The Inner Circle, April 25, 1996.xml
Media
Part of The Inner Circle: Vol. 3 No. 1 - April 25, 1996
content
:/ .,ti~~!"
Mari.
Volume 3, Number l
,
:,,.,-Mfilist'College; Poughkeepsie;'N.Y. - --_
· ·_
,,'- -•
•
-- ---- - - -- -
:April~S,
1996 .
-
·
--. -\ _.---_-- ___ --_ . ·: · __ -•
·
... ~->::.·::- - -·•-· _ --,-:•:
·t--
·
_,_ ·_•-:.
--Marist sal~ryincreases
Plans
for· modem
library 1n
the works
-_ -· ·
•-u··
1
___ ·. ·
t· · _
1
-__ -...
· - · · -
· · ·
-
- -> - •,
·
par~
~
na 1ona n~es
·by
Kristin
Richard _
·current positions." _
_
Asst. News.Editor
·,
Although the iu~.mes ofprofes-
.
·
sors who do not receive top sala-
. 'salaries fo~prof~ssors and ad~. ries
are
confidential. ihe aver-
miriistrators at Mari st· continue age salary . this .-year. for a full
·to infrease, but
.
they re1nain
professorwas$57,486. Theav- .
compar~l>le to h1stitution_s
of
erage compensation includin_g -·
·- simHar size.
··
-. benefits was $74,925.
· I>e~nis J.Miu-ray~ president <>f
. For an associate professor, the
Marist College, receiveg this
average ·salary was $48,335,
year's highest-_ salary of · with an average compensation
· $195,000;:analmost $14,000
of$64,152.-Theaveragesalary
increase from last year's sa,lary. · for assistant professors was
MarkSullivan, the executive $39,316,
.
with an average c_om-
. vice presiden_t
9f
Marj st; re:- . pensation · of :$~1
,490:
ceived the. next highest salary
Instructors and lecturers had
· of $I2t675.
an average salary of $34,742. _
--~ These salaries were foHowed · Inc1uding benefits, the average
by Professor DonaldCalista's _compen_sation was $46,020.
salary of $111,650 and Vice
-According to Murray, none of
President _of. Academics Marc
the administrators or pr:ofessors
vanderHeyden's- salary of at Maristreceive exorbitant
·
·-
·
-
--
·
- -
·1·b
_-t. b
·twill
I e the
$95,899·
-.
-
salaries in comparison_ to other
Prell
·nunary--·
plansarein
_
thew_orks.
_
_
tl
__
o ram
____ ore
__ ·m.
od_
em
__
1 __
rary_.
a_
repac.
h
d M · t
Other hig ly-paye
arts
institutions ofcomparable size.
existing facility pictured
above.1'11:e
new
library
is
S<:h~duled to open
in 1999•
employees this year were Tho-
"I think all the people work.:
by
Michael Goot
prowsal.
_ _ · . .
_ -
is not very ot~e~lt .,, . _ .
'mas Daly, director of physical
ing at Marist
earn
wh~t they're
.
"Duri6g part of the joint study
"It's not orgamzed, he.said.
plant, who recei~ed $86,850 paid," he said. "Ourincreases
.4s
st
- News Editor
with
~M,
Mark Sullivan de-, · .''Thing~ are all overthe pl~c,e.
and Onkar Sharma, head of the have very much paralleled th,e
Prdiminarysketchesoftheli-
veloped
1
a vfsion paper-de-
You do~'.t know where any-
comp~'ter science department,
national
increases in
compen-
brnry
have offered a glimpse
velopirig a library. for ·the: thing' is, ,especially down-
who,~e salary was $85,530. .
sation.''
ofwhatMarist's "libraryofthe
twenty-firstcen~l')'.tDaly s~~=-
·
,· stairs,'.'
~e
sai~.- , ... , .. ,
~
·:
·
. _
. __ -.
_
Ba~ket~a!ICoach D~vid ___ Acc,ording tC>the 19_95-96Ad-
fotu~~•\might
tie
lik~-<:i-~•-•
-
. :cJ-Je:also :said:.tt:i~·c:o!}~ge
1!~-; :'
<Ac.cordingJQ ~cGill!Y,
·
We, ·:::"Ma~anty_~~~•".ed.~~;9;sS0,-tu1d. - miriistraiive Compensation
-,- ·'According,to
.
Thoimls D~y; come:toAbe c·onchisfon that·a .--library sfaffis:curiendy'
_
fothe - Pr~fessor Lee Mmngoff re-
Survey rel~ed
by
the College
~Ii
rector
cif
physk:al
:
plant, the. totally newHbrary i~ necessary. . pmcess of -deciding ho~ the,
ce1ved $72,~72-
and University Personnel Asso-
iinpctusJor reform came
from•
·
"We've consider~;building
:
newlibrary is going t9 be laid
. _ Murrar S<lld he,~l~o e~pects
ciation, the salaries of
_
all of
a
proposal writtenJast year by -, additions onto.'.our existing
Ii-
out. -- ·
_ _
_ __ _ _ _ _ _ _
. the salanes for. next. year s ex-
Marist's top executives
are
ac-
a
co~miu~_studying the i_dea : brary of varicms ·size~," Daly
_ '"We basicaily.:deveioped a ··: e~u~ve ~ice pre~ident anq
ac~~
trially belowtlie median salary
ofa
library
b~ed
on technol- .said. ''Uliimately,,wfv:e come ·rough square footage setvices • demic vice presid~nt~ who will
for colleges with comparable
onv:.'
_ - -
_ _ _ •
to·the decision that th,e·most -. appro.~ch t!) -it-developing ··:replace
.
Sullivan -
.
. and
budgets. -
_ ·
Theteamconsisted of execu-: - cost effective::.was to build a .. stack space, spacefor:staff; ser~ :. vanderHeyden, to be relatively
; President Murray's salary is
ti,•c
\,)ce
president
_
Mark new60;()()()squarefootlibrary.''
vice·areiis,''he said"
·
'
-
'Now.
comparable to-t~~compensa~. $5,(X)Obelowthemedian, while
Sullivan, academi~ ,vice presi- .. ; Many Marist students, indud-' • _ we're trying to. trailsli\te that - . tibn forthes~_posi~ons th~s-year'.
Sullivan
and
vanderHeyden's
dent )via.re vander~eyden, ing James Robertazzk have,ex- ·-: int<> where
the
space
gqes.~
0
•
•
__
•
•
·,;'The salanes wtll be compa-
. salaries
:aTe
each more than
h~ar~_'.·ofc,_tru~t~~- m~m-~er
pressed':disconte.nt \Vith t~e : \McGintysaid no
Pru:t
ofthe ' : rablei_ but they qepe~d_pn: th~ --
$30,000
below the median.
M1c:h~et~uff,:_Iibrary d~~or ·>condition ofthecurre!}tljprary. _ :· 'existing-facil~ty' will be
'
used · ' expenence_ of 11;,e mdividuals,
Murray also said_ that al-
Jol1pfyfcGinty;
_aJ1:~
DaJy. From, ':Robertazzi;acriminalji.lstic«? -- ·
· -
·
---,-------_ · • -· : ;. ..
Murray-~a1d. _It-depe_ndso~
.
this
_
sr,oup~ Sulhvan,~rote a
major, saidJie_thinks·the library:
·
Please see
library,
suppJemeni 3..
·What thetr salanes are
m
their
Please
_
see
Solories.
supplement
2 ...
,.
'
.
~
-
.
.
'
.
,
'
,.
•
.
.
'
,
stuu;n~
take
ictiO:.:.
fol°
~ondOnis
on
.camJ.)US,
.
-
:i
:
Sec;etgroupposts·.~cont/ov~rsiCllflyer~ 'iri ~id~Rise -_·_-
. '
.
.
.
.
~
'
.
,
'
'
.
..
,>.,
,_
..
.
·
: by
Step~311i~ij~r~~rio_·
. · Asst. News.Editor_ .. -
•·.·,
•
,
it's -
greai,ttiat
studenti
ar/
ac-:_ • .
-
~
~ilf
orrem~nt
of
respon~j~H~
-. ·
·
tivelypartakingfo thejrfuture." :: ittfrom:$e sch()Otby,havmg
.- Tag'said she tiad no idea who. condoms ~n :~all]J.?US: :~npro-
pm th~_tJyers-~p.
.
.
:
. · ___
tee!~
sex is not responsible at
. Altlloug}:lcondo111s are-not
"A few
·
of my residents asked
all._
-. · . ·_
-
_·.
available on ~Marfs(campus, · me ifl knew
who
putthem up, · Gilroy said ?e th~ught tllefly"'
shot glasses can be bought in_ · becariseiiwasinthedonnarea,"
ers brought up a good argu_~
the bookstore/: . ( / . · '. :
she sairi. "!really didn'i'everi - rnent
· ___ .
,
:
.
.. _
Fi yers: promoting: co11dojn. know , about it until _
that after-
._ -"The school doesn t P':°mote
availability
011
campllS_we~·put -
~ - · ;, . '
·
· ·
drinking; but there_ are stiU shot·
on
.111
of the Mid-Rise d90rs on • . n~~n Valdes,
a
sophm_nore_
gl~se~ in
)~e·
bookstore," he
the night-of.AprilJ4.:·The fly-
resideti(ofthe
Mid-Rise,
said
said. -'This .°:'akes the sch
_
ool
ers. with condoms attached to - he supported the message _the
look hypocntical by not hav- -
them~ ..
were
puton,.thedoe>rs by
fl - _ tated
·
ing condoms on campus be-
-
yers
.
. ·
.
.
an unknown group:-.The 'group
"Our flyer is still on our door, . cause they promote prom1scu- .
r,i'i.;;cd the· fact that although
so we:
can
keep spreading the - ity." ; . ·.
. .
. .
condoms-are riot-_available on - message,''Yaldessa,id. ·"AfterJ
!enmf~rHmtze!a~u~1or-~1d-
campus, students can buy shot
read
the'flyer,
it really stuck in
Rise ~t~ent, said 1t 1s._th_e re-
gla.<;ses in th~ bookstore.
• _. . -
.
-
. d ,, -
·
·
·
_
spons1b1hty, of the adnumstra-
T:mya Tag,
a~identassistant my ;~s-Gilroy, a sophomore
tion and the stud~nts to provide
in the Mid.:.Ris.e, said.that:she
Mid-Rise res_ident, said he f~lt
co~do1!1s on cam~us.
_.
_
supported the~ action_s -take11. .
condoms should
be
made avatl-
'This campus is not totally
"h's my personal belief that a. able _on campus. ·
·
isolat~ f~om th~ r~st of_~e
101
of
students at Marist tend to·
,
1
t's not as if we're asking the
.
world, Hintze_ said. _'There 1s
go along with the populous and
school to have sex, we're
al-
~ S and v~nereal disease on
Just listen to what the college
ready having sex," he said. "It's this camp~.
has
to say," she said. "I think
C'utle
Pbol<\'Cbri5 11.?rinalO
Sophomore Paul Sullivan participates in the Take Back the
Night march against sexual violence last Sunday.
. :i
,•
..
.·
,·,.
,
..
. .
, ;
. • '
~
.= . .. -, · .. , . .
·.:·: . :- .
"
,
.
Sajdy
:reveals
advertiSihg
en~ourag~s
y6~fh.:S1Fl.~ijftg·7
:by
Rebet~_~e
· ·
·
.
• · · ·
•
··
· · ·'
.
:-;yJ~:o{s~~~~{;:
,
i\
;< ' ·
Staff_ Wn~er ,
. . .
:· .. ·(: "( c,ough;'.~oinetf~es~a)ot," ' .
Sevl.'nteen-year-old' Lis·a ·
·
;)said·Ostrandet:'tSometiiries it .
Ostrandl'r bangs the front door .
