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Part of The Circle: Vol. 31 No. 5 - October 10, 1985

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·,
I
Volume 31, Number 5
1
Maris~ College, Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
Marist workers
protest
wag·es
by Laverne
C.
Wiliiams
and Denise Wilsey ,
administrators and are not part of
SCA,
have already received a
9
per-
cent pay increase. Maintenance and
About 35 Marist secretaries and
security have also received increases
clerks picketed· TQesday at the
in their
base
salaries, which are
north entrance of campus to· pro•
considerably more than secretaries'
• test what they consider unfair
base salaries, .. according
to
wages.
Galleher.
The picketers were.members of
During
the
picket,
SCA
the Secretarial Clerical Association, members distributed Marist job
the. bargaining unit for Marist's
postings
showing
that
a
clerical workers. The association is secretary/clerk starts at $4.54 a
still negotiating·with administration hour, while a night security guard.
for
a- new contract after the
receives $5.08 to start and a part-
previous contract expired June
30.
time cafeteria worker $4.90. The
SCA ··members, 60 full-time . secretary's salary rises to $4. 77 an
employees • and 20 part-time, are
hour after a probationary period,
now working without a. contract.
~d the security guard and cafeteria
Five elected SCA members are
worker go to $6.97 and $6.07,
.on a negotiating team that has met
respectively, after a ye~r.
.
with a three-member administra-
'• . SCA is asking for a 9 percent in-
tion negotiating team about once a • crease across the board, an addi-
week since
~ May. "The two tional pay equity increase to help
negotiating teams are due to meet lift base salaries, a longevity clause ·
again tomorrow.


.that would eriable certain senior
SCA members recently decided

employees to get an additional pay
to picketto call public attention to increase and a new grievance pro•
their-request for better wages and
cedure that would allow • the
benefits;·; according . to Cathy
negotiators to call in an arbitrator,
Galleher;' spokesperson • for the Galleher said.
SC~
'i
negot_iati_i1¢
• te~_m
•. SC::A
i ,,
According
:!?·•
_E;~ily
. Burdis,,
notified
the adini~stratio11,an~ .tf.!fci
..
Maiist!s~director;iof.,publidrif
or'-,
<
r.,:,;;>;'c't'-'·;,.ii''c,::
media at.10:45
a;m.
Tuesday that. maioriZtlie administration warits'to •
n
..
·;,
...
October 10, 1985
-Meeting
to
decide
on parties
by. Shaaron Barriaga
& Douglas Dutton
College admiriistrators were still
undecided Monday whether to
. allow students to attend the annual
alumni" tailgating parties in the
Mccann Center parking lot this
Saturday; according to Bryan.
Maloney, director of alumni
affairs.
Representatives from various
college offices, including student
affairs and alumni affairs, were to
meet this week to determine if all
students, just-seniors or no students
at all would be allowed to par-
ticipate in the parties.
Students were .banned from the
event -for the first time ever last
year. Peter Amato, assistant dean
of student affairs, said that this was
because. of problems in the past
caused by students who had been
drinking at the parties.
-· members
·w,ou1d•·;picket
'on·tnei!·-·:so•iiackto-ihe·nesoiia'.ifiifti61e·fist...,
..... ___
~
....
lunch.he>ur,
tha.t,day. :
.,:
: •.•
";' ' ' 'soonaspossible; ... Theadnilrustra~
>
.': :::,.~9A..is requesting asal,ary:~--- ·_tion fullyappfeciatesthevaluable
~r~.e comp~abletot~~se,rece1v~ •• contributions· that ·the• secretaries
'.' Amato added lhat it would be • ..
,vc'rfeasyfot".:studc:nts·tovie>late
the-.
~s,ch<?,9!~f'alcohe>l_;.pc,)i~y)f~i,q,ved·
,
to.,all.$!1do.Tne policy includef
~
__
_. regulatio11
.• •.
prohibitfng _, students '--"
from having open. containers in
. • ~d
tt?t. 9thex:. groups on ,~pus;
have made,", said Burdis. "The ad-
&,~ch
as:non-SCA secretanes and ministration is anxious to finalize
maintenance and security workers. the matter with them."
. Abo~t
35. lli~mbers of Marist's Secretarial'ciericalAssocia-

tion protested
salary
levels during a no_ontime
p,cket l'uesday. -
The coUege~s
secretaries aild clerks have been working without
· a new contract since ~une 30 .. •• (Photo .by Bryan Mullen)
• A,pprQ,µmately seven. confid!n._
, Burdis said the· administration
tial. secr~taries, who serve semor
Continued on page
8
1.. ..... --....;. .........................
_ .... ___
-. ... -.-----~------~-
• ·,ss·
convocation:
-Gomputing and
Rafael:
,. g·
•1•0·
·ba·I 'e'd
••
_ ,u.c·
a11·on·.
..
by Anthony DeBanos .
that, and endures·. His daily calUn
Rafael. was born in Wisconsin,'
.

.
radio·. program
on-·· WEOK,
but _·moved with his
.family
_to
-
The walls of Ralph Mark's
''Talkback," has been runnillg for
Scaisdale;'N:Y;, at an early a.ge. It
4'by-5 foot office, nestled in a cor-
close to 18 years. Rafael's ','Talent
Was there he l,'>egarito.show
a)l in~
ner of the WEOK/WPDH Broad-
Search" has been a fixture at the -terest in his first love
=
music.
casting Corp. building, are
a.
Dutchess County fair since 1963,
• ''I was originally a 'jiiusician to
testimonial to bis lifestyle.· •
and the number of organizations
be " ·he .said. ·«I studied with Si- .
bf
Laverne C. · Williams
\ Convocation Day will be_held on
Oct. 23 in the Campus Center.
Students are e_ncouraged
to par--
ticipate, according to Julian~e
Maher, academic vice preside11t; •
. Newspapc;r
.clippings
detailing and committees he has served ori m:on Bellison, the first clarinetist
thelatest debatable topic, memos,
would fill this page.
.

with the Philharmonic in New
schedules of whom to.meet where,
"Ws not difficult at all," said
York, for abottt eight or so years.
thank you letters,. phone messages • . . Rafael, folding his hands across his. To give you· an idea of his. stature,
and a calendar bearing the inscrip~

rotund stomach.
"I'
like being an . one day when
I..
went up for rny
tion "aim high" are pinned to a
advocate fod>eople who can'ttalk
. third or fourth lesson, waiting in
public.
.
• •
Another pro!>lem' with students
• attending the event. is the question
• of liability, }vfaloney said. Marist
could be .held, responsible for in~
Con_tinued on page JO
Any student who wishes-to at-
ten·d must notify Ronna Gossett in
the Local History Room in the •
Marist College Library by Oct.IS.
The opening address will begin
at 8:30 a.m. The two speakers for
th.e day are Patricia Kutzer,
founder and executive director of
World Hunger Educational Ser~
vices, and William Cadden, the.
small -bulletin board. Each is ad-· to th~ people I can. It's fun to walk the waiting room· like everyone else
~~~~--­
• Linus R. Foy professor of com-·
puter science.

Kutzner is scheduled to speak at
9 a.m; on the importance of global
education and Cadden will speak at
I :45 p.m. on the future of com-
puters and computing.
. Kutzner has served as a U.S.
Delegate tp the World Conference
on Agrarian Reform and Rural
Development in Rome.
Cadden's 30 years of experience
at IBM and Bell Laboratories has
most recently included his job as
Education Manager at IBM in
Kingston.
Next Issue
of The Circle:
Oct. 31
dressed to "Rafael" -
the name
past the (Mid-Hudson) • Civic
was • a· -guy
named
Benny
Rafael Mark
he prefers and by which he is
Center and know I had something • Goodman."
known - to many Marist com-
to do with its being built."
Rafael wound up high school at • classical music station that needed
niunication arts students and
Rafael has been able to act as a
age 15, got a degree in engineering a program director. he came north
thousands of -Hudson Valley
community advocate through his
from New York University and .• to Poughkeepsie from his Long
residents.
"Talkback;' pfograni. Each week-
joined the Army at age 18, in 1942. Island home to run WEOK-FM.
But ·what really stands out are
day at noon, Rafael invites top
The Army sent him back to
"I walked into this shack on the
the photographs. Not
just
the sheer local government officials, leaders • Wisconsin. While stationed there, • side of the road," he relates, creak-
number, but the subjects: Mario
of community projects or law en-
he enrolled at_ the University of ing his chair back again, "and there
Cuomo, Hugh Carey and Ed Koch; forcement officials to speak on cur- . Wisconsin and l>egan studying was a school teacher. operating the
Lowell . Thomas
and Walter
rent issues. He then allows listeners journalism.
.
FM facility who had to get out of
Cronkite; Eddie Albert, Pete
to call the radio station and speak
"I was stationed in a place call-
there because be was starting
Seeger and Joe Franklin; Rafael
directly with his guest and voice ed Truex Field. I found there was' school the next day. So he said:
with his wife, Fran, and their seven their•own concerns. Once a month,
a school nearby and there was a 'Press this to talk on this, you turn
children.
Rafael also does a special Saturday journalism course there," Rafael that knob to ·make it louder, and
The 62-yeai-old broadcaster and
show with U.S. Rep. Hamilton
said. "Somewhere between when I that makes the turntable work, and
community activist leans back in
Fish Jr., discussing topics ranging was in the Army and when
I
got the other turntable hasn't worked
his chair, taking it all in through
from train· service to arms
out I finished that up, so that's
for two months so it doesn't mat-
bifocals a little too smaJI for his
reduction. -
what qualified me as a journalist."
ter,' and he left me with 14
round face. He scratches his gray-
Rick McCaffrey, WEOK's music
Rafael spent seven years in the records."
bearded chin and deadpans: "My
director, has worked with Rafael
anny. After his release in 1949, he
After Rafael took the helm of
next campaign is lobsters. I'm
for almost nine years at the
did stints as an entertainer on a WEOK-FM, he watched it change
against boiling them. It's too cruel.
Poughkeepsie radio station, and
cruise ship, building contractor,
owners and call letters once each,
You should hit them over the head
says the man's motivation comes
television script writer. He has also and formats twice, going from
first."
from the heart.
