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Part of The Circle: Vol. 43 No. 3 - October 7, 1993

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VOLUME 43, NUMBER 3
Marlst Col,lege,Poughk~epsie,
N.Y..

0CTOBER7,
1993.
Ma:rii.St
marChes .in pl'otest against violence
Antho~y Fusar, resident director
Staff Writer·
of Gartland Commons, said in his
.
· . .
speech that students. should
Members .of the Marist com-_
remember the lessons ofthe march,
munity took _time off from:their
that the Marist community"should
regular activities on Sunday night
not tolerate violence .•
. to particip*tein a candle~ lit pro-
The final • speaker, Roberto
test march ·against violence:
Amato, director of the counseling
Lynn -Magee, a junior arid se-:
center said that the march made a
cond • year resident. assistant,
''powerful statement," and now
organizedthe march because of the
that students are past the initial
recent increase in violence on. the
reaction of fear, education can pre-
Marist campus.
vent other occurences.

Magee said that her iritent was
Marist College President, Den-
not to protest against the a4-
nisMurray, spoke at the end of the
• ministration, • but rather to give
march, saying that he was impress-
students an opportunity to show·
ed with the.event.
unity and send the message
.that
'!Not only \Vas it a greatturnout,
violence is not welcome on campus.
but it was. a resopnsible and elo-,
"I was thrilled with the number-
quent statement," Murray said.
of-people showing unity and sup-
Murray said that it proved that
port," Magee said. "This proves
.the students are committed to
that the Marist community cares."
working together.
Approximately400 students and
: Both students and faculty who
faculty members who showed up •
marched agreed that the march
either ·went individ~ally. or as
showed unity in the Marist
representatives· of the 35 different
community.
. . clubs and organizations which
• Daryl Ledyard, ~irector of
volunteered their support for the
public relations for the event, said
march.
.
.
. •
it was great to see so many people
The march started at approx-
come together for one goal.
imately 8 p;m., · after, a few
"It
shows Marist College
volunteers handed out candles. The .. .
_
students are empathetic instead
of
candles were lit while Magee made
·

J~ircle
phe>to/Ma~t
lll1a~in_.
:.
apathetic," Ledyard said .
. the wooaen stairs behind.Sheahan ... port for the' entire:eventcand-said -~e~urity:,t1as:
added. patr.9l~s;-a11d \VhQ
said that tb,e. student govern, . :Apartm~nts, said that she was g)ad
H.an. • - . • •. ' .. ·· •.•..
·; .· -~-· .. : .• ;;• •·-~·
. thafifis important to keep ujfsti.i- : started a:.van;service ()Il campus: ' (merit iftrying'.:19.:makeJhe
_cainpus : }ha~ lvl~rist-fiQ~lIY,:f!ad
somethmg
The group
of
students and facul" • dent awareness:
.
i • • ..
: .. _
He
also
said that'the· studen£escortJ
<
as"
safe"ias
,possiblei _.:_
• : :
> -: > :-
Jike
·this:
because this .is what she
tyfollowed Magee around campus
. 'C'This really is great that students • service is·avaHable/andjmproyed ~-
f
:Rinehart also said. that they are· ·mought·college was like before she
to hear speakers who offered's_up~
.. ·keepawareness·going,"-Learysaid, • lighting around camplls is ill the · _evahiatihg_issm:s
of safety and if came. • . -
port to the Marist community'._/.
"That- will unite the conimuriity·· works;
••• . •.
. . . .
.
~
anyone has a problem (with
Joe
Leary,
director of safety and
better."

the secoi-1<1:,
soe~ke{ was· Kent
something,
to
let the SGA know.
• ••
see
MARCH
page
4

security, ~as the first soeaker of · • ·'· •
·, ...... ·: ... • .. ,:,,_,,
.• ....
_··.· ..... i .... :.··
- •.·.,:
.,
.•.'l~f
irl)}tf

r~.e~Jlf.igJira
tio.n
-·1\la.risf'.-lo.oks···t·o·•
.•
a¢ademlc···_structure
by
\JEFFREYJ. ijOSE
.·staffWriter.. •

.The first\,ption consists
of
a
School (qr'College) being'establish-
ed for five specfalized areas,
:
· • Marist's 'phy~ical
.appearance.
·; These.areas Would.be ciesignated
'may
not be the only aspectof-ihe
<
as: ,Liberal Arts> and Sdences,
campus undergoing recon~truction ·. Business ·-.:A_dmi~istration ••
and •
in the future, according to a docu~ . Public
J>olicy, Social
and
ment released. by_ Robert .J. -Behavioral Sciences, C:ommllnica-
:.(}rossman, associate professor :of_ tion. Arts_ and • .I_nformation .
·-business, andMarcvanderHeyden,
Sciences,
. and·
Continuing
· vice president for academic affairs. Education".. ·
. A
repgrt datecfSept. 9. from ______
"!'- _____
.-.--
vanderHeyden
arid Grossman
HThe
,c~rrent/divi-
outlined )>ptions for a' possible
siolialhas served· the. col-
- academic restructuring hf the col- .
. .
.
.
. • ...
<_
• •

lege by: . ·.. . . •
. ..
.
...


Lege well. JV_e
are
now ex-
'-::-Oividing
.the college into five
ploring ways to· make ••
~chools .ofconcentration; --·..
ourselves- better. "
• '-,:.·oeyeloping three sch.ools of
. ~_)R
___
ober(Gro§_ ,$_man,
concentration and keeping a divi-
-
,
sionar structure in four areas of
••.
assocfate pro,fessor
study; . .

, of • business
-
·Keep.
the present configura-
tion of. six divisions· and a school
of of Adult Education.
"The • current divisional con-
figuration has served tlie college
well," said Grossman." We are
now· exploring ways to make
ourselves better."
The faculty has b~n brought up
to date with the proposals through
an academic organization • docu-
ment, written by Grossman· arid
vanderHeyden, and are currently
expressing their thoughts through
divisional meetings, colloquiums
and E~mail. (electronic mail).
The proposals are still in the ear-
ly stages ofdiscussion and will be
debated throughout the Marist
community during the semester;
According to the academic
organization document, the final
proposal will be presented to the
faculty on Dec. 15.
The second • option ••
would
establish three separate schools and
keep the. divisional structure for the
Humanities, Natural Sciences,
Mathematics and Social and
Behavioral Sciences.
The three schools established
under this plan would be a School
of Business Administration, School
of Communication and the Arts
and
School
of
Continuing
Education.
Another area that is being
debated is how the faculty should
be governed.
According to .Grossman, many
departments have advocated hav-
ing the faculty members elect the
department leaders.
The current policy has the ad-
ministration appointing the divi-
sional chairs.
The academic organization
dm:timent says that if schools were
established within the college, they
• .:would be led by appointed deans,
who would be selected in accor-
dance
-with.
the .college search
procedures.
This would • allow. faculty
members to elect their department
chairs and to play a substantive role
• in making decisions that affect
them and the students.
. These decisions would concern
curriculum, personnel and budget,
· according
to the academic
organization document.
. Departments have also wanted
established schools within the col-
lege because· academic structure
would be consistent with configura-
tions favored by ·accrediting
authorities, the academic organiza-
tion document says.
It is very desirable to have ac-
credited programs within the col-
lege," Grossman said. "It would
open· up what we can offer
-students. Every institution that has
accredited programs has its own
schools.
"I think (the college setting up
schools) is a wonderful idea,".
Grossman said; "I believe it will
make the college even better, but
the question now is what the facul-
ty wants. There is no right way or
wrong way here."
"We ·are now discussing the
positives and the negatives of each
option,'.' Edward Springer, assis-
tant professor of communication,
said. "With only one faculty
meeting so far, it. is not clear as to
what option would best suit the
Communication .and the Arts
division."

I.

















































































THE CIRCLE,, 0CTOBER.7,J993 ..
Sledding goes_frcim
iarr,,aipu
to-Holly.wood
by
ANDREW BORIS. .
and COU..EEN MURPHY
.
.
·,
.
'.
'
._,,•
joke.
.
_ . _
_
A: Well, they basically are a jo~e. :_
• That's the ·main thrust of this· movie.
-
Plus, it.was.fun:
. __ . __ . .
·younger_mark:et. \~ .
The characters were engaging and funny,
Shame on
:you;
Disney.
. _ . . ....
_ , .
• :and their names made the whole film. - _·. . ,C:
If
you're
a
cynic; you won'.t hke this
It's· a few hours_
of
making fun_.
of big
Colleen: -Th.is week, the spirit. of the
Jamaican me1i'crammed into a bobsled.
"Rocky'l: movies has been captu~ed by
Of course,this is Disney; it'safamily film~
Disney and director Jon-Turteltaub in "Cool
_ There ·are the obligatory messages, such as
Runnings."

-
''It's OK to.be different" and "You can do
, Sanka Coffiewas my favorite, but I can't
1hovie.·

: : . .. .
::_

_ ,
i .. , •·
leave out Yul·Brenner or'.Junior BeviL
Bi.it the general m~od of the fil!]l doesn't
• They were just great to watch. . . • .. ,
seem aimed to\Vard a 01a~ket.
:
; •
J\,:
I'm not denying that this film has_
f
ami- . Jfhe go_al
is to Jry somethmg that lo.oks un-
iy appeai.
·_.
-_
_ •
• . :
: •
'possible at first.. . ._
.-
-
.· __
. • .--
_
_-<
gve alr~ady said that I enjoyed wat_ching
:Hopefully, yo~'ll find a good coa~h, goo_d
this story unravel. . . _ . ""
: •
. - friends, and you ll succeed, even without a
How can you not root for a Jamaican
anything you put your mind to."
bobsled team'?

·
k •

Andrew: Going to see this movie, I was
Sappy sentunent seems to ma
~
Its way m-
expecting a silly romp through the beaches
to this film just when the fun really starts to
\Vhaibothers·me, however, is the way this gold medal. •·
... .
·•
•.
typ~
'oLfilm
is :packaged for the· younger
A: Well, it loo}ss
as
if.Colleen has been
viewer.
hornswoggled too.
, . .
. . • . -
-
• Slick messages of family values. don't
Oh well, I_ sti~lthink:this is a dfli~htful
of Jamaica t~ the slopes of Calgary.
.
ro~~ me·
it
was a· little drawn
out·
and
. _ That's_bas1~ally what I got, but surpns- .. mispl/lced. •

mgly, _I hke~ it.
.
.
. • •
••
Maybe if the Zucker brothers took on this
I thmk !his film is a l! ttle mane for the
project it would have been different.
!cover up the fact that Disney is anticipating· film, even with-its overt commerciali~m.
jhundreds.of kids going out to buy "Cool
Murphy, on a scale fro_m o~eto ~en
adult movie-goer! bu! children should have
C: You_
have _to keep in mind, however,
no problem fi_ndmg ~ts appeal.
• . . the audience of the movie.
•Runnings» shirts, "Cool Runnings" hats,
bobsleds, what:would_yougive this movie'?
!and their very'.own "Cool Runnings" bobsl~
.
C: I'd give it eight bobsleds, for the sheer
C: T~e mov~e describes a group of a~hletes • .
'i
found the message to be a great one for
who ~1ss their chan:e to ~ompete _m the
kids that will see ·it.
Olympic event of their_ ch01ce: run~mg.
Children
need
:rhey_then meet skeptical fo~mer slide: Irv • encouragement.
ed when the sriow _starts
to
fall.
_ ·
entertainment value. . . _
.
.
Also, it doesn't take the trained eye to see
• You, can wait for video on t~is one,
that
kind
of
the numerous promotions for soft drinks, _ although it wasn't a total waste of time and
sneakers, and sportswear. aimed at the
money.
Blitzer _(John Candy), who thmks they re a

.
.
Get 'Cuckoo·, . by experiencingC({rve's:sqnic co_/il
frollt
by
DANA BUONICONTI
Most of the shoegazer bands of
recent years, bands named so for
playing swirly guitar pop while gaz-
ing at their shoes, seem to have
fallen by the wayside.
Maybe it's record downtime,
who knows?
One band that has stuck around,
though they're technically not
shoegazers, but have been lumped
into that category, is Curve.
Hailing from England, Curve
has been around for about two
years.
Their new record, "Cuckoo,"
on Anxious/Charisma records,.

