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Part of The Circle: Vol. 36 No. 7 - November 2, 1989

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Easy .Money
Dateline: Dublin
Hoop Scoop
ATM planned for
One of our own
1989-90 basketball
Donnelly Hall -
page 3
keeps in touch -
page 5
preview -
pages 7-1 O
Volume 36, Number 7
Marist College, Poughkeepsie,
N. Y.
November 2, 1989
City housing law snags off-campus students
by Steven Murray
Determined to curb off-campus
parties that disturb the peace or
violate state and local ordinances,
the City of Poughkeepsie recently
sent letters to several residences oc-
cupied by Marist students warning
that legal action could be taken
against them.
ty of Poughkeepsie Police more
than a month ago.

Although City Manager William
Theysohn did not specify how
many student residences received
letters, he said the letters were sent
to the houses that had complaints
registered against them at the police
department. Letters may have been
sent to as many as seven different
houses
occupied
by Marist
students.
each individual in a house; state
that the city has received several
complaints concerning the house
and that it is considered
to
be a
public nuisance and violatio~ of ci-
ty noise, traffic and garbage or-
dinances as well as the New York
State fire code and Alcoholic
beverage control law.
minors is not halted, legal action
more living together as a traditional
will be taken.
family or the functional equivalent.
A large part of the letter refers
The criteria which determines the
to the fact that many students may
functional equivalent of a tradi-
not be living as a family. A student
tional family is a group that in
living with more than two other- - theory, size, appearance and struc-
unrelated college students do not
ture resembles a family. Occupants
constitute' a family and violates a
must share the entire dwelling area
city zoning ordinance passed in
as a cooking and housekeeping
February 1989.
unit; expenses such as food, rent or
This action comes in the wake of
several incidents involving off-
campus Marist parties and the Ci-
The letters, which were sent to
The letter then warns that unless
behavior such as loud parties, park-
ing problems, the illegal sale of
alcohol and the sale of alcohol to
The ordinance defines a family
ownership costs and utilities must
as one, two or three people occu-
be shared; and the group must be
pying a dwelling unit, or four or
Continued on page 15
Not So Scar
Computer theft
baffles Security
-
by
Chris Landry
\
• :·:TWi5
rl~w-rfi1'•f<::rim~utersworlli'
mori
than
$6;000\vere sfolen=-wrt11---
no signs of forced entry - from Donnelly Hall over the mid-term break,
according to Joseph Leary, director of safety and and security.
Both computers, including keyboards and printers, were taken from
room 105 of the psychology department between 1 a.m. on Saturday Oct.
21 and noon on Sunday Oct. 22, Leary said.
Because there was no damage to the locks, Leary said it is likely the
computers were taken by someone with access to keys. "Whoever took
them (computers) sure knew what they were doing," Leary said.
And the thief or thieves knew exactly what they wanted, Leary said.
Only the two new conputers were taken, nothing was damaged and
an old computer was left behind, Leary said.
Dr. Royce White, assistant professor of psychology, discovered the
computers, one in his office and one in the psychology students' lounge,
missing on the following Monday.
Security and Town of Poughkeepsie Police have no suspects yet but
are continuing an investigation, Leary said.
White said there was no doubt his and the department's door was lock-
ed when he left that Friday. Housekeeping was the last to see the com-
puters when workers were cleaning at I a.m. on Saturday, Leary said .
. The theft prompted Security, under the request of White and other
faculty members, to install new locks last Friday. Before the lock change,
any student or faculty member who had reason to use the room could
get keys or access to them, Leary said.
These Halloween partygoers enjoyed themselves Friday at the Halloween Ball. A trip for two to Florida
during Spring Break was awarded for the best costume.
Circle photo/Beth Mahoney
"In a case like this you try to figure out who has access," Leary said.
"But there were just too many keys out there to boil it down to a few
people."
Risk of AIDS to students grows
Editor's Note: The last name of the man
with
AIDS who
is
interviewed in this
story
bas been withheld.
by
Karen·
Cicero
Mike
could easily be friends with many
Marist students. He enjoys listening to heavy
metal music, strumming his guitar and fix-
ing cars.
Last week, the 22-year-old
from
Rhinebeck, N. Y ., got tickets for a Testament
concert at The Chance and AZT from his
doctors at St. Luke's Hospital.
Mike
has
AIDS.
And he could have in-
fected someone before he was diagnosed last
March.
"You live now and you pay later," he
said. "That's the story of my life."
Many young people are paying later, ac-
cording to the Centers for Disease Control
in Atlanta, Ga. Its studies show I in every
SOO
college students -
or hypothetically
seven students at Marist -
is infected with
the acquired immune deficiency syndrome,
sometimes unknowingly exposing their sex
partners.
The center is already conducting a new
survey which will expand the analysis of ran-
dom blood samples from 18 to 26 college
campuses. Results will be available this
spring.
.
Researchers say this survey may confirm
their fears that the worst is yet to come at
college campuses where sexual relations are
the norm rather than the exception.
Stressing education and the protection of
a condom, national and Marist health pro-
f essionals say it's mainly promiscuity - not
IV drug use - that makes a college an ideal
breeding ground for the disease.
And. the threat is getting closer to home.
While there are no documented cases at
Marist, AIDS cases have already been
reported at Marist's neighbor, Vassar Col-
lege, according to Bill Arnold, the communi-
ty educator for AIDS-Related Community
Service
(ARCS)
in the Mid-Hudson Valley.
Da'llid Irvine, the administrative director
of Health Services at Vassar, declined com-
ment on the issue.
These
alarming
national statistics
and local
AIDS cases -
75 in Dutchess County -
have prompted area agencies to encourage
an all-out effort on the part of college ad-
ministrators to offer an AIDS education
program.
Then, what is Marist doing about it? Not
nearly enough, according to health profes-
sionals and some college personnel.
The Importance of
AIDS·
Education
Arnold rebuked Marist for not incor-
porating an AIDS education program in the
college's curriculum.
He said Marist has a "moral responsibili-
ty" to educate its students about the disease,
which has already claimed 55,000 lives.
"It's like you're giving the students a col-
lege degree and not teaching them how to
read," Arnold said. "Students can't do their
part until the necessary information is
available to them."
Dutchess County Community College of-
fers a one-credit course on
AIDS
education,
and Mount St. Mary's College requires an
AIDS education seminar as part of its
freshman orientation.
Continued on page 11
all started with a toothkche.
- •.
• . .
.
. ..
1th antibiotics, it became a digestive
.
,,;;problem. More medicine turned • it into
.
\bronchitis and then the esophagus became
,;'.inflamed.
.
.

'' :::cAnd for Mt1ce,
the four months of
aruc.-
/iety, false diagnosis and shots that made
<him
scream and cry. ended when he was
<m
bed at
St.
Luk.e's Hospital in
:;Newburgh.
. . • ;

;pJi,
P~g
his beachruougb the door, the
.
',·
or gave Mike
the
bad ~~-.
•.

:•~You
have
'!
I'
.1
.\
~


























































Page
2 - THE CIRCLE - November 2, 1989
·Entertainment ..
Educating Rita
. The New Day Repertory Company,
W!II ~resent the comedy, "Educating
Rita, at the Vassar Institute Theater
starting November 1 0 and running Fri-
day through Sunday until November
?6.
Student ticket cost is $1 o. For more
information and advance tickets, call
(914) 485-7399.
Foreign Film
Get a taste of Polish cinema -
come to next weekend's foreign film
"Border Street." This 1948 black and·
white film directed by Aleksander Ford
and starring M. Cwinklinska, ·. J.
Leszcynski and W. Godik is showing
at 7:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday in
Donnelly 245. Admission is free.
Comic Relief
. · •
;= .
Comedian Howie Mandel will bring
laughs to the Mid-Hudson Civic Center
oh November 17 at 7:30 p.m. Tickets
are $19 and are available by calling
454-3388.

I
Love New York
Take a bite out of the Big Apple for
only $8 on Saturday, Nov. 18. Buses
leave Chalilpagnat 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.
• ·•• .i,,i •
•h
G,
;,J
:
Essay ,Pontest :
.\
::·
mB,u~g
11
e ·• raue '.
The Vector Marketing Corporation is
Posfer Contest
sponsoring an essay contest• on tt:ie
Students can win $5,000 if- they topic "Beyond Your
GPA,
What More
enter a poster contest sponsored· in Does It Take to Be Successful. After
conjunction witli National • Alcohol • ··College?" There's _a
Dec. 1 deadline.
Awareness Week. More information For further information, call (215)
can be obtained frorri John Padovani ' 544-3020.


in Garland Commons Apartment F-12.
Fiction Contest
Animal Rights Lecture -
Start writing. Playboy magazine is
Ingrid Newkirk, co-founder ·of- the

sponsoring ·a college fiction contest
Ethical Treatment: for Animals, will with a $3,ooo· first prize. For more
discuss the animal rights jssue in a lee-• details, write _to Playl;>oy
College Fic-
ture today at 4 p.rii. in_the Theate(
tion Contest; 919 N.: Michigan Ave.,
Chicago, 111:.
60611.-


Accotinting 1~!s ~l~rbe lookin~ for
Att,intion .·.,
-
potential employees.ir:i a;job fair to be . ·'·-To get_yc,>Ur
activity .listed 1n this col-
held on Wednesday; Nov. 15 at Hunter 'umn, -send pertinent information
College in New York City. For further through campus mail to The Circle, c/o
information, call 1-800-633-6320. :
:"After Glass."


Mike---
Continued from page 1
"Trust me, I don't know what
you're talking about," Mike, 22,
responded.
WINTER
INTERSESSION
That was Feb. 4, 1989. Nearly
nine months later, Mike has ac-
cepted his fate - half of the coun-
try's 110,000 AIDS patients have
died.
But, he's not dwelling on that.
Busier now than he's ever been,
Mike
says he intends to make the
most of his life, mainly through
helping others.
Travelling to various schools
with a message of safe sex and
responsibility,
Mike puts in
16-hour days with AIDS-Related
Community Service (ARCS)
in
the
Mid-Hudson Valley.
"It gives me satisfaction to do
something, a reason to be here,"
Mike said of his involvement with
-"----
___ A.RCS._whicb. ... began. .. last
..
May.
"People with AIDS ask: 'What
reasons are keeping me here? Why
don't I just check out?' You can't
have that attitude."
But Mike, who shares an apart-
ment in Rhinebeck, N.Y., with his
18-year-old brother, has to be
careful that he doesn't wear himself
down.
In the ARC stage of the disease,
which means he has AIDS symp-
toms but they haven't
fully
developed yet,
Mike
must try to
balance fatigue with his busy
lifestyle.
"I'm stressed and I'm tired," he
said. "But I'm doing this because
I
want to help people. That makes
me feel good."
Mike also said his parents have
been supportive, but they're not
certain of his needs.
"My family never dealt with this
before," he said. "They don't
know what to do for me.
"My brother was upset for a
long time because he thought I was
going to die. He's more careful
now - he doesn't want to fall in-
to the same trap I did," said Mike,
who says he probably got AIDS
through multiple heterosexual
relationships.
Although m~y
people treat
Mike
well
and understand how
AIDS is transmitted, Mike said his
aunt won't let
him
near her two
children.
Mike says he regrets spending
time with them but his aunt's
negative attitude is something that
he's
trying
to
torreet
on a
broader
level.
"I
want
to
set
an example for
everyone
- to help them see mlli-
ty,"
be
said.
"I
have a friend (with
AIDS) in
the
hospital now. He's
not
going
to
live until the cod of the
week.
I want
to give
these people
hope and
maybee¥a}'Olle
will fed
differently."
Register
Now
before
Thanksgiving!
classes
to be held January
2 - 19
mornings,
afternoons
and evenings
one-third
payment
($230) is due at registration
Register
at the Adult Ed office, Marist East 250
8:30 am - 9 pm Monday
- Thursday
8:30 am - 5 pm Friday
Give the Gift of Life
~
~
--
MARIST BLOOD DRIVE
MONDAY, NOVEMBER
13
12
noon -
5
pm
FIRESIDE _:-LOUNGE
.
. . .
.

. '
;..:•
..
. ·::_
··-.:·:
•••
-
Look for the sign-up table
in Donnelly Hall
or
Call 452-9841
or
454-9605
Sponsored by Sigma Phi Epsilon






































































• • ,. t
...
November 2, 1989 - THE CIRCLE • Page 3
Project
planned. to solve fire code problem
by Bill Johnson
Marist administrators are plan-
ning anot_her
solution to the linger-
ing fire code problems in Marist
East.
Renovations to a corridor in the
back of Marist East will satisfy fire
code regulations so portions of the
front oftbe building won't have to
be closed, according to Executive
Vice President Mark Sullivan.
The corridor which separates the
Marist section of the building from
the warehouse behind it will be
reinforced with sheetrock and
flame-retardant material on the
ceiling,. Sullivan said.
Essentially, the project will fur-
ther close off the
·Marist

section
from the· warehouse, easing fire
code complications. A block wall
which is designed to hold flames
• for three hours already separates
the two sections.
Sullivan said the new plan had
been reached in a meeting with the
building inspector for the Town of
Poughkeepsie, Tom Farruggella.
Farruggella could not be reached
for comment this week.
Sullivan said a contractor has
Council
·to
preserve
Hudson waterfrorit
by Debra McGrath
Councils have been founded in
every town bordering the river
Marist students are not the.only

from New York City's·Battery to
ones who recognize the attractions . just north of -Troy, N. Y. So far,
of
th~ Huas_on River's banks.' The
•.
meetings have been held in Troy,
favorite place for clandestine stu-
Tarrytown, Catskill, Bear Moun-
dent parties is also being eyed by tain, Kingston and Staatsburg.
a state commission for possible
Although the council will not
preservation and recreational uses. publicly announce any finclings un-
The Hudson River. Greenway til next year, topics discussed at its

Council is exploring options for
meetings are a good indication of
preserving the river's edge and will what will make the report.
·
recommend sites for trails, parks
In Troy, the environmental im-
and environmental education pro-
pact of three proposed garbage and
grams. And that could open up the coal burning energy plants was the
riverfront adjacent to Marist to the foremost concern of meeting
public.
participants.

