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The Circle, April 4, 1985.pdf

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 30 No. 18 - April 4, 1985

content

'Aprli 4,
1985.
Continued on page
9
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·.Apr.~,
1985,
li!i.~~:~~i~~i:
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be reviewed as long-term goals·.:.
•• • • •• • • • • • •


Crecca said ; the school • must
•. analyze the effectiveness of each
proposal. "We don't want to just
take measures to
·
pacify . • a
situation. We want ·to· assess
problems and· take measures that
will make security•. more ef-
fective,'' he said.
.. . . •
·.
Murray said he is in favor of
pre}iminary semipars to instruct·
stu~ent security guards, . in ·· ad~·
dition to • a current· . on-the~job
training program. • • • :· ,

• Also, the proposal to keep open
/
the gates coming up from the pub·
/
·so . that students would not be
• . · forced
to
go outside_
the building
• to get back into the dorm has b~en
approved;-and is now effective,
according~to Crecca.
< : ·
?
Crecca·said that.CSL members
. have suggested .·that. surfacing .
security problems may be because·
of •Marist's growing population,.
campus size and reputation. "The
more • well ' known • Marist
becomes, the more we will attract.
interest from outsiders: As Marist
increases • its ·, acreage
.
and
buildings, it also musf recognize
the need· to increase i~ security
coverage," he said. -'
Murray said the administration /
is
i
a,ddressing 'the issue as
a
top!
priority. ,''We realize· that an!
educational facility can ·not run
i
unless the ,students feel secure,"
• Murray said. "But I. also feel that
Marist has less security problems
. than most other campuses," he
added:· •· • . • •• .·
~
7. '· •
;
. • ;
Crecca said the concern about
i
• ·security is expected to continue,/'
He said all new CSL officers
for/
. riext year will be bnmediately
. informed about and involved with
,· the current issues as·soon as they.
• •
• '. take office on April
15 .·;
so that
they'wilf tie.·
ible~ to coritinue:with
·
t briefed' on and, involved·with·.the'
·.curreni.iss,ues soihey.will be,able
: to _conti_nue
wi(h. the: proposals, :he_'
said .. •·
...
:serriinhr--
•• from
page
l • •.
..
about' 15 students and Roberta
'/.Amato,
dir~tor of the counseling
center,
wiH
hold an informational
: . seminar on the topic of assault on
Wednesday, April 10at7 p.m:in,
the Fireside !-<>tinge.· .
.
<
Jean Cravens from the Crime
. ,'Victims Couhselink~Service··and'
\.Detective.-'thomas.··rvtauro'of,th"e
··•11··
'
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.
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APRIL 11~1s
4
·9:30-7 -P~M.,··
APRIL 19 -
9:30~2:30>P.M.:
••
• Class of '.86/ '85 • ...
. f>l~a·se·b·ring your balance.due~·-.. ,/•
• • New: o:Cdeis also accepted.
• •
- ,,··$25 d.~P,~Sit,¢ash
or che~k.
For 'furtherJnf,o'rmation
please call:
.
·. · Al Meyers 71 a:343.~~43 •• · . . •
JJI

·.
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' ' . Cravens will ' discuss services
, ,
1
availableto victims of assault and
\ ;will discuss problems that ·victims
• \ 'and· their friends must face;
. : Amato: said. Mauro . will give
:-~ ,advice ~ow to prevent assaults. on
campus. ·The·· seminar will also
include'. a . discussion '. :session,
• according to Amato.
".:
SA VE, headed by sophomores,
Karen 'Chatterton : . and·: _Gina
· Disanza, recognizes a need to
educate
.·students
·
1
about
pr~utions
tl~at must J;,e taken
and\ security, changes that are
necessary, Disanza:said;
f
_
According to Disania:, SA VE
••
proposes to act
as
a check system
on the administration
and
security.: Committee members
wiJI
report to administration if
proposed and approved security
changes are not made, Disanza
said.·
President Dennis Murray said
he thinks SA VE is a ·"superb
Jdea" and said he agrees that
students need to support changes
in security.
-- • Fresh Seafood
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Steaks
·
:
Cho;ps - Cocktails· ·
Baking on Premises·

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your c_ollege
ID ~11.d
get ~:
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FREE Glass of Beer
with.
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DISCOUNT
194 WASHINGTON STREET
POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK
(Next to All ~port. A short walk from· Marist)
··.:.i'..L.ettij.(;Qu·atity•.:P:ri.nt~r/)··•
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Turnaro~·nd••:
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artists and writers • • • •
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GlwMla.
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------------·-
• Murray said he would welcome
the input of the student com-
mittee. "The safety of the
students on campus is
a
very real
and important concern of the
administration and I would hope
that rather than working as a
check against.us, the students will
work together with us through a
common committment, •
to
ap-
proach the issue of security," he
said.
----~----------------__.._
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Apr. 4,
1985 •
THE CIRCLE· Page
3
:i:ii;:I;,ifJf,lffililtli'a~if>i~tt~fl·lThe
••
••••
•••.•.••
·
··
''/\i.•:;)r!i~~WJ)iij~f~[d'lri$:1~~i!ifit:/
b•t::..iV£:!~h,Ofle.
as a· way of life
.
E
_
_Jl_,t~-~.--;,~,k_·
..
_'s.(·:,-i.;.-·.·o.\.·\
:i~~---
·:p:/::~.-~d.·.
·./etiu_·::;c.·:·•·:~tit;h
!~
!~~a~r:r:~i;~s1~~;'1:°~assp!~t
.
...
.
,
·.):
....
:
.
:
.
...
,
.
.
..
,
...
:
.
.
,_,
.
through life's jourrieysi

·
·
•• ·•• ;
.
.-.:,c; •
:.
Giardullo; 37,
:
is the coor:
.
by Christian
M,orrison.
.
tlieup~ofniilg year.

••
dinator' ofjuvenile- programs for
·:::·:
'.'
_.,. '.·->.
.
.

.
.
.
: .

ZuccareHo
.
said. the
new the Office of Special Academic's
Q~:.Louis Zuc~rello, professor
.
program should.·. allow. for the' atMarist.College: But from 1971
of·
political: science; has·
.been:,.
blending
:of ..
professional and to}98!-0iardullo made hls living
•.
appointed
.
Directqr of Marist's
:_
Hberal
.
learning
·•
in a
••
coml as


a·Y .full-time
_p:rofession~l
ri~'V.
:,::
Core/Liberal,·:
.
S,ttidi~s
:-,s
plementary relationship,
u
I
see, it' musician.'
:-




.
.
. •

program,
:according._
to Andre~,
::as<ari·
opportunity for ·us
.to :do,
• •~1· worked a variety of odd
.Molloy,_
Marist's academic yice-: ,what we've always wanted to, jobs, mostly in the jazz worlds,"
:
president. The appointment
)(
do/'
he.said~
"It
would bti'tragic
..
said Giardullo. "In 1977 I started
.
.
effecti.,,e July I.
••
'.'
. '
, ••
•.
after four years. to oniy know how
t_o
get involved in theoretical work
•.
;:
Zuccarello's
:-·
appointment·
to· do. things· and rio(to

know· and composing."
.
:·receiv~d
th~: uil~niinou~ support
~hat's wort~ doing:;'.
·zuccarello:"
::·
The saxophone worked its way
. :.
?~
the ,Academ_ic Afflurs Com-.: _emphasized
I
the importance.
of_'
info his life long before the 70's.

..
m1ttee, ac~ordmg
.
to·
-~Molloy,
heading off the
:ti:end.
towards:: Growing up·. in· Brooklyn, he
L
• ·
..

"The leaders.hip for the program.· career-minded;
<
pr'ofessional;
began playing the sax. wheri he
!
.

is in mostcapable hands," said
• •
learning;
.
_
.

..
,
.
.
..~
was nine years old, concentrating
I

Mollo)'.,
.
.
. :·,
.
.
,
.
:
:
In . l~ghL
,
of
~he
.
recent:: on the music.of Jam~s J3rown and
._
It ~tll bt: Zuccarello
~
duty to Assoc1at1onofAmencanColleges
o~h~~
. rhy~hm __ and
blues
oversee the1mplemeqtation of the.,• report.
which outlined
.
nine -musicians, said G1ardullo.
new
:
•.
Core/Liberal.~-•
·Studies··
chara~teristics,
needed
,
in a·.
:
Much of. Giardullo's listening
·
requirements . for the

Class of
required curricuitiin, Zuccarrello experience was done behind the
1989 and to supervise the winding

said, •~1
think our core addresses.· local nightclubs. "I couldn't get
,
down
.
of
,
the current
..
Core.·. those characteristics;"

.
in so I would sit by the kitchen
JoeGiardullo
•..

:J!rograrfr
over
_
the

next
,
three
The characteristics include such entrance
in back
and
.
the

.
.
. ·:years;
Molloy said:,
·
.- /
·:.
::
.
>·,
.
things
·.•as
abstract
·
.
logical:· music\ans would open the door so

Coltrane's "Giant Steps." The

:,•:ZuccareUo:-said
.he·
sees
:-his ·.thinking;'
literacy,
.
historicar
my friends and I
_could
hear the complexity
of
his
playing
m~jor:responsibility;. as getting
.consciousness
and
.
v,alues. music,''
said

Giardullo.

frightened me and I avoided jazz
students, faculty and
·staff
fo take< Zuccarello
'..
said
:
.
the·•.
·Marist
.
"Sometimes· they would
..
·.
bring

for a long time -
·but
I couldn't
advantage of the program.'
:
,
program

seems to have been
.
soda out to us;"


\
forget it."

