The Circle, January 31, 1985.xml
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 30 No. 11 - January 31, 1985
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st~dents;\W,,0?1:t.ade.
;1lleg~d:{t~~ir/ P.areilts'.,
dele~µone ' credit : •
f
."Th~ ;school iirnot, nor should(
·: ... • :·.::Ableast-.eight .to :10 Maris1c:.sa1d Fnday .m a;telephone mter-
.:
calls are:ex~~~ _to.pa,l'
for th~~,:, card·-num,bers
and ~1ther·sold or
be, • ,involved. 'in ·.this,". said1
·:
·:
students·have-been
identified as'il- •. view.,,}'·; : . ·,: -. ·;.· . • :,·:\F .. ·:·:· - • .• an~·no_:char-ges:~l~
t~e~i:~~-~l~~:
.• p~se~ along.; th~ • rium~ers.
to: •.
Sullivan. ·•_'To
·my :!tnowledge, it.
, ·: .. _.legally using -at • least. .one - • :Marist~ollege's involy~_~_en~
in•., :a:ccor~mg,to
F._eldm~~::
.,·::·-'.~=
~-;
;.·: .
·:frien.ds. :..;.,
'.. : .
•
• ••
;:· . ·; ~.~. '. . • doesri't:plan·.on ·.getting invloved.
I;
• . :telephone credit:card·iniLeo·Hall, the case ·has·rec~ntly,
r~eived ~t~. ·._'."·J:el~a~, :'-'!h!). ;-.r~efu
ses,-;,;
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It is-strictly·up:to the company to,
.;
according to:Warren Feldman, at-
tention ;~
,in.. a
·.regional;
• ~to_ry
.
:
re!ease :~~e.:µam~
$?t
·!Jle
jM_ans~-:
"·::-..
!h,e; fra~~ulent bdlmg·.stopp~d deal with the 'ind!vidual students :
·-.
.
tor:ney fo.r • a
·,long-aistance'
-publis~e~ ·,'..",by
.. !he,"_.Assoc1at
7
d_.,:st~~en~s-mvol,ve~rsa
1~.,!ll~,;-C:_
m!lY·_::;w:!'i<:n,_:.T~tt··
Tet; ..
7
h:ing~d • its:'·
·O.~
Jheir own. '.Lp_retty
much said
• • telephone company. • .
,
.
Press. ,To~.story 1denttfied Marist <:be.$~ ,OO(Ho:'$~,~
.~n,
,charged>: ~us!omers • f1ye-d}g_1t
• acce~s • •·
that in a ·letter to· Total .Tel· USA .
. Totai • Tel USA of •·Belville,:: Collcge"::stude11ts
:· and.' Olark -:ca~ls
,.from_
~ans,t .st!l_de~ts
:b~t·:· ,·nu_mbers
to seven-digit codes m. after my.phone conversation with.
, N.J.,•has not co':llpleted it's'-:jn- •University.st~deilts
in Worcester;-:;·•th!1t
_the:a~ou_nt
m~y ~~.higher as·.:._:Nove~_ber,
·Bruck~r tol~ the : Feldman.''.. . .
. .
. ,: •.
_
• vestigation -in tracing rall. ·the ··Ma.; as.participating-in a $50,000. th~·mvest1gat1on·•CQntmues.:
':,!!St
-
·Associated P.ress.
. • _..
. .•• M
• .
·P k.
c1· ••
·a .
students who.used·up.to six access • • ph(!ne fraud involving • s~v~ral ·s~~~st_er~·-:
a1·Mardi~t.
,:.:.do~fh
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ere _it.car c ..
arges. •
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Robert·
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se·e·
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freeze':'.·'..
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i'efepll<foe·:-:Qii~use
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:· .. ,· . :t,oll fraud was·disc.overed
lasrfall. :· Novembef·when: Feldman: called, ·.:~wc;.n
Slt~at!.<?n,.
·: _he.:said._'.·
.1
f:.w~
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or.
rp.a.lly.
•.
to.
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M.···
aris·t···o·
f .• the p.
r.o.bl·e.·m
.•••• are-.a~.l~
to 1dent1!'Y
-t~e studen.ts
/ _. ·• -: 1'·'-1.
i\,, ·· • · • .
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:'.j• '.·•s~.()()a}:n'.orith,.w.asJ,illed$10;000.:;
,Heywoqd.'itnmediately•'referred
respo_ns~~le,
we will ftrSt help.Jo
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... • • .•• . .
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:{ic;l"t~%,frJ~;{f
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,n,.,•s • hinitoPaul sumvan,a lawYeHo,
••
• • ·• • Contmu,d on
pag,
16
,··.toov.·Mario=Cuoi:no•proposed
a : . ,.':Sptne1ocar legislator(say.-th.eY;,-'.
••• ,. '·.
•
.••
$38;8•billion su1te'budget,on iJan. :i,bt?li¢ve,the
t>udget;wiU'h,a\if!o.)e,~;
22 'that 'includes an :-g
• percenein: ,
:
reyisecl
oefore.bein.g
passed_:
;,,:;t:..)::<
•. crease in°spendingand·aipersoriaI>,\;::~~:fhe·:,legislatuie
0
'l~1;;;,inake(:,
.'income tax cut,but·does•not allow. ·:'.-changes/.'.<;;c~ai!,1.
0
•Y,:$ssemb,lyman}i
'..for ·an•cincrease~in !the -Tuition •• iGlenn\Warren:-:?~,There'.will~:.be}'
•),.
;:.:.As'sistanCe'
::p_r08ram
.-.:for;":cQlleSe
-_:;
·,.:~cnan·&e~~}i5~iil):-/l)iS;/f:'(¢.UotilO~~st0~
~;, .· ..
••
students... ..·•··
... ··.•:: :.,;.',:,
·<;":<:
,\:buaget':-':'i$.·rS:;;1\,:f,;,:r£;;;Yti::+.:t
1
..
/}.·
, .
• :The budget, :however; 'does~can
/}~·"(
Warr~rf(il<lded'-1iii[D(althougn\/
L ' -
for inaiil~ain.ingth_e··:cost':eff~e:W,
-~
>.thet~~is/ri6{l:i.WJ~1jfj,r9yisipnJ4'!.,;1
t .... '·•.·.
:. . ·, '/.York suiteiinsUtutiotis'at'<tbe-c(lr:<;i,
.-raise·,T:AP/if
bill'may"be:iilfroaifc~/J,
;,_;-
0
• ••
:
, •
1
·.'meeting::;eligtbility}r,equfrem~nts~···:2·
pretiy 1':'dlamat,i§.i,lly{~If1}M_gpriey)·.};
····iit~l~Jl~llKJ2tl;;;t~~~r~~it!{~;~
ff;
,,tt1ition.costs·have:not·.oeen:frozen•~.,'-,
dataidaf.MaiistCollegfsaid:that}\:
,,:
'c,by-ihe·st~t¢:·.·Ttiiii'on·.:ror~SUN\'.·•·,·•.'fhe./_fctpnii{f~'::{ofiifffoc1~pericl.ent,~;.
11:.·.·.·.-_?
.•.
:,·.'•>,,··:_ ',.would:remain/afS.Vi375:per:yea('..,,.~o!legesahtl:.Vnix~1JJH~~-r_g,1gq~'l"
...
·
·,. , ....
:. ~undertlie ..
proj,os~d·
·bildS:et.,
T:iii;
·:c;,w,9414,.;m~.~(tj'~#?:.'.w#e.~f
to
::cli~c,~S:~:,:::;
•
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tion:forCUNY: \\,'.OU}d:
remain
::at:<
iithe,.j,ropi>sed,
bifilget!and~to
iSUg~C:<
,}t.··.
• •
-~:
1
?Jt~::t:~:;a_:~~~~~~1t~r?~~{)t~::tt:~~A!i~t:~i!~~t;:;{}(/\.';;:'.~~~~/J1)::~:fa·~·;.T;-f?{f~/~.:;~~:<~ff~:.~f:\~::1:\~:+;·;._:.\~-·:·:.·
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go .before-· the.
·st~t(J~gislaJ.ure,
"
•
.
":~as
.c!ln.ct:lled
_due·
to• heaYY'
so.ow?·<·
:,;"'E::J:'olrii-»/(i:.'-}r:t
• •
·t··
:·
-.
;
·
~--
:-
'.l~•ne:
,~•ri~t-~~u4en~,_-~•
ster • E~lee':' Hat,toran _and Ja~es.
'..:."
•
that
v.:m
_negotia_te
t!je ~ta(e'~:final :· !Wh!ch
_Pr.Qh~bite~
..
st:veral. C<!_~eges
_:'.-?~
·il!!!./~Je.".~~rfO'·
?::·w.U.,
.
~
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R.a•m~,
~~~~_,a•~~~~~·.
_spent.
sif:
~•.Y
5
,
ov,r_ ld~ersess.•~n
·: .spending plan~·· and :.,pass.: th~,. from.atten~mg. •. -. .,..·,·.,
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~~~~Jff11~~~~~f~jJFffb~i/?JIJJ·t~ti?isr=fjt/fJht&
•.
byJCennetb:F;.ParkerJr~
.·. ... ..
•
:the
:;progratn;
.·,Sta,rkieLasked:t
Dut,chess\'C,o,uniy/.'•citw£ns
~~
to·\-ttieir,Po\ighkeepsie studios saying phone calls·.· we have received
••• ·c;/'"'".·'(:: j:~,
::
i. -:-. ·'
}.>· •
0
Leu~n.nail toi~P~.lier;tandl~r,c! ";i~li:p~_on.~J,.~i~-~·~n~s:~ft:i~Jn,
·~ ~~i?~r-Dayid,:.We~fe
H~re:''~The ,alone,
...
~·.Jarge ·resllgnse is ex-·
. It sDutchessverslls D11Y!d.
,
•.
:that.
she was_.breakb.ig
lier lease .. -)~e,'Y;)'orlc.;·
. .They<pro_v1g~,
·thei, letters :wllL be ;colle_cted••ami • pected. : We're bopmg :for·. an
··, , T11Ik
<show host
:,D3:vicl
Let- ·;:Despite, sev~fal. phone • calls )ve; ~telephone> n,umtier and asked.· · .forwa.rded
,
to.·· Lefteiri:lan's
·.New
. :. invitation·
to
·appear. on his show
•
:,
J~i:rnan )ioes. n9_t:
: kn.ow. ;wher~
•
( lovecl
'to.
make; ; Letterman .. and
:
• • resid~_nts
••·.
jo ··:;.·.
c~.
: •
hiin :~ in.t.o
_:.·.·
•.
York offices for response:·/,·!"--,.
. ·
•..
or at . least-"a • ·phone can,~•. said
-.
• D~tc~ess County 1~;
·and.~tc!tess . Starki~ :coulp n_otJ>~
reached f,or .~ visiti11g.
-::
,:·
--;::
~
,,_·
: :<: • ,: ~·
-~:
·.,<, • : _. ,·. I>r2gr,am
·.,
d~rectoi Stu~ Schantz
.
_Schantz. .
.
~: . . .
.
.
.
•
.
:;(:8Jl_'t<seem
·to
persuade.him ·to_\_comment:· '.f'.T<\
:
>2,~(:._,,
),·:,\
• .·-~
,,
-I;ocal radio:station··\YP.DH
has' ·~·originated
theideifand says .he is .. •
..• -~•Lefterinari _opened himself up : •
>;':,:lllak~~hejourney
north;.
·
,.>
>
:'t"'
Ht response: to. Lettet:ril-;m's
,
begun a "Let David Know We're
impressed <with • listener. par- : for ·it and:n·ow, l feel the area· is
·}:J..etlerma1 : remarked
~
,on (co~e!its';·P?uglik~psie·'Joumal;.:'
~c~~~•_:<:8ffip~ign:
.The station -is. ticipatio~todate. • . ·•
~
• going'
'to
gi\'e;it' to :hini," said
·Ja.nuary·23:·that
he had·,never
..
'ManagmgE<;l1torB1,-tPukmeland askmg listeners to se,idletters to~-- C'Judg111g
from the amount of. Schantz.·.
'.heard of Red,Hook or for that . Legislature., Chairman Douglas
•
••• · •
•
• •• •• •
• •
'
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•
.•••
:~:;~~~?r!~tr~:riXsh!~;
...
~:~~6
1
.Jfsr:titi~:es~~o~!~;.
•
.•
Theatei£honors·~2:siudent
writers
• : Starkie, a Red Hook res'ident who
~
°Lettenrian
refused the invitation;. '
• , • •
•
• •
•
·.,. '-; ,
: participated in ,the "Phorie Calls
·:
A
Poughkeepsie • Journal. •
by
Gi~ny W~ite - : .
auditions '. and rehearsals of.. spring . for
the
Theatre
·• You-Hate To Make" segment of
editorial dated-January 25 urged_
•
•. •. ·
•
••• ,-.c •• · • ,
:
, • 'theirworks. ~- -
.
...
Wo
1
Jshop class,. were ._sub-
: ;
T~~
Marist
College stud~ri~
• Bakke,::.froni Wappingers mitted to _the competition by
• 4.
cl~ared in
yearbobk
case •
~
'. -~· "":
~~--. • - , :'.. ,_ -·=
'
1 '. '.:
·:.· .
AU charges against four
Marist students concerning
the alleged theft of 32 1984
, . yearbooks were dismissed
·., ._from court last week.
• • . Charged last Dec. 16 with
petit larceny and criminal
possession of_stolen property
. were Douglas Dutton, 20;
. Patrick Farley, 21; Brian Kel-
ly; 21; and Paul.Snyder, 22.
•.
:
Three of the books were
.
•
recovered from the four
. • students by the Town of
.
•
; Poughkeepsie Police. •
• • In exchange for the •
dismissal, the students were
required to sign a release
preventing them from suing
.
the Town of Poughkeepsie
Police for false arrest.
Town police refused
fo•
. c6mment on the case or any
further investigation.· • •
• were. finalists· in. the Young· .- Falls,· •won• second place for . Dean Gerard Cox, instructor
Playwrights·. Contest:. spon-
writers between the ages of l6
of the class .. Senior Jeanne
. sored
by · Society
HUL
and 22. His play '!After All'~-·. Fahey's "House of Mirrors"
' :Playhouse. of· Philadelphia,
depicts a widower and hinon
.was also submitted .. ,
Pennsylvania. •
•
as. they spend their last
The plays of John,Baklce, a
moments in a house which had
Marist ·college Council on
senior English major, and
been their home: for many
Theatre • Arts awarded • the.
John. Roche, a sophomore.
• years..
young playwrights for ex-
Communication Arts major,
Roche, from the Bronx, won
cellence in writinglast May.
will .be performed
·
by the •
honorable
mention
for
Both Bakke and Roche said
Society Hill • Playhouse bet-
"Gifted," • about a young
they were surprised. when ·they
ween April 3 and April 21.
.
man's struggle .to meet -ex-
heard they were·finalists in the
Bakke
and Roche have been
pectiltions others have for
competition. because the plays
invited ·to· Philadelphia to·
him.
were submitted six months
worl;c with directors during
The plays, wntten last
before they were notified.
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·See
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you·r
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ostells.
r~Pfesell.ta.iiVe;.Ai>M:eye,rsl
•
·1
•
Dates & Ti.mes:·
Februliry
11·::&
·12~
9:-30
:a~m.
•
February
13 &
14,
9·:30
a.in.
February
1_5,
••
9:30
a.m.
Place: Donnelly Hall
t·
DEPOSIT: $25.00
Cash or Check payable_to,Jostens
,1}f;-
7 :00_.:'i{
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4·:30·
p~rh.
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<WMttrisre:g:fgups1enq;~
a:liaiia···to·onio
·resiaents
)k#t),};/~~Loj;~i,]{:i>./,\L{;:_.':•L
~.'The _first•i;<w/·:~.riv~d- t~et):;,''Thi~ ~e~r,~e ~ad a l~t.of time
.
Rather th_an_work.
directly with
,
:\ :-".:
,.,
,;_,.:.:
:-,:,,~//,'~,.!'Tr'~'>:!(:'·/·.f,/'.i,
,:
·~:
guys ~pUttwo
-~o~_ds,,of.;~?,od:a11d
L,
to O~flielve~
~~d J! was more ~~ a • the_ ,,poor
;~nd,
constantly en-
,
."._g;It
was, a:t1me for,learmng and
,the
g1rls·worked_,m a:thnft:store-:-;~or~ r_etreat,
•
said Paul Rayrus,
c<;>urage.them
to.be dependent on
' \.
\vork
:
for a
/gro_up
',
of., Marist
;
that' the. churc"
,
owrie~/•
!
said\'. a junior'Jor Rockaway,. N .J; "We
••
others
•
~
an
.
expense A,nawim
::,.·stti~eritswho
s.penta'week ?ftheir:. James· ~follen,'.
''.a:
,j_unioi:·
·.
from
:
were_
ther~ to work but even n1ore
House workers couldn't
.afford
-
,
,,
hoh<lay break mAppalach1a help-
.Westchester·
County;<
:'.!The
day
...
_specially
Just to get together.
the v_oluntet:rs sent food to a
irigapoorcommuriity.:,,,
..
·,
.·,
after
:,,that<.everyone.·;worked
..
•.
":W~hadtimetositaroundand
friend of a.poor person, accor-
·:-,
..
",::
·.,.N.·,
•
..
,
.
.-.t:,·,d·,:
••
,.
t
·':.S.'
·,
..
E··.
1
•
,
.
.
together.·on the farm thai=belong•/.talk and time t.o laugh. We did so
ding to students on the trip.
,
,_,.
,
me·, s u ens,
ISter • 1 een
..
·
.·
h·.··
..
·.
-
,.
,,
.·
·
.
•
·
·
,
ti
i,1
•
h'
,,._
"d M
•
·
•
·
•
'
=Hallo··ra·n
.. '•·ass·1s'tan·t"d"1r·e·cto·
_,
r·
ed,tot echurc~.,-.:._.,;:
,muc
=.aug
mg,
sai
·
arta
.-.·."Youcan·
doa·lot'moreifyou
. .
.
..
,,
:
. .
.
r o
.
.
•.•
:
,
,
•
,
.
Powers,· a sophomore
from
ca~pus
,rumstry •
..
and
,_James•.·•·.,
"We ~lso c_l.ear~d
a barn out
Nanuet,N.Y.
.
go in as a friend and say, 'I'm
R,umo, a ~raduate ?f Manst _and
-
and a fairly big p1ece·of la~d so
Both .Raynis and Powers at-
.
your friend trying to help you
·.f~rmer:res1dence
director,
..
••
hved
.
they c_oul~ grow ~~ass am;l
-~et
t_he
•
.•
tended last year's retreat to West
out'," said Powers.
"If
you are a
-~ttha_nd
worked, for a p~s.tor,_
a
;?ws come_ out;,
M~llen· said. Virgit1ia and found the two trips
friend they are not going to rely
scltool
._.•
te~cher ._.and, _a,. social,.
:.,We
ha~ to·cut down som~ trees to be different experiences.
on you
·as
much because they
_.wo~ker
durmg a r~t~eat
m
Ot~ay,
.
and get nd of bushes.and prickers
,
",Last year we worked directly
think they would lose your friend-
_Oh10,.<
·.
.·,
.
'..
.
·.
·,
•..
.
a!ld tl)en_wemade a fire out-0fth_e
_-
with poor families. We went into
ship.''
.
.
,\.The
men stayed in the church
:•
pile anfl c,~oked hot dogs over it their houses and we did things for
Raynis and Powers agreed that
·,
rect~ry
·arid
the_
.wOmen-
stayed
..
·at'
·for
11:1~~h.
-
theitl,t' said Rayn'is. "This year
·,
last Year's retreat was much more
..
the-Anawim. House;:a
·residence
•:
The:
i:etreaters said•. they also
.the•
philosophy of the Anawim
strict and religious in nature.
··
which
.was·nained
after the poor.
found'.time to sled down the
.
House was not to. help the·. poor
"This year was a lot more
Together they worked to help
••
.mountain-side
on a sled made of a directly because they felt that the
relaxed and nice. It was a lot of
•.
build a community in the Anawim
piece, of. roofing and to get to
'poor
would just rely on them like
fun and it was made comfortable
,
.•,·House.-
•
know orie another.·
•
they rely on welfare.''
for us,'' said Powers.
Sister Eileen, who coordinated
the past two retreats, said she
•
feeis that- the students grow and
learn a lot about themselves.
"It's a learning experierice for.
our· students to go beyond their.
self-interest. We go and we learn
that in our own country, a coun-.
try with economic wealth, there
are poor people and we can learn
about other economic situations,
social systems and cultural
theories within our country,'' said
Sr. Eileen. "We grow as in-
dividuals, we grow in our value
systems and we grow in setting
our own priorities.''
Sister Eileen is looking into br-
inging a group of students to
Georgia in the spring or early
summer for another retreat to
help the poor. She said she hopes
that it will be just as successful as
the others have been.
W:hamrzaplRow! Collectors are hot. for comics
',•,,I'
.1
:·
;.•..
.
•
•.
··: . .-
..
~
...
•
...
,,
. .;
-.: .
-.
.
.
'.
'
•.
.
'
by Da~_id
Rakowle~ki
.
.
-
.
, ':
said.
•
,
,,
,
"For'· people in. their mid-
. ,
.
Brad,Tree is 15 years old.
·
;
., ·
,
teens," said Mead, "the appeal
,
..
He is an addict.
,·
.
.•
' .
.
:
..
•
• .•
may be in the money. For me it's
/,
/
How to get into the game
·
:
-
'
Each.month he spends between
in the naive and innocent spirit of
:
$90 and $100
Ori
his• habit.
."If
I
the Golden Age (1940's), and
•
didri't work,
l
couldn't afford my
.nothing
will ever touch that;"
"Don't get involved solely because of the money" is the first
habit;'' Tree said.
,
·
. .
e..
.,_,;=
"Comics are the mythology of
rule of comic book collecting, acc6rding to "Iron" Vic Bertini
. :
Tree works at Iron Vic Comics
today," Iron Vic said. "They
and some of his customers at Iron Vic Comics.
at 1 Raymond Ave., ,Poughkeep~
have the same appeal as classical
The comic industry is exploding now and is attracting
sie. His 'habit' is comic book col-
mythology, but are developed
thousands of collectors with the lure of quick and easy money,
'
lecting.
··, .
.
.
.
much more graphically."
but comic fans at Iron Vic's counsel that money is the wrong
,
.
Today the comic industry is en-
. For Lind:t,loom the appeal is
reason to begin a collection.
joying a period
•
of massive
.
mainly in the art. "Some artists
,
"If
you see something you don't like," said James Lindbloom,
growth, with such new lines as
,,
home, wheOh,e was a child .. He got
'have
a better sense of the graphic
14, "and someone says it will be worth money, that's no reason
.
_
Firstand Eclipse challenging the serious,he
•
said, "when I found
.
medium," he said. "Some great
to buy it." Lindbloom owns 1,500 comic books.
••
••.
standard Marvel and DC lines.
•
..
out you weren't a psychopath if· artists will get their start here."
"If
you're in it for the money, I feel
sorry
for you," said Brad
.
And the expanding market ha.sat< you coilecte&It suddenly became
•
For' Dickail, the appeal is in the
Tree 15-year-old owner of 4,000 comics.
"If
you don't read
.
tracted more and more.people to
•
acceptable._":.
',
··
••
.
·
.
complete package.
)'Comics
are
them, you might as well collect coins because you're not getting
:,,''
comic collecting.
,,
;~
•.
,
J~mes, Lindbloom, 11,.has col~ the near p~rfect,;1/media form
,·
the full value for your money."
•
..
··
.
,
"We have a couple of hundred
.
__
lected smc~ he was e1ght._.years
,
because
.
they· can appeal to all
.
Rule number two is buy'what you like.
,
-;<
people who reserve comic~: oil a
:_,old.:_
".It
was a· new, m_edi~m
I
ages and sectors oflife,", she said.
"I
started to buy things I liked," said Tim Mead, 23, of Ulster
f
\regular
basis;t> said ."lrqr:i','
Vic,:-
hadn'_t,'.seen,before. l'h'as really ,
<
.
:,
;.-<, ,,
.,,
..
,
..
>
..
,•, -_
.
Park,ownei of2,400 comics. "After that, I bought what looked
\
.)
Bertini,.· the .. owner, oL·Iron, :V:ic- ~ttracted by them;"'..~/:X':,:,;·
:~
,·, •.
:
,• '.'They have,.stimethingto:offer:: ,j;:Jntcrcstirig.'i,
•...
::
-'.-,; \,
,, .
,
>
,...
·.
,
•
.
,_·
)/
.9o~i.cs; .Iron
~ic'.s;;:wht~1>:;9~tbEd':
..
t
it~r9n'r
Vi,9,
._w~·o:;;~eaj~let~-a·
'-'._ey~ryo~C!/f
l\,#~d:Sa!cl;
?Ki~.s'can -
i
<-,:
T~ee~~reed._
''B~y wha_t
you like; ifyoil don't like what you're
,
..
·,
;:.;.:
m: August of_,,
19.&
I;\
carne~/O"'.e_r,
,
:
larger_:than hf e
-
li_er~:nghtJrom
·
•
enJoy,
,the
=
action;
.
while
'older
, • •
buymg
1t
s bormg, he said.
•
,
,
.
·:
J~O
ne_w
CO.OJic>lHles
eac_lf
rii~ilth,
?/~~-
~~g~
of
A
_co01_ic_,_bpo_k;
s,aid readers can, ~njoy the plot l!nes. ".
•
•
Rule number t~ree of C()llecting is to. become knowledgeable
,
.
and gets shipments of
•comics
·a ,
he s
·;
been;~ serious sinc.c 1960.
.
According to
.
Iron Vic, hts
yourself, by meetmg knowledgeable ':Ollectors
.
•
.
inonth\in,
advance' of, regular
~-'People_w~o
read t_herµ)n. the- customers range in age from 11 to
•·.
"Patronize a comic shop," Iron Vic Bertini suggested. "There
..
, .
newssta~ds.'
: ,,
.
,.,
.
,
,
40's_
lqsrc:~mtact ah? ilei:ame leac-,
,their
late· -.1()'s,
•.
although, as
you'll ~eet the ~ost kn6*,1edgeable c'ollectors and you'H develop
:
,
:
Tree 1s on,e of many collectors
_quamte~
.m
the, 60 s. The,second
Dickau pointed out, not many are
a feel for-what will be hot; '
_
i~Jhe'-Dlitchess·Countyareawho
,great>wave.
of·.,comic,\book
women:-,:::.·
•
• •
.
'~H.ang ~round with people who·have collected for a long
.• ·
frequenfironVic's.
<'.
:
.
':,.'..·.
'.,
publishing,
:·_led
by· Stan lee's
.·•,>
•!A
lot.of women are into fan-
til!le,'' advised Audrey Dickau, 22, of Poughkeepsie, owner of
, ,,
::
Tfee has beeri'seriously c9llec~
.
~evolu~ionary Maryel cqmics line
•
tasy rather
.•
t~an
_
fyl~rvel'. and
35~ comics. "Without th¢mJ would have never known what was
.
•.
~mg for only four.,years,· b_ut has
,
..
mcludmg .F;~ntast1c
.
F:our,
'.
The
.superheroes/,'
~he said ..
\:,;
.:
gomg on.''
.
..
.
.
.
been involved much longeri~''My. Hulk, Spider~an, ,t\vengers, and
In the last 20:;years; comics
The fourth and final rule is not to let collecting overwhelm
•
gra~dfather used to buy, them for,
,Iron
Man, -evoked_ ~.QJQ.t~X~R.in,.
have matured to the
:point
of a .-
you.·
.
••
\
me,'' Tree said .. c"I started
:early;
>·younger
0
readers .. This led to, col-
near~ perfect simulation of real
-.
''Don't spend all your money in one place," Mead said.
··
that's why I'm still ad~ictedi"
.':;:·
lectihg as a busines_~
fa
the mid-
.
life people and situations.
•
.
.•
Iron Vic;s last word on collecting was to "go easy. You should
,
:
By;;
compari_son;
>:Audrey_,
tiO's/'.
:·
•
•
,
.. _ ._.:
·,,-·,,
.
.
,. ..
"There's a lot of psychological
set
r:ealistic
goals for yourself and not try to buy everything
at
:<·Dickau,,
a
22-year~old:-,;'According"
t<>-.lron,:Yic,,the
drama/' Dickau said. "It's not
once.''
•
.
,:
~o:ug9k~sie resident who works'·
'finapc!al)ispe<:t
is::nov~haf:at.:
•
.•
just fight scenes, good
.vs.
bad
--------------------------~
..
·
..
/Jn;data
en.te,ring_;
has <>n.lY
_
co!·
.
t,~~:1s
~~s~
w9~Id~be-~ollector,s;
>:
::
arid_flashy costumes; The heroes
Iron.Vic.), inspiring such spinoffs
-
"My flance
'is
a worse collector
.'.
i ·
.,
lectcd for a few years.
,
•:.'<
_,,-,:,
.::. :
•
:
,
Peop!~ do it bas1c,ally for. en_- are no longer gods, they have feet
as the Superman and Conari than· I am," Mead said. "Which
·'
,.-;-','lwasediting.TheSpectatorat,
joyment/~:he:,~aid~'/"Th_ey:ai:e.
ofclay.'',
·
.
,
·,
• •.
Dutchess. (Coritmuniiy College),
•
ong~ing
:·
stories
,
•
witit
•
endless
, ,:
"There are
.some
comics that
films, but the appeal for the true
.•
is
•.
ironic because I got her
a#d i!,'.'.nurn~r,:
<>f..pcople
'.<>~'
the ~ro_ss-referenc~s.
They are ~-w~rld
,have
no•fight scenes at all," Lind-
.
fans is not the money. For comic
started."
staffwere
-into'it/'·-said
,D_ic:k~u. m 1tselfthat
.ts
constantly evolv~
·
bloo·m pro:udly.pointed out.
•.
:/~When
we didp't want/to·.w<;>rk, ing." , ,
.
. .
.
..
,
.•.
.
.
In the 70's and SO's, comics
,
we'd sit around readingX:Men.»
.
·.
Tlee agreed that the appeal 1s have progressed to
·a
point of.
· .·
Tim,f\.1ead,
'a23-year,old
coni-
~!caping
,
to ano~her W?r.Id,
•
mass acc~ptability and appeal
puter op~rator~ has collected, on"
..
After geometry, bto and digital ("Best selling novel sales couldn't
andsoft' for,
.eight,
years
..
His
,
electroJ!ics;
I
.
want
to
be compete with the total sales of a
grandmother. had, brought them
•
transferred·,far,, far away," he Spiderman or Superman," said
·.
__
-.
f
,
-fj
..
fans,
•
they have become a
. legitimate form of entertainment.
,
"l'ni·not'in it for the money,"
Tree said. "I don't see myself
ever selling my books.''
"I
like reading th•~m," Dickau
said. "I cried when Kitty {Pryde)
and
Peter
{Rasputin,
two
members of the X-Men) broke
up."
,.Singers.
at Disney World
by
Maria
Gordon
.
The members of two groups of
the Marist College choral pro-
gram performed at various loca-
.tions
in Florida between January
4 and January 14.
Members of the Les Chanson-
niers chamber singers and the
Marist Singers sang at Magic
Kingdom in Walt Disney World.
"I was elated when we were ac-
cepted because it is very com-
petitive," Dorothy Ann Davis,
the Marist College singing direc-
tor, said. "Only about four per-
cent of all the people who apply
get accepted. This is a feather in
the cap for the Marist Singers,"
she added.
As part of the choral tour, they
sang at
•
three churches, a
universtity and a high school. On
Sanibel Island, they performed
a
medieval concert at the Sanibel
Hilton Hotel. They also sang at
the Sanibel Community Church,
which consists of a number of dif~
ferent
denominations.
They
received honararium checks from
the Church as well from the other
churches where they performed.
"This helped defray the the cost
of the trip," Davis said.
The Marist Singers were given
time to tour when they were not
performing. "We got to see a lot
of different places and meet a lot
of different people. It was just
too bad we didn't have more free
time,"
Margaret Johnson,
a
freshman choral member, said.
As well as being guests of the
various hotels and receiving dona-
tions from the churches at which
they sang, they were given a pla-
que from Magic Kingdom.
,.
'.
r
,.
,
F
r
r
,
r
~
,
.,
..
,
.
• ·•;
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,;-,_/;i-:_.:,.t•~~-'
<·;,;;,:
~.:./·~t:f;~f.
t_:~\;:-;::,,-~:}<,:/:;J_,:'_(i
'
,,.
,,,:,·:•••C;'.,§~re:~:t:~~~~iJ~tfff
~!~i}~V••··•
•
•. S<rm·uch· has been e~p~essed;>with)offcrs-·of..~clothing
'a~d-
; : o~ei:
~'the'.
'yt!ars
•
·abouf'
Mari~t·~
••
apa~tm~n!-~-~ari~g;-;>
staff(: l?er-
.
, apa·thy
:
that
·-I
··.feel'
thaf
it·
is
<.
sonncLbro~ght wmt~r clothing,
•·,
/
/
·'
••
.. ·A·,,·
•• -",',.·
rcfreshiiigfoknoY1and·shatethe. ?ff~r~'.rpcals,_and
..
shar!d.the,
/.
. ,
:,:::
~
,i~>
·
opposite·.
Shottly-aftcr·christmas
•
,••m~~<bate
l,a.l>_orc·ofcleai:µng
up
...
•·
-!:::::!l::::=~---_.:..-..,....;...L_--'-
__
~_~1,,,.:=:!..;.-----_:_.-...:..
__
:..,__.,:_.;..;.~...:_i
·
•
my·homc:<suffered
extensive fire
.:and,
cou~tirig·.the
·entire:contents
:
.
.
.
Ive
r~<._4?;Ye<L
a. /of of-·
. ..-
\,./.h<i.l-'S
t,l,o..t,
No,~~~
/,&~t1
S'°J"":d
"'P
fo,,:
fi:i;~:f!.
<:-;_
.damagc,':'resulting
in
,:a
three~·:~
of•::tnY
',h_otne;:)andFt~e·fali-.
:
o...v~,-d:S
o.~cl
~v~n
I
C4.,,,of>,,£,,::·,. cla.sse.$
a..t
the. ,-~·,...,~
~fj,.,,,,t!.
·:.
,:, --,;~.
month'.relocationJor_·myself-and
,,.
ministr~tion_/proposed;:.camp11s:
:-
·:·
.
o.
f,,d/\sc.no/a...-.
sJ,;p·
,f-
.o..i...,a.rd?
_
•
•
•
•
-
..
•
•
-,'
..
•.
,: ,
,:
inf'::three: children,·, loss:·.•or· housing: as'.•im','imm~iate.shelter
.
•
lo
t
T
.
.
. .
•·
property;•
.'and·
a· general state· of
:
-.
and
.
granted_
tnc
)he.
opporJunity
•
•
•
•.
~:k
ff
IS
1"£G./ly :
.l
·disaster.-
·-'-:/';i>,,
·,:;._,
',.,:-:·
•;
todeal•.with the tasks at:hand.:·
..
,.•
;
•
·
es;
m~
Ccrfo.,~
<·
B~fore:7(hou'rs'6ad elapsed,
1;
without the.worry°(?fbeing-inJDY
.
,'..
:e:ll,f
"!-~Aoo
/5
••
..
received.: numerous~.
offers.
,of
officefor s~veraldays.
L•
:,.-.:
·:'/
.
.
e-,.
,,,,,,,,.,Y.
,.•
..
,.
'•
assis,tance·.,
from
'.the
:.,MarisL
··\Toiµie,
.the•Marlst
COµutl\lnity·
~
fla/et,'c
o..lol/i'_f
..
Y'.·
./.
.
,:
community;Jri the days ahead,
·1•
.
has s~oin co~ceni and caring far··'
•
·.
was offered, temporary,
•housing,
.
•
beyond.my:
expectations,
Tc;>
aUof.
•
._-•-•----•--••--•-.--.-.~-.---•--•-.--•••---•llill
t'o,x(clothing'; and phys.icallabor
'
you~
riiiiny;many;'th,ahJcs.-.,?;.,
.
:·;-
:
-
•.
.::.·
·
·
·
··' · ··
·
·
·
·
·?·
•
·
to. help me with
:the
seemingly
•
·; ::
.
·
:
.
Nancy.Sc;hmauch
.
·· ••
. ·/
R
.•.'
.
.
- '
...
;
.
:·
.··
·a:
.
.
.
·.
,, ,'
endless
task.of a hotiscinventory.'
•
-
.
•,
HEOP
Counselor'
...
.
.
·.
Once upon -~,~~;
wh8~
!iylan
:-~:L~~:!~inr:.
II
;
•• , ~;;~,
Qr>
itf
ci
••
f
..
;dci,~~1~
11
te:t~tf
ff
I~i•~~b.Ar
;,l
•.·.
:
and Baez
w.as:
queen, the;sun shone bright-· Joyh.il?
.
And
,,when,
was
.
.
the·
·1ast.
0
.
time
,The
Marist College Computer orgaruiatioii" can-·use the.
'coin~.
•
•
.
over Marlstlandi Spring was in t.he air; the
veverybody
could walkhome·fro'm It?:,,
:·,
·
Society_(MCCS)'has'a-committec
·
puterin 'a:-'more
speciai~ed'way,'
.
majestic rlver~lled by and birds sang In the
..
·: ,The
..
real_1
beginning
·of··
the• River:• Day,.•" desigricd-,toihelp other· clubs:·on we may·.he ·able
;to
supplY: the
trees. After
-a·
eaµtlful weekend,
-the,
last.
···probably
wasn't much
_different
·from.
the •
camptis;·Wc are;s:C.A.':C, the. software to make'that ·possible.·
thing senior Ma lstlte~ wanted to see was a,
--
one In the story. Seniors went dpwn·to.the •
Stu'dent·
•
·cooperative
'for'·
These
sbftwarc·'packages.'wilLbe
Monday.
..
..
.
.
. .
.
. .
'.·_-::
..
river; played guitars; welcomed,the sun a!'ld
,
Acadei:nic·
coniputing.
We
have
·
sold'.:·to. your, club through
'a<
·They
had survived winter, the tolls of
.a
•
enjoyed each 9t.her's company. They. spept
.
'
severalfunctions
oncanipus;
':,
'·
transfer of funds at a' mutually
.
harsh·life and seven semesters of,college.
·
a day away from.:classes and enjoyed at
..
·
•
First; we
·assist
.-·student
run·. agreeable
fee:•
'.<
i
•
..
•
,·,
•
.
They had spent every Monday since they
:-thelrbest
··•
•
!
·<-·;.
-"·, .• -·
.•
''·:
··-'
,
·'.,·····-··•·
clubs
..
and orgariizat.ions
iri· ob-''
--·Fina1:f)_';_S;C~A:C;'willmaintia_n
•
.,"
were children· 11stenlng to things they dldn!t
• •
<'.
Rlver,Day· happened because the ~erilors
taining access
:
to
;the
school's
•
any program tha~ we create, so, 1f
want to hear. It was time for a change. The
wanted a day o~f, not because they
were
too,
c::o!Jlputer.
7
':.
,:t_>,
:./t
1
:-->,
". •
an~thi~g·,,sho11l~
J~?
,_wrong;.
or
senior senior Marlstlte had always, a~mlred
:;
dru~k
·
to·: go to cl~sses.- They didn't
_em;-·
. ..,
Sec6iid;
·we
.
create generalized•.::
futu~e
<oc_lub
•
presidents
:.
want_
. •
the flowing wate.rs below his land and spent:· b~rrass'themselves by showing the world
.•
programs that any club can use
..
•.
mod1ficat1ons
...
made, we will do··.
much of his time clo~e to them. Oil.this
·one
•• their absolute
:..worst.
They· didn't destroy
•
..
•
At this time we have membership that at no:charge
to your club.
-
·.
,· .
beautiful day,}he Invited hi~ fell()W vlUagers
property; and they dldn'.trlsk_thelr
lives.
>i;_·:
;';
Hsting(and:a•progfam that1J1clps,
:"
]f:yc:,u·.:~r~
·ip.t~rest~
in using·
•
to share the_,peacefut,wa.tert,>:,;;,
. {_.)
·----::
· -r\~l_~·9e\lts,
b.eQinnfng(R!vef: O,ay,,_~~•.J~eq
• ' •
you (irid ihe b~(ti~~Jo
'hol~
club
\
the.·servi~
:<>f
S;C::A'.C. or you
· ...
Word of· his geMrosltyyqulckly,,spread-/
,'stead.llydegrad,d;,·c/
,.v
•
.,
,;.
'·:':'\•'.;<'•'<·
.
•
meeungs;and expect the:highest·.·
..
·
..
·llaye:,,:a!lYj-
quest1onsJ
:,,ple~se
;'.
..
throughout the
'
larid;f"and\
s'oon
··
he·· was
·-
..-~'.
'It ls·so far
from
the· original ldea'•now.
that
<
,-
atteiidarice;i
':Now
f'1jider
,
¢on~
<
·
conta¢t' us::through·
campus m~il
<
•
joined
.
by every Inhabitant of
·Marlstland.
·
.
Its founders
probab.lY:W6uldn'frecognlze
..
lt.'
. .:
·'
.
sidei:atiori~are;pfogtams
0
for·c1iJb
,_
.oj':thc
cgmputcf,mempfa~ilit.y.,~~
They brought music, food and ~rink. And, by
•
·
A 6eer
-keg.
bears·; little.,
resemblance
'to
a<·''"
budget accounting:
arid·a package./ a:ccc;,llnt
code H~AK_.:
:,
'"
>,·i/
;
·'<-
the banks of the majestic w~~ers;.theymade
:
gul~~r.
>
Every
?year;Jor:,the,.
pa.st,~,three
to.--sche!:lule.,club·,
events.:: ~e
;_·
•
-
:·
._. :·
•<·
,,;:.·.:
Smcerely,
merry as the sun. shone bright all through'
some<>ne
has gotten so dlsgustlngly·drunk.
·membership·.
listing, pa~kage
:-is ·_
•
...
,.
.
::.':
. ,_~teveEastw<>Od,
the day..
.
:
•.
.
..
"· ,,
< •
.
thathehasbeenserlouslyJnJured:,'
·'
·:-'''
beingoffercdfrccofcharge,toall,
..
•
.. ·
Cha1rman;S.C.A.~'.
But all too soon, tfJe sun began
to
set
and
•••
•
••
Rl_vei'
Day
was
supposed to be.something
.
clubs.·,;.
-·-
.
_
'.,,
-:
•
- -·.· -.-
,
.'·
• :
->.·
:e'-
(
Jerry,<:,ro~ley.
It was· time to return to Marlstland
..
Slowly,
good.'. to
,
rem~mb.er,: but
'i
how
..
111any
.·,we
also: cater to the specific
-
SentorProgrammer,
.
the people scaled.· the·. hill an~
·,reluctan~ly
..
•.
staggering drlinks:cart recaH: anythln~ after··
·.
:
:._.::
...
;.,:-··
,-:.
.
.
:·.,
;>:
,
•
•.
.
·.
.
...
,
..
S.C,A.C,
·
settled back to life on
a·
Monday evening.·
, •
.•
they,sober,up?,
.;,~/: ·.,,:,::·:;,
•
,-
,: :.
,.
;·
·<·
.
•.
·
··-
•·
.·,
-
::~.:
'°
• · . ·
•
.;:,_
::-:<,,'
•
•.
•
,·::
·: ~;:.
,
·
••
b~~~e::;n~~~ s:m~~:a~~~e~~:.
~iif
f
t!1l~
:·
'
~i:;n~~;e
roh~oiri;fr~~wi,e~~=i!i~~f~l;,;
·.:·,··
..
•
...
·•D;:
.•
"ea·;.,;·
.-.r:;:
•.
E.tdi;:
..
~.\ti.o:{r:.:,
•.
::.:1_.:,
..
:.tt
..
·:;.':·.•;·'.'.·.:·:•.:•:.·.:.:.·:i.l.:
..•.
,::::':.·i·.···:•·:.c
..
·'.
..
·_;_~.;_:h····.·_
..
-'
..
r·,_·
..
1·.··.·.~
...
····.t.·.·.·'m.~.,&
.•.
_.•.:_·~.·,~}tj~il:\
>•,
./.t}-'
:
.;;::};/
••
.
sorrow.· He bowed befpre, ~.Is god and .. said;
-·-::
emt>~rrassed
-i~s_elf:pr
:the fro.nt.
page,
()f ~he_}
.
· .
_ -..
~~rij~y··
6ur:'.
ca.tds
·
a~d-·letter;/Just
':
"Oh, if. only we could.have_.one
day.a yea,ras
:
,·
..
Pough~~,p~le Jo1.1rnal,
:···, :/•:.•·•
..
'
•···
i .. •
>.
,_,
-·
·
•.
·Recently,
:thc·.studeni.
League
•
uke
..
tis,;t~ey
·ha"'.e·been.separatcd
,';
beautiful as this ... thisRlver Day!-".·
.
;
:-.
,·
.·•.
·
•.
:·
Is It any wonder that the. ad,:ninlstration:
.
•
sponsored
a Christmas card drive
-from .thefr•
families
and
;friends,,:
·
...
:'
And. the skies operied and.
:a
boorrilng
'-·
sworE! to pu, anend to River Day?
·. •. ;
;
•'y\,.
\for ·t}t~·'.Alllc:tican
;arined
fqrces·.
'an(reall:Yineed
io,bear."Jrpni
the
•>
:
.·
.. •·
voice cried out, "So it shall be as long as th.e
.
'.
If
•
senlo~s
,
can n.ot·. prove
..
that, they·
..
are
;\:
,
stationti<f
al, o~er the\w'<>ktd;-:1;a:n(<
~•outside~:::
\Vorld:~•:,+Reineinber
':.
:
•
sun shines on the blessed event~''.;'--~·,.,\
•
·-•·
..
.
,:respQ'1Sl~le:
enough
:to
.·take::
a
.-day
,
for,·;> pi:o'lldt~ say:,thiit-:~h~'.drivc
was~ri:6!heiii/joo;-s.,af··:lic;,lidays
-sucf,
·as···
-
. .-
,
Nice story, isn't It? It was'( a peaceful,
ther:nselves without destroylng·property ar1d,
:
9vc;rwllelining
:
success>,
Over. 90
::
;
EasteU?thaiiksgiving;~,,
and/
:
of
•
.
joyful day, Pe9ple enjoyf!d them.selves
,and .:,
-themselves;
River.Day should never: happen
•.
,
r
parti~i~ri~'.c~~tribµtc:d
386
caid.s
:·
course'-Chtistriiasf}
?':';i1-:: :\
;t~':.
:
.
could. walk· home. The. day
,dldn';t •
~t~rt: the
••
•
·again(
',·,:
.·
'
•. •
,
·,. ,
:-,_·,
>,··
i\,, ·_.
:/:,..--,
.
·
: ::
·
•
. :::"
...
•.
-. ·
and
j:,'ur::total:stirpasse&thaf'of
:~?~t
N~t•iyear/,we: afe; hoping to.
:
.
night·before and the sun st:tone\brigt,tly, It
,
r
But)t·could be
a
day'to'remember7
.If
;
.Iast::•:.y~r's<toP
''!contrib_utH1g:c:',llave'.-tanothe(,\Cliristmas·J.card
::"
was the first River Qay.
•
,
••
-
.·
·
.. •.
'r
.
•
. .
. ;
/people
stay sober enough. It could be a day
-:.
schooJ;<;:,:,:/·:,;,~:'.:
:\>:,~_:
1~
'.'.i··
~,;,::::
..
,·
':
:drive'.apd:we'irivite·eachand·every.
•
It the people who started· It kn~w what It
:
•
..
·when.
seniors
.
take
.
time to
ib_e'.
•
good to
•
...
-.
\Vhen )Ve
retumcd,fromWinter,
V.'ritember?.
of-' the: Maris(. com~
would become, they. probably v.iould have
./.
them·selves
..
•
:
'.
-7•'.
.-
.•
\
_,:·>·'':.·><
>>
-·.
Interscssj~n~·ma~y
of those:w.ho;:_,munifyto,participate::There·ifso
prayed f_or
a quick end to the world;.:·
··
·. •.. •
•
•
•
:
It could be
a
spring Monday wt,en·the sun
participated
P
wti:e:,:
pleasantly
:·:much\wei
can: learn from these
.
