The Circle, November 11, 1993.pdf
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Part of The Circle: Vol. 43 No. 6 - November 11, 1993
content
.
VOLlJMEL43~
NUMBER
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•.
•
.
NOVEMBEfii11·,
·1993
.
M~rist library nee.ds iniJ)rovement, say Students
-
.
.
about the library; students are en-
couraged and appreciative of some
library services, especially the ABI
databases and tlte library staft
•
byLYNN~WIELAND
libraryis not.big enough for this
possible ..
:
Staff Writer
•
•
•
••
number of students •.•
.
•.••
By i995;McGinty pl~~o~ hav-
..
ing
5000
journals available on
-
a
-~-------'-'-'-'-'-'-
There should be a seating capaci-
Whe~
..
discussing Visic:>n '94, t)'. for 25 percen~
of
the ~otal
.r~i-:
m~y, students agree
,with
Jeff
•
µent student. body,
.according
to
Broderick, a junior; when he says McGinty; and Marist does not
"the vision is blurred."
come dose to that goal.
•
·
database; In 1987, the library had
•
850 • ~ubscriptions
·10
journals, to-
-
day thatnumber has more·then
doubled to .1688;
•
•
blems ·with stu.dents ripping
out
pages,-or stealing articles but there
is little-that can be done.
With more information becom-
McGirity said that
-
the
A
BI ser:=
vice
wm
continue
_to'
grow.
•
Circle
Poll·_
.
While th~ construction of the
~•we sho~ld. have 800
;~r
·900
.
ne~ townhouses has found m~ch • seats,'' he said. "We have:375.''
•
Another m~jor development in~
....
_
• •
,
dudes the installation
·ofa"Local
....
·
Tiu~
Circle
conducted
a
_nonO::scieri.tific
poll
praise ~ong students, the seeming .
•
lack of unprovement on the library
.
.
This Ia~k of seating bec~mes
draws considerable criticism from. more of a problem as,mid-temi and
them.
•
•
final e,cams approach. Along with
Area Ne.t:,Vork
·.(LAN)
'Nhich wm • f
.,
•.·
o· t
·2s·
N
-
9 M
•
h
•
•
600.
•
- d
allow access
fo
information stored
.. •
fOID
C •
'.'" OV •
~
ore
t
an
.·
Stu ents
iii
databases··.from various com-
were
askecl
to
respond
Yes
or
No
to
the
putei:s in the library. '.fhis will help •
•
•
•
•
•
.to
avoid students haying to w.ut for
--
f~ll9wing
__
questio~
:_·
•.
•
Many
students feelth~t the ~ol- this complaint, students also. point
Iege has forgotten its
imiin
priori..:· out that. there
:
is practically. no
ty of education while" focusing-Oil:.
"private
studying areas in the
the expansicm and development of library.-
•
•
•
••
..
.
•
•
•.
use on acertain data base,· which
•
is ~other c01ninon·complaint..
Does the
:library
satisfy your needs?
• -
Ciridy Malo,
-
a junior.' and
y
••
•
·
·4·
6
·
•
••
•
...
the college.
:
•
•
McGinty
.
and stude~ts are in
"!think
tiur library ~eeds more
agreement that
a
new library
•
is
improvements
.
bef 9re
,we.·
need an.
. •
necessary;.
however, like most pro-
art gallery; The othei: stuff is great
je~ts, money is the_ key problem:
business inajor said tliat the library
-
es
~
2
.
NO -
3 7 3
•
fulfiUs her needs, but she does have
someproblems with the periodical
but
.
the library is the priority,"
Building
·a:
library twice the size
senior· Amv: Maitterer
•
said •.
·
•
of the current one would cost about.
$8 million, McGility estimated. The
moriey needed would have to come
from private donors as the school
John. McGinty.
'direct<>r;
of the
'
library, understands the complaints
of the students and feels that most
of
them are justified.
•
,;The students want the library
as the next priority, and I think that
it should be the next priority,"
McGinty said.
•
•
is not state funded, he said.
section.
.
.
•
-
"I can neve,; find the periodical
that I am looking for; either the ar.:.
tide is· missing, pages are
.ripped
out or it's in the wrong. spot,"
Malo said,
ilig available electronically, the p~o-
blem should decrease, McGinty
said.
••
.·
.
.
The library also faces m~y com-
plaints about noise,
.
a
.
problem
which McGinty also n,~tes.
"The'staff is great, some will go
out of their way to help you get in-
formatipn;" Amy Martterer said.
S.enior Ralph Musolino, when
asked to name a positive thing said
with little hesitation, "The staff.
The Hbrarians are great."
McGinty said the library will
con~inue to grow_:
It is currently at
maximum electrical capacity, is
edged
-
for space, and is working
with a limited budget and staff, but
developments wiU still· continue.
•
•
by·
KRISTINA WELLS
• Staff Writer ·•
•
Security:has been
.kept
busy°,in the early part of this semester .
. ,Within.the
firsttvm_weeks of school there was,an alleged rape and
•
a third degree assault on a male student.
,
•
•
•
:
Because se'c4rityj:ouldn'tkeep up with an of'the calls for escorts on
~ampus; Phi Sigm11
Kappa and Kappa Kappa Gamma. volunteered to
,
sponsored a student escort service.
•
.•
•
.·
•
The students handled the_ escort service in order to_ allow security to
patrol and do ~heir·job inore easily.
.
~,fany st~dents are questioriirig if'seturity has been upgraded and if
members ()(t~e security has b~en doing itsjob, or if it has continued
·to
be the same.securityjt has ahvays been.
. • •• ·.
•
•
.
According t9Joe I.eary, dir~ctC>r
cffcollege safety arid security, Marist
~.C::ollege
secui:ity
h.as been upgrad_ed
and will condnue
·10·
be· further upgrad-
1ed
.·in'
the. next, few weeks.
·:
•.
-·
··:.:
•
•
•
•
-
·
•
.•
Con~tn.iction continue~ ~n
~the.
n~~
·d_orm
a~'~i~ion ;94
~~~~~s-
the f~lling te~p~r~tur~-s.
· _-:i
''Wi"Ji11d
orlginallyplannecl'to rerriov~ theioweu Thomas arid Dyso~
building guards and put them ori foot patrol oftheNorth End," Leary
said; ''Iristead, we hired three fuU time, temporary security guards.There
will be three posts·added from.8:00 p.m. to 4:00 a,IIl:'' .According to
.
Leary;· the security coverage for the_ dorms was changed after the rape.
:
)11,stead.<>_ftl)e_
fiye-daycover*ge from Tuesday to Sunday morning, securi-
.
ty will cover the dorms seven days a week.
-·
-
-
:
•. :'··
'.
>
'.
'.'..
••
Recent
..
,elec!iOI?-S_;
lack
....
fylarist
•
p~rtic;ip.ation
vote because it was
to6
far away to
the candidates or the election itself
getthere and it tc:>ok
to long to get
so I wouldn't want to guess for the
by
THOMA$'.HOWARD.
StaffWrit~r.
-
•
Orily a few thousand votes could
have changed thf outcome of the
elections for mayor in New York
City and governor in New Jersey,
but these
.
•
tight
·
races did riot
motivate Marist students to vote in
their local elections.
Most students claimed that.they
either forgot to get an absentee
ballot in time or were just not iii-
formed enough to make a choice_.
Many students said that since
they are at school, they have
f
alien
out of touch with politics in their
hometowns, and therefore knew
nothing about the candidates or the
issues.
.
Jeff D'Onofrio, 20, a com-
munications major from East
Hartford, Conn., said, "I didn't
a absentee ballot.'!_:
_
•
:_!-
.•·
right one."
.
:
."I
didn't know anything about
Tricia Southworth,
-
21,
a
theissues·becaµse I don't get any
business major from Hopewell
information here,"
•
D'Oriofrio
Junction, N. Y., said; "I was plan-
added.
-
ning on voting but I got home from
_Yahairah
Aristy,
a
psychology work late and I had a lot of
major from Manhattan said, "I'm
homework to do."
not going to vote because I don't
. •
Scott Frosch, 21, a senior com-
know everything I want to know
munications
major
from
about the candidates.''
Brookfield, Conn., said, "I didn't
Kate C~stle, 20, a junior
have time-to go back to Connec-
· psychology/special education ma-
ticut. and vote nor did I get a
jor frompuanesburg, N.Y., said
absentee ballot."
•
that she didn't vote because, "l
In the race for mayor of New
didn't go home for October break
York City, incumbent David
so I didn't pick up a· absentee
•
.
Dinkins lost to Republican-Liberal
ballot."
:
.
.
·candidate
Rudolph Giuliani by a
Elicia Woodford, 18, a business
slim margin.
•
major from Syracuse, N.Y., said
Locally, the city of Poughkeep-
that she didn't vote because, "I
sie elected its first woman mayor.
really don't know anything about
L~ry said the addition of the campu!l van and security in Beck Place
parking lot has helped to secure. problems· on campus.
.
,'
•
<'To ensure the safety of the students parked in.Beck Place, we have
•
taken,one building officer and put him on foot patrol back.there from
5:00 p.m. to·10:00 p.m:/• he said. "After night classes are over, we put
him back in the building."
.
.
•
•..
.
Leary said all of the.se upgrades have helped to better secure the
cam-
.
pus.against harm. He said-he hopes these changes are permanent.
"I certainly hope it will remain this way in upcoming years,., he said.
"I'd like to feel this is a .permanent upgrade. We certainly rieed it.'1
Although security has improved in number, many students are still
angry about the incidents on campus and still feel unsafe on their own
campus.
•
Many of the students who live on campus said they don't feel security
is doing its job.
-
•
•
Kendra Glen, a sophomore, said she doesn't like the fact that security
spends all its time ticketing cars instead of making sure the students are
safe.
.
_
•
•
"I think they should take less time putting boots on cars and ticketing
and spend more time on protecting us, that's what they are supposed
to do," she said.
•
Andrew Szegda, a sophomore in Champagnat Hall, said it has come
down to students doing security's job. He said the escort service is done
by the students instead of security and that the students are upgrading
security, not the officers.
•
•
•
A freshmen resident of Champagnat Hall, Lou Reynolds, said securi-
... see
UPGRADE
page
4
►
/.•.,
...
,
.;
I
,j
')
,.
,
)
,
,
,.>
I
/)
-""''•
'·
..
'''
Frosty blln'i b'e-foundif1Burton's 'Nig]a(rrtare'
Halloween. Land.
. .
. .
.
.
.
Christmas.
.
. .
.
•
•.
.
_'
.
••
.
hour.
.
. .
.
.
.
.
.
Bass films
.h:1ve·t
...
\
••
•
.'
•
.
••
•••
:-
• :&p't~~~:l:Mii~~y
..
T~m Burtonhas_fak,eD
the tradi.-
,
;A:
Aided.by
tll~
quir.ky_m~sical
•
• 1:he
•,
p~oducer/cr.ea_tor
_
..
of
•
·/\Icq~~~t~e>nJhe
5-tay1~gpo~er
..
·
·
· ·
·
·
·
· ·.
·
·
·
t1on, of Ran km· and
Bass
._
sty lings of Danny Elf man, Burton
"N1gh_tmare'' ~as had doodles of O
.
an m
:
~n
•.
:)3ass
:is. ;rell,
•
Colleen:
·Afmosieveryorie •
can
("Rudolph
The_, Red-1'1osed
.
takes us
to
a different level of holi~
.the
_characters
m a notebook ~or because_they,_s~opped,
putting The
imagine Santa's workshop at the
.Reindeer,","TheYearWi!h?utA
day_entertainment.,
,·
-
..
·
•·
•.
.
years,.·
,
__
•....
•
year_~~~~outA:Sant~CI~us''o,n:
•
..
North Pole, but Tiin Burton takes
Santa Claus") and turned 1t mto a
I don't know, however, if this is
..
True, the, plot wasn't Oscar teley1S1on_m
tht\~ate_
70 s/earl>: 80 s
.
llS
to the Halloween laboratory of
sad·
·commentary
on the lack of
a
'.
level. I'm
"comfortable
..
with.
.•
material, butthat's not what I was d1;1e
to VlO~!:nt
:imag_es.
associated
Jack Skellington, .the "Pumpkin
•
holiday spirit.
.
...
. .
..
"Nightmare"wasn't too axnusing'. looking for.. .
•.
_..
•
.. with S!1!1ta
,Claus;:
it scared the
King."
•
•
•
C:
Jack, our hero, 1s tired of the
Sure, there were some funny
It
.was
visually pleasmg, the young vi~wers. ;
.••
•
•
;.
•
,
Halloween Land is the place
sameness of his Halloween ex-
scenes and one or two really catchy music was good, and the talking
•
. A: All_
mall,
I
giv~ "Nightmare"
where all of the ghosts and goblins
travaganzas, and after stumbling
songs, but for the hours and hours skeleton, as well as all of the Five Qwrky D!l!1~Y
Elf man~.
. •
live year-round, waiting for Oct.
upon Christmas Town, decides he
put into
,
this film; I think they
•
charaters, were likable.
It was
,entertrumng,
but 'Ylll an~.
31:·
-
·--
..
: ·
•
.
needs a change of pace.
. ••
.
could have come up with a more in-
It wasn't
a:
complete waste of noy and confuse ~oun~er viewers.
Andrew:
The stop-action
"Befigures
that Halloween-Land
.
teresting story,
_
•
.
• time.
•
.
C: I t~oughtlliked
_1t
before we
animated· film "The Nightmare
can do. just as good a job as
Kids will probably·· become
A: Colleen,--let me ask Y~!!
.a
wrote this,
~u~
the.m~re,factt~at
Before Christmas" is a story about
Christmas Town, and tries to make
disinterested after the first few question.
.
we spenMh~_whole
-t•~e-argumg
,
how Jack, finds his way to
the holiday his owh.
scenes.
.
.
.
Do you think this film has the ab0l1tthe ~ents of Chris~mas pro~·
Christmas Town and decides to·
He doesn't realize that the Hallo-
C: !found it fascinating to be in-
potential
·of
staying. around year gr~s
leads me. to:
·t,elieve ·that
•
have his very owil
•
Christmas in
ween people aren't ready for
side the mind of Tim Burton for an after year like those old Rankin and
•
"Nightmare"- wasn•v·a
·,
filin>to
•
.
.
remember.
No grun,ge, no flannel, no Weiland
;_;_,p
Jstrikes
·
Dack
by
DANA. BUONICONTI
This column isn't going to be an
easy one to write, simply because
I still haven't totally decided what
I think of the new Pearl
.
Jam
record.
I
know
I
like it, but whether it's
as good as "Ten" ... well, let's just
say the jury isn't out yet.
For. starters, "Vs." is con-
siderably different than "Ten,"
and not
·what
I thought it would
sound like upon initial listenings;
But I suppose that's a good
thing.
If it had sounded like "Ten,"
you'd hear me compl,iiining
"sophomore slump."
The
percussion-driven
"Vs.," however, is decidi;dly
•
."W.M;A.''
sounds nothing like
not.
anything from "Ten."
.
Whether it holds up as well as
But the same could be said for
"Ten" has done remains to be
"Daughter,". "Glorified G,"- and
seen.
"Elderly Woman Behind The
If this record lacks anything, it's
Counter In A Small -Town."
.
the
immediate
·
emotional impact
I think the secret this time out is
that '!Ten" possessed.
drummer Dave Abbruzzese;
•
his
I figure that's because there were
..
playing really drives the songs, with
no expectations for
·"Ten,"
and
•
a beat that is equal
parts
thrash and
more than enough for "Vs." What
finesse.
seems to be most apparent about
The entire band is credited with
the record (aside from the fact that
songwriting duties, possibly sug-
my
review
of it is several weeks gesting the desire to be recognized
overdue) is that it manages to be
as five equals (hence the former ti-
both more diverse and a lot
tie "Five Against One," maybe?).
catchier.
Guitarists Stone Gossard and
Mike McCreadyhave tinkered
with
ing so thafthe words give a vague
and tightened their one-two punch. sense of what inspired
him
to write
The riffs and solos on "Vs." are them and the possibility for per~
a lot more lean and muscular than sona:I interpretation.
they were on "Ten," not nearly
I'm
.hard-pressed
to • come up
·
washed in as much
•
echo and
.
with a favorite song, buU'd pro-
reverb>"
.
.
.
. ..
bably say "Rearviewmirror,'-' for
And bassist Jeff Ament and Ab-
•
its
.lyrics.
•
-
~. .
... •
..
··.
•
,
.
bruzzese have becoine airtight in
.
,The
-band• has
,attempted.
to
their rh}1hll! propulsion'.
....
•
··relc:ase
this record with as little fan-
No doubt the refinements and
-
f#e""as possi~le, even. to the point
improveIIients in playing come' of holding out on making a video.
from the endless touring in support
.
·And
they·shotild'coritiilue to do
of "Ten.'.'.
•
•
so.
.
•
-
••
So riow I guess that leaves us
(I think it's quite funny, and at
with Mr. Eddie Vedder.
•
the same time,· disgusting, to see
Critic relishes 'Flesh'
(Boy was I crushed when I read
MTV act so desperate as to have to
that recent. Rolling Stone article
continuously prostitute the perfor-
and Jound out Eddie's dad wasn't
mance of "Animal" from the 1993
really a forest ranger ... )
_
,
Video Awards because they don't
If anything, his voice continues
have a video yet.)
•
..
to grow as a unique means
•
of
•
If
someone were to ask me if
by
JENNIFER GIANDALONE
"Flesh and Bone," starring real-
life couple Meg Ryan and· Dennis
Quaid, is a beautifully shot film
that has a constant mood of
apprehension.
.
On a farm in a small town in
1950's Texas;a lost young boyis
taken in by a family who provides
···h1m·w1th
a'placefo stay:---···.·
,.
In the middle of the night, the
boy wakes up, unlocking the front
door of the house to let
•
in his
father, Roy Sweeney (James Caan,
"Honeymoon In Vegas"), who
proceeds to steal everything inside.
Hearing the door open, the
owner of the house comes~
downstairs and tries
to
stop the
intruder.
.
The owner shoots at Roy and
misses.
••
•
Roy then kills him and the rest
of his family, except for an infant
girl.
•
.
.
Cut to 25 years later where we
.
meet ArUs Sweeney
(Dennis Quaid,
."D.O.A."),
a quiet man who ser-
vices and supplies vending
machines for a Hving in a. number
.
of small towns.
.
-
•
.
•
·
.
It's no secret that Artis is
.the
adult version of ihe young boy who
saw his father murder an innocent
family in the beginning of the film.
.
He is not at all prepared for the
tum his life is about to take and the
memories that are going to come
back to haunt him,
..
.
.
Enter. Kay Davies. (Meg
'Ryan,
Earn cash now!
.
.
·w·.
.
•
Ametk:a's
lastast
growing
Sec:urily
.
company
has
openings
duoughol4
..
. ·.
New.
Yolk.
Hyouase.
drug-f.
ree,
.
have
a verifiable
background,
telephone
and
reliable
transportation.
we are
lntarestad
in meeting
you.
(Bring
2 lorms
of ID)
Pror-lonal
Security
8urM1,
Ltd.
li6CXdT~Rd.N;ni41.NYtl~
250W:!9SI.NrwYOlfc.NY21M67-18CO
AppllcatiCll'I
Ille:
Men-
Fri:
81111
•
3Pm
BEAOI
SPRING
BREAK
PROMOTER.
Small or iuzer groups.
Your's ntn, dlsc.ounted
or
CASH.
call CMI t-S00-423-5264
SELLSPRING
BREAK!
Experienced
students
wanted to promote
Spring
Break.vacations
fora
serious
and
pres-
tigious
travel
company.
Eam
free
trips
and/or
cash!
CaHl<imberly
at (800)
879-4141.
"Sleepless in Seattle,") a young
woman who isn't quite sure what
she wants to do with her life.
We first see
a
drunken Kay try-
ing unsuccessfully to jump out of
a cake at a bachelor party, only to
pass out as she breaks through the
top.
Kay says "Your whole life can
change in one tiny' little second,"
which applies to all three characters
in the film.
Dennis Quaid's subtle but
powerful performance helped
make the movie as good as it was.
_,
'.Ad1s ·
is· r'ecruited by.
,the
..
:;
·;
~yan is just
as
good
as
Quaid;
bart d
• •
•
gtvmg Kay an energy that. has
-
en er at the party to take Kay
•
helped her get through her rough
home.
•
•
life.
.
_
_ He finds. out that she is trapped
m an abusive marriage and helps
her. leave her husband.
.
The two go on the road together.
.
"~lesh and
,Bone"
is a-good
.
!DOVIe
that ta~es a long time to tell
its story.
,: •
•
as Arlis makes his rounds servicing
the vending machines.
Its restraint to move the story
..
along contributes toJts dramatic
. .
Eventually, Arlis meets up with effect.
his long lost father, who brings
•
,---------------
back the past and contributes to the
nigbt~ares that he alieady
.
has
.
regardmg that horrible night.
··
If
you know anything about how
~ollrvood works when construc-
tmg its plots, you
will
~ave rio pro-
blem figuring out who Kay is artd
•
·what·
Roy's response is.
.•
The middle of
"Flesfr
and Bone';
deals with the relationship of Arlis
and Kay and how some things are·
better left unsaid.
Circl~
snow.
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expression.
.
·,
•
. ''Vs." is better than. "Ten,'' I don't
He's becoming increasingly more think I· could tell them.
adept at using his voice to convey
"Vs."_isn'twhat
I
expected, but
heart~
,
and
.
gut-wrenching
then agai
0
n, mos! things never are,
emotions.·
•
and thats why it's so good.
•
Arid his lyricalskills ar~ develop-
,
,
:Aff
ENTIO-N"·
·
,
liOCOl.iN'.1"1NG.
MAJORS
R~pf.8$~-n~a.tive.~Jro111:.the··t>ttice·;
of
..
the·
..
State•.·
CQmptrolle(\vilJ
··.visifMarist
_C611ege
:011_
No.:
vember.·1··s,-1.993_at1oa~ni.and·11
::30a.m._to
.
talk to
_.you··'ab6uf.·aud1ti'n,
1
g\an~-.)ic_cbaryting
care.a~
opportunities
wi1tf
the
if organiz_atio~.
•.•.
.
.
.
'.
':
-._-.
_.
..
lfyou
area
talented,
mOtivated
i.ndividual.who··
.·.:·_i~:·_1?.?~in~Jo~
..
~·9Q_,c~ll.~_D~!,f1_9,::~(9f~s.~Io,nal,p~$i-··
. t19.~
m the._auditing
orac99unting·
r,.eld/please::
.
pl~_frto
att_etid.
-
•
•
•
-~
RADIO
OODSTOCK
TH.E NEW
DiRECTION
OF ROCK
-
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~--
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••••
100.1 FM
I O W
I
N
PO U G H KEEPS
I E AT
;
.MARIST
;_
96.9
f
M
I
.
School of Adult Education
I
L-----------------~-~
. not yo,o~fathe_r's r<~dio
station!
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•
••
THE CIRCLE, NOVEMBER 11,
1993
b~.-
.. M
..
EA.
GH.AN
.FITZGERALD
McCa11n :said The We.ek· of
J
•
R.einembrance. , also remembered
•
Sta.ff Writer
other members of the • Marist
Jeanm.arie.Murfagh, :who was a • community. : .· ·.·.• . .
,
.·
junior communications major, will • On All·• Souls .· Day, _:Nov. 2,
be remembered seven months after
Marist staff; faculty and ~d-
she lost her battle with cancer last
niinistrators who have. died since
Aprill4.
. •
.
the. college's· foundation were
On Nov. 1, Murtagh, along with- remembered,
according.
to
26 other Marist students who had
McCann. •
dled during their undergraduate
On . Nov. 3, the 25 deceased
years; was. remembered during. a
trustees· who. had • served . Marist,
Mass in the Chapel.
and two of the 20 campus ministers
Thefrrst week of November is
who had been part of Marist .since
••
traditionaliy, a •:week·
o'f
remem.,__ 1957, were remembered.
•
bran\:e,atMarist, with each _day
of
The 66 deceased founders and
th_e,Dveek::holding;,a Mass that: ·b'uilders_ofthe College, all Marist
remembers different groups within.·. Brothers, were remembered during
the Maristcominunity, according
a
iiooriday Mass on Nov. 4,
to Father Luke McCann, campus
The names of the 27 students
chaplain.
. .
.
. who have died while at Marist can
"During the first days of the
be found aithe grotto, the student
month of Nov., Marist takes time
memorial located near Donnelly
to look back through the years to
Hall.
•.
•
deceased alumni who preceded us
• The memorial was·•
donated by
on this,campus,"- Mccann said.
the parents of Shelley Sperling, a
"On Monday, we recalled those
student who died in 1975.
•
27 undergrads; rememberingtheir
Last April 19, after a memorial
joyful presence ·on this. campus
service· held at. the Chapel, a
while· pondering their untimely
candlelight ceremony was held in
deaths,"· McCann said. ''Deep
Murtagh's memory at the grotto.
within
I
guess we count our bless-
Over ·. 200 people att~nded the
ings, asking Why them arid not us.''·
services. •
for a career
This service gave the family and
friends
a
chance to remember Mur-
tagh and her c~ntributions to the
Marist community.
•
Murtagh
was
an active member
of the Marist Greek community,
serving as a Greek Council
Representative, for the Kappa
Lambda Psi (KLP) sorority.
Presently, the Greek Council is
considering naming the Greek
Week trophy The Murtagh, and
KLP will be planting a tree on cam-
pus in her memory sometime in the
spring. .
Additionally, the 1994 Reynard
will feature ·a dedication page
which will be put together by Mur-
tagh's roommates.
"This week of shared memorials
is· unique to Marist and one of the.
traditions which binds us as a fami-
ly," Mccann said.
"It
is most
poignantly manifest in the patents
of deceased undergrads who return
annually tojoin faith with today's
students, staff and faculty."
"In this realization, there is a
certain reassurance that we, today's
students and staff, will be long
remembered·at.Marist at the turn
of the seasons."
3
Student paper under attack
by
CARI L. OLESKEWICZ
Assistant Editor
The student newspaper at Ket-
cham High School in Wappingers
has been attacked by the ad-
ministration, due to a cartoon
which depicted school board
members as animals and an
editorial which criticized the "back
to the basics"
educational
red by Principal John Biasotti.
Students complain they are be-
ing censored, with the removal of
their adviser, they are running the
paper without faculty help, and
Biasotti checks each issue before it
is printed.
According to the State Educa-
tion Department
regulations,
freedom of the press guaranteed in
the First Amendment is applied to
student publications, as long as
William Dourdis the adviser for
students refrain from libel- and
.the .Tomahawk ~aper
..
and. an . <;>~§cen~l)'
1
,.~P.,~
01?.s.~ry.e_the«~or-.
••.
English
foaclie'r
afthe ·schciol:·said'•-?1a/' ,.,,_-rules· ~ror'."f·respons1
bie • '· .... •
he will' have a hearing Nov.
30
Journalism..
.
•.
_
because he has been charged with . The Pough½eeps!e
Jo_urnal
insubordination.
reported that B1~sott1
,;o~s1dered
• Dourdis may face a reprimand the ca~to~?• ent1~!~d Circ~s
~!
or a penalty as strict as dismissal Education to be mappropnate
if he is found to have acted for a student newspaper.
improperly.
"I_t ~as . insu_ltin~,
!!
was
.- l\1ari~tsenior~ spe~kwith Janet May a"nd
An.n Bishop.(left to right) of the Galleria Crystal
Run atthe recent Career. Ex o>
· •
•
•
•.•
·
•
-An opinion column criticizing abusive,
Biasotti S_'.11d. If th_e
the action against Dourdis was students had somethmg to say, 1t
removed last month and • when most assuredly could have been
students attempted to'hold a sit-in done in a manner that did not
to protest this removal, it was bar-
degrade."
,]JJrit
i{l;~fl/artment
lacks in funds and Volunteers
by
KRISTA
E.
·st-iEPARD.
.
.
, .. ~-St~ff.
Y\f
riter
•• volunteer,'~ •Zeidan said~
"We transport several students each year
, to SL :Francis Hospital in out an;itmlance:
7
A'smoke·detector'sounds in one oftne·
riew
those.
are
.our ambulances-not. St. 'Fran-
classrooms of the.Campus Center and·two ::cis','.\Zeidari said: ..
:.
.
. ..
firetrucks·•. scream •• down •• Fulton • Street
There are ten career members on staff who
/. towards MaristCollege.
work 10-hour nights and 14-hour day~. Ail
It was the 187th time this year.·
paid staff members are former volunteers.
. The Fairview Fire Company, located in the
· .. According to Deputy Chief Richard
District Business Office onViolet Avenue,
Dormeyer, "The12-19
firefighters and
is made up of 40 volunteer members and they rescue squad volunteers cannot manage the
are looking for help from Marist students.
three-minute response time or the 1,200 calls
The· cQmpany, receives approximately each year. We can't pay all of them, so we
1,200 .·fire.
and rescue· calls . every year.
need both on staff.''
200 ·of those calls come.from-Marist.
"Our first Marist volunteer was here for
They getthe call from Marist secw:ity, and
almost four years and was excellent,''
the trucks can
be
anywhere within nine miles Dorineyer said.
•
of the college, and arrive in three minutes or
Former Marist volunteers have done
. less.
•
.
.
.
everything from fight fires to ride and assist
.. Fire Police Captain Joe Zeidan said,
on the ambulance. They have the option to
~'Marist was
'once
one of our biggest assets move up the ranks as high as they want as
in volunteering.:._:we
used to have a lot of stu-
long as they take the necessary courses and
dent volunteers from the college."
qualify, Dormeyer said.
Zeidan said that all of the former Marist
"It does cost.money to train and outfit
volunteers have graduated, and there is a lack these volunteers,'' Dorm eyer said.
of interest in current students to become in-
"We are looking primarily for students
volved in the program.
who have training from home, but if a stu-
• Working with students in the past had
dent plans to be here for a few years, we will
been a major asset for the department,
train them," Dormeyer said. •
Zeidan said.
· .
~
.. ··-: -:· · ..
·::
• "And we certainly wouldn't tum down
"Many students had the qualifications somebody who's leaving in June if they had
from their hometown fire departme9ts, and
the qualifications," Zeidan .said.
the one's that didn't, we trained,'' said
The company has met with some resistance
Zeidan.
•
from Marist regarding student volunteers.
Zeidan, a full-time deli manager said he
"The educators at Marist worry that it
volunteers because it is fun, he enjoys help-
takes away from their study time. This is not
ing people and:because it gets him out of the
true,~• said Dormeyer. "Students used to
house. • • •
-
study at the station here where it's quiet and
"It's too oad we're in a community where were here for us if we had a call." •
there's not a lot of people willing to •
Barbara Turner, volunteer rescue squad
· lieutenant, said, "One thing we stress with
• the students is that· schooling comes first.
-''.W!!
don'twant students leaving class to res-
pond to a call;"
Turner, a florist, is a member of both the
rescue squad and the ~refighters'. She began
her career with the company when she took .
an Advanced First Aid course at the com-
pany building.
"I immediately liked the people here-we're
like one big family and have lots of social •
activities such as softball games and parties,"
Turner said.
"Volunteering gives the students a chance
to do something for their community,"
Dormeyer said.
•
"Students become civic-minded and carry
this with them to their home communities,''
·said Fire Company President, Peg Connors .
"In this line of work, you have to like
helping people, and in dealing with them you
need patience,'' Turner said.
Volunteer work at the fire company can
be used to pick up skills in first aid and safety
or to further skills and talent.
A
former Marist student who took advan-
tage of these opportunities is Chris Dougher-
ty, who began as a volunteer and is now a
volunteer fire captain.
Dougherty, an Emergency Medical
Technician (EMT), is studying to be a
paramedic. Volunteers come from varied
professions, including electrical engineers,
paramedics, florists, electricians. There are
IBM employees and a deputy sheriff.
Tory Gallante, 21, is a member of the paid
staff. At 16, he became a volunteer and two
years later was hired part-time.
At 20, Gallante was hired full time and
continues to work at the company while go-
ing to school part-time at Dutchess Com-
munity College .
There are currently 40 active members of
the company, which includes the ladies aux-
iliary, the rescue squad, the fire police and
the firefighters.
While ~he ladies auxiliary handles
refreshments and the fire police secure the
scene and direct traffic, there is a bit more
training involved in becoming a firefighter
and a member of the rescue squaq.