·
• ·
·
• ;
• •
• • •
·
· ·d · :. · · ...
EP •
bination of the Butthole Surfers
fmds them. expandmg their musical . 1s.
comp~e an entire recor . to an
, •
d M
d h ll
h'
direction.
There is something recognizably the hooks
were better
on
Ministry, an - ega et 'a at t e
At heart, Curve is Toni Halliday
forebodding and macabre about
"Frozen."
' •
s~~~:t~
From Mars, Women
and Dean Garcia..
their songs.
Some
might
_
argue
that
Are From Venus" has a drum
They write the songs and play •
That's also part of their charm. '"Cuckoo" is too cold ofa record
sound suspiciously like the on:e us-
most. of the material in the studio
Over the progression of their to be enjoyable, but I would argue
ed on the Beastie Boys' ''Pass The
themselves, fleshing out their live records: four EPs and three albums•· ·that enjoyable isn't the right word.
Mic/'
.
shows with additional musicians.
{one a combination of the EPs), • !tis not a record to kick back
And "Left of Mother'' is about
What • sets them apart • from
they have gotten consistently more arid relax .with.
as close to acoustic techno as you
shoegazer bands is that there is. inventive and less radio-friendly.
Curve isn't.j:xactly unique in
really nothing swirly about their
The boo.ks are buried deeper in
their approach "to· making music,
can get.
-
guitar parts at all.
the songs, the guitars slash more
but the finished product (some
Sonically, "Cuckoo" is digital-
Bands like Lush, Ride, and My
like razors, the techno beats more
have called it«gothic techno") is . • ly pristine; every note and every
Bloody Valentine are all fairly
harnassed than before.
something you don~t hear much of
beat sounds· too perfect.
warm-sounding bands.
Collectively, "Cuckoo" is a bet-
·these days.
_ _
Their press bio quotes a review.
C
• h •
t
d th
th •
• •
f
Standout
·tracks
off "Cu·ckoo"
that said they "create a cavernous
urve 1s t e ice queen.
er recor
i\n e1r previous e -
noise that is not so much· a storm
What's
so striking
about
forts, save the "Frozen" EP.
include "MissingUnk," on which
"Cuckoo" is how cold the record
While it is proba_bly un_
fair to_ they· manage to sound like a com-
, in a teacup, as a monsoon in a cof-
.. fee mug."

Steroids and other e-itrrentfoOtbal/
_____ z_,__·ssues
eqnfrqr,{e/!i~~l.
'f!13ggrJ!lJ1
~
.. .
.
..
_
. ..
by
JENNIFERGIANDALONE -
quart~_r~ack, _
-
~ •. _. <. _/_ ·, .. Darnel_l ;is.the 5-1nlY(?~~--'.whq,·:iis
how:to·sign an:~L.•contr_a~!,:
l~hc,ug_htbniarEpps'.wasgr~at:

Staff
Writer
Crrug _Sh,~ffer
<.,
ARiyer ~u~s
becomes detenn111ed;
·t<>:-ger a
an~ that everythmg,. else 1s__ I_hevet saw;" Juice,''. but Ithi!1k
Through It ) plays Joe Kane, the
degree, as well as excell at
hi~
sport.
ummportant.
_
_ _.
we will be seemg a lot more of him
What's more important to the
administration of a· big university:
producing well-educated -students
who will go out in so~iety and make
a difference, or a winning football
team whose players will eventually
sign NFL. contracts'?
_
Touchstone Pictures'
latest
release "The Program" attempts to
answer this question along with
many others regarding sports on
the college and pr9fessional levels.
The alumni and administration
of Eastern ,State University are
upset that their school hasn't had
a winning football team in a few
years.
_
So they start. to put the pressure
on head coach Sam Winters (James
Caan, "Misery").
• _
Coach Winters is given an
ultimatum: put • together a team
that will make it to a bowl game at
the end of the season or look for
anotherjob after 12 years with the
university.
Now the freshman recruiting
begins, and so do the problems. •
One of the many small storylines
in the movie involves ESU's star
SEBltt9
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leader of the Timberwolves, and a
•With. the help
of
his
_tutor
This seems to be the po1>ular
opi
0
•in the future.
_ -•
Heismann Trophy candidate:
_. Autumn . . (Halle
..
- ;~eiry,
nion among the college alumni iµid . ·
·_
" ,.
< . _ ,._
,
..
,
-•
He -beco_mes the- center of a
"Boomerang''), Darnell passes his
those who currently run the 5-chooL

He playe~ his _character wit~ ,a
media campaign that makes him
placemen.ttests and earns a:starting
''The Program" doesn't paint a
lot of emotion .a~~ ahya,ys looked -
• look like he isn't ~othered by the
position on the team. •

, . • • • pretty picture of college athletic.s, . veq 9.omfort~ble m his ~cenes. ,,
pressure that constantly surrounds
• As you might have guessed, he
but it does give us a re.alistic,90,e.; ,.· -.IJ0:ve.9raig Shefferandthought
him. .
. . . .
. _ .
also gets the girl in the>erid. • _
·Awinningteam
means ..
re,~og~i-:··
:J1e dicl
an:
exceptionally goodjo.l;i ...
Joe comes from a family ·of
Another problem the teamfaces
tion and publicity for a school, not
•·
• •·•···
-
·
· -
• -

alcoholics and has constant battles
is the use of anabolic st~roids. ·.
to:mention'.iiicredible amounts_ of . , _-;
Kane
was
someone:\Vho acted
with his father.
_
_
.. This is _all shown.through drug
mon'eyt.d//1··>:::.,.
:-_,,_,
',.>
-like'he could handle:anything in"
He is under continuous scrutiny
use by one oftheteam's_best, and.
-_
.-JamesCaanddesa,ni~~job 'Yith

'fr<>iltofthecameras' and fans,,1"ut
from unive~s!ty officials a~d h~
biggest, defensive players, : •
a
role that soII1etimes
~eein.s
_li~e-~ .
-
was 'troubled
·on
the
'in.side-as
he •
the respons1b1hty
of not lettmg his _ Overseeing all. of this is Coach
suppprtiI1g orie rather than a·star~ . -·.
louilit
his· drinking ptobleni and -
team down.
_
-Winters. __ _ _
-
ring-one.· • _ ••• -_-

. ' - • : ,--• ;"
his.father. ,,

As the pressure gets worse, Joe
He is a father figure to Joe and .. • ·CoacfrWintersOissoIDeon~:y;litj
< . )::~., . -,, -·· .
.
" .
discovers alcohol.
.
.
never loses faith that Joe will return
gets thejob dorie on the _field as .0: -·
0
".'erail, The Prog~~
i:ie:
He also meets Camille (Knsty
to top form after his alcohol . well as look after his team when-the.-.:,
.fimc>Vbtell
or anyone
Swanson, "Buffy the Vampire
rehabilitation.

_
.;;;;.,.;.,=--==~~=~----"."".:
·---
oot a •
Slayer"), another "full ticket
Coach Winters also stands by
r
jock/'
at school on a tennis
one of his injured players who may
scholarship,
never play again.
• .
• She becomes his girlfriend and
Mack reads at a much lower level
confidant, and convinces him that
than he should and seems to have
he doesn't have to turn out like his
slipped through the system. , . -.--
father, who seems to need alcohol
He is allowed to stay in school
to. deal _with everyday life.
_
because of his piayingability.
Backmg up the star quarterback
It's funny how art imitates life,
is rookie tailback Darnell Jefferson
isn't it?


•• •
(Omar ~pps, "Juice").
.
.
At one point, Winters tells
Commg from a small town,
Darnell that all he needs to know _
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THlfCIRCLEi
OcrbeER-1;
1993
3
FifSfifoofbClll
coach\refl'iembers. the
·.·
,_,
.......
·.,.
,...
.
.•
.,
.
,
.
.
.
'Vikings'
••
by
JEFFREY ••
J.:
ROSE·
·
.button
sales, and :selling charter
.•
,
fessor of communication, was a
James Driscoll~
Marist is Ron Levine, the first head .
•.
<-
: /
StaffWriter
'
_

memberships to the football club,
,faculty
member. that got'(ery .in-
"He became a' big fan of ours
coach.
Finn said.

,
,,.
terested in what we were doing,"
and helped us_
tremendously," said
"He was the perfect man for the
Who would.have thoughtthata
·•
,,Each
player had to.pay:$50 to
said Finn. C<Bob
loved the idea of
Finn .. ':He would side himself with
job," said Finn. "Levine was an
residenf assistant working. af the
• •
finance the
.
insurance,• and Ron
football
·
at Marist and talked
us and advise us on what to say and
active member of the community,
fro qt' tleskJn Champagnat Hall r'L_e_v_in:.:;e:..w.;.;..::as::..:.:h::.ii',:;ed=as~th!.:e~h~e::::a::::d:..:~::::O::::O!.:t-;__~O~si!!.;ti~v.!:iel!.L.!a~b~o:.!;u~t
.:;W~h~a~t
.:;W:_.::e_.w::,:e~r~e.!:d:,::O::,-_w:.:.!!h:::at:.,:n~O::.:t:..:t:::::O..::S:::aY~W~h:::e!!n..:w::e:..w:.:.o~u::::l:.:::d:.!g!::o:_
was a qualified coach, and liked the
would initiate· MarisL
_College'
idea of getting involved with
Football.
.•.•
••

v·k.
Marist. He took a very active in-
That is exactly what happened
.
'
'n gs·

hum
b'/e F .
.
terest and was determined to
back• in October of 1964 When
creating a successful program atthe
Robert Finn,
a
junior R.A.,
r,a
college."
overheard a meeting of students
.
-
·rs
31 0
r'\_
The club soon gathered momen-
trying to•form a football club at
,
-
~
J
tum and recognition, Finn said,
Marist
and
decided to help the
""""'l
and there was a definite direction
gn:mp: •
~
-

in the club's activities.
.
''I. wasn't even involved, but I

t">V
Q.
By the fall of 1965, Marist field-
overheard the whole meeting and
~./'- ,c,/
.
_
~C...
.
3
ed its first football team.
sat in and started offering my opi-
, '
y
~
The football team was named
nions, ,,. said Finn. "They thought
h,
,t"'\
tr\,
the Marist Vikings· at the time
that lhad some interesting obser-
"'-v
,;,,Q1\' '
r.'-'
.CD
because it was a club activity and
vations arid asked me i(I was in-
,
.-.
('\ \. \
..._
'\
V
was not permitted to take on the
terested. Orie thing led to another
(o
~Y,
"'I
:::J
Red Fox logo.
:i:::::::r:s::::
·
{,0~
,...~sU.'.'-·.~~Q;
cc
:f~~~:~f:~~;::={i{!t:
approached _the
dub as a business.
~""'"'-
_
_ ·•·
.
tr
t0
r
..
,,<:>
~
0
table 3-3 record for the year. More
project,-and the club took off from
.
:V
~~\;
~'
importantly for the club, Finn said,
there.
.

•~V\..
.
i
\.
i ..
u,,
...
_._
.
.

