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Part of The Circle: Vol. 41 No. 1 - September 17, 1992

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3
VOLUME 41, NUMBER
1:
.
MARIST COLLEGE, POUGHKEEP~CE,
N. Y.
SEPTEMBER 17, 1992
chool's out
John Hartsock's journalism class enjoys the recent warm weather.
Townho
.
11se
·
s
.
op
-
hs anger some
Students blasted
for mob mentality
.
~
.
by
CAREY ALL~BAN0 ~nd 11N~~T
~~!A
~-
.
,
SU§Tf ~
·
.
. : . • .
.
.
·
.
·
··

.:·
St~ff Writ~t
_;}
,L
\:Ji\.
_
;;,
L
\
...
}
.
t
.
. On Mond.iy night several members of the Marist C!)~_mU!}itY a
_
lo_ng
.
with residents of the City of Poughkeepsie attended a· City Council
meeting focusing on off-campus Marist students.
Sixty
.
people,
approximately30
from the Marist community, attended-
the meeting to express their. concerns.
Dean of Student Affairs Gerald Cox; Assistant Dean for Student Af-
fairs Peter Amato, Director of College Relations Ed H yncs, Director of
Security Joseph Leary, and Marist attorney Paul Sullivan also attended
the
meeting. The question raised by the council was Marist's
.
policy toward
·
off-campus students.
Paul Sullivan; addressed the council by saying the college cannot en-
.
force local law and ordinances, however, it can and does support local
authorities.
It
should be recognized that Marist College has no role in
the lease arrangements between landlords and Marist students. Sullivan
expressed the willingness of the college to stand by local authorities with
college sanctions.
According to Sullivan, Marist was notified of an off-campus incident
taking place this semester in which a Marist student pleaded guilty to
breaking a noise ordinance and was subsequently placed on probation
by the school.Clearly, Sullivan noted it was
·
the only incident brought
to the college's attention that has taken place in the fall 1992-1993 year,
however, Marilyn Berson, assistant corporation counsel, informed the
council of 50 apparent complaints regarding off-campus students span-
ning over the past three years.
.
"I
have a very thick file containing copies of letters sent to Marist.
At best, we received a letter from Marist acknowledging the receipt of
by
CATHERINE CARDELL.
that letter,"
.
said Berson.
·
said;
.
.
other schools
.
eru:ollment declined,
At this point; Berson said another letter listing four complaints against
Each .: fownh ouse
·
has five
.
Marist was on the rise .
.
Some com-
off-campus students
was
currently in the mail to Maris!. City Councilman
bedrooms (two people to
·
a room),
1
·
plaints· .. have
_
bee_i!
-
xeceive
_
d _by
Al~erman, Lette_rii pointed
.
to page 24 in the tvtarist Student Handbook
Staff
Writer
-
.
.
three
-
bathroomsr
-
a
-
kjtchen-an<l
,
a:--Padovilni'.;._..-but-he:.;.said-placing ·"-to-the
.
~ode·of S
.
tudent Conduct· secti on·citingJhat
_
evcn though -it is.not
.
Due to housing shortages, f:vfarist
·
living mom. The
;
ToWiihouses also
.
·

sophomor¢§
.
in
J
he ]~ownhouses
the college's jurisdiction
for
misconduct off campus, the college may·take
·
placed sophomores in Sheahan
arid
·
come
·
equipped
·
with
.
central air
was
.
necessary because housing is
·
disciplinary action of its own for any student violations of the college's
the Townhouses.
·
conditioning and a clothes washer
guaranteed for:iinderclassman.
·
norms
.
or codes of conduct.
,
.
_
.
.
.
.
Because this-year'.s sophomore
and dryer.
.
•·
'
ChrisJ.~o.11g
/
a
:
sC>phomore.
_

Jrom
"Ar:e
.
t
_
hesejust mere
_
wordsJI~ seems to m
·
e
.
that you people have the
class is so

large, the Housing
·
Because
,,
the
>
Tcwnhouses
-
>
Princeton,
N.J
;
said he
'
originally
_-
responsibility and authority to do something. Otherwise this is a farce
Departmen
(
was forced toplace
·
formerly were given to
up-
_
requested
.
tci live itj Chanipagnat,
right here," said Letterii after reciting the handbook.
sophomores in the basement of
perclassmen
·
on
il
basis of priority
but
·
was placed in a townhouse
.
When council broke into executive session, Vice President and Dean
Sheahan, the Gartland Commons
points, complaints have been l_llade
instead.
.
. .
.
.
of Students Gerry
.
Cox said we cannot disenfranchise people who are of
Apartments, Champagnat.
.
Hall,
since the sophomores have moved
"The Townhouses are great, but
age simply because they are students. Any student who is old enough
and the Townhouses, according to
·
in to five of the Towrrhouses.
.
it
_
definitely has caused some
to sign a lease is old enough to abide by community standards. Issues
John Padovani, the assistant direc-
Krista Shepard; a juni
_
or from
animosity between us and the_ other
•••
see
MEETING
page
3

tor
·
of housing.
Southington, Conn., who lives next
sophomores," he sa
.
id
.
One
·
con-
Whiie
placemen[
of the
.
door to some of the sophomo~e_s,
cern.according
!~
r~dovimi
"
i~ the
Parking
·
problemsplague students
sophomores in Sheahan brought
.
said she was lucky to be placed m
level of respons1b1hty associated
_
.
.
..
..
·
·
about some
·
complaints according

a townhouse because seniors with living in. the Townhouses.
·
·
·
She
.
complained that the traf-
to members of the sophomore
'
should be give first
·
priority and
Padovani said
>
it is
a
developm
.
en-
by
EVELYN HERNANDEZ
fie lanes at the perimeter of the
class, the placement of sophomores
.

that living in the
.
Townhouses taUssue and
-
there was the question
Staff
Writer
lot
are often used for parking,
in the Townhouses was considered
should
·
remain
.
an upperclassman
·
of whether or npt the s9phomores
·
leaving
_
no room to maneuver.
·
·
, ·
1
-
"d D
.
-··
I

t
·

·
·
·
-
·
·
.
Sen
.
ior
.
Kris
..
t
.
in
.
.
Vi
.
'in
.
te
_
r
.
.
·
was
.
.
"It'
·
·
h
dd
th
.
a pnv1 ege sai
.
anny azze 1, a
.
.
privilege: ''It's breaking tradition," would
·
be
·
:
ready
.
to handle that
..
s a azar
ue to
e over-
.
sophomore from the Bronx, living
·
said Shepard.
·
respopsij:)Hity
.
.
.
·
·
,
_
: . _
_
looking forward to being assign
-
.
crowding,"
she
added: Wiriter
·
in theTownhouses.
--
,
·
.
·

·.

.
/:
.
According to Padovani; thjs
-
As
·
ofyet,therehav~n'tbeenany
.
ed
:
to the co
.
nveniently located
-
·
isrifr the
··
orily student.voicing
-
'.
-
.
Ia:izetti, who said he originally
.
I"eal
.
ly .isn't a

brea
.
k
of traditio
.
n, disciplinary P
.
roblems w
.
ith

-
the
Champagriatparking
.
lot. Little
her
·
coinpiaints .
.
At the· Cham-
.
li
d" h
·
.
· th
·
a
·
a r t
·
I d
h
h
·
di
.
dshe know what
a
problem it
-
t
d T
h
I t
·
app e
,
,or
.
ousmg m e
·
an
.
because four years ago sop omores sop omores mtheTownhouses, he
pagna an
own ouse o s,
Commons Apartments, was v.ery
were' hou~ed in the Townhouses.
said. Mark Fragc:>Ja,
.
a sophomore
would be.
students are once again endur-
h
·
n
'
d
h
h
·

"
Killi
·
"In
·
th
.
e morning
.
there are
·
b k
h
1 ·
1
B
appy to
m
ou.t t at e was 1
.
v-
.
PadovanLalso said that Marist ,rom
ngworth, Conn., Jiving in
mg a ac -to-sc oo ntua . ut
ing in the Townhouses.
_
did take in too mariy students
.
of the Townhouses said that he is hap-
never any spaces available,"
to some students, the problem
'-'The Townhouses are great
;
.
the class of
1995
·
when they. were p)' living the~e, but he's still getting
said
·
Winter who is from East
seems worse this year. "It's an-
They're so big and they're
..
the
freshman,
.
but it was not a inistake, used
tc,
it, because life in
.
the
NorthP
0
rt, N. Y. ''.It seems like
·
·
perfect studying atmosphere," he
ratheMi necessity; because while Townhouses is totally differenL

·
.
·
·
.._a_n.;.y_o-:-n-:-e_c_a_n~p_a_
·
r.;.k.;.t.;.;.he,;;.;r.;.e.;;..
·
'-'~-:.--..;s;;.e,;;..;.e_
·
_P_a..;r_k_i_il..:g~
·
_
·
.:,.P_
8
.;9:,,.
8
..;.

..;.
2
_
.
_►__J
Donnellan
appointed
acting
fashion di.rector
by
CARI OLESKEWICZ
.
Assistaritl:a1ior
.
.
.
A designer whose credentials
in-
clude working for Ralph -Lauren
and Perry Ellis has joined Marist
College as the acting fashion direc-
tor, Vice President of. Academic
Affairs Marc vanderHeyden an-
nounced Friday. Moya Donnelfan,
last year's sophomore class
designer critic replaces former
fashion director Carmine Porcelli
who left abruptly this summer.
"She
will
bring a lot of experience
and knowledge of the fashion
world," Kimberly Towers, a
freshman from New York,
N.Y.
said. Donnellan's career began in
her native Dublin, Ire., where she
received her design degree from the
National College of Art and
Design. "I have literally gone
through the ranks," Donnellan
said. "I worked my way through
college, but it helped that the work
·
.
was in
.
inydiscipline;• Donnellan
·
has
worked in clothing since
1979
when she began as a sample
machinist: She took a job ~or king
for Italian designer Enrico Coveri,
.
and it was this job that propelled
her into the world of fashion.
"This job is what first set me off
in the direction of wanting to be a
designer," Donnellan said. "It was
my first real look at the glamour
and glitz of fashion." Donnellan
spent five years
·
of free-lance
designing in Ireland and taught at
the National College of Art and
Design before she accepted a three
month internship with Perry Ellis
in New York.
"I was determined to get my foot
in the door and get a job," she
said. "At the end of mv three
months I did get a job, and I wv;k-
ed in the collection with Marc
Jacobs."
She later worked in the Perry
Ellis licensing department, with
lines such as luggage and eyewear,
and also worked for Ralph Lauren
before returning to Perry Ellis.
Donnellan said she came to
Marist wanting to duplicate her
working environment in Ireland." l
like the variety," she said. "It's
very stimulating to be working for
different designers and teaching at
the same time."
Along with her duties at Marist,
Donnellan is working for com-
panies in Ireland and the United
States. While at Marist, Donnellan
said she wants to prepare students
for the wonderful but demanding
and stressful world of. fashion."
There has to be a combination of
the excitement in the creative side
and the grounding in the practical
side," she said
.
Fashion students who had Don-
nellan as a critic said they were ex-
cited
arid
inspired by her presence
at Marist.
"i'm very happy that she's
here," Marge McGuire, a junior
from Baldwin,
N.Y.,
said. "She is
very tal
,
ented and I'm grateful that
she'll be here to assist us.""Ms;
Donnellan was really supportive
and articulate as a critic last year,"
M~lly Ronca!, a senior from Mid-
·
dletown,
N.Y.,
said. "She made us
feel wonderful in her critiques of
our work." Marist President Den-
nis Murray said that the program
needed someone from the fashion
industry and in the field of educa-
tion. "We are very fortunate that
in a short time we found such a
qualified person," Murray said.
"Moya Donnellan has a good
background in the industry and has
also had experience in teaching. I
anticipate that the fashion program
will rise to
·
new heights."
While Donnellan is now acting
director, she may become a can-
didate for the position of director,
depending on her experience at
Marist, vanderHeyden said, "We
will
conduct a national search for
a director/' he said;
"It
will
be so-
meone who can lead a focused and
expanded fashion program."
Donnellan said she sees every
reason for Marist fashion students
to be able to succeed once they
graduate. She added that students
need to keep their options open,
and not look to 7th Avenue for im-
mediate success. "They have to be
global in their thinking," Don-
nellan said. "It is a student's drive,
ability and passion for what they
do that lands them a job and puts
them in the limelight."










