Members of the rescue squad must take
courses to qualify to work on the ambulance:
Certified First Responder (CFR) and CPR.
Firefighters need to take EF-the Essen-
tials of Fire, a broad-based course that
teaches everything there is to know about
fire.
"There is a lot of training involved, but
once you get going, and have the patience •
to keep with it, it's not bad at all,'' Turner
said.
According to Turner, after an application
and interview process, one must be sworn in.
Then one must pass an extensive and gruel-
ing physical-basically
for one's own
protection .
Candidates are also required to take a class
for three months that meets twice a week.
Once certified, six weeks later, there is a one
month probation period.
"During this learning period, you ride on
the ambulance but administer no type of pa-
tient care-you just observe and learn how
everything works," Turner said. "Once you
take the Certified First Responder class, then
you can deal with the patients and basical- •
ly, you're on your way."
The Fairview Fire Company responded to
200 calls from Marist last year.
-,
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.,
TH_E CIRCLE, NOVEMBER'
11~
199~
UPGBADE--···-
.
..
,.
___
..
_.
----------
..
:con,rll&.~
i,oJ
pa~•
1
•
•.
:. thi~~ ..
~d.ut
siiity
ihOU1d
have
•
~<I
~;,;i, .~
arou~d.;
h;1~
••
. .·
needs to pay attention in
..
b_een.
~one.
~
lo~g time ag<>..
.
,
•
.
her;
•
.
. • .
.
..
-.,.
:< ·.
•
.
.
•.
'the
dorms and·c1'eck,everyperson
•
C'l
__
t_hirk ~t sh_ould hav~_al~a~s
-:.
·•-
• ,
,·
..
•
·••
• ,.
_,_:i
•
.
that' comes· thfough·: the door.·
been
·li~e
th.is,:' Br~nches1 said,·
•
.:
'.'I !eel tha.t there should be more
•
"The security.guards don't care,
.
'_'I think~ ~es get tougher and_
-_secun~y_<>u.!
~nCanter~ury beca~se
they just le·~
anyone walk right in- th
7
more thmgs happen, .the more
•
there ar~~t;t~geJ_o~~esJhii.t hang
·
to the dorms without even check~ things on campus are gomg to get· out- and wait. for peo_ple
to .come·
irig them," he siiid.
'
•
worse. Something·. should h.ave home from cll1s~es,"_
she S:i!~L.
_
The students in· Canterbury been done long ago.t,_ Mehssa
0
•
11
••
B" ·
•
·•·
ho··.
liv'·_ed·o,·n··cam<
'
.
.
-··
D 11
B"
l
•
,
C t bu Y
e a ianca, w
•
Garden Apartments said they don't
e. a
1
!lnc~, a so a , an er. r
pus for two years; said she feels
•
even see security out. patrolling at resident, said s~e does~--t_ feel safer
•.
safer. with .the escorts. than with
all.
on cm.ipus or m the apartments.
.
·t
Sb said without the
Jennifer Zanetti, a junior in apt. She said
_she
has been followed. up !~%1n~
on
c:mpus to do that, she.
94B, said she never sees. security to her apart~enlby stra~ge men wouldn't feel safe at all.
•
..
-anywhere
ouU~. Canterbury and when she arrives home at ru~ht
.and
•
••
•
said they need to check
·on
the
student_s out there as well.
..
.
. ,
"'I haven~t seen any changes at
•
all. The only thing I've heard about
is the escort service/' she said.
"I
:never
see security at Canterbury at
<
all. We need more out here.!'
•
Dana Branchesi, a junior, said .
Self Defense·
&
Rape Prevention··
Model Mugging Chapter offers Women's Empowerment
and Rape Prevention program. Full contact self defense
course that teaches women to knock out an assaillant of
.
any si_ze.
Taught in.a supportive emotional atmosphere.
.
~
.
.
•
.
·-·
.
.
..
.
.
,
.·
_.
'
.
.
--GRADUATJ·ON
••
:-·
SUNDAY; Nov·eIDber 14th~ at
.12:30
PM
at the Campus center room 348B
See what 100% commitment looks like! Supporte_rs
.
and
visitors are welcome to attend this event, the only pan of the
course open to the public. Come and celebrate the spirit and
empowennent of the woman.
CO'll:i(!Jl(j'E
'TO Y:I(j-9-f'T
(914)
.431-6779
.
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ITALIAN PIZZERIA •
·454~5133
SINCE1974
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''SPEEDY·DELIVERYI'
LARGE PIZZA'.ONLY
$6.0_0
(Excluding Wedµe~day's Special)
PLUS ~/:
DELI~RY
(APPLIES TO ON CAMPUS_
DELIVERIES
ONLY)
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I
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1
$1.00 OFF ANY:'
1
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ORDER OVER $1-2.00
1
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LIMIT ONE COUPON
PER ORDER
•
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~IW
l1r~
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111~
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~IW
J1r11J
-
And
Many
Other
OesUnaU_o_ns!
.
•
• n. t,oaKtt
for
•
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vtt
•
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ttalutf
tr{(/.
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'
(ralaate-
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•
.
..
•
Poughkeepsie:
,ub City, 246 Main Mall • 485-3579
.
·
·Arlington
·
~DRT/JNE'
Arlington
Getty,
813 Main St.• 454-3530
THECIRCLE,
•
F,EATURE
NoveMeeR11,1993
5
Marisf hocke;y J&ns keep Crowds entertained
--_-b...,~-,
...,B-IL-L-.-H-.
A_N_S_C;;..O_;_M.:.·
_;__·
•
he has seen the ~ffect of the crowd
.
There. is an atteinpf to ke~p ~he senior. "This is why I come to the
•
Staff. Writer
on opposing players ...
·
.crowd from yelling obscenities at
games."
••
"It's great watching
.
the • the Civic Center. If a security guard
The physical nature of hockey
Senior Rich Finn said the tough
guy image of the sport attracts the
rowdy crowds.
The sport of hockey is known
for fast action, and physical play.
It has also been known to attract
some
•
of the most rowdy and
fanatical crowds of any sport.
The
.crowds
that gather at the
Mid~Hudson Civic Center to cheer
on the Marist hockey club are no
different.
•
•
.
'
"I love the sport; the action, and
the violence," said
:senior
Frank.,
lmschweiler. "I love to get into it."
.
<Getting
into· it, is exactly what
the fans do.
•
The moment the players hit the
ice the crowd erupts. All game long
chants of "Let's go Marist" .ring
out through the rink.
There is also
a:
dark side to the
Marist crowd. All game long, the
crowd verbally attacks opposing
teams' players.
•
.
For example, in Saturday night's
game versus Stony Brook, some
crowd
comments
included:
"Number
9, your
dead!";
"Number
9,
tell your mom to stop
calling me!"; "Telryour
.dad
to
stop calling me too!"
Senior right wing, Jeff Frost said
Preparatjon:(9r,,
•
-.f.~
.::~::
:~;
-
·Th
f:°;
·:·
~;-:;
upcomµig,e~~ip~;
:
•
~-:'
.
-..
'-•
.
,.
LSAT beginsJan.
6
MCAT beginsJ?eb. 12
Smart people read t~fine print. Smart
people want small classes (fewer than 15
studenls). 4 procto,:ed diagniistic 'examfna.
dons, free extra help wit_h
the itwructor, and
excel/en1 score improvements: Smmt people
•
prepar,fwµh us.
·•
••
•
THE
PRINCETON
REVIEW
We
Score
Morel
other teams
•
get flustered by the
hears someone cursing, they will·· often leads to violent acts on the
crowd, it gets them off their
warn the person not to do so. If
ice. This is one of the attractions
game," Frost said.
•
swearing is heard from the same for some people.
"Hockey is such a physical
.
sport, it's easy for the crowd to get
involved,"
Finn said.
Not everyone enj6ys th~ verbal
abuse heard atthe game; Jennifer
Ross, a senior, said she doesn't ap-
preciate it.
"I enjoy hockey as a whole, but
the· crowd can be a deterrent,"
Ross said. "I don't think the crowd
should be shouting obscenities."
person again, that person will be
asked to leave the premises.
Now what exactly is it about
hockey, that attracts such a
raucous crowd?
.
"On the seventh day, God
created violence, and God said it·
was good," said Cliff Delaney, a
lW.-~A'.s~;n;.J.
.
J.Q[t-et>4t~~
·_
.•
/±'J
Y,o.vr
fll!SX
1.£.s.
Y.cv.rE,TtLr.e.
ill
y.ovr
Fr~er
• DAte~------t,·
li.:.:.im_e:;__
__
_
}}~----------------
Attention: JUNIORS & SENIORS
At MARIST - Ring ordering:
Nov. 11
(Thurs)
10am-S:30pm
Nov.12
(Fri)
10am-2:30pm
Nov. 15
(Mon)
10am-5:30pm
Nov. 16
(Tues)
10am-2:30pm
Dyson Center (Near Cafe)•
Deposit:
$25.
Cash, Check or Credit Card.
$100
deposit required for orders with
balance due over $400.
For additional info. contact:
Al Meyers-Jcstens:
(718) 343-6243
Dashl Dashl The •official•
Marlst
Watches for Men
&..
Women are available for purchase the above dates.
Great
Gift
Ideal
During the games, cries of "Hit
him!", and "Fight! Fight! Fight!"
can be heard echoing from the
stands.
Some people go to the games just
to be in the rowdy atmosphere.
Jim Macaluso, a junior said he
is one such person.
"I don't know, I guess I love
hanging
out with wackos,"
Macaluso said.
Dominic Tallarini, a senior, said
the crowd is a big reason why he
goes to the games.
"With the crowd'going crazy, it
makes the game more enjoyable,"
Tallarini said.
•
The quality of play is another
major factor in the large crowd
turnout.
.
In the past six years, the club has
made the playoffs every year. Two
years
ago
they
won
the
Metropolitan Collegiate Hockey
Conference championship,
by
beating Wagner in the playoff
finals.
SIGMA Pttl EPSILON
1993 BLOOD DRIVE
Time: 12:00 Noon to 5:30 PM
Date: November 18, 1993
Place: Fireside Lounge
Posting on campus for time
&
place.
Questions Refer to:
Jvhn Hynes 575-4314 • Joe Russo 485-1890
11
YOU CAN B~ A
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'
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•
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-·
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/.\
•
THECIRCL·E
• MARIST
COLLEGE;
POUGHKEEPSIE;
NY 12601
.
.
_
THE
STODENT
NEwSPfiPER
...
•.
..
.
.
.
SJ. Richard,
editor_
Ted Hohnlund,
sports editor
Matt
Martin,feature editor
,
..
Julie Martin, associate editor
Andrew Holmlund,
editorial page editor
Dana Buonf(:ontl,
columns editor.
Carl Ol~kewlcz, assistant editor
Kristina Wells, associate editor
KlrellA. L~khnt"an,
associare
editor
Jennifer Ponzinl, advertising
manager
James Hocking, distribution
manager
'
•
-·
Dennis GUdea,faculty
advfsir
PUBLISHED
EVERY
THURSDAY
.
.
.
~:·
.:~
~
.-
•
..
··_;-.
:--::.
r_,·
Ignorance affects
crime an-d_-;,
_ _
..
Americans,·Views
"Congress shali make no law respecting an establishment of religion,
•
This paSt weekend atMari st
·(:ollege
was
•
Replacing "jobs" as the hot topic this elec-
•
a very eventful one. We had the pleasure of
tion year was "crime."
or prohibiting the free. exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of
,
hosting 15 students from Up \Yith People.
speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble
The
.
-.
students
were·_ from. Canada,
and to petition the government for a redress of grievances." •
Netherlands, Germany, Ireland as well as the
- Our rights as American citizens begin here.
st
;:g
an Up with P~ple Alum~, this was
Recently at a local high school, the student newspaper has been cen-
an incredible weekend, but also it reminded
sored because it ran an:editorial criticizing the "back-to-basics" cur-
me ofthe things that bothered me when I
riculum and a cartoon depicting school board members as animals.
traveled two years ago.
:
.
,
•
•
•
•
.
•
Americans are ignorant to other countries'
What's the problem? Were they obscenely clad? Or did the caricature
•
cultures, traditions, governments and even
bear a striking resemblance to the individuals which they f~und unflat-
geography.
•
•
..
• .·
._.·
-_.
_.
_.
_
• ..
•
.
.
•·
.
1
tering? Has this somehow hurt the board members' reputations? Or
·By
geography,
_I
do not mean:_
where the
perhaps compromised the integrity of the board itself?
•
•
hills and lak~ are but where the countires
Everytinie we pick up the paper or turn on
••
the TV we see it. The new wave of crime;
• fear, and violence covers everything•-from
the report of a drive~by shooting on. the
"Nightly News•~-to a story on'. ''Donahue"
·
about two kids bilnµng down
:their
·house
after watching ''.Beavis
_and·
Butt-head.'·'
It is e~erywhe(e. And people are
~i
raid.
·
·
But why is it happening?
•
•
••
-
lg11qran~e
is all aroun4 us.
A
.
. ·
1
.
·.
.
are on•a:map,
;· •
.
.
·
..
· ..
·.
·.
1
•.
pparentyso.
··.
.
.
.
. .
_.,
,
.
<
-·..
. -
•
_.
:
• ,Just-by
curiousity, how many,·people
• •
• ·
·
··,
···
•·
'
BecauseQf this serfous infraction, the faclllty adviser isheing charif
•
'
••
'·
woiild"kriow \vhat the'Egc is?,T.he capital
:.B~t
who)s more ~~oi-~t:
the
person ~m-
)
..
ed.withJ,nsubprdinatiqn;:Jtfound guilty by the
..
·school
_
district, a.k~a.
•
of panmark (no tha~ is·nofa,-typo,· that is
rmtting the h~te
~~~~;
~he,.h<?~~ph~'!?:',,th~.
_.,,_,,,_.
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,
h
·h
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d
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f.
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_ho\\'.
th_e Danes spell1t)?·Or how about the
.
dmg-pusher, fhe _s1:1n-~ealer,
the ~somst or
t e sc o_o o~r _w
le
~as so o iei:i e , ;e ~rs est pena ty It may
language spokenin·Belgium?
:
.. :
.•.
the·p
7
ople wh_o
Jusr_s1t,and Jet1t happen?
levy
agamst him 1s d1sm1ssal from his teachmgJob.
_ .
I was talking to a frierid_ofrnirie who has·, Who
IS
t<>blame?,Thenew
trend-b!apifl'V
ha~:h:!J~:i~~:;~o~:i!'.
It makes one wonder if the First Am~ndment
•
~::~::~~at~~~lZn~~~!!\:~ds~
t;
_
·
•.
Buf~\ve
;~;
~lle-Uu{violincik otii'
,
_
According· to the State Education Department reg·
ulations "The First
tie.
_knowle~g~.
~f how c:>ther_,
go~~rnments
.
society.ori
ino,vi~s
like •~The
l?rogram''
cif>
·. . .. :
.· ·. ·_.
•
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.
.
. ' ' . . .
.
.
. . .
.
····•.
··.
.
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,'
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work and how much other countnes know
shows like.''Beavis arid Butt-head??Aie kids
Amendment protection of freedom of the press applies to student publica-
.
about ours.
•
•
••
,
_.. .
shooililg
eacli
other iµid
start;ingfrr~
because:
•
tions, but students have the responsibility to refrain. from libeLarid
• •
By the way; doesanyone know wh~t hap~. they are.watching too:ma11y:lloilrs
of
MTV
obscenity, and to observe the norm'al rules for responsiblejournaUsm.' '.
.
peiied in the ~anadaian election? Probably
or an Arn~ld\S~hw_:µ'ieneggei:
movie?
.
·•
Th
.
di
f "Th O
·
·
1 " h
·
SUNY N
p..;'t
·
·
did
·th
•
n<>t
becauseit does not concern you.
. ..
.
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•.
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.
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.
..
.
.
.
.
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e e to~
~
.
e ~ac e,
f
e
_
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_,
cu
Z
pape~, .
_
no onor
.
_
Unless there js a war, a terrorist attack,
. tlf.youf an:Sweds 'yes' maybe yoil should
the respons1b1hty of a Journahst, much less that of
_an
editor, when he
or if you are traveling outsid,e,the States; you
askyourself\vliy:they'.re'watching"it?
Whf.
wrote and p11blished a spoof horoscope which he said was attempting
-
really do ri9tca,re what i~ happe~ing in other
don'tlbeir;parents
'shiidf:off?/A
nd
if'
theit
•
-
to expose the mentality of the Ku Klux Klan.
•
•
.
..
]'.)arts_
cftljr:wor14,.
C
>;,-;'
;
.
.·
>·'
C
parent~:~~en'fh~~e
;''.\Yhi:noq
+,•,'
"
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.
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Wh~ts~~ me ~:that-thIS
~gnorancelS
not
.
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His
,attem?t
fell-pamfully shor_t of. the mark. He was impeached by
just for other countries but for our own as
.
·
..
;Iwotild
heuhat in Somalia, $arajevo, or
th_e paper' s_e
__
ditor_i~_l
bq_ard;
_
_
_
_
_
.
_ _
_ _
__
·.
_
.
•
well,_,'_,_)·:-.
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Haiti/f~~~peopleih.aye'·seen ."Beavis and
•
•
•
.·
Butt-head'.?·
or
"Robcicop·3"
:.-
yei;there's··
-
These are two local instances where the po\Vtfr of the First Amt!J}d"'._
._
.·
.-There
ar<: a lot of p,!:ople in;this co,untry: still violence.
_
,
.•.
ment was tested. Both
cases
are_disgracefuL
One
for
the flagrant disregard
as,weHas this cam~us_who
do no~ know 1;1°\\'.:
;;
f
·
·
u
·
• ·
h.
·
h.
h
·f
·
·
d"bl ·
·
·
·
"bl
1
.
k f
our own governm.,ent
1s run. Ok, they rmght.
..
• _.·
•
__
• •
.
•
:
>
.
. - -.·
or
JOUm~
sts ng ts;
t_
e ot er or an mere 1
Y
1rrespons1 e ac
O
.
know about
a
presidenL(do(ricitg¢t me
••
Our proQl~ms go beyond TV.
tact on
a
sensitive subject.
.. .
.
.
started), the senate
and
house butthey pro:.
Both cases bruised the
.First.
Amendment, but one more so than· the
bably c<>uld
not. feµ what
.~b,a(mearis:
:
th
•
••
We
can
breabt do\Vn evenJuther. How
o er·.
.
.
_
.
.
_
. .
.
·
.
,
.
people
can
name their two senators or even
While the New Paltz angle 1s appalling to many, 1t1s the K:etcham High
•
theiqtate reps?"
_
..
_
.
,
•
School situation thatniakes us worry.
.
.
.
.
.
·....
.
· ..
·
.··
.
,\Ve
have stopped teaching aboiit other
The infringement of the First· Amendment by. the powers :th~t be at
'contries,
othergoyemmentsas
weU
~.other
.
••
We need to
'pay
fuore attention to
"bur
children. We need to help influence them not
to be ignorant, intolerant, or violent
...
We
need to teach,theni ihat-homophobia· is
wrong. Th~t peQple of a diffen:nt race,
religion, gender,
:or
sexual preference are the
•
·same.·
Roy C. Ketcham High S~h.ool virtually rev?ke? th~ stude1;1ts'
right to
cu~ri~d
fo ~nderstand other cultur~ if
freedom of speech. Depnvmg anyone of this nght
IS
nothmg short of
we ever expect to get along with them:'.Fo[
Last week; an ~endment was added to.
a crime.
• .
• .
.
•
•
example, we all had to take ~ foreign
the.·crime biU, now being debated in con-
As professional journalists, w-ejealously guard everyone's right to ex-
language ill high school
a
nd some are
tak-
•
gress. The am,endin~ritadded
would lengthen
press themselves freely without fear of undue recourse.
~!~~!t:r~~~ege but how many of
you
S
till sentences forhllte:crime offenders.
•
•
Is this not the foundation
·of
a democracy?
What amazes me is how my friends from
Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) spon~
The newspaper does not provide only the journalist with the oppor-
other coutries not only speak english but also
sored the amendment citing that in Los
tunity to report on a story as he or she sees it, but also gives the reader-
several differnt languages.
• ·
.
Angeles, 165 hate crimes were reported froni
-
This ignorance is a major problem in the
July to Septeinber:,-a 19 percent increase.
ship an open forum for disagreement or rebuttal for stories as well as
United States. What really gets to me is
coun-
editorials.
.
.
.
try sterotypes.
•
If violations of the First Amendment spill over to other student publica-
.
tions, then a danger and practically irrevocable precedent will
.be
set.
A strong pillar within. the democratic structure would be severely·
weakened:
Eventually, journalism and free speech would be no more. Newspapers
•
would become sheer PR sheets. The public at large would suffer if it
·was
inundated solely with information from powerful organizations which
would not provide a forum or opportunity to respond.
We, S.J. Richard, Ted Holmlund, Matt Martin, Julie Martin, Cari
Oleskewicz, Andrew Holmlund, Kristina Wells, Kirell Lakhman and
Dana Bouniconti, hold these truths to be self evident.
All. Canadaians say "eh." Everyone in
Poland is poor. The list could go on and I
am sure everyone has their own ideas about
other countries.
Until you learn about other countries, not
just know where they are on a map, but real-
ly learn about them, you will realize that
everyone has the same ideas, beliefs and
.
goals as you do.
Scott Sullens is one of the Circle's political
columnists.
."Someone
who selects a victim based on
.
hatred should be-the subject of the stiff fest.
penalties;" Seri~
Feinstein said in a New York
Times article on Nov. 5.
The crime bill should not be defeated
because of partisan politics. If Americans are
serious about stopping ignorance - now's the
chance to stand-up and do something. Tur-
ning off "Beavis and Butt-head" may not
be enough.
Caroline .Jonah is one of the Circle's
political columnists.
•
THECIRCLE,
VIEWPOINT
y.f
ay
t◊
go Says
}>_residbnt1\1urray
Edit~r:
·,:>: ..
'
.
:
.
.
:
. .
·
.
.-
.
u
.N; AmbassadorQeorge Ball.
'
I~ was with great pride t'1at • I
··
....
_·
Everytwo,years;·.Marist College
Our< studerits>assisted :with
witnessed the contributions our
is·
·
invited
:·to·:
recommend.·• six
hospitalityCand logistics; greeti11g
.
students made to this event and the
•
students to~participate iii the Four·
•
tht: medal recipients
upon
their ar-'.: admiration and respect th~y earn~
Fr¢edotj:is
'.t\wardscereniony
spon-
..
•
rival in towri; escorting them to and
.
eel
-from
the medal winners their
sored by the Franklin and Eleanor
from events; arid serving as ushers families; arid other members'of the
Roosevelt Institute in Hyde Park.
at the· awards·_
ceremony;
• .
.
.
Roosevelt Institute board.
•
These awards·are given to.pro-
They also attended
:a
dinner in
I received
.
numerous com-
minent Americans who have made the medalists' honor
:
and par~
.
plirnents about how bright and per-
-a
special contribution to fulfilling ticipated in a roundtable discussion sonable our students were, and the
Roosevelt's vision of four essential with
.
these
distinguished
..
depth of their knowledge about
·
:freedoms:
freedom of speech and
Americans.
.
.
..
. .·.
world and national events and the
expression, freedom of worship,
• •
. The Marist students participating special contributions their par-
freedom from· want,. and• freedom this year included: Allison Andrews.
•
ticular honoree has made to our
·
·
·
'95, a:special education major nation.
from
:re~r
•
....
•
•
• •
,
·.••
•·
as_s_
igne_d
to th_
e Shriv_ers;
Matt_hew_ This_e.ven_
t p_rovided
a unique ex-
';
This: year's' event was held on
Oct/2l.and 22.
·
•.
Latvis-'94,: a history and Russian perience for these six students, one
.
'
Former Secretary of State Cyrus major. assigned to· Ambassador
that will stand out as a highlight
·
Vance, currently the personal en-
Ball;· Jason Lord, '94,
.a
:political
of their four years at Marist
-voy
of the· United Nations
science major assigned to Secretary College.
Secretary~Qeneral
in
.
··:the
Vance; Alexandra Papaleo '94, an
It
also showcased 'the ac-
Yugoslavia crisis; received the 1993 English major· assigned to
.
Mr. complishmerits of six remarkable
Franklin
D.
Roosevelt Freedom
Miller; Jeff Schanz '94, a political yourig people and the institution
Medal..
.
• _
•
•
sHcienbce
mh.
ajoi:d-asCshig1_1et~
toWRevd. thedy_represent
11
in a way that brings
Also honoredwer_e playwright
es urg ; an
•·
•
ns me
.•
00
ere
it
to us a •
h
M"ll
h
R
·
d
'95, a communications
and
I hope the entire college com-
Art ur '
1
er; .t e
•
•
everen
poJ.ltical
science major who assisted
.
munity will
J
0
oin me -in con-
Theodore Hesburgh, form.er presi:
•
.
dent. of Notre Dame University;
with publicity and media relations gratulating Allison, Matt, Jason,
Eunice Kennedy Shriver, founder
for the event.
.
.
Alex, Jeff, and Christine for the
of the Special· Olympics;
,
Sargent
As
a member of the board of the outstanding way in which they
.Shriver;
orgariizerahd firstDirec-
Roosevelt Institute, lattended the represented Marist.
tor of the
Peace
Corps; and former
dinner
·
and ,p·articipated in the
President Dennis J. Murray
awards ceremony.
IBM computers are here to help
.
.
Editor:
ing with the buttons:
• . •
FACT: Marist College houses
Just take a brisk walk to the help
.one
of the
•
most advanced
counter; and viola your problem is
technological computer systems in solved.
•
.
. •
:
•
the country.
.
.
:
All you· have to do is ask.
,
MYTH:
The computers donot
Is that so much?
work. There are also not eno_ugh
All of the student employees are
computers for every student; Why trained and knowledgeable about
is the.lab not open?
•.
the
.
.computer packages and
•
Why are MarisLstudents. so printers.
.
.
,
negative about Marist?
•
•
•
These employees are managed by
•
They complain and complain yet mor~ Marist students.,
,and
complain...
•• '--"
.. .
•
Jhi~_-,pr9yides'
:great
worl,c ex-
:.
They ovedookthe positive=ad-
.
perience
f,or. • these
student
.
yantages;;oLJiaviog;,.IBM..::,com_~:c;
employcek,,:-.,,
;,:·••,,,;·,.
,.
",
:;;pt1t~i:s',
,,the::,R9)m1ihone
..
and
:the
:
•
..
-The
PCSC (Personal Computer:
•
·mamframe
<>*
-~p11si'j;
,
,,;.;:
/{ -' .:
~upp6rt; Center.)
:ialso,;
assists>.
I
do not know how,many:-tiines
,:<students>sand
.
•
faculty
with
...
I have heard students swear at com~ questions.
•
•
.
•
puters or yell at them for losing
This center is located down.the
their work.
•,
"
stairs
in·
the Donnelly Computer
Hey, ~oniputers\are
.just
.
a
Center:
machine.- do ilot:abuse them.
..
And Seniors, this. is whereyou
.
__
The
.Computer
Center.
.employs
•
print out that final version
of
your
many Mari st students to_
assist you resume and cover letter on the laser
in your difficulties with the : printer,
.....
computers.·
.
•
. . .
_.
Not enough computers?
•
What does this mean?
That is impossible:
Well, if your paper can not print
The Marist College
.
Academic
orit is not saving, do not start play~ Computing guide states that Marist
has "over 160 PCs."
Now, that is a lot.
How many do we really need?
I was in the computer center on
a weekend morning and not a
single·sole was in there.
It was probably after lunch that
•
another handful of people came in.
If
you have work to do, then get·
up early and. get to the machines
before the rest of the campus wakes
up...
•
These computers cost money to
operate and repair. - · :
.
. .
.
•
If.we had five hundred
'com-
puter~
1
,then
stu~ents
w,ill
con1plain
about the high. cost oUuition.'
.
If
ail t~e-c<>mputers,are
not us-
ed now,why do.we need more?
The only time
·we
rim out of
computers is, during mid-terms and
finals.
•
•
If
you procrastinate until the end
of the semester; then that is your
fault,
·not
Marist's.
At
·
Marist, we should all
•
be
grateful for the relationship with
IBM .
Nella Licari, senior
Chess Club
Editor:
•
·_
On Saturday, O~t.-30, 1993, the
chess club drove to Thayer Hall on
the West Point campus to meet the
very strong Cadet team.
Mike Murray, Marist club presi-
dent, said he was particularly im-
pr~sed with the play of some of
our freshmen.
.
For example, Marist'sfreshman
John Brickman defeated the
Cadet's fourth-ranked
player,
Cadet Joseph Odell.
.
Other winners for Marist were:
juniors Ed Ryan and Darren Ranft,
and freshman Grayson DeWitt.
Freshman David Lifson also
played well, but was outma'tched
by West Point's third-ranked
player, Cadet Lo.
On boards one and two, Marist's
Mike Murray and John Pacut lost
extremely close games in which
.
single pawns decided the issues ..
C~ig W. Fisher
Faculty advisor, chess club
How to reach us:
• Mondays: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
• E-Mail:
LT 211, HZAL
• Phone Mail: X2429
NO LETTERS AFTER 5 PM
ON FRIDAYS
NOVEMBER 11,
1993
7
Th·e Answers
Editor:
I
can probably answer some of
your questions (from the editorial
in the Oct. 14 issue).
1.
Why does Marist exist?
- That's an easy one. To suck
up money and use it to put people
off campus.
6. What happened to the con-
dom committee Kent Rinehart pro-
mised when he ran for
SGA
presi-
dent last spring?
-
Apathy. Or the administra-
tion "suggested" he drop it.
8. Is the going to be a River Day
'94
held?
If
so, where will it be held
and when?
•
- Yes, it will be held in BS, just
to stick with tradition.
12. When is Marist going to get
a library?
-
•
Right after we get tennis
-courts.
16. Is the Student Government
Association working?
- A
violatio11 of grammatical
rules. You used "government" and
"working" in the same sentence.
17. Parking?
-
You're kidding, right?
18. When are the tennis courts
being !:milt?
- Right
·after
we get a new
gym.
20. When is Marist going to get
a new gym?
-
Right after we get a library.
21. Will the privatization of the
bookstore cost students more?
-
More than what? The Mid-
Hudson River Bridge repairs? If
that's it, then yes.
25. Why is J>oughkeepsie called
the "City Of Trees"?
- Because calling it the "City of
Drugs" won't attract tourists.
26. Parking?
-
No, stop, you're killing me!
(laughter)
27. How much will tuition go up
next year?
-
How much you got?
29. How many more water pipes
will burst before construction on
campus is completed?
-
If
construction on campus
is
completed. All of them. Twice.
30. Where are the construction
plans?
-
Don't you have them?
44.
Why did the college radio
station's staff have to sign a con-
tract agreeing not to say anything
against the college on the air?
-
Because we're trying to pre-
sent a more professional attitude
from our closet.
46. Why do the O:ew
townhouses
doorbells sound like fire alarms?
-
Because they were cheaper.
53. How far behind schedule is
the construction of the new dorm?
-
Far longer than the human
·mind·
can imagine.
57. How many people noticed
the grammatical error on the front
page of the Sept. 23 issue of The
Circle?
- Everyone I pointed it out to.
I found it quite ironic since you
were in that issue, pointing out the
spelling error on the parking signs.
More likely than
not,
it's
something in the water.
58.
Why is The Circle called the
Circle?
-
Because it describes how
things get done here-going
around in circles.
62. Who started the rumor that
Marist is a communications
school?
-
You mean we're not????
66. Does anyone still believe in
a place called Hope?
- Yes, but I'll give you a hint,
you won't find it on this campus.
Neil Kelly,
junior
,
.
'
.
,
•
,J
•••
,
.
·'•
••
,I.
8
..
_,···-•·
THE CIRCLE, NOVEMBER
11,
1993
..
.
.
..:
.
.
The
Anatomy
of the Otibank
Oassic card:_
a body of services
and peace of mind
for students.
For years, scientists could only theorize about the Cit:Ibank Clas&c
Vtsa®
card,
U1¥lble
to actually observe anything below its epidermal surface (i.e. the plastic). ·surely, the highly
.
.
.
intelligent services were evidence of an advanced brain. But with the latest advances in x-ray technology,
and when the light could catch the various parts just so, it
was
confirmed: the Citibank Clas&c
Vtsa
card
is head to toe more evolved than ever imagined.
