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The Circle, April 22, 1993.xml

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 42 No. 8 - April 22, 1993

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VOLUME
42,
NUMBER
8
MarlstCollege, Poughkeepsie,
N.Y.

APRIL 22,
1993
Cllomo
:visits and· joirisecono:inic think-tank
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ANASTASIA·B. CUSTER and
.MATT
MARTIN


Editorial Staff
.
Mario Cuomo was all ears as. he chaired a r()und-table discu~sion on
economic reform in the Hudson·Valley at.Marist College, Monday
..
Approximately 100 area business and political leaders participated in
the session triggered by the recent cutbacks at IBM..
.
"You've (the Hudson Valley) never had to be super energetic about
finding new opportunities. This is the first time you've been cha!lenged
this way," said Cuqmo, who stressed that the area has been rehant on
IBM for, "solid, predictable strength.'',
In .the closed-door meeting, topics ranged from enterprise zones to
stimulating small businesses aimed at diversifying the area's economy.
"Number one we have
.to
stay true to IBM, and be supportive of it.
Second, we· have to proliferate every other small opportunity you have,''
saii:i Cuomo in
a
press conference following the meeti.ng. "That offers
tremendous hope to the Hudson Valley."
Local representatives were encouraged by the visit, and hope that state
• money will follow.
.
.
.
''He is committed to providing state resources to help expedite ideas
in the Hudson Valley to bring development," said Shaileen Kopec, Vice-
President for Advancement at Marist, who attended the meeting as an
observer.-"The people of the Mid-Hudson have the talent to solve these
problems, and the state government is willing to work vigorously for solu-
: tions."
"You have some of the best educated people, some of the best institu-
tions, some of the finest living conditions in the state and in the coun-
• try," said Cuomo.
"If
you can't do it here, you can't do it"anywhere."
"You can turn the current strain and tension and concern into a whole
new positive era of development in the Valley," he.said.
Cuomo plans to see development through, as
.he
intends to return next
month for_a similar meeting.
"There is nothing more important than the chance to earn your own
. breaq. Therefore; my commih~el)t to the Hudson Valley trying to restore
a positive·locatenvironment is a priinary commitlllerit,'' said Cuomo.
Many Marist s~udents questionthe state's comtnitment to private.educa-
··.
.
.
.
.
.•
,: ti9Ili 'as ·Biuidy
·and
Tuition Assistance Program:·(TAP) aid have been


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pr~~;t~n•fcn:~ce,:one
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~d4r~sed thegoverr,ior:about these
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G\l.ts:
tdggef
Madst
to
<!~pand' ediic3.tionaf services
those fonn'iflfciIBl'vf,an4 oth~!:~'.
(
·,J\lthough:thi{~ffort.
is directed
·
in the Mid~Hudson· region,'' he
••
••
b/JOHN·U
..
ovo
unemployed,professioQlils;iri,'this
.
tOward former: IBMers, it.'s
said.


ed IBM satellite building,

<Staff
Writer>.·:
..

<:
•.
area;. said Marc. vanderHeydeni
•·
available to anyone becausethe ef-.
Locai students also feel the brunt
.
,
.
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_
.
.
••
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,.·.
,.:

vice presidentof A~demicAffairs.

.fects
of the cutbacks ll,t IBM trickle
of the current economic situation
.
.
:
"It
actually affects me because

how
business has dropped a lot,''
she said .
.
<
M:i~istCollege nof.only;offers
•••
'.
:VanqerHeyden said
'.the
·effort
·_
down through the
,whole
economy.
and how it' can affect their future
t~e coinmuni!Y;its. acad~niic'pr~-
:
wm
·riot.
only c::onsisfoL academic
.:.
. _The
college ha~ dev~lope<iJhese as: students at. Maris·t.
:
••
grajns;:~~t_'w1Wthe cun:eritJocaI: p_rograllls to retrain: ~he-.profes- programs and services with existing . Mike Murray, a jimior from
econollllcs1t1Jatlon,thecollegeh~
s1onals, ·but also· will include
staffmemberswhoarereadytoin-
Hyde Park, N.Y., said he is af-
starte.~.
a
j~ep,eraL
effort: that
.\\'ill
)
workshops iri career cowiseling and
••
traduce what Marist
'.has
to offer.
.•
fected
·by.
the situation and is not
.
Upon Marist's recent announce-
mentof its opening of an extension
center in Goshen, N.Y., ,there was.
a "phenomenal response" to the
"open house" held in Goshen
where 175 people turned outfpr the
event.
.also:·:pro_yid~:;.~om,~1!_nity\servi~~
<
spe~ific workshops for obtairih1g
.•
VanderHeyden said Marisi is the

sure if he will be able to afford liv~

a9ci counseling;\:,:,:·
:-··
,
·_..-·
cer:t1ficates,
.
.
.
.
.
onlyinstitution in this.region that

ing. on campus
:next
semester
•..
As a result of'the thousands-pf.
.·.·,
"It is o),rr thoughtful reacti.on to
cari provide professional graduate
·
because
of
his father's
recent
retire-
lay offs at IBM's three local plants;
.
thecurrentsituation1ii.the· comity. and·corporate:educaiion.
· ···

ment from IBM .

The Center for. Graduate and
Professional Education will be
open in September.
.
the
.':-J:.i~rist'
Fi.shkill-,Exterision
·•.··
and
.tO
.a,.
neigh1JQr
,(IBM)-viho
has·
....• ·
''The·coHege (Mari st) should be
.
Amy Vogt, a junior· commuter
Cente.r'¥lLexparid its:~ffer.iIJgs,
.
always beei1
·generous
tO Marist,''
recognized
as
themost comprehen-
from Hyde Park, works at a
.
The.center·wm be beneficial.to
.•
:
vanderHeyden said.
·..
.
....... •
sive institution of higher·learning •restaurant next to a recently clos-
..
A.cadell1ic

v
P : rio adclitionalfaculty next year
b/CAROUNE JONAH
Staff Writer
A
three-year hiring freeze of new full-time
.
faculty continues to strain some divisions at
Marist College.·
.


"We have a
.hiring
freeze at the college and
we're nothiring anyone new,'' saidViricent
Toscano; chairman of· the• Division
.of
Humanities. "We don't have enough full-
time faculty for a college of this size."
The only new faculty being Jured this year
are to fill vacant positions in the upcoming
school year, said Marc vanderHeyden, vice
president of Academic Affairs.
"We are not·hiring any additional facul-
ty,"
vanderHeyden
said.
"Only
replacements of faculty."
In the past, hiring new full-time faculty

has occurred with significant increases in
enrollment, vanderHeyden said.
"We don't have the funds to add new
faculty lines,'' vanderHeyden said. "The in-
creases
in enrollment are not so dramatic."
But increases have occurred within the
Science Division, acco.rding to Andrew
Molloy, chairman of the division.
"In the science department there is a grow-
ing need to add another full-time faculty
member to support the growing number of
majors,"
Molloy said. "I think it's the fastest grow-
ing major at the time."
.
Molloy ~aid with 6nly 13 full-ti~efaculty,:
~-teaching
sc!~nc~ core courses;''.

••.
members/' Sharma said. "That we have not
members, including only· one in physical
Molz.oy
s~!d 1t ha~ b~fome harder to res- done/,'
science, the division has to rely more on ad-
pond to the mounting ~umber of stu~ents
Sharma said he did not expect to gain any
junct'facult}'.
·.

.
.
.
, .
_

.
in the ?epartments of enVIronmental science additional faculty within his division due to
"We're forced to tum more and more to
and. biology ..


.
stable enrollment.
-

the use of adjunct faculty, which is difficult
'~There has ~een

no new. faculty, bP,~
Toscano said additional faculty is needed
in courses with laboratories·"

he said,
mamtenance of the same
full~t1me
faculty,
"We've tried to have only full:time faculty
Molloy said: ''There is a genuine need for
involved in laboratory course.''
·anew
faculty membfr."
.
There is the lack
.of
time they have to
.
Va!lderHeyden s~1d
.he
~ecogm~~. the
spend in the laboratories and with students.
growmg enrollment m the Science D1v1s1on.
This lack of time has meant that full-time
"Allofour programs need new faculty,''
faculty have less opportunity to teach core
vanderHeyden said. "Clearly the reason we
courses.
do.n't hire new faculty is because of con-
·•
''All
of our programs need
new f acuity. Clearly the reason
we don't hire new
I
acuity is
because of constrain'ts on the
budget.
- Marc vanderHeyden

Vice President of
Academic Affairs
"Over the last three years fewer and fewer
faculty were involved i~ teaching core
courses," Molloy said. "As the number of
students in the major go up, you may have
to have the full-time faculty teach more and
more full-time courses.
I(
severely limits the
.
number of full-time faculty involved in
straints on the budget."
.
In 1982, Marist. had 79 full-time faculty
members. By 1992, that number had increas-
ecf to
153, according
to
vanderHeyden.
straints on the budget."

In 1982, Marist had 79 full-time faculty
members.
By
1992, that number had increas-
ed to 153, according to vanderHeyden.
"Over the last five years we have hired 23
additional faculty,'' VanderHeyden said.
"We have not grown at the same rate (as that
of past years.)"
Onkar
Sharma,
chairman
of the
Division
of Computer Science and Math, said about
four years ago the school came up with a
plan to hire
five
new
faculty
members
every
year. Since the three-year
budget freeze, this
has not occurred.
"We should have hired 15 new
faculty
''TX.T
,,,, e have a pretty heavy
teaching load~ It's a juggling
'act."
- Vincent .Toscano,

Division of
Humanities Chairman
in the Division of Humanities.·In.the depart-
ment of political science there are only four
full-time professors and 145 majors, he said.
"We have a pretty heavy teaching load,''
Toscano said. "It's a juggling act."
Toscano said one effect of the few full-
time faculty is the dependence on adjunct
and parMime faculty.
"More and more (core courses) are being
taught by adjuncts and they don't have
enough time,'' Toscano said. "We'd really
strengthen the division with more faculty."
Toscano said this issue raises a "red flag"
over the long-term quality at Marist.
"Compared to institutions of the same size
our faculty is low," Toscano said. "We need
... see
FACULTY
page
4

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: \When it's aUovertyou'rejust_ttn. e~o_tional
.
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As the movie progresses, John realizes that.
·dreams'ofh1s mother., He is·also'respons1- •
.,messand are riot sure what you are suppC>s-
, Renie~ber,, the· television . show • "thir-
there is a time when everyone has to grow
ble for hi~ 3-year~old broth~r (Miko Hu~es,
ed to be (eeling: The dfrectot -,va11:~s
.Y~>U
t?-:
_tysomethmg, 'Y,here eve~yone had_ a pro-
-
.. · ·
-
: "~mder~art~n Cop"), w~1ch fo~cesh1m to thinkthatthefamily-will be okay, wh1c~ 1s ·
blem and people r~rely bved happily ever
.
• grow up too• fast.
wh.at I thought, • but othe_rs . may thmk
after? Well, its. director, .Marshall Her- •-----"."'_---------•
• . ..
·.
_
_ .
differently.
• • •

skov1tz, makes his first film work the same
• • • Steinmiller does a good job with some of
..

.
:
.
-
way• "Jack the Bear" i~
c1
higlily_
emo_tional..
The Reel
the'·more moving scenes, bu( for the most ' , fhe finitl
1
scerie; which seems; very llpset-
film about a father trymg to raise his two
Story
part; his performance is forced.' This kid is
ting,
is
also
a
bituplifting. Hshows that.
young sons alone after the death of his wife.
an actor in every sense of the word and is when a family sticks together, anything is
Danny De Vito ("Batman
Returns,"
not always· believablei. •

possible. Like the message of <CCris_s
Cross,"
"Jewel of the Nile") plays John Leary, the
_ Julia Loui~-Dr~yfu~s
(Elaine fr~m the TV GoldieHawii's bomb froni last year, "Jack
host of a late-night television horror show.
Jennifer.
show •~Seinfeld") has:a small role as a friend • the· Bear" demonstrates the· importance of
John moves with his two sons, Jack and
.Giandalone
family arid that monsters. do riofonly exist
Dylan, to Oakland, Ca., into what seems like
of.John's who works on his television show: in the irriagiriafion or on.TV. UnfC>rtunate-
a nor~al neighborh~>Od.
He is a favorite ~f
l:fer part is pointless and I think her tal~nts ly;'this is ~ot e~oug~ .to carry
a
filrii}~rt~o
the neighborhood kids who are fans of his
-
----
--
.are wasted on an insignificant, unimportant .• hours and keeo the interest of the audience.
show and occasionally ask Jack if his father
character.~- •
• •

••
•• • •


can come out and play.
up. This role_
was a nice change for· De Vito
So, if_.
Y.OU •
~ant ·to
__
·s.
ee a moyie .th_
at will
John is the k' d ofp
h
·11 l
who gives a warm, sincere performance as
•~Jack the Bear" tries to access e\'·eryj,C>ssi- ·
,
• d ,
h"
• A, - • t
m
· erson
W O WI
a )Vays a father who wants what is best for his
· ble eniotiori from its characters. When ..
so-- che~r·you up; on t_,se~
t
I~
one.·,· S .a;ma -
be a kid at heart. He is not without his pro-·
.
.
: .
. . .d th. _ ._. a re_
at outpouri·ng of ter of fact, you sh_
ould wait for the video.
blems though: A martini with every meal,
children, who were robbed of their mother
meone is sa , ere is g
If
. U
t to see Danny DeVito ·go
dreams of his wife who died a few years
at an early age.
• tears; Hap~iness • usuallr meant loud ?.r-
~
to ~:6ut
7
!e~r:s~~
vide6
store because ~hat
earlier, and in-laws breathing down his neck
-
chestra muSic acc<>~~amed bY.
tears of
JOY
«J k-the· -Bear" needs is a better script to
11

h"
.
Robert Steinmiller Jr., a 14-year-old, plays
and laughter. Anger 1s shown m one of the ... a~.
..
.
•.. ·
.

the mg im to straighten out, a,dd to what he
Jack. Jack, like his father, is troubled by
more_ exciting sc_enes
with a baseball baL -.give it a little more subStance.
as to deal with concerning his children.
. , ,:·
Band
comradery and good
cheer
erupt -oil
campu·s:-
by
DANA BU.ONICONTI
And the rockets' red glare, the
bombs bursting in air, gave proof
through the night...that after the
dust had settled in the theater last
Friday evening, ·something loud
and musical had happened.
The five bands that participated
in the Battle of the Bands contest
proved to be as diverse as the talent
they demonstrated, with musical
styles ranging from jazz improvisa-
tion to classic rock.
The event, which drew a

fairly
large number of enthusiastic peo-
ple, was hosted by comedian Kevin
James, who provided between-
band laughter.
The bands, in order of per.for-
mance, included: Woodpecker,
Sally Mudball, Dry Wall, The
Brownstone Trio, and Riff Raff.
The Brownstone.Trio took first
place in the competition, followed
by Dry Wall and Sally Mudball in
second
and
third
places,
respectively.
Prizes \\'.ere studio-recording
time for first olace. 50 percent off
Yamaha musical equipment for se-
. cond, and a $50 gift certificate at
Strawberries for third. .
Woodpecker's set consisted of
three covers and two originals.
Opening with "Porch." bv Pearl
In
your ear
Music review
Jam, they also played "Ziggy Star-
dust," by David Bowie and ''Sex
Type Thing," by Stone Temple
Pilots. One of the· originals
featured a riff reminiscent of-the
music
to
the
video • game
''Castlevania.''
Sally' MucJ.ball's fie,ry perfor-
. 1t1ance consisted of two upbeat
originals, titled "Caution" and
"Advil," as well as covers of
"State of Love and Trust," by
Pearl Jam and "Mustang Sally,"
most recently done by The .Com-
mitments. In addition to the usual
fiv~-piece band, Sally brought out
two female back-up singers and a
sax player for "M.ustang." They
were ·also able to overcome some
sound problems during "State" to
come off.with a big finish.
m?nce was extremely fluid and the
interaction between sax, bass, and
drums was tight. Towards the_
end
of their set, their jazz exploration -
seg~ed into a crowd- pleising v~r-
. sion of "Dazed and Confused," by
Led Zeppelin.
Riff Raff, the final band of the
night, seemed ready to case the en-
tire classic rock songbook if.
necessarv. with versions of "Since
At the.• .. beginning • of last
semester, th.ere didn't seem to ·be
too mu~h'in,terestincaitlPUS
bands,
but over the past couple of weeks,
there
,
have beeri several • cof-
feehouses Where. a· • few of these
bands, as weli as. other musical
• acts, have been able to perform in
front of anywhere from 50 to 100
people. This is a good thini;i;, and
shoul_d continue, because th~re is
I Been Loving You," by Led Zep-
an awful lot of musical talent at
Dry Wall, who performed
pelin, as well as "Day Tripper~• Marist.

