
and decisive
;Anthony , Ragorietti .;
·
Democratic
.
chal- ·
Except to those it affects· personally.
with the tough decisions he. has, maae since
lenger,
·
retired- lawyer;~f°rrst. time running
for
How often do we walk around this campus blind?
becoming mayor. ·
office. . .
. . _ .·•·
,
, .• _
-
.
. _ . ___ ,_ -.
-. __
Blind to what's around us, lost in a pitch black haze that blankets our days and
The recent Legal Aid lawyers strike
is
a,
-
·
Issues:
abolisl!:sce()ol ptoperty;tax, stim~s.
nights of studying, partying, talking, dreaming ... How often do we take the time to perfect example.
·
late employmentin area, reduce mwaste m
recognize. who we study with, who we party with, who we talk with, who we dream
The lawyers went on strike.
government, ban assault weapons, favors pis-
with, who love!i' us.
Supreme Dictator Rudy said get back to
tol licensing . .. . .
We hear, but we don't listen.
work or everyone is fired.
Contact:
Allthony
.
Ragonetti (914)- 889-
The lawyers went back to work.
4411
.
.- ·
i ......... _ _
We see and experience, but we don't feel. .
Maybe our president could take a few-les-
STATE ASSEMBLY
RACES 97TH DIS-
Because of the haze, we can't shut out the distractions and capture the moment. sons from Supreme Dictator Rudy.
TRICT
.focluding
Dutchess/ Wappingers,
Wait, where did it go?
Guliani has also kept to his promise of
Poughkeepsie, Hyde
·
Park, Rhin~beck, Milan;
It was here, but ... Can't find it.
reducing goyernment spending.
Germantown, Claremont,: Columbia County,
Lost.
Every
city
agency from the Tr~sportation
Catskill and Green County..
-•- _
Vanished.
Department to the Parks Department is being
-F:ileen •IDckey
---Democratic_-incumbent,-
Never to return again ... except in our minds, and that's just not good enough.
evalu~ted and overhauled in both monetary
running for her second terpi; licensed -regis-
H

d
spendmg and number of personnel.
terecl nurse from• Poughkeepsie. _ _ .
ow many tunes owe fmd ourselves having to say "I'm sorry," when we had so . Some _people however, especially those
.
Issues: pro~hoice,,veteran's rights, crime
much time to say
''I
love you," but never did?
_
involved m New York City's education sys-
penalty
We should never have to say the words "I'm sorry" again.
tern, ~ave ~ntended that Guliani has gone too
Contact:
Hickey Headquarte~ 471-1260
They have lost their value fi:om being used so carelessly in situations when they far with
his_
cuts, to the point of sacrificing
I!r~
Joel .~ler - ~epublican challenger,
aren't really meant.
-
needed services to save money. · . _
·
dent1St, first time runnmg for office.· .. ·
If
you have to say the words to someone, mean them.
'f!lere are many signs that several
city
Issues:
welfare reform, get tough on crime
M
th d
d
·
I
th h
·
h
th
agencies, most notably the Parks Department,
and criminals, cut spending, cut taxes
ean
at eep own m your sou
e.
urt
is so uge at you can't live without Child-Welfare services, and the Health Depart-
Contact:
Dan MacEntee 229-0187
sharing with that person how you truly feel.
ment are staggering to accoznplish their in-
96TH
DISTRICT including Beacon, City
How sorry you truly are.
tend~d tasks due to the reduction of staff and
of Poughkeepsie, Town of Newburgh; Town
But, it all comes too quick.
fundmg !rom Supreme Dictator Rudy's bud-
of Marlboro and Esopus.
.
It blindsides
us.
get slashing.
.
The following candidates are running for
It's something we can't control.
Supreme Dictator Rudy maintains that he
Larry
Bennett's seat.
·
The world spins around
us
in ·
such a way that we often miss the little things, has kept to his pledg~ to
be
tough on crime.
Mike Murphy •
Democrat, Superintendent
sometimes even the big things.
. He
can
proudly po~nt to the fact that during
o_f Public ~orks for City of Poughkeepsie, first
his_ term
as
mayor,_ cnme
has
fallen 6 percent
time running for office.
·
We shouldn't.
to its lowest total
m
13 years.
.
ls5!1es:
pro-choice, opposes death penalty,
We shouldn't ever lose sight of what, or more importantly, who, they are.
Also, total arrests by the city's Police
hfe
without parole truth in sentencing laws
What they mean to us.
Department has risen 4.4 percentto 198 087
business tax credi~
'
Why they- are so special.
~owever tbese
statistics
are
i1ligh1ly
misicad:
Contact: Katie O'Conner 454-1442
We scream at ourselves and at each other because we can't deal with the hurt.
mg. .
. "
.
• .,
~omas Kirwan· Republican, ex-trooper,
W1}h h!5 quality of
hfc
campaign,
Oullanf
first time running for office.
It consumes us in ways from which there seems no escape.
h8:5 h1ghhghted _the_ reduction
or
J(P,lt
level
~ssues: death penalty, pro-life, decrease per
We can never make it go away.
cn~es such as l01tenng.
panhandling, and di§.-
capita socialspending, · stop welfare depen-
We can't bring them back.
turbmg the peace.
dcncy, supplement income, term limits
But what we can do is love the moment and love those who are still here with us.
I wa_ s very wary of
Gulianl
bt:iti3
el"1cd
Contact: Mark Boone (914) 562-5296
Now.
m~yor
at iust, but
he
is
gradually t;,,..,g1nnlng
to
wm me over.
Anyone who has further questions regard-
The past and the future mean nothing
if
we can't appreciate who we love today,
I
• h
11
th
Ing campaign suggestions should · call the
because they may be gone tomorrow.
but
I:
:~~;;:ct
~ha~ su~!~'gf!;!: Dutchess County Board of Elections at 431-
Life is death.
tor Rudy is his own man and answers to no-
2473.
_ Often times, it never amounts to much until it's over.
body but himself and his voters.
But it doesn't have to be that way.
Ken Urben
is
one of The Circle's politi-
Christine Wood is one of The Circle's
columnists.
political columnists.
LIFE AND DEATH









































































