Skip to main content

The Circle, April 8, 1993.pdf

Media

Part of The Circle: Vol. 42 No. 7 - April 8, 1993

content

VOLUME 4_2~
JIUMBER7

Marlst _College/Poughkeepsie,
N.
Y.
--Splll · sends
,
..
'
........
,·•:.;
Six;seniors
Scrambling
tQ"Super
8 Saturday
by
MATT MARTIN
Features Editor·
A heavygas ·smell still. ~afted
from the house Monday, as four of
.-·
the s_tudents met with Jim Raimo,
. director of housing; Beth Ruppen- •
• Marist's recent spell of flooding·
.
thal, North End.resident director;
took a turn for the worse, when the
- and Steve Sanso la,' assistant dean
six residents of
75
North Road·
of students, inside the house to
discovered that their basement had
decide what would happen next.
struck _oil Saturday morning.
;•,
1
"If it had happened six weeks
<'Just after we received·aiLoil
fr:om now," said Raimo. "We
deHvery • around
10:30
a.m. on
wouldn't have had a problem.''
Saturday~ we noticed
a
faint gas
"These houses are scheduled to
• smell,'' said Deanna. Sapala, a
be taken down in a month or so for
senior from VaHey Stream, N.Y. .
the widening of Route 9," said
"The smell kept getting worse and
Marty ,Quick,
a
Marist carpenter.
worse, so we called security around
"That's if they don't fall down
noon." • .
first.,,
Wherl,sec:_urity arrived a; few.
"Most of the oil was soaked up
minutes later; they discovered ap-
by the quick dry," said Joe Lofaro,
proxim:1tely 200 ·gallons of home
a Marist maintenance worker.
__
}!eating oil, covering the basement
""""""*-'
.,
"The· rest .was soaked up by the
floor • under four inches of·
Residents of 75 North Road.~<:'•,~
•.
=
"·,"'·:i--,

wood."
• .
.
petroleum.
,,
.
. . . .
.
. .
· __ ~'They'll have. this smell till the
a baseball bat. "It's a real mess . ."
The total cost. for. repairs ·and
reimbursements won't be known
until the all the bills are collected,
but iii the meantime, the oil tank
will be replaced by a temporary one
to last until graduation.
"We're still waiting to see if in-
surance will cover the costs," said
Sansola.
".It's no one's fault,'' said Laura
Cooney, a senior from Thiells,
N.Y.c<Hopefully, we'll be aple to
move back in."


"We're coming back,'.' said.
Vitagliano. "As long as it's
healthy." . •

The group will live at the Super
8 until Easter break, and hopeful-
ly move back in after the break in
cleaner conditions.
. "We've always -imagined being
here for senior week,'' said Sapala.
"At first, (thought it .was .fun-
house,'' said Vitagliano. "So, we · ray,_ said V1ta~ha
11
0.
.
_· -
end," ·said Quick, .:as he cleared
ny ,'' said-,Janine Vitagliano, a
weren't ~appy with that'outcome.,,
. In the meantim~; the d1~placed away some of the ·rotted wood with-_
Matt Martin,
photography
senior from Belle Mead, N.J. "But ... Lookmg for ___
relief, Vitagliano· • stud_e~ts_.
moved_ Il'!to their new
_._
··-·.
· ....
__
__
Jl/!IJii;·_.
·:·rtf;>
• this. certainly isn't the w~y I an-
and two pf her housemates went to
home; the Supe1 8
m
Hyde Park.
-, ~,.,~
. ·
ticipated ending my senior year."
tallc to Pres}dent Dennis Murray, ,
"_We had pilesofstuff,_an~pe?c
••
~"~
An incMong gap ina seam on
.
t~en speak~ng to.- the incoming
pl~ Jusnp~ked at .us so weird, .. said
.the left end of the 275.gallon tank _.freshmen at an open house.atthe
·Vitaghano.
_ •· _ .
.
had ruptured during the filling : • tvfcCann Center.
• ••
_ "We were tol_d to keep _aU
our
causing· the spill to occur. _ • '
• "He was· extremely helpful/'
receipts,'' said Sapala, "_They of-
.The group had to be evicted Vitagliano said. "He told us that
fered to pay for everythu~g fr<?!Il.
from their house because of the
we could be wherever we wanted
our dr.y cleaning to our phone
-·. health risksinvolved, and were of-
and even informed us that we·coul<l _
bills/' . . ..
.
_ __ .
.
fered the base111ent
of
Sheahan, as ca.U him at home' if-we needed -•
'
"They,help~d-lls pack~ andga,ve .
.
well as the· ·rest ·onhe freshmen anything,7'
: , _·,.··.
-- • _____
·, ·, .us$6()from hori~ing'spetty ~ashto:
, _
dorm~!
pr. C:~te.rb~ri;;
a~ ,ac_c~m:
_ _
,
?When_ .\Ve::
/reipi,:zj~~:
;,;to\th~,:/::,J:i~Jp~.~llS,
¥e!::s,1arte~t;i~:
guy/\o,IU;,
, QJQ!iat1()nsas
longa,s they. sphtup, _.
_-hoµse, i!IIJhe
:RD'.s,
were there, but
·_
m~~tena~_ce:?·_ey~~".:':~r.pu$l.!:~·':..U.~

th';f we.r~
to!clJYdlQ1:lsmi{P~fic:iaj~;
i:-t:,\f~iythirigic:!Jang~dt'rh~n>:t!Jey:;
:
:
•••.
,c:pp~~,:-~e.13µs~
ne;lc~e.\V;;\\'.rdi~rni•5
Our ._goal·-,
IS
.to
st{lv ·_-m
.. this_..
-knew we talked to Pres1dentMur~
. ~av~ a
1
w
food_, . •~b,e.sa1d,,
... •:· ..
.

.
. -· '·

. . .
~
.
.
_,,
_.
'
'
.
.
.
'
.
.
'
,
-
..
NYS'
•seJJ;ate
,alms•
at
arming. secuiitY·
- • ..
··•
·
cJ,r1s
:·o:r,r,ose•

..
··•.·
by
PATRIC~" FARRELL
St~f(Writer
-i · •
Sen, Steve Saland, a Republican-
Cro~well, Conn.
Leary explained that th~ "validity ment which will give tis backing
-. Conservative from Poughkeepsie,
A "police" mentality, according • of numbers" was questi~ned at the • whenever we need it," Leary said.
has 'recently made recommenda-
to Lea~, is aggressive,. w!}ilecol-• conference because. Marist had "However, I don't know of such
; tions for: making-publkaiid private _lege security gt1ards :are typically
almost 3 times the . number of
a thing as a ·coiripletely safe cam-
Although ·a • New Yor:k' Sfate
college campuses. safer•. • • .
.
•• • .
pro-active
anq
wo_rk with a. high ,btirglaries
as
larger schools such as • pus,". adding that, ' ''beca1;1se·
"'.e
• Senate pa11el !las reCOIIIJ1}ended
•• • _: I.;eary said :that g'Qns :tend:\o
visibility towards crime>
Notre Dame; In1991, Notre Dame haven't had any violent_
cnmes_
lt
new p·roposals which \YC>Uld
grant . create a certaino:''rii.entality"
among : The Senate proposal, known as
reported 11 burglaries while Marist , doesn't metln .it .couldn't happen
college security officers the auth9ri-.
officers,.arid whether' one realizes ··The Security Information Act for
reports indicated
28. .
tomorrow."
• ty, fo carry we~pops o,n campus, .. • ,it:or not, gut1s give: someo11e the . Institutions_ of Higher Education,
.
~
Currently, Marist Security pro~
Jod::.eaiy;: the_:dir:e~tor
of. :safe~y' power to kiH, ·which: he does not . willtake lto
2
years before it goes
NationwJ_
de,. ther_
e is less_
crime
vides 2 outside officers and I super-
and security ~t Marist, .said he 1~ • waiifon'fos :campus •. •
. _· .
irito effect " if _?t all. -··
_ -
_·. .
on· college campuses than in their
vfsor for ·each shift, as well as 2
opposed to the ,id~a.
• _ • ·_
> .
~•we have the 1ype of.people • . At thenatiomvide Seventh An~ surrounding Communities; Leary
building guards and
4
dormatory
"I do not believe officers should
here that.-1 like in this business,''
nual Conference •
ori ·•
Campus ·
· I
M ·
· b
f
guards: according' to Leary.

have· guns; :they. are' riot--;rie_eded
• • Leary said. -''You can.talk to,one • Crime,. l:leld on Feb.3-5, -~he-Stu- • satd. Whi e
anst has een · or-
In addition, a service is provid-
here/' said. Leary. He ;idded th.at

• o(our peoplewh9 ;ire retired police·
•·
dentRigtif i:o.Know and-Campus tunate in iiot having violent crimes, ed by the security office which
at_largeriristitutfons·gt1nfm~ybe
officers and 'they will tell you they
Security
Ad,
·a federal law, •was Leary maintains that students and . escorts individuals throughout
necessary;' but· not. at M,ari~t. ;-do riot want to carry a
-
gun.,,
discussed. Underthis law, colleges members of the-·Marist comm uni-
campus. However, Leary said that
"Your . approach to a-: situati«:Jn
'. :' - Students agree: ''Ithink it's kind
are mandated to pubHsh statistics ty need. to think "safety" and be
when ycm'i:e armed and· when_ . ofa_a_
ngerous_,
actual_
ly~ becau_
se if
on certain crimes including murder,
• •
· -
-

·
• ,
d • • • • • d'f
h • h

·
h
(
- •
· ·
· ·d
It
reminded that crimes can happen.
you re not . arme _
IS_
very •• 1
-e
t ey- ave~ weapon
t
ey security
rape. robbery, aggravate assau ,
"I belive Marist is relatively safe.
the service is :.rarely requested
becuase either the Marist com-
munity is unaware ofit altogether,
or would rather not ask to be
e~corted. ·
fererit,''.said Leary,.
• . .
officers) would tend to use.them,'.'
burglary and rnotor vehicle theft. and a whole lot luck_
y. We·.are
The Senate Majority_
Task Force
said .·Greg. Cannito,

20-year~old
• Adding to the ·question of arm~·
on Campus Security, chaired by
political science major froni ·. ing security officers at Marist, _blessed
with a_good ~olice depart-
New program may. alle~iate -financi~l. ~o~s
------------------
but could re:1ch"lOO,OOO
by 1997. Recently;
gov~rmmmt, students w~th the ~e~kms loan Mc<::orm1ck
said. - Its a great idea, but,!he
by
DOMINICK
I;~
FO_NTANA.
the projected loansfor each eligible student . don t have to payanythmg whde
m
schooL loamn~ plan must b~ developed _more ..
• Senior Editor

was
about $15,000; decreasing $10~000
since· P~yments starts1x months aft~r the student
_Manst cancelled its commumty service
January, due to budget cuts. •• _ . _



graduates ffom copege, having about 10 reimbursement plan due to c~tbacks_ two
College students and coUege~bound
seniors
may find they could_ be eligible for a lo_an
payment plan, thanks to President Cliqton's
education proposals. .
• .

Last month at Rutgers University,-the
president said he wanted to spend. $7 .4 billion
to finance a national-service plan over _the
next four years, caUing for students to per-
form community s_ervice
in exchange for ear-
ning credit to pay for college or job training.
Local Mid
7
Hudson colleges were· in-
terested to find the federal government was
willing to help young adults pay for their
loans, and give students good work
experience.
President Clinton's program will serve on-
ly a small number of the average five million
students who receive college financial aid
each year.