?wakes\ine up;
1'can't
sleep,
i
of her· high school behind her
.
.
.
cail;tstop:sm<>king~ .either.'.'
.
; .
as the. last bell rings. Hoisting
, .Another link to underag·e
her hookhag onto one shoul-.
.·• smoking.is fi:equently,.·relaxe,d
der, she fishes for a cigarette in
: · ·adminis~tion of smo1cing la~~
her pocket, lightshagairist the ·
:··:bY.,
disJrib~tors .. In,N~~ Yor~ .
wind, inhales:deeply and scans
., .. : State,Jlie)aw, indicates that a
the parking lot for her car.
. ';consumef must't:ie·
t
~
years·
1
okL
Evl.'rything she does
"in.
one..
·
to
bhy cigarette.s: Bristrow said .
fluid mntion. She's
used
to
it. .
-•
tliatsto~oftenignorethisrule_.
She's hcen smokii;ig since. she . '
.. ?'In nad(?nwide. surveY,S,
nii.; .
was ninl.'..
·
·
·no~ prove_;they·c11!1:g_~taway
Like Ostrander, many:smo~- ·
with bµying._cigarettes thr~e-:
ers bcgl\O the habit when they
quarte_rs of the tim~,,, said
were children experimenting
<
Bristrow. "The indicators that
with cigarettes, unaw;u-e of the
.ptC>Clai~ _they don'~ w~ntmi-: . _
health hazards linked to to-
:nors t~ smoke fight tooth and ·
bacco.
. .
.
. nail againsHaws that would re-
"My dad smoked all the time, .
~-==-'-----=---=-=-=-~
strict access inariy way."_
everyday," said Ostranper. -'.'I
Sophomore Kelly Bacon, pictured above with sei1ior\Y'1nston McKoy, takes a·s~ok•f hr~
~
. ' 'Ostrander· said· she .has been
wanted to .try (cigarettes), and
.
. ·
·d
o ·
II
Hall S d. h
· h
·
-
1
·
be. •
•
• ·.
· ·
·
k"
·1·
th- · -.;.,;.- ··
b_·u. ying· cigarettes
fo_
i:
a long
.
outs1 e onne. Y.
• tu 1es av. e. s . own.-.·.
peo·p. ea.re. ·.
gmn..
m
..
g.· to s. m. o_ ·.··e. e. ar 1e
.• r -.• an ~. ...,o.
re.
henevernoticediflstole.one
·
· •
·
·
- ·
· · · ·· ·
-·.
· .·
- .
tim
.. e.,_
.
· ..
··.
·
.·,< .. ___ ·
.-
·-
,.·· ... , .. ,:.
·
· · ·
ad.vertising,.wh1.·ch enu.·ces chil-
ful. p1.· c_ tu.re.s .... o
.. f
.. Jo
.... e.
·.c_
·
oo
.. lo. r .·-'•.-.:R.om.·. p- ·said .. th_ rough
.. c
.. as
.. _es she
·
or two to do it."
. .
_ ,
.
·
"I've•beenbuymg at _stores
In. a 1994 spee.ch agains~ . dren to buy them. . -
.
.
people siriili~g with big, white.· h~; iised:inJier work, she has - everywhere.since _ryfstarted," .
smoking delivered at Indiana· ·
In a poll taken by Advert.is- . teeth; and kids want}o
~
apart
fourid that clµldren continue to; said Ostrander. "I don't think
University, Dr. Lonnie Bristrow,
ing Age, 6~ percent of ;µneri- - of that.':_,;;:
<
.
. .
_·. • • .
s"J,oke at• ~nearly age,.
. . . . I've ever.been giv~n ~i.'realprob-
chair to the American Medical · cans believe cigarette ads influ:-. . .. · WaII.cer. M:errym~nn; vk~
.
. •V:e have.~ lot of people_dy:-
lein, and if I did;I lied. I would
Association; addressed the
ence ·children and· teens; whil~ - president of_ the Tobacco Insti-
mg m agony of can~er! !Dami!
tell
the cashier they were for my
problem
of
smoking amqn·g
66 percent believe some ciga~
tute, said. there isno link b.e- . ol?er (people), but some
t?,
tht:tr · · dad. They justlet me buy thein.
children.
· iette ads are. especially de- . - tween ads and. youth s111oking.
pnme, !~te .30s and 40s, said
Easy."
. . . ··• . · ... · .. ·
·
"Some
3,000
kids start smok-· ·signed to appeal to young . ,'The oesrevidence that there
Ro~p. All of th~m have been
Bristrow said people should
ing every day,'·' said Bristrow. - people.
is _no link comes from Europe,
admittedly smoking for ye~•.: fight against this easy· access·
"The average age is
12
and-a-
· Gretchen Romp, a registered
~
where ~ere.have been ad baris
~e get 15 ~ear. olds hackmg
through her speeches_..
half years.
If
we don't·get the
nurse at. Samaritan Hospital in .,_in effect>"andconsumption still . with smoker ,s cough, and they
"If
we gather together, we.can
message to them by sixth grad_e, · Troy, N.Y., said she feels ads in-
increases," said Merrymann.
wonder what s wrong and want• become a tilde wave that c·an
it's too laie.''
.
fluence yqung pe9ple.
"Thatwould seem to r~fiite ~he
medicine.''
.
·. .
sci.
sweep away this boulder, and
Bristrow said there is a defi-
"It's the characters portrayed," · argument that advertising
Ostrander said she.has ~urrent-
save the lives of our kids,, said
nite link hctween cigare~s arid ' said Romp. ''They show color- . causes consumption.".
heal~h problems pue to eight . Bristrow. ·
'
$_Marist's-
Top
Salaries.
$$
-·V-C~p·
m~y i11iti~te·_1elevisib1i
-
censorship,.·i
;
_
.
.
.
.
.
·
--
..
:
.
.
.
.
Dr. Dennis
J.
Murray (President)
Dr. Mark Sullivan (Executive VP)
Dr .. Donald
Cali~ta ·
(Professor) ...
Dr. ·Marc vanderHeyden. (Academic
VP)
Thomas Daly (Director of Physical
Pfant)
.
.. by.Julie
Yuen
Filak
said: . .-'[Cen:~oring]
js
not • of the CanadiariV-chip; Chan-
Staff Writer
the
.
writer's: r.esporisibiHty,, it) nels over
12.
are not subject to.
_
The violence chip may act
the parent's• respo11si1:>i~ity.'! .... V-chip blocking. In _addition,
· as a form ·9f ~ensorship toward$ _. -.. · Tim Collings.,
_
~ profe~sor of · · American prowms are notsus-.
television writers...
-
.
·. eJectrical _engine.eri1_1g · and,
11)-
i
ceptible to the Canadian V-chip:
Commonly known as the\'-
botics at Simon Fraser Uniyer-
·
The American programs inay be
chip, it is part of the Telecom-
sity in Vancouver, Ca_nada,cre:-
blocked only if ·itis trarismit-
municationsAct ofl 996,which . ated.theN-chip .. He·also had -ted by a local cliannet.
.
was signed early February by
the same inientiori ofput_ting ·.. .
In "tlie<tinited ,States,.
President Bill Clinton.;
the re.sponsi~UitY:otcenso,rship .
·
C1iritori :Ordered
iifo
:media
Dr. Onkar Sharma· (Department Head}
David Magarity (:S.asketbali Coach)
Dr. Lee. Miringoff,(Professor and
Director of
MIPO
The act requires
"
televisicm .. on the._par~nts.
¥
the':ide1:1 for .
.
. groupstodeyise
.
a: violence
ta~~
manufacturers to install.the. V- ·_the chip ~ur_face_d,
.
.
·
:. .. .. , ,·.·
.
, ::_.'.jng
;
syste.m:that\\'.ould work
•
.
, chip in new
TV
models. This · .
.
. Collings _saicl in a Newxork \
0
.'with .the -V-chi1i\The f011r
ID~~;
· enablesp¥et1ts to block certain-.·. Tim
_
es &1ifle th~t it<iid ng! tillce .. jor rietworks'AJ3C/NBC,
_
QB.S, _
•·. violent s~owsor programs · .. tooJong to
.
figureout the me:-·-- .. and FOX al9ngviith
.
30.otlier
which they• believe ·may be ·. chani~s o
_
f
_
the fhip ... ·-·
·
>
<•
.
micli.a. e~ec~tives;'.pr.9rnised_
Salary· Increases. continue
to .·
remain -below tliitioliincreases·
•.. comi1111edfromsupplement 1 • . _ :
the bridget with as
low
of_a
tu-
though the highest salaries at
ition _i~_cre~se .~s ~qssibl~,"
~e colll!ge may seem difficult
Campth! · said:
We re ,hopmg
to justify, they Jtave not even · to keep it low, but I c~ t guar-
. been sufficiently adjusted to
a!1tee the ,percent of mcrease
reflect 1uition increases
nghtnow..
_
"Our salary increases
0
institu- .
. T~e _collective tuition in-
tionally have been below the
crease for .the 1995-96sc~ool
level of tuftion increases,"
Y~
w~ 4:65 percent, with a
Murray said. ''That is because
tuition mcrease of 5.06. percent
the biggest item that has· in-_ and a room and board mcrease
creased in the Marist College
of 3.93 ~~-ent..
,
· budget in the last five years has
<;:amp1l11_ s~1d · next year
s
been financial .aid."·
ment s~hol~!rl~s. sho~ld keep
Alth'ough next year's budget
pace with the tuition mcrease,
has not yet been completed,
bu! he would_ like to
see
more
Marist's Chief Financial Officer
stnngent reqmrements for these
Anthony V. Campilii said he aw~.
.
expects the tuition increase to
I would_ love to see the
be between four and five per-
amount be higher for students
· cent.
who !re tr~ly qualified for
''We'vl! been
trying
to
prepare
them, he said.
damaging to their chi_lclren ..
i.
,
"l\yanted-so~ethiJig that
Clinton early thiif111_onth.to
,
This raises the question o( parents c9Wd.uscfas
_
atool·but . haye
a
ratings syste111 im,ple-
whether there is a correlation
thatworild not affect t~e ere- . · inente<l.by 1997,:_ ·., ·., .
.
:
.
. ·
between>vioience on
TV
and. . ative freedoms of_"the produc-
· 'fheTV manufacturers, how~ ·
violenc~-in_society.
. tiOO)!nd.artistic community/7· ev.er, hav~)1p}o two·
yearst{)
-
This correlatioomay have . Collfogs said:-:
-
· .
.
.
-
.
.
coinply"with therequfrementto
been denioristrated when a sub-
install
_
the .chip in new .televi-
way token booth was set on fire'
•
.
· Th.is ability to contiolhas sion mod~_ls., .
.
by teenager~ early this year .. won ;,upport for theV.:chip.
.
The event mirrored a segment
. Luz Maldon.ado,
a:
former
from the movie Money Train.
resident of
the
B·ronx anci -
Margot Fiardenbergh, Assis-
motherc>f a 7 year-old boy, said -
tant Professor.of Comniunic11-
that the.V-chip would be very
tions at Marist, said that televi-
helpful for her.
sion writei:s
.will
feelthe·effects
- "Tl}ere are a lofofshows I'd
of the V-chip.However, it is _ like to block," Maldonado said. -
. within the writer's power to de-
''I'd pay to have [ v-chip]
termin~ how to cope with the installed.''
effects..
For an extra $1.00 to $2.00
-~-"It is up
to
the write~ not to
on her cable bill, she could ac-
let it influence them·nega-
tivate the V-chip--if she lived
tively," Hardenbergh said.
~n Canada. .
-
·
Anastasia Filak, a junior at
Testing of the V-chip has
Marist taking a course, Writing
been ongoing in Canada since
for Radio and '(elevision, , last year. The program has won
taught
l?Y.
