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Part of The Circle: Vol. 36 No. 8 - November 9, 1989

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Take a Breather
Winning· Streak
Scoring Waves
Worries of safety hazards· in
Debate team picks up fifth

Football loses in seesaw game
Donnelly_ air after construction
·consecutive title
-
-page
3
-page
5
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12
Volume 36,. Number 8
Marist College, Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
November 9, 1989
Three
-arres·ts
clear the
·stands
at hockey game
by Chris Landry
A Marist student, charged with public lewdness, and two other
teenagers were arrested last Saturday night at a Marist ice hockey game
at the Mid-Hudson Civic Center, causing police to clear the stands·
l:n
a matter of minutes.
.
Upon the request of Civic Center officials, City of Poughkeepsie Police
emptied the stands between the second and third periods of the opening
game between Marist and Wagner College with the score at 4-2. The rest
of the game was played in an empty arena. Marist lost 7-4.
According to a report in Tuesday's Poughkeepsie Journal, Kenneth
O'Connor, 18, a sophomore from Queens, was arrested when he refus-
ed to leave after he was observed with his pants down in front of the
snack bar, said Detective Sgt. Kevin O'Neil, who also serves as a securi-
~
ty guard at the Civic Center when off duty.

.

...
O'Connor was charged

with resisting arrest in addition. to public
lewdness; both are misdemeanors. After O'Connor's arrest, six more
·
police officers were called to the scene when a former Marist student,
Peter Crisafi, 19, of Rutherford, N.J., tried to punch O'Neil.
Crisafi was charged with resisting arrest and obstructing governmen-
tal administration, also misdemeanors. Another teenager, whose identi-
ty was not available at press time, was arrested and charged with disorder-
ly conduct.
.
Police officials refused to comment when The Circle contacted them
this week.
Continued on
page 2
Painter recycles images
as part of 'natural art'
by Kelly Woods
In baggy, paint-splattered p~nts
and a gray canvas army bag slung
over his shoulder, Tom Sarran-
tonio, walked quickly in the cold
drizzle to grab a cup of coffee
before going to his personal
museum.
Hidden down a side street in the
heart of New Paltz, a three-room,
old red barn with no plumbing has
been Sarrantonio's private studio
for two years.
"My studio is like a museum of

natural art because I collect a lot

of things from the woods like
rocks, sticks and car parts," said
Sarrantonio, visiting assistant pro-
fessor of art, who is both a painter
and a sculptor ..
Because Sarrantonio has a strong
interest in the environment, mak-
ing sculpture out of garbage is his
way of communicating.
and
.
creating a message.
In the upper room of the clut-
tered, musty, cold studio, Sarran-
tonio has a display of 100 coffee
cups, each in indfvidual cubby
holes. Once meaningless pieces of
plastic, are now a work of
art.
Sarrantonio first began using the
coffee cups to clean off his brushes,
but then began painting them black
and gluing on illustrations from a
1959 Boy Scout manual.
Sarrantonio said he wants his
paintings to be aggressive and to af-
fect people's perception of an
object.
"I think they're funny, yet
philosophical and make people
think," said Sarrantonio. "Instead
of making one year's worth of gar-
bage, I recycled it." •
Although creating the unusual
pieces is important to Sarrantonio,
it also acts as a playful release, in
contrast to his more "pretty" land-
scape paintings, which he admitted
can be limiting.
"I'm trying to capture the image
and make the viewer think/' said
Sarrantonio. "My paintings are
obsessive because I focus on one
aspect of landscape and not the
overall atmosphere."
One of Sarrantonio's more re-
cent goals is to do 100 paintings in
the next year since he received a
$10,000 grant from the Pollock
Krasner Foundation this past
Semptember.
The foundation, which
is
located
in New York City, was designed to
help aspiring artists who need ex-
tra financial assistance. Any artist
applying may ask for up to $20,000
to use for rent, art supplies and
medical expenses.
Sarrantonio will now be able to
dedicate himself completely to his
art during winter intersession and
next summer instead of teaching.
He will also have time to arrange
exhibitions.
"Displaying work is important
because art is like a language and
it
can't
communicate if it's locked
up
in
the
studio,"
said
Sarrantonio.
The State of Higher Education
Circle
photo/Lynaire Brust
Dr. Ernest Boyer, president of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, spoke to
J_!lculty and students last week about_ the capacity
of
the nation's colleges to effedively serve students.
Tom Sarrantonio
Sarranto.nio had an exhibition
this summer at Mohonk Mountain
House in New Paltz, which includ- •
ed drawings, paintings, coffee cups .
and other objects.
"I try to look for non-
commercial locations because in a
gallery the first question asked is
about the cost and that question
should be secondary because they
are priceless," said Sarrantonio
with a quick burst of laughter.
Although he has sold some pain-
tings, Sarrantonio never counts on
selling any of his works because
painting to sell inhibits thought,
whereas more dedication goes into
paintings he gives away.
"After completing a painting,
it's a sense of release or relief,
almost like purging, because I am
able to unleash visual images," said
Sarrantonio.
Continued
on
page
10

Council vote warns
off-campus students
by Holly Gallo
The City of Poughkeepsie's
Common Council passed a resolu-
tion Monday authorizing the Law
Department to institute public
nuisance action against those
residences housing Marist College
students who recently received let-
ters regarding past conduct.
The letters, which were sent to
• individuals in several off-campus
residences, stated that the city has
received complaints on separate oc-
casions of behavior such as loud,
late-night parties, parking pro-
blems and the illegal sale of alcohol
to minors.
According to Steve Giannone,
one of three Marist students who
attended the meeting, many of the
problems outlined in the letter did
not even apply to his house.
"This letter stated many viola-
tions which we aren't responsible
for, but it was in there, and these
letters go to our landlords," he
said.
As a result of the letter, their
landlord is threatening to evict
them, according to Giannone.
Other allegations in the letters
were
garbage
problems, damage
and destruction
to
neighboring
pro-
perties and abusive and threatening
behavior
on
the
part
of
tenants
and
guests.
"We've never had any problems
with any of these," said Ronald
Marchon, 24 Smith St., who also
.
attended the meeting.
Marchon said there was only one
party at his residence early'in the
semester, which was broken up by
the police at 10:50 p.m., ruling out
the charge of late-night parties.
"This letter came based on only
one complaint," Marchon said.
Kieran Fagan, a student residing
on Marilyn Avenue, said he also
received a letter, although there
was only one party at his residence
this semester, which police ap-
• proached but did not break up.
"I
think they're afraid of us,"
Fagan said. "They're trying to
sweep the problem under the rug
and not deal with it, but it doesn't
solve the problem. We have to live
somewhere."
The eight-member
council

deliberated in a closed meeting,
prior to making the decision, on
whether to vote that night or to
hold off for two weeks. The coun-
cil voted unanimously to vote that
night.
The proposal, which caine about
as a result of repeated complaints
to the City of Poughkeepsie Police
concerning Marist parties, will not
involve any action unless there are
repeat offenses
by
the residences in
Continued on page
10
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Page 2 •
THE CIRCLE - November 9, 1989
Entertainment
Goin' Bananas
Listen, all you funny college
students. Bananas Comedy Club is
sponsoring its Funniest College Stu-
dent in the Hudson Valley Contest on
Friday, Nov. 17. First prize is $100. For
more
information,
please
call
471-5002.
WWF Wrestling
Be at the Mid-Hudson Civic Center .
on Friday, Nov.17toseeWorldWrestl-
ing Federation action. A match bet-
ween Randy Savage and Hacksaw Jim
Duggan highlights the card whiqh
begins at 8 p.m. Tickets prices range
from $8 to $12 and are available by
calling 454-3388.
Drama Festival
Ulster County Performing Arts
Center will hold its first annual drama
festival on Nov. 10. Area theater
groups will compete for awards in the
following categories: Best Actor, Best
Actress, Best Director and Best
Original Play. Tickets for the 8 p.m.
show cost $1
O
and are available by
calling (914) 331-1613.
Educating Rita
The New Day Repertory Company

will present the comedy, "Educating
Rita," at the Vassar Institute Theater
starting November 1
O
and running Fri-
day through Sunday until November
26. Student ticket cost is $10. For more
information and advance tickets, call

(914) 485-7399.
I
Love New York
Take a bite out of the Big Apple for
only $8 on Saturday,_
Nov. 18. Buses
leave Champagnat at 9 a.m. For reser-
vations, call Mike Molloy at extension
206.
.
Jackie Mason
Television comedian Jackie Mason
will be at the Mid-Hudson Civic Center
on November 18 at 8 p.m. The show
will benefit the Jewish Community
Center of Dutchess County. The $30
tickets are available by calling
454-3388.
Heavy Metal Music
The heavy metal bands L.A. Guns,
Tora Tora and Dangerous Toys will
perform at the Mid-Hudson Civic
Center on November 8 at 7:30 p.m.
Tickets are available at the civic center
box office or by calling 454-3388.
Comic Relief
Comedian Howie Mandel will bring
laughs to the Mid-Hudson Civic Center
on November 17 at 7:30 p.m. Tickets
are $19 and are available by calling
454-3388.
Foreign
Film
Get a taste of Italian cinema -
come to next weekend's foreign film
"Joke of Destiny." This 1983 color film
directed by Lina Wertmu/ler and starr-
ing Ugo Tognazzi, Piera Degli Esposti,
Gastone Moschin and Renzo Mon-
tagnani is showing at 7:30 p.m. Satur-
day and Sunday in Donnelly 245. Ad-
mission is free
.
Getting· Involved
Gay and Lesbian
Support Group
.
The Gay and Lesbian Support
Group will meet this week. For more
information, please contact one of the
following: Gary Comstock, ex. 370,
Rich Roder, ex. 707 or Audrey Rodri-
que, ex. 795.
Amnesty International
Come to an Amnesty International
meeting tomorrow at 2:30 p.m. in Cam-
pus Center 260.
Pro Choice March
Buses are available from Dutchess
County to this Sunday's Pro Choice
rally in Washington, D.C: For more in-
formation, contact Wendy Dubin at
565~0779.
Clothes Drive
The Graduate Psychology Associa-
tion is sponsoring a winter clothes
drive and canned food collection dur-
ing the Final Exam week. The clothes
and food will be given to a nearby
charity organization for distribution.
The collections will be taken in Donnel-
ly 105.
Making the Grade
Job Fair
· Accounting firms will be looking for
potential employees in a job fair to be
held on Wednesday, Nov. 15 at Hunter
College in New York City. For further
information, call 1-800-633-6320.
Helping the Homeless

Join Kevin O'Conner, a Marist alum-
nus· and manager of the Gannett
House, on Tuesday, Nov.
14
for
a
lec-
ture about homelessness. The presen-
tation "Homelessness, A Growing
Crisis: How Can You Help?" will begin
at 7:15 p.m. in Campus Center 249.
Poster Contest
Students can win $5,000 if they
enter a poster contest sponsored in
conjunction with National Alcohol
Awareness Week. More information
~an be obtained from John Padovani
m
Garland Commons Apartment F-12.