~V'\.
""""'l
was the fact that they created an ex-
"The thing actually mushroom-

~\ "\\
~,~
co·
citement, "a movement that
:~~:ti~
~flli:t
Jlt
ine~iuesr;
• •
0-~
.
~--.
-~-
-,~-"
\Y._.
:\'..
.. .
<JJooie~
.
·.-G)·
wo~:·!r~~iig;d
for the club to
everybody on campus
_was:
in~.
~
rent Riverview Field on Friday
terested in having football here
nights for home games.
happen; .
-
other
than
·
the
"The games were very well at-
administraticm. ''
• -
_.
_
_
:
., .
_
_
.
/!!..
.n
6
Sl)
tended ~y the stude~ts a,nTd
the
The first thing Finn did w;,i.s
.go.
~~
\J
(D
community," said Fmn. ' here
to the.athletic d_epartment, then.to
~
Po
~
were only a couple hundred
the dean, and eventually ended.up
\.,
lJn
'-"O
-
students at the school in 1965, but
'•.!F~d:~L/:~
~~~·
;:~:--
~~
.
d
p
/j
I"
(9,v
(n
:1~
:~~~:::.:.:';:;~~·.oo•
poo-
:~~~~~~
~~!~::
ft::s;:~t
:::;
1
.k.
_
o
11,~e
.
~
ww
cat:~to~~~
:i~~!~::cTa~s r:~r~
fqllowing. criteria he would
cqn-
In
I
\.I~
n
station, and soon everyone wanted
'~l~~;.sanctionilig
it (the_ football.
.
gs
banr,·
.
Ce
I
~fu~~come a part of the football
-
"Beingaclub,wehadtobetotal
~
ze Cath
o
"We
became
very
self-
financially sufficient, which meant
-
-



-
0
,,•c
_.
u
.
_
sufficient," said Finn. "After our
from hiring a coach, to buying
25
first season I was able to hand over
!a~tr~s,rii,•!
0
;:~in:ai~~ld'~T~~
-

-
. -~
-

~
6
$\~:/~al~et~!~\~
1
:~1~~e~~it~;
school would not put one penny in<
~. '-:
::
.
·':;_
'· ,._
_a-
full year of his life, but "it was
to
l
·t•"

a
better experience then all my
.


.
. .

-
_
. .
.
_ing within the faculty ranks, which _
talk with anybody about our club."
9~Jl:-f
r~qu~r}!w,e~ts
.. t~a,~
f.~.q,J~q
.
S~pport•withn~ the Manst com.:..,
..
''
was'very iinportarit in· creating en-
. DriscoU also arranged a deal for
classes
combined. It was like being
be. sati~fied ,by th_e
. .clul?
,\VI:~~.
in~_. muruty was growing as word of the,:: thusiasm for. the·
·dub;
'.The
whole•·•, the team to buy equipmeiit from a
-
~f
;e;i~ent of a company at the age
surance for all_
t_he
players and the.
-,
club circulated around campus and_ campus
came
together for this club
·
• high school in Ohio that was drop-
search for acoach •.
-
.
.
-.·.
_.
.
a few key players stepp_ed
foi;ward to be successfut"


ping athletics.
"I thought football at Marist
The club was able to raise moner
-
to boost the chances ofthei;:lub be-
Another person.that was active·
Finn believes that the man who

would only last for two or three
throu_gh· cake sales;_
car--
washes,
_
ing successful.
.

'
'.
-

.••
,
-
in geuing the club going
·was
the
deserves the most credit for the sue-
...
see
FOOTBALL page 4

lo~~e change collect1ons, booster
"Bob Norman, associate pro~ college chaplairi at the time, Fr.
_
ce_ss and stability of football at
By candle.light
:
-
-
Marchers pause on the Leo steps to religh~ their C?n,dles,
Sunday.
·

.-
_·.

.
• ·
'
Circle
p~oto/M~tt
Martin
-
.....
,
L--..:.:__.:.:__
_____
~----"--------:----•
Directing
~
he
frenetics
·of
style.;
n_ew head of jashion takes
charge
by
NOREEN MCQUEENEY
'
Staff Writer
At the rate she's going, Elizabeth
Csordas
·could
be_ the new track
.
coach rather than the new fashion
director.

Between dropping in on various
classes, being featured iit the 'Good
Life' jection ofthe Poughkeepsie
Journal, arranging interriships on
the phone, and not
to
mention
teaching, it has been full speed
ahead.


As chairperson. of "fashion. at
Berkeley
College in New York Ci-
ty,
Csordas said she taught there
untiLthe last minute, turning in
grades on Thursday, Sept. 16,
.
moying from Manhattan
to
Poughkeepsie Friday, and starting
her new position as fashion direc-
tor at Mariston Monday.
"The shock hasn't hit me yet,"
said Csordas. "I feel like I have
been going non-stop."
And there is no end in sight for
Csordas.
Not quite settled yet, her office
equipped with a glass table serving
as a,desk and.a tiny chair, Csordas,
the third director in three years,
said she already plans many
changes
for
the
fashion
department.
.
The plans include introducing a
more updated modern element to
meet
current
.and
future
needs of
fashion
students.•
-
~•1
am amazed
by
the
students'

talent and creativity/' said
Csor-
das. "I
want to introduce a lot of
new courses so: when they go out
they
_are
equip~
in the
very
technical and modern industry."
Marist's fashion program em-
phasizes
design, while
the
Laboratory Institute of Merchan-
dising, also in New York City,

where Csordas taught for two year.s
before Berkeley, focuses strictly on
fashion merchandising.
"Design is another aspect of
fashion that I like," Csordas said.
"But I need to introduce merchan-
dising at different levels so students
become inore well-rounded."
Csordas is

foilowing in her
mother's shoes as a designer.
Prior to her teaching experience,
she worked in the fashion industry
for 15 years.
Her mother designed childrens'
wear while Csordas designed in-
timate apparel.
. Csordas learned different aspects
of the fashion b.usiness from her
years working for Vanity Fair and
Circa 2000, as well as other com-
panies which gave her experience in
everything
from
design
to
production.
"It doesn't matter what price
point you are at or design you
make, you have to respect the
customer's
needs and re-
quirements,"
said Csordas.
• Everyone has to follow their own
route, and do what fits their own
talents and personality, added
Csordas.
Csordas
received a bachelor's
of
arts
degree and a
master's degree
in
art
education from New
York
University. Csordas said
she
then
completed two
years
at
the Fashion
Institute of
Technology
and two
years of
independent study with
Empire State, part of New York
State University.
Three months were spent in
Europe at the Textile Museum in
Venice, Italy, the last semester
before completing her masters .
"Three short, short, short,
months," Csordas said. "It was
fun
.
until Daddy dragged me
home."
.
Csordas said that she considered
working in Europe, but that the op-
portunity just was not there.
"Everyone goes through that
phase,"
_
said Csordas. "But you
have to come back and face
reality."
Venice was not Csordas' first
time in Europe. Originally from
Budapest, Hungary, she moved to
the United States at the age of four
and has resided in Manhattan
since.
Csordas said her Hungarian
background influences her attitude
and some of her fashion.
"Culture always influences a
person in certain degrees," Csor-
das said. "Then again I have been
exffosed
to
so many cultures."
Designers who made a difference
such as Claire Mccardle, the first
American sportswear designer, and
Chanel, are those who Csordas
says she admires.
Csordas said that Marist fashion
students are very talented, that
their work speaks for themselves,
after viewing a tape of last year's
fashion show.
"The
students
are
exciting,
resilient, and workers," Csordas
said. "I love it here."






















































































































,1-
•.•
.•
.:\.:•
'.~

...
'
'.

t
'
4
THE
CIRCLE,- OCTOBER
7;~1$93.
FOOTBALL:
,

.
,
'
,,
MARCH·•···•
.;:::1~.;;;.ri~~J;2:;,~,
.
.
;:continued
trb~
:pag~
3
j::XA·r~Qtball
prog~~~-
. .
.
- :
wasFmn"a
fuffdtiriit:J~b-li966n)tskne_lf;._;:
-
-
_.,: • - '" ;;,
••
;::,.

_:'.;,.'.;,,,:>
:violenfact'ori;the
Maristcampus.
.
..Ironical_ly,
Firin never:.p.la.
ye.'d
. -·th'
"a·
thgra
0
ufllM\;l.l~t-.,,
.t.b
..
alow
1
_n
~
...
continued fro~· page
1
••

•~there
have been few events,"
years because people would.start
.
-,
••
-
.-- •


• •
..
• •
,

e·1, er
.
ans
,
1
00
.

-
_<·".I'·th·
.•
1
nk·.·.i·t~s
:abo·u·
t-.--ti·me·:tha·t·.•
-_'Coxsai.
-~.;,.C:'th.:ai
have br,,ough_~
this
•.
taking
it for granted and it would. football m high scho.
ol. He gave
it
H
.
.

,
,
.
1·._.
.••
_.

·t·h
.•.
·-
..
-f
-
·.
- .
.
-
.
I
h

..
·
·h
t t · 11


b.

t.
· •;d•

h.
·
e remamsc ose
WI
many
O
students··a--t·
Man·st took initiative,"
·
many peop etoget er. : •

::.
die,'.' sai~ Finn.
.
.
;
.

,
a_
5 0
a. co ege, u sai tat
hisformer.club membefs and'says • D
--
-
Ii
'd
·
-


·
Magee; who was also impressed
Fmn said that never 1n his_~dest
s~ply trymg to rent b,1JSes,
~
nd
of-
that his experience_
taught him
a
lot
··~°:i
de::;d
Cox
saicl
that it was with the
turnout,
said th~t "Marist
dreams could he have env1S1oned
.
fictals, take care of the field, and
about determination business and
.
a "powerful statement,". not only
"
has tak~n: back a ~ense ~fu·ss~!
ety
,
his once club turning into a div,sion-.
\
make sure everything ran·smoothly life.


'
for the students here, but also fora-
.
and secunty on this. camp •
Protection?·
A Campus Center smoke dete_ctor on the job.
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.
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Taught in a supportive
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Our NextCourse
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For more information,
please contact:
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'IO·
'fl
(jjf'I
.
(914} 431-6779
With
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cansave
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Now,
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order
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discovelthe
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.•

...
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".
:
.
. .
.
•...
-·....
:
-
::·
,

.
,.,.
.
.
.•_
.•
-
-:·:_.__:
:-
:

..
..:.-·

-·-:;;
:;--_·_,_;:::...·--~·-£::~
...
::;:>~~--~
••












f'.EATURE
Story and.pfiotos by.Matt Martin
HIGHLAND, NY - Iri the non-
descript ~o?ghkeepsie skyline, one
feature.d1stmctly stands out arriong
all the other cement monoliths.
Built of.a lattice weave of steel
and wood in 1888, the Poughkeep-
sie Railroad Bridge is the dinosaur
of all of the structures that it leaves
in its shadow.

Its do~inating

appearance·
characterizes early Hudson Riyer
Valley life at the tum of.the cen-
tury, giving today's passerby a
retrospective of an earlier time 104
years ago.
Yet, as.the•90'sease into 2000,
the bridge remains in its original
form, • untouched
by modern
improvements.
The test of time
Ravaged by a suspicious fire in •
1974, the bridge has stood silent on
the banks of the Hudson between
Poughkeepsie and Highland since.
However, much controversy has
·broiled on both sides over who has
control· of the bridge .•
/

According. to Jang records, the
bridge is owned by Vito Moreno,
a resident of King of Prussia, who
bought the bridge for $1 in April
of 1990.
.
Since then,
it seems that
everyone from Poughkeepsie to the
Coast Guard wants money for back
taxes, fines and navigation lights.
· In the meantime, -no one can
reach Moreno.
William Sepe, a resident of
Poughkeepsie, proposed that the
span be converted into a walkway
·across the Hudson back in March
• of 1992, and has been fighting ·for
funds ever since.
The plan benefits all parties in-
volved, yet there are many stumbl-
ing blocks to overcome: the owner,
the Coast Guard and, most of all,
money.

$7
million
refurbishment.
Many plans have been submitted
for demolishing the landmark
bridge, as well as plans for turning
ii
into a malrarea. A pair of men
actually bungee jumped off the
span on·Nov.-13, _1991.
These plans are a far cry from
the bridge's former duties as
a
rail
link from industrial New England
to the coa~fields of Pennsylvania
in the early 1900's.
The bridge was so important that
• troops guarded the trestle around
the clock during both World Wars.
Today, all that guards the
·
dilapidated structure is chain-link
fence and barbed wire.
If the current path contin•1es,
there will be qothing left of the
bridge, but a listing on the National
Register of Historic Places.
Gone will be Poughkeepsie's on-
ly l<!_ndmark,
and a irreplaceable
piece of history, passed by the
wayside.
HIGHLAND, NY -
Six steps,
stop.
se·ven steps, stop.
, Five steps, stop.
The pattern continues as I walk
along the tresile on top of the
104-year-old railroad bridge that
crosses the.Hudson River between
Poughkeepsie and Highland.
The walk mimics the clattering
of a freight train that would have
made its way across the one and a
quarter miles of wrought-iron lat-
ticework years ago.
I can hear the waves of the river
lapping at the base of the columns
that hold up the massive structure,
212 feet below the wooden trestle.
My steps continue between the
rails, taking two ties-a-stride, final-
ly taking me to a platform, one-
third of a mile from the Highland
side of the bridge.
From that vantage point, the
Hudson Valley glimmers in a green
glow as the leaves are just beginn-
ing to change below.
The wind picks up over the
rusted railings in their turn of the
century detail.
Breathtaking.
Decades ago, my great grand-
father may have stood at this point
as _he s.urveyed the land he was to
tum into the rail bed on the
Poughkeepsie side of the river.
He was a railroad engineer and
lived in Poughkeepsie far before I
was even born, even before Marist
ever existed.
Back then, the bridge was known
as "Old Wobbly," because it was
designed to flex under the weight
of a freight train, heavily laden
with coal from Pennsylvania.
You can still smell the grease
from the locomotives on the ties.
Now, as I take what some may
call a semi-illegal trip across this
landmark, I can see why this bridge
should be demolished, but I can see
more reasons why it should stay.
I am a strong believer in history,
and you shouldn't destroy the past.
Especially if it costs $7 million to
do so.
For the same money, the bridge
could be restored as a walkway,
and I could walk across it legally.
All that needs to be done, is to
cut through bureaucracy.
This isn't a new term in
Poughkeepsie. Just look at the ex-
ecutive office building that has
finally been completed.
Now, give the bridge to the
· group that will do the most for it:
The
Poughkeepsie-Highland
Railroad Bridge Co. and the Hud-
son Valley Greenway, before it falls
into the river.
And you thought that we had
gridlock now.
,.4
I
I

r
'I
































































6
THE CIRCLE
MARIST
COLLEGE,
POUGHKEEPSIE,
.NY
12601
·THE
STODENT
NEWSPAPER
.
SJ. Richard,
editor
Ted
_Holmlund,
sports editor
Matt
Martln,feature editor
.
.
Julie Martin,
associate editor
Cart Oleskewicz,
assistant editor
Kristina
Wens; associate
editor
Andrew Holmlund,
editorial page editor
Dana Buonlcontf,
columns editor

James
Hocking, distribution
manager
_
Klrell A. Lakhman,
associate
editor
Jennifer
Ponzlnl,
advertising
manager
.
Dennis
Glldea,faculty adviser
PUBLISHED
EVERY
THURSDAY_
Continuity·?
Approximately 400 students, faculty and public-conscious
administrators marched from
the McCann Center to the Gartland Commons Apartments last Sunday to protest the
violence on campus so far this year.
Liberal estimates say only one third of those finished the trek as
it
retraced its steps
to Mccann.
Next topic: parking.
.
Several concessions have been made to on campus students, but many still believe
this entire fiasco was unnecessary. Look how much time was wasted on this trivial topic.
After a general meeting with Joe Leary, director of the Office of Safety and Security,
students shifted their complaints to the real source.of this chaos: the administration;
Many students expressed displeasure and even disillusionments with Mark Adin, the
assistant vice president, after this meeting claiming Adin did not know of the vandalism
in Hoop Lot over the past few years.
_
.
Shannon Roper, a senior, said:
"I
didn't think he knew what he was talking about."
The clueless administrator ploy is old and not very reliab)e, though. As usual the p·arking
problems were taken
care
of but not much changed. Watching this issue progress it is
easy to draw tangents to· issues of past years.
Last year the C-word was condoms; this year it's cars. The fervor with which students
attacked this cause almost rivaled that of the Great Condom Debate in the spring of 1993.
Of course, that debate remains unresolved, too. Where do things stand now?

Exactly where they began, that's where. Nothing's changed. Status quo may as well
be Marist's motto.
'



,
Now what do protest marches, parking woes; and condom controversies have in
common?



All three are examples of situations where students could have taken control of an
issue but let the administration or their own lackadaisical nature putthein off.
,
.•
Most of the blame here does lie with the students for a change. Granted there wasn't
much they could do about changing parking. A petition was started on_the:first_day';·
upper classrnen began arriving.

..
_
.



_ _·
. .
• .
So what happened to it? Commuters no,v find themselves banished to BeckPlace
without being consulted, much like residents students when they arrived at Marisfin·
September. As for the protest march, to many it looked like an administrative P ;R.job.

That's debatable, but irrelevant considering many students didn't botherfo see it through


to the end.
·.
_
_
. .
_ _
_ •
_.
·_
.

·.,
_._
Why? Are mild, clear, Sunday nights so unbearable that a stroll ar,ound the campus
is too much to take?-

·
• ·

..
·

:· ·
..

.

<
•:
.

Those who did march to the end are to be commended. Thosewho·dropped off should·
question why they bothered to begin the walk in the first place. They didn't see it through
_
to the end. Condoms are no different.
_.
Kent Rinehart ran for Student Government Association presidentlast spring'. His·sup-
porters called him
.Condom
Man.
. .
.
. .
:
_
• ..

_· _

.-_.,,
__
..
-
•· .
So what has he done about condoms_?
WeH, there's a committee in the works.The
pros and cons of committees have been
·discussed
in this space many. times. Nowthe
.
fun begins. What'will this committee do; and will it needed other committees to help·
it commit to arty action?
-


.
.
_ •
. . . .

·__ •



It all comes down.to continuity. Marist, generally, is not so good with this concept,
especially the students, We get all fired up over a cause and play with it until it gets
a little old or something flashier comes along. Then we shelf it.
While the College starts to restructure itself physically; why don't weStudents try a
bit of reconfiguration ourselves? If a cause titillates us, enrages us, or simply interests
us, why don't we sincerely make an effort to make a difference?
Editor's notebook_
Want to solve a problem?
Have a march.
by
MATT MARTIN
March for AIDS, gays, women, men, flea collars and more toys in your cereal boxes.
A march is worthless unless it is followed up with-continued actions.
It's a tribute to the organizers that they were able to draw between 350 and450 mar-
chers to "Take back the night,'.' an event that has been previously associated with Rape
Awareness Week, and usually poorly attended.
To put this number into perspective, football didn't even pull that many students for
their last home game.
However, neither was able to hold their attention for the entire event.
After the march rounded Gartland Commons, the number of participants had dwindled
to around 100.

ls this an indication of future involvement in protests and actions taken against cam-
pus violence?
_
.
Will students refrain violent acts, while the other segment of the population takes
the appropriate measures so that they won't place themselves in unneeded danger?
Let's rephrase the question, how many have reformed their actions based on the AIDS
epidemic?
Thought so.
A march is a great first step to recognizing the problem. However, much more must
be done than placing a Band-Aid over the wound.
According to Marist Security statistics that are available to all students, this is the
.
first "rape" on campus since these statistics were required to be published.
Ask to see their numbers on date rapes ...
There aren't any.
That doesn't mean this campus is safe from this activity.
If it did, Marist would be a cosmic phenomenon.
One-in-five women are raped every year.
Marist had one, and it will happen again.
_ What are you going ~o
_do
about that?
T
.
•'

-TS:~OY£~.
. .
.
• _
_

it'.:.S{{'
••
So81ETIIJ/{C
gf
TTtR
_
Mr .. or Mrs. President?
The changing role of the first lady has been
Since the first days of the campaign for
a major topic of iliscussion this year.
the
.
Oval Office, America thought if Bill
Some believe Hillary is making too many
Clinton was elected president, Hillary would
decisions and-shouldttick to the traditional
not be the typical first-lady.

roles; while others beiieve this is the year of
They were· right.
.
.
. .
.
the woman.
Although the role Qf the modem first lady
I
said
it before and I will say it again:
has greatly expanded, America has not seen,
·Americans did not vote for Hillary or·any
since Elanor Roosevelt, such a strong and
first lady, for that matter. They voted for
powerful first· 1ady
as
Hillary Rodham
their husbands.
Clinton.

It seems to me Hillary is too much involv-
Not to say that other first lailies did not
ed politically.
have important roles-they did.
.
I realize_
her role is very· political, but the
Perhaps one of the most powerful women
committees she is in charge of are really not
in politics was the wife'of President Wilson.
the responsibilities of the first lady.
.
It is said that after the president's stroke
Hillary is most recognized for her involve-
in 1919,
Mrs.
Wilson made all the decisions.
ment with forming a plan for national health
on behalf of her husband.

...
care.
Rumor. has
_it
that a_fter the president's
Don't we
_elect
congressmen, as well
-as
stroke, whenever there was a situation that
senators, for that?.
.•
••



demanded Wilson's attention/the first lady
..
Who can hold her·accouiitable for her
would go into the presiderit'froom alone,
actions?
. .
_
::. _
:
.
.
.--.
.

.
and come out a f~w minutes later with what
If,shehl.:lkesaniistake,,wecannotfirc;her;
.
was said to be
,the
president's order ...
The
·only
persori''.she has to answer to· is

-






'
,
:
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·-
liappe~s, t~\~,~~-J~er
,:
:~Y~~,t!t::I~~~-t~it~
f Jit~
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It seems to ine tl_te
role of the frrst ladi,lias
_
·

- all~\Viµg
the presidentto·yield power to
ilie
·
alfochanged, just as the·role of.the woman
.
vice~president·and
giving Congress the ability
has chan~ecL_
<
.
.
-
.
fo· do so .••
' -·


-

He said·
.
More' arid m6i-e,

we
.
ai~
·:s~ing
Worri~ii'
:

:
,
P~esidiiit Cli~ton gave the
fir~t
l~d;
;~~i
~~~~~-
:!;
0;~ii6~aI!
~~1l{J~f
t;;~
:~~
•.
will pro)lably be one 9f th~. most'iniport~t
fields:
·
_
.
._._
.
_
_ .;. ,
>.:.
:
.·, _:
,·. ..
tasks in his administration: drafting the first

