The Circle, Feb 7, 1985.pdf
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 30 No. 12 - February 7, 1985
content
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bµ,t,, resid,~ts . co~tm!le •to "-c<>m-
• .• ~ere 10c?~~lu!1v~;
. ~•l have· bee.n • .
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pl~~"o~.hih.t ~d _noise .t~~t p~s -. ;µnable to_
ascertain any·r~on for_ .
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r '.
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detcri_orati_op'
of.sli.~ro~k·.'!.al~s
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';VOrsJ.::mconye-
: budd10g.~<?-1:J1Po.nen_ts:at~~served
.
•
··•{;_:t.~.
'.11 •
:
multi:.million:,•r-
1
dollar.•:' energy,.;.:, etenorate,-,,sarant no sa1 :-::.:-~.,,.~v,
However, lie sa1 · he 1s una le,to·
!:-mence;·gomg·m there·and tearing ·, by
.
us : m.:-our .. mspc:ct1on
: of
., , . ·.·
~,,
••• •
•.
' cbnservatioii~program;·
according : \
:·:·The>~nergy;cons~rvatfon/pr~_,:.
-:estimate
h?,w·long
it
wili.be
oefor~
•·
?;_it
apatt·or_th~·noise? The ':hoice is .' Decembei.:.
\ 10;-~:-'19_84,!'.
·:·,said
::, ..
1
:..:.-;
· .. ,. to'~thorly:Tarantino;'director of -.'\ grim,'fa'ccordirig'c;;to";;Tarant~o;·
:.':·the·new.
program goes.into'effect; -~-: theirs/•', Tarantino said.'~--:' :. . .- . Wilfred
A.·
Rohde: a professional
·.;f
:; .:· ; • the ·ph)'.Si~~i
plant:;:·'
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..
H,aywoo~ • and
·1
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:
~: • •. • .._ •:t
Separat1ons·'t'••wh1ch,;,-
.. w~r.e ::' .d~~s ~::-an,k. pla~mg- 11~sulatmg·0
,tions.~we·can contmue plastermg;
•-,
~me,.-
sent :-to :.Y1ce P~es1dent Ed-· • fakan Associates of Poughkeep-
,<
.'.,:. - . r,eported lasfsemester:arc'locatccl~:,;:-t;locksj·on~-
thc:'.1outsid~s
.•
of:')he'·_:;the?wails-fand ':'iliey'll(,openCup:·
•
_
_'ward rw.~ter(
0
iµ· • October, the. =,sic. , ,._;
·~
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th~ ::cei,lirig.
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,;:·.:bui.ldt~t.!i/Putting:
an,; ~n.d
.·t<:\
the •• :~gaiit/o~·~~:
?-rt'
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.
,
separ~tions_ a:i-e
: 1wt_
:
.. d,a,ng~ro}'s-::
. :
t.
"They: are not· sayin~, it• :is : a •..
·
?;, ..
,
, :;
:: :·
: • divider. wans _of most J1111th~floor"'
:.•
condensation
'<
that
:
caused::)he , : and anchor it-toJhe-cciling;
~t
.said . • '
1
The. walls; .• are ·:Jree •·•·
standmg •.
• : structural. probltlm/'- said Taran-
\ }:; .
,,:L :
rooms ·and ,were causect;by. con~.:·;:
sheeir:ock,
to~rumble/·: '.;:. ,;'.,~:;:
•
•:Tarandno
.• :
..
, u ,: • ·t:ccc :' : ;
C
·i; .wall.s divjding the.structtiral·bays ·•··
tino- of· the,.engineers'. «They're
·,f
:: : •
dens'ation-::-fr9m
••
J)()<)rlY~instil~ted·
.. /, "J'b.¢ Ptogr,ani.is
inth~ research\•
,>J'arantirio ''
sai·d ,· if, would ; be·· • <>f'-the . buildiµg!· This is . nof. a : •• qualified-in .ev.erything·
but every-
. (; , .
_,.:
: .....
•.
-win~ow~. according t?:.l'arantinl?· • :
~t~~~;
llut the' prpbl~IJliS .~ot ;be-t
'ea~ie~·to
~epair th~ .walls,
~~fllthe··. : stru::tural bearingwanan~ should . ~ay• hous~k~e~ing.
and ·.condensa-
f
.<
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• •
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·~;1ng:~-~:-<;>~~.'::T~ant~no
5,aid; :, • " bull~1ng.15;;~~Jrty·~o
that hintaff:
• have,~~. e~fect on_the;buMin~,•-•.
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movi~.\ ''The ...
Amityv1He
·\::'f'.i.
,
Horror/'
.
.•.•
• · / . ·
,,',t,1•
: In ·. the ~.cmly
\investigation •
•
'i;\i:~
ever-·allowed.,· by ..
· the then-.
·!\\•:t
<owners;
·a.
sr<>l.!P.
of
11
people •
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: en~ered
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• the'·
'
Coloniahstyle , :
~
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: ~ouse. d.uririg the..
first weeke,~d->
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: -.111_.fv.farch~
J976; Among them.···
:;;,V)
•
'>Were
the Wairens,:a husband-.·.
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• wite'.·!~~-~f::
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• •• /continued on page 2
•
)& ;-.
..
\ ,, c :: :murder .. Thts·casewas later-piade• "and
;·Lorraine;~,
Warren'' >was:_.paranor~alology:1s-the.~tudy
of.
,cat~gqry, -ofT:op1cal.:Program'. ,_:·.·
•·.>·
.. ••
·.
,,,-
•• )··· .. ···•· • •
.. .
;:)t::;
fc•:{{)
into a televisicm movie\vf!li·A.pdY.\·
puoHshed by Prentice Hall, Inc;·
;:c .
the;.sup~rµat~r'tl.~
J~e)'. !Ja~e.
beeii •. M;ari,st't C:':llleg~
;Union Bo~rq.)~ , /'· An,dr,e\V
C;recca,
• sUlrting·Ms_
se-.
,; \ \ . ·:
/·· ;"i·
\Griffith· as : E_d wan.en; .Qther. s',-'Il_l§c·Wa~ren~
O'
have : Ja_ught
·~
·on;tl_1ec:collegt9_?"CUlt,f9rov~
16. :, part
.of
th~ il'i~J~?~al;~ssociatioll, -
,_con(i
-~erm
<l~
,the C:o~legr.
Umon.
·,i.5·.·.:
~-r:
·:/}~cases. • incl11de \the_-, J>~s~~t!o_,t
class¢s ;.on,:' demo~~logy./an<i ·:years
~~ hav~Ject~ecl t<l<
~yer - of fampu~ Act1V1t1~.
an_d
has se~t . Bo~rd SJ>f~1aen_~
•. s~id, . People
"
:Jr\•.
::;_family's haunted house. in;L¢e. >"wanori:najolo~y-_•:
at : Sojlthetn "; ~oo~~ege.a.it~,..enc~
. .-,:~;'.
1>:·, :t··"};~P~-
t~}ts· COI1\'CI1t1ons
and WJIL. :~ho, ar~n
t
mt~
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the s~per~
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,byJanet1!fcLo~gblli;I . • :-.:-;
•
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-~:.
Brother·: to ·~ouane,
a
l4-year-:ol~< program next year,. but said he\vouldJike •• child who ~asn't ~-fortu~ateas lierseir.
.
h
'. '.
:A,I1}iough
there are more than 3~000 peo- • Poughkeepsie boy. ~· •
• : .. ,-
:
• • :
. to get'a· little brother froin a more troubled
: "I had a v'¢ry good childhood and I felt
· ; .; .....
, pie 'on· campus tp '!>efriend,
. two· Marist
_ : Duane· is
·one
of many children in the -.environment
.
than Duane's. He added ·
•
sorry for thes~ kids because most of them
,. :: ;(. l
·'stu<ients have soughr the rewards of
off-
COUf!ty·who
comes' from
·a.
bro]{en home, _though, he wants fo ·remain close friends - haye
a
hard:life,'! she said. "I wanted the
...
.
:.<'\\:
·~ campus friendships! Sophomores John
and through the ·Big ,Broili,er, Big: Sister
wi ..
th Duane. .
•
chance to share what I bad with a. little
\
Montanaro and Mary Jo Murphy are in-: agencywasabletafillagapinhislife:-.:
, .·,
•
• ·· '.. ·" ·
•
.
. .
·;
sister.•~
• • • •
•. :-\
:volved
•
ill· Dutchess • County's
Big·
• '-'Yoii are
a
model that they can follow," ·HallMontanaro,. alongd~ th • 81stfer Edeen
M
h , 1• 1 .
.
7
Id Sh
'.I'
• Brother, Big Sister pr:ogram.
Motanaro said; "You want the kid to OJ>CQ
. . _oran, assistant
irec_tor o campus
urp Y s itt e sister 1s -year-o
an-
; .
. "You , get a ~sa~faction -in. helping ~P to you first. Your role is not to change .. mlDl~!l'Y!.
and ~t!ter Manst students are . non; who she said comes from .a low in·
.
1 ,
somebody,'' said Montanaro, from "toron- . the kid but to be there when he-needs you . looking mto stanrng a program '?n caml?us co,rne family-and suffers frt>?fi
apathy.·
.\
i
':l'
to, Canada. ''It's nice to know you are giv-
for SOine advice-
0
Montanaro said he
:sees
to. get more stndents mvolved m ~elpmg
"She's not used to getting so inuch atten-
;
~'t
·
ing rather than rec~ivifl$, but in a way you Duane o~ a week for two to five hours,
chddren who ~eed some extra ~ttentton.
tion. ·wiaen she's around my family she's
{' { ).\
areMreceivingtoo.'h';.has s.--..·.
1
ed.
when they so shopping, rollerskating or
• Murphy, from Highland; N.Y., became
the center of attention and sbe shys away
;,\
h
.
..
ontanaro, w o
~u
mvo v
10 come to campus.
• involved in the program in December, : from it," Murphy
said ..
0
Sbe's a very af-
..r
)<
,_ the ·pr-ogram since September, is
a
Big
Montanaro said he hopes
io
continue the
because she said she wanted to lielp out a
'.i ,~
wntinued on page 9
\
t~
\(
\,
M;1rist faces
NC A,\
sanctions p. 10
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~.-.Jij~g!1'9~~.-.feb~
1,:198~
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A.fuitYViHes··
continued from page 1 .. .
.
'..
.
.
·.
,··-
..
_
}.•
Alberta·:/Reillf•·,
and
'.;.Mary
·, -. Pasquetella;-, clair_voyants;"
the
.
• · Channel
S
television crew from •
·,
New· York qty; various Duke .•
Univ~rsity;,: researchers _, and,.
Paul Bartz, who now works
. for .· Ques,t ... Associaties
.jn.
Amiapo,lis;
Ii,fd: . , ,
.
_
.
_. .
.'.'Every~ne,·on a one to one
basis, dealt with the force that
. night/'. said Bartz,
-··
.. -.. .. .
, .,.George· and Kathleen Lutz
'·
bought the
$100,000
house,
pool: and :.,boathouse for .
·. ;: $50,000; They moved into. the
· : \ hotiseJate in December, 1974
· -· : arid ptoved out with only the •
clothes on their, backs, 28 days
.
later, on Jan. 26, 1975 .. ;
On .that
I
March . weekend
most of the team wenYout for
supper, leaving behind. Bartz,.
Ed Warren and one camera- .
man. The· camera~man stayed ·•
on the
_
main,dlpor. W~ren'. .
• .wentinto-th,e
1
cellar::and Bartz···
. went up·to abedroom ori,the:
\
• second noor·and spread·out ori ::-
.
\
his baclc; Alllthe, lights iri t}\e •
house were turned off.
• '. • ·,.·
•
•.-·:·
..
_\_·.
,
,
When cued by ·warren, the
\
camera-man· begari, according
• to Bartz/ to ,. 'provo.ke :.. the
demoni'"He had holy water, a
._
-. bible. ' and. . other -··
religious
, ,. relics/FBartz said.' ''He was
•
,
saying;:·"ln\the:riame of Jesus
C:::hrist;'
shO\\'.
yourse,L"
·":Bartz; continued:·•/'At the .
same time, Warren' was iri. the -
·.cellar.:and saw· a:dark mass
•·.with
twinkling lights in it in the . •.
· · ...
cor.ner:
Ii ..
'came-~~
toward ,. ••
'-.:·;
W~i:eri and Warr~ri told. it to>:_
, ,:: ;, sto_p
and leave butit contmued •
, -'.-/:)ciQsef'.~ntil •it enveloped him/·'
>,::
Warren
..
was. cut:•and: slashed
.<~:
:ilnd"for the.first time ever, he
• i .,
losfcontrol.Jt.
threw' him to·:·
.
>
un1ors an · t, .' en1u1s•
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
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.
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i ,: • the,floofarid began to sin other
?\
·,:{hiin/Jus(as
he."1aS aboiifto~
',
1
f
lli~ilil~.lf!:ill!!~~
riotlifog. He· continued: ·"My ••
feet began to feel,,like they
were falling asleep. But lknew
• :· they .',were) tin.crossed) and. ' :
• getting dr<:~laHon.
1t
went
up. , •
• to my legs, t~eh frqiil my waist
down was numb.'
1
tried : to
relax. ,It went to my chest and· ..
arms ·and reached. my;neck; I·.
couldn'.t move. Just.:before L.
went to yel(i"
the
fest
of- the
, group came through the:frcmt .
door and•it lefL I later·.found '·
. ouLthat is
,
the first step in
·:·.-•physical·possession.
••.·, ,.· __
, ',.·
.•.
>--- LaterMaryPai.querella,-mie
,.
·• of the clairvoyants, had a·bad:·,·
headache and :went upstairs to\.
rest around 10 p;m.,,according
to:Bartz. He said thatfirst she
.
went to the sewing room,
where in • the movie the priest
encountered ' the flies ; • and
heard, "Get out.'' Bartz:said:
"Mary . was moaning .· and
groaning --:-delirious. iShe said -•
. she heard a voice -say 'Why
•
don't you. leave'?' arid recite
the Lord's Prayer backward as
~
an insult. That's a tell-tale sign
of demonic activity.>' ;
.-The . mysterious activities
contiyued while
'the
team was
in the house. \ "During . a
formal sean~ .downstairs . I
heard a horrendous scream;
one • of the Duke' researchers
was
grabbed from under the
table and ran and vomitted ·in
the kitchen," Bartz said.
• • .', "The three clairvoyants will
never go back again,". said
Bartz .. "Mary Pasquerella was
so affected she gave up in-
vestigating the paranormal,
became a devout Catholic and
moved
her family. from
Connecticutto Florida.J'
•
.
Bartz said that Ed Warren,
in his Connecticut· home 300
miles away from· Amityville,
was· warned by something· to
"never go back" to the house
· in Amityville ''or he wouldn't
come out alive."
See··your J"ost~risrepresentaliv~, ~JM;yers. • •
••
...
.
---
-•,
.".
',·.\•;~.
;
.
·.-•
'
:
;Dates:·
&
Times'£:F'eb1-°tiary
11
.&.'12~·:9_~3o··afin.
7:00 p.m_:::--
•
• ·T
February
13
-&-·14,:
9~30-a.tn. ;_ 4:30 p.in~
Februar·y ·15;;
9:30--a~m. 2:00 )?-~iji.·,.
,,!
Place:·
Doihnelly Hall
,,
,.
DEPOSIT:·
..
$25.00
Cash or Ch~c.k paya~le,to Jos~ens
i
~
l
-,:.
:
..
-·· -.------iilill11111111111111111 ______________________________
Feb.
7,
1985-:THE CIRCLE•
Page 3--•
,. /:tjfster'
county
loOkS;
at
cC>iiSfrllctive
alternatives
.
·
..
,.
·_
'-
; by
Baram.R;hy- '
repr~entati;e of the 'state.division
i
which results in over-crowdin;. . •
• './ : ; ..
'
• •
.. : :
of ·crimiiialJustice services. said .••·
" '!Thepopulatfon in the county·
.
: . ,_ Counties_'.
maiidevelop> some , •. the 62 counties in New.,sY
ork can ·· jails has. increased _to . the point
:.: altemai:ives ,'
to -,
their
·
-criminal
·•now.
work
'.With
the statecrimirial • , where th_ey
face a crisis situation;
·.' justice system t~ compens~te, fqr : justice service to develop ways. to
i
expand or buila new jails," he •
. crowded jails, according to
a
New . reduce the· number'•of inmates in
said. ··"Our-basic idea here is to
•.' York;. • State .-criminal jusiice • jails:
. . \ •' • ·,. \ , .
-:: reduce· inappropriate incarcera-
; • representative w}:lo
addressed the
McDonald • said while the . tion."
•
Ulster County. Criminal Justice
number of. people arrested each •
A
bill, known_ as the Marino
Options Task Force last week. ,, .••
• : year has stabilized; inmates are , Slaughter Act was passed, by the
',Richard _McDonald, program
•
being . given longer- sentences, state legislature in August 1984. It
,
•
. offers participating
counties
Laser -
disc~~·
. Quick ~surge:
::::a:~~
is3g,~
0
f~
0
~!c~f~~
- ·•
·
-
. · ·
••
·• . , ·• · · . · · -< ·
·
•
,.,
•
~
·
grants
if
they choose this option.
as_,_
new-sound: sensation _-
•
~d~~~~~err
0
:!e!s~f
~!a:S~};i!~
• •
•
. .
•
• . ; · ·, • ·• •
-· :- . · inmates
·10
four classes, . which
. ty1.J.en~~li54:t.
mto,a_~igit,l ~o?e 7--~nd,then
10
• •
McDonald said would make it
• • - .
.
-
•
to music.
.
; . • ..
· • . . • ·._
•
easier for. judges to determine ·
. Laser discs are· the latest boom-.
, 1:he _system
s har~vvare is ~ls~ . how serious an offense was. · .
ing _
advancement. in >recordi11g selbng
.. well, accordmg to Mtc~i-
Richard Mathews, chairman of •
• technology: And according ' to
Leuer!i _ of Souod ,?dyssey.
10
the task force, said Ulster County
• Steven • Cohens,
;manager
• of . W,appmg~rs Falls. ·•. The. prices . may be interested in the program,
• Record World in the South Hills
~in contmu_e
; to . go_ down, ~ut ' since the goal of the task force is
, Mall, Dutchess County .residents
nght·now we are sellmg four disc .
,
.
• are a·perfect indication of the new
players ,to every: one stereo turn~
found demand. , .
Cc-
..
J: :_-_:.·
;.
table;''.~etterii.s~d.. .
•
· _-,;.Cohen said ihere. are regular
Because of the, expense of the.-
' customers
I
who co·me
,-in
:
~ild
Disc system~ the market Js no':"
i
specifically request the compact
dominated by consumers m their;
discs. •~The discs are definitely in
•
twenties and thirties;·But as thei
demand," he said. "They are sell~ • prices . co_ntinue to
~roIJ
as ext
. ing like crazy oecause the. price is
pected, :· a / younger"-_customer:
down and they sound terrific. . market ·will pick up faster;-ac~or-
Th.eir rarige and clear sound is in-
ding to Cohen/' By Christmas
credible," Colieri said. :
: . ;
: the discs should be down another •
_· The
·growing
Poughkeepsie
$3.;' •
, .
,
· . · ... ,
. 'market is reflective of the CD's ;, ' Cohen coinmetiied on the wide
national -·. success. Customers
varietY of music. selections now
across the country are now buying
available. Classical and \Jazz'
their favorite selections on small,
music came out first on the discs;
0
silvery; smooth, ·music-encoded but now, many • pop and rock .
discs. . • .
__
• releases are available too. · ....
The increasing popularity of
·• The compact disc has reached
the compact disc is largely dtie_·to . ·worldwide popularity in less than:
- a drop in· prices. W,hile the:first
two·_:years; It· to~k: prerecorded·.
CD players costOover·
$1000
·iii ' cassettes'sb(,years~to achieye this
Spring ofJ983,;they n6w:sell for i _ succ~ss;'accotding to
a
recentarti~
$300tc{$500.,Disc prices;•,·ohce: ·.,cle'in_Billboard
magazine; _
.. ·_· : -
.,
$20 or more, ·o:ow average_$l2:to ·--::
_:·W~U~known.
"'dvantagef·of t~e • , ..
·,.$1t,:according
tQ
·a·i~cent'article·<~coinpact ~liscindudeit~_~maU1>ize:
•
•
. ' . :,.
'' in Newsweek mag~foe:
)<:'
.; ;'
Sc\•i<
·.:
: ; for.' storage .an~t its au'rabiHtY
~
It's '
,·_
.-· .
•
:f,;;):y::r,,ie-:cq_qiP.a.ci:::~u~·<>4l!lc..:ruaycfcs,/;t4Y.l!~f}Sq'!h~}r:ang~;{ir5~p:i)?les.0
~"· :.-:•-•:•~lt.}-itse1lij~fgnW~fff-a;ta~~~~~~!<>1;:{7.Ji_1fe~~st~cppr:9t~li,~})n~~(~~~~--~P,~+:
·
•
•·
·;
~-,. f pro~~i;~ the:c~ear;"dynan)i~-soundr~
,-_
':'If sou~cfs ·h~e}~ye>'fh,ete
15'1!0::
-
•
,;:_
thaf makes~
the, discs· so· poptilai:. • ·, . hissing,_ no.· bumps no·••·
nois~.;ifi-. •
• • ' The music
:is.
recorded on the disc '· terfereilce
• :
at ' • alt:. You. : can't
•' in • -a~: series··.' ·or
••
biHioris:/ of··•• : scratch< the· disc
•·easily.'-·
Oiice
inicroscopic pits in • the disc. ·As ·_ yo~•ve : used
a
.CD sy~tem, a
to provide 'alternative sentencing
• to first time offenders of non-
violent crimes.
McDonald suggested the coun-
ty expand their policy for releas-
ing an offender on his own
recognizance. He said with
pretrial releases certain inmates
could be released in the custody of
a probation officer, or other ~hi_rd
party,· or a domicile release,
where the prisoner would be re-
. quired to be at work or home on-
. ly. Community action programs,
where offenders would put hard
manual labor to -work for the
community, is another proposal.
McDonald said community ac-
tion programs .'and pretrial
releases would only be available
to those who had roots in the
community, had been employed
before arrest, had some ties . or
success within the community,
had no prior arre~ts, and live with
to
jail
a family .
'j'It makes more sense than put-
ting someone in jail. or on proba-
tion," he said.
The task force has made recom-
mendations to the Ulster County
Legislature,
which • include
developing a community· service
mechanism. The legislature has
also provided money for the
released on recognizance program
1n the . probation department,
another task force recommenda-
. tion. · • \
The task force has sent a letter
of intent to the state for applica-
tion. But they still have until May
1 •. to come up with an alternate
program proposal and a final
decision on · whether they will
develop this program.
However, Mathews said, they
first must get more data from
continued on page
8
. ihe Hghl ·_
:from -•·
the·· laser -· beam
regular system sounds like mud,"
• :sifikes-the disc, ~hich is spimiing -sai4 .'Danny Overton; .: 34, a
at high speed, i_t
is __
reJiected b_ack.
· Newburgh _electronics·
technician.
The machine reads the on-off pat- ••
..
"Y:
ou won't ever want to go back
_
Jun{g.r
.cl~ss
"ri,t{gs }tin"
_
•
The junior class
partied
it
up last week.in anticipation
of receiving their school rings later this semester.
_tem of light pulses, translates it • to ~regular system."
-
://..
•
•
•
(photo by Maureen Ryan)
·&:oiite.~-9
:
construcii.on.·-.
·ts::.;·c9mplett,d'
.
,·,''
·.-
.
,'
·.-
•
-·~
-~
,_.
.
'•
..
_,.
-.
, •
by Dan ~eyersoil
·' ~;-~rldifi~:inst~chblat
the
• intersection of.: Route
9
and
·w
ashirigton ,. Str6et/
:
directly
• across from the Marist College
campus, has been completed,
according io a New YorkState
-
Department of Transportation
•
•
engineer.. /.
.
.. _
· Final grading, ·.·smoothing
and paving of the bridge and
Route • 9 extensions will be
finished- in the spring when
weather permits, said John
• Burris, a DOT engineer.
• _
Th.e
construction e~tailed
building a n~w sub-base and
replacing the Route 9G bridge •
over the Conrail railroad
tracks. .
• •
During the construction, a
temporary bridge was installed
as • an entrance way onto
Washington Street from Route
9, while there was no direct en-
trance· to Route 9 • from
Washington Street.
When asked why the bridge
construction . was not done
when the intersection was
replaced earlier, Bums said,
they.
(the
bridge
re-
construction and new in-
tersection) were two separate
contracts each needing • ap-
proval in Albany.
>.Juggling
team keeps audience in lhe air.
._.,
•.
,:,
/
.
.
.
byW~am_Hare:
''Fyodor''--· • F_urst~ Randy.
Voice Obie and is now in the
.
. , /Alyosha"
Nelson, Paul David midst of a
65
dtyAmerican tour.
Sickles, eggs, a · skillet and a ••
"Dmitri" Magid, Howard Jay
Williams said that street perfor-
piece of dry_ice are -a_
few·
of the : ·''Ivan" Patterson and Williams ming.prepared t~em for the ~tage.
•
objects that are juggled by ,the ' -
aren't just jugglers, forjuggl: .
"It
was very much our learning
• Flying I<::aramazov''Brothers, an ing is only the canvas on which ground," Will~ams said.
i
"We
act that mixes vaudeville'skits and .:they painF, their:· masterpiece. learned a tremendous variety of
quick ·' onealine_rs
--\Vith.
•
Marx· W~ile flying objects dazzle your ways to hold an' audience's atten~
Brothers
type
.
comedy and • eyes, _puns and: one~liners tickle . tion."
characters from a Russian n·ov~l. , yotir_ears. • ••
.
. ''There-isn't an audience there
- But ·one· other object that the
~
'.'Watch your language!"
to begin with. You
1
have to create
•
Kai:amazovsjuggle - one that is
'-'English. What's yours?'_' .
the audience, the theater and the
·handled with such deft and agility
"There's an appreciable quan-
show from scratc:h on the street.
that the audience doesn't realize tity of juggling in the show," said. PJaying the theatre is easy com-
_what ·is happening--
is tqe au-
Williams, "but I wouldn't be sur- / pared to the street, because people
dience itself;, ' ,., . • ·' •
prised if it was only 30 percent of come specifically to • see the
The Karamazov's performance the time that we're juggling."
show."
at the-~ Bardavon 1869 Opera
Yet without the canvas, there
The audience plays a big part in
House last Friday night defined . would be ·no painting, and the keeping the shows· fresh from
juggling toits fullest.· It not ohly Karamazovs use juggling to pro-
place to place said Williams.
"If
means to keep several objects in . vide a variety of effects including the audience • is having a good
. motion in air-at the same time..,... musical entertainment.
time, it's hard for us not to," said
which the Karamazovs do quite
Using rubber balls, pins, drums Williams. "Aside from that, we
-well -
it also m,eans to and axylophonethe Karamazovs have a couple of different por-
manipulate, especially in ord~r to create a syncopated rhythm that is tions of our show that are built to
achieve a desired end.
•
not only enjoyable to listen to,
include improvisations."
The Kararitazovs juggle their but also
to
watch. -Of course there
One of those portions of the
audiences into laughter.
is always a one-liner:
show is what the Karamazovs call
Sam Williams, who plays Snier-
"This . next piece is Allegro, the gamble. The champ, Ivan,
dyakov Karamazov - a loveable which in English means the challenges the audience to give
• bearded gnome who immediately Rockettes."
him any three objects -
heavier
. gains the audience's • affection
If thejugglers aren't providing than an oun·ce, lighter than .ten
with his child-like innocence -
the music, then the Kamikaze pounds and smaller than a bread
said that surprise is a critical ele- Groundcrew, their side-kick five box - that he must juggle for the
ment of the Karamazov's show.
member band , is playing Klezmer count of ten. If he wins, he gets a
"It's a basic technique of com- music, a son of be bop sound one standing ovation. If he loses, he
edy to have people getting the im- • might hear at a,Jewish circus.
gets a pie in the face.
pression that you're heading in
The Karamazovs were founded
Williams said that the gamble is
one direction and suddenly end up by Patterson and Magid in 1974. always different because they
90 degrees over to the left of At that time they staned street· never know what might show up. •
·where they're anticipating you to performing in San Francisco. In the past there has been potted
go," Williams said said.
Since then the troupe has been on
plants, water balloons with nails
The Karamazovs .-:- Timothy Broadway, has won a Village in-them, and a variety of food
items such as fish, squid and pies.
• Out of the odd assortment of
objects thrown tip on stage last
Friday, the audience chose. a three
foot long. water balloon, a small
portable type writer and a· large~
semi-frozen fish.
'
Ivan Lost.
The Karamazovs have many
other gambles within their show;
when one juggles meat cleavers,
sickles, swords and flaming tor-
ches, there is always a chance of
being injured.
Ivan, according to Williams,
• had his thumb split down to_ the
first knuckle during a rehearsal.
"He had to go to the hospital to
get it. stitched up and bandaged,
so everyone in the show wore ban-
dages on their thumbs that
night," said Williams.
The Karamazovs success is
growing. Williams said that 20th
Century Fox has offered them a
part in a sequal to "Romancing
the Stone." "We are especially
eager about the fact that we're do-
ing movies," said Williams. "But
we'll never give up live perfor-
ming, because this is where it all
comes from."
The show has ended and it's
time to pack. Everyone pitches in
and Williams must do his share of
the work. His eyes twinkle and a
sly mischievous smile peeks
through his bushy beard as he
gives his last comment. The ever
present one-liner:
• "Time flies like an arrow; fruit-
flies like a banana."
......
,
:·•
.
---Page
4- THE CIRCLE- Feb.
7,"
1985
..:;
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..
::{.:'.).,"(f/j}'.{}/j::~
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:
•
.
Readers·';,
·;
.-.
c'All letiers must be typed trlijle space
tr
•.
·•Write/
.·;,.'-.•
.,
::wlth·a
6Q
space. margin; and)sut>.ij,lt-·/)
•···':•:<··•.•·:,,
•
'· :-;•'/.;~!'-ted.tothe
Clrcleofflcen~ lat~r,than:t:,;-::,,,
••• ·'•·.'
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•
i_·
(fp.inYMonday. Sftcirt_
letters are pref~r~
·:
\'
•
•
1
''·
i)id:'.We::i•eserve
therlght•.to edlt,au,<.
/:
;')-letters;<Letters
.must•t,e··slgned/b.ut';:~,
)/\::\n.an,e~"}m,a{:·~-,;~lt~held
-~po~/•~e-:-
·'
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·
.-.,,
quest·.••Letters
•.:will
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pub!lshed
~··.·.
