The Circle, December 10, 1992.xml
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 41 No. 9 - Decmber 10, 1992
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voLuMe,1,
-
NuM~ER 9
._.
MaristCoUege,
,
Poughkeepsie, N.Y.
DECEMBER10,1992
.
Senior goes to
·
Paris
£Or
fashion competition
b
y
S.J.
RICHARD
th~ international fashion w~~ld
.
·
wintter~
will
receive cash a~~rds
_·
Editor
''.We had no experience in this
and a scholarship to a Paris fashion
- - - , - - - - - - - -
'
'-
_
.-
_
,
_ _ type of competition, so we didn't
.
school,
·
Eichiler said.
.
'.
. . .
.
While rriost Marist students are
know
-
what to expect," Eichner
In addition, incentive awards of
prepar
i
ng to w
·
rap
up
the semester
said. _'
_
'Even the people at Air
.
approximateiy $1,000 \Vill
·
go
to
and head home for the holidays
,
.
Frarice said irwas an honor jus
t
for
other
·
designers whose work
.-
the
senio
r
Catherine Eichner
is
prepar-
.
Marist to be invited to submit sket-
judges deerri
.
worthy
.
.
.
.
..
.
ingfor
.
a trip to Paris and an inter
-
ches
.
"
•
.
.
·
_
.·
.
-
''Ifc
you win ariy
.
·
of
'
the
·
top
-
nationalcompetition
.
·
.
The
10
Americans going to the
·
awards, your ga.rment stays in Paris
:
Eichner, 22,
.
from Torrington
,
final
·
competitfori
·
come from
for 12 months to be used iil shows
·
·
Conn
.
, leaves Saturday for a week
fashion programs throughout the
and ads," Eichne
r
said
_
:
in Paris and the
_
Air-France spon-
·
country, Eichner said. The only
....
Just being selectedfor
J
~e fi~als
\
sored Jeunes Crea·teurs de La Mod
e
.
other representative from
_
New
provides
'
her with instant recogni
~
:'.
•
-
;
(which transl
a
tes into Young
York state is a student from the
tion that will help in landing a job
Fashion Designers) fashion
-
design
Fashion Institute of Technology in
when she graduates.
. .
·
-
_
·
show and competition.
. .
·
_·
New York City.
_
. ,
·
"This cci
_
mpet
i
tion is
.
well
.
_
OCit's e
x
citing
;
just great,
"
said
.
'
-
'
I was
.
absolutely thrilled when
.
known, which means that my name
.
Eichner
;
one of just
IO
student
I. heard,'
'
DeSailna said.
"I
had
·
·
will
·
-
get
a
lot
.
of
·
,
_
recogriition,''
.
designers in the United States to be
-
Catherine as
a
student last year.
I
_
Eichner said
.
,
.
. .
.
.
·_·
selected for the sho\v, which
·
will
.
taught her how to hold
-.
a needle
.
-
She said she
•
is aiming
.
for an in
-
feature the work of students frorri
and it's thrilling
now
to see her put
terns hip iri the fashion indllstry in
-
.
·
21
countires
>
.
the whole thing together. It takes
New York City nextsemesterand
.
This
·
year marks the iOth an-
my breath ai,vay
to
see a student's
a job there when
_
she graduates.
niversary oftheintei:national com-
·
work honored like this. It takes the
·
"I've taken
a
lot
:
of design
petition, and
.
the first
.
year that
.
experience from the abstract
'
to the
.
courses
.
and
.
also courses like
·
Marist's division
.
of Fashion Design
'
tangible."
publication la you
i:.
and graphics, so
.
and Me
i
cha_ndising was invited to
Among the tangible
·
awards
.
·
there's a wide range ofjobs I might
particip
·
ate, said Sue DeSanna
,
Eichner ,viUreap, in addition to the
get into when lgraduate,'' Eichner
associat~
i
diredor.oftlie
:
program
.
week-long
.
trip to Paris, are a
said
:
·
..
·
_.
Eichner and junior
.
Nicole Coyle
cocktail party that will be attend-
_ .
·
For now, though, she is
.
thrilled
.
submitted sketches of their designs
ed by the winners aiichepresen-
to be recogriized as on¢ of the top
.
in October;
·
and Eichner received a
tatives of the international fashion
.
student designers in tbe world.
.
·
phoµe
call
aoc>Ut two weeks ago in~
world and the
.
final show and com-
The garment she
.
designed
.
and
.
forming
.
her that her work was
_
petition,
~
-which i~
.
schedule~
:
°for
produced for the competition
.
was
_-
·.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. .
_
J:
among _t~at select~d by
-
~ P,anel of
•
'
,O~c .
.18.
:
'
.
•
.
· ·
.,
,
.
.
,
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tyf~~i~
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:/
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:
Qath~fin,e
_:
Eic
_
hn~r;
se'nio_r. fashion
:
·
major;
prepares to travel
·
,
,:,;
four
Judges,
rncJudmg .
t~o
-
-
·
-
.
-
_Twenty
Judges
will ~el~~t !hree
.
i
;See
'
FASHIOt.f.
'
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-
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dJifrMfeit
prillle
-
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..
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>
by
-
PATRICE
'.
SELLECK
'·
•
.
.
.
. ·,
-
~hese six peciple,iiow~v~i
/
are
:
•
have
decided
to
·
big
i
n aifain
.
wh:t
.
'
vicipr~i~
~
nt of:~uiiicu
i
urii-f<?~
:
~he
.
:
·'
.
_
The Center is completely run
·
by
' ' -
:
5
'
t
f
W
·
•
·
.
. ·
.
·
.
notthe
·
traditfonal 18
i<>
22 yea
r'
they maf have
'._
le_ft behind years
·
Cente
d
i.nd the wife ofJoriah Sher-
its
'
members, who act as commit
-'
'
.
d
C
,
: '
..
;::;"
ia
:
_
nter
.
:
.
-
olds that are usually
:
round
:
'
at
agd~their education.
. .
·_
.
·
·
.
.
·
·.
mari,
;
a meitiber of ,the
'
bi:iaid
·
of
tee members, planners, course
:<,
¢oll
i
ge
i f
ihe
_
sam
e',.
rio rrii!tf~
r
:
-
Marist
.
ori
·
a daily
:,
basK These
.
.
Approximately
.
350;000
trustees
-
at
:
t\farist arid Rose Sher-
.
..
coordinators and
.
facilitators, a:s
.
lio
"!
;
<>_Id
'
plle is
;
P,eopl~
:
stil
L
bring
:
.>
students are
_
all 55 ofolder and they
·
Americails over
'
the age o
f
50
.
_
iire
man's
-
nep~i
'
w
.
i_
. :
: .
,_
.
..
.
·
. .
well as students,
.
all in accordance
·
something to drink to
c
class
/
there
..
are here not because they are earn-
no\v enrolled in college courses;
·
ac~
-
.
-
''It
.
was on hef:request and due
with their
.
individual skills and
·
'j
s
/;'
always
~
ariitn~sity
\
b~tween
·
,
'
ing a
·
degree; they are here
_
:Cor
·
a
·
.
·
cording to.the
.
Census
,
Bureau.
~ .
to
an
article that rriy husband'and
interests
.
.
.
students and ilomatter\vli#e
·
one
->
more pefsonalreasori-:- enjoyment.
.
The Center
.
for l'.it'etime Studies
I r~ad
_
inTh~ Ne\11 York Times tha~
.
.
,
:
"Everyone is expected to study
.
goes
°;"
i
niorning
·
_c1asses
_
:
still
:
have
.
-
"We have always tried
·
to con
-
enrolled 226 older students into its
appealed to us aild
_
in~d(! us realize
arid contribute
.
to the advancement
·
popr
,
'
.turnc:foK
<
:
;
,
:
,
<
}
·
:< ; . .
.
tiil.ue our education,'' said Elvira
program, this fall, aimed especial-
that this was
·
something we were
of this p_rogram,'' Joan Sherman
·
.
,
/
\
Espec
i
all
y
o1fone'.f
u
esday nior
-
·
:
Haddad, ofHydePark,N
:
Y
.
; who
ly_towards pe6'ple
•
55
_
otolder who
. >
looking
·
for
·.
in memory of
•
Mrs.
said.
.
.
-
-
/
!
[f
,
~
~
1
-
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·
~1:
:
~!1
\
n
·
;
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i
:
~~E:ett!:
,
s~i~ ~
-
achelor of
.
arts
-
·
ha;~: ~i~re~gf~;t~~~ffu~e;~h~t
Sh~
-
~~:tl
r
0
i~na~~fAtl~~/t}~iie
·
..
mJcte ~~~~r~aiis
-
~~:t i~~e:;:ths~
i
b"right,
'
open
'
roorri
;
'
two rows
-
o
c
.
..
.
"
We have beeri transferred so
-
is funded by a gra
i
:it from Rose
Elderhostel lnstiiute, which
.
pro-
·
that this past fall's registration had
~ti_aiis
;
:
t
n,
.
_
a
::i
;
e
~i-circle, foe~
eait_i
·
_
:
many different tini.es ~ue to wqj-k,
.
·
·
Shemian,
:
a
·
.
former
·
resident of
vides
·
.
for
··
the
.
·
intellectual and
.
.
to
be maxed out at 250, ~ccording
othei waiting for class tci
.
begin
'.
.
- ·
- but each time we moved, we always
Poughkeepsie, who after her
·
death
·_
·
·
cultural explo
r
ation a.nd
·
develop-
..
fo
·.
Eleanor Chartwat, executive
.
Only six
·
·
.
people
· ·
sit
.
iil
-
this
-
·
·
went backtQ scho9)/' added Ray-
.
wanted
·,
her
'
inheritaQce
.
-
to
.
go
ment for men arid
\
vomen of retire-
director of the School
of
Adult
-
classroorri, patiently,
.
as
they
.
wait
mond
-
Haddad, who has his
towards a charitable c:>rganization
nicmt age.
:
It
.
also provi~es a relax.:
Education at Marist.
.
.
to :watch Gilbert and
'
Sullivan on
·
master's degree iii physics.
·.·
.
that would do somethillg in honor
ed learning environment without
.
.
"They are guaranteed to have
.
the 'J;'V~creeil'. The tape is popped
.
The Haddads are only two of the
-
of senior citizens in the coinmuni.:
the anxiety 6f exams cir grades for
two classes per semester and they
in and learning begins.
' ·
·
226 older students at Marist who
ty, according to Joan Sherman;
its members
;
.
,
·
...
see
ELDER
page 9
►
Fortulleeditor
-
s}i~res in~igllt
on
reporting world
-
by
CARI OLESKEWICZ
.
Ass_istantedito
{
.:
.
Brian O'Reilly
~
assodate editor
of Fortune magazine; returned to
Poughkeepsie after 20 years, arid
_
O'Reilly
·
first thought
.
about
,
journalism
·
,vhen
-
Woodward and
Bernstein revealed the Watergate
_
sc~ndal, since he
'
loathed Richard
·
Nixon.
all he remembered was the defunct
·
·
·
·
·
·
~
That's
.
when I knew
'
I was at the·
pinnacle cifbus driving and could
_
·
go
·
no farther"in
·
the field. So I
decided
to
try
something else."
.
Taking
a
'
journalism
class
·
at
~~~~~~s~~
ti;r~ stretching over
~'Writing Jias
·
been compared
to
r~moving your
O'Reilly,
44,
a
-
former Marist
.
own appendix./ like the conversation and talking to
student
;
·
said the campus looked
the most interesting people in the world, but the price
almost unfaniiliar,it had been
·
so
.
long.
.
. .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
you pay
is
having
.
to
write.''
"I find myself just stanng at all
the new
,
buildings, trying
·
to
·
remember," he said. "There is a
nice view over the river. I
·
forgot
how attractive it was."
.
O'Reilly studied to be a Marist
brother for two and a
·
half years
before he decided instead to go to
Fordham University, where he ob-
taine<l a degree in
.
english literature.
O'Reilly said he never knew he
wanted to be a journalist.
"The Marist brothers trained us
to be teachers," he said. "We
didn't have any obscure majors like
journalism.''
"I realized that in journalism
.
you can kick butt and
.
do
something worthwhile," he said.
·
O'Reilly went to San Francisco
upon graduation
;
where he drove
a school bus for a living. He
pointed out that in the seventies,
people were allowed to
,
"bum
·
around," that "career" was a dir-
ty
word.
"I finally progressed to driving
a Greyhound bus," O'Reilly said.
llrian O'Reilly
Associate Editor, Fortune
Berkely,~ O'Reilly then applied to
several newspapers, looking to start
his career in the field. His break
came
.
when a reporter was
beheaded.
The South San Francisco Enter-
.
prise Journal l_tad a position open
·
when one of their reporters was
beheaded in an
·
accident, and he
was hired.
.
.
.
"It
'
s that sort of dumb luck that
happens a lot in this field," he said.
"lt,s
v~ryr;mdomin applying for
.
the same
·
as being a reporter for
and getting jobs."
:
<
other publications.
·
·
.
:
O'Reilly worked at the Enter~
«Itis not a glamorous job,'' he
·
pri~
-
Journal, which
.
published
said. "My responsibilities were
twice a week, for two years, until
research assistant and fact checker
.
he decided he'd rather work for a
-
My'job was to disbelieve the writer
daiiy paper.
and if a mistake got through, it was
He moved to New Jersey and
my fault."
.
·
.
took a job working for the 1'ren~
.
In 1984, O'Reilly began writing
tonian as a night police reporter.
·
ful
(
time and
·
opened a
_
Dallas
.
"It
.
was a tabloid,'' he said.
Bureau for the magazine.
.
"The
.
Trentonian made the New
.
.
Now married and living in
York Post look like Foreign Affairs
Fairhaven, N.J. with three
Quarterly.''
·
_. ,
.
· ·
•
:-
;
,:;
_
_
-
<
children,
·
o•~eilly is associate
O'Reilly obtaine<l
a
fellowship at
·
/
editor
,
,
o
fi
fortune
,
and
,
spoke to
Princeton University after writing
.
•
communication classes at Marist,
·
for Princeton magazine for t
_
hree
offering to answer any questions
years. The Alfred P. Sloane
aspiring j~urnalists had about the
fellowship program involved
·
media world
.
·
teaching economics to journalists.
O'Reilly said there is no set for-
He did not think his resume would
mula to follow and said he hates
look better than with 'Princeton' at
writing. "Writing has been com-
the top.
·
pared to removing your own ap-
O'Reilly has been with Fortune
pendix,'' he said. "I like the con-
magazine since 1980, when a
versation and talking to the most
reporter he knew from Princeton
interesting people in the world, but
-
was able to get him in the front
the price you pay is having to
door. He
·
began at Fortune as a
write.''
reporter, which he explained is not
...
see FORTUNE page 8
►
.
'
'
2
New
Disile)'
.
lnOvie
a
flit
foi
young
llnd
Old
.
.
,
'
.
.
.
'.
.
-
,
,'
'
.
•
·'
·
,
'
.
·
Disney has done
it
again.
.
.
So,
·
with the help of
_
the
·
Genie, a magic
After the success of "The Little Mermaid" carpet and his sidekick monkey Ab!J, Alad-
:
Her
·
e are jus
_
t
.
a f~w names: Jack
Nicholson, Arsenio Hall, Rodney Danger-
.
field,
·
Ed Sullivan and Groucho Marx.
The musical score
for
"Aladdin" was
done by Oscar winning
.
composer
·.
Alan
.
Menken, with some h~lp from ano
_
ther Oscar
winner, the late Howard Ashman.
.
. ..·
and "Beauty and the Beast", Disney's din wins the heart of the Princess.
.
We also see him as
a
slot machine, a talk-
ing lampshade; Pinocchio and a variety of
animals. This character makes the movie!
animators and executives have another
·
The voice of the Genie is none other tha,i
These two men were responsible for the
music from Disney's two previous films, and
won their awards for "Urider the Sea"
.
(look
for a quick appearance by Sebas~ianthe crab
in this movie) and "~e ?ur G~est."
blockbuster.
.
■-•-----------'-•
"Aladdin" is a mix of great music, detail-
ed animation, and incredible talent.
"Aladdin" is the story of a
·young
peasant
boy
-
who falls in love with the beautiful
Princess Jasmine of Agrabah. But Jasmine
must marry a Prince and is having a very dif-
ficult time choosing one.
The evil Jafar, who works for the Sultan
The
Reel
Story
Jennifer
Giandalone
Disney also got another comedian to join
the cast; Gilbert Gottfried. He is the voice
· of Iago, the parrot who works for
_
Jafar.
Although I usually find Gottfried's whiny
voice annoying, he was very funny as the bird
who slams into things throughout most of
the movie
.
.
(Jasmine's father), wants to get the magic
· ..
lamp so he can control the people o f - ~ - -
- - - - - - -
Agrabah. He tricks Aladdin, the
.
only.per-
Robin Williams. This role was not only writ-
son worthy of entering the cave where the
ten for him, but the big blue Genie even
Once you hear Jasmine's voice, I know
what you're going to think. She sounds a lot
like Belle; who sounded a lot like Ariel.
Let me clear this up. The voices of these
three characters are provided by three dif-
ferent people.
Last year, we saw
.
the first animated film
ever to be
.
nominated for the Best Picture
award. This year, we may see the first
animated character ever to be nominated for
the Best Actor award. Anyone who could go
to a recording studio, stare alprops, and suc-
cessfully improvise his way through an en-
tire movie, deserves it.
lamp is, to get it for him.
·
looks like him.
Williams' ad-libs became part of the script
and some very talented animators managed
to keep up with hirri. The comedian's per-
foi-lnance as the Gen
.
ie
almost overshadows
the other parts of the movie.
Aladdin ends up with the lamp afte
_
r a dar-
ing escape from the cave and Jafar goes crazy
trying to find it and get rid of the Sultan.
I don't think he counted on Aladdin and the
Genie to ruin his plans.
·
Who does the Genie manage to turn into'?
Jasmine's voice is that of Linda Larkin,
who also does the singing in the film.
I gua
_
rantee you that come the spring, the
song "Friend Like Me", sung by Robin
Williams, will be nominated for an Academy
Award,
Judging from the articles I've read, I'm
not the only person who feels this way. Pro-
.
blem is, do you think the Academy will give
Robin Williams the award based on his vocal
performance only?
.
.
.
Both adults and children will love this
movie. You're never too old for Disney.
Scores of good muSlcal selections gone unappreciated
OK,
no looking back on the year
in music 1992.
No best/worst list.
No discussion of the bandwagon
jumpers.
No
venomous
attacks on record
company whores.
No bad-mouthing those
·
·
who
killed "Cop Killer."
No getting upset
that
"alter-
native" became "mainstream."
No outrage that CD and tape
orices are ridiculous.
·
them. Little to remind us of
"Luka" and a lot added by pro-
ducer Mitchell Froom. It's a little
.
bit industrial, a little bit pop and
In
.
your
ear
Dana
Ramones for the '90s--,-perhaps.
It's loud, fast and short. Enough
said.
8. Jeffrey Gaines "Jeffrey
Gaines." His CD came out of
nowhere, full of songs with emo-
tional maturity and a social cons-
cience. Often dark and introspec-
tive, it makes you think about a lot
of the good and bad that happens
to all of us. Simply put, one of the
best
·
debuts of the year.
7. The Sighs "What Goes On."
underrated band in the world. The
best thing Bowie's done in his
career and he gets slagged. Go
·
figure.
·
from 'Laverne and Shirley'?" "ls
that a cucumber'?" Yes, all these
questions and more
.
can be
answered with a wave of the wand
and
a
listen to this masterpiece. But
don't take my word for it. Ex-
perience the majesty of rock for
2
.
Rollins Band "The End of
yourself.
.
·
Silence." Henry
.
Rollins: singer,
,<
poet, coffee achiever. This album
5.
Lou Reed "Magic and Loss."
slams you in the best possible way~
Very few albums deal with the
When you're ticked
off,
this is the
mysteries of death: Now I
.
know
.
.
album for you. It's a soundtrack
why. No one could make an album
·
for your life.
as beautiful as this one.
If
you thought pop was dead, these
4. Miracle Legion "Drenched."
.
Buoniconti
d
.
. k" k"
d
1, Faith No More "Angel Dust."
And no ... no Ponderl·ng the pros
_
·.
•--!~~--~-~-----
guys are raggmg 1t 1c mg an
This one seems kind of nostalgic.
It's the best of th
ea
d
-1,
.
.
.
-
.
. .
.
·..
e y ran
1
s a
and Cons
Of
Mado
.
nna n
·
aked-_: J·ust
_
a· whole lotta enJ·oyable.
screaming back to life. It's short
-
·
Maybe it reminds you of,something
fl
D th
t
.
1
.
.
. .
-
and sweet, with harmon1· es
·
from
po·1gnant from the past
·
The vo1'ce
op·
ea
·
me a ' rap, country•
the 10 CDs you probably
_
did11't
9. Supersuckers "The Smoke of
·
pop; the theme to
·
"Midnight
b
th.
b t h
ld h
Hell,, No"' that Ni·rv·ana 1·s
00
hell, songs about lost love and Jove
and the melodies are distinct, tak-
c
·
0 ,,
_
..
bo
·
y•
_
'
.
and M
.
1
·ke Patton
·
's
pen-
uy
1s year u s ou
ave:
.
"
-
·
..
"
longer on the Su b(par),Pop label,
lost without all the lo
·
opy ncmsense.
ing you away to another place arid
chant for masturbation all rolled
10. Suzanne Vega "99.9F." The
someone had· to fill the space,
6.
Spinal Tap ~'Break
-
Like The
tirrie
.
·
·
up in one convenient package. In-
year saw very few good records
right'? Well, >these guys are better
- :
Wind."
,
~'Hey,
:
are
,they
a
,
real
3.Til)_Machine ''Qy_YeY, Baby/'
.
credible.
Q<>
out and buy it.
·
·
made
by
females. This was drie of
than
'
'
NirvaniE
-
They
'
-
are
'.
'-
the
-
;
band'?"
.
',\Hey;
-
isil.1t
~
that
,
the:
·
:
guy
.
,
Live,
.
and amazing,
:
lt's,:the most
.
;
'Mateo/in X'
·
i
brt11gs1esSOiis/JJ laclsi
'hiStOry
There comes a time when a
basis of racism.
_
.
•
· ·
·
·
movie critic has to live up to
In prison, Malcolm Little is con-
Many people will not pay the
I feel as of now that Washington
his/her name. The job is not movie
fronted by an Islamic convict and
ticket price to see this movie. And
·
should
:
win BeSt Actor
>'and
the
•
·
?
•
-
·
-
·
• •
inovie
_
gets a Best'
_
Picture and•Best
reviewer, where we go out and tell
begins to learn the ways of Islam.
why not. Because 1t is about a m1h-
h
h
·
bl k
f
·1
'
.
b
.
·
k
Director norriin
.
ation at least, which
.
.
you
w
at t e movie is about, but
During his lessons, he learns
tant
-
ac man or m1 ttant lac
·.
-
·
·
it will.
·
·
what we think and feel about the
about the "white man's" poisons,
:
audiences and
they
.would not see
·
movie.
his liquor, his drugs,
_
but most im-
a black,movie.
·
This area of news and informa-
portant, his words.
.
tion has caused much debate bet-
.
It really did shock me when they
ween tne critics and the people who
often clash viewpoints and knock
·
•--1111111!
_
-----••-
heads together to get their points
across.
Well, faced with this situation,
I feel many critics hir",'.e turned
reviewers due to the material mat-
·
ter of this certain cinematic
offering.
_
_
. ·
.
.
.
.
.
This is not a movie lean just say
"Oh, yeah,
it
stars
·
Denzel
··
Washington and Spike Lee and is
about Malcolm X and
·
he goes to
prison and converts to Islam and
blah blah blah", because this was
not.the intention of Spike Lee when
he made the movie.
I really believe this was not made
for profit, but for understanding
and educating, for storytelling to a
large mass of people who do not
have a great choice of films about
African-American leaders and their
fights and causes.
"X"
is not about
~•hating
the
white people for what they have
.
done to us so let us revolt and over-
throw our rulers," although some
will have you believe that.
Critic's
corner
Kraig
DeMattels
----------·
went through the dictionary and :.
found the true meaning of the
words "black"
.
and "white," and
the wordine each signified.
· ·
·
·
Are "black people" re~
·
lly
negative, lacking in color, evil'? Are
"white people" really pure,
:
·
good
in nature, and the opposite of
"black?"
.
.
There are many African-
American people I know who are
better people than some whites, so
should I start calling these white
people "blacks?"
But if people could open their
-
)B!
.
~9,M~
~
J~l\,~)~
;
;;,,~m~J,J~1~L
:!"-'>
1Ws is ~ust an example of the
J
~e~~r~
i
!~~J~~~Jt?:m.fJ~~~~
-
;&:
'
'<
~IJlt~
domman~ yocabula!)' we all
,ofJh~
,
~~ages
,
g1"!en,
·
>
-g_t~n
,
they
:
.
~
possess and which makes 1t harder
would see
·
that . Lee
·
,
has
laid the
. .'-
for ethnic groups to get along.
SPRING BREAKERS.
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Earn MONEY and FREE trips.
Organize SMALL or LARGE groups.
Campus Marketing. 800-423-5264
But it is
.
not a black movie for
black people, it is a movie for all
·
people about racial
_
attitudes
'
and
·
-
froin where they come;
Maybe f6r Afric~n-Ain~rican
youths to get in tou_chwi~h theiran-
·
cient heritage
.
could help
.
\
them
achieve whatthey feel they are nQt.
·
White youths should look "into
what they are being taught by
friends and family as
to
what their
outlook on other ethnic groups
should be. The repetition of racism
must stop at some point.
Do not get me wrong
'.
.
I am
~~t
.
trying to be preachy or bring some
sort of "Wrath of
.
Kraig" on
anyone, but I was affected by this
movie; not in a racial ,vay only, but
the movie itself is excellent .
.
Denzel Washington will be
nominated, but
if
"A Few Good
Men" is as great as it looks, he may
not win Best Actor.
In fact, this movie will be
nominated for many awards, as
should "Unforgiven," but they can
only win
if
"Men"
proves only to
be Hollywood-hype.
But that is for another article.
And to those ,vho think I am just
-
conforming t<> safety
_
measures by
not giving "X" a negative re
•
view
to avoid
inciting public
'
outcry, I
:
.
ani rip liberal, bleeding heart, lei:-
.
me-save-the-world activist who
,.,
believes all ,vhites
.'
should
start
'
pay-
'
;
~
ing for the 400 years
·
of)njustice
done to the African-Americans.
.
I am a human being who believes
that the
_
re hasto be peace before we
start becoi:ning ,varring factions
and destroy our
•
countries; only
because there are people who refuse
to think for themselves.
Three hours
·
and
·
twenty-one
minutes goes by fast
if
you are will-
ing to keep imopen mind and learn
.
something.
·
·
·
·
·
True, I knew little about
Malcolm X going into the theater,
and the way Lee portrays him is
.
a
bit sensational, but instead of
everyone wearing hats and prejudg-
ing what to expect, go see this
movie.
It is not just there in black and
white.
Work on your ownl
Earn CASH, FREE TRIPS, AND MOREi
Openings to promote our
SPRING and WINTER packages.
Call Epicurean Tours TODAY!
800-23 t-4-FUN
LSAT
GM·AT
GRE
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-
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GRE begins Feb~20
Smart people read the f111e prinJ: Smart
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ward
small classes (fewer than
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·
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•
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a..~T---Scm<c
•
\
'
·-·
.
-
.
·
-
-
--
--
-,-------------------
-------
---------
THE CIRCLE, DECEMBER 1(),
1992
'
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
3
Luck O' the Irish runs
out
for
bar owner
by
ANDREW ROSS
·
·
Staff Writer
·
Francis Gildernew thought he
was living the American dream in
the land of the free. He was an im
~
·
migrant from Northern Ireland
,vho worked as a carpenter for five
years
·
in New York City before
moving to Poughkeepsie in 1989
.
with his American wife; Sharon
.
In Poughkeepsie, he opened a
bar, Gildernew's Irish House, and
things were going smoothly.
Until the morning of April 16
1992.