-worked in the field of public rela-
classical to country to rock 'n' roll.
Most 62-year-old men would not
"Rafe is the kind
of
guy," lie • tions. In 1959 he married his wife, The station is now known as
be found putting in days that start
said, "that if you could prove to
Fran, now a Dutchess County WPDH-FM.
at 6 a.m. and end past midnight,
him you needed his heart more
legislator.
During the 25 years Rafael.has
much less campaigning on behalf
than he did, he would give it to
In 1960, after overhearing a con-
of a lobster. But Rafael does just
you."

versation in a bathroom about a
Continued on page 2
,;
I..·
"'











































































t,
i
i
r
--•Page
2 - THE CIRCLE - October 10, 1985
.
Rafael__
Open
·24
Hours
473-1.576
Continued from page I
worked at the Poughkeepsie radio
station, he has held everyposition
from janitor to general manager.
But he prefers his position as talk
show host best. Among fellow
workers, he has acquired the
reputation as a down-to-earth but
philosophical person.
"He can discuss the situation of
a local family being evicted, the
father being unemployed, and tie
it in with contemporary social pro-
blems,,,
said John Steffanci,
Rafael's
"Talkback"
co-host.
"And he can give ·you a clear pic-
ture in 3 minutes."
.
Mccaffrey said: "He's a very
perceptive person. He can look so-
meone in the eyes and see exactly
where they're
coming
from."
Rafael's perceptiveness con-
tinues at Marist, where he has been
an adjunct professor in com-
munication arts for three years. He
is teaching two sections of "Radio
Broadcasting" this semester and
says he thinks that when it comes
to education, there is no substitute
for practical work in the field.
"Some
say that it's a horrible
circumstance to have to work and
be educated at the same time," he
said. "I think it's the only way
to
get an education. (When you work
in your field) you're able to bring
,
to your learning a lot of practical
things which most students don't,
or can't."
Rafael says students are also af-
fected by the media. They may pick
up stereotypes and beliefs that can
hinder their progress later in. life.
Rafael ran his fingers through
his tuft of gray hair and said:
"Consider that a whole generation
grew up in the '30s thinking that all
girls who got married wore fluffy

white dresses, and there was always
a good guy and a bad guy. Ttie bad

guy always got it in the. end,
.
afid
the good guy got the girt That hap
0
pened

in every single movie.
Everybody lived in a white house,
and life was rosy.
"A whole generation
grew
up
with this, and it's still left around,
as much as we'd like to assume it's
gone. We are the imprint of what
we were in those formative years.
However we wind up at 40 or.SO,
our imprint of how we live is back
at 15. So our legacy is a distorted
view of a lot of people, of what
goals ought to be and what values
ought to be.

'.'So, we're influenced by what's
around us, and the only way that
can be offset is by a good educa-
tional background. You need the
kind of mix that Marist provides.

My classes tell me their favorite old
television shows are "Leave it to

Beaver"
and "Father
Knows·
Best." There are no families like
that. When you get out in the real

world, you'll find it's not like
television."
Rafael stands up, lets out a sigh
and looks at a clock. It is ap-
proaching 12:15 a.m., and he still
has a story to write for "Rafael at
Large," another daily news feature
on WEOK. He looks at his bulletin
board and cracks a smile. Someone
has. sent him a recipe: How to
painlessly boil lobsters.
"There's an area in any com-
munity where a person can attach
themselves to and find their own
little place, and that's the fun of be-
ing in a community like this one,''
he said, heading towards a produc-
tion
studio
and
a waiting
typewriter. "I'm doing what I
love."
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DoY<iuhavetherigbtstulf? .
Get ~our c~reer off to_a
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•. • •

'
'
7T
























I.
..
' ______________________
;._ ______
October-10, 1985 -THE CIRCLE·· Page
3--
Viewbook '85-86:
The· selling of a college
.. by Fred_
Dever
!es an eye opener at college fairs,
it has made hundreds· of friends
while traveling to high schools
throughout the Northeast, and with
its 16 pages of descriptions and col-
or photos, it tries each year to con-
vince hundreds of high school
seniors to attend Marist College.
It's the Marist College Ad-
mission Viewbook, and it is enter-
ing its 18th year as part of Marist's
marketing strategy.
The Viewbook, which also con-
tains an admissions form, tries to
depict life at Marist. It is given to
people who express interest in
enrolling at the college.
According to James Daly, vice
president of admissions and enroll-
ment planning at Marist, there is a
particular image that Marist wants
to portray through the Viewbook.
"We are an institution that is
concerned about being successful,
Daly said. "We want to be seen as
_ a forward, progressive institution
that relies on a rich tradition, that
essentially wants to remain as a
school . that cares about its
students.''
Daly says college admissions is
getting to be a big business, and
publications like the Viewbook are
vital in order to attract students.
"It's much more competitive, there
are fewer numbers of high school
seniors, and that number is going
to continue to shrink," he said.
. Daly added that a steady enroll-
ment is important financially to
any college. "Ninety-two percent
out of every dollar that comes into .
Marist is from student enroll-
ment," he said.
Daly said he is responsible for
portraying a truthful image of the
college. He said a picture of the
· Greystone building used on the
front cover of previous View books
was removed because he thought it
might be deceiving.
".We try to show
other
buildings," Daly said. "We want
to_be conscious not to give the im-
pression that every bµilding is made
of gray stone. I could put a book
together that would look like
Vassar College, but you have to
present it the way it is."
Daly said that although the
Viewbook tries to give a full pic-
ture of the college, emphasis is put
on computer science and com-
munications.
"It
is difficult to
match the computer hardware
Marist has," Daly said. "The in-
ternships and the Lowell Thomas
association in the communication
arts program is hard to beat."
'
Delays in the construction of
campus facilities, Daly said, can
result in the Viewbook giving
readers the wrong impression.
"If
I deserve a black eye for anything,
it would be promising the Lowell
Thomas Center," he said.
Daly pointed out, however, that
when he was interviewed in 1967
for admission as a student at
• Marist, the admissions director
promised a recreation center. "It
took nine and a half years for it to
With a new year comes a "newtt cafeteria. A change in management brings with it a change
--. in atmosphere and in service. Some new features include an automatic dishwashing machine
and a computerized identification system .for:determining
meal ticket ho~ders.
-
be completed. At least the Lowell
Thomas Center is not taking that
long," he said.
Construction
of the center,
which will be located on the north
side of campus, began this summer
after several delays.
The current Viewbook also has
pictures of the Garden Apartments
being constructed, but in its text,
the Viewbook says the apartments
are completed. In actuality, work
is just now being completed
on
the
units, and an entire section was not
completed in time for the opening
of the school this fall.
Daly said that
when the
Viewbook was being put together
this summer, officials believed that
the units would be completed by
the beginning of September.
According
to
Daly,
the
Viewbook costs $1 a copy to pro-
duce. T,he money for it is generated
by the $25 Marist charges as an ap-
plication fee. He sees the money us-
ed to produce the Viewbook as well
spent, because it helps the college
compete for the best students.
"This year over 4,000 people filed
an application. We have tripled the
number of applications over last
year," he said.
Marist's top five competitors arc
Syracuse University, Siena College,
Ithaca College, Fairfield Universi-
ty and Fordham University, Daly
said. That information is determin-
ed by where else Marist applicants
have sent their SAT scores.
The Viewbook
and other
publications within the Admissions
Office arc planned and executed
with the help of professional
writers and and designers.
"I
have
three
or
four
different
photographers taking pictures of
the campus. Each photographer
has his own perspective," Daly
said. In addition, he works with a
commercial artist and a profes-
sional writer on the Viewbook.
This is Daly's ninth year at
Marist. He was previously director
of admissions at Mount St. Mary
College
in Newburgh.
Daly
graduated from Maris! in 1971.
Dining director seeks
icte·as from students
by
Sue Blazejewski
prove the existing system.
A turnover in food service per-
"We relv on student feedback,"
sonnel has created new optimism
commented Marks. "We are look-
and change in the Marist College
ing forward to giving the students
cafeteria, according to recently ap-
what they want; because who
pointed Director of Dining Services
knows what the students want, bet-
Bill Marks.
ter than the students."
Marks comes to Marist from
·•we can't give the students
Simmons College in Boston, and
lobster and steak every night, but
replaces former director Frank
we can do almost anything else,"
Scott, who has branched into
he added.
another area of food service.
Last year a suggestion board was
Also new to the staff are Food
used to establish communication
Service Director Jim Connors, who
between students and management.
takes on board operations, and
Students wrote suggestions and
. Food Catering Manager . Mer-
questions on index cards and p\ac-
~riweather ,Clark,. whose<resp.onc .. ed. them. on the bu\\etin board,;_
in
s1bilities • include • overseeing, cash • ' tum managers replied with remarks
and catering operations in . both
and answers to these insights.
snack bars and the pub.
"It -worked well," remarked
Peter Rifenburg remains on the
Marks, "We want to establish that
staff as production manager in
kind of positive communication
charge of daily kitchen, ordering
with the students."
and purchasing operations.
· Another channel of communica-
According to· Marks, the major
tion is the development of the stu-
standards
in managing
and
.dent food committee. This commit-
operating the cafeteria will remain ._ tee is made up of students who •
the same, and that be combined . work· together
with cafeteria
with new plans and ideas to im-
Continued on page
W
No
budget· cut's
means .moreaid
The goal
of
the campaign had been
to send
over
1,000 student letters
Columbus
Day
is coming;
misconceptions linger
by
Michael .T. Regan
: • The proposed cuts in ·financial
. aid .. advocated by the Reagan ad-
•• ministration last February have all
been blocked bY Congress, and ac-
cordingto Karen Atkin, the direc-
tor of financial aid, Marist actual-
ly received_an increase in funding
for the.current school year.
