The Circle, September 23, 1993.pdf
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 43 No. 1 - September 23, 1993
content
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The Circle. begins it's construction coverage
Circle ·critiC••flllmeffavOrilirjzOvfe$1
ditectorS·~··•··
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My secon~Lf~;o~it~'.flim is
.''Witn~ss/'.
'
edlpla~e~':i
¢fie~.
~d
~~tt_h~·
;;J~~s.
Th~-
.
.
Rerite~b·e/.ioiiri Jii~~'.b~fore,tlte w~ole'
•
by
COLLEEN.
MURPHY
.
•_Again;
the: suspense will
,_hav~
you: clawing
.
character~:1!1,.
t_his Bar_ry
Levmson
fi~
.cap~
•.
'-'Home
·Alone.''
:series?
The REA!,; John·
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-:_·:you·r·.c~air_~·~-~~n~.~this
one
-~o_
:see
:_Harrison->.·~
tu_~e-,.t_h~.
ess_ence
._~f.-Jhe
g?m~:
~_ober~:_Red-
:,
;I-Iuglies,-::~--_who,;:,_·~reC~ed
._·.
~~;Th!!.:.>-J3r~~kf~~-
9r:eetmgs and
.s~luta~1on5..
All. nght, no,
Ford in his original
:'.'hunted
ma~" rol~. The.· f<>r:.4,:.aJ~ay,s
.a:,g99d
her~, Wilf<>_r~
~flTTl!l;lY,.
. Club;, '}'Pretti,
bf
Pi?k,
i•
"Some Ki~~. O_f
I d_1dn't see a movie th1~_week._lt_so.
rarely
.
witness in question is as~all Amish boy.who
th_~:t<>~gh,,_?ld
°!~,?~g~r:.
,
:
,
:,
'\
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.
.
Worid~~ful,".
~n~ •;_sixteen Candles?.
•
.
happens, but I thought I d take up,theJpace
_
sees a murder inside: the• bathroom of the
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to introduce myself' and le~
you
know \Yhat
'
Philadelphia train station; The contrast bet-
•
Okay' "J~e
__
Cira~ua_t§
'. it isn't, _Bu~
t~er~\
;
> ,.· .
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.
.
.to expe<::t
for the year.
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;.
ween Ford's culture andthatoftheAmish,
a feeling'you:gefwhen you:watch it. J>er-'
••
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Well,sometime.justabitafter,those;came.
. I
won't be writing this co~m!l by myse,lf..
.
is expertly handled by'director Peter Weir.
sonally,.I forgetall about ~ete Rose
.and
Bo
. c"She's
Having'ABaby;'',Dori't forget this
.
·.My counterpart; Andrew·-Bons, 1s on ex\end-
. •
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Jackson; the
·Meis,
tl:te Padres'
'ecoriomics,
·one
the· next time you and
'your
friends
put'·
ed leave, He should b<'!
back next week
•..
_..
Weir is known for tiis "outsider" films.
and thel964Phillies. Maybe it's me.-_l~f~ft,
•··.·together
your John· Hughes all-night-party
Ofwalf'tr~~e.~t:t~i ~~~:s_::~tyrffJ:.i~.t.:.r_-I Here, he introduces._a fugitive· (rio'pun,in-_
,
I'"l_s~~!H:~:tu~t-~~---
:·
.
.-,,
,;T'
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fil~,f~sti_"aL•lt'(inot;~~•te::the teenra'.n~st
tended) cop to an Amish world, where he can•
i
,:,,
,-:•
,u~c
,.
!_-._-
. •:.·
,.,.,_,
.
-.
-·.·.
.
we ve come to: expect~1t s \VOrse. lf:-you re
that' we didn~t'get.to. the inovie~.,thi~
~eek,~-~
•
never
..
fit in ..
ff
yoi.f
,reinember,
his other
.Wl'!!le
~fr~ on the top~c of fantasy ~Im~,
_
having. ~v~n\fl~e!in~;;:th?µghts
:•
-~b~tit
_
Plus,
l
didn't really want
to
se¢. the:
.ne'ly
popular ~lms, u~r'ee~.
-~ard,
".
or ~'Dead • we_:1!11¥,lJt:_::as
,.~e,11
_1;r1.e.~t19?_,-
.
~?b )~.e1nt:r.
~-
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'·&raduatm~ andYor-get~m.g
a J?b an,?_
'~t
get-
Bruce Willis 'inovie; and' th'e
••
new. Scorcese
,.
Poets Society,'.'
,this
theme also apphes. So
.
classic The Prmcess Bnde. Aside from be
tmg marned-watch this fjrsL
..
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picttir~ wasn't playing ai:J.y\Vhere
~r~m~d
•
few.directors will'look at
a:
script without a
.
sing able to recite the whole script-_myself;
this
.
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,
;!>_:-
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<
;<•\,
,here
•. W.:e'U see_ one_ next week, t~oug~. l
happy ending, s~ it~s inspiring to know that
.
is j?st·a terrific in~vie. Rein:r
can
tr:ansforril
Well/itiais
wh~i
i
lob,k}~r-ii{a fi1~>All
promise.
"
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"
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Weir. can make it work.
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satire-onto the big screen like_ no one.els~.
-
right it comes down to
a
good lookmg male
S(?, ~y ~av~mte film <?f all.,t1~~-?. The
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.If
you'd like to. see C~
~lwes ('..'Robm·,· • lead ~frii"ncnomance in_'·his
'life..
:
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_-
Player. . It 1s s_1mply
a~azi!lg- a,mov1e about.
.
My third favorite is "The N_atural."-The.
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Hood: fyfe_n
-~n Ti~hts") m
~ dece!1t comedy_
.:.
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th~ mo~1es. Tim_
Rob?ms 1s exc~llent as the
ultimate in fantasy pictures; it's the standard
role,, this 1s
,it:
-
It s
~
~av.onte
-fairy,
tale of
Sue me ... they're fun to watch.
'Andrew
.
paranoid executive wit~ somethmg to keep
by which all baseball films are measured.
screen~lay wnter ~1ll1~m. Goldman, com-
and I will try_ to find "Age of Innoce!lce"
out
0~
the_
trades. There s suspe~se, murder,
You're probably thinking ~at that's not say-
plete;Wlth
rev:nge, ldclp.app111g~
t~rtu~e, !<?;"e,
~
for-next..week. Keep.your fingers _crossed.! .
a teensy bit of: r?mance! an~ m~r~~~o.ap-
•
much: Well maybe not to you, but it's
adve~t'l;1t;.e,
and·. tl!e la_te i}ndr~
·the
_G.1~~t.
.s
-
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!
: .
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0;
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pearances
·than
a "M1am1 Vice
.-
episode.
·-·mg_
-·
~-
• h. ' h.
:
ts"
•
•t
d t min~ Who could ask for anythmg more?·
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Dare I say-it's better than the book.
set man era w en t. e s~or w~ ers e. ~r
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Smashing pumpkins release killer
sgphQPJ.rJcre.f:ef,<?J}tjt_
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Corian and. company create wat(OfnOise
,;:'
.
,
<
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Chamberlm propels the songs with
stars then they ever wanted to be.
their r?ots by creatmg a gust
Y
g~ e
put·me_to_• sleep with its· slower some
quirky,
firecracker.
by
DANA BUONICONTI
Quips notwithstanding,
t~e,
of_the!r own. Corgan,
.al?ng
~
1
~~ songs.
.
.
_
_
,,
drumming.
.
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Pumpkins have r:leased one hec,k, gmtan st Jdameds
Ihma,m.bearssis_
tJpim···
Am_
-
Here
1
the slower songs of~en _ Both ''Mayo11.aise'_
'. and_ "Sweet
Billy Corgan, singer and guitar
of an album, "Siamese Dream.
cy •
an .
ru
·
. .
.·
Y ·
burn with an equal or-·greater,m-· · Sweet"
.have
lush melodies,. even
guru for Smashing Pumpkins, was Th~ir follow
0
up to 1991 's '_'Gish" Cha~berhn, h~t cfn struc~~d a
,ten~Hy
•
'than
the fast· ones; 'though one features rnuted electric
·
qu<?ted recently as saying:th at, !f
•
(a!l,d
•
«~ullJJ. EP), "S1am_ese !'?e!hfluous wa
,,?
·
sou~
~n
.:
~'Disarm," one. of-the lJe~t on the guitars,;.and the other acoustic,
their. new album ½'as a failure, it
_Dream"
1s their first albu!ll for
Sia!Ilese Orea~.•. aJ?-d U~.ke it,
.
,
album,:has Corgan sh~ut_mg·C<the respectively..
.
.
_
~
0
wt:;ea;
:~~
tt~~t~tt?:ii
'.
;_Virgi_n,
aftc:r being on its ind1e sub~.
•
C Wit~ prgduction::5s1st
f;c:1
ri6
•.
kHler•
i!l,
rtie
is the ~iller in y()usmy
The real magic of Smashing
•
e
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)'t
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sidiary Caroline.
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~pt~i,n. rung_e
-
imsf,
·'
u
c
,·:love~!
S~J!d
this ~m1le
_ewer
to yo11,'' Pumpkins may ultimately He, in
to worrY}?
0
.U~·
,W1th
~n_y luc~.
_
HaiHng' from thewmdy city of
Vig,
_Siamese,,prea_111_
.
expands
"ove~
:a-·wrenchmgodal
wave of their ability to:go from a wall of
.
MT.V.~n~:.rag
1
.~-wt
r~h itint
.t!J,e
'·
Chicago, thePtimpkins:stay.true.to
•.
-~,~
h ~~ear.\
itJrote.~.
_up~n
_
acoustic guitar', ~trings, and tubular noise to
·'relative
quiet-and then
groun , an. ma e. em·• 1 er·
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·,
15 • w ic
-
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a a· en ency.
0
:,beHs.·
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:<
.· ._'.-
.
_.
back to noise;·sometimes-in°the-,-
.
__
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--On
''Gherub
.·:Rock,''.;
-the
same song.The contrasting,inten-
•
Earn $500 - $1000weekly
stufff ng
•
envelopes. For
details - RUSH $1.00 with
SASE to:
GROUP FIVE
57 Greentree Drive,
Suite 307
Dover, DE 19901-
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_
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For Proj~t' Excellent Earn-
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-
Work at School or
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Send Reswne
to:··
CAREER
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P.O.Box82
Howell, NJ 07731
Attn: Personnel
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- SPRING BREAK DISCOUNTERS·.
.
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free trip(s). Can~un - Bahamas - S. Padre
Island - Daytona. We handle bookkeeping - you handle sales.1-800-336-2260
.-
Monday thru Friday (9 AM - 5
PM).
,
smoki.n'; firs~' single;•·
an(!. ~:'Geek
_.:sities;of.:
(and.in)
"the
.songs,.plays_
-._
<
U ,S~A;
/!
Corgan unleashes
:some.
.
·with-•-·
the•·•-
emQtions,: making the
:\other-»-otl.<lly:.}.g11iiax:'.,~<>l9s/vvhile'.;:
son
s::iti~t·
much
iii.Brtappealirl
;'
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Rob:¢~~s-:-Hal~:Q.e~lgti$';
-
6
Mt.-Carmel Street
• _Poughkeepsie;:~·~
.. _
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·_.·.·;::
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t
7
3..·t!
7
~~l.<;i
..•.. -__
,
__
-•_-_--
>
_(betweei:i
Caesars Restaurant
and Noah's Ark Bar),.:
•
.Nl~n's''Cuts:Olt.00
..
_
reg.'ts~oo
':wonieii·s
cuts:•
t4~o.o·
,eg.'-ts~oo
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llISCpUNYS.(?:~-~~JtMS
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'&.HIGHLIGHTING
.:
6p¢:n:ij1i::.-I:30-.Jhiir~->-~1gltts
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Map out your game pan at
IIIIISl'GRaJ.11£
llllUN
Wednesday, September 29; 1993.
5:00 PM - 7:00 PM Campus Center
~
Spea!< one-on~one
t9
graduate,
MBA,
and. law school
representatives
~
Get Information
regarding
programs,
financial aid and
entrance
requirements
~
Explore
your options for the future·
Sponsored
by:
.
The Center for Career Development
and Field Experience
·
.
·
226 Donnelly
•
575-3543
•
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THE CIRCLE, SEPTEMBER 23,
1993
3
Resident 'Students petition for parking change
,
',
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•·.:.
-·,·
.·:•·.
·>
j')JyCARlli/OLESKEWICZ-r,
·;.:·J\ m~tiv.at!ng facto~: for:the p~tiiion '!;\'as,., patrols in
theissue·ofsafety;acccfrdiilg to·carmichaet · , continue.
the lotsc a(ld' that they would dent studen_ts.
.
. ... "It's hard for me to c&mplain, because the
situation suits me," Tauper said. "But it is
inconvenient for the people living on cam-
pus, and I sympathize with them~ especially
with the construction· going on:"
•
• Assistant Editor
>'
? •
••
Upon arrival to campus this semester; the ·_
•
"We are going to· increase the lighting
_; Tfo"o~senioi::r~sident
Ostu_d~nts
hav~ ,cir-':
.
dvef
lot had neither ·1ighting-11or
0
phone • amps.-and install phone boxes with a direct
culated .:a. petition ;to ·change the:. parking
boxestConnolly; who must park iri the river
Hne to security," Leary said.-"There is also
,assigriments:for -students .. living. in .the _clot, said.
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additiona!JightingintheworksfortheNorth
.. townhous·es and gartland commons. : •... ·
·,, · •.• :
End.Jot and the McCann lot."
• N:t}lrid<?;'f~~rc:;::ifc~!~k;~;~tJ1:ri:·
•;.
''They
want
us.to
pdtkiii
a• bei~~~i.c!~~!flds~~~~~~:.;~::!~c~cri:b:i~.
ford, Conn., began the petition because resi
0
di
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k.
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.d d ·.•
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cars if necessary.
.
. dentstudents are forcedto ~arkin the hoop
ar
sec u e. '• area
w . ere _any~ .
"They're supposedly there, but I haven't
')ofa~~:~~e
riv_er
lcit;_while.commuter
st~dents thing
can hannen·
and we can't
Se.en
them," she said. "They.want us to park
are parkmg _m. the lots near the residence• .
.
'l'k'
•
in a dark, secluded area where anything can
facilities.
.
• •.
. ·
get help."
•
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happen and.we can't get help."·
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"I.don't see,why commuters can't park in
.
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Connolly.pointed to the recent incident in.
theriverlotorthehooplot,".Connollysaid.
-Tammy
Carm1chael,
which a. woman was reportedly raped on
''Tpey,- are .·.there du_ring the d_ay. We
S •.•
campus as proof that anything can happen.
• shouldn't
be
!!xpe~ted to. walk tha,t distance
•
eDIOr
She agreed that Security had not been very
• just to.get to our house, especially at night!'
helpful and added that. even commuter
Carmichaelsaid that commuters have to
.. "There are still no call boxes, in case we
students. were shocked and thought that the
:understand. that resident students.ccmsider · need help~ or a ride from security,>'she said;
current situation was a bad idea.
-· the campus to;be, their home::.\ . ,
. ---, ''and the lights only went up after the recent
Scott Tauper, a sophomore commuter stu-
•
''When' they gc::,·home
atriight,Jhey park
rape incident." .
.·
:
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dent from Rhinebeck, N. Y ., parks in the
·• .near their houses," she said. "But we don't
• Joe.Leary, director of Safety and Securi-
townhouse lot and said that he can see the
. have that Iuxury.>I'
ty, said that there are additional security
point of the petitioners and disgruntled resi-
The construction has added to the park-
ing problems of Jason LaScolea, a senior
townhouse resident from Bath, N. Y ., who
must ·park in the river lot .
LaScolea, on two occassions, was nearly
hit by construction equipment when walk~
ing to the parking lot.
"It
is not the fault of the construction
workers," LaScolea said. "They are just do-
ing their job, and I'm sure we're slowing
them up by parking there._We shouldn't be
there because it's unsafe; and Marist would
be at fault if anything happened."
Leary said that the construction was a
complicated factor in the parking problems.
"Eventually, all resident student parking
will be on campus," Leary said. "Right now,
we are asking for everyone to make a
sacrifice." ...
see PARKING page 9
►
RlishlO .finish·townhouses as.students anxiously wait
. thing detail to be completed before
·'·by
MATT MARl"IN'_'
.
students,are allowed to inove in ..
: ; Feature Editor
Even
as
rain fell on Tuesday, ces
-. Two local hotels
are
losing their , ment: was being_poured while new
best customers today, when thirty-"
•mattresses
were hoisted to these-
nine Marist upperclassmen move to
co~:_nd~~priaced
students have b
__
een
, • their.almost
0
completed onscampus.
· housing.
• • ·
. living as parMime commuters for.
"We'll have the. guys Cleaning: -the past three weeks in the Super
the floors while others put,on. the
Eight Motel in Hyde Park; and in
• light switches;'' said Tom;Dllly;
the Days Inn in Poughkeepsie,while ••
director c::,fphysicalplant;cwho;_is construction ·contii:med • at their
overseeing the campus construe-:.· residences,,,, •.
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tion. "The hotels aren't rented past, .. '.'(wasn't r!!allysurpr.ised ":7h~n
Thursday, so this is it."
. . ..
l
found out about the delays,?-srud ; ..
Mid-summer. delays • caught
.
Jennifer ·cordone,:a senior from ••
Maristand its contractor,the,Piz-
Monroe, Conn, ~'This,i~ kinda. ,
zag_allicompan
__
Y,
qu_it_
e literal
__
ly bet-: typicatoLMarist.''.
.
•
• "I'll
move as soon as we have
· ..
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running water and toilets," said .
. .
''I'll
move
as soon
;Cordone·;;/'!
just 'don't
care
·_ •
.· . . .
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• _..
. anymore.-..
.
_ _ . _
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as we.haye
..
rµif1ii11g
wqter,·:, : ;··-·Tlje:,:
ctj~f:.)>f,
..
p~tting \iit>,,tb,e .
..
· _tipd~~tOi!e!f-~=~~~1uit:~!tl~~/ti;~~~~i~Nftlit~~fffif.~i~iiitf,1
•••
_.,_c~re•._a1e1:r:;t·;fii~~111;rtrt!f;f:t~JJ{ft~~~t~f:i~,~~e~~:•_.
:
•··· ·
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· ' ·
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help theiµ through the transition .
. S~nfor.
·•
•·
'!lt's.·costing the contractor aj)-
. • ·· •
•. ' •.
•
• •
• • •• •
•. proximately $3,000ia day in
ex.:.
ween ·a rcickand a::harci piac~
as
perises, .. said Jim Grenier; .Piz-
. : they tried .to .complete ~he:C
new
zagalli's project manager. '.'We just
• •. •
.•. · townhouse units before students
ar-
want things. to go to as smooth as
• rivecibackon:campi.ls,
•
•
possible for.the students;'',,· .
. C'lt
was
hell," said-Daly ... Near-
_
Mostofthe students agree that
·:) by water Jinesforced-blasting to}:ie th~q!st~ce a~ay from campus has·
enior Jennifer Cordone passes the time between classes at the Days Inn.
_
curtailed so mucli of the rockhad ..... been ,their m;im c~mcern, but _sen~
•.
• •
·
• , • ••
•.
• • •
•
•
ire le
hoto/Matt Martin
'tobeha~mered·out:It'_sfockcity
• timent goes deeper ·than early-
hate it.here. I can't wait to get
N.J: "Iwaswokenuplastnig~tby
"Weshouldhavehadmorepar-
down there." • •. • .·. . •
•
morning van .rides
a
nd long ~aits back. You can't cook your own some woman screaming at a guy, ties," said Whelan.
Athree,month delay in.obtain-
on campus between· classes.
meals and $100 doesn't go that
a boyfriend or husband maybe, to
ing a building pennitalmost shut . _ ''I ju st don't feel seUl:d," said far."
- let her back in. It's'the fourth inci-
down operations, ,.according to
Andrew Whelan, a semor .from
Loud construction workers,
dent with police since we've been
: • Peter Petricca Pizzagalli's project
Greenwich, Conn. "I do nit have-a 'fights, and prostitutes ·have a!l
here."
engineer.'
> ,
'
·..
.
- •
desk, or any of my stuff. It's all at .: brought the police to the hotel
• ''We could do• some work, but
home waiting to move into my new • several times during the past weeks.
·we really could_n;t dig.in·:until'we
house.''
. "There's
always sirens out
. got. the. ,permit,"' said Petricca..
Safety is· also a concern, as there," said Cordone. "Something
''Now •. we're
on.· full
guns • events at the hotel read like a nig~t- is always going on, so we just keep
. everywhere ...:.:
seven ,days a week • ly police blotter.
the chain on the door;"
'for the last inonth and.a half.'-'-
'ffwo guys were shot a couple of
· ".I thought only this type of stuff
. •• Besides''niajor 'interior
:,ap-
~tre_ets
down;" sai~ Vicki Kupec:,a happened in Ireland," said Pam
That's about the only regular
visitors that these students see.
"We're so detached out here,"
said Cordone. "Once you're out
here, you're out here. No one
visits, no social life. I really have
no life at this point."
However, some aspects of the
ordeal will be missed by the depar-·
ting students.
"I wish I could bring the room
service • back with me," said
Whelan. You come home and your
bed is made and you have fresh
towels. It's better than I expected.
I'll have to get used to feeling like
:i c;loh :il.'ain."
.·
~Ii~nces;. the_ e:ourtyarq i~ the last
Jumor from Southington, Con~. I Clinton, a senior from Somerville,
M~tftSl'rsecurity
increases; rape still unsolv~d
-,
-
the call fro~ security
atll:18
p.m.
Sheriff's Office • K-9 unit aslo
and convicted of rape in the first
As a result of this mc1dent, the
b;
KRISTINA:WELLS
··
Id
1- · h
h
r. esponded and searched the area.
·degree; they can receive a max-
requests for escort services from
.,
The.victim to
po ice t at s e
security have increased con-
··•· Staff Writer.
•
returned to the college from an off-
The- search turned up nothing
imum of 8-and-a-third years to 25
siderably, Joseph Leary said.
Police are still not close to mak-
campus party by taxi at approx-
concrete.
years in the state penitentiary, ac-
ing an arrest in the rape of a Marist
imately 10:30 p.m. and proceeded
The victim was treated at St.
cording to Smith.
College student that was reported
to walk to her dormitory from the
Francis-Hospital for minor injuries
on Saturday, Sept. 11. _
·
chapel where the cab had dropped
and and released. She was also
Detective Sgt. Thomas M;mro of
her, according to police.· ·
referred to the Crime Victims
the Town of Poughkeepsie Police .
When she reached the area to the
Assistance Program.
.
Department said thatthere were no
rear • of Lowell
·Thomas·
. Com-
Detective Sgt. Mauro said two
leads as to the identity of the
munication Center, she was grabb-
detectives have been working on
. ed from behind by an unknown
the case around-the-clock since the
sui:s~J· on a description given by
male and thrown to the ground,
incident occured and and another
h
• •
1·
• 1 k"
~
pol·ice sai"d.
detective
is assisting in the
t e Victim, po ice are oo mg ,or
three white males in their late teens,
The woman said three white
investigation.
•
all of whomwere about 5 feet 8 in-
males each forced her to engage in
All .three, suspects achieved full
ches tall. One wore glasses, police
sexual intercourse, police said.
penetration and therefore the cnme
"d
According to police, the three
is rape in the first degree, Mauro
sa1 •
. •
.
.
I . said.