I
I
2
THE CIRCLE, SEPTEMBER
17,
1992
'Pet Sematary Two'
-
.
.
a dead-rabbit skinner
In "Pet Sematary" horror master Stephen
King brought his best selling book to life
which introduced us to a place where the ·
"dead speak". Now director Mary Lambert
is back and has the job of creating a sequel
just
.
as chilli
_
ng as the 1989 hit. Although
Stephen King has absolutely nothing to do
with "Pet Sematary Two", this film has an
awful lot to do with him.Writer Richard Out-
ten and Mary Lambert don
'
t do the one
thing that King does so well. They never
leave anything up to the viewer's imagina-
tion
.
No ipatter how messy, everything is
shown in complete detail. So, if you like to
see someone kill and skin rabbits, this
More .
.
. movie is for you.
In the original "Pet Sematary", King
shows us a bloody sneaker and a father's
horrified reaction to an accident that is more
explicit in your mind than it could ever be
on screen
.
The image is much more intense,
which makes the scarier movie.
Stephen King can also scare us by using
psychologically unstable leadcharacters.
Kathy Bates' Academy Award winning per-
formance in "Misery"is a perfect example.
·
Who can forget the scene where she takes a
sledgehammer
.
to James Caan's ankles.
Everyone watching seems to feel the pain
The Reel
Story
"Pet Sematary" showed us a father griev-
ing for his child· and "Pet Sematary Two"
shows us a child grieving for his mother. One
is clearly directed at adults and the other at
kids. Chase Matthews and his son Geoff
move to Ludlow after the sudden death of
his wife. Chase, played by Anthony Ed-
wards; begins his new life by becoming the
town's veternarian. To Chase, Ludlow is the
perfect place to live where Geoff can recover
from the loss off his mother peacefully; away '
from the city.
As the people of Ludlow know, their town
is far from peaceful. Quite a few people seem
with the character;
to know about the Creed family murders and
· Don't get me ,vrong, this film has its share
th e secret 1ndian buriel ground that started
of tense moments in between the comic relief
it all. Edward Furlong of "Terminator 2"
that is scattered throughout. At first
fame is Geoff, who fi nds out about the for-
.
glance, "Pet Sematary Two" is a pretty good
bidden place beyond
·
the town's
--
pet
movie and has decent performances by its
c~metary
·
It
is fir
S
t dismissed as a rumor of
stars. Constant references to the first part
g
OS
t st0ry unti_l Geoff helps his friend
k
.
-
Drewbury his dog Zowie. You've probably
eep this one going.
already guessed that the so called"rumor"
Once again, we are in Ludlow, Maine, proves to be true.
·
Stephen King's favorite state. Richard Out
-
What the two boys don't k~ow is that the
ten ~imply take~ t~e script_ f;om t~e ~~st ground has gone "sour". When you bury
movie and aoohes it to a dif erent ami
Y •
your own, someone completely different
Video Awards great sleep aid
Parking
comes back.
When the dead dog sho.ws_ up for round
-
two, Drew and Geoff bring her, glowing eyes
·
and all;
_
-
to Chase
·
•s office
-
for
·
treatment of
the gunshot' wc,und

that killed
·
her. What
does Chase say w
.
hen examining the dog?
-
"I
can't
_
find a heartbeat.;, Not th
_
in
,
king twice,
.
he continues
·
his examination
.
Hello? ls it
.
me, or is this just
a
little strange?
Chase doesn't know what's going on un-
til he is told by a colleague that the blood
sa01ple taken from Zowie was from a dead
dog. Now, the good
·
doctor begins to do
some digging and talks to the town's old vet.
It just so happens that in the past, this doc-
tor dealt with a cat in the same situation. The
cat's name was Church.So now Geoff begins
to lose it and realizes that his
·
mother doesn't
have to be dead. Deja vu. In the first movie,
Louis Creed realized that his son didn't have
to be dead too. In the end, they move
out the answer
_
to all or their problems .
..
The burial ground still waits for a
grief-stricken person to bury a loved one and
wait for a miracle
.
"sometimes dead is better"
.
Jennifer G_iandalone · is a junior
majoring m communications
by
DANA BUONICONTI
wear out its welcome
.
The Peppers t~ be witness to K!--'rt Cobai!I's
•• •
continued from page 1
were good, clean fun too, but I felt p1ssy, school-boyanllcs. Speaking
noying ,, said C
t
I
K
H's bad enough that I don't real-
like I was watching "Dance Party of Joe Elliott, Def Leppard made
senior 'from M rys a
~my a
ly enjoy videos. Music was a lot
U.S.A." A~thony's outfit ~vas my evening. Really they did.
"You have to dri~::i6~nd ·th~•
cooler without a visual aid
.
Let the
checkered bhss and Flea certamly Anyone know where I can get a
entire lot to f" d
-
t
th
music speak for itself, I think.
does a convincing dog bark, blue? terry-cl?th bathrobe like
you realize yo~~av~ :~~~rk
~~
But, seeing as how MTV is here
that. Guns N Roses became a
the grass.
'.
' Nor is the problem
to stay (with all its faults) and there
parody.
To?
bad no one let them
likely to get better because
was a pretty nifty-sounding awards
m on the Joke That was
J
001
M

h
In your ear
St .
d .
,;N
b
R •. "
anst as only 1,600 parking
show on, I felt compelled to watch.
rmgs. omg
ovcm er
am
_
places for 4 700
f
It
t ff
By normal standards, the 1992
music review
wasn't it?
,
and students'. acco~i~g~~ ~=ta
MTV Video Awards were great.
Howard Stern s descent_fro!11 the
provided b th Offi
f S f _
Plenty of stars, celebrities, live per- ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
J
truss as Fartman and public display
cy a d S
Y •
1
e
ice
O
a e
formances and Elton John's new
d
• h
h" k?
of proper fq tt
d t
n
ecun y.
ont c _at m . I liked Clapton's
-
-
h
e
.
1
ueb e seeme
o sum
"There is a parking space
hairweave. By my standards
,
new haircut, as well.as his perfor- up t e evenmg est. And when he
problem," acknowledged Joe
however (I suppose that means
mance, even though
1
t was a bit too asked h
7
artthrob Luke Perry to
Leary, director of the office.
they're not normal, huh?), it was
subd
_
ued.
. .
touch, his butt ~r power, who
But he
.
defended the college's
a trifle boring. Make that I had
Wilson Phdhps proved they have would ve refused..
parking policy, noting that most
trouble keeping my eyes open
2/3 of a good thin~ going. And
Hey_ ~TV. I !hmk
Y~
~~ar me
colleges provide one space for
through most of it.
how ab?ut those ~-irvana boys? k,nockm . And I m _comm
_
m, ~nd
every
·
three students, while at
Sure, Pearl Jam and the Crowes
~mells !1ke teen spmt? Nah, they I ve got Conrad Bam! a box of Jel-
Marist the figure is one spot for
sounded great as usual, even
Just plam sm
7
lled. Geez, I'd rather ly donuts ~nd my Village People
every 2.25 students. Kishani
Conn
.,
has had problems of her
own
.
'
-
'I have already been
.
issued a parking sticker, but due
to the over crowded lot, I had
to go park at
.
Marist East,"
Chinniah said. ''When I did
park in the Champagnat lot, I
saw people backing out and
coming close to hitting my car,"
said Chinniah. "The spaces are
too close together and people's
fenders are getting bumped."
Tanya Neuhouse, a senior
from Monroe,
N.Y. had her
parking sticker withheld for a
few days because her
.
new I.D.
card was not ready.
While she waited, her car was
ticketed and then booted in the
Townhouse lot where she
resides.
though "Jeremy" is starting to
mow Joe Elliott's lawn than have 8-tracks with me.
.
Chinniah
·
from
·
Trumbull,
Lynch'S 'FireWalk'
fails ~ - - - - - - -
as peak film performance
by
CRAIG DEMATTEIS
Imagine this: You're reading a
mystery novel, thumbing through
page after page of grueling
s
uspense, waiting for that.last page
to reveal the missing pieces and
bring this whole story
to
a brilliant
end. But, just as you arrive at this
fateful page, there is only a note
saying, "Everything you need to
know, all the answers to your ques-
tions, and the surprise ending will
.
be published in the next series that
may never
.
see the light of dai!" If
·this has happened to you, then you
: know the-frustration of getting in-
volved with all these characters, of
trying desperately
to
piece together
the story, of trying to incorporate
the very words of the plor into your
:
soul so they are not just a string of
_
words,
_
but a catalyst for change.in
your life. If.you are not so lucky
,
then see "Twin Peaks: Fire Walk
with Me." I
-
admit "Peaks"
.
was
not a horrible movie, but let me be
honest.
If
you liked the TV show,
you will
-
feel very cheated by the
movie, but maybe not as much as
the last episode. If you like direc-
tor David Lynch, you will only like
the first half-hour. If you do not
like either of them, I would not
even recommend the bargain
matinee. The only people I recom-
mend to see this movie are those
who are or feel they should be
teaching film courses at UCLA. At
least they might be able to salvage
something from this visual mess.
As for myself, I like to think that
I walk that fine line between wat-
ching and looking at a movie. I felt
Lynch's other successes, "Blue
Velvet" and "Wild at Heart," were
amusingly symbolic and ingenious-
ly written, with a directing style to
match, but this time it did not even
seem that Lynch was ever a part of
the movie. Come to think of it, the
movie at times did not seem to be
about "Twin Peaks,"but a scaled-
down version of it. Several of the
characters we have come to know
and love were not mentioned, and
those that were had two~bit cameo
appearances, · such as The Log
Lady; Norma Jennings
,
and
Shelley. I wanted to see these peo-
ple more than I did Laura Palmer
(Sheryl Lee), who was the only ma-
jor character on the screen
.
Leland
P~lmer (RayWise) came in
._
se
~
ond
by entering halfway through the
·
-
Critic's
corner
movie, and he isthe major player
in this whole story. But after a
while, I did not care about Laura
Palmer because I know what hap-
pens to her; it was the wholepoint
of the TV show. I
wanted to know
about all the other characters who
had some impact
to the
·
show,
maybe
a little
something
about
Agent
Cooper's
_
(Kyle
MacLachlan) past. And although
Cooper has a couple of humorous,
yet strange, moments, we rarely see
him except
for a couple of cut
away
shots about his dreams. The movie
did have memorable appearances
by more famous actors, such as
Kiefer Sutherland playing an FBI
investigator (maybe examining
Julia Roberts), David Bowie as
~
missing agent (great to see
on the
big screen again before he, literal-
ly, disappears), veteran Harry
Dean Stanton (if I were not the on-
ly one in the theater, there would
have been cheering), and singer/ac-
tor Chris Isaacs
,
Isaacs, expanding
his SWAT leader role in "Silence
of the Lambs," has a great screen
presence as the FBI agent assigned
to the first of the bizarre homicides
in the Northwest. After his initial
investigation, he disappears, like
the attention span of this two hour
plus strobe-light
~
dream movie.
Th
.
is,
.
however, marks an in-
teresting event: this seems
to be the
point where David Lynch stops
directing and gives the reigns of
·control to someone who may have
seen a David Lynch film. From
then on, the movie grows uncom-
fortable, long and dull, filled with
absurd images and
_
unnecessary
scenes of nudity and violence, all
involving Laura Palmer
.
But as I said, the movie was not
horrible, just very difficult to
understand. There
.
are several
positive moments of the movie as
well, one being Chris Isaacs, the
other is Shcfryl Lee. She has
mastered some difficult acting and
is able to convey her pain to the au-
dience very evidently
.
You can feel
her suffering, her joy, her pleasure,
and her fear, all with an ear-
piercing scream to boot (keenly
screeched at just the right,
suspenseful moments).
Well, David Lynch struck out
this time, but I hope being involv-
ed with television has diluted his
unique styles of writing and direc-
ting. Ironically, though, the man is
still a genious. The movie follow-
ed the exact pattern the show did:
strong start with Lynch, slowing
down a bit in the middle with what
seemed to be Lynch wanna-bes,
then slowly losing ground until
Lynch steps in and confuses us all.
The man is brilliant. This movie,
however, is not.
Craig DeMatteis
is a Circle film critic
·
POWER MOVES
Map out your
g~ine plan at the
MARISTGRADUATEFORUM
Wednesday, September 30, 1992
5:30 PM - 8:30 PM Campus Center
*
Speak one-on-one to graduate, MBA, and law school
representatives
·
*
Get information regarding programs, financial aid and
entrance requirements
*
Explore your options for the future
Sponsored
by.
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226
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I
THE CIRCLE, SEPTEMBER 17,
1992
3
The property of 67 North Road.
.BEST
. E.R {-\fllO LUNG OISEA
_HA?ARD
AUTH()RIZED
~R§,QNNEL
ONLY
,
-_:'··:_::(·
''
··:_::·-
___
-_..
;·,
. Circle
photo/Matt Martin
Chairperson is king
of communications
by
STEVEN MASERJIAN
Staff Writer
\V_hi}e she was working her_ way thr~u~~ college, Dr. Sarah King,
M~nst s new professor and Cha1r of the D1v1s1on.of Communication Arts
.
sai.~ she. received. some helpful. words.of adv.ice~ fr<>_m'. her;brother. '. '
!°1e to!d me,
'If
you ca1;1 ever st_art anything, finish it; if you ever say
yo~ re go_mg to ~o somet~m_g, do 1t;.and you can do anything you warit
to if y~m Just ~ec!de what 1t 1s and go after it,'" she recalled.
It
is advice
she s;;u~ she still lives by and would like to pass along to her new students
at Manst.
H~eding ~er brother's advice, King said'she wotdd like to expand the
quaht? of hfe for students and faculty by introducing unique and in-
novative programs.
.
.
·
F~r ei:cample, King said she will work with coordinators of the com-
mu?1cat15>ns, fine arts, music and fashion divisions to define and establish
an 1dent1ty for each program.
King, who holds a Ph.D. from the University of Southern California
was a professor and Department Chair at both the University of Hawaii
and Central Con_1;1ecticut State University before coming
fo
Marist.
~t both Hawan and Ceptral Connecticut State, King was instrumen-
tal m program changes which combined diverse academic units from col-
leges such as business, technology, arts and sciences.
Wo~king on such cross-programs at Marist is another priority of King's
she said.
·
'
. "If
you've got graphic ar_t~ in art, that's s9mething_our communica-
tions_ stu_dents should be ta~mg. 1:he art students are ~oing to,µeed com-
mumcat1ons, too.
If you re gomg to do. prnduct10n, having some .
knowledge of each of those areas, I should think, would be a great help "
said King.
'
King added she
will
look for ways in which the divisions can cooperate
with each other, become an intergral part of each other or supplement
one another.
· State closes Aslyum
du·e -to asbestos scare
by
MATT MARTIN
Staff Writer
The house at 79 North Road, a
landmark for Marist students for
approximately IO years, was
cleared of its trademark rotting
road signs, plastic swimming pools,
furniture and its mainnuisance -
asbestos. "The Asylum," (shown in
the inset photo) named for its ap-
pearance, and the property of 67
North Road, poseno health risks to
neighboring buildings, despite the
warnings posted on the respective
pr?perties, according to Danny
Knegsman, the building inspector
for the Town of Poughkeepsie.
"Asbestos products are present
in those buildings, but they are en-
capsulated in various substances
that render that chemical harmless
to
the
inhabitants,"
said
Kriegsman.
"It
is a common
misconception that this is a hazar-
dous chemical when most buildings
use asbestos products in their con-
struction. "However, there is no
mistaking the warning signs posted
at the construction sites -
"DANGER! Asbestos cancer ar1d
lung disease hazard. Respirators
and protective clothing are required
in this area." "Those warnings are
for the protection or the contrac-
tors that arc removing the asbestos,
and because of state regulations
governing
the
removal
of
a._sbestos," said Kricgsman. "This
is simply standard procedure in
condemnation hearings so that the
state can acquire the land for the
expansion of Route 9."
Marist has not overlooked a
possible link between these North
Road properties, both owned by
the state of New York as right-of-
Syde Wattoff, secretarv to Tom
Daly,•the director or !l{e physical
plant. Daly toured the North Road·
houses·over the summer with Jim
~aimo, director of housing, and
lound nothing that should pose
concern.according to both sources.
Janine Vitagliano, a senior from
Belle Meade, N.J ., and a resident
of75 North Road, has no problem
with her current housing.
"I love my house," said
Vitagliano. "Granted my parents
weren't
too
thrilled about the other
houses, but I have no apprehension
about living here."
The two houses will not exist
around l\•larist much longer, due to
the expansion of Route 9, but there
will be some cosmetic changes to
the cast end of campus faciIH!
North Road. "Because this area i;
part of Poughkeepsie's historic
district, the state has agreed to in-
clude in its plans pcrfod lighting
way for the future expansimi of
fixtures, extensive landscaping and
Route 9, and their own six sites.
brick sidewalks and medians that
The two houses will fall victim to
will
become a striking gatewav to
the wrecking ball at the conclusion
the City of Poughk;epsic," ~aid
of this academic year.
President Dennis J. Murray in a re-
As far as we know, there is no
cent memorandum
10
the Maris!
asbestos that we are aware of in the
community.
other (North Road) houses," said
Sophomor~ -11 in housing limbo
by
DIANNE PAPA
she arrived at school. "My
Staff
Writer
father called Marist one hour
before I left and was told that
Each August students look
forward to finding out where
they will live for the academic
year. This semester
11
sophomores never recei~ed a
letter.
When the students finally got
in touch with the Housing Of-
fice, ·days before school started
t_hey -~vere fci,Id they just ,veren
't
placed yet · . ·
· ·
"I called for two weeks
straight," said Elaina Beato,
· from Massapequa;
N.
Y. "My
_roommate got a call the Satur-
day before we came up and was
t?ld_ we had an option, either
hve m Canterbury or be split up
on campus," she added. Accor-
ding to Jim Raimo, director of
housing and residential Life
"The problem is that student~
are offered on-campus housing
but the spaces are not necessari-
ly together."
Many sophomores are angry
at Housing, Jessica Fontela, 19,
~aid, "they know what was go-
mg to happen. It's all their own
doing." Eileen Kelly, a
sophomore from Cromwell,
Conn. said, "You don't accept
more people than you can
house." Kelly, 19, did not find
out where she was livin until
there might be a place for me on
campus.
"At first I was just trying to
feel comfortable with them (the
seniors), now I have to start all
over."l feel I'm invading on
other people because l have to
. -use their property because l was
not.· .informed that -this -.was
.
.
. -. ,vhe'reJ was going .. to live.•.
'.'It's
not fair to them either,"
she said about her new
housemates. Both Fontella and
Beato found out where they
were placed the Sunday evening
before everyone moved in.
Fontella,
from
Hamden,
Conn., who was placed in
Benoit with her roommate said
when she arrived at Marist,
"T-here were two names I never
even heard of on the door.
"I'd like to know what hap-
pened to those girls, if they were
moved or withdrew."
She feels that it was "luck I
guess" that she ended up in
Benoit, and is happy there now.
Beato, 19, was very upset when
she learned.she had no place to
live. When Marist called and
told her of her option, she chose
Canterbury.
"I was ready to just not come
back, but it's OK now. "It's not
fair, but I'd rather be out here
than in the basement of
Sheahan," she added.
Raimo said, "it's hard
because we cannot predict who
will show or who will withdraw.
"It's better
to
have some
sophomores without housing so
when you get withdrawals you
~an p\ace them in the open spots
m _sophomore housing." A\\ _or
the-displ_aced stµdents blame.the
. priority point system for their
·housing difficulties. "The
system is invalid, it should be
thrown out," said Fontella.
"We had an average of 16
points, and I know for a fact
people with lower points got
placed where they wanted to
be," she added. Beato feels that
it is now public knowledge that
she has low priority points.
"Everyone knows when I tell
them I live in Canterbury they
say, what no priority points?"
Beato feels she deserves not to
be housed where she requested
because she did have low priori-
ty points, but shouldn't have
been shipped out to Canterbury.
She doesn't feel ho,vever,
that everyone should know
it.
Raimo said, "it's a valid
system, it will be more valid
when Marist College has more
on-campus housing."
Having only joined Marist Sept. 1, her plans _will have to be put on
hold because she is currently touring the facilities, meeting with program
MEETING
coordinators and talking with faculty and students. "I am working with
all of my constituents to gain vital information," said King.
. ..
continued
from page 1
Briggs however, did not have a ; Marist students to be arrested.
Developing cutting-edge programs that will carve niches for Marist will
comment to The Circle and when
"\V_e are not being animals," said
keep it competitive in today's marketplace, said King.
addressing the council were
responding to questions, hung up
senror Tanya Godbout in response
She said most of her ideas will come from her past experience.
debated
and
ranged
the phone. On the other hand, Let-
to Letterii's comments. "I don't
During her academic career, King has restructured corporate com-
from the handling of off-campus
terii commented on his perception
th
ink Marist should be blamed for
~uµication units in both the public and private sectors. King's client list s!udents by Mari st and the impres-
of some Marist students.
it." Specifically, houses 20, 21, 71,
mcludes the states of Connecticut, New York and Hawaii; academic and s1on of students by the council and
"When these kids get bombed,
72
and 73 Taylor Ave. were alleg-
governmental agencies in -the United States, Yugoslavia, Australia
residents of the city.
they are under a mob mentality.
ed to be houses responsible for
Thailand, Poland and the People's Republic of China; and private cor:
"It's like Marist has unleashed
We all know what kids are like
diS
t
urbances; the alleged distur-
porations in the United States.
a plague on the area," said Cap-
when they are bombed at I in the
'Jances ranged from excessive
King also participated in the formation of the Consortium of Thai tam Donald Briggs, according to
mornin!!." said Letterii.
· ioise, high rates of speed, urinating
Universities for Communication Studies and serves on the Advisory Panel the September I 4, issue of The
L
11··~..
h
(
11
lawns and parking cars on
e em
t
en accused Marist of-
s dewalks. Currently, 600 Mari"st
S
.