He also said. he hopes that the-'-. designed with Jhese guidelines in·
,
If the _back entrance
.
of the
.
Giardullo did get into jazz and
.additional

• requirements
.will·
niind, even though the report was
nightclu~s were his classrooms, eventually worked his way to
prompt students to take greater published . after the

Academic then re.cords were his textbooks.
what he calls "modern classical,"

. interest in current issues,
.
uThe Affairs Committee approved it.
. . .
Most ,a:tl of the money he earned a chamber style of music that he
.
Core/Liberal Studies curriculum
Despite his love
.for
teaching,. on: Jhe weekends was
.
spent on composed

for
..
his
record
can't
.be
locked
.
irito
the zuccarrello said he will teach orily

rhythm and blues records,. said "Gravity,"
released in 1980_-
classroom. It should be expanded
,
tw:o
.
.-.
courses
..
each
.
semester
Giar<:\ullo
..
-
·:
..
Combining percussion,
-bass,
two
int9 outside a_reas,:! he said'.
.
.
..
·
·.'.·•
because of his added. respon-
.1
At one point he own!?d every R
.
violins, trumpet, flute, and voice,
Giardullo.
Tlie story behind his record
contract reads like a "boy goes to
big city and gets discovered"
movie script.
"I
was working on
my scores and I carried them with
me where ever I went," said
·
Giardullo.
"I
had a gig in New
York with Dizzie Gillespie and I
was waiting for a bus in Kingston.
The guy I was talking to turned
out to be Paul Bley, who played
piano for Charlie Mingus; he also
owned his own recording com-
pany. He looked at my scores and
Continued on page 12
,
·.Togetthe:progtam,underway,:
sibilities as Core/Liberal Studies• andBrecordhecouldfind;that's
along with his soprano sax,the
:zuccarello
said he will be meeting Director.
,;.
,.
:...
.· .

. •
when he discovered jazz; said recordwas given
a
four star rating
with
.
.faculty and others to" get
•·

"it was only something liic'e this Giardullo.
"f
went to the sax in Downbeat magazine, said
::thei(<!~~•··
and
:~hen_
at. t~e that \\'ould prompt;Jne to forego
section hiJhe rec<>.~-,d.
store and
.
.•
.
.
.
_
.. :_begi_n
__
l!ll_lg
o
__
f t_h_e·s.U~f!ier
__
he wtll. th~se.teaching OPP_
ortunit_i_es_
;'ihe., sa~namesthatlh~~---·heard,,.said
.. .
·C·.
omputer
free
·for
all·
,


.:
\Orgaruze
g~als and obJectives for, said;
.
.
·.. •
• ,:
.
::
,..
/
. .

.'
G1ardullo.
"I
c;leci<;ied
on: John/,
i
.
·
.
.
.
.
.
.
,
1
~fol~~~~-,~
byJa~etMcLougblini/>;'/
·:.:
).-':·
per'.scomputei-.back:gtourid ti~s in
.•
.According
to Burdis, there will Center· recently

decided
to
quirements."
..
<
•t•it<>~~~d6r~
.:--'br:ct{~Jtr~;:-·::
~~6~f
a:i.W ~u_r,g~rpmer: sci_~~r
i:
:~~rd~iiv~:
0
ou~~~~:~~re:;~;~
·.
~~::~~~au:~
1
~1~~: im~I~~~~~
atfo~:\~~rmo;~~put~;min;;~~~


. ,;
ij9pper;
_the.
creator:J>tthe;.~obof'•
}Ii
h~r early go•.s, I-lopper has\
i
The first award will go to Dr.

tiop of a second LB;M c.p. u.
eliminates paperwork. "A lot of
,
..
,-c911ip1Jter,,..:language;/:h~~:
:b~eil'.;been:w1tli
the navy for 42.years: Winifred
Asprey,
.
professor
.(central
pr9cessing unit) system, manual time was involved in
~-
cftos~n-:
as'
:the
1985
commence-· and 1s the oldest officer of active

emeritus· of-
_
mathematics

.at
/according
i
t.o James Falanga,
recording usage of computer
./me_nt'.speaker,accordfogtoEfoily'.?:d~t:~•-
Sh~ has worked .w.ith the Vassar College. and a long~time
;associate<l,irectorofthecomputer
funds," Falanga said. The com-
·_ •
Burdis,:. director of publicjnfor:-'
.,:·fil'St
Iargescale,computer; called

friend ·and. former
,inatli
student ; center.
·•
I

puter center, however, will con-
,,
-:.'
ajaticm'atMaristGoHege./\,::/;;,:,.thefyiark
I;
••
·.

...
_. _
.'.:
ofCommodo'reHopper;.
_ •
J ,
The se~ond mainframe is now tinue to monitor c.p.u. utilization
;~::;'.tHqpper;is
also creditecl with·irf/::C
:;J.'_ft~.:
,,c?mputer
~erm
''bug/'
State Sen. Jay Rolison Jr., the
:
available exclusively for student
for comparative reports on per-
:.\v~11~i":~tthe_
:firs~·,
l?ra~tic~l c:Ort:l"'i:·::B~rdis·said,
starred with ~oppe,:, assistant m:1jority leader. in the
\,
and facul,ty use, Falanga said.
formance and computer usage, he
;:piler, ·
ii
system which executes a·: W~~n the M~~lc LJ?roke.d~wn and::· Se11ate,
.·,
_will
.
be ~he second
\
Prior to tlie installation of these-
added •
.
;:coifipt1ter:pro~rain
and theif giv~s·:.: a cleacl..rnot~
was fc;mncl:
:;
,·:
,
.:
·:
•·
-,:
~onofary degree_re.cipiept.
.
..
. .•
.
cond unitl
-
the limiting of ac-
The mainframes, the additional
.
\r~~'-!lts,,or
i!l,q~~ates
a':'y errors in_
.. :.
Dr.· John N,IacD~nal~
?ra,
.
a:'°>
Burdis,,
said

that

NBC
cou.nts assured the availability of
full screen terminals, personal
,:.:;
th~ pro~ra~,-<§
t
·,/:
·\·'".<::
: \'
professor ~f compu!~r
_,s!=ience,
.::,
ne~sc.aster J~ne Pauley and '.'60 c.p.u. time tci. all users, said computers, plotters,• and other

~:_:
...

..
·.~.~rd1~~;e~~~-~1~e~rt~~t··tl),e
.~?}-.'.://:·~~
re.sp~ns.•~~~_fo~-b~~~g1.n~-Ho~~
.·,·~.
M!n~~es_~'-~-·
_.D1ai:ie

Sawyer
.
were.·
Fal~nga..
hardware
equipment,
as
well
as
•:
lege
_
was,;.seelcmg

a speaker,/
p~r to the commencement com-. ongmaHy
·
being
sought
_
as

numerous
software
packages,
.
.
/preferably
a woman;jvhoCwoult:I

initt~fsattention.
, ·_-


..
;--
,
speakers:for the May ceremony;

However, the computer·center

were included in the
$4.S
million
·,
.•_·
·• :,·pl¢as~ <the.
stliclents
'and :at :the;/
~acDonal.d, who said he has

but both were unable to free their became concerned
'when
students

grant from I.B.M.:, according to
.
/
same time represent the college iii
,
.heard
Hopper speak twice at lee~ schedules.
. were restricting their system use Falanga.

'.'someway.
;_:
.,
-· ..
.
·::
':'•

tures at Vassai: College and has
Burdis explained that
if
Com-
because they were low on funds,
Although the grant notification
••
,
•.
;·/.'We
are yery pleased
to}
get
a
:
/me~
her once, praised. her speak-
.
:
modore Hopper was unable to be Falanga said, "The computer is a occured in Feb. 1983, most of the
·.
woinan spe~ker w~th.a ~,cilllputer ing ability._;:.:,:
:
<>• .~ •
.
••
the speaker, actor Jack Lemmon tool, and students should be able equipment arrived last summer
.

science background/'
. Burdis_
,
••
"She entertains as well as iQ-

was to be the next candidate pur-
to use the system as a resource and early fall.
••
s.aid. "And Commodore Hop-

forms," he said.
.
.
sued.



like they use the library," said
.
"The Marist community is just
Falanga.
beginning to see ihe benefits of
He added, "the student can

the grant," Falanga said.
··M;c;1.ri!StO£ficia.lS:J'ljefts
a gl"owing concern on campus
·.byiohnWicks·
According to Brenn~r. siude~ts. cassettes and video tapes out of
·
•.

••



often steal books they need for an the media center. "The students
Employees of three facilities on

assignment, then discard them. were aiso allowed to take soft-
,.
.
the Marist campus have· dted
"We've
seen library · books
·
ware out of the media center, but
theft as one of their biggest
thrown in the garbage outside the
_
not any longer," Spinella said.
proble~~:··.
.
library," Brenner said.
.

