The Circle, December 3, 1992.pdf
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Part of The Circle: Vol. 41 No. 8 - December 3, 1992
content
){OLUME
.
41,
NUMBER
8
MarlstCollege~
Poughkeepsie,
N.Y.
DECEMBER 3,
1992
~Tis
-
the
Freshman Scott Sullens
_
eyes The Giving Tree orname~ts on a tree
in
camp~s center.
Sexllal h
-
arassment:
one
..
year later ...
by
ANASTASIA
B.
CUSTER
Staff Editor
Since Anita Hill spoke out last October, sexual harassment has become
one of the taboo topics of the 1990s.
·
After Hill entered the media spotlight and said the Supreme Court
nominee Clarence Thomas sexually harassed her, many women who ran
for a senatorial seat this year.used sexual harassment as one of the themes
in their campaign.
"Women aren't taking it anymore,." said Doug Roth, a
senior
from
New Rochelle, N.Y. "Since Anita Hill, women are coming forward. Even
with the election, more women were elected."
Although
·
Roth mentioned \vomen when discussing Hill, he defined
sexual harassment as any kind of sexual advancement on an individual
in return of promotion.
.
"Someone would
·
probably blackmail you into sexual favors
.
for
something -you want," sophomore Linda White, from Hancock,N.Y.
said.
·
Despite the recent attention on sexual harassment, laws banning sex-
ual harassment were included in the Civil Law Act of 1964. Although
males and females can both be victims of se::xual harassment, many said
sexual har
_
assment
is geared toward women.
_
·
"Sexual harassment
on
the job is
said
to be so common that many
consider it an inevitable condition
of
women's employment.
It
can take
many forms, from verbal harassment and abuse to p
_
ressure to engage
in sexual activity and even attempted rape," writes the editors of
Women at Work.
And some people ha~efailed to realize sexual harassment is not a prere-
quisite to the job.
"I.was
·
at
a
conference and saw a colleague and she said she got a call
asking
·
.
her to testify in a hearing for something
.
that happened a couple
_
-
-
~
,
·
.
,
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.
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·
.
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cle
photo/Matt Martin
of years ago. When she heard thetestimc;my, s
_
he thoughtit was c6m-
· ·-
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see,
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HARA~·sM
.
ENT'pclge
·:
6'
►
·
·
MafiSt-grac11raF<t
·
maJor
··
part
·
·•or:
·-
c11ntdlfVICtOfy
by:CARI OLESKEWICZ
·
o•Keefesaid. "I lookedii{t6in
:
i
:
.ptiblic:
.
,
_:
-
-
.
.
.·
•··
;ver very well arid
-
~e
·
w~r~
··
everi
-
AssisfaniEdit~r-
_;
.
,
;
the
-
i::andidatesintheJieldamfllik-
·
>
·
"We literally
-
walked
.:
thi:oiigh
·
covered by
.
CNN."
.
.
-
--'------'--'-......,.---'----'-----
·•·
:
ed
,
13ill
_
CUi:iion the
'.
most
:
Lreally
·
Manchester with our volunteers,"
•
The
.
company appropriately
A
1991
Marist graduate has
..
agr~ed widi his proposals and lik-
he said. "We werit door to door for
printed tote bags
·
with slogans
.
pf
already helped to change the
.
world
;
.
ed
'
what he
.
had to say
:
on
·
the
BillC:linton in a short amouritof
·
.·
'Clinton
·
ror President! O'Keefe
·
ln
the words ofHillary
.:
·
Clintcm>
•
issues." •
·
.
.
time."
said there are many memories to
·
Peter O'Keefe needs no introduc-
:
·•
O'Keefe began working for Clin-
-
O'Keefe began
_·
building
-
his
..
cherish when one is involved in a
tion
~
O'Keefe radiates fresh con
-
ton on Dec. 15 and was sent to New
·
reputation,in New Hampshire, at
.
political canipaign, especially when
fidence and a tou
.
ch of surprise at
Hampshire to help oversee the run-
one point making
it onto CNN.
it
·
is a winning campaign.
being so successful so early in his
·
ning of the primary
'
campaign.
"!will
alwayfremember my first
''I'll always remember meeting
political c~reer.
.
-
.
·.
.
.
-··
>
"I was a little overwhelmed with
event with Clinton," he said.;''We
Hillary Clinton forthe first time in
.
.
''1
-
never
-
,vould have guessed I'd
thejohl hadto do 1n Ne,v Hamp-
had the candidate for the day and
Kentucky," O'Keefe said. "When
be where
.
I am riow," O'K~efe, a
shire during the
.-
primaries/'
·
we had io get him out in the public
I was being introduced, Mrs. Clin-
Poughkeepsie native,
.
.
said. ·
-
~
'I
·
O'Keefe recitlled. "We
_
had t..yo
eye:••
_
O'Keefe had to find an event
ton said 'Ohi he needs nointroduc-
wasn't thinkingJong-term
-
\yhen I
months to introduce our candidate
.
for the candidate -
-
something that
tion.' That: was pretty special."
joined
_
the campaign.''
·.
After
,
to the state and
to
t
·
onvince them
would gain attention arid reflect
O'Keefe said he will also always
·
graduation; O'Keefe worked ori
.
to vote for him/'
.
.:
positively
.
on him.
.
.
rememberbeing'apartofameeting
.
Geraldine Ferraro's Senate cam-
·
With
·
<!very ca
_
ndidate concen-
-
.
''We dedded
..
that the
'message
withJeaders of the Perot campaign
·
•
paign before
·
joining the Clinton
trating their effortsin New Hamp-
of
·
the
-
day' would
'
be small
in July,' He was joined by Clinton
camp.
.
shire, O'Keefe said it was
business," O'Keefesaid;(<\vetook
and Al Gore. Working on a
"I decided that
I wanted to work
sometimes difficult to fight for ai-
-
Cliriton to a small shop that makes
-
presidential campaign was what he
on a presidential
·
campaign,''.
tention f~om the media and the
environmentaltote bags. This went
expected and more.
·
·
''It was
·
·
exciting to be able to
·
work in this field," O'Keefe said.
"l"liked the idea of organizing in
different states."
.
While running a political cam-
paign may
·
appear glamorous and
exciting
·
, it had its low points.
.
-
.
O'Keefe admitted feeling less than
-
enthusiastic at times.
He recalled one of these times as
being after the
.
New Hampshire
primary. T
_
he Clinton campaign
was celebrating to their new slogan
of "The Comeback Kid" after
finishing second in the primary to
Paul Tsongas, but the funds were
low and many doubted his can-
.
didacy.
·
workers such as O'Keefe
were not
'
getting paid, or were
.
receiving only a little money. Peo-
... see
O'KEEFE
page
2
►
.
K&D Deli and other store·s start to relocate or crumble
by
.
DOMINICK
E.
FONTANA
scapedcentral area.
·
_
Senior
Editor
At
·
each of the entrances to
- - - - - - - - - ' - - - ' - , . -
.
..
Marist, there will be turn lanes so
Businesspeople wm
·
.
either
·
have
·
northbound vehicles will have no
to
leave
-
their businesses for the
·
trouble making left turns onto the
wrecking crew of the Department
·
college grounds,
,
according to
of Transportation, or just get af
·
Clark.
.
.
.
.
.
·
face-lift when
.
the expansion o
f'Capacity
and safety were the
Route 9 between Delafield and
key issues for this project," Clark
Riverpoint roads begins.
·
said, ,vhen describing the many
However, until then, the widen-
driving forces for the expansion.
ing of the roadway has to wait un-.
The general condition of the road
til May of next year.
·
has also been a factor because
The propenies on
·
Route 9 and
roadways can withstand a certain
_
North Ro
-
ad, located on the east
number
·
_
of
y~;irs
,
.
,
be~ore
.
end of the Marist College campus,
deteriorating, according to Clark.
are scheduled to be demolished to
With all these changes occurring
make room for a 68-foot wide
in the coming year, K &
_
D Deli and
roadway, from curb to curb, accor.:
the Rent-All Center are just two
ding to Jennifer Clark,
.
one of
businesses on Washington Street to
several design managers from the
be demolished for the creation of
Department of Transportation in
this new intersection.
the area. So far, the demolition has
.. The state had the rights to these
begun across the street from
properties once they purchased
Marist, at the Mid-Hudson
them," said Steve Maffia, an
Business Center, also known as
engineer from the Town of
Marist East.
Poughkeepsie.
·
Included in the expansion will
be
Maffia said the entire building of
two lanes on either side of a land-
K &
o
Deli will be demolished, but
a seciion
-
of the Rent~An building
will be bulldozed, where the issue
might come up
if
the state does not
wa11t t~e rest of the property and
wants to transfer it back to the
town of Poughkeepsie or the
original owners.
The store employees from both
businesses said they were holding
negative feelings about the state's
decision.
Steve Jones, an employee at
Rent-All, said he wasn't sure what
the business is going to do because
the state was already taking a
significant amount of the building
away.
K & D Deli employees said they
had to leave by the end of
December, beginning of January
1993.
A map is displayed in front
of the counter so all the customers
can see where _the new roadway is
headed-right under their feet.-
Dan Reedy, an employee at
Goodyear's Rockland
.
Tire and
Auto Service on North Road, said
the business will be hurt financial-
ly in the beginning stages of the
construction
.because
K
&
D deli,
their current neighbor, is going to
b~ leveled.
"The traffic is not going to be
good," Reedy said. "When it's all
done, in the long term, our business
will improve."
The plant manager from Kem
Plastic Playing Cards, Inc., Gary
TerBush, said the expansion will
have "no real negative effects" on
the business. TerBush said he was
informed by the state that from the
traffic light at the corner of the
Citgo gas station to the bridge on
Washington Street will all be one-
way, northbom:id.
"The only thing they'll change is
the angle of our driveway which go
over the Washington Street
bridge," TerBush said, whose
business is across the street from
the Citgo gas station on Beck
Place
.
Representatives for Mid-Hudson
Mack, a truck rental business, near
the Route 9 expansion said they
... see
ROUTE page 6
►
2
·
·
THE CIRCLE;DECEMBER3,
'
1992
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13eing/
•
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.
.
t,eft
•
•
b?1JiiJdi:t
•
secont1
•
·
·
.
tilillJ
·
·
even
.
f
Uhilter
Chris Columbus is
;
bai:k
"
i~
:-
the
:
dfre~tor's
,_
\v
_
ay ~nd
.
his fa_mily_ an?ther.
He
fo~l9wsa
.
'
Unlimited ~ooni service~d his ovmpersonal
·
on
'.
the West side while they-are
-in
Pa~is
;
:
.
chai'r: to make
the
sequel to the top grossing
_
rµ~~
·
who he thmks ts hi~
fa
ther. This man,
sfretch
·
limo.
·
.
·
.
.
. Perfect. Kevin gets to work. Power tools,
:
:
comedy in movie history. He and writer John
.
obv~ously • gets. on
a
.
d!ff erent plan~, a~d
.
Kevin is riot the only new arrival to New
.
bricks,
.
kerosene, a blow tor
.
ch~ and pai
_
nt
:
Huglies attempt to make this film as sue
~
Kevm ends
·
up m the
_·
Big Apple.
York City. "The Wet Bandits
'.
' have broken
cans (sound famjliar?) are just some of the
.
cessful as the first. ''Home Alone
2
:
Lost in
If you were ten years old and all alone in
·.
out
,
of jair and just hit town
:
Daniel Stern
things that Kevin
·
uses
·.
to fight · off the
New York" has virtually the same storyline
one or the biggest
·
cities in the world, what
.
.
and Joe Pesci°are back as Marv and Harry,
bandits.
·
as the original, but is perhaps furin1er than
.
would you do? Check into the PJaza hotel
two
-
(can I say stupid?) burglers who never.
its predecessor.
·
·
·
■-----•------•-•
know when to quit.
.
.
.
Macauley Culkin (who repCJrtedly got$5
In a city with
6-8
million people in it, they
.
Tim Curry adds extra humor to this movi~
as
the Concierge of the Plaza HoteL His stuf~
.
fy, English character falls for Kevin's tricks
just
as
easily
as
Marv and Harry db. He com-
pletes the cast and rounds out the comedy,
most of which is slapstick, to help keep you
laughing for two hours.
.
million for this film)
.
is -back
·
as Kevin
just happen to bump into Kevin outside of
McCallister, the.youngest of the McCallister
The Reel
a
toy
store which they are planning to rob,
clan who never Seems to understand him.
Story
which Marv tells Kevin about. Hey, I said
This time
·
all · of New York City is
_
his
they were stupid.
'
.
.
.
.
.
playground while his family is in rainy Miami
Before Kevin goes head to head with "the
trying to enjoy the holidays.
··
Jennifer
two idiots", he has a hearno hearnalk with
Once again we start off in Chicago, where
a homeless
.
womanin Central Park. Oscar
the Mccallister house is filled with relatives
Giandalone
·
winner Brenda Fricker ("My Left Foot") is
· The rcu~iting of Kevin with ,his
·
mother
(Catherine O'Hara) in Rockefeller Cenlerat
the end is equally as mushy as the:tirst
·
and
may even bring a tear to your eye.
.
the night before everyone is scheduled to fly
.
the pigeon la.dy, a woman who lost her job
tC> Florida for Chris
.
tmas. And once again
aitd the man she loved. in their conversation
everyone oversleeps and there is a
·
mad rush
- - - - - - • we get
a
comparison, which really makes a
to the airport to avoid missing the plane
.
·
lot of sense, between her broken heart and
..
Even though this movie is basic~lly a
·
car
:
boo copy bf part
.
one, -"Home Alone 2'
'.
is
a comedy that will delight both children and
adults. It strongly r
_
cinforces the message that
around Christma
_
s time, family is the most
of course. (Look for a cameo appearance by
This time, however, Kevin makes it to the
·
Kevin's-old roller blades. Don't ask. Go see
.
Donald Trump) Kevin just happens to
_
be
airport. That's as far as he gets with his
carrying the bag containing his father's (John
for
yourself.
.
family.
.
Heard) wallet and a lot his money. So he uses
.
Since Kevin isn't at home, he needs a new
During the race to the gate
,
Kevin goes one
place to create his fun house for Marv and
it to do what every kid would dr\:~m of.
Harry. His uncle is renovatinj!; an old house
important thing.
O'KEEFE
.
.. continued from
·
page 1
This type or motivation helped
science major at Marist, looked
carry Clinton all the way to the
upon his education at the school as
pie in and out ofihe campaign ,
v
ere
Wh
i
te House.
valuable. He credits his current
questioning if Clinton could re
a
lly
During the general
.
election, . position
.
to his internship and
win the nomination. O
'
Keefe said
O
'
Keefe
was
stationed in
.
Kentucky
Joanne Myers, professor of
it was impossible to lose faith.
as a state organizer. ''.There were
political science.
.
.
.
"Once you dive into something
the same pressures and problems in
"Without Dr. Myers arid Marist,
like this
,
it
is
hard to walk away
the general election as in the
I would not be where ram now,"
from it," he said. "Especially be-
primaries," O'Keefe said. "We
O'Keefe said. "Dr
.
Myers en-
ing with this candidate from the
had a time limit in putting the state
couraged me to intern in
start. The candidate never walked
together. Organization was always
Washington D.C., and that was
away from the campaign when it
key in the campaign. Whatever
really a turning point for me."
got tough." Whenever the cam-
O'Keefe and the campaign did in
During his junior year, O'Keefe
paign was facing a problem in
Kentucky, theydid right. It was a
·
spent the spring semester at
moral, it was quickly amended.
.
state
.
that analysts termed
_
"up fqr
American
University
in
inside look at how a cainpaign was
·
run greatly influenced his career
.
decisions.
While at Marist,
.
O'Keefe
·
was
also a part of the Marist Institute
of Public Opinion. During the
campaign,
e
specially the primary,
he said he often used Marist's poll
numbers
.
O'Keefe has a
·
1ot to look back
·
on and be proud of, but he is nqt
ready
·
fo
'
end
·
his career with
Clinton.
;-
~
_
:
;
-
:.; \
::
:
:
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•
.
,
;
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. (:>'Ke;(e s~ia
h~
~
~~ulci like ~}ob
.
:
m
the Clmton administration but
will
.
not be
.
disappointed
{r
it
'
does
not mater
i
alize.
·-
.
·
"FrpniJhls expe~ience I have
·
.learned
_
that
.
wha~ you expect and
what happens are
·
two different
things,'' O'Keefe. said. "Plans
don't always go accordingly."
Running for office himself is not
something O'Keefe said he con-
siders seriously .
.
"I'd rather help
other people get elected," he said:
·
In July, before the
-
Democratic
grabs."
.,
..
.·
.
'
w
h"
.ts mgton, where he obtained an
Na
t
ional Convention in Ne\v York,
Bush
·
had
·
.
·.
cam
'
pciigited there
1
·nternshi"p w
1
'th New York Senator
·
·
·
er
·
"The dust is still settling right
·
·
·
· ·
· ·
· ·
·
·
··
mton was third in the polls
twice in the final
·
week of the elec-
Daniel Patrick Moynihan.
now, u
'
O'Keefe said. "I would real-
_
.
•
·.··
O'Keefe" now
·
ki"oks forward to
·
behind George Bush and H
.
Ross
tion and itwas close all the way to
._
·
.
_
"I met a Jot of important peo-
ly like a job with Clinton, biitthe
the future
:
a~d
-
leaving a mark on
Perot.
.
·
the closing of
.
the polls. The eight
pie and made some connections,"
people in Little Rock are not even
the ad
.
ministration. He has already
-
"It was a nightmare time forthe
electoral
.
votes
·
went
io
Clinton
.
O'Ke
_
efe said
.
"I really
_
caught the
sure what theY will be doing."
.
.
.
rnade
·
his mark in.
·
the 1992
campaign," O'Keefe said. "Sojn
who gained 45 percent of the vote:
political fever then.,,
presidential election.
.
Wisconsin,
we
put
together a big
Bush received 42 percent of the
..
Despite his desire
.
to remain in
O'Keefe is in Washington·rio~.
,,:
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·
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PeroL .
.
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th;""capi~al _
_
foi
'.
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the
.
i
sumfaer: •
•
, .
l\Qpingtpqe<;qmeirivolv!!dwiihthe
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e
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l!!
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j!]_d
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._a:half:ag~
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,
,,
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Clinto
"
0
Keefe returned
to
New York arid
Inaugural Committee until the new
-
was Just a
_
nother Marist student.
n up.
.
O'Keefe
,
who was a political
worked on a local campaign. This
•·
administration is organiz;ed.
\
:
·
<:
·\.
·
.
·
.
.
.. . ··
.
.
.
.
·
·
·
·
.
.
·
~Bodyguard'
a
success,
despite Costner'S hllir
.
I
found a
new
·
path in my life,
a
new direction,
a
riew challenge
.
-.
· .
1f
'
only
I
could change my
ma-
jor
to
".
Bodyguard," I woulcl be
·.
set. But riot
·
many colleges offer
.
such
_
courses, unless I wanted to be
all
that I could be in the Ariny.
•
· · _
There is only
a
small bick~ring,
a few harsh words
.
said, then\hey
go back
.
to acting
·
indiffe
r
ently
toward each other. Instead
, t
h
e
y
st:iould
_
have grappled with
_.
why
t~ere can be no romance, no p;i
s
-
s10n, no
:
emotion between them
rriakes him worth the $3,000
·
dollars-a
~
week?
·
I am not saying I am anything
special, bu
t
it was like sharing an
in
-
joke with the character.
It
made
.
watching the movie fun,
a
nd that
·
is something I like to have when
•
I
The only deterrence would be if
.
and
.
promote the stor
y
-
to
:
a
dif:
ferent level or suspense
.
·
But \Ve are
goto
a
film .
.
·
.
·
'
As for Whitney Houston's debut
·
as an actress, I found her compe-
tent while sharing the screen with
Kevin Costner, but she seemed
flawed when it came to acting with
some kind of emotion.
I ha<:1-to get
'
a haircut like Kevin
Costner's
.
in this new
·
romantic
thriller from Warner Brothers .
.
"The BCJdyguard" may have
.
opened tC>
·
bad and mediocre
·
reviews from critics, but my guess
is it will be the top grossing movie
this and next weekend.
Why? Guys, if your girlfriends
say they want to see
·
this film
because it look
_
s good, unless
·
you
look like
.
Costner, you may want to
recons
i
der.
.
.
·
• Kevin Costner, one of the
_
top
men in Hollywood today and hot
off "Robin Hood" and "JFK,"
stirs up a huge crowd at movie
tpeaters with this less-than-great
offering.
.
Although women may be drawn
by him, the men may just be as at-
tracted to his co-star, singer (or do
we now say singer/actress?)
Whitney Houston, who has a new
album, a new husband, and, in a
couple of months, a new baby
.
But even though this couple may
have
their
opposite sex panting,
they seem less than enthusiastic
with each other on-screen. One of
the weak points of the movie is the
lack of chemistry between the
characters, who never really click
together even in the end. The movie
tries to deal with the way their per-
sonal lives will conflict with their
relationship, but never actually at-
tacks
the
issue, just
kind of brushes
it off in the beginning.
not so b~essed.
.
·,
·
· ,.
However, even though the sto
r
y
is dull at times and predictable
_
most of the time, there's still
•---■
--
------
-
--
She plays Rachel Marron, a
Critic's
corner
Kraig
_
.