"Individual students could have
seen their aid reduced because of
fluctuations in need, but on the
whole Marist received an increase
in the overall funding of the finan-
cial aid program," said Atkin.
The planned cuts would have af-
fected
5
million students nation-
.. wide according to estimates by the
U.S.' Department of Education,
and over
2J)OO
Marist students.
The proposals
encountered
angry reactions from thousands of
students, parents, and co)lege of-
ficials throughout the nauon, and
according to a recent article in the
New York Times, Congressional
budget negotiators agreed not on-
ly. to keep the current funding in
place but to appropriate $280
million dollars more than the ad-
ministration had asked for.
In February, Marist student
leaders and ·the administration
teamed up to form a massive letter
writing campaign to combat the
President's proposed budget cuts.
• to legislators in Washington. The
college canceled
classes for
one day
and held a letter writing session in
the Theater, resulting in over 700
letters eventually mailed.
• "The- letter writing campaign·
pro\'ed
that
people really do have
a say in what happ_ens
to them.
They only have to put in the effort
to make their ·views known to their
Congressmen," said Atkin.
Atkin explained that the Higher
Education Act, which governs all
student aid programs, will expire
this year. She added that Congres-
sional subcommitees
have listened
to the complaints of students and
college administrators in an at-
tempt to determine what is wrong
with the current programs.
The New York Times article also
reported that Congress is now
working on legislation that would
keep current grants, loans and
work study programs
intact for the
next five years.
If the President's proposals had
been adopted, Marist would have
lost $75,000 in Pell grants;
$137,858 in SEOG awards;
$64,956
in NDSL awards; and almost $2.S
million in Guaranteed Student
Loans.
by Anthony DeBarros
You've studied his voyages in
elementary school. Our entire
• nation gets a holiday in his
name, on the second Monday in
October and he's even had the·
capital of Ohio named after
him.
Every American knows the
story of Christopher Columbus,
but what do you think of when
you hear his name?
• You probably picture an Er-
rol Flynn type-a swashbuckler
bent on blazing a new trail
across the Atlantic Ocean, a
man who laughed when others
said he would die because the
Earth was flat,
a
sailor who
tamed the sea and discovered
America-right?
Wrong, wrong, wrong.
Christopher
Columbus was a
brave sailor and he did sail to
America in 1492, but the first
bit of misinformation
to correct
is his name. He was christened
Cristofaro Colombo upon his
birth. to middle class, wool-
weaver parents in Genoa, Italy,·
in 1451. The Spanish called him
Cristobal Coton. How.his name
ever worked its way to
Christopher
Columbus
is a story
for a genealogical expert to tell.
There is also an argument to
be made about whether or not
he discovered America. The
problem lies in how one defines
"discovery," according to
Bill
Olson, a professor of history at
Marist College.
"The problem.is, what does
'discovery' mean?" said Olson.
"If it means 'to find,' then no,
Columbus was not the first to
discover America. There is
evidence that at least the
Vik-
ings, the Phoenicians,
the
Polynesians and the Asians were
here first. If it means 'to find
and make known,' then yes, he
did discover
America,"
he said.
Didn't
Columbus have
a
pioneering spirit,
a
desire "to
boldly go where
no man has
gone
before?" Well, there was
one other
factor. He had an
idea
about
finding a new and
shorter
way to the riches of the
East Indies, so in fact, Colum-
bus was more like his modern-
day American
counterparts
than
he knew: He was in it for the
money.
.. We tend to think of him as
an exciting person," said Olson,
.. but he was involved for
pragmatic reasons. Queen
Isabella of Spain promised him
royalties and the spice trade at
that time was enormous."
He must have had courage
though, because everyone told
'him his crew and ship would
perish when it fell off the edge
of the flat·world, right? Actual-
ly, not many people in 1492 still
thought the Earth was flat, ac-
cording
to
Olson.
"The
intellectual
people
thought it was round," said
Olson.
"On a clear day,
Spaniards could see boats sail-
ing out to sea dip below the
horizon. Very few people that
subscribed
to map-making
thought the world was flat,
especially in Spain and Por-
tugal," he said.
In fact, in 1492, "Behaim's
Globe" appeared, named after
the Spanish map-maker and
cartographer who developed it.
It portrayed the Earth as an
oval, and even showed some
chunk of land between Spain
and the East Indies, according
to Olson. So when the Nina,
Pinta and Santa Maria left
Spain on August 2,
1492,
not
many on board were afraid of
falling off the edge of the world.
Continued
on
page 6

~
......
,
, {·/i'
;.:.;
..



































































r
f
f
t.
I
--Page
4 •
THE CIRCLE - October 10, 19B5
. Safety ...
blit
·at
a price·
Lesson I: College students should refrain from burning their food
even if it is an intercollegiate pastime of sorts.
. .
-



Lesson 2: College officials and fire-alarm system designers should know
that college household-air is plagued with foreign
·matter
from the word
go.
.
.

-
.

The
incredible
rate at which the Garden A.part~ent alarm system has
chimed out "FIRE" in the day and night has got to make us wonder
when our local firefighters and apartment residents will ever get some
-
sleep again.


When the original ionization smoke detectors were installed, they were
activated by any foreign matter in the air - even dust and steam from
showers. Did the school really expect over 300 students to live like the
"Boy in the Plastic Bubble," free from all contaminations in a sterile
environment? Since when were college apartments supposed to be like
hospital emergency rooms?
So the college had made a mistake. They admitted as much. The
origi~al detectors were sent !nto early retirement. Next came the photo-
electric detector models, said to react only in cases of heavy smoke.
• College officials predicted a big improvement; and in some ways they
. may have been correct. Fairview firefighters said it had calmed to only
three or four alarms a day: Well, Marist, nice try.
At
present, solution number three is being implemented. Soon Fair-
view won't have to hear about most alarms at all. The photo-electric
system is still around, and will react just as often. But the signal won't
travel to Fairview unless a student pulls an alarm box handle or a se-
cond detector, connected to Dutchess Control headquarters, picks up

smoke from a genuine fire.
·You've
come a long way, baby- from "The Boy in the Plastic Bub-
ble" to the tenant's response method. Now that the situation's been
somewhat alleviated, who's going to foot the bill?
Everyone knows_
a fire set-up is expensive, so what about three?
. ·
For Garden Apartment residents, it's been "one of those days" every
day now. for over
a
month. Will they pay? Or will this go under
miscellaneous on the general school bill? It's your move, Mr. Administra-
tion, and we're all watching.
Letters
-£Of{
-r~~G
}.HA7.itJ&:1..Y
i~T6l.~i~E~'t'- f60t'l.6
WJfo
MAKE
TJ{E 51.6\A'fbR
Al\~tv-E' FA:1-'T"SR

BY ~i'l''T'iNll
'1li~
EJuTT0N 10
eru.ioN
-rit-1SS'.
The Real
World
Letter to the president
by
Carl MacGowan
tions on ..;atlonal TV. There's acer-
"e" where the "y"·should be. It's
tain form required to make the
.
all I can do to keep her from
.
Ronald Reagan needs our help; grade. Herein is a sample letter to

typing;



With the State of the Union ad-
.
the president that will give you an

The mortgage will soon be due

dress coming up in just• a few idea of what the Big Guy is look~ on my secorid home and the motor-
months,
.the White
.
House
.
ing for.

boat hasn'Fbeen used all year
in
speech writers will be needing
Dear Ron,
order to save gas. We even cancell-''·•
material to remind the country of.
,
(scratc~ that)
ed our trip to Haiti and ~ad,toJet-
what a good, sweet guy Reagan is. Dear Sir,
: .
.
.
.
·:.
.
tle fo.r the Philippines. If we can't
It is apparent that the country has.·.
)'ou don't know me, butLam a

pulltogether:out finances·soon
•we•.:;
.
. ..
become complacent in_
th~ wake of ._le>yalAmerican
citizen who is in
a
..
:;may
have."fo Jive in an RV frir:-
a.r
1
·•
More
on·• apartments
·,
_\(
,,tlt~
~eagan_,!e::eJect~on,•and:,~as.
-jafu;JJ).ope;you:cim
help me;:;;,,,;_weekfo bettefcmaxiffiize'oiifcash

;~ • t~;. ~di tor:
.

••••
Our.ap~~i~~tc~uldn't.b~:~~{~·
'./
~~~J~~~d.~~n:h~
0
~~~~;'l~aJ~;·.:x<i;J~_~j$i~?::t;:·t:i~~te~~t,r~~~;;i~iil::r;~~t~~:~:r~~}-
Everyone at Marist was to be
on time, although construction of'
-grearn~tt0n.
• •
. .
.
-'

;
; .
ed my countf)'.tnt~r:.ee .worldw_ars
:i
a
..
respec_t_able
ci.tizeri: who>has·;',·:
.•
housed by September 30.
,
.
-
things of the utmost importance,

They re not wntmg letters_..
•.
and voted Repµb}jcan
'allmy
hfe.
.
sweated each. day of his life along\
·c
:
T~at's what President Murray
.
such as the curbs and the installii-

Reagan has always been big on Still; even the best ofus sometimes
.·.that
prosperous' road
·we'
calf:

'
said.

tion of the
_famous
·"Christmas
letters from common folk_,
like the run into bad luck. (Author's note:
freedom? •
• >
:."
.
;
J'
;
:,,.
.•
~??
On September 30,
··
we asked
tree;' (a tip· of the hat to the class
letter from th e' kid who hoped

homespun philosophy is a must for
•·
'
If ever called to witness I
would'
'
Steve Sansola, the director ofhous-
of
.
'85) managed to come off
~eagan wouldn't have to wear pa~
_maximum
heart-tugging:)

• ••
be the first
to
testify thadhe coufsc:"'
ing, when our apartment would be
without delay .. One only hopes
Jamas at ~ress conferences after he
• ••••
It all began five years ago wher_i
···_you,
sir, ~ave set us upon. is: th~
'
built. He handed us letters saying
Marist will install something for the
~as shot m 1981. The most effec-
my son went to college. He was the
proper

course for our Second
come back October
l.