Thi.
Id. h'
·
-·ill·
• -·
· --
· •
- .
national health care plan.
._.
_- . . . .
.
.
.
s cou
ave a ·rect effect on the
_way

-.
While
'Mrs.'
Clinton
has
received
freme·n-
the role of the firstlady is viewec:t:·

.
dous'prais~ this past week after several con-
I do ~ot care ifthe first lady is a lawyer,
gressional hearings on her health care plan,

corporate.executive, or a doctor - I did not
sh_
e
_w_
·_
ill continue
to
be
_
criti_
• cize_d b_
y
_
her
vote for her.





I
·
··

·

·
· ·
·
·. ·
·
opponents.
_ _
,
_
.
_
.
am not tryuig to sound sexist because I
First; it was cookies arid now health care;
feel the same· way•--if we· had
a
-
woman
bu{ are these the real reasons people do not
president:

>

>i

·
-··.
likethe-firsf lady? No.

-

,

The first man should
·not
be making the
Even today, some Americans fear·
a
big decisions or heading
·com_mittees
that are
.
·
-
womari incharge~
.
gomg to affect the country.
Some.argue that Hillary is the one mak-
So what is the role of,the first lady?
ing all the decisions· in the White House.-
Should she just be supportive;of her bus-
All that comment indicates is that people
band, a ceremonial figure; orjust a wife?
do not have much faith in their president.
The president, I
mean.
Hillary; has been
What is wrong with a· husband listening

given more coverage than the_
vice-president:
to his wife; especially if she is one of the best
What does this say to the American
lawyers in the country.
_
.
public?


, -
-
• ·
·.

But this is not-a new controversy ..•
Hillary is more important than AI "the
wlien Franklin Roosevelt
was
runrun_
• g for
stiff'' Gore?

_.

,
Some say without Hillary,-B1·11··would
not
office, pins surfaced saying, "We don't want
Eleanor' either.-'~
._
.
.
be president.

'.

