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Part of The Circle: Vol. 43 No. 2 - September 30, 1993

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.VOLUME
.43~··NuMBER2
.

.
·.
.
.
'
.
.
.
Water11uiin
burst;
·third-this

year
by
MEREDITH KENNEDY..
"It. was. incredible. There. was
••

Staff Writer
water everywhere.
-They
•(the
con-

·
·
·
·
struction workers) are going to
-
Waterline. breaks'. are becoming have their worlc cutout for them,"
:
as frequent as Old Faithful on
cam-
said
_senior
Andy: Whelan.
.•
·• ••
•. •
pus in recent weeks.

Senior Mike Gordon said, "I
Monday, the South end of cam-
could see it from the last parking
pus discovered that they were once spot (in Riverview). It was like: this
without· water- as construction· huge
-rainbow
of water. It was
workers-struck a"main.water line on dowsing all of the machines."
the
.
edge of the former Cham-
According
to Director
of
pagnat parking lot facing Water Physical Plant, Tom Daly,' the line
Works Road.
was not buded deep enough and
Workers were preparing the was not in the correct location.
ground for a new sidewalk when
Pipes usually sit about four feet
they accidentally hit the line, ripp-
be~ow the surface, while this· Iirie
ing a ten-foot hole in the pipe, sat only two. feet below, he said.
releasing a 30-foot-high geyser of
."No
orie knew p·recisely
where it·
water.


was
.. That area is a construction
"We turned the cornetand there nightmare because there are so
was this fountain of water gushing many underground obstructions,".
·
from the pipe. It was going straight said R. Mark Sullivan, executive
up in the air," said sophomore Jen-
vice president.
--.
• •
nifer Prelli.
.•
.


The city.ofPoug.hkeeps1·e
1·n··s1a·11-There are two other pipes below
.•
Workers'\i/atct?as a30-f6ot:high geyser streams from the broken water main.
Water Works Road, according to
ed tlie line in 1865 when the Marist dty plans, measuring 24 and 36 in~
Brothers ran the campus, but never ches in
•diameter.

fortable sftuatio~ for. everyone in-
as six weeks to be completed, said
recorded the exact location of the



••



However, the exact locations of volved. I just hope it doesn't hap-
Raimo.
pipeline.
these two lines are still unknown.
pen again,,,saidJim Raimo direc-
The 128 year old line is not be-
·circle
photo/Colleen Murphy
line originally intended to supply
water to the town, but now only
services Marist.
The line runs below the southern
_ .
The broken pip_e
supplied water
,
tor of housing c1rid
residential life.
ing replaced, just repaired.· The
curb of the road. The break.occur-
.
to the entire south end of campus,
..
>''.Rightnow
it (the water)is be-
.conn~~tio~
must' be c.ustom,made
.•
«We've discoyeredJn. doing
_a
red ~cross the street from the l,ower iridudi_ng Be,noit;
and.9regory and
.
)11g
b~ckftd,.~Y;~.9~.her
ljn!!/'
-~_ctJd,
tC>
fit th<!'SUi"rnl,)nding_
pi_pe.
'> ;
·.
.•
'm.assi".e
project_li}ct!
~hjs,tµat many
.
.
.
section e>f
the new tO\,V~llot1s:s.
_
•·
excludnig th!! M.c<;ann:Center.
• •
Pet~r Petr~cca, P1zz?galh'SI!r.0J~ct
: .::T,hr_se
oth,et
~~,t~,~
ma1~ '?reakl\ pipes' dates,bacK to the' l 950's
·or
.
,;;--,·--·
-·····
~
•••
-Th~AMW-townhouses-:"Vere.
not·-~The
a
water
··was'?turned·~off·at
·
-·eng1neer:~'."'".-,~,•:•:1•~~''"~'::?~t•·.--...-;-:--
.......
occurred,a-tlns,
•.
year;
••
Alt-.of..these
..
.e"ven
e~irlje:C;'.}
said. Sullivan:. ''So,
.effect~d
by th e l:>re~k;:b:u~.-
":'.ater arou,nd
"s;·a~m:
_'and
re'gained af 1
.- ·:.~A
.sicqndary
linejs being-'us¢d
~
I?iil:es
:'V.~[_e
ciesi~nfd._t<>Jeecl_
~~ter
}ii
pa~t
Jhe
breaks are caused by
!loodedthe construction machinery p.m.
.. -::
,
:
.' ;
·'
•·
. .
.
.
.
while the. main. line
.,.is
'being.
to on,caf!lpUS bulld1ng~.
•.·
,
.••..•
,
consfruction, bt'if also because of
10
the lot.
''Losing the water-is ari uncom-
repaired, w_hich
~ouldtake
~slong
Monday's
,break
occurred to. a
·age."




Campus housing
.'hot
·gti.atantee<;l.
to
an.
Upperclassmen
by
LYNN WIELAND
·•
. •
StaffWriter
no~sing.will"ncit receive it, depen~ college h_as an obligation· to
Surpdsed
by
the
news,
don't have enciugh space for
ding on the number
of
returning
.
guarantee on-campus housing
_to
sophomonrBeth Arnqld stated t~at

students, they should keep Canter-
students who choose lo live off·
.
incoming students'as \Yell as retur-
without)iousing_ she, would· most bury ,'\she added.
.

·cilmpus~··:
-

••.•.
- •

.
••
ningµppercfass stud.ents>':

likely have to leave campus because

With the riew Champagnat
Whiie Marist continues
·to
·ex:
"The collegeis meeting the ma-
<«Ma:rist
has an absolute respona
of
finances arid inconvenience; "I
Suites scheduled for construction;
-

pand the number of
.students.
ac~ jority
.
of·: peoples' needs,'\·, said

sibility td house students,". said
assumed guaranteed housing, I 324 spaces for students will· open
cepted and.admitted each year; the
_ ·James
Raimo;·director of,Housing.
BrettMinieri; a sopl!omore, from
need
,to
live
·on
campus," said

up·, however when Maristgives up
Housing:Departmentis facing the
.
and Residential Life; Raimo said
c
Riverdale, N .J.
. .·
.-· ...
• . ·.
·.·.
_
Arnold~

.
.
.

.
the Canterbury Gard«!Ii apart-
difficulty of findiiig enough rpom. that it would.be hard foest:imate
-
-Minieri was originally planning
<
-
Helena
.
Henderson,
a ments, Housing
.•
will
Close
300
·
for upperdass students wishing to
exactly how)iiany,students wquld
to
·live
off
campus; however \Vith sophomore, agreed the College placements.
.
,
:'.

,

live on campus
'.

;
, ·
.•
<
require housihg;·:,
:
·.-
.

.-::._
.
the
..
developing
·changes~
aroµnd
<
should
guareritee students hmisiitg.
.
This summer, 64 spots were lost

\With
§03 houtingspotsa~~iiabl~
.· -T~is
year,J51 st~de11ts
returned

campus,
...
has·•·decided"tostay:''1
•.
She said this
]?.CW
policy is making
••.
when the North Road houses were
·next
year}<:,
upperclassmen, it-has . to campus; onlyto withdraw from
always thought
I'c;l
live off campus

her rethink her decision to attend taken down. The new townhouses
been estimated·.by:Housirig,that
housing ..
:
•.•
...
·•·.
:'

,:
butnowl'm75percentsurelwant
Marist.

-
..
:see
HOlJSINGpage 9

fivepercenfofstu_denis_requesting
'.Students
\aid
they fee,fthatJhe
to stay."



••
"If
it's a situation that they
'Stud.eJJtIJads,
§etOnct.
effort. to·· start hotline
·
.•
, ·'.:.,·.
...
-
~

01ath~f.th~'6n~c~~~s:rap;whic~
t~okso~e_i~ing like~ ~apeto'get
foture.
<
_
.
.
,

.

ing br
~~e
beginning of next
b
JULIE MARTIN
o·ccurred nearly three weeks ago~

it together, ~utl'm very hopeful,
. •
''Roberta h~ helped,, us out a semes er.

.ll b
~..
··
·
she hopes the hotline
will
finally
we can get it off the ground.''.
great deal,'' said Pace. We hope
C~drrentdly,
th
ebdh_o!h.ne
wif the
.•
'Associati
Editor
:
b
.
.
.•
·..
.•

art
,
'.
.
.•
.
Pace said she plans to get to use the basement of Sheahan for con_s1 ere a
SU
IVISlOil O
.
e
··
·
·
·
·
·
·

·
e-.-~fsm.tuedaenrte.s'h
1
a·.
Yv.·e··com··
e
·up·.·to
..
·me•
.
together•.· w.
1.·.th
·.
R.ob
..
ert.a. A
....
m
..
a_to.
,. the
..
h
.. ·.otiine.
·, th
..
e.r.e
..
are· ph_one
jacks.·

soci~l w.
ork deJ?a!1ment. Pace said
After .la.st ·.·y'ea.
r's
.f.
i:us.t.rating
·
h
b tt ng th
roposal
ruidas.ke.dwh.afisgoingonwiththe

directorofcounsel.i.ngservices~and
.downther
7:
Hopefully,1fallgoes
s e is. resu mi
1

e P
defeatofahotlineforrapevictims,
hotl"1ne."s·hes·a1··d
«It'sashameit
discuss. plans for
.the
hothne's
wen,weWillhavethehotlinework-
fro~ last year toSteve Sans~la,
junior Dina Pace said she wiUtry
.
.
,
...
.

.
·
..

·· · ·.
.
·
·
..
·.
.
.
• ··
.
-
assistant dean for student affairs,
again this year to get the program
sometime this week
.••
••
going.




Pace said her main focus when
Pace said a senior wanted to start
working with the hotline will be the
the progranias a parfof her social
victims who did not report the
work· thesis; however she wanted
...
••
crime to the· authorities.
U!Jderclas~men who
,\Vould
:
be
••
"Rape is a humiliating ex-
around for a while to work on it.
perience and these people deserve
Pace, along. with juniors Sarah
understanding when they are going
Opeila and. Laurie Ferraro, then
-
through the aftermath of the attack
took on the project.
.·•
·
·..
· ·
..
·
and all the feelings of guilt which
"We started with the hotline at

come with it," she said.
the end of our freshman year and
Amato said she also believes the
tookitoveroursophomoreyear,"
most important thing for a rape
Pace said. "We had intensive train-
victim is to get help.
ing including self-defense; we talk-
"Yes, reporting the crime is en-
ed to counselors, we had help from
couraged, however, the foremost
the Poughkeepsie Police Depart-
important thing for a rape victim
ment and security."
.
to do is make sure she doesn't go
Pace said it was
a
lack of student
through this alone," she said.
interest that brought about· the
Sue Lozinski, mentor in Cham-
demise of the hotline last year.
pagnat Hall and a member of the.
"We offered training to those
Sexual Assault Prevention Task
students who were interested, but
Force, said she is very optimistic
as training went on, people drop-
about the hotline.
ped out," Pace said.

However, this year, amid after-
•••
see
HOTLINE
page
9














































































































































·-·-----------:---------~--------------------~------------------------~
2
.
Duo enjoys-SCotC'ese
'S
.'YJ.ie
Of
1rinoce~€e''
•·
.
:
'
:
.-~

'.
..
.
-
.
..
.
.
.
..
-
_.
'''
•,'.
;_·
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:
. '
'
by
ANDREW BORIS and
COLLEEN
MURPHY
Andrew: Hello, to
·start
off, I'd like to
apologize for not being here last
.week.
I understand Colleen treated you to. a·
glim.pse ofherimier mind. For that, I am
extremely sorry.
.
..
<::olleen: Thanks.
.
A: Well, this ,veek Colleen and lsaw"the
much-anticipated film, "The Age Of In-
nocence," directed by Mr. Martin Scorcese.
.
C: It was adapted very cleanly from Edith
Wharton's novel of the same title.
A=
Why, yes it was. But let's not dwell on
the book.
.
This film can only be classified as Martin
Scorcese's masterpiece; the story of a man
torn
.
between the woman he loves arid a
society that will not allow him to love her
was eloquently brought to the screen.

C: Daniel Day Lewis; known for "The
Last Of The Mohicans<C.
and "My Left
Foot," classically portrayed the subject of
·the
timeless struggle between heart and mind.
A: Lewis' acting, along with that of
Michelle Pfeiffer and Winona Ryder, was
tremendous.
.
,
Much of the film depended upon ari
"unspoken"

dialogue, which came off

flawlessly.

In fact, the entire film could be viewed
with the sound completely turned off, Col-
leen, and you probably wouldn't miss a beat.
C: True, but you can'tdiscount the screen-
writing talent of Martin Scorcese.
But Ido agree,' the film was exceptionally
.
pleasing to the eye. The costumes and sets
made a lasting impression on everyone in the
theatre.
· .
'
·
.•
A: To all of those people out there who
are
,·expe<:tjng
anqther "Raging Bull,"
«Goodfellas,"·or:<'Taxi Driver," you will·
be disappointed.** This is not your average
Scorcese filin.
,_.•
.•
By.the sarrie token, you could also argue
thanliis film is exactly the same as. all his

others; because it relates to one theme com-
mon to all of Scorcese's pictures.
It is a story of a man torn between his role
iii society and his true wants and desires
(although no. one dies and nci
.
one gets
naked;)

,
•.
: .

.
.
.
C: This was just an all-around good
movie..
.

.
·
.
The_ acting, the score, the direction, the
sets;'it simply takes your
.breath
away.
In fact,the only fault that could be found
would ha.ve to be the length of the film. I
don't think the movie-watching public can
handle more than two hours without sex or
violence:'
..
. ,



·•
It probably won't be a large box office
·ciraw
.••
- •..
.
.
..
.
,


A:
WeJJ, first of all, calling this. a ':good
movie".is atragic understatement. This was
a. beautiful
·mm.
.