.
without a singer, turned in several
and "Little Wing," by Jimi Hen- .
• tight • instrumentals, ·including: · drix. They also trotted bu(a'cover.
-
• -
Orie ofthe best ~pects of the
."Spy __
o·f Soci'ety," ·"Open Me.·Up of(CMan In The Bo_
x_
," b_yAlice lri
••..
• . ·th·
. • h

music scene on 1s:campus 1st at
And ... ,'.'· and "Trust In. Me."
Chains. •
••
theffiajorityofthemusiciansknow
Jl~u~r i~:i~t~e~:6nt::
:~~;!~
Th~
;_inood_:
,p\lcks.tage, both -each}othe~;: ~iid'.\ihile they might
-before and.aner the perfo~mances, not all bethe best of friends, it was
ed improvisational jarn-,:they·ap-
peared willing
to •
play' all:· night,
-even -when the stage· curiaiii closed
1
ofrthem. ···'


The Brownstone Trio offered up
a healthy dose of improvisational
jazz to the audience. Their.perfor-
.
. - • .
.
.
eviden,t,FridaynighUhatthere"is
,
was~:decide4ly po_
s.itixe;, tliough • _resP,ect.arilongJhem... .•
h
.
.
.
.
.
.
....~.i..
• rat er compet1tive;·'Bands" did~-- "·.:
• •
however, give one· another en-
• • •
. .


,.•'

.
.
.
'
..
.-·
•••
couraging words• before going on
stage. Prior to the announcement
of the awards, they. wished each·
other luck.
Snipes continues to pick duel,
roles: ;'
- LSAT
GMAT
. GRE
'Boiling Point' generates little .heat
by
KRAIG DeMATTEIS
Wesley, Wesley, Wesley! What
is wrong? Are you this desperate to
get into action films _that you will
settle for any movie with a gun in
it? "Boiling· Point" is a
.mistake,
not a career move. We love you in
''Jungle ·Fever." We love you in
"White Men Can't Jump."" But
these string of low-rate action flicks
have. got -to go. They are killing
you!
In case you are wondering, that
-is my letter· to Wesley Snipes,
whose new movie, "Boilin!!
.
~
Point," I paid for two of my
friends to see with me. Please, do
not get me wrong, I did not go in-
to the movie with high expecta-
tions, so it is riot like I ani disap-
pointed
because
I wanted
something big. I just wanted an
entertaining· action movie with
some good stunts, big explosions,
a funny one-liner or two, and lots
of cool- looking guns with lar!!e
caliber
bullets.
You know,
something to keep me occupied and
• not have to think about all the
work I have to do.
But Fate would riot let me rest.
Nope, I sat through this one hour
and a half enema, dumbfounded
powerful_ group. in • Hollywood.
This movie did not know whether
to
be an action flick, a tragic story,
a dark comedv. or what~ver.
The ~tory
"is
from the book
"Money Men," and this is how the
story unfolds, like a book. But
-movies are not books; as everyone
is so quick to point out, so there is
a lot of thought~ and action left
out.
I
first thought that alt!i,ough
the movie was slow and choppy,
that it was leading up to some
clever ending or surpris·e twist. Un-
fortunately, nothing did. I soon
recalled my Ebert and the Oscar
Brotman'~ Law-
"If
nothing has
happened by the end of the first
reel, nothing is going to happen."
Before long, I found this to be too
true.
The movie never unfolds- it just
happens, as Wesley Snipes tracks
down the killer of his partner. Of
course, you know this guv is Roing
to die because he said the fateful
words, "Hey, tell your kid his
Godfather is going to take him out
tomorrow." He nright as well said
this was his last day on· the job
before he retires, or some other
corny phrase that puts ., the
crosshairs on him.
that this movie had to be passed by
Anyway, Snipes runs around try-
some executive board at Warner ing to act tough, trying to act, and
Brothers, currently the most smoking cigars like Arnold
Schwarzenegger, but it all fails hor-
. ribly. Even the catch phrase of the
movie, that one-liner like "I'll
be
back" or "Welcome to the party,
pal" does not even fit int-o the
already dull action. Perhaps you
have seen it· on TV already when
Snipes· says, "When I find that
(guy), I'll put him in a box ... by the
book." I wish I could tell the writer
to get a grip ... by the book: The
only original asoect to ,S-nipes'
character-is that he.is not a cop, not
a FBI nor CIA agent, and was not
even in. Vietnam, but a Treasury
Agent. _But they do not bother_to
• explain that until much later on in-
to the movie, just like everything
else.

.
The only element I planned on
to at least provide me with
something to genuinely laugh at
was Dennis Hopper, who ever since
"Blue Velvet" has been the only
actor since Crispin Glover ("Back
to the Future", "Wild at Heart")
to crack' me up just by acting. I
But there are positive aspects fo
this niovie, as evefdoud; even as
dark as this 611e,
has
a
silver lirtini;i;.
.•
.
·.•
-
For the first time
in
a
movie, ex-
cept "Malcolm
x,""
a .ch~racter .
said, "I'll park (the getaway car)
on

Hollywood Boulevard .. The
cops will think an African~
American stole it and left it there." ·-
Well,QK, there is a lt>t to workon,
_ but it is a start.
I
guess. A white
character talking to another white
character
saying
·••African-
American'' instead of all the racial
slurs that appear in these movies is
different, no matter how forced the
character had to say it. Did Snipes
have a hand in this? I would not be
surorised.
So here is another onefor my list
of bad movies, but then again I
have not had the ch_ance to really
pan one in a while, you know with
the Oscars and all. Bur here is the
surprise twist to my article-this was
the worst movi~ I ever had to
mean it in the upmost respect, as review, even "Sneakers" and "The
any of you who have seen and love Last of the Mohicans." "Boiling
"Blue Velvet" know what I mean. • Point" is an awful movie of scams
Hopper is crazy, but a genius in and con-artists that has the amaz-
any role, from "Apocalypse Now"
ing effect of conning the viewers.
to his directing career. Sadly,
You think with a title like "Boil-
however, even he could not tread
ing Point" that th!! action would be
the quicksand of the script, but
good, but the only boiling point
there were times where I could see
you will find is in the audience.
the humor trying to get out and it
This movie should be sued for false
was enough for me and my friends,
advertising, and the director,
fellow Hopper-lovers, to enjoy it.
James Harris, boiled in oil.
MCAT
.
.
Preparation·
in·.
• Poughkeepsie
for .
upcoming exams:
GRE begins
Apr..24
LSAT beginsMaYi
Smart people rea# the fiM pr~, Smart
people, want smal~
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THE
PRINCETON
REVIEW
We
Score
More!











































































SEOA.
:ariQ:.-Sii\eftS
-I1l sync on recycling isSUe
:b.
,;:,
s.
HA
..
NNON
·_ROP.
ER...
P!a~t1cs,. sa!d SEGJ\ andSeder-s
/recyclable:-
once-·they are con-
Gor. don,_
-
--
a
.
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if Dutches_s
County·woul·d not recy-
.
~fod·~iSA:-SCHUSTEff"
.
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••
tammate
:wit
:
foo·, and china
English/secondary education nia-
cle the materials .
.
.
.
.
, ,,. .

.
..
.
.
,:';:'.
SEGAand
..
~~iler.•~.saidth,ey,hc1y~
-:
products are:breakable and for in-
jorfrom Attleb,o.ro, M.
ass .. ."If. one
·,;:.,~~
~taff \Nriter~.
·:
sp~rt w·eeks,worJing toge\her to-.
_door
use· only,
"said
Lewis:



d • .
,
. ·
.
Riordan said SEGA is satisfied
--:'.'"~-----'--'-'-.....;.;-..;..;.....;.._
·
·come
up w"th th·
·
l t·
·1
h
·f.
d
·
per-so~. oesn't.recycle, it doesn't
•••
with its recycling achievement for
MaristColle~'~nd_.·
.•.
•.

........
1
...
1s.so_u1on_o
Te_mal
ecision, made by
seemhkethatb1gofadeal,but800·

.
1l•s
'ccimta·
l
.
!
··w·
•.•
recycl~ng-:-
:

fylanst's r~cyclmg problem.
.
••
,.
·SEGA:and Seiler's, ,vas to use 100 people -
that's a reality check.,.

now; and is loo~ing forward to the
-d .
/
gh_ ay,. but.it s.t•II.

,
~O':"C:
options that were looked
percent recyclable plastics from a

,
....
,.
· .. :,:•,.,,·,
.•

..
·
.
.
Earth_ Day_· celebration where
n~e s .to go urt er and a big step·
·mto
mstead of the current_ non-
.
local paper company. This decision
SEGA is.hoping the Earth Day

Slude~ts ~nd
·1o~al
envi'ronmental
wif
1
~e t~ke11;,.,~f
th!!d.
!9~J
Earth Day
~~cyclabl~
plastics l\farist uses were
.
wiilcost Seilel'.'s
double the original
plastics will be a stepping stone for
..

organizations, including Central
. ce e r~t\R~i accor mg._to
_Stu_dents

1~s~.itutiorial,,
:Plastic,
paper
.
and
.
budget.allocation.
.
.
future use of recyclable plastics iri
Hudson Gas an_d Electric and
~J~A?mg
__
·
Global
:Aware~rss

_chilla,
b_ut
·'Yit_h:
eac_h_
p9sed
pro-
.
Accordi~g to Le~is,
_the
biggest
the cafeteria; said Shane Riordan,

PROTECT, Inc. and Feminists for
(A.
,
)
,,
.
· ·
· -.d
..
.
.
·
·
.
.
blem, said Dan Lewis, director of.
•problem
:with recycling 1s Dutchess
president
qf
SEGA.
··.,
• ,

A_nimar Rights will help celebrate
,
c~mpus~w,
1
.
e. Eart.h Day
d_iniilg services who did research

County because it only recycles
"We \V~~ted
to
work with the

·
1
.he
earth ·--
ce_Ie?ratl1:>,n
~a~
~e~n s~heduledfor
"and
background work on•recyclirig;
· ·
numbers· (and 2 plastics;
school inside the system and. get
.
,
SEGAmembers will be oversee-
Apn~21 at1d Jt will_mcl.1;1d_e
v~ndors,
• ,.Institutional
plastic,which(is
a'·
• :
"I've been going to the cafeteria
results with
·every~me
working
ing the separation of recyclable
m~s~ciiJ
.
e_nte,rtamment ~nd , }-,
Was_Qable
and reusable hard plastic, . for'three years now and when I see
together," said Riordan.
materials at the barbecue and there
bc1rbecll~
~if,ferent from yc:arsyast
_was«cost
prohibitive"· because it.·. Seiler's'using·plastics I am disap-

because dl~nosable p d ts ll b
·
Id
.
.
.
.
L.
,
·,
.d h.

•11
_:b
.-

th'•
will be display showing how
.
,,
~:,.',
.
.n,
uc
.
W.
1
e
\fOU_
take· $8000 to
,purchase.•

pointed because) know
_they
are
ew1s sai
e wi
·
nng
•.
e
M

• •
·
•• 1
I
d
made o·
') percent re cl bl
p
.

.
I bl I




UI

C
• •
1
anst s matena s are recyc e •
.

.
.
cy a e
aper products
.
become non-
not being recycled," sa_id Mike
recyc a e Pas 1c o
s e~-. cmn
Y.
Stti.dents petition to.·keep profs
by
NIKKI LE ..
SAGE
Students have been circulating
.
~petition~ i_n the hopes of keeping
adv_ertising
professor Mary Louise
Bopp arid management studies pro-
fessor Robert Ristagno teaching at
Marist next year.
•..
~oth_are in the final year of their
contracts and are not scheduled to
• teach.next
ran:

• Not a single person has refused
to sign th_e petition for Ristagno,
said t:.isa Schuster,
a
junior minor-
ing in business, who has been in-
strumental
·
in circulating
the
petition.
••
''A teacher like him ,ve can't af-
ford to lose," Schuster said.

She said Ristagric>'is
willing to go
"that extra step" for his students.
Ristagno holds review sessions in
the m_orning
and afternoon so that
_all
~tudents who need help
_can
at-
tend, Schuster said.


.
"He'll even sit in his office with-
you for five tiours if that's what
ii
takes to.·make you understand,"
she said.
.
John C, Kelly; chair of the Divi-
si9n of ManagementStudies, said
that although Ristagno is an "ex-
cellent instructor," lhe. college is
seeking applicants who hold doc-
torates to fill three permanent
faculty positions in the business
department.

Ristagno's official status is a
temporary
visiting
professor, Kel-
ly said.
"I
don't think having a Ph.D.
makes someone a better teacher,"
Schuster said.
She said having a teacher who
can ·bring hands-on experience to
the class is more important than
having a teacher ,vho studied the
subject
without having practical
experience.

