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Part of The Circle: Vol. 41 No. 2 - September 24, 1992

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.
VOLUME 41, NUMBER
2
·
MARIST
COLLEGE, POUGtlKEEP$1E,
.
N. Y~
SEPTEMBER
24, 1992
H
'.
uh?
SGA flip-flops
on frat decision
by
S.J. RICHARD
and DOMINICK FONT ANA
Staff Editors
Lecture series
.
begins·
Racial vandalism
angers
.
campus
·
by
ANASTASIA B. CUSTER
Staff Writer
The business manager of the Mid-Hudson Business Park discovered
The Student Government
the
·
letters
"KKK"
spray painted on windows and doors on Sept.
14.
Association reversed a
7-1
decision
-
Although the paint is now gone, the feelings about the incident have not
penalizing the Sigma Phi Epsilon
disappeared.
fraternity on Tuesday, Sept.
-
15,
"I didn't think that
.
sort of thing still happened," said sophomore
and creating con fusion within the
.
Sherari Rudecindo, from Bronx, N. Y.
"It
makes me think we are mov-
student senate. The fraternity ad-
ing backward instead of forward."
mitted to violating the Fraternity
Rudecindo was just one of the many students and administrators who
Insurance Purchasing Group
condeiniied the varidalism at the l\1id-Hudson Business Park, located
charter and
its
Marist charter by us-
·
across the street from Lowell Thomas.
ing a school tax-exempt code on
"I really don't
.
appreciate that it happened. The fact that people think
April
24,
when itsponsored an
in
-
that stupid
-
way
~
and that it happened across the street, really hit
unauthorized, off-campus, alumni
home," s
_
aid sophomore Colleen Owens, from Jackson, N.J.
event where an estimated
60
to
70
Marist
:
President Dennis Murray :Said in
a
memorandum, sent to the
undergraduates and only two alum-
administration,
/
'there
is noplace for the Ku Klux Klan on this campus
niattended.
or in Dutchess County."
Although no club funds were us-
Although many
.
of the students criticized the graffiti, one student
ed, the fraternity did not inform
criticized
.
.
Marist.- "It's a start what he's (President Murray) doing, but
the Office of Student Activities
a lot more needs to be done. It's a very sexist and racist campus especially
about the event, which is required
in the administration. Your lucky if you find a female up there," said
under the fraternity's school
Black Student Union president af!d
senior
Ronette Ricketts. In addition
charter.
·
·
to students an~ the president commenting about the vandalism, S. M.
The senate's original punish-
Khatib, professor of communication arts, offered a written statement
ment, rendered on Sept.
8, includ-
about the incident. "Our own Dr. M~rray did 'the right thing' in aler-
.
ed canceHing
·
the fraternity's rush,
ting.members of the Marist academic community
to
the seriousness of
as
well as sending a letter to its na-
.
the issues involved. One can only hope that responsible leaders in other
tiohaF
:
chapter and
'
freezing the
relevanti.nstitutions-'--particularly the media and the Criminal Justice
club's fund
_
s,
.
according
.
to Nella
·
System-w,ill
.
l>e as forthright," said Khatib
.
,
.
Licari,- SQA
_
president.
·How.~ver;
Although
.
Ricketts
.
said
it
was a
·
start, she aiso said there must be
a
.
,
:,tom Arnold, then-rir~~ic!,el}L o_f
at,:,t,,:.
:,cliange.
;
/'.A.~tion
speaks
-
lo~der th~n words
i
''Jaid R~cketts.-The,Mid:
""
,
:.,
· -
Sigma Phi Epsilon, appealed
.
these
.
.
;
.
/
'
:-<
·
d-IudscmJ3µs1J1ess
,
fa.rXcont,a,in..t~1anstpr,ograms 1t1cludmg STEP, CSTE~
~a~.c::i~~~
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foit~:I~if:~itt~\l~~
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bfreinsiai:irig the rusheand calling
·
pr.
Donald_
P.
,
CuS~IJl~I); m
_
te~ni;ltI<>nal
-
author, scholar and
-
to
Ed Hynes
,
dfrector ofcollege relations, even though a few programs
.for
theofficers
'
ofihe
:
fraternlty to
.
el:iear_cher:,vi.:1U
_
beJectu~1rig a!)v1anstCollege on Wednesday,
in the Mid-Hudson Business Park are Marist related theoffices are not
r~i~-
·
m0tiohwas~assedon
~
4
c
~
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-~Bc
30
·
,
;
.
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.
:
:
<Y.
'
.
:
'
·
,
.
. .
. ··.
.
.
.
..
:see
VANDAL~SM
page
10

-
·
vote when three senators rev
,
ersed
•--·
·"
:
-

.
·.
,
.
·
.
.
_
_ ·
}~TI~
--
:
~f}riiifoi{a~b~;!~~:;~~r~t
-
·
Mullen
i
na
_
·1ned

te
.-
inpo. rary
.
·.· .
.
·.
debate coach
voting.
·
_
. .
.
.
. .
.
. .
.
.
.
.
.
.
Licari said she was "shocked"
.
.
resigned to takea full:time teaching
by tlte vote and that she considered
by
WILBERT DEN OU DEN
.
position at Liberty High S~liool in
cancellirigthefraternity'smshthe
StaffWnter
·
.
.
Sullivan County,
RY.
-
MuHen
-
niain )'-art of its punishment:
. .
.
.
.
.
said she understands thlS is a one-
·
.
"In
some respects,"
·
said Licari,
The Marist College Debate Team
-
.
year interim position while
;
the c:o_l-
"they (Sigma
<
Phi Epsilon) got
named Mary An
·
n Mullen its new lege looks for a permanent replace.:
_
away with murder.'
.
' Arnold was
interim debate
.
·
coach, filling the
-
:
ment for Springston
.
According
fo
unavailable for comment.
void left by James Springston who
·
Mullen,
.
··.
she
.
·

wants
_
.
.
the team
·
;
Licari said the administration
resigned last Aprjl after he could members to get more out of debate
was ••baffled'.' by the out: coine of
.
not account
for
·
che
$6,000
in
_
practice and competition thanjust
the second vote.
·
~'First the senate
.
.
revenue missing from Marist's na~
-
competitiveness.
·.
i
.
.
·
comes out with this strict decision,
tional debate camp's
1991 budget.
A balance between the
.
educa-
theri they tum themselves around,"
Mullen, a native of Poughkeep-
tional, recreationai
an~
competitive
said
,
Licari. "Bob (Lynch) aske<i
sie, attended Siena College forher aspects of debate is what Mullen
me, 'What is the senate's role?"'
bachelor of ·arts
.
and received her said she hopes to accomplish with .
'
Despite the confusion with SGA,
.
·
maste
'
r's degree from Marist the team.
--
·
administrators
·
said they are
College.
·
·
.
. ·
·
.• .
. ·
,.
.
·
Mullen said no radical changes
·
·
Mullen was the assistant coach
.
are in store for the debate team
...
see
SENAT
.
.
.
EP
.
a
.
ge
10
.
.

d
.
s
·
-
--
.
·
t
-
.•
·
·
19g
·
9
b
'
t
h
b
.
·
·
s
·· ·


.
·
·
·
-
.
·
h
.
un er prmgs on
m
· .
_
,
_
u s e
··
-.
ecause
'
prmgston was
·
.
er
.
teacher,
·and
all her experience and
the team, but keeps the coach/team
knowledge is from him~ Mullen
.
relationship more relaxed than in
named Dennis Creagh, the Marist
the past. Greg Maxim, a senior
Information Center manager, and
·
from Clinton, Conn. and a four
·
Julie
.
Dumont,
.
Marist's
1992
·
·
year debater, said the pressure of
-
scholastic All-American debater, as ·competition is weaker than before
her
.
assistant coaches.
.
because Mullen does not put win-
"We have a balance- iri the
-
ning
as far
·
above the educational
coaching staff
_
.::_ three people with
-
and recreational aspects of debate
·
different strengths is
a real ad van- 'as Springston had.
·
tage;" said Mullen. Frank Irizarry,
a senior fromElmhurst,.N.Y; and
. four year debater; said he
is-
not
worried about having anew coach.
"We know she works well because·
she
.
was: our· assistant
·
coach. our·
.freshman
·
year," said
Irizarry.
Irizarry added that Mullen brings
· a lot of experience and direction to
:
-
Maxim said the team should im-
.
prove due to Mullen's new and
· slightly different approach to
debate. Irizarry said he .also has
high hopes for the team. He em.:
"
phasiied
that only Mullen is new
and

the nucleus of last year's team
is- still there.
Rape Awareness
.
Week hopes
to
educate
by
CARI OLESKEWICZ
Assistant Editor
According to· the published crime
statistics under the "Student Right
to Know and Campus Security
Act," no reported rapes have oc-
curred at Marist Cqllege in the past
three years.
This does not mean they have
,
:
.
·
, =~
not
happerted; Recent" statistics
·
:
reveal that one in six women will
be the- victim of rape.
Date rape is defined in the
1992
Marist College Student Handbook
as"sexual intercourse against a per-
son's will and without his/her con-
sent by someone the victim
knows." "With the statistics citing
the frequency of this crime, none
of us have any reason to believe
Marist is any different,'.' Roberta
Amato, director of counseling,
said.
Awareness
of the crime is grow-
ing on campus, beginning with
Sept.
21-25
being declared Rape
and Sexual Assault
-
Awareness
Week. A task force of students,
faculty and mentors has
·
been
assembled, and will sponsor events
'-'The trauma and the
'
guilt that the
victim experiences makes her feel
like it was her fault," said Amato.
"There is still that rape mythology
.
that says you deserved it because of
what you were wearing or where
' '
There
is
still that rape mythology that says you
deserved it because of what you were wearing or where
you were going. "
·
·
Roberta Amato, director of counseling.
throughout the week, inclu<;ling in-
.
formation tables, discussion groups
and a "Take Back the Night"
march. "The march is powerful
because it opens up the campus to
awareness," Audrey Rodrique,
Sheahan Hall mentor, said. "We
are trying to educate people and
make both men and women
aware." Amato said date rape is
one of the most under-reported
crimes today for many reasons.
you were going." Amato said peo-
ple react differently after
·
being
raped, and it should be the victim's
choice whether or not to report the
crime.
"Sometimes a criminal pro-
cedure will retraumatize
-
the vic-
tim," she said. "Others find it em-
powering to come
forward
and say,
'You did this to me, you should
be
punished.' "Director of Safety and
Security Joseph Leary said he
strongly urges- someone- who is
raped to prosecute, but agrees it is
the victim's choice. Leary insists ~o
rapes have been reported in the
period of
1989-1991.
"If
a rape is
reported, we first support the vic-
tim and get counseling,'' Leary
said. "We'd encourage police in-
volvement, urge a visit to the
hospital and
-
investigate- allega-
tions."
·
While low self-esteem and reac-
tion to trauma play major roles in
victims choosing not to report,
there is also the fear that nothing
will be done.
The William Kennedy Smith trial
became one of the most publicized
cases of alleged date rape, and
Amato
said
that example
demonstrates the difficulty in pro-
ving a date rape allegation.
"The Kennedy Smith and
Mike
Tyson trials were good in that they
got more people talking about the
problem," Amato said. "But there
was also a
.
lot of blatant victim
blaming in both of those cases."
Two Marist sophomores, Dina
Pace and Laurie Ferraro, are tak-
ing rape awareness and prevention
one step further by organizing a
group called HELP: Helping Em-
power Listening People. "The
group seeks to educate and inform
.
both
meri
,
aria wofuin
'
that date
rape
·
is a "prbblerii
''
oiFthe Mari st
campus~ jtist as it is
on
every cam-
pus," Pace, from Ossining, N.Y.,
said. HELP has three major goals,
Pace
.
said. They plan to educate
students,
,
especially freshmen, to set
up a hotlfne for victims and to in-
stall an escort service across cam-
pus. "Men also need to be incor-
porated into this awareness,'' Pace
said. "They are brought up in this
society to believe that they can
.
... see RAPE page 4















































































