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The Circle, April 18, 1996.xml

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 48 No. 16 - April 18, 1996

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Volume 48, Number
.
16
·
.
·
1V1ovie
;-
Revi
'
ew
.

'Peru;;'.
1J~v~s
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.
except
its
failure a{b~i
office
:
.
.
.
·
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·
'
.
·
'
·
.,
.
·
,_
.
.
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_; PAGE
8
.
'
:
.
The stuclent
Newspaper
of
Marist
College
.
.
-
---- SPORlS
-"7
·
·
.
·
.
Softball
team
continues
·
winning·ways;
now
_
7~1
·
-PAGE
11
Mara
admirtlstration-takes
.
helmwith.fransitioil
.
dilfiier
.
r
i
I
Senior
honoredas
Intern
.
ofYear
byDARYLRi9fAIID
the
Mara
administration.
·
;
byClllllSTOPmltTHORNE
.
-
Editor-in~Chief
=
.
"[Mara]
is
'
inakirig
the
students
Sta.ff.Writer
_
.
The Student
-
Governmerit
'
As-
know
who
their representatives
I
Marist College
·
recently gave
.
·
sticiation ushered iri a new
·
era
are," Carlson said.
.
oui.iwo av;ards to recognize out-
ofleaciership as thePatrickMara
·
Reflecting
·on
his tenure as
I
standing achievement in intern"'.
administration ·was officially
·
.
SGA president, Car.Ison said his
..-:::::'."'!..
1.
ships-:-the Internship/Co-op
sworn in last Friday.
.
most memorable task was the
!
Student of the Year, and Intern/
About
140
student and faculty
·
joirit in~dng between the Ex:.
, Co~op Employer of the Year.
leaders gathered at the Best ecuti
.
ve Board
and
Senate last
.
;
Desmond Murray, assistant di-
Western Conference Center
·
iri
May
·
which resulted in the rais-
rector offield experience, hosted
I>oughkeepsie
.
.
for
the
:
20th
an-
ing of the club cap .
. ·· .
.
.
the
event.
The reception took
.
nual
.
transition
'
dinner.
.
"It
was thefirstbig meetingfor
place at the Cabaret.. Wednesday
Mara, elected
this
past Feb~
'.'
my
.
administration,"
_
CarJ~on
.
, April 10
.
al
9:30
a,m.
ary t~ the top post in student said
.
."Wesolved°aproblein
that
I
.
In addition to the awards, sev-
government, said. the
'
highest had piagued us
·
for
a while.''
.
I
era! senior students majoring in
item on his agenda is increasing
While the transition diimer put
the fields of business, psychol-
SGA's visibility to the student
a
cap on Carlson's administra-
. ogy-special education, commu-
body.
· _
_
.
.
.
.
tion,
it
opened the door for
nications and fashion design
.
"It's importarittokeep in close
·
.
Mara's.
.
gave speeches about theirintern-
·
contactwith the students," he
.
For the first tlmein a few years,
ships.
srud
.
. .
.
-
-
.
a gavel was passed from the out-
.
Murray said internships and
Mara said his administration going president to the incoming
the experience gained
by
them
-
will
begin working on that vis-
.
·
to symbolize the transfer of
have become
an
integral part of
.
ibility within the next couple of power.And
:
this year, th
_
epower
Marist.
.
_
weeks.
was transferred in
a
big way
.-
"internship experience has be-
·
senate speaker Todd Laiig
'
is
Carlson handed over
·
a 3~f~ot
come part of the rich.Marist tra-
.
hea
,
ding
.
a -polLwhich
·,'
wiU ~e
long gavel __ to
l\:fara,
in~ugurat-
=====
dition
?'
.
he said.
cohdubtecfby
SciA'~
Resear&~
ing his administration;
.
.
Before SGA: President Patrick D
·
Mara holds~the 3-footgavel presented
.
?Jie)nier'ri
_
ship/Co-op Student
'i
iuiqgv;ersi~p<:::om.n:i,it~~-
~
-
The
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t~~
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musical
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they wo~ld
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like
.
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·
~orri_ing
Ptes~clent~~
to
pol4
()O
.
. :
'11le Man
st Band won the Ser'-

·_
the cominu~ity,
,
.
Filak smd.
_
.
,
:
eludes internships, co
-
ops, stu-
to see play at'Marist to wh~
_
the
f
-'.
~
to
_
the_bo~Jtng
.
bc11l
_
uiltilJh~
_
new

_vice Club of the Year award
;
The
_
_
..
The music
.
deplUtmen!
,
~\Ve
_
pt dent teac~
1
ng experiences, and
or not the activity
fee
should
be
·
;:
fr~s~rnat1
:
c,t,c1s~ pi"e,s
,
id~~t_ is

·
Band's vice~pres1dent,junior
th~
awards c~rem
.
?ny this yefll"t . extemships.
_
·
raised.
-
_
_
_
• ·
·
· ·.
·
.-
elected theJollowing
.
October,
:
Anastasia Filak;
said
the club
:,vith the :rvt~st Smgers
,
receiv-:
_
This year's recipient of the
In-
Outgoing
-
president, :Mikael
.
'"Thank
God it's spifog
;,
because
was
·
very
-
excited to garner such . mg th~ c:Iul,
_
~f
_
the_Y'ear a war~.
terriship/Co.:op Student of the
Carlson
__
said he thinks visibH-
nowlcanplay croquet;" :Mara
recognition.
·?
.
• _Pre~1dentoft}JeSmgers,semor Ye
·
ar was
··
senior Desmond
ity is
th~
number one strength of
\
said
_
laughfog.
·
·
·
·
"We've been
:
trying so hard
C:ylinda Rickert~
_
said the c
.
lub
Ebanks. He was presented with
,ct,esefved
the a~!lfd for
-
the ex-
a plaque "to recognize his
ceptio~alyear 1t had.
.
achievement.
·
·
'.'lwas
ve
_
ry excited to get the
The Internship/Co-op Em-
.
-
award beca~s
.
e: we ~ad
.
a fabu-
ployer of the
Y~ar
award was pre
·
·
lousyear/
'-
.
Rickertsaid .
.
"lfthere
_
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C'IICle

to
APRIL
SHOWERS -
Bring mud to Marist Students slid to class Tuesday afternoon in the rain.
Three on~campus apart)Jlent~ burglariz
_
ed
byTIMMANsoN
Staff Writer
A
laptop computer, some cash,
and several credit cards were re-
cently stolen as two men burglar-
ized
some Marist College
apart-
ments.
According to
.
the Town of
Poughkeepsie Police Depart-
ment, two Gartland
-
Commons
apartments and one of the new
townhouses were burglari?ed on
Saturday night, March
30.
Apparently, the two suspects,
both from
New York. City, first
went to the townhouses, where
they found the front door to
apartment 12 unlocked. The
door was left unlocked because
one student was upstairs sleep-
ing.
According to the police. the
burglars entered, probably think-
ing no one
was
home,
.
and they
went through (?ne of the purses
in
room
B. They took only credit
cards.
Emily Merwin, who was~leep-
ing during the burglary,
said
she
is surprisingly all right with the
situation.
"I
should feel unsafe, but
I
re-
ally don't." said Merwin.
Please see
Burglars, page 9 ...
was ever a year we deserved it, it
was
this
one."
Pleas~
ste
l11tem,
page
4 ...
A'fcfous
On
·••
students
-
Latinos
..
and·-·Greeks
-
celebrate
by
JiYNA SLOMCINSKY
.
·
S.tajf
_
Writer
.
-
Last
week,
:
sttidents could
be
.:
seen riding btg wheels across
campus or dancing the meren~
gue in the
'
Student Center.
Marist celebrated Greek week
and Latinoweek April
8
through
April
13.
It
was a time where the Greek
organizations could

come to-
gether to compete in events, and
where the Latino
cl~b, El
Arco
Iris Latino~ could
be
recognized
on campus .
.
Events for both organizations
were held
_
throughout campus
Anietra Guzman; sophomore
and vice president of El Arco Iris
Latino
·
club, said Latino week
was good for recognition of the
organization.
"Latino week is a time for our
group to
be
recognized on cam-
pus," she said.
Melanie Feliciano, a junior and
treasurer of the club, said the
week was a success.
"We had a lot of people come
out
for
the events,"
·
said
_
Feliciano.
·
,
'•However, there
weren't many non-members
that participated;''
Feliciano said her favorite
event was on Wednesday night.
_
.
"We had professionals come
and teach people how to do
dif-
ferent dances," said Feliciano.••
It was a lot of fun."
The Salsarengue, held on April
12,
was the club's semi-formal
dinner dance where people
could dance to Spanish music
mixed in with other types of
music.
Guzman said that the
Salsarengue is usually very suc-
cessful.
''Last year we had a good turn-
out," she said.
Greek week started in
1990,
·
with events including ice carv-
ings, a talent show, painted
boards, and several field events,
Please see
Students,
page 3 ...
I
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t
.
2
THE
_
{~JRS:LE;
Aprir
:
1s;
1996
:.
·
clinton, Jiasbimoto
Reaffirm
u ~s.
-
.
B
.. ;
·
~-
~
six
:
_.
he?s
·
·,
setlwo liotf
se
.
~Jap!lll.ese Military Alllallce

.
·

..
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,
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:;,

•:
:;c
.
.
.
-
.
·fires
·
~rid
taken
p~tf
ot.spiri
By TERENCE HUNT
·
steps to the
'
sideand behind
<'-
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·
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ii
AP White House
the emperor .
.
<
-
·
.
-
·

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>-
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.
·
,,
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L.:u:IZ
,
:
f}a
:
:
(1!'f"'
A'.sif
: ;
'.'.:
'.'.
'.Th~
.:
Iatestttie'. heaviiy
darn-
·
'.
Correspo1.1dent
·
.
.
'.
::
'Pte·\Vhite House said
.
the
,
·
year-ol
,
d boywho wag~
.
~f!id.,
'.
age<f ttie hous~. owned
by
,
,
Paula
·
.
..
.
.
U.S
_'
relationship with Japan
~nes three ye~
.
ag~
.
fC>r
;
tak-
_
'
l1fro'iit;s
,
:
bc>yfriend
'
_
,
Robert
TQKYO (~)
~
-
Seeking to
has

been
·
defined by
.
eco
.:
:
.
·
)ng
·
the family
-
ca~ fClr
_
a.
mid-
.
·
·_
:
Stic
,
arichf,
11
\
thts bedroom
.
coni-
.
calm security jitters, President
:
.
nqmic
'
dispuies for
.
t(_)Olong
'.
·
night'~pinis
_
iit trouble
.
again:
munity
25
mile
(
northofTainpa
~
-
,
Clinton pledged
·
Wednesday to.
_
'
'We want
to
put more focus
·
He
~e
t
hi
s
house on
:
fire for
.
.
.
:
-
~ ear midnigh~
_
as his
:
~other
·.·
..
keep 100,000 American tr09ps
on this)rip on the security
the seco
_
nd ti~~-
.
.
.
.
.
and
·
s,stei: slept, Mikey
'
to~I<.:a
.
in the Asia-Pacific region tO:pre-
·
reJationship," national secu-
·
No one was 1nJured
m
the
cigarette lighter
.
and
·
a
.
candle

serve peace and stability. Japan
.
.
rity adviser Anthony Lake
latest
.
fire, which Mikey
into
his ;oom
and
lit the Candle.
1
strongly welcomed Clinton's
.
said.
.
over five years: Under a new de-
SprouJ star
.
ted by Jighting a
It feU Iroin his d.resser,ignit,;
pledge.
· ·
Asta has been rattled by men-
fense strategy approved Jast No-
candle that fell onto his _bed,
.
:
inghisbed
_
and
a
pile of toys:
:
In a swift follow-up to spon-
acing military moves by North· -ve~ber, Japan also pledged to
Hillsborough Fire Chief Bill
Mikeywenttohismotherisroom
soring a peace initiative

for the
Korea and China in recent
"play appropriate roles in the
Kaplan s
.
aid Monday.
and ''hopped in bed with the two
Korean
.
Peninsula, Clinton
.
weeks,
as
\Vell as by unrest in
sect1rity environment after the
·
Hismother,PaulaSproul
;-
was
oftheril.andfellasleep,"Kaplan
signed a joint declaratio1f
with
Okinawa about the large-scale Cold War."
·
awakened by a neighbor's
·
said.
.