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depending
upon: a'.J&llable
of
space~.:'.'.:;
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.... •:•\/t~:.?:··
•..
•..
:\•'
DearSir/~ani;
• •
•
.•.
:
~~~-'.?it{~~_.-;·ci~r
•·~eque~t_)~r._:,:
The foreign ~d.
Dome_st1c.,
:.:'.teachers_.:
..
:=i_;:c;
\\i:r)'
<:
·,::\ ,':·::::.
Teachers. Organ1zat1on~
·needs_
:•·-,_·._-~:_9ur.-:1nformation~-.1s
·free_
·-and.
••
.:
::
•
'
teacher applicants
in
all fields: comes,at_an
opportune:.tinle,~~ei(:.
fron{· Kindergarten
,
·through·.>
·there'_,:
arc=:,
more:
<ffllchers\'.
tha11::·-
•
'.··.·college.t~
.·fi~i
over
..
~~
..
builm:ed···
•
.tea~hing
p<>5itio~:,··"°·;./f?•''.!
:·~/:\i,:
.••••
.-
••
••
.
'teaching;vacaricies
both at·home
_
:Should;:you:•.wisb\additic:)llill
,·. •.
·
and abroad.'::.'::
:.
•
•
. •
informatio.n''\'= ab'out\
1
•
ou)·.
•
•
<Since;
J968,
•
our organization
•
•
organii.ation~
·yoµ
niay·writb Th~
;
•
has been, firiding.:vacancies and· Nationid
.1
.Teacher's
•
I>lacem~nt,
Jocating· teachers··
~oth in.foreign
•.
Agericy,,UniversaLTcachers,:•B9x·
:,
• countries arid
•
in' all fifty states;
-· •
5231, Portland, Orqoil 972()8.
<:'.:.
· ..
<
We;possess hundreds ofcurterit
·.:we·•
do. not promise
~'every··/•'·
...
openings
-
and.:.
have
,
all the iii-
•
graduate in the field:"o(ediicatiori
'
',:
..•
:
•
•
.-.
...
•:fonnation·\as··
to·: scholarships,
••
a definite position, however~ we<'.
/
•
.••
·
grarits, and fellowships:
;;: '
.,·,
:;·-::.·
do.promise•
to provide tbem•with
.•
·'
.
The principle
•
problem with
~
a
'
wide rarige of hundreds of
firstjear teachers
is WHERETO.
-
current vacancy notices both,at
••
nND·THEJO~Lf't:/;>.,.-··_::.bomeandabroad.'
•
• •
.:
.
'/
"!
•
»e.:
see
M~~
•
~
.
h
;t,
:~j
;_f
e.l~
d
'
C•
Since college
·newspapers
:
are
-·.
.
;
•
"
•.
;
••
• . .
.
always anxious to:find positions
Sincerely,
-
.
,
· for
··.··their··-graduating
··teachers;
·JohnP.
McAndrew,
,.:~
,-;
/
Oy~~\, .. iJe
Y'~
ftA_(.ST.
I
your
pa~r may be
.
m,terested
.iri.
.
-
•
•
President
.
.
!
..
•
your
~
teachers
·,
finding , erii~
,·
•
Foreign
&
Domestic
•
-
·.•·.·.··.
ploymeri(f()r the follo..ying;year;'
•
Teachers
.. <<.::::/,.
·:\
·:;.,
-..:,.:>:.::
:n--::-
-
. •
•
~•
.
.
.
.
. ..
.·
'··· :.:;,{
-~·
r:
.,.
,,
·Par.·an.'.·:o.·
iit'
..
•.
.
-.
..::\
..
,
....
:::._:
..
_.}_:··.•.·w~.;:,.·,M·.-_.-.·c·
·R'-
~-l
•
k~
•
:
Wh~6,~eleph0!1~:i~~dlfabuse:;~n-~hro~gh
::
•
pres·~::·::
~ut don't the administrators realize
:
·To
the Edi to~:.:
>t,,:;:.
__
'.-;,::;;.:
<
:
•.
d~ed
:
'mistaken.
Sine~ I
•
h~~e.
:
•
•
\1
•
.
•
the dorms, the· Marist administration· was<,: that ''cover up" is. even more· intriguing··to
:
.
r
am. the.
·News'
Direct:9r
·or
. ·become
News
.Director
.we
have.
:i
..
•
ffarefuHo keep the problem internal._At the.
.
reporters than-"scandalr
, .
...
.
.
WMCR
·andj
am
.writing
this let-:-·•
-
strived to. keep the Marist coin-
':
•
<-
. (
time, last fall, the· cost' of the
.credit
abuse·
.
Don't they realize that the quickest way to
te~
•
to cI:ar-up. a
:
couple
•
'!f •
munity; inform_ed ,about campus
•
-~
-)
was an estimated $15,ogo.
.
earn respect- In the public eye Is to admit a
m1s~once~t1ons
ab.out the rad10 h~ppe~!ngs;
With the help of Joe
.
·.
,
..
• ...
Yetwhenthreeyearbooks,atotalvalueof
mlstakeopenly?'Bycornlngcleantheflrst
station._
..•
::
..
::-.·
• :
:p1dzu1hsandCarlMacGowanthe.
•
•
••
/..,
about ~7~, wer!3. m_is_sing:
frorry the Campus
!
•
time,. they• stop the press. from dragging ·a
The
.first
~i~conceptio_n
is that
news
.department.
reported _ma_ny
·.:
•.
.
""j
{ :
:
Center, _college offlc1~_ls
..
lr:n!11ediat~ly
calle_d.
.
quesJ.io.na_ble
~tOfY.
throug~_ the mud;'.'
,::_-
...
: :.
;
.
WM_CR d.?.es
_no~:
play
,"good:•
of 18:~.t
se~ester's maJor ston~s
_m~
-.,
.:
::
,:;
• ,
~
:
~
the police
·_and
:
filed c.harges. against:
.four \
;
.· . •
Hone.sty cannpt be·legitlmately attacked:'·.,:
-_
m~~.•.~·
'.fhe}P,eopl~:
y,,ho
..
ho~~.
~his
:
clu~mg. the ~~C:k~~att coacJ;:ung
.r·_
·:
~-
:·.
•
•.
,.·
_
·
~-llegeq "th,~ye_s_.':
..
-'J'.·.:
.:<;'.,.:
•
-.,
.--
·,
.-
.
:,
,
.
~,:,;
.~,a;~r.ll!3r•
t~is rn·onth· t_h~
·Ass,o¢1a,ed-.Press·:--:
. miscon~ept10~
~~sua!Iy·
co!}stder
:
.
~hange,.,th~: new: c.C/l!ege-:apa~~-;
,
...
•
·.:.:·
,,,
-,: •.
• .
'<·
,
.
·The
f_o,ur.·~rrests
nev~r should
·have
been.-!
.
rar
,;a
story about: the:_--p_hone.
fraud ~nd
.-,.··
•
"good
1
~...,m~~ic
~o:be:.t_he:.T~J?··40,
·:·
me'!ts 9:n_q
a_fa~a1,a~~1deµt
that,m-
,
•.
,
•
,,
.
·:. :
•
1
\_
--
ma~e,
:and
.·.SOOI"!_.
al,I_~
the
~
charges_
·we~e··:
,.:
named·:only two of "several"
:c_olleges-"ln-::~:
::-songs_..!hl!t:;_rn.a1_1y
rad10·.s~~t19ns,:
=.
volv~d-~.c~~pu~
y1S1to.r.-,We.
al.so.,.,·:.
:
,;·,:·,
•
•
.
dropped.·
·-:
,
,
_,
.
: ..
;
., _
-
-
·
...
:
:
:
. .-·
•.
•.
·
_-
: ,;: ,
vloved."_
Mari st was• one. of them;-, The: un-
: ,
play
:."'.!th:
const~nt
_repetition:
,If
:.
_:
provide contn.i!Jous
u¢a,_te~
o,f,
n!3--
•
;
•
:
•
:
•
•
'
-
_But
:the
phon~: credit scam
·is·.
not
•
a
[
·:named
s.c~o61s ~~st
•likely.cooper~ted .witti·.·\::··YOU
happen. to
.•
be
,~~e
;()f
these·'-:-.·
tional.
:~nd-
st!-'t_e·
,n~ws
.\\'..i~~
"~ur •
•
:
.:-.:.
'.:.:
mistake. Betw~en: $1,000 and $2,000 was\··. the inv!3st1gators and· were· spared. public
-
_
•
people then
.VfM.<;R
1s pr9_b~bly
•;-.
con_ne~1on_
,w1t1l.
th:, ~ssoc1a~i;on
.......
_'
i'
stolen.
If
you wan~ t~ be technica\, a federal
i
.
~mbarrassment.
·So·
-,Marist's.:; ..
strategyr
..
:
.-not:
.
.!._,hcc.:
statt()n
'.fo~:'.
YO\!., J_r,,·,
,
Pr,ess.:
W.e.
are m.a~m$ a
;8e~ui_1_1e
/'
:>
·.~··
offense was _corn~rtte~. But u~t1 I the_ ~ery /
backfired. The
.very
same "bad p_ress":
,ri~J
:.
: _.,howc:ver
,.you ar_ek>()lcmg
to avoid
·•
effort to keep you i!}forn_t,ed:
Y(~t.!J.
•
•
;;~
:.
end of the rnyes~1gat1~n, Manst off1c1als. the ~ollege
..
tried
-
to. avoid r.a!l: because
: t~e
:m1?11otony
,,of_.c9ntemporary.::.
~ouF~guJarly;schedll.le_~
newsc.ll!lt~
.
.
/]
···••
asserted.· that rt dr?n't m~olve. ~he college
.
Mari st
..
couldn't, be , honest:Jn.tp_u_bllc'.J(lf
•
.hu rad1_0,jVM.<:R
1s YO?.r
ch~nne_l
•
·seven.days
a;wee_lc.
:
•·
'·;
<
,
••
;,
•.
,/,
or--~
and refused to assist the investigator from
('J
udeo-Christian':'
.· is
<suppo~edly
.(our
. for
_escap~'._,()11~.al_~ern:1t1\'.e
hsten-
.,>i
I· h<?P~
this l.etter.
w1!l clear-µp
.
ii
·
..
the phone company.
•
•
herl!age,
_:shouldn't
•
qur '.'elders'\ sef· ari
1ng ex.p~r1ence,.whi~h
u~clu_des
.the
..
_
the·t~mg~} have menu011ed.:
J\11
..
:
...
<.
<;
•
:t
.
· Apparently, JU~tlce at Marlst depends on
•
'\honeseexample?).',
.:;/-_:
:.:
',,.:'
:·
:
,
: '.
• '.'
.
.
I?,ew
as well ~:old !"~sic, 1s ~hat
•·
:·
that
,-
th,eJ)"_MCll<m.an~g~P~?,t:/.
,
•
•
,,.;
1
,f
·:
whose rn_?ney
Is mvo!ved,
.·
.
.
.
,
>
::\JVtien
.wm
:ad~illi_str~~¢rs
wake up, arid/"'. you ha~~ been_.lo~km_g.for.
--:,_c
,,
,:· ,
st~ff a~~s:1s;:th~tso!l:.g1v,e_:~5.a;
, •
"·,.·:
:t\
"\:
What rs th~ colleg~ tryi~g to· pro~e
,by
realize
·:that,·
·hor:aesty
:.
i!,
.
tn_uch
. _
more
_-:
••
.
,
1he_;, s~cond
•,>~1ss~mcept1C>n,._;·
g<;>od
hs.ten. before you~••criJtci?e.
.
/
.'
~;:;
'}
.
smok_e-~qreemng legl~1mate 1nveEitlg,t1ons?
,
re.spectable than. a smoke-screen?
_
., .
:
.
,
..
.
_
w~1c~•1s
of_greatest}IDJ)()rtancetoy
·-
our.effort_~:
',
:.::L//_,
'.:)
\::~:
..
/:,
,
:
:
•>:
:;:;)
1
,_,,
.
!hat 1t.1s·notresp9r:is1ble for the !l~t,on~
<>f
••. '.
If
.Marlst
wan,s
.to
avoid '.'bad press,','Jt
·•
>
me, !s,Jhe
,idea
t.hat_:~¥~~- dot:S
:
,.
··•<
._;\
:·,
..
_,b.(',.>.f.z:\/:':<:•:~•:"\i:-:.::
;.~:'.:·'·
Ti
:·
!ts st~dents?More l!kely th~ a~rrirn1strat1on·
,
;
tias t.o overcome_its paranoia; A little hone~t
.·_
I1o!hmgbut p~ay 111us1c:J
wish
to::<
~
_
<
•'>~<;
~::-:;•_,:-;;-'
.-,:.,~m~rel~,:--::.
•
/-
•·;:·
:.\
rs trying to,,keep
.
rts. name. ouLof
','bad
cooperation goes a longway;
,..
••
:-
•
pomt>o~t to
;tho.se
of-yoll w~o
•
.
...:_
.
.
: •
·'·
,
.
Gary A:_
Davts.
•.
:-
•.
•
•
·:'.
·
•.
·
·
,
·
-
·
share this bebef that you.are m~
,·,-
:
.WMCR
New~
Dire~or,
•
..
_.
.
-
•
·1
i
fie.
clcefuh
rivef..
•
•
•
•••
··•..
•
•
••••
•
••
J
~
..
·.-:~
.
The class." of '85
cci
1
~ld be a. class to
.
_
t_o
c~re
_enough
to change things.
:
•
'remember.
It could set an'exarnple as the
"
•
A
If
t
d
•
R.
D
111
..
class that care·d. lt:could be the cla· s·
s. that
•• ··
s
.,
s an s now,
•
ryer
•
.
ay w
.•
not
.
.
...
,,
happen· In
·.1985.
After the last year!s
••
made River ,Day safe.
'
\
•
.
,
··.·
·
~isaster, the administratior:i Is committed to
•
Last
'weefs
.editprial
•
'·'River's end?'".
-stopplrig
It In.Its tracks.
•
•
raised
~
few/ eyebrows; Sorn~ p~opl.e sup~
-
-,.;c:.
':,,
'c.:: :-'"
;
.
.
.
.
.. •.
-
.
:
.. _~;
.
ported rt, so,me wanted to bum It,, others
- •
:.
::in.
response to this, some students are
•.
,,
.
•
didn't care.
I
The truth
·
Is that everyone
•
committed to c;hallenging this alithqrity
-:
••
sho~ld care _about A.Iver Day.
•
•
•
: ••
.
.
.
wlt.h
.force.
Before-anything tragic;; happens
·,
_.
-
•
·
River Day affects all of Marrst It lr,wolves
_
this. year, we all have to take a common
every person asso.qiated ·with the college
·sense::approach
to the. problem. No
:'one
--
and greatly influences Marist•~ repuation.
•
_
..
·
wants to see anyone •get hurt. It's
,not"
Just
.:
•
.
-
If this reputation, is to, be savea; each
O:
··the
seniors'. responsibility· to ensure, that
< •
member of the_ Marist
•community
has to
.
_.
River Day does not get out ofcontrol;
it's
.
make. a. commrttment to change;
.
Beto.re.
everyone's.
The one thing Marist has
·"
•
anything large-scale change can
·t,appen,-
going for it is people who care about each
-
•
.
everyone hasto believ!3 in it. Before we even
_
other. Caring doesn't begin· ih April. It's.
•.
begin to debate the River Day issue openly,_
.•
early enough to keep River
...
Day
•
...
from
o
.
everyone has tp·come to terms with the
destroying the best part of Marist. If.River-·
probl~m. We must admit that River Day can
Day is to be controlled we have to start
:
••
be lethal. B~fore anyone gets killed, we have
now.
'
THE:
.
Editor
Lou Ann Seelig
Senior Editors
•
I
.
Assoctate
Editors
Brian Kelly
PaulRaynls
News Editors
CIRCLE:
BonnleHede
Sports Editor
Ian O'Connor
Viewpoint
Editor
~uslnen
Manager
r
Christine Dempsey
•
Advertising
Manager
Bernie Heer
John Bakke
Cartoonist
Laura Reichert
Carl MacGowan
.
AmieAh®eS
•Graphics
Beverly Morlang
•
•
••••
•
••o•••••••
Pete q<>lalzzo
Faculty Advlso,
David McCraw·
Laura Reichert
.
I
I
....
•.
•
•
;
___________ 1.:\___
/·
[.;:,;:;,
,:::}·--;_'.~-'-
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F1•b.T,1~5-THECIRCLE-Page5
:,
.
ii
2
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'
;_:;t~}tli~i~
Uo}J~>tb(
priille~tinie television?
__
.
.
.
•...
..
-·
.·-::-;::·,.
-:.
'·
;,
~y-
J\~_·f_h
__
,·_o_
·oiDeBarros
··;
.,,
'.
~
scihiethirig original during
;prime
for years.'
,
.
ty" or "Knot's Landing?"
. because they all had some
,. ·
· •
•
..
·,
.. ' •
•.
time
''.
:
·•
·
•
· What makes the others. boring
I can't offer a solution to the. semblance of human nature,
.
:_:
.One
day a friend who.is learned
·
<;
,
L;t's; leave ·out the mini-series is the fact that though the faces mindless. programming, but I do· some intangible quality that made
..
i~ pr~bability told me that-if he:
··a~d
·informative.
news.programs· may be different/the plot lines·. think that we, being intelligent them different.. They didn't
.
.
w~r~--
to.-,place_
t~n monkeys in
,a
. :
like. "20/20/' because, the'-ininis are'always·. the same. If the same college students, should be of-• always follow the formula ..
• ·
rooiri'\vith ten··typewriters,· and· series is·usually'based'on a good
.actors·
were
·in
"Miami Vice,"
fended that the networks think
Though the· concepts weren't
all~v,_cf theii(~o punch'..keys
_at:
:.
literary.
;work(
and riews
'shows
.
''TJ. Hooker"· and "Riptide," . their evening fare is stimulating.
always• entirely
•
original, the
..
ra~p.~1}_1:.Jot.)~*
::~our~.
a:
,d_ay;_.;
dcpi~t.rcalitY,·. ~hich s_hould. be·. what
·else
would set them apart Many of the best shows on TV to-
writing was very good, the jokes
.
soc,ner, or~~t~r,.<me
of:the~ wol,!l~_.,·:
inoi:e than iriteresti!lg enough for froin each other? The story rarely
.
day are late night reruns of "The
kept. coming, or in the case of
•
Jypc· o~t
:one:complc:te:work
of. anyone. What I don't'find tasty is·
••
varies: a:n evil villian; who usually
.
Honeymooners,"
"Odd
Cou-
"Star· Trek''
and ''Twilight
....
Sha~espeaJc::
:\ :,
.
0<\~
-:'·~
::
the endless bafrageQf what 1 call is suffering from some type of ple," "Star Trek" and "Twilight'
Zone;" the unexpected twist lent
:
·'
;WMU
\YO\lld
:like to·-kriow.-is,
.•
''forinula":shows. These basical-
r_are
•
Freudia_n psycho problem, Zone." It may all be a matter ofi the show a mysterious quality that
whfcari'.t ie.lev~sion
script writers;,·. ly fall into thr~e
:categories:
sit-
commits
.
an· offense against a taste, but the networks sooner orl nothing can riyal today.
•
wh5?'.~.r,~
supposedly a·lot: brighter
••.
coms,'-'·police: sho·ws and
:-night~ ;
to.tally defenseless victim, and our later will have. to come up with
•
·
tha_1f~<>11:r:avei:llg¢
~<>nkcy~>thirtk
__
':
time•dramas; This Js not
_saring;
;her~es track him down after ex- something to rival the wit and,
Let's hope that when our
-'
..
up an ongmal J)lOJ
lm~? 5lranted,
·• •
that ~here. ,ren't any g~.o~ s~<?ws
,
te!1s1ve
legwork and close brushes spark of those "ancients."
generation makes it into those
.
~ost of them d<;>!lt
~ork_t~~ hour
.that
JaU'. mto these. categories;
,
with death.
•
.
•
. ..
..
. Perhaps those older shows, and
posh Hollywood 'think tanks,'
.·,
d,}'.,s;·b~~.:th~re;n;iust,
b~ a,:great
•
"Cagney and
•·Lacey/'/
•~Hill
: .
Similarly, sitcoms follow their even fairly contemporary classics
.
we'll have i:nore to offer the next
. •.
: ,
11umber o~ pe<>pl~
b~~gmg. away
Streep~lues," '.'Family Tics" and
•
own formula. Aside
,
from. the like "M*A•s•H,"
have a lesson
generation of television watchers
.
•
,
at
.
.typevvnters.:.•
and.
-.word
.,.-pro-
.
'.'Paper· Dolls," in
.iny
•
opinion, ··faces; what is
•
the
·difference
for modern script writers. Those
than what's available today, and
.
cessors_.•
fo( Hollywood piodµc-
·
are examples ·of goocl television: between "Alice " '.'Three's
_·
a
•
shows didn't rely on a quota of
maybe exceed anything that's sure
tiori: companies and the major.net- .
•
What sets
·these
apart
'from
the. Crowd" and "Glmme.a Break?"
four
deaths
per hour,
or
to still be in reruns by then.
works. It seems
,that
·even
the_
laws
·
.
others is their original. treatment·
•.
Or for that matter, can you find subliminal sexual themes to hold
··
of
.
chance_
•
wo_uld'' aUow the
.
of: basically the same
.subjects
.
anything to differentiate the sex- the viewers interest. People
Anthony DeBarros is a junior
average television viewer to enjoy
we've been.watching on the tube ploitation of "Dallas " "Dynas-
faithfully watched those shows at Marisa
.
.
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~-:~iP.
;·.~-~;-\·:
.:;:_:
...
>:
...
Curmudgeon's
Manifesto
\.
.\·
Ari
Invitation· to
-._
Our Readers ...
_.
i
.,-l
.
.
.
.
.
.
. .
:·e
"
'FO!.
tlle past year, Viewpoint has
.
:.:r:
.. :.:O~eh
a forum ,for essays written-by
::.;(
..
Circle reader~.
·we
have tried~to
:·
i
:-
;
.
car::·
_in.=
_which
_·.·
.Bernhard,
,.Ji.ugo
...
·, IBM
•
.and :_
Chrysler
•.
don't·., build
·•.
it is either 1 )intentional or 2) com-
i?
.•
Goetz
;shot.
four· teenagers :is a··; plants in the South Brome. Darrel mitted with. malice. Some
•
ex-
•
.
print commentary. on• a. wide range
'.
..
of topics, from smoking in.public
·:-'-
to the role of religi61,1s:.studies
in a
college education, from
·ow1
•
laws to diplomatic relations with
•1
• ••
\vhole:rang~
..
:
oLquestions and'· Cabey and. the others )carried
amples:.
.
.·..
.
.
..
.
....
~ -
:
<lilerrimas
con~erning law,'. crime;
'tliat,;
to' make it, you· got tobe
.
/ /
•
•
:
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•
'
•
•
•
'
•
•.
,'.a.
,ju,stice;
·,;psychoanalysis,
,
urban
,,
tough, don't let
.
anybody push•.
.'
The ma!1 a~akes_ to
~h~
sou~d
•
<
.
sociglogy;~nd a'.few,other things·
··YOU
.•around.
Capitalism
'in
its of something. cla!1kmg m the k1t-
r.:_!_:
_
,
.
that drive us crazy:· Herein:•;
soine,.
~_
lowest form is the way
to
survive.
chen. Pr9~!ers, hk~ the ones that
.
"
.
, ,
of :those questions
;and
:a 'little·:
.'
.,
i
Whatever happened tq law and
•
took the pe1~hbors TV last year.
•
f
-
...
·
'
·
:
be~ign sophistry fo_r the.
'purpose
:
.
order?
Law-and order, you say?
.
~e
.reacpes
mto the drawer and
f.
,
•
·•
of~_\vastiri.g
•
valuable·. newspaper
:
Well, havelgofthe plac;e'for you, picks up the gu~ he had p~rchased
J
;:
•·
space ...
::~\;:·'
::;,;:.
•
·;·.\:' ,.• -,.; ·
-: The· Soviet Uriion ..:..
:law
and
•
a!lt had
•
reg1stere~
•
wtth the_
t
<:---;,What.,
are
·the
rights--of in->
order capital
~,ofc
the>worid!!!
•
pob~e •. He knew th1_s
day would
j
•
•
,
dividu_als?_
I
·know,
I know
--
~aitill~seedi~place! Murder rate co~e, n~w he,'s., g91ng to waste
J
Goetz. was
.striking
a blow for second to none, people can walk
_those
.
punks. He creeps toward
't
. ··
,humanity;staiiding
up
for whaf s
·
the streets at night,
'cops
on every the front of-the house, looking for
t
- , ·
riajit ..
:.Tm·mad
as.
hell, andJ'm;::,corner peer!Ii.g_into
every window
:~hado":s
<>l_l
the ~a!ls. He ~e~rs
;;
\.
',
noFgoing totakeit
anymorc!'.')fto make sure>nobody'f messing SOlllethmg, a cha1r·m, the dm1~g
,t
He.was
taking C!feofhimselfand
\around.
And the.· subway!, No room. S~oot ~rst,. b~fore he do~s.
?:
.
making
.those.
thugs: think
.
twice;
•
....
•
grafitti here/folks '-- clean as the He
_steadies
himself, then leaps m-
t ~-
.•
In~ other,, words;it's rev9iutioil,
.
day
it
was built. They even got to the room. "Freeze!" Blam,
I.
i
t~~L tiine':h~ll,~red
'.social. con_di-
.
chandeliers hanging from the ceil~ Blam, Blam. A_
glas.s_
of_ mur f~lls
"
•
,
tton
.that
no, 011e condones· and ing! Clean, quiet cars. Tlie perfect to_ the floor, th~ !1quid m1xmg_
'.(
ev~ryone drearilt.!lbout. J'.ak~il to
.
place to. raise children.<So, what with the ~lo?d· ~p1Hmg
out of the
G
itslogical~o_ilclusion;the~ubway
.·
do you say?
_;:
,··<>.·,
-
~:.:·:;:
,
.·
bod,y_ofh1s
e1ght•Year:~old·son.
-
-
/
iri~i~ent
iS.
~-1_1:liciO_co·sm
..
of
_'(take_
-
~-
~.-
..
Wl,a{isjUS(i~eJ:J~-Stice'is
to:see
•
-~;,.
·1
your. pick)_ the: rise
,of
the Con-
something'for'what
•ii
is. fr'can't
Just past midnight, deep within
;!
federacy, the Bolshevik. Rcvolu-. be measured'.: in prison terms,
a prison, Mugsy McDougall
is
fit-
ii
-
:
tion, rebel . activjty :- ~gh( and vengeful satisfaction or any of the
ted with leather straps across his
,
left -
in Central
America,
the·
•
traditional methods of organized wrists and a beenie over his skull.
bombing of abortion clinics, etc .• justice. For instance, murder is The blindfold around his.head is
When The Law is unresponsive -"'.'" not always murder, according 'to
tight, but he manages. to hear the
perceived as unresponsive -· to thejargon of the'skilled· realist.
warden's request- for his last
the populace, the people· react.
Murder is alternately termed
words; -.. I ain't got
·
nothing to
It'~
right there in the Declaration homicide, pacification, abortion,
•
say." All's ready, and the
.switch
of.Independence.
•
,
capital punishment,
•
neutraliza-
•
is thrown. Two minutes and a few
What about
•
the
.
victims of'
.
tion,
termination
and
-
other
.
thousand watts later, the power is
crime?
As
Bernhard-Goetz is a niceties.
.
Then
there's
shut off as Mugsy's body shakes
rebellious ~ctim of crime, so arc manslaughter, which so\mds_ like and puke spills from his mouth.
the, four kids he shot.-Thcy are murder, but don't be ~ece1ved. He inhales reflexiyely, the body
from the South Bronx. Yes, ther.!:
•.
Manslaughter -
as I figure it -
unwilling to accept the rules
·of
are some nice neighborhoods in is murder by those too embarass-
•
The Law.· Six minutes pass ·and
that area~ but judging from the•·
-ed
to admit to it. Something like the doctors are sent in. A pulse is .
tenement doors behin? which the
·
that. Anyway, society is· moody
found. He. ain't dead yet. The
youths
-
hide from reponers, I
.
and is highly appreciative of
switch is thrown again,
'another
don~t think I'd want to live there.
murder when it's not called two minutes at the same volume.
Their front lawns are concrete; murder and when it suits certain
Mugsy's body lies limp as the heat
spray-painted grafitti substitutes needs, To the 20-year-old who
fills the room. What's he in for?
for;_ the, Sunshine Yellow and
returns from battle with his chest
No one's quite sure; either the cop
A voµdo Green that suburbanites lined with ribbons, we raise a
killer or the one who uses the Boy
use on their houses. The·schools
toast. He has dutifully carried out
Scout knife. The doctors return to
are run down, streets full of drug heinous acts of barbarism for the
the room. Yep, he's dead, all
dealers. Basically; not a pleasant service of his country. May God
right ..
•
·,
.
the Vatican. We have been happy
to· proyide the space.
.,
·_
.
.
,
/
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.
-.
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But we're not sure we can con-
••
tinue:: doing so~
,·
.:
Fr~nkly, the response has been':
disappointing. We appreciate thos~
readers who: have taken the time
to write for /Viewpoint, but they
have· been too few. We like to
thini 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 mo~e, we are invidng you
to suor11it 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 Viewpoint's worth
keeping alive. We hope you do,
too.
·i
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•I
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,,·.·
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Thursday;
:
,
Friday
t'
•
6:30 p.m. Rtheaml:
7:30 p.m. FDm; Purple,
12 noon CPR dass:
•
Blithe Spirit, Fireside
·Lounge_
• •
Rain,
·Theatre,
Admission
•
• • Fireside
Sl with Marist I.D.
Fortlin Film Serles, Wild
5:30 p.m. Women's
7:30 p.m. Foreign Film
:
•
Strawberries (see
-
b~ketball
vs .. L.I.U.
Serles:
Wiid Strawberries
'
,
Thursday's listing)
(Sweden, 1974)
8:30 p.m. Psychic
Gbostbostm: Theatre Sl
•
with Marist I.D.
:
9:00 p.m. Valentine's Day
•
Mixer: Dini_ng
Room
_ 7:00 p.m. Film: Purple
Rain,
.Theatre
7:30 p.m.,
Fordp Flhll
-
Serles: The Blue Angel
(Germany 1930)
•
Donnelly 245
No Admission
9:30 p.m.
FDm:
Purple
Rain (see Friday's· listing)
·•-
......
•
7:30 p.m.
F'orela•
mai
'"_<.:'
:
••
,8
p.~ ..
The
Map:
Flute:
Series: Tlie ·Blue Angel (see
•
.
Bardavon 1869 Opera
Sunday's listing)
House
•
.
