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Part of The Circle: Vol. 35 No. 3 - September 29, 1988

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'
INSIDE:
America and its racist pastimes -
page
6. -
Tales from a year spent abroa.d -
page
9
Volume 35,
Number
3
Marist College, Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
September 29, 1988
Cigarettes leave
Marist in a
puff
by Paul O'Sullivan
Cox, vice president for student af•
fairs. "This is clearly a health artd
Concern over health and fitness welfare issue. All evidence shows
prompted the administration to that smoking is injurious to an in•
"kick the habit" of cigarette sales dividual's health."
on campus,. according to Marist
Peter Amato, assistant dean of
officials.
student affairs, estimated that 65 to
The decision, made this summer 70 percent of the Marist communi-
by the president's Cabinet, called ty does not smoke, but he stressed
for the removal
'of
cigarette ven• the decision to discontinue the
ding m_achines from the Campus cigarette s~es was made out of a
Center, Champagnat Hall and concern for fitness and not a desire
other buildings. Two machines to bend to majority rule.
located in Marist East and Donnel-
Economically,. the decision will
ly remain at the request of adult have little effect. Marist received
students.
only a 15 percent commission on
In addition, cigarettes are no the machines. The
·machines,
which
longer available at the Sweet were not very popular, were
Shoppe, located in the Activities brought in and maintained by an
Office, during the evening. Cigaret• outside vendor, said Campilii.·
tes are still sold at the Marist Col-
"The removal of cigarette
lege Bookstore. However, "that machines was'part of a larger plan
too will.be phased out in the long to bring in vending machines that

run/'.said Anthony Campilli,
chief
promote good health and nuttition .
. , ·,financial
·officer.

:·;
• :
·
We're trying to niake
the
machines,
··-'Administrators·
said they· f elnhe
·more
liealth-orieitted by
having
less
sale of cigarettes might encourage junk food available,••
said·
some-.students to smoke.·
Campilii.
"The college is trying
.
to en•
Both Cox anc,i Canipilii note
courage good health," said.Gerard
Continued
00
page
2
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__
lain Morley (left) and Justine Fosb, U.-e.Britisb
national debate



. •••


·
- .
team, discuss strategy during their-debate ~gainstthe
'Mitrist


debate team last Tuesday night in the Theater. For more details;
invasion
see page S.
(Photo byEllen Ballou)
Low profile
·h-as.
CSL
Few students tune in to the--Great Debate
concerned
by Karen
Goettler
Student Body President Jeff
.
·
Ferony said one·of his goals for
.
the year is
.
to

better organize
things so students will kn~w
they can come to the Council of
Student Leaders with issues of
concern.
"The students don't know we
exist let alone that they should
bring their problems ~o us," he
said.

CSL is made up of the
presidents of Student Academic
Committee, Resident Student
Council, Commuter Student
Council, College Union Board·
and the Studen~ Body, accor-
ding to Feiony. •
The council is considered the
highest governing body ?Ve~
the
major student orgamzat1ons
and Ferony said one of his
duties
as
Student Body presi7
dent is to act as chairperson of
the CSL.

Ferony,
a junior
from
Marlborough,' Conn., is ~egin-
ning his second y~r as ::,t~dent
Body president. H,1s
expenence
with basic procedures· last year
will increase his efficiency,
allowing
him
to concentrate
more on issues that c_oncern
students this year.
One of Feiony's duties is to
act as student representative to
the college administration,
faculty and board of trustees.
Ferony said once a month he
attends a board of truStees
meeting with all of the college
administrators and acts as a
Continued on page
2
by Use Martin
While· millions of Americans
viewed the Great Debate Sunday
night, an informal Circle sur:vey •
showed that few Marist students
were tuned in to watch the
preside~tial candjdates.


-
There were some reports of
debate

watchers
scattered
throughout campu-s, but a walk
through the dorms Sunday evening
found few students taking i~ the·
first debat~ of what may be their
first election as voters.
A survey of the lounges in Leo,
Sheahan and Champagnat hall~
during the debate showeg no televi•
sions turned on to the presidential
.
.
candidates. One television in a
Champagnat lounge
was
set to the
right channel, but no one was there •
to watch it.
Of the students who did see
Republican
·candidate
George Bush
.
and Democratic candidate Michael
Dukakis battle it out, most agreed.
neither candidate came out the
clear winner.
"They both made their points
and stated what ~hey believe in,"
said. sophomore
Mike
Larkiri, a
-
registered Democrat from West
Hartford, Conn. "But I tend to
agree with what Dukakis stands
for. He goes for the working man
and the family. Bush goes for Big
Business."
,
Sophomore·
Pete
Haviland, a
registered Republican from Farm-
ington, Conn, said despite past
mistakes, the overaJJ record of the
present administration is proof
enough that Bush will make the
better president-.
"He answered the questions
directly and I agree with what he
stands for," Haviland said.
"If
we
have Dukakis as president, he'Jl
ruin the fabric and the backbone of
our nation."
A registered Democrat from
.
Staten Island, N.Y. said although
Dukakis talked too much about his
family's immigrant background,
both candidates evaded too many
questions. "I thoug!tt they both
made each other look like fools.
They were immature,"
said
sophomote Dan Bowman.
One freshman said he and his
friends noticed a big difference in
Bush and Dukakis' delivery. Bush
had his head tilted and was look-
ing at the panel; Dukakis looked
directly into the camera. "I think
that wiii be a factor in influencing
the American people - maybe not
directly, but it will have some in-
.
fluence," said Tom Morgan from
Madison, N.J.
.
Some students said the quips ex-
changed between candidates prov-
ed the candidates were avoiding the
questions and somewhat denying
Continued on page
2
Interns hit road to sell
Cl
college
by
Michael Hayes
Marist students are representing
the college at more. than 500 high
schools and college fairs in the Nor-
theast in • an admissions intern
program.
Admissions interns ar~ responsi-
ble for making appointments and
reservations, managing a budget
and traveling a
lot.
·"You
can't. compare the level of
responsibility that our interns have
to just about any other internship
that is available. They're really
there to do a job and it's a tough
one. They're a big part of our

recruitment strategy," said Chris
Delgiorno, assistant director of ad-
missions and former admissions
intern.
Seniors Jennifer
Clements,
Maureen Smith, Linda Beluk and
Florence Flour are admissions in•
terns this year. Each
will
receive
$2,300, a car, an unlimited expense
account and 15 elective credits.

weeks by meeting With department
While this is an attractive intern-
heads and other Marist staff.
ship, the interns agree that they are Throughout this period the interns
doing it for the experience.
were required to meet daily from
"You're representing the college 8:30 a.m. until 4:30 p.m., far more
in a professional way," said Beluk. • time than the average 15 credit stu-
"People look at you as a profes-
dent spends in class.
sional while you're still a stude.nt.
To become an admissions intern
I thought that was really attrac-
a resume and cover letter must be
tive."

.
.sent to the Admissions Office dur-
"I figured it would be something ing the spring semester.
greaMo put on my resume," said
The internship
is open to
Flour.
"It
would show that I'm students of all majors, according to
responsible.''
Delgiorno. The Admissions Office
The interns leave Marist each is hoping for a large applicant pool
Sunday and return on Friday after this year.
visiting places such as Penn-
"We're looking for the kids who
sylvania, New Jersey, Long Island are sharp kids, who speak well,
and the New England region. Once with good communication skills,
or twice a month they will spend a who love Marist,'' said Delgiorno.
week at Marist working in the Ad-
"It's the kind of internship where
missions Office giving tours or do-
you really have to love your pro-
ing paperwork, said Delgiorno.
duct and our product is Marist Col-
Although this is the first week lege."
the interns will be on the road, they
have been preparing for three
Continued on page 4
Four
of this year's admissions
interns: Maureen Smith Oeft),
Jennifer Clements, Florence
Flour and Linda Beluk.
(Photo by Howard Dratch)
.I
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Page
2 - THE CIRCLE - September
29, 1988