In early November, the council
Atthe Bear Mountain-meeting,
will hold a meeting in Pough keep-

the lack of public access to the river
sie to hear proposals from the com-.. dominated the di_s~u~sjon.
.
..
munity on what to do with the
Citizens at the Kingston meetmg

riverfront.
informed the council that farms
in
By Nov. 1, 1990, the 19-member the area are quickly being lost to
council must propose recommen-
developers. They said urbanization
dations to Gov. Mario Cuomo, could be prevented by standing
who created the council in August, behind farmers.
1988, for specific areas in the pro-
By listening
to residents,
posed green way.
businesspersons and local govern-
:-,,Wh.at~Hl_.b_aP1>.en
jn ~Q~gl_l)c~p-
• .:
~~!l_ts,_t!!e.
co:icin~i!.1l?P.es
~~
g~lJo.
sie and points north and south re-
the core of the problems that
mains to be determined. But plague the river front.
already some ideas have been
One of these problems may be
floated. They include preserving maintaining the tourism industry
waterfront property and historic and the income from it.
19th.Centurybuildingsofthenear-

In 1988, tourism brought in $2
by Hudson Valley Psychiatric
billion to the Hudaon Valley.
Center, said J. W.
·
Aldrich of the Creating more parks and trails and
state Department of Environmen-
allowing more public access to
tal Conservation.
natural resources may help keep the
I
The council may also try to in-
tourist dollar coming in.
corporate privately owned land on
It may seem the council was
the Franklin D. Roosevelt Estate,
created solely to maintain and in-
in Hyde Park, into a national crease the tourism industry and the
historical site, Aldrich said.
number of residents of tlie com-
The council was created in munities, however, legislation for
response to development pressures the greenway states that the coun-
in the Hudson Valley, the fastest cil will try to, " .... relate the green-
growing region in the
state.
way with the protection of the
developing tourism industry."
More than 65 percent of New
York State's 17 million residents
live in coastal communities. The
state's population remains steady
but, development and population
in coastal areas increases each year.
The legislation also notes the
council evolved because the Presi-
dent's Commision on American
Outdoors has called for a network
of greenways across the United
States.
been selected for the $40,000 pro-
ject but would not give the name
of the firm.
··Sullivan
did not specify
.
the
timetable of the project. "It'll be
done in the next few months," he
said.
Marist administrators
and
lawyers are negotiating with the
owner of the building, the Mid-
-Hudson
Business Park, over who
will pay how much of the cost,
Sullivan said.
"If
we're lucky,
we're out of there for 20 grand,"
he said.

Paul Maley, the manager of the
building, said he could not com-
ment on the current negotiations,
but he said that the owners have
spent "significant amounts of
money" to bring the building up to
code in the past, and that owners
and tenants have negotiated solu-
tions cooperatively.
The fire code violations conern
the width of the corridors and the
material on the walls in the
building, Sullivan said. The rules
vary according to the usage of the
building, he said, and since the
building is used as a warehouse in
the back and an educational facili-
ty in the front, interpreting the
code has been complicated and
time-consumin~.
Sullivan says he hopes the new
plan is the final solution to the fire
code problem.
The administration has been
reluctant to invest money in Marist
East, planning to replace it with
The Dyson Center next year.
"When you add it all up, we've
.been
very responsive," Sullivan
said. "It doesn't seem prudent for
Marist to pay a small fortune to im-
prove space which it's going :o be
out of in nine months."
Circle
photo/Nathan Robinson
Activist:group seeks 'connection'
by Debra McGrath
An abandoned building provides

a·backdrop. A.table.displayi~ut.
tons promoting human rights
causes stands on the cracked
sidewalk in front of the orange and
blue store to catch the eye of
passersby.

Cathy Deppe sits inside sur-
rounded by posters and bumper
stickers announcing "Handsoff
Central America" and "Farms not
Arms." She looks out through the
mostly glass store front window
and observes three young students,
each wearing Marist College T-
shirts, browsing the button table.
"This is what I like to see," said
Deppe who coordinates activities
for the Peace and Justice Connec-
tion located at the corner of
Washington Street and Falkill

Place in Poughkeepsie's decaying
northside. "Our goal is to become
a resource center for the communi-
ty, especially college students," she
said.
The group is a clearinghouse for
information on human rights
issues, providing a meeting place
from which local social act1v1st
groups can wage their struggles.
With its strategic location on
Washington
Street,· a major
thoroughfare from Marist College,
into the city, it acts as a reminder
to students on their way into the ci-
ty that outside the shelter of the
classroom society is still wracked
by a variety of ills.
Seven groups share the Connec-
tion which is only open on Satur-
day afternoons. They are the Dut-
chess County Peace Center, The
Dutchess County Committee
Against Racism, The Rainbow
Coalition, The Dutchess County
Mental Health Group, Hudson
Valley Green, Active Culture Pro-
ductions and The Mid-Hudson
Larryniga Sister City Project.
Deppe and other members of the
Peace Center held meetings in
church basements for eight years
before making the Connection their
Poughkeepsie home.
Another goal of "The Connec-
tion" is to fight for human rights
in Dutchess County.
The groups at "The Connec-
tion" recently scored a victory
when a Poughkeepsie police officer
was suspended from the force for
oneweekwithout pay, due to their
efforts.

The peace center group claims
they recorded an officer yelling
racial slurs at a 14-year-old black
boy.
"How can we teach our kids to
respect our police if our police
don't respect our kids," Deppe
said.
The peace center group plans to
go to every city council meeting un-
til action is taken against the of-
ficer, and the group eventually
hopes to get the officer terminated.
Paraphernalia is sold at the store
to raise money to support such ef-
forts. The Connection has books,
phamphlets and brochures on
human rights issues that students
are able to use for school papers
and projects.
"We have things they (students)
just won't find in the library,"
Deppe said.
Deppe said student are en-
courages to volunteer or to use the
Connection to hold meeting and
fundraisers.
Quick money to move closer
by Jennifer ~ecker
mons apartments.
directly across from Security's of-
"We wanted to make life on
fice. It will also be accessible to
Marist students will have easier campus easier for students," said students
24
hours a day, Weglarz
access to their money next year.
Desmond. "We also wanted
said.
The cqllege has signed an agree-
students to know that if they ask
The administration at Marist
ment
.-with
Mid-Hudson Savings for something· that is a valid re-
researched other financial institu-
8ank. for

installaJion
of an
quest, the student government will tions before deciding on Mid-
,
g·of
both
residents. an oommi.it
automatic teller mac~irie in Don- • work with the administration to get Hudson Savings Bank, one of the
,
,
,
bers

cl
scli 1 ddresses
will
be published to.help st~ts
.
nelly Hall, accordmg to_ J?e
what students desire."
few local banks re!llaining in the
,es,_num
.....
anh'·
.. ,,
00
ah·····.
.
,,
"I
,
,
.:.!': • ..
··.
<c::
.~
Weglarz, the Bursar at Manst.
The ATM will be available for. area. The final decision depended
.....
•·
~Thm
td~ucb'WJ.t
.
0
11"z}~eg@~~r:i:~!~1l.1~6i<1iFfir~f<ahith~,:
:,
~-
D,elivery is· scheduled for t~e student, faculty, staff and ad-
on where most students were from,
i.;
'! ..
e rrectory
wt

~.~.

•• ••

• •

~
••
-.
·u~tiis
free
of ihate''
}
,
middle of December·and January
ministration use. It will accom-
Weglarz said.
<~yroom
number. It "'
111
be given to
all
st
·
· •.
· .·•
..
g
h
:
'
has been set as the tentative date
modate both the NY CE and
The majority of Marist students
fu<..,~or
c1
small ~ee, each student
can
hc1ye
a ~
0
~I1
"1~f
.n~
to~
!I~.
4
.for it to be·in operation'; Weglarz Cashere networks.
are from the tri-state area, Weglarz
!'
!lat'ne, and v~ous college clubt~!1c\:a
t
bieuc
rr~?1:!:?°t
~,
..
a\e
said.
_pelays
could be possible if
Now, there are ATMs at The said. The NYCE network serves
schedules p~nted for ~eference
t~·
the
Jii,
~"ilioe adver!"
••
there are complications installing
Bank of New York on the north
Connecticut, New Jersey and Long

Local busmess establishf!len~
t
~er to·

~
·

connections and major com-
end of campus and at the All Sport
.
Island whereas the Cashere net-
tised i~ the directory and
ll
will
also include an abo
d
g_«:?
~,~r~io~
of
_
mu~ication lir;es, he added. If this Fitness club and Saint Francis
'
work serves the Albany, N.Y. and
the tram schedule.
;,

:,
.
:..:• •isthecasethemachinewillnotbe
Hospital across from campus.
Schenectady, N.Y. region. This
Due to a misunderstanding \\-ith the campus post office7 t~e:fi_~t· iri operation till the spring semester. With the new machine, students
allows most students the added
forms requesting the information necessary for the directory wer~ not
Installation of the mac~ine will \\-ill no longer have to cross Route
convenience of using a cash card.
all sent out. Many of the people involved had to go through the lime-
fu~fill one of the
_campaign
pro-
9, Weglarz said.
consuming process of going door-to-door co make sure everyone
mises of ~ouncil
_of
Student
Weglarz said security was the
receh·ed a form.

•.
,




Leader~ pr~1dent ~eVJ~ Desmond, most important factor in determin-
.
.