•..
··
··

Like Hillary; Eleanor was a leader.
I truly believe the spouse is very important
A
woman ahead of her time, Eleanor
in a political career, but that does not mean
fought for civil, human, and children's
her reward is a cabinet position, head of a
•gh

national committee of health care, or defense
n
s!:e·
1obbied hard outside the.White House
secretary·
while caring for her five children and a hus-
What this basically comes down to is the
band with polio.
fact that this is dangerous. When any un-
Eleanor had her own newspaper column
elected person is put into a political role that
and held her own press conferences; allow-
determines the outcome of the entire nation,
ing only female reporters to attend.
there are some definite problems.

Hillary Rodham Clin_·
ton should be treated
The problem is there is
·no
checks and
.
balances between the president, I mean· B1·11, as any

0th er memoer of of the
administration.
·
and his wife.
-
Scott Sullens
is
one of
_
Tbe CircWs
Caroline Jonah
is
one of The Circle's
political columnists.

political columnists.























THECll=ICLE,
Ai.
cl)mn:iUter'
s
view
Editor: .. , . . _ .. . ..
Afµnny thing h~pl)ened to me
whenJ pulled into a spot in the
North en'd parking lot at 7:45 a.m.
on
Sept. 27; 1993:·
I
was handed a flyer stating that
as of October. 4, I was no longer
allowed, to park in this area.
Now !'am expected to park in the
off-campus inconvenience called
Beck· Place.•·
It
seems
'as·
-though a few on-
campus residents have created a big
fuss. about commuter students
parking on campus, while residents
were asked to park in Beck Place
and other distant lots.
Apparently,
these resident
students feltthat it was more im-
po~ant that they be able to park
closer to their buildings than fot
commuter students to park there.
Well, the change has been made,
and they got what they wanted.
No one even considered to ask
commuter students how they felt
about the situation or seemed to
consider the ,effects of how this
- would affect commuters.
So, I would like to take this op-
portunity to do just so. .
.
I
am a full-time resident of
.Marist College who lives in Canter-
'bury Gardens.
Many of us did not choose to live
out here. Many would have liked
the luxury of livl.ng on campus.
Who wants to drive 20 minutes
·Editor:
.
.
Student Government was one. of
the major sponsors. of

Sunday
evening's -"Marist Takes Back the
Night." ·

Daryl • Ledyard, director of
public relations, worked hard in all
the public relations dealing with the
event.

-

On behalf of everyone who par-
ticipated,
I
would like to say thank
you to Lynn Magee for her hard
work in organizing this memorable
event.

.
As I said on Sunday, it is now
important for students to take the
second step.

If there is some way that the
students feel that this campus can
ea.ch ~ay every time they have a
class orneed to come to campus to
use the library, check mail or do
anything else for that matter?
I
.do
not think that on-campus
residents realize that every time we
have
a
class, we have to drive to
campus.
_
Now residents, how long does it
take you to drive to campus to get
to class?.·
I
know that
I
am not alone when •
I
say that
I
do not see the rational .
of having residents park on cam- •
pus whep. practieally the only time
_they·
I.eave campus is for recrea-
tional activities or. shopping.
As .a former on-campus resident,
I know that many times residents
go for days without even driving
theit cars.
I
also found that the main time
period that residents use their cars
is on weekends.
• So why can't commuters and
residents arrange a compromise in
this situation?
Allowing commuters to park on
campus during the week, and on-
campus residents to park near their
• homes on weekends seems to be a
viable solution.
The major thing that angers me
• about this situation is the fact that
I was given the right to park on
campus, and now it is being taken
away.
SGA n()tes
be inade safer, please contact us in
Student Government.
The ad-hoc Safety.and Security
committee is being chaired by Jen-
nifer Nocella (Class of 1996 Presi-
dent), and is working diligently on
a proposal that will be submitted
to me and forwarded to the
administration.
As niany of you know, the guest
pass . policy was. changed in the
freshmen areas.
This change makes it such that
there is a limit on the number of
·guest passes in -Leo, Sheahan,
. Marian, and lower Chaf!lpagnat.
• I am meeting with Dean Cox this
week regarding to a change in this
policy.
I have done nothing to lose this
right, except being a commuter.
I also realize that safety
is
a con-
cern of on-campus residents, hav-
ing to park and then walk to their
homes when it is dark.
Well, commuters come to cam-
pu_s at night a_lso.
We do not just disappear when
the sun goes down.
Many off-campus residents have
night classes and come to use the
library at night.
What about our safety?
I realize that with all the con-
struction going on at the present
time, it is difficult to find a park-
ing situation that pleases everyone.
That is my reason for this letter.
-I see an opportunity for a com-
-promise that could make many
people's lives a little easier.
I feel that there is a better.solu-
tion to the present parking situa-
tion,
and there
should
be .
something done about it.
Sarah MitteJsdorf, sophomore
The results
of freshmen elections -
are 'in. Congratulations to the
following: Class of 1997; President
- ScottT. Graves; Vice-President -
Teri-Ann Carrozzo; Secretary -
Jennifer L. Adams; Treasurer -
Joseph O'Donnell.
The Resident Senator elected was
Rebecca Ryan,
As always, our office is open
Monday through Friday 9 a.m. - 4
p.m.


You can also reach us at x2206 •
or through E-Mail at HZGV.
Finally, fof up-to-the-minute
construction updates, dial x7994.
Kent Rinehart
Student Body President •
How to reach us:
• Mondays: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. \
• E-Mail: LT211, HZAL
• Phone MaU: X2429
NO LETTERS
AFTER 5 PM ON FRIDAYS
OCTOBER 7,
1993
7
.Vacation was
n·o pleasure
Recently, I had the strained
pleasure of being on what most
people call a vacation.
First of all, I travelled lightly.
The main reason was because the
airline misplaced my luggage.
However, the flight is what really
scared me.
I mean how good is my vacation
going to be when it starts off by be-
ing told what to do in the event the
plane crashes.
Not very encouraging.
One good thing was in my effort
to save money, I found ·a really
cheap flight.
The meals were leftovers, the
barf bags were recyclable (an
environmentally-conscience
airline), and I flew coach -
age-
nuine coach.
During the flight, I actually had
to give the pilot advice and a little
pep talk.
When
I
arrived to my destina-
tion, I went to the hotel.
Of course, this was not the one
in the brochure, but the one right
next to it.
The man at the counter asked
if
I had any reservations.
I said, "Yes, I don't like this
place!"
I then explained how this was not
the advertised
hotel in the
brochure.
"Yes, there's a good reason for
that," he said.
"And what would that be?" I
asked ..
"The other hotel is far better
looking."
When I reached the room, I
found it was unreasonably hot.
I
said to the bellboy, "Why is it
so hot in here?"
He told me the maintenance man
was from Jamaica.
-
'
"So," I said. "Just because he
is
used to the heat does not mean
we have to live like this."
"No, sir. He's from Jamaica and
has not got here to fix it yet."
"Oh."
After this, my vacation consisted
of pointless sightseeing and sending
postcards.
.
You know, your way of telling
someone, "I'm here, you're not."
And then there is the "Wish you
were here" post~ard.
-
What's with this? Isn't this why
you go on vacation - to get away
from them?
I soon left the hotel and started
home. I felt as though I was miss-
ing sometliipg.
Oh yeah, now about my luggage
that went somewhere else.
Well,
I was not leaving empty-
handed. Anyone need a towel?
After my flight, I went home.
(A generally good idea, unless
you like hanging out with weird
bald men who wear bed sheets and
have flowers.)
I got home shortly before my
luggage arrived.
I think it had a better time,
though.
My luggage actually went to
Hawaii.
Next time, I am going to just zip
myself in the suitcase and wind up
getting a better vacation.
Soon I started to think maybe I
should just watch the Travel Chan-
nel, at least if I fall asleep during
that, there will not_ be some
stewardess waking me up to eat.
And the worst that could happen
is
maybe the cable goes out, not
a
crash landing into a mountain
where we might have to resort to
cannibalism to stay alive.
Although that just might be bet-
ter than th,e in-flight meals.
Frank LaPerch is The Circle's
humor columnist.
When You're Up To
Your Eyeballs
In Alligators ...
...it's hard to remember that your original goal was
10
drain lhe swamp. If you're sw,amped,
cooperative education employees can help you baulc 1hc alligator-like problems that face
your business. Cooperative education employees arc highly motivated, bright and will
stick with you once they"re trained. And when the gators have been removed, your co-op
employees can help you tum thal swamp into a model of corporate effectiveness. Then.
you can not only do your job be11er. you migh1 even gee around to those pct projects you·ve
always wanted to do.
CooQerative Education:
Putting America's Future to Work.
For More Information Contact:
Desrrond 1'.lrray
Assistant
Director
of Field :)ct:erience
Marist C:Olleqe

Ebughkeepsie~
?<"l
12601
(91<) 575-3543
I



















































































































































I
I
t
-THE
CIRCLE,
()CTOBER
f,
1
~~3
-1\110DERti'.R6·cl<:·
·,
__
....
_

··>:·90~·1:
.·wMC;Rir=M
•1i993
Fa11···-sc11_e·dule
SUNDAY
MONDAY
·7ain
7am
BUI
Trond
Jenn
Hintze
.
Chris
Berinato
Eyoko
Robinson.·
•Hangover
Helper" 'Monday
Mornings
Suckl~

1oarn
Heather
Curatolo
'Sober
Up
WiHeather'
1pm
Neil
Kelly
"Artist
of the
Week"
4pm
Aimee
LaM111ch
"Top30
Countdown"
10am

Colleen
Murpha
'lunchtime
Cra~ngs•

1pm
Timothy
Connolly
'Tim lnThe
Afternoon·
4pm
Jami
Fregosi

Gabrielle
Demma
'The Smack
and
Cheese
Show"
7pm
Jeff Schanz
Jay LaScolea
"Flashback
to the
BOJ
W/Jeff+Jay'
10pm
DavidTriner
'Monday
Night
Metal
Madness"
Preparation
in
TUESDAY
7am
Chris
Gambardella

TomBecker
"The
A.M.
Jerks'
.
10am

MIii)'
Ann
McGovern
'Morning
Wah
Mlll)'Ann"
1pm
Alejandro
Brown
'D.W.'s
Dreamscape
Lane
of Unrearny"
4pm
Kevin
long
"TheRage•
·
7pm
Andrew
Boris
"Off
The Beaten
Path'
10pm
Liz Bellis
Shannon
Vincent
"Theme
Park•
WEDNESDAY··
• THURSDAY

FRiDAY
·
7am
Kris
Fatsy
Kerry
Custer
'The Show'
10am
Dana
Bunlconti
Sue
Yanusz

"Are
We Bored

Yet?'
1pm
TlnaTor1ora
Andrea
Murphy
-War:Jr.y
Wednesday
W/The
Wonder
Twins•
4pm
Mark
Melvin
Pat
Collins
'Me And
Duckboy"
7pm
Desmond
Ebarlls
'Phatness•
10pm
Dale
Kelly
·.:
.
'Heavy
Metal
Mayhem
WI
.
The Sandman•
7am
Scott
T.
Graves
'Early
Morning
Eyejarn"
10am
.
Freddie
Peck
•Fnidcfie
Boorn-
Boom's
Rumbling
Twnbling
Show"
1pm
Steven
Giampaolo
'The 6-Pack
Kid
Show"
4pm
Meghan
O'Neill
'DiMerDate
WnhMeg"
7pm
Daniel
Glover
'The Den"
ChrisGesue
'Slow
Ja,ns"
10pm
RachelSmhh
"Old,
New,
Borrowed
And
Blues•
7am
.
Rick
Oram'.
"R+R
In The
. Morning•
10am
Justin
Seremet
Jen Daly
•oaily
Mecficine
WrthJen+
Justin•
1pm
Carrie
Hesehon
Mike
Danis
•Songs
from
the
Other
Side"
4pm
MikeAHano
MattRussen
.
"TheRylhm
Section"

7pm
Terry
Tassone
"Friday
Night
Classics"
.
10pm
Heidi
Pearsall
Candy
Mar:Jr.ersie
"Crass
Chicks
in
Hot Pants·
,
..
<:;


{~
!.
10am

Michelle
Wright
'Saturday
Morning
Renegade"
1pm
Mile Gordon
• Jazz
and Blues•
4pm
Damion
Barton
Sean
McFeeley
.
"The
ttchy
and

Scratchy
ShoY:"
7pm
M!IICia
Rosbury
Gregory
cannlto
"Groovin'W/Marcia
and Greg
Brady"
-
: .