'
On that morning his house was
surrounded by teams of agents
from
t
he Immigration and
Naturalization Service (INS) and
the FBI. Six agents entered h
i
s
home
_
and placed Gildernew under
arrest,
.
_
charging
him
with
perpetrating a fraud on his green
card application that allowed him
to work in the United States
.
"It
was a complete surprise to
me," Gildernew says. "I'd been in
·
this country eight years with no
problems, not even so much as a
parl(:ing ticket."
tion on on his application that ask-
·
ed whether he had ever "been con-
victed of a crime of moral tur-
pitude" in his native land.
Gildernew insists that he didn't
lie
.
on the application
.
Rather, a conviction in Northern
Ireland in 1976 for allegedly plan
-
t
i
ng a land mine resulted from a
confession wrested from him
following six days of physical and
psychological torture, he says.
He served eight years in Long
Kesh Prison before the British
government, under criticism from
such groups as Arnnesty Interna-
tional and The Helsinki Watch
which considered Gildemew's and
the convictions of other Irish
Catholics in the Protestant-ruled
Northern Ireland to be gross viola-
tions of civil rights, released him;
he says.
"My confession was manufac-
.
lured, and l feel that I deserve
·
political-prisoner status rather than
being considered
.
a common
criminal," Gildernew says,
He is currently free, liv
i
ng in
Poughkeepsie and awaiting trial by
the INS board next November that
could result in his deportation to
Northern Ireland
.
Siobhan Stirling, co-chairperson
of the Gildernew Defense Commit-
tee based .in Lagrangeville, says,
''Francis is being prosecuted only
because he spoke out for the peo-
.
pie he left behind."
"It's an injustice," says Tom
Cotton of the defense committee.
Local businessman Francis Gildernew stands accused of fraud on his green card .
"The whole thing drips of
politics," Gildemew says. "Even as
I
-
was beirig taken away
.
I knew it
was all political. The long arm of
the British government reaching in-
to America."
Gildernew was charged with
falsely answering "no" to a ques-
"If
(Americans) allow one to oc-
cur here, we'll allow others to hap-
pen somewhere else
.
''
Gildernew claims that the INS
and the FBI have made it impossi-
ble for him to go to his place of
business, which remains open
under the management of his
nephew.
"The New York liquor board
asked the INS if there were any
restrictions (on his freedom), and
they denied
it,"
Gildernew says
.
But he is staying away, just to be
safe, just to make sure the INS has
nothing they can use against him,
he says. He is using his free time
to prepare his case and to lecture,
hoping to inform the American
public of the violations of civil
rights that go on in Northern
Ireland and the deportation of Irish
nationals from the Ur.ited States
that is occurring ill-:;gally, he says.
"It's a god-damn disgrace, and
I don't think the majority of
Americans know of the role their
government has played in it for the
... see
IAISH
page
a
►
Family tradition has student on ice-in very high ranks
.
by
KEITH REVLING
Staff Writer
one at that.
_
Most people, that is, who want
one ranking in 1991 came on the
However, Beany decided th
.
at
Around this time of the year at
to do it in the first place
.
Beany's
heels of his great finish to 1990.
going to col\ege took precedence
Lake Placid, N. Y.
;
the best lugers
desire to compete in the sport,
it
"I was the number-one seed
·
over continuing his luge career. He
Your
.·
average couch-potato
in
'
the United States can be found
turrts out, stemmed from his fami-
because l won the silver cup in the
American sports
-
fan
·
is
.
abou
L
as.
·
honing ttieir skills
·
at the Mount
:
'
ly's influence an
'
d .tradition.
.
. .
Grosser
,
Preis
.
Race in Innsbruck,
.
.
chose to
_
C?llle
to Marist and stop
·:
rainiliir":"wfrh.
ifi
t
'
spi:iri''oJ
U
i:'ige
fa
s
·.:r
Vail Hoven berg track, the only
.
cur-
Beany ~tarted luging at age 15 in
Austria, in December ofl990;''
'
luging
·
ror
a while
:·
.
.
..
·
·
-
·
·
·
he
-
i
_
s
:
.
~~('1,
_
say
·
,
--:
the
:
'iiu
·
ances
·
.
·
or.
,
..
~
.-~
-
·
Tell
f
tfaining faciJity
-
ill this Counti-y.
-
·
:~
the
summer
.
_
of
J
988
·
in
..
the Junior·
·
-
said
.·
.
Beany.
·
"It was
-
my best
_
raCe
. .
.
Australian
_
Rules Fot>tbalL
.·
..
·
.
·.
. .
.
.
·
0
An'iong
.
this elhe
·
·
group
of
. ·
Elite National Luge Camp, at Lake
ever, I came in second place out of
''I
took
·
offlaS
t year, and now
·
Iri
..
fact; sirice
.
it
·
appear~
.
on
.•
.
athletes
,
is
·
Beany,
_
a
19-yearsold
·
Placid. He enrolled at the advice of
a field of Iugers from nine different
I'm going to
try
to Slart again.
1
can
.
E~PN-TVat odd hours, Australi~
·.
sophomore at Marist.
his uncle, Bob Hughes, a member
countries
.
"
Rules
·
Football may be even mo~e
. .
Beany, a communications major
of
t
he 1984 United States Olympic
·
And Austria is a country where
familiar: to_J()e Fan
.
than luge is .
.
·.
from Wanvick, N
.
Y
.~
has been lug-
luge team who
c
ompeted in the
luge in the wintertime is virtually
It's
:
a winter spor
('
that is ing since the summer of 1988 and
Sarajevo Games
,
·
as popular as basketball is in the
dominated
by Europeans who live
.
is considered to be
_
one of the best
.
After his fast start,
.
things only
United States.
in the Alps and have the inclination
· ·
junior Iugers in the United States
.
got better for Beany
.
In January of
Early in the winter of 1991 Beany
·
and opportunity to lie on their
Just one year after he began lug-
1991 he was seeded number one on
headed the Junior National Luge
backs
•
ori a
_
small sled and slide
·
ing, he was ranked among the top
the
·
Junior National Luge circuit.
.
team on a trip to compete
rapidly
:
down an icy mountain
·
10 junior lugers in the United
<'In 19911 won everything; I was
throughout all of Europe.
chtite
;
· . ·
_
, .
·
·
.
• ..
>
_
·
_·
States.
seeded nuinber one in the class five
"I had a lot of fun in Europe,
-
Allofwhichdidn'tstopMarist
·
·
"Luging came easy-to me,"
juniorscategory;whichis 19and
but I mostly practiced and com-
College student Dan Beany
from
·
Beany said recently. "I picked ii up
··
.
under," said Beany
;
.
peted. It was a very successful trip
only do it part time, on weekends
and vacations
,
but hopefully I will
be able
10
return to the level I was
at and work on from there," he
said.
Beany admits luging is a very
time-consuming sport. He also ad-
mits that it is extremely tough
mentally
.
..
. see
LUGE
page
a
►
becoming a luger -,- and a good
·.
quick~r than most people do."
Beany's great year and number
for me," Beany said .
.Inductees into Alpha Chi includes scholastic survivor
..
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
by
J
_
OSEPH CALABRESE
Staff Writer
Eight years ago doctors told a
.
young woman, who just awoke
.
from
·
a coma, that she should be in-
stitutionalized with permanent
brain damage
.
.
·
This single mother was involved
.
in a
.
car crash which threw her
through the windshield. She could
not walk, speak or write because of
extensive head injuries.
·
A few weeks ago this same
woman, who was told by doctors
·
she could never take care of herself,
was inducted into the national col
-
lege honor scholarship society,
Alpha
_
Chi. .
Lisa Paydon, 30, said "I wanted
to prove to myself that I could do
it. I love school and I love
l
earn-
ing things."
Paydon, a senior communication
arts major, is one of 56 juniors and
seniors, from all academic
disciplines, who were inducted in-
to Alpha Chi on Nov.13.
The aggregate cumulative grade
point average for this group was a
3.839 while three students had 4
.
0.
Paydon, a Rhinebeck resident,
wakes up before dawn every mor-
ning to study and to review her
notes to keep her 3.8 index.
"It is very frustrating because I
will review my notes for class, but
.
once a teacher calls on me I forget
organ~zation recogmzes previous
what I read," she said.
.
·
_
accomplish~ents and provides op-
Paydon
-
has problems remember-
porturiity
for
continued growth and
ing things because of her lack of a
•
•
service! Members participate in a
.
short term memory,
·
She
·
_
not only
·
variety of local programs designed
·
goes to
·
school.full-time, but she
·
to enhance
·
the intellectual
life of
must also support her 10-year-old
·
the campus.
daughter.
·
Olson said in the past the
"I have always worked hard at
organization had been
.
involved
everything I do
.
It
is an honor to
with sponso
r
ing speakers on cam-
be recognized by Alpha Chi as be-
pus, peer advisement during
ing of the top 10 percent of
registration and localfund raisers.
America's students," she said.
"The initiative needs to come
Alpha Chi is one of two na-
·
from the students to start any pros
tionally recognized scholastic grams,,, he said.
organizations whose purpose is to
promote academic excellence and
Marc vanderHeyden,
the
exemplary character among college
academic vice president, told new
students and to honor those who
members
at
the
induction
achieve such distinctions.
ceremony to use what they have
William Olson, the founding
learned at Marist to search for
sponsor and current faculty ad-
truth and knowledge.
viser, said these students are not
bookworms but active participants
"Education creates new worlds,
in the community.
explore these worlds," he said.
"These are students who have
VanderHeyden told the students,
children, have spouses, work full-
none of which have less than a 3.5
time jobs, are involved with
gpa, "You have fought hard and
athletics, the school newspaper and
worked hard to be here. You are
the yearbook," he said.
in very good company."
Of the 56 students inducted, 35
were commuters and 21 were cam-
Paydon said the induction into
pus residents. "This organization
Alpha Chi was very spiritual and
is very diverse since half the
uplifting to her.
students live off-campus," Olson
said.
"I proved to myself that I could
The Alpha Chi manual said its
be successful in life," Paydon said.
Lisa Paydon and her daughter Lydia.
Circle
photo/Matt Martin
:--
•
4
THE CIRCLE
Ho
LI DAY
.
CHEER
DECEMBER 10.1992
Yuletide Visions
by:
Matt Martin
.
ci-,
.
5
.
·
Qt1airtt
.··
·
bistorical .
·
landmark is
no
·
.
::.-·~---,,~~-.~ ... w"~..,.,,.-:.,.,,,. ....... .,,. ••. .., ••
~~w-•.iJ'_.•n~-.-~-.-.• ...
'!~•--.•NJ'• ...
·•Yl'6'•"-....
v.
Grand Central
The students made it happen by
taking the study to people who
could really do something about it
,
added Balch.
Paul Rudolph,
.
a senior from
Breezy Point, N
.
Y., said he can see
many similarities between Grand
Central and the Poughkeepsie train
station
.
"Inside the building, the win-
dows, waiting room and ticket win-
dow look alike with Grand Cen
-
tral," Rudolph said.
However, Rob Brandt, a junior
fr9m Brooklyn,
N. Y .,
said he
disagrees.
"You can not even compare it
with Grand Central, because it is
not even half the size,
"
Brandt
said.
He ac!ded that since he began us-
ing the station three years ago he
has seen a lot of improvement.
"In my freshman year, they were
doing a
.
lot of construction. Now
they havidhe heat\vorking and a
new sriack:bar," Brandt said.
The ne,v snack bar was opened
on Halloween in
1991
by Vernon
Hoffman, and it adds a bit of
newness to the antique train
station.
The Poughkeepsie train station before rush hour;
Circle
photo!Matt Martin
Hoffman said he got the idea to
open a snack bar after a friend of
his father's wanted a cup of coffee,
but th
e
re w
a
s no plac
e
in the sta-
tion to buy one.
"It was a good idea to open up
by
WILBERT DEN OU DEN
Staff Writer
tion seminar to generate commum-
used the station
,
looked
.
at the with my food background. It took
ty interest.
results and each student came up a little while, but here we are,"
According to Balch, three
with a solution,'' Balch said
.
Hoffman said.
students in
·
particular influenced
The problem was presenting
it
to
The sna
·
ck bar made a big dif-
As students make
·
their way
the process through their connec-
the community and to those who
ference at the station, especially
home for the holidays many of
tions with the town government.
could save the station. The group with the daily commuters, who
·
-
themwill
begin their journeys at
"Patricia Howe, whose husband
decided presentations was the first
now can
·
have a donut and coffee
the Poughkeepsie train station, but
was a leading IBM attorney
,
lead
step to finding a solution.
with their morning paper on their
few
,
if any, realize that the quaint
the operation. Nancy Callahan
"We invited leaders from all
ride to New York.
county-like station almost became
became involved and her husband
over the valley
_
with relations to the
"Most people are happy, they
a modem monstrosity
.
Ifit was not
.
Was
the chief of police and Mike
·
station, In addition, we invited
like to get the New york Times
for Roscoe Balch
,
and
..
several
.
•
Kipp;
:
who
~vas e111ployed at IBM,
people
.
who had
.
something to do
before going
.
on the train or a
.
Maris
fs
t_udents there would be
·
no
.~
::
al
_
l
-
f<?ug!:i,t
)
o
,
•
•
sa
yeJhe
.
stat
,
ion
/
.:\
:
\v!H
f
preseryatiO:n; '
,
' Balch said.
•
·
gr?-ridfather buys his grandson a
.
c'ifirlllinglisforical
T
rain iitation)ii
??
BJllcli
:
-said
:
~
.
:c_!:
,,
-,:,
:7
0
°
~
~
,
-
.
~ :
:
,
:-:"
~
.
-
-
~:;
\
~·
Each
'.
stU&rir-made
0
"a
·
pre-sentti
"
:
·
.•
bag_of chips~'' said Hoffman, who
,~
Poughkeepsie;
•
·
.
.. _
< . ·
-
.
.
:>
,
.
The firs~ achon
.
the group took
-
·
_
tio11:
.
and
gave
t
_
heir opinion onwhy
owns the place with his mother.
_
'~The
.
Poughkeepsie Journal had
~as to see
1(
others also felt the sta-
•
.
the station should be saved.
.
Brandt said he is one of the peo-
a
.:
proposal to tear down that
·
sta-
tu:m w!ls ~m1;>orta1:1t. and worth
"The next day there ,vas a full
pie who's train ride is made hap-
tion and build
a
modern station ''
preservmg m its ongmal form.
page dedicated to the actions of the
.
pier by Hoffman's snack bar.
•
said Balch.
.
.
'
"
.
We first fo~nd out that the area
students in the Poughkeepsie Jour-
"I
use it to pick up a magazine
·
·
The Poughkeepsie train station
around the station from Mill Street
nal,'' Balch recalled.
for the train or soda and bag of
a historical landmark, supposedly
to_Route
9
could be saved," Balch
In addition, after Kipp and
chips'," Brandt said .
. is a replica of Grand Central Sta-
said.
.
Howe completed the study, Kipp
And in a
few
days Brandt
will
be
;
tion in New York City, and in the
Then_ the gr~up did a stu~y on
received a grant from IBM to pro-
ma½ing this familiar journey once
·
J960s Balch and
13
students took
the station to fmd ()Ut why 1t was
duce it. "They saved the station, a
agam.
it upon themselves to save the
there and wh_o it served the most
.
group of 13 college students,"
historic site by holding a preservll:-
''We ouestioned everybody who
Balch said nroudly.
Circle
photo/Matt Martin
.Performer shares views with Marist students
"I
think it's just a funny little thing
that everything that's serious has to
be turned into a form of entertain-
ment."
by
DANA BUONICONTI
·
•
Staff writer
·
•-
•
He used to work as a carpet cut-
ter for his father's company and gig
·
i
n
local bands
.
He talked about the
re
c
ent presidential election and his
own music
,
·
.
Currently, he
is
solo and open-
ing for such artists as Melissa
Etheridge and Tom Petty and the
Heartbreakers.
For
roughly an hour and a half,
singer/songwriter Jeffrey Gaines
entertained those in the theatre
with his brand of introspective,
socially conscious music.
Humble yet humorous, the com-
bination of Gaines' songs and
between-song banter resulted in
a
standing ovation.
The anecdotes about his sixth
grade mischievousness didn't
always make sense but the audience
didn't seem to mind.
Gaines, 27, from Harrisburg,
Pa., spent time honing his
songwriting skills in local bands
before declining an offer to front
Maggie's Dream in
1989.
Choosing
to go solo instead, Gaines crafted
a self-titled debut on Chrysalis
records
.
"I
look at the songs
I
write
as
a
cinematographer or visual artist,
making little character sketches.
I
want the listener to
fill
in the ac-
tual details based on their own life
experiences," Gaines said. "I'm
offering
it out
to
any person that
Full of songs and perspectives on everything else.
decides it's for
them."
Gaines talked about one of his
songs, "The Hero in Me," and said
it doesn't comment on himself, per
se, but that here is
a
hero in all of
us. He said people should stop
looking towards celebrities, often
stereotyped as perfect, for inspira-
tion, but to ourselves instead.
"Lowering your self-esteem bas-
ed on judgment and comparison
with others
will
always have you
come up short," Gaines said.
Just as Gaines warned people to
Circle
photo/Matt Martin
stop looking towards celebritit:s, he
also
discussed the mix of politics
and
entertainment
from
the recent
presidential
election
.
"I
don't like the
fact that
anybody is trying to be a
spokesmodel for me," Gaines said.
According to Gaines, the can-
didates had to go to such lengths
as to go
·
on MTV to reach an au-
dience, instead of making people
seek
out
information
for
themselves.
One form of entertainment
which Gaines discussed was the
new Malcolm
X
movie.
"The Malcolm
X
movie is a
Spike Lee Joint.
A
man's life
through the eyes of an artist," said
Gaines. "It's a shame that someone
had to die for things that they
believed in, but then it's also a
shame that things an individual
would believe in would be turned
into such a powerful statement."
Another individual who ran in-
to trouble for exercising her beliefs
was Sinead O'Connor.
"Like Sinead O'Connor, for in-
stance. She's a little girl. If she rips
,
/,up_
.
a pict.ure.of,the I?oP.efthat's her
·. thf~f!t:§11.oilldn't'ref;t\iy piss peo-
ple off. It's a matter of turning the
channel," Gaines said.
Other musicians, carry so much
anger in their performances, with
records judged on levels of inten-
sity, according to Gaines.
"Intense can be transferred from
me to the recipient without yelling
loud or busting blood vessels,"
Gaines said.
6
·
THECIRCI.E,
····
E
:
01'.TaFHAl-
DECEMBER
·
1
o,
1"992
.
.
THE
CIRCLE
.
.
S.J. Richard,
editor
J
.
W. Stewart,
sports editor
Domlnlck
Fontana,
senior editor
Chrissy Cassidy,
senior edilor
Carl
Oleskewlcz,
ass~tant edilo'r.
,
Joanne Alfarone;
business manager
Jason Capallaro,
business manager
Erlk Hanson~
distribution
manager
Anastasia
B.
Custer'
senior editor
Ted Holmhind,
associate editor
Margo Barre~ editorial page editor
Amy
Crosby,
associate
editor
.
.
Jennifer Ponzlnl,
advertising mmuiger
Matt Martin,
photography editor
Dennis GUdea,/aculty
adviser
Fashionably
lat~
.
.
.
~.
•
•
Tfl,oughts of a
burn~o
.
ut
·
.
.
The Circle )Vas informed of c1n,alleged scandal at Marist College in-'-
·
volving Carmine Porcelli. Porcelli was the director of the fashion pre>-
·,.-
Christmas time is
•
here
-
and
:
~hiJe we win
board and crayons
.
to draw
·
cnarrs ror
,
::
~
ri
/
gram. During the summer he resigned.
an be busy decking the halls
·
with boughs of
sumer
-
sentiment,
-
initial unemployment
.
We know that as of a few weeks ago he was writing
a
fa~hion column
·
hoJly
an
d sleigh riding, 1 wilJ be busy mak-
claims, house- hold deb
.
t
.
payments;job crea-
.
.
ing ~y list of Chr!sun~ ideas and wishes for
•
tio
.
n, real djsposable income and realexports.
•
.
called "What's Hot And What's Not" for an area newspaper.
President
-
elect
B!II
Chnt~n.
.
· ·
·
-
·
·
.
-
,
This w~yhe wiUknowhow the economy is
Rumors sprang up like dandelions. Sorting through all of them was
At
the same time,
I_
will attemp_t to rid
"really doing."
.
·
·
-
an arduous task whose difficulty increased exponentially when much
.
of
.
myself of
a
new found sic~ess-politicaJ_ ~ur-
.
(9) New computers will hopefully be in-
the information was given under the condition that it remain
off the
nout
.
_
Here are the confessions of a political
stalled in the White House so Clinton and
.
record.
·
burnout:
If
you are Jike me, then you
pro-
his team can chart the spending costs of his
.
bably have heard enough about politics for
administration.
Still rumors abo1.mded. What happened?
the semest~r.
.
_
.
..
_
. .
(IO)
The greatest c~istmas
gift the Bush's
The Circle was
as
eager to know as students and faculty, but tracking
I
was painfully reminded of my pohucal
could buy for the <::hntons _anew waffle
down the printable truth proved frustrating.
burnout" when I was approached at a party
maker.
.
·
·
.
.
.
.
Most of the stories had one element in common,: money.
a nd asked to
·
disc~ss my political views. 1
.
There it is my Christmas wish list
:
for the
.
.
.
usually do not hesitate to make my conser_-
Clintons
·
.
.
Gores
.:
and Democrats in
Several fashion majors, Who asked that their names not be mention-
vative
.
views ~~own t? my peers.
I
a_m always
..
Washingt~n.
.
:
·
_·
·
··
..
•
.
.
.
...
· ..
..
ed, claimed that Porcel1i was profi6ng from their purchases of supplies
·
~eady
•
and w1llmg to mtelhgently discuss_ the
.
:
If you are realJyJriterested in purchasing
.
necessary for their fashion
.
courses.
.
1ss
.
ues and then let my peers kno~
I
~m nght
·
Christmas
,
gifts
:
ror
.
that favorite
·
Circle
,
·
.·,
-
.
None of these allegations
.
could be substantiated.
andthey
:
are
.
wrong (So much for
-
mod~sty).
.
~
political columnist then here are a few sug-
·
Off-the-record findings seem to show that these accusations
are
es sen:-
·
:
.
·
.
\
,
!USl
:,
~
_:
I
Slart1:il
:
to s~eak
:
ab?ut
.
'
J
,
h~ issues
:
<
gestions of gifts you could purchase for yours
·
ti~ll~f.
.
·
f~.1_~~
..
.
.
.
;:
.
.
•.
,,.;
.
_.,
-
.•.
;
0
_
.
:
-
,
;;,,.
:
J
.
·;.
~
__,
"
;·'
'~
'};:e.
~i.
,;
:
;;ii,,;£
,
}~
,
,;,;:;;:,~;J;:;;:~'1:
f:{
?t:,~}i.
•
•·
•·•
.
·
<i;\
.
..
'·:;~
t~W:tf!11thfe~t~~tt~
1
(d~d~~j~~~i:i:h6t
·K
/[f
.
1Y:
',
;
/Jl,';;:'.?:
•
:.:::cr:·:\•;:;-:/
.
\,{'.\'},.:,;
J
:
:~
,>.~
~.:;
,
;d
,
.:.
·
/
·
Another version of the
:
scandal theory said that
.
¢oney
'
\\'.
_
a1rm1sap
~
·.
,
.
,
,:
find
'
ariymoiepassionleftin mysoultoargue
·
·
·
propriated within the fashion
"
department's
-
budget,
>
·
·
·
:
'~
--.
·
..
.
my conservative cause for this semester.
The story goes that 'this was known by the relevant
atitP
.
.
t?#ties
·
w
.
ho
The winter break is
a
welcome relief for
me~
.
I can use that timt:
.
to regroup and
in turn informed Porcelli
;
He then resigned of
.
llis'
:
own
:
accc;>rd.
.
come
·
back with enough ammuni~ion to
_
fire
.
.
Once again, on-the-record
;
.
high-level administrat<>rs d¢
_
riyt!J.i
{
c:,ccurred.
away at liberals in 1993.
.
.
.
.
So, the official story rema1ns that Porcelli merelY:r
.
esigD;ed
-
.
this sum-
I won
-
der how conserirative talk-shciwhost,
mer in or~er to move
_
on in his career .
,
He was not
·
asked
:t
o
·
resign.
_
He
radio personality, au
.
thor and
.
overal
f
nice
did
it of his own volition.
··
·
·
·
·
.
'
guy; R1~sh Limbaugh
·
stays passionate ~bout
F
1
·
1 b
.
·'
h
·
h
h
·
political issues.
.
.
.·
_
.·
.
·
ew peop e
'.
uy
t at version, t oug
.
.
·
.
.
.
.
.
. ..
·
,
·
Striking fear foto the heart
_
'.
of liberals
.
Weirds·
.
,
.
_·
rom
"
K
..
litica
l,'
,
..
.
.
A Circle reporter spoke with
.
Anthony Cainpilii, chief:financial of-
everywhere is fun and exciting,
as
well
as
in-
·
ficer at Marist
.
College, aboµtan imrelated story~
.
•.
·
.
· ....
,
.·
.
·
tellectually chailengirig but it
:
wears on you ______
......, ____ _... ____ -----________ ----;._
She was instructed to ask a qu~stion conceming
·
•
Porcelli at the erid
.
.
·
_
after
:
a
:
semester.
_
.·
.
.
·
-
-
·
·
·
.
·'
Alr
i
ght;
·
enough complaining
·
from
.
me
·
,
' ·
.
·
·
.
·
·
'
·
-
·
·.
'
.
of the interview.
.,
__
..
·
,~
·
ue
_
re is
.
·
a
·
Jis
.
(
of
·.
Chris
.
tin
.
as
wishes for
(1)
A lifetime subscription to WiUiani
'
_
F.
W
.
h
.
.
h d'd h s
·
'd C
·1--
t tied
d a·d h
ld not
Buckley
·
'
.
s conservative magaiine
.
,:__
_
T
.
he
Na
~
en
S
e
_
1 , S
e a1
amp111 was
S
ar
an
S 1
e
COU
President
'-
,;
1
e
.
cr
Bill Clinton
.
and h
i
s
·
new
•
·
,
_,.
·
<;I
tionaL Review.
·
·
..
talk about it.
-
·
·
.
.
:
.
.
administration
,
.•
· ·
.
·
.
-
·
.. .
.
.
.
Efforts
'
to' contac
t
Porcelli were
-
unsuccessfuL
_:
.
(i)Ih9pe
Bill
Clinton ~iidAi
Gore
agree
·
.·
•
,
,
"
(2)
,A
~ubscrip~io~
-
.:
to
,
Rush
;
Lirilbauglf
s
We
.
believe we know the realstory' but
·
our evidence ~as
.
gained
"off
_;
.
.
on aChristmasfree for th~
:
oval Qffice.
'
God
-
.
new,sletter and transcripts, as
.
- .
~en
.
:
as
,
h
·
d
.
,
·
·
1
....
·
d
..
·
.
d
·
·
·
·
·
'
onlykriows
'
howtheyce>uldchoose
'·
a
·
real
·
,
-
.
.
vid
.
e
.
o
.
·.
_
tapesofhislatenight
.
talk
.
·
.. ,
·
.
sh
.
ow
.·.
·
.
o
..
·
.
n
.·
.·
t
e-recor ,' a cpncept many
.
peop
_
e misun ~rst~n ;
.
-
i>
·· . :,-
·
.
.·
Christmastreet>ecauseAidore\Vouldnever
It sounds redundant, but o'rf-the-record means off-the::-record.
.
.
·
·
·
-
condone cutting
.
down
'
a
/
real tree: That
·
:
'
CBS.
.
.
·
..
'>· .
·
·
.
.
·
..
,,:
:;__ ·
·
.
.
Anything told
·
to a
journalist
·
under
this
condfrio~
:
i
,
s not
pe
pubiished
~
·.
wou)dbe
:
enviromhenta.Hyunsafe, urisound
'
.
·
There is Jothing more therapeutid'thana
Th~ crisis arises whcm
:"
a
.·
rep
.
oi1erlooks to
.
soine
_
orie
:
_
f~f
·
answerS only
'·
and harmful.
/
,
.
.
.
·
.