:
-
.
-
._,,
,,-\
........
-~~~~~::::-~
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&
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?:,:.:_:·.·/->!fsili'fs.-.CARME"t~:/~;
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1Mel=-.Gibson:&;DianefKeafon
in ; ..
=
\':iJ?;·~~MR.St··,so'FFElf~:7:25';,&
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•. ·,
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••
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:·.-.
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.,
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.. -• •
·: More:than;30<l,OO0
Americans . iJapan.-"'Afric.a; •. Tlie-; South"
• :-•not; incbidingamembers ·of··•· Pacific·.~The
Far
Easl, South '
... the)armed·,,servic·es -·:;;.;,
are··· ~-America.~=.neifrly
'every ·part''·
···n-0w:
1
1iving overseas:·':These •· ofthefree·world! ,. : 1 ·., :· '_'
•
:·;p~opirF~re·e~:g~~~d'·iit#E!.at1.Y
i ._,:,'.
f~f,
':Co:~•p~ni'es-
··_a_~r:
·everypo·ssible
•,achv1-
··.Govern·merit
·agencies·
'·, ty':.'.co'nsfruction;-' ·engineer~. •
·employlng'
personn'efin·near~ •
::,.Jn~_;/
sa1.!~1::;}r~:n~~~~~a\~o.n,.
'· _
:1y~,)."~!f
;:
of~!,lPll~J~il.
-~.fro~:·_
• _·secretar1.al'.
, ..
work, ,
accoun- ·.•.
• ,the· unskilled·. laborer .. to., the ,
.·.
-~ing; ; miiiuflcfiiring·;.:
:c,~l
:.-'.:
cojl~g~_:_,Jrai~~~',
:pr:~fe~sional
.;
.itr.~fWJ~g.:,:,~.~chh,lg,;_nt!_r-~ing,
,,-;.
-,man or,woinan,~: ,·
t.:b, · •·. •
:, , go_v~r.nm~nt;,:
: etc;~e.fo.t·
tAii~ < ·." :,, ( 4}L
;~irms:. -and • organiza-., •,
2rmani·~:are :.ea,I'lliilg::$2,000•·;to'••.
lions
engaged
in
foreigri•co~•;.:
·:;;$5,09,0.j;~r:rn,onth;~;or;JJioreI~i~/;·•stru~tiol).;projeds;;_manufa~~-
.•
;:/~;Tct•\allCJ_,w\\1Y-~!1'rit~~.··op_::(','.turbig'/-'ni~riirig;''oiltrefi~i~g.·_.·
·.•·.•:po'rtunify.•ffo;'~:-
a:p pl'y
·f
for. ).<engineering/ s~~sf:servfoe•s; ··:
···•
overseas
,,·employm·ent/l•~we,
•
3
'teachirigF'etc:\'•~tc'>r1i:,:)'':
:,,_~·.:
.
.,.;.~e~ea.(chedc-aitct"ccm,rirtr-~sr.:Hll'W7a·ncrwh~l!
7
to.
'aP-:.~
,r\fed
··a,ilew')aitd'excitibgidire·c-
,
·•ply'for overseas· Governmerif~
"'~i!ii;;t;~it{
...
•~!~~~}i?i-~tf
;:··~b;;;:
• Empl~1menl•::·b1recforj,...,.
·.\(.7),:You-;wiiLre'ceiveour.
~
;·spvers.: :-:
·:,i>·//<:·-..r-:.,·.,,::..
•
..
Employmen.L" Opp'ortunity;_.
?/
(_1)
;,>_qul','••IDter,~atJonaf
\ ,.
D_igest:;.jam~packed,.·
witll,
inf.
• Emploi.,ment<Dlrectory:
lists. •.·
.•forniatfon about current job·,.,
• dozens \off·cruise.,,ship_
.com;·
): opportunities: ,. Special
'::sec~~
:~·-panies,
botii~on:;t~e/e.a~st
and·:-,.,.·tions
·~.features;
.news·.,.
of •
-
..
·
we$t•:
coast
,You
_will be told.: <overseas-/ construction·· pro~ ;
.. what,
0
type =of .positions,·the
•. jects, executive positions'.
,
~
c_r~ise .shfp «!ompaiiies.·.·
hite; • 'and teachinghpportunities.·
> :
·:· s u
~'h
-L·
aJs " d·e-ci'>.h a
ii
ds·;. . ·• • :· :,
90
i>ay
Money
< '
·:restaurant
• help;·'tco_oks;.
,t
:·~:'.:Baact:Guar•ntee
.--:
. bartenders, just to name· a
<:
•
o·ur
Interiiational Employ-
; •.few: You wilL_also • receive
.
ment
Directory
is sentto you·
/ severalEmpl9yrnent.
:Ap·;_~;::
wiui.tliis
•.
guarantee.
If,
for
J;;plicatfon F°'rms·, that';y9u.:
any reason you do not otilain ..
· .''may send·:(directly
..
to/the
overseas:employnieiit or
you
·companies y6~{would ljke··to
·are not s~tisfied
with
the job
··workfor. ,,.;; :o::
:. · . • .;;,:· ,::
hffers .. :s'impiy: • return • our
•
(2)~
Fir.ms
·anq
c;,rg~foiza-. . Dlrectory·within
90
days and
'•. tions ~mi>Joying~alftypes of. • .. we'll refund your ·money pro-
persorihel
in A"ii,str a
li~. ,: -mptly:':;'116
question~ a,sked.
....
--
.
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'-..
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International Employment Directory .
131
Elma.Dr. Dept.
T21 •
. Centralia,
WA ~8531
Please send me a copy
·of
·your
International ·Employment
Director,;
I understand that
I
may
use this information for
90·
days and if I am not satisfied with the results, I may return'.
,)'our Directory for an immediate refund, On _that basis I'm
enclosing
$20.00
cash .... check .... or money order .... for your
Directory.
NAME---------=----------
pteas, print
ADDRESS
_______
_..PTN _______
_
CITY _____
__, __
~STATE ________
ZIP
International Employment Directory 1984
,j;,.•··
••
'\
,·•I•••,
.••
Feb.
·1;
1985 • THE CIRCLE·
Page·
7---•
IspeCiaried.
:l)rOgram establislied
•
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'by Mlcuet'Scott Mueller
••
scho61 applying what they have Vassar : : siudebts ·
by:"
Marist .
. , · · >:' •
. .
,
.
,
'.
<
learned in_ the classroom. There ... students;has been notable. Both
:( Marist College has established ;
are~
•
however,
~
no h~dicapped • Nolan • and - Tteairior • said • the
a·-' new· • program . with ...
••
Vassar,.:. children in.the Vassar pre-school.
transition has been very smooth.
College that will certify
araduatcs .:;_
According to Robin Trcainor,
According to Linda Smith, a
of theprograin to tcach•spccialor coordinator·" f.or the Vassar • Marist'sophomore from Bayville, .
elementarfeducation; or both.>: • College _ teacher : .. education
"The only thing better than the
: ·The,, decision to begin • the program;. the contbination of the
v
assar name is the Vassar people.
program was based· on the in- . pre-school' and. 'the _classroom "They
really . advocate
in-
crease
in • mainstreaming
. provides : an' internship-like set-
dependence, butthey will give you
. education in clementary
......
scliools: . ting>. '
i: • -, •
~
·' • •.• • -•.. •· ·· •
help when you need it. I wouldn't
throughout. the country. Main.: •: 1'The. students learn theory'in
consider transferring. This way, I
··streamini education, • a· federal • the'._
classroom and ' then· apply can have the best of both
• 1aw, is the process of educating what they have learned when t~ey worlds.''.
handicapped students in theleast '; visit.the pre-school a _short ti~e
For the past ten· y~ts, Marist
restrictive .. environment.
>Ace-
later," • Treainor said. <'This College offered teacher education
. co'fding to •• the/_law,, inain_. allows. th~ stude~ts ·• to . try
in conjunction with Mount. Saint
streaming is ideal with peers in •• strategies with the c~ldre~ ~1th a
Mary College in . Newburgh .
, local schools said Liz Nolan
••
great
deal
of. immediacy•
According to Nolan, "Mount
coo'rdinator of the Marist teache; provid,ing f:.
eedback
f.
or ••
the
S • M
,
1
ed
amt ary s no onger want to
•
education program.
•
•
studen,ts.",
..
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L :.~·-· . --'
TfeainOJ"
also said th&t working give
ariS
t
t e uxury o
ot
~ ,A no~blf pr~~lem has been 9te iri the pre-.school , allows the sp~!os~!~.
~nd phased out the
.teac~ers .· mabiltty to· :comb!ne students 'to recognize children's
·s~tal an_d
cle!D~nUlr)'
edu~t1on • needs early.
•
Re
q
u ire men ts
for
th e
l1thout hindenng the, pr<?Cess
for
' There was nQ mention by either Marist/Vassar teacher education
· eith.~ '
P~Y.
Nolan s,d. The Nolan or Treainor about using program include a 2.5 minimum
·Manst/Vas_sar
,proJI:aints geared th. ·M • p
h l·
•
GP A and the ma1·nta'n n
fa
to , certify teachers ·•to• Jeach in .. : e anst re~sc oo •
.
• • •
t
e ce o
mainstream classrooms~
...
<. . .
Maureen Ferguson, a Manst
C average. The student is also
>_.
/There are currently.Jive Marist sophomore from _Staten Island, required • to take a series of
•·
stuc:ients
. enrolled in the. program said she feels ~anst Coll~~e has Psychology courses at Marist.
: for the spring semester which. played a.f~ctor m h~r de~~s1on
to
According to Nolan, if the
requires them to
take.
two courses teach special e_ducation. I am a
demand for the program in-
at) Vassa_r
<co.Hes~.~.-Vassar Psyc_hology~a;or,
b1:1t
now_
I h~ve creases, more sections of classes
.students will begm
taking
courses an interest m s1;>cc1al
e_ducat1~n will be added at both schools.
at IMarisdn Uie Fall semester of because of my interaction with This semester, Marist is providing
~
19
s
5: ,. ' ;_ ,. ,• • • ~- •.. --. ••
~i1:~Er1
ttie°~~ararc~~~
. ;::i~sJt:!i~H!w~:!ro/ih;;:,,~i:
i· ;.
The, students •
in•
the' program Program," she said.· .
·•. : ·
.,.'iio
definite pians to
hav¢'
the,yans
then°spend time in the Vassar pre-
The amount of interaction with rini'a{ter that; she said.
:·~·•. •
;M6$~iC
}$eeks
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by John Clements,
·
"The Mosaic
0
is a collection of • Mosaic."
Zaccheo said the
·. d
·,
;
.
: , :· , ·
,
-,
,,
.. ·•
original:: short· stories, essays, . magazine staff is looking· .for
. · Thck· Marist ,College,' Literary poems ~and, artwork •
,by
Marist
"new members, and .artistic peo-
.SQciety;is
seeking:input for its an- students and members of
the·
sur~ ple." • Most of_ the present
,nuaI,-·publication,:6Lthe'Uterary rounding community: This year,
members
-of
the. ,staff are. up-
'andartmagazineii~!TheMosaic): .·.
the.magazine is "locikingfor a
perclassmen.· ': • :.
•
:,,
. Submissions· are due: by. Friday, classy. edition,., : said. Santa Zac-
, A cover contest is being offered
'.f~~-:.~-il(;
• • :
.,
<
,chi:o, ; editpr-in~chief . of-
f.'The
,
to help stimulate student input
'-'!'
"
The deadline for submitting
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'YourB#ttama_s·.pc,.llege
Week
ln91u~e~: /
• Round;frip air transportation from your home city to
Bahal'.Tlas. •·
7
Nights accommodation
in Freepbrt
(Fre~pprt •. Inn 7""'. casual club like hotel located
downtown, next to El Casino and opposite to lnterna-
tior-'alBaza.ar)or Nassau (DolphJn or Atlantis Hotel -
id~ally loc~teq across. the street from the beach within
.walking
dista.~ce to everything). Price Qased on quad
·occupancy. Triple add -
$50.00 Double add $100.00 •
Roundtrip airport/hotel transfers • Hotelroom
tax •
'Gratuities for bellman;'chari:ibermaids and poolman •
College_Week activities -
sports, parties, music, fun.
Hotel Options
.
. .
.
Nassau -
Add $50.00 for/ deluxe Sheraton British Col-
onial, add $60.00 for deluxe Pilot
House Hotel.
Freeport -
Add $50.00 for first class Windward Palms
.Hotel.·
···-------------------------·
I
Fc~·,~e·
212-.355-4705/600·223-0694(rcscrvationsonly)
I
I
-
Bahamas College Weeks
I
fJ
Jan 5-Jan 12
•
C May 04-1'\ay II
I
INIU COllNIAff
U Jan 12-Jan 19
O
Mar23-Mar30
0
May I I-May 18
I
• I
HOUOAYSINC:
fJ Jan 19-Jan26'
t: Mar.30-llpr6
IJ May l8-May25
I
~I Madison
Avenue lJ Feb 23-Mar 02
C Apr 6-Apr 13
IJ
May
25-Junc 01
I
Nt•YO<l<.NT1002l O Mar02-Mar09
l1 Apr 13-Apr20
0
June01-June08
I
· I
·u
Mar09-l'lar 16
G Apr20-Apr27
U June OS-June 15
I
I
Cl><d<One,
rJ Mar 16-l'lar23
0
Apr27-l'\ay04
•
0
June 15-Junc22
•
CJ
FREEPORT
.
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NJ\SSAU
Oro.,pan<y
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CSat..departutes) •
(Sat.d<parturn)
,
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C Triple
C!
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Sounds
good.
r.e checked
the
•Hk I -•nl to p,art1 uMS ~ncloscd
~
C 100 deposit.
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Each-"""',.,
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1cm,.
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S2Son.lonaory 1-Bool<Now,
.__ _________
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original ,.black~and-white.
photos
•
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{6tpe!(~n:c1JjiJfcitaw1nii,s
.:for
)lie
,;:contest1s
Febliaryl2 .. •
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.
··:
C ''":. Publicilti~~
Jr
:'.~The Mosai~.;
• dates back to the 1960s. During
;jbe • last few yelirs, sigriificaiit
,
changes have taken place in .the
magazine's layout. A new prin-
ting format;-and the use of Maar
Printing in Poughkeepsie are
among the major contributions
_for the magazine's success.
.-----------,
••WE'VE
I
I
••
.--.1111111
··I
I
••
-.GOI·
·I
I
ITALL···;
I
THE.BEST
I
SPRING BREAK 1
1
VACATION
PACKAGES
Check brochure desired .
from
0 Ft. LauderdaleS239*
(hotel only from s
79)
from
□ Bahamas
S249*
from
□
Bermuda
S279*
from
□
Puerto Rico
S299*
Includes:
• Round-Trip Airfare
• Airport-Hotel Transfers
• 7 Nights
Hotel
LOdglng
• College Week
Activities
· I
In Bermuda/Bahamas
I
(Dances,
Parties, Music,
I
Sports)
--------
1
Fcm·1'tG·
SOI MJa,sonA,enue
I
Nev, York. NY 10022
211·355-4705
I
INlllt
n HOUl».vs
Name _______
_
l
Address _____
_
I
School
City __
State-Zip
_
I •
Plu1
IS'!& Id•
and ~rv,ees.
Proces
t>.>~cl
on
Lr
p.,m,,es from
NY.
Supple~ncs
~pp•y
r,omJ
~ones
---------
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--•_Page
8
~
THE CIRCLE•
Feb.
1, 1.985
\V"har•;to,·trY·rof
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ert#rt~
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by.Scot Seal~- / ;
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.what
are" 'the}h~ttest· gifts· to
give. for. this Valentirie's.;'Day? . •
Some local· ·Poughkeepsie·. shops
have the answer.":.,'. \o,:: .:-· • ,_·
..
~
According\
io,::'.Chris;
-~.a
· ·
saleswoman • at ' the • • Book and
• Record· store iri the .Main Market
Mall, teddy bears ·are the best sell-
ing itein'at her' sh·op, '. . . . • \ . .
• Although sales.at this.time are.
rather slow, Chri~_
Said she expects
,
•
the Valentine's rush to begin later'
in the week and hopefully sale of
, . .
,. ,
thdittle fury fellows will increase
as well.::
,.: ., .. :·-.,
.
.. ·,
•
..
0
,
-
•
While· strolling
into • the
poi.nt~d to tr~ditio~ as'°the mai~ popular during Valeritine's .Pay;·
Celebrate' store located in the . reason for.the popularity of can~ according - to· ·Steve-' Morga11/
Main _Market Mall, one. may • dyhearts.
•
owner of Morgan's Valley,:View.
notice the array of hangi1_1g
Valeri-
.. .
.
. • ,
. . Florist iri downtown Pough~eep:
tine's • Day. balloons, chuckling . . -At-the -House of C.tr~s. com-
•
sie. "Woi:nen are , purchasing
clowns;
•
fuzzy unicorns, • and • • bination
gifts ; .are the , most. several roses for men, whereas
overweight cupids .with bow and
popular. A balloon bouquet; one-
men are usually purchasing: only
arrow in -hand. But the mainstay
pound candy heart and
a
greeting • one , rose· for women," : . said .
• of Valentine's Day , shopping, • card _all sold together are
a
.hot Morgan. · . .
•• : :. :. ;
displayed in the case adjacent-to
-itein, ·according to saleswoman,.:•: Morgan said he- wasn't sure·
the ·cashier, _are.
chocolate hearts
Naomi• Goldberg .. But_. wait -
why, such a contrasF,in buying"
in
a
multitude of sizes.
. that's not all.
To
top off the entire , trends,existed in ~he two genders;
''Chocolate hearts .are the best-
deal, Goldberg added, "We can , However/there was ·one detaiLhe
selling,Va~e.ntin.
e's gift. i.
n 9ur_ ,hop
even . de.
I_iv.
er . the . gifts to.·/ r_~ur.
_
• s.
a1.'.d
-he.
was
.
certain.·. _o.·
f: ".Red
now,ttsa1_d,_Carol, a saleswoman · favonte lover."
. . .
;
-
.. ·._. __ roses,'!, he •said, "are defimtely
for the Cel_ebrate store./Carol
Roses. have .· alway~ .; been: thehottest!"
•
•
et:A~IFIED&
·
c-
; ,/ :.v91VOD_!
,):i
:,
:r
: •
Marist( Crue
•
..
endo_rses<
the
•
St.·.
Valenii,rie's pay.Massacre/ /. -.•·i··
Sigma F>hi
• Epsilon,
..
Thei •_
best
•
fraternity on campus! Caii Carter
Jenkins ·at 471~5269,. 73 North
Rd. ·.
., ·:
•
-
.
',
DearJai:nes,
..
.
•• We're so close, yet so far?·.· .
-•• . Love Y ~. Mary
:.j•
·Soph9µl9re·
..
\Vfris:,=c't'utse.
•
,;_.,_,
-·-
..
;.
; __
:'.;~.
,
. :,•Meredith Limli)s going on a
,._. _cruise to nowh~re, ··s~e••d9esn't
know. who she • is taking·. or· even
••
when she leaves... _:;.
i .
• , Lima, a Marist,
,
sophomore,
won the cruise in
a
raffle at Satur-.
day's Bon Voyage/Video Mixer,
• but was not present at. the mid~
·night drawing.
.a•;,,,- ,, :::
i -
• :
r
: "My friends· came and .woke -
.
me up later to. ctell me,'' said_
Lima.~"Then,my room_startedto
0
Jill up viith people :who wanted to
· congratulate me.'..\ :
. . Lima said that she.has not been
given any details about-the cruise
and does not know who she is tak-
ing with her._ "But I have to ad-.
.. mit; I've had a lot of offers," she
said. -·
,_., .
.
Crime-_---_-
__ .,_
continued from page
3,
•
police departments,· to\Yn, : city
•
and county courts, the district at-
torney's office and
.
probation.
- departm.ents to d~eririine if the
county needs this program. _,
• ' ',
. ~•We
have to creat~ a program\
for the county's needs," he ,said. '
'A work study should be
a
learn-
ing experience.
It
should mutually
benefit both the COUiity
arid' the
criminal. It's a way of Sc8ying
you_;
can pay your debt to society this •
way, but if you mess'uj:ic"again,
BOOK.EARLY!;;
Limited Hotel.Space
.----------,
ft---=,---:---,·
in Ft Lauderdale . ,
a_nd Dayto~a Beach
, *:rRIP DATES*
March 2-March
9
M~rch 9-March 16
"'1arch 16-March 23 ..
,March .23-March 30
. March 30•April'6 •
11.pril
6-April 13
. TOUR RATE
;~ lt11CLUDES:
•R·ouhd <, :~ Trip
Transportation • via
:,~{!'t~
air<conditioned
0
. ~_jfffo-
..
lav·a·
tory .. e_
qui pp.
·e·d·
.
• ~~;.
m°.torc<>ach • to
..__,_~----'-·,--·
0_·._-_,•
"Daytona Baach·and
Ft. Lauderd,ile. •
•,Convenient Depar•
ture Points.
'<
.
__
.•
......
:-·:
-_
TRANSPORTATION:
Round trip transportation is available on our
: coaches. Motorcoaches depart from main bus terminals in major
: cities. Service is express ma~ing . only _food stops. (Departure •
·: times and dates have been carefu!ly pla11ned to coincide with the
• check-in-time of the hotels: Coaches depart on f:riday and arrive
back the following Sunday. Departure dates are Mar .. 1 return Mar.
10, Mar.
8
return Mar.
17,
Mar: 15 return Mar. 24, Mar.-22 retu-ril
Mar. 31, Mar. 29 return Apr.
7,
Apr.
5
return Apr. 14. Coaches are
the most modern up-to-date models with reclining seats and are
·. fully air conditioned and lavatory equipped for your comfort.
:~
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we'Jl putyouinjail,'
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.... lllllli--.-.-~-----------------------------------Feb.
7, 1985 •
THE CIRCLE· Page
9 --•
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fef:tij;natc Jtid and she's slowly opening up
..
parent ~•t de~y the Big.Bro~her or Sister
:
blems; she said.··
•
ticipate in ttiis program, it is not a require-
·.-:'.
tc:Hne;'.:;,z~?,tW
·:·r;:::_'.;,_;.
::
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;
;
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a weekly visic::·,,<.'
·:\:\
.-,:,
·;
•
.
'
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"Most of our children are troubled and ment. Stewart said
most participants are
•.
•
/::~-:
'Ac_ci>rding··
.'fo,r,Murphy!
•
to_~
b('a.
Big
1
_
-/:,Murphjsaid
she
ho~ to:continue with they need someone who is able to stick
with between20and 30 years old.
.
•.
:
:Brother
or, Sister
/tyou
must be consistent-· the program- and·: would Uke to stay with
the commitment,'.' she said.
.
_-
,
_
.
"A lot of our volunteers work.for IBM
..
~·.'.~~~~~=N~;g~:~t~i~;:~i~f~/;t~·J\;~'.-~~~~--:::•··::irr-~~····;~j-;s'~~~
:~~::~!opi~~.·•therela~ion-
y~~~~:~~~:::st~ntt~i!~:~~~~~~~rn~
~~eeso:u~t:rd:v~~wmi~!~i:~e~,n~ut:a~::.~
..
_-
her
up ahi
'ceriain timc,-you should make
:;:':;
.''lt'.s a satisfying experience~ I feel _good to see the child once
a week for two to five students," she said.
·: sur~yoii
are·
ther~
atth~tt~e,'~.she said.:
'.-::
!lbout myself.Jor participa.ting
'i~
the pro-
hours.
Stewart said the agency has two cross-
..
_
.. ·._
\Conversations· :with·Jittle
..
brothers_ and
.
.-.
gram~" she said.
-.-
. '-::,
•
-
:
••
•.
Children are referred to the agency by gendered members, part
of a new program
sisters:·jhould
bt
kept
_confidential, ·she···
·Laurie:stewart;
a·senior at Vassar Col-
:parents,
schools or social agencies, Stewart matching little girls with
men and .little
·said,.
Iri_ setting'goals.
for
activities, the
..
lege who is·dobig aitinternship with the said. The child and
parent both have to boys with women. She said the two boys
achievements· should
•.
be.,
fun; and
•
the:·· agency, said becoming involved in the pro-
want the services for the agency to become who are cross-gendered
will be rematched
;
children sho_uld'have.a say iri the.decision
gram requires
a·
detailed process,. which
•
involved. After conducting a home inter-
with a male as soon as they get more
.,
·making:}:::
:\:
~-
,;!;;;
.:>:
..
:
/
..
/i
·•_.:··
·\:'
··begins
with'·anorientation.-The applicant
view with the child and parent, it matches a volunteers.
'.Currently,
there is a waiting list
• )/'I
·tet
Shamion- decide the. day's. ac-
•
then must· filLout: a
.form
supplying volunteer with a child.-
,
of seventy boys for a Big Brother.
_
divities.J want her to benefit from this rela-
references. Stewart said the next step is a
•
The agency stresse~· to applicants that
•
Montanaro said it's not uncommon to
,
tionship,'..'-Murphy)aid._:,
..
•
..
•
·,,.
.
-
,_very
personal an? in-depth screen interview
•
they are neither a Santa Claus nor a parent have cross-gendered
members,
•
but the
·\LBig
Brothers and Sisters aren't.the only
by theagency. ·
.
,:
.
·
.
• '
·,
figure, Stewart said.
agency likes to keep the boys with the men
orieswith_g11idelines,
Murphy.said; Parents:·
-;·,_'_'Wewantto
find out about the-person's
"We.ask that they don't spend a lot of and the girls with the
women because it's
have a few ground rules
.to
follow. They
emotional stability and family life," she money, in fact we
encourage that they easier for the children to confide in
so-
-
•
baveJo
:reaHze
.the Big Brother,or Sister is .. _ said.
• :Although
the Dutchess County don't
because then .the relationship meone of the same gender.
-
not a taxicab-service nor a.babysitter: The
-·
11gency has
·had:
no problems with child becomes material instead of emotional,"
"Our goai here at the agency is that we
,.·.
~a_r,ent_s
shOldd ~e flexible an~ give the rela;;,,_:
mplesting,.Stewart-said it_is c_autious
ab~ut she said. "And a!1 emotional relationship is
.
hope these relationships will develop into a
t1o_nsb.1p_some
ttmc; at least six months, she
_,
•
this. The agency would reJect. a person with what we are looking
for."
I
friendship that is long lasting," Stewart
said,
to.
establish trust; Ap4 mosfof all/the
emotional ipsecurities and. f~mily pro-
Although many college students par-
said.
-A
NEW.YEAR - A:NEWYOU!
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You
can:Jose t0-30 lbs.
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hiding under
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.See
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DONAHOE:
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at o·oN-
;:NELLY
Hall on 13. & 14 FEB. 1985 between
'40:00
and
·-3:00
or
can
·t-800-342-2408.
G()etz: Hard to tell local impact
by Michael Ruseskas
••
Best spoke up for. the right of.
an .individual to defend oneself,
•
Last week, a Marist p-rofessor but he made a distinction between
and local gun shop owners spoke
self-defense and aggressive at-
out on the Dec. 22 Bernhard
tack.
•
Goetz shooting incident, saying,
-
•
"I think anyone has the right
to
-
.
respectively, that there is a· lack
self-defense, but can't understand
.inforination on the·
case
and· that
how or why some were shot in the
the occurrence has not led to a
back," Best said. .
notable increase in gun sales;
•
· .
-
Best said that the answer as· to
Eugene Best, an associate pro-
.
whether or not one is justified in
fessor
•
in • religious studies at
•
taking another life must be judg-
•
•.
Marist; wouldn't take a definitive
•
ed individually in each incident.
stance. on the Goetz case· because
: "Simplistic • judgments
_
on
he said there isn't enough known
complex issues ignore the fact
about the case.
•
that· any new variable
•influencing
•
"lt's''strange that no complete
the situation can
affect
the judg-
Fishkill Replica Arms, says he
hasn't had any increase in sales
since the incident.
"Most people in
Dutchess
•
County who own handguns use
them for hunting or target prac-
-
tice," Halpern $aid.· "Occasional
0
ly
.
a
•
gas
:_station·
owner· or
storekeeper will be interested in•
a
shotgun for self protection."
Workers at Adventure World in
Poughkeepsie and Trap and Skeet
Shop in Stormville have_
the same
opinion. Neither shop has had a
dramatic increase in handgun or
rifle sales, nor do they anticipate
one in the near future.
report of the incident has been
ment." Best said.
•
published, -that no
_reporter
has
Those who have made a judg-
Although area gun shops have
gone out· and
-
int~rviewed
•.
the
inent to side with Goetz, however,
reported no increase in sales, Out-
other people who were in the sub-
are not necessarilY buying guns
chess Coumy
Sheriff
Fred
'X~Y
~ar at tl_te time to
.
find out
for self protection, according to
•
Scoralick has noted an increase in
. . wh~Cthey
say.
happel)ecf,''
••
Best Io2algim shop owners;
.•
-
_·.
·
. ,.
permit applications.
,
saiq.
.
.
•
.
.
.
~
,
lrv_ing Ha\pern,
,
owner of
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has been an increase m
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.::1qth
.Ann·ual
\faJ:e:n,t.ine~s
·oance
/
-In/Cafe
After.Marist'-:saskefba·11-
$1 Admission.
·support
the Senior Class
Romance till
·:.-:·9:30-1:00
Wee Hours
*
Dress as a· Cupid
&
Get Free Admission
*
J:iandgun permit
,
·applications,"
Si:oralick said, "but I can't at-
tribute it to the Goeizincident."
•
•
Scoralick stressed that at cer-
tain times during the year hangun
permit applications are much
more frequent than other times.
"After the holiday season peo-
ple are more apt to file for a han-
dgun application,"
Scoralick
said. "This is because many peo-
ple getguns for presents and then
must register them.••
1
It takes about four months to
process a· pistol permit. applica-.
_
tion.
Women __
continued from page 11
Freshman Desiree. Genet paced
Marist with a second place finish
in the I-meter dive as well as a
second in the 3-meter event.
A pair of school records were
set as senior Mary
.Marino,
juniors Nancy Champlin and
t;aurie Desjardins and sophomore
Arlene Glynn teamed up· in the
· 800-freestyle relay for a sixth
place finish with a school record
time of 9:20.86.Marino and
Champlin then teamed up with
freshmen,Debbie Noyes and Kris
Maiming in the 400-medley relay
to set another school record of
4:39.36 for that event.
At the conclusion of the meet,
co-captain Marino, of Bloom-
field, CT., was· named as the
runnerup for the Outstanding
Senior Swimmer award.
Along with its seventh place
fi_nish at the conference cham-
pionships, Marist compiled a 6-1-
1 dual-meet record for the season.
Last year, the Red Foxes were
si~th at the championships.