.
·
_
.
_
..
Japanese
.
Prime
~
Minister U.S
.
military presence.
In
a good-
On a new peace initiative for
screams, and dropped Mikey and
.
It wasn't clear if Mikey tried
Ryutaro Hashimoto reaffinniitg
will gesture, the United States
the tense Korean Peninsula,
his baby sister out
a
second-
unsuccessfully to wake her
first.
.
U.S.-Japan security ties
.
.
will give back 20 percent of the
_
there was no immediate re-
story bedroom windo\V to a
The boyfriend wasn't home at
The two leaders said ihe alli-
.
land it uses on Okinawa, includ-
·
·
sponse from North Korea_ and
neighbor before jumping to
the time.
.
·
ance is the cornerstone "for ing a key Marine Corps air sta
-
administration officials said
safety.
_
· · .
-
·
A'
·
neighbor, 20-:year-old
maintaining a
·
stable
.
and
pros-
tion.
.
they didn't expect one. Clinton
"The fire pretty
.
much
·
con-
Joshua Santiago, noticed the fire
·
.
perous environment for the Asia"
Still, about 4,500 demonstra-
and Kf m proposed uncondi-
sumed ~verything," Kaplan said.
while working on his car. Sproul
Pacific region
as we enter the
tors shouted slogans and waved
tional peace talks among North
At age 3, Mikey took the keys
dropped her children to
_
21st century." They
.
pledged
effigies in a Tokyo park Tues-
and South
.
Korea, the United
to thefamily's sjlver Mercury
Santiago

close cooperation on defense
day to protest the U.S. military
States and China
.
The aim is to
and drove down U.SAl, a major
_
Kaplan said charges aren't
matters, including joint produc-
presence Jn Japan .
.
A cardboard
draw up a permanent peace
north-south artery, smacking
likely in the latest case because
lion of a jet fighter, the F-2 .
.
-
effigy of Clin
t
on was printed
treaty to replace the military ar-
·
four vehicles
·
and then veering
of Mikey's
:
age
_
.
_
"Children have
-
:
The
·
security accord was the
.
·
with
.
the words, "Give me more
mistice
'
that
·
ended the 1950-53
into
·
a ditch.
"I go zoom," he ex:..
a natural
·
curiosity with fire
,
" he
highlight of Clinton'._s three
-
day
land, more
.
people, more
Korean War.
plained
:
.
_
-
said
.
"Some children more than
.
state visit to Japan.
-
.
.
··
·
.
money!"
·
·
.
,
· '.'l would implore them to do
A month later, he set his bed-
others."
·
Ei:npercir Akihito and Empress
While expressing satisfaction
this t,tJtd io accept this offer,"
room curtains with a cigarette
A television show about
Michiko welcomed Clinton and
about the Okinawa agreement,
Clinton said
.
Kim called the pro-
lighter.
Mi~ey
~
s dir ride alsobrought
first
'
lady HiUary Rodha111
.
Clinton and Hashimoto said U
.
S.
posal "perhaps
,
the last choice
The ensuing blaze destroyed
ouf his natural father, a
.
_prison
.
.
~linton at the elaborate govern.:
troops were "essential for pre-
that Noi:th Korea can make
·10
the Sproul's three .. b~droom
inma
_
te who had been dating
-
menrguesthouse atAkasaka
·
Pal-
servingpeace
·
and stability in the
resolve the Korea question."
_
hoiise and hospitalized Paula's
Paula Sproul justbefore he was
ace in th
·
i
-
heart of Tokyo.
.
.
.
Asia-Paci
.
fie region
.,,
The United
Administration officials said
then-husband, Mike Sproul,
incarcerated and ~ealized
'
when
.
In
an
-
ornate, gold-paneled
re-
States will maintain abOut
the United States will leave the
with
bums
:
The Sprouls hav
·
e
he saw the show that Mikey was
ception room, the Clintons and
100,000 personnel in the region,
off~f"on the table
.
and wait pa-
since divorced
.
·
his child.
_
,
'
·
.
the imperial couple shook hands
including about the current tiently for an answer.
·
·
·
·
·
The state took Mikey fro111 his
and chatted briefly, then moved
level in japan _ roughly 47,000,
"As best as we can
_
understand
family
·
iri November 1993 after
A
blood test later confirmed
out into the brilliant sunshine.
Clinton said.
.
.
_
decision
·
-maJdng in North Korea,
the first fire.
the p
·
aterni ty of Ed ward
A.
As a band played the U.S. and
,
Japan pledged
·
"appropriate
·
if probably
.
will be the source of
He was returned
·
to his
Brayton
;_
~ho hasfiled a custody
Japanese national anthems
;
Mrs.
contributions" to help defray the
some deliberation
·_
internally,"
mother's care in September by
suit
.
Brayton is servipg a grand
Clinton stood at her husband
'
s
cost of the troops: Lake said To-
White
_
House press secretary
court order
;
with-weekly visits
theft sentence at Union Correc-
side;
t~~ empress
..
stqod
..
se~eral ·kyo
will
contribute $25 billion -Mike McCurry srud
.
-
,
.
.
fromcaseworkeri;;
tionaflnstitut~o~
.
in Raiford
:
:
·

if hf
nl~isiiiitl ....
.
.
---------------------------------
Rain
.
does
.
n'tdarnpen College
·
:
BeacllPartyfor local studeJ:?.ts
,

.
:
by STEPHANIE
MERCURIO
.
_

--.
i
)
,
As
.
st. News Editor
,
'
-
:
}
~tudents
_
gathe~ea
·
in the
.
:
Poughk(!epsie Main
'.
Mall
-
fast
·
~~turday to eat food, Hsten to
l>a.ri.ds
:
and play volleybalL
·
.
:"
,
TiiecityofPoughkeepsiePart-
1
•.

.
.
. ·
.

-
· . .
:··
riership;
.
a.
·
,
nori
~
profit
·
organiza~
-
:
:
ti()it
;
pu
_
t
_
together "College Day
·
,
:
~elich
'
Parfr
/'
·
on April
13 for
.
·
c
ollege
:
students
·.
in
.
the
•.
·
1>
9
ugllkeipsie

&ea. Students
could p.i('.ticipate in the activi-
.
tles'i,orJree with
.
acoUegeID
,
.
_
f
D1naAnello.'
a
senior at Marist
art4
.::,
an
)
Jn
.
tern
.
_·_
·
with
-
..
·
the
Poughkeepsie Partnership, said
·
the
·
piirpose was to get students
do\1/riiown .
.
,,._·
.
_
:
·

.
·
..•
,
·••
·
.
.
;'.
.
t
1Jtis
.
.
~tar@
-
-
~
an
·
iaea from

Il,lY
}~
p~rvisoi:
to
have more
.
in-
·
volveirieritfrom students in the
co@riuriity,': said
_
Anello
;
"We
wanted
fo
_
have sometllirig that
wouid brtng
.
the
.
students down
here, and get them together.'~

AileUo said thatall of the en-
tertafothenr and food
for
the
event was
:
donated
.
.
i
··
·
.
"WJ
ha.V'efour bands playing,
which
-
a
.i
tocal radio
.
station,
WOST-FM,
.
w.ill
be
broadcasting
Jive,"
,
shlclAnello. ''We also have
food from
·
Jocal
-
restaurants and
a
,
.volleyball- court f(?r people
who want
-
to
play. Almost all of
it was donated."
Anello said the event was siJni-
lar to
·
last
_
October's "Block
Party," which was also held in
the Main Mall.
"It was so successful last semes-
ter that
·
we
·
decided to do it
again," sad AneJio. "We had
·
"It's
a
good day to re-
lax, especially
.-
with fi-
nals coming
.
up.
I
think
it's
·
a really good
idea."
- Megan Dowden,
Mari.st senior
.

a_bout 400
-
students at the last
party, and we expect todouble
that amount today."
Eric Muhlfeld, also a senior and
intern. with the

Poughkeepsie
Partnership, said that they adver-
tised a lot for the event.
·
"We really pumped it up with
~dvertising at all of the schools
in the area,'' ~aid Muhlfeld. "We
put up flyers and sent phone mail
to Marist, Vassar, Dutchess Com-
munity College, Culinary Insti-
·
tute and
SUNY
New Paltz."
John Maroney, a third semes-
ter student at Dutchess Commu-
nity College, volunteered to
help with the party.
"We put in full-time hours all
week to put this together,'' said
Maroney. "Hopefully it will tum
out all right and a lot of people
will come."
Megan Dowden, a senior fine
arts
major at Marist, said she was
enjoying herself at the party.
"It's a good day to relax, espe-
cially with finals coming up,"
said Dowden. "I think it's a re-
ally good idea.''
PR specialist
gives an inside
look
at
career
byUIANE
Ko~oD
Staff Writer
Frasier Seitel,
a
senior cons tilt;,
ant
at the world's largest public
-
affairs
firm
Bumson
:..
Marsteelai,
delivered an informal speech
at
Marist on April
JO
;
.-
-
-
The speech \Yas sponsored by
the Communication Arts Soci,;
ety, and itwasSeitel's third visit
to
Marist.
__
_
.
· ·
·

Seitel is
·
the author of ''The
Practice of.Public
.
Relations," a
textbook
'
currently used
at
·
Marist and more
than
.
200 other
colleges. He was aiso
a
fomier
-
seQior vice president of public
-
affairs Jor (;base Manhattan
Bank.
Seitel's speech focuse<I on the
importance of knowledge, -ex-
. perience, judgment and attitude
in the field of public relations.
He explained that people work-
ing in the
.
field
.
of public rela-
tions need not Ollly maintain
avid interests in communica-
tions, but they also must take
on
the role of an advocate and
counselor. Above all
,
people in
the public relations field must
also
be ethical.
Seitel said public relations
professionals always must ask
themselves whether or not they
are doing the right thing, and
.
they must always be willing to
communicate.
"You want to be communica-
tive," he said. "You want to dis-
CI~~
_;
,
.
. >
.
.
.
vo~at
e;"
Believe
in
who you
'
.
Seitel
·
aiso stressed t}_lat people
work for.'
t
._
.
_
_
_
-.
-
_
..
in
'
the public relations industry
With
.
more than 200,000 pub-,.
,
must be advocates for their re-
lie
relaJions
·
specialists inJhe
spective companies.
United States, Seitel advised
"You have
·
to believe in the
publics relations majors 'and
man or woman who r:uns the
.
soon-to-be graduates to special-
company,'' he said .
.
"Be an
ad-
ize in a
·
field they
are
interested in.
Weekend
e
a--~,..,.
t
h
e
r
Spring
is
finally
. .
'
amvmg.
Friday:
Mostly sunny
.
Highs
55 to
60.
Lows
35
to
40.
Saturday:
Partly sunny
&
warm.
Highs
60
to
70.
Lows
45
to
50.
Sunday:
Mild, scattered showers.
Highs
60
to
70
.
Lows
45
to
50.
Source
:
Associated Press


































































































Living off campus
·
a1i
.
uripopQlar
:
-
opfioii
.
r-'/,
,
:--
-~-'
-
;t···
--:-
>ft
-
~:,:;-,
-
::t/
-
.h
- - - - - - - - - - ,
. , .byB•:r.Aooil..
.
-
,
'
Helm said knC>win
_
g
.
jtist t~o
..
-
~Despite:the
u~ex~ted CC>Sts
.
t',
-~
.-:-.:

.-1,\J·r:~i:
}
Jt
'·}{E/~:fffi:tzi<?
f):~t
:'.
Staff Writer
months before the start of school of
Ii
vingoff campus, j un19r
.
is
_
.
not enough time to plan
for
.
.
Carolyn
Bowen
said it is ideal
!
Tofhousing crunch atMarist
housing.
.
.
. ·.
·
.
.
..
.•
.
·
,r
'
compared
to
living
on
campus.
h?5
fotce<t'
many students
'
tbs~k
;
:·:
_o,avin Lllngevin
/
ajunfor
w~o

:
,
Bowen; 'YhO lives
'
off
·
campus
off~cairipus residences and has
lives
·
off campus; said she agrees
c•
and has

orie roommate; got
.
her
sparked debates
abotit
whether
that the housing system is inad-
·
housin
·
g through
a
friend,
.
.
.
the priority' poirit'systerrds ad-
equate.
'
,
,
"It
is nice
.
because you get
.
.
::.
:
r,
:.':<·!.
'.
,
(
()
·
equate.
.
.
·
.
·
·
·
Langevin currently lives with away from all the hassles of cain-
.
,
v
••
.,.,
,
,
l
·
some students say they
.
won-
three otheipeopie
11i
a house she
pus/' she said:
.
"Youjust
cfon't
\~.:~~:tf
,r
derif the college is dea}ing with
got through the Mountain Side
have any privacy living in a resi-
·
'/.-!itN
the problem appropijately.
.
Realtor Agency.
·
.
dence hall."
.
.
i7*-' ·'
Sophomore Jen Helm is one of
·she
said she does nqt like
.
the
Daman ti previously lived off
'
:
,
·
many students
.
who said she is
priority point system, but she
campus at the old ca
·
ntcrbury
,.
_·;
_
'._:~.
!