e·ntertainment
The·House of Horror
.
Paul Zaloom will perform his new show.-
The House of Horror to the 1869 Barvadon
Opera House in Poughkeepsie Saturday,
Oct. 15 at 8 p.m. For tickets and informa-
tion contact the box office at 473-2072.
Boesman and Lena
New Day Repertory Company presents
Boesman and Lena at the Vassar Brothers
Institute theater in Poughkeepsie on Sept.
30
through Oct. 16. The pres·entation is an
Athol Fugard play, about two people whose
relationship reflects all of the fears and
anguish that stem from the racial issues in
apartheid South Africa. Student Admission
is $8. For tickets and information call
485-7339 or 473-1045 between 7 and
.9
p.m.
Richie Hayward, Kenny Gradney, Sam
Clayton; Bill Payne and new additions
Craig Fuller (vocals) and· Fred Tackett
(guitar). Tickets are $17 and are available
through the Civic Center box office and all
ticketmaster outlets. For information call
454-5800.
Zoppe
Circus
Europa
An 8-generation family circus will be at
the Civic Center on October 7 and
8.
The
show features clowns, tigers, Lipizzan
stallions, elephants, acrobats and aerialsts.
Tickets are $12.50, and $7.50
for
groups.
For information call the civic center at
454-5800.
Catch
a Rising Star
CUB is sponsoring "StudeQJ. Band
Night" in the River Room tonight at 9:30
p.m. Admission is $1.
fessor of psychology at Marist will conduct for the courses ranges from $50-150·for
a free evening seminar called "You Must four to eight weeks. For information con-
Relax: Breathing Your Way Towards Bet-
tact the Clove Creek Artists at R.D .. 1,• Box
ter: Health" on Monday, Oc\. 3 from 7:30 464A, Beekman Road, Hopewell
_Junction.
to 9:30 p.m. at the Mental Health Associa-
.
tion Offices, TuytenbridgeRoad, Kingston.
The seminar, sponsored by the Mental
Health Association in Ulster County, will
address breathing awareness as a means
of relieving stress.
AIDS
Lecture
Rev. James Gardiner and a 28-year-otd
AIDS victim will speak in the Fireside
Lounge tonight at 7 p.m. The Lecture, "The
Many Faces
of
AIDS - How Can We Res•
pond?," is sponsored by Campus Ministry,
Health Services and the Social Work Club.
Miscellaneous
Miscellaneous·
.

48 Hours.
The news program
"48
Hours" will pre-
sent a special feature about the ongoing
desegregation controversy in Yonkers
tonight at 8 p.m. on CBS called "Not on
my Street."
Spring Break In Russia
Dr. Casimir Norkeliunas is offering
students an opportunity to spend Spring
Break in the Soviet Union.next semester.
Any student interested should contact Dr.
Norkeliunas in Fontaine Hall at ext. 207.
.Antiques
Fair
Little Feat
Lectures
Art Classes
·
Dealers will bring their antiques to the
Little Feat will perform at the Mid-Hudson
The Clove Creek Artists are offering Dutchess County fairgrounds in Rhinebeck
Civic Center Oct. 4 at 7:30 p.m. The band
Free Seminar
courses in photography, pottery, airbrush, Saturday, Oct. 8 and Sunday, Oct. 9. ad-
features original members Paul s
__
a_r_re_re_,
__
W_i_I11_·a_m_B_ri_n...;n.i_e..;r,_c_o_u_n_s_eI_or_a_n_d...;p:...r_o-
__ a_n_d_m_u_s_ic_b_e..:::gc-,inr-n_in
...
g'-t_h_is_w_e_e_k_.
_T_he_co_s_t-=-mission
is
$4~-----------.
Cigarette--
continued from page
1
there has been no feedback from
students regarding the machines'
removal. Students were not con-
sulted when the decision was made
this summer.

Students questioned on the issue
admitted they had not noticed the
absence of the machines. Some
smokers, however, were upset at
the move.

"I don't think it's right; we're all
of legal age to smoke and we're
also old enough to make our own
decisions," said Dave Cade, a
junior from Amenia, N. Y.
Non-smokers were more in favor
of the decision.
"I think it's a good idea for the
college not to encourage smoking,''
said Jason Valentino, a freshman.
"lt
should be up to the college
whether or not to sell cigarettes."
CSL---
Continued from
page
1
liaison by bringing student con-
cerns to the attention of board
members.
Communication between stu-
dent leaders and the administra-
tion is much improved, accor-
.
ding to Ferony, and he said he
hopes students will come to the
CSL with their problems and
concerns so something can be
done about them.
Ferony said there were
dif-
ficulties in promoting. club in-
terests after the drinking age
was changed several years ago
and alcohol could no longer be
used to draw in crowds.

But now Ferony said people
are realizing that activity in
organizations develops skills in
dealing with· people.
"We're just getting the hang
of it," he said.
Debate--
Continued from page
·1
the issues.But sophomore Dean
McGowan, a registered Republican
from Rockville Center, N. Y. said
he felt Bush fared better because of
the remarks.
Scott McVeigh, a sophomore
from Tabernacle, N.J. said: "He
was not supposed to be a good
debater but he came across well."
But
Morgaa
Bondon,
a•
freshman from Colst Neck, N.J,
said he felt Bush went off the track
too often. "I think Dukakis ·really
tried to attack Bush -
I didn't
really notice that in Bush,'' he said.
"The issue they made the biggest
deal out of was the arms," said
freshman Megan Whalen from
Yonkers,
N.Y.
Bush said Dukakis
would find fault with any form of
arms and would rather invest in the
homeless. "I don't sec anyth5ng
wrong with that; I don·t think Bush
took
a
very strong s!and
on
anything," she
said.
"'3rd
Annual
Demos
_Prizes?!!
PC FAIR
When:
9/30/88
noon-6 pm
IBM
10/1/88
10 am-4 pm
Where:
Donnelly 250
Raffle drawing for an
IBM P.S/2 l\todel, 25!!.!·
~.#
:
'.'
"THE MANY FACES OF AIDS:
HOW CAN WE RESPOND?:
/
LECTURE:
REV. JAMES GARDINER, SA
AND
·e1LL
._
A PERSON WITH AIDS
FIRESIDE LOUNGE-7:00
·PM
THURSDAV,SEPT.2~h
The AIDS Crisis
.touches
every aspect
of our society .. No group will avoid the
effects of this disease.
The Center for Disease Control predicts
.that
AIDS will be the number one killer
on College Campuses by 1991.
HOW WILL YOU - HOW WILL WE res-
pond as informed and compassionate
people???
Co-sponsored by:
Campus Ministry,
Health Services and
Social V,lork Club
PARK
DISCOUNT
.BEVERAGE
Check
Out This Week's·
Specials:
Bud 6 pk bottles
.................
$2.99/6
pk
Molson loose cans
......

.......
$11.99/case
Miller Ute/Genuine
Draft
.....
$10-.49/loose
cans
case
Meister Brau
..................
$18.95/¼
keg.
Located

on Rt. 9, Hyde Park

next to Easy Street Cafe
tel.
no .. 229~9000
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September 29, 1988 - THE CIRCLE - Page 3
WOtk continues on campus patio, ME project
Fire
wall
m
t
In a fire, the six-inch block wall
ee
s
would hold ba~k fhu~es for three
New
courtyard
patio, which will cost
$25,000 to
$30,000, will be finished by mid-
October.
sal'ety
standar,d
hours, Tarantmo said. It costs

I
.
;/ •
about
$200,000, he said.
IS
near
J'
ready
Other projects which have
delayed completion of the patio in-
clude the installation of telephone
wires and electrical outlets in
Champagnat and preparations for
the renovation of Donnelly Hall,
Tarantino said.
by Jay Reynolds
Dormeyer, who inspected the

wall, said:
"It
looks like it's going
The fire waHneeded in Marist
East to comply with state fire codes
is nearly complete, according to
Anthony Tarantino, director of
facilities.
The wall separates
Marist
classrooms and industrial storage
space used by Roe Movers on the
first ·noor of the building. The
owner of the building, the Mid-
Hudson Business Corp., was re-
quired-to build the wall so the col-
lege could continue holding classes
there, according
to Richard
Dormeyer, deputy chief of the
Fairview Fire Department.
Registration
aimed toward
frosh voter
by Nathan Robinson
. Organizers of the voter registra- •
tion drive, scheduled for this week,
have chosen freshmen as their main
target of recruitment said Benoit
Resident Director Nancy Walsh.
Walsh hopes to see a better tur-
nout at this year's drive as only 60
people became registered voters
during the drive in 1987. She said
that voter,registration for the ages
• 18 through 22 are typically low in
comparison with older age groups.
"It only takes five minutes and
25 cents to make a difference,"
said Wais~ of.the simple form that
students-must complete to become
a voter
in
this year's Nov. 8
elections.
The application calls for students·
to use their perma.n~nJ ~Qdress,
on
the application
".ail.if...'
have' :an
absentee ballot sent to their address
at school. · ·


