The Circle, February 28, 1985.xml
Media
Part of The Circle, Vol. 30 No. 15 - February 28, 1985
content
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Voi&ime
30,
Number
15 •
f~l!ll!
·,gr¢t!S':/~[(~~fl,j~\!!~~jilf
1
~,!~~s
.•
Pox
Fd'natics'
cheer,
Jeer
by Rosemary Olsen
•• in that posjtion. '.'Theadininistra::. the):esJ)()nsibility,lies-soleiy with
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A. r~cerit i~Jo~,,~y:a h~tional ~~~of~~g~:~J~~TT~t:r~~~l!~Jitifi~8lt:/;J~~J;j~;l~!
:~
their
·way
th.rough·
·season
·
. , ._,education_
group widely criticizing · - • : The. mstftution _needs·
the;finan--. get ·-lazy.:
but if _a.
teacher pushes;•
-~eri~n
colleges Jmd·· _univer-• ctal
IOJ?UL
of -students
I
and· tlteycando the work.'!<:, •··. • ·-•
-
siti~ has. becoi;ne:
the_ cent.ei:
• of:a pressures· f~c~lty not·. to ~~ucate,;~, ,Bettenci>~rt
• ·•
·' -i;t~d • out
·that
. ~~uonal deb~te on the quality of butto kc~ studentsjn sc~ool, • Marisf
15
takiiF steps to raise
}i1g~er educauon_t~~ay. _ _ • _· .. 1:utfiyya said. '.'We have a snua~. s
d
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.
,
-T1~led "Integrity m:the C:ollege tton w!t~re th~ unedu~t~d _are. q1:e::1r:t~!!tli:~!~s8f~!ea~~
:.Curriculum," th_e 47-page_
~epprt deJernnmng their-edl!cat_1on,"
she b ·institutin .
a new·
adiri
: _from. the A~encan '. -Assoctatmn _ said. "T~ey are setting the sJa~-, Jlicy that wfu add min: Jette~
of Colleges ~s based on_ a .th~ee-·:dards.•:
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-· .•
;-·. ••
_•' .
grades~ ''Thjs will
give
the faculty
year anal~s1s of .
IL.
colleges : _
A_ pro{essor, Ylho aske~ not to
•
more levelsto deal with '.' he said.
.
thrpughout the- country. The be 1dent1fied agreed with . Lut- "If will als h
1
l
·
report . charges that • standards fiyya. "Five to eight years ago, better idea
O
e P
st
u e~ts get a
~ayeJallen a~d that curriculum is · there were strong. feelings that the at.,, •
of where
th
ey re really
m need of basic restructuring.
future of the college was threaten-
' Recently, some Marist faculty ed,"
'
the
professor ·• said.
member~ were asked to comment "Teaching was done: to please
on !he report; and on the state of students· and to keep jobs, and
education at ¥arist.
•
• this is still .present. Every school
. The • question
of lowered should have a scholarly tradition
academic '.standards was of par-
and Marist does not."
•
ticular concern for them.
Student evaluations add to the
Nawal Li,l!fiyya, ~i~tant pro-
problem, according to George
fessor of commumcat1on arts, Sommer, professor of English.
said she believes the report's "As a consequence of student
criticism of standards applies to evaluation, faculty consciously or
Marist. F;_a~lty members feel they unconsciously are responding to
must keep st1;1dents
happy in order the pressure of what students
to keep their jobs, she said. •
want," Sommer said.
•
.
Lutfiyya faulted the academic
Joseph Bettencourt, professor
administration for putting faculty of biology, said; however, that
. Nadine
Foley,
divhion
chairperson of humanities, admit-
ted that collegt".S
are in a difficult
position. She said . that some
students come to college withour
the prerequisites of reading; ·oral
and written expression, and
teachers have to try to deal whh .
that without lowering their stan-
dards.
.. lil its report, the Association of
American• Colleges- condemned
both· general education programs
and major programs of college
Contlnnecton
psge
9
• : from the administration and the
.
.
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_ ,J..
students. C'lt's gotten so people··-
.
Marist ~ollege • basketball fans
<
save us seats at the game·. now .
don'.t ·'have. to look. twice when ·::.
They really want us there,'' said
. they· hear loud _shouts from the :'.junior Thomas Begg. "Everyone,
stands during home gaµies. . ._ ·,
including President Dennis Mur-
·,,
The •~Fox Fanatics;''-~ group
ray; lias told us· that they like
oL' Marist stud_ents,
•
are well what we're doing -
even the
known for their cheers and jeers • players;''
•
and the way they animate every .
.
Asselin . and Begg, . both of
home game with energy, spirit
Waterbury, Conn., the hometown
and painted faces.
_ .
of Marist's senior guard Bruce
• The students paint their faces
.
Johnson, have only missed one •
red and white, Marist's school
home game in the -past three
colors, in an attempt to get more
-
years. Asselin, Begg and Johnson
support • for the . team in atten-
attended Holy Cross High School
dance and to generate crowd
together. <'That's when it all
spirit at the games. • •
started," Begg said. "We used to
"We want more students there,
go off back then." .
.
involved and really intd' the
Asselin, Begg and sophomore
games. Hopefully we can turn the
Vinny Oliveto, of Bohemia,
gym into a pit, have the noise so
N.Y., first painted their faces for
, loud ;md with such an effect that
the Marist-Siena game last year;
other. teams are afraid to come
Since then many other students
piay us,"
said junior Peter
have joined them.
•
Asselin, one of the originators of
"People from Marist have.
the group.
•
come up to us in bars and asked
• The
Fox
Fanatics
have
•
-themselves received aoolause
Continued on
psge
2
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Continued fr~rn page l
us if they could come along: Even
a group
•
of
people
:
·,
fr<mi
Poughkeepsie have. brought
.their
own paint to· the gam~
•
and
wanted to sit with us," Begg'said.
"Some people. think.;
'.we're
.
crazy and off-the-wall, or that'.we
just drink alot," Begg said. "Ifs
not true. We nevet touch
a
dr~p
before a game. We just
·
get
psyched-up.".
Many
•
Marist students, like
Eileen McGough, of Queens,
N.Y., said that they like the spirit
the group brings to gaines. "They
create an atmosphere. They get
everyone psyched. They are real
team supporters and I think it's
great. You feel· like you can go
crazy
·
with
them,"•
said
McGough,
a sophomore
at·
Marist.
"They're an icebreaker for the
crowd,"
added
sophomore
JoAnn Burton, of New City;
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STlJDE.NT
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ORIENTATION~>STAFF
MEMBER-?·
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Appl_ications
ar~
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~ow b~ing:
accepted~
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Affairs
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Feb. 28,
-19'5
• THE CIRCLE: Page
3,
___
,f;~t"eii}teStde~tS;~itve:·{!)u/1:,Sifln:stitddeiJ
....
dreams
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·.•
·.s
~y~cb,et
~tt
~•eller_,
>'
'.?;.<; •
, ficials had:,~efpetjed~;,'.~:uLthere
(.·
t~r_ough_:the;i~}:lo\V;tlie
audience's:
~
Jankowski of
_
Kingston was no
•
South Hills mall, co-ordinators of
}
,·,,:,:,_:,;;"_;';;i:•
F~·A ,.;,.::::
·-:;.
c:
; {::'·.:-:
'
:
·:.were
no·ipi'obleiris;<~Most
of the·,;_.
curiosity._ was_ Jtroused, when
:·36-.
longer "on the d~rk si~e? when
.
the event, said they are planning
,·.:,
...
t
·
__
.Tlie';i
~:w.eu.:~f:': im~gip~t\on
.-a_u~i~nce.-ev~n'-f~9k;th{Ubetjy_
to):
ycar::oI.d ~m
.C~~ffin
decid~d
to .
t~eUghts a_nd c,meras'focused on
.;
to hold the event again in t~e near
\brought •Prmce,-,:F~a_nk
Sinatra;
,
s11.1ga11d
da~c~i.~ ~~e-~1s_le~:<:';'.
..
:_
(:,d9
:--·~s:;,,
ren.d1t1on.
'.
of . 'The
h1~ and his fn~nds as they were
-
future. "But next year," said Stu
,'. a_~f??,~n
faff~~ty a11~ !~e ~~y.e.r. , /,
_,1.~.:.J~~
.:~ay_::
progresse_d~
, tf!e
;.f
Gla~orous
•
Life" a la ~h1ela. E. • a~~rd_ed the pnze
.
money.• «We
_·
Shantz, morning man at WPDH
Brown·Band., to· the. Sout,h Hills
,
temperature and the·crowd's en·~
.•
Durmg the second verse, .Chaffin did this act a month ago.at a con-
and emcee of the event "we will
.
m~t
~as~ ~eek.·-~d'. the.-cro"'.d
Jth}lsi_asm
r(?_se;
But no one seemed
,.
~•e~
•
out
~f.
an ~verall suit,· test in Kingston," Jankowsi said,
definitely need a bigge; space in
.
_loved
1t.
·
:· ·
:·-=:,
! ., ·,
.
•
< ·
:·
to mind; they just
-screamed
for·:
:flmshmg
up m lmgene that would _·
"so we were well-rehearsed. We
•
the mall."
·
•.)
..
_
~ver.
6_0.
:•~roup,s,~~-
r~ging !n
_.
~ore: "This is greater than): e_x.,
\
have pu! Mae West to shame.
"I
•
are still e~c~ted
•
t<?
_ be _winners
•.
"
•
.
If impersonating your favorite
._
a~c,.fro~ 9)0. J6, participated m
<
pecte.d/' said Tcrri:Dittµs;::a:11~·
_saw
Shiela: E.
•
perform on an Ja~kowsk1 and his· friends said
'musicians
interests you, butYou'd
.
-:
}h~Jfirst' a~nu!l!r"'i:'D.1.-l(South
·,
year;old
/
spcctat'or:i\from
,
award·sh~w a few w~~s ago arid/:.they.bave no immediate plans for
_:
like to try it a bit closer to home,
.:
.
··•-,'H!l.l~t;·
~~n.·,
_bp~s_yn~
:;·_cc:mtes!;
..
_,
~o~g~keepsi~;!:,!I;,c_irine'_:here
out,
•·
figllred· I could. do ~ett_er;''
:s~id·:
the ~oney •. How~ver ,they _added
.··you
may want to participate in the
.··;
m~f!li.~km~
p~rfopI1~nc~
1
~f:~heir,
.•
of.c~ri~sitf,,nd
:s~t_:a··•11i~e·
su:r~
;
Chaffi!1, ''so ld1d/;
i:
~,,
,··<:;,-•;:-,;
th.at they were excited, particular-
-_
Marist's third annual Air Bands
·.
fav,~nte
_111usi~I
artists,
..
~for~~-- . prise.'?.::,
,<
\.;;,'.'.>'
·,
,_ ,
.
'.
·.-
..
:,
~~-
·:
·
Obviously the·
.
Judges.·. didn't,:_)Y because they_ planned to per-
•
Contest. This event, sponsored by
.
cro~d,,;,Of}p~r()X~,!!1atel)i
6(l(),
?C.~~
:
\
·:9uri~usj,assers~by
'~ften
°
s'toJ).-·.
<th~nk
so,-because
:the:
three
2
g!and.:,::fonn_
again, a, f ~w hours later~ at
.
.
both
i •
the class of
•
1986 and
.:_
ple.Ji
,.:_,
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,,
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.
,
,: ,.
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_
·ped
ioJakc'::a:¢e,k:over'the rows'
\prizes
of$101.50 were awarded
to:,:
Ulster Commumty College.
.
Seiler's, will be held during the
•·
Th'e crowd "for.··the six-ho"\n
.·
ofh~~df
'··;tryihg
to·get a glimpse
·imitators.
of
.
Prince;· Frank •
•
Jeanette Spaeth, sales represen-
last
:
weekend in March. For
:
;
eve~t
,wfis:
l~2er than contest o_f~ of the action.
··Then,·
~idway
Sinatra, and John Cafferty.; :
•
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tative at .WPDH, and Kathy Par-
.•
registration and more inform a-
.
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.,.
•·
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·. •
···
.
•
•
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CaffertY" im~r,sonator
Mike,.
sanko,
•
marketing director of
•
tion, see Bob LaForty.
·BC>HY
jtn,Gtg·e
iS
focus:-,
as
Mari~f
Shapes· ~P
•:::::://~:.(.~";•~~:,•~
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••
:.brf~r!Stl~?
1,~rs~~
:
_Ai~~
0
;aid both
~tuderits
and resi-
•••
-.•.
Marist College is ta}sing ~.goo.cl
'
dent
.:assistants
approached lier
•
lool(atitselt
,;,:,,;
·:
~/'.~.
·.·
:
.. ,~:
•,:
. :, :,
with the
top~c
of diet and_
exercise,
•
.
__
·_.·
·rlieJirst
of a. five-part· "Body
.,
and added it
was
"a common con-'
,_•
. Jmage'.';/. series , of,;. discussion cern·among'stuclents.",:
: •
:·
•
.'
groups;on dieting, exercise
•and
.
Jane
O'·Brien, director of·
.
weigh(conireLwas sponsored by health services, said there were
a:·
•
•
the counseling center last. week in
·
·variety"
·of"topics.
discussed at the
•
the.FiresideLoun'ge:
::-
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>
:.:
.·
.
meeting,' and the group provided
·.,
Students and: faculty. attendea inpti( to
._help_.
make. the
.
overall
•
.
the lecture, held ''in response to
.
prograrri more effective.
:'
>
•
_·
~tuderit request ,and desire for self
:.
.•
().'Brien
:
sa,id
'
students
.
ap~
d
.•
•
improvement;'
..
·
•
said
:
Roberta
•.
proached her
<with
the idea that
•
~
Ainato; director. of counseling:· you
••
can't Jose
•
weight on. a·
;j
services.
··:,
.
:
• ·. ,;. ·,
•
cafeteria ·diet, but she maintained
~
,:
·
·;•~we
~re not
.expe:rts;''
she said ..
_·.
that·'.'any diet could be:successfuL
~,
.
•
•
..''.lt';s
mo.~e:
~ll
of usJia:vin~ ~ad with
t~e
rig,.t nutritional· infor~
·,
I
.
·
s1mllarexpenences.''. .
•
,
..
·
.mation."
c_·•.•
.
·.,
•
•• •
.
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•
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....
,:
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The _second session·· will
·roc·us
•
.
Diet, nutrition and exercis~· in-:
_-
..
:.-)
.-_
..
o~-diei ~<(w~ght co_ntfol ~dJhe
forll}a_ti~n
was handed out d_uring
·
. ,
·
:
-
.
thir~ will be on exerci~e. _Informa--
•
the meetmg and over the course of.:
j
~-
::_:\:
..
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-,.
·.:··':·~_\,WJ~.~:~st~-~~-
cam~~~
.d~.r~~8:::-~01:1ts;-'lectur~~:arid
pa~el·dis~us-·
. _.
.
_-.
_-t~c
week_s_.they.w1Wb~_held,
said sions~·An,iatosa1d.· •
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.-_·_{_\:_·_·_·:_i
::_-:;
byM~eyA:~~·
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·'.: bu~iers,~~d--hotdogs a~l day
-a~d:i;.oving·.
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, • the·gathering area to the grassed lawn area
.,;_,:
' :
i ,\S~~i9r
cl~s.sr_epr.esent~ti~_es
a11_d;iJi~ll}ber,s_
;\. .'
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\?etween.the.boathouses.:
<
•
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<",.
,~,
/<>rJ.~~_,d!DlJ,1,lStratt.<?D
\YIU
meet t~IS y.,eekto
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'
According to Murphy, the senior class·
,._
•
,~:. ·
d1~cu_~s
a
prnp65.ctl.
desig~~d'.
to make. Rh,~r,
•
.
< /
.
'.wants ;th~
day to be better organized,
·He
,....
:
,_ ::Datsafer~ acc,?r~i~(to,ge~.ar<!9>~_..,de!1n,:,
_
it·adde,t,:th~t
he.)Jso
·hopes
fo have ;.the_
oofstudent_affa1~r:,
/';//·:~'=
:,_-,/:
<i'_.,. ~.,;: :_
Ernefgericy; ~edicaLSevices
:set
j.tp·
inside
•
:a's-
A
gr,ot1p,o(~c;nior,s·h~
~et several umes,;:c::;.
;)he
boathouse.in case of.an accident
•..
-
so Jar
:tllifye~r:
~!tli~<::;ox.
to
;~isc11ss)Uv.er
•
•
.··
.
•
A,ccording to Cox', River Day has
_
an
_-
D~f
:Dunng>the)11sr~~eting
·cox
0
asked
.
-~-
~4.v.m~>#{e~t'.oil the' Poughkeepsie com-
••
~~mor class officers to \:v"o;k
o_n;~
pr~p?sal.
• .. •.
m·unity. The
,people
at St; Francis Hospital
.:·,
IL the PfOposat looJcs,h~e:,1t:·1s
feasible-,
•
•
.
think of River Da'y as ''a war zone," Cox
:,t~en
we w1llset up a comm1tte~of.s~udents,
.
>
said, "Each
'River
Day brings the very real
facplty and st<lff to ~ork-on ho\Y.it could
•
possibility of death/' Cox said. "You're
:lJ~_m1plemente~(!.
said Co)!:._.
:.:
..
opening the door to a tragedy."
. .,
·<·
'
£,?,x
-~~d~d,
liow~~e1\ that: !h~·•:co~leg~
••
•
Tradttionally the date of the event
_has
. _does._not
ce>~don.e
River Day.
•
hs a;.no.n~
.
.
.
..
been kept secret by planners until that mor-
•
colleg~,
~ve!1~;
.,Not
only does the college not
• •
• -:~--
ning/ Senior pfficers have voiced concern
al?p~9ve)~•~erDay;. th~
_college
is against
-
·abdut)osing the surprise aspect of River
R1verpaY./-.:~~•qC_ox_,<·t
.:·
•
.
•
-:· ....
_
Day>\.-_::_:.,_:,
•
.
·.
-
•
;
:.
·'
·
Past_ ~yentfJave been marred by van-
•
'.
However/Cox said- he believes the
·ele-
dalism: a!_ld
~
inj~ry>• !;~st' year Kenneth
:-'..
inent of surpri;e can be retained even .if the
Bohan,
cl"!5~
pf '_Sf; fell off a cliff near the
•
event
)s·
plaiineci
•
in• advance. "Statistics
.•
. Hudson R~ver dunng t~e_'~~official holiday
show that over half.
o(
the student body
and was ~nocked_u~~~m~c1ous.
•.
-'
,
•.
.POJ>Ulation
who are new to_ the. campus
. Cox said he rec~gmzes.th_at
t~e e~ent 1s a
don't"know what to.expect on River Day,"
.difficult one to control.-• 'Manst 1s grow-
he said;
•
. .
• •
.
.
ing_; the student. body, h_as gotten larger.
~urphy said he believes the administra-
,.
This factor makes . River
.
Day: more and
tion
and the senior class can work together
.more ~angeroµs," h~said.
: ;
.
·_
.. ·•
•
•
and. come up with a proposal th.at will
Semor officers said· they also are con-
•
•
benefit everyone. "We want to bring across
cern~~-aqou~. the safety of..st~dents
_at.
the
the idea that River Day is not something to
trad1u~mal
·nverfront
,gat~enng.\"I
feel
.
be scared about;'' said Murphy. "River
that River Dar shol!ld not continue in the.
Day can be something that is good-:-- if we
s~me
_man_ner
1~ has m the past.,~ve!1tua!IY
keep the injuries minimial and stop the
-
.someone
__
1s g~mg to get h~rt,
-
said Jun
. complete drunkenss of the past."
Murp~y. president of the semor class.
Cox said if students want to hold on to
• •
SC:mor officer~ hav: not revealed all the_
the tradidon of River Day, age in New
" details: of their R!ver Day
•
proposal.
York state is changed to 21, he said.
"If
~owever, Murphy ~aid the proposal would
River Day is allowed to exist in· students'
m~lude a better sou_nd system and _portable
minds as a day to drink all you can, then
toilets. They also will propose serving ham-
there cannot be a River Day."
....
Mc1rist
stuijents
·get
ready_·
.:for>a.warm-weathet
break
·r
i
•
..-..
\
.semester
showed that students
. .
.
.
.
were interested in Hawaii too, so
.
On Thursday, Maich'7, they'll
•
..
that was also chosen."
:
be·finis~frlg up _the ".Veek_'s
work
,
.
Students on
.both
the Florida
'. •
and daydreamm~ a~out the
_~eek. ::
and Hawaii trips will leave Fri-
to. come. ~y midmg~t- t~e next
. ••
d~y, March 8. The 23 students go-
·
·
n,nght, they
II
be relaxing
10.
a set-
.·.
ing to. Florida will return Friday,
Ung ~ar removed from Manst -
·
March IS.The 22 goirig co Hawaii
that's ex~ctly what the
I
College will return on Saturday -March
:
Union Board had in mind when it
'1s.
,
•
•
•
'
•
.·began
planning last semester for
Brunner said that in order
to
··: its Spri~g ·Break trips to
'Florida
•
prntect the students and the
•
•
artd·Hawai_i.
•..
•
•
•
•
school from any problems that
0
••
0
Stie Bru_nner, CUB vice presi-
.
might arise, there will be a
dent, said that the' choices for the
chaperone traveling with each of
trips, wh-ich the CUB runs every
.
the groups. Teresa Manzi, assis-
•
year, were made by interested
•·
tant director of college activities,
students at a meeting in
•
1ate
._
~'ii}
be going to Hawaii,· and
November.
•
Carol
Graney,
north
end
"Fort Lauderdale, Florida was
.
z:esidence director, will go to
chosen because that's the tradi-
Florida.
•
tional place for_ spring break,"
"In Florida, people go wild and
Brunner said.· "A survey last
Continued on page
9
·:·Di~ing.
qut·
at the Culinary
by Janet McLoughlin
If you are planning on eating at.
The Culinary Institute of America
soon, you better call and make
your reservations now.
.
According to· Carol L:ally, the
•
director of Public Relations for
the Culinary, there is a several
months wait for dining there on a
-Friday
or
Saturday
night.
Although, during the months of
January, February. and March,
you might be able to get a reserva-
tion sooner because these are the
slower months.
Lally explained that during
these panicular months, people
are hesitant to make reservations
because of unfavorable weather
conditions, and because a Sl0 ad-
vance deposit is required.
The Culinary features two main
dining areas opened to the public.
The American Bounty Restaurant
is the perfect restaurant for you if
you enjoy traditional, American,
regional dishes. "All the. ingre-
dients we use.are American. We
try to use indigenous ingredients
native to American tastes." said
Lally.
The American Bounty has a
warm and hospitable atmosphere
with a
,fairly
elegant decor. It's
has an a la carte menu so one can
make one's own choice. Accor-
ding to Lally, the entrees at The
American Bouncy run about four-
teen dollars with the average
check being twenty-nine dollars
•
for dinner.
If you prefer more extravagant
Continued
on
page
7
l
·,
·,,
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t
·
·
·
-
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·Scholarships:_-' •.
•
:
_.
,;;1;>· ••
·
De~rEdii6;-'":.•::·
. .':··.
f)~\-·:/-:\~,:;.
:M~~~b_l~
198Sp~·~i-mi~r·d~t~·for-
•
Recently;' fout Mari"st.
studen_ts.,
\
applica~i<>tjsJ<?r
tji'eJ9~~
seri_es
'were
selected. as
:
'recipients
'of
of'thesc'
·uri.dergraduate
-~cholar-::
.
r9g4'.:g5'
·:
Emp.lie
r
Staie'
s'1ip_s,,a11d_:gr_aduate
fcllo~s~ip~.
Mathematics
and
Science Teacher,
.
lnt~restcd
•
stucf.citts:
:IIl,Y
._obtat_~
....
Sciiolarsblps,
.
awarded
.•
by•(.the.
i
app!ic~ti,011s:;,
''iuid:
.::
_eHg_ib!_li'!Y
;
•
New
.
York
•
State<
·Education
.
spec1ficat1ons
at the Fmanc1al.
~!d
.
•
Department. This award progr~m
•.
Office.~nd ~he-,C~ffice
_of_.}'c_a~~et
•
isdesigncdtoincreasethenurnber
Education.
• •.
•.•
..
·:
..
; ?,/·"<\
·
•
-of
:
certified·.
teachers·
•
of
:
.
.
:
•
,
S~ncerely,_
mathematics
.
and science
•
within
~
'Kenneth
M;-Po\\'.ers
•
New York.
,
,
..
··.
·
"
.
,.:
Assistant Director:of
•
.
Students are
rcminclcd
of the
•
.•
'.;.
Firilln~ial
A~d
•
-
.
~
..
·.:-;
:
:",
.
·.'
.
.Whose
Pub?
..
:
..
',
-.~
·:;:.
Wh/ca~'t w~ h'av/reas-~nable
i~
t.he
i~di~idual~"tii~~selves:
.
>
prices, drinking specials and hap-
•
•,
,
'
, •
:-
PY hours? After all most"Of us are
.
•
The a~i'nist~ation
\.
shouici·
:
'
payirig
~
c~nsiderable sum to go realize· that each of us is <>n
;
a-
•
to-Marist and should have some limited.budgetand that
die
prices
.•
.
.
:
say.into how. our: social facilities in
·the
pub are not
refl~ctive
__
of
;
are run. Does not Seiters and the
,,
. ·.;
·
. .
,
...
•••
,
activities office realize tliatas part
.
this fact since they areriditillous-
•
·: ;'_)
1
'1·
1
··.:,:·
.•
J.··.·
..
·•
.
.
_·
of o1!r.a~tiv~ties
fec,\\'e a,re ~titled
~ly
high'-for a colleg~ pu~:: This
.
_
.
•
to this nght.
:. . : ,,·
..
,
..
•
·,
"forces
~us
to:
go to other places,
---
.
•
h
.
.
~
••
;
.
•
•
,
• '
••
J
•
•
.
.
• .
I
.f
,
J
• '..
.
·t·
...
•.
•
I
.
am sure that.· others; besides
'
such
as
-The·
Workiitg'Class and
J
his·
+t·~r.,~r.'·is
cl.o.:n7ero_u.5.
I
L-V"':5 ~o..
.
,, ••
,n~
..
y·
0
.'t'.~'
,he.
,myself
'ha.ve
noticedi that
Oilte. ·Butterfields
who
·cater
'tc)'
this
I
,
• , •
•
_
.
..
•
•.
•
.
.
•
.
.
•
·
.
prices of beer. in o.ur Pub arc
C:QD:
ii~;°' Since. many:
·
of
·.
us·:
.are
·
S
0
cFf'
4t
en
f.he_
-f
h
:~Lv
·H;
-f
c...
n
cl·
I
h b..
d.
f-,o
5
~;:.,;,
'_+'
~
'7,
·_.
:
•
.•
\:
siderably
•
higher
·~ban
other
CQI~
''respe)Iisible
drinkers'' thuchool
.'·
;,,,, y.
1/,fc.
l.:
..
•;..
.
.
:
,>:
: •
.
_Ieges.
Being
a
senior;
1
hav,e h_lld is'forcing us to pay for taxis:t0 geL
. •
•
✓_/
•
•
•. •
••
:,
<;:
.:
many
·opJ>()hrt~ilithics
-
1
.to., :vidsith.
the there
.in
order to: avtjid:
:possible
,
i
.pubs
at
ot er sc oo s
·an
·.
ave
'DWi;s:-·
Thc
·cairtpus
0
-shoul~
be·
.
I
_··noticed
considerably lowerpri~cs. the center'ofour social Ufe/not.
/
::;
iri· beer.'
.
Fof example, schools
.
the local bars especially
:.when
•
..
I
<such·;
as.:
Niagara;-: Qtiirinipiac most·-·are
.
not
\vitliin
·.
walking
•
'
I
.QneonJa
:tnd Fairfield {whic~ is distance·: It may scem:rromwliatl
••
,
•
:·
•
.
•
_
,
1
••
•.
..
•
• •
••
.
•
•
•
•
•
;·r~!1
by, Se1~ers.i1:l~o)
aUhave_lo~er,. have written· so far that'T'dislike
.
•.
.
•
.
•.
.:
.•
:,
.
.
,.
•
:.-
•
•
, ••
·,
•
•
.
'
:·
•
:
·.'.P_r~c::fi::~~
f;~~·-a:~e~ber
--~
..
-
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.-
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/~".:_..-:_.-.:.
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::::.<:
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~,.'.:,:11··
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;t\? :~;·,:
.
.:'.~-·of,t_~~-S~_i~erts~:1ff~~~f~~~,P*(:-.}t:,~!t:-:tJS~~:~~i101r:t::iuH~!··
,
..
·::·
••
c.·.
-
::
,_··<·. •.
;'
::-.;A_::i•;ja··-·1,..;'A·e·;:
·m1·~·c·:·.,
.':;,.a·
:,:-+1:h:--0'":·-s'
..
!ff~~·e·<
'·~e;~~--i\'.":,.~t<}f·:.··
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·=;-:~~:~~~J;!}:~~~J~1:.-!~;!?:·,:_a)ew._?g<Jp~::al·gu#!~i~s:itJ¥.~Xi~--:
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r-1.'\i,,,
LI.','
.
·-t
·L
'
•.
p,Jiit
·_J:,- ...
,,_'.~:
:••,·.
·.:·:
·'"merit.is'a(:fault;'•sintje'·_Skinners:.;:,mght~ar~~su_ly,ag~o
..
t~n:i,e~:-.
·
..
·
'_'
,
.:.
•. ·".-.':·,
·
-· •
·.
·
··, ....
:
·
...
_;_,.·
·>.'·
._·,
··.:. '-: .··:/·.·,
·•·.
>_··.
::::-·;
:
·:·.-
.
price
is
·at
$3.:7S,
·The
.Working·
:.
offenng_acho1~eof}19uorb~~-es:
,
•
·
·
•
··
•
"<.
,·
'
·.
.··••
·
:.
· .•
, ·.
•.
·.
··-
..
· ·•·
··•
: <.
,.,
•
: ·
•
\:.:
:
/:;,,:.
;.,
·;°:,:;.\,:·:;;
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'
,
...
',
Class' $2150
'and·,-Biitterfields
'oh
•
the
-usual
cJ.t~1ce
•
of•,c~nIY:
t,~rt:
..
.
. .
The
:·housing
shc:>'{tage
at
Maris.f
has
be~n:
·::;
.
•
·,Btit
\th~·
~1isf:.6f
a¢adei:nlc
.
btijldj'ngs
•
Is
·:
Friday.is
Si
JO
als'o;
••
:'. ·:
•
•
..
''
•
•
·
·
•
wine
·and
soda•~ commeoda~lJ,;
·:
;.c~,,
a concern for years;·arii:Ht:ie
bol_leg,rs~ems:
••
emb~~rasslng.
)The_:;
college> owns
.
one
,
.,
.
T~e. pub.shq~l~:also 9e.abl~ to
.
.
.. ,
.···.·
.
.
.
.
.
.
:
.
,',
•
to b~
.
gettl11g
:
It
•
·1J,n_<1:9r
cont~QI. The ne_w
....
·.
aca~emlg;/bulldlng, palls\ the
;,front
.
of
_a:
.·
.
offer_drix_ikiitg}~~llis
and ~ap~y
..
·,
..
_T~e v,1ew_s
of
_e>ne.
or two !id~)
aparti:nenL pqn:ipl_ex
,.~hould
.
al!evlate the,·
•
war~hou~~- i!s
•
~'!;lls!
_Carr:ipus''.
and, hid~~ a,;
.
,
hour~-•
$mc.e,.1_t:A~e.~}1ot,,:
1s_}h1s
·-,_
mm1strators should not rep~esent
,
:.
pressurE9 <>f
ov~rcro~d~d. c1orms,and ~oney-
.
•
library. somew~E9re beiYleen the.
_chap,1:a~~.
•
·\because ••
J\11inst)if_pr'?01ot~s.
/:the<·
what'.\\'! wantfro111
quR_Pub.but
·.:
eating off-campus apartments.
.
.
:
·i
afacu.lty <>fflce.buU~lng'.
.•
•
•.··. ..
'·.
··>··
..
•.
'··•·
·•.:
.
aspect/<>f
:,:
:•res~ns1b\~-;~nn~-
'>
the paymg_students
o~ this schoe>l
:: :.
Students. worked hard to bring th_elr
•
:
The·campus certainly fjiiS_
EJnougt, sheHttr,,
,
.,
ing?'!
. ,WelJ,
••
fjne,
J_, belteye m_
,·
shoulcl J,e_.
the ones who set the
•
•
•
concerris· before
-
,the.
administration,
•
and.
to meet th_e.
basic S!,Ji'vlval;
h_eed~ of; Ma(l~t/;
.
respofasible_:
·4rinking
_,also~·
):~ut
•.,
..
standards.
.
.
.
••
administrators have· done very well· to meet
•
:
students~
·.They: .shc:>uld
,
be
;.comfortable
,.,
,
who arethe.Maristadmii:iistrators
:
•
'.
:i- ,.·
•
.
.
.
. ,
.·
.
:·,
\
..
some v~ry-pressi~g demands.
..•
J · ·..
.
··•·.
•
•
enough
..
tQ serlou·~1y.~(1uc~te
thetT!se!ves.'So
.
to,say·tliat-drinkinifsps,cials/~nd)\;.Is, t~s
_a
:qu~tion._oLJiJcle_o-
;•
>
. But it's a
.
bit 1n;mlc that a!1
•
~du_cat,onal
where are
_they
g(?mg to d~ It?
•
.
-
,
happy· hoµr5.-,
are;idct;terreii,ts
•
to
:<Chnsttan_
'-'.~lu~:
.
\\'ll1~~-
.
,¥.anst
t.
mstltuUon would
-perform
f!l8JOr surgery-on
.
•
Marlst must take a sen~us IO(?k at Itself
.... resp.e>Ii§ibl~
/' _clr1_n_k_111,g;
,,l'.ll;e
;
keeps. throwmg
..
m
our, faces?-, I
ii
housing
-while
mer~ly putting. bandaids on
..
and do s_omething about ,ts se~ere l~ck of,
·
.. :
studerits of drinking age
at
this
cthinkthat
young men and women'_::.·
Its academic µuildings.
.
•
•
. •
•
..
.
• academic. facilities: The faculty Is serious,/
•
:;.
schooi
·
are
'
ihdependen't·.jadults
·-
.
who•
·are
soon
·entering
:info
the'\'
: .
The strange·. th I
rig
•.
is
.that
If.··
a
_stranger •
•
:
abour· reforming· Marlst's: ~ca~eml9~,.
•
b~t
<
/-~p~bl~
,;'
o,f.,. cie~errilirifog
••·,
w,liat
·;:.
real world s)ic>'uld_be.
ma~iilg their
:;
were· to walk around_ the
..
Marlst· C?arnp1,1s
...
·
tm;:pnvenlent and overc~owd~d:~Jaf3~r~on:is
::
.•
,
resp·onsible"::'
:~riµking
;£is·
i•to
<~wn
::decisi<>ns:;.;.~·;;;~~;:D?:n't-:-
without being told people went to classes.,:. don't help.: Their battle. V/Ol!l_d.\be;:Jn~~-h.;.f
,:·
themselves
.. Each-stud~nt kno'IVs
:.you?
•
..
:·
...
'
··
>
·
< :~-
;>:,-;;?
,
,.
there; he could very 4:!aSily
mistake It for the
•
easle_r
If
something was
:bel(IQ:
0
done
,to,·
:·
hisor,her.limits
and
if_a'few }'i~ve
•
.
•
•
•
.
..
:
·,.
·;;,:"
.,
..
!
.
'
residential section of
a
larg'ercan,pus.
•.
• ••.
lmpfov~
the actua.t_ cq_ri.d_l~lci~s
:under.,w,~ictl
·
•
•
•
a problem
~t.h
:this._tl~en
it is'-nof
.:
••
_,_:_,;·
.:
:·
:·
•
/'.\:iohn'P.;
McGeai.-y
;_,,
Compared
t!)/ many
·::other·,
colleges,--. ~heyte~ct.1<.
: :
:,-':>.
,
:,,
.. _./:
•
·:-.. • •• . •
the social atmosphe~e ofthe-pu~
,
..
~-
··,.
::=·Bu_sin~s(~ar~etjng
.
Marist's housing_·
Is
:Impressive:
three dor-.
>A$.Mar1$~
grows,we cannot f_orget that Its
that is the root of this proble~. 1t
:'.··.
:·
..
i
;:.·:>· .-
:.'>:''./.>Senior,'.·
mitorles
~:two·
north-end residences
•
three
.
primary
::,
purpose
Is
.educaUOri.·;:Un-
. •.·
..
>>,
•
,
•.
..
.
··
..
·
·
,'·
•.\,:.·,?=\".'t:"
:J.::,_.J-~'-T/~://,·
.<\
•
blocks
o'f
towntio'u'leS and soo,n a se~tlon of,'
.
,
fortunately~· right
•
now It's
.
difficult
••
to.: t~I_I.
•
•..
:
•
:-
...
Gard~ns?
'J;r::ft:;:·::-:?d;};,-i;itX
·.
.
~,~~rde~
apartments.
•• •
whf!~her Marlst Is a cou,g~ or a su~urb!
·:
•
•
•.
:~.
.
•
•
•
.
,, ~- •..
. :
!{
~jj::?J:}[~;/{;:})}):{;:f
:·;.J
..
,,
Dear Editor:-<
•
:
"
>
·
• ..
>
.
all the dogs· :whq
Ji.ren
't supposed
•
•
<
,
(don't want this to
be
tak~ri-as
•
to live th~e in the first place~
.
.
·E111erge1].cy·:
;.
.
.
.
..
a:
case
of one
_disgruntZ~
·stud~n.t,
.. .
•.
·
ijf!ritage
•
is. _qwi~ th~ o~posite
railing:againstthe fate of. Marist
..
:
of a gar.den
being,
in fact,
a slum
.
transfers
;
(though,
:.assuredly,
•
.which
is pop11lated_by
the lo'tVlicst
:
•
Stay
•
&!one
.
In
.
0
th~
:
townhouse~
.
one
•
who;s going through yourroom.
•
·:
·-~.
.
.
.
•
.
_
that's wllap am.) Rat.~cr;.I,,w~nt;:
):~ass
of, c~tizens
~otow~ ha$ to
~f~
..
\
•
:weeken~
when your hqusernttes
~~~
away._-
_:·· •
Run to Gregory to
use
the'.-i(?use·ph_one·~
••
..
this to
be
taken·~ an.o~)~t~r'
•.fcr~Jfyou;~"er
Vt'ondC!,~
where
..
Around 9;1Q p.l"fl.,
~fter the can,p,u~ operator
j
Call security. Walt. Go outside. Watqh the
..
to Marist froni all the
students
at
,
•th~
peoP.le
frQlll'W:e
M8!D ¥~Ugo
Js:ott·duty~ pick up.a.~~!,J_se·p~qne. Dial 6
:
thief take,your stereo. See·,hlm drive off.