.
confused about the whole situa-
would like to see a lottery sys-
Estate and in off-campus hous-
tion;
tern instead.
.
,
ing. He said that he did not feel
_·.
1
,,

,-;f ;
.
·
"You never think when you are
"I
like the lottery system: a
·
first-
like he was a part of the school
a freshmen that two years down
come~first serve system
·
where
.
when he
lived
off
campus.
the road you won't have college
you pick your own number, not
"llike being apartoftheMarist
housing," she said.
where it is drawn for you,"
community," he said. "When I
·
Helm also said she does not
Langvin said.
was living off campus, I had no
think she has enQygh priority
.
According to Pat Daman ti,
·
a
idea what was going on."
poi
_
nts .to live, on c~nipus next
resident assistant
:
in Leo Hall,
Damanti said he would like to
year wif:b her 23 points. The jun-
one misconception that 1;llOSt
see the campus have another
ior
.
class' average is
_
about
.
25.5
people have when considering
Canterbury-type residence that
points.
·
to move off campus is that they
was closer to the college. He also
"It
is a no-win situation unless
think they will be saving money.
said he thinks the college should
you have a lo
"
t of points/' she
.
"We
didn't expect to
.
have to
purchase more land
_
and con-
said
.
"It
j~si isn't a
_
fafr
system:
pay as much for electricity, oil,
struct more residence halls.
_
for
the average student.','
.
water and food," he said. "We
Bowen agrees that the college
To aidher search for off cam-
didn't save any money at all.;'
should have another
_
set up like
pus housing, Helm said she
'
and
Langevin said she expected
Canterbury. She said that the
a friend have approached Marty
being off campus would be college should stop pursuing
Rule, assistant director of hous-'
cheaper, but she has
.
yet to see housing at the Sheraton Hotel.
ing and residential life, for help.
any savings.
"I
don't think the Sheraton will
According to Helrri, they were
Helm said the office of hous-
offer as much freedom as it
told to
try
for campus housing,
ing and residenti
_
al life told her
seems," she said.
IS IT SAFE TO COME OUT?
A cat that has taken up
residence behind a Gartland Commons
apartment
peers out
from its home. Wonder if it paid its
$200
room deposit on time.
Students celebrate Greek & Latino Week
and they were given maps of tbe
that living off campus would be
Helm said the idea of using
area and
·
a list of Poughkeep~ie
about
$1,000
less than the cost
the Sheraton as housing was
ri-
realtors. But, simply trying for
of living on campus.
diculous.
...continued
from page 1
.
and fraternities to get together
.
campus housing is not a guaran-
.
"{I
was told] that you would
such
as
a big wheels race.
and unite in one week. It is filled
tee that she will have
a
place to
save money by living off cam-
"I
don't know
.
why anyone
·
Karen Fusaro,juniorand presi-
with laughter
a
nd memories." she
I.
·
·
'
·
·
pus'," she sat'd.
-
·
o Id w t to l've ·n a hotel "
·
·
said.
1ve.
. . .
.
,
.
.
·.
.
. .
.
.•
w u
an
,
.
1
1
,, .
.
,
dent of the Sigma Sigma Sigma
h
''The
whole situation
irritates
·
"I
would expect having an
she said. "Even if Marist offered
sorority, said that Greek week
JenniferfHelm, a sop ~more
me becausenoonekriows
.
ifthey
apartment is halfthecostofwhat it, I wouldn't want to live there
was a time for memories.
member
O
the Kappa appa
are going to get_
.
campus hems-
you would pay living on cam-
because it would be too imper-
"It's a time for
-
all the sororities
Gamma sorority, said that it is
a
.
. ::_in-::.g_
'
_·~•_u_'_i..:...'_J.:...u
__
i-:.,y_·.
__
·••_
.
__
s_--h_e_
..
_
··
...
s_·ai
__
·
·_
·
_a_._
..
-::.
:
,
_._
:
_
·
·
_
'
_
'.
_'_
'
_
·
_
·
-::.
·
-::.-
·
__
P..;;
_u..;;s-:,,_:
__
~
_H_::-__
e_I
__
m-:__s
__ ai-::,·-d
__
._
.
. -::.-::.-::.-::.-:.
.
-:.-::.-:.-::.-:.-::.-::.-'--s--o-::.n-:.a_l_._•_'.-:.,-::.-::.-:.; -::.-::.-::.-:.
.
_
·
-----'-_
·
.
·
_
.
_
-
.
,
_
.
_
,,
_
,
_
,
-
__
-
·-=-
·
·
·
-·_::-
_ ________
;
- : . - : .
.
-:_
·
-

_
.
- : _ -
·
_
·
-:..-:.
,
'
- : .
·
_
·
_ _ _
-_::-_-_::-
·
_ ·
-:.-::.-:..,--,
w:~~ i~o as~~: }~::i~sih:c~reeks
.
.
.
.
·
·
·
·
c
··
·
1
to show their pride in them-
The
,Marist
College Student
Programmmg ounci
selves, and
to
have
a
good rime,"
proudly presents:
she said
.
.
.
CARROT TOP
{In concert)
.
·
J:
-~
t
l~
~~i~
-
~~

'it:.~
.•
,:;-.-
As seen on The Tonight Show, The Arsenio Hall Show,
Comic Strip Live, An Evening at the lmprov and
MTV's Spring Break Special.
Opening Act:
LIMPOPO -
A four piece Russian band who will be
perfonning their crazy stage antics and musical selections ranging from
traditional Russian Folk to vintage American Rock and Roll.
Date:
Friday, April 26, 1996
Time:
9:00 ·P.M.
Place: McCann Center Fieldhouse@
Marist College
For ticket information contact the Office of College Activities at
(914) 575-3279
RECOMMENDED FOR MATURE AUDIENCES ONLY
This year, Sigma Sigma Sigma
came in first overall for the
women closely followed behind
was Kappa Kappa Gamma.
Al-
pha Sigma Tau, and Kappa
Lambda Psi.
For the men, Tau Kappa Epsi-
lon came in first with Sigma Phi
Epsilon, Tau Epsilon Phi, and
Alpha Phi Delta following ..
/
Erin Early, president of the
Kappa Kappa: Gamma sorority
said
that Greek Week finally
made
it's goal
of getting the
Greek organizations together.
"It was a complete success. The
goal
of
unifying the Greek orga~
nizations on campus as a whole
·
was achieved," said Early.'' It
shows the college that the Greek
organizations came together and
that they plan on continuing on
campus."
·
Russell Heigel, sophomore and
vice-president of the Tau Kappa
.
Epsilon fraJemity said that there
was more closeness.
"There was a more closer bond
between the fraternities and so-
·
·
'
rarities this year," he said.
Ryan Soucy, a
sophomore
and
a
member of the Tau Epsilon Phi
fraternity, said that competition
is fun
;
"Competition between the f
ra-
ternities is fun. It is fierce and
as
the week goes on it gets more
competitive," he said.
Jessica Sheldon, a sophomore
mcmberof
sorority
Alpha Sigma
Tau, said the competition was
positive.
"It
seemed that the competi-
tion was more relaxed and ev-
eryone
was
out to have fun," she
said.








































































.
.
-------
...
'""'
.
..
Cultllfal·
dlililer clallce
.to•.
be
pyl~ S.ct!µtQ~i.~eJ~lJrat}Iig:
S!lld~#{S\.ff ~til~ge
by
SUE
FlscBER. .
.
Union (BSU) at Marist; is part
of•
.Jtie end pfµtino 'Neekand
~the)
d~ce, ha\ie enjoyed the.IDSelyes . . is. given ~o,tlle\>ut~ta11ding mem-
News Editor
the committee planning the
15th·
}beg~tj11i~g;of Black
\V~k/'
sl1e · ·: for: different reason, Alexander ber of ~cn~9lu
_
tj: ·.:: •·.• .•. ; /, ·.
::
.
annual cultural dinner dance to s;ud.'.~'It Js also.a
·
ce!eb,r11tio11 e>f s<lid ... , ... · :·,: :,. ..
< .. :. ·. . .
They also
.
recognizeJacultf
· What Tamiko Bell said she re-
be held in the. Cabaret Room .on :•i,uf;i1~rit~g~t \ ·
;'../:i.'";: \.\
:;,?:. :· ..
:?;'J:-:9.r
some; it. was a ctilt~l re_,: · ID.~mbers _w_ho.' hay~ supppried
members most was the sense of April
20.Th~_
theme of
this
year'.s
.
;,Thi{y~ar.;~e d~~~;'a.Is().~()-~~-- .
~~Y•'.'
hesaid./'.Others gott~ s#· ·- the:B~U andElArcfr~s L~tjno,
unity.
semi-formal affair is "From One ··meirioratesJnc6't\\'ehty::fifth."atF··
.
part of cultures they' hadn'.tex-
she sai.d> /. ·-•
·
:· ...
S
i
.
>
.
/ ·
"It filled the room," said Bell;
We Are Many/'
.
.
niversary of the BSU
foll
Marist.
peri_e_nced .before," •.·.·.
. .. ·
.
·•
'.'Tflis year;_ twotiiculty 01.ern-
as she recalled last year's cultural
Yasmin Evangelista, secretary
However, Damion Alexander,
Entertainment
will
also~ part . , .bers
~ill•· J:ie: ho~ored .from. each
dinner dance at Marist College.
ofJhe Latino
.
clµb, El Arco Iris• p_,resident of the BSU, said the of the_ festivities.
·.·.
· . .. ·'
club;" saict-·Felic:iano. ..
.
.. .•
·
,
"The wholeexperience,was won-
Latino, said· Latino. Weelc 'and
.
sponsoring clubs want people
.
Last year, Evangelista saidstu- ·-." As,tuden~ RioneerNvard is also.
derful, and I'm sure this year's Black,.Week at Marist are cen-
from all cultures to attend the dents performed the Merengue -'presented to. 'the freshman dub
dance will be just as enjoyable."
iered arqund: the cultural dinner dance.
.
. and the Flamingo,

.
·
·
member -.vho supported the i;lub
Bell, internal pubUc relations
·
dance:
·
"All Marist faculty and stu.:
'.'This year is a s.urprise," she • the IIlOst throughout the year,
officer for the Black Students'..
''Tpe dance.is a c;elebr:ation of .dents .ar~Jnvited to auend," he
said._
.
.
,
she said ... · . . . • ...
·
-,-...,.....;,...,.--'--'------'---...:....:...-......:...· """----'---'--------'--...:... said: "People see who is spon-
In addition to entertainment,
. "And, there will be
a
new award
soring the dance and think. that
the clubs also present awards
to ·
presented this year to the gradu:.
it
is just for black or Latino stu-
students_ i;tnd faculty.
. _
. ate who has helped each club
:
the
dents-anyone can attend."
Melanie Feliciano, treasurer of . most over th~ whole tinie he/she
Attention .
Students!
Students who have gone to the
EIArcolris
Latino,'saidanaward . was at Marist:
The Office of Student
Affairs
is
looking .for 30 ushers for
Marist's 50th Commencement
H interested contact the·
Office of Student
Affairs
· at ext. 2517
· o ·
11r111 ·
s .
lrisfi
~astir
nrstaurant . , )Pub , -)8anqurts
nt.
55 ,, ·
)PoughktQlSit
454-5848
"The Hudson Valley's #1 Irish Pub and !lestaurant" - 19_9SHudsonValley Magazine Readers Poll
"****." . -
Poughkeepsie Journal
Upcoming.~.llack
by
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show ...
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WDST/Killians Red Pafty.Jfo~ 8--l0pm!
Drink Specials and Give~waysl!
TICKETS ON SALE NOW! ALWAYS A SELLOUT!
On Going at O'Neill's:
"Thirsty Thursdays" - 9pm-12 midnight
"Guinness Night
11
-
every Friday 9pm-12 midnight
$5.00 domestic pitchers
&
15 cent wings!
$2.50 pints of Guinness and Half
&
Hairs!
21 and over in pub!
Convenient and affordable transportation available on premises provided by "Mohogany Ridge Roadrunners"!
Private Bay Rooms
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. .
IO'Neill's
Irish
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._
_______________________
_.
Perfect for Graduation
Celebrations - Banquets
up to 175 people!
I


































































l
I
Tmi
CIRCLE,
ApriU8, 1996
5
SGANEWS
The Year of Response
A note from your new
student body president
Dear Friends,
_
Last Friday evening,
'.
the Gavel was passed to my
administration for the 1996-1997 academic year d and with
it
all
the responsibilities of the Student GovernmentAsso-
ciation. The transition ceremony {very tastefully done I
might add) took place at the Best Western. A few clubs
and members of
S9A
were recognized for their accom-
plishments
·
over the past year
.
The previous administra-
tion deserves cm1gratulations not only for an outstanding
transition ceremony but a great year as
·
well.
Now that' the changing of
the
guard has taken place
,
my administration can finally settle down for this last few
weeks of school and concentrate on the issues at hand.
CllfJ."~ntly, we are planning the first ever Spring _Leader-
ship Conference for'allrecently elected club officers. The
purpose of the conf ererice is to familiarize leaders with
the
·
aspects of their
·
positions that they may be unaccus-
.
tomed too.Hopefully, it will help to alleviate some of the
pressure new officersmay
_
face in their first few months
as club leaders. This will be especially beneficial for lead-
ers quring the summer months when consultation on spe-
cific club matters may not be close by.
.
In my campaign I promised to be as accessible as
possible to the
·
student body. I now urge you my fellow
students to become as involved as possible with this new
.
~d:ministration'.
_
Past administr<!tions have accomplished a
i
great deal
.
However, I believe it's time for you the stu-
dents to bring your suggestions and complaints to
the
SGA
where they can do some good instead of voicing them in
the cafeteria and at other social gathering places.
H~y,
as
·
everyone around here is so
·
quick to point out, it's your
$18,000 dollars, you might as well make the
·
most of it.
-
.
_
So for those of you who are willing to become a
·
.
little more active
in
the student body, some positions are
.
still available in Student Government.
So
stop by, pick up
.
an application, or at least voice your opinion. My door is
always unlocked, it just needs to J,e opened by you my
fellow students. And look on the bright side, you don't
have to look at me
in
the shower anymore.
As
always, have a pleasant day,
PatMara
Student Body President
The SGA Is On The Web ...
.
Check Us Out!!!
http ://www.academic.marist.edu/sga/sga.htm
Dear Undergrads,
All of us in the Student Government want to let all of you know that we are
on the World Wide Web. Now you can have up
to
date information about
what's goin-g on in the Student Government ..
What's on our web page .••
?
-Elections Results
-A Word From Your Student Body President
-Info About Your Class Officers and Senators(how to contact)
-Weekly Minutes ,
-The SGA Constitution
This is a great new way for SGA to communicate better with the students .
You can also use e-mail to give the SGA any comments, complaints or
compliments. You can e-mail SGA directly at: HZGV or you can e-maii and
officer or senator personally.
Please take a look and let us know what you think of our web page. If
YOll
have any ideas of improving it, contact Josh Gaynor x4815
or
KP4C. We
-
~re
also looking
for non-SGA members to join the SGA World Wide Web
Committee. It's a great
w~y to get involved, earn priority points, and to learn
how to make
web pages.
·
Tharik you,,
Josh Gaynor
Resident Senator
**You can also find us on the Marist homepage under Campus Life and on
the Marist Country homepage under Student Organizations and Activities.
http://www.acaden1ic.marist.edu/sga/sga.htm
Blood drive coming this Monday
To the Marist Community:
Get a free pint of Ben and Jerry's Ice Cream!
On Monday April 22, 1996, Sigma Phi Epsilon will be
holding their biannual blood drive. This semester is
the first time that we will be having Ben and Jerry's
sponsor the blood drive. For anyone who donates a
pint of blood, Ben and Jerry's will give you a
FREE
pint of ice cream. The time of the blood drive is from
noon to
5: 15
pm. For any additional information, con-
tact:·
Jack Flaherty - 485-1986
P.J. Tycienski - ext. 4546
'
.,
'
.j
__
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.
_
-"_f:
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,
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.:
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,
>
f
>
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6
THE CIRCLE
·
EDITORIAi)
I
~pril'l8~
1996
Editorial
;.
,1
:
,
;'
;

,
t_;._
Priority point system
·
most
fair
As
~tudents are rushing to get
their
housing fonns in oii:° time; the
fairness of the priority point system has come into question.
Many students say they should not be penalized simply because
they
are 11ot involved in campus activities
.