According
to local financial
aid
authorities, the national program will pro-
bably start out to fund for approximately
20,000 service positions beginning in 1994,
Some of the. community ·service tasks
years to fimsh·~a~mg.
. .
years a~o._
Harry Wood, the vice P!es1de~1t
would be tutoring younger students, work-
. Students may_Jom the md_ita~, the Peace for adm1ss1ons
and e~rollment ?lannmg, said
ing in public clinics, serving on police forces, . Corps, or teach m sc}tools with d1sadvantag- he hopes the nat1onal-_serv1ce
proposal
maintaining. and cleaning. neighborhoods,
ed students,_ acc:or~mg to _Stacey.
"
fo~~ows_
thr?ugh bec~use 1t m~kes. sense._
and '.,VOrking
with senior citizens. College-
He,~lso said President ClinJon ~hould ex-
. I t~mk 1t (th; nat~onal-serv1ce)
1s ~ons1s-
b_ound
students couldperform these services pa~d _ on the_current financial aid progral!'

tent w1th_M~?st
s phd~so~?Y,of serv!ng the
before, during and ~(ter they_attend college.
which camt: mto effect la~t summer -
1t
commun~ty, Wood sa•?· It s certaml}'.
up
David Stacey, the College of Mount Saint
would help mstead of Cfeatmg m~re paper- t~ pa:, with the college s goals and obJec-
Mary's·financiaraid director,said the com-
~ork and problems with an entirely new uves.
.
munity service reimbursement plan is nothing
pr?pos~I.
.
Wood added that anythmg the federal
new to the institution. •
I th1~k there should be more (money) m go".ern~~nt has d~ne to help students pay
"We already have this type of program in
the Perkms Loan program because it would their tmt1on costs 1s good, but the federal
place and it seems to work very well," Stacey save the (fedefal govem~ent) mone~, and it P!Ograms hav~n't kept up with the costs of
said "It's now called the Perkins Loan but
would be easier to run, Stacey said.
higher education.
it's ~n a smaHer scale."
'
. Christine McCormick, the Marist College
Authorities in financial aid also unders- •
The Perkins loan is a direct loan ad-
financial aid director, said according to the tand that President Clinton's plan is only a
ministered by many colleges where the
proposal, ~. stud~nt co~!d receive as low as pro_posaJ,
and has not been issued or approv-
amount varies according to the need of the
20 percent forgiveness on an annual lo~,
ed m Co~gress..
.
.
.
student. The loan has the lowest interest rate
up to 60 percent, t~rough a voucher or_
credit
_D~n S1staremk, the fm~nCI~l aid ad-
a student can receive -
s
percent.
system. But she said the proposal has rough m1mstrator of the Sta!e U mversity of New
Each college gets a certain amount of
edges to be smoothed out.
York at New Paltz, said students who want
money based on need Under the federal
"The student wouldn't have the greatest to participate in this program should contact

payin2 job, but it would oav for the
loan.''
their congressman about the proposal.


















































































































































··-·
·-----
-·-·.
·----
-·-
·-···--··-
··--------------------------------------------------

TUrt[eS
deliver~·co
rrfJ:,flfitl·:i1tz-71'riiltd;fi/n~tU.lt11J,e~l




:._

•••
'
••
_··:·. .·•
·.'
'"r.
'd_-al.
·_J·.
:,-'.-
..
:
·h
...

.••••
·.16·0.
·3··
•· \i)t'~.--:
._:,.
,_tliei~
:p~~t}hoh~~e,c·~~~
-~~~~·t~/d¢1tr;~t·iE~iasKoi:i?;_.-Ii~6k,~ho::~~T~ki~i~6o"

by
JENNIFER·GIANDALONf;:.
·
to_1eu
.
~P"!qn_t e r~_ar
. )VI_ ., eir
.
them.:-Jt'_5;5afe
to say,that-th1sJs sqmewhat
..
, ·d-.h·

·
· · '.-· .-,··

,,
··
,,··
• ·:''


·
·
'
._
··
fnend Apnl O'Nell (Paige Turco) usmg a
..

·
·

•·

·
r
d h ,, h'. fi
·

-

-

• -·

an
_t
~
ongmal_._,l'llrtle_s)
fpr
~
small_part.

·.
Do"n·
_•t·
.·1a·u··
gh'.·_.'y·_
e·s',··_I·_'d·_
"1d·s-·p'
e·n""d.
·p'a'r't·o·

__
.my.·
•• ,. ••
• •
•··t·

.th·'
t. h. b

.ht
., t •
,
··n.
ntore.1.nyo ve_
:ta11.t
~- i_rst _t~(?
me>,V!.!!~,
..
He IMn about as many scenes·as Splinter
magic seep er\ a
..
-s e

oug ··,
a • a ea
when the only person the turtles fought was·

••
· d h
-_·
·

·_··
-····
·· ···_ii•··
•·ct
·
··
..
··
·..
·
·
· •
·h'
Saturday afternoon watching •.~Teenage
Mu-
market._ One~ iri Japan, the t~rtles have to
Shredder who· wanted to take over- the
,
an
t
~
mf)st ~e. s~e 1m_ o
.1s.
try_ to ;1eac

tant Ninja Turtles III." Hey, (didn't have
save April from being executed as a witch
.
•• •
Id

s '·
t"

·
th •

1

·
h
1
•••
h.

hock~Y.
to
.fo,ur,.J"P:ines~
~ol~iers.
H
s not
to pay for it. I wasn't in the mood foi-:the
• .





wqr_
.•.
o_me
imes e s1mp er_ t e Pot, t e

very important,
.but
it's good for a laugh for
new releases like "The Crush" or "Jack the •---~-~---------•better.·
b(?th·adul(fa.nd kids:

••
•• •
••

Bear." Sometimes
·you
just wan't to see
.


·.· '·.•
·:
_
..
,
.
.
·_ .

,
·

·: '.

••.
·
:··
·
'·>·-·ii·.·:,
·
,,;
•·
.>
.
;,
something pointless and stupid which doesn't·
••
,The .Ree·

:
9r-
courseSplmt~r.'° 1_s_
h~re, an,_d
.
~s the
...
,:, f~r,ey Feld~a?,
.
( The_ Lost
.
B?ys,.
require a lot of thinking. l certainly got what

.
tu_rtles
·_me~~or,
a_dds \\'1sdo_m
t<? the· fili_n
.
L1c_ense
to. J?nye. 1s.
~ack as the_ v01c~_of
I was looking °for in this movie:


:
·Story
(what·httle th_ere 1s).-Some of
_th1~_must
be D~matello
.~fterbe1_ng
b~nned by.NewL.111e
-


rubbing off 6n the turtles b~cause RaJ?hael
.
Cinema from "Tur*s·
II"
b!!ause of drug
Stuart
Gillard

directs
Leonardo,
warns a child about the dangers of violence .• use:.I think Ne~ Line 'Vas loqkingfor a big
Michaelangelo, Donatello and: Raphael in

Jelinifer"
.
Underneath it all, there is a message.-I guess name for the· yoice ~~;one or' their screen
this second sequel, where the plot is a little
the· forties are growing up.
_
heroes and decided to.give Feldman another
stronger than the ones of the first two
Giandafone
·

•·
.
.
;
.<
.
··
.
.
..
.· .
.
.


·'chance.Who lcnows who we wili hear if there
movies. In a movie like this, however; too
But, the st~p1d1ty
1s still ther~; Th~-turtles
-
is another.sequel.
. .
_
much or' too complicated
;
of
a
storyline
areJuU of
wise
cracks· and:·g~ve plenty· of-
'


'

·

....
causes the audience to lose interest.
·when;.
-Iii!'--~-•
"wet willys;': There are also a·good deal of
So, this i:evie~ is for anyone who saw the
the turtles are off the screen the· film slows
and help rebel villagers defeat the evil Lord.
.
references:; to' other· movies:, ''Wayne's
original movie and-anyone who knows young
down quite a bit. I found my;elf, along .with Norinaga;who is· being supplied guns from
World," ''.B.ackdraft,'' and !\The
'.J\ddams ·children
who like the turtles. If you liked the·
every kid in the theater, waiting for the fight
English pirates.
_
·
_
.
.
_.
·family,''·
jllst to namt!
·a.
few.: Oh,·
-y~s~.
and

first film; you
will
probably like thls one. The.
scenes to begin. Gillard tried to make the film
anyone. who. has seen· any of-these turtle best parts are the fight scenes and you don't
more mature, an~ in the process, hurt it in
Will kids understand
'this?
Probably not.
movi~ can'_t fo~get the silly dances and
• '
have to pay any attention to the plot:
the long run.

They also won't unoerstand that the
obsession. with pizza:.
"Turtles III" may make you laugh even
This time around. the turtles travel back
Japanese think the turtles are demons from_
Fi~ally,
·
Gillard threw. in Casey. Jones
.th0ugli
mo5t of the humo_r is really corny.
Fans treated to Crowes
bell~bottoJriS
dnd bulb lights
DANA BUONICONTI
.Adbum,
"The Southern Harmony
by




••
:
and Musical Companion
..
"

·~·
rounded by the:wprds
••r~
N,ucs''
-
to a smoking climax with the band his fra11dc
hippie.dancing an~ ion7

(most likely in response to ail altev
;
.
at fuJl-:Wt~
/.
'...
.•.. :

.
:
.
:
... '·
''stant"energy,
,w.fiicl).
ericoucaged the
cation· with· narcs at a recent
''Hard To Handle" and "Twice fans to
_do
a lot of dancing
pf
their
Underneath the magic of.multi-.
.I~
front
0
.of
.the
..
sold-out
colored bulb lights, those'in atten-
~-
'f>oughkeepsie
crowd, the Crowes
dance at the Mid-Hudson Civic proved that raw rock and roll is
~enter last Thursday were whisk-
.
definitely alive and well, an_d
wears
ed away to a time and place.called. ing
·
bell-bottoms. Fashion aside,
the '70s.


however, their,spicy Southern stylt:_
Crowes show); the Crowes played
As Hard/'. fro~ '-'Moneymaker;'' own.
.
..
--
., ....
--·
...
ne_
a_rl_y all·.· the
·songs
from
·
d
··
h.
·
·
00
·
f h
'
•. ·•
.•
'"'···.
.•

..,
""
~
.
.
.
-
.
.•
-
seeme to ave a renew
res ness

Marc Ford's stinging-·
foad
'guitar
"So_·_
u_th_e_rn-_Ha_i-mony·
,:_".'.
and_
•.
,,a
·

h.
•'


ct·d· h····
1

b
-~
·,tot
eI_Il,
as 1
_
t. e
.1tsts9ng
e1.o,r:e complemented· Rich
:.Ro_
binson's
handful from their debut; ushake
h

·'

.. s
I C Id,, h" h
t eencorl!,;·.tare.t.
o
., _w
ic
su_·p·er-loud·rhy·thm_-.
__
·p·lay·
ing·very
Your Moneymaker.''.
.
. •

b. k d


f
.
.
.
,

,
·.
.
.
,
ro e ownmto, a great.version o
well;
·bassist·.
Johnny Colt arid
·
•• One of ~he most, exhilarating
Bob Marley's ''Tllr~e Uttle_Birds!' qrummer Steve_Goi-inan:provided
"We are the Black Crowes,"
shouted singer and whirling dervish
C_hris Robinson, as his band tore
into the· opening chords of uNo
Speak No Slave," offth_eir latest
made fora killer concert
..
·

With a background of changin$
moments of the
-night
.was,
the
Thepairing·of:•~H
__
oteFllln_ess" an.~ir-tigpt foµndation;.andEd
rather lengthy._version-of "Thorn
··
·


·
l
.H··a·
wry·
sch· t1"ckle·
'd
·th·~·1•v···o.·r•_1·es.··G_o·
r-.·
·
and "My Moriung·Song;" a ong

tapestries that

included a liirge
photograph 6f
.
Leon Russell,
.
as
well as a huge gre(,n potleaf sur;
In My Pride,,, which was
_preced-
• h




f «J·
I
·
··A •
• ,,
m_
an,
_in
partictilar,.w_as extremely
w_
1t an encore o
ea ous gain
.
__

ed by a-blues jam
.
that started· off
d "R.
d ,,
h" h R

b"

imp···_re
__
s_siv_e,
an_d
wo_
re_
a lovely suit.
ll
·
·
·
an • eme y; w 1c

o mson
.
very me ow, b~t gradu_ally
built up
i_n_
trodii_ced as·_,
__
'a
_song
cal_led
'O_·
n
••
_.
••
•..••
_.
.••
•.

.
:
..
.
As a friend keeps telling me, the
.
.
.
.
.. .
.. h
:h..
.
..
...
.
.
...
.
The Good Ship'.Lollipop',"'.were
Bl k C
d

d
Getting
1
t
.
t1g •·.
t
t
.·.
lS
titll
e
/
th
;:::::::ntsw:'.~~:..'!::~
on
~~:r~~~~;::iut:;;r;:f~






·
·
·
speaking to the crowd;· except for performing like they did last week,

,
.

The Nicest Moment: Gene

Susan Sarandon
·and.
Tim Rob-
h
.
I " h k
.
.
.
ep·1·tom1·21·
·ng
the true s·p1·r1·t
of rock
·
·
·
·
t e. usua
t an
·
you very very
by
KRAIG DeMATTEIS
Hackinan dedicating his Oscar to bins, with their J:Iaitians speech not
much," but he made u_p
for it with an~ roil, h_e
may
_be
right.
.

his Uncle Oren. Who?·
i
do. not
10 minutes into the pr_ogram; plus
.Well,
I am a happy camper this
. ,
.
.
.
..
_


the othertwoabove makeme·sick
.week;-no·needto
say\Vhy;J
will
not.
:know,:but
it w_as,
mc~t·-
, ...
:' '
.
.·.
.
> , _.,
-:
~
,,·.
•··i'·
.r,'·'···.
·:
.
,.
nib' h: iri,' hut\ywould like
tq
sa~
Most Touch111g
~ome_nt: C:Im!
.
w1,tij
~h,~1r
J.>C?h~,~~~
~1e»1s.
that
_hll.~e
.
.
thaf Hollywood finally paid respect
'Ea~twood
brqugh! his mo~. t<>
the ~o rum a good-(1me. T~e-Academy
where .respect was due
..
Clint
awards and
.
dedicated his
_:Best
1s for: awards,_ not a soapbox for
Eastwood made 32 movies, acting
-Director
Oscar to her.
these people to stand on. Do· not.
and directing,
-but
never won an
·
.
King and Queen of Hait Don't:
waste my time, nor anyone else's
.
Oscar. He has finally become a Tom Hariks
.and
Andie. Mac-
for that matter. We do ric>t
·need·
respected icon in American culture. Dowell. What was she thinking?
your sickening bab_bl~.