,
healthy dose of cynical, biting, holiday
to be thwarted because
·
what she learns is
all
off-the.
.::.
record;
<
(
2)
:
~ill
Glinton
-
wiH receive
a
new scrap
s
political humor.
·
·
.
·
·
·
·
· ·
· ·
·
·
· '.
book for
a
gift. It will contain newspaper
·
It
is The Circle's job to clear up rumors ~nd question~
·
like those
.
sur-
cijppiµgs
'
of-each of hinva_ffling
;
episodes.
_
,
rounding Porcelli's abrupt resignation.
-
, :
_
;-
·;
.
:
·
.·
.
.
.
·
··
..
'
Sur~
·
;,
4e rais~ '
!
hope'
'.
of economic recovery
..
Bu~
on more serious not.e;
I
have enjoy~d
.
>
..
.
this ~emester's challenges as
_
politicaJ coliitn
~-_
i:',
~
·
riisLThe hours spent readii'i'g, reseai-chiri'g
,"
·
fact-checking were well
.
worth it.
.
.
:
'
Being able to do that job might
"
actually deadhe
:
doud
_
s
:
offonuendo
and
now:
·
he says
·
let's be realistic about job
hanging over Porcelli
':
s head.
.
.
·
._
.. _ .
:'::
,
;
.
·
.
. .
i~~~h, ti~lth
:
~are reform and economic
Cl
d d
l d
·
1·
·
d
·
·
·
f
·1
· ·
.
·
"
l
h
...
·
·
h
·
·
d
·
·
·
··-
growth
:
Gee, being realistic abou
f
what could
ose
oors, sea e
..
IPS
an pronuses o
.
s1
.
en
.
ce; a
_
t
_
oug
Uil
_
erstan,.
be
dori
i
i°'tiy govemmenton
·
theecc:inomy, was
dable, severely restrict the
.
paper's ability to
·
d
_
p
its Job
'
¢ffectively.
'
·
·
that
·
oe9
rge
-
Bush's platform
·
phii9sopby.
In journalism there is a fine line between what one can sa{aild what
·
_
(3f'
1
Socks'' Clinton
will
re~eive
.
a year
one knows. In some situations, the two have little
·
or
_
nothing in common.
.
;
supply
of
catnip from the television cre~s
·
Does a journalist maintain her integrity with sources or does she
·
and 11ewspaper photographers that took
sacrifice it for a big story?
.
·
photographs
and film footage of the ''First
Cat'
-
' in action.
.
_
The sacrifice in this case would be too great.
.
(4)
HiiiaryandTipper will be busy prepar-
In the final analysis, integrity is aHa journalist c~m hope to preserve.
ing
.
to have
a
new dance floorbuilt for the
The Circle took the course of the ethical journalist arid keptits word~
·
-
inauguration so they
can
"boogie" the night
This close-lipped news-gathering fiasco yielded few publishable results.
away to Fleetwood Mac.
•
·
·
·
·
'
(5)-The Clinton's are already decorating
The time spent on the story was not a complete loss,
·
though~
·
their tree;
1
hope
it includes Elvis and waf-
The Circle can
-
draw several conclusions from its semester-long in-
fle
.
ornaments:
.
vestigation into thisjncident.
'
·
·
'
.
·
(6)
I
wish Clinton
wm
get a new saxophone
Firstly, this is a circumstance which would probably shed some unflat-
for Christmas so
.
he can play romantic love
tering light on Marist, not to mention Porcelli.
songs to Jennifer Flowers, oops
I
meant
Secondly, what The Circle knows and suspects unfortunately can not
Hillary
;
Hey
Bill,
how about a gift certificate ·
to Frederick's of Hollywood for a year supp-
be told.
·
·
.
.
ly of underwear to give to your girlfriend,
Thirdly, The Circle does adhere to a professional code of ethics. If
sorry
wife.
something is told off-the-record, then it remains off-the.:.record.
(7)
Gore will receive
a
new globe from
San
-
Finally, The Circle needs its own version of Deep Throat, the
ta that pinpoints each major environmental
problem and/or disaster
.
anonymous source who helped crack Watergate.
·
(8)IwishClintonwillgetplentyofposter-
·
:·
The letters to the edit
_
or, the impromptu
.
.
.
·
·
.
cliscussio11s with faculty and students in
'.
arid
· ·
.
out of the classroom
.
a~d of course tile pre-
:
·
'
election excitement and arguments
·
heard
around campus were al1 refreshing,
sometimes inspiring and intriguing ex-
periences that only a political columnist
could savor.
_
Without adequate interest, <,:uriosity a~d
discussions, politics will suffer once more
as
.
politicians continue to abuse our unchecked
system. Politicians should be fearful
-
ttiat
Americans are now doubling their efforts (or
should be doubling their efforts) to make
sure elected officials
.
answer to those who
elected them.
To all Marist College students, staff,
faculty and administration have a very Merry
Christmas and a Happy New Year.
I
hope
vqu will still read
-
the column in 1993.
Aaron Ward
is
The Circle's political
columnist.
THE
CIRCLE,
Vn:WROINT
DECEMBER 10.
199;!
7
,·
'
•
Eva
OJ
l:/je
sem(?ster eQuals end of poverty
..
_
;
c
,
.
"
,
,
:
.
·
·
.
>
·
·
·
·
-
..
·
-
.
-
-You
_
·
_
decidftoothpas
·
t
__
eisaiiuh~
·
.
Well,
it'
.
s
}
he
j
fr~cti~ally
,
the ~nd
'
·
·
of
the semester
;-
For some, it signals
.
necessary toiletry; miiit
;
spearmint
.
·
the
.'.
begfonifig
;:
o
(
exains
~nd
the a~d peppermint gUf!l almost pro-
star
t.
ofa new break
'
, For.others, Vlde the same function.
_
how~ver:~l
_
ike
_
me),
:
·
it- ~i~nals t~e
.
,
-
You decide you need to enhance
end o'fsomething else ;,)he end of·
.
.
your penmanship abilities and pro•
the
_
mo11e)'. supply
for
the seinest~r.
·
ceed to hand copy all the articles
.
Just in case you can't tell when you
rather than waste p
r
ecious dimes
-
are m
;
aring the poverty.level, here
on the photocopier, for the
:
are
a
few helpful hints:
research paper you had been pro-
,
·
crastinating about all semester.
You know
:
you 're broke when:
·
-There are more dust particles i~
.
yotfr mailbox thaii money in your,
bank account.
.
-You own
a
car but now enjoy
faking the Canterbury van to and
from campus, thus saving you
money on
.
gas
;
·
.
-You become eternally grateful
·
-You have to decide whether oi;
·
.
that you are the meal plan and you
not
·
purchasing a stamp
is
a wor-
·
don't have to spend money on
thwhile investment.
·
food.
.
..
.
.
,
-~
:
~
-~~
-
·
:.
.
-·
.
.
·
~
Y~ii decide all Qf yoti clothes
,
should be delicately handled and
hand
washed; thus saving you from
splurging the
75
on
ever
y
load of
laundry.
·
-You invite your pare~ts up
.
to
get a free
meal
off them (regardless
of whether you are on the meal
plan).
.
.
-You
\
vish you were on the meal
plan so
·
you
·
dori'.t have to waste
111oney on food.
·
_ _
·
-You decide water is the tastiest
beverage you ever had.
No
need to
spend money on
milk
,
juice
,
or
soda any~ore.
-You decide that along with
toothpaste
;
shampoo is an un-
necessary toiletry as well. That
·
generic
brand
·
dishwashing
detergent can clean your hair(
maybe even your clothes as well).
.
,
.
-You decide that hairspray is also
an
"
extraneous hair accessory that
you have been purchasing for way
too long
.
You convince yourself
·
that the flat. natural look is in.
-Whenevei you go food shopp-
ing now , you appreciate the grade
A quality of no frills brands and
wonder why you never bought no
frills
-
brands before
.
-You as well as your friends
begin to pilfer condiments from
fast food restaurants(i.e. ketchup,
salt, mustard).
-You take.that "Free Refill" sign
hanging in Burger King literally,
you bring your own cup in daily to
refill it .
-You begin to devise plans with
·
friends the best ways in which to
steal paper towels and toilet paper
·
off the maintenance carts.
-You begin to convince yourself
that you need to stay in more on
the weekend and study.
-You begin to envy your little
brother/sister when you go home
on breaks because he/she appears
to have much more money than
you do.
-You can't wait to go home for
Ch
r
istmas break and work!
Tara Stepnowski is one of The
Circle's Humor Columnists
.
LETT
"
ERS
>
ro
THE EDITOR
.
Parking nightmares
·
continue
~
~
-
.
-
~
•'Editor:
,
I
am sure many people have ex~
-
perienced what
·
I experienced
-
this
past Tuesday evening, Dec.
I.
What
I
am shocked about is the fact that.
no one.has written
to
"The Circle"
about this before.
·
·
a special permit
'
to _park there
because of_ the basketball game go-
ing on that evening.
I'm
sorry, but what do we have
this stupid little sticker on our
car
for if nof to park in the lot we were
tolrl
to
oark in? -
'
Tuesday _night
I
was coming
back
.
to campus
·
after going
·
out
with
ir
friend and was amazed to
What
[really want to know is
•
find that
,
we
.
were
·
not
.
allowed
'
to this -why should a resident student
;
parkourcarin Sheahan lot -'the payiitg
.
$16,000 a year to attend
.
Personally, that night we had to
park in a lot much further away
and then 3 hours later we had to
move the car because it
was
not in
the proper lot for our permit.
Tell ine, wnat's wrong with this
picture?
.
I
think something needs to
be done
·
about this
.
parking
.
situation. ,
,
,
,
,
.
,
lot we were given a parking permit
·
Mari st be
-
told he/she had no right
Sports are important in life and
for.
i. _
·
.
·
toparkinthespottheyhavebeen
at Ma~istCollege, but
I
think
.
the_
.
The traffic director;for lack of
.
told
is
the
()NLY
spot he/she can
,
·
,
!
'
•
,
a
_
bett<=L.term,c.Said.we.llad .. to_bay
_
e
__
..JJ~$
-
!n _w,!_t_t10ut fe~_r.of a __ ~ick~~ o;:
. _
. s,tuden~~ !t;~i::xt~io:e
j~r!i~r
-
.
,
•
-
-
..
.
--
---
-
,
,
-
-
..
· . --
· . bemg booted?
·
•
·
-
.
·
P •
·
-
·
·
'.
:
~
:
.
··
:
:
..
.
.
Outrage
expf~ssed
over
humor
column
'
Editor:
>
-
.
.
-
.
.
...
attempt at humor?
If
so, it is of the
. ·
Regarding;
'
Dave Barrett's View
-
. most malicious kind ..
point in the Dec. lissue oftheCir-
_
Furthermore, I am appalled at
cle,
•
I am writing to express my
his crude language. Ilis the lowest
outrage at both the contentarid the
I have ever encountered in The Cir-
.
_
,
.
language of his article!
:
: cle. I am very disappointed that the
._ •
First
'
·
or
all,
Dave Barrett 1s
editorial board chose to publish it.
ficliculing someone ,vho is not even
-
.
Should our community tolerate
here to
·
defend
-
himself! Is this aii
attacks on individuals? Should we
,
,
Jolerate language that is offensive?
·
This kind of writing hurts all of us
at Marist. I
-
hope that The Circle
will
show better judgment in the
future.
·
Rosemary Molloy,
Director of
·
Student Academic Affairs
Correction
An article in last week's edition
of The Circle stated
cases
of sex-
ual harassment involving students
harassing other students, went to
Carol Coogan, Director of Human
Resources. rn matters involving a
staff member and a student,
Gerard Cox, Vice President of Stu-
dent Affairs would handle the case.
According to the student hand-
book, Coogan handles sexual
harassment cases
involving
students and staff members. Cox
handles sexual harassment cases in-
volving students.
A ~urvey on the quiet hours and the guest pass policy
~ill
be available to students between 4-6:30 p.m. Thursday
rn the front of the Student Government Association Office.
i
------ ----
-
--
----
-------
- -
---
- - -
8
THE CIRCLE~ DECEMBER 10,
1992
... continued
from page 3
"It takes a lot of mental concen-
tration," he said,
a
reference to the
fact that a good luger must focus
on the icy course as it winds down
a
mountainside, making turns and
adjustments to the path of the sled
with just a shift of weight
·
from his
foot, which controls the direction
the runners cake.
•
In a sport where the difference
between winning and losing is often
a matter of just hundredths of a se~
cond, concentration and emotional
control are paramount.
Beany explained that the worries
of having to adapt to a new at~
mosphere
as
a college freshman
and the workload from classes
weighed heavily in his dec
i
sion io
quit entirely last
year. However, he
missed the excitement of the sport
too much, and couldn't wait to get
back
·
to it.
.
.
Arter all, the
.
Winter Olympics '
will
be held next year in Norway,
-
and Beany may have a shot at mak-
ing the United States luge team
.-
ry-ou are coriia[[y invitei
to atteni
an 'Evening of Lessons ani Caro_(s
Saturiay, '1Jecem6er
12, 1992
7:30 - 8:30
p.m.
Instrumentaf Pre{uie - 7:00 p.m.
Marist Co{Cege Cliape{
:
MC
_
CTA's
HuMARISTs
.
.
.
The cl-fuMARISTs
will
be
·
spc>nsoring
_
a coffee house
·
this evening at
9
p.m.
in
the
small dining
room. The
im-
prov.
come
·
dy group will be
donating a percentage of
the proceeds
to
the
Giving
Tree Project. Donations will
be $1 at the door.
IRISl
...
l-_:
:-
~ - -
•
~--C~ntin
-
ued
'
from
page
3
··
1ast
_
·
li
years,
fo(
the
last_
.
fhree
-
_
·
Republican 'administrat_ions, ''
·
.
Gildernew . .s~ys.
.
'.
,
:
,:
·
.
:
.
-
•
•
--
.
-
•
-
f
About being rousted·
:
oufof h
_
is
·
home and arrested; Gildernew says,
"It's the kind of thing you'd expect
in Ireland. I was rousted there at
least
.
30 times.
·
·
.
_
·
"But this
is
supposed
-
to
·
be
-
American
-
freedom. Even
asJ was
--
·
being taken to
·
jail, the INS man
told me he didn't know what was
going on and that his organization
hadn't broughtthis tip.''
_
,
:
.
- _
.
.
Gildernew, and others
·
sµch as
U.S.
·
Representatives
-
•--
Hamilton
Fish, Eliot Engel and Nita Lowey,
:
·
have concluded that his case is a
_
blatantly political attempt by
_
the
British government to silence
Gildernew, who continues to speak
.
·
out for the MacBride Principles,
which, Gildemew explains, "ad~
vocate fair employment practices
which
work
to
prevent
discrimination
-
_
on the bas
i
s of
religious background in
.
Northern
Ireland;" Persistent violations
-
of
the MacBride
·
Principles are
-a
source
·
of embarrassment to the
.
British government, he says.
·
He also says that Americans
should be embarrassed by its
. .
government, which allows itself to
be swayed by British influence in
deporting Irish holding legal visas.
-
The impending change in ad-
ministrations, however, may mean
more resistance to
·
British in-
fluence,- Gildernew says.
"I'm
very hopeful," he says. "I've
spoken with Bruce Morrison, one
of Clinton's top men, and he says
Clinton is against visa denial for
· Irish activists."
FORTUNE-----
... continued from page 1
As
far as researching 'stories,
O'Reilly said
it
is necessary to be
prepared and informed
-
on the
story, but it is important not to just
give a
:
history of the topic.
''The job of a journalist: is . .to
-
report
.
on what
is
new and-current
or coming down the pike;"'O'Reil- ·
ly said.
·
A
journalist needs to have per-
s
_
onality, creativity and brains, but
the most important trait is curiosi-
ty, O'Reilly said. -
"It's the curiosity' that drives you.
on,'' he said. "A great.desire to
know things is the most important
aspect
in becoming a journalist and
everything else you need to know
will
come naturallv."
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'
I
THE CIRCLE,
DECEMBER
10,
1992
'
9
F
·
ASHION
.•. continued from page
1
Catherine Eichner works on her award winning garment.
ELDER
... continued from page 1
can take two more additional
courses on the basis of space
.
availability without any additional
cost," Chartwat said.
Like traditional courses at
Marist, classes, for these older
. students contain behveen
20-35
· people, depending on the topic of
interests.
,
However; the courses offered are
non-credit,
.·
which according to
Chartwat adds to the relaxed at-
mosphere of the program and
.
its
members;
•
·
·
•
·
•
.
.
.
, .
·
·
:
·
·
•
,
:.>:cJurses
:
~siialiy.
:
come
·
rroni
the
.
divisions of humanities, arts; and
.
social sciences
·
,
to
incliide
,
topics in
literature,
film, history and current
events.
..
Such courses offered this fallin-
cluded topics such as News and
·
.
Vie,vs; which discussed the effect
the media has on the public .
.
·
.
•,
Also offered was a class in the
. investigating of Sherlock Holmes
and a class in chamber music .
.
''The
·
classes allow·us to keep an active
mind
,
since .there is so inuch to
·
·
stu
'
dy/'
·
Elivia Haddad said.
The Haddads have taken classes
·
in the Center foi- four semesters,
)earning
.
about topics from
_
chamber inusic to cosmology, and
they said they loved. them
·
all.
''It's so hard to say which one
I liked the best becaus~ they were
all so good," Elivia Haddad said.
"The people who present the
material to the class are the tops in
their fields, and it is a privilege to
attend a class with someone of their
caliber," Eli via Haddad added.
"I
thought
,
I
had a lot of
lmowledge on the subject before
I
came
·
here,
-
but l.was humbled,"
said Helen Selinger, a resident of
Wappinger Falls,
N. Y., who is tak-
. ing a class on Gilbert and Sullivan.
''These people
.
are not
.
novices.
·
They are all very bright,'' .SeHnger
·
;
:
added
,
:~:,:
,;;;~
,
.
. ·
· ..
:
.
;
:,
;
_
,
,
·Selinger said she enjoys going to
'
school
"at
Marist
·
because it adds
another dimension to
·
her
lik
"I
go to senior areo bics four times
a
week
·
and I go
.
out with my
girlfriends for lunch' but this is
much:'
·
more stimulating then the
other things I do," Selinger said.
She
.
also said she enjoys the peo-
. ple who she attends class with
.
.
.
.
"When! started, I came in cold
turkey
·.
because I
.
didn't know
anyone, put little by little I got talk-
ing with some people and they are
all very nice, but I don't think they
.
let enough people enroll," Selinger
·
added.
.
.
·
She said that 20 people enrolled
for
.
tlie dass on Gilbert and
Sullivan but only 12 people came
.
on the first
.
day.
"We usually average seven or
Circle
photo/Matt Martin
eight people per class but it is a
shame that more people don't
come because ,vithout them we lose
some of · our class discussion
because they are not there," Sel-
inger said. Selinger added that the
people who do attend do it because
they want to.
Vincent Toscano, chairman for
the humanities department at
Marist, said that there was a dif-
ference between teaching older
students and the traditional
undergraduate. .
.
.
.
·•
''Undergraduatestake classes
. b·ecause
ttiey
iia'.ve to"
arid wheri you
teach them, you deal with giving
them the basic information that is
needed on the topic at hand,"
.
Toscano said.
"With these older students, you
are dealing with their life history,
so you get a better exchange of
ideas and they are speaking from
their own experience rather then
just textbook
knowledge,"
Toscano added.
Toscano said
it is a terrific ex-
perience
·
because older students
show the instructor how grateful
.
they are for the information at the
end of each class session.
"They make you feel good after
a presentation. Sometimes they
even applauded when I finished.
And in all my years of teaching
undergraduates, I never had an
F4~~;;~~~~:~;~;;;;:-~:;;;;~;;:::--1
f;}
Are you enthusiastic, po~itive and sincere about your experience here at
M
ffi
Marlst?
If
so, the Admissions Office would llke your help! We're looking for
~\i
r
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
~
j
MARIST AMBASSADORS,
students who· are wllllng
·
t~ return to their high
I
ti
schools
over Christmas break to speak wlth students, gtudance counselors and
J
~
·
.
.
.
.
.
-
g
teachers
about Marlst. The Marlst Ambassador Program would indude
f~
ij
answering questions, handing
out
college
literature and, most Importantly,
i]
I
sharing
your Marlst experience with high school juniors and seniors.
&
.
I
~1:;~:!.~•:~~\~
0
[)~~:eii::J: ~~:~i:~~:~ei't:~u:a:~
I
[l
3pm,
there
will
be
tables in Donnelly and the Campus Center.
You
may
pick
up
i;~!
ID
the Mar1st ~1:iai.~
.
99T packets at eit~er location. The next step ls easy - Just i
!
ili
m
visit your
hlgh
schooC
.
.
.
.
fili
I
.
.
.
You can make a difference!!
i
fj
So
stop by our table in Donnelly or the
Campus
Center, or see Jamie O'Hara In
It
[~ the Admissions Office, Greystone, Monday through Friday, 9-5 to pick up an
m
I~
Ambassador
packet!
Iii
li1ta:~2:rgz.:r;;:r;r,.;;;;;.:&,,'.::.·:cs,;.:K,r.:.~:.:
·:
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:
·
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calls its holiday collecdon; which is
.
meant to go along with spring and
foll collections for the annual Silver
NeedleAwards and Show held by
the fashion program every April.
·
"The dress is floor-length and
made of navy wool jersey,"
Eichner said. "It's got criss-cross
straps and a large slit up the back.
"The jacket is made of navy
guipure , an imported lace, and a
gold lame brocade.
"It's stuffed with
15
yards of
tulle, which gives it that sculpted
effect."
Eichner said the design was in-
spired by her finding a swatch of
cloth in the garment district of New
York City earlier this fall.
"
I
think it was the color," she
said, trying to pin down the source
of inspiration. "It's a dark navy,
more like a midnight blue than the
ususal navy blue.
"The theme Air France gave the
show was a party collection, so the
color seemed to fit that theme."
From that initial inspiration, she
did some sketches and then com-
pleted the garment that would
ultimately send her to Paris.
Eichner's winning the invitation
"is important to the Marist fashion
undergraduate class applaud for
me after
I was done with a lesson,"
Toscano said.
And like many undergraduates,
these older students take classes
with someone they already know,
usually with their spouses.
"It
is our quiet time we get to
spend together and it allows to
discuss topics of mutual interests to
us," Raymond Haddad said.
Anna Buchholtz,
a resident. of
the Town of Poughkeepsie and the
former town supervisor for 14
years, said she enjoys taking classes
with her husband.
"We have taken three classes
.
together so far and it's a fun thing
to do togethe:r," Buchholtz said.
Even though the Center for
Lifetime Study has been establish-
ed for less than six months, most
of the people involved already
know what the program's benefits
are.
Selinger said that she thought the
simple idea of the program was the
prime benefit. "Just by offering a
program like this is a benefit. It's
simply a wonderful thing for our
community," Selinger said.
program because it represents the
first time we've been invited even
to participate in the competition,"
DeSanna said.
DeSanna, along with program
director Moya Donnellan, who was
not available for an interview, and
senior Val Yoli, will take advantage
of a special package deal offered by
Air France to go with Eichner to
Paris.
"I
look at (Eichner's wjnning) as
validation for the program and
everyone involved in it," DeSanna
said. "It's not been the easiest of
years for us because we're in tran-
sition, and this let us know we're
going in the right direction."
Donnellan was named to replace
the previous fashion program
.
director, Carmine Porcelli, in
September. Porcelli resigned dur-
ing the summer.
DeSanna hopes Eichner's
achievement will pave the way for
Marist's future participation in the
French competition.
"We'd like to make this com-
petition an annual part of our pro-
gram," she said.
"It
keeps our minds active and
it also helps to keep us current in
the world today," Eli via Haddad
said. As for the people who present
to these classes, they too know
what the program's benefits are.
"It is a good reminder for peo-
ple that there is nothing to be afraid
of by growing older 1:iecause you
can still be intellectually stimulated
and challenged," said Toscano,
who taught a
class
on the Civil War
this
fa\\.
Currently, the Center for
Lifetime Study is in its planning
stage for the spring semester, but
the older students involved are
ready to start.
"i
will definitely stay with the
program next semester simply
because I enjoy it so much," Sel-
inger said, as she rushed off to her
class.
Raymond and Elivia Haddad
said that they too would stay with
the program for the spring
semester. "We are already signed
up and ready to go," they said.
&ETTEMBQE' 8
Always
FREE DELIVERY
to Marist!
!
- New Location -
Route9G
Hyde
Park, New York
(914) 229-9009
NEW HOURS
Tuesday - Thursday 11 am - 1 Opm
Friday- Saturday Ham- 11pm
Sunday
10am - 10pm
BRUNCH
Specials Tuesday - Sunday
Large Pie
Buy
one large one
xtra cheese
topping pie for
$5.99
$10.99
and get
EVERYDAY!!
the 2nd for FREE!!
GOOD LUCK ON FINAL EXAMS!!
.__
_________________________
_.
- - - -
~-----
-
f
f
i
(
'
\
'
-
·
...,;:-
10
·
.
THE
.,
CIRCLE, DECEMBER 10,
1992
.
'
'
.
..
'
..
'·
.
.
.
~
'.
.
.
.
.
.
The
·
Student Prograrnmlng
:
Coun
'
Cil
Would like
.
·
fo
·
·
Thank
-all
of YOU
.
.
.
for
.
making all of our events such a success
.
I!
·
TGIF Foxfests
Mario J~yner
Paul
Venier
Taylor Mason
Wayne Federma~
Spanky
.
Cheryl
King
HuMARISTs
Livingston Taylor
Flor de Cana
Paul
Strowe
Jen
.
Ferguson Duo
Jeffrey Gaines
Those
Melvins
Jady Kurrant
Suzi Landolphi
In Search of Dracula
.
··
.
.
UFO's
·
·
Shooting
ijack
.
-
·
-
at Homelessness
·
-
·
Halloween Dance
Winter Semi-Formal
For further inormation contact SPC at x2828
ROUTE 9, HYDE PARK
(Next to Shoprite
Plaza}.
,
·
229~9000
-
·
BEER • SODA • ICE • KEGS •SNACKS
-
•. LOITO
LARGEST ASSORTMENT OF
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·
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.,
.
.
'
·
..
·
·
"
,,.
·
.
. . .
-
.·,
··
•
.
.
SAM ADAMS LAGER
·
.
·
·
'
COKE 12 PACK
.
..
4 Pack
HOLIDAY GIFT PACKS
BEERS OF THE WORLS
$1199
Many Other Holiday Items!
GENNY BOTTLES
$899
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,..
"
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~
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Case
Golden • Beer • Ale • Light
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LE;::.E=:;ND;::=S:-;:;D~EC:::-:=EM;-:;B::=ER~1~41i:::-:H-------,1 - - -
r'
.
'
11
.
'"•
.'
..
leers knotted again; rematch with So.
Ct.
Sat.
,
:
.
,·
_
.
could
haV
~
ptaYed
better,,, he said.
·
b
y'
ANDFIEW HOLMLUND
"We should have never allowed
·
Sta
'
tt
Writer
them to score on a 5-on-3 advan-
'
It still has not died. The Marist
hockey team pushed its unbeaten
.
streak to six games with a 1-1 tie
to
.
Soutliern Connecticut Universi-
ty at the Mid-Hudson Civic Center
on Saturday night.
.
.
After a scoreless first period, the
·
Red Foxes; who are 3-1~3, found
themselves trailing
1-0
when
Southern Connecticut scored at the
·
3:09 mark of the second period.
·
Marist rebounded to knot the
game at one apiece when Mike
Flynn, a senior forward, scored his
fourth goal of the season on an
as~ist
,
from
.,
defenseman John
Dougherty at· 8:20 of the final
session.
"l received a real nice pass from
John from the defensive zone,"
Flynn said. ''{got it at mid-ice, and
right when
I shot it, I
·
got tripped
up. I did get the shot off, though,
and it passed the goal in the bot-
,
tom left corner," he added.
.
•
Dougherty said it all started .
·
when he saw Flynn break out
towards the center of the rink.
>fx
,
.
.
.
,
...
.