·
·
.
·
·
Like~ise, other students feel academic success should not have
a
·
C?le in determining h?using.
·
Ac~ording to the
·
current system,
par-
ticipation in activities accounts for up to eight priority points out of
themaximumof32.
.
·
: ·
·
Griides
,
room
damage, disciplin~ record and roo~
·
.
conditlon
are
the other areas
that
compose the current priority point system.
This is a fair system
that
attempts to cater to students
.
of all interests.
If
Y?U
are n?t involved in a lot of acti
_
vities yet excel academically,
you
are
awarded with up to eight points.
.
·.
·
,
.
If
you have little to no discipline problems and keep your dormi-
tory in satisfactory condition, you
are
duly compensated.
.
·
The problem is that too many students do not want to have to work
for their QOUSing. They complain they
are forced to become active in
the college commuriity. What's wrong with that?
;
.
Extracurricular activities
are the richest part of the college experi-
ence
.
Students often learn more and make more valuable connec-
tions through their clubs than through the classroom.
Marist is only trying to advocate student life by making campus
involvement a part of the priority point system. And students who
take
advantage of the numerous opportunities available - and this
includes muctlinore than the
67
clubs on campus
~
should
be
re-
warded for their involvemenL
For those students who choose to spend more time on academics
and
.
less on activities,
·
the system has been developed to accommo~
d~te
_
Y?U
too. A student who receives excellent grade~, has no
discipline problems or
.
room damage, yet is only involved in one
activity still
earns
26 points.

• ·
.