·
DeMatte1s
·
popular singer/actress who has
been nominated for an Academy
Award.
Sound familiar? Whitney hopes
it
will,
but I do not expect it to hap-
pen this year. Her character is sup-
posed to be strong and feisty, and
Houston handles that well, but I do
not know if that same feistiness was
meant
.
to be portrayed when
- - - - - - - - - - - • pleading for Farmer to
'
stay and
·
·
..
.
,·
protect not only her but her son,
~nc:jugh there to make it i~ter~ti~g.
Fletcher, a quick and bright young
·
.
There are a Jot of great one-liners
boy who Farmer gets along with at
and some good scenes involving
once.
Costner with Houston, her chauf-
feur, and a musclebound guard,
but I especially liked the earlier and
·
later scenes when Frank Farmer,
ex
-
Secret Service agent turned
freelance bodyguard, uses some
.
security techniques to change the
life of his client and her estate.
They are nothing earth shatter-
ing, but they are neat little
.
clues
and
tests that
someone like
me
can
identify with arid figure out why
Farmer's doing
ii.
Why does
·
he
give different names while first
entering her estate? Why does he
close his eyes when pursuing his
assailant in the woods? What
·
Here is where that chemistry
fails, and both actors just seem to
whine their way to a compromise.
I do not want to offend anyone,
.
.
but it seems that howe\'.e.i:
gr~t an
--
actor Kevin Costner is supposed to
be, he just seems to whine his way
through a movie.
·
I love his movies,
do not get me wrong
,
but it sounds
like
if
does not get his way, he is
going to cry.
Costner, despite the reviews, will
have another money-grossing
movie under his belt. Will nothing
stop this man? Well, except for that
haircut, let us hope not.
...
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.
--
·--
--
·--
-
- -
- - - -
-
THE CiRCLE; DECEMBER 3,
1992
3
The challenge of
,
becbming a student
•
again
by
DEBORAH ESTEVES
Staff Writer •
Many
.
adult students said
economics played a major role in
their decision to return to the halls
·
of academia. Burrow, 40, a full-
time student majoring in accoun:
.
May, 49, who
·
is
·
a parHime
.
graduate student majoring in com-
.
ptiter science/software
.
develop~
.
·
ment and also works for IBM, said
with all the changes taking place at
IBM, it made sense to "capitalize
before but now enjoys the
challenge
.
.
"I'm like a sponge, soaking up
all
this information!" she said. "I
love learning!"
would graduate from high school,
go to college, find a job and then
retire. Now, lifelong education is a
necessity. The average person will
change careers five or six times in
his or her lifetime."
· .
.
The house is finally quiet. The
children are asleep, the dishes have
been
·
been washed and put away
and t~e steady hum of the washing
machme can be heard in the
background.
.
.
.
While many tired parents are
winding down at 9:00
.
p.m., Bur-
row and others, like Ann Burrow
and Frank May, are gearing up for
several hours of peaceful, uninter-
rupted studying.
on
·
something I know." Software.
, 'f
•
.
.
As a single
·
parent with 'two
.
.
. ·
'm
.
like a sponge,
·
children, May said he divides his
· ·
·
-
time. between work, his children,
"T
.I.
had to lower my
standards of housekeep-
ing. The vacuuming, the
dusting, the yardwork
·
all
get pushed aside. ''
Burrow said: "I'm on the tail
end of females who stayed at
home, or who went to college, then
got married, had kids, and never
went to work. It's difficult.
I
find
myself in a period of transition,
torn between motherhood and a
career."
soaking up
all
this inf or-
their activities and school. He ad-
.
mation.
I
love learning!"
·
mitted his children "like seeing
Denise Stelman
.
Dad have homework to do."
"Instead of being in the ivory
They represent the growing trend
of adults who have returned to
school and struggle to
-
maintain a
balance of family, work and
academics.
Adult Student
tower and preaching to them about
doing
·
their homework, it gives a
Ann Burrow
Adult Student
The students said they agreed it
is
important to prioritize their lives.
ting and the mother of three boys,
offered several reasons
,.
for her
return to school: economics, self-
fulfillinent and college tuition for
her children. -"One day at work
I
asked myself, 'Do
I
really want to
deliver mail for the rest of my life?'
I
realized that I didn't," she said.
The faltsemester of 1992 saw a
29 percent increase over last year's
record high enrollment of full-time
adult students at Marist, said
Eleanor Charwat, executive direc-
·
tor of the Marist School of Adult
Educa,tion.
.
.. ~
-
.
.
.
.
.
:"f"
.
;
. _ .
'.
•
!he added income when she
. ·
"Economy has a lot to do with
returns
to the workforce will go
it," sh
_
e said. "Many have lost their
.
towards paying for her son's col-
.
jobs, while others realize there is
lege tuition. Her oldest is 15 and
.
more aid available for full-time
has only a few more
.
years o(high .
students than for part- time."
school before he heads off to
college.
different perspective on that," he
said.
. .
.
.
·
Denise
·
Stelman,
.
40, and the
mother of an 11-year-old daughter,
divides her time between school,
family and her own interior design
business. She said she is combining
the fields of business, communica-
tions and advertising in her studies.
Self-fulfillment and the need to
"feel really good about myself"
prompted her pursuit of a
bachelor's
·
_
degree.
·
"1
always felt
like a failure without a four-year
·
college degree," she said.
She admitted school was
something she had always hated
Despite
their
busy
and
sometimes frantic schedules, adult
students tend to work harder, are
more motivated
,
more focused and
strive for higher academic achieve-
ment, said Charwat. They unders-
tand the need for higher education
and because time and money are
critical factors, they want to get the
most out of their education.
"The whole role of higher educa-
tion has changed," said Charwat.
"One-half of the college students
in America today are over the age
of 25. There was a time when you
"I've had to lower my standards
of housekeeping
,
" said Burrow.
"The vacuuming, the dusting, the
yard work all get pushed aside."
May said he delegates more
responsibility to his children than
they would normally have. He does
not complain about the frantic
pace, though .
"Someday my children will be
grown and gone," he said, "and
l'II
have more than enough leisure
time. Right now I want to spend as
much time with them as
I
can
.
"
Stildents hate Mccann blockade
by
JASON VIANESE
Staff Writer
have tripled.
the situation, Diehl extended hours
The student population has
on Monday through Thursdays,
doubled since the Mccann Center
keeping McCann open until mid-
When Todd Coulson came to
opened 15 years ago. According to
night, instead of 9 p.m. Diehl also
Marist this year, he was looking
the Marist
·
Institute Research
prints schedules every Friday for
forward to practicing on the indoor
Center, approximately
I,
71
O
the following week so people won't
track and playing pick up basket-
undergraduates attended Marist in
be uninformed.
ball games in the McCann Recrea-
the fall of 1976. Currently there are
Tim Bourgess, a senior majoring
tion Center. Three months later,
3,787 undergraduates enrolled.
in business finance, isn't complain-
Coulson is still waiting.
Tom Diehl, Assistant Athletic
ing about being uninformed, he
"Sometimes I only get to play
Director and head of facility
iust does not like the information
(basketball) for 15 minutes before
management and operations, said
he is receiving from Diehl.
they close·the gym off,
"
.
Coulson,
that scheduling events is becoming
"I pay over $15,000 a year to at-
a fres}lman business major said
_
.
more
of
a challenge, because more
tend
.
this school and can't even get
·since
'
Mari st has increased its
people are requesting mo
·
re time.
into the school gym, except at odd
' enrollment ano
.
its roster
·
of
sp_orts;
:
· ·
·
Moria
·
Breen
;-
a junior po\i.ti.ca\
;
hours,'
:
·
sai.d Bourgess.
·
0 •
•
•
•
•
McCarin
•
is IJ<·ilonger
·
available
·ror
·
science
.
major who works at the
·
·
Athletes
·
and coaches have also
.
recreational use.
McCann
front
desk
said the fault
expressed their
dissatisfaction with
:
The number of varsity and club
is not with Diehl, but
with
what he
the gym
.
_
-
sports has incr
_
eased since
has to work with.
Dr. Howard Goldman, Director
·
McCann's opening in 1977
.
Varsi-
·
"He has too many respon-
of Physical Education and men
'
s
ty sports have gone from
13
Divi-
sibilities and obligations to uphold
soccer coach, said since the raised
sion
III
teams to 21 Division
I
for one gym," Breen said.
wooden basketball court was in-
teams (football will be Division I-
.
Diehl has been confronted with
stalled, practicing
s
occer in the gym
AA in
fair
1993) and club sports
scheduling problems and to help
has
become
difficult
and
dangerous.
Mariststudent smooches! amous model
for charity
.
.
.
.
.
by
AMY LETTERMAN
·
.
.
A voice off-camera said
,
"When
Staff
Writer
:
·
she wants to ligl1t up
.
.. give her a
ki°ss,
·
instead."
·
A
.
male supermodel s~ept a
. .
·
The smokeolit spot was includ-
·.
Marist student off her feet in an ef-
·
ed
_
-
in several newscasts
.
Tina
.
fort to get people to quit smoking
.
.
Mosetes,
-
director of public reta:
It
was part of a public service
.
an-
tions for the American Cancer
nouncement for the American Society, coordinated the project
Cancer Society.
and chose Cole to be the director
Doug Cole, assistant professor and executive editor.
of communication arts, said some
According to Mosetes, the media
·
of his current and former students
reaction to the PSA has
·
been un-
and
.
Fabio, the world's most
.
precedented in
.
her experience
.
photographed and painted model,
PSAs usually struggle for air time
.
volunteered for the project.
·
The and getting them on a newscast is
spots
.
premiered Nov.
-
18 at the ·rare
.
Cole said Fabio gave this PSA
Great American Smokeout celebri-
:
more credibility.
ty press conference in New York
"Fabio's presence is what set
City.
·
these spots apart from those done
The PSA shows Carolyn Powell,
in previous years," Cole said.
a senior, trying
.
to light a cigarette
Fabio has peen working volun-
but Fabio approaches her and
tarily with the
·
American Cancer
throws the cigarette away. After he
Society for almost seven years. He
throws the cigarette away, they do is currently the world's highest-paid
a ballroom dip and he kisses her.
novel model and has been on many
talk shows. Powell, who played op-
posite him, only found out the day
before she would be featured in the
spots ,vith him.
voice-over
She usually does technical work,
but
-
said it was !_!j.5e to have the
ca~era
f
turned.
~:
~
·
A section of West:56th Street off
Fifth Avenue was blocked off for
the shoot.
Other Marist College students on
the production crew were Daryl
Vallez, Teresa Sorrentino and
Tracy Low.
Ann Schroeder, a senior, provid-
ed the voice-over and a Marist
alumnus did
-
the voice-over in
Spanish.
Joseph Podesta, a 1989 graduate
who
-
works for Phoenix Com-
munications Group, loaned the
necessary equipment.
Cole and Podesta began editing
the material at 6 p.m. on a Friday
night and finished at 4 a
.
m. the
following morning. The project
was designed to serve as an ex-
tracurricular learning experience,
while also providing a valuable ser-
vice to the community, according
to Cole.
.
He finds the interaction of cur-
rent Marist students with former
students who are now in the in-
dustry to be the most interesting
aspect of projects such as the Fabio
spots.
Powell said she quickly found
that Fabio did not fit the stereotype
of a dumb, conceited model. He
came to New York from Italy to
model and
.
was discovered in two
days, she said.
He now lives in Los Angeles and
is writing and
·
trying to be a
producer.
.
.
Powell said Fabio got involved
with the project because he is
health-conscious and is against
smoking.
·
-··
='.
''Smoking
·
.
is not romantic. I
think it is sexy to kiss a girl who
does not smoke," Fabio told the
audience on the television program
Good Day New York. He said the
project brought together a cross
section of people with a common
desire to make people quit smok-
ing together
.
"Many
of those involved in these
shoots would never
have
met each
other had it not been for Tin:i
'
s
projects," sai_d_Fabio.
Carolyn Powell poses with model Fabio.
photo
by
Teresa Sorrentino
4
.
THE CIRCLE,
EDITORIAL
THE
CIRCLE
S.J. Richard,
editor
.
J.
W. Stewart,
sports editor
Dominick Fontana,
senior editor
Chrissy Cassidy,
senior editor
.
Carl 0leskewicz,
assistant editor
Joanne
Alfarone,
bu.;iness manager
Jason Capallaro, business manager
Erik Hanson~
distribution manager
Anastasia
B. Custer,
senior editor
Ted Holmlund,
associate editor
Margo
Barrett,
editorial page editor
Amy
Crosby,
associaJe editor
Jennifer Ponzlnl,
advertising manager
Matt
Martin,
photography editor
Dennis
Gildea,faculty
adviser
So this is Christmas
DECEMBER 3, 1992
I\M..J:eaJd
.,eµ~:,
(f(l
ih,f
or-e
I
b..,+
~-f'
Sovrds lite
(: ,._
o.n
awful
lot-m
do
for
s'l.;;5/f..ffr .••
[)C'
~
.
No, Virginia, there is no Santa Claus. He does not exist: not on 34th
Street; not in the North Pole; not in Poughkeepsie; not even in pictures
-
que, backwoods Vermont villages. He is a myth, a legend, a figment
of a child's imagination.
.
·
.
Poughkeepsie is lucky though.
It
doesn't need make-believe heroes
GOP heading
downhill
The carnival, football-like atmosphere of
like good, old
St.
Nick.
pre-election politics has quietly left the
Unlike many places through out this spoiled-rotten, give-me give-me
Marist College campus.
country, Poughkeepsie has
a
group of people who knowthere is nojol-
The proverbial political dust has settled
ly, old elf in a bright, red suit to dole out presents to.everyone from
and President-elect Bill Clinton
·
now faces
numerous new challenges
.
from political
age 2 to 92 regardless of economic class.
·
realists and critics.
.
Who are these enlightened souls?
.
.
.
.
·
.
.
It
will be difficult to accomplis_h eve~hing
No, they are not saints. They are just the people wlio participate in
Clinton promised in his campaign and the
press has wasted no time talking abQufit.
the Marist College Giving Tree ProjecL
But this is not the only post-election con-
The world needs more people like them. This project was started by
cem facing American voters and critics alike.
·
Republicans and do not hesitate to make
those moderate views
.
the core of their
political mind-set. These may remind peo-
ple of George Bush.
• ·
·
Rush Limbaugh, ultra-conservative radio
personality,. talk show host, author and
humorist, told Gabe Pressman, WNBC-TV,
Channel 4'.s poltical reporter the reason why
George Bush
•
lost
·
the election was not
because he let the conservative religious and
.
cultural right
:
dominate the GOP's conven~
tion in Houston but because he did not em-
a Marist student in 1990 and has been a success ever since. The Giving
There is a new fight in the political ring. - - - - - ~ , . . . , . - ~ - - - - - - ' - -
Tree enables approximately 20Joc<'.llJ~milies tohave presents under the
BuslinefssWh eeGk
.
desdcroibleds ipt as
.
a fi(1GghOtPfo)r
.
,:'the
Ch · t
t
I
·
d
·
·
d
·
·
f
·
1 ·
·
·
•
•
.
.
sou o t e · ran .
arty
.
ns ~as ree. t prov
_
1 es a y.ro~ er u
_
commumty
;
service opportumty
•
Since November 3rd's ~evestating loss for
~o Manst clubs,
.
ac1:ot
.
di11gJsfaJett~~
~e11!
t~ ~~t1b1e~derfby.Tiin
.
0_~~n.s
.
.
....
,.
rr~@;ni"p~~rn~.:?~~Ji;Jli:C
Rep):lblican
'
party .
and
-
Jennifer
Smith,
the
19Q2
'
projecCco
·
ordinatdrs:
·'~
'
·
:
,..
·
":l'
:.
·c
:,·
·
,
•z:-
.t,
.
·
:
.
,
0
' ·
'
has
:
been
::
shattered
t,
•
,~-
-
,
.
,_.
.
.. ·
.
'
•
.
True enough.
All
clubs should be interested in helping out in some way.
.
Dougla~s H~rbrecht and R1cahrd
s.
.
.
.
•
.
.
.
·
.
·
Dunham m BusmessWeek note that "back
.
However, m the same paragraph which asks club leaders to participate
in
1988, Bush presided over a fragile but
'
po-
in The Giving Tree Project, Owens and Smith say somethingthat seems
.. tent
coalition assembled by Ronald Reagan.
\,,Ss
·
f
VVords·~~~_,,. '
From A
.
Political
.
Ward
rather callous but is true enough.
. .
.
.
.
.
.
·
.
. .
·
Under t_he banner
·
of
:
J_ow tax~s. sm':ller
The letter states that helping with the project "always bodes well with
.
government, ~Ad assernve foreign_pohcy, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
. .
.
.
,,
· .
.
.
.
.
·
.
.
young voters Jomed with suburbamtes; ur- - - , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
College Act1v1tles and SGA. What a sad statement that
1s
about Manst
ban
.
blue-collar Catholics bonded
·
with
brace them enough.
.
.
students. It seems to say that if you won't help out because you want
Southemgood ol
'
boys and fundamentalist
Bush abandoned the conservative policies
to or find this project a worthy cause, then do it because it makes you
9hristians. The combination
_
supposedl7,
Ronald Reagan fought so hard to put h1
look good under the all powerful gaze of the Activities Office and stu-
gave the GOP a lock ~n the ~~1te House.
place .
.
It
is unfortunate but Bush yielded to
.
·
.
·
.
That
.
all
0
encompasmg coahtton captured
the D.emocratic Congressional majority and
dent government.
.
.
. .
the
:
young, the old, moderate and conser~
stopped
fighting for the continuation of
Granted, the more people who participate the more successful the
pro-
·
vative
.
Republ~cans and conservative
Reagan's political ideals.
ject could be but are under the table be"nefits like this necessary? This
Dem<?crats
a~~
m~ep~ndents co.mes along
·
Now that Bush is out~ the conservative
·
Id
·
•
·
·
.
·
·
. .
·
.
·
.
.
·.
·
.
.
.
·
·
once m a poht1cal lifetime or so 1t appears.
right not endorsed by ex-President Reagan
shou
not be VI~"'.ed as an ?PPOrtumty to suck-up to the powers that
George Bush was one ofthe lastmoderate
but brought into his coalition back in 1980
be but to some It IS .
.
So be It.
.
.
Republicans left in the GOP.
. ·
is fighting to re~establish control over their
Charity can be kind of like the newspaper business. You do whatever
·
·
The rivals for the soul of the GOP now
party.
it fakes to get the job done.
·
i~chide: Vice Pr~ident Dan Quayle, a tradi-
Civil war among the GOP has caused ex-
Th.
·
·
• •
h
• ·
.
•
.
:
I .
t1onal conservatwe, Pat Robertson, the
tremefractionalizationofpossiblecandidates
IS_PfOJectis 1~p9rtan~ e_noug to reqmrecoaxmg some peop e mto
leader of the far-right's Christian Coalition,
and supporters. The problem is the lack of
partakmg the the JOY of g1vmg. There ar.e hundreds of ornaments on
of course, there is always the dangerous
another Reagan, a man who had an uncan-
those trees. Mo
.
st of the gifts are not frivolous ones. Winter boots for
.
Patrick T Buchanan, also to the far-right.
ny talent for political seduction
.
He was the
a one-year old boy are a necessity during Hudson Valley winters.
~uch~an_stress~ racist ~ocial policies and
candidate for "change" in 1980 and 1984.
M
d •
h
h M
·
. , · ·
·
d
,
.
·
b 'ld"
·
an 1solat1omst foreign pohcy.
The Republicans had grown complacent
ost anyone wan ermg:t roug
.
anst s aca em~c
Ul
mgs, cam-
· Other names that the GOP is kicking
in the lastl2 years and we are nO\v beginn-
pus center or the Chapel the last few weeks has seen thttpaper ornaments
around as possible Republican front-runners
ing
.
. to recapture, as Apollo Creed from
asking for certain items decorating the· trees/ With just a few days left
f?r
.
the 1996 elect!o~ include: former Edu~-
"Rocky" would say, "the eye of the tiger."
before the ceremony when the gifts are distributed
<
the trees bows are
t1on Secretary William
J.
Bennett, Housmg
The <;:hristian right is the socially conser-·
·
~ .
.
·
.
·
;
.
·
.
.
'
·
·
·
and Urban Development Secretary Jack F.
vative branch of the GOP that dominated the
still littered with colored constructmn paper orna111ents.
.
Kemp and Texas Senator Phil Gramm.
convention and focused the Republican par-
Are people on campus so unconcerned and so insensitive to the pro-
If
Kemp
.
and Gramm ran
·
for the '96
ty, for better or for worse on "family
bl
ems of those less fortunate tha~ themselves that they are blind to need
nom~nation it would be a b!oody ~ontest. Ac~
values."
It
was this issue, combined
·
with
for a little generosity during what is supposed to be a season of giving?
cordmg to November 16 s Bus1!1essWeek,
economic criticism and failure that the GOP
·
.
.
.
.
.
·
·
•
Kemp and Gramm are "fierce nvals."
used to "kill" George Bush.
Are people m such due financial predicaments that they find themselves
.
The list of challengers for the
.
GOP
Bush's defeat came from within the GOP
unable
·
to spare some of their money to help a family in need?
nomination in '96 is long and distinguished
more
:
than from the strength of a large
Is Marist beginning to look a lot like Grinch-ville?
