1995 Reynard Yearbook.xml
Media
Part of Reynard 1995
content
Reynard
1995
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0?.cmember
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of us appreciate the
beautiful campus that Marist
offers- simply by taking the
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long way to class.
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at the
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campus
from a di erent perspective,
Marist students can see all the
memorable pleasures that are
brought to us -all year round.
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a never end-
ing process- some of us turn to
our books for answers while
others choose
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by living life day by dfy .
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around Dyson, stu-
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just one of the many
modern buildings built on a solid foun-
dation
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J"'/,e~lf,
awaiting
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their turn
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students understand that we must
all
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"give a little"-whether it.'
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by giving
blood or by donating gifts to the Giving
Tree.
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fans are everywhere
showing their school spirit- both on and
off the playing field.
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on what Marist was bui
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stand for, allstudents that enter Marist
leave with a better understanding- of
their major and themselves.
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Thomas, the Com-
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munication Arts building, has
provided an excellent learning
environment
to
many.
Equipped with the latest of
technology it gives the students
an advantage- by learning how
to get ahead in the world.
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September, stude~ts
experience what it's like to
leave their first liome- to arrive
to Poughkeepsie and encounter
their second home.
receive one-
on-one personal attention from
their faculty members
to
help
them with any questions that
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students may have.
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a whole
new territory is a part of the
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leai:ning process that is t~ught
at Marist. To study the un-
known is to explore the mini
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a few computer facili-
ties
available
to
students
around the clock, it gives the
student body a chance to learn
the many software programs
that are available on campus.
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cures does not
happen overnight-
it all
starts with a laboratory ex-
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periment and an understand-
ing of the conditional.
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breaks in the Donnelly cafe
are a perfect time to catch a bite to eat-
along with some light reading
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every second counts-
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when'typing an important pa-
per a fe:w days before it is due in class.
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the Route 9 constru~tion that
has been recently taking place in the
area,
,
commuters may have a longer trip
to campus.
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are able to talk to their
instructors about any concern they may
have about a subject matter or even
about the courses that
,
they are enrolled
in
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is yet anot!ie.r Marist
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student who is all smiles about
the vivacity of the Red Fox
spirit.
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tfte cold weather,
llla~y
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school-spirited students
attt!
~
i J\.farist games
.
.. to in-
still tbe Red Fox pride.
It
just
shows how much enthusiasm
the fans have for tlie Marist
playefs
.,
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school mascot, the red
and white fox, can
·
be seen be-
fore or after a game, "to take a
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picture with one of his fans.
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SENIORS
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C
AU
H
(
HOR
S
E
A
Message to the
Class of
1995
During our years here at Marist we have developed a set of very meaningful
dreams and goals
,
but more importantly the skills needed to attain them
.
It
is with great
confidence that we leave this sacred institution and begin our journey into the unknown.
Being a part of the Marist community has taught us
.
.
to respect our neighbors and
cherish human life, but more importantly, it has taught us how to care ... how to be a friend.
The ties we have built and the people we have met have changed us in a way that could
never be duplicated. This has greatly enhanced our concept of "being", and furthermore
has led to the discovery of ourselves
.
It
is this polish that has added luster to our
instruction,- a luster that will shine so brightly on graduation day. Without each other
our ~ducation would have been wanting for compJeteness.
While the realization of the vision that we have strove so eagerly to achieve is
fin
~
lly before us, it cannot be seen as the end of our endeavor, but rather the beginning of
higher goals and expectations. The lessons
,
the concepts and the achievements that we
have garnered are not to be pushed aside
,
but rather incorporated into our continuing
person that we are constantly adding to. We are the ones who will add flavor and
uniqueness
to
the society which we belong, we are the ones that will make the difference
for others as they have made a difference for us. We are our vision, we are the future.
Best Wishes
,
Jonathan R. Sorelle
Senior Class President
I
,
A FAREWELL TO THE SENIORS
I would like to offer my congratulations and best wishes
on your graduation from Marist College.
As you leave our campus to pursue a career or graduate
study, you will find a world that is rapidly changing and
increasingly complex.
From the revolutionary upheavals in
Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union to the
competitive struggles facing American business and industry,
the new global village you are about to encounter will be a
place of great challenge and great opportunity.
The years
you have spent at Marist will provide you with the
foundation to meet these challenges as well as to take full
advantage of the many opportunities that await you.
Your Marist education has given you the intellectual
tools and the professional competencies to be constructive
members of the organizations in which you work and the
communities in which you live .
.
I also hope your experience
at Marist has instilled in you a
~
sense of values and a
spirit of service, particularly to the less fortunate in our
.
society.
As we say goodbye to you as undergraduates, we also
welcome you back to Marist as alumni of the College.
I look
forward to seeing you at Homecoming Weekend and other alumni
events, and encourage you to continue your involvement with
the College.
As alumni, you are now stakeholders in this
institution,
·
and your participation in the life of Marist
College will be vital to our continu
'
ed growth and
development.
Again, congratulations on all your accomplishments and
best of luck in all your future endeavors.
1.
cerely,
Dennis
I
~urray
~
Braduates o
1995
~
Reyna Abaquin
BACHELORS DEGREE
Am_yAery
BUSINI;:SS FINANCE
Lynn Allen
BACHELORS DEGREE
18 Senior
s
Benjamin Abbatiello
COMMUNICATIONS
Jennifer Ahearn
SOCIAL WORK
Anthony Allison
BUSINESS ADMIN
Vincent Accardi
COMMUNICATIONS
Veronica Ahumada
BACHELORS DEGREE
Amy Anderson
BIOLOGY
/
PRE-VET
I
,
~
Jessica Adelman
COMMUNICATIONS
Heather Alexander
BACHELORS DEGREE
Mario Andre
BUSINESS
Allison Andrews
PSYC/SPECIAL ED
Brett Arnold
BACHELORS DEGREE
Rimma Aranovich
FINE ARTS
Karen Arnold
BACHELORS DEGREE
Yahairah Aristy
PSYCHOLOGY
Aaron Astorino
CHEM
/
BIOLOGY
Christine Armusewicz
BACHELORS DEGREE
Dana A vagliano
ACCOUNTING
Seniors 19
Kathleen Barry
ENVIRO SCIENCE
20 Seniors
Deena Barsky
BUSINESS ADMIN
Deanna Batza
COMMUNICATIONS
Anthony Bayer
BACHELORS DEGREE
-
~raduut-es o
Elaina Beato
COMMUNICATIONS
Bruce Berzenski
MEDICAL TECH
Willard Bink
COMPUTER SCIENCE
Gina Becconsall
COMMUNICATIONS
Jennifer Betz
MEDICAL TECH
Matthew Bluestein
BUSINESS
Thomas Becker
COMMUNICATIONS
Laurie Bianchi
BACHELORS DEGREE
Donna Boccelli
BIOLOGY
/PSYC
19~5
-
Scott Bernhard
BACHELORS DEGREE
Joseph Bica
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Shannon Bostwick
BACHELORS DEGREE
Seniors 21
~
Graduates o
1995
-
Elizabeth Boucher
BACHELORS DEGREE
Raymond Braun
BACHELORS DEGREE
Jeannine Bresica
ACCOUNTING
22 Seniors
Matthew Bourne
COMMUNICATIONS
Calm Brennan
BACHELORS DEGREE
Jeffrey Broderick
COMMUNICATIONS
Kersti Bowes
SOCIAL WORK
Jeanne Brennan
BACHELORS DEGREE
Faiza Brown
COMMUNICATIONS
Dana Branchesi
BACHELORS DEGREE
Patrick Brennan
BACHELORS DEGREE
Gregory Brown
COMPUTER SCIENCE
Joseph Bruno
BACHELORS DEGREE
James Burke
COMMUNICATIONS
Vincent Bugge
BUSINESS
Erin Butler
COMMUNICATIONS
Ann Marie Bunnell
ENVIRO SCIENCE
Nicole Buzzetto
BACHELORS DEGREE
Dana Buoniconti
COMMUNICATIONS
Kathleen Caddell
ENGLISH LITERATURE
Seniors 23
Michael Cahill III
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
.......
.......
....,
Gregory Cannito
POLITICAL SCIENCE
24 Seniors
.
'
Mary Calabro
BACHELORS DEGREE
John Capuano
PSYCHOLOGY
Margo Campbell
SOCIAL
WORK
Nicholas Capuano
HISTORY
Joanne Canavan
PSYCHOLOGY
Suzanne Carey
PSYCHOLOGY
c;raduutes
D
Alison Carinci
SOCIAL WORK
Laura Chlupsa
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Maria-Ann Carpenter
BACHELORS DEGREE
....._
Jennifer Clark
BACHELORS DEGREE
Kerri Casey
POLITICAL SCIENCE
Lisa Clinton
BUSINESS
1995
Eric Cavoli
BACHELORS DEGREE
Richard Cocchiara
COMMUNICATIONS
Seniors 25
-
~raduates o
Marla Colletti
BACHELORS DEGREE
Ricki Con:hors
BACHELORS DEGREE
Jeannie Cordero
BACHELORS DEGREE
26 Seniors
Cynthia Compel
BACHELORS DEGREE
Monica Connors
BACHELORS DEGREE
Bryce Cote
BACHELORS DEGREE
Pamela Conlon
PSYCHOLOGY
Jennifer Corcoran
COMMUNICATIONS
Michael Coughlin
SOCIAL WORK
1995
-
I
,
Kerry Connors
BACHELORS DEGREE
Christopher Cordaro
BACHELORS DEGREE
Danielle Couture
COMMUNICATIONS
Wendy Crocker
COMMUNICATIONS
Maria Cuneo
ACCOUNTING
Virginia Crudo
POLITICAL SCIENCE
Katherine Cunningham
PSYC/SPECIAL ED
Yesenia
Cruz
COMMUNICATIONS
Heather Curatolo
BACHELORS DEGREE
Erin Culhane
BACHELORS DEGREE
Michelle Curran
COMMUNICATIONS
Seniors 27
Denise D'Andrea
COMMUNICATIONS
Jennifer Daly
BACHELORS DEGREE
28 Seniors
Melissa D'Angelo
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
-
.J
effrey D'Onofrio
COMMUNICATIONS
-
--=~
,
w--....
.-----
•v
--
-
-
--
-
Shelly Ann Daniel
PSYCHOLOGY
Carina Davis
COMMUNICATIONS
Hugh Daily
BACHELORS DEGREE
Christine DeCampos
FASHION DESIGN
~
(;raduates
g
1995
~
George Celegianis
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Sharon Deloughery
PSYC/SPECIAL ED
Stephanie Devita
BACHELORS DEGREE
Gennaro Delgais
BACHELORS DEGREE
Bob Delponte
BACHELORS DEGREE
Deirdre Devlin
BACHELORS DEGREE
Melissa Della Bianca
BACHELORS DEGREE
Gabrielle Demma
ENGLISH WRITING
Anne Marie Devino
BACHELORS DEGREE
Kristen Della Vecchia
COMMUNICATIONS
Amy Devine
BUSINESS
Todd Dias
BACHELORS DEGREE
Seniors 2
9
Michelle Dibona
BACHELORS DEGREE
Claudia Dolan
PSYC/SPECIAL ED
30
Seniors
Kathleen Dick
BACHELORS DEGREE
Michael Donato
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Rex Dickson
·
COMMUNICATIONS
Terri Donnelly
SPANISH
Alicia DiGennaro
BACHELORS DEGREE
Jennifer Danza
COMMUNICATIONS
Jennifer Dodd
BACHELORS DEGREE
Marlo Dyson
PSYCHOLOGY
Dawn Doty
COMPUTER SCIENCE
Theodore Eglit
.
BACHELORS DEGREE
Sean Dumas
B
USINESS/MARKETING
Brian Elias
ENGLISH
Michael Dunn
SOCIAL WORK
Amy Ellenes
ENVIRO SCIENCE
Seniors 31
Marina Arras
-
Ernrey
BACHELORS DEGREE
Denis Farrell
BACHELORS DEGREE
32 Seniors
Laura Erario
BUSINESS
Kristen Fatsy
COMMUNICATIONS
Nicole Errnlich
ENGLISH
Yolanda Faustini
BACHELORS DEGREE
Hollie Farnan
PSYCHOLOGY
Peter Faustino
PSYCHOLOGY
l'----o---
f;raduates
g
James Fay
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Siobhan Finn
EDUCATION
-
---
John Foley
BACHELORS DEGREE
Kathleen Ferraro
MED. TECH.
Tracy Fitzsimmons
BUSINESS
Siobhan Foley
ENGLISH
Laurie Ferraro
PSYCHOLOGY
John Flippone
COMMUNICATIONS
Stacy Foster
COMMUNICATIONS
1995
Michele Ferraro
BOSSINESS
Michael Fogarty
ENGLISH WRITING
Peter Foy
BACHELORS DEGREE
Seniors
33
&raduates o
Lucia Fraboni
BACHELORS DEGREE
Christopher Fromm
MATH
Carolyn Gallagher
HISTORY
3
4 Senior
s
Kevin Freeman
SPANISH
Kimberly Furs
ENGLISH LITERATURE
Carrie Gallagher
BACHELORS DEGREE
Jami Fregosi
COMMUNICATIONS
Jayme Gabay
BUSINESS
Jean Gallo
PSYC
/
SPECIAL ED
1995
I
,
Sarah French
BACHELORS DEGREE
Ronald Gagne
COMPUTER SCIENCE
Anthony Galvin
POLITICAL SCIENCE
James Gerace
BACHELORS DEGREE
Theresa Geremia
BUSSINESS
Steven Giampaolo
COMMUNICATIONS
,
.
Edward Gilhooly
BACHELORS DEGREE
Seniors 35
Tracey Goery
BACHELORS DEGREE
36 Seniors
James Gorham
COMMUNICATIONS
Kathleen Gralton
BACHELORS DEGREE
..
Heather Griffin
BACHELORS DEGREE
Graduates o
1995
Allison Guarda
HISTORY
Jeremie Harris
ART HISTORY
Andrea Gulius
PSYC/SPECIAL ED
- - -
Maureen Hasselmann
COMMUNICATIONS
Jennifer Hall
MED. TECH
Stacey Haupt
BACHELORS DEGREE
Brian Hampel
BACHELORS DEGREE
William Hausher
BACHELORS DEGREE
Seniors 37
Graduates o
Kathleen Hull
POLITICAL SCIENCE
38 Seniors
1995
Heather Hyland
BACHELORS DEGREE
Anthony Ippolito
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Kim Jackson
BACHELORS DEGREE
Suzanne Jacobs
SOCIAL WORK
.
.
Dawn Jacobson
BUSINESS
Seniors 39
Brad Kamp
BACHELORS DEGREE
40
Senior
s
Carol Keane
BACHELORS DEGREE
Dale Kelly
BACHELORS DEGREE
Neil Kelly
COMMUNICATIONS
~
f;raduates o
Kristin Kennedy
BACHELORS DEGREE
Kimberly King
COMMUNICATIONS
Cathleen Kosiewicz
PSYCHOLOGY
Brian Kenworthy
COMMUNICATIONS
Andrea Kirichok
GRAPHIC DESIGN
Drew Kreidler
BUSINESS
Lori Keys
BIOLOGY
Bridget Kalka
PSYCHOLOGY
John Kudlack
BACHELORS DEGREE
1995
~
.
.
Christopher Kick
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Debra Komusin
BACHELORS DEGREE
Amie Kunkel
BACHELORS DEGREE
Seniors 41
Laurette Lapadura
PSYCH
/
SPECIAL ED
42
Seniors
Tricia Lauria
BACHELORS DEGREE
Frank LePerch
ENGLISH WRITING
>
,
Aaron Lefkowski
BACHELORS DEGREE
Graduates
o
Ro
byn
Lefkowski
B
AC
HELORS
DEGREE
Mo
nica Lichwick
B
ACHEL
ORS DEGREE
C
o
ri
ne
Lurry
C
RI
MINA
L JUSTICE
Sean
Lennon
BUSINESS
Michelle Lindhurst
BACHELORS DEGREE
Mar
ga
ret Lyko
BACHELORS
DEGRE
E
Erika
Leone
BACHELORS DEGREE
Kevin
Long
BACHELORS DEGREE
Jam
es
Macalu
so
C
OMMUNICATIONS
1995
Claudine Lewan
BACHELORS DEGREE
Marissa Love
COMMUNICATIONS
Kimb
e
rly Ma
c
Ka
y
BACHELORS
DEGREE
S
e
ni
o
r
s
43
6raduates o
1995
-
Molly McConeghy
BACHELORS DEGREE
Deanna McGraham
BACHELORS DEGREE
44
Seniors
Colleen McDevitt
BACHELORS DEGREE
Colleen McGrath
BACHELORS DEGREE
Matthew McDonald
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Kevin McGuiness
BACHELORS DEGREE
>
,
,
',j;
Sean McFeeley
COMMUNlCA TIONS
Matthew McGuire
ENVIRO SCIENCE
Patricia McGuire
BUSINESS
Sara McLaughlin
COMMUNICATIONS
Francis McKee
ACCOUNTING
Linda Mcloughlin
PSYCHOLOGY
Aaron McLaughlin
POLITICAL SCIENCE
John McTigue
BACHELORS DEGREE
I,
Kellie McLaughlin
BACHELORS DEGREE
John Macari
BUSINESS
Seniors 45
.
-
Candace Mackersie
COMMUNICATIONS
Shannon Malloy
BIOLOGY
46 Seniors
Lynette Madama
PSYC/SPECIAL ED
Cynthia Malo
BUSINESS
L
y
,
rmMagee
COMMUNICATIONS
Debra Mancuso
BUSINESS
>
.
Kim Ann Mahoney
BIOLOGY
Jessica Mand
ENGLISH WRITING
(;raduates o
Catherine Manganelli
HISTORY
Marybeth Mason
BACHELORS DEGREE
Robert Maniaci
BACHELORS DEGREE
Lawrence Mattera
BUSINESS
Kimberly Marchetti
PSYC/SPECIAL ED
RobMaurino
ENGLISH
19~5
Robert Marks
COMMUNICATIONS
Kimberly Meehan
BACHELORS DEGREE
Seniors 47
6raduales
o
Thomas Meehan
COMPUTER SCIENCE
Michelle Mercaldo
PSYCHOLOGY
Nicole Milius
BACHELORS DEGREE
48 Seniors
Marc Mele
POLITICAL SCIENCE
William Mertes
ACCOUNTING
Louis Miller
BACHELORS DEGREE
Rene Mejorado
COMMUNICATIONS
~
helia
Meyers
BUSINESS
Melissa Miller
PSYC
/
SPECIAL ED
1995
I
,
Doreen Melkonian
BUSINESS
Anthony Mignone
BUSINESS
Michael Milo
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Anthony Morris
POLITICAL SCIENCE
Colleen Morrow
BUSINESS
Michael Mostransky
COMMUN CIA TIONS
Megan Mould
COMMUNICATIONS
Seniors 49
Michael Murray
MATH
50 Seniors
Jessica Muscolino
BACHELORS DEGREE
Chasity Nadge
BACHELORS DEGREE
>
,
James N agurney
BACHELORS DEGREE
t:iraduntes o
Sherilee Newton
BUSINESS
Robert Noonan
BUSINESS
Jane Nichols
BACHELORS DEGREE
Jennifer Norris
COMMUNICATIONS
Joseph Neubig
BUSINESS
Stefanie Novy
BACHELORS DEGREE
Joseph Neu
COMMUNICAITONS
Edward O'Reilly
BACHELORS DEGREE
Seniors 51
--
&raduates o
1995
-
Carolyn Oderwald
PSYC
/
SPECIAL ED
Carol Paldino
PSYC
/
SPECIAL ED
52 Senior
s
Dina Pace
COMMUNICATIONS
Stephanie Paleo
PSYCHOLOGY
J
e
nnifer Pace
PSYCHOLOGY
Brian Paquette
BACHELORS DEGREE
I
,
Jo Ellen Paczkowski
BACHELORS DEGREE
Jennifer Parker
BACHELORS DEGREE
,
Heidi Pearsall
COMMUNICATIONS
Jennifer Paupini
COMMUNICATIONS
Frederick Peck
BACHELORS DEGREE
Colleen Pelkowski
COMMUNICATIONS
Senior
s
53
___
f;radua
.
tes o
Francis Pizzani
COMMUNICATIONS
54 Seniors
Kimberely
Pollina
PSYCHOLOGY
Lisa Pleines
ENVIRO SCIENCE
I
,
Elizabeth Potts
COMMUNICATIONS
~
Graduates
CJ
Maria Quintanilla
COMMUNICATIONS
Tammy Race
BUSINESS
Darren Ranft
MATH
1995
~
Jill
Reber
COMPUTER SCIENCE
Seniors 55
~
bradua.tes e
1995
-
Karin Reed
PSYCHOLOGY
Jamie Reyman
COMMUNICATIONS
56 Seniors
Sarah Reilly
BACHELORS DEGREE
Steve Rice
COMMUNICATIONS
Jeffrey Riva
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Alissa Renzulli
BUSINESS
William Rickman
BACHELORS DEGREE
,
,
Keith Reyling
ENGLISH
Gary Riley
BUSINESS
Todd Roberts
BACHELORS DEGREE
Graduates o
1995
Sylvain Rodrigue
ENVIRO SCIENCE
Marcia Rosbury
POLITICAL SCIENCE
·
Sagrario Rudecindo
COMMUNICATIONS
.
Joy Romanelli
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Jeffrey Rose
POLITICAL SCIENCE
Gina Rugilio
BACHELORS DEGREE
Mary Roman
BACHELORS DEGREE
Michael Rossi
BACHELORS DEGREE
Andrew
Russsell
BUSINESS
Scott Ronaghan
COMMUNICATIONS
Audry Rossow
PSYCHOLOGY
Matthew
Russell
COMMUNICATIONS
Seniors 57
Graduates o
1995
Susan Russello
PSYCHOLOGY
David Sa
t
o
BACHELORS DEGREE
Jennifer Schaivone
BACHELORS DEGREE
58
Seniors
Joseph Russo
BACHELORS
DEGREE
Rosemarie Santos
BACHELORS
DEGREE
Brian Schemp
BUSINESS
Margaret Ryan
ENGLISH
Ta
mmy Scannell
COMPUTER SCIENCE
Suzanne Schiano
PSYC/SPECIAL ED
I
,
Debra
Saal
COMMUNICATIONS
Jane-Alyse
Schaffner
BUSINESS
Keith Schlingheyde
BACHELORS DEGREE
_____
eraduates
D
Bree Scott
COMMUNICATIONS
.
Vanessa Sebastiano
COMMUNICATIONS
Jennifer Schneider
BACHELORS DEGREE
Kimberly Scott
BUSINESS
Justin Seremet
COMMUNICATIONS
Patricia Schneider
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Stacey Schultz
BACHELORS DEGREE
Timothy Sheehan
HISTORY
.
.
Helen Schryver
COMPUTER SCIENCE
Marina Sears
PSYCHOLOGY
Brian Sheridan
COMMUNICATIONS
59 Seniors
~
braduates
e
Joseph Sievers
BACHELORS DEGREE
Brian Skinner
BACHELORS DEGREE
Micki Smith
POLITICAL SCIENCE
60 Seniors
Scott Signore
COMMUNICATIONS
Brian Smith
POLITICAL SCIENCE
Tracy Smith
PSYC
/
SPECIAL ED
Jennifer Sito
BACHELORS DEGREE
Je
n
nifer Smith
BACHELORS DEGREE
Alan Snyder
BACHELORS DEGREE
I
,
Maria Skaff
COMMUNICATIONS
Joseph Smith
BACHELORS DEGREE
Christopher Sommella
BACHELORS DEGREE
Gradu
-
ates o
Mark Sternefeld
COMPUTER SCIENCE
Janis
Stock
BUSINESS
Heather Stott
PSYCHOLOGY
1995
James Sullivan
POLITICAL SCIENCE
Seniors 61
Gradua
.
tes o
1995
~
Amy Sweeney
COMPUTER SCIENCE
BUSINESS
Lisa Valenti
BUSINESSS
62 Seniors
Eric Tannenbaum
COMMUNICATIONS
Kimberly Tyne
BACHELORS DEGREE
Juante Vanterpool
SOCIAL WORK
Robert Targos
COMMUNICATIONS
Deborah Underdown
COMMUNICATIONS
Debra Vazquez
BACHELORS DEGREE
I,
Maureen Tatarian
COMMUNICATIONS
Joanne Ungechauer
BACHELORS DEGREE
Jill Veasey
BACHELORS DEGREE
-
Graduates o
Daniel Wager
JOURNALISM
Lalan
y
ea Weaver
BACHELORS DEGREE
Isabelle Walraven
ENGLISH
Sheri Weidner
BACHELORS DEGREE
Brian Walsh
COMMUNICATIONS
Kristina Wells
JOURNALISM
1995
-
Robin Ward
BACHELORS DEGREE
Mark Wesley
MATH
Senior
s
63
64
Seniors
Graduates
o
Sarah Woodward
BACHELORS DEGREE
1995
-
Charles Worner
BACHELORS DEGREE
Michelle Wright
COMMUNICATIONS
Mark Zeck
BACHELORS DEGREE
Anthony F. Mazer
BUSINESS ADM.
Susanne Yanusz
COMMUNICTIONS
Theresa Zimba
HISTORY
Arthur S. Sullivan
B.A.
Psychology
Jennifer Zanetti
BACHELORS DEGREE
~
_ _ , .
Leslie Zurinskas
BACHELORS DEGREE
Jennifer Zbell
ENGLISH
Cynthia Zurolo
BUSINESS
Seniors 65
UNDERCLASSMEN
.
.
·
THE
-
~~~ad
'
...
·
~
.
muuete,
ead,
4eeOd
~
HUne
~'
~~ead,tJdt'leh.it~,
..
'
.
,
..
,,
-
..
·
.
~ , , _
.
~ « l e ,
«J.ttt
le
OH,
tUe't,
(U{Ne
·
RIGHT: Are
th
ese g
u
ys
getting
ready
for class??
BELOW: A
l
yson,
Janet
and Amy
welco
m
e
th
e
in
com
in
g
freshman
.
ABOVE:
This
l
ooks
lik
e
a
g
r
eat
plac
e
t
o
r
e
la
x
..
.
especia
ll
y a
ft
er
class!
68
Juniors
RIGHT: Which
o
n
e
do
es
n
'
t
go
to
Marist?
Tim~ to Express Yourself .....
.
Q
JUNIORS
What was your most
memorable experience
at Marist?
"Baseball against North Carolina State .....
I
struck out a member of the U.S. Olympic
team and one of the top 100 players in the
nation."
-Bill
Paterson
ABOVE:
It snowed!!!
Did
th
ey say
that
a
ll
classes
wer
e
cance
ll
ed?!?'
LEFT: For
some,
just
h
ang
in
g ou
t
is
a co
ll
ege
activity'
Juniors
69
BELOW: What do students
like to do
off campus?
RIGHT: Talk about a road
trip
.
.
.
..
.
to
VIRGINIA!
Visit OTHER colleges, of course!
Time to Express Yourself
......
Q
70
Juniors
JUNIORS
If
the world were to end
next week, what would
you do?
"I
would travel to Italy, Greece, and Japan-
charging everything along the way. Hey-
why pay cash when the world's ending,
right?!?"
-Stacey Berrios
ABOVE: Twizzlers, anyone??!!
BELOw-c
·
·
irl beats
•
guy
m
wrestling.
LEFT:
IRON
·
Y
or what?!?!
Juniors
71
RI
GHT: La
rr
y a
nd J
ay a
r
e (
b
e
li
eve i
t
o
r n
o
t
)
s
t
a
n
d
in
g o
n
t
h
e
Hu
dso
n Ri
ve
r
.
B
ELO
W
:
H
ey,
h
ow
did th
ey ge
t th
a
t b
ike
up
th
e
r
e??
ABO
VE:
H
ey
,
w
h
a
t'
s go
in
g o
n
o
ut th
e
r
e??
72
Juniors
RIGHT
:
Sh
e
ron and I
so
b
e
l in th
e
ir humbl
e
h
o
m
e
o
n
ca
mpu
s.
Time to express yourself
.
.... .
'
Q
-
JUNIORS
What was your
experience like at
Woodstock?
"It was the biggest party I ever went to.
Everyone got along;
it
was like a modern day
Utopia- but with mud."
-John Nauke
•
ABOVE
:
YEAH!!!! A
rid
e
off ca
mpu
s
!!
!
!
L
EFT:
Which
o
n
e
do
es
n
'
t
belon
g?
Junior
s
73
B
E
LOW:
A
n
o
th
e
r
wa
rm d
ay
h
e
r
e a
t M
a
ri
s
t
.
..
(
wh
o's s
h
e
th
row
in
g
t
o a
n
yways?)
RI
G
HT: T
a
lk ab
o
u
t j
u
s
t HANG! G
A
ROU D!
?
!
?
Time to Express Yourself ..... .
Q
7
4
Junior
s
JUNIORS
If you could ask Pres.
Murray any question,
what would it be?
"Why does he keep cutting down the trees?
-Courtney Krasko
ABOVE
:
C
a
n w
e
call him natu
r
e
bo
y
now
??
>
,
B
E
LOW:
So
m
e
b
o
d
y
h
e
lp th
e
bunn
y
r
a
bbit!!!
! (
Or
w
h
a
t
eve
r it i
s)!