·
.
:
.
.
This is ~nough to assure some type of campus housing .
.
Students
at Mari st should feel grateful
·
for the priority point system. Housing
.
could
be
determined by a lottery, in which luck is your sole guide.
.
This ~~much.m.9~
.
~~~il1~ the
.
~urr~nt sy~te~:
;
,
.
k,
,;x,
,
.:
·;
.
,
...

.
,
Or
.
the college couldbe
.
~ven more cruel and assign housing on
a
first
come, frrst serve basis.
:
At some institutions, like Fairfield Uni~
versi
_
ty, students pitch tents outside the housing office a day
in
advance to guarantee a good place in line for housing assignments.
-
The priority point system is the most fair method of determining
,
who
_
.
deservt:s
.
·
hoµsing : and
.
students
·
should
·
appreciate· that they
have a
.
greatdeal ofcontrol over their "housing fate
.
"
.Allroads'lead to Montana
/.·.··
.,
:
...
.
· .

·.
•,
._
. .

·'
....... :,-;
· .. ·
·
..
.. · .">
" ; ......
'
.
..
.
..
:

:
·.
. .
•.
:
'
.
.
.
Many Republicans are going to
great lengths to criticize
:
so-
. called "big government", and to
.
.
.
·
:
fiif
)
i;ony
-
of the apprehensi~n
·
~ownsize
·
the role that govem-
of
·
,'fed
-
~iynski i~
J
he state of merit plays in the lives of private
M:()n~aispl'()bablylo~tonmost
_
citizens. Among the proposed
people
;
,
.
/ .
.
\
.
:
.
>
. _·
.
··
..
·
.
.
plans is the elimination of the
~~
.
f~ bµsted down the
.
Internal Revenue Service. while
d99
t:.
~f K,acz~ki' s
.
cabi~ as~ if
·
that is harclly
a
catastrophe, other
.
Rop~lol~!qh~l>een
lil
with
·
.
agencies
_
are essential to
.
the
agr~upqfhigh
_
~~oo, cheerlead
:-
safety of all Americans.
.
·
e%
'.
~
.
l~e\,\'her~
:
m the state the
Kaczynski is likely to join the
F~ro~
.
s~~!)ff Was held over
ranks
of Timothy McVeigh and
for
_
aµotl;lerbig
:
w~lc
>
.:.>
··:
.
•.
.
David Koresch as someone that
.
Wli
~
ttf~Q
.
itynic ,~ut ~s is · the government has done wrong.
the f~m~n•~pp?9s~tion tq g,9v
~
'
People are quick to defend these
ernm~l}~
_
ager_c.ies
;
:
To say-fu.at
·
people, often overlooking the
theF~~~,y~a~bl~mw1th
.
reasons why they had problems
govenunef!t
.
would
~
Ulce say-,
.
with the law.
ing
·
t,h~ tJJe
Lt,\Pp
~eecls
.
to ~nd
·
Quite simply, tpese are the bad
a n~w
_
pla~forbatttng practice
.
guys. The good guys are sup-
. If1t
,
h,a.gn_tbeen
.
forgoverJlll!ent posed to go after the bad guys.
mt
_
ervc::pt10~,
.
th
,
e Un~bomer
_
That is what they do. Now, any-
would still~ a guy w~armg sun-:-
.
one who has seen "The Dukes
glass~
'
and
.
c1
.
sw~~hirt~ The
·
ofHau.ard"mightdisagree. That
!nvestigaµ9n mu~t partic_ularly
seems about right, when you
1rk
the
,
Freemen
m
that 1t was consider that the Freemen prob-
jointly run
by
two dreaded agen..:
ably have the Bo and Luke com-
cies:
·
the FBland the B~u of memorative plates
.
("If'n I could
Alcohol
,
Tob~o an~ Firearms.
only find the one with Daisy and
Personally,
I
Just wish that the Uncle Jesse
.
.
.
")
post office didn't get to take
Sure, these agencies make mis-
creditfor
it However, that does
takes. But, come on, we can't
all
explain why it
,
took eighteen
be
Michael Eisner. Sure, they run
years.
·
·
.
.
up fees the size of Dom
TheFreemenepitomiz.eanidea DeLuise's grocery bill. Sure,
that
is gaining tremendous
popu-
these bills
can
be
difficult to pay.
larity in this country. This is the
.
Again, we can't all be Michael
idea that government
·
is bad.
Eisner.
I
..;.:..;.
-
.
Even after citing Secretaries DaY arid Canada's
.
Boxing Day,
Marist
gfad1111te: Drunc M
Gen
~
fails to successfully pitch River
_
_
Day and
.
Sunfest as
,
Hallmark holidays.
To
th9se who
helped_ine
to
grow
·
at
M
·
arist
-
·
.
'
' ~
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'.,
'
.
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._
,
.
.

by
Brian Frankenfield, Opinion
:
EdiJor
.....................
.
.......
-
As
the end of ~y last year here at Marist College rapidly approaches,
I
hav~ ~n
pondeitlg ov~;
·
wha
i'
exactly to·saym my sort-of farewell address
to
The
Circle
ancl to this institution .
.
I.had originally
plann~ ~n w1ting about~ the memories thatMarist has provided me with over the years and publish-'
mg this piece m the last issue of the newspaper.
,
However
,
this is a th~me that has been
.
well over-played
.
year after year. Instead,Td like
'
to take the time to thank certain people who have changed me in
-
some
way and ~elped me to become the person
I
am today; the people whC> have helped me to grow mentally
and_emotionally stronger throughout my four years here. Many of these people do not even knqw of
the mfluence
_
they have had on
my
attitudes and morals, and, more generally, on the
.
way
I
look at life.
So~
-
pleas_e, do
_
not be surprised if you are reading along
-
and you suddenly find that
I
am
describing
a
person who sounds a lot like you ... because itvery wen could be.
.
-
.
·
.
.
.
.

.
,
.
I would like to thank...
·
.
.
·
·
·
·
·
First, my houseniates for teaching me about frien~hip and fo~ pro~ing that no matter how h~d
-
~ day,
week or eve,;i month it's been, it's never anything so bad that a good laugh from agood friend can not
_
help you forget...
·
·
-
.
·
· ·
·
Toacertain
_
frie11cl since freshman year who stayed for a while in good ol
'
.
Meriden, CT,
fo~
teaching
me
about <:ourage, detemlination and that anything is possible if ytju set
.
y9ur mind to it.
:'.

.
.
·.
.
·
.
To
agoo,d
friend whom
I li
_
ved with this past summer in Poughkeepsie, for teaching ~e about strength,
about adversity and abc>utjpdividuality.;
;
,
:
.
'
.
,
··
i

;
.
:
.
. .
·
·
.
.
.··.
.
..
.
.
· . .To
a:
~t!~n
_png}i_~h
prof¢ssor whq
:
~q
.
sµll1Illersago c9uld hear
,
the
,
Woodstock-Festiyal,from.
.
his
. front
y'ard
'
and
who
·
l~ad
freshman
year for Creative
:
Writing, for
-
encouraging
me
:
to
·
write
and iowdte
'
.
·
with passion..
.
.
.
. . '..
·
·
· · .
.
·
·.
·
.
.
· ·
·
·
·
··
·
· •
.
_
To another Englis~professor who c.µrie to Maristwith
a
background from NY1.i,and who introduced
my Theory class to
.
the technology of ~e Web,Jor
.
his enthusiasm and
_
love for teaching that
was
expressed in the classroom, and for the confidence
.
he had in his students and therefore forced them to
have.in themselves ..•
·
.
.
.
.
:
.
.
·.
.
.
.
·
·
.
·
· ·
·
·
_
.··
· ·.
.
·
.
.
T() a
,
ce~n ex:..girlftierid,. for givjng me ltppe that love really do~ exist,
for
teathing me that it often
leaves as quickly as it
_
comes
·
and forte.tching ~e it's okay to cry .
.
.
.
. ·
.
·
:
.. ··
.
·
·
.
·
. ·
·
.
'fo
a certain person wh~m I'vejust
,
rec~ntly
started h~ging out
with
who
can
shoot
-
a
tnean gam~
.
9f
pool as ~eR as ameanJurnp shot,fot teaching me about honesty, straight-forwardness
·
and being
genuine
;
and for helping me to appreciate every last
day
here ...
·
·
·
·
·
.
·
..
<:
To the complete stranger who stucka gun inmy backtwo y ~ ago and
to
another
.
stnmger.who siu
.
ck
a gun in
my
_
~tomach at the end of this past summer, for teac:hing me to do it today, be_cause
I
might not
·
·
be
here tomorrow;.
;
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
··
·
·
··
·
-
··
· ·
-
·
To a
certain
friend
I
lived with for a
·
whiJ<f sophbmore
year
'
who ni6ved
·
to Texas after being forced to
leave Marist, for teaching me that, inthislife, things don~t always
.
wm
:
k out./
.
.

.
;
,
>
.
1"o
a couple of friends from home w_ho were always therefor me and who always encouraged me
'
tog<>
further an
_
d do more than
I thought poss~l>le,f or their trust and for tJ}eir ~ove...
·
.
·
··
.
To my brother, for teachi11gme about standing on my own;
·
standing iip
-
for what
I
Mlieve in and doing
what l
_
\Vant to do,
.
despite what others maythink
of
say.:.
_.·
.
.
•·
· ·
·
·
.
··.
·
.
_
.
.
·
·
To a ceqain person w~orve known since freshman year and who, in my book,
can
sing the National
Anthem just as well as, ifnot better than, \Vhitney Houston orRoberta Flack, for,showing me that there
are people out there following their
dreams
and giving me the inspiration to follow mine.
.
.
·
·. ··
· .
.To a certain person who sat next to me in Dr
.
Ingall's class frestiman year and who lives notto far
from
me at home (and at sch<Yol), for her friendship
and for sbme deep conversations that changed the way
I've C!Jme to think about a lot of different things...
. .
. .
· .· . .
.
. ·
.. . .
.
··
- To another
certain pe~on from ~ode Island who
.
sat
()D
the other side of me in br. Ingalls class
freshman
year, for teaching me, again, about strength and individuality .
. :

.
·
'fo a
ce~n
perso!l who lives ~n
.
Taylor Ave: an<l who took me for a b~nch ofloot in a card game over
this past wmter break, for ~eaching me about respect and about not forgeuing where I'm from ..
:
·
Toa certain
·
person
__
who works
.
in Student Accounts and who makes the
best
shrimp around, for
teaching me to fight for what is right..
·
.
·
·
To
a
c~rtain group of ladies at the Leaming Center for teaching me
·
about kindness and providing me
with opportunity..
.
.
·
·
tea:::m~;~e~J;~
TH£ CtRcL£©
.
of an education,
.
for
her support and for
her encouragement ..
The Student Newspaper of Marist College
To my father, for
Daryl Richard, Editor-in·Chief -
teaching me about
Meredith Kennedy, Managing Editor
Chris
Smith, Sports Editor
perserverence, about
family and, again,
about respect ..
And, finally, to all
those who didn't be-
lieve I'd make it this
far .•.
rm
going even
further.
Sue Fischer, News Editor
Jacqne Simpson, Fearure Editor
Amie Lemire. A&E Editor
Brian Frankenfield, Opinion Editor
Jason
Duffy, Business Manager
G. Modele Clarke, Faculty Advisor
The Circle is
published every Thursday. Any mail may
be
addressed
to
TM Circle
Marist College, 290 North Road, Poughkeepsie, NY 12601.
















































THE
CIRCLE:V
IEWPOINTS
April 18, 1996
7
·· .. ·_<:-,.;~~to,'!)~
~'i·
· ·
DiYCrSltytS yC>h~19hOice'.
:, Commentary on diversity con_trad!~ts itself
<'.
F.ditor:
The folio-.ving
is•
in respc,nse
to'
the .• :iiterilry mast~q>i~c/:
submitted to
The Cirlce
,last week by J~on White.
In
his
commentary, he focused on the problem~·gay:students face in an
undiverse setting. Hemay feelthat he,wasdoing the homosexual
community a favor by writitng his piece. But Jason.White is not
gay, and his article has absolutely no bearing on the gay
. community whatsoever. .
.
··
v
•·
·
White interviewed two gay students atMarist. He intended to :
h~lp voice the opinions of homosexuals everywhere, but ~ucceded
in
doing quite the opposite. White seems to want equality for
Mariststudents,· but judging ,by.his commentary, one can· plainly
see he further separated not only the ·gays from the straights,
but the blacks from the whites. It is peoplejust like himself
whom httcriticizes.
If
he wants to be_a voi~ for any community,
perhaps it should be for heterosexual 'African-Americans. We, as·
gay students, can speak for ourselves.
.
. .
·
We do nof~it alone .. We do not segregate.ourselves. We speak.
just
as
loud as the rest of campus .
.
We do not hide ...
In
fact, we
· are everywhere.•. Believe it or not, one in ten is a homosexual.
.
Roughly·around
500
gaynesbian students
walk
the halls at Marist.
We are; whether you choose to realizeit or not, on-your athletic
.
;~.-we are in your'fraternity/sorority. We
are
your roommates.
We are·your besf friends:-·.·Perhaps persecution was an answerin
the past, btitnow we have a voice. Not the voice of a well-
·
meaning-heterosexual. We have our own voice, ·and we will speak
for ourselves.
·
If
you cannot hear us, you choose not
to;
Perhaps ignorance
is takirig
up too much brain space. We are unique. We are not all
fashion majors. We do not refuse to use the urinals for fear of
harassment. We do not all dress in drag. Men~s clothes fit us
perfectly well. We do have straight male friends. Some of us do
love children. We don't wish we werewomen, ~And some of us do
despise Madonna. Intimate relationships between gay men (and
women) do last, as we can proudly testify. We all have the same
feelings as heterosexual men and women, and we have the capacity
to love one another.
Jason White may have spoken with two gay Marist students, ·
but he obviously:represented the,opinion,of-just:~:me:• Wf?are not
to:beSierrotyped'aslhe·same, for we have.diversity within our
·
own group. ·• We, Eddie and Jamie, are quite the opposite from what
Jason Wfilte tried to speak about in his commentary. We arejust
the same
as
everyone else, except we are two men who love each
other:· And we ourselves are able to speak about our relationship,
our opinons, our views ... even our choice in clothing. We don't
need the goodwill of others to do it for us. We can stand up for
ourselves and proundly admit that we are members of the Marist
student body.' And we.are gay. Who really cares?
EdmundM. Ercole,Junior
jamie P._Olmstead, Sophomore
Students are
not
the bad guys
Editor:
Throughout my career at Marist,
I
have noticed that Marist Secu-
rity views us, the students, as the "bad guys". They are always out
to bust the students;
Why
is that? In fact, as I see it, we are the good
guys that security is supposedly here to protect, and_ if we were not
here, their job would not exist.
This year,
I
have notice that security loves to write tickets, actually
more
than
any other year. Once again ... why is that? I strongly feel
that security should spend their time more wisely. In other words,
leave the people who belong here alone and start worrying about the
people who don't belong here.
.
What
.:lo tickets do for Marist Security anyway? Meet quotas --
maybe, make more money for Marist-yes, create angry students --
yes, create
a
hate relationship between security and students where
a strong relationship should be present so Marist Security can work
with the iotudents to make this campus a better place to live -- yes.
The point of this letter is that Marist Security should not be con-
cerned with where the people
who
belong on campus park, but they
should
he
concerned about the safety and security of the students'
and their belongings. By the way $25 for a parking ticket and a
stolen mountain bike in one week! Come on, let's be a little more
proactive!
Paul M.,rreu, senior
'.Editor:
Mymmie is Darren Duffy, a transfe~ student and a junior here at Marist College. I am ~ting this letter
to
The Circle
in
response to the letter published by Jason White _in the Viewpoints column of your April
3, 1996 issue. ·
.- ··
·
The points which are emphasized in your letter are well addressed and they're of great concern to all
ofus at Marist. However, in your letter you bring with your concern of diversity and discrimination a
sense of discrimination in the letter itself.
·
·
·
In
specific, you said the cafeteria has no selections whereas they really do have a multitude of
selections from every corneroffood groups as well as beverages. In your letter, you are over-general-
izing racial groups at Marist by separating the " ... black kids being young, having fun," and the " ... bunch
of white kids with plaid shirts having fun." These statements connote that these students only sit
separately from one another and only have "fun" here at Marist.
In
regard to the statements made about the gay section, I feel that here at Marist College there are
more elements of diversity among the student arid faculty body than at the equally sized college which
I transferred from,
.is
well as_ the real world. The gay members of our student body feel that they have
no voice or expression here
at
Marist, but in truth they really do. With clubs such as the
Bi,
Gay and
Lesbian club students can gather and voice their opinions and concerns toward the entire student
body. This also applies to the different ethnic clubs such as the Italian and the Gaelic clubs. The way
a
person dresses cannot deem whether they are gay or not, nor can the jewelry a person wears today.
with the modern trends in fashion.
If
a person feels that they are discriminated against here at Marist,
I
feel that they have not given the school nor the students here a fair chance. To over-generalize with
a closed mind is discrimination. Open· ·up your minds and your mouths to voice your unbiased
opinions and you will succeed.
Darren Duffy,junior
BiGALA
president speaks on commentary
Editor:
.,
I'm not sure where Jason White goes to school, but
I
for one can say that in
a
single day at Marist,
I
interact with an incredible diversity of people. I hang out, got to class and work with Latinos, African-
Arnericans, athletes, Jews, _heterosexuals and lesbians, or any combination of these. Each person on
this campus is an individual in his or her own right, that cannot be categorized or labeled. Every person
I know defies stereotypes in one way or another. Unfortunately, Jason White hasn't had this experience.
· He complains of alack of diversity and segregation of groups into "ghettoes" on this campus. Ac-
.. ·cordirig'tohim, "the\vhite section", are "a bunch of white kids with plaid shirts: .. mostly from Connecti-
cut, New Jersey or Long Island." According to Jason White, "the gay section ... sit alone, say nothing,
and must hide. They are silent. They have no voice." Jason creates the ghettoes he complains about
by
furthering stereotypes. Jason goes on to lend the gay community at Marist a voice through the story
of Eddie and Paul, two gay men on this campus who are inaccurately portrayed, lumped together,
categorized; segregated and stereotyped through Jason's representation of them.
I challenge that representation.
I
am a white lesbian from Brooklyn that doesn't wear plaid shirts.
I
do
not sit alone in "the gay section" silent and afraid.
I
speak my mind and I have friends that support me.
I
identify
with
the gay community but
I
do not segregate myself in it.
I
work toward advancing my
community through the Marist Bi GALA~- Bisexual, Gay and Lesbian Alliance -- our supposedly silent
voice on this campus. And my friends, housemates and professors, straight, gay, black and white
support me.
-
Jason, there is no "gay section" on this campus. Gay men, lesbians, bisexuals and people questioning
their sexuality are yourroommates, your frat brothers, your housemates, your classmates, your cowork-
ers,· your relatives and your best friends. They make up the diversity at Marist you have failed to see.
Gina 'Irapani,junior
President,
Marist
College Bisexual Gay and Lesbian Alliance
ore:·
!
0
iil
:or.
.... ~elpaj:
the Faculty
M,
.... ,et~:~roughtth~\
sh D¢partment,,
4~/
.
.
·
..
e,i:
ed
at
full
..
.
~on,ng
m. .
nglisll
-:,:,~:.-=:~:1=.:;: ':
=~-
. 3tw,e~\vho
have
pru,d :
can't
be
the
only
ones: '.
.
;_t~take
'action.··
We're·
.
,
.·. Illold
'()(
apathy thai>
·
aid
in the
'.
past,
'",
•·
'
.
.
'
.
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'
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8
.
THE cm'.cLE

'
·
..
April18,1996
Taking a
-
Closer Look
at
.
·-
News
·-
and
,.
Reviews
Love and Rockets
r9ck
·
on,
Fu
gees
groove
out
:
by
Amie Lemire
A
&EEdiior
Okay, for this week's music re
-
views, I chose two CD's from
.
very different ends of the musi
-
cal spectrum
.
The first one is the new one
from Love and Rockets; the sec-
ond is the
,
CD from the Fugees.
·
I
was
·
so excited to listen to
both albums, because I like both
.
groups.
Call me Miss Versitile--1 mean
;
·
who else can listen to
'.
'How
Many Mies' and 'Sweet Lover
Hangover' back to back?
.
Like most people, I first heard
.
of Love and Rockets back around
'89
,
when their lovely hit 'So Alive'
became a staple on MTV
_
and
ra-
dio stations everywhere
.
'
I
couldn't close my eyes with-
out see Daniel Ash's
·
face and
many pairs
.
of legs walking
through my mind.
(
r
emember the video?)
So
,
I was ecstatic to discover
thal, at long lasl, they have a new
'Judgement Day' shocked me
peatand sing along,
.
all the while
'
·
,<
into attention with its crashing
annoying the hell out of my room-
guitar chords
.
.
mate.
·
• ·
,
The song rolls along iriwaves:
.
Lauryn has a deep, strong
;
. ·
lulling melody, loud guitars.
voice that I love to listeri to.
The combination was delight-
Maybe you've seen the

fully delicious to the ear
:
Fugees video for Fu-:Gee-La,
.
'Use Me' is a luscious, deep
their highly catchy song.
little ditty.
·
Actually,
I
must say that the en-

Ash's voice is teasing
,
mock-
tire album is greatfun tolisten
ing; as he sings," "Use me. C'mon
-
to
.
Especia11y at ear-splitting
and use me;''
decibel while traveling down
..
This one is a
·
great one to listen
Route 9.
to with the one you love. Or want
'How Many mies' has
a
deep
to.
groove, and
a
nice smooth beat.
'Sweet Lover Hangover' is the
You cannot listen to this song
most radio friendly song on the
without nodding your head in
album, with non-obtrusive
·
gui-
. .
rhythm to the beat.
tars and lyrics.
'Zealots' made me laugh, be-
·
The second side ·of the
-
album
_
cause the idea oftal<lng the oldie
·
is a bit heavier than the first;
"I Only Have Eyes For You" and
·
David J's guitar shrieks a
.
bit
putting a new groove to it.
·
harder, a bit louder. ·

'No
.
Woman No Cry' takes the

Side One
has
wonderfully lay-
Bob Marley classic and fits a
·
ered sounds, with
.
Ash's voice
·
smarter bass beat to it.
ranging from high and sweet, to
-
• .
Still a great freakin' song--both
a deep, throbbing growl.
new and old.
Side Two stickS more
io
the lat-
·
·
Fu-Gee
-
La' (refugee camp
Inix)
baby out.
.
.
Sweet F.A: is their first venture
out in about six years.
·
Daniel Ash
,
David J.
,'
and Kevin
Haskins were in the wildly popu-
lar underground-ish band Bau-
-
ter; no songs can be mistaken for
.
opens with Wyclef asking, "Can
a ballad here.
·
,
I
get a groove?" Then when
This album is awesome; it rockS
Lauryn takes over, her
·
voice is
hard
.
both sweet and harsl:t.
I
must admit; I've never con-
It's a mellow, head-bobbin'
TO
.
PO-TOWN WITH LOVE"-
Black
47 rocks out
_
in
Poughkeepsie
;
The Irish natives are coming soon. They will be
playing at O
'
Neilrs Irish Castle
011
April 26
.
Come on down
.
sidered myself
to
be a Love and
song. Long after it's over, you'll
Rockets fan, but

after hearing
be walking around singing •;ooh-
this
co
;
I
am iii love with Daniel
La-La-La" anli annoy your room-
Marist Alumni returns to roots
h
a
us
.
.
~
When they broke up in
the
early
'80s, the three of them broke
away to
fonrt
Love and Rockets.
·
Betcha didn't know that, huh?
Well, maybe you did.
Ash's voice.
mates too
.
Even if you've never heard of
.
.
.
_
.
.
the band before
,
go
·
he
a
r this
·
;Fu-Gee-La' (Sly
& Robbie inix)
man's voice.
·
·
takes the
-
same song and
_
puts a
It'll make you weak in the
reggae spin to it. I dig
.
this.ver
.
.,.
.
He says, "Alot,ofmy
:
back
-
ground at Marist, besides litera-
ture courses, was liberal arts
Graduation
;
we allwonder
if
courses expandedwhic
_
h
I
found
our costly degrees will bring the
very valuable t<;> me.
,.
.
:
-
careers we seek
·
.
_
After graduation
,-
DeFelice
·

by
Elizabeth Batista
,
:
Staff Writer
.
The album starts outwith the
song 'Sweet F.A.'which Kendra
;
my housemate, says is a refer
:-
ence to Bauhaus.
·
knees.
sion too. The sound her is more
I
.
first
·
heard of the Fu gees
through
.
their version of 'Killing
Me $oftly'
;
which I love more
intense.
There are constant reminders
.
worked as
~
newspaper reporter
,
of the strugglingjobmarket
_
and
and has been writing eversirice
.
-
all those college graduates who
On Friday, April

J2th,
,
the
.
This is a good, srnooth
_
CD
:
can'.t find work in their desired
Alumni Office
:
welc
.
omed
.
The song is a dreamy
,
swirl-
·
ing melody, the kind you want to
.
drift off to sleep to.
than
I
cansay
;
.
Each song is unique, but the
_
'
fields.
>
.
,
.
DeFeliceforabooksigiiinginthe
overall
··
sound
·
is
.
a good, deep
But
,
there is hope.
Marist
Art Gallery.
·
There is a sweetly jangling gui-
tar and cymbal rolls
,
as Daniel
Ash's voice croons gently.
·
·
·
This one particular song made
rile seek out this CD with all of
groove.
Jim DeFelice
.,
gives us encour-
Malir~en
-
Kilgour, Marist
'
.
.
.
·.
agerrient:
'..
He is
an
accbmpiisllecF Aiunini Director; said, " We are
The opener
was
deceiving, be
-
cause the next song,

the intensity
_
of a heat
.::
seaking
inissie
;
·
··
Thanks.
The reworking of srings y~ur author
and
heis
an
alumnL
·
,
giving the opj:>ortunityto stu-
.
parents
.
know into songs you'll
At Marist, :OeFelice was an
E1_1-
'
dents to see a successful alumni.
like is an awesome idea. Buyit
gHshinajor and worked for
a
lo-
Becoming
.
a published author
now amf en
·
o .
cal ews a er n radio ta. n.
is no easy feat."
_.
_
Keith ahem!
Fifteen
'
spririg-tirnethingsto exploieinHUdsOnVfill~y
·
$
.
18
oo
··
.•
other wild
_
life
.
,

an
.
d
.
_
.
th
_
eir young
.
·-
..
·
Take
Route 299 tbrough New
. more.
.
.
4) Enjoy a picnic.
will be just coming out for din
-
.
·
Paltz, then follow the signs.
Vanderbilt mansion offers lots
_
-
ner.
.
.
.
If
yqu park in the main lot,
of secluded spots for a quiet pie-
9) Spel_lln
f
.
-
.
.
':
thN
·
oe.~!s1
·
·.
oats
.
1·ins
.
i•
·
·
tia1r
"·
ee~fee
_
; howev~r, the
nk on a sunny afternoon.
Explore Howe Caverns in
1u1
Afterwards, take a walk or
Howe's Cave
;
New York.
13) Hike up a
·
mountain.
throv
/
a frishee around
ort
the
.
Travell56 feet below
·
the earth
Mohonk Mountain House has
green.
·
_
.
and explore a world
_
that's been
miles of trails leading around
5)
Walk through a Japanese gar,-
,
·
around for
a
couple thousands
and up their mountain.
d
·

·
·
of
years;
.
·
.
. ·
The cost for parking is $8.00
en.
.
·
G
1
·
I
· "
G dens 1·n

T h
_
e
·
co
·
s
_
t ·1s $10.S0per"adult and
and includes access to the

With only a few short
.
weeks
.
o o
.
nms1ree
ar
.
-
•.
· ·
·
·
· ·
· ·
·
:
Mtlibrook and admire the
\;
ariety
it's open seven days a
,
week.
grounds for the day.
left"ofschool, it's time
.
to
'
take
offlora whichdecorates the land-
.
IO)
Go to the zoo.
However, if you eat at the inn,
.
.
a
.
d".an
.
:
.
ta
.
ge of
.
the beauty
in
the
.
·
.
. ·.· .· ·.
J ...
ti
.-
·
-
h
Treva
·
r
Zoo
1·s actually a part
park1"ng
·
1"sfree.
·
·
·
scape
.
nms ree ope11s to t e
HudsonValleyar~a
.
,.
·
.··.·
·.·
·
M
fi
of the Millbrook School in
14)Playwiththeanimals.
,
_
·
.
so
'
,
:
.
h
·
er
.
e's
·
_
fi
_
ititee
·

.
n
.
ways
,
t
_
o
·
.
eel-
public on.Wednesday,
ay 1rst.
·
· · d
:
Millbrook.
Catskill Game Farm, in Cairo,
ebrafo
'
spdrig
,
in
th
e region.
6
\Jct:ts~~~~~
~~~~n~omery
It offers over a hundred ani-
New York, is the absolute best
'
l)
:
Fiyakite.
·
·
·
.
·
·
.
.
·
'.
•.
o
.
ffers horseback ridi
.
ng
·
to the
mals, frommorethanS0different
kind of zoo .
.
.
Take
'.
a
.
cl.vantage of the breeze
V.
" d d , I
d
al
·
·
-
·
·
p
.
ub11·c
·
everyday
·
spec
.
ies.
.
~ou can
1 ~
an pet m
_
ost
of the
.
Hudson and fly a kite at
.