2
.THE, CIRCLE,- SEi:>TEMBER ,24, _
:19_!;)2 ,,
''Single. White Female''·Iea.ves·•vieWer WOrid_e~ing
be _desired, Hedy assu~es the rolt;: of not c,riiy
Alis~n. says ''It's fun having , a . girlfrieiid :,
1
pare1Jt ,reason, (or a'quic;~ dfsposal/mto the
by
JENNIFER GIANDALONE
Ahson's r.oommate but also her.guardian;' again'." Well, s_he had be~ter enjoy it while fiirri's"!ier·o.
_
:-
,,. ,
. . __
"West Side SWF seeks female to share
Fiom ~aking a healthy breakfast
for
her in _ it lasts:·,!
·
• qut of all the,~eople i!} the_film; Gr<1:ham
t
,, Th , th . b . .
f th d
the morning, to waiting up for her late at ,
·
.
_
-
. . .
._ ,_ _ .
is the only one -ivho is a true fne_nd to_Ah_s. on.
apar ment... . at s e egmmng o
ea
'night, Hedy is'al'!Vays there looking out for ,. Slowly but surely,_He~y i_nsmuates he~self . Li.ke I said before, Alis.on_is_not a good-judge
that would change Alison Jones' life. In Col-·
Alison's best interests.
mto_ every part 9f Ah~on s hfe.Whe!l Ahs~n- ·- · f h
cter. Check out this· impressive list
umbiaPictures"SingleWhiteFemale'',this =================getsbacktogetherwithBob,•Hedyisafraid
O
c ara
, .
·
·.,
.
young Manhattenite learns the true meaning
of being pushed out into "the cold. She sees , •of aquaintances: a cheating loxer, a psyc~otic
of the term "roommate frorn hell." Direc-.
The Reel.
a green light go o"t7r°in her he~d and begi~s •roommate, a,perver~ed business; asso~iate.
tor Barbet Schroeder gets Bridget Fonda to
·
. to· flirt , ·quite obviously I might add, with _
(You'll have_ to see ~i}e ~qyie to_Jilld out
play the bachelorette who begins.the search; .
Story
O
Bob·. Of cours~. this'doesn't go unnoticed· abo~! that o.i:ie!)•See 1f;th1s .~cepano soun~s
for a rooininate' when she' finds
out
tharher
fo
Alison which is exactlv what Hedy wants'.' famd!ar: An mno~ent, .t~ustmg w.o~a_n takes
fiancee is sleeping' with his ex-wife.
... · - ..
!,: ... ·
,.
' . _.,,,
· ·..
. · --
a total stranger into her home. This total
'
·
·'
· '
·
J
"f r
. . ,
Now things start to get a little weird. While-
. . . .
.
, .
.
: ..
· Alison Jones is a smart businesswoman
enm e
.
snooping around in Hedy's closet for.some, ~tr~ngfr begm_s to-take ~ver her•l~fe and
who created a. computer program · use4 in
Giandalone
clues about her past, Alison is surprised, to
ma_kes a play
f
o~- th_e. man -s~~ }~v~s. You
fashion design. She may know how tCJ iun ·
find her clothes hanging there,: So she takes __ sho1;1~d rec?gmze. th!s because 1t :_n?,t only
her business/ but is not too .swift when iC :::::::::::::::
= = = = = = = = = them back to her room. But are they, really , ,descr~l:>es this ~ov1e !jut an?ther thr~tler fro~
comes to: people_.,_,:·:, .. :
: . _
. . . : _ _
. _ . . , ;
,
:: , her clothes?,. ::
. _,,
-
~
while back. The babysitter fro~ hell m
-,, .
.
,, . · ·
1: _,. •:
., :;, : •.
, ;:.
! .;
.
. . .
; .
• _
Le1g~
W<J.S
tbe perfect person forth1s part. , .
,_ , . , .
,,,
._.
.
. ,. The Hand that Rocks the Cradle _ showed
.pnter ljedy,
M
1
~0.-ll
s ~h.<?!Se.for a r<?o~~- -.As·a hoolcer·,n:••Miari1i Blues" arid. a diu°g' · .
A-
1
: ·
f.-
1
·
1
·
·;--'<
'd•·· . f·- --H
ct';·· .
tis_ what is really meant by::the phrase "a
mate. The t~p;are S(?,d_1fft:rent from·each _, ·
. -
·
···- ·
·.
;;· ·· ,; .
· · ·. · . ·· ··
" -1~
0
n•:i ma
Y
gets tire
O -:
e
Y
s' woman's scorn."·
·
,
.- ·, __ .,_. ,·
- ,
other that it's strange. Hedy's little act'has · .add1cte~ cop m, Rush ,
I~
seems oj)v1ous,
behav1or_and needs:to fi.nd someone_t_o ta!!<.
- .
,,-. ..
__
,.
,. _
Alison thinking they have a lot in-
common. - ·
what, kmd-of people she h~es to play·. In
to. Upsta1rs we go to_ meet Graham. Michelle
.
If
you want a good psychological suspense
Now the_ computer whiz ,has left the door • •~B~ckdraft" ,:. as a professional execut1v_e
~
Pfeiffe: had or,ie in .''Fr~nkie 11nd Johnny'.' ... th,riiler t~at will !11-~ke;y~u wond~r,aoou_t the
wide open for Hedy to do, and even. take,
assistant, s~e s~emed tense throughout the ,.and !3ndget Fondaihas one here._ Gr11ha~ 1s :; p\;!rso9-- you're hvmg with, go see _';'Smgle
.
_ . '-'·
, . ·
whole movie. The stranger, more challeng-
"Single White Female's" version of the White Female."
·
·
·
what~ver she wants. !enmfer ·Jason Leigh,
ing the role, the more comfortable she feels.
popular gay neighbor/b.est friend.
who 1s used to playmg less than normal
·
..
·
-
characters, is Hedra Carlson. A shy person,
So, Hedy moves into Alison's eerie look-
Sh;oeder has some fun and turns this type
whose taste in ·clothing· leaves something to
ing apartment and everything is just fine:
~f character who is usually there ~o(no ap-
. Re~ember, if.you get honie late, check to
. see if someone is waiting up for
you:
''Pop means anything ftom Barry Manilowto Neil Young to Arrested Development''
·
And with MTV and·radio play-
ends of the spectrum but meet on' · is a foursome from Northampton,
by
DANA BUONICONTI
ing alternative, dance, metal, and
common ground by providing great
MA called The Sighs. Their self-
rap often back to back, a pop song
hooks and melody. The first group
titled debut came out this year on
I've always been a sucker for a
great pop song. A neat little
package of hook and melody about
three or four minutes long always
seems to capture my attention.I us-
ed to think that they could only be
found on Top
40
radio, but seeing
that the majority of music on Top
40
radio these days is dance fluff
(which on occasion can be really
good), most of my favorite pop
songs don't even· make it on the
charts.
by
KRAIG DEMATTEIS
As
I
sat in the Roosevelt, star-
ing at the impressive Nazi-style
eagle statues on either side on foe,
I
started to i.vonder what this movie
would· be about. With its· all-star
cast and "Field of Dreamf' direc-
can come from any one of those
Charisma records and
·
has been
different musics. Pop today means
thus far unnoticed. Produced by
anything from Barry Manilow
·
to
Ed. Stasium (Living Colour,
Neil
Young
to
Arrested
In
your
ear
Smithereens), "The Sighs" features
Development.
tightly-crafted love.sgngs that are
As much as I'd like to trace the
usually three to four minutes long.
origins of pop music for you, it
What makes this album so great is
would take me the whole semester.
that after the first time
I listened
So, I've decided to give to you, the
to it, I could remember the melody
gracious reader, a few word_s on
c
Dana
to each one of the songs. And
two of my favorite pop bands,
Buoniconti
that's really one of a great pop
which come from very different
song's best qualities; that it sticks
in your mind and you.end up sing-
_
with his all-star team of . highly
specialized technicians, he manages
to oreak through phone lines, ac-
cess computers via modems, and
basically fool security teams, access
codes, and alarm systeI?s. _
The team is very,successful, and
that
I was partially con'fused
throughout the movie mainly ·
because
I did not understand nor
like the political references that
Dan Aykroid blurted out .every
chance he got.
I
also did not know
whetller this movie was a comedy
(not enough laughs), a drama (too
ing it for·the rest of the day._

CONVENIENT LOCATION
,· Huntington, Long Island campus .. ' .
is easily reached
by
public or private
transportation. • -~ · .. , , :·
·
...

DAY AND EVENING CLASSES·
Select either_ a Full-Time Day, . ,
.
Part• Time
Day,
or Part• Time Evening
·' schedule, ·
.
·
. .
;
The second group, Sonic Youth,
has been around for a number of
years experimenting with feedback
and white noise. Their newalbum,
"Dirty," is their best and most
poppish; Their brand of pop is
definitely an acquired taste, . but
refreshing change for those look-
ing for something that conven-
tional radio doesn't offer.
Check out the songs
"100%",
currently a buzz-dip on
MTV,
"Youth Against fascism," and
"Theresa's Sound World,"
possibly the prettiest song I've
heard this year.
If you wish·to receive admission .
materials andfor arrange for
a
campus
visit, you are en,couraged to ~ntact:
Office of Admission
Jacob D .. Fuchsberg Law Center
300 Nassau Road
_ ·,,.
. H_1.mtin~on, NewY9fk
11743
1
imagine, they are . paid well to ·
tor, Phil Alden Robinson,
I figured
finance' all of the equipment they
this movie
·
would 'be· witty, in°
use, but there is an underlying pro-
. telligent, and action-packe~. a11~ in _:blem with_~h_e team.They all have
many jokes), or an action flick. But
the und·erlying tone of the picture
may be the reason why
I
felt so un-
comfortable with the picture. This
film was not made for the average

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, · -The
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Center is Fully
Approved
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the American
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TOURO
COLLEGE
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many ways it was, but as almost all
some past problem,with the law.
.
. .
,
.- ,
.
-
Redford is. wanted by the FBI for
college student, but more towards
JACOB D.
· ... •. ·
.
.
8X:t°. 314 ,.
.
.
FUCHSBERG ·
.,_,
~
LAWCENTER
an affirmati-..
action/
equal opportunity institution
m~>V1es ~vere _this summer, it ~.on~
.
. __ computer hackh;ig back in his col-
t~med .vital flaws.
1
a_m reall~ st~r- · Iege days, ·when his friend Cosmo
tmg
t?
get annoyed with movies ht- ._ was.caught-transferring funds frpm
the older generatipn. -Also,
the~•"■'-------•---•--•-•­
story and jokes were more -along
tered; and I mean litter~d. ,vith the
writer's or director's "truth" about
the problems in America, directly
labeling the government as the
cause for everything.
Robinson, who co-wrote, con-
stantly depicts the United States
Government as an enemy of the
people. Ironically, this is also what
the movie is about, of how com-
puters and emerging technologies
can change the world overnight if
the wrong people have access to it.
And, of course, throughout the
corner
Nixon's bank account. Sidney
Poitier, Dan Aykroid, River
Phoenix, and David Strathairn also
film,
it
is the government to blame.
have their past concerns, and that
Redford walks up to a building
is why they are hired/blackmaile_d
·with Bush posters on its side and
.
.
.
a homeless man begging for
by the Nat10nal Secunty Councd_to
.
• .
-- steal a.black .box that can break m-
m
~co1.<:u
ri;<,-,ldl.rn
T~tl'i-.h.n;h.k·n•·
'.lfti'::)
~
,?-..h'i••"_;_:.i..
.·.
• · ·
urn:y
1
_prc:.:n;r,,,
1erc•u1 I
g
y ,
_
.•
,
-·"iio'-
fi~lis(fa\va)l~,}i~etlfln;fraliHotc'l '; t~r:;:~pssian _ National· Secumy
ed'(Bsay
if
pbint~ a1 ifie-'poster and
systems. Anyway, we find out that
,:,: ;!:·
;', ,,,,
'.J:
::,
·J .:
Cosmo is working for either
says, "Talk . to him about it!"
Ouch, that ·hurt Bush's: campaign
so much, he ought to drop out right
now. Robert Redford is Martin
Bishop, a security expert hired to
break into corporations, banks, or
whatever in order to find the flaws
in their security systems. Together
,.
himself or some government or
agency (they never tell ·us), but
plans to use the black box to
unscramble any system in the
United States in order to seize ab-
solute power, or was it for money,
or was it to blowup the world (they
never m~de it clear). All I know is
the lines of an older way of think-
ing, like that of the Cold War and
the Kennedy Assassination. Come
on, how many times• has your
mother told you that video games
will turn your brains to.mush. Your
fathers probably think the
Japanese are trying to takeover the
youth of America through ''Mario
·Brothers.,, There are people out
there that are scared stiff of what
is emerging, and this movie caters
to them, or, at least, tries to.
Besides Robinson, Lawrence
Lasker and Walter Parkes co-wrote
the script, · the same writers for
"War Games." They e~ert the
same psychosisfor government and
computers now, as they did then.
A ten-year-old phobia can change
in either direction, it can be
strengthened or weakened. In
either case, this story does not ad-
dress those concerns being that the
movie is too weak to carry a strong
message, and too paranoid to at-
tract reasonable att~ntion. This
movie is the "JFK" of technology.
This movie, like my sneakers,
stinks inside, but look great on the
outside;
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ff
THE"'CIRCLE}SEPTEMBER-24~
1992
3
Campus set f:or big changes in housing plans
· by
TRICIA TASKEY
as to the west of Gregory. and
be constructed behin.d Cham-
Staff Writer
Benoit, across from the Riveryiew
pagnat, but the plans. to build on
parking lot -
PresidentMurray
the slope, which heads west
said these townhouses could.start
towards the Hudson River, will
as soon as late November. Each
cause the. addition from rising
unit will have four bedrooms, a Iiv-
above the third floor of
An estimated $19.8 million hous-
ing and administrative construction
·project will be underway as soon as
November, which will probably
eliminate the use of the Canterbury
Garden Apartments and North
Roadhouses, according .to Presi-
dent Dennis J. Murray and Mark
Sullivan,the
executive
vice
president.
ing room, and . a kitchen area,
Champagnat.
which will house eight students who
This building will be comprised
are either juniors or seniors.
of suites, housing about 325
· These townhouses alone
will
not
students, consisting mostly of
completely eliminate Canterbury,· -sophomores. These suites will have
but an extension. of Chainpa'.gnat
3
bedrooms, one bathroom and a
Hall will.
After the· new
common. area, but no kitchen,
townhouses are started, a "mid-
students will be forced to be on the
rise" development will be under-
meal plan, however. the meal plan
way, Sullivan said.
· ·
is
·another
area
under
The project's estimated comple-
tion date will be the fall of 1994,
when additional on-campus hous-
ing win be ~vailable to approx-
imately 500 students, according to
Sullivan.
· 1n addition to a new and improv-
reconstruction.
ed· campus -center there will be· an
This summer .. a new campus
extension to Champagnat and the
center will be in the works. Expan-
Campus Center for more housing
ding outfrom the theatre and part-
and additional meeting rooms:.· ·
ly Champagnat parking lot will be
New townhouses will be located
between Gregory and the A-section
. of the present townhouses, as well
A six or seven story building will
a- three, story "rotunda." The
Marist Students spe~k to each
other throug];i ''coi-dles~,phones''
by
MATT MARTIN
without having to look them in the
staff writer
eyes everyday,••
·
said Higgins.
ARNKAS: Sure· Ice~ \ve believ_e
However, C::hat caffbe- used
as
far
you..C:.:-'-NOT!
!
!
'
more than' a gripe service.
.
VANILLA ICE: Go back to
"This ·chatter, as we are called,
was sitting: in front of me in the
Arkansas Arnkas....
Computer .Center. Whatever she
BLADES: Do you have any
·
armadillos over there?
·
did ·1 typed'
it
up on the screen,"
said Bonkey, a freshman com-
PRES
MURRAY:
Why
munications major from R.I.
"I
armadillos?
put down things like, 'Don't
ARNKAS: This is too strange.
scratch your head' -
It
freaked her
Strange as it may seem, this type
out." An individual called 'Crazy
of conversation is taking place right
J'
said he uses chat to get to know
now. Across the Marist campus
new p·eople and make fun of them.
Sometimes Chat users get to know
students are telling one another
each ·other a little too well.
about their problems: and dreams
thrnugh the main frame option· . · "Chatters ~tart co.ming on to you
Chat_;
•":, .. ·
)ery ·strongly because:there is.no
Th_e user is requested to makeup
a handle to use as identification -
it can be. anything one wants.
Crusader came about because he is
a history major and loves
medievallore .. Sometimes the
handles are just nicknames - like
Bonkey. "When my sister was
voung, we climbed trees all the
time. However, she had trouble
with the letter 'm,' so ·she said
bonkey .· It just stuck," said
Bonkey; The handles at Marist
vary from the impressive to the
ridiculous: Vote Libertarian, Space
Ace, Cool
J,
Lucky, Scout, Virgin,
Stud, Moamar, Crazy
J
and Lord
Wa. According to its users, Chat
~:i