RESEARCH
Send
$2
for catalog
of
0Y8f
16,00J
topics to
assist your research el•
forts. For
info ..
can 10I1-
free
1~1-57-45
QnU-
llnols can 312-922-0:m).
Aulllorl' RtMlfell,
Rm.
@II,
4lJ7 S.
Ow!,om.
Owe.go.
11.
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N
CA~, will
penatiZe,;:1-J;~'~P':lf)f
~gr~~ji@t:
by Ian O'Connor:· _
ing phony credits to players.,, ,; • Coach Mike_ Pe~ry._"
Pe~ry
0
Was .• • m~i-e-inf
or~ati~~f6ft1ie ~CM,;-·< to th.~
N<;;M,;
Murr.~y
••
~aii~ain-' .
· -
. .
.. Murray said he didn'f"wish to
forced to resign in September, __
but_s,id theprocess_~m:onlyJake , _e~_.a~
tlie)ime,qf Pt;rry-~;res1gna-
. • Marist College President Dr. speculate on what type. of sane-
and was replaced by current flead .. 'a day _or s~.' Murr':!>'.
sa1_~
th_e
~ol~. , t10Ii ·.t,'l~t tfl:e _v1olat1onnn_volv!d
Dennis J. Murray says he does ex-
tions·Marist will receive from the . Coach Matt Furjanic. :
....
• . .• lege_w11l-s_end
the second report to . the fo1mercoach's off~ng:-of 1,~
t>ect «minor sanctions" to be NCAA, but • ruled , out -~
the
Perry's-. dismissal_ prompted .
a
,....the NCM l>y: t~e , ~nd _"qf.
the . _: legal.::· extra :benefits· o"-to:·
!
one,
.
placed ori ,the :men's basketball possibility of this year's team be-
~ix~week investigation.-into the . Week. After rec.eivmg
that report, ·' memb~rofthe_team/~n onlt<?ne
program as a result of
a
recent in-
ing seriously affected.
basketballprogram, and was con-
Murray said the'.1'fCA,A
will take • occasion.-
0'
' '.--.~
. • ,,; ·,).-· ,, • •
quiry-conducted-by the National .. • .''This case.won't be.closed until ducted ·by, Co~:· The_ fin~ings of. (._whatever/ac*>n .. :it_ • dl!~ms _. • ler~yi subs~~ue_ntly
·-t~ld
0
.T~e
Collegiate Athletic Association.
after the season and conference • the. college's mv~st1gat1on . was _
~ecessary.
,_. . -,_:'
. • ,
~1r~le ~~at h~:. P~fbab~y co~lll:1t~.
• In a telephone interview.-held • tournament," Murray said. "As
senttotheNCAAmDecember.
-,«They don~t.tell.us what their
ted~violapo
11
s_ du!t~~.~is.six-
_
earlier this week, Murray said he . for probation in the future, I
- , -..
•
• . •. • riext ste w·n b • ,, M -
•.• "d , • month tenure as Manst-s. head •
feels the Division One program , wouldn't think so. That's just my •• •~:he pri~~se of • t~e
-
in-
"
• P •.
1
- -~• • .urray sai • • • coach.' Murray saidlie~asn'isure
•
will be penalized by the· NCAA, opinion. It's in their hands." _
_ ve
5
t1gator's visit was to review the · • • The :.'
0~.
investi~ator_
Y-'
111
• ·• ••
if theNCAA plans to question the •
but that the.sanctl
·ons w·,11
be· of a
report which we submitted to the report is
m
mgs to his supenor,;
f, •
,.- •
h
.th
·1.
t t
t ,
Murray's comments came just
NCAA ,, Murray said "What he • who wilftli_en
repoi:tto the NCAA • 0~~erdoa~ °ten
~ sha_e~en ;_:_-h\.
"relatively low scale.'' •
days after he and Dean of Student
~antel was a clatifi~tion
of
the
.
infractions committee. The·• in-
_ d . on t . now : . ow ·hmtuclt -
"There will be some sanctions,
A.ff
airs Gerard Cox. met with an report Th_
ere was nothin_g
th_
at he ·. fractions committee wiUjudge the
ere benbcle
Y_ou
can;flp~t
m_
to t a •• k ••••
but I don't feelthey will be very N.
CAAinvestig-atorforfivehoui-s .. . . .•. -
- •
.
. ,
.
. •
t • d
·k • ·fl -1 d • •.
pro a Y was a 1ppant,remar .
serious,'' Murray said. "Our in- _ on Friday. The investigator came • que
5
uoned • or th0ught. 'Yas J~ac- •
~fi~.~.
all: ...
~a-
e. •
.f:. _
.. ma·_.
--.
~~-
-
an~ . he-
-
did1_1
',t
•
~ealize
•
t}te, .
vestigation found that we've done
to Marist to review the college's . curat_e. He • wanted clan_ficauon,
.
- -
. • • • • • • , • ,• <' • • • •. seriousness of 1t;" Murray said; •
nothing major like giving cash to . repori regarding the violations 8:nd ,~_sked
• for more ·mforma, . •. Throughout,:theiinvestigation, -, "The NCAA may approach him -
· players, fixing transcripts or giy~ committed by former • Head tion.
' -, . . .
.
_the college ~as_ re{use_d
_t_o
:release • on tharmatter. It's completely up •
Murray said Co,x will gather any of the fmdmgs bemg reported
to them.,,._. , • , , . ;_ _ , ••
.
•
.
,
,
..
. •··/[oJCessJ)litconJereflcegarfies,
tQ
hOstI.Slf.7
on Sdturaay; , ••.
,
by I,an Pietrafesa
•
· _
The Scurrys give LIU an alni~st • The Seahawk~, who were led by •
• After splitting. two:·ECAC
unstoppable inside game which is
Terrance Ba!ley with _19 points;
Metro games last week, the Foxes .•.
the key to their success._,. • ---
• were unable to.establish their well-
seek revenge iri a crudal":lfome
•
·"We must._stop them -inside," ·' k"nown running gaine due to a
game. agairist • conference leader· said • Marist .Head_ ·Coach·· Mat_t stubborn Marist defense which
Long· Island - University • on - Furjanic. "That will be the key." -. •.•.
played·a 2:3 zone throughout the
• Saturday.
.· - .• _,. : . • : .- , •· After a 44-'miriu!e delayat the
game'. . • '· - •
.
.
• The tt:am was scheduled "for a start of the gaine due to
·a
blown • •. ~n: the -. FDU contest ·Fred
conference .game last night at transformer; the Foxes performed • ,Collins hifconsecutive· or:e-and-
Jober! Mo_rris. • .
.
-
. , _ .
. ,. a blowoutthe~selycs_in_defeating ,orie.·_f~ee. thr?w.s
.with
seconds •
_ >.,
The; F<>,xes
entered_Ia~t -~ht's • Wagner73~55; ·::' • ·: ~. .
..
<
r~mammgtoJ1ft"FI:>U_to
a 57-'54-
·; _game_m-second_p~ace·:w!th·a:6-:3:<7-TheFoxes·usedari'S-O'.'spurt v1ctory.··:
•
.
·: •
:r""':
record,and, 911:e
game·behi_nd
·LI1:f:
•
midway t_hrougl(the second half
• • .
. .
·
:
·_•-·Manst,-_IS<CUrrentlYx4-0',l_n·~ to. take contro}of the see-saw
The,Fo.xes, put in:a 'valiant
.if.~,O,~_fer_!~c,~:::h<>me
: ,an_i~:\and,':b:attle:: \:~
·:;_..
•
:::•:•, ;,,·:;•_•~ . • _ comebac~ effo~tfrom,a It·POi11L /
)k,: w~µW; IPsf·t~~ex~~n~;-~~atE~ord
::~'.'':Th:C.
:delay·':affected•
'the
_;early'-•·.•-
first.Jtalf d,eficit-t~ ~,1'."P<>!!l-t
game'<_':
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loss:t~:~Iy_m:J_an_uary.
''°'<'),'.· ,··llalf?stats>:"~howed:-:'.·botli
·teams "'. :'.,":"
·t:;:··
t'·:t'-'?t;-:·:,,:;<s·\\~·-
0
,
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;,it:,:
.r~e,c~mb1natio.n.
of __
Carey a~d,t sl).ooting
only 38 percent. ': ,, -; . -
..
-. •. With Manst - m •. deep foul :.
,;e,
P,ul:~,~~urry
'le4
_Coach_ ~a~l -;,">ff :was 11·.
team
·.effort,,as
the :- trouble, FDlJ we~t
_to
_a kce~ ;
'.:::,,}:-~q
~
c:t~, to ;victory. Carey<, Foxes _ were . effective-.from. the
.
away game at this pomt and
,0
,~scored 20:po_hi~, 16 in ihe second.,'. outside as well as from-the inside._ forced the.Foxes to foul.
-
•• -
Frenchman Alain Forestier goes up for a juiriper during-.
recent action aHhe McCann Center
. . • ' •
, ••
· , · • ,
.-
-· • ,
•
'
• • (phot_o
by Margo Kucich) •
~:hal~;._;and:gia.b~e(iJ4
rebounds;'.;:· Wagner,_ double-teamed .\Rik
.-:~
...
--
... ·. -. . ,_
- Pau!):hipped' i~"l:4 1>oints
in Jhe
<
S~its, lea~ri~ Steve Egg_ink'
and
:
i-
.
' C'We v.erf (orced to foulf arid '._ ,
.. earherm~tch11p~
:-.>:'·.
.
..
,-.,Bruce· Johnso11:open for:-easy-< they made. their. free- throws,"-
•. Catey Scurry, the 6-9 senior- • jumpers. Johns~m-finisbed with a : saidFurjariic. :~.
, •
•·
center
_
~nd. A.,ll~America
.:c-_can-
•• game-high 24 points and -Eggink
• '
· , , . ; • < _ •· .. - , · ...•
. didate,is leading.the
·conference
,contributed 22,\making'this·the
,, ,:-Eggiitlcled the Foxes
.with
a
in ·both· scoring and .rebmitiding :, firsLtime this season that- two ._ game .high 24 points while Smits
:
and r~s-,amopg· the: lea~ei:s: in . , Marist player~ t~.P~~
~
poirttsjn ,,
~~~P~~in
12\ •;;-, . _
•
-thenationm_both_.categones,He,-agame;·•.-.·
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.:
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, .. _·
is . ay_eraging
•
better: than< 20_--- Smits -~rid
Ted
Taylor. for~ • 1:he F'oxes )vete able to hold
pomtsper g~e! and al!llost~.s • mu~ated
~
tOJ>:-notch
iriside game
,
, s~mo~{~~ar~
~~
l-l~pton,
~
r~botU1ds,thirdmthe1;1atiO?,i
-.'.
~-:·.forth.eVIctOrS~•Slllits,cl_1ipped)n,.~ ; .. -
,. , ,
.•
·< -~.
• Paul S!=urry, t~c: .•
6f S _·.
seJl!or : 13 pomts an~-grabbed 8 rebounds,_ - 3().pomt scorer m the lastmeeti~g .
_ roi:war_d;
1s ~veragmg close to 1 S -,, while Taylor _added
8 points and 7
_
< ·_
l,etween tlie two squads _at Manst --
•. poJnts and 8 reboun~ a game. _•
boards.
• -
• • ••• - • •
• • last m°-nth~
to
9
pomts.
Woinen hoops.tefs. be~t 'Colgate,
loose-to/.Mdnrr1outh
•last-Week,----
,.---
- . .
• .
-_ -.
-
: .i
•
• • .
.
• ·,
by MariaGordon•
whtch better suited th~ir team,"
technical fouls·
call;~
~~ainst. her.
Torza said . ."We're bigger and_ "My'_ fouls were detrimental.
"The Maristwomen's basketball.· more physical so their nian-to-
They threw the ·girls off," she
• team is ranked third in the ECAC man defense in the first half was· .said. The team did not score for 4
Conference following
a
63-51 win '- jneffective."_ The, Lady F9xes minutes afterwards.
-
•
over Colgate· and a loss to Mon~ were shootin·g SO percent froiri the
mo~th by 53-68 last week. .
floor against the nian4o-mari, ·?5
• •Our goal. is. to . win the con- opposed to just 31 percent against
ference title and tournament. By
th
~~~~-
said the problem was
losing to Monmouth, the goal is
•
just a little harder to reach,lt "getting,up" for the second hlllf:
Head Coach · Pat Torza said. "We · played a good pressure
"Yet, anything could happen."
deferise. It sparked our offense
and we began to hit."
.
:-
Torza accredited a solid team
Val Wilmer led the offensive
effort for the victory over Colgate and defensive game. She had 3
in the first of last week's two steals, 3 assists, 6 points and was
games. Although Ursula Winter 2 for 2 from the foul line,
was high scorer with 16 points, although she only played 18
"everybody came through
.
with minutes.
.
key baskets," Torza said. Paoline
Wilmer continued to play ag-
. Ekambi scored .the first 8 points gressive basketball against Mon-
for the Foxes,. and Lynne Griffin mouth. "She hustled and fought
and Jackie Pharr chipped in 9 and for everything. She was a real
8 points, respectively. Pharr also scrappy player," a teammate said
grabbed
9
rebounds, while Mary of Wilmer, who had 7 points in
Jo Stempsey added 8.
the contest.
Marist was up by 20 points at
The Lady Foxes were down by
the half.
11
Colgate came out in a 2 at the half and held on with 7
2-3 defense in the second half, minutes left to play. Torza got 2
"We wer~w~rking the ball well
thr_oughout the ent(re game and
taking good shots but they· just-
weren't falling," Jennifer Gray
said.
•
Pharr led the team with 12
points and 13 rebounds. Ekambi
chipped in
ff
points and 10 re-
bounds; Winter had 9 points,
while Una Geoghegan contributed
6.
•
-
'
-
The
women's - team
was
scheduled to face Wagner, the
conference leader, at home Tues-
day, and to play Iona College in a
non-_conference
competition
tonight at the McCann Center at 8
p;m .. Saturilay. the women's and
men's teams face L.I.U., s't'arting
atS:30.
"We must play 40 minutes of
good basketball to ensure our
standing in the conference _after
this week," Torza concluded.
-
•.•
.,,':.-;
••
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reri~wn#a
~~our~a~~Y.
cable~
/n.adve~·of,E~eri~;,J>,re_gori~
is\· .
•
•
spoi:ts.n,etwork{\i.:ill;b{comi.~g:,
-~~rti_ng
,j:an-(JntPf?Ved_.·
~~1-:.· :
totheMcCann·CenterJornext :around·gaJlleJo,go·along w1tlj _
week's :ine~?s~basketball
.·_con~
• ::hi~ ouisi9~'jl)'niper. ·oqing i11to ,· ·•-·
test with Co~co'rdfa College of ._
~
la,w night's::·g~~ ··at .. Robert·' ••
New York~_-
No,· the cable-net~ •-·_Morris,
Eggink :was•
the Foxes:.:
work wiUiiot~be tel~vising'the(highscore.fi~J2)>fthe
team's
j
entire game,
~~(
will be taking 21 cont~ts.;·6~8 power forward -
some clips for a special ~oming Tetfl_aylor has"either ·gral:!bed
-_
up· soon on European players or shared-the,team:lead in re- -
competing foi:~~eri~n
_cok -bounds, ,in. IS. gan1~:. this·
leges. 7-3 freshman centet Rik seasori:~'.Marist faris. wm·get a -
Smits- from: Hollarid, ••
Alain chance
'to
see· one. of the East's
Forestier of France and in-
toi> big-men in Carey Scurry of
jured forward Miroslav Pecar:. • Long -Island· ·uniyersity' this
ski ofYugoslavia.wiU·be inter-- • Saturday. Scurry, a sure bet_
viewed _ and featured on • the for ECAC Metro Player of the
.
show. "We're very excited that Year honors this season, is one
. ESPN will be featuring our of the nation's leading re-
three European • players,"
bounders and could go as high
Sports Information,· Director as th~ second round in the spr-
Bob Bordas
said. "It
ing NBA draft. .Taylor has
• should be a great chance for us been known to have big games
to get exposure °for the· pro-
on the glass against Scurry. In .
gram here, and we're looking : their first meeting this season, •
forward to it." .~.Senior for-
the Marist forward hauled in a •
ward
-Steve Eglnk continues game-high 17 rebounds.
•
•
'
r .
.
.
.
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_________
Feb.
7,"
1985
·THE.CIRCLE· Page
~-!---
\.·<·
..
·]fi~:r$(l&y.·:
MC>.trti"n:g
:·at.✓
afi;;r6~f;k:··_.·
• . .
.
..
,.
\
l~-s.worse.
- by
lait•C>.1Coii.ifor::}.·:-:t:·t=-.~,;·:\(
•
team~C:-:rou
:·.all'. ~now ~'\\'heri -it • the' recor(l~-',was orie story, .. off . ha(l been conducting an investiga-. right, arid not a privilege to be
•.. ;•;\:;~
,;·'•'.i:it',;}{i_t'\!~~;·;~t,<
·::
:'.;
t
started':,•,:. freq4ently t,eferred
Jo.·-•
't~e·rec'ord'; was quite another. • ·• tion of the program at the request
given or taken away..
• • .
>iHt hasn't-been'.a good year for, . as· -_~!Black Friday'.'-., the-·day : , So it.was "back to the NCAA of the NCAA. Although Marist
Furjanic's
i
argument that it
:Marisf.College basketball iµ:te,rins •. former Head C.oach·
Mike· Perry,-: violations.' Murray • maintained •. refused to release its findings to • would be unfair to The Journal if
::.of
,its reladpns)iij,•.wiili;the 'local .was:·rorce&'to resign; While· this ; tlrat the wrongdoing involved one· the media, a Journal story cited The Circle got a "scoop" while
_ : (m~la::-An<(;from:;the:·1Qoks.,'of. :,event:had·t"e partial.o,bser~ers.at ·.player ahd one incident. But'that
the team's. free use of a local on the bus_is a leghjmate point.
things/th~t.rel~tionship_w,on'tbe ·,~arisrcryitjg, it ll'adthe'impartial-. started to. get .questioned and,
health club as ·a· possible viola-
But while thatrs a tough tasl,<
for a
.. g~ting , any.1 b.ett'e{ j_n . th~ jiear • obsefvers·from ·die:'ai:~a laughing· ironically, wasri'.t even supported ••
lion. Further questioning of team
weekly ·paper •to pull off, it cer-
. : future.}'. '-''\D·- ,:;:::
.,:
:
•<·'· \: ;
at the scltool's ineptitude.. .
••
••
.. · .. by Perry .. The ex-coach told The members by Journal sportswriter • tainly wouldn't be for a focal
::fMarisfHead Co~ch .~att Ft1r- ·.(-.·Coll.egeJ>residerit•
Dennis Mur- . Circle in October • that . he Paul Hurley on the subject of
radio station. And that's why I
-jaµic:recently, announced.that th~ ray then met witl'!the media to tell ·, "probably . committed 40 viola-
violations got some people angry. • said Furjanic's policy only affects
:finen's•team• has a ne:w;
policy in-, , .~henf why this ~.•tragedy'.'
h_a~
oc- '.' tions'' during his reign as Marist's
Hurley was asked not to travel
"newspaper· report~rs.'' WKIP,
.. 'Valving;.::. the:,:. }ocilJ
.
,media,
·.curred.Perry
h~d violated NCAA head coach. That didn't look too with•· the team anymore, which . which does all Marist games, re-
:. specifically,~: ffhe'i'iJ>oughkeepsie '::
i:l!les/~urray expl~ined, ~y offer-
good in print.
.· .
eventually led to The Circle get-
mains on· the bus. • •
.. Journal and !fhe:Circle/This.new ' itjg illegal.benefits. to'.on(p~~yer,
,, Nor did the comments Joseph . ting the bootalso.
A paranoia • seems • to be
. ·<jfolicyC:,.,(lisaUows;.
!'new~paper.-~on one dccasion. Nobody, in·t.he .Belanger
made
to. , The.·
ldis~gree with Matt Furjanic's • developing·aroimd,this program.
• ·reportersU,from·travellingto road
,
atid_ien~e
:Seen1ed<t6.t:,uy:~ift·but Poughkeepsie Journal the next • recent clecision. My main conten-
Of course, the NCAA's snooping
games with: the. team.- I. separate .. that's .what was· reported in. the ·.day .. Belanger, . the
faculty
tion is that although The Circle around doesn't help matters. But
. 'tnew~paper ,repqrters" .. from the
following day's papers.·,· •
• • •.•
member who ,first informed Mur- • does wish to be treated as a pro-
a Division One basketball pro-
·. r~st·of the•-media Jor a :;Speci.fic • That is·until The Circle's report ray of Perry's\violations, told The fessional newspaper, it : simply gram looking for recognition has
• •· purpose, -which l'U explain short-. • that Perry was dismissed primari~. Journal that the coach had taken 'doesn't have a Fortune 500 com-
to have a healthy relationship
·: ly,
,-··;;_;J':'i\:
_-,
;":_,:,
>·-
'":,>
,,
..
:
•.
, ...
ly due to a·personal coinplaintfil-
a player on two overnight trips to pany paying for travel expenses as with the media. It's essential.
:;:-,Before,.
I
'go into· Furjanic's .··ed againstthe:former coach by a New York City. That makes two The Journal does. The students
• I commend Matt Furjanic and
• dedsioii;J'dlike to take a1ook at
melllber of the team. This was the violations, not one. Days later, pay tuition to the college, which Dennis Murray on their constant
some ,ofSthe more: embarrassing·. first andJast published statement : Belanger-told The Circle that he uses that money to fund the
availability to the media. But
moments the basketbalLprogram ..
:that
cited reasons other. than . knew of only one.overnight trip,
athletic program. This alone. that's not. eno_ugh. This new
has suffered
-due<to
the .local NCAA violations as the cause of . not two.
• ... • ·
.
·
.
•. .
~
'should make the presence of a stu-
policy is a step in the wrong direc"
media'.s. extensive coverage of the Perry's.downfall. In short, "on
During this. time, the college dent reporter on the team. bus a·,· tion.
•
•
•
''.
••
•
•
•
•
.
.
\'.:
'·.•
Rik
Sinits: •
7
0
;3
center finds happiness, as a Red
Fox
-,~--.--
..
.-
.:
•
•
~
,,.
~
.
• ,, .. , by John Cannon.
.
Smits' ,rise to becoming a Divi-
While at high school, Smits grew Smits already has surpassed in-
••••.
'.\\} \~~f \{
on . top .. of the ~~reiiric~:~t::~al~t~:fdC:rf::
~=
. .
:~~:~h~~::s~~~~e~~~:rd:~ck~!
:
~~~~~~e~f
:t}~l~~iv':~~:x~
0
e~re~~~~
,world.··. "'
.
•
did notplay the sport until he was ·upcoming • player . by many
But besides playing more than
25
:,.: No! be.caus~ he sta~ds 7-3 :(ani. ·15. ''lwent to watch my mother's
Holland coaches. He became a . minutes per game, the freshman·
still growing)/ but because he is . team :Play one night and I liked . member of the Holland National • center has averaged more than 10
>
having the best time of his life. ·~: the game,". he said, • "I began. Team, where he got his first look points and .almost 6 rebounds per
• ·• .. '..tlie 18~year-:Oldieft
his h·ome in. . playing .with other kids,: but I
at intense competition. . .
.
contest.
.
Einhoven, Holland, last summer didn't learn anything untiU went
"We played against Hofstra
Most impressive, however, is
· to pursue. a • basketball career in· to basketball camp.''.·.•··. . .. · , •
once and I had nine blocked shots, ·.that Smits· 1eads the· team in field
the United States. He had··offers
: He learnedsome basicskills at. in that game," he:said .. "That's >goal;percentage
(.547)
as well as
.
: from:maJor.schoolssuchasLoui-, .. thecampbeforeheplayeciforhis.
when.I knew that I. could play· ,blocked.shots(2pergame). "lam
JI,
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to come'. team. 'We didn't have a v1;1rsity
_ ,Amenca.' , .. ..
.
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co11f1dence and cons1~tency._
.
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gJtlUnt-fo~m::-:·r:-:'.;:C-
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w~~rnotc,
that-':
good:;-~-ysa1d---Sm1ts~
"· •
f
ans,.can, attesLto.,,Pn;the.co?-~,:--:-;~~; '"';"r:•;:;cpntmued:-~>U,~-!1&~-Jq..:
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tsPECIAL
~iRT:Y<
:.:·S;l11.:ip1//11/er
s
··::)Wed/ieb . .
13th' •
i/
/i
,Bofr Top·-f
orty's •
.,_._'-:.,.
,~1:+~:~rAi11:;
.
Men··
i~iR1~rSe(i8IS
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·stGN~uP.s
Now
THROUGH.FEB.
a·
.
Located in·McCann Center Intramural Dept. •
--. Winners Receive $200;00 in
•. •, •
B.irJ~clay
·Party
Ladies ; ·Drink Free
:-tilll:00
a~m.
Guys - 2 for 1 -
9:o·o
ttn
12:00
p.m ..
SHOT SPECIALS
·ALL NIGHT LONG
-~
L·~~--~-----
----~ -
•. SUNDAY
th·ru
TUESDAY.·.
.
. ·. .
..
t°>f
r;e Admission' ... Fireplac~.·-~
P6pcorJ~·
..
·-
•"'."
..
•WEDNESDAY
•. • LADIES NIGHT
• Ladie~:drink'FREE
tiil 1 :00
a.in.
·' $3.50 pitchers . •
..
Dance
Music:
.. • THURSDAY
$3.~.0p_itchers
• Free Admission~~New
Movies .. Popcorn ..
• FRIDAY
Happy Hour.- 2
for·f.-.
4:00
till 8:00
·. 5oe beers tfll
12:00
p.m .. ••
$2.50 pitchers of Beer
4:00-12:00
p.m.
Dance Music
Scllolarshlp and Trlphles
· .
·
·•··.
• < • • •
- Trophies for Second Place ::
.
.
,
•
SATURDAY
, . • • • •
...
Formorein/orinaticfn,
contact: .
•
SENJOR NIGHT~, Free Adm. for Senior.
TPM D~LY, M1Jle~.~-re,v,,i~-~4~f-~f:any
Campu~ ~epresentative
2
.for
I till ,I
t':oo
p.m.
.
• •
•
•
.
. . • or -
$3.50 pitchers of Beer.
Mike Malet, Marist College Intramural Director, McCann Center
'.:,by
Michael Robert Murphy
After comp~ting in two of. its
••
• final three dual meets, the Mari st
mert's swim team looks to end its
regillar' season when it. hosts N. Y.
. Ma_ritime
•
this Wednesday at the
McCann Center. The Red Foxes
hope fo end their dual-meet
season on a winning note before
. going on to
l
the Metropolitan
Swimming
and ,
I>iving Cham-
pionships Feb~uary 21, 22 and 23
at Marist. Marist went into last
Tuesday's_
meet_
against -St. Peter's
with a
1-6
record after falling to
Queen's College,
63-41,
on Jan .
• 31.
Leading Marist with victories
against Queen's were sophomore
Fred Dever (200-yard butterfly)
·and juniors Pete Asselin (100-
yard freestyle) and Dave Luber
(I-meter dive). Luber's victory ex-
ten·ded Marist's diving dual-meet
· . streak to
55
straight wins over the
. .last four years. The Red Foxes
diving contingent. is looking to
• capture its fifth consecutive con-
ference. title a.t th,e Metropolitan
Championships in two weeks. Ac-
cording to Marist Head· Coach
Larry
Van
Wagner, · after
Wednesday's meet Marist will
begin tapering its workouts in
preparation
·
for the champion-
ships in which it has the goal of
better_i11g
its 11th place ranking of
a year ago.
•
. ·• .:
..
,Women·
by
Michael
Rober(~urpby .
• • The Marist women's swim team
• completed its
1984-85
competitive
season with
a:
seventh place finish
at the Metropolitan Swimming
and Diving Championships at St.
Peter's College last weekend.
.
•
·
Dance Music .
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_.s_~_P_E_~-~-~-~-IJ;_s'_.!1_1T_1~_fJ_·.
,_W_e_:u_oi_r~_J_:_-_s_rn_.o_o
_ _.
The Red Foxes finished with a
total of 202 points· behind first-
• place Montclair State (N.J.) who
compiled 80S points. •
continued on page 9
.
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the NeY! ·oi~ing-·Room-
--~s1.oo
Admission·· •
· GIVE .TO.THE •
AMERICAN
:::_,CANCER
SOC~;
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.FOR MARTY :BEAR·
·WtL·L-BE
·
"JOE PRATT"
Refreshments Will .Be Served.
"BOUR'B'ON STREET·F-ESTIVAL~'
12':Nooil
•
4
p.n.,.
Gallery :Lounge - .campus Center_
·GAMBEL~FLI-N-G
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Darwin
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:9 p.m.
Dining
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~\:4:ne!SY-~-:f~~tY·wo~l_d.
~ot-.dis~upt :~hJ ,~es!~ents;
•. t]ie ~!m~ .~aid
•. f?n~irleer•~
re~tt.s_. ·z
. • ~;
\:: ;'· '.·
•.
•
•;/$i:,
<<·~~i-~'?;¼7f..K·
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m~~~ \~i~~,!~~~~3-~~,
.'!1!!;;;
s~ati~1~/:~w~\II~ _solye ~tie..,.-~~~:-::•.
bµ,t,, resid,~ts . co~tm!le •to "-c<>m-
• .• ~ere 10c?~~lu!1v~;
. ~•l have· bee.n • .
~
_
• • '·:
.' ~:·
• ;. •.. :'~'A long;J~ .so~u~i~~n-.t~
the-~~~;:;·
~~"1ns~
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..
f!P~'1:.~~d<t~·. ~}nP,1>:--·:
f.bl~m!
ti'o!
;~ij~~;_'.·::
~9..!1d.~~t1<J,ql···:·
pl~~"o~.hih.t ~d _noise .t~~t p~s -. ;µnable to_
ascertain any·r~on for_ .
•
r '.
!
t·:· ..
: ."··
detcri_orati_op'
of.sli.~ro~k·.'!.al~s
10,, ,~,W!~;1~,~-~g~~~~~9P1~rR~~!Ji~se:
~}~aft~ ·l!,omf?,~~~f,,
WWdq)!,!r.::l.'.iuf
_;:;J~i:-oug~
th,~_sP!ce
at.,the.£~.d.!~g.
··::
~
f
th~: -. ~:ovem~n~s ,:~
of:j .
variou·s •
{ • ••
;¥,: ..
>
~~am~gnat·~all ,will ~·paJ1 of.a •
.•
·:•wd
W.~?.~~I~M~·-~e
1
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!~~~,!.ilPbJ1~
1
~_;;.,\#"S~~ic_h;-1~;J~e
';VOrsJ.::mconye-
: budd10g.~<?-1:J1Po.nen_ts:at~~served
.