..
·

·
·
.
the
.
-
.

M
. ·-
1
:
ns
.
,
Ma
.
n
,
s
.
ion

·
in
..
It's$20.00perperson fora half-
·
All of which are Cared for by
all theanirnalsinit,includingthe
·
h
·
·
$30 00 r.or o
·
ne an
·
d a
·
half
.
the students and their
_
instruc-
giraffes and ze
_
bras.
S
taa
.
ts
_
burg, The best part? It's
our,
.
ll
..
hours, or $40.00 for two hours.
tors. A two dollar donation is
Also, at this time of
year,
there
free
.
-
:
·
·
· -
· .
Grabsorriefriendsandcall361-
suggested.
arealotofbabyanimalsondis-
2)
Take
.
.
a
·
tour across
·
th
e old
I
429Jor reservations.
11) Eat S0's style.
play, such
as
bear
and lion cubs.
Poughkeepsie-Highla
nd
Rail..
?)
Get ice cream.
Happy Days' Cafe is right on
It's$12.00perperson, butthe
road
b
r.id
ge.
Del's Dairy Creme, on Rt.
9,
Rt
·
44 on the way home from
tickets can be reused at a future
:
It offers a great view
9
f
th
e
north of Rhinebeck, offers the
MiJlbrook. Stop in and enjoy a
date.
Hudson, but it's not for
th
e
best
soft ice cream around.
vanilla-coke and a half-pound
The
farm
opens May first.
acrophobic.
;
.
. ·
·
.
They also have great food at
hamburger (with the workS).
15)
Feed the ducks
.
Call 454,:.9649 for detatls.

·
·
·
It's economical eating with a
Valkill, the Eleanor Roosevelt
3) Go "o
·
ran
_
airplane ride.
mexpens1ve pnces.
1
'
8) Deerwatch
great atmosphere.
estate in Hyde Park, has a pond
'
.
Rkhmoor Aviation a~te
·
On your· way back
from
12) Go biking.
that is always filled with ducks,
Dutchess County Airport
O
ers
Rhinebeck, travel the back roads
Lake Minnewaska has miles of geese and swans.
introductory flight lessons for
at sunset.
great biking trails for all levels of
Bring a loaf of bread and sa-
$50.00 an hour.
·
Deer, as well as a variety of riding.
vor the afternoon.
Or, bring a friend along for
.
·
President DennisM;urtayadds
,
"f
think
it's great when alumni are
willing to come back and share
their accompHshments."
Jamie Dunn, a senior at Marist,
describes his
.
meeting with
DeFelice
,-"
Iwas impressed with
t~e support

he
.
·
gives
_
students
who aspir
e
to
be
writers."
DeFelice says, "Writing affects
us in so many ways .
.
If
you are
interested in writing
,
pursue it for
·
it's own worth.
The
ability to find
things out
.
and communicate is
highly in demand in all sorts of
different jobs."
When asked about his recent
success, DeFeliceanswers, ''You
don't realize how different it (be-
ing a published author), is until
it happens to you. You have to
realize that this is not what hap-
pens every day
.
.
Everyone goes
through dry speJls:"
DeFelice
'
s new book; The
Golden Flask, is set in the his
-
toric Hudson Valley.
It is the third book of the Jake
Gibbs
,
Patriot Spy series, and it
can be purchased at the Marist
College Bookstore.
Other novels in the series in-
clude The Silver Bullet and The
Iron Chain
.
DeFelice's next book War
Breaker
,
will be on the shelves in
July.
The author describes it as an
"international thriller!"



















































































































.
......
.
.
,
......
.
.
.
.
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-
.
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.
Wb~11
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_
t_ifsl
~eard
·
~Q!J~tfeaf;
:
_
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in
';
lllydaughter for
·
a
'.
seccind
I
thouglit
;
"On
-
dear Lord
/
who
~
.
·
longer.
,
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.
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_
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.
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ark
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Now:Ihave
tp
address the sec-
.
·
ond humorous element of Fear--
Milano
back
intOthe niovies??"
.
·
:
Buttheiildecid&ftogi~ethein
.Alyssa
Milano; who plays
the benefit of t11e
'#
~ubt.
_:.:·
i
;
>
·,,
/::
·
:
rar:o,
_
Nicole's ~l~t~y
_
best
I
trie,~
to
st
op hum~ilg;
"Feel
>
.
0
A11
i
could think was, "Wow!
the vibrations!
\
Come
.
on; come
.
.
Samantha Micelli grew up to be
.
on ... F~el it;
feefit!"
'.
uridenny
.
. ·.
i
-
>
·.
~
-
-:-:
;
.-·,
.
.
/,
a HO!"
_
.
·
·
·
breath as lpurchased
.

my ticket: B~'if~h)5~!11nd
:
io
tcy
:
aciing.
,
;
Margo thankfully plays a mi-
Ho~ev~r,-Alas!
_
.:
.
.
.
';
;
_~
_
nlth1s
~ay C0?1~
.
as
_a
sur-
'
.
nor role in the movie.
.

My mstmct
,
~ were n~h.t_:
:_
: \.:··
.
_
pr:i~e
;
to
_
hr..ar~
.
but
_
th1~i1s his sec-
,
·
Like David, Margo's role is un-
·
_
The only
_:
f.nghtful
!~•~gabo
_
~t
·:
~e
l}~jilm:
:
.
/:
<;
,i
· ..
i;
_
::.