~-:---,-.
---·~---"'
4/,e"
··-
-:-·7.·
:'
'
'
-
-
~
,,
.,
.....
-c-;.."";""
-
.
;
,
~
.
~;
.lll"JIJ'l.4.Wll'~"'1
-
.-•
-
568 South Road
·
Poughkeepsie, N.Y. 1260J
..

(914)462-'4~45
••
FAX
462-24i'f

-• •
~
.
.
.
,
.
.

.
---~----------------------,
, Treasure Chest ..
.
,
.
I
·
·
·
·
·
··
-
I
·
I
• •

·


.

I
1
Clubhou-se
•·•:
I
,r·
I
"Athletic English Style PuJ:,''
I
·
Poughkeepsie
for
upcoming ex?Jlls:
1


568 South Road·.·
.
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I
£
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~-----------------~
:
MONDAY-NIGHT
:
:
GRE begins
Oct. 23.
LSAT begins
Oct. 28

Sman people read the fine print. Smart
people want small classes
·(fewer
than 15
students),
4
proctored diagnostic examina-
tions,
free extra help with the instructor,
and
ucellem score improvements. Smart people
prepare with us.
THE
PRINCETON
REVIEW
We
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OF BUD
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WITH COUPON
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THURSDAY & FRIDAY
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NIGHTS
:
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~10¢ WINGS
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ALL NIGHT
t
~------------~----~-
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EVERY
NIGHT
:
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s1oo
BUD
I
:
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AND
LIGHT DRAFTS
I

L---------.:.~~-;W-J...~
...
:~::J:.
.
.
.
''lrlli
IE
,r,o
\If'
lf lR
IU
1C
11\,S
A
IR IE
·,c
10
M.11-~ ,13
1 '~
On or about o·ctober
_8,
1993 tow-
trucks will
be
on campus to assi~fin
-~-nforcing
the parking policy of Marist

..
'College.
For your own protection· assure that,.
your vehicle is parked in your as-

signed lot & that your permit is clearly
-visible~·
Marist CoHege Security·
·
1
f
vpu'~e
looking
for a
~fig~tfdtur~:with
finan9ia~
••
.
security, we are offering;
fmmedfate
sponsorship
for
the ~T0CKBR0KER'S
LICENSE
••
• 01.JALIFIED
LEADS
• GENEROUS
75%
PAYOUT
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••
..
PROMOTIONS
• 3 MO.
TRAINING •

PROGRAM
••
. .

• .PROFESSIONAL
.•
SALARY
WHILE
You
.
LEARN

·
OFFICES
_
l:ffidiiiM¥ii•HiiiMi4•MHMWiWAiiid:HI
CALL MICHAEL
HASHO
.516-741-5400
C .TINENT4L
BROKER DEALER CORPORATION
ESTABLISHED
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NASD-MSRB-SIPC
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llY.S.L'
























•.
_ .. THE
CIR.CLE/OCTOBER
l,
1993 .
·9
lliflil~ll
d'l~lta feast
Of
inexJ)ensive goodies
byiABBI
NORI
Staff Writer
Cakes • and tortes made . in the
bakeshop classroom (valued at $40
·or'more) can be purchased for
$5
• Often, the best kept secrets are
at the cashier (one stipulation:
the tastiest mies..
cakes are only supposedto be pur-
or. vegetarian, hot or mild, price
varies) sold by cup or.bowl.
If
you want to go light, try the
fresh tortellini salad ($1.29), the tri-
color pasta salad ($.99) . or the
potato. or macaroni salads (each
carte); and
The
American Bounty
• (no· imports -·
here, ranging: from
$5-$14), all 'are stops that shouldn't
be missed.
• Reservations for the restaurants
can be made by calling 471-6608,
but a warning: there is usually a
month-long waiting list for Satur-
day. Your best bet is to call for a
weeknight seating. A setting could
be available in a few days.
There is plenty of parking in the
visitor's parking lot and it's easy to
find if you enter through the main
entrance, and follow the signs.
Almost•losi among a frenzy of
checkered pants and international
cuisine· lies the "hidden" deli .at
The Culinary Institute of America.
Kept- undercover because it
doesn't advertise (not even to its
own students), the Walk-In deli at
CIA is a "best-find" by any
definition.
chased by faculty and students, but
if you don't tell, they don't
ask ... and it's worth the risk).
If yoti don't want to start with
dessert, then why not try a foot-
long sub in your choice of anything
including liverwurst (most expen-
sive is roast beef at $3.90)?
Sometimes there is a· soup and
sandwich/hero special which gives
you, usually, four or more choices
of student-made soups.
Located .snugly behind _the
The soups are the deli's special-
·security office (a shiny, old diner)
ty in that they are always.fresh, and
next to the tennis courts, the deli
different. Go in with an open
lacks the showiness of Subway, but
mind, and you might try something
beats it in price and location (Just
like borscht (red cabbage soup),
l.3 miles North of Marist on Route
black bean, or the best New
9).
England seafood chowder you've
No, CIA does not deliver, but it
ever had for $1.00 each!
offers a taste of some ofthe best
..
Aside from basic deli items like
food offered in the country for very

heroes and soups,• you might get
little money.
lucky an~ show up 0:1 a day they
_.
are offering all-amencan, mouth-
Everything is student-made;
watering chili (southwest con carne
. $.99) which are usually_
set next to
marinated mushrooms ($1.99) or
some different salad that you've
never heard of but looks delicious.
If the starch you crave is not in
pasta form, then try a baked potato
at the cheapest prices around: sour
• cream and chive ($1.25), broccoli
and cheddar ($1.50), or chili and
cheddar ($1.75).
The "hidden" deli, of course,
offers the gamut of Snapple pro-
ducts, an array of chips, and Ben
and Jerry's ice cream.

The hours are limited at IO a.m.-
7:30 p.m. Mon. through Thurs., 10
a.m.- 4:30 p.m. Fri. and Sat., and
noon to 3:30 p.m. Sun.
. If you can get reservations for
. lunch, the St. Andrew's Cafe
(health food ranging from $3-$10);
Caterina de Medici (Italian food,
$17/seating);
The Escoffier
.
(French food. $23/seating or a la
B-E.
A GOOD'NEIGHBOR
Consideration
for the good people
of the area,
In their
homes and in their
neighborhoods,
Is important.
The Marist
tradition.is
consideration
for and commitment
to the well being
of our local
communities.
Hey, if the CIA students can use
Marist facilities, then Marist
students ought to know about the
"hidden" deli.
RA TING: 4 Paws
~~:~JA8i311::itl•~~
·• LOCATION
DELIVERY
AND
22 IBM
Road
STORE
HOURS
Poughkeepsie


(Rt.
9 South,
right
at light,
after
IBM
-plant)
HOT
SUBS
Philly
SteakSu~
...........
; .................
3.50
Meatball-Parm
................................
3.25
Chicken
Parm
.................................
3.75
Veal
Parm
.........
: .. : ..........................
3.75
EggplantPam,
....
:.;~·
.......................
; 3.25
Sausage
&
Pe~per
~
.................

.......
3.9
Any
Cold
Sub
33.
oz. Belly
Buster
Soda
and
a
FREE
Bag
of Chips
$4.50
PHONE
463-1800
or 463-1823
FREE
DELIVERY!!
large Pie
(16
11
)
$4.50,am.
,.
,<-Large Pie
(18
11
)
$6.25
plmtaz
BELL
V STUFFERS
Fried
Mozzarella
Sticks
..................
3.50
Deep
Fried
Shripm
.........
_
...............
.4.
75
Deep
Fried
Clams
.........................
.4.50
French
Fries
...................................
1.25
Onion
Rings
....................................
1.35
Fried
Dough
....................................
1.95
·, SALADS
TOO!!
FRI & SAT -6
a.m.
-
3
a.m.
SUNDAY-6
a.m.
-12
a.m.
MON·
- THURS
- 6
a.m.
-
11
p.m.
PIZZA
Bambino 10"
.............................
2.95
Sicilian
............................................
8.50
White
Pizza 16" .............................
7.75
18" .............................
9.75
Salad
(cold)
Pizza
16" ..........
: .....
; ... 10.95
18" .............................
12.95
Barbecue
Chicken
Pizza
16" .............................
11.95
18" .............................
13.95
Strom
boil ........................................
13.
75
Calzone
..........................................
3.25
Belly Bur·ner
Wings
or
Regular
Belly Wings
$3.25
.....




















































































































































































































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: ~·Classic
Visa.
cdrd-~:·-'How:
Student.
Discou"iits~and
Price. •
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~-:~ntributing to'. the econortric::
gtowth
of students;' inclucii~tiif:rt19re
.
lottery ~ers
.
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between the ages of 18
.~rid22,
(2) a 37% increase oil earnings from bottle ~d' cim returns, (3) more;
students d~ubling
earrunks--in
the lightning round of game shows,
~rid
(4)ihe.
Citibank
Clas&c
_fisa®.

carci. It's this last orie, ·ho~~ev~r
ili,at affects mo~t students.
,i
The Citibank, Cl~c
VJSa
card
o~
immediate savings.; student
~me~b~.
You
6t.n
save upto 26% on long distance
calls
versus AT&T
'.
.
.
;··:
..
'
........
.
.
~.
'
with the free
(:itibank
Calling s·~rvi~e
...
from
MCI!
An~ you
can
capitalize on a
$20 Airfare
pisc~imt

.
No known picture of mzshi,wton
smiling ~iscs. Economists
belil!l'e

mishi,wton ·was
unhappy
because he felt he could have receii'ed
a
better deal on
_llal'
supplies.
If he used a
Citibank Classic Visa card. he would have been asswed of getting the best price and probably
would ha•;e
been happier.
(Artist rendering
oflww he would ha>-e
appeared
on the dollarJ
for domestic flights.2
Savings on m~ order
-pur-
.
chases, sports equipment, magazjnes arid niµsic
.··

,
••
also abound. Maximize these savings with a low
.
'
variable interest rate of 15.4
°(o
3
anci noann~fee,
.
and you· can significantly improve your peciorial
....
.t
bottom line (especially if one's net ~come tends
to• be. pretty
gross)~
Put
:'another
.way,
orie\night
-··
-
.
.
,
...
even have enough savings to reui;est in~ CD or-two (the musical kind, of course). ,i_
On the way-to the
record store, or any store for that matter, take stock of the 3 services concernect"wiili
purchases made on

MonarchNotes®
Version:
the Citibank Clas&c carci.
Citibank
Price Protection~
one of the best prices. See the_same item


The
Citibank
~c-VISacard
~
advertised ihprint for less, within 60 da~~ ari.dCi~~ank will refund the
differen~-~P
to
$i50.
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Buyers
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aria.;i929,.
can
caru;e\1
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downswing
in
a
matket. But with 24-hour CustonterServi~;;there's
qcfre~Ilfor°itiA
question
ab:9?L
your account•isonly an 800·numberaway._ (P~c ofthe-5?rt.~x,perien~ecfJJie•Irigbf.:b~fore.Fmili
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Needless to say, building' a credithlstorywiththe supportofsµch services
can.
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today's-ht>W.;hhll we say?-fickle market~ ,iTo ~~~ly, calL
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call if you'd simply like your photo added to y01,rr
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CittbarikOas&c·visa card. Jiere's the num-
". ·
ber:
1-800-CITIBANK, extension 19.
,i
The'-Law of Student_
Supply and Demand states,
"If
a credit card satisfies more of a
student's unlimited wants-.
and rieeds, while reducing the· Risk
Factor in respect to
·limited
and often scarce·resources..:..with_
the
greatest
supply of services and savings ~ble-then
siu~·
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will ge~d
said credit-~·''Bo;~d~~-
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Not just
Vi~
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=~£~:r~s=~~~;i:i~~~~~=~=c=e
advm0csis
I~
If
a linanccc:harRC
is
imposed, !he mininMn
is
SOcallS.
Thae
IS
an
additional
finance
chatJlle
i:lreach
cash advance
uansa,;tion
equal
10
2~
c(lhc amount o{ead,
cash
advance
transaction•
~.ilwillll(l(bctess_ thallSUk>orgrcaialbanSl0.00.
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THE_CIRCLE; OCT0BE~ 7,
1993
===-==~===
SPikers
win again;

Streak
hits
seve1i:
.
.
.
~
.
.
.
.
.
' '
.
-
.
·
.,b.
TERI [/STEWART
The'.senior,:who_.,haiapp~ar.ed

.'Y
·-
- -
-
ncitto be playiiig·Well in'the'first
Staff
Writer
game, was replaced by freshman
The
·women's
volleyball team's
Ta~my Terc for the rest of the
.(7;6).seventh
consec11tive
win can_ game.
.
.
fall under· orie category.