When was the last time It was sunny o.n a
.
shlne.s·and the peaceful waters flow:,
:
•
•
.
surprised;·Insidc,their
mailb~x~;
·:people
and it f~ls goodinside'to
.
•
•
•
•
•
•
• •
ther found Jettcmfrom::aU-'~ver
_,:,
brighten the day of someone
who
· :··
•
"··
.
-
,.
~he.world.wtj~ten'
by.the:_men,anc;l.:
:.,
is doing so much forus.·
s ,~,;
:;;;-,:,:,
.
•
•
_.. ·
·
\
•
·
women·:-Who. feceivt4/0~t;;·~ds/·-
·····<.-
·:\~·.
-
;
?/·:--· ::;
.
.-
,;·~----~--:
;t;:oin.81lisa.ma
·_'
_· .••
h..
\
'·
·
·
· · ·
·
1·
·
•
:
•:k..
For
'all
-i.those:·'_st~d~ts:·;w~o'
. ,,
Chairperson~Public
.:
.
·:T.
:.·.
·e·
.••.
-n·.
·ew··.
:.·
...
---
o•
.·.·o·
:·
•
;
..
_:.
receiv_ed:-a~eply;Jen¢<.,uraie.yo~r::!-::
RelationsGomoiitt~•
•
t~
wnte back;· these ~opl~ r~~)'f
r:,
.
StuderitLeaguc·
•••
·:
•
•
•
--
.
._
-
'
-
•
-
•
•
•
~.-
•
•
·:~
. '
.
.
--.
-~
.
l
~.
.
.
·
.
!
We begin a new year with a new look - a
The riew
•
nameplate was designed by -
new nameplate. It's a surface alteratlon,an
•
Kristina Norgaard, graphic' designer
'and •
external change. It is meant only to be more
..
adjuct instructor of art at Marlst.· The:em- •
modern and attractive, not to
.change
the
blem
.on
the left of the name Is the·offlcia('
•
goats
e>f
our newspaper.-
.
.
,
•
.. .
Marist seal; the emblem· on the· right; the
::
.
The Circle will continue
•
to operate as
•
official MarlsHogo.
-
..
.
·.:
.-
•
•.
.
•
professlorially as possible· to cover. events
•
•
The new look of
•
The Circle
.
wlll not
,
fairly. It is
•
a student pub.llcation, and its
change its purpose or goals. We thlqk the
staff learns as the· newspaper grows. With.
.
change Is an· Improvement and,
•
we· wlll
•
•
the cooperation of
-
the Marist community,
continue to strive• towards professlonallsm
we will continue.to le~rn and to grow;\
,
and to Improve The Circle.
TH€
CIRCLE:
Edi\or
Associate Editors
Sports Editor
Photography
Editor'
Lou Ann"Seelig
•
Senior Editors
Brian Kelly
Pau·1
Raynis
News
Editors
BonnieHede
Ian O'Connor
Viewpoint Editor
Margo Kucich
.
Buslnus Manager
'
•
• . .. .
Cofrection·.
''-'·
;-
.
·.
__
•• .
.
·.
.'
.
. •
'·
.
. .,· .
•
.. ._ •
...
·
.• .•;
.
.t
.
·,
.
·: ' .'
'.
,.
•
.
.
."·
.. ·.
-:
In a Dec. 13 article, "Too much demand~
t®
litde
space,".
The
.·
Circle erroneously reported that Prof.
Paul
DelColle
bad
-sub-
mitted
a
noor
pian
for
the
Lowen
Tbom'a.s
Communication Arts
•••
~--Ce1:1ter;
that·. included
.WMCR. -DelCoile's
....
plan
WoUld
·provide.
. :.
space.for an audio production facility, bat not the-campus ndio
.
station.
.-'
· •
•
•
.
,.,
.
.
-.·-
:
••
·
•.
-·
•
·
.
•
Also,· DelColle
said
lie
bel,eves
housing
sp~ce
~n
be
created
in
.•
-
Marist
Eas~
but
not· the Lowell Thomas Center, as
TIie
Circl,
reported.
-
•
.
Christine l)empsey
John Bakke.
Carl MacGowan
Amie Rhodes
.
Pete COiaizzo
laura Reichert
Advertising
.Manager
Cartoonist
Graphics
.
Faculty Actrisor
BemieHeer
laura R~ichert
Beverly Morlang
David McCraw
l
-
--
- - -
- --
- -
.
-·
:--·.
~;
..
_.
-~.
•.
....
. .
::=
l~--~o·•••:,NJan.i1,
.1H5
-,THE CIRCLE~
:•g,•
~ ~
,}i1}\,t.,~rfi3.t
1
:'.'tt.llisi~Ma.n.iSt.•.owe.
its•····stUtlents?•.
•
:··-:~
··}
•f!-'rf,;j
;'.:'
~-:•
:·1~, ,·
:,
•
·:,;";''
·: ·_c:-·:;}:,:.,;,,,9:~~'.;¾;:;::~,;~Y..~·,,,.:
'::'::~~~
:.
;·.:·,
·,-~
•.
"~-
·.,,.
'
•• <·t-
·
. '
·
,.
•
.
.
.
.
_· .
•
.
\_;·
'.
.
.
:
.
··.
;: .·
.. ··
.• by David McCtaw'/}.'\~;;
t•:::,:_
:':·:
: ;_
betam'e;deai!to,:'me
\vhatJict
was
:.<B/is'
almosf automatic; the. ones.
.
acknowledge those
·strengths.
We
>' ' •• :
•
• ..
;c-:>;})):-::\f\-':°;{'.'~
:,_\)?t,it.?
-':'
_,_(',:/}rea)iy
jryihg';'tci·say:
.Marisr
ow'ed_.
:·:with :questionable content, silly
:
.
have some excellent instructors
:.
-:
:
.
:
;
>I.J<?lind
lllYs~l(ilot long ago af' him something better;
-.
• :
, :
>
:
assignments,'. and. few demands;
•
with
•
a rare
•
commitment ; to
•
• a pai'ty. witll:~evert1lyourig Marist
.!:::.::
-I_have been thinking
_abounhat
·/the night classes that adjourn· at
teaching, arid we h_ave
some first-
•
gradti~tes W~~it.one
of
them c~ine
;
'conversatipn:
these past few days· eight::'l'i:Lie,
__
they, are not the rule
•
rate students. They -'-: with some
. o-..;er.·.::io··teU/me
:soniething·11e·;· _arid
trying tc{decide what to make
.·.
ar. Mari~t;
,:
but
•
they are
•
not
.
help from the
.
-academic
•
ad-
•.
•
_thought'-.F
should know: He
.was<·
ijfii.
l
·cannot
write it
off
as just
:
isolated exceptions either.
•
ministration. -
can begin, I
,angry,-~
angry at himself 'and
.
on~;
ex-student's personal com-
.
• Undeman~ing courses may at
believe, to make Marist better.
••
• angry_at Marist;
.·
•,;,
:_.
-,.,e-.
: .
.
:
plajitt:,While I know of many re-
·nrst
seem b~nign. The professor
We shouldn't fool ourselves, of
.
::,_,','l
can'.t believe what.I spent all
_::
cent. graduates
,who
do
not share
.
s:tits back onl assignments, and no
course. Achieying academic ex-
-that money'for/'--he·t,egaii;iHe·,
his.sentiments;who feel thefgot
.
students complain. They arc hap-
cellence -
•
real academic ex-
.•
was
,c_talking/abouiO:
his
:·
co_Jlege,
:
9µt
of
Marist- ~ith a reasoria~le
:
py
·to
be fre~.of the work, and so cellence, not idle sloganeering
"'"7
cdticatfon/andiri quick orderr:he
••
education~
'f-also
know thafm~riy
·:
is tlie
,pi:_ofessor.
So what's the
is a complex task, one tied into
listed
·
some
:of:
his,
.'~\asses
•
--'--:
.·of
.
them would·
:say.
that" tJ\eir
•
pfo~lem?
,· ._:
•
.
admissions practices, hiring pro-
. _"joke~,.••
h1fcalled the~ ~-~las~~s
• .
cl~ssm~te was right about at least
..
:
_,_The ~robl~m. is
.
that
the
ced_u.~es, faculJY
••
evaluati~n
w~er.e, ~e ~;lli able.
,to .shde
;bY
,
one, thmg: T,h~re are too, ,many undemanding courses are like a
pohc1es, the quality of leadership
w1tho~Ldomg W~~h !)fan~thmg;
.
classes
-at
Man~~· trat
.do)!;
t ~sk cancer oil· the system. They eat
at t~e. college, a~d t~e ~orms and
and,
.w,nhoutieammg
much
.m_the
:
enough ?f student~ and don,: t g~ve:
..
away at· the college by lowering
_
trad~t1ons of_
the ms!1tuuon.
.
proces~:
i-~•·:~;;:;.:-.<>/'.;-?,
..
_cnoughm;return
•.
_
••
.
•
expectations of.work and·raising
Stlll,._I ~m convmce~ that we
.
·_
,''I
spent what:
·c_s4qo
a "class?.'':·
• :;-
Of all that :was said jn the con.: expectations of\ grades. Studen,.ts can begm, m small but_ impor!ant
''he:saiij
·bitterly;
''Evei-y:>'firiie I_ verfatfon, that·is·ihe' point·that
•
wlfo
take themi_begin ~o resent w~ys, to ~h~nge the m
5
utuuon.
thin~'.about,ho!' mu_ch trlone.y I·_· stays with<me: Yes, I can make
--p_rofessors
who\ de~and-
_more,
FirSt• ManSt s_beSt. stu~ents nee_d
owe now, J'getreally-mad.''._:.
·:c
.
·
the argument-that I-did then~
and
..
they,_grpw_CYIJ.1<:al
about a to st0P s_uffemig_
m silence a~d
,_.
:I
l_istened
patieritly:to·;his
·com~·
.that•
nobody· compels·students
·to
..
grading system that
seems·
so in-
••
s~op makmg·do with what they_ re
plaints~ and
l
sympathized, but· I
.•
take easy_ courses
•
and do
.
the
.
corisisterit. Professors trying._ to &(~~n_.
.
They need to l_obby, m-
. •
alsckfelt the' heed to' point' out
•minimum·..;.;.
-but
I
also
have
to hold the line on standards
·soon'
d,v,~uaHy an,.d colle~uvelr,
_
~or
what l considered to' be .the ob-
·acknowledge•
something else: Jt
feel embattled. They begin to
q1:1aI1ty
co_1,1rses
and
iq~ahty
m~
vious:
,Nobody
made:
-hiin
take•
:
shouldn'f be, so easy to get.by at. wonder why they bother. Slowly, Slructors
1
m every maJor every
those
_<:lassef
,·aricl
-,
~hose
•
pro".
>
Marist, and it':SJime. we put
_the
educa~ion clecays:
.
.
_
sem~Ster:
..
,
.
•
. '
.
fessors, ;ind he knew e-'Ca~ly
what
.
issue out on the table.
• •
.
•..
-~ •
".
•
.
• •
.•
.
.. ..·_
L1kew1se,
tt s time for those of
·
ti{ei
ect'
when lieisi ried: u
_;for_:. .
..
:
.
,
..
,
,.
.
. : .
. .
•
I d~n t know wheth~r
.the
pro-
us on the faculty to· take a hard
••
,
the'·
m·
·
PH.e
·_c·•·
uld.
·
·ha···v·
•·eg'd
,
·
e· P
e:
.
Maybe vve.should:start by
.com-
blem 1s. worse at Manst than at
.
look at our own courses, at the
.
o
on mor
..
·
•
•
·
1
• h
•
l
.
'b·
d
.
h
• • •
d I d '
.
.
•
tharith
•
· • • m'·,,
·/
·
·
.-·.·
::-
..
mg.c ean,w1t ourse ve_s,
•
Y:
,a
-
ot er msutut1ons,, an
,
..
on t
••
assignments we make, the Stans
•
.
.
fmt~mpu
,
•
•,
:,
.
••
•
mitting that all of us
7 •
students,
much care. The important thing is
.
dards we
-set;
and the grades we
•
academic achievement at Marist.
Moreover, we need to stop preten-
ding that what our colleagues do
is strictly
somebody
else's
business.
•
Concerns
about
academic freedom are real, but so
are ones about competence, and
one mark of a profession is its
willingness to accept the unplea-
sant responsibility of keeping its
own house in order.
•
Finally, Marist needs academic
administrators who will insist on
quality and encourage and sup-
port -
in meaningful ways -
those instructors who do likewise.
None of these steps is a cure-
all. None of them comes without
risk. All of them require effort
and persistence, perhaps with lit-
tle apparent
gain at times.
Together, though, they represent
an essential first step: that we stop
looking the other way.
•
When I think back to my con-
versation with my former student,
I struggle with the question of
obligations. What does Marist
owe its students?
That is a good question, and
one we should struggle with, but I
think _ that' with academic ex-
cellence; the real question for all
of us is this: What do we owe
ourselves'?
•
.A,ht_tle
_reluC!antly,
he
,~gr~ed,, ,
faculty, adm_inistrators '- know that we address the problem here
give. We need to talk openly as a
b_ut do1!1g-so did n~t
·
ta~e away
• •
there's
.·
a.-
·.
problem .. We·_
..
kno:,v and
.
start.
,
building
•
•
.on
our,·
•
faculty about what standards are
.
:either
_his.
anger ?r his d~_bts, an~ aboutthe classes that are re_gular- strengths.
.·
:.
.
"i-
_
reasonable and what steps are
David Mccraw is an assistant
as. the conversation co11tmue~,_._::1t
ly canceU~~; the courses where the
And it's
.important -that
we do
necessary to raise the level of
professor of communifation arts.
.
Al'Jd
now
the :neW
song:
.:/
•
:;;r,liit!it7J~f
t1f
~M~E::::.~f;f
i~i .•
~.
-
.
•
B.i~me~!ol~gl~t
:·
•
:,.,·t
:i-,:-•
,
;)
:'':''.
<· ·
p_rophecy
_1s'
true.• and destined_
,
to
'· ..
tage· over."thc
•
Tui:nultuous 1960s,
_o:;;:_;
:::.
":-h
'.;:
f-,
\
·'• ./:-·
.
•.·
..
,:: •.•
<.·.
.
;:
be. fulfilled iil thiS. W!!°y;
However'·,
.
:
-'- less
•
hos me parents
•
toward via
....
":·College
students
..
and.
·,global
·-the
riuiin; complaiiit·among
;the ·sionary-change.
This will,in turn,
••
•.
• consciousness are due to fulfill a
:
futurists who attended the 9lobal
produce
.
a more enlightened
•
' prophecy, provid~d that prophecy·•<•:
·
<
•
.
.•._
..
.
'·
·
.
,:,
•
rri_earis_
t~at by thinki~g globally Coilfe~e~ce 1980 was
''The
parenthood through the children
an,d
;
~<:t.irig
·;-
locally ~e,
•
th:
••
-missing
'.ingredient:'
or
:'No
vi~ of- our time themselves. So that
'
~ 1
,11nan_1ty
oft he Earth, will be go:,;
__
~ioil to guid~ us" in· terms of a by the time we reach the Vi~
.
1!1~
fron:i g()verna~ent by d:l:ga-
•
framework \hrough which to par-
sionary
i
990s, we will have a
1
!
0 n.:
t9 qemocr-~cy, ~Y
'P<!rttcipa-
·•
tidpate in th~ kind of democracy.,. third geriefati6n movement, back~
tton:.
-·,.
•.· > _
·:
'' :-• ·i•
• ·:
-.<::
:
we need.
•
•
_.,,
••
•
ed by the residual understandings
H,.1s a knownJact tllatrno~al
_..
•'
_:··.·
..
·
~-
.••
:._
'··
....
of the 1960s. History reveals
·r
:_;~ssu:s:
c_.
o_urlsles·,.haved
,,beg1;1n_.
ht~
;,;~\oiito_,f.ihe'\rie~ber_s_:~f.
the
_you·
study it;. that no. g;e~t
...
iascmate co ege stu ents m. t e
•
·
.·•
>.
-
.
•
,.
·--·
·..
•,>
•
-.
.
•
m v
e t f
n
·
·
·
h
·1
•
•
uriiied ~tates recently with the
Co~fer~nce:s~,bi'ni_ttep:a
paper,on
__
o 5,,n s
••
u Y· tnump
unt1
·
iprospectofchangingthe.worldby
the theme:war~ed·m.~~ri~ture,:
,-.
:·
:·
• -.
.
____
.
.
"thinking globaHy,; acting local-
'.'Wh_ere th~re
•.
is
:
no v.1s1on,
,·the·.
th,e residuaJ. understandings of t~e
ly.'.'. Thisois because:a number of-
people pensh.''._.: (1:rov: ~9:l8)
•
·developing"in~piration
reach anp
publications/are; pioneering_ the
·:;-Meanw~lle,
anAII1epcan prisoner r<>ot·in
.t~_e
third generation. I ain
•
,.way:/;_;•,:·:..:,;-::.'
.
::
,_,;,':::
-_.
,,'.:>c:'
-~~ttymg
to,comm1t,to paper the first generation;
,you
are second
•••
)-\'A.°
II1ajor breakthroughjn_.this
•
v1s~o.n
_he had ~xp_enenced aJong generation ifyou are a college sti.r-
_·
cultural-direction
-was·•
the First•·: tJ.tese
Imes, but_lt was so deep,that dent today, have been or shall be-
..
_
GlohatConference cm the Future
\_it-was,
diff1c11lt
.to;c6mI1111nic_ate
one within the same timeframe;
•
helcf;in Torontc:F·danada at ihc
:,:w_itllou(
_S()Undiilg·
presumptuous and your children are-destined to
·.
outset'ofthel980s}.it
W3$
spans>< !o-pe?_ple,
who ~ere notready for be third generation
...
of· global
sored bytheW<>rld_I-titure_Society
•
tJ;
.Fmally,.
durmg. 1983, l w~s ~inded local action. The cause
{49 I 6,<:St.=0(Elmo-:i::J\xe,,
:_
abl~Ho
.brea~-
ttie·story __
of t~1s· and e.ffect of a legend prophesied
·
Washingt<>n;O.C.·200i4)/ou(of
,_:_enhghten<>r.:
dow_n
.,'.}nt<;>.
a inScripture!.
·_.·
.
.
.
,
·• which. came/the· book
;·eniitled
rg<>velscript
along with his vmon;,
:
Thr«,ugb ·:The,, s0s;
;::
TbinJ(ing·
•.
and recen~ly i~ has been, publish-
Accordingly, I would sugges~
Glo,-ally; Acting µ,cany, now be-
~d.
~
:
:
::
/
--·
•.
••
,
•
:·:
..
,.
that
.
anybody interested in the·
·ing.llsed_asa.college_tcxtat_Eill-
.. ,,
• ;·
.,·, ...
•
_,
.·-
.. ,pros
and cons of this vision
pire_State and other universities.
:·
En~itled Silent. Tliunder,
•
it should consider the published
Isaac-Asimov and Alvin Toffler
-
~h?ws
.
dramatically
~ow results of the Conference on the
• •
are amorig its autllors ...
: ,
•
.•.
•.
-
.
: :.
m~g~tref!ds a[).~--~omputers;
~t~eo Future·_
·held.
at Toronto during
• W.hh
•
global·· consciousness·
'.
and audio, religion ~l!d'poUucs, 1980; and possibly follow it up by
- among college students on the rise
;
econom! and emouo~s a~e
•
all reading Silent • Thu_nder (Bundza
and Halley's Cornet on its way
to
,
headed m !he cultural direc_uon.
of House, Winkley Pond Road, Bar-
the Earth,·it may·well be that the
a synergeucal
_world
or Gridarian
.
rington, N.H. 03825). By then,
second half-of this Reaganomic · Democracy (~op}e
·_developi~~-
you will be informed enough to
Decade will . break out
.
into
.
slowly_ a
·
gri d . sySt em.
discussthe matter knowledgeably
something· like this. The -Old
•
wor!dwide).
•
Accor~mg t.~ this. with others.· Which could be fun.
Testament"of
the Holy Bible·. outlme
0
f the future m rel~uon to And remember, not much, if
speaks of a "new song" that will the past, the underSlandm~s <;>f
·
anYthing, is worth doing unless·
"magnify the law, and make it .the l~s
are very_ much alive m
•
the doing can be fun. "Think
honorable.". (Isa.· 42:10,21) The
the residual culture that th0se globally,
.
act locally, perceive
New Testament says, "They sang
newly," said one of the members
a new song ... for the healing of
beautiful and painful times pr~ of the Conference on the Future;
the nations." (Rev. 14:3; 22:2) So
duced in
·the
parents of_ioday•s and share this powerful learning
it definitely refers to a global
children. As those kids come in stance with others -
or perish in
development.
contact with this vision and take it a visionless mess.
.
Since people feel the spiritual
home to their parents, something
·An
Invitkttion to
~
.
.
;
i
Qur
Re8.ders
...
.
,•
'
-
:.
,,
·_.
•.
For the past year, Viewpoint has
.
b~en a forum for
:afssays
tritten by
.
Circle-.readers. We have tried to
·print
comnie-ntary/ on a ~ide range
of topics, from smoking in public
to the role of religious studies in a
college education,' from IDWI
.
.
.
.
,
\
.
laws to diplomatic relations with
-the Vatican .. We have been happy
to.provide the space.·
But we're not sure we can con-
tinue doing so.
·Frankly,
the response has been
.-
,,
•
dtsappointing.
·We
appreciate those
...
_.readers
who havetaken the time
•
to write for: Viewpoint, bu·t they
have been. too· few. We like to
think Viewpoint is
-
an important
•
part of the paper, and we want to
keep it in The Circle. But the deci-
•.•
sion is really yours.:
Once more, we are inviting you
to submit essays for publication.
They should be 500 to 700 words
and sent to Pete Colaizzo, The
Circle. If we get contributions, we
will continue to run Viewpoint. If
we don't, we will use the space for
other things.
We think Viewp9int's worth
keeping alive. We hope you do,
too.
within them long before they
in those parents will be con-
•
Dr. Theriault answers to many
become political or even entenain
sensually validated by the hope of nicknames and can be reached at
~litical thoughts, the spiritual in-
their children.
Otisville FCI. He is a prisoner
fluencc is due to formulate the
So the next half-of the Global • there.
_________________________
..
-:
..
"
...
i
\'.
r
l
'
I
--~
\)I
a
--·-----·
••
··-··-,,
.
_.....l...._
_________________________________________
_
·;,·,;,
.
'~.:
.
~~
..
---Page·6-THE
CIRCLE-\Jin.·31<1-~
...
'·
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Reel
.
.
by Beverly
Morlang
_,;_
..
\
.,.
·,·-
: ...
·.
already:;beeri:said?
;Except
thitJ.f:
•
ly
·Hills.Cop!.ns
still a good film,·.· film decides to.get heavy'with,Jt'sf.
,
..
i·r
i'f'
\•;'.
,_·.
:·
,?'.:;, ·./,:•::
.
:\':_,.-·.
;•;/t;
::::yoif!{havcn',b\already•~
,seen
kit;
.:\withou~hrequiriog:\'it's /~t_ai:
i,:'to
-:'
~essiah~like·:symbolis'm/the'only}/
1mpress1ons
: ..
-'.
•The (i111e~has
come
'to.·
ltill
'fwo
{iperhaps\you:'.shoukfr;The··•film.:if.-":s'fretch
.his'talehts
one
bit.
:;~L-,)rft~/thirtg
·:setting
:
heavy
-'._is:
'the;:au-~°i:';·
birds with on~:,ston~,
•
t~
•
revJ~w
.';\alij~<~i~g(fo_r'
M~tP6>'.'~
c~iit~~ic
•
?~·
_The
~eco~~
.fil!11,:
\~Duni?;'pr~.:=-.?,
dj_e~fe's
,_cyel_i~s;
:-~nf
just-
-~henf :,;
two of the Christmas rush movies.· talent;·:whicli 1s,
.,oPcourse;-.
un-:
--~m1sed
to be a sc1ence-fict1on~film
.. :
you thought· 1t
·was·
safe to. fall-; .
•.
•
bef9re'they c([mpletely
'disappc~r·_~-·_questio'nablc;
Howe\ier, Murpl}f
•;I
classi~, equal
·t~
·or:~uiP,assi~g,th~;;:
~l~p}fi.Jhf ~P,~~t,er
,.,a
;fa(,tslo?.;~-·:,
•..
• ...
from local theaters.
•
Both
·were
•
is
.funny
-on his· own, . he really . book on· which'.\it'is
:based'.-
.Talk
•
. J,enng1·
..
sac;hs.tic;
:
~uman·-zeppelin;-:·
,
•
T.,.;.,
.
WO
• awaited with·. great -
•
expectalions
.do~sn'
t need>, the
.
garbagey
•
:about your brokeri"'promise:
!"
The'/ flies:
o~itot_he
-~1:_reen
and sucks.the/?,;_ •
.
-~
·but,
any similarhies
,
end there language-he· so
·often
falls back-
,
film .
·opens
;
·with,.':a',:i
'iiariaiot,, ,:.;ooze''.•Ji:om\fa~-
squashed': mouse:/' ,
'
because one has become the top
on. This,
.
though perhaps
.
the princess,-who',kecps~
fiding'in"·a·nd·.~
/Sick,
"sick/sick.:
Ahd this from. a;; •
_-.
~,\
Christmas
grossing. film for'· th_e
•
lucrative movie's orily major flaw,
.
caimot
•
•
out whUe she speak"si;
Sije fin;llly/?. ~ci•ft buf(;·_Firially, if )ou
·didn~i-\
,
L
Christmas season a(ld
·the
.other
.
go by unri<>ticed, it is
.
prevalent
:
gratefully. f!l~~s
olii.'aii?~ihe
·filril'"''.,
i-ead
·the~:boolc
,
you· won'Cki:tow;
••. .
.
•
•
has all but disappeared with nary:· throllghout/the, film
·(definitely.
:slides
full~speed:.dowithill fronl'.'.'what•s·going
·on
and if you:did;~,
;
···•
•··
·._films
·B·
:,_·ct··ct··
.
u
..
,
y
/
•.;,
•
..
Holly:,
,
I
a whimper.-,·',
•
.
•
:
n~t S(?mething )'ou'd. want to.take
•there.
May.such alarll_lingly/~elf->twell/bettei- to g~,:See: "Beyerly:>
••
What· more may be said. about·
•
your kidsis.ter'to) .• Buf if you can
.
·conscious ·
drivel never. be
..
•
seen
'·Hills
Cop''·.·then· have
·your-
im.!·
•••
"Beverly
.Hills
Cop" that hasn't
.
gei through'the language;·"Bever-
.
again on· the
.screen.
(When
the
•:'.i
agi~ationdestroyedforyou.:
':
.·
·
/
•.•
.
.
. _
,
•.
•.
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'-_
... -~-
•'.:.
•
,
;
best and the least ~~ll'kii~~-n .•
,
••
voice went fromboyishinnocerice
'
fr~strat~d ati.thc(ios;;··'His' in-;:;
•
•
Today's· trivia.•buffs
_cari
'find
to a feyered intensity.,anf ev~ry\,>fluence•!,)11:suc~essivegenei:ationsii.
•
.
There are very few fa~ts in the more . than enough>
Of
acts
::arid
octave m between. He,was better
:of-
rriusicisans is immeasureablc.
.
•
world of popular ait. The 11umb_er statistics· which
''.to/testify
;
to than a singer~ he
_was
a vocalist , This despite;thefactthat-only two'.:
of tastes. and opinions is equal
.
Holly's popularity;
-But
it is the· and iri my opinion, rock has:tiever
0:·a1bums~
ai:td'.eight·.•
singles
-were/
•
only
:to
the number of. people artistic.· and
•
grou'rid:• breaking.: produced abetter voice.
;,:· ;\
:,
\,,.
recorded•at the timeofdeaih.His
'·
.
•
waiting to be asked. However, in creativity that wm•·forever. in-
. ::
:
If Holly were to arrive· on the
contributi9ris were.only beginning
..
:
the world of popular music ihe~e fluence succeeding gerierations··of· music sce.ne today as a new artist,
to be made.It's noffair>•->
.
is
'one
fact that goes. almos_t
~s ·
musicians. Considedhis;":;,
,._·::·;.
:_
ii
would:be intersting to see how
.·•
•
WQRDSOFWISDOM: ''Rock
•.
unrioti~ed as. t~e
.·
ar~is~ wh_o
•
~~oily was the fii'st,.~i~ger
:fo
_:
)e w_ould fair; Un~ortui:lateJy,
l
,:
and
:~?lLhas
b~n'going ~ownhiH
>
define 1t: The artist who pioneers obtam from
.
•
a
•.
record·
..
label
.
·
doubt he, would _fair
.~ell.
MTV
,
~ver sm~ Buddy Holly died.". :-'-
•
.
a unique style and craft. will be
.
complete. artistic
'control
both in would have
i
hard time.selling
:a· :
J>auLLeMacas 'Jolin•• Milner. in<
largelyjgnored by the Ame~ican thdtudioandons·tage_'''
:'·'./:.
·:_·
lanky, near-sighted, 20-yetk old .• Anierica:ndr;lffittL
•
..
.
-
..•
•··
public.
.
.
.. .
·:
·;.,
..
:.
.
' ...
•
. ~He ~as th(first r<>Ck
and r~U· __
frc,!11 Lubbock, Tex~.
·:·It
::wa~
<·
)<Ci}play:
::Buddy
H~lly. ~~e;;::.
B.u_ddyHollywas.ap1on~r.
·:
.
sm_gerto ~sea defi~ed_bandio.f .. e,as1er ba~k.then for- ~lent to
:nlghtbef6relgoon-:itkeepsme,
A
.
Anq when Su11d~y, ~e~ruary},
gmtars, bass
a~~
~ru_m_s:
,
.
.. su~c~
1~. the ma~ket ~lac~.
•
honest." -'- Bruce Springsteen,
>
•
.
.
marks· the 26th ann~versary
of:
-He was·th~ f1r~oo.mc<>rpora.te
• 'foday, you•~~
rambo"! hair
TheAquarian Weekly 1984.
.
.
·.•
,
tr.1btite
that fa~lplane crash, th.e-day:s anorchestramtoarockandroll,
a_ndanobnox1?:1s.pers?nality.
•
OF NOTE:.WVIP (107 FM)'
i
.
\
·./
news will teU_
<>f a gr9~µdhog s song:
.
• , .
,,
.....
_
., ,.
.
,• ~uddy _Holly s music ha~ n:,
will present a Buddy.Holly tribute
.
•
i
shado_w fo!,Tiled
the prev1o~s
:d~y
·.
·~He
was the· first to issue a phdosophical m!=5saae.
He didn).
·,
Saturday Feb. 1 at 8 p:m.
,
.
.
and
,not
:the
•
shadow that
.will
record' which'
•.
•
includeci
•
·over-
tellus
-who
to vote for or
-what:·.,
.
.
0
!,.,:
•
-
·
.·
.
•
•·
.•
cover millio.ns
of
m~sic
.fans
dubbed voices/=
·,. ::,._.
< .
'"'
·.,
e;ause to believe in: Like all
'great
.
·
The Buddy
,
Holly Memorial
•
.
around the world.:'·
. •.
•
":.
•
<·
These_: and countless
·i·ot_hef
•
artis~, his musi¢:w8$_a
mirroi.'A
-.
Society
•
pu~lishcs
:;
a
··:quarterly·'
.
•
He will riot receive the amount creative
.,
techniques.:·. set.
•.
Holly mirror that
_;,teflecteo
c/liumao· ..
·
magazine
'arid
llolds an aimual
;:·
of l)Ublicity Elvis got ear]ier. this apart from his contemporaries; In
.
:~motions
better
.than
·
soni~
.,and
c_onventiori'
and concert which i~t
,:'.
yea,r;"There will ~e n~ televis!~n fact, HoUy was' ihe· first 'per- unlik~~n ..
<'\
,
t,.;;~,:~1
f.
+
y~r
w~
h~~lin~d, by_ Marshall
spec~alf'or. front'.page. <;o,v~rage. forinerto take roclc';ind roll 11way
::
It-1s
:1mposs1~le,to
·write about
Crenshaw.
'
Their
•.
address is:
..
Ofall;'the. pioneers of popu_lar from its· rockabilly;·rootf
•and
.
ff
oily'
s
..
talent
.
and,_-
.,
ac- ..•
BHM~,. 3022 56th Street, Lub~
'.,
miisic,:Buddy Holly is amorig:~he create a pop atmosphe~e; His complishm:ents_ without<· ~ecling, bock;'l:X,.79413.
.
; •
-~
•
'
;
••.•
:
·,
1_.
'.
•
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·1
'
;
.'.:
~
,·
',.
.
•• ·.' •
'
.
•
'
'
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.
~.,,-
'
•
'
•,
. •,,.
: ...
_.,
Curmudgeon's
Manifesto
;
Thisso~ietyJ1as,gone·~·ut;.j
•
hero; heshJ~is from th~ hip; but
•
for.fivebucks:.He.took five shots
.
a woman who was released:
·The
"sub.way vigilante;'!
/
the he talks like a wimp.
:
..
'to
wou_nd
the four kids, later say-
after questioning -
wept in fear
:
abortion··. clinic
•
bonibadiers
tand
•
•.
Unlike
Beverly Hills. Cop;-'.
the
:.
ing. he intended to kill them .. He
of her life when she· 1earited she
•
John W.
•·
Hinckley
·.an,'
have subway shooting did not- have·a
•.
fled_'.,the·~suJ>:wa{,~r,,
arid 'disa1>·.
:·~could
·gi:>'"fo
hell fo~ her actions.•
something
:->in .•
coininon~
·but
predetermined hero;_Eddie Mt.ir'..
·j,eared'inthe-·dark"tunnel.
Police
•(Of
course:-if she'd'just
·send
a
:
they're all perceived in
'different
•••
phy's
-'humor.
,cuts·
across
·raciaL
an: still searching. for his• silver
:,
contribution to
·•
her. minister's
\'
ways; At one extreme;
a
ncirmal boundaries.' Nobody knew•
.who
•
bullet.
:·:
o-.\
••
· .•
.
·: ·:
•• • .
.
Save The \Vardrobe fund .. ~)
:.; .
't
··~
:
guy with a-'chip on his,shoulderis Goetz -was,,,or,
.the
.,four,
youths
.·'.<The
perfect defense/So whr, h.e
;:
ForJiis part, President Ronald:
...
;
.. ,-,: .. •
.·
·:
iMU~.t
~~-~J~e.,
i~~~,nc1:
i~W~~g~_C!fw.;~J:t<>~
~~,~~P!;)y~~L'r~.:-~~p
~~_,/di~:
tit
(~!~~n,.m,s:c1fi~r»~~{<>µJci.;:::~}l~~$s.iiJ¥.:to~i-°'u(a~ains(~~tf
,:
..
. ·.
>
..
:
.
<
\
;
Cha~les13ronson;
:at-the other.
ex-,:
1
.det.erm1ned_.by
the,'Qntfor.msr:worn
<liaye_s~t'bac_k
10 the,wtlderness of
.
the
,:,,J,ombmgs
.. ,
.
and ,· •Ber.nard·
,,
·.,
•
·.I·
·,,:·:-z
treme, the slightly
•wackys<>n'·of
·:
by· the·maHi chai-acters.,:oo'etz:·a•··.·
New
:Haiiipshife.~aitd•,·soaked:in',-
•• Ooefa'factfoiis~Make n'o:rnisfakeJ~·,
P:ublic
'
..
•
•
•
•
~:
at1 _oil exect1tiv~ is charged
w~~~
,'L~~it~/g~y ?/i~i~gJJh~}~u~\va1s·;
1
·;~ht:,;"1>~bl!~)c1~u.l,,t~p!J-t:}V.l!Y.?.Jl:f.~
1
,(
ya~6llt
i~v~eaga:n is anti~abortiori):,:'.
..
·'
, .•
••
sanity by reason of murder.
:,·.
-::-:\,~Joury;out~s:;_f:!la*
pun~~)ook1ilg
!·
gc;,r::a,:~<?o,l(t<>::w.r,~tc:,
,~ublrjljefs:' '.:·and
pro~handgun•for the purpose
or
·.
•
.
At. showings
·.of.
Beverly Hil(f·jc,r$ome·acti!5n;
~:r;··>
:'',ii\Y
~:;'.
):,;:\;}llU_st;~lready:~~Jf~iritf.lipJ[o_f;~ti'e/.-.of
self-~e~cnse~,.
Apparently, he
{.:
,,
Cop, as much as people laugh.at
-;:
But·whav1f-Goetz's name·was,
.fast
:draft;
G<>~tz:
has;·a,lot-·of
':
doesn't want to fan a new wave pf;
,
•
Hero
No_._.·l
••
··;··.the.hilarious·
wis~cracks. of:
·Axel.·
M.ar(:us,,Jackson'?.ii,1:_h,c
:
..
st~ry•)Work·-to d,~;
•th~'.:soo~er:he/gets"'\
~n~rc_hy;)-Je::ha'd
enough olt~at··,,_·>
• :
Foley, they cheer
'each'.
of :th(
ap
7
,
would
_have
barely µi~ri~ed:att~n::,
;
•
started,)h~'sooii~r ~he-firsi·,check;~.,.
a~: poVt:rrior' of:'Califomia iruhe
·; •.
•
,,
.
proximately 2,312 guri~hots
.Jired.:::
tion;
..
A.·
,Qlack
gtJy·: shootf f~u.r/ comes ii)''. ('f~cfof thf youths"solq./ )
9-@.s:.
::\./j;
.:
J> -~
,.
-;y
';'
:,
,-:.
<:
.
',:
..
: -. •
•
in the film. And it doesn't matter
•
black.
:kids/<probably
a busted
::
their'·sfories:
to
th1tNatioiialEn~·~'.-
·':
S6
what'makes Goetzahero? Is
i_
......
.
who's\ doing the shooting: it's drug deal, happens
·au
the time.
'quirer.)
0:
'.
,'.,</'.:
.'/:
:i_.
::
::
he
:a'
vigiianie?
:Now
therds an;,
_.,: •
..
·
.
f'Qnny
·to
se~ the cops
:tumbling
And if Marcus
-had
shot four
..
·
,MeanvvliUe,'i-police
in
Florida
· :overused;
misused term. To be\
.
:
away. from .ihe bullets, and it's white kids asking.f prJive doll_ars, arrestecl
_four
people for the bqins
:
vigilant
1~
~i111ply
to watch over;
:.,,
•
•
dme· for champagne when the bad· he would have beenJucky to avoid; biogs· 0Labortioi1i,cliriics.0Public
i'
ThoniasJefferson's maxim,
<IThe
i/
•
.
I
guys get killed.
.·.. . .
•.
.
•
getting strung
;up.:
the nearest: reaction:· mixed. The hypocrisy is
price
o.of.
freedom
~
is<•eteriiid
::
.
.
,
Escapist
fantasy?::: He~l_!hY l~lephone po\e.
;/,·;':
/)
: ';. :,.
·\
.•• '.:
obvious: d~~trutti~~ of. btiiidirigs
;;
.
vigi}~~c,e;
''._}~
:i~terpreted
·as.
sup-·(,·<
l
;_;
release of tension? Then how do
.•
.
Asit is, Bernard Hqgo Goetz is to: demo~~trateo,:t~e.
·s~nctity
of
.
po_rting
-Reaganis
arm
,buildupi;;: -. :
:
we explain the
:public
cailoniza-. E\'.eryman
,_;;_
defending himself.: hu~a(! Hf~; ~ven'. Jerry
'.FaJweff<·
What,. Jefft;r~QD
meant; however;:-;:·
.
I
_.
tion. of Bernard Hugo Goetz?
·against
the
,sharks
wbo
roam
the has'
·come,
·out
to
'•¢oiidenin
the
.
..•
•.
:
!
•
::-:'i:./
.:
·:
;,;:
;:;,
:
•.
'.;c::
:,i.;
•
:',
,
••
·
l,
-:
He's not your prototype gung.:ho streets prepared
fo
slit your wallet
·
•
borilbings~.
One
;of
.t~qse
arfested
Continuej on
page· 16
•·:
•
:-
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·.
-
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...
'.
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·.,
...
,
.•
,
,
'""."..
•
·;';·;
•.
·.-, >·.
•
·-·
-
.
:
.
,
'.
t.'
.
'1!
.-.-
..
:,:,.,;..,•'.
Thursday
Friday
.
.
,
8:00 p.m. Men's
•
•
.•·
':·~!_
··:
S~nday
Monday
.
..
,
·.·
•
0
·\vecinesday
.
Basketball
vs.
Fairleigh 7:30 p.m. Film: "The
Dickinson (away). 8:00 Amityville Horror" .
p.m.
Hockey
vs.
. . (Th~te~)
.
Stoneybrook (away).
.• Ad!J?ISSI0n
SJ ~th
9:00 p.m. Junior Ring • Manst 1.D.
..
J!'arty (Dining
Room)~
•.
_-Midnight Court Tradi-
tional
Irish
Dance
Music
and
Songs
At the Town Crier·
Cafe, 438 Beekman
Rd,
Hopewell
Jct.
1
(Cover charge,$,
7.50).
8:00 p.m.
Women's
Basketball
vs .•
Mon-
mouth
(away). 9:00
p.m. Video Mixer
.
sponsored
by
The
Stu-
dent League
(Dining
Room).
•
Women's Metro. Swim-
ming/Diving champion-
ship.
•
7:00
&
9:30 p.m. Film:
"The Amityville Hor-
.
ror"(theater)
.
($1 with ~farisd.D.).
8:00 p.m. "Brighton
8:00 p.m. Women's·
•
Beach
Memoirstt at the
•
.
Basketball vs. Wagner
Ulster Performing.
,
..
•
..
College .
Arts
Center (one night
• only);
•
9:00 p.m.
Hockey
vs.
C.W. Post.
rF:s-::·,~::;_::T<>.;;~:
:::c:
::;;::.,,,,:::::::;.:.:,::._:;
,;:~:;.:]~,:~
:::,.:.,-;".
::.::::::::::re.:::.>:_~:·:.:~::.
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:
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.
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..
\
Jan. 31, 1985 • THE CIRCLE· Page 7
.::
..
','
:
.\··
;\-.>(.'··';
,\,','.· ·. ;;·.
•.
'Adults<q~l,y:~~~
::
.·:--·
_
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:•
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-
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--
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•
_-_.-.
_-./a.pt,licatiOhst
fe>E
-·•
.
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.
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.
..
,.
,.
•
·:·.:•P:H:OTOGAAP.-HY
.
,.
'
..
'•
.
-·.
'.
.
EDlTO·R
••
·•-2
··.§qrit%stL
_
-
.
l.,o~u:.-An·J'):::.--se·e,l·ig.-:
:·
-
.;:':--'._-:/::·--clo·l'.tie
':Ci'r'cle
'..
-
·•.:c_
:
:•--..
;;<·:s·o)(
:·:cLa5·7
•.
-
.
,:
their· b~ddies/At. this
·writing;
the
.
.:·.
.
. .
_
·-:·
..
s:::-,:/·:
••
fun results;ofhis Sex or Bowling
·_PsstL
Psst!
,
Psssssssssssssssttt!
.
poll aren't in, but, his column on
•
Listen:up, because the subject this
Sunday indicated. ·that sex was
.
-week
IS .•.
it's,
.well,
you know,
running ahead of bowling. •
.- .
<
SEX!··.
~:
:
~- ..
..
.
•
.
..
-As if that
.weren't
enough, a re-
Before we get to·the business at
cent study done at_ the University
hand, here's some background in-
of Iowa (might have been Iowa
formation. Earlier this month,
State, but then ag~in, who really
.
Ann Landers-ran
a
column asking
cares?) indicates that the number
.
-: women to respond to this ques-
•
of college students who have sex
•
tion: "Wo~ld_ you be content to
with animals is declining.
.
be
.held
close and treated tenderly,
(A few points· about the Iowa
and forget about the act?"
survey: First, remember that out
The'. response was,
:
if not
•
in Iowa,
•
farm animals actually
orgasmic, then at least fr~nzied.
outnumber people.' Second, their·
•
NearlYi.
100,000 women across the
conclusions might have been that
country wrote in, and 72 percent
.
the average "animal lover" ac-
of. them said
·that
yes,. they'd
tually docs it less often, rather
·
..
rather just hug and kiss and cud-
...
than there are fewer of them - in
die and so forth· then; well,
-you
.
an
honestly, I
:can't
remember
know,
do
it.
.
.
..
•
.
_
which. But does it matter?)
/
The
.
ever-insight fut' Landers
"This is all well and good,"
•
said the results demonstrated that
you say, ".but what does this have
:
"woman\
-
need
•
affection.
.
It's
to do with us? Here in the heart of
more
.
important than sex, and
the judeo-christian heritage, there
••.
men·have
fo
listen to what women
certianJy
.can't
be too much con-
'
want and woirien have to teJI men
•
cern with anything, well,
•
you
what they want."
.
.
know, sexual."
• Reaction
,
to Landers' survey
Ahem.
has b~n hot.and heavy;_or. Ruth
.
It seems
to
me that, as infor•
•
Westhei~ei:-was quoted as saying,
:
niative,as
•
three surveys are, they
·
C'lt's dangerous, to say
a
high
don't-tell the average student here
per_centage ot'!V~rrieri do·n·ot ex-
at Marist much of anything. So,
pect sexual activity.:• Dangerous?
in. the interest
.of
socio-scientific
How about depressing?-~
.·
.
inquiry, lewd curiosity, and just
..
Marist's own Lee Miririgoff, in
,:
for the hell of it', I've decided
to
.
a PoughkeepsieJ ournafarticle on
.
coilduct. th~
first
·and.
probably
•
~uriday,
.
said: the ·;su~vey
~~as
•
last ev,er_,'Senii~Official
Survey on
•.
unreliable. "In established public
the Sexual State of.'the Students
opinion practice, this outcome
(SOSSSS) .•
would not be··· considered con-
··Here's
the deal -
after hours
.
elusive."
•.
,: ;
--,
of tiresome
·research,
I've come
•
The article did not quote Mrs.
up
.
with five questions for the
Miringoff.
•
•
·'
.
men, five for the women. First,
• •
, Meanwhile Mike. Royko~
·,
who
those for the women:
•
•
•
writes for the Chicago Tribune,
•
I.When I am with a man,,1I'd
,
did his own samplirij; asking men
'like
to be
•
•
.
•
if they!s rather be having sex with
a) hugging,
·kissing,
etc.
i
.
their wives t~an
-~~t
bowling witb
.
b) making love.
i
.
,,,
'
-
:
-
-
'lf'you',Ve
att~nded colle'ge on a Guaranteed
.
-
-
Stu.dei-1t
Loan
or·
a
N acional Direct Student Loan made
··aft~r.·Q~tq}:ier}~
)97-5; ¢·onsld~r spending a couple
of years in the Army. ·
.
_-·
·
•
-
• ·:,
•
lfvou train for certa.in_
specialties~
-the
govern- ·-
:
rnent'. will release you
·from
1/3
of your indebtedness
.';
.:~-'
.;;(or·;$l,5O0,·
whichever:is: gi;-eatei-
)·foi"each-~year
of
:·>:<acriy~/duty
..
•. ,-
--.
.--
•.
,
..
-
•..
-.··
••
•
.
_.·
.
_
-_.
...
- .
•
·
·
·.<
,
_<)f0bv~ously,"a_thfee-ye·arenlistment
cancels
100%
•:
ofyoutdebt._Butif you sign up for
the
Arrriy's exclusive
.
t\,Vq-year
enlisqnen~-option; we'll still cancel
2/3
of
y9.ur dept.
_
-
_-
-
-
•
• •
•
·-
·.
·
-~
.-,
Plus,
·you-may
be_
~ligible for generous educational
incentives.·
To find out how to serve your country and get out
of debt, call the number below.·
-
ARMY.
BE
ALLYOU
CAN
BE.
•
Call 452•015S or stop by the GSA Building, Room
-1Q5,
235 Main
• Str~et, Poughkeepsie;
•
•
··c):making·him
beg:
·.:;_' • /
2. I inost often tell men that "I
like sex,
.
a) but it should be with so-
meone I love."
•
b) but not with you."
c) period."