.
nu:CJRru.VIEWPOINT
OCTOBER 13, 1994
1
Letters to the Editor ...
Think
it,
never
say it
· .
.
Not
·satisfied
with
:
cafe
Editor:
.
It
is time for the cafeteria to be-
.
I
am a sophomore here at Marist gin to give the students what
.
they
and
_
I
feel that my opinion speaks are paying for.
.
·
.
·
·
.
for inost people here at the school.
The third and perhaps the most
The cafeteria is grossly insuffi-
angering aspect of the supposedly
·
·
·
t
d ·
h
I
new cafeteria is the downright rude
~6~!ol~n is
t
e ow point of the and obnoxious attitudes of the em-
.
.
-The areas that are in dire need of ployees.
,
·
some
.
drastic improvement
.
are
.
the
Employees are a reflection of the
choice of food, the quantity, and
'
the employer, in this case Marist Col-
tft d
f th
l
lege.
.
.
·
·
·
.
.
·
-
a
1
u
es
O
e emp oyees.
If
that is the case, your workers
·
First off, the selection of the food
offered day in and day out is inad-
ll"e giving a bad reputation to any-
equate.
body not enrolled or associated with
·
The same food is offered every
it.
day and if it were not for the Hudson
.
To cite a specific example, the
GriU Hne; this college would go
person working at the Deli Bar one
hungry.
·
night had such an attitude that
I
Last year
_
there were so many
wanted to just forget the sandwich
selections, this year
I
have not seen
and leave.
the baked manicotti, tortellini, ravioli
It
is ridiculous when the employ-
and stuffed shells.
ees are upsetting the customers.
The meat offered occasionally is
If
this were the real world
.
those
usually blood-red and severely
.
employees 'YouJd be fired.
I s~ggest
undercooked to the point where.sal•
the same thing here at Marist.
monella poisoning is possible.
·
·
·
In closing, the cafeteria is a new
Secondly, it is near to impossible
and beautiful facility.
·
to get two hamburgers, or for that
I would just like to see the main
matter, two of anything at one time.
ingredients upgraded to a level wor-
The food service has some gall
thy of this institution.
to not allow stude!}ts who are pay-
·
As
I stated earlier, most,
·
if not
ing in excess of $17,000 a year
.
to
all of the students enrolled in the
have two hamburgers.
· _
_ _
_
meal plan agree with me and encour-
When chicken is offered; it is
aged me to write
.
this letter.
difficult to get two large pieces, let
alone thre
_
e small
_
pieces.
Michael
,
Onorato~ sophomore
Societal
·
respect
Editor:
I
am
writing to you in hopes that
this letter may incite a rebeUion here
at Marist - a rebellion of thought.
Saturday, Oct.
8, I
went to a
dance club frequented by Marist stu-
dents, and the behavior that I wit-
nessed made me
ill.
I
personally witnessed, on two
separate occasions, men physically
assaulting and verbally abusing their
girlfriends.
.
.
I was outraged not only with the
actuality of this behavior, but that
most everyone else who witnessed
this along with me came up
·
with
perfect excuses for these men, such
as: She broke up with him today;
She was talking with another guy;
He's really a cool guy; He's drunk;
It's
OK, they're dating. How is it
that others did not get as outraged
as myself?
How is it that after I made the
bouncers aware at least one of the
situations, it took more violence on
his part and more screaming on
mine, to fmally get this man escorted
from the premises.
Judge Ito has threatened to not
have cameras in the courtroom.
Thank God.
Now intelligent programming like
soap operas can
·
resume.
One station that usually has re-
nms of "Love-Connection", has in-
stead been doing coverage of the O.J.
trial.
Imagine how confused a viewer
just tuning in and expecting to see
"Love-Connection" would be.
This would certainly be a date
gone bad.
.
Imagine
if
the whole trial was like
"Love-Connection."
O.J.: So Chuck, we just really
<lidn't connect - so I killed her and
her friend.
CHUCK: I'm really sorry we
didn't make a Jove connection here
- but if you'd like we would set up
and pay for another date with three
other contestants.
I'd really like the three people
we get to vote on for O.J. to be
Madonna, Cher, and Rosanne - be-
cause no matter who gets chosen, if
the date goes as well as the first one,
we'd all be better off.
Now I'm not assuming O.J.'s
guilty - I'd like to believe he's inno-
cent, but there's an overwhelming
amount of evidence against him.
O.J. never fumbled much in his
life, and he picked a hell of a time
to start dropping things - like hair,
blood, gloves
...
At the risk of going against popu-
lar belief of Marist College students,
I say that this is totally unjustifiable
and inexcusable behavior that needs
to be addressed
·
now.
,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
_
;;;;;;;;
.
;;;;;;
_
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-=;1
,

As
educated individuals, let us
I
read a list of the evidence the
prosecution wants to use and it re-
ally bothered me
.
They have the blood and the hair
and DNA, but now they want to use
a tape of the NBC. pilot O.J. was
shooting called "Frogmen".
~
-
:
cmc
·
'.
LE -
·
·
ask
ourselves:
I
na;,
When do we start holding people
accountable for their actions?
Production
·
Schedule·
-
Fall :.;.. '94
-
When are men going to stop, and
when are women going to stop them?
They say it shows him wielding
a knife the same way the stab
wounds were made.
October
.--~ :'._'
:
2Z
"./:
~_
-'.',
c:•
Decernfuer·
-o
,;
,
;
,
;
''
iilizrt::it1;~i~t;J~\r/U!1-Ii~-
Nbvernber
.
.
3
'
'
..
,
· .
'[)ec?mber
.
8
·
colll1~:i;;;f~~!!:~~i~;a;:!t!:
.
tion and society as a whole has lost
•.. Aren't they' sfretdiihg this a bit?
What's
.
the similarity here? -
Nicole
-
was stabbed, and look O.J.
knows how to stab with a knife! He
must be the killer!
November
1
O
·
the concept of what respect for oth-
ers is all about.