• .
.
Ronald· Rosen,
educational
.
Barbara ~renne~, direct~r of.
-
•.
The media center in the library computing
specia,ist in user
.
hbra~ services,. said that hbrary
has had a video recorder
.
and services, said
that
although
matenals are often stolen,: b~t

headphones stolen. According to computer thefts have occurred,
V.:hen people are caught it is
Mary
Spinella,
·
media coor-
there are security measures. taken
d•~!icult to prove.
dinator, t~efts.also include record to protect the equipment.
They are caught at the front
albums; cassettes and video tapes
Security measures include the
desk, but we really have no proof
such as "Reefer Madness" and students who work
-in
the com-
that they stole the books, because
:'2001.''
puter center and a recently in-
all they say is that they forgot.
Spinella added however that
stalled
alarm
system.
"The
But we hope the embarrassment
security precauti~ns have• been students working here are our
of the bell~ is enough for them,"
beefed up at the media center.
greatest asset. They take the
Brenner.said._
.
.
"It's
very difficult now,"
security issue seriously,'' Rosen
Brenner ~aid she feels that t!'is
Spinella said. "Everything
is said. 'They are helping quite a lot.
year there 1s a real problem with
carefully watched "
personal !>elongings being stolen
In the past, • students were
as well.
permitted
to
take
records,
The thefts in the computer
center include two p.c. printers
during this semester.
Rosen noted that there is a
problem
between
students
wanting access to computers and
security protection. "There is
always
a
.
fight

between
availability
to students
and
security procedlltf'e,,,
Rosen said.
According to Rosen, thefts are
mostly due to security procedures.
and not locking up the rooms
properly.
"Another concern we do have
is that people might copy the
software
.we
have, which is
against copyright laws," Rosen
said.
According
to Director
of
Security Joseph Waters, there are
many thefts on other parts of the
campus, ranging from stereos,
vcr•s, televisions, and personal
belongings, to a bag of rolls from
the cafeteria.
The security office does try to
deter theft on campus by security
guard
.
patrols,
Town
of
Poughkeepsie police car patrols
and a little known and little used
security service.

"If
a theft occurs, we give the
information card to the Town of
Poughkeepsie police who in turn
enter it into their computer,"
Waters said. "We've had things
recovered because of this system,
but students don't take advantage
of it."
To register items with security,
students should ask for the
stickers and information cards at
the security office in Donnelly
Hall.
·,
I
····
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• AIHetters must;be:.typecUrlple
space~;c;;:;-
with
a oo·
space'margirfr
and
1
subm1F·,
>
·
,
.
,

. ted
fo
'ttie Clrcle'office·:nc{lateftti1fo
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,
\,.::Ji;m.
Mcindax:
~htji't)~tte~s,are;p,ref~r;
2 :·
• , .• ,;•:red .. ,We, reser:ve_:the,:,rightJ~f
~dlt·an·.::,
• letters:· Letters
musfbe'
signed;;
but>:•;,,
. names rria~'i
be
wlthhelctupon
.re-:\
h
• - quest:.,
:Letters
.\viii ,
b(
p~blls~_ed :, /
depending upon
availab,le_;
,-sp1;u~e;_.\
.
.
.
.
,;
.
'' ,,
,_
'
;.;.·:
..
'
;
~~
.
·•
. .f~nny .feud? ..
'.:.c.: ,. ,
it;.\{>?M>·

To the Editor:.·
···:<·,, . .-
·
,
.

OOOPS ;;'MC:CT,AJ.m1ey 'got.-.•
· : Funriy isn't it. The:,onlycteam '.' the'big guy on the 't~ain_;) WeU, • .
. bumped ou( of the ·Family Feud;:: ,·wb'at do you:know'~ five b1Jms:> .··
Game held·
on
·'Monday·_night
-··;.,from.Parker Ave: Problein<solv-,
•••
wasn't. a club; Why? •Through·
a :
ed. WeH if• you· ask ·us: ..:-' •.
l'.f'.' •
. lottery (so tli'ey say);

·: • :· \, ••
f< •
STINKS: ·cc\1;:'
: . !h~_rikyou/· ••
.
Nine teams'joined 'up; andJhey
Y.·' • '
fohnAnderson,,'
only ·needed eight: • So, what· t() •
• .

: ,; Chr_i.s
~<?~l_d·:_

.. do? Put 'em iill in
~
hat :~nd the\·
; . Boo~_m1~er -
one picked can't play. OOOPS
~

• •.
M.,ark,G1.uf!re

The <;:UB! Can't have ·}h~~-
.'_,,:Leo
Devme

••
,·. S~olen'tapes~ry.::·•,·.\.;_',_:.i:\tt,.{~::·i;.,
__
To the Editor:
.
. . .

or : individuals <·that
i
tooki: the': •
. '.·\ College Parties should • be an
•.
tapestry to· return it; :There will be
...
,.enjoyable.time
.. The hosts of.these
_NO QUESTIONS· ASKED.
Just.
•: partief should not have to ·worry . drop the tapestry off at the, hou_se. : •
· abouJ their perl(onal property be-
We would like to continue to hold;.

. ing i;tolen. ; , • •
"off-campus,'~ parties,:, but • _if
• : Aftcr:the party atA-2 on Satur~
every time we do. have a party;•·· .·
day
night was:brokcn up,the par- • people take things we willhave t(! ;·· ;
ty was moved to44Parker Ave ..
stop.the-parties and.:we·do. not·-

We haveJield many parties at our,. want to do that
,. '· ' •
house· ov_er the past' years. with
.
••
ThankYou for ·your help;,, If·
• nothing stolen.
A
Bruce Springs-
any • one has•.•
any • · ~nformation -;•
teen tapestry: was: stolen off our • about the tapestry please be free. •
.. wall. There. was no reason • for
to contact me or any me~ber. of
this. The tapestry was: a gift. to
the house. •

this house.from an alumnus. •. • •
Our phone number is 485-6650
.•
• I
am asking for the individual
• .

Bob Miniter
• ·.,.··'Save Our Fish'
-A'
•r·
·'e·;
W\_r·
.•
e·.· t·h•.·e·.·.• ..
·W· ..
o···,<r·.
1·a?.
·
DearMaristCommunity, .,·.
k~o~ri~!•fishing/'Withoutlhis
• We the members of the' Save· important hub of campus social
I . ·
• •
' •
Our Fish Committee_
are sencHng life, ·we'll be a community with no

Five
.
months •
ago,

Mari
st / professor .• despite - • ~elatively ·.•:
ienlent ·tg~vernmen\al
•:
out anS.O.F;·:•o the Marist com-· foctis ·wandering·•
aimlessly Jrom . •
• asked his class "Where are people s.tai'-. ,cQntrols, depends' on gover,nrnent to set:·•
munity.-This letter is to inform , ChampagnattoDonnelly:with)fo· ·
.,ving?" A deplorable number -
rnaybe four.
pollcles • favorable to, the
11
,'surviv9:I • of
Mariststudentsoftheterriblefate
respite in the 'barren _·concrete·.
• • ..:..:
• kne'N

the •,answer ·was. Ethiopia,. :"here··, ·.•
b~slness_e!;
-and ~II other. spec I al lnter~sts. ••
....
··
..
,ab<>ut
to befall eachand_e\leryone· , l~nd_s·capeto
inspire·or ~eviv~
us'.·.
<.
famln~ w~s kil,llng hundrec:il3.dally
.,Th113
fact.:; :Jh~
}~~~,
artd;,POl!cl~s gC?v~m.'n_g:,thl~:,~,ll.r-
,.·
/J·
.ofils: and the ti:aye$tY~:i,
9
ut ,ig.be
.
\ We~ll be a.·~ommµ~ity,w1ili,.~~t
/
>.,However, .. mo_nths later,· African .:hunger mput ,from the .peoP,18.
1!1 their dlstrlc_~s
}o ,· .,. · ,,.
In the last'few weeks sculptures ..
·the
members of the s,~veOurF1sh
:
.•.
relief -'IS •
.. a ..
·. very , . popular·· cause~
'
. .\Mhy? guide them_.in th~lr \/0tl!°'g· The s,yst~nyonly_:.
• ..

have /peen
·::
disap'pearing :· from , '. Committ:~:"'YaJ>:f
to:,s~e student
Because two g~oups
pf
rock_ stars, Brlt~_sh ·.·.
works If clt1ZE,ns
ta_k~
It ueon ttle~selves,to.
_.
campus groun~s',in
al?
effort to; -.~llppor_t .;an~
mo~~ ~tude::r,t_
and American, recorded ~ongs that ,remmd ·, learn ab?.u,tw.orld affairs; see ~he.re th~_U.~. • -.
seemil)gly; b~autify
'the,
campus;,: a~areness_aboutt~e ~1tuat1on
.. ;''· .,
us that we can do something to help •. · _
and .,
t~e1r;
~~n
Interests . flt _In;-and • corn- : . ;
First to go was the: berit girder ,':' '': .We'd,. hke, •.to' ·see• _the Cu:cle •.·
...