•
The rape was reported to Marist
males fled the scene m a wester
Y
According to Bureau Chief
College Security late on the first
direction on campus toward the
Marge Smith of the Dutchess
Saturday night .of the semester. .
river.
Offi
Security received a report that an
The police said the victim ~etum-
County Distric Attorney's
ice,
18-vear-old female had_
been raped_ ed to her dorm and security was
the legal definition of rape is ~•for-
~
cible compulsion of sexual mter-
by three unknown males.
notified.
,
,,
,The Town of Poughkeepsie
The police responded to the
course.
Poli.~ Department f~ponded to
scene and
the Dutchess . County
If
the suspects are charged
wi
th
The Dutchess County District
Attorney's Office will be handling
the case if the suspects are ap-
prehended and charged with the
crime, Smith said.
Thus far, according to Mauro,
no witnesses or suspects have come
forward.
'Police remain hopeful that there
was a witness to the crime and that
this individual or individuals will
come
for.ward
with
any
information.
. Anyone with information is ask-
ed to contact the Town of
Poughkeepsie Police
Detective
Division at 485-3670 or 485~3666.
"The students are very aware of
personal safety now," he said.
·''Weare getting so many calls for
escorts that we can't do our
patrols, but that's OK. If you need
and escort, you will get an escort."
Because the calls for escorts have
increased, Leary said he is looking
into hiring both male and female
students to assist in the escorting
service. Leary said security would
dispatch one female student and
one male student to accompany the
individual to his/her destination.
Leary said security has been in-
creased since the incident on Sept.
11.
l~~~:t
·.::'•~·:~·-
:'.i )::
.~:r?:~~-
<;:~.
:1:~-
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•
·•
..
THE CIRCLE/SEPTEMBER 23,
1993
·•
•
···•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Miieff
reactt~tiS(,iit~n
·
..
·
for
neW
To,WlllioiiSes
•
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_;
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.
·
by
Bill HA.NSCOM
•
.••
Staff Writer
Construction
of the
•
new
townhouses marked just the begin-
ning
.
of Marist College'.s' Vision
'94'
campus·
improvement
program.
.
•
._
..
Although sections L and M have
not been completed, residents in
sections H, I, J, and Kmoved into
the new residence facilities
•
as
scheduled on Sept. 6.
--
• Mike Schultze, a senior from Mt.
Laurel, N.J., is a resident ~ho
.
mo~ecl into hiS:townhous~ althe
•
beginning_
<>f
.school
and is happy
with· his new accomo~ations .
..
"I
.
think Marisr-Us looking
"
toward. the
'future/
and these.
townhouses are
a
step:in the right
direction,'';Schtilti.e said.
•
•
Tlie layout
of
the
new
•
townhouses is unique comparecl
to
other campu's
•
housing, such as
gartland and the old townhouses.
Each· unit includes a common
area, a kitchen, two bathrooms and
four bedrooms.
•
•
•
•
:':.s.ee
NEW page 9
..
►
·NEVER."fOOLATE.
Physical plant employees move in mattrresses into
townhouses Tuesday in preparation .for students re.turn.
lower
•
sections of
•
the' new
Circle
photo/Matt
Martin
Think
~OU
mi~~d the Gradu~te°ififo(ci.E~;ni:de~dfr~~tfhink:ag~in.·with•
th~-new on~d~marid.
GRE~ youcb~Id. b~-~alcing
~i!'r~st
tomorr~~-A~d see
yourscor~ ilie in~tant you fini~h;Score.rep~)~
;}~-inailed
10 to 15 days
•
later.fa
pl~~ty
ohime f~r m~st scho6iideadlines. Call,~ow for instant.
~egist~tion:
@)
Edu~arional
Testing Service
Security
·briefs
by
KRISTINA WELLS
Staff Writer
Since the opening day of school,
there have been a total of twelve
alcohol confiscations. by Marist
security.
.
.
There have been·. seven in
charges against O'Connor. At 1:20
a.m., Mon, Sept. 20, O'Connor
surrendered himself to the police
and was charged with assault in the
third degree.
. ·
.
On Sat, Sept. 18, a fire alarm
went off in Townhouse H-3 at'S:59.
p.m.. The alarm went off as a
result of burning food in the
kitchen.
On Sun; Septd9, another fire
alarm went off at 3:15 a:m
..
in
Campus Center becasue of dust ris-
ing from the constructfonareas in-
the building. Security will have the
area cleaned as soon as possible.
•
.:Sylvan Technology
Centers®
..
•
Pait o/lM S.)1roft
Ltarnillf Cnltn-NdlDorlt
g:~:!~~lry ~ai;id~~°li,a~~~n:~
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w·m
two in Shehan Hall and one in the
a
.
o·
·
.
.
O
_·
e e_
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McCann parking lot and the
Champagnat lot.
The majority of alcohol con-
[~s;:eteta:~e~~e~o~e;\;a~:~~:~;
Samn·.
~- 'l'o·
'!'lie
and malt liquorconfiscated.
.
.
.
•
•
During the first weekend of
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•
•
•
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•
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Scientific
•
Wireless
:
back-up in<Sheahan
Hall
:oif
~)2·120Airieby
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students
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Saturday{Marist security.received
•
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.
·.·
Catalog List Price_
$4.35
a reportthat an:1ssyear~olcl,
female
012502522942
•
OfficeM■xEveiydoyl.owPri<•: 079767109325
•
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student
had. been"·
raped' by· t\uc;e
·
unknown•m~les,
.
.
.
.·
••
·_
•
.
._.
:
Security responded to the scene
•.
firstand The Town of Poughkeep-
•
sie Police were called at approx-
imately 11: 18 p.m. See related story
cm pagi: 3.
.
.
. •
•.•
On Fri; Sept.
p,
and Sat, Sept."
•
18, a.total of four Marist students
were taken to St. Francis hospital
by
Fairview ambulance for alcohol
intoxication.
. .
.
.
.
Two students froin Chanipagnat
·.
Hall, one· student from Marian
Hail and one student from the•·
Townhouses. were treated and
released. On Sat, Sept. 18, Marist
security responded to an assault in
Champagnat Hall at 3:31 a.m.
Brandon Fox, a sophomore, was
taken to St. Francis hospital by am-
bulance and treated for bruises to
his face and body and injuries to.
to his left side, according to Joe
Leary, director of college safety
.
and security.
Leary said Kristian Grizelj, a
sophomore assaulted Fox along
.
with Christopher O'Connor, a
freshman.
Grizelj, a resident of Cham-
pagnat, was arrested by Town of
Poughkeepsie Police at 6:00 a.m.
Sun, Sept. 19, and charged with
assault in the third degree, a misde-
meanor, Leary said.
Grizelj was also charged with
possession of an altered driver's
•
license, according to
Leary.
"On
Sun, Sept. 19, Fox filed
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South
Hills
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Store Hours:
Sun 11
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• Mon-Fri
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• Sat 9am-9pm
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:f.
J
'
THE C1RCLE;
.
F.EATU
RE
SEPT~MBER 23,
1993
5
A glimpse· at
l\lloSCow
.
.
•
.
Wl'iter tOurs]~usSiii,- capital
LOCATION::
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w/a roll)
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Beef• Turkey•
Ham
&
Cheese
.
• Salami
• Bologna
Ital. Cappicola,
Salami,
Provolone
• Corned
Beef
• Pastrami
• Liverwurst
• Egg
Salad
• Chicken
Salad
•
Tuna
Salad
• Seafood
Salad
A Statue
DELIVERY
AND
STORE
HOURS
FRIDAY
&
SATURDAY
-
6 a.m.
- 3 a.m.
SUNDAY-
6
a.m.
-
12
a.m.
MONDAY
thru THURSDAY
-
6
a.m.
-11
p.m.
PIZZA
.
Bambino
·
1 0" ..................................
2.95-
Large
16" .................................
5.50
Xtra Large
18"
................................
7 .25
Sicilian
..............................................
8.50
White
Pizza
16" ..............................
7.75
18" ..............................
9.75
Per Slice
..........................................
95¢
Toppings:
Anchovies,
Bacon,
Broccoli,
Xtra
Cheese,
Fresh
Garlic,
Ham,
Meatballs,
Mushrooms,
Olives, Onions, Pepperon.i,
Peppers,
Sausage,
Spinach.
Bambino
+
.50¢ each
Others
$1.00
each
.35¢
xtra for topping
on a slice
i'.
/
...
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.,.,
....
--
..
,
.
.
.
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CIRCLE
•••
• MARIST
COLLEGErPOUGHKEEPSIE,
NY·126~1
..
THE SToi>E.NT.
NEWSPAPER
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SJ. Richard, editor
..
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Ted
_Holmhmd,Sports
editor
Matt
Martlo,feature editor
Julie Martin, QSS()Ciale
editor
Andrew Holmlund, editorialpage editor
Dana Buonlcontl, ·columns
editor·
C~rl Oleskewic~ aisistant editor
Klreli'A. L~klmillll~.associate
editor.
Jennifer Pon'zlnl,
advertising
manager
Dennis
GUdea,facully adviser
.>·
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PUBLISHED
EVERY
THURSDAY·.
Lq,nd
(.)f
col1f
uSion
.
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It
was going to be a great
·year.
The beginning-just reeked of iL
•
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_.•·
Most students moved into their assigned places. There was a hew attraction
on campus,
'the
new Townhouses.
.
•
.•
••
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... : •
.:
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•
.·
Alas, this exuberance died·Hterally before the paint dried .. At ~pprox.imately
10:30 p.m., Sept .. 11, an 18-year.:ofd Marist student was raped.by th(ee unknown
white males.
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The·questions began to mount. Who did it? Where was Security? Were the
rapists Marist students? The answers do not come so easily,
•
.
Many were quick to point a shakey accusing finger at the Office of Safety
and Security while pointing out that students pay a $700 security fee as part
of their college expen·ses. So where· was security?
.· • .
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.•
.
•
Read "Security briefs" in this issue and one will see there were
a
plethora
of alcohol confiscations during the first week of school, It was a Saturday night,
so it is safe to bet some of their time was spentin this manner.
.
.
·
Still, many can attest to witnessing this sight on any given night at Marist:
a small group of on-duty security guards gathered in the Champagnat breezeway
chatting with each othe{as well as students.-No campus can be made 100 per-
.
cent secure.
•
Hillary Or
.Bitt
•
•.
T~ cl~ar>up any questions, when I say
·Clinton·
I· mean Bill, when: I
·say
President,
I mean Hillary; Ok,<now that we have this·
clear, hvill_ be able t<>
move on.
•
.
I guess, the question is what has Clinton
.
.
done in the pastnine months? We aU know
·
about his problems with hairdressers (even
in
L.A),
travel agencies (it runs inthefami-
.·
ly),
as
w.ell
as, nominating persons with child
.·
(:are problems (hello Zoe); But what has he
really
:done?
.
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· ..
.
. . .
•
Let us start with the new deficit red.uction
plan. First, Clinton was blessed with the old
•
tradj,Voi:J.s
of "yote with your l)arty."
..
He said
WhenAnlericans\vent to
·the
poUs fast
•
November, they voied·.not only for
a
new·
..
president, bli! for "c.harige"
:.
so they said.
•
It
is now almost 10 months after President
BilLClinton took office, arid not much has
changed, arid the faultlies more towards the
- •
American public:
We, the American people, have come to
expect too much.ofour presidents. We elect
them with the. exp·ectations
• they have the
power to eliminate all· our problems at the
drop of a hat.
•
•
President Clinton campaigned on the issue
of ''change;'' for the most part, that mea~t
She·said
No matter how many security guards are employed, no maHer how many
lights are
.installed,
no matter l_lo'Y
cautious a_pe.r~o~ i~~;t~!r~an; sWLhappen .
• •
•
Tak~ng
,.~~rtain.
PJrc.~~~i?~li"S~A:
t~~§e1:1,~\),~,.:yoi,~1p}JW"'?J~~~~~~.:.,~?1P-P:le
f
plll-•
.·'
/::,
,
.
}\:
.....
·• .
:
•.•···,
·;
.
mon
.•
sense is the best: pqhcy.·_:,-,;·:
.>.':,"::::
/.
;;.:''•;di~l-t-:-:.e:=,.;J;h~t->.•;;~~;,:;,
.:,~•,,,-,,",
•
';' o;
.:·,,,
:,.
,;!(
<scott.
'suileris'
::,:n
.
We'liave alf beeinidvised notto
walk into· dark areas andto take-:a: friend
•
•
•
.• ,
•
with us when we go out.
For
thosetimes when.friends
are\cai-ce,
caii'security
for an escort
•••
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••••.. ·
.••.
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•.•
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c.• •/
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·<':·'(:
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--
Ifit wasn'tforSen.John Keriy(sic), wh~ reduction ofth~ defici{tliat had been built
The possibiity of asti.Jd~~t esc:~_rt
serv.ice has,also be~ri."-br,ought
up by quite
said he had to vote with his party;',Vice
Presi-· up over the Reagan and Bush Administra~
a few. This could
..
proV.e to be a stroke ofgeni
..
t1s.·.
:
: ··;
i
. .
dent Al Gore had the· opportunity to break tions .. The
.American·
people. stiH ~ant
.
•
•
•
•
f
•
.
the tie.I would lik~ to know
.if
Sen. Kerry" change, but mostA!llericans feelthe)'should
•
Per hap~ themo.st terrifying aspect ofthis crim~ is:tlle identity o the.rapists.
•
is getting better seats at the Kennedy Center·
..
not beth,e one ~~-d~'the· changing.
·_ ·-
..
Though the polict: say th¢y.' have
no
suspects aftllis;~im'e; th e. possi~Iit~ th at
or if he really .care{ab'out' his·'constituents.
.
•
·
In orqe( t<>.
cri~idze. President Clmton,.
they could be Manst students. ro~ked the campus 1110.r:e
than
the blastmg mthe
. .
so
the American public is riot only goirig
•
both the press and ~he vqter~ should look_
at
Chainpagnat loL
:
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>.\
.>_,:,r>
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..•
·•
••..•...
··
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to be paying higher taxes, butthey arego-
their own expectations of him. Are _w~
g1v~
A student escort service cduld help mend the fractures the Manst coinmum-
ing to be respon~ible
for
paying
.taxeson
· ing Clil}.t9n,
aJ~ir chance? Are we w1llmg
to
ty has been subjected because·,orthe
rape.
..
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.·
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monies from last January.
:-> .
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sacrifi.ce:to
chang~?
·.>
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Marist likes to tout itself as aAamHy_. Many, including-The _9ircle, scoff at
..
·The
bill passed only because ii-'gives
.the
People aid riot]ike Clinton'.s eco11om,~c
this sappy description;.l1owiivef
,"
because of hs size, the College is like a small..
•
public two years to pay what they owe; Tllis. pla11,
which was evi~el}t
in the stru~gle to ~eL
town. It is the trust one puts in fell ow sttid~!}tsthat helps bin.d this place tog~ther:
entire bill scares me because it says
.when
a
it through the Senate. Why do. we. need
.it?
•
Now
as
we simply-do notkrtowwho the assailants.are, the family fragmented.
group of people waritto: collect;taxes·fn>m
.W:e·~eed
it ~ecause we allowed
-~~q:,ast
h"!'o
This crime
has
sown•the hidious seeds
·of
suspcion· and distrust among us..
··pa.S
t years,
.if
the majority. wins,: ~e:'pay. presidents to aCCUlll';ll~tea
$4
trlWOl}_defiClf;
A
•
studen· t.
:es
.•
c·
·ort.
-·s·
ervice
·could
be the
.solution.
Not only would it free up·_
securi-
:
Wbat st
oPS
the government fr~ril coll!!ctjng
•·
••
Vf
e ha.v~
to:start g.ivplg
the Preside~t credit
.
.
on four or. five years ago?
••
•
•
••
• .,
,
for. at
I.east:
attemptmg to dea1
...
w1th, the
ty
to do·its du!1es,it could also help restore students' faith in each other.
Don'tgetmewrc>1tg,as·farashigheffax~, mc:>nstrotJsprqblemsfacingournation,
..
~e
Of course;
·now
the real test begins. T.Jie crime is nearly two.weeks old. Peo-
1•don'tmind·payingthem;
,but·
I ~o haye a 11eedto sta~ lo9ki~g at some of the very im-.
pie tend
'to
have short attenticm spans. People are taking sensible preca~tions
pr()blem with not seeing the results untjl '95 pottant
·
things
·clmton
has· dont: for. th~
stiU, but.how long will this la-st? Another week?A month? We can not simply
or
'96.
This is just another example of the American people.
''/·.
•
.·.
.
....
forget or cQnvince oursel\les th~!J~is is a _done _a11d
over.
_
.
.
same oid democratic tradition
of
tax
·and
for instance; Clinton is responsible fo,r Iif-
.•
The lessons vve learn
,from
the rape and its aftermath could ·be some of the
spend...
•
•
.
.
.
• "
• • . ..
'ting
t~e gag
rule/Also;
the Family Leaye Act
most valuable we I~am ar Marist.
•
•
The most obvious_ example· of.Clinton
..
finally.passed, and seyeral
_key
appomtees,·
What
•
•
•
a
VISIOD.
-:·
,·.
Vision '94, and what a vision it i~. This once serene, picturesque hamlet on the Hud-
•
son now is a virtu~I battleground. Students are awakened by ihe pleasant hammering
sounds of construction at hours eyen
.administrators
would deem o,bscene.
.
Of course,· to be on campus is"
gocxi fortune. Even those in Canterbury found themselves
.
the object of envy when school opened. At least they were able to move into their assigned
residence areas;
•
•
Those who were scheduled to live in the Land M sections.of.the new Townhouses
became displaced persons. A pool everi started on the actual date they would be allowed
to 01ove into the rooms they paid for.
••
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.
.
.
,
.
. .
.
Sources say few picked the Sept. 24, the.date the College said they would be finished.
There's only one thing to say about the delay and inconvierice these students have
had to endure: construction happens. Few will disagree the new Townhouses are worth
the wait.
•
Why, even the greatest cynic of Marist's tuition-drained population will concede the
College did something right this time.
·
·
Of course, the parking situation can overshadow this in a wink. The word came down
from the dizzying heights of the adminsitration that students were to be banished to
the netheregions of the campus fo~ parking. .
.
Even in past years, students have not felt safe leaving their cars in these lonely areas.
Now, in light of recent events, the safety of tbeir vehicles takes a backseat to their own
well-being. Overall, the year begins much as it ended Ia,st May. Students are content,
but not happy, and the powers that be are pretending
.to
do something about it.
.
So be it. Let the gam~ begin.
•
•
.
.
.
•
..
·._
..
second~guessing
himself ~ould be his ''waf~
:
inc}udi~g
Supreme ~ourt}udge ~t1th }lader
••
fling'? on his issue of;homosex,u~ls in the
•
Ginsburg.
•NOYf,
qinton
1s
pushmg his new
'militai:y.·.
This is riot'about whetJter they·· health care plan and NAFfA.
.
'C
..
•.
• •.
•
should or should not be allowed to·serve, but
.
i
Clinton is•atso r~ponsible'for.bonibing
•
about "flip-flopping."! do;believe
honiosex-
,
Iraq in retaliation
·ror:
an ~ttempt to
_kill
uals should be. able to serve.
.
·...
.-.,.
•
.
George Bush. He has had to pay close att~il~
_·_:While
campaigning, Clinton was adamant.· tion to the World Trade Center bombing; to_.
about homosexuals serving in the military,
.events
in theformer Yugoslavia and in the.
QnlY to' soften his views four and a half
•
former Soviet Union, and !O the disasterin
months later.·
.
.··.
.
..•
.
Waco,.Texas.
•
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W'hatit really comes down··to is.the fact
Americans. n~
tq
:start
analyzingth_e
that Clinton is weak. We all kno\\',.that if the. President's.aciions for themselves, instead of
President.gets killed, we are goil)g to. have letting the pr~ do it for them.
to swear in Bill (see first paragraph if you
As Americans, we need to re-evaluate
do not understand).
.
.
•
.
what we expect from our presidents and put
•
I have a lot of respect for Hiilary; but the it into acti9~. \Ve need
.to
5top criticizing
American people did not vote for her, they President Clinton
.and
pay more attention to
voted for her husband, and somewhere.in the reasons. for Clinton's actions.
between January and now~ I think we forgot
.
Thirty years ago, President Kennedy had
that.
•
thisfo say about the Oval Office, "I would
Well, I have written almost 450 words on
say
that the problems are more difficult than
•
what Clinton has done, but when I re-read
t
had imagined them to. be. The respon-
•
this article, I realized that he really has not sibilities placed on the United States are
.
done any- thing, and I guess that is what I greater than I imagined them to be, and there
wanted you to realize.
are greater Umitations upon our ability to
And that my friends is what he said.
bring abouta favorable resultthan
I
had im-
•
agined them to
be."
•
,
Scott Sullens is one of
The·
Circle's.· Caroline
·Jonah
is one of The Ci_rcle's
•
political columnists.
.
.
political
.co~omn~ts.
•
••
THE
CIRCLE,
V:1
EWP©I NT
.
SEPTE~~ER 23,
1993
7
·.uu~r:
.• <~;.•jCt;~~e···~~h~i~~!,.~1~ht~~
..
··bl~t~~,~~~wb;
I~·
.;Beirig_the
die~hard Red Sox-fan. pkay, 9.ut I_was seated at
_the
back
,vrit~. this
'now;
As
·th·e
security
that I
am;
it is":very
difficult to ap-
•
of_
our pa~k, and so everyone i~-the guards were escorting. the pyros
plaud the actions~of:a
.
.Yankee.·. rq~s ~e_hmd me we!e:now
_made.
from" the
-starids,
Paul O'Neill
Howe~er, du~ to events tha! occur-
aware of ~y loyalties; Our gro~p
ttirew a ball" to me.-Either he was
red_ to me_ atYankee Stadium on
was then joined. by the entire
ta_king
target practice on the newly.
•
Sept.: 1_7,
tha~ ha~ c~anged,_
I)1ave
-
bleacher
.section
in
pointing. out
bare~headed Sox fan in his hatred
•
·
found, respect fop_outfiel?er::~aul
.
•
which team 1 supported.
_
for Boston, o:r he was displaying an
,
O'Neil( for
•
disregarding,<: t_he
·:
_
;
:
•
:
.
act of decency and sportsmanship
Boston/New
.
York rivalry ,':'arid----
.
In any_event; some people in the
showing a bit of sportsmanship.
group behind us decided' to do
•
-·
•
•
•
•
something about it that was not so
-
A
group qf: 30
•
b~
so
.
Marist good m~tur~d.,
•
.
_ .
students,· ~d.er th,e orchestration
.•
:'
Whenthe chant di~d d~wn, a
of
__
The
__
Circle s
_
?wn
:red. new one emerged from those fine
•
Holmlu~d, made th~ tnp down to
.
upstanding citizens. They were say-
·_wthet
Shtatdhnuyn
thk~t Fknday
•h~ost to.
,
ing, "Burn his hat; burn his hat!''
•.
a
C
e· an ~es eep t
,~1r
l?en-
Seconds later, I was de-cap~d-; and
nant
_dreams
alive, but
•
a· few to
•
watched in horror
as
those drunken
.
wat~h the Sox play the role of
morons tried to set
·my
Sox hat
spoller.
aflame;with their-lighters.
. .