:
Out of the 23 categories, 13 of
, them I predicted. If you do not This is the 90's, honey! the 20's are
count the documentaries, live ac~ gone.
Well, dhthafloveifn.6te, let me
remind everyone that thr Ac_ademy
tiori short, and animated film

The Actor to. Come Dressed as
categories, which I picked as they His Character
.
Award: Robert

announced each nomination, that

Downey Jr. Talk about method ac-
·drops
down to 13 out of 19'. N<>t ting, this gijy must have gotten a
of Arts and Scie~~es is'not and will
never be°an exact account ofwho•
is the bestin Hollywood since most
of the members do not even bother
filling out the ballots: I"read once

bad for an amateur,
_if
I may say. little too involved.·
.
Now, the two problems I had
with Oscar' about which none of

you· will probably care. Maybe
some of you heard a lone; painful
ci-y
of agony that night,.but "The
I:.ast oftheMohicaris" should not
of won ANYTHING, no matter
how minor the award .is
..
Best
Sound?!. Of what, guns being
fired?Wow, how did they ever do
that? They. are surely amazing!
And what is with the· Academy
awar_ding simple art designs for.
Best Art Direction. I picked «Bram
Stoker's. Dracula." "Toys" even
.
Greatest Feeling Moment: Tied-
Al Pacino and Clint Eastwood win-
.
that the late Henry Fonda ~ave his
..
ning, and their i;peeches afterward.
wife the ballot to fill out; wh<>"in
Most Annoying Presenter: sorry
girls, Richard Gere and his China
tirade. I wonder if Cindy Crawford
.
has to put up with that everyday.

turn let James Garner's wife do it.
So. if your fa~orite
·actor
or ac-,
tress did not win, there is always

_next
year. Andif~heydid win; then
Most Annoymg Winner: the lady
they deserved it.
U
was.
a
tough
who won the Best Documentary
contest this. year with·some strong
Feature award with her Panama
contenders, but as· long as Clint
speech nobody cared about.
,
won, I'm satisfied.
had a better chance; at least it was
*
·
TEN'
Q
different
and creativt:.
But
,
.
·AT
.

.
Tl
·
N
:*
"Howards End?" It's a room!

.
.-·:.:

·
.
T~ey drew it, they built it, enough

The Financial Aid Offi~e is currently accepting applications fo~ several
said!
._

.
..
.
:
Privately Sponsored Scholarships offered through the College. These
.
Billy Crystal once a~am p~ov1~- scholarships may be awarded on the basis of academic performance, •
ed laughs for the_ audience m lus financial need, majorfield of study and location.of permanent residence, -
mon~logue ~nd ~ong . parody,
or a combination of these items;
A
list of the scholarships offered and
esp~1ally the Jokes mvolvmg "The their eligibility requirements· is provided in the Marist College Under-
Crymg Game" and Jack Pa~ance. graduate catalog, and
.is
available in· the Financial Aid Office. All
Ho~ever, C':)'stal was not as great students returning for the 1993-94 academic year are eligible to apply.
as m previous years. Though
.
• ·


nothing can top last year's perfor-
To be considered for these scholarships students must_ submit the
mance, he is still a great comedian following to the Financial Aid Office (Donnelly 200) by
May
14, 1993.
and host.
Well, enough with the overview,
1.
A completed APPLICATION FOR PRIVATELY SPONSORED
let me get on with my own awards.

SCHOLARSHIPS for each scholarship you are interested in;
.
The nominees are: Coca-Cola,
Doritos, and Charlie Perfume. The
.
envelope please: A dose one, but
Doritos wins as the Most Annoy-
ing Commercial of the evening.
Two words to Liza Minelli: Lip
.
Synch. "Putting on the Hits" had
.
better contestants. A word of ad-
vice: pay attention to the song and
not to the audience next time.
2. A letter
from you, addressed
to the COMMITTEE
FOR PRIVATELY
SPONSORED
SCHOLARSHIPS,
outlining
why you feel you
_should
be
considered for the particular scholarship in question. (Note: A separate
letter is required for each scholarship you are interested in); and
3.
A completed·SPONSORED SCHOLARSHIP
RECOMMENDATION
FORM (for each scholarship) to ensure full consideration from the
scholarship committee.

APPLICATIONS AND RECOMMENDATION
FORMS ARE
AVAILABLE
IN THE FINANCIAL
AID OFFICE.
KtRK·-L•
LO.UCiHRAN
.
.
'.
..
.
•.
.
.
·.·
•·
.
-_
.
Attor.neys·
•t-laWi'
'
.
.
..
.
.
.
..
_
•crtmlnal
law
Clvlll.aw'.-
Vehlcte:
and
:trafftc•-

90· Market
Street"·_
••
·•Poughkeepsie·-~-
-
91f'471_.:lf31f3.
Available:
24Jiours
:
·.
.
.
.
FR.EEDOM<OF. CHOIC,E;l-
--

•••
-4
Woodstock
35 Mill Hill Rd.
, (914) 679-2251

Poughkeepsie.
807MalnSL
(914) 452-1250
CHOOS~:
THE BEST SELECTIO~I
Kingston
328WaUSt.
(914) 331-77~
CHOOSE:
20~ STUDENf DISCOUNTS ON ART SUPPLIES*
CHOOSE:
OUR HELPFUL AND KNOWLEDGEABLE
STAFF
CHOOSE:
ONE OF OUR MANY GRAND OPENING SPECIALS!
NOW OPEN IN POUGHKEEPSIE!
807 MAIN ST. 452-1250
(Near Vassar)
• Ex~ sale items
l






































































THE CIRCLEfAPRIL·8,1993.,··
3
SotntF.factilt:,~
.·:
>
,cf:hr:efSitY
can
fight
intolerance
• •


··•

••
• .
.•
ceptiog
Or
~,eni~,''
•MY«F

,:,f!omos~~ty
is, somdhing
"I. take
"!\"
of issues
·or
the
homos~xuality) th~t w~uld n6t be
., ,b?
C~_RO~IN,E
J.ONAH.
,
, :
-said.:
i:Most'ofour-student'popula~,.

that' 1s. not-_d1scussed
m society,"
sou}/' he said_.
.
.
a ba~ idea, but 1t s too
.nar~ow
_a

.... ,.• •
~t~ff Writ~r
• .
tion has been brought :up'·inAhe··
_·Myers
said .• ."Marist is a reflection

Brother Joseph. Belanger ·at-
• _.
solution. The_ broader solution
_is

• •

•.

·:· .
••
,.
·,
•·
•. ,
,
.
-
Catholic tradition· and this
·has.,
of. society.'t•:


.
tributes intolerance
·to
lack of a
global education to put people m.
,
In re~ponse t?
_such.,r~c.erypop~cs.
never
·entered:;
into)·, their con-.
'
Finally; Myers said peer pressure
''glob~I"
teaching method.
_
contact.''
.
as g_a_ys
m, t~e mili~arr.
an.d
·~o,,nd_?m,s,
sciousness. The:questiori is how· do
••
was
'_also·
a· factor in fighting in-

"Intoh;fance is a real lack of
·
Another reason for mt?lerance,
on c~mpus, some mem~er~ oft,he_,
'we·
eitier this into their con-. tolerance at Marist College.
glob_al perspectiv~,"
he said.·
Brothe~
.
Belanger said, .~as
~anst Coll~ge ~acultr agree that
sciousness?"
"Everybody wants to belong and
"Marist' College is
·not
a global
economics and the compet1t1on
mt9l_erarc~ is still a pro~lem, for
they don't want to be seen as the campus. Th~ curriculum is· no_t bu,sJnesses face from abroad.
M~~
1
st,
.•••

....


... •.·

-------------
other,"shesaid. "Whenyou'rethe
global.''.
,,
.
.
You_ ne_ed chan~~ and a
,

Oui;
,student .~odr.
it-P.?t
-~,
Y~u
wani C'-;,~d~.;,S
_other,
you have less status, less
Brother· Belanger said college

broad~mng. td~~ base,
Brot_her
tolerant enouw, at-t,his pomt,.
,said
.....
·
.
..
.
.
,
.
.
..
,.,
.
. ...
rights."
.
students, especially those in. the
Belanger said: You need variety
Joanne
Myers, professor

o(
'.
()n
campu$?,Olf.,
,QUf
only
Myer~ said one example of peer Northeast and language students,
and to get new people for better
poHtical•science.

'
'
.
. .
. . •··
.
with
mandatory·
A/Ds
pressure is labeling.
are more.tolerant, but intolerance
thinking and more progress."
•• Myers-
..
con_
tribut_es._t_liis_
i_n.
0




"At Marist_, to be a feminist is still exists. "'
He also said the key to curing in-

tolerance
•.
,
to, ·several different
•.•
educ_ation. "
to be a lesbian," she said.
"There. is some intolerance,"
·
tolerance and o~her problems was
factors:

'

.
. .
.
:
Bro.-- Joseph
Belanger
.Father
Luke Mccann, the col-
Brother Belanger said. "Human
education.
·''We
don't deal with sexuality
-----~------------
Iege chaplain, disagrees with asser-
nature doesn't
like anything
-
."You want condoms on ca~-
very well at all,''. she said. "We,are
...
·


. •
tio'ns that there is a large degree of different-whether
it'-s. gay or
pus?" Brother Belanger Said.
still
,very
,steep\!d
in
-
the C~t!i~l~c
,
1
At
Vassar College ihere
•is
both

intolerance on campus..
black."
.
"Okay, but only with mandatory
tradition/,'
.
.
:
,
.
..•.
.
,
.. :~
Women Studies-Program and an·
. "I
don't
think
there's
a
A core requiring global studies
AIDS education."
: ,Myers
said before you
.cou,ld
qf-
Intercultural
Center. At
..
City

(tolerance) problem here on cam-
would decrease intolerance because
Brother
Belanger
said he
fer,
_a
course i!} homo~e~u~Iity a~d
Univ~rsity.there is a center for Gay
-.
pus," he. said.
of the ''infusion of new· ideas" and
disa~rees with Dennis_ J. Ml}rray,
attemp~to curb_ i~tolerance, yo_u
.
and. Lesbian. Studies, Myers said.
Father McCann also said the in-
diversity , Brother Belanger said.
Manst College President, who
have to:ask who the.school is
"ser-,
,·.
,According·
to Myers, society is.-·· troduction of homosexual and Jes-
"The more diversity you have,
Belanger says thinks condoms on
ving" and who
·woulg)ake
it. •.
. .
also_.a;-.factor.
contributing to in-
.
bian specific classes were "out of the greater potential for progress,"
campus would hurt the school~s im-
"Catholic tradition is not all ac-
tolerance and homophobia.

niy sphere."
he said. "lfyouwantacourse(on
...
see
TOLERANCE
page
6

DeFelic·e·'
s--.
book a:_
g1:ippi_ng
tale
character~based·

techn.o-thriller
by
PETER·
DONALDSON
get emotionally attached
to:
DeFelice said.

;

Staff Writer
· --,
.
••
DeFelice jokes· about how his
DeFelice's first book, "Coyote.
copy editor;·in reading an episode Bird'\ was released last year and

where one character puts· out a
.
in addition to receiving rave
Ex-CIA' agent. Mich~el O'Con-
cigarette on top of a bureau, wrote
reviews from the New York Times
• nell was kicked out of the agency
him this long note about why that
Spies and Thrillers section, an ex-
for helping Pakistan b~ild three
character would never do that.
cerpt from the book was printed in
nuclear bombers that were virtual-
.
"At that point, it's kind of wild the Fall '92 edition of Marist's
ly invisible t6 radar.

.

because you've created something
Alumni News.
Now, the CIA needs his help to
th.at, to someone else, is Jjke a real
Following in the genre of the
find the bombers and prevent a
perscm;" he said. For Defelice, the
techno-thriller, "Coyote Bird"
nuclear

war between India

and
process of writing a book is one
takes place in the near future and
Pakistan,
long and involved ~iscovery
involves
..
aerial dogfights between
This gripping adventure is the
procf!ss.
Japanese..
and
American
scenario·
'of
.Jim,
DeFelice's
-new
superplanes.
·techno-thriller,.·."War
Breaker'',
,_.
,_"Ph·e
•who'e·
··book_
,·s
The.book, now available in soft-
which is due out in hardcover this
.I.
J
''
cover, can be_ found in most book
July.
'

.
.