:'l_t}s)iJ<e
a.·giapt.
c~nfe~~nce-_ca\l, ~-idl~tity.,iJ;~1Je·d /':
s~id . .B~~k~y.•;·
.
becomes addictive. ''You find
?m~ly
.
fr
0
1.1)h.e: cpipputeI",_'\.s~id
'~;''.Pvj-
_had}sbmeipfciple:).skrme: yourself needing,,to, know, more
John ... Dai~neault, .. ·a. JUJllO!>some really:pi:frverted questions;'!
·
al:loutthepersori you're talking to.
computer
0
sc1ence maJor· and .the ·..
··
·
·
· ·
·
·
·
.
l
did that for three hours once/'
_Computer Center's student staff
Higgins explained that chatters,
said Crusader, who now, is good
coordinator.
guys-especially, have this picture of
friends with his fellow chatter.
their ideal. dream giI"l in their head
when .. they chaf and there is·
a
. Some of the things people say are ·
very personal and doing it
anonymously through Chat really
helps them get things off their
chests, said Tauren . Higgins, a
freshman from Clifton Park, N.Y.,
who uses the handle of Tori when
she uses Chat.
"It
is easy to tell so-
meone that you never met, and
· probably never will, your problems
tendency to come on too str9ng,
but it is faceless. "You cantake on
totally different personalities - it's
human nature," said Crusader, a
sophomore from New York City
known as Jake. The identity
change begins when Chat is signed _
on to.
Bonkey said she ust:s Chat when
· she gets bored typing a paper or she
signs. on· just for the. heck of it.
'.'That's how freshmen get
started. The computer is new and
exciting to them (the freshmen),
most of whom haven't touched ·a
computer in their
life,"
said
Daigneault.
rotunda will connect campus center
to the new residence halt
In the rotunda and new campus
center there will be a larger
bookstore, an art gallery featuring
students works, a student recrea-
tion area with pool tables and video
games, a workout room, music
practice rooms and additional
meeting rooms ..
The Champagnat parking lot will
soon be a grassy quad and the ten-
nis courts will be a large parking
lot. In addition to a better food ser-
vice, there will be an expansion and
improvement of the cafe. Also
located in campus center there will
be a cabaret. It will be a din-
ing/restaurant area that can be a
study or reading area as well as an ·
entertainment place. There will be
a stage for the comedy, club and
other types of entertainment. Presi-
dent Murray and his staff assure
that there will be more parking
once this whole procedure is com-
plete. In addition to the new lot on
the tennis courts other lots maybe
expanded.
·
Murray said with the parking
area taking place of the North
roadhouses there should be no pro-
blems with parking or safety. There
will be sidewalks on both sides of
the street, a median in the middle
of the road and it will be well lit.
. · Murray also explained funding for
this project will not come from an
increase in tuition; rather they will
transfer Canterbury costs. He said
operating Canterbury was not in-
expensive. The costs of the van ser-
vice, security, etc'. all add up.
Canterbury cabbieS do more than just drive
by
DIANNE PAPA
Staff Writer
They see, hear and know
everything-they are the Canter-
bury shuttle drivers ..
The Canterbury Garden Apart-.
ments shuttle is taken by students
who don't have cars or the money
to pay for gas; students can be seen
talking with _drivers and other
students going back and forth to
campus daily. One of the Canter-
bury shuttle drivers, Chris
Whiteley, said people forget they
have high visibility and can see
what no one thinks they can. "We
have caught people in the act, and
had to report them; we (the drivers)
act as security guards too," said
Whiteley. Whiteley, 52, has been
driving for Marist almost four
, years and has also brought home
' many drunken students.
One of Whiteley's most
memorable .moments happened a
few years ago.
"It
was River Day
and a student was very inebriated.
I
helped him cross the street for
him to go home and he gave me
$10. He
thought
I
was a
cab
driver," he said. Be warned,
students who throw up on
Whiteley's van will have to clean it
up themselves.
According to Whiteley, drivers
are a combination of driver, father-
confessor, and socialite all' rolled
into one.
Last year when Tom Overbaugh,
a senior from Lanesboro, Mass.,
had a problem, Jack McLain, a
driver on the morning shift, helped
him out.
"I
was upset about my
dog dying and he just talked to me,
he knew what it felt like," Over-
baugh said. Overbaugh said it felt
nice to have someone to talk to
who understood. McLain, 56, has
been driving the van for two years,
Circle
photo/Matt Martin
and enjoys his job and the students.
"I
enjoy the
kids, I'm the guy
who
makes them say good morn-
ing to me before they're allowed on
the van. "Why be grumpy in the
morning?" Although
the shuttle is
primarily used to bring students to
Canterbury from campus
and
bring
students from campus to Canter-
bury, the shuttle was occasionally
used to transport drunk students
back to Canterbury. Mark LaMar-
che,
69,
who has been driving the
vans since
1979
said,
"It
used to be
interesting when they had a pub on
campus. I drove at night and used
to tell them to bring bags on with
them so they didn't throw upon the
van."
Not only do the drivers transport
students back and forth between
campus, they joke with the students
and they've handled events from
minor accidents
to
missing keys.
'Allison Letts, a senior social work
major from East Greenwich,
R.I.,
had a running joke with one of the
morning drivers. "We used to drive
by this one guy standing on the
street and used to joke about him.
On.e_4ay
!!t~
driver P,1;111.~d UPA<?.ti}!!
guy and ask_ed him if Ile kne~: the
way to Marist College; we were on
Delafield. Everyone on the van was
hysterical," she said.
Bernard Sperling, 64, who has
been driving the vans for five years,
had an embarrassing moment when
he had only been driving for about
a week. According to Sperling, the
van was supposed to leave Donnel-
... see VANS page 8
















