·
h.
•n
bl
who said his orgamzauon propos-
ing where the machine will go,
0
The directory is a quick, reliable reference source
1
at ~
1
ena e
ed the machine because of persis-
Weglarz said.
the students to communicate with each ~
t
ber. We need tbeJT support
tent student complaints about the
Donnelly was chosen because it
-~
do,.~
~~~-~~i~~!::~~~~:!!.fa~!~!~~~.~f t~:.~~~~
ATM at the Bank of New York will offer maximum security for
,_;~~_of~~.::·.-/.,,
<
·, ·':'
<····.··.•···':'•.:-:z.,·:

·:·
branch near the Gartland Com-
students -
the machine will be
"The machine
is
intended to
serve the entire Marist student
population and allow the students
immediate access when Mom and
Dad deposit the money in their ac-
counts," Weglarz said.
...ie'.





































































editorial
AIDS
risk
AIDS is becoming a deadly acquaintance of college students.
Marist students are not immune to this scourge, and they are not
adequately prepared for it.
Studies show that 1 college student in 500 has AIDS; that means
seven Marist students -
at least hypothetically -
could have
AIDS.


Although there are no documented cases of AIDS at Marist,
the incubation period can last as long as 11 years. Some people
here could have AIDS and not know it.
The uncertain present is alarming enough, but consider the
future. Some people here will get AIDS if more is not done to
prevent it.
Elsewhere, more is being done. Dutchess County Community
College offers a one-credit course on AIDS, and·Vassar College
established an AIDS Task Force four years ago. Mount St. Mary's
College requires freshmen to attend an AIDS seminar as part of
orientation.
Students don't need a college course to alert them to the dangers
of AIDS. And since we don't even know that AIDS is present
on this campus, a task force isn't the solution either.
But a seminar on AIDS and other health risks to students as
part of orientation for freshmen and transfers is a good idea.
Students need mandatory AIDS education and they need it soon.
The longer the administration procrastinates, the greater the
chance students have of acquiring the disease.
Right now, it seems like a covert operation to get AIDS infor-
mation at Marist. While brochures are available in Health Ser-
vices, the recent AIDS presentations on campus were poorly
publicized.
The administration must take a more direct approach to the
AIDS epidemic. Although it generally has been careful not to in-
terfere with the personal Jives of its students, this situation
demands a more effective response.
Realizing that many students aren't going to abstain from sex-
ual relations, the next best step is AIDS education.
We must not wait until it's too late.
Letters to
The Circle
Special Olympics
Editor:
Saturday,
Oct. 14, was a
beautiful day. It was warm and
sunny, and the rich spectrum of fall
colors presented a visual feast.
But what made the day really
beautiful was the caring and shar-
ing demonstrated by some Marist
students. That day, approximate-
ly 80 students turned out to assist
at" the New York State Special
Olympic Games.
Their enthusiastic support and
encouragement of the athletes and
their numerous contributions to the
staging of events helped make the
games
a truly
joyful
and
memorable occasion for everyone
involved.
i·.:..-
That evening, at the close of the
games, I was touched and proud to
accept an award presented by the
Special Olympics
_Committee
to
Marist for these student's efforts
and their display of the spirit of
volunteerism. I was also told by the
games coordinator that their par-
ticipation was a critical factor in
making the Oct.
14
event one of the
most successful state games in
years.
I wish to thank all these students
and extend a special note of
gratitude to following, who were
instrumental in mobilizing so many
volunteers: the officers of the class
of 1991; Tau Kappa Epsilon; Tau
Continued on next page
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 0eCosta
Business Manager: . ..........
Christopher Murphy
Circulation Manager: .............
John Scagliotti
Faculty Adviser: .................
John Hartsock
PB!Je
4_-
!~E
CIRCLE- November 2, 1989
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ff
•,;Reagan's
big trip
gives···•··
ex-presidents a bad narhe
When Douglas MacArthur ut-
tered the words "old soldiers never
die, they just fade away,'' he did
just that, faded away.
The activities of some of the
former chief executives can't help
but make one wish that some of the

United States' old presidents would
heed MacArthur's words and do a
disappearing act.
Last week, former

President
Reagan ended nine-day tour of
Japan that was partially financed
by Fujisankei Communications
Group, a Japanese broadcasting
company. In return for giving ex-
clusive interviews to Fujisankei sta-
tions and newspapers, Reagan is
receiving a
$2
million honorarium.
In addition, Reagan came out in
favor of Sony Corporation's
takeover at the same time as his
representatives were discussing a
possible contribution by Sony to
Reagan's presidential library.
Of course, Reagan is a private
citizen riow, he can do whatever he
wants for whomever he wants and
get paid for it.
But while the presidential oath of
office says nothing about what a
chief executive does after he or she
leaves office, are the American
people wrong in asking that former
presidents refrain from behaving
like sitting in the Oval Office was
a stepping stone to the really big
money'!
Some former presidents, such as
Gerald Ford and Richard Nixon,
have chosen to Jive their post-
presidential lives completely as
private citizens. In Nixon's case it's
understandable, considering the
circumstances surrounding his
resignation.
But Ford, while at least not sell-
ing his former title to the highest
bidder, has also chosen for the
most part
not
to use it for the
weight it can carry. Ford seems
content to relax, play golf and
remember the good old days.
Paul O'Sullivan
·
Thinking
between
the
lines
All

of these men could take a
lesson in post-presidential conduct
from Jimmy CarteL Despite the
fact that his administration is often
remembered as inept and bungling,
Carter is proving to the world that
his idealism, while being something
of a hindrance while he was in of-
fice, was not something he picked
up when he was elected and drop-
ped four years later.
Carter has spent his days as a
private citizen overseein~ elections
in Panama and declanng them
fraudulent when Noriega tried to
steal the election; mediating
negotiations to end the civil war in
Ethiopia, building low-cost hous-
ing in the South Bronx and
Philadelphia and educating people
in the Sudan on how to avoid
disease.
Carter has used the fact that he
was president as an opportunity to
walk through doors that normally
would be closed to a private citizen.
Instead of sitting back and recall-
ing past achievements, he is mak-
ing his status as a former president
work for him and the people he
helps.

·While
Carter's activity should be
praised, it should not be used
against men like Ford. Gerald Ford
devoted most of his life to serving
in public office and if he wants
a
few years to rest, that is more than
understandable.
.
But comparing the actions of
Carter and Reagan only brings out
all the more the lack of ethical
substance in Reagan's character.
While Carter does good works,
Reagan raises money. Carter is in-
terested in being a great man,
Reagan is interested in being
remembered as a great man. There
is a difference.
One can only wonder the path
George Bush will take when he has
finished his life in the public sec-
tor. We don't know what he will
say when he is standing in the door-
way of the jet that will take him
away from Washington
and
reporters ask him: "What are you
going to do after four (or eight)
years of being president of the
United States?"
Let's just hope it's not "I'm go-
ing to Disney World."
Paul O'Sullivan is The Circle's
political columnist.
Letter policy
The Circle welcomes letters to the editor. All letters must be typed
and signed and must include the writer's phone 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.























Vi
e w
Q_O
__
i_n
__
t _____
...;...
____________
H_ov,_e_m_b_e_,_2,_1s_8_9-_TH_E_c_1R_c_L_E_-_P:_a_ge_:
He lives to bust those Canterbury bashes
by Paul Lawrence
Picture this: I'm doing rounds at
about 11:30 p.m. Because Canter-
bury is such a large area, I'm cruis- •
ing around in the army jeep that
Marist has proyided for us, with a
with a mounted machine gun in
case of of trouble.
My sound equipment picks up a
television that is just a bit too loud
by quiet hours standards, so I jump
out of the jeep, kick down the
door, and yell: "Freeze, it's the
UC! You, over there, turn down
that TV! OK, I need to see
everybody's 1.D., now maggots!"
This is usually followed by a string
of obscenities. You just can't beat
all the wonderful abuse you get as
a UC.
Yes, my name is Paul Lawrence
and I'm a unit coordinator at
Canterbury. Whew, that was tough
to admit. I mean, it's not just that
I'm a UC now, but I was last year,
too, and
I
just couldn't stop -.
I
had to do it again.
I know what you're thinking:
"He's crazy, absolute nuts, an in-
credible lunatic; no hope of
recovery." Well, maybe you're
right. Maybe all of us who even
apply for an RA or UC position are
extremely masochistic, especially
those of us who come back for
more. But, is it possible that you're
wrong? Could there be a viable
reason
for
this
strange
phenomenon?
Let's look at the reward you get
from being an RA or UC. To begin
with, we don't get free housing, as
so many of you think; we just col-
Ject one paycheck every two weeks
like every other campus employee.
And it's not as big a paycheck as
you might imagine.
Let's just say that I like being
underpaid and unappreciated. And
that's an important part of our
psychological make-up: If you
don't like getting your friends in
trouble, feeling unappreciated, or
being viewed as an anti-Christ, then
you can't be an RA
or
UC. For-
tunately for me, I love stuff like
that.
For
example, if I tell a student
on opening day that I'm a UC and,
lucky them, he's my neighbor,
there's the inevitable, "Oh no, my
life is ruined!" What a feeling of
satisfaction.
I absolutely love doing rounds,
writing people up and getting them
in trouble. Most of the time I dress
om camouflage and carry hi-tech
sound sensing equipment so I can
nail people who are being quiet
while consuming their alcohol; they
aren't bothering anyone or presen-
ting any problem, but I can still
bust in there and jeopardize their
housing.·
Another enjoyable aspect of the
job is programming. It's a good
feeling to plan and work on a pro-
gram for two or three weeks, put-
ting together
something
the
students will enjoy, and then have
nobody show up for it. I try to do
this in my academic life, too. I
often spend hours researching a
writing a brilliant paper that either
wasn't assigned in class, or is for
a class that I'm not even enrolled
in, then throw it in the trash for the
enjoyment
of some literary
garbage-picker. Quite a feeling of
success.
What was that? Did you realize
that RAs and UCs are students just
like you? That's too bad, because
I
really love when students
·think
that all I'm doing walking across
campus and through academic
buildings is looking for them so I
can listen to their maintenance
problems.
I'd rather miss a class anc\ take
care of a leaky faucet than have a
student try to endure one more
hour with his apartment is such
disrepair. Hey, if it's convenient
for the student, I don't care if it
takes me 17 years to graduate
because of missed classes; I could
be a UC forever.
Paul Lawrence is a senior
English major.
Founder of the Marist Brothers I
The same old debate
recalled in 200th anniversary
but in a new setting
by Cornelius Russell
The banner that is hanging in
The Library is a reminder that the
Marist Brothers are celebrating
worldwide the bicentennial of the
birth of their founder, Blessed
Marcellin Champagnat.
Marcellin Champagnat was born
near Lyons, France, on May 20,
1789; he was the second xoungest
of 10 children. As a young boy,
Marcellin preferred manual work
to things academic and so grew up
as a peasant, learning to farm and
build. Among his peers he did not
stand out as an exceptionally
religious.person.
.
,
.
.
It.came
as
,i'great surprise to his
father and brothers when; at the
age of 15, and hardly able to read,
he decided to enter the priesthood.
Marcellin had his troubles with
school. The initial years in the
seminary were difficult ones for
him but he was determined to suc-
ceed.
"I
know that God wants me
to be a priest,"
he said.
"Therefore, I shall succeed." It
was this conviction that carried
Marcellin through the hard times.
By late 1813, Marcellin had
transferred to the Major Seminary
at Lyons. There, his vocation to the
priesthood grew on solid ground.
With a group of seminarians,
Marcellin planned the organization
of a society devoted to parish mis-
sion work and to the Christian
education of youth. They placed
this society under the special pro-
tection of the Mother of God and
gave it the name of the Society of
Mary, now known as the Marist
Fathers.
Marcellin's
dream was to
organize a special group of
Brothers, whose main work would
be the Christian education of
youth. He declared himself several
times that it was the difficulties he
such a situation. On Jan. 2, 1817,
he chose two young men, taught
them to read and to catechize; these
men became the first Marist
Brothers.
As their numbers increased from
day to day, Marcellin, together
with them, constructed a larger
house in a retired spot called the
Hermitage, gave them a rule, and
bound them by God by a promise
of fidelity.
had in school that caused him to
Marcellin was only 51 when he
conceive the project of preparing
died on the Vigil of the Pentecost,
religious teachers for country
June
6, 1840.
Yet, in that time he
children.
.
,
. h
d
al\ ~-
d
d45
h
1
The• se me·

·were''
to· become the • • a ·person
Y
._qun e

sc
00
s
and staffed them with trained
Marist Brothers of the Schools
religious teachers. On Pentecost
(FMS). Together with 51 young
Sunday, May 29, 1955, Pope Pius
men, Marcellin was ordained a
XII inscribed him, distinguished by
priest on July 22, 1816. On the very his sanctity and miracles, on the
next day, he and 12 of his
roll of the Blessed. At the present
classmates went up to the Shrine of
time, Marcellin is under considera-
Our Lady of Fourviere and formal-
tion for canonization.
ly pledged themselves to the foun-
dation of the Marist society,
His
studies
behind
him,
Marcellin, at the age of 27, arriv-
ed
as a parish priest to serve the
people of La Valla,
a
small village
in the foothills of Mount Pilat.
Then, visiting a dying boy and fin-
ding that he was ignorant of the
very eleinents of Christian doc-
trine, he determined to remedy
Throughout the world today, in
more than 70 countries, close to
6,000 Marist Brothers provide a