3. I want a man with a
a) great body .
b) perceptive mind.
c) Porsche 944 .
4. I'm usually lying when I say
that
•
a) he's the best .
b) I didn't fake it.
•
c) I was awake the whole
time.
5.
I most like men who are
a) sensitive and sincere.
b) tough and decisive.
c) rich and famous .
For the men:
·.•
•
I. When having sex, I like to be
·
a) on top.
b) sober.
c) with another person .
2. The woman of my dreams
will make
a) my life complete.
b)'it home on her own.
_:;
c) dinner on time.
(
3. Before making love, I would
wait until
a) we're married.
b)
we have a mean1ngful rela-
tionship.
c) I can remember her first
_name.
••
• •
•
4. I ~a~ta women who will
.
•
• •
·a)
stimulate me intellectually.
b) stimulate ine in other
ways .
c) write
my
term papers .
5. If l am
,watching
football on
television and she wants
-
to
make
Jove, I
.
•
a) agree, and turn of the
game.
\
b) wait until halftime.
•
c) wait to see if my team
wins.
•
Well, that's it. If you'd like to
participate in this monumental
scientific endeavor, circle your
answers• in the ap'propriate
-
category
(if
you're not sure which
•
is
,appropriate,"
ask your room-
mate), rip this column out and
send it to: SOSSSS, The Circle,
Ma_rist
College.
There's no need to include your
name, of course, unless you're
really desperate for it and wish to
advertise that fact. Also, feel free
to include as many comments and
explanations as you wish. (I will
ask, though, that you keep it fair-
ly clean because several members
of the Circle staff are a bit
squeamish.)
..
.
_.
..
,._.,
•
,
...
If I can get at least 100 or s_o
responses,
I'll
print
results.
Otherwise, we can assume that
everyone is either A) too shocked
with the whole idea to reply or B)
too busy practicing to answer any
questions about it.
.
Comic jugglers
to appear Friday
The Bardavon 1869 Opera
House wiH present the Flying
Karamazov Brothers at 8 p.~.
Friday.
The Karamazovs' novel act
combines wild comedy with
outrageous juggling. The troupe
has won the praise of critics
throughout the United States.
Tickets for the show are $12,
$14 and $17. They are available at
the Bardavon box office.
.
The Bardavon is located at 35
Market St. in Poughkeepsie.
--•·
P•SI•
.8; ..
THE,~~R,CLE.~:J•tJ~
~1,.19.85::·.
.
.
B~rdit1(°)ttt~1e,{lds:
~he!rj~,i~;i1zYi:f,t
f
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,•
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• •:•
£,
• }
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• '
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f
,,
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.: • • ·.
. '
· . ._,: .\.\.·.
• :· i::>,-~·; ·'.\,:·,",.:.· :.-'., ,,·:·':
·., ·.<·•:i.;>:;:
';:i;.·.:,\~),:,:;.;'.:;{~~;:);t',-
by·R.ose Hazelton
•• ·'
"It
is.a special occasion to see_a, '200 people to tlieiri.shows: ··If ~he
'\ ,.· ;e,,:_·.·' :
, .• :.· ,:- .·• ., show,.and. the overall theatre. showisina.theatrethat.seats200,.:
On Apr. 25, 1981, The New excitement is present: in .. the. it's a full. house., If· the-~ per~;
York ,. • -Times·:
..
wrote,
Bardavon," .Bo·rak said.··
He
,
formance is held.iri'aftheatre.that
•
"Poughkeepsie has a Cinder~lla • added thatit would be a real loss.· • seats 950; such .as.ithe Bardavori/
story to tell." The "Cinderella". , to the community if the Bardavon .. the performers ' feeL:they •. are'·
was the Bardavon-1869_-0pera- was not there.
• •
•·
'
.
->.:
.
•
.playing
to an empty'house; B6rak'
House;
•
her . prince was the
•. The theatre also features many. said. .•.·
•. ;. <• ; /.::~·•;;({;: i /'.;.;
community. The story reco·unted • ··community events such as the . • Borak added: "On onfside, th¢
the 1976 heroic efforts/by the - Poughkeepsie Ballet's •• "Nut- _-community,;; has ··.'adopt.eel
:5
the··;
community .t? save the r13ardavon • cracker" performance; co~ce~ts Bardav?n • a~d •
.. th~y •.
: ~re ·._:v~ry
.
. from demoht1on.
· ·,
,
by the Hudson Valley. Phdhar-
supportive.of
1t.
TheyenJc,y going
The Bardavon•~--struggle to • monic; music by the Dutchess . there, theyappreci~t~the:~inds of
bring first rate performam:es to 'Community College Jazz En-
things· the Bardavorf· bdngs/C)n ,
the area has endeared the theatre
semble and others. ·
--
·
the. other hand, ·there is'a·.serfous•
to many residents .. • However,-the
•· However, conflicts. often· arise: problem in making it available to
·
romance may be in jeopardy.
when community groups want to the community groups."; •:•, ·' •
The Bardavon 1869 Opera. use the theatre and they cannot
Downard agreed that'this;is·a·.
Housewas founded'.by·.James.
afford the
'Bardavon's .rental·
problem:- "Yet• .. I feel-dt's·,.a-,
Collingwood and . named the charge.
'.·..
. disservice for them:' if. they're
Collingwood Opera House ·in • .. The . Bardavon's . cost
of __
playing.in
·a
theatre of950
sfats-
1869~ Today, the Bardavon is a
operations has increased, Borak and there are only 200people who-
non-profit organization whose · noted, • and consequently their show ·up for: the.· event;''. said.
sole purpose is to \:>ring to
rental charges have increased.
Downard; lilthose cases, he urges·
Poughkeepsie
quality /multi-
•• "A lot of the local groups have the groups to perform in:a smaller ;
disciplinary • art ··• programs ••
gone elsewhere because they.just theatre, . because a ,seemingly'.
(dance, opera, theatre, and local can'tafford to be at the Bardavon small· aiieridarice .. is ;;also·'
a.
art . featured . in the Bardavon anymore," Borak said.
1
'1 know -reflection on the opefa house •. : ';-'.
. gallery),
said
H:. Thomas ·· the Bardavon is concerned about· ' Despite
the
:
Bardavon',s
i
. Downard, the executive director.
that. In one sense, there's not a • financial'stri.Jggle,-the theatre has,
"But we are also dedicated to
lot they can do about. it; but I·. earned a reptitationfor presenting ••
the preservation of. a historical know they are lookihg at ways in· quality events: Local community
landmark,"
-'Downatd: said ... which they can make it feasible gro1.1ps
: benefit . greatly
.
wljen
· "Above
everything . else, , t~e
.
for community groups."·
•
•
,,
..
playing on· the Bardavon stage,
Bardavon
is a • community
•• Addressing
. that/
issue,
Borak noted. -
organization."
Downard suggested ·that a lot of·
•
•
•
• • •
people don't realize or consider
• Borak. said that all the arts
In the past, the Bardavon st~rs the inflation factors thih face the organizations are in the same
have included Sarah Bernhardt, • theatre. . For . many .• 'years . the position; they are all struggling.
the Boston Symphony, Enrico·
•
with money. While the . local
Caruso, Lillian Russell, and many Bardavon 10st money, ~e said.·~-
groups' may not like· the high···
others.
•
.
"If
·we don't hav~ balanced
•
rental fees, Borak suggested tqat
Today, the t~eatre offers award . budgets,. we are going
to✓have~to
from .their point of view;·toplay :
winning performances such- as close our doors,"
Downard the Bardavon would.b"e
like in the.·.
"Ain't
Misbehaviri,"
"Torch : added. "Therefore, we are now • old days. a vaudevilli~ri:;·playing"\
Song Trilogy;,• "Give
'Em
Hell,
charging,
a
rental cost to non-, ·the Palace Theatre in NewYork::-C:
Harry,"and CCA
Soldier's Play,''
profit organizations that strickly : . "I mean the ~alace.was.theJop;,
justto name a few.. .\ ,. • ·/ . : : .
<
covers_
our_ costs." Sp_ec::ific
.ren,!iiH:i.of
the vaudeyiile· 'di-~i(/!./Boi:)1.k;;.::,
.' ... ·•
,
•..
•. ,,,. f ........
. : \ •···o~-,-
h~;s
··:
charges•\:olild'' riot •b'e•'.reteased/>·said. •·''And'\•if">"a:~::'/y°odffg~l
Co~:~b~~~
o.c~~!~n anJC the ;, Bl;\.rdav<>9_sR~~<:~~~icl:.
->:,
.
i
:-.,~pv~.ul.~fJiJTiioh~;ti<>tM.9N~~d.fv;t~:;:
• p
oughkeepsie Journal
.
express .. . The n~>rl-J)r_gfit
org~nizat_i,91)-'.
s
0
~ .)
1
1
-al
f2h· .. ,~.r~
,)!\.,_.
eh~-:i,f
"-.r
, • {
h. h· ·
·ct
f
th·
h
e
••.
mcome. 1s ·unstable··because. ·lt:'·we
,;,-t
11.t
·.\\las, it, .t ~Y>•::were:
1g regar
or. e op~ra ous • .;-_ · ·. ·. ·,· • .• •.
·. • ,_
.
" >cons1dered·to.have'-had.1tz.made;•,.;
The Bardavon
IS
considered the
depe nd s . upon
public
a
nd Th B a . . . ..
?'' -
f h ,•
,,
• showcase for. the.arts . accord_.
ing_·
.. _govei:nm_ent
suppor.t, The ..
theatie , .. h'e }./.h.
aVOJldlS.
so._r
..
_,~·
0
_
.t
e,_s_
a.
m.'.
e
...
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, . .
.
..
.
.
37 -- . ··t·•·f·'t" • . ..
. t
mg .
esa1 . '-'
·;. '
•
.•.
'
to Vickie Barnes Davis, the arts \receiv<:s . percen
!' •
1
sincoD?e ., . ·.· /'C;
.
. ; ,::.-:)/ ·, -
•
.: ·;_ ::
fund coordinator for the Dutchess
from
ucket sales;
~~
perc~nt fojm •. : When local groups play at .th~:
c
Oun t y
Arts • • Co
u
nc'i l. . . Bard~v()~·
Ihernber.ships.
~n4 loelll.·
}pitrda".()11~:
~he._c,opi~r11nity
i5c
v~fy '
Economically and artistically, ,contnbut1ons;
:
21 'percent from : 1mpresse{l
i
th~F one: oL' .their •
"the Bardavon is a· definite boon • government supp_ort; _
7 ..
percent ,."o~n" is on a.-stage that has seen·.·
to the county,,,. she said. ·•
.
: from_ theatre· rentals; 2 · Pfr~ent riatfonal,:companies
·perform, sai!,l
.
"Clearly
the
entertainmen_t. fro°! \ pro~ram. Jldverusmg;
Borak; T!te Bardl!VOn
serye~ ~n
dimate in the area has change~
• and
1 •
perc!!nt fro~ benefit extremely .1~portant function m
considerably," said Jeff Borak, . px:ografus,
the , Bardavon's
the commumty,'' he added.
'ii(~-:
theatre critic for the Journal.
"I
financial disclosure revealed.
_a source of pride for .. t~e com~
like going there because' for me,
:
.. _·.
Another • problem, • _.Bo_rak muriiiyto hav~
a
facility such as .
going to the theatre is an event; suggested,.·· is • that community • the Ba::i:davon.
operating,'' Davis
It's not just to see. a per, . groups, like the Gilbert arid said, "The Bardavon is a first rate
. formance."
Sullivan Society, will often draw. organization."
1
;
Affordable, convenzerz/
the revolution--co1'11ef°'/jOffle
. By Anthony DeBarros
..
;:-···t
;.·
.hundreds of titles to choose from . Televisfo~ ab9ut the. brain .that. I
_ ,
are among the best reasons for. couldn't watch , because oL my
• • Paul Juras purchased his first
.
·
owning a
VCR,
says Juras, ·who work scheaule ;,_ said Juras/ "I
videocassette recorder about two
has a personal library of over _65 • just set; it the VCR and my
years ago.
tapes,
• primarily
movies.
roommate and I watched. the.
Now
the
23-year-old
However, the feature,that really .segments at nighf when we got
Poughkeepsie accountant owns
makes.owning a VCR worthwhile home. It was extra important
three of the.machines and rarely
for Juras and other VCR:owners because we could earn credit at
watches conventional television.
is the ability to record programs
school for watching the series.",
.
He goes to the movies even less.
that would normally be missed
Families are benefitting from'
while wor:king, -;,shopping or
VCR's
also. -
Renee
.Bourbeau,
Juras is typical of a new type of
sleeping, and then watching them who works at Video II in Hyde
entertainment consumer, a breed
at one's conveniem::e.
~
•.
•· • .- Park, said that Friday and
that prefers to choose from
"They
provid~
,
a
great
Saturday· nights are extremely
hundreds of movie. titles at the
educational opportunity," said
busy, and many people rent
local rental emporium, instead of
Juras, "for the very reason that • videocassettes for an . entire
picking from the less than ten or
something that you're not able to
weekend.
Often
the
most
twelve films playing at local
watch that ·is culturally and
requested items are ones like
movie houses.
educationally enlightening, can be
"Star Wars" or "Raiders of the
Since-the first VCR, a beta
watchedatyourleisure."
Lost Ark '!...shows that a whole
model, was introduced by Sony in
Working
housewives
tape . family can enjoy.·.
.
- 1975, prices of the machines have
"General Hospital" and watch it
"Its' less expensive to rent a
THE.AMITYVILLE:_··.·
··HoRROR:
••
••
Ja·m·es
l!rolin, M~rgotKidder; Rt>'rsteiger·
.-
",:
.
•
-
l
.
,
,
.
THE AMITYVILLEHORROR is the true·story·of
a.·
young; new!y .niarried'.'couple who mov~ into their
large colonial "drl:}am h9.use''; in .Amityville; New· :
York in 1975. From that moment until ·they .flee 28
days later, their'days and nights are full of terror,.
" ... a dandy horror movie that is certain to set yo~r
rafters , creaking!"
Charles Champlin, LOS
ANGELES TIMES .• • •
~"; '
·,
-
.,_ F(idaf Febrµary,1'.:-:2
7;3il··~}~),
..
_
·
·.Sunday, February 3_.;__
t~:9-p.m~:
• :_r_
. .-.
IN THE:THEATR·e-,
.--;'•.y: .: .
Ar
..
{~~:··
.
:_\;{:S1-~oo:.:;~.oM1s.$161\tWi1{p;1t:1?tL~··
..
... : '. '·. ~·'
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·:_:-_~:.:~:-:•;-::{
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..
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~-;-._,-t;_•,-;;/·.·-,:,1?.;.-:.~---:·
,.~,
,}'f
t;i,it~~l!il~:spro~tt,xt~;s
• •
... -.
B.S.
I(gives
yo~i:chance.:to
g~t·i(career
st;trted·plus::.. • • ,·
~.Earn
·$100
a-month
durilJg
the
SCfi(?Ol
yeru; .,
•
:
_
.. : . ,., .. ,
·•-·:~1,ti;~~~r;p::t~!;~~rr~:;lJti*;1~'•:."·~>)t}i?
. yourb~ic:training:4uring_two
six-week,,
swnmer·~essioris
•
,
■
Lets
y~ii"g~~·in
line for one ofour graduate,·programs
as a junior·;"--~.
.
. .-
. .
·: :"
_"
.
-
: '
•.
•
.
•
•So,•if
yog're
Iooking•fora
chance
:to•lead,
check'out
:
--t!te Marine
Corps
undergraduate-officer.
pro~ ••
::::
•
• :-
•
• gram. You
could
stµ-t-off
making more ,
•
·.-~
than $17,000
a
year
'from th~~:__
~•-
~.-:•
Ue'relookingforafewgood
meIL
:
1·
.
• :
,
,
declined rapidly. The inception of
after dinner, sports· fans tape videocassette for a weekend and
longer-playing VHS machines has
events like the Super Bowl, and
watch it four or five times than
increased VCR versatility and
kids tape concerts on MTV. Juras
take a whole family out to see it
popularity, and the two factors
used his VCR to
tape
"The
once at a movie theater," said
coupled together have produced a • Brain," an educational program.
Bourbeau.
revolution
in
hoJtle
en-
Different tastes, but one common
Rental outlets such as Video II
See Captain
W.W.
DONAHOE
Jr.
at DONNELLY HALL
.
tertainmenL
advantage: each can see their and Captain Video's Movies To
on
13
&
14 FEB.1985
between
10:00
and
3:00
or
can:
...
Paying less, being able to watch
favorite at any time.
Go generally offer customers the
1-800-342-2408.
•
•
• •
• •
/ ·
at one"s convenience, and having .
."!h~e
~
a,
ser;i~
c,_n,
~-~l!c,.,.., •• , _,., .GC?9ti!'µ~<;l
4
0.I}
Pl&~ JJ~ ... • •.•.•.•·············-· .•.•·····'-·•······ ...... • .....
r-·,.• •
·,
.
. .
, .• ·:: J.'l'!p,"UZ;M·;,•c..;;.,":''r.".~;;!';,-.!:•'-c~~
..
:-:.-:.-:•.!cc :~:·•., "',;;-; ...
-i-',~:s.•:'>•,a:ce·::-v:--".'.~•~·'.··••W•-:-,:: ••
,, •
'
.
.
'
Ja,t.··31,'1985·-
THE'CiR,CLE;
Page,- ■---
' • : :,€:n:iR\~
's:
:Fesigil;
hew
·h.if
es •
filLopenings ,
I
.•·
i(§:<E/
. :,:-:
:r ., • :·/' .'..;' ..
\,\t.:\\\
.-. •
"' ..
. •bf Tom
McKelina
,\::.:.:
;_;\,.'
.. ":_· .·
internships,
. according
to'
.Champagnat Hall had -the' Trebotti, 'junior, and Ed~och,:· M.irgolotti • h,as. replaced Eric
':·/;:'~:1_\;':;,'.tt/:_;.i:::~fJ~'i;.:::·,./
0.'.:/~-.-·)i.1',eyw~;_.,:'.:.,,._
··:<·
c··---:.~,:., \largest~
t~rn~vcr of ~l itie. a:-senior. They replace Chr,is De: Tu_rpin, who left for personal
, .,,;l'en,n~~~s;~~,~;,.~ll}lip:~t"':,>tl:leyw~:;:expr~sed
_an.,•-;~n-
_dormsw1th
half ~f the residence
Sailtelle, ajunior who'is the new reasons;.·· •
•
.. Jf
repla~,Jen
1
/wli~/fleft~;,~he~r::_.:\derstan~1ngt~f:1thelt~;>s:r~sons
• staff there replaced.
:-
• Champagnat_ assistant resident
In the north end, Joe Pezzulo,
:iw.siti~ru.;•for._:•,v~rious')'treasoitsi>:-.for;:Jeaving}theiresidence:'staff.·
~: ,· ·,,:_:_,:_ ;-,
.·>;·
.
.
director,·. and
seniors Amie
who was previously assistant
:, according '.-ifojR<>berF:
Hc~ood,
•
-/ 'Who
·could'\pass
. up , an
in-, •
Champagnat House I has three
Rhodes, who has a • internship,· -·resident director of Champagnat
'directofoftjousiilg;·.
:":Cf.j'..'':,:
,:/: ·,
terriship? -l)n~n, it's a:chiuice at : new '·
RA
's,
according
to
and
Kevin
Schultz,
who
has replaced Santa Zaccheo as
.. _::.
ts&
e>ut
of
the:'ier(~tio'~ft'·
'did'\
a<
~r_cei;:
~r ;at_leasi)
a
.starting .' Hey~ood; · They : 'are • Robert
graduated.
·' -
. North End ARD, and two RA's
• ·
·
so ·
becaus·e·
':they---had)received:t.Point/'
be
said: ·
.. , •
•
:-<. ,: H,atem, .. a sophomore, , Paula
Champagnat Hou~e II has one have also been replaced there.
· -· •
· .•. ·
·
·. ',: · · · •. ·
•.
• · :. • ·
·
•• • < •' ·
~
'
.•· ., - :
·
·
~
•
new RA, sophomore Jill Nevers. 'Mary Clifford has taken over
.
..
'
"
••
ililtrilJi/1).
'jor'.1984-85
-(q~~s<qver
'Gli/Unf/agnlli
• -'"7·,•··
••• .
•
'
• '
. \·by
ai's"~~aJi1s~n
·--:.', . ,
•
~
•
tion in-a different sense,,, he said.
·
• •.
,. -
.
.
' Dioguardo is third in the chain_of Champagnat
.,'. • M;ri;r~t~derits living in ciampagnatHall
a~e
Residence Directors since the beginning of the
: once
-i
c1gain fa,ced ·-with' adjusting
fo
a new ,: academic year; Steve Lurie, Marist Track Coach,
, . Residence.Director, _but ·oeorge· Dioguardo, 22,-·.·was,hired.for the position in August of 1984 but
'>"says
lie
is hying to maki that process as smooth
resigned before the semester began. ·He was
as possillli!'fo(residents;:,. '·"' . ; : . • ·:. ' ,:.;
·.
;-_ replaced • twq· weeks into. the. semester. by Ellen
•.• Dioguardo, fornierComplex Dir~ctor for pro~ '.. Dolan whose contract expired on January 15,
gram development and Hall Director for SU~Y
1985 and was not renewed .. Robert Heywood,
.
, at New Paltz, replaced Ellen Dolan· who had been
Director of Housing,. filled in_ for the period
• hired.temporarily forctheFall of,19,84. :':
-:
before Dolan's arrival: Dioguardo said that he
Dfoguardo said he sees his position at Marist as • finds it difficult but challanging to begin in the
• • more inJine with his objectives than the one he
middle of the academic year. .
She has replaced Krista Dopslaff, Cynthia Ferrara's job in the A
a junior who has taken a semester section of the town houses, and a
off.
- replacement has yet to be hired in
In . Champagnat House III,
.
the C townhouses, for Sabrina
Roger Romano, a senior, has Segui who left for an internship.
replaced Michael Banahan, . a
According to Heywood, the
• junior who has an internship in replacements were chosen from a
Washington D.C. In House IV, list of alternate RA's some of
Jim Ferguson has replaced senior whom had been RA's previously
Janice Willis who has an in- and were simply re-hired.
·ternship:
•
Heywood expressed confidence
There were two turnovers in• the in the new RA staff. "There have
Freshman areas, according to been no problems so far. There
Heywood .. On . the third floor were good people in all the areas,
Sheahan, Karen Chatterton has and the people that left were
replaced Joyce Holly, who left for. replaced by good people," said
an internship. In Leo Hall, David Heywood.
Marist shuffles of fices
in· nJw round of moves
.: .held at.New Paltz., .... · .. ,:··
• ·.,./' • ;·.
Dioguardo graduated from SUNY Oneonta'
• ' ,.,'I'm looking to'comn'lit my time to students,"
.. with a Bachelors degree in Political Science and
,,'.;he_.said. ''At New Paltz I ·was
not
as free :fo do • Business Economics, and says he would like to
/
•
by William Hare
• Hall, room 200.
_
·tha:tbecause of other demand!\ on my time.'.'. .
work toward an MBA in Business Management.
, - The Marist College Institute
Marist College students return-
for Public Opinion will move into
ing from the semester break will
the• old Financial Aid offices,
find that a few of the school's
located in Aclrian Hall.
The duties of
a:
ResideritDirector include train-
He served as Assistant Resident Director and
ing staff, maintaining the building, dicipline and·
Resident Advisor for iwo years at Oneonta and
, administration operations, according to Djoguar- • : says he really enjoys this type of work.
::..
do.
_
•
•
-·
"I'm lookirig forward to a good semester," he
departments have been moved to
• -
The office of the Higher
new locations.
•
Education Opportunity Program
"A very important function-is to establish· a
added, "I hope for support from the residents
community for the residents and offer an~duca-
and
I'H
be here for whatever they mjght need."
According to Edward Waters,
will be moved into the present
vice president for administration
Public Opinion Institute office,
and
finance,
the
following.
located in Donnelly Hall, after
changes have been made or will be
the institute is moved.
RESEARCH
Send
$2
for catalog
of over 16,00'.l
topics to·
assist
_your
research
el•
forts. For info:, call toll-
free
1~21-5745 (In 11·
llnols call 312·922-0300).
orld
Understanding
MONTH -
FEB. 1-28
made within the.next few weeks: -
The moves have been planned
- The School of Adult Educa-
since last May and were supposed
tion office is now located;in new
to have been completed by last
offices built in Marist East.
September, Waters said. "The
-
The Financial Aid office is
changes took a while, because we
now located in the old Adult . had to make this building (Marist
;,: -Education offices in Donnelly
East). ready for students first,'?
'~~~~~~~~~~~~~iiii..==~lllil~=-~~~~~~.■.iiiia~.--~.._..;_~--.;-
1
..
•• ..
·~·
~-■·Iii·
__
..;.·_.··-·-•·•··•··--~•
said Waters. "We also· had· to
• I
wait until the new office was com-
_ .. • Amazing Acts qf
Comedy
arid
Gravity!
·--
~----
••-···-::..
•
.
•
..
The
Flying
...
•
..
·.·Karamazov
Brothers
____
_
"They are jugglers, but to leave
.
it at that
would
be like saying
• • Dostoyt,vsky
was.~ writ.~r."
--New
York Times
THE
NATIONAL
· THEATRE
OF THE DEAF
-A_II-The-Way-HomE,···--
.directed by
Colleen Dewhurst
-·
written by
.·Tad Mosel
'~ drama of ~firring
beauty,
one of the finest
contem·
porary
American
plays:'
-New York Post
Saturday,
February 9, 1985
At8:00
pm
Tickets:
$10,$12,$15
You'll Hear (And See)
Every
Word.
35 Market St., Pough., HY 12601
Members receive $1.00 discount _:: No refunds or exchanges
~
All sales final - Box
Office
Hours:
Mon.•Fri.
11-5 Sat. 11·2 - Hew box office located in theatre
lobby
C
Equipped with infrared listening
system
This performance is mode possible, in port, with public funds from the New York State Council On the Arts
plete so that we could move the.
/Adult Ed office in one day."
I
The new offices cost
$25,000
to
/ build,
according to
Waters.
'Waters said that the changes had
to be niade because of the great
demand for space.
Julianne Maher, dean of the
school of adult education at
Marist College, said the new loca-
: tion is more convenient for adult
students .. "Most of the adult
students have classes in this
: building, so it's easier for them to
have the office here," Maher
said.
Di;. Lee Miringoff, ·the director
for the public opinion institute, •
said that he is pleased with the
new location he will be getting.
According to Miringoff, his pro-
gram needs more storage space,
as well as an office that has a
more professional atmosphere.
Waters said that changes like
these will give Marist College
-more
· of a "university"
at-
mosphere~ "Before we started
having classes in Marist East,
everything a student. had to do
was done in Donnelly," Waters
said. "Classes, the registrar,
business
-
everything
was
located in Donelly. Now that we
have Marist East, we will have
more of a university look,"
LENT BEGINS
AS/ I WEIJNESINY
... F'fJJ.
20
a------
---------------------~------------
...
·--···--
,
..
.
-
•.:\-.·
\
_
.,._.
f
::;~;
',-:
,
·,•·
r.--
~
.
·(
f
>
/
--•·
Page
10
•
THE CIRCLE•
Jan ..
31,
1985
•
Fr6shmen
••.
:·
.f _
s1ze.:_up
'first·term:
by
Da~
Meyerson
·,,--~~:~.;\~/·.
.
-
.·
.
•
·•
Looking
•
back
.
a(. their
:
first,
semester
•
in
·,
cone·ge,
,:
some
freshmen say they feel that Marist-'
is £good place. to be while others
•
.
·.
are not so sure.
,
•
•
,
...
,
..
•
..
~
;
.•·
• "I don't'feel $10,000 sm'artei/'
•
said
Lynn
Maloney
i-
from
.Highland
1-'alls,
N.Y.
"I
expected·
to learn a lot· moi:_e."
.
~he also
noted she feels that too many peo-
ple "slide by."
'
Several·· othe'r::·:returning
freshmen agreed with this view.
Kerry Dynia of/ J?aldwin, Long
Island said,
"I
expected college to
.
be hard.· It's
•
basically
.
pretty
·easy."
•
·.:,•-:"
/.-·
I..
•
.
··:
..... :
/
.
.
..
On the other
.·.
hand,
..
Estelle
Cuadrado of· Red Bank, N.J .,
said that she was surprised to find
out how much work she had to do
in her computer class.
-
.
'.
• :
.•
-
.
.
,
.
.
.
.
:
While Dynia/foimcl
·the
school
work• easy; she didn't agree with
sortie-, ·.bf'
.·
the
•
dorm's· r\.tlef
• .
''Marian Hall
is
like
jail;"
she
.
said .. She particularly questioned
why;treshinen w~o·a~e ov,er 19 are_
not allowed to·dnnk m the dorm.•
•• ()~g;,i1, Dynia s~{d'~he i~ h~p~-
•
py with. the living. arrarigements.
and
-
that Marian
.
is not· a
•
bad
dorm; She aclded that shecould
·-
,·
•
......
.:....,_
·.
•
Sunday,
i
..
M_"<Jn<ltijl,
.TueSdaY
..
afli;l
/l'/ltti,,rs.d'.(ly}
**
~*
13RJ:]]JZ
.•
i
~riMISS{<!lN'
iiiit-,..,,,
'
1
i~'iif>f
~~---~if'lf\?,;,
•..
•
.
\
.:f
.......
,
.
..
.
..
•
-
•
not live in one of the "scuzzy'.'
doTb;:la~k-
.o;:
a
~ar
~an b~ dif~
1:::::~:::::;::::~:::;:::::~;:::;::::::::::.~:;::::::~::::::::::~:::::;::·:·
:··=·~-::·::;~:~;::::::::::::::::::I
ficult for freshmen to Ji.djilst
Jo
>
: ~:
••
•
and Jim Jacobs; a freshman.from
Cortland,.
N.Y.,
said he feels
Marisi is too far away from.the
'.
:
to~n
••
of, ~ol,ighk~~ps~_e:i>J~CQl:!S
·._
• •
said that.hefeels,the.lack,o(a,car
limits what'he arid ottierJreshmen
can do in iheir:spare time'.
-.:
.
<
.>
·
"
.
:
.
.
.
.
:
.
.
.
•.
·
',
~,
•
'
...
·'
...
..
.
.-
_.·
..
Commuters face different pro-
•
blems in 'adjusting
to
the·. coUege
life. Yvette Melito, a
·commuter
from Highland,
N.Y.,
found the
people
.
at•.· Marist
•
were-
;l)Ot'.
as
friendly as. she_ had hoped> "The•
people here weren't
as-:
friendly
compared to
·the
other colleges I
vi~ited,'' she said.
•
•
•
·."-···:>,,·
-·::-·.:-·-
.....
:·:·--'..·,SC·._;_'·'.-··~---
-:<~::-.-r··
W~dn~~fl~'if!':·L:k'lrflffill~;s•··Nl!j.ht·>.-,
....
, .....
;
..
-·••:•'<
/
Jl;~ti?ftf
ihit~JtJiij:~~'fJ.lfA;:'t:j')iJ:;'f
:~i-i;#{tJ:J~
;~?
52?iiamiJJt<iJ,L_?si,~ii1i?f;~tiJ{~!)i<,·
•.
_
Altho~gh •• Melit~
:
carite back
this semester, she is plaiuiing to
transfer to
SVN.Y
r-{e~ Palti-~ext
1,::;::;::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::±:::I
year.
-
., .
:
.
Disagreeing
•
•
with
.
.MeHto,
••
Michelle Newman, a Long Island
••.
resident who lives. at Royal Crest
Apartments. in
•
Hyde Park, said
•
that she. found the pe<:?pl~.--
at'
Marist to be friendly. However,.
she said that she f~els ihai: college
activities
.
are
•
not
••
advertised
enough.
•
\
•
·•
••
"My
social life
·is.
limited
•
because· -I commute;'';
'.said.
,
Newmiln."Here .. s~hedules of ac-
• 'tivities
·:
are> thrown
:,
·afoiihd:
-
They're not organized. You don;i
know what's happening
\
unless
·
•
you hear it frorn somebody;"
•
·•'
·,
-_
:
..
_One,
of the oldest_ and best-
known ''freshmen,"·. Matt Fur-
janic, who.recently began hjs first
year as Marist's men's basketball
coach, said . that ·he has nothing
but praise for Mai-ist .and the
Poughkeepsie area. He said he
feels the Marist
.campus
is close-
knit and he likes the interaction
between students and faculty.
Furjanic said he finds Dutchess
County to be an ideal place to
live, and added that he likes the
proximity to
New York
City yet
enjoys the4'eautiful scenery and
homes of the area.-·
.
•
•
•
•
David Schifter~ a
,
freshmari
from Manhatten, s,umn;ied up
t.iis
feelings about freshman year say-
ing; "Living away • from. home
and being independent gives
_me
a
chance to grow and
make
deci-
sions which can. be
'used
in the
future/'
· ;,
..
·,.,--
•
"
··-
~-·,J
,._
......
!":.
•'
i
•.-t.
··.,;,
._.~•
.
.
.
.
.
.
~riff'!-lt}
...
.
, .
•.·
.....
·•.·. .
<
...
.
. J() &•Beers
••
'till
.Mir;/hig/j,J
.&}JJ;.;J'f
-·
~
:·:•·
·(.
~
.
.
/.
:
·saturday
-.$2 .Admission -
$1 With- Gold Card·
"#,••
••
•
•••
•
2
for
1 'til/12:00
p.m.
&p~,ncj1J,g·
'·
..
/_.
,,.···,,
PREPARATION FOR:
.••
GMAT • LSAT'• MCAT
-~-
P.oughkeepsie Cf~i~ses
..
•
.
·.•'·
·
..
·begin
__
Week
of.Jan;
14,,
Jan: 21 and
.March
·4_
·-·
·;·cail
e14:94a:taor·:·
•
.For
Information
l ~~--
_·
KIIPIAN
.·
.
--ED\?~~--.
In lltw
'11>!1<
Stale Stanley
H KaDbn
r
ducabOOilt
t,nltr lid
ROOSEVELT 1, 2, 3 & 4
Rte. 9, Hyde Park CA9-2000
ACRES OF FREE PARKING
DISCOU'r"T MATS SAT. &
SU_N.
AT-2:00, P.M/-•'.•
·ALU4fHEATRES·
...
"Thebestfilmive."see~Jhisjedr.
'.'
•
•
JoelSiegel-ABC-TV
-
.
··:.
'\'tftE:
Kitti
N~···.F
I
E.L'DS(R)
•·,
->7:00
&_,9:40
•
•
.
. .
Eddie
Murphy
is
..
on ;Vaca:tion
}'
..
BEVERLY
HlL:LS<'COP··
:.
7:15.&9:30
FINAL W.E~K!
-_
,
Matt.Dillon
,.
>
-::THE
FLAMINGO'KID,PG-;3)
0
-
•
•.
7:35 & 9:25.
Starts
Wednesday
February 6
.
•
Bizet's CARMEN:-
·•
._.-r-,•.•.;.
,
•...
•
•
-.;,.:.~=
-::c:·-~-\-:_~;~r-:!_:::.{:-.:~:t·_<
_____
:i
___
,~
-- -~_'::~
·-:-:
:.:.
-,, :_
~:
-
.
.
·_.
- -
;
.
'
.
ei,dem
WINE & L~QUO
•-
26ACAOEMY ST.
PO'J(EEPSIE, "N.Y:' 12601
Tel. 452-4110
MA.RI.ST
.
'
BASKETBALL
defeat
FDU
••••
.,
'·.
-
Jan.
31;
1985.-·
THE CIRCLE·
Page
11--•
•
The
Hyd~
Park
~estival theatre.
Students sample theater
life
as":'interns for summer season··
I
.
••
·
b;~iari~i~e
t:legg
workers, said Smith.
"Vanities," which he authored
But
the
feeling
of
ac-
and directed at the theater this
There is more to theater than
complishriient the entire crew felt_ past summer.
meets the eye.
.
after a performance made. the
She recalled "Jack's panic two
·
That~s
.
what junior
Eileen
•
work worthwhile, Harris
.
said.
days before the show» when the
Harris and senior Tara Smith
"Being a part of the productions: actresses' costumes arrived from
found out this past summer was
rewarding.
•
•
Everyone
New York unfinished. Smith said
-
dudng: their internships af the
-
depended on· each ot~er for the
that she had had
_
no previous
Hyde P;ark Festival theater.
•
show to ~e perfect," she said.
.
sewing experience but finished all
For the two students, who had
•
S~ith
•
commen~ed on her
of the costumes in time for the
never ~n inyolved previously in
.
feeling of acco~phshment '.1fter
-
show.· "I made up the Tara
·_.··:a
_
.
profess~o_naL
~-:
produc_ tion,,
_
p~rformant:es. I got a bigger.
•
stitch, ".Smith joked •.
:·
working with··professional·actots· high knowmg that I made the·.
Harris also had a chance to
and actresses
-
as well as a crew actors feel secure - e~en more so_ meet
•
Heifneri
•
"He recapped in
who followed union rules to run
.
t~an Jrom
,
the audience clap-
.-
one
•
conversation
what
my
the theater,
-
the IS-credit in-
pmg...
playwriting teacher taught me in
ternship was a
-
new look at the
/W~en
Monte_ ~ark~am, t~~
-
one course," Harris said.
world of performing.
ie~d m the production. Sleuth,
•
Harris and Smith said that they
--·
Harris and Smith_ agreed
_tha_t'
said that he_
trusted Smi_th
enough thought
the iriternship was
.'there
is
·
more
'to
a theatrical t<? check his· personal props for
worthwhile and Smith said that
production
than
.
what
.
the him,_ then later. thanked her she would like to return to the
audience sees.
·-
•
publicly for bemg the best summerstock theater in Hyde
· .
"I realized thatyou don't have cos~ume . dresser he ever had,
Park riext year after completing
•
to be putting on makeup to be
•
Smith said she !elt then that she another internship in theater
;
theatrical. Anything _ that
•
go_es
_
had b~n appreciated. .
.
during the spring seniester.
';_
:~nto.'
makiµg:-~.~\:pr~uctio.n;, 'is{ ,:..;_!he_;Jo~b
was exha11stmg.
Smith':'
-
••
The internships were made
':'tbeafrical.'.i•Evcrj/j:,arf
·:is\",
.im-:
~
sa~d. that she
-averaged
about 90 available for the firsttime during
•
portant," said Harris.
·,
... •
..
.
•
h~urs of w?rk a week, b~t agreed the summer through Dr. Jeptha
:
...
·
'·
,-
.. •
:-/.
•
.
with Harns:
"Theater
is not a
Lanning, associate professor. of
.<.f
Smith, who w,.s·assist~nt stage
.
glamorous job. It is a lot of hard
communications and a member of
; .~anage~
for:
t!µ'ee-of the four
•
work; you have to stick with it
the board of directors for the
.
productions
•
1
noted
that
•.
the
and you have to love it" said Hyde Park Festival Theater.
:
bac:kstage crew· is vital in making Smith.
'
•
Lanning said that he hopes the
,the<P.r<>du~tion'
,run
smoothly.
-
Working with the professional
_internships
will
eventuaqy
.
Referring
.;-to
•
·.the
job
.
of a actors and actresses is not as big a
develop imo a program between
.backstage/worker,
Smith said: deal as people assume, according
-
the Hyde'Park theater and Marist
"You had to be on your toes. The
·
to Smith: "Everyone has this College ~here students will gain
.
actors depended on it
for
every illusion of 'oh my god, she's
experience
working
with
,
perforrt,lance. You couldn't make working with ihe stars.'. They're
professional actors and actresses
a mistake .. " The pressure and not like that. In'fact, they are very in classes and on stage. He added
..
nervousness of each performance down to earth."
•
that the.board of directors
for
the
was just as great
.for
-
those on
Smith worked clo·sely with Jack
theater is supportive of
•
the
.
stage as it was for the backstage Heifner on the Broadway play
program.
-
-
· -
the long run it helps the whole work and play. The VCR is
'.
Continued.from page 8
_
industry because it stimulates help/ng to usher in the home
'::
optio!l·of joining a club for
a
one more_ and more production of\' entertainment
revolution
by
i,
time fee that later entitles them to films." With more products to making it more desirable to stay
.
discounts and free rentals. For . choose from, . said Cohen, the home instead of going out, an
example, Video U charges $35.00 more people will be able to find appealing option on a cold winter
•
•
for club, membership. This gives something that they like.
,
'
night.
.
__
•
'the
member
.
three free video
Cohen does· feel, however, that
Th~ _Electronic Industries
rentals and half p,:ice on all future changing lifestyles caused by· Ass~1at1on says_ that s~les of
·•·
rentals.
•
_
•
-
increased VCR usage could hurt V~R s are growmg c_ontmua!IY,
. ,; -.
VCR's also come in handy· for his business._ "Personally I see with 81
OJo
more sold m th~ first
•
special events. "My mother used them as a good-sized threat," he ten months of 1984 than m the
to take-me and ten of my friends said "insofar as it· eliminates first ten months of 1983. The EIA
to the movies for my birthday,"
pot;ntial customers. It• doesn't
es!i~ates th~t more than 5.5
said Bourbeau, "and for the same hurt the fourteen to thirty-five mdbo~ VCR s have been_
sold so
price now she could rent the age bracket which are most of far this year alone, and mdustry
':
_movie
and throw me a good party our- custom~rs, but people over spokesmen pro)e_ct possib~e sales
.,:.
too.'.'
thirty-five
·
would rather stay
_
of over 10 mtlhon VCR s next
•
"It's
cheap entertainment,"
home on the couch.'' Cohen said year.
agreed Tony Sarice. manager of the thirty-five and over age group
The interrelated tape_
industry is
Sound Odyssey in Wappingers constitutes approximately· ten to subsequently . boommg also.
Falls. "Why spend twenty dollars fifteen percent of his_ business, Paramount claims to hav_e sold
on a movie wheit you can rent it but he remains optimistic about mor~ than 600,000 copies of
for four?"
•
VCR's
"Raiders of the Lost Ark" alone,
With all this excitement over
•
at $40.00
apiece. The EIA
staying at home, formerly
·the.
"We survived free TV and we estimates that total U.S. factory
dullest thing happening on a
·
survived cable TV," Cohen said, shipments of videocassettes, both
-
Saturday
•
night, the traditional "and we'll survive VCR's. If prerecorded and blank, will
movie theater would seem to. be anything I think they'll help us exceed I 13.5 million in 1984, a
on • the verge of collapse.
down the road."
healthy figure.
However, Fred Cohen, co-owner
"!"just think people would be
Faced with increasing numbers
of the Roosevelt 4 theater in Hyde fed up with staying home night of avenues of escape, people seem
Park, says that while VCR's after night,"
.Cohen
added.
to be choosing to stay home.
aren't helping his theater now,
But
as
American culture moves
"It
means freedom,"
says
they will eventually spur new 'further and further into the in-
Juras, "I
can
watch whatever I
growth in the movie industry.
formation age, the home is being want whenever I want. I'm not
"I don't think
they
help us any foreseen
as
an increasing center of tied down to someone else's
right now," said Cohen, "but in activity, where most people will schedule.''
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Pag~
.12
•
THE CIRC'LE:
Jan.
31,· 1985
.
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CA.
90254
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OVERSEAS'EMPI.OYME·NT
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WORLD-sioE
OPP-◊RTUNITIES'.FOR
.MEN
AND WOMEN!
•
JAPAN
>EtiROPE
•
AFRICA - AUSTRALIA : THE
·souTH
PACIFIC~ SOUTH AMERICA -THE FAR EAST.
.
.
.
•
EXCELLENT
:BENEFITS.
HIGHER
·SALARIES
AND
WAGES!,.:
:FREE
TRANSPORTATION! GE_N~ROUSVACATIONS!
•
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_,:·::.>_/.·
_.
-
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,
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M~re than\oo.~O~Am~'ric~ns
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Japan,
Africa·.' The: s~~th
2
:
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not including members of'. Pacific; The:Far East, Sou.th
.
'.
the armed: -services
.
.::.;• are
Arrierica ... nearly every
parf
now liv_ing overseas. These
·
of the free worid !
..
•
·_
• •
:
•
-people
are·engaged'innearly
'(3).
Companies·.
an~
everypossible
.-activi-·
•
Government
agencies·
•
ty .,.construction,
engineer-
employing pet'sonnelin !le·a~-
ing, s~les,
:·
trailsporfation;
·
Ij,;
every_. occupation; frot;n.
secretarial
•
work,
••
accoun°
the unskilled
'laborer·
to
:the:
ting,
manti.fac'turing,
.
oil
-
college trained_ professl.onaL
refining," teaching,
nursing,
man or woman:
·> .
•
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'.
government;
.
etc.-etc.
-
And
./
(4).
Firms
'and
organiza~:
.
many. are/~~rnjng
$2,000 to
'
.
tions engaged in for!!ig·n··c<ni~,
•
$5,000 pernionth,·:.or more!
_·_:
• struction
;projects;
111ariufa1!~
·
•
To <ail~~.:., y6u/the
;
op~(
.,
luring,
.
mining;..: oi('refining',;!
podunity-'c' to\ apply
/:
for
•
engfoeering/!sa1e~ .• serv.iC(lS;;_il
.
oversea·s<:employrrient;
\
.we
..
teaching, etc., etc.'.::.,
:<:.'.>:,,
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-'
haie• rese'arched:and compil-
'•
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(5).
How-and
_wherejo:ap":·
:
-·
ed a new':a~d exciting direc·-
ply for overseas Government.
:'tory
-
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01f~X9V-erseaS
_-.
employ ..
-.
::.-.jobs.
:
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·-:_.:~--~-,~><
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ment. Her,e;is just a
·sample'
/(6)•
Information
.<ab_out
of
>
what
>:our
International
summerjobs.',
. •.:
·.
·,:,,~ ·
'Employment
Directory-
J
(7).
You_
wm
receive
•:our.
covers._
;;
_.
:
·•
'Employme11t
Qpporturiity
( 1). Our
·_
International
-
•
Digest~,jam~packed· with.inc
Employment Directory lists
•
'formation•
about· currenf job.
dozens o( cruise ship: coiri-
:
:
opportunities.'/ Sp~c1al
.
sec~
panies, both
,on
ilie
'east
a'n~
..
tions
.features;'
news
of
-·
.west coastt You will be told
:_
ov¢rseas
:.
construction
'pro-
•
what typ·e: of positions th¢-
.jeds;·c exe(!U_tive
•
positions
•
-
cruise ship companies hire,
:
ailcl.teaching opportunities.-
••
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.
a~s
''.
d e c k
'
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a n d s·,
. '
.
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90
Day
Money
,
-'.
·
.
restauran't:;
help;
.cooks,>_.,·\
Back.Guarantee·_-?,
.•.
bartenders, just
•
to
;
name a.
.
Our International
'EIDploy-.
few. You
_:
:win aiso
.
receive.·'.
~
ment Directory is; senfto you
several
,·Employment
.Ap-
•
with ibis.
,guarantee.··u
for•
plicationCForms,:
,that
you· , any reasoriyoUdQ n9t9~ta!n.
·-
may send< directly
•
to: the
:
ovtirseas employmerihir,: yoj,ic
companiis'.you would like to
are
n'ot satisfiel
vJ(t~-_t.he
_job.
•
-
work for.
:;·
.
.
:
offers ... simply<; retur~
;
our
(2). Firms and organiza"
Directory within 90.day~ and
tioris empfoying
\11i
types
of
,jvf
l_lrefund
YQU~
ffi.Oll~Y:Pr<>\
•
personnel
in Aµstralia;
.\
mp~iy
...
noquestio!1sasked.:·-_.
••
•
: ·
s···r·
.,
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_·..
•
·-
International E.rnploy~ent Directory·,
:._
131 Elma Dr'. Dept. T21
. ·
:
•
,,
...
.
Centralia, WA 98531
. -·
~lease
.
se~d
~~\ ~
copy. of. your. International Employment
Directory~ I understand that! may use this information for 90
days and if I am not satisfied with the results, I may return
your Directory for an immediate refund. On that basis· I'm·
encl~sing $20.00 cash .... check .... or money order .... for your
Directory.