·


.
class of '86 to uproot. If so, that
tive, however, are the ones that ask pride of t~e entire family and we American Revolution. •

.
.. ..•
We came back October I and
would probably be ready before
Reagan for personal help and allow all loved _him.
B~t.
then he failed me
(Note: the above paragraph is
Sansola said, come back October
our apartment
the president.to arch his eyebrows by refusmg to Jom the ROTC· he


f
l
• •



t •
t
2. We came back October 2 and


with eviden_t, artificial concern.

spent his hard-earned college l~ans ~~s?
1
~
h
no, {itpera ivet
0
Sansola sa1·d, c·o-
me bac·
k October

We can only wonder w.
-hy
Man.'st
The last time Reagan tried it was by living it up·
vacations •

IS mgms your e er as a· rue,
.-
an obvious phony He re~er·
red
.t
Fl

"da
~

-
1
:
d
hm

forthright, worthy_.
fetter.• Flattery
-:
7, and maybe they w.ould know;
continues to deal with this contrac-

.
1
'
0
on ,
1
as cars,
.
ou stereos, t e

goes a long way

perhap

to

the
.
Maybe the contractor would
tor. You
can
only use excuses of bad a letter supp~sedly from
.a
guy in .works. He graduated from school
Congress. Letter;
·that
ofuifthis
.
have a· projected completion date.
hick, weather, shipping delays !,ind
..
So~ewheresville who asked the • magna cum laude, then scampered
••
h t

-

• d k
And maybe we'd be able to move
strikes for. so long before people. presicle~t for a tax reform plan. I off
.
to Europe
to
.
accept a
.
.f::g~ap
g~ an autom~tlc un
in before arhthritis sets in;
-
.
.
star~ to get suspicious.
-
kn~w It was made up because,
fellowship

at the University of

t e tras buc_ket.)
••
·•
• •
• •


And, of. course, the biggest
un!1ke
1
ast

presidential letter-. Madrid, He left it to his• mother-
to ~~at can be done
I
sh;dl leave.
maybe of them all, maybe we'd get
Now it seems the contractors
wnters, t e guy wasn't plastered all and I to pay the loans back.

• •

.
••




• . •

financial restitution.
have turned the tables ori Marist oyer the TV news as he basked in . His:behavior affected my other
Finally, let_!Il~ add that
I
~ave
•••
With Marist's track record of
·
College and will n,ow only. give his new•fol!nd fame "It's
_an
children; and all 15ofthem wanted
-
e
n
close~
th
e s~m of $I()()
t()
tl!e
building mishaps and delays, it
President Murray's· famous line, hcinor'" they all say·


to go to college. Mr. President sir

Republican National Committee to
would seem they would have learn-
·

••.
~
•:
• •
·
_
If you're more a phone person,··. I'm just a poor stock-broker 'anci
.•
further the P¥(}'.'s prepll!,atioris,for
ed their lesson. As the old saying
"We're working on it."·
.

yoll can
_always-
give The Great

I don't feel I should have to. ac-
;
th
e
1986
campai~n.
!
kn?~
_tha~?
goes, fool me once, shame on ytlu.
And the longer the.delay, the more.· Comrnurucat?r a_ring. Th~ number

quiesce to the demands of my ret~m to a Democratic tyrann}'. ~-
Fool me twice, shame on me. By
we expect to get as compensation.
at the White House Is (202)

punked~out brats~
.I

tove my
_
st
nke at. the
_h~
of.Americas
this time Marist should be pretty
The Residents. of 456-7639. Ju~t ask for "putch."
children, but, well; you know how grea!ness and will pl_unge
our.J)e~--
shamefaced.
Garden Apartmen.t
FS
But the nation has a senous pro-
it is...
.
.
ple mto the domam of an
.evtl

blem; if the speechwriters don't get
I
will not accept any fo~ of
empire.
_'
;,

_
.
·: ••

America's needy.
any goocl letters, the. January._ welfare, believing that hand-outs
.
(Note:
_hey,
mon~y don't hurt,
~peech may_be a bomb_of stagger-. only perpetuate poveity. (note: em-
you kn~w.):·
.
••
.

.
.

mg proportions. How 1s the presi-
.
phasize Republican party

line

Greetmgs to your wife, Nancy,
dent ~oi~$ to sell his next rou~d of
whenever possible) I choose instead who I hold P~~SOJ?ally
resp_o~sible
cut~ m the welfare programs 1f he to plug ahead in the spirit of Knute

for the rehab1h~at1on
of my e1ghJh
can t demonstrate that he is con-
Rockne and work things out for
daughter, who. beat her drug habits
To the editor:
I would like to respond to David
McCraw's
commentary
on
American attitudes: "My Travels
With Gossa," which appeared in
last week's CIRCLE. (September
26, 1985) Before I begin, however,
let me. invite everyone to think
seriously about what McCraw has
to say about America's attitude
towards the poor of the world.
TH€
CIRCLE:
I first heard of Ethiopia as a
highly impressionable ten year old,
when my ever-so-charitable
Catholic grade school presented a
program
on World Hunger
Awareness.-·As pictures of half-
naked, wide-eyed, starving children
with bloated bellies flashed across
the screen, I was so moved to pity
them that I fo.rfeited my lunch
money for the week. Hence, I was
·
cerned about the poor'? To that
myself.
••
cold turkey and now works as an
end, all of us must send help im-
Still, it's hard and my dear wife
.
investment counselor
for
the Rite-
medi~t~ly. We must all wri~e letters of 34 years has taken the worst of
Aid pharmaceutical chain.
explaining ~ur personal dilemmas it. She is a good woman and has
so th: president has some good
always accepted her role as the bar-.
Thank you for your kindness·,
matenal.
, .
ried second-mate, but lately she
sir.
Of course, we can t Just leave it
suffers from delusions and tends to
at that. Remember, the object is to
spell her words phonetically. When
get our everyday trials and tribula-
she writes her name, she puts an

Continued on pa~e 8
Editor:
Denise Wilsey
Associate Editors:
Douglas Dutton
Paul Raynis
Michael Regan
Laverne C. Williams
Cartoonist:
Don Reardon
Arts
&
Entertainment
Editor: Ken Parker
Business Manager:
Sports Editor:
Brian O'Connor
Advertising staff:
Photography Editor:
Laurie Barraco
Senior Editor;
Carl MacGowan
Fac;ulty Advisor:
Best wishes,
Paul and Mary
_Ferlingerritson
Lisha Driscoll
Christine Colvin
Teresa Razzano
David Mccraw
·-·--···--·-··--····-····
................
,
...............
.






















. •• • I . .
~
' •
,
.........
4
Coilcern for the cominunity
by Barrie Daneker
, The college administration is too
closed minded to the existing drug
situation. The administration is too
.concerned with the alcohol pro-
'blem on campus because of the re-
• cent decision , to raise the legal
• drinking age to twenty-one. At the
present time, all freshmen dor-
mitories are dry areas. However,
what is to be done with the upper-
• classmen areas? The above ques-
tion should have been answered
and resolved by Assistant Dean
• Amato in September.
• As statistics tell us, drinking
habits have changed not only in the
age group of twenty-five to forty,
but also, in the eighteen to twenty-
four year old range. Alcohol con-
·The .key
to the U.S.
trade deficit
by Omar
Farooq
The U.S. trade deficit, which
now totals nearly $150 billion an-
nually, has provoked rampant cries .
ih Congress for protectionism and
retaliation against
unfair trade.
practices.
Tariffs on foteign go.ods will
not, however, reduce the trade
deficit but will only provoke fur-
ther retaliation by opposers.,The
real reason for the trade deficit:is
the
50
percent overvaluation of the
American
dollar;which practical-
lyelim.inates all possibilities to sell
U:S. goods
at home or abroad.
This overvaluation permits foreign
firms to • sell their goods at
. anywhere
from one • half to two
thirds off of the U.S. prices
without resorting to
dumping or
government subsidies, as alleged by
advocates of.protectionist policies.
The c~use or' the overvalued
dollar
itself is the non-stop flow of
capital funds into
the U.S,, which
bids
up the price of the American
dollar on foreign
exchange
markets. Capital flows are 10 times
larger than world trade in goods
and services. Thus, imbalances in
capital flows, not the inherent
salability
of U.S. products, are the
primary
determinant of foreign ex-
change rates.

In sum, tariffs and other protec~
tionist measures will
do little in
·,
sumption in today's society has
changed towards the more social
drinker.
:

Is there still a problem
for
many
campuses and for society • in
generai?Xes,-but the facts show us
that alcoholism has decreased
drastically _since the 1960's. This
drop is a result of the public's
awareness of the problem at hand.
· In contrast, drug use has been a
problem at Marist College and
every college campus in the United
States. What is the solution? The
solution to any related drug situa-
tion is not how it can be eliminated,
but how one can deal with this pro'-
blem effectively on campus. Over
the years, Mar_ist has. had this
dilemma just like other campuses,
but the difference is the college
halting the influx of foreign goods
unless they take the· form of
straightforward ban or quotas.
After eliminating the possibility
of protectionism, one may ask
"Well what could, would or should
the government do?" This question
leads to a solution which is not cur-
. rently being _discussed
in the debate
of free trade vs. protectionism. The
government should not place a
tariff on imported goods and ser-
vices; rather place one on foreign
purchases of U .S; Government
securities and· on foreign purchases
of capital assets, such
as
U.S. com-
panies, stocks and bonds or
perhaps real estate. The govern-
ment should then set the tariff to
float at a rate sufficient to offset
the overvaluation of the dollar at
any given moment. •

~
Unlike
a
tariff on goods, forei~
Dlitions' woulcCwelcome one: on
ca.piial purchases. The huge flow of
capital has ma~e the U.S. a debtor
nation for the first time since
World War I and is draining vital
savings away from other countries
that need them for investment in
theit own economies. In turn those
countries' economic -success will
help the U.S.