,i
At its
backbone are
3
services to cover the purchases you make
on the carcl. Starting at the
Lower Costa/ Spine,
we
see
Otibank Price Protection
can
as.5Uie
you of the
best price. All you have to do is discover the same item •
Scientists
theorize
that
the
mind
of the
Citibank
Classic
Visa
advertised in print for iess, within 60 days, and Citibank
cardmember
(Fig.
A)
is
secure
because
it receives
superior
service;
the
mind
of the
non-Citibank
Classic
Visa
cardmember
will refun·
d the difference up to $lS01.
Along the
Ooin"-
it-
(Fig.
B}
is not
secure
because-could
it be-it
has
a screw
loose?
'J/"
.11
Slipped
Disc, Buyers
Securitysm
can
cover those purchases against accidental damage,
fire
or theft, for 90
days from the date of purchase
1
;
and
Citibank
Lifetime Warranty'm
allows one to extend the warranty
for the expected service life of eligible products up to 12 years
2
•
So if you ever buy a walkman, a stereo,
whatever, it
will be
reassuring
to know that Citibank can bend and be flexible while still lending support.
,i
The backbone is then connected to the cranium or headbone. You can actually see it on the top left
hand comer of the caret. Lookat the bottom of the page. The
Otibank Photocard
has the head of the
cardholdet on it, as well as his or her own signature, right on the front. Thatway, it will help preventfraud.
It wiUmake a good form ofID
~ well,"since you getto choose.your own photo:-,i But what about the
Nervous System?The fact is, it doesn't have one, not in the spinal cord llor in the brain.
·What
it has·
is
the
Very Calm System. Because even if your credit card gets stolen, or gets lost,
an
involuntary muscle called
the
Extendus Anewcardeus
activates the
Lost Wallei•m
Service
which. can repla~ • your
card
usually
within 24 hours.
,i
As suspected, there's another invqluntary muscle: the
lieari-a
B~~ting
and°
_caring
heart, big ·enough to give students special discounts and savings. You'll receive
a-$20
Airfare piscount
on domestic flights
3
;
savings on mail order purchases,·sports_equipment,magazines and music; a·low •
• >
.
.
.
•
• •
• •
...
•
-
·-
._ .. _.,
. ~·..;...
;
variable interest rate'of15.4%4;
and, no annuatfee.
(In
otherwords, the carclitselfdoesrrt cost
aforelimb
and a hlndlimb.)
,i
Naturally the heart ~f the· Citibank Visa card pumps life.
and persririalized customer
-
.
'.r
.
,
~
•··•~.,
..
·:'."';•,•,A
••--:
,~-..,,,·,•:,
•~_-. ,-.~-
.•
~
service. into all its.parts,
24 hours a·day.
Sd.ho matter what the questi9ri·you ipigh.thave concerning
'
.
-
•
.
.
•
-
.
·~
;
.,.
.
your card, you need only call the 800 number. Citibank represen~es each have
a
neckthey are eager
to stick out for you. They
will ~ys
lend an ear. Ora hand: They will keep an
ey~
out for yo~They will
put their best foot forward. Etc.
~
So call to apply. You dorlt need a job or a cosigner. And
call
if you'd
like your photo .added to your regular Citibank Classic
Vtsa
·card. The number is
1-800-CITIBANK
(1-800-248-4~26),
extension 19.
,i
If
we
take an overview of the whole body of
services _that make up the Cit:Ibank Clas&c
.Visa
card, ~d
consider that it
will facilitate building a credit history, then
you must shake a leg, flex your index finger and call today.
Not just VJSa.
Citibank
VJSa.
'Cenain C011ditions
and exclusions apply. Please refer to your Summary of Additional Program Informalion. Buyers Security is underwritten by The Zurich International UK
Limited. "Certain restrictions and limitations alll)ly. Underwritten by the New Hampshire Insurance Company. Service lite~
varies by product and is at least the
minimum based on retail industrydala. Details
of
~are
available in your Summary of Additional Program lnbmation. 'Olierexpires6/30/94. Minimum tidet purchase
price isS!OO.
Rebates
are
forOt.ibank student canlmembmon tickets issued by ISE Fl.ightsonly.
4
The Annual Paccntage Rate (APR) forpun:hases is 1S.4%asof10/93 and may
vary quarterly. The APR for cash advances is 19.8%.
If a finance dta.-gc is imposed, the minimum is 50 cents. There is an additional finance charge for each cash advance
transaction~to2'lbol'theamountofeadlcashad\,ancetransaction;hov.,:ver,itwillnotbelcssthan$2.()()orgreaia-than$10.00.Monan:h•NotesarepublishedbyMonan:h
Press, a division of Simon & Sdruster, a Paramount O>J:nmunications
Company. Used by pcrmis&On of publisher. ©1993 OU"bank (South Dalcota). N.A. Member FDIC
Monarch Notes® Version:
'
With your purchases covered,
no fee, and a low rate, the·
• Citibank Classic
Visa
card will
go easy on your Nervous System.
Call ·l- 8 00 ·;. ClTlBA N K
(1-800-248-4226), extension 19
..
...
1:
(_
I
•
~:..
• -
.
•
I"
'
,I
·
.. THE c·1RCLE,
·NoVEME3ER1·1,
1993
9
AndJt'swro,ig.place
for good food,
•
service
by ABBI NORL
Staff
Writer
.
specials ~oard (one of the• clever
•
$4,00, and Chicken Wings, $4.50) and is served with a heap of sauteed
staff
...
••
•·.
. spelled
,
• it
which consists of a "scoop of tuna
onions and mushrooms, french
"fasul'' ... umm ... NO.; .$1.25/3-; & jello on a bed of lettuce garnish-
fries and cole slaw:
stuff, huh? It's just a burger
without a bun. .
1
,
•
• '·Tucked
under the old burnt
25).
>
•
\ •
.
..
:>
._:·
,.:
•
.,.-.:"
·:.ed.w/tomatoes·& coleslaw.".:
railroad trestle at the end ofa dead
Get your bib· OliCif, you
:
orde(
How could you: resist?
•
'
.
•'..
end off Delafield St., is Andy's
Chili ($4.50), which is probably the
Swig out of your canned soda
Pla~e,
45
Dutchess
Ave.,
best item
·on
the menu: .This b.owl ($1.00) and get ready for the edi-
Poughkeepsie.
of mildly spicy meat
:and
beans
ble Elvis saridwichesin your choice
It's.a low-down, sloppy, greasy-
comes loade_d .with American
of The Memphis
(1/2
turkey, 1/2
spoo~ kinda joint..
•
cheese and oruons for the un-heart • roast beef, melted Swiss ... $5.00),
•
The "Pa" of "Ma and Pa"
smart.
.
or The Presley (chicken and eg-
eateries, you'not only get huge por-
Something that even the least gplant parmesan sandwich ruined
tions for a little price tag, you also classy restaurants leave out of the by the AMERICAN cheese with
get bad servi<;e
and the comfort of
side dish category is mashed
which it is served-ask for moz-
knowing there's no little man slav-
potatoes. Andy's are-
.
well,
zarella: • because
they
offer
irig over the dishes saved by the in-
they're mashe~ potatoes ($1.00)-
•
it. .. $5.50).
'
termittent-use of
.paper_plat~~-
but, with a touch of salt and pep-
If a burger fiend you are, then
From the brown panelling to the
••
p~r~ they're a welcome substitute
harden a few arteries with The King
blatant Elvis references, you just
.
for fries.
•
.
Deluxe ($6.25). Don't let the name
don't find
a
place. tackier than
Of course, there's the Diet Plate sea.re you off; this burger is HUGE
Andy's.
•
($4.50) offered "On The Light (about l" thick 5" in diameter
• The extensive menu even offers
Side" (along with Potato Skins,
and weighing i~ at about IO oz.)
some of the most ordinary food
.-'
There's
a
r'imge of s~ndwiches
offered ($2.75-$6.50) of which the
•
most exciting offered are the Fried
Fish and, yes,
·Meatloaf,
which is
also offered as a dinner for $6.00.
Goody ...
Dinners ($5.50-$10.00) include
potato, "veggie," and side of
bread-on-paper-plate, but Italian
Dinners ($4-$8.50) only include
bread-on-a-paper-plate and butter.
The excitement buzzes out of the
Hot Open Sandwiches category
where you'll find a Hot Jitterbug
($4.50). Sounds like wacky, wild,
.·•
'
•
There's plenty
o.f
parking across
.
the street so you do'n't have to com-
pete for a space and fight your way
-into Andy's Place.
Just walk right on in, plop your
butt down at the table of your
choice, and a waitress will be with
you when she's good and ready.
Andy's must rely on regulars to
keep it in business. Considering the
covert location, and· competitors'
attention to making lunching an
"experience," Andy's better get on
the ball because those regulars will
eventually die, and then who's left?
2 PA WPRINTS
==
AS A LAST
RESORT.
this side of the river!
-~•
Whether spelled correctly or not,
Andy's offers Pasta Fagioli on the
RESUMES
WANTED
■
FREE CONSULTATIONS
STUDENT.WRITTEN ONE-ACT PLAYS
'
.
.
'
•
■
WRITING/DESIGN
•
■
COVER
.LETTERS
for
■
LASERPRINTING
■
COMPUTERSTORAGE
•
■
FAX SERVICES
McCabe
Personnel
;I~"'
THE JOHN P. ANDERSON MEMORIAL AWARD COMPETITION
and for
·w'""-1
SJledwe
~
•
1485-33551
42
CATHARINE ST. PKPSE
Sta,1.e,a
7~Se/Wla4
;/(41>,,I~
LOCATION
•22
IBM
Road
Poughkeepsie
(Rt. 9 South,
right
at light,
after
IBM
plant)
HOT
SUBS
Philly.SteakSub
.............................
3~50
Meatball.
Parm
..
_
......
; .......................
3.25
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~··························~·····3.75
Veal
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.......................................
3.75
Eggplant
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......................
: .........
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&
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·····················'.···3·9
.
BuyAn
X~Large
Pie
And
GetA
Bambino
Pie For
1/2 Price!
performance
in
the college's
Spring festival
of
Student Written Plays
See G.A. Cox, Office of
Student
Aft airs, CC364
for Application and Contest Rules
PHONE
463-1800
or
463a
1823
FREE
,DELIVERY!!.··
DELIVERY
AND
STORE
HOURS
FRI & SAT -6 a.m. -3 a.m.
·.
SUNDAY-6
a.m. -12 a.m.
MON
- THURS
- 6
a.m. - 11 p.m.
PIZZA
Bambino
10" ......
: ......................
2.95
Sicilian
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:.·
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Larg~
.ri~
(16'.')
$4 ..
50plastax
X-large_Pie (18").
$6.25;tax
BELLY
STUFFERS
Fried
Mozzarella
Sticks
..................
3.50
Deep
Fried
Shripm
.........................
4.75
Deep
Fried
Clams
.........................
.4.50
French
Fries
.....................
~
.............
1.25
Onion·
Rings
.........
; ..........................
1.35
Fried
Dough
....................................
1.95
SALADS
TOO!!
,
. .
.
.1:a11 ............... '.'. ..... : ..
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16" ....................
10.95
·
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Barbecue
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16" .. ; ..........................
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13.75
Calzone
······················••.•···········
......
3.25
LARGE
CALZONE
ONLY
$3.25
',
••••
,
.•
••
'.
f.
, .•
,•
••
'
•.
'
,
,
,
'
.
,
.
'''.'
',,.''.,,
.•
.
,.
'
...
!
•
'
'
•
,
•
'
'
~
,
'
'
•
•
.•
•
....
,
.
,',
.·
"
,
,
THE CIRCLE,_._NOVEMBER
11,
1993 •.•
.
SNACKS
•
·
· 485.,,
2671
&
·_
-PASTA'
:&
APPETIZERS
MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL
COMBos·.
..
·SOUPS .
·.&
-
·SALADS··
BURGERS
•
~
-
•
'
SANDWICl1ES.
·_
-•---
.....
_
--·------·
-·-
.,
...
-
-- . --
•··
-
.
from
6pm -
·12am
.
.
Reduced Food
&
Drink Specials
·_
.
$4.00 Pitchers
75¢ Drafts
•
•
-
TUESDAY· NIGHT
•
·,
.
CHICKEN/
. flWelcome Mari$t:Students~'-Night
-· ·__
•
. ::
YEA_l/
-
.,.Reduced
Food\:~. Or111k-Spet~ials.·.:-i,::._·:.,_.:
......
-,;-
•
PORK-~:.:.,,..,:
-
---
• ·,. · ••
fro111_·1Jp111
r
.l2am
•
.
: ·
_
$4.00· Pitch~rs _
$:1·.00
Bottle __
--_--•
·
.
'.:
.,.---
. 1se··
Drafts< •
·>
·': . •
..
,:
.
•. -·•!.
••
.
·-.-:·.--:
•
•;
/
-,--..:_
.--,~.:-~,-.·
-
-,,
·
..
-
.
WEDNESDAY/NIGHT
••
. .
•
• ......
SEAFOOD
.·
·
· :-.. LiveBands••·_,-.,,
-_
• $4.0CJ
Pitch81's
'···s1:0ool'afts
•
•
THURSDAY NIGHT
•
Sumo· WrestHng
! !
$1.00 Bottles · --
-
-
DESSERTS·
I.
I
3
-
11
:THECl~CLE,
SPORTS
NOvEMeE~
11,
1993
---------,-------,-----.;.;.;.;.;.....;._----:---,---------------·-?"":
---=-====================.==;::=.:::::;==.======;:=::::::::;;::::::::;==,
.SWin1:riierS
·split;
r~Jiys,
up
n~xt
by
TERl:L/STEWART
•
~taff.Writer>::·
•
juniors R.onaid Gagne, BrettAr~
nold and Angel Tom.ala, finished
first with. ,itime of·3:43.19;.2.6
The
swimming_
and diving teams
•
seconds ahead of the.second place
swam into action on Saturday as
squad.·
-·
•
•
-
.·
•
the men defeated Seton Hall, and
•
-
"I think Arnold and Tdmala are
thewomenbroke two new school
swimming faster at this time than
records in a loss to
.the
Pirates.
they were last year ~t this time,"
.
The
•
men's team. (1-0), who
Van Wagner said.
..
.
__
__
finishedfourthin the Metropolitan
In men's diving action, freshman
•
Swimming Conference last. year,
Brenden Leddy placed
.second
in
•
defeated> Seton Hall;
_
134~102, the three-meter and third in the
• despite'-,winajng
_o,nly-foiir
ofJhir~
.
ope~_meter.
_:
teen: events.,:·: .
i
.
.
_.
-
._._
.
.•
-
Freshman Grove
..
Rasmussen
•
Accordirig tonien'sHead Coach
finished third in the three-meter
'.
Larry VariWagner, Seton Hall has: dive and second in the one-meter.
a bit more of an advantage in ac-
.
"By far, this is the best overall
quiring swimmers.
_
diving team we've ever had ~use
"Seton
Hall J:ias
•
a larger
of the depth,"
diving coach
recruiting budget," he said. ''They
Melanie Bolstad said.
had more talented athletes, but we
The young.women's team (7-1),
had the greater depth this year."
who currently has nine freshmen,
VanWagner, who graduated
were shut down by Seton Hall,
Freshman Stephanie Raider won the 200-yard butterfly with a time of2:14.81 last Satur-
·-
day. She also broke a new school record in the 200-yard freestyle with a time of 2:00.01.
•
four seniors last year, has recruited
149-92.
seconds behind
.Seton
Hall and
recor s
er career en s
.
the three-meter an
one-meter
eight new freshman.
_
Goldstein said his team
.swam
caught up in the freestyle leg.
here."
events.
Although the Red Foxes placed
Raider also won the 200-yard
On Nov. 2, the women's team
'.'We look stronger than we did
more competitively
·against
Seton
-
last season," he said.,
Hall this year compared to_)ast
•
Freshman Jon Churins has
year.
-
· •
~:
·_·
•
.: :
,._
•.
,
.
•
second in the race, it was pretty
Butterfly with a time of 2:14.81. defeated Central Connecticut State
close the whole way, according to
Although the squad lost; Golds-
University, 135-97.
.
already made a name for himself,
The first record.broken \vas iri Goldstein ..
_ •
.
.
.
.
tein said there were some positives
Marist won nine of thirteen
.
-
The secorid record was·.broken. that could be taken from the meet. events, with Raider winning both
by Raider in the 200-yard freestyle.
"They've continued to make im- the 200-yard Individual Medley and
placing third in the 200-yard
·
_
the 400-yard medley relay.-
;
freestyle.
•
Senior Cheryl Daly, sophomore
According
to Vanwagner,
Jean Maguire, and freshmen
The freshman beat the previous
.
provements over the last three the 500-yard freestyle races.
record, 2:01.41, by 1.41· seconds, meets," he added. "I was pleased
with a time of 2:00.01.·
with their performance against
Churins is already on the same pace
Stephanie Raider and Al~son
with sophomore Kyle O'Neill, who
Morilla smashed the
.
previous
holds-O'the
record in the 200.
record, 4:17.40 by 2.1 seconds
The 400-yard medley relay team
(4:15.30).
_
.
of sophomore Kyle O'Neill, and
.
The relay team started off three
•
"She's been real clostdn a few Seton Hall."
other races," Goldstein said.
"l
an-
Iri diving action, junior Jennifer
ticipate that ~he'll have· a few other McCauley placed second in both
The men's team traveled to face
Central Connecticut State yester-
day. Results were not available at
press time.
Bo-oters lose finale;
finish year at 4-12~2
-
.
.
,
.-
Runners place third , fifth;
in Virginia on Saturday
On Halloween~ Marist endedits
"(We) finished· where we ex-
by
ANDREW HOLMLUND
home portion of.its schedule on a
•
·-
by
GREG BIBB
pected to be," Kelly said. "(We)
Staff Writer
high note, thwarting Oneonta, 5-0,
Slaff Writer
·beat-·
up on the rest
·
of the con-
The men's soccer team ended its
at North field.
.
,
.
The women's and men's cross ference."
•
season the same way, it started -
Rose and freshman Kevin Har:-
-country
teams placed .third arid
__
According to the head coach,
~
with a loss:'~
1--·~
·,
7
,
.,_,_,;
.
dy scored two goalsapiecei·Massey'""' fifth:·respectfvely; at the Northeast both the field and the top 10 were
'
••
On Nov. 2, Marist
was
nipped by
also chipped. in with· a goal.
Conference Championships
in
filled with. upperclassmen.
Adelphi University,
-5-4.
•
Although Goldman said his Princeton,' N.J., on Saturday, Oct.
Four of the top five finishers
Marist, which finished at 4-12-2, club's opponent was weak, he was 30.
.
.
were seniors, which made Wood-
jumped to an early lead as senior
pleased with the victory.
•
The Red Foxes finished with a son's time the second fastest out of
.
back Eric Ross scored off an assist
"Oneonta was not
•
a strong
combined total of 92 points; while all the· underclassmen who par-
•
by Giangiuseppe Mazzella at 11 :52 team," he said. "(But) we still did Mt. St. Mary's of Emmitsburg, ticipated in the event.
seconds
_ofthe
first half;
a good job."
Md,·came·away with 52 ..
·-
Woodson was not the only Red
The ball then rolled against the
•
On Oct; 27, the Red Foxes
Wagner College, located in Fox competitor who prospered at
.
Red Foxes asAdelphi_collected
two
•
hosted the Manhattan Jaspers and Sta~en Island, was able to garner NEC's, as other Marist runners
-
goals 'in a· span of four minutes.
-
came. away with a 4-1 victory.
top honors, collecting 40 points,
also legged out impressive efforts.
•
Senior back Brian Rose obtain-
Rose, Mazzella, Ross, and
The women's squad was paced
'Theresa
Hickey finished 20th
ed the third Marist goal; assisted by
sophomore back GaryO'Brien all
,
by freshman. Kathleen Woodsen, with a time. of 20:09.
fellow senior Eric Ross at 42:28;
found the net for Marist.
who captured a sixth-place, finish-
Kelly said he liked the way
-
\Vhile sophomore mid-fielder Neil
Although Marlst won two of its ed with a time of 19:04 seconds. Hickey has stepped up in the past
Massey. followed at 49:44, off an
-
final three matches,
_Goldman
said
Head Coach Phil Kelly said few meets.
assist from Ross.
••
• •
it w~s a confusing year.
Woodsen excelled in the tourna-
"(Theresa) ran her best race of
Sophomore mid-fielder Steven
"I was not ever sure which team ment meet; despite running )n a the year," he said. "She has really
Horsfallclosedoutthe scoring, an
would be out there;''. he said. tough draw.
.
come on-in recent weeks."
unassisted
'tally~
at,65:00.
••
•
Goldman added he was hoping
•
"(Kathleen) ran a very good race
Colleen Carson also provided
Head Coach Howard Goldman
•
Marist could use last year's upset in an extremely competitive field," some spark for the Red Foxes,
•
said the game .was mai.fed bytoo
win
over
St.
John's as ammunition
·he
said.
•
•
<
·-"
·
•
•
•
•
despite having a hip flexor injury.
many mistakes by both teams.
for the season.
•
,
Kelly also sajd he was pleased
.
Carson came in 21st with a time of
"Adelphi (game) was full of er-
.
with the performances at Princeton·· 20:12:,
•
•
rors·on both sides," said the head
•
"I thought it would be a University, even though the Foxes
-
·-
In
men's-action, Brian Ordway
coach who just completed his 31st springboard," he said. "You learn faced formidable opponents, which led the Red Fox charge,
finishing
season;
.!'Ninegoalsfor
a Division
ho"'._to win. I thought they lea~n-
.
included the Mountaineers and the 13th with a time of 26:34.
I ame is too
-hi
h;;,
•
-
•
••
ed how to do that."
Seahawks.
Ordway was also joined by Rod
Rose, Josh Wood and freshman
Patrick Casey, who all obtained
personal bests.
Rose finished 20th, while Wood
and Casey placed 31st and 42nd;
respectively.
Head Coach Pete Colaizzo
said
that Ordway and Rose both achiev-
ed and improved their running
skills over the course of the season.
"(Brian) ran as well as yo·u could ,
have expected," Colaizzo said.
(He) had a phenomenal year. (Rod)
overcame difficulties throughout
the season'and came through when
it counted," he added.
Colaizzo said the Ivy
'League
course was a problem for his club
because it was a surface that his
runners did not prefer.
"It was an extremely fast and
flat course," Colaizzo said.
The head coach said his Red
Foxes had somewhat of a difficult
time with the likes of Fairleigh
Dickinson Knights, who won the
men's portion and the Rider Col-
lege Bro·ncs, who nabbed second.
The men and women will wrap
up their season this weekend at the
NCAA Regional Qualifying Meet
in Fairfax, Va.
•
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A Whole New Perspective on
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....
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12
.
Skaters· defe'.at S:UNY
··stollybrook,
9-4
Red
·Foxes
by
TED HOLMLUND
Sports Editor' •
There was :46 seconds remaining
·
in the game,: and the Red Foxes·
were trailing 27-24, facing a fourth
dO\vn
and goal situation on the
Iqna Gael's four-yard line.
-Marist·called
a.·timeout .
.
Did Head Coach Jim Parady opt
to
,go
for the win or for a game-
.
tying field goal?
•
...
:
·.
•
...
•.
The second
0
year coach chose to
go for the win and it failed.
·The
Red Foxes tried to run a lit-
tleswing pass·. to senior halfback
Julian Wyse, but it fell incomplete.
:
In
.
a· game that s'aw six lead
ch·anges,' Iona\;
(8cl)
survived
Marist's(4-5) ctiallenge and won
27~24 last Saturday at Mazzella
Field.
.
•
·-'•·
',
;
---
..
-
.
. :.-?
·-·,.:
•
:
• .-.
~
Vttiall
ends
·:se(i'sori··with,--
lo.ss to
.Arrriy
Does. Magarity meet MariS't's standllfds?
•
This is the final year in Head
Coach Dave
•
Magarity's
•
third
contract ..
'•
.
•
•
Will he be around for a fourth?
·.
•
Whether one likes it or not, it is
'.
a valid question. It's also a difficult
one to answer.
.
Magarity has
•
a career 98~
I 03
record during his seven year tenure
which surely is not. sparkling.
However, his squads have posted
a 71-50 league record during this
time too.
The Red Foxes have not won the
regular season or post-season Nor-
theast Conference title since the
1986-87 season, but once again,
there is another side to this story.
Afterthat season, Magarity saw
Marist get slapped with a three-year
probation, including two from post
season play, for violations that oc-
curred before his arrival.
•
This effected his recruiting a~ili-
ty
over the next few years.
What potential Division I pro-
spect would be interested in com-
ing to a school that does not have
any chance of making it to the
"Big
Dance" -
the NCAA Touma~
ment? No one.
Marist was first off. probation
three
•
years ago and suffered
through a 6-22 disaster, with then-
freshmen Izett Buchanan and Dex-
•
ter Dunbar seeing much more play-
ing time than they normally would
have if the team had a stronger
foundation.
After suffering th.rough the past
probation problems, Magarity now
has had four years of recruiting on
a clean slate. Whether its fair or
not, his grace period may be over.
However, the team's sub .500
records in the past few years can
partially be traced as aftershock of
the probation years.
It should also· be noted that
Marist has not been on probation
during Magarity's
tenure. If
nothing else, he has run a clean
program.
Administrators
wait
It's Marist's policy riot to discuss
any employees', including coaches,
job status until the end of the year.
Administrators are continuing to
follow along those guidelines.
At the end of the season,
Ted
Holmlund
Talkin'
it
Athletic Director Gene Doris and-
• Gerard Cox, vice-president of stu-
dent affairs, will meet with Magari-
ty
and discuss his job perfonnance.
According to Cox, the decision
to hire or fire Magarity would be
done soon after the season ends,
even if the decision is not made
public.
Although the adµiinistra~ion is
staying consistent in its policy, they
surely have not gone out of their
way to say that M:agarity's doing
.
an excellent job.
•
This says to me that the ad-
ministration officials are consider-
ing not signing Magaiiiy to another
contract.
In my interviews with Cox, Doris
and President Mu~ay, they ali
echped the same
.
sentiment that
Magarity.
-has·
represented the
Marist community well.
•
'Currently,
·eyerything
is clearly
vague, but there is one more fac.:.
tor that enters into this equation.
The Red Fox Club
Sonie administrators would like
µ.s
to think that this process is clear-
ly objective, but it's not.
One group that has a vested in-
terest in Magarity's future is the
Red Fox Club, Marist's official
booster club.
The organization has over 280
members that account for more
than 800 season tickets and has
donated over $50,000 last year to
Marist athletic programs.
However, the club is most clear-
ly interested in the men's basketball
team. This year the organization is
offering season tickets for 15 home
games and two others at Madison
Square Garden· and the Knicker-
bocker Arena.
If the Red Fox Club is not haP-
PY with Dave Magarity's perfor-
mance, they surely are going to let
•
the adntlriistrati6n hear ~boutit.
••
To say that this group· won't
have any influence in the decision
is ridiculous;
Closing Thoughts
Magarity should be fired if the.
judgment came solely based on the
team!s ,vin/loss record during his
tenure without looking at any ex~
tenuating circumstances.
However, Magarity has cleaned
up a program that was on proba-
tion which is no small task.
He also lost his star player, Izett
Buchanan, last year
because
he
was
declared academically ineligible
which hurt the make-up of last
year's team.
Although Marist has
a
Division
I basketball program, the Nor-
theast Conference is not the Big
East or a member of another
powerful conference.
I think we forget that
sometimes
If
Marist
just wants to
win
at
any
cost, fire Magarity. If there is more
to Marist athletics than just winn-
ing, keep him.
·
•
Ted Holmlund is The Circle's
Sports Editor.
j
I
l
!·
I
.
.
.-,;
1993·94
MARIST
COLLEGE
.
MEN'S
BASKETBALL
SCHEDULE
DAY DATE OPPONENT··
TIME·
·rues
..
,.
Nov.
16 Vienna
(Austria)
Flyers
(Exhbitioo)
7pm
Mon.' Nov.
22 USDBl
(Exhb~ion)
-
8pm
Sal
Nov.
27
al
Buffalo .
7:30pm
Wad. Dec.1 Slana(TV)
,.
8pm
Sat.
-Dec.4
ECAC
ChaDenge
5pm
(Abany,
NY)
Vermont
vs. Maris!
..
Mon. Dec.6
at Siena
7pm
Sal
Dec.11
•
al St
Francis
(Pa.)'
7:30pm
Sun. Dac.19 Army
(TV)
1pm
Wed. Dae.
29
•
Pepsl-Marlsl
Classlc
Drexel
vs. St. Pete(s
5:30pm
Buffalo
vs. Marlst
(TV)
8pm
Thurs. Dec.30 Consolation
5:30pm
Championship
&pm
Tun.
Jari.4
Mt. St. Mary'1
(Md.)
• (TV)
•
Bpm
Thu11,
•
Jan.
B
Rlder"(TV)
8pm
SaL
Jan.B
al Fairleigh
Dlddnson•
7:30pm
Thurs. Jan.13
•
al
Robert
Morris'
7:30pm
Sat.
Jan.15 Fai.rf1eld
fMadison
Sq. GS/den)
5:30pm
·
TueL Jari 18 Long
Island•
(TV)
8pm
Thurs. Jan.
20 St. Francis
(NY)•
(TV)
8pm
Sal
Jan.22
•
a1
Wagner"
7:30pm
Mon. Jan.24 at MorvnoU1h•
7:30pm
Sat.
•
Jan. 29 Fairleigh
Dickinson•
(TV) 7pm
Thurs.· Fab.3.
.
St. Francis
(Pa.)•
(TV)
8pm
Sat.
Fob.5
Robert
Morris•
(TV)
7pm
Thurs
..
Feb.
to
at
St
Franc's
(NY}'
7:30pm
'Sat.
•
Feb.12
al
Long
Island'
2Pm
Wed. Feb.16 Monmouth•
(TV)
8pm
Sal
Feb.19
Wagner'
(TV)
,
7pm
Thurs. Feb:24
·
al
Mt
St. Mary's
(Md.)'
.
7:30pm
Sat.
Feb.
26
al
Rider"
3pm
Mon. Feb.
28 NEC
Open~ Round
TBA
Wed.
•.
Mat.2
NEC
Quanerfmals
TBA
Fri
·Mat.4
NEC
Semifinals
TBA
Sun.
Mar.6
NEC
Final#
12pm
• Northeast
CorJarence
game #ESPN
Home
games
1n
BOLD
(TV)
WTZA•TV
1993-94
MARIST
COLLEGE
WOMEN'S
BASKETBALL
SCHEDULE
DAY DATE OPPONENT
TIME
Mon. Nov.
22 Austria
(Exhib~ion)
6pm
Fri.
Nov.26 at Kentucky
Invitational
Georgetown
vs. Idaho
State 6pm
Maris!
vs. Ken\uckY
8pm
Sat.
Nov.27 Consolation
6pm
Championship
8pm
Sat.
Dec.4
at UConn
lnv~ational
Holy
Cross
vs. Yale
•
1pm
Marist
vs. UCoM
3pm
Sun. Dec.5
•
Consolation
1pm
Championship
3pm
Wed. Dec.a Army
7pm
SaL
Dec.11 at Fordham
1pm
Tues. Jan.4
ML St. Mary's
(Md)•
5:30pm
Thurs.·. Jan.
6
Rider'
5:30pm
Sun. Jan.9
at Fairleigh
Dickinson'
2Pm
.
Thurs. Jan.13 at Robert
Morris'
•
5pm
Sat.
Jan.15 al St. Francis
(Pa.)'
7:30pm
Mon. Jan.17 at Buffalo
7:30pm
Thurs. Jan. 20 St. Francis
(NY)'
5:30pm
Sat.
.
Jen.
22 alWagoor'
•
.Spm
Mon.
.Jan.24
at Monmouth'
5pm
Sat.
Jan. 29 Fairleigh
Dickinson•
2pm
Thurs. Feb.3
St. Francis
(Pa.)•
5:30pm
Sat.
Feb.5
Robert
Morris•
2pm
Mon. Feb.7 Siena
7pm
Thur. Feb.10 at
St
Francis
(NY)'
5:30pm
Sat.
Feb.12
a1
Long
Island'
5:30pm
Wed. Feb.16 Monmouth•
5:30pm
Sat.
Feb.19
·
Wagner•
2pm
Thur
.
Feb.