ABOV
E:
What d
o yo
u m
ea
n
yo
u
'
r
e go
in
g
t
o w
rit
e
u
s
u
p?
L
EFT
:
We
ll it l
oo
k
s
lik
e G
r
eg
l
os
tthi
swa
t
e
r
g
u
n wa
r
!
Juniors
75
L
E
FT: Thr
o
u
g
h thi
c
k
a
nd thin
,
th
ese g
irl
s
l
oo
k
as
th
o
u
g
h n
o
thin
g w
ill
eve
r
se
p
e
r
a
t
e
th
e
m
.
B
E
LOW
:
It
l
oo
k
s as
th
o
u
g
h
g
u
ys a
nd
g
irl
s CAN
ju
s
t b
e
fri
e
nd
s!
A
BO
VE: G
u
ess w
h
o's
r
ea
d
y fo
r
a
h
a
ll
o
w
ee
n p
a
r
ty??
RI
G
HT
: So
m
e
M
a
ri
s
t
s
tud
e
nt
s
d
ec
id
e
d t
o
parti
c
ip
a
t
e
in th
e A
id
s Wa
lk
in
New Yo
rk
C
i
ty
.
76
Juniors
Time
,
to Express yourself ..... .
Q
JUNIORS
Where do you see
yourself in ten years?
"Somewhere in Europe
.... begging for food."
-Scott
Campbell
ABOVE: What's this kid doing?!?!
LEFT: Was the
sa
l
sa
too
h
ot??
FIESTA time!!
Juni
o
r
s
77
B
E
LOW
: Yo
u kn
ow, so
m
e of
u
s
d
o s
tud
y.
RI
G
HT: H
e
r
e's
l
oo
kin
g a
t
yo
u!
Time to Express Yourself ..... .
Sophomores
Q
78 Sop
h
omore
s
What was the weirdest
thing you have ever
done at Marist?
"Last year,
I
lived in Leo Hall, known for fire
alarms at the time. In the winter, during one
of the alarms,
I
would run to the top of the
hill outside screaming like a madman in a
pair of shorts and sneakers - maybe a jacket."
- Trevor Hill
ABOV
E:
Li
sa
,
roa
min
g a
round th
e
h
a
ll
s o
f
S
h
ea
h
a
n
.
I
,
BELOW
:
Mari
s
t
accepts everyone, even
tho
se
in
aprons
.
ABOVE: I'm thinking, I'm thinking!!!!!
LEFT
:
Smokin
'
!!!!!!!
Sophomores 79
RIGHT
:
Exc
u
se
me- Do
we
know
you?
BELOW: Hi
,
h
ow ya
doin'?
ABOVE
:
All
Smiles
for C
hri
s
tm
as
break.
80
Sophomores
RIGHT:
Some of
us like to
t
ake a
break-
in
the
snow!!
'
·
Time
,
to Express Yourself ..... .
Sophomores
~---
- - - - - - -
Q
What was your most
embarrasing moment
at Marist?
"I was walking back from class to my dorm
and I thought I saw a friend of mine. I ran
up behind her and covered her eyes with my
hands. When she turned around it was a
teacher! I was so embarassed ... "
-Mike Onorato
A
BO
VE:
M
o
m
sa
id th
e
r
e wo
uld b
e
d
ays
lik
e
thi
s.
L
E
FT
:
Ju
s
t
a
n
o
th
e
r
a
ll-ni
g
ht
e
r
fo
r m
e!
Sophomore
s
81
BE
L
O
W
: So so
m
e o
f u
s
DO h
ave
m
o
n
ey
t
o ge
t r
ea
l
RI
G
HT:
Eve
r
yo
n
e
n
eeds so
m
eo
n
e
t
o
J
ea
n
o
n
.
food!!
Time to Express Yourself ..... .
,,
Sophomores
Q
8
2 Sophomore
s
What was your most
memorable experience
at Marist?
"It was the first day moving in as a freshman.
It was not as scary as I thought
it
would be. I
was a little shocked when I saw my new
roommate for the first time, but now we get
along so well, we have been living together
ever since.
-
Jane
Noblet
ABOV
E
: Off t
o ye
t
a
n
o
th
e
r
exc
it
i
n
g
cl
ass
.
B
EL
OW
:
Ju
s
t
a
n
o
th
e
r fri
e
ndl
y face o
n
Ma
ri
s
t
ca
mpu
s.
ABOVE
:
All
s
miles from thi
s e
nd.
L
E
FT
:
D
eck
th
e
h
a
ll
s of S
h
ea
h
a
n
.
Sophomores
83
RIGHT:
All
dressed
and
ready to party!
BELOW: Hi mom!
ABOVE
:
Who
ever said
three
was a crowd?
RIGHT: Where's mom
when you
need her?
84 Sophomores
•
,
t
Time t~ Express Yourself ..... .
Sophomores
What is your most
frightening experience
as a child?
"I
was 5 and in a store when
I
walked away
from my mom looking for toys. When
I
came
back, she was gone so then
I
ran around the
store crying. Then a policeman found me.
I
recall sitting on the desk when he called my
mom over the loudspeaker." -Lisa Camagna
ABOVE: I shouldn
'
t have
gone out
last night.
LEFT: Some of
us REALLY understand the
concept
of
h
a
n
ging out.
>
,
Sop
h
omores
85
BELOW:
Girls
just wanna have fun!
RIGHT: CRAMM! G
.
A new word to the
Marist
community.
Time to Express Yourself ..... .
Sophomores
Q
86 Sophomores
What was the best joke
that you ever played on
someone?
"My roommate and I stretched clear plastic
tape across the span of one of our suite-
mate's bedroom door so when he woke up he
got a "sticky" surprise when he tried to walk
out of the door."
- Daryl Richard
ABOVE: Some
of
us do
enjoy
Marist functions.
BELOW: We're
like
two peas in
a
pod!
ABOVE: Kara and
Dianne
.
What a pair.
LEFT: Does
it
eve
r
stop
raining?
,
,
Sophomores 87
RIGHT:
Erika,
Lisa
,
and
Courtney
tak
e some
time
ou
t t
o ge
t
ready
for
the big night.
BELOW:
Melissa is
h
a
n
g
in
g o
ut
wi
th
two
of
her
new friends
,
Pete
a
nd
Jodi.
ABOVE:
Any
reque
s
t
s?
First Hilary
h
as
to fi
g
ur
e o
ut
how to turn
th
e s
t
ereo o
n
.
88
Freshmen
RIGHT:
The
so
rority
gir
l
s s
h
ow so
m
e of
their
spir
it
and
ge
t t
o
know
eac
h
o
th
e
r
.
Time
,
to Express Yourself ....
.
.
Q
Freshmen
How did you spend
your first weekend at
Marist?
"Brookside
+
No Curfew
=
FUN!"
"Meeting Girls"
- Brian Fagon
- Kraig Ogren
A
BO
VE:
K
a
ti
e a
nd M
ega
n
a
r
e foo
lin
g a
r
o
w1d
o
n
th
e
bu
sy fo
urth fl
oo
r
i
n L
eo.
LEFT
:
It
's
m
ov
i
e
ni
g
ht
fo
r Brid
ge
t
, A
pril
,
El
yssa, a
nd
C
a
rl
ee
n
.
Freshmen 89
BELOW:
Jess
a
nd
Jess
s
ho
w
their frined what we
do in
college.
Twister
anyone?
RIGHT:
Greg
can't
decide what
t
o wea
r
to class;
maybe
some
pants would be nice.
Time to Express Yourself
.....
.
Q
90 Freshmen
Freshmen
What do you like most
about Marist?
"It's small, and you can get more personal
attention; people get to know you."
- Christine Tripodi
"The people and the opportunities."
- Heather Ohliger
ABOVE:
Melissa
,
Trudy
,
and
Sarah test the
showers
to
see
if there is
any
hot
water.
B
E
LOW
:
H
ey-
thi
s
doe
s
n
'
t look lik
e
on
-
c
a
mpu
s
h
o
u
s
in
g
!
!
ABOV
E
:
Tom i
s
e
m
barra
ss
ed fo
r h
i
s
frie
n
d
,
J
i
m
,
w
h
o
m
e
t
h
i
s
date
,
Ra
c
h
e
l
,
in th
e
L
eo
H
a
ll Datin
g
Gam
e
.
L
EFf
:
Th
e ga
n
g s
p
e
nt th
e
d
ay
in
Y
C C
hri
s
tm
as
s
h
o
ppin
g a
nd
s
t
o
pp
e
d b
y
C
e
ntr
a
l
Pa
rk
fo
r
a group
pi
c
tur
e
.
F
r
eshmen 91
RIGHT
:
Ralph
is
too busy typing his paper to pose
for a picture.
BELOW:
Time for a
nap; Kerry has been
working
too
hard
on
her
work.
ABOVE:
Bethann is
chatting with one of
her
RIGHT:
What
'
s
he doing?
friends .
.
.
on
their bill!
92 Freshmen
Time to Express Yourself
.....
.
Q
Freshmen
What
do you
think
of
the classes at Marist?
"They're difficult and time consuming."
- Dawn O'Connell
"Small, interesting, and long."
- Jenn Walegir
A
BO
VE:
C
o
uld h
e
b
e
th
e
n
ex
t P
ea
rl J
a
m
?
LEFT:
L
ee (a.
k
.a.
Lim
ey)
i
s exc
it
e
d b
eca
u
se s
h
e
ju
s
t
go
t
a ca
ll fr
o
m
so
m
eo
n
e s
h
e
h
as
n
'
t t
a
lk
e
d t
o
in
aw
hil
e .
.
.
Freshmen 93
BELOW:
Jim
and Tom are
hanging
out with
their
RIGHT:
Locked
out
Kristen?
Follow
lock-out
friends
and
brought their teddy bear
along.
procedures.
Time to Express Yourself .....
.
Q
94 Freshmen
Freshmen
Is dorm life exactly
_
what you expected it to
.
be?
"Much better!
I
feel like
I
belong to a big
family.
I
love living on fifth floor Leo."
-
Wendy Kenerson
"No, the bathrooms are dirty and there is no
heat."
- Christine McGee
WANST
AIDS
ABOVE:
Surprise
,
Aundre!
I
,
BELOW:
S
mil
e eve
r
yo
n
e
!
ABOVE:
Sh
e
rri
,
Gi
a
nn
a,
D
a
ni
e
ll
e, a
nd Erin
s
ti
c
k
t
oge
th
e
r.
LEFT:
Th
e g
irl
s a
r
e a
ll r
e
ad
y
t
o go o
ut
a
nd l
ook
b
ea
utiful.
..
Freshmen 95
RIGHT:
Christine,
Jen,
and
Rachel dressed up
as
farmers for
Halloween.
BELOW:
Lynn, Mandi,
and
Mimma take
advantage
of
the Kodak moment.
11
\
t
(
ABOVE
:
The
guys
in Leo
stru
t th
eir stuff as
ladies
for
Halloween.
96 Freshmen
RIGHT:
The
sexy Sheahan
ladies
are
ready to
wow
their dates
at
the
Semi-formal.
I
,
Time
,
to Express Yourself ..... .
Q
Freshmen
What is your most
embarrassing moment
at Marist?
"I
fell down the stairs twice at Brookside."
-
Lisa Mele
"When Limey opened my robe in the
hallway."
- Kerry Suykora
ABOV
E:
Th
ese
girl
s
l
oo
k lik
e
th
ey'
r
e a
ll
se
t
a
nd r
ea
d
y
t
o go o
ut
fo
r
a
fun ni
g
ht!
LEFf:
D
a
ni
e
ll
e,
J
a
im
e,
J
a
im
e,
B
ec
k
y,
M
e
li
ssa, a
nd
J
ess
i
ca a
r
e
all r
ea
d
y
for th
e
bi
g
H
a
ll
o
w
ee
n p
a
r
ty
.
Freshmen 97
·
STUDENT LIFE
.
4Uputo~aattto
LIFE.
j
)
•
· ~
Waiting to use the computers, running to class, taking a
nap, and grabbing lunch. Sound familar? These are the
Days of Our Lives
Beep, Beep!
Your alarm goes off.
It's
7:25, and you
have
an 8:00
class;
so you
hit
the
snooze
button thinking
you
have
plenty of
time to put
on a
hat
,
some
dirt
y
jeans
and a sweatshirt,
then brush
your
teeth
and
run to class.
While
in class
you
take
some
notes
(in
between
falling asleep)
and
then
contimpla
te
whether you should
go
to breakfast
or go
back to bed
after
class! Most
of
us
go
ba
·
ck
to
sleep and
catch a fewmorezzz's,
then
getup around
noon, go
to lunch,
check
yo
ur
empty
mailbox
(hoping someday
to
get some-
100 Student
Life
thing)
and
run
off
to more
classes. After
your
last class,
yo
u
grab a few friends
and off
to dinner
you go, or off you go
to make
dinner! You all
h
a
ng
out for
a while
to let the meal
se
ttle
down, and
then
you go
to do
so
me homework
,
watch
a
movie
and (if
it's
a
Wednesday
or
Thursday night)
, yo
u
and a
bunch
of
people
go and
hang
out at
the
"regular"
places
.
Although many
of
u
s
choose
to
go out
almost every
night, it's
also
nice just to
sit
back
and
relax
....
and
do
absolutely
NOTHING!
ABOVE: Stamps a
r
e
n
ow .32 cents?!!?
Weren
'
t
th
ey
.2
9 cents yesterday?!
BELOW: This thing broke
AGAI ?!
LETT:
Will
s
h
e o
r
wo
n
'
t
s
h
e
h
ave
m
ai
l thi
s
tim
e?!?!
ABOV
E
: A
ty
p
ica
l
sce
n
e
.
.
.
. a
ll th
e
cl
asses yo
u
wa
nt
t
o
t
a
k
e a
r
e
fill
e
d
.
ow yo
u h
ave
t
o
t
a
k
e
Ad
va
n
ce
d
C
a
lculu
s
[
V
!
LETT
:
Th
e sce
n
a
ri
o: a go
r
geo
u
s
d
ay o
ut .
..
.
d
o we s
till h
ave
th
e e
n
e
r
gy
t
o go
t
o
cl
ass a
ft
e
r l
y
in
g
o
ut
a
ll d
ay?
!
Student Life 101
ABOVE LEFT: So
so
m
e
of
u
s
DO
wake
up
at
8:00a
m t
o
do
o
ur h
a
ir!
102 Student Life
ABOVE:
Is it midterms
week or what?
BELOW
:
Off
goes
Little
Blu
e
Ridin
g
Hood
.....
not to
g
randmoth
e
r
'
s
h
o
u
se
but t
o
th
e
cafeteria
in
s
tead
!
RIGHT
:
Are
yo
u taking
a
picture
of
m
e?
!
Making-a sta
t
emen
t
withou
t
saying a wor
d
?
S
ome like to
dress up and some like to bum out. With others, there's .
..
.
.
No Explanation Needed
We all
have
our fashion statements,
but
some
express
themselves more
differently than
others- which
just
shows your
personality!
We all
have
our
days
where some
of us bum
around all
day in
sweats while others
look
as if
they just
walked out of a
J.
Crew catalogue.
But hey,
when
yo
u have
an 8:00 am
class,
who
has
time
for a shower?
Then
again,
people
ARE
doing
some
pretty unusual
things
around
here-
or
is it just
that nobody is phased by
anything
anymore? For
instance, does
anyone ever
pierce their
ears anymore?
Belly piercing,
nose piercing, lip piercing, tongue piercing,
eyebrow
piercing
....
.
where
next?!
Remember the
video
by
Aerosmith where
the
girl
is
shown
having her belly button
pierced??
While
some of
us
were saying
"ouch", others were
running
out
to
get
it
done.
(We
commend
you guys!)
Thinking
about
it,
what "in"
thing is
going
to be next??
Maybe
people
will
be
spiking
their hair
again ..... (okay,
maybe not.)
ABOVE: A pair of jeans and a tee
s
hirt
,.
....
and off to Add
/
Drop!
LEFT
:
Did
yo
u
ay
that
we
have to
go
to clas
s
today?!!
Student Life 103
So maybe you don't have your bio lab finished or your
English report done. Well, face it, youtre one of us ......
Procrastinators
Ok,
ok- so you
didn't
study
for
your
3:00 exam yet.
So, it's
only
11:30am
and you figure you
have plenty
of
time
to
get
dressed
,
eat
lunch,
go
to the
bookstore to buy the book
you
need
to
study with, and still
have plenty of
time to
watch your favorite
T.V
.
show
before
you study
for
your exam,
right? Then
you
think to
yourself-
"WHY
DID I DO THIS
AGAIN?" You
should
have kept that promise to
study at
least
one
day in
advance.
But
then
again, you
DID have to do two
104
Student
Life
weeks of
laundry
yesterday, and
Pearl
Jam
WAS
playing live
over
the tube
for
three hours.
How could you
help that?
o
problem.
After
thinking
what you
could
have done,
you eat
lunch, buy the
book
and watch T.V. with
plenty
of
'
time to
study.
You finally
sit
down
and "hit
the
books".
After an
hour
of studying
,
you
'
re
done
with
20 minutes to
spare. Finally,
time to relax.
You slowly start
drifting
off
to
sleep for a quick
nap before
your
test,
when you
think-
"
was
that
five
page paper
for
Chemistry due
at 6:15
TONIGHT?!
"
ABOVE: Some people
like
t
o
t
a
ke
a "s
hort
"
break
in
the
n
e
w
r
e
cr
e
ation ro
o
m
..
..
for a f
e
w h
o
ur
s.
BELOW:
It
l
o
ok
s
like th
ese g
irl
s
will b
e
pullin
g
a
n
a
ll-ni
g
ht
e
r for
a
n
y
w
o
rk th
a
t n
ee
d
s
t
o
b
e
d
o
n
e
!
LEFT: 2x+(435
%
-
342z) x
1732874389=643873
%
-537z
(And
I have to
know
thi
s
b
y 3:30 ...... )
67
ABOVE: Some of
u
s
tak
e a
dv
a
nta
ge
of
the
five
minut
es
we
h
ave
b
efo
r
e
our
cla
ss
b
egins
to
finish
s
tud
y
in
g.
But
h
ey,
if
yo
u d
o
n
'
t
kn
ow
it
by
n
ow .....
.
LEFT
:
Eight
minut
es
l
eft
t
o
find
th
e co
rr
ect spe
llin
g
of
mi
crose
i
s
m
for
sc
i
e
n
ce
class.
,,
Student Life 105
ABOVE: For Amy Pfannkuch
and
John
Alfono, sometimes ou
r
"other
half
"
is
also
our
best friend.
106 Student Life
RIGHT
:
And
so
me relationships
are
just
friendly
....
LEFT:
Could
this be the future
Mr. and Mrs.
Riva?!
BELOW:
A
postive part
about
having
an on-campus
re
l
ationship
is that
you
don
'
t need
a vistor's
pass!
Whethe:i:-it's here or somewhere else, there are always
complications to deal with in each
RELATIONSHIP
So what's
the
difference
between
an
on-campus
relationship
and a
long
distance relationship?
A very
long
and expensive
phone bill. But
seriously,
there
are
both pros
and
cons for
both
sides of
the
spectrum.
For instance,
if
you
have
a relation-
ship on campus, you
have the
opportunity
to
see
them
24/7
.... but
then
again, you
need
a
break
once
in
a while.
On the
other
hand,
if you
have
a
long distance relationship, then
you're
probably
always
looking
at a
three
page phone bill...
.. and it always seems
to
have that
same
number
on
it!
There goes
another
paycheck.
....
but
you
rarely
get
to
see
that
special someone, so
it's
worth
it!
(Besides
,
you'll
have plenty
of chances
to
hang
out and see each other over
the
summer!)
So
in
either case,
there
will always
be SOMETHING to
overcome
...
.
whether
the
relationship
continues or
not, it
was
fun
while
it lasted!
UPPER LEFT CORNER: I
h
o
p
e
m
y
ph
o
n
e
biU
i
s
n
'
t
t
oo
hi
g
h thi
s
m
o
nth
.
.
.
. co
n
s
id
e
rin
g
it
was $
2
30.76
la
s
t month!
ABOVE
:
Str
a
n
ge
r
s
in th
e
ni
g
ht...
... (
h
ey
,
yo
u
n
eve
r kn
ow)
!
Student Life 107
Not going away for break?
If
t
here's.one problem that's
stopping us all from touring Europe and the Is
l
ands, it's
The Cash Flow
Excuse
me
,
do
you
take
Visa?
Mastercard? American Express?
Okay
,
so you're
using
"plastic"
again.But
then
again,
if
you want
something, you get
it because money
is not
an
issue
when you're at college.
(Don't we wish!)
Is the
word "debt"
in
YOUR vocabulary?
Didn
'
t
you
have
money in
your
bank
account at
the beginning
of
the
school year?
(Remember
those
good old
days.)
Then Spring
Break
rolls around and
you
have
WHAT?! $6.76
in
your
108 Student
Life
bank
account? What
happened? Oh,
that
's
right... Christmas
,
books ...
It
all adds
up
.
Why is it that
you
need
money to
socialize? A
buck here,
a
buck
there
.
..
.
then
you're
broke.
So
instead
you
decide to
charge
it- and then
one
month
later
you're $670
.
98
in debt.
(Well, at
least
you can
pa
y
off
that
.98
right now
.
- Who
REALLY needs to do laundry for the next
2 weeks?)
Well
,
as
long
as you're
having
fun at college (and
doing
your
laundry
once in while),
then just do it.
ABOVE: Thank
goo
dn
ess
for thrifty cash
...
a
lth
o
u
gh
it does
see
m t
o go ve
r
y
quickly.
BELOW: Kelly
a
lwa
ys seems
to
get
the Marist
pizza!
L
E
FT
:
I
w
i
s
h I h
a
d m
y
m
o
m
's c
h
ec
kb
ook i
n
s
t
ea
d
of
min
e!
ABOV
E: Fo
r th
ose w
h
o
h
ave
j
o
b
s o
n
ca
mpu
s-
it
's off
t
o wo
rk th
ey go!
LE
FT
:
T
o
n
y see
m t
o
kn
ow
th
e
m
ea
nin
g of wo
r
ki
n
g
"
nin
e
t
o
fi
ve"
.
Student Life 109
ABOVE: It
's
ju
s
t
o
n
e o
f th
ose
bum around da
ys.
110 Student Life
L
E
FT
:
So
m
e of
u
s
D
EF
!
A
T
EL Y t
r
y
to avo
i
d
h
av
in
g a
m
o
rnin
g
class
.
B
E
LOW
:
1
5
seco
n
ds
t
o go ....
1
4
seco
nd
s
t
o
go
....
BELOW
:
I'm
OUTTA
HERE!!!!!
Fee
l
like bumming out for the day ... or the week? College
doesn't teil you what to do or what to wear. It's all about
Expressing Yourse
lf
Don't
we
wish
college was
just
hanging out,
seeing your
friends
all
day
without going
to
any
classes?
(Keep dreaming!) Do
you sometimes
feel
like
sneaking
underneath
your
covers
and not
coming
out to face
the
world
that day?
(We
ALL have
those days-
and
no one
could
tell
you
that
you
can't hide in
your
bed!)
And
other days it feels
as
though
you
could do just
about anything? So you
do it-
without anyone's
permission!
Why is it that in high
school
it
seems as
though
we were so
restricted
..
.
about
the clothes
we wore and what
time
you were allowed
to
stay out with your
friends.
In
college,
it's
so
different....
you
could walk around
in
your
pajama
s
and
slippers around your friends and
no
one
would care. You
hang
out with your friend
s
in their dorm
room
until
5:00am-
trying to
get some work
done.
There
'
s
no
one
here to
tell
you when
to
go
to
sleep. Too
bad
college
wasn't
just
about
hanging
out and
bumming
around
....
it's
about
handling
your
responsibilities
... at 5
:
00am.
ABOV
E
: GRRRRR
.
..
.
..
Wh
y
did
I
wa
it
til th
e
l
as
t
minut
e
t
o
d
o
thi
s 7
p
age
p
a
p
e
r
?
!
?
!
L
E
TT
:
H
ey!
Shut th
e
li
g
ht
o
ff!
!
Th
e
r
e
's
so
m
e
se
ri
o
u
s
s
l
ee
pin
g go
in
g o
n h
e
r
e!
Student
Life 111
FACULTY
.
·
.
ACADEMIC
e ~ U
.
.
.
-
~°t~~~
_.·
-
,-
~ ,
''1~to~,pueeutted
JIUd
«JhJ,
,pue evze,
~
,pue
hwe,
~ t o ~
(put
to
4ee
thit
·
tpue
.
ea#
' J O ~ ~
«luee
,pue
d/le
-
'
~suPPORT.
FACULTY, STAFF A:\·
Paul Adogamhe
Political Science
Peter Amato
Assoc. Dean of Student Affairs
Roberta Amato
Director of Counseling Services
Brother Paul Ambrose
President Emenritus
Patricia Aykroyd
Special Services
Renee Boyd
Director of STEP /C-STEP
Deborah Brandl
Student Accounts
Barbara Brenner
Collection
Dev.
Librarian
Michael Britt
Psychology
Sandy Browne
Comp Sci /Math Secretary
Ermina Budd
Housing Secretary
Margaret Calista
Social Work
'
Anthony Campilii
Vice Pres. of
Business
Affairs
Joseph Canale
Psychology
Barbara Carpenter
Director
of Leaning
Center
Barbara Carvalho
Direcotor
of
the
Marist Poll
Irma Blanco-Casey
Spanish
Thomas Casey
Philosophy
Eleanor Charwat
Exec.
Director of
Adult Ed.
Gerard Cox
VP Student Affairs
114
Facul
t
y,
Staff
and Administra
tion
ADMINISTRATION
Brenda Crossley
Athletic Acad. Advisor
William Davis
Communications
Brother
Tom
Delaney
Mentor
Brian Desilets
Physics
Deborah Dicaprio
Asst.
Dean
Stud
.
Affairs
John Digilio
Sr. Programmer-Analyst
Sharon Dillon
Sr. Secretary Purchasing
Jim Dodd
Coor
.
Clinical Education
John Doherty
Criminal Justice
Edward Donohue
Philosophy
Cheryl DuBois
Asst. Registrar
Mary Easton
Admin
.
Exec. Secretary
William Eidle
Chair. Social
&
Beh. Sci
John Fahey
Communications
Barbara Favicchio
Cashier
Business
Office
James Fay
MGMT Studies
Craig Fennel
Dir.
Financial Aid
Elena Filchagina
Librarian AV Periodicals
Craig
Fisher
Information Systems
Brydon Fitzgerald
Mentor
Faculty, Staff and Admini
s
tration 115
FACULTY, STAFF A
Leah Fleming
Resident
Director
Cheryl
Frazier-W
oods
Coor. Human Resources
Ronald Gauch
MGMT Studies
Raymond Gila
Accounting
Thomas Goldpaugh
English
Richard Goldstone
Mathematics
Katherine Greiner
Medical Technology
Sue Gronewold
History
Robert Grossman
MGMT Studies
Katherine Gunthert
Exec. Secretary Stud. Affairs
Gregory Hamilton
Economics
Jeanne Hamilton
Dir. Campus Ministry
,
John Hartsock
Communications
James Helmre1ch
Mathematics
Neil Hogan
Copy Center
Rosemary Illustrato
Career
Development
Judith Ivankovic
Registrar
Nora Jachym
Teacher Education
Elizabeth Jaycox
Science Admin. Secretary
Al Jurkowski
Coor. Juvenile Prgms
116 Faculty,
Staff and Administration
ADMINISTRATION
Claire Keith
French
Brother Donald Kelly
Mathematics
John Kelly
Chair. MGMT Studies
Syed Khatib
Communications
Maureen Kilgour
Alumni Affairs
Steven Killion
English
Joseph Kirtland
Mathematics
Chester Kobos
MGMT Studies
Shaileen Kopec
VP Advancement
Constance Kustas
Business Office
Olympia
Kustas
Stud
.
Academic Affair
s
Patricia Laffin
Learning Center
Raymond Lane
Dir.
Postal Services
Thomas Lanspery
Dir
.
Purchasing
Richard La Pietra
Chemistry
Mary Sue Lawrence
Communications
Barbara Lavin
Criminal
Justice
Timothy Lawton
Telecomm
.
Analyst
Ann Lehane
A VP Receptionist
Na dine Lewis
Counselor HEOP
Facult
y,
Staff and Admini
s
tration 11
7
FACULTY, STAFF AN
:
Diane Litynski
MGMT Studies
Robin Loeffler
Student Accounts
Robert Lynch
Dir. Student Activities
Thomas Lynch
En
v
ironmental Science
Virginia Marquardt
Art History
Pamela Maurer
Secretary Teacher Educ.
William Mayo
Ad jun ct Professor
Jerome McBride
Dir. Info Systems
Rev. Luke McCann
Chaplain
Mary McComb
Communications
Martha McConaghy
Sr. S
ys
tems Programmer
Richard McGovern
Mathematics
Patricia Mcsweeney
Div. Comm. Secretary
Joann Mead
Accountant
Eugene Melan
MGMT Studies
David Meredith
MGMT Studies
Maria Moccio
Science Secretary
Andrew Molloy
Chair
.
Div. Science
Rosemary Molloy
Dir
.
Stud. Acad
.
Affrs.