_
I fell into the latter category, and
I can honestly call them morons
everyone in our group knew it. For
•
:~ecause
apparently they forgot that
~
inost of the game, we would good-
-
1t_
~as, at the time, still drizzling,
•
naturedly call into question the
.
an~ was for most of the night.
skills of the team we were rooting
L<;>g1c
would_.
tend to dictate that
against, and occasionally that ques-
.
wet doth does not burn, but ap-
tionirig would ;i)so deal with their parently these Yankees' fans felt
sexual preference (do da; do da.).
_that
they. could defy the laws of
However', ~tiings. chang~d
•
during natt1re during this ritual sacrifice to
that has not appeared in New York
since ... the Indians gave the Dutch
·such
a generous deal.
,
.
.
.
I am.guessing that since Paul is
:_i(l_h_is
first year as a·member of the
Yankees, he has not had enough
.
time to start
·hating
the Red Sox
that deeply (although I could
_be
•
wrong.)
In any event, one might suspect
that after an incident like this I
would learn my lesson, and should
the opportunity arrive, that I would
not wear a Sox hat at Yankee
Stadium.
However, like I already said, I
am a die-hard Boston fan which
means I have the common sense of
•.
a Buffalo Bills fan.saying, "Well
they'll NEVER lostf FOUR in a
row/' So riexf time I think I will
•
the wait' between the sixth. and :,yhate':'.ei:.
beer
god
they were
·
sevent~
·innings,
.
worshipping.
• •
_
• •
•
_.
•
stay in the middle of the pack; and
_At--
p:eriodic times during the
game, the crowd would point out
-
a Red Sox. fan and start' a chant
•
that likened him to a part of the
anatomy that.I wiH, dtie to com-
mon decency, refer to by.its scien-.
tific term: "tlie rectum.'' And so
...
To their credit:
'ih~y
did n'tan~ge not
•
expose myself to the hostile
a
·small
flicker, and to brown the
_
masses
'beyond
the group.
it was that my friends (and I now
use that:term· loosely), began the
chant and oointed at me.
-
edge~
_of
my poor
~at.
•
l
now had two options: A. stay
_
where I· was and
_take
the ribbing
•.
from myfriends, or B. go politely.
•
ask the gentle people for,my hat
back; and have my friends come
visit me iii the hospital.
·
•
I am just thankful that the
"lighter patrol" never found out
that I was wearing Boston Red Sox
boxer shorts.
Steve Crane, senior
._
What':S
..
that
•
slllell?.
.
.
.
.
.
Editor:
·
•
·
k
·
·
.-
-
·k?
p
•
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·
w
1
b
·k
1
h
I
M .
.
is e~p1~g
!rac . erhaps those of
•
. e
_com~
a~
O SC 00
.
an st.
us. low on socks.
.
--
the dirt.
.
.
Smee I hve m the H-section of
,_:;
:;'1'We:t1ave
been woken
u
•
at 4:'JO
Then, later dealing with the grass
the new townhouses (perhaps bet--~.:.
0
-i-••,,
0
,
_.
:.:·-·
h
.
-
•.
.
Y
tei: known
aifil'.i'e'i••rrib~t'doiie
sel:;j,--.:_~_
..
,i.n:--ry,.t,g:,:;J
e sound~
/1?.f
heavy
mauer,Ahat, would have seemed
. ,,
_
.
.
.. .--.--
_
- .
-
..
.
. ..
__
. -
::::!Tiach,1r,i~_ry,;:_S.oIB~l!<>.W
;-J~¥ing; up
.
.
chronologicalto m·e..
• •
'
t1on ), I J~st have.to say Uove it
·.
·the.grass
they spent time pla.nting
here .. I thmk the rf:st of
-t~~.
~c-
·_
seems counterproductive. when a
,
'.
cu pants ~ould_ back me up_
<;>n
this._.. laundry room seems at a standstill.
-
.
•
Hope_fully,_no
one who lives here
..
)t
is:still an empty roi:mi, with·a
1s creatmg_ dirty_ laundry be.cause
.
-
lot of glass windows.· ft see ins that
t_hat
would certamly be a problem,
_
_
they cot1ld have been "planting our
after all_,
we have n<;>Jaundry
rpom:
.
washers
:and
dryers,", instead of
.
.
Yes, it was_
promised
_to
us by
.the
grass.
_back
in the• beginning
•
of
tim_e
we go_t
bite~ (Sept. ~), b~t_w_ho
, :
September. and now
..
be tearing up
-ATTENTION
,
Hopefully, we will soon see the
laundry room. In. the meantime,
eit}oy the walk to Gartland. Who
,vould have ever thought doing
laundry could be such a_ great
•
exercise.
Lisa Schuster, senior
_
Advertising
-
&
Business Majors
The Circle is looking for 2 or 3 responsible, motiv~ted, outgoing students to
assist us in our advertising. If you are interested, please contact Jennifer Pon-
zini, Advertising Manager at,,X4938 A.S.A.P.
WIMPS-NEED N()T APPLY!!!!
Looks
great
on
a resurrie
.... :Earri
c~mmissio_n!!!
.-
How to reach
1Js:
•\ Mondays:
11
a.m. to 5 p.m .
E-Mail: L 1·
211,
HZAL
• Phone r\~ail: X2429
MARTIN LUTHER
KING, Jr .
.
"I have the audacity to
believe that peoples eve-
rywhere can have three
meals a day for their bod-
ies, education and culture for their
minds, and dignity, equality and free-
dom for their spirit$. I believe that what
self-centered men have torn down,
other-centered men can build up."
Cooperative
education offers
equal and
excellent opportunity
to all persons, regardless of race, gender, creed or ethnic background.
To find out about the opportunl_tles
available to you 1.n
co-op contact:
Desmond Murray, Assistant Director of Field Experience
Marlst College, Poughkeepsie,
NV 12601
(914) 57S.3543
-
......
'
t,_,··
t~t)
"~·~:
1;r
f:._,:.i:..
,.
8
canterbut-,:r
...
·.cr"cJWcl·.:·enters.
las·t.·.
·year:_:-
Thinkof
th
~sixwomen
-
·
·
-
.1··
· .. , ....
•
=·
•
•
-.
.
·,;
closesttoyou.
by
MARCIA ROSBURY
•
•
.
Staff Writer
•
__
·
It's got leaky faucets, plugged-
up toilets, less-than-sturdy decks,
the van, and it's in its final year on
:
··w~_an take tu.tns paying fe>r st~~dily.
•
•
••
·...
.
•
a controlled<e~viroilme~t •
.
•
.
:Ni"
/'
_::;,
•.
. .·
.goru.otctehreietsr,as.mha_kl·:it~sgwmoeralk··,.snag:·.no.dutt,aq:kwi~tge'
,
__
• .··unlike
:;t~de~ttlivin;i(i.n-
..
·•
:\
1
/hile·P~tk':s~Jiri's"f6.,be
i11'
the,,·
wTi~c-·'h':o~we···_~
__
;;:®nessb.e··'·ra:
.·.·;·
_·._-·e·
'.d;'
dependentlfii~:off~canipus· ho.us< ffiajbrity~ith,hissati~faction with.
lll
ll
WW
p
we~~; other itudents/Jifei,:at
-
~!~t~~~~;\:!~~~1~~/J~ftci~:,
~~~~tef:a~:~~~rit~·,:::;;-
0
!blt~-
··:
·,
·.·_@year}: •
•
the Marist housing scene;
.
And some students claim they
are actually going to miss Canter-
bury GardenApartments wheri the
new townhouses and dormitory are
finished for the 1994-'95 academic
year.
..
_
_
.
e-anterbury, located on Route
44-55 east of Poughkeepsfo, about
Canterbury is more difficult.
•
phone installation
·and
'their.m.ons
transportation and
:the
fact ihat
•
••••
:
••.
_,
••
-;
thl_y.bill,
which s_
w_·ts
some
__
J·ust_
fin_
e. they are
·separated
from campus
&eout~six~womcnwillticiriuallymuhcd~)W-
" It '.s
•
kind of hard
·
because_ my
But
>W
QJI
change
11,e
odds
of
it~
Silnply
b'/
uymg
shower hasn't drained_
since th_e
day·
·
•
•
·'
--
'
.-
: '
•
••
·.,.
·
'
·· •
life;.:.
•
ioll'OM!litua!iooslhalkMiwor)'OCl!fricodswlllcnblc.
••
.
.
Despite the comriiute; the repairs
rorsUilen.
illlow
io:urily
mwuies.
Doo\propn:sidcna:ball
I
got here," said·Sean McFeeley, • and the frustrations
of
being off-
•
.'
Next year·,
.
though,
"these.
doorscpcn.Walkwithafricoo~clm:.Andbcawarclhatdate
a junior conimunicatioris major
campus,~ some students_ said they • students
wm
·
at least have the op-
npeisamappoolanoocdlegccampuscs.
WllhllWl)'ofthcsc
from-Ne_w
Fat_
·meld, Conn.
•
h f
d
d
-
•
t1·on·_
---o'
f_·1,•v·1•ng·_
o··n·_
-
·c·
am.pus·,•·
and
npesilrlolvingdrinking,:
•·.-,_
•
..... ..: ......
•
•·
enJOY
t e. ree om an . experience.
lbcoshmlllesefacUwidlsixof)Wffiicah.tuN-,-nooe
.
"l have no car, so it's a hassle
..
·
.
. -
,
..
.
.
Canterbury will'be a distant Marist
oftbcmwillbecaneancchersutislic. "
•
to go shopping}or groceries,".
Freddie P·eck, a junio; from
memory'.
...... ----~
•
McFeeley said,. "but
.we
dp get
•
Newtown Square, Pa., said hisJiv-
HBO and hardwood floors, too."
ing, arrangements
are quite
a 15-minute commute from cam
0
pus, is scheduled to be,phased out
•
of the Marist housing plan after
io
-years
of college use, Canterbury's
'·Resident
Director Donald Godwin
said.
.
-
•
--
.•
The number cif students· cciliing
•.
.
Canterbury, horn¢
.
this year
•
is •
"down a small n'uinber from last
comfortable.
•
•
"My apartment is spa~ious an&
living out here gives me a type.of-
.-
independence that! didn't get on
The·
Novels
of·
AYNRANO.
Deb Komusin, a junior
•
from
_
year/' Goclwin•said.-;
Shirley, N.Y., said that she ,vill
,
·
·
,
:miss
the freedom and responsibHi-
•·-
GOd~in sa.id that.over_ thi{years
. ty of Canterbury Hving.<
.
_
...
--.
·.
• ..
'
since Maiis(has lodged students in
·
'.'This gives me
a
.chance::
to .. Canterbury,
the number, of
'disdpline
myself and make rational,
-
studenis.living·Jhe·re:-has
increased
choices•rathei-than having:an. RA.
(resident assistant) or
RP
(resident
i
director) do so
for
nie; "iShirley.
:
·said.:
..
•
_
·- ·•
:
-•
.
_,
>
. .
But
·Komusin'
.finds
.
herself
•
plagued b}'a problem comm·on)o
many.Canterbury n,sidents - lack
of private transportation.
. •
.
Although she hopes eventually to
bring her car to school, Komusin
.
•
said
•
she is surviving because;
"Everyone I live with and around
•
is
\villing
to-help each other out.
SPRING BREAK
7
Nights From $299
'~
■
-CONVENIENT
LOCATION
Huntington, Long Island campus
is easily reached by publfc or private
transportation.
,
.
■
DAY AND EVENING CLASSES
Select either a Full-Time Day.
.Part-Time
Day, or Part-Time Evening
schedule.
·campus,"
he said.
•
Peclcsaid he enjoys:the conve-
nience of cooking for himself, and'
he finds it easier to clean iri such
ll
you wish
to
receive admission
materials and/or arrange for a campus
.
visit, you are encouraged to contact:
-
.
Oifice of Admission
•
.
.
.
Jacob D. Fuchsberg
Law
Center.
300.Nassau Road
..
•
•
Huntington, New York 11743
Includes: Air, Hotel,. Transfers, Parties
andMorel
•
•.•
•
■
ACCREDITATION
TOURO COLLEGE
.
The Law
_Center
is Fully
•
I;
Phone
(516) 421-2244
ext.
314
NASSAU • PARADISE ISLAND
•CANCUN
~
JAMAICA • SAN JUAN
•
.
_·
Oiganii.e a small group -
Earn FREE trip plus commissions I
•
Approved by the American "-JACOB
o.
_
•
_
Bar Association.
•
.
FUCHSBERG
@1~ •
:LAW
CENTER
·an·
at ii rm alive action
I
.
•
equal opportunity
institution
•
Th~Fo~tainhead_anclAtl~Shrugg'edhave
captivated
millions
of read-
ers
~nee
their
publicati<>~
They
have~
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many
to
study
the.ideas
,,
•..
.-··
•
'
',...
.
'
.
behind the novels.
•
A
murse
·exploring
Ayn
Rand's
unique
vision
c;,f
ratioI¥U
fu.<:'Ught;
indi-
vidilillism.
_
respectfo_r
achievement,
and•freedom
is being.offered
in
Poughkeepsie,
beginnirigwithafit?e
introcluctoiy
Joctrire.
The
iecture
will
;
be
~ffeled
on three
riights
from
7:00
p.m
~
'.9;30
p.m
• •
.•
-Se~
28-Holiday
inn:503 ~ington
Alie,
Kingston·
•
~-:~-M~rrioU Courtyard,
400·~
~d;(Route 9}, Poughkeepsie
Sept 30 Horiday
Inn, Route 9
and
1-84,
FIShkiU
.
This.
COlJl'Se
iloffered by
the
~tute-for Objectivist
'studies.
a
widely
,
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lll
the
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Objectivism.
ilie pbil<>sop~y
of
Ayn
rikcL
·---
•
To
reserve
a seat
for this
-
lecture,
or
for
information
on
our student and
other
programs,
please
~l~
at
471-6100
or_l-800-374~1776.
1-800-GET-SUN-:1
•
-""----_-;.,..-~_-_;.-_----: ...
-::::::_..J~----~-----,-..;.;.........,.,......;_,-,:...~-.;..__;__
_ _;___.__.,.,.....
__
;__.,...--'-:-'--,..,.....--.----'----,-~-------------'------------'--'----'-----,
..
'J1,a1
penny
jar on your dresser
.
_
AJJpieltfa,intosb
_
_
•
ColorGaS!i~4/lXJ,
Buill-in
JU'.
OJ/or
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and Apple
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iple
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Now,
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student
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with
the Apple"
Computer
Loan·
-
call
1-800-877-4433,
ext.
40. Or,
visit
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•
·'THE CIRCLE;· SEPTEMBER 23,
1993·
9
Eall
Semester
sees
initiation
,_E_d_--=---j.u_.-k_··
a_--,--sh_u_n_?_-----,
.pf
N'.13,rist
lionp~s
program
by
ROBERT G>TARGOS
'.,J1onors· classes, from majors· such
The program goes a step further
Staff Writer ·
•
as communications, environmmen-
because it has an open enrollment
"THIS
LOT FOR~·,.
____________
• tal • science, psychology
and
policy, which means that a student
The image of an honors student : business.
•
•
••
• '
. not already in the honors program
with a pocket protector and thick
Steven Tedford, a freshman
may still applfto take an honors
glasses _has changed:
from South Windsor, Conn,,: said • cours.e.
With the . beginning of the. fall he believes the honors program im-
The application will be reviewed
-BR N
semester, Marist has introduced an proves a student's ability.to stµdy.
by iristrudor and the director of the
experimental honors-program.
..
''It gives yo,ll.an extr.a incentive
honors program. "The flexibility
In March of 1992, the 1aculty en-
to do. the hard work,". said. Ted-
and the opportunity that is built in-
dorsed the program proposal by a ford, a math inajor who takes
to this program, I think is wonder-
vote of-92-15-in a plenary session, . statistics:.
•
ful," Elko said.
PERMIT ONLY
and the Marist Board of Trustees
As the program grows; more
1n the past, some students have
approved· the program in April.
courses will be introduced for
criticized the idea of an honors pro-
• The honors program had been . fres_hman and upperclassmen·.
gram because they think it will
originally scheduled to start in the
. In addition to .befog offered in . isolate certain students not involv-
spring of 1993, howevera delay in Liberal Studies, honors can get ap-
ed in the program. "We took that
faculty appointments halted the···. proved by the honors· council for • into into consideration," Elko said.
program.
• a specific major, by having the • '"It's part of the reason you see so
ALL ORTHERS
WILL BE TOWED
AT OWNER'S
EXPENSE
~
pr. Constance Elko chaired the faculty of the discipline deciding if
much choice.
H
(isolation) is bad
ad hoc committee which wrote the . they want to offer the honors
for them (honors students) as well
honors proposal.
.
•
program:
•
•
as for the. rest of the college."
"Registration had already occur-
The honors council, which is
The Vice-President of Academic
red for the following year and sec- directed by Elko, has received pro-
Affairs,
Marc vanderHeyden,
tions of classes were set," Elko posals from Computer Science, already sees a pqsitive response
said. ..
Computer Information Systems from many.honors students.
During the 92-93 school year, the and Political Science.
• "The students are more willing
honors council was established to
A student's elibility for the pro-
to participate in class,'' said
oversee the honors program.
gram will initially be determined by ·vanderHeyden,
who is team
Marist offers «Introduction to his or hei- high school transcript,
teaching '.'Arts and Values" with
Philosophy,"
"Introduction . to Elko said. A student who proves , Virginia Marquardt.
Statistics" and "Arts and Values" outstanding ability can be admitted·
According to vanderHeyden, the
as honors classes for this semester. into honors with recommendations ·· material isn't more difficult or
62 frt':shman._
are enrolled_ in from professors.
more fast paced.
BE-A .GOOD···NEIGHBOR
Whether you ·1ive off campus or not
Consideration
for the good.people
of the area,
In their
homes and in their
neighborhoods,
Is important~·
The Marist'tradition
is,c:onsideration
for and commitment
tothe:we.ll·being,Of
our local
communities.
::t"·,
NEW
... continued from page 4
Andrew Boris, • a senior from
Union, N.J., said he likes the way
the townhouse kitchen is set up.
"The size of the kitchen is great,
and the second refrigerator creates
a lot of room." Boris said.
Students were also· impressed
with the size of the townhouses,
especially in the common area and
the. kitchen ..
"We have a lot of room. We're
not always tripping over each
other.': said Suzannen Brown, a
senior from Delmar, N.Y.
Despite the enthusiasm of mov-
ing into somewhere new and other
benefits such as their size, not all
-studen1s are completely satisfied
with the job done on the new
townhouses.
Brian Mac Lellan, a senior from
Greentown, P.A., said he is unhap-
py. with the laundry situation.
''It is really inconvienient
to
have
to go elsewhere to do my laundry."
said Mac Lellan.
*
EARN INCOME
1
93
*
• The ·Princeton Review is seeking a highly
motivated, well organized and extremely
personable self-starter :to ~erve as our part-
time _ on-campus qiarketing representa_Uve.
Youwill be given the opportunity to put your
marketing skills and creativity to work, a:nd
your efforts will be rewarded with compe~-
tive pay, performance bonuses and many other
incentives. Call today for more information!
THE-
PRINCETON
REVIEW
we score more
800/995-5565
The Prio«toa
Renew
is
oa
:affiliated 11,ith
Prin<eton Uoivcni:)' or the Eduatioa•I Testing Service.
Earn $200- $500weekly malling 1993 Travel brochures. For more
Information send a self addressed stamped envelope to:
Travel Inc., P.O. Box 2530, Miami; FL 33261
~1w
l~r~
~iij
• l~1~
Ill!!~
•
~1w
Jlrlll
And Many
Other
Destinations!
n· ~tf
fot
· I Stalut
tJtftO
Stalutf •
t,ata
atl
(ld«r"'-aa
fl,-alaaa
.
>'f'
Poughkeepsie:
ub City,
246 Main Mall • 485-3579
~~
,1 ,-
Arlington
fHORTJ..!NE
Arlington
Getty,
813 Main St.• 454-3530
Circle
photo/Matt Martin
Holly Boynton, a senior from
Simsbury, Conn., is the Resident
Assistant for sections H and I. She
said she feels sympathetic towards
townhouse residents looking for
their laundry room.
Boynton said that there is no of-
ficial date for the completion of the
laundry room. "We just have to be
patient," she said.
Students have pointed out other
problems existing with the new
townhouses.
Jennifer Ross, a ..
senior from Northpor~,
N.Y.,
said
· she 'is is not very
happy:
wiih' some~k':-_-,,.,,
.
of the work that was done and the
work that was not completed in her
townhouse. "There was some slop- ••
py work done in my townhouse," .
- Ross said. "Our sinks and toilets .
leak when used."
Rich Finn, a senior from
Yorktown, N. Y., said, "just hear-
ing the term "new" townhouses
makes it that m•.tch better."
PARKING>;-_
... continued from page 3
Connolly and Carmichael sa'id •
that the purpose of the petition. is'-·
to make themselves heard and to
bring the problem to the attention :
of the administration and Security.' •
"We'd be happy with a com-
promise," Carmichael said.
"If
they. would let us park near our;
houses on evenings and weekends~
that would be a great improve~.
ment."
••
Carmichael added that she was .
surprised at how overwhelmingly •
upset that people were about the .
situation.
•
"People are very upset and ;-
negative towards Marist," she said_-,
"It's not just the parking. Yoti
don't hear positive things from
people, especially upperclassmen, •
anymore."
Connolly said she believed the
problem was poor preparation for.
the
changes
Marist
was
undergoing.
"The parking system won't'
stand still," she said. "The school.
needs to start thinking more in the
long term when they begin these
projects."
Leary said that Security would
increase enforcement of parking
policies by issueing parking tickets,
boots, and eventually resorting to
tow trucks.
"We do not want to tow
anyone," Leary said, • "however
people need to know that we are
serious."
...
10~~...;__....:.:,_
_
_;_~_..;..-...;;..;_...;.__~~.......:.._:T:,:H=E~·•
.C=l::.:R=C=LE::_,~·•.
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1:.:9:.:.9.:.3
___
~----:--------------:-~~""'.'""".""-
'
in the ~omb'.Thetefore, it is the moth~r ofali credit cards.iSome experts attribt1te the~e feeHngs,
-
.
.
.
.
'
'
.
'
.
.
'
._.
.
-.
.
.
.
.
',
.
•
to the
·citibankPh9tocard,
the~onl;·~redit card ;ith your photo onit. A voice i~sid~' says, ~·This
,,,
•.··
-,-.---•
-..
.
i~
me~ r1atl;:~et
_(As,opposed-.ip,}Whe>
t~~,h~~kis that1,;~a ~ommon response tothephoto
•
.
•
-
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·-
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:.·
.
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:-.S.ubjffi:1
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ro111
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receivi;1xGtiba11k
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Classic Vi.ia
Plwtocwrl.
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to
·your
self.,image,
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Of course if your ciI"d is
; :\eyer:~iost
or. stolen
a~d
1
a
··stranger
is. prevented from ·using"
it,'
··;dd'ir:foe)
·exceptionaHy:gooq
(showing_
no sjgns··of Credit
•
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'
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Other
;~xperts
point
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specific
•
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such as The Lost
Wallet""
Service thatcan repl~ce
;
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'
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card ~sual ly within.
24,:
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tomer
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1ine, y~ur"hotH11¢/ifyou \vi1};_for:any ~ard-
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related ~nxiety whatsoever. ~: Further analysis reveal$' three
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·-·.