•
··•{;_:t.~.
'.11 •
:
multi:.million:,•r-
1
dollar.•:' energy,.;.:, etenorate,-,,sarant no sa1 :-::.:-~.,,.~v,
However, lie sa1 · he 1s una le,to·
!:-mence;·gomg·m there·and tearing ·, by
.
us : m.:-our .. mspc:ct1on
: of
., , . ·.·
~,,
••• •
•.
' cbnservatioii~program;·
according : \
:·:·The>~nergy;cons~rvatfon/pr~_,:.
-:estimate
h?,w·long
it
wili.be
oefor~
•·
?;_it
apatt·or_th~·noise? The ':hoice is .' Decembei.:.
\ 10;-~:-'19_84,!'.
·:·,said
::, ..
1
:..:.-;
· .. ,. to'~thorly:Tarantino;'director of -.'\ grim,'fa'ccordirig'c;;to";;Tarant~o;·
:.':·the·new.
program goes.into'effect; -~-: theirs/•', Tarantino said.'~--:' :. . .- . Wilfred
A.·
Rohde: a professional
·.;f
:; .:· ; • the ·ph)'.Si~~i
plant:;:·'
<:+:t./1~:'.:;
---:~~-:~~-~41:i~~!u~e.::!f~es}~Jf~'
.i~~'.
~o:~·::.z:
-i~:w~::
h~v~
iw,o
:-~~~f!=t~rfti:;?P{:
J .{~
:~~c~,r~pg,;t~. a ni.~~o· 'Taran-.". engin~r. : • wi!h :•.,
..
H,aywoo~ • and
·1
..
t.
:
~: • •. • .._ •:t
Separat1ons·'t'••wh1ch,;,-
.. w~r.e ::' .d~~s ~::-an,k. pla~mg- 11~sulatmg·0
,tions.~we·can contmue plastermg;
•-,
~me,.-
sent :-to :.Y1ce P~es1dent Ed-· • fakan Associates of Poughkeep-
,<
.'.,:. - . r,eported lasfsemester:arc'locatccl~:,;:-t;locksj·on~-
thc:'.1outsid~s
.•
of:')he'·_:;the?wails-fand ':'iliey'll(,openCup:·
•
_
_'ward rw.~ter(
0
iµ· • October, the. =,sic. , ,._;
·~
t:·
>
:c. :,,;:
.. ,·,:::
. .-. • ·.:
•
•
} ,
:/
·. )<: . ~t;
th~ ::cei,lirig.
~nd · Wil}~ows:::~r
,;:·.:bui.ldt~t.!i/Putting:
an,; ~n.d
.·t<:\
the •• :~gaiit/o~·~~:
?-rt'
~1:1tip_o,dirig:
'?Pc.
.
,
separ~tions_ a:i-e
: 1wt_
:
.. d,a,ng~ro}'s-::
. :
t.
"They: are not· sayin~, it• :is : a •..
·
?;, ..
,
, :;
:: :·
: • divider. wans _of most J1111th~floor"'
:.•
condensation
'<
that
:
caused::)he , : and anchor it-toJhe-cciling;
~t
.said . • '
1
The. walls; .• are ·:Jree •·•·
standmg •.
• : structural. probltlm/'- said Taran-
\ }:; .
,,:L :
rooms ·and ,were causect;by. con~.:·;:
sheeir:ock,
to~rumble/·: '.;:. ,;'.,~:;:
•
•:Tarandno
.• :
..
, u ,: • ·t:ccc :' : ;
C
·i; .wall.s divjding the.structtiral·bays ·•··
tino- of· the,.engineers'. «They're
·,f
:: : •
dens'ation-::-fr9m
••
J)()<)rlY~instil~ted·
.. /, "J'b.¢ Ptogr,ani.is
inth~ research\•
,>J'arantirio ''
sai·d ,· if, would ; be·· • <>f'-the . buildiµg!· This is . nof. a : •• qualified-in .ev.erything·
but every-
. (; , .
_,.:
: .....
•.
-win~ow~. according t?:.l'arantinl?· • :
~t~~~;
llut the' prpbl~IJliS .~ot ;be-t
'ea~ie~·to
~epair th~ .walls,
~~fllthe··. : stru::tural bearingwanan~ should . ~ay• hous~k~e~ing.
and ·.condensa-
f
.<
~\l
\a<;:,<: :
·.,
,,:
·.?;;:'~(
. . ,:;
• •
••
·~;1ng:~-~:-<;>~~.'::T~ant~no
5,aid; :, • " bull~1ng.15;;~~Jrty·~o
that hintaff:
• have,~~. e~fect on_the;buMin~,•-•.
·; .~10n,':!
.h.e
said.··.·
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; b,ook
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movi~.\ ''The ...
Amityv1He
·\::'f'.i.
,
Horror/'
.
.•.•
• · / . ·
,,',t,1•
: In ·. the ~.cmly
\investigation •
•
'i;\i:~
ever-·allowed.,· by ..
· the then-.
·!\\•:t
<owners;
·a.
sr<>l.!P.
of
11
people •
}.,~M
: en~ered
:.'.
• the'·
'
Coloniahstyle , :
~
:t,,;,;
: ~ouse. d.uririg the..
first weeke,~d->
{\\/ff
: -.111_.fv.farch~
J976; Among them.···
:;;,V)
•
'>Were
the Wairens,:a husband-.·.
{~{:!
• wite'.·!~~-~f::
~()~t.,unters;\,
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·.:,.~·'
• •• /continued on page 2
•
)& ;-.
..
\ ,, c :: :murder .. Thts·casewas later-piade• "and
;·Lorraine;~,
Warren'' >was:_.paranor~alology:1s-the.~tudy
of.
,cat~gqry, -ofT:op1cal.:Program'. ,_:·.·
•·.>·
.. ••
·.
,,,-
•• )··· .. ···•· • •
.. .
;:)t::;
fc•:{{)
into a televisicm movie\vf!li·A.pdY.\·
puoHshed by Prentice Hall, Inc;·
;:c .
the;.sup~rµat~r'tl.~
J~e)'. !Ja~e.
beeii •. M;ari,st't C:':llleg~
;Union Bo~rq.)~ , /'· An,dr,e\V
C;recca,
• sUlrting·Ms_
se-.
,; \ \ . ·:
/·· ;"i·
\Griffith· as : E_d wan.en; .Qther. s',-'Il_l§c·Wa~ren~
O'
have : Ja_ught
·~
·on;tl_1ec:collegt9_?"CUlt,f9rov~
16. :, part
.of
th~ il'i~J~?~al;~ssociatioll, -
,_con(i
-~erm
<l~
,the C:o~legr.
Umon.
·,i.5·.·.:
~-r:
·:/}~cases. • incl11de \the_-, J>~s~~t!o_,t
class¢s ;.on,:' demo~~logy./an<i ·:years
~~ hav~Ject~ecl t<l<
~yer - of fampu~ Act1V1t1~.
an_d
has se~t . Bo~rd SJ>f~1aen_~
•. s~id, . People
"
:Jr\•.
::;_family's haunted house. in;L¢e. >"wanori:najolo~y-_•:
at : Sojlthetn "; ~oo~~ege.a.it~,..enc~
. .-,:~;'.
1>:·, :t··"};~P~-
t~}ts· COI1\'CI1t1ons
and WJIL. :~ho, ar~n
t
mt~
I!· -
the s~per~
•
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:-~
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;--}.·,<·~:>=
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~-
..
-
.
'
,byJanet1!fcLo~gblli;I . • :-.:-;
•
'. .,.:
-~:.
Brother·: to ·~ouane,
a
l4-year-:ol~< program next year,. but said he\vouldJike •• child who ~asn't ~-fortu~ateas lierseir.
.
h
'. '.
:A,I1}iough
there are more than 3~000 peo- • Poughkeepsie boy. ~· •
• : .. ,-
:
• • :
. to get'a· little brother froin a more troubled
: "I had a v'¢ry good childhood and I felt
· ; .; .....
, pie 'on· campus tp '!>efriend,
. two· Marist
_ : Duane· is
·one
of many children in the -.environment
.
than Duane's. He added ·
•
sorry for thes~ kids because most of them
,. :: ;(. l
·'stu<ients have soughr the rewards of
off-
COUf!ty·who
comes' from
·a.
bro]{en home, _though, he wants fo ·remain close friends - haye
a
hard:life,'! she said. "I wanted the
...
.
:.<'\\:
·~ campus friendships! Sophomores John
and through the ·Big ,Broili,er, Big: Sister
wi ..
th Duane. .
•
chance to share what I bad with a. little
\
Montanaro and Mary Jo Murphy are in-: agencywasabletafillagapinhislife:-.:
, .·,
•
• ·· '.. ·" ·
•
.
. .
·;
sister.•~
• • • •
•. :-\
:volved
•
ill· Dutchess • County's
Big·
• '-'Yoii are
a
model that they can follow," ·HallMontanaro,. alongd~ th • 81stfer Edeen
M
h , 1• 1 .
.
7
Id Sh
'.I'
• Brother, Big Sister pr:ogram.
Motanaro said; "You want the kid to OJ>CQ
. . _oran, assistant
irec_tor o campus
urp Y s itt e sister 1s -year-o
an-
; .
. "You , get a ~sa~faction -in. helping ~P to you first. Your role is not to change .. mlDl~!l'Y!.
and ~t!ter Manst students are . non; who she said comes from .a low in·
.
1 ,
somebody,'' said Montanaro, from "toron- . the kid but to be there when he-needs you . looking mto stanrng a program '?n caml?us co,rne family-and suffers frt>?fi
apathy.·
.\
i
':l'
to, Canada. ''It's nice to know you are giv-
for SOine advice-
0
Montanaro said he
:sees
to. get more stndents mvolved m ~elpmg
"She's not used to getting so inuch atten-
;
~'t
·
ing rather than rec~ivifl$, but in a way you Duane o~ a week for two to five hours,
chddren who ~eed some extra ~ttentton.
tion. ·wiaen she's around my family she's
{' { ).\
areMreceivingtoo.'h';.has s.--..·.
1
ed.
when they so shopping, rollerskating or
• Murphy, from Highland; N.Y., became
the center of attention and sbe shys away
;,\
h
.
..
ontanaro, w o
~u
mvo v
10 come to campus.
• involved in the program in December, : from it," Murphy
said ..
0
Sbe's a very af-
..r
)<
,_ the ·pr-ogram since September, is
a
Big
Montanaro said he hopes
io
continue the
because she said she wanted to lielp out a
'.i ,~
wntinued on page 9
\
t~
\(
\,
M;1rist faces
NC A,\
sanctions p. 10
l
•
,~,,
•t
<,
,:
1 ..
:·
I
• '
, .....
, .....
' •. Pp~,
~.-.Jij~g!1'9~~.-.feb~
1,:198~
•
..
A.fuitYViHes··
continued from page 1 .. .
.
'..
.
.
·.
,··-
..
_
}.•
Alberta·:/Reillf•·,
and
'.;.Mary
·, -. Pasquetella;-, clair_voyants;"
the
.
• · Channel
S
television crew from •
·,
New· York qty; various Duke .•
Univ~rsity;,: researchers _, and,.
Paul Bartz, who now works
. for .· Ques,t ... Associaties
.jn.
Amiapo,lis;
Ii,fd: . , ,
.
_
.
_. .
.'.'Every~ne,·on a one to one
basis, dealt with the force that
. night/'. said Bartz,
-··
.. -.. .. .
, .,.George· and Kathleen Lutz
'·
bought the
$100,000
house,
pool: and :.,boathouse for .
·. ;: $50,000; They moved into. the
· : \ hotiseJate in December, 1974
· -· : arid ptoved out with only the •
clothes on their, backs, 28 days
.
later, on Jan. 26, 1975 .. ;
On .that
I
March . weekend
most of the team wenYout for
supper, leaving behind. Bartz,.
Ed Warren and one camera- .
man. The· camera~man stayed ·•
on the
_
main,dlpor. W~ren'. .
• .wentinto-th,e
1
cellar::and Bartz···
. went up·to abedroom ori,the:
\
• second noor·and spread·out ori ::-
.
\
his baclc; Alllthe, lights iri t}\e •
house were turned off.
• '. • ·,.·
•
•.-·:·
..
_\_·.
,
,
When cued by ·warren, the
\
camera-man· begari, according
• to Bartz/ to ,. 'provo.ke :.. the
demoni'"He had holy water, a
._
-. bible. ' and. . other -··
religious
, ,. relics/FBartz said.' ''He was
•
,
saying;:·"ln\the:riame of Jesus
C:::hrist;'
shO\\'.
yourse,L"
·":Bartz; continued:·•/'At the .
same time, Warren' was iri. the -
·.cellar.:and saw· a:dark mass
•·.with
twinkling lights in it in the . •.
· · ...
cor.ner:
Ii ..
'came-~~
toward ,. ••
'-.:·;
W~i:eri and Warr~ri told. it to>:_
, ,:: ;, sto_p
and leave butit contmued •
, -'.-/:)ciQsef'.~ntil •it enveloped him/·'
>,::
Warren
..
was. cut:•and: slashed
.<~:
:ilnd"for the.first time ever, he
• i .,
losfcontrol.Jt.
threw' him to·:·
.
>
un1ors an · t, .' en1u1s•
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
:·
.
.
.
.
.
.
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c'
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iict;:;::;;:~~:·.::;:
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:
i ,: • the,floofarid began to sin other
?\
·,:{hiin/Jus(as
he."1aS aboiifto~
',
1
f
lli~ilil~.lf!:ill!!~~
riotlifog. He· continued: ·"My ••
feet began to feel,,like they
were falling asleep. But lknew
• :· they .',were) tin.crossed) and. ' :
• getting dr<:~laHon.
1t
went
up. , •
• to my legs, t~eh frqiil my waist
down was numb.'
1
tried : to
relax. ,It went to my chest and· ..
arms ·and reached. my;neck; I·.
couldn'.t move. Just.:before L.
went to yel(i"
the
fest
of- the
, group came through the:frcmt .
door and•it lefL I later·.found '·
. ouLthat is
,
the first step in
·:·.-•physical·possession.
••.·, ,.· __
, ',.·
.•.
>--- LaterMaryPai.querella,-mie
,.
·• of the clairvoyants, had a·bad:·,·
headache and :went upstairs to\.
rest around 10 p;m.,,according
to:Bartz. He said thatfirst she
.
went to the sewing room,
where in • the movie the priest
encountered ' the flies ; • and
heard, "Get out.'' Bartz:said:
"Mary . was moaning .· and
groaning --:-delirious. iShe said -•
. she heard a voice -say 'Why
•
don't you. leave'?' arid recite
the Lord's Prayer backward as
~
an insult. That's a tell-tale sign
of demonic activity.>' ;
.-The . mysterious activities
contiyued while
'the
team was
in the house. \ "During . a
formal sean~ .downstairs . I
heard a horrendous scream;
one • of the Duke' researchers
was
grabbed from under the
table and ran and vomitted ·in
the kitchen," Bartz said.
• • .', "The three clairvoyants will
never go back again,". said
Bartz .. "Mary Pasquerella was
so affected she gave up in-
vestigating the paranormal,
became a devout Catholic and
moved
her family. from
Connecticutto Florida.J'
•
.
Bartz said that Ed Warren,
in his Connecticut· home 300
miles away from· Amityville,
was· warned by something· to
"never go back" to the house
· in Amityville ''or he wouldn't
come out alive."
See··your J"ost~risrepresentaliv~, ~JM;yers. • •
••
...
.
---
-•,
.".
',·.\•;~.
;
.
·.-•
'
:
;Dates:·
&
Times'£:F'eb1-°tiary
11
.&.'12~·:9_~3o··afin.
7:00 p.m_:::--
•
• ·T
February
13
-&-·14,:
9~30-a.tn. ;_ 4:30 p.in~
Februar·y ·15;;
9:30--a~m. 2:00 )?-~iji.·,.
,,!
Place:·
Doihnelly Hall
,,
,.
DEPOSIT:·
..
$25.00
Cash or Ch~c.k paya~le,to Jos~ens
i
~
l
-,:.
:
..
-·· -.------iilill11111111111111111 ______________________________
Feb.
7,
1985-:THE CIRCLE•
Page 3--•
,. /:tjfster'
county
loOkS;
at
cC>iiSfrllctive
alternatives
.
·
..
,.
·_
'-
; by
Baram.R;hy- '
repr~entati;e of the 'state.division
i
which results in over-crowdin;. . •
• './ : ; ..
'
• •
.. : :
of ·crimiiialJustice services. said .••·
" '!Thepopulatfon in the county·
.
: . ,_ Counties_'.
maiidevelop> some , •. the 62 counties in New.,sY
ork can ·· jails has. increased _to . the point
:.: altemai:ives ,'
to -,
their
·
-criminal
·•now.
work
'.With
the statecrimirial • , where th_ey
face a crisis situation;
·.' justice system t~ compens~te, fqr : justice service to develop ways. to
i
expand or buila new jails," he •
. crowded jails, according to
a
New . reduce the· number'•of inmates in
said. ··"Our-basic idea here is to
•.' York;. • State .-criminal jusiice • jails:
. . \ •' • ·,. \ , .
-:: reduce· inappropriate incarcera-
; • representative w}:lo
addressed the
McDonald • said while the . tion."
•
Ulster County. Criminal Justice
number of. people arrested each •
A
bill, known_ as the Marino
Options Task Force last week. ,, .••
• : year has stabilized; inmates are , Slaughter Act was passed, by the
',Richard _McDonald, program
•
being . given longer- sentences, state legislature in August 1984. It
,
•
. offers participating
counties
Laser -
disc~~·
. Quick ~surge:
::::a:~~
is3g,~
0
f~
0
~!c~f~~
- ·•
·
-
. · ·
••
·• . , ·• · · . · · -< ·
·
•
,.,
•
~
·
grants
if
they choose this option.
as_,_
new-sound: sensation _-
•
~d~~~~~err
0
:!e!s~f
~!a:S~};i!~
• •
•
. .
•
• . ; · ·, • ·• •
-· :- . · inmates
·10
four classes, . which
. ty1.J.en~~li54:t.
mto,a_~igit,l ~o?e 7--~nd,then
10
• •
McDonald said would make it
• • - .
.
-
•
to music.
.
; . • ..
· • . . • ·._
•
easier for. judges to determine ·
. Laser discs are· the latest boom-.
, 1:he _system
s har~vvare is ~ls~ . how serious an offense was. · .
ing _
advancement. in >recordi11g selbng
.. well, accordmg to Mtc~i-
Richard Mathews, chairman of •
• technology: And according ' to
Leuer!i _ of Souod ,?dyssey.
10
the task force, said Ulster County
• Steven • Cohens,
;manager
• of . W,appmg~rs Falls. ·•. The. prices . may be interested in the program,
• Record World in the South Hills
~in contmu_e
; to . go_ down, ~ut ' since the goal of the task force is
, Mall, Dutchess County .residents
nght·now we are sellmg four disc .
,
.
• are a·perfect indication of the new
players ,to every: one stereo turn~
found demand. , .
Cc-
..
J: :_-_:.·
;.
table;''.~etterii.s~d.. .
•
· _-,;.Cohen said ihere. are regular
Because of the, expense of the.-
' customers
I
who co·me
,-in
:
~ild
Disc system~ the market Js no':"
i
specifically request the compact
dominated by consumers m their;
discs. •~The discs are definitely in
•
twenties and thirties;·But as thei
demand," he said. "They are sell~ • prices . co_ntinue to
~roIJ
as ext
. ing like crazy oecause the. price is
pected, :· a / younger"-_customer:
down and they sound terrific. . market ·will pick up faster;-ac~or-
Th.eir rarige and clear sound is in-
ding to Cohen/' By Christmas
credible," Colieri said. :
: . ;
: the discs should be down another •
_· The
·growing
Poughkeepsie
$3.;' •
, .
,
· . · ... ,
. 'market is reflective of the CD's ;, ' Cohen coinmetiied on the wide
national -·. success. Customers
varietY of music. selections now
across the country are now buying
available. Classical and \Jazz'
their favorite selections on small,
music came out first on the discs;
0
silvery; smooth, ·music-encoded but now, many • pop and rock .
discs. . • .
__
• releases are available too. · ....
The increasing popularity of
·• The compact disc has reached
the compact disc is largely dtie_·to . ·worldwide popularity in less than:
- a drop in· prices. W,hile the:first
two·_:years; It· to~k: prerecorded·.
CD players costOover·
$1000
·iii ' cassettes'sb(,years~to achieye this
Spring ofJ983,;they n6w:sell for i _ succ~ss;'accotding to
a
recentarti~
$300tc{$500.,Disc prices;•,·ohce: ·.,cle'in_Billboard
magazine; _
.. ·_· : -
.,
$20 or more, ·o:ow average_$l2:to ·--::
_:·W~U~known.
"'dvantagef·of t~e • , ..
·,.$1t,:according
tQ
·a·i~cent'article·<~coinpact ~liscindudeit~_~maU1>ize:
•
•
. ' . :,.
'' in Newsweek mag~foe:
)<:'
.; ;'
Sc\•i<
·.:
: ; for.' storage .an~t its au'rabiHtY
~
It's '
,·_
.-· .
•
:f,;;):y::r,,ie-:cq_qiP.a.ci:::~u~·<>4l!lc..:ruaycfcs,/;t4Y.l!~f}Sq'!h~}r:ang~;{ir5~p:i)?les.0
~"· :.-:•-•:•~lt.}-itse1lij~fgnW~fff-a;ta~~~~~~!<>1;:{7.Ji_1fe~~st~cppr:9t~li,~})n~~(~~~~--~P,~+:
·
•
•·
·;
~-,. f pro~~i;~ the:c~ear;"dynan)i~-soundr~
,-_
':'If sou~cfs ·h~e}~ye>'fh,ete
15'1!0::
-
•
,;:_
thaf makes~
the, discs· so· poptilai:. • ·, . hissing,_ no.· bumps no·••·
nois~.;ifi-. •
• • ' The music
:is.
recorded on the disc '· terfereilce
• :
at ' • alt:. You. : can't
•' in • -a~: series··.' ·or
••
biHioris:/ of··•• : scratch< the· disc
•·easily.'-·
Oiice
inicroscopic pits in • the disc. ·As ·_ yo~•ve : used
a
.CD sy~tem, a
to provide 'alternative sentencing
• to first time offenders of non-
violent crimes.
McDonald suggested the coun-
ty expand their policy for releas-
ing an offender on his own
recognizance. He said with
pretrial releases certain inmates
could be released in the custody of
a probation officer, or other ~hi_rd
party,· or a domicile release,
where the prisoner would be re-
. quired to be at work or home on-
. ly. Community action programs,
where offenders would put hard
manual labor to -work for the
community, is another proposal.
McDonald said community ac-
tion programs .'and pretrial
releases would only be available
to those who had roots in the
community, had been employed
before arrest, had some ties . or
success within the community,
had no prior arre~ts, and live with
to
jail
a family .
'j'It makes more sense than put-
ting someone in jail. or on proba-
tion," he said.
The task force has made recom-
mendations to the Ulster County
Legislature,
which • include
developing a community· service
mechanism. The legislature has
also provided money for the
released on recognizance program
1n the . probation department,
another task force recommenda-
. tion. · • \
The task force has sent a letter
of intent to the state for applica-
tion. But they still have until May
1 •. to come up with an alternate
program proposal and a final
decision on · whether they will
develop this program.
However, Mathews said, they
first must get more data from
continued on page
8
. ihe Hghl ·_
:from -•·
the·· laser -· beam
regular system sounds like mud,"
• :sifikes-the disc, ~hich is spimiing -sai4 .'Danny Overton; .: 34, a
at high speed, i_t
is __
reJiected b_ack.
· Newburgh _electronics·
technician.
The machine reads the on-off pat- ••
..
"Y:
ou won't ever want to go back
_
Jun{g.r
.cl~ss
"ri,t{gs }tin"
_
•
The junior class
partied
it
up last week.in anticipation
of receiving their school rings later this semester.
_tem of light pulses, translates it • to ~regular system."
-
://..
•
•
•
(photo by Maureen Ryan)
·&:oiite.~-9
:
construcii.on.·-.
·ts::.;·c9mplett,d'
.
,·,''
·.-
.
,'
·.-
•
-·~
-~
,_.
.
'•
..
_,.
-.
, •
by Dan ~eyersoil
·' ~;-~rldifi~:inst~chblat
the
• intersection of.: Route
9
and
·w
ashirigton ,. Str6et/
:
directly
• across from the Marist College
campus, has been completed,
according io a New YorkState
-
Department of Transportation
•
•
engineer.. /.
.
.. _
· Final grading, ·.·smoothing
and paving of the bridge and
Route • 9 extensions will be
finished- in the spring when
weather permits, said John
• Burris, a DOT engineer.
• _
Th.e
construction e~tailed
building a n~w sub-base and
replacing the Route 9G bridge •
over the Conrail railroad
tracks. .
• •
During the construction, a
temporary bridge was installed
as • an entrance way onto
Washington Street from Route
9, while there was no direct en-
trance· to Route 9 • from
Washington Street.
When asked why the bridge
construction . was not done
when the intersection was
replaced earlier, Bums said,
they.
(the
bridge
re-
construction and new in-
tersection) were two separate
contracts each needing • ap-
proval in Albany.
>.Juggling
team keeps audience in lhe air.
._.,
•.
,:,
/
.
.
.
byW~am_Hare:
''Fyodor''--· • F_urst~ Randy.
Voice Obie and is now in the
.
. , /Alyosha"
Nelson, Paul David midst of a
65
dtyAmerican tour.
Sickles, eggs, a · skillet and a ••
"Dmitri" Magid, Howard Jay
Williams said that street perfor-
piece of dry_ice are -a_
few·
of the : ·''Ivan" Patterson and Williams ming.prepared t~em for the ~tage.
•
objects that are juggled by ,the ' -
aren't just jugglers, forjuggl: .
"It
was very much our learning
• Flying I<::aramazov''Brothers, an ing is only the canvas on which ground," Will~ams said.
i
"We
act that mixes vaudeville'skits and .:they painF, their:· masterpiece. learned a tremendous variety of
quick ·' onealine_rs
--\Vith.
•
Marx· W~ile flying objects dazzle your ways to hold an' audience's atten~
Brothers
type
.
comedy and • eyes, _puns and: one~liners tickle . tion."
characters from a Russian n·ov~l. , yotir_ears. • ••
.
. ''There-isn't an audience there
- But ·one· other object that the
~
'.'Watch your language!"
to begin with. You
1
have to create
•
Kai:amazovsjuggle - one that is
'-'English. What's yours?'_' .
the audience, the theater and the
·handled with such deft and agility
"There's an appreciable quan-
show from scratc:h on the street.
that the audience doesn't realize tity of juggling in the show," said. PJaying the theatre is easy com-
_what ·is happening--
is tqe au-
Williams, "but I wouldn't be sur- / pared to the street, because people
dience itself;, ' ,., . • ·' •
prised if it was only 30 percent of come specifically to • see the
The Karamazov's performance the time that we're juggling."
show."
at the-~ Bardavon 1869 Opera
Yet without the canvas, there
The audience plays a big part in
House last Friday night defined . would be ·no painting, and the keeping the shows· fresh from
juggling toits fullest.· It not ohly Karamazovs use juggling to pro-
place to place said Williams.
"If
means to keep several objects in . vide a variety of effects including the audience • is having a good
. motion in air-at the same time..,... musical entertainment.
time, it's hard for us not to," said
which the Karamazovs do quite
Using rubber balls, pins, drums Williams. "Aside from that, we
-well -
it also m,eans to and axylophonethe Karamazovs have a couple of different por-
manipulate, especially in ord~r to create a syncopated rhythm that is tions of our show that are built to
achieve a desired end.
•
not only enjoyable to listen to,
include improvisations."
The Kararitazovs juggle their but also
to
watch. -Of course there
One of those portions of the
audiences into laughter.
is always a one-liner:
show is what the Karamazovs call
Sam Williams, who plays Snier-
"This . next piece is Allegro, the gamble. The champ, Ivan,
dyakov Karamazov - a loveable which in English means the challenges the audience to give
• bearded gnome who immediately Rockettes."
him any three objects -
heavier
. gains the audience's • affection
If thejugglers aren't providing than an oun·ce, lighter than .ten
with his child-like innocence -
the music, then the Kamikaze pounds and smaller than a bread
said that surprise is a critical ele- Groundcrew, their side-kick five box - that he must juggle for the
ment of the Karamazov's show.
member band , is playing Klezmer count of ten. If he wins, he gets a
"It's a basic technique of com- music, a son of be bop sound one standing ovation. If he loses, he
edy to have people getting the im- • might hear at a,Jewish circus.
gets a pie in the face.
pression that you're heading in
The Karamazovs were founded
Williams said that the gamble is
one direction and suddenly end up by Patterson and Magid in 1974. always different because they
90 degrees over to the left of At that time they staned street· never know what might show up. •
·where they're anticipating you to performing in San Francisco. In the past there has been potted
go," Williams said said.
Since then the troupe has been on
plants, water balloons with nails
The Karamazovs .-:- Timothy Broadway, has won a Village in-them, and a variety of food
items such as fish, squid and pies.
• Out of the odd assortment of
objects thrown tip on stage last
Friday, the audience chose. a three
foot long. water balloon, a small
portable type writer and a· large~
semi-frozen fish.
'
Ivan Lost.
The Karamazovs have many
other gambles within their show;
when one juggles meat cleavers,
sickles, swords and flaming tor-
ches, there is always a chance of
being injured.
Ivan, according to Williams,
• had his thumb split down to_ the
first knuckle during a rehearsal.
"He had to go to the hospital to
get it. stitched up and bandaged,
so everyone in the show wore ban-
dages on their thumbs that
night," said Williams.
The Karamazovs success is
growing. Williams said that 20th
Century Fox has offered them a
part in a sequal to "Romancing
the Stone." "We are especially
eager about the fact that we're do-
ing movies," said Williams. "But
we'll never give up live perfor-
ming, because this is where it all
comes from."
The show has ended and it's
time to pack. Everyone pitches in
and Williams must do his share of
the work. His eyes twinkle and a
sly mischievous smile peeks
through his bushy beard as he
gives his last comment. The ever
present one-liner:
• "Time flies like an arrow; fruit-
flies like a banana."
......
,
:·•
.
---Page
4- THE CIRCLE- Feb.
7,"
1985
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Readers·';,
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c'All letiers must be typed trlijle space
tr
•.
·•Write/
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.,
::wlth·a
6Q
space. margin; and)sut>.ij,lt-·/)
•···':•:<··•.•·:,,
•
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Clrcleofflcen~ lat~r,than:t:,;-::,,,
••• ·'•·.'