Essay Contest ,.
The Vector Marketing Corporation is
sponsoring an essay contest on the
topic "Beyond Your GPA: What More
Does It Take to Be Successful After
College?" There's a Dec.
1
deadline.
For further information, call (215)
544-3020.
.
Fiction Contest
Start writing. Playboy magazine is
sponsoring a college fiction contest
with a $3,000 first prize. For more
~etails, write to Playboy College Fic-
tion Contest, 919 N. 'Michigan Ave.
Chicago, Ill. 60611.
'
Attention
To get your activity listed in
this column, send pertinent in-
formation through campus mail
to The Circle, c/o ''After Class.''
Hockey--
r----------------------------__,;_------'-------------.
Contin~ed from page 1
Lisa Pagano, the Civic Center's
marketjrig director, toJd The Cir-
cle in a phone interview yesterday
the the decision to clear the stands
was made because·manyofthe400
estimated fans were intoxicated and
more arrests would have been
made.
The arena
·was
emptied··within
minutes, leaving many fans confus-
ed. And Pagano said she regrets
having to penalize the majority of
the fans because of incidents in-
volving a few.
She said authorities were acting
in the interest of safety.

But some fans thought the police
and security went overboard.
Those who arrived just after the in~
cidents occured, said the evacua-
tion was not necessary and that of-
ficials acted unprofessionally.
Senior Steve Veccia said one
security gaurd used profaniti~ to
persuade him and a group of his
'
friends to leave.
"The guy who told us to get out
was more than rude," Veccia said.
"They could of handled it in bet-
ter ways."
The incident has forced Civic
Center officials to examine their
security and. alcohol policies,
Pagano said.
Officials will meet today, but are
reluctant to stop beer sales because
they fear students
will
drink more
before games and
try
to sneak beer
containers in the arena, Pagano
said.
Officials would rather continue
selling alcohol and have the option
to stop it, Pagano said. Sales were
stopped in the first period after of-
ficials realized many fans were in-
toxicated, Pagano said.
"We are reluctant to halt sales
ot'
beer becuase
we
are worried they
will
down a six-pack before the
game - that's a bigger problem,"
Pagano said.
Marist section of the stands was
filled to capacity before the evacua-
tion, and Marist head coach Bob
Mattice said playing to an empty
arena did have a negative effect on
his team's play.
"Whenever
anything
like that
happens it
rues
the
wind
out of
their
game.
II
be
said.
Saturday, November 11
9 a.m.-5:30 pm
Marist College
Campus Center
INFO-TAINMENT'
T H E
N E
w s
• Is "Tabloid TV" changing the face of the broadcast medium?
• Is the line between news and entertainment becoming
increasingly blurred?
• What challenges lie ahead for aspiring journ'31isi?
_
Join a distinguished panel of media professionals representing
ABC, NBC, CBS and local independent statiomrfor a critical look
at
~ft
important issue.
9 am
10 am
12
noon
-
Registration
-
Panel Presentation
-· Keynote Address and
Awards Ceremony
The Second
Annual
2:30.pm
4:30 pm
-
Mock Interviews
with media persona
.representatives
-
Tours and Receptic
Radio
and Television
News
Directors/
Marist
Advisory
Council
Conference
Open to the entire Marist Community.
Information: Communications Department, ext. 650

































i
November 9, 1989- TH_E
CIRCLE- Page 3
New software package to revamp registration
by
Jennifer Becker
Marist students will be able to walk out
of early registration
.
with their spring
schedule in hand, this fall, since the college
will be implementing a new software package
to do the job.
attempting to install it in nine, said Kelly.
The administration has installed the part of
the system required for registration - about
one-third of its total functions.
is signed also, the student will not have to
return to their adviser and get back on the
end of the line if one of their classes is closed.
Because the program is not fully install-
ed, the computer cannot check pre-requisites
or the priorities students have. Therefore,
classes are filled on a first come, first served
basis, said Kelly.
successive class.
The student's Social Security numbers will
be usedas the new student identification
numbers. They must bring their social securi-
ty cards with them to register, as well as their
current Marist ID.
However, the package, purchased from
Information Associates in Rochester, N. Y.,
will be more complex and time consuming,
said Dr. Jack Kelly, the Student Information
System Task Force chair.
"We're putting in the bare minimum re-
quired at this time - just what we need for
registration," said Kelly. "It will be more
streamlined in the future."
In the meantime, the burden falls on the
students and the faculty advisers. The ad-
ministration has published newsletters for
both groups informing them of the new pro-
cedures and possible problems to expect.
Originally, freshmen were to register first,
but the upperclassmen did not realize that
freshmen would not be competing for the
same classes. To satisfy student concerns, the
administration revised the schedule, said
Kelly.
The courses have been renumbered to
designate whether a course carries Liberal
Arts credit right in the course number.
According to Kelly, various department
heads will be present on the add/drop days
to help in selecting alternate courses.
The previous system was not expected to
last 10 years, and therefore, must be replac-
ed because it cannot print the "0" in 1990.
The computer company recommends an
18-month installation period, but Marist is
The new procedures require students to
have their adviser's signature on their add
form. Kelly recommends that students have
an alternate schedule as well. If an alternate
The seniors will register first and then there
will be an add/drop day exclusively for them.
The same process will be repeated for each
-
"Our biggest concern is the confusion ol
the students. We will work out the bugs of
the system in time, but for now we have the
vanilla ice cream with none of the toppings,"
Kelly said.
Ex-Miss Marist:
'I
want
my MTV!'
by Ann
Timmons
Junior Janel Scarborough has
gone from Miss Marist to Miss
MTV.
As the 1987 Miss Marist winner,
Scarborough has traded in her
crown for daily appearances on na-
tional television.
For the past year, Scarborough,
from Freeport,
N. Y.,
has perfom-
ed with some of the most famed
ceiebrities, worn sequined clothes
and danced to the hottest hits on
Club MTV, a daily music segment
on the 24-hour music television sta-
tion, MTV, from 5:00 to 5:30 p.m.
and Saturday 11 a.m. to noon.
Scarborough got her big break
almost by mistake.
.
She said she was coaxed unwill-
ingly by some friends to audition
for Club MTV at Let's Dance, a
.
Poughkeepsie night club. She was
one of the eight amateurs chosen
to compete again at the Palladium
in New York City. She survived
both auditions, being
·one
of the 10
chosen from the 80 dancers at the
Palladium.
"I
think
I
was chosen because
they were searching for a certain
look, because they were trying to
diversify their dancers. And I can
dance," Scarborough said.
Every six weeks Scarborough
travels to the Palladium to tape 15
shows in two days, dancing up to
10 hours each day. "Dancing is no
longer fun - it's work," she said.
Scarborough
describef
Club
MTV
as "an updated American
Bandstand," but music videos are
shown with clips of the dancers
Post editor
·10
speak at
TV forum
by Steven Murray
The second annual
Radio-
Television News Directors Associa-
tion/Marist Advisory Council con-
ference will be held· this Saturday,
in the Campus Center Theater.
The day iorig conference, which
will feature a panel discussion on
"Info-tain,nent and the News" and
mock interviews, will be broken in-
to two sessions. The panei discus-
sion will take olace from 10
to
11 :30 a.m., whfle the mock inter-
views will be from 2:30 to 4:30
p.m.
Because the conference will be
attended by professional member~
of the radio and television ne,vs
communitv and it deals ,,..ith "info-
tainment, ~vhich refers
to
the the in-
corporation of entertainment into
news to make it more appealing,
conference coordinator
Robert
Norman said it should be both
educational
and practical
for
students interested in the field of
communication.
"If vou're 1'.!0inl?
into that field,
it's 200d to k-now-what the
issue5
are and what's going on."' said
Nolan, an associate professor of
communication
ans.
"Right
now,
the field is mo,·ine in the direction
of info-tainment ~and away from
hard news."
The practice
of simulated
edited in. She said it follows earlier
shows as being a fashion trendset-
ter because
it is broadcast
nationwide.
"Sometimes l forget that people
from as far away as Hawaii,
Canada and England see the show
-
not
just the people next door,"
she said.
For that reason, Scarborough
said she
carefully plans out her out-
fits when she dances. which have
made her somewhat of a celebritv
herseif.

She has collected fans from all
over the country,
some
of whom
write her to praise her fashion
style
as well as her dance. She considers
herself a "hip but classy dresser,"
and even conservative compared to
the rest of the dancers. She does
admit that working long hours
under the intense lights makes it
difficult to wear much.
At each taping Scarborough gets
to meet a different music star. So
far she met Paula Abdul, Sheena
Easton, D.J. Jazzy Jeff and the
Fresh Prince, Donna· Summmer
and Tone-Loe. Two weeks ago
Scaborough met Donny Osmond
and she•said he
was
nothing like her
preconceived notion of him.
"Everybody thinks he (Osmond)
is sµch a goody-goody, but he is
trying so hard to shake that image
and be a bad, bad boy," she said.
"He is very professional and tends
·
to get the dancers involved.)'
She said the dancers sense if the
artist is cool and standoffish or if
they are receptive. the dancers
reciprocate admiration when it is
;),,'
.,
Jerry Nachman
newscasts and
"tabloid"
tele~ision
has been criticized by some as
unethical. while others
say
it is the
news format of the future and
makes the news more "palletable."