"We're going out to
·do
it, not
study it," Schuster said of her
future career in business.
Kelly-said the colkge wants to
hire

instructors ,_.,
ith

some
ex-

... see
PETITIONS
page
9

Skinner's fate holds for zoning decision-
: by
DAVE BUTTOMER
.
,
Staff Writer
Although April 30 is the last of-
••
fidal day of business· for Skinner's,
the
·owner,
Chris Turek, vciwes that
it wjll not be the last,·p~ople hear
.
ofhis_bar.
:
.
.
, ,,.
.
.
:
'.''.Pin
trying to r~tmild
,in,,
the
back.
I'
have some land
,'which ,I

bought· a few years ago," Turek
said;.
...
.
The 30-year~old Turek may lose
his business when Route
9
is widen-

Turek has owned Skinner's for
13 _years and_ is finding the reality_
of loosing a business to be difficult.
"I
-have
served the public for
many years now. I am hoping to
get the.OKI can start rebuilding
right,away, but
if
not, I'm stuck/'
Turek said.
.
....
"Especially
the way the economy
is; And looking at the way things
are with IBM. I become'nervous."
ed, so his plan is to move Skinner's
He has received money from the
farther back from the road.
·state,
but even that was not
.
'.'!just want to put up the same enough'.

operation, and it would basically be

the same size."

However, Turek must wait to
hear from board members in the
Town of Poughkeepsie.
"Owning a business is difficult.
I will eventually have to take loans
in ~rder to save mv business."
"I have to go through the zon-
Skinner's has been the norm for
ing ordinance, but I don't know
if
many people, and the thought of
the members ,viii give
it
to me," destruction is not taken lightly.
_said.
the Hyde Park native.

''I sent the proposed plan to the
Bill Brown, a se,iior from Pitt-
,zoning
board last week, and it will

sfield, Mass., does not want to
see
_probably
take a couple of months Skinner's flattened.
·before
I know," Turek said.

"-1 am hoping Skinner's can_ be
moved either farther back from the
road, or to a ne,v location," he
said.
"Not only because it is a land-
mark,
.but
because Skinner's has
always been a good· time."
For Turek, however, Skinner's is
not only his business·, but an
'im-
portant part of. his life.
"I have put everythin·g into Skin-
ners," Turek said.
.
.
''The argum'enc
I
have is rhar
I'm
a taxpayer, for the state and for the
county. Plus I feel I help the
college.
"I'm right
across
the strec1 and
my location is convenient."
Now Turek can only do one
thing, and that is to wait and hear
from the zoning board. And if
things do not go as planned, say
students
and locals alike
a
business, as well as a tradition, ~viii
be lost.
IBM repercussions may affect sports program
bj, KRISTINA WELLS
Staff·
Writer
'
The Marist College athletic pro-
gram may be affected bythe recent
IBM lay-offs. •.
.
·,
.
Eugene Doris,
director
of
athletics, said the department's
.
greatest concern is how to attract
people to the entertainment offered
by Marist sports so that ticket sales

remain steady.
.
.
"The· ability of people to pur-
chase tickets· on
..
a regular basis

might be hampered," Doris said.
"I think every family that ends up
in a situation such as IBM will have
to
assess
their money more. The
competition
.
for that amount of
money will be· greater
than
before."
Gerard Cox, dean of student af-
fairs, said the athletic department
will have to create an atmosphere
that will make people in the area
aware
of tfte entertainment
available to them at Marist.
"An evening at a basketball
game is one of the best buys in
town. People will find out the
entertainment potential in their
own back yards and hopefully take
advantage. of
it,'~
Cox said:
Cox added that the school ex-
pects. the season
..
tkket
.
sales to
.
decrease~. but' these losses will be
balanced
'
by an increase in
_in-·
dividual ticket sales.
.
"In more difficult economic
times people are less inclined to put
.
out all of the money required.for
season tickets at one time," Cox
said. "They may:be more willing
to put up
.
the money for an in-
dividual ticket to a game."
The cost for two season tickets
to basketball home games through
the Red Fox Club is $200; and this
includes membership in the club,
choice seating, invitation to special
.
events, and tickets to the tourna-
ment at Madison Square Garden.
The price
for
two regular season
tickets varies, depending upon how
many home games the team has
during the season, but last year's
cost was $73~ which included
tickets to all home games and to the
tournament at· the
.Garden.

Doris said the college will have
to package its goods in such a way
that attracts people to buy in-
dividual tickets to the games to
keep the money flow stable.
"We are going to have to be
much more aggressive in terms of
marketing ourselves as a_product,"
he said. "The competition for
revenue will be much more severe
than it has been in past years."
The Red. Fox Club has given
Marist $450,000 in sponsorship
money spread out over a period of
twelve yei}rs.

Doris said financial support
given to the school by the Red Fox
Club will not change provided the
six members on the board affected
by the cutbacks remain in the area.
"Out
-of
20 members, six have
been affected. If they stay their in- •
volvement won't change, but if not

we have to find a way to replace
them," Doris said.
Cox said Mari st
is
not' concern-
ed with whether it will be able to
attract the same caliber of student-
athletes in terms of scholarship
money.
"We are giving out scholarships
in numbers which equal what is re-
quired by the NCAA and the NEC
to maintain membership," he said.
"The number will only decrease if
the NCAA decreases the required
amount of scholarships."
Doris said the cuts in budget will
not affect the area of scholarships
because Marist is at the minimum
end or'· the scholarship amount
.
available.
The normal operational budget
of the athletic department includes
funding already allocated to
scholarships and to the fees re-
quired to be a member in the
NCAA.
Doris said there are enough
revenues that come into the school
to offset the spending for various
things such as recruiting_ and
scholarship.
"Most of the revenues that do
come ·back to the school are
primarily from the NCAA," Doris
said.
The
NCAA 's
Academic
Enhancement Program brought
Marist $20,000 last year and
_may
increase to $30,000 next year.
Marist also receives a share in the
additional money brought in on the
Division I championship. Also, a
percentage of the scholarship
money is given back to Marist.
Doris said ne is unsure how· the
IBM cutbacks will affect Marist's
ability to recruit in future years.
"The amount of money to
recruit a prospect varies form sport
to sport," he said. "It is not that
expensive
when you look at the
amount of people we are (ultimate-
ly) giving our attention to."
On the average, the total amount
of money spent on recruiting in one
year for 20 sports is approximate-
ly $80,000, according to Doris .
"In terms of the total $80,000
represented, you are looking at_
about $1,000 per student-athlete
after we have narrowed down the
recruiting list," he said.
The total number of students in
the outreach for football is 200 pro-
spects to get an average of a 40 to
50 size class. Basketball outreach is
approximately 25 prospects to get
a class of four to five potential
athletes.
The main concern of the athletic
department, as well as the whole
school, is how it can attract publici-
ty and still help the area out of the
economic crisis.
Cox said in terms of the Tracey
Patterson boxing match, held at the
McCann Center on March 13, the
most
important
thing
was
publicity.
"We were on a national broacl-
cast from coast-to-coast. The fight
... see
BUDGET
page
11

1




















































































































































.
.
.
4

THE:CIRCLE, APRIL
22,1993,.i.:;;:"~.
•.
H_eads·up
..
s
0
<
•• :,
,S0¥llE.!Stfi1Cn:S:;"WiM
·•
chOOSeI
•·.
• ••
fiji(~a~tifjf
2iietr[i~~~111;~§ut~l.Z
.
•..•
·
·
..
••
••.
.•
••

..
••
~
>.
:-a
•.
b.le
·t·'·o'
···p.ursu·.e
0
t'h'1's
..
c:a,:reer•·w,:1.thou·
t.
·.
Long Isla.
n.·ct:and.adde.
d she;'is:·atso
b
JUSTIN SEREMET·.··"'··
.
·
·
·.
·
··
·
.· .. ·
,.,.
·,:
··
··
·.
,,
..
,._,
..
~
·•
·

·
.
~-r··,
.
-
· ••
:it.
It·.wouid b~ini°possible."
·.••.
trymg t<?_g_~t:~1J.ob
at.Hq~~t!a-.ll~
a


Staff Wnt~r./
·
Caires said he was offered jobs·
.RD,
which }Y_<>t1)d
pay f?r)i~~-~wo

·
·

·
··
...
•••

·
·
·
· ·
iri some of Boston's urban areas,
years of g~~~J~te stud1_es;:needed
se3g
.•
~.
l.
w.
~fiat.·.-~.-
.;:f~;_r~rg·a
...
:.!uap.
t~~,
bu(decided graduate school was
~efore she
5fill:
~e~;Jl
m~~~~}
1egree
••
.t.he,
b.etter way. to go:
m art theraIJf.,-.
,
".:.·.;....
.
.·.

..
:'"-.~·.t.(
.·•.
.

economy'
·,wit!(
Hmited

jobs
·
••
.
·

available
to
t.hem.:,.<
.
.
.
. ..
:

<C(Thejobs
were as)part ofCiin-
"I'm looki~ft6:_gb)o;i.forstra
Because _of
-ff!is
some are con-·
ton's. Urban Peace
_.Corp
plan
·
because ofits aft)l!erapy,program
.
sidering beginning·graduate school.

·'where
I'd be in charge of
.10-20
·,and.because
thejob'rnai'!<et is so
in the fall, hop~n1faHit1eextra time'

people. around 17-23 years-old bad," said Roge·I"r~•~pl!l.hoping
will help· the economy;:.
.
.···.
. . working in_·
for specialized pro-
that by the time:Jt'gefout, things
·'
_Greg
Caires, a senior,history ni'as grams iothe city. I'd lik_e
to do it, will be better."·

. ·
jorJromBeverly; Mass; and'a resi-
·
but the length of the
-program
.
··
.


dent:assistant.iri Slieahan
Hall;',wiU

would conflict with Georgetown;''

RogerS, who has a double major
be attending· Georgetown'-
tf
niver~



.,

of, Comnhin,ications'and:Fine
Arts,
.
sity
,next
fall to. stuc!Y:naiional
.Caires
said· to·-get. a: master!s
,said
th,~t art t~,er,apy is
.
.tiQwing

s_ecurity;_with:the:hopfof~o.meqay • degree he will be required to take. field.:· ~?.s~-peoP_le:~?n, t·k_no~·

. being the National ·sec'~rity Ao-
six semesters of classes and to fulfiU ~pat .1t IS, She said. Its work-
visor to the president..
·
.'

,..
·
this means'.spe,riding.tw()
years .is
.·.mg
~ 1th a?olescen,ts ~nd the elder~

But.right'now Caires saidJie is
a
'full-time
student, but said
..
he

ly with artwork. Its
~n~
of~hefew
hoping•to get ajob'as:a'i-esident
hope<l speiloing the next couple
,fie!d.s~~t
there:thatism h1gh·de-
d_irectoi: to
·help
··1fay
·for
)iis
years getting his name known in the mand•





graduate classes. •
D.C. area would make him more
.
Rog~rs al~o ~pplied
to
George
<CGeorgetown
really has the pro-
marketable when
.he
enters the Washington
_University
and
gram that
l
want," he said.
"f
caree~,world.
.°;;Springfield_Coll¢ge,
but would like
know that if I don't get thejob as
ca· 1·res add·e·d
.th··a·
t he felt
!o. go to Hofstra the most because
an RD, I can find something else,
t th
l
h l th
Id
and Georgetown also has a· great
prepared. to enter graduate school
.
1
IS eon
r
SC
00
at "".
0
u pay
program for offscampus housing."
af~r