Jacki Moriarty
Coor. Ad ult Education
11
8 Fac
ultv
, S
t
a
ff
a
nd
A
dmini
s
tr
a
tion
ADMINISTRATION
Linda Muhlfeld
College Activities
Victoria Mullen
Budget/Fin
.
Analyst
Desmond Murray
Asst. Dir
.
Field Exp.
Mary Murphy
College Activities
Joanne Myers
Political Science
Scott Myers
Dir. Paralegal Prgm.
Prema Nakra
MGMT Studies
Catherine Newkirk
Medical Technology
Augustine Nolan
Chair
.
Comm Arts
Casimir Norkeliunas
Russian
Robert Norman
Communications
Roger Norton
Computer Science
Jane O'Brien
Dir
.
Health Services
Daniel Okada
Criminal Justice
Edward O'Keefe
Psychology
Pamela Oloffson
Secretary
Grad
Adm.
Miriam Oren
A VP Exec Secretary
Patricia Oswald
Asst.
Dir.
Human Res.
John Padovani
Asst.
Dir
Housing
Luis Perez
History
Faculty
,
Staff and Admini
s
tration 11
9
FACULTY, STAFF AN
Amy Pettengill
Coor. Marist Abroad
Marilyn Poris
Dir.
Inst. Research
Matthew Poslusny
Chemistry
Kenneth Powers
Registrar
Theodore Prenting
Dir.
MBA Program
Gail Presby
Philosophy
Timothy Priest
Counselor Juv. Prgms
James Raimo
Director,
Housing
Bro. Richard Rancourt
Mathematics
Edward Reyman
Dir
.
Payroll
Caroline Rider
Business
Evan Rivers
,
English
Dorothea Roche
MGMT Studies
Iris Ruiz-Grech
Dir
.
HEOP
James Ryan
Coor. Special Services
Steve Sansola
Asst.
Dean
Activities
Victoria Sarkisian
Coor. Linguistic Studies
Judith Saunders
English
John Scileppi
Dir. MA Psychology
Linda Scorza
Special Services
120
Faculty,
Staff and Administration
D
ADMINISTRATION
Art Scott
Comp Sci/
Math
Deidre Sepp
Dir. Career Deveopment
Alison Sexton
Asst. Athletic
Director
Onkar Sharma
Chau.
Comp
Sci
&
Math
Herbert Sherman
Business
Ralph Short
Grounds
Supervisor
Grace Sinisi
Student Affairs
Stuart Smyth
History
Teresa Snyder-Leiby
Biology
Mary Spinella
Library
Assistant
Lisa Spoor
Admin
Clerk,
Fin. Aid
Randy Stolz
Comp Sci
&
Math
Laurence Sullivan
Religious Studies
Robert Sullivan
Medical Technology
Richard Sunderland
Accounting
Jean Talbot
MGMT Studies
James TenEyck
Computer Science
Wendy Thatcher
Health
Services
Brian Toale
Copy Center
..
Faculty, Staff and Administration 121
FACULTY, STAFF A
Congratulations
to the
f
ollowing faculty
tnetnbers:
Faculty
of
the Year -
Katherine Greiner
Medical
Technology
Robin Torres
Dir
.
Annual Fund
Marianne Toscano
Coor
.
Math, Learning
Vincent Toscano
Chair. Div
.
Humanities
Jonah Triebwasser
Paralegal Studies
Marc vanderHeyden
VP Academic Affairs
Barbara Vanltallie
Coor. Math Placement
Carol Vari
Acting Dir
.
Grad Adm.
Vernon Vavrina
Political Science
Frances Vergili
Accounts Pa
y
able
Christina Vertullo
Mathematics
Loretta Walicki
Switchboard Operator
Syde Wattoff
P~ysical Plant Secretar
y
122 Fac
ult
y,
St
a
ff
a
nd Ad~
s
tration
ADMINISTRATION
Outstanding Recipients-
Modele Clark -Communications
Even Rivers- English
Joseph Weglarz
Dir
.
Student Accounts
Paul Weiner
MGMT Studies
Peter Wenzel
Locksmith
Thomas Wermuth
History
Theresa
Whitesell
Dir. Development
AD
Cheryl Whitley
Social Work
Bro. Michael Williams
Asst. Camp. Minister
Ann Winfield
Dir.
Enroll. Comm.
Jo-Ann Wohlfahrt
Alumni Affairs Asst.
Harold Wood
VP Admissions
Amanda Zarrelli
Sr. Accounting Clerk
Louis Z uccarello
Coor. Political Science
Best Adj Junctl Administration-
Dean Amato
Recognition Awards-
John Doherty-Criminal Justice
Ronald Gauch- Public Administration
Joesph Kirtland- Mathematics
Faculty,
Staff and
Administration 123
SPORTS
u
~
uu:tteatwe
t o ~
pvt
a ~
·,
.
'
.
.
'
,____
MEN'S F~~=l=BJ\J;J;
Become Metro AAC Champions with
7-3
record
The Red Foxes won
Senior Bruce A. Harris,
the MAAC Football
voted the Marist
SCOREBOARD
League championship
Sportsperson of the
(7-3); 6-1 MAAC)
in their first season of
Year, was named to the
Central Conn. 22
24L
play in the conference
All-MAAC and All-
Iona
37
19W
Wagner
8
30L
and tied the school
ECAC Division
SL John's
32
13W
record for wins finish-
I-AA first team all star
St. Peter's
33
ow
Duquesne
16
7W
ing at 7-3. Marist went squads while freshman
Canisius
13
ow
6-1 in MAAC play with tailback Jovan Rhodes
Georgetown 12
35L
St. Francis
39
16W
victories over St. John's, broke the school record
Siena
45
19W
Duquesne, Iona, and
for most yards with
MAAC Champions
Siena to name a few.
1,059 for the year.
LE
FT
:
T
h
e
R
e
d
Foxes
pl
a
n th
e
ir
s
tr
a
t
egy
b
efo
r
e
th
e
pl
ay
.
126
•
Foo
tb
all
ABOVE: Don't
attack
until
you
see
the
whites of
thei~
eyes .....
ABOVE and TOP RIGHT: The team wins against one one of their
rivalries- St.
Francis.
Football
•
127
'
BELOW and RIGHT: Running ten mile
s
a da
y
reall
y
pa
ys
off!
Swift 2nd at NEC's; women 3rd overall ..... .
Men
'
s Cross Country-
Senior David Swift was
catalyst for the Red Foxes,
wimming
'
two individual
titles at Monmouth ap.d
Fairfield and leading the
team to championships
i9n the same races. Swift
also placed second at the
Northeast Conference
championships, the best
finish ever by a Marist
runner, and third of 164
runners at the IC4A
Championships. He was
an All-NEC and All-IC4A
selection. As a Team,
Marist had one of its most
productive seaons ever
finishing third or bettter
12
8
• Cro
ss
Country
in five out of seven
meets and two team
titles.
Women's Cross
Country- The Red
Foxes placed 3rd at the
NEC Championships
and were 5th or better
in five of their seven
meets this past fall.
Colleen Carson was the
team's top finisher at
the NEC's placing 10th
and was seventh at
the Albany and Fair-
field Invitationals.
Sophomore Kathleen
Woodson finished as
the top Marist runner
in every race she ran.
SCOREBOARDS
Men's Cross Country
Cen Conn Inv 2nd of 6
Fordham Inv 14th of 25
Monmouth
1st of 5
Fairfield Inv 1st of 7
Columbia
w/
Wagner
3rd of 4
NEC Champ 3rd of
to
IC4A/ECAC tttrh of 29
Women's Cross
Country
Cen Conn Inv 4th of 7
Fordham Inv 7th of 20
Rutgers Inv 2nd of 6
Fairfield Inv 2nd of 7
Albany
2nd of 8
NEC Champ 4th of 10
!C4A/ECAC 11th of 31
'
Men finish
-
7th at NEC's; Schneider sets personal record
Men's Indoor Track-
The men finished seventh
at NEC
Championships,
with senior
David Swift
capping an excellent
campaign
by
finishing
fourth in
the
3,000
meters.
Swift
also
had
four other
first place finished,
two
at
1,000 meters
and
two
at
3,000meters. Men'sTrack
and Field-
The Red
Foxes
have had
a solid spring
led
by
senior
distance
runners David Swift
and
Andrew
Baird
and
sophomore Matt
Pool.
Marist was primed for its
best
showing at
the
NEC
Championships in
May.
Women'slndoorTrack-
The women were
led by
the
strong running
of
s o p h m o r e
Kathleen Woodson
and
junior Colleen Carson.
Women's
Track and
Field-
Marist was
led by
senior
Patsy
Schneider
who set
personal
and school
records
in
four
of her last
five meets in the
400IM
hurdles
while sophomore
Kathleen Woodson had
an
outstanding
spring
performance
in
distance
events.
Seven of the Red
Fox athletes
have placed
at
the
NEC
Champion-
ships
held
at
Rider.
SCOREBOARDS
Men's and Women's
Indoor Track-
12/2 West Point Relays
12/11 Seton Hall Games
12/17 Christmas Rush
1/14 Yale Invitational
1/22 Stony Brook Inv.
1/28 Army Invitational
2/11 St. John's Inv.
2/18 NEC Champion-
ships at FDU
2/25 Seton Hall Last
Chance
3/4 IC4A
Championships
LEFT and ABOVE
:
After each race,
the
coach suggests
ways of improving on
e's
race. As
the
runner
s
know,
EVERY SECOND COUNTS!
Track and Field
•
12
9
Basile 6th in country for free throw shooting ...
Men's Basketball -
11 record. Senior
The men finished
captain Gregg Cho-
second
in
the
dkowski had been
N o r t h e a s t
named to the GTE
Conferenceand
advanced to the
semifinals
of the
c o n f e r e n c e
tournament. Junior
center Alan Tomidy
was named to the first-
team all-NEC team,
while junior guard
Danny Basile was a
second
team selection.
Head
Coach Dave
Magarity was named
Academic All-
America Team for
his impressive work
in the classroom,
carrying a 3.8 in Bio-
logy. Both Tomidy
and Basile became
the first juniors in
school history to
reach the 1,000 pt.
mark for their
careers in the same
season.
SCOREBOARD
(17-11; 12-6 NEC)
Mt. St. Mary's 62
FDU
88
Robert Morris 78
St. Francis(Pa) 82
LIU
83
St. Francis(NY) 93
Rider
73
73L
90L
69W
72W
70W
54W
81L
Monmouth
Wagner
FDU
77
75W
79
66W
74
68W
St. Francis(Pa) 73
Robert Morris 80
St. Francis(NY)80
LIU
128
Wagner
74
Monmouth
51
Mt. St. Mary's 77
Rider
81
Wagner NEC 95
M.S.M
's S-F79
63W
77W
66W
98W
76L
62L
81L
71W
75W
84L
ABOVE:
Basile takes
a
pull-up jump
shot with
Lucasz
setting
the
screen.
130• Basketball
LEFf: Lori Keys in
the lane
shooting over a Monmouth
defender
with
Courtney
Bl
ore
blocking down low for
a
rebound.
WOMEN'S BASKE+Bl\tt
Keys ends career on a high note ....
The women were
beset by in juries
this year, losing
two starting
players to season
ending injuries.
The women
finished the year
with a 10-17 mark.
Senior forward
Lori Keys, the
Marist Sports-
person of the Year
for the women,
ended her stellar
career as the all-
time leading re-
bounder and
third leading
scorer in school
history. Keys was
also named to the
first team all NEC
and freshman
guard Liz
MacDougall was
named to the all-
newcomer team.
LEFf:
Dunbar breaks
away for an easy two as
Chodkowshi watches on ....
SCOREBOARD
(10-7; 7-11 NEC)
Rider
61
30W
Mt. St. Mary's 64
79L
FDU
72
69W
Robert Morris 67
69L
St. Francis(Pa) 54
71L
LIU
51
59L
St. Francis(NY)59
69L
Monmouth
46
64L
Wagner
56
45W
FDU
63
42W
St. Francis(Pa) 69
77L
Robert Morris 58
53W
St. Francis(NY)59 52W
Wagner
55
66L
Monmouth
50
69L
Mt. St. Mary's 40
41L
Rider
56
68L
LIU
64
61W
LIU NEC Opening
Round
58
77L
Basketball
•
131
SWIMMINb/gI\lING
Men and Women take Met
.
Conference Titles ....
Men
's
Swimming
Women
'
s Swim-
and Diving- Head
ming and Diving-
SCOREBOARD
coach Larry Van-
The women won
Men (10-0)
Wagner was named
their second con-
MSC Relay Champ 1st
Seton Hall
127 86W
Met Conference/
secutive Met
Cent. CT. St. 158 86W
Coach of the Year as
Conference champ-
Iona
123 69W
Rider
142. 5 97.5W
he guided the Red
ionship as head
Fairfield
139 66W
Foxes to a perfect 10-
coach Lloyd Gold-
St. Francis
129 54W
0 record and the Met
stein was named the
St. Peter's
132 69W
Conference Title.
Met Conference
Women (7-4)
Freshmen Chris
Coach of the Year.
MSC Relay Champ 1st
Blackwell and Chris
Sophomore Daniele
Seton Hall
97 1381
Cent.CT.St. 145
97W
O'Connor were
DiGeronimo was
Iona
131
now
named Most Out-
named the most
Rider
125 116W
Fairfield
123 114W
standing Diver and
Oustanding Diver
St. Francis
150
55W
Rookie of the Year,
at the Met Champ-
St. Peter's
143
73W
respectively.
ionships
.
A
BO
VE: Some
tim
es
th
e
r
aces see
m t
o
l
as
t
fo
r
eve
r
.
.
.
.
.
132
•
Swimmi
n
g a
nd Di
v
in
g
LEFf: Hard work
pays
off as
demonstrated by
Stephanie Raide
's
performance.
BELOW: The team
showing
off their
spirit...
LEFf: The
swimmers wait
in anticipatioin for
the next
event
against Colgate.
Swimming and
Diving•
133
B
EL
OW
: A
nd th
e Foxes
tr
y a
nd pull
off a
doubl
e
pl
ay
.
..
RIG
HT
:
T
h
e
b
a
ll i
s g
oin
g ..
.
go
in
g
.
.
. goi
n
g
.
.
.
,..
.
-
..
Red Foxes No. 1 seed in NEC Tournament
The Red Foxes pitcher Michelle
broke
,
the school Hudson entered
record for wins in a the
conference
season this spring tournament with a
when they finished 19-5 record and was
the regular season ranked amongthe
30-10-1 overall. top 10 in strikeouts.
Their 13-2-1 mark Senior third base-
in the NEC earned man Melissa Fan-
them their second elli has been rank-
straight
NEC ed as high as sixth
regular season title in the nation in
and a No. 1 seed in Division I batting.
conference tourn-
ament. Sophomore
134
•
Softball
SCOREBOARD
Fall (7-1)
Manhattan 8-5W;4-3W
Siena
3-lW; 10-6W
Army
.
2-0W; 10-3W
St. Peter's 1-0W; 2-4L
Spring (17-5-1; 7-0-1
NEC)
Siena
2-0W
Fairfield
11-3W
Bradley
0-13L
Niagra
5-lW
L
ehigh
8-6W
R.I.
3-2W
Monmouth 4-lW; 5-2W
LIU
5-lW; 6-6T
Wagner
8-0W; 8-3W
Colgate
4-0W;; 2-lW
Manhattan 6-7L
BA:SEBA:tt
Red Foxes make it to NEC Tournament
'
Marist entered in Columbia this
the final week of coming summer.
the season with the The Red Foxes
nation
'
s top hitter broke the school
in junior Mark record for victories
Barron. The team with twelve and
leader in seven went into the final
o f f e n s i v e week
'
s action look-
categories, Barron ing for their first bid
led all Division I into the NEC tourn-
~
-
-
hitters at .470 and ament.
double per game at
1.35 and, was
in
v
ited to play for
Team USA in the
SCOREBOARD
Fall (6-4-1)
Army
7-6W, 10-12L
Molloy
9-2W, 1-2L
Pace
5-2W, 0-7L
Iona
4-4T, 4-7L
Hartford
5-2W
Manhattan 3-0W, 8-SL
Spring (6-15-1;3-6 NEC)
Monmouth 2-3L; 2-4L
Monmouth 8-4W
Iona
7-7T
Siena
0-SL
Wagner
4-SL; 6-SL
Wagner
9-SW
Manhattam 6-7L
St. Francis 4-3W; 0-2L
St. Francis 4-9L
Molloy
3-16L
(scores available at
time)
LEFT:
R
ai
n
or shine,
th
ese p
l
ayers prac
t
ice
in
t
he
b
a
tt
i
n
g cages
.
A
BO
VE: Ma
r
is
t
tries
t
o s
t
ea
l t
o
t
a
k
e
th
e
l
ead
.
..
B
ase
b
all
•
135
136
•
Crew
LEFr
:
Although it'
s
a
lot
of
work,
the team
s
till put
s
in
th
e
dedication
and
the
effort.
REW
TOP
LEFT: The Crew
members put their boats
away after a
l
ong
practfo
in
the
early A
.
M
.
LEFT:
A few
dedicated
Fox members
h
e
l
p
in
m
ak
in
g s
ur
e
t
he boa
t
i
s
i
n
worki
n
g condition
.
~
-Ii.::!
B
ELOW
LEFT:
Marist
si
t
s
next to
one of
the
most
famous
river
s:
theHUDSO
.
The Red Foxes take the President's Cup once more ....
Another year of
tional both the
earymorning
practices and rigorous
training has led both
the
men's
and
women's crew teams
to what has been a
successful season.
These two teams
consist of two levels
each-
novice and
varsity. Between the
men's and women's
teams there are over
sixty
dedicated
rowers keeping the
program strong. At
the LaSalle Invita-
women's varsity
eight and the LT8
captured a first
place finish. The
Red Foxes won their
fourth straight Pres-
ident's Cup on the
banks of the
Hudson and were
considered to be
sending one of the
strongest crews to
the New York State
and Dad Vail
Championships.
..
SCOREBOARD
Skidmore
&
Army
MV8-2nd; WV8-2nd;
MHW4-lst; WV L TS-
lst; WV LT4-lst; MJV
L TS-2nd; MN8-3rd;
WN8-2nd
LaSalle Invitational
MV8-3rd; WVS-lst;
WN8-4th; MV LT-3rd
4/22 President's Cup
New York Rowing
Championship
5/12-13 Dad Vail
Regatta
C
r
ew
•
137
s
C
0
R
E
B
0
I
A
R
D
s
LACRtJ$$E
Mount St. Mary's
(Md.) 7-13 L
Radford 6-12 L
V.M.I. 8-15 L
New Hampshire
10-11 L
St John's 9-20 L
Providence
15-l0W
Farifield 17-13 W
Siena ppd.
Sacred Heart
Stony Brook
·
Lafayette
Hartford
Drexel
Holy Cross
WtJMENS
Yale Invitational
vs. Yale 0-3 L
Central Conn. St.
1-3L
Siena 0-3 L
Hartford 3-2 W
Fordham 3-2 W
Holy Cross 3-2W
St. Peter's 3-1 L
Siena 0-3 L
FDU3-1 W
Iona 1-3 L
St. Francis (NY) 3-2
·
W
LIU3-0 W
Central Conn. St.
0-3L
Army 0-3 L
Third Place in NEC
Tournament
,
.
$tJCCER
Fordham
2-3
L
Iona
0-1 L
Robert Morris
1-3 L
FDU0-4L
Mt. St. Mary's (Md.)
0-3
L
St. John's
1-5 L
St. Francis (NY)
2-1W
Siena
1-2 L
Central Conn. St.
0-5
L
Northeastern
3-1
W
St. Francis (Pa) 1-4L
Monmouth
2-3
L
Towson State 0-1 L
LIU
1-4 L
Rider 1-4 L
Manhattan 0-1 L
Adelphi
3-2
W
Oneonta 0-2 L
MEN'S
&
WQMEN'S
tJ UT-tJtJ tJR
¼-RACK
Iona College Inv.
Coulmbia Women's
Invitational
Yale
invitational
Coumbia Relays
(men only)
Columbia Inv.
Brown Invitational
NEC
,
Championships
(Hosted by Rider)
S
·
C
0
R
E
B
0
A
R
D
s
s
C
0
R
E
B
0
r
A
R
D
s
MEN'S
&
WtJMEN'$
tNEJQQR
¼-RACK
West Pt. Relays
Seton Hall Games
Christmas Rush
Yale Invitational
•
Stony Brook Inv.
Army Invitational
St. Hohn
's
Inv.
NEC Champion-
_
ships at FDU
Seton Hall Last
Chance
IC4A Champion-
ships
MEN'~
TENNIS
Army 1-6 L
Fairleigh
Dickinson
6-3
W
St. Francis (NY)
7-1 W
Rider 9-0 W
Fairfield ppd.
Central Conn. St .
2-5
L
Rhode Island
4-3W
Iona 7-0 W
·
Fordham 1-7 L
Manhattan ppd.
Siena
5-3
W
NEC
Championships
I
WtJMEN'S ¼-ENNIS
1
Wagner
7-2
W
Monmouth 9-0 W
Iona 5-4 W
St. Francis (NY)
8-1
W
FDU8-1
W
Central
.
Conn. St.
0-8 L
Hofstra 3-4 L
Manhattan 8-1 W
,
Fordham ppd.
ILIU ppd.
Canisius clld.
NEC
Championships
at Mt. St. Mary's
(Md.)- 3rd out of
10
Siena 4-7 L
s
C
0
R
E
B
0
A
R
D
s
CLUBS AND
ACTIVITIES
E ~ S ' ~ ~
, ~
7/tdu,4,ut~~~
r
~ ,
l ~
)
_
_ . _
•·
"
~
.....
;
.
~
REMEMBER~
.
.
.
~
O#t
~
oU ~ ,
~
I
•
• · ;
·
;'
ol~at
~ , ~
·,
deed
,{'
.
-..
....
,.
_
hwe
HU!JUte
da
.
~
~
~
~
·
·
~'"EORE\lEJl.
;:
.
,,
.
-
.
.,
-
.
'
..,_
.
'
.
'
.
~
.
'•
.
..
,.
.
.
~·
.
_;
.
The Student Government Association serves as the governing body for the
college's clubs, events
,
and activities
.
All members of SGA are dedicated to the
representation and fulfillment of student needs
,
raising expectations of the student body,
and enhancing personal and professional growth for all of the students here at Mari st.
In order for any these standards to be upheld
,
we must have confidence in ourselves, be
open to the opinions and suggestions of our peers, and be diligent pursuers of our own
good
,
as well for the good of the entire Marist community. With these standards
,
we
work towards making Marist College a better place for today and tomorrow
.
Over the past year
,
SGA has been instrumental in accomplishing many new things
on campus such as
:
the addition of a second refrigerator in the old town houses
,
the
addition of new lights in many of those "not so safe areas
,
" the implementing of two foot
patrols on the North End of campus
,
the removal of the wooden stairs behind Sheehan
Hall
,
the computerizing of SGA election results
,
by improving SGA communication to the
student body - writing in The Circle in each issue, the attempted new answer to the
parking problem-200 more spaces
,
and many entertainers and ev~nts brought to you from
the Student Programming Council.
Some of the issues SGA and the college may always be trying to solve are
:
the
Greek Club Cap, the parking problem
,
the student dissatisfaction with library, Freshman
dissatisfaction with the visitation policy
,
a fan base for our athletic programs, the
·
underfunding and lack of adequate space for WMCR, the relentless pursuit of improving
the image of this college, and the improvement of the overall quality of education
.
I would like to thank all the members of the student body for giving me the
opportunity and the challenge to represent their needs and interests
.
More importantly
,
I
would like to thank ALL MEMBERS of the Mari st Community more making my
educational experience here truly excellent.
Sincerely
,
//
/
//(
~
:-
#d
/
,
j l / ~
Matthew
J.
Gillis
Student Body President
SGA PRESIDENTS: Activities-Lynn Russo Academics-Mikael
Carlson Elections-Andreana Nelson Financial-Anthony Bayer
Judicial-Erin Barly.
'
·
148 Clubs and Activiti
e
s
THE
PSYCHOLOGY
CLUB
Officers:
Daniel Iazzetti
Allison Notaro
Jennifer Sito
Heather Spino
CRIMINAL
JUSTICE SOCIETY
Officers:
Dennis Rau
Laura Chlupsa
John Troland
Michael Donato
CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES
-Dennis Rau-"The criminal Justice Society prepares students for the future through trips to prisons,
courthouses and jails. This allows the members to become exposed to the system, and know what to
~XP,ect."
C
lub
s a
nd
A
ct
iv
iti
es
1
49
THE OUTBACK
CLUB
Officers:
Richard Pinto
Emily Merwin
Sara Anderson
STUDENTS
ENCOURAGING
GLOBAL
AWARENESS
Officers:
Joe
Smith
Stacy Rhubin
Aaron Astorino
Heather Haynes
THE CIRCLE
Officers:
Kristina Wells
Meredith Kennedy
Teri Stewart
Christopher Jones
150 Clubs
and Activities
>,
1
,
MARISTBAND
Officers:
Jennifer Trenary
Anastasia Filak
Jessica Cramer
Katherine Lewis
THE
MARIST
CHURCH
CHOIR
THE CHESS CLUB
Officers:
Michael Murray
Jeffery Wiater
David Lifson
Ronald Gage
C
lub
s
and
Ac
ti
v
it
ies 15
1
THE OUTBACK
CLUB
Officers:
Richard Pinto
Emily Merwin
Sara Anderson
STUDENTS
ENCOURAGING
GLOBAL
AWARENESS
Officers:
Joe Smith
Stacy Rhubin
Aaron Astorino
Heather Haynes
THE CIRCLE
Officers:
Kristina Wells
Meredith Kennedy
Teri Stewart
Christopher Jones
150
Clubs
and Activities
MARISTBAND
Officers:
Jennifer Trenary
Anastasia Filak
Jessica Cramer
Katherine Lewis
THE
MARIST
CHURCH
CHOIR
THE CHESS CLUB
Officers:
Michael Murray
Jeffery Wiater
David Lifson
Ronald Gage
Clubs and Activities 151
STUDENT
PROGRAMMING
COUNCIL
AT LAKE
MINIWASKA
·
THE
HUMARIST
·
S
152 Clubs and Activities
>
,
MODEL UN
Officers:
Peter Foy
Andreanna Nelson
John Seifert
Adrienne Selegna
MCTV
Officers:
Gina Becconsall
Christopher Berinato
Sue Yanusz
Anthony Allison
Clubs and Activities 153
THEBLACK
STUDENT UNION
Officers:
Timothy Gamory
Melissa Pittman
Natasha Guadulupe
Lisa Goddard
THE ITALIAN
AMERICAN
SOCIETY
Officers:
Lisa Comagna
Dana Spano
Vicky Karestes
Josheph Moscato
-Italian American Society-"Instills pride, unity and respect for our culture."
154 Clubs and Activi
t
ies
SORORITIES
'
AND FRATERNITIES
KAPPA LAMBDA
PSI
Officers:
Stephanie DeVita
Jennifer Illustrato
Jennifer Danza
ALPHA SIGMA
TAU
Officers:
.
Susan Russello
Danielle DeMarco
Monika Hobbs
Dana Avagliano
-Sunsan Russello-"lnstalls honesty, truth, trust and sisterhood. We are the newest
sorority at Marist and all of the members have had the opportunity to build it's
foundation and add to it's strength."
Clubs
and Activities
155
KAPPA KAPPA
GAMMA
Officers:
Laura Patterson
Cynthia Malo
Susan Ferinde
Yesinia Cruz
Kimberly Garrett
Melissa DellaBianca
SIGMA PHI
EPSILON
Officers:
Jason Tarulli
Joe Russo
Mark Higgins
Joe Malorigio
·
John Grambaro
-Sigma Phi Epsilon-"ln
ancient Greece, developing body and mind were two
complementary partners
of a quality education. Sigma Phi Epsilon challenges all
of it's member~ to be
balanced men; spirit healthy, body healthy."
156 Clubs and Activi
t
ies
TAU EPSILON
PHI
Officers:
Brett Minieri
Brian Gumbel
John Fiordalise
Chris Pavlowich
PHI SIGMA
KAPPA
Officers:
Brian Bradley
Chris Kovach
Tim Connolly
Brian Skinner
Bryan Michaelson
Andrew Maier
Jason Fusco
TAU KAPPA
EPSILON
Officers:
Ken Tierney
Jeffery Ferro
Matt Brown
Francis Mace
>
,
Clubs
and Activites
157
CLUB SPORTS
MEN'S
RACQUETBALL
TEAM
Officers:
Darren Ranft
HOCKEY TEAM
Officers:
Brad Kamp
Todd Corriveau
Grayson DeWitt
Joseph Accisano
158 Clubs and activities
WOMEN'S
RACQUETBALL
TEAM
I
CHEERLEADING
I
OFFICERS:
TRACEY SMITH
MEN'S
VOLLEYBALL
Officers:
Jason Letendre
Pete Blaney
Sean Stam
Francisco Jimencez
Clubs and Activities 159
MARIST COLLEGE COUNCIL ON
THEATRE ARTS
1994-1995 SEASON
The Marist College
Council on Theatre
Arts had an
outstanding
year
with
nine performances on
their playbill
.
M.C.C.T.A.
entertained young
and
old with comedies,
musicals, dramas,
children's
shows and
even some
experimental
plays
.