24
al
ML SL Mary's
(Md.)'
5pm
Sal.
Feb.
26 at Ridet
5pm
Thurs.
Mar.3
Long Island'
7pm
Sal
Mar.5
NEC
Opening
Round
7pm
Tues
..
Mat.a
NEC
Ouarterlinals
7pm
Thurs. Mar.10 NEC
Semifinals
7pm
Sat.
Mar.12 NEC
Final
7pm
• Northeast
Conference
game
Home
games
in
BOLD
I NS/
DE:
►
_Men's
Preview
►~
Women's Outlook
►
Ken Babineau's Class of '93-'94
►
Dave
Magarity's Future
-
►
Red Foxes'
-Recruiting
Class
►
Women's B-Ball Teams
Lack of
-Fans
►
Close-up· on Cindy Carroll
►
Spotlight on lzett Buchanan
Photos by Matt Martin
''
'.
'
' 'i
c~n
't.
rdn,Iinber.::the}iist
,;,;,e:
I
was
as
·excited
·abriµta
gr.oup·o/ki~~
I
think we have all the guys on the same
page.
:
••
·::·.
·.,
•
·,
·:
•.
·'.
·
•
•
·
• -;··
•
- Head·coacb'Dave:·Magarity
.·-.
J
•
•
••
~
--:'_>",;·;-~j~:-_;=-;>
_:_.
__
',
·:,
_;:•:::··,.T-~-;\:•-:
.,:::
•
'The\wrrien's
basketball
season
with
a
1 g::1
<frriark
•
theast
Col'lference.Ji11ali·
2
THE CIRCLE,
p
R E·V:1
EW
..
NOV.EMB.ER
.11,
1993.
~-H O O P S C O O P
Despite
low
·
expectatipnS,
Cagers
look
tq
surpri$e.
•••
..
·
.
Senior Chad Weikert said he also
Basile and Toinidysaw a lot of
by
TED HOLMLUND
Sports Editor
thinks this team could surprise the. action for.the Red Foxes at the end•
skeptics.
•
•
•
of the year.
• •
The men's basketball team had
"I think we can sneak up on
.•
BasUe, who started at, poinf.
heightened expectations last year some people/' the seni?r: said.
.
guard at th~ end of the year: reach~
because the squad had many "We got a lot more commg back
ed.doubles figures in•seven of his
veterans on the team like Andy than people expect.''
.
.
. .
•
last eight gain
es
averaging
,ovei:
Lake, Sean James, Mike Schreiber
Izett B~chanan is the only other
12~8 points per game during' that
and Fred Ingles.
senior, besides Weikert, who is.· stretch.
•
.
•
Many people believed the Red returning
for
the
1993~94
Tomidy led the team in blocked
Foxes would win the Northeast campaign.
.
.
shots with 25 and had a career-high
Conference Championship.
Buchanan, a 6_-6
gu~d,."'.ho was. 18 points in the regular season
They did not. Instead the men_ dedared academically meligible last
finale against St Francis· (PA). .
finished in a tie for third place in year, will be looked upon to. p.ro-
Hill saw the least playing time of
the NEC with a 10-8 record; 14-16 vide most of the offensive punch
the three sophomores,
.
but still
overall.
for the Red Foxes.
..
.•.
played in26 of the team's 30 games
With the loss of six lettermen,
The senior scored 14.8
.pointt
averaging:2.3 points per game.
<
expectations have been lowered"""'.'. and 6.5 rebounds per gamein his
.Tomidy
said lie arid his:feliow
considerably.
abbreviated season.
.
,
•
sophomores a~e ready tq_
accept
According to the pre-season
"(Buchanan's)
.
a·. tremendous
their increased role and to become
NEC coaches poll, Marist will athlete,t) Magarity said. "We're
more consistent.
.
,
_
.
.
•
finish eighth out of ten teanis in the going to try to capitalize
.on
his
"Affthree of us wiU be counted
conference.
ability to
ru1_1.•~
•.
•
.
on morethis y~ar, ... Toinidy said.
However, Head Coach -Dave
Buchanan said he knows he will
"1
think we'reready
for
it."
Magarity said he believes his club be looked upon to lead the team.
. Junior Gregg Chodkowski and
.
may sneak up and surprise a few
"I don't see that as pressure,"
Weikert will
.be
·also:
be looked
people.
.
the senior said. "I always ~a.n_ted upon
_
to provide· some outside
"I can't remember the last time to have that added respons1b1hty. shooting to· fill the void left- by
I was as excited about a group of It's something I look forward to."
three-point specialist~ Andy Lake ..
kids," the eighth-year coach said..
.
Despite Buchanan's ability to
However, Marist's task will be
"I think we have all the guys on the take over a game, Magarity said the
.
more difficult
·this
year because
-~--
--
-
..
--~
•··•~-•
"--;-'.
same page."
performance
of
the
th!ee
there are only
11
players: on:the
Sophomore AlanJomidy,
who
led
the team-with
25-blocks
SophomoreAianTomidysaidhe
sophomores,
Danny· Basile,
team because senior point guard
last
year, plays d~fe'nse as #14freshman Randy Encarcion'·
·
does not pay any attention to ear- Kareem Hill and Tomidy
will
deter- Dexter Dunbar declared himself
as looks
on,·
·
. ,
•
--
ly predictions.
mine the success or failure of this an academic redshift
~o
he
,can
play
''He is
JUSt
an
easy guy to'getalong
iiig
.time:
n::J::!,P~ti!e~-~~·. ~~i!J{e:':~~
.ye~ih~~~~e
s~p~omores
ai~,
th~
....
~h~~~~:!;.nt;.~;J~~./the
.•.
-t~\
0
T~t~:it~
•~~~;.
~j~P~~}~:e)
.
_.
. .
''Ifl'~
put
~ut a team tomorrow.·
"lt'.s at the end of the. year· that
•
foundation of this pr<>gram,.
•
~e team wilt.be m1ssmg:mucl!.•
.more. -.. :The• Red'. Foxes will, also have ,
•
..
•.
_b~ed
09
eXI>e,~e.nce
_and
unders~-
counts.
.
.
.
.
,
• ..
•
. .
.
said. ':Eve~hing I _projected from than Dunbar!s 7.
7
·poiiit~·and
;t3
•
• junior" college· tra1isfers Scott
""
ding
'.C9f..Jh.e.
,:
~r<>grain),
,;;~~ile,
•••
"I
like
it
ifpeaple won't expect
.them
!S
stann~Il!-e m th~ face._We
.·
assists per game_
..
_..
:
,.
. ..
,.
_
McCabe., and Chuck. Dctvis
:and
,. ;Cho~ko~~ki
1
J3uch,_n~~ Hill ~!ld
__
;,
us
to
be that good,"
he
added. need them to step up and b.e c~n-
•
• •
.
"Just his pr~enc:e:not b~ing iii
.
freshman.
_
Lucas
.
P,isarczyk
,
and
T<?nudy would start;
Magliflty
"We can sneak up ori people."
sistent."
.·
the locker room (hurts)," he said.
Randy Encarnacion
vying
for play::
•
said•
_
.
.
Mari§t
.h9p(!&
_
to;•·.q()Qfilltl.¢_:Jt;~?Wil}:fi.\11.R.W~t~·''--••
•
•
ma ~re-_season
t1!t on Nov •. 2~,}s
run smoothly into tile
.upcoming,
Mt. St._Mary's,-and.Ridedvillbe
.•.·.
our: offens~:v,rIJl:be.a·trans1tion:_
by
ANDREW HOLMLUND
that. It 1s ret~rmng
~n_iost.
of its
•
~eason.
,
.
: .
, •
• ·.
.
.
.
•
•
the top three;''
. _ ..
•
.
.
•
.
game,''":;:
,
- ·'.'. ..
·
>
> ·,
>
.
Staff Writer
•
players and w1U
b~ ehgtble
~~ play
..
,.
''We gained valuable experience·.
-Babineau's
prediction could be•
Marist's, itttac_~ C(:nters aro~nd
Despite having a young, inex-
.
<·10
the NCAA T<?urnament If the
.about
ourselves arid. how
to
act in itnmediately. test~d
•as
Marist \viii
.
getting
~~;
ball
.to
the shootmg
perienced club a year ago, the
team· . can. wm
th e NEC that type•ofsituation,'' he said. open its: winter
-schedule
on:the ..
,,
~-at:9,.-~~t.se,~e~allyU~e -~ffense,:
women's basketball team finished
Championships.
. .
.
'.~We
want last year's successes to .road in Lexington, Ky./at the Ken-•·•
w.ill
J~(.
adaptable;. according to
with a 19-10 record lait year-and
• •
However! the downside for the
,
flow into the beginning· of. tile tucky Irivitationaj:
'
:
>. •
. . .
•
.•
B~bin~_~u_;;
\::
i .
,
< .
<,
•
'
.
reached the Northeast Conference
:
Red Foxes is they have lost NEC
.
season.'~ •
<
•
. . • . .
'
•
/,
The
:Red
Foxes:.will' be
.
pilfod.
•'
:~'.W:~:
ljke: to d<.>
,a
lot for tlle
.
finals before falling
to
Mount SL
•
P!ayer~
·.
C>f
•
the
•
Year-;-'-CharJen.r
•
•.-..
J\cc':'rdirig to. Babineau;· wh_o is
::
;againsLil1eJikes):,_f'.Georgetown,
•
•
sh.09.?Jl&
gu;u-~;'' he.said.
_'.'0~
<;>f~
.·•
M
,. f M
I d 82 61
,
Fiel~s.
•...
.
.
.
.
;. .
,
,·-
mhis e1gh,thyear
as head coach, the
..
•ldah<>
State:and Kent11cky
...
:. _
.
,_
fense deals with a lot of flexibility,
Wi1f ~arisn:ie;
its- 199i93
•
Fields led !danst m sco~ng last Red Fox~ should bee>ne <>fthe
fop
•
-.':_.,CThe}'i
ar:e all v~ry f<>Tillidable.
.-all
<>Lthe ti~e.,,
.·
.
I
>
.•··
•.. ..: .
season?' That is the question th.at
.
year averagmg 17•8 points per con.tenders in
tlie
NEC
'again.,
.
. oppolleri~/'
.the
head _coach s?id.
•
:·
~--~pe<;t. 9L~~e Red Foxes'
theRedFoxeswillhavetoanswer.
game..
.
.
,
•
•
"Ifeelwewillbeoneofthetop<:'.c'P~r
,~11J_s
•are-.exc1te,d::abo1;1t·
trans•~~n.g;;une wilLb~ ll t.hr~::,
.
The goodnewsfor Marist; which
Despite Fiel~ s absc!1ce, Head
..
teams
in
·
the
.,conference,,,'
-poss1bly,gomg
t<>.the.chat11p1onship
:r~!lfd.
<>.f~ense'.
,·
..
'.
: ,,: -.,:
•·
,,.;
·
,';
•
opens its I993-94scheduleat home
.
•
Coach Ke,n Babmeau_sai
d he hopes,
1
Babirieau said.
"It
think(Marist)/
game.'t:
,;,
/-,
1<,<Y,·
·:-\
,:-:.;;:·,
·
0
·cc;:
·
~CC(?fding
t~ B.ab,m:au,
m. ~r~er
·,
·
last year s accomplishments can·
r-:----..
:
.<Manst
will haveJ0 players retur--
..
,
for:1tto be effe<::tive,~
his club n1;eds
. ,
.
ning; iµcludirig_ sen.iorguard Cin-
tq
•
do more for_th~tfuee-guard.
·.
•
Head Coach Ken Babineau instructs his players on strategy during a pre-season practice.
dy Carroll/junior _forward tori
"We nee4
·situations·
wll.ere we
•
• Keys
ancJ
sophomore center Stacey
canconte up l)iggei;,'? he said; "I~.·
Denglert
,; >:;
:
'
. -.
order:. to.
~c,
,that,
vve. need•::to
:•earrou
was
a spark for the Foxes
·
disguis¢ certain things and get more·
last year~ averagirigl0.8 points per
•
help to the three~guard position.•~.·
game'. Keys and Dengler grabbed
,.-,_
.M;aristwiU
usually plar <:onven~
7;8 arid ~.0 rebounds, respectively. t1on_aL·
~efenses, acc()rdmg
•
to
"With
Cindy, Lori and Sfacey
Babm~u.
• ....
_
:
-
. . • •
:·
·.. . .·•
back, we are in a· situation where
.
''We:.are going to be multiple
we have more game experience,"
defensively
.
than offensively,"
Babineau
•
said.
}'I
do not see
Babineau said. "We will playmost-
ourselves
as
young:''
ly man;''
•
. .
•
Babineau didnot comment on
.-Thus·
far, Babineau said he has
who will be his starting five, but
•
been pleased with the physical con~
said he is pleased with the team's • dition of his· club..
. •
.
.
.
. .
.
depth.
•
•
•
C'This is the best shape they ever
i
"From top to bottom, we are a
been in, ~d a lotofthe credit g~
,
better ball club," he
·said.
"We
to
(Assistant
Coach)
Pam
have more weapons."
(Dezago,)" he said. "The girls·
Babineau added that he wants
cmne back ready to compete. _They
his returning roster to be prepared
busted their butts in the pre-
to play.
season."
•
"We are going to be 10-deep,"
Besides avoiding
injuries,
he said. "Those players who did
Babineau said he hopes his players
not have a role last. year, should
will• be ready, both. mentally and
have an impact this year."
physically.
• Marist,
.
which averaged 67.8
"I hope (they) can stay healthy,"
points per game,
will
be running an
he said. "Preparation is a very key
offense Which
is
very similar to last
word. to us.''
season's.
Carroll said that as long as she
The Red Foxes
will
basically play
and her teammates can continue to
an up-tempo game, Babineau said.
play aggressively, things should be
"We do not want to be a boring
able to fall into place.
half-court
offensive
team "
"The key last year was that we
•
Babineau
said.
"Ninety percent ~f
_
worked hard,", the senior
,,
~··
"We have to continue to work.
,
..
I
I.
i
i.
,
..
;,':>.~.-''.~Tiiir'e~'~g~,~
~int-,,,,.ong,:
both
boosters
and alumni
that
their.
hop,r
,
Is
Dave'.
and
hls,-prot,am·
..
can
::1,e,
more:
competitive.''·•.
'. : .'')•
{''.
.• ..
'... •···
.•
..
•'
·
HOOP:·STAT:·:
•
~
President De1fois
Munay
• Freshman Jean°Marie'Lesko'averag~
ed-22.1 points: per: game· last' year at
John Jay High School.
THeC1RCLe,
FUTURE
.
·Rea·:Foxes
recruit
·two
new freshmen
by
ANDREW HOLMLUND·
•
•
Staff Writer
.
The· women's· basketball team will have the services of only two
freshmen this season.
.
·
.
•
Although one of his'rookies missed niost of her senior year after
SUS·
taining a knee injury, Head Coach Ken Babineau said he believes both
recruits will contribute to~the program now.and in the future.
•
.
•
.
.
JEAN-MARIE LESKO
•
This newcomer is no stranger to the Hudson Valley. Lesko was a former
basketball player at John Jay High School in Wappingers Falls, N.Y:
.
The former. Patriot averaged 22.1 points per game last winter.
•
The main reason Babirieau selected the Lesko was because of the
.
5-foot-6 guard's shooting ab1lity;
•
"Jean-Marie is going to be outstanding," the eighth-year head coach
said. "She has the ability to be the greatest scorer to come out.of the
program.~.'
•
.
·.
. .
'
•
• •
•
'
•
'
.
'·
. •
Babineau said he also likes the idea that Lesko can help pick up some
Of the scoring slack left by Charlene Fields, who led the Red Fox'es in
scoring last year, averaging 17.8 points per·game in her final season.
NOVEMBER 11,
1993
3
Women hope
to draw more
fan support
by
KRISTINA WELLS
Staff Writer
There may be no applause.
There may be no crowds.
But there is a women's basket-
ball team who will be playing its
first home
game
on Wed., Dec. 8
at 7:00 p.m. This year the team will
also be eligible to CO!Ilpete
in the
NCAA Tournament provided the
squad wins the Northeast Con-
ference Tournament.
Despite the team's
19-10
record
(12-6
in the Northeast Conference)
last
season,
their fan support was
low.
"She can flat-out shoot," he said. "She can bury three's that will kill
people.
_
..
-
..
__
. .
.
.
··"Jean-Marie
is a hard-working kid," Babineau added.
"I
think she
will have a great four years here."
•
The players said they are hoping
that more students will attend the
------1
games based on last year's results.
KIM·HORWATH
Kim
Horwath is a 5-9 guard who comes to Poughkeepsie from Eastlake,
Ohio:.
•
The Eastlake North High School graduate will have her work cut out
for her t!ri5 season after missing most of last year because of a knee injury.
However, according to Babineau; Horwath will have the opportunity
to come off the bench and contribute in key situations.
•
"It
is unlikely that she will be starting, but she could go 10-deep,"
he said. "She is ina situation where she will keep us at the same level
and not drop off.»
•
_
• ..
-c:·
<
;,:;,.
'
I'
i~
••
Babineau added that he has been pleased with Horwath's work ethic
1----------~--------':.._--...d~
in.trying to regain h~r form·,
·"·
• ._.
.
.
.
·. .
.
.
•
.
.
.
.
.
.
."She is a d.edicated player_with:a lot of skiU," Babineau said .. "She
_
.Freshman
K~m H<:>rwath
dnves past senior Cmdy Carroll m
has shown her fremendousdesire
towork."
••
•
..
·.····
·, •
a
recentpract1ce.
.
_.
.
_
.
.
...
iNif~g~f;f
~~'S/fUtUJ"i
;·Jet
ermined.
at
•
yearts
•
erid
•
by
TED HOLMLUND
._
Sports Editor<
••
• • •.
Doris ·and Gerard Cox{· vice-
local communities, Doris and Cox ministration.has been fair
to
me,"
presidentand dean ofacaderrifo af-
·
said.
•
•
he added. "Let the cards fall where
.
fairs; will tal~ with Maganty at the
According .to. Cox, each Marist
they may."
•
.
.
Men's head basketball coach
_end
of the season confidentially to
employee, including the men's
An organization in the outside
Dave Magarity, entering the final see whetlter or not Magarity has
basketball coach, defines his
community that may have a-vested
year of his third contract,
will
have
•
adequately
filled
his
job
designated role every year under
interest in Magarity'sfuture is the
.
his performance evaluated
ai
the
•
requirements.
•
the general criteria of each job.
Red Fox Club, the school's official
-·
endoftheyear,justlikeanyMarist
.«Evaluations
are personaland
"Each of us has certain goals
boosterclub,whosegoalistoraise
empfoyee, according to adrninisti:a~ are never made'publically/' Cox
and objectivesthatare part of the
both fan and financial support to
tion officials.
•
• •
said.
•
•
plan of the action for the year/'
all Marist athletics.
Magarity;. who is in his eighth
"The AD (Doris) and Dean Cox
Cox said. "These kind of factors
The club has over280 members,
season; has posted a 98-103 overall
•
ultimately would make the deci-
·are
looked at in the overall evalua-
accounting for more than 800
record (7l..:5o'_in
league play) dur-
sion," President Dennis Murray
tion of someone."
season tickets and has donated
ing
his
tenure at Marist.
said. "But they (decisions) all flow
•
•
Magarity said he feels he has
more than·
,$50,000
dollars to
.
"We're treating this much the up to the president-no
doubt
fulfilled his job description and has
Marist College, according to a Red
same
•
·as
any other
coach
-
about it."
•
been treated fairly
•
by Marist
Fox Club pamphlet:
negotiating
a
contract,"
'Athletic
Some of the criteria used in
-
College.:
"There's a general sentiment
Director Gene Doris said:
'''We
,
evaluating Magarity and all the
.
CCI
felt that I proved myself;" the
•
a~ong both booster and alumni
have a mid-year evaluation and end
-· 'coaches
include the effectiveness of
eighth-year head coach said, "I've
•
that their hope
is
Dave and his pro-
•
of the year evaluations with all the training, recruiting,
•overall·
and
been charged. witQ running a clean gram can be more competitive,"
coaches. Every coach that is on season performances, and their
program, graduating. players and Murray said.
•
aff oes throu h this rocess.". relationship with the campus and
being competitive.
"The ad-
Cindy Carroll, a senior guard,
said she feels confident about this
year and hopes there will be more
fan support.
"I've got good feelings,
.knock
•
on wood. It seems as if we are get-
ting the· concepts quicker at prac-
tice.'' she said. "Hopefully, we will
get more fan support after our per-
formance last year."
Stacey Dengler, a sophomore
center, said men's basketball
always gets the support because it
;~ more flashy.
..
"f~Qple.
,w_hc:>
Jiaveµ't..co~e tc:>
see
us
play should," she
said.
We
aren't as boring
•
as it sounds.
Besides, we win.''
Carroll said the women's team
has an ongoing joke when it comes
to the fan support at the games.
"When there are more than five
fans there to watch, we always say
·
'Watch for fan control, there are
more than five people here'," she
said. "When there are people there
we get so pumped. That's why we
try to get our friends. to come.''
Lori Keys said the squad, who
has only two new members, will
play good basketball and believes
the crowd support will follow.
"Almost all of us have played
.
together for a year and we are play-
ing well," the junior forward said.
"It's not the slam dunk, fast pac-
ed excitement of the guy's games .
We don't dunk, but we can play."
"Come once and see what it's
like," Carroll said.
•
Red Foxes reload for new year
Sophomo~e
,<areem Hill-and freshman.
Lucas Pisarczyk go
for the ball m a practice earlier this week.
by
TED HOLMLUND
Sports. Editor
The men's basketball team has
undergone a complete overhaul.
Marist, which finished 14-16 a
year ago, is looking to bolster its
inside and· perimeter· games.
The Red Foxes have added two
junior college
•
transfers and two
freshmen to fill the void left by An-
dy Lake, Sean James, Fred Ingles,
Mike Schreiber and Wilbert Den
Ouden, who completed their
Marist careers last March.
How Marist reacts to its image
change will be largely affected by
the performance of these four
players.
"The contribution from the
newcomers will determine the
strength of the team," said Head
Coach Dave Magarity, who will be.
entering his eighth season.
CHUCK DAVIS
The 6-3 guard averaged 10.6
points and
5.4
rebounds a game
last year for 27-3 Palm Beach
Junior College.
Davis
will
be competing for play-
ing time at the off-guard spot and
the small forward position.
"We felt we needed another
perimeter player," Magarity said.
"He's got decent three-point range.
He's a guy who could score and
make plays off the dribble."
RANDY ENCARNACION
The 6-0 freshman guard hopes to
see action at both the point guard
and off-guard positions.
Encarnacion, who graduated
from Marist High School in
Bayonne, N.J., had 11.2 points
and 2.6 assists per game in his
senior campaign to to help lead the
Golden Knights to a 24~3 mark.
Encarnacion could see a lot of
playing time this year due to the
departure of Lake and loss of
senior Dexter Dunbar, who became
an academic redshirt this season.
"He's been very impressive in
the early going," Magarity said.
.. Randy will have to step up and
give quality (minutes)."
SCOTT McCABE
The 6-8 junior college transfer's
job ,viii be
to
help fill the void at
the low-post positions
•
left by
Shreiber, James and Ingles.
Davis, who averaged 10.3 points
and 6.2 rebounds a game for Butler
Community College last year, was
recruited to give the Red Foxes
strength down on the blocks, ac-
cording to Magarity.
"He brings intense, skilled post
experience with a real understan-
ding of the game," Magarity said.
"In the first week of practice, (he's)
been everything· we've expected.''
LUCAS PISARCZYK
Pisarczyk is a 6-8 freshman for-
ward who scored
17.4
points and
grabbed J0.2 rebounds per outing
his senior year at St. John's Prep
in New York City.
The freshman,
along with
McCabe, will be competing for
playing time in the low post.
Pisarcyzk's play in the early
practices has impressed Magarity.
"I
haven't seen a guy at 6-8
shoot the ball the way he does," the
head coach said. "He's a demon on
the boards and lays it all out for
you. I'm excited about his poten-
tial."
-·.
I
I
'' You /ear~-to'.'i;/thankfiil.
with ·whatyou
have
fn?[ife.,,
< •..
•
_.._ Cindy
Carrolf
4
• -THE
CIRCLE,
·.f'EAT:l.lRE
. .HOOP.
STAT:
Senior lzett Buchanan needs
.92
points
Jo· break .the 1,000
oint plate~u.
NOVEMBER
11,
1993
-
HOOP
SCOOP
.
~
-
.
.
.
6:arrollprovilles inspiration
both
011
and off court
~
.
..
.
. .
-
·. sho.oting form.<
S;, . ;
. speaks fondly of her teammates
by
ANDREW HOLMLUND
:.
"My high school coa.,ch
h!id me
and the coaching staff.
Staff Writer .. •·
•
shooting,'.' Carroll said, :
;'He
•
"Some of my bestfriends are on
No one has to tell Cindy Carroll
would peek in and tell me what I
this team," she said; "(Assistant
there is. more to life .than just
would be doing wrong.' •.
'
Coach Pam Dezago andKen)are
basketball, •• ,
'·.· _ •
.
·.
In order for her point total to go
great to talk to. He (Babineau) is
Whether it·is• her involvement up/ Carroll· said she needs to im-
hard ori the court, but once you get
.with the coni·munity in lier
prove her mobility in driving the
off the court, lie is all ears~"
hometown of Media, Pa;, or right
lane.
•
Carroll, who is one of six
here in Dutchess County, Carroll
''I
want to have a quick, strong
children, says she attributes her
has shown she can be a leader both
move to the basket,' '-she said:
• success to her mother who held
on and off the basketball court.
•
Although Carroll has high expec-
kept the family unit together after .
The psychology/special• educa-
tations for herself;. she· said·. she
her father died when • she was
f
•
h
• • d 10 8 could riever see herself leaving the . six-years-old.
ion maJor. w
O
average
•
g·
am_
e s_he
has· loved s1·nce.her
1·u·
nior
h
I •
b
h
(f
points per gameJast season, work-
"She as a ways een t ere or
ed over the summer as a counselor year ip high• school. . .
.
me)," reflected Carroll. "It feels
at basketball camps throughout the
"I
love (basketball)," Carroll ex-
goo_d
to call her and tell her about·
vicinityj,f Philadelphia; • helping • claimed. i•r could riever see myself . the game. She should be a martyr.
•
f
•
• 0 k
f ·
·Ii
not playing'.";
.
•
.
• "You learn to be thankful with
yoc~;;lrit1y .ro~e r~1.:;~ar~~~ et;
While Carroll enjoys the sport,
what you have in life,'' she adde.d.
volunteering as a field worker at
her coach and teammatesfove hav-
For now, .Carroll is looking
Ast.or pre-school in
a
Head~Start . ing her. as a Marist Red Fox.·
toward the upcoming season.
· program, assisting three and four-
"Cindy is ce~ainly one of.the all-
According to the co-captain, she
year-old children who come from
time greats;" said Head Coach Ken
is looking forward to opening_
her
low-income families.
Babineau. "As a person, she is the
final chapter as a collegiate athlete
Carroll has also excelled in the
kind of kid I would be proud to say
at the Kentucky Invitational on
classroom by mruntainiitg approx- • that
fa
my daughter; She is a bright;
Nov. 26 • and 27.
iniately a cumulative 3.4. grade
shining light for us."
"Kentucky should be
a
great ex-
point average:
, •
Junior guard Amy - Presnall
perience," Carroll said as she twirl-
However, the senior did say that
shared nearly the same sentiments ed her stuffed panda pear around
all her activities do take up a great
as her coach.
in her hands. "My roommate's
amount of her time.
"She is inspiring,.,_ marvelled father told me that they are selling
"This year is my hardest year in
Presnall. "She has had a lot of set-
tickets like crazy.
my maJ·or,'_
• Carroll said. "The
backs, but she will not letthat stop
•
h
Sh •• •
•
"
''I
hope there is a big crowd,"
hour_
slhavetoputintohomework,
er.-
e is Just a great person.
Th · al h. •
• • • • d
c
she continued. "That
will
be neat."
Pre-schoo_ 1, s_choolw_ork, and
• ey so ave recogruze •. ar-
.
ll' • ·hi
•
•
·th
. Carroll's.atti_tude before or dur-
basketball do take.a toll on me.''
ro s ac evements out
•
on
e
OCI
really feel involved','.' she.con- . floor.
_ .. • _ . ·. ··. . . . ,
ing a game is notany different than •
. tinued .. !'(But)l know I will make •
"I
think she is one of.the hardest: her laid back off court·denieanor.
it.''
workers • I ~have ever 'bad,''
--"Wh'e1fl ani playing,,, explain~'
The 5-10.guard said shedoes
Babineau said. "Cindy Carroll is
ed,Carroll; "Andlknocksoineon:e
realize she must increase her scor-
the kind of player who has gotten
over, I would help them get back
ing
.
percentage· because. of the
better each year •. Freshman._and up. lknowout on.the court I must
graduation of last year's team sophomore years she improved on
be mentally prep~ed. I try to get
leading scorer, Charlene Fields;
ball-handling, last year it was
in a certain frame of mind.''
"I
do feel soine pressure because shooting/'
I know I have'to pick up a scoring
Teammate .. Stacey Dengler
slack," Carroll admitted.
"I
work-
especially:admires
Carroll's leader-
ed on my three-point shooting at • ship qualities: •
my high school over the summer." · . · "Cindy is great," Dengler said.
. The alumnus from Archbishop "She is a good team captain. She
Prendergast said her former high holds the team together.''
.
sch_ool coach helped with her
This reciprocates as • Carroll
Carroll said one of .last year's
three victories • over Fairleigh
Dickinson University was the big-
gest thrill. so far in her college
career.
·n
was
a
three-point buzzer
beater that led Marist to the
victory.
• "Melissa (Hauser) passed me tl).e :, life,''-Carroll said, -'~Basketball
has: •
ball/.' . she explained.
"I
kind• of taken me places
I
have never been.
turned and then shot it in the cor-
. like San Francisco. ·I have met
ner as I fell out of bounds."
•
some of my best friends for life
"I
just had
a
perma glow the
here."
whole time (on the ride home),"
she added.
•
Carroll said she has had no
regrets with her college life and
with the challenge of playing Divi-
sion I basketball.
. . "My four years at Marist have
~e~n !_he
greatest four years of my
Carroll said she does not want to
have any second thoughts when her
career is over.
"I definitely want to have-a good
year and have no regrets," Carroll
said.
CCI
just need to feel good when
I. hang up those sneakers in
March."
'lJttf
ha,:nqn.
rea<iy.
to •
take . charge
• by
TED HOLMLUND
SpC>rts
Editor
IzeUBuchanan knows som1;:
pep-
pie may have·had an "Ltold-you
so"' mentality after he \Vas declared
. academically ineligible in_
the spring·.
semester last .year.
"To
a
.certain
extent, .. there's
always
•
a preconceived notion
against athletes, (especially)
basket-
ball -· players," the • 2l~year-old
Buchanan . said .. ''That's
how
stereotypes are. It's a part of life."
Buchanan, who averaged 14.8
points and 6.5 rebounds a game in
his abbreviated season, has put the
pastto rest and is ready to take on
his appointed role· as the team
leader.
.
Although he missed the last 18
games, Buchanan raised his grades
and said he is determined to make
up for the lost time;
"I
got the job • done in the
classroom," he said. "This year I'll
make up for all the games I miss-
ed."
Head Coach Dave Magarity also
believes Buchanan is ready to
bounce back and finish an incon-
sistent career on a high note. •
"He's not going to bring that
(the past academic problems) into
the year," Magarity said; "He's
had a real checkered career, but his
goal as a senior is to go out a win-
ner.''
Buchanan, who is 92 points
away from being the 16th Marist
player to break 1,000 points, said
he is ready to lead as weHas score.
• Buchanan said he chose Marist
''I
want that added responsibili- be~ause of its convenience and
ty,"the senior criminal justicema-. believed he could have a bigger ef-
jor. said. "I'm definitely looking feet on a. smaller Division I
forward to b¢ing one of the leaders program.
. .
.
..
.
on this team. I don't feel any extra
.
"Marist was close to home," he
pressure:»
said; "This was the type of school
. . FeUow senior. and. teammate I can make an impact on.,,
Chad Weikert feels.that Buchanan
Buchanan wants to continue ·to
is ..
ready_ to. take the. leadership play. basketball aft:r his collegiate
mantle. _.· • .