.
Hundreds of years from now, people on
planet Zarko1i'will not be watching "Ram-
bo XXI," but watching _this film.
.••
.
Also, I thought that the length of the film
was perfect.

.
:
..
Nowadays, a two·hour movie is considered
short. "Malcolm
X,1'
'.'Dances With
·
Wolves," and "JFK" are just a few ex-
ampl~s of much longer movies that dtd ex-
tremely well at the box office; •
.·..
. .
. ..
·.
As for the public not being able to survive
two hours without sex:and violence/I think•
this movie, excuse ine, ''film,"
,contains

enormous amounts of both.

.
•• .
Daniel Day Lewis and Michelle Pfeiffer set
the screen oil. fire with their forbidden love
for each other.



.
,
.

The way they flinched and.shuddered.with.
every touch was far. rriore provocative than
two hours ofseeing Sharon-Stone's.butt.
••
C: Onscreeri,'
~omarice is one thi~g-, con-
summation is another.


••
.
•••.

I think that anything more explicit would
definitely be out of place in this. film.
·:~Films" like·this. don't sell; sex doe~,.-

A: True, this is a PCHilrri; but
:you
have
to remember that the setting for this film is
in a PG time period.
.

People were
~~t
all~wed to run a~ound.the
Vanderbilt Mansion in their underwear, let
alone even sleep itt''the same bedroom.
Nirvana's no fluke: ''Utero ,., .smells like a second hit
by
DANA BUONICONTI

back into rock.
ing from sincere appreciation to. ut-
it's also a better representation of
with Krist Novoselic's booming
And even though their punk at-
ter contempt, even going so far as
what the band sounds like live.·

bass and. Dave Grohl's deafening
Sometime around the beginning titude was hardly original (what is
to call Kurt Cobain's actions
Recorded by Steve Albini,
"In
drumming,
"In
Utero"
is
of the decade, a lot of people were these days?), it seemed incredibly
"pissy, school-boy antics," right
Utero" seems more consistant,
crazy-loud.
.
.
.
asking each other
if
rock was dead.
fresh and unique to a
·record-
here in this space, last year.
..
more raw. And that's
a
good thing.
There are even suggested treble
After 10 years of synth-based buying public who, at the time, had
So, where do we find Nirvana
.
Songs like "Serve
.
The Ser-
and bass levels inside the liner notes
mush and poseur metal, rock ap-
forgotten about what rock and roll
now, after the release. of "In
vants," "Pennyroyal Tea," and
tcrhelp ensure a hearing-imprured
peared to be on its last legs.
really stood for.
Utero" and their impressive perfor-
"All Apologies» contain their
listening experience.
.

Then came Nirvana.
Unfortunately, their emergence
mance on "Saturday Night Live"
. typical blend of punk and melody.
Somehow, I don't see this as the
During the fall of 1991, they meant the open embrace of -the
last week?
"Milk It,."· with. its unusual
record that separates their "true"
single-handedly resurrected rock mainstream, and with it, a host
of
I would say poised to emerge as
slinky bass line, and "tourette's" • fans from the bandwagon jumpers,
and roll by

becoming the un-
,
problems.
one of the most important bands
bear the fruits of Albini's labor.
like. people thought it would. It
disputed kings of grnnge.
Among them, the band's reli.lc-
of the decade, maybe
·even
of
And ''Rape Me" has a striking~ matters little .•• The bottom line is
Watching them take charge was

tance to accept stardom and its
all-time.




and
,
pr.obably

fotentiorial,
,
Nirvana's significance.
,,
something
to
be seen.
comforts,cries of "sell-out!," from
To
.this
day, I still think that
resemblance to "Smells Like Teen
d
·

h
·
h.
Wh
k N


1
their "true" fans, the snobby indi_e- "Nev· erm·1•n·d"
1·s
only a·
b.
out 2/3 of
Spi"r"it
..
"

1 oubt they're out t<,>
c ange t e
at ma es irvana so crucia
world.
'Lord
0
knows,
.it's
kind of
is equal parts music and attitude.
purist
..
attitude,
bandwagon
a good record. Good, but not
Maybe the best aspect: of.these
ironic; since rock music will never
Calling to mind the Sex Pistols,
.
junipers, and
.
a host
.of
,
look-
·great..
.
.
.
.
.
songs is the band's compressed, in-
b
.
th
.
-
·
they restored the punk ethic,
.
alike/sound-alike opportunists.
.
"hi
Utern»
is a great record.
your-face delivery;
.

,
..
e

~s~me_.

something that had been missing in
• •
My O)Vn
opinion of the band has
To.me, not only is
"In
Utero"
When Cobain's throaty scream-.
At heart, Nirvana is justa plink
b~nds like Whaml and WarraD:t, been: deci~edlv inconsistant, sway-
a better record than '·'Nevermind,"
ing and ragged guitar nuanc~ mix.,. band,. Arid a good
·one
at that.
In an.
atterilPt
tii·kien.··.·
..
,_·.u•n'··wf~fi'tW_·
...
•.
'tt
.•.
e.'
2
t.it_ffl_•t}_,:b_f·8f:J,~;,,:i;
.
r

··•
...
ru.•
,,
,-. .... .
.
.
..
,
Big Bruce
bombs.
with stinking
'/l)iSt0~l:e,1t
••




crease the drama of the: filqi
-~'ri'ct
Hardy_ does what he can to get

percent ofthe iriovie·
and rieverap.::

ting','andl'.lll g~ing to ~ayitagain,
by
JENNIFER
·GIANDALONE
• .
help us· syfllj>athize witl}.
·Hardy's
the case reopened, but to no avail.
.
µears to be comfortaple with'what
•.
predict;ible movie with only a few·
Don't you hate it when the best
problems; He even cries in a few
The depar,t:Qientdeni_es
that these. she's doiiig'or:saying/·

,.',;.:
(veryJ'e.ifgood acti9n stenes:
parts of a movie are.shown in the
scenes:** Believe me, I didn't syin~

mul'?ers and _the, OIIes from
two·
• :- '. ••
·,· ·:
< _-.·
.:·,
>
.• •
•.
Bruce' trie~t_ci:
hit a h_._.
ome ru_n
preview?

pathize with him atau.·.

years ago are connected....
or.:co~rse,
·she'.:a:na·
Hardy
with:'.••striking·Disfance«like lie
Boredom_ sets in very
_q·
uickly·
.
K_.eepin_
g the Pittsburgh
_police
01:1
1Y one m_an serio_usly in-
becom_-_e
·.1.·_nvo.lve_
d_.
_: ·_,W_h.
en it w.
as..
••
d.d • h " ·
·
· • ·
t
t
th
d
.
..
·
I
Wit
·
D_
1e
.Hard.;"
andiri my··
when you get to the theater.
busy is a serial killer who they just
ves iga es··
e new. mur ers:
all over·a. n.
d:done.w. 1_"th,
I felt like


·
d
T
H d Pl
op~nioQ; he wound iii> looking at
That's basically. what happens
can't seem to catch.
renega e cop om ar y; ease.
I had been cheated.· $6.75 seemed stnke three with the roll of the dos-
with Bruce Willis'. latest action
The movie opens with Hardy
However, Hardy becomes a
an awful lotfopay for a disappoi11~ ing credits.

• •

film, "Striking Distance."
.

.
and his father joining a car. chase
susp~ct in the ~illings because ~e
Guris, car chases (even though it
to capture a suspect in the murders.
~as involved _with each of the v1c-
was a
.very
good one), boat chases,
As you can probably figure
.out,
tlm~ at one time or· anoth_er.
and a serial killer all add up
fo
one
the chase ends with
a
crash
'and
the
Like all other action movies, this
thing: an· EXTREMEL
y
predic-
suspect just happens to escape.
one ends with a fight between om
table movie.
Not long after the escape,·the
hero a_nd the murderer.
.
Rowdy Harrington, also the
department announcesthe capture
Durmg _thes: ~ghts, we know .
director of "Roadhouse," with
and arrest of the killer who has that the killer 1sn
t.
dead the first

Patrick Swayze, attempts to tell us
·
long terrorized the dty. Har_dy;
be-
·
time,. the second time, or even the
the story of homicide detective
ing the smart cop that he is;Jmq~s
third time.

.,
..
.
...
Tom Hardy, played by Bruce WiUis
.
they have arrested the wrong man.
So the final scene provides little,
.
("Die Hard," <'Bonfire of the
Hardytends to have
a
big n)outh or no ~uspense.
.
··.
-··
...
Vanities").
and say anything that corriestohis
_If you listen c~efully to what'is
Tom has just finished testifying
mind.
. .

said, you ~n easily figur_e
out who
against his

partner in
·
a police
:
As
a
result· of telling everyone

the kdler
..
1
s:
0
"
.-


.
.•

brutality trial.**· His partner
whohethinksisthekiller heissent

.
It only·took me halfan hour,·
(Robert Pastorelli,
"Murphy
down to river patrol.· '
.

and fr~m th~n onl had-li!!le in-
Brown ") just happens to be his

Hardy takes his demotion like a terest, if any; m what was g<,>mg
oµ,
cousin.
man but sticks to his beliefs that
Movies tend. to lose something
Ang guess what? Tom's father
the ' department
is

hiding
~hen you know theendi_ng
that was
(John Mahoney, "Say Anything«)
something.
intended to be a surprise.
.
is the chief of the homicide division


So, the killings stop, and with
1 S?ppos_e
Bruce Willis does ad~-
of
the
Pittsburgh·
Police
the investigation closed, Hardy
cent J_ob
with
.a
charac~er that he 1s
Department:
continues to live his life as a "river
definitely used to playmg by now:
Wait, there's more. We find out
rat.''
the smart-!11outhed
cop who is ab-
that all of Hardy's cousins and
Two years later, the killings start
solutely. nght to challenge those
uncles are cops, including his Un-
again.
above him.
cle Nick (Dennis Farina, "Mid-
Just when everyone thought it
Sarah Jessica Parker ("Honey-
night Run"), who is next in line for
was over, the· killer comes back moon in Vegas," "Hocus Pocus")
Tom's father's job.
from his little vacation and goes plays his river patrol partner.
Hardy ends up battling not only
back to his old ways.
Parker looks terrible through
95
the department, but his whole
The women are conveniently
family.
dumped in the river so they can be
I guess this is supposed to in-
found by Hardy.
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Walking
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i.
!
'

'-
THEi.CIRClE,
;
SEPTEMBER:3o,
-1993'
3
River
..
R&om.
,r~g111ars
-.forced
to Donnelly
for
late snacks
.
..
.
,.
.
,·.
.
··.
'
·-..
.

..

'
·-

-.

.
'by __
BETH
-
POTTS
-
Sia.ff Writer·
_

The: location of the
ne~
late
riight:cafeseems'to be
a
problem
-
Jor' some. students, Jjke

Jamie·
Forget

late
-
_night.
~.nacks ancl
-
:~i!~i:J;~:.
j~niorfa,ing·_ in. t~e
study breaks. The River Room has
-
i"l
was an RA in Leo Hall
.last
-
fallen victim to' Vision '94,
•.
--

year and I was always going over

The once p~pular stop for pizza
.- ·to
Champagnatto eat at the River
and Snapple m the lower level of
-

the Campus Center, has been clos:.
-
Room/I don'tthink·l'd be so eager
-
ed. Buf don'tcallthe•p-izza delivery.·_·
to
:walk
·over
to Donnelly to get a
-
·
slice.of pizza/'-he said.
--
_
man just Y'* theDonnelly Cafe is·
open_ for business ..
-
.
__
.
-
__
.
"l'..m
not lookirigJorward: to
Many students aren't aware that
walking to Donnelly in the
._winter
fheC~fe

Dcmnelly has extended
when
'_it's
cold instead o["simp]y·
their evening hours until 11 :30 p.m. walking down the stairs, to the.
to cover for. the loss of the River
-
Riv_er
Room,,, said Matthew Gillis,
-
-
an RA in Champagnat.
.
_
R~?f had no. idea the Cafe was
Commuter students. don't seem
open thaUate. I miss going
·to
the
to be affected by this
·ne\v
chailge

-
in the cafe's hours.


.•
River Room. when_
I have the late.
'Tm rarely here late at night and
_
night hunger pains," said Sarah
,1
didn't-know-:it·was
_
open until
Povilaitis,
.a
junior from Mid-
-
·11:30,
but it's a convenient place
_
dlebury,: Conn.
-
-

f-
-
ff
-
·
-
d
·
· ·
·-·
"When I conie_out. o_f my night
.
or o_ -campus
.stu
ents
_to
come·:
arid get a biteto eat-,!',said Torn
class it's good to know I have
Regari of Windsor, Conn;
_
-
somewhere to go to get some_
food," she said.
-
• -
"I used to go to the River Room
"I always thought they closed at
-
.
all the_
time when
l
lived on cam-
8 o'.clock> I never heard any·
thing
_.pus,,,
said Aimee Prozzo, ~junior
commuting
·student.
''Nchv I. can

abounhe ch_anging hours,,, said
stop in aL Dpnnelly and grab
.
a .
Maria Pope, a commuting
senior·.
_
Snapple
for
niy, way. home.,,
:
_
•.
The' evening menu available in
-
Students enjoying lunch at the Donnelly
-
Cafe.
-
the Donnelly· Cafe is similar to the
The Donnelly Cafe is not open·
on weekends, unlike the River
former River Room's serving slices
-
Room,
-
which is· a aisappointmerit


Room after we went out ori Friday
of pizza, chicken patties, soda and,
to a few students.


and Saturday nights and eat fries
order out now,"
said
David
Strong,
resident
of the new
Townhouses.
The new hours for the Donnel-
ly Cafe are 7 a.m. to
11
:30 p.m.
Monday through' Friday and is
closed on the weekends.
of course, Snapple and snack foods
''We'd-
go over to th.
e· R,·ver
d-

b I
I'll h
of all kinds.
an pizza,
ut
guess
ave to
New laundry facilities no where in site,
Townhouse residents
-must
go elsewhere
of a co111pletion
date for the laun-
other facilities have not been hap-
by
KERRY'.CONNORS
dry facilities.
py about the situation.