·
I mean this isn't the way they
solve
·
other crimes.
·
,
l 7
Until we make a conscious effort
~======~===~~=~~============~
as a society to
_
rebel against this ig-
COP: If you were going to shoot
someone with a gun, how would you
do it?
M€TV was not given enough time
Editor:
tions would have to give us
i-2
.
.
Just
,
as '-'Empty seats and quiet weeks advance notice.
.
-.
.
.
hallways haunted freshman elec-
Even with the short notice Stu-
tions," so do empty facts and shal-
dent'Government gave us, we at-
low reporting haunt The Circle.
tempted to send a crew. Unfortu-
.
I would genuinely like
O
to con-
-
.
na,tely, we were unable
to
find any~
gratulate

·
staff writer
·
Brian
·
.
one who was free;
.
..
.
Frankenfield.
·
.
·.
.
·
•.·

-
Aphoile call the day
.
of the event
If
his
article on the freshman elec-
is clearly not 1-2weeks prior no-
tions was
.
to continue the stigma of tice.
.
_
·
shallow reporting that has
·
plagued
Do we blame student government
..
The Circle for years, he is certainly for not getting_ the show
.
aired?
doing a fine job of it.
Do we blame Mr. Frankenfield
Nam~ly, I am talking about his
·
for shallow reporting?
·
mentioning that MCTV was missing
.
Is MCTV perfect?
.
.
from the
·
event.
·
With

the limited resources
·
and
This fact
.
is correct.
.
.
the uphill struggle
_
all production
MCIV did not send a crew to clubs on campus have in order to
ta{>C the freshman election speeches.
.
simply exist, it's
_
a shame that cer-
.
·.
But a simple phone call to any of tain people have to make it difficult
the officers of MCTV would have
·
to develop the professional reputa-
yielded a different light to the story. tion that we l!ll aspire
·
to.
In
·
the phone conversation that
should have taken place,
Mr.
We
would urge everyone on cam-
Frankenfield would have discovered
·
pus, particularly those people whose
that Student Government called us work will be seen on a regular basis
the
day
of the event.
(such as Circle writers) to be careful
·
He would
.
also have discovered
in.
what they
report.
that MCIV had sent a memo to all
clubs and organizations on campus.
We should be working together,
This memo clearly spells out that not working apart.
in order to
be sure that an event
would
be taped, clubs and organiza-
Gina Becconsall, MCTV
president, senior
HOW TO REACH US:
• Mondays 2pmto8pm;
LT 211 Ext. 2687
• E-Mail: HAZL
• Phone Mail:
Ext.
2429
NO LETTERS AFTER 5PM ON SUNDA VS
norance, we do not deserve to call
ourselves a civilized
·
nation.
Let the legacy stop here.
Janet
M.
Tanury, sophomore
SUSPECT: Well I'd aim and pull
the trigger.
Get away
-
from the tube
Editor:
Always an insight into the prob-
lems
_
of the typical American col-
lege student, this tirade
is
in response
to last week's letter concerning the
cable television problem: not enough
channels.
·
.
Since I have been at Marist for
quite a few years, I can remember
when there was a minimal cable tele-
vision hookup (circa 90-91).
Marist only got a few stations
from the city and WTZA.
·
The result?
.
People went outside.
Today, when I walk around cam-
pus, it reminds me of a Leavenworth
lockdown.
Where the heck is everybody?
Now do not get me wrong, I en-
joy television; in fact I even intern
at a local station (F.Y.I.), but enough
is enough.
Today I look around and see
droves of brain dead tube jockeys
who do not have the good sense or
initiative to get off their keisters once
in a while.
It seems like the next episode of
Melrose Place takes precedence over
those up-coming midterms.
Mr. Smith says he wants an in-
crease in educational programming.
Is this really just a veiled ploy to
get the Science Fiction Network at
Marist?
In
closing I
.
would like to say
there is no need for more cable pro-
gramming at Marist.
Instead, I suggest you summon
up the stamina to tum off the televi-
sion and read a book, go outside, or
check out one of the fine museums
that the Hudson Valley
has
to offer.
Scott Frosch, senior
BE A GOOD NEIGHBOR
During these first weeks of the Fall Semester
whether you live off-campus or not
consideration for the good people of the area,
in
their homes and in their neighborhoods,
.
is important?
The Marist tradition includes consideration
for and commitment to the well-being of our
local communities.
COP: Exactly! The victim was
slain by that exact method! You must
be the killer! I think we have our
man.
Another thing that bothered me
was the report that in court
0.J.
was
overheard humming show-tunes.
Now with all of these big-time,
expensive lawyers you'd think one
of them might tell him: "When your
on trial for the murder of your ex-
wife, humming show-tunes might not
be such a good idea."
.
It's just common knowledge.
It's probably bad manners and
highly insensitive too.
It's sort of like going to a friend's
funeral and saying: "Gee, who's
going to bowl for him on Thursday.
It's a big game."
Hey, you can think it - but just
don't say it!
That's a big belief in our society.
What it basically means is that
you can be a dirty rotten little scoun-
drel - but just don't let anyone know.
And if you show a real knack for
it - run for office.
In other news, Michael Jackson's
van hit a boy in Brazil and crushed
his leg and the family is now suing
him for $20 million.
Jackson went to the hospital to
see the young boy and asked how
his leg was.
Jackson was then escorted out
when he
'
proposed a kiss to make it
better.
Jackson, after promising all sorts
of compensation sent him a toy car
set.
Now is it just me or is this present
in bad taste?
The boy gets run over by a van
and you send him a set of Matchbox
cars and trucks.
Is this just to insure the boy has
permanent mental scars?
:-
lfy_i;,u
_
know someonewholost a
loved one in
a
train accident, and
now they
sit
around depressed
all
day and need a hobby
to get their
mind off of
it -
would you say,
"Listen, I have this neat little train
set..."
Actually, you can think it - but
just don't say it.














































































































































..
.,
8
THE
.
CIRCLE,
'
OCTOBER
13,
_1994

Society
r;
tti
'
\::
rettiffi
··
·
...
tO
· :
Madst
.
next·
semeste1;
by MICHAEL
J.
LaCUGNA
·
..