Hardenbergh, said
approval with Canadian par-
she feels· the V-chip will have
ents.
no effect on the way she writes.
Mechanical problems, how-
. - "I write what I want to write,"
ever, have limited the success
..
.
The
:
Jnnet
:
crrcle,
'
:
April 25.,
'.
1996
· L.(}ca.Jbu~ifiess.esfear emergence
OfnewWal-Mart
.
.
-~
~~
-
,
c~ii
~
ij~i~~
.
.
.
.
;.-.))
~~
;~i
i~j
;
i
~;;~
:
~f
~u
I~~:
.
.
,\
~e Roosevelt'movie ~heater
.
In some areas,
.
more than ha:f..
-
~·
-
·
.
<
..
,
..
.
St.a!f.
)
rri!er
.
~
,.
•
.
..
st~~~
-
10
~~
,:
~~
-
I,
_
an
_
4_ s
_
h~
.
siud
..
;·
may
also
'
be.in trouble when the
of the local businesses have hacf
·
.-
·
-
,
-
~:,
:
·
.
,
.. :
.
:,:
.
· .
.
"
··
-
some
.
ofthestoreownershave
~·
..
..
,
_.
1
·
··
·
·
.
'\ou
·
push
·
the Jeans
.
as1cle
·
to . •
.·
.
.
, -
,
-
.
.
. ~"·
,
·
. ,
..
,;
.,-•
..
•
.
·
.
•
_.
n~w Wa -M~ opens. The the-
to close their doors due 10
:
·a
inakc
·
ro
•
oi:n for·the gallo1i"of
·
·
:
alr~~~Y,_exp
.
r~~-~~~
-".
c?n~~
-
r~
ater depends heavily on the
WaJ:Mart.'
milk
.
)'!Ju
·
'just
picked
up from
~bo
5
ut
~.~~~~~
:-
~n.
,
;
_
·th
·:; ..
·
:
'.
h
-,
:
· .
:
1:iusiness of students from both
According to Deyger, many
h
·
fl'
.
·
·
'
Ind
.
·
·
·
mw
•
uusmesses
.
at ave
-·
M ·
t C II
d Th C
r
people are on edge about
.
what
t
Cr~
-
~g~rator ~ -
o~~~-
-
-
e
·
stablished 'thenls;lveifo
'
tile
:-'°•
ru:isl
?
egeban
.
_
e
_
u
I-
SO,
you knock
·
over the Ia:va
·
:•
,
· .
_,
f ..
.
:
f
.,
.
-r
·
· _
...
nary nstttute, ut part of ~he
Wal-Mart will do to the com~
Jam
_
p;which
_
fallsoverandden
_
ts
_
· ;
'.c.o,mmd
_
~~h~tY,
:\
?
-
.t~~-
1
•·
.
~P1!
.
~.:'
:
WaI-Mru:t plan includes a Mui-
munity.
·
.
.
..
..
--.
·
.
•
-
.
>
.,
..
.
,
.
·
.
·
,
owne s ops
•
,s1mpy
,
cannot
-·
·
·
·
i
•
·
· ·
.. ,,, ... ,
·
th~ hox contammg your
,
new
•
·•.
·
·
··
,
·
.
·
.
: ·
'
_;
:
.·
.
.
:
.
·
·
--.: -
tiP ex cmema.
.
,
,
.
· .
n<U•Mart moves
·
in, under-
...
•
.
.
-
- .
.
.
.
:-
.
;
compete
-
with the huge
·
Wal-
.
M
M ·
t
1
-
d
·
1
-
·
d
JI
.
d
·
.
.
-
.
.
scm1~automat1c JI1a~h~i;ie
,
gun
,
:
·
_
Mart
;:
'
:··
.
:-
;
·
.
,
:
:;
. :
.
·
.
.
>
·
.
.
_
a!ly aris s u en!s, 1~c
~ ~ se
_
s an consequently
.
·de-
.
_Tius ~ould
be
_
a.
_
rou~ne sh?f ·
··
.
A~cciid~
.- .
·
.
:
.' ;
mg JUmor
.
stroys some of the business.
pmg tnp
~
fo_r tlie
: _
res1dept~
-
oL· iri
_
16
·:
olen
·
,-
.
•
: ·
..
J
.
~
-
h
_
n
··
.
Then they pull out and _the
Po
_
11ghkeeps1e as
_
early as
-
next
.
·
--
R
-
g
·
k
.:
.i.
•.-_
ts.:
.
·.
·
·
.
;'
·
S e1 fert',
.
smaltbusinesses can't recover,"
A
..
.
,
n,~tM
'
. .
.
. .
.
.
ep
O,
ue
..
.
D
it
.d
.
.
U!?USt
mu-
.
art
IS
movmg
.
.
.
.
..
.
.
·
· f
.
~
.
aresureto
'
.
eyE,ersat .
this~~um.iiler~tlY,across
from :_
~-a1!
-
~~~ oe
··
.
m;==~I-J~~~,;,
go to the
· However, many Marist stu-
:
Manst,
?
nd _1t1s
·
.
su!e. to dra
~ ·
Du
t
C
h·e~
~
:
_
:·
.
/1
b i g g e r
.
dents, including
Wi_l low
~ordes
pf
wide-eyed shoppers
. ·
:
Mal(
,:
.
fo
,
.
_
It-II~--,--
theater
,
Lanpher; said they are excited
_
marvcl
,
!
_
n~
_
at the5onve~1~~q~
. ~
Fi'slikil
r;
:
·
:
.
.
evettifthe
about the opening of Wal-Mart .
..
o_f
1
havmg ~r?cer1e
1
s, h~s1ery · said
,
that
·
t°;
.
.
pi-ices are •
"I am definitely psyched .
.
_
~0
(
·
am~umt1~:,g a) available
·
·
wheri
a
Wal-
·
..
·.
·
higher,
.
Moyies, a huge Wal-Mart ev-
-
m one place .
.
..
-.
.
.
.
..
. ·
.
.
·
.·
•
·,.
·
·
·
~
-
b
·
ecause erythirig
:
iswithin
·
walking dis-
bc
lfo1\v~d-'d':r, thos~~e ey~
·
iµth
·
ay
.
-
~p:r:l~r! '
:::
~
.
r - - - . _
of its con~
tance. · I don;t have a car so that
SlC
mgtearsa,ew
_
mon
_
s
.
.
·.
•··
d .
.
.
.
\'.enY~nt
i~ 'definitely good news,"
d
.
.
h 1·
.
·ftru
·
.
.
nr.
move
..
tn
.
.
.
.... ,-.. _ _
_.
1
.
La h
.d
.
·
_
own t
.
~
-_
me
1,
.
s new
~
nal-
durin th'e
.
·
.
,
·
ocat10n
np er sat .
_
?\fart brmgs
.
with 1t the same
·
g
f
..
and more
Senior Lynn Russo also
I
-
, .. •
.
h
-
fi
.
...
.
,
summer o
d
.
"d"'
.
I M rt ·11 b be fi
-
. I
·
m·r.:.n
.
·
as or
._
area busmess
1994
th .
.
·
.
1
.
.
._
_
mo ern sat na~ a _w1
e
ne 1c1a
across the nation.
·
.
.
'
·
e commun! Y
·
ex pen
attnosphere.
for students who do not have
It is hard find
a
case in which
en~~ salyebral. negattv~ effects.
·
"Igo to the Roosevelt theater
cars ori campus.
the_ coirimunity
'
~eld
·
•
a
·
ticker
t
·
m
usi~~s~esJtt s~:f now, but if there was a theater
"I wish I had this when I was a
tape parade for the new
.
Wal-
.. 0B· :
1
·
1
~0Ba w
1
ay • d
.
hep
1
°
5
sathi ·
right across the street, I would
·
freshman. They don't know
·
Mart heing constructed in town;
,
·
1 s es
a'!
a ou
O
er
definitely go there ins~e·a<["
how lucky they are," Russo
·
Onc
:
could even venture
'
to say
r;~m.and ~p
.
st0res went out Seifert said.
·
said.
·
.
·
it has 11everhappenecl.Vermont
O
·
usmess.
·
.
..
·.
. .
.
.
.
.
The Wal-Mart Corporation
These students have one thing
was the last of the 50 states to
W3!-Mart, t~e Jeadmg retruL
·
owns well over 2,500 stores
·
in
in common, they are also ex-
·
ha,
·
caWal-Martgo
'
up, and the
st0re
10
the n~tmn,-manag~s tQ the United States alone. They cited about the move-in ofWal-
-
.
.
.
.
.
·
-
.
·
Y offer more products at cheaper
.
·
II d
·
$82 ·
·
.,
.
put up quite a struggle. They
;
..
.
.
.
.
·
.
· ·
·
··.
pu e mover
_
Bllhon m
-
M_art. So, is Wal
-
Mart a night-
fought
the case to the bitter end,
pnrh· M~y people
-
th;.oug~-
.
net sales in 1995, and the 'num-
mare for small businesses and a
taking Wal-Mart
"
to court and
-
· ou t e ~ountry ar~ tra mg
10
b
.
ers continue to grow as the
dream for consumers?
fi
.
,
11
·
·
·
1
·
I
the specialty st0re atmosphere
·
number
'·
o
·
f
-
:
s
·
•o
'
:,;e
·
s do
These
Only 11·me
·
w1·11 tell.
·
Is
n,1 y sconng on y a mora
ti
.
.
h
-
:
h
.
.
.
i
.
_
, •
-
.
vktory. In
·
I 995, a small scale
or on~
t ~\
1
as a
·
the'!' large
stores include a pharmacy, gro-
Poughkeepsie just like all of the
Wal-Mart was constructed in
st0Thre~ t. adt se ~v~ry mgh.
·
.
·
cery store, stationary, and doth-
other towns that
.
suffered when
.
·
1s 1s owns1zmg .on t ere-
•
··
'
w.
1 M
d ·
·11 h
Bu
_
rh
_
ngton.
-
..
.
11
..
.
1
Th
...
.
.
.
__
.
,
. '
d
.
f
_
mg st
_
ore.
·
a-
art move m,orw1 t ey
.
.
..
•·
.
-
·
ta1 eve
.
.
·
ere 1s
·
a tren o
be
·
·
·
·
Accordrng to fosephme
b
.
·
·
·
b .
.
d
·
. •
.
·
The stores absolutely define
the excepti~n? The
·
bricks
_.
Deygcr
,'
.
the manager''Of the
O ,
J~&~r
"
{~!~es.~:~
°-W.
10
~llh$
·.
-
-~
th: t~rm
?
st1peMto~e.'9
,
~ut::3c-
. :
.
are being CcJrt~d in, .ind
_
the Jo-
_
P.oughkeepsie Plaza Mall;
_
!.
_e Illar
~~•
an
_
,
pus I~g 1 e
cordmg toAnnel Richardson, a
cal business owners are prepar-
..
pcople
.'
seem
.
threatened by the
httl.e guy OU~ of the pic!ure,
small business owner, the Su-
ing.
.
name Wal-Mart
.
.
.
-
.
and the
;
scene is set fo~ this to
per:-Stores are notgoirig'to save
"Som
_
e
of the st
_
ore
_
owne
_
rs
_
are · haThppen ~n · Po~ghkeeb psd,e
_
too.f the day
fol'.
small business own-
Every day, the Poughkeepsie
.-: :
.
...
-
.
'
.
-
d
·
.
.
Th I
.
·
.
ere is an overa un ance o
.
.
Wal-Mart becomes inore of a
very
.
worne .
·
e uggage
,
mall
·
-
h
·
•
.
·
th
ers.
.··
.
.
•.
.
.
;
P~
,
OJlle
\
t
he ~o]lec~
.
ble
:
dealers
.
ioughk~;Jsi~htyde
~~k
aret
_
.