:
•
.
career, but knows his college de&!ee
''He's matured a lot;,, the guru-d will hold him in good stead if.his
·
said. ''He realizes his role now and . goal to be a player falls through.
is playing really welt•' .
•
Last year, Buchanan was scouted
. Buchanan played on the Hudson by· the Portland Trailblazers and
Valley Region in the Empire State Phoenix Suns:
Games this summer where his team
. "Hopefully, I'll be playing after
won a gold medal. He played with college,
barring
, injuries,''
high ~ber players, induding Otis Buchan!in . said .... If.· I. wasn't
• Hill of the Syracuse Orangemen. drafted, there's
certain
NBAcainps
"There were a lot of high players where people pick up players. I've-
up there," Buchanan said. "It was talked to my coaches, and they've
the first time ·playing since being in- told me how to get into camps:
eligible. I played well.''
"If basketball doesn't work out,
Buchanan
graduated
from (a degree) gives me something to
Goshen High School, a small town fall back on,'' Buchanan added.
in Orange ~ounty, N.
Y .,
which is
However, Buchanan is not con-.
not known for its basketball.
cemed with the past or future, but
"I wasn't heavily recruited " the only with the present task of
6-6 guard said. "Goshen w~ not leading the team to tournament
known for its (basketball) talent. I glory. "I want us to win the Nor-
_
was also thin."
th~t
Conference Championship
If there has been one weakness and go to the (NCAA) Tourna-
in Bgchanan's game, it has been ment," ,Buchanan said.
the jump shot;but Buchanan, who
Buchanan realizes his n.ew role as
~as worked on improving his !he team leader and eagerly accepts
Jumper all summer, said that will it.
change.
"I don't see that (leading) as
"Everybody's going to see a pressure," he said. "I always
marked improvement on my jump wanted to be the guy to have that
shot," Buchanan said.
added responsibility. It's something
I look forward to.''
VOLlJMEL43~
NUMBER
s·
-
Marlst.c
..
<>.
·ue.
:g·
e,·.
P_o.
ug·
,h.
k.
e·e·p's1e·,
·N.v·
•.
•
.
NOVEMBEfii11·,
·1993
.
M~rist library nee.ds iniJ)rovement, say Students
-
.
.
about the library; students are en-
couraged and appreciative of some
library services, especially the ABI
databases and tlte library staft
•
byLYNN~WIELAND
libraryis not.big enough for this
possible ..
:
Staff Writer
•
•
•
••
number of students •.•
.
•.••
By i995;McGinty pl~~o~ hav-
..
ing
5000
journals available on
-
a
-~-------'-'-'-'-'-'-
There should be a seating capaci-
Whe~
..
discussing Visic:>n '94, t)'. for 25 percen~
of
the ~otal
.r~i-:
m~y, students agree
,with
Jeff
•
µent student. body,
.according
to
Broderick, a junior; when he says McGinty; and Marist does not
"the vision is blurred."
come dose to that goal.
•
·
database; In 1987, the library had
•
850 • ~ubscriptions
·10
journals, to-
-
day thatnumber has more·then
doubled to .1688;
•
•
blems ·with stu.dents ripping
out
pages,-or stealing articles but there
is little-that can be done.
With more information becom-
McGirity said that
-
the
A
BI ser:=
vice
wm
continue
_to'
grow.
•
Circle
Poll·_
.
While th~ construction of the
~•we sho~ld. have 800
;~r
·900
.
ne~ townhouses has found m~ch • seats,'' he said. "We have:375.''
•
Another m~jor development in~
....
_
• •
,
dudes the installation
·ofa"Local
....
·
Tiu~
Circle
conducted
a
_nonO::scieri.tific
poll
praise ~ong students, the seeming .
•
lack of unprovement on the library
.
.
This Ia~k of seating bec~mes
draws considerable criticism from. more of a problem as,mid-temi and
them.
•
•
final e,cams approach. Along with
Area Ne.t:,Vork
·.(LAN)
'Nhich wm • f
.,
•.·
o· t
·2s·
N
-
9 M
•
h
•
•
600.
•
- d
allow access
fo
information stored
.. •
fOID
C •
'.'" OV •
~
ore
t
an
.·
Stu ents
iii
databases··.from various com-
were
askecl
to
respond
Yes
or
No
to
the
putei:s in the library. '.fhis will help •
•
•
•
•
•
.to
avoid students haying to w.ut for
--
f~ll9wing
__
questio~
:_·
•.
•
Many
students feelth~t the ~ol- this complaint, students also. point
Iege has forgotten its
imiin
priori..:· out that. there
:
is practically. no
ty of education while" focusing-Oil:.
"private
studying areas in the
the expansicm and development of library.-
•
•
•
••
..
.
•
•
•.
use on acertain data base,· which
•
is ~other c01ninon·complaint..
Does the
:library
satisfy your needs?
• -
Ciridy Malo,
-
a junior.' and
y
••
•
·
·4·
6
·
•
••
•
...
the college.
:
•
•
McGinty
.
and stude~ts are in
"!think
tiur library ~eeds more
agreement that
a
new library
•
is
improvements
.
bef 9re
,we.·
need an.
. •
necessary;.
however, like most pro-
art gallery; The othei: stuff is great
je~ts, money is the_ key problem:
business inajor said tliat the library
-
es
~
2
.
NO -
3 7 3
•
fulfiUs her needs, but she does have
someproblems with the periodical
but
.
the library is the priority,"
Building
·a:
library twice the size
senior· Amv: Maitterer
•
said •.
·
•
of the current one would cost about.
$8 million, McGility estimated. The
moriey needed would have to come
from private donors as the school
John. McGinty.
'direct<>r;
of the
'
library, understands the complaints
of the students and feels that most
of
them are justified.
•
,;The students want the library
as the next priority, and I think that
it should be the next priority,"
McGinty said.
•
•
is not state funded, he said.
section.
.
.
•
-
"I can neve,; find the periodical
that I am looking for; either the ar.:.
tide is· missing, pages are
.ripped
out or it's in the wrong. spot,"
Malo said,
ilig available electronically, the p~o-
blem should decrease, McGinty
said.
••
.·
.
.
The library also faces m~y com-
plaints about noise,
.
a
.
problem
which McGinty also n,~tes.
"The'staff is great, some will go
out of their way to help you get in-
formatipn;" Amy Martterer said.
S.enior Ralph Musolino, when
asked to name a positive thing said
with little hesitation, "The staff.
The Hbrarians are great."
McGinty said the library will
con~inue to grow_:
It is currently at
maximum electrical capacity, is
edged
-
for space, and is working
with a limited budget and staff, but
developments wiU still· continue.
•
•
by·
KRISTINA WELLS
• Staff Writer ·•
•
Security:has been
.kept
busy°,in the early part of this semester .
. ,Within.the
firsttvm_weeks of school there was,an alleged rape and
•
a third degree assault on a male student.
,
•
•
•
:
Because se'c4rityj:ouldn'tkeep up with an of'the calls for escorts on
~ampus; Phi Sigm11
Kappa and Kappa Kappa Gamma. volunteered to
,
sponsored a student escort service.
•
.•
•
.·
•
The students handled the_ escort service in order to_ allow security to
patrol and do ~heir·job inore easily.
.
~,fany st~dents are questioriirig if'seturity has been upgraded and if
members ()(t~e security has b~en doing itsjob, or if it has continued
·to
be the same.securityjt has ahvays been.
. • •• ·.
•
•
.
According t9Joe I.eary, dir~ctC>r
cffcollege safety arid security, Marist
~.C::ollege
secui:ity
h.as been upgrad_ed
and will condnue
·10·
be· further upgrad-
1ed
.·in'
the. next, few weeks.
·:
•.
-·
··:.:
•
•
•
•
-
·
•
.•
Con~tn.iction continue~ ~n
~the.
n~~
·d_orm
a~'~i~ion ;94
~~~~~s-
the f~lling te~p~r~tur~-s.
· _-:i
''Wi"Ji11d
orlginallyplannecl'to rerriov~ theioweu Thomas arid Dyso~
building guards and put them ori foot patrol oftheNorth End," Leary
said; ''Iristead, we hired three fuU time, temporary security guards.There
will be three posts·added from.8:00 p.m. to 4:00 a,IIl:'' .According to
.
Leary;· the security coverage for the_ dorms was changed after the rape.
:
)11,stead.<>_ftl)e_
fiye-daycover*ge from Tuesday to Sunday morning, securi-
.
ty will cover the dorms seven days a week.
-·
-
-
:
•. :'··
'.
>
'.
'.'..
••
Recent
..
,elec!iOI?-S_;
lack
....
fylarist
•
p~rtic;ip.ation
vote because it was
to6
far away to
the candidates or the election itself
getthere and it tc:>ok
to long to get
so I wouldn't want to guess for the
by
THOMA$'.HOWARD.
StaffWrit~r.
-
•
Orily a few thousand votes could
have changed thf outcome of the
elections for mayor in New York
City and governor in New Jersey,
but these
.
•
tight
·
races did riot
motivate Marist students to vote in
their local elections.
Most students claimed that.they
either forgot to get an absentee
ballot in time or were just not iii-
formed enough to make a choice_.
Many students said that since
they are at school, they have
f
alien
out of touch with politics in their
hometowns, and therefore knew
nothing about the candidates or the
issues.
.
Jeff D'Onofrio, 20, a com-
munications major from East
Hartford, Conn., said, "I didn't
a absentee ballot.'!_:
_
•
:_!-
.•·
right one."
.
:
."I
didn't know anything about
Tricia Southworth,
-
21,
a
theissues·becaµse I don't get any
business major from Hopewell
information here,"
•
D'Oriofrio
Junction, N. Y., said; "I was plan-
added.
-
ning on voting but I got home from
_Yahairah
Aristy,
a
psychology work late and I had a lot of
major from Manhattan said, "I'm
homework to do."
not going to vote because I don't
. •
Scott Frosch, 21, a senior com-
know everything I want to know
munications
major
from
about the candidates.''
Brookfield, Conn., said, "I didn't
Kate C~stle, 20, a junior
have time-to go back to Connec-
· psychology/special education ma-
ticut. and vote nor did I get a
jor frompuanesburg, N.Y., said
absentee ballot."
•
that she didn't vote because, "l
In the race for mayor of New
didn't go home for October break
York City, incumbent David
so I didn't pick up a· absentee
•
.
Dinkins lost to Republican-Liberal
ballot."
:
.
.
·candidate
Rudolph Giuliani by a
Elicia Woodford, 18, a business
slim margin.
•
major from Syracuse, N.Y., said
Locally, the city of Poughkeep-
that she didn't vote because, "I
sie elected its first woman mayor.
really don't know anything about
L~ry said the addition of the campu!l van and security in Beck Place
parking lot has helped to secure. problems· on campus.
.
,'
•
<'To ensure the safety of the students parked in.Beck Place, we have
•
taken,one building officer and put him on foot patrol back.there from
5:00 p.m. to·10:00 p.m:/• he said. "After night classes are over, we put
him back in the building."
.
.
•
•..
.
Leary said all of the.se upgrades have helped to better secure the
cam-
.
pus.against harm. He said-he hopes these changes are permanent.
"I certainly hope it will remain this way in upcoming years,., he said.
"I'd like to feel this is a .permanent upgrade. We certainly rieed it.'1
Although security has improved in number, many students are still
angry about the incidents on campus and still feel unsafe on their own
campus.
•
Many of the students who live on campus said they don't feel security
is doing its job.
-
•
•
Kendra Glen, a sophomore, said she doesn't like the fact that security
spends all its time ticketing cars instead of making sure the students are
safe.
.
_
•
•
"I think they should take less time putting boots on cars and ticketing
and spend more time on protecting us, that's what they are supposed
to do," she said.
•
Andrew Szegda, a sophomore in Champagnat Hall, said it has come
down to students doing security's job. He said the escort service is done
by the students instead of security and that the students are upgrading
security, not the officers.
•
•
•
A freshmen resident of Champagnat Hall, Lou Reynolds, said securi-
... see
UPGRADE
page
4
►
/.•.,
...
,
.;
I
,j
')
,.
,
)
,
,
,.>
I
/)
-""''•
'·
..
'''
Frosty blln'i b'e-foundif1Burton's 'Nig]a(rrtare'
Halloween. Land.
. .
. .
.
.
.
Christmas.
.
. .
.
•
•.
.
_'
.
••
.
hour.
.
. .
.
.
.
.
.
Bass films
.h:1ve·t
...
\
••
•
.'
•
.
••
•••
:-
• :&p't~~~:l:Mii~~y
..
T~m Burtonhas_fak,eD
the tradi.-
,
;A:
Aided.by
tll~
quir.ky_m~sical
•
• 1:he
•,
p~oducer/cr.ea_tor
_
..
of
•
·/\Icq~~~t~e>nJhe
5-tay1~gpo~er
..
·
·
· ·
·
·
·
· ·.
·
·
·
t1on, of Ran km· and
Bass
._
sty lings of Danny Elf man, Burton
"N1gh_tmare'' ~as had doodles of O
.
an m
:
~n
•.
:)3ass
:is. ;rell,
•
Colleen:
·Afmosieveryorie •
can
("Rudolph
The_, Red-1'1osed
.
takes us
to
a different level of holi~
.the
_characters
m a notebook ~or because_they,_s~opped,
putting The
imagine Santa's workshop at the
.Reindeer,","TheYearWi!h?utA
day_entertainment.,
,·
-
..
·
•·
•.
.
years,.·
,
__
•....
•
year_~~~~outA:Sant~CI~us''o,n:
•
..
North Pole, but Tiin Burton takes
Santa Claus") and turned 1t mto a
I don't know, however, if this is
..
True, the, plot wasn't Oscar teley1S1on_m
tht\~ate_
70 s/earl>: 80 s
.
llS
to the Halloween laboratory of
sad·
·commentary
on the lack of
a
'.
level. I'm
"comfortable
..
with.
.•
material, butthat's not what I was d1;1e
to VlO~!:nt
:imag_es.
associated
Jack Skellington, .the "Pumpkin
•
holiday spirit.
.
...
. .
..
"Nightmare"wasn't too axnusing'. looking for.. .
•.
_..
•
.. with S!1!1ta
,Claus;:
it scared the
King."
•
•
•
C:
Jack, our hero, 1s tired of the
Sure, there were some funny
It
.was
visually pleasmg, the young vi~wers. ;
.••
•
•
;.
•
,
Halloween Land is the place
sameness of his Halloween ex-
scenes and one or two really catchy music was good, and the talking
•
. A: All_
mall,
I
giv~ "Nightmare"
where all of the ghosts and goblins
travaganzas, and after stumbling
songs, but for the hours and hours skeleton, as well as all of the Five Qwrky D!l!1~Y
Elf man~.
. •
live year-round, waiting for Oct.
upon Christmas Town, decides he
put into
,
this film; I think they
•
charaters, were likable.
It was
,entertrumng,
but 'Ylll an~.
31:·
-
·--
..
: ·
•
.
needs a change of pace.
. ••
.
could have come up with a more in-
It wasn't
a:
complete waste of noy and confuse ~oun~er viewers.
Andrew:
The stop-action
"Befigures
that Halloween-Land
.
teresting story,
_
•
.
• time.
•
.
C: I t~oughtlliked
_1t
before we
animated· film "The Nightmare
can do. just as good a job as
Kids will probably·· become
A: Colleen,--let me ask Y~!!
.a
wrote this,
~u~
the.m~re,factt~at
Before Christmas" is a story about
Christmas Town, and tries to make
disinterested after the first few question.
.
we spenMh~_whole
-t•~e-argumg
,
how Jack, finds his way to
the holiday his owh.
scenes.
.
.
.
Do you think this film has the ab0l1tthe ~ents of Chris~mas pro~·
Christmas Town and decides to·
He doesn't realize that the Hallo-
C: !found it fascinating to be in-
potential
·of
staying. around year gr~s
leads me. to:
·t,elieve ·that
•
have his very owil
•
Christmas in
ween people aren't ready for
side the mind of Tim Burton for an after year like those old Rankin and
•
"Nightmare"- wasn•v·a
·,
filin>to
•
.
.
remember.
No grun,ge, no flannel, no Weiland
;_;_,p
Jstrikes
·
Dack
by
DANA. BUONICONTI
This column isn't going to be an
easy one to write, simply because
I still haven't totally decided what
I think of the new Pearl
.
Jam
record.
I
know
I
like it, but whether it's
as good as "Ten" ... well, let's just
say the jury isn't out yet.
For. starters, "Vs." is con-
siderably different than "Ten,"
and not
·what
I thought it would
sound like upon initial listenings;
But I suppose that's a good
thing.
If it had sounded like "Ten,"
you'd hear me compl,iiining
"sophomore slump."
The
percussion-driven
"Vs.," however, is decidi;dly
•
."W.M;A.''
sounds nothing like
not.
anything from "Ten."
.
Whether it holds up as well as
But the same could be said for
"Ten" has done remains to be
"Daughter,". "Glorified G,"- and
seen.
"Elderly Woman Behind The
If this record lacks anything, it's
Counter In A Small -Town."
.
the
immediate
·
emotional impact
I think the secret this time out is
that '!Ten" possessed.
drummer Dave Abbruzzese;
•
his
I figure that's because there were
..
playing really drives the songs, with
no expectations for
·"Ten,"
and
•
a beat that is equal
parts
thrash and
more than enough for "Vs." What
finesse.
seems to be most apparent about
The entire band is credited with
the record (aside from the fact that
songwriting duties, possibly sug-
my
review
of it is several weeks gesting the desire to be recognized
overdue) is that it manages to be
as five equals (hence the former ti-
both more diverse and a lot
tie "Five Against One," maybe?).
catchier.
Guitarists Stone Gossard and
Mike McCreadyhave tinkered
with
ing so thafthe words give a vague
and tightened their one-two punch. sense of what inspired
him
to write
The riffs and solos on "Vs." are them and the possibility for per~
a lot more lean and muscular than sona:I interpretation.
they were on "Ten," not nearly
I'm
.hard-pressed
to • come up
·
washed in as much
•
echo and
.
with a favorite song, buU'd pro-
reverb>"
.
.
.
. ..
bably say "Rearviewmirror,'-' for
And bassist Jeff Ament and Ab-
•
its
.lyrics.
•
-
~. .
... •
..
··.
•
,
.
bruzzese have becoine airtight in
.
,The
-band• has
,attempted.
to
their rh}1hll! propulsion'.
....
•
··relc:ase
this record with as little fan-
No doubt the refinements and
-
f#e""as possi~le, even. to the point
improveIIients in playing come' of holding out on making a video.
from the endless touring in support
.
·And
they·shotild'coritiilue to do
of "Ten.'.'.
•
•
so.
.
•
-
••
So riow I guess that leaves us
(I think it's quite funny, and at
with Mr. Eddie Vedder.
•
the same time,· disgusting, to see
Critic relishes 'Flesh'
(Boy was I crushed when I read
MTV act so desperate as to have to
that recent. Rolling Stone article
continuously prostitute the perfor-
and Jound out Eddie's dad wasn't
mance of "Animal" from the 1993
really a forest ranger ... )
_
,
Video Awards because they don't
If anything, his voice continues
have a video yet.)
•
..
to grow as a unique means
•
of
•
If
someone were to ask me if
by
JENNIFER GIANDALONE
"Flesh and Bone," starring real-
life couple Meg Ryan and· Dennis
Quaid, is a beautifully shot film
that has a constant mood of
apprehension.
.
On a farm in a small town in
1950's Texas;a lost young boyis
taken in by a family who provides
···h1m·w1th
a'placefo stay:---···.·
,.
In the middle of the night, the
boy wakes up, unlocking the front
door of the house to let
•
in his
father, Roy Sweeney (James Caan,
"Honeymoon In Vegas"), who
proceeds to steal everything inside.
Hearing the door open, the
owner of the house comes~
downstairs and tries
to
stop the
intruder.
.
The owner shoots at Roy and
misses.
••
•
Roy then kills him and the rest
of his family, except for an infant
girl.
•
.
.
Cut to 25 years later where we
.
meet ArUs Sweeney
(Dennis Quaid,
."D.O.A."),
a quiet man who ser-
vices and supplies vending
machines for a Hving in a. number
.
of small towns.
.
-
•
.
•
·
.
It's no secret that Artis is
.the
adult version of ihe young boy who
saw his father murder an innocent
family in the beginning of the film.
.
He is not at all prepared for the
tum his life is about to take and the
memories that are going to come
back to haunt him,
..
.
.
Enter. Kay Davies. (Meg
'Ryan,
Earn cash now!
.
.
·w·.
.
•
Ametk:a's
lastast
growing
Sec:urily
.
company
has
openings
duoughol4
..
. ·.
New.
Yolk.
Hyouase.
drug-f.
ree,
.
have
a verifiable
background,
telephone
and
reliable
transportation.
we are
lntarestad
in meeting
you.
(Bring
2 lorms
of ID)
Pror-lonal
Security
8urM1,
Ltd.
li6CXdT~Rd.N;ni41.NYtl~
250W:!9SI.NrwYOlfc.NY21M67-18CO
AppllcatiCll'I
Ille:
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Fri:
81111
•
3Pm
BEAOI
SPRING
BREAK
PROMOTER.
Small or iuzer groups.
Your's ntn, dlsc.ounted
or
CASH.
call CMI t-S00-423-5264
SELLSPRING
BREAK!
Experienced
students
wanted to promote
Spring
Break.vacations
fora
serious
and
pres-
tigious
travel
company.
Eam
free
trips
and/or
cash!
CaHl<imberly
at (800)
879-4141.
"Sleepless in Seattle,") a young
woman who isn't quite sure what
she wants to do with her life.
We first see
a
drunken Kay try-
ing unsuccessfully to jump out of
a cake at a bachelor party, only to
pass out as she breaks through the
top.
Kay says "Your whole life can
change in one tiny' little second,"
which applies to all three characters
in the film.
Dennis Quaid's subtle but
powerful performance helped
make the movie as good as it was.
_,
'.Ad1s ·
is· r'ecruited by.
,the
..
:;
·;
~yan is just
as
good
as
Quaid;
bart d
• •
•
gtvmg Kay an energy that. has
-
en er at the party to take Kay
•
helped her get through her rough
home.
•
•
life.
.
_
_ He finds. out that she is trapped
m an abusive marriage and helps
her. leave her husband.
.
The two go on the road together.
.
"~lesh and
,Bone"
is a-good
.
!DOVIe
that ta~es a long time to tell
its story.
,: •
•
as Arlis makes his rounds servicing
the vending machines.
Its restraint to move the story
..
along contributes toJts dramatic
. .
Eventually, Arlis meets up with effect.
his long lost father, who brings
•
,---------------
back the past and contributes to the
nigbt~ares that he alieady
.
has
.
regardmg that horrible night.
··
If
you know anything about how
~ollrvood works when construc-
tmg its plots, you
will
~ave rio pro-
blem figuring out who Kay is artd
•
·what·
Roy's response is.
.•
The middle of
"Flesfr
and Bone';
deals with the relationship of Arlis
and Kay and how some things are·
better left unsaid.
Circl~
snow.
·.
.
update:"
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•
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expression.
.
·,
•
. ''Vs." is better than. "Ten,'' I don't
He's becoming increasingly more think I· could tell them.
adept at using his voice to convey
"Vs."_isn'twhat
I
expected, but
heart~
,
and
.
gut-wrenching
then agai
0
n, mos! things never are,
emotions.·
•
and thats why it's so good.
•
Arid his lyricalskills ar~ develop-
,
,
:Aff
ENTIO-N"·
·
,
liOCOl.iN'.1"1NG.
MAJORS
R~pf.8$~-n~a.tive.~Jro111:.the··t>ttice·;
of
..
the·
..
State•.·
CQmptrolle(\vilJ
··.visifMarist
_C611ege
:011_
No.:
vember.·1··s,-1.993_at1oa~ni.and·11
::30a.m._to
.
talk to
_.you··'ab6uf.·aud1ti'n,
1
g\an~-.)ic_cbaryting
care.a~
opportunities
wi1tf
the
if organiz_atio~.
•.•.
.
.
.
'.
':
-._-.
_.
..
lfyou
area
talented,
mOtivated
i.ndividual.who··
.·.:·_i~:·_1?.?~in~Jo~
..
~·9Q_,c~ll.~_D~!,f1_9,::~(9f~s.~Io,nal,p~$i-··
. t19.~
m the._auditing
orac99unting·
r,.eld/please::
.
pl~_frto
att_etid.
-
•
•
•
-~
RADIO
OODSTOCK
TH.E NEW
DiRECTION
OF ROCK
-
.•
.
.
.
,
'
.
~-
.
.
.
.
. .
.
.
.
~--
.
.
.
.
••••
100.1 FM
I O W
I
N
PO U G H KEEPS
I E AT
;
.MARIST
;_
96.9
f
M
I
.
School of Adult Education
I
L-----------------~-~
. not yo,o~fathe_r's r<~dio
station!
.
.
'
i
:1
!
j
•
••
THE CIRCLE, NOVEMBER 11,
1993
b~.-
.. M
..
EA.
GH.AN
.FITZGERALD
McCa11n :said The We.ek· of
J
•
R.einembrance. , also remembered
•
Sta.ff Writer
other members of the • Marist
Jeanm.arie.Murfagh, :who was a • community. : .· ·.·.• . .
,
.·
junior communications major, will • On All·• Souls .· Day, _:Nov. 2,
be remembered seven months after
Marist staff; faculty and ~d-
she lost her battle with cancer last
niinistrators who have. died since
Aprill4.
. •
.
the. college's· foundation were
On Nov. 1, Murtagh, along with- remembered,
according.
to
26 other Marist students who had
McCann. •
dled during their undergraduate
On . Nov. 3, the 25 deceased
years; was. remembered during. a
trustees· who. had • served . Marist,
Mass in the Chapel.
and two of the 20 campus ministers
Thefrrst week of November is
who had been part of Marist .since
••
traditionaliy, a •:week·
o'f
remem.,__ 1957, were remembered.
•
bran\:e,atMarist, with each _day
of
The 66 deceased founders and
th_e,Dveek::holding;,a Mass that: ·b'uilders_ofthe College, all Marist
remembers different groups within.·. Brothers, were remembered during
the Maristcominunity, according
a
iiooriday Mass on Nov. 4,
to Father Luke McCann, campus
The names of the 27 students
chaplain.
. .
.
. who have died while at Marist can
"During the first days of the
be found aithe grotto, the student
month of Nov., Marist takes time
memorial located near Donnelly
to look back through the years to
Hall.
•.
•
deceased alumni who preceded us
• The memorial was·•
donated by
on this,campus,"- Mccann said.
the parents of Shelley Sperling, a
"On Monday, we recalled those
student who died in 1975.
•
27 undergrads; rememberingtheir
Last April 19, after a memorial
joyful presence ·on this. campus
service· held at. the Chapel, a
while· pondering their untimely
candlelight ceremony was held in
deaths,"· McCann said. ''Deep
Murtagh's memory at the grotto.
within
I
guess we count our bless-
Over ·. 200 people att~nded the
ings, asking Why them arid not us.''·
services. •
for a career
This service gave the family and
friends
a
chance to remember Mur-
tagh and her c~ntributions to the
Marist community.
•
Murtagh
was
an active member
of the Marist Greek community,
serving as a Greek Council
Representative, for the Kappa
Lambda Psi (KLP) sorority.
Presently, the Greek Council is
considering naming the Greek
Week trophy The Murtagh, and
KLP will be planting a tree on cam-
pus in her memory sometime in the
spring. .
Additionally, the 1994 Reynard
will feature ·a dedication page
which will be put together by Mur-
tagh's roommates.
"This week of shared memorials
is· unique to Marist and one of the.
traditions which binds us as a fami-
ly," Mccann said.
"It
is most
poignantly manifest in the patents
of deceased undergrads who return
annually tojoin faith with today's
students, staff and faculty."
"In this realization, there is a
certain reassurance that we, today's
students and staff, will be long
remembered·at.Marist at the turn
of the seasons."
3
Student paper under attack
by
CARI L. OLESKEWICZ
Assistant Editor
The student newspaper at Ket-
cham High School in Wappingers
has been attacked by the ad-
ministration, due to a cartoon
which depicted school board
members as animals and an
editorial which criticized the "back
to the basics"
educational
red by Principal John Biasotti.
Students complain they are be-
ing censored, with the removal of
their adviser, they are running the
paper without faculty help, and
Biasotti checks each issue before it
is printed.
According to the State Educa-
tion Department
regulations,
freedom of the press guaranteed in
the First Amendment is applied to
student publications, as long as
William Dourdis the adviser for
students refrain from libel- and
.the .Tomahawk ~aper
..
and. an . <;>~§cen~l)'
1
,.~P.,~
01?.s.~ry.e_the«~or-.
••.
English
foaclie'r
afthe ·schciol:·said'•-?1a/' ,.,,_-rules· ~ror'."f·respons1
bie • '· .... •
he will' have a hearing Nov.
30
Journalism..
.
•.
_
because he has been charged with . The Pough½eeps!e
Jo_urnal
insubordination.
reported that B1~sott1
,;o~s1dered
• Dourdis may face a reprimand the ca~to~?• ent1~!~d Circ~s
~!
or a penalty as strict as dismissal Education to be mappropnate
if he is found to have acted for a student newspaper.
improperly.
"I_t ~as . insu_ltin~,
!!
was
.- l\1ari~tsenior~ spe~kwith Janet May a"nd
An.n Bishop.(left to right) of the Galleria Crystal
Run atthe recent Career. Ex o>
· •
•
•
•.•
·
•
-An opinion column criticizing abusive,
Biasotti S_'.11d. If th_e
the action against Dourdis was students had somethmg to say, 1t
removed last month and • when most assuredly could have been
students attempted to'hold a sit-in done in a manner that did not
to protest this removal, it was bar-
degrade."
,]JJrit
i{l;~fl/artment
lacks in funds and Volunteers
by
KRISTA
E.
·st-iEPARD.
.
.
, .. ~-St~ff.
Y\f
riter
•• volunteer,'~ •Zeidan said~
"We transport several students each year
, to SL :Francis Hospital in out an;itmlance:
7
A'smoke·detector'sounds in one oftne·
riew
those.
are
.our ambulances-not. St. 'Fran-
classrooms of the.Campus Center and·two ::cis','.\Zeidari said: ..
:.
.
. ..
firetrucks·•. scream •• down •• Fulton • Street
There are ten career members on staff who
/. towards MaristCollege.
work 10-hour nights and 14-hour day~. Ail
It was the 187th time this year.·
paid staff members are former volunteers.
. The Fairview Fire Company, located in the
· .. According to Deputy Chief Richard
District Business Office onViolet Avenue,
Dormeyer, "The12-19
firefighters and
is made up of 40 volunteer members and they rescue squad volunteers cannot manage the
are looking for help from Marist students.
three-minute response time or the 1,200 calls
The· cQmpany, receives approximately each year. We can't pay all of them, so we
1,200 .·fire.
and rescue· calls . every year.
need both on staff.''
200 ·of those calls come.from-Marist.
"Our first Marist volunteer was here for
They getthe call from Marist secw:ity, and
almost four years and was excellent,''
the trucks can
be
anywhere within nine miles Dorineyer said.
•
of the college, and arrive in three minutes or
Former Marist volunteers have done
. less.
•
.
.
.
everything from fight fires to ride and assist
.. Fire Police Captain Joe Zeidan said,
on the ambulance. They have the option to
~'Marist was
'once
one of our biggest assets move up the ranks as high as they want as
in volunteering.:._:we
used to have a lot of stu-
long as they take the necessary courses and
dent volunteers from the college."
qualify, Dormeyer said.
Zeidan said that all of the former Marist
"It does cost.money to train and outfit
volunteers have graduated, and there is a lack these volunteers,'' Dorm eyer said.
of interest in current students to become in-
"We are looking primarily for students
volved in the program.
who have training from home, but if a stu-
• Working with students in the past had
dent plans to be here for a few years, we will
been a major asset for the department,
train them," Dormeyer said. •
Zeidan said.
· .
~
.. ··-: -:· · ..
·::
• "And we certainly wouldn't tum down
"Many students had the qualifications somebody who's leaving in June if they had
from their hometown fire departme9ts, and
the qualifications," Zeidan .said.
the one's that didn't, we trained,'' said
The company has met with some resistance
Zeidan.
•
from Marist regarding student volunteers.