'····<~
Mari~t'sTom Schlief charges full-tilt towards the goal in Saturday's 1-1 tie to Southern Con-
necticut. The Foxes, 3-1-3, are home this Saturday at 10 p.m.
.
Circle
photo/Matt Martin
-'«:i~~~~~..,c,c;:~~~~~
-
~~~~::,..,c,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
tage because when you are up
5-on-3, you arc expected to score
.
"
Co-captain Ed Sherako, a senior
right wing, felt the Foxes made its
presence f
e
lt.
"I think we had a great game out
there," he said. "We didn't finish
off our plays, but it is still a step
in the right direction."
Sherako feels in order for Marist
to finish on the winning end, they
need to execute at both ends.
"We need to finish off our
plays," he said.
"
We have to
knock (the opponent) down
psychologically as well as physical-
ly."
After tomorrow night's game
against Albany State in Albany,
Marist will return home on Satur-
day, once again, to face Southern
Connecticut.
Walsh said the team will have to
be effective on the power play
when the two teams meet again in
a Metropolitan Conference tilt.
"We have to look to capitalize
on our power play," Walsh said.
"It
did not go as effectively as
planned (the last time
.
)"
According to Flynn, the team
needs to avoid making unnecessary
:
"l
started coming out of the
zone;'' he said. "I saw Flynn
·
get
clear from Southern's defense, who
at the time were
.
back-checking,
.
and
l shoveled the puck up to him
and he was able to pop it right in."
....
~~
........ ..-..
_
. - . - - .
~
.
~
penalties and improve breaking
...,.._._.._.._.._.~ - - -
~ J t ' l i : ~ ~ ~ ~ J t ' l i : ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ - ~ . .
out of its defense.
First-year Head Coach Kevin
Walsh said his players gave a fine
p
e
rformance
.
''We played
.
real
well," he said. "We played a com-
plete game
-
and executed
well.
·
Basically, it was a continuation of
last Sunday against Siena."
Walsh felt it was not only an ex-
citing contest, but his team ex-
ecuted around the puck.
"The game was made up of two
excellent teams," Walsh said.
"Both goalies came up big.
I
think
we back-checked
well."
For Marist, goaltending did, in-
deed, come up big as sophomore
Brad Kamp turned away
20
of
21
shots from Southern. Kamp at-
tributed the Red Foxes' success to
the defense.
"I
thought our defense played
Aqua,tnen spear Big
·
East foe
byMIKE WALSH
0
Staff; Writer
and took second in the 200 in-
dividual medley (4:34.32). Both
were seasonal dual-meet bests for
ed golds in their individual events.
Arnold was victorious
·
in the
200-yard backstroke competition
·
with
'
a
iiine
'
6f
'
2:06
:
98:
Cc
.,
.
;.
:_
The
_
·
111en's swimming/diving
·
the sopnomore
~
·
..
.
~
- ·
squad
competes
through
a
rigorous
~
Jelen
:
h~-efu_erge(!
:
as-a
"
~\JP
sajm~
~
'
-::-::'·-•,,;-
.
7
-:r
:::::
.
,
:::::e- ..
,
-,
·
:
~
~:,
schc_d
_
ule. So
·
when a meet
.
ag.unst
:,Qic,~
,
;
~nJg.
~
1
tea,!fl
.:-
\l,9d
VaQ
_
~
~~~~~r
~'
Gagne
'
lei:I the
f
pa¢k in
·
the
:;
200
·
a
_
dearly-inf ~ii9r ~ec1.m comes aion~,
.
.
att.~1butesJ11s sucf
,
ess to ded1cat1on.
:
breaststrofo · (2
:
18.62).
Tomala 's
the Red Foxes are-able to expen-
Doug
.
.
really
.
works
.
hard
·
to
win in the
·
200 freestyle (l :53.47)
ment- a
.
bit
~
as
•
well as focus on fulfill his potential as an athlete,"
followed a second-place
·
finish in
details
-
rather than
·
focus entirely he _sa_id. Jelen agreed,
.
"I've been
the 100 freestyle.
·
..
upon
the
competition
.
trammg much harder than
·
last
O'Neil took first in the 50-yard
'
Such \Vas the case Saturday at year~just practicing, practicing all
freestyle (:23.47). The 200-yard
Seton Hall.
·
·
the time
:
''
.
:
He
a
d
.
Coach Larry
·
Va'n Wagner
.
.
H
_
is perso
_
nal
.
goals .for _this
medley team of junior Matt Mar
-
b
d
tin, Gagne, sophomore Matt Blues-
.
J
ookadvantage of the opportuni-
sea~on~o eyon theMetropohtan
tein
and
freshman
David
ty
·
·
by allowing his S\Vimmers
.
to Sw1mmmg Conference.
.
Malsheske also seized a victory .
.
swim differerifevents.
He
was also
Th~ ~ilver Springs, Md., native
.
able to enter some of hi:i' inen in stated succinctly
,.-
«I plan to qualify
.
.
.
_
The site of Saturday's meet will
· ·
rtiore
-
races than he normally
for
the ECAC (East Coast.Athletic
,·
be at
-
St Francis
(N.Y.)
.
This will,
·
,voidd
·
.
·
Conference) Tournament."
·
•-
.. ·
likewise, be a relatively ea
s
y meet
·
:
••w~aker swimmer~
·
gotth
e
op
~
~
·
.
<
if
his
:
i:>ei:fo
.
i:ma~~e
'
thu~
.
}
a_
i
is
'
a
·
.
to take, according to Van Wagner
.
·
:
Portunity to swim
·
mqre
·
events;''
"
r~asonable md1ca_uon_ofh1
~
poten
-
Like Seton Hall, the focal poin
t
·
;th¢.15th-year coach said
;
"iristead l1al
;
an ECAC b1rtl1 ts not out_o
f
:
of.
one or two races we can use
reach. Jt!len has taken a tqp two
at this meet
will
be pace.
··
..
·
them in the maximu~ of three."
.
finish in s~ven
·_
of.his nine in-
"Every day this week we'll work
:
:
The J 16-96 victory was the
dividual
t
races
.
.this season-five
on it," Van Wagner said.
"I
want
.
team's third dual meet win of the
were wins.
.
.
them to be more conscious of
se~son againstjust one loss. Doug
Sophomores Brett Arnold,
maintaining pace, and
I want there
Jeleri•Jedtheswimmerswitliafirst
RonaldGagne,
'
AngelToinalaand
to be a progression in the
in
'.
the°2()9
~
yard butterfly (2:07.84)
freshm~n~yle(~'tfei_l also snatch-
understanding of pace .
.
"
the best it ever had this year," the
starting net-minder said. "Overall,
it was a strong defensive effort."
Despite some glitches, Dougher-
ty said he and his te
a
mmates played
a solid game.
"I
think we played well, but we
"We've been taking a lot of
dumb penalties,''. Flynn said. "We,
have to get out of our own zone
and break out stronger."
Friday's match up will be played
at
7:30 p.m. and face-off for the
following night will be at 10 p
.
m.
Sophomore Ron Gagne pops his head above water on his
way to a first-place finish in the 200 breaststroke
.
·
.Circle
photo/Matt Martin
Videos
neW
weapon in recruiting
by
KEITH SOUT AR
Staff Writer
Division
I
.
college basketball
recruiting
.
is
.
serious business.
Coaches need every available piece
of information about prospective
players and videotapes are now be-
ing used in the battle for top
recruits. Marist College is part of
that growing trend-especially in
its recruiting efforts in Europe.
Associate Head Coach Jeff
Bower returned from a recent trip
through Europe and brought back
tapes of some promising European
players for Marist to look at
.
Before he could view the tapes,
however, Bower had to have the
tapes converted from the European
videotape system to the American
system.
Audio Visual/Television Opera-
tions Manager Janet Lawler took
care of that for Bower with the help
of the Panasonic Worldwide Com-
munications System. The system
has been at Marist a little over a
year and was purchased primarily
to help with the Marist Abroad
program. The cost to have the
tapes converted is not cheap, so
when Bower realized Marist could
do it
,
ht! quickly took advantage of
it.
.
..
HT
·
.I.
t
should really
help recruiting a lot. It's
one thing to tell so-
.
meone about the school,
hut it's another to ac-
tually see the student
body."
-
Janet Lawler,
Media Center
"The cost is high," said Bower.
"So if you know you have this
capability on your campus, it's just
one less thing to worry about."
The service is free for the team,
except for the cost of the tape.
Where
·
the service really helps,
'
according to Lawler and Bower, is
when Marist is able to show the
overseas players tapes of the Marist
campus and what it really is like
here.
·
"It should really help recruiting
a lot," said Lawle
·
r. "It's one thing
to tell someone about the school,
but it's another to actually see the
student body."
·
Bower agreed. "Where it
'
s a big
help is when we sit down with them
and they can see our campus and
what we are trying to do with our
program."
Bower spends the summers in
Europe viewing major champion•
ships involving many different
countries and said the tapes will be
an important tool in evaluating
these players.
"One of the biggest things about
kids from Europe is information,"
he said. "This is just one more
piece of research that is going to
help us."
.-
j
\
:.
'
•
j.
·:
..
STAT
\
Of:
i
,
:JHE
'.,
:
.
:
WEEK:
,
.
.
,
, 'W
<i
.
'r¢
;
:
,
:
r~~ily
;:
.going
..
to
,
:_
.
;
,
The
:·:
\vofuen:'.s
N
basketball
i
betit
_:
thern
:
iip
.)
gqiJd./'
:
_\
.
.
.
,
,
.. _
. .
.
•
s
.
·
_
.
.
.
.
::
-
·
·
·
.
:
.
·
.
.
tearo
:
'
},e
,
at
\
½\rmy
f
forjhe
·
first
- -
.
;
'
r:
~
_
Ll~yd
.
)loldst~i~
:'
:_
T~EJi~cLE,
'
·
-
.
p
O
RTS
'
:
DECEMBER 10,
1992
Lt_im_•
,
e....;
'
<
_;,in_;
'
<
..:..,~c..,.;.ti __
'o.;.;..p~l
·
.;...~i_
st
_o....;ry"""'."
·
·
..
_
.
i
.
_
-'
-
·
~
-·
- - . I
.
12
>
.
.
'
'.
.
.
,
... ,,
.
.•
ft()xeS
fi~ll--,aiajijj,;
•
loSe
On
fillal
/
l1l~Y
·
.
-
.
-
.factoi:
.
(at the"erid
,.
of.the
-
game)."
by
TED HOLMLUND
·:
-
·
.
Marihattari's key
:
pJayer, Keith
-
Staff
Writer
'
·
·
Builock;was the difference for the
Jaspers. Bullock;
:
imAH
~
Ainerican
.
A week later
·
: Siena almost
candidate, sc
·
ored 24
·
·
points
.
and
·
repeated.
·
.
-·
· '
:
,
•
.
•
,
.·
grabbed eight relfotirids
;
·
.
·
·.
_. _
·
_
On Tuesday, the Red Foxes
(U)
·
First-year
,
Head Coach F
_
ran
.
·
dropped
:
another dose
..
decision
Fraschilla
·
said
<
his
:
"team
.
·
woiild
62-59 to Manhattan College at the
·
realize how big
a
win it
\
vas because
-
-
James
:
J. McCanri
.
Recreation
·
.
he
_
believes the Red
i
Foxes
·
could
.
Center.
:
.
.
.
·
m
·
ake a
-
run
for the Northeast Cone
.
Trailing
60-59 with
:27.4
remairi-
:
ference
·
ti tie;
.,. - .
.
- -
-
-
_
_
ing,
the Red Foxes took
_
the ball
.
to
-
'
-
'I'd hate t<>
·
ptay them again;"
half court and called a time out
he said;<'Tonight, we beat
a
cju~li-
with
-
:19.8 lefc
-
.
.
·
ty team."
.
·
.
.
-
.
After
·
:
the
·
.
first options
-
were
.
Lake
.
led the Marist attack not-
covered, junior point guardDexter
..
ching 16
:
points on
~
6°of-13
Dunbar drove to the basket
'
and
shooting. He also pulled down a
.
missed an eight-footjumper.
·
team-high eight r:ebounds.
"We wanted to get
-
the ballin-
Ingles added 15 points and
.
side to Ingles;'' Head Coach Dave
Buchanan chipped in with 12 to
Magarity said.
_
"Lake
.
off
the
balance the charge.
_
-
double~screen was our second
·
op-
Magarity said the
.
team has to
tion.''
keep plugging away un~il the breaks
._
In the finalpossession,Magari-
.
start falling their
.
way
.. "We
co
_
uld
ty said he
told
the team to loo
.
k for
.
be 3-1, riot 1-3," he said
:
"It's tear-
the first
-
open
.
shot.
.
_
·
ing me apart. I
-
want
.
them to get
With around :
13.
-
remaining,
-
that great win. We
..
can't let-this af-
senior Mike Schrieber passed up
fect'us.»
· · · ·
·
·
.
what looked to .be an open three-
This weekend the Red Foxes
point
.
shot.
..
.
.
.
traveled to
·
Syracuse and placed
"After
•
making
-
one- (a three-
· third in the Carrier Classic.
·
.
pointer) eirlier, I would have been
After losing 86-61
.
to Virginia
content if Mike ,let it fly,"
·
the
·
Commonwealth, Marist no~ched its_
seventh~year coach said. "M
.
ike's
first victory of: the season
-
with a
capable of making the shot, but it
78-69 win over SouthernMississip-
-
was not a bad decisfori because he
pi
.in
·
the consolation
_
.
game.
-
.
Senior Fred
.
Ingles leaps forward
for
:
two of his 1
s
:
points in
knew the play was designed}or
Freshman Danny
·
Basile scored a
Tuesday night's loss to Manhattan.
Circle
photo/Matt Martin
Lake c;>r lrigles."
·
.
·
.
-
team-leading
11
points in a losing
This weekend
,
the Red Foxes
travel
·with
the
_
team this weekend
Some of the players 53:td they felt
effort.
.
.
.
:
_
.
_
•
.
.
_
.
were without the ~ervices of senior
.
due
'
to
.
personal problems;
,'
The
Dunbar was fouled
<>Ii
the final
-.
Lake, who had
:
.b_een
·
struggling forward Sean James whp did
.
not
press
.
release
'
also said he
.
has
.
drive .
.
·
.-
·
_
-
.
.
· -
from' the floor,
· :
regajned his travelwith the team; James was on
returned to theMarist roster after
.
-
<'
I
thought Dex goL fouled,'_'
.
,
shooting touch agai
_
n~t
:
Sg~t~em
.
the berichfor the
,
clubTtiesday, but
"a two,game leave ofabsence" and
.
junior
'
forward
·
izett
.
Buchanan
•
Mi~sissip~i/sc~r~ng 23
'
p,9irits tj1f
:
rcti(rtotsuit:uf
/~
.
C
f /.·,,.
_,i
_
:-
,
has been ''suspended indefinitely
.·
'
.
sai~:
?I_tseemed
·
tnat th~
_
refs
:
ha~
_
'
:'
fivt:
·
~
_
hr
_
e~~poiitter s :
·
H$:jls<f
was
8
· - :,.,,,:
'Accor"ding°'tq1t1fathletic
·
depiut-
.
_
,
'
·
·
for missing team practices-ancicon~
--
their mmds made up not to ~e a
·
'
of 8
:
ffom the foul line
:· .
.
·
..
'>
·
merit press release James did not
tests
·
this
·
pasqveek.!'
.
.
·
•
Field~,
M~ceY,
t
P"1'~Y
t
Yi~iPI"Y
over
_
AJmy
·
by
J.
W •
.
STEWART
.
•
-·
.
_
Sp
'
orts
_
E
_
clitor
..
-
.
Indeei The F~xes; def~ris
_
e
~~f-
,
-.-
,,
. :
:
S~phomore
.·
.
:
r~~w~rd
.• --
Andrea
: .
lasted
'
for
'.
alinosC six~and~a-half
focated
'
-.
the
-
·
A
.
rmy
i
_
slow
.
~down
. ·
'
Macey put
_
-
on
a
<;lini~ofher
•
own.
minutes
~
.. -
.
. -
-
-.
,,.
·
•
_
.
·
_
-
'
.
.
-
.
game, li111iting
_
the
!
Cadets to 280/o
.
- Macey
,
w~s an
,
iiµpo~ing figure in
•·.-
.
''It
..
(tlie
·
1uj run). tired them
,
Ken Babineaideared
-
his team
shooting
:
(15
·
for 52)-: from the
the low post, scoring 10 p
_
oints_and
.
out
"
;; said Babineau of'the
·
west
,vould not fare well iri a Io,v
.:
sconng
harchvoo:ci.'
_'
.
'.
:
\.-
:
.
.
<
_
:
ripping dowp lO re~ounds.
.
.
Poiriters. "T
_
hey
_
didn't have as _
.
game\vith
.
the Army C
.
adets
:
But
.
_-
.
. -
For
.
senio(
·
guard
i
Char_lene
.
·
:
.
"I
s
.
efa goal ~o
.
have 10 points
·
•
much depth as yt,e
.did.We
:
got a
.
Babineau the
:
women'. s
.
head
:
'Fields;winning a low~scoring game
and lOrebotinds over:the ,veekentl
-
coupltf
0
trimsiti0Ii
.
plays togetller
..
•
coach, wa; pleasaritly
'.
~urprised
,
as
•
.
·
fain~
as no
.
_
stir
P,ris~:
--
''W~
knew
but)
,
did~'t
:
g~f it,-s<>::I was kin~a
arid
-
iLjust happened.''
.
.
_
>
..
.
..
....
.
'
his Red Foxes (2-1) beaUAnriy at
how they
.
were gomg to attack_
us,,,
down aboutJhat,' said Macey. I
-
.
:
,
Maris
t:
played
'
a
·
delay
,
ganie
-
the
its
O\yn
game 51
~43;
.
if
w
·
as
_
tlt~
first
_
:
said
_
)ne
.
:
~o~~apt
aj~
:, •
:
'Ther
·
rea~
. --
just
-
"'a~ted
)9
:
_
~c~~niP,lish that:
rest'ofihe way and
were
never in
_
time iri school history the
·
women
.
screens verywc:11
.
aµ~
:
up u
_
nt
_
il this
>
And
I
drd
7
barely.
.
.
,
_ :
_
_
.
. .
.
danie'r
.
cif;Josing:the
·
Jeaif.
C
:
:
-
:
·
have beaten Army
_
at
the
:
Divisio~
poi
_
rii;
I
.
d
_
idri'(t!J,inls: w
§
defend~d
-
'.
'f\ridy
,
pla~ed9ne
·
<>~
h.er _best
-
•
• ·
·
••Witliuskilling dock;"they end~
.
-
-•
I
teveL
. ___
-
.-
_
-
·
·
_
·
.
-
;
~
·
screens well.Tonight
·
:we
:
did)'.
·
gamesever,'.'lauqedBabmea~;&'lf
:elf
up)e~orru
_
ng their
,
own\vo(st
•
"Lthought
'
a l<>~
~
-
scoring
·
g~me
;.
.·
On the offensiy~ ~\de oftl).eJ~all,
_
yie
:
keep
'
get
,
t!~iJhat
·
out of her,
enemy
·
because they use: tip 20
_
.
would
play into
'
theii.fav
'
or.;
.
;,
_
said
-
.
Fields led
.
the
;
w~y
with 20
.
points
<
we'll haye a solid postJiame.'r
It
.
seconds
··
.
every
.
tim
·
e chef have the
-
Babineau. ''But
·
w~
'.
really' played
.
on nine~of-20
;
shooting.
_
·•-.
.
.
-
.
:
· ·
was Macey'.s first
_
double-double of
ball,''
.
·
Babineau
'
pointed
:
out
.
. .
.
tremendous team deferise.
We
die:
-
Her coach said
'.
she
:-
put on her
her young career.
.
-
-
.
-
.
.
.
.
•
.
The
women
started the
:
season to
'
tated
_
what shotSthey were gonlla
_
usual
.-
.
.
solid
:
-'
·
·'
p
'
er
'
formance.
Mari
.
stJook a22al7 lead into th.e
mixed reviews iast: weekend
.
The
.
take and
I
think we sho\vecLthem
''Charlene really put on a
•
<;linic,"
locker room at the break but 1t
Foxes
_
were
.
troi.mced. by
.
New
.
that there are
·
two
.
teams in the
said Babineau.
-
"S
_
he took a_l,ot of
W<
,
mld not stay that way for long.
·
Hampshire 7~j0 o,n Friday but
.
Hudson Valley - that
,-·
can
,
play
smart shots; Shejust made the right
Leading 28-23, the Foxes blitzed
defense."
·
-
·
de
,
cision~
_
at the right time.''
·
ArmY, (1-3)
·
with
·
a 12-0 run that
... s~e
BE3AI..L
page
1-1
►
.
. ~,#
'.
~
.
·
by
TERI L
.
STEW J\RT
.
.
~-;
Staff
Writer
The women's swimming team is
rio,v focusing on its winter training.
According to
_
Head
,.
Coach
-
Lloyd
Goldstein, the
·,
team
:
will
return
from
Christmas
.
break on January
·
3
.
Upori rettirn1ng, the
·
team will
·
.
.
begin a rigorous
;
three-week train-
ing
_:
session,
',
swimmjng approx-
imately
:
45,000 y~rds a ,veek.
.
_
_
•:we're
really going to beat them
up
.
good," Goldstein said .
·
·
The R~d Fo~es (3-3) were really
•'
beaten up by Seton Hall last Satur-
day i
_
n South Orange, N.J
.
The
·
Foxes were defeated by a score of
153-76.
, ..
-
.
-
According
'
to
_
Goldstein,
.
the
·
team
'
did riot have
.
a good day.
''Nobody
-
rea
'
lly swam that
well/' he said.
·
Goldstein believes the reason for
·
the poorshowing
was
that the team
was tired . from the workout last
we«!k. Heis giving tliem a restthis
.
week(by
:
decreasing the swimming
-
yardage) and hopes they will be
rested up
.
for
0
St. Francis (N.
Y.)
'college
·
on Saturday.
_
Freshinari Christy
.
Radcliff hai;i
the best swim of the day. She plac-
-
ed
·
first
in
the
200-yard
breastsfroke~the only first place
finish
of-
the meet.
-
Senior captain Kris- Andreasen
had two second-place
-
finishes, the
-
first co·ming in the
·
1000-yaid
-
freestyle with a time of J2:37:58
·
and
_
the second in the 200-yard
·
,
i:ireasisfrbice;
_ ·
·
·. · ·-
.
·
. •
·
Andreasen feels the team is cool-
-
ing off and getting ready for
break
''It
.
was a tough meei but rthink
every9ne isjust v.rin~irig 4own,"
she
-
said
;
·
.
Andreasen
-
also
added,
"Everyone on the team has a real-
·
1y good attitude."
.
.
.
Andreasen said
.
she is already
looking forward to the conference
-
chainpionshipsin February to see
·
how everyone does;
. .
.
."By the'iime they come; we
.
will be
_
-
rested and ,ve
'
should surprise
ourselves,'' said Andreasen.
-
-
---
.In
-
diving actfon; sophomore Jen
McCauley
·
placed
.
second in both
.
the l~ineter dive and the 3-meter
div;.
-
.
.
.
·
·
::
According to
.
diving coach
Melanie Bolstad, this was
.
her best
performance all year.
·
.
·
·
"The dive was a new one and we
were really pleased,'' said Bolstad .
-
.
,
.
.
·
.
-
·
:
:
..
•--,
►
·
;:.see
SWIM
page
.
11
Santa
Claus
is coming to (Po)' town ...
co·ach--a lifetime pass
to
the Dut-
Dear Santa,
-.
-
-
-
:.
-
-
.
.
..
chess Racquet Club in Pough keep-
.
•
I know you're
.
busy
·
checking
·
sie so his team can play on s~mede-
·
.
your list twice to
se~
whc:(s Qeen
cent courts. The courts we have
.
on
.
naughty and who's
·
been nice, but
·
campus aren;t even above
sea
level!
.
I would appreciate it if you could
• to the hockey team-varsity
-
find the time to swing by Marist
·
.
status. They
.
deserve it. Aftey
'
all,
College this year arid drop off some
they have been the
most
successful
presents to some folks who Ithink
winter team the past two years.
are most deserving ofthem. You
And, they draw in the fans.
.
..
know where Marist is, right?
.
Just
Amt if you can srieak it in their
follow the smell
·
of the
·
sewer
stocking, a rack for all
.
their ties.
plant-I'm sure
it
permeates all the
• to Ken Babineau, women's
way to the North Pole.
-
basketball coach-a playoff win.
Here's some ideas to start you
He's never had one
;
off...
• to Sally Johnston, ·women's
• to Dan Sullivan, sports infor-
_
volleyball coach-stepiadders so
mation director-a full-time paid
her team can block.
assistant. Dan is one of only a
• to Tom Diehl, lacrosse coach
handful of Division I SID's who
and assistant
.
athletic director -
works by himself and the workload
something, ANYTHING,' to make
he
has
is too much for any one per-
the man smile. It makes me wonder
son to handle.
what's wrong
·
when I don't see so-
His student interns help a great
meone smile for three years.
deal but in a Division I school that
•
You know what I mean, Santa.
continues to grow, don't you think
You've been hopping in your sleigh
it would be wise if we went out and
on Christmas Eve for how many
found someone who could share
years now? And you're still jolly,
the workload with him?
right?
• to Ken Harrison, tennis
.
_
_
.
~ to Art Smith, baseball
·Thursday.
Morning
_-
-
-
Qu~rterback
coach-enough money to pay for
all the dents the Mccann Center
roof is going to suffer when
baseballs stan flying out of the new
field.
.
• to the cross country teams-a
home meet. How about three miles
through the streets of Poughkeep~
sie at night? Now if that wouldn't
set some world records, I don't
k·now what would.
• to Charlene Fields, guard,
women's basketball team-,-1,588
career points: That would put her
at the top of the career scoring list.
• to "Doc" Goldman, men's
soccer coach-he already got his
present: a victory over nationallv-
.
-
rank~d St. Joh~;s and his first win,
-
• to Larry Davis, crew coach-
ning season in
.
se'!en years.
_
_
_
·.
a
·
listing
-
.
on
-
the Ma:rist Col_lege
.
•
.
to
..
Jim Parady, football
·
Composite Athletic Schedule.
·
coach.:.:a stronger passing' attack.
-
.
Every other scheduled varsity sport
And
.
if you
.
can't help him with
·
froin now until May is listed in it
that, S~ta, how about a clone of
.
except the~: Boy,
·
talk about
defensive monster Joe
-
Riccardi?
neglect.
·
• to the women ;s soccer teain-
.
.
These are just a few suggestions
varsity status. Why not?
.
'Tis the
to help yoµ this holiday season. I
season for
-
giving, you know.
know the athletic department is
*
to Dave Magarity;
·
inen's
awful tough to shop for. After all,
basketball coai::h~a trip to
·
the
what do you get for those who get
NCAA's. What more can you ask
free clothing and shoes from
for?
_
:,.
Reebok?
..
,
.,
·
.
.-;,,
•
.:
,;,_;,
:
• to the men's swim
.
team-the
'
--
'.
'
:
,
BeforeJ.wrap up this letter
;
San-
·
ability to accept the fact they are,
ta; let me just remind you I have
and always
will
be, referred to as
been very good
this
year. I
·
don't
MERMEN.
want to appear selfish or anything,
~ to Tom Chiavelli, softball
BUT ... do you think you can swing
coach-a serum that cures the men-
a job for me? I hear NBC Sports
ta! mistakes he says his team has
.
has an opening. Put in a good word
• to the men's volleyball club-a
for me,
OK?
·
portfolio to hold all of John
Oh, I almost forgot! There's one
O'Brien's red cards.
.
.
more thing you can deliver to cam-
• to the women's swim team.::..:.a
pus this year. It's for next
new pair of arms and legs. They're
semester's sports editor, Ted
gonna need them after swimming
Holmlund.
45,000 yards a week in
-
practice
Good luck. Happy Holidays,
during Christmas break.
.
everybody.
41.9.1
41.9.2
41.9.3
41.9.4
41.9.5
41.9.6
41.9.7
41.9.8
41.9.9
41.9.10
41.9.11
41.9.12
,
:
.·-·
·
·
.
.
.
.
.
..
·
•.·
.
.
.
.