,,
Hcritag~· ·Wlio-~·are,\:'.1c:ssi.'·th~>~!tnight;-~~~~1e.1~the~s~et;,.
(tti~ nur,ib~r
_needed
Jo
get:~ c~p_us line
)
Write down the license plate number.
i
:
satisfied with tneiisituation:.:
·_;.:
•
·~
.-And·Manst kno"°s this. Th~y
outside the 'townhouses) and Usteri to the
l
See security people come. Seethe police
•.
For those.who h'avc·ncvcr
seen:.·
\lSe Hcri~age
~
a threat to people.
busy signal. Try to
.
~1,t a. friend
In
qham-
.
cars.
•
•
.
.
.
the
Herit~g~ Qardeµ Apartmentsr, who scr~,
UJ>
on
-~pu~.
When I
pagnat:.~Jst~n to the busy~slgnal. Curse the
.
.
Listen to the questions. Don't ans~er.
, located
on.·
Innis· Avenue,
"the
first moved to Hentage m the fall
phone;
.
,,,
•
•
\
.
•
..
Pick up the phone. Dial 6. Hand the receiver
name
can be
.d~iving,~
There· is. of '84, there !"er! 56 st~d~t~. AU
Now hear the someone trying to break In.
·.,
to security. Walk away. Spend the rest of the
nothing garden~like about
it
ex-·· of whom were either disapbn~
Pick up the phone. Try to call security. Dial
•
weekend with a friend
.whose
house phone
cept the preponderance of fer-
•
cases or transfer students, which
6. Hear the busy signal. Run from the guy
works..
•
tilizer on the grounds, courtesy
.of
Continued on
page
8
I
Christine Dempsey
THE:
EdHor.fn-Chltf
Lou Ann Seelig
Senior
Edltcw.
AcmrtlllngStaff
Bernie
Heer
Johne.kke·
Denise WIisey
AuoclN
Edltorl
Brian Kelly
Cindy
Bennedum
PaulRaynls
C.rtoonlat
laura Reichert
BonnleHede
NewsEdtton
Car1MacGowan
AmleRhodes
Graphics •.
Bever1y Moriang
CIRCLE:
SpottaEdltor
Ian O'Connor
Viewpoint Editor
Pete Colaizzo
Faculty Achlaor
DavldMcCraw
Photograph}'
Edit«
MaQreenRy:an
au.tnesaManagef
laura
Reichert
·.,.,.
.f
~
~
f
I
;
.
,
.
•
1t._-:,
.
.
;'
l
[.•/
f
f.,
·1
.
t
t·
!·
Controversy
•
•
I
.
':
lVhO
c.Cllres?
:-·
:•t::/·:_:i.:(::".)~''
':·
'.
-;-<•·:,·.
,
. -
.
byCb_rjstian
l\t:oi'rls«>n
.:
'.·'".:'.:)
__
··.,~_',':
..
•.
~e;{ about Student· Government somehow.it seems hypocritical for
.,
'.',.~>····:.••::,
..
·•,,
..
;'.\,
__
._·
·Weck:.Thisletterprovidesfurther
.some
of the
·same
professed
•
,,
,;;:'Will.-:>
the
..
;;,re_al
.,e,;yourig •
backing to.
-the
pointjiJst made. Reagan supporters I speak ofto
•
:-
:
~eptibljcaris please staJi<i u_p?
.•
.,-_._
•
According to the letter, during the ask me to write a letter to my con-
y
.·Lhaveri't·he~rd). heck of a.Jot
•
week, \'sttiaents will be exposed gressman.
Actually,
you
_
all.-
•.
"bout the.Young ~~publk.ans:this to concerns.
.that
affect
..
•
them
,deserve
some praise for not-blind-
semester;
•,but
I. ~an·. understand
.··•
directly/.' Hey; what happened to ly trusting the idiot you voted"into
·
~fo<:,:J
)'thi_nk':
.the
Young
concerns that affect us indirectly; office. Thankfully; you·are ques-
Rep~blica~s ar~•afraid to own up.:.
·or
not at all?
-How.
about showing_··.
tioning some ofhis actions even if.
..
.
i~
ttieir,.iclentities these:daysancl
.•.
us
a
film··.·
about American·_••·in-
•
.. it is just because they a!"e affecting
•
qµitffra~kly you just}ari't blame
:
tervention in Nic!liagua instead of j·ou:
\
•.•
,
•
•
-
•
••
·them.I'd.be
hidipg my head too;
•.
one aboutthe restoration of the
_Smee I was a Mondale sup-
:
,
ifl voted for Ronald R~agani (If
.
_
Statue
of
Liberty. • Who cares, porter, I am now placed in the
•.
you!reiwondering·h9w._youj:,m
right?<
•
•
_.,
.
_
position of-saying, "I told you
• identify • the
•
•
average
'
Young
•
-I
hate to generalize and call the
•
so" to my fellow students who
Republican, just;try,to remember
.Madst
student population
self-
yoted for Reagan. Don't worry
•
those stu4ents
.who
·overzealously
-.'serving,
but somehow I can't help though, you can still make up for
supported~. Reagan· in this faU's
.
it: • After
•
all,
\Marist··:students
your· folly. by writing letters
·to
,,
elc;ction. Hint: Q1any
of them look
.
seemed. to
:overwhelmingly
sup- your elected officials about pro-
~n~
acrlik'e r?Pi>ies;) l~skyou,
.
port Ro11ald Reagan this fall.
'posed
budgetcuts that affect not
though;:wllen 1s theJast time you··
·Walter
·-Mondale
spoke about only. you, but others as welL-Of
heard: a· Marist
.
student" proudly
social justice in his campaign
·and
"course
this means that you
'U
have
prnclaimthat he voted for Ronald
naturally·.- none of
-
tis ' wanted to take time· out to examine the
.~eag~nJ,
.>:
>~
;.
\:'(.
,
.
•
..
· •
.
.
.
anythii1g
·to ·'do·
with that.-·. Did _issues
.and
~ecide which proposed
.,:;-,
Monday
.:wi}L.have
come and Marist students really care
•about
cuts are unJust. It also means th~t
•
.• •
•
;
:-:goni.
·by)~e\time.
a~yo·n.e gets to
cuts.Rc:agari would make in.social you. might have· to start caring
•
• ;,reit.dCthis,::a11d
th~re_will be a::ton programs"':thai woµld· affeet·the about those
.~ho
are l~ss for-
.
:Qf
lc;ttersj~ the mail frqm_.~.~rist
.
··elderly;
po9r ~fu~ minorities? 1'1ot tu!1ate than you. In ~ddition you
.,
•
~,tuclents,protc:sdng:the propose!,l really". Instead of listening, to
.!Jlight
.want
to question some of.
. ·,cj.lt~;il).
,finiuij::Jal aid avajlabl(to
•
Mo.ridale, many protidlyswallow~. Jhe other policies of the Reagan
•.
colleg~·:~iu.~ent~,,but;-.yliapvill
we
•
ed
all:
o(
the··RS
..
Reagan·,·.was jidministr~tion. I don't really
..
•
havc::}?:1'~.C'\;thr,o~gh
~ll
..
t~i~?
for
••'
shov~li~g without· even
-mriching'.
believe. this coul? happen,
•
but
:
•.
i:nany:
.
1t
i~11\;;prqv1d~-~
fu~her
.Aii_d
~lly
·11ot?
~ho_·really ~ares how·
·a.bout
provmg me wro!1g
Classes cOme first·
by Dan Mey~rson
tion we get by having a quality
.
program offsets the high cos.t. I.t
The college decided that it was doesn't seem fair that people
important. to cancei class on Mon-
whose talents lie in winning
day and write letter.s in protest of basketball games should be con-
the proposed budget cuts which ~idered more importa~t than
would eliminate
_guaranteed
stu-
those students (and faculty) who
dent loan·s to students whose help Marist try to achieve and
parents earn over $32,500 per maintain academic excellence .
year.
·;
Also, the impact of the cuts in
While the decision to cancel student loans is an ideal time for
classes was well"intentioned, it is Marist to show it ingenuity in
very questionable. What, in ef-
financing 'and
in · attracting
feet, are we telling our elected of-
students for future years. It is
ficials about how we value higher estimated· that
•
approximately
education when we decide that
•
1,000 Marist students will have
writing protest letters is more im-
their loans stopped if the new
portant than attending class?
budget is accepted. If Marist gave
There are a few questions that out loans at or below current in-
should
be
'.
addressed
about
terest rates, the college would
cancelation of classes: I) Why did make money on the interest and
the college opt to cancel classes the new financing would attract
instead ofstaging the protest dur-
more recruits than would using
ing a free slot or a weekend? 2) the money for other types of
Are we using student loan money recruiting.
Also, the
money
properly? And, 3) Will the pro-
would be coming back. on an
posed budget cuts severely affect ongoing basis so that continuance
Marist College?
•
of this program would not be an
.
The first· point shows a lack of expensive proposition for the col-
•
creativity on the part of the col-
lege.
:
lege, administration. Th.e protest
While. this. is only
_one
way of
•
.
strc:!:lgthemng
..
of>t,he
c1Ji:-eady-
·
aboiJt'the black unemployment guys? Three. cheers for social.
l·<
·:
S(rong_a(tiJ.#~f!hat'pe'cyacles·this
·•:rate
anyway?';
f·
.
•
•
justi~e.
'
•
r
··:·-CJ~IDP,U_S_'so_.~ot1ce~blt,.;That
at-.:,
01.
la~gh_ how
"~~en.
r
see
'.'.
It
I~
a fu~~y but sad commen~
••
would have··had
a
much greater offsetting the proposed budget
effect had the administration
cuts, I am sure with a little i~-
;
chosen to use out-of-class time to aginative thinking, this college
protest.
E.g.,
if the letter writing could_ turn a potentially adverse
was done on a weekend, then our situation and use it to their advan-
elected officials would have seen tage.
i-,
•.
•
-:
.
~.1nltu.i;!Jbl~
t'1,te.
9h.~~}.vh
1
.erf!
p~ple C~ff
•
Reagamhte~';abh.
oudt ~inpbus:
.~
1
cdrat-
,tadry
_
o!-1_
1
-Mt~nst
,studdents
thtatdthet
•
"/:
•
..
o ~\a,'?.u,_t.~~se,.,e~:-;:•··?
..
·cl?,ing::t
e1r ea s.m·
ew1 er- a m.1msraion an
01,1r
su_.en
that we are indeed serious abou·t
I am indeed in favor of conti-
·'.;:
::
;<Why::1s·,1t
that so many_ oLus
..
merit.
•
"t
·thought
Reagan.,:was
leaders-feel compelled to convince
••
~·
:
•
-
•
;
·r~IY
..
~on.'t<car~.,abo.ilt
a_nyjssue, goir( to
.zap
the
.wel.fate
mqther;
<those:.of,us
who• are not. dir~ctly
..
,.
.. :
,-
/:
~!,l~s.sr~t~irc:Ft!ri;a,ff
~_ctS.':U.~?::1.;he
·:·
:not.:
the,:~~~lege,<st1:1.de,n~ti:)'0"1f
It
.affected
by the proposed cu~s, like
•
·.;
,•.·.;
-~)?~l!c;.~.;~ay;,,t_.r.~~~y_e~:.~
.!e.tt~r;
fr?~:
:·
liea(Jh,ll!:§aY.:::10:ilI_l.9f-~p-~;
I_s~y my~el.f, that·~~-~i:.~-.:lt'_~;~,!Lt~~Y..
• fighting the proposed cuts in stu-
nuing student loan·s and agree
dent-aid.-However, since this pro-
•that·
letter writing: and·· protests
ject
·
involved. missing class, our mus.t be done to continue funding
•
•
:
'
--
• my: class·-·officers.
askmg
•
me
to:
-'ttirnaboilt
:i
is'· faii-·,·pJay.
:,
That's· knoW
·the-average•Ma'hst1student
..
.·:>.
pa1ic,it>a,tf1_ii'~leii_t:i~w_ii_tirig}~~:-,
)right/~ven")'lippies
i:i_re.
going to;
;Won'fcare
unlc;ss:he i~'-affei:ted;
r
,
q(fJclat~
.
4
Ca!J
,dismis~
,this,
prot.~st.
;,
higl!_er
_
~~~c.a~ion. ~ow ever, we
•
•
assuµiing:it
:was
dolle.beca.us,e
i.t is:
'inil~"t-•
understand_.·
that
.•
th.ere an~
better than goirig to class.
•
•
-
some s·erious faults with higher
·,.
pa1gh to. protest proposed cuts. m
••
suffer- a little. under· the Reagan'.
·mean,
honestly,11t doesn't affect
:
._financia(,
atd
'for•·
higher
_edlica~
.
Admiriistratfon;
:
' .•
:'·:,
,,:. :
rriy_
family and l'.U have. been,.
.
,
.... _
tiori: Hey/soundslike a great idea
,
.
(guess I should point,oulthat·· grad_uated
.before;it
really'. affects
·
f;.
>:
/
::gang.·
::w:~
•.
even, have
:
tlie. ad~ my:Jelli>w•itudents who voted.for. this school.)'m sifre.many seniors
•
• This bri.ngs me to the important
education· and. the
.
financing
.problem
of effectively using stu-
,
thereof.
Students
.
and
ad-
dent Ioan<money. I feel William
.
niinistrators. must work tog!!ther
Bennett, U.S, secretary of educa~
.
to find new and imaginative ;Nays
j
:J)illihi.strati.on's \back:ing.
i
ori",
:t~_!s
•:
R~agart./aren'f all bad. At Jeast:~n.~ junJors ar~;fr1.this saine posi-
~
•
,··::one:_Nq,-..v/_what:wouldhappen·1f
they voted,The one brand of stu-.
UOI)-,
butlhop¢'they_c!on't haye to
tion, grossly
•
exagge/ated the
.
to finarice education.
•
L
-
,::
.ii_group:of:studerits, ·or betteryet
:·
dent
even' ,lower
,than.
the. be fooled intb writing a .,J"tter.
!, __
•
'::·a,;gfouP:.o!-,ifacul~y/:_c1ecidedJo.
•:
Reaganiie is· the student who When you .think back to past,
number of students who
·buy
new
If we could transfer some of the
cars
·or
go to Florida for ~pring energy spent ?n _protesting a_nd
"
;· ;:
star1~;cilfupaigt1 to
_pJ,'otesr-pro-
'didn't·
:vote --or'
is, riot
.
evell Monday; you· might remember
.
ij:
.
/:~:-~ose~'.~u
11
.ddg-~t
cu
1
•i~Wtn,.:tt
1
ddonh't:adf:,
:
registert?d:Nowlhese fol~s really th~!.} wasd·
·t
1
here fohr
_the
.. let\er-
.
Break but I am sure that· there use it,. on fmdmg alternative
·are
m~ily misuses of.student.loans
.
measures of financing, everyone
,
that can be fairly eliminated.
>
would be better off. After all,
1
,
•
•
•
<
.•
e~t µs a
trect Y,
.
OU t ea -. deserve·.what .they geL Mariy cif wr}tmg
.a:n
_
was t ere ,_or one
.
i
•
..
<.:
'.
··
.
.''miriisir;ttipnjgiye_;.us
,a;
day of(:
:them
·ire:
freshmen- who will' be reason: not because:! am affected
,
Finally, I don't feel the Maiist
.isn't
one of the major goals of
College admiriisfrators are
-doing_
college. to. teach people how
to
everything in their power to help' look at problems from more than
defray the \:!Ost
of quality educa~ one angle?
J.;.··
__
:
..
_,:.'.:···:
•.
·.·.-,.·•.·.•.···•·.:,:
,
,
- :{(J~orn
c!~ses to.'irit~Jejt~rs}or:
\4it:~ctly
affected
;~Y
the:pfope>sed
•
by,tJle,proJ?OSed
C!!tS
in _financial
•
:
-.,.;i;'!ch··•a
~ause?,Someho.~ I;doubt
_:.cuts;
I'm.trying to feel sorry for aid for h1gh~r education, but.
I
if:\~e<:k,.
:~hY/cjck:;th~
bo'.at arid
,
th'ose
oC:you who fit into· thi.s. because I
.care
~b_out_
others. Do
tfon,·E.g., hundreds of thousands
of
•
dollars a year go into our
·basketball
program,. but I serious-
ly doubt that the increased atten-
t
•:
• :
·.
:~o.rry;a~<>uLsoc!~I
Jµst1c_e?.i
",,-,,
,
•
_
categoty,_-.but
if is difficult.
_T~ose
you?
..
-
.
.
-'.
.
•
·
•
.
.
.
.
_
i
,
-
-
Nothmg surpnses me:anymore.
,
who did vote for.Reagan at least
.
Cbnstia11. Mornson
1s
a Junior.
Dan Meyerson is a senior at
Marist majoring in communica-
tion arts.
l:;:
The Cou~cjl ofStudent-~ea4ers
caredabouts"omething/:
- •
,
~.-
•.
majoring
in
communication arts,'.:
t·
,
..
;
wrote aJetter te> The Circle last
•
,
'It's
not
•comt>letely.
'true;
-•but
He is an l11dependent~
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r'eaJiy'~·ine~ri
,.·
.
I
.
·.··amorig'parerits'.ahd
p'uhiicschooI· defense.The U.S.-isifounded
'ori .
ment,
he wanted. to raise the
.
_
.
'?
.
.
_
..
.
,._.
..:
teachers tl.iat coll.ege,is rigorpus,
.
principles
··or
philosophy,· prin,
-
budgedo $100 ~ilfion.
,
·:··
..
·f
1
.•'(Aiitho(s· note:'cActing:·
upon
,
~efua'ri"di~g''.·al]pji.~1¥
:-fqr
exc~Ji:;
.
·cil?le~
~llich are frequently laid:
.
Bell's replacement is William
the requests of manyto, for once,
•
ttO.I!llllY:.taiented.
yo~th~ N~t. ~rue.,:
..
aside
_
m_ order to pursue the
Bennett,
:the
for:iner chairman of
,
~,YQid
mentioning either Ronald
•
Urilike Eur"ope,
:~m,eficaJ~e~iev~t.
politically" ~xpedient principles of· the' National Endowment for the
'
Reagan
or Bernhard Goetz in this
•
in letting
'everyone
get'into th'e ac-
•
•
popularity;
•
recognizability and
H umaniti"es. Ari
.NEH
report writ-
• •
si>.ace
'- unless I have something tion. Everyone· h~s a right to a
•
votes.
.
ten by Bennett last fall also
good
Jo
say a~out thein:,:.1 shall
,
college education,. it is believed,
Short of having a'ton of dough
criticized college curriculums and
..
be,r,eby,
~att~mpt,
•to:
appease.' my
•
so curricul~~s are watere~ down,':
7anc.l
fOJlne~tions
:~ith,
~· pr~fess~r
called for reform. However, since
,.legions otread_er.s:) --:?Y
1,;-·,/ '"'·-'-'
.
the humamues de-emphasized.
)·
at,,Bard College; the· best .way_.-to he took office, the new secretary
,.".
The
:federaj/studenhai<l:
.cuts
In Eu"rope, universities retain
'pay
for a'· college ed_u~auon has
beeri criticizing
college
.
proposed by.Ro:·+ uh,ihe;current
·an
elitist attitude that.reinforces
without going broke. is to
JOI~
t.h_e.
-~tudents.
~e's the guy who sug-
adminlstr:ation is mor¢.tlian an jn-
the division· betw·eernhe:arrogant
;
Army, Navy; Air Foret:; M~rines,'. gested that students would merely
•
sensitiv~ actJo~iuds~~t\l"dents and
.
anct:•tlie: ignorant:-' IThis' is: not·
-''The
:
message of· o~,r .: present
have to· do withouf-stereos:- cars
,families
str:uggling to p~y:Jor a
desfrable, biit Mithe.}s a:-~ystein :Corrfmander~in-Cl1ief is' l~at
•
ser-
•
and three-week~iong vacations at
.
,
college.,e4ucation .. It is indicative
.
in which
·the
ignoranr:C;are·
permit-
•
•
vice' to yo1fr local recruiting of-
the beach/ While· his comments
of the low.regar.d Americ~ h.a~cof
.
ted to pretendto beintelligeCXt: :.
•
•
·;fi!=er··
comes before' filling. your
.
certainly' have merit,. they make
•
higherJearning ...
-
•
•-
.
•
.
• •
Another
•
difference
•
between
·''head
witli usetes·s ideas:
•
Man-
•
the
false assumption that folks
•
A.t
-least.
two examinations._of European schools and American
datory enscriptment is unpopular,
now in
·danger
of losing federal
•
tile U.nited, State's colleges and
•
schools is that m9st European
.
so the Pentagon and the president
aid
•
have kids who buy $1,500
·univer~itj~,
rel~eg
·
in
.the
past
coup tries completely subsidize the-·
:
have· found a way to get
.around
stereos, brand new cars, and
year have. determined thar the
colleges. Tuition
,
is free,
so
that·
••
it. Apparently it has worked,
spend the su·mmer getting tanned.
•.
liberal arts
.are
dead
in
this cou·n- studeriis are free--from having
·10
sinceArmed Forces ·recruitment is
.
Perhaps the secretary will next
try. The prevailing attitude seems work at tedious summer jobs and
way up in the years of, or rather,
take aim at: ordering out for piz-
.
to. b.e thal.c9llege i~.
~
vo_cational can concentrate on I~arni.ng. The,
.
since 1981.
.
.
._
za, buying records, owning com-
.·-
school •
•
for
•
gifted • children.
result, I am told, are univershies
Despite the federal push for
puters and televisions, doing the
History, philosophy, English, etc.... that reflect the .traditions of
budget cuts and smaller govern•
wash, entering into.a relationship,
•
a·re considered irrelevant by niany
higher
education
truth,
ment, the Administration's first
having friends, buying·Christmas
students and schools; What is be-
aesthetics and stuff like that.
Secretary of Education, Terrel
presems,
receiving
•
Christmas
ing.
,h~rd_
from m.any college
The American. way is to go
Bell, . wanted to
•
increase the
presents and reading Stephen
presidents is a.call for returning to
broke in order to· expand your
education budget. Bell told The
Kini! novels.
-- "the basics."
•
•
awareness of life's • richness.
New York Times after he resigned
No student should have to
.
The. basics -
reading, 'riting
That's not the fault of the schools
last year that, although he was ex-
choose his or her college on the
ancP'rithmatic. (Ever notice that
so much as it is the fault of a
pected to decrease the education
basis of financial qualifications.
whoever created the "Three R's"
society that doesn't recognize
budget from $18 billion to $9
If a studen• can Ret into Yale,
.
\\'as illiterate?) There's .a . myth
_.
ed~cation as a form of national
.
billion and dismantle the depart-
Continued on page 11
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--Page:6-T.ffE"CIRCLE·'FelJ.-28,-1985
.
..
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·.
,. .
. .. - . .
,
,
•
'
• ' ,
',
' bf John Bakke ., .
•, ,. '
1 __
:.
~~Excuse•::
me/' ) :-~~/:· ~p-·
,I _:.
~orkt~~ litt1_e;-·~or~;
ffliitlef·~·-;, -~_•Jt'ffrom'lasffail'sidebate/~
.I>" •
Column
One
Upon
a star
Reel
. .: ,··i:-.:/ :,,_ -~~\: .. ·'
.':(
_p_roa:ch_il}g
~a_udousl)'(~-~You·seem
~•~work
.•
a:httle ••• :,~-.ca~•:Stlll:
h_ear said; trying to'nucige his _budget- •
. • ··When ·last_ we left the Young•·irather,.
uh' ...
_well~-
ho'Y: co.uld)'\ _those word_s;ech~JD.g,
aU
t~~
w_ay • bludgeoned:·.'·memory.
·:
..
·
•~You
• - Republicans, . they : were a . busy :. put it?
1
f:;<,.;;;f::t:{'; ,f.
<X
O,f,J,t<~
_?
down _th~
b~ays;~n~ ,J;ulllwars
.to. Yurps ,must b~ so very happy:'.'
• ':
bunch.)t was ~~tqber)~~n .;·.:.the::·.
' "Statiiic~;-god_daµi:
it! ·Stll~n~h i:jhe: theater/ ~Jler~f'f~-: rfJ01
11,
:,.;,<.i
::Happy?~'.~:•-'~\--··:
"e
,;, '.
,° ·••·
,, ., ..
first frosty wisps of wmtenvere ··,as
~II
hell. Justh~e·Mr. ~eagan. ;:' am~ng. others, ·th_ese:·
~~r,.,same_.,
.f:
i.Y/.~\l,.:
pppre~"1.r,ve,
~nyhow •... ,
•
chilling the air; arid the
0
Yurps". • I'm sick and tired of liberals run- \ Yurps
.m
a,Ietter-wntmg· frenzy, _ _:Don
t
you feel, more fulfilleq?
l
,··ha?
theiiharids.ful! with the ~am-
ning th.is: country '.like:. a· ca1_19y,:
'·;u~f.
daysj1~0.:;_
,.
..> ',• ;: ' .; : .
~~~n.J,wtJH~!f
Ietiets/ pro!esti~~ ,· ' •
pa1gn.
The
campaign. The
cam-
store; Sick and ured,-do you hear '., . ILwon.tbe ea~y, •· s9m~one :: ~udgetcuts,
i1U
of,that
~
nsur,e
paign! .
me?"
•
. . . _ ..
•
, . . sa1,d,
C'but:1f we all;J\lSt make our ,, as
..
,hell'.' 1sn~t
:_'a candy store·:
What a thrilling time
for"
the·
"Yes, very well, thariks;,What· voices .. heard we/,<:an,
.•
head
'?ff,
anyinore.tt:-,
0.·• •
:
: ·,·
Yurps. Theirs _was
a holy mission, . do you propose we run the coun- • • thes.~
.>:imm'?~alr
• Godless,·' 1.11-
,
CCNo/' he said sadly, C'it !sn't.''
one for Mom, for apple pies,for
trylike-amunitionsdepot?"
• a~v1sed c~Js.in.stu_dent. (inanc1.al. ·Th~~-,--~C./)eaned. over\.~pd
-1776 for the fourth of July and
a1d._Now,1fweall1ustwork·aht-
. whispered;, ."Can
q
tell·--you
the Fortune 500. All that's really
"You're damn right, buddy,.,
tleharde_
r ... "
.. ,. . . . .
,· .. something? This:Whol_e
busine_ss
is
• he said; with just the slightest hint
•
" I
• •
sacred in America. I remember it of a tear in his eye. "And it's
• . •~Did}'.<?11
hear'.soltl~thing?
-.• kind.ofu1_1pJanned/'"
-..,
:•• .•
well...
•
.
·
• asked the paisley~printYurp who, .· •. "Unplanned? Student-ajd cuts?
"Four more years!. Four_·
more
'about
time, too. Don't you watch
by·extrao_
rdinary coincidence, was Good God! How.c.fo
you m_
ea
__
h?'!:.
Mr. Reagan's commercials?" '
•
·
•
• ·••
·
•
years!" they cried with a sort of
"Aren't you afraid of what
ne~ttomeJ~tthi\tji:p,e~,~.
.:•:.>.
,,.
"Shocking;:huh?, We_.didn't
glassy l()ok in their- eyes. They he'll cut back on n~xt?''
. • \' H1!h?,~: • Did ~-y,ou· •• '. s~y .. thinkRea~an would,bite,the,~and
were a colorful group, to be sure,
" . .
. , .
..
.. . • -' • somethmg? .
·,
He . looked d1f- . that fed ~!mJast
0
Nove!Dl?er. W,e
each sporting a different necktie .
,Afraid? Thats a good one.
~
fet:en!, somehow. T~ere
'!V~-
a
figured !t ~. be someone :,else s • •.
with their dark suits and white We ve all go~ .to be ready to •. ce11a10
betrayed l~o~ about him, . hand agam. ..-:_ .
. ., . .
.•
shirts. The neckwear . ran, the. tighten our belts a little,.'to feel • like he ju~t • found ."out he was
• '.'Like the poor?t' ' • . .•·. ~.
gamut: bright red for the neo- . the pinch. I only _.wish Reagan,,· ad~pted.
•'\~•
·: ·;~:· ·' . . >.:
, Ye~h'.· Th~ poor, t~e .elderly,
conservatives darker. for the would throw some cuts
ou_r.
way.
.
~-An ech.9.
l
thought I hea_rd
a9 .ham:l1~pped,,
you· know the, type,
more traditional . left-wingers; so I could sh_ow
ev~ryonej~st how -ecfi.o?:
that's~' a~.- It's •pro~ably :).Only: it,. ~turns :out~
7
~~3:gan~s
s~riped ties for the moderat~s, r~ady I am, but,!t-~oesnt seem_ nothmg. I ~1~n_t mean.to mter-_._already:cl!ewed nghtup
t?
die
tmy polka dots for the ever-so-
likely, sad to say •.. ·
•
.. :. '· • rupt you -you seem to be work~, . elbows (?n t~em. So till _that s.l~ft
slightly (but only in - private)
'_'Even rigbl •. ~ere
.~t'
~arist?.
ing a little-harder t~an most.'' ,·. •.
• · :is the middle class," :
i; ;
2-,
liberals.
.
. :. · • \
;.- · Evenonstudenta1df'·.:
,,, .
-''Wbat?Whatd1dyousay?".,
·"i~And-the
wealthy," I sug:
<'Four more years!u screamed
"Afraid no!;
1'
he:said reflex-'·; _ "I~ said, , 'Work,ing a. little gested. -~ . .
._ _ .. .
, ._
..
one maver,ick with a paisley print.
ively;'"But iq~ happened,_
J,know ':_harp.er/,';' • , . . : . .
, .
tBite ~?"ur
tongu~. ': ,_ ·-;:< ( \.
"Four I said, you bleeding heart
I, for one, would appreciate my · : You know, I thmk you re, . ''/Soqy.);ook, this 1s lill·part of:
heathe~ subversive liberal Com-
education- that much more. for. right," he _said with just:;. the . ., the Reagan principle we tried to;
munists!fourmore!Doyouhear
~a~ingtoworka}ittleharderfor_.
~~ightesthintofatea:_in.~is•.eye.
•• ;:·
.:
:
,.·,
..
me? Not three-four!"
1t. .
,
.
, .
i<' :'·.
11tat does.seem fam1bar.
. ,· Continueda~II
page
12 .
by Beverly Morlang
priest ' as
a
d~con.,If th~. priest : with
his
~b~g~egation.
'..
His need • "thing. aboutiun'atics,' they don't
.. c:annot·make the student abandon • for popularity has overshadowed ·:knowhow to survive. I do.'' .-•
..
A film that. has been eagerly . his ideals that thehigher-ups feel. the need to be a proper teacher for .
·.
"Mass Appeal" is a touching ; .
•
•
• awaited has finally made it to our in no way represent the traditions • his flock' and so he has allowed •
•
film filled
i
with· im'p'ortant •
area. The Marist community now of the Catholic Church, he will be himself ·to sink into' wine and : ' messages;: .
humor,'
•
intelligielice
has the opportunity to see the expelled. At . first · th.e, priest, • deceit.)3ut it is his· new .d~cp~. • ap:d t~s •. F!n,e_perform21;1~ef~e
rilovie·version of t_he play written played by Jack LeJ11mon,
ag~ees _,who refusesto com1>rom1se.
hts turned m_ 1,y._not only·the .s~ars,-
1mpress1ons
•
··'-Mass·-.
. ·A.Jpeal'
•.•···
. by one of its own, Marist alumnus . with his sup~rior_s; the_ .~~udent,
.,. id€als for anything or a~yotie who/ : .but the ·supporting. ~st as ~w.ell
..
• Biil C. Davis: "Mass Appeal" is after all, caused quite a furor by teaches· him a lesson. By the same ·Exceptional merit should be given
. appearing. ': this.. . w~ek ; at •. the jogging into '.mass. one 'day ·and: '. token, the priest.
tii~
:to
teach'
hi's
to'. Charles . Durning ,,as ,.a ••
:very
.. Roosevelt Theater and·itwas_well . making th,e.outra:geous ~tatement-_ st~derit.the one:valid lesson:tiiat • clo~ed-n,tindedMoµ~igiior.,AsJor
worth.the wait:' :_
!
•. . . . .•.
.
..
that women:~hou_ld
be priests. But· • may save him. In a~ ~µiotionaltY.-· Bill·:C::.
Davis; .w:ell:1,le~erv~q
ap- , .
''Mas~ Appeal,tt involv~s ·a as the priesqalks·,to the student;., c~arged scene between.the two,
plause
.was
,heard from·
aµ;
t_he ::
traditionalist
:
priest.· ,·anp a he realizesthatthe student has:the\ th~ priest tries to reason with him Marist students in the audience . :'
seminary student. with: radical idea!s' that h~; himselFused'.-to:~, be.fore time runs out;'"You're a
,when
his name appear.cc!,
f.n\the,. :,
.
idea's for ihe _·
Cathol~c
.. Ch1,1tch.
•
believe , in• ~d' that_ :he • is no~ : lu~atic,,. But :tl}~f ~,
.aU,
..
,ri&ht,
,JC,, _cf®t~. The. film__~-,W~U~l\'Q.rththe
:.
. The .smderit,
notorious
for his afraid.to believe iit:be~use ~e'.:,·there'sone_thing,thechurchneeds. -secing·and should"Jndeed, ·gain ,.
• outspok~nness, is -assigned
to
the feels it will make-him unpopi.llai' ; isJnore lunatics~ But there's one . appeal from the masses!. •
.
~r
·.·.':-.
, :;.•• --:: .:.--:, : •• ;,,t • ;•·
~ , .... ·•
•
•
... -.~, :
T
'
•
,
•
'
•
•
-
,, .- .:·•_ ·•
; .
by
Roberttt.•Laforty
.,,_,,;
·.y/;~--;-·,><.,•and,Watert~wifrPr~Hob!:!
~! !·!
!~{A'-}iQ~~coWf;~ta_fcolleg~itudenlr~-'.:'.'~1".loi'idir:~~:;Starl
·t6''.fead·foi''y~tif'.{~.
:
. :f '·
·.;, :·
.:·<
:- < . .:;-.. Well on_!O the_th!llls~ the.spd!s:c7 J~•~;gc)'t~ t)li=:..PI~~S_for.the
.
mi,~~ter~_S;,!!f!~;~E_!~l!l~--~-.
r
• ./ • .
' .. • • . . · ,
andthe chllls to be encount~fei:l. '5V~ek;
THIS WE;EK{s,
PICK for .for;;'f.,Y:·,~_viewmg·pl~ure:1sfthe·· •
Har-Har, Har-Har, .Har,.Har •. by all THIS WEEK. As· you all : Clii:istmas gifts of the future, J. -...,
classic-film, ''Th~Wizard of Oz"
That's what you should all be do-· .. should kno'w this week
·has
been
•
''Christmas with· Funhole" LPs
channel
2
'on Gonio Friday :at 8
. ing durin~ .mid-term week_.
WhY,, • "·'Roo111niat.e
~ppreciat~on. week as CQs and VidcoAllium:in 1990; 2.
p;m; THIS
·
WEEK's :p1CK . for
•· because you ar~ . ab9~t .·•·.
t_o show /Well .:-::}as_;,
• ~~i(~eri_t
:.
• Q~~erilment ·.•
Gift
·Ceni~cates - af the Ground
educational activity_·
is_ the. movie .
your teac.her that, Just 'bee?u~.e ,,;.,
week; J:>lease
, check, ·with your • Round
.
·with , Holly
•
as
<
your
"Richard • Pryor Live on .· the·. ,
you missed ~ight or nine classes so . roommate if you missed anything- :.Hostess. THIS WEEK's .. PICK • Sunset·.• StripU '. for" . reasons ;
of. ";
far, you· do know
0
whaCs'! going_,
·,
good, ~nd look_ to those irifor- •
fo,r'
Bi-Sexuai'~~i~t!!JI!~ni
·9r ,th~ '
v9ca9uiary ·-etihari~em~ht;
••
THIS' •
on in class (THIS WEEK recom.:
·.
in!ltive Weekly Happenings about
'Yeai,
''Women·(meil);· you.can't ·:WEEK's pickfodashion
is mid~
mends the. old= ''copied: your< student
Govern_ment
liye'with;theni,aric:l it'~:iµegal.'to'·;,thigh 'shortsJmd>pink. bowling.
friend's notes'.', excuse). LASl_' . · \Veek ... please. Do not forget-that • shoot theni~;u
::.T~IS/WEEK's
• shirts 'with simple accessm:ies:and'
. WEEK's hand: goes to the cast. in approximately eight days some • PICK for activity of the week will very little inousse for the hair ... ·
'. and crew· of.• 'Blithe Spiri_t'
• and •••
•
of you· lucky readers .win: 9e ven-
tie:tl!e ClJB's Comedy; C~bar.eJ,
• •.
:ju~t atouch_:: ,c . .. _;·:
;.Af;:
;-{<{";<. -
to, the -MEN's ·-•
HOOP TEAM, turing off-tci . sun~' a~d :fun: in. :,Saforday:ilight iQ the'Ne\V:Dinirig':,
·, ,.UntH neitftime: iememlleritiia( .. '·" .
Bruce:. Teddi, and Steve THIS
Florida and righ'Cnow ,".; every' . Rooni.:?TIDS.
WE~K•s
War~ing:·i 'the·_sociaJ season is in':·rull:
swinf:
f
WEEK puts you all in the THIS penny counts. THIS WEEK_
will L Call home and ask .. for money .: and yqu should be getting
a
flood .•
WEEK.· HALL • OF FAME;
'besendingjunioi:reporter
"TOP~ (THIS WEEK recommends ~ry-
•
of'inyitatiotis in ihe_·maiL Pick.
located in UPSTATE NEW
_.FORTY"
.to
bring_back all the:: ing on the'phoneto be inost cost-
.
yourparties,wis~ly arid ari:iveten
. YORK
somewhere between Utica
:>
details of what he experienced effective) you will ·need it fot
minutes late. :-· ,:
•
••
•
•
·.
-'
.• - _.-.~
~
>
;
_.: ~-·
~
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.·
·-.:~~{-___
: .,-
'
' ••
GO~ZO
,FRl?AY
SLEEP IN SUNDAY.
.. ,TO T-T • T-TIJESDAY
6a.m.
(ABC)
ABC Momlag
News
6
a.m.
(Ch:
i
I)
.,
N.,.
Jmey
Now •
. -.~IC)
a:m.
,cJ,
. . ~\:
;J \
lo'a,;,·;Ch.
II)
Bugs Bunny/Road Ranaer
Trusfonncrs
(Cartoon)
;' MOlllllD
MONDAY
: Mld-luas 1,q1a
._.,.
., .
6:30 a.m. (Ch. S)
GroomCllo~
7:30
a,m.
(Ch.
S)
Fal Alba1 aad The
I p.m. (ABC}
• All My Children
4
p.m.
(Ch.
2)
:
TH Rockford Flks
4:30 p.m. (ch. 5)
TIie Brady Bunda
• 7:30
p.m. mm.