,·
'
• '~e;vices-that
protect the.pu~chas~s you make on
th~
Citiba~k
.,-
,
(
~
,,;
·,
'Clas~ic\~isa
card; at no additi~n~?6p~t
L'
Buytirs Secur~ty·~:c:an,
cqVe/them agains(1b6iclental'
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6f ,heft,
for
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dais~ij~•',~oda;e•·Jf~ulf~i{/t~~f
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or.·~6J/~;f~~t~iik
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Lifetime Warranty,\auo\1/S
:
one to exterid}(h~
·:wa~n1nty
for
the expe¢t~d
-;e(vice '
.
:.·
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your photo added
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earl~
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Tt:iE
CIRCLE,, SEPTEMBER
23,
:1993:
·.
,'
....
·.·.
•,
.........
:":,·
,,
•..
·
[\Z~Jlrtg,_.}llni,.~t~
St@rf
oiiJ1;g~.
•
•
•
:,
by
GR~G-·
BIBB
.
•
•
:
p~t~d in
tw~m~·~i{:The
PifthA~~
•
19 t~ams\v.ith a
score
of 368. Navy
....
'S
ff
w .
'
nuaL Central Corinecti.ctit-
s.
tate
)V9n
..
111~
meet w.
i~ll
...
·,t·h
..
e low
SC.
or.e of
••
/:
•;._t~
•
nter
University:1nvitaiionaLand-The
·
41,.,,
.
.-.:,.,,
,·.•~>·
·
;·-· ,:,,._
.
. '
.Youth:
'.:,
.
:.
,
.
.
.·
·,
,
<·
.•
Fordham Invitational at
Van
€or-
••.
•.
;Thelistoft~a~swho,
competed
....
·It
is'the·one wo·rd to describe this tlaridtPark
..
·
·•
..
·•.
••
·
•
,>::··>.,_
'"
included:·
·Cornell,··
·Har;v~rd,
•
year's men's and women's cross
·
In·
·connecticut
•
the women
.
Lafayette and host Fordham.
.
'
couritryJeams.
•
. .
C
•
>: .
finished fifth while the men notch-'.
<.
Consistency seems to be an ear-
'
...
•
The men's team is returning five ed a second place finish trai'Iing oh-:
•
•
..
lY,
theme ipn_o~~
.the.
women.as ~he
.
'runners: However, absent from last ly,Providence College:
..
•
.
.
.
.squa~
follo~ed its.fifth p~ace fimsh
•
.,years
third place North East Con-
.
Freshman Kathline Woodson led
at <::01,1nect1cut
with a sixth place
ference squad are Dave Swift and
the Red Foxes while Brian Ordway
•
showing in· the Bronx .. ,
.
•
.. •
·
..
Marty F<:nney,. two oLthe: Red placed third for the men, just eight
•
..
Women's coach Phil Kelly said
Foxes most reliable and con~istent seconds off the winning time;
.:.
. the. competitio11 ~quailed
"the
runners.
.
Men's Head Coach Pete Colaiz~
-
,Dukes'
anct·-:North CaroHnas" of
.•
.
The youth inovem:entcan also be zo said he was pleased with his
_basketball
adding. !he_ woman's
•
seen on the woman's team where team's perfomance taking}n. t~ a_c~.,
'.i,program.her_e.~t
Manst 1s now run-
•
·eleven
of the. thirteen runners· are count "an unusual amount of in-
mng agamst some of the top teams
either freshman or sophomores.
juries'1which are plaguing the team
in the country ...
.
•
Fortunateiy for Marist, youth in
I
early in the 1993-campaign.
•
-
.· ..
-~od·Rose,
Brian Ordway, Josh
..
this case is not sym,nymous•with
The men's and women's teams
Wood and Todd Coulson all
growing pains.
.
.
•
ran into· Fordham University on
recorded personal bests on the For-
....
Despite the relative inexperience Sept. 18. and both squads· gained·
••
dham• course.
•
• •
·
.of
the two squads, success has.not
experience running against some of
The two teams. are off this
·
seemed to be a stranger in the ear-
the premiere squads on the East
weekend and are
.P_reparing
for a
Iy part of the ~eason.
•
•
Coast.
,
meet.at Colgate University ori Oct.
Both teams have.already com-
The men finished
twelft~
out of
2.
Netters (5-0) dOwil FDU, 9-0'
darkness is approaching.
Coach Harrison said he believes
•
'by
JIM DERIVAN
Maynard and freshman Mary
.
Marist was better than Iona.
,,
S_taff Writer
•
Beth Moscarello defeated'-Baluch
• '
"We were a better team, that's
•
.
and Janet Evelia (8-4).
wh.
y the score was so lopsided," he
The women's tennis team raised
d.
•
.
.
.
.
The Re Foxes swept Iona 9-Q, s.aid.
_
.
·
..
_
. _ .
its record to 5-0 by sweeping • on Monday.
•
•
'
,.
Once again,. McCaffrey and
•
Farleigh Dickinson, 9-0.
M C ff
d
~
II
f. h
c a rey an ,e ow res man O'Neille.d the
.Marist
charge posting
In sing·
!es play,.
•J·unior
Lisa
J
O'N
·11
d h R d"'
• h
•
en
e1 e t e e roxes m·t e a 6-0;6-0 straight set
win.
•
,
Maynard
•
led Marist defeating
singles matches, winning 6~0, 6-0.
Zilai also won her match
in
Toni-Ann Pierro in straight sets,
The
·tandem
of Maynard and straight se.ts, 6.-1, 6-2:
6-0, 6~1.
.
.
.
•
•
S
.
O'Neill
scored
an impressive
s~1
•
•
"
..
We want.ed to try our hardest,"
.
ophomore
,
Kim Zilai swept
S • "d
I h
.
.
victory. Charter and O'Hanlon
sa1·d·z·1·1a1·,
"We went.out with that
a1y1 e Ba uc , 6-1, 6-1.
1 f 11 d
• I
•
.
.
.
•
prompt y. o owe smt a so wmn-
atti"tude and we.took. advantage of
Freshman
•
Cara McCaffrey·
•
··
••
g 1
·
•
·
•
b
·
·
·
mg,·
-
•
•
our oppo.·nents·weaknesses, it was
a:lanced the charge scoring a 6-3,
F
•
I •
h D" k'
6
0
.
.
.
.
air e1g
1c mson was not as a pretty easy day.'.'
~
.·
victory over Katherme Aniiot.
•
•
•
h R d F
d'
h
•
strong as t e e
oxes, ac;co~ mg
In doublesaction, the Red Foxes
T e Red Foxes were just as
.
to Head Coach Ken Harrison.
d
dominant in doubles action.
"Fairleigh Dickinson was a were again led by Maynard an
Freshnian'Amanaa_Charterand
O'Neil who notched an impressive
.
.
.
.
weaker team," Harrison said. 8_1 victory.·
•
.
.
semor Kate O_'l:fanlo11
led the t~am.
·,.
''They lost_
some of their stronger
defeating"-Jennifer Buckley· arid·
•
playerS:';
•
•
The. Red
iFoxes'
next match
is
_Toni~Anri~Pierro,-·,s~2.
Tennis
.·
On Monday, the Red
,Foxes
home against St.
_Francis
(NY) on
:
teams'pl.{
ei
't
ame ro-sets, if
,
swept host Iona, 9-0.
Saturday.
;-•,·.-_··,,
...
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..
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r------------------~
1
ON WEEDAYS
SUNDAY
1
MCTV'S
11
1-on- l with
Jay
LaScolea"
+
"Sports Update
11
l
I
I
·
1
Q%
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2 PIZZAS,
GET
ONE
I
~
WrrHCOU~FF
fr
IBl
~ ~
R
•
!
~
i
Weekdays at 3:30pm on
Marist Channel 12
8
.SATURDAY
MARIST
SPECIAL
11
I
,
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Subs,
Get
One
I
: 25°/oOFF
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g
~
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L---------•--------~
A Whole New Perspective on
Marist Sports.
J.
WWW . . . .~ ..
~
,
...
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SEPTE_MB~R:23,J99 .• ••• • •
•
•.•
••
•·,
•
•
·-~~it1r11;r1,11
90
l~;::
• • • •
-
• .:. • • -- ,·
•
~lsJ~ad\i ~arriesf~;
4~
y~ds and'
••
b.Y
Teo:
HOLMLUND
two:fouchd6wns, •·. :·.•
.-/ , './ .. ··•
•.
•.
Sport~Edit~~C: .· •
••
..
·senior:
·qtiarterbatk··•Brian
Mccourt• ~as .6-14for.142 yards·.
·~to'
put .ir sfmpfy ,·it
,vas • and one touchdown·passi . , •
gornination:
.
•
. . . .
, . However, ilwas the defense who
.
·
• Trailing 7-0in the first quarter,.· led.tfie<charge fodhe Red Foxes.
Ma.rist • (2~0) rattled 'off:34
• •recording five sacks.and a·'rumble
. unansw.er~d points en rOUf~
to:~ ••
recovery;: •.. •
...
•.... . ' :
i ; .
•
• 47-19v1ctory over.Pace Umvers1ty
Senior defensive tackle ·Joe
on Saforday.
. ...
.
McGari.n . notched two . sacks:
.-The 47 points is a new school· • Sophomore nose. guard·.JeffSac~
record for the Red Foxes breaking, · comanno contributed a sack and
a
• 'the previous record:which came in
funible.recovery,. • . . ... ,· .•.
·: a·46s21 win over .Gallaudet in 1991; , .· • 'The·defensivelirie has improv-
. ·
.}Mari,s(
has started its inatig4ral-. • ed a lot;''· McGa~n saidi "Coach
, -· cairipaig~_in
Divis~on I~A:'\ P!ay:on • (Gary)
,Doherty
.. (deferi~iv~ line
' on)l posn1ve note outsconng ·~ op-
coach) taught us
to
be quick off.the
ponents 63-26 (including a-·16-7
,ball:",·
.
• •
·
.
.·..
·
opening,day win over SL Frnncis· • • • Saccomanno said the defense im-
(PA)). : .
. . . ,
. . , _ proved' its play after a lackluster
Despite the 1mpress1ve
wm, the ·start.
•
<
,.
.. .. .·
.
crowd was small/ 'fherewerepnly
''We steppei:Ieverything
up,"
he
l, 125 • .. fans .. m ,attendance.
s·aid. "Wejust played good.foot-
Leonidoff Field can seat 2,500 • ball;'' .·
.. ·. • .· .. ·.·.•
.
•
•
.··
people:
.
. '"·> • .•. •
..
·. • . •
. Head Coacl1Jim Parady said he·
. Junior· Kyle Carrara busts a tackle: on his way to ·his second touchdown. The. Red Fo_xes
. The Red Foxes c:ontroUed all" .· wru; pleased with the team's perfor-
three facets o.f the g1;11ne:>offense,
•
.
inance after the first quarter;
crushed.Pace 47::19· last-.Saturday.
•
.
Circle
photo/Matt Martin
def~nseand sp_ecial ~~allls. • .
C<Our,
seniors picked everyone
• Marist dominated the lirie, of
up;"the second~year _coach·said.
scrimmage griridirig .our217 yards
(Pace) Coach·(Doug)' Bieling said
·rushing .. · S<!nior
• : halfback Don .. he couldn't· believe. the defensive
D'Aiutoled the.ground attack with lirie?s pressure;"
.
• •
· 12 carries for 86 yards in the first
Marist's special teams \vere also
half but was'-forced .to leave .the
a key to the victory. Sophomore
game in. the second'because ofa hip •• pfac~~kicker Chris D' Autorio:had
pointer.
.
hvo field goals. Fellow.sophomore
Junior fullback Kyle Carraro
Chris Hancock also blocked a
•
punt.
· •
•••
teams on this year's schedule.
With the jump to Division I-AA,
According to new NCAA rules,
.: the Red Foxes now play as-an in-
dependent iri . the .. East Coast
all major sports'(football, baseball
.Athletic Conference (ECAC).
and basketball) have to be on the
Marist will still play against most' Division -I~AA-level;
• of its familiar Divisionlll foes·like
The Red Foxes traveled to Loret~
St. John's, RPI and Siena, who to to face St. Francis.(Pa)in its
also had to bump· their football· . season opener and scored a 16~
7
programs to the Division 1-AA win.
level'. However, Duquesne and
Once again, D'Aiuto led the
Central Connecticut are two new ru~hing attack gaining 116 yards on
23-carries.
Parady
said the offense,
• especially the line; did'the job .in the
crucial moments of'the game.
"The offense took charge when
they had to,'' he said. "When he
(D' Aiuto) has the big yardage it's
because of the offensive line." The
undefeated Red Foxes will host
C. W. Post Saturday at Leonidoff
Field at 3 p.m.
$pikers win first;
•
'
•.
•
.
.
Dunb·ar to miss entire
sea.son
z.cf@;\¥.tt·.Io:na,,in
fou:r,-,.
i:~··::
byJ~~~o~s
0
i:i~rUND
.
~;!s~:~~;i;~~{iilk!};!;i~
$:]}l:L~~L;t~~l~~*~Ei
'-·:!:'.,
<
1
<i''.''.'
•
•
::,.'>:·.
-·
•.
•.•
•
/ •
• • •• ••••
. • •
•.
·
· • • -~
·>
;':iSenior point guard Dexter Dun.7
•
~irig,;probation,or dismis.sal.{:'
.-. ;
freshman.. Daririy Basil~ :roi''the ·
·
'
by
TERI.
L ..
STEWART
were quick!y dampened by
bar will sit out:the entirel993-94
·.: The handbook also. says .a stu-
siai-tihiHifot:_:ii~ijg_wH\mo~t
iilcf-
•
>-Staff
Writer •
.Seton
Hall.
•
season as an academic redshirt, ac-
dent cari not participate in varsity
ly
be
the squad's
·starting
'point
•
:-·
~. ('We played hesitant:at fir
5t
cording to·Gene Doris, the direc-
athletics if the student is on proba-
guard this year·
. -Spike One in the win coluriin
and th eµ: we picked (it)'up and·.-~ tor of athletics.".·.·.,
. •• •
tion for two consecutive semesters.
It
·was a collective decision to
for the womeri!s volleyball
•
played,'' • senior co~captain
Dunbai,"a criminal-justice ma-
'~I'm Qbviously
disappointed not
declare Dunbar
as
an
academic red-
tea_Tmh·
.e··•.-
..
Re·
d.··F.oxes'
..
bro·k·e··
a·.s·•·
1
.x
Nicole.~ilenzi said. ''.We kn~w
jor; .still
.. •h~s .one ... m.ore year of. hav1.·ng Dexter av.iilable for this
shirt, Doris said.
••
.
•
when we were.
·coming
·in .here
1- •b·i·
d
1 · ,..
•
h R d
b •1 d
d h
h" • •
••
"He .(Dunbar) was part of the
·
•
.
e 1g1i 1ty·an ·can p ay,10r t e e
year
ut un erstan t at
t
1s 16'
game,, IOsirig streak defeating
thatthey'were very dominant: ..
·Foxes
next season provided he can. . : in his best interest; ,,Head Coach
decisio·n ·making process," the
Ion~' CoHege, , J5-13, 13~15,
and we had. to play our best'
iin···
prove. hi.s.·academ.ic;standing:·
.. • Dave M.agarity said in a· press
athletic director said.<'After all the
15-3, 15-7 ina close four game
'againsHhem:•~ .· ·
,
•
i
:<ounbarwotild
nolhave been in-
release./,
discussions, we kriew itwasin: his
battle :
. ,-. Freshman walk~cm Liz Heri-
.
··1·:
'b.
·1·
••••
h·' ••• ··"· .•••• b.
• .
• • h"
C ••••. tl
M.
·1
•
.
best i.n.ter.
est
·10.
aca.d.
em.
icall.Y
••••
·-
•
··c-
,,,
..
n··er.'··was·.a.ble··to,.p·
..
u.t.Mar.i
..
s.·t
,e1g1_~,tIS
season ,e~ause
IS.
• ..
urren,Y,
agany 1sona
dh"t
...
·
.
• SeniorNicoleSilenzUedthe
· .
.
.
- ..
-
· .. >'academic' perfo.'rimiiice
.. · did····11ot •recruitingttipandcould.notb.e
res
ir;
·
.. ·.·..
·
·
.
-.
M.a.
ri.st_c.ha.·.r
..
'ge
..
··.·sla··
m·.·m•.·.1·n·g··
•.•.
·d·.
o·w·_·.·n'.:
• · ·anead4-2inthefirstsetwith her
··.,
t ·
M·,
--. • • ,,
....
t, · --d·.--d
·
·D·
.-. • ·
h d ·f
·r
th.
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r·.
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1·ty.
an·d·.
•
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•
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• •
,
0
mee
'!
anst-s /San ar S,
ons. reac e • or ur
er commen . •
13
ki~ls. Freshman Jenny '\Vein-
firSt two aces of the riight ...
The
said~~ O" • • ' '~-. ··' .:~:
•
. •. .. . .• . . Dunbar's case is different from
Dr.,John Ritschdorff; the faculty
brechLchipped
Jfi'
with· seven ·
freshman h~ 12 acesinonly,s~.
/'lfMarist Cc,llegesaysDexteds Izett
Buchanan's,
the seQior .· athletic aclviser~,we·reall involved
·
solo 6Iocks; :. ;: '.. : ..... •. ·,.·.:
•
games •. :·•· •. ,:, ··>'.· ._<. :C:·/,·, <-iiieligible;-'than
the NCAA says he guard/forward who was declared
in determining .D1mbar's athletic
•
• , .The. •Red Foxes\vere not so
·: Sefori Han quicl_dyJieit:'the
•
is.'irieligibl~/• fie said;}~-- • •••
• •
academically ineligible in the ·se-
and academic future.
·•· ./
.·
forti.ipatfia:
st
Fri~_ay;,;_,
>: .•·.·
game, at: four with ah.ace by
Dunbar could riot be reached for ,cond·· semester last year.: Unlike
Doris said it should take Dunbar
b
'l
B,ik1tdEMast
;·ro,'Ner/
Shltori
~
Han
•
senMioarr.
·.'.As
..
t.nw~raes~·tKrru·.~.s.lpn'
eg··r.b-c"y:
;o,;n·
. .-.·
.y'· ' c
.. om.111.en
...
•.•.
t>.'.>
••
·.··.•.·.:.:
"•. '. ·.
·. . ...
.-.. ·,.Punba.
r ;Bucha.nan
.. - ; w.
ho .m
.. • issedJ 6. • fivde
year.sto grabquate'
(Mh.
ay; 1995)
oc e .. an st spat
lOVICl<>ry ..
.: ·,•·
.. · : ' .• .
. •. •
' .
,::Acc.ordingto the'stud~Q(hand-
games iast year;ban not make up
·an not onger ecause ecancon-
w_i.th,·•.:·i.ts.'.•··taller
..
• and·.·.·qu.
ic.
ke.r·.·
·seven
i>.·
0
.irits. i.
n. t.he secorid:set.
i
·b·
• • k • .. Al.
l t
•
d
· • ·•• • • t d t -.·
..
hi"s'eli•g·
1
·b1·11·ty· • ....
·.:· . •
ce.ntia.
t.
e
.. solely. on his.· aca
.. d.emics
•• - •. Id.
• • ... -.•.h
,h.
o.o.. ; ·... s u
.. en
.. tsare.expec e . o
defense.
• •
•
but cou not come up wit t e
..
h ,.. 11 •
• • •
B h. • .
•
·
. · .
•
. thi•s·
...
ye ..
a·.r·.. • •.
.
._
•
·
•
• ·
meet t e ,o owmg mm1mum stan°
uc .. anan.:.me.t
...
-
Manst's 1.nstitu-
..
•
•• •
•
.. • • • - .fi
11
• ••
h.. •
victory.
· · •.
·., · ·
<'
.d 'd ••
A-
•
I • ... • •• d ·
•
•
I
• d · d
·11 b ·• 1· • •
U.nderN.C.
AA.·.
rules, Oun.bar.
can
. Th.e ·Red •Foxes e to t_ ~,:-· .. The aggressiveness seemed:to.
· . ar :.
cumu atJve gra e. pomt t1ona stan. ar sand w1 . e e 1g1~
.
.
•
.. Pirates• 15-4, 15;;6::I5sl0; . ) :,: . :.be:too:much to:.haridle ·fcfr the ..
•
.
average
·or2;0
at.-the.ena ofeach• ble to play this semester, according . notpracticeor travelwith the team
Marist seeniecf'.'pulliped arid'':.,' young RedFoxes'. ,.:) ,
,
..
-
'semester. A student:iho fails_to to_Dbris •• •.•• • .
thi'~I~e::dden~·us tlia:t;~lm~: to
readyto play, btit their·spirits.
·• ..
,;Se!;!
'NVOLL'page 11-'
► acheive a 2,0 cum~Iiitive grade
Dunbar averaged 7.7 points per
do this to·Dexter,'• Doris said:
Rtll'ttiS
in.tne
.ai,:.
7Reel•·Fox-fever
is
now.nere
·.The.footb~Uteamhasstartedits
.and1twastJ:)etearn shomeopener.
• . ltwdl
take. a whde :for- t.he ·
SeniorgtiardizettBuchanan-has
• season in impressive Jasbion win~
_You
•
\l{ould : think :i:,eon!doff
• freshmen and the team to develop.
-
raised his grade point average Over
riing its_ first two game_s~
and the
Field was filled to capacity,-nght?
If
the squad can get on a win 2.0last semes_terandwill be eligi-
studeri.ts can not stop talking about
• Wrong.
. . ·. ·
streak, they may have a respectable ble to play this sem~tei:, according
the team's success.
.
Only J,lZ5 fans went to: the
season and could ditch the
to Gene Doris, diretforofathletics.
The fans were cheering raucous- : game, J;eonidoff Field holds 2,500
"rebuilding" label that is starting
, The Penri~rit Races
ly. :.Pace's quarterback
Mark
spectators..
- .
to form.·
Klausner had to call a few timeouts • Head· Coach Jim Parady's ,club
_____
••
The Dunbar factor
because he could not calf his signals •
•. could be on pac~ to have a special
Point guard Dexter Dunbar.will
over the noise of the crowd.
season. If th1s .kmd of fan support
sit out this season as an academic
Wa.it. The image is changing.
continues, we will call this year,
..__
___
...;. redshift.
. Marist is still playing well.and
"The Best Season That Never
Secondly, the ReclFoxes are not
What does this mean?
racking ·up the points against an
Was"·
·putting the ball in the net. The
. It means Dunbar would have
oveimatched Pace squad, but the
.
Soccer Struggling • •.
squad has only scored three ·goals been declared academically ineligi-
• crowd. is small.
••
.
Right now, the men's soccer
in its first five games. How many
ble this semester. It means Dunbar
The Marist fans who attended
team's 10-6-4 season (which includ-
goals have they scored in the last
will be eligible to play next year.
It
the game cheered but only after the
ed a 3-2 win over third-ranked St.
four games? O. •
means Head Coach Dave Magari-
team scored. The loudest noise was John's) seems like it was in a galaxy
Enough said. •
ty's squad will be missing a pure,
the sarcastic "Let Go Pace!"
far• far away·
·-
Growing pains
experienced floor general this year.
chants from a few die-hard Pace
This year Head Coach Howard
The women's volleyball team
It was a smart move by Dexter
fans who • were • forced to watch
Goldman's squad has crashed to an
finally won its first game on Tues-
and .. the. athletic department to
their ieam get smacked.