Norman said the mock interview
session, which will be divided into
four teams interviewed by profes-
sionals from
various
communica-
tions fields, will show students the
rights and wrongs of interviewing.
Some of the news professionals
attending the conference will be
Jerrv Nachman, editor of the New
Yori
Post; KatJly Maloney,
W
ABC news director; and John
Tomlin. producer of "Inside Edi•
tion.·•
Re11.istration
for the conference
will b'egin at 9 a.m. in the Campus
Center's Fireside Lounge and the
panel
discussion \\ill be followed by
a private luncheon at noon in the
RiYer Room. Followine the mock
interviews there will be
a
reception
and a tour of Lowell Thomas from
4:30 to 5:30 p.m.
"YO! MTV
Raps" personalities come to Marist. Junior Janel Scarborough, who has appeared on "Club
MTV,"
poses
with
members of the other MTV show during a cheerleading fund raiser last week •
given.
"If
we like the star we tend to
chant and go crazy and give them
a good show, and if we don't we
just do a job," she said.
It's all about show biz and look-
ing the part.
"Sometimes we have to dance to
the things we hate the most and
look like we love it," she said.
Scarborough said her favorite
performer was Tone-Loe who pull-
ed her onstage during one of the
tapings to dance with him to his
song,
"Wild
Thing." They spoke
after the taping and met again
backstage when Tone-Loe per-
formed
at
the
Chance
in
Poughkeepsie. They still keep in
touch, from time to time, she said.
"Everyone knows that college is
not just about books." she said.
"Club MTV opens up a whole dif-
ferent world and helps me ex-
perienci different things."
Besides being voted Miss Marist
her freshman year, Scarborough is

also captain of the Marist College
Cheerleaders and does the majori-
ty of their choreography. She has
modeled before and is currently do-
ing a modeling shoot for a
cheerleading magazine called "Var-
sity" in Memphis, Tennessee. She
was also chosen to star as one of
the lead dancers in a music video
on MTV by a new group named the
Drum promoting their new song
"The Swirl."
But Scarborough said
she
is not
ready for what accompanies the
limelight.
"I'm just
scared
people will
see
me as
a
Club MTV dancer and not
in any other li'ght," Scarborough
said.

Her real dream is to become a
television newscaster, possibly co-
anchoring the Channel 4 (NBC's
New York Affiliate) evening news
with Chuck Scarborough and Janel
Scarborough. She said she knows
she will have to "pay her dues"
first before making it to the top.
"I look at life as making a cake
and all these things are just the in-
gredients - but to become a televi-
sion newscaster,"
said Scar-
borough, "That would be the ic-,
ing."
Tests show Donnelly air is safe,
some fear.hazards weren't found
by Julie Cullinane
Results of tests performed in
Donnelly Hall show no heaith
dangers due
to
fiber glass content
in the air, but workers are
still
con-
cerned about other chemicals and
particles that may have been releas-
ed during construction.
The first of two air-quality tests,
conducted in eariy September. was
prompted by complaints of bron-
chial proble·ms by employees work-
ing on
the
lower level near con-
struction areas. Only
·fiberglass
levels were checked and did not
show
dangerous amoums,
said
Jack Shaughnessy, director of the
physical plant.
The exact date of the first test is
not known.
The administration
was not
aware that employees had concerns
other than fiber glass and didn't
have anything else tested, said
:\fark
Sullivan. executive vice
president.
Employees were concerned that
sheet-rock dust, fiber glass particle.,
and mold spores were being releas-
ed with the heavy dust buildups
that circulated in Donnellv during
the summer months when construe'".:
tion was the heaviest,
said
Katherine Greiner, associate pro-
fessor
in the science division. Don-
neily has been under renovation
since
last fall.
Sullivan
has
since
toid Greiner
that
further tests on
other
oanides
will be conducted upon ernpioyee
requests, said Greiner.
The Administration
was not aware that
employees had con-
cerns
other
than
fiberglass and didn't
have anything else
tested.
The results of a
second
test.
which was conducted on Sept.
27
after an anonymous complaint.
have not been received bv the
Security Office. said Josenh Lear.·,
director of safety and
security
.•
But, according to a report by the
Dutchess County Health Depart-
ment, the fiber glass content level
m the air in Donnelly
is
not
dangerous.
:--Jow.
there
are
no reguiaiions
on
fiber
glass content. but they
arc
be-
ing
processed.
said
john
Eisenhardt,
lab director of
CA:\1O
Pollution Comrol lnc .. which
con-
ducted
both
air tesrs.
The concern
is
not
for
the nre-
sent
conditions of Donneily, ·but
the conditions existinu durinu
sum-
mer months when conscruction is
heaviest. Greiner
said.
"Testing for
the
air quality now
is nor going to tell us what happen-
ed this
summer, ..
Greiner
said.
'.'Jow that much of the construc-
tion has ended. Leary and Greiner
suspect
that there will not be a pro-
blem with the air quality.

But. when drillinl'.! was being
done in large quantities over th~
summer.
the dust flying through
the halls of Donnelly was probably
heavily tainted with sheet rock,
which could cause bronchial pro-
blems. :\nd fungi from the air
ducts might have been released in-
to the air during the continuous
drilling. causing many allergic reac-
tions for people constantly
sur-
rounded by it, Greiner said.































'
\
Page 4 - THE CIRCLE - November 9, 1989
Briefs··
Campus traffic tieups
may create stricter -
parking regulations
by Maureen Kramer
Marist may eventually be converting to a pedestrian- only campus
to combat increasing traffic and parking problems, according to
Joseph Leary, director of safety and security.
Although there are sufficient parking spaces available on campus
to accomodate all residents and faculty members in the Marist com-
munity, the number of students that choose to commute within the
campus is creating a traffic and parking crunch, Leary said.
"Eventually we may temporarily have to assign everyone to a
specific parking lot - this will be done by having a specific colored
or shaped parking permkfor each lot in order to cut down on
P¥k-
ing and traffic problems," said Leary.

The parking regulations enforced by Security will not hold up under
the current construction of the new parking lots and buildings.
"The price of this progress will ultimately lead to grid lock in cer-
tain areas of campus if new rules are not enforced," said Leary.
Minimal efforts already in progress to combat the parking and traf-
fic problems are meant to benefit the pedestrians as well, Leary said.
"Originally we wanted a pedestian phase put on the lights when
leaving the north end of campus so that there would be a short time
where all of the lights would be red so the students could have a chance
to cross the street," Leary said. "That would adversly affect the traf-
fic. Instead, we settled on the 'No turn on red' sign."
Due to incidents where Marist students walking to or from campus
were struck near that entrance, the enforcement of the sign is crucial
although some students choose to ignore it.
'' At times while I was at_ that end pf campus I have seen students
ignoring the 'No turn on red' sign," Leary.said. "This is a properly
ordained sign issued by the state and it must be adhered to for safety.
The police have been advised about it and will be around here to en-
sure that it is not. being violated," said Leary.
Because the north end of campus leads directly to a high traffic
area, plans to ease the problem are being discussed.
"One idea we have is to have the parking lot directly off Route
9
to cut down the amount of travel through campus to get into a park-
ing lot," said Leary.
Champagnat goes-
high-tech,- mainfrarn~,
computers arrive
by Jennifer C. Johannessen
High-tech has hit Champagnat Hall.
Seventeen mainframe computers were installed last week in the study
halls of the dorm, making it easier for students to do work or com-
municate with friends.
"It's so much easier than going to Donnelly, especially if you want
to check mail and you can work late at night with no one to bother you,''
said sophomore Joe Harrington.
While some residents use the terminals for work, others use them for
recreation. "I basically use it for word processing, but I just recently
discovered how to use the BBS (BuJleti11
Board System)," said Mike
Siciliano, a communication arts major from Valley Stream, N.Y. "It's
-a great way to meet people. l have already met someone and hope to
meet more."
Christine Mulvey, manager of telecommunications at Marist, said
Marist is one of the first schools of its size to run fiber optics to residence
areas.
Mulvey hopes to implement this system in the future for the other
residence areas.
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Storyteller gives readers
clean breath off ri!sh air
Some people are just exceptional
story tellers.