t
B

f
Poughkeepsie Journal.
ficials of stonewalling and wanting
ecur1
y
r1e
s-------------•seeMEETINGpage13 ►
The Office' of Safety and Securi-
ty has prepared in formation for the
Marist community in response-to
the federal law kno,vn as the "Stu-
dent's Right to Know and Campus
Security Act." This pamphlet
hopes to make the community ·
more aware of security assistance,
help prevent major crimes on cam-
pus, inform students about· the
drug and alcohol policy and "en-
courage all students, faculty and
staff to 'think safety.'"
Security has been slowed down
from the first two weeks of this
semester in regards to the new iden-
tification cards, which is the reason
why students have complained
about parking all overcampus.
Joseph Leary, the director of
safety and security, said by
Wednesday night, September 16,
any car_ which docs not have a
sticker, or is not in the cc-.-rect
color-coded parking lot, will be
towed.
"The Champagnat parking lot is
a commuter lot during the day,"
Leary said in his office located in
Donnelly Hall. "There might be
some people who won't take it
seriously about the booting and
tickets, but the towinu of cars will
get the attention of many people."
Leary also said the staff and
faculty lots are located near Don-
nelly, the Lowell Thomas Center
and the Dyson Center, but after
5:15
p.m. every weekday, a com-
muter may park in any of those
respective lots if they have a sticker
for the McCann or Champagnat
lots.
He also said he was aware of the
lighting problem in the hoop lot
where the basketball courts arc
located.
Vance Amatulli, a senior com-
puter information systems major,
said he parked in the hoop lot last
year and found only one lamp
which was not bright enough.
"My
- housemate's car was broken into
last year and I thought it was
because there wasn't enough securi-
ty patrolling the area,'' said
1\n atulli, who is now allowed to
p.tr · in the Townhouse parkino
area There arc 68 existing parkin~
sp.1c ·s in the townhouse area.
but
th~
i
eniors with cars had 1110re
pn.lr: !y to receive their stickers
than the residing junior and
sophomore drivers, according to
Leary. The sophomores and
junk rs with cars arc now ,,arking
in tht' hoop and Ganland Com':.
mons lot.
..






































r
~
t
I
,
-
4
THE CIACLE,
S
EPTEMBER17,
1992
·Marist vote:
none of above.
by
Kirell A. Lakhman
Staff
Writer
·
With the election less than seven
weeks aw
a
y, students and faculty
alike at Mari
s
l College are very
apathetic, in some cases choosing
to vote for none of the above. Four
years ago, Americans saw images
of Micliacl Dukakis riding on a
Sherman tank and George Bush
warning us to read his lips
.
Ov
e
r the summer
,
the presiden·
tial contest has been narrowed
down to two major candidates;
President George Bush and Arkan-
sas Governor
Bill Clinton
.
The two men running for the
White House have emerged as
nominees of their respective par-
ties, after being challenged earlier
in the year in the primaries
.
While the major issues this year
on voters' minds include the
economy, jobs, and health care, the
election has also centered on
Arsenio Hall spots,
Idaho
potatoes, family values and Mur-
phy Brown.
With expressions at extremes,
there is also the pos
s
ibility that
voters will again be apathetic
towards the candidates, as was the
case in 1988.
"I see there being about a 50 per-
cent turnout of eligible voters this
time around," Waller Jablonski, a
lecturer in political science at
Marist said. "They are simply fed
up. "Some first time voters have
indic
a
ted that it is time for a change
in Washington.
"I think that Bush has neglected
public policy, the economy and the
environment," Jennifer A
.
Bom
-
melje, a junior political science ma-
jor from Rochester, N.Y., said. "l
believe that the Democratic Party
will
offer unintermittent attention
10
programs like health care and
the environment.'' While the vice
presidential candidates do
1101
receive as much attention as Bush
and Clinton
,
Vice President Dan
Quayle has spent time emphasizing
fainilv ,·alues, while Senator Al
Gore
·
has spoken out about tile
economy and the environment.
Matthew Sturgis, a communica-
tions major who has recently I urn-
ed 18, would like to see the
Democratic ticket reversed."lf it
were Gore-Clinton we'd have the
ticket or the centurv. But Clinton-
Gore
will
suit just ·as well against
the republicans," Sturgis said.
Other students still find the current
administration to be the better
choice.
"I
just don't trust Clinton,"
Daryl Ortiz, a finance major from
Buffalo,
N.Y.,
said.
"I
mean,
l
don
'
t love Bush, but between these
two, the choice for me
is
obvious."
There is still the cadidacy of the
third party,
H.
Ross Perot.
Although Perot officially withdrew
from the presidential race in July,
his name currently remains on the
ballot in
46 states.
"I
like him," Amy Fusdend,
a
fashion major from Hartford,
Conn. said. "He's different. He
'
s
not a politician like the other
ones."
Because this is America, voters
do not have to vote for either of the
two major parties, because any
party is allowed a spot on the
ballot.
Some of them inority parties in-
clude the Marxists, the Communist
Party U
.
S.A., the neo-Nazis,
quasi-Fascists and th
e
American
.
Socialists for Castro.
Oct. 2·g, 1992
4-7 p.m.
McCann
Center
Mari st
College
SENIORS and ALUMNI:
A chance to discuss
your qualifications with a variety of employers. Employers
will have information about the job market, full-time job
possibilities, tips about job hunting, and more.
·
Sorrie
employers interview on site; resume drop-off available.
JUNIORS:
Information about internships, part-time,
and summer job possibilities. A great chance .to learn
about different organizations and job opportunities, and
to make contacts for your senior year job search.
FRESHMEN and SOPHOMORES:
Advice on choosing your major and career
_
direction from
Marist faculty. Academic information available from
faculty. Information about careers, part-time and summer
job possibilities from employers.
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
__, At the Expo You'll Find
Employers Representing:
Faculty Representing:
• Business
• Communication
&
Arts
• Communications
• Computer Science
&
Mathematics
• Computer Science
• Humanities
• Education
• Management Studies
• GovernmenUMilitary
• Natural Sciences
• Legal/Law Enforcement
• Social & Behavioral Sciences
• Psychology/Social
Work

Internship Programs
• Retail/Fashion
• Marist Abroad
• Science
• Certificate Programs
'Professional dress recommended.
Resume
not ready? Use Professional Data Sheet available
at
Donnelly 226.
For further Information call 575-3547.
WELCOME BACK
*Bring
Marist I.D.
Buy. Four Subs at Assenza's
Deli and get:
at CARMINE'S
(next
door to
Assenza's
Deli)!!
Offer expires October 16th
Assenza's Deli
131 Washington St.
Poughkeepsie, NY
12601
452-4772
Carin
&
Sal
Class
of "68
and
'72
---


























l
!
I
l
~
-
~
~
i
f
r
THECIRCLE,
PHOTO ESSA
V
SEPTEMBER1~,1992
Making
the
Rounds
A night with RA Wendy Fell
Photos and text Matt Martin
Top: Fell patrols the empty halls
of Champagnat at midnight.
Above: The tools of the RA, the
Champagnat duty keys
.
Middle: Fell spends some time
between rounds with her students
of the second floor.
Center: The paperwork is never
done for Fell and Residence Direc•
tor Stewart Dawes.
Bottom: On rounds, you never
know what is around the corner.
5
1
,
:
l
·
1











































































































































