·
·
but we are not finished yet, m_o~erates like
Democratic coalition. It was
·
moderate
I
·
I
.
..
.
Massachusettes Governor Wilham Weld,
Republicans and more liberal-leaning
~agme on Y some members_ of you: family rece1vmg presents on
·
former, New Jersey Governor Thomas H.
Republicans that left the party and signed up
Chnstmas. Talk about depressmg holidays.
Kean, and "battered" California Governor
for the Clinton/ Gore party cruise.
It is understandable that npt everyone is in a financial position to help
Pete Wilso~ are possible pretenders to the
So now we have, Captain Stewbing and
but many people are and still do nothing.
throne a~d1cated by Bush.
.
Yeomen Purser
.
Gopher at the helm of the
·
•.
f
11
•
, •
·
The
..
differences
,.
among
.
possible new
·
Love Boat for· the next four years.
.
.
..
Th~nk_ u Y, some people reahze t~at tis th~ seas?n. They do not stroll
Republicaris~:i're.as
·
numerousas tlie);uppos~
-
The problem with embracing the religious
by while 1m~ges of wild weekend parties dance m their heads. Some people
ed "new Democrats'~ that put President-elect
-
right is
.
the lack of a broad-base of voters
stop and decide to help.
Bill Clinton in the White House.
·
who share those views. You will massacre
These people are to be commended. Whatever their reasons they have
Buchanan !s to the right of Genghas Kah~.
future Republican support with candidates
·
· . ·
•
.
.
. .
'
The Republtcans would make a drastic
like Buchanan and Robertson.
done somethmg admirable by helpmg out families they do not even know.
mistake putting him on any ticket, except a
Greater political success is achievable.with
Good tidings to those who participate because ultimately it does not
one-way ticket to Cleve
.
land.
men like Gramm, who extol the virtues of
matter whether they are bitten by the graciousness bug
of
the holidays;
According to Business~eek'_s Habrecht,
balancing the budget or Kemp, who values
have
ulterior motives for impressing someone in authority· or just hap-
Gove~or_ Weld a~d th<?se hke him who hold
tax cuts and policies aimed at better
.
.
.
.
. .
'
"perm1ss1ve social vtews" and endorse
capitalism.
pen
to be
compassionate people whose hohday spmt lasts longer than
"economic pragmatism" are too much like
Aaron ward
is
The Circle's
the
12
days of Christmas.
George Bush. Weld and Kean are moder~te.
political columnist·
THE CIRCLE;
V1
EWPOINT
DECEMBER 3, 1992
5
-----------------------------
Dubious
·
culinary achievements; beware of brownies
.
''Hey Brad, can I have one of
these brownies ? "
.
"No,
I don't think you really
want them."
"Why
·
not, they look really
good."
· "Believe me, these ones are a
bad batch."·
''Then why don't you just chuck
'em ?"
"Just leave them alone; alright
?"
I thought he was acting like a
jerk, but my good friend was sav-
ing me from a great deal of pain
and embarrassment and_
I thank
him for it.
gender and their constant maltreat-
ment of him. There were manv
times that Jason would question
himself about how girls felt about
him.
·
His roommate told me a story
____ about one of these demented
Out of the many forewarnings
that my brother had instructed me
with about college before my
DAYE BARRETT
·
departure, not one was more evi-
·
dent than: "Dave you're going to
meet the most unusual variety of
people that you
·
ever will in your
whole lifetime." Granted,
I ex-
pected maybe someone who wor-
shipped Joe Franklin
·or_
whose
parents were the same sex or
something~ but nothing could have
prepared me for what lay ahead.
There was this guy on my floor
last year whom
I'll
protect by nam-
ing him Jason Smaller. Even
though he got the academic boot
from Marist, he was still a nice guy
and anyone who knows me knows
·
that
•
the last thing I would ever
want to do with this column is to
offend anybody.
Anyway, like all tragic heroes
from Greek mythology, he had a
few character flaws that tended to
overshadow any good quality that
he had might have possessed.
The first one was his self-
destructive attitude about the other
dialogues that he experienced one
time when Jason had just gotten
off of the phone with one of his
"prospects".
Roughly, it went like this:
"How can she not like me?
Oh, you're such a jerk, how the
hell can you expect anyone to like
you?
Nah, I'm not such a bad guy, am
I?
.
Face
it
man, you're.just a damn
loser."
· Brad could recall numerous oc-
casions where Jason would battle
will
himself over .tough issues like
the weather. how much food
should one consume when hungry,
and the ever popular should I wipe
my caboose going toward the lower
back, or just jam my cornhole with
·
a loose finger?
·
·
In other words; living with Jason
was more of a task than
.
_
any
schoolwork that any teacher could
hand out.
-
·
What was Sheen's line in
The one thing that looms as his
"Apocalypse Now"?; "I asked for
worst characteristic was his out-
a mission and because of my sins
wardly blatant
·
disregard of any
they gave it to me. And when it was
form of personal hygiene that man
over I never asked for another."
or animal usually possessed. I saw
If you knew that your body was
a walking genepool of mutated
filth, what would influence this
decision: You know. dried snot on
Jason was more of a man of ac-
him shower maybe four times the
the sleeves of my shirt really gives
tion,rather than that of being one
whole year at the absolute most.
it a nice shiny coating,
I
think
I'll
whose eloquence defined himself.
His attitude towards doing laun-
wear it like this for the rest of the
The damage that leapt from his
dry could be compared to the white
semester.
hands as a
·
result of being shunned guy on "The Jefferson's" attitu~e
.
by women couldn't exactly be call-
about not coming next door to con-
Anyway, back to my opening
ed action.
stantly bother George and Wheezie
fable.
Husker Du has a·song that is a with stupid questions.
clear portrayal of his attitude on
Simply put, he just didn't do it.
lonely Fri.and Sat. nights: "Dead Clothes for him could be worn for
Set on Destruction".
weeks at a time without change or
One time while waiting in the being cleaned.
Champagnant lobby for
the
The thing that added
insult
to in-
elevator after coming back from jury was that he was on crew.
being rejected by some lucky co-ed,
Typical day: he wakes up for
he did a stupid thing. The class en-
crew in a flannel shirt, does his
casement that holds weekly events morning regiment with this same
was shattered by one of his bar-
shirt, and then proceeds
to
wear
it
baric punches. A security guard ran to all of his daily classes. Saying he
over in response and our poor soul smelled bad was like saying a hur-
just looked at him, Jost as ·ever.
ricane has the capacity to blow out
Then when he made it up to our the candles on your birthday cake.
floor, he punched a piece of sheet
If you didn't know him, there is
metal against the hallway, until it no way to imagine what he was
later fell off, only to receive further
like, trust me.
punishment from
him. ·
The thing that confuses me the
Jason used to ravage any and all
of Brad's food·no matter where he
hid
it
in the room. To teach him a
much deserved lesson, Brad made
a huge batch of brownies that con-
tained
more laxative than
chocolate.
Like bluefish to chumming,
Jason
·ate
just about every single
bite that his stomach could ahmrh
For a few nights after, Brad,
who slept in the bunk above Jason,
was joyfully treated to constant
sounds of him farting with
increas-
ing movement to try and get his
Many a time I would awaken
most about this entire episode is
from a drunken slumber to hear that everyone who lived with him, decimated bowels in a comfortable
mass upheaval and annihilation of constantly info~med him about the position. He graced the porcelain
some dorm furniture outside my
slow degenerat!o~ of ~ny healthy, god with his darkened bottom
door at all hours. Without ever
normal cells withm his body.
more in that week than he ever
seeking the identity of the distur-
Kennedy dido
't
see the bullets would before or after. Oh, well,
bance,
I
would just yell some
coming, nor Pee Wee the cops in doe will hunt.
obscenities and his last name and
the back of cultural enrichment
the noise always died as a result of cinema (word has
it
that if his kid-
it.
_.
die show lasted for one more
Dave Barrett thinks whistling the
When people think of him
,
season, a new character that would
opening chords to the Core's
"A
though, they don't immediately
become a new friend_ of Pee Wee's
Forest" helps to relax one's mind
think of his Neanderthal reasoning
would be named Billy Baloney~,
in order to perform bathroom
with his hands or his lack of but Jason was well aware of his
·
functions when necessary.
bedpartners.
problem.
·
Crew
.
crooris
over lack
·-
of
·
coverage
Editor:
works. Staff reporters for any
·
more than happy to provide infor-
Having just read the "Thursday
newspaper usually go out and get
·
mation on our fall season (such as
Morning Quarterback" article in
their stories; covering topic;s about the
·
fact that the men's and
.
the Nov.
12, 1992
issue of The Cir-
which their subscribers
are
women's varsity eights won their
cle,
I
am
_
puzzled and perplexed.
.
interested.
events at the Fall
1992
Metro Area
While virtually all of the varsity
While crew may be a sport that Rowing Championship) and on the
sports that compete in the
fall
(and
is little understood by the average sport of rowing in general.
one club sport) were mentioned in
·
sports reader at Marist, there is a
Perhaps a format can be set at
·
the coverage, one was not-
_
crew.
·
segment of the population at
·
that time which will insure a good
Perhaps this was an innocent
_
Marist that is interested in the line of communication
·
for the
oversight.
.
_
.
-
-
team's performance.
reporting of future
.
crew team
.
From my perspective, though, it
.
.
At the very least, there are 75 activities.
-
\vas the continuation of a long~
-_
team members (whose tuition
Thanks in advance
for
your con-
.
standing pattern of neglect.
·
. dollars help pay the expenses for sideration in this matter.
_
.
For the pasuwo years, there has.
·
The Circle)
that
read
the paper and
been minimal coverage of the crew
·
-
want to read about their endeavors.
team in the Circle, mostly outright
·
Who knows? An article explain-
omission. If this has been the result ing the sport of·rowing may serve
of myself or team members not an educational purpose for sports
writing the articles and submitting fans at Marist and it may even
them to your staff, then we must
-
create interest in the oldest inter-
accept
·
responsibility and
_
it
is collegiate sport in America and at
under
-
standable why there has
Marist.
·
·
been poor coverage.
·
I propose that a staff member
To my knowledge, though, this from The Circle contact me or one
is
.
not the way good reporting of the
.
team captains. We
will be
Little things· mean a lot
&litor,
The little things mean a lot!
The Women Soccer Club would
lik
_
e to take this opportunity to
thank those who helped keep us
smiling throughout our season.
Even though the Circle only
covered us at the end of our season,
it
was ~ice
to final1y know someone
was out there who cared about our
season.
Thanks to
J.
W. Stewart for in-
cluding us in his columns.
We
may
not
have been a varsity team this
season, but you helped us feel like
one.
Special
thanks to
Mile
Malet,
Mary
Hellman and George Browne
because without their support, we
probably wouldn't have made it
through the season. Sorry if we
drove you crazy but remember it is
all
part of the deal.
It is too bad that there aren't
more people like J.W. Stewart,
Mike Malet, Mary Hellman and
George· Browne here at Marist
because
if there were,
we
probably
would have been a varsity team by
.
now! Guess all we can do now is
wait and keep smiling!
.
Thanks again.
.Kate Casde
1
Vice President
of Women
Soccer Oub
Larry Davis, Head coach
of
Men's and Women's Crew
Happy hour
for seniors
·
Editor:
Attention Seniors! There will be
a
21 Society Happy Hour on this
Saturday night from Sp.m.-10 p.m.
in the River Room. Admission is
only
$1.
We hope to see all seniors
who are 21 and over there. A pair
of tickets to the Senior Formal will
be raffled off during the night.
Don't
.
Forget
Saturday
·
December 5, 1992, 8p.m. in the
River Room.
April Buther,
Nanci Forman,
Darlene Ebeheart~
Matt McQueenie,
Organizers
of the 21 Society
6
THE CIRCLE, DECEMBER 3;
19~2
-
HARASSMENT
pen to you," said
·
Caroline Rider,
niversary' of th~
.
Hill
·
hearings and
•
.
ment training-becaus
_
e
,'
~e
.
could
lot
.
of ,vomen think they can
.
wait
·
·
mon practice. She said she
.
assistant professor ofmariagement
recently two other sexual haras
·
s-
.
have been reformed," said Myers.
until the procedure is over arid
.
then
:·
... continued from
·
page 1
thought it was something you had
·
studies,
.
.
.
.
meilt cases made headlines.
·
,
"And ifit weren't true tlien;they
·
.
.
apply to the EEOC:Th'ey
·
have to
·
.
to accept,,,. said Joanne Myers,
Hostile casesinvolve co-workers
.
.
Mayor David
_
Dinkins appoints
can protect themselves.
In
this type
file with the EEOC
.
at the saine
political · science
professor.
or
·
supervisors
.
making your
meritofRandy Daniels drew
a sex-
·
of power situation you need to take
time as the
-
procedure.''
.
.
.
·
.
"Females are taught, if you play
workplace
intimidating
'
by using
.
ual harass!rient charge
.
from
.
·
a
some action."
·
When an incident of sexual
·
with the big boys-disregard sex-
nasty sexual jokes, rude remarks,
•
.
former
co-worker,
Barbara Wood.
.
Nowadays, companies have sex-
harassment takes place, in addition
ual harassment.''
unwanted touching, and practical
And Senator Bob Packwood was
ual harassment policies and in-
to the investigation, other
·
·
steps
In the book Women and Men in
jokes, said Rider.
accused of sexually harassing
vestigations are mandatory.
should be taken according
·
to
Management, Gary N. Powell
In some cases, women sexually
several women
-
co-workers.
"DuPont, the company, has one
Myers.
·
quotes the definition of sexual
harass males, however, the majori-
However,
·
this time,
·
instead
..
of
·
·
of the most extensive sexual harass-
"If
there is a guilty party then a
harassment from the US Office of
ty of cases it
appear:5 · involve
criticism directed at the
.
accused
merit prevention and educational
whole range of recourses could be
Personal
Management,
as
men harassing women.
·
(Randy Daniels), criticism,vas aims
.
programs in the country, including
taken. Recommend counseling,
deliberate or repeated
.
unsolicited
"Available estimates suggest that
ed at
·
Dinkins.
·
·
a 24-hour hot line, seminars and,
sensitivity training (a movie or
verbal comments, gestures, or
at
least
one in
ten
and
.
possibly as
"If men took sexual harassment
..
when necessary, a team of harass-
course about sexual harassment)
physicalcontactofasexualnature
many as one in two working
seriously,evenan hourbeforethe
ment investigators," wrote Ellen
andcommunityserviceforthesexa
which are unwelcome.
·
women experience sexual harass-
appointment, they
:
could of held
an
Rapp in Working Women.
ual harrasser. Everyone involved
Mye~s also said sexual harass-
ment at work," write·s editors
investigation,"
.
said Myers
;
Along with
:
investigations, in
might take sensitivity train_ing,"
ment is any type of action, either
of Women at Work .
.
"Individuals
·
"lf
Randy Daniels was ap-
order for a sexual harassment case
said Myers.
..
.
verbal, physical, nonverbal action,
w1th
0
th·e least amount of power in
pointed bank teller and
10
minutes
.
to go to court, the person being
Clea
·
rly, the world has seen a
or communication
in
which either
society, meaning women in most
before the appointment it was said
harassed mus_t file a complaint with
glimpse of sexual harassmentcases
a male or female cannot conduct
cultures, are the most
.
likely to be
that$40,000 was gone from his last
.
the EquafEmploymentOpportuni-
.
which have made the evening news .
.
their job in a safe and supportive
harassed
;
In a
.
patria~chal society
job, would Dinkins hold
off
with
ty Commission (EEOC). ·
.
Iri addition to the Hill and Daniels
environment. "It's one thing to say
that
rewards males for ag-
an investigation? By going
.
ahead
"Employers
are· i;equired to have
cases, incidents of sexual harass-
you are good
looking
in that
gressiveness and domineering
and appointing Daniels they don't
.
a policy about sexual harassment.
ment occur at offices and colleges.
·
.
sweater. It's
·
another. to say-:oh
behavior and females for passivity
care if women may be working in
Look at the institution's policy and
Marist 's sexual harassment
you
fill
out that sweater
.
nicely,"
.
,
_apq compliant behavior, sexual
a
hostile environment."
if you think the procedure is
·
policy involves two directors. Ha
said Myers.
,:
."'
·
"
narassment almost may be regard-
Although Daniels stepped down
reasonable then follow it
;
if not
student was harassing another stu-
Sexu
·
a1 harassmentspHts into
t\ycf
,
,
·
e
_
d
·
as a:
:
male prerogative;'' wrote
and did riot agree to the appoint-
then go to an attorney," said
dent then Carol Coogan, director
distinct forf!ls kno,".~
as
quid
pro
".; ·
Powell'
in' Women and Men in
ment, and
-
he recently filed a
Rider.
.
of human resources would handle
quo and
·
a
"
hostile
,
environmen
f
::
' :
Management.
.
lawsuit against Wood, Myers said
''You only have a. few months
the case.
·
However, if the ca~e in-
case.
Sexual harassment existed before
an
investigation
should have been
since the last time of sexual harass-
volved
.
two or more staff members
"In
.
quid quo
·
pro cases your
the
Hill
hearings
and
continues to
conducted.
ment. Then if you don't fiie
·
with
then Gerard Cox, vice president of
supervisor says sleep with me or I'll
exist in the small towns of America
"They should have not made the
in the EEOC then you will not be
student affairs would control it.
fire
you. That
is the most extreme
and the big cities, like New York
announcement and see if the allega-
able to go to court. So many pea-
In the past four years, only two
case, you agree to do something
City.
tion
were true.
If
it is true then he
·
pie follow the procedure and you
·
sexual harassment cases have been
sexual or something bad will hap-
·
October marked the
.
first an-
should go through sexual harass-
do an appeal and it takes time.
A
reported
to
Coogan.
·
<.tbttstmas
tu
++:rrct
.
~nbt•
-·:
.
.
•
-·
AN S.P.C. SEMI°
FORMAL
Date:
Sat~rd
_
ay,
·
o
·
ecember
5,
1992
Tiine: 10
Pl\4'~ 2AM
.
Place: I>ining Hall
·
$3 Single ~
:
$5
Couple w/Marist ID
1la~tutl ~~e«~~
_
t>tU
_
b
.
t
~~a~~
tl.lt
~
·
((.bU~tt\\
~
-
~
~
,
~~~~~
-
'
"
0
~
-
"ll
.
.
.
.
,
·
C UPON
THE
:
HAlit SHACK
.
.
FULL SERVICE
,
• FOR M~N
AND
WOMEN
'
•-------------
.....
I
H€Xus
··
Perm
$1
aoo
'
I
L.
~\
·
Cu!
&
Se!
~-----------------~-'
--------
HAIR CUTS
i500
(Full Stylfng
Extra)
.
NOTE:
Longer hairortinted
hair
may
requile adtfai'Jnal
charge.
49 Academy
St.
Po'k.
SPIRAL
'.
PERM
.
NOWs~ooo
Reg. $65;00
.
485-4946
110N.
THRUSUN.10-f;°PM
WALK.WSWELCCME
· .
..
CBDS
Boosting Alcohol
Consciousness
Concerning
the Health
·
of
University Students
- Informational Meeting -
ON:
Monday;oecember7th
AT:
9:15 PM
IN: Campus Center Room
ALL WELCOME TO ATTEND!
- Awareness Not Abstinence -
ROUTE
.
. .. continued from page
1
I
~ight relocate but wilJ wait until
the demolition begins.
"We're abiding by the DOT and
the state's rules," said a
represen-
tativ
.
e
from the truck rental
business
at
205
Delafield Street.
"Since
the state has already bought
the property, there isn't anything
·
we can do."
.
The state contractors are
scheduled
to
bid in
stages
on
.
one
Preparation
in
·
Poughkeepsie
for
upcoming
exams:
LSAT begins
Jan.
7
GRE begins
Feb.
20
Smart
.
people read the fine print. Smart
of
the projects in March, and it will
rewarded in April and the design
manager saidthe construction will
start
,
shortly after.
Clark said this particular area of
Route 9, along with the intersection
leading to Washington St~eet, was
.
part of a
,
"Memorandum
of
Understanding•~ from
,
,
the
1988
Rebuild New York Bond
:
Act-,:,-a
state approved project which liste
_
d
:
'
-
.
-:
Route
9
as one of the roadways to
be funded from the borid issue.
·
'' When we reconstruct
:
a
highway )ike Route
.
9, we look at
·
the existing road now, and..that
same road 20 years in the future to
satisfy our
.
criteria,'
.
' Clark said
.
who works for
.
Region 8 ofNe;
.
York State, which includes Coium-
.
bia, Dutchess, Orange, Putnam,
Rc,ckland, Ulster and Westchester.
Supporf the
Giving
•
Tree Projecf
.
.
.
"- 1
REE
·
·
.
..
~
.
~
,·
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
~
--
·
.
.
.
.
·
..
.
.
C:-,
.
..
.....
·
people
want
small classes (fewer than 15
sludenJS),
4
proctored diagnostic
examitu,.
twns,free e:ara help wiJh
the
instructor, and
guaranteed score impravemtlllS. Smart
.
people prepare wilh
us.
THE
PRINCETON
REVIEW
.
We Score More!
Choose your ornament from
the trees
around
campus
and
bring them to the
Tree Lighting Ceremony
Sunday evening 8:00 P.M. Marist Chapel
.
THE
.