•·-
.
derdeveloped, so much that she
.
Fear
was
the b~d achn~
_
.
and ~e
.
.
:_;-)
~~.q~~u~edm
_
The
_
B~ketb?ll
just brings on laughter, even
_transparent pl0Ustoryl
_
1~e
.
.
,
.
..
.
·iJ?.•;u:t~
_
..v~thLeon3!~PD1C.a~no,
,
·
·
when she has serious scenes.
Half war ~ug\the
-
II19~ie,l,
:
,:
~~~~
:
h~ pla~ed a_
·y
e2' c~~vmc-
.
;
.
Nicole is played by young
ac-
was shoutmg;
,_,
,!'ley. w:tiere stne
)
_
DgJu~~e
,
.
~
_
0
.
'

•••
:'
·

·


tress Reese Witherspoon, who
.
Funky
.
.
B~nch?
-
out l~u~
a.~
,
~e
'
'..
,
Her~;h(?\1/ey~r,
~~
,
~~rg
is out
won critical
acclaim
for her work
scr~eq.
.
_·,
.
·•
.
:
:
. ,
. :
.-,
.
.
-_.
>,
pf
:
place,: ~nconvmcg1g. as an
in "The Man in the Maori"•
·
and
.
-
Sixt~~ y~ar old Nie?}~ ~alk~r
--~
J.>.s
:
es~
_
ive soci_qf~t?:fYP,_e'.
.
''Wildflower".
1s fascmated ~nd very !ntngueo
,
: ;'
In

:
th~
:
~~g
.
mn~ Ilg,
.D~v_•d
·
She should concentrate on
_
by the mys
_
tensms Dav!1;
a
d~k
~
-_
s
,
~~p~
:
f-:l1c?~e 9f(h!!rf~~t \\'.1th
:
thought-provoking
roles
.
from
.
loner type she meets
m
a pool
·
fos smooth hnl!s and his dash-
hall.
.
.
.
_
_
_
.
.
-
_
_
.
.

'.
i
'
ngch¥Jn
::
.
. _
_
.
.
·
...
·
...
.
The two begin a passionate
.
:
,
Where
Nicole
was
taken iri by
"against-all-odds'' love affair,
.
David;J.was not fooled .
.
much
to
_
the dismay of Stephen,
·
,
'.~
His lines
,
were so cheesy and
.
Nicole\watchful father:
·::
(/
.
-_,:
_
cqmy,
I Jo~nd
_
myself laughing
Ofcourse, when
·
Daddy forbids
_
·
.
aloud
·
tn the theater.
:
,

.
the two from
seeing
:
ei:tch othe_r,
,
,
(Thankfully,
it
was
a-Monday
the pla
_
ri backfire_s
_
,
~nd ·
the
night; and therewaS only about
young lovers cling even closer
ten people in the theater who had
to each other.
.
the pleasure of listening to my
But
.
when David's disturbing
commentary)
·.
side comes out, little
by little,
Also, someone should have
Niccile
:
heeds her father's advice
doled out some
.
cash
.
and gotten
and breaks it off.
some voice lessons for Marky.
David can't cope
;
and
this is
His thick Boston
accent
comes
where
_
the
movie
takes
on
·
a de-
through loud
and
clear .
.
cidedly Stalker
kind
offeeJing.
"Mr
.
Wawkerh, you should've
Mark Walhberghas hung up
let riatuh' takejts courwse".
his Calv ins and· left the Funky
.
·
Wtieri
David made a homemade
now on.
·
Or at least, roles thatallow her
to wear outfits that cover her
butt.
Count the
number
of thigh-
skimming skirts she
wears
in Fear,
if you don't believe me.
The end of the
·
film tries to
achieve a level of spine-tingling
suspense.
It is scary in a couple places,
but even the
action
sequences
are plagued by Velveeta.
·
Fear was written by Cameron
Crowe, who wrote Singles.
!tis disappointing to think that
the same
man
who wrote Singles,
an awesome flick, penned this
piece of doody.
And you thoughf
We
only
had
textbooks!
.
.
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..
.
.
.
10
THE
CIRCLE
April
_
18, 1996
.
C~teW
:i.
·
deserves
·
.
mote
tha11· President's .QUp
<
Oljmpics; the World Ch~~pion-.
ships, and other
·
regattas are the
main
·
competitions. Rowing is
hardly ever shown on television
and therefore,
·
this culture is
.
n9t
accustomed to ~his actixity.
Th~ crew team doesn't get the
support at their ra~es basically
SPORTS WITH
·
SMITTY
.
due to the early times. They only
have two home
·
races all year.
The
.
first was actually canceled
The weather is finally starting
due to weather conditions; The
to get nice
.
and every once in a
second, The President's Cup, will
while a crew shell can be spotted
take place this Saturday.

At what
gliding down the Hudson.
·
·
The
time?
,
Early
.
·
T~e reasqn for the
thing that many
.
people seein to
early
_
~imes of the races and prac-
forget is that the crew program
tices is that the water is usual
at Marist is a year-round en-
calmest early
·
in the
'
day,
.
This
deavor. Who are these
·
crazed
obviously is the easiest type of
people who get up before the
condition to
.
rowi11.
.
A Closer Look At ...
Position/FirstBase
: ·
Age: 22
Hom~town:Marlboro,NY
:
.
Jiigh School:'M~lboro
·
.
.
High
s
.
~hool
Class:
Senior
.
Major:Psychology
crack ·of dawn every day to ei-
;This year the men are dedicated
ther row a boat, lift weights, or
to putting in the time and effort
go for a run?
but
·
are
.
off to
.
a mediocre start .
.
Sure,
many people can make a
.
The men's lightweight four fin-
case that many teams engagein
ished last in the
heat
and
.
ninth
these activities and this
-
is true
.
over~ll
_
this past weekend at the
However, they do not do these
LaSalle Invitational.
.
The men's
things at 5:30 in the morning all
varsity eight finished a respect-
year round like the crew team.
able second overall. The fresh-
.
.
~
:
'
:
-
.
.
.

µiune was named Player of the
·
Year in New York in 1992 .. At Marist,
:
0
sh~ is currently leading the
league
in
hitting. Laurie has also been named as a tri-captain of the Red Foxes.
These men·and women dedi-
men had a big race
.
and finishe~
.
cate great amounts of time to a
first overall. This shows th1;1t the
sport that receives hardly any
recruiting this year has paid off.
recognition. There are only a
The women on the other hand
handful of head races in the fall
:
proved that they are a force to
as well as dual meets in the
be ~koned with. The varsity
spring. The races only last for a
eight finished first along with the
few minutes unlike many
.
other
lightweight varsity eight. The
sports that go on for
.
a couple of novice boat, however, ,had a
hours. These individuals come
rough day finishing last in the
back early
·
in the Jail and work
heat.
Favoi-iteFood:Pizza
Favorite Pro Team:
New York Yankees
·
Favorite ~thlete:
Don
Mattingly
·
People Look Up to Most:
Softball Coaches
Reason Came to Marist:
Softball Team
out all year long to get in shape
This.was
·
the team's
.
first race
for a few minutes of competition.
.
this spring and they have at least
This shows how much· dcdica-
five more races to look forward
tion
.
that these athletes have to-
to. Back once again to the time
wards the sport of rowing.
commitment
·
involved in this
.
Many people on
,
this
'.
campus
sport; the crew teams
will
remain
do
not
seem to have much knowl-
··
here on campus after everyone
edge about the crew team or the
·
else leaves for the summer
.
They
sport in generaLYou hardly ever
,
wiHbe here practicing for the Dad
Red Fox Flashes
see the members oLthe team
.
Vails that take place in Philadel-
since· they practice
at
·
ungodly
.'
phiaon the Schuylkill river.
times and since th~y don't ever
The overall team has put a
.
carryany equipment
,
~incethey
great amount of time in for this

are
not yery visible;
.
this co~ld
spring season. The giris must
'
~amajOffe'1S
_
On»1~Ytheydon't
be·congratulated for their great
:
.
ge
(
apf
supp9rt.
·

:
>.
.
.

.
·
start
·
and will hopefully continue
Lacrosse goalie Craig Gi-evelding is ranked first in the
·
natio~ in saye ~~rcentage.
.
.
.
Lacrosse midfielder Greg Schneider
is
ranked sixth in the nation for assists and
18th in points-per~game.
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
.
· ·
·
·.
·
.

J\ho,therrea.fon
d1at
'
they don't
·
.
·.
their

winning ways .
.
J'he men
·
The softball team is 7~ 1 in the NortheastConference.
.
J:t~l~f
t
~
:5r}!~~s¢i;::;
.
~f;-:si
0
:
.
:t:~t ~u~x:~:e~~~:;
spozt
:;
TllfJJ1ain reasdri herejs
.
what the remainder of the sea-
that
:
Apferjca.p
..
sQCiety never put son
.
has in store .
The President's Cup Crew Regatta will be held at Marist
on
Saturday
siarting
~t
.
an e~p.h.a:sis.
'
011
'
I
~\yillg
-<
1Jlere
Chris
Smith
,
is
the
Circle's
are
ri.o
pro,fySS,~Oil~l 1¢agues that·
individuals
~ari
'
c9mpetein, The
sports editor
.
7:30a.m.
·
·
·
.
W~'ri-f
eh'steaµi
makes grea{'
:
strides at Blue Devillnvitational
. .
.
·
·
,
..
.
,•;
..

·
-
--
.
.
.
.
.
.
:~
Ri/nti}ng
R;d,
:
FOtf~
defeat Central Coniiecti~ut a~d University of Hartford laitwee_kend
;'

: -
-
,'
·.
_
·
-
_
,~
-
:-:
,
.
·:
.-
.
. J_
·'
.'
•.
>,

-·.
-
_.--
.-
-
_-_"
_
_ ·-
:
'
.
-.
.
.
.

.
.
. .
.

:
_
.
. .
..,
.
,
.



.
:;
°s
,.
·:.
·
\V
. .
Woodson, 'and
.
Allison Murray
.
day as well. She won both the
Al~xis Bequary also finished in
times,andthat'sth~wayitshould
ht
!EYE
..
~CfYK
have_l?een threeoftheteam'stop
1500mandthe3Q00m, with times
·
the top ten for Marist.
be. I'm not surprised
ataIV'
·
·
.
StaffWr,trr
performers all year long, and
of5:02and 11:02,respectively.
The most remarkable perfor-
TheMaii~fwt>fueri;itrack terun
6:~:~~i~:~~/~~r::C!~~~:
toi•~~:~~~
0
;:S ~~
0
i:~t~d~;
:~~~:~
~~:;;:,r, came
from
yet
continued
-
its rapid
.
imprq~ement
clai
.
med lit least one first place fin-
She just
ran
away with the 1500
Freshman walk-on Meredith
last weekend
.
at'the Bhie QevH
ish
on
Saturday.
right from ,he beginning, and, in
Halstead
ran
the 3000m
for
the
Invitatfonal;
';,
The
·
event~ hosted
Pino added two
.
more blue rib-
the 3000, she stalked and even-
first time in her career, and fin-
by Central Ccinri~ticut
.
Stat~,
··
bons to her already impressive
tually caught a really good run-
ished three seconds behind the
was dominated by Coach Phil
collection. The freshman won
ner."
leader.
KeHy
'.
s
.
squ,~C,;
·
the Red Foxes
the long jump with a 16'5-3/4"
Murray was responsible for
claimed first place in five of the
inark. She won easily, but has
Marist's fifth first place finish,
nine events that were featured at
the potential to fly much farther;
running the
800m
in
2:29
and
eas-
the meet.
her own personal record is over
ily outdistancing the field.
The team
.
·
completely
.
out-
17',
which she set during the in-
"Her time probably would have
classed Division
I
foes
like Cen-
door
·
season
.
.
been better, but she was ahead
tral Connecticut
·
State and the
She also claimed
first
in the
by so much that she started to
University
.
of Hartford. Accord-
100m, clocking a 13.33 in what
let up. AIHson's just.going to
ing
.
to Kelly, it was "not a very
Kelly described as
"a
real battle,
keep getting better in this event."
tough meet.'-'
·
.
from start to finish." Pino was
Sh'esetapersonalrecordofS
:
11
Some familiar names high-
also part
of
the 4x400 relay team
in the 1500m, which was good
lighted Marist'.s result sheet:
that captured second place.
enough for third place. Mary
Dominique Pmo, Kathleen
Woodson enjoyed an excellent
McQuillan, Karen Donahue, and
She crossed the finishline third,
behind Woodson and one other
runner, with a time of
11
:05.
Kelly is pleased with the
progress his team has made this
spring.
"We had a meeting after the
indoor season, and talked about
the mental aspects of running.
The girl~ ire posting some fast
With two more ~eets left inthe
1996
season, the Maristlrack
program is already looking for-
ward to next year .
.
The recruiting
season is well underway, and
Kelly has managed to lure at least
.
two
·
new distance runners to
Poughkeepsie.
'These girls have
·
had goo<J
high school careers, and I know
they will get even better."
"If
we get some walk-ons next
year that are half
as
good
as
the
two we got this year (Halstead
and Donahue), this program will
be in real good shape," said
Kelly.




































































































11
~
"
~
,
,



.


I
··
-
·-
.'
.
..
,
·
sOftball
i,mpi;9,r~~,,t;ec9:;d
to
7~1
,
. .
. .
·.
.
-
L·~·. ·: ..
.
A:;
t

\~
--
,.?
-
·
;•
r~•
-··_
...
~-(~ .:.~·
.
::
~
1
-
.
:
·.
·.
~-<
~
:
r
~
.~
~-:
~
..
.
~
..
...
.
-
:
>
::~~-
~
.-
. ·
..
··
:
.·. · ·.
•·· .
·
.
\.
.
. ..\ ·:.'
_
i;qoq~i}__ggqd, pI,~cgi!)~-,g~!l~r~!~f
.
:
\>,
TheNECtoumament, starting
b:y
!AT R~~OLDS
.
, .. : • .. ·
,
Wi~s;
:
a~o.
,
v.fith
~
Hudsc;>/ti
arid
'
'
.,lv1ay4 at Re>bert Morris, looks to
.
.
.
,
. $raff
W,;it~r
\
.
.
. . .
;,
~~$~il
,
(?°n;_the
·;
~oundrvi_c\ori~s
1
·
:
oewhere:tvlaristwants to.perform
U1)sung
heros
-,
_
_
ernerge
to
..
lead
Marist
}9_.victory
·
. •
;
,:.
·.

-.
'.
:
<
.;
,
'.
_
s
:
••
:•
·
:
·
ai:eenilnenL
:
:
;..;.-:'
.
_
:
•,
5:.
·
:>·
!
··
·
:
::
:
tothefrpotential.
: .
·
.
·
·
·
.
'
Withless-than)1aifoftheir
:'.~::•:
~uasoitdriieiihitrt1ajdrity'6f
>
i>
.
.
.
'
.
'.
':
.
:
'
..
Nort~east Conference gan,i~ ~~ft
:
the\voi-kioadJor
~~
te~rt{pitch~
"'We' re hoping to hi four peak
to plar, the Marist so~tball team
iii~
:
W2.7'.in~irig~
t
,
ahd her num~ . right w
.
h~n
we
get't6.the to~rna~
h.i~
_
to be pleased with
.
where
.
9¢rs
:
we
inipressiy~;
~
with a
1.16
ment,"Degatano said .
.
_"We're
.
theya~e
_.
.
.
.
.
.
,
,
,,

ear.l!eciJ~1f
[
av~dige and
-
12.0
not there yet but we
·
wm b~
/'
.
.
·
Commg off
an
unbeaten week-
·
strikeouts
'.-
·
·
·.:.:
·
. -
.
·
,
.
.
.
'.
.
:
end, which included three shut,-