·
''They're big and
~~~y.
They.
.
reality. We will just h
"
ave to wait
.
are
all
nervou!> becau~e Wal-
.
th
•
:
Id.
.
.
·.
h .
d .th have
,
no_ compass~on
Jpr:
the
and see if that reality is the end
.
M:irt offers the same product,"
·
th at
~o~
. m~et t eir en
,
wi
commumty or the md1v1dual,"
of the small business in
.
·
Deyger said
~
·
·
·
e move m.
·
·
Richardson said.
·
.
·
..
Poughkeepsie.
-
-
-
- - -
-
---
fit
¥fy
c1iaF
:·
'';
''
:
.
ogy available in the library is
helpful, but the materials are
·
too out of date.
"I think the technology in the
library is good, so I would keep
·
that," she said. "I would just
get more periodicals and update
all the books."
Senior Shannon Kennedy; a
.
business major, said the libr¥J
services and assistance are not
sufficient.
''Things aren't available," she
said. "There's pages ripped out
of books. It's not easy to find a
lot of things. There's not that
much help in the library."
McQinty said the new library
will attempt to address these
proble
_
ms.
He said Marist has doubled its
periodical collection in the past
eight years, but space limita-
tions will prevent it from con-
_
tinuing that trend, even with the
new library
"To double it again would be
_ almost impossible," he said.
·
McGinty said the "library of
the future" is going to take
some work to make a reality.
"The plan is that we would
start construction in May of
1998 and have it ready to go
by September '99," he said.
S1.1pp1ement 4:
The,
Inrier
Circle, April 25, 1996
Sii¢nf i)Iaglle
iqt,s.~rj~t
;
.'Alt1/illm~laise
1
·
mostpi-Jvd?entin
core
clqsfes
·,,)
,
.
.
'..
.
..
.
..
,
-~fTim~n· \_
-·~cit~d.}}i:j::d,:iiiiti·~i}~:~y-\:
'Si<iff:lfriter
•-~~~ug~/';,~he'.~.µ~:::_:'~y~cy_tl,ti,rig;::,-
-_';·
·
· · · ·
.. ,,.
1s)em.n budding
(m
~e;~<J.rk .
·
·A: professqr asks· a. question. ·. force )'especially in the business
No one· responds ..
A
student · world." · --
.
·. · ,
whispers . the aliswef t_o . his. . ; K#>Jcus'
ilid,
~ay,
tllbugh,
th~t .
.. neighhor;. but does hot raise ·,his:· . ·the level' of participation. rose .. ·
· ~and_: ,)\foments later the:pro~ .,:notic_eably· '?'hen -she start~~.
··
fessor says the same answer the. taking upper level major
student· said. •
.·.
•·· ·
.
• courses·.
.
.
. .
.
.
Why,liifn'theraisehishand?
''The
laterye~,_wh~ri lwas
Was
ithecause he was afraid · more in mymajorJhadto}<n~w.
that. hi! wquld .be·.wrong?. what was-going on,be(:a~se iF ...
Maybe it .is because hejust \\'asformycareer,"Krokussai_d. ;
· doesn'(care·at alt, Or is it
be-.
"Yoti'couldn'tjust sit there and
cause that student was in a core ·zone'out like before/' . /. . ·
cl~shs opposed toa class for
C
.
Amy_Coppola,_a-juniorat
that person's major?
Marist, said she :feeJs that part·
. Maur_cen Kilgour,
a
·
t
985 ..
'.of
the reason;students_ pai::tici:-
.
A
shidenfsn
9
ozes
in
class. Marist!llalaise is on the rise,_especially
in
core classes •...
graduate ofMarist CoJiege who
•
pate more intheir major~ourses
.
.
is nowthe ditector_ofAltimni · is that the upper leveh:lasses
GrinneJI said freshmen are
Affairs. said she remefu~~rs her
Sfo'volve
more studen_t opinion.-__ · ..
·
havi~g a hard .. enough_ time
core cl:tsscs not talki!)g much.
· She als_o said she felt the rea-' • . learning
a
new environmentand
1
·
.
Eating, disorders result
from-desire
to.fiti11
· by (;yna Slomcinsky
· Staff Writer
"I n·member a philosophy
son·studen_ts tal~.lessJn core
meetingnewpeople. WhiJehe
class where .no one e~er ask':d
courses isa niauer of,intiinida- · was not pointing any fingers, .
any
q
nest ions, then_ 1mmed1-: tion, which she said· gotbetter
Grinneli would t:onced.e
it
is
ately af1cr the dass ended,.~~
for her
as
she got to knowmbre\,possible that in some situations
students woul~ all _be. askmg . people.
. . .
,
. .
it could be the teacher's fault.
each otherwhatthe ~eacher was
·
..
".'fhe loilgerki9( are i_n
a,
He
·said
he makes it a point to
Eating disorders are preva-
talking.ahout," she said.
.
.
· school, the more people. th~y
try.to
splitthe sru.dents up into." le~t on college campuses, and
Kathy Gazzillo, a freshman at khow and the more cpmfortable
smali groups
as
much
as
pos-
Marist is no exception;
"/tis a
big
step for fresh-
men. There are·so many
neWthings going on, and
some ofthem you have to
watch outfor and pick out
thebad things"
·-Donna
Nastasi,·
sophomore
Marist College, said she feels
they· are to speak in fro11toftheir
sible. · . ,
. . •.
.
.
Yvonne Poley, a coi.ms~lor
the reasonJor- a lack ~n partici- .. classmates," Coppola saidi ·
''It gets the students more in-
·
at the Byrne Center.on Marist
pation is due to stude11_ts not . · .· Richard GrinneJI, an assistant
volved; not just in terms of
college campus, said that eat-
. really caring about
the
classes
p'rofessor at ~fa:r_ist'. said he . people answerfog questions,
ing disorders, such as Bulimia
they do not like. . .
.
· agrees thatyoungerstudents are
buti(also keepsthe class·.con-
and Anorexia Nervosa, are a . more serious to have an eat-
"All
you
.do is just sit there
more intimidated and he ~a,il
versation from being Utnited to
big problem on all col{ege
ing disorder while Jiving on
"It
seems like it would.be
because you have, no inte_rest in
understand why.
_ four or frve peoP,lt!," Qri,nnell ·
campuses.
·: . . · .. .'..
campus because you would
the classes at all,' she said.
"My i11tro:classes with a lot
said. "It's imporfant to'get the
"It's definitely·~n:an cam-
have to be more secretive
Jean Krokus, a
1991
gi'a~uate .. of frespmen ar~ often• bad (in
students talking because_ it can.·
puses.Colleg~ is a bigtime for
about·it so that no on~ would
of Mari-:t, said many te_achers
i
terms· Qf participation). becausf!_ ·help them to get to k,riow each
'transition," she said. , .
know," said Ruot. ''You would
that she had, were
as
much at
it seems like tliey are inti mi-
other better and at the same
Doima
Nastasi,
a
sophomore
have to be more careful be-
fault for the lack of participa-
dated. tneemslike they just iim~s'iudents ate more likely
to
at Niaristcollege, said, there
cause in the dorms you have
·· tion as~V1•cre:the students. · . · · want to figure out what is' go-
remember things frorri group
·are
~
lot of pressures leaving
to share bathrooms and its easy
"I
don
·1
ihink the teachers pro-
ing oh arouricl them,'' he said. · ·situations,'' · ·
home. and c_oming to college.
for someone to come in and
>?l\.iK:a•
·.
ilVJ.,
\S~.-~•-·-1 .-..
. ii,t~?/l
f::·.Lccna
ri~i/,vcre'.
'te'tif
antfl
.'.ft'flic
a'
Wlt:tJl
tlie::in,;.isio
wiiH<Y\\'ar
.·~lil
teachcr,"'i'
t~rtfol,cr;.
l~:\~~1
1
- strcn ~·, i/c
smaitih,,n"
Ci4i~i~.,if
most·fri1il
ijian)'
duil
her
Ii
Ii:.
:
.
rc?B111.··sh
Jh~,lcnge
World\\'a
:-t#J;
ri
C:·hii
\Vasa
l',
)ri.
sfans.'
She
Withh
ilW.
'ioj>Jay,. Th
':\vitti
11i~
sn
·;,.•~•Tl~ ;-·
:./·' •. 11,;
_Yr.•,
childh,llld,"
.. . .
·;/ __ · Karkala;sffaifiet
Hakakhto, cliedwhe1f
only
,~,·en.
yet1r{91~,:1;}i;::>
:,
,,,.,
,>>, ·" :::
,,,.
. ,,
In
hi:r fate
teens
ICarlcalasai . , ,., "
y~:
~If
tq.J9<:i1~,;;Sht?
~
she
;1',-.11med
t~'.
t;espg~it>iliiif:'I?:fi:Ih~t,;m~;~,J~'.f~'TT',L,
''It is a big step for freshmen.
possibly see you in the bath-
There are so many new things
room."·.
going, o·n ·an~ .s~mrf? 9f .them . · Poley said it is expensive to
you· have to wakh'dui for-and
have an eating disorder .
pick out ~he bad things;" slle
_''Having an eating disorder
said. ,
.
. .
is very expensive.-For people
· Poley said there are .~ lot of on the meal plan here on cam,•
pressures coming to coUege,
pus, it is easie~ bec.ause you
: "Breaking away can bevery
can go-up to the food several
overwhelming ..• ~ome people . times,''she said.
aren't readyJor it,'' she said;
A,ccording:io Poley~ another
.
Bulimia is prevalenron ca.Jll-
popular way of "getting ridof'.
puses because it is easy
to
fall · the consumed food
.on
co Hege
into.Aperson is able ioeatjust
campusesjs the use
.
of laX:a".'
aboutanythingheorshewants
tives, This way a person
and.is basica,ly able to get.rid
does11;t have
to
regurgitate
of it and not feel guilty.
th~ir food,
.but
is still able to
.:Poley said
it
isn't alhvhat eat whatever he or she wants
people think it is. · . . .
. ·
and is able to get ifout oftheir
. "ltis a lot morethan regur:-'
system;
.
.
gitating. Ifruinnhe inside of
.Anorexia Nervosa is another
your body," she said. ·
·•
·
coin:mon
.
eating . dis·orde:r/ .·•
A.ccording to
·an'
informa..;
People .withthis disorder de- .
·tionalpacketfromthe Mari~t
liberately attempt 10··1ose
College Counseling Cenier, ·. weight through starvation·.
soine indicators of a person -They .see themselves as fat
suffering:
from
Bulimia
1ri:.
.
even if they have an ideal
body
elude bingeing, secreti.ve·ea_t".'
we,ight. :, .
·
·
ing, ··several. bathroonr visits
According to that same in-
after ineals, and
fear
of being · formational pac~~t, soinechar-
fat, regardless of weight.
acteristicsofapt!rson suffer.;
. Tracey Soloms<?n,
a
sopho-
· ing fromAnm:exia Nerv~sa ii;t7
··
•
niore, :said' that one of her elude some of the following;
friends is . surviving from
odd fooddtuals, rigid exercise
Bulimia.
·.
regimes, dressing in )ayers to
.''She
u~
_to ~lways com-:- · hide. weight loss, and intense
plain about her weight Right
diets or fasting.
.
after we would eat 'dinner or
Poley said that the body re-
sorriethlng, she would.· excuse
sponds to the disease
as
pro-
~yf . ,·
J
t
herself from the table and go
tection.
.
.
into the bathroom alone," she
"As
a response, the body
be-
said.
gins to growUght
body
hair
Melissa Ruo~
a
sophomore,
around ~e body to· help keep
said that having an eating dis-
wanrith. It is almost like an ani-
order while Jiving" in the donns
mal growi
rig
hair to keep
,,,~~
,
can
be
more threatening.
warm,''shesaid.