I am certainly not one of them,
but a man by the name of Garrison
Keillor is.
Keillor is an Anoka, Minnesota
native who was born in 1942 and
graduated from the University of
Minnesota in 1966. For thirteen
years from 1974 to 1987 Keillor was
the host of a live radio show entitl-
ed "A Prairie Home Companion."
During this radio show Keillor
simply told very real life stories
about a fictitious town in Min-
nesota. The town is Lake Wobegon
"the town that time forgot, that the
decades cannot improve."
And this is exactly what makes
Keillor so special.
Keillor can tell everyday, mun-
dane stories like no· one else can.
His way with words turns any com-
mon occurrence into the most
fascinating and funny of tails.
Keillor is not a comedian, mind
you, he is a humorist and there is
a world of difference. Just as fun-
ny, but different. He is a man that
you can listen to with your seven-
year-old daughter and not have to
hurry lier out of-the room.
Besides his immensely popular
• radio show, Keillor has also writ-
ten three books. His first, "Jiap-
py to Be Here" was published in
1982. His second, "Lake Wobegon
Days" was published in 1985. His
most recent book, "Leaving
Home"
was
published in 1987.
As usual with me, l screwed up
the process by reading the last book
first. What is worse is that I bought
the book two summers ago and just
got around to picking it up and
Ed
McGarry
It's
a
little
known
fact
that ...
reading it. It was a mistake to wait
so long.
In "Leaving Home" Keillor tells
thirty-six stories, none longer than.
eleven pages, including one entitl-
ed "A Trip to Grand Rapids." In
this story a mother and .father
leaves their teenage daughters· alone
for the first time.
Half way to their destination
they get uneasy and decide to turn
back. When they get back to their
house they see · many unfamiliar
cars and hear loud music. With the
naive parents not sure what is go-
ing on they park the car and sneak
across a muddy field for a better
vantage point.
Upon a closer look they.see two
kegs of beer on the back porch and
witness one daughter taking and
unusually long puff off of a thin
cigarette that a few friends are
generously sharing.
The· parents start to feel guilty
for spying on their daughters and
decide to go -ahead with the_ trip.
However, the car gets stuck in the
mud and the story ends with the
parents embarrassingly having to
ask a friend of their daughtei:s to
pull the car out of the mud with his
truck.
None of the stories in."Leaving
Home" are much more com-
plicated than this one but it is
Keillor's .ability tell
a
story so
smoothly that makes each story so
mesmerizing.
For a quick taste of what Keillor
has to offer, consider this passage
from "Easter"
in which he
describes how parents panic when
it comes to their children: "Some
children love to scream for the
thrill of making immense people
' move fast. I remember that, on a
quiet day my sister and
I
in the
backyard , wondered, . 'Where's
Mom?' Upstairs, we thought. So I
screamed, 'MOM.' She made it
downstairs in two seconds. A good
pair of wheels for
an
old lady." .
"Leaving Home" is filled with
tales that are just as simple and just
as poignant as this. Keillor recalls
all of your fondest memories
without ever having known you.
Keillor is the perfect author for
leisure reading. His light stories are
not challenging, just entertaining.
In fact, the most challenging part
of reading "Leaving Home" is
having the guts to break the idiotic
Marist stereotype that it is "un-
cool" to do any outside reading.
Listen kiddos I wouldn't suggest it
if I didn't think you could handle
it.
Best of all; Marist students
should really appreciate "Leaving
Home" because the words are not
printed·very small and there are few
words longer than seven letters.
Hell, this a ·perfect follow-up to
"The Little Engine That Could."
·Ed McGarry is The Circle's
entertainment columnist.-··· ·
,.
Off.
·camp
us ;,_,
______________
C ....
on-ti-nu-.e-d--fr-om_p
...
ag_e_1_
question, Mayor Robert Bleakley
said.
"I hope we don't have to ever
file a nuisance
complaint,"
Bleakley said. "It's there, it's a
weapon. If agreements can be
reached, the problem won't exist."
Bleakley, in response to an in-
quiry at the meeting,said a public
nuisance action is "authorizing the
law department, when they deem it
necessary and have the proper
documentation, and nothing else is
working, to pursue .these com-
plaints."
About eight of the Poughkeep-
sie residents who have had pro-
blems in the past were also at the
meeting to give accounts of
disturbances.
Theresa Newkirk of Taylor
A venue said she has trouble sleep-
ing at night.
"I don't mind if it's up till 11
p.m., but they're going in and out
three or four times," she said. "l
think -they're going to get more
beer, or whatever, or. the
girls
come
in or the guys come in. I've been
taking it for about five years."
Tom
O'Neil,
4th Ward alder-
man, said even in the wake of the
passed resolution, students don't
ha\'.e that much to worry about.
"The city has an obligation to
keep the peace," he said.
"If
there
are no more parties or interference,
then you probably have nothing to
fear from the City of Poughkeep-
sie."
Two of the biggest problems bet-
ween off-campus residents and the
city have been student parties and
a housing ordinance which pro-
hibits more than three unrelated
people from living together unless
they can be defined as a functional
family. Off-campus students were
told in letters from the city to show
that they comply with the
ordinance.
To discuss these· issues, several
off-campus students . met last
Thursday, Nov. 2, with Peter
Amato, assistant dean for student
affairs.
Marchon, who helped organize
the meeting, said the group resolv-
ed to have a representative from
each house meet at a later date to
discuss solutions to the oroblems.
"Some students may have caus-
ed a problem in the community;
however, I think we're taking much
more of the responsibility than we
deserve," Marchan said.
"Poughkeepsie.has many more
problems than Marist College
students having parties," he said.
"I think the students are definite-
ly being singled out in the com-
munity.''
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November 9, 19B9- THE CIRCLE - Page 5
Rights group: What ~urts you hurts creation
by Nathan J. Robinson and
Je~el'. C. Johannessen
Animals are our fellow inhabitants of the
One of the biggest cruelties to animals is
Man is merely a strand in the web of
nature, and by manipulating the world, the
human race is destroying the environment
for all species, said Ingrid
Newkirk,
national
director of People for the Ethical Treatment
of Animals (PET A),
.in
a speech delivered
last Thursday in the Theater.
earth, yet we treat them as objects and not their use in experiments, according to
as individuals with feelings, said Newkirk. Newkirk. Although animal testing is not re-
Animals should be protected by law from quired by law and the results are in-
suffering just as any human is protected. It
.
conclusive, animals are used by companies
is not important whether animals can reason to test harmful products such as airplane glue
or talk, but that they suffer just
as
any and furniture cleaners, she said.
human suffers, she said.
"Some 100 million animals are killed each
Newkirk asked the audience to vote year. They have cosmetics dropped into their
against animal exploitation including animal eyes, chemicals forced down their throats,
testing, hunting and the fur industry .. By

and aerosols sprayed into their faces," said
quoting actress Rue McClanahan of "The Newkirk.
"Rights are not doled out by whether
something is ugly or not, even ugly (human)
individuals are protected by the law," she
said.
Because animals used in product testing

are kept in inadequate cages they are abus-
ed psychologica11y
as weU as physically, said
Newkirk.
"The earth is our home and if we don't
respect it, the· roof will fall in," she said.
She advised the audience to think things
The PETA is the largest animal rights
organization in the United States.
"We aren't the only ones with an interest
in living," Newkirk said. "Animals also
want to live in peace with enough food to
survive."
Golden Girls," Newkirk addressed the
Companies began using rats and mice for
recently controversial.issue concerning fur. product testing as a "public relations move"
"Fur used. to turn heads, but now it turns and manufacturers think of animals as "test
stomachs," referring to the inhumane con- tubes with whiskers" due to the total isola-
ditions the animals in fur ranches go tion and physical and psychological suffer-
through when such issues come to attention.
.
However, times are changing and man is
becoming more sensitive to the environment.
We are just realizing now what we have done
to the earth, and that we must change our
ways," said Newkirk.
through.
ing they go through, said Newkirk.
Debate team 5 for 5
.after Wisconsin win
by Maureen Kerr
The Marist debate team collected
its fifth championship in as many
tournaments after travelling last
Friday to Oshkosh, Wis., where
more than 100 colleges competed in
one of the biggest debate tour-
naments in the country.
At
the
University of Wisconsin,
Mike Buckley and Anthony Capoz-
zollo emerged undefeated, winning
12 consecutive judges' decisions in
the varsity division. In the junior
varsity division, April Amonica
and Tom Kavan won first and se-
cond speaker, advancing to the
semi-finals where they lost to
Macaelester University from Min-
nesota. Novice teammates, Greg
Maxim and MaryEllen Rozecki,
won on a 4-2 decision in the
preliminaries, but were defeated by
Northern Illinois University for the
championship.
With 102 national points, coach
Jim Springston said Marist has. a
good jump
on this year's
competition.
"We have more points now.than
we've ever had in five weeks," said
Springsto~. Last year Marist finish-
ed 11th in the nation with 123
points.
Each
semester,
coaches
throughout the country vote on a
.~opic
based on five selections
''chosen
by the National Debate
Committee. This semester, Maiist
is

tackling tQe affirmative and
/
negative positions on "Violence is
a justified response to political op-
pression."
One of Marist's key strategies
is
establishing "ideal partnerships" in
each two person team, Springston
said.
"It's important to fit the right
people together. A good team can
trust each other and read the other
P.Crson's mind," he said.
The team's first championship
win this year came at Northern Il-
linois University where Buckley
and Capozzollo defeated Wheaton
College, last year's third place na-
tional winners.
Marist
picked up its second and
third victories in Cleveland, Ohio,
at John Carroll University. In the
novice division, Greg Maxim and
MaryEllen Rozecki conquered
Richmond Virginia for the cham-
• pionship. Buckley and Capozzollo
were also undefeated, beating
~chigan State in the finals.
In
.
their fourth tournameni,
Buckley and Capozzollo beat Cor-
nell University in the championship
for the second year in a row at the
Suffolk University Invitational in
Boston.
Capozzollo
said
.practicing
debate three to four hours each
night and spending long hours
researching in the library has
helped the team become more com-
petitive. "I'm very pleased with our
success," he said, "we're right
where we want to be."
Student internships allow some
to jump ahead in work world
by
Maureen Kerr
As graduation draws near, the
anxieties and fearful expectations
of frantic job-seeking seniors seem
endless. But some students are
already getting a taste of the "real
world" through the Marist intern-
ship program.
"I wanted to get out of the
classroom and find out what ac-
counting is really about," said Jen-
nifer Matulewich, a senior from
Bethpage,
Long
Island.
Matulewich; an accounting major,
is an intern at. St. Francis Hospital.
"I
realize that everything we
learn in class is a small percentage
of what actually goes on in the
work field," she said. "An intern-
ship helps you to focus on your
career objective, school is so
broad."
.
Rob FJaherty, a senio! from
Woodbury, Ct. said his internship
at IBM has helped him build his
resume. "I wanted an internship
because I couldn't get the job ex~
perience
I needed
in
the
classroom."
Flaherty, a computer science ma-
jor, said his experience has also
developed his programing skills. "I
was a~le to present my program to
the department and they gave me
suggestions and ideas that were
very helpful."
Gail Ziamandanis, assistant
director of field experience, coor-
dinates an average of 120 intern-
ships each year in the local com-
munity. Placements are offered in
a variety of fields including accoun-
ting, business, communication arts,
computer science, fashion design,
paralegal studies, and political
science.
Ziamandanis said that an intern-
ship is important because students
can use their field experience to
determine if they've made the cor-
rect
career
choice
before
graduating.
"An internship gives students a
chance to get their feet wet,,.she
said. "They can find out what
they're interested in and change
their career direction."
Accor.ding to Ziamandanis,
employers are looking for profes-
sional and mature students who are
willing to grow and learn
.
in an
entry-level position.
"Companies call all the time for
students," she said. "The com-
munity is very interested in hiring
Marist interns."
Arianne O'Donnell,
a
senior
from New Canaan, Ct., majoring
in political science, is a paralegal in-
tern at Martin Charwat Esquire, a
bankruptcy
law
firm
in
Poughkeepsie.
"I wanted an internship because
it would help me to gain an
understanding about what I really
wanted to do after graduation,"
said O'Donnell.
While she said she enjoys her in-
ternship and has learned a lot from
working with bankruptcy cases,
O'Donnell said she found some of
the clerical work to be tedious.
"I
decided to pursue an intern-
ship because I wanted to learn
about law, not drafting and
photocopying," she said.·
Kim Calabro, a senior from
Simsbury,
Ct., majoring
in
business and finance, is an intern
at Alex Brown and Sons, a
brokerage firm in Poughkeepsi~ ..
"I do a lot of data entry," said
Calabro. "I've learned a lot about
what goes on in the brokerage
business, but I'm not doing
anything that's making me think."
Ziamandanis said that most
students are happy with their in-
ternships, but students who are not
satisfied should speak to· her or
their faculty advisor.
"I don't want students xeroxing
eight hours a day," she said.
"Students should be open. If I
don't know what's going on, I
can't help."
Matulewich said her internship
has increased her motivation to
succeed.
"I
realize an entry-level
position is kid stuff," she said,
"but when l see the people above
me I can't wait to get there."