Staff Writer

Kathy Link, a psychology major
"The people that live in Benoit
from Bethany, Conn. said, "In our
and Gregory are getiing upset

Most students have· had the ex-
meeting on the first day we were because they think we're
'trespass-
·:perience,
at least once, of running
told they were supposed to be done ing' or
something.
But.a lot of girls
••
out of clean clothes to wear because Thursday. They didn't say which are afraid to. go to Gartland
'
they neglected doing laundry.
Thursday, though."
because of the rap\! .. They feel there
,,
-
For student:. resi_d~ng
inthe new. -, Other students were informed of
__
are
..
no. phones
·or
security.down._.
:Tqwnhouses,the pile. up of dir:ty differei;it completion
·dates,.
-
• ..
·
.. -.there,''
said Yessenia Cruz, a com-
)a'undry111fay~n6t
be
eniirely'.their
.
.
MariAri)l
'carpenter, ·a
·senior
•.
munication arts major from Bronx,
"fault.
The laundry facilities in that
from BoonviJle, N. Y. said; •~We
·N.
Y.
_
_
;
area have not yet been compJeted · were.told they were supposed to be
Aliso~ Guard a, a his!ory major
·:,
Launary room construction has in by Wednesday. That was-two
from Bnstol, Conn, said
that
do-
.
.
-heen
deiayed because of
a
lack of weeks ago: I don't knoJ where
-
iilg laundry elsewhere was an
time available
·to
complete that part they· are now."
-
-
-
inconvenience.
of the complex.
-
_
.-
- . _.
Daly was unable to offer a com-
"I went to do mine at Gartland,
.
"It's
a
question
qf
priorities .. pletion date with any certainty.

and I carried-it all the way down

Our first priority was to get the Jiv-
''The
upper levelS"should
be able
there and then I had to
_wait.
It
ing quarters done. Qur next is lauri- to use the laundry rooms Monday.
took about three hours out of my
dry/' said Thomas
'Daly,
director The lower levels should be done
day," Guarda said.
of Physical Plant.

later in the week," Daly said. These
Susan Fitzge!ald, a senior from
_
"We have over 100 guys work-
dates could not be confirmej by
S_ar~toga_ ~pn~gs,
N. Y., had
ing to get those (Townhouses) workmen at the site.
s1m1lar d1fficult1es.
done," Daly said.
"It
won't take
Until the facilites are available,
"It's a pain," Fitzgerald said.
_
us'long."
.
students· have to find their own
"Last Sunday I had to
go
to
·
H()Jly Boyton, a_-senior froin means of getting their laundry
Gartland. Then I had to wait 20
Simsbury, Conn., and resident done.


minuces for
a
washer."
assistant for Townhouses H-I deals
Beth Ruppenthal, resident direc-
Some
students.said
they feel it is
with student complaints
about
the tor for the North End, said
easier to go off campus to get their
situation/on a daily basis.
-
_
students must go to other residence laundry done.
''Everyone always stops me and halls or to the Townhouses to get
"It's a bigger problem
t~
do on
is always
.asking
when they (the their laundry done.
campus. You have to lug it all
laundry rooms) are going to be
"I don't think students have had
there, then there's a line," said
done and I don't have an answer," a lot of problems getting it done.
Carpenter.
Boyton said.
There's plenty of facilities _on cam-
Jason Michaels, a social work
-
Students
living
in
the pus," said Boyton.
.
major from Pine Bush, N.Y. said,
-
Townhouses h_ave
_not
been notified
Students who have had to use "It's definitely an inconvience."
Fa-shion. interns to visit Paris
by
LYNN
WIELAND
Staff Writer
Two Marist students are prepar-
ing to go to Paris as the first inter-
national fashion interns.
Ann Kucipeck, from· Tup-
perlake, N.Y., and Trish Cerruto,
from Long Island, N.Y., will leave
in November for a three month in-
ternship at the Lecoanet Hemant
Couture House in Paris.
Cerruto and Kucipeck, both
seniors, said they are feeling the ex-
citement as they prepare to study
in the fashion capitol of the
world."
"Paris is it, that's the fashion
capitol," said Kucipeck, who plans
on seeing and learning as much as
possible while
also
making contacts
in the fashion industry.
The seniors said they are nervous
and are facing a lot of pressure
since the

are the first to receive
this internship.
_
"The hardest
part is the
pressure,
definitely,"
said
Kucipeck, who is worried about
meeting the high standard and
quality of a couture house.
The Lecoanet Hemant House is
one of only
12
member houses of
the Chamber Syndicate. The House
contains design studios and
workrooms
where
custom
garments are made for the t\VO
col-
lections produced a year.
Cerruto also said she is worried
about meeting the expectations of
the House.
"I'm very nervous, I don't know
what is expected of us," she said.
Sue DeSanna, the associate
director of the fashion program,
said
-
the responsibilities on the
students will depend largely on
their abilities.
While in Paris the interns will
also be responsible for finishing

i nments from the
Marist fashion program.
For both seniors this is their first
time in Europe and wiih an
Eurorail pass, they said they plan
on sightseeing as much as possible
r
after the work is done.
"Every weekend I'm going
somewhere
different, I definitely
want to see Italy," said Kucipeck.
Cerruto said
she
wants to see as
much as possible, including some
museums, England and Italy.
Cerruto and Kucipeck said they
are happy they
will
be
staying
together. There are two other
Madst Abroad students residing in
the same international house.
"It'll be nice to have someone to
relate to," Kucipeck said.
With only a few more weeks to
go, both seniors said they are look-
ing forward to the experience of a
lifetime.
"Even if I don't get anything else
out of it, just being over there is an
ex rience," said Kuci
k.






















































































4
THE
CIRCUE,.
SEPTEMB~R
30,
1993
~e~qlf
iiltW:l~f
t8!i,~~ll%!f'
••


Sin'ce
King
didri;fd~cide to
le~~~
....
:.
;,i,w,irit: to)~~ik m~-ri:with in-
bf
JEFFREY: J._ ROSE
until late in the past academic year; terpersoriaUevels of communica-
Staff Writer\,
__
·_
the.college Was unable
fo
conduct-.·:·
tioris and_interculturalcominuriica~
ana.tional sear~h for the positfori;

tfons/' Nolan said~C'We need.Oto
.
Mai:ist is not qnly reshaping its
inviting Nofan;
~
·member
of the
••
prepare· for a change in cultures; in
physical appearance; but with the
cominui:iication. arts. faculty,' to
,vords,
·in.
attitudes; and in time
addition of a new chairp¢rson of
take the,yacancy_'
_
·:
..
:~
~
•.
.
,
usage. 'fhes1f are _important areas
the division ofcomm_unication
and
Nolan;said he planned·this year fo_r
the. w_ork
force of the 21stcen-
the arts: an~; J2
..
ne\V.-.faculty

to be:a yeariof('discussioll arid t~ry:".
••


mt:mbers;then~isanewlo<?kinme. -reorganization:":,),·.-<
.• .
:.:
••
1
,c
classroqm as well,
\·-,
.,:·
:
,>
';!The _c;ollege/is\ looking'., to
..
·
·
,
. Fotthe_st:cond time in as many : res_hape''its/atjidemk'.strticture,',' ;_ Nolan said he is. confide11t
the
years, Maris~has a new:~hairp!!J-::;.
,r,J'olan
saicf
l'.Itjs:my
job'to bdng
ii~w'
'communicaifon
• faculty·
son f6i-the divisiqri of c9mmunicai\hht:'faculty tll~rep<>rtsand
find
otii:
::meinbers
:Jm
be' able
to
assist in

tion and the·~rt~:/<".''
,,
:.
;
c
</U\what.theithink
the college slioitla cafry_ing
outhis plans:

ch~i~;:r::n~u\~f.
1
t,!;
th
e:_act~~1f:}-/f
f~;-~~l~e~e, has_
prd~~;~/;~r;e
''With,
~~e
·youth·-and

~ibrancy
_
_I am. thnlleg._t<>.be,th_e.a_ctmg
-~plans;~oncernmg
the futu~~e>_f
the
.
that go along with ayourig faculty·
._
chai_rpers()_n
-~d
!9
~~y~t9e:opP_or:::,·
:
structure,
·or
t~e
'~ci!deinic
organii.:f
.
there will
oe
a lot of excitement'
and
•·tumty ·to.·'.•welcome_
:J_1y_e;cn.ew.::-:~'~tionf;.arid
the fact.ilty_hasibeen
in-
,
lear_n_
in_
g g_·
oing on,''. Nolai:i said_.
members that hay~j6ine<fiisJi:ithe

-voived'iii;discussing.
the·
·optiofoit
_
....
conimunic~tion,s
divisfo~;'..'-'Nolan;

'Nblart'alsoJias
plans
of
his' own
.
• .
.

.

a former Ma,risf Brotht:_r;_·said._ _ on-revisfog":the-curikulum within
.,
''Joyce Nogh was born in
Nolan, who replaces Sarah King
.
the


cofumuhkatio'n -, arts
Ca111eroo'n;
Africa
and will be
...
as chairperson, ~as. ~eeit. a fac_ulty
••
depa~tineiu
_;.~
>
;
-<
;
> ..
,.
:2:-X;
..
_·::
_tea.c;hing.
intercultural ccimfuuricia-
.
member at Manst smce,1968 and
:"hyantto
d_eye,lop._n¢\V:courses
ticins and organizationar com-
has seen the college take on many
_
and thrusts in our division ,, Nolan

_
munications,'' Nolan said. "Margo
<::hanges.
.
said~. "I beiie"~ wL.ne;cLmore

Hardenburgh will)Jeteaching cor~
"We (the communications divi-
broad based courses' such
·as
a
.
porale-video· ne,ws classes.
'David
sion) are in a change mode now.

course on what is cbmriiuriciations

Grassinick. is the new
'director
of
King. ~~n-ted something more. and what is jo1.1rnalism·:a.nd
then.
.the·
debate team:
Madelle
Clark
will
defimtive and th~t was one ofthe

develop specialties such as print

be~ te'adiing journalism.

And
reas<>ns.
she dec1de_ci.
t9:
_leave;'?
- journalism;_ or. electronic
·jom'-
Elizabeth Csordas is the new·direc-
Nolan said.

nalism."

tor
·of
Arts;". ••

••
Pep
band
to
make
jump
from
:h_oops.
{o Bach
•--------_;_
____ -


·
••




-,hesaia.:'.,
..
·.-
...
·
.- •
•-· •
by
THOMAS HOWAR

In
.the:·mid:to-late
1980's

the
.
.
.
.
.
.
-
.
..
.
.
.
.

••.••
'
Staff Writer
school hired Arthur.Himrrielberger
from West Pointfoputtogether a
pep
:band.
for.
Re?
Fox basketball

Pep Band members have traded_
their musical credits for musical_

games:Atihat drri.e';:the
band con-
s tat us.
.
. .··
_:

sisted. of· paid West

Point
Beginning this Jail, the Marist
musicians.

.
Pep Band Will be an official
·club
In I 990,' according .to Gord_o~(-
acti vity,
<
thus broadening
.
its..
Hiinmelqerge'r
asl<ed
him to play in
ho~izons.for. pote11tiaL
.·••
,: ,,·••.)i0
the'barid aha he saidliew~oneof
-
·According_·.
tq. -Mike J}ordoh;.

three
Marisfstiidents involved with
seniortminpet'.player;·thf,Maris(
the band"thiit year:· • "
pep Band will now be both_a
~<>ne:-

The riext•'Yeai the. band_ was
;
credit course. and a chib:activity,
smaller but the nuinbefofMarfst

making. it more
..
aci::es~ible to
student~ was upJo five or six; Last
students.
. ,- ·
-.
,

.
.year
the number was up to.12 or 13

"When you are
·a,
flub; yqu can

students; according to Gordon._
get more people_to'joirib.ecinise
we
_,·This/y_~at·pordo)1
sajc;l
h~is:ex~
':.
can
.
advertise and
:·talk'
about it
·pedirit(b~hveeri_2()arid}Qstud~nts·.
-·.
more,'' Gordon· said:
'.'.We

have
.
,to
joinJhe Marist Band; thC!
most:
that security
.ofbefog•:a
club/'
...
,
.
'
ever in its history.
...
·•


.:
-
'.-
'
:_
Gordo.n is expecting
..
more.
·.·.•
.\'\Ve
have·a'large.studerit
interest

recognition from .the· school.
.
.
..
this_:
year ihanks·
to.
:the' fact.· that
.
"We caIJ,
get funding so we can

niaybe'mdi-e'freshman.are
hearing
rent equipment and we can start
about
iI:ie
ba11d,'\he addeci.
·\
.
looking towards the future of the

..