"living miracle" of the sanctity of
their founder.
Cornelius Russell is a Marist
Brother.
Letters------------------C-o-n-tln-u-ed".""f".""ro-m-pa-ge-4"'.'"
Epsilon
Phi; Circle K; the
Psychology Club and the women's
soccer team.
.
Special thanks also to the class
of '91 and the Office of College
Activities
for arranging
bus
transportation; to the Director of
Safety and Security for providing
vans and to Seiler's for donating
breakfast doughnuts and box lun-
ches to all of the Marist volunteers
(fhese were really a godsend!).
Thank you all for caring!
Philip Koshkin-Youritzin
Community Service Program
Drinking policy
Editor:
I'd really like to know whom the
administration is trying to kid with
this Alcohol Awareness Week
slogan of "Party Smart."
Marist is largely a dry campus,
with the possession of alcohol
resulting in a written reprimand
and a fine. The college has been
working with the local ~lice in
busting off-campus parttes. It
seems to me that college officials
don't want us to party smart; they
would rather we not party at all.
Instead of fighting
about
the
whole
issue \\ith
Marist
Security
running around trying to bust peo-
ple - honestly, they get their kicks
off of it - and with students try- •
ing to hide their alcohol, suc-
ceeding most of the time, I'd like
to offer an alternative.
Since drinking is going to occur
anyway, why not control it instead
of banning it? Campus-sanctioned
parties could control the amount of
alcohol consumed, eliminate the
possibility of students driving back
to campus from a
party
drunk, and
also eliminate the complaints many
residentsgive to the college over
noisy off-campus parties.
All this is not to say that I don't
believe in partying smart. I just
think it is hypocritical to say it and
not let us party at all. People come
to college to party as well as to
study. The administration can't
stop students from drinking, no
matter what it does. The forbidden
fruit is, after all, the sweetest.
James
Hurler
Circle K
Editor:
You can make a difference by
joining Circle
K
Internation'.3-1.
I_t
is
a community service orgamzauon
(not Greek affiliated) \\ith 10,500
members. Students throughout the
United States, Mexico, Canada, the
Caribbean and now also in Europe
help their surrounding communitie
in various ways.
Marist students can make a dif-
ference right here in Poughkeepsie.
Young, underprivileged children
and the elderly really benefit from
students who take the time to care.
Circle
K
visits the elderly in Dut-
chess County and the children of
a Poughkeepsie orphanage. It helps
the Kiwanis Club of Poughkeepsie
with projects and plans fundraisers
for the benefit of organizations
such as the March of Dimes.
In addition, Circle K'ers travel
and have the opportunity to meet
other Circle K'ers from schools
throughout New York. Some of the
largest clubs are Manhattan Col-
lege, Fordham University, Adelphi
University and now Marist.
Upcoming events include:
-Nov.
3-5:
New York
Speaking
Conference in Lake George, N.Y.
-March
31 through April 2:
New York District Convention in
Binghamton.
-June 2-4: District Leadership
Training Conference.
-Mid-August:
International
Convention in Anaheim, Calif.
(Disneyland!).
Meetings are held every Tuesday
at 9:30 p.m. in Campus Center 268.
Julie M.
Goss
Circle K
With a passport in hand and my
life stuffed into three pieces of lug-
gage, last week and an airplane
plopped me into a foreign city that
will be my home for one year -
Dublin, Ireland.
I hadn't even left the airport
when the culture shock hit me. I
had to find my own way to Trinity
College. After asking directions, I
realized that although the words
spoke here are English, the
language is foreign. Phrases are
different,. and intonations
in
sentences seem completely opposite
from_ American English.
Double-decker buses are the ma-
jor means
of
public transportation
in Dublin and make travelling with
baggage difficult. It was so obvious
to two Irish girls I didn't know
where I was going that they shared
a taxi with me and pointed
me
in
the right direction.
Trinity College stands in the
heart of bustling Dublin; its cob-
blestone squares, stately gray-brick
buildings and green lawns form one
of the oldest universities in Western
Europe.
Thirty or forty tables lined the
College Park this week, beckoning
new students to join clubs and
societies
historical,
philosophical,
academic
and
political (including Marxist and
socialist).
Some societies offered free pints
of Guinness beer, hot Irish whiskey
or shots of Bailey's Irish Cream
just for joining. They're either
smart or desperate.
Newcomers to the college roam-
ed around campus looking at each
department's list of timetables for
class scheduling - quite a different
system than at most American col-
leges. Students can take a few days
to attend classes and decide
whether or not to enroll. The at-
mosphere is much more laid-back.
But among the typical havoc of
students moving into city flats, pro-
blems with limited campus housing
and the confusion of registration,
the college has suddenly become
the source of a controversy hitting
Halloween
Editor:
The good news was that a small
group of Marist faculty and staff
had been invited to judge a color-
ful and creative horde of costum-
ed students who invaded the din-
ing hall last Friday evening. The
bad news was that we had to make
hard decisions when everyone
deserved a prize.
The dining hall was decorated
v.ith pumpkins and ghosts, and out
in the courtyard the eerie shadow
of a giant v.itch loomed over the
whole company. And what a com-
pany it was!
Two mad doctors ghoulishly of-
fered amputations on the spot, a
Dateline:
Dublin
Ilse
Martin
the daily headlines of the Irish
press.
The High Court of Ireland
recently handed down an iniunc-
tion against tnc 'Tr'mit)' Co\\cgc
Students' Union that prohibits the
distribution of information about
abortion contained in its 1989
Guide for First-Year Students.
Abortion in Ireland is illegal. In
1983, The Society for the Protec-
tion of the Unborn Child, SPUC,
succeeded in getting Ireland to
amend its constitution. The eighth
amendment
says, "The state
acknowledges the right to life of the
unborn and with due regard to the
equal right to life of the mother.''
The Trinity College Students'
Union, part of the larger Union of
Students in Ireland, provides infor-
mation on AIDS and other
sexually-transmitted diseases, rape
and substance abuse, as well as
academic advice. Some of the in-
formation included locations of
clinics in England, where abortion
is legal.
The chatter and conversation in
the two on-campus pubs surround
the abortion issue.
I walk to my first class now
under banners in College Park that
read, "Protect Women's Right to
Information." Students boast but-
tons and stickers with slogans like
"SPUC OFF."
There may be differences in
culture, speech and lifestyle here,
but the fight for freedom and rights
is one that all countries seem to
share.
Ilse Martin is The Circle's
overseas correspondent.
pumpkin and a Hershey's kiss
bounced as they danced. We met
Frankenstein,
Dracula,
the
"paper"
boy, Chinese ladies,
mimes, lumberjacks, even the miss-
ing Marist letters! The grim reaper
with death's head face and bloody
scythe paced solemnly around the
hall to remind us all of our
mortality.
The v.inners of the super prizes
(dancing flowers, Popeye and Olive
Oyl, an Allsport bum, Black Death
and a unicorn) were chosen as mid-
night struck, but the music and
dancing went on.
We judges left with a greater ap-
preciation for the ingenuity of our
students. You were all terrific!
Cicely Perrotte





















t
Page
6 - THE CIRCLE -
November
2,
1989
t
Circle photo/Beth Mahoney
Members of Marist's Students for Students Rights group met at the river to discuss students' concerns about
the college.
Group gathers at river
to address student woes
by
Maureen Kramer
Problems concerning the library, ing setup, one that would benefit
housing and the postponment of
the students, was emphasized.
the approval of a mural, prompted
''The
housing situation is really
4l students to gather at the river for not fair for the students. We can't
the first Students For Student's
do anything about it for ourselves
Rights meeting.
because we are seniors, but we
"One of the main goals of this want to help change things for the
group is awareness for all students underclassmen. The reality· is,
.~!J~~-~~_i_sti!lg_nroJ?l~ms.,..~!sc:>,,
0_1,tr
...
freshmen
.could
be off campu,s in
goal
is
to
firid
possible solutions to
a few years, but tliey don't realize
the problems or we are not going that now. We're making the
to get support from the administra-
sacrifices for them, but they should
tion," said Ed Fludd, a senior from do something about it now because
Poughkeepsie.
they will be here for three more
To make the group more effec-
years," said senior Mark Miller.
tive, the students who attended the
A problem that could have been
meeting were divided into sub-
avoided through student support
groups to put their efforts into deals with a proposal for a mural
tackling a specific problem.
that took senior Bill Bastian an en-
However, the problems that take tire semester to get approved.
precedence for the students can on-
"The mural will reflect the stu-
ly be changed if the students voice dent's opinions, attitudes, and
their opinions.
beliefs of today. It will be for the
The housing problem at Marist students, from the students," said
took top priority. Although possi-
Bastian.
ble solutions were not mentioned,
"I
have received a lot of positive
the need for a more suitable hous-
feedback on the idea that it has
been approved, but there was no
one there to help a year ago," said
Bastian.
Another problem for the group
is the lack of available space in the
Library which should be a main
concern for all students.
"Th:5e are a l·o.
t. of
g.
oo.
d. features
to
:
~ti•l=',l}
.Library 4,,.such
...
as the
periodical '• section
.
and
.
the
audio/visual department, but we
want to emphasize the need to
make it more accommodating to
the number of students we have on
campus,"
said junior Martin
Camacho.
Although there may be financial
reasons why these problems were
not adhered to, the group's opinion
is that the students must make their
opinions known and stick by them
in order for the administration to
take the student body seriously.
"By doing these things we are
hoping to make Marist say that its
best feature is its students, not its
new buildings," said Bastian.
The conscience of rock
continues to roll forward
Once upon a time, in a land
much like the one we live in today,
rock and roll was considered a
form of social protest.
Some would argue that
in
to-
day's climate, where greed is good
and the dollar is god, musicians
have sold out.
If
protest is currently
the fashion, then wise bands will
spout out some vague statements of
a generic rebellion.
These critics say that the anists
care little for the flag they're wav-
ing and more for the "units" they
can sell.
(I
love it when they call
records "units.")
I don't deny the validity behind
these criticisms, but I think they
tend to ignore the bigger picture.
I firmly believe that true protest is
alive and well in rock today.
Then who is carrying the torch?
Please don't say U2, although they
might seem like an obvious choice.
They came closest to genuine
rebellion on I983's "War" album.
After that they shifted more

towards the generic rebellion, rein-
forcing the popular sentiments of
the day.
The musicians writing the most
intelligent social criticisms today
aren't usually the ones selling the
most units. (A strange coincidence?
Kieran Fagan
In
your
ear
Or is there some connection'!
Hmm
...
) But there are singers out
there that beg to be heard.
Billy Bragg is one of them. His
protests range from the obvious
("Help
Save the Youth of
America")
to
the
obscure
("Waiting for the Great leap For-
ward"). He's not a great guitar
player and his voice can be jarring
to the virgin ear, but his lyrics are
keenly in touch with the plight of
the'working man and the many ills
of society- England's, America's,
and the world's.
For sheer anger and cynicism,
Lou Reed's "New York" album is
unsur-
passed.
Here is
-1
man clear-
ly not happy with the state of things
in the U.S. He has a knack for
tempering his venomous words
with a sharp wit, which makes his
music a little more accessible to the
average listener.
And I think he can be credited
with coining the term "Statue of
Bigotry," which looks sadly down
on its poor huddled masses. The
entire album is full of vivid tales of
today's warped society. I only wish
Lou would lighten up occasional-
ly. He's depressing, but he's telling
it like it is.
I recently read
an
article that
cited rap music as being the only
true protest around in music today.
When you take away the juvenile
boasts of L.L. Cool J, the comedy
of DJ Jazzy Jeff, and the junior
high antics of the Beastie Boys, rap
can be seen as a social force. Per-
formers like Public Enemy,
N.W.A. and Ice-T cenainly have
strong opinions on society, racism
and abuse of power.
But occasionally the anger seems
too misdirected, as in N.W.A.'s
song
"F--
Tha Police.'' That's a
little too radical and more than a
bit obvious. Although subtlety
might be more effective, no one
can deny the sheer force of such a
song.
Kieran Fagan is The Orcle's
music columnist.
21 Club
begins

year
with Hallo\Ve.en
bash
by Kelly Woods
Dancing, singing· and a lot. of.
beer drinking, or depending on
.
your condition, spilling, were the
main activities for more than 180
seniors last Friday night.
The 21 Society held their first on-
campus alcoholic event in the the
New Dining Room in Campus
Center, bringing students from
both on and off campus together.
"It's not very often that we get
to see people from our class and,
this is the perfect opportunity,"
said Meg Brandon, an on-campus
senior.

Although it took over a month
for the 21 Society to get off the
ground, there will be at least one
activity a month for the remainder
of the year except for November
when two events will be held.
"We're going to try and have
themes to make it interesting so it
won't lose its novelty," said staff
manager, Jackie O'Brien.
In the future, faculty will be in-
vited to attend the 21 Society which
will give students the opportunity
to see professors outside the
classroom.
"I
hope faculty members come
because it will better relations bet-
ween the students and faculty,"
said senior Kevin Dwyer.
"The administration recognizes
that there are 21-year-olds at
Marist,'' said senior Kathryn Fran-
cis Valentine "F.W." Begin.
The bartenders, who work for
Seiler's, were responsible for serv-
ing the beer and there was a Town
a Poughkeepsie policeman check;
ing each student's identification to
make sui:e they were 21.
"It's a little too much to take on,
but the school is keeping the
students on campus and off the
road, said
·Jay
Stricker, assistant
director and catering manager of
Seiler's."

"l