· ·
• . .
.
· .
·
. · • . · ·. ·.· · ·· : Rape
·
• . :
New
f
ratern1ty c~lls Mar1st ho~e ..
~continued from page 1
by
JOSEPH CALABRESE
Staff Writer
The Student Senate will vote
Tuesday, Oct. 13 to decide if the
Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity will
become chartered again.
The Student Senate will have the
. final say on the fraternity's charter
from the s~hool, according to Stu-
dent Body President Nella Licari.
The Student Executive Board
plans to pass down their recom-
mendations on the final discussion
concerning thefr charter the day
before. After fulfilling an extend-
ed one year probationary period,
Phi Sigma Kappa would become
recognized as a full-fledged club.
Licari, a junior from Wappinger
Falls, said the fraternity would
have full rights ·and privileges once
they become approved as an
established club.
Phi Sigma Kappa, recognized by
the school on March 27, 1991,'was
put on mandatory probationary
status for a')'.ear. Don Glover, a
senior and president of the frater-
nity from Huntington~ Long
Island, said the National Chapter
of the fraternity came down lo ad-
minister
the
sacred ritual of
association.
. "At the point of association the
fraternity was only considered a
colony," Glover said. The frater-
nity has been involved in various
community services during the past ·
year, including the River'Cleanup, .
Alcohol Awareness Week, Big
Brothers and Big . Sisters of
America Inc. and the· Starlight
Foundation fundraiseri •·
Phi Sigma Kappa,.wlio·has ap-
proximately 56 ass.ociated brothers
and a
·
mascot named' ."Junior,"
needs at lease35 membfo topay
dues to become initiated by the
Na-
tional Chapter.
. At that time, the fraternity can
become chartered by the National
Chapter.
"They will b.e joining a fraterni-
ty whose roots date back to 1873
and is currently one
of
the top-10
national fraternities," Glover said.
Beta Chapter at Union College,
Schenectady,
N.Y.,
will come
down to administer the ritual of in-
itiation Saturday, Oct. 31. "At that
point, the secrets of the fraternity
and all the secret rituals will
become known to us," Glover said.
The fraternity is planning a large
banquet for
200
people on Nov. 1,
celebrating its charter.
The members of the fraternity,
parents, certain administrators and
the faculty advisor, John Doherty,
a criminal justice professor, will be
invited.
Freshmen qui~k to .. a~just,to Marist living
by
PATRICE SELLECK
high school,
O Co~neU adde~.
pect classes to be as hard as they
Clearly, one_ aspect · of Manst
are but
I
didn't think it would be
Staff Writer
fr~~hmen noticed was the people.
as much fun either," said Kathy
For many Marist freshmen, col-
The pe?ple he~e are great.
Th<_:Y
Flynn, from Edison, N .J. Roger
lege life turned out to be nothing a!e not chqu~7 h~e. they _were m
Surpless, of Mahwah, N .J., ap-
like they expected .. "It's totally a high school,
said -Jen 'Forde,
parently expected more work.
new life that you have to adapt to. anolher member of the cl~ss of
"College life is not quite what
I
I
didn't expect there to be as much 1996• from Yorktown HetghtS,
thought it would be like.
I
figured
partying but it's an excellent diver~, N.{.
p
H . h
f
it would be much more demanding
sion," said Michelle Chmielewski,
et
eter
~tg t,
.~om
and there would be much more
from Plainview, N.
y.
·
· ·
N~wburgh, N .Y_; • di~agreed. The
work involved," Surpless said.
Ch . lewsk· .
f th '835 '. chquesformedJust m
fl
matter of
Asked what was the one thing they
mte.
1•
IS
one
O
e.
,. days just like they did in high
d"
l°k
d b
.
new Manst students who arrived
h
1
,,.
8
.
h .. · .d "Th" .
ts
I
e a out Manst so far,the
on campus on Aug
30
1992 ac-
sc
1
°
0
'h altg t sat d.
II
ts is ex-
answer was unanimous~the food.
cording to Sean K~ylo; assi;tant aca w ~t r:xp~c~e co t~~e b
"It
definitely has to be the
director of admissions.'
1 ~to_: e
I
e, <;>mg n~ _mg . µt
food," Haight said. "The lines are
Wh"l man
f th
t d t
hangmg out· lookmg at girls and
too long to get to the food and
.
1 e
Y
O •
e new s u en s
la in basketball."
,
said they felt anxious and nervous P /
\
A d S
cl ·
f
when I.get there I don t even want
on opening day· they also said they H u~t dermCore,
n
Y
zegd a, bo
to eat it," Haight added. Danielle
were glad to b~ here.
art~or '
onn.' appe~re to . e
Lind, of Raynham, Mass., also
"It'
tt
d
t:
"
.
d
surpnsed by college and the people.
agreed with her , fellow classmate
B .
}/fe
Y
1f
0
;o ar, sati
, ~•In the beginning .this,.wasn't. with one exception
e
re1and
f
onnpe , whko co!DmNuYes what.
I,
expecied· college life tobe.
"The food is gros; but
I
hate my
v
ry
ay rom oug eeps1e, . . rk b t ·t•
tf
b
,
1
d"d 't
From commuters to resident
I
e u h
1
s ge_
1
mg. ~~ter,f ·.
1
dnl.
8:15 classes more," Lind said.
tud
t
rk
II
n:
h
. -
expect t e pe?P e to be
~s
nen
Y .
Wondering what many of the.
s
en
s
a t e, co ege.
I
e as m
as they are either· " said Szegda.
traduced them to a d1fforent· en- ..
,
0
..
"t .. th .· d"ff ..... , .. ,. .... . ... · ~embers of the class of 1996 are
vironment. "Colleg. elife.liasgive1.i"·
'
besplt:h'··
l:'·
1 .. tehrmg,-optlmdod11:s ... expec.ting. from Marist in four
f ··d - ~-.
t:.~
I""
·11"''''
"
"- '.·
a pu
="'
e.c }qµe.s,.. e n~:wes a 1- · .Y!:.ars? u A good·education and a lot
me more ree o_m uut·
•Stl
·.can, tion'tcitheMai-"isf'conirfit)nif'•a1~01.,' , .. --~ .. · -· ·--· - .. ,,
.
·
hang out with my old friends
f[
9Ill
1
·
differedcabout·classes.'
,
~'Idi~'tex-::~,-~{/un and fnends, said Flynn.
never. be accused of rape." Pace
also points out one-in 10 men is
raped.
.
"Women are not looked upon
as
the stronger sex-,,• she said. l'In this
society, men are not supposed to
be
raped. It is the ultimate blow to
their confidence and ego." Amato
said she believes there is a certain
defensiveness of males on the sub-
ject, which is why more men should
become involved in rape awareness.
"It's
not
fair that the victim or
the potential victim must act alone
in helping to solve this problem,"
she said. Both HELP and the
counseling center target freshmen
as the most important group for
education. ''State law requires we
do a session on rape for all
freshmen and new students on
~pus," Amato said .. '.'.~e're not
~[ ~' ·?,:~.{ ..
~~~-:
there
to
lecture 't1_tem, we just want
. to give them definitions an·d infor-
·
mation." &IWe · reach '.out to
freshmen because they are the most
important students to be influenc-
ed,"
Pace said. "Everything about
the college social life is so new to
them."
,
.
'With the Rape and Sexual
Assault Awareness
Week
and the ·
initiation of HELP into the com-
munity, Marist is taking a
necessary step in promoting
awareness and· prevention, Pace
said.
"Statistics show that it· is im-
possible to say we don't need this
on campus;!' she said. While rape
will be the main focus of this week
and this· organization, both will
deal with problems of assault and
harassment. ·
, : \\bmen
ha\,:
always spoken out again.st injtL,ticc.
.
: -, Yet. 9 out of IO women raped on
can1~
donl
~ya word. ·.
~L,:,t\;i(.,h.,-...,.,cmo...io~r-.ir,.,;m:,unniiu,'\!f'!-""'"""n..·
. . ~,,:tin1lni•,,11'11..-"Ll)llliill•Ji"'.....,~u"'•·
.. · · .
bnT4. r•••_n:N, li,rr..lf':. A~"""'--= tu-:11'1r..'ri;:hl
"'"lrl.'-"~'"
.... ,,,~1iN~,,.., .. ,u.
_- · 1_;
Soilthi,h.,.~,i,,.-Jk•~i,u.p,:xri.funil
n..;,;-""""'-•;alkT;all~"i.tri.J..,..,,u1.,ituu:1iuk.}',111,·,1n);alill\lk•
k....;-~~-vr_,1,i,.,·lll"'-
·. SPRING.=BREAK. ~93.
, . · ,Panama
City Beach, Florida
Sales Representative
needed
to. work'
with'
the #1:Spring Break
Team
TRAVEL ASSOCIATES'AND TOUR-EXCEi}
··• . . . .
,,
·_
S~l!
the
B~T
properties
oh
~e
beach_
·
. :
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-
THE
CIR.CLE;
S~PTEMBER 24,
·1992'.'
~
'
byCATHERIN.E CARDELL:.
,
-~:ltaff Writer
. An all ci~cuits are busy signal - This is what Cathy Manganelli heard
when. she tried .to m~ke a long di.stance call the other evening,f rom Cham~
pagnat Hall.
·
,, • .
. -
. .
. .
-..
r ·
Manganelli; a sophomore
fro~
Brooklyn,.
N:Y.,
said-that re~~ntly
it
is next to.impossibleJo get long distance service between 7,p.m. and,2
a.m.
..
.,
.
:_
:
"lend up using the pay phone and .using my calling cari:l," she said.
ManganellLis not the only student affected by the phone system.
Tim Lawton, a Marist teleco~munications.analyst, said he has heard
second:hand about student complaints regarding the phone system for
at least a week ..
The Rolm !'hone System, purchas~d from.IBM two years ago, gi~es
telephone access to 100 percent of the campus, said Lawton. Lawton ads
mitted there is a problem for students trying to make long distance calls
at the same time..
.
According to Lawton the Rolm system is set up with a five-percent-
bfockage rate -
meaning that for every 100 students making a long
distance call, no more than five should get an all circuits busy signal.
This five-percent-blockage rate was recommended by the phone
designers, but Lawton said he realizes it will probably be necessary to
add more access lines because many students have similar dialing habits, ..
which are different from the staff's. Lawton also said adding more ac-
cess lines will be expensive, so Marist is also·looking at mixing the stu-
dent and administration telephone line traffic. "We need to find a hap-
py medium between heavy usage times and what is needed for day to
day activity," said Lawton. By Oct.
1
a solution to this phone problem
hopefully will be found, according to Lawton. For the time being some
students will continue to run into the problem of not being able to make
all of their Jong dista11ce calls during the most frequently used times.
Chris Bramfeld, a freshman from Glenhead,
N.Y.,
said that you learn
through experience when to make calls and when not to make calls.
Bramfeld added that the Rolm phone itself is hard to understand and
that it did not come with any instructions. "I went to a workshop for
it last week, but it's still confusing," he said.
There are many options that the Rolm phone comes equipped with;
phone mail, call waiting, call pick-up," speed dialing, free four digit call-
ing, call transforring, music on hold, and no hook up fee, said Lawton.
The value of the system itself is hard pinpoint because Marist received
it from IBM as part of the joint study programand Marist pays fees,
but is estimated at around several million dollars, said Lawton.
Included in the value of the system is the phone mail system and the
wiring all across campus, Lawton added,
The college benefits very much by owning it's own phone system
because it keeps telephone costs low for students and makes it unnecessary
for students to buy their own phones or pay for installation fees, said
Lawton.
.
. .
_ .
.
. . .
.
.
.
"The idea of artytelephoile system: is to provide many people withaii
access to the outside," said Lawton, which is what is trying to be done.
RT. 9G
l
lilr--
__________ __,_fl__
N
RT. 9
s
f
\
~;.,;
Matisr
College ; · .
.
--
Stu~~nt · Program~ing ~ouncil
presents , . -:
-
-MARIO
JOYNER
MARIO .JOYNER
Host of
the MTV's '1-tALF-HOUR COMEDY HOUR"
and has appeared on
''The
Arsenio Hal
Show"
.and
"Late Night
with
David Letterman"-
Date:
Friday,
September
25th, 1992
Time:
s:00PM
Place:
campus
Center Theatre
Admission: . .
Marist
Students $3.00
with
vaid
I).
General
Pubic -
$12.00
Tickets
are
avaiable
at
the
Colege Activities Office,
, ___ CC 273 and
Theatre Ticket
Booth,
Monday -
Friday,
10:00
am. -
5:00
p.m..
Tickets are on a first come, first serve ~ s
. .
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6
THE·CIRCLE
EDITORIAL..,
SEPTEMBER 24,
1992
THE
CIRCLE
SJ.
Richard,
editor
J ..
W. Stewart,
sports editor
Dominick Fontana, senior editor
Chrissy Cassidy,
senior editor
Carl
Oleskewlcz, assistant editor
Joanne Alfarone, business manager
Jason
Capallaro,
business manager
Erik Hanson, distribution manager
Anastasia B. Custer, senior editor
Ted Holmlund, associate edi'tor
Margo Barrett, editorial page editor
Amy Crosby, associate editor
Jennifer Ponzlnl, advertising manager
Matt Martin, photography editor
Dennis Glldea,faculty adviser
Faith no ·more?
Jose Ortega
y
Gasset, Spanish philosopher, defines
crisis as the point one reaches when one no longer has
convictions.
The Student Government Association seems to be
in a crisis. It seems to have no faith in its decisions.
The student senate handed down a tough 7-1 ruling on
Sept. 8 punishing the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity for
violations of its Marist charter and the Fraternity In-
surance Purchasing Group.
Nella Licari, SGA president, and most members of
the student senate said they were satisfied with the deci-
sion, which included cancelling the fraternity's-rush.
Licari said she viewed cancelling rush as the main
point of the punishment.
Seven days later four of these staunch and satisfied
senators changed their minds and voted to reinstate Sig
Ep's rush. Four other ~fp.ators ab~tained from voting
altoget~er. What changed?'~i1li.iri.g,_-·according to
Jeft
Schanz, who abstained frorif voting. Schanz said he
heard no new evidence on Sept. 15 to change his mind
on reinstating the rush. Andrea Preziotti also did not
vote. She said she was "confused by the contradicting
stories'' she heard about the inddent. Brian Vett!;!r;who•.
cast one of the abstention votes, declined to comment
on his vote.
Said Vetter:
"I
just want to put this all behind me.
I've caught enough
flak
already·.,,-_ ..... ··
Other senators just plain changed their-minds ontl}_e
issue, like Michael Fogarty \Yho seemed clisappointed
when asked his opinions ori the abstentions.··
Fogarty said he thought people should vote for one
side of the argument or the othe,r :-In the end, Fogarty
chose both sides, ·voting first to caijc~lrush tllenlater
to reinstate it. KentRinehart_wastl}e onlysena.tor wh()
was consisterit.
·
Rinehart was·oppo'sedto cancelling the
rush from the beginning.
He
is the only ·senator who
seemed to kn9w why he voted the way he. did. The first
vote was practically unanii;nous. It showed SGA was
prepared to make the tough calls. Then, the senators
turn around and buckle.
People are eriti tleq to change Jheir minds; however,
changes as abrupt as this should be based on reason
not confusion~
The students areleft to wonder
if
p~rhaps the senate
did not employ enough forethought on the Sept. 8 vote.
Or, perhaps some senators' original votes were cast with
malice.
·
_
More likely, the fiasco can be attributed to students
unprepared for the role of being judges of their peers.
The senators forgot that they are not merely students
anymore. They have been elected to an.office that re-
quires them to pass judgment which is not always fun
but must be fair and consistent. The issue is not whether
or notSigEp "got away with murder" as Licari put
it, bu( that SGA ·seefoed to be reeling with confusion
after the outcome of the Sept.
15
vote.
Such a crisis undermines the very essence of a stu-
dent government. How can a government without faith
in itself and without convictions lead?
· Schanz said he hoped people would "not lose faith"
in SGA. However, the question could well be: has SGA
lost faith in itself?
The niaking of a
perfect president
by
AARON WARD
I was all ready to discuss another one of
Campaign '92's great issues, health care; but
as I struggled to understand the concepts of
a national health care plan, I found my
thoughts wandering to stranger ideas. We
have the technology, we can do it, we can
make the United States' first perfect
president.
·
Impossible, you say? Improbable, but not
impossible in the prose.recorded here in an
enlightening column, such as this one.
What would this president be like: would
it be a man or a woman; a conservative or
a liberal.or Ross Perot? This president's plan
to bring our economy back from the brink
of. disaster
.
. w.ould include the, re~education
.. and re-assignment of American.workers. By
cutting the national defense budget, workers
who once built submarines, stealth bombers
and nuclear missileswould be re-trained for
en\rironmentally sound jobs.
saved to start a fund to pay for our enor-
mous deficit. (Sounds a little like what Bush
has proposed, huh?) Give banks and
businesses tax breaks and they would be en-
couraged enough to help revitalize the inner
cities. Then locate those banks and
businesses in new · enterprise zones in the
economically disadvantaged inner cities. By
creating job opportunities and business, you
could start to wean people off of welfare in
the i11ner cities.
This president would not be a tax and
· spender. He would be an examiner, saver and
re-user of already existing programs. This .
· By·. cre~tii:ig .. a .. nati<>nar environmental
dean.:up .crew. our oceans would be clean.
·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=
and.free from t9xic'chein1cals; oil spillsand·
Illedi~ wastes. All plastJcs, paper, glass and ·
rubber:~ouJd betecycled in
.
nationalrecycl-
president would open the doors of education
ing Genters in every major,<:ity across the - . to the dis1:1dvai1taged through scholarships.
country. Too expensive you say? Funds freed
up from the research arid development end
ofthe national defense budgetwould help
cover costs .. Businesses
WO
uld 'receive tax in-
centives. from the federal ~overnment to
create their own .recyclingfor the products
they manufacture. However, this president
would also be strong on national defense as
well as environmentally sound: By cutting ex-
cess military programs but keeping outarm-
ed forces strong and developing new forms
of proven weapons, we could help maintain .
a strong national defense system. This pr~i-
dent would improve what· we have and not
waste workers, manhours and money on pro-
grams that take too long to develop.