CIRCLE,.DECEMB~R 3,
1992
Foxes slin to
3~2,
face
·
tfie
.
·
aan
..
·
next
•'
..
·.
.·'
,.-
•
,
·
:•
,
-:
·
-::
,
.·
;,
._
.
_._•
.
-
.
.
.
.
.
b)'TERI
L
.
STEWART
·
.
.
Staff Writer
·
·
·
.
::.
Lloyd Goldstein's focus this year is
t6
have
a
better
:
attitµde.
·
·
Goldstein, the new women's swimming coach
·
;
:
has cre
_
ated
a:
n
_
ew
.
goal
for
.
the Red Fox swimmers. According to
.
sophoniore
.
Denelle
,
:
HeHer,
Goldstefo wants
t'o
eliminate negative attitudes both in the pool and
.
out.
:
"lfyou don't have a good attitude you can't acco111plish anything,"
.
Heller said.
·
.
.
.
·
_.
_
_
. .
.
.
.
Heller
.
also added, "Coach says that if you have a positive attitude
about yourself, then you'll swim better in the end."
.
_
.
•
.
.
.
The team, on their way to
·
accomplishing these goals, lost a tough meet
against Rider College,
134-99,
on Nov
.
21
at theJam~
J:
McCann Center
~~-
.
.
.
.
.
.
According to Goldstein, Rider is the toughest team in the conference
and he feels that within a year ortwo, Marist (3~2 on the year) can be
:
more competitive.
.
. ·
·
· ·
•
_
-
.
:
. .
.
·
·
·
·
In swimming action, freshman
·
Christy Radcliff placed first in the
200-yard breaststroke with
a
time of 2:38.34
·
(only 8/10 of a second
.
off
.
the school record she set against Fairfield University onNovember 10).
Radcliff also placed second in the 200-yard individual medley-a per-
sonal best.
''(Rider) was a tough team, and it wasn't one of our better meets,''
Heller said
.
"But
I think we probably
.
could have done better against
them."
·
.
-
.
..
In women's diving action, sophomore Jennifer McCauley took first
place in the I-meter dive and second in the 3-meter
.
dive
.
.
According to Rick Bolstad, the diving coach, McCauley's opponent
is one of the best divers she
will
run into
·
this year.
..
Pig pile!!!
7
"She (McCauley) needed to be a little sharper, but sh
e
is right where
sh
e
should be at this point in the season," Bolstad said .
.
Tim Massette finds himself surrounded by Columbia defenders in a recent rugby match. Marist
defeated the Lions 23-22.
Circle
photo/ Christy Green
The Red Foxes
·
also took on Iona on November 19. They won by a
score of 132-74
.
.
BBALL
... continued from page 8
"If
I
hit those two foul shots, we
·
would have brought the game _into
overtime," Ingles said.
Ingles scored 20
·
points
-
(on
15
of them on three-pointers
against ninth-ranked Florida State
in the preseason National Invita-
tional Tournament.
.
7-of-11 shooting) and grabbed four
.
The combinatio
·
n of Lake,
rebounds to
·
lead the Red Fox
·
attack
.
Buchanan and sophomore Gregg
Chodkowski held Brown to 14
Buchanan
-
chipped
.
in with 17
points and nothree~point bucke~s.
points and six rebounds to balance
The road
·
does not get any easier
·
the charge.
·
·
for Marist.
·
.
Magarity said the defense di~
a
The Red Foxes win
·
travel to
~
good job
stopping Siena's lead1.ng
Syracu
s
e
OI\
Friday to play Virginia
,
a
i
:-.
-
·
.
scorers, especially fifth-year se
_
mor
Commonwealth in the Carrier
·
l
·
·
Mike
Brown who scored 28 points,
Classic.
·
a
·
SWlM
·
·
.
.
. .
l
·
.
. ~cc3°nfihJed
t~om
page
a
·
i.
.
backstroke,
200
butterfly
.The men's diving team
·
was
~
<t~d 200
breaststroke, resp
e
ctively
.
reduced to one when freshman
.
ii
·
Todd Moses was
_
kep
t'
ouf of
.
th
e
.
J
.
The medl
~
y and freestyle relay
,vater for three ,veeks -with ari ear
.
~
squads also topped Iona. Van
injury. All. of the duties fell on the
·
a
Wagner
·
was
-
not utterly disap-
shoulders of soph9more
.
Jamie
'
i
,
.
,
pointed about the
_
loss fo Rider; in
~
Nagurney, who was forced to dive
j
stead
;
he expressed
•
hope for the
in the three-meter event as well as
i
:
•
·
·
conference championships, which
.
his usual one-meter.
..
.
.
,
,
i.'
his
'
team still has
IO
weeks to
·
.
The team will face Seton
-
Hall on }
,
.
.
Prepare.
Saturday and ihen St.
..
Fr
_
ancis
::
L
''We
.
were competitive in ~II
(N
.
Y
.
) one week later. Both
'
are
:
~
·
-
events," he said. '-'
-
We can compete
·
meets which should translate into
:
~
:
.
with them or
it
least come close for
wins
·
for the
·
hopeful Red
·
Foxes
;
-
!
·
·
th
__ e.;..;.c.o.n.~e.r.en
..
c.e ..
c_h_a_m_p.io.n.
·
s.h.ip•·•"--•sa_i __
dv_a_n
____
W.;..;a;;,g=ne_r.
·
·
·
&
•
J
YOU SHOULDN'T
"
HAVE
-
-
TO
:
·
cRAM
-
ON
YOUR WAY
-
HOME!
.
.
,I\
I ;:'
jl\\\.Ji''n-.:
L
I
,
.
Ji
t
l' ;_:
h,~J,,,..--""
~~j~
i~
·
·
·
\,
No Other Bus Une Offers Lower Fares For Stuc;tents!
Special Student Discounts
OVER
$3.75
OFF
Regular One
Way
to New York City!
For schedule and fare lnfonn~lpn call:
Arlington -Arlington Getty, 813 Mam;St.: 454-3530
Poughkeepsie- SUb
City,
246 Main Mall.:
485-3579
.
..
©/HORTL!NE®
;,
I
l
f
:
~
~
I
j
1!
.E
X
3
l
~
W
hen you get a Chase card, you get
everything
but
an
annual fee.
That's because we've created Chase
Student Services5M* -
an entire group
of special benefits created to make your
life a little easier
at school.
,.
•
,.
,
•
•
,
• •
.
-
-
• ~-
,.-
-.,
- •
•
·
,,.
'-,
•
- -.•
'"
-
I
•
..
.
,.,
•
••
•·
•
•
·
'
.
:
.
.
. _
For example, when you rake off
during Winter
.
finally, A
Credit
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Without
A
Charge
Already On It.
[Nofee first
year.}
anci
Spring
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Chase Student
·
Travel will take
off with you.
In
fact, you'll get
5%
off the lowest
prices you find on
airfares,
train
tickets, car rentals
and even hotels.
And when you're back at school
spending time on the phone, you don't
have to spend a lot of money. Just sign
up for ChasePhontfM at no extra charge
and you can use your Chase card to
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Or, if you decide
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..
.
L.
_•
'' We
're.
~
not
playing cupcake
STAT
_.
Of
-
:THE
.
WEEK:.
,
.
'
·
"teams.
-
~'
'
'
_
_
-.
Fred
.
Ingles
'
SP
·
o·
'
·
'
R
'
TS
The
:
-
tiockey
·
te
·
ari,
.
did not
lose
a
·
.
g~r.ne
'
in
'
November.
'
'
'
' '
.
. .
THE
_
CIR
_
·
CLE,
;
'
'
_
·
'
.
8
.
CreW
finishes
·
seaso
·
n
strong
cagers
loS¢
.
···
1¢'1.d,
·
dfoP
hdm~
operier.
by
TED HOLMLUND
-
Staff Writer
.
The
men's basketball teain, with Siena's help, pulled defeat out of the
jaws ofvictory in the home opener at the McCann Center,
- _
-
.
.
The Red Foxes had a 52-42 lead with
11
:06 remaining in the game.
However, the Saints went
on
a 20-8 run for the rest of the game and won.
Marist did cling to a 58-57 lead until senior Lee Matthews scored a
layup with a 1:51 remaining to put
_
Siena ahead for
·
good.
·
.
Trailing 61-58 with under :28 remaining, the Red Foxes were looking
'
for three-point specialist Andy
-
Lake,'but he was well covered.
·
Ma
'
rist had to settle for a layup froinjunior lzett
-
Buchanan which cut
the lead to 61-60 with
:06
seconds
'
left.
_
·
.
-
·
_
- -
_
-
.
-·
-
.
A second after
.
Buchanan's layup, the Saints'
'
Brian Bidlingmyer \\'.as
.
-
fouled by junior point guard Dexter Dunbar. Bidlingmyer made one of
.
two
-
free throws to ice
the
victory for the Saints.
.
.
·
- .
• .
After the last timeout, Head Coach Dave Magarity said the team was
.
_
looking for Lake to shoot
'
the three~point shot. «We ran Lake off a double
screen;" he said. "They-did
:
a good
•
job covering him."
·
·
The Saints held the fifth~year seriior to six points on
_
2-7
:
shooting.
Magarity said the dub can not' dwell on
·
the one defeat.
·
''-W_e can't
get too high or too low,•~ the seventh~year
-
coach said. ''.We have over
30 games to play. We can't allow this to
.
affect the whole season."
Some of the players
,
said it was Siena's capability of making the big
plays and their own failure to produce in pressure situations .that deter-
mined the outcome of the game.
.
·
"We had too tnany turnovers towards the end," Dunbar said. "They
hit the key free throws and the big shots."
_
"We're not playing cupcake teams," senior Fred Ingles said. "They
are a good teain and have a good chance of winning their conference
(Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference)'. We looked really good, but fell
·
apart in the last minute."
Free throws were a big factor that determined the final score of the
game. Siena hit most of its clutch free throws-Marist did not.
In the final I:J 7, trailing 59c58, Lake and Ingles both missed the front
~
-
end of one-and-ones. During this time period, Siena
_
made three out of
four foul shots.
·
;
..
see
BBALL
page
7
►
Despite los
,
s to
Rider,
·
men of f
:
to
quick
-
start
·
·
-
by
,
~IKE
wA{sH
·
--
·
t~ijp~~~~t\:i~~
~~~~i~
·
·
Staff
Writer
breaststroke
.
with
,
a time· of
.
A
pair of wins over Central
_
2:
2
1.55;
.
lnth{400,yard inedley
-
·
~
~
:
..
~
:
:
'
·
,»
_
Senior Mike Schreiber goes up strong in
.
the Red Foxes'
62-60 season-opening loss to Siena.
·
Circle
photo/Matt Martin
_·
at the
·
·
Metros
by
ANDREW HOLMLUND
Staff Writer
The men's and
·
women's crew
teams recorded respectable finishes
during
.
the fall campaign. The
men's
'and
women's varsity eight
-
boats each grabbed
·
first place at
the New York Metropolitan Area
·
Championships while the women's
varsity four
·
and
_
men's and
women's lightweight four placed
third .
.
· .
"We rowed pretty well," Head
Coach Larry Davis said. "We
showed some good boat speed."
At the Head of the Fish, the
novice women's eight finished 10th
while
the
novice meri's eight end-
ed 15th.
Marist also captured second in
the men's eight and seventh in the
·
women's eight at the Head of the
Hudson.
·
In its biggest meet of the cam-
paign, Marist marked 20th of 49 at
the Head of the Charles. Davis said
he hopes his crew will make more
improvements for the upcoming
spring.
"l
would like to see us in the top
five
of the N.Y. State Champion-
ships," he said. "During the off-
season, we need to get stronger
because we
will
really have to work
for our goal."
·
leers blow late lead
V
·
S •.
Siena
·
_
tally wa:s the1·unior's eig
·
hth on
_
the
·
back as six different Marist players
by
ANDREW HOLM~UND
II
d
·
f·
·
d
1
year.
_
.
.
_
co ecte seven ITSt-peno goa s.
.
Staff '(llrite_r,
:
.
.
,
.
:
, ..
·
·
-.
Froni"there,it
'
was all Siena as
Sophomo~" Sc~tt J~cques
-
Tlie MarisC:hckkey,
'
ieam,
which
-.
the
Saihis
scored th
e
finai"two goals
.
started the scoring spree by nabb-
.
was undefeated thro
_
ughout
in the final session, one at 9:48 and ing his first goal of the season on
November,
:
wiil be looking to keep
the other at 2:18.
f
an
_
assist from Torn Schlie
.
its
'.
uribeaten
:-
streak alive this Satur-
First-year Head Coach Kevin
Connecticut State and ro
·
na and
;
•
refay; sophoinoi::es Brett Arnold
,
a loss to
a
tough
,
Rider squad
:·.
.
and Angel
_
Tomala
-·
and
gave the men~s swimming/div-
: ,
freshman Kyle O'Neil_ joined
clay
when Meiropoliian Co_nference
Walsh
was
not happy with how his
-
-
foe Southern
.
Connecticut Univer-
-
club fell apart in the third period.
sity invades the
.
Mid-Hudson Civic
.
'~We
·
played with too many
Center at lO
·
p.m.
_
· ·
.
_
_
_
penalties," he said. "We lost our
·_
Closinski collected two goals in
the first period, the first-from an
assist by Tom Regan and Lloyd,
_
and the second from Eirish.
ing team
.
three
·
overall
jfu::
:,c:
;
Bluestein
to
grab the
.
victory .
.
pressive performances..
_
_
_
,
-_
.
The Fox~ also took the top
·
These meets, coupled with
-
a
.
•
three s·pots in
_
the 400-yard relay
·
tpp finish at the Metropolitan
_
•
·
led
.
by freshmen fytichael Flynn,
·
Conference Relay Champiori
:
,
-
David Malsheske;
.
Kevin
.
ships, has
·
Coach
·-
L~rry
:
van
Richards
--
~ind
'
AllisOil.
·.:
=,
,
-
Wagner's bunch of(to a sue-
In the team~s pre~io~s ~~efat
cessfulstart.
·
.
.
·
·
•
.
_
-Iona;
Marisf slaughtered the
'
.
'
A-
'
47-point
·
defeat at the
Gael~ 139-~4 .
.
·
•
,
.-
, _-.
_
__
·-- _
hands of MSC newcomer Rider
·
.
_
Sophomore Doug
-
Jelen won
,va:s not quite as
_
painful
·
con-
both th<! 500 ai,id
'
1000-yard
·sidering
it was the team's third
·
-·
freestyle
races
>
He timed
meet in eight d~ys. With
so
.
---
5:07.78 for the500 and had a
many competitions early on, the
.
season~best with his W:37
.38
-
in
men's training time has ~een cut
the
.
moo:
Arnold, Tomala arid
shor~, revealed Van Wagn
_
er'.
sophomore Ronald Gagne also
Senior Rob Allison led
_
the
-
earned
_
wins in
.
tne
.
200
Marist men, achieving three
_
per-
sonal bests.
·
·
.
The
_
Red Foxes,
·-
_
3
~
1
~2 -
on
.
-
the
·
·
composure a
_
nd the dumb penalties
season, tied Siena College 3-3 last
.
costus the game."
Sunday iri Albany.
·
-
Senior Mike Mannebach,
a
left
·
·
Assistant Captain John Lloyd
defenseman, said it was
a
combina-·
started the Red Fox"scoring attack
tion between Siena's playing style
Corriveau recorded his eighth
·
tally on the year, unassisted, while
Schlief and co-captains Ed Sherako
and Doug Wasowski rounded out
the bombardment.
with
·
a short-handed, unassisted
and the referees' decision-making
-
goal in 'the first pei'iod.
.
-
that determined the final outcome
"If
feels good to get on a winn-
After
_
thi::" Saints scored early in
for the Red Foxes.
.
ing streak after a pretty sloppy
the second perioq;junior Chuck
. ·
"We
-
did some reorganizing, start," Walsh said.«Albany saw a
Efrish
_-
notched fi.is second goal of
-
which
was
.
more of a problem," he
·
different Marist team out there."
the se~son,
·
a:
'
power-play goal
said. "We couldn't adjust our style
Walsh explained what his club
which
was
assisted by Todd Cor-
-
of play between Siena's style and
.
riveau
and Lloyd
;
,:
. _
_
the refs' calls."
_
~epep:n~~tdin
~~~i~~~;S:~
:~~gy1:t
Marist was
·
not done scoring in
Marist
-
was victorious
·
the
.
-
-_
,
-
·
the second period, however.
previous night by pummelling
.
"Saturd8;Y will be a tough game,"
Lloyd collected his second short-
Albany State,
11~1.
· •-
-
. ·
.
.
Walsh said. "We need
to
be tough
handed goal of the
·
game off an
The Red Foxes opened the scor-
,
defensively because we know our
assist
-
from Doug Closinski. The
ing gates early and never looked
_
offense
Will
come."
Basketball '92-
-
'93:
A
blueprint
for
success
It is their time of
-
year. For the
next four months; the men's
·
and
women's basketball teams will cap-
ture the attention of the cam-
pus ... that is, until they begin to
lose.
·
-~ So how should they avoid that
P.redicament and prove their
finishes last year were not a fluke?
Here's what I believe they have
to do.
·
The men need a half-court game
to go with the fast break that work-
ed so well last year. That means
Fred
Ingles,
Alan Tomidy and
Dave Strong all have to
.
be factors
on the post. The team was inept-at
the half-court game last year
because Ingles, its only true post
player, was out for most of the
season.
The half-court set can work well
if Sean James, Izett Buchanan and
Kareem
Hill
all use slashing drives
·
towards-the hoop. This would ade-
I
quately complement the pivot play
of the centers.
·
And, on the outside, point
guards Dexter Du~bar and D~nny
Basile have to hit the medmm-
range jump shots (12-15 feet) while
Andy Lake and Gregg Chodkowski
take care of the long bombing.
·
Senior power forward Mike
Schreiber ends up Jost in the shuf-
fle after not being mentioned much
in
the pre-season.
_
Where does he fit in? Banging
the boards inside and-belie','.e it or
not-sticking a three-pointer here
.
and there.
Hey, why not? Other Marist big
men like Tom Fitzsimons and Ted
Sharpenter did the same. Whether
the team is on the break or
on
the
blocks, Dunbar
·
has a
-
,
tough
assignment-which
scoring
·
machine gets the ball?
The solution? Find the one or
two players who are hot early and
once opposing defenses key on
them, find whoever's open.
-
Dunbar also has to st;iy in con-
trol.-.Oriving the lane at ludicrous
speed with his arms and legs flail-
ing accomplishes nothing .•. except
giving the ball to the other team.
The Foxes could start out 2-
7
so
patience
will
be
a
virtue with this
team. They can not get depressed
ii....
J.W. Stewart
Thursday
Morning
Quarterback
by New Year's because they would
not have even played an NEC
game-the ones that count.
The women's situation is surpris-
ingly similar to
.
the men's.
Therefore, the steps to success are
the same. The women, too, need a
half-court game to coincide with
the fast break.
Lori Keys, Stacey Dengler, Tara
Walsh and Andrea Macey are the
ones who can make that happen.
Coming off last year, Keys is
solid but question marks remain
about Macey. In order to be an ef-
fective low-post player, she can not
get blown off the blocks like last
year.
The fast break niay bean adven-
on this team
ture for this team,
as
well; They ran
.
-
-
•
.
·
last year but not at the speed they
.
-
Finding their way to the NEC
·
planto run at this year. The player Tournament
will
be a lot easier for
who holds the reins is point guard the
-
Red
-
Foxes
·
if they win right
Amy Presnall.
away. I think it's almost
a
necessi-
She, like Dunbar, can not play ty after last year's disastrous 0-12
helter-skelter basketball like she has start.
in
'
the past. That's dangerous and
_
can send the fast break spinning
out of control.
.
Presnall, as well
as
every other
,
player in the half-court set, has to
pass better on the other side of
midcourt.
Poor passing decisions in the
half-court game
killed
this team
last year. Less-than-dominating re
-
bounding didn't help, either.
All the players have to hold on-
to the careening basketball instead
of tipping it up and up and up. Us-
ing two or three tall players to
fonn
a wall in front of the boards may
not be a bad idea.
-
Somebody has to
be
Charlene
Fields' outside shooting partner.
How about Cindy Carroll? It's
If not, don't be surprised to see
the team get down on itself and
Ken Babineau, like it has in the
~ast. A "here we go again" at-
titude must be avoided at all costs.
I
think both squads will be in an
enviable position by Spring Break
if, at the vef?' least, they play the
half-court game effectively and the
point guards don't make many
mistakes.
After
all,
playing
one-
dimensionally without an equal-
opportunity lender
will
get these
teams nothing but
a
one-way ticket
to the beach come March.
gonna have to be-there's no other
J.
W. Stewart is The Circle's
pure shooter (like a
Mary
Lightner)
sports editor.
41.8.1
41.8.2
41.8.3
41.8.4
41.8.5
41.8.6
41.8.7
41.8.8
.
41,
NUMBER
8
MarlstCollege~
Poughkeepsie,
N.Y.
DECEMBER 3,
1992
~Tis
-
the
Freshman Scott Sullens
_
eyes The Giving Tree orname~ts on a tree
in
camp~s center.
Sexllal h
-
arassment:
one
..
year later ...
by
ANASTASIA
B.
CUSTER
Staff Editor
Since Anita Hill spoke out last October, sexual harassment has become
one of the taboo topics of the 1990s.