·
.
The events were ~~signed to of-
.
R
•· :
.
>
i:
t

h
·
'
-;.,
:
·
h
· ·
d

._...
1
,
:
ft
·:·
:
,.
h
·
:
·
11
··.
. . ·
Other
.
problems th~t face
-
the
·
2i .
.
~•(ho~e

thai°:tliere
'
)s" a
.
big'
turn~
·
fer student 21
d
·
·
h
······
uppen
cu
a
·
e
.
t e co ege.
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
d
·
·
·
·
out, and that the ~pie who
arc
th
.
.
.
.
.
Staff Writer
.
·.
.
.
..
5.
:
an
..
over,
t
_
e opP?r-
.
.,
;
Finlay decided
fo
clioqse
,
Kelly
.
.
.
So91et:y.: a~e
.
try1~~ to etermme
.
want
to
be there
·
and
.
.
e
·
n,io·y
·
·.
eaecreh
.
.
t~111ty to enJOY g~dfood, entertain-
.
Frosf:
'
resideni director
of
Gartland
-
which
IS
the b~st
:_
mght of the
:
~veek
.
.
,,
.
.
...
'
. ·,
~
·
.
.
Marist.Colleg~js about to
·
expe-
me~t ~d alcoh~~1c
.-
beverages at a·
.
.
Comrifrins .
.
_··•
,
, .
...
.
.
.
.
.
·
:.
,.·
:
r:.
:.
'ii\
,
;_
.
·
·•··.
,
other, said Firil~Y-
, , i
,
.. ·.\
:
·
\'.·
~1ence a res
_
urrect1on; the 21Society
lo~ PJl
_
Ce,
:
.;
.

,
:
:
C
.· .·
..
,
•.
.
'
:
,
: ·
;
' , '

,
',
,
;
;
>'
:
_
to hold ev,ents,
.
c,?nung up ~
1
14
~
way
'
.
·
.
Finla
·.
said thatthe
'
2r Societ'
'
IS
,
IS
about to be reborn.
.
Sansoia attribul~s the lack
:
or at-
:
·
.
"After
.
speaking ~ith
,
her
;
T
_
~eal-
!
0
breats
:
~v~n ormake
:
a pro
_
~t;
£:1!1~-
:
a rewarifor
'
the
studirits of-M~t
-
At the conclusion of the
1994
.
·
tendance at 21 Society even~ to the
ized she had a
·
lotof ideas aboutthe
mg
a
d1~c Jockey
·
tha
_
t
!U<?St
_
part1c1~.
·
and an
O
·
portutiit

to further en-
spring seme
.
ster, the 2l Society had
.
fact that many students· prefer to 21 Society," Finlay said. "I felt she
.
pants will fmd appeahng and pre~
li
·
P
t bi'
h
Y
··

fr'
-dshi
what
was
thought to be the last call
-
drink
off-campus and not in the pres-
was the person I wanted to help
·
the
di~ting the nu!13bers of people
·
w_ho
.
ance
or es
,
a
.
·
15
.
.
new ien
·
ps.
0
~
last organized gathering at Marist'.
.
ene<: of any professional staffor club 21 Society to
.
have
·
a
·
successful
.
w1llbe attenru,ng events or be
will-
.
"It's
a
speciait{
or royalty
:
for
The reason for discontinuing the
adviser
that
might be chaperoning
2ar."
·
in~ to
stt
e
nd
·
·
··
·
·
· ·
being at Marist for three years,"
211 Society was
_
because there was a
,
,
th.e ~~':
.
l~er, ·
.
t
.
h
_
e 2LS
_
ociety
:
was
/
_
,'
hop·
.-.
e that
_
the
.
re is a big tu
_
rn o
_
ut,
·
a
.
nd that thepeople
Finlay said.
"It
also is a chance for
ack of student interest in
_
assuming
the Class of '95 to establish friend-
the responsibilities for the club, said
.
g,v
_
en a chan
'
c~ forrebirt
,
h w
.
hen John
that are there want to be there and eniov each
·
other.
ships;''
.
.
Ste~t: Sansola, ~ean of College
Sorelle, president of
.
the Class of
.
.
.
.
.
'J
J
.

Act1v1tes. and Residential Life.
...
.
1995, approached
.
Eileen Finlay, a
.
.
.
The 2i' Society orighla}ly. st~ed
• EUeen Finlay, senior
.
back inthe spring semester of 19
_
86.
He said that at the end of the
senior, about assuming the role of
year there were no students willing

leader$hip
for
the 21 Society
: .
t~ t_ake the responsi1?i~ities for orga-
.
"I_
tllo~ght
.
it was a challenge, and
mzmg the club act1V1ties and pro-
1
hke a ~hallenge," Finlay said.
Finlay, however, said she is con-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - F - i - n l - a y -
.
.;.sa_i_d
_
_
'
th_a_t -th_e...;2;..l_S_o_c_ie-ty--

._
Si~ter
-
Eileen
;
o_
'.
HaUoian~
:
then
.
will- be holding its
first
event of the
director of
.
Campus Ministry,
.
and
'
a
posing a budget.
·
.
.
.
·
.
She said she did not want to un-
cemed with potential problems that
·
"Basically, the 21 Society is run
dertake the
project
by herself, so she
-
.
might make the
·
revival of the 21
by students,'' Sansola said,
"but
at
formed a committee that
is
open for
Society difficult.
the end of the year, there wasn't any
anyone who is interested in helping.
student leader.''.
.
The committee now has about
.
Sansola also said that although
~ight to 10 members and is grow-
the
.
quality was good, not many
mg
,
people were coming to the events
'
One of the first things Finlay had
sponsored by the 21 Society.
to do was to find
a:
new adviser,
because former adviser Beth
ALUMNI
.
One probierri Finlay noted was
that there is no past record for how
the club was run, so there isn't much
insight into how the club was oper-
.
ated in the past.