Prof hit a few bumps on the way to Marist
by
Janet DiSimone
A nervous 23-year.:.old
walked in-
to a New Paltz fiction class he was
teaching for the first time. When
he put his foot into the garbage
can,
he tripped, hit his head on the
blackboard which swung around
and whacked him in the rear,
knocking him into the other board.
"I
knew at that point
I
would
never have any sense of dignity in
front of any class," recalls 40-year-
old Thomas Goldpaugh, a Marist
English professor.
Goldpaugh's rocky road that led
to Marist four years old took
a
few
turns -
and a lot of detours -
along the way but he says it all has
been
a rewarding experience.
Although
Goldpaugh,
a
Brooklyn native, never thought of
being a teacher while gro~ng up
in New Milford,
N.J.,
reading
was
his passion and teaching
was
a
family affair.
Once Goldpaugh said he C!en
contemplated a religious vocation
but the reality of the overworked
and underpaid job hit home.
"I did, though, consider being_
a
priest but then I realized certam
things,
such as
poverty,
chastity and
obedience, and I thought - wrong
field," Goldpaugh said with a grin.
Then, how did he find the right
one? Goldpaugh's early love of
reading blossomed into a college
major in English.
And college came early for
Goldpaugh. At 17, he arrjved at
SUNY New Paltz. He graduated
with a bachelor's degree in English
in 1972 and earned his master's by
1977.
Through the years, Goldpaugh
taught at St. Cecilia's High School,
Ulster County Community Col-
lege, Orange County Community
College, SUNY New Paltz, New
York University and Eastern Cor-
rectional Prison.
In January,
1980, he left
teaching to start work on his doc-
toral at
NYU,
but
was
suddenly
struck with "writer's block" and
abandoned graduate school.
"It's teuible to feel like you
can't write what you have to. You
just can't seem to get the idea
across clearly," he said ... It had to
be perfect, or else it just wasn't
good enough."
Goldpaugh
went back to
Tom Goldpaugh
teaching but became discouraged
with being an adjunct professor at
three
different
schools
simultaneously. He
questioned
the
purpose
~hind what he was doing.
"I
thought, my God, is this any
way for
an
adult to live his life?"
he said, taking a
long drag from a
Marlboro. "When does the
time
come when
you stop paying your
dues?"
During this period, Goldpaugh
occupied his time with jobs such as
a business writer for a restaurant,
stable cleaner, a waiter and a
"house-husband."
In 1983, Goldpaugh became in-
spired once again and went back to
NYU to work on his doctorate.
After
completing his course load
and his language examinations, he
is
now working
on his dissertation
in critical theory and concentrating
on his job at Marist.
Teaching has its ups and downs,
according
to
Goldpaugh,
but he en-
joys
it
every
minute
of
it.
"Where else are they
going to
pay you to read books
and
talk
about them with intelligent peo-
ple," he exclaims, almost jumping
out of his seat.
In fact,
Goldpaugh, who is
known for
his
high energy and
con-
stant
enthusiasm in
the classroom,
prefers to do most
listening -
rather
than the lecturing.
Goldpaugh said his best day in
a classroom
is
when he walks
in,
asks one question and doesn't get
a word
in until
the end.
.. The most
frustrating kind
of
teaching
is when you're up
there
and the students are containers
which you're just pouring informa-
tion into," he said, clenching his
fist.
.
His energy stems from ner.:
vousness and he admitted there
hasn't been a class he's walked in-
to where he wasn't frightened that
the students already knew all the
information.
"I want my students to be bet-
ter than me," he said. "I want
them to care enough to know their
stuff, master the info so they can
challenge me."
It's the teacher's responsibility to
get the student into a situation
where they want to learn, he said.
Most of good teaching, accor-
ding to Goldpaugh, reflects the
quality of information presented -
not a teacher's style or personality.
Goldpaugh said he taught some
students he'll never forget - three
in particular at Marist.
"You have a student, and you
say to yourself, 'Wow, this one's
going to be someone someday;
they're going to do something, and
you think in some way you're a
part of that,' " he pauses silently.
"It's great; incredible. That's what
it's all about. That's the purpose;
th~t is the reward."


























































editorial
Registration
Marist students had more abstract reading to do this week -
and it wasn't from their philosophy classes.
Stuffed in all the mailboxes were the three-page instructions
for the new registration procedure. In addition, students were to
pick up their course adviser and academic history outside the
Registrar's Office this week.
Next semester's registration process - which implements a new
policy as well as a software change - is an admirable attempt
to eliminate the add/ drop lines that used to snake through Don-
nelly Hall.
Students will be registered according to their class and their last
initial on a first-come, first-served basis. This will enable student-
sto walk out of registration with their final spring schedule.
Although the instant registration process holds great promise,
1
right now the disadJJantages outweigh the benefits.
The old system was merit-based, considering factors such as
credits and grades when assigning priority to registering students.
Now, the burden of determining who gets which class falls to
faculty advisers, who must approve a student's schedule. This job
belongs to the Registrar's Office.
Worse yet, the new system gives priority to students within a
class whose last initial falls within the first 12 letters of the
alphabet. A junior with a lower grade point average and fewer
credits can get first shot for classes among other juniors just
because his last name begins with E instead of
P.
The new process also prohibits freshmen from changing the sec-
tion of their "College Writing
I"
or "Introduction to Philosophy"
courses, thereby forcing students to take instructors they didn't
like.

Perhaps The Registrar's Office can solve these problems in the
future, but Marist students and faculty have to deal with them
now due to the the administration's poor planning.
Administrators are speeding up the installation of the new soft-
ware package from
18
months to nine months because the previous
software cannot print the zero in 1990.
This clumsy process should have been prevented. Why didn't
the administration have the foresight to realize this?
Letter policy
The Circle welcomes letters to the editor. All letters must be typed
and signed and must include the writer's phc;me number and address.
The deadline for letters is. noon Monday. Letters should be sent to
Bill Johnson, c/o The Circle, through campus mail or dropped off
at Campus Center 168.
The Circle attempts to publish all the letters it receives but reserves
the right to edit letters for matters of style, length, libel and taste. Short
letters are preferred.
THE:CIRCLE:
Editor: ...........................
Bill Johnson
Managing Editor: ..................
Karen Cicero
Senior Editors: ....................
Chris Landry
Steve Murray
Editorial Page Editor: . ...........
Paul O'Sullivan
News Editors: .........
: ......
Stacey McDonnell
Molly Ward
Features Editors: ...................
Holly Gallo
Ann Timmons
Sports Editor: ....................
Jay Reynolds
Photography Editor: . ..............
Lynaire Brust
Editorial Cartoonist: ................
Bob Higgins
Advertising Manager: ...........
Michael DeCosta
Business Manager: . ..........
Christopher Murphy
Circulation Manager: .............
John Scagliotti
Faculty Adviser: ................
. John Hartsock
Page 6- THE CIRCLE- November 9, '1989
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Step back and stay clear
of a rising Iron Curtain
.
The answer to the question,
"How do you get half-a-million
communists into one place at one

time?" used to be answered by the
.
phrase, "Scream 'free Levi's' in a
public square."
Last week, however, 500,000
East Germans gave

a different
answer to that question and no one
is laughing, least of all the East
German government.
The demonstrations for reform
in West Germany are only the latest
events in a long line of political
upheavals in Eastern Europe in the
past few months. Reforms in East
Germany, the Soviet Union,
Poland,
Hungary
and other
Eastern Bloc nations have the
European continent going through
its most dramatic political changes
since World War
I.
But • while the changes are a
reason to celebrate, there are also
reasons to be concerned. Will the
reforms be allowed to continue un-

tit Eastern Europe is truly free, or
will there be a Tiananmen Square-
type crackdown if things get too
out of hand? Also, what role, if
any, should the United States play
in the liberalization of Eastern
Europe?
Soviet President Mikhail Gor-
bachev's new policy of openness
has spread across Eastern Europe
like a computer virus, leaving no
nation untouched. Now that he has
let the pit bull out of the cage,
though, how far \\ill he let it go
before he pulls back on the leash?
It
may not be as far as some peo-
ple think: last week, a poll comis-
sioned by Leonid Abalkin, Gor-
bachev's chief economic adviser,
showed that a majority of the
Soviet people do not have much
faith in Gorbachev's reforms.
The lack of public support, add-
Paul O'Sullivan
Thinking
between
the
lines
ed to the opposition he faces within
the Soviet government, may force
Gorbachev to cut
·down
on the
reforms.
Then again, predicting the shifts
of the political winds in Moscow is
like trying to predict earthquakes,
and the present condition
-of
San
Francisco is testament to how
dangerous it can be to play guess-
ing games and to guess wrong.
That's. exactly why President
George Bush is right to approach
the situation in Eastern Europe
with· caution. The temptation to
welcome the Eastern Bloc's new
liberalism with open arms is so
great that the only way to avoid
mistakes is to take things at a slow
pace.
Those in the U.S. who are
clamoring for huge increases in
economic assistance to Poland are
forgetting a lesson that American
lawmakers seem to learn and forget
constantly: thro\\ing money at a
problem is one of the worst ways
to deal with it.
Domestically this approach has
given us a ruinous welfare system.
Internationally, it has pro1,ided us
\\ith wealthy Latin American dic-
tators and not much else. In this
sense, the U.S.'s recent economic
woes have been a blessing in
disguise, preventing it from using
the dollar diplomacy that has fail-

ed so often in the past.
Bush's cautious approach has
drawn fire from some lawmakers,
who fear that the U.S. is falling far '-
behind the Soviet Union in the~
public relations war that Gor-
bachev is waging. They are afraid
.
that other nations will see the
Soviets as the great peacemakers
and the U.S. ~s the gn;at
oppressors.
This fear is valid to a point. But
Gorbachev's meteoric rise in public
relations is perfect evidence that it
is a lot easier to make up ground
in public relations than in military
buildup. Since there is no way the
U.S.
can
know for sure what the
future holds, it is better to err on
the side of caution than on the side
of foolishness.
There is no doubt that the
changes taking place behind the
Iron Curtain have the potential for
changing the political make-up for
the world. But for the U.S. to get
depply involved now would do
more harm than good to both it
and to the countries it seeks to help.
This one is not the U.S.'s
ballgame. The best it can to is lend
some encouragement from the
sidelines.
Paul
O'Sullivan is The Circle's
political
columnist.
Correction
Due to a editing error in last
week's Circle, the final paragraph
in the article about the 21 Club was
unclear. It should have said,
"Guests are allowed to attend, but
they must have a guest pass and
proper identification, such as a
driver's license or a passport."














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Another look at the other side
from one who -used to be there
by Philip Karpel
Where is Canterbury?
That was my question on August 16th, 1988 when
I read the housing assignment for my junior year. But
I guess, indirectly, I asked for it. Yes, I jumped on
the Marist College bandwagon of apathetic thought.
I wasn't involved with any college activities, clubs,
what have you. So with low priority, I moved from
my luxurious 9th floor Champagnat suite to 58A Janet
Drive.