Accotdipg to Goido11;' be_catjse
banq:and.the moriey will help us·
-
\ qf;the·;targe: numberj>f-Jyladst·
tow~rds thaf-gO_al/':-~·e
s~id.-
··.--
';_:
..
••
·
~
students expecte_d,-·--th_ey.·can·phas~

..
_The
course,hPeJ?
Band;'i~:a o~e
<
·>-
j:iut
the'.paidWestPoiilfmusicians ..
credit course t at involves pract1c-
;...;;;.;;.;;;,.;.;:_;;,._;___;-,:::===_;;:_..,;_..;;...;===:==:.:_:c.....;;.=:..:::=-.:..i
Gordonsai.diherewill orily
be
three·
ing)>etween !)DC
and' two hours a
-Senio~
Mike_
Gordon qelts ou·t some
'notes
at'a
basketball
game
!ast
y~ar as· p_art
of
the
.pe_ople
:from
West\Poiiifiii";the
week and a performance, Gordon_
pep
band.
'
.
,
.
!
.



..•
·c··
'I
.
h:·
t
iM.
·tt_-Marr
band this
year
with the hopes··'of
said.
'----'-'--'-:--,,-....-..;._-,-,--,-..,.-....-...,...--,;_c-'---'---'---_;_-'-,-·----',~--~-'----'--'---'.'--''
._.
'c.c··..,=-
1
:.:.r.::.c;;,;e~-!:P.:.;
0
.:.;.:;
0
.:..·
:,_;_a..;.·:,_;_-,:..·
_m_;___:.::.c.c.;J
phasing'iii l\.1arist studeiits-:ini:he
The band, best known for its

"We
try
t() get thecn:>wd
in~olv~
In addition to playing at games,
. ,•.•we:are
buying concert music

upcoming years.
,_
•.
·
..

: • -
..•••
upbeat appearances at basketball
• •
ed arid provide entertainment when

Gordon said he would like to see

and,w~ areJrying to ~>p~n
up3. ne\V
••
'.'I.see
a
lot offutur,e in'the people:
'
games, will still be leading the fans
the teams are.not·piaying,".Gor- . the band play concerts inconjunc-
door within the.band so we can be
in the band mnv,~•
.Gordon: said,<-·_
in the cheers for the Red Foxes.
'
don said.

,
tion with. the music department;
visible in
the'
music department,"

Former Trek writ~r
give_~_Stttderttt,itlSJg]fl,fSintO
Sci-Ii.
b
,u
·NOREEN.MCQUEENEY··-·
-"There
is definite power connecting-the.·.
,-"Star.Trek''
w~
the firs(oJits genie to
..
~~
./
-;.,
-
:

':·.

' -·
-
.
.
••
J
viewer to the show/', said Fries.
·e;
_,
,..
feature a blllckactor and an asian acfof.on·
>~ome~i~~.
~~ances work and sometimes
Staff Writer
· ·
·
>'-~If
you preacbtoo:m.uch you willloose--: a'television series ..•..


_
..•
-~-.
.. •.
tliey don t.
"S'tar Trek: "The Next

Generation;''

·.
!h~
audie~ce;" said J.:ries.
"You have to sµck

By being tile ~rst
.to
go so,
''~Stai:
:Trek';
-
Frid said that the'first script Fries ;ubinit-
"Different Strokes," "Fame," "Quanium m explos1v~ and_ J?liasers here and th~re.". was represe?tallve of the _peopl~
__
of t~e
ted to NBC was returned to ·him with a note
Leap,"-and "The Smurfs" all have one thing • ."1:Im~or is. part of. the sh~w•s app~; ','.'
'.
,w9rJd

nc,t Just the,.J\mencan ehte,.
'said.
that he _should
.find.
another line of. work.
in common.
.
.
saidJumorLynnMagee,anavidtrekker .. Jt

· ~agee.:-:
.
.
,,-, •.
,
.··.
.
.
.
.•

••
• • •
- . •
-
••••
-
.
!he bond tha! they share is former staff is D?t .~ stiff as"other science_ fiction
.
''It
gives us ~OP.C
t_()J~y~
~fY<>nq
-~!,!r
9\Vll
___
Fries said h.e ,wrote b_.ack
later telling the
wnter Sandy Fnes.
.
.
mo~es. .
.
.
.
..
,

·..
,
. -;
<
,
..
igno~a11_cea
nd th!!l:W~)'?Jt,_~_q:ve:~~
tQ,,do. · mari he was glad he didn'ttake his.advice.
"It was like working up the food chain of
• Fnes said he had fun whenworkmg on the
_'.mO~!JW~~tal:th1ngs,'-,'_said.~M!l&ee.·::.,
:-
·_
•· •••


• •



-


' ••
~hows," said Fries. ''I like to have variety episode, "Coining of ~ge", playing with the··
• •.
Fn~ ~aid ~e ~as~eer(ta~mg cqa~ceswith.
..
. .
so I keep my hand in being as versatile as shuttle craft and talktng to military officers ~1s ~~1
tlrt¥
smce:h1gq ~i;_h_oA!~•
·:

;-
. •
·"
Heinformeci the
·man
that hihad,been
I can."
at West Point.

Fnes said he wrote mem·os to dire_ctors
at
:
writing for "Quantum Leap" and "Fanie".
Fries ~ave avid trekkers and aspiring
"Star Trek" air~ in-the midst of_t~e <;o~d
_
~NEW, now Fo_x Five;
}·egarding_
ho~ to

screenwriters a glimpse behind the scenes of
.
War thus, focusmg more on. m1htanst1c improve the news staff when he mt_erned

"Star Trek: The Next Generation" Wednes- issues while "Star Trek: The Next Genera-
there: the summer_ lifter g~aduating :high
day night in the theatre.
tion" focuses more on social issues such_
as
-
school. When offered the position of pro-
"Versatile" does describes a day in the life young Jove, sexuality, and drug abuse.
ducer, Fries said he turned it-down because
of Fries when writing for "Star Trek: The
The universal theme of the "Coming of
he didn't want to be stuck iri orie career path.
Next Generation."
Age" clip, shown by Fries during his lecture, Fries said he felt college would~ a broaden~-•
_
.
Fries said he has done a variety of duties is about being a perfectionist.
ing experience
•. -
.
.
from brainstorming with Executive ProduCC:. In the clip, the character Wesley realized,
Fries is currently creating his own, science
Gene Roddenberry for new bizarre aliens after not getting into the Starfleet Academy,


fiction show with Rick Sternbach, who was
and choosin~ special effects'to deciding an· th~t a per:son can still be good even if they an artist and ~esigner for ''Star Trek: The
episode's uruversal theme.
fad.
Next Generatioµ".
.
.
.
.
.
Fries· said he always

tries to include
When writing the episodes, Fries said he
The
.transition
from journalism to televi-
philosophy in his work.

tries to
be
open and free, often reflecting his sion offered a new experience after receiv-

Fries sa!d his ideas and creativity come own ~rsonal crises.
ing
~
mast~r•s ~egree in journalism at Col-
from wanting to do an episode that connects
Takmg chances has been a key to success umb1a
_Uruvers1ty.
.
• .
to
the audience.
for both the show and for Fries.
"I have always been gutsy," said Fries.


Rob~rt Tai-gos,.
a:Junior communications
major, has a,n
:autographed
script of Fries
. after asking, "Where does your creativity
come from and liow is it reflected iri the
episode 'Coming of Age'."
Every three or: four inonths, Fries said he
enjoys traveling to various colleges, depen-
,
ding on which pays the most, to speak to avid
trekkers and aspiring screenwriters, it is a
mini vacation for him;
·
·cc1
did Harvard once for free just'to say
that I did Harvard," said Fries.

















































Staff Writer
..
;
Unlike in Berek-sur~mer, Tracy
Patterson finished his business.
Patterson
of Highland, N;Y.,
was s\lccessful in defending his

World Boxing Council's super ban-
tamweight.· title.

l>y

handily

defeating Daniel Zaragoza of Mex-
ico before ~,600.vociferous fans at.
the Mid~Hudson·civic Center last
Saturday evening.
...
.



Patterson, who improved his

record to 48-2-1 with35 knockouts,
came away victorious :53 seconds
into the seventh
.
·round
via a
technical knockout. The fight was
ended on the decision of ringside
physician Dr. David Schwalb.
:
Although it was a TKO, Patter-
son

led in all scoring as judge

Abraham Chavarria of Mexico had
the match at 59-57, while judge Al
DeCesar of New York calculated a
four-point
margin at
5~
0
55.
Judge
Jean-Claude Theroux decided a
5
as the

replay on WTZA clearly
showed it was Patterson's fist.
Patterson's trainer, Brian Burke,
seemed to be more annoyed by the
complaining by Zaragoza's en-
tourage than any other member of
• the Patterson clan.
"They can't accept defeat,"

Burke said,
If
that happened to
Tracy, he would take his bad
medicine and fight back three times
as hard."
Patterson, who was fighting
Zaragoza in a rematch from their
controversial.draw last December
.
in France,
was in control
throughout most of the match as
the 28-year-old boxer took six of
the seven rounds, losing only the
third.
"As the fight went on, I picked
up the pace a little more," Patter-
son said. "This
is the guy
(Zaragoza) who made me wait for
the title.
58-56 result.
. .
.
The bout did not last its schedul-
ed 12 rounds because of what Pat-
terson did to Zaragoza

in the
Zaragoza, 36, said prior to the
fight if lost, he would retire, but
after the fight, he said he would
take on Patterson "right now."
Tracy.Patterson faces off against challenger Daniel Zaragoza in last Saturday's bout.
Former boxing great Floyd Pat-
L----------------,---·----=------'-·
--:-------C=ir":"c..:.le::....cp..:.h..:.o.:.:
10
..:../M..:...:.a..:tt_M_art_i_n
___
.
terson, the stepfather and manager
previous round.
In the latter part of the sixth
round, Patterson unleashed a
powerful right hand punch, caus-
ing a stream of blood to come
pouring out around Zaragoza's left
eye.
Despite the early exit, Zaragoza
and his entourage came out
fighting even afterthe final bell had
Rafael Mendoza was vividly upset

"If
you look on tape, you will of Tracy Patterson, said he would
of what happenecl. to his prized
see it was the right hand," Patter-
weigh-out the possibility of another
fighter, claiming Patterson
.head-
son said. "(However,) the bottom
rematch with Zaragoza.
butted Zaragoza.
line is I won the fight."
"l would consider it," the elder
rung.
.
,
During the post fighfpress con-
.
ference, Zaragoza's
manager,
Oil. the other side, the Patterson
It turned out Patterson was not
Patterson said.
''As
long as if they
camp said Tracy used all of his
only right on the mark with his give me a written contract or paper
72-inch reach and not his head.
assessment, but also with the punch
saying they won't complain.
Victor and vanquished:
after
-the
final
bell tolls-
'