• "Vamm:•
D-245
Sp.m. (NBC)
TkCOSIJySIIOw
8 p.m. (ABC} Film:
··Ne1&•11on·•
s,arrins ,~ btt
John
Bdmhi
and Dan Ayt.rO)-d
10 p.m. (NBC)
HlDSlmelllhla
. 6:30 a,m.
(Ch.
S)
, Balhrinkk
• .
.
3:30 j,.m. (Ch, S)
•
pJ.,lkMan
4
pm . HAPPY
HOUR
al Berties
2
for
I
rill
6:30
7:30 p.m.
(Ch. 71 • .
EatuWIIDlfflt Tolllgllt
8
p,m.
(CBS)
Film:
"'TIit
Wlzanl
or
Oz"
(19391
Campus· Center Film:
"'Ridlant
Pryor
UTt
oa
tk
S.nsttSlrip'"
Balltnodd"s
50
«Ill bttn lill
micllllgbl.
11:JO p.m. (Cb, 2) Film:
··n.
Trial
or
11my
Jm•·
(1974)
JI a.m. (ABC) ;
' Sea
__
ry Scooby F_aailles_
•.•. ,
10:JOa.m.
(Ch. II).•
.
nrtt
Sloogei
12
a.m. (ABC)
AIIC-Wtd<rnd Sptdal
12
noon
'"Tfft Achtnlara or• Two-··.
Sldnatt's
Sallday
Brnc:11
·, Miaa1t
wcrnro1r•
4:30 p.m. (ABC)
\\lcle
World of Sports
6 p.m. (Ch. II)
Pllttlat 0a
TIM,
HilS
I p.111.
(CII. Ill
film:
'"Class
of
•44•• (1973)
clmpus Center:
COMEDY CABARt."T
11:30
p,m. tNBO
SalWl'lb:,
Nillll
~
Rod'ltdls
S
p.m. (Ch. 4)
Hett"s Laey
4:30 p.m. (ABC)
\\'lde Worfd of
Sports
campus
Center
Film:
"Rkbtd
Pryor
Utt -
. lllt
s....
51r1p·•
7p.m.
tCBSI
60
M"tnla. . .
.:.
Mar1st•s
on
Ubnry
Con1~ror
SPRISG BREAK
_ 7 a.m.
(NBC)
: TIida,-
.
~ 8:30 a.m. (Ch. S)
Cosby
Kids '
'
·u:30
a.tn~ (Ch;
9j
I Drtam_
or Jftnnle
7
a.m.
(Ch. JI)
. Pink Paalllff
; ~~~oaa
: •
~
•
. II
a.m.
(Ch: 41:., ,
•• W11<e1
or For!aae'
••• .• • .;8:30
~.m
..
(Ch. 13) •• - , • • .
~~~~~
'-- -. ' !Mister
RodJaS Nefabborllood •
4
,
30
p.m.
I
p.m.(ABC)
AD M:, Clllldmi
2:30
p.m.
(Ch. 11)
Politbl Sd"a(
Tom
ud
Jerry
lect■tt/dlscassloa,
• 4 )i.m. (Ch. 4)
4:30 p,m. (Ch. SI
,·LcMConnmloa
•. Tllt~Balldl
• ~SklDsWort,sbop.
Workshop:How101a1<n1nr
•' -::
•
,
• WdliallltRt'a!Wortd
. V'aole«t
Propam
• •
_ 7
p.m.
MCTV
8
p m
1Nnr..
u-•s
n-Ldball
n.
LoJola,
• • '
=
1
'"""'
.,.,,..
TlltA•Tftm
Oantll
7:30 p.m.
Film:
"Enry
Mn For
m-ir
ud God Api,lsl Air
·O24S
10
p.m.
(NBC)
Ripli,k
12
p.m.
!Ch.
11)
Slsrlrrk
1.2:JO
:r,m..
(NBC)
la•~ ;\lglf '""
Dt>ld
l.dlmian
Fireside
Lounge
7p.m.MCTV
Hodtj
n.
Patt.
Channel 8 •
7
p.m.
!Ch. S)
M~A-S•ff
Ladles' NJillt al
Balltrt"idd's
12:30 (NBC)
Lal~ NJi•• wl1ll
Da'fld utltmwll
· , Worldaa Os.<sSO
mnbttn
--
t·.·
....
··_.·,
,.
;
.:
...
·
..
:
.•
.
PLUS $20 TAX
&
SERVICE
'ROUND
TRIP MOTORCOACH
TRANSPORTATION
..
;~:'~:•·1·1\li9ht;~··
.
··FJEA.Cll
-
,:/_F(?RTLAUDERD~
_,
,fTRiP' DATES*
Marc~ 2'.March
9::
March 9-March 16
·•
MarchJ6-March 23
:M~rch
23-March
30
March 30:April 6
·
April 6cApriL~3 •
..
,· ,BOO~
!:ARLY!
.
.
/
Li
mite~ Hotel Space
11,.-_..;._~ in Ft.
Lauderdale
•
and
-tiayfona-
Bea~h
:
:
•
.
•
.-
~
-~
.
.
...
·.-·
•.
·
,.
:'._TOUR
RATE,
.t.
INCLUDES·,
•Round
:
'-';
'·Trip'
Transportation.· via
air. conditioned-
iavatory_ equipped
r:notorcoach>', to
.
Daytona Beach and
.__ ___
_;__ ___
.:...J
Ff Lauderdale.·
\
·
.
•Convenient Depar-.
.
turePoints.
•
• .
.,
I
.
\.
•_.
TRANSf>ORTATiorlRound
trip tr~ns.portation is available on.our
coaqi,es._Motorpoaches depart from:m9:in
bus terminals
_in
major
.
cities
..
Ser:vice. is J3Xpress making only fqod . stops'. (Departure
times and dates have been carefully planned fo coincide with the
•
ch~_ck:in~tii:ne.
of the:hotelf Coacfles depart on Friday and arrive
.
ba9,k th,e following Su~day: Departur~ date's are Mar. 1 return Mar.
10,
.Mar.
8
return
Mar.
17;·Ma:r. 15 return Mar.: 24, Mar. 22 retum
•
tv1,ar;,31,
~-~r;·29ret_urfi.<\pr:·7,
Apr. 5
r,eturn·Apr:
1~.,Coache~'are
\:
the·.rnosr ~od~rn up-to'date models with recllning•seats and are
•
·•
fully)tfr co"ridit/oned and lavatory eqLiipped'foryour comfort.·
:
•
·. ·
:icdi
.·
•
.•
\'
· .,
..
;,· ···
:<.•.·· .•
•
,
1
-~-
,
...
2,2-02-Norlhem' lloulevciid • lffffe Neck. ff.,.; Vorli 11363
•
•
New
VOIie
City
I
ong
ISlond.
,
.
Wostcrosrc,;'
•
New
Jcr,J;;y
718-631-JSOO
'516-7l2-015:>
914-~7-0140,
20!
0'3-41168
"'PJJ.\lJIS'E.
Qi
11er;;t.1t.1:Resta1.1
rant
;._
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....
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...
•
:
·_:
:
., -
.' •.
••
.
,,•'
,·;
.•
Fresh
Se.af6od
·-
Ste'aks
•
•
._
...
c:.
:Ch~_P:P·~
-,~;C99_ktalrs-~··
..
·:
~-
.·.
}Baklng.:i>n
...
Prerrilses
..
_.
__
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.:;·.
.
:
.
.
'\.
.:
'.
.
..
:
.
•
:.
.
;
~
·:...:
.
.
half'! 'your colf.ege ID
and
get
~
FREE-_Glass
of Beer
with
you_r
meal!
7%
01s·couNr
.
•,
194 WASHINGTON STREET
POUGH~EEPSIE, N_EW
YORK
(Next to All $port·
A
~hort walk from Marist)
-·
...
,_by
Dan
Meyerson
'$tudents, I· think, find going
.
to college· pretty stressful. Art is
•
•
The Marist College art depart-
.
an excellent creative outlet for
ment
is
planning to open a new
that kind of stress," said Lewis,
art gallery, which will display art
who thinks many students feel
.
work from the college communi-
there are people who have artistic
ty.
•
talent-
and those who don't. He
Accordin:g
io
Richard Lewis, .made th e analogy of people who
•
-area.coordinator
of.
art,. the new may not sing very well, but still
.
-
.
get a lot of enjoyment out of sing-
gallery, which will be located m
ing. "If they give themselves half
Marist
East,
•
will be small, in-
•
timate and will
be
able to show a chance; they could probably
find the same type of pleasure
•
more creative works, while the with art." Lewis also said art can
.
galle1
Y
in Champagnat wili show even help t~e student in the job
•
larger ~orks and visiting shows.
.
•
:-
The gallery should be open by
,
market. He said that while m'any
the_
end of March; Lewis said.
people feel an art degree· is
Spring art enrollment has in-
"economic suicide,,, there are ad-
f
h f
II
vantages to studying art. Artists
creased 60' percent. rom t e a
have a flexibility in thinking that
said Lewis, who replaced Allen employers find useful in anv field.
Moore in September·.,
,
•
•
Lewis cites
•
the increase in
"Art is probably the oniy field
enrollment to the a~ded emphasis where creativity is the main
on. attracting more· non~majors substance,"
said
Lewis.
arid creating more interest in art "Creativity is important
if
you
·
as a
·minor;
This emphasis gives want to rise above the. general·
an opportunity
·to
experience the mass."
•
creati_vity
art hast~ ~~fer, he said.
When asked if he was surprised
by the sudden interest in the
Marist art program, he said he
was surprised the program wasn't
bigger before, but he's happy
with the increase in enrollment .
Lewis said he wants the pro-
gram to continue to grow and
feels that'by emphasizing art as a
minor, Marist's art program will
grow.
Art trains people to "see" bet-
ter, said Lewis. He stressed the
big difference b~tween
running
by
life, where everything whips past
you - and looking at things very
carefully. "You'd be surprised
how life looks better once you
stop to look at it."
It is this different way at look-
ing at life that attracts people
from all majors to art, Lewis said.
"I'd like to encourage people to
come down and talk with me if
they're interested in taking art
courses, even
·jf
they think they
.
have no
_artistic
talent. They may
find out they have quite a bit of
taleriL:.;;.;.if
they give themselves a
:
"
chance.'>:·
.
•
•
•
•
CuJinarY--------·
_._,
,
__
•
__
•
Continued from page
3 •.
does the American Bounty room .
surroundings than the~ American
:
Bounty room offers, the Culinary
'According
to·
Lally, the Escof-
·_
can•. again
.
provide. the·. perfect
•
tier h~s
_.a
fixed price,· Lun~hes
.
restaurant to fit. yout;tastes: .The
there mclu~e
~ five-cou_rse ~~l
Escoffier Restaurant is a-Classical for $16. Dm11ers comprise a six-
•
French restaurant decorated with
•
;
course meal for $34 •. The price
pink, rose and mauve.furnishings
;
does not. ~over taxes,· beverages
.
_and
elegant chandeliers,,,creating
1
and gratuities.
·
a
,more
formal atmosphere than
Aside from the two restaurants
""
.:
...
:•,;'. .,_:-. ••
♦
·-·~;.
•
•
··•
•
,
CAREERS
/,
IN
-·1
. •
I
.
.
• hr
• •
'
,,
COMPUTER
·
..
SCIENCE
speakers
with
q~.e.~tion
and answer
session
:;:
~_._.-.
_,
·, ·:·-.i~-
,.
Fet>fV&f'/28·,
1985
-
Marist College Th8atre
4 • 6 p.m~
Anyone interested in .a career
in computer science
SHOULD ATTEND!
the Culinary operates
:1
~offee
shop that is being expanded to
become St. Andrews Cafe by the
end of March. The cafe will focus
on healthier anci more, nutritious
foods with a heavy accent on
meals with low-salt, low-fat, and
low-cholesterol ingredieJJtS, Lally
said.
.Another restaurant: located at
the
.Culinary
is the Sheraton Din-
irig,·)ti:>oi:n':.\'{lii£h?>-i~~seJI}i,pti"li_ct:
meaning,.that there;',is:
0
a· limited:.
.
amount
'of
'outsiders'
wlio:
are
••
allowe~
-~o
enter/Lally. said'·that
•.
•
this restaurant· serv_es
as·
a_ dining
•
area for the-students,:faculty and
staff. In the beginning of March,
the Sheraton will switch from a
·continental
cuisine to an Italian
Restaurant.
The Culinary draws a large part
.of
their_ business from an eighty-
mile radius, according to Lally.
,
Bus tours and local business peo-
ple constitute a large part of the
Culinary's lunch crowd;
"The greatest percentage of our
luncheon and dinner guests comes
frorri outside the area," she said
.
"IBM
is, however,
·a
major por-
tion of our guests."
Lally explained th?t one of the
most interesting and
_,·,
unique
aspects about dining at the
Culinary is the fact that you, as
the public, are interacting with
the students. All four dining areas
serve
•.
as classrooms for the
students. The students who work
in the
restaurants
are actually in
class, providing a practical and
realistic setting for their ex-
•
periences.
•
Lally said that the
public seems to enjoy the facnhat
students
run
the
restaurant.
"People seem to have a lot of fun
asking their waiter questions. It's
a much more comfortable and
friendly atmosphere that the
students create," she said. "The
students
are definitely
non-
intimidating., They are usually
cheerful and energetic and the
customers like that." She added
that she thinks that the customers
like the feeling that they are con-
tributing to the students' educa-
tional experience. The Culinary
Institute of America is located on
route 9 in Hyde Park .
'~
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•
-
•
~o~tlnu~d from
page
4
>
/-
J
•
should tell yoti a
•
littli. about.
-
Marist attitude towards transfers.
••
Now. the student population has
-.
been reduced to 20,' all of. whom
are male, which should
.ieil
you
what Marist thinks oLthe degree
of safety at Heritage.
.
Plus there was the
·isolation
that
makes
.
someone
•
"living"
·at
Marist feel. like they are. a
_com-
muter student. That kind of isola-
tion_ breeds the apathy everyone
talks about but c:loes nothing to
change. One solution·wolild be to
move the 219 off
campus
residents on campus, a
.'solution
Marist has finally taken. action
towards althou·gh,
·it
the Lowell
Thomas Center-is any indication,
:
I have no hope ~fJlle new apart~
.
ments being built: while I'm still
•
here.
•
.
'
•
•."
•
I personally felt a sense of
frustration and anger· ab9ut living
at Hertt'age,,
I
transferred here
and I finally thought I'd be in-
•
"olyed in.real college life, as op-
·posed
to
'th~
junior college I
previously commut~d to,· yet I
was faced with
•
the· exact
•
situa-
••
tion. I'd get· up in the m~rriing,
•
take a ,van. to dass, then take a_
van.back to.Heritage at• the end of
•
•
the day; ending-·my connection to·~-
••
,.
Marist <;:ollege:arid.
ending my in~
terest in it as w~ll.
•;-
..
1::
.; :
,/
Why • should< off
·campus·
••
residents pay as much as on cam-:
pus residents if
·they.
are not en-
joying the full resources of Matist
•
College? Jha,;e no ~s~er to
.
.tl,lat-
·._
.
bufthe ariswer,wiUJ>e';!lcad~trlic
if·
the new apartments are'.finisbed.
••
.
This s'einester there
were
two
cases; of•.-~ssault
;against
:·Marist.·
....
·
..
students, by
Heritag¢
resic:lent~,
at
•
Heritage\ Gardens;
'A~sault.''.
is
.
,
.legally
defined as: Any
·word.
or
• •
·;
action intended io: cause the
per-
..
•:
'.
.
sori fo. wh_oni
it. i,s.
dite~t~4
fo
.~fin.
•
.
fear ofimineaiate physical.harm;
•
·,•a_
rj~~onablfl!el1ev_abl~)~i'~a(_\/{i
:_
::
•
•.,::·:.:.:rnlfirsfcaseWas
foiir sb.'idents
•
.
'":who.
wereithreat~rie_d{l?r'.'.-~{'ma~
•
:
''with
agun'y.rlio);aid_he:..youl_d
~i!l
•···_fhenf.because·th_cy'.we·re·makirig
.
.
.
:
t~%;reui~ttt~~i~
~~:;:~n:~s-:
.··
.ed
ine to move.
l
was pblying my.
stereo and:gi.titar.
at qllarter..to tw_o
in the afternoon;
.
wheh.
f
was~
threatened.by anian
,with
a club
saying, he,'¥ould k_ill
mt
~ecause
•
ofaH the ·noise I was making:
.
-'
TharikL to. prompt:, actiqn
•
by·
•
Robert·Heywood, Car9l Grariey
.
arid Lenny:Cheatham I'was able
•
to
move on;'cani'pus'the.next
·day
and outofidariger.
·
.
•
...
··
Heritage; Gardins ar~ jus_t too
..
•.
.
dang«;rolis for students to live. in
·;
and no· one should be forced to
•
live uncler those· conditions for the
·.
-~_mount
ofw~~ion.'Yepay,,.
;/
.•
•. ,:I
'just
ilope_-Marist·
.realiz~,--·
before someorie
·.is.
seriously·. ins
•
·
•
,jured
ihere,'.that the'
.safety
o_f.its
....
students is more importanfio this
.
•
school tha.n the moriey they 'Yoidd
lose bfbreald'ng a lease.
'::·.
•
.
·_
·:
•''•-Dave
Rakowiecki
•
·•/'
••
.
- -Junior, English Major
:
, ··•·.,
'i:
Transferred in'Fall of '84
_-
~
·1
--.:-~~-:;-Ji_:.;_.·,:'._-.~,;··
:
-
.......
•-.·-~
"'.ii£:
:
,·.·
.
:·•
GIVE TO TH~
AMERICAN--
CANCER SOCIETY.
.
~
.
:c
C:
~
r-.
ffl·
:e
•
'·
;
;,
.
.-·<1
THEi,
•• NIGHT 1s··
-'THUR~DA~t.
FEB~·2&TH·:.
<
,10-~·2-.
_-·
en
T()NIGHT-
&....-....;.;.~----<
·T
Spend
:a
nigh{-.::·,
·i '
'
with.:
;
•
,._
•
'-'·DESIRE'-'·
--
.
Brendan C_onolly
-)(damSlpitt,.
_.
.
-
Michael togan
•.
•
-
Frank· Pensa
•
/<--:~-,~m
:tE/B--esrn-&;D
·:
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,
,
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••
•
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..
:~·,,li·~v:m11:!m~:Q11:,,m:fr··}?t1.:r
...
SIMPEJNIS
..
SUMMEI
....
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·:Luffman,
Marist.
eo1:.
lege 914-471-3240 Ext. 528.
_,,
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!i----..■..~--~-------~-----~---Feb.
28,·1985 ·
THE CIRCLE·
Pages--
••.
YJij/,!/g1ilieeJ}Jie:¢~ii?efiteai:tlrcs
local·
culture ..
·
·. /:;/~t~?:J':.':?:
\.·r:
.•. ,,
_· .. · :'. .,
::?:~:,{.
·-:
·f\•:,, •. '. ....
:. •• .· ,. • .
.
.:,}
.. ·•
. ...
,
I
·
·
· •
\\,
by'Ctirisilaii
Larsen •
'science Qenter -:- thro~glj, Jhe cok'. •.•
proud to
be
doing it,'' s'afd Har- . America. recently finished a series
September after working for the;
. t:'•:.:.
'o'/,,,
••
i,:\:/'<"~. • .. .. . . ••
.. :•· .. lecthre ~ff~rts of Exccutive:·Qir~_..::::
dy. . .
•
..
•
•.
.·: • • .
:· - • .·
of lectures and demonstrations at
Chance -
a Poughkeepsie ba'r
• In 1977, -the old'ci~Y .. hall in tor,I~it Hardy, a group of college : . The center is supported through
M.A.s.c.; and during March a· that burned down last September.
_Pough~~p_sie
. was saved_ from interns ',, and
var~~us . st~q, • f~n:d-raising ·activities. Much of
group ... of artists
collectively
."The news about the Chance
d_estru~!~n ~y :a group, of con, vol~?Iteers ·and support~rs -:- 1s a ~he current funding.will be used to
,
known as· Summergroup
will be
devastated me, but it's a lot more
cern~ citizens.. . •
0
•
' :•
•
'
contmual showplace for-art and renovate the building; .
• • 'displaying works of art' in the
rewarding being back in the
·01.ven . a •. second ·,;life, the science.froin around the Hudson
M.A.S.C. affiliates itself with main
showcase.
·
In
April,
arts," she said.
'. b'1!lciin~,3:t
2~8.Main,~t;·that99-'t ·:·Valley:.•:·, :·', t<:· - •
,::,i.
:' '.·. · • •
numerous ~rea arts groups and in M_.A.S.C. has planned a ,wine ex-
.• was· theJio~e of Poughk,eeps1e s .
•
."Our m1ss1on 1s to showcase all this sense 1t stands for "art. and
hi bit.
,
.
.
'p<?liticalprcicess now"houses aml ; the aits; science~ and education~.! science as a whole" in relation to
"I
haye things scheduled
n~rtures an.and science from the~ resources with \vhk_h the Hudson' other groups 'in the area, said straight through. the year," said
ar~;?
. >,}
:
.
•
_... ;,Valleyisso.richlyendowed.Being
• Hardy.
'
•
•
Hardy:
•
• .
•
.<
,Th~' tviid4;1µd~on • Arts and} a Dutchess<County native,. I'm
·.The ..
·· Culinary . Instit~te! of
Kit,Hardy joined.M.A.S.C. last
. <--~.-~-.::--,,. ;''
'·~~~-~-::-~
,j,
•-:.,
•
_,;<
'.
•
•.
•
All ·of the
programs
at
M.A.S.C. are free and informaa
tion • about center and its pro~
grams is available from the
,center. at 471-1155 .
·
Eat.t:<iet<i~Ie~:..,_,;,;....;,:,'.
:_;: · -~·.',
·..;...··
-----~-----____,,;,___,;,..~-~-----
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;,~~;(i~~~~ti/~sii_pag~·~'.
•.':;':<'·:.{.
: ;
geihurt ~/get 'sun po~so~ing. Th·~ •
'tend
:'to:'-:drink::a··1ot,','
:,Brunner'' .:chap,e(one is a ~ontact person,
· said'' •~and' Hawaii is two ··thou~
•.
and someone who/can help. the
; sand' milefaway. SonieoJ!e Illight ;; stude11ts
if they ne~d it;"
•
._,. ._·:!.,
··-
ROOSEVELT 1, 2, 3 & 4
Rte. 9, Hyde Park CA9-2000
ACRES OF FREE PARKING
DISCOUNT MATS SAT. & •
•• ·suN.·AT 2:00 P.M.
•
ALL 4 THEATRES
_HafrisOn
Ford
in· ..
• WITNESS
(R)
/\7.:20an.d9:35_
:.EDDIE MURPHY IS ON VACATION.
\B·EVE·R~LY~I-I--ILLs;coPcR)'
• • •. . ,·" ~: ;: 7::15 and 9~30
•.
.
·: •-
ack.
Lemmon ·
-
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• S\tp·p:eAL:·.-:,:,:
·oo:an_ds:ts
;._ ...
-.co·m
tn··u:rliCB·;t·i·.oA/\I}
English
Nli!jQrs<
••
• Co~~<>:~l:i8f
1·1ite:fnship
-<_.
~--
1\11.'e..~liog··tQ_·>[)iscuss.
• •
•
-.Plac'efflen·f
·:possibilities
:for
..
tlie.·~--~.
~.
·_
:·----......_
$·unime·r--'and:-·Fall·
;
R~q·u
ite-nl~:nt:·._~no,:·
•
-Ap.plication-':.Pro·cedures.
will be discus:sed
February 28~ t985
free• slot
Donnelly 243
Manzi said her job is to handle
emergencies and notify the proper
• people, but she's not sure of other
duties.
.
•. '"There might be more to it,"
she said last week. "I plan to find
• out next • week exactly what else
• there is:"
•
'. There are several day trips
available to the stu.dents in •
Hawaii, including a tour of the
USS Arizona' and its Pearl Har-
bor Memorial, a trip to Diamond
Head -:- an extinct yolcanoe, and
city tours. .
· Brunner
said
that. many
students in the Hawaii group have
expressed an interest in windsurf-
f
I
ing and scuba diving, and some
haveeven asked about visiting
Don Ho.
Brunner said that The Yankee
Trader,. the· Florida hotel where :
some of the Marist students will
stay; has many programs set up
for vacationers, as Spring Break
is one of the biggest times of the
year for the Fort Lauderdale area.
Costs of the trips will • vary
• depending on hotel costs and how
many_ people _share a room. In
Florida, prices range from the
Tourist Hotel's $378.35 apiece to
the Sheraton Yankee's .rate of
..
$608.35 each. Both include air-
fare, hotel, tax and gratuities.
For the Hawaii group, The
u
Hotel Hawaii Dynasty offers a
single room for $608.35 and a
quad for $539.35 apiece, while the
Waikiki Malia has a quad for
$562.35 each.These prices also i~-
clude airfare, hotel, tax and
gratuities.
Brunner said that deposits for
the trip were made in December,
and two equal payments covering
the balance were due about · a
month before the trip.
tApa_thy slows
MCTV
growth,
: i
. '.·
..
'.
·•.,,
i
by Gina Franciscovich'
• • /
in ·the campus Weekly Happen-
::..
• • • •
/'
• 1
ings publication.
,;Marist College Television has
•Two years ago, Gene Robbins,
taken
a
giant leap over the past
of Danbury, Conn., recognized a
·two years:.Butfurther expansion
spotlight on. the communications
of MCTY will be limited without . department at Mlirist': But, at the
;_c.more.
stydentJnxc:>lV:em~11t;
,, . _: <.<
·
....
_,. tinu;;_
Jh~ie -~i½ :
~s>
Ltelevision, or .
:?tt,,~t.f;':'r1t::::,,..;:
..
~.~=i;_;f1;;;t::c:,',:,:.;;,:_i,
~,:.::::::··
video,~station.' As'·a ·result; -~Rob-
•
. {;urrently • the dub am pro-
bins said he.founded MCTV. The
;gr~iils: everr, ;-i~on~ay -~and • club fac~P,roblems in the future
::We~,esday n~g~L:from
7:
to :9 • due
to
la<;k of student response
(p;Jll; ·on: cable channel 8._-SoJar
according.to Robbins.
:'Marist , basketball • and hockey
•. •
•
>gitin~s
have J:,een_aired. The club
"A ~l~b. like this cann~t func-
lis'. also ptittirig together a • news tion without members," Robbins
prgram, according.to Jo~ <;::oncra, remarked.
.•
,
•
.MCTV's news-director: Listings
"For
1
the second largest major
ofMCTV's schedule are printed
in the school; I'm surprised more
people aren't involved," said
Concra .
After taking two years to get
off its feet, MCTV • now • owns
enough equipment to furnish Jts
·own televsio~ studio. This. equip~
ment includes two
•
complete
camera systems; valued at $2,000
eacli, . and an a·udio mixer
in-
cluding three microphones and •
two headsets, valued at $500.
With a foundation crew of 15
people, the club has. been short
handed .. Robbins said, however,·
if more students got involved, the
club would be able to tape and air
more shows..
•
'I-Iiglier
ed----........,_
______
.. ,. ____
Continued from p~ge 1
• ~t~dy, describing them respective-·.·
ly as merely "distribution re~
•
quirements" and as "Iittle,.mor~ •
. than
a
gathering of courses. taken, •
in one department," rather than
«experiences in depth." -
"They're
taught
how
to
perpetuate one economic system
without understanding what it is
theyfre perpetuating."
•
•
Bettencourt said that the charge
does not apply in the science pro-
grams .at Marist. "There is .a
natural sequence in the science
major with more regimentation,"
he said.
•
•
However, he cited
.
the history
program as one in which there is
no sequence and which does con-
stitute merely a "gathering of
courses."
As
for Marist's general
education requirements, Betten-
court pointed out that Marist is
addressing some of the issues rais-
ed by ·the report by introducing
the new Core program.
· Lutfiyya was not so generous.
"The philosophy-. taught here is
not philosophy," she said. "It's
the worst kind of watered down
social thought which does not-
deal
-with
the
theoretical
perspective of philosophy."
Lutfiyya is equally dissatisfied
with the major programs as with
the Core. "My students don't
know what a communication ma-
jor means, short of getting a job
with the media," she said.
•
-Foley and Sommer said they
believe Marist is attempting to ad-
dr~s the problem of general
education, but Sommer said the
college has not come far enough.
Even with -the riew Core program,
which he said lis better than the •
I
. .
old one, Sommer said: "We are
not really fostering a sense of
· history, a serise .of universal
cultur,e, a sense of tradition. Until
· we do these things, university
education will not train the whole
person."
He added that colleges have
become "trade schools, because
we are in the age of a trade school
mentality."
•
This mentality lends itself to a
"supermarket approach," accor-
ding to the report, "where fads
and fashions, the demands of
popularity and success, enter
where wisdom and experience
should prevail." Bettencourt said
that this situation arises because
colleges are trying to survive. Lut-
fiyya agreed. "Students here
choose courses with the least in-
tellectual struggle and the most
labor market potential," she said.
Lutfiyya accused . Marist of
On another topic, the associa-
directing everything toward "the
tion's report stated that research
mundane practical world," in-
and teaching should complement
stead of emphasizing the educa-
each other at American colleges.
tional • experience. She used
"The enemy of good teaching is
"but· rather the spirit that says
that this is the only worthy or
legitimat_e • task
for
faculty
members." Ttie Marist faculty .
members interviewed agreed that,
unlike at some larger institutions,
research was not stressed to the
detriment of teaching. They
disagreed, however, on what role
research s~ould play at Marist.
.
Somnief called fqr a greater
emphasis on research. "We don't
have the luxury of fostering
research and· scholarship," Som-
mer said .. "This should be present
the students too would
benefit."
.
• .
Bettencourt, however, said that
Marist is• not • research-oriented
and should emphasize. teaching.
"I am personally more interested
in teaching," he said;
Foley also favored keeping
teaching as a high priority at .
Marist. It is up to the individual
teacher to find a balance between
scholarship and teaching, she
said.
Lutfiyya, however, claimed
that "neither good teaching nor
•---------------•---------•
business majors as an example:. • not research,". the repo~ said,
• research pays off at Marist." She
said that a "publish-or-perish
predicament" is usually generated
by college administrations. But,
she said, "what is generated by
the administration at Marist is
that if you can keep your students
happy, you can keep your job,
regardless of your course content,
your research or your publica- •
tion."
f~-'-
.
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.;
.
FOXeSi.·
go.·
•·itlto.:~·gJf~f
~it~i}JP;tif'Il.e~:.:aS.
by
Dan Pietrafesa
.
. .
The two victori~S iast; week·
•
F~ver;;·, to'..Ma~ist:as ~elta~ .to~·
; •
.
:· _. · ,
•::
,
.. - :. · •
enabledMaristtofiriishthemonth
, allofDutchess·County~ :-.;:_;:
,,;:, .
.
:·After.Steve Eggink led Marist • of._February w_ith a. perfect, 7-0
,.-The F'oxes were,a teant,withoiit):
to. decisive wi~s· over V/agner and record; a winning season-f~r· the •
a
coach \inti} a few days, before-:
~~yola. (Md:),)he Re~ 'Fox me!:1
•
firs! time siri_ce
enter_ing·
rnvisi~n, • their_: first
~
practice; ··-:!<>st
;Of
our: .
will • head. ll)to . Baltimore, this One ball_ four _years-ago,· and .m players due to academ1c:reasons :,
week~nd as the mi~ber _
one seed • first place, in! the ECAC Metro . and Jost three:players aFthe start,,
• in the ECAC Metro Conference Conference with
'!l
11-3 record oftheseasoritofootinjuries:Yet/'
Tournament. ·- •
(16-lloverall). .
_·.
. ·.··. •. : ,the team overcame all this to win:.
''Any team is capable of~inn·- .·
.·«I
di~nJ ~hinlc·
~
team,_in the .• theconferem;e.tttle;, . , ·/ ~",·;:
ing," Lpyola.~ead.Coach _
M.ark • co!1fl:!ren~e
~ou!? wm llgames," - .. "~e're _not ~~ne. yet,!' said:?
AmatuccL said, just as Long _said FurJamc.
I
_thought at ~he_• ~ans.t semor forward· Steve Eg-
lslapd ..
Ui:iiversity Head. Coach star.t of _the season that
?·?
.wms gmk.e .,''.We· want- t~;g~ ·to,,the ,
. -Paul .LiZZ<f-tqld
Th_e,Circle two would :w,1.n
the conference: : . _ . _ NCA~ Tour11ament._
; '. _ .
weeks earlier. C'Yoli',have to put
Manst played 1ts_,best_
h~lf
qf.
:
~ggmkJe?·the scormg,w1th 2f)-~
~
together three • strong games . ~n b_asketball for the s,~~son.
m.
!he . po1!1ts . agamst. . Loyola,._ .whi.le
_,
three days." .
•
first half c;m
Saturday mdefeatmg
Smits and -Bruce ·Johnson· con~·.
• • • . . .
.
Loyola (Md.) 63-46.
tributed t6·each. ;
•
: ": ;
.
. The tourna11'.ent will begm
•
a
••
The team came outfired up as .· The hot, shooting ·of Eggink :
brand ~e":i sea~~; f~ the ~oxe_s,
a· ,proven on the fir~t t~iP.}-1
pco~rt also led,the Foxes to.an 82-58 vic-/i
~eas9n
7n
e~~ t e.la~:e:~d\~~
when Drafton Dav1s_h1tRJkSm1ts tory oyer Wag~er in a·home cons:.(
o~ger
I
ifS
id • d th.
uc> unde_rne~th
for _a
_slam-dunk,.
. . _
.
ference game last Wednesday''.<
·,:
<
w_ ert
oss, wou en
IS
s
. With seven mmutes remammg
The Foxes·brokethe game:open :.,
ce~~.lt~
s~.a~on'.
.
• ~.
.d Marist • scored . 10 _unanswered with a 8-0_ spurt midway in ;the ,(i
s, a new season,
sa1
••
•
h
f'
h If
Ir .
r -
h
• - -
· •
•
• •
Marist. H6ad·Coach. Matt' Fur-
pomtsf.1n t. eh . .-1Grst
ha ,pdu ifng irEst ~lfk::
fi. :h .. d
. h ,.-., ....
· •· • «We
·
•
t .
h
t -
.l:!,Wtl.Y
rom t e • rey 9un s or ._·. ggm
mis e wit a .game ,.
J~mc •• '··· _are.gomg,~_ avc:.o
good;'·: .. •i- • .':,: _.,,
•.
• .. ··
•. andcareerhigl127points·goirig,9-··
pl~y smart:basketball. R,ght now,
The•: 2-3 . zone • defense . was • 13 f
th· fi Id
d -9-10
·f • · ·
Ihkeourk1dschances.":
. . ..
.
. ,
.. . .·
. .
.
· rom_ e .1e _an
rom
• • .··• •. • , 1 • .
• •
•
- ,,
superb,
I
earmng applause. from the chanty stnpe. .
.. . . .
,
. The Fo,xes will be _th~ only te,m
the c.rO\yd
·on several o~cas1on_s
as
• «~e~ante~ to conta~n Eggink,.-
m the t~ufnament wu~ a ro.ad Loyola
1
was unable to put_µp
~
_ but 1td1dn't. work/'. sa1d,Wagner.'_
conference;record ofover.500,
.4-
shot. Loyola was unable to grab· Head Coach Neil Kennett: . . .
. 3. The-home team as of.this past an offensive rebound in, the first·.
''Their defense -wasri't .that:
Saturday h~s won 42 of 54 home half and .. went into the; Jacker • :
•
good/'· Eggink said. "I ,was wide. •
conference .games." .The .hosting roomdown 34-17
>
. ,
l ,.:
'\< .
';<
open ,, . :· :· -., ::·. ,;::., •.. :, ; . • '
Loyola:Gi-eyh·oiinds ·are ~-0 in>'
••w~·.outreb6unded·._,Notre
...
Joh~sott:hild
a
cii:re~r-high 15···
home conference games. ·
• . • Dame ; Monday riight, '-' : Loyola· assists .. :.: - ·
.
. · The Foxes yvill play St. Francis., Coach/~ark Amatucci said;-"We
. ''I wasn't c~ncerned on ·scoring
(l'l,Y .) in the firstround on Satin- : ,were:
just unable to_gr11b)uioffen.:•
.· tonight," -said. Johnson. •~Lwas,
day. Th~ Foxes.romped the 1-:er< .:sive
rebound/'
.';~.,:'(•;~ .• · .•• trying.to hit the open man.' Steve
•
: riers 63-4f, ~t'
~~~~
jn ,·Jan~ay~, :·_
}- ~-i~h ·.
~
Rc:d _F'~x:iyi~Jo,it,
5:eerµ~
• :- ~as ltRt.;_
a~d
YCJU
Stlly Ylitll,_the
~?.t: .
buttheTemer~ wangJe:and-tYIO _,_mg:.cei;tam;:the
f~n~ b~gan.cQan--;. m,an,.c,:.-;,
,.-;;< /.,.·/·;, ,,_~·
•:<:'.<":',<:,"•~--,
c.:
•
•
.
.. _ ,,
.
.
, .,
. _ .•. ,·
by Ginny Waite
. . : .. ·._
._,·.
, .
si~~ iit~bk-•~ith;26 'p6intfirt~r-:
. ·,>·>\::·;~:.? . .:.· ,
•.
~··: .• 8: reboun(is,.·.while 6-:-foot~2·.::.:-
. •, • • • Ursula,Winter ;. 'a •
s~fooi-10
.'
c.
center Pao line :Ekambi turned·,:
< :.
·1·
'.a'<l;.'e·
•.
':s··.
,:·•n··--~
''.·,·1··n··
··;:f,~
<ril·'oa:.;:_':\c:•>:·~e··::/:(a',,_>:;t•
·•.
••••
.
>;
,.j,/~-\~~\fjf
\i,·
E
,.i .•• ·_
]St · .. >: - : · :
,t:11·:.
pi
• · • ..
··
:r ·. ·
<.·
....
·.· - .;-.-,,
•ii!ttoiJliikriI>~i~~iiI~iiff
i~{·}f:·
1: ••
•ii·
- senior from
'F~i.J
Lee,
i-,tt~
out2r'points.and 7"rebounds:•:'.,
·:/_scored
~el\l,5()_lli.~_Pi?!ntat)ast • Coming· .. off..:"tfle.••Joss',,to
<
. Saturday'(' we>meµ's:-ibas~et_-
-.-,Queen~;
the-Lady Foxesput·in- ;~
. : bam'76~64 ;win over
'Fairleigh
. a :soHd team ,effort
.fo ·,
ovei'~
: Di~k,ins:o.ri"
'Urih,'er'sHY~
'•comei Fairleigh ,Dickinson
,, Winter's·rei:or(1is the'best ~yer, Uni~ersity.'; at the . McCanns,-
• set by
a
woman ·at Marist· Col-
Recreation· Center. lasf Satur.:-:
. ·Jeg~l ' '. ••
F.'