.
his
••
way
of
redeeming
stores.
.
.
.
DeFelice, an adjunct professor h •
lF
F.

t ;
S
It's
,DeFelice realizes that
,mariy
of
communication arts,
,said
the
·'
imse
'.I
J.
or__
pa~ ;
8
.n
,•.
writers never getthis far and admits
.
maiif,thfog;.'that::-inspired~him•;:to
,~·-about;
respons1b1llty.-_r\
...
_
-
that the feeling of.liaving'his first
,
write his second book was the
_inc
Jim DeFelice
book ptiblished'is':sweet.
' ';,

;
trigue ofits characte~s.-,,-especial-·
·
:.
·th
'
·
''Walking into a bookstore·ancf
ly
··the
book's mau1_ character,

au
·
or • seeing cardboard displays of your
Michael O'Connell.
• •
.

books is like cool," he said.


h"
f
He thinks about ideas, focussing
"The whole book
JS
1s way
O
As one might expect, DeFelice
redeeming himself for past sins, on certain characters. He thinks
likes the work.of authorTom Clan-·
and that's what- got' me into the

about it, formulates it, lets it per-
cy (Hunt For Red October, Patriot
book " DeFelice said. "It's about colate and then coines up
_wi
th
·a
Games) even though he does not
respo~sibility."


-.·

scenario.
get ideas from him, because Clan-
Although his book contains a lot
All this creative imagination is
.
cy does •~sea stuff.,,
of technical terms dealing with ju st the fir st step in a year-long
Apparently, this writer of air-
super~airplanes and co~puters,

process.


.
.
combat doesn't mind "sea stuff"
DeFelice said his stones are·
.
.
If the proposed scenario is ac-
.
• because his favorite author is Her-
primarily character-based.

.
.
cepted, he a~ranges a. chapter to

man Melville.
"People are the real attrac-
ch~l?ter-outhne
-
and then starts
DeFelice

remembered reading
tions," he 1>aid.
wr~tmg_.
.
·
"Moby Dick" and said he loved it.
He takes pride in the fact that his
"You have to try it out first to
"Boats are cool, and the whale's
characters are "full~blooded, real, make sure that, six months down
kinda neat,'; he said.
• •

d
th
oad you've got-an ending,"
.
.

.
.
.
actual people" that the rea er can
.
er

-
Although his mam goal 1s to con-
~our Pruenu is ~ue,stea at tlie
'Af!A.J~
~,r.
14n
e~ent

tft.sionea
to.
assist sttuknts in
~Coring finx.pge.s
6etween majors,
mitwrs,
a,u{
careers.
9,fonaa!J,
Jtpri(
19, 1993
![r:om 4:30 - 6:JOp.m.
Campus.
Center - (jafkry LounfJe·
Marist alumni
a,u{
faculty
wi£[
6e
avaifa.i(e
for informal
aa'llisement
conversations.
tinue ,vritirig books, Defelice en-
joys teaching journalism and is still
active in the field.
Aside from his journalism
classes at Marist, he was executive
editor for Taconic Newspapers for
three years and currently writes a
political column for them.
Champagnat
Carnival
SGA revamps
constitution
by
TOM BECKER
Staff Writer
In a session last Thursday,
various members, headed by Stu-
dent Body President Nella Licari,
discussed grammatical errors and
title changes within the SGA
constitution.
The group discussed the option
of changing the titles of the ap-
pointed
vice-presidencies
to
secretary positions.
The result: vice-president would
look better on a resume than the ti-
tle secretary.
The Executive Vice-President
was instead changed to Vice-
President of the student body.
Stop
6y on
your
way
to
ainnerl
The motion to change the office
A

1
16
to an elected position was defeated
Pr
I
.
under the notion that the president
would know who best could serve
"---------------------------

their policies.




























































'
i
i
I
;
I
I
'

I
4
••
·THE'
CIRCLE,:,
.THE-.'
lttR.C'LE
.
• .. . J
·.S.J.
Richard,
editor
Ted Holmlund,
spo,,; editor
..
,
Matt
Martin,
photography editor
Dominick Fontana, senior ediior
_
Jason Capellaro,' business
manager
Andrew Holmlund, editor~l page editor
Dana Buonlconti, columns editor
Jennifer Ponzlnl, advertising
manager
Joanne Alfarone,
biisiness manager
Erik Hanson, distribUlion manager
Anastasia
B.
Custer, senior editor:
Klrell
A.
Lakiurian,
assQCiate
editor
Amy_
Crosby,
senior editor
Dennis Glldea,/acully
adviser

So
What's
up?
Maybe because Spring is the time for ·change; maybe
.because
for one reason or another
alums have been drifting through in the past few weeks, or maybe with Clinton in the
White House and Yeltsin hanging on in the Kremlin, they've got nothing better to
speculate about, but the question of the moment ~eems to be:

.
So what's up with D.J.?
·
.
·
.
•.
,
There's been a substantial amount of talk recently about the future of Marist Col-
lege. Intertwined with all this chat comes questions about President DennisJ. Murray Jr.
Alumni who were around when he was relatively new to the job realize how much
Murray has accomplished and is accomplishing>Murray equals Marist, they say, and
that leads to a case of the 'what ifs' - especially, what
if
he leaves.-
But he's given the Marist community no indications he's ready to bolt. Perhaps it's
time some of our former best and brightest should look around and take a realistic look
at the situation.
. •
.
.

.
Marist is about to become Construction Land-where the hard hats roam and gray
squirrels frolic among heavy equipment, where never is heard a delayed opening word
and the Hudson reeks of environmental degradation all day.
.
.
.


'.fune your ears into some of these talks concerning Marist's future and one can hear

some astonishing predictions;
. .
·
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
-
..

.

·
·
-
,
.
FOR RENT-
•·
1n,guire
w,ithir1
_
WOnderfut
Wllshih'gton

During a party, after
.Melanie.has
just.
As the political columnist for a smallc.ol-
-
·
d
r
h
lege newspaper, one never finds an oppo'r-
;
dropped the Verner Amen _me11
t
m_~,-~ e
• tunity• to contact federal departments in camera pans over the crowd and stops on a • -
group of three men discussing politics.
Washington, D.C.; however, this columnist
-
One of them says to the other, ''We could
did out of curiosity.
.
-

·
·f h UN
·
id · t
My curiosity was definitely satisfied.! am
.get
out
·or
this mess;!.·
t
e_

• wou
J.us
completely
:
convinced
the
-
federal

11~~~ the Verner Amendmentto Re~olut1on
bureaucracy i.s composed of a significant
.
The wild and wacky U.S. government
number of idiots who are skilled in the art

.
So there you ha:ve it, that is our govern-
of making you "hold the telephone line" un- ment at is most absurd. You probably would
til they connect you to the right person who
·.
notpwna television if you ~ved in D.C;Wat-
has the information you require.
·
··
·
·
·
·
· all
Over the course of the week, I decided I

ching the federal government m action 1s

the fun you need.
.
.
.
.
·.
,
·
.
woul?
contact.
approximately
. ~ve_
-
Makes you wonder when certain. politi-
W~hmgton agencies to seek o~t some
m
or-
dims• say they
will
streamline· governµient
_matio.n for a personal proJect. of great
_operations
and cufback bureaucracy. You
magnitude.



..
••

.
.

do
·realize ·that
to cut back excess government
..
J,soon found myself callmg a nu_mber\oL.
, ..
-
•,:
.· •·
.. · ·
,
,
.• .· ..
,
long~winded. and
,
bureaucratic-sounding Jn Washington they have to hire about 100
Yvashirigi:on·agericies,
inhopesoffinding_a
.....
·new :employees
to study,·the.w.oblelll
.•
and
Murray came· to Marist College
14
years.,ago,
,back,in
1979
when the word· college
wasn't an·integralpart of mcistof our vqcabula.rJes.Y.e.t;
'·>·
,;_.;;:,:.:
·,"'>
, ,; •.
,;~·.-
.
Since'his arrival, he's accomplished quite a bit·here at Harvard on the Hudson:.Qu1te
a few people are even willing to go out ori-a limb and say he's done an
OK.'
job,. too.
1
,.

stuc;ly
.and
sorrie
_information
for_ a proje_ct
...

the1_1_
create. an agency for the e,nd of.govern-,

-~;;·"_•'
••
Before
you
could say "red tape;'',iii each


m'erlfexcess to analyze the graphs and charts

:•,:
~·'
ofthe five
'organizatforis-
l
contacted• I was and' propose cuts.
:.


They point out that admissions have increased (so has tuition, butthat's another story).
In fact, there is a more nationwide push for admissions now as Marist reaches out
_.
across the country for different students.
_
'

·.
-



.

·
·
Overall, the academic programs here have improved and don't forget the new buildings.
The campus is in the midst of expansion with the new townhouses under construction
and the new dorm slowly preparing .to slink its way_ off the. architect's· drawingss
.
.On
paper, it looks like Murray has almost finished building a college.
So what now,.Mr. Construction?


.
.
.
. .
, •
.. ·.

·
.
,
Some of the illustrious alums think he's going to be leavingus in the next few years
to run for a political office or perhaps an appointed position is government.

, .
Several Marisf graduates expressed this opinion while visiting during Open House this
past weekend.

.
. •
.
-
.•
.
,
.
,

. •
..
.-
·
While Murray was in McCarin addressing would-be freshmen and their parents with
words-about Marist's future, some former students.were wandering aboutthe campus
wondering about his. future.
.
.
He's done all he said he'd do, they said.
He's finished here, they said.
What's left for him to do, they asked.
What, indeed?
·•
.

.
.
. .
·
.
Aside from the day-toadayjob of sitting in his big office high atop Greystone_
Palace,
there are a few thingf left for the-captain of this ship. (Hint, hint, the stµdents would
like to have a library to replace that bookcloset attached to Fontaine HalL) .
•·
But mere construction is not the only item on the agenda in Marist's future.
_
Marist is on the verge of breaking into the big time. While the economy of.this area
dwindles because.of IBM's woes, Marist has the unique possiblity of rem.µning and grow-
ing into a positiion of economic stability in the commi.mity.
,
.
. .
-
_
.
It's too soon to be talking of his "imminent" departure. The play's only half over,
fo~.

;
.
.
.•
.
Sure· in terms of physical.expansion, this campus is almost complete.
But there's still so much left to do. This school is on the rise and don't think for one
second that our star would miss the climactic acts.
He just loves curtain calls.
Thumbs up
There was good news for the Marist community late Monday afternoon.
At 2:45 p.m. the state budget was adopted.
.
Gov. Mario Cuomo's proposal to cut $30 million in TAP money was not m that budget.
So now Marist can breath a sigh of se!Di-relie_f..

.
"

,,
According to Ed Hynes in College Relauons, this 1s a credit to the grass roots work
done by so many including Marist students.
.
.
.
The phone-calling and letter-writing campaigns organized by SGA and the Fmanical
Aid Office were a part of this success.
.
.
However other cuts were made. The $3 million cut in Bundy Aid means approximately
,
.
.
a $30,000 loss for Manst.
.
.
Still the role played by students in this campaign to persuade the state not to slash
necessary funds should not go unnoticed.
They acted when called upon and a~hieved l?artial_
and noteworthy results.
Everyone who lent their words to this campaign, give yourselves a pat on the back •.
transferred at least• three· times and told to ___
-_._·_.
__
--::::::::::::::::;·:;::·:·:::::::::::::::::::::-_
hold·for s6long
l
could have gone to the
bathroom, brushed my teeth and balanced
iny checkbook and still had time to showe.r
and-shave.·.··,
..
,.,.•

,.
·•
.. ·•.
.The mostappealing part.of the process is
dealing with-the.public affairs people who
want to transfer. you to
.a_
statistics depart-
.
ment who; iri tum, want to tn1risfer yoti to
the commissioner for no~nothingness and the
.
chairman of stupidity and the counselor for
turning people away;
.
.
.
.
.. · .
<,
.
·
And God isthe orily one
_who
could. ever·
getthrough to Washington on aMonday or
••·=·
·:::::::::'.:'.::'.~;:::::::::::::::::::::=
a Friday. I never dreamed you could ho.Id of-

flee hours like they· doJn Washington. It
.
·fhen~
of course; you need to ~ire statisti~
-
must b~ greatto go info work aboiitlO a.m:
'
ciaris
to
figure out the most opportune mo-
have a coffee break abouCl0:30 a.m>have
:
merit when the sun arid.moon are aligned and.
lunch at 12 rtoon untill :30 p·.m;. ancl then the Red
Sea
parts ~dhell freezes over to bifei
leave. the office around 4
·
p'.m.