Affordable health care would be ~vailable
to all -
businesses would be given tax in-
centives to make their own health care plans
affordable and available to their employees.
Few excessive federal regulations would be
placed on businesses for a national health
care plan. (Sorry, Clinton, old boy, I just do
not want to end up paying more taxes for
health care that is already outrageously ex-
pensive.) Health care vouchers would be
given to low-income families who cannot af-
ford health care. (Gee, I wonder where that
idea came from -Bush perhaps?) By cutting
the budgets of unnecessary government agen-
cies and eliminating workers from federal
government staff, enough money would
be
A
national scholarship funded by money
. from the federar government and private
enterprise would award scholarships to high
school.graduates from the'inner cities.
This would en~ourage students to stafin
school and graduate and offer them the op-
portunity to attend college.
Most
of all, by realizing we do not live in
· a vacuum, this president would have the
wisdom to navigate the United States
through the world with a strong foreign
policy. A foreign policy that sets injustices
right and does· not pander to nations who
clamor for financial, military and medical
aid and then criticize the United States for
not helping ~nough. We have taken on the
role of world policeman; let us not forget this
when liberals say we should concentrate on
the United States. Domestic issues are im-
portant and the health of our nation should
be a top priority, .but the shape and health
of our economy depends upon the shape and
health of the world's .economy;
If
the captain of the ship does not· know
the foreign policy course, we may just run
aground. L~t us not face that prospect with
a governor from Arkansas, who may not
know where the. rough waters lie. And if
Bush can't grasp the steering wheel tight
enough to steer a safe course, I may just have
to place my eggs in Ross Perot's basket. See
you at the polls.
·
Aaron Ward is the political columnist for
The Circle.










































































THE CIRCLE
VIEWPOINT
SEPTEMBER 24,
1992
7
To
save planet earth we must love it or leave it
.
.
:
-
·
·
.
·
.
. -
·
.
c
.
ontribi.ltion and suddenly Jeans a
·
·
Decent? First off, Moonch1lct,
brought to its summit when Uon
Beatles' "Revolution:"
you say
..
:
'
bi
DAVE BARRETT

.
Iiule
to
the left instead ofth
_
e right,
take off that rasta garba~e, those
Henley .discards . his usual f?Or-
you ll'anna SOl'e
'Olli
plan~!
I don't think it's goingto be ama-
peace signs, those stuJ)td co!or
nographtc _material for
~
- lllt~e
ll'ell
Y?U
kno11 all that lives has
Earth:
Love
it
or lose
it.
·or accomplishment.'Those rain-
beads that seem to go with
Henry David Thoreau dunng his
got to·d1e
.
·_
![that's right, then there'sa very
h,rests far away are being chowed
everything, and anything else t~at
daily trip to the lavatory. All of a
yo1~ say ll'e should s'.t down and
strong lack of feeling somewhere
by the powers that be, takc
'
it up
resembles Jesus wear
'92 .
.
Bemg
sudden,
\VALDENWOODS
plan tt well you kno11
,
because we've been losing this thing
===:;::;:;;:=========
·
==
close to the earth doesn't mean you
MA TIERS AND I'LL BE DARN-
/
can start
to
see through yonder
for quite some time.
·
It's alright
have to smeHlike it,
ED JF J DON'T SING
ABOU!
sky but when you try to save the
·
though; no need to fret Just don't
A6
Oh Fried One. Wake up,
IT! (Kind of makes you wonder tf
forests
jump on the freakin' bandwagon.
''7
~
America! We've lost it.
he grabbed Swift's "A Modest
can't you see that they're a dy-
.
Yes, darlings, that's right. My
When I was younger,
Proposal" instead, huh?) Anyway,
ing mess?
·
spaceship is being fueled for Mars
4f..
remember there was a great con-
back to the point: if yo·u live in a
you know we're gonna-all
as
:
gallons of. chilli and crates of
_
~~
.
.
cern for animals on the verge of be-
house that kills you_r pets, has
dead, all dead, all dead_You tell me
-
styrofoam are slowly being loaded
c
0
/J#
ing extinct. Then oil companies
plumbing that's commg through
to hold on to my empfles well you
aboard. '.fhis' planet has been a nice
'~"J.'l'
started including an open bar dur-
the walls spewing dark fluids, con-
know the kitchen's start in' to reek
place,
.
but it only 'takes a certain
ing lunch out for the captains
tinually sets fire to your mother's
you tell me to embrace my
amount of time before an ashtray
·DAVE
.
transporting their products acro~s
vegetable garden and then attracts
botherswe/1 you know all I see are
gets filied up. What about Earth
BARRETT
·
the ocean. The smoke from the
fanatic~ ~vho tell you that _you_'~e
burned out freaks but when you
Day? What do
-
you mean gone?
·
:!!!!!~~~~~~~====::;:=
burning rainforests became
not po!Jt1cally correct,
I thmk 1t s
want money to ~ave the land that
Recycle, buddy. Do your part!
with them. The least you can do is
popuiar when fluorocarbons didn't
time to move.
. .
.
we own I'm q'.i~ck to see you
.
1
don't want to bur
st
anyone's
.
buy and acre of that s~uff and be
munch the Ozone or our amount
I was so touched by wntmg this,
Dave Barrell 1s one of The Cir-
bubble, but if that mountain of
.
A DECENT HUMAN BEING!
of oxygen fast enough. This is all
that I wrote a song. It goes to The
clc's
humor
columnist.
garbage doesn't contain my tiny
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Students choose wisely on-campus or off
·
and social freedom. Some of you
ly or are infants who are sensitive
Editor:
tiave decided that you have had
to loud music or voices at any time
Let me begin this letter by say•
enoughofon-campushousingand
of the day or night. Your
ing that I am an administrator at
the lifestyle of a student and have
neighborhoods may contain small
a local college and I thoroughly like
opted to become members of the
children who should not be expos-
and enjoy being with college
Poughkeepsie community
·
To
eel to those·students who engage in
students.
those of you who choose
to live
reckless driving, drinking or ap-
off-campus because you are ready
propriate language.
Your college years are truly_ un-
to become members of an adult
To those of you who wish to en-
paralleled. You have the unique
society, welcome. College stud
_
ents,
joy your college years by experien-
opportunity to explore new
as a rule are caring, sharing, friend-
cing not only intellectual stimula-
philosophies while experiencing
ly and helpful, and have been
tion but by fully enjoying the ad-
different lifestyles.
1
remember my
known to be valuable
.
and con-
vantages of a student's lifestyle, by
own college days when
1
lived in
tributing
members
of
a all means do so and have a wonder-
on-campus housing. Along wi
th
community.
ful time. If this is your choice,
energizing and informative classes,
.
.
b
·
·
·
I
To those of you who \Vant to 11·ve
however, please remam m on-
I remem er impromptu parties.

h
"Id
d b
k
t
2
off-campus, but st·111 retain the
_
ad-
campus housmg w ere your
remember
_
w1
.
stu y
_
rea _s a .
b h
·
·
·
· t
d
vantag
-
es
_
of being_a college stu
_
dent,
_
e av1or is appropna e an accep-
a.m.
I'
remember loud music ano
table. Please only move into our
conversations yelled out windo\vs
,
please be advised,that behavior
.
that
,
-

neighborhoods
-
if. you are ready to' ---
and doors.
I remember engaging in
·
is tolerated and even accepted on
Jive with the values and rules of a
a variety of behaviors that pro-
a colJege campus
is not aooropriat~
society which are different from
bably would not have been in off-campus houses, condos and
those ofa college. Whatever you
tolerated
,
in any other setting.I
apartments. You now have
decide, the best
·
of luck and
hope
.
,you
-
will have similar neighbors who must be at \vork at
remembe~, these are your wonder
memories and
1
urge yo
_
u to fully
·
years.
take advantage of all aspects of
-
8
a
.
m. and who do not appreciate
your college years. It
will
inost like-
·
your parties which often are held
ly
.
be
-
the last time in your life you
until
··
the early morning hours.
wiUbe a!,le to have tllis int
_
ellectual
.
Some of your neighbors are elder-
.Athletes are
-
all
behind Jen
Editor:
.
·
·
.
we're right behind you.
_
·
Student
·
athletes compete
because of a love for a sport, com-
.
petition and a burning. It is this
·
.
. •
burning within the heart which
·
pushes us to not only go to college
to
-
·
Jearn, but also to represent
-
our
,
institution of higher education in
the field of athletics. A common
bond is shared by all student
athletes. Football players, basket-
ball players, crosscountry runners
and swimmers alike share this bur-
ning within
·
ourselves
to
make
ourselves better. Unfortunately,
sometimes unforseen circumstances
.
hirider
us
from doing what we love,
what we
·
need to do. This has hap-
pened to Marist's own
1992 Athlete
of the
Year,
Jen VonSuskil. lt hurts
all student athletes to see one of our
own struck down so randomly and
und~ervedly. It brings home how
··
easily it could have been any one
of us .. However, as Jen faces her
biggest challenge so far, we want
her to know she'll never be alone.
I know I speak for all student
athletes who have ever put in time
.
down at Mccann in saying, Jen,
John T. Suzuki,
senior,
is
·
a member of the
Men;s Swimming and Diving team
<·
Political
frust'ration
Editor:
Aaron Ward's "A political up-
date on campaign
'92"
is iin anti-
Clinton, inaccurate editorial.
First is the issue of Governor
Clinton's new job program. Ward
calls Clinton's program the typical
ICDemocratic platform of tax and
spend." Yes, Clinton does plan to
tax. But, Ward fails to mention
·
that the increased tax revenue will
come from those making more
than $200,000 a year. And
as
far
as
«tax and spend" goes, I have
three words, "Read My
Lips.,."
Second is his criticism of
a
trade
·
policy with Japan. True, Clinton
has not had much to
say
about this.
Why?
My guess is that with less
than two months
until election day,
the American people are more con-
cerned with domestic issues. And
Rita L. Banner,
is an
admissions counselor
at Dutchess Community College
after Bush's recent trip lo Japan,
and his vomiting episode,
I would
think he would also like American
voters to forget it. Ward also calls
on George Bush to clear his vision
in order to "sell Congress (your)
ideas." He further notes, "With a
Democratic Congress, Bush hasn't
sold much." The problem is not
with Congress. While we often hear
the blame on Congress, what we
don't hear is that Bush has vetoed
more than
30
bills passed by Con-
gress. Finally, Ward criticizes Clin-
ton for expecting "the government
to afford a· national health care
system."
'
His justification of the
U
.
S.
·
not affording such a plan?
Our debt. And who does Ward
claim will foot the bill? "That's
right, the middle class." Well,
that's wrong. Clinton proposes a
pay or play health care plan. Those
companies that do not offer health
care will be forced to pay into a na-
tional account. This account will
help pay for those who are not of-
fered care by their employer or
those who cannot afford it.
Caroline Jonah,
junior
'
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 Ci~cle
is looking for letters and viewpoints on campus o~ national eve~ts. Viewpoints
should
be
typed,
double-spaced. Send viewpoints to S.J. Richard, c/o The
Circle
via
campus
mail.
How can you reach us?
• Monday 11 a.m. - 7 p.m., X2687 LT 211
• All Times X2429
• Musich Account - Send E-Mail to HZAL
• Letters to the Editor, Viewpoints accepted
through E-Mail.!
IS NOT A GAI\'IE
......
DON'T
turn it into
a game
of chance







;
.....
8
. ... Tlilf
CIRCLE,
SEP.TEMBER 24,'·f992
-Marist·professorshares his
. ¢xperiences in Ukraine
by
KRISTEN MCDADE
Staff Writer
John Hartsock, assistant pro-
fessor of journalism, said he was
unprepared for what happened to
him when he went to the Ukraine
as part of the Marist/Kiev ex-
change last fall.
"For half-a-second, I felt resent-
ful," he recalled."What am I do-
ing here? It's my holiday and I'm
in the middle of a coup."
His holiday became ·a working
one when he decided to stay in the
Ukraine
even
though
the
Marist/Kiev exchange had been
postponed due to the failed coup
in the former Soviet Union.
"I
felt
like
I had a responsibility as a jour-
nalist to be a witness to history,"
Hartsock said.
So, Hartsock took a leave of
absence from teaching in the fall
and did a number of reports on the
coup for the San Francisco Ex-
aminer. One of these reports can be
found in the
1992
issue of
the
Marist Magazine.
Hartsock spent
most of his
fall
traveling. He said he received a call
from a cousin in Riga asking him
to travel with her up the Yenisei
River in Siberia to inspect aban-
doned slave labor camps. He was
invited as a journalist and talked to
many peqple who were in the labor
camps.
According to the captain of the
ship, Hartsock was the second
American to travel up the river and
back. Hartsock said the stories of
the concentration camps touched
home for him since he is a second-
generation Latvian. He recalled a
story about his aunt who was l)lac-
ed
in one of the camps when she
was
17.
He said the soldiers put a
harness around his aunt and ex-
pected her to pull large trees
through the wilderness during the
winter months.
Hartsock returned to the
Ukraine in November and witness-
ed more history when the Ukraine
decided to become independent
through a voter referendum.
After a brief visit in the states tor
the holidays, Hartsock again
returned to the Ukraine to start his
journalism teaching at the Univer-
sity of Kiev. "The students are like
American students, b·ut more
cynical because of the difficult
times," Hartsock said. "My role
was to show them another alter-
native to journalism because the
Ukraine journalism is trying to
redefine itself," he added.
Hartsock said he was surprised
how much the journalism changed.
"The journalism there went from
completely controlled to where you
could say anything you wanted.
Opinions were starting to show up
in the news stories," he explained.
Hartsock said he will return
to the
University of Kiev to teach again
in the spring on a Fulbright
Scholarship.
The scholarship is given by the
U.S. government so American pro-
fessors can teach overseas and, in
turn, other professors can come to
the United States. Despite all the
traveling and writing he did, he did
find time to have some fun. "There
were country dachas parties. There
I learned to drink vodka, which I
always have hated," Hartsock said.
"You can't say no to Siberians and
Ukrainians."
.
.
.
· ~.
..:.+-
·~
Circle
photo/Matt Martin
Leather-clad Romeo with comedian Taylor Mason.
VANS---------------
... continued from page 3
ly in a
few
minutes, and he left the
van with some students inside and
the keys in the ignition. When he
Sperling did not get in trouble
but he was told never to leave the
keys i.n the van· again.
Colleen Russell, a senior from
Schenectady,
N.
Y.,
was in a small
accident on the cruiser last year.
returned the students were still
there-but no keys. The students
said they did not know what hap-
pened to the keys.
"We were leaving from the south
. Sperling and Security could not entrance· and a· truck delivering
locate a_nr ,spare keys, so everyone materials for the new baseball field
• .
,. '=.. , , / , , ".;
. "·· :, •. , ,
_backed into us;, There was no
had to get off the van, which was
damage, but it was pretty funny
then towed.
because the driver had to _go back
to Donnelly. We were told to get
off the van and wait for the next
one, while he went into Security,"
she said.
Clearly, the Canterbury shuttle
drivers do more than just drive
students back and forth everyday.
"It keeps me thinking and my
outlook younger than it would be
oth.erwise,'' said SperHng in
response to why he drives the
shuttle.
Seniors wonder what the ftiture has in store
by
EVELYN HERNANDEZ
Staff Writer
Flashbacks of living at home and
having to find a job can be
frightening for any Marist senior.
"One of my two biggest fears
about graduation is moving in with
my parents and knowing
I
won't
have a summer to play anymore,'•
said senior Erin Meher, from
Albany,
N.Y.
Although it is early to start
thinking about graduating, since it
is their last year, many seniors like
Meher are contemplating moving
away or staying home after
graduation.
Meher said she feels as if she
'won't grow up anymore when she
moves back home.
"I
want to keep
progressing, and if I go home,
I'll
regress," Meher said.
Meher may be nervous about liv-
ing at home again, but she said she
feels ready to go out and join the
work force. "I'm hungry for it,"
said Meher, "and I don't want to
lose that hunger come May.
I don't
want to get too scared." As an
, English major, Meher said she
didn't expect the English depart-
where she hopes to learn how to
survive on her own. Slie said she is
really looking forward to getting a
break from the academics,
although she doesn't want to leave
the sheltered college atmosphere.
' '
The real world consists of paying bills; utilities, the
rent, etc. You don't learn how to live in the real world
in college."
Andrea Gakeler
ment to be as healthy for her as it
has been and still is. She also tries
to broaden her horizons by taking
classes outside of her major, which
made her realize she can do other
things.
"Try everything," Meher said.
"Taste everything until you find
what you are looking for." Andrea
Gakeler from Burlington,
N.J.,
plans on taking a big step after
graduation. Gakeler is leaving her
hometown to go to California
"I don't want the bonds that I
made to be torn apart," Gakeler
said.
"I
don't want to lose touch
with all my friends. Everyone