,> ·:, :~ i/,-.· ~-~-.
,
• day.• i'?': •• • .·
.:·,. ,,/".;·"·;·
••
·: : Last. S*urday's" ':' vic;tory
·
•. >The,C,:
Lady .. Foxes
J
led
• qal}l,e aftef a'
.
heartbre~~iitg thro.u'ghoutthe game; ·with·
a.~
!oss tq Que~ns CoUe~e; 67.~6~; 36~24_
lead • at ·:the .half. Th~y -;:
•
m
a
key c~nference compeu~ c01itinued .to. dominate in. the;;·
. ti~nilast Th~rsda~. : • .. .' • (.', • second flalf, and wo~ the game .. •.
• • ... A·:·strongrouts1de-shootm,g with Jackie Pharr _netting 23
.. • attack gaveLQueens the eariy poinis'arid pulling dowi19 re:. '.•
lea~in the first half.anq enaql~ bounds.~veralL
.
•
~
.. ·· . , . ·_ . ,
, ed_the La?Y :1(nigh_tsto
p~Hoff
•
., Thewi~ locked-up,5t);l phtce. ••
the gamem the-second half. •
,! •
for the .Lady Foxes'
7-7
stim- .
'~~We were about even in all ding in the.Cqsi:nopolitan Con- ••
•
of the, categories right· across ference .. The team may. move·.
the· boi1rd with Queens except • into . 4th • place pending . the •
• in ~ebound~/' said Pat Torza;
•
results from Monday night'.s
head coach:for the Lady Fox-
game. against ·Northeastern
es. "It -was a tough ·loss for University and .· last · night's
us.".
·, .
contest - against
. Cornell
Winter led the Marist offen-
University. •
1
__
·
by
Michael
~~l'P.hY.'. .. ·: :·.·. -
i
.
. ··/
Juruor :DaveL,uber:{~~-~voted,y;:b¢iiers;its
~l~~eµ'th'pla~e·
c,!)(year~~,~
·•
..•..
,: :-oi, : :'). ·.; • -:/.:-'
:~ ;' ; ::':/.; :_.t~e
aj~t•s-~utstanding :<Hver
W!t~_-].\~g!f/,Qp.~•of:;!~ej~n,ff
ptj_rri.ary
;},-
· ... Th.~ ~anst-~oll~~e
mert
:s_
s"1m .'"~'his
victory m:the three_~meter·
dive
:(goals
;of. the .. s~bn ,. was: to.:·im..:
•
,
;:
teal_ll
:cl9sed ~( the }ea~op. ,"'.~th_
·a.:•'.
,arid second place finis.h•in
the'.9ne(:·
~
prJ,y~:/'µJ>Bfdts:~elev~ntfr
• place{·; •.
. riinOf; . placf.': finish , ·:at '. :t~~
•.
,meter event; Luber's·'teanimates· \rariking/."-''.accoi:ding
<
to
i
Heaa ;.,-(.
-
~~ro~qlitan ,Sv.ri.mµij~g
:~~d .D}v~ faired well• . ,1so :ar'.}<>P.~qin<?~e
}<.::?a~lt
t,rtf,X~~t?(
agner:: : >.· :\ -;:: ••
mg C,9nference
.. Champ~~n~h1ps
.. , Larry Canomco. fin1slj_ed
t~1r~.'111
.:.·,,,,::
·:-:,:<[:
T'. \;·:'"1·:·,._
:,'. : , .•
..
:'" . ' • _;:
•
helcLat ·the :McCann Cente(pool
both die --one-, :arid.~
thr:ee.-iiieter
.<<
Although:the ~•Swimming
Red.
o,
tlti~ past weekend. : : ,> :)· <-•
., • • : events,.:.: whHe>. Junior• ·;Tqdd»_:Fo_~t!S~:-\
liavf: c<>mplcted their
\i
.' ·_;.,,:: .. ·:· •0··;:
,·.>
_'.;:'<.'-::·: Squillaro endedup with afourlh·>season,.the.'Mar~sf·diving.cori
7
~Y
•
Mari~t finj!lQ~d
'with:·a:total
o_f :
(one~meter ~dive):, and,, a/, fifth·· :ting'ent i(not
yet.
(inish~d with· its _;:
443.~ points,; w1tile' 1)le :Unit~d • (three-meter.dive) plice,finish.:·,;,·:
0
1984-85·'c9mpetitive:
~eason. ,The
.·:
.
States Meicharit Marine:~cademy· •.
.· '. ',: .· ,,:·
....
,,_)';
,,,-,,- ;c--\
;':·
,-i:
"\?.;::·_ •.• ',;.:;', ... :,,;: ,_,·:-;;,· '., ·_
I
·.·'
:~
. was tlie' t~m.champion with 972.
•.
;_ The lvfarist swimmer:S
~e~e led,. "Diviilg Red
Fox~~"
~tiil hive· at\
'
points: A'total of
22
schools·froin •
l?Y
top.finishes from junior .Peter: least two more meets ahead.·The
:'
..
both theA.arid B divisio_ns.of
the' Asselin who,
.. finished l2th.in the
•
ECAC:. iChampionships .. are;_;
conferencec6mpeted.:·<-::
100-yard freestyle a~d freshman-- scheduled for. March·,7 and 8 at·
• •
• •
_
.
, .. : .
..
·. . . ~ill Masi wh_o_
finished 13th in ' Brown University, :· while . the<
• Marjst· divers • ca_ptrired their
_
the 200-yard butterfly; _. •
NCAA Division I tri.als will be., :
fifth ·straight conference title by
,...
:'· held at Harvard on March 15 and'~·
soiidly defeating·Iona, 224 to-139. • • t-1arist's ·ninth place -showing 16/ .: :: •
, • • •
WdYflen
's b-ball: Marist'Slrish COnnection
by Julia
E.
Murray
• John
J:.
K~nnedy.had his "Irfsh
Mafia," Scarlett O'Hara ;ilways
had "her Irish up," the Clancy
Brothers. have their "Wild Irish
Rose," and for three years·Marist
- College has· had the "Irish Con-
. nection"~
Una Geoghegan and
Jennifer Gray.
Geoghegan and.Gray are both
members of the Marist College
Women's • Basketbalf
team.
Geoghegan, a junior, was first
~potted at a basketball camp in
the United States while here for a
holiday. She was latei told there
was an opening for a scholarship
Una Geoghegan
(photo by M~oreen Ryan)
and tried out · for it on her way .
home to Dublin after a summer in
califomia. The rest,
as
they say,
is history. '
Gray, a sophomore, was also
spotted at a basketball camp, but
she was in Ireland at the . time.
.
Pete Strikland, a high . school ..
• basketball
coach
from
Washington D.C.,, saw her play
anc;I
telephoned Marist. Her coach
then>sent a letter describing her
talents and, before she knew it,
she was headed from Dublin to
Marist on a scholarship.
Both women found adjusting to
• a new style of basketball to be one
of ihe biggest problems to over-
come.
.
.. The players over here are big-
ger and more agressive than at
home," said Gray ... They're a bit-
Jennifer Gray
(photo by ~•orttn Ryan)
more physical under the boards." ·
The practice schedule was also
difficult for .Geoghegan and Gray
to
get used
to. Here practices are
• held everJ day,: while in Ireland··
there are ·usually only two or three
practices a week,. -according to
'Gray.
~
•
•. . , •
.
• "In Ireland it's all club basket- :
ball and we play more for fun,"
said Gray.
.
The frequency of practices also
means that their social life is very
limited'until basketball season is •
over, said Geoghegan.
"During the season I have no
social life," Gray said.
· Both women had graduated
high school and were working full
time when they were offered their
scholarships, so coming back to
school was another big adjust-
ment.
Continued on psge
12
'-;~
.:~·•,·;~-
•.,
1'
;~:I\~~~:iday::M()tn1
nt,:.;ouar-tetba6k.'.
::?.
::
: .
,·
.. r.
••.••
.
I
Feb. 28, 1985 ·
THE CIRCLE•
Page 11 __
•
\
.
·rv:)i
1{jif
;[it'.:
-
••
•
•
•
.. ,,··• ...
,;,,:;;}'
.......
::
.'l!~i;i~ij~:--~
~-.:an·
era·
.
•
·:
•
:
~ylan Q'Connor,
:
::
:
.
.;.>:·.·<·witnessed
the. contest;it'r'eally was•''
·the
East's top players;>He. has
.•
just happy we were able to win the ., years, on the marks they'v~ left
.
•
,·,::-:->,'.··;'/~
'
'i. ,_,.._.. .....
, :.';:·•·\
··"·'ii'nightto·reme·mber:·
\?··:
.,
••
?:'
•
'become tJie·teani's'_star. H¢ is bn·e ·• conference,"
·:Padilla
said. ''The
'·
on this'college·. They look'ixcited-
..
• ·.,
• :..iFor.'!h~
pasf:four years, th~r)
.;i?.
First, Eggink ~nd Padilla, Both·.
:'of
the main reasons
'this
prog_ram
•.
future· really looks good for this
.ly
to
the
future,
of what Mari
st
:
. :
/h~ve
be_~P:tJ;l,~dQ~i~antfigur~sjn
.:,·:·of.;thfse_departi~g•.pla}'c;rs
are here•• cai:inow be calledlegitimate:,.
:
.
program.",
'. .
•
•
•
,
..
•
.:-
.
.,
basketball can become.·
•
•
•
• :·
::
•.
':
:tht
..
}1ari~t;J:o_l~ege·:~tJ!Jeti~.-J:>i§~
•
for. t~ei! flfth.;y_ear~:~u~_to
th~ fact:.
}
~'This
i~:
by
't.ir
•
the' best y,ear
i
<
Just as· ~he Loyol~ game was
•
••
If you werct'there Jcist Saturday
:,:
•
.
,gram·:J:<:.
,·.:;::;;,.,<.';';'.°<;
.
p
..
''.
.·~,
·;
· ,
·:
.
:;th~t,
1.nJur1es·,caused
each to re;d-
·we've
ever-.had;' '. Eggink recently
-:
represen~at1ve
of Eggmk, th~ star,
night,
•
you know why they were
.····\
]_!le1r _naOles,_are-St~'!'.~-~~g_ml<,,.shJ~t•
for·
__
pns_:s.~,son
... :Out ~h.1le.; said'..<'This'prograin_is
just going
·.an_d
Padilla; the role player!
1t
was
•
excited. You saw Rik Smits flash
.
. ,
.GJ~t,P;ad1Ua,-:
Br_11ce,
J~~ns~~;•
a_n?,
..
they. shar:t~tu..~
coRlmo~-~ond; ~he
·.:
to get better.''
.
_
.
.
,
•
. ..
·:'··
. •.
also an accurate account of. the
the skills that may make him a
: /Tu~r~ayl<I~;
/f:.hey
art the·:semor
,'4'_t'ro
h_ave;_~ad,.,.~ar«!erq~aL~re_
as
,..-Padilla
•has never been the careers of the <:>ther s!mo~s, 11rst round NBA pick in three
.
·;Iµ_.~P}.~~rs
~r
°.~I'..
~e.n sibask~b~l~
:';,~:~fffer~nt
.~sthe1r
~.ac~~r_oun,d~:
....
>;-
team's
·star; '.:He
came: to Marist
.
!ohnson a.n~ '.faylor. F?r,the pair,
years
•.
You· saw the
.cool
Drafton
: •.
,te11m,,
~~-n.~.~,>~J.,of.
l~~t Sat~r~_~Y,,,
''\
,:.,~~gmk_ca~e
_to
Jhls.school
VJ~::
from
. _New .
Jersey's,
,·Memorial
.
It
was
8:
f~ttmg finale m fro11t of
Davis,
th~
•
i_~proviilg Ken.
-~~FY,;;~a~e,pJ~yed
~he1r
.. last; g~~5
:
:Man.~t}i1_g~
m E,u~ene,, Or,egon,
.
Hi h
-and
was' ro'ected to be a . the partisan crow_d.
•
.
, .
. 03:lloway,
•
.
and the • anxio.us
:J}~:f~optpf.th~:~~1s,t_f~thf~~•<:
':':,a.ft~rturnmg_dow{l:~~ve_r,al
_of,fers_
:,
fo:. rebo~ndei ~d. defensive·
. Johnson,. t~e
·aII-t1me
assist
Miroslav Pecarskijust waiting for
•
:
:-:A[~llt.
_ga.m~r:,a,_~~c1s1ve
v191;~r~
:
fr.~~· P,ro_f~~s1~nal-~a~~1?,It~e~msjplayer
f
9
r the Foxes:· It was a knee
..
le~der :11,
Man~t, put. on a show his
•
opportunity:
.
They are
•
the
. ::o-~r~con,fer~~~n~11_U,;orol~.g~~::
:,~ookmg
Ao ~c._q~ir.e:
his
;high-
';injury that forced him·oul ofac-
with h1s/~azzh~g quickness and
nucleus, the players that
wi)l,
legck,T~f~~~,~~v~ri~Lfli:s_ts
f~~Jh!s:).
·pow_ered
.fastb~l_::~~ter. a r_athcr
.
tion iri'his second. year, an injury
•.
~allhandhng ~kill. Taylor, the ~II-
elevate this program to further
:c~Jle,e
~,b.asketbl!,ILpro,ra~.
fqe
,. •.·
average• first
.two
Y.:~i:s
as a ~ed
•:that-took-some
of the spring out
time rebounding leader a,! Manst,
..
heights.
•
•
.
•
•.
•
._::~~~-:~pP.C~:.off:1he:,first
;,ymmng
:;
Fox;_ th,e &:5· f()rward suff~~~d a ofJ>adilla's legs for good.
•
cr~hed the board~ on ~oth ends
.
But if you were there that night,
SW.QP.:,the)~.ed;.f'.oxes
have
..
h~4
:
hern1ated;d1sc
that-caused bun. to
• .
·
.
•
.
.
•
.
of the
'
court
•
m his usual you also know one thing:
.This
.
si~b.f_e~!~E~8.~·J>tyi~io!1·:q~~'.fotif>_sit
h:µt
what wa.uld.~ave beeri ~_is.··
..
Ma~ sa\
the
.
6
•
7
frwa~~ ha~
.·.
workmanli~e man~er .• The
_two
moment belonged to the seniors. ..
:;
y~s
1
;:,ago,-,·)~~•·;also.,·'!=~mched:::
·junior'year.:
Up,to this point, Eg~ n~ver. en.t. e s_a~e.a te.r 1 is s~t
were the pnze recruits of Manst's
It was their tiine to bask in the·
.
::M.~fi~(~_:{first
0
//E~AC\·,,M~tro\"'..'gi~~•
hadn't' exactly''.been\'_setting. ;a~\
But.:m~c_h
·:f.
his tedit,
first Division One freshman class; sun, to receive due praise for
,
:r~gularsea~on.t1tl~;and_puqhe·-··:theworldonfire.·,
.•
·,
l
·l:
a 1 aneverquit.
e_S
tuc_it_out
·Afterfouryears;'theyweregiving
everything they've• done for
.-
..
sq°'a~j~ tlie unfamiliar. position
y
:
:That
all'changed the following t~ro~gh t~o
·seasons.
?f h~~t~d the M.ccann Center one final Marist basketball.
•
9{:',b~ing
ttift9P,: seed in the con-:.: season as• former Head
·.coach
,
P aymg time_,
•
~eceivmg 1tt. e look.
No matter what happens over
•
fer~jlc_e'Jto_µfney:
beginning
:th~s::
Ron. Petro. inserted Eggink' into
..
:
rewa~d /or his tireless work
10
• :
"This program is growing,"
the weekend in Baltimore, Steve
:·Satf.l,rq~y;:
:::
..
·:._;,:.
•::/·.
<
·
•c.
·y::,<
:/the;startiQg
lirieup,~
and~watched., pracuce. H<?
~asbe~? !he heart of • ~ruce said.
.
Eggink,
.Gil
Padilla,
Bruce
,·
.
·;<J3.tIF~hile}his'·evenfdid
matk, his western· recruit average double
•
the team, hke a fighter w~o
;
"Leaving. as a winner is a
Johnson and Ted Taylor can all
,
.;sprite
rather ri.ew and exciting ac~
:.
figures for the year. But that was-: r_epres~nts th~ true work e1h1~· thrill," Taylor
.said.
"This team
look back proudly on their ac-
•
-~·com.pi~shnt~ilis;.
it.also signified_· just a small p'review of.'.wiiatiwas And hke all fighters, he made
.
11 can be great in the future. This. complishments. They are proven
::the
..
~.erid
.:-of.
an:·:.·era. iii: MarisL' to come in this current campJign.. th_rou~hto the. final c~mteSl,
c?n-
program will grow.,,
.
winners .
.
:~thletics.-Jt
was·tiie ushering out> Eggink, averaging over l5'po,nts
tnbutmg to victory m a quiet,
•
They all ·talk about the pro-
•
NOTE:
.. ·
Thanks
to
Dan
'.:o(the'ol~,
the bririgiiig in of the per game and one of the nation's
...
modest way~
.
. -gram,
about the future. The four
Pietrafesa for bis help
with this
••
new:\ For
·tlic\e;J~OOO-plus·'.
who-,, best fout'shooiers, is now one\ of:
"It took
.four
years and l'm· seniors don't look back on past
column.
:
,·
•·,
-,
•
'
••
•
-.~.:
•
-·..
-.>:-'.(.·
•• ,
•
'
•
.
,·
',
•
·1.,
•\_.
•
'
Why is tlie Fox-our mascot?
.
.
.
'
;'.
\
[f
{1(:.~~~•,
__
2
~-->
:
J~~f.Q:~•c,~~••J~r~:
·
..
·
..
_
~,~.:::.!i?ge
'$ .:~.~.~:~
s:~.irs
•
debate
0/:
',\Vit6.ihessuirt'.of,tiif
ECAC
•
ca4s~ a' Jew'. probl~ms,:fc,r t'1e
...
•
who was dean of students at
The
•
Marist
•
Viking. football
-;-'
Mefrci
.•
:'°:Corirerence/
.to'urna~. '
faVO!i.tes
is',Furjanic'.s fc,rrner
••
?
.
·•:.
The
Fighting
•
Irish;.~. The. Marist from 1958-65,. is credited
teamh sported
'f/~rf
purp(e c~lor
·::·m~nf;this\Saturday;:it
seems
••
<
squad;·
:
the Colonials': from
·_:
.
Redmen. The Trojans. rhe Red with. choosing the Fox. "Brother
!sit~ -~iik~~~/CI~sc!i~a~
~c~ ~;~
•
:;,that."iiny'of'
four teams have:.
,':R..ober:ti~~rris;.:lf_the,;_I~oxe~
•
Foxes: They all have something in ~tokes was a hunter in his day,· team jerseys and jackets. "it was
v~abfo.;shots:a~,takjrig
.tlie,titie'.
: .(~~p:.nia~e
.
th
~,r
firSt app~r~~ce;
•··
•
commonwith one another.
•
• •
,_,
·
• and he hunted
in
Dutchess. Coun-
a
gesture and
.a
convenient hype at
\f~ltffy6/rtii~Jt~~lfr~~~\{\~~ih~\~¢~•·st;:,i~~;:::h;~l,).'.
>.t:tit~e~~h{~-it~~~~c~6iA·•~trf~a-tiIWo~::~t~i~?iJ~~!i~;-·
·,
t:d
ti~~;df8i!e~
0
•~i;;:~---~z~~
•
';
After
.i.the:-·
·league's~·
Weaket;
'.
·>
tu nd
'
OPPO.l}eat
;-
111
be·Lokufd.
\
.,.,:,furnamerit.
n€:"t.
cmonth.
~ath_er,
•
local •.anim~l
•-arid,
was eventually enough' for the football team;''
.,
.
''..:•f
0;'':'./:;:\i!?
{:''\
.;(,//
.,.
,
. . }'.
si~':°:i:~t~R~~~:~jf
0c~l:
..
:
• :they
all repre:sent t~e qffic1,H1tl~
.
chosen
by:
Brother Paul because
Since then, the football
.
team
•
:-:~.r.;_•.tM/i:a.ftri.sst-?f
...
•.ua~n.~de:
..
t.t.i~~tyl;_o·'1:;a~
.•
~.u.6.01:.ni.
_m_:>o.~nder
g_;_.~-~b.
;
..
··.ii.x.o_
~-
;\.ll!
..
~./ta.}!!.?_\~.1}.~~.;.};
.·rl~hlct~o~:~.::~;~.~l.h:i~
.·'
•
of~~t~·~~ri;~~~·~:1i~;:;~:1~- ·~
••
~;~~e{~
1:ag1~?Jt;:d{~r:
~e~~~
'.
.
.....,
II
h
fi I
>.·
Th_e I!amef_s~und simple and
'·'legend". with thiH>lder alumni,
and has carried the Red Fox sym- •
.
: •
sernifinal~,with LIU and
IDU
,sea,s_c;,n,
wi carry,t e sei,nt ma_
'.
·
0
hav~
_a
certam
.nng
to them. For made the decision to adopt the
bol every time
it
has taken the
,. ?
battliii'g. iµc'the, other; If.that's
·,
an<;l
f~nalrou nds.
0
f.
tbe,,con,.
::
.
~.ap~t
:: .
Co!leg~
,.
~tt1:dent.~
,
and Red Fox following his hunting
field.
..
•.
·the
case, the Red
,Foxeif.will
·.:
ferenc.~_,~o.urnaipen~
~n Sunda,Y-
•
.otliers°'~s9tiateµ,~1th:tJ1e;schpol,
,
adventures throughout Dutchess
Over the years, the Marist Red
have~ to
:_
take
•.
on the
, ..
and
,>tv!9J.1d,ay.;
iughts
...
s'l'.lm.,<'·
the·Red,Fox'is th¢'symbbl ofthe
·county.
Belanger said
;that
the
Fox has bcien· pictured in'.several
'..
Greyhounds
:on
their home
~
:
G~~•rn,_,~
JU_nl<?,L
m.ember 9f
c<;>ll~ge.·
T_h~ qu~tio_n that_ ma9-y
.
readings oLReynard
·may
have
different ways. In the 60's and
·~
:)
court;· a place the~Foxes~don't
·,
~~~
'
¥,~ns~.: hock~y
•
t~~m;
•
people faiLto inquire abo,ULIS,
•
·
also influenced Stokes' decision.
· 70's, the Fox was pictured with a
,
.
.
like
to travel-to, Loyola
seems
:
•
;~·,,-,
·>
-,'
_.·
c- •••• • ••
,,
:
•
•
,:
•
-~!Where
did.:Marist ever come up
~a1·10
•
r's ha·
t ... '
..
'Sai·11·ng was· the· top·
·•,
.,
.
h.
,·
·
M.
·'·· ~,-:
,
i::
'"··
<.·
,r~ntlY,rea~hed
the_m1lest~!le
•
d"F
•
.... ..
• ·
.
•
• •
.tC?,::.
~v_e-.
anst ~>~u?1_u~L
ID,'
·-or.1oo·ca:reer''poihts.
Graham.>
with the·R.e
•
ox:as,its;·symbol.
:
-~I ·think
that it all
sport here.in the 60's,".Belanger
.
.:
,::.\
'.
.· .
•
•
·:
'·i~
thdhird ptayei"'in Redfox:
•
a
nd mascot?"
•
•
g;.oe·
s·
·.b
.
.la'
.....
c.k·.
to·
.a_·F·.
rench
said •. "We.won the·~CACsailing
.
,
;
Balt1mor,C?,
..
~mnmg
.Jli.ere:
the_."~
hisfory. to, compile·-over
JOO..
The answer to thi~ question.has
.
championship. one year." The
:
;
p~_U,W<?_:years.-L11:9ttnne
th~,:,:-points,-<with-'.'senior
Rob
..
varied from
.person'
to
'person;
m.·.
ythi.'.cal
poem
·abo.
ut
sailor's cap
·was
'tacked·on
to the
•
...
: .~~x<:5
headecl d9w~_tqµ:>yo!a,:,.:
'.Tn~~<aJldi\gradu*eYllm
•
:
dep~nding._on who you. talk t_o.
Fox because of the sailing team's
,
}~,e
squ~d:w~ df~l~
~ra~1cc._\l\lcP9nal~
/bei~g'::t}ie ':other_, ...
Even. ari:J~ariy: 1910·~
'stud,ent
a,
ifox
•••
i
named
prominence
,and
dominance in
,
..
um~
at t.he. hosp gynionJl_i~:
·two~.-.Ihtramura1-··
director
·
..
•·.handbooic,
The Arrow, fails' to
•• ...
:
•
•
··1
·
.
..
those few years.
·•.,·.·
'day:of:Jhe
garne'.,That ~u~ed.,
Mlk:e.MaJetis
sHll19oking:for:::::. reveal who chose the Red Fox' as.
Reynard.'
''.:
i
"•
_
•
'.
some
:bad
-:blood
between· the
o.tet.erces
to do
.•
the upc·o.rriin.g
5
••
•
Marist's official
'mascof
TheAr-
Th k
t
the
•.
•
•
·•
•
•
•
•
•·
•
row
sayi that the Red
"Fox
was
s·
h •
•
'
•
I
•
f
·h
F
The cap is now gone, and the
•
two te_ams._;. e .
~Yt.
or
•
•
.
:
on,/
S
•
basketliall
•.
ga~~s.
.
c.
hose_
n
...
f.
or "its ke.en intelligence
mce t
_e
..
mcept1~n.
o t e ox,
Marist "M" has been moved to
Foxes mt~e tourney,wlltbe-the
,,
-Anyone
interested should con-
there has been only
•
one team
the back of the Fox. But no one
'j.nside~utside combination·
of:
..
tact
,Malet·
at his McCann.
•and.ingenuity."
The guide also which has not taken on the Marist ·
•
•
Rik Sml
·-d
S
w ..
.d ..
1r
•
•
• •
•
sa·ys·
that· t·he·
red and wh1'te
colors Red Fox trad1't1·on.
That e'xcept1'on • know.
s when (or if) another piece
•
•
.....
·
ts an
tev~
~~
·,.Center
offi~,. ext .. 329.;.Toe·
•
·
•
·
·
a~d. th,e:b<>~d play o.fsemor>.. men's hockey team.improved.
:
of'Marist were derived
from
the was the club football team in the ;l~yb~e 1:td}~xtoco~~- s:::;io~
forw~rd
Ted Taylor.
If
these
.•
its overall record to 6-8-1 last
••
colorationoftheFoX.
:'· •••.
•.•
early1970's. -.
•
basketball, soccer ball,
· ..
volley
three· can play as they have
••
•
week with a:·i0-.
•
2 vict.Oty over
• •
In order to find out exactly how
•
·
•
,.
·
•
·
• ·
·
·
•
•
·
·
.
the.Red Fox: came about, one has
"They nlcknamed tliemselves ball, lacrosse stick, hockey· stick
.
·ov~r
.
the
-p~t
~ori.th, there:
•
Mariti~e Academy. Th~ co_n-
to have a historical perspective on
...
the Vikings
·on
the instigation of
or tennis racket in the near future.
should
..
·be
.
no
.
stopping
.
test. was.•held at. the Mid-
_
•
the matter; Legend has it'that the the coach," said Dr. Howard
Chances of that:-c-!1appening
are
•
Marist· ... This
·mar.ks
the first
.
Hudson Civic
·C.
enter,·:• the
.
Maristj:,rothers were founded in Goldman, interim athletic direc-
very unlikely, but one never
F
•
d th
• t
•
d
•
A
d'
a
Id
th
knows. Perhaps all we· can hope
•
..
t1'me the·. Foxes have· ever w.on Fo·xes horn·
e 1·ce.·.·•.Th·e
men's
ranee an
.
.
us mam ame a tor• ccor mg to
o man,
e
F
•
h
I
•
A'
•
d'
•
h
h
b
•
.for
is that the Red Fox will some-
·1he
..
co·
nference ti'tle
·and
•
1
bb d
••
•
d
renc
cu ture.
ccor mg to team c ose t e name ecause
1t
entered the tourney
as the top
soccer earn gra e sec~m
.
Brian Maloney; director
·of
alum·-
day mean as much as a Fighting
place at their own indoor
• ff •
th R d F
d • d wanted the club to be separated Irishman, a Redman or a TroJ·
an.
seed. Being n.
umber one,
tourney held at the· McCann
m
a airS,
e e
ox enve
f
h t • It
"I th· k th t 't and on 1·1s own. "It was a
"All teams want to have a stan-
'
everyone will be gunning for
Center over the weekend. The
rom t a cu ure.
·
m
a
1
II
b• kt
F
h
h' I psycholog·1cal
ploy "or the coach dardized and official mascot,"
the squad from Poughkeepsie.
Marist Red 'team, led by goalie
a goes ac O a renc myt ica
1
'
.
Marist's
•
league-leading
H.
arry
Guglielmo,· fell to. na- -
poem about
a
•
fox named in order to psych up his players,"
said Maloney. "And
Marist
R
d ,, M 1
'd "H
Goldman sa'1d "They named the should be proud to have the Red
defense will definitely be put
·
tional power Hartwick' in the
eynar •
a oney sai •
e
·
•
Fox."
to the test ... Prediction _
.
finals; 2-0 ... At Yale's
.
Col~
was an intelligent and tough team on their own."
fox."
Marist is right now the best
legiate Track. Conference
_In-.
team in the ECAC Metro. The
Foxes have won seven in a
· •
row, and are peaking at the
perfect time. Although it will
be
.
tough
winning
.
three
straight at Loyola, look for
Matt Furjanic
to make his
third
-
career trip to
the
NCAA's. Marist will do·it by
edging the· Greyhounds in
door Championships held.last
.•
Reynard has been· a familiar
A1•d
S~turday, Marist's 3200 meter
name to Marist students over the
----------------------•
years. It's the official name of the
·front.of
a
.wild
crowd, then
~ropping
Carey Scurry
~nd his
relay team took sixth· place
•
with
•
a school-record time of
7:56.3. The squad, which was
the first non-scholarship team
to finish the race, broke the
record it set on Feb. 10 at West
Point. The' team· consisted of
Christian Morrison, Donald·
Godwin, Garrett Ryan
and
Kevin Mackay.
college. yearbook, and was
•
once Continued from
pages
.the- title
of
the
school's
newspaper:. Prior to The Circle,
the school's
newspaper was
known as Reynard's Record.
federal aid restrictions should not
stand in the way. I know several
people who couldn't attend their
first choices because their parents
Reynard the Fox may have had
something to do with the school's
official seal. But that is not the made just enough money to
be
in-
main reason why the Fox was eligible for federal. aid. There's
chosen, according to Brother nothing wrong with state schools
Joseph
·
Belanger,
Marist's
(most of them are very good), but
foreign-student advisor. Be~anger when private colleges go bankrupt
- as many did three years ago -
the quest for prudent cuts in aid
to students has obviously gone
awry.
But it begins with a renewed
respect for education, starting
with the Chief Executive and in-
cluding everyone who believes in
the greatness of America's foun-
ding principles.
i
~
•
.. :,,.,.:;,~'r11E'c111ci&-_i:.b~
a,,
1.,s-~-
Jobs<~V-~h~6ie:
:.
, ;:··
- •
•
•
\.
1 __ ~;,.
,
.
~
i·
~i, \
t \
•
I'--
.
({\"
I'_:~
tf
(\\.
.. '. - -... \,,. •
. ·".
• l -·
on-Cape
:.Cod _.
••
::
>-
:\r_:;~~i:re.16Jk~~s.·r~r~atd.• .•
t~::
--you(surmiier. job with'Jitde or no -
eitthusiasin/mayb'e· it'iriime
for-a··.
. : change" of
pace,-
or ··sceriery, or·
both. <·:.,\.· •
:'·:,f':'\•·J\,'.;. • -· __
,·
• .The· Cape· Cod··suriuitcr Job·
Bureau'•.says·-it·•can'--provide··that -
, change; _or af least poinf you in<
the right'directi61i'.
. _. .
•
A:
recent explosive_ growth in .
tourism in _the Cape Co'd, Mass.;
area· and
on
:thi islands ·of Nan-'
tucket and Martha's Vineyardhas'
treated the large~~ s~asonatJob--
markei in ther'egioii's history~· ac-.
cording ,
fo
:Bomiie
>
Bassett,'
spokesperson 'for' the Cape Cod'
. Sumrri'er Job Buteau ••
•
•
•
....
/i•:·,
Bassett added that there are •·
tlio~sands of)njeresting summer
jobs~· beirig offei:ed ·to·_ college _
studerits . arid .teachers from· all •.
over-·t~C
CQ\lniiy. />-:_. .:·.-
-:-·.
_,.;,.,_
t ,, •
... UThe oppoi:tu)iities are e?',-'·
citirig, ihe pay is good~ and now is
the
time to act.:while .the sclcctiori' -
__
is best,'' said
Bassett.
r -- •
For detailed,• irlforntatioii ori
h~w to apply, send
a
long, self
7·'.
addressed • stamped - envelope
.
to
'_
1985 SUMMEif· JOBS PRO- -
(J.RAM; Box 594,
Rrri. •
12, Barn- -
stable,MA02630. --,
-
iJ·
~:-i:;·.
lt-.l'.
•
C<»nti_nued'froni_
pag·
~io
_
l'c,
i?{~ ·
•
"The lo~s oCindependence was
1' (\'- _.
the : hardest
thing/\
, said
l '\\ •
Geoghegari; "Wljen you're work~
·11
ing yo·u' re • muc~ more indepen-
t
A
dent.Qoing'fr-om that backto be~·
( )\
ihg a student again is like taking a
V:;
step backward.,,-
. --
1 _
~
( 'I
While.the womcn·say they iniss
1
:.i\
the independence they used .to
/_ I,
have, they also miss tlie, security
' •
of having their families -nearby.
:t(i~ _
.
. . ''
'-'This
wa'.s"
:iny 'first 'Christmas
_
~~,\-
•
•_.;
- away from hoine," ,said Gray.
''I
1.!\":' •
. •
_was hoine last Christmas; 'andall
·.,f_/
___
... , : _ : .. ,',,·_I_~st_s._u
___
m_.-_·m_.e_ft'_b
__
'\1_,.t_
i_h
___
e __
a
__
i
___
r·f_
a_re._.'i_s:t
__
o_.·o_:
_.
_ ,;; • - • ··•·•
, expensive: now. We're gomg to
-_,:{(
;' •
-· • _.::
::ry;tb~e[lt:~~~-5ci:~t~r:i~.
r.1 -
Christmas/! :') ' <,
..
· :: . _-.. ~-. -. '. .
f •
• •.
When '.things get 'too . rough,jlie
,
women· know they. always have
.., \·
• someone to hu'n'.to: Jim Larkin,
' i'_'
: -
of. West • Hartford; Conn., has
t""·,
_::-:,(.i,.,:
provided _a se~ond • family. • for
t .'- ,..-
Geoghegan and CJray, :
__
._
_
.
.'
1 ,:'. - •
• -· •
r•
A
lot of.the credit.for _me still·
b~i~g here 'goes)9:Jiiri-Larkiii,"
Ofay sai~. '"He's,J>eenJike·a big
. faoth~r_'fo m_e!r. ,; ;:
"!:
·-'
( '·
< · _
Lai:kiri has been resp<>risible
for
giving· ·inahy: -
·trish
w<>men
ta
chance <to pfay basketball in -the
U.S; and is.now worJcing oil·seri--_
~ing ._Aqieric~n:·w~men :ox~r}O-
; play 'b;:isketball in'. Ireland,. said
Oeqghegan.
_ •·-•• •
_
•
_ " •
. .Though it's been rough ; at:
.
•
times;· neither-·woman·•·has ·any
- regrets , about coming·. to _ • the
United States.
.
._
_.
.
. . '·;,.
"I~ thiilk.:iCs an opportunity
you'd be •afoo,l
to
miss/' said
Gray.•-
Conti~uecffrom
pilge'6 .· . ' •
tell
yi>).i
Yurps·about Iasi:y~ai:.
•~
"What principle is that?'.'_· _·
_-
.
_
• •y o·u know, the R~gan princi: •
pie -. ~I'm
a.
millionaire, you're
not; I' go.
fo
Washirigton, you go
to hell.'"
•
.
• --
• Paisley print
was
llQt amused.
In fact, I thought he was going to
cry~ so
I left him alone, chanting
softly to himself.
"Ronnie, Ron-
nie, la'ma
sa-bach-tha'nr!" he
said over and over.
But we shouldn't feel too sorry
for the Yurps; They're young and
impressionable and only did what
they thought was best at the_ time.
They wanted a movie star for, the
leading political role, and after
·an, he never promised'them any
special exemption from his more
painful programs. If only they'd
;,.
listened, not to Reagan's old
t
t,
movies, butto Disney's:
:11
When you wish upon a star ...
~f;
~~-.,;:·mak:::
Wfference
who you
i.>5
I
~-t-
A1.;t;sm1)CJ'.E:NtJs
1N~rERESTED
•
• l"N
'FlliJ::N,NfNtl.'F':6R·
A:ColJNC1t.
OF"-.
·,smu,iEN'T-l.EADERs
·Pos1r10N
.OR
FQRiiCllA$S
6FFlCeR··.·Pos1r10.N:•·
(
'.
ITlay.:d~cl-~r-e._··•
hislt1er
car,d
idaqy
arid piG.k
..
l.lpSPetltion~•·•·
:
.
',
'
'
..
,·
--
i
-I
Beginning-12
npon,
Wed.,-MarCh
6
in CSL
Office, ..
·•.
-:cc~2sa
\,
·.
::·
R'.·ricJay,-,Marcft
t
.
--
,._:
<
•
<·~·
.
_,from·/
-
fl
•·
S:OQ.p.J'Tl.
tO
t
c1.n1.···
.
. .
-
.
..
.
.
.
tulles
by
WMCR
$1-~00
admission
.
.
.,
/_
•I
ti•
r
soc -if dressed DECENTLY, in a TOG.A
Sponsored by CSL
I
I
1.·
·,· ·:,:;,,
.. ·
r,.:
·· ••. · ... ·
,T
• .. •
·.
_· •
..••
_. • •
;
•
\
.,
Voi&ime
30,
Number
15 •
f~l!ll!
·,gr¢t!S':/~[(~~fl,j~\!!~~jilf
1
~,!~~s
.•
Pox
Fd'natics'
cheer,
Jeer
by Rosemary Olsen
•• in that posjtion. '.'Theadininistra::. the):esJ)()nsibility,lies-soleiy with
• ;·-·-. , • • -· ·
• ••
·• :
•
:
••
• ... • •• •
A. r~cerit i~Jo~,,~y:a h~tional ~~~of~~g~:~J~~TT~t:r~~~l!~Jitifi~8lt:/;J~~J;j~;l~!
:~
their
·way
th.rough·
·season
·
. , ._,education_
group widely criticizing · - • : The. mstftution _needs·
the;finan--. get ·-lazy.:
but if _a.
teacher pushes;•
-~eri~n
colleges Jmd·· _univer-• ctal
IOJ?UL
of -students
I
and· tlteycando the work.'!<:, •··. • ·-•
-
siti~ has. becoi;ne:
the_ cent.ei:
• of:a pressures· f~c~lty not·. to ~~ucate,;~, ,Bettenci>~rt
• ·•
·' -i;t~d • out
·that
. ~~uonal deb~te on the quality of butto kc~ studentsjn sc~ool, • Marisf
15
takiiF steps to raise
}i1g~er educauon_t~~ay. _ _ • _· .. 1:utfiyya said. '.'We have a snua~. s
d
•
-
•• -~ - . - •• •• • • -~
.