.Without a doubt; our j'ldols" haye done ••
municate t~elr opinions ~o P~,?ple wlth,the •. •• ·,
that. resembledaU,
a,
01~gn.e_t
o.ra<: fl9<>ded
\Vith51
deluge_~f.Sa,v~Qur.:
.
s~mething very poslUve. Not only have they
powertqJprrn,U.S._pollcy., . :.
,.,
• :-
• : '._. •
fish hook. Nextto'go !ere the:' :Ft~h,}etters_. -~fci,hke;to_ :se~ • .
ra1seg a consciousness, but they have .... ' lrtiot~erworc;fs,the. 0lllY.p.nes who can .
thre~ bent·girders that reseml:>led : s.t~dents :kn_ocJcmg
on Pre~14~~~) .
donated money to help feed the hungry.; :
, su~lve are
..
the ones who:l_mow how to use .. •
·-notliii:igwhatso~ver.
••• .,,c;::,
':.·
-¥~rr~y
1
sfront cioo!,;
We'd_hket9
1
:
....
_
. • . _But why· did It take rock stars. hvmg
the systern; And the system works on e_ach
:
..
Now we the members.
of
the/.
see angry _students_
,~ar:chmg~
pn
-
: . •
• luxurious Jives to make. us 'feel, or
ill
sorrie
·

lndlvldt.ial's interest and ·sel,f~educatlon:'
·< :
• Save Our, Fish· Committee .have ·., Greysto~e
ancl
thr9µgh the:stieets ·;' •: ,
cases,'even to .. be aware ·o,t the pUgh.t
_
of_
·''.':But
·at M_arlst,
·we're·"trappe~.''. H?w, dp -
>
b~n: in~orin~d ·f~e>m.
hi&ll,;,leyel'.\o~•fofo.\VO;
~ri~--'Y~'fJike t<r,~«:~
-··
• .
these p~ople?
.
. .. ·.·
·...
. ._
. •

,< :\ ,
..
.
we.~reak out of the bubble? ,
<
>\. . , security mform.,mt~.
{w_ho
~st t~ _: st~dentf; c_hauun~::
~~emsel~es
).0 /
.•
Why were VJe
.turnlng·.the.
channel-to.
?
First, we have to recognize that eve_n
,the
.
remain'(haineless)
_:•that<' .the:. :tpe•fisJ1 !n·pr9test and asho'Y·<>f •
• M*A•S~H .·when. we .could •.
have ·:been w,at~
.: --~.
very edi.Jcated·.are·lg_nora_nt,
and .~e haveto
.;:
•. ,.
sculpture,-:we:affectiona,tely?r,efer.;·;
~tJ.!~~ilts<>lid11~~t~::.:·•~-
:·,,.
·,·.:·,=·_'-'7~:
..
_
ching the evenmg ·•
news? Why were Y/e . want to .combat: our: own.·
..
•.
P,erso,nal •. ·' ••
to ·'as·the
"fish'>''.:otiiside :of.·::::-,·And1fa.l.lth_1s.1s·successful;,and,
•••
li~tening to·pop music whenwe coµld have : • ig_n?rance;.
Very
'simply;
WE3
hllV8 ;' to· .be . , :
Champagnat :E:lall:~'is'tfext
oi(th~ • ••
:we s_av~:oui
fisli,
tlj~n~e ca~!il\~e. ,_ .
picked up a newspaper and • learned
willing to learn more than what <>u,r
text- • :
list of thesebarbark ~rt-nappefs, :; a ·fish. D_1ty·t.o_,
ranK ~ong w1,th
•.
.
something about the world? • •
. books and.class lectures teach
US; , •
•.
·:
>:-: .\
We' rnusi:stop:ihem!· :We~'
the T'Riv,er'Dayin Maristhistory;
'.,\f'!<
.•
Some would say we are trapped In the..
Second, w~ have tp be wllllngto
stop . •
students 'can'tJei',them take'otir:f··J'hank,ye>u
for_yotir !iine_and\
. M~uist • ''bubbl,e" : and ' that the bubble ,taking the
easy way out. When
7
p.m; com~s .. -·
fish: Where will we relafon
·c~qf
>
-patience in rea~ing this· and your\ .
. re~ains intact. because Marlst students
and _we h~ve: a .choice between the evening, :
•·spririg'nights
and
sun
ourselves :on·
,
co~:01>e~at_fon
.l11d
support· i~ the
.
:'
• ho,ld career goals ,above education. If this Is , news th~t_rnily mak,!3
us ~ncomfortable and.•

hot. summer afternoons -)vit~e>.ut
·• tryuig u01es te>_c_ollle.
-;:;
, . :
',co:''.:>
.
tru,e, ~owever, even the :'career-mlnde~" are
a rerun of .our. favorlt~ sitcom, we have to.·
the fi_shT
,,
r::c·.t.
,>·,;.:'..

, · _:
_
••
,

;_.: · ;,. ··
~1n~ereh;/:
. cheating themselves.• '
.
.
.
, .
'
.
.
make the effort to-face discomfort for t,he .
•.
The fish started out as.a simple .
,
. The O-F1sh-1<'lltof
the
·, There are two very good reasons for every
sake of wider perspective. • ••• .
• . : ' :_ • • • •.
steeL girder but with one bold
··Save
Out
Fish Co~~itt~e
.
. on~ of us
.to
care ab~ut the rest of the '!J0rld.
:Ttilrd, we have to ~tart payl_ng
att~nJ.lofl to .. . .
stroke ~-
oC:
genius -it
·•
•• was .
1
•·
,Joe D_1dziuhs,~
·
1)
:Real success in business or otherwise
the Information we can get o.n campus, ••
transformed into a piece of
art:··
.... •
Ed Flynn
demands • interest and knowledge far . however limited It may '. be; During the
.
Now it
has'.
risen above the
. :
.. 5,Eri¢ Garci~; ;:,
beyond the office. 2) Our government's • course of the year, there hasn't been a great
fleeting fandes,ofmere "art'Ho •
':
Jeff:Oo!qi;te{Q';
policies depend on an educated public to let
deal of lnformaUon aval.lable on campus
.
become a Marist institution.
:
.' ;
.. 'F~t
J1m!DY.f.
>
representatives , know . how • to . vote. :
A .
other than a local newspaper: But, In the

It
.is· botti · a symt,oLof .otir
, ~/ .•
\.St~ye Pin(o.:,
knowledge ·of ..

world affairs.' is • In . the ;. past two weeks· alone,- three dlfferen~
Christian>heritage and a symbol
.•. DaveMarg3lottV
students' bestfnterest. ; .-
.
• _ .
organizations have sponsored lectures· on
of student togetherness~ StudeJJts
'.
. . . .: . :·-M~ke
O'S()!l:1.u:~t,>
First, . employers .do not want people
world events and politics. The _attendance
can always
be
found on or ar~und.
: .. -


Dave J,lakow1~k1:
coming Into their bu~ine~ses wlth·a.llmlted - was low, but lfwe make a conslous·declslon
.the fish doing what is commonly •. - •
,, ·TimStieehar
wQrld perspective -. no matter how much
to learn more aboutthe world, every lecture
• • •

-they know about computers, or personnel • could fill the Theatre~ • We owe It -to our~
-:'. ..
-A-. .-d.

lt _s.·t·
ud·
·e·n·
·
·t.s
management.·· or accounting. Top .level selves as the future American work force to
executives have to be able to deal with
learn as much as we can about the world.
Incredibly. complex Issues. In their own
That's the ·only way our business and
businesses. A person ignorant and unin-
political systems can work.
terested In the world and Its Issues lacks
. With a little effort, the next time a
the perspective needed to succeed.
professor asks

his class about a world
• Second, the business someone works for,
issue, eyeryone will be able to respond.
THE:
Editor-In.Chief
LOU
Ann Seelig
Senior Editors
Auoclate Editors
Brian Kelly
Paul .Raynls
BonnleHede
N ... Edltora
CIRCLE:
Spam Editor
Ian O'Connor
r•
Viewpoint
Editor
Photogqphy
Editor
Maureen Ryan
Busl~
Manager
To the Editor:
,
.
.
.
The theory of evolution is not
··confined
. to . the . biology
classroom. For example, take the
interesting evolution of your re-
cent series that started as being "a- .
• three part.series on adult students
at' Marist" and ended as "a three
part series on the School of Adult
. • Continued on
page
8
Christine Dempsey
Advertising
Staff
Bernie Heer
John Bakke
Cindy Bennedum
Denise WIisey
Carl MacGowan
• C.rtoonlst .
Laura Reichert
AmleRhOdes
Oraphlca.
Beverly Morlang
PeteColalzzo
Faculty Actn90r
DavldMcCraw
Laura Reichert





















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like /.JerseY
best~
i
'Ah, ,thi>~rfainiliar sounds ..• ' · all; Now just a minute about foot:.. 'toxic dumps.'\ No fooliri'! But,
(then again,-why go to the moun-
"You're''fiomJersey'l
WhaLex~ ball. New York laughed as'they -New. Jersey is desperately trying
taiils when you can go. to the
it?;'_, "Je!~ey? :why 'that'f .the· dumped garbage iri New Jersey, • to· rectify that. New Jersey has
sea-?).