•
•
NAME--------.:-:--:-:=-:-------
ptease
print
ADDRESS.-~--------APT
fl.
--
_________
,:
CITY_:_
_____
~STATE__
-~.
___
_
IntemaUonal Employment Directory 1984
·---
.
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ZIP
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for:·a semester,of Bn;,c-
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.
•
'.)p_us;
4:'fo aUmiMarist buddies:
.-•::.
l bad·a GREAJ· visit;,'.arid
.:l'Ji
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back.: Next tiine come vis if me
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.Your S<;i-_antori
Connection
/
·
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Maureen;
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·.;/:"':;
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·:,.
·-.
Senior Week· is
so; close,
•
but I
':.
-
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no\Y.•(:omc
baclchome.
:
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•·-:.Frea1¢on
Parker~:-·•-·_..;:~;:,.
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'men,
so
-little,.
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kidf>
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Stintz and Damien eyes
•
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Michael_
Loweri,
• _ _ _
.
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''All
I need. is the tadio, my.·:.
.
~fa~)
pit,'
etc.~" We'..ve
•.
got
i<>
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·_
.
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See
yo~
on the plane ..
•.
·
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.
.
•
•
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Bonnie
•
Cabbage-
••
··-I'i.OVEYOU!.
'
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·
Handsome • •
·
:,1:t<-,
•I!'·:-~,.·.,.
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Dear John Higgins;
• -\·
,
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We'•'· miss
-
you·, at·
.the
:•Tciwnhous~i
•
-
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.
.
Love,>
yoifr kids
'.
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Oi Lo\'e you -
you're excellent!
;
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.,,come:visit<.·
•
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•••
-Jan."31,<1985
d'HE
CIRCL.E
~-Page .13.
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, . ••· • .
•
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.
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t6
irt-Volve
students
~-·
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·,.:.i:_/'.p.O'.s'1iicin'sf1i'va•iiable·.'du·ri•ng
;;,:·stiit~if\~~frie,~~~ei:
..
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•Iutors: · ::
:»;~~R~ad~rs
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:·•:NotetEike-rs.
·:,!Tesunfa.:AssJstants._··
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brafy/Aca:~em.rc
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· • ·<~Typ.i-~ts/Trarisciibers: ,_
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,·'
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'
. ;
If
you , are JrJ~_tested,
--_
pl.e~se .
stop-by the:office, CC 181
•.
- i , .•.••.
• •
between 8:30-5:00
:
.
•
-
--
'•
'· ~.
.
•
•
.•
.
to·fiu.out·
an·
a
pp.I
ication
.
~ ...
.
:
'
'
·, b/B~rbara'liuby
• will.affect anyone," said Phiiips. . "
T~
helpsiudents .who are think-
,:
.. ·, · •
' : ;.. ,.,. • .
.
:
, He said that a mixer is also plan~ . ing of becoming officers, Philips
,)·: In_ an effort to get Marist .-, iled arid that the profits from both said he'd like
fo
Hst job re-
students mor,e actively involved in :: events : win be donated to the
quirements •arid benefits so that
• their· scho9l, the_ college will be .: foundation;
•
i
officers would.know wI1at was ex,
·ho_lding . Student
Government
All clubs .will be represented . pected <?f, th~~. and w~at _
they •
_..\V~ekF~~-_25
-A1~rch
1.
.
:
during. Student. Government . could gam by bemg a club leader.
•• ·._
A!lthony ~hihpS, snident b_ody · Week, with eight 'clubs working
Philips said he has also spoken
_.presid.ent,
said that the .C~uncil of •• on the particular event for that
to Gerard Cox, dean of student
. S_tudent Leaders ijas planned the. day. The week will also include a affairs, . and · Elizabeth Ross,
• event to show stu~ents what they . cultural
language· ancl food
registrar, about allowing officers
can get:out of Manst.
"esti·val. .
• • ·t
f
I
k ·
1 '
to ·reg1s er or c asses a wee m
_.-
. The week-lon_g
event is schedul-.
ed • to include discussions and
workshops on financial aid for
•. priyate ··colleges. and student. in-
volvement in college activities.
: :.''Also scheduled for this week is
•• a • filni from the Foundation to
Save the Statue of Liberty. "They
tell us it's a real tear-jerker and
Philips said that in addition to
getting more students involved,
: CSL is concerned with making of-
. ficer positions more attractive.
•· • "A lot of times it's a hassle and
'
it takes a lot· of work," he said .
"We'd like to make : it more
• pr~s~igious to be.an officer of a
· club."
• •
advance.
• •
The CSI.:meets in Champagnat
Room 260, Tuesday at 8 a.m.
Philips said that it is difficult get-
ting people involved. "It's usually :
the same s·tudents that prepare all
the events and go to them. We'd •
like to get a lot of people ihvolv- •
ed," he said.
••
'Classics are fashion key
;
· by Marianne c~nstantino •
styled clothes are always a good
scarves, are often as important as
choice.
•
the clothes they enhance. "Look
·
·
• . at the purchase of your wardrobe
. Do the clothes make the man or •. ,· When sorting • through your
as an investment. If the items are·
does the man ma~e the clothes?
_ wardrobe,
Perlingieri suggests
classic, you will be wearing them :
No.one can ever seem to agree •. that you look for items with
for a long time. If they are or-·
• on that issue •• •
•
•
.classjc
styling. Wool blazers with
good quality, they will hold up
But one thing is for certain, ac-
narrow- lapels, skirts and ·pant~
and always look,.tasteful," Perl-
cording to Patricia
Livshin, \ made of natural fabric that aren't
manager · of the Up-To-Date '- 'too flared or too straight are
ingieri said ••
clothes store in Pqughkeepsie and
good.
.
. •
On the issue of economy, Perl-
a Marist alumna, the occasion •. '· _The best color to wear var!es by
ingieri and Livshin disagree. Liv-
dictates what should be worn and
individual. But, it's best to chose
shin said that· wheri buying
the key is
fo
look appropriate.
.
from the classics: grey, black,
clothes, the earlier in the season
·
,. : ·
-
·
/ ... blue and beige. "Each individual
you buy, the better off your.,·
. - One
•
special. occas10n .that . should have a sense of color coor-
choices will be. "Since you will be-'
everyone_
hope~ to_ atten~, s,9oner .' dination that is right for his or her
spending a lot of money, you will
or later,.is the Job mterv1e~/And, • complexion, and the basic colors
want to have the best selection. At:
how you look-could be as,1mpor-
.are great,, Perlingierisaid.
the beginning.of the season your.
tant as what you know.
. ·, • .
• '
•
choices of size, style and color are
,.-.. ,;, •.
,.,,:,,:.s- .. ,,
-.;>
c,,.,, •. ;•.·,,,.,
,,. -·-'.,. .: : _
Livshin reminds everyone that
the greatest," Liv_s_.h\n
said .
•
a.■•■•■•■•■•■•■•■•■•■•■•■-■■•••••••••■•••■•••••••••••••■•■•••~•,,,_•,.•~-■,.•,,,_•••••■•,.•.•.•,,,_•.•■.•~•,.•._•~•••.•,.••
''•-Ili~/"'P_erl~ngieri;':"di~!ctor: _of
·'f:
1l:if(erent.timesof.the,year call for
f;f~Ji~I~~!~W~-~~?m!,:,:,;fa
1
d:,.}; °c:lifferent fabrics and• colors, but
.
.
. Perlingieri did say, however,
,:]~:!cf
If
:f
~1,
iit~;:~Jil
t
~,~g
:~~;;:;
!::::::::;::.
::;:
' c<.c:
~
.. ••
:··are·1ook1rig fm' .people with that • ·colors in an interview. They are
, that buying at the end of the •
: season could save y·ou money and
still afford you good quality.
"Granted,; the selection may not
i
be as wide, but the savings will
' make up forthat."
' <' ;·:~~
•
:.
?
::::_
.
.
: reservecfquality. You have to play
not professional and they are not
'•the.game;''·
_
• • _·
. •
•
in the line of a professional sense
<: ..
:c::.;·.·:-
..
->--' .. ·•·.
Ye_.
,:.LA_,_
:•·,~I];::
......•
~,
-:..,
,
, ·:/f
resb :s'.eaf.ot,d-Steaks
:·/' ·:.Ch:ops
-iCQckfail·s_·.
_. a~kin·,toii
_Pre:mise·s·--
Show your.·college
_ID·aiid
get:a
->~FREE-
Glass of Beer
-__
witl) your ri,eal!
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.
~
.
.
.
194 WASHINGTON STREET
~POUGHKEl;PSIE·;
NEW YORK
i~~xtJ9-; 411 Sport.: A_sh_ort
ytaJk
from_
Marist).
,.-; 'The best place
to
begin choos"-. • of good taste," said Perlingieri.
• i_ng
wµ'at
to 'Year is in youi: closet.
• The necessity item for both men
: The two words to keep· 'in. mind • and women is a basic suit. Here is
~,re
·.•:qu;~lity'}'
<(
an_d • wheretheneedforgoodqualityis
_conser~auye:,, ·_ Both L1vshm - crucial. Perlingieri said: "It's bet-
.-·.and,Perhngien _agree
that t~e. on!Y . ter to own one good suit and wear
: ;place ~pat encc>U~age~
creauvttym_ it everyday, than to. have -three
dress
1s
the fashion industry. So,· cheaper ones and alternate them.
if.your job hunting in any other Thei:e is no substitute for quali-
field;stay away from trends.
• ty."
• •
•
.• ~: ferluigieri ·.said_ th~t
to .
be
Accessories· should also be of
fashionably. dressed, . classically ·' high quality. Shoes, belts, ties and
As a final suggestion, Perl-
ingieri said to keep yourself in-
formed about new style, so that .
.
you can alter your basic wardrobe
into something more expressive,
if the need presents itself.
Livshin, in response to giving a
final sugg~stion, offers the most .
basic and\ probably the· most
valuable business fashion advice
of
all. "If
it dosen't look good on
you, 4on't wear it!"
•
·TOUCH SOMEONE WITH YOUR LIFE
Mission-s.
.
-:
-Bduca
•
·
·
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-----------------------------------
Send for free booklet:
NAME-
ADDRESS
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• L·ay
_
Brothers
SOCIETY
OF
ST.
EDMUND
EDMUNDITE
VOCATION
DIRECTOR / FAIRHOLT • SOUTH
PROSPECT
STREET / BURLINGTON
• VI 05401
.
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••
1
by_la~O';Con~or • :·.,
>
•.
>top.of the Foxes·thro~ghout·the Eggink (b6thof,whom
~ad~the'. -·
.. ,>·. ;;) .: :,. ,,;.-: .·.• •.
. •;second half. < ·• •--•. -
<' ,.
<<
flu) handling the.'offeilsive load'
.
•
,Aft~r' : dropping> _a
O
non-;··:
Marist did ·get some soHd.
plai -
for the Foxes; dnlf senior .Tom
conf~mmce g~ll)e to. :Utica at
.the
·_
from seniors Bruce Johnson·: and Underman's hot_outside shooting
_ Mc<;ann Center on _Monday;' th~
Steve• Eggink,
'and ,.,some kept-Robert :Mcmis deadlocked
men:; basketb,u, t~IIl _looks to
aggressive play from 7
7
3- fresh- with Marist at 22· as the half
bounce. back tomght;w1th a .key
man center. Rik :Smits but the
• ded
•
.
.
,
-·en
. ,
conference : .cl~sh-'. at Fairleigh
Pioneers were able to capitalize
_ "I coached Underman for three
..
Dickinson Uriivei'sity. ;. / / :--· on several· Red· Fox mistakes years andl think he's one.of the
Marist Will be ti-ying to sWeep down tlie·sti-etch~
. , ···_: :·.:
:_~,.,~
• •
top · forwai'ds .-in· .. the. •. east/'
the !(nights, who _ came' to
' Forward D.J. Carstensen's free Furjilnic :said.· "I told our guys .
.f>oughkeepsie· - over •-.-
the ' in-
throw with 5:29 left in the contest that he was dangerous, because he
tersessidn -·break and dropped a
gave 'Utica a• 53-43 lead, which can score. frc;,m
.both outside arid
tough·.
61"S6
µecision _•
t?;'\he, Red
pr<>ved
to be too 11\uch tcr: ov~r- inside." ·-••
•
•
• _ •
Fox.es._ : , '
·_
-,-.. - . ••
come for the hosts.
,
·: -.-:, ... -:-;_
While_ Underman • was .. busy
. - The ~nights - are headed, by
:. Marist never ·got closer. to.the . tallying up. his game-high 23 -
• second-year Coach Tom· Green,
visitors than six ·p9ints in Jhe points, - Eggink, Johnson and
- who counts
00:-
one of"the ECAC • -closingminutes; ending the Foxes • Drafton Davis all put in _ solid •
- Metro's t9p j;layl!rs •
i9/ senior
hopes of stretching their 'Vinning offensive efforts in the second
forward'Larry,Hjimpton
.. streaktothreegames._--
: ..
:<·
half to give Marist_a
little
Hampton gets m9re.tlfan -am~!e
· Johnson popped forJ4_points.
breathing room. It w·as the team's
support from ._freshmen -Jamie
in a losing cause, while S_mits
and clutch foul shooting down the
• Latney and Stev~Malloy. - • .•' '_..
1
Eggfnk _ each. had 10-:c-points. stretch, especially from Eggiqk
FDU sports.· the smallest
Williams led the winners 'with 14 (10 of.·
11'
for the game), that
Division One gymnasium in the
points.
> • • - • • .,. : :.
I· .
pro_ved
to be the difference.
colinJr_yi
·one which is _no! frien~ly_;
_ _ Last Sat~r~ay's contest. iith·
"We're playing with a·lot more
t.o visiting .-teams. Mans_t Head • Robert Morns marked• the.: first poise and composure·. down. the __
_
C_oach Matt{ Furjanic will· bring.
time Furjanic went up agains~ the stretch, and that's
the. dif-· _·
•
his team toNew Jersey,with
~
9-: school he left last September; 'and ference," Furjaruc said. "The key .•
: 1~ oyerall r,ecord and·a
5~2
111ark - ifprovedto be an enjoyable night to our season is patience, and we -
w1thm the.conference. .
- ••
<.
for the first~yearMaristinentor as were patient -tonight.· It was a
In the Utica contest;_the Foxes • _ the Foxes prevailed, 59-5'7: :;
·:<'.,. •
good overall team effort.''· •
_
committed -·_numer_ous
• costly
- • Bruce Johnscni ·also had re~sc:m·
Eggink led ·the Fox.es with 20
turn9vers in the second half to : to celebrate after the victocy,>·as points, : while . Smits added 14
-allow the visiting Pioneers to pull
he became only the tenth·pla}'.er
in
points : (including .. three slam
.
.
away with a 71-59 victory. -·- . .'..
Marist' history to score -tooo
dunks) and 7 rebounds. The only
_ Marist's new 1,000-pointscorer,BruceJohnson· . _
Marist suffered : a lackluster
career points. The basketihit did Robert Morris -player in double
• ----
• • ·-
· • • •
• , -·
•
-
' ·
••• -. • ., • · '
-
.first half offensively and could • it for Johnson came with aJittle
figures _besides Underman was • 73-69 win at the Mci:a~n C~nt~r :seJond
'h~lf
·agairisf' the much
_never recover to pull near Utica in
over five • minutes )eft 'in the . Ken Williams, who had IO points.
earlier last week.; .'. ., • .
smaller Red Flash. •
•
.. ,
_the game's, final IOniinutes. It
contest and gave the hosts a 4441
The Foxes also- proved • vie-
Once again iqvas Eggi,;ik froni
.-: Eggink hiffor a career~high 25'
was - the outside shooting of. :lead .. --
•
•
._,.
•
torious over· the -other ECAC
the outside and Smits_ from the.- points, and ·Sinits poured· in 1,4
guards W~llace WiHiams and Eric
The. game's first. half was.-a
Metro
representative : ·_
from - inside for the Red Foxes,
-
who
before fouling out late in ._the -
Jeter thar kept .the Pioneers ,oh
seesaw battle with Smits aijd • Pennsylvania, St. Franci~, with a
broke the game ~pen in _ th~ • contest. •
- ·-
•
- -
-
··Women <ti:tke
itw.<J«.0.f!}.:t1:J"1:.et!iga/il:tes,iili'Bf'&J$;~ef!:fi:.·
-
-- -
·_ •• • ·_.
·;
·-
- :
/
·
•.• .
· •• .·-•n;, •• • ./:
,
/:_<:.,.:.:· i·.-,,: .. /:-'.'.
/'.i":'<:
:\):t;J\::h3}\l2i?t))t~?J?\\);f.z·(},}+:
. ·•
.
. -by Dan Pietrafesa'
The second
.half
saw stronger • either,'.' said 1'or~. . \;/, : /.: , ·., /l'he othe(recent ,yict_~ry-/9wed
.:
~~fe,~~,'.{s_ai_~,~ilmer:_
. _
'."•
• .
.. .
_
.
shooting, better boardworkand a
, The Foxes· managed to pull :much to a pressure·,defensc: that ; ,,,AJull~<:qurtpress at the startof,.
After going 2-1 last week, pressure defense that enabled the ~head by 5 in-the second half, but•: helped the women_:9vererc9roe:a_n·/:tlie_'se¢orid:hal(helped
the Foxes.,
•
• Marist's women's basketball team : Foxes to build a JO-point lead Queens rallied back. _ _
·
: •.
>
early-• 19-2 deficie;iind:'_i'~efeat s~cir.e-_~h~;'
first-~Jght points of t~~:
heads
in to >Saturday's·_
with 3,ninutes_remairung,
•
,_\ ~•we wei:e-in it in the finaLtwo ,_·Brooklyn77-6t' :,~,;-;;y;;.,t.:··~r·•'··:)1alftotffthegame at 36.
·:
.. _ ,,; •
Cosmopolitan Conference road , :: Val \Wilmer_ and Paoline
Jrlinute~, biltourpi'essuredef~_nse '.;':··T~~ win:was thf ~e_#ii's.:m~~/:•f~M.11.ri~t~~~-;:t~en.able
tf
take.(
game against Monmouth with as~
Ekambi led the scoring attack : left their players open underneath • straight and gave them _a_fperfeft c~>ntrohbecause·.
Brooklyn s -la~k-" •
3 conference and a 9-7 overall ·_with JS arid: 12 points~ 'respec--, for easy buckets;''_ said Toria. homerecord_<>f6-0.
:
• "<·'.",' ,-·-: of bench strength
forced
them.to. _
record.·
tively,-- while : Ursula:· Winter
,y
'!We were, forced_.to foul th,em,
:
.:Co~~hTor~.was forctld i<>.use kec:p· thejr .~tar~~-g, five on ,the
That record doesn't reflect the contributed g • points and
i
1
•
and they made the1dree throws;'' -~wo· umeou~ to sett!e ~er:.tean,t
c. ~ourt., _-,:-
,;,:
-: • :·\?.
t : •
·,
__
results
Of
-a··
ro·
a·
d·
8
-
ame ·at· Colga''te
b • • d
.
.
• '·-·Th. -k ••
1
----
-Q • . - • h.· •. ·-down llfte"r:Seeing
Brooklyn build
,
•'t'ln s~~11ting them;· \Ve:sa-.y
>
re' ou~ s'. -
.
;
-
-- . --.
• e erJo_r ueens was t e1r
•
d" l d d
, •
t1· -•-·'
their vulnerability to the press and· ••
on Tue da tho gh
•
-
1
• - •
- -
,
• • • - · .·
-_·
use --of a thi'ee~guard offense. - a ~omnia~ mg
~
.. l!e to cos.
Y.
• .· .... --,
··-· ., ·.·
• •·· - -...
-·.
•
· , ,, - •
•
The ~o!i recrnt iame sa~,' the
C
w
laSt week s
o~~
los~~:~r~r!·
Guards Marsha. Bloim(
:phyilis
tumM_
oy~rs,by M_anS
t
i, ,'
.k '. b ;- C
•
~c~
,.()r
..
,~~ch_ -:~tr~ng%, ,,-,&aJ:t
Red Foxes put in a strong per- . m?d!!eyor:r~~\ec6~~
1
ha~.
1
~~ ' C~i'ry; • ~nd freshman Sh_()laf!da
;;' Cd _an~r.~.t::h\~_<>fipiet.
•.
"~~f-<b egtahn·.
:/-?tirihl~·\virit~~·i~'ill~\~-in'
---f
•
·
h
·-d h lf''
- · ·. · · · ·
Young did the damage by sconng· • nu way
in
e. irs ·
uAJ
,
w en e ,, .
. ... · .--
• -.. --.-
.
- ...
·-
.
.
ormance m t e secon .. a 'to
defeat the Foxes,71-6O and)nap
• • _ -
-
- : ·. . . • ..
-.
. • .
Foxes ~pplied'a.hatf~cowt
press./
scorihg'{with '17 •"points, while
• defeat St. ,Franci~ (N._Y:>
70~~7-'{:
_ th~ Foxes S•gc1me.winru_ng
streak. • _ ~,,
1
3i:a~d
!t
pom~ ~es~tively.
.,J'he
perfect.
i>l~y
of th~:press by - Paolin~ :E,lt~bi'
!~
the: t~
iii • .-•
.. "Poor
shooting . and
our
P;oor aU•aro1md shc>0ting
'"'"":
26 • . oun \Va~ ·. e mos
ou
-
esollle
Val•
Wilmer; who: fuusijed 'the
..
reb()unds ~th
8/:} ( ·::
J.t · .
inability to control the boards B_Cr~ent·
from. t_he field and _27
}~~~~~!:-W!/
2
_ of
1
~ fromt~e
i
g~e with "14 poi_~ts
an~
'S}!eals; • .' 'ed F'o_,x,_cWoµi~
:~~tes:_.
-~e:,
: kept them in the· game," said percent from the free throw hne
. . > .....
· ....
. .
, ·-·•.
..
-·-
<,.,--
·,
enabled ; the
•
Foxes
.
to ·cut
,
the - team's ~rfect home ,court record ..
• Marist
- -
Pat Torza,
- put the Foxes down at the half
• Paoline Ekambiled ~arist with '• deficit to 36'28
at
the half.• -
<< ' •
willbe
oti the
line
nei:i"Tucsdayat. •·
who sa_w her team, shoot_ 31
by,~29-23d~fici~~ .. :
-
> , ,
,}:4points;,Ursu.laWin~erchipped:;
·••coach;iold .us:that
if.
we
~p:m .. wlfeniheytake·pn·wagner;;.
-- percent m the first half to bwld a
- y/e were still
10
1t beca_use • m;l2,.and Jackie Ph_arr grabbed a
:·
couldn't hit on offense, then we
ma game that could mean first,.
small lead.
•
-
-
\ they weren't shooting' too well team high 8 rebounds;: •
• woul<i have to get aggressive on • pl~ce for the winner~_,
· :-'-
'
-
.
\
,·
-
...
''
.-
'
'.
''
'
•
•
-,
'
.
-.
..
.
._;·
•
."·-··
-
~
',,.
-Foie·s-·split ;~\over:br'.eal(
-by Ian O'Connor . •
• The men's basketball teatn c6tnpeted in eight con~~ts over the
intersession break: • arid continued with· the inconsistent play that •
• hasplaguedtheFoxesthisyear ... • - :-· • •
_ .
• After dropping an overtime heartbreaker to eastern power St~
Peter's, Marist rattled off a pair of -victories oyer the ECAC_
Metro's "weak ~isters," St. Francis (N. Y .) and St. Francis (P;i.). -_
Steve Eggink was the leading scorer in both wins, while freshman -
center Rik Smits popped for a career-high-19 points against St.
Francis (Pa.).
. ,
The Foxes next played Long Island University tough before
losing in the closing minutes, but then put in their worst per-
formance ·of the season in an 11.:.point home loss to Cornell
University.
• Although Marist bounced back with victories over Boston
University and Fairleigh Dickinson, the Foxes closed out the
int~session slate with a 63-57 loss to conference rival Loyola
College. With that defeat, the squad finished with a 44 record
over the break.
;
Marist Head Coach Matt Furjanic said that despite the Cornell
performance, he was encouraged by the Foxes play over the past.
five weeks. .
'
.
"We're much better defensively now, and we've become a lot
more patient on offense," Furjanic said. "We've improved a
great deal from the beginning of the season;''
• sivimiiierSbeafitWo
t/1:is
'rliixrltn
'
.
.
'
.
.
•
'
.
,
•
'
'
-
..
-
•
.
'~
-·
,•
-
byMl~ha~IR~j~M~~~y
'dividual-medley) who;set ~---~;,,_ .. "W~\~;~~
-sixth th~;~ last
.
.,,
..
_ . _
.· . ___
.. __ sonal best of 2:54;0() iii the· 200- , year..i .would li_~e
to plat¢ in the •
-
-,The Maiist women's:swim
team •
yard individual m~ley.
fop five this year/which I think -
upped its overaU record•to s~l-1 • _< At t.he St: Ro~e 'meet, .double • we can do· if ·the girls produce
with .two victories over the past - winners for Marist were freshmen
.
their bestefforts," said Billesiinp'.
•
two weeks. : ·,
·.:.., _
• • _. Tracey.O'Neill (SO.and 100-yard - • • In order for the team members
.: • __
On Jan;•. 18; the ·Red F9-xes·
•
breastroke); Genet O:=meter op;.
to swim their best times- at the
qefeated Brooklyn Coll~ge by the , tional and I •meter ·required dives)
championship, Billesimo said, the •
score of 104-25 a,t Brooklyn. . :
and . Noyes (1000 yard freestyle
team returned
"to
campus on Jan.
The Red Foxes next victory _ and 200-yard backst_ro~e)
.. ,. .
7. Each member swam four and
J
2
half hours a day, six days a week
came on an. 2 at the McCann
<
Senior co-captain Mary Marino
for two weeks to get into prime
Center when • they defeated the set
a
seasonal best in winning the
C
11
f
s
R
72 33
•
-
racing-shape.
o ege o
t. ose
-
, wmn- • SQ.yard freestyle and sophomore
_ ~•We worked ·hard over- in-
ing 15 out of 17 events.
• Cheryl . Trask . set a· personal
tersession and on Jan. 20 we
Leading Marist with victories at
'
record of 6
=
48•63 with a win in the ·began tapering our workouts with
Brooklyn were ~unior co-captain S()().ya
rdfr-~tyle; • •
the·hopes of being well-rested for
Nancy Champlin (100-and 20().
Marist
Head . Coach
Jim
the • championships," Billesimo
yard freestyle), freshmen Debbie . Billesimo said he is pleased with
said. :
Noyes
(100-and
200-yard
_ the two victories, but the team's
"The only probtern•is that the
backstroke) and Desiree Genet (1- • goal is still· the Metropolitan
N.Y.U. - meet was rescheduled
meter optional and l·meter re• - Swimming and Diving Cham-
from last semester to Tuesday,
quired dives) and sophomore
pionships tomorrow through Sun-
Jan. 29. It definitely will not help
Laurie
DeJong
(100-yard
day at ·St. Peter's College in
our performance at the ch_am;;
breaststroke and 200-yard in-
Jersey City.
••
pionships."
_I
j
1
· :. :,;:.~:.+
..
ff.,:i.,:,~:"'f.~:-.k.·::;•i••/•,·:-
..
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..
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-,-••••••
•••
___
....
':
...
• •• .·.,
•• ·.·-.--·
••
·,·.· ..
·---~---Jan.
31,
1985-
~~~
CIRCLE -
Page
1s--•
' ''.
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•"..;..t,'
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:..>>::::Ihf.1tsaa~--Morhing
..
Quarterb.ack_,_,_:,
.. ". _
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it2!,i]l~f
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tldn-P1aying
•.
ro
1e
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,,. __
,_,...,_./•,t,flano;coiinot:> .::.; :;,,;.,_":;~ ·.:
.~ecarskL.cam.eJo''.".Marist. in __ :-when·-l felt:_the 'pain,'.'. .Pecarski
-~
.,•
,•:,.
•
.
//".'\:,'·:
• .. ·'
::,···
'<
,, .. .-·•. September as this program's ITIOS( said_. ''I never, though( my foot •
: : :'::;":W.h.en,
Marist ;basketball. fans• -·~heavily.
re.cruited,prospect. .After
could be broken. I didn't believe
•
\t:~lfJ~p?,t'irag:!c;~ap~,e~!~js)~J1(?'.·b~!ri.~:i~!i1ejfJhe: ~e~(_C~deJ,.(l7 • it' until the doctor showed.me the·
:,'JeJi!,':,.9n~
~~teJharqmcl<~Y,.C,OI_l}e~/:')'..e.ar:<>H:ls;a~~}ll}d~~)_.mEurppe
_b>:.' X;rays in 'the 'hospital. The pain
to m_1p4·.Jlas,
toJ,e. Septt28;-,the~ .. a.:paneJ;-of.th,e:conune!}t',s.
sport- justwasri't that bad." _
•
• :day_' -f::the:.·
,a!}nouit~eme_nc.:x~as·~•'
sW~it~rs scticibls stich·as· Wichita
•• B~t the p~i~ in his foot ~as~;t
:,.,~ad~•·'."/'.':'-\?
··:;
\?<;~:;';',-:-'.:•,
:t/tstate;-,;:t;oiii~fana-
Siate/ Illinois •. nearly as,: bad '. as · the almost
.:,,i
8-~f;\Y,hile
th!lt eyent;~~~,a1,1:o~:::··/iaria/Arizona_
State pursued _.the unbearable pain he felt inside
'. Y
1':)US .
1~p~c,u,n: t_he IJ.lVlSU?Il,9n1;
••• fresiini'an ·center:' With fast com~ later that night; His father was to
: pr?gr~J!l;:: :_
al_lot~er_,
:.A<l\~
':~'.n?~·:< pa_ny;
:•like,
,·1har- competi~g ~f_or
• come all tl).e way from Yugoslavia
•
-·
~tlln~s:.a~)Javmg ~.mor~ _sigmfJ-/; :Pecafski!s· talents -• it's: .a' small • the next d!!Y to watch Marist and
·_
•caritel),eg_a,t!ye._<:g~~ron
the tea~'s,·_::, mitacle·/:Jilifr/-'th_~- soft~spq~en . Miroslav play against a club team
• P.erforP1:1J\~~}1~
1s_s~iiso
11• ,·: '._?">'•·-;':,Yugoslav~n-4t:d.'up:a~e~;Fox;
:
• from ·their homeland -
a team
;, .:rnat·_date:,IS
No~_.).4 ~,t~e day_:(·
.n
.:cam~':A()me fro~'. playing • which consisted of rnany of
.· __
M1roslay P~car.sk1 ~roke his left. • basketb~ll - -.one ;· day· and ... my
Pecarski's friends. Instead, both
.:root. ) • :_·_; .•·:·"<,:;
,;:
' ,· <'-:::_,Hrdther:said he had a surprise for
would be able to•watch the game -
.. -.C::hi.~case:xo.u:-.'<ion'tknow-
who::· nie ,',: Pecarski. said. '!Bogdan . together. . _.;
-_Pecat~kjis;
he'S:t~a(6-10 guy you · -JoJicic '(Marist'~ ··academic ads
• see dresse<l iq-str_eetdothes at !he ·.r~isor)'c~me io.my·hou·se and said
"I
cried that night when they
. -:end of.
.t~e;.Mar1st;bench
dunn.g
\:he
wanted me to come and.play in
tqld.me I could not play,'' Pecar-
_•home. basketball games.•· And· m·::: the United:States.· Iwas very
ex-
ski said.
"I
had worked very hard •
.
case you were ~on~ering, you'll • • cited,.because l've'always wanted
to be ready for the season. It was
'. p_ro_bably
see him in. that same •. to play inAinerica. •
.•. •
.:'.-''· :" •.
the first time in iny life that lwas
. :<spot for .the res! of the_.season. • _ , ''.After talking with _iny father
seriously hurt."
.
U?less Pecar5"1 '.pull~< off-. a , and with.my family,I decided on·
: Pecarski .calls the period just
m1rac.ulous
recovery by_the end of : Marist '' · ••
Pecarski
continued.
after the injury the "hardest time
ne~t. ·,~,eek
1 •
he . wiW• ~e./'.ied-
,
:
•~My f~ther didn't want, me to go
in my life.': He said he found it·
. ~~•rtl=d :foqheyea~.-- :.<\,
•
.•
toaveryl:!igschool,·andl
lilced hai'dtowatchhisteammatesplay,
•
1
/
'\V~at :' _exacdy..-,
does "' red- : _ the;;·school's computer • science . but that his friends gave him alot
_· shi~ed,, mean?. '\Y~l},
\ for_ some
program. Bogdan·\Vas alsoa big of support during· the rm1gh
maJor s_chqols,.aUJt
me~ns 1s.·
that
.
part •. of the rea~on to attend
times.
•
••
• healthy freshn.1en _recr~1ts
get' to , • Marist?!~
: •• • •• •
•
. "Sometimes I think about not
. • spend.a ye:ir !n·the ~e1gh~ room·_ : After. arriving in,Poughkeep-
being on the court, and 1· get _.·
•
before. be~1!1nmg
th~1r f?ur yea~s , sie; Pecarski quickly .established upset/'
Pecarski said. l'But
L
of compeuuon. But m this case,
It
himself as the best of the trio of
have a lot of friends here who
..
:
allows an. ~t~l~te to re~ai~ four
E_uropean recruits (Rik Smits and • • stayed with me and helped. They
. years of ebg1b1hty
_a~t~r
Sltt\ng out
Alain:. Forestier being the other
helped when I was .dow:n.
~•
on~ season duet? mJ,ury. .
, .
. two) who came here via the Mike
· Now, with the cast finally off
• I feel t~~t be1~g ~e~~h1rted 1~
.
Perry Express.
·
His pre-season . his foot, the Yugoslavian,speaks
.a good dec~s10
?,
ffr me, . fecar~ki . play _had e_arned him the job of_ with anticipation about his future
•
• ~~cen,tly
sa1~. .I ve had a ba~ in.-
starting . center, and . he seemed . at Marist. He rules ,out any
J~ry,, an~j if·
I,
_come back . this
ready to .be the Foxes main _inside c_hance of transf~rring/to a big-
se.~o?. I)l_lose .a-whole year of _ scoring threat. But then came the ·ume school,· saymg he wants to
e~g~bihty
•.
~
want to play four • injury.
.. .
complete his education right here
y~ars here._
"We were ~oing through drills • in Poughkeepsie.
,
_
"I'm going to go
1
home over the
Miroslav Pecarski
. . . .
summer.: and . lift . w.eights and
-
-
·
·~·"•'
,,run>'·:Pecarskh''said··' ''I'm· op-" ther.e to give PecarskLa helping .. season."
---------·
.. ••
timlstic that we(te goi~g to have a . hand, they will not be forgotten.
d
-
"I can't forget what I owe
• If Pecarski remains healthy,
those slam dunks will be a com-
mon· occurrence in the McCann
Center for four years to come.
·:,-.>>::·
_):o\•-:'.:<.:::/'l~-:--:~•:o::.·,.\'-·
:.,_ -~ . --~_;.
__
._
, .. '
shooter, somebody- better 'telL
•
• •.c,
•.
him.The senior.foiward,froin
t.
T4_; Jn_en's'.
basietb~_u·.
t~m
•.
E1,igeiie~ :oregon, . has , been
: , rece11:tlr acq}lired. a w.elcom_e deadiy'from the.floor and foul ,
addition to the squad iq Ron.
linecan.,,year.:-~Eggink·1s
••
...
_. M«:<;:11~ts,
a,·,6~2.traits!er f~om , ayer11.ging
°.Y~i
;15. p_oi~tf P.~r·:
; Id11.hp ~tat~ •
0
!-!~1v~_mty_'.,,·
g~~e apd)ut~ 9~~r
95.
pe,rcent •
.. _
,
: ¥<;:Car,i~s;
,who stafred at New
from tlie charity.stripe,.one of, :
York's Brandie~:_Hfg~
_s_c~9ol, ~lie .: Ea'don'.s \ bes(
·.per},
_
, ,,has two;y~rs.of,ehg1b1hty,left • ·c.~n.-tages
...
Dr.
Ho'Yard"D.oc'.'.
' ':· b,eginning nexf.,s~fon. Marist
•.
Goldman,
,who'
took QVCr
the
.
:;· assis~nt, coach: Jim· Todd, said ._ -athletic
.·director's
:post ·on an : •
'./ McPants\vi~l
play
:iith~r guar.d , inter,ini'
b'asi'~
~lasi" semester, -: '
/ position· for _the Red, Foxes.
retains his :duties, for now_·
.as
; ''His. d~fensiye .quickness
and .
d·oes'assistantAb Dick Quinn.
• • leaping· abiiity will definitely •• The bet here is tha·t both men
be an asset for us;'' Todd said.
will keep their current duties
''Ron is a fine player who'll .. for the remainder of the school •
help
this.'.team.
'!.[>Pre-seas.on • year : •. Mike: Malet· ·will, bring .
publicity;'wht?ther positive ~r
his Maiist • taciosse·· squad· to •
negative, seems to have paid
-
· Virginia during the . week of
off ·for tile men!s ·basketball
spring break, . and . not to.
t~in. ,Attendaµce is reporte9ly . FIQrida: ·as originally. planned ...
.up.over 25 pcrcc{!.t from_la~t .. The team will COI!lpete in a
season, and the. crowds· seem
round-robin tournament there
more v~t
And.it's not just
to -get ready
.-for
the 1985
Jor
the big • games. with
-season. uoetting away from
_ Villanova _and -Iona anymore.
the cold weather and . com-
Et11pty ~eats are -nc,w hard to • peting with some quality teams
find in the McCann . Center _ will definitely help- us," said
even when ·mediocre squads
junior. attackman
Tom
Daly.
. like Cornell and Jtobert Morris
. "It should be a_ good ex-
come to town ... While the
perience for us." ... On the
Foxes have been erratic for
negative side, junior mid-
most of the season,· some
fielder John Yoong will
miss
things have. become com-
the first two weeks of practice
monplace. Rtlt Smits is now
after straining ligaments in his
• consistently scoring in double
left ankle over the intersession
figures and
is
also grabbing his
break._ Young sustained the
share of rebounds. Drafton
injury
during
a
pickup
'Bat' Davis,
now a starter, has
basketball· game with his
been dishing of( around -five
brothers .Michael and Ricky
assists per ~uting l~tely, aiding
Lee, who were recently rated
. Marist's
tenth • 1,000-point
by
a
national magazine
as
two
, __
scorer
Bru~e . «Scooby"
of the top prep stars in the
Johnson
in that department. If
Boston area.
Steve Eggink is
a
streak
very goo .team·next year.''_
them," Pecarski said. "l promis-
: As
for those friends who were ed them some slam dunks for next
-
-
•,
;
;
'
:..
.
•
,
•
..
, .
.
.
I
t:S:katers ·came .off 'hectic. week,
setto host CM£ ,Post
w
ednesday
by John Cannon
·: After • playing _its busiest week
• of-the season; the .Marist men's
ho·ckefteam will hostC;W .. Post
nextWedriesday night at'the Mid-
Hudson Civic Center.
• :
. The Red Foxes travel to
StonybrookCollege today to face
Stonybrook for the firsttinie this
.season·;-:
'after skating last night
against Maritime Academy at the
Civic Center. The Foxes went into
last night's game with a record of
5-3 this ·season,giving them .fo_ur
inoi-e victories than during all of
last season.· ; ·' · •
•.
. Marist has had .success against
•
•
I
. upcoming opponent C. W; Post in
the past few years, according to
Red. Fox center Tim· Graham.
'.'We· have beaten them in. the
. past,. but we have not seen them
this year," he said.
•
• Earlier this season, C.W. Post
tied Manhattan College, which is
unbeaten at 9--0-1. The ninth win
was a 12-5 rout over the Foxes last
Saturday night at Manhattan's
outdoor skating rink .
- "Manhattan just outskated us
throughout the entire game,". said
co-captain Rob Trabulsi. The
senior notched. a hat trick in the
losing cause and was Marist's
primary offensive spark. Graham
scored the other -two goals and
• added an assist.
The • Foxes defeated • Kean
College 9-6 last Wednesday night,
with freshman goaltender· Greg
Whitehead picking up the win.
Trabulsi scored twice, while
• Graham contributed a goal and
an assist.
Although • the Foxes have
played four games in the past
week, the team's overall con-
ditioning is. not as good as the.
players would like. "We have·
been inconsistent," said Graham, •
."and we couldn't get the ice time
over the break."
Swimmers go·through· tough time
{lfter ffloving up in Conference
-by Michael Rohen Murpby
"A year of transition" is how
Larry Van Wagner, Marist men's
swimming head coach, describes
his team's performance up to this
point.
The I-5 Red Foxes are undergo-
ing some growing pains because
of two factors, according to Van
Wagner.
The first is its switch from the B
section of the Metropolitan
Swimming and Diving Con-
ference, where it was 7-3 last year,
to the more competitive A sec-
tion. "I knew last year that when
we went to the A division it was
going to
be a difficult transition,"
said Van Wagner.
"I
was
prepared for those sort of grow-
ing pains."
The second trouble spot is an
unexpectedly
poor
recruiting
year. "Of the· six individuals
I
highly recruited last year, only
one matriculated into Marist last
fall," he said.
• Despite those setbacks, Van
Wagner said he remains confident
the team will
be
competitive
throughout the rest of the season.
There are three meets (Queens
College J~n. 31, St. Peter's Feb.
5.
and N.Y. Maritime Feb. 13) left
before the Metropolitan Swimm-
ing and Diving Championships
February 21, 22, and 23 at Marist.
"I think we have a good chance
of winning all of those meets or at
least two of them," said Van
Wagner.
Regarding
the
conference
championships, he said that his
goal is improvement over last
year's 11th place finish among 22
schools.
"I
hope that we can in-
dh-idually reduce our times at the
championships," he said. "This
would not only help our team per-
formance, ~ut also help us better
our eleventh place ranking."
,,:,·:
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S: '\· .
.
love o'f:five '9o_lla~s.
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::Goetz•:are
t
\.\\, •
. physi.cally/slight men;- clfan:cut/;
\\\
·-bespeckled and;Jrom, pro~perous ::
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·'•
families.:They •both, hadJllegal\y-_ ..
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.purchased, handgbQS. Hinekky'.s
L
!/\·\:
,
trigger finger took aim
:at
Rqnald:·-,
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•
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i•.:mentar:-:
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.hospital;-; still :,dr~rrting. :of,fov~.'/:
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. ,and marriage. po~~'.s ~~iP..f~H'oJ'.1.-::
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·a·couple·of,black;k1ds.m~a.New
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• 'Yorfsubw~y'.:He's'.~bout,'t~'Ylri,te?;
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-the·· ,.::Great
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:Aut'obiography,.: scion.to· ;beO:a·:
t
V~
\:
•
crit,i~lly-:"~an1,1e~,f!I()j~o,n
pictll~e •.
·:
J\ :
:.The abortion .;chmc, bombers;are .
f~\\: .
·going tci.hell,'an~
110
one cares.: .
t~:\;\
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see that.the: company i~ reim- ..
•
•
•• tbursed_ for the charges and 'then:,
·<lookat eachcase'individually: We :'
would. certainly:>'look ,<more:;
• ··ravorablyohanyonewho chooses •
• .to owrh.1pfo their involvement on •
.. .theifmvn;'.~-< , .... \:.,':',
•
.·'"'·.":
-
.
,;
_.,-
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_·:·:•-
.
.,
ToiafTelU.SA~· which serves •
•
•
.•••
'5,000 customers 'in: norther'n Nevv
Jersey;,was:Cable·
tq
ideritif"y:the··:'
students ····,involved
·_
by:: ·making •
numerous -phon'e/cans·to :check .
•
·.·_
numbers:}isied 6rithe bills; accor~)
·
..
:?m!::z:~~:zd·:.if
fatlnis-
,~;it~~;·;-•
.. : • Mirist noor:pay 'tih:ones)i~'
~eWas .:
•• ·.110mes·
'.·to:.where/tJie'.calls.:; were '.
• mad~,-' according· ,to .':FeldmaiL ~::
• "'The'studeritsthat·i falked'to'o~ '.
the ;phone
':were
yei:y 'pleasa.ni:, 'I :
was extremely pl~ased_'with:;their ;_
.·cooperatic;,n.<Tlley:adrnittedthat, ...
:
_.-~they
baa_. done. sc;>!llethiilg
-wro.ng
..
.
· ·and were willing to .payJor.· ihe '
···),ills;'{Feldm~ns,aidi >\
'-;:;::;:
;•·:
• i
·Although'
h~ .•
has
.riot
.
se~t -the ;
'.,
bills to the ·studerits~yei, Feldi11an
°:
·expect~ -rc:irobumriterit~
0
l:lnd':says :
, thatlegaLaction ·will not be ~1:1ken
-_·
: if the bills are settled.·''! want this ,·
.•.• :whole thing _cieared up ·a~d'.<!rop::
:-
pe~k I~n'L not· trying;·tq''.geLthe
·:
·students in frouble,·I riladea pro~
~
• •• . ..• mise .fo the . students
.
to
keep:,
.
everything,: confidential\ if . they ::
·,cooperated/'. Feldman said: , ,
.
:,
·Feldman ~id that this.1~·cieaily:).
• a moral . -issue· .that' the. students'.
must deal with themselves: "It·,,
• happens:
You':
•do·. something.:
- wrong ·and sooner,.or.Jater· you\
will ·get _caµght.
·
lt'.s
•
important
i'
that ·they .· understand • that they/
were wrong,",Feldman said ..
-
-· :
• •. Despiie the. st1c1dents'.
coopera-
·:_
tion, • : Feldman ....
said : he. , was--_
• disc6l!raged and • • disappointed •
-with'the·college's reaction-to the '
problem.
..
.
.
.
. _
• • "The school left , this whole·'"
chore up to.me. They put me off.·.
cc;,mpletely and referred me to a ·
lawyer. . I only . wanted · the
students' • • reimbur&ement. I've
received cooperation from other
administrations, • but
Marist's
-·.:.·~\--:"•.
;·.'.,_/:\~::No,·i-,:c.i:'.:it.o:-·:/·~
. .: .
:·:•"
·Ai~i..-._F-iit/t))tiMs-·,s:ti!ioEN-iis
:.:-
.:-• ··_·:.
• • , _\::a'ppl
i•c-ati'o·ns
Jar · .·
..
'.~
1
}:,;~l{~;~;)miW}itJi-r~\.'f•'
1
{:'c·o·MMlTT.EE-YG:HAJRPERS·oN
\
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::,.:-:.
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f!l'tYou;il.iRe·,c~al_l.eMg~s;"Jthe.·q~p'prtu
rti~'
:
?ly.
::to.\'m~et·nntere-stin'g:;:,.peopfe
-
-arfrl. ·.~
:>have·)he,};lesi_re}t_Q~e·nil.ghten·
..
the ...
'.stu-•:_,_
-,
:.-den,tJlody;-·app'l.y~'nowT
•• • •
•
.
,,
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-·-··1ttt-E
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.
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atJl:t1i~iii_~i}f:()r\
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._·
·
• -:_.\P.Jcf;u'.r~es
.
•
•
·•Ess'aJs
.•
·by
(F:ebruary
:8,
··.·~
:98~
•.
.' I.
•.
•.r,
l.
: ·:;C.OV:E:R
·CO:NT,EST
•
•
$25;.00 P-Ril_ZE
••
•
~Send
·-Yo.ur
ptctu.res a:nd ··c(raw~
: i n:g,s
-~by
.:-F.ebrqa(y.
·t-?th .. _,
-
1
•
;-::A:1.·1
·.-~ti'.bm\1'ss!io.ns
::to,the
<•~ite
r#,rt
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i
eiY(BOx.·
C-833 .
·.[:IV'E
:M:U:SIC.
EVE~RV-·TH
URSDAY--
-1-0-2
.SUNDAY BRUNCH 11-2:30
NIGHTLY DINNER SPECIALS·
: position has just seemed to be one.·
of 'no comment'," Feldman said.,
----------------------------------
...J
.;
)j:-·:.,.>
~t).t\~<1ii\{
: ...
,\:·:.;!;:~;j,\/j\{;fif
..
:.
\:.~_-,;;i ::- , .
. ,.,. : ·, ·. · - .... -
,
··:·.'./
,M_ajfst·~~flege,:~,Uflhlc~IJ!l~,·~•J~·\,
1 _:.;:: ::· ,,
;
.:
.