48.17.1
48.17.2
48.17.3
48.17.4
Mari.
Volume 3, Number l
,
:,,.,-Mfilist'College; Poughkeepsie;'N.Y. - --_
· ·_
,,'- -•
•
-- ---- - - -- -
:April~S,
1996 .
-
·
--. -\ _.---_-- ___ --_ . ·: · __ -•
·
... ~->::.·::- - -·•-· _ --,-:•:
·t--
·
_,_ ·_•-:.
--Marist sal~ryincreases
Plans
for· modem
library 1n
the works
-_ -· ·
•-u··
1
___ ·. ·
t· · _
1
-__ -...
· - · · -
· · ·
-
- -> - •,
·
par~
~
na 1ona n~es
·by
Kristin
Richard _
·current positions." _
_
Asst. News.Editor
·,
Although the iu~.mes ofprofes-
.
·
sors who do not receive top sala-
. 'salaries fo~prof~ssors and ad~. ries
are
confidential. ihe aver-
miriistrators at Mari st· continue age salary . this .-year. for a full
·to infrease, but
.
they re1nain
professorwas$57,486. Theav- .
compar~l>le to h1stitution_s
of
erage compensation includin_g -·
·- simHar size.
··
-. benefits was $74,925.
· I>e~nis J.Miu-ray~ president <>f
. For an associate professor, the
Marist College, receiveg this
average ·salary was $48,335,
year's highest-_ salary of · with an average compensation
· $195,000;:analmost $14,000
of$64,152.-Theaveragesalary
increase from last year's sa,lary. · for assistant professors was
MarkSullivan, the executive $39,316,
.
with an average c_om-
. vice presiden_t
9f
Marj st; re:- . pensation · of :$~1
,490:
ceived the. next highest salary
Instructors and lecturers had
· of $I2t675.
an average salary of $34,742. _
--~ These salaries were foHowed · Inc1uding benefits, the average
by Professor DonaldCalista's _compen_sation was $46,020.
salary of $111,650 and Vice
-According to Murray, none of
President _of. Academics Marc
the administrators or pr:ofessors
vanderHeyden's- salary of at Maristreceive exorbitant
·
·-
·
-
--
·
- -
·1·b
_-t. b
·twill
I e the
$95,899·
-.
-
salaries in comparison_ to other
Prell
·nunary--·
plansarein
_
thew_orks.
_
_
tl
__
o ram
____ ore
__ ·m.
od_
em
__
1 __
rary_.
a_
repac.
h
d M · t
Other hig ly-paye
arts
institutions ofcomparable size.
existing facility pictured
above.1'11:e
new
library
is
S<:h~duled to open
in 1999•
employees this year were Tho-
"I think all the people work.:
by
Michael Goot
prowsal.
_ _ · . .
_ -
is not very ot~e~lt .,, . _ .
'mas Daly, director of physical
ing at Marist
earn
wh~t they're
.
"Duri6g part of the joint study
"It's not orgamzed, he.said.
plant, who recei~ed $86,850 paid," he said. "Ourincreases
.4s
st
- News Editor
with
~M,
Mark Sullivan de-, · .''Thing~ are all overthe pl~c,e.
and Onkar Sharma, head of the have very much paralleled th,e
Prdiminarysketchesoftheli-
veloped
1
a vfsion paper-de-
You do~'.t know where any-
comp~'ter science department,
national
increases in
compen-
brnry
have offered a glimpse
velopirig a library. for ·the: thing' is, ,especially down-
who,~e salary was $85,530. .
sation.''
ofwhatMarist's "libraryofthe
twenty-firstcen~l')'.tDaly s~~=-
·
,· stairs,'.'
~e
sai~.- , ... , .. ,
~
·:
·
. _
. __ -.
_
Ba~ket~a!ICoach D~vid ___ Acc,ording tC>the 19_95-96Ad-
fotu~~•\might
tie
lik~-<:i-~•-•
-
. :cJ-Je:also :said:.tt:i~·c:o!}~ge
1!~-; :'
<Ac.cordingJQ ~cGill!Y,
·
We, ·:::"Ma~anty_~~~•".ed.~~;9;sS0,-tu1d. - miriistraiive Compensation
-,- ·'According,to
.
Thoimls D~y; come:toAbe c·onchisfon that·a .--library sfaffis:curiendy'
_
fothe - Pr~fessor Lee Mmngoff re-
Survey rel~ed
by
the College
~Ii
rector
cif
physk:al
:
plant, the. totally newHbrary i~ necessary. . pmcess of -deciding ho~ the,
ce1ved $72,~72-
and University Personnel Asso-
iinpctusJor reform came
from•
·
"We've consider~;building
:
newlibrary is going t9 be laid
. _ Murrar S<lld he,~l~o e~pects
ciation, the salaries of
_
all of
a
proposal writtenJast year by -, additions onto.'.our existing
Ii-
out. -- ·
_ _
_ __ _ _ _ _ _ _
. the salanes for. next. year s ex-
Marist's top executives
are
ac-
a
co~miu~_studying the i_dea : brary of varicms ·size~," Daly
_ '"We basicaily.:deveioped a ··: e~u~ve ~ice pre~ident anq
ac~~
trially belowtlie median salary
ofa
library
b~ed
on technol- .said. ''Uliimately,,wfv:e come ·rough square footage setvices • demic vice presid~nt~ who will
for colleges with comparable
onv:.'
_ - -
_ _ _ •
to·the decision that th,e·most -. appro.~ch t!) -it-developing ··:replace
.
Sullivan -
.
. and
budgets. -
_ ·
Theteamconsisted of execu-: - cost effective::.was to build a .. stack space, spacefor:staff; ser~ :. vanderHeyden, to be relatively
; President Murray's salary is
ti,•c
\,)ce
president
_
Mark new60;()()()squarefootlibrary.''
vice·areiis,''he said"
·
'
-
'Now.
comparable to-t~~compensa~. $5,(X)Obelowthemedian, while
Sullivan, academi~ ,vice presi- .. ; Many Marist students, indud-' • _ we're trying to. trailsli\te that - . tibn forthes~_posi~ons th~s-year'.
Sullivan
and
vanderHeyden's
dent )via.re vander~eyden, ing James Robertazzk have,ex- ·-: int<> where
the
space
gqes.~
0
•
•
__
•
•
·,;'The salanes wtll be compa-
. salaries
:aTe
each more than
h~ar~_'.·ofc,_tru~t~~- m~m-~er
pressed':disconte.nt \Vith t~e : \McGintysaid no
Pru:t
ofthe ' : rablei_ but they qepe~d_pn: th~ --
$30,000
below the median.
M1c:h~et~uff,:_Iibrary d~~or ·>condition ofthecurre!}tljprary. _ :· 'existing-facil~ty' will be
'
used · ' expenence_ of 11;,e mdividuals,
Murray also said_ that al-
Jol1pfyfcGinty;
_aJ1:~
DaJy. From, ':Robertazzi;acriminalji.lstic«? -- ·
· -
·
---,-------_ · • -· : ;. ..
Murray-~a1d. _It-depe_ndso~
.
this
_
sr,oup~ Sulhvan,~rote a
major, saidJie_thinks·the library:
·
Please see
library,
suppJemeni 3..
·What thetr salanes are
m
their
Please
_
see
Solories.
supplement
2 ...
,.
'
.
~
-
.
.
'
.
,
'
,.
•
.
.
'
,
stuu;n~
take
ictiO:.:.
fol°
~ondOnis
on
.camJ.)US,
.
-
:i
:
Sec;etgroupposts·.~cont/ov~rsiCllflyer~ 'iri ~id~Rise -_·_-
. '
.
.
.
.
~
'
.
,
'
'
.
..
,>.,
,_
..
.
·
: by
Step~311i~ij~r~~rio_·
. · Asst. News.Editor_ .. -
•·.·,
•
,
it's -
greai,ttiat
studenti
ar/
ac-:_ • .
-
~
~ilf
orrem~nt
of
respon~j~H~
-. ·
·
tivelypartakingfo thejrfuture." :: ittfrom:$e sch()Otby,havmg
.- Tag'said she tiad no idea who. condoms ~n :~all]J.?US: :~npro-
pm th~_tJyers-~p.
.
.
:
. · ___
tee!~
sex is not responsible at
. Altlloug}:lcondo111s are-not
"A few
·
of my residents asked
all._
-. · . ·_
-
_·.
available on ~Marfs(campus, · me ifl knew
who
putthem up, · Gilroy said ?e th~ught tllefly"'
shot glasses can be bought in_ · becariseiiwasinthedonnarea,"
ers brought up a good argu_~
the bookstore/: . ( / . · '. :
she sairi. "!really didn'i'everi - rnent
· ___ .
,
:
.
.. _
Fi yers: promoting: co11dojn. know , about it until _
that after-
._ -"The school doesn t P':°mote
availability
011
campllS_we~·put -
~ - · ;, . '
·
· ·
drinking; but there_ are stiU shot·
on
.111
of the Mid-Rise d90rs on • . n~~n Valdes,
a
sophm_nore_
gl~se~ in
)~e·
bookstore," he
the night-of.AprilJ4.:·The fly-
resideti(ofthe
Mid-Rise,
said
said. -'This .°:'akes the sch
_
ool
ers. with condoms attached to - he supported the message _the
look hypocntical by not hav- -
them~ ..
were
puton,.thedoe>rs by
fl - _ tated
·
ing condoms on campus be-
-
yers
.
. ·
.
.
an unknown group:-.The 'group
"Our flyer is still on our door, . cause they promote prom1scu- .
r,i'i.;;cd the· fact that although
so we:
can
keep spreading the - ity." ; . ·.
. .
. .
condoms-are riot-_available on - message,''Yaldessa,id. ·"AfterJ
!enmf~rHmtze!a~u~1or-~1d-
campus, students can buy shot
read
the'flyer,
it really stuck in
Rise ~t~ent, said 1t 1s._th_e re-
gla.<;ses in th~ bookstore.
• _. . -
.
-
. d ,, -
·
·
·
_
spons1b1hty, of the adnumstra-
T:mya Tag,
a~identassistant my ;~s-Gilroy, a sophomore
tion and the stud~nts to provide
in the Mid.:.Ris.e, said.that:she
Mid-Rise res_ident, said he f~lt
co~do1!1s on cam~us.
_.
_
supported the~ action_s -take11. .
condoms should
be
made avatl-
'This campus is not totally
"h's my personal belief that a. able _on campus. ·
·
isolat~ f~om th~ r~st of_~e
101
of
students at Marist tend to·
,
1
t's not as if we're asking the
.
world, Hintze_ said. _'There 1s
go along with the populous and
school to have sex, we're
al-
~ S and v~nereal disease on
Just listen to what the college
ready having sex," he said. "It's this camp~.
has
to say," she said. "I think
C'utle
Pbol<\'Cbri5 11.?rinalO
Sophomore Paul Sullivan participates in the Take Back the
Night march against sexual violence last Sunday.
. :i
,•
..
.·
,·,.
,
..
. .
, ;
. • '
~
.= . .. -, · .. , . .
·.:·: . :- .
"
,
.
Sajdy
:reveals
advertiSihg
en~ourag~s
y6~fh.:S1Fl.~ijftg·7
:by
Rebet~_~e
· ·
·
.
• · · ·
•
··
· · ·'
.
:-;yJ~:o{s~~~~{;:
,
i\
;< ' ·
Staff_ Wn~er ,
. . .
:· .. ·(: "( c,ough;'.~oinetf~es~a)ot," ' .
Sevl.'nteen-year-old' Lis·a ·
·
;)said·Ostrandet:'tSometiiries it .
Ostrandl'r bangs the front door .
?wakes\ine up;
1'can't
sleep,
i
of her· high school behind her
.