6
THE
CIRCLE, SEPTEMBER
17,
1992
In Irelclnd
Or
Russia,
militarism stuns students
Ki~g.
... continued from page 3
Honors Degree in
Communications at the University
communication and has published
several communication books
which are used in colleges today.
by
Joseph Calabrese
Staff Writer
As Jennifer Kay walked down
the street, she was watched-
suspiciously by soldiers dressed in
camouflage and holdingautomatic
weaoons.
Kay, a senior from Staten Island,
N.Y .,.visited Northern lrelanddur-
ing the two semesters she studied
abroad
at
Trinity College inDublin,
Ireland. "It is weird to see this
beautiful countryside right in the
middleof trouble," said Kay, com-
menting on the presence of the
Britishsoldiers in Northern Ireland.
Kay was one of the 38 Marist
students who left Marist to,
studyabroad in foreign countries
including Spain, Russia, Austria,
Australia,France, Italy and
England. Lisa Vogt, a senior from
Staten Island, N. Y., experienced
cultureshock upon arriving in
Russia to
study
the State Universi-
ty of St.Petersburg.
"When I
arrived
at Lenningrad
there was soldiers everywhere and-
statues of Lenin were knocked
down," said Vogt.
·
The most intimidating part of
the
trip for
Vogt was getting over
the language barrier, but
she
said
it only took a few weeks to learn
the key phrases she needed to get
by
and
learn to read the language.
Vogt said the people she en·
countered were always pleasant,
but very curious about herself and
her homeland. "The people wanted
to become your friend so that they
could be invited to the United
·states,
which was the only way to
get out," said Voet.
The trip Vogt took to Azerbai-
jan, a Russian Republic, was an ex-
perience she
.said
she will never
forget. At the time there was a
travel freeze for all foreign visitors,
making it illegal for Vogt to leave
St. Petersburg, but she managed to
sneak out."
It
was the middle of the
revolution and there were tanks
and soldiers at the airport," Vogt
said. Vogt said it was a short trip
because she never got off the plane
for fear of being arrested. Tim Car-
roll, a senior from Marlborough,
Conn., did not e~perien~e any
BUNGEE
... continued from page
11
as I have," said Wright, "you
never lose that fear of heights, or
that thrill."
It is a thrill that always leaves
customers asking for more." I can't
wait to go again," said Kay, who
hasn't told her parents about her
first iump.
"I ;m
afraid to tell my parents,"
said Kay. "So this is their first
notice. She'll kill me, but I lived."
soldiers or revolutions wnue he
studied at the National University
of Ireland in Galway last semes!er.
Carroll said he chose Ireland
because he wanted to experience
the culture where his family roots
came from. "All the people were
friendly and easy congenial. I could
not believe how mellow and
easygoing they were," remembered
Carroll. When he was not busy stu-
.
·
of Canberra, Australia. As a
member of the team from the East-
West Center Communication In-
stitute in
_
Honolulu, King wor~~-d
in countries in Asia and the Pacific
to upgrade faculty and curricula in
communication.
King is the recipient of numerous
grants used for researching areas of
Until she can put her programs
in-
to action, King said she
\Viii
just
become accustomed to her new sur-
roundings. "It's wonderful, it's a
:
b-
solutely beautiful," she said. "The
people are friendly, they're eager,
they're
anxious
to get started on
doing new things."
dying Carroll said he spent his time ~ - - - - - - • • • - - - - - • - • - -
visiting Irish pubs, playing gold
and traveling around Europe,
"Ireland was the most beautiful
place I have ever seen," said Car-
roll, who could not understand
why more students do not travel
abroad. Carroll said he chose
Ireland because he wanted to ex-
perience theculture where his fami:
ly roots came from. "All the peo-
ple were friendly and easy con-
genial. I could not believe how
mellow and easygoing they were,''
remembered Carroll. When he was
not busy studying Carroll said he
spent his time visiting Irish pubs,
playing gold and traveling around
Europe.
Information about Adrenalin
Adventures can be obtained by
calling 226°JUMP. Hours are
Wednesday thru Friday 2pm till
dark and Saturday and Sunday
11 am till dark. From Marist, take
Route 55 to a right onto Titusville
Road. The Farm is on the left
about five miles. The cost is
.
$39.
Jumps will be available throughout
the Octoberfest at the farm until
October 4th.
••••

• ••
Part• Time Sales
·1
$11.25/Hour
• No
Experience Necessary
• All Majors
• Flexible Hours
Poughkeepsie, NY
Location
@rnm=-
Nationa1 Services Inc.
Please Call:
(201) 305-5950
FOOD
KING
~
DELICIOUS CHINESE FOOD TO TAKE OUT OR EAT IN
-- SZECHUAN, HUNAN
&
CANTONESE STYLE -
N
TEL.: (914) 229 - 9402
PhOne Your Order In Advance For Quicker Service
NOM.S.G.
OPEN7DAYS:
Mon.•Thurs.:
11
:
00a.m.- 10:30p.m.
Fri.
&
Sat.:
11
:00am.
• 11
:00p.m.
Sunday: 12:00 noon - 10:00p.m
RT. 9G
RT. 9
s
HYDE PARK MALL, RT. 9, HYDE PARK, N.Y. 12538
(Between ?hop R
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······················~········






















































































THE CIRCLE, SEPTEMBER 17,
1992
''@o
I
take·
The
Microb,'o/o
8
y
0
f
Po
+eh
fia/ly ·
Pa+ho9elhic
Befa-Hernol'l+ic.
S'+reptococc;.'
Or
'The
~volu+ion
of
the
>ifuat,~n
Comedy.'
Do I
really
wah+
to
H\le
with
·
Judy
the
neat
freaK-~aio.I
can'+
believe
Ive
got
until
Mohclay
to
decide
iF
I'm
-a
Biolo3y
or-
a
TAeatre
tnajor ..
Have
I
Complete~
lost
·
it
?
'will I
ever
be
able
to
make
'a
decif/on
'
a9ain?
'vlait
a
rn1hute,Ju1+
yeJferday,I
wa{
able
to
picl<
a
phone
company
with
abso\utely
no
problem ...
¾,5
1
there
ir
hope~'
W
ith AT&T, choosing a phone company is easy.
.
Because when you sign up for AT&T Student
Saver Plus, you can pick from a complete line
of products and services designed specifically
to
fit your
needs while you're in college. Whatever they may be.
ones your roommates make. And the AT&T Calling Card
makes it easy to call from almost anywhere
to
any-
where. Also, when you sign up for AT&T, your first call
is

free:
Our Reach Out· Plans can save you money on
AT&T Long Distance, no matter where and when you call.
Call
Manager will separate your AT&T
Long
Distance calls from the
And with AT&T, you'll get the most reliable long
distance service.
.
AT&T Student Saver Plus. It's the one college decision that's
easy
to
make.
If you're an off-campus student, sign up for
Amr
Student Saver Plus by calling 1800 654-0471 Ext. 85L
AT&T
(119')2
AT&T
.
•l'<K!1l ttetti,eooe
S3
AT&T LD.
c,rnrai,
eqamlmt
to
22 minattsof ditttt-diakd.
coast
·
IIX'Ol51, ni!f,t
and
wedend oiling b2SNI
on
rltt$
df«:tivt
6/8/91
Yoo coo Id
get
a,n
or
~
milllltS dq,endioi on
"1lm
or"""1
~
all
.
Olftt
hmilcd ro one anilia~
ptt
stuclc,nt
-
7
1
!
I
.
I
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I
I
l
I
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I
I
I
I

































...
8
THE CIRCLE
THE C1RCLE
S.J. Richard,
editor
J.W. Stewart,
sports editor
Dominick Fontana,
senior editor
Chrissy Cassidy,
senior editor
Cari Oleskewicz,
assistant editor
Joanne Alfarone,
business manager
Jason Capallaro,
business manager
Erik Hanson,
distribution manager
Anastasia
J? .•
Custer,
senior editor
Ted Holmlund,
associate editor
Margo Barrett,
editorial page editor
Amy Crosby,
associate editor
Jennifer Ponzini,
advertising manager
Matt Martin,
photography editor
Dennis Gildea,
faculty advisor
Poug-hkeepsie face-off:
civilians vs. ''Animals''
There are some who claim that Marist students are
unleashing a plague on the City of Poughkeepsie. There
are many Marist students who take exception to being
branded as plague bearers.
Both sides may be right. And both sides are faced
with roughly the same question: What do we do about
the situation.
The "situation," of course, is the one that erupted
Monday evening at a special workshop meeting among
Poughkeepsie Common Council members, Marist Col-
lege officials and Marist students. Residents of Taylor
Avenue and Talmadge Street in Poughkeepsie have
complained to police and the Common Council about
rowdy, rude, noisy and generally uncivilized behavior
on the_ part of .Marist students living in. th~ir
neighborhoods. Alderman·Pasquale Letterii· referred
to Marist students as troublemakers who "when they're
19 and bombed (are) animals." Residents want the
police and the City to enforce peace and quiet in their
neighborhoods, especially on weekends when they
claim parties with as IJlany as 200 people attending
make life difficult forthe neighbors. Common Coun-
cil wants Marist officials to crack down ori the alleged ·
offenders. Marist's position is that the College can do
nothing to regulate the lifestyles of students living off
campus unless there is some legal action initiated
against the students. In this instance, Marist is right.
You can't legislate civility. And the students who argue
that they )J.ave been and will continue to be civil, to
be good neighbors
in
Poughkeepsie, have a valid point.
They have every right ·to object to being ca.lled
animals. And they sllould be certain to exercise that
right in public and private forums. In fact, It's in the
private forums, in conversations with other students,
in social settings, that those Marist students who feel
that their behavior is not offensive should make their
feelings known - especially to those students who take
their weekend partying to uncivil extremes. Calling all
Marist students ''animals'' and asserting that they are
unleashing a plague on Poughkeepsie is the_ same as
making any overly generalized statement about any
minority or ethnic group. It doesn't hold up to the test
of individual cases.
We're sure the problem of rowdy and noisy behavior
exists in the streets around campus. But
if
Marist
students who showed up to protest at Monday's
meeting get together with other students who refuse to
condone unruly behavior, the problem for both the
residents and innocent students may be solved.
To become educated is to become civilized.If Marist
students want to be regarded as educated individuals,
they will speak out against the offensive few.
If
Marist wants to be highly regarded as a quality
educational institution, it
will
encourage its students
-
all of its students -
to behave civilly.
SEPTEMBER 17,
1992
1"Hf
ALL
t-fill
HAR<S-1"°
Cr,lt(

51CIO£NT Io
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A political· update
on campaign ,-92
however, 10 million Americans are out of
_ _ _ _
by_A_A_R_O_N_W_A_R_D _ _
---'_ ·
work and the jobless rate in California and
Here is a political update to start off the
year and some thoughts to mull over before
we head to the polls to choose between
George and Bill. Campaign
'92
is in
Juli
swing as both Bush and Clinton scramble for
the support of American voters. The main
objective of both Bush and Clinton is to ap-
pear capable of handling this nation's
economic woes. Bush is still struggling to
make a coherent economic policy that will
lead the nation to prosperity. Clinton would
like the voters to believe he is a political
savior and will waltz into Washington with
mop and broom in hand;
to
cleanup where
Georgie has made his mess; however,
I
wonder if Clinton has the policies that will
other large states is well above the national
average. George, in order to turn the coun-
try toward economic prosperity, you must
clear your vision, make your proposals work
and sell Congress yourideas.
With a Democratic Congress, Bush hasn't
sold much. Bush must dig in and cut the
· deficit. The only way you can do that is
to
cut programs and find new ways of
generating revenue; Clinton cannot expect
work.
·
Thoughts
from a
.: political
ward
Aaron Ward
the government to afford a national
healthcare system, not with our debt. And
if government can't afford that, guess who
gets to foot the bill? That's right, the mid-
. Recently,, Clinton Uil'\'.eiled
his
.new
job,
program
.:_,a
program that stresses,educa- -
tion of workers and re-tooling factories for
the 21st century. While this sounds wonder-
ful and may ready America for the future,
how does Clinton propose to pay for these
programs?
If this sounds awfully familiar to
the old Democratic platform of tax and
spend, then you may not be far from the
truth. Clinton says the taxes he is proposing
will pay for the program but exactly what
taxes will help cover costs have not been
mentioned. Bush has said hewants to give
businesses incentives to invest and consumers
the incentive to save by cutting capital gains
taxes. Although, the August 24 · issue of
Business Week· says cutting capital gains·
taxes does not alter people's ability to save
and invest, it does offer some much needed
stimulation to
a
faltering economy. Bush
may just be able to make cuts in the capital
gains taxes work.
.
, .
- die class.
Clinton, you want to help stimulate the
American economy? Then, get a coherent,
working trade policy toward Japan. Bush has
been criticized for not having a member of
his
.
cabinet that specializes in Japanese
economic policies but Clinton has had little
to say on the export issue other than he will
encourage more American exports.Bush still
has a long way to go on his economic plan;
Bush can make health care affordable if
he overhauls his plan to give out health care ·
vouchers and tax-credits to low-income
families.
The bottom line
is
Bush could be more .
successful if he: fine tunes his economic plans
,vhich have met with modest success,
~evelops a more coherent world economic
policy that stresses increasing American ex-· -
ports, makes it clear
to
the American voters
that Clinton may be another Jimmy Carter·.
-, a supposed champion of the middle class
but inept at simulating economic growth. See.
you at the polls. ·
·
Aaron Ward is a senior
majoring in Journalism
Voter Registration
o·rive
Thursday, September 17 - Dyson _
Friday, September 18 -
_ Campus Center -
1
0am-3pm
Information regarding absentee ballots will be available.
Sponsored by the Political Science Club ·
VIEWPOINTS WANTED
Are you upset about housing? Canterbury life got you down?
Do
you have
any thoughts about national current events? If you
do,
write
it
down. The Circle
is looking for letters and viewpoints on campus or national events. Viewpoints
should
be
typed,
double-spaced. Send viewpoints to S.J. Richard, c/o The
Circle
via
campus
mail.
I