With most of all the
proceeds from each
performance the
establishment
of the
Jennifer Dressel (91
')
Scholorship,
should
be
in effect
for the
following
year.
"I
HA TE HAMLET"
"Ghosts,
Swords, Sex
and Shakespeare: what
more
could you want?"
160
Clubs
and
Activities
"TRIPLE BILL"
"On
my own,"
"The
Best Years of Our
Lives," and
"One
Bitchin' Lunch Hour."
"ME AND MY GIRL"
"The
Hareford's us. The
Cockney's, True Love Wins!"
Clubs
and Activites
161
"WHO'S AFRAID OF
VIRGINIA WOOLF?"
"Martha and
George meets the
true woolf without a
nick
on
them
.
"
"NOISES OFF"
"Is
this
a party?
"
162 Clubs and Activities
"LOVE'S
LABOUR'S
LOST"
"4 girls, 4 guys in
a
play
about the
ins and outs of
this
crazy
little
thing
called
love!"
"ROBIN HOOD"
"Sherwood Forest
and 3500 children
took
over Marist
for
a week."
Clubs and Activities 163
GUESTS AND EVENTS AT MARIST COLLEGE 1994-1995
Barry Williams
SINIMEW Dance Ballet of Senegal
Jeffery Gaines with Bill Patterson
Minneapolis Gospel Sound
164 Clubs and Activities
Singer/
Songwriter:
Jeffery Gaines
Battle of the
,
Band Winners:
YARN
El Arco Iris Latino Talent Show
Holiday Decorating Contest at the Midrise
SPC Holiday Semi
Formal
Marist Employer
Expo
Clubs
and
Activites 165
The Run For Hunger
Faculty of the Year Award Ceremony
Sigma Phi Epsilon Blood Drive
166 Clubs and Activi
t
ies
Lecture: Living with AIDS- Sharon Lund
Comedian: Dan Horn
Comedian:Paul Venier with
'f.om
Privitera
Comedian:Walli Collins
I
~
IGHER
Eo
ucAr10N
0PPORTu nv
PRoGRPJ
25
TH
ANNIVERSARY
25th Anniversary of HEOP
The Astonishing Neil
*All pictures provided by Robert
J.
Lynch
.
.
Clubs
and Activities
167
World Events 1994-1995
President Bill Clinton
entered 1995 with
hope
for a
better
year.
Although
he
won a significant political
battle
with
the
Crime
Bill,
he lost
the
Health Care proposal
that he battled
all year.
> '
With
President
Bill Clinton presiding
at a
White House
Mideast Peace ceremony, Israeli Prime
Minister
Yizhak
Rabin
and King Hussein of Jordan shook
hands
and
signed
"The Washington Declaration".
More
than
a
million refugees
were forced
to flee from Rwanda
.
Disease killed
thousands of
refugees in
several camps.
But the
United Nationsays
massacres
killed
more than
500,000
refugees.
'
168
Clubs and Activities
President
Jeanbertand
Aristide
was elected
president in late
1990, but less than
a
year
later
was
arrested
by the
military
and
expelled
the
country.
Coup
leader
Lt.
Gen.
Raoul Cedras
assumed
presidential
powers.
Clinton
ordered US
.
ships
to
intercept those
fleeing Cuba
b
y
boat to
detain them
at
the
U.S
.
Navy
base in
Guantanamo
Bay
.
Forest fires raged in more than
a
dozen
Western states
burning
3
millioin
acres.
14
fire
fighters were
killed during
a
blaze in Colorado.
5,000
people died
in
Kobe, Japan,
on January 17, 1995. Buildings
turned into
rubble as 270
,
000
people
were forced
to live in
refugee
shelters,
because their
homes
collapsed or were
unsafe.
Tropical storm Alberto
dumped 20 inches of rain on Georgia and took
31
lives.
49
counties
were
declared federal disaster
areas.
Fighting in Bosnia
continued even
though
a
referendum for independence
was
sighned
in
1992.
Negotiations for a peace plan made
slow
progress
as
1994
came
to a close and killings continuied.
Clinton's
grandest
legislative
goal
of the
year failed
to
come
to a
vote in Congress
late
in 1994.
The legislation
would
have
guaranteed
health care
to
all Americans.
,
.
Clubs
and Activities 169
Ken Griffey Jr.
of the Seattle Mariners
was on his way to a homerun record of
61, but the baseall season ended and
there was no record.
OJ Simpson was accused of murdering
his ex
-
wife, Nicole Brown Simpson and
her friend, Ronald Goldman. Marcia
Clark
represented the DA
'
s office,
Robert Sharpiro represented OJ
.
170 Clubs and Activities
The
baseball
season
ended in August 1994 due to a strike inspired by disputes
between players and owners over a salary cap. The 1994 World Series was not
played.
1994
World Cup
soccer competition was played in the U.S. The U.S. team played
Brazil
,
but lost in the second round
.
The final game was Brazil vs Italy. Brazil
won
3-2 as an estimated 2 billion people around the world looked on.
The counry watched the preliminary hearing
and the trial
of OJ Simpson
on national
television
.
It has become the trial of the
Century.
The
San Fransisco 49ers
scored 49-26 defeating
the
San
Diego
Chargers. Steve
Young was named most
desirable player.
Heather Whitestone,
21 native of
Birmingham,
Alabama, was
the
first
deaf
woman
to be
crowned Miss
America.
Agassi
was
the
champion of
the
U.S.
Open Tennis Tournament against
Michael Stich of Germany. Agassi
became
the
first
unseeded
player
to
win
'
the crown.
It
was his first U.S. Open
title.
Nelson Mandela
was elected
to
govern the violent country of
South Africa. He won
the
countries first all-race election. In
1993 he won the Nobel Peace
Prize.
The
Beastie Boys
matured
from brats
to
pop
stars. Their current album,
"
Ill
Communications" is concidered
their
best. The
Beastie
Boys
displayed
their
diverse sound
with several 1970s-esque instramentals.
WOODSTOCK:
Woostock
'94
drew
hundreds
of
thousands
of a new generation
to Saugerties, N.Y.
this
August.
It
was a
weekend concert with music
practically
24
hours
a day. Artists
that
performed ranged
from folk singers
to
heavy metal bands. The
legendary
rock festival left many concert
goers covered in Woodstock mud.
BEST OF THE YEAR:
Movie:
Timecop
Music single:
"I'll Make Love To You"-
Boyz
to
M
en
Album:
Boyz to
Men
Book:
Debt
of Honor, by
Tom
Clancy
Disclosure,
by
Michael
Crichton
Television shows:
Melros
e
Place
Party
of Five
Friends
Seinfeld
E.R.
,.
Clubs and Activities 171
SPONSORS AND
SENIOR MESSAGES
&taut
B,
%'411Ne
~ 0 #
/1,ut
-4t44
~~
'
THANK
~~deue9
·
tie'te
.
·
·
'
.
-
.
'
The Annunziata Family
Franklyn & Pauline
Dickson
Eleanor Farnum &
Rosemarie Tillmann
The LaPerch Family
Mr. & Mrs. Marc Lauria
I
Mom, Dr. Go, Erin, Papa
& "Nannie" too!
Mr. & Mrs. Alex
Pelkowski
>,
Mr. & Mrs. Anthony
J.
Puma
The Sorelle Family
Staten Island
Honda, Nissan
-
.
SureWay Air
Express
The Ungechauer
Family
Carmela Zanetti
I,
Georgia & Gerard Adelman
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph L. Bica Sr .
.
Mr. John 0. Daly
The Delponte Family
The DiBona/Schulte Family
The Family of Shaughn Duffy
The Enriquez Family
Mr. & Mrs. James A. Gallo &
Family
The Garrett Family
The Healy Family
The Kinlin Family
Mr. & Mrs. Roger J. Letendre
The Magee Family
'·
onsors
-
Mrs. Angela M.
McGraham
Jack & Connie McTigue
Mrs. James Pizzani
Mr. & Mrs. Tim Race
Mr. & Mrs. Sarkis
Tatari
·
an
Mr. & Mrs. Sanford Van
Vranken
Mr.
&
Mrs. Eugene
Veltri
The Vetter Family
The Workman Family
.
The Yanusz Family
>
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas R. Ajello
Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Barbaro
The Beato Family
The Bluestein Family
Mr. & Mrs. Leonard C. Bostwick Jr.
Al & Pat Brennan
Bob & Mary Lou Brown
Mr. & Mrs. Vincent Cordaro
The Corsentino Family
The Cosentino Family
Jim & Traudy Culle~
The Duphinery Family
The Foy Family
The Galvin Family
The Gamma Family
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Gerace
The Gleason Family
Mr. & Mrs. John Guarda
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Ilukowicz
The Juwa Family
Alice & Annie Kenworthy
Mr. & Mrs. Kinstle
Mr. & Mrs. Gerald X. Lamb
Mr. & Mrs. Frank Macaluso
Mr.
&
Mrs. John Macari
&
Family
onsors
~
Jim & Marylou McCann
B. K. K. & C McGee
The McGuire Family
Mr. & Mrs. Francis J. McKee
Mr. & Mrs. P.J. Mignone
Barbara Monte & Family
The Nocco Family
Mr. & Mrs. Richard K. O'Connell
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Pace
The Pedinotti - Daggett Family
The Potts Family
Mr. & Mrs. Schemp
Edmund & Mary Sheehan
Christopher Smith & Family
The Smith Family
-
Mr. & Mrs. John Sommella
The Stepp Family
.
The Targos Family
The Tipley Family
The Valentini Family
Mr. & Mrs. Paul R. Vegiard
John & Myrna Whitworth
The Walter Wisting Family
M~. Lucuis & Mrs. Joyce Wright
The Zbell Family
.
.
Robyn, Ali,
or,
Aim-ster, DJ:
"Do
n
't
be dismayed at
goodbye's.
A farewell is
necessary before
we ca
n
meet
agai
n
, and
meeting
again,
after moments or
a
lif
e-
tim
e
is
certain
for
th
ose
who
are
friends." Thanks for
eve
r
yt
hin
g!
Love Ya
,
Lisa
DJ
:
Don
'
t
e
v
e
r
fo
r
ge
t ham
&
c
h
eese,
ba
c
kbend
,
c
h
a
mpa
g
n
a
t
,
F4
,
Hl-C
,
S&D, Cancun
,
Dayt
o
na
Beach
, "
h
e
ll
o",
Oh wh
a
t
a
ni
g
ht
,
WP
,
S
unf
es
t
,
M
y
bod
y
i
s o
n fir
e,
&
Ro
a
d Trip
s.
Thank
s
for bein
g
p
a
rt
o
f th
e
best 4
yrs
o
f my
lif
e.
"
Di
s
t
a
n
ce
tak
es
n
o
t
th
e
rin
g
fr
o
m th
e
lau
g
ht
e
r
,
s
mil
e
fr
o
m
th
e
th
o
u
g
ht
s,
warmth fr
o
m
th
e
m
e
m
o
ri
es,
j
oy
fro
m th
e
years,
tru
s
t fr
o
m
th
e
h
ea
rt
s o
f fri
e
nd
s."
Lov
e ya
l
o
t
s
m
y
fri
e
nd
!
Li
sa
Ali
:
Th
a
nk
s
for bein
g a
v
e
r
y s
peci
a
l
fri
e
nd th
ese
p
as
t 4 yr
s a
nd a
g
reat r
oo
mm
a
t
e.
Alway
s
r
e
m
e
mber
:
Ca
n
cu
n
... C
lub Ab
yss
..
.
P
a
ni
c
...
Don G
...
"
t
e
ll him
I
a
m not h
e
r
e" ...
"
don
'
t
c
all me
,
I'll
c
all
yo
u
"
..
.ir
g
rad
es
w
e
re
b
ased o
n
e
f
fo
rt w
e
w
o
uld hav
e
all A
's ...
s
l
ee
pin
g
in th
e
hallwa
y ... "
wh
y a
r
e
w
e
th
e o
nl
y o
n
es s
till
awa
k
e?"
..
.
"
Dr
ea
m
s ca
n
co
m
e
tru
e" ...
and
"
all
g
ood
co
m
es
t
o
th
ose
wh
o
wait!
"
L
ove ya,
Li
sa
180 Senior Messages
T
o
Alli
e
-
In th
e
p
as
t 4
y
r
s. yo
u
hav
e s
h
o
wn
m
e
wh
a
t
a
tru
e
fri
e
nd
reall
y
i
s
and I want t
o
th
a
nk
yo
u
.
Alwa
ys
r
e
m
e
m
be
r
g
rilled
c
h
eese,
C
a
nt
e
rbur
y,
pa
s
ta
,
lat
e
ni
g
ht
talks
,
Jenn
y
J
o
n
es,
pink b
a
thro
bes,
Mari
s
t b
y
M
oo
nli
g
ht
,
&
NYPD
Blu
e.
I
will
n
e
ver for
g
et all
o
ur
w
o
nd
e
rful tim
es
to
ge
th
e
r
.
Lo
ve
Cin
a
Purple Onion, W
&
M, G
&
V, Pelicans,
"What
ladder?
"
"The
loft
",
"She
talks to
angels",
"A
re
you scared?"
s
to riv
e
r
...
Cancun
... s
l
na
l
!
?,
Jr yr-hou
se
parti
es!...
S
r
y
r-mood
s
win
gs ..
.
ib
so
n
...
What
co
m
es
aroun
,
D
a
wn
Nor, Miss Dawn, Lis
&
Al- Succeeding
alone
means
we
have
survived;
s
ucceeding
with othe,rs
means
we
have truly lived!
I
love u
guys
-Amy
J
e
n
's: yo
ur th
e
b
es
t
roo
mm
a
t
es! A
ll th
e
l
a
u
g
h
s,
j
okes, a
n
d me
m
o
ri
es!
I'll
m
i
ss yo
u
B
r
ady
'
s
ru
l
e!!
I
wa
nt t
o
th
an
k m
y
fa
mil
y
&
fr
i
e
nd
s
fo
r
s
upp
o
rtin
g
m
e
th
ro
u
g
h m
y
co
ll
ege
ca
r
ee
r.
ow
i
s
th
e
t
ime
w
h
e
n
we
mu
s
t
e
mb
irrk o
n
t
h
e grea
t
es
t
Is
it
E
mm
e
tt
S
mith
o
r
Je
nni
fe
r
P
u
sa
t
e
r
e? Love
,
Ac
jo
urn
ey of o
ur li
ves
.
T
h
a
nk
s
t
o
m
y
fa
mil
y
&
fri
e
n
d
s
.
-
Ted
Eg
Lit
Mom, Dad, Kim
&
Nana - Thanks for all your letters,
support and encouragement througout these 4 years
and for being the "wind beneath my wings." I made
it! I could never have done it without you. I'll never
forget "make me proud of you" and "assume the
position". Love ya lots, Ljsa
I really made it! Mom
&
Dad thanks! Couldn't
have done it without you both! To: L V, AE, NM,
DJ, AA, AV, DM, RL, JB, KC, AS, EP
&
the Hl
Girls - thanks for the memories, the good times
and the sad and for always listening. Go for it
and make all your dreams come true! Have a nice
day. Love, Ali
G.
Brian Vetter - Well, so much for winging it so far!
Whatever you do, wherever you go, don't ever
plan! Best of luck to you and enjoy life.
Remember don't worry about it, there's other
more important things to think about - it's not
worth it. - Love, Amy
Ember Presler - No matter where you go and what
you do - remember - JUST TURKEY! Best of luck
to you in whatever the future brings. Never forget
all the friends we made and all the times we had.
Enjoy and keep going to Friendly's!! Love, Amy
For sixteen years we have been students in a
classroom but teachers have tried to make us
f
realize one thing - we can learn more outside the
classroom than sitting behind a desk. So, my
advice is become a student of life. - Robert Tangos
Anthony - "It's Prince Spaghetti Day!" From the
day I met you I knew this was the beginning of a
"beautiful" friendship. Thank you for all your
support and encouragement throughout these 4
years. You are a very special friend and I will never
forget you. I wish you much success in your future.
Remember, I am always here for you.
Love, Lisa
I want to thank my best friends who live in my
medicine cabinet. I will cherish you all until my
last breath. I think everyon
'
e in the world should
wear red cowboy boots.
-Gabrielle Demma
Dear Amy
:
Thanks for all the fun and great memories.
Sidekick
s
, "
s
ecrets
"
, Shade
,
Top 10 for 10-NGA! G2
Good Luck in the future. Keep in touch. Love, Ember
girls ..
.
wisdom. .. 21 I am.
.
. Last Chance! It
'
s just the
s
ame old
s
on
g.
Kevin, miss you during my senior year, but looking
forward to our life together. Love, Jennifer
Dea
r
"
Marge
",
Although you a
r
en
'
t
g
r
aduating with
me
and Virginia
,
in some ways you
have never tru
l
y
left. Yo
u
r p
r
esence
haun
t
s
my memories
and your absence
pu
ll
s at
m
y
heart. Thank
you for
the priviledge
of your friendship
.
Avec Amour -
Maria
"
Marge
"
Wherever we go and whatever we do you will always
be in my heart. Love, Ja
y
me
182 Se
nior M
essages
To Jen, Melissa and Debbie, Thanks for the four best
years of my life. Love, Ann Marie
MP+ 3
=
H2
.
You girls are the best! Thank you for making
my senior year great. Love, Wendy
Thanx to all my friends at Marist - it's been fun! Good
luck to those still there - you are not forgotten - I will
•
visit! Thanx Mom and Dad
.
Love Marla
TFIXC Team: Where to begin ... Margarita
-Parties, Card Gamos in 504, "Valid" ID 's,
Preseason, Practive, and Phil. You gals are so
special. Phil, thanks a bunch and watch them
carefully! YOU CANT BEAT THE FOX
XXOO
Love, Patsy
.
,
Jens, Sue
&
Andrea "Thanks for letting me
live with you! Brain, environmental issues -
it began there! To the future, yes I know
what it moans! I loves' you! Thanks Mom,
Dad, Bets
&
Rebel! I guess this proves all
my critics 100% wrong! Love, Patsy
To the Senior Class: We do not know what
the future will bring, but one thing is certain
-you guys will always have a special place
in my heart. We have so many memories to
cherish and so many more to come. I wish
you the best of luck in all you do. Thinking
of you always - Love, Jeanne Brennan
I want to thank my family for all of their
support, my friends Debbie, Ann Marie and
Jen for making the past four years great,
and my boyfriend, Mark, for standing by
me this last dificult year. I love you all.
Melissa D 'Angelo
Dear Tricia, Colleen, Julie, Carrie, and
Christine, Thank you for being the greatest
friends a girl could ask for. Your friendship
has made my four years at Marist the
happiest of my life .
.
I'll never forget the
great times we have shared! Best of luck to
each of you. All my love, Joann
Dear Deena, I just wanted to thank you
for keeping my sanity these past four
years. Thanks for being you. Friends now
and forever. I love you. - Cathy
Dear Kerrie - Sorry for all the heartaches
but it just makes us better friends. Here's
to good times ahead: I love you - Cathy
To Mom, Dad
&
Jerry - You are my role
models. Thank you and I love you. To all
of my dear friends at Marist, I will always
hold the memories we made in my heart.
Let's make many more. To my AST sisters
~
Thanks for sharing the dream and making
it happen. Sisterhood is a lifelong bond .
Leo 2nd floor, 11, Tracks, NiteCap, Renny
's.
Love, Susan
To my vixens: Gabrielle, Jami
&
Carol and
to my big brother Dave - I never would
have made it through without you. Thank
you for the best years of my life. I love you
all! Salut! ... Tracy
"Well, I don't really think the end can be
assessed as of itself as being the end.
Suddenly, time is so elastic ... it's a gift of
freedom."; "You 're all clear kid, now let's
blow this thing and go home!''; May the
cheese be with you ... always; Loved it! -
Dana Buoniconti
For making my Senior Year the best, I
thank you Sheri, Christine, and Tony.
S
~
eri your crazy and I love you for it.
Christine good luck on your marriage.
Tony I wish I met you sooner. You guys are
the bestest friends. Love, Stacy Marie
To Allison, thank you for making my last
four years. I love you and can not wait to
ive the next 80! The men at 8J - nice shot,
bro. - }4om, Dad and Chris - thanks for
everything. I could not make it without
you! Sean
Sean, you are the best thing that ever
happened to me. I love you. Gina, the best
roommate and friend ever. I will miss you
terribly. Margo, thanks for all the laughs,
cries and special memeories. Finally, mom
and dad, without you none of this would be
possible. Thank you!! Allison
,
.
Senior Messages 183
CLOSING
GOOD
~~~1e~,
.
i•-
~
7fue
~
~
eome a ~
..
~
.'>-
'Ifie peop{e
wfio made
tfiis
6001(
possi6{e ....
The
R
E
y
N
I
A
R
D
186
Reynard
Staff
BELOW:
Here
we
are ...
Taking a loo]$ at the 1994-1995
Reynard Staff.
.
ABOVE:
Hey, can I ask you something?
As a staff
member,
it was
typical
getting ideas from
the
Marist community.
RIGHT:
We became user-friendly
Some
of
us
got
to know the
computer very well ...
for
at
least
3-
4
hours
at a
time
.
ABOVE:
Same
things-different day
Labeling
photos
,
typing
copy,
labeling
envelopes, cropping
pictures,
labeling page
s
...
.
.
will
it
ever end?!?!
MIDDLE RIGHT
:
Let's ta
l
k about sports
We bet Carolyn won
'
t be looking a
t t
he
sport
s s
ection the same ~ver again
.
ABOVE
:
It
i
sn
'
t easy meeting dead
l
ines
Ta
l
k a
b
ou
t
STRESS!!?!?!
Special
Thanks .....
to
Bob Lynch and
Steve Sansola for
their guidance,
support, and photo
s
to our Jostens
representative,
Kevin Byrne, who
was very patient
with our ideas
to our faculty
advisor, Professor
McComb, for all he
1
advice
to the copy center
&
college activities
staff who either
took film from our
staff or ran off 800
copies of the s
e
nior
letter
to all those who
had given the staff
their pictures and
thoughts
Rich Cocchiare for
their help with the
club sectiu-i-1 -
and a very generous
thank you to all th
e
students and
parents who had
purchased and
sponsored this
year's book
Reynard Staff 187
188
'BE~fJ1(/:
Reg-
istering for
classes almost
never
seemed
to go
our
way-
many of us knew
the
Add/
Drop line all
too
well.
~'J/tl.~'J,,
Giving
a part
7£
themselves
never
questioned in
the
minds of
these
students-
as
they were
giving blood.
A'BfJ'1/£:
The
HuMarists
al-
ways had a sell-out crowd
-
with their un-
usual perspective on comedy.
~1a~7:
Some of
,
the Marist
studenTopted for another
source
of trans-
portation- and avoided the traffic on Route
9.
LASTING
~
dead,
~
att
°'
#4
«,at
t«we
a
fu:vit
ol
~
ddbut,
189
A'BfJ~E,,.
Ice carving during
Greek Week was one of the spectacles that en-
couraged each sorority and fraternity to show
exactly what their club stood for
.
'
'if!!1tfl.~7,,
Sometimes, just to get
-
away
rTm
it all, there would be late nights
with just the guys.
'if!!1tfl.~7,,
Through their Marist
years,
~se
girls show exactly wha
t
it's all
about.
-----
SOH1e
tJt
eu
~
«1e
etut,
1Ue
•
~ M a t e a e i ~
MARIST COLLEGE
TIME TO
1
92
95 REYNARD
Colophon
The 1995
Reynard
of Marist College, Volume 35
was printed by Jostens Printing
and
Publishing.
COVER
:
The
cover is
Smoke Leathertone
(491)
and custom
debossed
and embossed
with fully
modeled brass dies
.
It
is
mounted
on 150-point
binder board
.
Black Ink
(326) and two
units
of
Gold Foil (380) and
Red
Foil (331)
were used
on
the front lid, and
one unit of Gold
Foil (380) was
used on the traditional
spine
.
The
cover was
printed
by Jostens, Topeka, KS
.
ENDSHEETS
:
Front
and
back endsheets
are
Smoke Gray
(297).
The front
endsheet
used
Black Ink
(326) and
one unit
of
Gold
Foil (380)
.
The
back
endsheet
used Black Ink
(326)
.
PAPER
STOCKS
:
The
opening signature was
printed on
#80 Stippletone
Gloss. The rest
of the
book was printed
on #100
Mead Gloss
.
COLOR
:
Thirteen pages were printed
in
process
color.
TYPOGRAPHY: Body copy is Palantino.
Opening
section and all
divider body
copy
is
Brush
Script. Captions are
I Opt type
.
Folios are
l
4pt
Palantino
.
DESIGN
:
The cover
was designed by the
Reynard
Staff
.
The front endsheets,
the opening
section and
the dividers
were
made
similar to the
1994 Pennsylvania State
University yearbook
titled
Complementing the
Past.
The back
endsheets were
made
similar
to the 1991
Pennsylvania State
University
yearbook
titled
A
Moment
In Time
.
All other
sections
were
either
created
by the
Reynard
staff editors,
or made
simil r
to the
EZ
Track Layouts provided by
Jostens Printing
and
Publishing
.
PHOTOGRAPHY
:
The senior
section and
faculty section
were taken by TD BROWN
studios.
Activities
and
Events
and theater
photography were taken by Bob
Lynch. Current
Events
photography were
supplied
by
Jostens/World Book.
All other
photography
was
provided
either
by
the
Reynard
Staff or
the Marist
student
body
.
The
1995
Reynard's
press run was
500
copies
.
Books
sold
for $54
.
00
a copy
.
Inquiries
about
the publication may be
forwarded to the
Reynard,
Marist
College, 290
North
Road Poughkeepsie,
NY
1260 I.
REYNARD
I
Marist College
I
TANIA K. GOJDYCZ
Editor in Chief
ANTHONY ALLISON
Business Manager
OPENING SECTION
Tania Gojdycz, co-editor
Kelly Magee, co-editor
SENIOR SECTION
Gabrielle Demma, co-editor
Allison Martin, co-editor
Anthony Allison
Gina Becconsal
Stacy
Foster
Allison Guarda
Ember Presler
Lisa Valentini
Robin Ward
UNDERCLASSMEN
Alison Collazo, co-editor
Wendy Kenerson, co-editor
Joanna Battiloro
Jennifer Berrio
Rachel Carter
Keri Kelly
Elyssa Kimmel
Karen Lumberk
Theresa Marcotrigiano
Christine McGee
•
April Montana
Kevin Straw
Marianne Vetter
CLOSING SECTION
Tania Gojdycz, co-editor
Kelly Magee, co-editor
FACULTY SECTION
Gina Becconsall, co-editor
Allison Guarda, co-editor
SPORTS SECTION
Laraine Kautz, co-editor
Carolyn Mercury, co-editor
CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES
Jennifer Mabee, co-editor
Kelly Magee, co-editor
SPONSORS/SENIOR
MESSAGES
Dawn Jacobson, co-editor
Lisa Valentini, co-editor
PHOTOGRAPHY
Sue Frost, editor
Stacey Foster
Kristen Froliger
Wendy Kenerson
Charlie Melickar
Jackie Simpson
STUDENT LIFE
Carolyn Barnett, editor
nother book published. Some people thought there
wouldn't be a yearbook this year. ( Or at least I thought
so). But we did it. Although the staff got off to a late
start (around November) I still think we produced an
outstanding book. We took a staff of ten and doubled
it- to make it a staff of twenty. Without the diverse
opinions of the staff and other Marist college students,
this yearbook wouldn't be as good as it is. Thank you.
So what possessed me to take a big position like this?
Insanity. Staying in the office until 4:00am before
deadlines was very normal. Even if there was no
deadline you could find me in the yearbook office- just
checking up on things. For a position like this, I think
one needs patience and dedication. But I think I took it one step further. I think I was
obsessed- (or crazy?!). I've been doing this ever since my sophomore year in high school and
I haven't stopped. I guess I like the idea of creating a memory. And as a staff, we tried to
make this book represent the whole student body that has passed through Marist College
from 1994-1995. Looking back, we took the Marist tradition and twisted it just a little- to
make it represent the people of today. Although some tbings never change, the social and
academic aspect of the Marist community is still growing- and we're still learning. This
book is just a reflection of all our battles, our accomplishments, and our defeats. I think
Dickens said it best when he wrote, "it was the best of times, it was the worst of times" .....
And that's exactly what the Reynard staff had tried to capture.
Take a look at the book right now. You'll see who we are today. Flip through the pages
tomorrow. You'll notice things you haven't noticed before. Read these pages a few years
from now. You'll understand what we were yesterday and how it was all a
time to
remember.
Best wishes always.
Jlhtia-
K.
~
Tania K. Gojdycz
Editor in Chief
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1995
i1?lst uli ge
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·
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,
1
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Reynard
2
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66
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s~
124
18'4
-
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N
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MARIST COLLEGE
230
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TIME TO
2
0?.cmember
~
of us appreciate the
beautiful campus that Marist
offers- simply by taking the
.
long way to class.
~~
at the
·
campus
from a di erent perspective,
Marist students can see all the
memorable pleasures that are
brought to us -all year round.
·
~ ~ i s
a never end-
ing process- some of us turn to
our books for answers while
others choose
'
to experience it
by living life day by dfy .
•
TIME TO
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around Dyson, stu-
Te~ts-~;tt~-;diire
just one of the many
modern buildings built on a solid foun-
dation
.