•••
,,
••
"
.;c
'ii_/MATT~MAR.TiN
'>
i
••
.:'•
0
'{/fJ\;1~tr::A~Vcf
3K;f::
1>1htit;d~
/
:'f~Je~~~nza~:~~ega~te
i~~~
•.
~~~·•·
Feature·. Editor
•••
opened tip oil' Zaiagoza
with
ring.
----------'-----
several quick combinations, even-
A reprieve.
As a bloodied and battered tually slicing
_the
challenger's left
Then,
53
seconds into the
Daniel Zaragoza
.
made his way eye above the bone.
seventh round, it was over.
down the rear stairs into. the

Blood soon covered the Mex-
Patterson stood in· the neutral
recesses of the Mid-Hudson Civic ican's entire left side, mixing the
corner,. peering into the bright
Center, he pa1,1sed
at a run:.1ength bright ring lights with his bright red
lights that surrounded the ring,
mirror to look at
.an
inch long gash satin trunks.
straining to find a verdict in the
that cut a semi-circle around his left
As one ringside fan put it,
bloody mess that stood 20 feet
eye~ and laughed.
·•
i

"There was
salsa
everywhere;"
away .
.
He shrugged his.shoulders; and
The small enclave of fans smell-
At last, victory, and he was
looked to his manager, Rafael ed
a
kill, and poured on cheers as
quickly enveloped by a punch-
Mendoza, and said a few words in Zaragoza beckoned to Patterson
drunk entourage.
Spanish to him that translated to, that he wanted some more.
Emotionless as his conqueror

'·'That's it?''.
1
That one-inch slice

With his arrris outstretched, he
celebrated on the other side of the
tothebattered browoftheformer
waved Patterson closer, opening·
ring, Zaragoza didn't move as the
champion that had unleashed a tor- his mouth in a yell that could make
blood was wiped from his slender
rent of blood only minutes ]?efore, him the lead in any horror movie.
frame.

was now as quiet as the man· that

"I
thought that he (Patterson)
Quiet and reserved, Zaragoza
.
wore it as a scar.
was scared fighting me with my
descended into the depths.
Indeed, this could have been the face like it was," said Zaragoza
"A doctor decided the fight," he
aging 35-year-old's last shot at the

afterwards.
.
said. "Not the fighters."
..
title that he has held three previous
.
For a split second, it had looked
"I
could hear him (Patterson)
times. However, this
·could
have that way, as Patterson stepped
getting tired.
I
could
•hear
his
been his last chance for glory.
back from Zaragoza, almost as if
breathing-short and quick," said
Last December, Zaragoza had he.was aghast by the atrocity that
Zaragoza softly
in
Spanish.
come away with the upper hand, he had created;
As

he left the pressroom, his
fighting Patterson to a controv.er.-
<'The
human pincushion" had
manager continued to lobby that a
sial draw in Berek-sur-mer, France, reached the l>reaking
point, but was·
head butt had opened the decisive
dropping Patterson to the canvas desperate to go on, it was his final
wound,. but Zaragoza kept walk-
for only the second time in 48 pro
0
opportunity.

ing, right to a desk where his
fessional bouts.
"Zaragoza,
man, that guy
wound was sewn shut with five
The
tide

had
turned
in should donate his head to science,"
stitches.
·
Poughkeepsie.
said Brian Burke, Patterson's
They were his first stitches as a
Before the fight; Zaragoza said trainer. "He can take so much
pro fighter, but they could not stem
that if he lost, he would retire; he punishment."
the Joss that remained.
Daniel Zaragoza glares as Tracy Patterson ducks away
from a jab.
Circle
photo/Matt Martin
was a changed man.
Dr.
David Schwalb, the ringside
Civic Center ousts Marist as site
~·;t-
So~~ accused Patterson of ducking Zaragoza. He did
here in the rematch.
Circle
hoto/Matt Martin

by
ANDREW HOLMLUND
Staff Writer
Once again, Tracy Patterson was
able to defend his super ban-
tamweight title last Saturday,
however the only thing different
this time around was that he won
in a different sports facility in
Poughkeepsie.
Patterson, the adopted son of
former boxing great Floyd Patter-
son, was scheduled to fight Daniel
Zaragoza at the McCann Center in
June; the same place where he
defeated Jesse Benevides of Corpus
Christi, TX, in his first title defense
back in March.
However, due to an injury to
Patterson, the bout was delayed for
nearly three months and was mov-
ed to the Mid-Hudson Civic
Center.
According to Gene Doris, the
director of athletics, Marist decid-
ed to drop out of the running to
hold the boxing event this Fall
because of the College's athletic
season.
"There was no choice because
we had home football, home soc-
cer, and home softball (last)
weekend," Doris said. "Our sports
teams come first."
Doris said the reason why Marist
held the fight during the academic
year iast Spring was because the
College was closed that weekend
for Spring Break.
Brian Burke, the trainer for Pat-
terson, said they were disappointed
they could not return to Marist.
"We were hoping to fight at
Marist," Burke said. "We loved
being (there.)"
Doris said that if the fight re-
mained as scheduled, Marist would
have hosted it.
Doris added that he hopes Marist
will have the opportunity to have
another bout, but it all depends on
the promoters.
"The promoters decide whether
or not we are a rental site," he said.
"If
we were
.the
promoters, we
would try to get it."
•--
..
!
I
I
I
I
I
I
~
I
I
I
I
I






































6
THE CIRCLE
MARIST
COLLEGE,
POUGHKEEPSIE,
NY 12601
THE STUDENT
NEWSPAPER
SJ.
Richard, editor
Ted Holmlund,
sports editor
Matt Martin,fearure editor
Julie Martin, associare
editor
Carl Oleskewlcz,'
assistant editor
Kristina Wells, associate editor
Andrew Holmlund,
editorial page editor
Dana Buonicontl,
columns editor
James
Hocking,
disiribution
manager
Ktrell A. Lakhman,
associate editor
Jennifer Ponzini, advertising
manager
Dennis Glldea,faculty adviser
PUBLISHED
EVERY
THURSDAY
Stand
No one ever said that Marist was immune to the violence that occurs on
college campuses across America.
These acts are an indication of the violent nation we have become. What can
we expect in a society where anyone can buy a gun or drugs; where rapists are
excused because of what the victim was wearing and where our inner cities have
become battlegrounds for competing gangs_?
Maristis finally fed up. On Sunday, Oct. 3, a march will take place to pro-
test the violence.on campus. The demonstration will not mean much without
active participation by students and faculty.
Now is not the time to give into the forces of. apathy and indifference. Marist
is made up of diverse individuals; however, it has never been so important for
this school to come together as a community.
Marist must, in a unified voice, get the message across to the perpetrators
of violence that we are not going to take it any more.
People commit violent acts for many reasons, including hate, racism, sexism
and intolerance. For the most part, the offenders want to feel.and prove that
they have the power - that they are the • ones iri control.
Take the control away from them. They do not deserve iL
This event is not a protest against Marist CoUege, secudty, qr the administra-
tion. In fact, theiadmin.istration shou}d-be'involvecL
t· ~-
·:;:
_
·:.
_
_ -•... _·
Joseph Leary, director ofsecurity, and Roberta.Amato, of the coilege coun~el-
ing services, have agreed to be there. This march is not only for Marist students.
Faculty, staff and administators should take part because everyone should be
equally as outraged at violence.
Our problem is that we have learned to accept it. Rather than attempt to
change the situation, we plead ignorance. We clo.se our eyes and look the other
way, assuming that things will change on their own ..
We, as a society, are no longer enraged when so.meone is murdered or at-
tacked. We read about it in the paper or see iton the news, and shake our heads,
murmuring about what a shame it is, but_ then -we forget about it and we go
on with our lives.
_
.-_._
.
Until it hits close to• home.
It has hitus close to home, '"'.ith the reported rape and other assaults that
have taken .place on campus. Students are feeling less safe and less in control
over the security of their own lives'.
It
is a good sign that ·MarisUs reacting to its own students being· attacked
right here on campus. We should react because our sense of security is being
stripped ·away.
.
_
_
It is time that the Marist community realizes that it is. vulnerable. Anyone
can be the victim of violence. These are not incidents happening in New York
City or on Acadamy Street in Poughkeepsie. This violence is occuring outside
of Lowell Thomas and in Champagnat hall.

We cannot just accept these events the way that America has learned to ac-
cept them when they occur in our inner cities around the country.
Marist is not.a very politically active campus. We do not hold rallies for peace
in Bosnia or hunger strikes to end the construction of nuclear weapons. A pro-
test is a fairly radical .idea for Marist - an idea• whose time has come.
This cause deserves the attention of all members of the Marist community.
We have a choice: we can get involved and feel comfortable that we are doing
something effective to bring about change in the attitudes towards violence,
or we can shake our heads and tell ourselves that someone else will worry about
it.
That will be fine, until it happens again.
There are probably hundreds of reasons we
can
ea~h come up with for not
going to the protest on Sunday. There is homework to do, papers to write, family
obligations to attend to. Anyone can come up with something better to do.
These are excuses. Marist cannot afford to put off action on this most im-
portant issue. Student leaders
will
be there; every club and organization will
be represented. However, they should not be the only ones responsible for help-
ing to end the violence. Every student has thought about it, now is the time
to start acting on it.
Who can argue with protesting_ violence? The candlelight march will begin
atMcCann at
8
p.m. on Sunday. The march will continue around campus, with
speakers along the way.
We caII on Marist to come togetlier as a community. We call on every stu-
dent to participate in this crusade. We call on the faculty members and ad-
ministrators to attend, we call on President Murray to show his support for
the
march.
Everyone has been talking about the recent issues of violence on campus.
Stop whispering and start shouting.
[!l.{ffioR5;iYL,
MA-RTST
sruDENT5
COh1MA
~p
MEN
1 •
RI
T~OU SHALf
t/OT
._
ttAVE
·
Ci}fJDOMS)!
Is Bill"s
plan healthy?
Voltaire once said, "The art of medicine
More than a week ago, President Clinton
consists of amusing the patient while nature
introduced his long-awaited health care plan
cures the disease."
to the.nation. .

However today, the art of medicine is no
What ~as the response?.
longer amusing and neither is this country's
In terms of the . press, it was basically
health' care system.
.
The United States is one of the weaithiest
negative.
·
- ·
. - ·
.
.
_ The views from the American people have
nations in the world, but we have one of the. • yetto be heard, .and it looks l,ike it will be
most embarrassing health care programs, if
partisan politics, as usual, to get the plan
not the worst.
-
thro1,1gh
Congress.
There have been very few times that I have -• Beyond_
the
·specifics,
the greatest_
aspect
agreed with or even· supported Clinton,
of this plan-is the hope it has the potential
(Clinton is inter-changeable with both Bill
of helping the American people.
and Hillary because she has had a lot to do
Under Clinton's plan, everyone will have
with this) but this is not one of them.
insurance without the fear of losing
jt.
President Clinton;s plan.includes that all
Many Americans .who already have in-
employers will be required to· pay
80'
of the
surance
will
not have a substantial cost
premiums, while the employees
have to ma~~
increase.
up for the rest.
_
_ . _ _ - . __
. _ _ . _ ·
What this plan
will
do is require employers
. Also,
a
''.health _security
~ard'' would be , tojia.)' alarge percentage
of
health c~e costs,
• ·1ssue_d·t?
al}Amenca,n,~,
wh1~h:wou;~
cover_: . en(orce price._confrols, and put a· ~ap on
.. , amaJonty·o.f:b,ell~fits;m~ludmgeyeexams,---
~medical prices.-
,,,-·. :-·
-· ·
dental care, hospital stays; as well as.many

- -
He said
Scott -Sullens
others.
..
_ This is a visionary plan because not only
are our employers going fo pick up
8(Y,
but
the
37
million people in this country who do
not have insurance will.
_ . .
: __
.
Although I
am
very optimistic aboutthis
plan, there are several
items that concern me.
First, would be money.
_
Clinton says it is only about.$100 million
in additional truces,
as well as a sizeable true
increase on cigarettes. _ . _
_
_
!believe this $100 million is just a small
percentage of the real cost. •
_
. We
will
be paying higher prices at the small
businesses
to
cover their
cost
for premiums.
For example, the McDonald's <:orpora-
tion is a very large company however, 75-'of
the ·restaurants·are individually .o.wned.
Therefore, it is not the corporation pay-
ing for the insurance, but the individual
operators. This will incr~e prices and we,
the consumer, will pay for it.
Although this plan encourages a "get-
well" theory, it will cost jobs.
This means that people will be going to
H.M.O's, paying $3 to $10a visit, but they
will
be keeping themselves
more healthy and
away from the hospital.
If people use the H.M;O., the chance-of
serious illness is reduced. •
If
people do not go to the hospitals, then
the use for both the buildings and staff are
not necessary.
Clinton is on the right track but needs to
be
more specific and realize that it is not just
$100 million in taxes.
Clinton has done more on this issue than
the past two presidents, and for that, he
should be commended.

It is about time Clinton has followed
though with his campaign promises!
And that my friends is what he said ...
Scott Sullens is one of The Circle•s
political columnists.
She-said.
Caroline Jonah
In order to do this, Clinton
will
have to
·encourage· competitfon and stop-the_ huge
number of medical malpractice suits filed
every year.
While doctors, nurses, hospital ad-
ministration, and other health care providers·
have lobbi.ed hard against the plari, -it may
substantially_
help_them on_the job .. -• • ••
To assist those in the inedical fielg;
-
Clin-
ton hopes to cut' paperwork. and the
bureaucracy
involved
in a trip to the hospital.
This
wilJ
help aU of us.

However, it is the American people who
are going !O benefit t_!'le
most from it:
.
.
If a mother of two loses her job, she will
not have to worry about not being able to
take her sick children to the doctor's office.
In terms of the family on welfare with an
ill
child, this plan means the parents who had
not worked in order to receive Medicare will
be able to ,go back to work.
- •
Dr. Timothy Johnson, the medi~ expert
for "20/20," hopes the American people
remember that this health care plan is a land-
mark iµ presidential politics.
"The Clintons' are almost heroes in my
mind," he said. "This is a totally revolu-
tionary plan." ("20/20, 9/24/93)
Beyond being a health care plan, this is
what could make or break Clinton and his
administration.
If this plan fails, Clinton will not only let
down the American people, but most likely
himself, too.
Caroline Jonah is one of The Circle's
political columnists.





























THE CIRCLE,
VIEWPOINT
Cfa.mped
dOrrll..,....junior's


·VlSlOil
Editor:
We did have the balcony, but we told they would be there in 20
With. the· exception of my best
could not get on it for a week. They minutes.
friend· going abroad, I was very
also said they would give us $10.00
• much looking forward to my junior
a
week for phone calls. I have not
year at Marist.
.
seen that yet. (They said we would
I received my housing letter that
get a letter. We did, but this issue
told me I would be living in new
was not even mentioned.)
townhouseL-1.
My family was also inconve-
While. this was not my first
nienced by this double move. Not
choice, I was happy not to be stuck
only did we have to make countless
in Canterbury with the rest of my
phone calls back and forth with
class (or most of it.)
Marist, but they had to make an ex-
I even. received an update on
tra trip here.
"Vision '94," telling me the new
Since they get one day off a
townhouses were completed and
week, driving five hours is not a
would be ready when students
pleasant way to spend it. Dare I
moved in.

mention the stress factor?
I should have realized things at
With the amount of money
Marist could not go that well.
students pay to go here and for
• A week before my return, I
their housing, they should not· be
received a phone call from the Of-
paying to live where they are not
fice of Housing and Residential
living.
Life.
This situation also impaired my
• Of course you know what they
ability to perform to my maximum
·had to say-my townhouse was not
capability in classes and in debate.
finished, and I could live with a
Many of my things were packed in
• friend on campus (which would
boxes in my friend's townhouse
have been hardsincethey were all
(they are males-I could not stay
in the same situation) or I could live with them.)
in the Super 8 or the Days Inn.
I was unable to study because I
Let's not forget the oh-so-enticing
was in a noisy dorm, and I was at
offer to live in Canterbury.
the end of campus, furthest from
.I was given 24 hours to make this
my friend's house (where I could
decision. I took ten minutes to call
study, even if I could not live
and consult with my roommate.
there).
.
We agreed to the Super
8. I
im-
In light of recent events, one of
mediately called Marist, but since
them would have to waste their
they had waited until 5:30 p.m. to

time coming to get me and walk-
An hour and a half and countless

phone calls later, the movers show-
ed
up.
They had to argue with
security to get into the building.
When they finally did, I went to my
townhouse.
I was happy to be moving into
my "finished" house. Then I went
in. There was no countertop, no
molding, no hot water, and no
floor on the stairs, I thought I was
living in Leo for three weeks, so
they could finish these things.
I guess it was so they could start
them.
I do not agree that Marist
deserves to be commended. They
not only did this to me, they did it
to quite a few other students.
They blame the delay on building
permits. This is not acceptable.
They knew well over a year ago
they would be losing North Road
housing, yet they chose to wait un-
til the last possible moment to do
anything about
it.
Similarly, they waited until the
last possible moment to notify the
students. I was . told by an ad-
ministrator they knew on Thursday
and did not contact us until
Monday.
I should ·hope students do not
follow the example set by the
school to lie and pass the buck.
call me, I had to leave a message
ing me home.
on phonemaiL
Finally, I was notified we could
The school inconvenienced us
I stated my preference, and call-
move in our "finished'.' house bet-
time and time again, expecting us
ed back at 8 a.m. to confirm. I was
ween 3 p.m .. to
5
p.m. on Thurs-
to continually work around them.
told everything was all set. Again,
day.· The letter we received stated
They wanted me to make myself
I was misled.
" .. .laundry carts will be available available all day Thursday, but
Alas, the hotel was full, and
I
at 8:30 a;m. on Thursday in your
they did not offer to attend work
·was doomed to spend three weeks
temporary housing location."
or my three . classes and two
(it was supposed"to be two) in Leo
It went on .to say that movers meetings for me.
Hall. Again, I was subjected to the