Obviously, a tariff on capital
purchase would compel the govern-
ment to confront the issue of solv-
ing the • Federal budget deficit,
which itself is a primary cause of
the overvalued dollar. Shall the fact
that the Reagan Administration did
just the opposite be considered
unusual?
Through
the U.S.
Treasury, ifis now offering U.S.
Government bearer bonds in order
to make it easier to market the
Federal deficit abroad.
. Omar Farooq is a computer
science major and a freshman at
Marist. •
VIEWPOINT
on
E-qual
Rights
for Women
E_ssays
should
be 500-700
words
typed
and double-spaced
Send
all essays
to Mike Regan
C/O the Circle
Office
does little to prevent this activity
from occurring.
,
So, how does Marist College
discourage the use of illegal drugs?.
. Let us take a look at the college
• policy on illegal drug possession
and use. The 1985/1986 Student·
Handbook states, under college
regulations, that, "possession
and/or use of illegal substances, is
a· serious
matter ... and ... ap-
propriate disciplinary action will be
taken at the discretion of Resident
Director." Well, the college is cor-
rect in one legal aspect, by impos-
ing discilinary actions. But, does
the college have a moral obligation
to society, its students, their
families,
and
the college's
environment?
Yes, Marist College does have a
moral obligation to all these par-
ties. But how does the college ad-
dress this major problem? My sug-
gestion is that the college include
in -its disciplinary action, thatthe
violator
attend
certain drug
awareness sessions which are man-
datory for every violator, in order
to attend Marist College in the
future. However, does the· every
day or casual drug user face the
chance of being caught engaging in
this activity? No, it is not likely.
Most drug users are very discrete
because of this possibility.
How does Marist College at-
tempt setting up this system? lt is
easily feasible.
If
the administra-
tion would open ifs eyes, policy
makers would see that agencies ex-
ist that deal with these situations.
Will
Marist administrators pur-
sue this system? My belief is that
they have no choice in the matter.
The victims are not just the drug-
users themselves, but their room-
mates, our environment
and
society.
This article is the first step in
drug awareness and in helping our
troubled students, faculty, et
cetera. The Marist community
must stand together and push for
this system, which can only better
our society. Let us start now, to-
day, not tomorrow. Let's work on
this dilemma faster than the Lowell
Thomas Communication Center.
Some people need our help to see
how valuable life really can be.
Barrie Daneker is an accounting
major and freshman at Marist.
Why history?
by William Hare
When I changed my. major to
history I knew what type of work
was required. I also knew that the
job market would be competitive
.and the salaries minimal compared
to other careers.
What I didn't know was that I
would be bombarded with ques-
tions from people in non-liberal
arts majors. Everytime, it's the
same old scene.
"You changed your major to
history? History!" (They usually
say history twice to make sure they
heard right.)
.
."What are you going to do with
it, teach'?"
"How are--you going,to make_
any:money?"
"Why history?!"
That's the hardest question to
answer, why? It's not hard because
I don't have an answer. It's hard
because the. answer is difficult for
most people to understand. I'm
studying history because it's in-
teresting, challenging and most of
all because I like it. It's as simple
as that.
Too many times I've heard peo-
ple complain that they're bored
wlth their major or they don't like
.
it. When I ask them why they stay
with that major their answer is "for
the money." The idea of making
money and getting a better job
after college is one reason for pay-
ing $40,000 dollars for an educa-
tion, but it shouldn't be the only
. one.
A person should enjoy what he
or she is doing for a living. If not,
life becomes a monotonous chore
that you have to drudge through
day after day. And if you don't like
your job it will influence the quality
of your work.
But there's more to it than likes
and dislikes. Believe it or not stu-
dying history, or any' liberal arts
major, can be inspiraticinal. When
. I read about the hardships faced by
the pioneers of this country, mine
don't seem quite so bad. That
might sound corny, but it's true.
Probably all of us have felt that
feeling at some time. Think about
that certain song, story, poem or
painting that makes you feel more
secure and self-confident, and
you'll know what I'm talking
about.
What will happen if the liberl
arts are no longer studied? There'll
be no more music, art, dance or
poetry. All the avenues for hum~n
expression will have disappeared,
What good will it be to have money
if
there isn't anything to spend it
on? Records, clothes, cars, movies
and all the other luxuries in life are
directly related to the liberal arts.
Fortunately there are signs that
a change is in the making. Increas-
ing volumes in the library, the new
core program and the rejuvenation
of the debate team are
a
few ex-
amples of how the Marist ad-
ministration is attempting to keep
the arts and humanities alive.
• But this change is slow and cost-
ly, and it won't continue if no one
takes advantage of it. What's need-
ed now is student support. The
ironic thing is that the liberal arts
major has marketable skills that
businesses look for; communica-
tion
skills, both writing and speak-
ing, analytical thinking and the
ability to work with people, are just
a few.
So the next time someone tells
you they're studying history, art,
music, English, or any of the other
no,n-monetary majors don't snear
and challlenge them to name a
career that they can go into.
There's more to liberal arts than
meets the eye.
WilJiam Hare
is a history major
and a senior at Marist.
The Twilight
Zone
by John P. Anderson
Submitted for your approval.
Jonathan D. Lerrima, a hungry stu-
dent. Age? Irrelevant. Shakies
Shakedo_wn Pizza. An emporium
of fine Italian cuisine. When this
one Jonathan D. Lemma stepped
into Shakies Shakedown Pizza he
also stepped into the ... Twilight
Zone.

"Excuse me Sir, but I was just
walking down the street and I
noticed that you have a pizza that
can be ready in four minutes."
"That'sa right," Shakie said in
his thick Italian accent, "Four-a
quick minutes."
"Excellent .... excellent. I'll take
one, because I am starvin,"
Jonathan said holding his slight
beer belly.

Shakie then proceed.ed to run
about kitchen throwing every ingre-
dient he could find into a large pot.
Fifteen minutes had passed.
"Excuse
me .. .
Mr.
Shakedown?"
Jonathan
whispered. _
"Call-a me Shakie. And-a speak
up you fine-a Iookin' boy you,"
Shakie said as he continued.
"Excuse me ... Sh-Shakie, but it's
been about ten minutes."
"Hey," Shakie said flailing a
knife,
"Are
you-a
startin'
trouble?"
"No, I...I just wanted to know
how long it's going to take? You
told me before four minutes."
"So it's-a taken' a bit longer. No
big-a deal. You wanna hear-a
sometin'?"
"What?" Jonathan said holding
a tighter grip on his stomach.
"Take-a
good-a look over
there," Shakie said pointing across
the street.
Jonathan saw a large hole with
construction equipment all around.
"You-a see that hole?" Shakie
continued, "That's-a gonna be my
new-a buildin" '.
"Oh? Really?" Jonathan said
tightening his belt.
"That's-a right. I'm-a callin' it
Shakies Pizza and Bowlin' Center.
You wanna hear-a joke?"
"Well .. .I ... "
"Whats-a donut and my
new-a
buildin' have in common?"
"What?"
"They-a both have holes where
Centers should be."
"I
don't get it."
"You're not supposed.to."
"Look," Jonathan said sternly,
"It's been an ... holy smokes ... an
hour
since
I came in here. When
am
I
going to get my pizza?"
"Hold-a your
horses. You're-a
gonna get it."
"When
I came here I thought I
was going to get my pizza in four
minutes.
Then it was Ten
minutes ... then
THIRTY ... then
an
HOUR!
Now
I've
been
waiting ... Three hours?
It
was just
an hour a minute ago. Where did
the time go?"
"Time-a flies when you 're-a
havin fun."
"But I'm NOThavin' fun. Give
me my pizza. NOW!"
"Look-a·wise guy. I need time.
I have to cut 'da tomatoes, roll-a
the dough, spread-a the sauce, it-a
takes-a time."
"Look Mr. Shakedown, 1 gave
you time. Three . . FOUR? hours
worth. How long does it take to
make a stupid pizza. Did you have
to wait for the farmer to die so you
could get a good deal on the
tomatoes?
I
gave you enough time.
Now cough up my pizza. My four
minute pizza," Jonathan
was
red
in the face.
"Look-a son," Shakie said with
a
sadistic smile, "Hows about an
English Muffin?"
"Don't make me something else.
Make me my pizza."
"A nice-a English Muffin?"
"No."
"Please-a?
Make-a Shakie
happy."
"No," Johathan said as he head-
ed for the door.
"Oh, don't go away mad.
Shakie has another joke for-a
you."
Continued on page 9

,.,
\.
;;.:,










--Page
6 - THE CIRCLE_
- October 10,-
1sss------------,.,,,•-~---------------------------------------_..._
..
"'."--~~..._..._..._..._..._~..._,
..
Sound
barrier
Live Aid vs. Woodstock
by
Kenneth F. Parker Jr.
By this time, much has been said•
and written about Live Aid and its
accomplishments and failures.
Maybe too muc:-i. As a concert,
Live Aid organizers did what had
to be done. They rounded up some
of the most popular musicians in
the world. Although organizers
were criticized for not allowing
lesser known bands the opportunity
to
perform,
critics
should
remember that Li~e Aid was not
designed as a promotional tool. It
was organized to raise money. If
more attention is going to be paid
to
Rick Springfield than an up and
coming band, then so be it. The
more viewers the higher the chance
for donations.
As a fund raising venture, Live
Aid has to be labeled a success.
Over $80 million has been raised to
date. Just published is a Live Aid
book which will generate still more
revenue and the 1-800-LIVEAID
number is still in operation and tak-
ing pledges.
Despite frequent comparisons to
Woodstock,Live Aid stands on its
own in terms of acceptibility and
purpose. What made Woodstock
noteworthy was that it was not ex-
pected to attract such a large au-
dience and
become
such a
timepiece of '60s culture. The spon-
taneity that was at Woodstock was
not present in Philadelphia. Live
Aid was structered and designed as
a day of unity. People planned in
advance to take time out of their
day to watch the event. Yet in keep-
ing with the revivalist nature of to-
day many insisted on experiencing
Woodstock II father than Live
Aid.