•
•• •• ., ·:(.
.: ··:-:~ , ..
.
.
.
.
.·•··rteb··
nesidel"lt~··•i~~.ugiJl
jlt{tf}-I~P-¢
:.::ctci~lt·.!-£r3.tlil.'
• -):.,;;~ri~;
~~lsey •
· • • ·
·, .. • •
ri~b~~s
:·~t
M~rfst(:ciJi¼~/:~,
;~h~~i;/:\ii/:•t'(}{(l·L{~Fft{
i:'ii~~iaeih\ai~i:'t11~,:;~~de~ts
.ii~~d:
\ ).1~tist Coti~~~L
••.
- • .
, ..
. . , "· ,-, .... ·,: . .•
· · ..
.
, .
-w~U
,as;.'o!h~r ·.)£hools; F_cl~man
.S:
'
'A!~
st~dents;\W,,0?1:t.ade.
;1lleg~d:{t~~ir/ P.areilts'.,
dele~µone ' credit : •
f
."Th~ ;school iirnot, nor should(
·: ... • :·.::Ableast-.eight .to :10 Maris1c:.sa1d Fnday .m a;telephone mter-
.:
calls are:ex~~~ _to.pa,l'
for th~~,:, card·-num,bers
and ~1ther·sold or
be, • ,involved. 'in ·.this,". said1
·:
·:
students·have-been
identified as'il- •. view.,,}'·; : . ·,: -. ·;.· . • :,·:\F .. ·:·:· - • .• an~·no_:char-ges:~l~
t~e~i:~~-~l~~:
.• p~se~ along.; th~ • rium~ers.
to: •.
Sullivan. ·•_'To
·my :!tnowledge, it.
, ·: .. _.legally using -at • least. .one - • :Marist~ollege's involy~_~_en~
in•., :a:ccor~mg,to
F._eldm~~::
.,·::·-'.~=
~-;
;.·: .
·:frien.ds. :..;.,
'.. : .
•
• ••
;:· . ·; ~.~. '. . • doesri't:plan·.on ·.getting invloved.
I;
• . :telephone credit:card·iniLeo·Hall, the case ·has·rec~ntly,
r~eived ~t~. ·._'."·J:el~a~, :'-'!h!). ;-.r~efu
ses,-;,;
1
.°-.::.-,:.,
....
,
> ' ...
··:··
." :,,. , :_. ;- . ,: ·~.·
.. ·
··
It is-strictly·up:to the company to,
.;
according to:Warren Feldman, at-
tention ;~
,in.. a
·.regional;
• ~to_ry
.
:
re!ease :~~e.:µam~
$?t
·!Jle
jM_ans~-:
"·::-..
!h,e; fra~~ulent bdlmg·.stopp~d deal with the 'ind!vidual students :
·-.
.
tor:ney fo.r • a
·,long-aistance'
-publis~e~ ·,'..",by
.. !he,"_.Assoc1at
7
d_.,:st~~en~s-mvol,ve~rsa
1~.,!ll~,;-C:_
m!lY·_::;w:!'i<:n,_:.T~tt··
Tet; ..
7
h:ing~d • its:'·
·O.~
Jheir own. '.Lp_retty
much said
• • telephone company. • .
,
.
Press. ,To~.story 1denttfied Marist <:be.$~ ,OO(Ho:'$~,~
.~n,
,charged>: ~us!omers • f1ye-d}g_1t
• acce~s • •·
that in a ·letter to· Total .Tel· USA .
. Totai • Tel USA of •·Belville,:: Collcge"::stude11ts
:· and.' Olark -:ca~ls
,.from_
~ans,t .st!l_de~ts
:b~t·:· ,·nu_mbers
to seven-digit codes m. after my.phone conversation with.
, N.J.,•has not co':llpleted it's'-:jn- •University.st~deilts
in Worcester;-:;·•th!1t
_the:a~ou_nt
m~y ~~.higher as·.:._:Nove~_ber,
·Bruck~r tol~ the : Feldman.''.. . .
. .
. ,: •.
_
• vestigation -in tracing rall. ·the ··Ma.; as.participating-in a $50,000. th~·mvest1gat1on·•CQntmues.:
':,!!St
-
·Associated P.ress.
. • _..
. .•• M
• .
·P k.
c1· ••
·a .
students who.used·up.to six access • • ph(!ne fraud involving • s~v~ral ·s~~~st_er~·-:
a1·Mardi~t.
,:.:.do~fh
1~
1~1s .. :.;.~,
.. ::, :·
. .': ·:
.. :~·-
•. :. :··_.
. >·_.,. .: direc~~ue~1e.L:o.~!nd :~;~e:;;~
.
• • .•
, • ,:
• .
-::::-- . .. ,· •
.:.:
.... est11:.n~~edtot
ere _it.car c ..
arges. •
·:=.;In·.-
·-oec:ember,··.
Robert·
· ·•
. •
•.
.
. ruo·
m·
·o··:
se·e·
Ks····.
freeze':'.·'..
'.:_.
....
·
0
~i~~~~ittt,t·;~~:~:~:~~~!~t~d:>:·:~1~-t~r~hti~~!~fe;~~~3~!;'.::;.
·.~~~~~~~te~~~.!?~!~~~~~~~~ci~r.di;;
. \..:_;,.
~
• . • .
• :
, '.
.
. · . .', ·. : . • . :
,:·.
·' .. , :.· ••
.. Press~~Fe!drriap~.re:P-pi:!_e~~~l;i~Fth~::·
i'efepll<foe·:-:Qii~use
:. in<::.c:'~rly.'
,)~ ...
~~!~<?.O~·
-~~-:5J~~4
..
0
f.
~,!l
e~r.s
.'
•
c •
~ ,··
•:'
•.
;. •
.
;
.: · '
..
<
•
", - • '
.•
:· .. ,· . :t,oll fraud was·disc.overed
lasrfall. :· Novembef·when: Feldman: called, ·.:~wc;.n
Slt~at!.<?n,.
·: _he.:said._'.·
.1
f:.w~
ln' .
·.a·'.:-'~.-'·.·.·.'°
.. ·
·o
.stu
....
A.· ...
···
·e·
·n.·
...
·;+
.•
·.s·
.....
·· . : .. ··.·
..
· ·
..
·.·.··:
....
·.Onf·c.
li.en.t,··.~.·.tt.~.~.e.bi
..
l ..
l.1·:·s·.
n
.•..
or.
rp.a.lly.
•.
to.
··not.ffy
•.
M.···
aris·t···o·
f .• the p.
r.o.bl·e.·m
.•••• are-.a~.l~
to 1dent1!'Y
-t~e studen.ts
/ _. ·• -: 1'·'-1.
i\,, ·· • · • .
:\.;.J
••
· .. •
'Li· ·
..
:'.j• '.·•s~.()()a}:n'.orith,.w.asJ,illed$10;000.:;
,Heywoqd.'itnmediately•'referred
respo_ns~~le,
we will ftrSt help.Jo
<
.•.·
•
~
;
··•
... • • .•• . .
i~j;f
:{ic;l"t~%,frJ~;{f
~~::;tit~~E'.';t
,n,.,•s • hinitoPaul sumvan,a lawYeHo,
••
• • ·• • Contmu,d on
pag,
16
,··.toov.·Mario=Cuoi:no•proposed
a : . ,.':Sptne1ocar legislator(say.-th.eY;,-'.
••• ,. '·.
•
.••
$38;8•billion su1te'budget,on iJan. :i,bt?li¢ve,the
t>udget;wiU'h,a\if!o.)e,~;
22 'that 'includes an :-g
• percenein: ,
:
reyisecl
oefore.bein.g
passed_:
;,,:;t:..)::<
•. crease in°spendingand·aipersoriaI>,\;::~~:fhe·:,legislatuie
0
'l~1;;;,inake(:,
.'income tax cut,but·does•not allow. ·:'.-changes/.'.<;;c~ai!,1.
0
•Y,:$ssemb,lyman}i
'..for ·an•cincrease~in !the -Tuition •• iGlenn\Warren:-:?~,There'.will~:.be}'
•),.
;:.:.As'sistanCe'
::p_r08ram
.-.:for;":cQlleSe
-_:;
·,.:~cnan·&e~~}i5~iil):-/l)iS;/f:'(¢.UotilO~~st0~
~;, .· ..
••
students... ..·•··
... ··.•:: :.,;.',:,
·<;":<:
,\:buaget':-':'i$.·rS:;;1\,:f,;,:r£;;;Yti::+.:t
1
..
/}.·
, .
• :The budget, :however; 'does~can
/}~·"(
Warr~rf(il<lded'-1iii[D(althougn\/
L ' -
for inaiil~ain.ingth_e··:cost':eff~e:W,
-~
>.thet~~is/ri6{l:i.WJ~1jfj,r9yisipnJ4'!.,;1
t .... '·•.·.
:. . ·, '/.York suiteiinsUtutiotis'at'<tbe-c(lr:<;i,
.-raise·,T:AP/if
bill'may"be:iilfroaifc~/J,
;,_;-
0
• ••
:
, •
1
·.'meeting::;eligtbility}r,equfrem~nts~···:2·
pretiy 1':'dlamat,i§.i,lly{~If1}M_gpriey)·.};
····iit~l~Jl~llKJ2tl;;;t~~~r~~it!{~;~
ff;
,,tt1ition.costs·have:not·.oeen:frozen•~.,'-,
dataidaf.MaiistCollegfsaid:that}\:
,,:
'c,by-ihe·st~t¢:·.·Ttiiii'on·.:ror~SUN\'.·•·,·•.'fhe./_fctpnii{f~'::{ofiifffoc1~pericl.ent,~;.
11:.·.·.·.-_?
.•.
:,·.'•>,,··:_ ',.would:remain/afS.Vi375:per:yea('..,,.~o!legesahtl:.Vnix~1JJH~~-r_g,1gq~'l"
...
·
·,. , ....
:. ~undertlie ..
proj,os~d·
·bildS:et.,
T:iii;
·:c;,w,9414,.;m~.~(tj'~#?:.'.w#e.~f
to
::cli~c,~S:~:,:::;
•
:.
,..
; >;,'
>c
tion:forCUNY: \\,'.OU}d:
remain
::at:<
iithe,.j,ropi>sed,
bifilget!and~to
iSUg~C:<
,}t.··.
• •
-~:
1
?Jt~::t:~:;a_:~~~~~~1t~r?~~{)t~::tt:~~A!i~t:~i!~~t;:;{}(/\.';;:'.~~~~/J1)::~:fa·~·;.T;-f?{f~/~.:;~~:<~ff~:.~f:\~::1:\~:+;·;._:.\~-·:·:.·
:_
• ~:
........ _·_.
____
.. ---. :·
?f •••
go .before-· the.
·st~t(J~gislaJ.ure,
"
•
.
":~as
.c!ln.ct:lled
_due·
to• heaYY'
so.ow?·<·
:,;"'E::J:'olrii-»/(i:.'-}r:t
• •
·t··
:·
-.
;
·
~--
:-
'.l~•ne:
,~•ri~t-~~u4en~,_-~•
ster • E~lee':' Hat,toran _and Ja~es.
'..:."
•
that
v.:m
_negotia_te
t!je ~ta(e'~:final :· !Wh!ch
_Pr.Qh~bite~
..
st:veral. C<!_~eges
_:'.-?~
·il!!!./~Je.".~~rfO'·
?::·w.U.,
.
~
:
~
': [, •
R.a•m~,
~~~~_,a•~~~~~·.
_spent.
sif:
~•.Y
5
,
ov,r_ ld~ersess.•~n
·: .spending plan~·· and :.,pass.: th~,. from.atten~mg. •. -. .,..·,·.,
(··~
;': -:
.<". •.
•
• -.~":.":·-,
:<.:.
<-·_->-.:.~
.<-->:::
:.-. . :-.. ,
:,}!~l'~in_g!~~~!~~.~~~~!-!~,~l?!~!.~~~~.•-.~-•~rt~Jg!~:
·._ ·• ... :·. . .. ~.
-.•;i,~te'.liilifliJ~f
~~~~Jff11~~~~~f~jJFffb~i/?JIJJ·t~ti?isr=fjt/fJht&
•.
byJCennetb:F;.ParkerJr~
.·. ... ..
•
:the
:;progratn;
.·,Sta,rkieLasked:t
Dut,chess\'C,o,uniy/.'•citw£ns
~~
to·\-ttieir,Po\ighkeepsie studios saying phone calls·.· we have received
••• ·c;/'"'".·'(:: j:~,
::
i. -:-. ·'
}.>· •
0
Leu~n.nail toi~P~.lier;tandl~r,c! ";i~li:p~_on.~J,.~i~-~·~n~s:~ft:i~Jn,
·~ ~~i?~r-Dayid,:.We~fe
H~re:''~The ,alone,
...
~·.Jarge ·resllgnse is ex-·
. It sDutchessverslls D11Y!d.
,
•.
:that.
she was_.breakb.ig
lier lease .. -)~e,'Y;)'orlc.;·
. .They<pro_v1g~,
·thei, letters :wllL be ;colle_cted••ami • pected. : We're bopmg :for·. an
··, , T11Ik
<show host
:,D3:vicl
Let- ·;:Despite, sev~fal. phone • calls )ve; ~telephone> n,umtier and asked.· · .forwa.rded
,
to.·· Lefteiri:lan's
·.New
. :. invitation·
to
·appear. on his show
•
:,
J~i:rnan )ioes. n9_t:
: kn.ow. ;wher~
•
( lovecl
'to.
make; ; Letterman .. and
:
• • resid~_nts
••·.
jo ··:;.·.
c~.
: •
hiin :~ in.t.o
_:.·.·
•.
York offices for response:·/,·!"--,.
. ·
•..
or at . least-"a • ·phone can,~•. said
-.
• D~tc~ess County 1~;
·and.~tc!tess . Starki~ :coulp n_otJ>~
reached f,or .~ visiti11g.
-::
,:·
--;::
~
,,_·
: :<: • ,: ~·
-~:
·.,<, • : _. ,·. I>r2gr,am
·.,
d~rectoi Stu~ Schantz
.
_Schantz. .
.
~: . . .
.
.
.
•
.
:;(:8Jl_'t<seem
·to
persuade.him ·to_\_comment:· '.f'.T<\
:
>2,~(:._,,
),·:,\
• .·-~
,,
-I;ocal radio:station··\YP.DH
has' ·~·originated
theideifand says .he is .. •
..• -~•Lefterinari _opened himself up : •
>;':,:lllak~~hejourney
north;.
·
,.>
>
:'t"'
Ht response: to. Lettet:ril-;m's
,
begun a "Let David Know We're
impressed <with • listener. par- : for ·it and:n·ow, l feel the area· is
·}:J..etlerma1 : remarked
~
,on (co~e!its';·P?uglik~psie·'Joumal;.:'
~c~~~•_:<:8ffip~ign:
.The station -is. ticipatio~todate. • . ·•
~
• going'
'to
gi\'e;it' to :hini," said
·Ja.nuary·23:·that
he had·,never
..
'ManagmgE<;l1torB1,-tPukmeland askmg listeners to se,idletters to~-- C'Judg111g
from the amount of. Schantz.·.
'.heard of Red,Hook or for that . Legislature., Chairman Douglas
•
••• · •
•
• •• •• •
• •
'
'···
•
.•••
:~:;~~~?r!~tr~:riXsh!~;
...
~:~~6
1
.Jfsr:titi~:es~~o~!~;.
•
.•
Theatei£honors·~2:siudent
writers
• : Starkie, a Red Hook res'ident who
~
°Lettenrian
refused the invitation;. '
• , • •
•
• •
•
·.,. '-; ,
: participated in ,the "Phorie Calls
·:
A
Poughkeepsie • Journal. •
by
Gi~ny W~ite - : .
auditions '. and rehearsals of.. spring . for
the
Theatre
·• You-Hate To Make" segment of
editorial dated-January 25 urged_
•
•. •. ·
•
••• ,-.c •• · • ,
:
, • 'theirworks. ~- -
.
...
Wo
1
Jshop class,. were ._sub-
: ;
T~~
Marist
College stud~ri~
• Bakke,::.froni Wappingers mitted to _the competition by
• 4.
cl~ared in
yearbobk
case •
~
'. -~· "":
~~--. • - , :'.. ,_ -·=
'
1 '. '.:
·:.· .
AU charges against four
Marist students concerning
the alleged theft of 32 1984
, . yearbooks were dismissed
·., ._from court last week.
• • . Charged last Dec. 16 with
petit larceny and criminal
possession of_stolen property
. were Douglas Dutton, 20;
. Patrick Farley, 21; Brian Kel-
ly; 21; and Paul.Snyder, 22.
•.
:
Three of the books were
.
•
recovered from the four
. • students by the Town of
.
•
; Poughkeepsie Police. •
• • In exchange for the •
dismissal, the students were
required to sign a release
preventing them from suing
.
the Town of Poughkeepsie
Police for false arrest.
Town police refused
fo•
. c6mment on the case or any
further investigation.· • •
• were. finalists· in. the Young· .- Falls,· •won• second place for . Dean Gerard Cox, instructor
Playwrights·. Contest:. spon-
writers between the ages of l6
of the class .. Senior Jeanne
. sored
by · Society
HUL
and 22. His play '!After All'~-·. Fahey's "House of Mirrors"
' :Playhouse. of· Philadelphia,
depicts a widower and hinon
.was also submitted .. ,
Pennsylvania. •
•
as. they spend their last
The plays of John,Baklce, a
moments in a house which had
Marist ·college Council on
senior English major, and
been their home: for many
Theatre • Arts awarded • the.
John. Roche, a sophomore.
• years..
young playwrights for ex-
Communication Arts major,
Roche, from the Bronx, won
cellence in writinglast May.
will .be performed
·
by the •
honorable
mention
for
Both Bakke and Roche said
Society Hill • Playhouse bet-
"Gifted," • about a young
they were surprised. when ·they
ween April 3 and April 21.
.
man's struggle .to meet -ex-
heard they were·finalists in the
Bakke
and Roche have been
pectiltions others have for
competition. because the plays
invited ·to· Philadelphia to·
him.
were submitted six months
worl;c with directors during
The plays, wntten last
before they were notified.
,·
r
t
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:
.
·See
•
you·r
J
ostells.
r~Pfesell.ta.iiVe;.Ai>M:eye,rsl
•
·1
•
Dates & Ti.mes:·
Februliry
11·::&
·12~
9:-30
:a~m.
•
February
13 &
14,
9·:30
a.in.
February
1_5,
••
9:30
a.m.
Place: Donnelly Hall
t·
DEPOSIT: $25.00
Cash or Check payable_to,Jostens
,1}f;-
7 :00_.:'i{
rit
::
4·:30·
p~rh.
2:00
p.tn.
-
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<WMttrisre:g:fgups1enq;~
a:liaiia···to·onio
·resiaents
)k#t),};/~~Loj;~i,]{:i>./,\L{;:_.':•L
~.'The _first•i;<w/·:~.riv~d- t~et):;,''Thi~ ~e~r,~e ~ad a l~t.of time
.
Rather th_an_work.
directly with
,
:\ :-".:
,.,
,;_,.:.:
:-,:,,~//,'~,.!'Tr'~'>:!(:'·/·.f,/'.i,
,:
·~:
guys ~pUttwo
-~o~_ds,,of.;~?,od:a11d
L,
to O~flielve~
~~d J! was more ~~ a • the_ ,,poor
;~nd,
constantly en-
,
."._g;It
was, a:t1me for,learmng and
,the
g1rls·worked_,m a:thnft:store-:-;~or~ r_etreat,
•
said Paul Rayrus,
c<;>urage.them
to.be dependent on
' \.
\vork
:
for a
/gro_up
',
of., Marist
;
that' the. churc"
,
owrie~/•
!
said\'. a junior'Jor Rockaway,. N .J; "We
••
others
•
~
an
.
expense A,nawim
::,.·stti~eritswho
s.penta'week ?ftheir:. James· ~follen,'.
''.a:
,j_unioi:·
·.
from
:
were_
ther~ to work but even n1ore
House workers couldn't
.afford
-
,
,,
hoh<lay break mAppalach1a help-
.Westchester·
County;<
:'.!The
day
...
_specially
Just to get together.
the v_oluntet:rs sent food to a
irigapoorcommuriity.:,,,
..
·,
.·,
after
:,,that<.everyone.·;worked
..
•.
":W~hadtimetositaroundand
friend of a.poor person, accor-
·:-,
..
",::
·.,.N.·,
•
..
,
.
.-.t:,·,d·,:
••
,.
t
·':.S.'
·,
..
E··.
1
•
,
.
.
together.·on the farm thai=belong•/.talk and time t.o laugh. We did so
ding to students on the trip.
,
,_,.
,
me·, s u ens,
ISter • 1 een
..
·
.·
h·.··
..
·.
-
,.
,,
.·
·
.
•
·
·
,
ti
i,1
•
h'
,,._
"d M
•
·
•
·
•
'
=Hallo··ra·n
.. '•·ass·1s'tan·t"d"1r·e·cto·
_,
r·
ed,tot echurc~.,-.:._.,;:
,muc
=.aug
mg,
sai
·
arta
.-.·."Youcan·
doa·lot'moreifyou
. .
.
..
,,
:
. .
.
r o
.
.
•.•
:
,
,
•
,
.
Powers,· a sophomore
from
ca~pus
,rumstry •
..
and
,_James•.·•·.,
"We ~lso c_l.ear~d
a barn out
Nanuet,N.Y.
.
go in as a friend and say, 'I'm
R,umo, a ~raduate ?f Manst _and
-
and a fairly big p1ece·of la~d so
Both .Raynis and Powers at-
.
your friend trying to help you
·.f~rmer:res1dence
director,
..
••
hved
.
they c_oul~ grow ~~ass am;l
-~et
t_he
•
.•
tended last year's retreat to West
out'," said Powers.
"If
you are a
-~ttha_nd
worked, for a p~s.tor,_
a
;?ws come_ out;,
M~llen· said. Virgit1ia and found the two trips
friend they are not going to rely
scltool
._.•
te~cher ._.and, _a,. social,.
:.,We
ha~ to·cut down som~ trees to be different experiences.
on you
·as
much because they
_.wo~ker
durmg a r~t~eat
m
Ot~ay,
.
and get nd of bushes.and prickers
,
",Last year we worked directly
think they would lose your friend-
_Oh10,.<
·.
.·,
.
'..
.
·.
·,
•..
.
a!ld tl)en_wemade a fire out-0fth_e
_-
with poor families. We went into
ship.''
.
.
,\.The
men stayed in the church
:•
pile anfl c,~oked hot dogs over it their houses and we did things for
Raynis and Powers agreed that
·,
rect~ry
·arid
the_
.wOmen-
stayed
..
·at'
·for
11:1~~h.
-
theitl,t' said Rayn'is. "This year
·,
last Year's retreat was much more
..
the-Anawim. House;:a
·residence
•:
The:
i:etreaters said•. they also
.the•
philosophy of the Anawim
strict and religious in nature.
··
which
.was·nained
after the poor.
found'.time to sled down the
.
House was not to. help the·. poor
"This year was a lot more
Together they worked to help
••
.mountain-side
on a sled made of a directly because they felt that the
relaxed and nice. It was a lot of
•.
build a community in the Anawim
piece, of. roofing and to get to
'poor
would just rely on them like
fun and it was made comfortable
,
.•,·House.-
•
know orie another.·
•
they rely on welfare.''
for us,'' said Powers.
Sister Eileen, who coordinated
the past two retreats, said she
•
feeis that- the students grow and
learn a lot about themselves.
"It's a learning experierice for.
our· students to go beyond their.
self-interest. We go and we learn
that in our own country, a coun-.
try with economic wealth, there
are poor people and we can learn
about other economic situations,
social systems and cultural
theories within our country,'' said
Sr. Eileen. "We grow as in-
dividuals, we grow in our value
systems and we grow in setting
our own priorities.''
Sister Eileen is looking into br-
inging a group of students to
Georgia in the spring or early
summer for another retreat to
help the poor. She said she hopes
that it will be just as successful as
the others have been.
W:hamrzaplRow! Collectors are hot. for comics
',•,,I'
.1
:·
;.•..
.
•
•.
··: . .-
..
~
...
•
...
,,
. .;
-.: .
-.
.
.
'.
'
•.
.
'
by Da~_id
Rakowle~ki
.
.
-
.
, ':
said.
•
,
,,
,
"For'· people in. their mid-
. ,
.
Brad,Tree is 15 years old.
·
;
., ·
,
teens," said Mead, "the appeal
,
..
He is an addict.
,·
.
.•
' .
.
:
..
•
• .•
may be in the money. For me it's
/,
/
How to get into the game
·
:
-
'
Each.month he spends between
in the naive and innocent spirit of
:
$90 and $100
Ori
his• habit.
."If
I
the Golden Age (1940's), and
•
didri't work,
l
couldn't afford my
.nothing
will ever touch that;"
"Don't get involved solely because of the money" is the first
habit;'' Tree said.
,
·
. .
e..
.,_,;=
"Comics are the mythology of
rule of comic book collecting, acc6rding to "Iron" Vic Bertini
. :
Tree works at Iron Vic Comics
today," Iron Vic said. "They
and some of his customers at Iron Vic Comics.
at 1 Raymond Ave., ,Poughkeep~
have the same appeal as classical
The comic industry is exploding now and is attracting
sie. His 'habit' is comic book col-
mythology, but are developed
thousands of collectors with the lure of quick and easy money,
'
lecting.
··, .
.
.
.
much more graphically."
but comic fans at Iron Vic's counsel that money is the wrong
,
.
Today the comic industry is en-
. For Lind:t,loom the appeal is
reason to begin a collection.
joying a period
•
of massive
.
mainly in the art. "Some artists
,
"If
you see something you don't like," said James Lindbloom,
growth, with such new lines as
,,
home, wheOh,e was a child .. He got
'have
a better sense of the graphic
14, "and someone says it will be worth money, that's no reason
.
_
Firstand Eclipse challenging the serious,he
•
said, "when I found
.
medium," he said. "Some great
to buy it." Lindbloom owns 1,500 comic books.
••
••.
standard Marvel and DC lines.
•
..
out you weren't a psychopath if· artists will get their start here."
"If
you're in it for the money, I feel
sorry
for you," said Brad
.
And the expanding market ha.sat< you coilecte&It suddenly became
•
For' Dickail, the appeal is in the
Tree 15-year-old owner of 4,000 comics.
"If
you don't read
.
tracted more and more.people to
•
acceptable._":.
',
··
••
.
·
.
complete package.
)'Comics
are
them, you might as well collect coins because you're not getting
:,,''
comic collecting.
,,
;~
•.
,
J~mes, Lindbloom, 11,.has col~ the near p~rfect,;1/media form
,·
the full value for your money."
•
..
··
.
,
"We have a couple of hundred
.
__
lected smc~ he was e1ght._.years
,
because
.
they· can appeal to all
.
Rule number two is buy'what you like.
,
-;<
people who reserve comic~: oil a
:_,old.:_
".It
was a· new, m_edi~m
I
ages and sectors oflife,", she said.
"I
started to buy things I liked," said Tim Mead, 23, of Ulster
f
\regular
basis;t> said ."lrqr:i','
Vic,:-
hadn'_t,'.seen,before. l'h'as really ,
<
.
:,
;.-<, ,,
.,,
..
,
..
>
..
,•, -_
.
Park,ownei of2,400 comics. "After that, I bought what looked
\
.)
Bertini,.· the .. owner, oL·Iron, :V:ic- ~ttracted by them;"'..~/:X':,:,;·
:~
,·, •.
:
,• '.'They have,.stimethingto:offer:: ,j;:Jntcrcstirig.'i,
•...
::
-'.-,; \,
,, .
,
>
,...
·.
,
•
.
,_·
)/
.9o~i.cs; .Iron
~ic'.s;;:wht~1>:;9~tbEd':
..
t
it~r9n'r
Vi,9,
._w~·o:;;~eaj~let~-a·
'-'._ey~ryo~C!/f
l\,#~d:Sa!cl;
?Ki~.s'can -
i
<-,:
T~ee~~reed._
''B~y wha_t
you like; ifyoil don't like what you're
,
..
·,
;:.;.:
m: August of_,,
19.&
I;\
carne~/O"'.e_r,
,
:
larger_:than hf e
-
li_er~:nghtJrom
·
•
enJoy,
,the
=
action;
.
while
'older
, • •
buymg
1t
s bormg, he said.
•
,
,
.
·:
J~O
ne_w
CO.OJic>lHles
eac_lf
rii~ilth,
?/~~-
~~g~
of
A
_co01_ic_,_bpo_k;
s,aid readers can, ~njoy the plot l!nes. ".
•
•
Rule number t~ree of C()llecting is to. become knowledgeable
,
.
and gets shipments of
•comics
·a ,
he s
·;
been;~ serious sinc.c 1960.
.
According to
.
Iron Vic, hts
yourself, by meetmg knowledgeable ':Ollectors
.
•
.
inonth\in,
advance' of, regular
~-'People_w~o
read t_herµ)n. the- customers range in age from 11 to
•·.
"Patronize a comic shop," Iron Vic Bertini suggested. "There
..
, .
newssta~ds.'
: ,,
.
,.,
.
,
,
40's_
lqsrc:~mtact ah? ilei:ame leac-,
,their
late· -.1()'s,
•.
although, as
you'll ~eet the ~ost kn6*,1edgeable c'ollectors and you'H develop
:
,
:
Tree 1s on,e of many collectors
_quamte~
.m
the, 60 s. The,second
Dickau pointed out, not many are
a feel for-what will be hot; '
_
i~Jhe'-Dlitchess·Countyareawho
,great>wave.
of·.,comic,\book
women:-,:::.·
•
• •
.
'~H.ang ~round with people who·have collected for a long
.• ·
frequenfironVic's.
<'.
:
.
':,.'..·.
'.,
publishing,
:·_led
by· Stan lee's
.·•,>
•!A
lot.of women are into fan-
til!le,'' advised Audrey Dickau, 22, of Poughkeepsie, owner of
, ,,
::
Tfee has beeri'seriously c9llec~
.
~evolu~ionary Maryel cqmics line
•
tasy rather
.•
t~an
_
fyl~rvel'. and
35~ comics. "Without th¢mJ would have never known what was
.
•.
~mg for only four.,years,· b_ut has
,
..
mcludmg .F;~ntast1c
.
F:our,
'.
The
.superheroes/,'
~he said ..
\:,;
.:
gomg on.''
.
..
.
.
.
been involved much longeri~''My. Hulk, Spider~an, ,t\vengers, and
In the last 20:;years; comics
The fourth and final rule is not to let collecting overwhelm
•
gra~dfather used to buy, them for,
,Iron
Man, -evoked_ ~.QJQ.t~X~R.in,.
have matured to the
:point
of a .-
you.·
.
••
\
me,'' Tree said .. c"I started
:early;
>·younger
0
readers .. This led to, col-
near~ perfect simulation of real
-.
''Don't spend all your money in one place," Mead said.
··
that's why I'm still ad~ictedi"
.':;:·
lectihg as a busines_~
fa
the mid-
.
life people and situations.
•
.
.•
Iron Vic;s last word on collecting was to "go easy. You should
,
:
By;;
compari_son;
>:Audrey_,
tiO's/'.
:·
•
•
,
.. _ ._.:
·,,-·,,
.
.
,. ..
"There's a lot of psychological
set
r:ealistic
goals for yourself and not try to buy everything
at
:<·Dickau,,
a
22-year~old:-,;'According"
t<>-.lron,:Yic,,the
drama/' Dickau said. "It's not
once.''
•
.
,:
~o:ug9k~sie resident who works'·
'finapc!al)ispe<:t
is::nov~haf:at.:
•
.•
just fight scenes, good
.vs.
bad
--------------------------~
..
·
..
/Jn;data
en.te,ring_;
has <>n.lY
_
co!·
.
t,~~:1s
~~s~
w9~Id~be-~ollector,s;
>:
::
arid_flashy costumes; The heroes
Iron.Vic.), inspiring such spinoffs
-
"My flance
'is
a worse collector
.'.
i ·
.,
lectcd for a few years.
,
•:.'<
_,,-,:,
.::. :
•
:
,
Peop!~ do it bas1c,ally for. en_- are no longer gods, they have feet
as the Superman and Conari than· I am," Mead said. "Which
·'
,.-;-','lwasediting.TheSpectatorat,
joyment/~:he:,~aid~'/"Th_ey:ai:e.
ofclay.'',
·
.
,
·,
• •.
Dutchess. (Coritmuniiy College),
•
ong~ing
:·
stories
,
•
witit
•
endless
, ,:
"There are
.some
comics that
films, but the appeal for the true
.•
is
•.
ironic because I got her
a#d i!,'.'.nurn~r,:
<>f..pcople
'.<>~'
the ~ro_ss-referenc~s.
They are ~-w~rld
,have
no•fight scenes at all," Lind-
.
fans is not the money. For comic
started."
staffwere
-into'it/'·-said
,D_ic:k~u. m 1tselfthat
.ts
constantly evolv~
·
bloo·m pro:udly.pointed out.
•.
:/~When
we didp't want/to·.w<;>rk, ing." , ,
.
. .
.
..
,
.•.
.
.
In the 70's and SO's, comics
,
we'd sit around readingX:Men.»
.
·.
Tlee agreed that the appeal 1s have progressed to
·a
point of.
· .·
Tim,f\.1ead,
'a23-year,old
coni-
~!caping
,
to ano~her W?r.Id,
•
mass acc~ptability and appeal
puter op~rator~ has collected, on"
..
After geometry, bto and digital ("Best selling novel sales couldn't
andsoft' for,
.eight,
years
..
His
,
electroJ!ics;
I
.
want
to
be compete with the total sales of a
grandmother. had, brought them
•
transferred·,far,, far away," he Spiderman or Superman," said
·.
__
-.
f
,
-fj
..
fans,
•
they have become a
. legitimate form of entertainment.
,
"l'ni·not'in it for the money,"
Tree said. "I don't see myself
ever selling my books.''
"I
like reading th•~m," Dickau
said. "I cried when Kitty {Pryde)
and
Peter
{Rasputin,
two
members of the X-Men) broke
up."
,.Singers.
at Disney World
by
Maria
Gordon
.
The members of two groups of
the Marist College choral pro-
gram performed at various loca-
.tions
in Florida between January
4 and January 14.
Members of the Les Chanson-
niers chamber singers and the
Marist Singers sang at Magic
Kingdom in Walt Disney World.
"I was elated when we were ac-
cepted because it is very com-
petitive," Dorothy Ann Davis,
the Marist College singing direc-
tor, said. "Only about four per-
cent of all the people who apply
get accepted. This is a feather in
the cap for the Marist Singers,"
she added.
As part of the choral tour, they
sang at
•
three churches, a
universtity and a high school. On
Sanibel Island, they performed
a
medieval concert at the Sanibel
Hilton Hotel. They also sang at
the Sanibel Community Church,
which consists of a number of dif~
ferent
denominations.
They
received honararium checks from
the Church as well from the other
churches where they performed.
"This helped defray the the cost
of the trip," Davis said.
The Marist Singers were given
time to tour when they were not
performing. "We got to see a lot
of different places and meet a lot
of different people. It was just
too bad we didn't have more free
time,"
Margaret Johnson,
a
freshman choral member, said.
As well as being guests of the
various hotels and receiving dona-
tions from the churches at which
they sang, they were given a pla-
que from Magic Kingdom.
,.
'.
r
,.
,
F
r
r
,
r
~
,
.,
..
,
.
• ·•;
.•
·,•:_:
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,;-,_/;i-:_.:,.t•~~-'
<·;,;;,:
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t_:~\;:-;::,,-~:}<,:/:;J_,:'_(i
'
,,.
,,,:,·:•••C;'.,§~re:~:t:~~~~iJ~tfff
~!~i}~V••··•
•
•. S<rm·uch· has been e~p~essed;>with)offcrs-·of..~clothing
'a~d-
; : o~ei:
~'the'.
'yt!ars
•
·abouf'
Mari~t·~
••
apa~tm~n!-~-~ari~g;-;>
staff(: l?er-
.
, apa·thy
:
that
·-I
··.feel'
thaf
it·
is
<.
sonncLbro~ght wmt~r clothing,
•·,
/
/
·'
••
.. ·A·,,·
•• -",',.·
rcfreshiiigfoknoY1and·shatethe. ?ff~r~'.rpcals,_and
..
shar!d.the,
/.
. ,
:,:::
~
,i~>
·
opposite·.
Shottly-aftcr·christmas
•
,••m~~<bate
l,a.l>_orc·ofcleai:µng
up
...
•·
-!:::::!l::::=~---_.:..-..,....;...L_--'-
__
~_~1,,,.:=:!..;.-----_:_.-...:..
__
:..,__.,:_.;..;.~...:_i
·
•
my·homc:<suffered
extensive fire
.:and,
cou~tirig·.the
·entire:contents
:
.
.
.
Ive
r~<._4?;Ye<L
a. /of of-·
. ..-
\,./.h<i.l-'S
t,l,o..t,
No,~~~
/,&~t1
S'°J"":d
"'P
fo,,:
fi:i;~:f!.
<:-;_
.damagc,':'resulting
in
,:a
three~·:~
of•::tnY
',h_otne;:)andFt~e·fali-.
:
o...v~,-d:S
o.~cl
~v~n
I
C4.,,,of>,,£,,::·,. cla.sse.$
a..t
the. ,-~·,...,~
~fj,.,,,,t!.
·:.
,:, --,;~.
month'.relocationJor_·myself-and
,,.
ministr~tion_/proposed;:.camp11s:
:-
·:·
.
o.
f,,d/\sc.no/a...-.
sJ,;p·
,f-
.o..i...,a.rd?
_
•
•
•
•
-
..
•
•
-,'
..
•.
,: ,
,:
inf'::three: children,·, loss:·.•or· housing: as'.•im','imm~iate.shelter
.
•
lo
t
T
.
.
. .
•·
property;•
.'and·
a· general state· of
:
-.
and
.
granted_
tnc
)he.
opporJunity
•
•
•
•.
~:k
ff
IS
1"£G./ly :
.l
·disaster.-
·-'-:/';i>,,
·,:;._,
',.,:-:·
•;
todeal•.with the tasks at:hand.:·
..
,.•
;
•
·
es;
m~
Ccrfo.,~
<·
B~fore:7(hou'rs'6ad elapsed,
1;
without the.worry°(?fbeing-inJDY
.
,'..
:e:ll,f
"!-~Aoo
/5
••
..
received.: numerous~.
offers.
,of
officefor s~veraldays.
L•
:,.-.:
·:'/
.
.
e-,.
,,,,,,,,.,Y.
,.•
..
,.
'•
assis,tance·.,
from
'.the
:.,MarisL
··\Toiµie,
.the•Marlst
COµutl\lnity·
~
fla/et,'c
o..lol/i'_f
..
Y'.·
./.
.
,:
community;Jri the days ahead,
·1•
.
has s~oin co~ceni and caring far··'
•
·.
was offered, temporary,
•housing,
.
•
beyond.my:
expectations,
Tc;>
aUof.
•
._-•-•----•--••--•-.--.-.~-.---•--•-.--•••---•llill
t'o,x(clothing'; and phys.icallabor
'
you~
riiiiny;many;'th,ahJcs.-.,?;.,
.
:·;-
:
-
•.
.::.·
·
·
·
··' · ··
·
·
·
·
·?·
•
·
to. help me with
:the
seemingly
•
·; ::
.
·
:
.
Nancy.Sc;hmauch
.
·· ••
. ·/
R
.•.'
.
.
- '
...
;
.
:·
.··
·a:
.
.
.
·.
,, ,'
endless
task.of a hotiscinventory.'
•
-
.
•,
HEOP
Counselor'
...
.
.
·.
Once upon -~,~~;
wh8~
!iylan
:-~:L~~:!~inr:.
II
;
•• , ~;;~,
Qr>
itf
ci
••
f
..
;dci,~~1~
11
te:t~tf
ff
I~i•~~b.Ar
;,l
•.·.
:
and Baez
w.as:
queen, the;sun shone bright-· Joyh.il?
.
And
,,when,
was
.
.
the·
·1ast.
0
.
time
,The
Marist College Computer orgaruiatioii" can-·use the.
'coin~.
•
•
.
over Marlstlandi Spring was in t.he air; the
veverybody
could walkhome·fro'm It?:,,
:·,
·
Society_(MCCS)'has'a-committec
·
puterin 'a:-'more
speciai~ed'way,'
.
majestic rlver~lled by and birds sang In the
..
·: ,The
..
real_1
beginning
·of··
the• River:• Day,.•" desigricd-,toihelp other· clubs:·on we may·.he ·able
;to
supplY: the
trees. After
-a·
eaµtlful weekend,
-the,
last.
···probably
wasn't much
_different
·from.
the •
camptis;·Wc are;s:C.A.':C, the. software to make'that ·possible.·
thing senior Ma lstlte~ wanted to see was a,
--
one In the story. Seniors went dpwn·to.the •
Stu'dent·
•
·cooperative
'for'·
These
sbftwarc·'packages.'wilLbe
Monday.
..
..
.
.
. .
.
. .
'.·_-::
..
river; played guitars; welcomed,the sun a!'ld
,
Acadei:nic·
coniputing.
We
have
·
sold'.:·to. your, club through
'a<
·They
had survived winter, the tolls of
.a
•
enjoyed each 9t.her's company. They. spept
.
'
severalfunctions
oncanipus;
':,
'·
transfer of funds at a' mutually
.
harsh·life and seven semesters of,college.
·
a day away from.:classes and enjoyed at
..
·
•
First; we
·assist
.-·student
run·. agreeable
fee:•
'.<
i
•
..
•
,·,
•
.
They had spent every Monday since they
:-thelrbest
··•
•
!
·<-·;.
-"·, .• -·
.•
''·:
··-'
,
·'.,·····-··•·
clubs
..
and orgariizat.ions
iri· ob-''
--·Fina1:f)_';_S;C~A:C;'willmaintia_n
•
.,"
were children· 11stenlng to things they dldn!t
• •
<'.
Rlver,Day· happened because the ~erilors
taining access
:
to
;the
school's
•
any program tha~ we create, so, 1f
want to hear. It was time for a change. The
wanted a day o~f, not because they
were
too,
c::o!Jlputer.
7
':.
,:t_>,
:./t
1
:-->,
". •
an~thi~g·,,sho11l~
J~?
,_wrong;.
or
senior senior Marlstlte had always, a~mlred
:;
dru~k
·
to·: go to cl~sses.- They didn't
_em;-·
. ..,
Sec6iid;
·we
.
create generalized•.::
futu~e
<oc_lub
•
presidents
:.
want_
. •
the flowing wate.rs below his land and spent:· b~rrass'themselves by showing the world
.•
programs that any club can use
..
•.
mod1ficat1ons
...
made, we will do··.
much of his time clo~e to them. Oil.this
·one
•• their absolute
:..worst.
They· didn't destroy
•
..
•
At this time we have membership that at no:charge
to your club.
-
·.
,· .
beautiful day,}he Invited hi~ fell()W vlUagers
property; and they dldn'.trlsk_thelr
lives.
>i;_·:
;';
Hsting(and:a•progfam that1J1clps,
:"
]f:yc:,u·.:~r~
·ip.t~rest~
in using·
•
to share the_,peacefut,wa.tert,>:,;;,
. {_.)
·----::
· -r\~l_~·9e\lts,
b.eQinnfng(R!vef: O,ay,,_~~•.J~eq
• ' •
you (irid ihe b~(ti~~Jo
'hol~
club
\
the.·servi~
:<>f
S;C::A'.C. or you
· ...
Word of· his geMrosltyyqulckly,,spread-/
,'stead.llydegrad,d;,·c/
,.v
•
.,
,;.
'·:':'\•'.;<'•'<·
.
•
meeungs;and expect the:highest·.·
..
·
..
·llaye:,,:a!lYj-
quest1onsJ
:,,ple~se
;'.
..
throughout the
'
larid;f"and\
s'oon
··
he·· was
·-
..-~'.
'It ls·so far
from
the· original ldea'•now.
that
<
,-
atteiidarice;i
':Now
f'1jider
,
¢on~
<
·
conta¢t' us::through·
campus m~il
<
•
joined
.
by every Inhabitant of
·Marlstland.
·
.
Its founders
probab.lY:W6uldn'frecognlze
..
lt.'
. .:
·'
.
sidei:atiori~are;pfogtams
0
for·c1iJb
,_
.oj':thc
cgmputcf,mempfa~ilit.y.,~~
They brought music, food and ~rink. And, by
•
·
A 6eer
-keg.
bears·; little.,
resemblance
'to
a<·''"
budget accounting:
arid·a package./ a:ccc;,llnt
code H~AK_.:
:,
'"
>,·i/
;
·'<-
the banks of the majestic w~~ers;.theymade
:
gul~~r.
>
Every
?year;Jor:,the,.
pa.st,~,three
to.--sche!:lule.,club·,
events.:: ~e
;_·
•
-
:·
._. :·
•<·
,,;:.·.:
Smcerely,
merry as the sun. shone bright all through'
some<>ne
has gotten so dlsgustlngly·drunk.
·membership·.
listing, pa~kage
:-is ·_
•
...
,.
.
::.':
. ,_~teveEastw<>Od,
the day..
.
:
•.
.
..
"· ,,
< •
.
thathehasbeenserlouslyJnJured:,'
·'
·:-'''
beingoffercdfrccofcharge,toall,
..
•
.. ·
Cha1rman;S.C.A.~'.
But all too soon, tfJe sun began
to
set
and
•••
•
••
Rl_vei'
Day
was
supposed to be.something
.
clubs.·,;.
-·-
.
_
'.,,
-:
•
- -·.· -.-
,
.'·
• :
->.·
:e'-
(
Jerry,<:,ro~ley.
It was· time to return to Marlstland
..
Slowly,
good.'. to
,
rem~mb.er,: but
'i
how
..
111any
.·,we
also: cater to the specific
-
SentorProgrammer,
.
the people scaled.· the·. hill an~
·,reluctan~ly
..
•.
staggering drlinks:cart recaH: anythln~ after··
·.
:
:._.::
...
;.,:-··
,-:.
.
.
:·.,
;>:
,
•
•.
.
·.
.
...
,
..
S.C,A.C,
·
settled back to life on
a·
Monday evening.·
, •
.•
they,sober,up?,
.;,~/: ·.,,:,::·:;,
•
,-
,: :.
,.
;·
·<·
.
•.
·
··-
•·
.·,
-
::~.:
'°
• · . ·
•
.;:,_
::-:<,,'
•
•.
•
,·::
·: ~;:.
,
·
••
b~~~e::;n~~~ s:m~~:a~~~e~~:.
~iif
f
t!1l~
:·
'
~i:;n~~;e
roh~oiri;fr~~wi,e~~=i!i~~f~l;,;
·.:·,··
..
•
...
·•D;:
.•
"ea·;.,;·
.-.r:;:
•.
E.tdi;:
..
~.\ti.o:{r:.:,
•.
::.:1_.:,
..
:.tt
..
·:;.':·.•;·'.'.·.:·:•.:•:.·.:.:.·:i.l.:
..•.
,::::':.·i·.···:•·:.c
..
·'.
..
·_;_~.;_:h····.·_
..
-'
..
r·,_·
..
1·.··.·.~
...
····.t.·.·.·'m.~.,&
.•.
_.•.:_·~.·,~}tj~il:\
>•,
./.t}-'
:
.;;::};/
••
.
sorrow.· He bowed befpre, ~.Is god and .. said;
-·-::
emt>~rrassed
-i~s_elf:pr
:the fro.nt.
page,
()f ~he_}
.
· .
_ -..
~~rij~y··
6ur:'.
ca.tds
·
a~d-·letter;/Just
':
"Oh, if. only we could.have_.one
day.a yea,ras
:
,·
..
Pough~~,p~le Jo1.1rnal,
:···, :/•:.•·•
..
'
•···
i .. •
>.
,_,
-·
·
•.
·Recently,
:thc·.studeni.
League
•
uke
..
tis,;t~ey
·ha"'.e·been.separatcd
,';
beautiful as this ... thisRlver Day!-".·
.
;
:-.
,·
.·•.
·
•.