Unfortunately, organizers of the
: . ~.drive were ~only_,.
able. to· get New
~;;.it,i>~J$";,~s·~:;t~;-:api>ll:C-aiion~
>satd ~-
.:.,;_;:,,:e~J.it~at"'Science
:,-E:lub-President
:\?~iacey
Waite;
but:of-state students
' • • will stil~ be able to get absentee
_. ·ballots:with the help of Walsh if
'.
~
·they .. :Visit. her office before the
,-<regjsiratiofi deadline of Oct. 11.
tit~~;;~('.:'~,--~.·:
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t;tti;
0
·f
---:T·
·:-·
8
·-·_
-_=-·_.
"~::V.::_...
-
to be alright when it's finished .... It
by Jay Reynolds
was late getting going, (but) they
made substantial improvement
prior to Sept. I, which is what they
had to do."
Construction was scheduled to
begin in July but did not start un-
til early August. The project is now
on schedule, Dormeyer said.
State fire regulations prohibit oc-
cupany of a building by both
educational and industrial storage
facilities. However, a December
1987 state court ruling permits dual
occupancy with the fire wall.
*End *Go . *In progress /include
script evenlm'lO,oddlm'IO .ds
Chapter
charter
A patio behind Champagnat
Hall should be completed this
semester after several projects
delayed its completion over the
summer, according to Anthony
Tarantino, director of facilities.
"We steered away from work on
the patio this summer mainly
because of the Champagnat
renovations," Tarantino said. "We
just could not complete the patio
with all the trailers there." The
patio was scheduled to be ready for
student use this fall.
Tarantino said he estimates the
Sod has been ordered for the
area because it is too late in the year
to plant grass seed.
Another change in plans, Taran-
tino said, is the replacement of the
big rocks with a curb.
"If
students want to play ball or
something back there, l don't want
anyone hitting his head on the
rocks," Tarantino said. "They will
also keep the cars and trucks off
the grass as much as the rocks
Last Thursday, a student chapter of the Mid-Hudson Valley
chapter of the American Society for Per_sonnel
Administrators
Jeceived it's charter in a ceremony in the Lowell Thomas Com-
munications Center. Above, Executive Vice President Mark
Sullivan accepts the charter
.from Candace Rypsick, the regional
director of the
ASPA in the Mid-Hudson Valley.
(Photo by Bob Davis)
·New
teacher recalls Third World
by Karen·
Gorman·
By her junior year at The Col-
lege of New Rochelle Sister Marion
. Boben, the new religio-µs studies
teacher at Marist, decided to join·
the convent and dedicate her life to
helping others.
Boben, at ihe age of 21, went to
Indonesia where for 24 years she •
was involved with education and
religious studies. She spent 15 years
in Jakarta~ the capital of In-
donesia, and earned a bachelor's
degree in religious studies.She also
taught religious studies and english
at Indonesia State University.
Boben and two nuns lived in a
• small house in a Kampung, a low-
income Muslim neighborhood,
where they were involved in com-
munity service.
"In the beginning the residents
. were suspicious that we wanted to
make them Christians," Boben
• said. "After about a year and a
half they accepted us."
Speaking only english, Boben
had to learn the Indonesian
language and customs in a short
time.
"I used elementary school books
to learn the language," said .l;\ohen,
"and I was also learning the
customs of the country from the
books."

• According to Boben, the people
of Indonesia were wonderful and
dependent or" other people."
According to Boben, they would
teach the children to buy peanuts,
roast and sell them for profit in-
stead of begging.
Being far away from home for
such a long period of time had its
effect on Boben.
'I had
to
learn to bathe in a river with
no privacy. You have to learn to
laugh at yourself.'
helped her adjust to life in a· foreign
country.
"I had to learn to bathe in a river
with no privacy," said Boben.
"You have to learn to laugh at
yourself. One time I lost a bar of
soap in the water and was furious
with myself. I've bathed in dirty
water - I just take my glasses off."
Aside from teaching, Boben
helped the Indonesians realize the
worth of being people.
"They had to learn their lives are
their own," Bohen said. "We were
helping them to be free and not
"At times of family crisis I
would wish I could be home,"
Boben said.
Boben also spent five years in
Iran where she taught in a pastoral
institute preparing men and women
to be pastors. After her work there
she decided it was time to return
home.
"The shock was coming back,"
Boben said. "Simple things, like
driving a car, writing a check."
According to Boben she kept in
touch with American happenings
as best she could during her 24-year
absence.
"I
would read Time or
Newsweek when I could get it just
to keep up," said Boben.
"I
also
kept in touch with family."
Boben returned to New Rochelle
about a year ago, and while ad-
justing applied for work.
"I
taught a brief course as part
of an adjustment," Boben said. "It
still takes a while for some of the
english words to come back to
me."
Boben has been at Marist for ap-
proximately one month and teaches
four religious classes.
"I'm very impressed with the
open atmosphere, the people are
very accepting here," Boben said.
According to Boben, her ex-
perience in Indonesia was one of
the best times of her life.
<'It was an exchange - they had
to teach me," she said. "I wasn't
going as the giver only. I had to
learn a lot - and I did. I've come
back far richer in an understanding
of the world. I appreciate life much
more."
would."
The patio, which will measure
approximately
JOO
feet by 75 feet,
will have three table and bench
units similar to those on the patio
next to Fontaine Hall. That patio
will receive two more units this
year, Tarantino said.
In addition tc the tables, Taran-
tino said he would like to put a
barbecue grill on: the new patio,
similar to the one behind the
Townhouses.
Students would be able to go out
on the patio on the weekend and
hold a cook-out, Tarantino said.
"Seiler's (the food service com-
pany) could also utilize the space,"
he said. "It's a shame they have to
do their cooking out in front of the
Campus Center. That's like the
front lawn -
the cooking should
be. done in back."
For student,
escape was
first step
to new life
by Molly Ward
After years of waiting, Trung
Phung's dreain finally came true.
On Sept. 9, 1988, the Marist junior
became an American citizen.
Phung, whose new first name is
Matthew, escaped his native Viet-
nam with his two younger brothers
on Sept. 27, 1982.
It-was not the first time Phung's
family had tried to leave Vietnam.
During the first
two
days,
seasickness
was
common. Phung
survived the trip
on two glasses of
water a day.
In August 1978 at the age of 14,
Phung spent three weeks in . .jail
after his family was caught trying
to escape.
"After I was in jail, I had to
work in a concentration camp and
do hard labor," he said.
The fishermen who sneak people
out of the country charge $3,000
per person. It wasn't until years
after their first attempt the family
had enough money to get-Phung
and his brothers out.
"Sometimes they would try to
trick you and try to make you get
caught so they can keep the
money," said Phung.
Seventy people were crammed
into the 25-foot boat, said Phung.
The passengers had to sit in a
crouched position, scarcely able to
move for the six days it took to get
to Malaysia.
"The days seemed so long," said
Phung. "We had nothing to do ex-
cept look at each other."
Before people were used to the
waves, seasickness was common.
Phung survived the trip on two
glasses of water a day, because the
food they were given was bad.
Despite the difficulties;' Phung
and his fellow passengers could
consider themselves lucky. Pirates
from Thailand often ransack
refugee boats and leave them
stranded, said Phung. Other boats
have had engine trouble and have
had to wait for days for passing
ships.
Phung and his brothers spent
two months in a Malaysian refugee .
camp, while trying to get accep-
tance into the United States. They
were helped by their older brother
Kenneth, who had escaped fro~
Vietnam in 1979, and was living on
Long Island.
After they left Malaysia, the
t~ree spent four months in a Philip-
pme refugee camp doing menial
>









































































'•
i
I .
•••
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-·-
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I
.
Page4 - THE CIRCLE- Septem~r 29, 1988
College attempts
;new
program
to curb campus alco~ol problem
EAR.N YOUR CREDIT-S
··•'A
ABROAD.
The college will step up its efforts
to curb alcohol-related problems
on-campus by offering
an
educa-
tional program ~esigned to teach
students of alcohol's dangers, ac-
cording to college officials.
The program, proposed last year
and not
Jet
organized, will be
directed towards st'l)dents facing a
second alcohol offense.
"The expectation is that student
consciousness will be raised regar-
ding the consequences of using
alcohol on campus and later on in
life," Andrea Raphael, commuter
mentor and one of the staff
.
.
members of the program.
"We're really trying to educate
them as to why they are getting the
sanctions,"
said
.
Audrey•
Rodriguez, residence director of
Leo Hall, of the attempts to explain
the disciplinary action students are
receiving.
Officials do not see alcohol on
campus as a major problem but
there is concern for student well be-
ing, said Joseph Leary, director of
safety and security.