would be available to move . our
f b •
f h
Id
Had we been excused for these
tortures o emg a res man-co
things on Thursday morning and
h
11 hall • d filth
th_
ings, it just would have put us
s owers, sme y
s an
1
Y that if we were ~ot in our r?oms,
further behind. 1 would like to let
bathrooms.
.
. they would• key m and get
1t.
'h . d · •
·
k
h
_
I would not want to leave out the .••. , I h d .. · ..
k
t &=30 . • • d . t ea mmistratmn nowt ey ca~s
ways in_
which Marist tri_ed
tom_
ake: ,, .. ,h'
.•.
,,~I to '!{Odr
·h.a • .,--t.a_l.mO
,_,an·'' ·ed the students a great deal of m-
w en arnve
ome a
p.m.,
·, •
• -• · · d
· ·
our stay-more pleasant (or appease.. the laundry carts were not there. 1 conveme~ce 3:n unnece~sary
us.) They gave us $75.00 in thrifty
called housing and. was · assured
stress, which without my fnends
cash while everyone in the hotels
th
Id b . ht •
··
(yes, the male ones that I could not
, .
.

.
ey wou
e ng
over.
1-
·
h)
Id h
d
could get money and received
T.
h
t 10.30 •
1
k
1ve wit wou
ave cause me to
$100 00
ey came a
• p.m. pac -
tr sfer schools

ed my things and went to class
an

They did change that the second
from 11 a.m. to 3:15 p.m. Then I
I would just like all people con-
week. Oh,· I should mention our
went to pick up my key. I was told sideririg coming to this school to
comfortable three-person room
which held four people (with two .
closets ·and three desks.)
I could not move in until 4 p.m.
take warning-Vision '94 is not-a
I \vent back to Leo, and the
reality yet, and neither is our laun-
movers still _ had not taken my
dry room.
things. I called housing and was
Linda White, junior
Do an internship
Editor:
I spent this summer interning at
"One Life To Live," a soap opera
on
W ABC-TV,
and what a summer
it was.
I learned about the daily opera-
tions involved in a daytime televi-
sion drama production. The most
exciting part was meeting and be-
ing with the soap opera· stars.
One advantage of doing an intern-
ship is that you begin to meet
professionals.
It is not what you know, it is
who you know.
One thing 'to keep in mind once
you make those connections is to
maintain contact, and hope they
will make you an offer you cannot
refuse.
After completing an internship,
you will find out if you want to
continue in your field of study.
Internships are a great addition
to your resume.
Seniors, do you have one? If not,
get one ready.
Stop by the Career and Develop-
ment Office in Donnelly to pick up
information sheets on how to do a
resume, or make an appointment
to review your resume with one of
the counselors.
In order to complete an intern-
ship through the College, you must
have completed 60 • credits and over
a
2.5 GPA.
If
you have under 60 credits, but
are interested in doing an intern-
ship, then by all means o for it.
Contact
local
businesses,
political or non-profit organiza-
tions to set up a possible internship.
• Above all, plan your internships
ahead of time. Get all your paper
work completed and do not leave
any loop holes.
Good luck.
Nella Licari, senior
Campus shuttle
Editor:
A student escort service has just
begun last Monday and will con-
tinue throughout the semester. The
service runs from 8 p._m. to 4 a.m.
Students may call the Security
Office at ext. 2282 to arrange an
escort. This service is sponsored by
the members of Kappa Kappa
Gamma and Phi Sigma Kappa.
They are dispatched from the com-
muter lounge in Donnelly Hall.
There will be a self-defense
workshop entitled: "Courage To.
Fight," held on Wednesday, Oct.
6 at 7:30 p.m. in CC 349. This
workshop is free and open to all.
It is sponsored by the Sexual
Violence Prevention Task Force
and Phi Sigma Kappa.
Linda Muhlfeld, Activities Office
SEPTEMBER 30,
1993
7
FAN-far~ for
the cabbie
When you have no car and need
to be somewhere, there is only one
thing to do-cancel.
Well, okay-two things: cancel
or call a cab.

So many of the calJs for cabs on
weekends are to take Marist
;tudents to the various study ses-
;ions held at fraternity houses with
;,lenty of stimulating conversation,
!Ibow room, and drinks.
Well, one out of three is not that
bad, or is not as bad as the bargain
:heap keg of beer that the most
thirsty bowling team would not
touch.
But more interesting than this is
the history of George Riley of
Poughkeepsie's taxi· service.
I,
along with many other Marist
students, had the opportunity of
being driven home by him.
It reminded me of church, since
this too, is a place of intense
praying.
Of course, a church just stays on
a street and does not fly down the
road at 90 mph, but let us get back
to George.
Before driving a cab, he served
in the Marines, where they do more
before 9 a.m. than we do all day.
Driving as fast as he did, I do not
doubt it.
It was like he was aiming the cab
down the streets. I guess once again
relating to his Marine experience.
He also served in Vietnam,
which would explain his preference
for taking various, grassy, off-road
"short cuts."
One interesting thing was that his
car backfired many times, and he
said the gu~shot-like sound often
frightened him and gave him
flashbacks of Vietnam, once again,
justifying what before just seemed
like "dangerous driving."
He also told us that he had a co-
caine addiction. A rather expensive
hobby for a cabbie, which might
explain the (are rates.
He said he was braving the drug
battle and is in a program now. The
one thing he hates about it is that
they do not let him drink beer.
One clever Marist student
pointed. out that he should stay
away from alcohol because it could
cause co-dependence.
On this tip, he thoughtfully
responded by pointing to a fast-
food place and said, "That there·
place serves the best fried chicken
around, do not let anyone tell you
different."
He mentioned he used to work
at a local radio station. When ask-
ed what had happened by a stu-
dent, he explained it went under
new management, and they cut his
pay in half.
His negotiating strategy: "They
can go scratch their ?*
9
!"
He mentioned when he was done
with his drug program, he was go-
ing to brush up at a broadcasting
school and hopefully get a job in
the city.
This is where a colleague of his
at the local radio station went. This
colleague was none other than
Mike Breen, who works with Don
Imus on "Imus in the Morning" on
WFAN radio. George said to us:
"What a small world."
Frank LaPerch
is
one of The
Circle's humor columnists.
How to reach us:
• Mondays: 11 a.m; to 5 p.m.
\
• E-Mail: LT211, HZAL
• Phone Mail: X2429
·\T.L\_S.SAli
.
;•.
._.
!_ ;
',
·._
.......



















































































































I
I
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I
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I
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/1,.,1,f,
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..
8
THE.CIRCLE,
Restaurant,RE'11EW
SEPTEMBE~3iJ.1993
Cactus Club ..
t0pamong d0wntown fare. Ole!
dard Nachos appetizer (not even


by
ABBI NORI
worth $3.95) which lacks substance
Staff Wrjter
(for instance: cheese),~
.

• •.
If you're lookin' to feel ·1ike a
TheQuesadillas' Monterey Jack
RATING. SYSTEM·
.•
birnbliged ~o W,\lk y6u to}our car
or call you n cab upon request.
.
Sufficient nnil nearby parking is
located·around the corner nt Canon
St. ($.40/hour), there is n ramp
. ranchero (or ranchera) or just want Cheese,· spices,

tomato,
·and
to eat like one, try the place which jalapeno-stuffed and baked flour
~
1 PAWPRIN'T'-
it..
WAS1E
Of 'DME
.AND
MONEY
is "Always the Alternative," the
tortilla is accompanied by soui:
.

garage a few blocks nwny. on
Cactus Club, 51 Market St., in cream, and homemade not-too•
lovely downtown Poughkeepsie.
spicy "salsa fresca" while the
~
~
A'fTENTION
MEXICAN
Nachos are simply a colorful
"r(
"rf
2PAWPRINIS:-·ASALASTRESORT
FOOD LOVERS OF ALL AGES!
display of yellow, blue and/or pur-
• Market St., an_d
after 6 p.m.,.uicre
is free parking, in • the Dcp_t. of
Motor Vehicles lot on Market St.
(across the street).
Saddle•up and trot on over to the
pie tortilla chips, dabbed with
~
~
Cactus Club's secluded outdoor
guacamole, sour cream, and "salsa
.
a._.
3_PAWPIUNIS_.

• •
.
·•
...,~
..
r
patio for lunch ($2.95-$6.25) serv-
fresca."·


.

• •
"19"
~
d 11 30
3
d ·1
If you've a han_
kering to_
set your
e
:
a.m. to
p.m.
ru
y.'
lfyouhearyourselfstarttotalk
mouthonfire,trytheCactusClub
-~-.
a._ a.
4P.~---:-.......,
••
·_
-GOOD·_
.PIA•.
CE_TO·.
in drawl, it's because of the
bar favorite Buffalo Wings (ac-
..,,.,.
rv-,
"I""
"f"'
n....-.---.. ..
authentic-looking Southwestern
companied by bleu cheese and






.
TAKE
YOUR
PARENIS
'
.
Kudos to the Cactus Club·for the
muy magnifico menu and college-
.
town affordability. Ole'!
woody atmosphere ,vhich includes celery sticks ••• $4.25).


~
brown leather-look table coverings,
To douse the flames,. try a 16
~
~
,.,.._-~,.,.,.
5 PAWPIUN,JS
• YOU'VE
OOI'
TO
cactuses, and hanging drfed

chili
?z.beverahge~_for-af-bbuck
(yd~•
$dl.OOt
~
,
.
,
.
:
lR.Y 1IDS PIACEI .
.

peppers, which complement the
m your c 01ce o
rewe ice ea ...., ____________
__, .......... _ ...... .....;,
__
......
Polished bar and
colorful mu·
rals.·. or your favorite soc;la.
.
••



r------·
._.
_
••
----------------
h
·f·
h
Or, if you're a Gringo,_why no_t
Getting
in and out of a
If
you're s~ill ungry a ter t e

·
·
, ·f
,
f h
try a Cactus Club Burger with some
restaurant
in one hour, ap-
appetizers ,on you re one o t ose
f h
ff
··
h
l ,
o t ose bananas ($5.00) or a

propriately labeled the "business

people who picks o ot er peop e s
lunch," is the Cactus Club's lunch • plates because you don't wa~t to
time concern.

_order
your own), try the Gnlled
However,
perhaps
the

•.
~hicken ~asta Sal~d ($5.75)\vhich
waitstaff is too relaxed in their
t-
1s served m an edible bowl (made
shirts-and-jeans-uniforms to prac-
ture can o~der the Pasta From Hell
tice proper ediquette.
(maybe this one's hot? ... $4.95) or
Allow. some
constructive
the Black Bean Cakes ($3.50).
mucho grande chicken or beef Burs
rito ($5.95, $6.25);
As safety is always a concern in
downtown

Poughkeepsie,
the
management and employees wo1,1ld
criticism: Never let customers sit
unattended for seven minutes
before an order is taken!
Especially when dealing with
business lunch clientele, drink
orders should be taken immediate-
ly. A handy rule-of-thumb is to
take the food order during the time
or after the drinks are delivered.
The
:r
riendly waitstaff is young,
and probably slightly inexperienc-
ed, but a solid effort is given.
.
Don't ask for complimentary
chips and salsa, either. Shame on
you, Cactus Club, for making us
order them ($1.50).

.The
Cactus Club's bargain•of-
..
the-da.y, the appetizer Quesa.dillas

($2.95) m~kes up for the substan-
.
·
..
~
..
-;
~.
NEVERTOO
LATE~
Think you missed the Graduate Re~ord Exam deadiine? Think ~gain. With
the new on-demand GRE~ yo~ could be taking the test tomorrow:
·And
see
your score the instant you finish. Score reports are mailed 10 to 15 days
later, in:plency of time for most ~chools' de~dlines. Call no~ for instant
registration.@ Educational Testing Service



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Philly
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Meatball
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Veal
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Eggplant
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MON - THURS ". 6a.m. -11
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Hot Dog ..........................................
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Baked
Ziti .......................................
4.75
Spaghetti
w/Sauce
.........................
4.75
Spaghetti
w/Meatball
; .....................
5.95
Homemade
Chili (reg.)
.....
~
.............
1.50
(Lg.)
.. '.
.................
2.95
:II
I










































































































































•;
,
\
-·-
~
.
·,._.

....
-··
9
·
·ToL:~vote:;';i)r•~·r1o_t•···•.·•tcl•·
•·vote:··.
PsC
.re~1Sieis
Votef
s
•••
r
__ ,_..,:...._
__
......
__________
ning."
Security goes greek;
escort service starts
by
ROBERT G/TARGOS
,

Wood said she believes the recent
StafLWriter;

.
• •
rape on campus will.increase in-
-
by
KRISTIN_A
WELLS
Staff Writer
:.....___;.;...,----
......
""'-:--,---~.

terest in SGA because the incident

Thes~ days;· voting ~igh_t seein happened so. close to hoine..
With safety on the minds of the
like spending time a:t a roulette
.
"I walked in the spot.\Yhere.that
.
Maristcommunity, a student escort
tablejn .Atlantic City.
_

-
.
·,
girl walked," she said. "If-it hap-
service was initiated on Sept. 28.
.

This week· the P~litical Science
'pencd.
to· per it could happen to
Due to the number of calls for
Club tded to change
_that
crap-
-me."
escorts increasing~. security· has
shoot mentality,
with voter
,
Wood said that Marisi reflects '
found
it m'ore difficult to keep up
registration; .. ·, ..
;
.
:
..
.
. 'the
general population because with the normal work load.
.
··
Joii;De, Rise, a freshman
·f~om -most
Marist students are white,
In an effort to help security,
Qu'eens; N:y:; said
p~
seis voting
.;middle-class
and·Roman Cathq_lic._._,,
members ·of_·'thf;.various greek
as an essential part of democracy.

Wood
.said
sh~,_<1.l:50,fe~l_phllt
,
organizations on campus, par-
•.
''The voter ·registration table has
;college
students should have con-
ticularly Phi Sigma Kappa and
been es~ablishi:d to e11co1.1rage
peo-
;
cerns ~j)out,gener,al.P,ol~t\c;s:
,
..,,
...
Kappa
:"Kappa
Gamma, are:
.in-
pllifo:: vote· and-'par~1cip·ate
·in· the
:'
'' As college kid:{; we· sho.uld be. stltutirig a student 'escort service
democratic process of~ur go~ern- :;interest~~ \!1.~_h.l!-f~
g~i_nf~o·~~~; d_uri~g
the_w~ek
ancl {?_n
weekends.
ment,". the history maJor said.
pen when we get out of school.
The student service will consist
····Christine
Wood, the president:of:•·.~:Sfeve-Crarte;··secretary
-eif
the of
,one
female and one male who
the Political Science;:
Clt;ib;-s_ai,fshe
:..,Poliik1i,I
\.Science ;:"Cfpb
_
·s~i_d tje will be be ort
·callto'
escort anyone
wants ~tlidents fi:>!a!c.~
iidvanta$e of,)1~iiiks;peopl_e
ha.ye:tq ~cpyelr_pa~- to his/her destination on campus
their Constitutional right..·
_
ticipate to make Amenca a true between the hours of 8p.m. to 4
"They have I10 excuse for, not.:demoCri,1-CY.
a,m.
.
registering because· it's
.ab
their:; ;•We.need a heavy turn-out in
The escorts will be equipped with
fingertips," the junior from
Tef~
•the
polls to make sure that_ all the flashlights, the P AAL screamer,
-
• ryv_i11e,
Conn.; said.
peoples'
interests
are·. being
and, upon availability, a security
Registration started on Sept. 23, represented. in the el~ction," said radio. According to Joseph La Bar,
and it ends on Friday.
.
.
..
.
.
the senior from R.l.
.
philanthropy chair for Phi Sigma
It takes place from 11 a.m; untff.-'.'

De Rise said hefeels many peo-
Kappa, the idea for improving the
2 mm. on'th~fsecondJJoor pf th~- J?l~.votifonW:for,t~eJ?resid_:,lit.' overall security and student safety
campus center·, nexft_o the Colleg~
-_

.';'Not
too>many people_
know or
.
began over the summer at freshmen
....
Activities
·office.

•• •


·•
care who their senator or governor orientation._: .---,.
'
-
:·,
·
•.

Jennifer,r-loceHa,A sophqrµor~js,or
.wh~t.he dqes.''.He
..
said.;
''I am'nor}ump1ng··on thebartd
0
'
:~
fr~}ll Broq~IY.11·
~' Y.t' s~id ~he
__
.
_
,
-~
_
,
,.
.
..
.:
-.
~
wagon of the. emotional roller-
Gamma, said the sorority got in-
volved because of the need to give
the students a feeling of safety
again.·
"There is
a
very big fear of not
feeling safe on our campus," she
said. "Because of this, students
should take action to help other
students to regain confidence in
themselves and the school."
Highland also said this service is
not a "mixer" situation for any of
the greek organizations .

"I want to make it clear that this
is not a mixer for both fJf the
.
:cluos,'.' Highland said. "It is to
'give safety.back to campus, not for
our
_self
benefit."

Highland said all the members of

Kappa Kappa Gamma are involv-

,
ed with the service as escorts, but
those with

vigorous schedules
would be involved in support for
the program.
Michael McGilligan, Phi Sigma
Kappa president, said the organiza-
tion is doing their part to help
security.

"We, as a greek

organ_ization,
are just trying to do our part as a
'campus
group,"
he
said.
"Hopefully, this will help to shed
the bad rap greeks have gotten in
the past."

,
thinks each person s contnbutton
Accordmg.to .Wood, Ross Perot coaster we are all on since the inci-
-


-.
••
...




f
Brian Skinner, public relations
counts._
-~
. .
•••
·, •
.attracted
many people because he dent," LaBar said'. "I thought o
chair of Phi Sigma Kappa, said the

'!Ir':everybody casts. their
..
o'ile was a businessman who tried to the idea over the summer, not just
vot~,

then tb_ey'll make a djf- charige politics~

'

f the escort service but about im-
fraternity is working closely with
ference." Nocella::said.
.
..
,,
,
6,
,·:<:
L
, -_.,
s-:··
~-
,
roving"safeiy•·au together:"
~in~~~e;~g;ici~~
0
[his\~~~\~!~~~l~~
Wood
.said
she saw a lot of''"•Wodd'sai.d she-feels that-ifpoliti-
Heather Highland, community
..
apafhy
last,
spring whe~ Ma,rist had cia":s are
,
corr_~pt "- it. ~hould 1<:e~r~v~ic~e~c;!!h~ai!!·
r~.
··~o~f
2
K:!!a:.Ep~p~a
2
K~a:.EP'.EP~a~=:::!:=:::==::::'.==:::=:::::;:::::;::.:::::::.:.....:.co.:..m:.:.:.:.:m_u_n_i,;.;:ty:..:.·
________
_,
elections for the Student. Govern- motivate people to become mvolv- c.
.
ment Association._-

.
.
•.
•-· • .
eel to get the. politicians out of
•.•

"When they JSGA) had the

office.
HOUSING
: ..
speeches (orthepeople running for
,,
:
....
,
.· ·..
...
.
.
_ .
. . .
. ... ·... ..
.

_

.
office;'' she said; \'maybe two ro_ws
..
• :We
~on t ha veto let_
politicians ...
continued from page
1

:
..
•··.
or.·
..
seats
,
.•
were filled up, T
...
·.·.hat's~.
ruh_
n our hvd_
es,:•
.Wo.
:o.
d satd,d~'Atll
wde w·111··hold
144. stude' n·ts. yet. as in-
Gartland Commons or new or old
_. . ·
··, ....
·c·
'·d
.)
.. ·
.,
•..
_,
ave to O·IS·try to un ers an
·
,
.
.
.
.pe~_all.s_e;
~l:tey
•:
st
t1
<;ni~
.,-,yer~.,.,
'ii
{th· •-"',f·n
••
...
,,
\'
·
.• •.
coming classes continue to grow,
Townhouses. accordmg to Raimo.
~•~---~
f
ri~n'!~
:~~!HU275~P!~-~~<?
••
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..
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.-·
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-..
.(;/~
allow 324 more upperclassmen on
l:'l:'
"J

-


-__




••
••

.
'.
'
• •
theniain campus; that's 603 juniors
o
..
n camp.
us all four_
••

:-'568
South
Road

Poughkeepsici/N.'Y.12601
••
,(Qi4)"462j4545.
·
FAX
462i2417
.
.
.
r----------~------,
;
..
-
Treasure Che~'f
_.:
:
I
·
..
·.
,
··

·
·.
·
I
··•
-,Clubhouse··
_
1
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.
.
.
-
..
. .
.
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1
... -.
:
;'Athletic ~tiglfsh Style Pub"
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568
S_outh
Road
I
. .
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.
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.
..
.
.·.
•.•
~~-----------·------_--.-t
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··
..
·...
·
·
···
.-
.·.
.
·
I
1
·
-
'MONDAY:NI_GHT
•••
I
••
;
,
$5°
0
:
PITCJ.iERS
·:
·_1-
--OF:BUD
-··_1_
I
..
• -
.
·I
I
7,.
··_

·WITH
COUPON·. , _._
.

I
~~~--~-----~~~~--~~
a.rid seniors on the main campus,
.