.
.
cail;tstop:sm<>king~ .either.'.'
.
; .
as the. last bell rings. Hoisting
, .Another link to underag·e
her hookhag onto one shoul-.
.·• smoking.is fi:equently,.·relaxe,d
der, she fishes for a cigarette in
: · ·adminis~tion of smo1cing la~~
her pocket, lightshagairist the ·
:··:bY.,
disJrib~tors .. In,N~~ Yor~ .
wind, inhales:deeply and scans
., .. : State,Jlie)aw, indicates that a
the parking lot for her car.
. ';consumef must't:ie·
t
~
years·
1
okL
Evl.'rything she does
"in.
one..
·
to
bhy cigarette.s: Bristrow said .
fluid mntion. She's
used
to
it. .
-•
tliatsto~oftenignorethisrule_.
She's hcen smokii;ig since. she . '
.. ?'In nad(?nwide. surveY,S,
nii.; .
was ninl.'..
·
·
·no~ prove_;they·c11!1:g_~taway
Like Ostrander, many:smo~- ·
with bµying._cigarettes thr~e-:
ers bcgl\O the habit when they
quarte_rs of the tim~,,, said
were children experimenting
<
Bristrow. "The indicators that
with cigarettes, unaw;u-e of the
.ptC>Clai~ _they don'~ w~ntmi-: . _
health hazards linked to to-
:nors t~ smoke fight tooth and ·
bacco.
. .
.
. nail againsHaws that would re-
"My dad smoked all the time, .
~-==-'-----=---=-=-=-~
strict access inariy way."_
everyday," said Ostranper. -'.'I
Sophomore Kelly Bacon, pictured above with sei1ior\Y'1nston McKoy, takes a·s~ok•f hr~
~
. ' 'Ostrander· said· she .has been
wanted to .try (cigarettes), and
.
. ·
·d
o ·
II
Hall S d. h
· h
·
-
1
·
be. •
•
• ·.
· ·
·
k"
·1·
th- · -.;.,;.- ··
b_·u. ying· cigarettes
fo_
i:
a long
.
outs1 e onne. Y.
• tu 1es av. e. s . own.-.·.
peo·p. ea.re. ·.
gmn..
m
..
g.· to s. m. o_ ·.··e. e. ar 1e
.• r -.• an ~. ...,o.
re.
henevernoticediflstole.one
·
· •
·
·
- ·
· · · ·· ·
-·.
· .·
- .
tim
.. e.,_
.
· ..
··.
·
.·,< .. ___ ·
.-
·-
,.·· ... , .. ,:.
·
· · ·
ad.vertising,.wh1.·ch enu.·ces chil-
ful. p1.· c_ tu.re.s .... o
.. f
.. Jo
.... e.
·.c_
·
oo
.. lo. r .·-'•.-.:R.om.·. p- ·said .. th_ rough
.. c
.. as
.. _es she
·
or two to do it."
. .
_ ,
.
·
"I've•beenbuymg at _stores
In. a 1994 spee.ch agains~ . dren to buy them. . -
.
.
people siriili~g with big, white.· h~; iised:inJier work, she has - everywhere.since _ryfstarted," .
smoking delivered at Indiana· ·
In a poll taken by Advert.is- . teeth; and kids want}o
~
apart
fourid that clµldren continue to; said Ostrander. "I don't think
University, Dr. Lonnie Bristrow,
ing Age, 6~ percent of ;µneri- - of that.':_,;;:
<
.
. .
_·. • • .
s"J,oke at• ~nearly age,.
. . . . I've ever.been giv~n ~i.'realprob-
chair to the American Medical · cans believe cigarette ads influ:-. . .. · WaII.cer. M:errym~nn; vk~
.
. •V:e have.~ lot of people_dy:-
lein, and if I did;I lied. I would
Association; addressed the
ence ·children and· teens; whil~ - president of_ the Tobacco Insti-
mg m agony of can~er! !Dami!
tell
the cashier they were for my
problem
of
smoking amqn·g
66 percent believe some ciga~
tute, said. there isno link b.e- . ol?er (people), but some
t?,
tht:tr · · dad. They justlet me buy thein.
children.
· iette ads are. especially de- . - tween ads and. youth s111oking.
pnme, !~te .30s and 40s, said
Easy."
. . . ··• . · ... · .. ·
·
"Some
3,000
kids start smok-· ·signed to appeal to young . ,'The oesrevidence that there
Ro~p. All of th~m have been
Bristrow said people should
ing every day,'·' said Bristrow. - people.
is _no link comes from Europe,
admittedly smoking for ye~•.: fight against this easy· access·
"The average age is
12
and-a-
· Gretchen Romp, a registered
~
where ~ere.have been ad baris
~e get 15 ~ear. olds hackmg
through her speeches_..
half years.
If
we don't·get the
nurse at. Samaritan Hospital in .,_in effect>"andconsumption still . with smoker ,s cough, and they
"If
we gather together, we.can
message to them by sixth grad_e, · Troy, N.Y., said she feels ads in-
increases," said Merrymann.
wonder what s wrong and want• become a tilde wave that c·an
it's too laie.''
.
fluence yqung pe9ple.
"Thatwould seem to r~fiite ~he
medicine.''
.
·. .
sci.
sweep away this boulder, and
Bristrow said there is a defi-
"It's the characters portrayed," · argument that advertising
Ostrander said she.has ~urrent-
save the lives of our kids,, said
nite link hctween cigare~s arid ' said Romp. ''They show color- . causes consumption.".
heal~h problems pue to eight . Bristrow. ·
'
$_Marist's-
Top
Salaries.
$$
-·V-C~p·
m~y i11iti~te·_1elevisib1i
-
censorship,.·i
;
_
.
.
.
.
.
·
--
..
:
.
.
.
.
Dr. Dennis
J.
Murray (President)
Dr. Mark Sullivan (Executive VP)
Dr .. Donald
Cali~ta ·
(Professor) ...
Dr. ·Marc vanderHeyden. (Academic
VP)
Thomas Daly (Director of Physical
Pfant)
.
.. by.Julie
Yuen
Filak
said: . .-'[Cen:~oring]
js
not • of the CanadiariV-chip; Chan-
Staff Writer
the
.
writer's: r.esporisibiHty,, it) nels over
12.
are not subject to.
_
The violence chip may act
the parent's• respo11si1:>i~ity.'! .... V-chip blocking. In _addition,
· as a form ·9f ~ensorship toward$ _. -.. · Tim Collings.,
_
~ profe~sor of · · American prowms are notsus-.
television writers...
-
.
·. eJectrical _engine.eri1_1g · and,
11)-
i
ceptible to the Canadian V-chip:
Commonly known as the\'-
botics at Simon Fraser Uniyer-
·
The American programs inay be
chip, it is part of the Telecom-
sity in Vancouver, Ca_nada,cre:-
blocked only if ·itis trarismit-
municationsAct ofl 996,which . ated.theN-chip .. He·also had -ted by a local cliannet.
.
was signed early February by
the same inientiori ofput_ting ·.. .
In "tlie<tinited ,States,.
President Bill Clinton.;
the re.sponsi~UitY:otcenso,rship .
·
C1iritori :Ordered
iifo
:media
Dr. Onkar Sharma· (Department Head}
David Magarity (:S.asketbali Coach)
Dr. Lee. Miringoff,(Professor and
Director of
MIPO
The act requires
"
televisicm .. on the._par~nts.
¥
the':ide1:1 for .
.
. groupstodeyise
.
a: violence
ta~~
manufacturers to install.the. V- ·_the chip ~ur_face_d,
.
.
·
:. .. .. , ,·.·
.
, ::_.'.jng
;
syste.m:that\\'.ould work
•
.
, chip in new
TV
models. This · .
.
. Collings _saicl in a Newxork \
0
.'with .the -V-chi1i\The f011r
ID~~;
· enablesp¥et1ts to block certain-.·. Tim
_
es &1ifle th~t it<iid ng! tillce .. jor rietworks'AJ3C/NBC,
_
QB.S, _
•·. violent s~owsor programs · .. tooJong to
.
figureout the me:-·-- .. and FOX al9ngviith
.
30.otlier
which they• believe ·may be ·. chani~s o
_
f
_
the fhip ... ·-·
·
>
<•
.
micli.a. e~ec~tives;'.pr.9rnised_
Salary· Increases. continue
to .·
remain -below tliitioliincreases·
•.. comi1111edfromsupplement 1 • . _ :
the bridget with as
low
of_a
tu-
though the highest salaries at
ition _i~_cre~se .~s ~qssibl~,"
~e colll!ge may seem difficult
Campth! · said:
We re ,hopmg
to justify, they Jtave not even · to keep it low, but I c~ t guar-
. been sufficiently adjusted to
a!1tee the ,percent of mcrease
reflect 1uition increases
nghtnow..
_
"Our salary increases
0
institu- .
. T~e _collective tuition in-
tionally have been below the
crease for .the 1995-96sc~ool
level of tuftion increases,"
Y~
w~ 4:65 percent, with a
Murray said. ''That is because
tuition mcrease of 5.06. percent
the biggest item that has· in-_ and a room and board mcrease
creased in the Marist College
of 3.93 ~~-ent..
,
· budget in the last five years has
<;:amp1l11_ s~1d · next year
s
been financial .aid."·
ment s~hol~!rl~s. sho~ld keep
Alth'ough next year's budget
pace with the tuition mcrease,
has not yet been completed,
bu! he would_ like to
see
more
Marist's Chief Financial Officer
stnngent reqmrements for these
Anthony V. Campilii said he aw~.
.
expects the tuition increase to
I would_ love to see the
be between four and five per-
amount be higher for students
· cent.
who !re tr~ly qualified for
''We'vl! been
trying
to
prepare
them, he said.
damaging to their chi_lclren ..
i.
,
"l\yanted-so~ethiJig that
Clinton early thiif111_onth.to
,
This raises the question o( parents c9Wd.uscfas
_
atool·but . haye
a
ratings syste111 im,ple-
whether there is a correlation
thatworild not affect t~e ere- . · inente<l.by 1997,:_ ·., ·., .
.
:
.
. ·
between>vioience on
TV
and. . ative freedoms of_"the produc-
· 'fheTV manufacturers, how~ ·
violenc~-in_society.
. tiOO)!nd.artistic community/7· ev.er, hav~)1p}o two·
yearst{)
-
This correlatioomay have . Collfogs said:-:
-
· .
.
.
-
.
.
coinply"with therequfrementto
been denioristrated when a sub-
install
_
the .chip in new .televi-
way token booth was set on fire'
•
.
· Th.is ability to contiolhas sion mod~_ls., .
.
by teenager~ early this year .. won ;,upport for theV.:chip.
.
The event mirrored a segment
. Luz Maldon.ado,
a:
former
from the movie Money Train.
resident of
the
B·ronx anci -
Margot Fiardenbergh, Assis-
motherc>f a 7 year-old boy, said -
tant Professor.of Comniunic11-
that the.V-chip would be very
tions at Marist, said that televi-
helpful for her.
sion writei:s
.will
feelthe·effects
- "Tl}ere are a lofofshows I'd
of the V-chip.However, it is _ like to block," Maldonado said. -
. within the writer's power to de-
''I'd pay to have [ v-chip]
termin~ how to cope with the installed.''
effects..
For an extra $1.00 to $2.00
-~-"It is up
to
the write~ not to
on her cable bill, she could ac-
let it influence them·nega-
tivate the V-chip--if she lived
tively," Hardenbergh said.
~n Canada. .
-
·
Anastasia Filak, a junior at
Testing of the V-chip has
Marist taking a course, Writing
been ongoing in Canada since
for Radio and '(elevision, , last year. The program has won
taught
l?Y.
Hardenbergh, said
approval with Canadian par-
she feels· the V-chip will have
ents.
no effect on the way she writes.