A few good things did arise from this situation. One
is that my parents didn't have to drive as far this year
to drop me off.
I stepped back and looked at my dilemma. I realiz-
ed this wasn't what I wanted, so I got involved. I join-
ed a number of different clubs and organizations. The
big one was that I became a Unit Coordinator, along
with Paul Lawrence (the author of a previous view-
point, "He Lives to Bust ... ", 11/2/89).
We had a fun staff. This isn't saying we didn't take
our jobs seriously, because we did. We just made the
best of it, for both the students and ourselves. We were
an understanding staff, not a ban of camouflaged by-
the-book housing police.
We recognized the fact that different housing areas
require different methods of control and maybe more
liberal (with reference to Canterbury) interpretations
of the handbook. For some, Canterbury is hell. This
doesn't infer that the Housing Staff should be
Lucifer's cohorts.
Even with this method of practice, I found that few
students accepted, respected or took advantage of us
as a resource. This made the job unfulfilling and at
times depressing. Fused with poor pay, few benefits,
and no signs of change in the future, I did not take
the U.C. position again this year.
According to Lawrence's article, things haven't got-
ten better. In fact, they are deteriorating. With some
gung ho thriving-to-bust staff members and poor
management, I'm now sorry that I didn't pull Paul
and the other returning staff members out with me.
It is said that the captain should go down with his
ship, but look guys, RA's and UC's weren't and aren't
the captains, just mere subordinates. If the captain
doesn't want to listen, then grab the closest life raft
and row for land (hopefully you'll take th~ correct 5
items with you).
Canterbury is probably one of the most apathetic
living areas "on campus". These people are instilled
with a feeling of alienation from the rest of campus,
so, it is Housing's duty to restore a sense of "belong-
ingness". But this is difficult when the staff is also
alienated. They are the lowest paid employees with
arguably the most work.
Resolving this problem doesn't mean increasing the
number of staff members, but how about adding more
incentives and rewards? Face it, the expectations
outlined in the U.C. job description ( ... in a position
such that they are perceived as role models and
therefore, have significant, positive influence and im-
pact on students' adjustments and developments) just
don't make the grade out at Canterbury.
In a war, Canterbury would be considered a lose
cause. Efforts would be diverted to other, more
positive areas. This isn't a war, though, it is reality.
Clean up your efforts, Marist. Take care of the Resi-
dent Student Housing Staff.
Philip Karpel is a senior majoring in political science
When protest becomes fashion
music can betray the meaning
My faithful readers - I love you
both - were rather displeased with
the abrupt ending to last week's
column. Truth be told, there was
more to
it.
My,computer illiteracy
was to blame for serving up only
half the story. This is a public
apology, by the way. So now
forgive me and let me bring you
part two ...
So rock music's voices of protest
are still ringing out. That much
l
Kieran Fagan
In
your
ear
mentioned last week. But there's a
tater in 1985, Little Steven.
lingering question in my inind: is gathered_ an eclectic assortment of
• anyone listening?
musicians to protest apartheid. The
Four years ago we witnessed the
"Sun City" single had more bite
largest display of goodwill and con-
than the Band Aid and USA for
science the rock world has ever Africa songs and a more impressive
seen. Live Aid brought together the variety of artists, but it didn't sell
biggest names in popular music in as well. Still, it clearly solidified
order to raise money to feed a star-
rock music's place in the eighties as
ving country. Nearly one billion • a voice of.social protest.
· people were watching, calling in
Siuce these events, we've seen the
their donations and getting into the F!eedomfest concert for Nelson
music.
Mandela's birthday (Fox network
Talking her ear off -
"Is that an American accent I .
hear?" asked the man at the cash
register of the local newsagent
(newsstand).
"Yep," I said and put the Irish
Times on the counter.
"Ohhh! My son lives in America
now. Seattle, Washington. Ever
been there?"
"No, I live on the East Coast -
Boston."
"Well, anyway, he moved there
a few months back, after he
graduated. Went to visit him with
me wife last year on holiday (vaca-
tion). We even flew down to
California. Have you been there?"
"No, I h ... "
"Well, we had a grand time.
Northern
California
is just
brilliant."
-
"Oh, I'm sure it ... "
"You know, we're thinking of
going again soon. My son just had
a baby, and they bought a new
house and all. We just rang him
yesterday. And my \\ife really
misses him.
I
do, too, of course,
but you know how women
get ... heh-heh!"
"Uh, right."
"But I thank God we weren't
there for that dreadful quake. And
you had !'tat hurricane, too.
Dateline:
Dublin
Ilse Martin
Shame, isn't it? Most we ever get
is a tropical storm every few years.
Last one was in '85, I think."
"So how much is the paper?"
I
broke his concentration.
"Fifty pence. Where did you say
you were from again?"
"Boston, Massachusetts - East
Coast."
-
"Oh, right. Haven't been there
before. Say, so what are you do-
ing in Ireland? Searching for your
roots, eh? That's what you folks
do. You've got relatives here,
right? All Americans do."
"On the West Coast."
"I
thought you were from the
East Coast."
"Yes, but I. .. "
"Well, wherever you are. You're
in Ireland now. A little different
from the States, eh?"
should be hung for editing the
broadcast. They took out all the
"offensive elements" -
such as
any mention of apartheid) . .Then
Amnesty International went on the
road with.'their Human R'ights
Now! tour, stirring up attention for
political prisoners around the
world.
These events were significant
considering the amount of people
they reached and their effect on
pop culture as a whole. But again
I ask, is anyone listening?
Four years ago the cry was for
the hungry in Ethiopia. Then the
wind shifted to South Africa and
apartheid. Now Amnesty Interna-
tional seems to be all the rage with
rockers and rock fans alike.
These are all important causes
and the artists involved should be
commended for calling attention to
them. But how sincere are they? Is
Continued on page 10
Irish style
"Yeah, a lot different."
"America's not so bad, I guess.
My son likes it a lot. The pace is
a bit faster."
"Things are much more laid-
back here."
"That's the way they shoulcl be,
right? Studying at Trinity, are ya?"
"Mm-humm."
"What are ya studying?"
"A little bit of everything.
Philosophy, linguistics, geography,
Gaelic, art history."
"Oh right, well that's just grand.
My nephew studied there - history
and English. Now he's teaching
secondary school (high school) in
Galway.''
"Oh really, that's where my
relatives are!"
"Never
been there meself,
though."
"Oh."
"He's a mighty smart boy, my
nephew."
"Uh-huh. Well, thanks for the
paper..,

"Sure enough. Hey, if you ever
get the chance, you really should
see Northern California."
-"Sure thing."
"Cheerio."
Ilse Martin
is
The Circle's
overse25 correspondent.
Cleaning day arrives
as parents come by
It's been a while since Mom
and Dad have seen the campus
and the surrounding area, so
when they suggested a visit last
Saturday,
I
wholeheartedly
agreed.
Much has changed since their
last visit. Champagnat has been
spruced up, Donnelly has
undergone major transforma-
tions and ground was recently
broken for the Dyson Center.
There is a certain element of
nervous tension as one waits for
the parents to show up, especial-
ly when one's parents have a
history of showing up late.
It was nice of Mom to give a
warning call at 11 :30, telling me
that they were just about to
leave. For my parents that sim-
ple phrase can mean anywhere
from five minutes to an hour.
l sprang into action.
I
figured
I had roughly two hours to get
the house and myself into the
presentable mode.
My first reaction as
I
crept
down to the Jiving room was,
"Uh-oh."
Unfortunately, the neighbors,
we suspect, broke into our
house the night before and,
judging by the way the place
looked, had a beer party.
There were cups and cans
strewn about in a manner that
would make Skinners appear to
be the library.
I applied a little elbow grease
to the task and rose to the
challenge
of housekeeper
emeritus.
With the living room and sur-
rounding areas under control,
I
shifted my effort to the front
lawn.
Apparently
these sinister
neighbors were also hanging out
on the front stoop, as many
cups of day old beer and aqua
ashtrays stood stoically, seem-
ingly guarding my house from
evil forces lurking about the
neighborhood.
Within minutes I had the
whole area scoured and ready
for inspection.
I quickly scanned the scenario
and headed upstairs.
My room has always been a
major source of ridicule and
harrassment, just because it
happens to be a little bit messy
once in a while.
Personally I don't think it's
Wes Zahnke
A
day
in
the
life
half as bad as people say, but
I'm always open for some con-
structive criticism.
Of course, the abuse
I
take is
like pouring a Morton's salt
container on a festering sore,
but I can deal with it.
There are generally a few
garments ·1ying about, but let's
not overreact. Acting hastily
and calling the laundry patrol
won't solve the problem.
My bed might not be made
everyday, but I'm only going to
sleep in it later that night, so
what's the big deal?
Honestly,
some people,
notably
roommates,
have
nothing better to do than gripe
and moan about the most
miniscule problems.
Ok,
I
haven't done the dishes
in some time. Quite frankly,
I
feel guilt when I wash the dirty
dishes that
I
know people in
Tangier will never see.