Zeidan, a full-time deli manager said he
"The educators at Marist worry that it
volunteers because it is fun, he enjoys help-
takes away from their study time. This is not
ing people and:because it gets him out of the
true,~• said Dormeyer. "Students used to
house. • • •
-
study at the station here where it's quiet and
"It's too oad we're in a community where were here for us if we had a call." •
there's not a lot of people willing to •
Barbara Turner, volunteer rescue squad
· lieutenant, said, "One thing we stress with
• the students is that· schooling comes first.
-''.W!!
don'twant students leaving class to res-
pond to a call;"
Turner, a florist, is a member of both the
rescue squad and the ~refighters'. She began
her career with the company when she took .
an Advanced First Aid course at the com-
pany building.
"I immediately liked the people here-we're
like one big family and have lots of social •
activities such as softball games and parties,"
Turner said.
"Volunteering gives the students a chance
to do something for their community,"
Dormeyer said.
•
"Students become civic-minded and carry
this with them to their home communities,''
·said Fire Company President, Peg Connors .
"In this line of work, you have to like
helping people, and in dealing with them you
need patience,'' Turner said.
Volunteer work at the fire company can
be used to pick up skills in first aid and safety
or to further skills and talent.
A
former Marist student who took advan-
tage of these opportunities is Chris Dougher-
ty, who began as a volunteer and is now a
volunteer fire captain.
Dougherty, an Emergency Medical
Technician (EMT), is studying to be a
paramedic. Volunteers come from varied
professions, including electrical engineers,
paramedics, florists, electricians. There are
IBM employees and a deputy sheriff.
Tory Gallante, 21, is a member of the paid
staff. At 16, he became a volunteer and two
years later was hired part-time.
At 20, Gallante was hired full time and
continues to work at the company while go-
ing to school part-time at Dutchess Com-
munity College .
There are currently 40 active members of
the company, which includes the ladies aux-
iliary, the rescue squad, the fire police and
the firefighters.
While ~he ladies auxiliary handles
refreshments and the fire police secure the
scene and direct traffic, there is a bit more
training involved in becoming a firefighter
and a member of the rescue squaq.
Members of the rescue squad must take
courses to qualify to work on the ambulance:
Certified First Responder (CFR) and CPR.
Firefighters need to take EF-the Essen-
tials of Fire, a broad-based course that
teaches everything there is to know about
fire.
"There is a lot of training involved, but
once you get going, and have the patience •
to keep with it, it's not bad at all,'' Turner
said.
According to Turner, after an application
and interview process, one must be sworn in.
Then one must pass an extensive and gruel-
ing physical-basically
for one's own
protection .
Candidates are also required to take a class
for three months that meets twice a week.
Once certified, six weeks later, there is a one
month probation period.
"During this learning period, you ride on
the ambulance but administer no type of pa-
tient care-you just observe and learn how
everything works," Turner said. "Once you
take the Certified First Responder class, then
you can deal with the patients and basical- •
ly, you're on your way."
The Fairview Fire Company responded to
200 calls from Marist last year.
-,
I
I
I .
I
:
'
\
_'l
\
I.
4
.
''
......
.,
TH_E CIRCLE, NOVEMBER'
11~
199~
UPGBADE--···-
.
..
,.
___
..
_.
----------
..
:con,rll&.~
i,oJ
pa~•
1
•
•.
:. thi~~ ..
~d.ut
siiity
ihOU1d
have
•
~<I
~;,;i, .~
arou~d.;
h;1~
••
. .·
needs to pay attention in
..
b_een.
~one.
~
lo~g time ag<>..
.
,
•
.
her;
•
.
. • .
.
..
-.,.
:< ·.
•
.
.
•.
'the
dorms and·c1'eck,everyperson
•
C'l
__
t_hirk ~t sh_ould hav~_al~a~s
-:.
·•-
• ,
,·
..
•
·••
• ,.
_,_:i
•
.
that' comes· thfough·: the door.·
been
·li~e
th.is,:' Br~nches1 said,·
•
.:
'.'I !eel tha.t there should be more
•
"The security.guards don't care,
.
'_'I think~ ~es get tougher and_
-_secun~y_<>u.!
~nCanter~ury beca~se
they just le·~
anyone walk right in- th
7
more thmgs happen, .the more
•
there ar~~t;t~geJ_o~~esJhii.t hang
·
to the dorms without even check~ things on campus are gomg to get· out- and wait. for peo_ple
to .come·
irig them," he siiid.
'
•
worse. Something·. should h.ave home from cll1s~es,"_
she S:i!~L.
_
The students in· Canterbury been done long ago.t,_ Mehssa
0
•
11
••
B" ·
•
·•·
ho··.
liv'·_ed·o,·n··cam<
'
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-··
D 11
B"
l
•
,
C t bu Y
e a ianca, w
•
Garden Apartments said they don't
e. a
1
!lnc~, a so a , an er. r
pus for two years; said she feels
•
even see security out. patrolling at resident, said s~e does~--t_ feel safer
•.
safer. with .the escorts. than with
all.
on cm.ipus or m the apartments.
.
·t
Sb said without the
Jennifer Zanetti, a junior in apt. She said
_she
has been followed. up !~%1n~
on
c:mpus to do that, she.
94B, said she never sees. security to her apart~enlby stra~ge men wouldn't feel safe at all.
•
..
-anywhere
ouU~. Canterbury and when she arrives home at ru~ht
.and
•
••
•
said they need to check
·on
the
student_s out there as well.
..
.
. ,
"'I haven~t seen any changes at
•
all. The only thing I've heard about
is the escort service/' she said.
"I
:never
see security at Canterbury at
<
all. We need more out here.!'
•
Dana Branchesi, a junior, said .
Self Defense·
&
Rape Prevention··
Model Mugging Chapter offers Women's Empowerment
and Rape Prevention program. Full contact self defense
course that teaches women to knock out an assaillant of
.
any si_ze.
Taught in.a supportive emotional atmosphere.
.
~
.
.
•
.
·-·
.
.
..
.
.
,
.·
_.
'
.
.
--GRADUATJ·ON
••
:-·
SUNDAY; Nov·eIDber 14th~ at
.12:30
PM
at the Campus center room 348B
See what 100% commitment looks like! Supporte_rs
.
and
visitors are welcome to attend this event, the only pan of the
course open to the public. Come and celebrate the spirit and
empowennent of the woman.
CO'll:i(!Jl(j'E
'TO Y:I(j-9-f'T
(914)
.431-6779
.
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SINCE1974
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•
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.
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for
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vtt
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tr{(/.
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•
.
..
•
Poughkeepsie:
,ub City, 246 Main Mall • 485-3579
.
·
·Arlington
·
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Arlington
Getty,
813 Main St.• 454-3530
THECIRCLE,
•
F,EATURE
NoveMeeR11,1993
5
Marisf hocke;y J&ns keep Crowds entertained
--_-b...,~-,
...,B-IL-L-.-H-.
A_N_S_C;;..O_;_M.:.·
_;__·
•
he has seen the ~ffect of the crowd
.
There. is an atteinpf to ke~p ~he senior. "This is why I come to the
•
Staff. Writer
on opposing players ...
·
.crowd from yelling obscenities at
games."
••
"It's great watching
.
the • the Civic Center. If a security guard
The physical nature of hockey
Senior Rich Finn said the tough
guy image of the sport attracts the
rowdy crowds.
The sport of hockey is known
for fast action, and physical play.
It has also been known to attract
some
•
of the most rowdy and
fanatical crowds of any sport.
The
.crowds
that gather at the
Mid~Hudson Civic Center to cheer
on the Marist hockey club are no
different.
•
•
.
'
"I love the sport; the action, and
the violence," said
:senior
Frank.,
lmschweiler. "I love to get into it."
.
<Getting
into· it, is exactly what
the fans do.
•
The moment the players hit the
ice the crowd erupts. All game long
chants of "Let's go Marist" .ring
out through the rink.
There is also
a:
dark side to the
Marist crowd. All game long, the
crowd verbally attacks opposing
teams' players.
•
.
For example, in Saturday night's
game versus Stony Brook, some
crowd
comments
included:
"Number
9, your
dead!";
"Number
9,
tell your mom to stop
calling me!"; "Telryour
.dad
to
stop calling me too!"
Senior right wing, Jeff Frost said
Preparatjon:(9r,,
•
-.f.~
.::~::
:~;
-
·Th
f:°;
·:·
~;-:;
upcomµig,e~~ip~;
:
•
~-:'
.
-..
'-•
.
,.
LSAT beginsJan.
6
MCAT beginsJ?eb. 12
Smart people read t~fine print. Smart
people want small classes (fewer than 15
studenls). 4 procto,:ed diagniistic 'examfna.
dons, free extra help wit_h
the itwructor, and
excel/en1 score improvements: Smmt people
•
prepar,fwµh us.
·•
••
•
THE
PRINCETON
REVIEW
We
Score
Morel
other teams
•
get flustered by the
hears someone cursing, they will·· often leads to violent acts on the
crowd, it gets them off their
warn the person not to do so. If
ice. This is one of the attractions
game," Frost said.
•
swearing is heard from the same for some people.
"Hockey is such a physical
.
sport, it's easy for the crowd to get
involved,"
Finn said.
Not everyone enj6ys th~ verbal
abuse heard atthe game; Jennifer
Ross, a senior, said she doesn't ap-
preciate it.
"I enjoy hockey as a whole, but
the· crowd can be a deterrent,"
Ross said. "I don't think the crowd
should be shouting obscenities."
person again, that person will be
asked to leave the premises.
Now what exactly is it about
hockey, that attracts such a
raucous crowd?
.
"On the seventh day, God
created violence, and God said it·
was good," said Cliff Delaney, a
lW.-~A'.s~;n;.J.
.
J.Q[t-et>4t~~
·_
.•
/±'J
Y,o.vr
fll!SX
1.£.s.
Y.cv.rE,TtLr.e.
ill
y.ovr
Fr~er
• DAte~------t,·
li.:.:.im_e:;__
__
_
}}~----------------
Attention: JUNIORS & SENIORS
At MARIST - Ring ordering:
Nov. 11
(Thurs)
10am-S:30pm
Nov.12
(Fri)
10am-2:30pm
Nov. 15
(Mon)
10am-5:30pm
Nov. 16
(Tues)
10am-2:30pm
Dyson Center (Near Cafe)•
Deposit:
$25.
Cash, Check or Credit Card.
$100
deposit required for orders with
balance due over $400.
For additional info. contact:
Al Meyers-Jcstens:
(718) 343-6243
Dashl Dashl The •official•
Marlst
Watches for Men
&..
Women are available for purchase the above dates.
Great
Gift
Ideal
During the games, cries of "Hit
him!", and "Fight! Fight! Fight!"
can be heard echoing from the
stands.
Some people go to the games just
to be in the rowdy atmosphere.
Jim Macaluso, a junior said he
is one such person.
"I don't know, I guess I love
hanging
out with wackos,"
Macaluso said.
Dominic Tallarini, a senior, said
the crowd is a big reason why he
goes to the games.
"With the crowd'going crazy, it
makes the game more enjoyable,"
Tallarini said.
•
The quality of play is another
major factor in the large crowd
turnout.
.
In the past six years, the club has
made the playoffs every year. Two
years
ago
they
won
the
Metropolitan Collegiate Hockey
Conference championship,
by
beating Wagner in the playoff
finals.
SIGMA Pttl EPSILON
1993 BLOOD DRIVE
Time: 12:00 Noon to 5:30 PM
Date: November 18, 1993
Place: Fireside Lounge
Posting on campus for time
&
place.
Questions Refer to:
Jvhn Hynes 575-4314 • Joe Russo 485-1890
11
YOU CAN B~ A
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. .
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.
..
'
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•
.
-·
,--.··
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.
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/.\
•
THECIRCL·E
• MARIST
COLLEGE;
POUGHKEEPSIE;
NY 12601
.
.
_
THE
STODENT
NEwSPfiPER
...
•.
..
.
.
.
SJ. Richard,
editor_
Ted Hohnlund,
sports editor
Matt
Martin,feature editor
,
..
Julie Martin, associate editor
Andrew Holmlund,
editorial page editor
Dana Buonf(:ontl,
columns editor.
Carl Ol~kewlcz, assistant editor
Kristina Wells, associate editor
KlrellA. L~khnt"an,
associare
editor
Jennifer Ponzinl, advertising
manager
James Hocking, distribution
manager
'
•
-·
Dennis GUdea,faculty
advfsir
PUBLISHED
EVERY
THURSDAY
.
.
.
~:·
.:~
~
.-
•
..
··_;-.
:--::.
r_,·
Ignorance affects
crime an-d_-;,
_ _
..
Americans,·Views
"Congress shali make no law respecting an establishment of religion,
•
This paSt weekend atMari st
·(:ollege
was
•
Replacing "jobs" as the hot topic this elec-
•
a very eventful one. We had the pleasure of
tion year was "crime."
or prohibiting the free. exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of
,
hosting 15 students from Up \Yith People.
speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble
The
.
-.
students
were·_ from. Canada,
and to petition the government for a redress of grievances." •
Netherlands, Germany, Ireland as well as the
- Our rights as American citizens begin here.
st
;:g
an Up with P~ple Alum~, this was
Recently at a local high school, the student newspaper has been cen-
an incredible weekend, but also it reminded
sored because it ran an:editorial criticizing the "back-to-basics" cur-
me ofthe things that bothered me when I
riculum and a cartoon depicting school board members as animals.
traveled two years ago.
:
.
,
•
•
•
•
.
•
Americans are ignorant to other countries'
What's the problem? Were they obscenely clad? Or did the caricature
•
cultures, traditions, governments and even
bear a striking resemblance to the individuals which they f~und unflat-
geography.
•
•
..
• .·
._.·
-_.
_.
_.
_
• ..
•
.
.
•·
.
1
tering? Has this somehow hurt the board members' reputations? Or
·By
geography,
_I
do not mean:_
where the
perhaps compromised the integrity of the board itself?
•
•
hills and lak~ are but where the countires
Everytinie we pick up the paper or turn on
••
the TV we see it. The new wave of crime;
• fear, and violence covers everything•-from
the report of a drive~by shooting on. the
"Nightly News•~-to a story on'. ''Donahue"
·
about two kids bilnµng down
:their
·house
after watching ''.Beavis
_and·
Butt-head.'·'
It is e~erywhe(e. And people are
~i
raid.
·
·
But why is it happening?
•
•
••
-
lg11qran~e
is all aroun4 us.
A
.
. ·
1
.
·.
.
are on•a:map,
;· •
.
.
·
..
· ..
·.
·.
1
•.
pparentyso.
··.
.
.
.
. .
_.,
,
.
<
-·..
. -
•
_.
:
• ,Just-by
curiousity, how many,·people
• •
• ·
·
··,
···
•·
'
BecauseQf this serfous infraction, the faclllty adviser isheing charif
•
'
••
'·
woiild"kriow \vhat the'Egc is?,T.he capital
:.B~t
who)s more ~~oi-~t:
the
person ~m-
)
..
ed.withJ,nsubprdinatiqn;:Jtfound guilty by the
..
·school
_
district, a.k~a.
•
of panmark (no tha~ is·nofa,-typo,· that is
rmtting the h~te
~~~~;
~he,.h<?~~ph~'!?:',,th~.
_.,,_,,,_.
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h
·h
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d
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th_e Danes spell1t)?·Or how about the
.
dmg-pusher, fhe _s1:1n-~ealer,
the ~somst or
t e sc o_o o~r _w
le
~as so o iei:i e , ;e ~rs est pena ty It may
language spokenin·Belgium?
:
.. :
.•.
the·p
7
ople wh_o
Jusr_s1t,and Jet1t happen?
levy
agamst him 1s d1sm1ssal from his teachmgJob.
_ .
I was talking to a frierid_ofrnirie who has·, Who
IS
t<>blame?,Thenew
trend-b!apifl'V
ha~:h:!J~:i~~:;~o~:i!'.
It makes one wonder if the First Am~ndment
•
~::~::~~at~~~lZn~~~!!\:~ds~
t;
_
·
•.
Buf~\ve
;~;
~lle-Uu{violincik otii'
,
_
According· to the State Education Department reg·
ulations "The First
tie.
_knowle~g~.
~f how c:>ther_,
go~~rnments
.
society.ori
ino,vi~s
like •~The
l?rogram''
cif>
·. . .. :
.· ·. ·_.
•
.
.
.
. ' ' . . .
.
.
. . .
.
····•.
··.
.
.
·. .
,'
.
..
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;
work and how much other countnes know
shows like.''Beavis arid Butt-head??Aie kids
Amendment protection of freedom of the press applies to student publica-
.
about ours.
•
•
••
,
_.. .
shooililg
eacli
other iµid
start;ingfrr~
because:
•
tions, but students have the responsibility to refrain. from libeLarid
• •
By the way; doesanyone know wh~t hap~. they are.watching too:ma11y:lloilrs
of
MTV
obscenity, and to observe the norm'al rules for responsiblejournaUsm.' '.
.
peiied in the ~anadaian election? Probably
or an Arn~ld\S~hw_:µ'ieneggei:
movie?
.
·•
Th
.
di
f "Th O
·
·
1 " h
·
SUNY N
p..;'t
·
·
did
·th
•
n<>t
becauseit does not concern you.
. ..
.
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.
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.
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f
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cu
Z
pape~, .
_
no onor
.
_
Unless there js a war, a terrorist attack,
. tlf.youf an:Sweds 'yes' maybe yoil should
the respons1b1hty of a Journahst, much less that of
_an
editor, when he
or if you are traveling outsid,e,the States; you
askyourself\vliy:they'.re'watching"it?
Whf.
wrote and p11blished a spoof horoscope which he said was attempting
-
really do ri9tca,re what i~ happe~ing in other
don'tlbeir;parents
'shiidf:off?/A
nd
if'
theit
•
-
to expose the mentality of the Ku Klux Klan.
•
•
.
..
]'.)arts_
cftljr:wor14,.
C
>;,-;'
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parent~:~~en'fh~~e
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Wh~ts~~ me ~:that-thIS
~gnorancelS
not
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His
,attem?t
fell-pamfully shor_t of. the mark. He was impeached by
just for other countries but for our own as
.
·
..
;Iwotild
heuhat in Somalia, $arajevo, or
th_e paper' s_e
__
ditor_i~_l
bq_ard;
_
_
_
_
_
.
_ _
_ _
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Haiti/f~~~peopleih.aye'·seen ."Beavis and
•
•
•
.·
Butt-head'.?·
or
"Robcicop·3"
:.-
yei;there's··
-
These are two local instances where the po\Vtfr of the First Amt!J}d"'._
._
.·
.-There
ar<: a lot of p,!:ople in;this co,untry: still violence.
_
,
.•.
ment was tested. Both
cases
are_disgracefuL
One
for
the flagrant disregard
as,weHas this cam~us_who
do no~ know 1;1°\\'.:
;;
f
·
·
u
·
• ·
h.
·
h.
h
·f
·
·
d"bl ·
·
·
·
"bl
1
.
k f
our own governm.,ent
1s run. Ok, they rmght.
..
• _.·
•
__
• •
.
•
:
>
.
. - -.·
or
JOUm~
sts ng ts;
t_
e ot er or an mere 1
Y
1rrespons1 e ac
O
.
know about
a
presidenL(do(ricitg¢t me
••
Our proQl~ms go beyond TV.
tact on
a
sensitive subject.
.. .
.
.
started), the senate
and
house butthey pro:.
Both cases bruised the
.First.
Amendment, but one more so than· the
bably c<>uld
not. feµ what
.~b,a(mearis:
:
th
•
••
We
can
breabt do\Vn evenJuther. How
o er·.
.
.
_
.
.
_
. .
.
·
.
,
.
people
can
name their two senators or even
While the New Paltz angle 1s appalling to many, 1t1s the K:etcham High
•
theiqtate reps?"
_
..
_
.
,
•
School situation thatniakes us worry.
.
.
.
.
.
·....
.
· ..
·
.··
.
,\Ve
have stopped teaching aboiit other
The infringement of the First· Amendment by. the powers :th~t be at
'contries,
othergoyemmentsas
weU
~.other
.
••
We need to
'pay
fuore attention to
"bur
children. We need to help influence them not
to be ignorant, intolerant, or violent
...
We
need to teach,theni ihat-homophobia· is
wrong. Th~t peQple of a diffen:nt race,
religion, gender,
:or
sexual preference are the
•
·same.·
Roy C. Ketcham High S~h.ool virtually rev?ke? th~ stude1;1ts'
right to
cu~ri~d
fo ~nderstand other cultur~ if
freedom of speech. Depnvmg anyone of this nght
IS
nothmg short of
we ever expect to get along with them:'.Fo[
Last week; an ~endment was added to.
a crime.
• .
• .
.
•
•
example, we all had to take ~ foreign
the.·crime biU, now being debated in con-
As professional journalists, w-ejealously guard everyone's right to ex-
language ill high school
a
nd some are
tak-
•
gress. The am,endin~ritadded
would lengthen
press themselves freely without fear of undue recourse.
~!~~!t:r~~~ege but how many of
you
S
till sentences forhllte:crime offenders.
•
•
Is this not the foundation
·of
a democracy?
What amazes me is how my friends from
Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) spon~
The newspaper does not provide only the journalist with the oppor-
other coutries not only speak english but also
sored the amendment citing that in Los
tunity to report on a story as he or she sees it, but also gives the reader-
several differnt languages.
• ·
.
Angeles, 165 hate crimes were reported froni
-
This ignorance is a major problem in the
July to Septeinber:,-a 19 percent increase.
ship an open forum for disagreement or rebuttal for stories as well as
United States. What really gets to me is
coun-
editorials.
.
.
.
try sterotypes.
•
If violations of the First Amendment spill over to other student publica-
.
tions, then a danger and practically irrevocable precedent will
.be
set.
A strong pillar within. the democratic structure would be severely·
weakened:
Eventually, journalism and free speech would be no more. Newspapers
•
would become sheer PR sheets. The public at large would suffer if it
·was
inundated solely with information from powerful organizations which
would not provide a forum or opportunity to respond.
We, S.J. Richard, Ted Holmlund, Matt Martin, Julie Martin, Cari
Oleskewicz, Andrew Holmlund, Kristina Wells, Kirell Lakhman and
Dana Bouniconti, hold these truths to be self evident.
All. Canadaians say "eh." Everyone in
Poland is poor. The list could go on and I
am sure everyone has their own ideas about
other countries.
Until you learn about other countries, not
just know where they are on a map, but real-
ly learn about them, you will realize that
everyone has the same ideas, beliefs and
.
goals as you do.
Scott Sullens is one of the Circle's political
columnists.
."Someone
who selects a victim based on
.
hatred should be-the subject of the stiff fest.
penalties;" Seri~
Feinstein said in a New York
Times article on Nov. 5.
The crime bill should not be defeated
because of partisan politics. If Americans are
serious about stopping ignorance - now's the
chance to stand-up and do something. Tur-
ning off "Beavis and Butt-head" may not
be enough.
Caroline .Jonah is one of the Circle's
political columnists.
•
THECIRCLE,
VIEWPOINT
y.f
ay
t◊
go Says
}>_residbnt1\1urray
Edit~r:
·,:>: ..
'
.
:
.
.
:
. .
·
.
.-
.
u
.N; AmbassadorQeorge Ball.
'
I~ was with great pride t'1at • I
··
....
_·
Everytwo,years;·.Marist College
Our< studerits>assisted :with
witnessed the contributions our
is·
·
invited
:·to·:
recommend.·• six
hospitalityCand logistics; greeti11g
.
students made to this event and the
•
students to~participate iii the Four·
•
tht: medal recipients
upon
their ar-'.: admiration and respect th~y earn~
Fr¢edotj:is
'.t\wardscereniony
spon-
..
•
rival in towri; escorting them to and
.
eel
-from
the medal winners their
sored by the Franklin and Eleanor
from events; arid serving as ushers families; arid other members'of the
Roosevelt Institute in Hyde Park.
at the· awards·_
ceremony;
• .
.
.
Roosevelt Institute board.
•
These awards·are given to.pro-
They also attended
:a
dinner in
I received
.
numerous com-
minent Americans who have made the medalists' honor
:
and par~
.
plirnents about how bright and per-
-a
special contribution to fulfilling ticipated in a roundtable discussion sonable our students were, and the
Roosevelt's vision of four essential with
.
these
distinguished
..
depth of their knowledge about
·
:freedoms:
freedom of speech and
Americans.
.
.
..
. .·.
world and national events and the
expression, freedom of worship,
• •
. The Marist students participating special contributions their par-
freedom from· want,. and• freedom this year included: Allison Andrews.
•
ticular honoree has made to our
·
·
·
'95, a:special education major nation.
from
:re~r
•
....
•
•
• •
,
·.••
•·
as_s_
igne_d
to th_
e Shriv_ers;
Matt_hew_ This_e.ven_
t p_rovided
a unique ex-
';
This: year's' event was held on
Oct/2l.and 22.
·
•.
Latvis-'94,: a history and Russian perience for these six students, one
.
'
Former Secretary of State Cyrus major. assigned to· Ambassador
that will stand out as a highlight
·
Vance, currently the personal en-
Ball;· Jason Lord, '94,
.a
:political
of their four years at Marist
-voy
of the· United Nations
science major assigned to Secretary College.
Secretary~Qeneral
in
.
··:the
Vance; Alexandra Papaleo '94, an
It
also showcased 'the ac-
Yugoslavia crisis; received the 1993 English major· assigned to
.
Mr. complishmerits of six remarkable
Franklin
D.
Roosevelt Freedom
Miller; Jeff Schanz '94, a political yourig people and the institution
Medal..
.
• _
•
•
sHcienbce
mh.
ajoi:d-asCshig1_1et~
toWRevd. thedy_represent
11
in a way that brings
Also honoredwer_e playwright
es urg ; an
•·
•
ns me
.•
00
ere
it
to us a •
h
M"ll
h
R
·
d
'95, a communications
and
I hope the entire college com-
Art ur '
1
er; .t e
•
•
everen
poJ.ltical
science major who assisted
.
munity will
J
0
oin me -in con-
Theodore Hesburgh, form.er presi:
•
.
dent. of Notre Dame University;
with publicity and media relations gratulating Allison, Matt, Jason,
Eunice Kennedy Shriver, founder
for the event.
.
.
Alex, Jeff, and Christine for the
of the Special· Olympics;
,
Sargent
As
a member of the board of the outstanding way in which they
.Shriver;
orgariizerahd firstDirec-
Roosevelt Institute, lattended the represented Marist.
tor of the
Peace
Corps; and former
dinner
·
and ,p·articipated in the
President Dennis J. Murray
awards ceremony.
IBM computers are here to help
.
.
Editor:
ing with the buttons:
• . •
FACT: Marist College houses
Just take a brisk walk to the help
.one
of the
•
most advanced
counter; and viola your problem is
technological computer systems in solved.
•
.
. •
:
•
the country.
.
.
:
All you· have to do is ask.
,
MYTH:
The computers donot
Is that so much?
work. There are also not eno_ugh
All of the student employees are
computers for every student; Why trained and knowledgeable about
is the.lab not open?
•.
the
.
.computer packages and
•
Why are MarisLstudents. so printers.
.
.
,
negative about Marist?
•
•
•
These employees are managed by
•
They complain and complain yet mor~ Marist students.,
,and
complain...
•• '--"
.. .
•
Jhi~_-,pr9yides'
:great
worl,c ex-
:.
They ovedookthe positive=ad-
.
perience
f,or. • these
student
.
yantages;;oLJiaviog;,.IBM..::,com_~:c;
employcek,,:-.,,
;,:·••,,,;·,.
,.
",
:;;pt1t~i:s',
,,the::,R9)m1ihone
..
and
:the
:
•
..
-The
PCSC (Personal Computer:
•
·mamframe
<>*
-~p11si'j;
,
,,;.;:
/{ -' .:
~upp6rt; Center.)
:ialso,;
assists>.
I
do not know how,many:-tiines
,:<students>sand
.
•
faculty
with
...
I have heard students swear at com~ questions.
•
•
.
•
puters or yell at them for losing
This center is located down.the
their work.
•,
"
stairs
in·
the Donnelly Computer
Hey, ~oniputers\are
.just
.
a
Center:
machine.- do ilot:abuse them.
..
And Seniors, this. is whereyou
.
__
The
.Computer
Center.
.employs
•
print out that final version
of
your
many Mari st students to_
assist you resume and cover letter on the laser
in your difficulties with the : printer,
.....
computers.·
.
•
. . .
_.
Not enough computers?
•
What does this mean?
That is impossible:
Well, if your paper can not print
The Marist College
.
Academic
orit is not saving, do not start play~ Computing guide states that Marist
has "over 160 PCs."
Now, that is a lot.
How many do we really need?
I was in the computer center on
a weekend morning and not a
single·sole was in there.
It was probably after lunch that
•
another handful of people came in.
If
you have work to do, then get·
up early and. get to the machines
before the rest of the campus wakes
up...
•
These computers cost money to
operate and repair. - · :
.
. .
.
•
If.we had five hundred
'com-
puter~
1
,then
stu~ents
w,ill
con1plain
about the high. cost oUuition.'
.
If
ail t~e-c<>mputers,are
not us-
ed now,why do.we need more?
The only time
·we
rim out of
computers is, during mid-terms and
finals.
•
•
If
you procrastinate until the end
of the semester; then that is your
fault,
·not
Marist's.
At
·
Marist, we should all
•
be
grateful for the relationship with
IBM .
Nella Licari, senior
Chess Club
Editor:
•
·_
On Saturday, O~t.-30, 1993, the
chess club drove to Thayer Hall on
the West Point campus to meet the
very strong Cadet team.
Mike Murray, Marist club presi-
dent, said he was particularly im-
pr~sed with the play of some of
our freshmen.
.
For example, Marist'sfreshman
John Brickman defeated the
Cadet's fourth-ranked
player,
Cadet Joseph Odell.
.
Other winners for Marist were:
juniors Ed Ryan and Darren Ranft,
and freshman Grayson DeWitt.
Freshman David Lifson also
played well, but was outma'tched
by West Point's third-ranked
player, Cadet Lo.
On boards one and two, Marist's
Mike Murray and John Pacut lost
extremely close games in which
.
single pawns decided the issues ..
C~ig W. Fisher
Faculty advisor, chess club
How to reach us:
• Mondays: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
• E-Mail:
LT 211, HZAL
• Phone Mail: X2429
NO LETTERS AFTER 5 PM
ON FRIDAYS
NOVEMBER 11,
1993
7
Th·e Answers
Editor:
I
can probably answer some of
your questions (from the editorial
in the Oct. 14 issue).
1.
Why does Marist exist?
- That's an easy one. To suck
up money and use it to put people
off campus.
6. What happened to the con-
dom committee Kent Rinehart pro-
mised when he ran for
SGA
presi-
dent last spring?
-
Apathy. Or the administra-
tion "suggested" he drop it.
8. Is the going to be a River Day
'94
held?
If
so, where will it be held
and when?
•
- Yes, it will be held in BS, just
to stick with tradition.
12. When is Marist going to get
a library?
-
•
Right after we get tennis
-courts.
16. Is the Student Government
Association working?
- A
violatio11 of grammatical
rules. You used "government" and
"working" in the same sentence.
17. Parking?
-
You're kidding, right?
18. When are the tennis courts
being !:milt?
- Right
·after
we get a new
gym.
20. When is Marist going to get
a new gym?
-
Right after we get a library.
21. Will the privatization of the
bookstore cost students more?
-
More than what? The Mid-
Hudson River Bridge repairs? If
that's it, then yes.
25. Why is J>oughkeepsie called
the "City Of Trees"?
- Because calling it the "City of
Drugs" won't attract tourists.
26. Parking?
-
No, stop, you're killing me!
(laughter)
27. How much will tuition go up
next year?
-
How much you got?
29. How many more water pipes
will burst before construction on
campus is completed?
-
If
construction on campus
is
completed. All of them. Twice.
30. Where are the construction
plans?
-
Don't you have them?
44.
Why did the college radio
station's staff have to sign a con-
tract agreeing not to say anything
against the college on the air?
-
Because we're trying to pre-
sent a more professional attitude
from our closet.
46. Why do the O:ew
townhouses
doorbells sound like fire alarms?
-
Because they were cheaper.
53. How far behind schedule is
the construction of the new dorm?
-
Far longer than the human
·mind·
can imagine.
57. How many people noticed
the grammatical error on the front
page of the Sept. 23 issue of The
Circle?