"We've confiscated literally hun-
dreds of cans of beer since this
semester opened," Leary said.
"The kids have to. understand,
we're not trying to ruin· their fun.
It's illegal."·
While town
and city of
Poughkeepsie police are often in-
clined to return
intoxicated
students to campus, underage
drinkers· run the risk of arrest and
a subsequent court appearance. Ar-·
rest for driving while intoxicated
also exposes the stu.dent to severe
penalties.
In addition to the program, the
college is permitting three weekly
meetings

of
Alcoholics
Anonymous in the Lowell Thomas
Communications
Center
..
Ad-
ministrators are also discussing a
program for children of alcoholics.
The College Consortium for·• International
Studies, CCIS, is composed of 170 American
Universities and Colleges. The CCIS offers 17
semester and year long study abroad
programs.
Accredited Programs • Affordable Programs
•England
•Israel
•Ireland
•Germany
•Spain
•Italy
•Denmark
•Scotland
Financial Aid Available
IRELAND
Spring Semester
In Dublin
St. Patrick's College
Maynooth
In terns _________
c_o_nt_in_u_ed_._rr_om_p_ag_e_i_
•Switzerland
•Mexico
•Canada
•France
•France
•China
•Sweden
•Portugal
•Columbia
•Ecuador
CLASSIFIEDS
ARE BACK!!
$1
for
the first 20 words;
5 oc
for every
·Delgiorno,
who graduated last so much different because I would
year, feels his internship gave him have already experienced thlngs by
an edge in dealing with prospective myself," said Smith.
employers.
"It gives you the picture of what
Through their association with it'~ like to get outside of Marist and
Delgiorno, interns realize that this what it's going to be like when you
particular program, as Delgiorno get older," added Clements.
puts
it is,
"an
incredibly
According to Flour, the interns
marketable internship."
have a motto.
1987. 88 Over 15000 U.S. Students Registered for CCIS Programs
English is the instructional language in all programs.
,
Six hours of the language of the host country is re9uired.
CCIS
Suite 511
.
866 United Nationas Plaza
New York, NY 10017
P~one: (212) 308-1556
College Consortium For International Studies
5 words thereafter.
"1
realized that when it came
"If
you're going
to
represent
time to apply for a job, having an Marist, you have to love Marist,"
internship like this would make it .:.s=a:.:id:...:F:.:l::.ou=r:a:...
______
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~
~'.
j
'I
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~
£
'-
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J
J.
I
Photos
by
Ellen Ballou
_September
29, 1988- THE CIRCLE - Page 5
Forensic Fire
'Micl!ael Buckley (in die cut-out),
captain of the Marist debate team.
Tom Nesbitt (top) states bis posi-
tion during last week's debate bet-
ween the British national debate
team and the Marfst debate team
as James
Springston,
M~rc
Eisenhauer and Vanessa Codorniu
look on. Anthony Capozzolo,
var-
sity team co-captain (far left); in-
troduces Vice President for Admis-
-
sions
and Enrollment Planning
Harry Wood, who in tum in-
troduced the British team. Above,
lain Morley of the British team
cross examines Buckley after
Buckley's arguments for the affir-
mative subject. Justine Fosh (left),
who is ranked 35 in the world,
pleads her case to the audience.
For once, Brits
play
it straight at debate
by Chris Landry
When the Marist debate team hosts the
British national debate team for its annual
exhibition, the crowd is usually geared up for
a sarcastic free-for-all.
Debaters can score more QOints by blitz~
ing their opponents with callous· remarks
about physical appearance than by executing
cross-examination.
But Oxford University's-Iain Morley, win-
ner· of last year's World Universities
Debating Championship and the No.
I-ranking debater in the world, did not try,
to imitate Benny Hill last Tuesday night in
the Marist College Theater. Instead, he step-
ped up to to the lectern with flaring red
cheeks -
ready to prove to his Yankee
counterparts that American foreign policy
was not offensive.
The crowd of 250 was surprised to see
Morley and his partner Justine Fosh edge
away from Britain's typical off-the-cuff
parliamentary style, to challenge Marist on
a more serious note.
"They caught us off gµard,"
Mike
Buckley, Marist's top debater, said. "We ex-
pected them to be more humorous."
Buckley's partner for the debate was senior
Tom Nesbitt.
The structure of the British debate also dif-
fers from the American. They give straight
speeches and plan their arguments as the
debate transpires, making general statements
for their position. There are no rebuttals,
Fosh, from Scotland's Strathclyde Univer-
sity, said.
"We keep the issues as broad as possible,"
Fash said, "while the Americans are very
much in-depth."

The British said_
they opted for the serious
style only because they thought the Marist
audience expected it.
"They assumed that American audiences
were used to the American style of debate,''
Jim Springston, director of debate, said.
"They thought it would be hostile to use their
style."
In effect, this overseas confrontation,
which is used as a recruiting device for the
Marist team, is the only Marist debate that
draws an audience. The crowd expected the
"Monty Python-like" British humor they
had witnessed in the three previous matches.
Marist was the first stop on a two-month
tour that will take the duo of Morley and
Fosh to 20 American universities and col-
leges. Fash admits that intimidation may
have also influenced her team's decision to
hide its British wit.
"We were a little apprehensive to use our
own style because we were on their home
turf," Fosh said.
"It
was intimidating at the
beginning when all their debaters stood up."
But not all witty remarks were withheld.
Nesbitt used issues like American involve-
ment in the Iran Contra affair and the coun-
try's apathy towards Panama's drug traffick-
ing to support M;uist's position.
Speaking of President Reagan and the na-
tion's drug problem, Nesbitt said: "No
wonder he was elected to a second term -
we were all on drugs."
Fosh began to lighten the mood in her first
negative argument by bringing up foreign
policy issues that she and Nesbitt had discuss-
ed the night before at the popular Marist
nightspot Skinner's.
After Nesbitt asked Fosh to repeat her
resolution that American foreign policy was
used to spread democracy's goodness, Fosh
told him to "pay a bit more attention and
stop drinking so much."
Buckley got in the act by kneeling down
and bowing to Morley, calling him the "best
in the world."
Morley, the most serious debater, reliev-
ed the crowd of the Theater's heat with the
most entertaining line of an otherwise intense
night. He approached the lectern and thank-
ed the "giant ego (Buckley) and the giant
restaurant (Nesbitt) that spoke before him."
But one or two jokes pointed at physical
shortcomings was simply not enough for the
British team to get the win, Springston said.
"It
was real clear that we won,"
Springston said. "You're not going to beat
us playing our game plan."
The British team may not go back to Bri-
tain without capturing
a victory
in
Poughkeepsie. They said they want a
rematch after their American tour ends in
November.
1
f
,_
f'
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)
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e.ditorial
The right to • vote
On Sunday night, George Bush and Michael Dukakis squared
off in Winston-Salem, N.C., in a debate to try and impress the
American voting public.
Unfortunately, many of the members of that voting public are
caught in a trend that includes political apathy and a general lack
of interest in their government. Thus, many will not take advan-
tage of their right to choose their political leaders when national
and local elections are held on November 8.
In recent years, the American public has neglected their right
to vote. Voter turnout in many recent elections was less than
SO
percent.
Across the globe, people are being supressed by governments
that have been forced on them; In the United States, each in-
dividual has the ability to pick and choose who we feel will best
represent and lead our nation, but many of us do not.
Rather than take an active part in the election process, many
of us sit back and watch - willing to complain when the time
is right but not willing to do anything about· it.
As college students, we are members of the voting public -
whether we realize it or not. While some of us are registered to
vote and take part
in
the election process, a greater number of
us tend to follow the recent trend. We abapdon our right to vote
and have slowly become the silent majority.
This should change.
.
While we are at school, we tend to forget about many of the
events going on around us. Unfortunately, political elections are
included.

Currently, a voter registration drive is taking place on campus
and those of us who are not planning on participating in this year's
election should re-think their positions.
.The United States, as said by members of the British National
Debate Team at last week,s debate in the Theater, is looked up
to by other western nations as the premiere democracy.
What a disappointment it must be for them to see this country
struggle through an election year with low voter registration and
even lower voter turnout.
Let's start reversing the trend.
~
.
letters
-
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.
,
Page 6 - THE CIRCLE - September 29, 1988
AS A
PRANIC,
TltE
JA~lTORS
A--r
T~is
5MAII
ColLEG-E
5EC~E.TLY ~EP)-/.\C.ED_,_,
TtlE w4reR·
iN
fH~
D\Vf~4 WEL~ WiTr\
COWCR."ETt.
',
41
It's 'athletic apartheid'
••