0-5 start. All five losses were on the
day def eating Iona College 15-13, choose the academic redshirt route
• Yes,
the weather was crummy. road, and the team must be hop-
13-15, 15-3, 15-7 to raise its record
for two reasons. First, it gives him
N • M • , ,.. b ll
•
ing some home coo.
king will change to a paltry 1-6..
a year to concentrat
I I
h.
o,
anst s ioot a program is
Moira Breen and Nicole Silenzi
.
e so e Yon is
not dose to comparing to Notre
th~~;~i~~~~tic
drop?
are the only two seniors returning
i~demics. _Sfech.ond,
he can play a
Dame's, Michigan's or Penn
First, the team lost Shawn Scott,
from last year's l4-l 4 squad.
u s~on 1 1s grades get better.
st ate's.
Lou Schmidt, Andy Clinton and
Because of . the lack of up-
Dunbar has the time and the -
However, the team was coming Bob Angrilla to graduation. These perclassmen, Johnston has had to
chance
to improve
in the
off a good opening day victory on
were integral parts to the team's
use her four freshmen in crucial classroom. If he does not, he will
the road against St. Francis (PA), success.
game situations.
have no one but himself to blame.
The baseban'.races: are heating
up. Sort of.
•
.
.
\
The Toronto Blue Jays are star-
ting to fly in the American League
East. The Yankees will have one
last 'opportunity to· shoot them
down this weekend at Skydome .
'I)ie Chicago· White Sox are still
putting "the . Big Hurt" (Frank
Thomas will be The Most Valuable
Player) on the rest of the teams in
the A.L West.
The Philadelphia Phillies are
chQking and doing their best to lose
the National League East, but most
likely, it is too late,.
The San· F~ancisco Giants have
choked. The Atlanta. Braves will
definitely win the N.L. West.
Fo(?tball next ..yeek.
Ted Holmlund
is The Circle
Sports Editor.
-t
I
:,/
11
,\
1:
\.
The Circle. begins it's construction coverage
Circle ·critiC••flllmeffavOrilirjzOvfe$1
ditectorS·~··•··
•
..
~l[(lnyonf
·fl(!eds/Ot{~
.:)ivigljt
lliJIJOf
i~'''
i,
..
·•·•
..
•
.....
·
--'---------------,----·-·
_·_
• •
My secon~Lf~;o~it~'.flim is
.''Witn~ss/'.
'
edlpla~e~':i
¢fie~.
~d
~~tt_h~·
;;J~~s.
Th~-
.
.
Rerite~b·e/.ioiiri Jii~~'.b~fore,tlte w~ole'
•
by
COLLEEN.
MURPHY
.
•_Again;
the: suspense will
,_hav~
you: clawing
.
character~:1!1,.
t_his Bar_ry
Levmson
fi~
.cap~
•.
'-'Home
·Alone.''
:series?
The REA!,; John·
.
,
.•
•
•••.
•
:··
._
.•.
•
••
-
.•
__
.-•
•.
•
...
_
1
•
.
-:_·:you·r·.c~air_~·~-~~n~.~this
one
-~o_
:see
:_Harrison->.·~
tu_~e-,.t_h~.
ess_ence
._~f.-Jhe
g?m~:
~_ober~:_Red-
:,
;I-Iuglies,-::~--_who,;:,_·~reC~ed
._·.
~~;Th!!.:.>-J3r~~kf~~-
9r:eetmgs and
.s~luta~1on5..
All. nght, no,
Ford in his original
:'.'hunted
ma~" rol~. The.· f<>r:.4,:.aJ~ay,s
.a:,g99d
her~, Wilf<>_r~
~flTTl!l;lY,.
. Club;, '}'Pretti,
bf
Pi?k,
i•
"Some Ki~~. O_f
I d_1dn't see a movie th1~_week._lt_so.
rarely
.
witness in question is as~all Amish boy.who
th_~:t<>~gh,,_?ld
°!~,?~g~r:.
,
:
,
:,
'\
•
.
.
Worid~~ful,".
~n~ •;_sixteen Candles?.
•
.
happens, but I thought I d take up,theJpace
_
sees a murder inside: the• bathroom of the
·
•
• ·
•
·.-
•
•
•
·
·
•
•
'
·
·
·
·
·· --',
· .
•
to introduce myself' and le~
you
know \Yhat
'
Philadelphia train station; The contrast bet-
•
Okay' "J~e
__
Cira~ua_t§
'. it isn't, _Bu~
t~er~\
;
> ,.· .
. .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.to expe<::t
for the year.
.
.
..
.
.
;.
ween Ford's culture andthatoftheAmish,
a feeling'you:gefwhen you:watch it. J>er-'
••
•
Well,sometime.justabitafter,those;came.
. I
won't be writing this co~m!l by myse,lf..
.
is expertly handled by'director Peter Weir.
sonally,.I forgetall about ~ete Rose
.and
Bo
. c"She's
Having'ABaby;'',Dori't forget this
.
·.My counterpart; Andrew·-Bons, 1s on ex\end-
. •
_
•
•
,.
•
.
_
Jackson; the
·Meis,
tl:te Padres'
'ecoriomics,
·one
the· next time you and
'your
friends
put'·
ed leave, He should b<'!
back next week
•..
_..
Weir is known for tiis "outsider" films.
and thel964Phillies. Maybe it's me.-_l~f~ft,
•··.·together
your John· Hughes all-night-party
Ofwalf'tr~~e.~t:t~i ~~~:s_::~tyrffJ:.i~.t.:.r_-I Here, he introduces._a fugitive· (rio'pun,in-_
,
I'"l_s~~!H:~:tu~t-~~---
:·
.
.-,,
,;T'
:
•
•
•
fil~,f~sti_"aL•lt'(inot;~~•te::the teenra'.n~st
tended) cop to an Amish world, where he can•
i
,:,,
,-:•
,u~c
,.
!_-._-
. •:.·
,.,.,_,
.
-.
-·.·.
.
we ve come to: expect~1t s \VOrse. lf:-you re
that' we didn~t'get.to. the inovie~.,thi~
~eek,~-~
•
never
..
fit in ..
ff
yoi.f
,reinember,
his other
.Wl'!!le
~fr~ on the top~c of fantasy ~Im~,
_
having. ~v~n\fl~e!in~;;:th?µghts
:•
-~b~tit
_
Plus,
l
didn't really want
to
se¢. the:
.ne'ly
popular ~lms, u~r'ee~.
-~ard,
".
or ~'Dead • we_:1!11¥,lJt:_::as
,.~e,11
_1;r1.e.~t19?_,-
.
~?b )~.e1nt:r.
~-
•·
'·&raduatm~ andYor-get~m.g
a J?b an,?_
'~t
get-
Bruce Willis 'inovie; and' th'e
••
new. Scorcese
,.
Poets Society,'.'
,this
theme also apphes. So
.
classic The Prmcess Bnde. Aside from be
tmg marned-watch this fjrsL
..
·
-
picttir~ wasn't playing ai:J.y\Vhere
~r~m~d
•
few.directors will'look at
a:
script without a
.
sing able to recite the whole script-_myself;
this
.
.
.
-
.
.
.
,
;!>_:-
"' .:
<
;<•\,
,here
•. W.:e'U see_ one_ next week, t~oug~. l
happy ending, s~ it~s inspiring to know that
.
is j?st·a terrific in~vie. Rein:r
can
tr:ansforril
Well/itiais
wh~i
i
lob,k}~r-ii{a fi1~>All
promise.
"
.·
.
..
.
,
.
.
•
"
•
Weir. can make it work.
• .
.
.
satire-onto the big screen like_ no one.els~.
-
right it comes down to
a
good lookmg male
S(?, ~y ~av~mte film <?f all.,t1~~-?. The
_
•
.:
.
•
_ ...
•
.
·: •.
.If
you'd like to. see C~
~lwes ('..'Robm·,· • lead ~frii"ncnomance in_'·his
'life..
:
...
_-
Player. . It 1s s_1mply
a~azi!lg- a,mov1e about.
.
My third favorite is "The N_atural."-The.
•
Hood: fyfe_n
-~n Ti~hts") m
~ dece!1t comedy_
.:.
"· .. • .-.
·•,
·,. .
.
,
..
-
·.,,
-
.
•
-
:
•
-·
_.·_-:.
.
th~ mo~1es. Tim_
Rob?ms 1s exc~llent as the
ultimate in fantasy pictures; it's the standard
role,, this 1s
,it:
-
It s
~
~av.onte
-fairy,
tale of
Sue me ... they're fun to watch.
'Andrew
.
paranoid executive wit~ somethmg to keep
by which all baseball films are measured.
screen~lay wnter ~1ll1~m. Goldman, com-
and I will try_ to find "Age of Innoce!lce"
out
0~
the_
trades. There s suspe~se, murder,
You're probably thinking ~at that's not say-
plete;Wlth
rev:nge, ldclp.app111g~
t~rtu~e, !<?;"e,
~
for-next..week. Keep.your fingers _crossed.! .
a teensy bit of: r?mance! an~ m~r~~~o.ap-
•
much: Well maybe not to you, but it's
adve~t'l;1t;.e,
and·. tl!e la_te i}ndr~
·the
_G.1~~t.
.s
-
.. • .
_
.
!
: .
,. '".
0;
-
1 . .
• ,-·
.
pearances
·than
a "M1am1 Vice
.-
episode.
·-·mg_
-·
~-
• h. ' h.
:
ts"
•
•t
d t min~ Who could ask for anythmg more?·
•
• •
·
.
·
,
,
_"
...
_,
·.
Dare I say-it's better than the book.
set man era w en t. e s~or w~ ers e. ~r
.
.
.
-...
-.-..
.
.
.
. .
•..
.
.
•
•
.
.
-
.
·_
.
.
•
.
'
.
Smashing pumpkins release killer
sgphQPJ.rJcre.f:ef,<?J}tjt_
•
•
Corian and. company create wat(OfnOise
,;:'
.
,
<
•
•
·
I
•
•
Chamberlm propels the songs with
stars then they ever wanted to be.
their r?ots by creatmg a gust
Y
g~ e
put·me_to_• sleep with its· slower some
quirky,
firecracker.
by
DANA BUONICONTI
Quips notwithstanding,
t~e,
of_the!r own. Corgan,
.al?ng
~
1
~~ songs.
.
.
_
_
,,
drumming.
.
.
_
.
Pumpkins have r:leased one hec,k, gmtan st Jdameds
Ihma,m.bearssis_
tJpim···
Am_
-
Here
1
the slower songs of~en _ Both ''Mayo11.aise'_
'. and_ "Sweet
Billy Corgan, singer and guitar
of an album, "Siamese Dream.
cy •
an .
ru
·
. .
.·
Y ·
burn with an equal or-·greater,m-· · Sweet"
.have
lush melodies,. even
guru for Smashing Pumpkins, was Th~ir follow
0
up to 1991 's '_'Gish" Cha~berhn, h~t cfn struc~~d a
,ten~Hy
•
'than
the fast· ones; 'though one features rnuted electric
·
qu<?ted recently as saying:th at, !f
•
(a!l,d
•
«~ullJJ. EP), "S1am_ese !'?e!hfluous wa
,,?
·
sou~
~n
.:
~'Disarm," one. of-the lJe~t on the guitars,;.and the other acoustic,
their. new album ½'as a failure, it
_Dream"
1s their first albu!ll for
Sia!Ilese Orea~.•. aJ?-d U~.ke it,
.
,
album,:has Corgan sh~ut_mg·C<the respectively..
.
.
_
~
0
wt:;ea;
:~~
tt~~t~tt?:ii
'.
;_Virgi_n,
aftc:r being on its ind1e sub~.
•
C Wit~ prgduction::5s1st
f;c:1
ri6
•.
kHler•
i!l,
rtie
is the ~iller in y()usmy
The real magic of Smashing
•
e
'
0
!°1
•
)'t
:·
- -
·
. ·
•
sidiary Caroline.
_
.
-
.
..
,.: •
~pt~i,n. rung_e
-
imsf,
·'
u
c
,·:love~!
S~J!d
this ~m1le
_ewer
to yo11,'' Pumpkins may ultimately He, in
to worrY}?
0
.U~·
,W1th
~n_y luc~.
_
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Vig,
_Siamese,,prea_111_
.
expands
"ove~
:a-·wrenchmgodal
wave of their ability to:go from a wall of
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MT.V.~n~:.rag
1
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r~h itint
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Chicago, thePtimpkins:stay.true.to
•.
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h ~~ear.\
itJrote.~.
_up~n
_
acoustic guitar', ~trings, and tubular noise to
·'relative
quiet-and then
groun , an. ma e. em·• 1 er·
•
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•
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15 • w ic
-
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a a· en ency.
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back to noise;·sometimes-in°the-,-
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__
•
--On
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Rob:¢~~s-:-Hal~:Q.e~lgti$';
-
6
Mt.-Carmel Street
• _Poughkeepsie;:~·~
.. _
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..
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3..·t!
7
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__
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_(betweei:i
Caesars Restaurant
and Noah's Ark Bar),.:
•
.Nl~n's''Cuts:Olt.00
..
_
reg.'ts~oo
':wonieii·s
cuts:•
t4~o.o·
,eg.'-ts~oo
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•
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llISCpUNYS.(?:~-~~JtMS
-
..
'&.HIGHLIGHTING
.:
6p¢:n:ij1i::.-I:30-.Jhiir~->-~1gltts
.
•
_
••..•
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llllUN
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THE CIRCLE, SEPTEMBER 23,
1993
3
Resident 'Students petition for parking change
,
',
.
•·.:.
-·,·
.·:•·.
·>
j')JyCARlli/OLESKEWICZ-r,
·;.:·J\ m~tiv.at!ng facto~: for:the p~tiiion '!;\'as,., patrols in
theissue·ofsafety;acccfrdiilg to·carmichaet · , continue.
the lotsc a(ld' that they would dent studen_ts.
.
. ... "It's hard for me to c&mplain, because the
situation suits me," Tauper said. "But it is
inconvenient for the people living on cam-
pus, and I sympathize with them~ especially
with the construction· going on:"
•
• Assistant Editor
>'
? •
••
Upon arrival to campus this semester; the ·_
•
"We are going to· increase the lighting
_; Tfo"o~senioi::r~sident
Ostu_d~nts
hav~ ,cir-':
.
dvef
lot had neither ·1ighting-11or
0
phone • amps.-and install phone boxes with a direct
culated .:a. petition ;to ·change the:. parking
boxestConnolly; who must park iri the river
Hne to security," Leary said.-"There is also
,assigriments:for -students .. living. in .the _clot, said.
•
•
•
• ..
additiona!JightingintheworksfortheNorth
.. townhous·es and gartland commons. : •... ·
·,, · •.• :
End.Jot and the McCann lot."
• N:t}lrid<?;'f~~rc:;::ifc~!~k;~;~tJ1:ri:·
•;.
''They
want
us.to
pdtkiii
a• bei~~~i.c!~~!flds~~~~~~:.;~::!~c~cri:b:i~.
ford, Conn., began the petition because resi
0
di
<
k.
·. • .....
1
"
.d d ·.•
·· . ·, . >h.·
•
· -·. .
cars if necessary.
.
. dentstudents are forcedto ~arkin the hoop
ar
sec u e. '• area
w . ere _any~ .
"They're supposedly there, but I haven't
')ofa~~:~~e
riv_er
lcit;_while.commuter
st~dents thing
can hannen·
and we can't
Se.en
them," she said. "They.want us to park
are parkmg _m. the lots near the residence• .
.
'l'k'
•
in a dark, secluded area where anything can
facilities.
.
• •.
. ·
get help."
•
·
happen and.we can't get help."·
..
"I.don't see,why commuters can't park in
.
•
-·
,
0:
. • •
•
Connolly.pointed to the recent incident in.
theriverlotorthehooplot,".Connollysaid.
-Tammy
Carm1chael,
which a. woman was reportedly raped on
''Tpey,- are .·.there du_ring the d_ay. We
S •.•
campus as proof that anything can happen.
• shouldn't
be
!!xpe~ted to. walk tha,t distance
•
eDIOr
She agreed that Security had not been very
• just to.get to our house, especially at night!'
helpful and added that. even commuter
Carmichaelsaid that commuters have to
.. "There are still no call boxes, in case we
students. were shocked and thought that the
:understand. that resident students.ccmsider · need help~ or a ride from security,>'she said;
current situation was a bad idea.
-· the campus to;be, their home::.\ . ,
. ---, ''and the lights only went up after the recent
Scott Tauper, a sophomore commuter stu-
•
''When' they gc::,·home
atriight,Jhey park
rape incident." .
.·
:
.
dent from Rhinebeck, N. Y ., parks in the
·• .near their houses," she said. "But we don't
• Joe.Leary, director of Safety and Securi-
townhouse lot and said that he can see the
. have that Iuxury.>I'
ty, said that there are additional security
point of the petitioners and disgruntled resi-
The construction has added to the park-
ing problems of Jason LaScolea, a senior
townhouse resident from Bath, N. Y ., who
must ·park in the river lot .
LaScolea, on two occassions, was nearly
hit by construction equipment when walk~
ing to the parking lot.
"It
is not the fault of the construction
workers," LaScolea said. "They are just do-
ing their job, and I'm sure we're slowing
them up by parking there._We shouldn't be
there because it's unsafe; and Marist would
be at fault if anything happened."
Leary said that the construction was a
complicated factor in the parking problems.
"Eventually, all resident student parking
will be on campus," Leary said. "Right now,
we are asking for everyone to make a
sacrifice." ...
see PARKING page 9
►
RlishlO .finish·townhouses as.students anxiously wait
. thing detail to be completed before
·'·by
MATT MARl"IN'_'
.
students,are allowed to inove in ..
: ; Feature Editor
Even
as
rain fell on Tuesday, ces
-. Two local hotels
are
losing their , ment: was being_poured while new
best customers today, when thirty-"
•mattresses
were hoisted to these-
nine Marist upperclassmen move to
co~:_nd~~priaced
students have b
__
een
, • their.almost
0
completed onscampus.
· housing.
• • ·
. living as parMime commuters for.
"We'll have the. guys Cleaning: -the past three weeks in the Super
the floors while others put,on. the
Eight Motel in Hyde Park; and in
• light switches;'' said Tom;Dllly;
the Days Inn in Poughkeepsie,while ••
director c::,fphysicalplant;cwho;_is construction ·contii:med • at their
overseeing the campus construe-:.· residences,,,, •.
~
- ·: • • •
tion. "The hotels aren't rented past, .. '.'(wasn't r!!allysurpr.ised ":7h~n
Thursday, so this is it."
. . ..
l
found out about the delays,?-srud ; ..
Mid-summer. delays • caught
.
Jennifer ·cordone,:a senior from ••
Maristand its contractor,the,Piz-
Monroe, Conn, ~'This,i~ kinda. ,
zag_allicompan
__
Y,
qu_it_
e literal
__
ly bet-: typicatoLMarist.''.
.
•
• "I'll
move as soon as we have
· ..
•
. ..
.
•.
.·
running water and toilets," said .
. .
''I'll
move
as soon
;Cordone·;;/'!
just 'don't
care
·_ •
.· . . .
. .·
• _..
. anymore.-..
.
_ _ . _
..
as we.haye
..
rµif1ii11g
wqter,·:, : ;··-·Tlje:,:
ctj~f:.)>f,
..
p~tting \iit>,,tb,e .
..
· _tipd~~tOi!e!f-~=~~~1uit:~!tl~~/ti;~~~~i~Nftlit~~fffif.~i~iiitf,1
•••
_.,_c~re•._a1e1:r:;t·;fii~~111;rtrt!f;f:t~JJ{ft~~~t~f:i~,~~e~~:•_.
:
•··· ·
· • • ,
· ' ·
·
•
help theiµ through the transition .
. S~nfor.
·•
•·
'!lt's.·costing the contractor aj)-
. • ·· •
•. ' •.
•
• •
• • •• •
•. proximately $3,000ia day in
ex.:.
ween ·a rcickand a::harci piac~
as
perises, .. said Jim Grenier; .Piz-
. : they tried .to .complete ~he:C
new
zagalli's project manager. '.'We just
• •. •
.•. · townhouse units before students
ar-
want things. to go to as smooth as
• rivecibackon:campi.ls,
•
•
possible for.the students;'',,· .
. C'lt
was
hell," said-Daly ... Near-
_
Mostofthe students agree that
·:) by water Jinesforced-blasting to}:ie th~q!st~ce a~ay from campus has·
enior Jennifer Cordone passes the time between classes at the Days Inn.
_
curtailed so mucli of the rockhad ..... been ,their m;im c~mcern, but _sen~
•.
• •
·
• , • ••
•.
• • •
•
•
ire le
hoto/Matt Martin
'tobeha~mered·out:It'_sfockcity
• timent goes deeper ·than early-
hate it.here. I can't wait to get
N.J: "Iwaswokenuplastnig~tby
"Weshouldhavehadmorepar-
down there." • •. • .·. . •
•
morning van .rides
a
nd long ~aits back. You can't cook your own some woman screaming at a guy, ties," said Whelan.
Athree,month delay in.obtain-
on campus between· classes.
meals and $100 doesn't go that
a boyfriend or husband maybe, to
ing a building pennitalmost shut . _ ''I ju st don't feel seUl:d," said far."
- let her back in. It's'the fourth inci-
down operations, ,.according to
Andrew Whelan, a semor .from
Loud construction workers,
dent with police since we've been
: • Peter Petricca Pizzagalli's project
Greenwich, Conn. "I do nit have-a 'fights, and prostitutes ·have a!l
here."
engineer.'
> ,
'
·..
.
- •
desk, or any of my stuff. It's all at .: brought the police to the hotel
• ''We could do• some work, but
home waiting to move into my new • several times during the past weeks.
·we really could_n;t dig.in·:until'we
house.''
. "There's
always sirens out
. got. the. ,permit,"' said Petricca..
Safety is· also a concern, as there," said Cordone. "Something
''Now •. we're
on.· full
guns • events at the hotel read like a nig~t- is always going on, so we just keep
. everywhere ...:.:
seven ,days a week • ly police blotter.
the chain on the door;"
'for the last inonth and.a half.'-'-
'ffwo guys were shot a couple of
· ".I thought only this type of stuff
. •• Besides''niajor 'interior
:,ap-
~tre_ets
down;" sai~ Vicki Kupec:,a happened in Ireland," said Pam
That's about the only regular
visitors that these students see.
"We're so detached out here,"
said Cordone. "Once you're out
here, you're out here. No one
visits, no social life. I really have
no life at this point."
However, some aspects of the
ordeal will be missed by the depar-·
ting students.
"I wish I could bring the room
service • back with me," said
Whelan. You come home and your
bed is made and you have fresh
towels. It's better than I expected.
I'll have to get used to feeling like
:i c;loh :il.'ain."
.·
~Ii~nces;. the_ e:ourtyarq i~ the last
Jumor from Southington, Con~. I Clinton, a senior from Somerville,
M~tftSl'rsecurity
increases; rape still unsolv~d
-,
-
the call fro~ security
atll:18
p.m.
Sheriff's Office • K-9 unit aslo
and convicted of rape in the first
As a result of this mc1dent, the
b;
KRISTINA:WELLS
··
Id
1- · h
h
r. esponded and searched the area.
·degree; they can receive a max-
requests for escort services from
.,
The.victim to
po ice t at s e
security have increased con-
··•· Staff Writer.
•
returned to the college from an off-
The- search turned up nothing
imum of 8-and-a-third years to 25
siderably, Joseph Leary said.
Police are still not close to mak-
campus party by taxi at approx-
concrete.
years in the state penitentiary, ac-
ing an arrest in the rape of a Marist
imately 10:30 p.m. and proceeded
The victim was treated at St.
cording to Smith.