'·'.. ••
•
i_·
(fp.inYMonday. Sftcirt_
letters are pref~r~
·:
\'
•
•
1
''·
i)id:'.We::i•eserve
therlght•.to edlt,au,<.
/:
;')-letters;<Letters
.must•t,e··slgned/b.ut';:~,
)/\::\n.an,e~"}m,a{:·~-,;~lt~held
-~po~/•~e-:-
·'
'.
·
.-.,,
quest·.••Letters
•.:will
0
·be
:·
pub!lshed
~··.·.
•
.?
=
•
~-
••
•
:
depending
upon: a'.J&llable
of
space~.:'.'.:;
•
•
.
•
·,•
,·
.... •:•\/t~:.?:··
•..
•..
:\•'
DearSir/~ani;
• •
•
.•.
:
~~~-'.?it{~~_.-;·ci~r
•·~eque~t_)~r._:,:
The foreign ~d.
Dome_st1c.,
:.:'.teachers_.:
..
:=i_;:c;
\\i:r)'
<:
·,::\ ,':·::::.
Teachers. Organ1zat1on~
·needs_
:•·-,_·._-~:_9ur.-:1nformation~-.1s
·free_
·-and.
••
.:
::
•
'
teacher applicants
in
all fields: comes,at_an
opportune:.tinle,~~ei(:.
fron{· Kindergarten
,
·through·.>
·there'_,:
arc=:,
more:
<ffllchers\'.
tha11::·-
•
'.··.·college.t~
.·fi~i
over
..
~~
..
builm:ed···
•
.tea~hing
p<>5itio~:,··"°·;./f?•''.!
:·~/:\i,:
.••••
.-
••
••
.
'teaching;vacaricies
both at·home
_
:Should;:you:•.wisb\additic:)llill
,·. •.
·
and abroad.'::.'::
:.
•
•
. •
informatio.n''\'= ab'out\
1
•
ou)·.
•
•
<Since;
J968,
•
our organization
•
•
organii.ation~
·yoµ
niay·writb Th~
;
•
has been, firiding.:vacancies and· Nationid
.1
.Teacher's
•
I>lacem~nt,
Jocating· teachers··
~oth in.foreign
•.
Agericy,,UniversaLTcachers,:•B9x·
:,
• countries arid
•
in' all fifty states;
-· •
5231, Portland, Orqoil 972()8.
<:'.:.
· ..
<
We;possess hundreds ofcurterit
·.:we·•
do. not promise
~'every··/•'·
...
openings
-
and.:.
have
,
all the iii-
•
graduate in the field:"o(ediicatiori
'
',:
..•
:
•
•
.-.
...
•:fonnation·\as··
to·: scholarships,
••
a definite position, however~ we<'.
/
•
.••
·
grarits, and fellowships:
;;: '
.,·,
:;·-::.·
do.promise•
to provide tbem•with
.•
·'
.
The principle
•
problem with
~
a
'
wide rarige of hundreds of
firstjear teachers
is WHERETO.
-
current vacancy notices both,at
••
nND·THEJO~Lf't:/;>.,.-··_::.bomeandabroad.'
•
• •
.:
.
'/
"!
•
»e.:
see
M~~
•
~
.
h
;t,
:~j
;_f
e.l~
d
'
C•
Since college
·newspapers
:
are
-·.
.
;
•
"
•.
;
••
• . .
.
always anxious to:find positions
Sincerely,
-
.
,
· for
··.··their··-graduating
··teachers;
·JohnP.
McAndrew,
,.:~
,-;
/
Oy~~\, .. iJe
Y'~
ftA_(.ST.
I
your
pa~r may be
.
m,terested
.iri.
.
-
•
•
President
.
.
!
..
•
your
~
teachers
·,
finding , erii~
,·
•
Foreign
&
Domestic
•
-
·.•·.·.··.
ploymeri(f()r the follo..ying;year;'
•
Teachers
.. <<.::::/,.
·:\
·:;.,
-..:,.:>:.::
:n--::-
-
. •
•
~•
.
.
.
.
. ..
.·
'··· :.:;,{
-~·
r:
.,.
,,
·Par.·an.'.·:o.·
iit'
..
•.
.
-.
..::\
..
,
....
:::._:
..
_.}_:··.•.·w~.;:,.·,M·.-_.-.·c·
·R'-
~-l
•
k~
•
:
Wh~6,~eleph0!1~:i~~dlfabuse:;~n-~hro~gh
::
•
pres·~::·::
~ut don't the administrators realize
:
·To
the Edi to~:.:
>t,,:;:.
__
'.-;,::;;.:
<
:
•.
d~ed
:
'mistaken.
Sine~ I
•
h~~e.
:
•
•
\1
•
.
•
the dorms, the· Marist administration· was<,: that ''cover up" is. even more· intriguing··to
:
.
r
am. the.
·News'
Direct:9r
·or
. ·become
News
.Director
.we
have.
:i
..
•
ffarefuHo keep the problem internal._At the.
.
reporters than-"scandalr
, .
...
.
.
WMCR
·andj
am
.writing
this let-:-·•
-
strived to. keep the Marist coin-
':
•
<-
. (
time, last fall, the· cost' of the
.credit
abuse·
.
Don't they realize that the quickest way to
te~
•
to cI:ar-up. a
:
couple
•
'!f •
munity; inform_ed ,about campus
•
-~
-)
was an estimated $15,ogo.
.
earn respect- In the public eye Is to admit a
m1s~once~t1ons
ab.out the rad10 h~ppe~!ngs;
With the help of Joe
.
·.
,
..
• ...
Yetwhenthreeyearbooks,atotalvalueof
mlstakeopenly?'Bycornlngcleantheflrst
station._
..•
::
..
::-.·
• :
:p1dzu1hsandCarlMacGowanthe.
•
•
••
/..,
about ~7~, wer!3. m_is_sing:
frorry the Campus
!
•
time,. they• stop the press. from dragging ·a
The
.first
~i~conceptio_n
is that
news
.department.
reported _ma_ny
·.:
•.
.
""j
{ :
:
Center, _college offlc1~_ls
..
lr:n!11ediat~ly
calle_d.
.
quesJ.io.na_ble
~tOfY.
throug~_ the mud;'.'
,::_-
...
: :.
;
.
WM_CR d.?.es
_no~:
play
,"good:•
of 18:~.t
se~ester's maJor ston~s
_m~
-.,
.:
::
,:;
• ,
~
:
~
the police
·_and
:
filed c.harges. against:
.four \
;
.· . •
Hone.sty cannpt be·legitlmately attacked:'·.,:
-_
m~~.•.~·
'.fhe}P,eopl~:
y,,ho
..
ho~~.
~his
:
clu~mg. the ~~C:k~~att coacJ;:ung
.r·_
·:
~-
:·.
•
•.
,.·
_
·
~-llegeq "th,~ye_s_.':
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•
-.,
.--
·,
.-
.
:,
,
.
~,:,;
.~,a;~r.ll!3r•
t~is rn·onth· t_h~
·Ass,o¢1a,ed-.Press·:--:
. miscon~ept10~
~~sua!Iy·
co!}stder
:
.
~hange,.,th~: new: c.C/l!ege-:apa~~-;
,
...
•
·.:.:·
,,,
-,: •.
• .
'<·
,
.
·The
f_o,ur.·~rrests
nev~r should
·have
been.-!
.
rar
,;a
story about: the:_--p_hone.
fraud ~nd
.-,.··
•
"good
1
~...,m~~ic
~o:be:.t_he:.T~J?··40,
·:·
me'!ts 9:n_q
a_fa~a1,a~~1deµt
that,m-
,
•.
,
•
,,
.
·:. :
•
1
\_
--
ma~e,
:and
.·.SOOI"!_.
al,I_~
the
~
charges_
·we~e··:
,.:
named·:only two of "several"
:c_olleges-"ln-::~:
::-songs_..!hl!t:;_rn.a1_1y
rad10·.s~~t19ns,:
=.
volv~d-~.c~~pu~
y1S1to.r.-,We.
al.so.,.,·:.
:
,;·,:·,
•
•
.
dropped.·
·-:
,
,
_,
.
: ..
;
., _
-
-
·
...
:
:
:
. .-·
•.
•.
·
_-
: ,;: ,
vloved."_
Mari st was• one. of them;-, The: un-
: ,
play
:."'.!th:
const~nt
_repetition:
,If
:.
_:
provide contn.i!Jous
u¢a,_te~
o,f,
n!3--
•
;
•
:
•
:
•
•
'
-
_But
:the
phon~: credit scam
·is·.
not
•
a
[
·:named
s.c~o61s ~~st
•likely.cooper~ted .witti·.·\::··YOU
happen. to
.•
be
,~~e
;()f
these·'-:-.·
tional.
:~nd-
st!-'t_e·
,n~ws
.\\'..i~~
"~ur •
•
:
.:-.:.
'.:.:
mistake. Betw~en: $1,000 and $2,000 was\··. the inv!3st1gators and· were· spared. public
-
_
•
people then
.VfM.<;R
1s pr9_b~bly
•;-.
con_ne~1on_
,w1t1l.
th:, ~ssoc1a~i;on
.......
_'
i'
stolen.
If
you wan~ t~ be technica\, a federal
i
.
~mbarrassment.
·So·
-,Marist's.:; ..
strategyr
..
:
.-not:
.
.!._,hcc.:
statt()n
'.fo~:'.
YO\!., J_r,,·,
,
Pr,ess.:
W.e.
are m.a~m$ a
;8e~ui_1_1e
/'
:>
·.~··
offense was _corn~rtte~. But u~t1 I the_ ~ery /
backfired. The
.very
same "bad p_ress":
,ri~J
:.
: _.,howc:ver
,.you ar_ek>()lcmg
to avoid
·•
effort to keep you i!}forn_t,ed:
Y(~t.!J.
•
•
;;~
:.
end of the rnyes~1gat1~n, Manst off1c1als. the ~ollege
..
tried
-
to. avoid r.a!l: because
: t~e
:m1?11otony
,,of_.c9ntemporary.::.
~ouF~guJarly;schedll.le_~
newsc.ll!lt~
.
.
/]
···••
asserted.· that rt dr?n't m~olve. ~he college
.
Mari st
..
couldn't, be , honest:Jn.tp_u_bllc'.J(lf
•
.hu rad1_0,jVM.<:R
1s YO?.r
ch~nne_l
•
·seven.days
a;wee_lc.
:
•·
'·;
<
,
••
;,
•.
,/,
or--~
and refused to assist the investigator from
('J
udeo-Christian':'
.· is
<suppo~edly
.(our
. for
_escap~'._,()11~.al_~ern:1t1\'.e
hsten-
.,>i
I· h<?P~
this l.etter.
w1!l clear-µp
.
ii
·
..
the phone company.
•
•
herl!age,
_:shouldn't
•
qur '.'elders'\ sef· ari
1ng ex.p~r1ence,.whi~h
u~clu_des
.the
..
_
the·t~mg~} have menu011ed.:
J\11
..
:
...
<.
<;
•
:t
.
· Apparently, JU~tlce at Marlst depends on
•
'\honeseexample?).',
.:;/-_:
:.:
',,.:'
:·
:
,
: '.
• '.'
.
.
I?,ew
as well ~:old !"~sic, 1s ~hat
•·
:·
that
,-
th,eJ)"_MCll<m.an~g~P~?,t:/.
,
•
•
,,.;
1
,f
·:
whose rn_?ney
Is mvo!ved,
.·
.
.
.
,
>
::\JVtien
.wm
:ad~illi_str~~¢rs
wake up, arid/"'. you ha~~ been_.lo~km_g.for.
--:,_c
,,
,:· ,
st~ff a~~s:1s;:th~tso!l:.g1v,e_:~5.a;
, •
"·,.·:
:t\
"\:
What rs th~ colleg~ tryi~g to· pro~e
,by
realize
·:that,·
·hor:aesty
:.
i!,
.
tn_uch
. _
more
_-:
••
.
,
1he_;, s~cond
•,>~1ss~mcept1C>n,._;·
g<;>od
hs.ten. before you~••criJtci?e.
.
/
.'
~;:;
'}
.
smok_e-~qreemng legl~1mate 1nveEitlg,t1ons?
,
re.spectable than. a smoke-screen?
_
., .
:
.
,
..
.
_
w~1c~•1s
of_greatest}IDJ)()rtancetoy
·-
our.effort_~:
',
:.::L//_,
'.:)
\::~:
..
/:,
,
:
:
•>:
:;:;)
1
,_,,
.
!hat 1t.1s·notresp9r:is1ble for the !l~t,on~
<>f
••. '.
If
.Marlst
wan,s
.to
avoid '.'bad press,','Jt
·•
>
me, !s,Jhe
,idea
t.hat_:~¥~~- dot:S
:
,.
··•<
._;\
:·,
..
_,b.(',.>.f.z:\/:':<:•:~•:"\i:-:.::
;.~:'.:·'·
Ti
:·
!ts st~dents?More l!kely th~ a~rrirn1strat1on·
,
;
tias t.o overcome_its paranoia; A little hone~t
.·_
I1o!hmgbut p~ay 111us1c:J
wish
to::<
~
_
<
•'>~<;
~::-:;•_,:-;;-'
.-,:.,~m~rel~,:--::.
•
/-
•·;:·
:.\
rs trying to,,keep
.
rts. name. ouLof
','bad
cooperation goes a longway;
,..
••
:-
•
pomt>o~t to
;tho.se
of-yoll w~o
•
.
...:_
.
.
: •
·'·
,
.
Gary A:_
Davts.
•.
:-
•.
•
•
·:'.
·
•.
·
·
,
·
-
·
share this bebef that you.are m~
,·,-
:
.WMCR
New~
Dire~or,
•
..
_.
.
-
•
·1
i
fie.
clcefuh
rivef..
•
•
•
•••
··•..
•
•
••••
•
••
J
~
..
·.-:~
.
The class." of '85
cci
1
~ld be a. class to
.
_
t_o
c~re
_enough
to change things.
:
•
'remember.
It could set an'exarnple as the
"
•
A
If
t
d
•
R.
D
111
..
class that care·d. lt:could be the cla· s·
s. that
•• ··
s
.,
s an s now,
•
ryer
•
.
ay w
.•
not
.
.
...
,,
happen· In
·.1985.
After the last year!s
••
made River ,Day safe.
'
\
•
.
,
··.·
·
~isaster, the administratior:i Is committed to
•
Last
'weefs
.editprial
•
'·'River's end?'".
-stopplrig
It In.Its tracks.
•
•
raised
~
few/ eyebrows; Sorn~ p~opl.e sup~
-
-,.;c:.
':,,
'c.:: :-'"
;
.
.
.
.
.. •.
-
.
:
.. _~;
.
ported rt, so,me wanted to bum It,, others
- •
:.
::in.
response to this, some students are
•.
,,
.
•
didn't care.
I
The truth
·
Is that everyone
•
committed to c;hallenging this alithqrity
-:
••
sho~ld care _about A.Iver Day.
•
•
•
: ••
.
.
.
wlt.h
.force.
Before-anything tragic;; happens
·,
_.
-
•
·
River Day affects all of Marrst It lr,wolves
_
this. year, we all have to take a common
every person asso.qiated ·with the college
·sense::approach
to the. problem. No
:'one
--
and greatly influences Marist•~ repuation.
•
_
..
·
wants to see anyone •get hurt. It's
,not"
Just
.:
•
.
-
If this reputation, is to, be savea; each
O:
··the
seniors'. responsibility· to ensure, that
< •
member of the_ Marist
•community
has to
.
_.
River Day does not get out ofcontrol;
it's
.
make. a. commrttment to change;
.
Beto.re.
everyone's.
The one thing Marist has
·"
•
anything large-scale change can
·t,appen,-
going for it is people who care about each
-
•
.
everyone hasto believ!3 in it. Before we even
_
other. Caring doesn't begin· ih April. It's.
•.
begin to debate the River Day issue openly,_
.•
early enough to keep River
...
Day
•
...
from
o
.
everyone has tp·come to terms with the
destroying the best part of Marist. If.River-·
probl~m. We must admit that River Day can
Day is to be controlled we have to start
:
••
be lethal. B~fore anyone gets killed, we have
now.
'
THE:
.
Editor
Lou Ann Seelig
Senior Editors
•
I
.
Assoctate
Editors
Brian Kelly
PaulRaynls
News Editors
CIRCLE:
BonnleHede
Sports Editor
Ian O'Connor
Viewpoint
Editor
~uslnen
Manager
r
Christine Dempsey
•
Advertising
Manager
Bernie Heer
John Bakke
Cartoonist
Laura Reichert
Carl MacGowan
.
AmieAh®eS
•Graphics
Beverly Morlang
•
•
••••
•
••o•••••••
Pete q<>lalzzo
Faculty Advlso,
David McCraw·
Laura Reichert
.
I
I
....
•.
•
•
;
___________ 1.:\___
/·
[.;:,;:;,
,:::}·--;_'.~-'-
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F1•b.T,1~5-THECIRCLE-Page5
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;_:;t~}tli~i~
Uo}J~>tb(
priille~tinie television?
__
.
.
.
•...
..
-·
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-:.
'·
;,
~y-
J\~_·f_h
__
,·_o_
·oiDeBarros
··;
.,,
'.
~
scihiethirig original during
;prime
for years.'
,
.
ty" or "Knot's Landing?"
. because they all had some
,. ·
· •
•
..
·,
.. ' •
•.
time
''.
:
·•
·
•
· What makes the others. boring
I can't offer a solution to the. semblance of human nature,
.
:_:
.One
day a friend who.is learned
·
<;
,
L;t's; leave ·out the mini-series is the fact that though the faces mindless. programming, but I do· some intangible quality that made
..
i~ pr~bability told me that-if he:
··a~d
·informative.
news.programs· may be different/the plot lines·. think that we, being intelligent them different.. They didn't
.
.
w~r~--
to.-,place_
t~n monkeys in
,a
. :
like. "20/20/' because, the'-ininis are'always·. the same. If the same college students, should be of-• always follow the formula ..
• ·
rooiri'\vith ten··typewriters,· and· series is·usually'based'on a good
.actors·
were
·in
"Miami Vice,"
fended that the networks think
Though the· concepts weren't
all~v,_cf theii(~o punch'..keys
_at:
:.
literary.
;work(
and riews
'shows
.
''TJ. Hooker"· and "Riptide," . their evening fare is stimulating.
always• entirely
•
original, the
..
ra~p.~1}_1:.Jot.)~*
::~our~.
a:
,d_ay;_.;
dcpi~t.rcalitY,·. ~hich s_hould. be·. what
·else
would set them apart Many of the best shows on TV to-
writing was very good, the jokes
.
soc,ner, or~~t~r,.<me
of:the~ wol,!l~_.,·:
inoi:e than iriteresti!lg enough for froin each other? The story rarely
.
day are late night reruns of "The
kept. coming, or in the case of
•
Jypc· o~t
:one:complc:te:work
of. anyone. What I don't'find tasty is·
••
varies: a:n evil villian; who usually
.
Honeymooners,"
"Odd
Cou-
"Star· Trek''
and ''Twilight
....
Sha~espeaJc::
:\ :,
.
0<\~
-:'·~
::
the endless bafrageQf what 1 call is suffering from some type of ple," "Star Trek" and "Twilight'
Zone;" the unexpected twist lent
:
·'
;WMU
\YO\lld
:like to·-kriow.-is,
.•
''forinula":shows. These basical-
r_are
•
Freudia_n psycho problem, Zone." It may all be a matter ofi the show a mysterious quality that
whfcari'.t ie.lev~sion
script writers;,·. ly fall into thr~e
:categories:
sit-
commits
.
an· offense against a taste, but the networks sooner orl nothing can riyal today.
•
wh5?'.~.r,~
supposedly a·lot: brighter
••.
coms,'-'·police: sho·ws and
:-night~ ;
to.tally defenseless victim, and our later will have. to come up with
•
·
tha_1f~<>11:r:avei:llg¢
~<>nkcy~>thirtk
__
':
time•dramas; This Js not
_saring;
;her~es track him down after ex- something to rival the wit and,
Let's hope that when our
-'
..
up an ongmal J)lOJ
lm~? 5lranted,
·• •
that ~here. ,ren't any g~.o~ s~<?ws
,
te!1s1ve
legwork and close brushes spark of those "ancients."
generation makes it into those
.
~ost of them d<;>!lt
~ork_t~~ hour
.that
JaU'. mto these. categories;
,
with death.
•
.
•
. ..
..
. Perhaps those older shows, and
posh Hollywood 'think tanks,'
.·,
d,}'.,s;·b~~.:th~re;n;iust,
b~ a,:great
•
"Cagney and
•·Lacey/'/
•~Hill
: .
Similarly, sitcoms follow their even fairly contemporary classics
.
we'll have i:nore to offer the next
. •.
: ,
11umber o~ pe<>pl~
b~~gmg. away
Streep~lues," '.'Family Tics" and
•
own formula. Aside
,
from. the like "M*A•s•H,"
have a lesson
generation of television watchers
.
•
,
at
.
.typevvnters.:.•
and.
-.word
.,.-pro-
.
'.'Paper· Dolls," in
.iny
•
opinion, ··faces; what is
•
the
·difference
for modern script writers. Those
than what's available today, and
.
cessors_.•
fo( Hollywood piodµc-
·
are examples ·of goocl television: between "Alice " '.'Three's
_·
a
•
shows didn't rely on a quota of
maybe exceed anything that's sure
tiori: companies and the major.net- .
•
What sets
·these
apart
'from
the. Crowd" and "Glmme.a Break?"
four
deaths
per hour,
or
to still be in reruns by then.
works. It seems
,that
·even
the_
laws
·
.
others is their original. treatment·
•.
Or for that matter, can you find subliminal sexual themes to hold
··
of
.
chance_
•
wo_uld'' aUow the
.
of: basically the same
.subjects
.
anything to differentiate the sex- the viewers interest. People
Anthony DeBarros is a junior
average television viewer to enjoy
we've been.watching on the tube ploitation of "Dallas " "Dynas-
faithfully watched those shows at Marisa
.
.
::·:..
,.
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,,
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,
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~\·-~.:.:)·
;
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•';
~-:~iP.
;·.~-~;-\·:
.:;:_:
...
>:
...
Curmudgeon's
Manifesto
\.
.\·
Ari
Invitation· to
-._
Our Readers ...
_.
i
.,-l
.
.
.
.
.
.
. .
:·e
"
'FO!.
tlle past year, Viewpoint has
.
:.:r:
.. :.:O~eh
a forum ,for essays written-by
::.;(
..
Circle reader~.
·we
have tried~to
:·
i
:-
;
.
car::·
_in.=
_which
_·.·
.Bernhard,
,.Ji.ugo
...
·, IBM
•
.and :_
Chrysler
•.
don't·., build
·•.
it is either 1 )intentional or 2) com-
i?
.•
Goetz
;shot.
four· teenagers :is a··; plants in the South Brome. Darrel mitted with. malice. Some
•
ex-
•
.
print commentary. on• a. wide range
'.
..
of topics, from smoking in.public
·:-'-
to the role of religi61,1s:.studies
in a
college education, from
·ow1
•
laws to diplomatic relations with
•1
• ••
\vhole:rang~
..
:
oLquestions and'· Cabey and. the others )carried
amples:.
.
.·..
.
.
..
.
....
~ -
:
<lilerrimas
con~erning law,'. crime;
'tliat,;
to' make it, you· got tobe
.
/ /
•
•
:
.
•
'
•
•
•
'
•
•.
,'.a.
,ju,stice;
·,;psychoanalysis,
,
urban
,,
tough, don't let
.
anybody push•.
.'
The ma!1 a~akes_ to
~h~
sou~d
•
<
.
sociglogy;~nd a'.few,other things·
··YOU
.•around.
Capitalism
'in
its of something. cla!1kmg m the k1t-
r.:_!_:
_
,
.
that drive us crazy:· Herein:•;
soine,.
~_
lowest form is the way
to
survive.
chen. Pr9~!ers, hk~ the ones that
.
"
.
, ,
of :those questions
;and
:a 'little·:
.'
.,
i
Whatever happened tq law and
•
took the pe1~hbors TV last year.
•
f
-
...
·
'
·
:
be~ign sophistry fo_r the.
'purpose
:
.
order?
Law-and order, you say?
.
~e
.reacpes
mto the drawer and
f.
,
•
·•
of~_\vastiri.g
•
valuable·. newspaper
:
Well, havelgofthe plac;e'for you, picks up the gu~ he had p~rchased
J
;:
•·
space ...
::~\;:·'
::;,;:.
•
·;·.\:' ,.• -,.; ·
-: The· Soviet Uriion ..:..
:law
and
•
a!lt had
•
reg1stere~
•
wtth the_
t
<:---;,What.,
are
·the
rights--of in->
order capital
~,ofc
the>worid!!!
•
pob~e •. He knew th1_s
day would
j
•
•
,
dividu_als?_
I
·know,
I know
--
~aitill~seedi~place! Murder rate co~e, n~w he,'s., g91ng to waste
J
Goetz. was
.striking
a blow for second to none, people can walk
_those
.
punks. He creeps toward
't
. ··
,humanity;staiiding
up
for whaf s
·
the streets at night,
'cops
on every the front of-the house, looking for
t
- , ·
riajit ..
:.Tm·mad
as.
hell, andJ'm;::,corner peer!Ii.g_into
every window
:~hado":s
<>l_l
the ~a!ls. He ~e~rs
;;
\.
',
noFgoing totakeit
anymorc!'.')fto make sure>nobody'f messing SOlllethmg, a cha1r·m, the dm1~g
,t
He.was
taking C!feofhimselfand
\around.
And the.· subway!, No room. S~oot ~rst,. b~fore he do~s.
?:
.
making
.those.
thugs: think
.
twice;
•
....
•
grafitti here/folks '-- clean as the He
_steadies
himself, then leaps m-
t ~-
.•
In~ other,, words;it's rev9iutioil,
.
day
it
was built. They even got to the room. "Freeze!" Blam,
I.
i
t~~L tiine':h~ll,~red
'.social. con_di-
.
chandeliers hanging from the ceil~ Blam, Blam. A_
glas.s_
of_ mur f~lls
"
•
,
tton
.that
no, 011e condones· and ing! Clean, quiet cars. Tlie perfect to_ the floor, th~ !1quid m1xmg_
'.(
ev~ryone drearilt.!lbout. J'.ak~il to
.
place to. raise children.<So, what with the ~lo?d· ~p1Hmg
out of the
G
itslogical~o_ilclusion;the~ubway
.·
do you say?
_;:
,··<>.·,
-
~:.:·:;:
,
.·
bod,y_ofh1s
e1ght•Year:~old·son.
-
-
/
iri~i~ent
iS.
~-1_1:liciO_co·sm
..
of
_'(take_
-
~-
~.-
..
Wl,a{isjUS(i~eJ:J~-Stice'is
to:see
•
-~;,.
·1
your. pick)_ the: rise
,of
the Con-
something'for'what
•ii
is. fr'can't
Just past midnight, deep within
;!
federacy, the Bolshevik. Rcvolu-. be measured'.: in prison terms,
a prison, Mugsy McDougall
is
fit-
ii
-
:
tion, rebel . activjty :- ~gh( and vengeful satisfaction or any of the
ted with leather straps across his
,
left -
in Central
America,
the·
•
traditional methods of organized wrists and a beenie over his skull.
bombing of abortion clinics, etc .• justice. For instance, murder is The blindfold around his.head is
When The Law is unresponsive -"'.'" not always murder, according 'to
tight, but he manages. to hear the
perceived as unresponsive -· to thejargon of the'skilled· realist.
warden's request- for his last
the populace, the people· react.
Murder is alternately termed
words; -.. I ain't got
·
nothing to
It'~
right there in the Declaration homicide, pacification, abortion,
•
say." All's ready, and the
.switch
of.Independence.
•
,
capital punishment,
•
neutraliza-
•
is thrown. Two minutes and a few
What about
•
the
.
victims of'
.
tion,
termination
and
-
other
.
thousand watts later, the power is
crime?
As
Bernhard-Goetz is a niceties.
.
Then
there's
shut off as Mugsy's body shakes
rebellious ~ctim of crime, so arc manslaughter, which so\mds_ like and puke spills from his mouth.
the, four kids he shot.-Thcy are murder, but don't be ~ece1ved. He inhales reflexiyely, the body
from the South Bronx. Yes, ther.!:
•.
Manslaughter -
as I figure it -
unwilling to accept the rules
·of
are some nice neighborhoods in is murder by those too embarass-
•
The Law.· Six minutes pass ·and
that area~ but judging from the•·
-ed
to admit to it. Something like the doctors are sent in. A pulse is .
tenement doors behin? which the
·
that. Anyway, society is· moody
found. He. ain't dead yet. The
youths
-
hide from reponers, I
.
and is highly appreciative of
switch is thrown again,
'another
don~t think I'd want to live there.
murder when it's not called two minutes at the same volume.
Their front lawns are concrete; murder and when it suits certain
Mugsy's body lies limp as the heat
spray-painted grafitti substitutes needs, To the 20-year-old who
fills the room. What's he in for?
for;_ the, Sunshine Yellow and
returns from battle with his chest
No one's quite sure; either the cop
A voµdo Green that suburbanites lined with ribbons, we raise a
killer or the one who uses the Boy
use on their houses. The·schools
toast. He has dutifully carried out
Scout knife. The doctors return to
are run down, streets full of drug heinous acts of barbarism for the
the room. Yep, he's dead, all
dealers. Basically; not a pleasant service of his country. May God
right ..
•
·,
.
the Vatican. We have been happy
to· proyide the space.
.,
·_
.
.
,
/
.
.
-.
•'
;
.
..
But we're not sure we can con-
••
tinue:: doing so~
,·
.:
Fr~nkly, the response has been':
disappointing. We appreciate thos~
readers who: have taken the time
to write for /Viewpoint, but they
have· been too few. We like to
thini 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 mo~e, we are invidng you
to suor11it 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 Viewpoint's worth
keeping alive. We hope you do,
too.
·i
---.1)
..
•
.,
....
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• .
•
'
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•I
••
,,·.·
··1.-
Thursday;
:
,
Friday
t'
•
6:30 p.m. Rtheaml:
7:30 p.m. FDm; Purple,
12 noon CPR dass:
•
Blithe Spirit, Fireside
·Lounge_
• •
Rain,
·Theatre,
Admission
•
• • Fireside
Sl with Marist I.D.
Fortlin Film Serles, Wild
5:30 p.m. Women's
7:30 p.m. Foreign Film
:
•
Strawberries (see
-
b~ketball
vs .. L.I.U.
Serles:
Wiid Strawberries
'
,
Thursday's listing)
(Sweden, 1974)
8:30 p.m. Psychic
Gbostbostm: Theatre Sl
•
with Marist I.D.