doesn't come back for homecom-
ing." However, Gakeler has
reasons for uprooting herself.
"The real world consists of pay-
ing bills; utilities, the rent, etc. You
don't learn how to live in the real
world in college," she said. "That's
why I'm going away." Whether liv-
ing at home or moving on, there
are other causes of concern for-the
senior. class. Michael Callahan
from Glastonbury, Conn., said he
is looking forward to graduation,
but the job market is tough. "It's
a relief (to graduate), but then you
have the added stress of looking
for
a job," Callahan said.
Regina Pelliccio is another senior
who looks forward
to
graduation,
but only to an extent.
"I
want to graduate, but
I
don't
want all the responsibility ofa full-·
time job," Pelliccio said.
"It
real-
ly hits you when you get out." Tom
Overbaugh from Lanesboro,
Mass., who transferred to Marist
from
a
two year college i~
Massachusetts, said he felt ready to
do just that.
·
As a communication arts major
with
a · concentration
in
radio/tv/film, he had the oppor-
tunity .to work on an educational
video for Hospice with professor
Doug Cole and fellow classmates.
He said he enjoyed ·. the .ex-
perience and
is
anxiously awaiting
the next project.
Since he has taken the oppor-
tunity to · learn outside of the
classroom, he thinks
all
newcomers
should do so as well.
"Freshmen should take advan-
tage of all the extracurricular ac-
tivities available to them," Over-
baugh said.
The class of '93 has a lot to think
about before the big day next
spring.
·
Jerome
Anderson
1
from
Cleveland, Ohio has thought about
his last year and what it represents.
"You know this is your last shot
at this
so
you want to have fun, but
do your best at the same time,"
Anderson said.
His advice for the freshman class
is to keep their options open. "A
college experience is only
as good
as you make it, so take advantage
of all your opportunities."
Marist graduate praises internship program
by
PATRICE SELLECK
just a go-fers or secretary job.
Staff
Writer
Granted,
I had to do that kind of
stuff at times, but it gave me the
Ryan McEntee did get hands-on
opportunity to experience what
I
experience during his internship,
would really be doing," he said.
but he also received knowledge that
"It also made me realize that
I
would last a lifetime.
wanted to be a stockbroker."
; "I
learned that you never let _ The Marist graduate saidhe was
anyone know when you are having
lucky to get his position directly
a bad day," he said.
from his internship.
McEntee, a '92 Marist graduate
McEntee said anyone can be
from Breezy Point,
N.Y.,
obtain-
easily replaced, but by always stay-
ed a full-time position from his
ing in a good mood, co-workers
nine credit internship at Paine
will be more likely to remember
Webber lnc.,in New York City last
you and will not want you to leave.
spring.
"I always made the small talk at
McEntee, who majored in
the water cooler, and I always talk-
business administration, is 91rrent-
ed to everyone I met," he said.
ly an assistant branch manager for
"When I left for the day, I always
Paine Weber Inc. in Lincoln Har-
left with a joke because it made the
bor, N.J. "My internship wasn't
people I worked with want to know
who
I was." McEntee also offered
a piece of insight into the "real
world". "Never tell anyone
anything personaland when office
gossip starts going around the of-
fice, excuse yourself and go to the
bathroom because by doing this
you are showing your co-workers
that you demand respect and that
you will not tolerate it if it's about
you," he said. McEntee said ·
students interested in finding a job
or inter'nship should get their
resume done by the tirrie the career
expo comes to Marist on Oct. 28.
"The expo gives you the oppor-
tunity to talk to alumni and start
the the job search right here at
Marist," McEntee said.
McEntee also said students
should take classes that can
sharpen their interviewing skills
and to .get involved in some job
placement programs because it
helped past Marist students.
As for Marist, McEntee offered
these words of advise. "When your
roommate asks you to go out and
"
· .
.
you have a lot ·of work to do, ask
_When
Y?U
are look~ng for a Job
yourself,
if by going out tonight it
or m_te~nshi~, t~lk to the person
-will'
have;an, effect on my 11ife in
who
1
s mtemewmg you and make three· t si·
•'--
h
J
d 't
,
-- -,~
,
r
,
w~,
en on
sure you do what s best for you and , -·go,,, M~n~,UR}_c"'ifut m,ne out
not them. They are choosey and
you should be too," he said.
McEntee said his internship and life
at Marist taught him the meaning
of the word respect.
"Always be yourself and respect
others because out in the real world
disrespect does not go far and peo-
ple can see right through the brown
nosers."
of IQ times it won't."
/
"Have the time of your life while
you are at Marist because it sucks
¥etting up every morning and hav-
mg to go to work," he added.
McEntee's hopes that in the future
he'll be on top some day.
"l
would love to work my way
up to branch manager and have ex-
ecutives under me," McEntee said.
-






































































































































































































































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·THE.
CIRCLE,:SEP
.
TEMBER 24,
1992
'
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o matter what ph~e of:college li_fe you're Jn,
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i
1
.
j
I
I
i
10
THE CIRCLE, SEPTEMBER 24~
1992
Intern
experience
Valuable
Yc!~u~d~~!~1
_
by
STEVEN
'.
MASERJIAN
-
-
s~idM~i-~ay
:
:ro
:
fillthe v
.
oid, Mur-
The new trend
.
for companies in
located on Marist campus; It also
must be noted that members of
-
the
KKK held a meeting in Newburgh
during the same ,veckcnd as the
graffiti was sprayed on the Mid-
_
Hudson Business Park.
"ffhere are terrible race rela-
.
tions here. You see different racial
.
groups not mixing arid there is ten-
sion," said senior Christine Krein.
(ay
;
se_nf a mem~ to
'
the Manage-
recruiting entry Jevel

empl~y~es
is
S)aff.W
_
riter
·
ment
·
_ Studies
·
~h
·
airperson
.
re- . through internships and co
,
:~ps. ·
-_
Fl1,culty and-employers alik({cite

·

~ueSling the
·
faculty to be asked
to
Each division within
-
the intern- -
Although some people said they
wanted· to know
__
who committed
.
th~ v~ndalism
:
and spray painted
.
-
.
the Mid-Hudson Business Park
internships as one of the
_
most
mform students about the need for
ship program has
.
it~ own specific
valuable educational experiences a
interns.
.
-
:-
requirements for eligibility. Aside
student can have. "A student ,vith
"Perhaps I'm doing inyjob too
from the Social Work, Criminal
·
a 2.85 gpa with a lot of work ex-
·
well," Murray said: "The ~tariSt
Justice, Psychology, Public
perience may well have a better
program is becoming _more
a
nd
History and Environmental Science
chance at- the job than a 4.0 stu-
more visible. Comp~mies know the
programs, internships are optional
d
,,
"d
d
Marist name
:
and •
:'
are referringd
k ·
1
·
·

d"
ent,
sai
_
-
Desmon
_
Murray,
..
M . ,
,
.
h
.
.
an are ta en as
.
e ect1ve
_
cre its.
assistant director of field ex-
, anst s_ name to ot ~r companies.
"Students who do not dioose their
perience and affirmative action of-
.
.} m gett~ng c
_
alls (for 1nterns) from
major early may end up ,vithJewer
ficer.
·
·
_
compa?!es that I never even con-
elective credits and therefore may
"The police department is doing
drive-by's. When

you
.
have
something done
_
t,y a coward from
a coward's organization-,-its very
difficult to come up with a lead,"
saidJ;F; Leary, director of safety
and security.
·
·
-
Khatib said people should concen:
trate on another question.
,
''.The
~ig!3ifica!1t question regarding the
mc1dent
JS
not, therefore, 'Who did
it and :why?'
.
but,. rather 'From
.
whom did the perpetrators derive
-
·
their sense of impunity for their ac-
tions?'
.
Once this question
-
is rais-
ed, an~ answei:ed, we
~ill
pe ori our
way
·
towards the creation
.
of a
humane society ·COil~aining a
hospitable learning environment
for all students," said Khatib .
Although internships seem like
tacted.
not have the option of participating
another way to upgrade a resume,
~he, de~dline
!
0

apply for
·
a -
in the internship program," Mur•
not all students are trying to get sprmg_ 93 mter~ship is ~ct. 30· 'for
ray said. For the
'
most
.
part';
internships.
more mform_auon on ~nternships,
however, it appears as
if
interns are
.
In the Management Studies divi-
co~;tge Fie/t~f
1
~r~ence Office
in high demand. "The bottom line
Clearly, many students knew
·
about the vandalism by word of
·
mouth, classes or th
·
e local media;
however, some students did not
know the incident took- pl~ce.
sion
·
, there is a shortage of students at
onne
Y
·
:
'
is work experience in the field
need~d to fill the available
With the economy i~· r~cession,
you're trying to get into," Murray
inte'rnships.
employers that
are
dO\vnsizing their
said. '.'We need for the eligible
"Our ration of employers is not
staffs find interns more valuable
students to come out and par-
even to our number of students,"
than ever.
ticipate in internships."
SENATE·
·
.:
·
.continued
from page
1
satisfied with the
,
second vote.
Steve Sansola, assistant dean of
student affairs, said he respects
SGA's decision arid will receive the
names of.the new leaders of Sigma
·
Phi Epsilon toclay.
.
Sansola also said the fraternity
will be going through a great deal
of pressure since it will be very busy
with their new leaders and new
responsibilities, such as the extra
community service they must com-
plete this semester. "In the midst
of this particular issue, SGA has
been able to go on with other
issues,
"
Sansola said. "They are
presently responding to
·
other
clubs
,
promoting the
.
weekly com
-
edy club and holding financial
workshops."
Sansola also said SGA respond-
ed to the fraternity's inappropriate
behavior, confronted it and cor-
rected it, just as the government
. would do with any other club
,
While admins~rators appear to
uridersfand the ciutcciine
·
or
the
·
Sept. 15 vote, those who actually
voted on the motion are perplexed
.
Michael Fogarty, president
·
of
the sophomo"i'e
·
class from West
Hartford, Conn.
,
originally was
one of the seven who voted to
cancel the rush; however, one week
later he voted to reinstate it
.
"I am not happy with the
(abstentions),"said Fogarty. "I
think they (the other senators)
should take a stand one way or the
other." Fogarty said he felt cancell-
ing the rush would be hurting the
club's future.
Jeff Schanz
,
president of the
junior class from Schenectady,
N.Y., said thatthis decision might
not send the "right message" to the
greeks· or other

clubs.
Schanz; who abstained
·
from

voting, said he was very upset and
disappointed with the way the vote
turned out.
.
Schanz
- '
also
.
said .that,

in
,
retrospect, he wished
·
he had vote
-
d
against the
:
motion to amend the
earlier decision; however, Schanz
justified his actions citing his ~ish
to remain
·
consistent:·
:
scha
·
nz
seconded a motion to acljourn the
Sept. 15 meeting before the motion
to amend the Sigma Phi Epsilon
decision was brought to the floor.
"Why would I second
a
motion to
.
adjourn and then vote on
_
another
issue?" said Schanz
.
Andrea
Preziotti, president of the
.
senior
class from Brooklyn, N.Y., said
she, like Licari,
,
viewed cancelling
the rush as the main part of punish
-
ment; however, she cast one of the
abstention votes. Preziotti pointed
out that the fraternity is still beirig
penalized since its accounts are still
frozen. Kent
-
Rinehart, student
senator from Milford, Conn.,was
the only senator who remained
consistent throughout both votes:
Rinehart's was the only dfasenting
vote at the
'
Sept. 8 meeting. "The
punishment did
.riohfit
the crime/'
_
said Rinehart:
1
.
.

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I

















































































-
On S
a
turd
a
y
~
the
'
rrien's
·
s
oc
c
er team
'.
did something
it
has not done
in aWhifo.'.,_;.score
a
bunch
'
of"goals
.
.
.
.
.
. . .
. :
.
;
.
'

.
.
Tfie
'
Rea Foxes defeatea Mt. St. Mary's
5
7
3, The.team's overall record,
.
,
is 2
~
2
-'
3
.
Marist's
·
conference retord stands aj 1-1-2. Seniprs
·
Bob Angrilla
and
.
Shihvn
Scott
led·
·
the',iled Fox' attack.
. - .. -.
-
-
,.
.
,
Angrilla notched .three,: ·goals for· the hat trick and Scott c\l.ipped in with
a goal
·
anci
aii
assist. ·senior'Andy Clinton a,dded a goal on a penal~y kkk
.
to balance 'the chiirge'.' , '.
'J
,
• •
_,
_
:
_
,
·: -•.
,I.':
-
. ,
,
,,
,
. ; :
·
:
·
.
_
.:
·
'Head
i
Coacn Howard Gqlqman said he
.
w~s pleased with; ~he team
'.
s
_
..
perforrha'nce.
,,
.
'••' , '
)'
.
.
.
.. , .
.
. .
.
,
.
"We\vei:e due to put some g6als on the board," he'said. "The players
could
have gotten
clown, but didn't"." Goldm.
·
an said' Angrflla converted
·
on moff:
,
~~oring cha,nt~s.,ag~('!St M.t.~t
..
_Ma~y•s ~!tan.hi;: has all_ seaso~.
·
"Bobby hacf.aJotof chances
·
that weren
'
t falhng for h1in
,
,t he::,aid. "To-
day
,
(against Mt
~
:St: Mary's).he
·
-
~
ook advantage
,
of
byt;fy
opportuni~y
and scored some good goals
.
'' Last Wednesday, the Red Foxes dropped
a
1-0
decision to St.
;
frim~is (N. Y
.
)
_
..
· · ..
·
--
,
.; ,:·
.
·
:- .; -
.
Golaman
.
said the team failed _again to
'
corivert-on its
.
: scoring
opportunities.
·
·.: -,-~ ·
·,
·
·
·
~
.
. :·
.,

'
.;
"It
was
a very winnable.game for us,!! he said. "We should have beaten
them.•·;
·
On· M.Elnday, Marist tied
..
Sieria
'
1
-
1.
Ffeshm~n.' Steve Horsfall
scored
,
the
-
lone'goal fo'i: the Red }:oxes: The Red
Foxes
hosted Adelphi
on Wednesday. Results were
·
not available at press time.
:
11
,. Chris.Arriii~ii
(L)
and Bob Angrilla ~~lebrai~ Angrfii'a;s
·
~~~I
t~
the' dis~ay
of
Mount St. Ma'ry's
Adam Rieger, during Saturday's. match.
Cii;cle
photo/Matt Martin
DOris
:
attains cultural knowledge in Europe
·
:_
·
.
-
·
- _
.
. ·
.
'
_
of
.10
·studerit
.
-athletes
·
·
and
:
a
returned to Duke to win the na-
made. One of the most moving ex-
due to an injury.
_
·
bj
CARL'A ANGELINI
·
·
·
,
14-personsiaffthis_ye_ar, includi
_
ng
tional
·
banner two years in a row
.
periences for Doris, a former
Doris said one of his most
·
·
·
Staff Writer
,.
reti
r.
ed
St.
John's University Head
The. trip went for a two-week
history teacher, was Anne Frank's
memorable moments in his NIT
·
_
Basketball Coach Louie Carnesec- ' period of which most of the games
house, the Jewish girl who hid
travels was in a little town in France
Gene Do~is
-
didn't get bi,r~d
-
c
f
n
·
ca, who)::oached the tour.
are at night, leaving room for some
from the Nazi sin an attic during.
called Erstein where the team was
his daily five
·
mile runs this su~-
;
The student-athletes chosen have
exploring. Doris said he enjoyed
World )Nar
II
and kept a diary of playing the French National Team.
mer.
·
·
·
to be under classmen who are
jogging around the areas to get a
it all.
The thing that made this town
Running under th~ Eiffel Tower
:
recommended by the NIT site
real feel for the culture and the
-"It's important for Marist to get
unique was that it was a place
in Paris can 1:Dake f~r an interesting
director and the player's college
.
flavor of the people. "It seems fun-
the exposure. We are getting the
which never had basketball before,
course
\
said Doris. ·
-
:,
'
Doris, who is responsible
for
game
ny to be sitting in a French cafe
visibility even on the international
explained Doris
.
"We marked the
Doris, Marisfs athletic director,
.
administration dur:ing the tour
,
has
with Lou Carnesecca,a basketball
level," Doris said
.
"It's great
for
beginning of basketball in this town
spent a poitio~
_
of the last' th~ee
_
·
..
·
.
been sjte director five times in the
legend, and getting into a conver-
Marist and it's great for me.
"
Even
and they literally adopted us for
summers travelmg through Europe
.
·
··
1ast six years
.
He surveys the talent
sation having nothing to do with
in Europe, Doris kept his Marist
our three-night stay
,"
said Doris
.
Yet, Doris was
_:
not on yoµr nor-
.
and submits thQse who should
'
be
basketball," said
·
Doris of their
ties
.
The first night they were ther
e
,
mat European sightseeing trip.
:
on the European tour
.
The NIT has
talks on European and interna-
While in Holland, Doris got to
Dori
s
said, the mayor had an of
-
Doris wasJhere,as p~rt of-t~e of-
,
been a major· player in college
tional politics.
spend three days with current In-
ficial reception for them, delivered
ficial Nationannvitational bas!<et-
.
_
basketball,
·
according to
.
_
Doris.
Having Carnesecca there was
diana Pacers and former Mari st
speeche
s a
nd played the national
_
ball
.
Tol.im~~ent (~!T) t_ravel p
_
a~-
_
Doris· said he· feels
.
. the
NIT
helps
like living basketball history, accor-
player, Rik Smits who was there as
anthe
_
m
.
ty sponsored by Footlocker. This - players blossom in the NCAA.
ding to-Doris.
part of the Dutch National Team.
"Alon
g
with all the cultural
:
·
year, the party traveled to France,
Doris said he recalls
.
how Brian
_
Boris also said he found it in-
Doris said he was looking
for-
benefits
,
comes a prid~; we're all
;,
Holland ancL Q
_
erffi~llY ·
:
~
-
.
,:~~
-:
;
..:._
Davis, a~star playet,..fr.oin Duke
credible to. walk through the
.
streets
ward
to
playing
·
a
gainst Smits but
in
.
it
togeth
e
r. We were th
.
ere to
:
The NITt~aY~l P.~i'!Y c~msistt;d
:.
"t.Jfiiyersity; played
for
fhe NITaild
and go places where history was
unfortunately he could not play
represent the NIT and the United
·
.-
f
'
·
-
':
_<
'.
·
~
_
.
. ·
.
.
'..
:
_
-
--
~
>