·
After Hill entered the media spotlight and said the Supreme Court
nominee Clarence Thomas sexually harassed her, many women who ran
for a senatorial seat this year.used sexual harassment as one of the themes
in their campaign.
"Women aren't taking it anymore,." said Doug Roth, a
senior
from
New Rochelle, N.Y. "Since Anita Hill, women are coming forward. Even
with the election, more women were elected."
Although
·
Roth mentioned \vomen when discussing Hill, he defined
sexual harassment as any kind of sexual advancement on an individual
in return of promotion.
.
"Someone would
·
probably blackmail you into sexual favors
.
for
something -you want," sophomore Linda White, from Hancock,N.Y.
said.
·
Despite the recent attention on sexual harassment, laws banning sex-
ual harassment were included in the Civil Law Act of 1964. Although
males and females can both be victims of se::xual harassment, many said
sexual har
_
assment
is geared toward women.
_
·
"Sexual harassment
on
the job is
said
to be so common that many
consider it an inevitable condition
of
women's employment.
It
can take
many forms, from verbal harassment and abuse to p
_
ressure to engage
in sexual activity and even attempted rape," writes the editors of
Women at Work.
And some people ha~efailed to realize sexual harassment is not a prere-
quisite to the job.
"I.was
·
at
a
conference and saw a colleague and she said she got a call
asking
·
.
her to testify in a hearing for something
.
that happened a couple
_
-
-
~
,
·
.
,
,·;
.
:
·
.
·
·.,:
,.
.
'
:,_.
_
;::':
- ,
:
Cir
__
cle
photo/Matt Martin
of years ago. When she heard thetestimc;my, s
_
he thoughtit was c6m-
· ·-
--~~
-~
~
-
-•4~_:
~
-
-:'":
.
.
·
·
·:~-
:
-
.
.
.
t-
•
•
·
-
~
-
, • - .
•
,
~
• •
•
•
'
•
~.
-
:
_
see,
'
HARA~·sM
.
ENT'pclge
·:
6'
►
·
·
MafiSt-grac11raF<t
·
maJor
··
part
·
·•or:
·-
c11ntdlfVICtOfy
by:CARI OLESKEWICZ
·
o•Keefesaid. "I lookedii{t6in
:
i
:
.ptiblic:
.
,
_:
-
-
.
.
.·
•··
;ver very well arid
-
~e
·
w~r~
··
everi
-
AssisfaniEdit~r-
_;
.
,
;
the
-
i::andidatesintheJieldamfllik-
·
>
·
"We literally
-
walked
.:
thi:oiigh
·
covered by
.
CNN."
.
.
-
--'------'--'-......,.---'----'-----
·•·
:
ed
,
13ill
_
CUi:iion the
'.
most
:
Lreally
·
Manchester with our volunteers,"
•
The
.
company appropriately
A
1991
Marist graduate has
..
agr~ed widi his proposals and lik-
he said. "We werit door to door for
printed tote bags
·
with slogans
.
pf
already helped to change the
.
world
;
.
ed
'
what he
.
had to say
:
on
·
the
BillC:linton in a short amouritof
·
.·
'Clinton
·
ror President! O'Keefe
·
ln
the words ofHillary
.:
·
Clintcm>
•
issues." •
·
.
.
time."
said there are many memories to
·
Peter O'Keefe needs no introduc-
:
·•
O'Keefe began working for Clin-
-
O'Keefe began
_·
building
-
his
..
cherish when one is involved in a
tion
~
O'Keefe radiates fresh con
-
ton on Dec. 15 and was sent to New
·
reputation,in New Hampshire, at
.
political canipaign, especially when
fidence and a tou
.
ch of surprise at
Hampshire to help oversee the run-
one point making
it onto CNN.
it
·
is a winning campaign.
being so successful so early in his
·
ning of the primary
'
campaign.
"!will
alwayfremember my first
''I'll always remember meeting
political c~reer.
.
-
.
·.
.
.
-··
>
"I was a little overwhelmed with
event with Clinton," he said.;''We
Hillary Clinton forthe first time in
.
.
''1
-
never
-
,vould have guessed I'd
thejohl hadto do 1n Ne,v Hamp-
had the candidate for the day and
Kentucky," O'Keefe said. "When
be where
.
I am riow," O'K~efe, a
shire during the
.-
primaries/'
·
we had io get him out in the public
I was being introduced, Mrs. Clin-
Poughkeepsie native,
.
.
said. ·
-
~
'I
·
O'Keefe recitlled. "We
_
had t..yo
eye:••
_
O'Keefe had to find an event
ton said 'Ohi he needs nointroduc-
wasn't thinkingJong-term
-
\yhen I
months to introduce our candidate
.
for the candidate -
-
something that
tion.' That: was pretty special."
joined
_
the campaign.''
·.
After
,
to the state and
to
t
·
onvince them
would gain attention arid reflect
O'Keefe said he will also always
·
graduation; O'Keefe worked ori
.
to vote for him/'
.
.:
positively
.
on him.
.
.
rememberbeing'apartofameeting
.
Geraldine Ferraro's Senate cam-
·
With
·
<!very ca
_
ndidate concen-
-
.
''We dedded
..
that the
'message
withJeaders of the Perot campaign
·
•
paign before
·
joining the Clinton
trating their effortsin New Hamp-
of
·
the
-
day' would
'
be small
in July,' He was joined by Clinton
camp.
.
shire, O'Keefe said it was
business," O'Keefesaid;(<\vetook
and Al Gore. Working on a
"I decided that
I wanted to work
sometimes difficult to fight for ai-
-
Cliriton to a small shop that makes
-
presidential campaign was what he
on a presidential
·
campaign,''.
tention f~om the media and the
environmentaltote bags. This went
expected and more.
·
·
''It was
·
·
exciting to be able to
·
work in this field," O'Keefe said.
"l"liked the idea of organizing in
different states."
.
While running a political cam-
paign may
·
appear glamorous and
exciting
·
, it had its low points.
.
-
.
O'Keefe admitted feeling less than
-
enthusiastic at times.
He recalled one of these times as
being after the
.
New Hampshire
primary. T
_
he Clinton campaign
was celebrating to their new slogan
of "The Comeback Kid" after
finishing second in the primary to
Paul Tsongas, but the funds were
low and many doubted his can-
.
didacy.
·
workers such as O'Keefe
were not
'
getting paid, or were
.
receiving only a little money. Peo-
... see
O'KEEFE
page
2
►
.
K&D Deli and other store·s start to relocate or crumble
by
.
DOMINICK
E.
FONTANA
scapedcentral area.
·
_
Senior
Editor
At
·
each of the entrances to
- - - - - - - - - ' - - - ' - , . -
.
..
Marist, there will be turn lanes so
Businesspeople wm
·
.
either
·
have
·
northbound vehicles will have no
to
leave
-
their businesses for the
·
trouble making left turns onto the
wrecking crew of the Department
·
college grounds,
,
according to
of Transportation, or just get af
·
Clark.
.
.
.
.
.
·
face-lift when
.
the expansion o
f'Capacity
and safety were the
Route 9 between Delafield and
key issues for this project," Clark
Riverpoint roads begins.
·
said, ,vhen describing the many
However, until then, the widen-
driving forces for the expansion.
ing of the roadway has to wait un-.
The general condition of the road
til May of next year.
·
has also been a factor because
The propenies on
·
Route 9 and
roadways can withstand a certain
_
North Ro
-
ad, located on the east
number
·
_
of
y~;irs
,
.
,
be~ore
.
end of the Marist College campus,
deteriorating, according to Clark.
are scheduled to be demolished to
With all these changes occurring
make room for a 68-foot wide
in the coming year, K &
_
D Deli and
roadway, from curb to curb, accor.:
the Rent-All Center are just two
ding to Jennifer Clark,
.
one of
businesses on Washington Street to
several design managers from the
be demolished for the creation of
Department of Transportation in
this new intersection.
the area. So far, the demolition has
.. The state had the rights to these
begun across the street from
properties once they purchased
Marist, at the Mid-Hudson
them," said Steve Maffia, an
Business Center, also known as
engineer from the Town of
Marist East.
Poughkeepsie.
·
Included in the expansion will
be
Maffia said the entire building of
two lanes on either side of a land-
K &
o
Deli will be demolished, but
a seciion
-
of the Rent~An building
will be bulldozed, where the issue
might come up
if
the state does not
wa11t t~e rest of the property and
wants to transfer it back to the
town of Poughkeepsie or the
original owners.
The store employees from both
businesses said they were holding
negative feelings about the state's
decision.
Steve Jones, an employee at
Rent-All, said he wasn't sure what
the business is going to do because
the state was already taking a
significant amount of the building
away.
K & D Deli employees said they
had to leave by the end of
December, beginning of January
1993.
A map is displayed in front
of the counter so all the customers
can see where _the new roadway is
headed-right under their feet.-
Dan Reedy, an employee at
Goodyear's Rockland
.
Tire and
Auto Service on North Road, said
the business will be hurt financial-
ly in the beginning stages of the
construction
.because
K
&
D deli,
their current neighbor, is going to
b~ leveled.
"The traffic is not going to be
good," Reedy said. "When it's all
done, in the long term, our business
will improve."
The plant manager from Kem
Plastic Playing Cards, Inc., Gary
TerBush, said the expansion will
have "no real negative effects" on
the business. TerBush said he was
informed by the state that from the
traffic light at the corner of the
Citgo gas station to the bridge on
Washington Street will all be one-
way, northbom:id.
"The only thing they'll change is
the angle of our driveway which go
over the Washington Street
bridge," TerBush said, whose
business is across the street from
the Citgo gas station on Beck
Place
.
Representatives for Mid-Hudson
Mack, a truck rental business, near
the Route 9 expansion said they
... see
ROUTE page 6
►
2
·
·
THE CIRCLE;DECEMBER3,
'
1992
·
·
.
:
:
·
..
.
.
·
..
.
..
·
..
.
.
.
.
,,.
·
.
. . . . .
.
.
13eing/
•
·
.
.
t,eft
•
•
b?1JiiJdi:t
•
secont1
•
·
·
.
tilillJ
·
·
even
.
f
Uhilter
Chris Columbus is
;
bai:k
"
i~
:-
the
:
dfre~tor's
,_
\v
_
ay ~nd
.
his fa_mily_ an?ther.
He
fo~l9wsa
.
'
Unlimited ~ooni service~d his ovmpersonal
·
on
'.
the West side while they-are
-in
Pa~is
;
:
.
chai'r: to make
the
sequel to the top grossing
_
rµ~~
·
who he thmks ts hi~
fa
ther. This man,
sfretch
·
limo.
·
.
·
.
.
. Perfect. Kevin gets to work. Power tools,
:
:
comedy in movie history. He and writer John
.
obv~ously • gets. on
a
.
d!ff erent plan~, a~d
.
Kevin is riot the only new arrival to New
.
bricks,
.
kerosene, a blow tor
.
ch~ and pai
_
nt
:
Huglies attempt to make this film as sue
~
Kevm ends
·
up m the
_·
Big Apple.
York City. "The Wet Bandits
'.
' have broken
cans (sound famjliar?) are just some of the
.
cessful as the first. ''Home Alone
2
:
Lost in
If you were ten years old and all alone in
·.
out
,
of jair and just hit town
:
Daniel Stern
things that Kevin
·
uses
·.
to fight · off the
New York" has virtually the same storyline
one or the biggest
·
cities in the world, what
.
.
and Joe Pesci°are back as Marv and Harry,
bandits.
·
as the original, but is perhaps furin1er than
.
would you do? Check into the PJaza hotel
two
-
(can I say stupid?) burglers who never.
its predecessor.
·
·
·
■-----•------•-•
know when to quit.
.
.
.
Macauley Culkin (who repCJrtedly got$5
In a city with
6-8
million people in it, they
.
Tim Curry adds extra humor to this movi~
as
the Concierge of the Plaza HoteL His stuf~
.
fy, English character falls for Kevin's tricks
just
as
easily
as
Marv and Harry db. He com-
pletes the cast and rounds out the comedy,
most of which is slapstick, to help keep you
laughing for two hours.
.
million for this film)
.
is -back
·
as Kevin
just happen to bump into Kevin outside of
McCallister, the.youngest of the McCallister
The Reel
a
toy
store which they are planning to rob,
clan who never Seems to understand him.
Story
which Marv tells Kevin about. Hey, I said
This time
·
all · of New York City is
_
his
they were stupid.
'
.
.
.
.
.
playground while his family is in rainy Miami
Before Kevin goes head to head with "the
trying to enjoy the holidays.
··
Jennifer
two idiots", he has a hearno hearnalk with
Once again we start off in Chicago, where
a homeless
.
womanin Central Park. Oscar
the Mccallister house is filled with relatives
Giandalone
·
winner Brenda Fricker ("My Left Foot") is
· The rcu~iting of Kevin with ,his
·
mother
(Catherine O'Hara) in Rockefeller Cenlerat
the end is equally as mushy as the:tirst
·
and
may even bring a tear to your eye.
.
the night before everyone is scheduled to fly
.
the pigeon la.dy, a woman who lost her job
tC> Florida for Chris
.
tmas. And once again
aitd the man she loved. in their conversation
everyone oversleeps and there is a
·
mad rush
- - - - - - • we get
a
comparison, which really makes a
to the airport to avoid missing the plane
.
·
lot of sense, between her broken heart and
..
Even though this movie is basic~lly a
·
car
:
boo copy bf part
.
one, -"Home Alone 2'
'.
is
a comedy that will delight both children and
adults. It strongly r
_
cinforces the message that
around Christma
_
s time, family is the most
of course. (Look for a cameo appearance by
This time, however, Kevin makes it to the
·
Kevin's-old roller blades. Don't ask. Go see
.
Donald Trump) Kevin just happens to
_
be
airport. That's as far as he gets with his
carrying the bag containing his father's (John
for
yourself.
.
family.
.
Heard) wallet and a lot his money. So he uses
.
Since Kevin isn't at home, he needs a new
During the race to the gate
,
Kevin goes one
place to create his fun house for Marv and
it to do what every kid would dr\:~m of.
Harry. His uncle is renovatinj!; an old house
important thing.
O'KEEFE
.
.. continued from
·
page 1
This type or motivation helped
science major at Marist, looked
carry Clinton all the way to the
upon his education at the school as
pie in and out ofihe campaign ,
v
ere
Wh
i
te House.
valuable. He credits his current
questioning if Clinton could re
a
lly
During the general
.
election, . position
.
to his internship and
win the nomination. O
'
Keefe said
O
'
Keefe
was
stationed in
.
Kentucky
Joanne Myers, professor of
it was impossible to lose faith.
as a state organizer. ''.There were
political science.
.
.
.
"Once you dive into something
the same pressures and problems in
"Without Dr. Myers arid Marist,
like this
,
it
is
hard to walk away
the general election as in the
I would not be where ram now,"
from it," he said. "Especially be-
primaries," O'Keefe said. "We
O'Keefe said. "Dr
.
Myers en-
ing with this candidate from the
had a time limit in putting the state
couraged me to intern in
start. The candidate never walked
together. Organization was always
Washington D.C., and that was
away from the campaign when it
key in the campaign. Whatever
really a turning point for me."
got tough." Whenever the cam-
O'Keefe and the campaign did in
During his junior year, O'Keefe
paign was facing a problem in
Kentucky, theydid right. It was a
·
spent the spring semester at
moral, it was quickly amended.
.
state
.
that analysts termed
_
"up fqr
American
University
in
inside look at how a cainpaign was
·
run greatly influenced his career
.
decisions.
While at Marist,
.
O'Keefe
·
was
also a part of the Marist Institute
of Public Opinion. During the
campaign,
e
specially the primary,
he said he often used Marist's poll
numbers
.
O'Keefe has a
·
1ot to look back
·
on and be proud of, but he is nqt
ready
·
fo
'
end
·
his career with
Clinton.
;-
~
_
:
;
-
:.; \
::
:
:
' ·
•
.
,
;
·
;;
,
:
:
,
>
:
·
-
·
.
.
:
.;·
.
:."
·
-
"
:
..
.
'.
. (:>'Ke;(e s~ia
h~
~
~~ulci like ~}ob
.
:
m
the Clmton administration but
will
.
not be
.
disappointed
{r
it
'
does
not mater
i
alize.
·-
.
·
"FrpniJhls expe~ience I have
·
.learned
_
that
.
wha~ you expect and
what happens are
·
two different
things,'' O'Keefe. said. "Plans
don't always go accordingly."
Running for office himself is not
something O'Keefe said he con-
siders seriously .
.
"I'd rather help
other people get elected," he said:
·
In July, before the
-
Democratic
grabs."
.,
..
.·
.
'
w
h"
.ts mgton, where he obtained an
Na
t
ional Convention in Ne\v York,
Bush
·
had
·
.
·.
cam
'
pciigited there
1
·nternshi"p w
1
'th New York Senator
·
·
·
er
·
"The dust is still settling right
·
·
·
· ·
· ·
· ·
·
·
··
mton was third in the polls
twice in the final
·
week of the elec-
Daniel Patrick Moynihan.
now, u
'
O'Keefe said. "I would real-
_
.
•
·.··
O'Keefe" now
·
ki"oks forward to
·
behind George Bush and H
.
Ross
tion and itwas close all the way to
._
·
.
_
"I met a Jot of important peo-
ly like a job with Clinton, biitthe
the future
:
a~d
-
leaving a mark on
Perot.
.
·
the closing of
.
the polls. The eight
pie and made some connections,"
people in Little Rock are not even
the ad
.
ministration. He has already
-
"It was a nightmare time forthe
electoral
.
votes
·
went
io
Clinton
.
O'Ke
_
efe said
.
"I really
_
caught the
sure what theY will be doing."
.
.
.
rnade
·
his mark in.
·
the 1992
campaign," O'Keefe said. "Sojn
who gained 45 percent of the vote:
political fever then.,,
presidential election.
.
Wisconsin,
we
put
together a big
Bush received 42 percent of the
..
Despite his desire
.
to remain in
O'Keefe is in Washington·rio~.
,,:
:
·
>
;
;
·
·
_
::_
__ ~
··
···-
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.
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_
foi
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..
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i
sumfaer: •
•
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e
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h~
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,,
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Clinto
"
0
Keefe returned
to
New York arid
Inaugural Committee until the new
-
was Just a
_
nother Marist student.
n up.
.
O'Keefe
,
who was a political
worked on a local campaign. This
•·
administration is organiz;ed.
\
:
·
<:
·\.
·
.
·
.
.
.. . ··
.
.
.
.
·
·
·
·
.
.
·
~Bodyguard'
a
success,
despite Costner'S hllir
.
I
found a
new
·
path in my life,
a
new direction,
a
riew challenge
.
-.
· .
1f
'
only
I
could change my
ma-
jor
to
".
Bodyguard," I woulcl be
·.
set. But riot
·
many colleges offer
.
such
_
courses, unless I wanted to be
all
that I could be in the Ariny.
•
· · _
There is only
a
small bick~ring,
a few harsh words
.
said, then\hey
go back
.
to acting
·
indiffe
r
ently
toward each other. Instead
, t
h
e
y
st:iould
_
have grappled with
_.
why
t~ere can be no romance, no p;i
s
-
s10n, no
:
emotion between them
rriakes him worth the $3,000
·
dollars-a
~
week?
·
I am not saying I am anything
special, bu
t
it was like sharing an
in
-
joke with the character.
It
made
.
watching the movie fun,
a
nd that
·
is something I like to have when
•
I
The only deterrence would be if
.
and
.
promote the stor
y
-
to
:
a
dif:
ferent level or suspense
.
·
But \Ve are
goto
a
film .
.
·
.
·
'
As for Whitney Houston's debut
·
as an actress, I found her compe-
tent while sharing the screen with
Kevin Costner, but she seemed
flawed when it came to acting with
some kind of emotion.
I ha<:1-to get
'
a haircut like Kevin
Costner's
.
in this new
·
romantic
thriller from Warner Brothers .
.
"The BCJdyguard" may have
.
opened tC>
·
bad and mediocre
·
reviews from critics, but my guess
is it will be the top grossing movie
this and next weekend.
Why? Guys, if your girlfriends
say they want to see
·
this film
because it look
_
s good, unless
·
you
look like
.
Costner, you may want to
recons
i
der.
.
.
·
• Kevin Costner, one of the
_
top
men in Hollywood today and hot
off "Robin Hood" and "JFK,"
stirs up a huge crowd at movie
tpeaters with this less-than-great
offering.
.
Although women may be drawn
by him, the men may just be as at-
tracted to his co-star, singer (or do
we now say singer/actress?)
Whitney Houston, who has a new
album, a new husband, and, in a
couple of months, a new baby
.
But even though this couple may
have
their
opposite sex panting,
they seem less than enthusiastic
with each other on-screen. One of
the weak points of the movie is the
lack of chemistry between the
characters, who never really click
together even in the end. The movie
tries to deal with the way their per-
sonal lives will conflict with their
relationship, but never actually at-
tacks
the
issue, just
kind of brushes
it off in the beginning.
not so b~essed.
.
·,
·
· ,.
However, even though the sto
r
y
is dull at times and predictable
_
most of the time, there's still
•---■
--
------
-
--
She plays Rachel Marron, a
Critic's
corner
Kraig
_
.