double what we have this year."
years, but students
:· .
Jim Tolfree, a sophomore, said
• 'the
sophomores
·and
.freshman
will have to earn it."
··should"
definitely be guaranteed
housing.

.
-
Jim Raimo
"I don't think it would bea bad
idea," he said.
"It
would give the
Director
juniors

and seniors a sense of

responsibility."
.

of Housing
Next year, freshmen will live in
the traditional dorms, sophomores
will be placed i~ upper Cham-
pagnat, the

C::hampagnat Suites,
Gregory and
,Beniot.
Juniors and
seniors will be able to live in
HOTLINE
. .. continued trom page 1
• "When something like a rape
happens, there is a
·
lot of energy
that the community doesn't know
what to do with," she said. "So
long as
·the
students stay interested,
.
we(the fac~lty) will do all we can

to make thes·e things work."
.
. Pace,
a
public relations major,
said helping victims of rape·and
rape prevention has always been a

·passion
_of hers and she hopes to
The placements available will be
assigned to students through priori-
ty point system that has been used
in the past.
.
work on more programs in the
future.
''Nobody deserves to be· raped
no matter what,"
she said.
"Rapists come from all walks of
life. I would like to educate males
••
and females, not only in takii:ig
precautions, but give th~m an i~-
centive for making-the nght deci-
sions."
.
,
.

However,
.Pace
said her mam
focus will remain the hotline until,
"All students have the oppor-
tunity to live on campus all four
.
years, but students will have to.earn.
it," Raimo said.
Debbie Mancuso, a junior living
in• the new townhouses disagrees
with Raimo.
"I think it's unfair," she said;
"Our parents are paying a lot of
money to send us to this school and
as upperclassmen, we've earned the
respect and_ we should be able to
continue living on campus."
Raimo also st;.ted that he feels
some students chose to live off
campus to avoid Canterbury.
However, some students like
• Karin Reed, are concerned with liv~
ing off the Marist College Campus .
"It worries me a lot especially
with the violence and crime rate in
Poughkeepsie," said the junior.•.
Staff writer Teri L. Stewart, con-
tributed to this report.
it is up and working .
"I want to do all I can to turn·
the victim into a survivor," she
said.
Pace said anyone who is in-
terested in helping out with the
hotline or has any suggestions is
asked to contact her through cam-
pus mail. Her P.O. box is 3-1193.
Or contact Roberta Amato through
the Counseling Center. •

I
I

THURSDAY &FRIDAY
I
a;·
I
BE A GOOD NEIGHBOR
1-.
NIGHTS'.
1

1 ·-
.10t WINGS
1
I
ALL NIGHT
:
~-----------------~
I
I
I
EVERY
NIGHT
I
I
I
I
s100
BUD
I
I
AND LIGHT DRAFTS
I
L~----------------~
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.
.....













































10
THE
CIRCLE,:~SEPTEMBEi=lt30;-,i'
99~
~
-
.
Red
:,•
.
-Foxes -looking·
·fo1{
:rii'.orC·'
fall:·•
s~pJlott_
"Wheri· 1 was
a
'1tiicl~nt; you : tee.to ptomote upcb.riling gariies:, ,,w,as'pi_ostly
p~ren!S, '.?
_
\'
f
•.
,
couldn't get near.this building/' he·.
0
<,
·\'T.here are·no'posters or bal}.llers ··; ; ~ulhvan
_said
that there ~re :go-
said; "They were turning students

_
to promote the games," lie said,
m~ to be :9me newpromotlo~s. at
mittedly a weak display:of school
• spirit, according to_ .. Sullivan,
because of miscommunication a.rid
Free cars, cookie;, and basket-
the lack of student support.
balls just don'rseem to be enough·. •
"I jus~ • don't think that (the
by
JEFF FILA
Staff Writer
In recent years, support for students) really havethe interest,"
Marist sports teams has been on the Sullivan said.
"It
didn't go over as
dedine, and. not even giveaways of
well as everyone had hoped." The
Mohinder basketballs; Friehoffei-s problem was that the location had
co.okies, or a car ·at_ basketball
been moved and. the rally was
games have been able to change scheduled for 11 a.m., a poor time,
that'.