goj~g through Marist's
~~~
~r
b:~!~etit/ears
10
return
In this job market Caires said he
un ergra
_yate
program.


felt it really helps
a
lot
.lo
get a
Rogers said she has found that
master's degree, which is what get-
''(Maris·t College) is a really a
i
lot of seniors are w11,iting
for job
.
ting a bachelor's degree was 20
fi_ne
school. It's helped me mature,

offers and people taking a year off"'
.
years ago.

make good decisions, and I've got-
•.
before perhaps going

to grad
"I've found that a lot of seniors
are taking more time to graduate,''
ten a lot of help from faculty,."
school.



said Caires.

''I thinkpeople are waiting to see
Circle
photo/Matt Martin
.
Ron Gagne. throws
'a
ball towards a game at

this past
eekend's Cham a nat Carnival.
.
s_aid Caires, who de~ided. to go to
graduate school while· studying
abroad at the University College of
.Galway
is Ireland. "I wouldn't be

Amy
.
Rogers, a_ senior • from
what's out there, and then go from
Sharon, Mass. and assistant RD in
.
there,'' she said. uEntering the real
Leo Hall, said she is stiil waiting to· .world is still a scary thought for a
hear from Hofstra Uni-11ersity
in
lot of people:"·
FACULTY---------------------------
... continued from page
1
an effort to get faculty into
classrooms."

VanderHeyd·en said he is con-
cerned with the students being well
served and keeping the
21: 1
student
to teacher ratio.
.
,
..
• •
...
.
.
"The faculty has to spend more
time with the students," he said.
"The faculty should probably be
less involved withsonie other (pro-
jects). "·Another "red,flag''.raised
by Toscano ·was
'the
inadequate ..
resources· given to academics.

before· dorms," h~ said.
"I
can't be
unhappy about that."
.
••
Tuition is the largest part of.
Marist's income and is a.determi-
nant· in .the decision making,
variderHeyden
_said.
. •

.
_

''You can~i exaggerate tuitjon or
.
.
you-lose students;',' vanderHeyd~n
said, "_The problem. with hiri_ng
.
faculty at Marist College,
.or
at_
any
college, is having the funds to do
so."
.
C.To
hire new fulHime faculty,

other priorities would have to.:.be
••
pushed back or students would
have to
.
pay more tuition.;
Bronx, N.Y., said he likes full-time said he's happy.with the decision n_ew full-fim~ faculty."
..
.
faculty better than adjunct faculty. to· build new dorms. .',
.. .


"For
the classes I take there
••
''!didn't like them (adjuncts),"
"I
think there's enough faculty
,seem
to.be enough (faculty);" she
Nelan said. "Ithink more full-time for what everyone's doing/fAlpert
said.
.

..

,.
:
:.

·.

.
..
. .••
·taculty,
would be much
.b~tter
.-
. said.'. ~-·.1
,think
mQre

dorms equal

'.
.'Kristine'.
Andr~asen, . senior
·.
they'r.e. more dedicated/'
:
. : ..
:


·.
moi-e.'students~·.Th·ey.djd
it with the. psychology and
·special-
education
.


Other students thin~_the
col!_ege's
:Aight,
pri_orities/
1 •.

,
·. .
.
_

;major;
said· hiring new ru11.:.time
priorities, have
.been
reflectiv~. of
••

Debbie Callaghan, -~ soJ)homor~
.'faculty,
~sII'F as
"C'.
impoi:tarit<. as
whatthe school and students need. business administration major; said•' building new;·doims::,/::.:'.
• .
,
,
·,

Shannon Alpert;.<a'. criminal the, build,ing
.
of
.new
dorms wru/
'•
';'.'lthinkit'.s
o_kay they built the
.•
justice majorfrnm Amenia,;N.L,
more importantt~an the hiring of dorms," she said..
•·
,
RETIRING
,FACULTY:'
·can:You-.Pti'ss
.This.:Exam?.':··
•..
-•
--,
.'
...
"We,'ve alivays

been a shoe-
string· operation," Toscano said.
••
"We don't have a big endowment.
Our money. comes

from student
tuition. We're very consdous·and
we're not an elaborate
•.
place. ''
vanderHeyden said.
.
.
.
.

.,
..

''You could.double tuition;-,out
Dept.:··
Course:
.Retiii~rne:nt
...
REAP
550.-:fake··
Cortfrof
of.·
Your=-;Retfrertterit
ldon'tthinkwewant
to'do.ihat/'
VanderHeyden said a balance
between tuition and priorities has·
to be met, e_specially
with existing
budget constraints,
. •
..
he said. ''We warit
to
make.sure
..
our college has the righi\uhio.n(q(.
•·
student~
_and
parents to bting thep
•.
to Marist College."
.
<

.
.,~ ·.,

Toscano said\the

issueds the:
distribution tjfexistirig ru·ndsf
'.'
"There·
.
:
are
,:choices,"
.
vanderHeyden said.
!'Over
the last
five years the colle"ge has built
Lowell Thomas and Dyson for
academic purposes:·(We)°
reforbish-
ed Qonnelly and riow new dorms."
"It goes to the tieait
of
a large
question -aliocatioii of r~mirc~."-
Toscano said: "Where.are. the
resources gCling?.
Should·. they
ifo
spent elsewh_ere?''.
·
..
,
..
•.
Vand~rHeyden said the emphasis
has been. on academics before other·

Students have mixed feelings
about the allocation of resources
arid school priorities:
'
.•
,
•.

priorities:
"We built academic buildings

Viricerit t-sel~n; a freshman from.
The
Powerhouse
Theater··.
at Vassar
and
New York
Stage and
Film
Company
J
urie I 8-Aug.13, !993
Where
·rr?dition
has
been passed
dchvrt
from
. ,
professional t:9 apprentice:,
since 1985. Fcirdetailed
information write:
Powerhouse Theater at
Vassar
College,
Box
225
Vassar College

124 Raymond Ave.
Poughkeepsie, NY 12601
914-437-5900
Connect
with the
·professionals.·
.
..

..
.
.,,
.
.
.
'
.
.
.
.
'
..
'
.

~
.
SPRING
FINAL'EXAMINATION
.
..
..
Question
1,


:rt
iU~jir:ad~·ti'~tW6.(~PW
ctill!,f
,~11
tl{i,/
..
-
a)
.
·.
Choos~ !nyJev¢(o'fmc01rie.,
·.
b).:
Receiy~i'l1111ip,su~~-~ithdra~al_s
atanytirne;
aitd
.,.·
C)
Create a11:estate'Ioi-
in/fanuly,

.

.
·.

.
without 111aki,1ig
irrevocable de<;isio~s%
:,
TO.
RECEIV_~_TIIE
CORRECT
ANSWER-'.
·

•.
• .
DO
NOT'·MISS
·ouR
FREE
SEMINAR:.
·.,
:_
·.
Date:
T,ime:.
Place:
_:
May
6;
1993

~:39
p~m.~

,
Courtyanl by
.M_arriott
4Cl8
South Road, Route 9
·Poughkeep~ie,
New York'

(914) 485-::-6336
PROGRAM
It Is Your Ret,irement,
It
Is
Yotfr Money

·REA~
0
WHAf
0
Yoti
0
SOW1
Call
Now for more
information:
1-800-786-1598















by
MATT MARTIN
Features Editor
On the shelf behind Marc Adin's
desk stands a fading black and
white photograph.
Sketched in the chromeis,a man
of 19, in fatigues, clutching an
M-16 rifle; the scene is Pleiku, Viet-
nam, May of 1969.
Adin wa:s,about to go on patrol
as his outpost was under mortar at-
tack from Charlie, when a buddy
yelled his name.
"I'
want to take the last picture
of you alive," said the man.
It is a moment that Adin will
never forget. . . .
.
"I will never be as scared as I
was at that moment,'' recallsAdin.
"I never thought I was coming
back."
Adin was one of the fortunate,
for 58,000 • Americans did not·
return from their trip into East
Asia.
Adjn
and Okada
THE CIRCLE,
FEATURE
APRIL 22,
1993
5
. . . The continuing conflict
the Army's forth infantry division fighting," said Okada. "I thought
turned his three bronze. stars and
shot them for it," Hamilton said.
in the hotly. contested central
my government knew what they
two purple hearts to· Kingston's
However, Hamilton stuck with
highlands of Vietnam.
were doing. Given that Nixon was
Daily Freeman newspaper, calling
his studies, eventually earning a
"It becomes part of your per-
President, that seems • ridiculous
the medals, "medals of shame."
PhD in economics, crediting it to
sonal history, this trauma that you now."
Ironically,
Okada
received
the maturity he found in Vietnam.
have experienced. It's all too pain-
"I always realized that this was
another medal, a Combat Infantry
That was his way of dealing with
ful," Adin said.
all for nothing, we all did. Just
Badge, in the mail not too long
the anger and anguish.
"It is a common thread that runs look at the vocabulary. You didn't
after.
"For many people, the war isn't
. through all vets -
words can't
get killed, you got wasted," Adin
Okada's wife was also protesting
over, the casualties are still coming
describe the. emotions," said Adin.
said.
"If
I had a choice, I would've
America's involvement in the war.
in," said Adin.
For every vet, the experience is gone to· Canada."
"Apparently, she laid down in
Casualties that America finds
different. Each carrying; his own
Returning from their tours of
the path of a B-52, and chained
mirrored in the wall.
burden of memories. ·Each with his
duty, each distanced themselves
herself to the gate of a Naval Sta-
The wall, a monument
to
the
own reaction.
from the war. Hamilton returned
tion," said Okada.
pain and the suffering of
58,000
"My son is named after my best
to school and Adin and Okada
Hamilton's
return
to the
men and women who were
friend
from Vietnam,
Greg
joined VVAW, Vietnam Veterans
academia that he left at 19, he
America's sacrifice in Vietnam to
Thomas,'' said Okada.
"I
was
Againstthe War and were among
enlisted in the Marines because he
a hopeless cause.
talking-with hiin when he was'hit
the many who. returned their .. wasn't happy in college, pitted him
In Washington, in the shape of
by a rocket or mortar round. My
medals;
in the midst of turmoil once again.
a gigantic V, the aura of the shrine
.. It is a painful legacy that still.· son is a living memorial to him, a
Okada gave his two bronze stars
"It bothered me that people were
overwhelms most visitors.
plagues America's consciousness man I intensely knew for five
(acts of courage) and Purple heart
waving the North Vietnamese flag.
"Even after five trips to the wall,
even today - almost twenty years months."

to a friend to take to the Capital
Protesters rallied around that flag,

later.
"The pain and anger have taken
in .Washington D.C., while Adin
when a year before I could have
...
see
VIETNAM
page
8
"The waste, the human treasure
years to work through," Okada
that we gave up for a goal which said.
no one understood and which no
In Vietnam, you didn't know a
one understands to this day," said
man for long, sometimes only a
Marc Adin, 45, an 11ssistant vice- . day's time.
president at Marist who also
"We lost 80 of 110. men during
teaches a class on the· Vietnam
one year. You only knew a guy by
experience.
his last name or a nickname," said
His sentiment is shared by many
Adin, who acquired the name
of his fellow vets on campus.
Voodoo-child from a popular Jimi
• "What a wasfe. What a com-
Hendrix song.
plete waste,'1 said Greg Hamilton,
Every mission was different for
43, an associate professor of, each vet.
economics. "58,000 Americans
"We swam in the daytime, and
died for what?"
ambushed charlie at night," said
It is a question that vets grapple
Hamilton, who was part of a
with everyday.
Marine combined action group that
"Most vets don't have a day pass
worked with the local militia near
without thinking about their ex-
perience in Vietnam," said Dan
Okada, 44, a professor of criminal
justice, who teaches the Vietnam
class with Adin.
"Vietnam was the singular defin-
ing moment in. my life, because it
permeates everything I do,'' said
Okada. He was 21 in Vietnam.
The visions that these vets re-
count are as vivid as they were 20
years ago, and still their questions
lie unanswered.
"Not all the movies combined
can give you an accurate account
of what Vietnam was like, a million
things going on at once, tracer
bullets coming at you in the night,
but none betray the butchery that ·
occurred,'' said Adin.
"We often didn't know what we
were doing, where we were going,
or what we would find when we get
there " said Okada, a member of
the Army's First cavalry division.
Ironically, the squad leader of
Custer's fabled unit.
"Vietnam was like a fatal auto
acciderit everyday,'' Adin said.
"You know it's coming, you just
don't know in what way."
"People, men, friends, were
turned into pieces no bigger than
a ouart." said Adin, who served in
Hamilton
Hi Phong Pass, 30 miles North of
Da Nang.
"They said that Charlie {the
North Vietnamese) owned the
night, well, we were contesting it
with them,"
Hamilton
said.
"Three months of snoopin' and
poopin' protecting those rice pat-
ties."
For Adin and Okada, their time
wus spent hacking through the
dense jungle that makes up the ter-
rain of most of Vietnam.
Both received Purple Hearts for
wounds in action.
.
For Adin, that meant a couple
hundred splinters frpm a fragmen-
tary grenade lodged in his back.
They both realized that the war
was fighting against them.
"I believed that the war was un-
winnable, given the way we were
Student remembers POW /MIA
by
MATT "-:'!ARTIN
Features
Editor
Shannon Roper has worn a silver
bracelet on her right wrist for
almost half her lifetime. •
No, it's not from her boyfriend
or her parents, it's a POW
/MIA
bracelet.
The plain silver band has graced
Roper's arm for seven years. •
A small inscription reads: SSgt.
Edward J. Bishop, Jr. 4/29/70.
"My mother has a friend who
works at a Veterans's Hospital,''
said Roper,
a junior
from
Southington, Conn. "She]ust ask-
ed me if I wanted one one day."
• "I said yes because my father
was a vet and I didn't want them
to be forgotten,'' Roper said.
Roper's father, an Air Force
mechanic, stopped eating Chinese
food until two years ago because of
the things he witnessed in Vietnam.
"He just doesn't talk about it,''
said Roper. "I always think it
could have been him on my wrist."
Bishop, an Army Staff Sargent
from Hartford, Conn., was listed
as Missing In Action two years
before Roper was even born.
The bracelet, to be worn until the
subject is found or if information
is discovered about their death is
obtained, only leaves Roper's wrist
for a shower.
"It isn't much, but it means
something to me and to his fami-
ly,'' said Roper.
• On a high school band trip her
junior year, Roper made a trip to
the wall.
"The black monument .over-
whelms you," said Roper. "You
see family members and friends
sometimes talking to the wall as if
the person was behind the name,
caressing the name as if it was the
person."
"It's so quiet and personal. It's
amazing that so many people can
have so much respect," Roper
said."lt made wearing this bracelet
so much more significant."
Roper used the computers at the
site to pin-point Bishop's name.
She took an etching of his name
from the wall.
"People ask rrie if he is a
boyfriend, relative, friend, or from
my town, or ask me if I can get
them a bracelet,'' Roper said.
"It's good that they ask, because
it creates awareness. It makes them
curious and it makes them think
about the war," said Roper.
At
Let's Dance her freshman
year, Roper was pulled aside by the
bouncer to talk about his bracelet.
"He was surprised to see so-
meone my age wearing one,'' said
Roper. "It's only the memory that
counts."


















6
THE 'CIRCLE,
E·Dl'TC>RlAL.·
APRIL22,1993
THE
CIRCLE
S.J, Richard, editor
Ted Holmlund,
sports editol '
Matt Martin, photography edifor •
Dominick Fontana,
senior editor
Joanne Alfarone, business manager
Erik ~anson, distribution manager
Anastasia B; Custer, senior editor
Jason Capellaro,
busfness manager
Andrew Holmlund,
editorial page editor
Dana Buonlcontl,
columns editor
Jennifer Ponzlnt;
ad~ertising
manager
••