·
DeMatte1s
·
popular singer/actress who has
been nominated for an Academy
Award.
Sound familiar? Whitney hopes
it
will,
but I do not expect it to hap-
pen this year. Her character is sup-
posed to be strong and feisty, and
Houston handles that well, but I do
not know if that same feistiness was
meant
.
to be portrayed when
- - - - - - - - - - - • pleading for Farmer to
'
stay and
·
·
..
.
,·
protect not only her but her son,
~nc:jugh there to make it i~ter~ti~g.
Fletcher, a quick and bright young
·
.
There are a Jot of great one-liners
boy who Farmer gets along with at
and some good scenes involving
once.
Costner with Houston, her chauf-
feur, and a musclebound guard,
but I especially liked the earlier and
·
later scenes when Frank Farmer,
ex
-
Secret Service agent turned
freelance bodyguard, uses some
.
security techniques to change the
life of his client and her estate.
They are nothing earth shatter-
ing, but they are neat little
.
clues
and
tests that
someone like
me
can
identify with arid figure out why
Farmer's doing
ii.
Why does
·
he
give different names while first
entering her estate? Why does he
close his eyes when pursuing his
assailant in the woods? What
·
Here is where that chemistry
fails, and both actors just seem to
whine their way to a compromise.
I do not want to offend anyone,
.
.
but it seems that howe\'.e.i:
gr~t an
--
actor Kevin Costner is supposed to
be, he just seems to whine his way
through a movie.
·
I love his movies,
do not get me wrong
,
but it sounds
like
if
does not get his way, he is
going to cry.
Costner, despite the reviews, will
have another money-grossing
movie under his belt. Will nothing
stop this man? Well, except for that
haircut, let us hope not.
...
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··
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ownl
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IW..,d_rl'l,t0,,..,,""16-,_
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lbtp{,urioTe,.;,,,;--P«(JI,
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--
·--
--
·--
-
- -
- - - -
-
THE CiRCLE; DECEMBER 3,
1992
3
The challenge of
,
becbming a student
•
again
by
DEBORAH ESTEVES
Staff Writer •
Many
.
adult students said
economics played a major role in
their decision to return to the halls
·
of academia. Burrow, 40, a full-
time student majoring in accoun:
.
May, 49, who
·
is
·
a parHime
.
graduate student majoring in com-
.
ptiter science/software
.
develop~
.
·
ment and also works for IBM, said
with all the changes taking place at
IBM, it made sense to "capitalize
before but now enjoys the
challenge
.
.
"I'm like a sponge, soaking up
all
this information!" she said. "I
love learning!"
would graduate from high school,
go to college, find a job and then
retire. Now, lifelong education is a
necessity. The average person will
change careers five or six times in
his or her lifetime."
· .
.
The house is finally quiet. The
children are asleep, the dishes have
been
·
been washed and put away
and t~e steady hum of the washing
machme can be heard in the
background.
.
.
.
While many tired parents are
winding down at 9:00
.
p.m., Bur-
row and others, like Ann Burrow
and Frank May, are gearing up for
several hours of peaceful, uninter-
rupted studying.
on
·
something I know." Software.
, 'f
•
.
.
As a single
·
parent with 'two
.
.
. ·
'm
.
like a sponge,
·
children, May said he divides his
· ·
·
-
time. between work, his children,
"T
.I.
had to lower my
standards of housekeep-
ing. The vacuuming, the
dusting, the yardwork
·
all
get pushed aside. ''
Burrow said: "I'm on the tail
end of females who stayed at
home, or who went to college, then
got married, had kids, and never
went to work. It's difficult.
I
find
myself in a period of transition,
torn between motherhood and a
career."
soaking up
all
this inf or-
their activities and school. He ad-
.
mation.
I
love learning!"
·
mitted his children "like seeing
Denise Stelman
.
Dad have homework to do."
"Instead of being in the ivory
They represent the growing trend
of adults who have returned to
school and struggle to
-
maintain a
balance of family, work and
academics.
Adult Student
tower and preaching to them about
doing
·
their homework, it gives a
Ann Burrow
Adult Student
The students said they agreed it
is
important to prioritize their lives.
ting and the mother of three boys,
offered several reasons
,.
for her
return to school: economics, self-
fulfillinent and college tuition for
her children. -"One day at work
I
asked myself, 'Do
I
really want to
deliver mail for the rest of my life?'
I
realized that I didn't," she said.
The faltsemester of 1992 saw a
29 percent increase over last year's
record high enrollment of full-time
adult students at Marist, said
Eleanor Charwat, executive direc-
·
tor of the Marist School of Adult
Educa,tion.
.
.. ~
-
.
.
.
.
.
:"f"
.
;
. _ .
'.
•
!he added income when she
. ·
"Economy has a lot to do with
returns
to the workforce will go
it," sh
_
e said. "Many have lost their
.
towards paying for her son's col-
.
jobs, while others realize there is
lege tuition. Her oldest is 15 and
.
more aid available for full-time
has only a few more
.
years o(high .
students than for part- time."
school before he heads off to
college.
different perspective on that," he
said.
. .
.
.
·
Denise
·
Stelman,
.
40, and the
mother of an 11-year-old daughter,
divides her time between school,
family and her own interior design
business. She said she is combining
the fields of business, communica-
tions and advertising in her studies.
Self-fulfillment and the need to
"feel really good about myself"
prompted her pursuit of a
bachelor's
·
_
degree.
·
"1
always felt
like a failure without a four-year
·
college degree," she said.
She admitted school was
something she had always hated
Despite
their
busy
and
sometimes frantic schedules, adult
students tend to work harder, are
more motivated
,
more focused and
strive for higher academic achieve-
ment, said Charwat. They unders-
tand the need for higher education
and because time and money are
critical factors, they want to get the
most out of their education.
"The whole role of higher educa-
tion has changed," said Charwat.
"One-half of the college students
in America today are over the age
of 25. There was a time when you
"I've had to lower my standards
of housekeeping
,
" said Burrow.
"The vacuuming, the dusting, the
yard work all get pushed aside."
May said he delegates more
responsibility to his children than
they would normally have. He does
not complain about the frantic
pace, though .
"Someday my children will be
grown and gone," he said, "and
l'II
have more than enough leisure
time. Right now I want to spend as
much time with them as
I
can
.
"
Stildents hate Mccann blockade
by
JASON VIANESE
Staff Writer
have tripled.
the situation, Diehl extended hours
The student population has
on Monday through Thursdays,
doubled since the Mccann Center
keeping McCann open until mid-
When Todd Coulson came to
opened 15 years ago. According to
night, instead of 9 p.m. Diehl also
Marist this year, he was looking
the Marist
·
Institute Research
prints schedules every Friday for
forward to practicing on the indoor
Center, approximately
I,
71
O
the following week so people won't
track and playing pick up basket-
undergraduates attended Marist in
be uninformed.
ball games in the McCann Recrea-
the fall of 1976. Currently there are
Tim Bourgess, a senior majoring
tion Center. Three months later,
3,787 undergraduates enrolled.
in business finance, isn't complain-
Coulson is still waiting.
Tom Diehl, Assistant Athletic
ing about being uninformed, he
"Sometimes I only get to play
Director and head of facility
iust does not like the information
(basketball) for 15 minutes before
management and operations, said
he is receiving from Diehl.
they close·the gym off,
"
.
Coulson,
that scheduling events is becoming
"I pay over $15,000 a year to at-
a fres}lman business major said
_
.
more
of
a challenge, because more
tend
.
this school and can't even get
·since
'
Mari st has increased its
people are requesting mo
·
re time.
into the school gym, except at odd
' enrollment ano
.
its roster
·
of
sp_orts;
:
· ·
·
Moria
·
Breen
;-
a junior po\i.ti.ca\
;
hours,'
:
·
sai.d Bourgess.
·
0 •
•
•
•
•
McCarin
•
is IJ<·ilonger
·
available
·ror
·
science
.
major who works at the
·
·
Athletes
·
and coaches have also
.
recreational use.
McCann
front
desk
said the fault
expressed their
dissatisfaction with
:
The number of varsity and club
is not with Diehl, but
with
what he
the gym
.
_
-
sports has incr
_
eased since
has to work with.
Dr. Howard Goldman, Director
·
McCann's opening in 1977
.
Varsi-
·
"He has too many respon-
of Physical Education and men
'
s
ty sports have gone from
13
Divi-
sibilities and obligations to uphold
soccer coach, said since the raised
sion
III
teams to 21 Division
I
for one gym," Breen said.
wooden basketball court was in-
teams (football will be Division I-
.
Diehl has been confronted with
stalled, practicing
s
occer in the gym
AA in
fair
1993) and club sports
scheduling problems and to help
has
become
difficult
and
dangerous.
Mariststudent smooches! amous model
for charity
.
.
.
.
.
by
AMY LETTERMAN
·
.
.
A voice off-camera said
,
"When
Staff
Writer
:
·
she wants to ligl1t up
.
.. give her a
ki°ss,
·
instead."
·
A
.
male supermodel s~ept a
. .
·
The smokeolit spot was includ-
·.
Marist student off her feet in an ef-
·
ed
_
-
in several newscasts
.
Tina
.
fort to get people to quit smoking
.
.
Mosetes,
-
director of public reta:
It
was part of a public service
.
an-
tions for the American Cancer
nouncement for the American Society, coordinated the project
Cancer Society.
and chose Cole to be the director
Doug Cole, assistant professor and executive editor.
of communication arts, said some
According to Mosetes, the media
·
of his current and former students
reaction to the PSA has
·
been un-
and
.
Fabio, the world's most
.
precedented in
.
her experience
.
photographed and painted model,
PSAs usually struggle for air time
.
volunteered for the project.
·
The and getting them on a newscast is
spots
.
premiered Nov.
-
18 at the ·rare
.
Cole said Fabio gave this PSA
Great American Smokeout celebri-
:
more credibility.
ty press conference in New York
"Fabio's presence is what set
City.
·
these spots apart from those done
The PSA shows Carolyn Powell,
in previous years," Cole said.
a senior, trying
.
to light a cigarette
Fabio has peen working volun-
but Fabio approaches her and
tarily with the
·
American Cancer
throws the cigarette away. After he
Society for almost seven years. He
throws the cigarette away, they do is currently the world's highest-paid
a ballroom dip and he kisses her.
novel model and has been on many
talk shows. Powell, who played op-
posite him, only found out the day
before she would be featured in the
spots ,vith him.
voice-over
She usually does technical work,
but
-
said it was !_!j.5e to have the
ca~era
f
turned.
~:
~
·
A section of West:56th Street off
Fifth Avenue was blocked off for
the shoot.
Other Marist College students on
the production crew were Daryl
Vallez, Teresa Sorrentino and
Tracy Low.
Ann Schroeder, a senior, provid-
ed the voice-over and a Marist
alumnus did
-
the voice-over in
Spanish.
Joseph Podesta, a 1989 graduate
who
-
works for Phoenix Com-
munications Group, loaned the
necessary equipment.
Cole and Podesta began editing
the material at 6 p.m. on a Friday
night and finished at 4 a
.
m. the
following morning. The project
was designed to serve as an ex-
tracurricular learning experience,
while also providing a valuable ser-
vice to the community, according
to Cole.
.
He finds the interaction of cur-
rent Marist students with former
students who are now in the in-
dustry to be the most interesting
aspect of projects such as the Fabio
spots.
Powell said she quickly found
that Fabio did not fit the stereotype
of a dumb, conceited model. He
came to New York from Italy to
model and
.
was discovered in two
days, she said.
He now lives in Los Angeles and
is writing and
·
trying to be a
producer.
.
.
Powell said Fabio got involved
with the project because he is
health-conscious and is against
smoking.
·
-··
='.
''Smoking
·
.
is not romantic. I
think it is sexy to kiss a girl who
does not smoke," Fabio told the
audience on the television program
Good Day New York. He said the
project brought together a cross
section of people with a common
desire to make people quit smok-
ing together
.
"Many
of those involved in these
shoots would never
have
met each
other had it not been for Tin:i
'
s
projects," sai_d_Fabio.
Carolyn Powell poses with model Fabio.
photo
by
Teresa Sorrentino
4
.
THE CIRCLE,
EDITORIAL
THE
CIRCLE
S.J. Richard,
editor
.
J.
W. Stewart,
sports editor
Dominick Fontana,
senior editor
Chrissy Cassidy,
senior editor
.
Carl 0leskewicz,
assistant editor
Joanne
Alfarone,
bu.;iness manager
Jason Capallaro, business manager
Erik Hanson~
distribution manager
Anastasia
B. Custer,
senior editor
Ted Holmlund,
associate editor
Margo
Barrett,
editorial page editor
Amy
Crosby,
associaJe editor
Jennifer Ponzlnl,
advertising manager
Matt
Martin,
photography editor
Dennis
Gildea,faculty
adviser
So this is Christmas
DECEMBER 3, 1992
I\M..J:eaJd
.,eµ~:,
(f(l
ih,f
or-e
I
b..,+
~-f'
Sovrds lite
(: ,._
o.n
awful
lot-m
do
for
s'l.;;5/f..ffr .••
[)C'
~
.
No, Virginia, there is no Santa Claus. He does not exist: not on 34th
Street; not in the North Pole; not in Poughkeepsie; not even in pictures
-
que, backwoods Vermont villages. He is a myth, a legend, a figment
of a child's imagination.
.
·
.
Poughkeepsie is lucky though.
It
doesn't need make-believe heroes
GOP heading
downhill
The carnival, football-like atmosphere of
like good, old
St.
Nick.
pre-election politics has quietly left the
Unlike many places through out this spoiled-rotten, give-me give-me
Marist College campus.
country, Poughkeepsie has
a
group of people who knowthere is nojol-
The proverbial political dust has settled
ly, old elf in a bright, red suit to dole out presents to.everyone from
and President-elect Bill Clinton
·
now faces
numerous new challenges
.
from political
age 2 to 92 regardless of economic class.
·
realists and critics.
.
Who are these enlightened souls?
.
.
.
.
·
.
.
It
will be difficult to accomplis_h eve~hing
No, they are not saints. They are just the people wlio participate in
Clinton promised in his campaign and the
press has wasted no time talking abQufit.
the Marist College Giving Tree ProjecL
But this is not the only post-election con-
The world needs more people like them. This project was started by
cem facing American voters and critics alike.
·
Republicans and do not hesitate to make
those moderate views
.
the core of their
political mind-set. These may remind peo-
ple of George Bush.
• ·
·
Rush Limbaugh, ultra-conservative radio
personality,. talk show host, author and
humorist, told Gabe Pressman, WNBC-TV,
Channel 4'.s poltical reporter the reason why
George Bush
•
lost
·
the election was not
because he let the conservative religious and
.
cultural right
:
dominate the GOP's conven~
tion in Houston but because he did not em-
a Marist student in 1990 and has been a success ever since. The Giving
There is a new fight in the political ring. - - - - - ~ , . . . , . - ~ - - - - - - ' - -
Tree enables approximately 20Joc<'.llJ~milies tohave presents under the
BuslinefssWh eeGk
.
desdcroibleds ipt as
.
a fi(1GghOtPfo)r
.
,:'the
Ch · t
t
I
·
d
·
·
d
·
·
f
·
1 ·
·
·
•
•
.
.
sou o t e · ran .
arty
.
ns ~as ree. t prov
_
1 es a y.ro~ er u
_
commumty
;
service opportumty
•
Since November 3rd's ~evestating loss for
~o Manst clubs,
.
ac1:ot
.
di11gJsfaJett~~
~e11!
t~ ~~t1b1e~derfby.Tiin
.
0_~~n.s
.
.
....
,.
rr~@;ni"p~~rn~.:?~~Ji;Jli:C
Rep):lblican
'
party .
and
-
Jennifer
Smith,
the
19Q2
'
projecCco
·
ordinatdrs:
·'~
'
·
:
,..
·
":l'
:.
·c
:,·
·
,
•z:-
.t,
.
·
:
.
,
0
' ·
'
has
:
been
::
shattered
t,
•
,~-
-
,
.
,_.
.
.. ·
.
'
•
.
True enough.
All
clubs should be interested in helping out in some way.
.
Dougla~s H~rbrecht and R1cahrd
s.
.
.
.
•
.
.
.
·
.
·
Dunham m BusmessWeek note that "back
.
However, m the same paragraph which asks club leaders to participate
in
1988, Bush presided over a fragile but
'
po-
in The Giving Tree Project, Owens and Smith say somethingthat seems
.. tent
coalition assembled by Ronald Reagan.
\,,Ss
·
f
VVords·~~~_,,. '
From A
.
Political
.
Ward
rather callous but is true enough.
. .
.
.
.
.
.
·
.
. .
·
Under t_he banner
·
of
:
J_ow tax~s. sm':ller
The letter states that helping with the project "always bodes well with
.
government, ~Ad assernve foreign_pohcy, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
. .
.
.
,,
· .
.
.
.
.
·
.
.
young voters Jomed with suburbamtes; ur- - - , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
College Act1v1tles and SGA. What a sad statement that
1s
about Manst
ban
.
blue-collar Catholics bonded
·
with
brace them enough.
.
.
students. It seems to say that if you won't help out because you want
Southemgood ol
'
boys and fundamentalist
Bush abandoned the conservative policies
to or find this project a worthy cause, then do it because it makes you
9hristians. The combination
_
supposedl7,
Ronald Reagan fought so hard to put h1
look good under the all powerful gaze of the Activities Office and stu-
gave the GOP a lock ~n the ~~1te House.
place .
.
It
is unfortunate but Bush yielded to
.
·
.
·
.
That
.
all
0
encompasmg coahtton captured
the D.emocratic Congressional majority and
dent government.
.
.
. .
the
:
young, the old, moderate and conser~
stopped
fighting for the continuation of
Granted, the more people who participate the more successful the
pro-
·
vative
.
Republ~cans and conservative
Reagan's political ideals.
ject could be but are under the table be"nefits like this necessary? This
Dem<?crats
a~~
m~ep~ndents co.mes along
·
Now that Bush is out~ the conservative
·
Id
·
•
·
·
.
·
·
. .
·
.
·
.
.
·.
·
.
.
.
·
·
once m a poht1cal lifetime or so 1t appears.
right not endorsed by ex-President Reagan
shou
not be VI~"'.ed as an ?PPOrtumty to suck-up to the powers that
George Bush was one ofthe lastmoderate
but brought into his coalition back in 1980
be but to some It IS .
.
So be It.
.
.
Republicans left in the GOP.
. ·
is fighting to re~establish control over their
Charity can be kind of like the newspaper business. You do whatever
·
·
The rivals for the soul of the GOP now
party.
it fakes to get the job done.
·
i~chide: Vice Pr~ident Dan Quayle, a tradi-
Civil war among the GOP has caused ex-
Th.
·
·
• •
h
• ·
.
•
.
:
I .
t1onal conservatwe, Pat Robertson, the
tremefractionalizationofpossiblecandidates
IS_PfOJectis 1~p9rtan~ e_noug to reqmrecoaxmg some peop e mto
leader of the far-right's Christian Coalition,
and supporters. The problem is the lack of
partakmg the the JOY of g1vmg. There ar.e hundreds of ornaments on
of course, there is always the dangerous
another Reagan, a man who had an uncan-
those trees. Mo
.
st of the gifts are not frivolous ones. Winter boots for
.
Patrick T Buchanan, also to the far-right.
ny talent for political seduction
.
He was the
a one-year old boy are a necessity during Hudson Valley winters.
~uch~an_stress~ racist ~ocial policies and
candidate for "change" in 1980 and 1984.
M
d •
h
h M
·
. , · ·
·
d
,
.
·
b 'ld"
·
an 1solat1omst foreign pohcy.
The Republicans had grown complacent
ost anyone wan ermg:t roug
.
anst s aca em~c
Ul
mgs, cam-
· Other names that the GOP is kicking
in the lastl2 years and we are nO\v beginn-
pus center or the Chapel the last few weeks has seen thttpaper ornaments
around as possible Republican front-runners
ing
.
. to recapture, as Apollo Creed from
asking for certain items decorating the· trees/ With just a few days left
f?r
.
the 1996 elect!o~ include: former Edu~-
"Rocky" would say, "the eye of the tiger."
before the ceremony when the gifts are distributed
<
the trees bows are
t1on Secretary William
J.
Bennett, Housmg
The <;:hristian right is the socially conser-·
·
~ .
.
·
.
·
;
.
·
.
.
'
·
·
·
and Urban Development Secretary Jack F.
vative branch of the GOP that dominated the
still littered with colored constructmn paper orna111ents.
.
Kemp and Texas Senator Phil Gramm.
convention and focused the Republican par-
Are people on campus so unconcerned and so insensitive to the pro-
If
Kemp
.
and Gramm ran
·
for the '96
ty, for better or for worse on "family
bl
ems of those less fortunate tha~ themselves that they are blind to need
nom~nation it would be a b!oody ~ontest. Ac~
values."
It
was this issue, combined
·
with
for a little generosity during what is supposed to be a season of giving?
cordmg to November 16 s Bus1!1essWeek,
economic criticism and failure that the GOP
·
.
.
.
.
.
·
·
•
Kemp and Gramm are "fierce nvals."
used to "kill" George Bush.
Are people m such due financial predicaments that they find themselves
.
The list of challengers for the
.
GOP
Bush's defeat came from within the GOP
unable
·
to spare some of their money to help a family in need?
nomination in '96 is long and distinguished
more
:
than from the strength of a large
Is Marist beginning to look a lot like Grinch-ville?