<

:
,
o(fire•:those e~c~s_ government workers,
_
.'Nobody.
-works
;'like'
·-they.
do. in
.
Washington.Thave fc>Und
my dr~amjoq._A
job where.you never have'Jo
.listeri
to am~s~
ty tehephone <;:onversation,
you can transfer
calls you should deal
·with
to clepartments
that. dci nof have the right information and
·you
work about.four h.ours a day .. What
more cotilcl_
one·hope for in a_ care~r'?
-
Iri the end, I neve(did

really firid the in~-.
·
formation I needed: No one in each of the

statistical departments or in the public affairs
departments seemed: to know about .any
studies done on any of the topics
l
mention-
ed, nor did they know·'who I should
·ca11
and
when they would. be there and what I should

ask for and how I should ask.
.

Ah, Washington
7
that gr~t town where
everyone wants to appear they.know exact-
ly what they are talking about and. if they do
not they will sure
·make
the effort to make
you feel like they know what the hell they
are.talking about and why they are talking
about it.
Politics in Hollywood

Over the weekend,lsaw the new motion
picture, Born Yesterday,
.staring
Don
Johnson, Melanie Griffith and John Good-
man. Although the movie was not excep-
tional, it gave some insight towards the world
of Washington politics.
Griffith stars as a stupid Las Vegas
showgirl involved with a less-than-
r~pectable gentleman, John G09(1man. Don
Johnson

gives his off-scree!} wife some
lessons on smartness, or at least how to fake
to be smart in Washington.
..
BYt~~ ti~~ seyeral years; griesby and-l)ef.~
'pie forget
a
prominent politicians promise to
reduce government waste,
.he·
has already.
managed to blqat t~e bureaucracy:more,
.
Nothini·likiAinerica~· go~ernment and
politics to make you a positive and cheerful
soul: No cynicism here; just plain.idealism
for
me.
• •

.
. Washington seems to be one big gaping
_
hole; a money pit thatsuc_k~ down taxpayers
rrionefandspits back pages upon pages.of
paperwork designed to make the average per-
son. on the street,believe his tax dollars.are
actually ai work and getting him somewhere.
:
.
~
-
What we have no,v in W ashingtori will not
help you, they will wind up transferring you
to "someone who would know that infor-
mation."
.
.
May~ I just expected too much, I do have
a tendency to forget that wrangling informa-
tion out of Washington is similar to trying
to get blood out of stone. It will amuse you
and frustrate you for awhile, but it never
,
quite works out in the lqng run.
That long run is made

longer by the
Washington treadmill that helps you- go
round and round, making you feel like you
have just exercised. However, it is about as
healthy as
a
chocolate glazed donut ..
Aaron Ward is the politicaJ col:omnist for
The Circle.




































'THE
CIRCLE;
V1EWPOINTAPRILl1,1993
5
Editor:
.
,.
.
The class of 1993 is no doubt
concerned about that first job.
·sut,
there is hope and a lot of help: out
there if we simply keep our eyes
open. The mid-Hudson chapter of
the Marist
.
CoHege Alumni
Association
·
and senior - class
representatives are planning·· an·

event that can help us in our job
••
search: Aliimrii are willing to share
career· advice and· provide. us
.with
possible networking opppi;tunities.
·•.•.
This event, a buffet brul!~li. wiU
be on·Siin., April 25; from rioon
to.
J
p.m. at. the River Station

re~taunint,
25
Main
St.,
·Poughkeepsie.•
The cost-is $12.95
-
per person and reservations are
i'e~
quired. (Spaceis limited.)
• •
.•

• -There
will betable in Donnelly
and Dysqn Hans on Frj;, April 16,
from 9:3() a.m. to 3
·p.m.
to make
reservations.
If
you are· not going
fo be on campus that day, you may

seniors
mail or drop off your check to the
Alumni Affairs Office· in Adrian
Hall (across from Donnelly.)

•.
Upon· graduation; the class of
1993 should consider continued in-
volvement with Marist. by-becom-
ing active in their chapter of the
Ah.imni
Association. Membership
allows for the continuation of rela-
tionships
formed at. Marist,
broadens networking opportunities
and provides a
.
connection with
your alma mater'.

..
!r'you have any-,i~esti~ns regar-
ding the bmnch;. please call the of-

flee of Alumni Affairs at 575-3283.
I_ hope to see
-many
of my
classmates there:
I
·
know this will
be a great way to meet influential
alumni who are willing to help us
in any way they
.can.

Janine Vitagliano
Intern for Alumni Affairs
_.-Positions
open
•-,•
•··--:
-
-
-
Edit~r{
'.--
..
,
.
.
.
_
.
. ·.
.
ly
.
rliesponsible
.J
1
or ins,r
11
ing that
',
:
I arii_writing
thisletter to inform•· par amentary ru es are 10 owed in
theMarisf Colleg~ student body of the Executive Board and Senate
two
positions thaf are currently· meetings.
.
..
.
.
available. in student government'.·

Applications are available in the
The hv·o
-positions
-
are
-
vice-
Student Government Office bet-
president for

academics. and·
ween 9 a.in. to 4.p.m, and are due
parliamentarian.
.
.-

by April 15, 1993, at 4 P:m.
T.
he vice-president for a.·
cademics
..
If there are any questions, please

is resp_onsible
for chairing the Stu-
feel free to contact me at x2206.
•.
dent Academic Council meeti_ngs
·
·
and isO-also
the student represen-
.
Thank you.
tative on· the. Academic· Advisory
Committee.
·
·.
..
.
The parliamentarian is primari-
.
.
Kent Rinehart
Student Body President-)j:lect
Editor:.
Where is home then? Home is in
America's real melting pot -
historic Jackson Heights, N.Y
.-
the most ethnically
diverse
Just a short note to correct a few
errors. which appeared in the last
issue of The Circle. Specifically in
the article entitled, "SGA in Disar-
.
rayAgain:''
..
I will not address all of the false
3; This error is where I have my
biggest beef. For the record, I'd
like to make it perfectly clear I am
.not
from Poughkeepsie.
I
am what·
is called a non--traditional com-
muter. That is to say,. I live· off
,
campus in Poughkeepsie on_ my
.
neighborhood in New York City,
and thus the country.

statements and insinuations con-
.
tained in the article regarding the
·Spring
1993 SGA Elections. Should
you seek to clarify and/or correct
these statements, both myself and
the official reports on the matters
are available to
·you,
To the-point:· the three errors
I
am most
.concerned
with are as
follows.

1. The
·correct
spelling of my last
.
name is Salvayon.
2. I am a double major in Com-
munication Arts-Public Address
and Rhetorical
Theory
and
Political Science.
own.
.
.
This
·choice
was was not made by
me, but by our· founding Marist
Brothers who choose' this city to
settle in. I do'not identify myself
with Poughkeepsie in any way,

shape, or form other than to say I
go to school here.
No offense to any Poughkeepsie
natives, but any town I can't get a
cab on a corner, a subway up the
block, Tandori chicken, Mon-
.
dongo, a good calzone, or decent
pastrami is not a place I want to
caH home.
I invite anyone who has never
been to come and experience the
cultures· Jackson 'Heights has to
offer.·


That's.pretty much it from me
.•
As you can see, the errors were no
big whoop, and this letter is no big
whoop. I just wanted to get these
things straight. Think how you
would feel if suddenly everyone
thought you were a Poughkeepsie
native.
Joseph A. Salvayon
The Commish and
.Jackson Heights native
Very funny
Major Market set for April 19
Editor:
.
One's sense of humor was sore-
ly tested upon reading about the
~e'ath of the editor of The Circle in
the April 1, 1993 issue. Not cat-
ching on and reading further, one
• was· everi more dismayed to read of
her "involvement" in the Feb. 26
bombing of the. World Trade
Center.
Only then did the light come on
and we realized it was a joke -
some joke. Maybe five years from
now it might be funny.· But the
bombing
_was
so recent and the
television pictures of the frighten-
ed employees/victims, still so vivid,
that one fails to see any humor in
it at all.
·:
Editor:
Through the combined efforts of
the center for Career Development,
mentors, faculty advisors and the
office of Student Academic. Af-
fairs, a special event for freshmen
and sophomores is being planned
for Mon., April 19, from 4:30 -
6:30 p.m. in the gallery lounge of
the Campus Center.
The name of this event is the
"Major Market," and the theme is:
What can I do with a major in
...
?
Faculty and alumni professionals
from various fields will be available
. for one-to-one conversations with
students. We hope that this event
will encourage freshmen and
:~ophomores
to think broadly and

explore fully before they commit

themselves to a specific major.
The "Major Market" is
.plann-
ed so that students _on the meal plan
will stop by on their way to and
from dinner. Of course, we hope
that sophomores who are not on
the meal plan will stop by, too, as
we think the information available
,viii be well worth their time.
We look forward to seeing all
freshmen and sophomores on April
19.
Ellen Brickwedde
Rosemary Molloy
Dr:
Evan Rivers
Br. Joe Sacino
Deidre Sepp,
• Several Marist:·college alumni
~oil/in
the
\vo°fld Trade Center
and we learned of. the narrow
escape of one of them. We think
perhaps that he wouldn't think the
story too funny either.
Several years ago (April 1, 1988),
Michael Zuccarello wrote a column
for The Poughkeepsie Journal. The
Thank
you

headline that day read: "Sloof Lir-
pa makes afool of experts. It went
on to say that a basketball player
by the name of Sloof Lirpa was be-
ing recruited• by. Marist College.
Editor:
Peace, love, joy to all.
.
This letter is overdue but sent in
gratitude to all the Marist students
who so generously. reached out to
help the poor and needy of the Dut-
chess County area.
He was supposedly bigger and
better than Rik Smits. It took some
people quite
a:
while to realize that
-.Sloof
·
Lirpa
is April fools
backwards, This
'is
funny.
.
The Holy Trinity
Roman
We offer·
..
this example·. to

-
Catholic Church in Poughkeepsie
demonstrate
.that
we do, indeed,
has a parish- caring ministry. One
have a sense of humor. But not at
of the many social outreach to the
the expense ofa deadly, serious and Dutchess County community is the
expensive tragedy.
food drives for the poor and needy.
'
Valerie Hall '86
.Claire Horton
The students ofMarist College,
Theola Patterson
under the leadership of Ellen
.
Marion Terralavoro
Brickwedde have been very active
.
·
Robin Will
in helping our project. They have
Jo.:Ann Wohlfahrt
given their time, contributed food
Advancement Office, Adrian Hall
goods and money.
Their
generous
g1vmg of
themselves, has been an inspiration
to us and demonstrated that they
know the true meaning of GosP,el
living by their actions .
These students are an asset to
Marist College, their parents and
teachers. The training they are ac-
tively demonstrating by their giv-
ing spirit is a sure sign that they are
on their way to becoming great
citizens of God.and country.
We, at Holy Trinity, in the name
of
..
our administrator,
Father
Joseph La. Morte, express our
gratitude and admiration to all who
help us in our parish caring
ministry.
Sr. Rosaire,
O.S.F. Director
Shuttle service is not much better either
Editor:
for the next one, and, of course, it
There were many times when the
priority points, with 8 of them in
realize that in a few years this pro-
As a resident i'n the "get away does not arrive on campus
.u
1
ntil
vans did not run. I realize that
activities. So why were we denied
blem will be solved, but what about
4:15, and therefore you are ate.
sometimes there was bad w~ather,
a townhouse?.
the present?
from it all" area, it seems .to be·


b k
c
b



I
.k
.
~
d
f . The last van gomg ac to anter-
ut we were never given notice that
It was because Marist accepted
I know I should probably have
more
I
e "bemg 1c:irce out o 1t
• 2 20
d

h
k
h
h
h I

II
,, h
.
. C
b
bury 1s 1 : a.m.