J"'/,e~lf,
awaiting
.
their turn
,
students understand that we must
all
,
"give a little"-whether it.'
;
by giving
blood or by donating gifts to the Giving
Tree.
~
'ilf!etJt
~~
fans are everywhere
showing their school spirit- both on and
off the playing field.
...
S44e4
on what Marist was bui
•
lt
to
·
stand for, allstudents that enter Marist
leave with a better understanding- of
their major and themselves.
✓
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Thomas, the Com-
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munication Arts building, has
provided an excellent learning
environment
to
many.
Equipped with the latest of
technology it gives the students
an advantage- by learning how
to get ahead in the world.
~
September, stude~ts
experience what it's like to
leave their first liome- to arrive
to Poughkeepsie and encounter
their second home.
receive one-
on-one personal attention from
their faculty members
to
help
them with any questions that
·
students may have.
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TIME TO
8
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a whole
new territory is a part of the
~
·
leai:ning process that is t~ught
at Marist. To study the un-
known is to explore the mini
'
1Q"'
a few computer facili-
ties
available
to
students
around the clock, it gives the
student body a chance to learn
the many software programs
that are available on campus.
TIME TO
·'
9
~ember
~t#'J
cures does not
happen overnight-
it all
starts with a laboratory ex-
.
periment and an understand-
ing of the conditional.
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TIME TO
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breaks in the Donnelly cafe
are a perfect time to catch a bite to eat-
along with some light reading
.
·
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every second counts-
•
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when'typing an important pa-
per a fe:w days before it is due in class.
,;.
11
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the Route 9 constru~tion that
has been recently taking place in the
area,
,
commuters may have a longer trip
to campus.
S ~
are able to talk to their
instructors about any concern they may
have about a subject matter or even
about the courses that
,
they are enrolled
in
.
.
IN
THE
·
.
.
7k
~at~~
~ i o d e ~ o j a d
\
.
,
~ t o ~
lo'i-
7(/td,
ead
°'
.
~
.
...,
_~-:
'
~
--
~ ~ « A e
'
:
atatte
I
.
-
.
'
...
,
'
.
J
'
.
;
~ t o O # l e ~ 7 k ~
'
.
'
.
.
.
TIME TO
12
@?.cmwbcr
,,
.
.
.
_....,
I
'
I
I
~
is yet anot!ie.r Marist
.
student who is all smiles about
the vivacity of the Red Fox
spirit.
~
tfte cold weather,
llla~y
·
;
school-spirited students
attt!
~
i J\.farist games
.
.. to in-
still tbe Red Fox pride.
It
just
shows how much enthusiasm
the fans have for tlie Marist
playefs
.,
·
tJ#II,
school mascot, the red
and white fox, can
·
be seen be-
fore or after a game, "to take a
•
picture with one of his fans.
·
;
,
I
..
TIME TO
...._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
~__.:.:.._____;,,_~~..:..._-
:
13
0?.tmt:11tb:r
,
.
SENIORS
E&ted
8'~
~
Z>eHUIUi
/1,ut / / ~
~
.
,
.
.
U
_
~
·
jo,e
f4e
ft4'et
"/
.
felt
ldid.
.
.
.
.
·.
·
7(/ai,
( / U t ~
~
\
:
'«,e
' f t ~
&le
4:
.
t
~
1
I
•
IE'
C
AU
H
(
HOR
S
E
A
Message to the
Class of
1995
During our years here at Marist we have developed a set of very meaningful
dreams and goals
,
but more importantly the skills needed to attain them
.
It
is with great
confidence that we leave this sacred institution and begin our journey into the unknown.
Being a part of the Marist community has taught us
.
.
to respect our neighbors and
cherish human life, but more importantly, it has taught us how to care ... how to be a friend.
The ties we have built and the people we have met have changed us in a way that could
never be duplicated. This has greatly enhanced our concept of "being", and furthermore
has led to the discovery of ourselves
.
It
is this polish that has added luster to our
instruction,- a luster that will shine so brightly on graduation day. Without each other
our ~ducation would have been wanting for compJeteness.
While the realization of the vision that we have strove so eagerly to achieve is
fin
~
lly before us, it cannot be seen as the end of our endeavor, but rather the beginning of
higher goals and expectations. The lessons
,
the concepts and the achievements that we
have garnered are not to be pushed aside
,
but rather incorporated into our continuing
person that we are constantly adding to. We are the ones who will add flavor and
uniqueness
to
the society which we belong, we are the ones that will make the difference
for others as they have made a difference for us. We are our vision, we are the future.
Best Wishes
,
Jonathan R. Sorelle
Senior Class President
I
,
A FAREWELL TO THE SENIORS
I would like to offer my congratulations and best wishes
on your graduation from Marist College.
As you leave our campus to pursue a career or graduate
study, you will find a world that is rapidly changing and
increasingly complex.
From the revolutionary upheavals in
Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union to the
competitive struggles facing American business and industry,
the new global village you are about to encounter will be a
place of great challenge and great opportunity.
The years
you have spent at Marist will provide you with the
foundation to meet these challenges as well as to take full
advantage of the many opportunities that await you.
Your Marist education has given you the intellectual
tools and the professional competencies to be constructive
members of the organizations in which you work and the
communities in which you live .
.
I also hope your experience
at Marist has instilled in you a
~
sense of values and a
spirit of service, particularly to the less fortunate in our
.
society.
As we say goodbye to you as undergraduates, we also
welcome you back to Marist as alumni of the College.
I look
forward to seeing you at Homecoming Weekend and other alumni
events, and encourage you to continue your involvement with
the College.
As alumni, you are now stakeholders in this
institution,
·
and your participation in the life of Marist
College will be vital to our continu
'
ed growth and
development.
Again, congratulations on all your accomplishments and
best of luck in all your future endeavors.
1.
cerely,
Dennis
I
~urray
~
Braduates o
1995
~
Reyna Abaquin
BACHELORS DEGREE
Am_yAery
BUSINI;:SS FINANCE
Lynn Allen
BACHELORS DEGREE
18 Senior
s
Benjamin Abbatiello
COMMUNICATIONS
Jennifer Ahearn
SOCIAL WORK
Anthony Allison
BUSINESS ADMIN
Vincent Accardi
COMMUNICATIONS
Veronica Ahumada
BACHELORS DEGREE
Amy Anderson
BIOLOGY
/
PRE-VET
I
,
~
Jessica Adelman
COMMUNICATIONS
Heather Alexander
BACHELORS DEGREE
Mario Andre
BUSINESS
Allison Andrews
PSYC/SPECIAL ED
Brett Arnold
BACHELORS DEGREE
Rimma Aranovich
FINE ARTS
Karen Arnold
BACHELORS DEGREE
Yahairah Aristy
PSYCHOLOGY
Aaron Astorino
CHEM
/
BIOLOGY
Christine Armusewicz
BACHELORS DEGREE
Dana A vagliano
ACCOUNTING
Seniors 19
Kathleen Barry
ENVIRO SCIENCE
20 Seniors
Deena Barsky
BUSINESS ADMIN
Deanna Batza
COMMUNICATIONS
Anthony Bayer
BACHELORS DEGREE
-
~raduut-es o
Elaina Beato
COMMUNICATIONS
Bruce Berzenski
MEDICAL TECH
Willard Bink
COMPUTER SCIENCE
Gina Becconsall
COMMUNICATIONS
Jennifer Betz
MEDICAL TECH
Matthew Bluestein
BUSINESS
Thomas Becker
COMMUNICATIONS
Laurie Bianchi
BACHELORS DEGREE
Donna Boccelli
BIOLOGY
/PSYC
19~5
-
Scott Bernhard
BACHELORS DEGREE
Joseph Bica
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Shannon Bostwick
BACHELORS DEGREE
Seniors 21
~
Graduates o
1995
-
Elizabeth Boucher
BACHELORS DEGREE
Raymond Braun
BACHELORS DEGREE
Jeannine Bresica
ACCOUNTING
22 Seniors
Matthew Bourne
COMMUNICATIONS
Calm Brennan
BACHELORS DEGREE
Jeffrey Broderick
COMMUNICATIONS
Kersti Bowes
SOCIAL WORK
Jeanne Brennan
BACHELORS DEGREE
Faiza Brown
COMMUNICATIONS
Dana Branchesi
BACHELORS DEGREE
Patrick Brennan
BACHELORS DEGREE
Gregory Brown
COMPUTER SCIENCE
Joseph Bruno
BACHELORS DEGREE
James Burke
COMMUNICATIONS
Vincent Bugge
BUSINESS
Erin Butler
COMMUNICATIONS
Ann Marie Bunnell
ENVIRO SCIENCE
Nicole Buzzetto
BACHELORS DEGREE
Dana Buoniconti
COMMUNICATIONS
Kathleen Caddell
ENGLISH LITERATURE
Seniors 23
Michael Cahill III
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
.......
.......
....,
Gregory Cannito
POLITICAL SCIENCE
24 Seniors
.
'
Mary Calabro
BACHELORS DEGREE
John Capuano
PSYCHOLOGY
Margo Campbell
SOCIAL
WORK
Nicholas Capuano
HISTORY
Joanne Canavan
PSYCHOLOGY
Suzanne Carey
PSYCHOLOGY
c;raduutes
D
Alison Carinci
SOCIAL WORK
Laura Chlupsa
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Maria-Ann Carpenter
BACHELORS DEGREE
....._
Jennifer Clark
BACHELORS DEGREE
Kerri Casey
POLITICAL SCIENCE
Lisa Clinton
BUSINESS
1995
Eric Cavoli
BACHELORS DEGREE
Richard Cocchiara
COMMUNICATIONS
Seniors 25
-
~raduates o
Marla Colletti
BACHELORS DEGREE
Ricki Con:hors
BACHELORS DEGREE
Jeannie Cordero
BACHELORS DEGREE
26 Seniors
Cynthia Compel
BACHELORS DEGREE
Monica Connors
BACHELORS DEGREE
Bryce Cote
BACHELORS DEGREE
Pamela Conlon
PSYCHOLOGY
Jennifer Corcoran
COMMUNICATIONS
Michael Coughlin
SOCIAL WORK
1995
-
I
,
Kerry Connors
BACHELORS DEGREE
Christopher Cordaro
BACHELORS DEGREE
Danielle Couture
COMMUNICATIONS
Wendy Crocker
COMMUNICATIONS
Maria Cuneo
ACCOUNTING
Virginia Crudo
POLITICAL SCIENCE
Katherine Cunningham
PSYC/SPECIAL ED
Yesenia
Cruz
COMMUNICATIONS
Heather Curatolo
BACHELORS DEGREE
Erin Culhane
BACHELORS DEGREE
Michelle Curran
COMMUNICATIONS
Seniors 27
Denise D'Andrea
COMMUNICATIONS
Jennifer Daly
BACHELORS DEGREE
28 Seniors
Melissa D'Angelo
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
-
.J
effrey D'Onofrio
COMMUNICATIONS
-
--=~
,
w--....
.-----
•v
--
-
-
--
-
Shelly Ann Daniel
PSYCHOLOGY
Carina Davis
COMMUNICATIONS
Hugh Daily
BACHELORS DEGREE
Christine DeCampos
FASHION DESIGN
~
(;raduates
g
1995
~
George Celegianis
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Sharon Deloughery
PSYC/SPECIAL ED
Stephanie Devita
BACHELORS DEGREE
Gennaro Delgais
BACHELORS DEGREE
Bob Delponte
BACHELORS DEGREE
Deirdre Devlin
BACHELORS DEGREE
Melissa Della Bianca
BACHELORS DEGREE
Gabrielle Demma
ENGLISH WRITING
Anne Marie Devino
BACHELORS DEGREE
Kristen Della Vecchia
COMMUNICATIONS
Amy Devine
BUSINESS
Todd Dias
BACHELORS DEGREE
Seniors 2
9
Michelle Dibona
BACHELORS DEGREE
Claudia Dolan
PSYC/SPECIAL ED
30
Seniors
Kathleen Dick
BACHELORS DEGREE
Michael Donato
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Rex Dickson
·
COMMUNICATIONS
Terri Donnelly
SPANISH
Alicia DiGennaro
BACHELORS DEGREE
Jennifer Danza
COMMUNICATIONS
Jennifer Dodd
BACHELORS DEGREE
Marlo Dyson
PSYCHOLOGY
Dawn Doty
COMPUTER SCIENCE
Theodore Eglit
.
BACHELORS DEGREE
Sean Dumas
B
USINESS/MARKETING
Brian Elias
ENGLISH
Michael Dunn
SOCIAL WORK
Amy Ellenes
ENVIRO SCIENCE
Seniors 31
Marina Arras
-
Ernrey
BACHELORS DEGREE
Denis Farrell
BACHELORS DEGREE
32 Seniors
Laura Erario
BUSINESS
Kristen Fatsy
COMMUNICATIONS
Nicole Errnlich
ENGLISH
Yolanda Faustini
BACHELORS DEGREE
Hollie Farnan
PSYCHOLOGY
Peter Faustino
PSYCHOLOGY
l'----o---
f;raduates
g
James Fay
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Siobhan Finn
EDUCATION
-
---
John Foley
BACHELORS DEGREE
Kathleen Ferraro
MED. TECH.
Tracy Fitzsimmons
BUSINESS
Siobhan Foley
ENGLISH
Laurie Ferraro
PSYCHOLOGY
John Flippone
COMMUNICATIONS
Stacy Foster
COMMUNICATIONS
1995
Michele Ferraro
BOSSINESS
Michael Fogarty
ENGLISH WRITING
Peter Foy
BACHELORS DEGREE
Seniors
33
&raduates o
Lucia Fraboni
BACHELORS DEGREE
Christopher Fromm
MATH
Carolyn Gallagher
HISTORY
3
4 Senior
s
Kevin Freeman
SPANISH
Kimberly Furs
ENGLISH LITERATURE
Carrie Gallagher
BACHELORS DEGREE
Jami Fregosi
COMMUNICATIONS
Jayme Gabay
BUSINESS
Jean Gallo
PSYC
/
SPECIAL ED
1995
I
,
Sarah French
BACHELORS DEGREE
Ronald Gagne
COMPUTER SCIENCE
Anthony Galvin
POLITICAL SCIENCE
James Gerace
BACHELORS DEGREE
Theresa Geremia
BUSSINESS
Steven Giampaolo
COMMUNICATIONS
,
.
Edward Gilhooly
BACHELORS DEGREE
Seniors 35
Tracey Goery
BACHELORS DEGREE
36 Seniors
James Gorham
COMMUNICATIONS
Kathleen Gralton
BACHELORS DEGREE
..
Heather Griffin
BACHELORS DEGREE
Graduates o
1995
Allison Guarda
HISTORY
Jeremie Harris
ART HISTORY
Andrea Gulius
PSYC/SPECIAL ED
- - -
Maureen Hasselmann
COMMUNICATIONS
Jennifer Hall
MED. TECH
Stacey Haupt
BACHELORS DEGREE
Brian Hampel
BACHELORS DEGREE
William Hausher
BACHELORS DEGREE
Seniors 37
Graduates o
Kathleen Hull
POLITICAL SCIENCE
38 Seniors
1995
Heather Hyland
BACHELORS DEGREE
Anthony Ippolito
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Kim Jackson
BACHELORS DEGREE
Suzanne Jacobs
SOCIAL WORK
.
.
Dawn Jacobson
BUSINESS
Seniors 39
Brad Kamp
BACHELORS DEGREE
40
Senior
s
Carol Keane
BACHELORS DEGREE
Dale Kelly
BACHELORS DEGREE
Neil Kelly
COMMUNICATIONS
~
f;raduates o
Kristin Kennedy
BACHELORS DEGREE
Kimberly King
COMMUNICATIONS
Cathleen Kosiewicz
PSYCHOLOGY
Brian Kenworthy
COMMUNICATIONS
Andrea Kirichok
GRAPHIC DESIGN
Drew Kreidler
BUSINESS
Lori Keys
BIOLOGY
Bridget Kalka
PSYCHOLOGY
John Kudlack
BACHELORS DEGREE
1995
~
.
.
Christopher Kick
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Debra Komusin
BACHELORS DEGREE
Amie Kunkel
BACHELORS DEGREE
Seniors 41
Laurette Lapadura
PSYCH
/
SPECIAL ED
42
Seniors
Tricia Lauria
BACHELORS DEGREE
Frank LePerch
ENGLISH WRITING
>
,
Aaron Lefkowski
BACHELORS DEGREE
Graduates
o
Ro
byn
Lefkowski
B
AC
HELORS
DEGREE
Mo
nica Lichwick
B
ACHEL
ORS DEGREE
C
o
ri
ne
Lurry
C
RI
MINA
L JUSTICE
Sean
Lennon
BUSINESS
Michelle Lindhurst
BACHELORS DEGREE
Mar
ga
ret Lyko
BACHELORS
DEGRE
E
Erika
Leone
BACHELORS DEGREE
Kevin
Long
BACHELORS DEGREE
Jam
es
Macalu
so
C
OMMUNICATIONS
1995
Claudine Lewan
BACHELORS DEGREE
Marissa Love
COMMUNICATIONS
Kimb
e
rly Ma
c
Ka
y
BACHELORS
DEGREE
S
e
ni
o
r
s
43
6raduates o
1995
-
Molly McConeghy
BACHELORS DEGREE
Deanna McGraham
BACHELORS DEGREE
44
Seniors
Colleen McDevitt
BACHELORS DEGREE
Colleen McGrath
BACHELORS DEGREE
Matthew McDonald
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Kevin McGuiness
BACHELORS DEGREE
>
,
,
',j;
Sean McFeeley
COMMUNlCA TIONS
Matthew McGuire
ENVIRO SCIENCE
Patricia McGuire
BUSINESS
Sara McLaughlin
COMMUNICATIONS
Francis McKee
ACCOUNTING
Linda Mcloughlin
PSYCHOLOGY
Aaron McLaughlin
POLITICAL SCIENCE
John McTigue
BACHELORS DEGREE
I,
Kellie McLaughlin
BACHELORS DEGREE
John Macari
BUSINESS
Seniors 45
.
-
Candace Mackersie
COMMUNICATIONS
Shannon Malloy
BIOLOGY
46 Seniors
Lynette Madama
PSYC/SPECIAL ED
Cynthia Malo
BUSINESS
L
y
,
rmMagee
COMMUNICATIONS
Debra Mancuso
BUSINESS
>
.
Kim Ann Mahoney
BIOLOGY
Jessica Mand
ENGLISH WRITING
(;raduates o
Catherine Manganelli
HISTORY
Marybeth Mason
BACHELORS DEGREE
Robert Maniaci
BACHELORS DEGREE
Lawrence Mattera
BUSINESS
Kimberly Marchetti
PSYC/SPECIAL ED
RobMaurino
ENGLISH
19~5
Robert Marks
COMMUNICATIONS
Kimberly Meehan
BACHELORS DEGREE
Seniors 47
6raduales
o
Thomas Meehan
COMPUTER SCIENCE
Michelle Mercaldo
PSYCHOLOGY
Nicole Milius
BACHELORS DEGREE
48 Seniors
Marc Mele
POLITICAL SCIENCE
William Mertes
ACCOUNTING
Louis Miller
BACHELORS DEGREE
Rene Mejorado
COMMUNICATIONS
~
helia
Meyers
BUSINESS
Melissa Miller
PSYC
/
SPECIAL ED
1995
I
,
Doreen Melkonian
BUSINESS
Anthony Mignone
BUSINESS
Michael Milo
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Anthony Morris
POLITICAL SCIENCE
Colleen Morrow
BUSINESS
Michael Mostransky
COMMUN CIA TIONS
Megan Mould
COMMUNICATIONS
Seniors 49
Michael Murray
MATH
50 Seniors
Jessica Muscolino
BACHELORS DEGREE
Chasity Nadge
BACHELORS DEGREE
>
,
James N agurney
BACHELORS DEGREE
t:iraduntes o
Sherilee Newton
BUSINESS
Robert Noonan
BUSINESS
Jane Nichols
BACHELORS DEGREE
Jennifer Norris
COMMUNICATIONS
Joseph Neubig
BUSINESS
Stefanie Novy
BACHELORS DEGREE
Joseph Neu
COMMUNICAITONS
Edward O'Reilly
BACHELORS DEGREE
Seniors 51
--
&raduates o
1995
-
Carolyn Oderwald
PSYC
/
SPECIAL ED
Carol Paldino
PSYC
/
SPECIAL ED
52 Senior
s
Dina Pace
COMMUNICATIONS
Stephanie Paleo
PSYCHOLOGY
J
e
nnifer Pace
PSYCHOLOGY
Brian Paquette
BACHELORS DEGREE
I
,
Jo Ellen Paczkowski
BACHELORS DEGREE
Jennifer Parker
BACHELORS DEGREE
,
Heidi Pearsall
COMMUNICATIONS
Jennifer Paupini
COMMUNICATIONS
Frederick Peck
BACHELORS DEGREE
Colleen Pelkowski
COMMUNICATIONS
Senior
s
53
___
f;radua
.
tes o
Francis Pizzani
COMMUNICATIONS
54 Seniors
Kimberely
Pollina
PSYCHOLOGY
Lisa Pleines
ENVIRO SCIENCE
I
,
Elizabeth Potts
COMMUNICATIONS
~
Graduates
CJ
Maria Quintanilla
COMMUNICATIONS
Tammy Race
BUSINESS
Darren Ranft
MATH
1995
~
Jill
Reber
COMPUTER SCIENCE
Seniors 55
~
bradua.tes e
1995
-
Karin Reed
PSYCHOLOGY
Jamie Reyman
COMMUNICATIONS
56 Seniors
Sarah Reilly
BACHELORS DEGREE
Steve Rice
COMMUNICATIONS
Jeffrey Riva
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Alissa Renzulli
BUSINESS
William Rickman
BACHELORS DEGREE
,
,
Keith Reyling
ENGLISH
Gary Riley
BUSINESS
Todd Roberts
BACHELORS DEGREE
Graduates o
1995
Sylvain Rodrigue
ENVIRO SCIENCE
Marcia Rosbury
POLITICAL SCIENCE
·
Sagrario Rudecindo
COMMUNICATIONS
.
Joy Romanelli
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Jeffrey Rose
POLITICAL SCIENCE
Gina Rugilio
BACHELORS DEGREE
Mary Roman
BACHELORS DEGREE
Michael Rossi
BACHELORS DEGREE
Andrew
Russsell
BUSINESS
Scott Ronaghan
COMMUNICATIONS
Audry Rossow
PSYCHOLOGY
Matthew
Russell
COMMUNICATIONS
Seniors 57
Graduates o
1995
Susan Russello
PSYCHOLOGY
David Sa
t
o
BACHELORS DEGREE
Jennifer Schaivone
BACHELORS DEGREE
58
Seniors
Joseph Russo
BACHELORS
DEGREE
Rosemarie Santos
BACHELORS
DEGREE
Brian Schemp
BUSINESS
Margaret Ryan
ENGLISH
Ta
mmy Scannell
COMPUTER SCIENCE
Suzanne Schiano
PSYC/SPECIAL ED
I
,
Debra
Saal
COMMUNICATIONS
Jane-Alyse
Schaffner
BUSINESS
Keith Schlingheyde
BACHELORS DEGREE
_____
eraduates
D
Bree Scott
COMMUNICATIONS
.
Vanessa Sebastiano
COMMUNICATIONS
Jennifer Schneider
BACHELORS DEGREE
Kimberly Scott
BUSINESS
Justin Seremet
COMMUNICATIONS
Patricia Schneider
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Stacey Schultz
BACHELORS DEGREE
Timothy Sheehan
HISTORY
.
.
Helen Schryver
COMPUTER SCIENCE
Marina Sears
PSYCHOLOGY
Brian Sheridan
COMMUNICATIONS
59 Seniors
~
braduates
e
Joseph Sievers
BACHELORS DEGREE
Brian Skinner
BACHELORS DEGREE
Micki Smith
POLITICAL SCIENCE
60 Seniors
Scott Signore
COMMUNICATIONS
Brian Smith
POLITICAL SCIENCE
Tracy Smith
PSYC
/
SPECIAL ED
Jennifer Sito
BACHELORS DEGREE
Je
n
nifer Smith
BACHELORS DEGREE
Alan Snyder
BACHELORS DEGREE
I
,
Maria Skaff
COMMUNICATIONS
Joseph Smith
BACHELORS DEGREE
Christopher Sommella
BACHELORS DEGREE
Gradu
-
ates o
Mark Sternefeld
COMPUTER SCIENCE
Janis
Stock
BUSINESS
Heather Stott
PSYCHOLOGY
1995
James Sullivan
POLITICAL SCIENCE
Seniors 61
Gradua
.
tes o
1995
~
Amy Sweeney
COMPUTER SCIENCE
BUSINESS
Lisa Valenti
BUSINESSS
62 Seniors
Eric Tannenbaum
COMMUNICATIONS
Kimberly Tyne
BACHELORS DEGREE
Juante Vanterpool
SOCIAL WORK
Robert Targos
COMMUNICATIONS
Deborah Underdown
COMMUNICATIONS
Debra Vazquez
BACHELORS DEGREE
I,
Maureen Tatarian
COMMUNICATIONS
Joanne Ungechauer
BACHELORS DEGREE
Jill Veasey
BACHELORS DEGREE
-
Graduates o
Daniel Wager
JOURNALISM
Lalan
y
ea Weaver
BACHELORS DEGREE
Isabelle Walraven
ENGLISH
Sheri Weidner
BACHELORS DEGREE
Brian Walsh
COMMUNICATIONS
Kristina Wells
JOURNALISM
1995
-
Robin Ward
BACHELORS DEGREE
Mark Wesley
MATH
Senior
s
63
64
Seniors
Graduates
o
Sarah Woodward
BACHELORS DEGREE
1995
-
Charles Worner
BACHELORS DEGREE
Michelle Wright
COMMUNICATIONS
Mark Zeck
BACHELORS DEGREE
Anthony F. Mazer
BUSINESS ADM.
Susanne Yanusz
COMMUNICTIONS
Theresa Zimba
HISTORY
Arthur S. Sullivan
B.A.
Psychology
Jennifer Zanetti
BACHELORS DEGREE
~
_ _ , .
Leslie Zurinskas
BACHELORS DEGREE
Jennifer Zbell
ENGLISH
Cynthia Zurolo
BUSINESS
Seniors 65
UNDERCLASSMEN
.
.
·
THE
-
~~~ad
'
...
·
~
.
muuete,
ead,
4eeOd
~
HUne
~'
~~ead,tJdt'leh.it~,
..
'
.
,
..
,,
-
..
·
.
~ , , _
.
~ « l e ,
«J.ttt
le
OH,
tUe't,
(U{Ne
·
RIGHT: Are
th
ese g
u
ys
getting
ready
for class??
BELOW: A
l
yson,
Janet
and Amy
welco
m
e
th
e
in
com
in
g
freshman
.
ABOVE:
This
l
ooks
lik
e
a
g
r
eat
plac
e
t
o
r
e
la
x
..
.
especia
ll
y a
ft
er
class!
68
Juniors
RIGHT: Which
o
n
e
do
es
n
'
t
go
to
Marist?
Tim~ to Express Yourself .....
.
Q
JUNIORS
What was your most
memorable experience
at Marist?
"Baseball against North Carolina State .....
I
struck out a member of the U.S. Olympic
team and one of the top 100 players in the
nation."
-Bill
Paterson
ABOVE:
It snowed!!!
Did
th
ey say
that
a
ll
classes
wer
e
cance
ll
ed?!?'
LEFT: For
some,
just
h
ang
in
g ou
t
is
a co
ll
ege
activity'
Juniors
69
BELOW: What do students
like to do
off campus?
RIGHT: Talk about a road
trip
.
.
.
..
.
to
VIRGINIA!
Visit OTHER colleges, of course!
Time to Express Yourself
......
Q
70
Juniors
JUNIORS
If
the world were to end
next week, what would
you do?
"I
would travel to Italy, Greece, and Japan-
charging everything along the way. Hey-
why pay cash when the world's ending,
right?!?"
-Stacey Berrios
ABOVE: Twizzlers, anyone??!!
BELOw-c
·
·
irl beats
•
guy
m
wrestling.
LEFT:
IRON
·
Y
or what?!?!
Juniors
71
RI
GHT: La
rr
y a
nd J
ay a
r
e (
b
e
li
eve i
t
o
r n
o
t
)
s
t
a
n
d
in
g o
n
t
h
e
Hu
dso
n Ri
ve
r
.
B
ELO
W
:
H
ey,
h
ow
did th
ey ge
t th
a
t b
ike
up
th
e
r
e??
ABO
VE:
H
ey
,
w
h
a
t'
s go
in
g o
n
o
ut th
e
r
e??
72
Juniors
RIGHT
:
Sh
e
ron and I
so
b
e
l in th
e
ir humbl
e
h
o
m
e
o
n
ca
mpu
s.
Time to express yourself
.
.... .
'
Q
-
JUNIORS
What was your
experience like at
Woodstock?
"It was the biggest party I ever went to.
Everyone got along;
it
was like a modern day
Utopia- but with mud."
-John Nauke
•
ABOVE
:
YEAH!!!! A
rid
e
off ca
mpu
s
!!
!
!
L
EFT:
Which
o
n
e
do
es
n
'
t
belon
g?
Junior
s
73
B
E
LOW:
A
n
o
th
e
r
wa
rm d
ay
h
e
r
e a
t M
a
ri
s
t
.