••


-
'
••
.·i:.,,:
..
•''
the conunents of Campariis and
,,
That may
l_>~
~-
sjgniQca11~
la~d~~
~
In April i987, Al Campanis,
.
then vice president for player per-
SOMel
of the Los Angeles Dod.gers,

appeared
on
ABC
News'
"Nightline" and made remarks
concerning the black race that
Snyder? Definitely not.
_
mark, but it is simply too little, too
.
Both men have earned their posi-
slow.
tions. Gumbel was the perfect
After Campanis' comments

choice for head anchor because of
came out, Frank Robinson, cur-
his sports experience as host of
rently
_
the only black niariager'iri
NBC's NFL pre-game show and as

baseball, said: "I'm glad it'~ finally
co-host of the· "Today" show.
out in the open, so we can address
Rashad currently appears on
it."
.
Student jobs
stunned the sports world.
To the editor:·
Governor Mario Cuomo· has pro-
claimed the week of October
3-7,
1988 as Student Employment
Week.
ing while in school is a financial
necessity. For others, working is a
voluntary choice to enhance career
development. Whatever the reason,
working while in school demands
initiative and self-discipline. These
students deserve our recognition
--
for their extra efforts.
-
Campanis said the reason there
were so few

black managers in
baseball was that that blacks "may
not have some of the necessities"
to do the job. Campanis was forc-
NBC's NFL coverage and it is
Robinson was right: It is good
• As we move towards the 21st
century, continued leadership by
America will require an even
~t~
ter educated workforce at every
level. Student employment pro-
grams contribute to the strength of
our economy, and-help fulfill t~e
..
promise of educational opponuruty
in America.
Student employment programs
help provide many students. the
rewards of higher edu~t1on.
Students work for a
.
va11ety ?f
reasons: to cam money, to gain
work experience and to test career

choices. For many students,
work-
The Job Location and Develop-
ment Office will have a table set up·
in Donnelly Hall during Student
Employment Week from noon un-
til 2 p.m. each day: Students may
either stop by the table or the JLD
Office in the Donnelly Trailer to
find out more about off-campus,
part-time jobs that are currently
available.
Mrs. Naaey Moody
Coordinator,
lob Locatioll and Dewelopment
Letter
policy
The Circle welcomes letters to the editors. All letters must be
typed doublesspacecl and.have full left and right-margins. Hand-
written letters cannot be accepted.
_
.
All letters must be signed and must include the writer's phone
number and address. The editors may wjthhold names from
publkation upon re.quest.
The deadline for letters is noon Monday. Letters should be sent
to Michael Kimme, c/o The Cirde, through campus mail or drop-
ped off at Campus Center 168.
The Circle attempts to publish all the letters it receives, but the
editors reserve
d1e
right
t<>
edit letters for matters of style, length,
libel and taste. Shon l~ters
are preferred.
ed to resigntwo days later as black
groups threatened_
public protests
against the· Dodgers.
In December 1988, Jimmy. "the
_.
.
thinking
_-
between
the lines
Greek" Snyder made similar com-
reasonable
to
say that Costas and
ments during a television interview. - Rashad are currently the
best
sports
He remarked about the black man
-
- coverage people NBC has.
being "bred,,_t~havc ''big thighs"· . But what of Campanis and
.
bef~re the Civil:War and ~n ~e ·_snyder?,Theil'.commentsarebeing
.
subJect of black coaches ~d: . If
swept under the
rug
~
the
rug
of
they take over coachmg hke
"progressive changcs"'that sports
everybody wants them to, there's
officials say are
being
made but no
not going to be anything left for the
one can find. Racism in our socie-
white people. I mean all the players ty is bad enough• what is
going
on
are black. The only thing whites
in football and baseball today is

control are the coaching
jo~.:•
nothinglessthanathJeticapartheid.
Snyder was fired from his Job
A USA Today survey taken soon
with CBS for the remarks.

after the Campanis affair showed
. These remarks have a lot to do
that while blacks mak~ up about 20
with each other. but what do they
percent of all major
league
players,
have to do with sports right now?
they
hold just 17 of 879 top ad-
Tum on
NB<?'s
coverage of the
ministrative jobs. There have only
XXIV Olymp1~ and yo~ have a

been four blacks to manage at the
two-thirds
chance
of
seeing
a
black
major league level, and only one,
man at the anchor desk. Bryant • the fate Bill Lucas (Atlanta
Gumbel and Ahmad Rashad are
1977-1979) has ever served as a
main and morning anchors, respec~ general managet.
lively, while Bob Costas. handles
-
In football there bas never been
the duties at night.
.
a black·head coach, and anyone
Is the fact that Gumbel
and
who watched Sunday's Giants-
Rashad are anchoring the Olympics Rams game saw the first black
a direct result of the backlash from
referee in NFL history.
that it is out in the open. But now
that it is, there seems to be some
backlash against the backlash.
Owners and
-
administrators resent
the notion that they be pressured
into hiring someone. Owners
especially feel that since they pay
. the bills, they should hire
whomever they want.
In most
cases
I
WQuld
agree with
them. But the situation in
·major
league
-
s~rts today is a
travesty
and must
be deal~
with now.
;_in
baseball
especi~y. there
~,~la~k
men who deserve and
have
earnca
the oppc,rtunity
to
be
more than\~_
batting
coaches.
Joe Morgan
and
••
Bill Jt~binson come to·
mind
~ly.
.
-
.
p~fnth{~~~~:t--
then so.be
it.
~~
~'"'.ho~con~l;-
the purse
-
strings
'°of.:-professioitat''
sports
have
danced
l<ftheir own
racist tune
lopg~~sl:t;J_t:i~
tinie
to
pay
the piper:·:.'"'-·:".~.::-~~-;.;;:.>
The accomi,mhments ~f,
it)eg
like Gumbel-_~80(:-
Rasl,laclisliow.
dearly thaf
giveit:tq~Qf>~rrum:
ty,
blacks am·achicve
-~Y
~tion
·in
any profession
arid
eitcel.
lif
fact;
that should have'..:tieen
-ev1<ient
before
Gumbel
and"Rasbad
\Vork-
ed on the Olympics. .- ·: -.

.
There can be no·
more'
excuses.
The time
for change
is
_now;
Editor:
/
Michael Kinane
Sports
Editor:
Ttm Besser
THE:
Advertltling Managers:
.
.
.
Jennifer
Fragomenl
Managing
Editor:
Ken Foye
CIRCLE:
News
Edltora:
Bill Johnson
~
Ilse
Martin
Steven Murray
Feature Edltora:
Karen Cicero
Chris
Landry
Photography Editor:
Bob Davis
Faculty Advlaor:
David Mc Craw

·Paul
Mead
.
·.
$ophia.'J'~ker·
~•
Business Manager:
ei~~:~t/'':·.-,-



















































Vi e
w
P-_t_:_1_i_r_1_t
____________
s_e_,,_,e_m_b_e,_2_s_,
_1s_s_s_-
_TH_'E_cl_R_c_i.E_-
_Pa_g_e_1_
Canterbury tales: Is this life worth living?
by
Wes Zahnke
-
. Listen, I was just minding my
own business.
paranoid/Stark-raving lunatic tliat
tle ditty is that I requested to live
It costs the college a ridiculous by this camper•
I am, about all I could muster was
out there.
sum of money to run the joint and
I have to admit that the
I was innocently sitting in my
college-issued chair, eating a
Wunderbar Bologna sandwich,
which happened to be on sale for
$1.19 a pound, watching "The
White Shadow."
the inevitable, high-pitched wail of,
Being the sacrificial lamb_
~hat I
all they get out of it are complaints neighbors are great.
"Get Out."
____________
and a couple of free cats.
We've only been physically at-
Yes, nothing like residing in all
By my estimations, living out
tacked by them once and the
of the tranquil elegance and
I'd
be
willing
to
there .would push the progress on
woman who lives upstairs, a.k.a
We're talking Monday .around
11:15 a.m., and I am through for
the day.
So, I'm· psyched, in a relative
kind of way, when all of a sudden
appears, out of the corner of my
eye, this huge cat.
Marlon Perkins I am not.
This thing was ugly, grungy and
bad a hell of a lot of nerve coming
into my abode. unannounced.
Overtaken by a blind rage felfby
su·ch illuminaries
as· David
Berkowitz and Bernard Goetz I
wanted.nothing more than to see
that fat cat roast in a pot of my
Grandmother's sauerkraut.
But,
being
the
absolute
a day
in the life
panoramic majesty that is: The
Canterbury Garden Apartment
Complex.
I'd
be wilJing to bet my little
sister that this little, Heaven-on-
earth isn't pictured in the old
Marist propaganda pamphlets.
I would also hazard a guess that
Doc
Murray has never spent a night
out there.

The irony in this wonderful lit-
a new donnitory facility that much
"Cat Woman," is very friendly.
bet my little sister
closer.
Personally I love nothing better

l
Then 10 years after graduation
than to awaken to the shrill whistles
that . this litt e
I could bring my little bambinos • of "Cat Woman" calling her clan
h
E
h
around on Alumni weekend and
in for breakfast.
eaven On . art
tell them that their Daddy played
Essentially though the bottom
l
·s not
1·n
Mar1·st's
amajorroleinthedevelopmentof
line is this: we get free HBO and
this fine, academic landmark.
cable TV.
P
r
O
p a g a n d a
It's kind of like when you ,.....;----------;-
awaken after an evening of
v•,ewpo•1nts
Pamphlets
imbibing.