armpit of the world!'', .'~I'm from
·
and what did we . do? • Builf. a ' more federal, state and private
Now I could rate New Jersey up
Je~scy
•. :' you· fromJersey? Ja I.a . ,stadium and stole both their. foot-
funds than any other state put
against· other states, or even make
Joe.Piscqpo)/~, Yes, yes, us New .. ball teams (sure>thef have the aside for location; identification,
fun of them. F6r example: did
Jersey~ii~s
• expec( ::these ,.jokes Buffalo Bills but they don't really • -and' Clean-up of toxic dumps. ."
anyone ever actmilly plan a vaca-
because in some instances they're
count as a .football team). Just· How do ya like them apples?
.•
tion to North -Dakota. and then
true. Sure Elizabeth and Secaucus about ANYTHING you. want'to
But the best t..hing about New
j
nop down to South Dakota? Or
stink,
arid
sure'we have chemical · do, you can do it_iriNew Jersey-
·• tour Idaho? Or even Maryland?
• ·dumps;, but .:lest us riot forget . all. within 'driving distance ·(thus Jersey are its people, and that in-
(I,
for one, have nev.er met
where Love Canal
is. ·we
know the·
1•0'
ke·
~.·"What. ex1·t?
.. "
.M·
1·ne··.1·s
'eludes· Bruce SpringSteen. You
f
M
I d
I •
··
· · ·
· ·
can kick us, mock us, shun us,· ' anyone
rom
ary an •
t s
• NewfJersey has its bac:l points,
163, by the way). I guess you·
I
always, "I
used to Jive in
• whalsta.te doesn't? N.
ow, 1,·
m no.t . could say· ·.New Je. rsey· is th. e b1·g- spit in our face and we just come
M
I d ,,
"I
k
. .
.
.
.
N
back laughing. New_
J erseyans are
ary an ' or
now
some one
out to convert you mto
ew . ·gest Httle st.ate arqund:
-
who Jives/lived in Maryland," or
Jersey's.biggest fan, or make· you
..
'
'
.
. .
a proud lot. That is because as
even, "I
have : a house ' in
move there (God forbid),
I
just
. Now heres _a s1;1rpnsmg little you are complaining about the
Maryland.'') Personally
1
have
want you. to look at• New· Jersey nddle •. What is
';big
and ·green, Ne\\'. Jersey T~rnpike, we just
never seen Maryland, ergo, it
through
my
eyes iQstead'qfa:gas ;· ~oon to_~e br?w~ls~, f~male, an~
keep in.the back of our minds the
d0es not exist. And while we're on
mask.- I. just ·.want you to ;view 1f.y~u Y!_anted_to.
wrfte a letter to 1t quiet watering holes and trails
the subject, ever notice Penn-
New Jersey as som.ething ·other. yo~ d ~aye to addres~ t~e lette~ t,o that: are abundant, but tucked
sylvania is alwaysdoudy? O.K.,
than'orie big toxic dump. •
,
.. -·" Ehzabe~h, New J.ers~Y.· No, its . aw~y, in Ne~ Jersey's hiUs.
enough is enough. I won't make
.
.
• not _New
Jersey's representative to
The things. that New Jersey
fun of other states, but if I did
You name it· - ,skiing,:,horse. the •• Miss America .conteSt• It' s,
lacks are just. a hop, skip and a
you would see how people from
Jacing, casino gll.mpling, S\Yirim~- n~w get this, th
e
Statueoffiber-
: jump away. If one wants to t~ke
New Jersey feel (that is, if we
. ing-iil the ocean, i9ck climbing, ty. The
st
atue of ~ibert~:
And
the advantages of Manhattan, it's
were not so good natured).
back · packing, rock, concerts, you alw~ys th0ught it was_
10
N_e'Y
··only
a· bridge, or a tunnel, away.
basketball, hockey:(soon to have York. Silly Y?U· •

. · -,. •·· :· . The Poconos and Catskills are
baseball),
.
and 'football ·-. (NFL • Now. ail
of
you critics are say-
also· just a short drive from just
A,ND USFL)-~~w Jersey has it ·jng,
0
Yeah, sure; but you still got aboµt any point in New Jersey
All kidding aside ... New Jersey
has been the butt of jokes for too
•·.
long. It seems other states use
New Jersey"as a scapegoat so as to
overlook their own imperfections.
· Chances are, your views of New
Jersey have not changed, pro-
bably as a result of years of pro-
paganda, but you could at least
see in your heart to do one thing.
The name of our homeland is
NEW Jersey. (only native New
J erseyans can call New Jersey,
"Jersey") We have the decency to
call New York New York and not
YbRK.
I, for one, have never
heard New Hampshire called
' HAMPSHIRE
or New Mexico
called Mexico (I'd bet there would
be some very mad people_'if they •
did).
•-
In conclusion, just keep in
mind that New Jersey has more to
offer than a good joke .. And as
one proud New Jerseyan put it:
I have been to a lot of places;
Seen pictures of the rest;
But of all the places I have been,
I like New Jersey best!
John Anderson is a junior ma-
joring iJ! communication arts.
.The
t1eW
IlliSsion· of liberal ·arts
..
.
,•.,.
'/
. Editor's
Note:
.The·_foJlowing
is•·:
the realities _.of_.
internationalism ••
of this new proposal, although
o:r .assume as fact that Golda . . Those of us here, who for one
.· a speech given by Dr. Norkeliunas ••
and globalism today,· so.- that
the World com!Jlunity has closed
Mayer was the
1
president of Egypt
reason or another do not see the
before·· the . • faculty duriiig -the
Marist students- have .some sense . ranks, and . become a global :•\or that Ethiopia is located in need for a foreign language re-
.
planning of, the _new <::ore cur- •
of.orientation aftenhey l~av_e
this village; whose common Janguage:)[Latin Americal'In our country to-
quirement in the new curriculum
• riculuin last semester.· •
instit.~tion? •;Global i>,erspectiv~s
, is not
~xd~sh
1
ely E~~lish .. ,
..
!.i~
d8;Y,
_the liberal arts ha~e· a new should be reminded of a recen(
.•·
:
-
:-,.:'-'•:.
.
andmternat1on~lstud1esare.not.
•.•::: •. :.,,.,./·
•·
::::,. • •m1ss1on,··
to·
foster
mutual
fact.Yes,youandI,astaxpayers,
,'·· -.·'-'_>·-,._,·_ •
,._
• :
.••
part'°ofthis_d?~u-~ent:_: ·:·.-/·
.: .•.,.Study of'foreig1{cultures·and
1
.cooperation
•in a spirit
of
willbepayingforthehiringofad-
..
'
By':
C~si~ir Norkeii~nas
~
·< •
1
:- • .
• •
:L_
-:
' ;' ,.~.,;;-:I
: ' :~·:
,.
'l
h·:"
~
.
..:,;:.,T·
.h'•i,-
••
·civiiizatfons-is'·allociited fdbtnote:~· ~rothe_rhood on a global scale. •

•••.
ditio,nal foreign language teachers

.
.
.. ·c·.-~:.·
et,,s.go.coser.,to.
ome.,.
e -
~t-'
0•

•••
rs···
h •••
,-,
••
· ·-.-·. _.
•• ··.;
'· •
onthesecondary·.1evel.;Stilrtingin
_- '-_·
·•

·--:.
L,
·-.
-' ••
·
,'_;
::
• ••
• ;,
••.
pluralism· of- 'Ame;ica-is not_.
ad~'\ status,
0 -
r~qUJremen • m.
!S
tq_.ry
'~- ·:; ·.-:-.
/ • ·, ·---:-
··.- "_:
.
.
---- "
The Core ·proposa! by~l!sses dressed· here, especially the syvelF and world_
~1terature. Moslem fµn-
, . Liberal arts must· make our • September of 1985, the New Y::ork
. some ~f the key educational 1s~ues ing ·ranks of. the Hispanics,_ over.,
,~ame1:1tal~sm
- and, Ara?
na-
students aware that we are ~me State Regents is introducing a
of our times. It ignores the 20 million strong_ 100 thousand.'/_tlonahs~ cannot be explamed by and . the same. humi:m1t~, two-year foreign language re-
realities of the present and does
,
C ba s
w .
'
f b •. ,·;.'a world literature course. Why the
regar_dless of
differences
m
quireinent for all high school
_
.
,
u n no
m process o . emg R
• . d. •d
·d
,
·
1
. ·
r · -
t d
not .address-the _imniine~t
future.
naturalized as lspeak to you; who
.
u~s!an
iss1 e_nts . cons1 er .a
lang~ag~, race, re 1g1on,
J)O
itics,
s u ents •
. Thr.mode:11 wor!d at t_his
...
very refusetobeamalgamatedfatotiie•
..
•.·Ph)'.Slcal extpuls1on from t~ehl~ ..•
·Meconpm1c.sdtatus,
.anc:l so ... forth.
As many other states have
moment • is .reelmg from the .
• b'
I - "
If
.
t'' /: f -nauve coun ry a worse pums
a~1st gra uates must. uecome
already dohe, the New York State
• sho·c'
kwaves of Bhopal° p·.
0•
iso.n.ed ·Aprov
1
er Sia •
m~ mtgd Apo
• . o? • ment than exile to Siberia or why
direct contributors and activists in
R
h . d h
.
d
··
· ng o- axon onen e
menca
11 b 1•
h
egents ear t e warnmg soun •
.
ga.
s
leakag· e

the assa.
ssination of
·Th
.
. . . .
. .
.. • ·d· Solzhenitsyn actu. a
Y
e 1eves t at
he.
lping to solve the problems that
. . .
. • . . .
. . .
.
ere are no prov1S1ons ·ma e
h
W • . d
·
d
h
d
ed in two ,,major reports. One
'Inghlr_a Gandhi-and the m~ssacre here for a "breath''
study of t. e, . est i.s ·. eca ent, sue ques- . threaten the contemporary worI • prepared by'the President's Com-
of .the Sikhs, the hundreds of S a ·sh la u·a • . a .d./
··a uons. cannot ~e ans~ered by a
We as educators have an obhga-
mission· on the Study of Foreign
• -

.-
.
-
•••
•••••
-

<
P m .
ng ge
n •.
or
history course alone Only the
·~

·u ·
d t
thous~~ds starving: to._.
deat~. in Hispanic culture:.