:
9:00 p.m. Valentine's Day
•
Mixer: Dini_ng
Room
_ 7:00 p.m. Film: Purple
Rain,
.Theatre
7:30 p.m.,
Fordp Flhll
-
Serles: The Blue Angel
(Germany 1930)
•
Donnelly 245
No Admission
9:30 p.m.
FDm:
Purple
Rain (see Friday's· listing)
·•-
......
•
7:30 p.m.
F'orela•
mai
'"_<.:'
:
••
,8
p.~ ..
The
Map:
Flute:
Series: Tlie ·Blue Angel (see
•
.
Bardavon 1869 Opera
Sunday's listing)
House
•
.
:
-
.
-
._,,
,,-\
........
-~~~~~::::-~
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&
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1Mel=-.Gibson:&;DianefKeafon
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Americans . iJapan.-"'Afric.a; •. Tlie-; South"
• :-•not; incbidingamembers ·of··•· Pacific·.~The
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... the)armed·,,servic·es -·:;;.;,
are··· ~-America.~=.neifrly
'every ·part''·
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1
1iving overseas:·':These •· ofthefree·world! ,. : 1 ·., :· '_'
•
:·;p~opirF~re·e~:g~~~d'·iit#E!.at1.Y
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':Co:~•p~ni'es-
··_a_~r:
·everypo·ssible
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'·, ty':.'.co'nsfruction;-' ·engineer~. •
·employlng'
personn'efin·near~ •
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sa1.!~1::;}r~:n~~~~~a\~o.n,.
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of~!,lPll~J~il.
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work, ,
accoun- ·.•.
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:c,~l
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cojl~g~_:_,Jrai~~~',
:pr:~fe~sional
.;
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,,-;.
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t.:b, · •·. •
:, , go_v~r.nm~nt;,:
: etc;~e.fo.t·
tAii~ < ·." :,, ( 4}L
;~irms:. -and • organiza-., •,
2rmani·~:are :.ea,I'lliilg::$2,000•·;to'••.
lions
engaged
in
foreigri•co~•;.:
·:;;$5,09,0.j;~r:rn,onth;~;or;JJioreI~i~/;·•stru~tiol).;projeds;;_manufa~~-
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;:/~;Tct•\allCJ_,w\\1Y-~!1'rit~~.··op_::(','.turbig'/-'ni~riirig;''oiltrefi~i~g.·_.·
·.•·.•:po'rtunify.•ffo;'~:-
a:p pl'y
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for. ).<engineering/ s~~sf:servfoe•s; ··:
···•
overseas
,,·employm·ent/l•~we,
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Employmen.L" Opp'ortunity;_.
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;,>_qul','••IDter,~atJonaf
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D_igest:;.jam~packed,.·
witll,
inf.
• Emploi.,ment<Dlrectory:
lists. •.·
.•forniatfon about current job·,.,
• dozens \off·cruise.,,ship_
.com;·
): opportunities: ,. Special
'::sec~~
:~·-panies,
botii~on:;t~e/e.a~st
and·:-,.,.·tions
·~.features;
.news·.,.
of •
-
..
·
we$t•:
coast
,You
_will be told.: <overseas-/ construction·· pro~ ;
.. what,
0
type =of .positions,·the
•. jects, executive positions'.
,
~
c_r~ise .shfp «!ompaiiies.·.·
hite; • 'and teachinghpportunities.·
> :
·:· s u
~'h
-L·
aJs " d·e-ci'>.h a
ii
ds·;. . ·• • :· :,
90
i>ay
Money
< '
·:restaurant
• help;·'tco_oks;.
,t
:·~:'.:Baact:Guar•ntee
.--:
. bartenders, just to name· a
<:
•
o·ur
Interiiational Employ-
; •.few: You wilL_also • receive
.
ment
Directory
is sentto you·
/ severalEmpl9yrnent.
:Ap·;_~;::
wiui.tliis
•.
guarantee.
If,
for
J;;plicatfon F°'rms·, that';y9u.:
any reason you do not otilain ..
· .''may send·:(directly
..
to/the
overseas:employnieiit or
you
·companies y6~{would ljke··to
·are not s~tisfied
with
the job
··workfor. ,,.;; :o::
:. · . • .;;,:· ,::
hffers .. :s'impiy: • return • our
•
(2)~
Fir.ms
·anq
c;,rg~foiza-. . Dlrectory·within
90
days and
'•. tions ~mi>Joying~alftypes of. • .. we'll refund your ·money pro-
persorihel
in A"ii,str a
li~. ,: -mptly:':;'116
question~ a,sked.
....
--
.
.
'-..
_..
-<.
::·-·
.
,
.
-·
'
.
__
,,,..
International Employment Directory .
131
Elma.Dr. Dept.
T21 •
. Centralia,
WA ~8531
Please send me a copy
·of
·your
International ·Employment
Director,;
I understand that
I
may
use this information for
90·
days and if I am not satisfied with the results, I may return'.
,)'our Directory for an immediate refund, On _that basis I'm
enclosing
$20.00
cash .... check .... or money order .... for your
Directory.
NAME---------=----------
pteas, print
ADDRESS
_______
_..PTN _______
_
CITY _____
__, __
~STATE ________
ZIP
International Employment Directory 1984
,j;,.•··
••
'\
,·•I•••,
.••
Feb.
·1;
1985 • THE CIRCLE·
Page·
7---•
IspeCiaried.
:l)rOgram establislied
•
-~·'
,
.
'
.
.
.
,-~:
.
•
"
'
,~
··,·
,'
.,"::.
,'
.,
'by Mlcuet'Scott Mueller
••
scho61 applying what they have Vassar : : siudebts ·
by:"
Marist .
. , · · >:' •
. .
,
.
,
'.
<
learned in_ the classroom. There ... students;has been notable. Both
:( Marist College has established ;
are~
•
however,
~
no h~dicapped • Nolan • and - Tteairior • said • the
a·-' new· • program . with ...
••
Vassar,.:. children in.the Vassar pre-school.
transition has been very smooth.
College that will certify
araduatcs .:;_
According to Robin Trcainor,
According to Linda Smith, a
of theprograin to tcach•spccialor coordinator·" f.or the Vassar • Marist'sophomore from Bayville, .
elementarfeducation; or both.>: • College _ teacher : .. education
"The only thing better than the
: ·The,, decision to begin • the program;. the contbination of the
v
assar name is the Vassar people.
program was based· on the in- . pre-school' and. 'the _classroom "They
really . advocate
in-
crease
in • mainstreaming
. provides : an' internship-like set-
dependence, butthey will give you
. education in clementary
......
scliools: . ting>. '
i: • -, •
~
·' • •.• • -•.. •· ·· •
help when you need it. I wouldn't
throughout. the country. Main.: •: 1'The. students learn theory'in
consider transferring. This way, I
··streamini education, • a· federal • the'._
classroom and ' then· apply can have the best of both
• 1aw, is the process of educating what they have learned when t~ey worlds.''.
handicapped students in theleast '; visit.the pre-school a _short ti~e
For the past ten· y~ts, Marist
restrictive .. environment.
>Ace-
later," • Treainor said. <'This College offered teacher education
. co'fding to •• the/_law,, inain_. allows. th~ stude~ts ·• to . try
in conjunction with Mount. Saint
streaming is ideal with peers in •• strategies with the c~ldre~ ~1th a
Mary College in . Newburgh .
, local schools said Liz Nolan
••
great
deal
of. immediacy•
According to Nolan, "Mount
coo'rdinator of the Marist teache; provid,ing f:.
eedback
f.
or ••
the
S • M
,
1
ed
amt ary s no onger want to
•
education program.
•
•
studen,ts.",
..
• •
•
M •
h I
f b h
>~
...
>
~
)
• • ·
--
L :.~·-· . --'
TfeainOJ"
also said th&t working give
ariS
t
t e uxury o
ot
~ ,A no~blf pr~~lem has been 9te iri the pre-.school , allows the sp~!os~!~.
~nd phased out the
.teac~ers .· mabiltty to· :comb!ne students 'to recognize children's
·s~tal an_d
cle!D~nUlr)'
edu~t1on • needs early.
•
Re
q
u ire men ts
for
th e
l1thout hindenng the, pr<?Cess
for
' There was nQ mention by either Marist/Vassar teacher education
· eith.~ '
P~Y.
Nolan s,d. The Nolan or Treainor about using program include a 2.5 minimum
·Manst/Vas_sar
,proJI:aints geared th. ·M • p
h l·
•
GP A and the ma1·nta'n n
fa
to , certify teachers ·•to• Jeach in .. : e anst re~sc oo •
.
• • •
t
e ce o
mainstream classrooms~
...
<. . .
Maureen Ferguson, a Manst
C average. The student is also
>_.
/There are currently.Jive Marist sophomore from _Staten Island, required • to take a series of
•·
stuc:ients
. enrolled in the. program said she feels ~anst Coll~~e has Psychology courses at Marist.
: for the spring semester which. played a.f~ctor m h~r de~~s1on
to
According to Nolan, if the
requires them to
take.
two courses teach special e_ducation. I am a
demand for the program in-
at) Vassa_r
<co.Hes~.~.-Vassar Psyc_hology~a;or,
b1:1t
now_
I h~ve creases, more sections of classes
.students will begm
taking
courses an interest m s1;>cc1al
e_ducat1~n will be added at both schools.
at IMarisdn Uie Fall semester of because of my interaction with This semester, Marist is providing
~
19
s
5: ,. ' ;_ ,. ,• • • ~- •.. --. ••
~i1:~Er1
ttie°~~ararc~~~
. ;::i~sJt:!i~H!w~:!ro/ih;;:,,~i:
i· ;.
The, students •
in•
the' program Program," she said.· .
·•. : ·
.,.'iio
definite pians to
hav¢'
the,yans
then°spend time in the Vassar pre-
The amount of interaction with rini'a{ter that; she said.
:·~·•. •
;M6$~iC
}$eeks
~9Plllt~~toll~
~~J~iti~h:~.w.
·.r-.:·t::-~
_Li-·;•
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'
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by John Clements,
·
"The Mosaic
0
is a collection of • Mosaic."
Zaccheo said the
·. d
·,
;
.
: , :· , ·
,
-,
,,
.. ·•
original:: short· stories, essays, . magazine staff is looking· .for
. · Thck· Marist ,College,' Literary poems ~and, artwork •
,by
Marist
"new members, and .artistic peo-
.SQciety;is
seeking:input for its an- students and members of
the·
sur~ ple." • Most of_ the present
,nuaI,-·publication,:6Lthe'Uterary rounding community: This year,
members
-of
the. ,staff are. up-
'andartmagazineii~!TheMosaic): .·.
the.magazine is "locikingfor a
perclassmen.· ': • :.
•
:,,
. Submissions· are due: by. Friday, classy. edition,., : said. Santa Zac-
, A cover contest is being offered
'.f~~-:.~-il(;
• • :
.,
<
,chi:o, ; editpr-in~chief . of-
f.'The
,
to help stimulate student input
'-'!'
"
The deadline for submitting
•:.-.
-.-•.
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.
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vr
.•
,/
'YourB#ttama_s·.pc,.llege
Week
ln91u~e~: /
• Round;frip air transportation from your home city to
Bahal'.Tlas. •·
7
Nights accommodation
in Freepbrt
(Fre~pprt •. Inn 7""'. casual club like hotel located
downtown, next to El Casino and opposite to lnterna-
tior-'alBaza.ar)or Nassau (DolphJn or Atlantis Hotel -
id~ally loc~teq across. the street from the beach within
.walking
dista.~ce to everything). Price Qased on quad
·occupancy. Triple add -
$50.00 Double add $100.00 •
Roundtrip airport/hotel transfers • Hotelroom
tax •
'Gratuities for bellman;'chari:ibermaids and poolman •
College_Week activities -
sports, parties, music, fun.
Hotel Options
.
. .
.
Nassau -
Add $50.00 for/ deluxe Sheraton British Col-
onial, add $60.00 for deluxe Pilot
House Hotel.
Freeport -
Add $50.00 for first class Windward Palms
.Hotel.·
···-------------------------·
I
Fc~·,~e·
212-.355-4705/600·223-0694(rcscrvationsonly)
I
I
-
Bahamas College Weeks
I
fJ
Jan 5-Jan 12
•
C May 04-1'\ay II
I
INIU COllNIAff
U Jan 12-Jan 19
O
Mar23-Mar30
0
May I I-May 18
I
• I
HOUOAYSINC:
fJ Jan 19-Jan26'
t: Mar.30-llpr6
IJ May l8-May25
I
~I Madison
Avenue lJ Feb 23-Mar 02
C Apr 6-Apr 13
IJ
May
25-Junc 01
I
Nt•YO<l<.NT1002l O Mar02-Mar09
l1 Apr 13-Apr20
0
June01-June08
I
· I
·u
Mar09-l'lar 16
G Apr20-Apr27
U June OS-June 15
I
I
Cl><d<One,
rJ Mar 16-l'lar23
0
Apr27-l'\ay04
•
0
June 15-Junc22
•
CJ
FREEPORT
.
r:
NJ\SSAU
Oro.,pan<y
I
I
CSat..departutes) •
(Sat.d<parturn)
,
r,
°"4d
C Triple
C!
Dou~
I
I
Sounds
good.
r.e checked
the
•Hk I -•nl to p,art1 uMS ~ncloscd
~
C 100 deposit.
I
I
iiAMi..
~t«56t.---------
I
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""°"'"TES
-----------
I
·==---·----'-,=
==------- ■
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AllOl<tSS
OEPARTU"t:OTY
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5<AfE
ZIP
Pll:,O
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U':wUx.andffn'kes.
IC.mpusReplOff«
1
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Pricel>nedc<1~f,_
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N<wYoc1<(forWa,/ling<011.
D.C.-e
.
.
I
I
&Boslon~S40).
Each-"""',.,
c..t
,e;,arat•
1cm,.
I
I
l'rice>nlmc,
S2Son.lonaory 1-Bool<Now,
.__ _________
_,
•
----------------------------·
original ,.black~and-white.
photos
•
1
1
{6tpe!(~n:c1JjiJfcitaw1nii,s
.:for
)lie
,;:contest1s
Febliaryl2 .. •
_c
.
··:
C ''":. Publicilti~~
Jr
:'.~The Mosai~.;
• dates back to the 1960s. During
;jbe • last few yelirs, sigriificaiit
,
changes have taken place in .the
magazine's layout. A new prin-
ting format;-and the use of Maar
Printing in Poughkeepsie are
among the major contributions
_for the magazine's success.
.-----------,
••WE'VE
I
I
••
.--.1111111
··I
I
••
-.GOI·
·I
I
ITALL···;
I
THE.BEST
I
SPRING BREAK 1
1
VACATION
PACKAGES
Check brochure desired .
from
0 Ft. LauderdaleS239*
(hotel only from s
79)
from
□ Bahamas
S249*
from
□
Bermuda
S279*
from
□
Puerto Rico
S299*
Includes:
• Round-Trip Airfare
• Airport-Hotel Transfers
• 7 Nights
Hotel
LOdglng
• College Week
Activities
· I
In Bermuda/Bahamas
I
(Dances,
Parties, Music,
I
Sports)
--------
1
Fcm·1'tG·
SOI MJa,sonA,enue
I
Nev, York. NY 10022
211·355-4705
I
INlllt
n HOUl».vs
Name _______
_
l
Address _____
_
I
School
City __
State-Zip
_
I •
Plu1
IS'!& Id•
and ~rv,ees.
Proces
t>.>~cl
on
Lr
p.,m,,es from
NY.
Supple~ncs
~pp•y
r,omJ
~ones
---------
.
..,
:f
'
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~:
...
,
...
..
,
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--•_Page
8
~
THE CIRCLE•
Feb.
1, 1.985
\V"har•;to,·trY·rof
.''Vil
ert#rt~
•.
btiY
·,•;,•
__
by.Scot Seal~- / ;
<_,·
.. ; . .· ·
- .;_
..
_,_.>..t~:,.·
·: ____
::::~•
..
·.,.'/\::·~~;,~'_.'..~r;;,n.·:.-
.• . ,-.
:::•·\
.what
are" 'the}h~ttest· gifts· to
give. for. this Valentirie's.;'Day? . •
Some local· ·Poughkeepsie·. shops
have the answer.":.,'. \o,:: .:-· • ,_·
..
~
According\
io,::'.Chris;
-~.a
· ·
saleswoman • at ' the • • Book and
• Record· store iri the .Main Market
Mall, teddy bears ·are the best sell-
ing itein'at her' sh·op, '. . . . • \ . .
• Although sales.at this.time are.
rather slow, Chri~_
Said she expects
,
•
the Valentine's rush to begin later'
in the week and hopefully sale of
, . .
,. ,
thdittle fury fellows will increase
as well.::
,.: ., .. :·-.,
.
.. ·,
•
..
0
,
-
•
While· strolling
into • the
poi.nt~d to tr~ditio~ as'°the mai~ popular during Valeritine's .Pay;·
Celebrate' store located in the . reason for.the popularity of can~ according - to· ·Steve-' Morga11/
Main _Market Mall, one. may • dyhearts.
•
owner of Morgan's Valley,:View.
notice the array of hangi1_1g
Valeri-
.. .
.
. • ,
. . Florist iri downtown Pough~eep:
tine's • Day. balloons, chuckling . . -At-the -House of C.tr~s. com-
•
sie. "Woi:nen are , purchasing
clowns;
•
fuzzy unicorns, • and • • bination
gifts ; .are the , most. several roses for men, whereas
overweight cupids .with bow and
popular. A balloon bouquet; one-
men are usually purchasing: only
arrow in -hand. But the mainstay
pound candy heart and
a
greeting • one , rose· for women," : . said .
• of Valentine's Day , shopping, • card _all sold together are
a
.hot Morgan. · . .
•• : :. :. ;
displayed in the case adjacent-to
-itein, ·according to saleswoman,.:•: Morgan said he- wasn't sure·
the ·cashier, _are.
chocolate hearts
Naomi• Goldberg .. But_. wait -
why, such a contrasF,in buying"
in
a
multitude of sizes.
. that's not all.
To
top off the entire , trends,existed in ~he two genders;
''Chocolate hearts .are the best-
deal, Goldberg added, "We can , However/there was ·one detaiLhe
selling,Va~e.ntin.
e's gift. i.
n 9ur_ ,hop
even . de.
I_iv.
er . the . gifts to.·/ r_~ur.
_
• s.
a1.'.d
-he.
was
.
certain.·. _o.·
f: ".Red
now,ttsa1_d,_Carol, a saleswoman · favonte lover."
. . .
;
-
.. ·._. __ roses,'!, he •said, "are defimtely
for the Cel_ebrate store./Carol
Roses. have .· alway~ .; been: thehottest!"
•
•
et:A~IFIED&
·
c-
; ,/ :.v91VOD_!
,):i
:,
:r
: •
Marist( Crue
•
..
endo_rses<
the
•
St.·.
Valenii,rie's pay.Massacre/ /. -.•·i··
Sigma F>hi
• Epsilon,
..
Thei •_
best
•
fraternity on campus! Caii Carter
Jenkins ·at 471~5269,. 73 North
Rd. ·.
., ·:
•
-
.
',
DearJai:nes,
..
.
•• We're so close, yet so far?·.· .
-•• . Love Y ~. Mary
:.j•
·Soph9µl9re·
..
\Vfris:,=c't'utse.
•
,;_.,_,
-·-
..
;.
; __
:'.;~.
,
. :,•Meredith Limli)s going on a
,._. _cruise to nowh~re, ··s~e••d9esn't
know. who she • is taking·. or· even
••
when she leaves... _:;.
i .
• , Lima, a Marist,
,
sophomore,
won the cruise in
a
raffle at Satur-.
day's Bon Voyage/Video Mixer,
• but was not present at. the mid~
·night drawing.
.a•;,,,- ,, :::
i -
• :
r
: "My friends· came and .woke -
.
me up later to. ctell me,'' said_
Lima.~"Then,my room_startedto
0
Jill up viith people :who wanted to
· congratulate me.'..\ :
. . Lima said that she.has not been
given any details about-the cruise
and does not know who she is tak-
ing with her._ "But I have to ad-.
.. mit; I've had a lot of offers," she
said. -·
,_., .
.
Crime-_---_-
__ .,_
continued from page
3,
•
police departments,· to\Yn, : city
•
and county courts, the district at-
torney's office and
.
probation.
- departm.ents to d~eririine if the
county needs this program. _,
• ' ',
. ~•We
have to creat~ a program\
for the county's needs," he ,said. '
'A work study should be
a
learn-
ing experience.
It
should mutually
benefit both the COUiity
arid' the
criminal. It's a way of Sc8ying
you_;
can pay your debt to society this •
way, but if you mess'uj:ic"again,
BOOK.EARLY!;;
Limited Hotel.Space
.----------,
ft---=,---:---,·
in Ft Lauderdale . ,
a_nd Dayto~a Beach
, *:rRIP DATES*
March 2-March
9
M~rch 9-March 16
"'1arch 16-March 23 ..
,March .23-March 30
. March 30•April'6 •
11.pril
6-April 13
. TOUR RATE
;~ lt11CLUDES:
•R·ouhd <, :~ Trip
Transportation • via
:,~{!'t~
air<conditioned
0
. ~_jfffo-
..
lav·a·
tory .. e_
qui pp.
·e·d·
.
• ~~;.
m°.torc<>ach • to
..__,_~----'-·,--·
0_·._-_,•
"Daytona Baach·and
Ft. Lauderd,ile. •
•,Convenient Depar•
ture Points.
'<
.
__
.•
......
:-·:
-_
TRANSPORTATION:
Round trip transportation is available on our
: coaches. Motorcoaches depart from main bus terminals in major
: cities. Service is express ma~ing . only _food stops. (Departure •
·: times and dates have been carefu!ly pla11ned to coincide with the
• check-in-time of the hotels: Coaches depart on f:riday and arrive
back the following Sunday. Departure dates are Mar .. 1 return Mar.
10, Mar.
8
return Mar.
17,
Mar: 15 return Mar. 24, Mar.-22 retu-ril
Mar. 31, Mar. 29 return Apr.
7,
Apr.
5
return Apr. 14. Coaches are
the most modern up-to-date models with reclining seats and are
·. fully air conditioned and lavatory equipped for your comfort.
:~
!ctyve·-
• '.. t
.
-
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• .·
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•-;i/;
Q~PPS
s
C:QP15{~i1$i;;
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• • :<-Bakh,·g·-orf
Premises :
Show y~~;
c~,l~fle
ID ;~d get
a
• -
FREE Glass of
·see'r
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.... lllllli--.-.-~-----------------------------------Feb.
7, 1985 •
THE CIRCLE· Page
9 --•
;:;B~f
iS(-'Siblhi~~}'''_
~-~iln_;~~_H,_::m"!""""·,~•~,~-~-
-: ________
,_,--
____
___
..
fef:tij;natc Jtid and she's slowly opening up
..
parent ~•t de~y the Big.Bro~her or Sister
:
blems; she said.··
•
ticipate in ttiis program, it is not a require-
·.-:'.
tc:Hne;'.:;,z~?,tW
·:·r;:::_'.;,_;.
::
-:.:C
::_-\
;
;
: ;,
:
:':
a weekly visic::·,,<.'
·:\:\
.-,:,
·;
•
.
'
·-:-"'
"Most of our children are troubled and ment. Stewart said
most participants are
•.
•
/::~-:
'Ac_ci>rding··
.'fo,r,Murphy!
•
to_~
b('a.
Big
1
_
-/:,Murphjsaid
she
ho~ to:continue with they need someone who is able to stick
with between20and 30 years old.
.
•.
:
:Brother
or, Sister
/tyou
must be consistent-· the program- and·: would Uke to stay with
the commitment,'.' she said.
.
_-
,
_
.
"A lot of our volunteers work.for IBM
..
~·.'.~~~~~=N~;g~:~t~i~;:~i~f~/;t~·J\;~'.-~~~~--:::•··::irr-~~····;~j-;s'~~~
:~~::~!opi~~.·•therela~ion-
y~~~~:~~~:::st~ntt~i!~:~~~~~~~rn~
~~eeso:u~t:rd:v~~wmi~!~i:~e~,n~ut:a~::.~
..
_-
her
up ahi
'ceriain timc,-you should make
:;:':;
.''lt'.s a satisfying experience~ I feel _good to see the child once
a week for two to five students," she said.
·: sur~yoii
are·
ther~
atth~tt~e,'~.she said.:
'.-::
!lbout myself.Jor participa.ting
'i~
the pro-
hours.
Stewart said the agency has two cross-
..
_
.. ·._
\Conversations· :with·Jittle
..
brothers_ and
.
.-.
gram~" she said.
-.-
. '-::,
•
-
:
••
•.
Children are referred to the agency by gendered members, part
of a new program
sisters:·jhould
bt
kept
_confidential, ·she···
·Laurie:stewart;
a·senior at Vassar Col-
:parents,
schools or social agencies, Stewart matching little girls with
men and .little
·said,.
Iri_ setting'goals.
for
activities, the
..
lege who is·dobig aitinternship with the said. The child and
parent both have to boys with women. She said the two boys
achievements· should
•.
be.,
fun; and
•
the:·· agency, said becoming involved in the pro-
want the services for the agency to become who are cross-gendered
will be rematched
;
children sho_uld'have.a say iri the.decision
gram requires
a·
detailed process,. which
•
involved. After conducting a home inter-
with a male as soon as they get more
.,
·making:}:::
:\:
~-
,;!;;;
.:>:
..
:
/
..
/i
·•_.:··
·\:'
··begins
with'·anorientation.-The applicant
view with the child and parent, it matches a volunteers.
'.Currently,
there is a waiting list
• )/'I
·tet
Shamion- decide the. day's. ac-
•
then must· filLout: a
.form
supplying volunteer with a child.-
,
of seventy boys for a Big Brother.
_
divities.J want her to benefit from this rela-
references. Stewart said the next step is a
•
The agency stresse~· to applicants that
•
Montanaro said it's not uncommon to
,
tionship,'..'-Murphy)aid._:,
..
•
..
•
·,,.
.
-
,_very
personal an? in-depth screen interview
•
they are neither a Santa Claus nor a parent have cross-gendered
members,
•
but the
·\LBig
Brothers and Sisters aren't.the only
by theagency. ·
.
,:
.
·
.
• '
·,
figure, Stewart said.
agency likes to keep the boys with the men
orieswith_g11idelines,
Murphy.said; Parents:·
-;·,_'_'Wewantto
find out about the-person's
"We.ask that they don't spend a lot of and the girls with the
women because it's
have a few ground rules
.to
follow. They
emotional stability and family life," she money, in fact we
encourage that they easier for the children to confide in
so-
-
•
baveJo
:reaHze
.the Big Brother,or Sister is .. _ said.
• :Although
the Dutchess County don't
because then .the relationship meone of the same gender.
-
not a taxicab-service nor a.babysitter: The
-·
11gency has
·had:
no problems with child becomes material instead of emotional,"
"Our goai here at the agency is that we
,.·.
~a_r,ent_s
shOldd ~e flexible an~ give the rela;;,,_:
mplesting,.Stewart-said it_is c_autious
ab~ut she said. "And a!1 emotional relationship is
.
hope these relationships will develop into a
t1o_nsb.1p_some
ttmc; at least six months, she
_,
•
this. The agency would reJect. a person with what we are looking
for."
I
friendship that is long lasting," Stewart
said,
to.
establish trust; Ap4 mosfof all/the
emotional ipsecurities and. f~mily pro-
Although many college students par-
said.
-A
NEW.YEAR - A:NEWYOU!
•
r-
•
You
can:Jose t0-30 lbs.
•
:'THIS:MO:NTH·f·-
·Tt;ere's
··a
slim
'··new
.yoi.1:-
hiding under
,tl~se unwantec1_pour.iqs
..
_:--,:
···:
·:_
Guaranteeqresults with safe, proven formula.
:·
Send:only $3~ (cli~ck otmom~y order)_
.·
.•
·
.
:
•••
for a
4
weeks ·supply,'
to:_-~
._
-·ci\2RTE.R-)~ssoc1ATES
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½.~i2StiH--
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-
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room right
from
'the
start
'In
three years,
you
,
•
could
f:iatjdle
more ~',3,000 ca.5eS
iJI,a
wide:Vdtjety.:qf
s.ubJects
from
in~O~'
to.-·
.
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tb
'crimiital
Jaw.
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uw~ ~
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wha,t
itta4~.t.o'.1Je:
a Ma.$e
Corp~
Officer:
and
.
-
lawyet,'jaik
ll1tlf
tlie
Marille
corps
Officef
'\
:
•
SelectiQn
Officer
whe#
he visits
your campus;
•·
_
·>.;.Morethari190,000.·
•
•
Mai_;nescowduse
__
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.See
Captain
.w.w:~-'.
DONAHOE:
J}.
at o·oN-
;:NELLY
Hall on 13. & 14 FEB. 1985 between
'40:00
and
·-3:00
or
can
·t-800-342-2408.
G()etz: Hard to tell local impact
by Michael Ruseskas
••
Best spoke up for. the right of.
an .individual to defend oneself,
•
Last week, a Marist p-rofessor but he made a distinction between
and local gun shop owners spoke
self-defense and aggressive at-
out on the Dec. 22 Bernhard
tack.
•
Goetz shooting incident, saying,
-
•
"I think anyone has the right
to
-
.
respectively, that there is a· lack
self-defense, but can't understand
.inforination on the·
case
and· that
how or why some were shot in the
the occurrence has not led to a
back," Best said. .
notable increase in gun sales;
•
· .
-
Best said that the answer as· to
Eugene Best, an associate pro-
.
whether or not one is justified in
fessor
•
in • religious studies at
•
taking another life must be judg-
•
•.
Marist; wouldn't take a definitive
•
ed individually in each incident.
stance. on the Goetz case· because
: "Simplistic • judgments
_
on
he said there isn't enough known
complex issues ignore the fact
about the case.
•
that· any new variable
•influencing
•
"lt's''strange that no complete
the situation can
affect
the judg-
Fishkill Replica Arms, says he
hasn't had any increase in sales
since the incident.
"Most people in
Dutchess
•
County who own handguns use
them for hunting or target prac-
-
tice," Halpern $aid.· "Occasional
0
ly
.
a
•
gas
:_station·
owner· or
storekeeper will be interested in•
a
shotgun for self protection."
Workers at Adventure World in
Poughkeepsie and Trap and Skeet
Shop in Stormville have_
the same
opinion. Neither shop has had a
dramatic increase in handgun or
rifle sales, nor do they anticipate
one in the near future.
report of the incident has been
ment." Best said.