College student that was reported
to walk to her dormitory from the
Francis-Hospital for minor injuries
on Saturday, Sept. 11. _
·
chapel where the cab had dropped
and and released. She was also
Detective Sgt. Thomas M;mro of
her, according to police.· ·
referred to the Crime Victims
the Town of Poughkeepsie Police .
When she reached the area to the
Assistance Program.
.
Department said thatthere were no
rear • of Lowell
·Thomas·
. Com-
Detective Sgt. Mauro said two
leads as to the identity of the
munication Center, she was grabb-
detectives have been working on
. ed from behind by an unknown
the case around-the-clock since the
sui:s~J· on a description given by
male and thrown to the ground,
incident occured and and another
h
• •
1·
• 1 k"
~
pol·ice sai"d.
detective
is assisting in the
t e Victim, po ice are oo mg ,or
three white males in their late teens,
The woman said three white
investigation.
•
all of whomwere about 5 feet 8 in-
males each forced her to engage in
All .three, suspects achieved full
ches tall. One wore glasses, police
sexual intercourse, police said.
penetration and therefore the cnme
"d
According to police, the three
is rape in the first degree, Mauro
sa1 •
. •
.
.
I . said.
•
The rape was reported to Marist
males fled the scene m a wester
Y
According to Bureau Chief
College Security late on the first
direction on campus toward the
Marge Smith of the Dutchess
Saturday night .of the semester. .
river.
Offi
Security received a report that an
The police said the victim ~etum-
County Distric Attorney's
ice,
18-vear-old female had_
been raped_ ed to her dorm and security was
the legal definition of rape is ~•for-
~
cible compulsion of sexual mter-
by three unknown males.
notified.
,
,,
,The Town of Poughkeepsie
The police responded to the
course.
Poli.~ Department f~ponded to
scene and
the Dutchess . County
If
the suspects are charged
wi
th
The Dutchess County District
Attorney's Office will be handling
the case if the suspects are ap-
prehended and charged with the
crime, Smith said.
Thus far, according to Mauro,
no witnesses or suspects have come
forward.
'Police remain hopeful that there
was a witness to the crime and that
this individual or individuals will
come
for.ward
with
any
information.
. Anyone with information is ask-
ed to contact the Town of
Poughkeepsie Police
Detective
Division at 485-3670 or 485~3666.
"The students are very aware of
personal safety now," he said.
·''Weare getting so many calls for
escorts that we can't do our
patrols, but that's OK. If you need
and escort, you will get an escort."
Because the calls for escorts have
increased, Leary said he is looking
into hiring both male and female
students to assist in the escorting
service. Leary said security would
dispatch one female student and
one male student to accompany the
individual to his/her destination.
Leary said security has been in-
creased since the incident on Sept.
11.
l~~~:t
·.::'•~·:~·-
:'.i )::
.~:r?:~~-
<;:~.
:1:~-
·.;;
-~
·~
(~·
•
·•
..
THE CIRCLE/SEPTEMBER 23,
1993
·•
•
···•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Miieff
reactt~tiS(,iit~n
·
..
·
for
neW
To,WlllioiiSes
•
'.
_;
·'/\:';
.\·.·.-·
:.
:::::
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•
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·/:·
•,,
•.,'•.
',,
·:,,,•'
'.''
.
·
by
Bill HA.NSCOM
•
.••
Staff Writer
Construction
of the
•
new
townhouses marked just the begin-
ning
.
of Marist College'.s' Vision
'94'
campus·
improvement
program.
.
•
._
..
Although sections L and M have
not been completed, residents in
sections H, I, J, and Kmoved into
the new residence facilities
•
as
scheduled on Sept. 6.
--
• Mike Schultze, a senior from Mt.
Laurel, N.J., is a resident ~ho
.
mo~ecl into hiS:townhous~ althe
•
beginning_
<>f
.school
and is happy
with· his new accomo~ations .
..
"I
.
think Marisr-Us looking
"
toward. the
'future/
and these.
townhouses are
a
step:in the right
direction,'';Schtilti.e said.
•
•
Tlie layout
of
the
new
•
townhouses is unique comparecl
to
other campu's
•
housing, such as
gartland and the old townhouses.
Each· unit includes a common
area, a kitchen, two bathrooms and
four bedrooms.
•
•
•
•
:':.s.ee
NEW page 9
..
►
·NEVER."fOOLATE.
Physical plant employees move in mattrresses into
townhouses Tuesday in preparation .for students re.turn.
lower
•
sections of
•
the' new
Circle
photo/Matt
Martin
Think
~OU
mi~~d the Gradu~te°ififo(ci.E~;ni:de~dfr~~tfhink:ag~in.·with•
th~-new on~d~marid.
GRE~ youcb~Id. b~-~alcing
~i!'r~st
tomorr~~-A~d see
yourscor~ ilie in~tant you fini~h;Score.rep~)~
;}~-inailed
10 to 15 days
•
later.fa
pl~~ty
ohime f~r m~st scho6iideadlines. Call,~ow for instant.
~egist~tion:
@)
Edu~arional
Testing Service
Security
·briefs
by
KRISTINA WELLS
Staff Writer
Since the opening day of school,
there have been a total of twelve
alcohol confiscations. by Marist
security.
.
.
There have been·. seven in
charges against O'Connor. At 1:20
a.m., Mon, Sept. 20, O'Connor
surrendered himself to the police
and was charged with assault in the
third degree.
. ·
.
On Sat, Sept. 18, a fire alarm
went off in Townhouse H-3 at'S:59.
p.m.. The alarm went off as a
result of burning food in the
kitchen.
On Sun; Septd9, another fire
alarm went off at 3:15 a:m
..
in
Campus Center becasue of dust ris-
ing from the constructfonareas in-
the building. Security will have the
area cleaned as soon as possible.
•
.:Sylvan Technology
Centers®
..
•
Pait o/lM S.)1roft
Ltarnillf Cnltn-NdlDorlt
g:~:!~~lry ~ai;id~~°li,a~~~n:~
B
.
ck..
'l'
.
C 11
.
g
w·m
two in Shehan Hall and one in the
a
.
o·
·
.
.
O
_·
e e_
·I_
McCann parking lot and the
Champagnat lot.
The majority of alcohol con-
[~s;:eteta:~e~~e~o~e;\;a~:~~:~;
Samn·.
~- 'l'o·
'!'lie
and malt liquorconfiscated.
.
.
.
•
•
During the first weekend of
•
•
-
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~?rt
~\f.::'.i
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•
•
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Hall
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. .
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•
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Saturday{Marist security.received
•
•
:
.
•.
> ;
.
·.·
Catalog List Price_
$4.35
a reportthat an:1ssyear~olcl,
female
012502522942
•
OfficeM■xEveiydoyl.owPri<•: 079767109325
•
OlloeMaxEvetydaylowPri<•
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student
had. been"·
raped' by· t\uc;e
·
unknown•m~les,
.
.
.
.·
••
·_
•
.
._.
:
Security responded to the scene
•.
firstand The Town of Poughkeep-
•
sie Police were called at approx-
imately 11: 18 p.m. See related story
cm pagi: 3.
.
.
. •
•.•
On Fri; Sept.
p,
and Sat, Sept."
•
18, a.total of four Marist students
were taken to St. Francis hospital
by
Fairview ambulance for alcohol
intoxication.
. .
.
.
.
Two students froin Chanipagnat
·.
Hall, one· student from Marian
Hail and one student from the•·
Townhouses. were treated and
released. On Sat, Sept. 18, Marist
security responded to an assault in
Champagnat Hall at 3:31 a.m.
Brandon Fox, a sophomore, was
taken to St. Francis hospital by am-
bulance and treated for bruises to
his face and body and injuries to.
to his left side, according to Joe
Leary, director of college safety
.
and security.
Leary said Kristian Grizelj, a
sophomore assaulted Fox along
.
with Christopher O'Connor, a
freshman.
Grizelj, a resident of Cham-
pagnat, was arrested by Town of
Poughkeepsie Police at 6:00 a.m.
Sun, Sept. 19, and charged with
assault in the third degree, a misde-
meanor, Leary said.
Grizelj was also charged with
possession of an altered driver's
•
license, according to
Leary.
"On
Sun, Sept. 19, Fox filed
Save $40.01
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Sun 11
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J
'
THE C1RCLE;
.
F.EATU
RE
SEPT~MBER 23,
1993
5
A glimpse· at
l\lloSCow
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.
•
.
Wl'iter tOurs]~usSiii,- capital
LOCATION::
--
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Garlic,
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+
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Others
$1.00
each
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xtra for topping
on a slice
i'.
/
...
__
.,.,
....
--
..
,
.
.
.
.
.
'
.
.
.
.
'
CIRCLE
•••
• MARIST
COLLEGErPOUGHKEEPSIE,
NY·126~1
..
THE SToi>E.NT.
NEWSPAPER
..
.
;.
.
.
.•·
.
·,
-.
.
...
.
.
'.
SJ. Richard, editor
..
.
Ted
_Holmhmd,Sports
editor
Matt
Martlo,feature editor
Julie Martin, QSS()Ciale
editor
Andrew Holmlund, editorialpage editor
Dana Buonlcontl, ·columns
editor·
C~rl Oleskewic~ aisistant editor
Klreli'A. L~klmillll~.associate
editor.
Jennifer Pon'zlnl,
advertising
manager
Dennis
GUdea,facully adviser
.>·
...
·,
.
•
_,
.
••
PUBLISHED
EVERY
THURSDAY·.
Lq,nd
(.)f
col1f
uSion
.
•
'
.
It
was going to be a great
·year.
The beginning-just reeked of iL
•
..
_.•·
Most students moved into their assigned places. There was a hew attraction
on campus,
'the
new Townhouses.
.
•
.•
••
•
... : •
.:
-
•
•
.·
Alas, this exuberance died·Hterally before the paint dried .. At ~pprox.imately
10:30 p.m., Sept .. 11, an 18-year.:ofd Marist student was raped.by th(ee unknown
white males.
.
..
.
.
.
• :
.
The·questions began to mount. Who did it? Where was Security? Were the
rapists Marist students? The answers do not come so easily,
•
.
Many were quick to point a shakey accusing finger at the Office of Safety
and Security while pointing out that students pay a $700 security fee as part
of their college expen·ses. So where· was security?
.· • .
.
.•
.
•
Read "Security briefs" in this issue and one will see there were
a
plethora
of alcohol confiscations during the first week of school, It was a Saturday night,
so it is safe to bet some of their time was spentin this manner.
.
.
·
Still, many can attest to witnessing this sight on any given night at Marist:
a small group of on-duty security guards gathered in the Champagnat breezeway
chatting with each othe{as well as students.-No campus can be made 100 per-
.
cent secure.
•
Hillary Or
.Bitt
•
•.
T~ cl~ar>up any questions, when I say
·Clinton·
I· mean Bill, when: I
·say
President,
I mean Hillary; Ok,<now that we have this·
clear, hvill_ be able t<>
move on.
•
.
I guess, the question is what has Clinton
.
.
done in the pastnine months? We aU know
·
about his problems with hairdressers (even
in
L.A),
travel agencies (it runs inthefami-
.·
ly),
as
w.ell
as, nominating persons with child
.·
(:are problems (hello Zoe); But what has he
really
:done?
.
•
.
· ..
.
. . .
•
Let us start with the new deficit red.uction
plan. First, Clinton was blessed with the old
•
tradj,Voi:J.s
of "yote with your l)arty."
..
He said
WhenAnlericans\vent to
·the
poUs fast
•
November, they voied·.not only for
a
new·
..
president, bli! for "c.harige"
:.
so they said.
•
It
is now almost 10 months after President
BilLClinton took office, arid not much has
changed, arid the faultlies more towards the
- •
American public:
We, the American people, have come to
expect too much.ofour presidents. We elect
them with the. exp·ectations
• they have the
power to eliminate all· our problems at the
drop of a hat.
•
•
President Clinton campaigned on the issue
of ''change;'' for the most part, that mea~t
She·said
No matter how many security guards are employed, no maHer how many
lights are
.installed,
no matter l_lo'Y
cautious a_pe.r~o~ i~~;t~!r~an; sWLhappen .
• •
•
Tak~ng
,.~~rtain.
PJrc.~~~i?~li"S~A:
t~~§e1:1,~\),~,.:yoi,~1p}JW"'?J~~~~~~.:.,~?1P-P:le
f
plll-•
.·'
/::,
,
.
}\:
.....
·• .
:
•.•···,
·;
.
mon
.•
sense is the best: pqhcy.·_:,-,;·:
.>.':,"::::
/.
;;.:''•;di~l-t-:-:.e:=,.;J;h~t->.•;;~~;,:;,
.:,~•,,,-,,",
•
';' o;
.:·,,,
:,.
,;!(
<scott.
'suileris'
::,:n
.
We'liave alf beeinidvised notto
walk into· dark areas andto take-:a: friend
•
•
•
.• ,
•
with us when we go out.
For
thosetimes when.friends
are\cai-ce,
caii'security
for an escort
•••
-
.
•
••••.. ·
.••.
'.·
•
.
•
'·.·•
•.•
...
c.• •/
...
·<':·'(:
•
•
--
Ifit wasn'tforSen.John Keriy(sic), wh~ reduction ofth~ defici{tliat had been built
The possibiity of asti.Jd~~t esc:~_rt
serv.ice has,also be~ri."-br,ought
up by quite
said he had to vote with his party;',Vice
Presi-· up over the Reagan and Bush Administra~
a few. This could
..
proV.e to be a stroke ofgeni
..
t1s.·.
:
: ··;
i
. .
dent Al Gore had the· opportunity to break tions .. The
.American·
people. stiH ~ant
.
•
•
•
•
f
•
.
the tie.I would lik~ to know
.if
Sen. Kerry" change, but mostA!llericans feelthe)'should
•
Per hap~ themo.st terrifying aspect ofthis crim~ is:tlle identity o the.rapists.
•
is getting better seats at the Kennedy Center·
..
not beth,e one ~~-d~'the· changing.
·_ ·-
..
Though the polict: say th¢y.' have
no
suspects aftllis;~im'e; th e. possi~Iit~ th at
or if he really .care{ab'out' his·'constituents.
.
•
·
In orqe( t<>.
cri~idze. President Clmton,.
they could be Manst students. ro~ked the campus 1110.r:e
than
the blastmg mthe
. .
so
the American public is riot only goirig
•
both the press and ~he vqter~ should look_
at
Chainpagnat loL
:
.:
.
>.\
.>_,:,r>
••
..•
·•
••..•...
··
'·
•••
•
.
. .
.
.
.
.
.
to be paying higher taxes, butthey arego-
their own expectations of him. Are _w~
g1v~
A student escort service cduld help mend the fractures the Manst coinmum-
ing to be respon~ible
for
paying
.taxeson
· ing Clil}.t9n,
aJ~ir chance? Are we w1llmg
to
ty has been subjected because·,orthe
rape.
..
.
.·
.
..
._.
•
monies from last January.
:-> .
.
'.'
•
sacrifi.ce:to
chang~?
·.>
• •
·
..
.
·
·•
Marist likes to tout itself as aAamHy_. Many, including-The _9ircle, scoff at
..
·The
bill passed only because ii-'gives
.the
People aid riot]ike Clinton'.s eco11om,~c
this sappy description;.l1owiivef
,"
because of hs size, the College is like a small..
•
public two years to pay what they owe; Tllis. pla11,
which was evi~el}t
in the stru~gle to ~eL
town. It is the trust one puts in fell ow sttid~!}tsthat helps bin.d this place tog~ther:
entire bill scares me because it says
.when
a
it through the Senate. Why do. we. need
.it?
•
Now
as
we simply-do notkrtowwho the assailants.are, the family fragmented.
group of people waritto: collect;taxes·fn>m
.W:e·~eed
it ~ecause we allowed
-~~q:,ast
h"!'o
This crime
has
sown•the hidious seeds
·of
suspcion· and distrust among us..
··pa.S
t years,
.if
the majority. wins,: ~e:'pay. presidents to aCCUlll';ll~tea
$4
trlWOl}_defiClf;
A
•
studen· t.
:es
.•
c·
·ort.
-·s·
ervice
·could
be the
.solution.
Not only would it free up·_
securi-
:
Wbat st
oPS
the government fr~ril coll!!ctjng
•·
••
Vf
e ha.v~
to:start g.ivplg
the Preside~t credit
.
.
on four or. five years ago?
••
•
•
••
• .,
,
for. at
I.east:
attemptmg to dea1
...
w1th, the
ty
to do·its du!1es,it could also help restore students' faith in each other.
Don'tgetmewrc>1tg,as·farashigheffax~, mc:>nstrotJsprqblemsfacingournation,
..
~e
Of course;
·now
the real test begins. T.Jie crime is nearly two.weeks old. Peo-
1•don'tmind·payingthem;
,but·
I ~o haye a 11eedto sta~ lo9ki~g at some of the very im-.
pie tend
'to
have short attenticm spans. People are taking sensible preca~tions
pr()blem with not seeing the results untjl '95 pottant
·
things
·clmton
has· dont: for. th~
stiU, but.how long will this la-st? Another week?A month? We can not simply
or
'96.
This is just another example of the American people.
''/·.
•
.·.
.
....
forget or cQnvince oursel\les th~!J~is is a _done _a11d
over.
_
.
.
same oid democratic tradition
of
tax
·and
for instance; Clinton is responsible fo,r Iif-
.•
The lessons vve learn
,from
the rape and its aftermath could ·be some of the
spend...
•
•
.
.
.
• "
• • . ..
'ting
t~e gag
rule/Also;
the Family Leaye Act
most valuable we I~am ar Marist.
•
•
The most obvious_ example· of.Clinton
..
finally.passed, and seyeral
_key
appomtees,·
What
•
•
•
a
VISIOD.
-:·
,·.
Vision '94, and what a vision it i~. This once serene, picturesque hamlet on the Hud-
•
son now is a virtu~I battleground. Students are awakened by ihe pleasant hammering
sounds of construction at hours eyen
.administrators
would deem o,bscene.
.
Of course,· to be on campus is"
gocxi fortune. Even those in Canterbury found themselves
.
the object of envy when school opened. At least they were able to move into their assigned
residence areas;
•
•
Those who were scheduled to live in the Land M sections.of.the new Townhouses
became displaced persons. A pool everi started on the actual date they would be allowed
to 01ove into the rooms they paid for.
••
.
.
.
.
,
.
. .
.
Sources say few picked the Sept. 24, the.date the College said they would be finished.
There's only one thing to say about the delay and inconvierice these students have
had to endure: construction happens. Few will disagree the new Townhouses are worth
the wait.
•
Why, even the greatest cynic of Marist's tuition-drained population will concede the
College did something right this time.
·
·
Of course, the parking situation can overshadow this in a wink. The word came down
from the dizzying heights of the adminsitration that students were to be banished to
the netheregions of the campus fo~ parking. .
.
Even in past years, students have not felt safe leaving their cars in these lonely areas.
Now, in light of recent events, the safety of tbeir vehicles takes a backseat to their own
well-being. Overall, the year begins much as it ended Ia,st May. Students are content,
but not happy, and the powers that be are pretending
.to
do something about it.
.
So be it. Let the gam~ begin.
•
•
.
.
.
•
..
·._
..
second~guessing
himself ~ould be his ''waf~
:
inc}udi~g
Supreme ~ourt}udge ~t1th }lader
••
fling'? on his issue of;homosex,u~ls in the
•
Ginsburg.
•NOYf,
qinton
1s
pushmg his new
'militai:y.·.
This is riot'about whetJter they·· health care plan and NAFfA.
.
'C
..
•.
• •.
•
should or should not be allowed to·serve, but
.
i
Clinton is•atso r~ponsible'for.bonibing
•
about "flip-flopping."! do;believe
honiosex-
,
Iraq in retaliation
·ror:
an ~ttempt to
_kill
uals should be. able to serve.
.
·...
.-.,.
•
.
George Bush. He has had to pay close att~il~
_·_:While
campaigning, Clinton was adamant.· tion to the World Trade Center bombing; to_.
about homosexuals serving in the military,
.events
in theformer Yugoslavia and in the.
QnlY to' soften his views four and a half
•
former Soviet Union, and !O the disasterin
months later.·
.
.··.
.
..•
.
Waco,.Texas.
•
.
. .
.
.·
•
.•
W'hatit really comes down··to is.the fact
Americans. n~
tq
:start
analyzingth_e
that Clinton is weak. We all kno\\',.that if the. President's.aciions for themselves, instead of
President.gets killed, we are goil)g to. have letting the pr~ do it for them.
to swear in Bill (see first paragraph if you
As Americans, we need to re-evaluate
do not understand).
.
.
•
.
what we expect from our presidents and put
•
I have a lot of respect for Hiilary; but the it into acti9~. \Ve need
.to
5top criticizing
American people did not vote for her, they President Clinton
.and
pay more attention to
voted for her husband, and somewhere.in the reasons. for Clinton's actions.
between January and now~ I think we forgot
.
Thirty years ago, President Kennedy had
that.
•
thisfo say about the Oval Office, "I would
Well, I have written almost 450 words on
say
that the problems are more difficult than
•
what Clinton has done, but when I re-read
t
had imagined them to. be. The respon-
•
this article, I realized that he really has not sibilities placed on the United States are
.
done any- thing, and I guess that is what I greater than I imagined them to be, and there
wanted you to realize.
are greater Umitations upon our ability to
And that my friends is what he said.
bring abouta favorable resultthan
I
had im-
•
agined them to
be."
•
,
Scott Sullens is one of
The·
Circle's.· Caroline
·Jonah
is one of The Ci_rcle's
•
political columnists.
.
.
political
.co~omn~ts.
•
••
THE
CIRCLE,
V:1
EWP©I NT
.
SEPTE~~ER 23,
1993
7
·.uu~r:
.• <~;.•jCt;~~e···~~h~i~~!,.~1~ht~~
..
··bl~t~~,~~~wb;
I~·
.;Beirig_the
die~hard Red Sox-fan. pkay, 9.ut I_was seated at
_the
back
,vrit~. this
'now;
As
·th·e
security
that I
am;
it is":very
difficult to ap-
•
of_
our pa~k, and so everyone i~-the guards were escorting. the pyros
plaud the actions~of:a
.
.Yankee.·. rq~s ~e_hmd me we!e:now
_made.
from" the
-starids,
Paul O'Neill
Howe~er, du~ to events tha! occur-
aware of ~y loyalties; Our gro~p
ttirew a ball" to me.-Either he was
red_ to me_ atYankee Stadium on
was then joined. by the entire
ta_king
target practice on the newly.
•
Sept.: 1_7,
tha~ ha~ c~anged,_
I)1ave
-
bleacher
.section
in
pointing. out
bare~headed Sox fan in his hatred
•
·
found, respect fop_outfiel?er::~aul
.
•
which team 1 supported.
_
for Boston, o:r he was displaying an
,
O'Neil( for
•
disregarding,<: t_he
·:
_
;
:
•
:
.
act of decency and sportsmanship
Boston/New
.
York rivalry ,':'arid----
.
In any_event; some people in the
showing a bit of sportsmanship.
group behind us decided' to do
•
-·
•
•
•
•
something about it that was not so
-
A
group qf: 30
•
b~
so
.
Marist good m~tur~d.,
•
.
_ .
students,· ~d.er th,e orchestration
.•
:'
Whenthe chant di~d d~wn, a
of
__
The
__
Circle s
_
?wn
:red. new one emerged from those fine
•
Holmlu~d, made th~ tnp down to
.
upstanding citizens. They were say-
·_wthet
Shtatdhnuyn
thk~t Fknday
•h~ost to.