..
(
wh
o's s
h
e
th
row
in
g
t
o a
n
yways?)
RI
G
HT: T
a
lk ab
o
u
t j
u
s
t HANG! G
A
ROU D!
?
!
?
Time to Express Yourself ..... .
Q
7
4
Junior
s
JUNIORS
If you could ask Pres.
Murray any question,
what would it be?
"Why does he keep cutting down the trees?
-Courtney Krasko
ABOVE
:
C
a
n w
e
call him natu
r
e
bo
y
now
??
>
,
B
E
LOW:
So
m
e
b
o
d
y
h
e
lp th
e
bunn
y
r
a
bbit!!!
! (
Or
w
h
a
t
eve
r it i
s)!
ABOV
E:
What d
o yo
u m
ea
n
yo
u
'
r
e go
in
g
t
o w
rit
e
u
s
u
p?
L
EFT
:
We
ll it l
oo
k
s
lik
e G
r
eg
l
os
tthi
swa
t
e
r
g
u
n wa
r
!
Juniors
75
L
E
FT: Thr
o
u
g
h thi
c
k
a
nd thin
,
th
ese g
irl
s
l
oo
k
as
th
o
u
g
h n
o
thin
g w
ill
eve
r
se
p
e
r
a
t
e
th
e
m
.
B
E
LOW
:
It
l
oo
k
s as
th
o
u
g
h
g
u
ys a
nd
g
irl
s CAN
ju
s
t b
e
fri
e
nd
s!
A
BO
VE: G
u
ess w
h
o's
r
ea
d
y fo
r
a
h
a
ll
o
w
ee
n p
a
r
ty??
RI
G
HT
: So
m
e
M
a
ri
s
t
s
tud
e
nt
s
d
ec
id
e
d t
o
parti
c
ip
a
t
e
in th
e A
id
s Wa
lk
in
New Yo
rk
C
i
ty
.
76
Juniors
Time
,
to Express yourself ..... .
Q
JUNIORS
Where do you see
yourself in ten years?
"Somewhere in Europe
.... begging for food."
-Scott
Campbell
ABOVE: What's this kid doing?!?!
LEFT: Was the
sa
l
sa
too
h
ot??
FIESTA time!!
Juni
o
r
s
77
B
E
LOW
: Yo
u kn
ow, so
m
e of
u
s
d
o s
tud
y.
RI
G
HT: H
e
r
e's
l
oo
kin
g a
t
yo
u!
Time to Express Yourself ..... .
Sophomores
Q
78 Sop
h
omore
s
What was the weirdest
thing you have ever
done at Marist?
"Last year,
I
lived in Leo Hall, known for fire
alarms at the time. In the winter, during one
of the alarms,
I
would run to the top of the
hill outside screaming like a madman in a
pair of shorts and sneakers - maybe a jacket."
- Trevor Hill
ABOV
E:
Li
sa
,
roa
min
g a
round th
e
h
a
ll
s o
f
S
h
ea
h
a
n
.
I
,
BELOW
:
Mari
s
t
accepts everyone, even
tho
se
in
aprons
.
ABOVE: I'm thinking, I'm thinking!!!!!
LEFT
:
Smokin
'
!!!!!!!
Sophomores 79
RIGHT
:
Exc
u
se
me- Do
we
know
you?
BELOW: Hi
,
h
ow ya
doin'?
ABOVE
:
All
Smiles
for C
hri
s
tm
as
break.
80
Sophomores
RIGHT:
Some of
us like to
t
ake a
break-
in
the
snow!!
'
·
Time
,
to Express Yourself ..... .
Sophomores
~---
- - - - - - -
Q
What was your most
embarrasing moment
at Marist?
"I was walking back from class to my dorm
and I thought I saw a friend of mine. I ran
up behind her and covered her eyes with my
hands. When she turned around it was a
teacher! I was so embarassed ... "
-Mike Onorato
A
BO
VE:
M
o
m
sa
id th
e
r
e wo
uld b
e
d
ays
lik
e
thi
s.
L
E
FT
:
Ju
s
t
a
n
o
th
e
r
a
ll-ni
g
ht
e
r
fo
r m
e!
Sophomore
s
81
BE
L
O
W
: So so
m
e o
f u
s
DO h
ave
m
o
n
ey
t
o ge
t r
ea
l
RI
G
HT:
Eve
r
yo
n
e
n
eeds so
m
eo
n
e
t
o
J
ea
n
o
n
.
food!!
Time to Express Yourself ..... .
,,
Sophomores
Q
8
2 Sophomore
s
What was your most
memorable experience
at Marist?
"It was the first day moving in as a freshman.
It was not as scary as I thought
it
would be. I
was a little shocked when I saw my new
roommate for the first time, but now we get
along so well, we have been living together
ever since.
-
Jane
Noblet
ABOV
E
: Off t
o ye
t
a
n
o
th
e
r
exc
it
i
n
g
cl
ass
.
B
EL
OW
:
Ju
s
t
a
n
o
th
e
r fri
e
ndl
y face o
n
Ma
ri
s
t
ca
mpu
s.
ABOVE
:
All
s
miles from thi
s e
nd.
L
E
FT
:
D
eck
th
e
h
a
ll
s of S
h
ea
h
a
n
.
Sophomores
83
RIGHT:
All
dressed
and
ready to party!
BELOW: Hi mom!
ABOVE
:
Who
ever said
three
was a crowd?
RIGHT: Where's mom
when you
need her?
84 Sophomores
•
,
t
Time t~ Express Yourself ..... .
Sophomores
What is your most
frightening experience
as a child?
"I
was 5 and in a store when
I
walked away
from my mom looking for toys. When
I
came
back, she was gone so then
I
ran around the
store crying. Then a policeman found me.
I
recall sitting on the desk when he called my
mom over the loudspeaker." -Lisa Camagna
ABOVE: I shouldn
'
t have
gone out
last night.
LEFT: Some of
us REALLY understand the
concept
of
h
a
n
ging out.
>
,
Sop
h
omores
85
BELOW:
Girls
just wanna have fun!
RIGHT: CRAMM! G
.
A new word to the
Marist
community.
Time to Express Yourself ..... .
Sophomores
Q
86 Sophomores
What was the best joke
that you ever played on
someone?
"My roommate and I stretched clear plastic
tape across the span of one of our suite-
mate's bedroom door so when he woke up he
got a "sticky" surprise when he tried to walk
out of the door."
- Daryl Richard
ABOVE: Some
of
us do
enjoy
Marist functions.
BELOW: We're
like
two peas in
a
pod!
ABOVE: Kara and
Dianne
.
What a pair.
LEFT: Does
it
eve
r
stop
raining?
,
,
Sophomores 87
RIGHT:
Erika,
Lisa
,
and
Courtney
tak
e some
time
ou
t t
o ge
t
ready
for
the big night.
BELOW:
Melissa is
h
a
n
g
in
g o
ut
wi
th
two
of
her
new friends
,
Pete
a
nd
Jodi.
ABOVE:
Any
reque
s
t
s?
First Hilary
h
as
to fi
g
ur
e o
ut
how to turn
th
e s
t
ereo o
n
.
88
Freshmen
RIGHT:
The
so
rority
gir
l
s s
h
ow so
m
e of
their
spir
it
and
ge
t t
o
know
eac
h
o
th
e
r
.
Time
,
to Express Yourself ....
.
.
Q
Freshmen
How did you spend
your first weekend at
Marist?
"Brookside
+
No Curfew
=
FUN!"
"Meeting Girls"
- Brian Fagon
- Kraig Ogren
A
BO
VE:
K
a
ti
e a
nd M
ega
n
a
r
e foo
lin
g a
r
o
w1d
o
n
th
e
bu
sy fo
urth fl
oo
r
i
n L
eo.
LEFT
:
It
's
m
ov
i
e
ni
g
ht
fo
r Brid
ge
t
, A
pril
,
El
yssa, a
nd
C
a
rl
ee
n
.
Freshmen 89
BELOW:
Jess
a
nd
Jess
s
ho
w
their frined what we
do in
college.
Twister
anyone?
RIGHT:
Greg
can't
decide what
t
o wea
r
to class;
maybe
some
pants would be nice.
Time to Express Yourself
.....
.
Q
90 Freshmen
Freshmen
What do you like most
about Marist?
"It's small, and you can get more personal
attention; people get to know you."
- Christine Tripodi
"The people and the opportunities."
- Heather Ohliger
ABOVE:
Melissa
,
Trudy
,
and
Sarah test the
showers
to
see
if there is
any
hot
water.
B
E
LOW
:
H
ey-
thi
s
doe
s
n
'
t look lik
e
on
-
c
a
mpu
s
h
o
u
s
in
g
!
!
ABOV
E
:
Tom i
s
e
m
barra
ss
ed fo
r h
i
s
frie
n
d
,
J
i
m
,
w
h
o
m
e
t
h
i
s
date
,
Ra
c
h
e
l
,
in th
e
L
eo
H
a
ll Datin
g
Gam
e
.
L
EFf
:
Th
e ga
n
g s
p
e
nt th
e
d
ay
in
Y
C C
hri
s
tm
as
s
h
o
ppin
g a
nd
s
t
o
pp
e
d b
y
C
e
ntr
a
l
Pa
rk
fo
r
a group
pi
c
tur
e
.
F
r
eshmen 91
RIGHT
:
Ralph
is
too busy typing his paper to pose
for a picture.
BELOW:
Time for a
nap; Kerry has been
working
too
hard
on
her
work.
ABOVE:
Bethann is
chatting with one of
her
RIGHT:
What
'
s
he doing?
friends .
.
.
on
their bill!
92 Freshmen
Time to Express Yourself
.....
.
Q
Freshmen
What
do you
think
of
the classes at Marist?
"They're difficult and time consuming."
- Dawn O'Connell
"Small, interesting, and long."
- Jenn Walegir
A
BO
VE:
C
o
uld h
e
b
e
th
e
n
ex
t P
ea
rl J
a
m
?
LEFT:
L
ee (a.
k
.a.
Lim
ey)
i
s exc
it
e
d b
eca
u
se s
h
e
ju
s
t
go
t
a ca
ll fr
o
m
so
m
eo
n
e s
h
e
h
as
n
'
t t
a
lk
e
d t
o
in
aw
hil
e .
.
.
Freshmen 93
BELOW:
Jim
and Tom are
hanging
out with
their
RIGHT:
Locked
out
Kristen?
Follow
lock-out
friends
and
brought their teddy bear
along.
procedures.
Time to Express Yourself .....
.
Q
94 Freshmen
Freshmen
Is dorm life exactly
_
what you expected it to
.
be?
"Much better!
I
feel like
I
belong to a big
family.
I
love living on fifth floor Leo."
-
Wendy Kenerson
"No, the bathrooms are dirty and there is no
heat."
- Christine McGee
WANST
AIDS
ABOVE:
Surprise
,
Aundre!
I
,
BELOW:
S
mil
e eve
r
yo
n
e
!
ABOVE:
Sh
e
rri
,
Gi
a
nn
a,
D
a
ni
e
ll
e, a
nd Erin
s
ti
c
k
t
oge
th
e
r.
LEFT:
Th
e g
irl
s a
r
e a
ll r
e
ad
y
t
o go o
ut
a
nd l
ook
b
ea
utiful.
..
Freshmen 95
RIGHT:
Christine,
Jen,
and
Rachel dressed up
as
farmers for
Halloween.
BELOW:
Lynn, Mandi,
and
Mimma take
advantage
of
the Kodak moment.
11
\
t
(
ABOVE
:
The
guys
in Leo
stru
t th
eir stuff as
ladies
for
Halloween.
96 Freshmen
RIGHT:
The
sexy Sheahan
ladies
are
ready to
wow
their dates
at
the
Semi-formal.
I
,
Time
,
to Express Yourself ..... .
Q
Freshmen
What is your most
embarrassing moment
at Marist?
"I
fell down the stairs twice at Brookside."
-
Lisa Mele
"When Limey opened my robe in the
hallway."
- Kerry Suykora
ABOV
E:
Th
ese
girl
s
l
oo
k lik
e
th
ey'
r
e a
ll
se
t
a
nd r
ea
d
y
t
o go o
ut
fo
r
a
fun ni
g
ht!
LEFf:
D
a
ni
e
ll
e,
J
a
im
e,
J
a
im
e,
B
ec
k
y,
M
e
li
ssa, a
nd
J
ess
i
ca a
r
e
all r
ea
d
y
for th
e
bi
g
H
a
ll
o
w
ee
n p
a
r
ty
.
Freshmen 97
·
STUDENT LIFE
.
4Uputo~aattto
LIFE.
j
)
•
· ~
Waiting to use the computers, running to class, taking a
nap, and grabbing lunch. Sound familar? These are the
Days of Our Lives
Beep, Beep!
Your alarm goes off.
It's
7:25, and you
have
an 8:00
class;
so you
hit
the
snooze
button thinking
you
have
plenty of
time to put
on a
hat
,
some
dirt
y
jeans
and a sweatshirt,
then brush
your
teeth
and
run to class.
While
in class
you
take
some
notes
(in
between
falling asleep)
and
then
contimpla
te
whether you should
go
to breakfast
or go
back to bed
after
class! Most
of
us
go
ba
·
ck
to
sleep and
catch a fewmorezzz's,
then
getup around
noon, go
to lunch,
check
yo
ur
empty
mailbox
(hoping someday
to
get some-
100 Student
Life
thing)
and
run
off
to more
classes. After
your
last class,
yo
u
grab a few friends
and off
to dinner
you go, or off you go
to make
dinner! You all
h
a
ng
out for
a while
to let the meal
se
ttle
down, and
then
you go
to do
so
me homework
,
watch
a
movie
and (if
it's
a
Wednesday
or
Thursday night)
, yo
u
and a
bunch
of
people
go and
hang
out at
the
"regular"
places
.
Although many
of
u
s
choose
to
go out
almost every
night, it's
also
nice just to
sit
back
and
relax
....
and
do
absolutely
NOTHING!
ABOVE: Stamps a
r
e
n
ow .32 cents?!!?
Weren
'
t
th
ey
.2
9 cents yesterday?!
BELOW: This thing broke
AGAI ?!
LETT:
Will
s
h
e o
r
wo
n
'
t
s
h
e
h
ave
m
ai
l thi
s
tim
e?!?!
ABOV
E
: A
ty
p
ica
l
sce
n
e
.
.
.
. a
ll th
e
cl
asses yo
u
wa
nt
t
o
t
a
k
e a
r
e
fill
e
d
.
ow yo
u h
ave
t
o
t
a
k
e
Ad
va
n
ce
d
C
a
lculu
s
[
V
!
LETT
:
Th
e sce
n
a
ri
o: a go
r
geo
u
s
d
ay o
ut .
..
.
d
o we s
till h
ave
th
e e
n
e
r
gy
t
o go
t
o
cl
ass a
ft
e
r l
y
in
g
o
ut
a
ll d
ay?
!
Student Life 101
ABOVE LEFT: So
so
m
e
of
u
s
DO
wake
up
at
8:00a
m t
o
do
o
ur h
a
ir!
102 Student Life
ABOVE:
Is it midterms
week or what?
BELOW
:
Off
goes
Little
Blu
e
Ridin
g
Hood
.....
not to
g
randmoth
e
r
'
s
h
o
u
se
but t
o
th
e
cafeteria
in
s
tead
!
RIGHT
:
Are
yo
u taking
a
picture
of
m
e?
!
Making-a sta
t
emen
t
withou
t
saying a wor
d
?
S
ome like to
dress up and some like to bum out. With others, there's .
..
.
.
No Explanation Needed
We all
have
our fashion statements,
but
some
express
themselves more
differently than
others- which
just
shows your
personality!
We all
have
our
days
where some
of us bum
around all
day in
sweats while others
look
as if
they just
walked out of a
J.
Crew catalogue.
But hey,
when
yo
u have
an 8:00 am
class,
who
has
time
for a shower?
Then
again,
people
ARE
doing
some
pretty unusual
things
around
here-
or
is it just
that nobody is phased by
anything
anymore? For
instance, does
anyone ever
pierce their
ears anymore?
Belly piercing,
nose piercing, lip piercing, tongue piercing,
eyebrow
piercing
....
.
where
next?!
Remember the
video
by
Aerosmith where
the
girl
is
shown
having her belly button
pierced??
While
some of
us
were saying
"ouch", others were
running
out
to
get
it
done.
(We
commend
you guys!)
Thinking
about
it,
what "in"
thing is
going
to be next??
Maybe
people
will
be
spiking
their hair
again ..... (okay,
maybe not.)
ABOVE: A pair of jeans and a tee
s
hirt
,.
....
and off to Add
/
Drop!
LEFT
:
Did
yo
u
ay
that
we
have to
go
to clas
s
today?!!
Student Life 103
So maybe you don't have your bio lab finished or your
English report done. Well, face it, youtre one of us ......
Procrastinators
Ok,
ok- so you
didn't
study
for
your
3:00 exam yet.
So, it's
only
11:30am
and you figure you
have plenty
of
time
to
get
dressed
,
eat
lunch,
go
to the
bookstore to buy the book
you
need
to
study with, and still
have plenty of
time to
watch your favorite
T.V
.
show
before
you study
for
your exam,
right? Then
you
think to
yourself-
"WHY
DID I DO THIS
AGAIN?" You
should
have kept that promise to
study at
least
one
day in
advance.
But
then
again, you
DID have to do two
104
Student
Life
weeks of
laundry
yesterday, and
Pearl
Jam
WAS
playing live
over
the tube
for
three hours.
How could you
help that?
o
problem.
After
thinking
what you
could
have done,
you eat
lunch, buy the
book
and watch T.V. with
plenty
of
'
time to
study.
You finally
sit
down
and "hit
the
books".
After an
hour
of studying
,
you
'
re
done
with
20 minutes to
spare. Finally,
time to relax.
You slowly start
drifting
off
to
sleep for a quick
nap before
your
test,
when you
think-
"
was
that
five
page paper
for
Chemistry due
at 6:15
TONIGHT?!
"
ABOVE: Some people
like
t
o
t
a
ke
a "s
hort
"
break
in
the
n
e
w
r
e
cr
e
ation ro
o
m
..
..
for a f
e
w h
o
ur
s.
BELOW:
It
l
o
ok
s
like th
ese g
irl
s
will b
e
pullin
g
a
n
a
ll-ni
g
ht
e
r for
a
n
y
w
o
rk th
a
t n
ee
d
s
t
o
b
e
d
o
n
e
!
LEFT: 2x+(435
%
-
342z) x
1732874389=643873
%
-537z
(And
I have to
know
thi
s
b
y 3:30 ...... )
67
ABOVE: Some of
u
s
tak
e a
dv
a
nta
ge
of
the
five
minut
es
we
h
ave
b
efo
r
e
our
cla
ss
b
egins
to
finish
s
tud
y
in
g.
But
h
ey,
if
yo
u d
o
n
'
t
kn
ow
it
by
n
ow .....
.
LEFT
:
Eight
minut
es
l
eft
t
o
find
th
e co
rr
ect spe
llin
g
of
mi
crose
i
s
m
for
sc
i
e
n
ce
class.
,,
Student Life 105
ABOVE: For Amy Pfannkuch
and
John
Alfono, sometimes ou
r
"other
half
"
is
also
our
best friend.
106 Student Life
RIGHT
:
And
so
me relationships
are
just
friendly
....
LEFT:
Could
this be the future
Mr. and Mrs.
Riva?!
BELOW:
A
postive part
about
having
an on-campus
re
l
ationship
is that
you
don
'
t need
a vistor's
pass!
Whethe:i:-it's here or somewhere else, there are always
complications to deal with in each
RELATIONSHIP
So what's
the
difference
between
an
on-campus
relationship
and a
long
distance relationship?
A very
long
and expensive
phone bill. But
seriously,
there
are
both pros
and
cons for
both
sides of
the
spectrum.
For instance,
if
you
have
a relation-
ship on campus, you
have the
opportunity
to
see
them
24/7
.... but
then
again, you
need
a
break
once
in
a while.
On the
other
hand,
if you
have
a
long distance relationship, then
you're
probably
always
looking
at a
three
page phone bill...
.. and it always seems
to
have that
same
number
on
it!
There goes
another
paycheck.
....
but
you
rarely
get
to
see
that
special someone, so
it's
worth
it!
(Besides
,
you'll
have plenty
of chances
to
hang
out and see each other over
the
summer!)
So
in
either case,
there
will always
be SOMETHING to
overcome
...
.
whether
the
relationship
continues or
not, it
was
fun
while
it lasted!
UPPER LEFT CORNER: I
h
o
p
e
m
y
ph
o
n
e
biU
i
s
n
'
t
t
oo
hi
g
h thi
s
m
o
nth
.
.
.
. co
n
s
id
e
rin
g
it
was $
2
30.76
la
s
t month!
ABOVE
:
Str
a
n
ge
r
s
in th
e
ni
g
ht...
... (
h
ey
,
yo
u
n
eve
r kn
ow)
!
Student Life 107
Not going away for break?
If
t
here's.one problem that's
stopping us all from touring Europe and the Is
l
ands, it's
The Cash Flow
Excuse
me
,
do
you
take
Visa?
Mastercard? American Express?
Okay
,
so you're
using
"plastic"
again.But
then
again,
if
you want
something, you get
it because money
is not
an
issue
when you're at college.
(Don't we wish!)
Is the
word "debt"
in
YOUR vocabulary?
Didn
'
t
you
have
money in
your
bank
account at
the beginning
of
the
school year?
(Remember
those
good old
days.)
Then Spring
Break
rolls around and
you
have
WHAT?! $6.76
in
your
108 Student
Life
bank
account? What
happened? Oh,
that
's
right... Christmas
,
books ...
It
all adds
up
.
Why is it that
you
need
money to
socialize? A
buck here,
a
buck
there
.
..
.
then
you're
broke.
So
instead
you
decide to
charge
it- and then
one
month
later
you're $670
.
98
in debt.
(Well, at
least
you can
pa
y
off
that
.98
right now
.
- Who
REALLY needs to do laundry for the next
2 weeks?)
Well
,
as
long
as you're
having
fun at college (and
doing
your
laundry
once in while),
then just do it.
ABOVE: Thank
goo
dn
ess
for thrifty cash
...
a
lth
o
u
gh
it does
see
m t
o go ve
r
y
quickly.
BELOW: Kelly
a
lwa
ys seems
to
get
the Marist
pizza!
L
E
FT
:
I
w
i
s
h I h
a
d m
y
m
o
m
's c
h
ec
kb
ook i
n
s
t
ea
d
of
min
e!
ABOV
E: Fo
r th
ose w
h
o
h
ave
j
o
b
s o
n
ca
mpu
s-
it
's off
t
o wo
rk th
ey go!
LE
FT
:
T
o
n
y see
m t
o
kn
ow
th
e
m
ea
nin
g of wo
r
ki
n
g
"
nin
e
t
o
fi
ve"
.
Student Life 109
ABOVE: It
's
ju
s
t
o
n
e o
f th
ose
bum around da
ys.
110 Student Life
L
E
FT
:
So
m
e of
u
s
D
EF
!
A
T
EL Y t
r
y
to avo
i
d
h
av
in
g a
m
o
rnin
g
class
.
B
E
LOW
:
1
5
seco
n
ds
t
o go ....
1
4
seco
nd
s
t
o
go
....
BELOW
:
I'm
OUTTA
HERE!!!!!
Fee
l
like bumming out for the day ... or the week? College
doesn't teil you what to do or what to wear. It's all about
Expressing Yourse
lf
Don't
we
wish
college was
just
hanging out,
seeing your
friends
all
day
without going
to
any
classes?
(Keep dreaming!) Do
you sometimes
feel
like
sneaking
underneath
your
covers
and not
coming
out to face
the
world
that day?
(We
ALL have
those days-
and
no one
could
tell
you
that
you
can't hide in
your
bed!)
And
other days it feels
as
though
you
could do just
about anything? So you
do it-
without anyone's
permission!
Why is it that in high
school
it
seems as
though
we were so
restricted
..
.
about
the clothes
we wore and what
time
you were allowed
to
stay out with your
friends.
In
college,
it's
so
different....
you
could walk around
in
your
pajama
s
and
slippers around your friends and
no
one
would care. You
hang
out with your friend
s
in their dorm
room
until
5:00am-
trying to
get some work
done.
There
'
s
no
one
here to
tell
you when
to
go
to
sleep. Too
bad
college
wasn't
just
about
hanging
out and
bumming
around
....
it's
about
handling
your
responsibilities
... at 5
:
00am.
ABOV
E
: GRRRRR
.
..
.
..
Wh
y
did
I
wa
it
til th
e
l
as
t
minut
e
t
o
d
o
thi
s 7
p
age
p
a
p
e
r
?
!
?
!
L
E
TT
:
H
ey!
Shut th
e
li
g
ht
o
ff!
!
Th
e
r
e
's
so
m
e
se
ri
o
u
s
s
l
ee
pin
g go
in
g o
n h
e
r
e!
Student
Life 111
FACULTY
.
·
.
ACADEMIC
e ~ U
.
.
.
-
~°t~~~
_.·
-
,-
~ ,
''1~to~,pueeutted
JIUd
«JhJ,
,pue evze,
~
,pue
hwe,
~ t o ~
(put
to
4ee
thit
·
tpue
.
ea#
' J O ~ ~
«luee
,pue
d/le
-
'
~suPPORT.
FACULTY, STAFF A:\·
Paul Adogamhe
Political Science
Peter Amato
Assoc. Dean of Student Affairs
Roberta Amato
Director of Counseling Services
Brother Paul Ambrose
President Emenritus
Patricia Aykroyd
Special Services
Renee Boyd
Director of STEP /C-STEP
Deborah Brandl
Student Accounts
Barbara Brenner
Collection
Dev.
Librarian
Michael Britt
Psychology
Sandy Browne
Comp Sci /Math Secretary
Ermina Budd
Housing Secretary
Margaret Calista
Social Work
'
Anthony Campilii
Vice Pres. of
Business
Affairs
Joseph Canale
Psychology
Barbara Carpenter
Director
of Leaning
Center
Barbara Carvalho
Direcotor
of
the
Marist Poll
Irma Blanco-Casey
Spanish
Thomas Casey
Philosophy
Eleanor Charwat
Exec.
Director of
Adult Ed.
Gerard Cox
VP Student Affairs
114
Facul
t
y,
Staff
and Administra
tion
ADMINISTRATION
Brenda Crossley
Athletic Acad. Advisor
William Davis
Communications
Brother
Tom
Delaney
Mentor
Brian Desilets
Physics
Deborah Dicaprio
Asst.
Dean
Stud
.
Affairs
John Digilio
Sr. Programmer-Analyst
Sharon Dillon
Sr. Secretary Purchasing
Jim Dodd
Coor
.
Clinical Education
John Doherty
Criminal Justice
Edward Donohue
Philosophy
Cheryl DuBois
Asst. Registrar
Mary Easton
Admin
.
Exec. Secretary
William Eidle
Chair. Social
&
Beh. Sci
John Fahey
Communications
Barbara Favicchio
Cashier
Business
Office
James Fay
MGMT Studies
Craig Fennel
Dir.
Financial Aid
Elena Filchagina
Librarian AV Periodicals
Craig
Fisher
Information Systems
Brydon Fitzgerald
Mentor
Faculty, Staff and Admini
s
tration 115
FACULTY, STAFF A
Leah Fleming
Resident
Director
Cheryl
Frazier-W
oods
Coor. Human Resources
Ronald Gauch
MGMT Studies
Raymond Gila
Accounting
Thomas Goldpaugh
English
Richard Goldstone
Mathematics
Katherine Greiner
Medical Technology
Sue Gronewold
History
Robert Grossman
MGMT Studies
Katherine Gunthert
Exec. Secretary Stud. Affairs
Gregory Hamilton
Economics
Jeanne Hamilton
Dir. Campus Ministry
,
John Hartsock
Communications
James Helmre1ch
Mathematics
Neil Hogan
Copy Center
Rosemary Illustrato
Career
Development
Judith Ivankovic
Registrar
Nora Jachym
Teacher Education
Elizabeth Jaycox
Science Admin. Secretary
Al Jurkowski
Coor. Juvenile Prgms
116 Faculty,
Staff and Administration
ADMINISTRATION
Claire Keith
French
Brother Donald Kelly
Mathematics
John Kelly
Chair. MGMT Studies
Syed Khatib
Communications
Maureen Kilgour
Alumni Affairs
Steven Killion
English
Joseph Kirtland
Mathematics
Chester Kobos
MGMT Studies
Shaileen Kopec
VP Advancement
Constance Kustas
Business Office
Olympia
Kustas
Stud
.
Academic Affair
s
Patricia Laffin
Learning Center
Raymond Lane
Dir.
Postal Services
Thomas Lanspery
Dir
.
Purchasing
Richard La Pietra
Chemistry
Mary Sue Lawrence
Communications
Barbara Lavin
Criminal
Justice
Timothy Lawton
Telecomm
.
Analyst
Ann Lehane
A VP Receptionist
Na dine Lewis
Counselor HEOP
Facult
y,
Staff and Admini
s
tration 11
7
FACULTY, STAFF AN
:
Diane Litynski
MGMT Studies
Robin Loeffler
Student Accounts
Robert Lynch
Dir. Student Activities
Thomas Lynch
En
v
ironmental Science
Virginia Marquardt
Art History
Pamela Maurer
Secretary Teacher Educ.