Mechanical problems, how-
. - "I write what I want to write,"
ever, have limited the success
..
.
The
:
Jnnet
:
crrcle,
'
:
April 25.,
'.
1996
· L.(}ca.Jbu~ifiess.esfear emergence
OfnewWal-Mart
.
.
-~
~~
-
,
c~ii
~
ij~i~~
.
.
.
.
;.-.))
~~
;~i
i~j
;
i
~;;~
:
~f
~u
I~~:
.
.
,\
~e Roosevelt'movie ~heater
.
In some areas,
.
more than ha:f..
-
~·
-
·
.
<
..
,
..
.
St.a!f.
)
rri!er
.
~
,.
•
.
..
st~~~
-
10
~~
,:
~~
-
I,
_
an
_
4_ s
_
h~
.
siud
..
;·
may
also
'
be.in trouble when the
of the local businesses have hacf
·
.-
·
-
,
-
~:,
:
·
.
,
.. :
.
:,:
.
· .
.
"
··
-
some
.
ofthestoreownershave
~·
..
..
,
_.
1
·
··
·
·
.
'\ou
·
push
·
the Jeans
.
as1cle
·
to . •
.·
.
.
, -
,
-
.
.
. ~"·
,
·
. ,
..
,;
.,-•
..
•
.
·
.
•
_.
n~w Wa -M~ opens. The the-
to close their doors due 10
:
·a
inakc
·
ro
•
oi:n for·the gallo1i"of
·
·
:
alr~~~Y,_exp
.
r~~-~~~
-".
c?n~~
-
r~
ater depends heavily on the
WaJ:Mart.'
milk
.
)'!Ju
·
'just
picked
up from
~bo
5
ut
~.~~~~~
:-
~n.
,
;
_
·th
·:; ..
·
:
'.
h
-,
:
· .
:
1:iusiness of students from both
According to Deyger, many
h
·
fl'
.
·
·
'
Ind
.
·
·
·
mw
•
uusmesses
.
at ave
-·
M ·
t C II
d Th C
r
people are on edge about
.
what
t
Cr~
-
~g~rator ~ -
o~~~-
-
-
e
·
stablished 'thenls;lveifo
'
tile
:-'°•
ru:isl
?
egeban
.
_
e
_
u
I-
SO,
you knock
·
over the Ia:va
·
:•
,
· .
_,
f ..
.
:
f
.,
.
-r
·
· _
...
nary nstttute, ut part of ~he
Wal-Mart will do to the com~
Jam
_
p;which
_
fallsoverandden
_
ts
_
· ;
'.c.o,mmd
_
~~h~tY,
:\
?
-
.t~~-
1
•·
.
~P1!
.
~.:'
:
WaI-Mru:t plan includes a Mui-
munity.
·
.
.
..
..
--.
·
.
•
-
.
>
.,
..
.
,
.
·
.
·
,
owne s ops
•
,s1mpy
,
cannot
-·
·
·
·
i
•
·
· ·
.. ,,, ... ,
·
th~ hox contammg your
,
new
•
·•.
·
·
··
,
·
.
·
.
: ·
'
_;
:
.·
.
.
:
.
·
·
--.: -
tiP ex cmema.
.
,
,
.
· .
n<U•Mart moves
·
in, under-
...
•
.
.
-
- .
.
.
.
:-
.
;
compete
-
with the huge
·
Wal-
.
M
M ·
t
1
-
d
·
1
-
·
d
JI
.
d
·
.
.
-
.
.
scm1~automat1c JI1a~h~i;ie
,
gun
,
:
·
_
Mart
;:
'
:··
.
:-
;
·
.
,
:
:;
. :
.
·
.
.
>
·
.
.
_
a!ly aris s u en!s, 1~c
~ ~ se
_
s an consequently
.
·de-
.
_Tius ~ould
be
_
a.
_
rou~ne sh?f ·
··
.
A~cciid~
.- .
·
.
:
.' ;
mg JUmor
.
stroys some of the business.
pmg tnp
~
fo_r tlie
: _
res1dept~
-
oL· iri
_
16
·:
olen
·
,-
.
•
: ·
..
J
.
~
-
h
_
n
··
.
Then they pull out and _the
Po
_
11ghkeeps1e as
_
early as
-
next
.
·
--
R
-
g
·
k
.:
.i.
•.-_
ts.:
.
·.
·
·
.
;'
·
S e1 fert',
.
smaltbusinesses can't recover,"
A
..
.
,
n,~tM
'
. .
.
. .
.
.
ep
O,
ue
..
.
D
it
.d
.
.
U!?USt
mu-
.
art
IS
movmg
.
.
.
.
..
.
.
·
· f
.
~
.
aresureto
'
.
eyE,ersat .
this~~um.iiler~tlY,across
from :_
~-a1!
-
~~~ oe
··
.
m;==~I-J~~~,;,
go to the
· However, many Marist stu-
:
Manst,
?
nd _1t1s
·
.
su!e. to dra
~ ·
Du
t
C
h·e~
~
:
_
:·
.
/1
b i g g e r
.
dents, including
Wi_l low
~ordes
pf
wide-eyed shoppers
. ·
:
Mal(
,:
.
fo
,
.
_
It-II~--,--
theater
,
Lanpher; said they are excited
_
marvcl
,
!
_
n~
_
at the5onve~1~~q~
. ~
Fi'slikil
r;
:
·
:
.
.
evettifthe
about the opening of Wal-Mart .
..
o_f
1
havmg ~r?cer1e
1
s, h~s1ery · said
,
that
·
t°;
.
.
pi-ices are •
"I am definitely psyched .
.
_
~0
(
·
am~umt1~:,g a) available
·
·
wheri
a
Wal-
·
..
·.
·
higher,
.
Moyies, a huge Wal-Mart ev-
-
m one place .
.
..
-.
.
.
.
..
. ·
.
.
·
.·
•
·,.
·
·
·
~
-
b
·
ecause erythirig
:
iswithin
·
walking dis-
bc
lfo1\v~d-'d':r, thos~~e ey~
·
iµth
·
ay
.
-
~p:r:l~r! '
:::
~
.
r - - - . _
of its con~
tance. · I don;t have a car so that
SlC
mgtearsa,ew
_
mon
_
s
.
.
·.
•··
d .
.
.
.
\'.enY~nt
i~ 'definitely good news,"
d
.
.
h 1·
.
·ftru
·
.
.
nr.
move
..
tn
.
.
.
.... ,-.. _ _
_.
1
.
La h
.d
.
·
_
own t
.
~
-_
me
1,
.
s new
~
nal-
durin th'e
.
·
.
,
·
ocat10n
np er sat .
_
?\fart brmgs
.
with 1t the same
·
g
f
..
and more
Senior Lynn Russo also
I
-
, .. •
.
h
-
fi
.
...
.
,
summer o
d
.
"d"'
.
I M rt ·11 b be fi
-
. I
·
m·r.:.n
.
·
as or
._
area busmess
1994
th .
.
·
.
1
.
.
._
_
mo ern sat na~ a _w1
e
ne 1c1a
across the nation.
·
.
.
'
·
e commun! Y
·
ex pen
attnosphere.
for students who do not have
It is hard find
a
case in which
en~~ salyebral. negattv~ effects.
·
"Igo to the Roosevelt theater
cars ori campus.
the_ coirimunity
'
~eld
·
•
a
·
ticker
t
·
m
usi~~s~esJtt s~:f now, but if there was a theater
"I wish I had this when I was a
tape parade for the new
.
Wal-
.. 0B· :
1
·
1
~0Ba w
1
ay • d
.
hep
1
°
5
sathi ·
right across the street, I would
·
freshman. They don't know
·
Mart heing constructed in town;
,
·
1 s es
a'!
a ou
O
er
definitely go there ins~e·a<["
how lucky they are," Russo
·
Onc
:
could even venture
'
to say
r;~m.and ~p
.
st0res went out Seifert said.
·
said.
·
.
·
it has 11everhappenecl.Vermont
O
·
usmess.
·
.
..
·.
. .
.
.
.
.
The Wal-Mart Corporation
These students have one thing
was the last of the 50 states to
W3!-Mart, t~e Jeadmg retruL
·
owns well over 2,500 stores
·
in
in common, they are also ex-
·
ha,
·
caWal-Martgo
'
up, and the
st0re
10
the n~tmn,-manag~s tQ the United States alone. They cited about the move-in ofWal-
-
.
.
.
.
.
·
-
.
·
Y offer more products at cheaper
.
·
II d
·
$82 ·
·
.,
.
put up quite a struggle. They
;
..
.
.
.
.
·
.
· ·
·
··.
pu e mover
_
Bllhon m
-
M_art. So, is Wal
-
Mart a night-
fought
the case to the bitter end,
pnrh· M~y people
-
th;.oug~-
.
net sales in 1995, and the 'num-
mare for small businesses and a
taking Wal-Mart
"
to court and
-
· ou t e ~ountry ar~ tra mg
10
b
.
ers continue to grow as the
dream for consumers?
fi
.
,
11
·
·
·
1
·
I
the specialty st0re atmosphere
·
number
'·
o
·
f
-
:
s
·
•o
'
:,;e
·
s do
These
Only 11·me
·
w1·11 tell.
·
Is
n,1 y sconng on y a mora
ti
.
.
h
-
:
h
.
.
.
i
.
_
, •
-
.
vktory. In
·
I 995, a small scale
or on~
t ~\
1
as a
·
the'!' large
stores include a pharmacy, gro-
Poughkeepsie just like all of the
Wal-Mart was constructed in
st0Thre~ t. adt se ~v~ry mgh.
·
.
·
cery store, stationary, and doth-
other towns that
.
suffered when
.
·
1s 1s owns1zmg .on t ere-
•
··
'
w.
1 M
d ·
·11 h
Bu
_
rh
_
ngton.
-
..
.
11
..
.
1
Th
...
.
.
.
__
.
,
. '
d
.
f
_
mg st
_
ore.
·
a-
art move m,orw1 t ey
.
.
..
•·
.
-
·
ta1 eve
.
.
·
ere 1s
·
a tren o
be
·
·
·
·
Accordrng to fosephme
b
.
·
·
·
b .
.
d
·
. •
.
·
The stores absolutely define
the excepti~n? The
·
bricks
_.
Deygcr
,'
.
the manager''Of the
O ,
J~&~r
"
{~!~es.~:~
°-W.
10
~llh$
·.
-
-~
th: t~rm
?
st1peMto~e.'9
,
~ut::3c-
. :
.
are being CcJrt~d in, .ind
_
the Jo-
_
P.oughkeepsie Plaza Mall;
_
!.
_e Illar
~~•
an
_
,
pus I~g 1 e
cordmg toAnnel Richardson, a
cal business owners are prepar-
..
pcople
.'
seem
.
threatened by the
httl.e guy OU~ of the pic!ure,
small business owner, the Su-
ing.
.
name Wal-Mart
.
.
.
-
.
and the
;
scene is set fo~ this to
per:-Stores are notgoirig'to save
"Som
_
e
of the st
_
ore
_
owne
_
rs
_
are · haThppen ~n · Po~ghkeeb psd,e
_
too.f the day
fol'.
small business own-
Every day, the Poughkeepsie
.-: :
.
...
-
.
'
.
-
d
·
.
.
Th I
.
·
.
ere is an overa un ance o
.
.
Wal-Mart becomes inore of a
very
.
worne .
·
e uggage
,
mall
·
-
h
·
•
.
·
th
ers.
.··
.
.
•.
.
.
;
P~
,
OJlle
\
t
he ~o]lec~
.
ble
:
dealers
.
ioughk~;Jsi~htyde
~~k
aret
_
.
·
''They're big and
~~~y.
They.