think it's phenomenal that we
have alcohol on campus and there's
no reason that this type of event
can't be held on a regular basis,"
said off-campus
senior Wes
Zahnke. "If Marist has more
events like this, they would
eliminate a lot of the trouble that
is caused off campus."
Even though most students were
enjoying the evening, there were
some who weren't as satisfied.
Some of the complaints includ-
ed waiting on line to purchase beer
tickets, expensive beer prices and
no musical variety.
"I
think we should have specials
and a happy hour from 3 to 7 p.m.
·so
everyone can hang out," said
senior Sue Weisser.
Eventually, the 21 Society will be
moved to the cafeteria and maybe
get bands, said Jeff Ferony, presi-
dent of the 21 Society.
Most of the money is donated to
campus ministry, but hopefully
some of the money will go back to
the Marist students, said Ferony.
30. drunks are allowed to attend,
but they must have a guest pass and
proper identification, such as a
driver's license or a passport.
The big weekends
of the Wes-tern wqrld
With the World Series schedul-
ed to resume this past Friday night,
it finally looked as. if sanity and
calm had been restored to the free
world.

You had this disaster destroying
everything and having every in-
surance companies wishing they
were in Pork Bellies.
Just when you thought it was
safe to venture forth, with the
Wes Zahnke
A
day
in
the
life
natural flow of things, the weekend --------------
in Poughkeepsie began.
would think if he spent a weekend
Traditionally weekends in the
here in paradise. Perhaps he would
Tree City have defied logic and
just go off in
a
corner and cry.
refuted what the experts said. This
With the shower complete and
was no exception.
the last piece of ocean dweller
It began on Friday, a seemingly brushed from between my molars,
innocent day.
I was gone.
Laying around the house, trying
Cocktails in a re·mote cavern
to grow hair behind my ears, while somewhere in the townhouses,
simultaneously wishing to one day
followed by barley in Milan, led
breed thoroughbreds, I thought it
straight to the River Room.
would be neat to have a war with
It's been a while since the River
yogurt grenades.
Room has seen me. I believe it was
The 21 Club was to be held that
potato skins, large 7up, back in
night in the River Room.
1987. That was before the zany of-
Being the ardent supponer of
fer of buy eight slices, get the ninth
campus activities that I am, I
free.
quickly dove into my bed, trying
The crowd was great, the beer
desparately to squeeze in a power
better and the operation smoothly
hour before the appointed time.
and efficiently run. Nice job. Let's
As I slept, dreams of worldwide
.
do it more often.
.
bottle redemption and unilateral
The next night was Halloween
disarmament of high interest rates
Soiree Supreme·, finding me deck-
filled my head.
ed out in the polyester of my hero
Not being able to decide between and role model: Rubin Kincade.
an adjustable rate or a fixed rate
Rubin, the energetic manager of
mortgage ravaged my REM sleep
the Partridge Family, perhaps best
and I awoke in a cold sweat.
epitomized my favorite decade and
That is, I thought I was awake.
made my formative years that
I
daintily dried myself with my
much better. A true national hero.
trusty EPCOT Center towel, and
From the crazy singles pads to
snuck down to the kitchen
in
search
the eye muffs for sleep, Rubin
of filet mignon with a fresh garden
covered all his bases. He had gigs
salad, baked potatoe and a slice of
constantly booked for the band
pumpkin pie.
and always had a babe in hand.
Giving up that fantasy, I began
Well, almost.
the process of making tuna on a
I missed the game, though I was
hot dog roll with a heany glass of
there in spirit. The A's romped in
Poughkeepsie Springs water.
the weirdest series in history, and
Things moved quickly as the in-
the spirit of Rubin and the 70's
tensity level turned up a notch.
romped on too.
Slipping "Louder Than Bombs"
From Travolta to Kincade to
by the Smiths, into the CD player
Devo and Jaws, the 70's covered
"Oscillating Wildly" kept the
the bases.
blood pumping, as thoughts of
Hey, just talkin' 'bout my
sophomores \\ildly stampeding my
generation.
house kept popping up.
Wes Zahnke is The Cittle's
I wondered what Morrissey
humor columnist.
j

























-
)
'
;
1989
-
90
H
OP
.SC
November is here.
The Mccann
.
Center is once
again lilied

with the sounds of
bouncing basketballs and blowing
whistles.

Soon--the stands will
·be'
full
·of
fans eager to see the Red Foxes
play -
right.
On the men's side -
improving
on last year's 13-15 record may be
difficult since graduation has taken
players like Miroslav Pecarski and
John Kijonek (right). However, both
the players and coaches are op-
timistic about their chances this
season.
Meanwhile, the
.Lady
Foxes are
gearing up for what could be a ban-
ner season since four starters are
returning from last year's team as
are many experienced players.
Basketball at Marist has grown
tremendously in recent years and
the following pages have been
.
designed to lend insight into the
1989-90 Marist basketball season.
No Prob
Marist finally
out of "Limbo"
-page
9
4
"'/l!,,.,.f
•....

..
,.:·
..
Frosh Hope
New recruits provide
hope for future
-page
9
...
'----------------
OP
*'1
/~,,,,f"
Up Tempo
Lady Foxes adopt
new offense -
page
1 O
























,
r
~
r
r
'
r
r
Foxes remain optimistic
despite being the hunted
by Mike O'Farrell
When the regular season opens
on November 25 against Mt. St.
Vincent, it will be the first time in
two years that the Marist men's
basketball team does not have a
burden hanging on its shoulders.
As the final buzzer sounded a
year ago, the two-year postseason
tournament ban imposed by the
NCAA was lifted.
The program has survived and
the Red Foxes are ready to play.
Head coach Dave Magarity said
it was a tough road, but the Red
Foxes are ready.
"No one can understand what
we went through," he said. "We
lived through it, though, and now
it is behind us and we are excited
and ready to go."
Last year, Magarity's Red Foxes
finished with a 13-15 record while
posting a 9-7 mark in Northeast
Confrence play.
But gone from last year are
Miroslav Pecarski and John Ki-
jonek who combined averaged
35
points and
14
rebounds a contest.
Also gone from last year is Reg-
gie Chambers. Averaging just
under 8 points a game, the
freshman point guard added spark
to
the
offense.
However,
Chambers withdrew from school
earlier in the year for personal
reasons.
According
to
Magarity,
Chambers does plan to come back
..
to Marist.
.
.
.
"He has a
great future and he
-
d<>es
,-
want
..
t<> c<>me back
to
Marist,,.,said Magarity.
Losses of that magnitude coupl-
ed with the team's injury situation
have left the Red Foxes wide open
for speculation on the
.upcoming
season -
and ; many have; not
predicted a good one.
Yet, the team and its coaches
have remained optimistic.
Most likely, the offensive.pro-
.
duction of the Red Foxes will come
from the perimeter.
Magarity has a group of players
who are all capable of connecting
from 3-point range.
"We
will
open up the floor,"
Magarity said, "and try to take ad-
vantage of our ability to shoot the
basketball."
The top returning scorer for
bounds a contest.
Marist is Steve Paterno.
A
6-foot-9-inch sophomore,
The
6-foot-3-inch
junior
Fitzsimons was involved in last
swingman averaged 10.5 points and
year's campaign partly because of
nearly four rebounds per game last
injuries to the starters.
year.
However, he took advantage of
A consistent scorer last year,
the opportunity and gave a solid
Paterno might also be the team's
performance last year.
best defensive player.
"He'll be able to pick up where
"We'll look to Steve for produc-
he left off last season," Magarity
tion, but we should have a more
said.
balanced attack," Magarity said.
Fitzsimons said he is excited
Paterno echoed that thought.
about the year and that the Red
"Outside shooting is the key,"
Foxes "are going to need equal
he said, "but we have a good group
play out of everyone this season."
of shooters. We will have to work
Another player who played well
hard."
at the end of last season is Siegrist.
Another outside threat for the
A Hyde Park native, Siegrist will
Red Foxes is Joey O'Connor.
captain this year's team and is ex-
The senior point guard averag-
pected to be a "solid contributor"
ed 8.8 points per game while also
in the front court.
pulling down 2.2 rebounds per
Junior college transfer Rod
contest.
Henderson is one of the newcomers
O'Connor is a major threat from
to this year's team.
behind the 3-pbint arc.
Henderson led his Pensacola
Last season, he was good on 56
(Fla.) Junior College to a con-
of his 125 attempts. Magarity feels
ference championship a season
that O'Connor is
"vastly
under-
ago.
rated" and that he will be an im-
An all-around
player, the
portant factor this year.
6-foot-5-inch junior averaged
14
"Joey is a big key," Magarity
points, five rebounds and three
said. "We need his ability
to
get
assists per game.
everyone involved
in
the offense."
Magarity said Henderson is a
The
third
starter returning from
capable outside shooter and has a
last season is senior forward Cur-
strong feeling for the game -
tis Celestine who averaged 7
.5
hopefully enabling him to con-
points and 5.5 rebounds a game
tribute right away.
last season for the Foxes.
That is as soon as he heals. A
Celestine, according to Magari-
broken bone in his hand will
ty, is having "an exceptional pre-
sideline the transfer for about a
season and we will look to Curtis.. moi\th.;
.
.
.
.
for
production."
•••


..


Fauber~
who hails from Holland,
"We
are
lacking in
size; so
we
--
will'also
be
needed for.immediate
are going to have to put emphasis
,,.
contributions.
o.n re:bounding

as : well
.
as
1
"(He) is a mature player who
shooting/' Celestine said.
-
:
-~
should. step rightin and help us
Helping Celestine in the front
out," Magclrity
said of the 6-foot-
court ~l be Ted Sharpenter, Tpm
.
nine-inch sophomore.
-Fitzsimons,
GeorgeiSiegrist an.d

Two players returning from last
newcomers Paui Fauber and Rod
season but could be considered
Henderson.
newcomers are Andy Lake and
According
to
Magarity,
John Slattery.


.
Sharpenter, a senior, does all the
Both playei:s suffered injuries
little things that do not show up in
last year that sidelined them for the
the box score.
season.



. .
.
''He is.
a
versatile player with
Lake suffered from an injured
great experience that will be a fac-
hamstring while Slattery fractured
tor on this year's squad," Magari-
his left index finger, twice.
.
ty said.
Both were granted medical hard-
Playing every game last year,
ship waivers -,- thus each still has
.
Sharpenter
contributed
and
four years of eligibility remaining
average of, five points and three re-
-at
Marist.
The inside game thilHhe Red,F.oxes·have beiri k®wn°forin:reeent,.years,wUh1
1
of the missing pieces of this year's offense.
,
With· the loss of Champers, Lake
will' become· more of
a
factor.
An outstanding
perimeter·
shooter, Lake will see time at both'
the guard positions.
"Andy is a tremendous athlete
with great open floor speed,"
Magarity said. "We will need pro-
duction from him."
Siattery is· a "fearless· re-
bounder" who will need to per-
form well inside for the Red Foxes;
"John is a very tough and ag-
gressive player," Magarity said.
Juniors Reggie Gaut and Bobby
.
Reasbeck are two players that had
tremendous freshman years and
suffered
-a
bit of a let down last
season.
·'
However, Magarity is confident
that both will have a great impact
this season..

Gaut, who averaged 3,3 points
per game last year, is another solid
shooter.:
"Reggie really fits our offense
well," Magarity said. "He is aver-
satile player that
can·
score inside
and out, we need a solid perfor-
mance from him."
Reasbeck, on the other hand,
averaged just under two points per
I
Marist stil/:going strong with
ctrcle
file photo
Marist basketball bas come to be known for
its
foreign connection.
Miro Pearski, who graduated last year, was one of the many the Red
Foxes have seen.
by Chris Shea
There are not too many college
basketball teams that, while on the
road, have had to face chants of
"U-S-A, U-S-A" from comedic
crowds during their pre-game
introductions.
Marist has.
The reason why opposing
crowds tend to become na-
tionalistic concerning Marist is due
to the number of foreign players on
the Red Fox roster.
Last
year, for instance, Marist
regularly started a lineup that was
60 percent foreign-born.
One factor that contributes to
the reason Marist lands the foreign
recruits is the willingness on the
part
of the coaching staff to put in
the time and effon to search for the
talent that is often overlooked by
other programs.
"People don't realize how well-
known Marist is overseas, especial-
ly Holland," said head coach Dave
Magarity.
When Magarity went to the
Netherlands last spring to recruit
Wilbert
Den
Ouden - who is now
a freshman - he said he was over-
"It was difficult to concentrate on recruiting
because I was always answering questions and
even signing autographs. It was a nice feeling
though. Obviously, the success of Rik had a lot
to do with it.''
whelmed by the magnitude of the
interest people had in Marist.
"It was difficult to concentrate
on recruiting because I was always
answering questions and even sign-
ing autographs," he said. "It was
a nice feeling though. Obviously,
the
success
of Rik (Smits) had a lot
to do with it."
Smits, who now plays with the
Indiana Pacers in the NBA, seems
to have become the symbol of
Marist basketball and the pinnacle
of overseas recruiting.
Ending his Marist career in 1988
as the all-time leader in numerous
categories, Smits was the second
player drafted overall -
behind
Danny Manning -
in the 1988
NBA draft.
Smits was followed to Marist by
Frenchman Rudy Bougarel and
Yugoslavian Miroslav Pecarski,
both of whom were able to eff
ec-
tively produce for Marist.

Now there is Den Oeden and
fellow Hollander Paul Fauber.
Den Ouden, being 7 feet I inch
tall, will obviously have his perfor-
mance corn~ed to that of Sm!ts·
Although he has been playmg
taslcetball for a short period of


























































November 2, 1989- THE CIRCLE- Page 9
Freshmen provide light .
at the end of the tunnel
by Mike O'Farrell
For the second year in a row, the
Marist men's basketball team has
lost two impact
players to
graduation.
The impact may be a bit harder
this year, though.
Two years ago, head coach Dave
Magarity Jost guard Drafton Davis
and center Rik Smits to the cap and
gown.
Smits, who is now playing for
the Indiana Pacers, was the second
player chosen in the 1988 National
Basketball Association draft -
behind Danny Manning.
Gone from last year are center
Miroslav Pecarski and forward
John Kijonek -
both of whom
were standouts who will be missed
by this year's club.
Pecarski averaged 19 points and
nine rebounds per game while Ki-
jonek averaged 15 points and