William Mayo
Ad jun ct Professor
Jerome McBride
Dir. Info Systems
Rev. Luke McCann
Chaplain
Mary McComb
Communications
Martha McConaghy
Sr. S
ys
tems Programmer
Richard McGovern
Mathematics
Patricia Mcsweeney
Div. Comm. Secretary
Joann Mead
Accountant
Eugene Melan
MGMT Studies
David Meredith
MGMT Studies
Maria Moccio
Science Secretary
Andrew Molloy
Chair
.
Div. Science
Rosemary Molloy
Dir
.
Stud. Acad
.
Affrs.
Jacki Moriarty
Coor. Ad ult Education
11
8 Fac
ultv
, S
t
a
ff
a
nd
A
dmini
s
tr
a
tion
ADMINISTRATION
Linda Muhlfeld
College Activities
Victoria Mullen
Budget/Fin
.
Analyst
Desmond Murray
Asst. Dir
.
Field Exp.
Mary Murphy
College Activities
Joanne Myers
Political Science
Scott Myers
Dir. Paralegal Prgm.
Prema Nakra
MGMT Studies
Catherine Newkirk
Medical Technology
Augustine Nolan
Chair
.
Comm Arts
Casimir Norkeliunas
Russian
Robert Norman
Communications
Roger Norton
Computer Science
Jane O'Brien
Dir
.
Health Services
Daniel Okada
Criminal Justice
Edward O'Keefe
Psychology
Pamela Oloffson
Secretary
Grad
Adm.
Miriam Oren
A VP Exec Secretary
Patricia Oswald
Asst.
Dir.
Human Res.
John Padovani
Asst.
Dir
Housing
Luis Perez
History
Faculty
,
Staff and Admini
s
tration 11
9
FACULTY, STAFF AN
Amy Pettengill
Coor. Marist Abroad
Marilyn Poris
Dir.
Inst. Research
Matthew Poslusny
Chemistry
Kenneth Powers
Registrar
Theodore Prenting
Dir.
MBA Program
Gail Presby
Philosophy
Timothy Priest
Counselor Juv. Prgms
James Raimo
Director,
Housing
Bro. Richard Rancourt
Mathematics
Edward Reyman
Dir
.
Payroll
Caroline Rider
Business
Evan Rivers
,
English
Dorothea Roche
MGMT Studies
Iris Ruiz-Grech
Dir
.
HEOP
James Ryan
Coor. Special Services
Steve Sansola
Asst.
Dean
Activities
Victoria Sarkisian
Coor. Linguistic Studies
Judith Saunders
English
John Scileppi
Dir. MA Psychology
Linda Scorza
Special Services
120
Faculty,
Staff and Administration
D
ADMINISTRATION
Art Scott
Comp Sci/
Math
Deidre Sepp
Dir. Career Deveopment
Alison Sexton
Asst. Athletic
Director
Onkar Sharma
Chau.
Comp
Sci
&
Math
Herbert Sherman
Business
Ralph Short
Grounds
Supervisor
Grace Sinisi
Student Affairs
Stuart Smyth
History
Teresa Snyder-Leiby
Biology
Mary Spinella
Library
Assistant
Lisa Spoor
Admin
Clerk,
Fin. Aid
Randy Stolz
Comp Sci
&
Math
Laurence Sullivan
Religious Studies
Robert Sullivan
Medical Technology
Richard Sunderland
Accounting
Jean Talbot
MGMT Studies
James TenEyck
Computer Science
Wendy Thatcher
Health
Services
Brian Toale
Copy Center
..
Faculty, Staff and Administration 121
FACULTY, STAFF A
Congratulations
to the
f
ollowing faculty
tnetnbers:
Faculty
of
the Year -
Katherine Greiner
Medical
Technology
Robin Torres
Dir
.
Annual Fund
Marianne Toscano
Coor
.
Math, Learning
Vincent Toscano
Chair. Div
.
Humanities
Jonah Triebwasser
Paralegal Studies
Marc vanderHeyden
VP Academic Affairs
Barbara Vanltallie
Coor. Math Placement
Carol Vari
Acting Dir
.
Grad Adm.
Vernon Vavrina
Political Science
Frances Vergili
Accounts Pa
y
able
Christina Vertullo
Mathematics
Loretta Walicki
Switchboard Operator
Syde Wattoff
P~ysical Plant Secretar
y
122 Fac
ult
y,
St
a
ff
a
nd Ad~
s
tration
ADMINISTRATION
Outstanding Recipients-
Modele Clark -Communications
Even Rivers- English
Joseph Weglarz
Dir
.
Student Accounts
Paul Weiner
MGMT Studies
Peter Wenzel
Locksmith
Thomas Wermuth
History
Theresa
Whitesell
Dir. Development
AD
Cheryl Whitley
Social Work
Bro. Michael Williams
Asst. Camp. Minister
Ann Winfield
Dir.
Enroll. Comm.
Jo-Ann Wohlfahrt
Alumni Affairs Asst.
Harold Wood
VP Admissions
Amanda Zarrelli
Sr. Accounting Clerk
Louis Z uccarello
Coor. Political Science
Best Adj Junctl Administration-
Dean Amato
Recognition Awards-
John Doherty-Criminal Justice
Ronald Gauch- Public Administration
Joesph Kirtland- Mathematics
Faculty,
Staff and
Administration 123
SPORTS
u
~
uu:tteatwe
t o ~
pvt
a ~
·,
.
'
.
.
'
,____
MEN'S F~~=l=BJ\J;J;
Become Metro AAC Champions with
7-3
record
The Red Foxes won
Senior Bruce A. Harris,
the MAAC Football
voted the Marist
SCOREBOARD
League championship
Sportsperson of the
(7-3); 6-1 MAAC)
in their first season of
Year, was named to the
Central Conn. 22
24L
play in the conference
All-MAAC and All-
Iona
37
19W
Wagner
8
30L
and tied the school
ECAC Division
SL John's
32
13W
record for wins finish-
I-AA first team all star
St. Peter's
33
ow
Duquesne
16
7W
ing at 7-3. Marist went squads while freshman
Canisius
13
ow
6-1 in MAAC play with tailback Jovan Rhodes
Georgetown 12
35L
St. Francis
39
16W
victories over St. John's, broke the school record
Siena
45
19W
Duquesne, Iona, and
for most yards with
MAAC Champions
Siena to name a few.
1,059 for the year.
LE
FT
:
T
h
e
R
e
d
Foxes
pl
a
n th
e
ir
s
tr
a
t
egy
b
efo
r
e
th
e
pl
ay
.
126
•
Foo
tb
all
ABOVE: Don't
attack
until
you
see
the
whites of
thei~
eyes .....
ABOVE and TOP RIGHT: The team wins against one one of their
rivalries- St.
Francis.
Football
•
127
'
BELOW and RIGHT: Running ten mile
s
a da
y
reall
y
pa
ys
off!
Swift 2nd at NEC's; women 3rd overall ..... .
Men
'
s Cross Country-
Senior David Swift was
catalyst for the Red Foxes,
wimming
'
two individual
titles at Monmouth ap.d
Fairfield and leading the
team to championships
i9n the same races. Swift
also placed second at the
Northeast Conference
championships, the best
finish ever by a Marist
runner, and third of 164
runners at the IC4A
Championships. He was
an All-NEC and All-IC4A
selection. As a Team,
Marist had one of its most
productive seaons ever
finishing third or bettter
12
8
• Cro
ss
Country
in five out of seven
meets and two team
titles.
Women's Cross
Country- The Red
Foxes placed 3rd at the
NEC Championships
and were 5th or better
in five of their seven
meets this past fall.
Colleen Carson was the
team's top finisher at
the NEC's placing 10th
and was seventh at
the Albany and Fair-
field Invitationals.
Sophomore Kathleen
Woodson finished as
the top Marist runner
in every race she ran.
SCOREBOARDS
Men's Cross Country
Cen Conn Inv 2nd of 6
Fordham Inv 14th of 25
Monmouth
1st of 5
Fairfield Inv 1st of 7
Columbia
w/
Wagner
3rd of 4
NEC Champ 3rd of
to
IC4A/ECAC tttrh of 29
Women's Cross
Country
Cen Conn Inv 4th of 7
Fordham Inv 7th of 20
Rutgers Inv 2nd of 6
Fairfield Inv 2nd of 7
Albany
2nd of 8
NEC Champ 4th of 10
!C4A/ECAC 11th of 31
'
Men finish
-
7th at NEC's; Schneider sets personal record
Men's Indoor Track-
The men finished seventh
at NEC
Championships,
with senior
David Swift
capping an excellent
campaign
by
finishing
fourth in
the
3,000
meters.
Swift
also
had
four other
first place finished,
two
at
1,000 meters
and
two
at
3,000meters. Men'sTrack
and Field-
The Red
Foxes
have had
a solid spring
led
by
senior
distance
runners David Swift
and
Andrew
Baird
and
sophomore Matt
Pool.
Marist was primed for its
best
showing at
the
NEC
Championships in
May.
Women'slndoorTrack-
The women were
led by
the
strong running
of
s o p h m o r e
Kathleen Woodson
and
junior Colleen Carson.
Women's
Track and
Field-
Marist was
led by
senior
Patsy
Schneider
who set
personal
and school
records
in
four
of her last
five meets in the
400IM
hurdles
while sophomore
Kathleen Woodson had
an
outstanding
spring
performance
in
distance
events.
Seven of the Red
Fox athletes
have placed
at
the
NEC
Champion-
ships
held
at
Rider.
SCOREBOARDS
Men's and Women's
Indoor Track-
12/2 West Point Relays
12/11 Seton Hall Games
12/17 Christmas Rush
1/14 Yale Invitational
1/22 Stony Brook Inv.
1/28 Army Invitational
2/11 St. John's Inv.
2/18 NEC Champion-
ships at FDU
2/25 Seton Hall Last
Chance
3/4 IC4A
Championships
LEFT and ABOVE
:
After each race,
the
coach suggests
ways of improving on
e's
race. As
the
runner
s
know,
EVERY SECOND COUNTS!
Track and Field
•
12
9
Basile 6th in country for free throw shooting ...
Men's Basketball -
11 record. Senior
The men finished
captain Gregg Cho-
second
in
the
dkowski had been
N o r t h e a s t
named to the GTE
Conferenceand
advanced to the
semifinals
of the
c o n f e r e n c e
tournament. Junior
center Alan Tomidy
was named to the first-
team all-NEC team,
while junior guard
Danny Basile was a
second
team selection.
Head
Coach Dave
Magarity was named
Academic All-
America Team for
his impressive work
in the classroom,
carrying a 3.8 in Bio-
logy. Both Tomidy
and Basile became
the first juniors in
school history to
reach the 1,000 pt.
mark for their
careers in the same
season.
SCOREBOARD
(17-11; 12-6 NEC)
Mt. St. Mary's 62
FDU
88
Robert Morris 78
St. Francis(Pa) 82
LIU
83
St. Francis(NY) 93
Rider
73
73L
90L
69W
72W
70W
54W
81L
Monmouth
Wagner
FDU
77
75W
79
66W
74
68W
St. Francis(Pa) 73
Robert Morris 80
St. Francis(NY)80
LIU
128
Wagner
74
Monmouth
51
Mt. St. Mary's 77
Rider
81
Wagner NEC 95
M.S.M
's S-F79
63W
77W
66W
98W
76L
62L
81L
71W
75W
84L
ABOVE:
Basile takes
a
pull-up jump
shot with
Lucasz
setting
the
screen.
130• Basketball
LEFf: Lori Keys in
the lane
shooting over a Monmouth
defender
with
Courtney
Bl
ore
blocking down low for
a
rebound.
WOMEN'S BASKE+Bl\tt
Keys ends career on a high note ....
The women were
beset by in juries
this year, losing
two starting
players to season
ending injuries.
The women
finished the year
with a 10-17 mark.
Senior forward
Lori Keys, the
Marist Sports-
person of the Year
for the women,
ended her stellar
career as the all-
time leading re-
bounder and
third leading
scorer in school
history. Keys was
also named to the
first team all NEC
and freshman
guard Liz
MacDougall was
named to the all-
newcomer team.
LEFf:
Dunbar breaks
away for an easy two as
Chodkowshi watches on ....
SCOREBOARD
(10-7; 7-11 NEC)
Rider
61
30W
Mt. St. Mary's 64
79L
FDU
72
69W
Robert Morris 67
69L
St. Francis(Pa) 54
71L
LIU
51
59L
St. Francis(NY)59
69L
Monmouth
46
64L
Wagner
56
45W
FDU
63
42W
St. Francis(Pa) 69
77L
Robert Morris 58
53W
St. Francis(NY)59 52W
Wagner
55
66L
Monmouth
50
69L
Mt. St. Mary's 40
41L
Rider
56
68L
LIU
64
61W
LIU NEC Opening
Round
58
77L
Basketball
•
131
SWIMMINb/gI\lING
Men and Women take Met
.
Conference Titles ....
Men
's
Swimming
Women
'
s Swim-
and Diving- Head
ming and Diving-
SCOREBOARD
coach Larry Van-
The women won
Men (10-0)
Wagner was named
their second con-
MSC Relay Champ 1st
Seton Hall
127 86W
Met Conference/
secutive Met
Cent. CT. St. 158 86W
Coach of the Year as
Conference champ-
Iona
123 69W
Rider
142. 5 97.5W
he guided the Red
ionship as head
Fairfield
139 66W
Foxes to a perfect 10-
coach Lloyd Gold-
St. Francis
129 54W
0 record and the Met
stein was named the
St. Peter's
132 69W
Conference Title.
Met Conference
Women (7-4)
Freshmen Chris
Coach of the Year.
MSC Relay Champ 1st
Blackwell and Chris
Sophomore Daniele
Seton Hall
97 1381
Cent.CT.St. 145
97W
O'Connor were
DiGeronimo was
Iona
131
now
named Most Out-
named the most
Rider
125 116W
Fairfield
123 114W
standing Diver and
Oustanding Diver
St. Francis
150
55W
Rookie of the Year,
at the Met Champ-
St. Peter's
143
73W
respectively.
ionships
.
A
BO
VE: Some
tim
es
th
e
r
aces see
m t
o
l
as
t
fo
r
eve
r
.
.
.
.
.
132
•
Swimmi
n
g a
nd Di
v
in
g
LEFf: Hard work
pays
off as
demonstrated by
Stephanie Raide
's
performance.
BELOW: The team
showing
off their
spirit...
LEFf: The
swimmers wait
in anticipatioin for
the next
event
against Colgate.
Swimming and
Diving•
133
B
EL
OW
: A
nd th
e Foxes
tr
y a
nd pull
off a
doubl
e
pl
ay
.
..
RIG
HT
:
T
h
e
b
a
ll i
s g
oin
g ..
.
go
in
g
.
.
. goi
n
g
.
.
.
,..
.
-
..
Red Foxes No. 1 seed in NEC Tournament
The Red Foxes pitcher Michelle
broke
,
the school Hudson entered
record for wins in a the
conference
season this spring tournament with a
when they finished 19-5 record and was
the regular season ranked amongthe
30-10-1 overall. top 10 in strikeouts.
Their 13-2-1 mark Senior third base-
in the NEC earned man Melissa Fan-
them their second elli has been rank-
straight
NEC ed as high as sixth
regular season title in the nation in
and a No. 1 seed in Division I batting.
conference tourn-
ament. Sophomore
134
•
Softball
SCOREBOARD
Fall (7-1)
Manhattan 8-5W;4-3W
Siena
3-lW; 10-6W
Army
.
2-0W; 10-3W
St. Peter's 1-0W; 2-4L
Spring (17-5-1; 7-0-1
NEC)
Siena
2-0W
Fairfield
11-3W
Bradley
0-13L
Niagra
5-lW
L
ehigh
8-6W
R.I.
3-2W
Monmouth 4-lW; 5-2W
LIU
5-lW; 6-6T
Wagner
8-0W; 8-3W
Colgate
4-0W;; 2-lW
Manhattan 6-7L
BA:SEBA:tt
Red Foxes make it to NEC Tournament
'
Marist entered in Columbia this
the final week of coming summer.
the season with the The Red Foxes
nation
'
s top hitter broke the school
in junior Mark record for victories
Barron. The team with twelve and
leader in seven went into the final
o f f e n s i v e week
'
s action look-
categories, Barron ing for their first bid
led all Division I into the NEC tourn-
~
-
-
hitters at .470 and ament.
double per game at
1.35 and, was
in
v
ited to play for
Team USA in the
SCOREBOARD
Fall (6-4-1)
Army
7-6W, 10-12L
Molloy
9-2W, 1-2L
Pace
5-2W, 0-7L
Iona
4-4T, 4-7L
Hartford
5-2W
Manhattan 3-0W, 8-SL
Spring (6-15-1;3-6 NEC)
Monmouth 2-3L; 2-4L
Monmouth 8-4W
Iona
7-7T
Siena
0-SL
Wagner
4-SL; 6-SL
Wagner
9-SW
Manhattam 6-7L
St. Francis 4-3W; 0-2L
St. Francis 4-9L
Molloy
3-16L
(scores available at
time)
LEFT:
R
ai
n
or shine,
th
ese p
l
ayers prac
t
ice
in
t
he
b
a
tt
i
n
g cages
.
A
BO
VE: Ma
r
is
t
tries
t
o s
t
ea
l t
o
t
a
k
e
th
e
l
ead
.
..
B
ase
b
all
•
135
136
•
Crew
LEFr
:
Although it'
s
a
lot
of
work,
the team
s
till put
s
in
th
e
dedication
and
the
effort.
REW
TOP
LEFT: The Crew
members put their boats
away after a
l
ong
practfo
in
the
early A
.
M
.
LEFT:
A few
dedicated
Fox members
h
e
l
p
in
m
ak
in
g s
ur
e
t
he boa
t
i
s
i
n
worki
n
g condition
.
~
-Ii.::!
B
ELOW
LEFT:
Marist
si
t
s
next to
one of
the
most
famous
river
s:
theHUDSO
.
The Red Foxes take the President's Cup once more ....
Another year of
tional both the
earymorning
practices and rigorous
training has led both
the
men's
and
women's crew teams
to what has been a
successful season.
These two teams
consist of two levels
each-
novice and
varsity. Between the
men's and women's
teams there are over
sixty
dedicated
rowers keeping the
program strong. At
the LaSalle Invita-
women's varsity
eight and the LT8
captured a first
place finish. The
Red Foxes won their
fourth straight Pres-
ident's Cup on the
banks of the
Hudson and were
considered to be
sending one of the
strongest crews to
the New York State
and Dad Vail
Championships.
..
SCOREBOARD
Skidmore
&
Army
MV8-2nd; WV8-2nd;
MHW4-lst; WV L TS-
lst; WV LT4-lst; MJV
L TS-2nd; MN8-3rd;
WN8-2nd
LaSalle Invitational
MV8-3rd; WVS-lst;
WN8-4th; MV LT-3rd
4/22 President's Cup
New York Rowing
Championship
5/12-13 Dad Vail
Regatta
C
r
ew
•
137
s
C
0
R
E
B
0
I
A
R
D
s
LACRtJ$$E
Mount St. Mary's
(Md.) 7-13 L
Radford 6-12 L
V.M.I. 8-15 L
New Hampshire
10-11 L
St John's 9-20 L
Providence
15-l0W
Farifield 17-13 W
Siena ppd.
Sacred Heart
Stony Brook
·
Lafayette
Hartford
Drexel
Holy Cross
WtJMENS
Yale Invitational
vs. Yale 0-3 L
Central Conn. St.
1-3L
Siena 0-3 L
Hartford 3-2 W
Fordham 3-2 W
Holy Cross 3-2W
St. Peter's 3-1 L
Siena 0-3 L
FDU3-1 W
Iona 1-3 L
St. Francis (NY) 3-2
·
W
LIU3-0 W
Central Conn. St.
0-3L
Army 0-3 L
Third Place in NEC
Tournament
,
.
$tJCCER
Fordham
2-3
L
Iona
0-1 L
Robert Morris
1-3 L
FDU0-4L
Mt. St. Mary's (Md.)
0-3
L
St. John's
1-5 L
St. Francis (NY)
2-1W
Siena
1-2 L
Central Conn. St.
0-5
L
Northeastern
3-1
W
St. Francis (Pa) 1-4L
Monmouth
2-3
L
Towson State 0-1 L
LIU
1-4 L
Rider 1-4 L
Manhattan 0-1 L
Adelphi
3-2
W
Oneonta 0-2 L
MEN'S
&
WQMEN'S
tJ UT-tJtJ tJR
¼-RACK
Iona College Inv.
Coulmbia Women's
Invitational
Yale
invitational
Coumbia Relays
(men only)
Columbia Inv.
Brown Invitational
NEC
,
Championships
(Hosted by Rider)
S
·
C
0
R
E
B
0
A
R
D
s
s
C
0
R
E
B
0
r
A
R
D
s
MEN'S
&
WtJMEN'$
tNEJQQR
¼-RACK
West Pt. Relays
Seton Hall Games
Christmas Rush
Yale Invitational
•
Stony Brook Inv.
Army Invitational
St. Hohn
's
Inv.
NEC Champion-
_
ships at FDU
Seton Hall Last
Chance
IC4A Champion-
ships
MEN'~
TENNIS
Army 1-6 L
Fairleigh
Dickinson
6-3
W
St. Francis (NY)
7-1 W
Rider 9-0 W
Fairfield ppd.
Central Conn. St .
2-5
L
Rhode Island
4-3W
Iona 7-0 W
·
Fordham 1-7 L
Manhattan ppd.
Siena
5-3
W
NEC
Championships
I
WtJMEN'S ¼-ENNIS
1
Wagner
7-2
W
Monmouth 9-0 W
Iona 5-4 W
St. Francis (NY)
8-1
W
FDU8-1
W
Central
.
Conn. St.
0-8 L
Hofstra 3-4 L
Manhattan 8-1 W
,
Fordham ppd.
ILIU ppd.
Canisius clld.
NEC
Championships
at Mt. St. Mary's
(Md.)- 3rd out of
10
Siena 4-7 L
s
C
0
R
E
B
0
A
R
D
s
CLUBS AND
ACTIVITIES
E ~ S ' ~ ~
, ~
7/tdu,4,ut~~~
r
~ ,
l ~
)
_
_ . _
•·
"
~
.....
;
.
~
REMEMBER~
.
.
.
~
O#t
~
oU ~ ,
~
I
•
• · ;
·
;'
ol~at
~ , ~
·,
deed
,{'
.
-..
....
,.
_
hwe
HU!JUte
da
.
~
~
~
~
·
·
~'"EORE\lEJl.
;:
.
,,
.
-
.
.,
-
.
'
..,_
.
'
.
'
.
~
.
'•
.
..
,.
.
.
~·
.
_;
.
The Student Government Association serves as the governing body for the
college's clubs, events
,
and activities
.
All members of SGA are dedicated to the
representation and fulfillment of student needs
,
raising expectations of the student body,
and enhancing personal and professional growth for all of the students here at Mari st.
In order for any these standards to be upheld
,
we must have confidence in ourselves, be
open to the opinions and suggestions of our peers, and be diligent pursuers of our own
good
,
as well for the good of the entire Marist community. With these standards
,
we
work towards making Marist College a better place for today and tomorrow
.
Over the past year
,
SGA has been instrumental in accomplishing many new things
on campus such as
:
the addition of a second refrigerator in the old town houses
,
the
addition of new lights in many of those "not so safe areas
,
" the implementing of two foot
patrols on the North End of campus
,
the removal of the wooden stairs behind Sheehan
Hall
,
the computerizing of SGA election results
,
by improving SGA communication to the
student body - writing in The Circle in each issue, the attempted new answer to the
parking problem-200 more spaces
,
and many entertainers and ev~nts brought to you from
the Student Programming Council.
Some of the issues SGA and the college may always be trying to solve are
:
the
Greek Club Cap, the parking problem
,
the student dissatisfaction with library, Freshman
dissatisfaction with the visitation policy
,
a fan base for our athletic programs, the
·
underfunding and lack of adequate space for WMCR, the relentless pursuit of improving
the image of this college, and the improvement of the overall quality of education
.
I would like to thank all the members of the student body for giving me the
opportunity and the challenge to represent their needs and interests
.
More importantly
,
I
would like to thank ALL MEMBERS of the Mari st Community more making my
educational experience here truly excellent.
Sincerely
,
//
/
//(
~
:-
#d
/
,
j l / ~
Matthew
J.
Gillis
Student Body President
SGA PRESIDENTS: Activities-Lynn Russo Academics-Mikael
Carlson Elections-Andreana Nelson Financial-Anthony Bayer
Judicial-Erin Barly.
'
·
148 Clubs and Activiti
e
s
THE
PSYCHOLOGY
CLUB
Officers:
Daniel Iazzetti
Allison Notaro
Jennifer Sito
Heather Spino
CRIMINAL
JUSTICE SOCIETY
Officers:
Dennis Rau
Laura Chlupsa
John Troland
Michael Donato
CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES
-Dennis Rau-"The criminal Justice Society prepares students for the future through trips to prisons,
courthouses and jails. This allows the members to become exposed to the system, and know what to
~XP,ect."
C
lub
s a
nd
A
ct
iv
iti
es
1
49
THE OUTBACK
CLUB
Officers:
Richard Pinto
Emily Merwin
Sara Anderson
STUDENTS
ENCOURAGING
GLOBAL
AWARENESS
Officers:
Joe
Smith
Stacy Rhubin
Aaron Astorino
Heather Haynes
THE CIRCLE
Officers:
Kristina Wells
Meredith Kennedy
Teri Stewart
Christopher Jones
150 Clubs
and Activities
>,
1
,
MARISTBAND
Officers:
Jennifer Trenary
Anastasia Filak
Jessica Cramer
Katherine Lewis
THE
MARIST
CHURCH
CHOIR
THE CHESS CLUB
Officers:
Michael Murray
Jeffery Wiater
David Lifson
Ronald Gage
C
lub
s
and
Ac
ti
v
it
ies 15
1
THE OUTBACK
CLUB
Officers:
Richard Pinto
Emily Merwin
Sara Anderson
STUDENTS
ENCOURAGING
GLOBAL
AWARENESS
Officers:
Joe Smith
Stacy Rhubin
Aaron Astorino
Heather Haynes
THE CIRCLE
Officers:
Kristina Wells
Meredith Kennedy
Teri Stewart
Christopher Jones
150
Clubs
and Activities
MARISTBAND
Officers:
Jennifer Trenary
Anastasia Filak
Jessica Cramer
Katherine Lewis
THE
MARIST
CHURCH
CHOIR
THE CHESS CLUB
Officers:
Michael Murray
Jeffery Wiater
David Lifson
Ronald Gage
Clubs and Activities 151
STUDENT
PROGRAMMING
COUNCIL
AT LAKE
MINIWASKA
·
THE
HUMARIST
·
S
152 Clubs and Activities
>
,
MODEL UN
Officers:
Peter Foy
Andreanna Nelson
John Seifert
Adrienne Selegna
MCTV
Officers:
Gina Becconsall
Christopher Berinato
Sue Yanusz
Anthony Allison
Clubs and Activities 153
THEBLACK
STUDENT UNION
Officers:
Timothy Gamory
Melissa Pittman
Natasha Guadulupe
Lisa Goddard
THE ITALIAN
AMERICAN
SOCIETY
Officers:
Lisa Comagna
Dana Spano
Vicky Karestes
Josheph Moscato
-Italian American Society-"Instills pride, unity and respect for our culture."
154 Clubs and Activi
t
ies
SORORITIES
'
AND FRATERNITIES
KAPPA LAMBDA
PSI
Officers:
Stephanie DeVita
Jennifer Illustrato
Jennifer Danza
ALPHA SIGMA
TAU
Officers:
.
Susan Russello
Danielle DeMarco
Monika Hobbs
Dana Avagliano
-Sunsan Russello-"lnstalls honesty, truth, trust and sisterhood. We are the newest
sorority at Marist and all of the members have had the opportunity to build it's
foundation and add to it's strength."
Clubs
and Activities
155
KAPPA KAPPA
GAMMA
Officers:
Laura Patterson
Cynthia Malo
Susan Ferinde
Yesinia Cruz
Kimberly Garrett
Melissa DellaBianca
SIGMA PHI
EPSILON
Officers:
Jason Tarulli
Joe Russo
Mark Higgins
Joe Malorigio
·
John Grambaro
-Sigma Phi Epsilon-"ln
ancient Greece, developing body and mind were two
complementary partners
of a quality education. Sigma Phi Epsilon challenges all
of it's member~ to be
balanced men; spirit healthy, body healthy."
156 Clubs and Activi
t
ies
TAU EPSILON
PHI
Officers:
Brett Minieri
Brian Gumbel
John Fiordalise
Chris Pavlowich
PHI SIGMA
KAPPA
Officers:
Brian Bradley
Chris Kovach
Tim Connolly
Brian Skinner
Bryan Michaelson
Andrew Maier
Jason Fusco
TAU KAPPA
EPSILON
Officers:
Ken Tierney
Jeffery Ferro
Matt Brown
Francis Mace
>
,
Clubs
and Activites
157
CLUB SPORTS
MEN'S
RACQUETBALL
TEAM
Officers:
Darren Ranft
HOCKEY TEAM
Officers:
Brad Kamp
Todd Corriveau
Grayson DeWitt
Joseph Accisano
158 Clubs and activities
WOMEN'S
RACQUETBALL
TEAM
I
CHEERLEADING
I
OFFICERS:
TRACEY SMITH
MEN'S
VOLLEYBALL
Officers:
Jason Letendre
Pete Blaney
Sean Stam
Francisco Jimencez
Clubs and Activities 159
MARIST COLLEGE COUNCIL ON
THEATRE ARTS
1994-1995 SEASON
The Marist College
Council on Theatre
Arts had an
outstanding
year
with
nine performances on
their playbill
.