unng t e wee •
t e van t at we were on wast e ast
to many
.sophomores,
and of
made the best of the situation, but
a . T e residents m

anter ury
d
,
d •
'd

b .
'f
It
oesn t matter urmg m1 -
van.
course they are guaranteed hous-
I fail to see anything positive about
·are
.
emg treated as
I
we were t
fi al am eek when the
When I called security to find

f
• II
.
second-class citizens.
erm or m ex
1
w
ing, so apparently, the juniors were gettmg away rom
It
a •
From the heat and hot water be- library· is open until 2:00 in the
out what the problem was, they
thrown out into Canterbury. I
Mary Ann McGovern
ing tur.
·oed
off without Jetting the morning or that all.the terminals in
acted like I had some gall to ask
Donnelly ar

e full
them w·
hen the vans will be runn-
residents know, to having the

-If· •
·r
II 12 15· th
·t l
.ing
a_
gain. There were many times
bathroom ceiling leak for weeks
It IS u at
: ' en
I
eaves
because it wasn't considered an and you are then stuck on campus
when the van cancelled for no ap-
"emergency."
But the most important issue
about living in Canterbury is the
van service. The schedule for it is
_horrendous.
For example; if you
have a 4:10 class, you can either
take the 3:35 van, which usually
leaves at 3:30 because it has the
maximum of 11 passengers.
A person must wait until 4 p.m.
until 6:00 the next morning.
parent reason. (The roads had not
a drop of water on them). There.
was no notice given, and I, along
with another resident, were told to
wait at least an hour, until securi-
ty had "gotten around to taking us
home."
On Friday nights, we are given
a break -
the last van is at 2:30
a.m. I know I should feel happy
that I am allowed to stay out until
2:30, but it is awfully hard to ad-
just to it, after my freshman and
sophomore years when I had no
curfew. This happens when the
vans are running, though.
I did not choose to get away
from it all -
I was forced. Most
of my prospective housemates, as
well as myself, had close to 30
How to reach us:
• Mondays: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
• E-Mail: LT 211, HZAL
• Phone Mail: X2429














































































































-

Op·e11
_
f1C:n1S.e:-Wef
C()m.es:.se·
·
temb,er·
;st!!9-~~ttLi
Emolhri.erit Planning"
. .-.;:·:.;-
..
-.·
by
DAWN. MARTIN
:
-~'The
t'iencl is .roi:students·to
..
.._ / Staff.-Writer,,·
.
·'-.
apply to more colfeges, We (e,el

·

• - •


thaes\viiy"oiir.applicatioris aieup
• Last w~el<end
wits'Marist'fopen'
:so
higli.':' ~urr.ay':said:
<
>
.• '
house where high school seniors cic-
:

'Layoffs
and.
·c.~tbach)!
work
cepted to the college had·their last
••
may also be factors .in }iow. many
chance to ask questions befQfe·
·or;
...
thosi:acc~pted. studentf eiid
deciding if Marist is where they will
u·t at M,aristJri. tb'e ,f ;ill,~·
Mtifray.
be spending their college life.
..
s.~1d;:..

..
.
. ,
...
:
.:.


..
The students who attended· the

••
Applying to numerous· colleges
open house were sonie of the 3000
was not part, of Je,nnifer. O'tteil's·
who were accepted by Marist for
trend. O'neil is·a high schciol senior.
the Fall semester. Some 4800
from
'.Reading,'
Mass.;,
..
who 'js
students applied in all.
"definhel:?' coming'here in. the

•~This was an extremely com-
f~lb
···::


•.•
-.


;

petitive year," Jay Murray, assis-
.Sheis.planning
to'lfo:~{fashion
tant'director of admissions, said.
·m~jor'·a_~d'
Mai:ist is)hi:only col-
"We· set
a
new record fc5r applica-
lege
·she
applied-_to.·'


.

lions this yea·r/'


•'. •
·

....
"I liked the one on·one,rel_ation~
"We did receive a· lot moi:e ap-
:~hip
here, c1nd;-th_~
p~~:onatatten;
plications this year, which is good
ti.on
t'd get" here' with
·my
pro-
for the school and great for the
fessors,'.'.she.said:.
,
__
, ..
,.
students," said Weridy
·Tilfoil;'
• O'neil
..
is
·not·
the only. student
assistant director of admissions.

who liked tlierelation.shiP-between
Modele Clarke, editor for college··,,
Marist arid.the' student;:.'

advancement, attributes the in-

Jei;-ei:n)'.,
Lyonnai~-
~
0(
0
~.µ-ver,
crease in accepted applications to
Mass.,
_said
that M;trist kept seri-
..
a shoddy job market alternative.
ding him things thatii:J.t~rested.hiID
"If
I were graduating from high
and::were_
very helpful.
. :,
,·.:
school and looking at the options
~'They made it worth my while·
of either getting a job or starting
Prospect·1ve
students sp·
eak with a Marist representative at last w_eekend's,Ope,
n
Hou_se.
•.
to come hei:e," h~ said. Altljough.
college,T would take every step to
he. is not positive that h~
will
enroll
get enrolled=in
·a
school."
-





.
Circle
hoto/Matt Martin
·
here in-the Fall; Lyonnais,main-

Furthermore, said Clarke,~'The
And ·this record breaking year
of admissions, said.· •
is planning on only 8l5'tci850 of
tains·thatMarist is'his first choice.
fact that Marist

offers
'a·
com-:
:
may bring

a wide variety· of
Erickson said•that'students
ap~
them to becoine'Marisfstudents.
,.
.
Maristhas accepted
100
transfer.
prehensive educational package
-
students
to the· campus in
plied to Marist from countries in
_Assistant
Academic Vice Presi-
:
students, 18 of whom are definite-
that is competative with other
September,
say
some
Europe, the Far East, the Middle dent Linda Cool said, oil average,

Iy enrolling next
ran;
_
,.
schools would attract a sizable administrators.
East, as well. as other-parts-of the
,
"ever.r,:
stu~e~.c,c~ep_t~cl:Jle~~jvii5
..
Claire D<?lan, • transfer
·_coor-
numl>er
of graduating (high school)
,
. "Students applied from 40 dif-
'world.
,
.
.
'-
•..


.
,, accepted by.4.5other mstltutions;" dmator, said. that the. school
seniors from throughcn:it the· Nor-
..
ferent states
·and
20.different co.tin~ .
Although the·
_school_
has·, ac:::
·: last yeai:: Coofreceived her
inf
or-
.
typically enrolls : 150 transfer
theast region."

• tries,'' Michelle Erickson, 4ire<:tor . cepted 3000 applicants, admissioQ.s matiorrfroin Hairy Wood; ilie vice students for the fali semester:::

-Counseling Center pf oVid,¢s·asSiStance
for ra'.{)e
Y,ictJfiis
-·'
.
'
.
..
.

.
.,·
by
E.
~.OBIN VAZQUEZ
Staff Writer
·
there is nothing about rape printed
and printed the new information
ii{
Higher.Education ~andate that all
percent.of college women are· raped
,
';in the Marist Student Handbooks.
the1989-1990 Student Handbooks.
'
:colleges
.
arid universities' irr<ihis
an<:I
,50
p~rce11t
are vict!rn.s~
~f at-
"It.· says
.that
you can't thi:ow
The purpose of the task force is
·,
state, edu9ate·new studcnts·regar-
t~Tpted rape...


-
,
snowballs or-take food out of the
to
discuss how to educate students
diiig the
·
frequency of· sexual
Research regarding rape in-· cafeteria,