5
re-
bounds per game. Kijonek also
became a 1,000-point scorer in his
last game for Marist.
Realizing his returning strength
was in the back court, Magarity
and his staff brought in four big
men to help fill the void left by
Pecarski and Kijonek.
But not without complications.
Rod Henderson, Paul Fauber,
Sedric Veazey and Wilbert Den
Ouden were all brought to Marist
by Magarity and his coaching staff.
Both Veazey and Den Ouden,
however, are ineligible to play for
the Red Foxes this year and while
both players concentrate ·_on·
academics this yeart!vfagaritY.f~i~
he feels that they "are two real key
figures in our future."
Meanwhile, Henderson is out
nursing an injury.
Veazey, a 6-foot-8-inch forward
from Bridgeport, Conn., played
for Notre Dame High School where
he averaged 18 points, 15 rebounds
and six blocked shots per game. He
also led his team to the semifinal
round of the state tournament.
Veazey was a preseason
McDonald's All-American prior to
last year as well as a preseason
honorable mention All-American
by Street & Smith's Basketball
Yearbook.
Magarity said he
is
excited about
Veazey and is anxious to have him
ready for next season.
Den Ouden, being from the
Netherlands, is already being com-
pared to Smits even though he has
not played a single game.
At 7 feet
I
inch, it is an obvious
physical comparison, according to
Magarity.
"There are a lot of similarities,"
he said. "But it is unfair to com-
pare him with Rik."
Although he has not played a
great deal of organized basketball,
Den Ouden averaged 12 points, 11
rebounds and four blocked shots
per game in the Dutch Junior Club
League.
"I
am impressed with his desire
and aggressiveness," he said. "He
is also not afraid to get physical."
Although Veazey and Den
Ouden will not play until next
season, Paul Fauber and Rod
Henderson are expected to make
major contributions this year for
the Red Foxes.
Fauber, who also hails from
Holland, will be expected to help
out the untested front court of
Marist.
A 6-foot-9-inch sophomore,
Fauber was discovered almost by
accident, Magarity said.
"I saw Paul while watching
another game and I liked what I
saw," he said. "Paul has good
skills and is a mature player. We
look for him to make major con-
tributions for us this year."
Henderson was discovered on
the junior college level by Magari-
ty and his staff.
The 6-foot-5-inch junior from
Sanford, Fla., was a standout at
Pensacola Junior College following
his high school career.
Last season, while averaging 14
points, five rebounds and three
assists per game, Henderson led his
team to a 27-6 record and a con-
frence championship.
"Rod can score inside and out,
and he has a real feel for the
game," Magarity said. "He can
also shoot the 3-point shot and he
will help us become a better team."
However, due to a broken bone
in his hand, Henderson will be out
for three to four weeks. Henderson
broke the bone during a preseason
practice.
Despite losing Veazey and Den
Ouden for a season, Magarity said
he is excited about Henderson and
Fauber. "Both are solid and will
.help us out this year," he said.
Circle
file
photo
·ilt·,b&.as;prevalent,tbis1season .. Mil'o P.eurski.(43),will.be.one-,.,,.<,• ..
•,<>• .. ., .. -..:-

:::j,·.
,., .'~ll'!: ,
. ~· !
i;.
Probation_:_'no prob'
for diehard seven
,game. -
"Bobby is, shooting r.eal well,
: right now and he is ready to come
Red Foxes. back are injuries.
Injuries have plagued the Red
Foxes in the preseason
-
sometimes limiting them • to only
eight players at practice.
The Red Foxes'have some other
tough
competition
on ' their
schedule.
!
back strong," Magarity said. ,
"My contribution will ,help," .
ReasQeck said. "The guards are go-
ing to be a factor."
Magarity is optimistic and. feels_
this will be an exciting team to
•watch.
"We feel _comfortable to open
<'If we stay healthy, I have a real
good . feeling about this. team/'
Magarity said. ..
Because of the schedule, Marist
is being picked by many to finish
fifth in the Northeast Conference
and Magarity said he could _not-be
happier.
"I
like being in that position,"
he said. "The guys • have gone
through a great d~I of advers~ty
and they are real. hungry. They are
intense and dedicated. They will
relish that position."
. things up," he said. "Defensively,
we'll apply a lot of man to man
:pressure and try to creat offense
from our defensive pressure."
One thing that could hold the
The schedule for this season will
find Marist playing iii two
tournaments.,
Celestine agrees.with his coach.
"I
like the position we are in,"
he said. "This way, we
can
surprise
people -
and I think we will.".
its European connection
time, Magarity said Den Ouden has
exceUent work habits and a lot of
potential.
"He can only get better,"
Magarity said. "He's a player for
the future."
Unfortunately for Marist Den
Ouden will only
be
able to play in
the future - he has been declared
acedemically ineligible for this
year.
Magarity said he first heard
about Den Ouden from Smits'
father Ad.
A player who
can
play this year
is sophomore Paul Fauber - who
was discovered in Holland almost
by accident.
Magarity said he was there for
other recruiting purposes when he
noticed Fauber involved in a local
game.
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him to make significant contribu-
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I
by Mike O'Farrell
Would you buy a car if you knew that you could not drive it?
Would you play Division I basketball if you knew that at-some point
in your career you would not be eligible for post-season play?
The answer to the first question is most likely "no." However, the
second question was answered "yes" by seven Marist College athletes.
For the past two seasons, the Marist men's basketball team has been
ineligible for post-season tournaments due to sanctions handed down by
the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA).
When the final buzzer sounded last season against Loyola of Macyland,
though, a heavy burden was lifted off of the Marist program.
Head coach Dave Magarity, who inherited the problem, said it was
a rough road to recovery.
"No one can understand what we went through," he said. "It was
a difficult time for the program, but we survived and we are ready to
make a run this year."
Seven players decided they wanted to play basketball at Marist Col-
lege, even though the program was on probation.
Steve Paterno, George Siegrist, Bobby Reasbeck, Reggie Gaut, Andy
Lake, Tom Fitzsimons and John Slattery were all signed· by Magarity
and his staff.
Paterno, Siegrist, Reasbeck and Gaut suffered through two years of
probation while Lake, Fitzsimons and Slattery only had to play one year
under NCAA sanctions.
Paterno, who averaged 10.5 points per game last season as a
sophomore, said the fact that Marist was on probation had no real ef-
fect on his decision.
"Coming out of high school, I just wanted to play everyday," he said.
"At Marist I could do that - the probation really didn't bother me."
Paterno did note that it feels good to be free from the ban.
"The seniors are working real hard, as is everyone else, because we
want to surprise people," he said. "We are looking forward to our chance
at the tournament."
When asked how he initially felt about the probation, Reasbeck said,
"I
felt robbed. Coming here
I
thought about going to the tournament.
However, we then had to set different goals and work real hard. I have
no regrets, I gave my word to play."
"The tournament is all I've been thinking about," he said.
"I
want
us to be competitive and I want the school to be recognized."
Fitzsimons, a sophomore, only had to suffer through one year of
probation.
"I
have no regrets about coming to Marist whatsoever," said the
6-foot-9-inch forward.
"I
love the school and I love the coaching staff.
The probation never really entered my mind."

Fitzsimons also agreed that the team is excited about its new beginning.
"We really want the -tournament - we want to surprise everyone,"
he said.
Marist has lived through a tough time and now a burden has been
removed and the program is ready to move on and become successful
in postseason play.
"We survived the probation and now we want to move on to the
future," Magarity said.




















...
..
Page
10- THE CIRCLE-
November 2,
1989
Lady
Foxes set
to hound
with quick 'O'
by Chris Shea
Ken Babineau is optimistic.
The fourth-year coach of the
women's basketball team said he
sees the 1989-90 season as having
a bright horizon, following last
year's 13-15 finish but including an
impressive 11-5 in the Northeast
conference.
This is in contrast to the fact that
the team won just 16 games in the
previous two years ~ombined.
"I
think we're one of the top two
teams
in the conference,"
Babineau said. "We have an
outstanding chance to win 20
games."

Babineau said this is a goal
which he sees as realistic, and
which the team will work hard to
achieve.
"Our players are looking at this
year as being a big challange," he
said.
The key to the
J
989-90 season,
and the reason why Babineau is so
excited, is depth.
Marist will return eight players
from last year's team - including
four starters.
"The last three years we've only
been able to go eight or nine players
deep," he said. "This year we have
13 players and all of them can
play."
As a result of this depth,
Babineau has a lot of freedom in
formulating a game plan.
"Each player on this team has
strengths
and
weaknesses "
Babineau said. "We now have the
luxury of mixing and matching
combinations of players to suit the
game. We can go with a big lineup
or a small, quick lineup."
With so many capable players,
one would think it would be dif-
ficult to integrate playing time for
everyone.
However, Babineau has a plan.
"We plan on putting in a new
system which is really up-tempo,"
he
said.
"We're going to have rapid
substitutions, a lot of running fast
breaks, and pressing on defense.
"We're going to send wave after
wave of players and just wear down
our opponents."
. Returning to the Red Fox lineup
1s
first-team all-conference point
guard Maureen Dowe.
Last year, as a junior, Dowe
averaged more than six points and
three rebounds per game. She also
finished second in the league in
assists.
Dowe will play an important part
in the Red Fox game plan. She,
along with sophomore transfer
Claudia "Woody" Butler will dic-
tate the pace of the "up-tempo"
offense.
Although Dowe is slated to start,
Babineau says she and Butler will
see equal playing time.
"I'm
very impressed with
Woody," Babineau said. "She's
going to push Maureen for the star-
ting spot."
Also returning to the Red Foxes'
lineup are forwards
Monica
O'Halloran
and
Danielle
Galarneau.
O'Halloran,
a 5-foot-8-inch
junior, led Marist in points, field-
goal percentage, free-throw percen-
tage and steals - good enough to
be
named
second
team
all-conference.
For the past two years,
Galarneau, a junior, has been play-
ing center -
out of her natural
position. As a result she has been
unable to play up to her potential.
This year Galarneau is being
shifted to power forward and
Babineau said he thinks she will
explode.
"I
think Danielle is going to have
a fantastic year," he said. "She's
our best low-pose scorer, and this
year she'll have smaller people
defending her. "
To present further proof of how
deep and talented this year's Red
Fox team is -
there is Nancy
Holbrook.
Last year Holbrook finished se-
cond on the team in points - with
12.7
per game -
and was named
second team all-conference -
despite starting just 11 games,
This year, however, Holbrook
faces serious competition to earn
even the starting spot at shooting
guard.
Mary O'Brien and Jennifer
O'NeH are, according to Babineau,
"our purest shooters."
Both are coming off major knee
troubles, but
so
far have respond-
ed well in the preseason.
Having a healthy O'Brien and
O'Neil would be a big boost for
Marist.
O'Brien is Marist's most ac-
curate three-point shooter, and
over the final five games last year
she averaged 10.3 points a game.
O'Neil missed all of last year
with an injury, so, in her final year
at Marist, she hopes to revert back
to her freshman form when she
averaged 15.4 points a game.
Also complicating the shooting
guard picture is senior Laura
Trevisani. Trevisani is a three-time
letter winner who knows the Marist
system, and will ultimately see
playing time.
Whoever ends up at the shooting
guard position, one thing is certain,
they'll put up three-point shots by
the truckload.
Last year Marist led the con-
Circle
file photo
. Mary O'Brien (42) will be one of the four returning starters when the Lady Foxes hit the court this year.
ference in three point attempts, arid
this year, according to Babineau,
"you'll see more-'...'.
However, Babineau insists
.the
shot is just one weapon in his
arsenal.
"We won't live and die with it,"
,
he says.
Kim Smith-Bey is also set to
return tor her senior year.
Smith-Bey, at 5-foot-9-inches, is
the team's most tenacious re-
bounder and best defensive for-
ward. She is often assigned the job.
of guarding the opposition's best
scorer.
.
Although she isn't slated to start,
she will see a great deal of playing
time. Babineau has her set as the
backup for both forward positions:

The one starting spot that will
not be filled by a returning starter
is that of center.
That job belongs to Ruth Halley,
a 6-foot-3-itlch
junior
from
Ireland.
At the beginning of training
camp, the position was supposed to
be a battle

between Halley and
freshman Lisa Chmielewski.
However, Halley improved so
much, she now appears to have
earned the nod ..
Halley has been a standout
defensively, but now she has work-
ed extremely hard to develop her
offensive game, Babineau said.
Alon~ with Chmielewski, two
other freshmen are expected to
contribute to this year's squad.
Charlene Fields and Jennifer
Staton are both considered excep-
tional athletes.
• Fields averaged 23 points in her
senior year of high school and is ex-
pected to play the shooting guard
and small forward positions.
Staton is an extremely versatile
athlete who played at each of the
five positions during her high
school career. Babineau is expected

to use her in the shooting guard
role.
"I
really believe we are going to
have a successful year," Babineau
said.
"I
hope the fans come out,
support us, and realize how hard
these girls have worked.
I
guarantee we are going to play an
extremely exciting brand of basket-
ball."
Freshmen give strength to solid team
by
Chris Shea
"I
think this is one of the best recruiting
classes we've ever had," said Ken Babineau,
Marist women's basketball coach.
This statement basically sums up just how
good he believes the· women's 1989-90
recruits are.
The four new faces - three freshmen and
a sophomore transfer - will join an already
talented nucleus of players.
This combination of the new with the old
is what Babineau hopes will bring Marist a
conference title.
Here are some outlines of the new faces
that will be seen on the court this year for