·
·
but we are not finished yet, m_o~erates like
Democratic coalition. It was
·
moderate
I
·
I
.
..
.
Massachusettes Governor Wilham Weld,
Republicans and more liberal-leaning
~agme on Y some members_ of you: family rece1vmg presents on
·
former, New Jersey Governor Thomas H.
Republicans that left the party and signed up
Chnstmas. Talk about depressmg holidays.
Kean, and "battered" California Governor
for the Clinton/ Gore party cruise.
It is understandable that npt everyone is in a financial position to help
Pete Wilso~ are possible pretenders to the
So now we have, Captain Stewbing and
but many people are and still do nothing.
throne a~d1cated by Bush.
.
Yeomen Purser
.
Gopher at the helm of the
·
•.
f
11
•
, •
·
The
..
differences
,.
among
.
possible new
·
Love Boat for· the next four years.
.
.
..
Th~nk_ u Y, some people reahze t~at tis th~ seas?n. They do not stroll
Republicaris~:i're.as
·
numerousas tlie);uppos~
-
The problem with embracing the religious
by while 1m~ges of wild weekend parties dance m their heads. Some people
ed "new Democrats'~ that put President-elect
-
right is
.
the lack of a broad-base of voters
stop and decide to help.
Bill Clinton in the White House.
·
who share those views. You will massacre
These people are to be commended. Whatever their reasons they have
Buchanan !s to the right of Genghas Kah~.
future Republican support with candidates
·
· . ·
•
.
.
. .
'
The Republtcans would make a drastic
like Buchanan and Robertson.
done somethmg admirable by helpmg out families they do not even know.
mistake putting him on any ticket, except a
Greater political success is achievable.with
Good tidings to those who participate because ultimately it does not
one-way ticket to Cleve
.
land.
men like Gramm, who extol the virtues of
matter whether they are bitten by the graciousness bug
of
the holidays;
According to Business~eek'_s Habrecht,
balancing the budget or Kemp, who values
have
ulterior motives for impressing someone in authority· or just hap-
Gove~or_ Weld a~d th<?se hke him who hold
tax cuts and policies aimed at better
.
.
.
.
. .
'
"perm1ss1ve social vtews" and endorse
capitalism.
pen
to be
compassionate people whose hohday spmt lasts longer than
"economic pragmatism" are too much like
Aaron ward
is
The Circle's
the
12
days of Christmas.
George Bush. Weld and Kean are moder~te.
political columnist·
THE CIRCLE;
V1
EWPOINT
DECEMBER 3, 1992
5
-----------------------------
Dubious
·
culinary achievements; beware of brownies
.
''Hey Brad, can I have one of
these brownies ? "
.
"No,
I don't think you really
want them."
"Why
·
not, they look really
good."
· "Believe me, these ones are a
bad batch."·
''Then why don't you just chuck
'em ?"
"Just leave them alone; alright
?"
I thought he was acting like a
jerk, but my good friend was sav-
ing me from a great deal of pain
and embarrassment and_
I thank
him for it.
gender and their constant maltreat-
ment of him. There were manv
times that Jason would question
himself about how girls felt about
him.
·
His roommate told me a story
____ about one of these demented
Out of the many forewarnings
that my brother had instructed me
with about college before my
DAYE BARRETT
·
departure, not one was more evi-
·
dent than: "Dave you're going to
meet the most unusual variety of
people that you
·
ever will in your
whole lifetime." Granted,
I ex-
pected maybe someone who wor-
shipped Joe Franklin
·or_
whose
parents were the same sex or
something~ but nothing could have
prepared me for what lay ahead.
There was this guy on my floor
last year whom
I'll
protect by nam-
ing him Jason Smaller. Even
though he got the academic boot
from Marist, he was still a nice guy
and anyone who knows me knows
·
that
•
the last thing I would ever
want to do with this column is to
offend anybody.
Anyway, like all tragic heroes
from Greek mythology, he had a
few character flaws that tended to
overshadow any good quality that
he had might have possessed.
The first one was his self-
destructive attitude about the other
dialogues that he experienced one
time when Jason had just gotten
off of the phone with one of his
"prospects".
Roughly, it went like this:
"How can she not like me?
Oh, you're such a jerk, how the
hell can you expect anyone to like
you?
Nah, I'm not such a bad guy, am
I?
.
Face
it
man, you're.just a damn
loser."
· Brad could recall numerous oc-
casions where Jason would battle
will
himself over .tough issues like
the weather. how much food
should one consume when hungry,
and the ever popular should I wipe
my caboose going toward the lower
back, or just jam my cornhole with
·
a loose finger?
·
·
In other words; living with Jason
was more of a task than
.
_
any
schoolwork that any teacher could
hand out.
-
·
What was Sheen's line in
The one thing that looms as his
"Apocalypse Now"?; "I asked for
worst characteristic was his out-
a mission and because of my sins
wardly blatant
·
disregard of any
they gave it to me. And when it was
form of personal hygiene that man
over I never asked for another."
or animal usually possessed. I saw
If you knew that your body was
a walking genepool of mutated
filth, what would influence this
decision: You know. dried snot on
Jason was more of a man of ac-
him shower maybe four times the
the sleeves of my shirt really gives
tion,rather than that of being one
whole year at the absolute most.
it a nice shiny coating,
I
think
I'll
whose eloquence defined himself.
His attitude towards doing laun-
wear it like this for the rest of the
The damage that leapt from his
dry could be compared to the white
semester.
hands as a
·
result of being shunned guy on "The Jefferson's" attitu~e
.
by women couldn't exactly be call-
about not coming next door to con-
Anyway, back to my opening
ed action.
stantly bother George and Wheezie
fable.
Husker Du has a·song that is a with stupid questions.
clear portrayal of his attitude on
Simply put, he just didn't do it.
lonely Fri.and Sat. nights: "Dead Clothes for him could be worn for
Set on Destruction".
weeks at a time without change or
One time while waiting in the being cleaned.
Champagnant lobby for
the
The thing that added
insult
to in-
elevator after coming back from jury was that he was on crew.
being rejected by some lucky co-ed,
Typical day: he wakes up for
he did a stupid thing. The class en-
crew in a flannel shirt, does his
casement that holds weekly events morning regiment with this same
was shattered by one of his bar-
shirt, and then proceeds
to
wear
it
baric punches. A security guard ran to all of his daily classes. Saying he
over in response and our poor soul smelled bad was like saying a hur-
just looked at him, Jost as ·ever.
ricane has the capacity to blow out
Then when he made it up to our the candles on your birthday cake.
floor, he punched a piece of sheet
If you didn't know him, there is
metal against the hallway, until it no way to imagine what he was
later fell off, only to receive further
like, trust me.
punishment from
him. ·
The thing that confuses me the
Jason used to ravage any and all
of Brad's food·no matter where he
hid
it
in the room. To teach him a
much deserved lesson, Brad made
a huge batch of brownies that con-
tained
more laxative than
chocolate.
Like bluefish to chumming,
Jason
·ate
just about every single
bite that his stomach could ahmrh
For a few nights after, Brad,
who slept in the bunk above Jason,
was joyfully treated to constant
sounds of him farting with
increas-
ing movement to try and get his
Many a time I would awaken
most about this entire episode is
from a drunken slumber to hear that everyone who lived with him, decimated bowels in a comfortable
mass upheaval and annihilation of constantly info~med him about the position. He graced the porcelain
some dorm furniture outside my
slow degenerat!o~ of ~ny healthy, god with his darkened bottom
door at all hours. Without ever
normal cells withm his body.
more in that week than he ever
seeking the identity of the distur-
Kennedy dido
't
see the bullets would before or after. Oh, well,
bance,
I
would just yell some
coming, nor Pee Wee the cops in doe will hunt.
obscenities and his last name and
the back of cultural enrichment
the noise always died as a result of cinema (word has
it
that if his kid-
it.
_.
die show lasted for one more
Dave Barrett thinks whistling the
When people think of him
,
season, a new character that would
opening chords to the Core's
"A
though, they don't immediately
become a new friend_ of Pee Wee's
Forest" helps to relax one's mind
think of his Neanderthal reasoning
would be named Billy Baloney~,
in order to perform bathroom
with his hands or his lack of but Jason was well aware of his
·
functions when necessary.
bedpartners.
problem.
·
Crew
.
crooris
over lack
·-
of
·
coverage
Editor:
works. Staff reporters for any
·
more than happy to provide infor-
Having just read the "Thursday
newspaper usually go out and get
·
mation on our fall season (such as
Morning Quarterback" article in
their stories; covering topic;s about the
·
fact that the men's and
.
the Nov.
12, 1992
issue of The Cir-
which their subscribers
are
women's varsity eights won their
cle,
I
am
_
puzzled and perplexed.
.
interested.
events at the Fall
1992
Metro Area
While virtually all of the varsity
While crew may be a sport that Rowing Championship) and on the
sports that compete in the
fall
(and
is little understood by the average sport of rowing in general.
one club sport) were mentioned in
·
sports reader at Marist, there is a
Perhaps a format can be set at
·
the coverage, one was not-
_
crew.
·
segment of the population at
·
that time which will insure a good
Perhaps this was an innocent
_
Marist that is interested in the line of communication
·
for the
oversight.
.
_
.
-
-
team's performance.
reporting of future
.
crew team
.
From my perspective, though, it
.
.
At the very least, there are 75 activities.
-
\vas the continuation of a long~
-_
team members (whose tuition
Thanks in advance
for
your con-
.
standing pattern of neglect.
·
. dollars help pay the expenses for sideration in this matter.
_
.
For the pasuwo years, there has.
·
The Circle)
that
read
the paper and
been minimal coverage of the crew
·
-
want to read about their endeavors.
team in the Circle, mostly outright
·
Who knows? An article explain-
omission. If this has been the result ing the sport of·rowing may serve
of myself or team members not an educational purpose for sports
writing the articles and submitting fans at Marist and it may even
them to your staff, then we must
-
create interest in the oldest inter-
accept
·
responsibility and
_
it
is collegiate sport in America and at
under
-
standable why there has
Marist.
·
·
been poor coverage.
·
I propose that a staff member
To my knowledge, though, this from The Circle contact me or one
is
.
not the way good reporting of the
.
team captains. We
will be
Little things· mean a lot
&litor,
The little things mean a lot!
The Women Soccer Club would
lik
_
e to take this opportunity to
thank those who helped keep us
smiling throughout our season.
Even though the Circle only
covered us at the end of our season,
it
was ~ice
to final1y know someone
was out there who cared about our
season.
Thanks to
J.
W. Stewart for in-
cluding us in his columns.
We
may
not
have been a varsity team this
season, but you helped us feel like
one.
Special
thanks to
Mile
Malet,
Mary
Hellman and George Browne
because without their support, we
probably wouldn't have made it
through the season. Sorry if we
drove you crazy but remember it is
all
part of the deal.
It is too bad that there aren't
more people like J.W. Stewart,
Mike Malet, Mary Hellman and
George· Browne here at Marist
because
if there were,
we
probably
would have been a varsity team by
.
now! Guess all we can do now is
wait and keep smiling!
.
Thanks again.
.Kate Casde
1
Vice President
of Women
Soccer Oub
Larry Davis, Head coach
of
Men's and Women's Crew
Happy hour
for seniors
·
Editor:
Attention Seniors! There will be
a
21 Society Happy Hour on this
Saturday night from Sp.m.-10 p.m.
in the River Room. Admission is
only
$1.
We hope to see all seniors
who are 21 and over there. A pair
of tickets to the Senior Formal will
be raffled off during the night.
Don't
.
Forget
Saturday
·
December 5, 1992, 8p.m. in the
River Room.
April Buther,
Nanci Forman,
Darlene Ebeheart~
Matt McQueenie,
Organizers
of the 21 Society
6
THE CIRCLE, DECEMBER 3;
19~2
-
HARASSMENT
pen to you," said
·
Caroline Rider,
niversary' of th~
.
Hill
·
hearings and
•
.
ment training-becaus
_
e
,'
~e
.
could
lot
.
of ,vomen think they can
.
wait
·
·
mon practice. She said she
.
assistant professor ofmariagement
recently two other sexual haras
·
s-
.
have been reformed," said Myers.
until the procedure is over arid
.
then
:·
... continued from
·
page 1
thought it was something you had
·
studies,
.
.
.
.
meilt cases made headlines.
·
,
"And ifit weren't true tlien;they
·
.
.
apply to the EEOC:Th'ey
·
have to
·
.
to accept,,,. said Joanne Myers,
Hostile casesinvolve co-workers
.
.
Mayor David
_
Dinkins appoints
can protect themselves.
In
this type
file with the EEOC
.
at the saine
political · science
professor.
or
·
supervisors
.
making your
meritofRandy Daniels drew
a sex-
·
of power situation you need to take
time as the
-
procedure.''
.
.
.
·
.
"Females are taught, if you play
workplace
intimidating
'
by using
.
ual harass!rient charge
.
from
.
·
a
some action."
·
When an incident of sexual
·
with the big boys-disregard sex-
nasty sexual jokes, rude remarks,
•
.
former
co-worker,
Barbara Wood.
.
Nowadays, companies have sex-
harassment takes place, in addition
ual harassment.''
unwanted touching, and practical
And Senator Bob Packwood was
ual harassment policies and in-
to the investigation, other
·
·
steps
In the book Women and Men in
jokes, said Rider.
accused of sexually harassing
vestigations are mandatory.
should be taken according
·
to
Management, Gary N. Powell
In some cases, women sexually
several women
-
co-workers.
"DuPont, the company, has one
Myers.
·
quotes the definition of sexual
harass males, however, the majori-
However,
·
this time,
·
instead
..
of
·
·
of the most extensive sexual harass-
"If
there is a guilty party then a
harassment from the US Office of
ty of cases it
appear:5 · involve
criticism directed at the
.
accused
merit prevention and educational
whole range of recourses could be
Personal
Management,
as
men harassing women.
·
(Randy Daniels), criticism,vas aims
.
programs in the country, including
taken. Recommend counseling,
deliberate or repeated
.
unsolicited
"Available estimates suggest that
ed at
·
Dinkins.
·
·
a 24-hour hot line, seminars and,
sensitivity training (a movie or
verbal comments, gestures, or
at
least
one in
ten
and
.
possibly as
"If men took sexual harassment
..
when necessary, a team of harass-
course about sexual harassment)
physicalcontactofasexualnature
many as one in two working
seriously,evenan hourbeforethe
ment investigators," wrote Ellen
andcommunityserviceforthesexa
which are unwelcome.
·
women experience sexual harass-
appointment, they
:
could of held
an
Rapp in Working Women.
ual harrasser. Everyone involved
Mye~s also said sexual harass-
ment at work," write·s editors
investigation,"
.
said Myers
;
Along with
:
investigations, in
might take sensitivity train_ing,"
ment is any type of action, either
of Women at Work .
.
"Individuals
·
"lf
Randy Daniels was ap-
order for a sexual harassment case
said Myers.
..
.
verbal, physical, nonverbal action,
w1th
0
th·e least amount of power in
pointed bank teller and
10
minutes
.
to go to court, the person being
Clea
·
rly, the world has seen a
or communication
in
which either
society, meaning women in most
before the appointment it was said
harassed mus_t file a complaint with
glimpse of sexual harassmentcases
a male or female cannot conduct
cultures, are the most
.
likely to be
that$40,000 was gone from his last
.
the EquafEmploymentOpportuni-
.
which have made the evening news .
.
their job in a safe and supportive
harassed
;
In a
.
patria~chal society
job, would Dinkins hold
off
with
ty Commission (EEOC). ·
.
Iri addition to the Hill and Daniels
environment. "It's one thing to say
that
rewards males for ag-
an investigation? By going
.
ahead
"Employers
are· i;equired to have
cases, incidents of sexual harass-
you are good
looking
in that
gressiveness and domineering
and appointing Daniels they don't
.
a policy about sexual harassment.
ment occur at offices and colleges.
·
.
sweater. It's
·
another. to say-:oh
behavior and females for passivity
care if women may be working in
Look at the institution's policy and
Marist 's sexual harassment
you
fill
out that sweater
.
nicely,"
.
,
_apq compliant behavior, sexual
a
hostile environment."
if you think the procedure is
·
policy involves two directors. Ha
said Myers.
,:
."'
·
"
narassment almost may be regard-
Although Daniels stepped down
reasonable then follow it
;
if not
student was harassing another stu-
Sexu
·
a1 harassmentspHts into
t\ycf
,
,
·
e
_
d
·
as a:
:
male prerogative;'' wrote
and did riot agree to the appoint-
then go to an attorney," said
dent then Carol Coogan, director
distinct forf!ls kno,".~
as
quid
pro
".; ·
Powell'
in' Women and Men in
ment, and
-
he recently filed a
Rider.
.
of human resources would handle
quo and
·
a
"
hostile
,
environmen
f
::
' :
Management.
.
lawsuit against Wood, Myers said
''You only have a. few months
the case.
·
However, if the ca~e in-
case.
Sexual harassment existed before
an
investigation
should have been
since the last time of sexual harass-
volved
.
two or more staff members
"In
.
quid quo
·
pro cases your
the
Hill
hearings
and
continues to
conducted.
ment. Then if you don't fiie
·
with
then Gerard Cox, vice president of
supervisor says sleep with me or I'll
exist in the small towns of America
"They should have not made the
in the EEOC then you will not be
student affairs would control it.
fire
you. That
is the most extreme
and the big cities, like New York
announcement and see if the allega-
able to go to court. So many pea-
In the past four years, only two
case, you agree to do something
City.
tion
were true.
If
it is true then he
·
pie follow the procedure and you
·
sexual harassment cases have been
sexual or something bad will hap-
·
October marked the
.
first an-
should go through sexual harass-
do an appeal and it takes time.
A
reported
to
Coogan.
·
<.tbttstmas
tu
++:rrct
.
~nbt•
-·:
.
.
•
-·
AN S.P.C. SEMI°
FORMAL
Date:
Sat~rd
_
ay,
·
o
·
ecember
5,
1992
Tiine: 10
Pl\4'~ 2AM
.
Place: I>ining Hall
·
$3 Single ~
:
$5
Couple w/Marist ID
1la~tutl ~~e«~~
_
t>tU
_
b
.
t
~~a~~
tl.lt
~
·
((.bU~tt\\
~
-
~
~
,
~~~~~
-
'
"
0
~
-
"ll
.
.
.
.
,
·
C UPON
THE
:
HAlit SHACK
.
.
FULL SERVICE
,
• FOR M~N
AND
WOMEN
'
•-------------
.....
I
H€Xus
··
Perm
$1
aoo
'
I
L.
~\
·
Cu!
&
Se!
~-----------------~-'
--------
HAIR CUTS
i500
(Full Stylfng
Extra)
.
NOTE:
Longer hairortinted
hair
may
requile adtfai'Jnal
charge.
49 Academy
St.
Po'k.
SPIRAL
'.
PERM
.
NOWs~ooo
Reg. $65;00
.
485-4946
110N.
THRUSUN.10-f;°PM
WALK.WSWELCCME
· .
..
CBDS
Boosting Alcohol
Consciousness
Concerning
the Health
·
of
University Students
- Informational Meeting -
ON:
Monday;oecember7th
AT:
9:15 PM
IN: Campus Center Room
ALL WELCOME TO ATTEND!
- Awareness Not Abstinence -
ROUTE
.
. .. continued from page
1
I
~ight relocate but wilJ wait until
the demolition begins.
"We're abiding by the DOT and
the state's rules," said a
represen-
tativ
.
e
from the truck rental
business
at
205
Delafield Street.
"Since
the state has already bought
the property, there isn't anything
·
we can do."
.
The state contractors are
scheduled
to
bid in
stages
on
.
one
Preparation
in
·
Poughkeepsie
for
upcoming
exams:
LSAT begins
Jan.
7
GRE begins
Feb.
20
Smart
.
people read the fine print. Smart
of
the projects in March, and it will
rewarded in April and the design
manager saidthe construction will
start
,
shortly after.
Clark said this particular area of
Route 9, along with the intersection
leading to Washington St~eet, was
.
part of a
,
"Memorandum
of
Understanding•~ from
,
,
the
1988
Rebuild New York Bond
:
Act-,:,-a
state approved project which liste
_
d
:
'
-
.
-:
Route
9
as one of the roadways to
be funded from the borid issue.
·
'' When we reconstruct
:
a
highway )ike Route
.
9, we look at
·
the existing road now, and..that
same road 20 years in the future to
satisfy our
.
criteria,'
.
' Clark said
.
who works for
.
Region 8 ofNe;
.
York State, which includes Coium-
.
bia, Dutchess, Orange, Putnam,
Rc,ckland, Ulster and Westchester.
Supporf the
Giving
•
Tree Projecf
.
.
.
"- 1
REE
·
·
.
..
~
.
~
,·
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
~
--
·
.
.
.
.
·
..
.
.
C:-,
.
..
.....
·
people
want
small classes (fewer than 15
sludenJS),
4
proctored diagnostic
examitu,.
twns,free e:ara help wiJh
the
instructor, and
guaranteed score impravemtlllS. Smart
.
people prepare wilh
us.
THE
PRINCETON
REVIEW
.
We Score More!
Choose your ornament from
the trees
around
campus
and
bring them to the
Tree Lighting Ceremony
Sunday evening 8:00 P.M. Marist Chapel
.