But if Woodstock
showed
anything it was that young aduits
were just as adept at complacency
as their parents were. They said
• they were there in the name of
peace and love, yet how many peo-
ple actually took the time to plea·
for change or action?
It
seemed
• more drugs were passed around
than petitions.
What Woodstock did show was
the ability of one subculture to
gather together even if it was only
for music and not world reform. •
Of those
in attendance
at
Woodstock, very few recognized
this.
Woodstock was not
so much an accomplisnment but an
example of what could be done. It
_showed us the possibilities. Those
who saw Woodstock as that exam-
ple left with a feeling of urgency to
apply that unity to bigger pro-
blems. But they were thwarted in
their efforts by those who lived
simply for each '60s "event." The
intent of many activists of the '60s
I feel, was not to help humankind
but rather to give meaning and
direction to their own disjointed
lives. The safety and security they
found in groups gave them a feel- .
ing of belonging and self-worth.
And once they discovered security,
they found they liked it. This led
directly to the downfall of '60s con-
sciouness and into the overin-
dulgence of the ''me" decade.
After all, who is going to risk go-
ing into the streets and taking a
bullet in the chest when everything
is secure and stable inside?
One of the aspects that is so
satisfying about Live Aid is that it
caught the attention of even those
who have it all. Few lines were
drawn. Granted, the issue of world
famine is not as complex as some
of the political problems of the
'60s
but the point is that Woodstock did
not have a single definable issue,
only unity and togetherness
which,if left alone, breeds com-
placency. Live Aid made unity the
result of an issue. And to next to
saving lives, that is its greatest
accomplishment.
New Rock 92 top ten:
, 1: Wire Train -
Between Two
Worlds
2: Marillion -
Misplaced
Childhood
3:
OMO -
Crush
4: Adventures -
Adventures
5: Midnight Oil-
Red Sails in the
Sunset
6: Prefab Sprout
~
Two Wheels
Good
7: Thompson Twins -
Here's to
Future Days
8: John Cougar Mellancarnp -
Scarecrow
9: Armoury Show -
Waiting for
the Floods
IO: ABC -
How to Be a
Zillionaire
'Kiss of the Spider Woman'
by Janet McLoughlin
The web is tightly woven in the
critically acclaimed film, "Kiss of
the Spider -Woman." There's no
doubt that this is one of the best
films to come along in a while.
With its deep plot and brilliant
actors, director Hector Babenco
brings to life even the smallest
characters in Manuel Puig's novel.
William Hurt is electrifying in his
role as Luis Molina, a homosexual .
jailed for molesting
minors.
Molina, who is a window dresser,
Columbus-__
Continued from page 3
Columbus made four voyages
to the new world, so we would
expect to have the newly charted
land named after him. So, why
aren't we living in "Columbia,"
or some other
Columbus
derivitive?
Blame
Italian
navigator and explorer Amerigo
Vespucci.
Vespucci also made four
voyages to America, the first in
1497, according to Olson. When
he returned to Europe, he
published a book and gained
notoriety. In 1507, a German
map-maker
named Martin
Waldseemuller
derived
the
name "America"
from the
Latin version of Vespucci's
name:
Americus.
The rest, as we say, is history.
' escapes his dreary cell life by bring-
- ing to life the characters of an old
movie to his cellmate, Valentin. In
the opening scene, we see Hurt with
a red towel wrapped around his
head as he begins decribing· the
leading lady of his movie to
Valentin.
flowerY shirts, to his walk, talk and
gestures, Hurt certainly took on a
challengeirig role and succeeded.
He is very convincing.
The other ·half of the duo, Raul
Julia, who plays the-Marxist polic-
tical prisoner, Valentin Arregui, is
another assest to the film. Julia's
character of Valentin is so opposite
Babenco • enables us to see,
Molina, that together the twosome
through Molina's eye, the movie
about a French woman named
make· sparks fly from the screen.
Leni, who defies her country and
At times Valentin is feisty while
falls in· love with a Nazi General.
other times he's compassoinate, as
Leni's Jove relationship_ with the
he.learns to accept Molina for who·
General resembles the love Molina
he is.
has for Valentin.
Jailed for concealing informa-
Molina often refers to the film
tion about his party, Valentin is
throughout the movie. This pro-
tortured for his secrecy. Molina
vides entertainment for himself as _ • wants to help him, but must first
well as Valentin, who at times
gain his trust. Valentin sees this
refuses to be bothered with
caring side of Molina and eventual-
M-olina's tales.

ly the two come to a complete
• The Brazilian actress Sonia
understanding of one another. This
Braga, who plays the roles of Leni,
scene in particular is filled with
the French dame; Marta, Valen-
emotion, compassion and the bon-
tin's girlfriend; and the Spider
ding of a great friendship.
. Woman. Her role_ as the Spider
"Kiss of the Spider Woman" is
Woman is in a movie that Molina
more than just a film that deals
is describing to Valentin. "When
with two prisoners, one being
he awoke, he gazed up at the Spider homosexual. It shows a great deal
Woman and saw a perfect tear in
of pride that one human being has
her eye." Later on in the movie,
for another. How one would go so
this scene of the Spider Woman
far out of his way to help a frierid
plays a significant role in Valentin's that he endangers his own life. Out
own fantasy.
of his love for Valentin, Molina put
Hurt won the Best Actor Award
his life on the line - a move that
at the 1985 Cannes Film Festival
costs him in the end.
for his breathtaking performance
"Kiss of the Spider Woman" is
as Molina. Being as flamboyant as
by far one of the best movies play-
Molina can be, Hurt is a natural
in
ing in the area. With its indepth
his role; "I have to keep my girlish plot and talented cast, Babenco
figure,'' Molina says in a scene bet-
didn't leave any loose strings hang-
ween him and Valentin. From his
ing from this film.
This·we.ek




























































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October 10, 1985 - THE CIRCLE - Page 7--
The Other
Murray
Confusion
by Julia E. Murray
Have you ever wondered what
must run through the min,ds of
some of the people who design
building layouts? What evil must
lurk in their hearts that they can so
cruelly set out to confuse us poor
individuals who expect logic and
reason to be the guiding forces in
the numbering of rooms and the
positioning of certain conven-
iences?
An excellent example of such
blatant attempts to confuse the
masses is Marist East (a.k.a. The
Far East) .. From the moment you
walk in the door, you know that
somewhere someone is snickering
while they watch you try to yank
the left-hand door open. Not until
you admit defeat and sheepishly
walk in the right-hand door are you
allowed to see the demure little sign
on the inside of the left door
reading, "Please Use Other Door."
The next dilemma is one only
faced by upperclassmen, called the
"l know where that classroom was
last year" Syndrome. Symptoms
include pounding your head against
the wall, ripping the signs which
state the classroom numbers off of
the wall and openly accusing the
person at the information desk of
moving Rm. 156 just to confuse
you. The only known cure for this
disease is an aspirin and a kindly
freshman to lead you to _your
classroom.

by
Rosemary Olsen
Q._
Marist health services, unlike
many other college health services,
does not offer birth control services
to students. I'm from out of town
and don't know Poughkeepsie very
well. I'd like to know what birth
control services are available in the
area and an idea of what they cost.
A. Planned
Parenthood
in
Poughkeepsie is probably your best
bet for low cost professional ser-
vices in this area. According to
Dolores
Thompson,
Planned
Parenthood counselor, the cost is
$12 for high school and college
students, and is on a sliding scale
for
.,i.11
others. This includes a
health exam and counseling to
determine the type of birth control
Seriously though, I personally
believe that the placement of Rm.
156 is part of a plot by the govern-
. ment to drive many promising
young individuals insane, and thus
prepare them for-a future political
career. I mean, why else would they
place it in an obscure hallway
where no one ever looks, not to
mention placing it right around the
corner from Rm. 105? Maybe my
education was not the best money
• could buy as a child, but I always
thought there were a few numbers
in between five and
55 -
about 50.
Speaking of odd numbering, has
anyone located Rm. 410 lately? Dr.
Stanley himself couldn't find _that
room without a guide. For some
odd reason, obviously only known
to
the powers that be, Rms. 409
and 410 are not next to Rm. 408,
the way most of we poor mortals
presumed they would be. Rather,
they're around the corner near Rm.
414. The more I walk in the new
- wing the more I think my educa-
tion was neglected. Obviously so-
meone out there invented a new
method of counting and forgot to
mention it to my teachers.
While in the new wing of Marist
East you have probably also notic-
ed the lack of a rather important
convenience -
bathrooms. Un-
doubtedly trying
to
encourage
students to exercise, no bathrooms
were built in the new wing, forcing
• people to take a IO-minute trudge
to the old wing in search of a
Answering
Service
best suitable for the individual. Ses-
sions are by appointment only.
Confidentiality is assured.,Plann-
ed · Parenthood is located at 85
Market Street. The phone number •
. is 471-1540.
Q.
At the beginning
of the
semester, I understood that tuition
refund checks would be issued at
the end of September. Now I'm be-
ing told that they won't be ready
until the end of October. Why the
delay?
I had to pay my tuition on
time so
I think it's only fair that
Marist does their part on time too.
When are we getting the money
that is supposed to help with living
expenses?
A. You are among many who
are concerned about tuition refund
checks. They should be ready by
I-IAIRCUTTI;RS
$2.00 Off
With Marist l.D.
Every Monday
and Tuesday
C
Tlil: CUlTl:l?.,,
Come l"isit
The Cuuery,
where we'l·e been
seuing hair cuuing
trends for over
ten years.
For men, women
and children, it's
The Cullery for
the very best in
professional
hair styling, shamf}OQ,
conditioning, perms,
body ~m·es, cellophane
colorings, and more.
)
Serving
Marist
Since
1975
The Cutlery
is located at.
3 Libeny Street
in Poughkeepsie.