.
.
'
.
.
.
_.
.
,
:
-
.
-
.
_
:
.
.
.
_
:.
.
-..
.
.
:
·
-
.
~
,
-':
,,
"
.
:
.
.
.
.
·
,
.
.
~
'
-
:
.
...
.
.
•.
.
,
•
.
.
.
.
·.
·
voLuMe,1,
-
NuM~ER 9
._.
MaristCoUege,
,
Poughkeepsie, N.Y.
DECEMBER10,1992
.
Senior goes to
·
Paris
£Or
fashion competition
b
y
S.J.
RICHARD
th~ international fashion w~~ld
.
·
wintter~
will
receive cash a~~rds
_·
Editor
''.We had no experience in this
and a scholarship to a Paris fashion
- - - , - - - - - - - -
'
'-
_
.-
_
,
_ _ type of competition, so we didn't
.
school,
·
Eichiler said.
.
'.
. . .
.
While rriost Marist students are
know
-
what to expect," Eichner
In addition, incentive awards of
prepar
i
ng to w
·
rap
up
the semester
said. _'
_
'Even the people at Air
.
approximateiy $1,000 \Vill
·
go
to
and head home for the holidays
,
.
Frarice said irwas an honor jus
t
for
other
·
designers whose work
.-
the
senio
r
Catherine Eichner
is
prepar-
.
Marist to be invited to submit sket-
judges deerri
.
worthy
.
.
.
.
..
.
ingfor
.
a trip to Paris and an inter
-
ches
.
"
•
.
.
·
_
.·
.
-
''Ifc
you win ariy
.
·
of
'
the
·
top
-
nationalcompetition
.
·
.
The
10
Americans going to the
·
awards, your ga.rment stays in Paris
:
Eichner, 22,
.
from Torrington
,
final
·
competitfori
·
come from
for 12 months to be used iil shows
·
·
Conn
.
, leaves Saturday for a week
fashion programs throughout the
and ads," Eichne
r
said
_
:
in Paris and the
_
Air-France spon-
·
country, Eichner said. The only
....
Just being selectedfor
J
~e fi~als
\
sored Jeunes Crea·teurs de La Mod
e
.
other representative from
_
New
provides
'
her with instant recogni
~
:'.
•
-
;
(which transl
a
tes into Young
York state is a student from the
tion that will help in landing a job
Fashion Designers) fashion
-
design
Fashion Institute of Technology in
when she graduates.
. .
·
-
_
·
show and competition.
. .
·
_·
New York City.
_
. ,
·
"This cci
_
mpet
i
tion is
.
well
.
_
OCit's e
x
citing
;
just great,
"
said
.
'
-
'
I was
.
absolutely thrilled when
.
known, which means that my name
.
Eichner
;
one of just
IO
student
I. heard,'
'
DeSailna said.
"I
had
·
·
will
·
-
get
a
lot
.
of
·
,
_
recogriition,''
.
designers in the United States to be
-
Catherine as
a
student last year.
I
_
Eichner said
.
,
.
. .
.
.
·_·
selected for the sho\v, which
·
will
.
taught her how to hold
-.
a needle
.
-
She said she
•
is aiming
.
for an in
-
feature the work of students frorri
and it's thrilling
now
to see her put
terns hip iri the fashion indllstry in
-
.
·
21
countires
>
.
the whole thing together. It takes
New York City nextsemesterand
.
This
·
year marks the iOth an-
my breath ai,vay
to
see a student's
a job there when
_
she graduates.
niversary oftheintei:national com-
·
work honored like this. It takes the
·
"I've taken
a
lot
:
of design
petition, and
.
the first
.
year that
.
experience from the abstract
'
to the
.
courses
.
and
.
also courses like
·
Marist's division
.
of Fashion Design
'
tangible."
publication la you
i:.
and graphics, so
.
and Me
i
cha_ndising was invited to
Among the tangible
·
awards
.
·
there's a wide range ofjobs I might
particip
·
ate, said Sue DeSanna
,
Eichner ,viUreap, in addition to the
get into when lgraduate,'' Eichner
associat~
i
diredor.oftlie
:
program
.
week-long
.
trip to Paris, are a
said
:
·
..
·
_.
Eichner and junior
.
Nicole Coyle
cocktail party that will be attend-
_ .
·
For now, though, she is
.
thrilled
.
submitted sketches of their designs
ed by the winners aiichepresen-
to be recogriized as on¢ of the top
.
in October;
·
and Eichner received a
tatives of the international fashion
.
student designers in tbe world.
.
·
phoµe
call
aoc>Ut two weeks ago in~
world and the
.
final show and com-
The garment she
.
designed
.
and
.
forming
.
her that her work was
_
petition,
~
-which i~
.
schedule~
:
°for
produced for the competition
.
was
_-
·.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. .
_
J:
among _t~at select~d by
-
~ P,anel of
•
'
,O~c .
.18.
:
'
.
•
.
· ·
.,
,
.
.
,
·
,
,
,
_
,
·
:
Pj
1
~
_
-
~f
l
X~~t
,
tlil:
;e
tyf~~i~
V
~~
0
~r~
:/
;
;
:
Qath~fin,e
_:
Eic
_
hn~r;
se'nio_r. fashion
:
·
major;
prepares to travel
·
,
,:,;
four
Judges,
rncJudmg .
t~o
-
-
·
-
.
-
_Twenty
Judges
will ~el~~t !hree
.
i
;See
'
FASHIOt.f.
'
" :
-
9
►.
.
:'
:ttf
:
Parilf
\.
France.
·
'. '
.
.
,
.
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.
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.
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eqµ
q_
anon
Oi)]?(frfUlliti~s fOr
Jiibs
'
dJifrMfeit
prillle
-
·
:
..
:'
>
by
-
PATRICE
'.
SELLECK
'·
•
.
.
.
. ·,
-
~hese six peciple,iiow~v~i
/
are
:
•
have
decided
to
·
big
i
n aifain
.
wh:t
.
'
vicipr~i~
~
nt of:~uiiicu
i
urii-f<?~
:
~he
.
:
·'
.
_
The Center is completely run
·
by
' ' -
:
5
'
t
f
W
·
•
·
.
. ·
.
·
.
notthe
·
traditfonal 18
i<>
22 yea
r'
they maf have
'._
le_ft behind years
·
Cente
d
i.nd the wife ofJoriah Sher-
its
'
members, who act as commit
-'
'
.
d
C
,
: '
..
;::;"
ia
:
_
nter
.
:
.
-
olds that are usually
:
round
:
'
at
agd~their education.
. .
·_
.
·
·
.
.
·
·.
mari,
;
a meitiber of ,the
'
bi:iaid
·
of
tee members, planners, course
:<,
¢oll
i
ge
i f
ihe
_
sam
e',.
rio rrii!tf~
r
:
-
Marist
.
ori
·
a daily
:,
basK These
.
.
Approximately
.
350;000
trustees
-
at
:
t\farist arid Rose Sher-
.
..
coordinators and
.
facilitators, a:s
.
lio
"!
;
<>_Id
'
plle is
;
P,eopl~
:
stil
L
bring
:
.>
students are
_
all 55 ofolder and they
·
Americails over
'
the age o
f
50
.
_
iire
man's
-
nep~i
'
w
.
i_
. :
: .
,_
.
..
.
·
. .
well as students,
.
all in accordance
·
something to drink to
c
class
/
there
..
are here not because they are earn-
no\v enrolled in college courses;
·
ac~
-
.
-
''It
.
was on hef:request and due
with their
.
individual skills and
·
'j
s
/;'
always
~
ariitn~sity
\
b~tween
·
,
'
ing a
·
degree; they are here
_
:Cor
·
a
·
.
·
cording to.the
.
Census
,
Bureau.
~ .
to
an
article that rriy husband'and
interests
.
.
.
students and ilomatter\vli#e
·
one
->
more pefsonalreasori-:- enjoyment.
.
The Center
.
for l'.it'etime Studies
I r~ad
_
inTh~ Ne\11 York Times tha~
.
.
,
:
"Everyone is expected to study
.
goes
°;"
i
niorning
·
_c1asses
_
:
still
:
have
.
-
"We have always tried
·
to con
-
enrolled 226 older students into its
appealed to us aild
_
in~d(! us realize
arid contribute
.
to the advancement
·
popr
,
'
.turnc:foK
<
:
;
,
:
,
<
}
·
:< ; . .
.
tiil.ue our education,'' said Elvira
program, this fall, aimed especial-
that this was
·
something we were
of this p_rogram,'' Joan Sherman
·
.
,
/
\
Espec
i
all
y
o1fone'.f
u
esday nior
-
·
:
Haddad, ofHydePark,N
:
Y
.
; who
ly_towards pe6'ple
•
55
_
otolder who
. >
looking
·
for
·.
in memory of
•
Mrs.
said.
.
.
-
-
/
!
[f
,
~
~
1
-
1l
·
~1:
:
~!1
\
n
·
;
\
i
i
:
~~E:ett!:
,
s~i~ ~
-
achelor of
.
arts
-
·
ha;~: ~i~re~gf~;t~~~ffu~e;~h~t
Sh~
-
~~:tl
r
0
i~na~~fAtl~~/t}~iie
·
..
mJcte ~~~~r~aiis
-
~~:t i~~e:;:ths~
i
b"right,
'
open
'
roorri
;
'
two rows
-
o
c
.
..
.
"
We have beeri transferred so
-
is funded by a gra
i
:it from Rose
Elderhostel lnstiiute, which
.
pro-
·
that this past fall's registration had
~ti_aiis
;
:
t
n,
.
_
a
::i
;
e
~i-circle, foe~
eait_i
·
_
:
many different tini.es ~ue to wqj-k,
.
·
·
Shemian,
:
a
·
.
former
·
resident of
vides
·
.
for
··
the
.
·
intellectual and
.
.
to
be maxed out at 250, ~ccording
othei waiting for class tci
.
begin
'.
.
- ·
- but each time we moved, we always
Poughkeepsie, who after her
·
death
·_
·
·
cultural explo
r
ation a.nd
·
develop-
..
fo
·.
Eleanor Chartwat, executive
.
Only six
·
·
.
people
· ·
sit
.
iil
-
this
-
·
·
went backtQ scho9)/' added Ray-
.
wanted
·,
her
'
inheritaQce
.
-
to
.
go
ment for men arid
\
vomen of retire-
director of the School
of
Adult
-
classroorri, patiently,
.
as
they
.
wait
mond
-
Haddad, who has his
towards a charitable c:>rganization
nicmt age.
:
It
.
also provi~es a relax.:
Education at Marist.
.
.
to :watch Gilbert and
'
Sullivan on
·
master's degree iii physics.
·.·
.
that would do somethillg in honor
ed learning environment without
.
.
"They are guaranteed to have
.
the 'J;'V~creeil'. The tape is popped
.
The Haddads are only two of the
-
of senior citizens in the coinmuni.:
the anxiety 6f exams cir grades for
two classes per semester and they
in and learning begins.
' ·
·
226 older students at Marist who
ty, according to Joan Sherman;
its members
;
.
,
·
...
see
ELDER
page 9
►
Fortulleeditor
-
s}i~res in~igllt
on
reporting world
-
by
CARI OLESKEWICZ
.
Ass_istantedito
{
.:
.
Brian O'Reilly
~
assodate editor
of Fortune magazine; returned to
Poughkeepsie after 20 years, arid
_
O'Reilly
·
first thought
.
about
,
journalism
·
,vhen
-
Woodward and
Bernstein revealed the Watergate
_
sc~ndal, since he
'
loathed Richard
·
Nixon.
all he remembered was the defunct
·
·
·
·
·
·
~
That's
.
when I knew
'
I was at the·
pinnacle cifbus driving and could
_
·
go
·
no farther"in
·
the field. So I
decided
to
try
something else."
.
Taking
a
'
journalism
class
·
at
~~~~~~s~~
ti;r~ stretching over
~'Writing Jias
·
been compared
to
r~moving your
O'Reilly,
44,
a
-
former Marist
.
own appendix./ like the conversation and talking to
student
;
·
said the campus looked
the most interesting people in the world, but the price
almost unfaniiliar,it had been
·
so
.
long.
.
. .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
you pay
is
having
.
to
write.''
"I find myself just stanng at all
the new
,
buildings, trying
·
to
·
remember," he said. "There is a
nice view over the river. I
·
forgot
how attractive it was."
.
O'Reilly studied to be a Marist
brother for two and a
·
half years
before he decided instead to go to
Fordham University, where he ob-
taine<l a degree in
.
english literature.
O'Reilly said he never knew he
wanted to be a journalist.
"The Marist brothers trained us
to be teachers," he said. "We
didn't have any obscure majors like
journalism.''
"I realized that in journalism
.
you can kick butt and
.
do
something worthwhile," he said.
·
O'Reilly went to San Francisco
upon graduation
;
where he drove
a school bus for a living. He
pointed out that in the seventies,
people were allowed to
,
"bum
·
around," that "career" was a dir-
ty
word.
"I finally progressed to driving
a Greyhound bus," O'Reilly said.
llrian O'Reilly
Associate Editor, Fortune
Berkely,~ O'Reilly then applied to
several newspapers, looking to start
his career in the field. His break
came
.
when a reporter was
beheaded.
The South San Francisco Enter-
.
prise Journal l_tad a position open
·
when one of their reporters was
beheaded in an
·
accident, and he
was hired.
.
.
.
"It
'
s that sort of dumb luck that
happens a lot in this field," he said.
"lt,s
v~ryr;mdomin applying for
.
the same
·
as being a reporter for
and getting jobs."
:
<
other publications.
·
·
.
:
O'Reilly worked at the Enter~
«Itis not a glamorous job,'' he
·
pri~
-
Journal, which
.
published
said. "My responsibilities were
twice a week, for two years, until
research assistant and fact checker
.
he decided he'd rather work for a
-
My'job was to disbelieve the writer
daiiy paper.
and if a mistake got through, it was
He moved to New Jersey and
my fault."
.
·
.
took a job working for the 1'ren~
.
In 1984, O'Reilly began writing
tonian as a night police reporter.
·
ful
(
time and
·
opened a
_
Dallas
.
"It
.
was a tabloid,'' he said.
Bureau for the magazine.
.
"The
.
Trentonian made the New
.
.
Now married and living in
York Post look like Foreign Affairs
Fairhaven, N.J. with three
Quarterly.''
·
_. ,
.
· ·
•
:-
;
,:;
_
_
-
<
children,
·
o•~eilly is associate
O'Reilly obtaine<l
a
fellowship at
·
/
editor
,
,
o
fi
fortune
,
and
,
spoke to
Princeton University after writing
.
•
communication classes at Marist,
·
for Princeton magazine for t
_
hree
offering to answer any questions
years. The Alfred P. Sloane
aspiring j~urnalists had about the
fellowship program involved
·
media world
.
·
teaching economics to journalists.
O'Reilly said there is no set for-
He did not think his resume would
mula to follow and said he hates
look better than with 'Princeton' at
writing. "Writing has been com-
the top.
·
pared to removing your own ap-
O'Reilly has been with Fortune
pendix,'' he said. "I like the con-
magazine since 1980, when a
versation and talking to the most
reporter he knew from Princeton
interesting people in the world, but
-
was able to get him in the front
the price you pay is having to
door. He
·
began at Fortune as a
write.''
reporter, which he explained is not
...
see FORTUNE page 8
►
.
'
'
2
New
Disile)'
.
lnOvie
a
flit
foi
young
llnd
Old
.
.
,
'
.
.
.
'.
.
-
,
,'
'
.
•
·'
·
,
'
.
·
Disney has done
it
again.
.
.
So,
·
with the help of
_
the
·
Genie, a magic
After the success of "The Little Mermaid" carpet and his sidekick monkey Ab!J, Alad-
:
Her
·
e are jus
_
t
.
a f~w names: Jack
Nicholson, Arsenio Hall, Rodney Danger-
.
field,
·
Ed Sullivan and Groucho Marx.
The musical score
for
"Aladdin" was
done by Oscar winning
.
composer
·.
Alan
.
Menken, with some h~lp from ano
_
ther Oscar
winner, the late Howard Ashman.
.
. ..·
and "Beauty and the Beast", Disney's din wins the heart of the Princess.
.
We also see him as
a
slot machine, a talk-
ing lampshade; Pinocchio and a variety of
animals. This character makes the movie!
animators and executives have another
·
The voice of the Genie is none other tha,i
These two men were responsible for the
music from Disney's two previous films, and
won their awards for "Urider the Sea"
.
(look
for a quick appearance by Sebas~ianthe crab
in this movie) and "~e ?ur G~est."
blockbuster.
.
■-•-----------'-•
"Aladdin" is a mix of great music, detail-
ed animation, and incredible talent.
"Aladdin" is the story of a
·young
peasant
boy
-
who falls in love with the beautiful
Princess Jasmine of Agrabah. But Jasmine
must marry a Prince and is having a very dif-
ficult time choosing one.
The evil Jafar, who works for the Sultan
The
Reel
Story
Jennifer
Giandalone
Disney also got another comedian to join
the cast; Gilbert Gottfried. He is the voice
· of Iago, the parrot who works for
_
Jafar.
Although I usually find Gottfried's whiny
voice annoying, he was very funny as the bird
who slams into things throughout most of
the movie
.
.
(Jasmine's father), wants to get the magic
· ..
lamp so he can control the people o f - ~ - -
- - - - - - -
Agrabah. He tricks Aladdin, the
.
only.per-
Robin Williams. This role was not only writ-
son worthy of entering the cave where the
ten for him, but the big blue Genie even
Once you hear Jasmine's voice, I know
what you're going to think. She sounds a lot
like Belle; who sounded a lot like Ariel.
Let me clear this up. The voices of these
three characters are provided by three dif-
ferent people.
Last year, we saw
.
the first animated film
ever to be
.
nominated for the Best Picture
award. This year, we may see the first
animated character ever to be nominated for
the Best Actor award. Anyone who could go
to a recording studio, stare alprops, and suc-
cessfully improvise his way through an en-
tire movie, deserves it.
lamp is, to get it for him.
·
looks like him.
Williams' ad-libs became part of the script
and some very talented animators managed
to keep up with hirri. The comedian's per-
foi-lnance as the Gen
.
ie
almost overshadows
the other parts of the movie.
Aladdin ends up with the lamp afte
_
r a dar-
ing escape from the cave and Jafar goes crazy
trying to find it and get rid of the Sultan.
I don't think he counted on Aladdin and the
Genie to ruin his plans.
·
Who does the Genie manage to turn into'?
Jasmine's voice is that of Linda Larkin,
who also does the singing in the film.
I gua
_
rantee you that come the spring, the
song "Friend Like Me", sung by Robin
Williams, will be nominated for an Academy
Award,
Judging from the articles I've read, I'm
not the only person who feels this way. Pro-
.
blem is, do you think the Academy will give
Robin Williams the award based on his vocal
performance only?
.
.
.
Both adults and children will love this
movie. You're never too old for Disney.
Scores of good muSlcal selections gone unappreciated
OK,
no looking back on the year
in music 1992.
No best/worst list.
No discussion of the bandwagon
jumpers.
No
venomous
attacks on record
company whores.
No bad-mouthing those
·
·
who
killed "Cop Killer."
No getting upset
that
"alter-
native" became "mainstream."
No outrage that CD and tape
orices are ridiculous.
·
them. Little to remind us of
"Luka" and a lot added by pro-
ducer Mitchell Froom. It's a little
.
bit industrial, a little bit pop and
In
.
your
ear
Dana
Ramones for the '90s--,-perhaps.
It's loud, fast and short. Enough
said.
8. Jeffrey Gaines "Jeffrey
Gaines." His CD came out of
nowhere, full of songs with emo-
tional maturity and a social cons-
cience. Often dark and introspec-
tive, it makes you think about a lot
of the good and bad that happens
to all of us. Simply put, one of the
best
·
debuts of the year.
7. The Sighs "What Goes On."
underrated band in the world. The
best thing Bowie's done in his
career and he gets slagged. Go
·
figure.
·
from 'Laverne and Shirley'?" "ls
that a cucumber'?" Yes, all these
questions and more
.
can be
answered with a wave of the wand
and
a
listen to this masterpiece. But
don't take my word for it. Ex-
perience the majesty of rock for
2
.
Rollins Band "The End of
yourself.
.
·
Silence." Henry
.
Rollins: singer,
,<
poet, coffee achiever. This album
5.
Lou Reed "Magic and Loss."
slams you in the best possible way~
Very few albums deal with the
When you're ticked
off,
this is the
mysteries of death: Now I
.
know
.
.
album for you. It's a soundtrack
why. No one could make an album
·
for your life.
as beautiful as this one.
If
you thought pop was dead, these
4. Miracle Legion "Drenched."
.
Buoniconti
d
.
. k" k"
d
1, Faith No More "Angel Dust."
And no ... no Ponderl·ng the pros
_
·.
•--!~~--~-~-----
guys are raggmg 1t 1c mg an
This one seems kind of nostalgic.
It's the best of th
ea
d
-1,
.
.
.
-
.
. .
.
·..
e y ran
1
s a
and Cons
Of
Mado
.
nna n
·
aked-_: J·ust
_
a· whole lotta enJ·oyable.
screaming back to life. It's short
-
·
Maybe it reminds you of,something
fl
D th
t
.
1
.
.
. .
-
and sweet, with harmon1· es
·
from
po·1gnant from the past
·
The vo1'ce
op·
ea
·
me a ' rap, country•
the 10 CDs you probably
_
did11't
9. Supersuckers "The Smoke of
·
pop; the theme to
·
"Midnight
b
th.
b t h
ld h
Hell,, No"' that Ni·rv·ana 1·s
00
hell, songs about lost love and Jove
and the melodies are distinct, tak-
c
·
0 ,,
_
..
bo
·
y•
_
'
.
and M
.
1
·ke Patton
·
's
pen-
uy
1s year u s ou
ave:
.
"
-
·
..
"
longer on the Su b(par),Pop label,
lost without all the lo
·
opy ncmsense.
ing you away to another place arid
chant for masturbation all rolled
10. Suzanne Vega "99.9F." The
someone had· to fill the space,
6.
Spinal Tap ~'Break
-
Like The
tirrie
.
·
·
up in one convenient package. In-
year saw very few good records
right'? Well, >these guys are better
- :
Wind."
,
~'Hey,
:
are
,they
a
,
real
3.Til)_Machine ''Qy_YeY, Baby/'
.
credible.
Q<>
out and buy it.
·
·
made
by
females. This was drie of
than
'
'
NirvaniE
-
They
'
-
are
'.
'-
the
-
;
band'?"
.
',\Hey;
-
isil.1t
~
that
,
the:
·
:
guy
.
,
Live,
.
and amazing,
:
lt's,:the most
.
;
'Mateo/in X'
·
i
brt11gs1esSOiis/JJ laclsi
'hiStOry
There comes a time when a
basis of racism.
_
.
•
· ·
·
·
movie critic has to live up to
In prison, Malcolm Little is con-
Many people will not pay the
I feel as of now that Washington
his/her name. The job is not movie
fronted by an Islamic convict and
ticket price to see this movie. And
·
should
:
win BeSt Actor
>'and
the
•
·
?
•
-
·
-
·
• •
inovie
_
gets a Best'
_
Picture and•Best
reviewer, where we go out and tell
begins to learn the ways of Islam.
why not. Because 1t is about a m1h-
h
h
·
bl k
f
·1
'
.
b
.
·
k
Director norriin
.
ation at least, which
.
.
you
w
at t e movie is about, but
During his lessons, he learns
tant
-
ac man or m1 ttant lac
·.
-
·
·
it will.
·
·
what we think and feel about the
about the "white man's" poisons,
:
audiences and
they
.would not see
·
movie.
his liquor, his drugs,
_
but most im-
a black,movie.
·
This area of news and informa-
portant, his words.
.
tion has caused much debate bet-
.
It really did shock me when they
ween tne critics and the people who
often clash viewpoints and knock
·
•--1111111!
_
-----••-
heads together to get their points
across.
Well, faced with this situation,
I feel many critics hir",'.e turned
reviewers due to the material mat-
·
ter of this certain cinematic
offering.
_
_
. ·
.
.
.
.
.
This is not a movie lean just say
"Oh, yeah,
it
stars
·
Denzel
··
Washington and Spike Lee and is
about Malcolm X and
·
he goes to
prison and converts to Islam and
blah blah blah", because this was
not.the intention of Spike Lee when
he made the movie.
I really believe this was not made
for profit, but for understanding
and educating, for storytelling to a
large mass of people who do not
have a great choice of films about
African-American leaders and their
fights and causes.
"X"
is not about
~•hating
the
white people for what they have
.
done to us so let us revolt and over-
throw our rulers," although some
will have you believe that.
Critic's
corner
Kraig
DeMattels
----------·
went through the dictionary and :.
found the true meaning of the
words "black"
.
and "white," and
the wordine each signified.
· ·
·
·
Are "black people" re~
·
lly
negative, lacking in color, evil'? Are
"white people" really pure,
:
·
good
in nature, and the opposite of
"black?"
.
.
There are many African-
American people I know who are
better people than some whites, so
should I start calling these white
people "blacks?"
But if people could open their
-
)B!
.
~9,M~
~
J~l\,~)~
;
;;,,~m~J,J~1~L
:!"-'>
1Ws is ~ust an example of the
J
~e~~r~
i
!~~J~~~Jt?:m.fJ~~~~
-
;&:
'
'<
~IJlt~
domman~ yocabula!)' we all
,ofJh~
,
~~ages
,
g1"!en,
·
>
-g_t~n
,
they
:
.
~
possess and which makes 1t harder
would see
·
that . Lee
·
,
has
laid the
. .'-
for ethnic groups to get along.
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Earn MONEY and FREE trips.
Organize SMALL or LARGE groups.
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But it is
.
not a black movie for
black people, it is a movie for all
·
people about racial
_
attitudes
'
and
·
-
froin where they come;
Maybe f6r Afric~n-Ain~rican
youths to get in tou_chwi~h theiran-
·
cient heritage
.
could help
.
\
them
achieve whatthey feel they are nQt.
·
White youths should look "into
what they are being taught by
friends and family as
to
what their
outlook on other ethnic groups
should be. The repetition of racism
must stop at some point.
Do not get me wrong
'.
.
I am
~~t
.
trying to be preachy or bring some
sort of "Wrath of
.
Kraig" on
anyone, but I was affected by this
movie; not in a racial ,vay only, but
the movie itself is excellent .
.
Denzel Washington will be
nominated, but
if
"A Few Good
Men" is as great as it looks, he may
not win Best Actor.
In fact, this movie will be
nominated for many awards, as
should "Unforgiven," but they can
only win
if
"Men"
proves only to
be Hollywood-hype.
But that is for another article.
And to those ,vho think I am just
-
conforming t<> safety
_
measures by
not giving "X" a negative re
•
view
to avoid
inciting public
'
outcry, I
:
.
ani rip liberal, bleeding heart, lei:-
.
me-save-the-world activist who
,.,
believes all ,vhites
.'
should
start
'
pay-
'
;
~
ing for the 400 years
·
of)njustice
done to the African-Americans.
.
I am a human being who believes
that the
_
re hasto be peace before we
start becoi:ning ,varring factions
and destroy our
•
countries; only
because there are people who refuse
to think for themselves.
Three hours
·
and
·
twenty-one
minutes goes by fast
if
you are will-
ing to keep imopen mind and learn
.
something.
·
·
·
·
·
True, I knew little about
Malcolm X going into the theater,
and the way Lee portrays him is
.
a
bit sensational, but instead of
everyone wearing hats and prejudg-
ing what to expect, go see this
movie.
It is not just there in black and
white.
Work on your ownl
Earn CASH, FREE TRIPS, AND MOREi
Openings to promote our
SPRING and WINTER packages.
Call Epicurean Tours TODAY!
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-
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GRE begins Feb~20
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ward
small classes (fewer than
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a..~T---Scm<c
•
\
'
·-·
.
-
.
·
-
-
--
--
-,-------------------
-------
---------
THE CIRCLE, DECEMBER 1(),
1992
'
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
3
Luck O' the Irish runs
out
for
bar owner
by
ANDREW ROSS
·
·
Staff Writer
·
Francis Gildernew thought he
was living the American dream in
the land of the free. He was an im
~
·
migrant from Northern Ireland
,vho worked as a carpenter for five
years
·
in New York City before
moving to Poughkeepsie in 1989
.
with his American wife; Sharon
.