Kirell A, Lakhman, associate editor
Amy Crosby, senior editor
Dennis Glldea,/acully
adviser
It's tradition.
It's tomorrow.
It's River Day.
It's restricted.
Tradition
~
~a..vftt:rr!
- - . .
~-~.43/!~~I
.
'c';,rullf~lt'f~
L . -~
/). t.o1'
Of
f'E"ctL£,
/VIO
I\
w-r
oHvfl.
~
W~'fS(JJIOtS
f
: Some say thi~ _space has been-too critical of the College this year. So be it. Let's con-
tmue that trad1t10n.
BOring
While River_
Day is hardly a pressing topic, it does lend itself to controversy.
Some say River Day makes Marist College look hypocritical.
H<?w
~an a college '_Vith
an alco~ol policy stricter than that of the Betty Ford Clinic
Political discussions have started to annoy,
even moderated a mock presidential d~bate.
provide its students with opportumty and the substances which they crusade against?
frustrate and aggravate this cohimnist. 1 At the time, politics seemed like everyone's
they ask.
'
know that more discussion of current events
"cause celebre;''
T~ere is n?_real answe_r
of c_ourse. There's lots of justification, but no answer. That
and political issues is supposed to be
Now, it seems like "business as usual."
too 1s a trad1t1on at Manst. River Day is restricted to those 21 and older. It's the law
stimulating.

Maybe· the media plays a large role in·
after all.

'
It does sustain you for a-.vhile, but those
::creat~ng excit:ment" and enhancing the
. While the seni?rs begi!1 to celebrate their final days of college, some of their friends
late night rap sessions can really run you
emot10nal excitement" of an event like an
will be left standmg outside the fence to stare forlornly at their friends all because they
down and just make you think you do not
election.
were born too late.

want to argue or discuss politics anymore.
The "power of the people" was a com-
ls this fair? The Colle¥e will enforce its strict alcohol policy this Friday down near
My attitude right now is just give ·me a beer
monl~ heard phrase these past months, yet
the_ Hoop Lot. Meanw_h!le,
.freshmen will be sitting in thei.r rooms _ rooms in dry
and my diploma, and I
wiH
be on my way Washmgton seems like it is conducting
residence halls -
fracturmg these very policies with little worry of getting caught. Why
to graduation.
_
. • ·business as usual.
get tough for o~e day? _
.
. .
_ . .
••
.
·-.• .
..
<
Fighti~g ~bout politics used to be one,of.
_ .
Health care
It's as ridic.
ul,ou_
s as thinking that bending the rules ·for one day· 1_·s
_g~ing·
to' ~~ii~ho'w·
.. , : : -• 'riiyfavorite pastimes. That rush of adrei:iaifo .H.ll
• ... ·d· •• •• .. l .. • - - .. •• ·• ' • -.
d
M
bl
-
I
ary
IS
con uctmg
C
ose negotiations on
amage_ , anst s 1mpecca e re~ord and standing as a predominantly dry campus. Sure,
that ru~s through your body as you attempt
health care reform. It would be a nice gesture
maybe 1t s not 100 percent logical. So what?
to convmce someone you have an inside line
on her part if the public were informed in
ac~~~i=~ts should be allowed to associate with their friends at all college-sanctioned
on the real heart of the matter used to make
detail _on·
those negotiations. •
After all, Bill
me think I was stimulating-thought about
promised the public would be informed of
The amo~t of _alcohol
consume~ by students could be controlled, just as the the students
issues.
all information -'- particularly oh health care
who can drmk 1t legally can be identified. .

. .. Now boredom and frustration have set in; • reform.



Just ask the p~ople who run the bars and clubs in the area that allow patrons under
leaving me with the unpleasant taste of .
<
.
.
•. •• •• •.· .•
21 how they do 1t.
. .
politics. •

-<•·
.ThelatestNe~
York Times article is not
~ome places use
a
rubber stamp, others use bracelets· to signify who can arid who can't
...
. .· . ._
.
. ·-...
_..
• •·
so encouraging about the cost of universal
drmk. Sure, there would be s_ome
who could get by this system. Big deal·; security 'will'
'fhe job factor·<

...
· ._
.... •
••
' •
-;<he_althcare,-Some of the proposals.that could
be there to keep the peace.
· ·
:Back_
in November, t~7whole caillpus
jas
_
be implemented would cause people to pay
Think of the alternatives.
ahve with vigorous poht1caldebate and con- , • more for health care.

Students shu~ out ofthis. supef"'.ised event will have their own parties whid1
\\'ill
pro.:-
• cem about the course of the country. Now,
• _
bably go ~nn<;>ticed.
because of River Day. Why_ they could probably even have a live
seniors_ like myself are just plain worried
The problem with the proposed "Value.
band playmg m th~ to_wnhouses to entertain a group of nonsMarist students and they
abou~ fincling jobs.


Added Tax" or VAT is it places the tax
would get away with 1t. · .
.
·.
_
... ·•
·. ·.
..
. . _·
.
Finding the right job that could utilize the burden on the poor and middle class. "Mid-
-
If you let all students participate, the incidences of these other'parties could be diminish~
$60,000 worth of education we have receiv- - die income families could pay more than
ed. Don't forget the ecomonic factor either.
·.
· -
ed these last four years would be rewarding $1,000 a year in additional taxes with a VAT
• There is the possiblity to make money here. Think about it.Isn't that another Marist
and alleviate some of my job anxiety.
as low as 4 percent, even with exclusions for
tradition? ·
-
_
·

Most students
r
know are not interested • food, shelter and medical care," according
in "getting rich" or "striking a gold mine."
to the New -York Times.
.
.
At this point, theyjustwant to find a job
. in. their field· of expertise.
We. do need health care reform, but we do.
not need inore taxes;
' Life changes you
Perhaps all college students go through
changes in their political development.-They
become less idealistic about politics and more
realistic as they grow intellectually and emo-
tionally with age.
. Suddenly the reality of finding a job has
. occupied the minds of today's youth. This
has left political issues to simmer on-the back
burners of the "knowledge stoves" in our
minds.

.
This may not necessarily be a bad thing.
Those issues, those potent political agendas
we on_ce
thought we should and could fulfill
and affect become less important. Raising
families, paying taxes, buying homes· and
making car payments become daily realities
that require our immediate and more pas-
sionate attention.
As we age, we become more confident in
the beliefs we hold to be true. We rely less
on others to validate and approve of those
beliefs and tell us they are correct. Age has
a way of tempering idealistic young minds.
Those late night rap sessions about politics
may continue and your passion for beliefs
never totally leaves you but it seems for now
the idealism of today's youth can take a
break.
Business as usual
Election '92 saw its share of student ac-
tivism this past year. My housemate and I
Do not expect'employers to take on more
-
..
of the financial strain they already would pay
more for universal care.
-
Small and medium-sized businesses will
n?t be able to survive if they are swapped
with taxes on top of more taxes for health
care.
--
Where is it all going?
_
Tax, tax, tax - I have heard enough about
taxes.
What the hell is the government doing with
the money they raise now? How about a new
word from the democrats, how about ''cut."
Keep
cutting the reform package or cut ex-
cesses internal government spending until
health care is more affordable to the poor
and middle class without broad expansive
new taxes that punish those classes in socie-
ty who already bare the majority of the tax
burden.
I just hope those politicians in Washington
do "change" because as a spectator wat-
ching these clowns go at one another ~d at-
tempt to save money in the political arena
is just plain frustrating ..
Aaron Ward is the political columnist for
The Circle.















THE CIRCLE,
VIEWPOINT
APRIL22,
1993
7
Tolerance . at Marist?
Volunteers are needed
Editor:
of one's self, especially when you
Graduation is getti!lg closer and . happen to· be different. Yes, you
closer, and Iain starting to ponder can conform, but the consequences•
about iµy !'~tand my future. How are frightening. I am a living pro-
How can you teach students to
learn about different peoples on the
• the future will be, I cannot know, of and I am sure there are more
but I know my past. I think about
living proofs' like me at Marist.
.
my pas( 'Y(ith joy and tears.
• globe while a lot of them cannot
even deal with the facts that there
are different kinds of people in the
United States, in Poughkeepsie, or
even at Marist?
I have changed. Ihave achieved.
I have· improved myself. However,
what has compelled me to write this
letter is this guilt I have carried for
a while..

The story began ~lien I first_ar-
rived at'Marist four years ago· from
Hong Kong, some 8,000 miles
away;: where
r
was born and rais-
ed. Jt:was hard for me to deal with
everyday events • with a secoriq
language, but _I managed to handle
it quite well.
_'
It was hard for me to understand
the American culture,· but I gave
myself time to learn it.·Iknow that
the past is_ .the past and is not
changeable, but I just cannot help
to think that I could have done
more.
I could have done more than one
major. I could have made more.
friends ..
I could have confronted
• people who made slurs to my face.
I confront them now, but I feel
guilty I had let some of them go:
At Marist College, it is very im
0
portant to have a very strong sense
Some of them have spoken out,
some have not.
It is hard to have
to live through all the lies· and fear.
It is hard to Jive with intolerance.
• Bi-. Joe is ~!so quoted in the ar-
ticle as saying, "Human nature
does not like. anything different,
whether you are. gay or black." I
am terrified to be told that I do not
have a human nature. Is it really in-
The other day', I picked up a
copy of The Circle (April 8, 1993),
there was that article on page 6, titl-
ed "Some faculty: diversity can
reduce intolerance". After reading
the article, I thought, "Where has
Fr. Luke McCann been for the past
decade?"
.. humane of me not to dislike
anyone?·
• · He is quoted in the -article say-
ing,
"l
don't think there is a
(tolerance)
problem
here (at
Marist).
tt
It is like hearing someone
saying to me that my past four
years here was a deja vu. I had
always thought of Fr~ Luke as an
intelligent man, :how coine this •
statement? I am quite perplexed.
Another thing I°read
in
the arti-
cle ..yas equally ironic. In the arti-
cle, Br. J.oseph,
L.R. Belanger sug-
gests pushing forth global studies
as a method to reduce intolerance.
·1 like blacks, whites, hispanics,
Asians, gays, straights, bisexuals,
men, women, old or young people,
Catholics, Muslims, Buddhists, all
races, religious backgrounds, age
groups and sexual orientations.
• I like people who are what they
. are without hurting or harming
others. There is only one category
that I dislike, or even hate, and it
is people who hurt others. Bigots
and rapists fall into· this category.
Tell me, am I inhumane to love
people, or is it inhumane of those
who find excuses to hate?
Reggie
Ho,
senior
H·ere's the pitch: from Alzy
Back from the dead and scared
-
this time I am really scared.
i
alway~ enjoy reading the letters to
the editor each week because they
reflect what is really going on in the
feeble minds of the general public.
However, lately an ugly trend
has developed. • •
I have been attacked for my tales
ofdegradation. The girlwho was
,
outraged at my crew article came
as• nq surprise.
The.thing that shocked me was
that• right· above her long-winded·
babbling of nonsense was a defense
of the political columnist, whose
phone lines have been under siege.
Also there was an open challenge
to the music columnist by someone
who was "shocked, surprised, and
angered" over an article that he
had written.
A
week ·later, a letter from the
entire staff of the advancement of-
fice , in Adrian Hall is launched
against The Circle's recent lam-
pocming of the World Trade Center
bombing.

The staff went on to offer the ex-
ample of a mock-athlete (and there
are plenty of them here).reported
by the Poughkeepsie Journal with
the name "Sloof Lirpa" (April
Fools backward) as their idea of
what funny is.
I have to admit, those guys down
at the Journal know how to
dispense their own brand of gar-
bage from time to time. Fortunate-
ly; this is not one of those times.
People who go through the
media with a fineatoothed comb in
• dire search of anything they believe
to be obscene are a waste of space.
Everyone 'Y.~o
writes for. The Cir-
Barrett_
Mr.
contribute to God's immanent
wrath."

I thought the guys in the FBI cut
all the communication lines from
. the compound in Waco, Texas. I
guess I was wrong.
• I have a new message for the
world of Marist. If you want hard-
core side-splitting humor, then
. never read what occupies this space
again.

i:
>
:
r·_.
Read the letters to the editor. See
what ticks inside the minds of those
who walk among you to class and
laugh like crazy. People still do
laugh out loud to reruns of
"Mama's Family."
Archie Bunker is nestled at the
top of Champagnat, clutching a
copy of The Circle and screaming
his cries of victory. He is also not
=======
wearing any pants.
cle has the· same nght to an opinion
Please Joe, teach them your in-
and the expressing of that opinion
finite wisdom: "and if you think
that anyone else does.
that being serious and smart gets
Can life be so shallow and void
you where you should be, you must
of thought that we take it upon
be not only joking, but way too
ourselves to make our names by at-
heavy for me .•. " Mr. Jackson, my
tacking other people's ideas?
friends.
Another letter discussing how
Dave Barrett, The Circle's
· Clinton
has disregarded
his
humor columnist, drinks beer in
Catholic faith with his. views on
the shower and needs eye black in
abortion appeared
with the line,
order to hit Alzy's hanging curve
"This sin of omission will surely
on SU!lnY
days.
River Festival set for tomorrow
Editor:
As a result of hours of planning
between senior·class representatives
. and college administrators, we pro-
udly announce the 6th Annual
River Festival on Fri. April 23,
1993,

from 1-5 p.m. at the
Gartland Commons basketball
courts.
• The festival will include basket-
ball, Awesome Audio DJ for dan~
cing and a barb~cue at which both
non-alcoholic
and alcoholic
beverages will be served.
The students and staff who have
made the arrangements for this day
want it to be a safe and responsi-
ble senior event. Given the spirit of
the occasion, we • ask all par-
ticipants to ·observe the "Good
Neighbor" policy and not be noisy
or disruptive to those living near
them.
The event is open only to current
Marist students 21 ·and older, as
well as faculty and staff (no others