·

State
s,
" Doris said .
.-
VBALL
'
_
-
.
.
.
continued from
.
page 12
the hands of Hartford in Connec-
ticut. Despite being swept,
'
Johnston said she is pleased at how
the team has respondec:l to her
"fast" style of offense and defense.
-
'
.
'If,ve can play like we did against
St. Francis, then we should have no
problem with either of our next two
matches;" she
·
said;'The_-Red Foxes-
were i(l action on T~esday; playing
-
hos
v_
to
'
Q~e
.
ens
_
Co
_
U~ge. ~esults
·-
were
·
not ayaqab!e af.press time.
if
t,ne
offense was struggling; the
defense was the complete opposite.
Rock-solid for the second week
in a row
,
the Foxes only
.
let up
175
total yards
.,-
including
a
pal try 35
on the ground.
_
_
.
More importantly
,
after Pace
opened the fourth with a long TD
pass
,
the Marist "D" kept the Set-
ters scoreless the last ten minute~
of the g
·
ame:
-
"We had been
holding on all :day," explained
Parady. "We were very concerned
that in one play, they coµld be back
in it. With their offense, they have
the ability to strike quickly
.
" The
.
secondary also passed its first true
test with
. ·
flying colors· against
Pace;s run
-
and-shoot offense. The
Setters
(0-1
in the
'
Liberty Con-
I
fef~J\Ce
;
·_
O-
____
_
2
_
-;.
2Y$lt
_
n
__
)
_
.
_-
-_
~c~m~d
.
_
.
o~ly
.
tha~Jone-ctou-chd'Q.Wn
·
Jhf<?!igh th
.
~
air
1l
nif:were
:
limttecHo
·'
l2-of-50
!
pasmtt"'Ttre=·defense played
_
_
I
outsl~W:ifs
·
:
~
w~t{fr~eg.thenfin
J
<f
.
many'_ "futnovet~Z,~ s_a1~ _Par~d.Yi .
referring to the four mtercepuons
Marist corralled. ·••Our defense just
·
'
carried us.'! The· Marist defense
·.
will carry the team
(1
-
0
in the con-
ference, 2-0 overall) to Long Island
·
on Saturday to knock heads with
C.W
.
~ost
.
Ganie ti~e isl pm.
Athletes
of
th
·
e
1
·
week
~
.


:>
...
..
••
BOBBY ANGRILLA
SARAH SHEEHAN
In the game against conference
Senior Sarah Sheehan (Spring
foe Mt. St
-
. Mary's, senior for-
Lake, N.J.) led the women's
ward Bobby Angrilla (North: cross country team.
'
to
·
a
third
0
Merrick,
N.Y.)
starred fo
r
the
place finish at the King's Invita-
Marist College soccei-' tearr
i.
H~
!ipnal as she placed 5th out of
91
scored the go-ahead goal iri the
:
·
.
runners \Vith a tiine
of
19
:
28 on
second half- and Marist never
the three-mile course. This is the
looked back- as the hooters went
second week in a row Sarah has
on to
\Vin
the
game
5-3..
Bqbby
,
finished iii
,
the
top
10
while
also
'
contributecl two other goals

breaking
·.
her best time of the
i_n the game
:
-
.
·
·
year.
-
.
·.
VOTED
THE
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_
·
.:food
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-
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·
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12
i~ec,RctJ.SF'oRJrS
__;:.=, _ _ _ _
__;,.:_.....;......., _ _ _ _
.;.... ___ ...;... _ _ _
_,...,,_---,-----
O
i
rr
it
o,
·
·
:
d.efbrise.