In Poughkeepsie, he opened a
bar, Gildernew's Irish House, and
things were going smoothly.
Until the morning of April 16
1992.
'
On that morning his house was
surrounded by teams of agents
from
t
he Immigration and
Naturalization Service (INS) and
the FBI. Six agents entered h
i
s
home
_
and placed Gildernew under
arrest,
.
_
charging
him
with
perpetrating a fraud on his green
card application that allowed him
to work in the United States
.
"It
was a complete surprise to
me," Gildernew says. "I'd been in
·
this country eight years with no
problems, not even so much as a
parl(:ing ticket."
tion on on his application that ask-
·
ed whether he had ever "been con-
victed of a crime of moral tur-
pitude" in his native land.
Gildernew insists that he didn't
lie
.
on the application
.
Rather, a conviction in Northern
Ireland in 1976 for allegedly plan
-
t
i
ng a land mine resulted from a
confession wrested from him
following six days of physical and
psychological torture, he says.
He served eight years in Long
Kesh Prison before the British
government, under criticism from
such groups as Arnnesty Interna-
tional and The Helsinki Watch
which considered Gildemew's and
the convictions of other Irish
Catholics in the Protestant-ruled
Northern Ireland to be gross viola-
tions of civil rights, released him;
he says.
"My confession was manufac-
.
lured, and l feel that I deserve
·
political-prisoner status rather than
being considered
.
a common
criminal," Gildernew says,
He is currently free, liv
i
ng in
Poughkeepsie and awaiting trial by
the INS board next November that
could result in his deportation to
Northern Ireland
.
Siobhan Stirling, co-chairperson
of the Gildernew Defense Commit-
tee based .in Lagrangeville, says,
''Francis is being prosecuted only
because he spoke out for the peo-
.
pie he left behind."
"It's an injustice," says Tom
Cotton of the defense committee.
Local businessman Francis Gildernew stands accused of fraud on his green card .
"The whole thing drips of
politics," Gildemew says. "Even as
I
-
was beirig taken away
.
I knew it
was all political. The long arm of
the British government reaching in-
to America."
Gildernew was charged with
falsely answering "no" to a ques-
"If
(Americans) allow one to oc-
cur here, we'll allow others to hap-
pen somewhere else
.
''
Gildernew claims that the INS
and the FBI have made it impossi-
ble for him to go to his place of
business, which remains open
under the management of his
nephew.
"The New York liquor board
asked the INS if there were any
restrictions (on his freedom), and
they denied
it,"
Gildernew says
.
But he is staying away, just to be
safe, just to make sure the INS has
nothing they can use against him,
he says. He is using his free time
to prepare his case and to lecture,
hoping to inform the American
public of the violations of civil
rights that go on in Northern
Ireland and the deportation of Irish
nationals from the Ur.ited States
that is occurring ill-:;gally, he says.
"It's a god-damn disgrace, and
I don't think the majority of
Americans know of the role their
government has played in it for the
... see
IAISH
page
a
►
Family tradition has student on ice-in very high ranks
.
by
KEITH REVLING
Staff Writer
one at that.
_
Most people, that is, who want
one ranking in 1991 came on the
However, Beany decided th
.
at
Around this time of the year at
to do it in the first place
.
Beany's
heels of his great finish to 1990.
going to col\ege took precedence
Lake Placid, N. Y.
;
the best lugers
desire to compete in the sport,
it
"I was the number-one seed
·
over continuing his luge career. He
Your
.·
average couch-potato
in
'
the United States can be found
turrts out, stemmed from his fami-
because l won the silver cup in the
American sports
-
fan
·
is
.
abou
L
as.
·
honing ttieir skills
·
at the Mount
:
'
ly's influence an
'
d .tradition.
.
. .
Grosser
,
Preis
.
Race in Innsbruck,
.
.
chose to
_
C?llle
to Marist and stop
·:
rainiliir":"wfrh.
ifi
t
'
spi:iri''oJ
U
i:'ige
fa
s
·.:r
Vail Hoven berg track, the only
.
cur-
Beany ~tarted luging at age 15 in
Austria, in December ofl990;''
'
luging
·
ror
a while
:·
.
.
..
·
·
-
·
·
·
he
-
i
_
s
:
.
~~('1,
_
say
·
,
--:
the
:
'iiu
·
ances
·
.
·
or.
,
..
~
.-~
-
·
Tell
f
tfaining faciJity
-
ill this Counti-y.
-
·
:~
the
summer
.
_
of
J
988
·
in
..
the Junior·
·
-
said
.·
.
Beany.
·
"It was
-
my best
_
raCe
. .
.
Australian
_
Rules Fot>tbalL
.·
..
·
.
·.
. .
.
.
·
0
An'iong
.
this elhe
·
·
group
of
. ·
Elite National Luge Camp, at Lake
ever, I came in second place out of
''I
took
·
offlaS
t year, and now
·
Iri
..
fact; sirice
.
it
·
appear~
.
on
.•
.
athletes
,
is
·
Beany,
_
a
19-yearsold
·
Placid. He enrolled at the advice of
a field of Iugers from nine different
I'm going to
try
to Slart again.
1
can
.
E~PN-TVat odd hours, Australi~
·.
sophomore at Marist.
his uncle, Bob Hughes, a member
countries
.
"
Rules
·
Football may be even mo~e
. .
Beany, a communications major
of
t
he 1984 United States Olympic
·
And Austria is a country where
familiar: to_J()e Fan
.
than luge is .
.
·.
from Wanvick, N
.
Y
.~
has been lug-
luge team who
c
ompeted in the
luge in the wintertime is virtually
It's
:
a winter spor
('
that is ing since the summer of 1988 and
Sarajevo Games
,
·
as popular as basketball is in the
dominated
by Europeans who live
.
is considered to be
_
one of the best
.
After his fast start,
.
things only
United States.
in the Alps and have the inclination
· ·
junior Iugers in the United States
.
got better for Beany
.
In January of
Early in the winter of 1991 Beany
·
and opportunity to lie on their
Just one year after he began lug-
1991 he was seeded number one on
headed the Junior National Luge
backs
•
ori a
_
small sled and slide
·
ing, he was ranked among the top
the
·
Junior National Luge circuit.
.
team on a trip to compete
rapidly
:
down an icy mountain
·
10 junior lugers in the United
<'In 19911 won everything; I was
throughout all of Europe.
chtite
;
· . ·
_
, .
·
·
.
• ..
>
_
·
_·
States.
seeded nuinber one in the class five
"I had a lot of fun in Europe,
-
Allofwhichdidn'tstopMarist
·
·
"Luging came easy-to me,"
juniorscategory;whichis 19and
but I mostly practiced and com-
College student Dan Beany
from
·
Beany said recently. "I picked ii up
··
.
under," said Beany
;
.
peted. It was a very successful trip
only do it part time, on weekends
and vacations
,
but hopefully I will
be able
10
return to the level I was
at and work on from there," he
said.
Beany admits luging is a very
time-consuming sport. He also ad-
mits that it is extremely tough
mentally
.
..
. see
LUGE
page
a
►
becoming a luger -,- and a good
·.
quick~r than most people do."
Beany's great year and number
for me," Beany said .
.Inductees into Alpha Chi includes scholastic survivor
..
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
by
J
_
OSEPH CALABRESE
Staff Writer
Eight years ago doctors told a
.
young woman, who just awoke
.
from
·
a coma, that she should be in-
stitutionalized with permanent
brain damage
.
.
·
This single mother was involved
.
in a
.
car crash which threw her
through the windshield. She could
not walk, speak or write because of
extensive head injuries.
·
A few weeks ago this same
woman, who was told by doctors
·
she could never take care of herself,
was inducted into the national col
-
lege honor scholarship society,
Alpha
_
Chi. .
Lisa Paydon, 30, said "I wanted
to prove to myself that I could do
it. I love school and I love
l
earn-
ing things."
Paydon, a senior communication
arts major, is one of 56 juniors and
seniors, from all academic
disciplines, who were inducted in-
to Alpha Chi on Nov.13.
The aggregate cumulative grade
point average for this group was a
3.839 while three students had 4
.
0.
Paydon, a Rhinebeck resident,
wakes up before dawn every mor-
ning to study and to review her
notes to keep her 3.8 index.
"It is very frustrating because I
will review my notes for class, but
.
once a teacher calls on me I forget
organ~zation recogmzes previous
what I read," she said.
.
·
_
accomplish~ents and provides op-
Paydon
-
has problems remember-
porturiity
for
continued growth and
ing things because of her lack of a
•
•
service! Members participate in a
.
short term memory,
·
She
·
_
not only
·
variety of local programs designed
·
goes to
·
school.full-time, but she
·
to enhance
·
the intellectual
life of
must also support her 10-year-old
·
the campus.
daughter.
·
Olson said in the past the
"I have always worked hard at
organization had been
.
involved
everything I do
.
It
is an honor to
with sponso
r
ing speakers on cam-
be recognized by Alpha Chi as be-
pus, peer advisement during
ing of the top 10 percent of
registration and localfund raisers.
America's students," she said.
"The initiative needs to come
Alpha Chi is one of two na-
·
from the students to start any pros
tionally recognized scholastic grams,,, he said.
organizations whose purpose is to
promote academic excellence and
Marc vanderHeyden,
the
exemplary character among college
academic vice president, told new
students and to honor those who
members
at
the
induction
achieve such distinctions.
ceremony to use what they have
William Olson, the founding
learned at Marist to search for
sponsor and current faculty ad-
truth and knowledge.
viser, said these students are not
bookworms but active participants
"Education creates new worlds,
in the community.
explore these worlds," he said.
"These are students who have
VanderHeyden told the students,
children, have spouses, work full-
none of which have less than a 3.5
time jobs, are involved with
gpa, "You have fought hard and
athletics, the school newspaper and
worked hard to be here. You are
the yearbook," he said.
in very good company."
Of the 56 students inducted, 35
were commuters and 21 were cam-
Paydon said the induction into
pus residents. "This organization
Alpha Chi was very spiritual and
is very diverse since half the
uplifting to her.
students live off-campus," Olson
said.
"I proved to myself that I could
The Alpha Chi manual said its
be successful in life," Paydon said.
Lisa Paydon and her daughter Lydia.
Circle
photo/Matt Martin
:--
•
4
THE CIRCLE
Ho
LI DAY
.
CHEER
DECEMBER 10.1992
Yuletide Visions
by:
Matt Martin
.
ci-,
.
5
.
·
Qt1airtt
.··
·
bistorical .
·
landmark is
no
·
.
::.-·~---,,~~-.~ ... w"~..,.,,.-:.,.,,,. ....... .,,. ••. .., ••
~~w-•.iJ'_.•n~-.-~-.-.• ...
'!~•--.•NJ'• ...
·•Yl'6'•"-....
v.
Grand Central
The students made it happen by
taking the study to people who
could really do something about it
,
added Balch.
Paul Rudolph,
.
a senior from
Breezy Point, N
.
Y., said he can see
many similarities between Grand
Central and the Poughkeepsie train
station
.
"Inside the building, the win-
dows, waiting room and ticket win-
dow look alike with Grand Cen
-
tral," Rudolph said.
However, Rob Brandt, a junior
fr9m Brooklyn,
N. Y .,
said he
disagrees.
"You can not even compare it
with Grand Central, because it is
not even half the size,
"
Brandt
said.
He ac!ded that since he began us-
ing the station three years ago he
has seen a lot of improvement.
"In my freshman year, they were
doing a
.
lot of construction. Now
they havidhe heat\vorking and a
new sriack:bar," Brandt said.
The ne,v snack bar was opened
on Halloween in
1991
by Vernon
Hoffman, and it adds a bit of
newness to the antique train
station.
The Poughkeepsie train station before rush hour;
Circle
photo!Matt Martin
Hoffman said he got the idea to
open a snack bar after a friend of
his father's wanted a cup of coffee,
but th
e
re w
a
s no plac
e
in the sta-
tion to buy one.
"It was a good idea to open up
by
WILBERT DEN OU DEN
Staff Writer
tion seminar to generate commum-
used the station
,
looked
.
at the with my food background. It took
ty interest.
results and each student came up a little while, but here we are,"
According to Balch, three
with a solution,'' Balch said
.
Hoffman said.
students in
·
particular influenced
The problem was presenting
it
to
The sna
·
ck bar made a big dif-
As students make
·
their way
the process through their connec-
the community and to those who
ference at the station, especially
home for the holidays many of
tions with the town government.
could save the station. The group with the daily commuters, who
·
-
themwill
begin their journeys at
"Patricia Howe, whose husband
decided presentations was the first
now can
·
have a donut and coffee
the Poughkeepsie train station, but
was a leading IBM attorney
,
lead
step to finding a solution.
with their morning paper on their
few
,
if any, realize that the quaint
the operation. Nancy Callahan
"We invited leaders from all
ride to New York.
county-like station almost became
became involved and her husband
over the valley
_
with relations to the
"Most people are happy, they
a modem monstrosity
.
Ifit was not
.
Was
the chief of police and Mike
·
station, In addition, we invited
like to get the New york Times
for Roscoe Balch
,
and
..
several
.
•
Kipp;
:
who
~vas e111ployed at IBM,
people
.
who had
.
something to do
before going
.
on the train or a
.
Maris
fs
t_udents there would be
·
no
.~
::
al
_
l
-
f<?ug!:i,t
)
o
,
•
•
sa
yeJhe
.
stat
,
ion
/
.:\
:
\v!H
f
preseryatiO:n; '
,
' Balch said.
•
·
gr?-ridfather buys his grandson a
.
c'ifirlllinglisforical
T
rain iitation)ii
??
BJllcli
:
-said
:
~
.
:c_!:
,,
-,:,
:7
0
°
~
~
,
-
.
~ :
:
,
:-:"
~
.
-
-
~:;
\
~·
Each
'.
stU&rir-made
0
"a
·
pre-sentti
"
:
·
.•
bag_of chips~'' said Hoffman, who
,~
Poughkeepsie;
•
·
.
.. _
< . ·
-
.
.
:>
,
.
The firs~ achon
.
the group took
-
·
_
tio11:
.
and
gave
t
_
heir opinion onwhy
owns the place with his mother.
_
'~The
.
Poughkeepsie Journal had
~as to see
1(
others also felt the sta-
•
.
the station should be saved.
.
Brandt said he is one of the peo-
a
.:
proposal to tear down that
·
sta-
tu:m w!ls ~m1;>orta1:1t. and worth
"The next day there ,vas a full
pie who's train ride is made hap-
tion and build
a
modern station ''
preservmg m its ongmal form.
page dedicated to the actions of the
.
pier by Hoffman's snack bar.
•
said Balch.
.
.
'
"
.
We first fo~nd out that the area
students in the Poughkeepsie Jour-
"I
use it to pick up a magazine
·
·
The Poughkeepsie train station
around the station from Mill Street
nal,'' Balch recalled.
for the train or soda and bag of
a historical landmark, supposedly
to_Route
9
could be saved," Balch
In addition, after Kipp and
chips'," Brandt said .
. is a replica of Grand Central Sta-
said.
.
Howe completed the study, Kipp
And in a
few
days Brandt
will
be
;
tion in New York City, and in the
Then_ the gr~up did a stu~y on
received a grant from IBM to pro-
ma½ing this familiar journey once
·
J960s Balch and
13
students took
the station to fmd ()Ut why 1t was
duce it. "They saved the station, a
agam.
it upon themselves to save the
there and wh_o it served the most
.
group of 13 college students,"
historic site by holding a preservll:-
''We ouestioned everybody who
Balch said nroudly.
Circle
photo/Matt Martin
.Performer shares views with Marist students
"I
think it's just a funny little thing
that everything that's serious has to
be turned into a form of entertain-
ment."
by
DANA BUONICONTI
·
•
Staff writer
·
•-
•
He used to work as a carpet cut-
ter for his father's company and gig
·
i
n
local bands
.
He talked about the
re
c
ent presidential election and his
own music
,
·
.
Currently, he
is
solo and open-
ing for such artists as Melissa
Etheridge and Tom Petty and the
Heartbreakers.
For
roughly an hour and a half,
singer/songwriter Jeffrey Gaines
entertained those in the theatre
with his brand of introspective,
socially conscious music.
Humble yet humorous, the com-
bination of Gaines' songs and
between-song banter resulted in
a
standing ovation.
The anecdotes about his sixth
grade mischievousness didn't
always make sense but the audience
didn't seem to mind.
Gaines, 27, from Harrisburg,
Pa., spent time honing his
songwriting skills in local bands
before declining an offer to front
Maggie's Dream in
1989.
Choosing
to go solo instead, Gaines crafted
a self-titled debut on Chrysalis
records
.
"I
look at the songs
I
write
as
a
cinematographer or visual artist,
making little character sketches.
I
want the listener to
fill
in the ac-
tual details based on their own life
experiences," Gaines said. "I'm
offering
it out
to
any person that
Full of songs and perspectives on everything else.
decides it's for
them."
Gaines talked about one of his
songs, "The Hero in Me," and said
it doesn't comment on himself, per
se, but that here is
a
hero in all of
us. He said people should stop
looking towards celebrities, often
stereotyped as perfect, for inspira-
tion, but to ourselves instead.
"Lowering your self-esteem bas-
ed on judgment and comparison
with others
will
always have you
come up short," Gaines said.
Just as Gaines warned people to
Circle
photo/Matt Martin
stop looking towards celebritit:s, he
also
discussed the mix of politics
and
entertainment
from
the recent
presidential
election
.
"I
don't like the
fact that
anybody is trying to be a
spokesmodel for me," Gaines said.
According to Gaines, the can-
didates had to go to such lengths
as to go
·
on MTV to reach an au-
dience, instead of making people
seek
out
information
for
themselves.
One form of entertainment
which Gaines discussed was the
new Malcolm
X
movie.
"The Malcolm
X
movie is a
Spike Lee Joint.
A
man's life
through the eyes of an artist," said
Gaines. "It's a shame that someone
had to die for things that they
believed in, but then it's also a
shame that things an individual
would believe in would be turned
into such a powerful statement."
Another individual who ran in-
to trouble for exercising her beliefs
was Sinead O'Connor.
"Like Sinead O'Connor, for in-
stance. She's a little girl. If she rips
,
/,up_
.
a pict.ure.of,the I?oP.efthat's her
·. thf~f!t:§11.oilldn't'ref;t\iy piss peo-
ple off. It's a matter of turning the
channel," Gaines said.
Other musicians, carry so much
anger in their performances, with
records judged on levels of inten-
sity, according to Gaines.
"Intense can be transferred from
me to the recipient without yelling
loud or busting blood vessels,"
Gaines said.
6
·
THECIRCI.E,
····
E
:
01'.TaFHAl-
DECEMBER
·
1
o,
1"992
.
.
THE
CIRCLE
.
.
S.J. Richard,
editor
J
.
W. Stewart,
sports editor
Domlnlck
Fontana,
senior editor
Chrissy Cassidy,
senior edilor
Carl
Oleskewlcz,
ass~tant edilo'r.
,
Joanne Alfarone;
business manager
Jason Capallaro,
business manager
Erlk Hanson~
distribution
manager
Anastasia
B.
Custer'
senior editor
Ted Holmhind,
associate editor
Margo Barre~ editorial page editor
Amy
Crosby,
associate
editor
.
.
Jennifer Ponzlnl,
advertising mmuiger
Matt Martin,
photography editor
Dennis GUdea,/aculty
adviser
Fashionably
lat~
.
.
.
~.
•
•
Tfl,oughts of a
burn~o
.
ut
·
.
.
The Circle )Vas informed of c1n,alleged scandal at Marist College in-'-
·
volving Carmine Porcelli. Porcelli was the director of the fashion pre>-
·,.-
Christmas time is
•
here
-
and
:
~hiJe we win
board and crayons
.
to draw
·
cnarrs ror
,
::
~
ri
/
gram. During the summer he resigned.
an be busy decking the halls
·
with boughs of
sumer
-
sentiment,
-
initial unemployment
.
We know that as of a few weeks ago he was writing
a
fa~hion column
·
hoJly
an
d sleigh riding, 1 wilJ be busy mak-
claims, house- hold deb
.
t
.
payments;job crea-
.
.
ing ~y list of Chr!sun~ ideas and wishes for
•
tio
.
n, real djsposable income and realexports.
•
.
called "What's Hot And What's Not" for an area newspaper.
President
-
elect
B!II
Chnt~n.
.
· ·
·
-
·
·
.
-
,
This w~yhe wiUknowhow the economy is
Rumors sprang up like dandelions. Sorting through all of them was
At
the same time,
I_
will attemp_t to rid
"really doing."
.
·
·
-
an arduous task whose difficulty increased exponentially when much
.
of
.
myself of
a
new found sic~ess-politicaJ_ ~ur-
.
(9) New computers will hopefully be in-
the information was given under the condition that it remain
off the
nout
.
_
Here are the confessions of a political
stalled in the White House so Clinton and
.
record.
·
burnout:
If
you are Jike me, then you
pro-
his team can chart the spending costs of his
.
bably have heard enough about politics for
administration.
Still rumors abo1.mded. What happened?
the semest~r.
.
_
.
..
_
. .
(IO)
The greatest c~istmas
gift the Bush's
The Circle was
as
eager to know as students and faculty, but tracking
I
was painfully reminded of my pohucal
could buy for the <::hntons _anew waffle
down the printable truth proved frustrating.
burnout" when I was approached at a party
maker.
.
·
·
.
.
.
.
Most of the stories had one element in common,: money.
a nd asked to
·
disc~ss my political views. 1
.
There it is my Christmas wish list
:
for the
.
.
.
usually do not hesitate to make my conser_-
Clintons
·
.
.
Gores
.:
and Democrats in
Several fashion majors, Who asked that their names not be mention-
vative
.
views ~~own t? my peers.
I
a_m always
..
Washingt~n.
.
:
·
_·
·
··
..
•
.
.
.
...
· ..
..
ed, claimed that Porcel1i was profi6ng from their purchases of supplies
·
~eady
•
and w1llmg to mtelhgently discuss_ the
.
:
If you are realJyJriterested in purchasing
.
necessary for their fashion
.
courses.
.
1ss
.
ues and then let my peers kno~
I
~m nght
·
Christmas
,
gifts
:
ror
.
that favorite
·
Circle
,
·
.·,
-
.
None of these allegations
.
could be substantiated.
andthey
:
are
.
wrong (So much for
-
mod~sty).
.
~
political columnist then here are a few sug-
·
Off-the-record findings seem to show that these accusations
are
es sen:-
·
:
.
·
.
\
,
!USl
:,
~
_:
I
Slart1:il
:
to s~eak
:
ab?ut
.
'
J
,
h~ issues
:
<
gestions of gifts you could purchase for yours
·
ti~ll~f.
.
·
f~.1_~~
..
.
.
.
;:
.
.
•.
,,.;
.
_.,
-
.•.
;
0
_
.
:
-
,
;;,,.
:
J
.
·;.
~
__,
"
;·'
'~
'};:e.
~i.
,;
:
;;ii,,;£
,
}~
,
,;,;:;;:,~;J;:;;:~'1:
f:{
?t:,~}i.
•
•·
•·•
.
·
<i;\
.
..
'·:;~
t~W:tf!11thfe~t~~tt~
1
(d~d~~j~~~i:i:h6t
·K
/[f
.
1Y:
',
;
/Jl,';;:'.?:
•
:.:::cr:·:\•;:;-:/
.
\,{'.\'},.:,;
J
:
:~
,>.~
~.:;
,
;d
,
.:.
·
/
·
Another version of the
:
scandal theory said that
.
¢oney
'
\\'.
_
a1rm1sap
~
·.
,
.
,
,:
find
'
ariymoiepassionleftin mysoultoargue
·
·
·
propriated within the fashion
"
department's
-
budget,
>
·
·
·
:
'~
--.
·
..
.
my conservative cause for this semester.
The story goes that 'this was known by the relevant
atitP
.
.
t?#ties
·
w
.
ho
The winter break is
a
welcome relief for
me~
.
I can use that timt:
.
to regroup and
in turn informed Porcelli
;
He then resigned of
.
llis'
:
own
:
accc;>rd.
.
come
·
back with enough ammuni~ion to
_
fire
.
.
Once again, on-the-record
;
.
high-level administrat<>rs d¢
_
riyt!J.i
{
c:,ccurred.
away at liberals in 1993.
.
.
.
.
So, the official story rema1ns that Porcelli merelY:r
.
esigD;ed
-
.
this sum-
I won
-
der how conserirative talk-shciwhost,
mer in or~er to move
_
on in his career .
,
He was not
·
asked
:t
o
·
resign.
_
He
radio personality, au
.
thor and
.
overal
f
nice
did
it of his own volition.
··
·
·
·
·
.
'
guy; R1~sh Limbaugh
·
stays passionate ~bout
F
1
·
1 b
.
·'
h
·
h
h
·
political issues.
.
.
.·
_
.·
.
·
ew peop e
'.
uy
t at version, t oug
.
.
·
.
.
.
.
.
. ..
·
,
·
Striking fear foto the heart
_
'.
of liberals
.
Weirds·
.
,
.
_·
rom
"
K
..
litica
l,'
,
..
.
.
A Circle reporter spoke with
.
Anthony Cainpilii, chief:financial of-
everywhere is fun and exciting,
as
well
as
in-
·
ficer at Marist
.
College, aboµtan imrelated story~
.
•.
·
.
· ....
,
.·
.
·
tellectually chailengirig but it
:
wears on you ______
......, ____ _... ____ -----________ ----;._
She was instructed to ask a qu~stion conceming
·
•
Porcelli at the erid
.
.
·
_
after
:
a
:
semester.
_
.·
.
.
·
-
-
·
·
·
.
·'
Alr
i
ght;
·
enough complaining
·
from
.
me
·
,
' ·
.
·
·
.
·
·
'
·
-
·
·.
'
.
of the interview.
.,
__
..
·
,~
·
ue
_
re is
.
·
a
·
Jis
.
(
of
·.
Chris
.
tin
.
as
wishes for
(1)
A lifetime subscription to WiUiani
'
_
F.
W
.
h
.
.
h d'd h s
·
'd C
·1--
t tied
d a·d h
ld not
Buckley
·
'
.
s conservative magaiine
.
,:__
_
T
.
he
Na
~
en
S
e
_
1 , S
e a1
amp111 was
S
ar
an
S 1
e
COU
President
'-
,;
1
e
.
cr
Bill Clinton
.
and h
i
s
·
new
•
·
,
_,.
·
<;I
tionaL Review.
·
·
..
talk about it.
-
·
·
.
.
:
.
.
administration
,
.•
· ·
.
·
.
-
·
.. .
.
.
.
Efforts
'
to' contac
t
Porcelli were
-
unsuccessfuL
_:
.
(i)Ih9pe
Bill
Clinton ~iidAi
Gore
agree
·
.·
•
,
,
"
(2)
,A
~ubscrip~io~
-
.:
to
,
Rush
;
Lirilbauglf
s
We
.
believe we know the realstory' but
·
our evidence ~as
.
gained
"off
_;
.
.
on aChristmasfree for th~
:
oval Qffice.
'
God
-
.
new,sletter and transcripts, as
.
- .
~en
.
:
as
,
h
·
d
.
,
·
·
1
....
·
d
..
·
.
d
·
·
·
·
·
'
onlykriows
'
howtheyce>uldchoose
'·
a
·
real
·
,
-
.
.
vid
.
e
.
o
.
·.
_
tapesofhislatenight
.
talk
.
·
.. ,
·
.
sh
.
ow
.·.
·
.
o
..
·
.
n
.·
.·
t
e-recor ,' a cpncept many
.
peop
_
e misun ~rst~n ;
.
-
i>
·· . :,-
·
.
.·
Christmastreet>ecauseAidore\Vouldnever
It sounds redundant, but o'rf-the-record means off-the::-record.
.
.
·
·
·
-
condone cutting
.
down
'
a
/
real tree: That
·
:
'
CBS.
.
.
·
..
'>· .
·
·
.
.
·
..
,,:
:;__ ·
·
.
.