but there.was nothfog
and respond to the problem: of
.
·assault,
the.availability of counsel-
The rese~rch also shows that JO
..
dwico·
amtee.snt~~l~bn:
~~~r~~-
t~n~~ll~~:
..
about" rape," she .said.
.
"
rape.
_
_
.
i..


•.
>.
::
·'\,/:
;';
ing arid what options can J,e sought

percentof college men have fdrc-i
:
In May ofl989 Amato and the·•
"Studeri_ts.·_,
w_.
·.no_
•.
n.e.
e_
d
___
li_'elp·_
d_
eali
__
·n_·g
,_._.'if_.
:_som
..
eo_
n_.e.
cho_os_
es to_ repo.
rt th_
e

ed sex with women and that one-
.
wanted
_sexual
activity,
.
and ,
· -·
·

·


·.
·•
·.•••
·
·
·
..
·.
·•.·
·
.

•.
·.


~


·
-i;iossib\-y·
even· at Marisf College.
.
rest':ofthe ·task•,:force',·,which.k • • wi(h pajnfuJ.:if~el~Vgfo(~¢J!l9rii!(·<
incident;
·•··
__


_

: •

..
_ .. _
third of college inen would rape if


;_·
Studies conducted by the Santa
made up· of inem hers: ofcthe;ad•
can com~f~to',·r.th·e:,
0
·coµTT:;elirig•.:.
:
'
•~Rape
is Vety'serious; a'iid'inany ... giiaranteed

no ~p~nitive damages
._.
ministration, faculty and student
center,''
_Am~to·:,:
said:•
'W~
'.
have

times they go unreported;'(Amatci
would occur:·
-

Monica• Rape Treatment Center
body, requested that a selection on
••
private
and
g_toup sessjefIJs
·and
said,
·"we•
ensure. safety
and
ap~

support these findings.
~

general regulations and policies be
everyone hasJhe guar.ant~:of_cqm~

proj:>riate
treatment."

·
.
Roberta Amato, a member of

put into the handbook.
plete
.confidentiality." , . /·c.
:

. .:.

.-current
research from the San-
.
the Marist Task Force on Acquain-


· • •

·

-

·
The administration was r~eptive
The State of New York_U1_~s'of.
:.
ta Monica study indicate t~--
at 20
tance Rape, stresses that rape is

·
.
real, even at Marist.
"If
you live with more than six
women," Amato said, "you can
statistically assume that one has
.
had a very close experience with
rape.
Amato said there is
no
reason to
believe that Marist is different from
any other school.
"Rape is real and so many go
unreported," she said. "Com-
munication and education about
rape are the biggest ways we can
prevent it." A few.· years ago,
Amato said she was very surprised
,
..
TOLERANCE
... continued from page 3
age."
John White, professor
of
history, said the college e;icperience
should· be one that opens minds
and addresses issues.
''You should have an awareness
of problems,'' White said°. "Col-
lege should be an experience for all
students that opens their minds."
White also said it is necessary to
look at any issue in a certain con-
text."
"When it comes to the question
of gay and lesbian issues, it has to
be addressed in a historical con-
text," he said. "When it comes up
in my history classes, I address it."
Brother Belanger said that
students should seek differences.
Dua wins
Nick Dua, a senior Computer In-
formation Systems major and Fine
Arts minor, was the winner of the
student logo design contest spon-
sored by the (;enter for Career
Development and Field Experience.
.
The first runner-up in the con-
tenst was Naava Koblenz, an adult
equcation student, who is studying
to receive a certificate in Art and
Advertising Design.
ATTENTION
RETIRING
FACULTY
•'
·,,·
,.I
,,
',
:

. .•.••
'
'
"
'
'.

--
"What-They
I>o Not_T~aclf'YouJn:TIAA:c/JEfJOJ
..
~.•i
;
"'
,.
•·
;._•··--·
-~--------,
FULL BENEFITS FROM YOUR JIBTIREMENT SAVINGS
. Thanks to the
recent

IRS
R.evenue·R.u}tng
90-24;. and REAP, it is
now possible for you to take control of your own retirement plan.

·•


MAXIMIZE
YOUR
FLEXIBILITY:
Choose your level of ip.come
Receive lump sum withdrawals anytime·
Create an estate for your family
,
Change your decisions
to
meetyour changing needs
RETIRING
EDUCATORS'
ALTERNATIVES
PROGRAM
It
Is Your Retirement,
It
I~ Your Money
;
And Now It Is Your Choice ...
REAP
WHAT
YOU
SOW!
Calf Now for more information: 1-800-786-1598
Preparation
·in-~:
Poughkeepsie
for
up~oming·exants':'
GRE begins
Apr. 24
LSAT begins
May 1

Sma,rt
people read the jiM prinl. Smart
people want small classes
(ftw~r.
than 1S
sludelltS),
4
proctored
diagnostic
·exJJnlWJ•
tions,free extra help wilh the instructor,
and
guaranteed
score improvWIQIJs.
Smart

people prepare with us.
THE
PRINCETON
REVIEW
We
Score
More!
I
I































































































































































































.-.T:
·•a:·:-
.X::.-.-~m:~,-:;-:-e···
~-n••.
--:-_··
..
-~a--··
.-e·-~f
..
e-.:.:
..
,'..a··•.-4t•.:f.;U··.<•a~
·•1•:f··
.··f·
::1·•·.e''
•.--~1-
,_.:1:,
.
···1··_.·3-_
-
..
:-
,-8
.
. :
=
L.~,·
.:-
.
.,
.:
_.
:
:···
·
·-:_.-__
,
__
_. .:.
--·:
·
=·1;.
·'.::-.r-:·:
..
-
-~
·-•
..
~
-:

·
.-
U-'·
·
·-
· ·
~
-
-.
:<
·:

..
_ ':
·,
..
•. .

/_:
J
>
· _-;·~
- ·
•.

·
•"
--~r
4:.:

~~::"':,\,;:
~.:.:.
f ..
,'_i:-~_·.;,:~·.:·":-:--i:?:~'.
..
:"~:--_
~
.-:-,,~.(

:~-,
.',:"
..
;_,.
~-.
·
_-.~•,::
..•
_
;.;,/;
••
_'.;·t .• ,,.~
'--
-~-
:·~. •.
·:-
....
• .
.-.
'.
.
,
._:
·:
.~ :··_.
••
.:
..
·
.
MIKE.WA
.

asainfqiey·590µJ~ed: othe~s.e:><:·,;
...
~eni_or
Michaep3ierne played. a
by .,
..

·-'
.
..
LSH
;:;;~1tiii:'?~~,:~¥i~JoseFthatt'~e~;-}9li~.s~iMJhe
~efensi~e epq; he
• •• •
Sta°ft.Writer
·.
.
.. , ..

•i·:1,s~9:_finatw@fdf;ii1,4,!c~~-:Mari_s()~4~e~;~,::i·;
·.\,;), : ..
:-i
...• ;'.·>:
;
..
••.
One':
·
~cfr'ci
:"can
.
be
_.
use'd •

t6

.•
'htjrig:toi1$i)_
t~r9.).lghout
~nd
.~lo~ed
·:
'/· .. Dqug Closinsk.i
jl;d_ Marist '.9Yith'
describe the
.•
i~93 ·.mi1is lacrosse:

):tQ
wi~hin tw~ a(l
g;s
b.efore'..SU:NY:·
.•
six
-
goals
:arid;\
three· assi,sts. The
season~ progress.,.-
, •
::·
.. ··
-~~•~e~-~~aV~'..if?t<\::
:~
..
:
j~ni_or'ts~ sfore~_inthe g~me is
•.
A:win·over Fairfield and a welf
;<·The:Re~LFoxes.welcqmed
the
tied for.third ~estm school htstq~.
·played.
game· ~ershs_·
Stonybrook': _ F~f.\elcfSt~~
,~o_Di~ion
l play by
.
Th:-Rom'e;
-~y
native l:ads his

giv¢s
'Coach''.fom·
Diehl's meh a 24' •
:_,~an~1!1g;_the11:1
·a·
·g:~
1~{~~-t;
•.
·.
••
.
tea~.:1~~-b.o~h,gC>c1ls
and assist~ (17,
recoh~-beiter
th,m last_ year's .. ".-Aft_er,lie>lding'11:ii,.;1,1:2
lea~;
oiir
.:.
:2~vo.rIJ1e,~eason:·-:-lf.he
maintains"
mark.
••
.

:
• ••.
.
.. ,

:
effqi:t\dii:ninished(the
'thi(d-year

• ..
his
_sco~ng
pace., he will become the
After
'six
contests in 1992 the

coach said·.-
.
-
1
~

• ,
.
~
:·;:
'fii:st-player
since 1986 (pre-division
squad was wi9,less and c~nnin~ off
.• :;.,-:
.••
w~
doininateci'early;
i~d
~hen-~
,l),tq_score'49lointsfa a se;i.sonfor
of a 19-4loss at Stonybrook and
·
kind
,,of\coasted
,;_'.
.DiehL srud·

l'v.lansL.:·•· •. : ;:.,
•.•
..••
had lost
an
but one of its contests.
.
··'.They.
didn;t: rfor(o;mt<> t.he;l:iest':
:
'::.
Miifist· faced· Colg~te on Tuess
,by
.q
g<;>als
or more._ .. .
.
.
:
of their abilities'ifter'that:''.~
·.-._.:
.\day/Results
·were not available at
If
the.Patriots ca~e iit thinki,µg
. ,
Diehl:said he was··pleased•with
his•
'pressliine.
The Red Foxes will take
the Foxes would be an easy win
team's'.deferisive play/:.

.-
• /
,
··::-on;,Boston
College today:
..
RO\V~rS
f{}qfti(i~,:·$aPibi~go
.
·/jy
TED HOLMLUND

Spcirts
Editor .....

:.
The men's ~arsity' eight was the

riegatively
effect their performance.
only boat_'that
:c.ompet~d
iii" the.
. :
-:The
San Diego Crew Classic is
regatta. They finished wit.h a time:· Jhe second biggesfcollegiate regatta
The me.
n's crew team m_ayhave
...
of 6.30.3.

\. >
\•:.:
·o.,· •.


in the:world, Davis added.
..
The following rowers rac.
ed for...

'.
pa
vis· also said he believes the
facedjts·toughest competition in its_

-
b'

• •

first regatta this spring.

Marist: I>ete Tartaglia; who is t,he


1g
ttme compet1t1on thts early in
The Red Foxes raced in the San
·
team•~ captain, Mark Fragola,
•.•.

tile seasqn .will give his team vital
Diego· Crew

Class Regatta this Greg Fagnant, Bradl~eonard,Jim
.
race experience for future races.
weekend and placed !0th out of the Sullivan, Dan Morris; Chris Batt;

"I was pleased with a lot of the
15 teams in the Visitors/California:·· Keith Laurie and BretfGalisano~


things we accomplished," he said.
Cup Competition. Marist finished
.
,
the c_oxsitjg;;
::',
.
'.'·: • ~,
>
..
.
:
.
.
We have_ the potentia_l to have a
.
·
·
AccordingtqHead ~oach L¥1,'.
good spring, even if it's short."
fourth out of the:five squads in• the·~ Davis, the size
of
the regatta, with.-,
.The
-R~d
Foxes will race tornor~
Visitor's Cup Finals.
· ·· •

••
.
over. 2;000 athletes present, seem-
rO\v
;,,Jlgainst.
Manhattan
and
Oregori'State;won the Visitor's
.
ed to,intimidate
,the.
teaq1 and,, V~sar:.·
Division. ..

••
:".·

, ..


·

··.
·
··
·
·
-··
··
··
·
•·
·
-\1>~:i~
'flAVS:
. '.
~h~~
s~"ett.le_:.
G R E E I( S
&
CLUBS
RAISEACOOL
·
·
s1000. ·
._
.
~
.:
--
\
.
.
IN ~UST
ONE
WEEKI
•·

'.-~~t\-\
cM-l-':
::

,
l-~~9:-.9887.
t.t'
..
PLus:s1000
~RTHE
MEMBERWHOCALLS!
••
No obligation.
No cost.
Earth
Share.
AndaFREE

'IGLOO
COOLER
ifyouqualify.
ean··
1-800-932-0528,
Ext. 65
.
l\1.liTi~~pollege

.....
Js·Red
Hot
""-::·
:--
'
:.
,
;
::
·,
.
-.
.
____
_.
...•
.'•·>··'
·•.
.
.
••

.



i::t~h.1s
S.u-:mmer
Put some class in your summer at Marist
.

.:,gver:
:100
..
undergra.duate

.
• -.
aij~fgraduate coutses
• •
••


V
"

~
•.
•._:.
••
-

~--.:
:-_;:

,'ptep~e
fot
a
new
·career
.
_
or spe~d up: your college degree.

-~ree,
six,
_and.twelve
week sessions,

·
day·
and evening classes.

Poughkeepsie and Flshklll locations.
Re~stratlon begins
·March
s.
I
~
1/3 payment du~
f
_
at
registration.
I
.-
~
Fit;s~
session begins June 1.
i
MARIST
School of Adult Education
c;
~
I
:?
~
1
~
D
~=================================::i....
i:·,:tJNFORTUNATEIX;
TIDS
IS WHERE
PEOPLE-'ARE
PUTTING
TOO
MANY
RETIREMENT
DOLLARS.
·E·
very year, a lot
of
people make a
money you don't send to Washington
.

huge mistake on their taxes. They
works even harder for you. Down the
don't take advantage of tax deferral and
road, that can make a dramatic difference
wind up sending Uncle Sam ~oney they
in your quality oflife.
could be saving for te~irement: .
.-
• •
What else makes SRAs so special?
For.tunately, that's a mistake ydu can
A range of allocation choices-from
the
easily avoid with TIAA-CREF SRAs.
guaranteed security of TIAA to the
SRAs not only ease your current tax-
diversified investment accounts of
bite, they offer a remarkably easy way
CREF's variable annuity-all
backed
to build retirement income-especially
by the nation's number one retirement
for the "extras" that your regular pension
system.
and
Social Security benefits may not
Why write off the chance for a more
co"'.er. Because your contributions are
rewarding retirement? Call today and
made in before-tax dolJars, you pay less
learn more about how TIAA-CREF
taxes now. And since
all
earnings on
SRAs can help you enjoy many
your SRA are tax-deferred as w~II, the
happy returns.
Benefit
now
from
tRX
deferrtll. CR1l """ SRA hotline 1 800-842-2733, ext. 8016.
75 years of ensuring the future
for those who shape it!"
.1
Dyson Center 127
CREF
cer/iflllllu an
Ji.strJuteJ
by TIAA-CREF
/,Ji,,;J,,,J
.,,,J /NtiJaJ;,,,,.J
S,,-,uu.
F4rtMruHnpktt
infoNMJ~~.
intlu.Jing
,kl"JU
1U1.Jt.rp,11.11J,
14[11800-842-27]].
al.
80/6
fora pl'Olp«lo.t. R,,.} lb< prtJJp«lauurfully /,efort y;,u invul or JcnJ money.












































































































,:
'We.
didn't
hit·:-,-,,uch.
',.
.
STA.J
.OF.,THE
WEEK
:
Janine;·Q'Connor: was t11e
L
"Aj~=i~~·
SPQRTS
..
~~R1Y8,19~
~8~-
i.±::::=:::::=============:::::::::!,;._~=µ:.~~=====

Northeasf Conference player
of.the We~~-
.. -:·
c-·;

..
"
·>
••
....
:_:FI.itt·et-s:·_.:···lo-s:e
..
:.:•:-'..·::.•
..
·.~9:9\1i--..'.;.:
.
.
••
,•
.
'
.•.....

.·,
,
...

,,,,,,,.
•··
'.
dr()J:f
liP11!le
~I)~ft~rs
.
·b•~T·
-ED.
_·H·
_O·L_··.M.
LU_N.
D.
·:
Rider•
because of
die
shoddy: field<
~
c9nclitions·· due
;
to .. indeillent,
'
....
Sports:
Editor

weather ;Jay Gavigari·picked
up_:his

firsf.win-
for
the. Red Foxes on
·
It Wa~
a day ofnew,beginhingi
Sunday.






The baseball team played its. first
home game on· its· newbaH. field.
.
Thejunior·~llo"'.efonly one.iun
• Freshman Mark
.
Barron
••
was
in:.
seven innings of work leading.