. tu.dy ff. e·g .- . · 1tu' es ex lains
uon to msu
·t
ourd gra ua_ ef1 a
Languages and
International
Ethipp1a; the , m1c1rder
,
of ,the
• .
,
. • • .
I
S ·

or
I
ncu
r . p.
• sense of humllty an ' especia y,
Studies; the other prepared by the
R~v,erend Papayoushko • by the··,
o.ur · future nurses; medical !Ile differences between nations • responsibilit~ toward the rest of
President's
Commission
on
.· Comnii.uiisiregimein,Poland,·the!aids,
policemen; certified·accoun~. and peoples
8:
nd .h~lps to br~ak, the globe and its common pro-
Global
Environmental
and
t~rorinfli~t~donthe·passengers;·,Ota~ts,,media"specia}ists,
do not down the-preJudices and ha,t~ed_ blt:~s.• And not si~J?lY feel Energy Projections for the Year
' now,.host_~ges~_jn. the Kuwajth·'need the~e subjects: According'to • tha! rnamfeSt .th e!llselves
'as
satisfied that we are tram.mg them
2000. I hope you have read them
:AirHrie,s\ plarie,'t,'. an.d _.-other: the prpvisions made· here, they· racism aod. gei:i?cide
m
th_e w~rld for. the future by preparmg them or, at least, have some knowledge
✓ caiastrophies:that _scream' at us· wilf
·/dc:aF:
iiith :.normal and
tod~y •. Thmk of Sout3· Af~ic3:, f~r !ucrative careers .. Th; in-
of their content. Thank you very
d~Hy·. through/the··•
media.: emergency-.s~tuatioiis: by· com~ ·EthiopiaandLebanon •• ,
. st1tuuon al~o has an o~hgauon to much.
Specifically, ·l\'Yo.uld . like to.' niunicating with t_hc;ir i:Iient,s in
c?~e up with the fundmg. for the .
know/ which;. disciplines and • EngUsh>
'.
• -·


·_
I don't wish our grad~ates to.be
hmng oLeJq~erts who can d_eal.
courses in this proposal
~11
give;i···· .. ; :.---~,- . _
.
.· . .
.
°,.
among those who do not know • with global ~ssues and foreign
Dr.
Norkeliunas is a professor
an ;,enlightened·.· expla11atfoil
·to.
Foreign language study is'again
i
the political and . cultural dif-
languages of\ the non-Western =a~~:~ian and German
st0
dies at
th;s:. ~-y~~ts?.
Who will deal . wi._th
• placed some\\'here on the. fringes

ferences between Israel and Egypt
world.
. .. \
,Morbid
Maun.dy
and none ~f tfie brothers were
' really sure.

..
Did. I tell you about two weeks
DearMoin andDad,
ago, at the track meet? We ran a
. • It',s • M~undy • ~h.ursday -· and : dual meet again~i St. Jer~y,'s P!ep
they re _still cle~mng the palm and Our Lady or the L1berat1on
lt:3ves _ffO!fl
the roa~. ,we had a Theology ..•.
· J~.eally weird, : the
• ~1g r~tagmg of Ch~1st s entrance ' stories. these guys were t~lling us.
mto Jerusalem and ·it was a lot of One guy,· from St, .Jerry's, l!e said
.· fun~_
Remember Tony. that ltold
they had
to
sing the national aii--
.you about? Well, he. vo~unteered them in church every Sunday and
~o play Jesus, but he r~lly blew they. were. getting sued by the
1t. At the part where he s suppos-
state. This guy was saying, "Hey,
ed to say, "God, why. hast thou this country ain't nothin' without
forsaken
me?"
he
went,
the glory of God. America is His
uA~a~ugh~" instead. You know, chosen land~•.• I said I thought
that s the part where he gets the Israel was the chosen land and he
nails pounded in his wrists. Next punched
me
in ihe JDOUth. Just a
week we execute Judas
of few stitches; 1~m O.K ..
Iscariot.·
I'll
sure
miss
Tony.
Well, it's another God-fearing
day at St. Rudolph the Secular
Humanist. Today, . we . had a
scavenger hunt to find out what
"maundy" means~· Nobody won.
None of the dictionaries had it
"',·-:~----
__
....
_~---.
•·-
:-~:..·
.-_
Then, we're talking to a guy
from Our Lady and he was
spouting Marxist doctrine and
damning the pope.
We
said,
aren't you Cathe>lic? And he said,
"You should ask the pope that."
Really strange kid.

This meet was at ·st. Jerry's, so
we're driving. out
'and
Coach
didn't see the speed limit and
neither did we. This cop comes up
and says, "AH rig}_lt,
thou pagan
motorist -
step out of thy vehi-
cle." Coach gets out and says,
"What's the matter?" Cop says,
"Thqu • hast broken the speed
limit!" "I was only going 20.
What's your speed limit?" And
the cop says, "Godspeed.;' So,
Coach pays the $200 fine. For
some reason, he had to make the
check out to something called°
"The Order.''
Thanks for the.news about Joey
Harper. I can't believe he got ex-
pelled. Just because he got caught
praying before an exam? I did
that all the time at public school
and nobody ever noticed. I even
thanked God when I did good and
the teacher never did anyihing.
This school has all kinds of
people, I told you before.
Well;
today we had
a
guy who just
enrolled and he's from Africa. He
must have a different religion_
because when Brother Bob said
· we
could do silent prayer, this kid"
stai:ts shouting . and
dancing
around! And he starts saying that
he was expressing his joy to the
.Lord. Brother Bob sent him to
Father Ray. There's a lot of
strange people in this world.
Now that the flowers ·are com-
ing out, this campus is really
·beautiful. Makes me think of
God's ever-loving splendour, His
forgiving love, His promise of
fulfillment, His all-encompassing
majesty, His firm grip on the
wayward and the lost, all the star-
ving people who can just look to
Him and see light and find
sustenance and the broken dreams
tnat are repaired by His grace.
Oh yeah, I got a
95
on my
business exam.
Well, that's about it. Write
soon. Happy Easter.
Love,
Fred



























































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--Page~
~.THECl~CLE
-Apr.
it,:, ..
s_·------------------ ....
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~Hf
,
B~st
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Photos by Mike Patulak
..

.'

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:.:·.-~~>·.:,:;_·~,!.J;t'.·--;-,.
By AmieRho~es·
lost But this year I
'don't
think cheered; ..
,,;
·1·''">'.'i;::,..,c ;.: . .,.
v-.+,·,:
.
. .· _ .
:,:,
..
: _th~fewa;:·~ •
:', •• _.·
''.
•.
--._.,.·i~F6r.ti\~Jihk;~J;J~r6li'
This yea~, AirBand,s was ,d1f- ·:, .......
H
\Vas Jun to .s~~ that ther~. • the - rformance
<
a
-
ood feeling '
ferentJhan It_
had beenmthe past.~--were no real;,host1ht1es -b~tween_-,perv~ed theatm6sp:ere:C:<• ..
>,.:.:
•. . Granted,. 1t looked the .same.: :,the
groups; -
he .. contmued.. .. .. ,,,
\'i,•.
,>:x .. , :,;.,
..
:/.-,
·.,:,c;::;:,
1,_;,· ;·:· . ••
-The audienc:e was huge, and ·ex;,
i
''And,I thinkJhat. a lot_ of Jt w~s: :--~. <'At
A
pm;'"
right,:· b~fore· .. thef/
citement was•high Saturday, night-· -·•beca.use
thermmberone band, ~1d.
:
show!began :
l
had ·a·irii£eting·with. •
as the cafeteria wa~ turned into'a - the song they did."
.
._, .
.
·;_ 'ail the ·bands· ''.'-he said'.,.f.'1',was,'
concert .hall·
for. twelye group_s
,e>f;
>-
The \Vinners were a group .of 33 ,: standing :;:
up\·
riear
.
:;\he '\ soda. •
·
students: . to pe'rform

to; :,thei_r
·:
students : who who .• performed~·•. inachines with. all'. the • g'roups:. •
favorite·recordingartist's·sorig~.
'. "We Are the World,'~ imitating arotind-me.Texplained all of my ,
•. But this year, :Air, B~n$1~.:
wa~
:
USJ\ for· Afric~! and. "Do. They" "rules/ like 'Keep : aU. ai:ticl~s ;or_
.
simply more fun, :•ac:ord~~gto'
K~o.w It's Ch_nstmas," ·by the :'clothing
:pri•:at
all/times.'·,and:
the producer.
"It . was cool, , Bnt1sh Band-Aid.
.
.
_
~LaForty, ·mal_ces·:
all
,
thee rules.' ....
because. it wasn't competitive,''.
:
.T~e performances of the t~o ~Therfl,said-my last rule-was, 'All:·
C
sai'd Bbb Ll:lForty, the senior/\V~O

soµg~ l;>rought _the crowd to; it~ ; particir,'anJ_s
must have fun' and.·•
, produced the shmy. '.,'l'.ve beenm<Jeet,
but emot10n peaked
as
a thewhok'l crowd wentcrazy cheer-·
volved in some .. · aspect . of, :t,:if: :: µiember of the· grn_up annou~ced •··
ing and stuff."
Bands for all four yearsand there ,: that
-
the $200 pnze would, ~e
.. , "·
... • , ,•.
has ahvays' been some amount ·or· donated to helP. feed the starving ' •• "I really. enjoyed' that, it was • •
sour grape~ by the groups :
who
people of. Ethiopia. The crowd· . cool." .
~
. •
·-z ,_





































































































































































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.
Apr.4,~985-·THECIRCLE-Page1••··--
r:n.{.·•·
..
·~irt~t.~.~l}ljJffjJ(~>:fA~.~~~twi£c~fJJPrtition

•.
peaks· ..

·
.:..
'_~YJ.a.11et.l\_t:~~ughlio.·
\.:',f..
i.j
;,';::(./:cot1ld:
ori.lY:
·show
;_on¢·
film ai: a
:':
Fishkill, and the
·Imperial
Twin 1:

.look
·up·
~nd down Route 9, we are .
'.
most busines.s
to
the theater ••


\· .•
' ..
·:-
·:-:i,".,'.I
~,-;
.. ~_:;;:_-
,:,i:,:
.<;;>;
·,
:,.
: :,\;'_,.';'.~
<,giveri
time; \vpile
··c,ther
cinemas·
••.
& 2 in Wappingers. Falls have .· loaded with theaters."

. .