the Lady Red Foxes:
Oaudia Butler -
She is
a
S-foot-6-inch
guard who transfered to Marist from Boston
University but due to NCAA regulations she
was forced to sit out all of last season. She
was a three-year captain and all-conference
player at Rensselaer
(N.Y.)
High School and
also holds her high school's record for most
points in a game with 44. According to
Babineau, she will see a lot of playing time
this year.
Lisa Chmielewski -
As a 6-foot-4-inch
center from St. Catherine Academy in the
Bronx, she is the tallest player ever to come
to Marist. She averaged 24.2 points and 16.1
rebounds in her senior year, and will see a
good deal of pla~
time at back-up center.
Charlene Fields -
A S-foot-9-inch
guard/forward from Notre Dame Gibbons
High School in Schenectady, N. Y. where she
was the all-time leading scorer. Fields was
named ~rrst-team all-conference in her junior
and senior years and she will see most of her
playing time in the shooting guard and small
forward positions.
Jennifer Staton - A 6-foot forward from
Eastlake High in Ohio. She was the teams
MVP
t"!"ice
as she averaged 12.5 points and
5.3 ass1Sts per game in senior year. Those
stats qualified her for an honorable mention
alJ..state
award.
She is definitely a candidate
for
a
starting position in the future.

















November 2, 1989- THE C/RCL~ - Page 11
AIDS ___________
c_o_n_ti_n_ue_d
__
fr_o_m_p_ag.:..e_l_
Don't
Drink
and
Peddle~},
__
Four years ago, Vassar College
established an AIDS Task Force
whose focus • has shifted from
educating
the community to
counseling students whose behavior
- through homosexuality or multi-
ple sex partners - has put them at
a higher risk, according.to Irvine.
At Marist,
some
information is
discreetly available. Students can
find brochures and posters explain-
ing the AIDS threat in the Office
of Health Services in the Byrne
Residence. Student affairs person-
nel watched the video, "AIDS:
Changing the Rules,"
which
students may borrow.
And about 40 of Marist's 3,500
students attended two low-key
AIDS information workshops that
were offered on campus this
semester.
"The more we (Marist) can do
to get AIDS information out, the
better,"
said Jane O'Brien,
Marist's director of Health Ser-
vices. "Students don't think this is
an issue - they're at an age where
they seem to think they are in-
vulnerable to certain problems.
AIDS is one of them."
A Mattress Campus?
Mattress Marist, that's what
West Point cadets have affec-
tionately dubbed the. college.
Indeed, O'Brien says every week
she sees one to three cases of
sexually-transmitted diseases.
Students, too, agree the label is
not off the mark.
In random conversations with
students last week, men said many
women don't respect the commit-
ment that accompanies sexual
relations.
One Marist freshman, who ask-
ed not to be identified, said he
found his girlfriend in bed with
another guy last week.
"A girl can sleep with one guy
at 8 p.m. and a few hours later
she's hanging out with the kid's
friend," he said. "Girls are no
challenge
here.
Sex is not
something they cherish."
One in six teen-age girls had four
or more sex partners during her
teen years, according to the Train-
ing Center for Health Professionals
in New York City.
At least part of the cause of pro-
miscuity is a double standard men
practice when it· comes to sexual
relations, women said.
"Guys talk about us ifwe won't
sleep with them and they talk about
,us
if we do," said Trisha Coffee,
a sophomore from Long Island.
"Either way, we're trapped."
Coffee said she wouldn't be sur-
prised if students had 10 sex part-
ners during their four years at
Marist.
But O'Brien said Marist students
are not more sexually active than

other college students.
Nationwide, 80 percent of males
and 70 percent of females are sex-
ually active by age 20, according to
the Center for Population Options.
"I'm not here to tell students to
be sexually active or not," O'Brien
said. "I'm here to tell them to have
responsibility -
to take

the
necessary precautions. Right now,
the only thing that we have to
guard against AIDS (for sexually
active students) is a condom."
'Condom Sense'
Pulling out a condom during her
presentation in the Fireside Lounge
three weeks ago, Gerri Pozzi-
Galuzzi, an ARCS volunteer and
instructor of the AIDS education
course at Dutchess Community
College, urged students to practice
safe sex.
"Condoms should be available
in a fishbowl in Health Services,"
she said. "There should also be
condoms available in every man's
room and in every woman's room.
Having sex with a condom is
magnificent."
Calling her philosophy "condom
sense," she asked if condoms
should be available on campus.
The 25 people present, including
O'Brien, raised their. hands in
agreement.
Senior Tony Pantelo demonstrates the effects of alcohol on riding a tri-cycle ~s senior
Brendon McDonald (holding
Mike)
looks on. The event was held during the college's
Alcohol
Awareness
Week.
Circle photo/Nathan Robinson
When SUNY New Paltz install-
ed condom vending machines near-
ly two years ago, students express-
ed interest in a similar system at
Marist.
However, Peter Amato, assistant
dean of student affairs, said the
college should not provide con-
doms but rather a broader educa-
tion of human sexuality.
Amato said he and Brother
Joseph Belanger, in a conversation
last spring, discussed the possibili-
ty of a college-wide
convocation on
human sexuality. No further plans
were made, he said.
Belanger, a French professor,
said although
Marist
needs
"massive AIDS education," con-
doms aren't the solution.
"Condoms aren't the answer -
they decrease the risk of AIDS but
they're not going to solve your pro-
blems," Belanger said. "Believe
that you can say no."
Amato said if students don't abs-
tain from sexual activity and they
want condoms, they
.
should _be
responsible enough to get them off
campus.
"Our students are certainly
capable of getting alcohol when
they want it," he said. "Condoms
are no different. Our students are
not ignorant about the world of
materialism.''
However, contraception isn't the
issue here. While Marist ad-
ministrators
frown upon the
availability of birth control on
campus, for more than three years
a nurse practitioner has been com-
ing to
Marist
to
provide
gynecological services - including
prescriptions for the birth control
pill which does not guard against
AIDS.
On her Monday night visits to
Marist as part of the college health
plan in conjunction with St. Fran-
cis Hospital, Ann Bollmann says
she discusses birth control options
with students who express interest.
"If
you don't believe there's in-
tercourse on this campus, you're
hiding your head in the sand," she
said. "Condoms are the common
sense thing to make available, but
that's an administrative choice. If
it were my choice, I'd probably
have them here."
O'Brien said condoms should be
distributed on campus, but she's
not certain how.
Nationwide, colleges have tried
a variety of approaches.
Dartmouth College students
have taken their AIDS IOI class -
which includes skits on condom use
and condom distribution -
to
other college campuses throughout
the country. And
in
honor of
Halloween a student group at
Lafayette College distributed can-
dy and condoms to all student
mailboxes.
Ultimately,
Mike,
who says he'
probably acquired the disease
through multiple heterosexual part-
ners, said the issue lies in being
responsible.
"You should know how you can
get AIDS and that you can get it,"
he
said.
"Once you have that in-
formation, be responsible.
If
that
means buying a 36-pack of con-
doms, do it."
Second Annual RTNDA/Marist Advisory Council Conference
STAND OUT FROM
THE CROWD
BECOME AN RA/UC
''Inf o-tainment
on the News:
Tabloid Television''
A penetrating look at the role and responsibility
of the media in contemporary society. Featuring
a panel of distinguished broadcast journalists, pro-
ducers and news directors.
Saturday, November 11, 1989
9 am - 5:30 pm
Marist Campus Center
Open to the
entire Marist
community
For complete
agenda, contact
the Communications
Dept. LT 213
REQUIREMENTS:
-2.5 Cum. G.P .A.
-no major discipline history
-internships limited to 6 er.
INFORMATIONAL MEETINGS:
*11/6 - 7:30 - Fireside Lounge
* 11 /7 - 7: 30 - Gregory Lounge
*11/8 - 9:30 - Leo Stone Lounge
APPLICATIONS DUE 11/10/89
INTERVIEWS 11/13 - 11/17
Additional information and
materials can be obtained
·from
the Housing Office.
cc
270






















...
Page
12 • THE CIRCLE- November 2, 1989
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Nove~ber-2, 1989- i:HE CIRCLE- Page 13
PS/2
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---~---·--
t'
-----------·-
-
-··
--
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.,
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..
..,
--
'Talking'
u/J
a storm
Ed McGarry
It's
a.
little
known
fact
that ...
I should have gone with my in-
itial instincts, plain and simple.
You see, my initial instincts told
me I was crazy to go see a movie
that starred Kirstie Alley, the voice
of Bruce Willis, and some guy
claiming to be· John Travolta. The
real John Travolta passed away
after "Grease," didn't he?
Well, my initial_ instincts were
right.
But you see, the previews actual-
ly looked fairly promising, so I
said, "What the heck, I'll give it a.
shot."

The movie I am.speaking of -
for those of you who have been
watching
WTZA
for too long --- is
"Loo·k Who's Talking" starring
those screen
·legends.
I mentioned
abo·ve
·and
a 'number of cute
-little -
babies.
.
The worst part of this movie is.
that it is a good, semi-original idea
that simply wasn't done well.
...

·•·.
·-:
---Certificate
of Appreciatioll--'---_--
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lt.t.lrJ.,tion
.
:
Quickly, the movie is about a
32-year-old single woman (Alley)

who gets pregnant by her rich and
married lover. He decides to get
another lover,:one who is not preg-:
nant presumably,_
;~nd
thus she
must find a father for her baby.
Travolta plays the taxf cab driver.
who takes.her on an adventurous
trip to the hospital when she goes
....
..
t__:___.:.__ _________________
~~
..
----------'-~-----:------:--"'."".
..
~"."""""7,, -. _
___,
into labor.
He is mistaken by hospital staff
as the baby's father and is forced

-
into the de\ivery room to watch""the~--
••
birth. After witnessing the birth
Travolta becomes attached to the
baby and offers to baby sit. Ally
accepts and the rest of the movie
is spent with Travolta trying to con~
vince Alley that he would be a good
father for the baby.
We never truly find out whether
or not they actually get married but
the viewer is left with a pretty good
idea. I guess
you can say
that the
movie·ends with a sequel in mind.
You know, something like "Look
Who's Taking Again" or "Look
Who's Still Talking."
So much for the plot,
The babies in
'"Look

Who's
Taking" are great paiticularly con-
sidering how hard it is to get babies
to do what you want them to. In
fact much of the film includes
scenes that were not written but the
babies did something unexpected
and the director liked it so it.was
included.
Believe
it
or not, though, the
cast
wasn't too bad. Even Alley.was
okay.

You see, no matter what Alley
does
she
has
two strikes against her
_-beca\ise
she screwed up '"Ch~ers:"
Therefore. saying she was okay is
probably a bigger compliment than
I really want to give her.
Even more amazing is that the
.
disco maniac himself, Vinny Bar-
.
barino, was great. If it wasn't for
Travolta the mo\'ie would have
been
a
disaster. He actually show-
'.
ed
a
certain degree of acting abili-
,
ty
and played
a
very likable
·
character. He handled the baby

scenes very well, which is
: something in
itself.
_··
Willis was pretty good as the
: voice
of the
baby -
how.hard
can
: it
be'-,.:....
out
better lines from· the
writers would have_
m~de (or~~-
·:
ter performance. I guess you
can

say for the
first time
ii:t
his life he
Vlr-a.5
involved in something
that was
_ lousy and it wasn't his fault. Con-
: gratulations Bruce.

Ed McGarry is The Qrcle's
entertainment roltimnist.
R~e.~m-i-n-d-:e-r·
OFF
CAMPUS
STUDENTS
LIVING-
IN LOCAL
NEIGHBORHOODS
are invited to a meeting
at 5:30 P.M. today
Campus
Center
249
.
W-A-N-T--E-D
Student
Written
One-Act
Plays
.
for the Jqhn.
·p
.. Anderson, '86,: Mero~ti~l:·Award.
Competition
••
•.·

·-
..
• ••
:
..

:-_.
!,
:
•.
-
.
. '
Plays
should
run-15-20
minutes,
emphasize
character,
and develop
a.,single
issue
within
a simple
setting
(avoid
complex
set requirements.)
It is strongly
recommend~d
that the
play be written in one scene.
Submitted
plays may be staged
for. the college.~s
annual
festival
of student
written_
plays.
.
· ·
.

For a play to be considered
for the Anderson
award
(presented
at the threatre
organiia-
tion
's annual
recognition
ceremony)
and/or
for use in Festival
'90 by-threatre
workshop
students,
it must be properly
submitted.
The:
script-SflQuld:b8
_pone
Orf
a wofd proc·ess-
fng cj'evice,
double
spaced,
ano-on
the cover.sheet
provide
information
on
-how·the
·playwright
can be reached
during·
the semester
and the winter intersession.
,
Scripts
will be accepted
by G.A.
Cox,
Office
of Student
Affairs,
Rm. 264 Campus
Center.
Drop
scripts
off at this office
anytime
before
Fri., 8 Dec. 1989.
J
;r
.
l
I

I
,,
1-.











































----------------------------..--------:------r----------------
------
November 2, 1989~.
THE CIRCLE- Pag~ 15
.
.
•.·
..
-
.

.
.
Drugs---
continued from page 16
Griffith will meet with coaches
and players sepatately in order to
keep the pressure at the lectures at
a minimum, Marinelli said.
As
far as drug use goes at Marist,
Marinelli said that steroids are not
the big problem.
.
"We have a minimum steroid
problem here," he said. "It pro-
bably leads more toward other
drugs."
Although the lecture is man-
datory for all varsity athletes;
Marinelli said players on club,
teams such as hockey and·
volleyball have been invited.
Soccer_---
Continued from page 16
weren't in the games and so we
didn't play well." .
The Red Foxes bounced back
last Saturday to defeat Manhattan
College 3-1.

Mark Edwards, Sean Cullen and
Joe Purschke had the goals , for
Marist -
Purschke and Edwards
also each had an assist.
While they sit and watch as their
fate is determined by other con-
ference teams, the Red Foxes still
have
two
regular-season games on
which to concentrate.
Marist Basketball fans will not have to pack the Mccann center this season to see the Red Foxes play.
"Just by education you can scare
kids," he said. "That's what we're
trying to convey."
Marist will travel to to face what
Goldman calls a very aggressive,
physical Pace University team on
Nov.
1.
A new television contract will air the games live in the Hudson Valley.
Circle file photo
Hudson -Valley
·now tuned in
.
.
.
live hoops
On Nov. 8, the Red Foxes round
out their regular season hosting
Central Connecticut State Univer-
sity - one of the top ranked teams
by
Anndalena· Glaze
When turning on the television