THE CIRCLE
VIEWPOINT
SEPTEMBER 17,
1992
9
A· day in the. life of one West Point cadet
by
GINA·_TORRE
. In one year
h~
missed out on the
summer, was forced to shave his
head, was given issue clothing to
wear, lost his first name, personal
identity, and dropped eight pounds
in the first week.
Still,it wasn't enough to break
Stewart Shapiro,
a
19-year-old
Michigan native, who is· now begin-
ning his third year at West point
military academy.
'. Shapiro admits there. are many
difficult aspects of
life at West
Point, but they don't outweigh the
but Stewart himself (called
"Shmoo" by his fellow cadets.) No
one in his family had any kind of
military background. His father is
a professor of sociology at Central
Michigan University, his mother a
homemaker; both were surprised
not only at his interest in West
Point, but even more so at his ac-
ceptance. His sister, four years his
elder, cer.tainly had no influence in
his decision to apply. Instead he
credits a good childhood friend for
convincing him that· West ·Point
was the place for him.
positive ones.· It's what one would
"It's a totally male dominated
e~pect from a campus he describes place" admits cadet Shapiro, as he
as one huge fraternity. "It:s like explains the 9:1 ratio of males to
one year of hell week, but I've got females. He admits it's definitely
sci many close friends we're like one harder on women there, but " ..
.I
big fraternity," he said.
guess they have a right to be here."
There are other benefits of
course. Graduates don't worry
At
this
point,
almost
about finding a job when they get · apologetically, he's quick to point
out and the education is free. The out some of his best friends are
reasoning for applying to West females, "It's just harder on them
Point baffled not only his parents, because of what guys may say
behind- there backs or when they
think no girls are around."
The truth is, it's not easy on any
cadet regardless of gender. An
average day for cadet Shapiro
begins at 5:50 a.m. {considered late
by- most other cadets on base).
Breakfast formation is at 6:25, then
three classes between 7: 15 and
11
:35 a.m. Lunch formation is at
11:45, followed by an afternoon of.
classes, two hours of working out,
dinner. a 7p.m. formation drill.
and homework until midnight. No
one is sparedthe grueling schedule
as cadet Shapiro admits "the
workload is heavy, it seems like
we're always studying."Shapiro's
choice of summer programs, (a re-
quirement for graduating) further
reflect his abilities and drive for
leadership. He first worked on Drill
Cadet leader Training (DCL T),
because in training cadets " ... you
get to work with the Sergeant on
an equal level." His second project
was air borne school. He explains,
"Jumping out of planes is an op-
portunity that most people don't
get. I might as well take it ... "
In fact Shapiro has an oppor-
tunity to learn many things.
Among the things he is taught are
philosophy and ethics of war. He
claims the basic message is that
"We (the U.S.) have to follow the
rules even though they (the enemy)
don't. They try to teach you to do
what is right.;.to follow legal
orders." Though the classroom in-
struction is-clearly Army controll-
ed, there are other things the cadets
don't need formal classes to obtain.
"The best thing
I
have learned is
not to hesitate to put my life my
hands for my friends. I trust them
so much.'' At this point the conver-
sation is interrupted by a suoerior
officer.
It
is late and -the cadet is
growing more tired. His responses
are slower, more drawn out and
thoughtful. Upon returning to the
. conversation he adds matter-01:
factly, "You also learn there are
many things you can't control."
His laid-back attitude and goals
for the future are giving insight as
to why a middle-class man, from
a liberal family and large public
high school would choose to come
to West Point for four of what
might be the toughest years of his
life. He doesn't follow orders well
and doesn't obey rules all of the
time. He is incredibly self-
motivated. From the four sports he
played in high school and two
acad:mic clubs, to his plans to
recruit and train cadets and one day
obtain Ph.D. in history, this
19-year-old has long term goals and
he's willing to follow any ethical
route to achieve them.
Gina Torre is a senior majoring
in Communication Arts.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Communication is the key
Hartsock kindly lends The Circle a hand
To: The Marist College Student
Editor:
And so Sara,
I'll
try to help you
in your request as best I can. As an
old Grubb Street hack, I know
what it is like to have to putout a
newspaper and have very little to
fill it with.
I
am reminded of a Texas tabloid
that in its addiction to screaming
headlines one day discovered there
was no news worth screaming
about. Still, the presses must roll.
As I recall, the screaming headline
ended up running something like
this: "Grasshoppers invade Col-
orado." Also,
I
_can imagine what
it is like to want·
to
offer a
stimulating Vie.;vp'ofiit' page, that
mirror the community's most
urgent concerns; only to discover
that the community seems to suf-
fer from a lack of urgent concern.
But my advice is to be charitable.
There are slow news days for
everyone. Besides, remember that
your readers are a fickle bunch, coy
tociay, boid the next.
It
is your oc-
cupational hazard. -
This also· helps to. expiaiu,
I
itse!L True, the learning may pro-
Body
suspect, why you love being a jour-
ve painful. And true, you have a
nalist, this living on the edge, in an-
choice. You could promote illusions
ticipation of how the next issue of of what people wish to believe of
The Circle will define, however im-
themselves. The alternative is to
perfectly, the history of its com-
help people confront and accept
munity -
and the response it will
themselves for what ·they are, and
prompt. Because it is the peculiari-
sometimes out of that provoke
ty of a journalist's disposition that
them to improvement.
he or she lives for and embraces the
Finally,
I
do not think we should
contingencies of a fickle news
attempt to conceal from your
universe, perverse and unpredic- · readers that you asked me to write
table, like a wild and cosmic roller
this to fill up an empty space in the
coaster ride.
paper, to feed the inexorable copy
That does not mean the jour-
god, all consuming and pitiless.
My name is Brent Golisano and
l am the Director of Public Rela-
tions for the Student Government
Association, (SGA). lt is
my
job to
communicate to the student body
the everyday decisions that occur
\Vith in the SGA office. This should
be important to you because these
decisions will effect you directly.
However, l would also like to in-
nalist is without mission. There is
That's because
I
discovered a
or'course the traditional mission or· long time ago that in the business form you that, due to the new con-
a newspaper to inform its -corns• of writing, honesty is the best · stitution, you have more say with
mimity of the pressing issues of the
policy.- One reason is that your what goes on in student govern-
day. ·
·
. readers are a lot more forgiving
·
·
That's the vanilla version.·
than you may realize -
if they are ment then any other student body
But . beyond it lies,
I
think,
given a reason to forgive.
I
think in the past. This year SGA has set
something deeper. I believe it is
that will take care of it for now, in forth a few goals that we are plan-
alsq the journalist's responsibility
our attempt to account for the void
to hold up a mirror to the com-
on the page. All that remains is for
munity so that it can see itself
me to offer public commiseration
honestly, and from which hopeful-
and congratulation on the publica-
ly
it will learn something about
tion of your first issue of The
Circle.
· John· Hartsock
Assistant Professor of Journalism
ning
to
reach and they include you.
. First, SGA wants to improve com-
munications campus wide, from
students to administration and
facility. Anyone in student govern-
ment can be either reached during
their office hours, at ext. 2206 or
by sending the Email on the main-
frame cornputersystern (our ac-
count is HZGV musicB). Second-
ly, SGA is going to assist clubs to
make sure they are functioning
properly. Most importantly SGA
will be getting involved in a cam-
pus wide recycling program.
SGA
feels this will be beneficial to our
small ecosystem as well as help pro-
tect the worlds ecosystem. Please
help us do a fine job and recycle.
We nave an open-ooor pu111.:y
· ·and welcome you to attend the Ex-
ecutive Board Mee1ings on Mon-
days at 5:45pm or the Senate
Meetings on Tuesday al 5:45pm.
If
you have any questions or concerns
please call us al ext. 2206.
The Student
Government
Association
BerryYour
Cancer ·Risk.
Strawberries; · blueberries,
raspberries .. All .are good
sources of fiber, and fiber
Letter·
Policy
may
help .you· reduce
your risk ofcancer.
There's much
you
can
do
to
fight cancer. Call tis arid we'll
tell you about
it
,LAMERICAN
~CANCER
JSOCIETYe,
1-800-ACS:-2345
The Circle welcomes all letters to the editor. Letters must be typed and
include the author's name, address.and phone number. Short letters are preferred.
Deadline
is noon on Monday.
·
Letters should be addressed to
S.J.
Richard, C/o The Circle, through campus
mail.
The editorial staff reserves the right to edit submissions for length, libel, style
and
good
taste.
The truth
surrounding course descriptions.


ment for a major. In most cases,
seniors have put off taking this
class and there are no other op-
tions. Waiting for a better class
might hinder chances of gradua-
tion. Usually this class combines all
elements of the other three. In such
cases, the students really didn't
know and didn't care what they
were in for because they didn't
have much choice in the matter.
This class is dull, useless and
anything learned here will never
apply to real life. Well, as you can
see the college can save much time,
effort and paper by using these
descriptions.
No
need for exciting
titles, just tell us what we really
want to know: is it easy and if
I
take it will
I
still have Fridays off?
by
TARA STEPNOWSKI
Yes,
it's that time again. It's that
back to school time of year. Many
students are still enthusiastic about
their new classes. Add/drop is over
and everyone is now stuck with
their classes for better or worse.
Some students
will
very soon find
themselves regretting not dropping
some of their classes.
Some studer.its will sign up for
aclass on the basis of the course ti-
tle alone. Not a good idea in
mostcases. The school likes to
delude students into thinking that
there
is
agreat variety
of
classes be-
ing offered. The course descrip-
tions blanket the bulletin board of
Donnelly Hall. It makes it seem as
if there are many different classes
to chose from.
However, in my eyes, that's not
true. All the courses offered at any
college can be lumped into these
Why are
we.the
only ones
laughing
· Tara Stepnowski
,generic categories: It's too early to
know the name of my teacher: ob-
viously offered in the early morn-
ing hours. For non-morning peo-
ple (the majority of college
students) this clas!. bc..:cmes the
closest thing to hell. A class at such
a treacherous hour not only
challenges your intellectual
a!>ilities, but also challenges your
fashion coordinating capabilities as
well.
Many students have and will
continue to roll out of bed and in-
to class sporting terribly clashing
clothes, clothes which are on
backwards, or something that
would not be seen otherwise. One
thing students learn from this class
is that they don'tlike being up that
early and they might have to think
also. Neck rolling and jerking 101:
This class is offered at any hour.
The subject matter in this class is
presented in such a dreary and
dismal manner that the necks of the
students begin to jerk involuntari-
ly forward then backward, then
sideways and finally forward where
thr.
mind falls into a sleeping state.
I
can't believe this class was sup-
posed to be my blow off: The ma-
jority of students in such a class are
juniors and seniors who thought
they were in for an easy ride. On
a never ending quest to obtain the
easiest possible schedule, (to devote
more . time for partying) these
slackers try to choose at least one
blow off every semester.
To find these 'easy' classes they
rely on word of mouth and the ad-
vice of friends. Unfortunately this
does not always work to their ad-
vantage. There is nothing worse
than a supposedly easy class turn-
ing into something difficult and
time consuming.
Why oh why is this class a re-
quirement for me (and why didn't
I
drop it when
I
had the chance?)
This class, perhaps, is one of the
most frustrating classes.It may be
a
core requirement or a require-
Tara Stepnowski is one of The
Circle's humor columnists.
.........
,






