making his first regular season col-
.
Marist. to-a'3sl victory;
legiate starL
_
.
·

.
.
.


'
'
· • •

··

The script
was
,vritten forMarist
.
The sq~id-split a
'dou~leheader •.
to win its home opener in story oi:i Saturday winning
.a
hard fought
book fashion---it did not
_happeri'.
.
game ih
.13"
innings..
-
The ''fir sts''' will' have to-wait

In th~seco~dgaine·,·.th_e_
Br_o.
ncos
another day because the Red Foxes
2-ll"l (2;3 in· the· Northeast Con- no-hitthe Red Foxes arid notched-

ference) ,vere drubbed bY: Seton, a· d~mihatirig·l9:.3 win;<_

Hall, 9-L
.

·.
.
· .·
. •
.,
Jn the firsrgame,:
0
junioi: I>11ry1·>
Sophomores ignited the only of- Costell_o
·re.cord.
e_d his·_first v1.·cto_ry
'
fense the.Red Foxes could muster.
Matt Bourne's RBI·triple driving leading MariSt to its·first win of the

inTodd Horbian accounted for the year,
,
5·3.

lone run for Marist;
.·-·.
• -
Senior· Mike Dailerer. said.the·
''We have to-puLpitching, hit- team was successful this weekend
ting and defense together/' he said. because they played· harder when
Barron hasn'tthrown this year yet.
,
confronted: with diversity;.


He just needs experience.'' Head
·
·
• •

•• •

Coach Art Smith. said Bari:011
will
"We h~ci to do a gut-check/'.the

get 111ore
experience·with;time,but
.
co-captairfsaid. "Anytime you·c~n
is more concerned.with the team's. rebound from-a 16 run loss and wm
offensive struggles.
3-1 is a good. sign;"

''We really don't_ hitmuch/' the_
.
. .
second-year coach said ..
''We.'re
.
'.'W;
have to keep ~oving·_.for-
halfwaythi:ough the season. I hope ward, especially: in the
con-::
it comes around." The Red Foxes fereri.i:e," he added. •
won (\vo out
of
three against Rider,
.-.
·
-
·
·
• ·
·
·
an NE.
c·.·.·.foe,
thisp· ast
•·.week.
end.
.
:The
Red-Foxes hosted Manhat~
•·
tari

on Wednesday; The results\

Marisfplayed all three games
·at
were not available at; press time ..
:eats:011
.•
_
~rdW3,Yi
P.~ce:·-,r.µ:rin~t§:;
4\l1Ja11y_
i1e.xt
bJ!
.TERI·
L.; STEWART.~.


Staff-Writer·
.
.


. Brian Ord":aY is
:
starting
·
to
become.· one of the
.
premier
steeplechasers in the· Northeast
·:conference.
:
.
.
.

.
.•

.
·
Although there was no ..team
·:
scoring in the men-and·women's in-

vitatiorials; Ordway.put.together a
)olid performance.
••

:
.
The junior competed in,his se-

cond J;,000-meter steeplechase race
·

thls past- Saturday at. the Yale
:
Springtime· invitational notching a
'sixth;place
finish with.a 9:45.6.
Colaizzo said a
.
time in the
:
steeplechase is similar to a two-mile
:
race, arid Ordway is excelling well
pastthat standard.


•.

.'·'He's overachieving in this
.
race/''.Colaizio said ..
•.
The women's team ran at the
Columbia Invitational at Columbia

University~
.
According to-Head coach Phil
·Kelly,·
there were not• many teams

at the meet so the competition was
limited.
-
:
Kelly. also said the best pe,for-
mance

of the day came from
:;;..,;...;...;.._
......
..;.;:,.;;..=:........;;;;;.;..::;.:.....;.....ui.freshman
Colleen Carson: in the
-Brian
Ranft
takes•
to the
'air'during
the triple
jump
at
the
West PointlnvitationaL




Circle
phllto/Matt
Martin
1500-meter run.
_
The next meet for both teams is
on Friday April 16 atthe Univer-
sity of Albany Open.
-
.
Netters Sfopped, 7-2;
teco.rd
dfops
tq
2-2
1t.e4.:.Jloies

split

:·'.'·

-
·.·,·

, ·'·

•·
-
·


·--
-'-------,;,;;;.;,;....,.,.,,,.,.;.,.......
......
--~
,.p~d
that should. be caughL. We· got up got a hit,".said O'Connor,
wlth·'·Cadets
·~Y.P,tNi:>R'EW
tfOLMLUN[)
co~~e~~!i°J1~Y'.·,Marist
trav~i1:d·to
by
J.w:'siEWART
,
can't keep giving runs,away like who is batting well over .450 arid
-

s'taff.
Writer
:
,
that.·••
was named the NEC's Player of the

Staff-Writer
.
Plea_s_an_tvi_l_le,
N;Y., an_d
beat Pace
------"-'--------
·
· ·
·
-

·h
)
·
·
·
··
·

_Jen Luker took the foss and the Week;
_."She
(the Army p1tc er
.The
men's teririis team dropped • University'.· 6-3.


-
·Th~
softballte~n{ltas woniliore

•.
Foxes' only'tun came off the bat
.
was'. throwing more. fastballs. We
.
ts record.·to 2-2'on Tuesday fall-
0.
LaSusa, ~~dAllen w,ereSfraight~
.
ganies'three;:weeks iritoihe<l.993
••.
_of
Beth
··Murphy
who singled in can hit fast pitches better than slow
ng to the RidefBroncs, 7-2, atthe
:!i;~~~~e:!ithile Mc Govemwent
seas6ri thanJt did alfoflafryear;
Terri Bambakidou in the bottom of ones.,,.


U

tc·hes·s·
Racquet-·_club.·
.

Last
year_'s 6-29 team has been

the "ourth.
_
.
.
, • .·,
.-The
women won their.first game
.
,
.Marist
was also successfuL in

db
-
h h.

h
1
'

Things.:lookedgood (or Ma'rist~
· ·
replace y·a group t a~- as c arg;
.
Marist also loaded the bases
.
,of'
the
·yearJast
weekend with a
ly as Brian La Susa won in t_hree • dol,ibles as the: teag1s
.of
La Susa-
ed to_a ?-5 ~ecord (2•21
_n
the .N~r-
·.·.•
..
twice. in_
the late innin. gs with only comesfrom-behind. victory.
Mc
·Govern
··and.
Allen-Favazio
th
t
c
re
c ) despite splitting
Th
·F
bl
7 3
J
d
.
ets, 2-6; 6-3, 6-2. However, losses riabb_ed_._s_traig.
ht-sc.t trium.
phs.~.·•
_-_
eas
.
<Jn rell e
._
.
. .
.
.
.
.
one.
out
but could not score.
-
·.
e
••
oxes
ew a -
ea. to
roin Kevin Mc Govern,-Jermaine

•.
LastWednesday,the Red Foxes
tl:t~,~.rst_~~~-:~Su~le~,eiicl~rs•offhe
•·•.
-,''H
wasn't-·Jike w~_were getting Monmouth la:te in the game and
llen John. Favazio and Heath
were in ConriecticUHo face.Fair-·
Y.~al':;
;.
·:~
';
._,_:
·.
->
-
,.
crushed,'' said Janine O'Connor,
had to go to extra innings.
-
rambe'rgei:j>ut the Foxes do\1Vn, field JJniversity and were clbb~
,
¥.an
st sp~t_\Vith,
J\_piy.1'µesday, '·'l!rrors:are part ofthe game arid:

.•
No problej'n.

.
.
.
1.
.
•··

.
.
• .
.
.
.
•.

bered, 9:.0.'.

••

..

• •
,_-.-
__
1d~s_
...
1Jl
...
g._
+_J_,~·g
..
aID.,e_
..
onte
..
~ut_7.
r_.;~o_T.u_;_.-:
..

..
Y:.oti
go···tta
imike.·up for_
them at.the-
,:>O'Connor
bashed the. game-
The
,
Red Foxes' finished·the.
•.
•~gJ9c-win:gaII1e: ~o
·
•. •
" ..
e
·.plate."·
.
.
••
'.winning
double
..
in the top
_of
the
ingles portion of the match with·
In •eight'. o[ di~ nine, lllat~Jies, garn~
011
.~u
nday Y'.e.re
~o
f
(fere~t-
_

• The Red Foxes did. just that by eighth and Ackermann added and
win asAsiflrifran was ii three-set

Marist was defeated in straightse~:
.
~
t~e
:Re~
f:~xes W-~IIJhe
_fir
st9
-~
7
·.-
re1?oun4ing iri the nightcap.
.
.
'insurance RBI right after.
.
.
ict()r:--,~6::i,:-:2~·6,f·6-~:..
-. _
·_
_

-.:· .·-.


·-
-,,_.·:
···.>·--
·.-
_
_-
~~d
d,f':'P_l?_e~.t~~-}l~X~--1~~·-·
..
••
_
_
~
···o_,'Conrioi·_Jed
the_0nslaughtby·
-
O'C9hn0r._'·ats6 smashed~--an
; .Marist
did not fair well:either in.
,:La
Susa/the_. only Red
·Fox
fo
·
.-
T_radmg 201
1n
t~e home open~r
.•
going-3-for-Jwitli a triple and three outside-the-park grand slam, well
ne
doub!es segrilent,<·
:
.. ···•·
-
.bring
a match to three sets, lost 6-3,
agau~st Army,,~he Fox~s ca.m11?
1t.-· RBI. KateO'Hanlon turned in a over the 215~foot
'sign
in right
.
The squad'was
·swep(S-5.,
s~3; .i-:6; 6-3:'··
• •
• ••
• • •
te~·two err_?rs 1~ t~e: s•~~fi ~hich J~for-4 day, Murphy smacked two center
.•
· •

arid· 8-4, .in eight~game pro sets:.
·-•
-
'
••

·•
-
'
• •

••
••


op:,ne,d the ~oor-J<>r-
the fiidets·;,
.,hits,
Patty Ackermafm stroked an
"There was a little trotting,'.'
'she
.
Afferthe match, firstcyearlfead
-Jhe
Red Foxes
.,w1Irbe
back: in

• '·
It:s phdyCs1cal
eh.
r~rsnoC,wh~
too1'1·
.
RBI single and Laurie Sleight chm-
.•.•
said with a slight smile;
..
"The whole
Coach Ken Harrison said his club· action next:Wedne:Sday
afternoon
}aid !I:ea
·
oac
,~om
-.
iave
I,:
ched·a triple.-
...
·-
...

.•
·
team was at the plate waiting for
played well, despite facjng tough when if hosts Siena College: 'f.he
"'.ho ~s alw~Y~,concerned
~th men-_
"It
seem d nc
.
·
.
h
me so !just wanted to make:sure


"-
. .
·
•••

·
·
.•
ame•is at 3:30 p;tn,


fal mistakes.•.·,
Balls are bemg·clrop:
·
•.•
e

1 e everyone w
O
I hit all the bases."
Ma.fisJ;ipQrls llil/il' 'tfiCkle'-d~wn,,. eco11:omtcs
·
.
The tennis teams
.
(budget) do
si~iently.
A
few ~irors in theffrst
However, Head Coach
.
Pete
He dribbled down the nght side
nofhave'.its ow11
courts'atthe pre-
.game·againstArmy cost Jen Luk~r
Calaizzo has to be happy with the and called a time-out because he
sent time and is playing atthe Out-
_
and the' team a win.
••
,
Ted
performance
of
.
his
.
new was trapped, but the Wolverines
chess County Racquet Club.
-
However; the team's seven wins


Holmlund
steeplechaser'-
Brian Ordway.
used aU of.their timeouts ..

The tnick teams do not have a.
has'ali:eady.
topped last' year's mark
The junior notclted a perscmal
Donald Williams made the two
track (budget) to n1n o~!
..
,
of six.
-
·

best time of 9:45.6 good for a sixth technical free throws and th~t was
The_crew teams do not r~ceive
...
Baseball notes
_
pl~ce finished at. the Yale'Spring a~l she wrote. North Carolina
·(budget)a
lot of funding from the
The basebaU·team has'to start··
__
...,,...__
Time Invitational.
__
-
didn't
win .the national
:-
athletic department.
doing two things more c~nsisteHt·
In only two races; Ordway has Michigan lost it,71-77.
.
T wonder why?
•-
.

·
. .
ly
~
hitting and winning.
.
\
improved his personal best time.
There's been talk that Michigan
Maybe because Marist is losing
Before the Seton Hall game, Art
,______
Isn't
.
continuously

r~aching for
·.threw
the game.
It
wouldn't sur-
money and its effects are trickling
Smith's team had a paltry .221
••
which is well below his standards.
-one's
highest potentialthe point in prise me. Only Chris would know.
down to ,the athletic department;
average,
··despite
a· su·ccessful
,. -T~is
may be occurring because true sports competition?
.
Byrd goes to Shea
Nah. Forget about it.
weekend against Rider.
he is putting the fate of the entire

The men's volleyball club will be
The highlight of the Mets.home
- Softball stuff
The hitting slump has been an
team's offense on his shoulders. competing· in the club nationals opener was Dennis Byrd's address
.
Janine O'Connor
has been
entireteam effort. However, one
Although this is a legitimate next week.
to the crowd.

.
.
crushing the ball of late.
reason the team's struggling_ so
pressure, especially with the team's
The Red Foxes will have trouble
Byrd, who was paralyzed f~r
In th~ two gam1:5 a~ainst Army
much is because George Camacho
present
offensive

problems,
in the tou!Ilame~t
.
because they months after plowing into

Jet
on .Tuesday, the Junior had two
is not hitting well.

Camacho has to concentrate on his have been mcons1stent; It doesn't teammate Scott Mersereau in a
triples and three RBl's.
Last year, the senior had an im-
individual performance.
help that the team can only take six Nov. 29 game against the Chiefs
-
On Sunday at Monmouth, she
pressive .320 batting average, and
Once he realizes this, he will have players.
..
has made a miraculous comeback'

had a game-winning double in the
was the Marist offense.
a strong second half. Camacho has
The National Championship
The Yankees
impressively
_
top of the eighth inning, as well as
Before the season started;
..
the
been a career .300-plus hitter. He
Did . you . ~atch the national
thrashed the Indians, 9-1. Jimmy
clouting
.a
out--0f-the-park grand
senior said he wanted to hit .400 for will tum it around.
champ1onsh1p and the Chris Web-
Key gave up only one run in eight
slam over the 215-foot mark in
the year. Although this was an am-
More on the Marist front
ber choke show?
innings of work.
-
.
right center.
,
bitious goal, it did not seem out of
The track team •s success does
:r~iling 73-71, Webber, _of
One b!15ketball note: the New
Oh by the way,
0
Connor was
the question.
not hinge on team results because M1ch1gan,
grabbed a rebound with York Kmcks are going to win the
also the Northeast Conference
However, things have not turn-
many of the meets the Red Foxes :~7 s~onds left. He then dragged NBA championship.They won't
Player of the Week.
ed out as planned. Camacho is compete in do not count in team his pivot and walked, but the ref throw the game, like Michigan.
The defense is still playing incon-
struggling; He is only hitting .255, scoring.
missed it.
Ted Holmlund is The Circle's
Sports Editor.