- according to Sullivan.
«It
was real-
Sports Media Director · Dan
ly a makeshift event,'' he said.
Sullivan, graduating from Marist in '~Memo's were going all over the
1987 at the height of sports en-
place. No one knew what the ac-
thusiasm,
has ·a .hard·. time
tual itinerary was."
understariding why student support
The lack of student support to
is so different nowthan
it
was dur-
Marist athletic events is very
ing the _
1986 and 1987 NCAA
discouraging.to Sullivan, who's job
basketball tournament. .
includes. promoting these events
The pep rally _scheduled for . ai:id making them attractive to
Wednesday, September 15was ad-:,· students.'· :
away at the door."
_ _ . . _ ._ , "we don't even ha:ve
-a
band/'
th1s,year.s. b~sketbalJ games,-m-
He. said that meri'S '·ba:s·ketbaU . Auendance at the footbaHgames ·.eluding-the "Cou~h Potat_ciClub"
has always struggled to get student: this
.-
year • have alr'eady been
where _six stu~~,nts.
wil_l'b~·select_~d
support and much of the support· • reported as low.
_
_
.
to wa_~ch
th~ game_
on the floor m
today is composed of the local . , ·_There were only 1157 rieople a(
couches and ~ating J?i_iza!
a~d the
community;
· . , /
. the Re~ Fox's first home game; 402 bo~s~er c!ub
1s
hel1?1~g
out also.
Part of that problem, a~cording :.· of them student~.
Thar
figure is
. . I cii.n t. e!11phas1s
enoµgh how
to Sullivan, is that students. can clown 'from
·a
total of 2251 for the . important 1t 1s to our teams for the •
watch the games on Jive t,v .. _from first game of last year. •
• -stude~ts tC>
~C>me_see
us,?he said.
their rooms or a bar; , • •· __ _.
• Accordin& to Sullivan,-Saturday
Sulhva~ alsQ sru~ that,if stu~ents
''Teams come· in here pumped
had th~ makmg of a great game, as
have any reco01:~end~t10~~'
to get
up to play because they know there . both'. teams ·came in _undefeated, more crowd support and
..
~f they
is going to be a big crowd and they post had a star-·quarterbackwho is
are _not informed enough, -let us
know it is going to.be on livet.v./'
a probaple NFL pick, and Marist . know." ._ _
.
,
• .. _ . ... _-_.
he said. "We .need that kind of
h·as scored 31 points per game:
'.'I'll do anything t<?
getstudents
fiery,,upbeatcrowd to make this an •
Junior Kris Mingo attended the • at the games.''. _he sa1?,'.'."".e.
n~ed
intimidating place/'. .
first home football:gaine and said
to make Manst an_ 1_nt1m1datmg
Junior Jonas Barbaro said that . she thought there was good sup~ place to play, we need 1tdesperate-
the school should form a commit-
port, but "itseeined like the crowd
ly."
MARIST
-.Studentsl-
Ne.ed shirts with
your
dorm. team
·or. c'Iub's
• Ipgo _screen-printed·•
on them?
--The:ri
-stop
in arid
.
see us at
MILLMAN's·-.T~SHIRT
, ·;All,Lett!3rs,t9 tb~·~Edi_to(diie-,F-rida,.y,
~
5 p.m. prior to publication .. Please-.in~
elude~ name
and
number for verifica-
tion. The Circle reserVes:the
rightto
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THE°Ct~CLE, ·Sf::PTEMBER
30,.:1993 •
GridQ~r:S
l~se;,

bJg.;
f8:llfQ.Post 31-10
.
. •
. .
. ...
-
':c-
.,
, ..•...
·. ,'.
.
by'.
TED HOLMLUND·

Only 987 faQs.attended the game
• •·
• ,. · ·
. ·
:

·which was-down from last.week's
• ;Sports Ed.itor
mark of 1125. Leonidoff field seats
Sports Illustrated was running a 2500 people.
.

·
·

It looked like· the Red. Foxes
story ·on
a
quarterback. in last would close the half trailing only
week',5 game.betweeriMarist and
7_3 after apparently s·topping a
C. W • • Po st.' His name _:_ Perry
Pace drive late in the second half.
Klein.
.
• •
· ·
· I ·
His tea·m
~
C.W. Pose'
• .However, a 12 men 9n. the .fie d
Klein;
who'fa
being scouted by penalty allowed.C.W. Postto
C<_>!l-.
NFL teams, ,led
c:w.
Post.(2-l)Jo
tinue its drh,:e.
• .
an impressiv:e 31-10 win over the
Klein's 12-yardmn.with :40 re-.
Red ·Foxes ·(2~
l).'

_· _ maining.gave.tb.e
'£ioneers a crucial
Th

14-3 halftime lead.
, .
e semor quarterback riddled
"We .. made
fome
mental.
the fylarist defens'e completing mistakes," P.·arady said __
; "You
26-42 ·passes for 409 yards. • •
Klein·. also threw · for two
have to play flawles~_against
a team
touchdowns and ran for another.
like PoSL"
• , .
Klein was able to· see the whole
Pac~ do_rninate4the third quarter

field ana·th'e"defense's·aligrltnents> outscoring
0
the Red:Foxes 17-0 to
Head Coach Jim Parndy sai9-.-·: . cHnchJhe win •• '
"We tried to 'mix it)ip on hiin
The ~ed F~xes_ .offense st~uggl-
(Klein)," Parady said .. "He's so - ~d a!l day, esp~cially when 1t was
Od at
d•1

th"n •,,
m Pioneer territory~
Th. d
k

CW p t'
rt
b k p
Kl •
go
rea ng
I
gs.
"O

t • "d th
d
Senior defensive end Jeremy
o e ta es aim at
os s qua er ac . erry
em,
Junior
Bruce Harris . and •. . ; nee we go ms1 e er~ zone
'
d f
II d
408
d

11
freshman MalikW~odard did pick .(ms1de the
~O),
we made.1,1!-1sta~es
:Saturday: Klein eluded Marists
e ense_
a
ay to post
yar s passing.
off two of Klein's passes, but it was we shouldn t h~ve_
made, sen~or senior halfback
Julian Wyse
be ready for tonight's game against
The Red Foxes will look to
not enough.
~uar.terback Bnan ~cCourt sai~;
St. John's.
.
regain its winning. edge tonight
.. The Red Foxe·s _took a·. 3-0 lead
We shot ourselv_
es m the foot. . fumbled the ball inside the
when the team travels to New York
Th
ff
d d
t
k th
Pioneer's 10-yard line to thwart
"You're
going
to
make
in the middle of the first quarter on
. e 9 en~e
1
no ma e
e
any hopes of a Marist comeback.
mistakes," Mccourt said. "We
City to face the SL John's Redmen.
a
30-yard field goal by sophomore. crucial plays
I!J:
key ~oments of the
. The only touchdown Marist
just have
to
bounce back for • The game will be televised on
l
k• k
Ch •
D'A
'
game, Parady said..
h .

.
Sports Channel
Pace 1c er
ns
utono. .
• "We didn't finish the drives,"
scored was late in the fourth
T ursday." "We're a good team,

It would be the only lead Manst. the second year coach said. "When
quarter on a 30-yard 'touchdown
and good teams bounce back from
If history is any indication,
would hold as C. W. rost. rattled ·you get ·to· the scoring area you
pass from McCourt to junior
losses," ·Parady said. "We're go-
Marist should fare well against the
off 31 unanswered pomts to run
h
t .
• t ,,
'
fullback Kyle Carraro.
ing to put it behind us as quickly
Redmen.
away with the win.
ave
?
score pom s.
.
• p
d
d M C
'd h
as possible and be ready for Thurs-
The Red Foxes have defeated St.
The Pioneers outgained the Red
Manst ~ad a chance
t?
~ut mto
ara Yan
c ourt sai t ey day.".
.
John's for three years in a row, in-
Foxes, 523-348-.
. .
the lead with 11:15 remammg, but
believe the squad will recover and
.
eluding-a 23-15 win last year.
Red FOX.es
.start· year undefeated~ mark 4-0-1
..;;..;.------.-.-,-.
-_-'·----· •
. Unfortunately
for their op-
• The hard work Oggero is t~lking .

'.While .stopper Oggero and • . This season, _the club has a
by
GREG BIBB
ponents, the women!s.soccer club
_·about could have been seen m !he goalkeeper Castle have the final say
twelve game schedule. Ele~en of
Staff writer
is very serious arid.successful when
_
las~ week of August when the girls o_n
defense, they ~re supported by
the twel"'.e
team~ the ,~omen_
s _c!ub_
it comes to.playing the game.•
. arrived: on campus early to prepare ngM full pack Michelle -Andersqn
has or_
wJll face 1s agamst D1v1s10n
_ One penalty-kick:/
. .
The engineer'ofthis;locom·otive
for the upcommg season.
and sophomore sweeper Jen Ford
l varsity teams.
That, is all that separates the
.js
Head Coach·. -Brother Dan
It is now late September and the among others.
. .
This makes the squad's 4-0-1
womer1s soccer club fro~-a·perfect
:--
O'Riordan. _ . ··•
• •

. .
___
.
> _
woweri's soccer clul:>
is reaping the _. Up_ fro_nt; Manst 1s led by for-
record even more remarkable.
se_aso_n·thus
f~r~_T> •
'.:"=·::··?·
>: " -:: :fo·his :firsi\y~kiai: the::h~alirt;. -~l>t!!!_efits
of_ tli_ose tm1gh August
war~~ Jacki.e D' Andrea and Cindy
It is rare that a club team can
, The.Red Foxe_s
liave startedt~e
O'Riordan has led the team to an
workouts and practices.
Dalot!o.
compete game in and game out
seaso~4-0-1. It 1s the best start m -undefeated start with a win over
Besides the 1-0 win ofover Fair-
While the season has already
with a varsity squad, especially on
the ~ustory of women's soccer at
Fairfield (something which has
field on a Julie Phillipon goal, the
been lab~Jed
~
success by Oggero,
the Divisio~ I level. • _
..
Mans~:
._ .
_.
,
never been done in
·.the
school's
club has also faced New Paltz and
the captam, wms an~ losses are not_.
Castle ~aid the club has been
Junior goa~keeper Kate_.Cast!e .. history),_ . _.
, _ ..
_
, Steyens Institute recently.
.
the ~nl_y
focus ofth1s years squa_d. striving for success for a long time.
has allowed Just . two .go,Js. this
Seni<;>r
stopper Keri Oggero s;iid :· : The ,Red i:oxes came away with .
0
.R_iordan and the_
ch!.b are c?r- _
"Goodthings come to those who
season,· ~ne on tJie pen_alty'.•k1ck_.
. . O'Riordail h_l,15
had a positive effect - .. a :2-2
~•~
agam~t ~ew Paltz as the
rent~y 1n the process of ~ompletmg. wait,,, the junior goalkeeper said.
Pretty 1mpre~s1ve_number~
for a
on'the team-and.its play.

.
oppos1tion cap1tahzed on a penal-
theneces~~~ steps req~Ired to app- • ·"We have waited long enough."
program. that is still learmng to
"Brother Dan is one of the best
ty shot to knot the score for good.
ly for Dms1on I varsity status.
.
walk _in the world of college things:that. ever. happened to the
OnSatur9!fY, the wome!lfa.ced
·•
If,
successful, the club would
h Castle a~d_th1 Red ~oxes f1~hn~t
athletics,
.
.
,
t
~•,
h • • 'd•
• ·,


StevensiJnst1tute, and this time. th ·: ff' • II b
.
• • •
ave to w~it · ong
O
pu_
eir
w

.
· ·. •
1 b
·t
earn,·,
5• ~-
sm • .
0

•.
_
.


..
-


,

.•
en:? icia Y ecome an mtera. undefeated record on the !me .
. omen
s
socc~~
IS
a c. u . spor.
-; Oggero .. also said . ~he ..
believes · came a"fay with th~ v_1ctory
· It was . coll.eg1ate
team, and women's soc-
wqich _does not g_1ve
out scholar-
there is a real cornradery among the
the clubs fourth wm m five games. cer would be a varsity sport at
s~1ps, 1s not ~anctioned _by
the N.a- ,.. team:
Midfielder Heather Morris net-
Marist.
The women's club faced Mount
St. Vincent's on Tuesday. Results
were not available at press time.
t!onal Collegiate ~thletic Assoc1a-
. "We all work together, pull for
ted the o~ly g~al ?f the ga~e off
t10n an~ garners ltttle suppo_rt on
each other, win not for the sake of
of.a free kick with Just two mmutes
campu~ m comparison to the mte~-
winning, but as a payoff for all of
r~maini!1g·
. .
collegiate

;NCAA .
athletic
our hard work " the senior said.
Moms and Ph1lhpon anchor the
programs.

'
'dfiel
f;
r
MCTV'S
11
0ne~on-One with
. Jay
LaScolea
11
+
11
Sports Update
11
Weekdays at 3:30 pm on
Marist Channel 12
A Whole New Perspective on_
Marist Sports.
However, the level of competi-
tion the Red Foxes would face
would not change if. the squad
makes the jump to Division L
The women's squad will be back
at Marist for an bet. 10 game
against NYU.
~IW
f 1m
~iij
I
l1~111
I~~
' ~IW J1n1~
And Many
Other
Destinations!
/}i'
¢alftf
for
tJ ·
I
/tt,./tKt
~
1
~
u
/tt,./tKtt
-.
~a.
atl t(.r!erra
«a
>/:J-Jzf
,a.laa
Poughkeepsie:
>Ub
City,
246 Main Mall • 485-3579
rr.~

1 _
Arlington
-~'HDRTJ.!NE'
Arlington
Getty,
813 Main St.• 454-3530
























I'
;
}
,
'
-
bj, JERI
L
STEWART
-
staff_writer
.
by JIM DERIVAN
.•
c/
Staff Writer
-·Bootif~
..
:win,
snaPklu.Illp;
..
,,
.
Iopa.today
by
ANDREW HOLMLUND
•.
Staff Wriier