The throbbing in the head is con-
------------
stant and you know that you have
w
t
d
I
am I concluded that my suffering
to
trek all the way to the bathroom
an e

now would greatly aid this
to pop those Excedrins.
prestigious institution at a later
However, it seems that around
date.
here they can't twist off the
Let's face it; Canterbury is to
tamper- proof seal.
Marist what that big zit on the tip
All right I have to confess that
of your nose was when you were there are many positive aspects to
16.
old Canterbury.
Gutters, not shutters
Let's start with the basics:
utensils.
From incredibly durable knives,
forks and spoons to frying pans
and pots they're all here.
If you have an
opinion on col-
lege, local, state,
national
or world
issues,
The Circle
is interested in
your viewpoint.
by
Michael Lofaro
because my first class wasn't until
11 :25 and I wanted to sleep for a
few more hours. I got out of bed
As a senior, I
am
now living in and, to my surprise, I saw men put-
the Gartland Commons apartments ting shutters up around the win-
for my second year. I used to come dows on the rear of the buildng. I
and visit friends at the apartments
asked myself, "Why shutters and
when I was a sophomore. Then, a
not gutters?" I couldn't come up
major complaint of my friends was with an answer.
that there were no rain gutters on
When I was looking at the
the buildings to force water away
newly-installed shutters, I noticed
from the steps·. Now, two years
that there is a gutter on the
later, this problem still exists.
building, but it wasn't in the front
Now here is what I • think is
over the stoop to stop the rain and
ironic.

. snow .. from. falling and, freezing
Laii:'Fhiitsda'.f
af
7:3o'. a'.m'. ,: :I • over. Rather, it was on the back of
was trying to sleep, but I heard
the building; where nobody walks.
banging outside of my apartment
I asked myself again, "Why?"
in the G-section. I was a little upset
The only aswer that I could come
up with is that Marist is unknow-
ing about this situation in the
Gartland Commons Apartments.
You would think, that since a
number of students fell last
semester and at least one had to be
taken to the hospital, Marist would
try to do something to alleviate this
situation. But I have yet to see
anyone take action to try and solve
the problem.
Seeing that I am one of the many
. students who has slipped or fallen
on these wet and icy steps, I would
like to see something done.
Sure, the shutters add a nice
touch to the apartme~ts, but
wouldn't it be better if they guard-
ed the stoops from Mother Nature?
And, none of this teflon crap,
give us the old stainless steeled-
copper bottomed, guaranteed to
burn every time stuff.
Yeah, dishwashing is such a
pleasure.
Just a few pounds of barbed wire
and a gallon of suds is all you need
for a clean and sparkling kitchen.
Air-conditiqning was looking
mighty appealing as I ambled into
my pad and pushed the "high"
button .
We just let that baby crank all
night and woke up sweaty with a
rather rude stench emerging from
the general vicinity of the AC.
That was the first and last time
climate control will be attempted
{
l_:
let's face
it, amigos,
any
bcerthat
needs.a
slice
oflimc
to give
it flavor
can't
be
much
of a beet Discover
Calgary
Amber
Lager
... Its rich,
imported
taste
is
Viewpoints
should
be 500-700
words in length
and
type
written.
Send
your
Viewpoint
through
the campus mail
c/o The Circle.
'fl
:I
hearty
and robust
Try
itthc nex1
time
you
order
beer,
and hold the lime. •
~-, ,:~
• -.,
=
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-'.~
. :/~
i-:L¼
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A
T:-Shid:
offer
that's
not for suckers.•]'.
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send me the following
Calgary
I-Shins:
tl'IL\.'>E
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..

The Creations.
.
11-._
.

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t-.b,
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1<161-\1-,
T'LL SEE
<,Jou
T11EN.
Escape--
continued
from page
3
labor until finally they were allow-
ed into the United States and given
a foster family.
Phung and his brothers lived in
four different foster homes until '
1986, when they moved to Central
Islip,
N. Y.,
with Dorothy
Sorrentino.
"I
had a lot of difficulty trying
to learn the language," he said.
"At first I learned by watching
TV."
I
Phung's father and sister are
hoping to come to America
sometime next year, but they are
trying to do it legally. His mother
died two years ago. His two
brothers are majoring in engineer-
ing at SUNY Buffalo.
"America has such great oppor-
tunities," said Phung, who majors
in accounting.
"I
feel like now that
I
am a
citizen,
I can do whatever
Americans can do now, whatever
I want."
What
if youdoritget
into the gradschCX>l
of your choice?
Of course, you-may
get
into
another school, but why settle?
Prepare for the LSAT, -GMAT,
GRE, MCA T or any grad schoo,
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Page B - THE CIRCLE - September 29, 198'
'THE
PLACE
FOR
SUPER
SANDWICHES
by
James Ferguson
IS •
WELL; jlJS"r ONE-Tli!N(;i'.COOl.P •
~OU ~RI NG ,,
aim~,
T\\E
ATTRAC
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1N
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or sample
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Fresh
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& bagles
available
- every morning. ,
K&D is more than just a deli.
Pick up your favorite magazine
or
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or grab some munchies,
beer or soda in one quick trip.·
250 North Road .:.
Across from St. Francis
Open
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For further info. contact: Al Meyers, Josten's Inc., College
&
University Division,
P.O. Box 281, Glen Oaks, N.Y. 11004 (718) 343-6243








September 29, 1988- THE CIRCLE - Page 9
Siiidents tell tales of learning, fun
overseas
by Carrie Boyle
Saying good-bye is tough.
'~Leavi~g horµe for months upon
end, away from family and friends
isn't e11sy. But who would'v:
thought that coming home would
be }ust as hard?
.
. After being exposed to European
cultures for nine months, the 13
Marist Abroad students return this
year to resume their .American
lifestyles.
"I felt like I belonged," said
MacLellan, a senior from Trum-
bull, Conn. "When· leaving, it felt
like I was going on a trip, and that
I'd be coming back home -
to
England."

.Two days after
getting
settled in,
MacLellan went on a five-day trip
from England to Munich, West
Germany to experience the German
way of partying -
Octoberfest.
Reminiscing about his trip to
Germany, MacLellan tells of a rude
MacLellan said.
·«1
made two
,.....--,,---------------r---..----------'----,
Australlian friends that I'm still in
. J_
touch with. It was the best time I
ever had in my life."
"I
felt like
I
was in Disneyland,"
said Mark O'Neill, who studied at
Royal Holloway College in Lon-
don. "There's no other building
here . that l can equate Royal
Holloway to."
O'Neill recalls not feeling very
welcome on his firt day in England.
He and
an
American he had met on LM-._....,......,...,
a
train went to get something to eat
in a pub where they met an English
man. After O'Neill told the man
that he was an American, the man
replied, "Oh, I guess that can't be
helped."
After that things started looking
up.
O'Neill played for the college's
basketball team. By his last term he
was coaching the team. "They
don't have much knowledge of the
game," said O'Neill. "They're
good playe:rs, but they're not
technically sound," said O'Neill.
Vinny Cimino, a senior from
Monroe, N.Y., spent his nine
months studying and playing rugby
at St. Patrick's University in
Maynooth, Ireland.
Being an American
in a
classroom with Irish students
didn't seem to phase Cimino in the
least bit.
Above, Josephine Miluso (se-
cond from left) visits St. Mar-
co's Square in Venice, Italy with
friends she met while studying
abroad. Mark O'Neill (right) at
the top of Mount Kenya, 15,700
feet above the equator.
Mark O'Neill and Kevin MacLellan visit Loch Ness, the home of
Scotland's mythical monster.
"The best way that I found to
meet people," said Cimino~ "was
to go to class five minutes late, and
sit next to someone I didn't know
and start talking to them."
tion she received. Everyone went
around the classroom saying where
they were from, and Miluso said
that the classed ooohed and aahh-
ed when she said she was from New
York.
-
"I
didn't want to leave.
I
had to
be dragged to the airport," said
Josephine Miluso, who attended
La Scuola Artisica Per La Moda in
Milano, Italy.
"I
needed another
good t.hree months there -
10
months is not enough. A good two
years of living there really does you
good."
.
"I was looking forward to com-
ing home; but I was depr.essed to
leave my new home," said Kevin
MacLellan, who attended Brighton
Polytechnic in England.
awakening while staying at a Youth
Hostel in Munich. He said that for
$30 a night he and 11 other people
stayed in a five-person room. The
next morning at 7:30 a.m., they
awoke to a German man's voice
screaming over the loud speaker:
"GET UP. GET OUT. YOU.
MUST GO TO BREAKFAST.
GET OUT .. YOlJ MUST GET
OUT.IT IS COLD. IT IS RAIN-
ING. IT 'nOES NOT MA TIER.
YOU MUST GET OUT!"
"Octoberfest was the best trip,"
For Maclellan, it wasn't that
easy.
"In the beginning no one talked
to me. They stared at me. Usually
it was because I was wearing bright
colored clothes, instead of the
dreary black and grey that they
wore. I felt like an outsider. When .
American topics came up in class,
I felt that I should add my input,"
said•Mactellan.
Miluso remembers her first day
of classes because of all the atten-
Miluso explained that school
went from nine in the morning to
five in the evening. There were cap-
puchino breaks in the morning plus
a two-hour break for lunch in the
afternoon.
"There was a communication
problem in class," Miluso said.
"Not that I couldn't understand
them, but they couldn't understand
me. My Italian was different from
tneirs," said Miluso.