•
published, -that no
_reporter
has
Those who have made a judg-
Although area gun shops have
gone out· and
-
int~rviewed
•.
the
inent to side with Goetz, however,
reported no increase in sales, Out-
other people who were in the sub-
are not necessarilY buying guns
chess Coumy
Sheriff
Fred
'X~Y
~ar at tl_te time to
.
find out
for self protection, according to
•
Scoralick has noted an increase in
. . wh~Cthey
say.
happel)ecf,''
••
Best Io2algim shop owners;
.•
-
_·.
·
. ,.
permit applications.
,
saiq.
.
.
•
.
.
.
~
,
lrv_ing Ha\pern,
,
owner of
_
..
:~
,
. ··
.
.
•
.
.
.
•
•
i•·, --.: •
•
•
••
•
r
•
•
•
,,_.
,,_
.... -;,,:
,.-
-
•
---
---,----•'·':"-'There
has been an increase m
·
:J
.
•.
.
•.
.
. ,_...
.
•
;
•'
.
.::1qth
.Ann·ual
\faJ:e:n,t.ine~s
·oance
/
-In/Cafe
After.Marist'-:saskefba·11-
$1 Admission.
·support
the Senior Class
Romance till
·:.-:·9:30-1:00
Wee Hours
*
Dress as a· Cupid
&
Get Free Admission
*
J:iandgun permit
,
·applications,"
Si:oralick said, "but I can't at-
tribute it to the Goeizincident."
•
•
Scoralick stressed that at cer-
tain times during the year hangun
permit applications are much
more frequent than other times.
"After the holiday season peo-
ple are more apt to file for a han-
dgun application,"
Scoralick
said. "This is because many peo-
ple getguns for presents and then
must register them.••
1
It takes about four months to
process a· pistol permit. applica-.
_
tion.
Women __
continued from page 11
Freshman Desiree. Genet paced
Marist with a second place finish
in the I-meter dive as well as a
second in the 3-meter event.
A pair of school records were
set as senior Mary
.Marino,
juniors Nancy Champlin and
t;aurie Desjardins and sophomore
Arlene Glynn teamed up· in the
· 800-freestyle relay for a sixth
place finish with a school record
time of 9:20.86.Marino and
Champlin then teamed up with
freshmen,Debbie Noyes and Kris
Maiming in the 400-medley relay
to set another school record of
4:39.36 for that event.
At the conclusion of the meet,
co-captain Marino, of Bloom-
field, CT., was· named as the
runnerup for the Outstanding
Senior Swimmer award.
Along with its seventh place
fi_nish at the conference cham-
pionships, Marist compiled a 6-1-
1 dual-meet record for the season.
Last year, the Red Foxes were
si~th at the championships.
RESEARCH
Send
$2
for catalog
of
0Y8f
16,00J
topics to
assist your research el•
forts. For
info ..
can 10I1-
free
1~1-57-45
QnU-
llnols can 312-922-0:m).
Aulllorl' RtMlfell,
Rm.
@II,
4lJ7 S.
Ow!,om.
Owe.go.
11.
~
;...
..
✓
-•·
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•
I
,,
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(
.
~-
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'.. _ __,J
)_
.• -~·-··-·.
',
.•'
MlJ1"fay:
·.
N
CA~, will
penatiZe,;:1-J;~'~P':lf)f
~gr~~ji@t:
by Ian O'Connor:· _
ing phony credits to players.,, ,; • Coach Mike_ Pe~ry._"
Pe~ry
0
Was .• • m~i-e-inf
or~ati~~f6ft1ie ~CM,;-·< to th.~
N<;;M,;
Murr.~y
••
~aii~ain-' .
· -
. .
.. Murray said he didn'f"wish to
forced to resign in September, __
but_s,id theprocess_~m:onlyJake , _e~_.a~
tlie)ime,qf Pt;rry-~;res1gna-
. • Marist College President Dr. speculate on what type. of sane-
and was replaced by current flead .. 'a day _or s~.' Murr':!>'.
sa1_~
th_e
~ol~. , t10Ii ·.t,'l~t tfl:e _v1olat1onnn_volv!d
Dennis J. Murray says he does ex-
tions·Marist will receive from the . Coach Matt Furjanic. :
....
• . .• lege_w11l-s_end
the second report to . the fo1mercoach's off~ng:-of 1,~
t>ect «minor sanctions" to be NCAA, but • ruled , out -~
the
Perry's-. dismissal_ prompted .
a
,....the NCM l>y: t~e , ~nd _"qf.
the . _: legal.::· extra :benefits· o"-to:·
!
one,
.
placed ori ,the :men's basketball possibility of this year's team be-
~ix~week investigation.-into the . Week. After rec.eivmg
that report, ·' memb~rofthe_team/~n onlt<?ne
program as a result of
a
recent in-
ing seriously affected.
basketballprogram, and was con-
Murray said the'.1'fCA,A
will take • occasion.-
0'
' '.--.~
. • ,,; ·,).-· ,, • •
quiry-conducted-by the National .. • .''This case.won't be.closed until ducted ·by, Co~:· The_ fin~ings of. (._whatever/ac*>n .. :it_ • dl!~ms _. • ler~yi subs~~ue_ntly
·-t~ld
0
.T~e
Collegiate Athletic Association.
after the season and conference • the. college's mv~st1gat1on . was _
~ecessary.
,_. . -,_:'
. • ,
~1r~le ~~at h~:. P~fbab~y co~lll:1t~.
• In a telephone interview.-held • tournament," Murray said. "As
senttotheNCAAmDecember.
-,«They don~t.tell.us what their
ted~violapo
11
s_ du!t~~.~is.six-
_
earlier this week, Murray said he . for probation in the future, I
- , -..
•
• . •. • riext ste w·n b • ,, M -
•.• "d , • month tenure as Manst-s. head •
feels the Division One program , wouldn't think so. That's just my •• •~:he pri~~se of • t~e
-
in-
"
• P •.
1
- -~• • .urray sai • • • coach.' Murray saidlie~asn'isure
•
will be penalized by the· NCAA, opinion. It's in their hands." _
_ ve
5
t1gator's visit was to review the · • • The :.'
0~.
investi~ator_
Y-'
111
• ·• ••
if theNCAA plans to question the •
but that the.sanctl
·ons w·,11
be· of a
report which we submitted to the report is
m
mgs to his supenor,;
f, •
,.- •
h
.th
·1.
t t
t ,
Murray's comments came just
NCAA ,, Murray said "What he • who wilftli_en
repoi:tto the NCAA • 0~~erdoa~ °ten
~ sha_e~en ;_:_-h\.
"relatively low scale.'' •
days after he and Dean of Student
~antel was a clatifi~tion
of
the
.
infractions committee. The·• in-
_ d . on t . now : . ow ·hmtuclt -
"There will be some sanctions,
A.ff
airs Gerard Cox. met with an report Th_
ere was nothin_g
th_
at he ·. fractions committee wiUjudge the
ere benbcle
Y_ou
can;flp~t
m_
to t a •• k ••••
but I don't feelthey will be very N.
CAAinvestig-atorforfivehoui-s .. . . .•. -
- •
.
. ,
.
. •
t • d
·k • ·fl -1 d • •.
pro a Y was a 1ppant,remar .
serious,'' Murray said. "Our in- _ on Friday. The investigator came • que
5
uoned • or th0ught. 'Yas J~ac- •
~fi~.~.
all: ...
~a-
e. •
.f:. _
.. ma·_.
--.
~~-
-
an~ . he-
-
did1_1
',t
•
~ealize
•
t}te, .
vestigation found that we've done
to Marist to review the college's . curat_e. He • wanted clan_ficauon,
.
- -
. • • • • • • , • ,• <' • • • •. seriousness of 1t;" Murray said; •
nothing major like giving cash to . repori regarding the violations 8:nd ,~_sked
• for more ·mforma, . •. Throughout,:theiinvestigation, -, "The NCAA may approach him -
· players, fixing transcripts or giy~ committed by former • Head tion.
' -, . . .
.
_the college ~as_ re{use_d
_t_o
:release • on tharmatter. It's completely up •
Murray said Co,x will gather any of the fmdmgs bemg reported
to them.,,._. , • , , . ;_ _ , ••
.
•
.
,
,
..
. •··/[oJCessJ)litconJereflcegarfies,
tQ
hOstI.Slf.7
on Sdturaay; , ••.
,
by I,an Pietrafesa
•
· _
The Scurrys give LIU an alni~st • The Seahawk~, who were led by •
• After splitting. two:·ECAC
unstoppable inside game which is
Terrance Ba!ley with _19 points;
Metro games last week, the Foxes .•.
the key to their success._,. • ---
• were unable to.establish their well-
seek revenge iri a crudal":lfome
•
·"We must._stop them -inside," ·' k"nown running gaine due to a
game. agairist • conference leader· said • Marist .Head_ ·Coach·· Mat_t stubborn Marist defense which
Long· Island - University • on - Furjanic. "That will be the key." -. •.•.
played·a 2:3 zone throughout the
• Saturday.
.· - .• _,. : . • : .- , •· After a 44-'miriu!e delayat the
game'. . • '· - •
.
.
• The tt:am was scheduled "for a start of the gaine due to
·a
blown • •. ~n: the -. FDU contest ·Fred
conference .game last night at transformer; the Foxes performed • ,Collins hifconsecutive· or:e-and-
Jober! Mo_rris. • .
.
-
. , _ .
. ,. a blowoutthe~selycs_in_defeating ,orie.·_f~ee. thr?w.s
.with
seconds •
_ >.,
The; F<>,xes
entered_Ia~t -~ht's • Wagner73~55; ·::' • ·: ~. .
..
<
r~mammgtoJ1ft"FI:>U_to
a 57-'54-
·; _game_m-second_p~ace·:w!th·a:6-:3:<7-TheFoxes·usedari'S-O'.'spurt v1ctory.··:
•
.
·: •
:r""':
record,and, 911:e
game·behi_nd
·LI1:f:
•
midway t_hrougl(the second half
• • .
. .
·
:
·_•-·Manst,-_IS<CUrrentlYx4-0',l_n·~ to. take contro}of the see-saw
The,Fo.xes, put in:a 'valiant
.if.~,O,~_fer_!~c,~:::h<>me
: ,an_i~:\and,':b:attle:: \:~
·:;_..
•
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loss:t~:~Iy_m:J_an_uary.
''°'<'),'.· ,··llalf?stats>:"~howed:-:'.·botli
·teams "'. :'.,":"
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t'·:t'-'?t;-:·:,,:;<s·\\~·-
0
,
.•
;,it:,:
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of __
Carey a~d,t sl).ooting
only 38 percent. ': ,, -; . -
..
-. •. With Manst - m •. deep foul :.
,;e,
P,ul:~,~~urry
'le4
_Coach_ ~a~l -;,">ff :was 11·.
team
·.effort,,as
the :- trouble, FDlJ we~t
_to
_a kce~ ;
'.:::,,}:-~q
~
c:t~, to ;victory. Carey<, Foxes _ were . effective-.from. the
.
away game at this pomt and
,0
,~scored 20:po_hi~, 16 in ihe second.,'. outside as well as from-the inside._ forced the.Foxes to foul.
-
•• -
Frenchman Alain Forestier goes up for a juiriper during-.
recent action aHhe McCann Center
. . • ' •
, ••
· , · • ,
.-
-· • ,
•
'
• • (phot_o
by Margo Kucich) •
~:hal~;._;and:gia.b~e(iJ4
rebounds;'.;:· Wagner,_ double-teamed .\Rik
.-:~
...
--
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- Pau!):hipped' i~"l:4 1>oints
in Jhe
<
S~its, lea~ri~ Steve Egg_ink'
and
:
i-
.
' C'We v.erf (orced to foulf arid '._ ,
.. earherm~tch11p~
:-.>:'·.
.
..
,-.,Bruce· Johnso11:open for:-easy-< they made. their. free- throws,"-
•. Catey Scurry, the 6-9 senior- • jumpers. Johns~m-finisbed with a : saidFurjariic. :~.
, •
•·
center
_
~nd. A.,ll~America
.:c-_can-
•• game-high 24 points and -Eggink
• '
· , , . ; • < _ •· .. - , · ...•
. didate,is leading.the
·conference
,contributed 22,\making'this·the
,, ,:-Eggiitlcled the Foxes
.with
a
in ·both· scoring and .rebmitiding :, firsLtime this season that- two ._ game .high 24 points while Smits
:
and r~s-,amopg· the: lea~ei:s: in . , Marist player~ t~.P~~
~
poirttsjn ,,
~~~P~~in
12\ •;;-, . _
•
-thenationm_both_.categones,He,-agame;·•.-.·
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,.,.,·,:·.•··_··._
.:
-,.'<·.
, .. _·
is . ay_eraging
•
better: than< 20_--- Smits -~rid
Ted
Taylor. for~ • 1:he F'oxes )vete able to hold
pomtsper g~e! and al!llost~.s • mu~ated
~
tOJ>:-notch
iriside game
,
, s~mo~{~~ar~
~~
l-l~pton,
~
r~botU1ds,thirdmthe1;1atiO?,i
-.'.
~-:·.forth.eVIctOrS~•Slllits,cl_1ipped)n,.~ ; .. -
,. , ,
.•
·< -~.
• Paul S!=urry, t~c: .•
6f S _·.
seJl!or : 13 pomts an~-grabbed 8 rebounds,_ - 3().pomt scorer m the lastmeeti~g .
_ roi:war_d;
1s ~veragmg close to 1 S -,, while Taylor _added
8 points and 7
_
< ·_
l,etween tlie two squads _at Manst --
•. poJnts and 8 reboun~ a game. _•
boards.
• -
• • ••• - • •
• • last m°-nth~
to
9
pomts.
Woinen hoops.tefs. be~t 'Colgate,
loose-to/.Mdnrr1outh
•last-Week,----
,.---
- . .
• .
-_ -.
-
: .i
•
• • .
.
• ·,
by MariaGordon•
whtch better suited th~ir team,"
technical fouls·
call;~
~~ainst. her.
Torza said . ."We're bigger and_ "My'_ fouls were detrimental.
"The Maristwomen's basketball.· more physical so their nian-to-
They threw the ·girls off," she
• team is ranked third in the ECAC man defense in the first half was· .said. The team did not score for 4
Conference following
a
63-51 win '- jneffective."_ The, Lady F9xes minutes afterwards.
-
•
over Colgate· and a loss to Mon~ were shootin·g SO percent froiri the
mo~th by 53-68 last week. .
floor against the nian4o-mari, ·?5
• •Our goal. is. to . win the con- opposed to just 31 percent against
ference title and tournament. By
th
~~~~-
said the problem was
losing to Monmouth, the goal is
•
just a little harder to reach,lt "getting,up" for the second hlllf:
Head Coach · Pat Torza said. "We · played a good pressure
"Yet, anything could happen."
deferise. It sparked our offense
and we began to hit."
.
:-
Torza accredited a solid team
Val Wilmer led the offensive
effort for the victory over Colgate and defensive game. She had 3
in the first of last week's two steals, 3 assists, 6 points and was
games. Although Ursula Winter 2 for 2 from the foul line,
was high scorer with 16 points, although she only played 18
"everybody came through
.
with minutes.
.
key baskets," Torza said. Paoline
Wilmer continued to play ag-
. Ekambi scored .the first 8 points gressive basketball against Mon-
for the Foxes,. and Lynne Griffin mouth. "She hustled and fought
and Jackie Pharr chipped in 9 and for everything. She was a real
8 points, respectively. Pharr also scrappy player," a teammate said
grabbed
9
rebounds, while Mary of Wilmer, who had 7 points in
Jo Stempsey added 8.
the contest.
Marist was up by 20 points at
The Lady Foxes were down by
the half.
11
Colgate came out in a 2 at the half and held on with 7
2-3 defense in the second half, minutes left to play. Torza got 2
"We wer~w~rking the ball well
thr_oughout the ent(re game and
taking good shots but they· just-
weren't falling," Jennifer Gray
said.
•
Pharr led the team with 12
points and 13 rebounds. Ekambi
chipped in
ff
points and 10 re-
bounds; Winter had 9 points,
while Una Geoghegan contributed
6.
•
-
'
-
The
women's - team
was
scheduled to face Wagner, the
conference leader, at home Tues-
day, and to play Iona College in a
non-_conference
competition
tonight at the McCann Center at 8
p;m .. Saturilay. the women's and
men's teams face L.I.U., s't'arting
atS:30.
"We must play 40 minutes of
good basketball to ensure our
standing in the conference _after
this week," Torza concluded.
-
•.•
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reri~wn#a
~~our~a~~Y.
cable~
/n.adve~·of,E~eri~;,J>,re_gori~
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•
•
spoi:ts.n,etwork{\i.:ill;b{comi.~g:,
-~~rti_ng
,j:an-(JntPf?Ved_.·
~~1-:.· :
totheMcCann·CenterJornext :around·gaJlleJo,go·along w1tlj _
week's :ine~?s~basketball
.·_con~
• ::hi~ ouisi9~'jl)'niper. ·oqing i11to ,· ·•-·
test with Co~co'rdfa College of ._
~
la,w night's::·g~~ ··at .. Robert·' ••
New York~_-
No,· the cable-net~ •-·_Morris,
Eggink :was•
the Foxes:.:
work wiUiiot~be tel~vising'the(highscore.fi~J2)>fthe
team's
j
entire game,
~~(
will be taking 21 cont~ts.;·6~8 power forward -
some clips for a special ~oming Tetfl_aylor has"either ·gral:!bed
-_
up· soon on European players or shared-the,team:lead in re- -
competing foi:~~eri~n
_cok -bounds, ,in. IS. gan1~:. this·
leges. 7-3 freshman centet Rik seasori:~'.Marist faris. wm·get a -
Smits- from: Hollarid, ••
Alain chance
'to
see· one. of the East's
Forestier of France and in-
toi> big-men in Carey Scurry of
jured forward Miroslav Pecar:. • Long -Island· ·uniyersity' this
ski ofYugoslavia.wiU·be inter-- • Saturday. Scurry, a sure bet_
viewed _ and featured on • the for ECAC Metro Player of the
.
show. "We're very excited that Year honors this season, is one
. ESPN will be featuring our of the nation's leading re-
three European • players,"
bounders and could go as high
Sports Information,· Director as th~ second round in the spr-
Bob Bordas
said. "It
ing NBA draft. .Taylor has
• should be a great chance for us been known to have big games
to get exposure °for the· pro-
on the glass against Scurry. In .
gram here, and we're looking : their first meeting this season, •
forward to it." .~.Senior for-
the Marist forward hauled in a •
ward
-Steve Eglnk continues game-high 17 rebounds.
•
•
'
r .
.
.
.
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_________
Feb.
7,"
1985
·THE.CIRCLE· Page
~-!---
\.·<·
..
·]fi~:r$(l&y.·:
MC>.trti"n:g
:·at.✓
afi;;r6~f;k:··_.·
• . .
.
..
,.
\
l~-s.worse.
- by
lait•C>.1Coii.ifor::}.·:-:t:·t=-.~,;·:\(
•
team~C:-:rou
:·.all'. ~now ~'\\'heri -it • the' recor(l~-',was orie story, .. off . ha(l been conducting an investiga-. right, arid not a privilege to be
•.. ;•;\:;~
,;·'•'.i:it',;}{i_t'\!~~;·;~t,<
·::
:'.;
t
started':,•,:. freq4ently t,eferred
Jo.·-•
't~e·rec'ord'; was quite another. • ·• tion of the program at the request
given or taken away..
• • .
>iHt hasn't-been'.a good year for, . as· -_~!Black Friday'.'-., the-·day : , So it.was "back to the NCAA of the NCAA. Although Marist
Furjanic's
i
argument that it
:Marisf.College basketball iµ:te,rins •. former Head C.oach·
Mike· Perry,-: violations.' Murray • maintained •. refused to release its findings to • would be unfair to The Journal if
::.of
,its reladpns)iij,•.wiili;the 'local .was:·rorce&'to resign; While· this ; tlrat the wrongdoing involved one· the media, a Journal story cited The Circle got a "scoop" while
_ : (m~la::-An<(;from:;the:·1Qoks.,'of. :,event:had·t"e partial.o,bser~ers.at ·.player ahd one incident. But'that
the team's. free use of a local on the bus_is a leghjmate point.
things/th~t.rel~tionship_w,on'tbe ·,~arisrcryitjg, it ll'adthe'impartial-. started to. get .questioned and,
health club as ·a· possible viola-
But while thatrs a tough tasl,<
for a
.. g~ting , any.1 b.ett'e{ j_n . th~ jiear • obsefvers·from ·die:'ai:~a laughing· ironically, wasri'.t even supported ••
lion. Further questioning of team
weekly ·paper •to pull off, it cer-
. : future.}'. '-''\D·- ,:;:::
.,:
:
•<·'· \: ;
at the scltool's ineptitude.. .
••
••
.. · .. by Perry .. The ex-coach told The members by Journal sportswriter • tainly wouldn't be for a focal
::fMarisfHead Co~ch .~att Ft1r- ·.(-.·Coll.egeJ>residerit•
Dennis Mur- . Circle in October • that . he Paul Hurley on the subject of
radio station. And that's why I
-jaµic:recently, announced.that th~ ray then met witl'!the media to tell ·, "probably . committed 40 viola-
violations got some people angry. • said Furjanic's policy only affects
:finen's•team• has a ne:w;
policy in-, , .~henf why this ~.•tragedy'.'
h_a~
oc- '.' tions'' during his reign as Marist's
Hurley was asked not to travel
"newspaper· report~rs.'' WKIP,
.. 'Valving;.::. the:,:. }ocilJ
.
,media,
·.curred.Perry
h~d violated NCAA head coach. That didn't look too with•· the team anymore, which . which does all Marist games, re-
:. specifically,~: ffhe'i'iJ>oughkeepsie '::
i:l!les/~urray expl~ined, ~y offer-
good in print.
.· .
eventually led to The Circle get-
mains on· the bus. • •
.. Journal and !fhe:Circle/This.new ' itjg illegal.benefits. to'.on(p~~yer,
,, Nor did the comments Joseph . ting the bootalso.
A paranoia • seems • to be
. ·<jfolicyC:,.,(lisaUows;.
!'new~paper.-~on one dccasion. Nobody, in·t.he .Belanger
made
to. , The.·
ldis~gree with Matt Furjanic's • developing·aroimd,this program.
• ·reportersU,from·travellingto road
,
atid_ien~e
:Seen1ed<t6.t:,uy:~ift·but Poughkeepsie Journal the next • recent clecision. My main conten-
Of course, the NCAA's snooping
games with: the. team.- I. separate .. that's .what was· reported in. the ·.day .. Belanger, . the
faculty
tion is that although The Circle around doesn't help matters. But
. 'tnew~paper ,repqrters" .. from the
following day's papers.·,· •
• • •.•
member who ,first informed Mur- • does wish to be treated as a pro-
a Division One basketball pro-
·. r~st·of the•-media Jor a :;Speci.fic • That is·until The Circle's report ray of Perry's\violations, told The fessional newspaper, it : simply gram looking for recognition has
• •· purpose, -which l'U explain short-. • that Perry was dismissed primari~. Journal that the coach had taken 'doesn't have a Fortune 500 com-
to have a healthy relationship
·: ly,
,-··;;_;J':'i\:
_-,
;":_,:,
>·-
'":,>
,,
..
:
•.
, ...
ly due to a·personal coinplaintfil-
a player on two overnight trips to pany paying for travel expenses as with the media. It's essential.
:;:-,Before,.
I
'go into· Furjanic's .··ed againstthe:former coach by a New York City. That makes two The Journal does. The students
• I commend Matt Furjanic and
• dedsioii;J'dlike to take a1ook at
melllber of the team. This was the violations, not one. Days later, pay tuition to the college, which Dennis Murray on their constant
some ,ofSthe more: embarrassing·. first andJast published statement : Belanger-told The Circle that he uses that money to fund the
availability to the media. But
moments the basketbalLprogram ..
:that
cited reasons other. than . knew of only one.overnight trip,
athletic program. This alone. that's not. eno_ugh. This new
has suffered
-due<to
the .local NCAA violations as the cause of . not two.
• ... • ·
.
·
.
•. .
~
'should make the presence of a stu-
policy is a step in the wrong direc"
media'.s. extensive coverage of the Perry's.downfall. In short, "on
During this. time, the college dent reporter on the team. bus a·,· tion.
•
•
•
''.
••
•
•
•
•
.
.
\'.:
'·.•
Rik
Sinits: •
7
0
;3
center finds happiness, as a Red
Fox
-,~--.--
..
.-
.:
•
•
~
,,.
~
.
• ,, .. , by John Cannon.
.
Smits' ,rise to becoming a Divi-
While at high school, Smits grew Smits already has surpassed in-
••••.
'.\\} \~~f \{
on . top .. of the ~~reiiric~:~t::~al~t~:fdC:rf::
~=
. .
:~~:~h~~::s~~~~e~~~:rd:~ck~!
:
~~~~~~e~f
:t}~l~~iv':~~:x~
0
e~re~~~~
,world.··. "'
.
•
did notplay the sport until he was ·upcoming • player . by many
But besides playing more than
25
:,.: No! be.caus~ he sta~ds 7-3 :(ani. ·15. ''lwent to watch my mother's
Holland coaches. He became a . minutes per game, the freshman·
still growing)/ but because he is . team :Play one night and I liked . member of the Holland National • center has averaged more than 10
>
having the best time of his life. ·~: the game,". he said, • "I began. Team, where he got his first look points and .almost 6 rebounds per
• ·• .. '..tlie 18~year-:Oldieft
his h·ome in. . playing .with other kids,: but I
at intense competition. . .
.
contest.
.
Einhoven, Holland, last summer didn't learn anything untiU went
"We played against Hofstra
Most impressive, however, is
· to pursue. a • basketball career in· to basketball camp.''.·.•··. . .. · , •
once and I had nine blocked shots, ·.that Smits· 1eads the· team in field
the United States. He had··offers
: He learnedsome basicskills at. in that game," he:said .. "That's >goal;percentage
(.547)
as well as
.
: from:maJor.schoolssuchasLoui-, .. thecampbeforeheplayeciforhis.
when.I knew that I. could play· ,blocked.shots(2pergame). "lam
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co11f1dence and cons1~tency._
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that-':
good:;-~-ysa1d---Sm1ts~
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f
ans,.can, attesLto.,,Pn;the.co?-~,:--:-;~~; '"';"r:•;:;cpntmued:-~>U,~-!1&~-Jq..:
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tsPECIAL
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:.:·S;l11.:ip1//11/er
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··::)Wed/ieb . .
13th' •
i/
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,Bofr Top·-f
orty's •
.,_._'-:.,.
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.
Men··
i~iR1~rSe(i8IS
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·stGN~uP.s
Now
THROUGH.FEB.
a·
.
Located in·McCann Center Intramural Dept. •
--. Winners Receive $200;00 in
•. •, •
B.irJ~clay
·Party
Ladies ; ·Drink Free
:-tilll:00
a~m.
Guys - 2 for 1 -
9:o·o
ttn
12:00
p.m ..
SHOT SPECIALS
·ALL NIGHT LONG
-~
L·~~--~-----
----~ -
•. SUNDAY
th·ru
TUESDAY.·.
.
. ·. .
..
t°>f
r;e Admission' ... Fireplac~.·-~
P6pcorJ~·
..
·-
•"'."
..
•WEDNESDAY
•. • LADIES NIGHT
• Ladie~:drink'FREE
tiil 1 :00
a.in.
·' $3.50 pitchers . •
..
Dance
Music:
.. • THURSDAY
$3.~.0p_itchers
• Free Admission~~New
Movies .. Popcorn ..
• FRIDAY
Happy Hour.- 2
for·f.-.
4:00
till 8:00
·. 5oe beers tfll
12:00
p.m .. ••
$2.50 pitchers of Beer
4:00-12:00
p.m.
Dance Music
Scllolarshlp and Trlphles
· .
·
·•··.
• < • • •
- Trophies for Second Place ::
.
.
,
•
SATURDAY
, . • • • •
...
Formorein/orinaticfn,
contact: .
•
SENJOR NIGHT~, Free Adm. for Senior.
TPM D~LY, M1Jle~.~-re,v,,i~-~4~f-~f:any
Campu~ ~epresentative
2
.for
I till ,I
t':oo
p.m.
.
• •
•
•
.
. . • or -
$3.50 pitchers of Beer.
Mike Malet, Marist College Intramural Director, McCann Center
'.:,by
Michael Robert Murphy
After comp~ting in two of. its
••
• final three dual meets, the Mari st
mert's swim team looks to end its
regillar' season when it. hosts N. Y.
. Ma_ritime
•
this Wednesday at the
McCann Center. The Red Foxes
hope fo end their dual-meet
season on a winning note before
. going on to
l
the Metropolitan
Swimming
and ,
I>iving Cham-
pionships Feb~uary 21, 22 and 23
at Marist. Marist went into last
Tuesday's_
meet_
against -St. Peter's
with a
1-6
record after falling to
Queen's College,
63-41,
on Jan .
• 31.
Leading Marist with victories
against Queen's were sophomore
Fred Dever (200-yard butterfly)
·and juniors Pete Asselin (100-
yard freestyle) and Dave Luber
(I-meter dive). Luber's victory ex-
ten·ded Marist's diving dual-meet
· . streak to
55
straight wins over the
. .last four years. The Red Foxes
diving contingent. is looking to
• capture its fifth consecutive con-
ference. title a.t th,e Metropolitan
Championships in two weeks. Ac-
cording to Marist Head· Coach
Larry
Van
Wagner, · after
Wednesday's meet Marist will
begin tapering its workouts in
preparation
·
for the champion-
ships in which it has the goal of
better_i11g
its 11th place ranking of
a year ago.
•
. ·• .:
..
,Women·
by
Michael
Rober(~urpby .
• • The Marist women's swim team
• completed its
1984-85
competitive
season with
a:
seventh place finish
at the Metropolitan Swimming
and Diving Championships at St.
Peter's College last weekend.
.
•
·
Dance Music .
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The Red Foxes finished with a
total of 202 points· behind first-
• place Montclair State (N.J.) who
compiled 80S points. •
continued on page 9
.
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"Feb.--1-t'-.i:.,_g:oo
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·__ in_
the NeY! ·oi~ing-·Room-
--~s1.oo
Admission·· •
· GIVE .TO.THE •
AMERICAN
:::_,CANCER
SOC~;
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.FOR MARTY :BEAR·
·WtL·L-BE
·
"JOE PRATT"
Refreshments Will .Be Served.
"BOUR'B'ON STREET·F-ESTIVAL~'
12':Nooil
•
4
p.n.,.
Gallery :Lounge - .campus Center_
·GAMBEL~FLI-N-G
Wrth
Darwin
-Ortiz
:9 p.m.
Dining
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