Anything told
·
to a
journalist
·
under
this
condfrio~
:
i
,
s not
pe
pubiished
~
·.
wou)dbe
:
enviromhenta.Hyunsafe, urisound
'
.
·
There is Jothing more therapeutid'thana
Th~ crisis arises whcm
:"
a
.·
rep
.
oi1erlooks to
.
soine
_
orie
:
_
f~f
·
answerS only
'·
and harmful.
/
,
.
.
.
·
.
,
healthy dose of cynical, biting, holiday
to be thwarted because
·
what she learns is
all
off-the.
.::.
record;
<
(
2)
:
~ill
Glinton
-
wiH receive
a
new scrap
s
political humor.
·
·
.
·
·
·
·
· ·
· ·
·
·
· '.
book for
a
gift. It will contain newspaper
·
It
is The Circle's job to clear up rumors ~nd question~
·
like those
.
sur-
cijppiµgs
'
of-each of hinva_ffling
;
episodes.
_
,
rounding Porcelli's abrupt resignation.
-
, :
_
;-
·;
.
:
·
.·
.
.
.
·
··
..
'
Sur~
·
;,
4e rais~ '
!
hope'
'.
of economic recovery
..
Bu~
on more serious not.e;
I
have enjoy~d
.
>
..
.
this ~emester's challenges as
_
politicaJ coliitn
~-_
i:',
~
·
riisLThe hours spent readii'i'g, reseai-chiri'g
,"
·
fact-checking were well
.
worth it.
.
.
:
'
Being able to do that job might
"
actually deadhe
:
doud
_
s
:
offonuendo
and
now:
·
he says
·
let's be realistic about job
hanging over Porcelli
':
s head.
.
.
·
._
.. _ .
:'::
,
;
.
·
.
. .
i~~~h, ti~lth
:
~are reform and economic
Cl
d d
l d
·
1·
·
d
·
·
·
f
·1
· ·
.
·
"
l
h
...
·
·
h
·
·
d
·
·
·
··-
growth
:
Gee, being realistic abou
f
what could
ose
oors, sea e
..
IPS
an pronuses o
.
s1
.
en
.
ce; a
_
t
_
oug
Uil
_
erstan,.
be
dori
i
i°'tiy govemmenton
·
theecc:inomy, was
dable, severely restrict the
.
paper's ability to
·
d
_
p
its Job
'
¢ffectively.
'
·
·
that
·
oe9
rge
-
Bush's platform
·
phii9sopby.
In journalism there is a fine line between what one can sa{aild what
·
_
(3f'
1
Socks'' Clinton
will
re~eive
.
a year
one knows. In some situations, the two have little
·
or
_
nothing in common.
.
;
supply
of
catnip from the television cre~s
·
Does a journalist maintain her integrity with sources or does she
·
and 11ewspaper photographers that took
sacrifice it for a big story?
.
·
photographs
and film footage of the ''First
Cat'
-
' in action.
.
_
The sacrifice in this case would be too great.
.
(4)
HiiiaryandTipper will be busy prepar-
In the final analysis, integrity is aHa journalist c~m hope to preserve.
ing
.
to have
a
new dance floorbuilt for the
The Circle took the course of the ethical journalist arid keptits word~
·
-
inauguration so they
can
"boogie" the night
This close-lipped news-gathering fiasco yielded few publishable results.
away to Fleetwood Mac.
•
·
·
·
·
'
(5)-The Clinton's are already decorating
The time spent on the story was not a complete loss,
·
though~
·
their tree;
1
hope
it includes Elvis and waf-
The Circle can
-
draw several conclusions from its semester-long in-
fle
.
ornaments:
.
vestigation into thisjncident.
'
·
·
'
.
·
(6)
I
wish Clinton
wm
get a new saxophone
Firstly, this is a circumstance which would probably shed some unflat-
for Christmas so
.
he can play romantic love
tering light on Marist, not to mention Porcelli.
songs to Jennifer Flowers, oops
I
meant
Secondly, what The Circle knows and suspects unfortunately can not
Hillary
;
Hey
Bill,
how about a gift certificate ·
to Frederick's of Hollywood for a year supp-
be told.
·
·
.
.
ly of underwear to give to your girlfriend,
Thirdly, The Circle does adhere to a professional code of ethics. If
sorry
wife.
something is told off-the-record, then it remains off-the.:.record.
(7)
Gore will receive
a
new globe from
San
-
Finally, The Circle needs its own version of Deep Throat, the
ta that pinpoints each major environmental
problem and/or disaster
.
anonymous source who helped crack Watergate.
·
(8)IwishClintonwillgetplentyofposter-
·
:·
The letters to the edit
_
or, the impromptu
.
.
.
·
·
.
cliscussio11s with faculty and students in
'.
arid
· ·
.
out of the classroom
.
a~d of course tile pre-
:
·
'
election excitement and arguments
·
heard
around campus were al1 refreshing,
sometimes inspiring and intriguing ex-
periences that only a political columnist
could savor.
_
Without adequate interest, <,:uriosity a~d
discussions, politics will suffer once more
as
.
politicians continue to abuse our unchecked
system. Politicians should be fearful
-
ttiat
Americans are now doubling their efforts (or
should be doubling their efforts) to make
sure elected officials
.
answer to those who
elected them.
To all Marist College students, staff,
faculty and administration have a very Merry
Christmas and a Happy New Year.
I
hope
vqu will still read
-
the column in 1993.
Aaron Ward
is
The Circle's political
columnist.
THE
CIRCLE,
Vn:WROINT
DECEMBER 10.
199;!
7
,·
'
•
Eva
OJ
l:/je
sem(?ster eQuals end of poverty
..
_
;
c
,
.
"
,
,
:
.
·
·
.
>
·
·
·
·
-
..
·
-
.
-
-You
_
·
_
decidftoothpas
·
t
__
eisaiiuh~
·
.
Well,
it'
.
s
}
he
j
fr~cti~ally
,
the ~nd
'
·
·
of
the semester
;-
For some, it signals
.
necessary toiletry; miiit
;
spearmint
.
·
the
.'.
begfonifig
;:
o
(
exains
~nd
the a~d peppermint gUf!l almost pro-
star
t.
ofa new break
'
, For.others, Vlde the same function.
_
how~ver:~l
_
ike
_
me),
:
·
it- ~i~nals t~e
.
,
-
You decide you need to enhance
end o'fsomething else ;,)he end of·
.
.
your penmanship abilities and pro•
the
_
mo11e)'. supply
for
the seinest~r.
·
ceed to hand copy all the articles
.
Just in case you can't tell when you
rather than waste p
r
ecious dimes
-
are m
;
aring the poverty.level, here
on the photocopier, for the
:
are
a
few helpful hints:
research paper you had been pro-
,
·
crastinating about all semester.
You know
:
you 're broke when:
·
-There are more dust particles i~
.
yotfr mailbox thaii money in your,
bank account.
.
-You own
a
car but now enjoy
faking the Canterbury van to and
from campus, thus saving you
money on
.
gas
;
·
.
-You become eternally grateful
·
-You have to decide whether oi;
·
.
that you are the meal plan and you
not
·
purchasing a stamp
is
a wor-
·
don't have to spend money on
thwhile investment.
·
food.
.
..
.
.
,
-~
:
~
-~~
-
·
:.
.
-·
.
.
·
~
Y~ii decide all Qf yoti clothes
,
should be delicately handled and
hand
washed; thus saving you from
splurging the
75
on
ever
y
load of
laundry.
·
-You invite your pare~ts up
.
to
get a free
meal
off them (regardless
of whether you are on the meal
plan).
.
.
-You
\
vish you were on the meal
plan so
·
you
·
dori'.t have to waste
111oney on food.
·
_ _
·
-You decide water is the tastiest
beverage you ever had.
No
need to
spend money on
milk
,
juice
,
or
soda any~ore.
-You decide that along with
toothpaste
;
shampoo is an un-
necessary toiletry as well. That
·
generic
brand
·
dishwashing
detergent can clean your hair(
maybe even your clothes as well).
.
,
.
-You decide that hairspray is also
an
"
extraneous hair accessory that
you have been purchasing for way
too long
.
You convince yourself
·
that the flat. natural look is in.
-Whenevei you go food shopp-
ing now , you appreciate the grade
A quality of no frills brands and
wonder why you never bought no
frills
-
brands before
.
-You as well as your friends
begin to pilfer condiments from
fast food restaurants(i.e. ketchup,
salt, mustard).
-You take.that "Free Refill" sign
hanging in Burger King literally,
you bring your own cup in daily to
refill it .
-You begin to devise plans with
·
friends the best ways in which to
steal paper towels and toilet paper
·
off the maintenance carts.
-You begin to convince yourself
that you need to stay in more on
the weekend and study.
-You begin to envy your little
brother/sister when you go home
on breaks because he/she appears
to have much more money than
you do.
-You can't wait to go home for
Ch
r
istmas break and work!
Tara Stepnowski is one of The
Circle's Humor Columnists
.
LETT
"
ERS
>
ro
THE EDITOR
.
Parking nightmares
·
continue
~
~
-
.
-
~
•'Editor:
,
I
am sure many people have ex~
-
perienced what
·
I experienced
-
this
past Tuesday evening, Dec.
I.
What
I
am shocked about is the fact that.
no one.has written
to
"The Circle"
about this before.
·
·
a special permit
'
to _park there
because of_ the basketball game go-
ing on that evening.
I'm
sorry, but what do we have
this stupid little sticker on our
car
for if nof to park in the lot we were
tolrl
to
oark in? -
'
Tuesday _night
I
was coming
back
.
to campus
·
after going
·
out
with
ir
friend and was amazed to
What
[really want to know is
•
find that
,
we
.
were
·
not
.
allowed
'
to this -why should a resident student
;
parkourcarin Sheahan lot -'the payiitg
.
$16,000 a year to attend
.
Personally, that night we had to
park in a lot much further away
and then 3 hours later we had to
move the car because it
was
not in
the proper lot for our permit.
Tell ine, wnat's wrong with this
picture?
.
I
think something needs to
be done
·
about this
.
parking
.
situation. ,
,
,
,
,
.
,
lot we were given a parking permit
·
Mari st be
-
told he/she had no right
Sports are important in life and
for.
i. _
·
.
·
toparkinthespottheyhavebeen
at Ma~istCollege, but
I
think
.
the_
.
The traffic director;for lack of
.
told
is
the
()NLY
spot he/she can
,
·
,
!
'
•
,
a
_
bett<=L.term,c.Said.we.llad .. to_bay
_
e
__
..JJ~$
-
!n _w,!_t_t10ut fe~_r.of a __ ~ick~~ o;:
. _
. s,tuden~~ !t;~i::xt~io:e
j~r!i~r
-
.
,
•
-
-
..
.
--
---
-
,
,
-
-
..
· . --
· . bemg booted?
·
•
·
-
.
·
P •
·
-
·
·
'.
:
~
:
.
··
:
:
..
.
.
Outrage
expf~ssed
over
humor
column
'
Editor:
>
-
.
.
-
.
.
...
attempt at humor?
If
so, it is of the
. ·
Regarding;
'
Dave Barrett's View
-
. most malicious kind ..
point in the Dec. lissue oftheCir-
_
Furthermore, I am appalled at
cle,
•
I am writing to express my
his crude language. Ilis the lowest
outrage at both the contentarid the
I have ever encountered in The Cir-
.
_
,
.
language of his article!
:
: cle. I am very disappointed that the
._ •
First
'
·
or
all,
Dave Barrett 1s
editorial board chose to publish it.
ficliculing someone ,vho is not even
-
.
Should our community tolerate
here to
·
defend
-
himself! Is this aii
attacks on individuals? Should we
,
,
Jolerate language that is offensive?
·
This kind of writing hurts all of us
at Marist. I
-
hope that The Circle
will
show better judgment in the
future.
·
Rosemary Molloy,
Director of
·
Student Academic Affairs
Correction
An article in last week's edition
of The Circle stated
cases
of sex-
ual harassment involving students
harassing other students, went to
Carol Coogan, Director of Human
Resources. rn matters involving a
staff member and a student,
Gerard Cox, Vice President of Stu-
dent Affairs would handle the case.
According to the student hand-
book, Coogan handles sexual
harassment cases
involving
students and staff members. Cox
handles sexual harassment cases in-
volving students.
A ~urvey on the quiet hours and the guest pass policy
~ill
be available to students between 4-6:30 p.m. Thursday
rn the front of the Student Government Association Office.
i
------ ----
-
--
----
-------
- -
---
- - -
8
THE CIRCLE~ DECEMBER 10,
1992
... continued
from page 3
"It takes a lot of mental concen-
tration," he said,
a
reference to the
fact that a good luger must focus
on the icy course as it winds down
a
mountainside, making turns and
adjustments to the path of the sled
with just a shift of weight
·
from his
foot, which controls the direction
the runners cake.
•
In a sport where the difference
between winning and losing is often
a matter of just hundredths of a se~
cond, concentration and emotional
control are paramount.
Beany explained that the worries
of having to adapt to a new at~
mosphere
as
a college freshman
and the workload from classes
weighed heavily in his dec
i
sion io
quit entirely last
year. However, he
missed the excitement of the sport
too much, and couldn't wait to get
back
·
to it.
.
.
Arter all, the
.
Winter Olympics '
will
be held next year in Norway,
-
and Beany may have a shot at mak-
ing the United States luge team
.-
ry-ou are coriia[[y invitei
to atteni
an 'Evening of Lessons ani Caro_(s
Saturiay, '1Jecem6er
12, 1992
7:30 - 8:30
p.m.
Instrumentaf Pre{uie - 7:00 p.m.
Marist Co{Cege Cliape{
:
MC
_
CTA's
HuMARISTs
.
.
.
The cl-fuMARISTs
will
be
·
spc>nsoring
_
a coffee house
·
this evening at
9
p.m.
in
the
small dining
room. The
im-
prov.
come
·
dy group will be
donating a percentage of
the proceeds
to
the
Giving
Tree Project. Donations will
be $1 at the door.
IRISl
...
l-_:
:-
~ - -
•
~--C~ntin
-
ued
'
from
page
3
··
1ast
_
·
li
years,
fo(
the
last_
.
fhree
-
_
·
Republican 'administrat_ions, ''
·
.
Gildernew . .s~ys.
.
'.
,
:
,:
·
.
:
.
-
•
•
--
.
-
•
-
f
About being rousted·
:
oufof h
_
is
·
home and arrested; Gildernew says,
"It's the kind of thing you'd expect
in Ireland. I was rousted there at
least
.
30 times.
·
·
.
_
·
"But this
is
supposed
-
to
·
be
-
American
-
freedom. Even
asJ was
--
·
being taken to
·
jail, the INS man
told me he didn't know what was
going on and that his organization
hadn't broughtthis tip.''
_
,
:
.
- _
.
.
Gildernew, and others
·
sµch as
U.S.
·
Representatives
-
•--
Hamilton
Fish, Eliot Engel and Nita Lowey,
:
·
have concluded that his case is a
_
blatantly political attempt by
_
the
British government to silence
Gildernew, who continues to speak
.
·
out for the MacBride Principles,
which, Gildemew explains, "ad~
vocate fair employment practices
which
work
to
prevent
discrimination
-
_
on the bas
i
s of
religious background in
.
Northern
Ireland;" Persistent violations
-
of
the MacBride
·
Principles are
-a
source
·
of embarrassment to the
.
British government, he says.
·
He also says that Americans
should be embarrassed by its
. .
government, which allows itself to
be swayed by British influence in
deporting Irish holding legal visas.
-
The impending change in ad-
ministrations, however, may mean
more resistance to
·
British in-
fluence,- Gildernew says.
"I'm
very hopeful," he says. "I've
spoken with Bruce Morrison, one
of Clinton's top men, and he says
Clinton is against visa denial for
· Irish activists."
FORTUNE-----
... continued from page 1
As
far as researching 'stories,
O'Reilly said
it
is necessary to be
prepared and informed
-
on the
story, but it is important not to just
give a
:
history of the topic.
''The job of a journalist: is . .to
-
report
.
on what
is
new and-current
or coming down the pike;"'O'Reil- ·
ly said.
·
A
journalist needs to have per-
s
_
onality, creativity and brains, but
the most important trait is curiosi-
ty, O'Reilly said. -
"It's the curiosity' that drives you.
on,'' he said. "A great.desire to
know things is the most important
aspect
in becoming a journalist and
everything else you need to know
will
come naturallv."
$$$$
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'
I
THE CIRCLE,
DECEMBER
10,
1992
'
9
F
·
ASHION
.•. continued from page
1
Catherine Eichner works on her award winning garment.
ELDER
... continued from page 1
can take two more additional
courses on the basis of space
.
availability without any additional
cost," Chartwat said.
Like traditional courses at
Marist, classes, for these older
. students contain behveen
20-35
· people, depending on the topic of
interests.
,
However; the courses offered are
non-credit,
.·
which according to
Chartwat adds to the relaxed at-
mosphere of the program and
.
its
members;
•
·
·
•
·
•
.
.
.
, .
·
·
:
·
·
•
,
:.>:cJurses
:
~siialiy.
:
come
·
rroni
the
.
divisions of humanities, arts; and
.
social sciences
·
,
to
incliide
,
topics in
literature,
film, history and current
events.
..
Such courses offered this fallin-
cluded topics such as News and
·
.
Vie,vs; which discussed the effect
the media has on the public .
.
·
.
•,
Also offered was a class in the
. investigating of Sherlock Holmes
and a class in chamber music .
.
''The
·
classes allow·us to keep an active
mind
,
since .there is so inuch to
·
·
stu
'
dy/'
·
Elivia Haddad said.
The Haddads have taken classes
·
in the Center foi- four semesters,
)earning
.
about topics from
_
chamber inusic to cosmology, and
they said they loved. them
·
all.
''It's so hard to say which one
I liked the best becaus~ they were
all so good," Elivia Haddad said.
"The people who present the
material to the class are the tops in
their fields, and it is a privilege to
attend a class with someone of their
caliber," Eli via Haddad added.
"I
thought
,
I
had a lot of
lmowledge on the subject before
I
came
·
here,
-
but l.was humbled,"
said Helen Selinger, a resident of
Wappinger Falls,
N. Y., who is tak-
. ing a class on Gilbert and Sullivan.
''These people
.
are not
.
novices.
·
They are all very bright,'' .SeHnger
·
;
:
added
,
:~:,:
,;;;~
,
.
. ·
· ..
:
.
;
:,
;
_
,
,
·Selinger said she enjoys going to
'
school
"at
Marist
·
because it adds
another dimension to
·
her
lik
"I
go to senior areo bics four times
a
week
·
and I go
.
out with my
girlfriends for lunch' but this is
much:'
·
more stimulating then the
other things I do," Selinger said.
She
.
also said she enjoys the peo-
. ple who she attends class with
.
.
.
.
"When! started, I came in cold
turkey
·.
because I
.
didn't know
anyone, put little by little I got talk-
ing with some people and they are
all very nice, but I don't think they
.
let enough people enroll," Selinger
·
added.
.
.
·
She said that 20 people enrolled
for
.
tlie dass on Gilbert and
Sullivan but only 12 people came
.
on the first
.
day.
"We usually average seven or
Circle
photo/Matt Martin
eight people per class but it is a
shame that more people don't
come because ,vithout them we lose
some of · our class discussion
because they are not there," Sel-
inger said. Selinger added that the
people who do attend do it because
they want to.
Vincent Toscano, chairman for
the humanities department at
Marist, said that there was a dif-
ference between teaching older
students and the traditional
undergraduate. .
.
.
.
·•
''Undergraduatestake classes
. b·ecause
ttiey
iia'.ve to"
arid wheri you
teach them, you deal with giving
them the basic information that is
needed on the topic at hand,"
.
Toscano said.
"With these older students, you
are dealing with their life history,
so you get a better exchange of
ideas and they are speaking from
their own experience rather then
just textbook
knowledge,"
Toscano added.
Toscano said
it is a terrific ex-
perience
·
because older students
show the instructor how grateful
.
they are for the information at the
end of each class session.
"They make you feel good after
a presentation. Sometimes they
even applauded when I finished.
And in all my years of teaching
undergraduates, I never had an
F4~~;;~~~~:~;~;;;;:-~:;;;;~;;:::--1
f;}
Are you enthusiastic, po~itive and sincere about your experience here at
M
ffi
Marlst?
If
so, the Admissions Office would llke your help! We're looking for
~\i
r
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
~
j
MARIST AMBASSADORS,
students who· are wllllng
·
t~ return to their high
I
ti
schools
over Christmas break to speak wlth students, gtudance counselors and
J
~
·
.
.
.
.
.
-
g
teachers
about Marlst. The Marlst Ambassador Program would indude
f~
ij
answering questions, handing
out
college
literature and, most Importantly,
i]
I
sharing
your Marlst experience with high school juniors and seniors.
&
.
I
~1:;~:!.~•:~~\~
0
[)~~:eii::J: ~~:~i:~~:~ei't:~u:a:~
I
[l
3pm,
there
will
be
tables in Donnelly and the Campus Center.
You
may
pick
up
i;~!
ID
the Mar1st ~1:iai.~
.
99T packets at eit~er location. The next step ls easy - Just i
!
ili
m
visit your
hlgh
schooC
.
.
.
.
fili
I
.
.
.
You can make a difference!!
i
fj
So
stop by our table in Donnelly or the
Campus
Center, or see Jamie O'Hara In
It
[~ the Admissions Office, Greystone, Monday through Friday, 9-5 to pick up an
m
I~
Ambassador
packet!
Iii
li1ta:~2:rgz.:r;;:r;r,.;;;;;.:&,,'.::.·:cs,;.:K,r.:.~:.:
·:
;--::·:·:·:'.·'
·
·s:::g-:-)·':~t:··::·
···
:::;1'1::::'.·?::::
:
t:::·
:
·
·
•:•:··•
:•
:•:•:•:-;w:::y·•:t=···(:?:::->>'❖'•''>'••··w:❖:❖>:❖'·'·>>'·'•'•'•'·'•'·'❖'•'•'•':
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calls its holiday collecdon; which is
.
meant to go along with spring and
foll collections for the annual Silver
NeedleAwards and Show held by
the fashion program every April.
·
"The dress is floor-length and
made of navy wool jersey,"
Eichner said. "It's got criss-cross
straps and a large slit up the back.
"The jacket is made of navy
guipure , an imported lace, and a
gold lame brocade.
"It's stuffed with
15
yards of
tulle, which gives it that sculpted
effect."
Eichner said the design was in-
spired by her finding a swatch of
cloth in the garment district of New
York City earlier this fall.
"
I
think it was the color," she
said, trying to pin down the source
of inspiration. "It's a dark navy,
more like a midnight blue than the
ususal navy blue.
"The theme Air France gave the
show was a party collection, so the
color seemed to fit that theme."
From that initial inspiration, she
did some sketches and then com-
pleted the garment that would
ultimately send her to Paris.
Eichner's winning the invitation
"is important to the Marist fashion
undergraduate class applaud for
me after
I was done with a lesson,"
Toscano said.
And like many undergraduates,
these older students take classes
with someone they already know,
usually with their spouses.
"It
is our quiet time we get to
spend together and it allows to
discuss topics of mutual interests to
us," Raymond Haddad said.
Anna Buchholtz,
a resident. of
the Town of Poughkeepsie and the
former town supervisor for 14
years, said she enjoys taking classes
with her husband.
"We have taken three classes
.
together so far and it's a fun thing
to do togethe:r," Buchholtz said.
Even though the Center for
Lifetime Study has been establish-
ed for less than six months, most
of the people involved already
know what the program's benefits
are.
Selinger said that she thought the
simple idea of the program was the
prime benefit. "Just by offering a
program like this is a benefit. It's
simply a wonderful thing for our
community," Selinger said.
program because it represents the
first time we've been invited even
to participate in the competition,"
DeSanna said.
DeSanna, along with program
director Moya Donnellan, who was
not available for an interview, and
senior Val Yoli, will take advantage
of a special package deal offered by
Air France to go with Eichner to
Paris.
"I
look at (Eichner's wjnning) as
validation for the program and
everyone involved in it," DeSanna
said. "It's not been the easiest of
years for us because we're in tran-
sition, and this let us know we're
going in the right direction."
Donnellan was named to replace
the previous fashion program
.
director, Carmine Porcelli, in
September. Porcelli resigned dur-
ing the summer.
DeSanna hopes Eichner's
achievement will pave the way for
Marist's future participation in the
French competition.
"We'd like to make this com-
petition an annual part of our pro-
gram," she said.
"It
keeps our minds active and
it also helps to keep us current in
the world today," Eli via Haddad
said. As for the people who present
to these classes, they too know
what the program's benefits are.
"It is a good reminder for peo-
ple that there is nothing to be afraid
of by growing older 1:iecause you
can still be intellectually stimulated
and challenged," said Toscano,
who taught a
class
on the Civil War
this
fa\\.
Currently, the Center for
Lifetime Study is in its planning
stage for the spring semester, but
the older students involved are
ready to start.
"i
will definitely stay with the
program next semester simply
because I enjoy it so much," Sel-
inger said, as she rushed off to her
class.
Raymond and Elivia Haddad
said that they too would stay with
the program for the spring
semester. "We are already signed
up and ready to go," they said.
&ETTEMBQE' 8
Always
FREE DELIVERY
to Marist!
!
- New Location -
Route9G
Hyde
Park, New York
(914) 229-9009
NEW HOURS
Tuesday - Thursday 11 am - 1 Opm
Friday- Saturday Ham- 11pm
Sunday
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BRUNCH
Specials Tuesday - Sunday
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xtra cheese
topping pie for
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and get
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GOOD LUCK ON FINAL EXAMS!!
.__
_________________________
_.
- - - -
~-----
-
f
f
i
(
'
\
'
-
·
...,;:-
10
·
.
THE
.,
CIRCLE, DECEMBER 10,
1992
.
'
'
.
..
'
..
'·
.
.
.
~
'.
.
.
.
.
.
The
·
Student Prograrnmlng
:
Coun
'
Cil
Would like
.
·
fo
·
·
Thank
-all
of YOU
.
.
.
for
.
making all of our events such a success
.
I!
·
TGIF Foxfests
Mario J~yner
Paul
Venier
Taylor Mason
Wayne Federma~
Spanky
.
Cheryl
King
HuMARISTs
Livingston Taylor
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Paul
Strowe
Jen
.
Ferguson Duo
Jeffrey Gaines
Those
Melvins
Jady Kurrant
Suzi Landolphi
In Search of Dracula
.
··
.
.
UFO's
·
·
Shooting
ijack
.
-
·
-
at Homelessness
·
-
·
Halloween Dance
Winter Semi-Formal
For further inormation contact SPC at x2828
ROUTE 9, HYDE PARK
(Next to Shoprite
Plaza}.
,
·
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·
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•
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·
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LE;::.E=:;ND;::=S:-;:;D~EC:::-:=EM;-:;B::=ER~1~41i:::-:H-------,1 - - -
r'
.
'
11
.
'"•
.'
..
leers knotted again; rematch with So.
Ct.
Sat.
,
:
.
,·
_
.
could
haV
~
ptaYed
better,,, he said.
·
b
y'
ANDFIEW HOLMLUND
"We should have never allowed
·
Sta
'
tt
Writer
them to score on a 5-on-3 advan-
'
It still has not died. The Marist
hockey team pushed its unbeaten
.
streak to six games with a 1-1 tie
to
.
Soutliern Connecticut Universi-
ty at the Mid-Hudson Civic Center
on Saturday night.
.
.
After a scoreless first period, the
·
Red Foxes; who are 3-1~3, found
themselves trailing
1-0
when
Southern Connecticut scored at the
·
3:09 mark of the second period.
·
Marist rebounded to knot the
game at one apiece when Mike
Flynn, a senior forward, scored his
fourth goal of the season on an
as~ist
,
from
.,
defenseman John
Dougherty at· 8:20 of the final
session.
"l received a real nice pass from
John from the defensive zone,"
Flynn said. ''{got it at mid-ice, and
right when
I shot it, I
·
got tripped
up. I did get the shot off, though,
and it passed the goal in the bot-
,
tom left corner," he added.
.
•
Dougherty said it all started .
·
when he saw Flynn break out
towards the center of the rink.
>fx
,
.
.
.