,
-T1~led "Integrity m:the C:ollege tton w!t~re th~ unedu~t~d _are. q1:e::1r:t~!!tli:~!~s8f~!ea~~
:.Curriculum," th_e 47-page_
~epprt deJernnmng their-edl!cat_1on,"
she b ·institutin .
a new·
adiri
: _from. the A~encan '. -Assoctatmn _ said. "T~ey are setting the sJa~-, Jlicy that wfu add min: Jette~
of Colleges ~s based on_ a .th~ee-·:dards.•:
i
•
.,,_ : ,- -,
.
-· .•
;-·. ••
_•' .
grades~ ''Thjs will
give
the faculty
year anal~s1s of .
IL.
colleges : _
A_ pro{essor, Ylho aske~ not to
•
more levelsto deal with '.' he said.
.
thrpughout the- country. The be 1dent1fied agreed with . Lut- "If will als h
1
l
·
report . charges that • standards fiyya. "Five to eight years ago, better idea
O
e P
st
u e~ts get a
~ayeJallen a~d that curriculum is · there were strong. feelings that the at.,, •
of where
th
ey re really
m need of basic restructuring.
future of the college was threaten-
' Recently, some Marist faculty ed,"
'
the
professor ·• said.
member~ were asked to comment "Teaching was done: to please
on !he report; and on the state of students· and to keep jobs, and
education at ¥arist.
•
• this is still .present. Every school
. The • question
of lowered should have a scholarly tradition
academic '.standards was of par-
and Marist does not."
•
ticular concern for them.
Student evaluations add to the
Nawal Li,l!fiyya, ~i~tant pro-
problem, according to George
fessor of commumcat1on arts, Sommer, professor of English.
said she believes the report's "As a consequence of student
criticism of standards applies to evaluation, faculty consciously or
Marist. F;_a~lty members feel they unconsciously are responding to
must keep st1;1dents
happy in order the pressure of what students
to keep their jobs, she said. •
want," Sommer said.
•
.
Lutfiyya faulted the academic
Joseph Bettencourt, professor
administration for putting faculty of biology, said; however, that
. Nadine
Foley,
divhion
chairperson of humanities, admit-
ted that collegt".S
are in a difficult
position. She said . that some
students come to college withour
the prerequisites of reading; ·oral
and written expression, and
teachers have to try to deal whh .
that without lowering their stan-
dards.
.. lil its report, the Association of
American• Colleges- condemned
both· general education programs
and major programs of college
Contlnnecton
psge
9
• : from the administration and the
.
.
.
_ ,J..
students. C'lt's gotten so people··-
.
Marist ~ollege • basketball fans
<
save us seats at the game·. now .
don'.t ·'have. to look. twice when ·::.
They really want us there,'' said
. they· hear loud _shouts from the :'.junior Thomas Begg. "Everyone,
stands during home gaµies. . ._ ·,
including President Dennis Mur-
·,,
The •~Fox Fanatics;''-~ group
ray; lias told us· that they like
oL' Marist stud_ents,
•
are well what we're doing -
even the
known for their cheers and jeers • players;''
•
and the way they animate every .
.
Asselin . and Begg, . both of
home game with energy, spirit
Waterbury, Conn., the hometown
and painted faces.
_ .
of Marist's senior guard Bruce
• The students paint their faces
.
Johnson, have only missed one •
red and white, Marist's school
home game in the -past three
colors, in an attempt to get more
-
years. Asselin, Begg and Johnson
support • for the . team in atten-
attended Holy Cross High School
dance and to generate crowd
together. <'That's when it all
spirit at the games. • •
started," Begg said. "We used to
"We want more students there,
go off back then." .
.
involved and really intd' the
Asselin, Begg and sophomore
games. Hopefully we can turn the
Vinny Oliveto, of Bohemia,
gym into a pit, have the noise so
N.Y., first painted their faces for
, loud ;md with such an effect that
the Marist-Siena game last year;
other. teams are afraid to come
Since then many other students
piay us,"
said junior Peter
have joined them.
•
Asselin, one of the originators of
"People from Marist have.
the group.
•
come up to us in bars and asked
• The
Fox
Fanatics
have
•
-themselves received aoolause
Continued on
psge
2
,,
i
I,
',·
.
.
•.:'
.
Continued fr~rn page l
us if they could come along: Even
a group
•
of
people
:
·,
fr<mi
Poughkeepsie have. brought
.their
own paint to· the gam~
•
and
wanted to sit with us," Begg'said.
"Some people. think.;
'.we're
.
crazy and off-the-wall, or that'.we
just drink alot," Begg said. "Ifs
not true. We nevet touch
a
dr~p
before a game. We just
·
get
psyched-up.".
Many
•
Marist students, like
Eileen McGough, of Queens,
N.Y., said that they like the spirit
the group brings to gaines. "They
create an atmosphere. They get
everyone psyched. They are real
team supporters and I think it's
great. You feel· like you can go
crazy
·
with
them,"•
said
McGough,
a sophomore
at·
Marist.
"They're an icebreaker for the
crowd,"
added
sophomore
JoAnn Burton, of New City;
:':''\%/~lii:,i~tt:'.Jt'.'('\''}
:\}JI~;J,t
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.
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.
:
'~.
;
,:.·
i.'
i
.
.
l.
. .,
STlJDE.NT
•
ORIENTATION~>STAFF
MEMBER-?·
.
.
'
•
•
.-
'
'
'
.·._,:
...
,
..
Appl_ications
ar~
·
~ow b~ing:
accepted~
.
.
\
cc266.,Student.
Affairs
.Office
·
•
;.
,
.,-.
',
•
•
-4.
••
:
~-.
•
••
•
•
,
N.Y.
,· ..
._ _______________________________________
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Feb. 28,
-19'5
• THE CIRCLE: Page
3,
___
,f;~t"eii}teStde~tS;~itve:·{!)u/1:,Sifln:stitddeiJ
....
dreams
·:X'
>
\;:.:t'f)ii
1:~/-~;\
1,:·:/;1,,:_.,-,;:._·,\···"·
..
_-.:
:.:·_.··,)t£ii2)ii~l:\\f;f·;:;·.,.
·:{:\.._::•.:-:o::-,·:,.•;r
..
-
::,>:-:·::"'
:~·-_
::
.--_·
·_·_:.;,_.
:•
-__
•
.
.
..,
'·
: •
·
·.•
·.s
~y~cb,et
~tt
~•eller_,
>'
'.?;.<; •
, ficials had:,~efpetjed~;,'.~:uLthere
(.·
t~r_ough_:the;i~}:lo\V;tlie
audience's:
~
Jankowski of
_
Kingston was no
•
South Hills mall, co-ordinators of
}
,·,,:,:,_:,;;"_;';;i:•
F~·A ,.;,.::::
·-:;.
c:
; {::'·.:-:
'
:
·:.were
no·ipi'obleiris;<~Most
of the·,;_.
curiosity._ was_ Jtroused, when
:·36-.
longer "on the d~rk si~e? when
.
the event, said they are planning
,·.:,
...
t
·
__
.Tlie';i
~:w.eu.:~f:': im~gip~t\on
.-a_u~i~nce.-ev~n'-f~9k;th{Ubetjy_
to):
ycar::oI.d ~m
.C~~ffin
decid~d
to .
t~eUghts a_nd c,meras'focused on
.;
to hold the event again in t~e near
\brought •Prmce,-,:F~a_nk
Sinatra;
,
s11.1ga11d
da~c~i.~ ~~e-~1s_le~:<:';'.
..
:_
(:,d9
:--·~s:;,,
ren.d1t1on.
'.
of . 'The
h1~ and his fn~nds as they were
-
future. "But next year," said Stu
,'. a_~f??,~n
faff~~ty a11~ !~e ~~y.e.r. , /,
_,1.~.:.J~~
.:~ay_::
progresse_d~
, tf!e
;.f
Gla~orous
•
Life" a la ~h1ela. E. • a~~rd_ed the pnze
.
money.• «We
_·
Shantz, morning man at WPDH
Brown·Band., to· the. Sout,h Hills
,
temperature and the·crowd's en·~
.•
Durmg the second verse, .Chaffin did this act a month ago.at a con-
and emcee of the event "we will
.
m~t
~as~ ~eek.·-~d'. the.-cro"'.d
Jth}lsi_asm
r(?_se;
But no one seemed
,.
~•e~
•
out
~f.
an ~verall suit,· test in Kingston," Jankowsi said,
definitely need a bigge; space in
.
_loved
1t.
·
:· ·
:·-=:,
! ., ·,
.
•
< ·
:·
to mind; they just
-screamed
for·:
:flmshmg
up m lmgene that would _·
"so we were well-rehearsed. We
•
the mall."
·
•.)
..
_
~ver.
6_0.
:•~roup,s,~~-
r~ging !n
_.
~ore: "This is greater than): e_x.,
\
have pu! Mae West to shame.
"I
•
are still e~c~ted
•
t<?
_ be _winners
•.
"
•
.
If impersonating your favorite
._
a~c,.fro~ 9)0. J6, participated m
<
pecte.d/' said Tcrri:Dittµs;::a:11~·
_saw
Shiela: E.
•
perform on an Ja~kowsk1 and his· friends said
'musicians
interests you, butYou'd
.
-:
}h~Jfirst' a~nu!l!r"'i:'D.1.-l(South
·,
year;old
/
spcctat'or:i\from
,
award·sh~w a few w~~s ago arid/:.they.bave no immediate plans for
_:
like to try it a bit closer to home,
.:
.
··•-,'H!l.l~t;·
~~n.·,
_bp~s_yn~
:;·_cc:mtes!;
..
_,
~o~g~keepsi~;!:,!I;,c_irine'_:here
out,
•·
figllred· I could. do ~ett_er;''
:s~id·:
the ~oney •. How~ver ,they _added
.··you
may want to participate in the
.··;
m~f!li.~km~
p~rfopI1~nc~
1
~f:~heir,
.•
of.c~ri~sitf,,nd
:s~t_:a··•11i~e·
su:r~
;
Chaffi!1, ''so ld1d/;
i:
~,,
,··<:;,-•;:-,;
th.at they were excited, particular-
-_
Marist's third annual Air Bands
·.
fav,~nte
_111usi~I
artists,
..
~for~~-- . prise.'?.::,
,<
\.;;,'.'.>'
·,
,_ ,
.
'.
·.-
..
:,
~~-
·:
·
Obviously the·
.
Judges.·. didn't,:_)Y because they_ planned to per-
•
Contest. This event, sponsored by
.
cro~d,,;,Of}p~r()X~,!!1atel)i
6(l(),
?C.~~
:
\
·:9uri~usj,assers~by
'~ften
°
s'toJ).-·.
<th~nk
so,-because
:the:
three
2
g!and.:,::fonn_
again, a, f ~w hours later~ at
.
.
both
i •
the class of
•
1986 and
.:_
ple.Ji
,.:_,
·>
'~->,
,,
.
>
.
,
,: ,.
<(
>
~
_
·ped
ioJakc'::a:¢e,k:over'the rows'
\prizes
of$101.50 were awarded
to:,:
Ulster Commumty College.
.
Seiler's, will be held during the
•·
Th'e crowd "for.··the six-ho"\n
.·
ofh~~df
'··;tryihg
to·get a glimpse
·imitators.
of
.
Prince;· Frank •
•
Jeanette Spaeth, sales represen-
last
:
weekend in March. For
:
;
eve~t
,wfis:
l~2er than contest o_f~ of the action.
··Then,·
~idway
Sinatra, and John Cafferty.; :
•
..
'
..
.
tative at .WPDH, and Kathy Par-
.•
registration and more inform a-
.
·
·
•
..
.,.
•·
.. ·.
·. •
···
.
•
•
•
CaffertY" im~r,sonator
Mike,.
sanko,
•
marketing director of
•
tion, see Bob LaForty.
·BC>HY
jtn,Gtg·e
iS
focus:-,
as
Mari~f
Shapes· ~P
•:::::://~:.(.~";•~~:,•~
•>
•:,
',•
h••••:•-.--.
•,
•••:.,•.::•_•t_••••·.:·•.:~.:<·::•
••
:.brf~r!Stl~?
1,~rs~~
:
_Ai~~
0
;aid both
~tuderits
and resi-
•••
-.•.
Marist College is ta}sing ~.goo.cl
'
dent
.:assistants
approached lier
•
lool(atitselt
,;,:,,;
·:
~/'.~.
·.·
:
.. ,~:
•,:
. :, :,
with the
top~c
of diet and_
exercise,
•
.
__
·_.·
·rlieJirst
of a. five-part· "Body
.,
and added it
was
"a common con-'
,_•
. Jmage'.';/. series , of,;. discussion cern·among'stuclents.",:
: •
:·
•
.'
groups;on dieting, exercise
•and
.
Jane
O'·Brien, director of·
.
weigh(conireLwas sponsored by health services, said there were
a:·
•
•
the counseling center last. week in
·
·variety"
·of"topics.
discussed at the
•
the.FiresideLoun'ge:
::-
.••
>
:.:
.·
.
meeting,' and the group provided
·.,
Students and: faculty. attendea inpti( to
._help_.
make. the
.
overall
•
.
the lecture, held ''in response to
.
prograrri more effective.
:'
>
•
_·
~tuderit request ,and desire for self
:.
.•
().'Brien
:
sa,id
'
students
.
ap~
d
.•
•
improvement;'
..
·
•
said
:
Roberta
•.
proached her
<with
the idea that
•
~
Ainato; director. of counseling:· you
••
can't Jose
•
weight on. a·
;j
services.
··:,
.
:
• ·. ,;. ·,
•
cafeteria ·diet, but she maintained
~
,:
·
·;•~we
~re not
.expe:rts;''
she said ..
_·.
that·'.'any diet could be:successfuL
~,
.
•
•
..''.lt';s
mo.~e:
~ll
of usJia:vin~ ~ad with
t~e
rig,.t nutritional· infor~
·,
I
.
·
s1mllarexpenences.''. .
•
,
..
·
.mation."
c_·•.•
.
·.,
•
•• •
.
.
•
.:.
• •
....
,:
..
The _second session·· will
·roc·us
•
.
Diet, nutrition and exercis~· in-:
_-
..
:.-)
.-_
..
o~-diei ~<(w~ght co_ntfol ~dJhe
forll}a_ti~n
was handed out d_uring
·
. ,
·
:
-
.
thir~ will be on exerci~e. _Informa--
•
the meetmg and over the course of.:
j
~-
::_:\:
..
·.:J!~Ji~~~i}~t~ii~;~,:~!:~~i;~t-·-::~j{-tt!~!~~;:-:t~j~;:~t~f~~i!{
........
-.i
1
-,.
·.:··':·~_\,WJ~.~:~st~-~~-
cam~~~
.d~.r~~8:::-~01:1ts;-'lectur~~:arid
pa~el·dis~us-·
. _.
.
_-.
_-t~c
week_s_.they.w1Wb~_held,
said sions~·An,iatosa1d.· •
•
•
-
•
:
•
-
,ii
;:
~.
.~.'
•
,.
-
,,
;
••
,.
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:
'
••
~
•
;
.
,-.
:
:
'
.
•.•
•
•
•
:·
'
'
••.
•
.
\·;lt1~c~~.t~~{~i'\}'llfr~{gif
.•.
·::.
~-'··1_•.:_;_-
.
.-_·_{_\:_·_·_·:_i
::_-:;
byM~eyA:~~·
,':~\:\)(
..
,;:,_
:
•
,:<,_:
·'.: bu~iers,~~d--hotdogs a~l day
-a~d:i;.oving·.
..
. :
:
f>
-/,.,
·
•
,:,:
•
· ,,,
...
,,
• •
•
'=
••
< . _-
••.•
_.
••
: ,,.
- .:.:·
.: -
•
, • the·gathering area to the grassed lawn area
.,;_,:
' :
i ,\S~~i9r
cl~s.sr_epr.esent~ti~_es
a11_d;iJi~ll}ber,s_
;\. .'
•
\?etween.the.boathouses.:
<
•
•.
•
<",.
,~,
/<>rJ.~~_,d!DlJ,1,lStratt.<?D
\YIU
meet t~IS y.,eekto
C
...
'
According to Murphy, the senior class·
,._
•
,~:. ·
d1~cu_~s
a
prnp65.ctl.
desig~~d'.
to make. Rh,~r,
•
.
< /
.
'.wants ;th~
day to be better organized,
·He
,....
:
,_ ::Datsafer~ acc,?r~i~(to,ge~.ar<!9>~_..,de!1n,:,
_
it·adde,t,:th~t
he.)Jso
·hopes
fo have ;.the_
oofstudent_affa1~r:,
/';//·:~'=
:,_-,/:
<i'_.,. ~.,;: :_
Ernefgericy; ~edicaLSevices
:set
j.tp·
inside
•
:a's-
A
gr,ot1p,o(~c;nior,s·h~
~et several umes,;:c::;.
;)he
boathouse.in case of.an accident
•..
-
so Jar
:tllifye~r:
~!tli~<::;ox.
to
;~isc11ss)Uv.er
•
•
.··
.
•
A,ccording to Cox', River Day has
_
an
_-
D~f
:Dunng>the)11sr~~eting
·cox
0
asked
.
-~-
~4.v.m~>#{e~t'.oil the' Poughkeepsie com-
••
~~mor class officers to \:v"o;k
o_n;~
pr~p?sal.
• .. •.
m·unity. The
,people
at St; Francis Hospital
.:·,
IL the PfOposat looJcs,h~e:,1t:·1s
feasible-,
•
•
.
think of River Da'y as ''a war zone," Cox
:,t~en
we w1llset up a comm1tte~of.s~udents,
.
>
said, "Each
'River
Day brings the very real
facplty and st<lff to ~ork-on ho\Y.it could
•
possibility of death/' Cox said. "You're
:lJ~_m1plemente~(!.
said Co)!:._.
:.:
..
opening the door to a tragedy."
. .,
·<·
'
£,?,x
-~~d~d,
liow~~e1\ that: !h~·•:co~leg~
••
•
Tradttionally the date of the event
_has
. _does._not
ce>~don.e
River Day.
•
hs a;.no.n~
.
.
.
..
been kept secret by planners until that mor-
•
colleg~,
~ve!1~;
.,Not
only does the college not
• •
• -:~--
ning/ Senior pfficers have voiced concern
al?p~9ve)~•~erDay;. th~
_college
is against
-
·abdut)osing the surprise aspect of River
R1verpaY./-.:~~•qC_ox_,<·t
.:·
•
.
•
-:· ....
_
Day>\.-_::_:.,_:,
•
.
·.
-
•
;
:.
·'
·
Past_ ~yentfJave been marred by van-
•
'.
However/Cox said- he believes the
·ele-
dalism: a!_ld
~
inj~ry>• !;~st' year Kenneth
:-'..
inent of surpri;e can be retained even .if the
Bohan,
cl"!5~
pf '_Sf; fell off a cliff near the
•
event
)s·
plaiineci
•
in• advance. "Statistics
.•
. Hudson R~ver dunng t~e_'~~official holiday
show that over half.
o(
the student body
and was ~nocked_u~~~m~c1ous.
•.
-'
,
•.
.POJ>Ulation
who are new to_ the. campus
. Cox said he rec~gmzes.th_at
t~e e~ent 1s a
don't"know what to.expect on River Day,"
.difficult one to control.-• 'Manst 1s grow-
he said;
•
. .
• •
.
.
ing_; the student. body, h_as gotten larger.
~urphy said he believes the administra-
,.
This factor makes . River
.
Day: more and
tion
and the senior class can work together
.more ~angeroµs," h~said.
: ;
.
·_
.. ·•
•
•
and. come up with a proposal th.at will
Semor officers said· they also are con-
•
•
benefit everyone. "We want to bring across
cern~~-aqou~. the safety of..st~dents
_at.
the
the idea that River Day is not something to
trad1u~mal
·nverfront
,gat~enng.\"I
feel
.
be scared about;'' said Murphy. "River
that River Dar shol!ld not continue in the.
Day can be something that is good-:-- if we
s~me
_man_ner
1~ has m the past.,~ve!1tua!IY
keep the injuries minimial and stop the
-
.someone
__
1s g~mg to get h~rt,
-
said Jun
. complete drunkenss of the past."
Murp~y. president of the semor class.
Cox said if students want to hold on to
• •
SC:mor officer~ hav: not revealed all the_
the tradidon of River Day, age in New
" details: of their R!ver Day
•
proposal.
York state is changed to 21, he said.
"If
~owever, Murphy ~aid the proposal would
River Day is allowed to exist in· students'
m~lude a better sou_nd system and _portable
minds as a day to drink all you can, then
toilets. They also will propose serving ham-
there cannot be a River Day."
....
Mc1rist
stuijents
·get
ready_·
.:for>a.warm-weathet
break
·r
i
•
..-..
\
.semester
showed that students
. .
.
.
.
were interested in Hawaii too, so
.
On Thursday, Maich'7, they'll
•
..
that was also chosen."
:
be·finis~frlg up _the ".Veek_'s
work
,
.
Students on
.both
the Florida
'. •
and daydreamm~ a~out the
_~eek. ::
and Hawaii trips will leave Fri-
to. come. ~y midmg~t- t~e next
. ••
d~y, March 8. The 23 students go-
·
·
n,nght, they
II
be relaxing
10.
a set-
.·.
ing to. Florida will return Friday,
Ung ~ar removed from Manst -
·
March IS.The 22 goirig co Hawaii
that's ex~ctly what the
I
College will return on Saturday -March
:
Union Board had in mind when it
'1s.
,
•
•
•
'
•
.·began
planning last semester for
Brunner said that in order
to
··: its Spri~g ·Break trips to
'Florida
•
prntect the students and the
•
•
artd·Hawai_i.
•..
•
•
•
•
school from any problems that
0
••
0
Stie Bru_nner, CUB vice presi-
.
might arise, there will be a
dent, said that the' choices for the
chaperone traveling with each of
trips, wh-ich the CUB runs every
.
the groups. Teresa Manzi, assis-
•
year, were made by interested
•·
tant director of college activities,
students at a meeting in
•
1ate
._
~'ii}
be going to Hawaii,· and
November.
•
Carol
Graney,
north
end
"Fort Lauderdale, Florida was
.
z:esidence director, will go to
chosen because that's the tradi-
Florida.
•
tional place for_ spring break,"
"In Florida, people go wild and
Brunner said.· "A survey last
Continued on page
9
·:·Di~ing.
qut·
at the Culinary
by Janet McLoughlin
If you are planning on eating at.
The Culinary Institute of America
soon, you better call and make
your reservations now.
.
According to· Carol L:ally, the
•
director of Public Relations for
the Culinary, there is a several
months wait for dining there on a
-Friday
or
Saturday
night.
Although, during the months of
January, February. and March,
you might be able to get a reserva-
tion sooner because these are the
slower months.
Lally explained that during
these panicular months, people
are hesitant to make reservations
because of unfavorable weather
conditions, and because a Sl0 ad-
vance deposit is required.
The Culinary features two main
dining areas opened to the public.
The American Bounty Restaurant
is the perfect restaurant for you if
you enjoy traditional, American,
regional dishes. "All the. ingre-
dients we use.are American. We
try to use indigenous ingredients
native to American tastes." said
Lally.
The American Bounty has a
warm and hospitable atmosphere
with a
,fairly
elegant decor. It's
has an a la carte menu so one can
make one's own choice. Accor-
ding to Lally, the entrees at The
American Bouncy run about four-
teen dollars with the average
check being twenty-nine dollars
•
for dinner.
If you prefer more extravagant
Continued
on
page
7
l
·,
·,,
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•
t
·
·
·
-
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·Scholarships:_-' •.
•
:
_.
,;;1;>· ••
·
De~rEdii6;-'":.•::·
. .':··.
f)~\-·:/-:\~,:;.
:M~~~b_l~
198Sp~·~i-mi~r·d~t~·for-
•
Recently;' fout Mari"st.
studen_ts.,
\
applica~i<>tjsJ<?r
tji'eJ9~~
seri_es
'were
selected. as
:
'recipients
'of
of'thesc'
·uri.dergraduate
-~cholar-::
.
r9g4'.:g5'
·:
Emp.lie
r
Staie'
s'1ip_s,,a11d_:gr_aduate
fcllo~s~ip~.
Mathematics
and
Science Teacher,
.
lnt~restcd
•
stucf.citts:
:IIl,Y
._obtat_~
....
Sciiolarsblps,
.
awarded
.•
by•(.the.
i
app!ic~ti,011s:;,
''iuid:
.::
_eHg_ib!_li'!Y
;
•
New
.
York
•
State<
·Education
.
spec1ficat1ons
at the Fmanc1al.
~!d
.
•
Department. This award progr~m
•.
Office.~nd ~he-,C~ffice
_of_.}'c_a~~et
•
isdesigncdtoincreasethenurnber
Education.
• •.
•.•
..
·:
..
; ?,/·"<\
·
•
-of
:
certified·.
teachers·
•
of
:
.
.
:
•
,
S~ncerely,_
mathematics
.
and science
•
within
~
'Kenneth
M;-Po\\'.ers
•
New York.
,
,
..
··.
·
"
.
,.:
Assistant Director:of
•
.
Students are
rcminclcd
of the
•
.•
'.;.
Firilln~ial
A~d
•
-
.
~
..
·.:-;
:
:",
.
·.'
.
.Whose
Pub?
..
:
..
',
-.~
·:;:.
Wh/ca~'t w~ h'av/reas-~nable
i~
t.he
i~di~idual~"tii~~selves:
.
>
prices, drinking specials and hap-
•
•,
,
'
, •
:-
PY hours? After all most"Of us are
.
•
The a~i'nist~ation
\.
shouici·
:
'
payirig
~
c~nsiderable sum to go realize· that each of us is <>n
;
a-
•
to-Marist and should have some limited.budgetand that
die
prices
.•
.
.
:
say.into how. our: social facilities in
·the
pub are not
refl~ctive
__
of
;
are run. Does not Seiters and the
,,
. ·.;
·
. .
,
...
•••
,
activities office realize tliatas part
.
this fact since they areriditillous-
•
·: ;'_)
1
'1·
1
··.:,:·
.•
J.··.·
..
·•
.
.
_·
of o1!r.a~tiv~ties
fec,\\'e a,re ~titled
~ly
high'-for a colleg~ pu~:: This
.
_
.
•
to this nght.
:. . : ,,·
..
,
..
•
·,
"forces
~us
to:
go to other places,
---
.
•
h
.
.
~
••
;
.
•
•
,
• '
••
J
•
•
.
.
• .
I
.f
,
J
• '..
.
·t·
...
•.
•
I
.
am sure that.· others; besides
'
such
as
-The·
Workiitg'Class and
J
his·
+t·~r.,~r.'·is
cl.o.:n7ero_u.5.
I
L-V"':5 ~o..
.
,, ••
,n~
..
y·
0
.'t'.~'
,he.
,myself
'ha.ve
noticedi that
Oilte. ·Butterfields
who
·cater
'tc)'
this
I
,
• , •
•
_
.
..
•
•.
•
.
.
•
.
.
•
·
.
prices of beer. in o.ur Pub arc
C:QD:
ii~;°' Since. many:
·
of
·.
us·:
.are
·
S
0
cFf'
4t
en
f.he_
-f
h
:~Lv
·H;
-f
c...
n
cl·
I
h b..
d.
f-,o
5
~;:.,;,
'_+'
~
'7,
·_.
:
•
.•
\:
siderably
•
higher
·~ban
other
CQI~
''respe)Iisible
drinkers'' thuchool
.'·
;,,,, y.
1/,fc.
l.:
..
•;..
.
.
:
,>:
: •
.
_Ieges.
Being
a
senior;
1
hav,e h_lld is'forcing us to pay for taxis:t0 geL
. •
•
✓_/
•
•
•. •
••
:,
<;:
.:
many
·opJ>()hrt~ilithics
-
1
.to., :vidsith.
the there
.in
order to: avtjid:
:possible
,
i
.pubs
at
ot er sc oo s
·an
·.
ave
'DWi;s:-·
Thc
·cairtpus
0
-shoul~
be·
.
I
_··noticed
considerably lowerpri~cs. the center'ofour social Ufe/not.
/
::;
iri· beer.'
.
Fof example, schools
.
the local bars especially
:.when
•
..
I
<such·;
as.:
Niagara;-: Qtiirinipiac most·-·are
.
not
\vitliin
·.
walking
•
'
I
.QneonJa
:tnd Fairfield {whic~ is distance·: It may scem:rromwliatl
••
,
•
:·
•
.
•
_
,
1
••
•.
..
•
• •
••
.
•
•
•
•
•
;·r~!1
by, Se1~ers.i1:l~o)
aUhave_lo~er,. have written· so far that'T'dislike
.
•.
.
•
.
•.
.:
.•
:,
.
.
,.
•
:.-
•
•
, ••
·,
•
•
.
'
:·
•
:
·.'.P_r~c::fi::~~
f;~~·-a:~e~ber
--~
..
-
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.-
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/~".:_..-:_.-.:.
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;t\? :~;·,:
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.:'.~-·of,t_~~-S~_i~erts~:1ff~~~f~~~,P*(:-.}t:,~!t:-:tJS~~:~~i101r:t::iuH~!··
,
..
·::·
••
c.·.
-
::
,_··<·. •.
;'
::-.;A_::i•;ja··-·1,..;'A·e·;:
·m1·~·c·:·.,
.':;,.a·
:,:-+1:h:--0'":·-s'
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!ff~~·e·<
'·~e;~~--i\'.":,.~t<}f·:.··
...
:
·=;-:~~:~~~J;!}:~~~J~1:.-!~;!?:·,:_a)ew._?g<Jp~::al·gu#!~i~s:itJ¥.~Xi~--:
'
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r-1.'\i,,,
LI.','
.
·-t
·L
'
•.
p,Jiit
·_J:,- ...
,,_'.~:
:••,·.
·.:·:
·'"merit.is'a(:fault;'•sintje'·_Skinners:.;:,mght~ar~~su_ly,ag~o
..
t~n:i,e~:-.
·
..
·
'_'
,
.:.
•. ·".-.':·,
·
-· •
·.
·
··, ....
:
·
...
_;_,.·
·>.'·
._·,
··.:. '-: .··:/·.·,
·•·.
>_··.
::::-·;
:
·:·.-
.
price
is
·at
$3.:7S,
·The
.Working·
:.
offenng_acho1~eof}19uorb~~-es:
,
•
·
·
•
··
•
"<.
,·
'
·.
.··••
·
:.
· .•
, ·.
•.
·.
··-
..
· ·•·
··•
: <.
,.,
•
: ·
•
\:.:
:
/:;,,:.
;.,
·;°:,:;.\,:·:;;
,,.>
'
,
...
',
Class' $2150
'and·,-Biitterfields
'oh
•
the
-usual
cJ.t~1ce
•
of•,c~nIY:
t,~rt:
..
.
. .
The
:·housing
shc:>'{tage
at
Maris.f
has
be~n:
·::;
.
•
·,Btit
\th~·
~1isf:.6f
a¢adei:nlc
.
btijldj'ngs
•
Is
·:
Friday.is
Si
JO
als'o;
••
:'. ·:
•
•
..
''
•
•
·
·
•
wine
·and
soda•~ commeoda~lJ,;
·:
;.c~,,
a concern for years;·arii:Ht:ie
bol_leg,rs~ems:
••
emb~~rasslng.
)The_:;
college> owns
.
one
,
.,
.
T~e. pub.shq~l~:also 9e.abl~ to
.
.
.. ,
.···.·
.
.
.
.
.
.
:
.
,',
•
to b~
.
gettl11g
:
It
•
·1J,n_<1:9r
cont~QI. The ne_w
....
·.
aca~emlg;/bulldlng, palls\ the
;,front
.
of
_a:
.·
.
offer_drix_ikiitg}~~llis
and ~ap~y
..
·,
..
_T~e v,1ew_s
of
_e>ne.
or two !id~)
aparti:nenL pqn:ipl_ex
,.~hould
.
al!evlate the,·
•
war~hou~~- i!s
•
~'!;lls!
_Carr:ipus''.
and, hid~~ a,;
.
,
hour~-•
$mc.e,.1_t:A~e.~}1ot,,:
1s_}h1s
·-,_
mm1strators should not rep~esent
,
:.
pressurE9 <>f
ov~rcro~d~d. c1orms,and ~oney-
.
•
library. somew~E9re beiYleen the.
_chap,1:a~~.
•
·\because ••
J\11inst)if_pr'?01ot~s.
/:the<·
what'.\\'! wantfro111
quR_Pub.but
·.:
eating off-campus apartments.
.
.
:
·i
afacu.lty <>fflce.buU~lng'.
.•
•
•.··. ..
'·.
··>··
..
•.
'··•·
·•.:
.
aspect/<>f
:,:
:•res~ns1b\~-;~nn~-
'>
the paymg_students
o~ this schoe>l
:: :.
Students. worked hard to bring th_elr
•
:
The·campus certainly fjiiS_
EJnougt, sheHttr,,
,
.,
ing?'!
. ,WelJ,
••
fjne,
J_, belteye m_
,·
shoulcl J,e_.
the ones who set the
•
•
•
concerris· before
-
,the.
administration,
•
and.
to meet th_e.
basic S!,Ji'vlval;
h_eed~ of; Ma(l~t/;
.
respofasible_:
·4rinking
_,also~·
):~ut
•.,
..
standards.
.
.
.
••
administrators have· done very well· to meet
•
:
students~
·.They: .shc:>uld
,
be
;.comfortable
,.,
,
who arethe.Maristadmii:iistrators
:
•
'.
:i- ,.·
•
.
.
.
. ,
.·
.
:·,
\
..
some v~ry-pressi~g demands.
..•
J · ·..
.
··•·.
•
•
enough
..
tQ serlou·~1y.~(1uc~te
thetT!se!ves.'So
.
to,say·tliat-drinkinifsps,cials/~nd)\;.Is, t~s
_a
:qu~tion._oLJiJcle_o-
;•
>
. But it's a
.
bit 1n;mlc that a!1
•
~du_cat,onal
where are
_they
g(?mg to d~ It?
•
.
-
,
happy· hoµr5.-,
are;idct;terreii,ts
•
to
:<Chnsttan_
'-'.~lu~:
.
\\'ll1~~-
.
,¥.anst
t.
mstltuUon would
-perform
f!l8JOr surgery-on
.
•
Marlst must take a sen~us IO(?k at Itself
.... resp.e>Ii§ibl~
/' _clr1_n_k_111,g;
,,l'.ll;e
;
keeps. throwmg
..
m
our, faces?-, I
ii
housing
-while
mer~ly putting. bandaids on
..
and do s_omething about ,ts se~ere l~ck of,
·
.. :
studerits of drinking age
at
this
cthinkthat
young men and women'_::.·
Its academic µuildings.
.
•
•
. •
•
..
.
• academic. facilities: The faculty Is serious,/
•
:;.
schooi
·
are
'
ihdependen't·.jadults
·-
.
who•
·are
soon
·entering
:info
the'\'
: .
The strange·. th I
rig
•.
is
.that
If.··
a
_stranger •
•
:
abour· reforming· Marlst's: ~ca~eml9~,.
•
b~t
<
/-~p~bl~
,;'
o,f.,. cie~errilirifog
••·,
w,liat
·;:.
real world s)ic>'uld_be.
ma~iilg their
:;
were· to walk around_ the
..
Marlst· C?arnp1,1s
...
·
tm;:pnvenlent and overc~owd~d:~Jaf3~r~on:is
::
.•
,
resp·onsible"::'
:~riµking
;£is·
i•to
<~wn
::decisi<>ns:;.;.~·;;;~~;:D?:n't-:-
without being told people went to classes.,:. don't help.: Their battle. V/Ol!l_d.\be;:Jn~~-h.;.f
,:·
themselves
.. Each-stud~nt kno'IVs
:.you?
•
..
:·
...
'
··
>
·
< :~-
;>:,-;;?
,
,.
there; he could very 4:!aSily
mistake It for the
•
easle_r
If
something was
:bel(IQ:
0
done
,to,·
:·
hisor,her.limits
and
if_a'few }'i~ve
•
.
•
•
•
.
..
:
·,.
·;;,:"
.,
..
!
.
'
residential section of
a
larg'ercan,pus.
•.
• ••.
lmpfov~
the actua.t_ cq_ri.d_l~lci~s
:under.,w,~ictl
·
•
•
•
a problem
~t.h
:this._tl~en
it is'-nof
.:
••
_,_:_,;·
.:
:·
:·
•
/'.\:iohn'P.;
McGeai.-y
;_,,
Compared
t!)/ many
·::other·,
colleges,--. ~heyte~ct.1<.
: :
:,-':>.
,
:,,
.. _./:
•
·:-.. • •• . •
the social atmosphe~e ofthe-pu~
,
..
~-
··,.
::=·Bu_sin~s(~ar~etjng
.
Marist's housing_·
Is
:Impressive:
three dor-.
>A$.Mar1$~
grows,we cannot f_orget that Its
that is the root of this proble~. 1t
:'.··.
:·
..
i
;:.·:>· .-
:.'>:''./.>Senior,'.·
mitorles
~:two·
north-end residences
•
three
.
primary
::,
purpose
Is
.educaUOri.·;:Un-
. •.·
..
>>,
•
,
•.
..
.
··
..
·
·
,'·
•.\,:.·,?=\".'t:"
:J.::,_.J-~'-T/~://,·
.<\
•
blocks
o'f
towntio'u'leS and soo,n a se~tlon of,'
.
,
fortunately~· right
•
now It's
.
difficult
••
to.: t~I_I.
•
•..
:
•
:-
...
Gard~ns?
'J;r::ft:;:·::-:?d;};,-i;itX
·.
.
~,~~rde~
apartments.
•• •
whf!~her Marlst Is a cou,g~ or a su~urb!
·:
•
•
•.
:~.
.
•
•
•
.
,, ~- •..
. :
!{
~jj::?J:}[~;/{;:})}):{;:f
:·;.J
..
,,
Dear Editor:-<
•
:
"
>
·
• ..
>
.
all the dogs· :whq
Ji.ren
't supposed
•
•
<
,
(don't want this to
be
tak~ri-as
•
to live th~e in the first place~
.
.
·E111erge1].cy·:
;.
.
.
.
..
a:
case
of one
_disgruntZ~
·stud~n.t,
.. .
•.
·
ijf!ritage
•
is. _qwi~ th~ o~posite
railing:againstthe fate of. Marist
..
:
of a gar.den
being,
in fact,
a slum
.
transfers
;
(though,
:.assuredly,
•
.which
is pop11lated_by
the lo'tVlicst
:
•
Stay
•
&!one
.