will be admitted.) All faculty and
staff are welcome and are urged to
attend since this is one of the last
opportunities to meet seniors at a
social event.
For more details and ticket infor-
mation, please feel free to contact
the Office of College Activities at
ext. 3279 or the Office of Student
Affairs at-ext. 3515.
The Class of 1993 Administration
Andrea Preziotti
Gerard A. Cox
Rob Matthews
Marc. A. vanderHeyden
Robert Melillo
Joseph F. Leary
Jodie Schaeffer
Jodi Hyland
Don't miss your last chance!
April 29 is The Circle's final issue of the year.
The deadline for letters to the editor is Monday,
April 26 at 10 a.m. Don't miss your last chance
to get in the last word.
for next year
April
18-25, is
Nat(onal
Volunteer Week, a week set aside
to honor the millions of Americans
who volunteer their time where and
when it is needed ..
Americans have a long and pro~
ud tradition of volunteering. From
colonial times, Americans have
worked shoulder-to-shoulder,
building roads, schools and each
other's homes.
.
Today, .volunteerism is still alive
and well across the land. Some re-
cent surveys indicate that at times,
half our 'American adult popula-
tion
does
some
kind
of
volunteering.
Marist College shares in this pro-
ud tradition. -
In past years, we have generously
responded to many appeals. Some
times it is money, other times it is
blood, and still other times, it ·is
gifts. Everyone can recall the
• generous contributions for the
Marist Christmas Giving Tree.
Once again, a call comes for
help. It is a special request, not for
money, but for time -
time to be
spent helping non-profit organiza-
tions in our area.
The economic problems of the
present time are impacting the
agencies. They have experienced
enormous budgetary cuts that_ re-
quire more volunteer hours if they
are to succeed in their various
missions.
More than 200 agencies in the
Hudson Valley need help.
Please look over the list of things
that need to be done and the places
that need such help, and see
if
you
can lend a hand, give some time,
and make a difference.
Your contributions of time will
help the agency, bring credit to the
c:_ollege
and enrich your life.
You know your schedule for
next Fall. Make some time to
volunteer. Sign up now and visit
the agency so you can get familiar
with how you will be able to help.
Your time will really make a
difference.
Agencies such as the Astor
Home for Children, the Bardavon
Opera House, the Dutchess Coun-
ty ~rts Council, Dutchess County
Tourism, and the Voluntary Action
Center, which needs clerical and
administrative help, are among
many in the area looking for help.
On Sunday, April 25, a special
television program will be aired at
6 p.m. on WTZA; dedicated to
volunteerism in the Hudson Valley.
You could get an idea of what you
might be able to do from this
program.
Here are a few of the needs in the
community:
-
Arts and Culture: fund-
raising, public relations, visitor in-
formation, tours.
- Education: literacy programs,
teachers' aides, translators, com-
puter assistance, libraries.
-
Friendship and Guidance: Big
Brothers/Big Sisters, Scouting,
mentor programs.
-
Office support: mass mail-
ings, telephone work, data entry,
filing, typing, planning.
-
Social Services: community
centers, day-care centers, Meals on
Wheels, emergency help.
There are two places where you
can explore the possibility of
volunteering:
Br.
Michael
Williams,
Voluntary
Action
Center, Campus Ministry or 12
Vassar St., Byrne Residence,
Poughkeepsie, N .Y. 12601 Ext.
2275 452-5600.
Gus Nolan is the assistant pro-
fessor of communications at Marist
College.
Chess Club news
Editor:
. The Marist College Chess Club
swept a triangular intercollegiate
chess match on Sat. April 17, 1993.
The Vassar College Chess Club
finished in second place, followed
by Kings College at Briarcliff
Manor.
Each team consists of five
players. Marist defeated Vassar in
the opening round by a score of
. 3-2. John Pacut, Paul Fedor, arid
Mike Tjoa scored wins for Marist.
Vassar then defeated Kings Col-
lege in the second round by a score
of 5-0. Marist also defeated Kings
College. Marist winners over Kings
College were Pacut, Fedor, and
Tjoa. Mike Murray and Ron
Gagne both earned draws.
This intercollegiate event ended
the Marist Chess Club's 1992-93
season on a positive note. Last Fall,
Marist defeated West Point but lost
to Vassar.
We look forward to a strong
season in 1993-94.
Craig Fisher
Faculty Advisor for the Chess Club
New Townhouses
Editor:
The largest construction project
in the history of MaristCollege has
begun this Spring with the building
of the new townhouses.
Eighteen two-story townhouses
will occupy seven buildings, which
will be located on the land behind
Benoit House and to the right of
Gregory House.
The final result will be more on-
campus housing for 144 students.
Each townhouse will contain
four bedrooms, two full baths, and
a large dining and living room area.
In addition, the kitchen will con-
tain ample counter and cabinet
space, along with a conventional
and microwave oven.
• A central heating system will
feature individual heating control
units for each room. There will also
be a one-zone
central
air-
conditioning system.
Instead of washers and dryers in
the kitchen area, laundry facilities
will be constructed in a central
location.
The exterior facade will echo the
colors of the Dyson and Lowell
Thomas Centers. The materials will
feature red, brick bases with wood
siding on top and gray metal roofs.
The project is scheduled to be
completed by September, 1993, in
time for returning students to move
in for the Fall semester.
This 36,000 square-foot project
will cost around $2. 7 million
dollars.
Nella Licari, junior
How to reach us:
• Mondays: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
• E-Mail: LT 211, HZAL
• Phone Mail: X2429

















































I
.,
•.
8
New clirtiCliluni;
Students
get more
··clotit
-
M~fiSt,tO h~IP<diSl)laced
..
aluriJ.11i





ing to provide
as
much support and.
"Student
tuition
.
would
.
be

by.DENISE-·D'ANDREA
·create
as many programs as possi-· significantly higher without the in-·
and DARA HECHT
ble for displaced alum11J.-

coming money," Whitesell said .
·
Staff Writers
Whitesell stresses that the alum-
·~ In '.addition to aI.umni
.
.layoffs,
bi.CLAUDINE ·M."
MARTINI
-··
ni have always been an:extremely Marist has also experienced the loss
..
·
..
:
.
...
.,'."
.
,,
Staff
Writer
;
,,·
Marist College faces one ofits
supportive and affiliative group,
·o(cash ·and
equipment· gifts
from
-------------------'----..;.··-·
_,.__
__
biggest financial challenges this
and although the goals this year of

IBM: In January, 1993, the com-
The Marist College Division of Commun,it:ation Arts fs looking for
year as anmial fund contributions
returning past favors will • be
.•
puter
·giant
cut its.
,5
Jo)
mat!=h for
ways to reo·rganize and redefine its curriculum for the future.
.
~
decrease: Marist alumni have con,
challenging, she anticipates they
equipment to 3 to· l, and ,its cash
The changes being discussed might eliminate the current ·track-_based

sistently been·supportive with their
will nevertheless be met.
gifts from 2 to 1 haye dropped to
..
currjculum and offer a more general approach to to areas of communicas

donations, yet job and subsequent
.
"I think this situation is making
.
1 to I:.
.
,
...
_.
.,
tion study.
..

.
financial instabilities have created • us more creative and is forcing·us
These gifts have.made Marist a·

Taking into considerationth_at commuri.icatioii;.rts is the largest pro_>;-unwelcomed change.
.

-
·to
work harder," said Whitesell. more advanced campus iri. terms.
grams at Marist, with close fo 750 students, any chaneiricurred.would
'Approximately 10 percent

of
•·."We'll.just
have· to look at· new·
.
of
information tedinology; and
undoubtedly effect many students, say some administrators.


Marist alumni wor_ked
for IBM.~d
ways of' doit:ig the things we_·do; will significantly impac.t(utu~e pro-
Currently, subcommittees of the communication ai:ts faculty,
ate
Jook-
their loss of employmenf due to .. perhaps even adjusting our goals."
gress; say. sources clos.e to. the
ing for ideas within three broad categories: general communication; mass
IBM downsizing_,
has 'affected·,·th_e
··:

.
W~i!esall a~ded it is· importan~ subject..
_.
_

·
' , •

_,.
,
communication and org·ani_za,tional
communjcation.
_
-
::
. -·
.••..
,
Marist community as
.a
_whoJe
..

._,., to ericouragestudents to vohinteer·
.IBM's
cutbacks have not only.
According to Dr. Edward Springer, who wafchairman of'the com-·_
Theresa Whitesell; assistan(vice_~

·for
the"phone-a
0
thons that
·raise
af(ec_ted,the
Marist ~oriuimnity
_but
mittee when it began last Fall, the'coming changessho.uld not·be'a sur-·· president and director ofdev'elow

money for the arinua!Marist Fund
also local businesses_ throughout
prise for anyone. «If the faculty are doing their job, the·curriculumshb\Ild
..
ment at Marist saicish~, along'_wi~}:l
, which-h'elps to bridge the gap bet~·, the mid-Hudson Valley.

constantly be reyiewed.''
.
.
. ,,
.
''
.


.
_
..
the Office of Career Developine'1t ween tuition reven·ue··
and· actual
,
.
Dr. Sarah S. King;
_chairwoman
of the Division of Corrimtiri.icaiion

and Field Experience, has been try~.
-operating
expenses at Marist.
and the Arts, argues the possibie curriculum chang<i
..yiH
offer
'faculty,


;~o~~~m~s
students, a rene~ed sense ofpride an~)dentityab~ut
th~,
The bea.t;.
of a differ.ent drum·.:
"We need to assess what we have,". said King.
"I
was hired.to do this."
.


·'






Sprfager, however, exP,ressed
concernabout making possible changes:·.
"There's always-some anxiety about what we should change," he said.
"The curricu_lum
should reflect not only student interest, but what the
students should have."
Up to this point, st'udents had no formal role in the planning process,

Springer maintains.
::

"Students are a prime concern," he said, although questioning the
importance of the_ir
role at this point. ''I'm not stire if we are far enough
along in the process to have st1,1dent
input," jr1dicating that a an ap-
propriate time may arise'wheri
a
firial draft has been offered.

Although King did not disclose any specific plans for student involve-
ment at this time, she did indicate that student input may be considered
in the future.
And as specifics for the new curriculum are yet undecided, some ad
0 '._
ministrators are· stressing that the changes would be more generalized'.
"I
personally would like to see the opportunity for more generalized
study," said Springer.
I
think an introduction to communications course·
would be beneficial for all students,-whether they are specialized or not."
King, however, focused more on the importance of the changes
themselves, rather than delve into specifics.
"You must remember that the field of study is not going to stay the

same. We need a curriculum that is up-to-date, in tune and on the cut-
ting edge," King said .
.
.
.
continued
frnm
'page
1
curs.
_,.
_
_
"You're not going to ask me for more money, are you?" joked Cuomo.
·,
"There isn't a state in the United States of America that thinks more
about private education than we do. However, we give priority to the
The_ Scott Forbes, the drummer for Drywall, takes to the beat at the Battle of the Bands

competion.
State Universities because it is our system," Cuomo said.
.
"This is the wrong time to cut aid," said assemblywoman Eileen_
Hickey, a Marist Alumnus. "I'm trying to raise the consciousness of the
other legislators to this problem."
..
VIETNAM---------
Cuomo, who attended a private school himself, still manages to
: ..
continued from page 5
acknowledge
a
commitment. to private ~du cation.
.
.
.
·_ •.
"Our tuition assistance is so rich, that if you add the next three states
I still feel the pain;'' admits Okada.
together, including California, they're-not as high," he said.
.
. •
"I just stand there a~d try fo
Although most Marist students were shut out from meeting the gover-. understand."

nor, they still found ,vays to yoice their opinions,·
,-

"I
went through all these years
One student went as far to walk right into the governor
to
get his pie-
after Vietnam, th.inking that those
ture, while two others stepped out of the lm;ich line'. to meet Cuomo.,-
:
Ileft there were still alive. It was •
"I
told him (Cuomo) that
I
didn't want to get into politics,'' said.Jim
'
staggering, because this is how
I
Macaluso, a sophomore from Clifton, NJ.
.
.
_
..
_
...
_
.
found out that they didn't make
"Jim has too big, ofa mouth to get into politics,'' said Chris Som-

it,'' said Arlin.
mella, a sophomore buddy from Ramsey, NJ.

. •
"Friends that never came back;
''That•s·okav.'' reolied Cuomo. "So do
I.".
names of people I· served with.

These are actual· people who· suf-
NUTRITIONIST
VISITS
MARIST·
DINING
HALL
On Wednesday,
·April
28, Lisa Lauder M.S.R.D;, will be
availabl~ in the dining half to meet with stu_dents and staff.
Lisa,
a
Seiler Manager, has been working as a Registered
Dietitian for the last
1 O
years in the health care field. She will
..
now be: a resource to the Seiler Managers as well as the
.Marist
community. Lisa will be in the dining hall atlunch time.
CONGRATULATIONS CLASS OF93'
SERVING DI~R
FROM 2:00 pm
ON MAY22&23rd
CALL NOW FOR RESERVATIONS
!!
Specializing in:
CAJUN & CREOLE CTJSINE,
SI'EAKS & SEAFOOD
Major<X'cdit
cardsacccptcd
fered and died.They'll never age,
they'll always be 19,'' Adin said:-
"lt's. so personal. Everyone's
.
name is there. I've cried everytime,
and I'm incensed when people are
smiling and laughing,"
.
said
Okada.
"I
just don't want this do
be another stop on the gray line
-
tour."
85-Main St., Poughkeepsie • 485-2294
The silerice is thick and the errio-
tion is high as sons, daughters,

wives visit their.loved ones, often··
bringing mementoes to the base of
the gigantic monolith.
Wedding rings; messages, letters,
photos, clothing,.is alldeposited
as
if the dead were there to receive it ..
·
Okada has left roses and his CIB
badge in memory of his lost friend.
"You
see your reflection and
you become part of the wall,'' said
Adin. "The psychological impact
is enormous when you
·
see lhe

names as part of your reflection."
Adin himself is part of the wall.
..
,
.
..
"Looking atthe wall, I found a
man with my name, it was like
looking at. my
..
own tomb. That
name could have easily have been
me,'' Arlin sai<;l.
"This is an
..
eve~t that literally·
tore
·this
society apart,"
said
Hainilt~11. "You just don't dose
_
the book on it. After all, the south
still fights the Civil War."

KIRK ~--LOUGHRAN
-

Attorneys
at
Law
Criminal Law
CMILaw
Vehicle and Traffic
90 Market Street
Poughkeepsie
914-471-1818
Available 24 Hours




























