10
Weird encounters
of the photo kind
·by
TRICIA TASKEY
Staff Writer
Some Marist students are missing bits of their face or body, their name
has been changed, and their hair has been altered.
It has happened to several Marist students when they were given their
new college ID cards.
Some students were given ID cards with the wrong name, or the wrong
picture, or both.
Brian Crounse, a senior from Niskayuna, N.Y., got his ID with his
signature on the back but the wrong name and face on the front. Todd
Lincoln, a freshman from Norfork, Mass., had a problem with his pic-
ture and his name.' 'My shoulders are gone and I have two middle in~
itials," Lincolnsaid.
Amy Patenaude, a freshman from Copake Falls, N. Y., says her pic-
ture ok but the name isn't. "My ID says Amy M, but I'm Amy B," she
said. Other students just had complaints about the picture.
"I look like I have skin cancer, It's horrible," said Brett Riolo, a senior
from Carmel,
N. Y. "I think the whole new ID system will be great once
it's done, but they should use a camera for the picture because the com-
puter imaging distorts your face too much." Amy McHugh, a freshman
from Marblehead, Mass., says her picture looks nothing like her.
"l went
to the post office to pick up a package and the guy looked at my picture
a few times, he didn't think
it
was me," McHugh said. "He asked me
if
I had just come back from the Caribbean because of my cornbraids."
Paul Digiacomo, a sophomore from Brooklyn,
N.Y ., is shown in his ID
with one tooth and long hair coming out of his shirt and from behind
his ears, what's left of them.
"I
look like
I
have 'snaggle' tooth,'; he said.
"My ears are all chopped up and
I
look like I'm turning info a
werewolf." Some students claim their ID picture resembles someone else.
John Hynes, a freshman from New York, N. Y., says he looks like.Max
Headroom. "Chunks of my shoulders are missing and the top of my
head is cut off," Hynes said. Craig Millon, a freshman from Ridgefield,
Conn., says his picture looks like an alien.
"I
look like
I
came from
another planet," Millon said.
"I
have no shoulders or neck." Kim Zanotelli, a senior from New-
ington, Conn., was one of several students who's
ID
card was lost. "They
had no idea what happened to it, they just told me to go to security to
get a new one," she said. Joe Leary, Director of Safety and Security,
contributes the problem to computer and human error and explained it
takes time to learn a new system.
He also said he understands the many students had problems obtain-
ing their
ID
cards and he and his staff are doing everything they can to
correct the problem. As far as the pictures go he said it's just computer
imaging and there will be faults. But if there is a major problem with
names or signatures they can have a re-take.
THE CIRCLE, SEPTEMBER
17,
1992
New I.D. cards use expanded~·
by
KRISTEN McDADE
Staff Writer
The installation of the new
I.D.
card system has left many Marist
students questioning.it's necessity-
. Joe Leary, Director of Safety
and Security, said the new I.D.
cards
will
eventually be used for en-
try into buildings, offices, and in-
dividual
dorm
rooms
or
apartments.
The· new I.D. cards will not
replace security guards in the
dorms at night, but will aid them,
Leary said.
The cards will eventua1ly be us-
ed in vending machines and at the
bookstore in the form of a debit ac-
count, Leary added.
"The debit account is different
than a credit card. With a debit ac-
count, you put x number
o:
dollars
into your account and with each
purchase the cost is subtracted
from the.lump sum," Leary said.
Marc Adin, Assistant Vice Presi-
dent of the college, said installing
the new I.D. system cost the col-
lege between
$60;65,000.
That cost includes machines,
software, supplies, and labor for
4500
LO.cards. It will be three
years before the new I.D. cards are
used for all of their intended pur-
poses, Adin said. "Only a few
schools are using this process.
Before it was only used by the
federal government. If we were to
change all of Marist'swiring, and
buy readers for the bar codes on
the back of the
l.D. cards, it would
be much too expensive. We have to
wait until the process is a little older
to go out and buy everything, "
Adin said. Marist has been in-
vestigating the new
l.D.
cards for
a couple of years, according to
Leary.
"A lot of studying went into the
I.D. cards," said Leary. "We have
traveled
to
other universities to see
how the cards worked." Penn
State, Duke, and Seton Hall are us-
. ing the same LD .. card system as
Marist, according to Leary.
The new system will allow securi-
ty to identify students and faculty
members by inputting data into the
compute{and having computeriz-
ed images of those who fit the
description appear on the screen,
Adin said. While the library used
to issue I.D. cards, the responsibili-
ty will now be with the Office of
Safety and Security.
Student crush moves sophs into s·heaha_n
by
AMY LETTERMAN
· Staff Writer
An overabundance of students
needing campus housing this year
caus~d
14
sophmores to be placed
in the basement of Sheahan Hall.
While most of their classmates were
finding out that they would be liv-
ing in Gartland Commons, Cham-
pagnat Hall, Gregory,.Benoit, or
even the Townhouses,
14
guys got
letters assigning them to Sheahan.
"I
started laughing when
I
found
out," said Chris Sommella a
sophmore from Ramsey, New
Jersey.
The
14
guys were told in a letter
about a week before school started
that it was a temporary situation
and they would be moved within a
week. Jim Raimo Director of
Housing and Residential Life ex-
plained there were about 100 more
sophmores than usual and finding
housing them was -difficult.
Besides the fact that the
freshman class was so large there
were also more of them returning
· this year than usual. Marist
guarantees campus housing to all
freshman and sophmores.To ac-
comadate them
5
Townhouses were
· given to sophmores·, Gartland is
almost all sophmores, there are
sophmore triples in Champagnat,
and
14
sophmores who had low
priority points were assigned to the
basement of Sheahan. By now
most of the guy's moved into other
dorms but there are still few re-
maining. The students who lived
there had mixed feelings about liv-
ing there.
Four guys who were assigned to
what used to be a study liked it so
much they decided to stay.
In a spacious room with a decor
like something out of "Wayne's
.World" the guys gave reasons why
they liked it. "We wouldn't want
to be separated," said Jason
Podolak from Monroe, Conn.
If
, they were to move it would mean
separating and moving in with peo-
ple they wouldn't know.
"If
it was up to them we would
still be living there but we were per-
sistent," said Ciulla from Garrison
NY. "We had one desk and no
closet it was impossible to get work
done," said Malary from Clifton
Park, NY.Ciulla and Malary found
empty spaces in Champagnat and
got people to move together sothat
they could be roomates. "It's to
bad there are so few upperclassmen
on campus this year, it really takes
away from campus life,'' said
Raimo. Raimo said "This was the
hardest year", in reguards to
housing.
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THE CIRC~E,
SEPTEMBER 17,
1992
11
Marist stude1:1t$
,
/Jlunge into bungee jumping
by.MATT MARTIN
,
11
Staff
writer
parked it next to a pond for your
enJoyment.
Adrenaiin Adventures has taken
great care to maintain a perfect
Itis har~
fo
put your finger ori
safety record of over 50,000 sue-
.
Ever since the Montgolfier
·
.
the reasons why so
~
manf Marist
cessfuljumps, said Walter Wright,
Brothers,
,
invented
: ,
the hot-air
·
studen
·
ts are pl
_
U!]ging)11to a sport
owner and ceo of Adrenalin
balloon in
'
France in 1783, people : that._ha~
_
beef! outlawed
,
in
'
t\V!)
·
Poughkeepsie and a veteran of over
have
.
wonderedwhattodowithit.
,
:;:
states·becauseofthehigh
:
riskfac-. 150
.
jiimps; . ,
,
,
.
,.,
·
•.
·.
.
.
.

..
tor involved.'
'
·
· .. ,
,
·
·
..
·
·
,
• -.··
•·
.
•.
-
-Pinally, a daredevil found the
.,
,
"But when youire
:
getti~g ready
.
solution -
why not tie.' some
.
"Imagine Leo on
·
top of Cham-
to jump, you can't help to think of
.
industrial-strength rubber bands to pagnat,"
·
says Jen Kay,
a
senior
the danger of it all.
·
11
just adds to
your ankles and jump off?
from Bropkiyn,
N;Y., and
'
a
the excitement," said Kay."
_
As
I
Acfrenalin Adventures
,.
of vete~an ofa b!Jngee Jump. "Then
stepped up to the edge of the basket
Poughkeepsie, located on the Carl
·
imagine divi~g
·
off of the top
·
and
and S?,id to myself, 'I'm not going
.
.
.
.
to do
_
this, it's too high,'" .said
Eimer farms in La Grangeville, has living to tell
.
about it. It's like
sophomore Jon Sore Ile from
brou ht their 160 foot
.
crane and
'
suicide."
.
·
·
·
Acushnet, Mass
.
"But jumping
was the
·
only way down. "Jumps
take place
·
from a metal cage
suspended 160 feet above a pond.
A bungee cord, set to your weight,
.
is secured to the underside of the
cage and to your ankles. At the
tqp, your equipment is checked and
you a:re ready for a leap of faith
.
"The view from the top of the
crane is breathtaking," said Mike
Gordon, a junior from Attleboro,
Mass
.
"I
don't remember being
scared, because it happened so
fast." Gordon was lured to his
bungee adventure by a friend who
he says, "has
an
insane death wish.
But I soon found myself to be in
-
treeged by the thought of a near-
death experience. ""You hear your
guide count down and you just let
your body go.
I
had shot my mouth
• off earlier, so there was no going
back," said Kay.
"l
felt like Bat-
man with my arms outstretched
falling towards earth, "said
Gordon.
"I
remember seeing the water
coming and then I closed my eyes,"
said Kay. "The next thing I knew,
I saw clouds and stars, it was such
photo/Mall Martin
Sophomore Jon Sorelle hangs upside down after completing
his jump.
a headrush that
I
saw stars
.
I
was
exhausted."
"It all happened so quick.
I
never felt a jerk or anything, it was
smoot~. You'd bounce back up
and down again, doing flips and
spins,it was a rush," said Sorelle.
"I'd recommend it
to
anyone -
weak heart or not."
When the cord come to a halt,
the jumper is caught by assistants,
and taken down from the bungee.
And that's when it hits - That was
awesome, let's do
it
again.
For those looking for a greater
thrill, you may be dunked into the
water
a
t the end of the dive.
"The dunk adds the extra fear,
but also an extra thrill," said
Wright who says a 240
-
foot waler
dunk was
his most thrilling
jump."
Even when you've jumped as much
... see
BUNGEE page 6

..
Welcolllt! 8llck All M arist Students ....
--
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and
Pb County, PA. Cu11t1nt
prices and
1)3/tkipaoon
SI.Dj9Cl to
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CT:
and
Pile
County,
PA. Cu11t1nt pn:es
and partk;ipatiorr
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Limit
on,
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may
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on•
lldependentoperatordecision.
Pnces
ma.yva,y.
Cash value 1120011e.
Limit
on,
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coupon
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Plr
sandwich
per
pertOII
per
wislt. Not
good
In
conjunc-
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per
sandwich per person per
Yisit.
Net
good
In
conjunc•
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per person per
visit.
Not
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other
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12
THE CIRCLE, SEPTEMBER 17,
1992
Pizza
&
F amity Restaurant
Route
9
Poughkeepsie,New York
For Marist Students
.
·
:

:M:onday-Thursday
·
-
.
_
_
.
_
.
*
Must
Mention
Special&
When Ordering
All With Free Local Deliyery

,
·
·
2
Large
.
1
topping
.
Pizzas
(16")
·
.
.
.
··
·
·
.
only $10~99
.
·
.
·
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· ·
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'
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1
Large x~cheese Pizza
(16")
·
·
·
.
.
·•
.
·
.
.
.
.
.
qnly $5.99
.
.
1
FREE
·
order
·

Ftencfi
:
Fries
·
With
--
"
·
.
;,
_
,
.
,
-
'
"
"
,
._
,
the purchase of 1 or more Subs.
-
WEEKEND SPECIALS
Free
liter of
.
Coke or Free Order Zeppolis (1 order per customer)
·
with purchase of Large Pizza at Regular Cost
Super Eat-In
.
Special
Free
Pit9her of Soda with purchase of
a
·
Large
Pizza
·
_
(at regular
_
price)
Free
Large
Fou;ntain Soda
~
with
purchase
of 2
regular cheese
slices
·
Try
our New
Pizza Sticks
$2.95
_
·
..
.
any
1 topping aqd .50
-
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Dinners
-
• Subs • Calzolies
Specialty-Pizza (inquire
within)
_
Ca,tering
·
_
• Beer • Wine
·
.
·
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Open
7Day$.
Nobody
tastes
like S ettembre
's
NOBODY!



























































THE CIRCLE, SEPTEMBER 17,
1992
13
MEETING---------------
... continued from page 3
students live off campus, excluding
450 students who live.
iJt
Marist-
leased apartments in the. town and
300 ·
commuters, according·. to Ed
. Hynes, director of college relations,
in the September. I 4, issue of The
Poughkeepsie Journal. ln addition
to the discussion, solutions were
suggested by the council, Marist
administration, the landlords, and
the students.
Several times, the councii asked
if some method in conjunction with
the college could enact cooperation
and penalize the people in these
locations before a conviction of a
localordinance. However, Sullivan
said we would encourage landlords
who rent to students to write into
their leases prohibitions against
public parties and a stipulation that
unruly, disruptive behavior will be
grounds for eviction.
:
One landlord, Laura Smith, a
resident of Taylor Ave., said she
even had parents co-sign the lease
but it did not work. She suggested
Marist utilize their computers to
fincl. out exactly where students live
off~campus and said she would like
to see Marist's code of ethics app-
ly for off-campus students.
Another resident of Poughkeep-
sie, May Parker Harris, question-
ed the council as
to
why Marist
students should be treated any dif-
~~:~~rs~~
1he
Society of H i s p ~ r s .
Foundation ojfe_rs an educational
grant, ranging from
$500
to
$3.(XXJ,
to
·
Hispanic college undergraduates or
graduates studying engineering
and
sciences. 1he sclw/arship
is
awarded
on the basis of academic achievement,
financial need, involvement in school
and
community activities,
and
recommendalions. Prospective
applicants should contact
Ka1hy
Borunda-Haro
aJ
(213) 888-2080 or
write
to:
Society
of
Hispanic Professional
Engineers Foundation
54(X)
E. Olympic Blvd., Suite 306
Los Angeles,
C4 90J22
Deadline: April 15, 1993
Hi.spanic Designers,
Inc.
provides
an
array of sclwlarship
and
educational
'opportwiities to Hispanic studems.
Ranging from $250 to $1,500 per
srudent, sclwlarships
are
granted
10
winners of compelilions
in
disciplines
such as
fashion
and
stage/set design,
plwtography, and modeling.
Additionally offered are internships in
the Washington, D.
C.
office of
Hispanic Designers, Inc. for which
individuals receive compensation of
housing, airfare and
a
scholarship.
Applicants slwuld be enrolled
in
an
accredited fashion design or art school.
For more information; contact:
Hispanic Designers, Inc.
JCW 16th Street,
N.
W.
Suite 504
Washington, D.
C.
20036
(202) 452-()()92
Deadlille: ongoing
ferently than other . students or
residents of the community.
"If
a
student 'in the City of Poughkeep-
sie broke the law then the law takes
·over. What is so different about
these students here?
If
they break
the.law then the same should app-
ly," said Harris.·
·
"I am sympathetic with Marist.
But what the council is suggesting
is military-like," said senior Tom
Mulryan.
The meeting ended with a mo-
tion passed by the council to leave
the issue of removing the tennis
. _court on Marist College's campus,
for a newdorm, tabled until the
issue
regarding off-campus
. students is resolved. The council
th.en went into executive session.
Another suggestion by the coun-
cil was, the attendance of Marist
security at ofkampus incidents in-
volving police; "If Marist Securi-
ty did go with police to the in-.
cidents then they would get more
disrespect," said senior Chris
Leach. "I can guarantee it." Most
of the students attending the
meeting said they felt sorry for
Marist and said if a law is being
broken then the police department
should be held responsible.
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-,,

,.,.
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14
Lyme disease ends runner's career·
Sport
·
Schedule
by
AMY CROSBY
· ·
/
·
/.
.
.
·.
.
\
Senior Editor .
Jennifer Von Suski! knew something was:
wrong when she felt weak during her daily
IO-mile runs, but she blamed it on the mix-
ture of the miles and the heat.
...,
·
Then her weight dropped and- her joints
began to hurt, making her runs very
uncomfortable.
..
A few weeks later, Von Suski!, Marist's
number one female runner last season, was
diagnosed with Lyme disease and told by her
doctor to stop running immediately. Lyme
disease: a serious illness that can affect the
heart, the nervous system and cause crippl-
ing arthritis, is passed
to
humans through
deer tick bites - insects
.
smaller than a grain
of rice
.
For Von Suski!,
·
Marist's
1992
Athlete of the Year and
.
veteran of the
1990
Boston Marathon, this
.
is the first time since
·
she started running nine years ago
.
that the
sport is off-limits to her
: .
.
.
.
·
·
.. It really hurts to \\'Ork so hard and have
something like this happen. You don't realize
how much something means to you until you
lose
it," said Von Suski!.
On top of that, Yon Suski! is a senior,
making this her last opportunity to run with
the Marist women's cross country team.
"
Being at Marist and not running is not
fun
for
me any more.
I can
'1
even get myself
10 l!O
to the races until
I have a date when
I
c.i"n run.
I
get jealous watching," said
.
Von
St,skil.
.
·
Jen Voij ~uskil contemplates a year without ru
_
rihing .
.
...
wpmen. ".The morning workouts
.
would wipe
musde aches and stiffness, swollen glands
me out for the rest of the
.
day and l started
and fatigue.
-
Sometimes individuals

test
getting bad headaches and my joints always
negative even when
·
1hey have the disease, as
.
hurt, '' remembered Von Suski!.
"I
really
in Von Suskil's case.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Men's Tennis
vs.
Wagner (H)
Today at 3:30pm
.
Women's Vol_leybaU
vs.
St.
~rancis
(NY)
. •
(H) Tonight at 7pm
.
.
Women's Tennis
·
vs. Buffalo (H)
Saturday at
rpm
.
.
·
Baseball
·
Von Suski! said she \\
;
as not immediately
diagnosed with Lyme disease. The imrse at .
the Little People's Workshop
,"
a Marist sum-
mer camp, told her she was probably run-
down and getting a cold
.
thought
I
was going nuts because
I
felt weak
The only
.
.
iell-tale symptom of , Lyme
·
.
·
an the time, but the doctors kept 'telling me
:
disease 'is a r~q r~sh (haf nrnkes .a·' 'bulP_s ·
· ( was healthy," ·she added.
·
·
·