Johnston said since the team was
-Winning ugly'.

not playing well, she decided to.
The Red Foxes struggled to a win
change strategy. •
.
-
·over .·Fordham-··
University_ last
'.'I
d9n't
_have
a
lpt_ 9f options
St
d


and.tha_·t•_sanoptionThave,"she·
.-
a ur ay.-.
,
• The five game match was a close
said. "So l used iL'.'
..
battle as Marist squeaked
·by
with
Silenzi and 'junior·'-Christin:
a 5-15, 15-7, 12-15, 15-11, 15-10 McKeon paced the Marist offense.
win.
:
.
Silenzi slammed dowh l
l
kills:on
According to Head Coach Sally
the day; while'McKeon' aclded nine
Johnston,
the team was not
to balance the.charge.
concentrating.
__
"When the ball goes to
-her.
"Fordham didn't have anything
(McKeon); l just know it's going
to beat_ us with, we were beating
down," Silenzi said,.
.
..
:
ourselves," the coach said.
,
The third game appeared to be
Marist quickly dug a hole for
as disastrous_ as the first. •
themselvesasFordham jumped out
Fordham took a 2-1 lead because
to a
-
9-3 lead which spurred the
it seemed Marist lost its com-
Rams to a 15-5 first game victory.
munication and concentration.
11
During the break between the
However, the Red Foxes bounc-
Maria Breen misses a dig in·volleyball
·action·against
Fordham, Saturday.
.
_

first and second games, Johnston
ed back in the fourth and fifth
-
.

·_
.
. _
Circle
photo/Matt Martin
said the team had to raise its level games to clinch the victory.
According to Johnston, the team your skill· level."
_
College, 11-15, 15-5, 15-7, 15-7.
of play.


"Everytime we got the set or
was missing a lot of serves and did
Marist defeated St. Peter's Col-
Freshman Liz Herzner and Silen-
"It's now or never," she. said.
pass, we either got the point or a
not concentrate throughout the
lege, 15sl0, 15-4,. 15-12 on. Tues-
zi knocked down
10
kills apiece.
''You have to get yourselves in the
side-out," John ston said. "They
match.
day, Sept. 28.
The Red Foxes will be hosting
game."
_-

.
.
couldn't defend our offense."
"We didn't have to play hard in
Silenzi had 12 kills and.five digs three Northeast Conference foes

'In
the second game, senior co-
Mary

Beth Horman led_ the
the past two games," she said.
"It
to lead,the Red Fox attack.
this weekend:

Robert Morris,
captain,· and team setter, Moira
~ari st at~ack, notching a team-
is hard to keep concentration when
Two days later, Marist pulled
Fairleigh Dickinson and St. Fran-
Breen was taken out by Johnston.
high
12
kills.
__
__
,
.
.
you're playing a team not up to
out
a
victory against Manhattan
cis (PA).
Players not in· "love"
with
lack of courts
.

IM
VAN
The men's team has also faced
.
"It's a pain to go IO minutes for
With 'aft th~ construction taking

"They w~n 't be ~cady until after
by
J
DE~I
this problem, but the squad will not
practice,'' freshman Ann Henry
place on
•campus,
there seems to be
I graduate, she said. People com,e
Staff Writer
have to continually deal with. it un-
said. "I think there should be less emphasis placed on building
to me and ask me why we don :
The· women's tennis team is. t!I its· main season begins in the
courts on campus."
new tennis courts.
have courts, and I don't know what
undefeated at home this·year,'but
Spring:
h. b-
Last year there were tennis
"From what we've been told, it's
to tell them."
students may
_
not know- that
Playmg off campus as een an
courts on campus but the" were on the bottom of the priority list,"
O'Niel said she believes having
because the Red Foxes do not play
'inconvenience
for the_ women··s
destroyed.
I

O'Niel Sll,id. "The big stuff is go-
tennis courts on campus W~)Ufd
any home ~atches on campus.

team; especially getting the chance
ing to be built first.
draw more fan support tram
to practice, according to some
The courts were not in go ,d con-
"Last
.
year, they said two to
students .

_The
team has riot had courts"on
'
I

d't'
d'
P ayers.
•.
·-
.



.
1
~on, accqr mg to sor iomore
three years,-but now they are say-
-
Having tennis courts on campus
.
campus for almost a year becau_
se
"I
Id 1·k
h
·c

·
Kt'm z·1 •
• •
_

.
..
.

.
.
.•
_
.
wou
I
e t em
-
tennis
I
ai.
ing four to five years," Zilai said.
wou!d also give every~ay students
of the.con
st
rucuon proJec~;;
·__
·courts),
it would be-more conve-
•-"' "Last year, the <;ourt• were ab-
Head Coach Ken Harrison cou\d
a chance to p\ay tenms.
This.has forced Mari
st
t~play its

nient, freshman\len O'Niel 'said; • soli.ttely"hohible,'; she· aid. "The
·
not be reached for comment.
"It would definitely be of use,
hozne_~atc~e~
at_
th~ P~tfh_es~ Rae-_-
;,_'_'If•'Ye•miss
a ride to the Racquet•
__
coach was.scared
to
lei us play on
Senior katy Seward knows she
for the whole college," Seward
quet Club m Poughkeepsie.

Clu!J, we miss ractice:"

'.
it.•~
·,

y.,
-
•.
--




will neve·r_
play on campus again.
·
said.
.
1\/I.A.RIST
Sfud.SD.tsl
-

l\leed
shirts with
your
dorni.,:team
or club's
_
...
logo
:screen-printed
on··them?
Then
stop
-in
and
.
.
.
_.see
us at
--
.
MILLMAN'S T~SHIRT
FACTORY
•.
12 Fowler Ave.Poughkeepsie

(One block down·from Raymond
Avenue on the eastbOund arteiiall
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I
j
'
I
,,
I
1'
i
.
'bj,.JIM:DERIVAN·

Staff Writer

."The.
women's tenriis tea~ won a hard fought• battle··over,H6ftsra
University;
5-4
on Sunday.
. .....
·
. , .
.
.
.
.

.....
•···
...
With the ~iciory, Ma"rist raises its recordto·9-1(5-0 againstNortheast
Conference foes).

.
.
i.
,-:.
••
'...
.
.
,
• .
.
.

: -

,
A-victory, in the. final double.·mat~h gave the' Red Foxes the. vic~ory.
·
Senior.Katy Seward and freshman·Jen O'Niehvori the.deciding match
for Marist.
,


:.:
·:..
'.
,
,>
.
;
.
:
-
;
It was
·a
stressful match with high intensity; according.
to:
O'Niel.
.

''We.needed two matches to win, there was:a lot:of pressure,· andl
played with Katy$eward who· I never played with
,before,
so it\vas
aii
adjustment," she said;
"It
was ori·and off, but.we pulled it together at·
the end/'

The doubles.team did notkriow the significance··of tlieiwin;
"We didn't know what was going on ..:-the games were ori·different

courts," Seward said. ''.We
.didn't
know if the other teams had one or
lost. So ·we had to puRout/'
.

.
.
.
. .
.
.
.
.
..·

.
Seward said she played weUwith.O'Neil because their different styles
of play gave·the team·balance,

.


·.

.
·
"She (O'Neil) had the patience, and I wanted to go for
it,'!
:she
said.
"The combination was really good." Head Coach Ken Harrison could
not be reached for comment.·

.
..
·.•


O'Niel. also
·won
her singles match, 6~0, 6~4.:
.
.
·>.

..

..
·
..
O'Niel said she believed staying focused was, the key to her victory.
••
.
"The key was patience mostly," she said. "It.was a questit:in'of hang-
ing in there in the second set. I had to work against the wind'."
"I made her make the mistakes," she added..
..

.
Sophomore''Kim Zilai won. her match iri straight sets; 6-0, 7°6.
"It
was just a matter of staying focused; and just"outplaying my op- ,
ponent," she said:
.
.
.

.
.

The Red Foxes recorded an impressive 9-0 win
·over
Buffalo on
Saturday.
.

.
.

Seward led the charge scoring a 6-1, 7~6 victory in her match.
Seward said she was able to raise her play, despite being injured.
"I turned my game up to a higher level," she said'.
"I
sprained my
ankle ankle, so it made me work harder:"


·The
whole match was exciting according to Zilai.
.
.
"It
was tense," she said. "We.were cheering from the bench'like were
Senior Katy Seward
.practices
for
'a
match ·at Dutchess
Racquet.Club Tuesday.

Circle.
photo/Matt_
Mar:tin
.•
o:blefs
··win;
li~li
:.Gaels
..

.
.
..
.
'

by·
·ANDREW'HOlMlUND
.Staff
Writer:.
····Head
Coach·· Howard Goldman
and company could be.getting in-
volved:' in· yef another streak.
:-'After
starting the' season with
.
seven consecutiv.elosses, the men's
soccer team'carrie away·with its se-
c:ondstraight victory of the season
·by
blanking the Iona Gaels,2-0, at

.•
'•Leonidoff
Field last Thursday.
·The
.
:win
improved the Red
·Foxes'
record to 2-7 overall.
,.However,.
Marist·is still 0s5 in the
Northeast Conference. •

:The
Foxes were once again pac-
ed bya goal from senior forward

Giangiuseppe Mazzella on an assist
:·rrom
sophomore· Gary O'Brien at
,the
9:20 second mark·ofihe first

half.
,
..
Sophomore Craig Gottilla scored
:theinsurance.
goal, unassisted, at
·
.20:30
in the same period.
.
Mazzella, from Highland,.N.Y.,
has been the main offensive spark
.
for Marist lately, scoring the game-
winning

goal against Iona, while
notching two in a 3-0 Marist
triumph over the Siena Saints last
week.
.
"Actually, the first goal (against
Siena) kind of got' me going,"
Mazzella said. "I feel more
·relaxed."
.
.. :see,SOCC~R page 11

at· a football game."
.

.
. '
.
,
.
:
Marist hosted Siena yesterd~y, Results were riot available.at-press time;
•·
· • • •••


.H
.. ·.
•·a·
·
..
rrier·s·
..
·::.;g·
rah
fifth\
.
Gi"JcJ.A~rs
fall
t<».
Redinen,
"31-30
.
.

.
...
.
.
.
.
,

'·'·
-


·

• •
the:tempo of the·game for good
·by
.TED'HC>LNiLUND
.
:However,.
Sharkey's. perfora
'
was idumbled exchange·between
•.
D

·r··:

1·a·.
.
...
·.'
··.:
.