How can
I
justify mopping
the floor, when half of the
world's population has no floor ·
to mop?
It just takes the wind out of
my sails.
The cleaning got done and
Mom and Dad did arrive ... late.
l
showed off the campus.
They were impressed.
I took them to Vanderbilt,
the Ogden Mills Mansion and
Foster's Tavern in Rhinebeck.
The meal, my first semblance
of solid food in weeks, was
outstanding.
We stopped at.the Champion
Outlet,
where I suddenly
became Larry Bird. Arriving
back at the house, they came in
to view my handiwork and the
room from hell.
They were almost impressed.
Because a happy room is a
slightly messy room.
Wes Zahnke is The Circle's
humor columnist.
Viewpoints
Wanted
Viewpoints
from members of the
Marist community
on college,
state or
national
issues
are both requested
and
desired. Essays should .be typed
500-700
words
in length,
and signed
by
the author. Send Viewpoints
through
the campus
mail to The Circle
care of
the Editorial
Page Editor.
·-r

















































-
...
Page
B - THE CIRCLE - November 9, 1989
''I've finally discovered
theformula for taking
the late
·nights
out
of
lab class . .. ''
·-
I
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•••



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...
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November 9,.1989- THE CIRCLE- Page 9
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,..,
Page 10- THE CIRCLE·- November 9, 1989
Kieran---
Continued from page 6 •
charity just a trend you can ride out
until the next cause comes along? •
This applies to the fans also. If
U2 says Amnesty is cool, then U2
fans will join. If Michael Jackson
says give money to starving people,
his fans will. If Bon Jovi protested
aerosol hairspray, the ozone layer
would be saved thanks to his
devoted fans.
But this all seems like packaged
conscience to me. Having a huge
concert to raise people's awareness
of world hunger, for example, is
undoubtedly a worthy effort. But
of the millions who may watch it,.
how many are getting the message?
Here's my impression of the
average Live Aid concertgoer after
the show ended: "Gee, people are
starving. Bummer. But how about
the Who, man? And wasn't U2
awesome?" You can lead a kid to
the show, but you can't make him
think.
I'm all for the mega-concerts
that carry a message, but we need
less of them and more proverbial
voices crying out in the darkness.
Less hyped goodwill and more ge-
nuine conscience.
A song like Bob Dylan's
"Blowin' in the Wind" reaches me
more rilan any huge concert ex~
travaszanza could. The fact that the
worici hasn't improved much since
he wrote it doesn't mean the song
is without value.
Like any songwriter, artist, or
poet. Dylan tells us that the change
is oniy going to come from inside.
Live Aid was a great event, but
people are still starving in Ethiopia.
(Not to mention everywhere else in
the world.) And Johannesburg ob-
viously didn't heed the message of
the "Sun City" project.
We have to fine tune our .ear if
we expect rock music to make a dif~
ference. lf a band gets you to join
a charity, don't think that carrying
a membership card means you're
doing something. And don't feel
that you have
to
jump on a cause
because it's the thing to do.
I have an interesting R.E.M.
shirt. On the back is a simple
slogan that sums up my whole
point: "Understa1
~
that change
begins with the individual." The
music isn't going to do anything by
itself, it can't change the world.
But it might change you. After
that, anything is possible.
END NOTES:
Quick album up-
date: the new one from the Dead
isn't bad. It's not quite a step up
from "In the Dark," but it has a
certain appeal. "Change,"'.the new·
one from the Alarm, shows the
band at their best in terms of musi-
cianship. Too bad the majority of
the lyrics are either tired cliches or
meaningless generalities. Still, they
are great in concert.
Kieran Fagan is The Circle's
music columnist.
Painter--
I
continued
from
page 1 •
Due to Sarrantonio's education
at the Pennsylvania Academy of
Fine Arts in Philadelpia, he said he
. tends to teach in a conservative and
traditional style.
"You have to represent things as
they really are before you. can in-
terpret them the way you want,"
said Sanantonio.
Although Sanantonio does not
classify himself as one particular
type of artist, his works are main-
ly a personal interpretation of the
outdoors with heavily stroked blue
and purple overtones. Yet, he
doesn't limit himself to just dark
colors. Almost all of his paintings
contain a horizontal .line which
breaks the pictures into two halves.
almost forcing the image onto the
\"iewer.
Although Sarrantonio
has a
bachelor's degree in biology and
• masters· degrees in English and fine
arts. he alwavs falls back on one
philosophy which is printed in blue
pen on a scrap of wood in his
• studio -
"Don't
think, just
paint."'
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Women·g~t-
soccer te.am
by Nathan
J.
Robinson
The Marist womens socc~r team
became a reality for its 25 members
last Thursday when its constitution
was passed by the Council of Stu-
dent Leaders, giving the group club
statis.
• •
• .
According to co-author of the
club's constitution, Jo-Anne Pro-
kopowicz, a junior communication
arts major, the group had original-
ly planned to be a varsity-level
sport but decided to become a club
after Marist would not support a
women's soccer team.
· "A group must have a sustain-
ed interest level to become a varsi-
ty sport and women's soccer does
not have a this yet," said Elsie
Mula, assistant to the athletic
director.
.
There must be enough interest on
a yearly basis so that Marist will
not invest in a team that will disap-
pear as did the field hockey team,
said Mula.
Marist is also in the midst of jug-
gling sport conferences and may
need to add a women's softball
team and men's baseball team in
the next year, said Mula.
Marist will switch from the Nor-
theast conference to the East Coast
Conference - a move which may
require the addition of the extra
sports.
Prokopowicz said Marist should
have a women's varsity soccer
team
instead of a women's softball team
because there is aleady an interest
in soccer and not in softball.
"We just want to play, and I'm
happy we're a club," said club
member Marybeth Burnell, a
sophomore business _major.
The women's soccer club holds
its practices on North Field at 4
p.m. on weekdays and 12 p.m. on
Sundays.
Novem~r 9, 1989- THE CIRCLE- Page 11
Icemen split in
opening weekend
by Jay Reynolds
Under a new coach and a new
direction, the Marist hockey team
skated at .500 in its first weekend
of action.
After dropping a 7-4 game to
Wagner College last Saturday, the
Red Foxes rebounded to defeat
William Patterson College 8-1 on
Sunday night.
Sunday saw the Red Foxes reach
an 8-0 lead, despite leading just 2-0
after the first two periods.
Junior defenseman Kevin Walsh
put the Red Foxes on the board,
scoring his first goal of the season
with 6:33 left in the first period on
a pass from forward Steve Murray.
Murray then scored a power-play
goal with just under seven minutes
gone by in the second period on a
pass from center Scott Kendall.
The third period saw the Red
Foxes explode for six unanswered
goals.
The Red Foxes added goals for-
wards Brendan McDonald (assisted
by Murray and Kendall), Scott
Brown (unassisted) and Steve
Mueller (assisted by Doyle).
Doyle added two goals of his
own in the period - with Mueller
picking up a pair of assists and
freshman Ed Sharake tallying one.
In Saturday's home opener at the
Mid-Hudson Civic Center, the Red
Foxes could not hold on to the 4-2
lead they had after the· first two.
periods
~
losing to Wagner 7-4.
Freshmen Scott Brown and Dar-
ryl Vallen put Marist in front with
their unassisted goals.
Doyle -
off a pass from Pat
Corbett - and Kendall tallied the
other two Marist goals.
Between the second and third
periods, though, police cleared
most of the stands following an in-
cident involving fans at the game
and an off-duty police officer
working as a security guard at the
arena.
According to reports, three teen-
agers -
two Marist students and
a former Marist student - were ar-
rested in the incident.
About eight city police cars
responded to the Civic Center,
however, the City of Poughkeep-
sie police refused to comment on
the matter.
The 1-1 Red Foxes will take on
Columbia University Saturday
night at the Mid-Hudson Civic
Center. Garrie time is 8 p.m.
Basketball coach leaves; Davis may return to Foxes
by Jay Reynolds
years, has left Marist to become an
Drafton Davis, a former guard
assistant athletic director at Iona for the Red Foxes and 1988
Proposition 48, graduation and
College.
graduate, is rumored to be Mur-
injuries
are
just
a
few of the pro-
With the early signing period for ray's replacement. Athletic depart-
blems which have affected the college basketball prospects begin- ment officials would neither con-
men's basketball team so far this ning Wednesday, Magarity said it firm nor deny the rumor.
year.
will be tough until a replacement is
Though he said he is sorry to lose
·athletic director at
a
major col-
lege," he said.
Besides
his
on-the-court
coaching duties, Murray also did
scouting, junior recruiting and
some of the team's day-to-day ad-
·ministrative duties.
Now added to the list is the
found.
Murray, Magarity said the move
departure of an assistant coach.
"I really feel that we will miss has a positive reflection on Marist.
Before coming to Marist, Mur-
Tim Murray, who had been an
him
quite a bit,". he said. "I'll pro-
"I
think it says a lot about our
ray served as a graduate assistant
assi~tant coach under head coach bably miss him more than anyone institution
when an assistant
for the St. Thoi:,ias University Bob-
F
O ()
t
ball----
r--D_a_:ve_M_a_g_an_·t_y_r_o_r_th_e_pas_t
_thr_ee
__ -_h_e_to_o_k_a
___
b1-·g_1_oa_d_or_r_o_r_m_e_._"_b_as_k_et_b_all_co_a_c_h_can_1._o_t_o_as_s_is_tan_t
__ ca_t_s_in_M_ia_m_i_.
-------
Continued from
page
12
first down and 46 total yards 1n the
third quarter.
On the first drive, Marist, under
the direction of quarterback Dan
O'Donnell, marched 92 yards in 12
. plays covering just 2:27.
• tl:le defense
~
led by freshman
Joe . Riccardi who registered 10
tackles -
continued to play hold
the Bison in the third quarter,
allowing Chris Douglas to hit a
31-yard field goal to bring the score
to 21-17 with 4:43 left.
Defensive end Thomas Coyne
then intercepted a Segala pass
which gave the Foxes another scor-
ing opportunity.
On the very next play, Scott
DeFal_co,
also back from
an
injury,
took the hand-off from O'Donnell
and rambled in from 27 yards out
to put the Foxes ahead 24-21 at the
end of the third quarter.
"To come back and go ahead
was great, I'm proud of the guys,"
Pardy said. "They showed some
. great tenacity, enthusiasm, and
togetherness -
they did not back
down."
Marist's impressive third quarter
may have been overshadowed. by
the fourth quarter of the Bison,
though.
Gallaudet exploded for 21 points
in just four minutes to puJl away
with the victory.
With just over two minutes gone
by in the fourth quarter, Woods
scored his second touchdown of the
day on a 30-yard pass from Segala
making the score 28-24.
Gallaudet next performed the
"hook and ladder" as Woods
caught a screen pass and then pit-
ched to Karl White who took it in
for the score putting the Bison
ahead 35-24.
After missing last week's game
with an injury, O'Donnell re-
bounded for the Red Foxes.
The junior, who attempted a
school record
4S passes, completed
20
of
them for 196
yards
and one
touchdown ..
Marist will
wrap
up its season
Friday
night
in
Brooklyn.
Kiele-off
is
slated for
8
p.m.
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sgorts
Page 12 - THE CIRCLE- November 9, 1989

Cagers optimistic
despite weekend
exhibition loss
by Mike 0'Farrell
"We have to start somewhere."
Those were ·head men's basket-
ball coach Dave Magarity's first
words after his Red Foxes were
defeated in Saturday's scrimmage
by the U.S.A. Verich Reps 100-79.
A reported crowd of 2, 704
gathered in the McCann Center to
get a glimpse of this year's squad.
The exhibition was the first
public appearance of the year for
the injury-hampered Red Foxes.
~n the opening minutes of play,
Marist looked sharp.
The Red Foxes moved the ball
nicely on offense looking for the
open man and throwing crisp
passes. This enabled Marist to take
a 29-25 lead in the first half.
However, the Red Foxes were
dry for five minutes, the Reps -
a team which tied for second place

in last summer's International
Games in South Korea -
pulled
ahead 41-31 and they never look-
ed back.
Magarity, however, was not too
worried.
"I
didn't treat this as a win/loss
situation," he said. "What hap-
pened really didnt suprise me. We
just wanted to evaluate ourselves -
I saw some really good things."
Magarity said one bright spot
was junior forward Reggie Gaut.
"Reggie played really well," said
Magarity.
"I
could not be more
pleased with his performance."
Gaut tallied 14 points, hauled in
·
eight rebounds and dished out four

assists.
Tom Fitzsimons was the leading
rebounder -a category the Foxes
must improve on this year - pull-
ing down 11 boards.