:·
Is It any wonder that the. ad,:ninlstration:
.
•
sponsored
a Christmas card drive
-from .thefr•
families
and
;friends,,:
·
...
:'
And. the skies operied and.
:a
boorrilng
'-·
sworE! to pu, anend to River Day?
·. •. ;
;
•'y\,.
\for ·t}t~·'.Alllc:tican
;arined
fqrces·.
'an(reall:Yineed
io,bear."Jrpni
the
•>
:
.·
.. •·
voice cried out, "So it shall be as long as th.e
.
'.
If
•
senlo~s
,
can n.ot·. prove
..
that, they·
..
are
;\:
,
stationti<f
al, o~er the\w'<>ktd;-:1;a:n(<
~•outside~:::
\Vorld:~•:,+Reineinber
':.
:
•
sun shines on the blessed event~''.;'--~·,.,\
•
·-•·
..
.
,:respQ'1Sl~le:
enough
:to
.·take::
a
.-day
,
for,·;> pi:o'lldt~ say:,thiit-:~h~'.drivc
was~ri:6!heiii/joo;-s.,af··:lic;,lidays
-sucf,
·as···
-
. .-
,
Nice story, isn't It? It was'( a peaceful,
ther:nselves without destroylng·property ar1d,
:
9vc;rwllelining
:
success>,
Over. 90
::
;
EasteU?thaiiksgiving;~,,
and/
:
of
•
.
joyful day, Pe9ple enjoyf!d them.selves
,and .:,
-themselves;
River.Day should never: happen
•.
,
r
parti~i~ri~'.c~~tribµtc:d
386
caid.s
:·
course'-Chtistriiasf}
?':';i1-:: :\
;t~':.
:
.
could. walk· home. The. day
,dldn';t •
~t~rt: the
••
•
·again(
',·,:
.·
'
•. •
,
·,. ,
:-,_·,
>,··
i\,, ·_.
:/:,..--,
.
·
: ::
·
•
. :::"
...
•.
-. ·
and
j:,'ur::total:stirpasse&thaf'of
:~?~t
N~t•iyear/,we: afe; hoping to.
:
.
night·before and the sun st:tone\brigt,tly, It
,
r
But)t·could be
a
day'to'remember7
.If
;
.Iast::•:.y~r's<toP
''!contrib_utH1g:c:',llave'.-tanothe(,\Cliristmas·J.card
::"
was the first River Qay.
•
,
••
-
.·
·
.. •.
'r
.
•
. .
. ;
/people
stay sober enough. It could be a day
-:.
schooJ;<;:,:,:/·:,;,~:'.:
:\>:,~_:
1~
'.'.i··
~,;,::::
..
,·
':
:drive'.apd:we'irivite·eachand·every.
•
It the people who started· It kn~w what It
:
•
..
·when.
seniors
.
take
.
time to
ib_e'.
•
good to
•
...
-.
\Vhen )Ve
retumcd,fromWinter,
V.'ritember?.
of-' the: Maris(. com~
would become, they. probably v.iould have
./.
them·selves
..
•
:
'.
-7•'.
.-
.•
\
_,:·>·'':.·><
>>
-·.
Interscssj~n~·ma~y
of those:w.ho;:_,munifyto,participate::There·ifso
prayed f_or
a quick end to the world;.:·
··
·. •.. •
•
•
•
:
It could be
a
spring Monday wt,en·the sun
participated
P
wti:e:,:
pleasantly
:·:much\wei
can: learn from these
.
When was the last time It was sunny o.n a
.
shlne.s·and the peaceful waters flow:,
:
•
•
.
surprised;·Insidc,their
mailb~x~;
·:people
and it f~ls goodinside'to
.
•
•
•
•
•
•
• •
ther found Jettcmfrom::aU-'~ver
_,:,
brighten the day of someone
who
· :··
•
"··
.
-
,.
~he.world.wtj~ten'
by.the:_men,anc;l.:
:.,
is doing so much forus.·
s ,~,;
:;;;-,:,:,
.
•
•
_.. ·
·
\
•
·
women·:-Who. feceivt4/0~t;;·~ds/·-
·····<.-
·:\~·.
-
;
?/·:--· ::;
.
.-
,;·~----~--:
;t;:oin.81lisa.ma
·_'
_· .••
h..
\
'·
·
·
· · ·
·
1·
·
•
:
•:k..
For
'all
-i.those:·'_st~d~ts:·;w~o'
. ,,
Chairperson~Public
.:
.
·:T.
:.·.
·e·
.••.
-n·.
·ew··.
:.·
...
---
o•
.·.·o·
:·
•
;
..
_:.
receiv_ed:-a~eply;Jen¢<.,uraie.yo~r::!-::
RelationsGomoiitt~•
•
t~
wnte back;· these ~opl~ r~~)'f
r:,
.
StuderitLeaguc·
•••
·:
•
•
•
--
.
._
-
'
-
•
-
•
•
•
~.-
•
•
·:~
. '
.
.
--.
-~
.
l
~.
.
.
·
.
!
We begin a new year with a new look - a
The riew
•
nameplate was designed by -
new nameplate. It's a surface alteratlon,an
•
Kristina Norgaard, graphic' designer
'and •
external change. It is meant only to be more
..
adjuct instructor of art at Marlst.· The:em- •
modern and attractive, not to
.change
the
blem
.on
the left of the name Is the·offlcia('
•
goats
e>f
our newspaper.-
.
.
,
•
.. .
Marist seal; the emblem· on the· right; the
::
.
The Circle will continue
•
to operate as
•
official MarlsHogo.
-
..
.
·.:
.-
•
•.
.
•
professlorially as possible· to cover. events
•
•
The new look of
•
The Circle
.
wlll not
,
fairly. It is
•
a student pub.llcation, and its
change its purpose or goals. We thlqk the
staff learns as the· newspaper grows. With.
.
change Is an· Improvement and,
•
we· wlll
•
•
the cooperation of
-
the Marist community,
continue to strive• towards professlonallsm
we will continue.to le~rn and to grow;\
,
and to Improve The Circle.
TH€
CIRCLE:
Edi\or
Associate Editors
Sports Editor
Photography
Editor'
Lou Ann"Seelig
•
Senior Editors
Brian Kelly
Pau·1
Raynis
News
Editors
BonnieHede
Ian O'Connor
Viewpoint Editor
Margo Kucich
.
Buslnus Manager
'
•
• . .. .
Cofrection·.
''-'·
;-
.
·.
__
•• .
.
·.
.'
.
. •
'·
.
. .,· .
•
.. ._ •
...
·
.• .•;
.
.t
.
·,
.
·: ' .'
'.
,.
•
.
.
."·
.. ·.
-:
In a Dec. 13 article, "Too much demand~
t®
litde
space,".
The
.·
Circle erroneously reported that Prof.
Paul
DelColle
bad
-sub-
mitted
a
noor
pian
for
the
Lowen
Tbom'a.s
Communication Arts
•••
~--Ce1:1ter;
that·. included
.WMCR. -DelCoile's
....
plan
WoUld
·provide.
. :.
space.for an audio production facility, bat not the-campus ndio
.
station.
.-'
· •
•
•
.
,.,
.
.
-.·-
:
••
·
•.
-·
•
·
.
•
Also,· DelColle
said
lie
bel,eves
housing
sp~ce
~n
be
created
in
.•
-
Marist
Eas~
but
not· the Lowell Thomas Center, as
TIie
Circl,
reported.
-
•
.
Christine l)empsey
John Bakke.
Carl MacGowan
Amie Rhodes
.
Pete COiaizzo
laura Reichert
Advertising
.Manager
Cartoonist
Graphics
.
Faculty Actrisor
BemieHeer
laura R~ichert
Beverly Morlang
David McCraw
l
-
--
- - -
- --
- -
.
-·
:--·.
~;
..
_.
-~.
•.
....
. .
::=
l~--~o·•••:,NJan.i1,
.1H5
-,THE CIRCLE~
:•g,•
~ ~
,}i1}\,t.,~rfi3.t
1
:'.'tt.llisi~Ma.n.iSt.•.owe.
its•····stUtlents?•.
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.• by David McCtaw'/}.'\~;;
t•:::,:_
:':·:
: ;_
betam'e;deai!to,:'me
\vhatJict
was
:.<B/is'
almosf automatic; the. ones.
.
acknowledge those
·strengths.
We
>' ' •• :
•
• ..
;c-:>;})):-::\f\-':°;{'.'~
:,_\)?t,it.?
-':'
_,_(',:/}rea)iy
jryihg';'tci·say:
.Marisr
ow'ed_.
:·:with :questionable content, silly
:
.
have some excellent instructors
:.
-:
:
.
:
;
>I.J<?lind
lllYs~l(ilot long ago af' him something better;
-.
• :
, :
>
:
assignments,'. and. few demands;
•
with
•
a rare
•
commitment ; to
•
• a pai'ty. witll:~evert1lyourig Marist
.!:::.::
-I_have been thinking
_abounhat
·/the night classes that adjourn· at
teaching, arid we h_ave
some first-
•
gradti~tes W~~it.one
of
them c~ine
;
'conversatipn:
these past few days· eight::'l'i:Lie,
__
they, are not the rule
•
rate students. They -'-: with some
. o-..;er.·.::io··teU/me
:soniething·11e·;· _arid
trying tc{decide what to make
.·.
ar. Mari~t;
,:
but
•
they are
•
not
.
help from the
.
-academic
•
ad-
•.
•
_thought'-.F
should know: He
.was<·
ijfii.
l
·cannot
write it
off
as just
:
isolated exceptions either.
•
ministration. -
can begin, I
,angry,-~
angry at himself 'and
.
on~;
ex-student's personal com-
.
• Undeman~ing courses may at
believe, to make Marist better.
••
• angry_at Marist;
.·
•,;,
:_.
-,.,e-.
: .
.
:
plajitt:,While I know of many re-
·nrst
seem b~nign. The professor
We shouldn't fool ourselves, of
.
::,_,','l
can'.t believe what.I spent all
_::
cent. graduates
,who
do
not share
.
s:tits back onl assignments, and no
course. Achieying academic ex-
-that money'for/'--he·t,egaii;iHe·,
his.sentiments;who feel thefgot
.
students complain. They arc hap-
cellence -
•
real academic ex-
.•
was
,c_talking/abouiO:
his
:·
co_Jlege,
:
9µt
of
Marist- ~ith a reasoria~le
:
py
·to
be fre~.of the work, and so cellence, not idle sloganeering
"'"7
cdticatfon/andiri quick orderr:he
••
education~
'f-also
know thafm~riy
·:
is tlie
,pi:_ofessor.
So what's the
is a complex task, one tied into
listed
·
some
:of:
his,
.'~\asses
•
--'--:
.·of
.
them would·
:say.
that" tJ\eir
•
pfo~lem?
,· ._:
•
.
admissions practices, hiring pro-
. _"joke~,.••
h1fcalled the~ ~-~las~~s
• .
cl~ssm~te was right about at least
..
:
_,_The ~robl~m. is
.
that
the
ced_u.~es, faculJY
••
evaluati~n
w~er.e, ~e ~;lli able.
,to .shde
;bY
,
one, thmg: T,h~re are too, ,many undemanding courses are like a
pohc1es, the quality of leadership
w1tho~Ldomg W~~h !)fan~thmg;
.
classes
-at
Man~~· trat
.do)!;
t ~sk cancer oil· the system. They eat
at t~e. college, a~d t~e ~orms and
and,
.w,nhoutieammg
much
.m_the
:
enough ?f student~ and don,: t g~ve:
..
away at· the college by lowering
_
trad~t1ons of_
the ms!1tuuon.
.
proces~:
i-~•·:~;;:;.:-.<>/'.;-?,
..
_cnoughm;return
•.
_
••
.
•
expectations of.work and·raising
Stlll,._I ~m convmce~ that we
.
·_
,''I
spent what:
·c_s4qo
a "class?.'':·
• :;-
Of all that :was said jn the con.: expectations of\ grades. Studen,.ts can begm, m small but_ impor!ant
''he:saiij
·bitterly;
''Evei-y:>'firiie I_ verfatfon, that·is·ihe' point·that
•
wlfo
take themi_begin ~o resent w~ys, to ~h~nge the m
5
utuuon.
thin~'.about,ho!' mu_ch trlone.y I·_· stays with<me: Yes, I can make
--p_rofessors
who\ de~and-
_more,
FirSt• ManSt s_beSt. stu~ents nee_d
owe now, J'getreally-mad.''._:.
·:c
.
·
the argument-that I-did then~
and
..
they,_grpw_CYIJ.1<:al
about a to st0P s_uffemig_
m silence a~d
,_.
:I
l_istened
patieritly:to·;his
·com~·
.that•
nobody· compels·students
·to
..
grading system that
seems·
so in-
••
s~op makmg·do with what they_ re
plaints~ and
l
sympathized, but· I
.•
take easy_ courses
•
and do
.
the
.
corisisterit. Professors trying._ to &(~~n_.
.
They need to l_obby, m-
. •
alsckfelt the' heed to' point' out
•minimum·..;.;.
-but
I
also
have
to hold the line on standards
·soon'
d,v,~uaHy an,.d colle~uvelr,
_
~or
what l considered to' be .the ob-
·acknowledge•
something else: Jt
feel embattled. They begin to
q1:1aI1ty
co_1,1rses
and
iq~ahty
m~
vious:
,Nobody
made:
-hiin
take•
:
shouldn'f be, so easy to get.by at. wonder why they bother. Slowly, Slructors
1
m every maJor every
those
_<:lassef
,·aricl
-,
~hose
•
pro".
>
Marist, and it':SJime. we put
_the
educa~ion clecays:
.
.
_
sem~Ster:
..
,
.
•
. '
.
fessors, ;ind he knew e-'Ca~ly
what
.
issue out on the table.
• •
.
•..
-~ •
".
•
.
• •
.•
.
.. ..·_
L1kew1se,
tt s time for those of
·
ti{ei
ect'
when lieisi ried: u
_;for_:. .
..
:
.
,
..
,
,.
.
. : .
. .
•
I d~n t know wheth~r
.the
pro-
us on the faculty to· take a hard
••
,
the'·
m·
·
PH.e
·_c·•·
uld.
·
·ha···v·
•·eg'd
,
·
e· P
e:
.
Maybe vve.should:start by
.com-
blem 1s. worse at Manst than at
.
look at our own courses, at the
.
o
on mor
..
·
•
•
·
1
• h
•
l
.
'b·
d
.
h
• • •
d I d '
.
.
•
tharith
•
· • • m'·,,
·/
·
·
.-·.·
::-
..
mg.c ean,w1t ourse ve_s,
•
Y:
,a
-
ot er msutut1ons,, an
,
..
on t
••
assignments we make, the Stans
•
.
.
fmt~mpu
,
•
•,
:,
.
••
•
mitting that all of us
7 •
students,
much care. The important thing is
.
dards we
-set;
and the grades we
•
academic achievement at Marist.
Moreover, we need to stop preten-
ding that what our colleagues do
is strictly
somebody
else's
business.
•
Concerns
about
academic freedom are real, but so
are ones about competence, and
one mark of a profession is its
willingness to accept the unplea-
sant responsibility of keeping its
own house in order.
•
Finally, Marist needs academic
administrators who will insist on
quality and encourage and sup-
port -
in meaningful ways -
those instructors who do likewise.
None of these steps is a cure-
all. None of them comes without
risk. All of them require effort
and persistence, perhaps with lit-
tle apparent
gain at times.
Together, though, they represent
an essential first step: that we stop
looking the other way.
•
When I think back to my con-
versation with my former student,
I struggle with the question of
obligations. What does Marist
owe its students?
That is a good question, and
one we should struggle with, but I
think _ that' with academic ex-
cellence; the real question for all
of us is this: What do we owe
ourselves'?
•
.A,ht_tle
_reluC!antly,
he
,~gr~ed,, ,
faculty, adm_inistrators '- know that we address the problem here
give. We need to talk openly as a
b_ut do1!1g-so did n~t
·
ta~e away
• •
there's
.·
a.-
·.
problem .. We·_
..
kno:,v and
.
start.
,
building
•
•
.on
our,·
•
faculty about what standards are
.
:either
_his.
anger ?r his d~_bts, an~ aboutthe classes that are re_gular- strengths.
.·
:.
.
"i-
_
reasonable and what steps are
David Mccraw is an assistant
as. the conversation co11tmue~,_._::1t
ly canceU~~; the courses where the
And it's
.important -that
we do
necessary to raise the level of
professor of communifation arts.
.
Al'Jd
now
the :neW
song:
.:/
•
:;;r,liit!it7J~f
t1f
~M~E::::.~f;f
i~i .•
~.
-
.
•
B.i~me~!ol~gl~t
:·
•
:,.,·t
:i-,:-•
,
;)
:'':''.
<· ·
p_rophecy
_1s'
true.• and destined_
,
to
'· ..
tage· over."thc
•
Tui:nultuous 1960s,
_o:;;:_;
:::.
":-h
'.;:
f-,
\
·'• ./:-·
.
•.·
..
,:: •.•
<.·.
.
;:
be. fulfilled iil thiS. W!!°y;
However'·,
.
:
-'- less
•
hos me parents
•
toward via
....
":·College
students
..
and.
·,global
·-the
riuiin; complaiiit·among
;the ·sionary-change.
This will,in turn,
••
•.
• consciousness are due to fulfill a
:
futurists who attended the 9lobal
produce
.
a more enlightened
•
' prophecy, provid~d that prophecy·•<•:
·
<
•
.
.•._
..
.
'·
·
.
,:,
•
rri_earis_
t~at by thinki~g globally Coilfe~e~ce 1980 was
''The
parenthood through the children
an,d
;
~<:t.irig
·;-
locally ~e,
•
th:
••
-missing
'.ingredient:'
or
:'No
vi~ of- our time themselves. So that
'
~ 1
,11nan_1ty
oft he Earth, will be go:,;
__
~ioil to guid~ us" in· terms of a by the time we reach the Vi~
.
1!1~
fron:i g()verna~ent by d:l:ga-
•
framework \hrough which to par-
sionary
i
990s, we will have a
1
!
0 n.:
t9 qemocr-~cy, ~Y
'P<!rttcipa-
·•
tidpate in th~ kind of democracy.,. third geriefati6n movement, back~
tton:.
-·,.
•.· > _
·:
'' :-• ·i•
• ·:
-.<::
:
we need.
•
•
_.,,
••
•
ed by the residual understandings
H,.1s a knownJact tllatrno~al
_..
•'
_:··.·
..
·
~-
.••
:._
'··
....
of the 1960s. History reveals
·r
:_;~ssu:s:
c_.
o_urlsles·,.haved
,,beg1;1n_.
ht~
;,;~\oiito_,f.ihe'\rie~ber_s_:~f.
the
_you·
study it;. that no. g;e~t
...
iascmate co ege stu ents m. t e
•
·
.·•
>.
-
.
•
,.
·--·
·..
•,>
•
-.
.
•
m v
e t f
n
·
·
·
h
·1
•
•
uriiied ~tates recently with the
Co~fer~nce:s~,bi'ni_ttep:a
paper,on
__
o 5,,n s
••
u Y· tnump
unt1
·
iprospectofchangingthe.worldby
the theme:war~ed·m.~~ri~ture,:
,-.
:·
:·
• -.
.
____
.
.
"thinking globaHy,; acting local-
'.'Wh_ere th~re
•.
is
:
no v.1s1on,
,·the·.
th,e residuaJ. understandings of t~e
ly.'.'. Thisois because:a number of-
people pensh.''._.: (1:rov: ~9:l8)
•
·developing"in~piration
reach anp
publications/are; pioneering_ the
·:;-Meanw~lle,
anAII1epcan prisoner r<>ot·in
.t~_e
third generation. I ain
•
,.way:/;_;•,:·:..:,;-::.'
.
::
,_,;,':::
-_.
,,'.:>c:'
-~~ttymg
to,comm1t,to paper the first generation;
,you
are second
•••
)-\'A.°
II1ajor breakthroughjn_.this
•
v1s~o.n
_he had ~xp_enenced aJong generation ifyou are a college sti.r-
_·
cultural-direction
-was·•
the First•·: tJ.tese
Imes, but_lt was so deep,that dent today, have been or shall be-
..
_
GlohatConference cm the Future
\_it-was,
diff1c11lt
.to;c6mI1111nic_ate
one within the same timeframe;
•
helcf;in Torontc:F·danada at ihc
:,:w_itllou(
_S()Undiilg·
presumptuous and your children are-destined to
·.
outset'ofthel980s}.it
W3$
spans>< !o-pe?_ple,
who ~ere notready for be third generation
...
of· global
sored bytheW<>rld_I-titure_Society
•
tJ;
.Fmally,.
durmg. 1983, l w~s ~inded local action. The cause
{49 I 6,<:St.=0(Elmo-:i::J\xe,,
:_
abl~Ho
.brea~-
ttie·story __
of t~1s· and e.ffect of a legend prophesied
·
Washingt<>n;O.C.·200i4)/ou(of
,_:_enhghten<>r.:
dow_n
.,'.}nt<;>.
a inScripture!.
·_.·
.
.
.
,
·• which. came/the· book
;·eniitled
rg<>velscript
along with his vmon;,
:
Thr«,ugb ·:The,, s0s;
;::
TbinJ(ing·
•.
and recen~ly i~ has been, publish-
Accordingly, I would sugges~
Glo,-ally; Acting µ,cany, now be-
~d.
~
:
:
::
/
--·
•.
••
,
•
:·:
..
,.
that
.
anybody interested in the·
·ing.llsed_asa.college_tcxtat_Eill-
.. ,,
• ;·
.,·, ...
•
_,
.·-
.. ,pros
and cons of this vision
pire_State and other universities.
:·
En~itled Silent. Tliunder,
•
it should consider the published
Isaac-Asimov and Alvin Toffler
-
~h?ws
.
dramatically
~ow results of the Conference on the
• •
are amorig its autllors ...
: ,
•
.•.
•.
-
.
: :.
m~g~tref!ds a[).~--~omputers;
~t~eo Future·_
·held.
at Toronto during
• W.hh
•
global·· consciousness·
'.
and audio, religion ~l!d'poUucs, 1980; and possibly follow it up by
- among college students on the rise
;
econom! and emouo~s a~e
•
all reading Silent • Thu_nder (Bundza
and Halley's Cornet on its way
to
,
headed m !he cultural direc_uon.
of House, Winkley Pond Road, Bar-
the Earth,·it may·well be that the
a synergeucal
_world
or Gridarian
.
rington, N.H. 03825). By then,
second half-of this Reaganomic · Democracy (~op}e
·_developi~~-
you will be informed enough to
Decade will . break out
.
into
.
slowly_ a
·
gri d . sySt em.
discussthe matter knowledgeably
something· like this. The -Old
•
wor!dwide).
•
Accor~mg t.~ this. with others.· Which could be fun.
Testament"of
the Holy Bible·. outlme
0
f the future m rel~uon to And remember, not much, if
speaks of a "new song" that will the past, the underSlandm~s <;>f
·
anYthing, is worth doing unless·
"magnify the law, and make it .the l~s
are very_ much alive m
•
the doing can be fun. "Think
honorable.". (Isa.· 42:10,21) The
the residual culture that th0se globally,
.
act locally, perceive
New Testament says, "They sang
newly," said one of the members
a new song ... for the healing of
beautiful and painful times pr~ of the Conference on the Future;
the nations." (Rev. 14:3; 22:2) So
duced in
·the
parents of_ioday•s and share this powerful learning
it definitely refers to a global
children. As those kids come in stance with others -
or perish in
development.
contact with this vision and take it a visionless mess.
.
Since people feel the spiritual
home to their parents, something
·An
Invitkttion to
~
.
.
;
i
Qur
Re8.ders
...
.
,•
'
-
:.
,,
·_.
•.
For the past year, Viewpoint has
.
b~en a forum for
:afssays
tritten by
.
Circle-.readers. We have tried to
comnie-ntary/ on a ~ide range
of topics, from smoking in public
to the role of religious studies in a
college education,' from IDWI
.
.
.
.
,
\
.
laws to diplomatic relations with
-the Vatican .. We have been happy
to.provide the space.·
But we're not sure we can con-
tinue doing so.
·Frankly,
the response has been
.-
,,
•
dtsappointing.
·We
appreciate those
...
_.readers
who havetaken the time
•
to write for: Viewpoint, bu·t they
have been. too· few. We like to
think Viewpoint is
-
an important
•
part of the paper, and we want to
keep it in The Circle. But the deci-
•.•
sion is really yours.:
Once more, we are inviting you
to submit essays for publication.
They should be 500 to 700 words
and sent to Pete Colaizzo, The
Circle. If we get contributions, we
will continue to run Viewpoint. If
we don't, we will use the space for
other things.
We think Viewp9int's worth
keeping alive. We hope you do,
too.
within them long before they
in those parents will be con-
•
Dr. Theriault answers to many
become political or even entenain
sensually validated by the hope of nicknames and can be reached at
~litical thoughts, the spiritual in-
their children.
Otisville FCI. He is a prisoner
fluencc is due to formulate the
So the next half-of the Global • there.
_________________________
..
-:
..
"
...
i
\'.
r
l
'
I
--~
\)I
a
--·-----·
••
··-··-,,
.
_.....l...._
_________________________________________
_
·;,·,;,
.
'~.:
.
~~
..
---Page·6-THE
CIRCLE-\Jin.·31<1-~
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.
by Beverly
Morlang
_,;_
..
\
.,.
·,·-
: ...
·.
already:;beeri:said?
;Except
thitJ.f:
•
ly
·Hills.Cop!.ns
still a good film,·.· film decides to.get heavy'with,Jt'sf.
,
..
i·r
i'f'
\•;'.
,_·.
:·
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.
:\':_,.-·.
;•;/t;
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kit;
.:\withou~hrequiriog:\'it's /~t_ai:
i,:'to
-:'
~essiah~like·:symbolis'm/the'only}/
1mpress1ons
: ..
-'.
•The (i111e~has
come
'to.·
ltill
'fwo
{iperhaps\you:'.shoukfr;The··•film.:if.-":s'fretch
.his'talehts
one
bit.
:;~L-,)rft~/thirtg
·:setting
:
heavy
-'._is:
'the;:au-~°i:';·
birds with on~:,ston~,
•
t~
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revJ~w
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?~·
_The
~eco~~
.fil!11,:
\~Duni?;'pr~.:=-.?,
dj_e~fe's
,_cyel_i~s;
:-~nf
just-
-~henf :,;
two of the Christmas rush movies.· talent;·:whicli 1s,
.,oPcourse;-.
un-:
--~m1sed
to be a sc1ence-fict1on~film
.. :
you thought· 1t
·was·
safe to. fall-; .
•.
•
bef9re'they c([mpletely
'disappc~r·_~-·_questio'nablc;
Howe\ier, Murpl}f
•;I
classi~, equal
·t~
·or:~uiP,assi~g,th~;;:
~l~p}fi.Jhf ~P,~~t,er
,.,a
;fa(,tslo?.;~-·:,
•..
• ...
from local theaters.
•
Both
·were
•
is
.funny
-on his· own, . he really . book on· which'.\it'is
:based'.-
.Talk
•
. J,enng1·
..
sac;hs.tic;
:
~uman·-zeppelin;-:·
,
•
T.,.;.,
.
WO
• awaited with·. great -
•
expectalions
.do~sn'
t need>, the
.
garbagey
•
:about your brokeri"'promise:
!"
The'/ flies:
o~itot_he
-~1:_reen
and sucks.the/?,;_ •
.
-~
·but,
any similarhies
,
end there language-he· so
·often
falls back-
,
film .
·opens
;
·with,.':a',:i
'iiariaiot,, ,:.;ooze''.•Ji:om\fa~-
squashed': mouse:/' ,
'
because one has become the top
on. This,
.
though perhaps
.
the princess,-who',kecps~
fiding'in"·a·nd·.~
/Sick,
"sick/sick.:
Ahd this from. a;; •
_-.
~,\
Christmas
grossing. film for'· th_e
•
lucrative movie's orily major flaw,
.
caimot
•
•
out whUe she speak"si;
Sije fin;llly/?. ~ci•ft buf(;·_Firially, if )ou
·didn~i-\
,
L
Christmas season a(ld
·the
.other
.
go by unri<>ticed, it is
.
prevalent
:
gratefully. f!l~~s
olii.'aii?~ihe
·filril'"''.,
i-ead
·the~:boolc
,
you· won'Cki:tow;
••. .
.
•
•
has all but disappeared with nary:· throllghout/the, film
·(definitely.
:slides
full~speed:.dowithill fronl'.'.'what•s·going
·on
and if you:did;~,
;
···•
•··
·._films
·B·
:,_·ct··ct··
.
u
..
,
y
/
•.;,
•
..
Holly:,
,
I
a whimper.-,·',
•
.
•
:
n~t S(?mething )'ou'd. want to.take
•there.
May.such alarll_lingly/~elf->twell/bettei- to g~,:See: "Beyerly:>
••
What· more may be said. about·
•
your kidsis.ter'to) .• Buf if you can
.
·conscious ·
drivel never. be
..
•
seen
'·Hills
Cop''·.·then· have
·your-
im.!·
•••
"Beverly
.Hills
Cop" that hasn't
.
gei through'the language;·"Bever-
.
again on· the
.screen.
(When
the
•:'.i
agi~ationdestroyedforyou.:
':
.·
·
/
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.
.
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,
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'-_
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•'.:.
•
,
;
best and the least ~~ll'kii~~-n .•
,
••
voice went fromboyishinnocerice
'
fr~strat~d ati.thc(ios;;··'His' in-;:;
•
•
Today's· trivia.•buffs
_cari
'find
to a feyered intensity.,anf ev~ry\,>fluence•!,)11:suc~essivegenei:ationsii.
•
.
There are very few fa~ts in the more . than enough>
Of
acts
::arid
octave m between. He,was better
:of-
rriusicisans is immeasureablc.
.
•
world of popular ait. The 11umb_er statistics· which
''.to/testify
;
to than a singer~ he
_was
a vocalist , This despite;thefactthat-only two'.:
of tastes. and opinions is equal
.
Holly's popularity;
-But
it is the· and iri my opinion, rock has:tiever
0:·a1bums~
ai:td'.eight·.•
singles
-were/
•
only
:to
the number of. people artistic.· and
•
grou'rid:• breaking.: produced abetter voice.
;,:· ;\
:,
\,,.
recorded•at the timeofdeaih.His
'·
.
•
waiting to be asked. However, in creativity that wm•·forever. in-
. ::
:
If Holly were to arrive· on the
contributi9ris were.only beginning
..
:
the world of popular music ihe~e fluence succeeding gerierations··of· music sce.ne today as a new artist,
to be made.It's noffair>•->
.
is
'one
fact that goes. almos_t
~s ·
musicians. Considedhis;":;,
,._·::·;.
:_
ii
would:be intersting to see how
.·•
•
WQRDSOFWISDOM: ''Rock
•.
unrioti~ed as. t~e
.·
ar~is~ wh_o
•
~~oily was the fii'st,.~i~ger
:fo
_:
)e w_ould fair; Un~ortui:lateJy,
l
,:
and
:~?lLhas
b~n'going ~ownhiH
>
define 1t: The artist who pioneers obtam from
.
•
a
•.
record·
..
label
.
·
doubt he, would _fair
.~ell.
MTV
,
~ver sm~ Buddy Holly died.". :-'-
•
.
a unique style and craft. will be
.
complete. artistic
'control
both in would have
i
hard time.selling
:a· :
J>auLLeMacas 'Jolin•• Milner. in<
largelyjgnored by the Ame~ican thdtudioandons·tage_'''
:'·'./:.
·:_·
lanky, near-sighted, 20-yetk old .• Anierica:ndr;lffittL
•
..
.
-
..•
•··
public.
.
.
.. .
·:
·;.,
..
:.
.
' ...
•
. ~He ~as th(first r<>Ck
and r~U· __
frc,!11 Lubbock, Tex~.
·:·It
::wa~
<·
)<Ci}play:
::Buddy
H~lly. ~~e;;::.
B.u_ddyHollywas.ap1on~r.
·:
.
sm_gerto ~sea defi~ed_bandio.f .. e,as1er ba~k.then for- ~lent to
:nlghtbef6relgoon-:itkeepsme,
A
.
Anq when Su11d~y, ~e~ruary},
gmtars, bass
a~~
~ru_m_s:
,
.
.. su~c~
1~. the ma~ket ~lac~.
•
honest." -'- Bruce Springsteen,
>
•
.
.
marks· the 26th ann~versary
of:
-He was·th~ f1r~oo.mc<>rpora.te
• 'foday, you•~~
rambo"! hair
TheAquarian Weekly 1984.
.
.
·.•
,
tr.1btite
that fa~lplane crash, th.e-day:s anorchestramtoarockandroll,
a_ndanobnox1?:1s.pers?nality.
•
OF NOTE:.WVIP (107 FM)'
i
.
\
·./
news will teU_
<>f a gr9~µdhog s song:
.
• , .
,,
.....
_
., ,.
.
,• ~uddy _Holly s music ha~ n:,
will present a Buddy.Holly tribute
.
•
i
shado_w fo!,Tiled
the prev1o~s
:d~y
·.
·~He
was the· first to issue a phdosophical m!=5saae.
He didn).
·,
Saturday Feb. 1 at 8 p:m.
,
.
.
and
,not
:the
•
shadow that
.will
record' which'
•.
•
includeci
•
·over-
tellus
-who
to vote for or
-what:·.,
.
.
0
!,.,:
•
-
·
.·
.
•
•·
.•
cover millio.ns
of
m~sic
.fans
dubbed voices/=
·,. ::,._.
< .
'"'
·.,
e;ause to believe in: Like all
'great
.
·
The Buddy
,
Holly Memorial
•
.
around the world.:'·
. •.
•
":.
•
<·
These_: and countless
·i·ot_hef
•
artis~, his musi¢:w8$_a
mirroi.'A
-.
Society
•
pu~lishcs
:;
a
··:quarterly·'
.
•
He will riot receive the amount creative
.,
techniques.:·. set.
•.
Holly mirror that
_;,teflecteo
c/liumao· ..
·
magazine
'arid
llolds an aimual
;:·
of l)Ublicity Elvis got ear]ier. this apart from his contemporaries; In
.
:~motions
better
.than
·
soni~
.,and
c_onventiori'
and concert which i~t
,:'.
yea,r;"There will ~e n~ televis!~n fact, HoUy was' ihe· first 'per- unlik~~n ..
<'\
,
t,.;;~,:~1
f.
+
y~r
w~
h~~lin~d, by_ Marshall
spec~alf'or. front'.page. <;o,v~rage. forinerto take roclc';ind roll 11way
::
It-1s
:1mposs1~le,to
·write about
Crenshaw.
'
Their
•.
address is:
..
Ofall;'the. pioneers of popu_lar from its· rockabilly;·rootf
•and
.
ff
oily'
s
..
talent
.
and,_-
.,
ac- ..•
BHM~,. 3022 56th Street, Lub~
'.,
miisic,:Buddy Holly is amorig:~he create a pop atmosphe~e; His complishm:ents_ without<· ~ecling, bock;'l:X,.79413.
.
; •
-~
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Curmudgeon's
Manifesto
;
Thisso~ietyJ1as,gone·~·ut;.j
•
hero; heshJ~is from th~ hip; but
•
for.fivebucks:.He.took five shots
.
a woman who was released:
·The
"sub.way vigilante;'!
/
the he talks like a wimp.
:
..
'to
wou_nd
the four kids, later say-
after questioning -
wept in fear
:
abortion··. clinic
•
bonibadiers
tand
•
•.
Unlike
Beverly Hills. Cop;-'.
the
:.
ing. he intended to kill them .. He
of her life when she· 1earited she
•
John W.
•·
Hinckley
·.an,'
have subway shooting did not- have·a
•.
fled_'.,the·~suJ>:wa{,~r,,
arid 'disa1>·.
:·~could
·gi:>'"fo
hell fo~ her actions.•
something
:->in .•
coininon~
·but
predetermined hero;_Eddie Mt.ir'..
·j,eared'inthe-·dark"tunnel.
Police
•(Of
course:-if she'd'just
·send
a
:
they're all perceived in
'different
•••
phy's
-'humor.
,cuts·
across
·raciaL
an: still searching. for his• silver
:,
contribution to
·•
her. minister's
\'
ways; At one extreme;
a
ncirmal boundaries.' Nobody knew•
.who
•
bullet.
:·:
o-.\
••
· .•
.
·: ·:
•• • .
.
Save The \Vardrobe fund .. ~)
:.; .
't
··~
:
guy with a-'chip on his,shoulderis Goetz -was,,,or,
.the
.,four,
youths
.·'.<The
perfect defense/So whr, h.e
;:
ForJiis part, President Ronald:
...
;
.. ,-,: .. •
.·
·:
iMU~.t
~~-~J~e.,
i~~~,nc1:
i~W~~g~_C!fw.;~J:t<>~
~~,~~P!;)y~~L'r~.:-~~p
~~_,/di~:
tit
(~!~~n,.m,s:c1fi~r»~~{<>µJci.;:::~}l~~$s.iiJ¥.:to~i-°'u(a~ains(~~tf
,:
..
. ·.
>
..
:
.
<
\
;
Cha~les13ronson;
:at-the other.
ex-,:
1
.det.erm1ned_.by
the,'Qntfor.msr:worn
<liaye_s~t'bac_k
10 the,wtlderness of
.
the
,:,,J,ombmgs
.. ,
.
and ,· •Ber.nard·
,,
·.,
•
·.I·
·,,:·:-z
treme, the slightly
•wackys<>n'·of
·:
by· the·maHi chai-acters.,:oo'etz:·a•··.·
New
:Haiiipshife.~aitd•,·soaked:in',-
•• Ooefa'factfoiis~Make n'o:rnisfakeJ~·,
P:ublic
'
..
•
•
•
•
~:
at1 _oil exect1tiv~ is charged
w~~~
,'L~~it~/g~y ?/i~i~gJJh~}~u~\va1s·;
1
·;~ht:,;"1>~bl!~)c1~u.l,,t~p!J-t:}V.l!Y.?.Jl:f.~
1
,(
ya~6llt
i~v~eaga:n is anti~abortiori):,:'.
..
·'
, .•
••
sanity by reason of murder.
:,·.
-::-:\,~Joury;out~s:;_f:!la*
pun~~)ook1ilg
!·
gc;,r::a,:~<?o,l(t<>::w.r,~tc:,
,~ublrjljefs:' '.:·and
pro~handgun•for the purpose
or
·.
•
.
At. showings
·.of.
Beverly Hil(f·jc,r$ome·acti!5n;
~:r;··>
:'',ii\Y
~:;'.
):,;:\;}llU_st;~lready:~~Jf~iritf.lipJ[o_f;~ti'e/.-.of
self-~e~cnse~,.
Apparently, he
{.:
,,
Cop, as much as people laugh.at
-;:
But·whav1f-Goetz's name·was,
.fast
:draft;
G<>~tz:
has;·a,lot-·of
':
doesn't want to fan a new wave pf;
,
•
Hero
No_._.·l
••
··;··.the.hilarious·
wis~cracks. of:
·Axel.·
M.ar(:us,,Jackson'?.ii,1:_h,c
:
..
st~ry•)Work·-to d,~;
•th~'.:soo~er:he/gets"'\
~n~rc_hy;)-Je::ha'd
enough olt~at··,,_·>
• :
Foley, they cheer
'each'.
of :th(
ap
7
,
would
_have
barely µi~ri~ed:att~n::,
;
•
started,)h~'sooii~r ~he-firsi·,check;~.,.
a~: poVt:rrior' of:'Califomia iruhe
·; •.
•
,,
.
proximately 2,312 guri~hots
.Jired.:::
tion;
..
A.·
,Qlack
gtJy·: shootf f~u.r/ comes ii)''. ('f~cfof thf youths"solq./ )
9-@.s:.
::\./j;
.:
J> -~
,.
-;y
';'
:,
,-:.
<:
.
',:
..
: -. •
•
in the film. And it doesn't matter
•
black.
:kids/<probably
a busted
::
their'·sfories:
to
th1tNatioiialEn~·~'.-
·':
S6
what'makes Goetzahero? Is
i_
......
.
who's\ doing the shooting: it's drug deal, happens
·au
the time.
'quirer.)
0:
'.
,'.,</'.:
.'/:
:i_.
::
::
he
:a'
vigiianie?
:Now
therds an;,
_.,: •
..
·
.
f'Qnny
·to
se~ the cops
:tumbling
And if Marcus
-had
shot four
..
·
,MeanvvliUe,'i-police
in
Florida
· :overused;
misused term. To be\
.
:
away. from .ihe bullets, and it's white kids asking.f prJive doll_ars, arrestecl
_four
people for the bqins
:
vigilant
1~
~i111ply
to watch over;
:.,,
•
•
dme· for champagne when the bad· he would have beenJucky to avoid; biogs· 0Labortioi1i,cliriics.0Public
i'
ThoniasJefferson's maxim,
<IThe
i/
•
.
I
guys get killed.
.·.. . .
•.
.
•
getting strung
;up.:
the nearest: reaction:· mixed. The hypocrisy is
price
o.of.
freedom
~
is<•eteriiid
::
.
.
,
Escapist
fantasy?::: He~l_!hY l~lephone po\e.
;/,·;':
/)
: ';. :,.
·\
.•• '.:
obvious: d~~trutti~~ of. btiiidirigs
;;
.
vigi}~~c,e;
''._}~
:i~terpreted
·as.
sup-·(,·<
l
;_;
release of tension? Then how do
.•
.
Asit is, Bernard Hqgo Goetz is to: demo~~trateo,:t~e.
·s~nctity
of
.
po_rting
-Reaganis
arm
,buildupi;;: -. :
:
we explain the
:public
cailoniza-. E\'.eryman
,_;;_
defending himself.: hu~a(! Hf~; ~ven'. Jerry
'.FaJweff<·
What,. Jefft;r~QD
meant; however;:-;:·
.
I
_.
tion. of Bernard Hugo Goetz?
·against
the
,sharks
wbo
roam
the has'
·come,
·out
to
'•¢oiidenin
the
.
..•
•.
:
!
•
::-:'i:./
.:
·:
;,;:
;:;,
:
•.
'.;c::
:,i.;
•
:',
,
••
·
l,
-:
He's not your prototype gung.:ho streets prepared
fo
slit your wallet
·
•
borilbings~.
One
;of
.t~qse
arfested
Continuej on
page· 16
•·:
•
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•
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.
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,
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Thursday
Friday
.
.
,
8:00 p.m. Men's
•
•
.•·
':·~!_
··:
S~nday
Monday
.
..
,
·.·
•
0
·\vecinesday
.
Basketball
vs.
Fairleigh 7:30 p.m. Film: "The
Dickinson (away). 8:00 Amityville Horror" .
p.m.
Hockey
vs.
. . (Th~te~)
.
Stoneybrook (away).
.• Ad!J?ISSI0n
SJ ~th
9:00 p.m. Junior Ring • Manst 1.D.
..
J!'arty (Dining
Room)~
•.
_-Midnight Court Tradi-
tional
Irish
Dance
Music
and
Songs
At the Town Crier·
Cafe, 438 Beekman
Rd,
Hopewell
Jct.
1
(Cover charge,$,
7.50).
8:00 p.m.
Women's
Basketball
vs .•
Mon-
mouth
(away). 9:00
p.m. Video Mixer
.
sponsored
by
The
Stu-
dent League
(Dining
Room).
•
Women's Metro. Swim-
ming/Diving champion-
ship.
•
7:00
&
9:30 p.m. Film:
"The Amityville Hor-
.
ror"(theater)
.
($1 with ~farisd.D.).
8:00 p.m. "Brighton
8:00 p.m. Women's·
•
Beach
Memoirstt at the
•
.
Basketball vs. Wagner
Ulster Performing.
,
..
•
..
College .
Arts
Center (one night
• only);
•
9:00 p.m.
Hockey
vs.
C.W. Post.
rF:s-::·,~::;_::T<>.;;~:
:::c:
::;;::.,,,,:::::::;.:.:,::._:;
,;:~:;.:]~,:~
:::,.:.,-;".
::.::::::::::re.:::.>:_~:·:.:~::.
:.::
;
:
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:
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.
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..
\
Jan. 31, 1985 • THE CIRCLE· Page 7
.::
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·:·.:•P:H:OTOGAAP.-HY
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··.§qrit%stL
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-
.;:':--'._-:/::·--clo·l'.tie
':Ci'r'cle
'..
-
·•.:c_
:
:•--..
;;<·:s·o)(
:·:cLa5·7
•.
-
.
,:
their· b~ddies/At. this
·writing;
the
.
.:·.
.
. .
_
·-:·
..
s:::-,:/·:
••
fun results;ofhis Sex or Bowling
·_PsstL
Psst!
,
Psssssssssssssssttt!
.
poll aren't in, but, his column on
•
Listen:up, because the subject this
Sunday indicated. ·that sex was
.
-week
IS .•.
it's,
.well,
you know,
running ahead of bowling. •
.- .
<
SEX!··.
~:
:
~- ..
..
.
•
.
..
-As if that
.weren't
enough, a re-
Before we get to·the business at
cent study done at_ the University
hand, here's some background in-
of Iowa (might have been Iowa
formation. Earlier this month,
State, but then ag~in, who really
.
Ann Landers-ran
a
column asking
cares?) indicates that the number
.
-: women to respond to this ques-
•
of college students who have sex
•
tion: "Wo~ld_ you be content to
with animals is declining.
.
be
.held
close and treated tenderly,
(A few points· about the Iowa
and forget about the act?"
survey: First, remember that out
The'. response was,
:
if not
•
in Iowa,
•
farm animals actually
orgasmic, then at least fr~nzied.
outnumber people.' Second, their·
•
NearlYi.
100,000 women across the
conclusions might have been that
country wrote in, and 72 percent
.
the average "animal lover" ac-
of. them said
·that
yes,. they'd
tually docs it less often, rather
·
..
rather just hug and kiss and cud-
...
than there are fewer of them - in
die and so forth· then; well,
-you
.
an
honestly, I
:can't
remember
know,
do
it.
.
.
..
•
.
_
which. But does it matter?)
/
The
.
ever-insight fut' Landers
"This is all well and good,"
•
said the results demonstrated that
you say, ".but what does this have
:
"woman\
-
need
•
affection.
.
It's
to do with us? Here in the heart of
more
.
important than sex, and
the judeo-christian heritage, there
••.
men·have
fo
listen to what women
certianJy
.can't
be too much con-
'
want and woirien have to teJI men
•
cern with anything, well,
•
you
what they want."
.
.
know, sexual."
• Reaction
,
to Landers' survey
Ahem.
has b~n hot.and heavy;_or. Ruth
.
It seems
to
me that, as infor•
•
Westhei~ei:-was quoted as saying,
:
niative,as
•
three surveys are, they
·
C'lt's dangerous, to say
a
high
don't-tell the average student here
per_centage ot'!V~rrieri do·n·ot ex-
at Marist much of anything. So,
pect sexual activity.:• Dangerous?
in. the interest
.of
socio-scientific
How about depressing?-~
.·
.
inquiry, lewd curiosity, and just
..
Marist's own Lee Miririgoff, in
,:
for the hell of it', I've decided
to
.
a PoughkeepsieJ ournafarticle on
.
coilduct. th~
first
·and.
probably
•
~uriday,
.
said: the ·;su~vey
~~as
•
last ev,er_,'Senii~Official
Survey on
•.
unreliable. "In established public
the Sexual State of.'the Students
opinion practice, this outcome
(SOSSSS) .•
would not be··· considered con-
··Here's
the deal -
after hours
.
elusive."
•.
,: ;
--,
of tiresome
·research,
I've come
•
The article did not quote Mrs.
up
.
with five questions for the
Miringoff.
•
•
·'
.
men, five for the women. First,
• •
, Meanwhile Mike. Royko~
·,
who
those for the women:
•
•
•
writes for the Chicago Tribune,
•
I.When I am with a man,,1I'd
,
did his own samplirij; asking men
'like
to be
•
•
.
•
if they!s rather be having sex with
a) hugging,
·kissing,
etc.
i
.
their wives t~an
-~~t
bowling witb
.
b) making love.
i
.
,,,
'
-
:
-
-
'lf'you',Ve
att~nded colle'ge on a Guaranteed
.