....
·
''
.
...
faarice \'lliSJh
e
story:.
.
,.
..
Mccourt and senior center Scott
,
£
air, 1e·:
:
. .
'
nex
• . •
..
···
,
.
.
Sports Editor

•.
The
;
senior
.
completed
,
30"55 Khare that occurred late in the
---"---------....;._._
...
--~..;;..---
·
..
•.·.
Cariisius took the team cham-

It
·appeared.-lviaris(\vas
on-the
passes ,or 3
o
3
·ya
rds; while throw-
,
fo,mh.quarter:withMaristclinging

:by<GREG.
BIBB
pioriship with' a low_
taUy of29.
yerge of; be~dng thi:·sL John's
••
ing
for
three touchdown pasSes:
to a
'30-25
lead.
Staff Writer.
...
.
.

Brian. Ordway was> the•.fop
Redmen
for
the fourth consecutive
·
"We knev.• ~harkefwas a good
·

After
.
the fumble, the Red men
finisher for the Red Foxe:t-The

Y.ea(Ia
..
st Thu.rsday--.·.
·.·.
•·.·.·
....
·.
..
.
·
·quarterback," Head
.Coach
Jim
took over p.
os.
s.
ession on the Red
·
The two ,vorcis health
Y
bodies
.
senior placed)~th with
a::ii111e.


sThe
Jast(half
of.'the- fourth
,Paia
dy,said,. "He played big when Foxes' 30-yard line and scored the
have become synonymous\viih
·
of 26·47 seconds·
·
•••


uarter'sto·
·p
...
e·ct·

..
,
,·:,
·
:
·..


1···
·
~
,he
needed to play big;"
·
·
.
.w.
inn.
ingtouch.down.s1·x.plays
la.te·r
.
t.h.
e.·M
..
ari.
st c. olleg.
e
...
rri.e1rs.:art.d
..
·.:
·:
·


••
··

..
·•
••

;,.•\
:
·•
••.•.•
• ••
·

··
•• ·. •
p


.anyt:prospec.s
o,.

...
• >.senior
Do.n.
:n
.•
'Aiuto nearly m.at-
·on·.·•Ru·sso's·
one ya··rd····d
1
·v·e·.
.
..
Head
:coach
Pete Calaizzio
e
...
xten.
dirigt.he.·
·w..in.;
streak
...
,.•.•.•.·.:
·: ..


·
·
..

.
women'.s. cross country•:teams
·
• •
·
·
·
·
• ••
h



• ...
..
• ·
· ·
• •
:ched
Russo's performance in the
h
·
..
.
.
.
·
saidthemen'steampuftoget
er
. T.h_el{ed.J:9xes
<.2"'~)
were. silent
d
1
b'
.
.
.
."It
just squirted through,"
··~is
season.:
•••
:
.
·
.· ·
>
a solid perfortnance:.\.:
• •
for the lasf'eight miriuies·ofthe
• ue
·
.etwe~n•
the two running Parady said; ''You expect to ex-

/This
:weeke
n
tl;'•
the;team's

..
• .•
......
A·.
cross•.t.h
..
e'.b.
oa.
rd,-·.i.t.w
...
a.s a
..
-g·am.
e.,a.·
..
n.d.·.··s·aw.the'Re·d·
me.n.···c·o·.me
.·backs •••
·•

• •
••
••

··ecu·te···onyourfu
d

t I It

h ···I'
'
d"t'


ct·
'ff.
'
..

.• ..
The· s·en.·1•o·r·.·.h·
..
·a·lfback··
ru· s·
hed.·for··
·
·
n amen as.
was
P ysica con 110
.n
paye
.o
as·
·
realsticcessfulmeetforus/'..:the
....
b
__
ackfro
..
nfa•_.30:-.1_8
d
..
efi.1.c
..
i.tto
...
no.tch
·
·
very
.unfortunate
it happened at

·
18 R.·ed\Fox runn. ers
·garnered ·•
·
••

h

·.·d
• •
• •



127Yar.ds.
on
..
,.1_6.car
..
r.ie.s.,
inc.
l
..
udi.ng·.
·that·.·ti•m"e."
...
·
·
·
·
·
headcoac
;Sill.'.:

.
:'
·a3ls30,victory··•
_..-
..
,">.:•c·,
·
:
p~rSOll~_lcbeS
tS oyer: 1he'~eight<:
.• ·
/Ordway
and Ai:idrew'.Baird

Aft~r
'.soplia"lii~f(,pl~cekicker

a 6S~yar
ct
·tou~hdowffrnn"which

'.,Senior
linebacker
David
.

..
••.
:<.'
k·i.,!
0
°inn:.·,e·;·~·t•·.:h.~t.t.··.·mC.·
..•.
·.·eo
..
n•l
..
~.sa•.t.{s}
1
dJne.i,vfgrs
0
.J.otyd::,/.
.
. ·
..
firiishedthe
race
tinder the.27:00.
.
Qhris,
I>'
Autorio's"·33fyilrd field
gave
th
e ,Red
:F:oxes
a
27
-'lS lead:
Caldwell said the. fumble. was not·
minute·mark· for°the:first•:time
goal, the Redmensc:ored the lastB
·
••
·
Senior., qua~terback.
Bdan.
.the
only. reason. t.he squ.
ad lost.
healtlipayed good divideilds'as
·
·
·
·.
•..
··

··

·
·
·
·
--
·
··

· ·
·
·
Mccourt foinpleted 9c24.passesfor
it helped'lead the team'to. grab
i
iri1hefr careers,
,
.
• .
..
,
;
pgi11ts.
on a. nirte
0
y:~rdjouchdown
a career~high.
222 yards.
''Yo_u can't say it (the defeat)
a fifthc:p·.Iac.e
..
fi_irt.is.
h•,'
.on.
lyfalling·
·
....

<'lt wan nice breakthrough'.

pass by Sea·rt. Shari<ey, a11d An-

D' A

.d h
.
If.
was one thing," he said. "We took
.. ·
·
· ·
"•
·
·
-
·
·
·
for those guys/' Colaizzo said,
.•
<thony
,Russo:s·
orit:-yard ruri. to
·

·
UltO

Sal
t e team· se -
the loss as a team."

to:·iiational
~powers:)uchia~:·.·
=wii.ile.
·ordw·a.·.
Y
..
·.a.n.d.
Ba.'ird
ran.
clinch th. e. ,i.,in
..

•.
:
<·
:·, ::
.. •.
•· ..
·..
desfructe·d inthe fourth quarter.

The.Red.
·Foxes
will have. to
C.·anis
..
iu.s.·,.c.ornell,·.Syra.'c.use.and.·..
·

.. · •
·.
..
.. ...........


·
·
"We·lostthe··g·am·e·ous
..
l

,,.
·
·
·
·
·
..
thetwofastestr_aces'oftheday
·•Russorwho·moyec:Linto· third
•••
•·
·•
• ·
·
· re ves;·
botirice back quickly because a
lioi;lColgate: ••.
·• •

i

•.
:
...
··•··•
<>
·
.
for Maris.t.;.·
s
..
o.
plioin
....
or.e.
:).o.
sh
..
·.·•
:place on.
:.th.·
e.N.
CA
...
Atotal vards· 11·s·t
'D'Auito
said, "S
t.
John's did hot.
l

C

l C

Themen•finishedwithatotal·.·.
.
.
.
.
.beac;:us.
Ws'a.tough
loss to
.arger
_entra .~mnect1cut~tate
..
, .
·, •
f
139: .
.••.
Wood: also rail ai:i impressive
':with4,938,
rushed forJ44\rards on
.
·.swallo"w."
Th.
·e·
..
p"lay that.· h

d

squad WIii b.e waitmg for Mar1st on
score.
O.
·
pomts.
race accordin to· Colaizifo,
28 carries.
:
.•
..
·
.
_
. c ange
Saturday ..
F/U/rno.vers
•_:,t-urn
:~.:ea
Eo!xes·'
seaS..ofJ·
backwards

-_.
1/:~s the best: ~f times:
·i;·was
~
The' Red Foxes ar~
~~abl~-·of





_'b.espite
havf~g

g~od team

The Pittsbur~ Steelers will take
the worst' of times.

.

-
turning its season around again,
• •
·
chemistry and soHd hitting from
the AFC Central
.with
Barry

Sound
'famHiar?


. . . ..
:·•.
but the tearii'must cut'down on its
t;·:
Ted
the likes ofLenny_Dykstra/Darryl
• Foster's running arid a rugged
Thought so.Thisis the best.way
•.
turnovers. If they do not, there

Holmlund
Daulton and John Kruk,it will not

defense. Cleveland, despite being
to describe the football tearn's first may be only 500 people a( the
be enough for the Phillies because.
3~ 1, is doing it with mirrors. Ber-
.
four.games.

.
. . .
.
..
·.
.
... ...
homecoming game on. Oct. 16
the ~raves pitching staff led by
nie Kosar or Vinnie Testaverde?
After a 2~0 start, the. Red Foxes against Duquesne.
.
Steve Avery, Tom Gfavine and
For
:a
team to win a division, it
have·droppedits last two d~sioris.


Soccer success
Greg Maddux is just too dominant.
needs one solid quarterback.
The latest loss

especially hurt
·
After a dismal 0-7 start, the
Braves in six.
If Joe Montana does not get
because.Marist had a 30-18 lead men's soccer team has won its last

Talkin' it

The Chicago White Sox are back
hurt, the Kansas City Chiefs will
with~: 14 remaining only to see it· two games.
.
.
.

in the pennant which is
a
nice ac-
• win the AFC West.

·.
disappear into a 31-30 def~t to the

Senior•.· forward Gianguseppe.
.
••

Runners place•fifth
.
complishment.
However,. the
Jordan retires
St; John's··Redmen.
'_. ,
Mazzella's performance is the main
.
The men's and \¥omen's cross

Toronto Blue. Jays will put an end
Michael Jordan· shocked the
Currently, Marist is a mediocre reason for the team's.· recent country teams both notched fifth
to the Sox's year.
.
world when he officially announc-
team·: Good teams do. riot usually success.
.
. .
.
place finishes at the Colgate meet.
Toronto has a lineup of Ricky
ed his retirement at a press con-
blo~ l~ds. Great teams never ~o.
Mazzella has provided.the offen-. Marist's placement ~oes ~ot ac-
Henderson, Paul Molitor, Joe
fererice yesterday.
R1gh~ now,. Head_ Coa~h Jim
sive spark for the Red Foxes who curately show
.
the entire p1ctu_re. Carter.- John Olerud and Roberto

Jordan said he ended his career
Parady s club 1s ma_kmg
too many
were previously in an
.-offensive
The_ Red· F<?xes were compet!ng
Alomar. "Black Jack" McDowell
because he lost his love for NBA
fundamental
mistakes
.•
and
drought.

aga1!1~t nationally
.
powers bke
is the only pitcher who can con-
basketball and felt he had nothing
turnovers.
Camsms, Syracuse and Colgate.
sistently give the potent Blue Jay
left to prove .
.
The fumble on the exchange bet-
• The senior· scored the.
·game-
Although this is not a stellar
lineup trouble.
He said he would have played
ween qu~rterback Brian Mccourt
winning goal in a 2-0 victory over finish for either team, If runners
McDowell
cannot
pitch
even if his father was still alive.
arid~center Scott Khare late in the
iona last Thursday. He also notch- did beat their personal bests.
everyday.
·
In the years to come, Jordan will
game;is just one example of. the
ed two goals in a 3-0 win over the
This is what sports is all about.
Blue Jays in five.
be recognized as the greatest player
merital errors· that have hurt the
Siena Saints.
Pennant Fever
.
AFC predictions
in the game. What more could he
Red Foxes over the last two games.
Head Coach Howard Goldman's
Well, the Atlantic Braves won
The Miami Dolphins will win the
have accomplished?
"It's do or die time," is an ap-
squad needs Mazzella to continue the National League West. Ho-
American Football
.
Conference
.
However, Jordan is a strong
propriate cliche for Marist's game
to perform and provide senior Hum. That's a big surprise.
Eastern Division because Buffalo
competitor who loves the game.
at. Central Connecticut State on
leadership if this win streak is to
Who's going to stopthe Braves?
has continually become a weaker
Will he come back?
Satµrday.
continue.
The Philadelphia Phillies? No.
team after each successive Super
Ted
Holmlund is
The Circle's
Bowl loss.
Sports Editor.