RIVERS
-
year during the last week of Octo-
group of
_
students got
.
tog~ther to
ber or during the first week of No-
form the club to raise money for
vember
;
·
Campus Ministry.
·
Flyers will be posted mentioning
the date, time, and location of the
event.
·
Finlay said she is looking forward
to the
.
first gathering.
The profits generated b/ th'e
events sponsored by the 2l Society
would go to campus Ministry, who
would then donate the money to local
charities.
·
...
continued from
page
1
...
conUnuedfrom
page
'
3

·
they need; and
lthink
that this would
abilities
_
and it
_
will
'
_
really
'
benefit
now
.
are so much smarter than we
"It's fun to be back and see ev-
Jennifer Benoit, a biology major
be
_
real
_
ly helpful: '.That's what the
"
· d
s
d
"Th
f
M
h
11
those students who have
·
difficulty
were, sa1
ny er.
ere's no way
eryone," Tynan said. "But it's weird
rom
assac usetts, said she thinks
co ege is here for," Benoit said.
writing,'' Bourque sai~.
we could have gotten in here,"
to see everyone

aft
th
.
!he Writing Ce11ter is
a
really good
M
..
ichelle
.
Bou
·
~qu
·
e, a J'uni'or fash-
Th
w ·
·
c
running
er
err tdea.
.
_
.
.
.
e
ntmg enter is located in
.
Ma_ria Licari, Class of
1993
,
'porn
kids
,
It's hard to see the people you
"Th
,
.

ion maj_or, agrees that the Writing
the Campus
_
Center 367, x
.
2735.
·
Th
·
e
.
W
"'
d
t d
·
k · h
·
ere s
a
lot of people out there
Ce t
d d
appmgers Falls, sai·d she was glad
use
o rm wit , as parents."
h
n er 1s a goo i ea.
·
hours are from
·
2
7
pm
·
Mon
·
d
·
to see her feJlow graduates.
r-------------w-o
_d_o_n'_t _h_av_e_
·
-
th
;,;.e,.;,wr..;~it,;,;,in;,:;g..;s~kil;;;.
1
:;;,s-. r-"-P..,eo..._le;,.,;;,ha;;.;v.;e~d;;if£;;,
.
e;.;r.;;;en;:,t.;.;
,
w;;.;r~it;;,:in::g:....
·
.;;,Th;;u;:r;,:sd:a;,;y·:,._ _ _
-_ _
._., -~-ay_-_
"ltwasfuntoseeoldpeopleand
sP
·
R
•,
1
·
NG
BREfi
·

·
9S
catch ~p," she said. "It's always in~
• • •
• •
fJ
.
.
·
.
·

I
·
·
. .
.
·
!erestmg to see ~hat everybody else
_
:o~1ntto~;, gomg to be doing or
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·
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'
TIIE
ORCll/
OCfOBER
:
13
·.
1994
.
..
'
.
.
.
.
-
"
.
. .
,
_
.
9
·
·
·
..
'.
·
,
byDARYL
·
RICHARD
'
:,
-
.:
"
-'
-
,
(:
·Staff:Writer
·
·
:
·,
--
,
.. ,,
w:nt@m
a.m.
.
.
,
The last bf the new rooms to open
in the Student Center will be the art
.
,
.
,
Tireit,o.C~aipng for Yi
,
sion
_'
:'94
g"llery, located in the rotunda.
!O
be<;<>~~ ~e~lt}' •~4?',YelI, ~an~
_
"It
wjll be the home for the ere-
in
there
,
a htt1e
:
lorger because the
ative work of students and
fmi:shing to~che~·are
ii()~
being pu(
faculty,"said Richard Lewis, studio
on to
.
Marist's $27 million campus
art coordinator, who is in charge of
upgrade
.
. ·
_
.
·
>
.
_
_ _
.
.
coordinating the new gallery.