- Everyone I pointed it out to.
I found it quite ironic since you
were in that issue, pointing out the
spelling error on the parking signs.
More likely than
not,
it's
something in the water.
58.
Why is The Circle called the
Circle?
-
Because it describes how
things get done here-going
around in circles.
62. Who started the rumor that
Marist is a communications
school?
-
You mean we're not????
66. Does anyone still believe in
a place called Hope?
- Yes, but I'll give you a hint,
you won't find it on this campus.
Neil Kelly,
junior
,
.
'
.
,
•
,J
•••
,
.
·'•
••
,I.
8
..
_,···-•·
THE CIRCLE, NOVEMBER
11,
1993
..
.
.
..:
.
.
The
Anatomy
of the Otibank
Oassic card:_
a body of services
and peace of mind
for students.
For years, scientists could only theorize about the Cit:Ibank Clas&c
Vtsa®
card,
U1¥lble
to actually observe anything below its epidermal surface (i.e. the plastic). ·surely, the highly
.
.
.
intelligent services were evidence of an advanced brain. But with the latest advances in x-ray technology,
and when the light could catch the various parts just so, it
was
confirmed: the Citibank Clas&c
Vtsa
card
is head to toe more evolved than ever imagined.
,i
At its
backbone are
3
services to cover the purchases you make
on the carcl. Starting at the
Lower Costa/ Spine,
we
see
Otibank Price Protection
can
as.5Uie
you of the
best price. All you have to do is discover the same item •
Scientists
theorize
that
the
mind
of the
Citibank
Classic
Visa
advertised in print for iess, within 60 days, and Citibank
cardmember
(Fig.
A)
is
secure
because
it receives
superior
service;
the
mind
of the
non-Citibank
Classic
Visa
cardmember
will refun·
d the difference up to $lS01.
Along the
Ooin"-
it-
(Fig.
B}
is not
secure
because-could
it be-it
has
a screw
loose?
'J/"
.11
Slipped
Disc, Buyers
Securitysm
can
cover those purchases against accidental damage,
fire
or theft, for 90
days from the date of purchase
1
;
and
Citibank
Lifetime Warranty'm
allows one to extend the warranty
for the expected service life of eligible products up to 12 years
2
•
So if you ever buy a walkman, a stereo,
whatever, it
will be
reassuring
to know that Citibank can bend and be flexible while still lending support.
,i
The backbone is then connected to the cranium or headbone. You can actually see it on the top left
hand comer of the caret. Lookat the bottom of the page. The
Otibank Photocard
has the head of the
cardholdet on it, as well as his or her own signature, right on the front. Thatway, it will help preventfraud.
It wiUmake a good form ofID
~ well,"since you getto choose.your own photo:-,i But what about the
Nervous System?The fact is, it doesn't have one, not in the spinal cord llor in the brain.
·What
it has·
is
the
Very Calm System. Because even if your credit card gets stolen, or gets lost,
an
involuntary muscle called
the
Extendus Anewcardeus
activates the
Lost Wallei•m
Service
which. can repla~ • your
card
usually
within 24 hours.
,i
As suspected, there's another invqluntary muscle: the
lieari-a
B~~ting
and°
_caring
heart, big ·enough to give students special discounts and savings. You'll receive
a-$20
Airfare piscount
on domestic flights
3
;
savings on mail order purchases,·sports_equipment,magazines and music; a·low •
• >
.
.
.
•
• •
• •
...
•
-
·-
._ .. _.,
. ~·..;...
;
variable interest rate'of15.4%4;
and, no annuatfee.
(In
otherwords, the carclitselfdoesrrt cost
aforelimb
and a hlndlimb.)
,i
Naturally the heart ~f the· Citibank Visa card pumps life.
and persririalized customer
-
.
'.r
.
,
~
•··•~.,
..
·:'."';•,•,A
••--:
,~-..,,,·,•:,
•~_-. ,-.~-
.•
~
service. into all its.parts,
24 hours a·day.
Sd.ho matter what the questi9ri·you ipigh.thave concerning
'
.
-
•
.
.
•
-
.
·~
;
.,.
.
your card, you need only call the 800 number. Citibank represen~es each have
a
neckthey are eager
to stick out for you. They
will ~ys
lend an ear. Ora hand: They will keep an
ey~
out for yo~They will
put their best foot forward. Etc.
~
So call to apply. You dorlt need a job or a cosigner. And
call
if you'd
like your photo .added to your regular Citibank Classic
Vtsa
·card. The number is
1-800-CITIBANK
(1-800-248-4~26),
extension 19.
,i
If
we
take an overview of the whole body of
services _that make up the Cit:Ibank Clas&c
.Visa
card, ~d
consider that it
will facilitate building a credit history, then
you must shake a leg, flex your index finger and call today.
Not just VJSa.
Citibank
VJSa.
'Cenain C011ditions
and exclusions apply. Please refer to your Summary of Additional Program Informalion. Buyers Security is underwritten by The Zurich International UK
Limited. "Certain restrictions and limitations alll)ly. Underwritten by the New Hampshire Insurance Company. Service lite~
varies by product and is at least the
minimum based on retail industrydala. Details
of
~are
available in your Summary of Additional Program lnbmation. 'Olierexpires6/30/94. Minimum tidet purchase
price isS!OO.
Rebates
are
forOt.ibank student canlmembmon tickets issued by ISE Fl.ightsonly.
4
The Annual Paccntage Rate (APR) forpun:hases is 1S.4%asof10/93 and may
vary quarterly. The APR for cash advances is 19.8%.
If a finance dta.-gc is imposed, the minimum is 50 cents. There is an additional finance charge for each cash advance
transaction~to2'lbol'theamountofeadlcashad\,ancetransaction;hov.,:ver,itwillnotbelcssthan$2.()()orgreaia-than$10.00.Monan:h•NotesarepublishedbyMonan:h
Press, a division of Simon & Sdruster, a Paramount O>J:nmunications
Company. Used by pcrmis&On of publisher. ©1993 OU"bank (South Dalcota). N.A. Member FDIC
Monarch Notes® Version:
'
With your purchases covered,
no fee, and a low rate, the·
• Citibank Classic
Visa
card will
go easy on your Nervous System.
Call ·l- 8 00 ·;. ClTlBA N K
(1-800-248-4226), extension 19
..
...
1:
(_
I
•
~:..
• -
.
•
I"
'
,I
·
.. THE c·1RCLE,
·NoVEME3ER1·1,
1993
9
AndJt'swro,ig.place
for good food,
•
service
by ABBI NORL
Staff
Writer
.
specials ~oard (one of the• clever
•
$4,00, and Chicken Wings, $4.50) and is served with a heap of sauteed
staff
...
••
•·.
. spelled
,
• it
which consists of a "scoop of tuna
onions and mushrooms, french
"fasul'' ... umm ... NO.; .$1.25/3-; & jello on a bed of lettuce garnish-
fries and cole slaw:
stuff, huh? It's just a burger
without a bun. .
1
,
•
• '·Tucked
under the old burnt
25).
>
•
\ •
.
..
:>
._:·
,.:
•
.,.-.:"
·:.ed.w/tomatoes·& coleslaw.".:
railroad trestle at the end ofa dead
Get your bib· OliCif, you
:
orde(
How could you: resist?
•
'
.
•'..
end off Delafield St., is Andy's
Chili ($4.50), which is probably the
Swig out of your canned soda
Pla~e,
45
Dutchess
Ave.,
best item
·on
the menu: .This b.owl ($1.00) and get ready for the edi-
Poughkeepsie.
of mildly spicy meat
:and
beans
ble Elvis saridwichesin your choice
It's.a low-down, sloppy, greasy-
comes loade_d .with American
of The Memphis
(1/2
turkey, 1/2
spoo~ kinda joint..
•
cheese and oruons for the un-heart • roast beef, melted Swiss ... $5.00),
•
The "Pa" of "Ma and Pa"
smart.
.
or The Presley (chicken and eg-
eateries, you'not only get huge por-
Something that even the least gplant parmesan sandwich ruined
tions for a little price tag, you also classy restaurants leave out of the by the AMERICAN cheese with
get bad servi<;e
and the comfort of
side dish category is mashed
which it is served-ask for moz-
knowing there's no little man slav-
potatoes. Andy's are-
.
well,
zarella: • because
they
offer
irig over the dishes saved by the in-
they're mashe~ potatoes ($1.00)-
•
it. .. $5.50).
'
termittent-use of
.paper_plat~~-
but, with a touch of salt and pep-
If a burger fiend you are, then
From the brown panelling to the
••
p~r~ they're a welcome substitute
harden a few arteries with The King
blatant Elvis references, you just
.
for fries.
•
.
Deluxe ($6.25). Don't let the name
don't find
a
place. tackier than
Of course, there's the Diet Plate sea.re you off; this burger is HUGE
Andy's.
•
($4.50) offered "On The Light (about l" thick 5" in diameter
• The extensive menu even offers
Side" (along with Potato Skins,
and weighing i~ at about IO oz.)
some of the most ordinary food
.-'
There's
a
r'imge of s~ndwiches
offered ($2.75-$6.50) of which the
•
most exciting offered are the Fried
Fish and, yes,
·Meatloaf,
which is
also offered as a dinner for $6.00.
Goody ...
Dinners ($5.50-$10.00) include
potato, "veggie," and side of
bread-on-paper-plate, but Italian
Dinners ($4-$8.50) only include
bread-on-a-paper-plate and butter.
The excitement buzzes out of the
Hot Open Sandwiches category
where you'll find a Hot Jitterbug
($4.50). Sounds like wacky, wild,
.·•
'
•
There's plenty
o.f
parking across
.
the street so you do'n't have to com-
pete for a space and fight your way
-into Andy's Place.
Just walk right on in, plop your
butt down at the table of your
choice, and a waitress will be with
you when she's good and ready.
Andy's must rely on regulars to
keep it in business. Considering the
covert location, and· competitors'
attention to making lunching an
"experience," Andy's better get on
the ball because those regulars will
eventually die, and then who's left?
2 PA WPRINTS
==
AS A LAST
RESORT.
this side of the river!
-~•
Whether spelled correctly or not,
Andy's offers Pasta Fagioli on the
RESUMES
WANTED
■
FREE CONSULTATIONS
STUDENT.WRITTEN ONE-ACT PLAYS
'
.
.
'
•
■
WRITING/DESIGN
•
■
COVER
.LETTERS
for
■
LASERPRINTING
■
COMPUTERSTORAGE
•
■
FAX SERVICES
McCabe
Personnel
;I~"'
THE JOHN P. ANDERSON MEMORIAL AWARD COMPETITION
and for
·w'""-1
SJledwe
~
•
1485-33551
42
CATHARINE ST. PKPSE
Sta,1.e,a
7~Se/Wla4
;/(41>,,I~
LOCATION
•22
IBM
Road
Poughkeepsie
(Rt. 9 South,
right
at light,
after
IBM
plant)
HOT
SUBS
Philly.SteakSub
.............................
3~50
Meatball.
Parm
..
_
......
; .......................
3.25
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,
THE CIRCLE,_._NOVEMBER
11,
1993 •.•
.
SNACKS
•
·
· 485.,,
2671
&
·_
-PASTA'
:&
APPETIZERS
MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL
COMBos·.
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•
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I
3
-
11
:THECl~CLE,
SPORTS
NOvEMeE~
11,
1993
---------,-------,-----.;.;.;.;.;.....;._----:---,---------------·-?"":
---=-====================.==;::=.:::::;==.======;:=::::::::;;::::::::;==,
.SWin1:riierS
·split;
r~Jiys,
up
n~xt
by
TERl:L/STEWART
•
~taff.Writer>::·
•
juniors R.onaid Gagne, BrettAr~
nold and Angel Tom.ala, finished
first with. ,itime of·3:43.19;.2.6
The
swimming_
and diving teams
•
seconds ahead of the.second place
swam into action on Saturday as
squad.·
-·
•
•
-
.·
•
the men defeated Seton Hall, and
•
-
"I think Arnold and Tdmala are
thewomenbroke two new school
swimming faster at this time than
records in a loss to
.the
Pirates.
they were last year ~t this time,"
.
The
•
men's team. (1-0), who
Van Wagner said.
..
.
__
__
finishedfourthin the Metropolitan
In men's diving action, freshman
•
Swimming Conference last. year,
Brenden Leddy placed
.second
in
•
defeated> Seton Hall;
_
134~102, the three-meter and third in the
• despite'-,winajng
_o,nly-foiir
ofJhir~
.
ope~_meter.
_:
teen: events.,:·: .
i
.
.
_.
-
._._
.
.•
-
Freshman Grove
..
Rasmussen
•
Accordirig tonien'sHead Coach
finished third in the three-meter
'.
Larry VariWagner, Seton Hall has: dive and second in the one-meter.
a bit more of an advantage in ac-
.
"By far, this is the best overall
quiring swimmers.
_
diving team we've ever had ~use
"Seton
Hall J:ias
•
a larger
of the depth,"
diving coach
recruiting budget," he said. ''They
Melanie Bolstad said.
had more talented athletes, but we
The young.women's team (7-1),
had the greater depth this year."
who currently has nine freshmen,
VanWagner, who graduated
were shut down by Seton Hall,
Freshman Stephanie Raider won the 200-yard butterfly with a time of2:14.81 last Satur-
·-
day. She also broke a new school record in the 200-yard freestyle with a time of 2:00.01.
•
four seniors last year, has recruited
149-92.
seconds behind
.Seton
Hall and
recor s
er career en s
.
the three-meter an
one-meter
eight new freshman.
_
Goldstein said his team
.swam
caught up in the freestyle leg.
here."
events.
Although the Red Foxes placed
Raider also won the 200-yard
On Nov. 2, the women's team
'.'We look stronger than we did
more competitively
·against
Seton
-
last season," he said.,
Hall this year compared to_)ast
•
Freshman Jon Churins has
year.
-
· •
~:
·_·
•
.: :
,._
•.
,
.
•
second in the race, it was pretty
Butterfly with a time of 2:14.81. defeated Central Connecticut State
close the whole way, according to
Although the squad lost; Golds-
University, 135-97.
.
already made a name for himself,
The first record.broken \vas iri Goldstein ..
_ •
.
.
.
.
tein said there were some positives
Marist won nine of thirteen
.
-
The secorid record was·.broken. that could be taken from the meet. events, with Raider winning both
by Raider in the 200-yard freestyle.
"They've continued to make im- the 200-yard Individual Medley and
placing third in the 200-yard
·
_
the 400-yard medley relay.-
;
freestyle.
•
Senior Cheryl Daly, sophomore
According
to Vanwagner,
Jean Maguire, and freshmen
The freshman beat the previous
.
provements over the last three the 500-yard freestyle races.
record, 2:01.41, by 1.41· seconds, meets," he added. "I was pleased
with a time of 2:00.01.·
with their performance against
Churins is already on the same pace
Stephanie Raider and Al~son
with sophomore Kyle O'Neill, who
Morilla smashed the
.
previous
holds-O'the
record in the 200.
record, 4:17.40 by 2.1 seconds
The 400-yard medley relay team
(4:15.30).
_
.
of sophomore Kyle O'Neill, and
.
The relay team started off three
•
"She's been real clostdn a few Seton Hall."
other races," Goldstein said.
"l
an-
Iri diving action, junior Jennifer
ticipate that ~he'll have· a few other McCauley placed second in both
The men's team traveled to face
Central Connecticut State yester-
day. Results were not available at
press time.
Bo-oters lose finale;
finish year at 4-12~2
-
.
.
,
.-
Runners place third , fifth;
in Virginia on Saturday
On Halloween~ Marist endedits
"(We) finished· where we ex-
by
ANDREW HOLMLUND
home portion of.its schedule on a
•
·-
by
GREG BIBB
pected to be," Kelly said. "(We)
Staff Writer
high note, thwarting Oneonta, 5-0,
Slaff Writer
·beat-·
up on the rest
·
of the con-
The men's soccer team ended its
at North field.
.
,
.
The women's and men's cross ference."
•
season the same way, it started -
Rose and freshman Kevin Har:-
-country
teams placed .third arid
__
According to the head coach,
~
with a loss:'~
1--·~
·,
7
,
.,_,_,;
.
dy scored two goalsapiecei·Massey'""' fifth:·respectfvely; at the Northeast both the field and the top 10 were
'
••
On Nov. 2, Marist
was
nipped by
also chipped. in with· a goal.
Conference Championships
in
filled with. upperclassmen.
Adelphi University,
-5-4.
•
Although Goldman said his Princeton,' N.J., on Saturday, Oct.
Four of the top five finishers
Marist, which finished at 4-12-2, club's opponent was weak, he was 30.
.
.
were seniors, which made Wood-
jumped to an early lead as senior
pleased with the victory.
•
The Red Foxes finished with a son's time the second fastest out of
.
back Eric Ross scored off an assist
"Oneonta was not
•
a strong
combined total of 92 points; while all the· underclassmen who par-
•
by Giangiuseppe Mazzella at 11 :52 team," he said. "(But) we still did Mt. St. Mary's of Emmitsburg, ticipated in the event.
seconds
_ofthe
first half;
a good job."
Md,·came·away with 52 ..
·-
Woodson was not the only Red
The ball then rolled against the
•
On Oct; 27, the Red Foxes
Wagner College, located in Fox competitor who prospered at
.
Red Foxes asAdelphi_collected
two
•
hosted the Manhattan Jaspers and Sta~en Island, was able to garner NEC's, as other Marist runners
-
goals 'in a· span of four minutes.
-
came. away with a 4-1 victory.
top honors, collecting 40 points,
also legged out impressive efforts.
•
Senior back Brian Rose obtain-
Rose, Mazzella, Ross, and
The women's squad was paced
'Theresa
Hickey finished 20th
ed the third Marist goal; assisted by
sophomore back GaryO'Brien all
,
by freshman. Kathleen Woodsen, with a time. of 20:09.
fellow senior Eric Ross at 42:28;
found the net for Marist.
who captured a sixth-place, finish-
Kelly said he liked the way
-
\Vhile sophomore mid-fielder Neil
Although Marlst won two of its ed with a time of 19:04 seconds. Hickey has stepped up in the past
Massey. followed at 49:44, off an
-
final three matches,
_Goldman
said
Head Coach Phil Kelly said few meets.
assist from Ross.
••
• •
it w~s a confusing year.
Woodsen excelled in the tourna-
"(Theresa) ran her best race of
Sophomore mid-fielder Steven
"I was not ever sure which team ment meet; despite running )n a the year," he said. "She has really
Horsfallclosedoutthe scoring, an
would be out there;''. he said. tough draw.
.
come on-in recent weeks."
unassisted
'tally~
at,65:00.
••
•
Goldman added he was hoping
•
"(Kathleen) ran a very good race
Colleen Carson also provided
Head Coach Howard Goldman
•
Marist could use last year's upset in an extremely competitive field," some spark for the Red Foxes,
•
said the game .was mai.fed bytoo
win
over
St.
John's as ammunition
·he
said.
•
•
<
·-"
·
•
•
•
•
despite having a hip flexor injury.
many mistakes by both teams.
for the season.
•
,
Kelly also sajd he was pleased
.
Carson came in 21st with a time of
"Adelphi (game) was full of er-
.
with the performances at Princeton·· 20:12:,
•
•
rors·on both sides," said the head
•
"I thought it would be a University, even though the Foxes
-
·-
In
men's-action, Brian Ordway
coach who just completed his 31st springboard," he said. "You learn faced formidable opponents, which led the Red Fox charge,
finishing
season;
.!'Ninegoalsfor
a Division
ho"'._to win. I thought they lea~n-
.
included the Mountaineers and the 13th with a time of 26:34.
I ame is too
-hi
h;;,
•
-
•
••
ed how to do that."
Seahawks.
Ordway was also joined by Rod
Rose, Josh Wood and freshman
Patrick Casey, who all obtained
personal bests.
Rose finished 20th, while Wood
and Casey placed 31st and 42nd;
respectively.
Head Coach Pete Colaizzo
said
that Ordway and Rose both achiev-
ed and improved their running
skills over the course of the season.
"(Brian) ran as well as yo·u could ,
have expected," Colaizzo said.
(He) had a phenomenal year. (Rod)
overcame difficulties throughout
the season'and came through when
it counted," he added.
Colaizzo said the Ivy
'League
course was a problem for his club
because it was a surface that his
runners did not prefer.
"It was an extremely fast and
flat course," Colaizzo said.
The head coach said his Red
Foxes had somewhat of a difficult
time with the likes of Fairleigh
Dickinson Knights, who won the
men's portion and the Rider Col-
lege Bro·ncs, who nabbed second.
The men and women will wrap
up their season this weekend at the
NCAA Regional Qualifying Meet
in Fairfax, Va.
•
MCTV CHANNEL 12
SCHEDULE.
OF PROGRAMMING
(MONDAY through FRIDAY)
MCTV'S
,
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call X3279
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11
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11
Weekdays at 3:30 p.m. on
Marist Channel 12
A Whole New Perspective on
Marist Sports.
....
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12
.
Skaters· defe'.at S:UNY
··stollybrook,
9-4
Red
·Foxes
by
TED HOLMLUND
Sports Editor' •
There was :46 seconds remaining
·
in the game,: and the Red Foxes·
were trailing 27-24, facing a fourth
dO\vn
and goal situation on the
Iqna Gael's four-yard line.
-Marist·called
a.·timeout .
.
Did Head Coach Jim Parady opt
to
,go
for the win or for a game-
.
tying field goal?
•
...
:
·.
•
...
•.
The second
0
year coach chose to
go for the win and it failed.
·The
Red Foxes tried to run a lit-
tleswing pass·. to senior halfback
Julian Wyse, but it fell incomplete.
:
In
.
a· game that s'aw six lead
ch·anges,' Iona\;
(8cl)
survived
Marist's(4-5) ctiallenge and won
27~24 last Saturday at Mazzella
Field.
.
•
·-'•·
',
;
---
..
-
.
. :.-?
·-·,.:
•
:
• .-.
~
Vttiall
ends
·:se(i'sori··with,--
lo.ss to
.Arrriy
Does. Magarity meet MariS't's standllfds?
•
This is the final year in Head
Coach Dave
•
Magarity's
•
third
contract ..
'•
.
•
•
Will he be around for a fourth?
·.
•
Whether one likes it or not, it is
'.
a valid question. It's also a difficult
one to answer.
.
Magarity has
•
a career 98~
I 03
record during his seven year tenure
which surely is not. sparkling.
However, his squads have posted
a 71-50 league record during this
time too.
The Red Foxes have not won the
regular season or post-season Nor-
theast Conference title since the
1986-87 season, but once again,
there is another side to this story.
Afterthat season, Magarity saw
Marist get slapped with a three-year
probation, including two from post
season play, for violations that oc-
curred before his arrival.
•
This effected his recruiting a~ili-
ty
over the next few years.
What potential Division I pro-
spect would be interested in com-
ing to a school that does not have
any chance of making it to the
"Big
Dance" -
the NCAA Touma~
ment? No one.
Marist was first off. probation
three
•
years ago and suffered
through a 6-22 disaster, with then-
freshmen Izett Buchanan and Dex-
•
ter Dunbar seeing much more play-
ing time than they normally would
have if the team had a stronger
foundation.
After suffering th.rough the past
probation problems, Magarity now
has had four years of recruiting on
a clean slate. Whether its fair or
not, his grace period may be over.
However, the team's sub .500
records in the past few years can
partially be traced as aftershock of
the probation years.
It should also· be noted that
Marist has not been on probation
during Magarity's
tenure. If
nothing else, he has run a clean
program.
Administrators
wait
It's Marist's policy riot to discuss
any employees', including coaches,
job status until the end of the year.
Administrators are continuing to
follow along those guidelines.
At the end of the season,
Ted
Holmlund
Talkin'
it
Athletic Director Gene Doris and-
• Gerard Cox, vice-president of stu-
dent affairs, will meet with Magari-
ty
and discuss his job perfonnance.
According to Cox, the decision
to hire or fire Magarity would be
done soon after the season ends,
even if the decision is not made
public.
Although the adµiinistra~ion is
staying consistent in its policy, they
surely have not gone out of their
way to say that M:agarity's doing
.
an excellent job.
•
This says to me that the ad-
ministration officials are consider-
ing not signing Magaiiiy to another
contract.
In my interviews with Cox, Doris
and President Mu~ay, they ali
echped the same
.
sentiment that
Magarity.
-has·
represented the
Marist community well.
•
'Currently,
·eyerything
is clearly
vague, but there is one more fac.:.
tor that enters into this equation.
The Red Fox Club
Sonie administrators would like
µ.s
to think that this process is clear-
ly objective, but it's not.
One group that has a vested in-
terest in Magarity's future is the
Red Fox Club, Marist's official
booster club.
The organization has over 280
members that account for more
than 800 season tickets and has
donated over $50,000 last year to
Marist athletic programs.
However, the club is most clear-
ly interested in the men's basketball
team. This year the organization is
offering season tickets for 15 home
games and two others at Madison
Square Garden· and the Knicker-
bocker Arena.
If the Red Fox Club is not haP-
PY with Dave Magarity's perfor-
mance, they surely are going to let
•
the adntlriistrati6n hear ~boutit.
••
To say that this group· won't
have any influence in the decision
is ridiculous;
Closing Thoughts
Magarity should be fired if the.
judgment came solely based on the
team!s ,vin/loss record during his
tenure without looking at any ex~
tenuating circumstances.
However, Magarity has cleaned
up a program that was on proba-
tion which is no small task.
He also lost his star player, Izett
Buchanan, last year
because
he
was
declared academically ineligible
which hurt the make-up of last
year's team.
Although Marist has
a
Division
I basketball program, the Nor-
theast Conference is not the Big
East or a member of another
powerful conference.
I think we forget that
sometimes
If
Marist
just wants to
win
at
any
cost, fire Magarity. If there is more
to Marist athletics than just winn-
ing, keep him.
·
•
Ted Holmlund is The Circle's
Sports Editor.
j
I
l
!·
I
.
.
.-,;
1993·94
MARIST
COLLEGE
.
MEN'S
BASKETBALL
SCHEDULE
DAY DATE OPPONENT··
TIME·
·rues
..
,.
Nov.
16 Vienna
(Austria)
Flyers
(Exhbitioo)
7pm
Mon.' Nov.
22 USDBl
(Exhb~ion)
-
8pm
Sal
Nov.
27
al
Buffalo .
7:30pm
Wad. Dec.1 Slana(TV)
,.
8pm
Sat.
-Dec.4
ECAC
ChaDenge
5pm
(Abany,
NY)
Vermont
vs. Maris!
..
Mon. Dec.6
at Siena
7pm
Sal
Dec.11
•
al St
Francis
(Pa.)'
7:30pm
Sun. Dac.19 Army
(TV)
1pm
Wed. Dae.
29
•
Pepsl-Marlsl
Classlc
Drexel
vs. St. Pete(s
5:30pm
Buffalo
vs. Marlst
(TV)
8pm
Thurs. Dec.30 Consolation
5:30pm
Championship
&pm
Tun.
Jari.4
Mt. St. Mary'1
(Md.)
• (TV)
•
Bpm
Thu11,
•
Jan.
B
Rlder"(TV)
8pm
SaL
Jan.B
al Fairleigh
Dlddnson•
7:30pm
Thurs. Jan.13
•
al
Robert
Morris'
7:30pm
Sat.
Jan.15 Fai.rf1eld
fMadison
Sq. GS/den)
5:30pm
·
TueL Jari 18 Long
Island•
(TV)
8pm
Thurs. Jan.
20 St. Francis
(NY)•
(TV)
8pm
Sal
Jan.22
•
a1
Wagner"
7:30pm
Mon. Jan.24 at MorvnoU1h•
7:30pm
Sat.
•
Jan. 29 Fairleigh
Dickinson•
(TV) 7pm
Thurs.· Fab.3.
.
St. Francis
(Pa.)•
(TV)
8pm
Sat.
Fob.5
Robert
Morris•
(TV)
7pm
Thurs
..
Feb.
to
at
St
Franc's
(NY}'
7:30pm
'Sat.
•
Feb.12
al
Long
Island'
2Pm
Wed. Feb.16 Monmouth•
(TV)
8pm
Sal
Feb.19
Wagner'
(TV)
,
7pm
Thurs. Feb:24
·
al
Mt
St. Mary's
(Md.)'
.
7:30pm
Sat.
Feb.
26
al
Rider"
3pm
Mon. Feb.
28 NEC
Open~ Round
TBA
Wed.
•.
Mat.2
NEC
Quanerfmals
TBA
Fri
·Mat.4
NEC
Semifinals
TBA
Sun.
Mar.6
NEC
Final#
12pm
• Northeast
CorJarence
game #ESPN
Home
games
1n
BOLD
(TV)
WTZA•TV
1993-94
MARIST
COLLEGE
WOMEN'S
BASKETBALL
SCHEDULE
DAY DATE OPPONENT
TIME
Mon. Nov.
22 Austria
(Exhib~ion)
6pm
Fri.
Nov.26 at Kentucky
Invitational
Georgetown
vs. Idaho
State 6pm
Maris!
vs. Ken\uckY
8pm
Sat.
Nov.27 Consolation
6pm
Championship
8pm
Sat.
Dec.4
at UConn
lnv~ational
Holy
Cross
vs. Yale
•
1pm
Marist
vs. UCoM
3pm
Sun. Dec.5
•
Consolation
1pm
Championship
3pm
Wed. Dec.a Army
7pm
SaL
Dec.11 at Fordham
1pm
Tues. Jan.4
ML St. Mary's
(Md)•
5:30pm
Thurs.·. Jan.
6
Rider'
5:30pm
Sun. Jan.9
at Fairleigh
Dickinson'
2Pm
.
Thurs. Jan.13 at Robert
Morris'
•
5pm
Sat.
Jan.15 al St. Francis
(Pa.)'
7:30pm
Mon. Jan.17 at Buffalo
7:30pm
Thurs. Jan. 20 St. Francis
(NY)'
5:30pm
Sat.
.
Jen.
22 alWagoor'
•
.Spm
Mon.
.Jan.24
at Monmouth'
5pm
Sat.
Jan. 29 Fairleigh
Dickinson•
2pm
Thurs. Feb.3
St. Francis
(Pa.)•
5:30pm
Sat.
Feb.5
Robert
Morris•
2pm
Mon. Feb.7 Siena
7pm
Thur. Feb.10 at
St
Francis
(NY)'
5:30pm
Sat.
Feb.12
a1
Long
Island'
5:30pm
Wed. Feb.16 Monmouth•
5:30pm
Sat.
Feb.19
·
Wagner•
2pm
Thur
.
Feb.
24
al
ML SL Mary's
(Md.)'
5pm
Sal.
Feb.
26 at Ridet
5pm
Thurs.
Mar.3
Long Island'
7pm
Sal
Mar.5
NEC
Opening
Round
7pm
Tues
..
Mat.a
NEC
Ouarterlinals
7pm
Thurs. Mar.10 NEC
Semifinals
7pm
Sat.
Mar.12 NEC
Final
7pm
• Northeast
Conference
game
Home
games
in
BOLD
I NS/
DE:
►
_Men's
Preview
►~
Women's Outlook
►
Ken Babineau's Class of '93-'94
►
Dave
Magarity's Future
-
►
Red Foxes'
-Recruiting
Class
►
Women's B-Ball Teams
Lack of
-Fans
►
Close-up· on Cindy Carroll
►
Spotlight on lzett Buchanan
Photos by Matt Martin
''
'.
'
' 'i
c~n
't.
rdn,Iinber.::the}iist
,;,;,e:
I
was
as
·excited
·abriµta
gr.oup·o/ki~~
I
think we have all the guys on the same
page.
:
••
·::·.
·.,
•
·,
·:
•.
·'.
·
•
•
·
• -;··
•
- Head·coacb'Dave:·Magarity
.·-.
J
•
•
••
~
--:'_>",;·;-~j~:-_;=-;>
_:_.
__
',
·:,
_;:•:::··,.T-~-;\:•-:
.,:::
•
'The\wrrien's
basketball
season
with
a
1 g::1
<frriark
•
theast
Col'lference.Ji11ali·
2
THE CIRCLE,
p
R E·V:1
EW
..
NOV.EMB.ER
.11,
1993.
~-H O O P S C O O P
Despite
low
·
expectatipnS,
Cagers
look
tq
surpri$e.
•••
..
·
.