Stop by or
call us at
9/4-454-9239.
bathroom. And they wonder why
students run through the halls.
For the new student, there are
some puzzling questions that come
to mind about these bathrooms,
such as: why aren't the men's and
ladies' rooms next to each other?
Answer: Because then if you found
one you could tell people where the
• other one is and spoil the thrill of
the hunt.
Another question that these
"conveniences"
bring to mind .
relates to why there is a safe by the
ladies' room. For those who live in
the North End the answer is ob-
vious; the safe is where they store
the toilet paper so that naughty
North Enders won't steal it, but
rather buy their own and save the
school some money.
Last but not !east, we come to
the question of why the candy and
soda machines are in the ladies'
• room and not in the hall. The
answer: Because then the male
students will all go to the coffee
shop and buy more expensive food
rather than go into the ladies' room
for a Hershey bar.
The list of oddities in Marist East
goes on and on, but I don't want
to
spoil the fun of finding a few for
youself, so I'll just leave you with
one final question: Does anyone
know what color the doors in the
new wing are painted? I've been
through my 64 pack of Crayolas
three times already and I haven't
found it yet.
the second week in October, if all
the proper financial aid forms have
been submitted by the student.
Judy lvankovic, Marist bursar,
said that the business office was to
begin work on the checks at the end
of September. September 24 was -
the last day for half tuition refunds
so no checks could be issued before
then. Each student who is getting
a refund must fill out a refund re-
quest slip at the business office
before
a
check can be issued.
EDITOR'S NOTE:
Do you have
questions concerning the Marist
community or Poughkeepsie area?
The Answering Service will offer
responses to questions on school
policies and procedures, local com-
munity services and local issues.
Send questions to Rosemary Olsen,
Box 857.
The Job Location and Develop-
ment Program helps students find
off-campus, part-time jobs in the
Poughkeepsie area.
Students usually work up to 20
hours weekly and earn hourly
wages from $3.35 in permanent or
temporary jobs.
Students are currently working
in a wide range of jobs from
theater box office attendant to stu-
dent aide in the attorney general's
office.
Since early September, JLD has
listed more than 150 job openings.
Currently,
employment oppor-
tunities are available in sales and
retailing, law offices, fast food
restaurants, emironmental testing,
banking, child care and more.
JLD
is located in the Donnelly
Trailer and is open from 8:30 a.m.
to
5
p.m. Monday through Friday.














































1.:
I
I -
I
--Page,_8-
THE CIRCLE~ October 10, ,1985
Letter.s·:;_:-
..
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________________
.....,_,_c_on~••-·n
..
ue;.;,d..,'fr,_o_rit_··p:;.;.-·~,:,;ge;....·~
given a pat on the back, and told
I had done my duty as a Christian
and an American by helping those
less fortunate than myself. How I
pitied those kids; which is exactly
what I was taught to do, and what
most of us probably grew up do-
ing; Pitying the "less fortunate."
Who are we to pity them? Are
they less fortunate? In relating the
story of Gossa's need to reveal the
riches of the Ethiopian culture,
McCraw sensed that they may
not
be.
During a long busride through
the backcountry areas of New York
and Pennsylvania, I was slapped in
the face with America's own
desolate;hungry, and poor people.
Yes,
fellow sheltered youth, they
do exist, live, and breathe in our
very own country. They m·ay be
poor in material ways, but many
are rich in other ways-tradition,
beliefs, skills, and a love of life.
Needy people have dignity,
something a lot of Americans fail
to realize. Be they Ethiopians, In-
dians; or Americans, these people
need our help. But, pity and con-
descension should not be part of
the package.
1984 I attended my first and only
"River.
Day."
It·
was my
sqphomo_re y~ar and,I
~_?.s
kicking
myself for skipping River Day to
go to classes .my freshman year.
That must be why I got to·gether
with a friend of mine, collected
money from my other friends, bor-
rowed' a car and bought a keg.
Yeah, we brought that keg down to
the river and really had a great
time. Unfortunately, that great
time caine fo a sudden and sober-
ing stop.
One of my closest friends, .Ken
Bohan, fell off a cliff onto some
We have all been in situations
VO
11
eyb
all_
where we needed the help of others
to "get by." I have recently been
Continued from page
12
in such a situation. I needed and
MaryAnne Casey, Marist came
sincerely appreciated the help of-
back and won the match 15-12. fered by ot~ers; yet I detested those
Tough
offensive
play
by
who pitied me. Next time you pity
- rocks at the edge of the Hudson
below, and believe me no one was
having fun then. Ken was a senior
and a captain of the cross country
and track teams. I was a teammate
of Ken's and looked up to him a
lot. Ken was and LUCKILY still is
a great guy. He was the last person
you'd expect something like this to
happen
to.
No one considered it a
possibility when they were running
out to buy kegs that morning. I
didn't expect it to happen to me or
• sophomore Marion McBride and
some one "less fortunate" than
good spikes by Murphy and Billen • yourself, put yourself in their
aided the -team in winning the se:"', shoes. It is difficult enough to have
cond match, 15-4.
to accept help from some one else.
In action last Thursday; Marist
It is impossible to accept pity.
quickly stomped on Old Westbury,
winning 15-1, i5-4. Bernhard and
Billen • played well overall while
Murphy and McBride displayed
their skill at serving.
Marist lost its first game against
Mount St. Mary's 15-8 on that
same night. Mount St. Mary's was
not to continue dominating the
match however as the Foxes pull-
ed off a 15-2 defeat in the second
game. Fine defensive play by
sophomore Peggy Farrell and
junior Shelia O'Donaghue backed
the team. Farrell and O'Donaghue
repeated in the third and deciding
match as Marist won 15-5.
"Sometimes you need a scare .
like that in the first game to wake
you up," admitted Head Coach
Victor VanCarpels. "That won't be
the case from here on in, we'll be
the underdogs agait].st
everyone else
we meet. This is where the schedule
gets tough."
I agree with McCraw that
someone I cared about, and no one
America does like to be aloof and else did either. No one ever does.
distant from the needy, the poor
But it did.
and the desolate. However, we
That stofy aside, but ever present
have to realize that there are needy, in my mind, I would like to bring
poor, and desolate people who are
something else to your attention.
Americans. They live among us This year's seniors are doing
and should be recognized.
something right now that entirely
Not to add to the legend, but let defies logic, but not tradition. This
me mention Bruce Springsteen. At
year's seniors are planning yet
all of his U.S. concerts in the past another River Day. Give me logic
year, Springsteen has made a before tradition any day. When
sincere "pitch" for local Food Ken Bohan fell off the cliff all of
Banks in the cities where he per-
his friends rushed to St. Francis
formed. The money collected went
to American poor and American
Hospital to sit inthe waiting room.
It was quite a scene: all of Ken's
needy. Springsteen also offered his drunk, wet friends crvlng and hug-
services to the "We Are The
•J•
World" recording, which aided
ging and praying and wondering if
Ethiopia. Somehow, Springsteen
he would live. Oddly enough, it just
so happens that Ken was a friend
has come to the reality that the
to a lot of this year's seniors, and
poor are everywhere - but they are ·

real people too. ,
they were all a p~rt of ~his pitif~l,,
As Mccraw points out maybe, scene'. What defies logic. ~hen, is
·
· ·
'·h
:· that many of these same friends of_
• i -". /.
. 'S•
I
~
'{l\\S
'"
-
ouP
0
"-.,
~~---'
1>nniR"~l
. t -
11.0NDE,.
I
I
HIGNLIGHYS
I
l(W/foll melhod)f
• ,THURSDAY
&
rRIDAY 1.$
1
-
0
-••
·o·o•
!-
EVENING ,
f
•_, ._· i
BY APPT. ONLY
_______
.,
486-9883
49 Academy St. Pok. .
NO APPOINTr,i!ENT.NECESSARY
_
-.
_Monday thru Friday 10-6, Saturday· 9.5
-
, •••
NOTE: Longer hair or tirited hair may
• require
addt'I
charge
Marist
takes
its
show on
the
road
seven more times in its nine remain-
. ing matches.
we sllo1;1ld
open o~r ey«:5
tot e pro-.,..: Ken Bohan '.are at the center ·of
blems. m our pwn soc1
7
ty,
a~ w_ell_,:-
planning this year's River Day, I'J!l
.p•••---•-•••-·•
111

•■---■-■• •·•·••·-•••••••11■•
as takmg a closer look at the pro-
sure no one wants anymore
blems ~f the world. We should ~ot
tragedies, so why must we tempt
be afraid to come face-to-face Wlth fate for one last time?
Picket __
_
Continued · from page.
1
had accepted a proposal that SCA •
submitted on Aug. 29 for a 17 .2
percent increase over a two-year
period. But SCA then decided it
wanted further negotiations, Bur-
dis said.
According to Galleher, the SCA
wanted a 9 percent increase this
year.
Burdis said that SCA benefits
should be counted as pan of the
salary. Some of those benefits in-
clude
free
tuition
for
undergraduate
courses
for
employees,
free tuition
for
employee children after two years
of service, eight days of paid sick
leave, two weeks paid vacation and
13 regular paid holidays.
,
But the opinion of many SCA
members were expressed by the
!he P?
0
r • ~hey are real human be- _,
I realize this is probably falling
mgs
JUS
t lake you and me. Ta~e. on several hundred pair~ of deaf
note of the~ •
~u~ do not_ st:•P ears, butl beg you all to listen to
them of their digmty by patymg me. Let us put tradition to rest. -Let
them.
.
. .
us file away, fondly, . all our
McCraw P
0
•?ts out that at is
memories of the good, times at the
good t~at_Amenca chooses to help
last three River Days and be done
cou?tnes m n~. _Bu~
we must al~o with it. Don't get me wrong, I want
realize that
Amenca is a COUJ?try
m
to have a great senior year and ad-
nee~. Maybe wh_at
we.need most of
mittedly I even want to drink a lot
all is a change m attitude.
of beer, but I don't want another
Donna Hood
Ri
D
Th
, •
h.