"It's
a very co·mpetitive
:
,,:;,:
· ••
.:)t.tdore:::
pe.ople/Jt.r,~:raue.ri"ing-·
.-,~ere/showing.
morf:.tlian·>'one.
ceased plans
_for.
adding extra·.. 'Having so manyscreens·within

market,•~ said'Cohen.
i
•.

:
·
_:·
. ~ov!e.s
·:
:th~n
.
e~er
·:
before
'ari4:
:''W.~'V:efost
a Ioi 9(¢,tistoin.ers to!•·· scree11s
to its theaters.
:
.
.
,
.
a 10-inile radius brings too much
_.
The recent trend seems to lean
•1
• ..

0

••
m_ov1e-mama
has definitely hit the
..
multiplex
·corporations,"
he:said.
/
.;
Acco·rding
.to
Ste\1e

Perrorie,

repetition of
'films
shown in. the
.
m·oi:e towards
_building
a theater
I;)ut_chess.County
area.
:,
:
.>
i:::,
>>CCThis
is a
:rebuilding
process for
':
manager of. Movies 4, his. com-
various theate·rs, the managers
in a mall as opposed to a free-
·•:-;.
In
:;.the
j,asL,:year
~
'nin~
new us to ~ring back customers.'!
.>
"p,11ny
wants::to add ~n three to said.
..
.
standing theater. But both sur-
. the~te.rs _haye been: bujltj-C~using
''._;~·


;> • •
•·
• ,
..
•.
·,_:
....
-·.
:
..
_,
'· ..
·four::
more screens,
·
but. has··
•.

"Becausel there, are so many
roundings have its· advantages
• ·::·
ar:ea·
:maniige_rs.
~o.:be_· skeptical
'.
• ;'
One of ttJese multiplex corpora-:. postponed plans to·do·so because_: theaters, a (ilin that
_used-to
play
and disadvatanges.
• ·
.
.
>
:
abol!t
,whether:·
25_::
theaters' are
}
1ons, an? th~ n~Yfest
-_to_t~e.
ar~a,
,.
there has been such a boom ofi

in one house is now being shown
,

According to Nikles, having
·•..
necessary in the region.
.
·.·•.
'.'

?··: •
is SBC_
Cmesix.m:the ~oµt_h;Hll_ls
••
movie screens in the area.
in. three. or
four
'different
Cinesix in the mall means a better
-··:
-~;
••
·._,:

.:
·
'
·
•.
;
::
•.•

·.,
Mall_ 1_n-Poughkeeps~C?·::
Cmesix
..
~

<
.. ,.
theaters,"
·said
Perrone. "And
flow of people around all the
.
,
We ar~: overscreened
m
Dut-. has• tiie most screens· of any

p
B
f
f

,
d
'
~hess County," said Fred·Cohen,. theater in the area.
_
.
_.
.
.
.
.
.-
',

ete ergamo, manager o Im-
_beca_~se
o this, you ~mly s~art
·time
•. Even if a person
oesn t
the:owner·
of The· Roosevelt··:
..
···:
.'
:· .
,.·.

..
,.,
·.•.··

perialTwinl&:2,sharesthesame
d~~w!ng,,fr9m your u~mediate
planonseeingafilmthatday,he,
·'Theater,
irt Hyde Park:: ''.It has
·
_Da~e ~•kles,
-
~anager : of
..

f~elings as Perrone'. His company v1cm!ty.

Pe.rrone e~plamed th_at is able to see what's playing for
·
tilcoine
.·fashipnable•·io
put up
..
,:
Cmesuc, said ~e. beh«;ves
tha_t the

added • ori a second

screen· in • Movies 4 hc!;s

los~ many of Its
the. week. The bad part about the
:
S!'.;reeris,·biit·J'.
am,a· firm beJi~ver-: 8:rea c~n s_urv1ve
hav1~g as It_tany September of 1980. and has since P?ug~keeps1e
.,
viewers
since
mall is the parking.
·
.that
putting
_up.
screens
-:is
·not
..
scre«;ns as•~ do_es,
b~t 1t also cou!d

made· tenative plans. to
·add
_on,
Cmes1x cameJo town.
••
Though
the mall
theaters
enough .. Yoil have to>mak{your
.•
survive
..
with
.
h~vmg. only· six

but is waiting to see how the area
generate
••
plenty of
business,
·
--
· ·
·
·
·
. .
•·
screens.
·
.
·.-
.
.-
•.
·
.-
wiil" adjust· to

the
.
nine new
Because it's too costly for a
Cohen feels that a free-standing
complex comfortable for v1ewmg


"If
h'
h
•'


'
and show top-rate films.,,:·,,.'
'.,•;·
. ·,
.
~o.t mg c_ anges nght now,
.
screens.

theater to run an exclusive show-
theater has just as much to offer.
,..._.,.T·h-.R···.·•.•·:,

:.·d·d·
..
youw1llmosthkelyseeeveryone
.......
_
.i
ingofafilm,thereis·nowayfor
Cohen
explained
.that
the
. •
...
:
: :;
e. oosevelt_ recenUy
.a
_ed
"stay
on the market," he said.·
..
>''The
area. has. only so milch each cinema to avoid showing the
Roosevelt has an enormous park-
.
·•
1Jnt'1[~e_extra
theater~_,
prese_ry1_~g·:
C(1i3ut
if, there are any more addi-
potential. Everyone looks at this same film. According to area
ing lot exclusively for movie at-
the ongmal theater 1_topene_d:
'!l
•.
tions, there might be a problem.'',
·
area with gold in. their eyes managers, they each have their
tenders and that, by going to a
..
}~48 ..
:,.. •

< .·
..
·_:
• ..
·o/
Knowing. that more· additions· because of the employment with own distributing company that
free-standing theater, the public
--
-.•
1ccording
to
Cohen,< th_e: could hurt. theater business, both
IBM," Bergamo said. "We are reviews the new· films, and then
knows that these conv.eniences are

Roosevelt expanded becaus_e 1t Movies 4 injthe Dutchess Mall in too congested with screens.
If
you picks the films that will bring the
.
made especially for them .
. ,
'
ROOSEVELT 1, 2, 3 & 4
Rlt1. 9, Hyde Park CA9-2000
ACRES OF FREE PARKING
.'
·:
'.
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' ·
..
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DISCOUNTMATS
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2:00 P.M .
••

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l~
Aninesty group:
·justice
for all
by
Lou Ann Seelig
.
charge
.
nor trial. Torture. is
and Mary Wall
.
.
.
.
widespread. The death penalty is
.
!
gaining popularity
.
for
ever-
:
A merchant in Afganistan was increasingly
minor
crimes,"
detained for three days at a police . Huf said.

station where he was beaten and
Amnesty lnterna!ional is an
tortured with electric shocks. One assocaition of concerned citizens
guard . stamped on his

hand,
throughout the world who fight
breaking the~ bones:
._His·
inter-
for human rights. In 1977 Amnis-
rogators demanded, information
ty International was awarded the
about his acquaintances and his Nobel Prize for Peace, according
alleged attempts to·
i'se~
discon-
to Rebecca· Cooney, the other
tent in
.
the government."
.
The
.
member of the organization who
ordeal ended when:cine of the fo'..
:~
spoke at the lecture.
terrogators informed him that he
;
'.'The fundamental belief and
_:
.
had
b~en
d~tairied D.Y
.mistake.
.
·,
<,:.·experience
·on.
which Amnisty In-
,/._
That is orie example o'f ~latant':' ternatioimL was. founded is that
abuses cifhiJmail rights r.ecounted\ the only'. alternative (to abuses of
:.
by
,Judith
Huf.
,',
.· '
<.
,
.•
on/
·.huinari rights) which has proved
<y<>f:t~o1:;speake~s
,froin
~nesty,~:_ef!et:tive;;~as be~n the fo,r~,e.of
.

\Jnte)'.'.n~tional,
..
who lectured. last ·,,:aro,u,s~.d.,
,:;
,..,'o/pdi:l
'c:¥
':: _op~o.n,"
::
weel,dn_the'Stqne Lounge:



• Huf said;...





'
{:'.''Thousands
of:peopie are in
</<'Human
rights. are absolute,
prison today because
of:
their and the· defence of. such rights
::_beliefs:'.Many
'ar~
held
_without
should_
..
not
·
be

dependent on

CINESIXiIS HERE!
·.
..
• .
6
e~ettt,e9 ~i.ea.t'te4
l
.
,
.
t:Jo&,
Ste1iu
/
1(/4'1,
to
11/4'1,
S~i
:e~~r
)
~-~ditJ"4t
NOW.
'1'LAYl"G!
'Cher
in.
Peter.' Bogdanovich
'ii
-~"s:~
Somttlines
the,
most unlik,ly
proi,le

\ b«~
heroes.
!PO·Ul
.
,,.,
\
'



·
CUT IIERE
STUDENT DISCOUNT COUPON

Present this c~~pon for-reduced
evening admission price of
$
2.50
(one person
per coupon)
expires
4-30-85
•.•:•:•:•:•:•:•:=::::::::::::::::::;::
..... ::::•·
......... ?:::::: ::·
political convenience,-" she said.
Cooney explained that
the
organization works in groups and
will "adopt" a prisoner of con-
science, someone held for his or
her personal beliefs.
She explained that Amnesty In-
ternational is careful to research
all cases of interrment and that
the process is long and com-
plicated.
"Up until the time of the
prisoner's release, it feels in-

credibly hopeless;

it feels like
there is no way you
·are
going
to
budge the government," Cooney
said.
The group carefully r_esearches
each case by writing to officials in
the cquntry where the prisoner is
held,. then to the American Em-
..
bassy, then setting up a network
-
.
within the country to obtain in-
.
formation about the location and
physical· helath of the prisoner,
Cooney said.
"But at the end, you get a feel-
ing that all your tiny letters, et
cetera made the difference.''
This lecture was sponsored by
the Political Science Club.
-Players
dramatize·
.
.
'
-
s·uicides·
by John Clements
The
·
Mental Health Players
from
the
·
Hudson·
River
Psychiatric Center performed at
Marist College recently in a
dramatization of tee_nage
suicide.
The per(ormance,
by eight
members of the group, was four
scenes long and videcitaped in the
Beirne Media Center,