-
-
Stu.dei-1t
Loan
or·
a
N acional Direct Student Loan made
··aft~r.·Q~tq}:ier}~
)97-5; ¢·onsld~r spending a couple
of years in the Army. ·
.
_-·
·
•
-
• ·:,
•
lfvou train for certa.in_
specialties~
-the
govern- ·-
:
rnent'. will release you
·from
1/3
of your indebtedness
.';
.:~-'
.;;(or·;$l,5O0,·
whichever:is: gi;-eatei-
)·foi"each-~year
of
:·>:<acriy~/duty
..
•. ,-
--.
.--
•.
,
..
-
•..
-.··
••
•
.
_.·
.
_
-_.
...
- .
•
·
·
·.<
,
_<)f0bv~ously,"a_thfee-ye·arenlistment
cancels
100%
•:
ofyoutdebt._Butif you sign up for
the
Arrriy's exclusive
.
t\,Vq-year
enlisqnen~-option; we'll still cancel
2/3
of
y9.ur dept.
_
-
_-
-
-
•
• •
•
·-
·.
·
-~
.-,
Plus,
·you-may
be_
~ligible for generous educational
incentives.·
To find out how to serve your country and get out
of debt, call the number below.·
-
ARMY.
BE
ALLYOU
CAN
BE.
•
Call 452•015S or stop by the GSA Building, Room
-1Q5,
235 Main
• Str~et, Poughkeepsie;
•
•
··c):making·him
beg:
·.:;_' • /
2. I inost often tell men that "I
like sex,
.
a) but it should be with so-
meone I love."
•
b) but not with you."
c) period."
3. I want a man with a
a) great body .
b) perceptive mind.
c) Porsche 944 .
4. I'm usually lying when I say
that
•
a) he's the best .
b) I didn't fake it.
•
c) I was awake the whole
time.
5.
I most like men who are
a) sensitive and sincere.
b) tough and decisive.
c) rich and famous .
For the men:
·.•
•
I. When having sex, I like to be
·
a) on top.
b) sober.
c) with another person .
2. The woman of my dreams
will make
a) my life complete.
b)'it home on her own.
_:;
c) dinner on time.
(
3. Before making love, I would
wait until
a) we're married.
b)
we have a mean1ngful rela-
tionship.
c) I can remember her first
_name.
••
• •
•
4. I ~a~ta women who will
.
•
• •
·a)
stimulate me intellectually.
b) stimulate ine in other
ways .
c) write
my
term papers .
5. If l am
,watching
football on
television and she wants
-
to
make
Jove, I
.
•
a) agree, and turn of the
game.
\
b) wait until halftime.
•
c) wait to see if my team
wins.
•
Well, that's it. If you'd like to
participate in this monumental
scientific endeavor, circle your
answers• in the ap'propriate
-
category
(if
you're not sure which
•
is
,appropriate,"
ask your room-
mate), rip this column out and
send it to: SOSSSS, The Circle,
Ma_rist
College.
There's no need to include your
name, of course, unless you're
really desperate for it and wish to
advertise that fact. Also, feel free
to include as many comments and
explanations as you wish. (I will
ask, though, that you keep it fair-
ly clean because several members
of the Circle staff are a bit
squeamish.)
..
.
_.
..
,._.,
•
,
...
If I can get at least 100 or s_o
responses,
I'll
results.
Otherwise, we can assume that
everyone is either A) too shocked
with the whole idea to reply or B)
too busy practicing to answer any
questions about it.
.
Comic jugglers
to appear Friday
The Bardavon 1869 Opera
House wiH present the Flying
Karamazov Brothers at 8 p.~.
Friday.
The Karamazovs' novel act
combines wild comedy with
outrageous juggling. The troupe
has won the praise of critics
throughout the United States.
Tickets for the show are $12,
$14 and $17. They are available at
the Bardavon box office.
.
The Bardavon is located at 35
Market St. in Poughkeepsie.
--•·
P•SI•
.8; ..
THE,~~R,CLE.~:J•tJ~
~1,.19.85::·.
.
.
B~rdit1(°)ttt~1e,{lds:
~he!rj~,i~;i1zYi:f,t
f
:0:·.:
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.··.-g··.li.•j,z~e;_.-_:,:;:1?r:.-;?s-'·'r.1·•.:e:?_:'.•;:\·.·:·;.:;····
,•
~.-;
't
,•--~
• •:•
£,
• }
i
•
'•:.I\..~
• '
••_.
f
,,
r (: •
.: • • ·.
. '
· . ._,: .\.\.·.
• :· i::>,-~·; ·'.\,:·,",.:.· :.-'., ,,·:·':
·., ·.<·•:i.;>:;:
';:i;.·.:,\~),:,:;.;'.:;{~~;:);t',-
by·R.ose Hazelton
•• ·'
"It
is.a special occasion to see_a, '200 people to tlieiri.shows: ··If ~he
'\ ,.· ;e,,:_·.·' :
, .• :.· ,:- .·• ., show,.and. the overall theatre. showisina.theatrethat.seats200,.:
On Apr. 25, 1981, The New excitement is present: in .. the. it's a full. house., If· the-~ per~;
York ,. • -Times·:
..
wrote,
Bardavon," .Bo·rak said.··
He
,
formance is held.iri'aftheatre.that
•
"Poughkeepsie has a Cinder~lla • added thatit would be a real loss.· • seats 950; such .as.ithe Bardavori/
story to tell." The "Cinderella". , to the community if the Bardavon .. the performers ' feeL:they •. are'·
was the Bardavon-1869_-0pera- was not there.
• •
•·
'
.
->.:
.
•
.playing
to an empty'house; B6rak'
House;
•
her . prince was the
•. The theatre also features many. said. .•.·
•. ;. <• ; /.::~·•;;({;: i /'.;.;
community. The story reco·unted • ··community events such as the . • Borak added: "On onfside, th¢
the 1976 heroic efforts/by the - Poughkeepsie Ballet's •• "Nut- _-community,;; has ··.'adopt.eel
:5
the··;
community .t? save the r13ardavon • cracker" performance; co~ce~ts Bardav?n • a~d •
.. th~y •.
: ~re ·._:v~ry
.
. from demoht1on.
· ·,
,
by the Hudson Valley. Phdhar-
supportive.of
1t.
TheyenJc,y going
The Bardavon•~--struggle to • monic; music by the Dutchess . there, theyappreci~t~the:~inds of
bring first rate performam:es to 'Community College Jazz En-
things· the Bardavorf· bdngs/C)n ,
the area has endeared the theatre
semble and others. ·
--
·
the. other hand, ·there is'a·.serfous•
to many residents .. • However,-the
•· However, conflicts. often· arise: problem in making it available to
·
romance may be in jeopardy.
when community groups want to the community groups."; •:•, ·' •
The Bardavon 1869 Opera. use the theatre and they cannot
Downard agreed that'this;is·a·.
Housewas founded'.by·.James.
afford the
'Bardavon's .rental·
problem:- "Yet• .. I feel-dt's·,.a-,
Collingwood and . named the charge.
'.·..
. disservice for them:' if. they're
Collingwood Opera House ·in • .. The . Bardavon's . cost
of __
playing.in
·a
theatre of950
sfats-
1869~ Today, the Bardavon is a
operations has increased, Borak and there are only 200people who-
non-profit organization whose · noted, • and consequently their show ·up for: the.· event;''. said.
sole purpose is to \:>ring to
rental charges have increased.
Downard; lilthose cases, he urges·
Poughkeepsie
quality /multi-
•• "A lot of the local groups have the groups to perform in:a smaller ;
disciplinary • art ··• programs ••
gone elsewhere because they.just theatre, . because a ,seemingly'.
(dance, opera, theatre, and local can'tafford to be at the Bardavon small· aiieridarice .. is ;;also·'
a.
art . featured . in the Bardavon anymore," Borak said.
1
'1 know -reflection on the opefa house •. : ';-'.
. gallery),
said
H:. Thomas ·· the Bardavon is concerned about· ' Despite
the
:
Bardavon',s
i
. Downard, the executive director.
that. In one sense, there's not a • financial'stri.Jggle,-the theatre has,
"But we are also dedicated to
lot they can do about. it; but I·. earned a reptitationfor presenting ••
the preservation of. a historical know they are lookihg at ways in· quality events: Local community
landmark,"
-'Downatd: said ... which they can make it feasible gro1.1ps
: benefit . greatly
.
wljen
· "Above
everything . else, , t~e
.
for community groups."·
•
•
,,
..
playing on· the Bardavon stage,
Bardavon
is a • community
•• Addressing
. that/
issue,
Borak noted. -
organization."
Downard suggested ·that a lot of·
•
•
•
• • •
people don't realize or consider
• Borak. said that all the arts
In the past, the Bardavon st~rs the inflation factors thih face the organizations are in the same
have included Sarah Bernhardt, • theatre. . For . many .• 'years . the position; they are all struggling.
the Boston Symphony, Enrico·
•
with money. While the . local
Caruso, Lillian Russell, and many Bardavon 10st money, ~e said.·~-
groups' may not like· the high···
others.
•
.
"If
·we don't hav~ balanced
•
rental fees, Borak suggested tqat
Today, the t~eatre offers award . budgets,. we are going
to✓have~to
from .their point of view;·toplay :
winning performances such- as close our doors,"
Downard the Bardavon would.b"e
like in the.·.
"Ain't
Misbehaviri,"
"Torch : added. "Therefore, we are now • old days. a vaudevilli~ri:;·playing"\
Song Trilogy;,• "Give
'Em
Hell,
charging,
a
rental cost to non-, ·the Palace Theatre in NewYork::-C:
Harry,"and CCA
Soldier's Play,''
profit organizations that strickly : . "I mean the ~alace.was.theJop;,
justto name a few.. .\ ,. • ·/ . : : .
<
covers_
our_ costs." Sp_ec::ific
.ren,!iiH:i.of
the vaudeyiile· 'di-~i(/!./Boi:)1.k;;.::,
.' ... ·•
,
•..
•. ,,,. f ........
. : \ •···o~-,-
h~;s
··:
charges•\:olild'' riot •b'e•'.reteased/>·said. •·''And'\•if">"a:~::'/y°odffg~l
Co~:~b~~~
o.c~~!~n anJC the ;, Bl;\.rdav<>9_sR~~<:~~~icl:.
->:,
.
i
:-.,~pv~.ul.~fJiJTiioh~;ti<>tM.9N~~d.fv;t~:;:
• p
oughkeepsie Journal
.
express .. . The n~>rl-J)r_gfit
org~nizat_i,91)-'.
s
0
~ .)
1
1
-al
f2h· .. ,~.r~
,)!\.,_.
eh~-:i,f
"-.r
, • {
h. h· ·
·ct
f
th·
h
e
••.
mcome. 1s ·unstable··because. ·lt:'·we
,;,-t
11.t
·.\\las, it, .t ~Y>•::were:
1g regar
or. e op~ra ous • .;-_ · ·. ·. ·,· • .• •.
·. • ,_
.
" >cons1dered·to.have'-had.1tz.made;•,.;
The Bardavon
IS
considered the
depe nd s . upon
public
a
nd Th B a . . . ..
?'' -
f h ,•
,,
• showcase for. the.arts . accord_.
ing_·
.. _govei:nm_ent
suppor.t, The ..
theatie , .. h'e }./.h.
aVOJldlS.
so._r
..
_,~·
0
_
.t
e,_s_
a.
m.'.
e
...
:·.•·
, . .
.
..
.
.
37 -- . ··t·•·f·'t" • . ..
. t
mg .
esa1 . '-'
·;. '
•
.•.
'
to Vickie Barnes Davis, the arts \receiv<:s . percen
!' •
1
sincoD?e ., . ·.· /'C;
.
. ; ,::.-:)/ ·, -
•
.: ·;_ ::
fund coordinator for the Dutchess
from
ucket sales;
~~
perc~nt fojm •. : When local groups play at .th~:
c
Oun t y
Arts • • Co
u
nc'i l. . . Bard~v()~·
Ihernber.ships.
~n4 loelll.·
}pitrda".()11~:
~he._c,opi~r11nity
i5c
v~fy '
Economically and artistically, ,contnbut1ons;
:
21 'percent from : 1mpresse{l
i
th~F one: oL' .their •
"the Bardavon is a· definite boon • government supp_ort; _
7 ..
percent ,."o~n" is on a.-stage that has seen·.·
to the county,,,. she said. ·•
.
: from_ theatre· rentals; 2 · Pfr~ent riatfonal,:companies
·perform, sai!,l
.
"Clearly
the
entertainmen_t. fro°! \ pro~ram. Jldverusmg;
Borak; T!te Bardl!VOn
serye~ ~n
dimate in the area has change~
• and
1 •
perc!!nt fro~ benefit extremely .1~portant function m
considerably," said Jeff Borak, . px:ografus,
the , Bardavon's
the commumty,'' he added.
'ii(~-:
theatre critic for the Journal.
"I
financial disclosure revealed.
_a source of pride for .. t~e com~
like going there because' for me,
:
.. _·.
Another • problem, • _.Bo_rak muriiiyto hav~
a
facility such as .
going to the theatre is an event; suggested,.·· is • that community • the Ba::i:davon.
operating,'' Davis
It's not just to see. a per, . groups, like the Gilbert arid said, "The Bardavon is a first rate
. formance."
Sullivan Society, will often draw. organization."
1
;
Affordable, convenzerz/
the revolution--co1'11ef°'/jOffle
. By Anthony DeBarros
..
;:-···t
;.·
.hundreds of titles to choose from . Televisfo~ ab9ut the. brain .that. I
_ ,
are among the best reasons for. couldn't watch , because oL my
• • Paul Juras purchased his first
.
·
owning a
VCR,
says Juras, ·who work scheaule ;,_ said Juras/ "I
videocassette recorder about two
has a personal library of over _65 • just set; it the VCR and my
years ago.
tapes,
• primarily
movies.
roommate and I watched. the.
Now
the
23-year-old
However, the feature,that really .segments at nighf when we got
Poughkeepsie accountant owns
makes.owning a VCR worthwhile home. It was extra important
three of the.machines and rarely
for Juras and other VCR:owners because we could earn credit at
watches conventional television.
is the ability to record programs
school for watching the series.",
.
He goes to the movies even less.
that would normally be missed
Families are benefitting from'
while wor:king, -;,shopping or
VCR's
also. -
Renee
.Bourbeau,
Juras is typical of a new type of
sleeping, and then watching them who works at Video II in Hyde
entertainment consumer, a breed
at one's conveniem::e.
~
•.
•· • .- Park, said that Friday and
that prefers to choose from
"They
provid~
,
a
great
Saturday· nights are extremely
hundreds of movie. titles at the
educational opportunity," said
busy, and many people rent
local rental emporium, instead of
Juras, "for the very reason that • videocassettes for an . entire
picking from the less than ten or
something that you're not able to
weekend.
Often
the
most
twelve films playing at local
watch that ·is culturally and
requested items are ones like
movie houses.
educationally enlightening, can be
"Star Wars" or "Raiders of the
Since-the first VCR, a beta
watchedatyourleisure."
Lost Ark '!...shows that a whole
model, was introduced by Sony in
Working
housewives
tape . family can enjoy.·.
.
- 1975, prices of the machines have
"General Hospital" and watch it
"Its' less expensive to rent a
THE.AMITYVILLE:_··.·
··HoRROR:
••
••
Ja·m·es
l!rolin, M~rgotKidder; Rt>'rsteiger·
.-
",:
.
•
-
l
.
,
,
.
THE AMITYVILLEHORROR is the true·story·of
a.·
young; new!y .niarried'.'couple who mov~ into their
large colonial "drl:}am h9.use''; in .Amityville; New· :
York in 1975. From that moment until ·they .flee 28
days later, their'days and nights are full of terror,.
" ... a dandy horror movie that is certain to set yo~r
rafters , creaking!"
Charles Champlin, LOS
ANGELES TIMES .• • •
~"; '
·,
-
.,_ F(idaf Febrµary,1'.:-:2
7;3il··~}~),
..
_
·
·.Sunday, February 3_.;__
t~:9-p.m~:
• :_r_
. .-.
IN THE:THEATR·e-,
.--;'•.y: .: .
Ar
..
{~~:··
.
:_\;{:S1-~oo:.:;~.oM1s.$161\tWi1{p;1t:1?tL~··
..
... : '. '·. ~·'
;· •. : ' ::
;,,
:.
·:_:-_~:.:~:-:•;-::{
~
; -~~--
..
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__
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~-;-._,-t;_•,-;;/·.·-,:,1?.;.-:.~---:·
,.~,
,}'f
t;i,it~~l!il~:spro~tt,xt~;s
• •
... -.
B.S.
I(gives
yo~i:chance.:to
g~t·i(career
st;trted·plus::.. • • ,·
~.Earn
·$100
a-month
durilJg
the
SCfi(?Ol
yeru; .,
•
:
_
.. : . ,., .. ,
·•-·:~1,ti;~~~r;p::t~!;~~rr~:;lJti*;1~'•:."·~>)t}i?
. yourb~ic:training:4uring_two
six-week,,
swnmer·~essioris
•
,
■
Lets
y~ii"g~~·in
line for one ofour graduate,·programs
as a junior·;"--~.
.
. .-
. .
·: :"
_"
.
-
: '
•.
•
.
•
•So,•if
yog're
Iooking•fora
chance
:to•lead,
check'out
:
--t!te Marine
Corps
undergraduate-officer.
pro~ ••
::::
•
• :-
•
• gram. You
could
stµ-t-off
making more ,
•
·.-~
than $17,000
a
year
'from th~~:__
~•-
~.-:•
Ue'relookingforafewgood
meIL
:
1·
.
• :
,
,
declined rapidly. The inception of
after dinner, sports· fans tape videocassette for a weekend and
longer-playing VHS machines has
events like the Super Bowl, and
watch it four or five times than
increased VCR versatility and
kids tape concerts on MTV. Juras
take a whole family out to see it
popularity, and the two factors
used his VCR to
tape
"The
once at a movie theater," said
coupled together have produced a • Brain," an educational program.
Bourbeau.
revolution
in
hoJtle
en-
Different tastes, but one common
Rental outlets such as Video II
See Captain
W.W.
DONAHOE
Jr.
at DONNELLY HALL
.
tertainmenL
advantage: each can see their and Captain Video's Movies To
on
13
&
14 FEB.1985
between
10:00
and
3:00
or
can:
...
Paying less, being able to watch
favorite at any time.
Go generally offer customers the
1-800-342-2408.
•
•
• •
• •
/ ·
at one"s convenience, and having .
."!h~e
~
a,
ser;i~
c,_n,
~-~l!c,.,.., •• , _,., .GC?9ti!'µ~<;l
4
0.I}
Pl&~ JJ~ ... • •.•.•.•·············-· .•.•·····'-·•······ ...... • .....
r-·,.• •
·,
.
. .
, .• ·:: J.'l'!p,"UZ;M·;,•c..;;.,":''r.".~;;!';,-.!:•'-c~~
..
:-:.-:.-:•.!cc :~:·•., "',;;-; ...
-i-',~:s.•:'>•,a:ce·::-v:--".'.~•~·'.··••W•-:-,:: ••
,, •
'
.
.
'
Ja,t.··31,'1985·-
THE'CiR,CLE;
Page,- ■---
' • : :,€:n:iR\~
's:
:Fesigil;
hew
·h.if
es •
filLopenings ,
I
.•·
i(§:<E/
. :,:-:
:r ., • :·/' .'..;' ..
\,\t.:\\\
.-. •
"' ..
. •bf Tom
McKelina
,\::.:.:
;_;\,.'
.. ":_· .·
internships,
. according
to'
.Champagnat Hall had -the' Trebotti, 'junior, and Ed~och,:· M.irgolotti • h,as. replaced Eric
':·/;:'~:1_\;':;,'.tt/:_;.i:::~fJ~'i;.:::·,./
0.'.:/~-.-·)i.1',eyw~;_.,:'.:.,,._
··:<·
c··---:.~,:., \largest~
t~rn~vcr of ~l itie. a:-senior. They replace Chr,is De: Tu_rpin, who left for personal
, .,,;l'en,n~~~s;~~,~;,.~ll}lip:~t"':,>tl:leyw~:;:expr~sed
_an.,•-;~n-
_dormsw1th
half ~f the residence
Sailtelle, ajunior who'is the new reasons;.·· •
•
.. Jf
repla~,Jen
1
/wli~/fleft~;,~he~r::_.:\derstan~1ngt~f:1thelt~;>s:r~sons
• staff there replaced.
:-
• Champagnat_ assistant resident
In the north end, Joe Pezzulo,
:iw.siti~ru.;•for._:•,v~rious')'treasoitsi>:-.for;:Jeaving}theiresidence:'staff.·
~: ,· ·,,:_:_,:_ ;-,
.·>;·
.
.
director,·. and
seniors Amie
who was previously assistant
:, according '.-ifojR<>berF:
Hc~ood,
•
-/ 'Who
·could'\pass
. up , an
in-, •
Champagnat House I has three
Rhodes, who has a • internship,· -·resident director of Champagnat
'directofoftjousiilg;·.
:":Cf.j'..'':,:
,:/: ·,
terriship? -l)n~n, it's a:chiuice at : new '·
RA
's,
according
to
and
Kevin
Schultz,
who
has replaced Santa Zaccheo as
.. _::.
ts&
e>ut
of
the:'ier(~tio'~ft'·
'did'\
a<
~r_cei;:
~r ;at_leasi)
a
.starting .' Hey~ood; · They : 'are • Robert
graduated.
·' -
. North End ARD, and two RA's
• ·
·
so ·
becaus·e·
':they---had)received:t.Point/'
be
said: ·
.. , •
•
:-<. ,: H,atem, .. a sophomore, , Paula
Champagnat Hou~e II has one have also been replaced there.
· -· •
· .•. ·
·
·. ',: · · · •. ·
•.
• · :. • ·
·
•• • < •' ·
~
'
.•· ., - :
·
·
~
•
new RA, sophomore Jill Nevers. 'Mary Clifford has taken over
.
..
'
"
••
ililtrilJi/1).
'jor'.1984-85
-(q~~s<qver
'Gli/Unf/agnlli
• -'"7·,•··
••• .
•
'
• '
. \·by
ai's"~~aJi1s~n
·--:.', . ,
•
~
•
tion in-a different sense,,, he said.
·
• •.
,. -
.
.
' Dioguardo is third in the chain_of Champagnat
.,'. • M;ri;r~t~derits living in ciampagnatHall
a~e
Residence Directors since the beginning of the
: once
-i
c1gain fa,ced ·-with' adjusting
fo
a new ,: academic year; Steve Lurie, Marist Track Coach,
, . Residence.Director, _but ·oeorge· Dioguardo, 22,-·.·was,hired.for the position in August of 1984 but
'>"says
lie
is hying to maki that process as smooth
resigned before the semester began. ·He was
as possillli!'fo(residents;:,. '·"' . ; : . • ·:. ' ,:.;
·.
;-_ replaced • twq· weeks into. the. semester. by Ellen
•.• Dioguardo, fornierComplex Dir~ctor for pro~ '.. Dolan whose contract expired on January 15,
gram development and Hall Director for SU~Y
1985 and was not renewed .. Robert Heywood,
.
, at New Paltz, replaced Ellen Dolan· who had been
Director of Housing,. filled in_ for the period
• hired.temporarily forctheFall of,19,84. :':
-:
before Dolan's arrival: Dioguardo said that he
Dfoguardo said he sees his position at Marist as • finds it difficult but challanging to begin in the
• • more inJine with his objectives than the one he
middle of the academic year. .
She has replaced Krista Dopslaff, Cynthia Ferrara's job in the A
a junior who has taken a semester section of the town houses, and a
off.
- replacement has yet to be hired in
In . Champagnat House III,
.
the C townhouses, for Sabrina
Roger Romano, a senior, has Segui who left for an internship.
replaced Michael Banahan, . a
According to Heywood, the
• junior who has an internship in replacements were chosen from a
Washington D.C. In House IV, list of alternate RA's some of
Jim Ferguson has replaced senior whom had been RA's previously
Janice Willis who has an in- and were simply re-hired.
·ternship:
•
Heywood expressed confidence
There were two turnovers in• the in the new RA staff. "There have
Freshman areas, according to been no problems so far. There
Heywood .. On . the third floor were good people in all the areas,
Sheahan, Karen Chatterton has and the people that left were
replaced Joyce Holly, who left for. replaced by good people," said
an internship. In Leo Hall, David Heywood.
Marist shuffles of fices
in· nJw round of moves
.: .held at.New Paltz., .... · .. ,:··
• ·.,./' • ;·.
Dioguardo graduated from SUNY Oneonta'
• ' ,.,'I'm looking to'comn'lit my time to students,"
.. with a Bachelors degree in Political Science and
,,'.;he_.said. ''At New Paltz I ·was
not
as free :fo do • Business Economics, and says he would like to
/
•
by William Hare
• Hall, room 200.
_
·tha:tbecause of other demand!\ on my time.'.'. .
work toward an MBA in Business Management.
, - The Marist College Institute
Marist College students return-
for Public Opinion will move into
ing from the semester break will
the• old Financial Aid offices,
find that a few of the school's
located in Aclrian Hall.
The duties of
a:
ResideritDirector include train-
He served as Assistant Resident Director and
ing staff, maintaining the building, dicipline and·
Resident Advisor for iwo years at Oneonta and
, administration operations, according to Djoguar- • : says he really enjoys this type of work.
::..
do.
_
•
•
-·
"I'm lookirig forward to a good semester," he
departments have been moved to
• -
The office of the Higher
new locations.
•
Education Opportunity Program
"A very important function-is to establish· a
added, "I hope for support from the residents
community for the residents and offer an~duca-
and
I'H
be here for whatever they mjght need."
According to Edward Waters,
will be moved into the present
vice president for administration
Public Opinion Institute office,
and
finance,
the
following.
located in Donnelly Hall, after
changes have been made or will be
the institute is moved.
RESEARCH
Send
$2
for catalog
of over 16,00'.l
topics to·
assist
_your
research
el•
forts. For info:, call toll-
free
1~21-5745 (In 11·
llnols call 312·922-0300).
orld
Understanding
MONTH -
FEB. 1-28
made within the.next few weeks: -
The moves have been planned
- The School of Adult Educa-
since last May and were supposed
tion office is now located;in new
to have been completed by last
offices built in Marist East.
September, Waters said. "The
-
The Financial Aid office is
changes took a while, because we
now located in the old Adult . had to make this building (Marist
;,: -Education offices in Donnelly
East). ready for students first,'?
'~~~~~~~~~~~~~iiii..==~lllil~=-~~~~~~.■.iiiia~.--~.._..;_~--.;-
1
..
•• ..
·~·
~-■·Iii·
__
..;.·_.··-·-•·•··•··--~•
said Waters. "We also· had· to
• I
wait until the new office was com-
_ .. • Amazing Acts qf
Comedy
arid
Gravity!
·--
~----
••-···-::..
•
.
•
..
The
Flying
...
•
..
·.·Karamazov
Brothers
____
_
"They are jugglers, but to leave
.
it at that
would
be like saying
• • Dostoyt,vsky
was.~ writ.~r."
--New
York Times
THE
NATIONAL
· THEATRE
OF THE DEAF
-A_II-The-Way-HomE,···--
.directed by
Colleen Dewhurst
-·
written by
.·Tad Mosel
'~ drama of ~firring
beauty,
one of the finest
contem·
porary
American
plays:'
-New York Post
Saturday,
February 9, 1985
At8:00
pm
Tickets:
$10,$12,$15
You'll Hear (And See)
Every
Word.
35 Market St., Pough., HY 12601
Members receive $1.00 discount _:: No refunds or exchanges
~
All sales final - Box
Office
Hours:
Mon.•Fri.
11-5 Sat. 11·2 - Hew box office located in theatre
lobby
C
Equipped with infrared listening
system
This performance is mode possible, in port, with public funds from the New York State Council On the Arts
plete so that we could move the.
/Adult Ed office in one day."
I
The new offices cost
$25,000
to
/ build,
according to
Waters.
'Waters said that the changes had
to be niade because of the great
demand for space.
Julianne Maher, dean of the
school of adult education at
Marist College, said the new loca-
: tion is more convenient for adult
students .. "Most of the adult
students have classes in this
: building, so it's easier for them to
have the office here," Maher
said.
Di;. Lee Miringoff, ·the director
for the public opinion institute, •
said that he is pleased with the
new location he will be getting.
According to Miringoff, his pro-
gram needs more storage space,
as well as an office that has a
more professional atmosphere.
Waters said that changes like
these will give Marist College
-more
· of a "university"
at-
mosphere~ "Before we started
having classes in Marist East,
everything a student. had to do
was done in Donnelly," Waters
said. "Classes, the registrar,
business
-
everything
was
located in Donelly. Now that we
have Marist East, we will have
more of a university look,"
LENT BEGINS
AS/ I WEIJNESINY
... F'fJJ.
20
a------
---------------------~------------
...
·--···--
,
..
.
-
•.:\-.·
\
_
.,._.
f
::;~;
',-:
,
·,•·
r.--
~
.
·(
f
>
/
--•·
Page
10
•
THE CIRCLE•
Jan ..
31,
1985
•
Fr6shmen
••.
:·
.f _
s1ze.:_up
'first·term:
by
Da~
Meyerson
·,,--~~:~.;\~/·.
.
-
.·
.
•
·•
Looking
•
back
.
a(. their
:
first,
semester
•
in
·,
cone·ge,
,:
some
freshmen say they feel that Marist-'
is £good place. to be while others
•
.
·.
are not so sure.
,
•
•
,
...
,
..
•
..
~
;
.•·
• "I don't'feel $10,000 sm'artei/'
•
said
Lynn
Maloney
i-
from
.Highland
1-'alls,
N.Y.
"I
expected·
to learn a lot· moi:_e."
.
~he also
noted she feels that too many peo-
ple "slide by."
'
Several·· othe'r::·:returning
freshmen agreed with this view.
Kerry Dynia of/ J?aldwin, Long
Island said,
"I
expected college to
.
be hard.· It's
•
basically
.
pretty
·easy."
•
·.:,•-:"
/.-·
I..
•
.
··:
..... :
/
.
.
..
On the other
.·.
hand,
..
Estelle
Cuadrado of· Red Bank, N.J .,
said that she was surprised to find
out how much work she had to do
in her computer class.
-
.
'.
• :
.•
-
.
.
,
.
.
.
.
:
While Dynia/foimcl
·the
school
work• easy; she didn't agree with
sortie-, ·.bf'
.·
the
•
dorm's· r\.tlef
• .
''Marian Hall
is
like
jail;"
she
.
said .. She particularly questioned
why;treshinen w~o·a~e ov,er 19 are_
not allowed to·dnnk m the dorm.•
•• ()~g;,i1, Dynia s~{d'~he i~ h~p~-
•
py with. the living. arrarigements.
and
-
that Marian
.
is not· a
•
bad
dorm; She aclded that shecould
·-
,·
•
......
.:....,_
·.
•
Sunday,
i
..
M_"<Jn<ltijl,
.TueSdaY
..
afli;l
/l'/ltti,,rs.d'.(ly}
**
~*
13RJ:]]JZ
.•
i
~riMISS{<!lN'
iiiit-,..,,,
'
1
i~'iif>f
~~---~if'lf\?,;,
•..
•
.
\
.:f
.......
,
.
..
.
..
•
-
•
not live in one of the "scuzzy'.'
doTb;:la~k-
.o;:
a
~ar
~an b~ dif~
1:::::~:::::;::::~:::;:::::~;:::;::::::::::.~:;::::::~::::::::::~:::::;::·:·
:··=·~-::·::;~:~;::::::::::::::::::I
ficult for freshmen to Ji.djilst
Jo
>
: ~:
••
•
and Jim Jacobs; a freshman.from
Cortland,.
N.Y.,
said he feels
Marisi is too far away from.the
'.
:
to~n
••
of, ~ol,ighk~~ps~_e:i>J~CQl:!S
·._
• •
said that.hefeels,the.lack,o(a,car
limits what'he arid ottierJreshmen
can do in iheir:spare time'.
-.:
.
<
.>
·
"
.
:
.
.
.
.
:
.
.
.
•.
·
',
~,
•
'
...
·'
...
..
.
.-
_.·
..
Commuters face different pro-
•
blems in 'adjusting
to
the·. coUege
life. Yvette Melito, a
·commuter
from Highland,
N.Y.,
found the
people
.
at•.· Marist
•
were-
;l)Ot'.
as
friendly as. she_ had hoped> "The•
people here weren't
as-:
friendly
compared to
·the
other colleges I
vi~ited,'' she said.
•
•
•
·."-···:>,,·
-·::-·.:-·-
.....
:·:·--'..·,SC·._;_'·'.-··~---
-:<~::-.-r··
W~dn~~fl~'if!':·L:k'lrflffill~;s•··Nl!j.ht·>.-,
....
, .....
;
..
-·••:•'<
/
Jl;~ti?ftf
ihit~JtJiij:~~'fJ.lfA;:'t:j')iJ:;'f
:~i-i;#{tJ:J~
;~?
52?iiamiJJt<iJ,L_?si,~ii1i?f;~tiJ{~!)i<,·
•.
_
Altho~gh •• Melit~
:
carite back
this semester, she is plaiuiing to
transfer to
SVN.Y
r-{e~ Palti-~ext
1,::;::;::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::±:::I
year.
-
., .
:
.
Disagreeing
•
•
with
.
.MeHto,
••
Michelle Newman, a Long Island
••.
resident who lives. at Royal Crest
Apartments. in
•
Hyde Park, said
•
that she. found the pe<:?pl~.--
at'
Marist to be friendly. However,.
she said that she f~els ihai: college
activities
.
are
•
not
••
advertised
enough.
•
\
•
·•
••
"My
social life
·is.
limited
•
because· -I commute;'';
'.said.
,
Newmiln."Here .. s~hedules of ac-
• 'tivities
·:
are> thrown
:,
·afoiihd:
-
They're not organized. You don;i
know what's happening
\
unless
·
•
you hear it frorn somebody;"
•
·•'
·,
-_
:
..
_One,
of the oldest_ and best-
known ''freshmen,"·. Matt Fur-
janic, who.recently began hjs first
year as Marist's men's basketball
coach, said . that ·he has nothing
but praise for Mai-ist .and the
Poughkeepsie area. He said he
feels the Marist
.campus
is close-
knit and he likes the interaction
between students and faculty.
Furjanic said he finds Dutchess
County to be an ideal place to
live, and added that he likes the
proximity to
New York
City yet
enjoys the4'eautiful scenery and
homes of the area.-·
.
•
•
•
•
David Schifter~ a
,
freshmari
from Manhatten, s,umn;ied up
t.iis
feelings about freshman year say-
ing; "Living away • from. home
and being independent gives
_me
a
chance to grow and
make
deci-
sions which can. be
'used
in the
future/'
· ;,
..
·,.,--
•
"
··-
~-·,J
,._
......
!":.
•'
i
•.-t.
··.,;,
._.~•
.
.
.
.
.
.
~riff'!-lt}
...
.
, .
•.·
.....
·•.·. .
<
...
.
. J() &•Beers
••
'till
.Mir;/hig/j,J
.&}JJ;.;J'f
-·
~
:·:•·
·(.
~
.
.
/.
:
·saturday
-.$2 .Admission -
$1 With- Gold Card·
"#,••
••
•
•••
•
2
for
1 'til/12:00
p.m.
&p~,ncj1J,g·
'·
..
/_.
,,.···,,
PREPARATION FOR:
.••
GMAT • LSAT'• MCAT
-~-
P.oughkeepsie Cf~i~ses
..
•
.
·.•'·
·
..
·begin
__
Week
of.Jan;
14,,
Jan: 21 and
.March
·4_
·-·
·;·cail
e14:94a:taor·:·
•
.For
Information
l ~~--
_·
KIIPIAN
.·
.
--ED\?~~--.
In lltw
'11>!1<
Stale Stanley
H KaDbn
r
ducabOOilt
t,nltr lid
ROOSEVELT 1, 2, 3 & 4
Rte. 9, Hyde Park CA9-2000
ACRES OF FREE PARKING
DISCOU'r"T MATS SAT. &
SU_N.
AT-2:00, P.M/-•'.•
·ALU4fHEATRES·
...
"Thebestfilmive."see~Jhisjedr.
'.'
•
•
JoelSiegel-ABC-TV
-
.
··:.
'\'tftE:
Kitti
N~···.F
I
E.L'DS(R)
•·,
->7:00
&_,9:40
•
•
.
. .
Eddie
Murphy
is
..
on ;Vaca:tion
}'
..
BEVERLY
HlL:LS<'COP··
:.
7:15.&9:30
FINAL W.E~K!
-_
,
Matt.Dillon
,.
>
-::THE
FLAMINGO'KID,PG-;3)
0
-
•
•.
7:35 & 9:25.
Starts
Wednesday
February 6
.
•
Bizet's CARMEN:-
·•
._.-r-,•.•.;.
,
•...
•
•
-.;,.:.~=
-::c:·-~-\-:_~;~r-:!_:::.{:-.:~:t·_<
_____
:i
___
,~
-- -~_'::~
·-:-:
:.:.
-,, :_
~:
-
.
.
·_.
- -
;
.
'
.
ei,dem
WINE & L~QUO
•-
26ACAOEMY ST.
PO'J(EEPSIE, "N.Y:' 12601
Tel. 452-4110
MA.RI.ST
.
'
BASKETBALL
defeat
FDU
••••
.,
'·.
-
Jan.
31;
1985.-·
THE CIRCLE·
Page
11--•
•
The
Hyd~
Park
~estival theatre.
Students sample theater
life
as":'interns for summer season··
I
.
••
·
b;~iari~i~e
t:legg
workers, said Smith.
"Vanities," which he authored
But
the
feeling
of
ac-
and directed at the theater this
There is more to theater than
complishriient the entire crew felt_ past summer.
meets the eye.
.
after a performance made. the
She recalled "Jack's panic two
·
That~s
.
what junior
Eileen
•
work worthwhile, Harris
.
said.
days before the show» when the
Harris and senior Tara Smith
"Being a part of the productions: actresses' costumes arrived from
found out this past summer was
rewarding.
•
•
Everyone
New York unfinished. Smith said
-
dudng: their internships af the
-
depended on· each ot~er for the
that she had had
_
no previous
Hyde P;ark Festival theater.
•
show to ~e perfect," she said.
.
sewing experience but finished all
For the two students, who had
•
S~ith
•
commen~ed on her
of the costumes in time for the
never ~n inyolved previously in
.
feeling of acco~phshment '.1fter
-
show.· "I made up the Tara
·_.··:a
_
.
profess~o_naL
~-:
produc_ tion,,
_
p~rformant:es. I got a bigger.
•
stitch, ".Smith joked •.
:·
working with··professional·actots· high knowmg that I made the·.
Harris also had a chance to
and actresses
-
as well as a crew actors feel secure - e~en more so_ meet
•
Heifneri
•
"He recapped in
who followed union rules to run
.
t~an Jrom
,
the audience clap-
.-
one
•
conversation
what
my
the theater,
-
the IS-credit in-
pmg...
playwriting teacher taught me in
ternship was a
-
new look at the
/W~en
Monte_ ~ark~am, t~~
-
one course," Harris said.
world of performing.
ie~d m the production. Sleuth,
•
Harris and Smith said that they
--·
Harris and Smith_ agreed
_tha_t'
said that he_
trusted Smi_th
enough thought
the iriternship was
.'there
is
·
more
'to
a theatrical t<? check his· personal props for
worthwhile and Smith said that
production
than
.
what
.
the him,_ then later. thanked her she would like to return to the
audience sees.
·-
•
publicly for bemg the best summerstock theater in Hyde
· .
"I realized thatyou don't have cos~ume . dresser he ever had,
Park riext year after completing
•
to be putting on makeup to be
•
Smith said she !elt then that she another internship in theater
;
theatrical. Anything _ that
•
go_es
_
had b~n appreciated. .
.
during the spring seniester.
';_
:~nto.'
makiµg:-~.~\:pr~uctio.n;, 'is{ ,:..;_!he_;Jo~b
was exha11stmg.
Smith':'
-
••
The internships were made
':'tbeafrical.'.i•Evcrj/j:,arf
·:is\",
.im-:
~
sa~d. that she
-averaged
about 90 available for the firsttime during
•
portant," said Harris.
·,
... •
..
.
•
h~urs of w?rk a week, b~t agreed the summer through Dr. Jeptha
:
...
·
'·
,-
.. •
:-/.
•
.
with Harns:
"Theater
is not a
Lanning, associate professor. of
.<.f
Smith, who w,.s·assist~nt stage
.
glamorous job. It is a lot of hard
communications and a member of
; .~anage~
for:
t!µ'ee-of the four
•
work; you have to stick with it
the board of directors for the
.
productions
•
1
noted
that
•.
the
and you have to love it" said Hyde Park Festival Theater.
:
bac:kstage crew· is vital in making Smith.
'
•
Lanning said that he hopes the
,the<P.r<>du~tion'
,run
smoothly.
-
Working with the professional
_internships
will
eventuaqy
.
Referring
.;-to
•
·.the
job
.
of a actors and actresses is not as big a
develop imo a program between
.backstage/worker,
Smith said: deal as people assume, according
-
the Hyde'Park theater and Marist
"You had to be on your toes. The
·
to Smith: "Everyone has this College ~here students will gain
.
actors depended on it
for
every illusion of 'oh my god, she's
experience
working
with
,
perforrt,lance. You couldn't make working with ihe stars.'. They're
professional actors and actresses
a mistake .. " The pressure and not like that. In'fact, they are very in classes and on stage. He added
..
nervousness of each performance down to earth."
•
that the.board of directors
for
the
was just as great
.for
-
those on
Smith worked clo·sely with Jack
theater is supportive of
•
the
.
stage as it was for the backstage Heifner on the Broadway play
program.
-
-
· -
the long run it helps the whole work and play. The VCR is
'.
Continued.from page 8
_
industry because it stimulates help/ng to usher in the home
'::
optio!l·of joining a club for
a
one more_ and more production of\' entertainment
revolution
by
i,
time fee that later entitles them to films." With more products to making it more desirable to stay
.
discounts and free rentals. For . choose from, . said Cohen, the home instead of going out, an
example, Video U charges $35.00 more people will be able to find appealing option on a cold winter
•
•
for club, membership. This gives something that they like.
,
'
night.
.
__
•
'the
member
.
three free video
Cohen does· feel, however, that
Th~ _Electronic Industries
rentals and half p,:ice on all future changing lifestyles caused by· Ass~1at1on says_ that s~les of
·•·
rentals.
•
_
•
-
increased VCR usage could hurt V~R s are growmg c_ontmua!IY,
. ,; -.
VCR's also come in handy· for his business._ "Personally I see with 81
OJo
more sold m th~ first
•
special events. "My mother used them as a good-sized threat," he ten months of 1984 than m the
to take-me and ten of my friends said "insofar as it· eliminates first ten months of 1983. The EIA
to the movies for my birthday,"
pot;ntial customers. It• doesn't
es!i~ates th~t more than 5.5
said Bourbeau, "and for the same hurt the fourteen to thirty-five mdbo~ VCR s have been_
sold so
price now she could rent the age bracket which are most of far this year alone, and mdustry
':
_movie
and throw me a good party our- custom~rs, but people over spokesmen pro)e_ct possib~e sales
.,:.
too.'.'
thirty-five
·
would rather stay
_
of over 10 mtlhon VCR s next
•
"It's
cheap entertainment,"
home on the couch.'' Cohen said year.
agreed Tony Sarice. manager of the thirty-five and over age group
The interrelated tape_
industry is
Sound Odyssey in Wappingers constitutes approximately· ten to subsequently . boommg also.
Falls. "Why spend twenty dollars fifteen percent of his_ business, Paramount claims to hav_e sold
on a movie wheit you can rent it but he remains optimistic about mor~ than 600,000 copies of
for four?"
•
VCR's
"Raiders of the Lost Ark" alone,
With all this excitement over
•
at $40.00
apiece. The EIA
staying at home, formerly
·the.
"We survived free TV and we estimates that total U.S. factory
dullest thing happening on a
·
survived cable TV," Cohen said, shipments of videocassettes, both
-
Saturday
•
night, the traditional "and we'll survive VCR's. If prerecorded and blank, will
movie theater would seem to. be anything I think they'll help us exceed I 13.5 million in 1984, a
on • the verge of collapse.
down the road."
healthy figure.
However, Fred Cohen, co-owner
"!"just think people would be
Faced with increasing numbers
of the Roosevelt 4 theater in Hyde fed up with staying home night of avenues of escape, people seem
Park, says that while VCR's after night,"
.Cohen
added.
to be choosing to stay home.
aren't helping his theater now,
But
as
American culture moves
"It
means freedom,"
says
they will eventually spur new 'further and further into the in-
Juras, "I
can
watch whatever I
growth in the movie industry.
formation age, the home is being want whenever I want. I'm not
"I don't think
they
help us any foreseen
as
an increasing center of tied down to someone else's
right now," said Cohen, "but in activity, where most people will schedule.''
j
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Pag~
.12
•
THE CIRC'LE:
Jan.
31,· 1985
.
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P.o/s6X697
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HERMOSA
.BEACH,-.
CA.
90254
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OVERSEAS'EMPI.OYME·NT
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WORLD-sioE
OPP-◊RTUNITIES'.FOR
.MEN
AND WOMEN!
•
JAPAN
>EtiROPE
•
AFRICA - AUSTRALIA : THE
·souTH
PACIFIC~ SOUTH AMERICA -THE FAR EAST.
.
.
.
•
EXCELLENT
:BENEFITS.
HIGHER
·SALARIES
AND
WAGES!,.:
:FREE
TRANSPORTATION! GE_N~ROUSVACATIONS!
•
'J
_,:·::.>_/.·
_.
-
,I~
-
•
-· ...
,
••
M~re than\oo.~O~Am~'ric~ns
i
Japan,
Africa·.' The: s~~th
2
:
..
-
not including members of'. Pacific; The:Far East, Sou.th
.
'.
the armed: -services
.
.::.;• are
Arrierica ... nearly every
parf
now liv_ing overseas. These
·
of the free worid !
..
•
·_
• •
:
•
-people
are·engaged'innearly
'(3).
Companies·.
an~
everypossible
.-activi-·
•
Government
agencies·
•
ty .,.construction,
engineer-
employing pet'sonnelin !le·a~-
ing, s~les,
:·
trailsporfation;
·
Ij,;
every_. occupation; frot;n.
secretarial
•
work,
••
accoun°
the unskilled
'laborer·
to
:the:
ting,
manti.fac'turing,
.
oil
-
college trained_ professl.onaL
refining," teaching,
nursing,
man or woman:
·> .
•
:Ji
'.
government;
.
etc.-etc.
-
And
./
(4).
Firms
'and
organiza~:
.
many. are/~~rnjng
$2,000 to
'
.
tions engaged in for!!ig·n··c<ni~,
•
$5,000 pernionth,·:.or more!
_·_:
• struction
;projects;
111ariufa1!~
·
•
To <ail~~.:., y6u/the
;
op~(
.,
luring,
.
mining;..: oi('refining',;!
podunity-'c' to\ apply
/:
for
•
engfoeering/!sa1e~ .• serv.iC(lS;;_il
.
oversea·s<:employrrient;
\
.we
..
teaching, etc., etc.'.::.,
:<:.'.>:,,
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-'
haie• rese'arched:and compil-
'•
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(5).
How-and
_wherejo:ap":·
:
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ed a new':a~d exciting direc·-
ply for overseas Government.
:'tory
-
__
01f~X9V-erseaS
_-.
employ ..
-.
::.-.jobs.
:
•
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·>.·
·-:_.:~--~-,~><
..
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•
ment. Her,e;is just a
·sample'
/(6)•
Information
.<ab_out
of
>
what
>:our
International
summerjobs.',
. •.:
·.
·,:,,~ ·
'Employment
Directory-
J
(7).
You_
wm
receive
•:our.
covers._
;;
_.