THE
.
CIRCLE,.DECEMB~R 3,
1992
Foxes slin to
3~2,
face
·
tfie
.
·
aan
..
·
next
•'
..
·.
.·'
,.-
•
,
·
:•
,
-:
·
-::
,
.·
;,
._
.
_._•
.
-
.
.
.
.
.
b)'TERI
L
.
STEWART
·
.
.
Staff Writer
·
·
·
.
::.
Lloyd Goldstein's focus this year is
t6
have
a
better
:
attitµde.
·
·
Goldstein, the new women's swimming coach
·
;
:
has cre
_
ated
a:
n
_
ew
.
goal
for
.
the Red Fox swimmers. According to
.
sophoniore
.
Denelle
,
:
HeHer,
Goldstefo wants
t'o
eliminate negative attitudes both in the pool and
.
out.
:
"lfyou don't have a good attitude you can't acco111plish anything,"
.
Heller said.
·
.
.
.
·
_.
_
_
. .
.
.
.
Heller
.
also added, "Coach says that if you have a positive attitude
about yourself, then you'll swim better in the end."
.
_
.
•
.
.
.
The team, on their way to
·
accomplishing these goals, lost a tough meet
against Rider College,
134-99,
on Nov
.
21
at theJam~
J:
McCann Center
~~-
.
.
.
.
.
.
According to Goldstein, Rider is the toughest team in the conference
and he feels that within a year ortwo, Marist (3~2 on the year) can be
:
more competitive.
.
. ·
·
· ·
•
_
-
.
:
. .
.
·
·
·
·
In swimming action, freshman
·
Christy Radcliff placed first in the
200-yard breaststroke with
a
time of 2:38.34
·
(only 8/10 of a second
.
off
.
the school record she set against Fairfield University onNovember 10).
Radcliff also placed second in the 200-yard individual medley-a per-
sonal best.
''(Rider) was a tough team, and it wasn't one of our better meets,''
Heller said
.
"But
I think we probably
.
could have done better against
them."
·
.
-
.
..
In women's diving action, sophomore Jennifer McCauley took first
place in the I-meter dive and second in the 3-meter
.
dive
.
.
According to Rick Bolstad, the diving coach, McCauley's opponent
is one of the best divers she
will
run into
·
this year.
..
Pig pile!!!
7
"She (McCauley) needed to be a little sharper, but sh
e
is right where
sh
e
should be at this point in the season," Bolstad said .
.
Tim Massette finds himself surrounded by Columbia defenders in a recent rugby match. Marist
defeated the Lions 23-22.
Circle
photo/ Christy Green
The Red Foxes
·
also took on Iona on November 19. They won by a
score of 132-74
.
.
BBALL
... continued from page 8
"If
I
hit those two foul shots, we
·
would have brought the game _into
overtime," Ingles said.
Ingles scored 20
·
points
-
(on
15
of them on three-pointers
against ninth-ranked Florida State
in the preseason National Invita-
tional Tournament.
.
7-of-11 shooting) and grabbed four
.
The combinatio
·
n of Lake,
rebounds to
·
lead the Red Fox
·
attack
.
Buchanan and sophomore Gregg
Chodkowski held Brown to 14
Buchanan
-
chipped
.
in with 17
points and nothree~point bucke~s.
points and six rebounds to balance
The road
·
does not get any easier
·
the charge.
·
·
for Marist.
·
.
Magarity said the defense di~
a
The Red Foxes win
·
travel to
~
good job
stopping Siena's lead1.ng
Syracu
s
e
OI\
Friday to play Virginia
,
a
i
:-.
-
·
.
scorers, especially fifth-year se
_
mor
Commonwealth in the Carrier
·
l
·
·
Mike
Brown who scored 28 points,
Classic.
·
a
·
SWlM
·
·
.
.
. .
l
·
.
. ~cc3°nfihJed
t~om
page
a
·
i.
.
backstroke,
200
butterfly
.The men's diving team
·
was
~
<t~d 200
breaststroke, resp
e
ctively
.
reduced to one when freshman
.
ii
·
Todd Moses was
_
kep
t'
ouf of
.
th
e
.
J
.
The medl
~
y and freestyle relay
,vater for three ,veeks -with ari ear
.
~
squads also topped Iona. Van
injury. All. of the duties fell on the
·
a
Wagner
·
was
-
not utterly disap-
shoulders of soph9more
.
Jamie
'
i
,
.
,
pointed about the
_
loss fo Rider; in
~
Nagurney, who was forced to dive
j
stead
;
he expressed
•
hope for the
in the three-meter event as well as
i
:
•
·
·
conference championships, which
.
his usual one-meter.
..
.
.
,
,
i.'
his
'
team still has
IO
weeks to
·
.
The team will face Seton
-
Hall on }
,
.
.
Prepare.
Saturday and ihen St.
..
Fr
_
ancis
::
L
''We
.
were competitive in ~II
(N
.
Y
.
) one week later. Both
'
are
:
~
·
-
events," he said. '-'
-
We can compete
·
meets which should translate into
:
~
:
.
with them or
it
least come close for
wins
·
for the
·
hopeful Red
·
Foxes
;
-
!
·
·
th
__ e.;..;.c.o.n.~e.r.en
..
c.e ..
c_h_a_m_p.io.n.
·
s.h.ip•·•"--•sa_i __
dv_a_n
____
W.;..;a;;,g=ne_r.
·
·
·
&
•
J
YOU SHOULDN'T
"
HAVE
-
-
TO
:
·
cRAM
-
ON
YOUR WAY
-
HOME!
.
.
,I\
I ;:'
jl\\\.Ji''n-.:
L
I
,
.
Ji
t
l' ;_:
h,~J,,,..--""
~~j~
i~
·
·
·
\,
No Other Bus Une Offers Lower Fares For Stuc;tents!
Special Student Discounts
OVER
$3.75
OFF
Regular One
Way
to New York City!
For schedule and fare lnfonn~lpn call:
Arlington -Arlington Getty, 813 Mam;St.: 454-3530
Poughkeepsie- SUb
City,
246 Main Mall.:
485-3579
.
..
©/HORTL!NE®
;,
I
l
f
:
~
~
I
j
1!
.E
X
3
l
~
W
hen you get a Chase card, you get
everything
but
an
annual fee.
That's because we've created Chase
Student Services5M* -
an entire group
of special benefits created to make your
life a little easier
at school.
,.
•
,.
,
•
•
,
• •
.
-
-
• ~-
,.-
-.,
- •
•
·
,,.
'-,
•
- -.•
'"
-
I
•
..
.
,.,
•
••
•·
•
•
·
'
.
:
.
.
. _
For example, when you rake off
during Winter
.
finally, A
Credit
Card
Without
A
Charge
Already On It.
[Nofee first
year.}
anci
Spring
Break,
Chase Student
·
Travel will take
off with you.
In
fact, you'll get
5%
off the lowest
prices you find on
airfares,
train
tickets, car rentals
and even hotels.
And when you're back at school
spending time on the phone, you don't
have to spend a lot of money. Just sign
up for ChasePhontfM at no extra charge
and you can use your Chase card to
make long distance calls at MCI®s low
rates.
Or, if you decide
to
move off cam-
pus, we'll even write you a credit refer-
ence letter to help you get an apartment.
So
pick up an application on cam-
pus and apply
·
for your
~
,
,
Chase card today.
p...'8
t'
\
·
we won't
even charge
you for the
stamp when
you mail it in.
..
.
L.
_•
'' We
're.
~
not
playing cupcake
STAT
_.
Of
-
:THE
.
WEEK:.
,
.
'
·
"teams.
-
~'
'
'
_
_
-.
Fred
.
Ingles
'
SP
·
o·
'
·
'
R
'
TS
The
:
-
tiockey
·
te
·
ari,
.
did not
lose
a
·
.
g~r.ne
'
in
'
November.
'
'
'
' '
.
. .
THE
_
CIR
_
·
CLE,
;
'
'
_
·
'
.
8
.
CreW
finishes
·
seaso
·
n
strong
cagers
loS¢
.
···
1¢'1.d,
·
dfoP
hdm~
operier.
by
TED HOLMLUND
-
Staff Writer
.
The
men's basketball teain, with Siena's help, pulled defeat out of the
jaws ofvictory in the home opener at the McCann Center,
- _
-
.
.
The Red Foxes had a 52-42 lead with
11
:06 remaining in the game.
However, the Saints went
on
a 20-8 run for the rest of the game and won.
Marist did cling to a 58-57 lead until senior Lee Matthews scored a
layup with a 1:51 remaining to put
_
Siena ahead for
·
good.
·
.
Trailing 61-58 with under :28 remaining, the Red Foxes were looking
'
for three-point specialist Andy
-
Lake,'but he was well covered.
·
Ma
'
rist had to settle for a layup froinjunior lzett
-
Buchanan which cut
the lead to 61-60 with
:06
seconds
'
left.
_
·
.
-
·
_
- -
_
-
.
-·
-
.
A second after
.
Buchanan's layup, the Saints'
'
Brian Bidlingmyer \\'.as
.
-
fouled by junior point guard Dexter Dunbar. Bidlingmyer made one of
.
two
-
free throws to ice
the
victory for the Saints.
.
.
·
- .
• .
After the last timeout, Head Coach Dave Magarity said the team was
.
_
looking for Lake to shoot
'
the three~point shot. «We ran Lake off a double
screen;" he said. "They-did
:
a good
•
job covering him."
·
·
The Saints held the fifth~year seriior to six points on
_
2-7
:
shooting.
Magarity said the dub can not' dwell on
·
the one defeat.
·
''-W_e can't
get too high or too low,•~ the seventh~year
-
coach said. ''.We have over
30 games to play. We can't allow this to
.
affect the whole season."
Some of the players
,
said it was Siena's capability of making the big
plays and their own failure to produce in pressure situations .that deter-
mined the outcome of the game.
.
·
"We had too tnany turnovers towards the end," Dunbar said. "They
hit the key free throws and the big shots."
_
"We're not playing cupcake teams," senior Fred Ingles said. "They
are a good teain and have a good chance of winning their conference
(Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference)'. We looked really good, but fell
·
apart in the last minute."
Free throws were a big factor that determined the final score of the
game. Siena hit most of its clutch free throws-Marist did not.
In the final I:J 7, trailing 59c58, Lake and Ingles both missed the front
~
-
end of one-and-ones. During this time period, Siena
_
made three out of
four foul shots.
·
;
..
see
BBALL
page
7
►
Despite los
,
s to
Rider,
·
men of f
:
to
quick
-
start
·
·
-
by
,
~IKE
wA{sH
·
--
·
t~ijp~~~~t\:i~~
~~~~i~
·
·
Staff
Writer
breaststroke
.
with
,
a time· of
.
A
pair of wins over Central
_
2:
2
1.55;
.
lnth{400,yard inedley
-
·
~
~
:
..
~
:
:
'
·
,»
_
Senior Mike Schreiber goes up strong in
.
the Red Foxes'
62-60 season-opening loss to Siena.
·
Circle
photo/Matt Martin
_·
at the
·
·
Metros
by
ANDREW HOLMLUND
Staff Writer
The men's and
·
women's crew
teams recorded respectable finishes
during
.
the fall campaign. The
men's
'and
women's varsity eight
-
boats each grabbed
·
first place at
the New York Metropolitan Area
·
Championships while the women's
varsity four
·
and
_
men's and
women's lightweight four placed
third .
.
· .
"We rowed pretty well," Head
Coach Larry Davis said. "We
showed some good boat speed."
At the Head of the Fish, the
novice women's eight finished 10th
while
the
novice meri's eight end-
ed 15th.
Marist also captured second in
the men's eight and seventh in the
·
women's eight at the Head of the
Hudson.
·
In its biggest meet of the cam-
paign, Marist marked 20th of 49 at
the Head of the Charles. Davis said
he hopes his crew will make more
improvements for the upcoming
spring.
"l
would like to see us in the top
five
of the N.Y. State Champion-
ships," he said. "During the off-
season, we need to get stronger
because we
will
really have to work
for our goal."
·
leers blow late lead
V
·
S •.
Siena
·
_
tally wa:s the1·unior's eig
·
hth on
_
the
·
back as six different Marist players
by
ANDREW HOLM~UND
II
d
·
f·
·
d
1
year.
_
.
.
_
co ecte seven ITSt-peno goa s.
.
Staff '(llrite_r,
:
.
.
,
.
:
, ..
·
·
-.
Froni"there,it
'
was all Siena as
Sophomo~" Sc~tt J~cques
-
Tlie MarisC:hckkey,
'
ieam,
which
-.
the
Saihis
scored th
e
finai"two goals
.
started the scoring spree by nabb-
.
was undefeated thro
_
ughout
in the final session, one at 9:48 and ing his first goal of the season on
November,
:
wiil be looking to keep
the other at 2:18.
f
an
_
assist from Torn Schlie
.
its
'.
uribeaten
:-
streak alive this Satur-
First-year Head Coach Kevin
Connecticut State and ro
·
na and
;
•
refay; sophoinoi::es Brett Arnold
,
a loss to
a
tough
,
Rider squad
:·.
.
and Angel
_
Tomala
-·
and
gave the men~s swimming/div-
: ,
freshman Kyle O'Neil_ joined
clay
when Meiropoliian Co_nference
Walsh
was
not happy with how his
-
-
foe Southern
.
Connecticut Univer-
-
club fell apart in the third period.
sity invades the
.
Mid-Hudson Civic
.
'~We
·
played with too many
Center at lO
·
p.m.
_
· ·
.
_
_
_
penalties," he said. "We lost our
·_
Closinski collected two goals in
the first period, the first-from an
assist by Tom Regan and Lloyd,
_
and the second from Eirish.
ing team
.
three
·
overall
jfu::
:,c:
;
Bluestein
to
grab the
.
victory .
.
pressive performances..
_
_
_
,
-_
.
The Fox~ also took the top
·
These meets, coupled with
-
a
.
•
three s·pots in
_
the 400-yard relay
·
tpp finish at the Metropolitan
_
•
·
led
.
by freshmen fytichael Flynn,
·
Conference Relay Champiori
:
,
-
David Malsheske;
.
Kevin
.
ships, has
·
Coach
·-
L~rry
:
van
Richards
--
~ind
'
AllisOil.
·.:
=,
,
-
Wagner's bunch of(to a sue-
In the team~s pre~io~s ~~efat
cessfulstart.
·
.
.
·
·
•
.
_
-Iona;
Marisf slaughtered the
'
.
'
A-
'
47-point
·
defeat at the
Gael~ 139-~4 .
.
·
•
,
.-
, _-.
_
__
·-- _
hands of MSC newcomer Rider
·
.
_
Sophomore Doug
-
Jelen won
,va:s not quite as
_
painful
·
con-
both th<! 500 ai,id
'
1000-yard
·sidering
it was the team's third
·
-·
freestyle
races
>
He timed
meet in eight d~ys. With
so
.
---
5:07.78 for the500 and had a
many competitions early on, the
.
season~best with his W:37
.38
-
in
men's training time has ~een cut
the
.
moo:
Arnold, Tomala arid
shor~, revealed Van Wagn
_
er'.
sophomore Ronald Gagne also
Senior Rob Allison led
_
the
-
earned
_
wins in
.
tne
.
200
Marist men, achieving three
_
per-
sonal bests.
·
·
.
The
_
Red Foxes,
·-
_
3
~
1
~2 -
on
.
-
the
·
·
composure a
_
nd the dumb penalties
season, tied Siena College 3-3 last
.
costus the game."
Sunday iri Albany.
·
-
Senior Mike Mannebach,
a
left
·
·
Assistant Captain John Lloyd
defenseman, said it was
a
combina-·
started the Red Fox"scoring attack
tion between Siena's playing style
Corriveau recorded his eighth
·
tally on the year, unassisted, while
Schlief and co-captains Ed Sherako
and Doug Wasowski rounded out
the bombardment.
with
·
a short-handed, unassisted
and the referees' decision-making
-
goal in 'the first pei'iod.
.
-
that determined the final outcome
"If
feels good to get on a winn-
After
_
thi::" Saints scored early in
for the Red Foxes.
.
ing streak after a pretty sloppy
the second perioq;junior Chuck
. ·
"We
-
did some reorganizing, start," Walsh said.«Albany saw a
Efrish
_-
notched fi.is second goal of
-
which
was
.
more of a problem," he
·
different Marist team out there."
the se~son,
·
a:
'
power-play goal
said. "We couldn't adjust our style
Walsh explained what his club
which
was
assisted by Todd Cor-
-
of play between Siena's style and
.
riveau
and Lloyd
;
,:
. _
_
the refs' calls."
_
~epep:n~~tdin
~~~i~~~;S:~
:~~gy1:t
Marist was
·
not done scoring in
Marist
-
was victorious
·
the
.
-
-_
,
-
·
the second period, however.
previous night by pummelling
.
"Saturd8;Y will be a tough game,"
Lloyd collected his second short-
Albany State,
11~1.
· •-
-
. ·
.
.
Walsh said. "We need
to
be tough
handed goal of the
·
game off an
The Red Foxes opened the scor-
,
defensively because we know our
assist
-
from Doug Closinski. The
ing gates early and never looked
_
offense
Will
come."
Basketball '92-
-
'93:
A
blueprint
for
success
It is their time of
-
year. For the
next four months; the men's
·
and
women's basketball teams will cap-
ture the attention of the cam-
pus ... that is, until they begin to
lose.
·
-~ So how should they avoid that
P.redicament and prove their
finishes last year were not a fluke?
Here's what I believe they have
to do.
·
The men need a half-court game
to go with the fast break that work-
ed so well last year. That means
Fred
Ingles,
Alan Tomidy and
Dave Strong all have to
.
be factors
on the post. The team was inept-at
the half-court game last year
because Ingles, its only true post
player, was out for most of the
season.
The half-court set can work well
if Sean James, Izett Buchanan and
Kareem
Hill
all use slashing drives
·
towards-the hoop. This would ade-
I
quately complement the pivot play
of the centers.
·
And, on the outside, point
guards Dexter Du~bar and D~nny
Basile have to hit the medmm-
range jump shots (12-15 feet) while
Andy Lake and Gregg Chodkowski
take care of the long bombing.
·
Senior power forward Mike
Schreiber ends up Jost in the shuf-
fle after not being mentioned much
in
the pre-season.
_
Where does he fit in? Banging
the boards inside and-belie','.e it or
not-sticking a three-pointer here
.
and there.
Hey, why not? Other Marist big
men like Tom Fitzsimons and Ted
Sharpenter did the same. Whether
the team is on the break or
on
the
blocks, Dunbar
·
has a
-
,
tough
assignment-which
scoring
·
machine gets the ball?
The solution? Find the one or
two players who are hot early and
once opposing defenses key on
them, find whoever's open.
-
Dunbar also has to st;iy in con-
trol.-.Oriving the lane at ludicrous
speed with his arms and legs flail-
ing accomplishes nothing .•. except
giving the ball to the other team.
The Foxes could start out 2-
7
so
patience
will
be
a
virtue with this
team. They can not get depressed
ii....
J.W. Stewart
Thursday
Morning
Quarterback
by New Year's because they would
not have even played an NEC
game-the ones that count.
The women's situation is surpris-
ingly similar to
.
the men's.
Therefore, the steps to success are
the same. The women, too, need a
half-court game to coincide with
the fast break.
Lori Keys, Stacey Dengler, Tara
Walsh and Andrea Macey are the
ones who can make that happen.
Coming off last year, Keys is
solid but question marks remain
about Macey. In order to be an ef-
fective low-post player, she can not
get blown off the blocks like last
year.
The fast break niay bean adven-
on this team
ture for this team,
as
well; They ran
.
-
-
•
.
·
last year but not at the speed they
.
-
Finding their way to the NEC
·
planto run at this year. The player Tournament
will
be a lot easier for
who holds the reins is point guard the
-
Red
-
Foxes
·
if they win right
Amy Presnall.
away. I think it's almost
a
necessi-
She, like Dunbar, can not play ty after last year's disastrous 0-12
helter-skelter basketball like she has start.
in
'
the past. That's dangerous and
_
can send the fast break spinning
out of control.
.
Presnall, as well
as
every other
,
player in the half-court set, has to
pass better on the other side of
midcourt.
Poor passing decisions in the
half-court game
killed
this team
last year. Less-than-dominating re
-
bounding didn't help, either.
All the players have to hold on-
to the careening basketball instead
of tipping it up and up and up. Us-
ing two or three tall players to
fonn
a wall in front of the boards may
not be a bad idea.
-
Somebody has to
be
Charlene
Fields' outside shooting partner.
How about Cindy Carroll? It's
If not, don't be surprised to see
the team get down on itself and
Ken Babineau, like it has in the
~ast. A "here we go again" at-
titude must be avoided at all costs.
I
think both squads will be in an
enviable position by Spring Break
if, at the vef?' least, they play the
half-court game effectively and the
point guards don't make many
mistakes.
After
all,
playing
one-
dimensionally without an equal-
opportunity lender
will
get these
teams nothing but
a
one-way ticket
to the beach come March.
gonna have to be-there's no other
J.
W. Stewart is The Circle's
pure shooter (like a
Mary
Lightner)
sports editor.
41.8.1
41.8.2
41.8.3
41.8.4
41.8.5
41.8.6
41.8.7
41.8.8