·,
Nod'ar behi11d
,
is Hanson who
outs, the Red Foxes
'.
improved
:
ha~qnly?giyeri)ip ~8·
-
hitsJn
'.
her
the
_
ir
:
NEC record to 7-1
(18~9
70\n:ningsofworkandhasaEiy\
,:
0
~ :
-
?~am, riding th~
·
aoininant
,
0
f~~i~tiri~\hi
,
batt~;/mate of
:
r~
Wnik
\
~
\l{f('1;.
;
1
>
;t
i
;
arms of pitchers Michele
'
the twq phchers,
.
said
·
,
that with
.
~,
d
,,
O
Hudson, junior,
.
and Jenn
the
.
\\lafthe two Pitch; wins
al~
·
Hanson, freshman; h~ye won
lhir-
~ostcome ec,1sy.
.
·
·
teen out of their last fourteen
,~As soon
as
we score I'm sat-
·
contests.
.
.
.
'
isfied'.''. .
.
she
said.
''We need to
On Saturday,Hudson shutout
score four
:
or
:
fi.ve nins
·
fo gtiar-
Rider 3-0 while her cou~terpart,
antee awin."
·
.
·
·
Hanson, battled to a 6-4 victory,
Sc:ori
_
ng rupsJ1as been no diffi-
·.
for the sweep of the double-
·
cult ta'.skfo(th~ Red Foxes this
<
header.
.
·
season,
.
.
.
.
The dynamic duo was back at
The team has outscored their
it again on Sunday, blanking
oppo!J~
.
n
_
ts
..
H6 to§
.
~
a~d
has
·
av~
.
,
.
Mount Saint Mary's with a 6-0
·
eraged
·
nearly seven runs a game
·
win in the first game; then blow-
·
in the NEC.
ing out the Mount 9-(Hn the
·
nightcap.
Leading Marist in the hitting de-
Marist has only doubleheaders
·
partment has been senior tri-cap-
with Monmouth, Robert Morris,
tain Laurie Sleight, who has main-
and St. Francis (PA) left on their
tained a
.377
batting average
NEC regular season schedule.
along with seven doubles.
Senior catcher Angela
Degatano, one of the Red Fox tri-
.
captains, said she believes the
remaining
NEC
games
will
end up
on the win column for her team.
"I'm confident that we can win
them all," she said. "We never
go into
.
a game thinking less than
that."
Like any e:reat teams on the dia-
'
Degatano, who
has
knocked in
18
runs, said that despite the Red
Foxes' success, there is still roqm
for improvement.
''There's always more
-
work to
be
done," she said. "The team is
improving a lot as the season
goes on."
by
MARc
:
LESTINSKY
.
.
.
.
'
staff Writer
.
·
Fot
the first' six matches of the
season
·
. the nurribetone
·
and two
playerHor the men's tennis team
·
were carrying
the
load
:
On Sun-
day, however, it was the middle
man's tum to play top notch.
·
·
Madst's Tony'Yacobellis (third
·
singles), Andrew
·
Janes (fourth
singles) and Ben Sc
.
urto (fifth
singles) all came up with crucial
wins
to
key a 4-3 team victory
· over the Manhattan Jaspers in
Riverdale, New York. The win
also evened the Red Foxes'
record at
5-5'. ·
"Usually its been the top half
of our team that's been playing
well for us, but it was the middle
that came through for us today,"
head coach
·
Charles Hardman
said. "We've been working on
their games· a bit of late and
they've really· shown some im-
provement.''
.
,
·
Yacobellis, down 2-5 in the first
set of liis match, showed great
patienceanddetermination - two
qualities he hasn
1
t
exactly been
knowll for lately
~
to come back
and win the setin a tie-break, 7-6
(8-6)
.
·
He
"
also took the
·
second
set, 6-0, to earn the victory.
"I was very pleased with the
fact that I stayed in the match,"
Yacobellis
·
said. "I've been
known to lose my head a little bit
in the past, but I kept it today."
Jnnes, pla~ing out
.
of the num-
GRADUATING
SEN Io
·
RS
·
Whoever said
bcr four position
,'
aiso
·
struggled
at times buhvas
,
-able to pound
out a 6-4;7-6 (7-1 )'victory.
'
Scurlo fou
_
nd his opponent,
Tom Cesa,Jo
l:>e
a
·
little more for-
giving in his 6~3, 6-1 win.
In doubles, the first team of
Than Ferris (number one singles)
and Ryan Ulizio (number two
singles) were able to rally back
from a 0-5 deficit to win the set in
a tie-breaker,
9-8 (7'-2).
The sec-
.
ond doubles team, consisting of
Yacobellis and Janes, also came
up big with a
8-4
victory.
Those two wins provided the
crucial fourth point in the Marist
win.
In previous action from the
week of April 2, the Red Foxes
secured two wins (Iona and
·
Siena) against just one defeat
(Hofstra).
·.
·Notable performances were
.
turned in by Ferris
(3-0),
Yacobellis (2-0), Ulizio
(2-1)
and
·
Scurto
(2'-
l ).
·
Another fact to note should be
that Marist has won four of its
la'it five matches after losing four
of its
·
first five to start the sea-
son.
Yacobellis said he feels that
positive turnaround will continue
this weekend at the NEC Cham-
pionships in Emmitsburg, Mary-
land.
"We have a good shot this
year," Yacobellis said. "We're all
playing pretty well right now.''
"one person
can't
change the world,"
never tried.
Yu're
bllrsting
with
ambitions, goals, dreams and aspira-
tions .
.
The questio~ is
·
, how do you realize them?
Consider a degree from Fordham's Graduate School
-
~
·
of Social Service, which offers orie
:
of
thenation's
fargest,
.
top'.'"ranked pn>grams for educating and
training social servic~ professionals. At Fordham, we
.
offer a wide ~ariety
.
of concentrations as well as a hands-
on appro~ch to learning. When you graduate from
.
Fordham's Graduate School of Social Service, you'll have
. the tools and training necessary to make a differenc
e
.
Most importantly, we understand that life can be very
demanding. This is why we've created a Social Service
program that can fit just about any bu
s
y schedule
.
Attend either of our Information Sessions: Saturda); April
13th at our Lincoln Center campus or Saturda)
~
April 27th at
·
our Tarrytown campus. The Fordham Graduate School of
Social Service-together, we can make a difference.
INFORMATION. SESSIONS:
Saturday, April 13th, ·11AM-12:30PM Lincoln Center Campus
Saturday, April 27th, 1 :30PM-3PM Tarrytown Campus
.
For more information, call 212-636-6601
·
(Lincoln Center) or 914-332-6007 (Tarrytown).
FORDHAM
SocIAL
SERVICE



































































































































...
.
:'.
STATOFTBEWEEK:
;:-,
;
..
.
-
.·-._•·.
·'
·

.
._-..
:
·
-
•·
.
.
·-
CRAIG
:
GREv'ELDINO
·
1s
·
RANKED
·
·.-:- ·
12
=::""::ro•"'VE....
S00&1:S
:
,o.j,Ill
'.
1s
t
19!16
.
.
.
...
.
rmm
·
om
ARE
rosrINo
SOME
FAST
-nMES
AND
nrATS 'IHEWAY. IT SHOUID
BE."
.
.
:
-Phil Kelly,-
.
·
-
··
:
,;;
_;.
_.
,
..
·women's
track
coach
· "i
think
the
·
Stonyhrook game
gave us the ~spect as
a
program
by
MARTY
SINACOLA
·
StaffWriter
·
that we feltwe deserved. It also
did
a
lot for us in temis of giving
us a tremendous amount of con-
All
_
good Strl!alcS
tnust coine to
.
ari
end.~~ men
~
s
_
la~s~ ~
--
---
saw their five game wmnmg
streak fall to
.
the hands
:
of
the
.
University of New Hanlpsbire,
in
,
New Hampshire last Saturday.
The winning streak pushed a
·
2-2 team to 7-2 record before the
fidence."
·
.
·
. .
-
·
Grevelding is one of the rea-
sons .for Marist's success this
season
/
Currently the senior tri-
.
captain is ranked first in the na-
tion in save percentage with a
•percentageof.710.
Mariano, needless to say, likes
the
fact that Oreveldj.ng is a Red
Fox .
.
"Craig gives you confidence
. UNH game, and put them in
good
position
.
to
·
take
·
control
·
of the
Metro Atlantic Athletic Confer-
ence.
:
Cuqently
.
the
.
R~
i
Foxes
.
are
·
a perfect
4-0
_
in th~
MAAC,
·
tied for the top spot in the league
with Fairfield.who they
will
take
·
..
on at Fairfield onApril
26
.
.
that he will
be
in there. He stabi-
lized the defense when it was
·
weak
.
early on; but now that the
·
·
defenseis
:
playing much better
,
The
UNH
garrie;despite look:..
ing
:
Jike a lopsided I 4-9 d~feat~
was much closer than that, as the
gaine
was
tied 9-9 entering
>
th~
final quarter.
.
.
.
.
.
. _.
_
-
:
.
.
Head coach Tom Manano
.was
·
not terribly disappointed with the
loss:
·
·
_
.
·
-
.
.
.
"l
think we
are
better
.
talerit-
wise,
·
but they just camereacly to
play,''
_
Mariano said.C<We made
some menial
.
mistakes that
·
_
we
hadn't made all year, but a
·
lot of
the breaks that had be.en going
·
our
'
way ~llyear, didn't go our
·.
.

.
.
. .
·
.
.
.
.

.
... ·_·..
.
-
.
_
. .
.

-
·
.
.
_ .
.
_
.
.
.
.
·
.
.
.
Circle photo/Jason Ligouri
Midtield~r
Greg
Schneider
is
ranked
sixth
in
the
.
nation
in
assists and 18th
iii points-per-game;
.
.
w~y(on S~hlrday)
/
'
.
-.
.
.
..
.
_
one <>f
.
the bi#est win~ in r
_
ec~nt
cause i~ the past we
.
have had
Marist jumped out to
a
3:-0
memory,wh~ch occur
red
APril 3
difficulty with Stony brook. They
lead, only to see
UNH
battle to
at home a~amst Stonybrook.
~
have a good program and
f9r
us
take a 6-3 lead. The Red Foxes
back:-and-fourth game culmt-
to beat iheni gave the team a
tied it up at 6-6 by half-time; aJ1d
nated_in a
f~~~c
l
l- lO
?.ouble-
·
·
sense of how gc:>od -.ve can
be.
It
the game remained close until overuipe victory forMllrl~t
·
.
was a nice'feeling.';
_
_
.
UNH was
_
able to take control in
Mariano -.vas pleasecl Wtth the
Goaltender Craig Grevelding
the fourthquarter:
.
..
win
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
..
.
..
·
.
·
.
a
_
greed
w
_
ith
_
Marianp
>
.
.
'
·-.
Marisi can still savor probably
·
· "'It was a good win for us be
:
.
it causes us to play much better
as
a
unit."
.
Another cog to the Red Fox
.
machine is junior Greg Schneider.
.
Schneider ranks sixth in the na-
tion
in
assists per game, and eigh-
teenth in points-per-game.
"Greg is having a very good
year," Mariano said.
__
_
The 7-3 Red Foxes played Sa-
cred Heart at home yesterday, but
_
results were not available at
press time: Their next home game
will
-.
be Sunday against MAAC
foe Mt. St Marf s
.
Game time is
2:00 PM at Leonidoff field.
.
--
~
-.
.
Min.
J
f
tlfack
ptoveStliatthef
J
Can gothe
.

d.istance outdoors
·
by
GIANNA
PINO
:
credits his win
.
to hard work and
.
mately
sixmiJe
lpng race: '.Todd
..
seconds behi~d the first and sec-
. ·
,
-
·.
·

.
..
-
::
i f f

.
·
w, .
1
··
·
·
-
good weather.
_
Coulson(4),
·
JoshWood(5),
Tlill
·
ond place fimshers.
..
~
,
.
;;~~
,::
~
-Sriin
·
~iei
weekend
"I'_vebeen w:orking really fi.ird,
Russo( 6), Matt Pool(?), Lou
,
"Lwouldha~eHked to have run
~eJ•t~
~~
-
,
..
,
g's
track
.
team
did
but 1t was also a good Qay to run.
Caporale(S),
. and
_
Ned about
.
three seconds faster
,
"
0
'
ank
_
st
5
_
me
_
n
_
t·on
·
fro
·
·
m
· _
_
.
the'tr
·
It was really good conditions,"
Kenyon(l 0).
-
_
Casey said
.
"Going into th~ race
not ta e a
.
vaca
1
·
·
·
M lfi
.
'd
·
.
.
.
al
.
.
I th
ht I
ld .
-
·1.,
·
b
·
1
·
,
,
ard the Northeast
e
1
sru .
.
_
.
Second place so went to a
oug
·
cou
wm 1
ut
progress tow
.
·
.
-
.
.
Saturday's 10,000meterrun was
Red Fox, but it was to Marist
.
didn't have enough to finish.''
Conference meet t med to the
Melfi's first competitive 10,000 alumnus,AndyBairdwhogradu-
Looking ahead to next week's
Thek
'
.
Rh
_.
~
--
-
Fox
_
tesSreturud
._
ay
:
at the
.
meter race since the summer of ated in 1995. Baird competed as
meet at the Albany Invitational,
trac
De
..
t
1
~lpinas'tatt~
·
·
a1a
·
teen
·
tral
·
19<J3.
..
an open competitor.
·
Caseyanticipatesabetterperfor-
Blue
vi
Vt
on
·
th fi
·
I
't
To
will
·
th
-
·
.
.
· ·
S
·
un·versit
"This was e ustt1me ran 1
emen
notracemano er mance.
_
Connect•: ~te
·
tl
1
dista!~e-
in
college. Thelasttimewasthe
10,000metereventuntiltheNEC
"IthinkI'lldoalotbetternext
·
Toe
P
omman
u!n
show-
summer after my sophomore year
league meet on May 4 and 5.
weekend, just because of the
?ase~i.squa: had s
·
e:ts The in high school, when I tried to
In a "shorter'' distance event,
weekend off I was a little flat,"
mgs m the
,
J:°:
ev m~tion qualify for the Empire State junior Pat Casey placed third in
Casey said.
Foxes engu
.
e
co
.
Games, I
ran
a 35:58
so I
guess
the
1500metefracewithatimeof
of the 10,000f
thmeter run_,J
0
1
:~mg you could say
I
improved," Melfi
4:13.4.
in seven o
e ten post
·
· d
Edged out of first place in the
Sophom
_
ore Mike Melfi led the
satTh.
.
f
th
Red
c
al
.
f
th
. .
fi
with a
r-
e resto
e
.1·ox run-
fin straight away o
e race,
pack fimshmg
.
ust
8 4
peH
ners dominated the approxi-
Casey finished one and two in
sonal l-!'st time of 32:3

·
e
The Albany Invitational and
the Brown Invitational
are
the
two meets remaining before the
NECmeet.
Marist's season-long goal has
been to
.
use ~ch meet as a step-
ping
·
stone to getting closer and
better for the conference meet.
"The season is
so
quick it's al-
most over already. We're trying
to make every meet count but
we're all looking ahead to the
league meet," Casey said.
''We're starting to lessen our
long runs (during practice),"
Melfi said. "Our only focus now
i~ the league meet in Maryland,
it's our only scored meet and
we're hoping to be a force in the
distance races."


48.16.1
48.16.2
48.16.3
48.16.4
48.16.5
48.16.6
48.16.7
48.16.8
48.16.9
48.16.10
48.16.11
48.16.12