September 28, 1985 -. ver. ay.
e_re
s Just some~ ~ng
Cha p Rm 809 mcredibly volatile about combamng
m • S h
alcohol with the Hudson River.
op •
Someday I wa.nt to look back and
River Day -
reflect on what a great senior year
I had. I don't want to reflect back
on how I lost a fellow student or
a fellow classmate or
a
close friend,
To the editor:
. .
or worse yet, my best· friend to
In the following letter I would • another River Day tragedy. Do
like to address my f~llow seniors , • you? .
• and all concerned members of the
Marist community. In the spring of
Christian
J.
Morrison
Class of 1986
picketers in signs that said "Mur- ..
-------------------------■
ray's kind wor~s don't buy bread,
money does," a reference to college
President Dennis Murray, and
"Marist
prefers turnover to
experience.''
The members of-the administra-
• tion negotiating team are Edward
Waters, vice president of ad-
ministration and finance, Marc
Adin, director of personnel and
Judith lvankovic, bursar at Marist.
Though the SCA is not part of
an official union, it is recognized
by the National Labor Relations
Board, according to Elizabeth
Jaycox, elected chairperson of SCA
and secretary in the Division of
Science.
Theresa
At·
Ozzy & Robert's Hair Shoppe
precision cuts, permanents·
naturalizings
6 Mt. Carmel PL
Poughkeepsie, NY
473-7757
SAL'S-··
LITTLE
-
1·TAL\':-
P1zzER1A
&-RESTAURANT
Hot and Cold
'H'eros
s·peciality
-Italian
Dinners
FREE -DELIVERY
TO MARIST
ALL YEAR
PHONE: 485-6771



























































































·,
:-JmSIDENCE.HALL
CLOSING
Octob~r 18-23, 1985.
·•,
Pertinent Residence Information·
.
Th~
Residence Halls will close at'6 p.m. on Friday, October 18, 1985.
.
.
'

.

.
The Residence Halls
will
reopen
~
12 Noon on Wednesday, October 23, 1985.
..
...
:
-~,
.
.
.

~
.
:~·
The las~ meal served on Friday
~II
be l~nch and the first meal on Wednesday
will
be
dinner.
,
·

The following are the only acceptable reasons for remaining on campus dur-
ing this period:

1. Athletic·commitment
-
2. Internship
.
3. Unreasonable Distance from Home
·_:
Should you believe that you fall into one of the above categories, please con-
tact the Housing Office, Room 271 Campus Center; by Monday.., October 14,
1985.
No_ One without authorization will be permitted to remain on campus.
-~Earn
Money the Easy and Fun Way


with
••
Evante.
Cosllletics
Sell Evante Cosmetics at
.your
conve-
••
nience - between classes, after classe·s,
on weekends or in the evening.
Call Evante Cosmetics at
(516) 957-2049 and ask for Yvonne
·or
write
Yvonne Noonan Cifarelli.
510 Ten Street
WestBavloh. New York 1·1104
'l
••
t
;(-
!
ii
Ir
I.
I
October 10, 1985 - THE CIRCLE - Page 9--
N o ted journalist urges
idealism for students
by·
Brian O'Keefe
Today's
college generation
shouldn't be so set on owning and
possessing, says Sydney Schanberg,
the New York Times writer whose
experiences in Cambodia in 1975
inspired the· film "The Killing
Fields."
.
Speaking before a crowd of over
500 last Wednesday at Vassar Col-
lege, Schanberg told his audience
that the youth today must not
move toward materialism. In his
tips to aspiring journalists, he refer-
red to his experiences at The New
York
Times
and his recent
estrangement from the paper.
The lecture was the first in a
series sponsored by the Vassar
Journalism Forum.
Schanberg said a recent National
Education Council poll found that
70 percent of college students at-
tend college to make more money,
whereas 15 years ago the material
concerns were less.

'
.
"There is nothing wrong with
making money," said Schanberg.
"But
it's a good time to ask
yourself the ethical que~tions like
'what priority will money take?'
Material·goods," he said, "do lit-
tle to w_arm a soul."
Relating money to the field of
journalism, Schanberg said: "You
want money,
go
to television -
don't go to newspapers. We are the
television generation."
NATIONAL
SIGHT
SAVING
·.\l~NTH_
.;....:.;
Schanberg's advice to aspiring
New York Times' decision to
journalists included his opinion of
discontinue his column was not
the U.S. press in Vietnam.
''A
known, though it followed a series
journalist should go outside the
of columns in which he denounc-
skills of writing on paper," he said.
ed the New York City Westway
"Journalists should be concerned
highway project. The paper was a
about events and not for personal
firm supporter of Westway, accor-
interest or gain."
ding to Schanberg.
To be a good journalist, he said,
Commenting
.
on the recent
• one should be an unselfish out-
cancellation of his "New York"
sider. "An outsider," he said, "is
column, Schan berg said, "The
a person who has to point out the
paper stifled the diversity of opi-
world's unfairness and inequities."
nion." Newspapers in general, he
Schanberg· ~aid the American
said, are heading dangerously into
press in Vietnam was biased against the direction of censorship.
the U.S. government,
"not
because
A number of newspapers, in-
reporters were unpatriotic but eluding The Washington Post,
because we were holding our coun-
have criticized the newspaper for
try to a greater standard," he ex-
discontinuing Schanberg's column.
plained.
"We
knew what was go-
Schanberg said that he hadn't left
ing on over there."

• the paper yet, but that he plans to
resign.
_Of the press today, S_cha~berg
Schanberg, who has been at The
said that the n_ew
~~nerat,~n.
m
the
New York Times for over
26
years
newsroo~
ts
a S(?trttlesS, as correspondent and metropoliran
homogemzed group. l thm~ m~re editor, pledged his respect for the
new~papers,
are conce~ned wit~
m-
paper. "It's
still the greatest
fot~mm.~nt and_less ngoro,us.~our- newspaper in the world," he said.
nal~sm, he said: Todays _1our-
"But
sadly it has now tainted its
nahsm, he added,
1s
not what ,t was
.
.,
'
like in Vietnam and the Watergate
image.

era.
Schanberg described "The Kill-
ing Fields" as authentic. The film
was based on Schanberg's ex-
periences in Cambodia during the
capture of the capital Phnom-Penh
and the assistance he gets from
Dith Pran, now a Cambodian
refugee.
"I
was very happy with the
film," he said.
Schanberg said he is presently in-
volved in a major effort to get Dith
Pran's 69-year old mother, who is
ill and living in Cambodia, out as
soon as possible.

In . a question-answer session
. following the_ lecture, ~i;hanberg
, •. explained that the reason for The
Zone __
_
Continued
from
page 5
"What?" Jonathan said turning.
"What do you-a call an English
Muffin cooked in a microwave
oven at a not-a very high settin'?"
"What?"
"A
LOW-WAVE-THOMAS,"
Shakie said laughing.
"I
don't get it."
"You're not supposed to."
Re-submitted
for
disap-
·proval...One
learns the art of true
postponement and tenative dates in
The Thomas Zone.
John Anderson is a communica-
tion
·arts·
major

and
a
senior
at
Marist.
··Never·
Sweetest
DayocT
19nr
A cover charge
Always
$1
Wi'lQ$
Mon-Fri: all you can eat lunch
buffet only
s399
Mon-:-Wed:
all the BBQ ribs· &
chicken you can eat &
unlimited beverages
during dinner only
s799
Thurs-Sat: all the crab legs, salad &
bread you can eat
only
s9
99
Mon & Thurs: football on TV & 1 oc
buffalo wings
Fri: DANCE DANCE DANCE
Canyou
afford
to gamble
with the LSAT.
GMAT.
GRE,or
MCA1?
Probably not. Great g@des
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Scores
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thats how
Stanley H. Kaplan
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The Kaplan course teaches·
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So
if
you've been out of
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or even if you·re fresh
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Take Kaplan. Why take
l
a chance with your
'
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KAPLAN

·
The worlds leading
test
prep organization.
ENROLLING
NOW
For information on
local schedules call
days, evenings or
weekends
(914) 948-7801
,c'













































































































i
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Homecoming
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ittlMtnlll_l_,"
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Cafeteria_
CDndN<tl
f,oia
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fflllnl'"110
pl.In""'"'•
ffld-
Mocr..,......
$1~
idw,
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lie
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lotq;QII
biked
al,,sl;,i,
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,.,, or
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job. ..
DUE TO
"HOMECOMING
WEEKEND"
THERE WILL BE NO
OVERNIGHT PARKING
ALLOWED IN.
·McCANN
·OR
·SHEAHAN
PARKING LOTS
FRIDAY
NIGHT
OCTOBER
llTH,'
THOSE
WHO
-USUALL
y·pAflK'THERE
·
ARE
'ASKED
TO PARK IN
CHAMJ:>._AGNAT-NORTH
PARKING LOT
ORIN.
TOWNHOUSE LOT
.
.
THANK YOU
FOR YOUR
COOPERATION
SECURITY
'

























































































Boaters
win
2;
ready
to face
Army and.
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Ma.ris1
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DISCOUNT FOR
STUOEl'ITS STAFF
ANO FACULTY
ON
·ALL
REGULA~
ITEMS
HEROS
PIZZA
DAILY
LUNCH
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31.5.1
31.5.2
31.5.3
31.5.4
31.5.5
31.5.6
31.5.7
31.5.8
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31.5.10
31.5.11
31.5.12