In
.
0
th~
:
townhouse~
.
one
•
who;s going through yourroom.
•
·:
·-~.
.
.
.
•
.
_
that's wllap am.) Rat.~cr;.I,,w~nt;:
):~ass
of, c~tizens
~otow~ ha$ to
~f~
..
\
•
:weeken~
when your hqusernttes
~~~
away._-
_:·· •
Run to Gregory to
use
the'.-i(?use·ph_one·~
••
..
this to
be
taken·~ an.o~)~t~r'
•.fcr~Jfyou;~"er
Vt'ondC!,~
where
..
Around 9;1Q p.l"fl.,
~fter the can,p,u~ operator
j
Call security. Walt. Go outside. Watqh the
..
to Marist froni all the
students
at
,
•th~
peoP.le
frQlll'W:e
M8!D ¥~Ugo
Js:ott·duty~ pick up.a.~~!,J_se·p~qne. Dial 6
:
thief take,your stereo. See·,hlm drive off.
,,
Hcritag~· ·Wlio-~·are,\:'.1c:ssi.'·th~>~!tnight;-~~~~1e.1~the~s~et;,.
(tti~ nur,ib~r
_needed
Jo
get:~ c~p_us line
)
Write down the license plate number.
i
:
satisfied with tneiisituation:.:
·_;.:
•
·~
.-And·Manst kno"°s this. Th~y
outside the 'townhouses) and Usteri to the
l
See security people come. Seethe police
•.
For those.who h'avc·ncvcr
seen:.·
\lSe Hcri~age
~
a threat to people.
busy signal. Try to
.
~1,t a. friend
In
qham-
.
cars.
•
•
.
.
.
the
Herit~g~ Qardeµ Apartmentsr, who scr~,
UJ>
on
-~pu~.
When I
pagnat:.~Jst~n to the busy~slgnal. Curse the
.
.
Listen to the questions. Don't ans~er.
, located
on.·
Innis· Avenue,
"the
first moved to Hentage m the fall
phone;
.
,,,
•
•
\
.
•
..
Pick up the phone. Dial 6. Hand the receiver
name
can be
.d~iving,~
There· is. of '84, there !"er! 56 st~d~t~. AU
Now hear the someone trying to break In.
·.,
to security. Walk away. Spend the rest of the
nothing garden~like about
it
ex-·· of whom were either disapbn~
Pick up the phone. Try to call security. Dial
•
weekend with a friend
.whose
house phone
cept the preponderance of fer-
•
cases or transfer students, which
6. Hear the busy signal. Run from the guy
works..
•
tilizer on the grounds, courtesy
.of
Continued on
page
8
I
Christine Dempsey
THE:
EdHor.fn-Chltf
Lou Ann Seelig
Senior
Edltcw.
AcmrtlllngStaff
Bernie
Heer
Johne.kke·
Denise WIisey
AuoclN
Edltorl
Brian Kelly
Cindy
Bennedum
PaulRaynls
C.rtoonlat
laura Reichert
BonnleHede
NewsEdtton
Car1MacGowan
AmleRhodes
Graphics •.
Bever1y Moriang
CIRCLE:
SpottaEdltor
Ian O'Connor
Viewpoint Editor
Pete Colaizzo
Faculty Achlaor
DavldMcCraw
Photograph}'
Edit«
MaQreenRy:an
au.tnesaManagef
laura
Reichert
·.,.,.
.f
~
~
f
I
;
.
,
.
•
1t._-:,
.
.
;'
l
[.•/
f
f.,
·1
.
t
t·
!·
Controversy
•
•
I
.
':
lVhO
c.Cllres?
:-·
:•t::/·:_:i.:(::".)~''
':·
'.
-;-<•·:,·.
,
. -
.
byCb_rjstian
l\t:oi'rls«>n
.:
'.·'".:'.:)
__
··.,~_',':
..
•.
~e;{ about Student· Government somehow.it seems hypocritical for
.,
'.',.~>····:.••::,
..
·•,,
..
;'.\,
__
._·
·Weck:.Thisletterprovidesfurther
.some
of the
·same
professed
•
,,
,;;:'Will.-:>
the
..
;;,re_al
.,e,;yourig •
backing to.
-the
pointjiJst made. Reagan supporters I speak ofto
•
:-
:
~eptibljcaris please staJi<i u_p?
.•
.,-_._
•
According to the letter, during the ask me to write a letter to my con-
y
.·Lhaveri't·he~rd). heck of a.Jot
•
week, \'sttiaents will be exposed gressman.
Actually,
you
_
all.-
•.
"bout the.Young ~~publk.ans:this to concerns.
.that
affect
..
•
them
,deserve
some praise for not-blind-
semester;
•,but
I. ~an·. understand
.··•
directly/.' Hey; what happened to ly trusting the idiot you voted"into
·
~fo<:,:J
)'thi_nk':
.the
Young
concerns that affect us indirectly; office. Thankfully; you·are ques-
Rep~blica~s ar~•afraid to own up.:.
·or
not at all?
-How.
about showing_··.
tioning some ofhis actions even if.
..
.
i~
ttieir,.iclentities these:daysancl
.•.
us
a
film··.·
about American·_••·in-
•
.. it is just because they a!"e affecting
•
qµitffra~kly you just}ari't blame
:
tervention in Nic!liagua instead of j·ou:
\
•.•
,
•
•
-
•
••
·them.I'd.be
hidipg my head too;
•.
one aboutthe restoration of the
_Smee I was a Mondale sup-
:
,
ifl voted for Ronald R~agani (If
.
_
Statue
of
Liberty. • Who cares, porter, I am now placed in the
•.
you!reiwondering·h9w._youj:,m
right?<
•
•
_.,
.
_
position of-saying, "I told you
• identify • the
•
•
average
'
Young
•
-I
hate to generalize and call the
•
so" to my fellow students who
Republican, just;try,to remember
.Madst
student population
self-
yoted for Reagan. Don't worry
•
those stu4ents
.who
·overzealously
-.'serving,
but somehow I can't help though, you can still make up for
supported~. Reagan· in this faU's
.
it: • After
•
all,
\Marist··:students
your· folly. by writing letters
·to
,,
elc;ction. Hint: Q1any
of them look
.
seemed. to
:overwhelmingly
sup- your elected officials about pro-
~n~
acrlik'e r?Pi>ies;) l~skyou,
.
port Ro11ald Reagan this fall.
'posed
budgetcuts that affect not
though;:wllen 1s theJast time you··
·Walter
·-Mondale
spoke about only. you, but others as welL-Of
heard: a· Marist
.
student" proudly
social justice in his campaign
·and
"course
this means that you
'U
have
prnclaimthat he voted for Ronald
naturally·.- none of
-
tis ' wanted to take time· out to examine the
.~eag~nJ,
.>:
>~
;.
\:'(.
,
.
•
..
· •
.
.
.
anythii1g
·to ·'do·
with that.-·. Did _issues
.and
~ecide which proposed
.,:;-,
Monday
.:wi}L.have
come and Marist students really care
•about
cuts are unJust. It also means th~t
•
.• •
•
;
:-:goni.
·by)~e\time.
a~yo·n.e gets to
cuts.Rc:agari would make in.social you. might have· to start caring
•
• ;,reit.dCthis,::a11d
th~re_will be a::ton programs"':thai woµld· affeet·the about those
.~ho
are l~ss for-
.
:Qf
lc;ttersj~ the mail frqm_.~.~rist
.
··elderly;
po9r ~fu~ minorities? 1'1ot tu!1ate than you. In ~ddition you
.,
•
~,tuclents,protc:sdng:the propose!,l really". Instead of listening, to
.!Jlight
.want
to question some of.
. ·,cj.lt~;il).
,finiuij::Jal aid avajlabl(to
•
Mo.ridale, many protidlyswallow~. Jhe other policies of the Reagan
•.
colleg~·:~iu.~ent~,,but;-.yliapvill
we
•
ed
all:
o(
the··RS
..
Reagan·,·.was jidministr~tion. I don't really
..
•
havc::}?:1'~.C'\;thr,o~gh
~ll
..
t~i~?
for
••'
shov~li~g without· even
-mriching'.
believe. this coul? happen,
•
but
:
•.
i:nany:
.
1t
i~11\;;prqv1d~-~
fu~her
.Aii_d
~lly
·11ot?
~ho_·really ~ares how·
·a.bout
provmg me wro!1g
Classes cOme first·
by Dan Mey~rson
tion we get by having a quality
.
program offsets the high cos.t. I.t
The college decided that it was doesn't seem fair that people
important. to cancei class on Mon-
whose talents lie in winning
day and write letter.s in protest of basketball games should be con-
the proposed budget cuts which ~idered more importa~t than
would eliminate
_guaranteed
stu-
those students (and faculty) who
dent loan·s to students whose help Marist try to achieve and
parents earn over $32,500 per maintain academic excellence .
year.
·;
Also, the impact of the cuts in
While the decision to cancel student loans is an ideal time for
classes was well"intentioned, it is Marist to show it ingenuity in
very questionable. What, in ef-
financing 'and
in · attracting
feet, are we telling our elected of-
students for future years. It is
ficials about how we value higher estimated· that
•
approximately
education when we decide that
•
1,000 Marist students will have
writing protest letters is more im-
their loans stopped if the new
portant than attending class?
budget is accepted. If Marist gave
There are a few questions that out loans at or below current in-
should
be
'.
addressed
about
terest rates, the college would
cancelation of classes: I) Why did make money on the interest and
the college opt to cancel classes the new financing would attract
instead ofstaging the protest dur-
more recruits than would using
ing a free slot or a weekend? 2) the money for other types of
Are we using student loan money recruiting.
Also, the
money
properly? And, 3) Will the pro-
would be coming back. on an
posed budget cuts severely affect ongoing basis so that continuance
Marist College?
•
of this program would not be an
.
The first· point shows a lack of expensive proposition for the col-
•
creativity on the part of the col-
lege.
:
lege, administration. Th.e protest
While. this. is only
_one
way of
•
.
strc:!:lgthemng
..
of>t,he
c1Ji:-eady-
·
aboiJt'the black unemployment guys? Three. cheers for social.
l·<
·:
S(rong_a(tiJ.#~f!hat'pe'cyacles·this
·•:rate
anyway?';
f·
.
•
•
justi~e.
'
•
r
··:·-CJ~IDP,U_S_'so_.~ot1ce~blt,.;That
at-.:,
01.
la~gh_ how
"~~en.
r
see
'.'.
It
I~
a fu~~y but sad commen~
••
would have··had
a
much greater offsetting the proposed budget
effect had the administration
cuts, I am sure with a little i~-
;
chosen to use out-of-class time to aginative thinking, this college
protest.
E.g.,
if the letter writing could_ turn a potentially adverse
was done on a weekend, then our situation and use it to their advan-
elected officials would have seen tage.
i-,
•.
•
-:
.
~.1nltu.i;!Jbl~
t'1,te.
9h.~~}.vh
1
.erf!
p~ple C~ff
•
Reagamhte~';abh.
oudt ~inpbus:
.~
1
cdrat-
,tadry
_
o!-1_
1
-Mt~nst
,studdents
thtatdthet
•
"/:
•
..
o ~\a,'?.u,_t.~~se,.,e~:-;:•··?
..
·cl?,ing::t
e1r ea s.m·
ew1 er- a m.1msraion an
01,1r
su_.en
that we are indeed serious abou·t
I am indeed in favor of conti-
·'.;:
::
;<Why::1s·,1t
that so many_ oLus
..
merit.
•
"t
·thought
Reagan.,:was
leaders-feel compelled to convince
••
~·
:
•
-
•
;
·r~IY
..
~on.'t<car~.,abo.ilt
a_nyjssue, goir( to
.zap
the
.wel.fate
mqther;
<those:.of,us
who• are not. dir~ctly
..
,.
.. :
,-
/:
~!,l~s.sr~t~irc:Ft!ri;a,ff
~_ctS.':U.~?::1.;he
·:·
:not.:
the,:~~~lege,<st1:1.de,n~ti:)'0"1f
It
.affected
by the proposed cu~s, like
•
·.;
,•.·.;
-~)?~l!c;.~.;~ay;,,t_.r.~~~y_e~:.~
.!e.tt~r;
fr?~:
:·
liea(Jh,ll!:§aY.:::10:ilI_l.9f-~p-~;
I_s~y my~el.f, that·~~-~i:.~-.:lt'_~;~,!Lt~~Y..
• fighting the proposed cuts in stu-
nuing student loan·s and agree
dent-aid.-However, since this pro-
•that·
letter writing: and·· protests
ject
·
involved. missing class, our mus.t be done to continue funding
•
•
:
'
--
• my: class·-·officers.
askmg
•
me
to:
-'ttirnaboilt
:i
is'· faii-·,·pJay.
:,
That's· knoW
·the-average•Ma'hst1student
..
.·:>.
pa1ic,it>a,tf1_ii'~leii_t:i~w_ii_tirig}~~:-,
)right/~ven")'lippies
i:i_re.
going to;
;Won'fcare
unlc;ss:he i~'-affei:ted;
r
,
q(fJclat~
.
4
Ca!J
,dismis~
,this,
prot.~st.
;,
higl!_er
_
~~~c.a~ion. ~ow ever, we
•
•
assuµiing:it
:was
dolle.beca.us,e
i.t is:
'inil~"t-•
understand_.·
that
.•
th.ere an~
better than goirig to class.
•
•
-
some s·erious faults with higher
·,.
pa1gh to. protest proposed cuts. m
••
suffer- a little. under· the Reagan'.
·mean,
honestly,11t doesn't affect
:
._financia(,
atd
'for•·
higher
_edlica~
.
Admiriistratfon;
:
' .•
:'·:,
,,:. :
rriy_
family and l'.U have. been,.
.
,
.... _
tiori: Hey/soundslike a great idea
,
.
(guess I should point,oulthat·· grad_uated
.before;it
really'. affects
·
f;.
>:
/
::gang.·
::w:~
•.
even, have
:
tlie. ad~ my:Jelli>w•itudents who voted.for. this school.)'m sifre.many seniors
•
• This bri.ngs me to the important
education· and. the
.
financing
.problem
of effectively using stu-
,
thereof.
Students
.
and
ad-
dent Ioan<money. I feel William
.
niinistrators. must work tog!!ther
Bennett, U.S, secretary of educa~
.
to find new and imaginative ;Nays
j
:J)illihi.strati.on's \back:ing.
i
ori",
:t~_!s
•:
R~agart./aren'f all bad. At Jeast:~n.~ junJors ar~;fr1.this saine posi-
~
•
,··::one:_Nq,-..v/_what:wouldhappen·1f
they voted,The one brand of stu-.
UOI)-,
butlhop¢'they_c!on't haye to
tion, grossly
•
exagge/ated the
.
to finarice education.
•
L
-
,::
.ii_group:of:studerits, ·or betteryet
:·
dent
even' ,lower
,than.
the. be fooled intb writing a .,J"tter.
!, __
•
'::·a,;gfouP:.o!-,ifacul~y/:_c1ecidedJo.
•:
Reaganiie is· the student who When you .think back to past,
number of students who
·buy
new
If we could transfer some of the
cars
·or
go to Florida for ~pring energy spent ?n _protesting a_nd
"
;· ;:
star1~;cilfupaigt1 to
_pJ,'otesr-pro-
'didn't·
:vote --or'
is, riot
.
evell Monday; you· might remember
.
ij:
.
/:~:-~ose~'.~u
11
.ddg-~t
cu
1
•i~Wtn,.:tt
1
ddonh't:adf:,
:
registert?d:Nowlhese fol~s really th~!.} wasd·
·t
1
here fohr
_the
.. let\er-
.
Break but I am sure that· there use it,. on fmdmg alternative
·are
m~ily misuses of.student.loans
.
measures of financing, everyone
,
that can be fairly eliminated.
>
would be better off. After all,
1
,
•
•
•
<
.•
e~t µs a
trect Y,
.
OU t ea -. deserve·.what .they geL Mariy cif wr}tmg
.a:n
_
was t ere ,_or one
.
i
•
..
<.:
'.
··
.
.''miriisir;ttipnjgiye_;.us
,a;
day of(:
:them
·ire:
freshmen- who will' be reason: not because:! am affected
,
Finally, I don't feel the Maiist
.isn't
one of the major goals of
College admiriisfrators are
-doing_
college. to. teach people how
to
everything in their power to help' look at problems from more than
defray the \:!Ost
of quality educa~ one angle?
J.;.··
__
:
..
_,:.'.:···:
•.
·.·.-,.·•.·.•.···•·.:,:
,
,
- :{(J~orn
c!~ses to.'irit~Jejt~rs}or:
\4it:~ctly
affected
;~Y
the:pfope>sed
•
by,tJle,proJ?OSed
C!!tS
in _financial
•
:
-.,.;i;'!ch··•a
~ause?,Someho.~ I;doubt
_:.cuts;
I'm.trying to feel sorry for aid for h1gh~r education, but.
I
if:\~e<:k,.
:~hY/cjck:;th~
bo'.at arid
,
th'ose
oC:you who fit into· thi.s. because I
.care
~b_out_
others. Do
tfon,·E.g., hundreds of thousands
of
•
dollars a year go into our
·basketball
program,. but I serious-
ly doubt that the increased atten-
t
•:
• :
·.
:~o.rry;a~<>uLsoc!~I
Jµst1c_e?.i
",,-,,
,
•
_
categoty,_-.but
if is difficult.
_T~ose
you?
..
-
.
.
-'.
.
•
·
•
.
.
.
.
_
i
,
-
-
Nothmg surpnses me:anymore.
,
who did vote for.Reagan at least
.
Cbnstia11. Mornson
1s
a Junior.
Dan Meyerson is a senior at
Marist majoring in communica-
tion arts.
l:;:
The Cou~cjl ofStudent-~ea4ers
caredabouts"omething/:
- •
,
~.-
•.
majoring
in
communication arts,'.:
t·
,
..
;
wrote aJetter te> The Circle last
•
,
'It's
not
•comt>letely.
'true;
-•but
He is an l11dependent~
-
"-
--
•
")
•
f
~-
'
,.
I
t·:
·l<'.
t
,.
i,
r
..
:,
._,._,_
-
.i-,
.·.,-
.•
i.
~
•.
i
.
i.
l
.
j-
i
•
l
I
.
;
.
~--~
~
:..·.'
JO•
>:.i;·-·:.•:I~.-P:-
:::
__
;_:.·.:;.:·~--:
~:-:·-~-
•.·
•
..
:;.J.:.,
!
•
,.
.
_..,
~:J\.";
';. .•
'
~:::~p~t:{f
tl¢:?.
>::
_::aid
..
·cuts.:
.
·.
·
:;~
r'eaJiy'~·ine~ri
,.·
.
I
.
·.··amorig'parerits'.ahd
p'uhiicschooI· defense.The U.S.-isifounded
'ori .
ment,
he wanted. to raise the
.
_
.
'?
.
.
_
..
.
,._.
..:
teachers tl.iat coll.ege,is rigorpus,
.
principles
··or
philosophy,· prin,
-
budgedo $100 ~ilfion.
,
·:··
..
·f
1
.•'(Aiitho(s· note:'cActing:·
upon
,
~efua'ri"di~g''.·al]pji.~1¥
:-fqr
exc~Ji:;
.
·cil?le~
~llich are frequently laid:
.
Bell's replacement is William
the requests of manyto, for once,
•
ttO.I!llllY:.taiented.
yo~th~ N~t. ~rue.,:
..
aside
_
m_ order to pursue the
Bennett,
:the
for:iner chairman of
,
~,YQid
mentioning either Ronald
•
Urilike Eur"ope,
:~m,eficaJ~e~iev~t.
politically" ~xpedient principles of· the' National Endowment for the
'
Reagan
or Bernhard Goetz in this
•
in letting
'everyone
get'into th'e ac-
•
•
popularity;
•
recognizability and
H umaniti"es. Ari
.NEH
report writ-
• •
si>.ace
'- unless I have something tion. Everyone· h~s a right to a
•
votes.
.
ten by Bennett last fall also
good
Jo
say a~out thein:,:.1 shall
,
college education,. it is believed,
Short of having a'ton of dough
criticized college curriculums and
..
be,r,eby,
~att~mpt,
•to:
appease.' my
•
so curricul~~s are watere~ down,':
7anc.l
fOJlne~tions
:~ith,
~· pr~fess~r
called for reform. However, since
,.legions otread_er.s:) --:?Y
1,;-·,/ '"'·-'-'
.
the humamues de-emphasized.
)·
at,,Bard College; the· best .way_.-to he took office, the new secretary
,.".
The
:federaj/studenhai<l:
.cuts
In Eu"rope, universities retain
'pay
for a'· college ed_u~auon has
beeri criticizing
college
.
proposed by.Ro:·+ uh,ihe;current
·an
elitist attitude that.reinforces
without going broke. is to
JOI~
t.h_e.
-~tudents.
~e's the guy who sug-
adminlstr:ation is mor¢.tlian an jn-
the division· betw·eernhe:arrogant
;
Army, Navy; Air Foret:; M~rines,'. gested that students would merely
•
sensitiv~ actJo~iuds~~t\l"dents and
.
anct:•tlie: ignorant:-' IThis' is: not·
-''The
:
message of· o~,r .: present
have to· do withouf-stereos:- cars
,families
str:uggling to p~y:Jor a
desfrable, biit Mithe.}s a:-~ystein :Corrfmander~in-Cl1ief is' l~at
•
ser-
•
and three-week~iong vacations at
.
,
college.,e4ucation .. It is indicative
.
in which
·the
ignoranr:C;are·
permit-
•
•
vice' to yo1fr local recruiting of-
the beach/ While· his comments
of the low.regar.d Americ~ h.a~cof
.
ted to pretendto beintelligeCXt: :.
•
•
·;fi!=er··
comes before' filling. your
.
certainly' have merit,. they make
•
higherJearning ...
-
•
•-
.
•
.
• •
Another
•
difference
•
between
·''head
witli usetes·s ideas:
•
Man-
•
the
false assumption that folks
•
A.t
-least.
two examinations._of European schools and American
datory enscriptment is unpopular,
now in
·danger
of losing federal
•
tile U.nited, State's colleges and
•
schools is that m9st European
.
so the Pentagon and the president
aid
•
have kids who buy $1,500
·univer~itj~,
rel~eg
·
in
.the
past
coup tries completely subsidize the-·
:
have· found a way to get
.around
stereos, brand new cars, and
year have. determined thar the
colleges. Tuition
,
is free,
so
that·
••
it. Apparently it has worked,
spend the su·mmer getting tanned.
•.
liberal arts
.are
dead
in
this cou·n- studeriis are free--from having
·10
sinceArmed Forces ·recruitment is
.
Perhaps the secretary will next
try. The prevailing attitude seems work at tedious summer jobs and
way up in the years of, or rather,
take aim at: ordering out for piz-
.
to. b.e thal.c9llege i~.
~
vo_cational can concentrate on I~arni.ng. The,
.
since 1981.
.
.
._
za, buying records, owning com-
.·-
school •
•
for
•
gifted • children.
result, I am told, are univershies
Despite the federal push for
puters and televisions, doing the
History, philosophy, English, etc.... that reflect the .traditions of
budget cuts and smaller govern•
wash, entering into.a relationship,
•
a·re considered irrelevant by niany
higher
education
truth,
ment, the Administration's first
having friends, buying·Christmas
students and schools; What is be-
aesthetics and stuff like that.
Secretary of Education, Terrel
presems,
receiving
•
Christmas
ing.
,h~rd_
from m.any college
The American. way is to go
Bell, . wanted to
•
increase the
presents and reading Stephen
presidents is a.call for returning to
broke in order to· expand your
education budget. Bell told The
Kini! novels.
-- "the basics."
•
•
awareness of life's • richness.
New York Times after he resigned
No student should have to
.
The. basics -
reading, 'riting
That's not the fault of the schools
last year that, although he was ex-
choose his or her college on the
ancP'rithmatic. (Ever notice that
so much as it is the fault of a
pected to decrease the education
basis of financial qualifications.
whoever created the "Three R's"
society that doesn't recognize
budget from $18 billion to $9
If a studen• can Ret into Yale,
.
\\'as illiterate?) There's .a . myth
_.
ed~cation as a form of national
.
billion and dismantle the depart-
Continued on page 11
:·.
_::
.~'
·t
-~
~
"- ...
-
... ..,, •
'-~
•· ,.
•••
_ ····~ ....
·•·.
-~-
........
" '-~
..
--
--
'
~
•
....
'
............
-
-·
- - -
•.
·...
.
.•-
.
--Page:6-T.ffE"CIRCLE·'FelJ.-28,-1985
.
..
. .
.
.
·.
,. .
. .. - . .
,
,
•
'
• ' ,
',
' bf John Bakke ., .
•, ,. '
1 __
:.
~~Excuse•::
me/' ) :-~~/:· ~p-·
,I _:.
~orkt~~ litt1_e;-·~or~;
ffliitlef·~·-;, -~_•Jt'ffrom'lasffail'sidebate/~
.I>" •
Column
One
Upon
a star
Reel
. .: ,··i:-.:/ :,,_ -~~\: .. ·'
.':(
_p_roa:ch_il}g
~a_udousl)'(~-~You·seem
~•~work
.•
a:httle ••• :,~-.ca~•:Stlll:
h_ear said; trying to'nucige his _budget- •
. • ··When ·last_ we left the Young•·irather,.
uh' ...
_well~-
ho'Y: co.uld)'\ _those word_s;ech~JD.g,
aU
t~~
w_ay • bludgeoned:·.'·memory.
·:
..
·
•~You
• - Republicans, . they : were a . busy :. put it?
1
f:;<,.;;;f::t:{'; ,f.
<X
O,f,J,t<~
_?
down _th~
b~ays;~n~ ,J;ulllwars
.to. Yurps ,must b~ so very happy:'.'
• ':
bunch.)t was ~~tqber)~~n .;·.:.the::·.
' "Statiiic~;-god_daµi:
it! ·Stll~n~h i:jhe: theater/ ~Jler~f'f~-: rfJ01
11,
:,.;,<.i
::Happy?~'.~:•-'~\--··:
"e
,;, '.
,° ·••·
,, ., ..
first frosty wisps of wmtenvere ··,as
~II
hell. Justh~e·Mr. ~eagan. ;:' am~ng. others, ·th_ese:·
~~r,.,same_.,
.f:
i.Y/.~\l,.:
pppre~"1.r,ve,
~nyhow •... ,
•
chilling the air; arid the
0
Yurps". • I'm sick and tired of liberals run- \ Yurps
.m
a,Ietter-wntmg· frenzy, _ _:Don
t
you feel, more fulfilleq?
l
,··ha?
theiiharids.ful! with the ~am-
ning th.is: country '.like:. a· ca1_19y,:
'·;u~f.
daysj1~0.:;_
,.
..> ',• ;: ' .; : .
~~~n.J,wtJH~!f
Ietiets/ pro!esti~~ ,· ' •
pa1gn.
The
campaign. The
cam-
store; Sick and ured,-do you hear '., . ILwon.tbe ea~y, •· s9m~one :: ~udgetcuts,
i1U
of,that
~
nsur,e
paign! .
me?"
•
. . . _ ..
•
, . . sa1,d,
C'but:1f we all;J\lSt make our ,, as
..
,hell'.' 1sn~t
:_'a candy store·:
What a thrilling time
for"
the·
"Yes, very well, thariks;,What· voices .. heard we/,<:an,
.•
head
'?ff,
anyinore.tt:-,
0.·• •
:
: ·,·
Yurps. Theirs _was
a holy mission, . do you propose we run the coun- • • thes.~
.>:imm'?~alr
• Godless,·' 1.11-
,
CCNo/' he said sadly, C'it !sn't.''
one for Mom, for apple pies,for
trylike-amunitionsdepot?"
• a~v1sed c~Js.in.stu_dent. (inanc1.al. ·Th~~-,--~C./)eaned. over\.~pd
-1776 for the fourth of July and
a1d._Now,1fweall1ustwork·aht-
. whispered;, ."Can
q
tell·--you
the Fortune 500. All that's really
"You're damn right, buddy,.,
tleharde_
r ... "
.. ,. . . . .
,· .. something? This:Whol_e
busine_ss
is
• he said; with just the slightest hint
•
" I
• •
sacred in America. I remember it of a tear in his eye. "And it's
• . •~Did}'.<?11
hear'.soltl~thing?
-.• kind.ofu1_1pJanned/'"
-..,
:•• .•
well...
•
.
·
• asked the paisley~printYurp who, .· •. "Unplanned? Student-ajd cuts?
"Four more years!. Four_·
more
'about
time, too. Don't you watch
by·extrao_
rdinary coincidence, was Good God! How.c.fo
you m_
ea
__
h?'!:.
Mr. Reagan's commercials?" '
•
·
•
• ·••
·
•
years!" they cried with a sort of
"Aren't you afraid of what
ne~ttomeJ~tthi\tji:p,e~,~.
.:•:.>.
,,.
"Shocking;:huh?, We_.didn't
glassy l()ok in their- eyes. They he'll cut back on n~xt?''
. • \' H1!h?,~: • Did ~-y,ou· •• '. s~y .. thinkRea~an would,bite,the,~and
were a colorful group, to be sure,
" . .
. , .
..
.. . • -' • somethmg? .
·,
He . looked d1f- . that fed ~!mJast
0
Nove!Dl?er. W,e
each sporting a different necktie .
,Afraid? Thats a good one.
~
fet:en!, somehow. T~ere
'!V~-
a
figured !t ~. be someone :,else s • •.
with their dark suits and white We ve all go~ .to be ready to •. ce11a10
betrayed l~o~ about him, . hand agam. ..-:_ .
. ., . .
.•
shirts. The neckwear . ran, the. tighten our belts a little,.'to feel • like he ju~t • found ."out he was
• '.'Like the poor?t' ' • . .•·. ~.
gamut: bright red for the neo- . the pinch. I only _.wish Reagan,,· ad~pted.
•'\~•
·: ·;~:· ·' . . >.:
, Ye~h'.· Th~ poor, t~e .elderly,
conservatives darker. for the would throw some cuts
ou_r.
way.
.
~-An ech.9.
l
thought I hea_rd
a9 .ham:l1~pped,,
you· know the, type,
more traditional . left-wingers; so I could sh_ow
ev~ryonej~st how -ecfi.o?:
that's~' a~.- It's •pro~ably :).Only: it,. ~turns :out~
7
~~3:gan~s
s~riped ties for the moderat~s, r~ady I am, but,!t-~oesnt seem_ nothmg. I ~1~n_t mean.to mter-_._already:cl!ewed nghtup
t?
die
tmy polka dots for the ever-so-
likely, sad to say •.. ·
•
.. :. '· • rupt you -you seem to be work~, . elbows (?n t~em. So till _that s.l~ft
slightly (but only in - private)
'_'Even rigbl •. ~ere
.~t'
~arist?.
ing a little-harder t~an most.'' ,·. •.
• · :is the middle class," :
i; ;
2-,
liberals.
.
. :. · • \
;.- · Evenonstudenta1df'·.:
,,, .
-''Wbat?Whatd1dyousay?".,
·"i~And-the
wealthy," I sug:
<'Four more years!u screamed
"Afraid no!;
1'
he:said reflex-'·; _ "I~ said, , 'Work,ing a. little gested. -~ . .
._ _ .. .
, ._
..
one maver,ick with a paisley print.
ively;'"But iq~ happened,_
J,know ':_harp.er/,';' • , . . : . .
, .
tBite ~?"ur
tongu~. ': ,_ ·-;:< ( \.
"Four I said, you bleeding heart
I, for one, would appreciate my · : You know, I thmk you re, . ''/Soqy.);ook, this 1s lill·part of:
heathe~ subversive liberal Com-
education- that much more. for. right," he _said with just:;. the . ., the Reagan principle we tried to;
munists!fourmore!Doyouhear
~a~ingtoworka}ittleharderfor_.
~~ightesthintofatea:_in.~is•.eye.
•• ;:·
.:
:
,.·,
..
me? Not three-four!"
1t. .
,
.
, .
i<' :'·.
11tat does.seem fam1bar.
. ,· Continueda~II
page
12 .
by Beverly Morlang
priest ' as
a
d~con.,If th~. priest : with
his
~b~g~egation.
'..
His need • "thing. aboutiun'atics,' they don't
.. c:annot·make the student abandon • for popularity has overshadowed ·:knowhow to survive. I do.'' .-•
..
A film that. has been eagerly . his ideals that thehigher-ups feel. the need to be a proper teacher for .
·.
"Mass Appeal" is a touching ; .
•
•
• awaited has finally made it to our in no way represent the traditions • his flock' and so he has allowed •
•
film filled
i
with· im'p'ortant •
area. The Marist community now of the Catholic Church, he will be himself ·to sink into' wine and : ' messages;: .
humor,'
•
intelligielice
has the opportunity to see the expelled. At . first · th.e, priest, • deceit.)3ut it is his· new .d~cp~. • ap:d t~s •. F!n,e_perform21;1~ef~e
rilovie·version of t_he play written played by Jack LeJ11mon,
ag~ees _,who refusesto com1>rom1se.
hts turned m_ 1,y._not only·the .s~ars,-
1mpress1ons
•
··'-Mass·-.
. ·A.Jpeal'
•.•···
. by one of its own, Marist alumnus . with his sup~rior_s; the_ .~~udent,
.,. id€als for anything or a~yotie who/ : .but the ·supporting. ~st as ~w.ell
..
• Biil C. Davis: "Mass Appeal" is after all, caused quite a furor by teaches· him a lesson. By the same ·Exceptional merit should be given
. appearing. ': this.. . w~ek ; at •. the jogging into '.mass. one 'day ·and: '. token, the priest.
tii~
:to
teach'
hi's
to'. Charles . Durning ,,as ,.a ••
:very
.. Roosevelt Theater and·itwas_well . making th,e.outra:geous ~tatement-_ st~derit.the one:valid lesson:tiiat • clo~ed-n,tindedMoµ~igiior.,AsJor
worth.the wait:' :_
!
•. . . . .•.
.
..
that women:~hou_ld
be priests. But· • may save him. In a~ ~µiotionaltY.-· Bill·:C::.
Davis; .w:ell:1,le~erv~q
ap- , .
''Mas~ Appeal,tt involv~s ·a as the priesqalks·,to the student;., c~arged scene between.the two,
plause
.was
,heard from·
aµ;
t_he ::
traditionalist
:
priest.· ,·anp a he realizesthatthe student has:the\ th~ priest tries to reason with him Marist students in the audience . :'
seminary student. with: radical idea!s' that h~; himselFused'.-to:~, be.fore time runs out;'"You're a
,when
his name appear.cc!,
f.n\the,. :,
.
idea's for ihe _·
Cathol~c
.. Ch1,1tch.
•
believe , in• ~d' that_ :he • is no~ : lu~atic,,. But :tl}~f ~,
.aU,
..
,ri&ht,
,JC,, _cf®t~. The. film__~-,W~U~l\'Q.rththe
:.
. The .smderit,
notorious
for his afraid.to believe iit:be~use ~e'.:,·there'sone_thing,thechurchneeds. -secing·and should"Jndeed, ·gain ,.
• outspok~nness, is -assigned
to
the feels it will make-him unpopi.llai' ; isJnore lunatics~ But there's one . appeal from the masses!. •
.
~r
·.·.':-.
, :;.•• --:: .:.--:, : •• ;,,t • ;•·
~ , .... ·•
•
•
... -.~, :
T
'
•
,
•
'
•
•
-
,, .- .:·•_ ·•
; .
by
Roberttt.•Laforty
.,,_,,;
·.y/;~--;-·,><.,•and,Watert~wifrPr~Hob!:!
~! !·!
!~{A'-}iQ~~coWf;~ta_fcolleg~itudenlr~-'.:'.'~1".loi'idir:~~:;Starl
·t6''.fead·foi''y~tif'.{~.
:
. :f '·
·.;, :·
.:·<
:- < . .:;-.. Well on_!O the_th!llls~ the.spd!s:c7 J~•~;gc)'t~ t)li=:..PI~~S_for.the
.
mi,~~ter~_S;,!!f!~;~E_!~l!l~--~-.
r
• ./ • .
' .. • • . . · ,
andthe chllls to be encount~fei:l. '5V~ek;
THIS WE;EK{s,
PICK for .for;;'f.,Y:·,~_viewmg·pl~ure:1sfthe·· •
Har-Har, Har-Har, .Har,.Har •. by all THIS WEEK. As· you all : Clii:istmas gifts of the future, J. -...,
classic-film, ''Th~Wizard of Oz"
That's what you should all be do-· .. should kno'w this week
·has
been
•
''Christmas with· Funhole" LPs
channel
2
'on Gonio Friday :at 8
. ing durin~ .mid-term week_.
WhY,, • "·'Roo111niat.e
~ppreciat~on. week as CQs and VidcoAllium:in 1990; 2.
p;m; THIS
·
WEEK's :p1CK . for
•· because you ar~ . ab9~t .·•·.
t_o show /Well .:-::}as_;,
• ~~i(~eri_t
:.
• Q~~erilment ·.•
Gift
·Ceni~cates - af the Ground
educational activity_·
is_ the. movie .
your teac.her that, Just 'bee?u~.e ,,;.,
week; J:>lease
, check, ·with your • Round
.
·with , Holly
•
as
<
your
"Richard • Pryor Live on .· the·. ,
you missed ~ight or nine classes so . roommate if you missed anything- :.Hostess. THIS WEEK's .. PICK • Sunset·.• StripU '. for" . reasons ;
of. ";
far, you· do know
0
whaCs'! going_,
·,
good, ~nd look_ to those irifor- •
fo,r'
Bi-Sexuai'~~i~t!!JI!~ni
·9r ,th~ '
v9ca9uiary ·-etihari~em~ht;
••
THIS' •
on in class (THIS WEEK recom.:
·.
in!ltive Weekly Happenings about
'Yeai,
''Women·(meil);· you.can't ·:WEEK's pickfodashion
is mid~
mends the. old= ''copied: your< student
Govern_ment
liye'with;theni,aric:l it'~:iµegal.'to'·;,thigh 'shortsJmd>pink. bowling.
friend's notes'.', excuse). LASl_' . · \Veek ... please. Do not forget-that • shoot theni~;u
::.T~IS/WEEK's
• shirts 'with simple accessm:ies:and'
. WEEK's hand: goes to the cast. in approximately eight days some • PICK for activity of the week will very little inousse for the hair ... ·
'. and crew· of.• 'Blithe Spiri_t'
• and •••
•
of you· lucky readers .win: 9e ven-
tie:tl!e ClJB's Comedy; C~bar.eJ,
• •.
:ju~t atouch_:: ,c . .. _;·:
;.Af;:
;-{<{";<. -
to, the -MEN's ·-•
HOOP TEAM, turing off-tci . sun~' a~d :fun: in. :,Saforday:ilight iQ the'Ne\V:Dinirig':,
·, ,.UntH neitftime: iememlleritiia( .. '·" .