·
·
• •
·
eye" shape around
.
the tiite and can-beJound
.
.vs. LIU (H)
-:
Saturday at noon
·
Von Suski! said it was a few weeks later
that the same nurse sent her over to St. Fran-
··
cis
Hospital because she still felt weak and
.
had lost a lot of weight.
.•
Von
·
s°iis~il
_
's _mother finally made
·
her
elsewhere on the body,
:
but
:
this symptom
is
.
.
come home to Lincoln Park,
N
,
J., and see
not
.
experien
:
ced. by every
-
.
·
v,ictim . of the
the
.
family physici,m whojested her again for
disease .
.
Von
,
Suski! said she
·
rem~mbeied
· ·
;
'
.,
Von Suski\ said the first time she was
tested for Lyme disease, the results came
back negative, so Von Suski! figured ·she
.
was
safe.
·
.
Lyme
.
·
disease. This time she
,
tested
having
A
rash back in April, bµ( said she did
·
positive
. :
von Suskil's doctor put her on an-
not think it was
.
anything serious
.
Von Suski\
.
tibio
_
tics immediately and told her to stop
.
said she is still. adjusting
to
going from
:
ihe
.
Soccervs:
runni11g.
He also
·
advis~d her not to return
'
.
athlete with
:
"energy
.
to
.
bu~n, ".
·
f).s
·
.
~he
.to
schoofbecause her count was too high,
_Poughkeepsie Journal wrote last fall, to not
.
Mf
.
St
Mary's
'
(H)
.
·
saturday
at
·
1 :30prl}
·
..
.
She kept training for the
fall
season.,:_
running
60
to
70
miles a week and ran. the
Sparta Run-Around-the
-
Lake race in
N.J.;
where she finished 16th and first out
ofthe.
.
but Von Suski\ said
.
she insisted upori com-
·-
~
..
ha~ing enough energy tqget throµghthe day.
ing back. Ly111e disease· is
.
difficult to
·
.
'.'Energy to
,burn,
.
yeah right," she said
.
.
. diagnose because the early stages include flu_.
. wryly.
"I
am a iniserable _shell
of
what
I
~s~
'.
. like symptoms such as fever, headaches, .. ed to. be/'
.
.

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COLDSUBS
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WHEATORITALIAN BREAD
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SMALL OR REGULAR SALAD
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All
Turkey Based)
SPICY ITALIAN
(Genoa, Salami, Pepperoni)
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SUBWAY CLUB
(Roast Beef, Turkey, Ham)
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FOR TWICE THE MEAT,
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SAY "SUPER" ADD
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f9otiorg

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.
TH~
CIRCLE, SEPTEMBER 17,
19~~
-
15
Boaters tie
·
again,
still lack offen·se
by
TED
,
HOLMLUND
Staff Writer
Fairleigh Dickinson University.
Smith stopped eight
shots
in riet for
Marist. Goldman said he believed
The men;s s~ccer team has been
,
his
.
squad should have ,von
.
the
game. ''The F
.
D.U. game was ours
·
tied up lately·
.
to win,'' lie said. "We were at least
On Friday, the Red Foxes came
one or two goals better 1hari
back from a
1-0
deficit to
tie
Nor-
·
F.D:U." The Red Foxes split their
lheast Conference foe Robert
first two matches in the Shearson
Morris.
Brothers Classic. at the University
Senior Shawn Scott scored the
of Vermont. Marist dropped
.
a
lone goal for Marist. Head Coach
tough 2-1 decision
10
Syracuse in
Dr. Howard Goldman said he has
the opening.round of the tourna-
been pleased with Scott's perfor-
ment..Senior Lou Schmidt scored
mance but would like to see him do
·
the only goal for the Red Foxes.
more. "He's a mature and capable
.
.
Smith chipped in with five sav
_
es in
..
player," he said. ''He has to be a
·
·
·
·
·
d ·
little more
·
selfish on occasion and
a losing effort. Mapst earne
its
first
'
win of the season notching
-
a
take charge more."
.
·2-1 victory over Holy Cross
.
.
Junior Ryan Smith notched
10
Juniors Giangiuseppe MazzeHa and
··
saves
·
for the Red Foxes. "He's
·
Eamon Twomey scored a goal a
starting
·
to do the things he's
·
piece to lead the Red Foxes attack.
capable of doing," Goldmansaid.
Goldman said he is optimistic
"He has a very good work ethic,
about the team's chances for the
and it's starting to pay off."
.
rest of the season.
Last week, the Red Foxes were
"I'd like to see the caliber of play
knotted in a
0-0
tie against
remain the same." he said.
Senior Shawn Scott eludes a Robert Morris defender.
Netters lose first match on ''home'' courts
by
TERI L. STEWART
Staff Writer
Marist tennis is back -
but not
on campus.
The Lady Red Foxes opened its
Fall '92 tennis season with a 5-4,.
four-hour grueling loss to Mon-
mouth College at the
·
Dutchess
Racquet Club in Poughkeepsie, its
temporary home site.
The condition
-of
the courts
behind Champagnat Hall are horri-
ble, according to Ken Harrison, the
:
new head coach. So, he said the
:
team will be off-campus indefinite-
ly. Despite playing away from the
banks of the Hudson River, the
young team played
0
·a: ·
strong first
:
_
match, said Harrison.
· •·.
.-..
·
"Everyone fought really
·
hard
and tried their best," he said.
Marist was down 3-0 after singles
losses from Katy Seward,
·
Chris
Baker and Kim Haight before the
Foxes began to rally. Freshman
Kim Zalai came up with a power-
ful win over Venn Nguyen of Mon-
mouth,
6-0, 6-1. Then junior
Heather Lapier
·
defeated
·
Je
.
nn
Mardello
6-4, 6~2.
Marist finally pulled even when
freshman Stacie Gamma crushed
Stefanie Williams
6-2, 6-2.
In tight
doubles action, Marist actually
took the lead when the number oiie
doubles team of Seward and Baker
defeated Megan Albano and Chriss
ty Janick in three sets,
3-6;6-3, 6-4.
~'They pulled
"
off a good win, play-
.,
Athlete of the Week
KYLE CARRARO
In the season opener,
sophomore
full
back Kyle
Carraro (Monroe, Conn.)
tallied a career-high 161 yards
and one touchdown on 16
carries to
:help
Marist to a
28-12 win over Siena.
His
35~yardjaunt on the firstplay
of
'
the
game set
µp
Marist's
first s~ore of the year.
XCOUNTRY
... continued from pag~
16
·
Kelly said he was happy with the
trio. "They're a close group, they
like running with each other, an!l
they work very hard,"
·
he said. He
said he also looks forward to see-
ing freshman Coleen Carlson (22nd
·.
place) and senior co-captain Noel
'
-
Feehan (29th) among the bunch.
<_
Carlson recently needed eight days
off to recover fi:om foot injury,
while
.
Feehan is coming
9ff
of an
·
injury-plagued '91 season: Kelly
.
said he expects the pair to be in top
shape by mid-season. Both coaches
played down the importance of an
awesome showing in this first meet.
The training has been tough in re-
cent weeks and although the run-
ners are fit, many went in to this
VBALL
... continued from page
16
can
.
play to our caliber, then we
should be able to match our record
from last year."
The
Red
Foxes were in action on
Tu~day at Hartford. Results were
not
available
at press
time.
MELISSA ZOBEL
..
·
· ;· .
In her collegiate cross coun-
try debut, freshman
·
Melissa
Zobel had the best Marist per-
formance at the Wagner In-
vitational. She finished the
three
-
mile course in ninth·
.
.
place with
a
time of
20:28 and .
helped her
team
to
.
a
.
third-
place Sfiowing
:
She wili be:ex~
.
pected to fill some of the void
left by Jen Von Suski!.
_
·
·
·
race with what Kelly called "dead
legs." Saturday the teams travel
to
the Kings College Invitational
where last year Marist faced a field
·
of over twenty teams. It is tradi-
.
tionally a fast course, often yielding
season bests in times.
With Kings only about 45
minutes away, this
will also be the
closest the "nomads of the athletic
. department'' will come to
a
h~me
meet this season.
·
·
ing against some good players,"
said Harrison. "They were down,
came back, tried different tactics
and pulled off an exciting win."
The next doubles match tied it up
again. Monmouth's Tracy Marx
and Jenn Mardella defeated Haight
and Zalai
6-3,6-4. It came down to
the wire in the third and final
doubles match of the day. Lapier
·
and freshman Sue Hoffman lost a
grueling match to Nguyen and
Williams. Harrison said,
"It
was a
good three-set match that could
·
have gone either way.
·
"The program is run
around
en-
durance and if it were where it
should be, they would have won,"
he added. After her loss in doubles,.
'
Lapier said the
-
teani will get better.
"It
was a good match. We
played hard and even though
wedidn't win, by the
end
of the
season we hope to come out on
top," she said.Assistant Coach Kaz
Fielek said: "It appeared that the
other team was much more
prepared than us. We really had no
formalized practices due to the
courts and trying to get off cam-
pus."
Harrison said this year will be
for taking a hard look at the team
and·
concentrating . on
mechanics.
"This
year is to
be
taken
as one of analysis
·
and evaluation,''
hestated. "We
'
will
focus on
building endurance and peaking for
late October and the Northeast
Conference Ch"ampionships." The
team played Tuesday at Fairfield.
Results were not available at press
time.
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I:'
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./
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'
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·
·
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,
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:
·
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:
a

•·
·
·
·
·.

c 1
·
·


·
··•
·
·

.
·n
28-12
·
defense stops
Sa11).ts
....
.
.
\...J.fl
·..
.
er s
Wl
. '
.
down the field and called his own
.
b_y°J.W:
STEWART
·
·
·
·
Sports Editor

·
.
With
.
five new
=
·
st~rters
.
on
defense, first-year head
coach
Jim
.
Parady figured there
·
,vould
·
be_
some
'
questiOn marks hovering over
·
the team's season opener. Parady
·
and the rest of the Red Foxes found
the answers they were looking for_
as the Marist defense rose to the
·
challenge last Saturday and ex~
ploited Siena, 28
°
12.
·
·
.
.
.
Led by pre-season All-American
candidate Joe Riccardi's 10 tackles;
sHrnssists ~nd one
·
sack; the defense
limitecI:Siena
·
cto 28
:
yards
~
on
:
the
.
groi.Hi.ifarid·' 92
;
.ya'rdi!overall.t

-
..
,.
·
Riccarcti\vas'n'of atone
\i
tfowever.
'
VeteranHnemen Bruce Harris, J
_
oe
McGannand;
,
Jeremy Th~de (2.
1/~
sacks)
'
pressured
.
starting quarter-
back
.
Damon Bieneik
.
and bottled
up the Siena running game. The
five new starters passed with flying
·
colors too. Bruce A. Harris, John
Thom~son and the rest of the
·
secondary
..
kept a leash ~n Siena's
All-American candidate, Bill
Scheitinger. Scheitinger, who bur11-
ed l'viarist for
160 yards receiving
in
lasr year's13-12. upset,
.
was
limit'ed to only four receptions for
·
29
yards. Parady said he and his
staff had a lot to smile about on the
way home from Loudonville,
"The most important thing to
me was our defense/' Parady
pointed out. ''They came out and
hit the heck out of Siena. They rais-
ed their game up a notch."
The offense was no slouch;
either. Fullback Kyle Carraro·rack-
ed
up
16.l yards rushing and a
tolichdown on
16 cat.~ies ...
Sophomore Kyle Carraro's rushing led Marist to victory over Siena.
.
His 1s:.:yard rtiri
~n
the first play
froiil'
scrimmage set up the first
score of the
·
season. l'hree plays
iatef, on third-and-goal
.
from
.
the
'
10, lefty Brian McCc:iurfhit
·
Dan
Phelan for. the touchdown.
.
McCourt, w
_
ho won the
sfatting
job
over Ken Rahn in the last week of
practice; showed his athletic abiff.
ty on Marist's second touchdown
m1dway
.
through the second
quarter. Escaping a four-man Siena
rush, the senior lofted a 14-yard
TD pass to tight end Adam Gib-
bons, who was
.
between two Saint
·
defenders.
Marist would