O'Neill said that students were
treated more like adults than they
Fly
with
the finest.
are here.
"You put a lot more work out-
side of class. Marist is more like a
high school," O'Neill said. "You
did your own work. If you didn't
do it, it didn't matter; There also
wasn't any attendance taken. lt was
all up to you."
Adjusting
to the different
Continued on page 10
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and be guaranteed flight school •
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This is an excellent
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Check out the Marine Corps Offi-
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~·-·
,•'•
Page 10 - THE CIRCLE-September 29, 1988
killing·
time·
Singer
_is
reincarnation·
of the ~60s
by Mary Stricker
Female vocalists
...
Too many?
Too few? It depends on how you
look at it.
Camp. us leaders to focus oii student
Vote
!

.
for the coming decade and into the
t1on organizations such as ProJect.

More than 500 student govern-
D.C. Sept. 30 - Oct. 2, will focus next century so we must mobilize
VOTE!. and the. NAACP, will
ment

presidents,
campus
on the importance '?f youth voter and made ~ursleves heard this
teach students h_ow
to conduct ef-
newspaper editors, and state stu-
registration, education,. and.let-
November ,, said Rafael Zapata,
fective voter ·participation drives.
dent associations~ representing.all out-the-vote efforts nauonwi e.
student b~dy presient at SUNY
National student leaders will help
50 states and the District of Col um-·
,
'This is going to be a_ critical Binghamton
students develop leadership skills,
bia, today issued a call to
·convene

such as building effective campus
election for many issues of concern
...
a National Student Conference on to students. The next Administra-
Workshops, ied by many of the
coalitions and utilizing campus and
ie~!~ce,pt:~~ih:!~
0
I;;
Ja~~in~~;~
tion's decisions will set the course largest community voter registra-
.
community media.

Look at Madonna;
Cyndi
Lauper and the ever popular terri-
fying teen, Debbie Gibson, and I
say -
Stop ... please ... or I will
surely vomit. On the contrary, look
at Janis Joplin, Tracy Chapman
and the woman who has most
recently given music fans a reason
to cry for more -
our angel of
.
mercy -
Natalie Merchant.
Although she refuses to imitate
baby talk, pretend to be skinny or
rely solely on sex appeal for suc-
cess,
Merchant
has sung her way to
the top (of my list) through a purely
melodic form of storytelling and
sincerety in her music.
AT CHASE,
lVEKNOW A GREAT·
INVESTMENT WHEN WE SEE ONE
.
Merchant, the sole vocalist for
10,000
Maniacs, struggles with the
notions
of ideology and despair
in
the Maniacs second album releas-
ed last year, "In My Tribe." In
songs such as "Cherry Tree" and
"Don't
Talk" Merchant sings of
the
desperate lives of
illiterates
and
alcoholics. In "Peace Train" we
see a sign of hope with lyrics such
-
as, "I've been happy lately think-
ing of the good things to come, and
I believe it could be, something
good has begun."
Interestingly enough, Merchant
borrows these lyrics from Cat
Stevens'.
album
."'Teaser
and the
~'i.tcc.at," an a\'bum te\eased

in
1971, nearing the end of
the
radical
'60s era. During this time, there
was a great search for peace, love
and freedom. Unfortunately, wars,
assassinations and racism often
prevailed. It seems, however, that
Merchant is appealing to· today's
generation to begin searching again
and indeed, many have predicted
the oncoming '90s to be somewhat
of a reincarnation of the '60s.
In "Hey Jack Kerouac," Mer-

chant reminds us of the beatnik
generation such as Kerouac himself
and Allen Ginsberg. In the last line
of the song, Merchant sings,
"You've
gone away without saying
goodbye." Again she seems to be
pleading for the emotion and lust·

for life that overwhelmed the '60s
generation. The beatnik boys left
without a goodbye. They didn't
finish the job. Insteati, Merchant
sings; "They sit and rattle their
bones and think of their blood-
stoned days." While they sit and
rattle, perhaps it is time for others
to clean up the mess.
Yes, you're right. Maybe I'm
reading into this
a
bit much. Maybe
I'm using the 10,000 Maniacs as a
front to make my plea to the
readers to wake up and smell the
coffee. Maybe I'm on my own
search for freedom and my lust for
life. Maybe not;
Whatever my underlying reasons
are for

featuring the_ 10,000
Maniacs in this column, my main
goal remains in convincing you to
tune into their music. It's not dif-
ficult".
·vou
_can even. flip on
Mongrel television
(MTV)
and
catch a glimpse of Merchant in
"Like
the Weather." She appears
no different than she sounds:
carefree, serene, playful and always
soothing. Need I say more?
•••I,
: ••
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:::
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·,_.··
INTRODUCING
THE
CHASE
BANKING
101SMACCOUNT.
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for
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every
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24 hours
a
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Chase
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• No
nickel
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far writing
checks
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• If
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qualify,
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of
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i
f
,
t~ursday
. ··morni:ng
• ·,.
quarterback
'•
Different as
night and
ct·ay
by Tim Besser
Monday at the Summer Olym-
pics was as different as night and
day ..
To begin the day, sprinter Ben
Johnson of Canada was stripped of
his gold medal from the 100 meters
after he tested positive for steroids.
The gold was then awarded to
American Carl Lewis, putting him
back
·on
track to repeat his
four-
gold medal performace of the 1984
games in Los Angeles.
Later that same night we saw the
side of'the Olympics that people
want to remember. American diver
Greg Louganis,

who won gold
medals in the springboard and plat-
form at LA, went to the top of the
10 meter tower
for
his final dive
trailing Xiong Mi of China, who
had just completed a spectacular
final dive. Louganis followed with
a dive that is almost indescribable.
Amid all the pressure he nailed on
of the best dives of his career to win
the gold by just over one point.
Two radically different moments
that have come to symbolize
athletic competition.
Johnson had won the 100 meters
in world-record time, reaching the
tape in just 9.87 seconds. He was
the world's fastest human. Now all
that is gone. Like the gold, the
world record was taken off the
books almost before the ink had
dried. The sight of Johnson, sur-
rounded by guards, hurrying to a
plane at Kimpo airport with his
head down is cause for shame.
Shame thai a man
-would
allow
himself to become so obsessed
with
winning a competition
·that
he
would take that risk. He
.was
not
alone.
.

The Bulgarian weightlifting
team
left the Games last week after
a
se-
cond lifter was disqualified and his
medal stripped when
a
diuretic was·
discovered in his urine in a post-
competition drug test.
Some of the athletes say drug use
among international competitors is
rampant, that the number-exceeds
even the most wild estimates.
The idea behind competition is
that the best athlete will win. Now,
is it the athlete with the best phar-
micist that wins?
Johnson was caught. That,
among some athletes, is the sin.
Not using performance-enhancing
drugs, but getting caught using
them. Johnson disgraced himself,
his
country and ultimately the
Games.
·
t

It is refreshing on a day with
such negative news to see a shining
light like Louganis, a symbol of
what the Olympics are all about.
Louganis, 28 and in his third
-Olympiad,
foot a tough battle with
the China:manduring. the last five
dives of the 10-dive final.
When Louganis climbed the

tower for his final dive, you could
feel the pressure. As he walked
to
the edge of the platform you had
a feeling he could do it, somehow
he would do it.
Summoning his years of ex-
perience Louganis stole the gold
from his young competitor. He
cried on his coach's shoulder. The
best athlete had won.
When you think of past Olym-
pics you think of Bob Beamon
soaring over
29
feet in the long
jump at Mexico City in 1968, Mark
Spitz swimming to seven gold
medals in Munich in 1972, Nadia
Comenici capturing the hearts of
the world in Montreal in 1976, the
abomination
of the
U
.S.-led
boycott in Moscow in 1980 and the
Soviet-_led
boycott of the LA games
in 1984.
When the world looks back on
the Seoul games in
1988,
will it
remember the splendor of Greg
Louganis, or the disgrace of Ben
Johnson?
September 29, 1988- THE CIRCLE- Page 11
CHICO'S PIZZA
100 Washington St.
Large Pie
.................
$6.25
Small Pie ........