Gras
·
s,is being
_
planted
.
for the.
So
.
me of the types of work the
qmpu,s green,
.
s
_
idewalks'are being
art gallery
will
include are paintings,
la1d and one by one new rooms
ar¢
computer designs and photography.
opening
:
for student use in the Stu~
·.
"This gives us an opportunity
to
dent Ceriter.
.
:
·
reach beyond the campus and open
.. uourjiart is done '.over
·•
the next
the eyes of our students," Lewis said.
four weeks,"
.
said Jam.es Grenier, the
The art gallery's grand opening
project
·
manager from
·
.
i>izzagalli
·
will
be in about two to three weeks
Construction Co.
·
and will be kicked off with a faculty
After"that time however, a few
exhibition, showcasing the works of
"follow on projects" wili be started,
Marlst Is protecting Its Image
as
construction continues
,
on Route
9.
Marlst has almost completed Its $27 million
about 20 practicing artists in the
including the construction of the
renovation
;
-
_
·
.
.
. .
.
.
Marist faculty.
scenic overlook on the west end of
Lewis said he has been working
the
.
green, Grenier
.
said.
i-...----'-------~---~---_;_--~-..;_;,_--~__:..-.:.-______
__Jfor eight years at getting an art gal-
_
The only flaw
in
the project at
·
other projects, such as the scenic
mencement ceremonies for this
as an arcade, but rather as "a colle- lery on campus, and two years ago
this pointinvolves the construction
overlook.
.
year's graduating class on the new
giate recreation center."
the plans passed approval of the
of the staircase in the rotunda of the
Marist
is
cu~erilly applying for a
green, but a lot has to happen before
In addition to providing an es- Board of Trustees and became part
Mid-Rise.
$200,000 federal grant
.
to pay for
that. can be written iit stone.
·
cape from the books, the recreation of the blueprints of Vision ,94.
Students may have noticed small
construction of the overlook, which
Gompletion of other areas of the
center will offer tournament and
Lewis said he foresees the art
sections of cement in between some
wilt' also serve as an outdoor per-
Student Center is up to Marist.
league play.
f th
·
·
fi
·
h
The
.
Student Recreation Center,
Students
will
b
ble to co
·
p t
gallery becoming an integral part of
0
e sta1rs.
ormmg ar:ts t eater.
e a
m e e students' education at Marist.
The cement was needed to fill
Marist Executive Vice-President
located in the connector between
in billiards and table tennis, as well
gaps
·
in tlie stairs resulting from a
·
·
Mark Sullivan said he hopes
to
have
. Champagnat and the Mid-Rise, is
as in games not housed in the facil-
"The gallery experience will be~
miscommunication between the
approval for the grant by the end of
targeted to
·
open within two weeks.
ity, such as golf and racquetball.
come part of the teaching experi-
builder and the s
_
upplier on how
_
_
.
this ~eek, allowing work
to
start on
"The new facility will have four
"We are going to have an oppor- ence," Lewis said. "It's part of what's
muc
.
h material
_
w~
·
neede
_
d to build
·
the
·
project by mid-October.
-
billiard tables, one table tennis set
!unity now to run tournaments and going to be a new cultural center on
h
·
·
d
·
10
5
·
·
l
h
tt d t
campus."
t e stairs, Grem~r said.
·
·
The overlook will place the fin-
an
·
- 1 com-operated electric
eagues w ere we can a en ourna-
".He (the supplier) made an un-
ishing touch on the campus greeri,
.
games,
including
pinball
ments outside of the school," Lynch
Lewis said he also hopes to bring
fortunate mistake. Whe~ you have
providing an area
·
for outdoor con-
machines,"said Student Activities
said.
works from artists around the coun-
this big of an
.
~nterprise with
·
this
certs and other performances;
Director Bob Lynch.
The Student Recreation Center try into the new gallery, as well as
many people involved, mistakes hap-
It
will have a 400 amp electrical
However, Lynch said he does not
will be open everyday from late being a host to travelling exhibitions
pen," Grenier said.
system and a
-
60 x 40 foot stage.
want the new facility to be viewed
morning or early afternoon until 2 that move around the United States.
·
Due to the mistake, the entire
Once completed, the green will
staircase
.
is going to be tom down
hold a crowd of 8,000 - 10,000 for
~nd rebuilt to eliminate the cement
outdoor performances and events,
additions:
including future commencement ex-
Choose
from 3
.
;
different
fundralsers
·
sPRING BREAK '95
Grenier said the
.
reconstruction
ercises.
·
lastlng either
SELL TRIPS, EARN CASH & GO FREE!!!
will probably be
_
done over Thanks-
Past commencement ceremonies,
3 days or 7 days.
Student Travel Services is now hiring campus
.
representatives. Lowest rates to Jamaica,
giving break.
.
_
_
.
held in the former Champagnat park-
No Investment
Earn$$$$
for
your
group plus
pcl"IOIW
aa
boaasa for
yoursell
Foe
details;
call:
Once the new stairs are com-
ing lot, could only hold 4,000 - 5,000
-
Cancun, Daytona and Panama City Beach.
·
·
pleted, Pizzagalli
will
be finished
people
;
.
.
,
with their job on campus,. unless
.
.
If
all goes according to schedule,
Marist asks them
·
for assistance on
·
Sullivan said he hopes to have com-
-
1
1.aoo-93!.CS
Ext.'
65
Call 1-800-648-4849
BER.:TIES'
l>R.E
'
SENTS
-
ITS
.
IST ANNUAL
.
PRE-MIDTERM BLOWOUT
THURSOAY
OCTOBER 13TH
.
.
.
,,
'
'
'
' ,
·-
*
BERTIES
1
UNDERSTAi'IDS
;
THE PRESSU
_
RES OF
MIDTERMS,
SO
TAKE
A
BREAK AN-, COME
,
PARTY WITH US.
-
*
DOORS
WILL
OPEN·
AT
7:00
so
·
you
<AN PARTY AND STILL GET
YOUR
REciurRED
,
~EST
:
~~P
GEr
·
so.M-= EXTRA
,
.
ST.UDYING
rtt.
.
.
-
:
.
~
~
-
:
-
.
-
.
! •
.
.
·.
*
.
BERTIES WILL '4SO ADD
.
YET ANOTHEIJ FREE KE(. TO THE
4 WE ALREADY
GM YOU.
THAT
MA.KB
5 FREE KEGS.
WHYt BECAUSE WE CARE.
*
BERTIES WOULD
·
ALS
:
o
UKE TO
INTRODUCE THE ONE
AND ONLY
LATE MITE
HAPPY HOUR •
.
STARTING
AT
1:00 A.M TILL
CLOSING PURCHASE
ANY
·
ooMESnc BOTTLE oR
-
'WELL DRINK FOR
ONE STINKIN' BUCK.
ALSO ANY
SHOT
IN THE
HOUSE IS
ONLY
A ROffEN 150 CENTS.
LATE NITE HAPPY
_
_
-
HOUR IS EVERY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY AND FRIDAY+
*
REMEMBER
THIS
THURSDAY DOORS
OPEN AT 7:00
AND
In
S, THATS RIGHT, 5
*
FREE KEGS+ SEE YA
TONIGHT!
BERTIES IS SORRY THAT THE BUS CAN NOT PICK YOU UP ON CAMPUS <TRUST
US IT IS NOT ARE FAULn+ WE CAN PICK
YOU UP
ON ROUTE
S>
ACROSS FROM
DONNEJ.Y OR FROM ANY. HOUSE PARTY OR ANY OTHER BAR+
~
FREE KEGS






































































































































































