,
ing, "Burn his hat; burn his hat!''
•.
a
C
e· an ~es eep t
,~1r
l?en-
Seconds later, I was de-cap~d-; and
nant
_dreams
alive, but
•
a· few to
•
watched in horror
as
those drunken
.
wat~h the Sox play the role of
morons tried to set
·my
Sox hat
spoller.
aflame;with their-lighters.
. .
_
I fell into the latter category, and
I can honestly call them morons
everyone in our group knew it. For
•
:~ecause
apparently they forgot that
~
inost of the game, we would good-
-
1t_
~as, at the time, still drizzling,
•
naturedly call into question the
.
an~ was for most of the night.
skills of the team we were rooting
L<;>g1c
would_.
tend to dictate that
against, and occasionally that ques-
.
wet doth does not burn, but ap-
tionirig would ;i)so deal with their parently these Yankees' fans felt
sexual preference (do da; do da.).
_that
they. could defy the laws of
However', ~tiings. chang~d
•
during natt1re during this ritual sacrifice to
that has not appeared in New York
since ... the Indians gave the Dutch
·such
a generous deal.
,
.
.
.
I am.guessing that since Paul is
:_i(l_h_is
first year as a·member of the
Yankees, he has not had enough
.
time to start
·hating
the Red Sox
that deeply (although I could
_be
•
wrong.)
In any event, one might suspect
that after an incident like this I
would learn my lesson, and should
the opportunity arrive, that I would
not wear a Sox hat at Yankee
Stadium.
However, like I already said, I
am a die-hard Boston fan which
means I have the common sense of
•.
a Buffalo Bills fan.saying, "Well
they'll NEVER lostf FOUR in a
row/' So riexf time I think I will
•
the wait' between the sixth. and :,yhate':'.ei:.
beer
god
they were
·
sevent~
·innings,
.
worshipping.
• •
_
• •
•
_.
•
stay in the middle of the pack; and
_At--
p:eriodic times during the
game, the crowd would point out
-
a Red Sox. fan and start' a chant
•
that likened him to a part of the
anatomy that.I wiH, dtie to com-
mon decency, refer to by.its scien-.
tific term: "tlie rectum.'' And so
...
To their credit:
'ih~y
did n'tan~ge not
•
expose myself to the hostile
a
·small
flicker, and to brown the
_
masses
'beyond
the group.
it was that my friends (and I now
use that:term· loosely), began the
chant and oointed at me.
-
edge~
_of
my poor
~at.
•
l
now had two options: A. stay
_
where I· was and
_take
the ribbing
•.
from myfriends, or B. go politely.
•
ask the gentle people for,my hat
back; and have my friends come
visit me iii the hospital.
·
•
I am just thankful that the
"lighter patrol" never found out
that I was wearing Boston Red Sox
boxer shorts.
Steve Crane, senior
._
What':S
..
that
•
slllell?.
.
.
.
.
.
Editor:
·
•
·
k
·
·
.-
-
·k?
p
•
•
·
w
1
b
·k
1
h
I
M .
.
is e~p1~g
!rac . erhaps those of
•
. e
_com~
a~
O SC 00
.
an st.
us. low on socks.
.
--
the dirt.
.
.
Smee I hve m the H-section of
,_:;
:;'1'We:t1ave
been woken
u
•
at 4:'JO
Then, later dealing with the grass
the new townhouses (perhaps bet--~.:.
0
-i-••,,
0
,
_.
:.:·-·
h
.
-
•.
.
Y
tei: known
aifil'.i'e'i••rrib~t'doiie
sel:;j,--.:_~_
..
,i.n:--ry,.t,g:,:;J
e sound~
/1?.f
heavy
mauer,Ahat, would have seemed
. ,,
_
.
.
.. .--.--
_
- .
-
..
.
. ..
__
. -
::::!Tiach,1r,i~_ry,;:_S.oIB~l!<>.W
;-J~¥ing; up
.
.
chronologicalto m·e..
• •
'
t1on ), I J~st have.to say Uove it
·.
·the.grass
they spent time pla.nting
here .. I thmk the rf:st of
-t~~.
~c-
·_
seems counterproductive. when a
,
'.
cu pants ~ould_ back me up_
<;>n
this._.. laundry room seems at a standstill.
-
.
•
Hope_fully,_no
one who lives here
..
)t
is:still an empty roi:mi, with·a
1s creatmg_ dirty_ laundry be.cause
.
-
lot of glass windows.· ft see ins that
t_hat
would certamly be a problem,
_
_
they cot1ld have been "planting our
after all_,
we have n<;>Jaundry
rpom:
.
washers
:and
dryers,", instead of
.
.
Yes, it was_
promised
_to
us by
.the
grass.
_back
in the• beginning
•
of
tim_e
we go_t
bite~ (Sept. ~), b~t_w_ho
, :
September. and now
..
be tearing up
-ATTENTION
,
Hopefully, we will soon see the
laundry room. In. the meantime,
eit}oy the walk to Gartland. Who
,vould have ever thought doing
laundry could be such a_ great
•
exercise.
Lisa Schuster, senior
_
Advertising
-
&
Business Majors
The Circle is looking for 2 or 3 responsible, motiv~ted, outgoing students to
assist us in our advertising. If you are interested, please contact Jennifer Pon-
zini, Advertising Manager at,,X4938 A.S.A.P.
WIMPS-NEED N()T APPLY!!!!
Looks
great
on
a resurrie
.... :Earri
c~mmissio_n!!!
.-
How to reach
1Js:
•\ Mondays:
11
a.m. to 5 p.m .
E-Mail: L 1·
211,
HZAL
• Phone r\~ail: X2429
MARTIN LUTHER
KING, Jr .
.
"I have the audacity to
believe that peoples eve-
rywhere can have three
meals a day for their bod-
ies, education and culture for their
minds, and dignity, equality and free-
dom for their spirit$. I believe that what
self-centered men have torn down,
other-centered men can build up."
Cooperative
education offers
equal and
excellent opportunity
to all persons, regardless of race, gender, creed or ethnic background.
To find out about the opportunl_tles
available to you 1.n
co-op contact:
Desmond Murray, Assistant Director of Field Experience
Marlst College, Poughkeepsie,
NV 12601
(914) 57S.3543
-
......
'
t,_,··
t~t)
"~·~:
1;r
f:._,:.i:..
,.
8
canterbut-,:r
...
·.cr"cJWcl·.:·enters.
las·t.·.
·year:_:-
Thinkof
th
~sixwomen
-
·
·
-
.1··
· .. , ....
•
=·
•
•
-.
.
·,;
closesttoyou.
by
MARCIA ROSBURY
•
•
.
Staff Writer
•
__
·
It's got leaky faucets, plugged-
up toilets, less-than-sturdy decks,
the van, and it's in its final year on
:
··w~_an take tu.tns paying fe>r st~~dily.
•
•
••
·...
.
•
a controlled<e~viroilme~t •
.
•
.
:Ni"
/'
_::;,
•.
. .·
.goru.otctehreietsr,as.mha_kl·:it~sgwmoeralk··,.snag:·.no.dutt,aq:kwi~tge'
,
__
• .··unlike
:;t~de~ttlivin;i(i.n-
..
·•
:\
1
/hile·P~tk':s~Jiri's"f6.,be
i11'
the,,·
wTi~c-·'h':o~we···_~
__
;;:®nessb.e··'·ra:
.·.·;·
_·._-·e·
'.d;'
dependentlfii~:off~canipus· ho.us< ffiajbrity~ith,hissati~faction with.
lll
ll
WW
p
we~~; other itudents/Jifei,:at
-
~!~t~~~~;\:!~~~1~~/J~ftci~:,
~~~~tef:a~:~~~rit~·,:::;;-
0
!blt~-
··:
·,
·.·_@year}: •
•
the Marist housing scene;
.
And some students claim they
are actually going to miss Canter-
bury GardenApartments wheri the
new townhouses and dormitory are
finished for the 1994-'95 academic
year.
..
_
_
.
e-anterbury, located on Route
44-55 east of Poughkeepsfo, about
Canterbury is more difficult.
•
phone installation
·and
'their.m.ons
transportation and
:the
fact ihat
•
••••
:
••.
_,
••
-;
thl_y.bill,
which s_
w_·ts
some
__
J·ust_
fin_
e. they are
·separated
from campus
&eout~six~womcnwillticiriuallymuhcd~)W-
" It '.s
•
kind of hard
·
because_ my
But
>W
QJI
change
11,e
odds
of
it~
Silnply
b'/
uymg
shower hasn't drained_
since th_e
day·
·
•
•
·'
--
'
.-
: '
•
••
·.,.
·
'
·· •
life;.:.
•
ioll'OM!litua!iooslhalkMiwor)'OCl!fricodswlllcnblc.
••
.
.
Despite the comriiute; the repairs
rorsUilen.
illlow
io:urily
mwuies.
Doo\propn:sidcna:ball
I
got here," said·Sean McFeeley, • and the frustrations
of
being off-
•
.'
Next year·,
.
though,
"these.
doorscpcn.Walkwithafricoo~clm:.Andbcawarclhatdate
a junior conimunicatioris major
campus,~ some students_ said they • students
wm
·
at least have the op-
npeisamappoolanoocdlegccampuscs.
WllhllWl)'ofthcsc
from-Ne_w
Fat_
·meld, Conn.
•
h f
d
d
-
•
t1·on·_
---o'
f_·1,•v·1•ng·_
o··n·_
-
·c·
am.pus·,•·
and
npesilrlolvingdrinking,:
•·.-,_
•
..... ..: ......
•
•·
enJOY
t e. ree om an . experience.
lbcoshmlllesefacUwidlsixof)Wffiicah.tuN-,-nooe
.
"l have no car, so it's a hassle
..
·
.
. -
,
..
.
.
Canterbury will'be a distant Marist
oftbcmwillbecaneancchersutislic. "
•
to go shopping}or groceries,".
Freddie P·eck, a junio; from
memory'.
...... ----~
•
McFeeley said,. "but
.we
dp get
•
Newtown Square, Pa., said hisJiv-
HBO and hardwood floors, too."
ing, arrangements
are quite
a 15-minute commute from cam
0
pus, is scheduled to be,phased out
•
of the Marist housing plan after
io
-years
of college use, Canterbury's
'·Resident
Director Donald Godwin
said.
.
-
•
--
.•
The number cif students· cciliing
•.
.
Canterbury, horn¢
.
this year
•
is •
"down a small n'uinber from last
comfortable.
•
•
"My apartment is spa~ious an&
living out here gives me a type.of-
.-
independence that! didn't get on
The·
Novels
of·
AYNRANO.
Deb Komusin, a junior
•
from
_
year/' Goclwin•said.-;
Shirley, N.Y., said that she ,vill
,
·
·
,
:miss
the freedom and responsibHi-
•·-
GOd~in sa.id that.over_ thi{years
. ty of Canterbury Hving.<
.
_
...
--.
·.
• ..
'
since Maiis(has lodged students in
·
'.'This gives me
a
.chance::
to .. Canterbury,
the number, of
'disdpline
myself and make rational,
-
studenis.living·Jhe·re:-has
increased
choices•rathei-than having:an. RA.
(resident assistant) or
RP
(resident
i
director) do so
for
nie; "iShirley.
:
·said.:
..
•
_
·- ·•
:
-•
.
_,
>
. .
But
·Komusin'
.finds
.
herself
•
plagued b}'a problem comm·on)o
many.Canterbury n,sidents - lack
of private transportation.
. •
.
Although she hopes eventually to
bring her car to school, Komusin
.
•
said
•
she is surviving because;
"Everyone I live with and around
•
is
\villing
to-help each other out.
SPRING BREAK
7
Nights From $299
'~
■
-CONVENIENT
LOCATION
Huntington, Long Island campus
is easily reached by publfc or private
transportation.
,
.
■
DAY AND EVENING CLASSES
Select either a Full-Time Day.
.Part-Time
Day, or Part-Time Evening
schedule.
·campus,"
he said.
•
Peclcsaid he enjoys:the conve-
nience of cooking for himself, and'
he finds it easier to clean iri such
ll
you wish
to
receive admission
materials and/or arrange for a campus
.
visit, you are encouraged to contact:
-
.
Oifice of Admission
•
.
.
.
Jacob D. Fuchsberg
Law
Center.
300.Nassau Road
..
•
•
Huntington, New York 11743
Includes: Air, Hotel,. Transfers, Parties
andMorel
•
•.•
•
■
ACCREDITATION
TOURO COLLEGE
.
The Law
_Center
is Fully
•
I;
Phone
(516) 421-2244
ext.
314
NASSAU • PARADISE ISLAND
•CANCUN
~
JAMAICA • SAN JUAN
•
.
_·
Oiganii.e a small group -
Earn FREE trip plus commissions I
•
Approved by the American "-JACOB
o.
_
•
_
Bar Association.
•
.
FUCHSBERG
@1~ •
:LAW
CENTER
·an·
at ii rm alive action
I
.
•
equal opportunity
institution
•
Th~Fo~tainhead_anclAtl~Shrugg'edhave
captivated
millions
of read-
ers
~nee
their
publicati<>~
They
have~
impi~
many
to
study
the.ideas
,,
•..
.-··
•
'
',...
.
'
.
behind the novels.
•
A
murse
·exploring
Ayn
Rand's
unique
vision
c;,f
ratioI¥U
fu.<:'Ught;
indi-
vidilillism.
_
respectfo_r
achievement,
and•freedom
is being.offered
in
Poughkeepsie,
beginnirigwithafit?e
introcluctoiy
Joctrire.
The
iecture
will
;
be
~ffeled
on three
riights
from
7:00
p.m
~
'.9;30
p.m
• •
.•
-Se~
28-Holiday
inn:503 ~ington
Alie,
Kingston·
•
~-:~-M~rrioU Courtyard,
400·~
~d;(Route 9}, Poughkeepsie
Sept 30 Horiday
Inn, Route 9
and
1-84,
FIShkiU
.
This.
COlJl'Se
iloffered by
the
~tute-for Objectivist
'studies.
a
widely
,
reco~
centei
for research
and
education
lll
the
ideas
of
Objectivism.
ilie pbil<>sop~y
of
Ayn
rikcL
·---
•
To
reserve
a seat
for this
-
lecture,
or
for
information
on
our student and
other
programs,
please
~l~
at
471-6100
or_l-800-374~1776.
1-800-GET-SUN-:1
•
-""----_-;.,..-~_-_;.-_----: ...
-::::::_..J~----~-----,-..;.;.........,.,......;_,-,:...~-.;..__;__
_ _;___.__.,.,.....
__
;__.,...--'-:-'--,..,.....--.----'----,-~-------------'------------'--'----'-----,
..
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penny
jar on your dresser
.
_
AJJpieltfa,intosb
_
_
•
ColorGaS!i~4/lXJ,
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•
·'THE CIRCLE;· SEPTEMBER 23,
1993·
9
Eall
Semester
sees
initiation
,_E_d_--=---j.u_.-k_··
a_--,--sh_u_n_?_-----,
.pf
N'.13,rist
lionp~s
program
by
ROBERT G>TARGOS
'.,J1onors· classes, from majors· such
The program goes a step further
Staff Writer ·
•
as communications, environmmen-
because it has an open enrollment
"THIS
LOT FOR~·,.
____________
• tal • science, psychology
and
policy, which means that a student
The image of an honors student : business.
•
•
••
• '
. not already in the honors program
with a pocket protector and thick
Steven Tedford, a freshman
may still applfto take an honors
glasses _has changed:
from South Windsor, Conn,,: said • cours.e.
With the . beginning of the. fall he believes the honors program im-
The application will be reviewed
-BR N
semester, Marist has introduced an proves a student's ability.to stµdy.
by iristrudor and the director of the
experimental honors-program.
..
''It gives yo,ll.an extr.a incentive
honors program. "The flexibility
In March of 1992, the 1aculty en-
to do. the hard work,". said. Ted-
and the opportunity that is built in-
dorsed the program proposal by a ford, a math inajor who takes
to this program, I think is wonder-
vote of-92-15-in a plenary session, . statistics:.
•
ful," Elko said.
PERMIT ONLY
and the Marist Board of Trustees
As the program grows; more
1n the past, some students have
approved· the program in April.
courses will be introduced for
criticized the idea of an honors pro-
• The honors program had been . fres_hman and upperclassmen·.
gram because they think it will
originally scheduled to start in the
. In addition to .befog offered in . isolate certain students not involv-
spring of 1993, howevera delay in Liberal Studies, honors can get ap-
ed in the program. "We took that
faculty appointments halted the···. proved by the honors· council for • into into consideration," Elko said.
program.
• a specific major, by having the • '"It's part of the reason you see so
ALL ORTHERS
WILL BE TOWED
AT OWNER'S
EXPENSE
~
pr. Constance Elko chaired the faculty of the discipline deciding if
much choice.
H
(isolation) is bad
ad hoc committee which wrote the . they want to offer the honors
for them (honors students) as well
honors proposal.
.
•
program:
•
•
as for the. rest of the college."
"Registration had already occur-
The honors council, which is
The Vice-President of Academic
red for the following year and sec- directed by Elko, has received pro-
Affairs,
Marc vanderHeyden,
tions of classes were set," Elko posals from Computer Science, already sees a pqsitive response
said. ..
Computer Information Systems from many.honors students.
During the 92-93 school year, the and Political Science.
• "The students are more willing
honors council was established to
A student's elibility for the pro-
to participate in class,'' said
oversee the honors program.
gram will initially be determined by ·vanderHeyden,
who is team
Marist offers «Introduction to his or hei- high school transcript,
teaching '.'Arts and Values" with
Philosophy,"
"Introduction . to Elko said. A student who proves , Virginia Marquardt.
Statistics" and "Arts and Values" outstanding ability can be admitted·
According to vanderHeyden, the
as honors classes for this semester. into honors with recommendations ·· material isn't more difficult or
62 frt':shman._
are enrolled_ in from professors.
more fast paced.
BE-A .GOOD···NEIGHBOR
Whether you ·1ive off campus or not
Consideration
for the good.people
of the area,
In their
homes and in their
neighborhoods,
Is important~·
The Marist'tradition
is,c:onsideration
for and commitment
tothe:we.ll·being,Of
our local
communities.
::t"·,
NEW
... continued from page 4
Andrew Boris, • a senior from
Union, N.J., said he likes the way
the townhouse kitchen is set up.
"The size of the kitchen is great,
and the second refrigerator creates
a lot of room." Boris said.
Students were also· impressed
with the size of the townhouses,
especially in the common area and
the. kitchen ..
"We have a lot of room. We're
not always tripping over each
other.': said Suzannen Brown, a
senior from Delmar, N.Y.
Despite the enthusiasm of mov-
ing into somewhere new and other
benefits such as their size, not all
-studen1s are completely satisfied
with the job done on the new
townhouses.
Brian Mac Lellan, a senior from
Greentown, P.A., said he is unhap-
py. with the laundry situation.
''It is really inconvienient
to
have
to go elsewhere to do my laundry."
said Mac Lellan.
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tJtftO
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ub City,
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~~
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Circle
photo/Matt Martin
Holly Boynton, a senior from
Simsbury, Conn., is the Resident
Assistant for sections H and I. She
said she feels sympathetic towards
townhouse residents looking for
their laundry room.
Boynton said that there is no of-
ficial date for the completion of the
laundry room. "We just have to be
patient," she said.
Students have pointed out other
problems existing with the new
townhouses.
Jennifer Ross, a ..
senior from Northpor~,
N.Y.,
said
· she 'is is not very
happy:
wiih' some~k':-_-,,.,,
.
of the work that was done and the
work that was not completed in her
townhouse. "There was some slop- ••
py work done in my townhouse," .
- Ross said. "Our sinks and toilets .
leak when used."
Rich Finn, a senior from
Yorktown, N. Y., said, "just hear-
ing the term "new" townhouses
makes it that m•.tch better."
PARKING>;-_
... continued from page 3
Connolly and Carmichael sa'id •
that the purpose of the petition. is'-·
to make themselves heard and to
bring the problem to the attention :
of the administration and Security.' •
"We'd be happy with a com-
promise," Carmichael said.
"If
they. would let us park near our;
houses on evenings and weekends~
that would be a great improve~.
ment."
••
Carmichael added that she was .
surprised at how overwhelmingly •
upset that people were about the .
situation.
•
"People are very upset and ;-
negative towards Marist," she said_-,
"It's not just the parking. Yoti
don't hear positive things from
people, especially upperclassmen, •
anymore."
Connolly said she believed the
problem was poor preparation for.
the
changes
Marist
was
undergoing.
"The parking system won't'
stand still," she said. "The school.
needs to start thinking more in the
long term when they begin these
projects."
Leary said that Security would
increase enforcement of parking
policies by issueing parking tickets,
boots, and eventually resorting to
tow trucks.
"We do not want to tow
anyone," Leary said, • "however
people need to know that we are
serious."
...
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enco~raged
to
call Mom
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regl:}-:,
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p'ossibility.)
~ot to mention the low variable interest rate:_ofi5.4o/c?:
and
'i10°annual
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your photo added
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to your'Citibank Classic Visa
earl~
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sense of Identity is the first component of the Citibank
Classic Visa card, a sense of Security. the second, and
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Not just Visa·. Citibank Visa~
•Certain_
ronditiom and oclusion., apply. Please refer to
)<)UC
Summary of Additional P!Ollr:,m lnfofmotion.
Bu),eB
Scrilrity
is underwritten by The Zurkh International
.
UK Limited.
'Ccnain
reqrict;oo,. and limitation., appl:,<
l'ndcrwri11cn by the
New
Hampshire ln.surancc Company: Service life opcctancy v.irics t,y
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claim is
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3.000 '!'ilcagc ba~ using MCI", Card Compatibility· r:,tcs •~
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4193. Citibank Calling
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long d1siancc u,.agc cannoc be applied lo cllllain benefits under any other MCI partner program or offer. including tr.r.1:I award prograrn.s.
•Offer expires 6/30'94. Minimum ticket purchase
price
is SIOO.
Rclia1c:(
arc for Citibank sludcnt cardmcmbcr. on tickets i'-'ucd by, ISE F)ii;hts on!)<
'The
.Annual
Pl:rcentage
Rate for purchase.,
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15.4<; a, of 8/9~ and may vary quarterly. The Annual l'ercentai;e Rate for cash advance,
i,.
19.m-. If a finante ch.nee is imposed. the
minimum
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an additional finance ch:lrgc
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a di\-imn of Simon & SdxNer. a Paramount Communicatiolt\
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Tt:iE
CIRCLE,, SEPTEMBER
23,
:1993:
·.
,'
....
·.·.
•,
.........
:":,·
,,
•..
·
[\Z~Jlrtg,_.}llni,.~t~
St@rf
oiiJ1;g~.
•
•
•
:,
by
GR~G-·
BIBB
.
•
•
:
p~t~d in
tw~m~·~i{:The
PifthA~~
•
19 t~ams\v.ith a
score
of 368. Navy
....
'S
ff
w .
'
nuaL Central Corinecti.ctit-
s.
tate
)V9n
..
111~
meet w.
i~ll
...
·,t·h
..
e low
SC.
or.e of
••
/:
•;._t~
•
nter
University:1nvitaiionaLand-The
·
41,.,,
.
.-.:,.,,
,·.•~>·
·
;·-· ,:,,._
.
. '
.Youth:
'.:,
.
:.
,
.
.
.·
·,
,
<·
.•
Fordham Invitational at
Van
€or-
••.