to watch college basketball action,
one of the last things many would
expect to see would ;be· a live
telecast of the Marist Red Foxes.
However, through a contract
abridgment made with Colony
Sports, a U.S. Cablevision Net-
work subsidiary, and Kingston-
based television station WTZA, the
Marist Red Foxes will be broadcast
live during prime-time hours for all
13 home games.
"We started working on the
abridgment to the previous con-
tract in the begining of August,"
said Marist Director of Athletics
Gene Doris. "But the idea of go-
ing live had been talked about
before."
Colony's executive producer Bud
Breheney approached Gene Col-
lins,
WTZA
station manager, this
summer with idea of the joint
Off
campus
Continued. from page _1
permanent and stable.
Evidence of a "permanent and
stable" household is residents with
the same legal address, common
ownership
of furniture
and
residence together for more than a
year.
The letter warns that unless
students submit a list of their
houses' residents to the town, the
zoning department will pursue the
violations,
holding both the
residents
and the landlord
responsible.
According to some students who
received the letters, this action has •
landlords worried and has students
concerned about a possible violas.
tion of their civil rights.
Pierrette Gavigan, a senior who
lives at 145 Washington St., said
her landlord told her and her three
housemates that: one of them may
have to leave.
Students residing at Dean Place
face the same fate.
A Dean Place resident, who ·ask-•
ed
not to
be
identified; • said his
landlord
wants one of his
housemat,-s to move out, but the
students, who. have informally
spoken with a lawyer; said their
rights
are
being violated.
·«It's harassment. Ask any
lawyer and they'll say that our
rights
are being violated," the
stu-
dent said.
Richard Canter.
a
lawyer
for
the
City of Poughkeepsie, refused
to
~t
OD
the matter.
Students from Dean Place said
they are waiting
to
bear
from the
American
avil
L&'l,crtics
Union
(ACLU),
whom
tbcymntactcd last
week, while studeats
residing
on
Maryland Avenae
said
they
will
contact the
Aa.u
if any men~
blems
occur.
.
venture.
"It's jokingly called an 'unholy
alliance' considering that they (the
two stations) are competitors,"
Doris said. "But I think everyone
involved is excited about it," said
Doris.


The Red Foxes had previously
been televised through Colony
Sports on a tape-delay basis.
But according to Doris the tape-
delay broadcasts had its problems.
"One concern over the tape-
delay broadcasts was getting it out
on time," he said. "Sometimes the
games weren't televised until two
days after the game. With the live
broadcasts, the games will air
around 7:55 p.m. closer to tip-
off."
Another problem with the
previous contract was the large
number of homes that did not
recive the Colony Sports Network
broadcasts.
"Colony is not a part
of
Poughkeepsie cable, so a lot of
homes were not being reached,"
Doris said. "With the abridgment
of the WTZA station, we'll be open
to a bigger market and more than
double the number of home
viewers."
Skepticisim over the live telecasts
hurting spectator turn-out was not
a serious concern to Doris or coach
Dave Magarity.
Magarity said that with the live
telecasts reaching more viewers he
believes crowds will increase.
"We have one of the best crowds
in our league," he said. "They're
going to come see us play. Because
it's going to be live adds to the ex-
citement of the game."
they were excited with the prospect
of the coverage Marist College will
be getting through the telecasts.
'.'More coverage will help
Marist, people will start to realize
who you are,'' Doris said.
The Admissions Office said it is
happy about the exposure as well.
"I'm pleased with the idea," said
Harry Wood, director of admis-
sions, noting that the added ex-
posure will reach more people and
help promote Marist in a positive
way.
Colony plans to air a halftime
program called "Marist College
Profile." The segment will focus
on the various aspects of Marist
and the programs the college
offers.
"If the product is good, the
crowds will come," Doris said.
"Even more, when they see Marist
on T.V. they're going to say, 'Hey,
The home games will be televis-
that's pretty good basketball,' "
ed live this season on a trial-run
Doris said.
basis to be evaluated at the end of
Both Doris and Magarity said _ . the basketball season.
in New England.

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_____
sgor
ts
Redmen scalp gridders;
Marist still in losing skid
by Mike O'Farrell
For the third week in a row, the
Marist College football team has
come up empty .
Last Saturday, the Red Foxes
traveled to meet St. John's. The
trip, however, was unsuccessful as
the Redmen handed the Red Foxes
a 34-7 loss.
Two weeks ago, over mid-term
break, the Red Foxes fell to the
Engineers of RPI by a score of
33-10.
RPI had led.· by just ten points
lat_e in the game -
however, two
quick scores put the game out of
reach for Marist in its final home
game of the season.
The Red Foxes also dropped 'a
35-14 contest to Coast ·Guard on
October 14 .
Despite losing three games in a
row, Marist still has a chance to
win the conference championship
because all three defeats were at the
hands of non-confrence foes.
The first step towards the title
comes Saturday when Marist
travels to the nation's capital to
take on Gallaudet University. This
past weekend, Gallaudet downed
Stevens Tech 27-12.
If Marist wins both Saturday and
next Friday night against Brooklyn
College, they will be confrence
champions.
Last week, the high-powered of-
fensive attack of St. John's down-
ed Marist 34-7. The Red Foxes are
now 3-4-1 with just_ the two games
left on the schedule.

Marist was hampered by injuries
against .the Redmen -
the entire
starting backfield was out of the
game due to injury, quarterback
Dan O'Donnell missed the game
because of a separated shoulder
and running backs Dan McElduff
and Scott Defalco were also out of
action to nurse injuries.
.
Stepping in for O'Donnell was
freshman Ken Rahn who was mak-
ing his first collegiate start.
Rahn completed 15 of his 39
passes for 209 yards and one
touchdown.
However, he was also in-
tercepted four times by the Redmen
defense.

~
"There was pressure on him,"
said Maristcoach Rick Pardy. "He •
will be a really good player - he's
only a freshman."
Averaging 45 points per game,
St. John's is ranked seventh in
Division III.
The Redmen scored first when
Steve Nieves picked off a Rahn
pass and returned it 24 yards for a
touchdown in the first quarter. The
Red Fox defense was tough,
however. St. John's was not able
to gain a first down until the second
quarter.
Quarterback Scott Scesney, who
is being scouted by the pros, hit
Denis McDermott on a 53-yard
touchdown strike at 8:32 of these-
cond quarter -
putting the
Redmen on top 13-0.
Scesney completed 11 of 28
passes for 235 yards and 3
touchdowns on the day. McDer-
mott caught four of those passes
for 145 yards.
St. John's pulled ahead 20-0
when Scesney connected with An-
thony Amalfitano from 15 yards
out.
That was the extent of the scor-
ing in the first half.
The Redmen kept things rolling
in the third quarter. Scesney again
found Amalfitano, this time from
24 yards out to put his team ahead
27-0.
On its very next possession, St.
_John's running back Manny
Tsantes scampered 63 yards on a
draw play to cap the Redmen's
scoring at 34 points. St. John's did
not score in the fourth quarter.
"That was just a great football
team," said Pardy.
The sole Marist score came at
10:51 of the fourth quarter when
Rahn connected with Steven
LoCicer-o
for
an
I I-yard
touchdown strike. Chris Douglas
added the extra point making it
34-7.
The Red Fox defense, which was
in the top
IO
of Division
III
earlier
this season, has now given up over
30 points in each of the last three
games.
Marist athletes required to hear
lecture about drug
awai:eness
With the rash-of drug-related in-
cidents and deaths that have ap-
peared across the nation's sporting
scene in recent times, the Marist
athletic department has decided to
help its own program.
In an effort to promote an
awareness of drugs and their effects
on the body, every Marist varsity
athlete.must attend a lecture being
offered this week on that very
topic ..
Gordon Griffith, a naJionally
reknow~ed speaker on drug issues,
was hired by the departinent _to
deliver his message this week in twc;>
lectures-. one Wednesday and one
·today.
Athletic Trainer Glenn Marinelli
said that the athletes can definite-
ly benefit from a program of this
nature.
"We are trying to bring about an
awareness of what drugs can do to
you," he said.
Griffith has given many lectures
of this type - including one at the
NCAA convention in 1987.
He is involved with the Califor-
nia State Police and is a regular
speaker for the NFL. He has also
spoken at colleges and·universities
such as the University of Nebraska.
and the University, of Colorado.
According to Marinelli, just
because Griffith is coming to_
speak
does not necessarily mean Marist
has a drug problem.
"I don't think we have a drug
problem here," he said. "But we
need the awareness because if we
get into the NCAA (postseason
tournament), everyone gets drug
tested.
"Drug
use here is at a
minimum."
The dynamics of Griffith's lec-
tures often have a lasting effect,
Marinelli said.
"There are times at lectures like
these that he gets five or six people
to· tum tbemselves in," he said.
"~e at least g~ts them thinking."
Continued on page 15
National pastime to sport
Tilt yQur head way bac!c, stick
.your nose-in the~
~'1
take a deep
.breath.
Wha.t do you smell?
Barring
any .
interf~rcnce from
the Huqson River, yo_u shou,ld be
able to tell that baseball is
in the
air.
That's right -
baseball.
for catchers) does not mean the
l~veJ of ·play. will not be
competitive. • •
Glancing over the rosters will not
only bring many people back to
their childhOQd
~s
but also give
any sport$ fan an indication of the
caliber. of baseball capable. of be-
ing played.
Thursday
Morning
Quarterback
Page 16 - THE CIRCLE-.NovembFr2, 1989
Circle
photorrony Uanino
Marist's Sean Cullen (6) and Mark Edwards
(16)
control the ball for
the Red Foxes during last week's soccer action at Leonidoff.
Booters hopes slim
following rough span
by Chris Shea
The Marist mens soccer may
have
..
ended.
any
hopes
of
postseason play when the team
recorded a 2-3 record over its last
five outtings.
"We don't know yet," said head
coach Howard Goldman referring
to whether or not his team will
qualify for the-conference playoffs.
"It dependson. the. outcome of the
Monmouth-St. Francis game."
The key loss occurred to con-
ference foe Long Island Universi-
ty by the score of 2s0.
LIU scored 23· minutes into the
second half-to give it a lead it would
never relinquish.
Marist came out strong at the
start of the-game using.emotion to
set the pace. However
a
very
talented LIU team would not give
up any ground and the teams. end-
ed the first half. tied 0-0.
The second half was just the op-
posite of the first, though - with
LIU coming out strong and Marist
flat.
"They made some key ad-
justments,"
said
Goldman.
"They've got a very skillfull team
and when we came out a little slow
to start the half they took advan-
tage."
The loss to LIU was the team's
third in a row -
all shutouts.
Goldman said he believes his
team, in realizing the importance of
the LIU game, may have started
looking forward to it too early. As
a result not enough attention was
paid to earlier contests against
Hofstra and Fairfield.
"When we got off the bus we
knew we were better than those
teams," Goldman said in reference
to Hofstra and Fairfield. "But we
Continued on page 15
o/d:...fime·
hardball
There are.also those teams in the
SPBA that look like reunions from
the teams. ofthe-1970's.

• • The Winter Haven Super Sox -
whose home is .the spring training
home for the Boston Red Sox -
are the premier example of this.
Under
the
control
of
when they're no longer wanted in
· the big leagues .
Hey,
Gary
Carter, Keith Her-
nandez, Jim Rice, Lee Mazzilli,
Steve Balboni and Darrell Evens -
the SPBA is calling!
The end of the World Series
us-
ed to mean the end of the national
pastime until spring -
but now
baseball is a year-round sport.
The roster for the West Palm
Beach Tropics, who are the con-
sidered the favorite for the league
title, includes a pitching staff with
such notables
as
Rollie Fingers,
Ray Burris and Tim Stoddard; an
infield with Toby Harrah and Dave
Kingman at the corners; and and
outfield of Lee Lacy, Tito
Lan-
drum and Mickey Rivers.
__ Ja_y_R_e_y_no_l_d_s
_______
player/manager Spaceman Bill
Lee, the Super Sox sport a roster
This league will fly because the
players and managers in the SPBA
appear to be quite serious about
their undertaking -
and not just
any ex-major leaguer will find a
spot on the roster .
Like the Professional Golfers'
Tour with its Senior To.ur, so
baseball now has its own -
the
Senior Professional
Baseball
Association.
The eight
teams
in the league will
each play a 72-game schedule
which
began
Wednesday night
in
the spring training sites across
Florida. The season runs through
Jan. 31.
There are those who don't think
this league has a chance to get off
the ground - they couldn't be far-
ther from the truth.
Just because the minimum age
for a player in the SPBA is 35 (32
To top it all off, the Tropics are
managed by Dick Williams - the
manager of the Oakland Athletics
the last time they won the Series.
The Tropics are not the only
team with talent, though.
The Gold Coast Suns, for exam-
ple. under the direction of manager
Earl Weaver, present pitchers
Grant Jackson and Louis Tiant -
who have 18 and 19 years of pro
experience, respectively - another
opportunity to play.
The Suns have obtained Bert
Campaneris and Derrel Thomas
for their infield - those two alone
played a combined 34 years of
major-league ball.
And who knows -
the Suns
could also be the vehicle for the
se-
cond coming of Jesus.
Joining 17-year veterans Paul
Blair, Cesar Cedeno and George
Hendrick in the outfield will be
Jesus de la Rosa -
who didn't
quite make it in his only profes-
sional season with the Houston
Astros.
with names quite familiar up north.
Bil_l Campbell,
Ferguson
Jenkins,
John LaRose
Jim
Willoughby and Rick Wise'are all
in Winter Haven to take the mound _
for the Super Sox while Gary
Allenson, Cecil Cooper, Butch
Hobson and Bernie Carbo handle
their respective duties in the field.
. A
glance throughout the league
will
present familiar names from
both last year and 10 years ago and
it seems the league will be good
enough to attract other players
J. R. Richard, who led the Na-
tional League in strikeouts when he
pitched for the Astros, came to the
Orlando Juice's camp saying he
would be the league's best pitcher.
He was cut for weighing more
than 300 pounds.
Who knows - if I start training
now, keep the arm in shape and the
glove oiled ...
Jay Reynolds
is TIie Orde's
sports
cohmulist.