"':
, .
,•

-

l
r---~--~~----~--~---------------------~--,
i
.
.
·
.
I
HOW
TO KEEP PEOPLE'S
;
.
HANDS
OFF YOU
.
R
MONEY.
Car:ry only enough cash to last ~he day •
.
Ahyone
who
tries
to
borrow your
Jast
five
·
sp
'
ot
isn't a friend, anyway.
Label your spare-change jar ,"beetle farm!'
Then, put your beetle farm in
a
jar labeled
"spare change."
M~rk up every spctce on checks .
.
. D
'
dh't leave
·
-roo111,fbr someone to
·
fill
in
their
.
na
?
me
anci
··
extra:
:t~
r
os.
.-
·
·
..
.
.
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:
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.
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·
.
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.
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...
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'
.
'
I
I
.
.
,
J
,
.
:
.'
_
.
..
..
.
,
...
.
..
K~~p your w~ll
_
et
:
i
·
n your Jron
.
t
_;
p0,c~~~-.
. .
.
.
·
·
1
.
·
:
.<
,
ltdiscourciges liic:kpo2kets. Sod6e's0e
:
~-frihi
·'
·

,
,
:
:
i
reJJly tig~t pant?
·
:
·
·
'
"
.
:
·
.
·
.
'.:

·.
•'
·•·

··
·
:c.·
·

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·< .
j
.
.
P~!
Your picture on yoU~
-
credi
.
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c;a,~a
;
f
.
.
·
·
.
.
.
.
!
;"
.
.
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i~iban.k

Photqtard
-
is
.
tough
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~----------------------------------------~
:
.
.
.
.
.
.
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.
.
'
·
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:
.
.
..
















~
... ;.THE_c;:IRC~E,
~OBER:13, 1994
Spil(ers-aef
eated;
:stre
.
ak hits· ·six
by
.TERI
·L.
STEW ART
, · Staff Writer