.
reality. We will just h
"
ave to wait
.
are
all
nervou!> becau~e Wal-
.
th
•
:
Id.
.
.
·.
h .
d .th have
,
no_ compass~on
Jpr:
the
and see if that reality is the end
.
M:irt offers the same product,"
·
th at
~o~
. m~et t eir en
,
wi
commumty or the md1v1dual,"
of the small business in
.
·
Deyger said
~
·
·
·
e move m.
·
·
Richardson said.
·
.
·
..
Poughkeepsie.
-
-
-
- - -
-
---
fit
¥fy
c1iaF
:·
'';
''
:
.
ogy available in the library is
helpful, but the materials are
·
too out of date.
"I think the technology in the
library is good, so I would keep
·
that," she said. "I would just
get more periodicals and update
all the books."
Senior Shannon Kennedy; a
.
business major, said the libr¥J
services and assistance are not
sufficient.
''Things aren't available," she
said. "There's pages ripped out
of books. It's not easy to find a
lot of things. There's not that
much help in the library."
McQinty said the new library
will attempt to address these
proble
_
ms.
He said Marist has doubled its
periodical collection in the past
eight years, but space limita-
tions will prevent it from con-
_
tinuing that trend, even with the
new library
"To double it again would be
_ almost impossible," he said.
·
McGinty said the "library of
the future" is going to take
some work to make a reality.
"The plan is that we would
start construction in May of
1998 and have it ready to go
by September '99," he said.
S1.1pp1ement 4:
The,
Inrier
Circle, April 25, 1996
Sii¢nf i)Iaglle
iqt,s.~rj~t
;
.'Alt1/illm~laise
1
·
mostpi-Jvd?entin
core
clqsfes
·,,)
,
.
.
'..
.
..
.
..
,
-~fTim~n· \_
-·~cit~d.}}i:j::d,:iiiiti·~i}~:~y-\:
'Si<iff:lfriter
•-~~~ug~/';,~he'.~.µ~:::_:'~y~cy_tl,ti,rig;::,-
-_';·
·
· · · ·
.. ,,.
1s)em.n budding
(m
~e;~<J.rk .
·
·A: professqr asks· a. question. ·. force )'especially in the business
No one· responds ..
A
student · world." · --
.
·. · ,
whispers . the aliswef t_o . his. . ; K#>Jcus'
ilid,
~ay,
tllbugh,
th~t .
.. neighhor;. but does hot raise ·,his:· . ·the level' of participation. rose .. ·
· ~and_: ,)\foments later the:pro~ .,:notic_eably· '?'hen -she start~~.
··
fessor says the same answer the. taking upper level major
student· said. •
.·.
•·· ·
.
• courses·.
.
.
. .
.
.
Why,liifn'theraisehishand?
''The
laterye~,_wh~ri lwas
Was
ithecause he was afraid · more in mymajorJhadto}<n~w.
that. hi! wquld .be·.wrong?. what was-going on,be(:a~se iF ...
Maybe it .is because hejust \\'asformycareer,"Krokussai_d. ;
· doesn'(care·at alt, Or is it
be-.
"Yoti'couldn'tjust sit there and
cause that student was in a core ·zone'out like before/' . /. . ·
cl~shs opposed toa class for
C
.
Amy_Coppola,_a-juniorat
that person's major?
Marist, said she :feeJs that part·
. Maur_cen Kilgour,
a
·
t
985 ..
'.of
the reason;students_ pai::tici:-
.
A
shidenfsn
9
ozes
in
class. Marist!llalaise is on the rise,_especially
in
core classes •...
graduate ofMarist CoJiege who
•
pate more intheir major~ourses
.
.
is nowthe ditector_ofAltimni · is that the upper leveh:lasses
GrinneJI said freshmen are
Affairs. said she remefu~~rs her
Sfo'volve
more studen_t opinion.-__ · ..
·
havi~g a hard .. enough_ time
core cl:tsscs not talki!)g much.
· She als_o said she felt the rea-' • . learning
a
new environmentand
1
·
.
Eating, disorders result
from-desire
to.fiti11
· by (;yna Slomcinsky
· Staff Writer
"I n·member a philosophy
son·studen_ts tal~.lessJn core
meetingnewpeople. WhiJehe
class where .no one e~er ask':d
courses isa niauer of,intiinida- · was not pointing any fingers, .
any
q
nest ions, then_ 1mmed1-: tion, which she said· gotbetter
Grinneli would t:onced.e
it
is
ately af1cr the dass ended,.~~
for her
as
she got to knowmbre\,possible that in some situations
students woul~ all _be. askmg . people.
. . .
,
. .
it could be the teacher's fault.
each otherwhatthe ~eacher was
·
..
".'fhe loilgerki9( are i_n
a,
He
·said
he makes it a point to
Eating disorders are preva-
talking.ahout," she said.
.
.
· school, the more people. th~y
try.to
splitthe sru.dents up into." le~t on college campuses, and
Kathy Gazzillo, a freshman at khow and the more cpmfortable
smali groups
as
much
as
pos-
Marist is no exception;
"/tis a
big
step for fresh-
men. There are·so many
neWthings going on, and
some ofthem you have to
watch outfor and pick out
thebad things"
·-Donna
Nastasi,·
sophomore
Marist College, said she feels
they· are to speak in fro11toftheir
sible. · . ,
. . •.
.
.
Yvonne Poley, a coi.ms~lor
the reasonJor- a lack ~n partici- .. classmates," Coppola saidi ·
''It gets the students more in-
·
at the Byrne Center.on Marist
pation is due to stude11_ts not . · .· Richard GrinneJI, an assistant
volved; not just in terms of
college campus, said that eat-
. really caring about
the
classes
p'rofessor at ~fa:r_ist'. said he . people answerfog questions,
ing disorders, such as Bulimia
they do not like. . .
.
· agrees thatyoungerstudents are
buti(also keepsthe class·.con-
and Anorexia Nervosa, are a . more serious to have an eat-
"All
you
.do is just sit there
more intimidated and he ~a,il
versation from being Utnited to
big problem on all col{ege
ing disorder while Jiving on
"It
seems like it would.be
because you have, no inte_rest in
understand why.
_ four or frve peoP,lt!," Qri,nnell ·
campuses.
·: . . · .. .'..
campus because you would
the classes at all,' she said.
"My i11tro:classes with a lot
said. "It's imporfant to'get the
"It's definitely·~n:an cam-
have to be more secretive
Jean Krokus, a
1991
gi'a~uate .. of frespmen ar~ often• bad (in
students talking because_ it can.·
puses.Colleg~ is a bigtime for
about·it so that no on~ would
of Mari-:t, said many te_achers
i
terms· Qf participation). becausf!_ ·help them to get to k,riow each
'transition," she said. , .
know," said Ruot. ''You would
that she had, were
as
much at
it seems like tliey are inti mi-
other better and at the same
Doima
Nastasi,
a
sophomore
have to be more careful be-
fault for the lack of participa-
dated. tneemslike they just iim~s'iudents ate more likely
to
at Niaristcollege, said, there
cause in the dorms you have
·· tion as~V1•cre:the students. · . · · want to figure out what is' go-
remember things frorri group
·are
~
lot of pressures leaving
to share bathrooms and its easy
"I
don
·1
ihink the teachers pro-
ing oh arouricl them,'' he said. · ·situations,'' · ·
home. and c_oming to college.
for someone to come in and
>?l\.iK:a•
·.
ilVJ.,
\S~.-~•-·-1 .-..
. ii,t~?/l
f::·.Lccna
ri~i/,vcre'.
'te'tif
antfl
.'.ft'flic
a'
Wlt:tJl
tlie::in,;.isio
wiiH<Y\\'ar
.·~lil
teachcr,"'i'
t~rtfol,cr;.
l~:\~~1
1
- strcn ~·, i/c
smaitih,,n"
Ci4i~i~.,if
most·fri1il
ijian)'
duil
her
Ii
Ii:.
:
.
rc?B111.··sh
Jh~,lcnge
World\\'a
:-t#J;
ri
C:·hii
\Vasa
l',
)ri.
sfans.'
She
Withh
ilW.
'ioj>Jay,. Th
':\vitti
11i~
sn
·;,.•~•Tl~ ;-·
:./·' •. 11,;
_Yr.•,
childh,llld,"
.. . .
·;/ __ · Karkala;sffaifiet
Hakakhto, cliedwhe1f
only
,~,·en.
yet1r{91~,:1;}i;::>
:,
,,,.,
,>>, ·" :::
,,,.
. ,,
In
hi:r fate
teens
ICarlcalasai . , ,., "
y~:
~If
tq.J9<:i1~,;;Sht?
~
she
;1',-.11med
t~'.
t;espg~it>iliiif:'I?:fi:Ih~t,;m~;~,J~'.f~'TT',L,
''It is a big step for freshmen.
possibly see you in the bath-
There are so many new things
room."·.
going, o·n ·an~ .s~mrf? 9f .them . · Poley said it is expensive to
you· have to wakh'dui for-and
have an eating disorder .
pick out ~he bad things;" slle
_''Having an eating disorder
said. ,
.
. .
is very expensive.-For people
· Poley said there are .~ lot of on the meal plan here on cam,•
pressures coming to coUege,
pus, it is easie~ bec.ause you
: "Breaking away can bevery
can go-up to the food several
overwhelming ..• ~ome people . times,''she said.
aren't readyJor it,'' she said;
A,ccording:io Poley~ another
.
Bulimia is prevalenron ca.Jll-
popular way of "getting ridof'.
puses because it is easy
to
fall · the consumed food
.on
co Hege
into.Aperson is able ioeatjust
campusesjs the use
.
of laX:a".'
aboutanythingheorshewants
tives, This way a person
and.is basica,ly able to get.rid
does11;t have
to
regurgitate
of it and not feel guilty.
th~ir food,
.but
is still able to
.:Poley said
it
isn't alhvhat eat whatever he or she wants
people think it is. · . . .
. ·
and is able to get ifout oftheir
. "ltis a lot morethan regur:-'
system;
.
.
gitating. Ifruinnhe inside of
.Anorexia Nervosa is another
your body," she said. ·
·•
·
coin:mon
.
eating . dis·orde:r/ .·•
A.ccording to
·an'
informa..;
People .withthis disorder de- .
·tionalpacketfromthe Mari~t
liberately attempt 10··1ose
College Counseling Cenier, ·. weight through starvation·.
soine indicators of a person -They .see themselves as fat
suffering:
from
Bulimia
1ri:.
.
even if they have an ideal
body
elude bingeing, secreti.ve·ea_t".'
we,ight. :, .
·
·
ing, ··several. bathroonr visits
According to that same in-
after ineals, and
fear
of being · formational pac~~t, soinechar-
fat, regardless of weight.
acteristicsofapt!rson suffer.;
. Tracey Soloms<?n,
a
sopho-
· ing fromAnm:exia Nerv~sa ii;t7
··
•
niore, :said' that one of her elude some of the following;
friends is . surviving from
odd fooddtuals, rigid exercise
Bulimia.
·.
regimes, dressing in )ayers to
.''She
u~
_to ~lways com-:- · hide. weight loss, and intense
plain about her weight Right
diets or fasting.
.
after we would eat 'dinner or
Poley said that the body re-
sorriethlng, she would.· excuse
sponds to the disease
as
pro-
~yf . ,·
J
t
herself from the table and go
tection.
.
.
into the bathroom alone," she
"As
a response, the body
be-
said.
gins to growUght
body
hair
Melissa Ruo~
a
sophomore,
around ~e body to· help keep
said that having an eating dis-
wanrith. It is almost like an ani-
order while Jiving" in the donns
mal growi
rig
hair to keep
,,,~~
,
can
be
more threatening.
warm,''shesaid.
48.17.1
48.17.2
48.17.3
48.17.4