,
...
.
'····<~
Mari~t'sTom Schlief charges full-tilt towards the goal in Saturday's 1-1 tie to Southern Con-
necticut. The Foxes, 3-1-3, are home this Saturday at 10 p.m.
.
Circle
photo/Matt Martin
-'«:i~~~~~..,c,c;:~~~~~
-
~~~~::,..,c,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
tage because when you are up
5-on-3, you arc expected to score
.
"
Co-captain Ed Sherako, a senior
right wing, felt the Foxes made its
presence f
e
lt.
"I think we had a great game out
there," he said. "We didn't finish
off our plays, but it is still a step
in the right direction."
Sherako feels in order for Marist
to finish on the winning end, they
need to execute at both ends.
"We need to finish off our
plays," he said.
"
We have to
knock (the opponent) down
psychologically as well as physical-
ly."
After tomorrow night's game
against Albany State in Albany,
Marist will return home on Satur-
day, once again, to face Southern
Connecticut.
Walsh said the team will have to
be effective on the power play
when the two teams meet again in
a Metropolitan Conference tilt.
"We have to look to capitalize
on our power play," Walsh said.
"It
did not go as effectively as
planned (the last time
.
)"
According to Flynn, the team
needs to avoid making unnecessary
:
"l
started coming out of the
zone;'' he said. "I saw Flynn
·
get
clear from Southern's defense, who
at the time were
.
back-checking,
.
and
l shoveled the puck up to him
and he was able to pop it right in."
....
~~
........ ..-..
_
. - . - - .
~
.
~
penalties and improve breaking
...,.._._.._.._.._.~ - - -
~ J t ' l i : ~ ~ ~ ~ J t ' l i : ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ - ~ . .
out of its defense.
First-year Head Coach Kevin
Walsh said his players gave a fine
p
e
rformance
.
''We played
.
real
well," he said. "We played a com-
plete game
-
and executed
well.
·
Basically, it was a continuation of
last Sunday against Siena."
Walsh felt it was not only an ex-
citing contest, but his team ex-
ecuted around the puck.
"The game was made up of two
excellent teams," Walsh said.
"Both goalies came up big.
I
think
we back-checked
well."
For Marist, goaltending did, in-
deed, come up big as sophomore
Brad Kamp turned away
20
of
21
shots from Southern. Kamp at-
tributed the Red Foxes' success to
the defense.
"I
thought our defense played
Aqua,tnen spear Big
·
East foe
byMIKE WALSH
0
Staff; Writer
and took second in the 200 in-
dividual medley (4:34.32). Both
were seasonal dual-meet bests for
ed golds in their individual events.
Arnold was victorious
·
in the
200-yard backstroke competition
·
with
'
a
iiine
'
6f
'
2:06
:
98:
Cc
.,
.
;.
:_
The
_
·
111en's swimming/diving
·
the sopnomore
~
·
..
.
~
- ·
squad
competes
through
a
rigorous
~
Jelen
:
h~-efu_erge(!
:
as-a
"
~\JP
sajm~
~
'
-::-::'·-•,,;-
.
7
-:r
:::::
.
,
:::::e- ..
,
-,
·
:
~
~:,
schc_d
_
ule. So
·
when a meet
.
ag.unst
:,Qic,~
,
;
~nJg.
~
1
tea,!fl
.:-
\l,9d
VaQ
_
~
~~~~~r
~'
Gagne
'
lei:I the
f
pa¢k in
·
the
:;
200
·
a
_
dearly-inf ~ii9r ~ec1.m comes aion~,
.
.
att.~1butesJ11s sucf
,
ess to ded1cat1on.
:
breaststrofo · (2
:
18.62).
Tomala 's
the Red Foxes are-able to expen-
Doug
.
.
really
.
works
.
hard
·
to
win in the
·
200 freestyle (l :53.47)
ment- a
.
bit
~
as
•
well as focus on fulfill his potential as an athlete,"
followed a second-place
·
finish in
details
-
rather than
·
focus entirely he _sa_id. Jelen agreed,
.
"I've been
the 100 freestyle.
·
..
upon
the
competition
.
trammg much harder than
·
last
O'Neil took first in the 50-yard
'
Such \Vas the case Saturday at year~just practicing, practicing all
freestyle (:23.47). The 200-yard
Seton Hall.
·
·
the time
:
''
.
:
He
a
d
.
Coach Larry
·
Va'n Wagner
.
.
H
_
is perso
_
nal
.
goals .for _this
medley team of junior Matt Mar
-
b
d
tin, Gagne, sophomore Matt Blues-
.
J
ookadvantage of the opportuni-
sea~on~o eyon theMetropohtan
tein
and
freshman
David
ty
·
·
by allowing his S\Vimmers
.
to Sw1mmmg Conference.
.
Malsheske also seized a victory .
.
swim differerifevents.
He
was also
Th~ ~ilver Springs, Md., native
.
able to enter some of hi:i' inen in stated succinctly
,.-
«I plan to qualify
.
.
.
_
The site of Saturday's meet will
· ·
rtiore
-
races than he normally
for
the ECAC (East Coast.Athletic
,·
be at
-
St Francis
(N.Y.)
.
This will,
·
,voidd
·
.
·
Conference) Tournament."
·
•-
.. ·
likewise, be a relatively ea
s
y meet
·
:
••w~aker swimmer~
·
gotth
e
op
~
~
·
.
<
if
his
:
i:>ei:fo
.
i:ma~~e
'
thu~
.
}
a_
i
is
'
a
·
.
to take, according to Van Wagner
.
·
:
Portunity to swim
·
mqre
·
events;''
"
r~asonable md1ca_uon_ofh1
~
poten
-
Like Seton Hall, the focal poin
t
·
;th¢.15th-year coach said
;
"iristead l1al
;
an ECAC b1rtl1 ts not out_o
f
:
of.
one or two races we can use
reach. Jt!len has taken a tqp two
at this meet
will
be pace.
··
..
·
them in the maximu~ of three."
.
finish in s~ven
·_
of.his nine in-
"Every day this week we'll work
:
:
The J 16-96 victory was the
dividual
t
races
.
.this season-five
on it," Van Wagner said.
"I
want
.
team's third dual meet win of the
were wins.
.
.
them to be more conscious of
se~son againstjust one loss. Doug
Sophomores Brett Arnold,
maintaining pace, and
I want there
Jeleri•Jedtheswimmerswitliafirst
RonaldGagne,
'
AngelToinalaand
to be a progression in the
in
'.
the°2()9
~
yard butterfly (2:07.84)
freshm~n~yle(~'tfei_l also snatch-
understanding of pace .
.
"
the best it ever had this year," the
starting net-minder said. "Overall,
it was a strong defensive effort."
Despite some glitches, Dougher-
ty said he and his te
a
mmates played
a solid game.
"I
think we played well, but we
"We've been taking a lot of
dumb penalties,''. Flynn said. "We,
have to get out of our own zone
and break out stronger."
Friday's match up will be played
at
7:30 p.m. and face-off for the
following night will be at 10 p
.
m.
Sophomore Ron Gagne pops his head above water on his
way to a first-place finish in the 200 breaststroke
.
·
.Circle
photo/Matt Martin
Videos
neW
weapon in recruiting
by
KEITH SOUT AR
Staff Writer
Division
I
.
college basketball
recruiting
.
is
.
serious business.
Coaches need every available piece
of information about prospective
players and videotapes are now be-
ing used in the battle for top
recruits. Marist College is part of
that growing trend-especially in
its recruiting efforts in Europe.
Associate Head Coach Jeff
Bower returned from a recent trip
through Europe and brought back
tapes of some promising European
players for Marist to look at
.
Before he could view the tapes,
however, Bower had to have the
tapes converted from the European
videotape system to the American
system.
Audio Visual/Television Opera-
tions Manager Janet Lawler took
care of that for Bower with the help
of the Panasonic Worldwide Com-
munications System. The system
has been at Marist a little over a
year and was purchased primarily
to help with the Marist Abroad
program. The cost to have the
tapes converted is not cheap, so
when Bower realized Marist could
do it
,
ht! quickly took advantage of
it.
.
..
HT
·
.I.
t
should really
help recruiting a lot. It's
one thing to tell so-
.
meone about the school,
hut it's another to ac-
tually see the student
body."
-
Janet Lawler,
Media Center
"The cost is high," said Bower.
"So if you know you have this
capability on your campus, it's just
one less thing to worry about."
The service is free for the team,
except for the cost of the tape.
Where
·
the service really helps,
'
according to Lawler and Bower, is
when Marist is able to show the
overseas players tapes of the Marist
campus and what it really is like
here.
·
"It should really help recruiting
a lot," said Lawle
·
r. "It's one thing
to tell someone about the school,
but it's another to actually see the
student body."
·
Bower agreed. "Where it
'
s a big
help is when we sit down with them
and they can see our campus and
what we are trying to do with our
program."
Bower spends the summers in
Europe viewing major champion•
ships involving many different
countries and said the tapes will be
an important tool in evaluating
these players.
"One of the biggest things about
kids from Europe is information,"
he said. "This is just one more
piece of research that is going to
help us."
.-
j
\
:.
'
•
j.
·:
..
STAT
\
Of:
i
,
:JHE
'.,
:
.
:
WEEK:
,
.
.
,
, 'W
<i
.
'r¢
;
:
,
:
r~~ily
;:
.going
..
to
,
:_
.
;
,
The
:·:
\vofuen:'.s
N
basketball
i
betit
_:
thern
:
iip
.)
gqiJd./'
:
_\
.
.
.
,
,
.. _
. .
.
•
s
.
·
_
.
.
.
.
::
-
·
·
·
.
:
.
·
.
.
tearo
:
'
},e
,
at
\
½\rmy
f
forjhe
·
first
- -
.
;
'
r:
~
_
Ll~yd
.
)loldst~i~
:'
:_
T~EJi~cLE,
'
·
-
.
p
O
RTS
'
:
DECEMBER 10,
1992
Lt_im_•
,
e....;
'
<
_;,in_;
'
<
..:..,~c..,.;.ti __
'o.;.;..p~l
·
.;...~i_
st
_o....;ry"""'."
·
·
..
_
.
i
.
_
-'
-
·
~
-·
- - . I
.
12
>
.
.
'
'.
.
.
,
... ,,
.
.•
ft()xeS
fi~ll--,aiajijj,;
•
loSe
On
fillal
/
l1l~Y
·
.
-
.
-
.factoi:
.
(at the"erid
,.
of.the
-
game)."
by
TED HOLMLUND
·:
-
·
.
Marihattari's key
:
pJayer, Keith
-
Staff
Writer
'
·
·
Builock;was the difference for the
Jaspers. Bullock;
:
imAH
~
Ainerican
.
A week later
·
: Siena almost
candidate, sc
·
ored 24
·
·
points
.
and
·
repeated.
·
.
-·
· '
:
,
•
.
•
,
.·
grabbed eight relfotirids
;
·
.
·
·.
_. _
·
_
On Tuesday, the Red Foxes
(U)
·
First-year
,
Head Coach F
_
ran
.
·
dropped
:
another dose
..
decision
Fraschilla
·
said
<
his
:
"team
.
·
woiild
62-59 to Manhattan College at the
·
realize how big
a
win it
\
vas because
-
-
James
:
J. McCanri
.
Recreation
·
.
he
_
believes the Red
i
Foxes
·
could
.
Center.
:
.
.
.
·
m
·
ake a
-
run
for the Northeast Cone
.
Trailing
60-59 with
:27.4
remairi-
:
ference
·
ti tie;
.,. - .
.
- -
-
-
_
_
ing,
the Red Foxes took
_
the ball
.
to
-
'
-
'I'd hate t<>
·
ptay them again;"
half court and called a time out
he said;<'Tonight, we beat
a
cju~li-
with
-
:19.8 lefc
-
.
.
·
ty team."
.
·
.
.
-
.
After
·
:
the
·
.
first options
-
were
.
Lake
.
led the Marist attack not-
covered, junior point guardDexter
..
ching 16
:
points on
~
6°of-13
Dunbar drove to the basket
'
and
shooting. He also pulled down a
.
missed an eight-footjumper.
·
team-high eight r:ebounds.
"We wanted to get
-
the ballin-
Ingles added 15 points and
.
side to Ingles;'' Head Coach Dave
Buchanan chipped in with 12 to
Magarity said.
_
"Lake
.
off
the
balance the charge.
_
-
double~screen was our second
·
op-
Magarity said the
.
team has to
tion.''
keep plugging away un~il the breaks
._
In the finalpossession,Magari-
.
start falling their
.
way
.. "We
co
_
uld
ty said he
told
the team to loo
.
k for
.
be 3-1, riot 1-3," he said
:
"It's tear-
the first
-
open
.
shot.
.
_
·
ing me apart. I
-
want
.
them to get
With around :
13.
-
remaining,
-
that great win. We
..
can't let-this af-
senior Mike Schrieber passed up
fect'us.»
· · · ·
·
·
.
what looked to .be an open three-
This weekend the Red Foxes
point
.
shot.
..
.
.
.
traveled to
·
Syracuse and placed
"After
•
making
-
one- (a three-
· third in the Carrier Classic.
·
.
pointer) eirlier, I would have been
After losing 86-61
.
to Virginia
content if Mike ,let it fly,"
·
the
·
Commonwealth, Marist no~ched its_
seventh~year coach said. "M
.
ike's
first victory of: the season
-
with a
capable of making the shot, but it
78-69 win over SouthernMississip-
-
was not a bad decisfori because he
pi
.in
·
the consolation
_
.
game.
-
.
Senior Fred
.
Ingles leaps forward
for
:
two of his 1
s
:
points in
knew the play was designed}or
Freshman Danny
·
Basile scored a
Tuesday night's loss to Manhattan.
Circle
photo/Matt Martin
Lake c;>r lrigles."
·
.
·
.
-
team-leading
11
points in a losing
This weekend
,
the Red Foxes
travel
·with
the
_
team this weekend
Some of the players 53:td they felt
effort.
.
.
.
:
_
.
_
•
.
.
_
.
were without the ~ervices of senior
.
due
'
to
.
personal problems;
,'
The
Dunbar was fouled
<>Ii
the final
-.
Lake, who had
:
.b_een
·
struggling forward Sean James whp did
.
not
press
.
release
'
also said he
.
has
.
drive .
.
·
.-
·
_
-
.
.
· -
from' the floor,
· :
regajned his travelwith the team; James was on
returned to theMarist roster after
.
-
<'
I
thought Dex goL fouled,'_'
.
,
shooting touch agai
_
n~t
:
Sg~t~em
.
the berichfor the
,
clubTtiesday, but
"a two,game leave ofabsence" and
.
junior
'
forward
·
izett
.
Buchanan
•
Mi~sissip~i/sc~r~ng 23
'
p,9irits tj1f
:
rcti(rtotsuit:uf
/~
.
C
f /.·,,.
_,i
_
:-
,
has been ''suspended indefinitely
.·
'
.
sai~:
?I_tseemed
·
tnat th~
_
refs
:
ha~
_
'
:'
fivt:
·
~
_
hr
_
e~~poiitter s :
·
H$:jls<f
was
8
· - :,.,,,:
'Accor"ding°'tq1t1fathletic
·
depiut-
.
_
,
'
·
·
for missing team practices-ancicon~
--
their mmds made up not to ~e a
·
'
of 8
:
ffom the foul line
:· .
.
·
..
'>
·
merit press release James did not
tests
·
this
·
pasqveek.!'
.
.
·
•
Field~,
M~ceY,
t
P"1'~Y
t
Yi~iPI"Y
over
_
AJmy
·
by
J.
W •
.
STEWART
.
•
-·
.
_
Sp
'
orts
_
E
_
clitor
..
-
.
Indeei The F~xes; def~ris
_
e
~~f-
,
-.-
,,
. :
:
S~phomore
.·
.
:
r~~w~rd
.• --
Andrea
: .
lasted
'
for
'.
alinosC six~and~a-half
focated
'
-.
the
-
·
A
.
rmy
i
_
slow
.
~down
. ·
'
Macey put
_
-
on
a
<;lini~ofher
•
own.
minutes
~
.. -
.
. -
-
-.
,,.
·
•
_
.
·
_
-
'
.
.
-
.
game, li111iting
_
the
!
Cadets to 280/o
.
- Macey
,
w~s an
,
iiµpo~ing figure in
•·.-
.
''It
..
(tlie
·
1uj run). tired them
,
Ken Babineaideared
-
his team
shooting
:
(15
·
for 52)-: from the
the low post, scoring 10 p
_
oints_and
.
out
"
;; said Babineau of'the
·
west
,vould not fare well iri a Io,v
.:
sconng
harchvoo:ci.'
_'
.
'.
:
\.-
:
.
.
<
_
:
ripping dowp lO re~ounds.
.
.
Poiriters. "T
_
hey
_
didn't have as _
.
game\vith
.
the Army C
.
adets
:
But
.
_-
.
. -
For
.
senio(
·
guard
i
Char_lene
.
·
:
.
"I
s
.
efa goal ~o
.
have 10 points
·
•
much depth as yt,e
.did.We
:
got a
.
Babineau the
:
women'. s
.
head
:
'Fields;winning a low~scoring game
and lOrebotinds over:the ,veekentl
-
coupltf
0
trimsiti0Ii
.
plays togetller
..
•
coach, wa; pleasaritly
'.
~urprised
,
as
•
.
·
fain~
as no
.
_
stir
P,ris~:
--
''W~
knew
but)
,
did~'t
:
g~f it,-s<>::I was kin~a
arid
-
iLjust happened.''
.
.
_
>
..
.
..
....
.
'
his Red Foxes (2-1) beaUAnriy at
how they
.
were gomg to attack_
us,,,
down aboutJhat,' said Macey. I
-
.
:
,
Maris
t:
played
'
a
·
delay
,
ganie
-
the
its
O\yn
game 51
~43;
.
if
w
·
as
_
tlt~
first
_
:
said
_
)ne
.
:
~o~~apt
aj~
:, •
:
'Ther
·
rea~
. --
just
-
"'a~ted
)9
:
_
~c~~niP,lish that:
rest'ofihe way and
were
never in
_
time iri school history the
·
women
.
screens verywc:11
.
aµ~
:
up u
_
nt
_
il this
>
And
I
drd
7
barely.
.
.
,
_ :
_
_
.
. .
.
danie'r
.
cif;Josing:the
·
Jeaif.
C
:
:
-
:
·
have beaten Army
_
at
the
:
Divisio~
poi
_
rii;
I
.
d
_
idri'(t!J,inls: w
§
defend~d
-
'.
'f\ridy
,
pla~ed9ne
·
<>~
h.er _best
-
•
• ·
·
••Witliuskilling dock;"they end~
.
-
-•
I
teveL
. ___
-
.-
_
-
·
·
_
·
.
-
;
~
·
screens well.Tonight
·
:we
:
did)'.
·
gamesever,'.'lauqedBabmea~;&'lf
:elf
up)e~orru
_
ng their
,
own\vo(st
•
"Lthought
'
a l<>~
~
-
scoring
·
g~me
;.
.·
On the offensiy~ ~\de oftl).eJ~all,
_
yie
:
keep
'
get
,
t!~iJhat
·
out of her,
enemy
·
because they use: tip 20
_
.
would
play into
'
theii.fav
'
or.;
.
;,
_
said
-
.
Fields led
.
the
;
w~y
with 20
.
points
<
we'll haye a solid postJiame.'r
It
.
seconds
··
.
every
.
tim
·
e chef have the
-
Babineau. ''But
·
w~
'.
really' played
.
on nine~of-20
;
shooting.
_
·•-.
.
.
-
.
:
· ·
was Macey'.s first
_
double-double of
ball,''
.
·
Babineau
'
pointed
:
out
.
. .
.
tremendous team deferise.
We
die:
-
Her coach said
'.
she
:-
put on her
her young career.
.
-
-
.
-
.
.
.
.
•
.
The
women
started the
:
season to
'
tated
_
what shotSthey were gonlla
_
usual
.-
.
.
solid
:
-'
·
·'
p
'
er
'
formance.
Mari
.
stJook a22al7 lead into th.e
mixed reviews iast: weekend
.
The
.
take and
I
think we sho\vecLthem
''Charlene really put on a
•
<;linic,"
locker room at the break but 1t
Foxes
_
were
.
troi.mced. by
.
New
.
that there are
·
two
.
teams in the
said Babineau.
-
"S
_
he took a_l,ot of
W<
,
mld not stay that way for long.
·
Hampshire 7~j0 o,n Friday but
.
Hudson Valley - that
,-·
can
,
play
smart shots; Shejust made the right
Leading 28-23, the Foxes blitzed
defense."
·
-
·
de
,
cision~
_
at the right time.''
·
ArmY, (1-3)
·
with
·
a 12-0 run that
... s~e
BE3AI..L
page
1-1
►
.
. ~,#
'.
~
.
·
by
TERI L
.
STEW J\RT
.
.
~-;
Staff
Writer
The women's swimming team is
rio,v focusing on its winter training.
According to
_
Head
,.
Coach
-
Lloyd
Goldstein, the
·,
team
:
will
return
from
Christmas
.
break on January
·
3
.
Upori rettirn1ng, the
·
team will
·
.
.
begin a rigorous
;
three-week train-
ing
_:
session,
',
swimmjng approx-
imately
:
45,000 y~rds a ,veek.
.
_
_
•:we're
really going to beat them
up
.
good," Goldstein said .
·
·
The R~d Fo~es (3-3) were really
•'
beaten up by Seton Hall last Satur-
day i
_
n South Orange, N.J
.
The
·
Foxes were defeated by a score of
153-76.
, ..
-
.
-
According
'
to
_
Goldstein,
.
the
·
team
'
did riot have
.
a good day.
''Nobody
-
rea
'
lly swam that
well/' he said.
·
Goldstein believes the reason for
·
the poorshowing
was
that the team
was tired . from the workout last
we«!k. Heis giving tliem a restthis
.
week(by
:
decreasing the swimming
-
yardage) and hopes they will be
rested up
.
for
0
St. Francis (N.
Y.)
'college
·
on Saturday.
_
Freshinari Christy
.
Radcliff hai;i
the best swim of the day. She plac-
-
ed
·
first
in
the
200-yard
breastsfroke~the only first place
finish
of-
the meet.
-
Senior captain Kris- Andreasen
had two second-place
-
finishes, the
-
first co·ming in the
·
1000-yaid
-
freestyle with a time of J2:37:58
·
and
_
the second in the 200-yard
·
,
i:ireasisfrbice;
_ ·
·
·. · ·-
.
·
. •
·
Andreasen feels the team is cool-
-
ing off and getting ready for
break
''It
.
was a tough meei but rthink
every9ne isjust v.rin~irig 4own,"
she
-
said
;
·
.
Andreasen
-
also
added,
"Everyone on the team has a real-
·
1y good attitude."
.
.
.
Andreasen said
.
she is already
looking forward to the conference
-
chainpionshipsin February to see
·
how everyone does;
. .
.
."By the'iime they come; we
.
will be
_
-
rested and ,ve
'
should surprise
ourselves,'' said Andreasen.
-
-
---
.In
-
diving actfon; sophomore Jen
McCauley
·
placed
.
second in both
.
the l~ineter dive and the 3-meter
div;.
-
.
.
.
·
·
::
According to
.
diving coach
Melanie Bolstad, this was
.
her best
performance all year.
·
.
·
·
"The dive was a new one and we
were really pleased,'' said Bolstad .
-
.
,
.
.
·
.
-
·
:
:
..
•--,
►
·
;:.see
SWIM
page
.
11
Santa
Claus
is coming to (Po)' town ...
co·ach--a lifetime pass
to
the Dut-
Dear Santa,
-.
-
-
-
:.
-
-
.
.
..
chess Racquet Club in Pough keep-
.
•
I know you're
.
busy
·
checking
·
sie so his team can play on s~mede-
·
.
your list twice to
se~
whc:(s Qeen
cent courts. The courts we have
.
on
.
naughty and who's
·
been nice, but
·
campus aren;t even above
sea
level!
.
I would appreciate it if you could
• to the hockey team-varsity
-
find the time to swing by Marist
·
.
status. They
.
deserve it. Aftey
'
all,
College this year arid drop off some
they have been the
most
successful
presents to some folks who Ithink
winter team the past two years.
are most deserving ofthem. You
And, they draw in the fans.
.
..
know where Marist is, right?
.
Just
Amt if you can srieak it in their
follow the smell
·
of the
·
sewer
stocking, a rack for all
.
their ties.
plant-I'm sure
it
permeates all the
• to Ken Babineau, women's
way to the North Pole.
-
basketball coach-a playoff win.
Here's some ideas to start you
He's never had one
;
off...
• to Sally Johnston, ·women's
• to Dan Sullivan, sports infor-
_
volleyball coach-stepiadders so
mation director-a full-time paid
her team can block.
assistant. Dan is one of only a
• to Tom Diehl, lacrosse coach
handful of Division I SID's who
and assistant
.
athletic director -
works by himself and the workload
something, ANYTHING,' to make
he
has
is too much for any one per-
the man smile. It makes me wonder
son to handle.
what's wrong
·
when I don't see so-
His student interns help a great
meone smile for three years.
deal but in a Division I school that
•
You know what I mean, Santa.
continues to grow, don't you think
You've been hopping in your sleigh
it would be wise if we went out and
on Christmas Eve for how many
found someone who could share
years now? And you're still jolly,
the workload with him?
right?
• to Ken Harrison, tennis
.
_
_
.
~ to Art Smith, baseball
·Thursday.
Morning
_-
-
-
Qu~rterback
coach-enough money to pay for
all the dents the Mccann Center
roof is going to suffer when
baseballs stan flying out of the new
field.
.
• to the cross country teams-a
home meet. How about three miles
through the streets of Poughkeep~
sie at night? Now if that wouldn't
set some world records, I don't
k·now what would.
• to Charlene Fields, guard,
women's basketball team-,-1,588
career points: That would put her
at the top of the career scoring list.
• to "Doc" Goldman, men's
soccer coach-he already got his
present: a victory over nationallv-
.
-
rank~d St. Joh~;s and his first win,
-
• to Larry Davis, crew coach-
ning season in
.
se'!en years.
_
_
_
·.
a
·
listing
-
.
on
-
the Ma:rist Col_lege
.
•
.
to
..
Jim Parady, football
·
Composite Athletic Schedule.
·
coach.:.:a stronger passing' attack.
-
.
Every other scheduled varsity sport
And
.
if you
.
can't help him with
·
froin now until May is listed in it
that, S~ta, how about a clone of
.
except the~: Boy,
·
talk about
defensive monster Joe
-
Riccardi?
neglect.
·
• to the women ;s soccer teain-
.
.
These are just a few suggestions
varsity status. Why not?
.
'Tis the
to help yoµ this holiday season. I
season for
-
giving, you know.
know the athletic department is
*
to Dave Magarity;
·
inen's
awful tough to shop for. After all,
basketball coai::h~a trip to
·
the
what do you get for those who get
NCAA's. What more can you ask
free clothing and shoes from
for?
_
:,.
Reebok?
..
,
.,
·
.
.-;,,
•
.:
,;,_;,
:
• to the men's swim
.
team-the
'
--
'.
'
:
,
BeforeJ.wrap up this letter
;
San-
·
ability to accept the fact they are,
ta; let me just remind you I have
and always
will
be, referred to as
been very good
this
year. I
·
don't
MERMEN.
want to appear selfish or anything,
~ to Tom Chiavelli, softball
BUT ... do you think you can swing
coach-a serum that cures the men-
a job for me? I hear NBC Sports
ta! mistakes he says his team has
.
has an opening. Put in a good word
• to the men's volleyball club-a
for me,
OK?
·
portfolio to hold all of John
Oh, I almost forgot! There's one
O'Brien's red cards.
.
.
more thing you can deliver to cam-
• to the women's swim team.::..:.a
pus this year. It's for next
new pair of arms and legs. They're
semester's sports editor, Ted
gonna need them after swimming
Holmlund.
45,000 yards a week in
-
practice
Good luck. Happy Holidays,
during Christmas break.
.
everybody.
41.9.1
41.9.2
41.9.3
41.9.4
41.9.5
41.9.6
41.9.7
41.9.8
41.9.9
41.9.10
41.9.11
41.9.12