.
score two
·
more
times inthe third quarter, tncluding
.
the most bizarre play of the game.
After Carraro scored at the 8:45
.
markj Mccourt marched the team
number on a quarterback draw .
Just before he crossed the goal line;
he was
_
hit and the ball popped
straight up in the air. and into the
waiting arms
of
offensive lineman
Steve Maher. As a
·
team, Marist
churned out
·
304 yards on the
ground and 375 overall. ~o! a b~d
showing without Don D Arnto m
the line-up.
D' Aiuto, the school's all-time
leading rusher, strained his hamstr-
ing during thesummcr and has not
practiced:
'.
much.
:;
Parady
· :
said
·
if
·
D' P.iuto:can practice this week, he
will
>
play this
:
Saturday against
Pace. Siena did all of its scoring in
the

fourth quarter on two
·
short
touchdown
.
passes from back-up
quarterbacks Jeff Mulholland and
Phil Lettre.
Parady said he made it a point
to play all 52 members of the
traveling team.
"Some of the freshman got some
experience -
'pay day' as we like
to call it after a long pre-se~son,"
·
h~ explai11ed.
- .
. .
Marist leaps into Liberty Con-
ference play
.
for the next three
weeks with games against Pace,
C. W. Post and Iona. More tests re-
main for the defense, according to
·
Parady, especially for the secon-
dary. Pace, C.
W.
Post and Iona all
.
use the run-and-shoot offense.
Pace already has struck for 271
passing· yards
·
in that new
formation.
"The next three weeks will be a
great test for our secondary," said
Parady.
·
Harri~p~
st
,
art seaspnStrong,
'-~<I
f
pxes sttf!er
~a.rly
setback,
bOih
thifd
.
~t
;
Wag~~t
;,
,
1
.
0SeJ,ljg
~t
J;llSaJl~IitVUational
.
.
·
can.build on
:
;'. J6nior David Swift
',
·.
._..
.
.
·
'
Despite
.
the
'
,
unsuccessful
team's match
.
against Fordham.'.'
by
MIKE WALSH
·
led Marist;
·
,
finishing in seventh
·by
ANDREW
'
HOLMLUND
weekend; Marist recorded
·
respec~
Nicki played excellent defense
.
th
e
·
·
·
·
· ·
2
·
F
J
·
--
·
·
St ff W
·t
·
·
·
ta
·
b
.
Je
·
nu
···
m· b
·
ers.
.
·
whole tournament," she said.
Staff Writer
',
·,
place V>'.ith it
.
time
of-.
7:50, qi ow-
.
a
f!
er
.
in
.
g Sw
.
ift,
.
.
th
.
e Foxes
.
·
.
h
.
ad
_
a
·
pa
.
c
.
k
.
of
.
·
·
Junior· Nicole Silenzi tallied a
"Our match against Fordham was
·
1
fi
.
.
h
C
..
b
.,
h
·h·
·
·
.
Th
·
e
.
worn
.
·
en's
.
.
volleyball team,
.
.
.
.
.
.
h . .
t
h because th1"s was our
Third-p ace 1i,1s es 1
_
o
·
r ot
.
t e
three: seniof,Jason Vianese (13th,
.
tearn~high 10 blocks' while C nstm
very oug
. .
.
.
me.n's and women's cross country
·
·
·
·
·
·
M
··
:
returning
from
a
22-ll
record a M
K
·
·
d N" k. Kyle each had
first five-set match
I was happy to
.
.
.
-
•.
.
. 28:18),
_semor.
fo
::
captam
arty
.
.y
·
·
e
·
ar
.
a
·
go· ,
·.:
.
w
_
ill
·
.
operi its
·
.
.
hoirie
c eon an
.
1c
.
1 .
.
. .
.
·
h
·
.
.
·
1
.
d.
II "Last
teams pleased coai:hesP,ete Colaiz-
Feeney (l4tli;28:32)
.
ahd freshman
_
five apiece.
see t e g1r s respon so we ,
zo
,
:
andPhil
,
K~lly,
,
as
_
die: sq!,uids
,
Roel
.
Ros~
(lSih
;
_
28:
36) ..
Senior
·
scliechde
·
tonight
.
when
··
it. battles
..
.-
Kyle,an outside hitter, collected
Tuesday, the Red
.
foxes opened the
opened their season ~aturday at the
Brian
·
ordway
,
antl'-]tinior Andy
·
with St; Fii,incis (NY)
at
·
7_
p.in.
lO'aces, while juniors Moira Breen
season on a high note, beating Fair-
Wagner Inv
.
iiati"ona1.
.
. ..
.
.
.
.
Baird alsc
L
finished
·
fo
the
.
·

top
. :
The Red Foxes,currentlY,2-4 ori
·
and Silenzi
·
each tallied five.
field University
_
3-1. Afterlosing
Rowan
.•
College
.
(formerly
·
·
·
·
·
·
the youngseasoni lost four
C>tit
of-
M K
·
· I
·
I t hand in kills
the first set Marist never looked
·
·
·
·
b'
·
f h
twen
.
ty .
.
.
· .
. .
·
·
··•
·
·
·
·
fiv·e
.
m
··
·
a
·
·
_
cc·h
·
·
es
.
at
·
cheLaSa
_
lle
.
I
_
nvita-
·
c eonaso en
.
a-
-
b
.
k
·
·'
th f'
1
·
1h
sets
Glassboro State) was the est o t e
Ori the
·
womeri's side
~
Coach
·
spiking 34 while senioroutside hit-
.
-
ac , wmmng
e ma
ree
,
eight team field in both the men's
_
._
K
...
elfy's
.
ru
.-
.
·
_
·
n.
-
.
n
.
·
.
e
.
r
..
· s:fr
.
a

Hed secon.d pl
.
a
_
c.e
:
ti(?rial la~t weekend -
·
·.
··
··
..
·
.
·.
·
ter Robin Gest! slammed 29. First-
15~10, 15-5 and 15-4.
d
,
t·t·
·
.
•·
Marist was:fi
.
rstknocke
.
d off
.
·by·
··
h s-'l J h
·
"I was happy to see everyone
an womens compe
I
i9n.
.
.
Monmo_uih
:
by'onlyfour~
_
arid \\'.ere
.
-
.
.
year head coac
.
i1l
y
O
nst~n
.
Men's Coach Colaizzo said he
9
ff the pa~e of.first place Rowari
·:
Cc,lgate in straighfsets,
..
lS-;I I,
iS~S,
said rn:any positive things came out
make
·
equal
·
contributions,"
felt his team could have been even_
by.•

J·u
_
·
s
..
t
.
-
six
.
.
·
P
·
.
o
.
·

.
·n. ts
..
.
.
.

°'
·

•·
·
.
·
.
.
··
.
.
.-
...
.-
........
·.:.'.
•.
·.
.
:
'ts~t
f
'
ah<i:c-then \vas swept
.
by of this tourriatnent
.
:«.Despiteit be-
Johnston said:-
"l was also pleas-
.
b
·
.
·
·ct
h
.
·
.
·
·· ·
.•
·
11
··
.
·
A
·.
·
'm·
.

·
e'
'
r
'
1·ca·.-_·n
··.
·
;:
un
.
ive
_
r
.
sify· ,·
..
.
is~
.
.
10,
t5°9
·· ·
·
· ·
·
·
·
d that
·
·
ct·d n
·
·
o
·
t m1·ss
·
a s·1ngle
better ut Sal
.-
e was genera y
..
Marist's
.'
tpp
-
ttiree
,..·
.
fres~rpan
:
ing a horrible weekend; it was
a
e
.
we
I
.
·
satisfied with the
·
:
opening
.
'
day
M
.
·
1.
·
z
·
·
b
·
l
·
·
·-
-
..
·
..
. •
·
t ·
·
·
'
and
'
15~9
/
-
Afterfosing
·
in'
·
foufsets
·.
g
··
r
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e
-
at
.
:
.
1e
·
.arn
·
1
·n
.
g
.
.
.
expe_rie
.
nee,·." s
.
he
··
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serve in the final twosets." Assis-
.
·
·
·
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·
e issa

O
e ' semOFCO-cap
am
.;
.
·
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·
t
·
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·
och
·
t. he
·
host sch
.
·
00.· 1 and then to
·
.
M"k
.
G
-
·ct h
performance.

sarah Sheehan
·.

ii:nd
.
·
..
,
.
fr
.
es
.
hman
.•
said. "We g
·
otsome ~ad calls here
tant Coach
1 e eanng sai
e

·
h. k
. .
·
ld h
·
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·"
·
.
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.
6
.
war
.
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Red Foxes w
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.·:.
·.
9_t
.
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and the
..
re,
.
b
.
tit
.
the girls c
.
ame
IS
very op
IIDIS_ IC
ts s
.
n.
S
.
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d
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.
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·
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bo
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urice back by
.
def ea
.
t
.
ing
·
For.:
b
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.
.
fi ·sh
fi
st or second
eton a
.
t
esecon pace e~
th
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'ro11
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g
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h
··
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·
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ea
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·
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r
·
tog·eche
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rwell
.
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·
e evewecan
lill
.
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h.
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·
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···
is-9,16-
.
14,9-i5,
··
15
.
-3a
.
·
nd
h"
·.,, G
·
·ct "if
-
a better scare, butt 1s was a
-
g90
·
secorids
.
ci.f. Zob:~1•s
.
.
time of 20:~.
.
15
_
10
_
.
. .
.
.
.
.
·
Johnston said shewas particular"
t IS year,
.
earmg sat
.
we
start
.
It
is definitely som
,
e
_
t~~n$
~~
.:
.,.see
XCOUNTRY
a
'
e1'S
:

_
ly
unpressed
With Kyle
·
and tlte
.· .•
see
VBA'LL
page
:
15 .......
The
Par/Ji

iS(o.Vei
lJt1,t
Pat(a)dy
continues
·
·
·
·
·
Kyle ca:i-raio rambled
-:
35 yard.s
year," he said. "~nd with multiple
.
_
. Harris; Thompson, an~ the rest
.
The 1992 edition
.
of the•Marist
dowri .theleft sideline behincl the
fron~s~ that IJ1eans Y{e'II be playing
·

of
_
the secondary really were not
Cohege football team
\•.iill

try
to
:
biocking of:Oickson anlMafrer
·
;
·
rs-20 differentpeople a game on
C
tested in
.
the Siena game because
sµccessfully
·:
blend
·
youth
.
and
·
ex~
·
·
.
"Wewante_d
to
gei our left side
.
·
Thu~sday
defense."
·
David
.
·Caldwell,
.
Matt
.
Siena had no one who could throw
perience as

it looksfor
·
it~ third
started rigltt away and.now we feel
.
Morning
.
McGilvray and Andy ~ohen
.
are
deep. The defensive backs wm be
straight winning season. New he.ad
we have a solid front
·
five," said
Quarterback
among the new starters oil defense.
.
challenged the next· three weeks
coach Jim Parady expects his teru.n
.
Patady a'rter:
the
game .
.
The 9ffert~
.
They
.
have

·
been
·
giyen
.
a huge
against
•-
.
·
i-unsand-shoot
·
offenses.
to be challenged in
·
a variety of sive line did

appear
_
bal~n
·
ced, as.
·
assignment;_;_step i~ and replace the
Knowing this; Parady and
,
Kevin
ways, so here is an in.:deptti
,
l09k
fyf~rist was willing·uj run
·
co eith«:r
J~
W ·
Stewart
departed Chris
·
Pratti, Jason
Doherty plan to use mainly a zone
at what concerns this
team and how
side. Even Siena's defensive line
.-
new school records.
.
DiTullio, and Ed Flanagan. "It's
fotmatic>n, even though the secon-
it will function without the man
·
could notcrack the
·
Foxes' front
·
''We
ran the
.
ball so much last
·
.
goingtobeexdtingforsomeofour
dary has·one-on~one capabilities.
who turned the program around.
five. Siena could pnly muster one
year because the kids really did not
·
new players to step in at1d play for
"It's easier for the defensive
Offensively, the left side of the
·
sack. D.on D'Aiuto is out
·
with
·
an
·
under
·
sfand the passing gaine and
graduated pl~yers, butthere'll also
backs to play zone because they
line is a concern for Par~dy, who
injured hatjtstring andjt is possi-
they know that,"
'
he said. "This
be a lot of butterflies," said
have a little more cushion;" ex-
took over the team last spring when
ble _he will not be ready for this
year,theyaremorestudentsofthe
Parady.
plained Parady. "lt'snot
:
d0-0r-die
Rick Pardy departed to coach
Saturday's game
'
with Pace. Not to
passingj~ame, so look for us to mix
If there ~ere any butterflies in
like it is in man-to-man."
Bates College in Maine.
·
worry, so long as
·
Carraro and
it tip." On the defensive side, there
the stomachs
.
.
:
of Caldwell,
The Foxes looked strong against
It
is such a concern that
·
the J:,ulian Wyse combine for D' Aiuto-
are five new starters, an untested
McGilvrayor
·
Collen in the .Siena
the Saints
.
and it's great to get of-
coaching
staff successfully
like numbers._Put the three of them
secondary and two new defensive
game, they disappeared quickly.
fon the right foot, but Siena is no
recruited nine offensive lineman,
together and yci"Q have one of the
.
coaches. When Pardy
.
left, so did
Right from
·
the
·
outset, all three
St. John's, RPI or Iona. With that
even though Parady and offensive
most vaunted
.
ru
·
nn_ing attacks in
the defense, for all intensive pur-
could be found arc>und the ball and
in mind and expectations high for
line coach Robert Palombo would
the East. Fans can expect to·see the
poses. Pardy's specialty was
Cohen even snared
·
his first career
another winning season, Parady
have liked more. John Higgins and
same offense as last year. Parady,
defense. So, Parady brought in
·
the
interception in the opening
can only hope his troops heed his
Jason Menu have both graduated
·
who doubles as the offensive coor-
.
brothers Doherty-Kevin (def en-
minutes. The other two first-time
warning.
and Parady has tabbed
·sopholllore
dinator, will stick with his pro
-
style
sive coordin·atoi:) and Gary (def en-
·
starters are ·in the defensive
"I
_
just want everyoneto take
Rex

Dickson and
.
junior Steve
attack. And why not? His offense,
sive line
·
coach). Interestingly
·
backfield. Sophbmore Bruce A.
care of his ownjob and not anyone
Maher to fill the void.
which utilizes multiple formations
enough, 'the formations will be
Harris andjunior John Thompson
else's."
Both looked
.
strong against
to
.
ucreate
.
an advantage for
similar to last year's defense, accor-
are in a secondary that coaches are
';J.W.
Stewart
Is
The
.
'
Clrcie's
Siena, as e"'.idenced by Marist's
ourseTves" as he says;-averaged 33S
.
·
~ling
'
io
Parady. "We'll inove the
sure
·
to target' in the early part of
spons
edJtor.
.
first offensive play.
yards agame last year and set four
·

front
·
line
·
a little more· than fast
the
'
season.


41.1.1
41.1.2
41.1.3
41.1.4
41.1.5
41.1.6
41.1.7
41.1.8
41.1.9
41.1.10
41.1.11
41.1.12
41.1.13
41.1.14
41.1.15
41.1.16