The women;s volleyball team is
in the niids.t of a losing streak. Marist
will be looking to snap its latest
slump tonight when it faces Man-
hattan in New York City.
. The ~ed Foxes ( 4-13 overall, 0-
2
m
the Northeast Conference) in-
. creased
their -losing streak to · six
games last weekend at Army in West
Point,
N.Y.
· Marist dropped matches to host
Army and Central Connecticut State.
Army downed Marist, 15-6, 15~
9,
15-9, while the Blue Devils de-
feated the Red Foxes, 15-5, 4-15, 3-
15; 7-15.
.
.
Head Coach Sally Johnston said
her team should have won · against
the Cadets.
·
. "They didn't have anything 'to
battle us with;" she said. "We sim-
ply let them win."
ter," she said. "We're simply having
a problem sustaining it for a match."
Johnston also said her players
came out strong against CCU.
"We went in and literally blew
them off the court in the first game,"
Johnston said. "We were playing
very aggressive-going for. all our
shots, and they were coming in for
us."
·Johnston said her team did not
attack the ball when it was hit on
their side.
"We were waiting for the ball
to
come to us, instead of going for it,"
Johnston said.
Johnston said her team lost be-
cause of a lack of confidence on the
court.
· "They are young, · and as they ·
mature, they'll start to believe in
themselves," she said.
The Red Foxes hosted Siena
College last Wednesday. Marist lost
the match, 8-15, 6-15, 4-15.
.. tt
According to Johnston the ailing
problems her team has experienced
lately. is improving.·
. "We have a. very good offense,
and the defense is getting much bet-
Johnston said her team did not
play poorly in the match.
The Re.d Foxes traveled to
Wagner
.
on .Tuesday. Results were
unavailable at press time.
Sophomore Tara Damrau follows through on a spike during a recer1tgame. Marist
lost its sixth consecutive game at Army
in
West Point
G rid de
rs
defeat
St.
Peters, 33-0
by ANDREW HOLMLUND
. Sports Editor
The. football team won for the
second consecutive week, its long-
est winning streak of the season, as
Marist defeated St. Peter's College,
33-0, at JFK Stadium in Hoboken,
N.J., on Saturday·night.
The Red Foxes (3-2 overall, 3-0
in the Metro Atlantic· Athletic Con-
f~rence) w~re led by senior defen-
sive back and kick returner Bruce
A. Harris.
Harrisfirst intercepted a pass and
. then ran 96 yards for a touchdown
: . with 9:14 remaining in the first half.
Harris' other score .came with
5:17 left in the third quarter when
the 6-foot-2-inch senior· returned a
kickoff and then scampered 68 yards
into the end zone.
Freshman tailback Jovan Rhodes
had 18 carries for 113 yards, and
senior fullback Matt McDonald
rushed 13 times for 65 yards.
Marist used two quarterbacks f<>r
the fourth time this season .. Junior
Pete Ford, who started the contest,
was 1-3 for 17 yards, while senior
Bob Delponte went 5-12 for 54
yards.
. Head Coach Jim Parady said he
was pleased with the team's overall
effort.
·
"We qtme out and got on.top of
them offensively," Parady said:'"All
facets did play very well." ·
The Red Foxes opened their scor-
ing spree with 9:21 remaining in the
first quarter when Rhodes gave
Marist a 7-0 advantage with a 4-
yardmn .. ·
Sophomore fullback Ben Greene
scored on a 1-run plunge with 3:40
left in the first quarter;
After Harris' first score, junior
Scott DeBemardo kicked a 37-yard
field goal to increase Marist's lead
to 24-0.
The Red Foxes then tallied t~eir
fourth safety in five weeks, which
was then followed by Harris' kick-
return touchdown.
Marist will .· travel . to. Pittsburgh ;
on Saturday to take on the Duquesne
Dukes (1 :30 p.m,, WKIP).
Netters finish third at NEC tourne
by JIM DERIVAN
Staff Writer
The women's .terinis team col-
lected a third-place finish last week- -
· end in .the Northeast Conference
Tournament at Mt. St. Mary's Col-
lege in Emmitsburg, Md.
· The Mountaineers,. the host
school, took the title this year for
the sixth consecutive time, while
Marist (7~2 overall, 6-0 in the
NEC)
recorded
11
points.
. SophomoreJen O'Neil won a
quarterfinal match, 6-3, 6-2, in num-
bers four singles, but then later
fell
short, 6-1, 6-0.
O'Neil was-then able to bounce
Intramurals
In softball action, the Swingbags
and the Mighty Muggs are each tied
for first place in· the standings.
The Swingbags and the Mighty
Muggs- both have 4-0 records.
Tau Epsilon Phi (TEP) and the
Midrisers each have 3-1 marks, and
· the Sultans of Swat are 3-0.
The season
is
nearing towards the
end as playoffs
will
start on Mon.
Oct. 24.
Basketball games will begin on
Mon. Oct. 17 at 9:30 p.m., while
volleyball will
be
held on the fol-
lowing night at the same time in
McCann.
Captains for basketball and vol-
leyball teams are encouraged to pick
up a schedule at the intramural of-
fice, located on the second floor of
the McCann Center.
Interviews for hiring exper(enced
basketball referees have begun. Call
Bogdan Jovicic in the intramural
office at ext. 2584 if you are inter-
ested in the position.
If you have any questions regard-
ing these athletic activities, call ext.
2584.
back in
a
match for third place, win-
ning 1-6, 6-3, 6-3.
, Robinson, who came into the
tournament with a 6-2 record, won
her consolation match, 6-1, 6-2, over
an opponent from Wagner.
Head Coach Charles Hardman
s~id O'Neil's·performance played a
big part in the Red Foxes' third-place
result.
"O'Neil's play was the determin-
ing point," Hardman said. "She was
down, but she kept fighting hard for
the win."
. Sophomore Kim Zilai and junior
Amanda Charter earned three points
for the Red Foxes as an unseeded
doubles tandem.
Hardman said he was glad to see
his team reach its goal.
Hardman said he was also im-
pressed with the pla.y of freshman
Holly Robinson.
-"We wanted to place at least one
position higher than last year,"
Hardman said. "Second place was
just unrealistic."
"She was over-seeded, _and ·that
made her a little nervous," Hardman
said.
"I
think
if
she had been seeded
at number two, she could have won
The Red Foxes traveled to Siena
yesterday to serve and volley against
the Saints. Results were unavailable
at press time.
it
all."
'
The Assoicated
Press
Top 25 College Football Poll
Rimk.
Tumn
Rwm!'
, 1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
Florida
Nebraska
Penn State
Colorado
Michigan
Auburn
TexasA&M
Miami
Washington
Alabama
Florida State
Texas
Colorado SL
Arizona
North Carolina
Kansas State
Notre Dame
Syracuse
Virginia Tech.
Washington SL
Utah
Oklahoma
Wisconsin
Boston College
Duke
5-0
6-0
5 • 0
5-0
4 • 1
6-0
5-0
4-1
4-1
6-0
4-1
4-1
6-0
4-1
4-1
4-0
4-2
5 •
1
5 - 1
4-1
5-0
3-2
3-2
2-2
5-0
Circle photo/
Katcy
Link
'MCTV PROGRAMMING
FALL 1994
CHANNEL12
W E E K D A Y S
12:00 A.M. - 9:00 A.M.
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3:00 P.M. - 5:00 P.M.
5:00 P.M. - 7:00 P.M.
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7:30 P.M. - 8:00-P.M.
8:00
P.M. - 10:00 P.M.
10:00 P.M. - 12:00 A.M.
WEE
12:00 A.M. - 12:00 P.M.
12:00 P.M. - 2:00 P.M.
2:00 P.M. - 5:00 P.M.
5:00 P.M. - 7:00 P.M.
7:00 P.M. - 8:00 P.M.
8:00
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STATIONI.D.
FOX FITNESS
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, .·•·· STAT-OF TIIE WEEK:
... The>fooibalf
teaqi
recorded
;•its·fourth safety .m, five games
versus St. J>eter's. on Saturday
._: nig~t..
. BOOters fclll ..
to
{Rea
Flash.,
.
4-~
1
bali weU anci
:
moving the. ball well,
but
we just\veren'.t scoring goals."
. by TERI_L; STEWART_
·
, Staff Writer ·
·
Marist was out-shot by St.
Francis,
.22-11 .
. St. Francis was able to shoot from
ail
parts ·
of
the field; according to
Goldman.
.
"Because of long-ball play; they
got there quicker and took more
shots," he said.
·
Goldman'.steamshowed signs of
improvement last Wednesday when
they defeated Northeastern Univer-
sity, 3-1. ·
Goldman said the defense was
key to . the win.
"We played better defensively
and had a much stronger game up
the middle," Goldman said. "People
stepped up a little better and did the
things they were supposed to do."
Junior midfielder Chris Riviezzo
scored two goals within 15 minutes
in the. first half.
Junior Steven Horsfall scored his
. team~leading fourth goal of the sea-
son in the second half.


45.4.1
45.4.2
45.4.3
45.4.4
45.4.5
45.4.6
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45.4.8
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45.4.11
45.4.12