.......
.
$5.25
Chico's Special. ........
. $12.00
Slice .........
; ..........
$1.00
WE HAVE DINNERS Toor
Cheese Ravioli
Manicotti
Baked
Ziti
Stuffed Shells
Chicken parm
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No. 9 Adelphi
'blanks
hooters·
by Ken Foye
T_be Marist College soccer team
is getting a lot of bad bounces
lately.
The Red Foxes, 1-5 overall and
0-3 in the Northeast Conference,
lost a non-conference game to
nationally-ranked Adelphi 2-0 last
Saturday. It was the Red Foxes'
fourth consecutive loss.
The results of Tuesday's game
against Fordham were unavailable

at press time. The Red Foxes' next
game is Saturday at Oneonta State
at I p.m.
In North.east Conference news,
St. Francis (N.
Y.)
was declared in-
. eligible for any postseason play
because the college did not field the
required six women's teams during
the past academic year, said Bob
Steitz,. associate
,commisioner
of
the Northeast Conference.
-
Because the Terriers are ineligi-
ble for postseason play', games they
play against conference opponents
will not be included in the con-
ference standings, according to
Steitz. The ruling applies
_to
all
sports, not just soccer.
Since Marist is ineligible for
postseason basketball play, six of
the. seven remaining conference
teams will qualify for the con-
ference tournament in March, to
determine which team will get a bid
to the NCAA tournament.
In the Adelphi garre -
as in
Marist's previous game, a 3-1 loss
to Robert Morris - the Red Foxes
played well, but their opponents
just played better, said coach
Howard Goldman.
"We had a good day, but they·
had a better :me," Goldman said.
"For a while it was anybody's
game, but they scored their first
goal (in the first

half) and that
helped their confidence."
Adelphi was ranked ninth in the
country going into the game.
Goldman said

that freshman
defender Phil O'Hara was Marist's
standout player against Adc;lphi.
O'Hara, who stands
5
feet, 8 inches
tall and weighs 140 pounds was
outstanding marking Adelphi's top
scorer, Duane Robinson. Robin-
son, however, managed one of
Adelphi's two goals.
Offensively, the Red Foxes con-
tinued their season-long scoring
drought.
.Page
12 - THE CIRCLE· September 29,
1988
Mark Edwards dribbles the ball upfield last Saturday against Adelphi. Marist lost the ga~e
2-0.

(Photo by Bob DaviJ)
.
"We had three or four good op-
portunities," Goldman said. "In
one case their goalkeeper made a
horrendous mistake but we didn't
capitalize."
Marist has scored more than one
goal in a game only once this
season -
in. their only victory of
the season, a 2-1 win over Fairfield
on Sept. 8.
Marist's next conference game
will be against Loyola on Oct. 15.
Loyola earned a berth in the
NCAA tournament last season.
After that game, the Red Foxes'
only other conference game will
be
against Long Island University on
Oct. 26. LIU also made the tour-
nament last season. Both games are
away.
Crew Opens with strong showing· at Head of Hudson
by Tim Besser'
The crew team rowed its way to
first, second and fourth_
.place
finishes at the Head of the Hudson
Regatta last Saturday at Albany.
The mixed eight completed the
3.3 mile
course
in 19:45
to
take first
place
by
more than- two minutes
over Community
Rowing of
Boston, one of the clubs that par-
ticipated in the regatta.
The Red Foxes boat of (bow to
stern) Cathy Fazzino, Mary Beth
Wood, Jesse Valente, Elizabeth
Murphy, Ed Fludd, Mike Longo,
John Andreasen and Jay Murray
fin\shed the c9urse in 21 :56, com-
pared to Community Rowing's
23:57. SUNY Albany's boats plac-
ed third and fourth. Skidmore was
fifth.
The four men in the boat had
.
just finished rowing the men's eight
and did not have
.the
usual break
befo.re the
mixed
race. They did not
·even have a chance to get out of the
boat, something
•.
that concerned
coach Larry Davis.
"They were on the water two
.
hours due to an equipment pro-
blem waiting for the first race,"
said Davis. "They just came to the
dock and the four wom~n got in.
Then they had to wait another hour
to start that race. It is like sitting
Mark Hamlin jumps .for the ball but comes up short against Drew
University last Saturday. The Red Foxes won 10-4.
-
(Photo by Bob Davis)
on a bleacher for three hours, not
to mention rowing two three-mile
races."
The team started in the back of
the pack and worked its way up to
the lead, winning going away, said
Davis.

The
women's eight, composed of
(bow
to stern) Fazzino, Wood,
Murphy, Karen Groves, Yvonne
Hedrick, Kelli Martin, Valente and
Sarah Brown and coxswain Rachel
Farrar, beat all the college teams,
losing only to Community Rowing.
Commu~ity turned_ in a time of
20:42, followed by Marist (21 :06),
Ithaca (21:06), Skidmore (22:18)
and SUNY Albany (23:02).
"It is the first time we beat
Ithaca in the heavyweight eight in
10 years," said Davis. "We·beat
them jn lightweight and
jay.vee
but
hadn't beat
their first boat. We
beat
them
by
a fair margin. Ten •
seconds is three-four boat lengths."
Ithaca won the men's
eight
in
19:45, followed by Skidmore
(20:03), Ithaca (20:04), Marist
(20:18)
and SUNY Albany (20:59).
The team of (bow to stern) Ed
Miller, Ryan Applegate, Rob Jean-
net, Bob Hunt, Fludd, Longo, An-
dreasan and Murray with coxswain
Calabaro is, like the other teams,
inexperienced after losing several
rowers to graduation.
The
teams
began
rowing together
earlier this'inonth. They perform-.
ed a little better than they were
ex-
.
pected to, said Davis.

The teani is tentatively schedul-
ed to compete Oct. 15 at Long
-
Beach, N.Y;, in the Head of the
Long Island Regatta.

Ceriello keeps women running
by Kevin St.Onge
She was sitting on the curb in
front of the McCann Center wear-
ing running shoes and shorts, taik-
ing to members of the women's
cross country team. She could have
passed for a junior or a senior ru·n-
ner, but one thing set her apart
from the other.girls sitting on. the
curb, her son Billy,
2 1/2,
was kick-
ing a soccer ball ar9und in the field
opposite them. "Yeh, he was born
into an athletic family, he loves the
Mets,
especially
(Darryl)
Strawberry but he'll probably be a
runner like his parents." she said.
Billy's mother is Maryanne
Ceriello, the new coach of the Lady
Red- Fox cross country team.
Ceriello came to the team a week
into the season but the late start has
not dampened her enthusiam.
"We have a young team
.with·
three freshman and only one
senior, but the girls know they will
be competing every week so they
can relax and simply perform to the
best of their ability," Ceriello said.
The Ceriello family is quite ac-
tive. Maryanne's husband Ken,
_
was recruited by men's cross coun-
try coach Rich Stevens some 10
years ago. Maryanne is a fitness
supervisor across Rout 9 at All
Sport Health and Fitness. Ceriello
comes to Marist by way of Cor-
tland State, where she ran track
and majored in physical education.
•"In
high school I was more of
a sprinter but
a$
I went through
colJege, I started running longer
distances for the fitness aspect of
the activity and that has carried
over into my everyday life up at
All
Sport," says coach Ceriello.
Pam White, last year's coach
was a co-worker of Ceriello's at
All
Sport. "When Pam had the oppor-
tunity to coach at West Point, and
the Marist posistion opened up I
said, 'why not?' " said Ceriello. "I
coached high school for a couple
of years in the Syracuse area and
the thought of coaching on college
level sounded appealing.
"College runners are fun people
to be around. The girls are here
because they love the sport and
they want to improve themselves.
My position
_as
coach is to provide
them with the proper training to do
just that."
Harriers win· an~ther King's Invitational
by Kevin St.Onge
The running Red Foxes have
sprinted to a 26 and 2 record after
only three meets, defeating i3
teams including St. Peter's College,
while the lady Foxes entered two
runners at the King's Invitational
meet, last Saturday.
Winning the King's Invitational
has become a tradition for Marist
as the Foxes ran away with first
place for the third year nmning.
Plagued by sickness and previous
committments, the women fielded
a team of two runners. Senior,
Trish Webster placed 16th with a
time of 20 minutes, 11 seconds.
Her freshman runningmate, Megan
Bell, covered the 3.1 mile course in
21:32.

Women's coach, Maryanne
Ceriello, was pleased with their ef-
fort. "Running without a team is
tough but Trish and Megan im-
pressed me with their determina-
tion, Megan and I set a goal of cut-
ting her time by twenty seconds and
she shaved 22 off her previous
best."
What was expected to be a very
-
close meet against rival St. Peter's
turned out to be a convincing vic-
tory for the men. After exchanging
victories early in the season, the
two teams faced met for the third
time in as many weeks and the
Foxes downed St. Peter's by 41.
Scott ~endall again led a deter-
mined ~arist squad, placing sixth
in 27 :06. Coach Rich Stevens last
week predicted the return of Peter
Antes to the varsity lineup would
impact the race, and he was right
as Antes placed a solid 10th in
27:31.
Freshman Shane Pidgeon's first
effort coming off the injury list was
impressive with
a
17th place show-
ing while sophomore J\,like Coakley
may sti11 be hampered by a sore
ankle as he finished 37th but with
a respectable time of 28:56.
Marist was able to place eight
runners in the top 50 of a 96 run-
ner field. The next meet is October
1st; the Lemoyne Invitational.
Race time is noon .

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