~---
···•··••·······.-
••

:.-:----------------------------------~----------------------------------
-_-_
-.:-:;:"_·-;::Ht':-·l~S-\:}):_:-~t:rs1!1/.;~t~~~:;-•-··•''.-;\~fc':):\'.)•••-:·:·•-:::;_::,:•·-···:·:


··,
Most student:S forget the H~dson River Psychiatric
..
Center'fs Marist's
••
neighbo:r;'bufmany. wer~ remfoded
-~it
_Thursday,:
A,pri18,
'when.a 'pa-
•.
tientlabeled "<?~tremely
dangerouf' escaP,ed an~ was. possibly lurking
,
in the area:.
'

.

-'
·'
·

·::.
,.-_




·_.·
.
_·_
..
,
.:.
:
-··.
George (owy, a Hudson River Psychiairic'-ceiiter-patient/who
,was

found i~siuieafter stabbing his father 18 times, escaped and was at'Iarge,
for a; wee~)efore 'surrendering in New Ycii-1(
City on. ApriL is:
. ;,,
:
r.
Maristsecurity said the situadon did, not pose .any r.eal threatto students

and ~~~ttJ:tey
w.erewell prep·ar~dti{keep i(under contr<>_l.
~very secµrhy,
officer was given Lowy's description and told to keep an. eye· open for him._
.
CCObvfously;
ailytime'you havfsonieone·with that kind of.backgl'.burid
on the loose; you' get'coricerned: However, \ve felt that he'd try an·cige(
as far away as possH,Ie:.
But'·we w·ere still.as prepared as
·we
could be/',.
said Joe Leary, director"of Safety 3:nd·Secuiity..

'
:
:
~
Leary addedthatthese incidents happen about three times a year, but
usually the escapee -is not a dangei;ous
individual.
.
.



·.
-
"I've
_dealt
with people like this ~efore afid it's never easy. Law en-
forcement if9.0 percent boredoin and)0 perceritterror. Situations like
thisniakeione think abcitit the latter,'' said Leary, who has held-his posi~
.ti<>n;atMaris(for,5yeari
a~d_had_a-2_6::ye~rcai-eer
as.a New
York
sta.te

police: of.fic_er.:
0'._.
-,
. •
- .
.:~._.
:

,: ;::>_·
••. . .. ,
.
.

_
.

.
·
Students saidthey heard about Lowy's escape from a.variety of sources,
and "according tcrChris Gambardella, 20-year.:old junidr from Warwick,
R.II; tlie·mairi.source was the usual ''Marist:"nimor mill."
.
: ·
••
..
''.At'°'first;,j
heard that he.killed his paients.Jthought he statibed them._
to· death: fhe~fthe real story on the news whenlgotba_ck;'' ~aid Br:uce

Bei-iert~kit'a-'20syear-()ld
sophomore_ fro~ ~c1nchestei:
,,"conn:
..
•.•
._
••
·_-
.•
Jarie:Nichols;.a 20-year•old sophomon:
Jroni
B~ldwin,
N
:Y.
,-
said she·
•• _·
;
Freshma'i-t.
Marc· Lestinsky takes
a
swing in a wiffle ball game outside. of Marian Hall as frosh
hear'ci that Lowy;tried tci'.kili his·fatneFaitd was extremely dangerous·on;
Todd Lincoln looks on.
the news the'night sh'e:came back.from Easter bfeak.,

,
;, .
..,...,..===...=;;:.:.;;;,.;:;,,;,,;,.:...:.,;;..;;.;..;.;:,_.;:,.:_;,;___-'-
__________________________
_.
Nl~iis'\et~i;~f
2\:i.Pha
Kappel Psi Scholarship A
wa:r-9
;·by-M~RY:
DIAMOND
investigate;, :
.. ·
.
.
. -
meet outside business contacts as. K~ppa
.Psi)
had to offer,,, Sullen
Sullen said the fraternity is both

· ,



. .
.
.
.Orice·
confirmed by "the national
well as
_other
students within their
said. .
.
.
business-and commuJ1it-oriented.
:Sta.ff_
Writer •

.
offic;, tlte fraternity immediately·
.
field.
••


Unhke other f~atermtie~,
part of
"People seem to think that its

Alphf Kappa. Psi; t~c:_.MarisL· initiate~
_t.~c:
:program.

. .
:
.
~evins, wh? joined the fraterni-
~~1:!u~tr~a Ps1's f~cus
IS
on the just_ a
group
of ~eople talking
College-:.busmess>fratermty;. has..
.Oal?ay,
a sop_homore
from Kings
.•
ty m·the sprmg semester of her
"W
y
.
.
busmess and readm~ the Wall
awarded· AiinNevins, a senior
with
-J:>ark~
N. y ·•
said the a war~ would
.junior
year, said the fraternity has
k" e h~ve different comi:mttees Street ~ournal, he
_said:
But t~e
the highi:_sf'
r~nking
·within
:the
p_rnv1de the
.opportunity.
~o provided those opportunities for
wo~ mg i_n_
the ,,com~umt~ on
fratermt~ has
~
social side and is
f

··
·t

·
th
•A·
l
·h
--K
··
·
p

..
acknowledge
academic
h
various PrDJects, Nevms said.
commumty oriented."
raterm y,
e
.
p a
.
appa
s1
-
.
.
er.
.
.
-
A
t
f th •
.
.
.
Schdlarshfp··
A
__
wa:r
__
d_;

_·. '
accomplishment.
..
"Throug· h the fra_ternity·
ymi get
f
s par o . e1r comm~~1ty
Sullen mamtams that because the
-
·

-

.

-
Alth

h N. •

·21
-
Id
ocus the fratermty plans to v1s1t
a
f
t

1

d
k

The award presented to Nevins

.
oug
.
evms, a
-yearo
to
see people different speakers
.
.
_
_
ra erm
Y
is co-e ma es
It
even
on April)3 a~d consisting ofa cer,

Slatell lsland r.e~ident,.can n<>t
say
that are out i~ the business world'. nursmg home later m thP. <:P.mP.~ter
• more uniQuc.
tificate and.key, .was recently_ in-
she was wo_rkuig to_w,ards
~Jh_e
<
.•
"But theres also a focus on.,·
itiatediby:the fraternity.

;;.
.
aw~rd,
_she
st1ll app(eciates,thf1t!.t~.-friciidships;'.',·Nevins:added},":,·J::,-
·_
'/I
\vas"looking
over the bylaws
.•
ack_n<>wledges her acad~mic
.Scott
Sullen/a fi-esh'mantfrom'(
of.our,c:onstitution,", said ~ayme
..
ac~.•eveme~t.
_
. ,
, ..
.
._.
..
Nashua, N.H.,.said the fraternity
Gabay/ 'the f_ratemity's historian,
1 certa!?ly d!dn t;x~.ect to get has also enabled him· to become
"a.nd found that under the
the ~ward, Nevms said, but I ap-
,
more "connected with the facul-
Managemerit
Action
-Plan
wec1ate the:acknowledgement."
-.
ty."·
_


GuideHnes there was a
.sc:~olarship

The
_M~nst
c~apte~ of· Alpha
...
"When
I
first came to Marist I
plan."·.
-

oc·

·.
-•· :_,·
Kappa·Psiwas.·m,corpor~ted:~m
wasai5prehen~iveaboutthefrater--·
.
Gabay then called Alpha Kappa
·
Feb. 9, I?S>I,' to

prov1d~
.
its
nity scene, but then I
·started
lear
0
Psi's" nation·at office
·to
further
m_embers
with the opportumty to
2jng more_ about what it (Alpha
-_
PE:T:ITI_CiNs·-·.
__
----------
.. :qon·tir:iued.frorri
·page 3
.•

perience·: 'Nho
.have
the required
ing to.need young, skilled people
before she assumed the position at
academic credentials tffgo with it.
-
.to gointo advel'.tising there.:;
.--Marist,
she said
.
.
·
L'We're
:noLhei-e
just
to
traiii
••.
Sarah S.King, chair ofJhe Divi-
-

King said that a·search has been
students;·we're_.here
to·proyide tpe
'.
siori of. Commuriica:tion·.and··the · conducted and that a qualfied
.
,_
broa~es(,b~sed

education

possi~

Ar~s,.said she was ~ot'par(o(ihe
.
advertising professor with national-
ble/' Kelly.said:
-•·
_

.


decision to ask Bopp·to;Ieave:The • ly known credentials will 1:>e
hired.
'
He· said Mari st will tenure or. decision, was· reached
a
.year :ago;
promote only people
with-
a tef-
..
minal degree in)heir field,
~which
-----------------------------
is a:cfoct<,>rate~
•.
·
..

_.
••
·•. :..
BnAnvs
29
GARDEN
STREET
tbo
i~!~}kddi~ffg~ta~e~6~~;'?n
1
~~:
..
jftw __
,1
__
·
:_
POUGH(9Kt
E)EPSI2E,
NY3.00t260t
u_smes_s·.
epartm·enfas an adjunct,

4 45 •4
if Risfagrio:is willing,:to
_do
so,
.
PUBLIC!(

Ristagno was unavailable·for
HOUSE
Comment.'

.
..
·


.

.
·
EST.1986
.
Bopp,

who does hold a doc-
torate, told her students
"that
she

was>
asked
_to·
leave the. college
.because
of problems with the ad-
ministratfon, according
_to·
senior

adverti~ing major Debbie Petrone.
.
Bopp d_ecHned
to comrri.entoil
what· the. problems -with
_
the ad-
ministration might ·be.·

• • •
Petrone s;iid she started the peti~
tion so that upcoming sophomores

and juniors could continue receiv-
ing the excellent assistance Bopp
.•
provides.

"I've practicallyseen (Bopp) do
jumping jacks

in class·. to get·
students to learn," she said:
Bopp said she hopes to stay at
Marist for at least another year so
she can
.
carry the students she
started with through the program.
"I have no children of my own,
so everyone here i~ my child,"
.
Bopp said~



In the meantime, Bopp said sh~
••
is trying
-
to obtain a Fulbright
-
Fellowship to teach advertising in-
Hungary or Poland.
Bopp said those countries are go-
.
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: .10
-l31i:n1P¢9
;VQlle&Otllli
g0.Jll~s:
Q11rini--:(it~§~
'.'.~"~~1<:-··c1raes
' •
• •••• /•
their games," ;he sa1ct ''No one
keep cha~ging things. aiou""n.d
like
by
KEITt-J.
REYLING
e','.en
said anything until af~er Qreek .. this, I don't kno~ i( I'll k~epplay-
.Staff Write __
(·...
. .. . .

Week was over; Iflhey would have • ing "
_· •
., • • ,
• "inentioned • sometliing earlier,.
''
One player'
"Joanne
lJngach~~er, '
The .. cancellation of. intramural •· ·maybe we. could,;have reached :an
said she was concerned about
.. volleyball • games . due: to·· Greek •• agreertj.etlt . tliat wou_Id
J:ia'Ve
0
oeen
league playoffs because. qf.al.l the
Week and other events has sent the
agreeable to everyone.''

i
cancelled games.
. .-:, ..
players and coordinators spinning
Accotdin'g to'Gearing,this'.is"riot •
"Our team gets·cancelled all the
-into
disarray.• ,.· •. • . •,
• thefirsi time i~ti:amutal voll~r,ball time,'' said Ungachaµer, I~,. of_
• The Greek Week events ·-ap-
games w~r_e
buinpe~ in favor. of
Carle Place, N.Y; "Aphe.~n~ (of
parently took precedence over-the • something else; • • • • •. • • : .
.
_ .. the season);
vtf!
m~y not ~ake_ tJ:ie'
scheduled intramural games.,
• • . . "It's not that I'fo'against qi:e_ek ~playoffs·. because_-9(· ~ames _.we
, Mike Gearing,. who is in charge ,· Week or anything like tlial;':' said •.didn't _play-t_hat· we cou.Jd.~ave
of intramural volleyball scheduling, • 'Gearing,
a
senior: "l'mjust sick:of
won "
. • .
. . • . '· • •
said: •~We had scheduling. games
planning a"sef amount''pf games
._ S~ver~l people ~aid intramural~
for that night way before the Greek
and then :having
to.
cancel and : it Madst don't get enough respect.
events were even mentioned.They
reschedule' games:)n''the
·end. it_ . _or priority.

bad.no right ot cancel our games."· • never· seems to· come mit the. way _
.. · Greg~ry /Reiss,' a sophonior~
The usual Greek Week format • the'original'·plari int¢nded. The.
from Northport;'N,Y.-; said there
was taken for granted because itis
players·deserve _better.".·' ,'·'· •
is_· a •-problein with • intramural
done essentially the same every
Gearing added that if the College organization at_ Marist. • He plays_
year.
.
.
, is going to-<;ontinually-bump the
both intramural volleyball and
No one checked for obstacles in
games, then maybe they shouldJ1ot
basketbaHandsaid the gani~s are .
. the use of the gym.
have an intramural. volleyball
always getting. cancelled and
Don Glover, .president of Phi
league.· . .
rescheduled."
· · . •• :
•-·
Sigma Kappa, sai<;l
the format .for
Players tend to agree ,vith Gear-
Greek Week remains the same
ing lil<e Sue Carey.··
• ..
every year and this plan was an-
"We play volleyball because its
nounced ahead· cif time.'
fun,"
said
Carey,, 20,
of
"They had time to reschedule
~ou~hing~on·, Conn. "~ut if they
However,·the· re~ent s~heduling_
problems regarding Greek Week
sparked more . life into . the in-
tramural ·coordinators,"··Gearing
said.



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by:ANDR';W .HOL_MLUND
• '
'Staff Writer •

iust like.:the Marist baseball
team, the
'men's
tennis team had its
hands full against Fairleigh Dickin-
son Uhiversify
on Monday
afternoon"..
·


: ..
"The Red Foxes were swept by the
Knights, 9-0, in Teaneck, N.J. The
loss dropped the team's record to

below .500· at 4-5.
• Marisfcould never get itself go-

irtg
as
five of the six singles players
• were 'knocked off in straight sets.
Senior John Favazzo was the on-
ly player who was able to push his
match to three sets, losing 6-1, 4-6,
6-1..
In the doubles segment, which
.
was played in eight-game pro sets,
.the
teams of Brian LaSusa/Jer-
maine. Allen and Favazzo/Heath
Pramberger
fell
8-7 and 8-3,
respectively.•
"The 8-1 result was really deceiv-
.
ing; we played really well," Favaz-
zo said. "St. Peter's was just a step
ahead of us. We have been playing
'
teams that are more talented than
us."
.
On Sunday, Marist clashed

against St. Peter's College in their
home-away-from-h;ome court, the
Dutchess ' Racquet
Club
in
The Red .Foxes
.
were Jed by
1
-PoughJceej)sie.

.'.
-' ·., .: ;. . • LaSusa,

Allen and Favazzo in
·-.:Once again, the
·Red
·Foxes'·· singles;.
_while ·1.;aSusa/Kevin
struggled an9 lost to the J>eacocks, McGovern and Allen/Favazza
8-1.

..
,
.
,
·
....

..
•.
:
. •.
.
. .
.
·were-"victoricius'in
doubles, 6-2, 6-1
.
.W_hile_
LaSus~
;~as
the. lone and
7-6
..
(7-3),
7-6
(7-4),
Manst v1ctpr, wmnmg a 6~3, 4-4 respectively.
defa~lt, seve_n
o(!he nin_e matches
Marist also went up against St.
l\.'fa~1stJos~-
were
.m
straight sets.
Francis (N.Y.) in Fishkill and pum-
F1rst~year,Head,Coach Ken Har-
.
melted the Terriers
.
8-1 ..
~son ,vas v~ry please~ witli_the play
..
·
The Red Foxes b;eezed through
of
_LaSusa,
who ~efeated the the singles portion, winning in
number one pl~yer m. the Metro straight sets. Abi Sharma, who was
Atlantic
Athletic. Confer;ence, scheduled
-
to play number six
_Amechi N~eje:
.
singles,. won by default. •
.' 1Brian was zone playing a lot of
In doubles Marist nabbed two
great shots," Har'.ison sa_id. He of the.three,~atches, notching an
never allowed (NueJe).to get focus- 8,1 victory
.and
winning another
ed on ~he match.''..
.
match by default.
.
:
Last. Thu~sday_,
_!"'farist
travelled

This. weekend, Marist will be
?Own to. West
_Point.
to do b~ttle heading to the Northeast Con-
.wit~ Army
..
It
_was
deja
.vu
all over ference Championships at Mt. St.
again for Manst as the Red Foxes
.
Mary's College in Emmittsburg,
were shot down by,~he Cadets, 8-1. MD.
. In the
·
singles portion, Marist
Harrison said he hopes his team
was· clobbered, 6-0, losing each can finish in the upper half of the
match in straight sets.
draw •
·"
I would like to see us at least
However, in doubles, the Red earn a number five spot in the con-
• Foxes were able to muster a win as ference," he said.
the team of LaSusa/Pramberger
The Red Foxes were in Staten
triumphed, 8-6.
Island yesterday
to take on
Last Wednesday, Marist hosted Wagner. Results were not available
Siena College and won -
5-4.
at press time.
Laxrp.ell
·Skid
hits four, riow 2-8 Feriney··paces· runners;
bu_
MI_KE
WA,'
LSH
"We've gotten better each game at
reasons. other than graduation -
J
one aspect oranother."
'
,,
including four potential starters.
Ston
b
ook
next
.

Staff Writer

Keeping this positive outlook
The team has been dressing only 22
y
f
.
•.

·
·•
may not been easy. Currently, the
players of late .
.
One word can describekthe men's . team is on a four game skid.
This puts them at a major disad-
--------------------------
lacrosse team's 2-8 mar..
Th·e
·most
recent defeats came
b
f h •
by
TERI
L.
STEWART
Disappointing.
.
.
..
·.
.
..
f
vantage ecause most o t
cir
com-
.
Head Coach Tom Diehl said he against. New, York In~titute_ o,
petition carry many more players.
Staff Writer
·
-

·
··
• ·
- ·
Technology on Saturday and Siena
Two weeks ago, Marist faced a
liopeo·his squad would be 4-6, or
earlier in the week>

Boston College team which field-
even
·j~5
a_t,
thjs poi~t-
.
·

••
,
.