.
·
Save Reel
FOXeS
..
.
.
.
.

,
.
.
..
..
.
..
'
.
by
'
J.w~_sTEWART
Sports Editor
Don D'Aiuto? Who's th~t? Th~t qtiestion is probably floa.ting in the
minds ofthe football cc,aches at Siena and
.
Pace University .
.
For there
.is
-
now a new force:for coaches in.the Liberty Conference
-
to be conc.ern-
.ed-witli.
.
.
.
His. na111e? Kyle Carraro.
While
.O'
Aiuto is still out with a strained hamstring, his would-be
ba~kfiel_d mate is turning some heads with his D'.Aiuto-like nu111bers'. The
sophomore fullback was the driving
·
offensive
·
forc_e orice
·
again last
weekend; this tini
_
{against Pace.
:
.
:
.
.
_
·
·_-
·.
'
'
'
.
.
The Monroe, Comi.riative rushed for 142
:
yards on
-
19cardes, scored
aUthree Marist touchdowns and led the Red Foxes
to
anJ8-13 victory
in its first~ever-Liberty Conference game. To put things i~ perspective,
Carraro has run for moreyards (296)in
-
two games.this year than he did
all last ye~r (242 yards in
-
nine
.
games). Car:raro scored on
'
runs of3,
5
and 68 yards and was one of the few solid players on offense, a~cording
.
to Head Coach Jim
:
Parady. "Offensively, we
:
have
·
to be more consis-
tent," said
.
the first-year
:
head coach. "Kyle.was
.
tremendous
:
but.we have
to limit the fumbles and turri
'
overs."
Indeed. The Marist offense turned the
.
ball over four times-twice on
fumbles and twice on interceptiol)s.
The f:oxes
:
also had two touchdowns called back on penalties and
·
fumbled the ball once on the goal line, much to Parady's dismay.
·
"It
was an ugly, ugly game," he said. "But we'r.e
·
gonna have s_orite
of those throughout the season. The bottom line is that we won;'' Marist
looked ugly early. The Red Foxes fumbled the
.
opening kickoff and Pace
subsequently scored on a reverse to 111ake it 7-0.
·
Carraro struck for touchd
_
own number one late in the firstquarter on
a threeayard plunge. The point-after was blocked, so the score remained
7-6 right through the first half. Carraro did the rest of his scoring in the
third, including the longest run of the day-his 68-yard sprint.
Marist failed on two PA T's in the quarter and entered the final quarter
up 18-7.
·
... see
GRIDDERS
page 11

.
·
Circle
photo/Matt Martin
.
Moira Breen (L) and Nicole Silenzi, attempt to block a spike
in their match against St. Francis (N.Y.) Thursday.
·
·
Laiiies
v-ball
·
s.plit:.last
two;
r
.
ecor
.

3-5
'byANDREW HOLMLUND
Staff Writer
The
_
women's volleyball team
was
:
able to regain its winning form
last Thursday by handily
.
defeating
.
Northeast-Conference foe St. Fran-
cis
,
(N .Y :), 15-8, 15-7, and 15-5.
Marist, which improv.ed its
record to 3-5, was
-
led by junior
Nicole
.
Silenzi, who recorded a
ieam-high eight aces and nine
·
blocks, while Ione senior Robin
Gesti slammed down eight kills.
.
·
Part- of the reason the Red Foxes
-
~ere victorious was due to excellent
serving. Throughout the whole
matcJ:i, the team was successful orr
the majority of its service points
.
First-year head coach Sally
Johnston said she was very pleas-
ed
.
with the win. "We are starting
to play'together. At times, there
were moments of indecision, but
I
was glad to
·-
see the girls all come
together," she said'.
Johnston said
·
she.was particular-
ly impressed.with the play. of Silenzi
·
and
.
sopho~ore Nikki
·
Kyle.
"Nicole's nine kills were a big
boost forus, and Nikki
-
just
-
played
great defense," she said.
Last Tuesday, Marist was-dealt
a 15-12, 15-11, and 15-6 setback at
.
..
see
VBALL
page 11

Netters drop two of three,
Harriers continue
.
strong pace,
play ho
_
~t
:
to Gaels to
.
d~y
bot4
.
third at
:
King's
.
.
.
_Invitational
defeated Wendy Schweigardtin
the next match, 6
~
2,
6-0.
by
TERi
.
L
·
sTEWART.
·
Staff Writer
The
-
women's tennis team is
stricken with a lack oLplayers:
When practices started for
the fall '92 season, the Lady
Red Foxes only consisted of six
players, which is the minimum
number needed fora legal terinis
match (six singles and three
do
.
ubles teams). D~~to aJittle
recruiting, th
_
e
team
'1!lS

eJ5pand-
ed
-
·
to seven players,
i
_
qut
.
the
missing bodies havetalcen t
_
heir
toll, as eyiclence!i la!it
:
:week
w:hen the
.
wpmen played
·
tJttee
-matclies
in six days. In Sunday's
match,
.
t~¢
-
women

lost t
_
o
Manhattan College, 7-~. In
single~ action; both Katy
Seward and Kim Zilai.lo!it an4
the Foxes found. themselves in
a
hole
'
from which it-:Coulcl not
,
__
'
.
.
-
.:
·
,
,
~cape.
-
.
However, seqior Kirn }:iaight
"She came through today
again, won the match like she
had the car running in the park-
ing lot," said Head Coach Ken
Harrison.
.
.
.
DespiteHaight's win, Marist
lost the next three matches and
·
could not come back.
"We gave it
_
our best and
didn't come
·
out oinop.
It
was
close enough to say
:
that next
-
time we could beat them," said
:
Harrison .
.
On Tuesday,
:
·
the
women lost
-
. to an
.
experienc_ed
Fairfield'team, 9-0. CCFairfield
.
was much stronger, the girls
-
tried to apply different tactics
put were just over"-'.helmed;"
·
said
:
Harrison .
.
The Lady Red
Foxes conceded a singles-match
and a doubles match due to a
lack of players. Later in the·
week, l'v:larist battled
:
Buffalo
and won
54,
highlighted by
Seward'$ first
,
win of the season .
by
MIKE WALSH
Staff
:
Writer
·
For the second straight meet~ the
Marist men's
_
and women's cross-
.
country teains each took third-
place honors. Ju'riior David Swift
led the way for
·
the
:
men, while
senior Sarah Sheehan paced the
women.
.,
.
.
· In
the rrien's group, Trenton
··
State and Stony Brook ended with
an equalnumber of p_oints, with
Trenton winning asa result of a tie-
breakirig
.
procedure. The
._
Foxes
were just two points behind the
leaders in the ten~ieam (ield;One
might expect Coach Pete Colaizzo
to be somewhatdisitppointed
_
by his
team's third-place firiish while first
lay just two points away, .but his
r
_
eaction was a coµipletely positive
one;
"This was a really good meet,"
Colaizzo stated definitively. "It's
rare to see three teanis so close, and
I was extremely happy to almost
illness to Jen VonSuskil, the 1991
win it."
Marist FemaleAthlete of the Year.
All but one of Marist's
=14
men
"This was a solid team effort and
achieved personal bests.
.
,vith Jen gone, every week we need
Swift's 26:32
.
was good enough
someone-to step up. This week it
.
for fifth place overall,
.
36 seconds
·
was Sarah;'' he said
~
Sarah
behind
·
the
.
victor
.
Senior co-
Sheehan-was anotherrunner who
captain Marty Feeney (26:49) and
managed a personal best with her
freshman Rod Rose (26:59) also
time of 19:28and she placed fifth
· were in the top ten at 8th and 10th,
overall. She was "surprised and
respectively.
_
·
.
.
.
Like
.
hiscoach, Feeney said he
.very happy"
,
abotit
.
heuace which
was excited a))out the performance.
was
:36
better than her finish last
"W.e pulled it together as a team,
year aiBriarcliff
:
The
.
co-captain
and we're working well together.
frorriSpringLake, N.J., said she
No one seerris to be out for only was
-also
pleased with the tearri 's
themselves,"·hesaid. The women's showing, and
w~s
_
especially aps
bronze
-
finish behind Monmouth preciative of-the new additions to
and Wagner was n:ot as close as the this year'steam.
•~we
did really
men's was, but it was equally satis-:
-
well
-
~d--th; new freshmen (Melissa
fying, according to Colaizzo, who
.
Zobel 9th, 19:37; Theresa Hickey
too'k die w.omen's.coaching cluties · l lth, 19:48; and Colleen
·Carson
.
for the day in Coach, PhiLKelly's
19th, 20:20) showed
·'
that they can
absence. Colaizzo said he believes
take control of
·
a race. J'm very
the women's strategy has be~n
proud of them," she sa
_
id.
force<l to change as a result of the
Success hinges on Scott and "Back
Four"
H
.
~d
,
Coach How~rd Goldman
arid the Red Fox soc
.
cer
,
team.
celebra~~d New Y~ar•s Day
-
on
September ~-
.
No,-they were no.t eight mo_nths
late. Jn fact, they were right on
time.
·
For Golc_l.111an
_
i
_
md
J1is er~:,,;, the
1992 campaign c_l.oes syn;ibolize a
new year..;....a year to recapture the
feeling of winning and lllaybe some
fans along the way. In
.
order fo_r the
team to forget two straight losing
seaso_ns, ;:md even more iil}portant-
ly,-
-
16
.
one-goal losses sp~nning
:
three seasons (including this young
one), it can not slip into the mode
of play witnessed in 1990and 1991.
Here is how Goldma-i:i, in his
30th season at the hel.m, plans to
doit. Of the four li_nes of players
on a soccer team, he p_oints to two
· as extremely critical to the team's
success-the backfield and the for-
wards.
His vaunted "Back Four" of
Lou Schmidt~ Brian
-
Rose, Erle
Ross and Eamon Twomey are the
virtual
.
backb9ne of
the
team and
last line of defense
.
before the
go<!]ie
.
The experienced lot of tw.o
seniors and two juniors has given
up eight goals in six
.
games; _en
route
·
to a 2~2~2 111ark ov
.
erall as of
Saturday. The foui:some know the
fate of the team often rests on their
collective shoulders.
.
_
"We just try to hold the oppps-
ing offense because if they score,
Thursday
.
Morning
·
-
Quarteroack
it's mainly our fault,"
.
explained._,,.;;.;..;. ______________
_
Ross, a senior. ''There's some
pressure on us, but there's also a
lot of confidence back there. We all
trust each other.'' Not only does
the
'
Back Four have to play
defense, but they also have
to
bring
the ball up. No problem.
At times, the backfield has
brought the ball up so far that
Schmidt and Twomey have both
scored and Rose has an assist to his
credit.
Although defenders like Schmidt
have no problem with scoring every
now and then, he said he is willing
to leave that job to the of_f ense.
"We're really dependi_rig on our
forwards," said the senior from
Northport,· N;Y. "We'll do our
best to stop goals from going in,
but we need others to put the ball
in the net for us."
The offense revolves
·
around
senior forward Shawn Scott. Scott,
who hails from Wappingers Falls,
N. Y., is coming off a banner year
.
He led the team in scoring last
year and garnered a First-Team
All-Northeast Conference selec-
tion. He is considered one of the
most dangerous players in the NEC
because he can score and pass with
ease. A strong performance from
him
is a must
if
the team is to reach
its
New Year's
resolution of
mak-
..
ing the
NEC
TOUlJ)ament. Oddly worse yet, -tum in anotherJosing
season,
inqueries · towards
·
Goldman's
·-retirementwill
surely
surface.
. enough, solid
-
performances from
Scott and the Back Four may not
ensure that trip to the playoffs. "In
soccer; the record is deceptive,"
said Goldman; remembering
-
last
year's 4-13-2 mark. "You could
Goldman,
.
who will be
-
62 in
play three quarters of the game in
December, said even another los-
your opponent's zone and
_
come up
ing season would
.
not change
.
his
with no goals.,, And while the team
.
mind or his typical response. "One,
has fallen into the one-goal loss
it's none of your damn business,"
funk again, Goldman shrugs it
he said with a smile. "And two, I'll
off." There's nothing wrong with
retire when it stops becoming fun.
the team, per se. Tactically, this is
·
one of the best teams I've had.
They know what their roles are
supposed to be. It's the last 20
yards where we have a break-
down," he said.
That means players like forwards
Bob Angrilla and Gian Mazzella
will
have to complement Scott on
the wings while midfielders Chris
Arrigali, Ray Payne, Jason Dieterle
and Stefano Rossi must break free
in order to help out a front line that
will draw alot of attention from
op-
posing defenses. Should the soccer
team miss the tournament, or
·
,
.•
"I'm not jusLgoing to retire,
either.
I'm
going
to
~
do something.
I've
_
been too active too
:long
to
.
stop," he added. Rose, for one,
will make sure Goldman will come
back for his 31st season.
"We.'re done rebuilding-this is
it," he proclaimed. "We're
definitely coming out and so-
meone's in trouble."
J.W.
Stewut
Is
The Circle's
..... editor.


41.2.1
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41.2.11
41.2.12