One area that the fourth-year
coach said the Red Foxes must im-
prove upon is shooting.
The Red Foxes connected on on-
ly 35 percent of their field goals -
a figure that must be higher for
them to be successful, according to
Magarity.
Marist also hit just four of 17
from behind the 3-point line.
"We'll be all right," Magarity
said. "Andy Lake will shoot bet-
ter than one-for-12 and Bobby
Reasbeck will do better than one-
for-nine. We have a good founda-
tion of shooters.'!
Steve Paterno, who could be
considered the cornerstone of that
foundation, missed the game with
lacerations on his hand but will be
ready to practice this week.
"Steve will be a guy that we will
go to in certain situations this
year," Magarity said.
One key aspect according to
Magarity was Joey O'Connor.
The senior point guard scored 17
points -
13 in the second half.
"Joey realized tonight that he
has to take over this team,"
Magarity said. "He
.must
be a
leader."
Turnovers and shot selection
were two major problems for
Magarity.
"Our continuity was off,"
Magarity said. "Turnovers were a
major problem for us.
"ln our situation, with all the in-.
Circle
photo/Tony Uanino
-
Marist's Bobby Reasbeck doesn't have much luck in his attempt to
~ore against
the
Verich Reps' TiUman Bevely. The Red Foxes didn't have
much luck either -
losing the exhibition game 100-79.
juries, certain guys we're playing
,
Paul Faber made his first ap-
together for the first time. Take
pearance as a Red Fox -
scoring
Lake and O'Connor, in practice,
two points.
they have been working against
"Paul
is coming along,"
each other, not with each other,"
Magarity said. "Although he may
he said.
still feel a little unsure of himself."
Magarity said that this team is
Ted Sharpenter scored nine
much different from those in the
points during the action he saw
recent past.
despite having only two days of
"We're not a star system this
practice with the team because he
year," he said.
"It
used to be a set
was out with an ankle injury.
system. This year we have to
"When healthy," said Magari-
become a total system - everyone
ty, "you will see a much different
has an equal opportunity in this
Ted Sharpenter.
offense.
"We can't talk about what we
"For the first time iri a long
don't have, only what we do have.
time, we don't have a guy we can
We are a better team than what we
isolate and post up on offense."
showed."



Gridders lose again - miss chance at· title
by Mike 0'Farrell
Any hopes of a confrence title or
a
winning season for the Marist
Red Foxes were put to rest last
Saturday when Gallaudet College
defeated Marist 42-24 in the na-
tion's capital.
With the loss, Marist falls to a
record of 3°5-1 overall and
.2-2
in
the Atlantic Collegiate Football
Confrence with just one game left
on the schedule.
Gallaudet, on the other hand,
moves to 7-2 -
4-1 in the ACFC
-
and with the win over Marist,
clinched a tie with St. John Fisher
College for the conference title.
Marist defeated St. John Fisher
28-7 in the first game of the season
under the lights at Leonidoff Field.
Friday night, rookie coach Rick

Pardy and his squad travel to
Brooklyn where they will take on
the Kingsmen of Brooklyn College.
The Red Foxes, after starting the
season with a 3-1-1 m~!5, have lost
their last four games
m
a row.
During the streak, Marist has
given up an average of. 35 points
per game.
Last weekend, despite scoring 24
unanswered points to take the lead
from a 21-0 defecit after three
quarters, Marist could not hold on
as Gallaudet pulled away for the
18-point victory ..
Scoring came in streaks and
Gallaudet was the first team to put
points on the board.
Quarterback Jimmy Segala ran
from nine yards out to put the
Bison ahead 7-0 in the first quarter.
Segala again took it in, this time
from the 3-yard line to put his team
in front 14-0.
Darnell Woods, who had six
receptions on the day, made the
score 21-0 when he caught a
22-yard touchdown
.
pass from
Segala.
But Gallaudet would not score·
again unilt the fourth quarter ..
Eric Gardner put Marist on the
board before halftime when he
scampered in from eight yards out
on a reverse. The point-after fail-
ed and the Foxes found themselves
trailing 21-6 at the midway mark.
The third quarter saw Marist
play perhaps its best 15 minutes of
football all year.
The Red Foxes came out and
scored 18 points while completely
shutting down the Bison offense as
Gallaudet could muster only one
Continued on
page
11
Booters end
season; no
postseason
by Chris Shea
There will not be an early
Christmas this year for the Marist
soccer team.
The Red Foxes needed a huge
present 'this year from conference
foe St. Francis College -
in the
form of a win -
in order for
Marist to qualify for post-season
play.
.
St. Francis had to defeat Mon-
mouth
.College
by more than four
goals.
It didn't happen.
Marist coach Dr. Howard
Goldman said his team was ob-
viously disappointed, but he stress-
ed that it was not a matter of so-
meone else controlling the Red
Foxes' destiny.
"Our fate was in our own hands
during the whole year," Goldman
said. "We had a lot of oppor-
tunities during the season to im-
prove our position."
Last Wednesday Marist travell-
ed to Pace University for its last
road game of the year and the Red
Foxes lost in overtime by a score
of 2-1.
"Once again I thought we we're
the better team," Goldman said.
"But we let our opponents get back
in the game."
Madst suffered from what
Goldman called a "defensive
breakdown"
in the overtime
period.
"It wasn't our goaltending - it
was our entire defense," he said.
"it
just collapsed."
Mark Edwards scored the only
'
Marist goal with
an
assist by Shawn
Scott.
Edwards has 18 points in his last
10 games and Marist is now 5-t' in
games in which Edwards has a
point.
The Red Foxes concluded their
season on Wednesday hosting Cen-

tral Connecticut State University.
The results of the game were
unavailable at press time.
Paul Stento
.
was scheduled to
make his first start in goal for
Marist. Regular goaltenders Matt
Scarano (severe headaches) and
Adam Brown (broken tibia) are
injured.
Marist hockey fans
grow up or stay home
This weekend was not one of the
best that Marist athletic_
teams have
seen.
The football team lost its fourth
straight game -
a 42-24 decision
to Gallaudet.
The basketball team lost in its
first outing of the year - a I
oo~
79
exhibition loss to the
U.S.A.
Verich
Reps.
The hockey team· split its first
.
two games of the season .:_ losing
to Wagner College Saturday but
coming back- to win 8-0 over
William Patterson on Sunday.
The weekend hit rock bottom·
during Saturday's hockey game,
though.
With about 400 fans at the
Mccann Ice Arena to see the Red
Foxes play, the team took a 4-2
!ead into the locker room follow-
ing the second period.
When the teams returned to the
ice for the final period, the fans
were gone.
Marist lost 7-4.
According to reports, three teen-
agers - including a Marist student
and a fonner Marist student -
were arrested
by
the
City
of
Poughkeepsie police.
Kenneth O'Connor, an 18-year- --------------
There have been numerous
old student from Queens, alleged-
_
stories in the media and around the
ly decided to moon someone out-
Poughkeepsie area about the
side the arena and then decided not
Thursday
stereotyping of Marist social life.
to leave when asked to.
People now believe that Marist
.
That was enough to prompt
Morning
students don't care about anything
Detective Sgt. Kevin O'Neil - who
or anyone in the community as
is a secµrity guard at the Civic
Quarterback
long as they have their fun.
Center when he is off duty-
to ar-
Incidents like these don't help to
rest O'Connor.
stop the spread of these stories.
Simple enough, right?
Jay Reynolds
I'll be the first to agree that
Wrong.
there's nothing wrong with having
To make matters worse, the
a beer or two while watching a
men's bathroom was "trashed,"
The answer is simple -
yes.
sporting event - in fact, in today's
and while O'Connor was being ar-
The Mid-Hudson Civic Center society, it's almost a prerequisite.
rested, Peter Crisafi, a 19-year-old should hire a security guard that
But when the "fun" gets out of
former Marist student, allegedly can handle a couple of rowdy fans. hand as it did in this case, it hurts
tried to punch O'Neil.
Actually, the Civic Center's
everyone.
.
Brilliant:
alcohol policy should not even be
That was evident by the fact that
O'Neil then called for backup -
in question here. Most of the intox-
police cleared the stands.
calling in six other police officers icated fans at the hockey games
That
act seemed like an
- and arrested the three. The third
show up that way -
drinking overreaction.
teen-ager
was charged with
before they arrive.
O'Neil said it was done because
disorderly conduct.
Actually• they'd go broke trying many of the fans at the game were
O'Neil said he decided to clear to get drunk at the Civic Center.
intoxicated and more arrests would
the stands because many of the
Don't get me wrong _ both have to be made.
"students had been drinking heavi-
sides are at fault here.
Big deal.
ly.''
Many professional arenas across
Now the Civic Center is looking
If it hadn't been for the scene the country are known for having
at its alcohol policy to see what -
these teen-agers ,were causing,
rowdy fans, but they don't kick
if anything - can be done to pre-
O'Neil would not have had to react everyone out when one fan does
vent similar incidents.
as he did.
_
something wrong.
If two, three or even a handful
of fans do something wrong, they
only kick those people· out.
Just imagine: A drunk fan at the
Super Bowl decides to run on the
field. He doesn't want to be taken
out and puts up a fight. The police
say that many of the fans
jn
the
stands have been drinking and
there could be more incidents so
they clear the stands of 80,000 fans
during the halftime of a 14-10
game.
It would
_never
happen.
Likewise, the fans at Marist
hockey games should not have to
be punished for the stupidity of
three others.
Most of the people who go to the
games want to see some hockey
played - whether or not they drink
is their prerogative.
If they get out of hand, then they
should be dealt with individually.
Jay Reynolds
is
Tbe
Orde's
sports columnist.