:
·•
'Employme11t
Qpporturiity
( 1). Our
·_
International
-
•
Digest~,jam~packed· with.inc
Employment Directory lists
•
'formation•
about· currenf job.
dozens o( cruise ship: coiri-
:
:
opportunities.'/ Sp~c1al
.
sec~
panies, both
,on
ilie
'east
a'n~
..
tions
.features;'
news
of
-·
.west coastt You will be told
:_
ov¢rseas
:.
construction
'pro-
•
what typ·e: of positions th¢-
.jeds;·c exe(!U_tive
•
positions
•
-
cruise ship companies hire,
:
ailcl.teaching opportunities.-
••
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.
a~s
''.
d e c k
'
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a n d s·,
. '
.
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90
Day
Money
,
-'.
·
.
restauran't:;
help;
.cooks,>_.,·\
Back.Guarantee·_-?,
.•.
bartenders, just
•
to
;
name a.
.
Our International
'EIDploy-.
few. You
_:
:win aiso
.
receive.·'.
~
ment Directory is; senfto you
several
,·Employment
.Ap-
•
with ibis.
,guarantee.··u
for•
plicationCForms,:
,that
you· , any reasoriyoUdQ n9t9~ta!n.
·-
may send< directly
•
to: the
:
ovtirseas employmerihir,: yoj,ic
companiis'.you would like to
are
n'ot satisfiel
vJ(t~-_t.he
_job.
•
-
work for.
:;·
.
.
:
offers ... simply<; retur~
;
our
(2). Firms and organiza"
Directory within 90.day~ and
tioris empfoying
\11i
types
of
,jvf
l_lrefund
YQU~
ffi.Oll~Y:Pr<>\
•
personnel
in Aµstralia;
.\
mp~iy
...
noquestio!1sasked.:·-_.
••
•
: ·
s···r·
.,
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/.
_·..
•
·-
International E.rnploy~ent Directory·,
:._
131 Elma Dr'. Dept. T21
. ·
:
•
,,
...
.
Centralia, WA 98531
. -·
~lease
.
se~d
~~\ ~
copy. of. your. International Employment
Directory~ I understand that! may use this information for 90
days and if I am not satisfied with the results, I may return
your Directory for an immediate refund. On that basis· I'm·
encl~sing $20.00 cash .... check .... or money order .... for your
Directory.
•
•
NAME--------.:-:--:-:=-:-------
ptease
ADDRESS.-~--------APT
fl.
--
_________
,:
CITY_:_
_____
~STATE__
-~.
___
_
IntemaUonal Employment Directory 1984
·---
.
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ZIP
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for:·a semester,of Bn;,c-
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4:'fo aUmiMarist buddies:
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l bad·a GREAJ· visit;,'.arid
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back.: Next tiine come vis if me
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.Your S<;i-_antori
Connection
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Maureen;
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Senior Week· is
so; close,
•
but I
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no\Y.•(:omc
baclchome.
:
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Parker~:-·•-·_..;:~;:,.
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so
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•
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Michael_
Loweri,
• _ _ _
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I need. is the tadio, my.·:.
.
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pit,'
etc.~" We'..ve
•.
got
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See
yo~
on the plane ..
•.
·
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•
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Bonnie
•
Cabbage-
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··-I'i.OVEYOU!.
'
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Handsome • •
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Dear John Higgins;
• -\·
,
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We'•'· miss
-
you·, at·
.the
:•Tciwnhous~i
•
-
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.
.
Love,>
yoifr kids
'.
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Oi Lo\'e you -
you're excellent!
;
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-Jan."31,<1985
d'HE
CIRCL.E
~-Page .13.
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If
you , are JrJ~_tested,
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stop-by the:office, CC 181
•.
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between 8:30-5:00
:
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• will.affect anyone," said Phiiips. . "
T~
helpsiudents .who are think-
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.. ·, · •
' : ;.. ,.,. • .
.
:
, He said that a mixer is also plan~ . ing of becoming officers, Philips
,)·: In_ an effort to get Marist .-, iled arid that the profits from both said he'd like
fo
Hst job re-
students mor,e actively involved in :: events : win be donated to the
quirements •arid benefits so that
• their· scho9l, the_ college will be .: foundation;
•
i
officers would.know wI1at was ex,
·ho_lding . Student
Government
All clubs .will be represented . pected <?f, th~~. and w~at _
they •
_..\V~ekF~~-_25
-A1~rch
1.
.
:
during. Student. Government . could gam by bemg a club leader.
•• ·._
A!lthony ~hihpS, snident b_ody · Week, with eight 'clubs working
Philips said he has also spoken
_.presid.ent,
said that the .C~uncil of •• on the particular event for that
to Gerard Cox, dean of student
. S_tudent Leaders ijas planned the. day. The week will also include a affairs, . and · Elizabeth Ross,
• event to show stu~ents what they . cultural
language· ancl food
registrar, about allowing officers
can get:out of Manst.
"esti·val. .
• • ·t
f
I
k ·
1 '
to ·reg1s er or c asses a wee m
_.-
. The week-lon_g
event is schedul-.
ed • to include discussions and
workshops on financial aid for
•. priyate ··colleges. and student. in-
volvement in college activities.
: :.''Also scheduled for this week is
•• a • filni from the Foundation to
Save the Statue of Liberty. "They
tell us it's a real tear-jerker and
Philips said that in addition to
getting more students involved,
: CSL is concerned with making of-
. ficer positions more attractive.
•· • "A lot of times it's a hassle and
'
it takes a lot· of work," he said .
"We'd like to make : it more
• pr~s~igious to be.an officer of a
· club."
• •
advance.
• •
The CSI.:meets in Champagnat
Room 260, Tuesday at 8 a.m.
Philips said that it is difficult get-
ting people involved. "It's usually :
the same s·tudents that prepare all
the events and go to them. We'd •
like to get a lot of people ihvolv- •
ed," he said.
••
'Classics are fashion key
;
· by Marianne c~nstantino •
styled clothes are always a good
scarves, are often as important as
choice.
•
the clothes they enhance. "Look
·
·
• . at the purchase of your wardrobe
. Do the clothes make the man or •. ,· When sorting • through your
as an investment. If the items are·
does the man ma~e the clothes?
_ wardrobe,
Perlingieri suggests
classic, you will be wearing them :
No.one can ever seem to agree •. that you look for items with
for a long time. If they are or-·
• on that issue •• •
•
•
.classjc
styling. Wool blazers with
good quality, they will hold up
But one thing is for certain, ac-
narrow- lapels, skirts and ·pant~
and always look,.tasteful," Perl-
cording to Patricia
Livshin, \ made of natural fabric that aren't
manager · of the Up-To-Date '- 'too flared or too straight are
ingieri said ••
clothes store in Pqughkeepsie and
good.
.
. •
On the issue of economy, Perl-
a Marist alumna, the occasion •. '· _The best color to wear var!es by
ingieri and Livshin disagree. Liv-
dictates what should be worn and
individual. But, it's best to chose
shin said that· wheri buying
the key is
fo
look appropriate.
.
from the classics: grey, black,
clothes, the earlier in the season
·
,. : ·
-
·
/ ... blue and beige. "Each individual
you buy, the better off your.,·
. - One
•
special. occas10n .that . should have a sense of color coor-
choices will be. "Since you will be-'
everyone_
hope~ to_ atten~, s,9oner .' dination that is right for his or her
spending a lot of money, you will
or later,.is the Job mterv1e~/And, • complexion, and the basic colors
want to have the best selection. At:
how you look-could be as,1mpor-
.are great,, Perlingierisaid.
the beginning.of the season your.
tant as what you know.
. ·, • .
• '
•
choices of size, style and color are
,.-.. ,;, •.
,.,,:,,:.s- .. ,,
-.;>
c,,.,, •. ;•.·,,,.,
,,. -·-'.,. .: : _
Livshin reminds everyone that
the greatest," Liv_s_.h\n
said .
•
a.■•■•■•■•■•■•■•■•■•■•■•■-■■•••••••••■•••■•••••••••••••■•■•••~•,,,_•,.•~-■,.•,,,_•••••■•,.•.•.•,,,_•.•■.•~•,.•._•~•••.•,.••
''•-Ili~/"'P_erl~ngieri;':"di~!ctor: _of
·'f:
1l:if(erent.timesof.the,year call for
f;f~Ji~I~~!~W~-~~?m!,:,:,;fa
1
d:,.}; °c:lifferent fabrics and• colors, but
.
.
. Perlingieri did say, however,
,:]~:!cf
If
:f
~1,
iit~;:~Jil
t
~,~g
:~~;;:;
!::::::::;::.
::;:
' c<.c:
~
.. ••
:··are·1ook1rig fm' .people with that • ·colors in an interview. They are
, that buying at the end of the •
: season could save y·ou money and
still afford you good quality.
"Granted,; the selection may not
i
be as wide, but the savings will
' make up forthat."
' <' ;·:~~
•
:.
?
::::_
.
.
: reservecfquality. You have to play
not professional and they are not
'•the.game;''·
_
• • _·
. •
•
in the line of a professional sense
<: ..
:c::.;·.·:-
..
->--' .. ·•·.
Ye_.
,:.LA_,_
:•·,~I];::
......•
~,
-:..,
,
, ·:/f
resb :s'.eaf.ot,d-Steaks
:·/' ·:.Ch:ops
-iCQckfail·s_·.
_. a~kin·,toii
_Pre:mise·s·--
Show your.·college
_ID·aiid
get:a
->~FREE-
Glass of Beer
-__
witl) your ri,eal!
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.
~
.
.
.
194 WASHINGTON STREET
~POUGHKEl;PSIE·;
NEW YORK
i~~xtJ9-; 411 Sport.: A_sh_ort
ytaJk
from_
Marist).
,.-; 'The best place
to
begin choos"-. • of good taste," said Perlingieri.
• i_ng
wµ'at
to 'Year is in youi: closet.
• The necessity item for both men
: The two words to keep· 'in. mind • and women is a basic suit. Here is
~,re
·.•:qu;~lity'}'
<(
an_d • wheretheneedforgoodqualityis
_conser~auye:,, ·_ Both L1vshm - crucial. Perlingieri said: "It's bet-
.-·.and,Perhngien _agree
that t~e. on!Y . ter to own one good suit and wear
: ;place ~pat encc>U~age~
creauvttym_ it everyday, than to. have -three
dress
1s
the fashion industry. So,· cheaper ones and alternate them.
if.your job hunting in any other Thei:e is no substitute for quali-
field;stay away from trends.
• ty."
• •
•
.• ~: ferluigieri ·.said_ th~t
to .
be
Accessories· should also be of
fashionably. dressed, . classically ·' high quality. Shoes, belts, ties and
As a final suggestion, Perl-
ingieri said to keep yourself in-
formed about new style, so that .
.
you can alter your basic wardrobe
into something more expressive,
if the need presents itself.
Livshin, in response to giving a
final sugg~stion, offers the most .
basic and\ probably the· most
valuable business fashion advice
of
all. "If
it dosen't look good on
you, 4on't wear it!"
•
·TOUCH SOMEONE WITH YOUR LIFE
Mission-s.
.
-:
-Bduca
•
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-----------------------------------
Send for free booklet:
NAME-
ADDRESS
---------------
CITY
STATE
ZIP
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----
----
~----------------------------------
• L·ay
_
Brothers
SOCIETY
OF
ST.
EDMUND
EDMUNDITE
VOCATION
DIRECTOR / FAIRHOLT • SOUTH
PROSPECT
STREET / BURLINGTON
• VI 05401
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••
1
by_la~O';Con~or • :·.,
>
•.
>top.of the Foxes·thro~ghout·the Eggink (b6thof,whom
~ad~the'. -·
.. ,>·. ;;) .: :,. ,,;.-: .·.• •.
. •;second half. < ·• •--•. -
<' ,.
<<
flu) handling the.'offeilsive load'
.
•
,Aft~r' : dropping> _a
O
non-;··:
Marist did ·get some soHd.
plai -
for the Foxes; dnlf senior .Tom
conf~mmce g~ll)e to. :Utica at
.the
·_
from seniors Bruce Johnson·: and Underman's hot_outside shooting
_ Mc<;ann Center on _Monday;' th~
Steve• Eggink,
'and ,.,some kept-Robert :Mcmis deadlocked
men:; basketb,u, t~IIl _looks to
aggressive play from 7
7
3- fresh- with Marist at 22· as the half
bounce. back tomght;w1th a .key
man center. Rik :Smits but the
• ded
•
.
.
,
-·en
. ,
conference : .cl~sh-'. at Fairleigh
Pioneers were able to capitalize
_ "I coached Underman for three
..
Dickinson Uriivei'sity. ;. / / :--· on several· Red· Fox mistakes years andl think he's one.of the
Marist Will be ti-ying to sWeep down tlie·sti-etch~
. , ···_: :·.:
:_~,.,~
• •
top · forwai'ds .-in· .. the. •. east/'
the !(nights, who _ came' to
' Forward D.J. Carstensen's free Furjilnic :said.· "I told our guys .
.f>oughkeepsie· - over •-.-
the ' in-
throw with 5:29 left in the contest that he was dangerous, because he
tersessidn -·break and dropped a
gave 'Utica a• 53-43 lead, which can score. frc;,m
.both outside arid
tough·.
61"S6
µecision _•
t?;'\he, Red
pr<>ved
to be too 11\uch tcr: ov~r- inside." ·-••
•
•
• _ •
Fox.es._ : , '
·_
-,-.. - . ••
come for the hosts.
,
·: -.-:, ... -:-;_
While_ Underman • was .. busy
. - The ~nights - are headed, by
:. Marist never ·got closer. to.the . tallying up. his game-high 23 -
• second-year Coach Tom· Green,
visitors than six ·p9ints in Jhe points, - Eggink, Johnson and
- who counts
00:-
one of"the ECAC • -closingminutes; ending the Foxes • Drafton Davis all put in _ solid •
- Metro's t9p j;layl!rs •
i9/ senior
hopes of stretching their 'Vinning offensive efforts in the second
forward'Larry,Hjimpton
.. streaktothreegames._--
: ..
:<·
half to give Marist_a
little
Hampton gets m9re.tlfan -am~!e
· Johnson popped forJ4_points.
breathing room. It w·as the team's
support from ._freshmen -Jamie
in a losing cause, while S_mits
and clutch foul shooting down the
• Latney and Stev~Malloy. - • .•' '_..
1
Eggfnk _ each. had 10-:c-points. stretch, especially from Eggiqk
FDU sports.· the smallest
Williams led the winners 'with 14 (10 of.·
11'
for the game), that
Division One gymnasium in the
points.
> • • - • • .,. : :.
I· .
pro_ved
to be the difference.
colinJr_yi
·one which is _no! frien~ly_;
_ _ Last Sat~r~ay's contest. iith·
"We're playing with a·lot more
t.o visiting .-teams. Mans_t Head • Robert Morns marked• the.: first poise and composure·. down. the __
_
C_oach Matt{ Furjanic will· bring.
time Furjanic went up agains~ the stretch, and that's
the. dif-· _·
•
his team toNew Jersey,with
~
9-: school he left last September; 'and ference," Furjaruc said. "The key .•
: 1~ oyerall r,ecord and·a
5~2
111ark - ifprovedto be an enjoyable night to our season is patience, and we -
w1thm the.conference. .
- ••
<.
for the first~yearMaristinentor as were patient -tonight.· It was a
In the Utica contest;_the Foxes • _ the Foxes prevailed, 59-5'7: :;
·:<'.,. •
good overall team effort.''· •
_
committed -·_numer_ous
• costly
- • Bruce Johnscni ·also had re~sc:m·
Eggink led ·the Fox.es with 20
turn9vers in the second half to : to celebrate after the victocy,>·as points, : while . Smits added 14
-allow the visiting Pioneers to pull
he became only the tenth·pla}'.er
in
points : (including .. three slam
.
.
away with a 71-59 victory. -·- . .'..
Marist' history to score -tooo
dunks) and 7 rebounds. The only
_ Marist's new 1,000-pointscorer,BruceJohnson· . _
Marist suffered : a lackluster
career points. The basketihit did Robert Morris -player in double
• ----
• • ·-
· • • •
• , -·
•
-
' ·
••• -. • ., • · '
-
.first half offensively and could • it for Johnson came with aJittle
figures _besides Underman was • 73-69 win at the Mci:a~n C~nt~r :seJond
'h~lf
·agairisf' the much
_never recover to pull near Utica in
over five • minutes )eft 'in the . Ken Williams, who had IO points.
earlier last week.; .'. ., • .
smaller Red Flash. •
•
.. ,
_the game's, final IOniinutes. It
contest and gave the hosts a 4441
The Foxes also- proved • vie-
Once again iqvas Eggi,;ik froni
.-: Eggink hiffor a career~high 25'
was - the outside shooting of. :lead .. --
•
•
._,.
•
torious over· the -other ECAC
the outside and Smits_ from the.- points, and ·Sinits poured· in 1,4
guards W~llace WiHiams and Eric
The. game's first. half was.-a
Metro
representative : ·_
from - inside for the Red Foxes,
-
who
before fouling out late in ._the -
Jeter thar kept .the Pioneers ,oh
seesaw battle with Smits aijd • Pennsylvania, St. Franci~, with a
broke the game ~pen in _ th~ • contest. •
- ·-
•
- -
-
··Women <ti:tke
itw.<J«.0.f!}.:t1:J"1:.et!iga/il:tes,iili'Bf'&J$;~ef!:fi:.·
-
-- -
·_ •• • ·_.
·;
·-
- :
/
·
•.• .
· •• .·-•n;, •• • ./:
,
/:_<:.,.:.:· i·.-,,: .. /:-'.'.
/'.i":'<:
:\):t;J\::h3}\l2i?t))t~?J?\\);f.z·(},}+:
. ·•
.
. -by Dan Pietrafesa'
The second
.half
saw stronger • either,'.' said 1'or~. . \;/, : /.: , ·., /l'he othe(recent ,yict_~ry-/9wed
.:
~~fe,~~,'.{s_ai_~,~ilmer:_
. _
'."•
• .
.. .
_
.
shooting, better boardworkand a
, The Foxes· managed to pull :much to a pressure·,defensc: that ; ,,,AJull~<:qurtpress at the startof,.
After going 2-1 last week, pressure defense that enabled the ~head by 5 in-the second half, but•: helped the women_:9vererc9roe:a_n·/:tlie_'se¢orid:hal(helped
the Foxes.,
•
• Marist's women's basketball team : Foxes to build a JO-point lead Queens rallied back. _ _
·
: •.
>
early-• 19-2 deficie;iind:'_i'~efeat s~cir.e-_~h~;'
first-~Jght points of t~~:
heads
in to >Saturday's·_
with 3,ninutes_remairung,
•
,_\ ~•we wei:e-in it in the finaLtwo ,_·Brooklyn77-6t' :,~,;-;;y;;.,t.:··~r·•'··:)1alftotffthegame at 36.
·:
.. _ ,,; •
Cosmopolitan Conference road , :: Val \Wilmer_ and Paoline
Jrlinute~, biltourpi'essuredef~_nse '.;':··T~~ win:was thf ~e_#ii's.:m~~/:•f~M.11.ri~t~~~-;:t~en.able
tf
take.(
game against Monmouth with as~
Ekambi led the scoring attack : left their players open underneath • straight and gave them _a_fperfeft c~>ntrohbecause·.
Brooklyn s -la~k-" •
3 conference and a 9-7 overall ·_with JS arid: 12 points~ 'respec--, for easy buckets;''_ said Toria. homerecord_<>f6-0.
:
• "<·'.",' ,-·-: of bench strength
forced
them.to. _
record.·
tively,-- while : Ursula:· Winter
,y
'!We were, forced_.to foul th,em,
:
.:Co~~hTor~.was forctld i<>.use kec:p· thejr .~tar~~-g, five on ,the
That record doesn't reflect the contributed g • points and
i
1
•
and they made the1dree throws;'' -~wo· umeou~ to sett!e ~er:.tean,t
c. ~ourt., _-,:-
,;,:
-: • :·\?.
t : •
·,
__
results
Of
-a··
ro·
a·
d·
8
-
ame ·at· Colga''te
b • • d
.
.
• '·-·Th. -k ••
1
----
-Q • . - • h.· •. ·-down llfte"r:Seeing
Brooklyn build
,
•'t'ln s~~11ting them;· \Ve:sa-.y
>
re' ou~ s'. -
.
;
-
-- . --.
• e erJo_r ueens was t e1r
•
d" l d d
, •
t1· -•-·'
their vulnerability to the press and· ••
on Tue da tho gh
•
-
1
• - •
- -
,
• • • - · .·
-_·
use --of a thi'ee~guard offense. - a ~omnia~ mg
~
.. l!e to cos.
Y.
• .· .... --,
··-· ., ·.·
• •·· - -...
-·.
•
· , ,, - •
•
The ~o!i recrnt iame sa~,' the
C
w
laSt week s
o~~
los~~:~r~r!·
Guards Marsha. Bloim(
:phyilis
tumM_
oy~rs,by M_anS
t
i, ,'
.k '. b ;- C
•
~c~
,.()r
..
,~~ch_ -:~tr~ng%, ,,-,&aJ:t
Red Foxes put in a strong per- . m?d!!eyor:r~~\ec6~~
1
ha~.
1
~~ ' C~i'ry; • ~nd freshman Sh_()laf!da
;;' Cd _an~r.~.t::h\~_<>fipiet.
•.
"~~f-<b egtahn·.
:/-?tirihl~·\virit~~·i~'ill~\~-in'
---f
•
·
h
·-d h lf''
- · ·. · · · ·
Young did the damage by sconng· • nu way
in
e. irs ·
uAJ
,
w en e ,, .
. ... · .--
• -.. --.-
.
- ...
·-
.
.
ormance m t e secon .. a 'to
defeat the Foxes,71-6O and)nap
• • _ -
-
- : ·. . . • ..
-.
. • .
Foxes ~pplied'a.hatf~cowt
press./
scorihg'{with '17 •"points, while
• defeat St. ,Franci~ (N._Y:>
70~~7-'{:
_ th~ Foxes S•gc1me.winru_ng
streak. • _ ~,,
1
3i:a~d
!t
pom~ ~es~tively.
.,J'he
perfect.
i>l~y
of th~:press by - Paolin~ :E,lt~bi'
!~
the: t~
iii • .-•
.. "Poor
shooting . and
our
P;oor aU•aro1md shc>0ting
'"'"":
26 • . oun \Va~ ·. e mos
ou
-
esollle
Val•
Wilmer; who: fuusijed 'the
..
reb()unds ~th
8/:} ( ·::
J.t · .
inability to control the boards B_Cr~ent·
from. t_he field and _27
}~~~~~!:-W!/
2
_ of
1
~ fromt~e
i
g~e with "14 poi_~ts
an~
'S}!eals; • .' 'ed F'o_,x,_cWoµi~
:~~tes:_.
-~e:,
: kept them in the· game," said percent from the free throw hne
. . > .....
· ....
. .
, ·-·•.
..
-·-
<,.,--
·,
enabled ; the
•
Foxes
.
to ·cut
,
the - team's ~rfect home ,court record ..
• Marist
- -
Pat Torza,
- put the Foxes down at the half
• Paoline Ekambiled ~arist with '• deficit to 36'28
at
the half.• -
<< ' •
willbe
oti the
line
nei:i"Tucsdayat. •·
who sa_w her team, shoot_ 31
by,~29-23d~fici~~ .. :
-
> , ,
,}:4points;,Ursu.laWin~erchipped:;
·••coach;iold .us:that
if.
we
~p:m .. wlfeniheytake·pn·wagner;;.
-- percent m the first half to bwld a
- y/e were still
10
1t beca_use • m;l2,.and Jackie Ph_arr grabbed a
:·
couldn't hit on offense, then we
ma game that could mean first,.
small lead.
•
-
-
\ they weren't shooting' too well team high 8 rebounds;: •
• woul<i have to get aggressive on • pl~ce for the winner~_,
· :-'-
'
-
.
\
,·
-
...
''
.-
'
'.
''
'
•
•
-,
'
.
-.
..
.
._;·
•
."·-··
-
~
',,.
-Foie·s-·split ;~\over:br'.eal(
-by Ian O'Connor . •
• The men's basketball teatn c6tnpeted in eight con~~ts over the
intersession break: • arid continued with· the inconsistent play that •
• hasplaguedtheFoxesthisyear ... • - :-· • •
_ .
• After dropping an overtime heartbreaker to eastern power St~
Peter's, Marist rattled off a pair of -victories oyer the ECAC_
Metro's "weak ~isters," St. Francis (N. Y .) and St. Francis (P;i.). -_
Steve Eggink was the leading scorer in both wins, while freshman -
center Rik Smits popped for a career-high-19 points against St.
Francis (Pa.).
. ,
The Foxes next played Long Island University tough before
losing in the closing minutes, but then put in their worst per-
formance ·of the season in an 11.:.point home loss to Cornell
University.
• Although Marist bounced back with victories over Boston
University and Fairleigh Dickinson, the Foxes closed out the
int~session slate with a 63-57 loss to conference rival Loyola
College. With that defeat, the squad finished with a 44 record
over the break.
;
Marist Head Coach Matt Furjanic said that despite the Cornell
performance, he was encouraged by the Foxes play over the past.
five weeks. .
'
.
"We're much better defensively now, and we've become a lot
more patient on offense," Furjanic said. "We've improved a
great deal from the beginning of the season;''
• sivimiiierSbeafitWo
t/1:is
'rliixrltn
'
.
.
'
.
.
•
'
.
,
•
'
'
-
..
-
•
.
'~
-·
,•
-
byMl~ha~IR~j~M~~~y
'dividual-medley) who;set ~---~;,,_ .. "W~\~;~~
-sixth th~;~ last
.
.,,
..
_ . _
.· . ___
.. __ sonal best of 2:54;0() iii the· 200- , year..i .would li_~e
to plat¢ in the •
-
-,The Maiist women's:swim
team •
yard individual m~ley.
fop five this year/which I think -
upped its overaU record•to s~l-1 • _< At t.he St: Ro~e 'meet, .double • we can do· if ·the girls produce
with .two victories over the past - winners for Marist were freshmen
.
their bestefforts," said Billesiinp'.
•
two weeks. : ·,
·.:.., _
• • _. Tracey.O'Neill (SO.and 100-yard - • • In order for the team members
.: • __
On Jan;•. 18; the ·Red F9-xes·
•
breastroke); Genet O:=meter op;.
to swim their best times- at the
qefeated Brooklyn Coll~ge by the , tional and I •meter ·required dives)
championship, Billesimo said, the •
score of 104-25 a,t Brooklyn. . :
and . Noyes (1000 yard freestyle
team returned
"to
campus on Jan.
The Red Foxes next victory _ and 200-yard backst_ro~e)
.. ,. .
7. Each member swam four and
J
2
half hours a day, six days a week
came on an. 2 at the McCann
<
Senior co-captain Mary Marino
for two weeks to get into prime
Center when • they defeated the set
a
seasonal best in winning the
C
11
f
s
R
72 33
•
-
racing-shape.
o ege o
t. ose
-
, wmn- • SQ.yard freestyle and sophomore
_ ~•We worked ·hard over- in-
ing 15 out of 17 events.
• Cheryl . Trask . set a· personal
tersession and on Jan. 20 we
Leading Marist with victories at
'
record of 6
=
48•63 with a win in the ·began tapering our workouts with
Brooklyn were ~unior co-captain S()().ya
rdfr-~tyle; • •
the·hopes of being well-rested for
Nancy Champlin (100-and 20().
Marist
Head . Coach
Jim
the • championships," Billesimo
yard freestyle), freshmen Debbie . Billesimo said he is pleased with
said. :
Noyes
(100-and
200-yard
_ the two victories, but the team's
"The only probtern•is that the
backstroke) and Desiree Genet (1- • goal is still· the Metropolitan
N.Y.U. - meet was rescheduled
meter optional and l·meter re• - Swimming and Diving Cham-
from last semester to Tuesday,
quired dives) and sophomore
pionships tomorrow through Sun-
Jan. 29. It definitely will not help
Laurie
DeJong
(100-yard
day at ·St. Peter's College in
our performance at the ch_am;;
breaststroke and 200-yard in-
Jersey City.
••
pionships."
_I
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·---~---Jan.
31,
1985-
~~~
CIRCLE -
Page
1s--•
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it2!,i]l~f
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tldn-P1aying
•.
ro
1e
i•
,,. __
,_,...,_./•,t,flano;coiinot:> .::.; :;,,;.,_":;~ ·.:
.~ecarskL.cam.eJo''.".Marist. in __ :-when·-l felt:_the 'pain,'.'. .Pecarski
-~
.,•
,•:,.
•
.
//".'\:,'·:
• .. ·'
::,···
'<
,, .. .-·•. September as this program's ITIOS( said_. ''I never, though( my foot •
: : :'::;":W.h.en,
Marist ;basketball. fans• -·~heavily.
re.cruited,prospect. .After
could be broken. I didn't believe
•
\t:~lfJ~p?,t'irag:!c;~ap~,e~!~js)~J1(?'.·b~!ri.~:i~!i1ejfJhe: ~e~(_C~deJ,.(l7 • it' until the doctor showed.me the·
:,'JeJi!,':,.9n~
~~teJharqmcl<~Y,.C,OI_l}e~/:')'..e.ar:<>H:ls;a~~}ll}d~~)_.mEurppe
_b>:.' X;rays in 'the 'hospital. The pain
to m_1p4·.Jlas,
toJ,e. Septt28;-,the~ .. a.:paneJ;-of.th,e:conune!}t',s.
sport- justwasri't that bad." _
•
• :day_' -f::the:.·
,a!}nouit~eme_nc.:x~as·~•'
sW~it~rs scticibls stich·as· Wichita
•• B~t the p~i~ in his foot ~as~;t
:,.,~ad~•·'."/'.':'-\?
··:;
\?<;~:;';',-:-'.:•,
:t/tstate;-,;:t;oiii~fana-
Siate/ Illinois •. nearly as,: bad '. as · the almost
.:,,i
8-~f;\Y,hile
th!lt eyent;~~~,a1,1:o~:::··/iaria/Arizona_
State pursued _.the unbearable pain he felt inside
'. Y
1':)US .
1~p~c,u,n: t_he IJ.lVlSU?Il,9n1;
••• fresiini'an ·center:' With fast com~ later that night; His father was to
: pr?gr~J!l;:: :_
al_lot~er_,
:.A<l\~
':~'.n?~·:< pa_ny;
:•like,
,·1har- competi~g ~f_or
• come all tl).e way from Yugoslavia
•
-·
~tlln~s:.a~)Javmg ~.mor~ _sigmfJ-/; :Pecafski!s· talents -• it's: .a' small • the next d!!Y to watch Marist and
·_
•caritel),eg_a,t!ye._<:g~~ron
the tea~'s,·_::, mitacle·/:Jilifr/-'th_~- soft~spq~en . Miroslav play against a club team
• P.erforP1:1J\~~}1~
1s_s~iiso
11• ,·: '._?">'•·-;':,Yugoslav~n-4t:d.'up:a~e~;Fox;
:
• from ·their homeland -
a team
;, .:rnat·_date:,IS
No~_.).4 ~,t~e day_:(·
.n
.:cam~':A()me fro~'. playing • which consisted of rnany of
.· __
M1roslay P~car.sk1 ~roke his left. • basketb~ll - -.one ;· day· and ... my
Pecarski's friends. Instead, both
.:root. ) • :_·_; .•·:·"<,:;
,;:
' ,· <'-:::_,Hrdther:said he had a surprise for
would be able to•watch the game -
.. -.C::hi.~case:xo.u:-.'<ion'tknow-
who::· nie ,',: Pecarski. said. '!Bogdan . together. . _.;
-_Pecat~kjis;
he'S:t~a(6-10 guy you · -JoJicic '(Marist'~ ··academic ads
• see dresse<l iq-str_eetdothes at !he ·.r~isor)'c~me io.my·hou·se and said
"I
cried that night when they
. -:end of.
.t~e;.Mar1st;bench
dunn.g
\:he
wanted me to come and.play in
tqld.me I could not play,'' Pecar-
_•home. basketball games.•· And· m·::: the United:States.· Iwas very
ex-
ski said.
"I
had worked very hard •
.
case you were ~on~ering, you'll • • cited,.because l've'always wanted
to be ready for the season. It was
'. p_ro_bably
see him in. that same •. to play inAinerica. •
.•. •
.:'.-''· :" •.
the first time in iny life that lwas
. :<spot for .the res! of the_.season. • _ , ''.After talking with _iny father
seriously hurt."
.
U?less Pecar5"1 '.pull~< off-. a , and with.my family,I decided on·
: Pecarski .calls the period just
m1rac.ulous
recovery by_the end of : Marist '' · ••
Pecarski
continued.
after the injury the "hardest time
ne~t. ·,~,eek
1 •
he . wiW• ~e./'.ied-
,
:
•~My f~ther didn't want, me to go
in my life.': He said he found it·
. ~~•rtl=d :foqheyea~.-- :.<\,
•
.•
toaveryl:!igschool,·andl
lilced hai'dtowatchhisteammatesplay,
•
1
/
'\V~at :' _exacdy..-,
does "' red- : _ the;;·school's computer • science . but that his friends gave him alot
_· shi~ed,, mean?. '\Y~l},
\ for_ some
program. Bogdan·\Vas alsoa big of support during· the rm1gh
maJor s_chqols,.aUJt
me~ns 1s.·
that
.
part •. of the rea~on to attend
times.
•
••
• healthy freshn.1en _recr~1ts
get' to , • Marist?!~
: •• • •• •
•
. "Sometimes I think about not
. • spend.a ye:ir !n·the ~e1gh~ room·_ : After. arriving in,Poughkeep-
being on the court, and 1· get _.·
•
before. be~1!1nmg
th~1r f?ur yea~s , sie; Pecarski quickly .established upset/'
Pecarski said. l'But
L
of compeuuon. But m this case,
It
himself as the best of the trio of
have a lot of friends here who
..
:
allows an. ~t~l~te to re~ai~ four
E_uropean recruits (Rik Smits and • • stayed with me and helped. They
. years of ebg1b1hty
_a~t~r
Sltt\ng out
Alain:. Forestier being the other
helped when I was .dow:n.
~•
on~ season duet? mJ,ury. .
, .
. two) who came here via the Mike
· Now, with the cast finally off
• I feel t~~t be1~g ~e~~h1rted 1~
.
Perry Express.
·
His pre-season . his foot, the Yugoslavian,speaks
.a good dec~s10
?,
ffr me, . fecar~ki . play _had e_arned him the job of_ with anticipation about his future
•
• ~~cen,tly
sa1~. .I ve had a ba~ in.-
starting . center, and . he seemed . at Marist. He rules ,out any
J~ry,, an~j if·
I,
_come back . this
ready to .be the Foxes main _inside c_hance of transf~rring/to a big-
se.~o?. I)l_lose .a-whole year of _ scoring threat. But then came the ·ume school,· saymg he wants to
e~g~bihty
•.
~
want to play four • injury.
.. .
complete his education right here
y~ars here._
"We were ~oing through drills • in Poughkeepsie.
,
_
"I'm going to go
1
home over the
Miroslav Pecarski
. . . .
summer.: and . lift . w.eights and
-
-
·
·~·"•'
,,run>'·:Pecarskh''said··' ''I'm· op-" ther.e to give PecarskLa helping .. season."
---------·
.. ••
timlstic that we(te goi~g to have a . hand, they will not be forgotten.
d
-
"I can't forget what I owe
• If Pecarski remains healthy,
those slam dunks will be a com-
mon· occurrence in the McCann
Center for four years to come.
·:,-.>>::·
_):o\•-:'.:<.:::/'l~-:--:~•:o::.·,.\'-·
:.,_ -~ . --~_;.
__
._
, .. '
shooter, somebody- better 'telL
•
• •.c,
•.
him.The senior.foiward,froin
t.
T4_; Jn_en's'.
basietb~_u·.
t~m
•.
E1,igeiie~ :oregon, . has , been
: , rece11:tlr acq}lired. a w.elcom_e deadiy'from the.floor and foul ,
addition to the squad iq Ron.
linecan.,,year.:-~Eggink·1s
••
...
_. M«:<;:11~ts,
a,·,6~2.traits!er f~om , ayer11.ging
°.Y~i
;15. p_oi~tf P.~r·:
; Id11.hp ~tat~ •
0
!-!~1v~_mty_'.,,·
g~~e apd)ut~ 9~~r
95.
pe,rcent •
.. _
,
: ¥<;:Car,i~s;
,who stafred at New
from tlie charity.stripe,.one of, :
York's Brandie~:_Hfg~
_s_c~9ol, ~lie .: Ea'don'.s \ bes(
·.per},
_
, ,,has two;y~rs.of,ehg1b1hty,left • ·c.~n.-tages
...
Dr.
Ho'Yard"D.oc'.'.
' ':· b,eginning nexf.,s~fon. Marist
•.
Goldman,
,who'
took QVCr
the
.
:;· assis~nt, coach: Jim· Todd, said ._ -athletic
.·director's
:post ·on an : •
'./ McPants\vi~l
play
:iith~r guar.d , inter,ini'
b'asi'~
~lasi" semester, -: '
/ position· for _the Red, Foxes.
retains his :duties, for now_·
.as
; ''His. d~fensiye .quickness
and .
d·oes'assistantAb Dick Quinn.
• • leaping· abiiity will definitely •• The bet here is tha·t both men
be an asset for us;'' Todd said.
will keep their current duties
''Ron is a fine player who'll .. for the remainder of the school •
help
this.'.team.
'!.[>Pre-seas.on • year : •. Mike: Malet· ·will, bring .
publicity;'wht?ther positive ~r
his Maiist • taciosse·· squad· to •
negative, seems to have paid
-
· Virginia during the . week of
off ·for tile men!s ·basketball
spring break, . and . not to.
t~in. ,Attendaµce is reporte9ly . FIQrida: ·as originally. planned ...
.up.over 25 pcrcc{!.t from_la~t .. The team will COI!lpete in a
season, and the. crowds· seem
round-robin tournament there
more v~t
And.it's not just
to -get ready
.-for
the 1985
Jor
the big • games. with
-season. uoetting away from
_ Villanova _and -Iona anymore.
the cold weather and . com-
Et11pty ~eats are -nc,w hard to • peting with some quality teams
find in the McCann . Center _ will definitely help- us," said
even when ·mediocre squads
junior. attackman
Tom
Daly.
. like Cornell and Jtobert Morris
. "It should be a_ good ex-
come to town ... While the
perience for us." ... On the
Foxes have been erratic for
negative side, junior mid-
most of the season,· some
fielder John Yoong will
miss
things have. become com-
the first two weeks of practice
monplace. Rtlt Smits is now
after straining ligaments in his
• consistently scoring in double
left ankle over the intersession
figures and
is
also grabbing his
break._ Young sustained the
share of rebounds. Drafton
injury
during
a
pickup
'Bat' Davis,
now a starter, has
basketball· game with his
been dishing of( around -five
brothers .Michael and Ricky
assists per ~uting l~tely, aiding
Lee, who were recently rated
. Marist's
tenth • 1,000-point
by
a
national magazine
as
two
, __
scorer
Bru~e . «Scooby"
of the top prep stars in the
Johnson
in that department. If
Boston area.
Steve Eggink is
a
streak
very goo .team·next year.''_
them," Pecarski said. "l promis-
: As
for those friends who were ed them some slam dunks for next
-
-
•,
;
;
'
:..
.
•
,
•
..
, .
.
.
I
t:S:katers ·came .off 'hectic. week,
setto host CM£ ,Post
w
ednesday
by John Cannon
·: After • playing _its busiest week
• of-the season; the .Marist men's
ho·ckefteam will hostC;W .. Post
nextWedriesday night at'the Mid-
Hudson Civic Center.
• :
. The Red Foxes travel to
StonybrookCollege today to face
Stonybrook for the firsttinie this
.season·;-:
'after skating last night
against Maritime Academy at the
Civic Center. The Foxes went into
last night's game with a record of
5-3 this ·season,giving them .fo_ur
inoi-e victories than during all of
last season.· ; ·' · •
•.
. Marist has had .success against
•
•
I
. upcoming opponent C. W; Post in
the past few years, according to
Red. Fox center Tim· Graham.
'.'We· have beaten them in. the
. past,. but we have not seen them
this year," he said.
•
• Earlier this season, C.W. Post
tied Manhattan College, which is
unbeaten at 9--0-1. The ninth win
was a 12-5 rout over the Foxes last
Saturday night at Manhattan's
outdoor skating rink .
- "Manhattan just outskated us
throughout the entire game,". said
co-captain Rob Trabulsi. The
senior notched. a hat trick in the
losing cause and was Marist's
primary offensive spark. Graham
scored the other -two goals and
• added an assist.
The • Foxes defeated • Kean
College 9-6 last Wednesday night,
with freshman goaltender· Greg
Whitehead picking up the win.
Trabulsi scored twice, while
• Graham contributed a goal and
an assist.
Although • the Foxes have
played four games in the past
week, the team's overall con-
ditioning is. not as good as the.
players would like. "We have·
been inconsistent," said Graham, •
."and we couldn't get the ice time
over the break."
Swimmers go·through· tough time
{lfter ffloving up in Conference
-by Michael Rohen Murpby
"A year of transition" is how
Larry Van Wagner, Marist men's
swimming head coach, describes
his team's performance up to this
point.
The I-5 Red Foxes are undergo-
ing some growing pains because
of two factors, according to Van
Wagner.
The first is its switch from the B
section of the Metropolitan
Swimming and Diving Con-
ference, where it was 7-3 last year,
to the more competitive A sec-
tion. "I knew last year that when
we went to the A division it was
going to
be a difficult transition,"
said Van Wagner.
"I
was
prepared for those sort of grow-
ing pains."
The second trouble spot is an
unexpectedly
poor
recruiting
year. "Of the· six individuals
I
highly recruited last year, only
one matriculated into Marist last
fall," he said.
• Despite those setbacks, Van
Wagner said he remains confident
the team will
be
competitive
throughout the rest of the season.
There are three meets (Queens
College J~n. 31, St. Peter's Feb.
5.
and N.Y. Maritime Feb. 13) left
before the Metropolitan Swimm-
ing and Diving Championships
February 21, 22, and 23 at Marist.
"I think we have a good chance
of winning all of those meets or at
least two of them," said Van
Wagner.
Regarding
the
conference
championships, he said that his
goal is improvement over last
year's 11th place finish among 22
schools.
"I
hope that we can in-
dh-idually reduce our times at the
championships," he said. "This
would not only help our team per-
formance, ~ut also help us better
our eleventh place ranking."
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love o'f:five '9o_lla~s.
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;_.:::·)·:.~,:.::~~1~::--~;·:·~:~'.-;
::·
__
._:
1.,~-,;..i'r'
··Both Hfockl_ey;:and
::Goetz•:are
t
\.\\, •
. physi.cally/slight men;- clfan:cut/;
\\\
·-bespeckled and;Jrom, pro~perous ::
'.~
·'•
families.:They •both, hadJllegal\y-_ ..
;\<
.purchased, handgbQS. Hinekky'.s
L
!/\·\:
,
trigger finger took aim
:at
Rqnald:·-,
~,·r·
•
··Reagan .. ·· He's·. -.in,'-:
i•.:mentar:-:
\'( '.·
.hospital;-; still :,dr~rrting. :of,fov~.'/:
.\:,
. ,and marriage. po~~'.s ~~iP..f~H'oJ'.1.-::
:,: 1
•.·
·a·couple·of,black;k1ds.m~a.New
·,
( \\.
• 'Yorfsubw~y'.:He's'.~bout,'t~'Ylri,te?;
\\
-the·· ,.::Great
.;,'..~American',
~\'·'. .
:Aut'obiography,.: scion.to· ;beO:a·:
t
V~
\:
•
crit,i~lly-:"~an1,1e~,f!I()j~o,n
pictll~e •.
·:
J\ :
:.The abortion .;chmc, bombers;are .
f~\\: .
·going tci.hell,'an~
110
one cares.: .
t~:\;\
•
Thisi;~i~ty.h~hq~e itutS:.. ::'
.I
~.:.;
.. ·
.
.
. ,;·•·
.
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·.
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·,- .. -. -.. ----
• {.\
c;nthi~;d.jt'~~:~~i~'-t
..
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.·;
•.
·.,
'
. •.
_,.'
~
'
.
.
\-t,~ '
.
,
see that.the: company i~ reim- ..
•
•
•• tbursed_ for the charges and 'then:,
·<lookat eachcase'individually: We :'
would. certainly:>'look ,<more:;
• ··ravorablyohanyonewho chooses •
• .to owrh.1pfo their involvement on •
.. .theifmvn;'.~-< , .... \:.,':',
•
.·'"'·.":
-
.
,;
_.,-
__
.:
_·:·:•-
.
.,
ToiafTelU.SA~· which serves •
•
•
.•••
'5,000 customers 'in: norther'n Nevv
Jersey;,was:Cable·
tq
ideritif"y:the··:'
students ····,involved
·_
by:: ·making •
numerous -phon'e/cans·to :check .
•
·.·_
numbers:}isied 6rithe bills; accor~)
·
..
:?m!::z:~~:zd·:.if
fatlnis-
,~;it~~;·;-•
.. : • Mirist noor:pay 'tih:ones)i~'
~eWas .:
•• ·.110mes·
'.·to:.where/tJie'.calls.:; were '.
• mad~,-' according· ,to .':FeldmaiL ~::
• "'The'studeritsthat·i falked'to'o~ '.
the ;phone
':were
yei:y 'pleasa.ni:, 'I :
was extremely pl~ased_'with:;their ;_
.·cooperatic;,n.<Tlley:adrnittedthat, ...
:
_.-~they
baa_. done. sc;>!llethiilg
-wro.ng
..
.
· ·and were willing to .payJor.· ihe '
···),ills;'{Feldm~ns,aidi >\
'-;:;::;:
;•·:
• i
·Although'
h~ .•
has
.riot
.
se~t -the ;
'.,
bills to the ·studerits~yei, Feldi11an
°:
·expect~ -rc:irobumriterit~
0
l:lnd':says :
, thatlegaLaction ·will not be ~1:1ken
-_·
: if the bills are settled.·''! want this ,·
.•.• :whole thing _cieared up ·a~d'.<!rop::
:-
pe~k I~n'L not· trying;·tq''.geLthe
·:
·students in frouble,·I riladea pro~
~
• •• . ..• mise .fo the . students
.
to
keep:,
.
everything,: confidential\ if . they ::
·,cooperated/'. Feldman said: , ,
.
:,
·Feldman ~id that this.1~·cieaily:).
• a moral . -issue· .that' the. students'.
must deal with themselves: "It·,,
• happens:
You':
•do·. something.:
- wrong ·and sooner,.or.Jater· you\
will ·get _caµght.
·
lt'.s
•
important
i'
that ·they .· understand • that they/
were wrong,",Feldman said ..
-
-· :
• •. Despiie the. st1c1dents'.
coopera-
·:_
tion, • : Feldman ....
said : he. , was--_
• disc6l!raged and • • disappointed •
-with'the·college's reaction-to the '
problem.
..
.
.
.
. _
• • "The school left , this whole·'"
chore up to.me. They put me off.·.
cc;,mpletely and referred me to a ·
lawyer. . I only . wanted · the
students' • • reimbur&ement. I've
received cooperation from other
administrations, • but
Marist's
-·.:.·~\--:"•.
;·.'.,_/:\~::No,·i-,:c.i:'.:it.o:-·:/·~
. .: .
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·Ai~i..-._F-iit/t))tiMs-·,s:ti!ioEN-iis
:.:-
.:-• ··_·:.
• • , _\::a'ppl
i•c-ati'o·ns
Jar · .·
..
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rti~'
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?ly.
::to.\'m~et·nntere-stin'g:;:,.peopfe
-
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:>have·)he,};lesi_re}t_Q~e·nil.ghten·
..
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•.
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: ·:;C.OV:E:R
·CO:NT,EST
•
•
$25;.00 P-Ril_ZE
••
•
~Send
·-Yo.ur
ptctu.res a:nd ··c(raw~
: i n:g,s
-~by
.:-F.ebrqa(y.
·t-?th .. _,
-
1
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C-833 .
·.[:IV'E
:M:U:SIC.
EVE~RV-·TH
URSDAY--
-1-0-2
.SUNDAY BRUNCH 11-2:30
NIGHTLY DINNER SPECIALS·
: position has just seemed to be one.·
of 'no comment'," Feldman said.,
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