Bruce:. Teddi, and Steve THIS
Florida and righ'Cnow ,".; every' . Rooni.:?TIDS.
WE~K•s
War~ing:·i 'the·_sociaJ season is in':·rull:
swinf:
f
WEEK puts you all in the THIS penny counts. THIS WEEK_
will L Call home and ask .. for money .: and yqu should be getting
a
flood .•
WEEK.· HALL • OF FAME;
'besendingjunioi:reporter
"TOP~ (THIS WEEK recommends ~ry-
•
of'inyitatiotis in ihe_·maiL Pick.
located in UPSTATE NEW
_.FORTY"
.to
bring_back all the:: ing on the'phoneto be inost cost-
.
yourparties,wis~ly arid ari:iveten
. YORK
somewhere between Utica
:>
details of what he experienced effective) you will ·need it fot
minutes late. :-· ,:
•
••
•
•
·.
-'
.• - _.-.~
~
>
;
_.: ~-·
~
··-.,
.·
·-.:~~{-___
: .,-
'
' ••
GO~ZO
,FRl?AY
SLEEP IN SUNDAY.
.. ,TO T-T • T-TIJESDAY
6a.m.
(ABC)
ABC Momlag
News
6
a.m.
(Ch:
i
I)
.,
N.,.
Jmey
Now •
. -.~IC)
a:m.
,cJ,
. . ~\:
;J \
lo'a,;,·;Ch.
II)
Bugs Bunny/Road Ranaer
Trusfonncrs
(Cartoon)
;' MOlllllD
MONDAY
: Mld-luas 1,q1a
._.,.
., .
6:30 a.m. (Ch. S)
GroomCllo~
7:30
a,m.
(Ch.
S)
Fal Alba1 aad The
I p.m. (ABC}
• All My Children
4
p.m.
(Ch.
2)
:
TH Rockford Flks
4:30 p.m. (ch. 5)
TIie Brady Bunda
• 7:30
p.m. mm.
• "Vamm:•
D-245
Sp.m. (NBC)
TkCOSIJySIIOw
8 p.m. (ABC} Film:
··Ne1&•11on·•
s,arrins ,~ btt
John
Bdmhi
and Dan Ayt.rO)-d
10 p.m. (NBC)
HlDSlmelllhla
. 6:30 a,m.
(Ch.
S)
, Balhrinkk
• .
.
3:30 j,.m. (Ch, S)
•
pJ.,lkMan
4
pm . HAPPY
HOUR
al Berties
2
for
I
rill
6:30
7:30 p.m.
(Ch. 71 • .
EatuWIIDlfflt Tolllgllt
8
p,m.
(CBS)
Film:
"'TIit
Wlzanl
or
Oz"
(19391
Campus· Center Film:
"'Ridlant
Pryor
UTt
oa
tk
S.nsttSlrip'"
Balltnodd"s
50
«Ill bttn lill
micllllgbl.
11:JO p.m. (Cb, 2) Film:
··n.
Trial
or
11my
Jm•·
(1974)
JI a.m. (ABC) ;
' Sea
__
ry Scooby F_aailles_
•.•. ,
10:JOa.m.
(Ch. II).•
.
nrtt
Sloogei
12
a.m. (ABC)
AIIC-Wtd<rnd Sptdal
12
noon
'"Tfft Achtnlara or• Two-··.
Sldnatt's
Sallday
Brnc:11
·, Miaa1t
wcrnro1r•
4:30 p.m. (ABC)
\\lcle
World of Sports
6 p.m. (Ch. II)
Pllttlat 0a
TIM,
HilS
I p.111.
(CII. Ill
film:
'"Class
of
•44•• (1973)
clmpus Center:
COMEDY CABARt."T
11:30
p,m. tNBO
SalWl'lb:,
Nillll
~
Rod'ltdls
S
p.m. (Ch. 4)
Hett"s Laey
4:30 p.m. (ABC)
\\'lde Worfd of
Sports
campus
Center
Film:
"Rkbtd
Pryor
Utt -
. lllt
s....
51r1p·•
7p.m.
tCBSI
60
M"tnla. . .
.:.
Mar1st•s
on
Ubnry
Con1~ror
SPRISG BREAK
_ 7 a.m.
(NBC)
: TIida,-
.
~ 8:30 a.m. (Ch. S)
Cosby
Kids '
'
·u:30
a.tn~ (Ch;
9j
I Drtam_
or Jftnnle
7
a.m.
(Ch. JI)
. Pink Paalllff
; ~~~oaa
: •
~
•
. II
a.m.
(Ch: 41:., ,
•• W11<e1
or For!aae'
••• .• • .;8:30
~.m
..
(Ch. 13) •• - , • • .
~~~~~
'-- -. ' !Mister
RodJaS Nefabborllood •
4
,
30
p.m.
I
p.m.(ABC)
AD M:, Clllldmi
2:30
p.m.
(Ch. 11)
Politbl Sd"a(
Tom
ud
Jerry
lect■tt/dlscassloa,
• 4 )i.m. (Ch. 4)
4:30 p,m. (Ch. SI
,·LcMConnmloa
•. Tllt~Balldl
• ~SklDsWort,sbop.
Workshop:How101a1<n1nr
•' -::
•
,
• WdliallltRt'a!Wortd
. V'aole«t
Propam
• •
_ 7
p.m.
MCTV
8
p m
1Nnr..
u-•s
n-Ldball
n.
LoJola,
• • '
=
1
'"""'
.,.,,..
TlltA•Tftm
Oantll
7:30 p.m.
Film:
"Enry
Mn For
m-ir
ud God Api,lsl Air
·O24S
10
p.m.
(NBC)
Ripli,k
12
p.m.
!Ch.
11)
Slsrlrrk
1.2:JO
:r,m..
(NBC)
la•~ ;\lglf '""
Dt>ld
l.dlmian
Fireside
Lounge
7p.m.MCTV
Hodtj
n.
Patt.
Channel 8 •
7
p.m.
!Ch. S)
M~A-S•ff
Ladles' NJillt al
Balltrt"idd's
12:30 (NBC)
Lal~ NJi•• wl1ll
Da'fld utltmwll
· , Worldaa Os.<sSO
mnbttn
--
t·.·
....
··_.·,
,.
;
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·
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:
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.
PLUS $20 TAX
&
SERVICE
'ROUND
TRIP MOTORCOACH
TRANSPORTATION
..
;~:'~:•·1·1\li9ht;~··
.
··FJEA.Cll
-
,:/_F(?RTLAUDERD~
_,
,fTRiP' DATES*
Marc~ 2'.March
9::
March 9-March 16
·•
MarchJ6-March 23
:M~rch
23-March
30
March 30:April 6
·
April 6cApriL~3 •
..
,· ,BOO~
!:ARLY!
.
.
/
Li
mite~ Hotel Space
11,.-_..;._~ in Ft.
Lauderdale
•
and
-tiayfona-
Bea~h
:
:
•
.
•
.-
~
-~
.
.
...
·.-·
•.
·
,.
:'._TOUR
RATE,
.t.
INCLUDES·,
•Round
:
'-';
'·Trip'
Transportation.· via
air. conditioned-
iavatory_ equipped
r:notorcoach>', to
.
Daytona Beach and
.__ ___
_;__ ___
.:...J
Ff Lauderdale.·
\
·
.
•Convenient Depar-.
.
turePoints.
•
• .
.,
I
.
\.
•_.
TRANSf>ORTATiorlRound
trip tr~ns.portation is available on.our
coaqi,es._Motorpoaches depart from:m9:in
bus terminals
_in
major
.
cities
..
Ser:vice. is J3Xpress making only fqod . stops'. (Departure
times and dates have been carefully planned fo coincide with the
•
ch~_ck:in~tii:ne.
of the:hotelf Coacfles depart on Friday and arrive
.
ba9,k th,e following Su~day: Departur~ date's are Mar. 1 return Mar.
10,
.Mar.
8
return
Mar.
17;·Ma:r. 15 return Mar.: 24, Mar. 22 retum
•
tv1,ar;,31,
~-~r;·29ret_urfi.<\pr:·7,
Apr. 5
r,eturn·Apr:
1~.,Coache~'are
\:
the·.rnosr ~od~rn up-to'date models with recllning•seats and are
•
·•
fully)tfr co"ridit/oned and lavatory eqLiipped'foryour comfort.·
:
•
·. ·
:icdi
.·
•
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2,2-02-Norlhem' lloulevciid • lffffe Neck. ff.,.; Vorli 11363
•
•
New
VOIie
City
I
ong
ISlond.
,
.
Wostcrosrc,;'
•
New
Jcr,J;;y
718-631-JSOO
'516-7l2-015:>
914-~7-0140,
20!
0'3-41168
"'PJJ.\lJIS'E.
Qi
11er;;t.1t.1:Resta1.1
rant
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Fresh
Se.af6od
·-
Ste'aks
•
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...
c:.
:Ch~_P:P·~
-,~;C99_ktalrs-~··
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half'! 'your colf.ege ID
and
get
~
FREE-_Glass
of Beer
with
you_r
meal!
7%
01s·couNr
.
•,
194 WASHINGTON STREET
POUGH~EEPSIE, N_EW
YORK
(Next to All $port·
A
~hort walk from Marist)
-·
...
,_by
Dan
Meyerson
'$tudents, I· think, find going
.
to college· pretty stressful. Art is
•
•
The Marist College art depart-
.
an excellent creative outlet for
ment
is
planning to open a new
that kind of stress," said Lewis,
art gallery, which will display art
who thinks many students feel
.
work from the college communi-
there are people who have artistic
ty.
•
talent-
and those who don't. He
Accordin:g
io
Richard Lewis, .made th e analogy of people who
•
-area.coordinator
of.
art,. the new may not sing very well, but still
.
-
.
get a lot of enjoyment out of sing-
gallery, which will be located m
ing. "If they give themselves half
Marist
East,
•
will be small, in-
•
timate and will
be
able to show a chance; they could probably
find the same type of pleasure
•
more creative works, while the with art." Lewis also said art can
.
galle1
Y
in Champagnat wili show even help t~e student in the job
•
larger ~orks and visiting shows.
.
•
:-
The gallery should be open by
,
market. He said that while m'any
the_
end of March; Lewis said.
people feel an art degree· is
Spring art enrollment has in-
"economic suicide,,, there are ad-
f
h f
II
vantages to studying art. Artists
creased 60' percent. rom t e a
have a flexibility in thinking that
said Lewis, who replaced Allen employers find useful in anv field.
Moore in September·.,
,
•
•
Lewis cites
•
the increase in
"Art is probably the oniy field
enrollment to the a~ded emphasis where creativity is the main
on. attracting more· non~majors substance,"
said
Lewis.
arid creating more interest in art "Creativity is important
if
you
·
as a
·minor;
This emphasis gives want to rise above the. general·
an opportunity
·to
experience the mass."
•
creati_vity
art hast~ ~~fer, he said.
When asked if he was surprised
by the sudden interest in the
Marist art program, he said he
was surprised the program wasn't
bigger before, but he's happy
with the increase in enrollment .
Lewis said he wants the pro-
gram to continue to grow and
feels that'by emphasizing art as a
minor, Marist's art program will
grow.
Art trains people to "see" bet-
ter, said Lewis. He stressed the
big difference b~tween
running
by
life, where everything whips past
you - and looking at things very
carefully. "You'd be surprised
how life looks better once you
stop to look at it."
It is this different way at look-
ing at life that attracts people
from all majors to art, Lewis said.
"I'd like to encourage people to
come down and talk with me if
they're interested in taking art
courses, even
·jf
they think they
.
have no
_artistic
talent. They may
find out they have quite a bit of
taleriL:.;;.;.if
they give themselves a
:
"
chance.'>:·
.
•
•
•
•
CuJinarY--------·
_._,
,
__
•
__
•
Continued from page
3 •.
does the American Bounty room .
surroundings than the~ American
:
Bounty room offers, the Culinary
'According
to·
Lally, the Escof-
·_
can•. again
.
provide. the·. perfect
•
tier h~s
_.a
fixed price,· Lun~hes
.
restaurant to fit. yout;tastes: .The
there mclu~e
~ five-cou_rse ~~l
Escoffier Restaurant is a-Classical for $16. Dm11ers comprise a six-
•
French restaurant decorated with
•
;
course meal for $34 •. The price
pink, rose and mauve.furnishings
;
does not. ~over taxes,· beverages
.
_and
elegant chandeliers,,,creating
1
and gratuities.
·
a
,more
formal atmosphere than
Aside from the two restaurants
""
.:
...
:•,;'. .,_:-. ••
♦
·-·~;.
•
•
··•
•
,
CAREERS
/,
IN
-·1
. •
I
.
.
• hr
• •
'
,,
COMPUTER
·
..
SCIENCE
speakers
with
q~.e.~tion
and answer
session
:;:
~_._.-.
_,
·, ·:·-.i~-
,.
Fet>fV&f'/28·,
1985
-
Marist College Th8atre
4 • 6 p.m~
Anyone interested in .a career
in computer science
SHOULD ATTEND!
the Culinary operates
:1
~offee
shop that is being expanded to
become St. Andrews Cafe by the
end of March. The cafe will focus
on healthier anci more, nutritious
foods with a heavy accent on
meals with low-salt, low-fat, and
low-cholesterol ingredieJJtS, Lally
said.
.Another restaurant: located at
the
.Culinary
is the Sheraton Din-
irig,·)ti:>oi:n':.\'{lii£h?>-i~~seJI}i,pti"li_ct:
meaning,.that there;',is:
0
a· limited:.
.
amount
'of
'outsiders'
wlio:
are
••
allowe~
-~o
enter/Lally. said'·that
•.
•
this restaurant· serv_es
as·
a_ dining
•
area for the-students,:faculty and
staff. In the beginning of March,
the Sheraton will switch from a
·continental
cuisine to an Italian
Restaurant.
The Culinary draws a large part
.of
their_ business from an eighty-
mile radius, according to Lally.
,
Bus tours and local business peo-
ple constitute a large part of the
Culinary's lunch crowd;
"The greatest percentage of our
luncheon and dinner guests comes
frorri outside the area," she said
.
"IBM
is, however,
·a
major por-
tion of our guests."
Lally explained th?t one of the
most interesting and
_,·,
unique
aspects about dining at the
Culinary is the fact that you, as
the public, are interacting with
the students. All four dining areas
serve
•.
as classrooms for the
students. The students who work
in the
restaurants
are actually in
class, providing a practical and
realistic setting for their ex-
•
periences.
•
Lally said that the
public seems to enjoy the facnhat
students
run
the
restaurant.
"People seem to have a lot of fun
asking their waiter questions. It's
a much more comfortable and
friendly atmosphere that the
students create," she said. "The
students
are definitely
non-
intimidating., They are usually
cheerful and energetic and the
customers like that." She added
that she thinks that the customers
like the feeling that they are con-
tributing to the students' educa-
tional experience. The Culinary
Institute of America is located on
route 9 in Hyde Park .
'~
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•
-
•
~o~tlnu~d from
page
4
>
/-
J
•
should tell yoti a
•
littli. about.
-
Marist attitude towards transfers.
••
Now. the student population has
-.
been reduced to 20,' all of. whom
are male, which should
.ieil
you
what Marist thinks oLthe degree
of safety at Heritage.
.
Plus there was the
·isolation
that
makes
.
someone
•
"living"
·at
Marist feel. like they are. a
_com-
muter student. That kind of isola-
tion_ breeds the apathy everyone
talks about but c:loes nothing to
change. One solution·wolild be to
move the 219 off
campus
residents on campus, a
.'solution
Marist has finally taken. action
towards althou·gh,
·it
the Lowell
Thomas Center-is any indication,
:
I have no hope ~fJlle new apart~
.
ments being built: while I'm still
•
here.
•
.
'
•
•."
•
I personally felt a sense of
frustration and anger· ab9ut living
at Hertt'age,,
I
transferred here
and I finally thought I'd be in-
•
"olyed in.real college life, as op-
·posed
to
'th~
junior college I
previously commut~d to,· yet I
was faced with
•
the· exact
•
situa-
••
tion. I'd get· up in the m~rriing,
•
take a ,van. to dass, then take a_
van.back to.Heritage at• the end of
•
•
the day; ending-·my connection to·~-
••
,.
Marist <;:ollege:arid.
ending my in~
terest in it as w~ll.
•;-
..
1::
.; :
,/
Why • should< off
·campus·
••
residents pay as much as on cam-:
pus residents if
·they.
are not en-
joying the full resources of Matist
•
College? Jha,;e no ~s~er to
.
.tl,lat-
·._
.
bufthe ariswer,wiUJ>e';!lcad~trlic
if·
the new apartments are'.finisbed.
••
.
This s'einester there
were
two
cases; of•.-~ssault
;against
:·Marist.·
....
·
..
students, by
Heritag¢
resic:lent~,
at
•
Heritage\ Gardens;
'A~sault.''.
is
.
,
.legally
defined as: Any
·word.
or
• •
·;
action intended io: cause the
per-
..
•:
'.
.
sori fo. wh_oni
it. i,s.
dite~t~4
fo
.~fin.
•
.
fear ofimineaiate physical.harm;
•
·,•a_
rj~~onablfl!el1ev_abl~)~i'~a(_\/{i
:_
::
•
•.,::·:.:.:rnlfirsfcaseWas
foiir sb.'idents
•
.
'":who.
wereithreat~rie_d{l?r'.'.-~{'ma~
•
:
''with
agun'y.rlio);aid_he:..youl_d
~i!l
•···_fhenf.because·th_cy'.we·re·makirig
.
.
.
:
t~%;reui~ttt~~i~
~~:;:~n:~s-:
.··
.ed
ine to move.
l
was pblying my.
stereo and:gi.titar.
at qllarter..to tw_o
in the afternoon;
.
wheh.
f
was~
threatened.by anian
,with
a club
saying, he,'¥ould k_ill
mt
~ecause
•
ofaH the ·noise I was making:
.
-'
TharikL to. prompt:, actiqn
•
by·
•
Robert·Heywood, Car9l Grariey
.
arid Lenny:Cheatham I'was able
•
to
move on;'cani'pus'the.next
·day
and outofidariger.
·
.
•
...
··
Heritage; Gardins ar~ jus_t too
..
•.
.
dang«;rolis for students to live. in
·;
and no· one should be forced to
•
live uncler those· conditions for the
·.
-~_mount
ofw~~ion.'Yepay,,.
;/
.•
•. ,:I
'just
ilope_-Marist·
.realiz~,--·
before someorie
·.is.
seriously·. ins
•
·
•
,jured
ihere,'.that the'
.safety
o_f.its
....
students is more importanfio this
.
•
school tha.n the moriey they 'Yoidd
lose bfbreald'ng a lease.
'::·.
•
.
·_
·:
•''•-Dave
Rakowiecki
•
·•/'
••
.
- -Junior, English Major
:
, ··•·.,
'i:
Transferred in'Fall of '84
_-
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GIVE TO TH~
AMERICAN--
CANCER SOCIETY.
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-'THUR~DA~t.
FEB~·2&TH·:.
<
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T()NIGHT-
&....-....;.;.~----<
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Spend
:a
nigh{-.::·,
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'-'·DESIRE'-'·
--
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Brendan C_onolly
-)(damSlpitt,.
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Michael togan
•.
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Frank· Pensa
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you
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officer's
commission..
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-,
CPT.
·:Luffman,
Marist.
eo1:.
lege 914-471-3240 Ext. 528.
_,,
____
.';"-·~·
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!i----..■..~--~-------~-----~---Feb.
28,·1985 ·
THE CIRCLE·
Pages--
••.
YJij/,!/g1ilieeJ}Jie:¢~ii?efiteai:tlrcs
local·
culture ..
·
·. /:;/~t~?:J':.':?:
\.·r:
.•. ,,
_· .. · :'. .,
::?:~:,{.
·-:
·f\•:,, •. '. ....
:. •• .· ,. • .
.
.:,}
.. ·•
. ...
,
I
·
·
· •
\\,
by'Ctirisilaii
Larsen •
'science Qenter -:- thro~glj, Jhe cok'. •.•
proud to
be
doing it,'' s'afd Har- . America. recently finished a series
September after working for the;
. t:'•:.:.
'o'/,,,
••
i,:\:/'<"~. • .. .. . . ••
.. :•· .. lecthre ~ff~rts of Exccutive:·Qir~_..::::
dy. . .
•
..
•
•.
.·: • • .
:· - • .·
of lectures and demonstrations at
Chance -
a Poughkeepsie ba'r
• In 1977, -the old'ci~Y .. hall in tor,I~it Hardy, a group of college : . The center is supported through
M.A.s.c.; and during March a· that burned down last September.
_Pough~~p_sie
. was saved_ from interns ',, and
var~~us . st~q, • f~n:d-raising ·activities. Much of
group ... of artists
collectively
."The news about the Chance
d_estru~!~n ~y :a group, of con, vol~?Iteers ·and support~rs -:- 1s a ~he current funding.will be used to
,
known as· Summergroup
will be
devastated me, but it's a lot more
cern~ citizens.. . •
0
•
' :•
•
'
contmual showplace for-art and renovate the building; .
• • 'displaying works of art' in the
rewarding being back in the
·01.ven . a •. second ·,;life, the science.froin around the Hudson
M.A.S.C. affiliates itself with main
showcase.
·
In
April,
arts," she said.
'. b'1!lciin~,3:t
2~8.Main,~t;·that99-'t ·:·Valley:.•:·, :·', t<:· - •
,::,i.
:' '.·. · • •
numerous ~rea arts groups and in M_.A.S.C. has planned a ,wine ex-
.• was· theJio~e of Poughk,eeps1e s .
•
."Our m1ss1on 1s to showcase all this sense 1t stands for "art. and
hi bit.
,
.
.
'p<?liticalprcicess now"houses aml ; the aits; science~ and education~.! science as a whole" in relation to
"I
haye things scheduled
n~rtures an.and science from the~ resources with \vhk_h the Hudson' other groups 'in the area, said straight through. the year," said
ar~;?
. >,}
:
.
•
_... ;,Valleyisso.richlyendowed.Being
• Hardy.
'
•
•
Hardy:
•
• .
•
.<
,Th~' tviid4;1µd~on • Arts and} a Dutchess<County native,. I'm
·.The ..
·· Culinary . Instit~te! of
Kit,Hardy joined.M.A.S.C. last
. <--~.-~-.::--,,. ;''
'·~~~-~-::-~
,j,
•-:.,
•
_,;<
'.
•
•.
•
All ·of the
programs
at
M.A.S.C. are free and informaa
tion • about center and its pro~
grams is available from the
,center. at 471-1155 .
·
Eat.t:<iet<i~Ie~:..,_,;,;....;,:,'.
:_;: · -~·.',
·..;...··
-----~-----____,,;,___,;,..~-~-----
~
'
'
•
'
'
'
'
'
•
...
~
,·,.
,- ·!: '.- ., •
;,~~;(i~~~~ti/~sii_pag~·~'.
•.':;':<'·:.{.
: ;
geihurt ~/get 'sun po~so~ing. Th·~ •
'tend
:'to:'-:drink::a··1ot,','
:,Brunner'' .:chap,e(one is a ~ontact person,
· said'' •~and' Hawaii is two ··thou~
•.
and someone who/can help. the
; sand' milefaway. SonieoJ!e Illight ;; stude11ts
if they ne~d it;"
•
._,. ._·:!.,
··-
ROOSEVELT 1, 2, 3 & 4
Rte. 9, Hyde Park CA9-2000
ACRES OF FREE PARKING
DISCOUNT MATS SAT. & •
•• ·suN.·AT 2:00 P.M.
•
ALL 4 THEATRES
_HafrisOn
Ford
in· ..
• WITNESS
(R)
/\7.:20an.d9:35_
:.EDDIE MURPHY IS ON VACATION.
\B·EVE·R~LY~I-I--ILLs;coPcR)'
• • •. . ,·" ~: ;: 7::15 and 9~30
•.
.
·: •-
ack.
Lemmon ·
-
\' -~-:
• S\tp·p:eAL:·.-:,:,:
·oo:an_ds:ts
;._ ...
-.co·m
tn··u:rliCB·;t·i·.oA/\I}
English
Nli!jQrs<
••
• Co~~<>:~l:i8f
1·1ite:fnship
-<_.
~--
1\11.'e..~liog··tQ_·>[)iscuss.
• •
•
-.Plac'efflen·f
·:possibilities
:for
..
tlie.·~--~.
~.
·_
:·----......_
$·unime·r--'and:-·Fall·
;
R~q·u
ite-nl~:nt:·._~no,:·
•
-Ap.plication-':.Pro·cedures.
will be discus:sed
February 28~ t985
free• slot
Donnelly 243
Manzi said her job is to handle
emergencies and notify the proper
• people, but she's not sure of other
duties.
.
•. '"There might be more to it,"
she said last week. "I plan to find
• out next • week exactly what else
• there is:"
•
'. There are several day trips
available to the stu.dents in •
Hawaii, including a tour of the
USS Arizona' and its Pearl Har-
bor Memorial, a trip to Diamond
Head -:- an extinct yolcanoe, and
city tours. .
· Brunner
said
that. many
students in the Hawaii group have
expressed an interest in windsurf-
f
I
ing and scuba diving, and some
haveeven asked about visiting
Don Ho.
Brunner said that The Yankee
Trader,. the· Florida hotel where :
some of the Marist students will
stay; has many programs set up
for vacationers, as Spring Break
is one of the biggest times of the
year for the Fort Lauderdale area.
Costs of the trips will • vary
• depending on hotel costs and how
many_ people _share a room. In
Florida, prices range from the
Tourist Hotel's $378.35 apiece to
the Sheraton Yankee's .rate of
..
$608.35 each. Both include air-
fare, hotel, tax and gratuities.
For the Hawaii group, The
u
Hotel Hawaii Dynasty offers a
single room for $608.35 and a
quad for $539.35 apiece, while the
Waikiki Malia has a quad for
$562.35 each.These prices also i~-
clude airfare, hotel, tax and
gratuities.
Brunner said that deposits for
the trip were made in December,
and two equal payments covering
the balance were due about · a
month before the trip.
tApa_thy slows
MCTV
growth,
: i
. '.·
..
'.
·•.,,
i
by Gina Franciscovich'
• • /
in ·the campus Weekly Happen-
::..
• • • •
/'
• 1
ings publication.
,;Marist College Television has
•Two years ago, Gene Robbins,
taken
a
giant leap over the past
of Danbury, Conn., recognized a
·two years:.Butfurther expansion
spotlight on. the communications
of MCTY will be limited without . department at Mlirist': But, at the
;_c.more.
stydentJnxc:>lV:em~11t;
,, . _: <.<
·
....
_,. tinu;;_
Jh~ie -~i½ :
~s>
Ltelevision, or .
:?tt,,~t.f;':'r1t::::,,..;:
..
~.~=i;_;f1;;;t::c:,',:,:.;;,:_i,
~,:.::::::··
video,~station.' As'·a ·result; -~Rob-
•
. {;urrently • the dub am pro-
bins said he.founded MCTV. The
;gr~iils: everr, ;-i~on~ay -~and • club fac~P,roblems in the future
::We~,esday n~g~L:from
7:
to :9 • due
to
la<;k of student response
(p;Jll; ·on: cable channel 8._-SoJar
according.to Robbins.
:'Marist , basketball • and hockey
•. •
•
>gitin~s
have J:,een_aired. The club
"A ~l~b. like this cann~t func-
lis'. also ptittirig together a • news tion without members," Robbins
prgram, according.to Jo~ <;::oncra, remarked.
.•
,
•
.MCTV's news-director: Listings
"For
1
the second largest major
ofMCTV's schedule are printed
in the school; I'm surprised more
people aren't involved," said
Concra .
After taking two years to get
off its feet, MCTV • now • owns
enough equipment to furnish Jts
·own televsio~ studio. This. equip~
ment includes two
•
complete
camera systems; valued at $2,000
eacli, . and an a·udio mixer
in-
cluding three microphones and •
two headsets, valued at $500.
With a foundation crew of 15
people, the club has. been short
handed .. Robbins said, however,·
if more students got involved, the
club would be able to tape and air
more shows..
•
'I-Iiglier
ed----........,_
______
.. ,. ____
Continued from p~ge 1
• ~t~dy, describing them respective-·.·
ly as merely "distribution re~
•
quirements" and as "Iittle,.mor~ •
. than
a
gathering of courses. taken, •
in one department," rather than
«experiences in depth." -
"They're
taught
how
to
perpetuate one economic system
without understanding what it is
theyfre perpetuating."
•
•
Bettencourt said that the charge
does not apply in the science pro-
grams .at Marist. "There is .a
natural sequence in the science
major with more regimentation,"
he said.
•
•
However, he cited
.
the history
program as one in which there is
no sequence and which does con-
stitute merely a "gathering of
courses."
As
for Marist's general
education requirements, Betten-
court pointed out that Marist is
addressing some of the issues rais-
ed by ·the report by introducing
the new Core program.
· Lutfiyya was not so generous.
"The philosophy-. taught here is
not philosophy," she said. "It's
the worst kind of watered down
social thought which does not-
deal
-with
the
theoretical
perspective of philosophy."
Lutfiyya is equally dissatisfied
with the major programs as with
the Core. "My students don't
know what a communication ma-
jor means, short of getting a job
with the media," she said.
•
-Foley and Sommer said they
believe Marist is attempting to ad-
dr~s the problem of general
education, but Sommer said the
college has not come far enough.
Even with -the riew Core program,
which he said lis better than the •
I
. .
old one, Sommer said: "We are
not really fostering a sense of
· history, a serise .of universal
cultur,e, a sense of tradition. Until
· we do these things, university
education will not train the whole
person."
He added that colleges have
become "trade schools, because
we are in the age of a trade school
mentality."
•
This mentality lends itself to a
"supermarket approach," accor-
ding to the report, "where fads
and fashions, the demands of
popularity and success, enter
where wisdom and experience
should prevail." Bettencourt said
that this situation arises because
colleges are trying to survive. Lut-
fiyya agreed. "Students here
choose courses with the least in-
tellectual struggle and the most
labor market potential," she said.
Lutfiyya accused . Marist of
On another topic, the associa-
directing everything toward "the
tion's report stated that research
mundane practical world," in-
and teaching should complement
stead of emphasizing the educa-
each other at American colleges.
tional • experience. She used
"The enemy of good teaching is
"but· rather the spirit that says
that this is the only worthy or
legitimat_e • task
for
faculty
members." Ttie Marist faculty .
members interviewed agreed that,
unlike at some larger institutions,
research was not stressed to the
detriment of teaching. They
disagreed, however, on what role
research s~ould play at Marist.
.
Somnief called fqr a greater
emphasis on research. "We don't
have the luxury of fostering
research and· scholarship," Som-
mer said .. "This should be present
the students too would
benefit."
.
• .
Bettencourt, however, said that
Marist is• not • research-oriented
and should emphasize. teaching.
"I am personally more interested
in teaching," he said;
Foley also favored keeping
teaching as a high priority at .
Marist. It is up to the individual
teacher to find a balance between
scholarship and teaching, she
said.
Lutfiyya, however, claimed
that "neither good teaching nor
•---------------•---------•
business majors as an example:. • not research,". the repo~ said,
• research pays off at Marist." She
said that a "publish-or-perish
predicament" is usually generated
by college administrations. But,
she said, "what is generated by
the administration at Marist is
that if you can keep your students
happy, you can keep your job,
regardless of your course content,
your research or your publica- •
tion."
f~-'-
.
,_
;,
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•
!?.
.-
:
-
-;
•,
-:.
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,~
. .
.
.;
.
FOXeSi.·
go.·
•·itlto.:~·gJf~f
~it~i}JP;tif'Il.e~:.:aS.
by
Dan Pietrafesa
.
. .
The two victori~S iast; week·
•
F~ver;;·, to'..Ma~ist:as ~elta~ .to~·
; •
.
:· _. · ,
•::
,
.. - :. · •
enabledMaristtofiriishthemonth
, allofDutchess·County~ :-.;:_;:
,,;:, .
.
:·After.Steve Eggink led Marist • of._February w_ith a. perfect, 7-0
,.-The F'oxes were,a teant,withoiit):
to. decisive wi~s· over V/agner and record; a winning season-f~r· the •
a
coach \inti} a few days, before-:
~~yola. (Md:),)he Re~ 'Fox me!:1
•
firs! time siri_ce
enter_ing·
rnvisi~n, • their_: first
~
practice; ··-:!<>st
;Of
our: .
will • head. ll)to . Baltimore, this One ball_ four _years-ago,· and .m players due to academ1c:reasons :,
week~nd as the mi~ber _
one seed • first place, in! the ECAC Metro . and Jost three:players aFthe start,,
• in the ECAC Metro Conference Conference with
'!l
11-3 record oftheseasoritofootinjuries:Yet/'
Tournament. ·- •
(16-lloverall). .
_·.
. ·.··. •. : ,the team overcame all this to win:.
''Any team is capable of~inn·- .·
.·«I
di~nJ ~hinlc·
~
team,_in the .• theconferem;e.tttle;, . , ·/ ~",·;:
ing," Lpyola.~ead.Coach _
M.ark • co!1fl:!ren~e
~ou!? wm llgames," - .. "~e're _not ~~ne. yet,!' said:?
AmatuccL said, just as Long _said FurJamc.
I
_thought at ~he_• ~ans.t semor forward· Steve Eg-
lslapd ..
Ui:iiversity Head. Coach star.t of _the season that
?·?
.wms gmk.e .,''.We· want- t~;g~ ·to,,the ,
. -Paul .LiZZ<f-tqld
Th_e,Circle two would :w,1.n
the conference: : . _ . _ NCA~ Tour11ament._
; '. _ .
weeks earlier. C'Yoli',have to put
Manst played 1ts_,best_
h~lf
qf.
:
~ggmkJe?·the scormg,w1th 2f)-~
~
together three • strong games . ~n b_asketball for the s,~~son.
m.
!he . po1!1ts . agamst. . Loyola,._ .whi.le
_,
three days." .
•
first half c;m
Saturday mdefeatmg
Smits and -Bruce ·Johnson· con~·.
• • • . . .
.
Loyola (Md.) 63-46.
tributed t6·each. ;
•
: ": ;
.
. The tourna11'.ent will begm
•
a
••
The team came outfired up as .· The hot, shooting ·of Eggink :
brand ~e":i sea~~; f~ the ~oxe_s,
a· ,proven on the fir~t t~iP.}-1
pco~rt also led,the Foxes to.an 82-58 vic-/i
~eas9n
7n
e~~ t e.la~:e:~d\~~
when Drafton Dav1s_h1tRJkSm1ts tory oyer Wag~er in a·home cons:.(
o~ger
I
ifS
id • d th.
uc> unde_rne~th
for _a
_slam-dunk,.
. . _
.
ference game last Wednesday''.<
·,:
<
w_ ert
oss, wou en
IS
s
. With seven mmutes remammg
The Foxes·brokethe game:open :.,
ce~~.lt~
s~.a~on'.
.
• ~.
.d Marist • scored . 10 _unanswered with a 8-0_ spurt midway in ;the ,(i
s, a new season,
sa1
••
•
h
f'
h If
Ir .
r -
h
• - -
· •
•
• •
Marist. H6ad·Coach. Matt' Fur-
pomtsf.1n t. eh . .-1Grst
ha ,pdu ifng irEst ~lfk::
fi. :h .. d
. h ,.-., ....
· •· • «We
·
•
t .
h
t -
.l:!,Wtl.Y
rom t e • rey 9un s or ._·. ggm
mis e wit a .game ,.
J~mc •• '··· _are.gomg,~_ avc:.o
good;'·: .. •i- • .':,: _.,,
•.
• .. ··
•. andcareerhigl127points·goirig,9-··
pl~y smart:basketball. R,ght now,
The•: 2-3 . zone • defense . was • 13 f
th· fi Id
d -9-10
·f • · ·
Ihkeourk1dschances.":
. . ..
.
. ,
.. . .·
. .
.
· rom_ e .1e _an
rom
• • .··• •. • , 1 • .
• •
•
- ,,
superb,
I
earmng applause. from the chanty stnpe. .
.. . . .
,
. The Fo,xes will be _th~ only te,m
the c.rO\yd
·on several o~cas1on_s
as
• «~e~ante~ to conta~n Eggink,.-
m the t~ufnament wu~ a ro.ad Loyola
1
was unable to put_µp
~
_ but 1td1dn't. work/'. sa1d,Wagner.'_
conference;record ofover.500,
.4-
shot. Loyola was unable to grab· Head Coach Neil Kennett: . . .
. 3. The-home team as of.this past an offensive rebound in, the first·.
''Their defense -wasri't .that:
Saturday h~s won 42 of 54 home half and .. went into the; Jacker • :
•
good/'· Eggink said. "I ,was wide. •
conference .games." .The .hosting roomdown 34-17
>
. ,
l ,.:
'\< .
';<
open ,, . :· :· -., ::·. ,;::., •.. :, ; . • '
Loyola:Gi-eyh·oiinds ·are ~-0 in>'
••w~·.outreb6unded·._,Notre
...
Joh~sott:hild
a
cii:re~r-high 15···
home conference games. ·
• . • Dame ; Monday riight, '-' : Loyola· assists .. :.: - ·
.
. · The Foxes yvill play St. Francis., Coach/~ark Amatucci said;-"We
. ''I wasn't c~ncerned on ·scoring
(l'l,Y .) in the firstround on Satin- : ,were:
just unable to_gr11b)uioffen.:•
.· tonight," -said. Johnson. •~Lwas,
day. Th~ Foxes.romped the 1-:er< .:sive
rebound/'
.';~.,:'(•;~ .• · .•• trying.to hit the open man.' Steve
•
: riers 63-4f, ~t'
~~~~
jn ,·Jan~ay~, :·_
}- ~-i~h ·.
~
Rc:d _F'~x:iyi~Jo,it,
5:eerµ~
• :- ~as ltRt.;_
a~d
YCJU
Stlly Ylitll,_the
~?.t: .
buttheTemer~ wangJe:and-tYIO _,_mg:.cei;tam;:the
f~n~ b~gan.cQan--;. m,an,.c,:.-;,
,.-;;< /.,.·/·;, ,,_~·
•:<:'.<":',<:,"•~--,
c.:
•
•
.
.. _ ,,
.
.
, .,
. _ .•. ,·
by Ginny Waite
. . : .. ·._
._,·.
, .
si~~ iit~bk-•~ith;26 'p6intfirt~r-:
. ·,>·>\::·;~:.? . .:.· ,
•.
~··: .• 8: reboun(is,.·.while 6-:-foot~2·.::.:-
. •, • • • Ursula,Winter ;. 'a •
s~fooi-10
.'
c.
center Pao line :Ekambi turned·,:
< :.
·1·
'.a'<l;.'e·
•.
':s··.
,:·•n··--~
''.·,·1··n··
··;:f,~
<ril·'oa:.;:_':\c:•>:·~e··::/:(a',,_>:;t•
·•.
••••
.