•.
;Thelistoft~a~swho,
competed
....
·It
is'the·one wo·rd to describe this tlaridtPark
..
·
·•
..
·•.
••
·
•
,>::··>.,_
'"
included:·
·Cornell,··
·Har;v~rd,
•
year's men's and women's cross
·
In·
·connecticut
•
the women
.
Lafayette and host Fordham.
.
'
couritryJeams.
•
. .
C
•
>: .
finished fifth while the men notch-'.
<.
Consistency seems to be an ear-
'
...
•
The men's team is returning five ed a second place finish trai'Iing oh-:
•
•
..
lY,
theme ipn_o~~
.the.
women.as ~he
.
'runners: However, absent from last ly,Providence College:
..
•
.
.
.
.squa~
follo~ed its.fifth p~ace fimsh
•
.,years
third place North East Con-
.
Freshman Kathline Woodson led
at <::01,1nect1cut
with a sixth place
ference squad are Dave Swift and
the Red Foxes while Brian Ordway
•
showing in· the Bronx .. ,
.
•
.. •
·
..
Marty F<:nney,. two oLthe: Red placed third for the men, just eight
•
..
Women's coach Phil Kelly said
Foxes most reliable and con~istent seconds off the winning time;
.:.
. the. competitio11 ~quailed
"the
runners.
.
Men's Head Coach Pete Colaiz~
-
,Dukes'
anct·-:North CaroHnas" of
.•
.
The youth inovem:entcan also be zo said he was pleased with his
_basketball
adding. !he_ woman's
•
seen on the woman's team where team's perfomance taking}n. t~ a_c~.,
'.i,program.her_e.~t
Manst 1s now run-
•
·eleven
of the. thirteen runners· are count "an unusual amount of in-
mng agamst some of the top teams
either freshman or sophomores.
juries'1which are plaguing the team
in the country ...
.
•
Fortunateiy for Marist, youth in
I
early in the 1993-campaign.
•
-
.· ..
-~od·Rose,
Brian Ordway, Josh
..
this case is not sym,nymous•with
The men's and women's teams
Wood and Todd Coulson all
growing pains.
.
.
•
ran into· Fordham University on
recorded personal bests on the For-
....
Despite the relative inexperience Sept. 18. and both squads· gained·
••
dham• course.
•
• •
·
.of
the two squads, success has.not
experience running against some of
The two teams. are off this
·
seemed to be a stranger in the ear-
the premiere squads on the East
weekend and are
.P_reparing
for a
Iy part of the ~eason.
•
•
Coast.
,
meet.at Colgate University ori Oct.
Both teams have.already com-
The men finished
twelft~
out of
2.
Netters (5-0) dOwil FDU, 9-0'
darkness is approaching.
Coach Harrison said he believes
•
'by
JIM DERIVAN
Maynard and freshman Mary
.
Marist was better than Iona.
,,
S_taff Writer
•
Beth Moscarello defeated'-Baluch
• '
"We were a better team, that's
•
.
and Janet Evelia (8-4).
wh.
y the score was so lopsided," he
The women's tennis team raised
d.
•
.
.
.
.
The Re Foxes swept Iona 9-Q, s.aid.
_
.
·
..
_
. _ .
its record to 5-0 by sweeping • on Monday.
•
•
'
,.
Once again,. McCaffrey and
•
Farleigh Dickinson, 9-0.
M C ff
d
~
II
f. h
c a rey an ,e ow res man O'Neille.d the
.Marist
charge posting
In sing·
!es play,.
•J·unior
Lisa
J
O'N
·11
d h R d"'
• h
•
en
e1 e t e e roxes m·t e a 6-0;6-0 straight set
win.
•
,
Maynard
•
led Marist defeating
singles matches, winning 6~0, 6-0.
Zilai also won her match
in
Toni-Ann Pierro in straight sets,
The
·tandem
of Maynard and straight se.ts, 6.-1, 6-2:
6-0, 6~1.
.
.
.
•
•
S
.
O'Neill
scored
an impressive
s~1
•
•
"
..
We want.ed to try our hardest,"
.
ophomore
,
Kim Zilai swept
S • "d
I h
.
.
victory. Charter and O'Hanlon
sa1·d·z·1·1a1·,
"We went.out with that
a1y1 e Ba uc , 6-1, 6-1.
1 f 11 d
• I
•
.
.
.
•
prompt y. o owe smt a so wmn-
atti"tude and we.took. advantage of
Freshman
•
Cara McCaffrey·
•
··
••
g 1
·
•
·
•
b
·
·
·
mg,·
-
•
•
our oppo.·nents·weaknesses, it was
a:lanced the charge scoring a 6-3,
F
•
I •
h D" k'
6
0
.
.
.
.
air e1g
1c mson was not as a pretty easy day.'.'
~
.·
victory over Katherme Aniiot.
•
•
•
h R d F
d'
h
•
strong as t e e
oxes, ac;co~ mg
In doublesaction, the Red Foxes
T e Red Foxes were just as
.
to Head Coach Ken Harrison.
d
dominant in doubles action.
"Fairleigh Dickinson was a were again led by Maynard an
Freshnian'Amanaa_Charterand
O'Neil who notched an impressive
.
.
.
.
weaker team," Harrison said. 8_1 victory.·
•
.
.
semor Kate O_'l:fanlo11
led the t~am.
·,.
''They lost_
some of their stronger
defeating"-Jennifer Buckley· arid·
•
playerS:';
•
•
The. Red
iFoxes'
next match
is
_Toni~Anri~Pierro,-·,s~2.
Tennis
.·
On Monday, the Red
,Foxes
home against St.
_Francis
(NY) on
:
teams'pl.{
ei
't
ame ro-sets, if
,
swept host Iona, 9-0.
Saturday.
;-•,·.-_··,,
...
'-~,
..
~--R11\IRl.~f:~.I\El<f'I\V.--
-----
CORREO AE:REO
+
VIA AIR MAIL.
+
.PAR AVIOI''
+
CORREO AEREO
RED
FOX
DELI and.
V~fDEO
51 Fairview Ave.
454-4200
FREE DELIVERY!!!
r------------------~
1
ON WEEDAYS
SUNDAY
1
MCTV'S
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1-on- l with
Jay
LaScolea"
+
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11
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SPECIAL
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A Whole New Perspective on
Marist Sports.
J.
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SEPTE_MB~R:23,J99 .• ••• • •
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•
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HOLMLUND
two:fouchd6wns, •·. :·.•
.-/ , './ .. ··•
•.
•.
Sport~Edit~~C: .· •
••
..
·senior:
·qtiarterbatk··•Brian
Mccourt• ~as .6-14for.142 yards·.
·~to'
put .ir sfmpfy ,·it
,vas • and one touchdown·passi . , •
gornination:
.
•
. . . .
, . However, ilwas the defense who
.
·
• Trailing 7-0in the first quarter,.· led.tfie<charge fodhe Red Foxes.
Ma.rist • (2~0) rattled 'off:34
• •recording five sacks.and a·'rumble
. unansw.er~d points en rOUf~
to:~ ••
recovery;: •.. •
...
•.... . ' :
i ; .
•
• 47-19v1ctory over.Pace Umvers1ty
Senior defensive tackle ·Joe
on Saforday.
. ...
.
McGari.n . notched two . sacks:
.-The 47 points is a new school· • Sophomore nose. guard·.JeffSac~
record for the Red Foxes breaking, · comanno contributed a sack and
a
• 'the previous record:which came in
funible.recovery,. • . . ... ,· .•.
·: a·46s21 win over .Gallaudet in 1991; , .· • 'The·defensivelirie has improv-
. ·
.}Mari,s(
has started its inatig4ral-. • ed a lot;''· McGa~n saidi "Coach
, -· cairipaig~_in
Divis~on I~A:'\ P!ay:on • (Gary)
,Doherty
.. (deferi~iv~ line
' on)l posn1ve note outsconng ·~ op-
coach) taught us
to
be quick off.the
ponents 63-26 (including a-·16-7
,ball:",·
.
• •
·
.
.·..
·
opening,day win over SL Frnncis· • • • Saccomanno said the defense im-
(PA)). : .
. . . ,
. . , _ proved' its play after a lackluster
Despite the 1mpress1ve
wm, the ·start.
•
<
,.
.. .. .·
.
crowd was small/ 'fherewerepnly
''We steppei:Ieverything
up,"
he
l, 125 • .. fans .. m ,attendance.
s·aid. "Wejust played good.foot-
Leonidoff Field can seat 2,500 • ball;'' .·
.. ·. • .· .. ·.·.•
.
•
•
.··
people:
.
. '"·> • .•. •
..
·. • . •
. Head Coacl1Jim Parady said he·
. Junior· Kyle Carrara busts a tackle: on his way to ·his second touchdown. The. Red Fo_xes
. The Red Foxes c:ontroUed all" .· wru; pleased with the team's perfor-
three facets o.f the g1;11ne:>offense,
•
.
inance after the first quarter;
crushed.Pace 47::19· last-.Saturday.
•
.
Circle
photo/Matt Martin
def~nseand sp_ecial ~~allls. • .
C<Our,
seniors picked everyone
• Marist dominated the lirie, of
up;"the second~year _coach·said.
scrimmage griridirig .our217 yards
(Pace) Coach·(Doug)' Bieling said
·rushing .. · S<!nior
• : halfback Don .. he couldn't· believe. the defensive
D'Aiutoled the.ground attack with lirie?s pressure;"
.
• •
· 12 carries for 86 yards in the first
Marist's special teams \vere also
half but was'-forced .to leave .the
a key to the victory. Sophomore
game in. the second'because ofa hip •• pfac~~kicker Chris D' Autorio:had
pointer.
.
hvo field goals. Fellow.sophomore
Junior fullback Kyle Carraro
Chris Hancock also blocked a
•
punt.
· •
•••
teams on this year's schedule.
With the jump to Division I-AA,
According to new NCAA rules,
.: the Red Foxes now play as-an in-
dependent iri . the .. East Coast
all major sports'(football, baseball
.Athletic Conference (ECAC).
and basketball) have to be on the
Marist will still play against most' Division -I~AA-level;
• of its familiar Divisionlll foes·like
The Red Foxes traveled to Loret~
St. John's, RPI and Siena, who to to face St. Francis.(Pa)in its
also had to bump· their football· . season opener and scored a 16~
7
programs to the Division 1-AA win.
level'. However, Duquesne and
Once again, D'Aiuto led the
Central Connecticut are two new ru~hing attack gaining 116 yards on
23-carries.
Parady
said the offense,
• especially the line; did'the job .in the
crucial moments of'the game.
"The offense took charge when
they had to,'' he said. "When he
(D' Aiuto) has the big yardage it's
because of the offensive line." The
undefeated Red Foxes will host
C. W. Post Saturday at Leonidoff
Field at 3 p.m.
$pikers win first;
•
'
•.
•
.
.
Dunb·ar to miss entire
sea.son
z.cf@;\¥.tt·.Io:na,,in
fou:r,-,.
i:~··::
byJ~~~o~s
0
i:i~rUND
.
~;!s~:~~;i;~~{iilk!};!;i~
$:]}l:L~~L;t~~l~~*~Ei
'-·:!:'.,
<
1
<i''.''.'
•
•
::,.'>:·.
-·
•.
•.•
•
/ •
• • •• ••••
. • •
•.
·
· • • -~
·>
;':iSenior point guard Dexter Dun.7
•
~irig,;probation,or dismis.sal.{:'
.-. ;
freshman.. Daririy Basil~ :roi''the ·
·
'
by
TERI.
L ..
STEWART
were quick!y dampened by
bar will sit out:the entirel993-94
·.: The handbook also. says .a stu-
siai-tihiHifot:_:ii~ijg_wH\mo~t
iilcf-
•
>-Staff
Writer •
.Seton
Hall.
•
season as an academic redshirt, ac-
dent cari not participate in varsity
ly
be
the squad's
·starting
'point
•
:-·
~. ('We played hesitant:at fir
5t
cording to·Gene Doris, the direc-
athletics if the student is on proba-
guard this year·
. -Spike One in the win coluriin
and th eµ: we picked (it)'up and·.-~ tor of athletics.".·.·.,
. •• •
tion for two consecutive semesters.
It
·was a collective decision to
for the womeri!s volleyball
•
played,'' • senior co~captain
Dunbai,"a criminal-justice ma-
'~I'm Qbviously
disappointed not
declare Dunbar
as
an
academic red-
tea_Tmh·
.e··•.-
..
Re·
d.··F.oxes'
..
bro·k·e··
a·.s·•·
1
.x
Nicole.~ilenzi said. ''.We kn~w
jor; .still
.. •h~s .one ... m.ore year of. hav1.·ng Dexter av.iilable for this
shirt, Doris said.
••
.
•
when we were.
·coming
·in .here
1- •b·i·
d
1 · ,..
•
h R d
b •1 d
d h
h" • •
••
"He .(Dunbar) was part of the
·
•
.
e 1g1i 1ty·an ·can p ay,10r t e e
year
ut un erstan t at
t
1s 16'
game,, IOsirig streak defeating
thatthey'were very dominant: ..
·Foxes
next season provided he can. . : in his best interest; ,,Head Coach
decisio·n ·making process," the
Ion~' CoHege, , J5-13, 13~15,
and we had. to play our best'
iin···
prove. hi.s.·academ.ic;standing:·
.. • Dave M.agarity said in a· press
athletic director said.<'After all the
15-3, 15-7 ina close four game
'againsHhem:•~ .· ·
,
•
i
:<ounbarwotild
nolhave been in-
release./,
discussions, we kriew itwasin: his
battle :
. ,-. Freshman walk~cm Liz Heri-
.
··1·:
'b.
·1·
••••
h·' ••• ··"· .•••• b.
• .
• • h"
C ••••. tl
M.
·1
•
.
best i.n.ter.
est
·10.
aca.d.
em.
icall.Y
••••
·-
•
··c-
,,,
..
n··er.'··was·.a.ble··to,.p·
..
u.t.Mar.i
..
s.·t
,e1g1_~,tIS
season ,e~ause
IS.
• ..
urren,Y,
agany 1sona
dh"t
...
·
.
• SeniorNicoleSilenzUedthe
· .
.
.
- ..
-
· .. >'academic' perfo.'rimiiice
.. · did····11ot •recruitingttipandcould.notb.e
res
ir;
·
.. ·.·..
·
·
.
-.
M.a.
ri.st_c.ha.·.r
..
'ge
..
··.·sla··
m·.·m•.·.1·n·g··
•.•.
·d·.
o·w·_·.·n'.:
• · ·anead4-2inthefirstsetwith her
··.,
t ·
M·,
--. • • ,,
....
t, · --d·.--d
·
·D·
.-. • ·
h d ·f
·r
th.
·
t
..
-.·
•
.•
D·
·un.·b·a··
..
r·.
,· D·.
•
0
-··.r·.•
1s·.--.•·.·Magar·
1·ty.
an·d·.
•
••
•
•••
• •
,
0
mee
'!
anst-s /San ar S,
ons. reac e • or ur
er commen . •
13
ki~ls. Freshman Jenny '\Vein-
firSt two aces of the riight ...
The
said~~ O" • • ' '~-. ··' .:~:
•
. •. .. . .• . . Dunbar's case is different from
Dr.,John Ritschdorff; the faculty
brechLchipped
Jfi'
with· seven ·
freshman h~ 12 acesinonly,s~.
/'lfMarist Cc,llegesaysDexteds Izett
Buchanan's,
the seQior .· athletic aclviser~,we·reall involved
·
solo 6Iocks; :. ;: '.. : ..... •. ·,.·.:
•
games •. :·•· •. ,:, ··>'.· ._<. :C:·/,·, <-iiieligible;-'than
the NCAA says he guard/forward who was declared
in determining .D1mbar's athletic
•
• , .The. •Red Foxes\vere not so
·: Sefori Han quicl_dyJieit:'the
•
is.'irieligibl~/• fie said;}~-- • •••
• •
academically ineligible in the ·se-
and academic future.
·•· ./
.·
forti.ipatfia:
st
Fri~_ay;,;_,
>: .•·.·
game, at: four with ah.ace by
Dunbar could riot be reached for ,cond·· semester last year.: Unlike
Doris said it should take Dunbar
b
'l
B,ik1tdEMast
;·ro,'Ner/
Shltori
~
Han
•
senMioarr.
·.'.As
..
t.nw~raes~·tKrru·.~.s.lpn'
eg··r.b-c"y:
;o,;n·
. .-.·
.y'· ' c
.. om.111.en
...
•.•.
t>.'.>
••
·.··.•.·.:.:
"•. '. ·.
·. . ...
.-.. ·,.Punba.
r ;Bucha.nan
.. - ; w.
ho .m
.. • issedJ 6. • fivde
year.sto grabquate'
(Mh.
ay; 1995)
oc e .. an st spat
lOVICl<>ry ..
.: ·,•·
.. · : ' .• .
. •. •
' .
,::Acc.ordingto the'stud~Q(hand-
games iast year;ban not make up
·an not onger ecause ecancon-
w_i.th,·•.:·i.ts.'.•··taller
..
• and·.·.·qu.
ic.
ke.r·.·
·seven
i>.·
0
.irits. i.
n. t.he secorid:set.
i
·b·
• • k • .. Al.
l t
•
d
· • ·•• • • t d t -.·
..
hi"s'eli•g·
1
·b1·11·ty· • ....
·.:· . •
ce.ntia.
t.
e
.. solely. on his.· aca
.. d.emics
•• - •. Id.
• • ... -.•.h
,h.
o.o.. ; ·... s u
.. en
.. tsare.expec e . o
defense.
• •
•
but cou not come up wit t e
..
h ,.. 11 •
• • •
B h. • .
•
·
. · .
•
. thi•s·
...
ye ..
a·.r·.. • •.
.
._
•
·
•
• ·
meet t e ,o owmg mm1mum stan°
uc .. anan.:.me.t
...
-
Manst's 1.nstitu-
..
•
•• •
•
.. • • • - .fi
11
• ••
h.. •
victory.
· · •.
·., · ·
<'
.d 'd ••
A-
•
I • ... • •• d ·
•
•
I
• d · d
·11 b ·• 1· • •
U.nderN.C.
AA.·.
rules, Oun.bar.
can
. Th.e ·Red •Foxes e to t_ ~,:-· .. The aggressiveness seemed:to.
· . ar :.
cumu atJve gra e. pomt t1ona stan. ar sand w1 . e e 1g1~
.
.
•
.. Pirates• 15-4, 15;;6::I5sl0; . ) :,: . :.be:too:much to:.haridle ·fcfr the ..
•
.
average
·or2;0
at.-the.ena ofeach• ble to play this semester, according . notpracticeor travelwith the team
Marist seeniecf'.'pulliped arid'':.,' young RedFoxes'. ,.:) ,
,
..
-
'semester. A student:iho fails_to to_Dbris •• •.•• • .
thi'~I~e::dden~·us tlia:t;~lm~: to
readyto play, btit their·spirits.
·• ..
,;Se!;!
'NVOLL'page 11-'
► acheive a 2,0 cum~Iiitive grade
Dunbar averaged 7.7 points per
do this to·Dexter,'• Doris said:
Rtll'ttiS
in.tne
.ai,:.
7Reel•·Fox-fever
is
now.nere
·.The.footb~Uteamhasstartedits
.and1twastJ:)etearn shomeopener.
• . ltwdl
take. a whde :for- t.he ·
SeniorgtiardizettBuchanan-has
• season in impressive Jasbion win~
_You
•
\l{ould : think :i:,eon!doff
• freshmen and the team to develop.
-
raised his grade point average Over
riing its_ first two game_s~
and the
Field was filled to capacity,-nght?
If
the squad can get on a win 2.0last semes_terandwill be eligi-
studeri.ts can not stop talking about
• Wrong.
. . ·. ·
streak, they may have a respectable ble to play this sem~tei:, according
the team's success.
.
Only J,lZ5 fans went to: the
season and could ditch the
to Gene Doris, diretforofathletics.
The fans were cheering raucous- : game, J;eonidoff Field holds 2,500
"rebuilding" label that is starting
, The Penri~rit Races
ly. :.Pace's quarterback
Mark
spectators..
- .
to form.·
Klausner had to call a few timeouts • Head· Coach Jim Parady's ,club
_____
••
The Dunbar factor
because he could not calf his signals •
•. could be on pac~ to have a special
Point guard Dexter Dunbar.will
over the noise of the crowd.
season. If th1s .kmd of fan support
sit out this season as an academic
Wa.it. The image is changing.
continues, we will call this year,
..__
___
...;. redshift.
. Marist is still playing well.and
"The Best Season That Never
Secondly, the ReclFoxes are not
What does this mean?
racking ·up the points against an
Was"·
·putting the ball in the net. The
. It means Dunbar would have
oveimatched Pace squad, but the
.
Soccer Struggling • •.
squad has only scored three ·goals been declared academically ineligi-
• crowd. is small.
••
.
Right now, the men's soccer
in its first five games. How many
ble this semester. It means Dunbar
The Marist fans who attended
team's 10-6-4 season (which includ-
goals have they scored in the last
will be eligible to play next year.
It
the game cheered but only after the
ed a 3-2 win over third-ranked St.
four games? O. •
means Head Coach Dave Magari-
team scored. The loudest noise was John's) seems like it was in a galaxy
Enough said. •
ty's squad will be missing a pure,
the sarcastic "Let Go Pace!"
far• far away·
·-
Growing pains
experienced floor general this year.
chants from a few die-hard Pace
This year Head Coach Howard
The women's volleyball team
It was a smart move by Dexter
fans who • were • forced to watch
Goldman's squad has crashed to an
finally won its first game on Tues-
and .. the. athletic department to
their ieam get smacked.
0-5 start. All five losses were on the
day def eating Iona College 15-13, choose the academic redshirt route
• Yes,
the weather was crummy. road, and the team must be hop-
13-15, 15-3, 15-7 to raise its record
for two reasons. First, it gives him
N • M • , ,.. b ll
•
ing some home coo.
king will change to a paltry 1-6..
a year to concentrat
I I
h.
o,
anst s ioot a program is
Moira Breen and Nicole Silenzi
.
e so e Yon is
not dose to comparing to Notre
th~~;~i~~~~tic
drop?
are the only two seniors returning
i~demics. _Sfech.ond,
he can play a
Dame's, Michigan's or Penn
First, the team lost Shawn Scott,
from last year's l4-l 4 squad.
u s~on 1 1s grades get better.
st ate's.
Lou Schmidt, Andy Clinton and
Because of . the lack of up-
Dunbar has the time and the -
However, the team was coming Bob Angrilla to graduation. These perclassmen, Johnston has had to
chance
to improve
in the
off a good opening day victory on
were integral parts to the team's
use her four freshmen in crucial classroom. If he does not, he will
the road against St. Francis (PA), success.
game situations.
have no one but himself to blame.
The baseban'.races: are heating
up. Sort of.
•
.
.
\
The Toronto Blue Jays are star-
ting to fly in the American League
East. The Yankees will have one
last 'opportunity to· shoot them
down this weekend at Skydome .
'I)ie Chicago· White Sox are still
putting "the . Big Hurt" (Frank
Thomas will be The Most Valuable
Player) on the rest of the teams in
the A.L West.
The Philadelphia Phillies are
chQking and doing their best to lose
the National League East, but most
likely, it is too late,.
The San· F~ancisco Giants have
choked. The Atlanta. Braves will
definitely win the N.L. West.
Fo(?tball next ..yeek.
Ted Holmlund
is The Circle
Sports Editor.