M.C.C.T.A.
entertained young
and
old with comedies,
musicals, dramas,
children's
shows and
even some
experimental
plays
.
With most of all the
proceeds from each
performance the
establishment
of the
Jennifer Dressel (91
')
Scholorship,
should
be
in effect
for the
following
year.
"I
HA TE HAMLET"
"Ghosts,
Swords, Sex
and Shakespeare: what
more
could you want?"
160
Clubs
and
Activities
"TRIPLE BILL"
"On
my own,"
"The
Best Years of Our
Lives," and
"One
Bitchin' Lunch Hour."
"ME AND MY GIRL"
"The
Hareford's us. The
Cockney's, True Love Wins!"
Clubs
and Activites
161
"WHO'S AFRAID OF
VIRGINIA WOOLF?"
"Martha and
George meets the
true woolf without a
nick
on
them
.
"
"NOISES OFF"
"Is
this
a party?
"
162 Clubs and Activities
"LOVE'S
LABOUR'S
LOST"
"4 girls, 4 guys in
a
play
about the
ins and outs of
this
crazy
little
thing
called
love!"
"ROBIN HOOD"
"Sherwood Forest
and 3500 children
took
over Marist
for
a week."
Clubs and Activities 163
GUESTS AND EVENTS AT MARIST COLLEGE 1994-1995
Barry Williams
SINIMEW Dance Ballet of Senegal
Jeffery Gaines with Bill Patterson
Minneapolis Gospel Sound
164 Clubs and Activities
Singer/
Songwriter:
Jeffery Gaines
Battle of the
,
Band Winners:
YARN
El Arco Iris Latino Talent Show
Holiday Decorating Contest at the Midrise
SPC Holiday Semi
Formal
Marist Employer
Expo
Clubs
and
Activites 165
The Run For Hunger
Faculty of the Year Award Ceremony
Sigma Phi Epsilon Blood Drive
166 Clubs and Activi
t
ies
Lecture: Living with AIDS- Sharon Lund
Comedian: Dan Horn
Comedian:Paul Venier with
'f.om
Privitera
Comedian:Walli Collins
I
~
IGHER
Eo
ucAr10N
0PPORTu nv
PRoGRPJ
25
TH
ANNIVERSARY
25th Anniversary of HEOP
The Astonishing Neil
*All pictures provided by Robert
J.
Lynch
.
.
Clubs
and Activities
167
World Events 1994-1995
President Bill Clinton
entered 1995 with
hope
for a
better
year.
Although
he
won a significant political
battle
with
the
Crime
Bill,
he lost
the
Health Care proposal
that he battled
all year.
> '
With
President
Bill Clinton presiding
at a
White House
Mideast Peace ceremony, Israeli Prime
Minister
Yizhak
Rabin
and King Hussein of Jordan shook
hands
and
signed
"The Washington Declaration".
More
than
a
million refugees
were forced
to flee from Rwanda
.
Disease killed
thousands of
refugees in
several camps.
But the
United Nationsays
massacres
killed
more than
500,000
refugees.
'
168
Clubs and Activities
President
Jeanbertand
Aristide
was elected
president in late
1990, but less than
a
year
later
was
arrested
by the
military
and
expelled
the
country.
Coup
leader
Lt.
Gen.
Raoul Cedras
assumed
presidential
powers.
Clinton
ordered US
.
ships
to
intercept those
fleeing Cuba
b
y
boat to
detain them
at
the
U.S
.
Navy
base in
Guantanamo
Bay
.
Forest fires raged in more than
a
dozen
Western states
burning
3
millioin
acres.
14
fire
fighters were
killed during
a
blaze in Colorado.
5,000
people died
in
Kobe, Japan,
on January 17, 1995. Buildings
turned into
rubble as 270
,
000
people
were forced
to live in
refugee
shelters,
because their
homes
collapsed or were
unsafe.
Tropical storm Alberto
dumped 20 inches of rain on Georgia and took
31
lives.
49
counties
were
declared federal disaster
areas.
Fighting in Bosnia
continued even
though
a
referendum for independence
was
sighned
in
1992.
Negotiations for a peace plan made
slow
progress
as
1994
came
to a close and killings continuied.
Clinton's
grandest
legislative
goal
of the
year failed
to
come
to a
vote in Congress
late
in 1994.
The legislation
would
have
guaranteed
health care
to
all Americans.
,
.
Clubs
and Activities 169
Ken Griffey Jr.
of the Seattle Mariners
was on his way to a homerun record of
61, but the baseall season ended and
there was no record.
OJ Simpson was accused of murdering
his ex
-
wife, Nicole Brown Simpson and
her friend, Ronald Goldman. Marcia
Clark
represented the DA
'
s office,
Robert Sharpiro represented OJ
.
170 Clubs and Activities
The
baseball
season
ended in August 1994 due to a strike inspired by disputes
between players and owners over a salary cap. The 1994 World Series was not
played.
1994
World Cup
soccer competition was played in the U.S. The U.S. team played
Brazil
,
but lost in the second round
.
The final game was Brazil vs Italy. Brazil
won
3-2 as an estimated 2 billion people around the world looked on.
The counry watched the preliminary hearing
and the trial
of OJ Simpson
on national
television
.
It has become the trial of the
Century.
The
San Fransisco 49ers
scored 49-26 defeating
the
San
Diego
Chargers. Steve
Young was named most
desirable player.
Heather Whitestone,
21 native of
Birmingham,
Alabama, was
the
first
deaf
woman
to be
crowned Miss
America.
Agassi
was
the
champion of
the
U.S.
Open Tennis Tournament against
Michael Stich of Germany. Agassi
became
the
first
unseeded
player
to
win
'
the crown.
It
was his first U.S. Open
title.
Nelson Mandela
was elected
to
govern the violent country of
South Africa. He won
the
countries first all-race election. In
1993 he won the Nobel Peace
Prize.
The
Beastie Boys
matured
from brats
to
pop
stars. Their current album,
"
Ill
Communications" is concidered
their
best. The
Beastie
Boys
displayed
their
diverse sound
with several 1970s-esque instramentals.
WOODSTOCK:
Woostock
'94
drew
hundreds
of
thousands
of a new generation
to Saugerties, N.Y.
this
August.
It
was a
weekend concert with music
practically
24
hours
a day. Artists
that
performed ranged
from folk singers
to
heavy metal bands. The
legendary
rock festival left many concert
goers covered in Woodstock mud.
BEST OF THE YEAR:
Movie:
Timecop
Music single:
"I'll Make Love To You"-
Boyz
to
M
en
Album:
Boyz to
Men
Book:
Debt
of Honor, by
Tom
Clancy
Disclosure,
by
Michael
Crichton
Television shows:
Melros
e
Place
Party
of Five
Friends
Seinfeld
E.R.
,.
Clubs and Activities 171
SPONSORS AND
SENIOR MESSAGES
&taut
B,
%'411Ne
~ 0 #
/1,ut
-4t44
~~
'
THANK
~~deue9
·
tie'te
.
·
·
'
.
-
.
'
The Annunziata Family
Franklyn & Pauline
Dickson
Eleanor Farnum &
Rosemarie Tillmann
The LaPerch Family
Mr. & Mrs. Marc Lauria
I
Mom, Dr. Go, Erin, Papa
& "Nannie" too!
Mr. & Mrs. Alex
Pelkowski
>,
Mr. & Mrs. Anthony
J.
Puma
The Sorelle Family
Staten Island
Honda, Nissan
-
.
SureWay Air
Express
The Ungechauer
Family
Carmela Zanetti
I,
Georgia & Gerard Adelman
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph L. Bica Sr .
.
Mr. John 0. Daly
The Delponte Family
The DiBona/Schulte Family
The Family of Shaughn Duffy
The Enriquez Family
Mr. & Mrs. James A. Gallo &
Family
The Garrett Family
The Healy Family
The Kinlin Family
Mr. & Mrs. Roger J. Letendre
The Magee Family
'·
onsors
-
Mrs. Angela M.
McGraham
Jack & Connie McTigue
Mrs. James Pizzani
Mr. & Mrs. Tim Race
Mr. & Mrs. Sarkis
Tatari
·
an
Mr. & Mrs. Sanford Van
Vranken
Mr.
&
Mrs. Eugene
Veltri
The Vetter Family
The Workman Family
.
The Yanusz Family
>
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas R. Ajello
Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Barbaro
The Beato Family
The Bluestein Family
Mr. & Mrs. Leonard C. Bostwick Jr.
Al & Pat Brennan
Bob & Mary Lou Brown
Mr. & Mrs. Vincent Cordaro
The Corsentino Family
The Cosentino Family
Jim & Traudy Culle~
The Duphinery Family
The Foy Family
The Galvin Family
The Gamma Family
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Gerace
The Gleason Family
Mr. & Mrs. John Guarda
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Ilukowicz
The Juwa Family
Alice & Annie Kenworthy
Mr. & Mrs. Kinstle
Mr. & Mrs. Gerald X. Lamb
Mr. & Mrs. Frank Macaluso
Mr.
&
Mrs. John Macari
&
Family
onsors
~
Jim & Marylou McCann
B. K. K. & C McGee
The McGuire Family
Mr. & Mrs. Francis J. McKee
Mr. & Mrs. P.J. Mignone
Barbara Monte & Family
The Nocco Family
Mr. & Mrs. Richard K. O'Connell
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Pace
The Pedinotti - Daggett Family
The Potts Family
Mr. & Mrs. Schemp
Edmund & Mary Sheehan
Christopher Smith & Family
The Smith Family
-
Mr. & Mrs. John Sommella
The Stepp Family
.
The Targos Family
The Tipley Family
The Valentini Family
Mr. & Mrs. Paul R. Vegiard
John & Myrna Whitworth
The Walter Wisting Family
M~. Lucuis & Mrs. Joyce Wright
The Zbell Family
.
.
Robyn, Ali,
or,
Aim-ster, DJ:
"Do
n
't
be dismayed at
goodbye's.
A farewell is
necessary before
we ca
n
meet
agai
n
, and
meeting
again,
after moments or
a
lif
e-
tim
e
is
certain
for
th
ose
who
are
friends." Thanks for
eve
r
yt
hin
g!
Love Ya
,
Lisa
DJ
:
Don
'
t
e
v
e
r
fo
r
ge
t ham
&
c
h
eese,
ba
c
kbend
,
c
h
a
mpa
g
n
a
t
,
F4
,
Hl-C
,
S&D, Cancun
,
Dayt
o
na
Beach
, "
h
e
ll
o",
Oh wh
a
t
a
ni
g
ht
,
WP
,
S
unf
es
t
,
M
y
bod
y
i
s o
n fir
e,
&
Ro
a
d Trip
s.
Thank
s
for bein
g
p
a
rt
o
f th
e
best 4
yrs
o
f my
lif
e.
"
Di
s
t
a
n
ce
tak
es
n
o
t
th
e
rin
g
fr
o
m th
e
lau
g
ht
e
r
,
s
mil
e
fr
o
m
th
e
th
o
u
g
ht
s,
warmth fr
o
m
th
e
m
e
m
o
ri
es,
j
oy
fro
m th
e
years,
tru
s
t fr
o
m
th
e
h
ea
rt
s o
f fri
e
nd
s."
Lov
e ya
l
o
t
s
m
y
fri
e
nd
!
Li
sa
Ali
:
Th
a
nk
s
for bein
g a
v
e
r
y s
peci
a
l
fri
e
nd th
ese
p
as
t 4 yr
s a
nd a
g
reat r
oo
mm
a
t
e.
Alway
s
r
e
m
e
mber
:
Ca
n
cu
n
... C
lub Ab
yss
..
.
P
a
ni
c
...
Don G
...
"
t
e
ll him
I
a
m not h
e
r
e" ...
"
don
'
t
c
all me
,
I'll
c
all
yo
u
"
..
.ir
g
rad
es
w
e
re
b
ased o
n
e
f
fo
rt w
e
w
o
uld hav
e
all A
's ...
s
l
ee
pin
g
in th
e
hallwa
y ... "
wh
y a
r
e
w
e
th
e o
nl
y o
n
es s
till
awa
k
e?"
..
.
"
Dr
ea
m
s ca
n
co
m
e
tru
e" ...
and
"
all
g
ood
co
m
es
t
o
th
ose
wh
o
wait!
"
L
ove ya,
Li
sa
180 Senior Messages
T
o
Alli
e
-
In th
e
p
as
t 4
y
r
s. yo
u
hav
e s
h
o
wn
m
e
wh
a
t
a
tru
e
fri
e
nd
reall
y
i
s
and I want t
o
th
a
nk
yo
u
.
Alwa
ys
r
e
m
e
m
be
r
g
rilled
c
h
eese,
C
a
nt
e
rbur
y,
pa
s
ta
,
lat
e
ni
g
ht
talks
,
Jenn
y
J
o
n
es,
pink b
a
thro
bes,
Mari
s
t b
y
M
oo
nli
g
ht
,
&
NYPD
Blu
e.
I
will
n
e
ver for
g
et all
o
ur
w
o
nd
e
rful tim
es
to
ge
th
e
r
.
Lo
ve
Cin
a
Purple Onion, W
&
M, G
&
V, Pelicans,
"What
ladder?
"
"The
loft
",
"She
talks to
angels",
"A
re
you scared?"
s
to riv
e
r
...
Cancun
... s
l
na
l
!
?,
Jr yr-hou
se
parti
es!...
S
r
y
r-mood
s
win
gs ..
.
ib
so
n
...
What
co
m
es
aroun
,
D
a
wn
Nor, Miss Dawn, Lis
&
Al- Succeeding
alone
means
we
have
survived;
s
ucceeding
with othe,rs
means
we
have truly lived!
I
love u
guys
-Amy
J
e
n
's: yo
ur th
e
b
es
t
roo
mm
a
t
es! A
ll th
e
l
a
u
g
h
s,
j
okes, a
n
d me
m
o
ri
es!
I'll
m
i
ss yo
u
B
r
ady
'
s
ru
l
e!!
I
wa
nt t
o
th
an
k m
y
fa
mil
y
&
fr
i
e
nd
s
fo
r
s
upp
o
rtin
g
m
e
th
ro
u
g
h m
y
co
ll
ege
ca
r
ee
r.
ow
i
s
th
e
t
ime
w
h
e
n
we
mu
s
t
e
mb
irrk o
n
t
h
e grea
t
es
t
Is
it
E
mm
e
tt
S
mith
o
r
Je
nni
fe
r
P
u
sa
t
e
r
e? Love
,
Ac
jo
urn
ey of o
ur li
ves
.
T
h
a
nk
s
t
o
m
y
fa
mil
y
&
fri
e
n
d
s
.
-
Ted
Eg
Lit
Mom, Dad, Kim
&
Nana - Thanks for all your letters,
support and encouragement througout these 4 years
and for being the "wind beneath my wings." I made
it! I could never have done it without you. I'll never
forget "make me proud of you" and "assume the
position". Love ya lots, Ljsa
I really made it! Mom
&
Dad thanks! Couldn't
have done it without you both! To: L V, AE, NM,
DJ, AA, AV, DM, RL, JB, KC, AS, EP
&
the Hl
Girls - thanks for the memories, the good times
and the sad and for always listening. Go for it
and make all your dreams come true! Have a nice
day. Love, Ali
G.
Brian Vetter - Well, so much for winging it so far!
Whatever you do, wherever you go, don't ever
plan! Best of luck to you and enjoy life.
Remember don't worry about it, there's other
more important things to think about - it's not
worth it. - Love, Amy
Ember Presler - No matter where you go and what
you do - remember - JUST TURKEY! Best of luck
to you in whatever the future brings. Never forget
all the friends we made and all the times we had.
Enjoy and keep going to Friendly's!! Love, Amy
For sixteen years we have been students in a
classroom but teachers have tried to make us
f
realize one thing - we can learn more outside the
classroom than sitting behind a desk. So, my
advice is become a student of life. - Robert Tangos
Anthony - "It's Prince Spaghetti Day!" From the
day I met you I knew this was the beginning of a
"beautiful" friendship. Thank you for all your
support and encouragement throughout these 4
years. You are a very special friend and I will never
forget you. I wish you much success in your future.
Remember, I am always here for you.
Love, Lisa
I want to thank my best friends who live in my
medicine cabinet. I will cherish you all until my
last breath. I think everyon
'
e in the world should
wear red cowboy boots.
-Gabrielle Demma
Dear Amy
:
Thanks for all the fun and great memories.
Sidekick
s
, "
s
ecrets
"
, Shade
,
Top 10 for 10-NGA! G2
Good Luck in the future. Keep in touch. Love, Ember
girls ..
.
wisdom. .. 21 I am.
.
. Last Chance! It
'
s just the
s
ame old
s
on
g.
Kevin, miss you during my senior year, but looking
forward to our life together. Love, Jennifer
Dea
r
"
Marge
",
Although you a
r
en
'
t
g
r
aduating with
me
and Virginia
,
in some ways you
have never tru
l
y
left. Yo
u
r p
r
esence
haun
t
s
my memories
and your absence
pu
ll
s at
m
y
heart. Thank
you for
the priviledge
of your friendship
.
Avec Amour -
Maria
"
Marge
"
Wherever we go and whatever we do you will always
be in my heart. Love, Ja
y
me
182 Se
nior M
essages
To Jen, Melissa and Debbie, Thanks for the four best
years of my life. Love, Ann Marie
MP+ 3
=
H2
.
You girls are the best! Thank you for making
my senior year great. Love, Wendy
Thanx to all my friends at Marist - it's been fun! Good
luck to those still there - you are not forgotten - I will
•
visit! Thanx Mom and Dad
.
Love Marla
TFIXC Team: Where to begin ... Margarita
-Parties, Card Gamos in 504, "Valid" ID 's,
Preseason, Practive, and Phil. You gals are so
special. Phil, thanks a bunch and watch them
carefully! YOU CANT BEAT THE FOX
XXOO
Love, Patsy
.
,
Jens, Sue
&
Andrea "Thanks for letting me
live with you! Brain, environmental issues -
it began there! To the future, yes I know
what it moans! I loves' you! Thanks Mom,
Dad, Bets
&
Rebel! I guess this proves all
my critics 100% wrong! Love, Patsy
To the Senior Class: We do not know what
the future will bring, but one thing is certain
-you guys will always have a special place
in my heart. We have so many memories to
cherish and so many more to come. I wish
you the best of luck in all you do. Thinking
of you always - Love, Jeanne Brennan
I want to thank my family for all of their
support, my friends Debbie, Ann Marie and
Jen for making the past four years great,
and my boyfriend, Mark, for standing by
me this last dificult year. I love you all.
Melissa D 'Angelo
Dear Tricia, Colleen, Julie, Carrie, and
Christine, Thank you for being the greatest
friends a girl could ask for. Your friendship
has made my four years at Marist the
happiest of my life .
.
I'll never forget the
great times we have shared! Best of luck to
each of you. All my love, Joann
Dear Deena, I just wanted to thank you
for keeping my sanity these past four
years. Thanks for being you. Friends now
and forever. I love you. - Cathy
Dear Kerrie - Sorry for all the heartaches
but it just makes us better friends. Here's
to good times ahead: I love you - Cathy
To Mom, Dad
&
Jerry - You are my role
models. Thank you and I love you. To all
of my dear friends at Marist, I will always
hold the memories we made in my heart.
Let's make many more. To my AST sisters
~
Thanks for sharing the dream and making
it happen. Sisterhood is a lifelong bond .
Leo 2nd floor, 11, Tracks, NiteCap, Renny
's.
Love, Susan
To my vixens: Gabrielle, Jami
&
Carol and
to my big brother Dave - I never would
have made it through without you. Thank
you for the best years of my life. I love you
all! Salut! ... Tracy
"Well, I don't really think the end can be
assessed as of itself as being the end.
Suddenly, time is so elastic ... it's a gift of
freedom."; "You 're all clear kid, now let's
blow this thing and go home!''; May the
cheese be with you ... always; Loved it! -
Dana Buoniconti
For making my Senior Year the best, I
thank you Sheri, Christine, and Tony.
S
~
eri your crazy and I love you for it.
Christine good luck on your marriage.
Tony I wish I met you sooner. You guys are
the bestest friends. Love, Stacy Marie
To Allison, thank you for making my last
four years. I love you and can not wait to
ive the next 80! The men at 8J - nice shot,
bro. - }4om, Dad and Chris - thanks for
everything. I could not make it without
you! Sean
Sean, you are the best thing that ever
happened to me. I love you. Gina, the best
roommate and friend ever. I will miss you
terribly. Margo, thanks for all the laughs,
cries and special memeories. Finally, mom
and dad, without you none of this would be
possible. Thank you!! Allison
,
.
Senior Messages 183
CLOSING
GOOD
~~~1e~,
.
i•-
~
7fue
~
~
eome a ~
..
~
.'>-
'Ifie peop{e
wfio made
tfiis
6001(
possi6{e ....
The
R
E
y
N
I
A
R
D
186
Reynard
Staff
BELOW:
Here
we
are ...
Taking a loo]$ at the 1994-1995
Reynard Staff.
.
ABOVE:
Hey, can I ask you something?
As a staff
member,
it was
typical
getting ideas from
the
Marist community.
RIGHT:
We became user-friendly
Some
of
us
got
to know the
computer very well ...
for
at
least
3-
4
hours
at a
time
.
ABOVE:
Same
things-different day
Labeling
photos
,
typing
copy,
labeling
envelopes, cropping
pictures,
labeling page
s
...
.
.
will
it
ever end?!?!
MIDDLE RIGHT
:
Let's ta
l
k about sports
We bet Carolyn won
'
t be looking a
t t
he
sport
s s
ection the same ~ver again
.
ABOVE
:
It
i
sn
'
t easy meeting dead
l
ines
Ta
l
k a
b
ou
t
STRESS!!?!?!
Special
Thanks .....
to
Bob Lynch and
Steve Sansola for
their guidance,
support, and photo
s
to our Jostens
representative,
Kevin Byrne, who
was very patient
with our ideas
to our faculty
advisor, Professor
McComb, for all he
1
advice
to the copy center
&
college activities
staff who either
took film from our
staff or ran off 800
copies of the s
e
nior
letter
to all those who
had given the staff
their pictures and
thoughts
Rich Cocchiare for
their help with the
club sectiu-i-1 -
and a very generous
thank you to all th
e
students and
parents who had
purchased and
sponsored this
year's book
Reynard Staff 187
188
'BE~fJ1(/:
Reg-
istering for
classes almost
never
seemed
to go
our
way-
many of us knew
the
Add/
Drop line all
too
well.
~'J/tl.~'J,,
Giving
a part
7£
themselves
never
questioned in
the
minds of
these
students-
as
they were
giving blood.
A'BfJ'1/£:
The
HuMarists
al-
ways had a sell-out crowd
-
with their un-
usual perspective on comedy.
~1a~7:
Some of
,
the Marist
studenTopted for another
source
of trans-
portation- and avoided the traffic on Route
9.
LASTING
~
dead,
~
att
°'
#4
«,at
t«we
a
fu:vit
ol
~
ddbut,
189
A'BfJ~E,,.
Ice carving during
Greek Week was one of the spectacles that en-
couraged each sorority and fraternity to show
exactly what their club stood for
.
'
'if!!1tfl.~7,,
Sometimes, just to get
-
away
rTm
it all, there would be late nights
with just the guys.
'if!!1tfl.~7,,
Through their Marist
years,
~se
girls show exactly wha
t
it's all
about.
-----
SOH1e
tJt
eu
~
«1e
etut,
1Ue
•
~ M a t e a e i ~
MARIST COLLEGE
TIME TO
1
92
95 REYNARD
Colophon
The 1995
Reynard
of Marist College, Volume 35
was printed by Jostens Printing
and
Publishing.
COVER
:
The
cover is
Smoke Leathertone
(491)
and custom
debossed
and embossed
with fully
modeled brass dies
.
It
is
mounted
on 150-point
binder board
.
Black Ink
(326) and two
units
of
Gold Foil (380) and
Red
Foil (331)
were used
on
the front lid, and
one unit of Gold
Foil (380) was
used on the traditional
spine
.
The
cover was
printed
by Jostens, Topeka, KS
.
ENDSHEETS
:
Front
and
back endsheets
are
Smoke Gray
(297).
The front
endsheet
used
Black Ink
(326) and
one unit
of
Gold
Foil (380)
.
The
back
endsheet
used Black Ink
(326)
.
PAPER
STOCKS
:
The
opening signature was
printed on
#80 Stippletone
Gloss. The rest
of the
book was printed
on #100
Mead Gloss
.
COLOR
:
Thirteen pages were printed
in
process
color.
TYPOGRAPHY: Body copy is Palantino.
Opening
section and all
divider body
copy
is
Brush
Script. Captions are
I Opt type
.
Folios are
l
4pt
Palantino
.
DESIGN
:
The cover
was designed by the
Reynard
Staff
.
The front endsheets,
the opening
section and
the dividers
were
made
similar to the
1994 Pennsylvania State
University yearbook
titled
Complementing the
Past.
The back
endsheets were
made
similar
to the 1991
Pennsylvania State
University
yearbook
titled
A
Moment
In Time
.
All other
sections
were
either
created
by the
Reynard
staff editors,
or made
simil r
to the
EZ
Track Layouts provided by
Jostens Printing
and
Publishing
.
PHOTOGRAPHY
:
The senior
section and
faculty section
were taken by TD BROWN
studios.
Activities
and
Events
and theater
photography were taken by Bob
Lynch. Current
Events
photography were
supplied
by
Jostens/World Book.
All other
photography
was
provided
either
by
the
Reynard
Staff or
the Marist
student
body
.
The
1995
Reynard's
press run was
500
copies
.
Books
sold
for $54
.
00
a copy
.
Inquiries
about
the publication may be
forwarded to the
Reynard,
Marist
College, 290
North
Road Poughkeepsie,
NY
1260 I.
REYNARD
I
Marist College
I
TANIA K. GOJDYCZ
Editor in Chief
ANTHONY ALLISON
Business Manager
OPENING SECTION
Tania Gojdycz, co-editor
Kelly Magee, co-editor
SENIOR SECTION
Gabrielle Demma, co-editor
Allison Martin, co-editor
Anthony Allison
Gina Becconsal
Stacy
Foster
Allison Guarda
Ember Presler
Lisa Valentini
Robin Ward
UNDERCLASSMEN
Alison Collazo, co-editor
Wendy Kenerson, co-editor
Joanna Battiloro
Jennifer Berrio
Rachel Carter
Keri Kelly
Elyssa Kimmel
Karen Lumberk
Theresa Marcotrigiano
Christine McGee
•
April Montana
Kevin Straw
Marianne Vetter
CLOSING SECTION
Tania Gojdycz, co-editor
Kelly Magee, co-editor
FACULTY SECTION
Gina Becconsall, co-editor
Allison Guarda, co-editor
SPORTS SECTION
Laraine Kautz, co-editor
Carolyn Mercury, co-editor
CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES
Jennifer Mabee, co-editor
Kelly Magee, co-editor
SPONSORS/SENIOR
MESSAGES
Dawn Jacobson, co-editor
Lisa Valentini, co-editor
PHOTOGRAPHY
Sue Frost, editor
Stacey Foster
Kristen Froliger
Wendy Kenerson
Charlie Melickar
Jackie Simpson
STUDENT LIFE
Carolyn Barnett, editor
nother book published. Some people thought there
wouldn't be a yearbook this year. ( Or at least I thought
so). But we did it. Although the staff got off to a late
start (around November) I still think we produced an
outstanding book. We took a staff of ten and doubled
it- to make it a staff of twenty. Without the diverse
opinions of the staff and other Marist college students,
this yearbook wouldn't be as good as it is. Thank you.
So what possessed me to take a big position like this?
Insanity. Staying in the office until 4:00am before
deadlines was very normal. Even if there was no
deadline you could find me in the yearbook office- just
checking up on things. For a position like this, I think
one needs patience and dedication. But I think I took it one step further. I think I was
obsessed- (or crazy?!). I've been doing this ever since my sophomore year in high school and
I haven't stopped. I guess I like the idea of creating a memory. And as a staff, we tried to
make this book represent the whole student body that has passed through Marist College
from 1994-1995. Looking back, we took the Marist tradition and twisted it just a little- to
make it represent the people of today. Although some tbings never change, the social and
academic aspect of the Marist community is still growing- and we're still learning. This
book is just a reflection of all our battles, our accomplishments, and our defeats. I think
Dickens said it best when he wrote, "it was the best of times, it was the worst of times" .....
And that's exactly what the Reynard staff had tried to capture.
Take a look at the book right now. You'll see who we are today. Flip through the pages
tomorrow. You'll notice things you haven't noticed before. Read these pages a few years
from now. You'll understand what we were yesterday and how it was all a
time to
remember.
Best wishes always.
Jlhtia-
K.
~
Tania K. Gojdycz
Editor in Chief
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