>;
,.j,/~-\~~\fjf
\i,·
E
,.i .•• ·_
]St · .. >: - : · :
,t:11·:.
pi
• · • ..
··
:r ·. ·
<.·
....
·.· - .;-.-,,
•ii!ttoiJliikriI>~i~~iiI~iiff
i~{·}f:·
1: ••
•ii·
- senior from
'F~i.J
Lee,
i-,tt~
out2r'points.and 7"rebounds:•:'.,
·:/_scored
~el\l,5()_lli.~_Pi?!ntat)ast • Coming· .. off..:"tfle.••Joss',,to
<
. Saturday'(' we>meµ's:-ibas~et_-
-.-,Queen~;
the-Lady Foxesput·in- ;~
. : bam'76~64 ;win over
'Fairleigh
. a :soHd team ,effort
.fo ·,
ovei'~
: Di~k,ins:o.ri"
'Urih,'er'sHY~
'•comei Fairleigh ,Dickinson
,, Winter's·rei:or(1is the'best ~yer, Uni~ersity.'; at the . McCanns,-
• set by
a
woman ·at Marist· Col-
Recreation· Center. lasf Satur.:-:
. ·Jeg~l ' '. ••
F.'
,> ·:, :~ i/,-.· ~-~-.
,
• day.• i'?': •• • .·
.:·,. ,,/".;·"·;·
••
·: : Last. S*urday's" ':' vic;tory
·
•. >The,C,:
Lady .. Foxes
J
led
• qal}l,e aftef a'
.
heartbre~~iitg thro.u'ghoutthe game; ·with·
a.~
!oss tq Que~ns CoUe~e; 67.~6~; 36~24_
lead • at ·:the .half. Th~y -;:
•
m
a
key c~nference compeu~ c01itinued .to. dominate in. the;;·
. ti~nilast Th~rsda~. : • .. .' • (.', • second flalf, and wo~ the game .. •.
• • ... A·:·strongrouts1de-shootm,g with Jackie Pharr _netting 23
.. • attack gaveLQueens the eariy poinis'arid pulling dowi19 re:. '.•
lea~in the first half.anq enaql~ bounds.~veralL
.
•
~
.. ·· . , . ·_ . ,
, ed_the La?Y :1(nigh_tsto
p~Hoff
•
., Thewi~ locked-up,5t);l phtce. ••
the gamem the-second half. •
,! •
for the .Lady Foxes'
7-7
stim- .
'~~We were about even in all ding in the.Cqsi:nopolitan Con- ••
•
of the, categories right· across ference .. The team may. move·.
the· boi1rd with Queens except • into . 4th • place pending . the •
• in ~ebound~/' said Pat Torza;
•
results from Monday night'.s
head coach:for the Lady Fox-
game. against ·Northeastern
es. "It -was a tough ·loss for University and .· last · night's
us.".
·, .
contest - against
. Cornell
Winter led the Marist offen-
University. •
1
__
·
by
Michael
~~l'P.hY.'. .. ·: :·.·. -
i
.
. ··/
Juruor :DaveL,uber:{~~-~voted,y;:b¢iiers;its
~l~~eµ'th'pla~e·
c,!)(year~~,~
·•
..•..
,: :-oi, : :'). ·.; • -:/.:-'
:~ ;' ; ::':/.; :_.t~e
aj~t•s-~utstanding :<Hver
W!t~_-].\~g!f/,Qp.~•of:;!~ej~n,ff
ptj_rri.ary
;},-
· ... Th.~ ~anst-~oll~~e
mert
:s_
s"1m .'"~'his
victory m:the three_~meter·
dive
:(goals
;of. the .. s~bn ,. was: to.:·im..:
•
,
;:
teal_ll
:cl9sed ~( the }ea~op. ,"'.~th_
·a.:•'.
,arid second place finis.h•in
the'.9ne(:·
~
prJ,y~:/'µJ>Bfdts:~elev~ntfr
• place{·; •.
. riinOf; . placf.': finish , ·:at '. :t~~
•.
,meter event; Luber's·'teanimates· \rariking/."-''.accoi:ding
<
to
i
Heaa ;.,-(.
-
~~ro~qlitan ,Sv.ri.mµij~g
:~~d .D}v~ faired well• . ,1so :ar'.}<>P.~qin<?~e
}<.::?a~lt
t,rtf,X~~t?(
agner:: : >.· :\ -;:: ••
mg C,9nference
.. Champ~~n~h1ps
.. , Larry Canomco. fin1slj_ed
t~1r~.'111
.:.·,,,,::
·:-:,:<[:
T'. \;·:'"1·:·,._
:,'. : , .•
..
:'" . ' • _;:
•
helcLat ·the :McCann Cente(pool
both die --one-, :arid.~
thr:ee.-iiieter
.<<
Although:the ~•Swimming
Red.
o,
tlti~ past weekend. : : ,> :)· <-•
., • • : events,.:.: whHe>. Junior• ·;Tqdd»_:Fo_~t!S~:-\
liavf: c<>mplcted their
\i
.' ·_;.,,:: .. ·:· •0··;:
,·.>
_'.;:'<.'-::·: Squillaro endedup with afourlh·>season,.the.'Mar~sf·diving.cori
7
~Y
•
Mari~t finj!lQ~d
'with:·a:total
o_f :
(one~meter ~dive):, and,, a/, fifth·· :ting'ent i(not
yet.
(inish~d with· its _;:
443.~ points,; w1tile' 1)le :Unit~d • (three-meter.dive) plice,finish.:·,;,·:
0
1984-85·'c9mpetitive:
~eason. ,The
.·:
.
States Meicharit Marine:~cademy· •.
.· '. ',: .· ,,:·
....
,,_)';
,,,-,,- ;c--\
;':·
,-i:
"\?.;::·_ •.• ',;.:;', ... :,,;: ,_,·:-;;,· '., ·_
I
·.·'
:~
. was tlie' t~m.champion with 972.
•.
;_ The lvfarist swimmer:S
~e~e led,. "Diviilg Red
Fox~~"
~tiil hive· at\
'
points: A'total of
22
schools·froin •
l?Y
top.finishes from junior .Peter: least two more meets ahead.·The
:'
..
both theA.arid B divisio_ns.of
the' Asselin who,
.. finished l2th.in the
•
ECAC:. iChampionships .. are;_;
conferencec6mpeted.:·<-::
100-yard freestyle a~d freshman-- scheduled for. March·,7 and 8 at·
• •
• •
_
.
, .. : .
..
·. . . ~ill Masi wh_o_
finished 13th in ' Brown University, :· while . the<
• Marjst· divers • ca_ptrired their
_
the 200-yard butterfly; _. •
NCAA Division I tri.als will be., :
fifth ·straight conference title by
,...
:'· held at Harvard on March 15 and'~·
soiidly defeating·Iona, 224 to-139. • • t-1arist's ·ninth place -showing 16/ .: :: •
, • • •
WdYflen
's b-ball: Marist'Slrish COnnection
by Julia
E.
Murray
• John
J:.
K~nnedy.had his "Irfsh
Mafia," Scarlett O'Hara ;ilways
had "her Irish up," the Clancy
Brothers. have their "Wild Irish
Rose," and for three years·Marist
- College has· had the "Irish Con-
. nection"~
Una Geoghegan and
Jennifer Gray.
Geoghegan and.Gray are both
members of the Marist College
Women's • Basketbalf
team.
Geoghegan, a junior, was first
~potted at a basketball camp in
the United States while here for a
holiday. She was latei told there
was an opening for a scholarship
Una Geoghegan
(photo by M~oreen Ryan)
and tried out · for it on her way .
home to Dublin after a summer in
califomia. The rest,
as
they say,
is history. '
Gray, a sophomore, was also
spotted at a basketball camp, but
she was in Ireland at the . time.
.
Pete Strikland, a high . school ..
• basketball
coach
from
Washington D.C.,, saw her play
anc;I
telephoned Marist. Her coach
then>sent a letter describing her
talents and, before she knew it,
she was headed from Dublin to
Marist on a scholarship.
Both women found adjusting to
• a new style of basketball to be one
of ihe biggest problems to over-
come.
.
.. The players over here are big-
ger and more agressive than at
home," said Gray ... They're a bit-
Jennifer Gray
(photo by ~•orttn Ryan)
more physical under the boards." ·
The practice schedule was also
difficult for .Geoghegan and Gray
to
get used
to. Here practices are
• held everJ day,: while in Ireland··
there are ·usually only two or three
practices a week,. -according to
'Gray.
~
•
•. . , •
.
• "In Ireland it's all club basket- :
ball and we play more for fun,"
said Gray.
.
The frequency of practices also
means that their social life is very
limited'until basketball season is •
over, said Geoghegan.
"During the season I have no
social life," Gray said.
· Both women had graduated
high school and were working full
time when they were offered their
scholarships, so coming back to
school was another big adjust-
ment.
Continued on psge
12
'-;~
.:~·•,·;~-
•.,
1'
;~:I\~~~:iday::M()tn1
nt,:.;ouar-tetba6k.'.
::?.
::
: .
,·
.. r.
••.••
.
I
Feb. 28, 1985 ·
THE CIRCLE•
Page 11 __
•
\
.
·rv:)i
1{jif
;[it'.:
-
••
•
•
•
.. ,,··• ...
,;,,:;;}'
.......
::
.'l!~i;i~ij~:--~
~-.:an·
era·
.
•
·:
•
:
~ylan Q'Connor,
:
::
:
.
.;.>:·.·<·witnessed
the. contest;it'r'eally was•''
·the
East's top players;>He. has
.•
just happy we were able to win the ., years, on the marks they'v~ left
.
•
,·,::-:->,'.··;'/~
'
'i. ,_,.._.. .....
, :.';:·•·\
··"·'ii'nightto·reme·mber:·
\?··:
.,
••
?:'
•
'become tJie·teani's'_star. H¢ is bn·e ·• conference,"
·:Padilla
said. ''The
'·
on this'college·. They look'ixcited-
..
• ·.,
• :..iFor.'!h~
pasf:four years, th~r)
.;i?.
First, Eggink ~nd Padilla, Both·.
:'of
the main reasons
'this
prog_ram
•.
future· really looks good for this
.ly
to
the
future,
of what Mari
st
:
. :
/h~ve
be_~P:tJ;l,~dQ~i~antfigur~sjn
.:,·:·of.;thfse_departi~g•.pla}'c;rs
are here•• cai:inow be calledlegitimate:,.
:
.
program.",
'. .
•
•
•
,
..
•
.:-
.
.,
basketball can become.·
•
•
•
• :·
::
•.
':
:tht
..
}1ari~t;J:o_l~ege·:~tJ!Jeti~.-J:>i§~
•
for. t~ei! flfth.;y_ear~:~u~_to
th~ fact:.
}
~'This
i~:
by
't.ir
•
the' best y,ear
i
<
Just as· ~he Loyol~ game was
•
••
If you werct'there Jcist Saturday
:,:
•
.
,gram·:J:<:.
,·.:;::;;,.,<.';';'.°<;
.
p
..
''.
.·~,
·;
· ,
·:
.
:;th~t,
1.nJur1es·,caused
each to re;d-
·we've
ever-.had;' '. Eggink recently
-:
represen~at1ve
of Eggmk, th~ star,
night,
•
you know why they were
.····\
]_!le1r _naOles,_are-St~'!'.~-~~g_ml<,,.shJ~t•
for·
__
pns_:s.~,son
... :Out ~h.1le.; said'..<'This'prograin_is
just going
·.an_d
Padilla; the role player!
1t
was
•
excited. You saw Rik Smits flash
.
. ,
.GJ~t,P;ad1Ua,-:
Br_11ce,
J~~ns~~;•
a_n?,
..
they. shar:t~tu..~
coRlmo~-~ond; ~he
·.:
to get better.''
.
_
.
.
,
•
. ..
·:'··
. •.
also an accurate account of. the
the skills that may make him a
: /Tu~r~ayl<I~;
/f:.hey
art the·:semor
,'4'_t'ro
h_ave;_~ad,.,.~ar«!erq~aL~re_
as
,..-Padilla
•has never been the careers of the <:>ther s!mo~s, 11rst round NBA pick in three
.
·;Iµ_.~P}.~~rs
~r
°.~I'..
~e.n sibask~b~l~
:';,~:~fffer~nt
.~sthe1r
~.ac~~r_oun,d~:
....
>;-
team's
·star; '.:He
came: to Marist
.
!ohnson a.n~ '.faylor. F?r,the pair,
years
•.
You· saw the
.cool
Drafton
: •.
,te11m,,
~~-n.~.~,>~J.,of.
l~~t Sat~r~_~Y,,,
''\
,:.,~~gmk_ca~e
_to
Jhls.school
VJ~::
from
. _New .
Jersey's,
,·Memorial
.
It
was
8:
f~ttmg finale m fro11t of
Davis,
th~
•
i_~proviilg Ken.
-~~FY,;;~a~e,pJ~yed
~he1r
.. last; g~~5
:
:Man.~t}i1_g~
m E,u~ene,, Or,egon,
.
Hi h
-and
was' ro'ected to be a . the partisan crow_d.
•
.
, .
. 03:lloway,
•
.
and the • anxio.us
:J}~:f~optpf.th~:~~1s,t_f~thf~~•<:
':':,a.ft~rturnmg_dow{l:~~ve_r,al
_of,fers_
:,
fo:. rebo~ndei ~d. defensive·
. Johnson,. t~e
·aII-t1me
assist
Miroslav Pecarskijust waiting for
•
:
:-:A[~llt.
_ga.m~r:,a,_~~c1s1ve
v191;~r~
:
fr.~~· P,ro_f~~s1~nal-~a~~1?,It~e~msjplayer
f
9
r the Foxes:· It was a knee
..
le~der :11,
Man~t, put. on a show his
•
opportunity:
.
They are
•
the
. ::o-~r~con,fer~~~n~11_U,;orol~.g~~::
:,~ookmg
Ao ~c._q~ir.e:
his
;high-
';injury that forced him·oul ofac-
with h1s/~azzh~g quickness and
nucleus, the players that
wi)l,
legck,T~f~~~,~~v~ri~Lfli:s_ts
f~~Jh!s:).
·pow_ered
.fastb~l_::~~ter. a r_athcr
.
tion iri'his second. year, an injury
•.
~allhandhng ~kill. Taylor, the ~II-
elevate this program to further
:c~Jle,e
~,b.asketbl!,ILpro,ra~.
fqe
,. •.·
average• first
.two
Y.:~i:s
as a ~ed
•:that-took-some
of the spring out
time rebounding leader a,! Manst,
..
heights.
•
•
.
•
•.
•
._::~~~-:~pP.C~:.off:1he:,first
;,ymmng
:;
Fox;_ th,e &:5· f()rward suff~~~d a ofJ>adilla's legs for good.
•
cr~hed the board~ on ~oth ends
.
But if you were there that night,
SW.QP.:,the)~.ed;.f'.oxes
have
..
h~4
:
hern1ated;d1sc
that-caused bun. to
• .
·
.
•
.
.
•
.
of the
'
court
•
m his usual you also know one thing:
.This
.
si~b.f_e~!~E~8.~·J>tyi~io!1·:q~~'.fotif>_sit
h:µt
what wa.uld.~ave beeri ~_is.··
..
Ma~ sa\
the
.
6
•
7
frwa~~ ha~
.·.
workmanli~e man~er .• The
_two
moment belonged to the seniors. ..
:;
y~s
1
;:,ago,-,·)~~•·;also.,·'!=~mched:::
·junior'year.:
Up,to this point, Eg~ n~ver. en.t. e s_a~e.a te.r 1 is s~t
were the pnze recruits of Manst's
It was their tiine to bask in the·
.
::M.~fi~(~_:{first
0
//E~AC\·,,M~tro\"'..'gi~~•
hadn't' exactly''.been\'_setting. ;a~\
But.:m~c_h
·:f.
his tedit,
first Division One freshman class; sun, to receive due praise for
,
:r~gularsea~on.t1tl~;and_puqhe·-··:theworldonfire.·,
.•
·,
l
·l:
a 1 aneverquit.
e_S
tuc_it_out
·Afterfouryears;'theyweregiving
everything they've• done for
.-
..
sq°'a~j~ tlie unfamiliar. position
y
:
:That
all'changed the following t~ro~gh t~o
·seasons.
?f h~~t~d the M.ccann Center one final Marist basketball.
•
9{:',b~ing
ttift9P,: seed in the con-:.: season as• former Head
·.coach
,
P aymg time_,
•
~eceivmg 1tt. e look.
No matter what happens over
•
fer~jlc_e'Jto_µfney:
beginning
:th~s::
Ron. Petro. inserted Eggink' into
..
:
rewa~d /or his tireless work
10
• :
"This program is growing,"
the weekend in Baltimore, Steve
:·Satf.l,rq~y;:
:::
..
·:._;,:.
•::/·.
<
·
•c.
·y::,<
:/the;startiQg
lirieup,~
and~watched., pracuce. H<?
~asbe~? !he heart of • ~ruce said.
.
Eggink,
.Gil
Padilla,
Bruce
,·
.
·;<J3.tIF~hile}his'·evenfdid
matk, his western· recruit average double
•
the team, hke a fighter w~o
;
"Leaving. as a winner is a
Johnson and Ted Taylor can all
,
.;sprite
rather ri.ew and exciting ac~
:.
figures for the year. But that was-: r_epres~nts th~ true work e1h1~· thrill," Taylor
.said.
"This team
look back proudly on their ac-
•
-~·com.pi~shnt~ilis;.
it.also signified_· just a small p'review of.'.wiiatiwas And hke all fighters, he made
.
11 can be great in the future. This. complishments. They are proven
::the
..
~.erid
.:-of.
an:·:.·era. iii: MarisL' to come in this current campJign.. th_rou~hto the. final c~mteSl,
c?n-
program will grow.,,
.
winners .
.
:~thletics.-Jt
was·tiie ushering out> Eggink, averaging over l5'po,nts
tnbutmg to victory m a quiet,
•
They all ·talk about the pro-
•
NOTE:
.. ·
Thanks
to
Dan
'.:o(the'ol~,
the bririgiiig in of the per game and one of the nation's
...
modest way~
.
. -gram,
about the future. The four
Pietrafesa for bis help
with this
••
new:\ For
·tlic\e;J~OOO-plus·'.
who-,, best fout'shooiers, is now one\ of:
"It took
.four
years and l'm· seniors don't look back on past
column.
:
,·
•·,
-,
•
'
••
•
-.~.:
•
-·..
-.>:-'.(.·
•• ,
•
'
•
.
,·
',
•
·1.,
•\_.
•
'
Why is tlie Fox-our mascot?
.
.
.
'
;'.
\
[f
{1(:.~~~•,
__
2
~-->
:
J~~f.Q:~•c,~~••J~r~:
·
..
·
..
_
~,~.:::.!i?ge
'$ .:~.~.~:~
s:~.irs
•
debate
0/:
',\Vit6.ihessuirt'.of,tiif
ECAC
•
ca4s~ a' Jew'. probl~ms,:fc,r t'1e
...
•
who was dean of students at
The
•
Marist
•
Viking. football
-;-'
Mefrci
.•
:'°:Corirerence/
.to'urna~. '
faVO!i.tes
is',Furjanic'.s fc,rrner
••
?
.
·•:.
The
Fighting
•
Irish;.~. The. Marist from 1958-65,. is credited
teamh sported
'f/~rf
purp(e c~lor
·::·m~nf;this\Saturday;:it
seems
••
<
squad;·
:
the Colonials': from
·_:
.
Redmen. The Trojans. rhe Red with. choosing the Fox. "Brother
!sit~ -~iik~~~/CI~sc!i~a~
~c~ ~;~
•
:;,that."iiny'of'
four teams have:.
,':R..ober:ti~~rris;.:lf_the,;_I~oxe~
•
Foxes: They all have something in ~tokes was a hunter in his day,· team jerseys and jackets. "it was
v~abfo.;shots:a~,takjrig
.tlie,titie'.
: .(~~p:.nia~e
.
th
~,r
firSt app~r~~ce;
•··
•
commonwith one another.
•
• •
,_,
·
• and he hunted
in
Dutchess. Coun-
a
gesture and
.a
convenient hype at
\f~ltffy6/rtii~Jt~~lfr~~~\{\~~ih~\~¢~•·st;:,i~~;:::h;~l,).'.
>.t:tit~e~~h{~-it~~~~c~6iA·•~trf~a-tiIWo~::~t~i~?iJ~~!i~;-·
·,
t:d
ti~~;df8i!e~
0
•~i;;:~---~z~~
•
';
After
.i.the:-·
·league's~·
Weaket;
'.
·>
tu nd
'
OPPO.l}eat
;-
111
be·Lokufd.
\
.,.,:,furnamerit.
n€:"t.
cmonth.
~ath_er,
•
local •.anim~l
•-arid,
was eventually enough' for the football team;''
.,
.
''..:•f
0;'':'./:;:\i!?
{:''\
.;(,//
.,.
,
. . }'.
si~':°:i:~t~R~~~:~jf
0c~l:
..
:
• :they
all repre:sent t~e qffic1,H1tl~
.
chosen
by:
Brother Paul because
Since then, the football
.
team
•
:-:~.r.;_•.tM/i:a.ftri.sst-?f
...
•.ua~n.~de:
..
t.t.i~~tyl;_o·'1:;a~
.•
~.u.6.01:.ni.
_m_:>o.~nder
g_;_.~-~b.
;
..
··.ii.x.o_
~-
;\.ll!
..
~./ta.}!!.?_\~.1}.~~.;.};
.·rl~hlct~o~:~.::~;~.~l.h:i~
.·'
•
of~~t~·~~ri;~~~·~:1i~;:;~:1~- ·~
••
~;~~e{~
1:ag1~?Jt;:d{~r:
~e~~~
'.
.
.....,
II
h
fi I
>.·
Th_e I!amef_s~und simple and
'·'legend". with thiH>lder alumni,
and has carried the Red Fox sym- •
.
: •
sernifinal~,with LIU and
IDU
,sea,s_c;,n,
wi carry,t e sei,nt ma_
'.
·
0
hav~
_a
certam
.nng
to them. For made the decision to adopt the
bol every time
it
has taken the
,. ?
battliii'g. iµc'the, other; If.that's
·,
an<;l
f~nalrou nds.
0
f.
tbe,,con,.
::
.
~.ap~t
:: .
Co!leg~
,.
~tt1:dent.~
,
and Red Fox following his hunting
field.
..
•.
·the
case, the Red
,Foxeif.will
·.:
ferenc.~_,~o.urnaipen~
~n Sunda,Y-
•
.otliers°'~s9tiateµ,~1th:tJ1e;schpol,
,
adventures throughout Dutchess
Over the years, the Marist Red
have~ to
:_
take
•.
on the
, ..
and
,>tv!9J.1d,ay.;
iughts
...
s'l'.lm.,<'·
the·Red,Fox'is th¢'symbbl ofthe
·county.
Belanger said
;that
the
Fox has bcien· pictured in'.several
'..
Greyhounds
:on
their home
~
:
G~~•rn,_,~
JU_nl<?,L
m.ember 9f
c<;>ll~ge.·
T_h~ qu~tio_n that_ ma9-y
.
readings oLReynard
·may
have
different ways. In the 60's and
·~
:)
court;· a place the~Foxes~don't
·,
~~~
'
¥,~ns~.: hock~y
•
t~~m;
•
people faiLto inquire abo,ULIS,
•
·
also influenced Stokes' decision.
· 70's, the Fox was pictured with a
,
.
.
like
to travel-to, Loyola
seems
:
•
;~·,,-,
·>
-,'
_.·
c- •••• • ••
,,
:
•
•
,:
•
-~!Where
did.:Marist ever come up
~a1·10
•
r's ha·
t ... '
..
'Sai·11·ng was· the· top·
·•,
.,
.
h.
,·
·
M.
·'·· ~,-:
,
i::
'"··
<.·
,r~ntlY,rea~hed
the_m1lest~!le
•
d"F
•
.... ..
• ·
.
•
• •
.tC?,::.
~v_e-.
anst ~>~u?1_u~L
ID,'
·-or.1oo·ca:reer''poihts.
Graham.>
with the·R.e
•
ox:as,its;·symbol.
:
-~I ·think
that it all
sport here.in the 60's,".Belanger
.
.:
,::.\
'.
.· .
•
•
·:
'·i~
thdhird ptayei"'in Redfox:
•
a
nd mascot?"
•
•
g;.oe·
s·
·.b
.
.la'
.....
c.k·.
to·
.a_·F·.
rench
said •. "We.won the·~CACsailing
.
,
;
Balt1mor,C?,
..
~mnmg
.Jli.ere:
the_."~
hisfory. to, compile·-over
JOO..
The answer to thi~ question.has
.
championship. one year." The
:
;
p~_U,W<?_:years.-L11:9ttnne
th~,:,:-points,-<with-'.'senior
Rob
..
varied from
.person'
to
'person;
m.·.
ythi.'.cal
poem
·abo.
ut
sailor's cap
·was
'tacked·on
to the
•
...
: .~~x<:5
headecl d9w~_tqµ:>yo!a,:,.:
'.Tn~~<aJldi\gradu*eYllm
•
:
dep~nding._on who you. talk t_o.
Fox because of the sailing team's
,
}~,e
squ~d:w~ df~l~
~ra~1cc._\l\lcP9nal~
/bei~g'::t}ie ':other_, ...
Even. ari:J~ariy: 1910·~
'stud,ent
a,
ifox
•••
i
named
prominence
,and
dominance in
,
..
um~
at t.he. hosp gynionJl_i~:
·two~.-.Ihtramura1-··
director
·
..
•·.handbooic,
The Arrow, fails' to
•• ...
:
•
•
··1
·
.
..
those few years.
·•.,·.·
'day:of:Jhe
garne'.,That ~u~ed.,
Mlk:e.MaJetis
sHll19oking:for:::::. reveal who chose the Red Fox' as.
Reynard.'
''.:
i
"•
_
•
'.
some
:bad
-:blood
between· the
o.tet.erces
to do
.•
the upc·o.rriin.g
5
••
•
Marist's official
'mascof
TheAr-
Th k
t
the
•.
•
•
·•
•
•
•
•
•·
•
row
sayi that the Red
"Fox
was
s·
h •
•
'
•
I
•
f
·h
F
The cap is now gone, and the
•
two te_ams._;. e .
~Yt.
or
•
•
.
:
on,/
S
•
basketliall
•.
ga~~s.
.
c.
hose_
n
...
f.
or "its ke.en intelligence
mce t
_e
..
mcept1~n.
o t e ox,
Marist "M" has been moved to
Foxes mt~e tourney,wlltbe-the
,,
-Anyone
interested should con-
there has been only
•
one team
the back of the Fox. But no one
'j.nside~utside combination·
of:
..
tact
,Malet·
at his McCann.
•and.ingenuity."
The guide also which has not taken on the Marist ·
•
•
Rik Sml
·-d
S
w ..
.d ..
1r
•
•
• •
•
sa·ys·
that· t·he·
red and wh1'te
colors Red Fox trad1't1·on.
That e'xcept1'on • know.
s when (or if) another piece
•
•
.....
·
ts an
tev~
~~
·,.Center
offi~,. ext .. 329.;.Toe·
•
·
•
·
·
a~d. th,e:b<>~d play o.fsemor>.. men's hockey team.improved.
:
of'Marist were derived
from
the was the club football team in the ;l~yb~e 1:td}~xtoco~~- s:::;io~
forw~rd
Ted Taylor.
If
these
.•
its overall record to 6-8-1 last
••
colorationoftheFoX.
:'· •••.
•.•
early1970's. -.
•
basketball, soccer ball,
· ..
volley
three· can play as they have
••
•
week with a:·i0-.
•
2 vict.Oty over
• •
In order to find out exactly how
•
·
•
,.
·
•
·
• ·
·
·
•
•
·
·
.
the.Red Fox: came about, one has
"They nlcknamed tliemselves ball, lacrosse stick, hockey· stick
.
·ov~r
.
the
-p~t
~ori.th, there:
•
Mariti~e Academy. Th~ co_n-
to have a historical perspective on
...
the Vikings
·on
the instigation of
or tennis racket in the near future.
should
..
·be
.
no
.
stopping
.
test. was.•held at. the Mid-
_
•
the matter; Legend has it'that the the coach," said Dr. Howard
Chances of that:-c-!1appening
are
•
Marist· ... This
·mar.ks
the first
.
Hudson Civic
·C.
enter,·:• the
.
Maristj:,rothers were founded in Goldman, interim athletic direc-
very unlikely, but one never
F
•
d th
• t
•
d
•
A
d'
a
Id
th
knows. Perhaps all we· can hope
•
..
t1'me the·. Foxes have· ever w.on Fo·xes horn·
e 1·ce.·.·•.Th·e
men's
ranee an
.
.
us mam ame a tor• ccor mg to
o man,
e
F
•
h
I
•
A'
•
d'
•
h
h
b
•
.for
is that the Red Fox will some-
·1he
..
co·
nference ti'tle
·and
•
1
bb d
••
•
d
renc
cu ture.
ccor mg to team c ose t e name ecause
1t
entered the tourney
as the top
soccer earn gra e sec~m
.
Brian Maloney; director
·of
alum·-
day mean as much as a Fighting
place at their own indoor
• ff •
th R d F
d • d wanted the club to be separated Irishman, a Redman or a TroJ·
an.
seed. Being n.
umber one,
tourney held at the· McCann
m
a airS,
e e
ox enve
f
h t • It
"I th· k th t 't and on 1·1s own. "It was a
"All teams want to have a stan-
'
everyone will be gunning for
Center over the weekend. The
rom t a cu ure.
·
m
a
1
II
b• kt
F
h
h' I psycholog·1cal
ploy "or the coach dardized and official mascot,"
the squad from Poughkeepsie.
Marist Red 'team, led by goalie
a goes ac O a renc myt ica
1
'
.
Marist's
•
league-leading
H.
arry
Guglielmo,· fell to. na- -
poem about
a
•
fox named in order to psych up his players,"
said Maloney. "And
Marist
R
d ,, M 1
'd "H
Goldman sa'1d "They named the should be proud to have the Red
defense will definitely be put
·
tional power Hartwick' in the
eynar •
a oney sai •
e
·
•
Fox."
to the test ... Prediction _
.
finals; 2-0 ... At Yale's
.
Col~
was an intelligent and tough team on their own."
fox."
Marist is right now the best
legiate Track. Conference
_In-.
team in the ECAC Metro. The
Foxes have won seven in a
· •
row, and are peaking at the
perfect time. Although it will
be
.
tough
winning
.
three
straight at Loyola, look for
Matt Furjanic
to make his
third
-
career trip to
the
NCAA's. Marist will do·it by
edging the· Greyhounds in
door Championships held.last
.•
Reynard has been· a familiar
A1•d
S~turday, Marist's 3200 meter
name to Marist students over the
----------------------•
years. It's the official name of the
·front.of
a
.wild
crowd, then
~ropping
Carey Scurry
~nd his
relay team took sixth· place
•
with
•
a school-record time of
7:56.3. The squad, which was
the first non-scholarship team
to finish the race, broke the
record it set on Feb. 10 at West
Point. The' team· consisted of
Christian Morrison, Donald·
Godwin, Garrett Ryan
and
Kevin Mackay.
college. yearbook, and was
•
once Continued from
pages
.the- title
of
the
school's
newspaper:. Prior to The Circle,
the school's
newspaper was
known as Reynard's Record.
federal aid restrictions should not
stand in the way. I know several
people who couldn't attend their
first choices because their parents
Reynard the Fox may have had
something to do with the school's
official seal. But that is not the made just enough money to
be
in-
main reason why the Fox was eligible for federal. aid. There's
chosen, according to Brother nothing wrong with state schools
Joseph
·
Belanger,
Marist's
(most of them are very good), but
foreign-student advisor. Be~anger when private colleges go bankrupt
- as many did three years ago -
the quest for prudent cuts in aid
to students has obviously gone
awry.
But it begins with a renewed
respect for education, starting
with the Chief Executive and in-
cluding everyone who believes in
the greatness of America's foun-
ding principles.
i
~
•
.. :,,.,.:;,~'r11E'c111ci&-_i:.b~
a,,
1.,s-~-
Jobs<~V-~h~6ie:
:.
, ;:··
- •
•
•
\.
1 __ ~;,.
,
.
~
i·
~i, \
t \
•
I'--
.
({\"
I'_:~
tf
(\\.
.. '. - -... \,,. •
. ·".
• l -·
on-Cape
:.Cod _.
••
::
>-
:\r_:;~~i:re.16Jk~~s.·r~r~atd.• .•
t~::
--you(surmiier. job with'Jitde or no -
eitthusiasin/mayb'e· it'iriime
for-a··.
. : change" of
pace,-
or ··sceriery, or·
both. <·:.,\.· •
:'·:,f':'\•·J\,'.;. • -· __
,·
• .The· Cape· Cod··suriuitcr Job·
Bureau'•.says·-it·•can'--provide··that -
, change; _or af least poinf you in<
the right'directi61i'.
. _. .
•
A:
recent explosive_ growth in .
tourism in _the Cape Co'd, Mass.;
area· and
on
:thi islands ·of Nan-'
tucket and Martha's Vineyardhas'
treated the large~~ s~asonatJob--
markei in ther'egioii's history~· ac-.
cording ,
fo
:Bomiie
>
Bassett,'
spokesperson 'for' the Cape Cod'
. Sumrri'er Job Buteau ••
•
•
•
....
/i•:·,
Bassett added that there are •·
tlio~sands of)njeresting summer
jobs~· beirig offei:ed ·to·_ college _
studerits . arid .teachers from· all •.
over-·t~C
CQ\lniiy. />-:_. .:·.-
-:-·.
_,.;,.,_
t ,, •
... UThe oppoi:tu)iities are e?',-'·
citirig, ihe pay is good~ and now is
the
time to act.:while .the sclcctiori' -
__
is best,'' said
Bassett.
r -- •
For detailed,• irlforntatioii ori
h~w to apply, send
a
long, self
7·'.
addressed • stamped - envelope
.
to
'_
1985 SUMMEif· JOBS PRO- -
(J.RAM; Box 594,
Rrri. •
12, Barn- -
stable,MA02630. --,
-
iJ·
~:-i:;·.
lt-.l'.
•
C<»nti_nued'froni_
pag·
~io
_
l'c,
i?{~ ·
•
"The lo~s oCindependence was
1' (\'- _.
the : hardest
thing/\
, said
l '\\ •
Geoghegari; "Wljen you're work~
·11
ing yo·u' re • muc~ more indepen-
t
A
dent.Qoing'fr-om that backto be~·
( )\
ihg a student again is like taking a
V:;
step backward.,,-
. --
1 _
~
( 'I
While.the womcn·say they iniss
1
:.i\
the independence they used .to
/_ I,
have, they also miss tlie, security
' •
of having their families -nearby.
:t(i~ _
.
. . ''
'-'This
wa'.s"
:iny 'first 'Christmas
_
~~,\-
•
•_.;
- away from hoine," ,said Gray.
''I
1.!\":' •
. •
_was hoine last Christmas; 'andall
·.,f_/
___
... , : _ : .. ,',,·_I_~st_s._u
___
m_.-_·m_.e_ft'_b
__
'\1_,.t_
i_h
___
e __
a
__
i
___
r·f_
a_re._.'i_s:t
__
o_.·o_:
_.
_ ,;; • - • ··•·•
, expensive: now. We're gomg to
-_,:{(
;' •
-· • _.::
::ry;tb~e[lt:~~~-5ci:~t~r:i~.
r.1 -
Christmas/! :') ' <,
..
· :: . _-.. ~-. -. '. .
f •
• •.
When '.things get 'too . rough,jlie
,
women· know they. always have
.., \·
• someone to hu'n'.to: Jim Larkin,
' i'_'
: -
of. West • Hartford; Conn., has
t""·,
_::-:,(.i,.,:
provided _a se~ond • family. • for
t .'- ,..-
Geoghegan and CJray, :
__
._
_
.
.'
1 ,:'. - •
• -· •
r•
A
lot of.the credit.for _me still·
b~i~g here 'goes)9:Jiiri-Larkiii,"
Ofay sai~. '"He's,J>eenJike·a big
. faoth~r_'fo m_e!r. ,; ;:
"!:
·-'
( '·
< · _
Lai:kiri has been resp<>risible
for
giving· ·inahy: -
·trish
w<>men
ta
chance <to pfay basketball in -the
U.S; and is.now worJcing oil·seri--_
~ing ._Aqieric~n:·w~men :ox~r}O-
; play 'b;:isketball in'. Ireland,. said
Oeqghegan.
_ •·-•• •
_
•
_ " •
. .Though it's been rough ; at:
.
•
times;· neither-·woman·•·has ·any
- regrets , about coming·. to _ • the
United States.
.
._
_.
.
. . '·;,.
"I~ thiilk.:iCs an opportunity
you'd be •afoo,l
to
miss/' said
Gray.•-
Conti~uecffrom
pilge'6 .· . ' •
tell
yi>).i
Yurps·about Iasi:y~ai:.
•~
"What principle is that?'.'_· _·
_-
.
_
• •y o·u know, the R~gan princi: •
pie -. ~I'm
a.
millionaire, you're
not; I' go.
fo
Washirigton, you go
to hell.'"
•
.
• --
• Paisley print
was
llQt amused.
In fact, I thought he was going to
cry~ so
I left him alone, chanting
softly to himself.
"Ronnie, Ron-
nie, la'ma
sa-bach-tha'nr!" he
said over and over.
But we shouldn't feel too sorry
for the Yurps; They're young and
impressionable and only did what
they thought was best at the_ time.
They wanted a movie star for, the
leading political role, and after
·an, he never promised'them any
special exemption from his more
painful programs. If only they'd
;,.
listened, not to Reagan's old
t
t,
movies, butto Disney's:
:11
When you wish upon a star ...
~f;
~~-.,;:·mak:::
Wfference
who you
i.>5
I
~-t-
A1.;t;sm1)CJ'.E:NtJs
1N~rERESTED
•
• l"N
'FlliJ::N,NfNtl.'F':6R·
A:ColJNC1t.
OF"-.
·,smu,iEN'T-l.EADERs
·Pos1r10N
.OR
FQRiiCllA$S
6FFlCeR··.·Pos1r10.N:•·
(
'.
ITlay.:d~cl-~r-e._··•
hislt1er
car,d
idaqy
arid piG.k
..
l.lpSPetltion~•·•·
:
.
',
'
'
..
,·
--
i
-I
Beginning-12
npon,
Wed.,-MarCh
6
in CSL
Office, ..
·•.
-:cc~2sa
\,
·.
::·
R'.·ricJay,-,Marcft
t
.
--
,._:
<
•
<·~·
.
_,from·/
-
fl
•·
S:OQ.p.J'Tl.
tO
t
c1.n1.···
.
. .
-
.
..
.
.
.
tulles
by
WMCR
$1-~00
admission
.
.
.,
/_
•I
ti•
r
soc -if dressed DECENTLY, in a TOG.A
Sponsored by CSL