Senior Chad Weikert said he also
Basile and Toinidysaw a lot of
by
TED HOLMLUND
Sports Editor
thinks this team could surprise the. action for.the Red Foxes at the end•
skeptics.
•
•
•
of the year.
• •
The men's basketball team had
"I think we can sneak up on
.•
BasUe, who started at, poinf.
heightened expectations last year some people/' the seni?r: said.
.
guard at th~ end of the year: reach~
because the squad had many "We got a lot more commg back
ed.doubles figures in•seven of his
veterans on the team like Andy than people expect.''
.
.
. .
•
last eight gain
es
averaging
,ovei:
Lake, Sean James, Mike Schreiber
Izett B~chanan is the only other
12~8 points per game during' that
and Fred Ingles.
senior, besides Weikert, who is.· stretch.
•
.
•
Many people believed the Red returning
for
the
1993~94
Tomidy led the team in blocked
Foxes would win the Northeast campaign.
.
.
shots with 25 and had a career-high
Conference Championship.
Buchanan, a 6_-6
gu~d,."'.ho was. 18 points in the regular season
They did not. Instead the men_ dedared academically meligible last
finale against St Francis· (PA). .
finished in a tie for third place in year, will be looked upon to. p.ro-
Hill saw the least playing time of
the NEC with a 10-8 record; 14-16 vide most of the offensive punch
the three sophomores,
.
but still
overall.
for the Red Foxes.
..
.•.
played in26 of the team's 30 games
With the loss of six lettermen,
The senior scored 14.8
.pointt
averaging:2.3 points per game.
<
expectations have been lowered"""'.'. and 6.5 rebounds per gamein his
.Tomidy
said lie arid his:feliow
considerably.
abbreviated season.
.
,
•
sophomores a~e ready tq_
accept
According to the pre-season
"(Buchanan's)
.
a·. tremendous
their increased role and to become
NEC coaches poll, Marist will athlete,t) Magarity said. "We're
more consistent.
.
,
_
.
.
•
finish eighth out of ten teanis in the going to try to capitalize
.on
his
"Affthree of us wiU be counted
conference.
ability to
ru1_1.•~
•.
•
.
on morethis y~ar, ... Toinidy said.
However, Head Coach -Dave
Buchanan said he knows he will
"1
think we'reready
for
it."
Magarity said he believes his club be looked upon to lead the team.
. Junior Gregg Chodkowski and
.
may sneak up and surprise a few
"I don't see that as pressure,"
Weikert will
.be
·also:
be looked
people.
.
the senior said. "I always ~a.n_ted upon
_
to provide· some outside
"I can't remember the last time to have that added respons1b1hty. shooting to· fill the void left- by
I was as excited about a group of It's something I look forward to."
three-point specialist~ Andy Lake ..
kids," the eighth-year coach said..
.
Despite Buchanan's ability to
However, Marist's task will be
"I think we have all the guys on the take over a game, Magarity said the
.
more difficult
·this
year because
-~--
--
-
..
--~
•··•~-•
"--;-'.
same page."
performance
of
the
th!ee
there are only
11
players: on:the
Sophomore AlanJomidy,
who
led
the team-with
25-blocks
SophomoreAianTomidysaidhe
sophomores,
Danny· Basile,
team because senior point guard
last
year, plays d~fe'nse as #14freshman Randy Encarcion'·
·
does not pay any attention to ear- Kareem Hill and Tomidy
will
deter- Dexter Dunbar declared himself
as looks
on,·
·
. ,
•
--
ly predictions.
mine the success or failure of this an academic redshift
~o
he
,can
play
''He is
JUSt
an
easy guy to'getalong
iiig
.time:
n::J::!,P~ti!e~-~~·. ~~i!J{e:':~~
.ye~ih~~~~e
s~p~omores
ai~,
th~
....
~h~~~~:!;.nt;.~;J~~./the
.•.
-t~\
0
T~t~:it~
•~~~;.
~j~P~~}~:e)
.
_.
. .
''Ifl'~
put
~ut a team tomorrow.·
"lt'.s at the end of the. year· that
•
foundation of this pr<>gram,.
•
~e team wilt.be m1ssmg:mucl!.•
.more. -.. :The• Red'. Foxes will, also have ,
•
..
•.
_b~ed
09
eXI>e,~e.nce
_and
unders~-
counts.
.
.
.
.
,
• ..
•
. .
.
said. ':Eve~hing I _projected from than Dunbar!s 7.
7
·poiiit~·and
;t3
•
• junior" college· tra1isfers Scott
""
ding
'.C9f..Jh.e.
,:
~r<>grain),
,;;~~ile,
•••
"I
like
it
ifpeaple won't expect
.them
!S
stann~Il!-e m th~ face._We
.·
assists per game_
..
_..
:
,.
. ..
,.
_
McCabe., and Chuck. Dctvis
:and
,. ;Cho~ko~~ki
1
J3uch,_n~~ Hill ~!ld
__
;,
us
to
be that good,"
he
added. need them to step up and b.e c~n-
•
• •
.
"Just his pr~enc:e:not b~ing iii
.
freshman.
_
Lucas
.
P,isarczyk
,
and
T<?nudy would start;
Magliflty
"We can sneak up ori people."
sistent."
.·
the locker room (hurts)," he said.
Randy Encarnacion
vying
for play::
•
said•
_
.
.
Mari§t
.h9p(!&
_
to;•·.q()Qfilltl.¢_:Jt;~?Wil}:fi.\11.R.W~t~·''--••
•
•
ma ~re-_season
t1!t on Nov •. 2~,}s
run smoothly into tile
.upcoming,
Mt. St._Mary's,-and.Ridedvillbe
.•.·.
our: offens~:v,rIJl:be.a·trans1tion:_
by
ANDREW HOLMLUND
that. It 1s ret~rmng
~n_iost.
of its
•
~eason.
,
.
: .
, •
• ·.
.
.
.
•
•
the top three;''
. _ ..
•
.
.
•
.
game,''":;:
,
- ·'.'. ..
·
>
> ·,
>
.
Staff Writer
•
players and w1U
b~ ehgtble
~~ play
..
,.
''We gained valuable experience·.
-Babineau's
prediction could be•
Marist's, itttac_~ C(:nters aro~nd
Despite having a young, inex-
.
<·10
the NCAA T<?urnament If the
.about
ourselves arid. how
to
act in itnmediately. test~d
•as
Marist \viii
.
getting
~~;
ball
.to
the shootmg
perienced club a year ago, the
team· . can. wm
th e NEC that type•ofsituation,'' he said. open its: winter
-schedule
on:the ..
,,
~-at:9,.-~~t.se,~e~allyU~e -~ffense,:
women's basketball team finished
Championships.
. .
.
'.~We
want last year's successes to .road in Lexington, Ky./at the Ken-•·•
w.ill
J~(.
adaptable;. according to
with a 19-10 record lait year-and
• •
However! the downside for the
,
flow into the beginning· of. tile tucky Irivitationaj:
'
:
>. •
. . .
•
.•
B~bin~_~u_;;
\::
i .
,
< .
<,
•
'
.
reached the Northeast Conference
:
Red Foxes is they have lost NEC
.
season.'~ •
<
•
. . • . .
'
•
/,
The
:Red
Foxes:.will' be
.
pilfod.
•'
:~'.W:~:
ljke: to d<.>
,a
lot for tlle
.
finals before falling
to
Mount SL
•
P!ayer~
·.
C>f
•
the
•
Year-;-'-CharJen.r
•
•.-..
J\cc':'rdirig to. Babineau;· wh_o is
::
;againsLil1eJikes):,_f'.Georgetown,
•
•
sh.09.?Jl&
gu;u-~;'' he.said.
_'.'0~
<;>f~
.·•
M
,. f M
I d 82 61
,
Fiel~s.
•...
.
.
.
.
;. .
,
,·-
mhis e1gh,thyear
as head coach, the
..
•ldah<>
State:and Kent11cky
...
:. _
.
,_
fense deals with a lot of flexibility,
Wi1f ~arisn:ie;
its- 199i93
•
Fields led !danst m sco~ng last Red Fox~ should bee>ne <>fthe
fop
•
-.':_.,CThe}'i
ar:e all v~ry f<>Tillidable.
.-all
<>Lthe ti~e.,,
.·
.
I
>
.•··
•.. ..: .
season?' That is the question th.at
.
year averagmg 17•8 points per con.tenders in
tlie
NEC
'again.,
.
. oppolleri~/'
.the
head _coach s?id.
•
:·
~--~pe<;t. 9L~~e Red Foxes'
theRedFoxeswillhavetoanswer.
game..
.
.
,
•
•
"Ifeelwewillbeoneofthetop<:'.c'P~r
,~11J_s
•are-.exc1te,d::abo1;1t·
trans•~~n.g;;une wilLb~ ll t.hr~::,
.
The goodnewsfor Marist; which
Despite Fiel~ s absc!1ce, Head
..
teams
in
·
the
.,conference,,,'
-poss1bly,gomg
t<>.the.chat11p1onship
:r~!lfd.
<>.f~ense'.
,·
..
'.
: ,,: -.,:
•·
,,.;
·
,';
•
opens its I993-94scheduleat home
.
•
Coach Ke,n Babmeau_sai
d he hopes,
1
Babirieau said.
"It
think(Marist)/
game.'t:
,;,
/-,
1<,<Y,·
·:-\
,:-:.;;:·,
·
0
·cc;:
·
~CC(?fding
t~ B.ab,m:au,
m. ~r~er
·,
·
last year s accomplishments can·
r-:----..
:
.<Manst
will haveJ0 players retur--
..
,
for:1tto be effe<::tive,~
his club n1;eds
. ,
.
ning; iµcludirig_ sen.iorguard Cin-
tq
•
do more for_th~tfuee-guard.
·.
•
Head Coach Ken Babineau instructs his players on strategy during a pre-season practice.
dy Carroll/junior _forward tori
"We nee4
·situations·
wll.ere we
•
• Keys
ancJ
sophomore center Stacey
canconte up l)iggei;,'? he said; "I~.·
Denglert
,; >:;
:
'
. -.
order:. to.
~c,
,that,
vve. need•::to
:•earrou
was
a spark for the Foxes
·
disguis¢ certain things and get more·
last year~ averagirigl0.8 points per
•
help to the three~guard position.•~.·
game'. Keys and Dengler grabbed
,.-,_
.M;aristwiU
usually plar <:onven~
7;8 arid ~.0 rebounds, respectively. t1on_aL·
~efenses, acc()rdmg
•
to
"With
Cindy, Lori and Sfacey
Babm~u.
• ....
_
:
-
. . • •
:·
·.. . .·•
back, we are in a· situation where
.
''We:.are going to be multiple
we have more game experience,"
defensively
.
than offensively,"
Babineau
•
said.
}'I
do not see
Babineau said. "We will playmost-
ourselves
as
young:''
ly man;''
•
. .
•
Babineau didnot comment on
.-Thus·
far, Babineau said he has
who will be his starting five, but
•
been pleased with the physical con~
said he is pleased with the team's • dition of his· club..
. •
.
.
.
. .
.
depth.
•
•
•
C'This is the best shape they ever
i
"From top to bottom, we are a
been in, ~d a lotofthe credit g~
,
better ball club," he
·said.
"We
to
(Assistant
Coach)
Pam
have more weapons."
(Dezago,)" he said. "The girls·
Babineau added that he wants
cmne back ready to compete. _They
his returning roster to be prepared
busted their butts in the pre-
to play.
season."
•
"We are going to be 10-deep,"
Besides avoiding
injuries,
he said. "Those players who did
Babineau said he hopes his players
not have a role last. year, should
will• be ready, both. mentally and
have an impact this year."
physically.
• Marist,
.
which averaged 67.8
"I hope (they) can stay healthy,"
points per game,
will
be running an
he said. "Preparation is a very key
offense Which
is
very similar to last
word. to us.''
season's.
Carroll said that as long as she
The Red Foxes
will
basically play
and her teammates can continue to
an up-tempo game, Babineau said.
play aggressively, things should be
"We do not want to be a boring
able to fall into place.
half-court
offensive
team "
"The key last year was that we
•
Babineau
said.
"Ninety percent ~f
_
worked hard,", the senior
,,
~··
"We have to continue to work.
,
..
I
I.
i
i.
,
..
;,':>.~.-''.~Tiiir'e~'~g~,~
~int-,,,,.ong,:
both
boosters
and alumni
that
their.
hop,r
,
Is
Dave'.
and
hls,-prot,am·
..
can
::1,e,
more:
competitive.''·•.
'. : .'')•
{''.
.• ..
'... •···
.•
..
•'
·
HOOP:·STAT:·:
•
~
President De1fois
Munay
• Freshman Jean°Marie'Lesko'averag~
ed-22.1 points: per: game· last' year at
John Jay High School.
THeC1RCLe,
FUTURE
.
·Rea·:Foxes
recruit
·two
new freshmen
by
ANDREW HOLMLUND·
•
•
Staff Writer
.
The· women's· basketball team will have the services of only two
freshmen this season.
.
·
.
•
Although one of his'rookies missed niost of her senior year after
SUS·
taining a knee injury, Head Coach Ken Babineau said he believes both
recruits will contribute to~the program now.and in the future.
•
.
•
.
.
JEAN-MARIE LESKO
•
This newcomer is no stranger to the Hudson Valley. Lesko was a former
basketball player at John Jay High School in Wappingers Falls, N.Y:
.
The former. Patriot averaged 22.1 points per game last winter.
•
The main reason Babirieau selected the Lesko was because of the
.
5-foot-6 guard's shooting ab1lity;
•
"Jean-Marie is going to be outstanding," the eighth-year head coach
said. "She has the ability to be the greatest scorer to come out.of the
program.~.'
•
.
·.
. .
'
•
• •
•
'
•
'
.
'·
. •
Babineau said he also likes the idea that Lesko can help pick up some
Of the scoring slack left by Charlene Fields, who led the Red Fox'es in
scoring last year, averaging 17.8 points per·game in her final season.
NOVEMBER 11,
1993
3
Women hope
to draw more
fan support
by
KRISTINA WELLS
Staff Writer
There may be no applause.
There may be no crowds.
But there is a women's basket-
ball team who will be playing its
first home
game
on Wed., Dec. 8
at 7:00 p.m. This year the team will
also be eligible to CO!Ilpete
in the
NCAA Tournament provided the
squad wins the Northeast Con-
ference Tournament.
Despite the team's
19-10
record
(12-6
in the Northeast Conference)
last
season,
their fan support was
low.
"She can flat-out shoot," he said. "She can bury three's that will kill
people.
_
..
-
..
__
. .
.
.
··"Jean-Marie
is a hard-working kid," Babineau added.
"I
think she
will have a great four years here."
•
The players said they are hoping
that more students will attend the
------1
games based on last year's results.
KIM·HORWATH
Kim
Horwath is a 5-9 guard who comes to Poughkeepsie from Eastlake,
Ohio:.
•
The Eastlake North High School graduate will have her work cut out
for her t!ri5 season after missing most of last year because of a knee injury.
However, according to Babineau; Horwath will have the opportunity
to come off the bench and contribute in key situations.
•
"It
is unlikely that she will be starting, but she could go 10-deep,"
he said. "She is ina situation where she will keep us at the same level
and not drop off.»
•
_
• ..
-c:·
<
;,:;,.
'
I'
i~
••
Babineau added that he has been pleased with Horwath's work ethic
1----------~--------':.._--...d~
in.trying to regain h~r form·,
·"·
• ._.
.
.
.
·. .
.
.
•
.
.
.
.
.
.
."She is a d.edicated player_with:a lot of skiU," Babineau said .. "She
_
.Freshman
K~m H<:>rwath
dnves past senior Cmdy Carroll m
has shown her fremendousdesire
towork."
••
•
..
·.····
·, •
a
recentpract1ce.
.
_.
.
_
.
.
...
iNif~g~f;f
~~'S/fUtUJ"i
;·Jet
ermined.
at
•
yearts
•
erid
•
by
TED HOLMLUND
._
Sports Editor<
••
• • •.
Doris ·and Gerard Cox{· vice-
local communities, Doris and Cox ministration.has been fair
to
me,"
presidentand dean ofacaderrifo af-
·
said.
•
•
he added. "Let the cards fall where
.
fairs; will tal~ with Maganty at the
According .to. Cox, each Marist
they may."
•
.
.
Men's head basketball coach
_end
of the season confidentially to
employee, including the men's
An organization in the outside
Dave Magarity, entering the final see whetlter or not Magarity has
basketball coach, defines his
community that may have a-vested
year of his third contract,
will
have
•
adequately
filled
his
job
designated role every year under
interest in Magarity'sfuture is the
.
his performance evaluated
ai
the
•
requirements.
•
the general criteria of each job.
Red Fox Club, the school's official
-·
endoftheyear,justlikeanyMarist
.«Evaluations
are personaland
"Each of us has certain goals
boosterclub,whosegoalistoraise
empfoyee, according to adrninisti:a~ are never made'publically/' Cox
and objectivesthatare part of the
both fan and financial support to
tion officials.
•
• •
said.
•
•
plan of the action for the year/'
all Marist athletics.
Magarity;. who is in his eighth
"The AD (Doris) and Dean Cox
Cox said. "These kind of factors
The club has over280 members,
season; has posted a 98-103 overall
•
ultimately would make the deci-
·are
looked at in the overall evalua-
accounting for more than 800
record (7l..:5o'_in
league play) dur-
sion," President Dennis Murray
tion of someone."
season tickets and has donated
ing
his
tenure at Marist.
said. "But they (decisions) all flow
•
•
Magarity said he feels he has
more than·
,$50,000
dollars to
.
"We're treating this much the up to the president-no
doubt
fulfilled his job description and has
Marist College, according to a Red
same
•
·as
any other
coach
-
about it."
•
been treated fairly
•
by Marist
Fox Club pamphlet:
negotiating
a
contract,"
'Athletic
Some of the criteria used in
-
College.:
"There's a general sentiment
Director Gene Doris said:
'''We
,
evaluating Magarity and all the
.
CCI
felt that I proved myself;" the
•
a~ong both booster and alumni
have a mid-year evaluation and end
-· 'coaches
include the effectiveness of
eighth-year head coach said, "I've
•
that their hope
is
Dave and his pro-
•
of the year evaluations with all the training, recruiting,
•overall·
and
been charged. witQ running a clean gram can be more competitive,"
coaches. Every coach that is on season performances, and their
program, graduating. players and Murray said.
•
aff oes throu h this rocess.". relationship with the campus and
being competitive.
"The ad-
Cindy Carroll, a senior guard,
said she feels confident about this
year and hopes there will be more
fan support.
"I've got good feelings,
.knock
•
on wood. It seems as if we are get-
ting the· concepts quicker at prac-
tice.'' she said. "Hopefully, we will
get more fan support after our per-
formance last year."
Stacey Dengler, a sophomore
center, said men's basketball
always gets the support because it
;~ more flashy.
..
"f~Qple.
,w_hc:>
Jiaveµ't..co~e tc:>
see
us
play should," she
said.
We
aren't as boring
•
as it sounds.
Besides, we win.''
Carroll said the women's team
has an ongoing joke when it comes
to the fan support at the games.
"When there are more than five
fans there to watch, we always say
·
'Watch for fan control, there are
more than five people here'," she
said. "When there are people there
we get so pumped. That's why we
try to get our friends. to come.''
Lori Keys said the squad, who
has only two new members, will
play good basketball and believes
the crowd support will follow.
"Almost all of us have played
.
together for a year and we are play-
ing well," the junior forward said.
"It's not the slam dunk, fast pac-
ed excitement of the guy's games .
We don't dunk, but we can play."
"Come once and see what it's
like," Carroll said.
•
Red Foxes reload for new year
Sophomo~e
,<areem Hill-and freshman.
Lucas Pisarczyk go
for the ball m a practice earlier this week.
by
TED HOLMLUND
Sports. Editor
The men's basketball team has
undergone a complete overhaul.
Marist, which finished 14-16 a
year ago, is looking to bolster its
inside and· perimeter· games.
The Red Foxes have added two
junior college
•
transfers and two
freshmen to fill the void left by An-
dy Lake, Sean James, Fred Ingles,
Mike Schreiber and Wilbert Den
Ouden, who completed their
Marist careers last March.
How Marist reacts to its image
change will be largely affected by
the performance of these four
players.
"The contribution from the
newcomers will determine the
strength of the team," said Head
Coach Dave Magarity, who will be.
entering his eighth season.
CHUCK DAVIS
The 6-3 guard averaged 10.6
points and
5.4
rebounds a game
last year for 27-3 Palm Beach
Junior College.
Davis
will
be competing for play-
ing time at the off-guard spot and
the small forward position.
"We felt we needed another
perimeter player," Magarity said.
"He's got decent three-point range.
He's a guy who could score and
make plays off the dribble."
RANDY ENCARNACION
The 6-0 freshman guard hopes to
see action at both the point guard
and off-guard positions.
Encarnacion, who graduated
from Marist High School in
Bayonne, N.J., had 11.2 points
and 2.6 assists per game in his
senior campaign to to help lead the
Golden Knights to a 24~3 mark.
Encarnacion could see a lot of
playing time this year due to the
departure of Lake and loss of
senior Dexter Dunbar, who became
an academic redshirt this season.
"He's been very impressive in
the early going," Magarity said.
.. Randy will have to step up and
give quality (minutes)."
SCOTT McCABE
The 6-8 junior college transfer's
job ,viii be
to
help fill the void at
the low-post positions
•
left by
Shreiber, James and Ingles.
Davis, who averaged 10.3 points
and 6.2 rebounds a game for Butler
Community College last year, was
recruited to give the Red Foxes
strength down on the blocks, ac-
cording to Magarity.
"He brings intense, skilled post
experience with a real understan-
ding of the game," Magarity said.
"In the first week of practice, (he's)
been everything· we've expected.''
LUCAS PISARCZYK
Pisarczyk is a 6-8 freshman for-
ward who scored
17.4
points and
grabbed J0.2 rebounds per outing
his senior year at St. John's Prep
in New York City.
The freshman,
along with
McCabe, will be competing for
playing time in the low post.
Pisarcyzk's play in the early
practices has impressed Magarity.
"I
haven't seen a guy at 6-8
shoot the ball the way he does," the
head coach said. "He's a demon on
the boards and lays it all out for
you. I'm excited about his poten-
tial."
-·.
I
I
'' You /ear~-to'.'i;/thankfiil.
with ·whatyou
have
fn?[ife.,,
< •..
•
_.._ Cindy
Carrolf
4
• -THE
CIRCLE,
·.f'EAT:l.lRE
. .HOOP.
STAT:
Senior lzett Buchanan needs
.92
points
Jo· break .the 1,000
oint plate~u.
NOVEMBER
11,
1993
-
HOOP
SCOOP
.
~
-
.
.
.
6:arrollprovilles inspiration
both
011
and off court
~
.
..
.
. .
-
·. sho.oting form.<
S;, . ;
. speaks fondly of her teammates
by
ANDREW HOLMLUND
:.
"My high school coa.,ch
h!id me
and the coaching staff.
Staff Writer .. •·
•
shooting,'.' Carroll said, :
;'He
•
"Some of my bestfriends are on
No one has to tell Cindy Carroll
would peek in and tell me what I
this team," she said; "(Assistant
there is. more to life .than just
would be doing wrong.' •.
'
Coach Pam Dezago andKen)are
basketball, •• ,
'·.· _ •
.
·.
In order for her point total to go
great to talk to. He (Babineau) is
Whether it·is• her involvement up/ Carroll· said she needs to im-
hard ori the court, but once you get
.with the coni·munity in lier
prove her mobility in driving the
off the court, lie is all ears~"
hometown of Media, Pa;, or right
lane.
•
Carroll, who is one of six
here in Dutchess County, Carroll
''I
want to have a quick, strong
children, says she attributes her
has shown she can be a leader both
move to the basket,' '-she said:
• success to her mother who held
on and off the basketball court.
•
Although Carroll has high expec-
kept the family unit together after .
The psychology/special• educa-
tations for herself;. she· said·. she
her father died when • she was
f
•
h
• • d 10 8 could riever see herself leaving the . six-years-old.
ion maJor. w
O
average
•
g·
am_
e s_he
has· loved s1·nce.her
1·u·
nior
h
I •
b
h
(f
points per gameJast season, work-
"She as a ways een t ere or
ed over the summer as a counselor year ip high• school. . .
.
me)," reflected Carroll. "It feels
at basketball camps throughout the
"I
love (basketball)," Carroll ex-
goo_d
to call her and tell her about·
vicinityj,f Philadelphia; • helping • claimed. i•r could riever see myself . the game. She should be a martyr.
•
f
•
• 0 k
f ·
·Ii
not playing'.";
.
•
.
• "You learn to be thankful with
yoc~;;lrit1y .ro~e r~1.:;~ar~~~ et;
While Carroll enjoys the sport,
what you have in life,'' she adde.d.
volunteering as a field worker at
her coach and teammatesfove hav-
For now, .Carroll is looking
Ast.or pre-school in
a
Head~Start . ing her. as a Marist Red Fox.·
toward the upcoming season.
· program, assisting three and four-
"Cindy is ce~ainly one of.the all-
According to the co-captain, she
year-old children who come from
time greats;" said Head Coach Ken
is looking forward to opening_
her
low-income families.
Babineau. "As a person, she is the
final chapter as a collegiate athlete
Carroll has also excelled in the
kind of kid I would be proud to say
at the Kentucky Invitational on
classroom by mruntainiitg approx- • that
fa
my daughter; She is a bright;
Nov. 26 • and 27.
iniately a cumulative 3.4. grade
shining light for us."
"Kentucky should be
a
great ex-
point average:
, •
Junior guard Amy - Presnall
perience," Carroll said as she twirl-
However, the senior did say that
shared nearly the same sentiments ed her stuffed panda pear around
all her activities do take up a great
as her coach.
in her hands. "My roommate's
amount of her time.
"She is inspiring,.,_ marvelled father told me that they are selling
"This year is my hardest year in
Presnall. "She has had a lot of set-
tickets like crazy.
my maJ·or,'_
• Carroll said. "The
backs, but she will not letthat stop
•
h
Sh •• •
•
"
''I
hope there is a big crowd,"
hour_
slhavetoputintohomework,
er.-
e is Just a great person.
Th · al h. •
• • • • d
c
she continued. "That
will
be neat."
Pre-schoo_ 1, s_choolw_ork, and
• ey so ave recogruze •. ar-
.
ll' • ·hi
•
•
·th
. Carroll's.atti_tude before or dur-
basketball do take.a toll on me.''
ro s ac evements out
•
on
e
OCI
really feel involved','.' she.con- . floor.
_ .. • _ . ·. ··. . . . ,
ing a game is notany different than •
. tinued .. !'(But)l know I will make •
"I
think she is one of.the hardest: her laid back off court·denieanor.
it.''
workers • I ~have ever 'bad,''
--"Wh'e1fl ani playing,,, explain~'
The 5-10.guard said shedoes
Babineau said. "Cindy Carroll is
ed,Carroll; "Andlknocksoineon:e
realize she must increase her scor-
the kind of player who has gotten
over, I would help them get back
ing
.
percentage· because. of the
better each year •. Freshman._and up. lknowout on.the court I must
graduation of last year's team sophomore years she improved on
be mentally prep~ed. I try to get
leading scorer, Charlene Fields;
ball-handling, last year it was
in a certain frame of mind.''
"I
do feel soine pressure because shooting/'
I know I have'to pick up a scoring
Teammate .. Stacey Dengler
slack," Carroll admitted.
"I
work-
especially:admires
Carroll's leader-
ed on my three-point shooting at • ship qualities: •
my high school over the summer." · . · "Cindy is great," Dengler said.
. The alumnus from Archbishop "She is a good team captain. She
Prendergast said her former high holds the team together.''
.
sch_ool coach helped with her
This reciprocates as • Carroll
Carroll said one of .last year's
three victories • over Fairleigh
Dickinson University was the big-
gest thrill. so far in her college
career.
·n
was
a
three-point buzzer
beater that led Marist to the
victory.
• "Melissa (Hauser) passed me tl).e :, life,''-Carroll said, -'~Basketball
has: •
ball/.' . she explained.
"I
kind• of taken me places
I
have never been.
turned and then shot it in the cor-
. like San Francisco. ·I have met
ner as I fell out of bounds."
•
some of my best friends for life
"I
just had
a
perma glow the
here."
whole time (on the ride home),"
she added.
•
Carroll said she has had no
regrets with her college life and
with the challenge of playing Divi-
sion I basketball.
. . "My four years at Marist have
~e~n !_he
greatest four years of my
Carroll said she does not want to
have any second thoughts when her
career is over.
"I definitely want to have-a good
year and have no regrets," Carroll
said.
CCI
just need to feel good when
I. hang up those sneakers in
March."
'lJttf
ha,:nqn.
rea<iy.
to •
take . charge
• by
TED HOLMLUND
SpC>rts
Editor
IzeUBuchanan knows som1;:
pep-
pie may have·had an "Ltold-you
so"' mentality after he \Vas declared
. academically ineligible in_
the spring·.
semester last .year.
"To
a
.certain
extent, .. there's
always
•
a preconceived notion
against athletes, (especially)
basket-
ball -· players," the • 2l~year-old
Buchanan . said .. ''That's
how
stereotypes are. It's a part of life."
Buchanan, who averaged 14.8
points and 6.5 rebounds a game in
his abbreviated season, has put the
pastto rest and is ready to take on
his appointed role· as the team
leader.
.
Although he missed the last 18
games, Buchanan raised his grades
and said he is determined to make
up for the lost time;
"I
got the job • done in the
classroom," he said. "This year I'll
make up for all the games I miss-
ed."
Head Coach Dave Magarity also
believes Buchanan is ready to
bounce back and finish an incon-
sistent career on a high note. •
"He's not going to bring that
(the past academic problems) into
the year," Magarity said; "He's
had a real checkered career, but his
goal as a senior is to go out a win-
ner.''
Buchanan, who is 92 points
away from being the 16th Marist
player to break 1,000 points, said
he is ready to lead as weHas score.
• Buchanan said he chose Marist
''I
want that added responsibili- be~ause of its convenience and
ty,"the senior criminal justicema-. believed he could have a bigger ef-
jor. said. "I'm definitely looking feet on a. smaller Division I
forward to b¢ing one of the leaders program.
. .
.
..
.
on this team. I don't feel any extra
.
"Marist was close to home," he
pressure:»
said; "This was the type of school
. . FeUow senior. and. teammate I can make an impact on.,,
Chad Weikert feels.that Buchanan
Buchanan wants to continue ·to
is ..
ready_ to. take the. leadership play. basketball aft:r his collegiate
mantle. _.· • .
:
•
.
career, but knows his college de&!ee
''He's matured a lot;,, the guru-d will hold him in good stead if.his
·
said. ''He realizes his role now and . goal to be a player falls through.
is playing really welt•' .
•
Last year, Buchanan was scouted
. Buchanan played on the Hudson by· the Portland Trailblazers and
Valley Region in the Empire State Phoenix Suns:
Games this summer where his team
. "Hopefully, I'll be playing after
won a gold medal. He played with college,
barring
, injuries,''
high ~ber players, induding Otis Buchan!in . said .... If.· I. wasn't
• Hill of the Syracuse Orangemen. drafted, there's
certain
NBAcainps
"There were a lot of high players where people pick up players. I've-
up there," Buchanan said. "It was talked to my coaches, and they've
the first time ·playing since being in- told me how to get into camps:
eligible. I played well.''
"If basketball doesn't work out,
Buchanan
graduated
from (a degree) gives me something to
Goshen High School, a small town fall back on,'' Buchanan added.
in Orange ~ounty, N.
Y .,
which is
However, Buchanan is not con-.
not known for its basketball.
cemed with the past or future, but
"I wasn't heavily recruited " the only with the present task of
6-6 guard said. "Goshen w~ not leading the team to tournament
known for its (basketball) talent. I glory. "I want us to win the Nor-
_
was also thin."
th~t
Conference Championship
If there has been one weakness and go to the (NCAA) Tourna-
in Bgchanan's game, it has been ment," ,Buchanan said.
the jump shot;but Buchanan, who
Buchanan realizes his n.ew role as
~as worked on improving his !he team leader and eagerly accepts
Jumper all summer, said that will it.
change.
"I don't see that (leading) as
"Everybody's going to see a pressure," he said. "I always
marked improvement on my jump wanted to be the guy to have that
shot," Buchanan said.
added responsibility. It's something
I look forward to.''