After
a
dose first half; Marist
ed 39 players.
. How~ver, Die~l_sai
d that frustr~- could not keep up with NYIT and
Junior Doug Closinski needs just
-tion
will not hmder the team
5
.
lost 21-14.

five points to take over third place
effort,

.
.

"Tliere was questionable referee-
in
-scoring
in school history.
.
"':,:e"~e
got
!
0
~~ep it
m
p~rspec~ ing on botti ends, and they adjusted
Closinski said he is satisfied with
uve, Diehl said • Y~u don _t look
better "Diehl said. "We didn't get
his statistics (~Jittle over 5,3 poi~ts
at-a Joss and
•say
th ere snot!ungwe.
"ihe
job
doriewheri w~ needed to:"
a game) but does not prioritize
c~n do. We look
a!,
why thmgs are

Senior co-captainTom Fasolo net-
tliem above the team's success:··
di<;,
way they a,re.
.

. _ ted five poi*ts for,Marist_,'.
.
,;;
·..
w_e have lots of.youth and m
The lack of dep_tl:unay:be
one of
''It
(personal
achievement)
expenence, some losses are to _be the reasons for the· teain?s dismal

counts, but I'm not going o'ut there
expected - but they h~ven't g_one
m-
record.

• _
.>
. ,
·._.
.
,
.
for the records,''._ he said.
to any games P_
laymg as if_ they
O

the· off season • Diehl lost·
·:

The

Red Foxes will travel to
-

.

.
·1
" h
.
"d
urmg
,

were
to ose
e sai

.
seven players for a variety
.
·o.f;
L!!high this Sunday
..
·
BE A GOOD. NEIGHBOR
During these last weeks of the Spring Semester
WDether you. live off campus or not
Consideration for the good people of the area,
In their homes and in their neighborhoods,
Is important.
.
The Marist tradition is consideration for and commitment
to the well being of our local communities.
Heavy rain did not stop Martin Feeney-from making the record books.
Thejunior ran the second fastest 10,000-meter run time in Marist track
and field history despite adverse weather condition.s.
:
l:fis mark
(9
minutes 48.2 seconds) was also his personal best time.
'"He
has.been a middle distance runner all season and for him to run
this well ih the 10,000 is great," Head Coach Pete Colaizzo said .
Feeney led the team to a ninth place· finish at the two-day University
of Albany' Invitational.

.
Despite the weather, three of the four Marist runners scored persona\
bests.
·::';,:,:rhe
rate:, which was originally scheduled for Friday, was postponed
until Saturday due to severe lightning and heavy rain.
.
'According
toiColaizzo, the weather was not a huge factor in the way
the runners ran the 10,000-meter race, which is the longest race in track
.and
field
.
~
Junior Brian Ordway continues to excel in the 3,000-meter steeplechase.
The steeplechase is a 3,000-meter race full of stationary barriers. One
of these barriers has a water pit immediately behind it which the runners
contend with.
• •
·The
runners must run the course seven times.
Although Ordway did beat his personal best time, he did finish se-
cond in a field of 16 runners.
.,·
"He would have been pressed to run his best time," Colaizzo said.
The women's track team placed
sixth
in
a
field of 19 teams .
.
,Head
c;:oach Phil
_Kelly
said the women ran well despite the windy
conditions.
Freshman Colleen Carson and senior Sarah Sheehan placed fourth
and
fiftli" in the 3.000-meter run.

.
The women's and men's teams competed at the Union Lightning Open
in Schenectady, N~Y yesterday. The results were not available at press
time.
-_.
ATT.ENTION
_
..
\Circle
Staff Openings For
··-

1993 - 1994 Year:
cartoonist
business manager
movie critic
political columnist
distribution manager
niusic critic
humor columnist
photographers
If interested, contact
The Circle (X2429)
or SJ Richard (X4323) by May 1.






















































































.ST
AT
·.Qf,._Tfll;'
'WEE~:
:''They
were
slingshot pit~-
·chers."
".,~-Head
:c9aclr
•·
Tom Chiavelli
-
,
. "Martin'.Feeney's
time .(9,minUte~
48.2

·s·p·

·-R·.
T-s=·
=-·
..::~=:~:-2+~::s=:e=c=on=d:.s~).7in_'t7.he::~10;;:--oo-o
__
m-=et'.""e-.-r-ru~.n-;-1s~·-th'.';e
__ _

secoricf.fastest·in·Mari~t•·~ist(?ry:"_
·.·
..
APRIL"22/f~93.
n1fters.ra11SH~rt;
ToSe
ft:)
~DOi,
..
7~6
Vinnie Roberto looks forthe:call at'second during
a
recent game against Manhattan College.
.

.

..
Circle

by
TE,D
'liOLMLUND
Sports Editor
-
.
.
-·.
.
To put it simply, the better-baseball team won.
:Was
ifMarist?
_.·
.~
0
!;;
.Northeast_·
Conference, foe Fai~leigh • ~ickinson.
.
..
.
Despite a valiant three-run comeback
m
the nmth, the Red Foxes fell
.7-6 to the first-place Knights on Moaday_after':1oon.
_
..
.
·With
the defeat, Marist drops to 5-19--1 (3-9 m the NEC). FDU
1m-
,proves
its record to<t8~5 (11
~
l_in the NEG).
.
.

.
_
..
Trailing 7:J,.the·.Red Foxes pushe? acro~s three runs on two hits.
-
Senior Mike Pagano opened the mnth wit~ a d~uble fol!o~ed by a
single by fellow-seni5>r
George Camacho. Semor Mike -Domm1ck walk-
-ed
filling the bases with'no outs.
.
.
·.
A
balk and a wild pitch later in the inning made it7-5. Freshman Mark
Barron's RBI groundoutwas tlte final run the Red Foxes could muster.

Head Coach Art Smith said the team has to start winning the close
games.
._
.
.
.
.
. .
.• .
«We have to figure out a_way to wm mstead of f1gurmg.out a way
·.to
lose," the seconci::year coach said.''

.
·

_


.
.
Senior co-captain Mike Dauerer said the team has not made the big
play in critical moments
·ofclose
games.
.


"They (FDU) get the big hits - we don't," he said. "We move for-
ward and something will set us back."-

•.
Assistant Coach Ed Ward said his club's experience playing in close
games was a key to. this game.
.
"We've had a lot of close games," he said. "You don't feel much
pressure.,,
.
.

-
.
.
.

.
.
.
Third-baseman DerekPukash led the· Kmghts charge,
.gomg
3-3 with
a solo homerun, two singles, a walk and two.ru11s scored ..
·
"We got some good pitching, and we are together as a team," Pukash
said.

The Red Foxes travelled to Manhattan yesterday. Results
.were
not
Red Foxes get Swept by Terriers
SPik~,;~.end
at·
.500;

hit to
,bring
.
in the. run," said
Her St. Francis counterparts had
1
17 •
l b
.
t
by
J.W
..
STEWART
Chiavelli.

.··
• no problems as they thoroughly
p ace .
lll
:c
u na s
Staff Writer
Game two was more ofthe same

frustrated the Fox.es ~th their-slow


-'--just uglier.
. ·
speed and odd J?ltchmg s_tyle.
.
1-=;;;.__________
where their season ended

'rhey·are
·no
longer_.aniong the

The Red Foxes pounded 10 hits
_''They wer~ shngshot p_1tchers,''
by.JIM.
DERIV!'N.
against Wisconsin
·stout.
nati011!s elite.
<
a.

••
,
"
>but
stranded.13 baseruriners in the
said Cl1.1avelh,
:wh<;>
explamedth«:Y
,
Staff Writer

.
.Senior
John O'Brien, led the
The
lled ~oxe~;,who w_ere l~th
process.

,; •
,
·--·.'t'''
_d<?n't
1!~e a fulL\\'.md-up.
·;11
'Y•ll
I--'---------'------
club with eight aces and a team-
...
!~
:th~
_n~t1011:
_1_n
.!~~~
;_!'_~t~u;1~
..
:·.
~Again,
it.cam~ dovm t~.the ~rial
pt~ba~~Y, be
..
the ,:,Vo~st p1tchmg
Tlie men's volleyball learn
high 69 kills.
.
.
·average
~t 320 and were first
m
the
inning and agam, the hits disap~ we,._H
s~ all year. .
.
.
.
achieved it~ best
·finish
ever
~n
Sophomore Randy Desrosiers
cou!ltrym runs sc~red per game at
peared. With the bases loaded and
.
Th~,sp~d and wmd-up confus-
..
the c~ub national toum~e~t, m
led the charge.in the nationals
7.6 Just two w:Cks a~o, have scored tw.o outs,'Courtney Sleight flew out
;~ us,
said An~ela Degatan'?.

Austm, TX last week with a 3-4
wit~ 5~ digs. He also had 150
only five runs.m the1r)ast four con-
to left.
. .
.
.
.
No one was ad Justed to their record.
.
assists m the seven 1?ames; .

tests - all losses,
,
..
·

..
··
"We had the
•ninners
·on. We
speed at the same time.''.

The club finished 17 out of 24
When the club
·won,
the key
·
TheFoxes(3~5intheNortheas!,
just couldn't
put three
.hits
Degatano, who's in'themiddle
Division
H
~lubs and,finished
was the.offense,_accordiJ?-g to·
12-14, overall)Jost to St.
•Francis
together,"-said Chiavem.: "We had
of a 14-fo_r-2?
tear at-the plate, led the season with a 10-10 record.
club treasurer Mike Geanng.
(N.Y;) on _S11nda~
5-4 and 3-0 and
enough opportunities to do it, we the Fo:i:es with-a 3-for:3 per[or-..

The _Red Foxes were fi~5,t
"We won when we ran the
to Adelphi on_Fnday3-0.and_4-t-
just didn't do it.''

.
_.·
••


_man~
m th_e
shutout. Sleight, ~•ster_·.·
pla~ecl m af<>ur-team pool ~a·
offense like-we diq w~en we had
.
"We had hit the ball well,,un!ll
~
SL-Francis.did all of their s~or-

L.aurie Sleight· and _Ba~~ak1~ou fimshe~ second
..
by def~atmg
the . six _game wmrung stre~k
thoselasttwo doubleh~ders! said ing in the first
as
thef cliased st_arter each collect~d two hits apiece. .
M~han_sha
International
earlier m the season," said
• Head Coach Tom Ch1avelh...

-.
Beth
·Kershaw ·.after
only four
The Foxes collected orily two hits Umvemty, 15-1?, 15-10 and
Gearing.
Sunday his team hit the ball, just
batters.
against Adelphi in another shutout Howard· Payne·; 15-9, 12-15,

The club lost as a result of
not in the.clutch,
.
.

.
.·,.

lossJast Fricfay. Bambakidou and 15-8, but lost to Mankato State
poor communicating, according
Leading 2-0 in the sixth in game·
'Tve been having mental.pro-
Roseanne
_Daly
w,ere the only two

7-15; 9-15.
-
.
.
.
to. John O'Brien.
one; MarisUet up all five of the
blems," said Kersh_aw,•who
walk~ to come up with singles;


The club than lost to Loyola
·.
•''We
lost because of a
Terriers' runs on four singles
·and
eel.two
·of
the four batters she;{ac~
.·_.
In gametwo, Marist scored its Md. and was placed in a con-
breakdown incommuriication"
.
two-walks. The Foxes·took two
;ed.
''.I've been thinking too much Jorie run in the fifth wheri Marge solation round;
.
.
.
.
he
·said.
"We would win o~e
back
'iri
the.home halfof the
~sixth

about my mechani<:5.''
Sylvia singled
·and
scored·ori Patty
Maristfinished second inthis
game and it would all go
oh Terri Bambakidou's two-run
I
Ackermann's single'. •

..
.
.
pool as wen; by beating South
downhill from there."
single b~t!hen came
:the
dutch
The freshman said she has. not
.
Marist is i~ Pennsylvania Satur-

W<:5tem'15-3, 5-15, 15-11, and

The club played well, accor-
seventh:mmng,_
_
_
.

been
·stepping
straight
·off
the
day to play m the NECTourna-
losmg to Lamar 6-15, 15-11,
ding to Gearing.

Janine O'Cmmor bounced to se-

mound in· her delivery.
:Instead,
ment.
,The
Red Foxes, s~ed fifth; 15-9 in a three club pool.

"We did have a goodtouma-
cond with two on artd·two out to
.
she's been stepping to the left or
pla_y
Wagner in the first round of

The dub was tha11 seeded
ment the senior said. "It was
end. the game.
.
.
.
. •
...
_ . .
right which cause her pitches
·to
• the -
dou ble~elimination

.
seventh in a single elimination
the b~t that Marist has done in
"We· just couldn't get an_other

float in _that dir~ction.
tournament.
.
fight for the championship;
h

hree ears.''
The
ShOWdOwn
in
Aft~r Bobby Bonill~
was
talking
it toJ3ob Klapisch, a Daily News
reporter, a week;and.ahalf ago, I
have come to orie conclusion...
.
I better siai1 weight-lifting again,
if
I want to be· a· member of the
New York City press.
..
Bonilla's verbal attack stemmed
from Klapisch's and John Harper,
a reporterfor the New York Post,
''The Worst Team Money Could·
Buy.''

Although I have not read the
book
.
yet, Klapisch has said the
book isjust
an
account on how the
Mets went from New York's darl-
ings in 1986 to New York's bums
after last year's dismal season.
Sure there are some personal ac-
counts' from players during the time
period, but neither reporter men-
tioned any. intimate details about
the players lives.
According to Klapisch, he could
have

written the players extra
marital affairs, but he didn't
because
that was not what the book
was
about.
Bobby "Bo" had not read the
book when he started threatening
Klapisch.
So wh/thci· tirade?

It may have been because Bonilla
thought he
.was

defending

the
team's unity, or he could just be
tired of the press and just blew up.
Bonilla,
J
have one thing. to say
to you: stop whining. It's not
justified, and the New York City
press is not going to change for
you.
Spring blues •

Spring is well under way and so
is another depressing spring sports
season.
_
At least one team is over .500.
-
I take that· back: Sorry.
I think my predictions are under
.500; too. Something is in the air.
The volleyball club has been the
lone bright spot, finishing its year
at 10-10.
The only two other teams that
are having any bit of success are the
tennis (4-5) and softball (14-16)
teams. They have been hitting the
skids lately.
Why the stellar performances?
Let's stan
with baseball.
the:big
...
city-Bo
vs.~B:ob
Ted
Holmlund
•••
Talkin' it
Clutch plays anyone?
The baseball team's 7-6 loss to
first place Fairleigh Dickinson on
Monday·clearly showed why both
teams are headed in different
directions.
The Red Foxes did not manage
to come up with the clutch play
during the entire game - FDU did.
Marist showed some guts in
rallying· from a 7-3 deficit in the
ninth, to cut it to 7-6, but once
again, the squad could not produce
the clutch hit to complete what
could have been a season turning
comeback. FDU, on the other
hand, kept its
composure
and held
on for
the win.
·
In
'a
long season, many games club nationals.
are decided by one run. On Sunday-
The club's 10~
10 miu-k was also
and Monday, FDU scored a three
a significant· improvement after
game sweep over Marist.
·Two
of
consecutive losing seasons.
those games were decided
.by
one
The club will be losing some key
run (the Red Foxes lost 3-2 in the
players, like Mike Gearing and
first game of a doubleheader on
John O'Brien, to graduation. It
Sunday).
will be interesting to see
if
the team

Marist's record in one run games
can continue the upward trend next
is 1-4. Marist is 5-19-1 (3-9 in the
year.
NEC). FDU is 18-5 (11-1 in the
NEC).
Softball Struggling
.
The softball team has also been
failing to come up with the crucial
plays. As a result, the Red Foxes
have lost five of their last six.
Head Coach Tom Chiavelli's
squad has not had problems getting
runners on base. The team is just
not taking advantage
of its
opportunities.
However, the team is still young
and has already showed marked
improvement over last year's 6-29
debacle.
Spikers successful on trip
The
men's volleyball
3-4
mark.
was
its
best
performance ever
in
the
Odds-n-ends
The Rangers and the Devils first
round playoff match will beclose.
Wait, the Rangers did not qualify
for the playoffs -
the Islanders
did.
It doesn't matter Pittsburgh will
probably win it all.
·
I may have been too hard on
Chris Webber.
--
According to the New York
_Times,
Webber said the following,
two days after the national cham-
pionship: "It's just really hard
right now. It
seems
like you just

want to go crawl up under a rock
and just
.
watch the world from
under there."
Ted Holmlund
is
tbe
Cirde's
Sports
F.dltor.