Joe Towers, senior public in-
formation specialist at Hudson
River Psychiatric, is the director
of the Mental Health Piayers. The
group was formed six years ago
and is made up of 60 volunteers
who travel throughout Dutchess
and Ulster counties improvising
scenes to help increase public
awareness of a variety of mental
health problems.
According to Towers, the ma-
jor goal of the campaign is to ex-
amine the causes and danger signs
of teen suicide and offer ways to
help teens and their families deal
with the problem.
The performances are run in a
forum-like style with Towers ac-
ting as a mediator to help stimulte
interest and questions from the
audience. When answering ques-
tions, the players stay in character
and do not use scripts. Marie
Healy, a Marist College senior
and member of the cast, por-
Continued on page 12













































































































































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:
perienced over.
,_the~·
past_
:•r9u~_.(-:':'TwouktU~~
to
..
extend a wa~.
.
-
_

\

\
the problems ofadult students as
years. Even though the Adult Stu-
,
than~-you to those:s_tudent_s
who
' •
\
told by the studert~ind as tc;>ld
by
dent<-
Union
.'
is=-·
t~e
,,,offi_cial
:'
pa_iticipat.ed. ~n las(Weq!1es'cfa_x;s·

-
"
.
"_..
;
·
.
.
:the'administratiori;fr.
• •• •
·:.
organization for. adlllt
-'student,·.
Miss-a~rvteal
~o ~enefit the·March
...

• \
When I saw the series introduc-
has
a
substantial -budget and has a
:,
ofOimes Assodation;'
• •
.•
.
• •
'. •
ed, I delivered a letter to The Cir:
president who;.;is
a
member of
• It is· reassuring' to ~now. that
cle suggesting :yoif•niight wish to
:
CSL,_all the repoi:ter. hears is how . soine ~tudeitts at. M;uist College
interview me
as
:-:
the elected

adult' students feel left out of the
give of themselves

• to
:
help
respresentative·· of
'
the

adult":


ma~n~tream.
\\'.'Fil,
I feel more a others.
-
..
.
.
.
.
.
stu~ents at Marist~:Jt was nearly a
part_ofthe mainstream than many
1:would also like to thank
month before I got a resPQ!}Se
to·
"tr:iditional" students. Some of

Frank Scott, director of
-
dining
the letter, in the form of a phon.e these students and adminsitrators
·
services at Marist, for being so
call from reporter.William Hare.
~ho cite the problem of adults be-
i.
helpful during the sign-up period
At that time· he said he. had no
mg outsiders on
.
campus
.
could and for his generosity in making
.
questions to ask me because (a) he
help resolve the problem by being this fund raiser a success.
.
didn't know who Twas,
(bfhe
more supportive of ASU.
.
Finally, without. the help
·of

never heard of the Adult Student
,,There have been a number_ of
March of Dimes
.
representative
_Union
and (c) the series was now students recentlr expressing in-
·
Alison Smalley we
.
would not
finished.

·,
terest. in being active next-. year
have had the excellent publicity,
_;-Hare's lack of knowledge con-
a·nd running for office in A~U.
which came in the form of profes-
ceming ASU is not entirely his As I complete my term as prest~
sionally nrinted posters and but-
fault as he says he asked the Adult dent,· I
-
ha\'.e much faith iri
.
the.
tons. Once again, a thank you to

School who he could intervjew to future <>f adult students and t_he all those who really care ..

get the student's viewpoint. The Adult Student Union at Marist.

.
·
Sincerely,
'M-A.'N
p·::.:o··:w
.E·R
...
Temporary
·s~rv~ce·s:
44 Haight-Avenue
;Pough.keepsie-,
NewYork
.(~14)-
471~5623
fact that the Adult Student
Steve Rosenstein
Christina Casciato
.
Union's existence was never men-
Adult Student Union President

President, Circle
K
a.--•-111!1-•--••••--------••--.I
I
·::···
.---:.-
..
••
•••
"
I
'
.. 1
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----iiillii1111111iliill ... _________
Apr.
4, 1985 · THE CIRCLE· Page 9
'.!:'IJJt;:if{~°,;,i
st
~\\:~(
-
_.:·::1_t
..
·cof1.,tt:::th~e:.'l:lit·
s:
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l<Jf
>
>
..
• •·•
·• .·. •
·.,
.•·
'
:)'
by~riailO'Connor.·:}?;.·;
Nevendown:
.
.
.
:,::,;.\;/:·:::•<:·•::··:·/·.···i'..::·:··c--_
.
'.''
Sigma Phi Epsil<;>n,
the·frater---
..
;,;It
mayfnor:be.Playboy/and
nity on
:campus,,;
now-.has:;:the;'
they m.~f hot
0~
piaymates; bu{ 12
:
C
photo~raphs of:the wome1fancl is
:
Marist.womenmay
·soon:
be mak-
working ori gettiilgthenr pu!,lish-
·i~g'their
de6iit~ a~.calenda{girls .•

...
'
ec!.'.7)-..
.·•
-.
:,.
:?
{.}.a::?/~;·;??(·
·:
. .••
:-?J3!}Ldon'.t
.expect
a lot:of flesh,:
"Paul
Damp; pres,_dent of. the
-4
oc..any at all, for.that ina.tter.
:
fraternity,
.said
they are not sure
;;'.-The
12 were. photographed
~
.,
they.
'are.
going.
to
,
stay with it
appropriately·
.-clad.,
..
·,-<_by
,Scqtt
'
0
because
<>f,
th~Jechriicalities of.us~
.:
N,~ven;
a
M!lrisfstuderit'; a.s a; pro~
:,·
in·g
)
th~.
\:'fraternity's
·::
and/ or
..

ject
·for:
orie
··of·his
classes; but
'
Marist•s·name
dri
the calendar.
••
• Iiow plans fo'use:the
1
photographs,:
.
::·'.The
...
:
caiendar•s models • are.
' itia calendar.'
;,;·

'
'.
•• , ; >.
::_.::
i
sophomores
.
Connie.' Brisson,
.
·i'.~l
started it as an
ihdepenclent~:€hris
"~olvin,

Pisamai Jaigla;
study proje~~;-

buL 1· thougfi( it.·
.
Beth)amesen, Karol Pawlak and
•.
would be a
.good,.money
maker.
:fres1i1T1'en

E~telle Cuadrado;

atict'·~~iaie,lctw.or
~pirit, ·: sai,,~/11~,'
..
·:o~~#f
'P!?tdn{
:J;y~~i
'.,Mci_l9ney;

sophomoreJromChatham.
,
... ,
Mai:;y· McDermott,
.
Traceyanne
.
·
:
Neveri has· contacted the Brown
• 'O'Neill,'•,
Beth
'Ann
Sewing
.
and

.•
a.nd J3igelow Publishing Co;;
but'

J~ri Slatteey .
..i
<
. .
.
raising.the·in_ohey fo(publication
:~•Alf
:the.f
rn9dels
''are
w_eax:ing
.
is difficult. The cost is about casual''clothesi_ - ·,up
.to :date,
.
$8,00Ofor 1,000 9x12 calendars fashionJ1ble;
.ir
is:not
a
bathing

with 8xiO ~olor photographs, ac-
.
suit calendar;'' Neven said.

cording to Neven.
The price. of the calendar, the
.
So
fad'.Jeven has.put-tip all the. size:and the date of sales to the
mcineyJor ~he project. •~1 paid for public would be up.to the calen-
film;• developing, enlargements~
..
dar'.s financial backer, whoever it
around.$400 ..__ and that doesn't turn's outtobe:.
.
.
...
·
FiVe from faculty approved
for:sab·baticals-·cturing 19.85-86
include time," Neven said.

"I .. -: Each modeLwill receive
.
one
by Gina Franciscovkli
1

of business at Marist, will leave
took 48 pictures of each girl.
u
...
:.
:
percent
_of
the total sales, acccir-
,
on sabbatical next spring.

/
Neven, oringinator of the idea
..
d,ing
to'
Neven/ Neven will also
The Marist College faculty
"The main purpose of a sab-
at Marist, has had trouble finding
.
receive one percent and

the
·
committee on sabbaticals. and batical is to improve your capaci-
.
groups to
.
be
,
financial backers. amount he decides on for the sale faculty research·• grants has ty iri some fashion," Chase said,
Campu~ groups
••
have turned of th~ phot<?graphs;
grarited sabbaticais
)or
five factil-
·
adding that this capacity can
·s·.
. .

.
··.
'
ty
.
members· for
\the.
1985-86
.range
from one's scholarship to
.
en10
r·s.
.
.
ac~t:11c~!:tmemJers
are Kevin on~~1::c~~~~e:~o~~~iew
and


Carolan, Philip Chase, Raymond revise a paper on management
Contliiued from page 1
.
.
.
.
•.
.
.
.
Gila;' Barbara Lavin, and Lee succession planning with the hope
and theoretical study into two ex-
.
isting
courses.
A foreign component will not
only be attractive to students, but .
will provide a realistic employ-
ment benefit, according t~ Gila.
.
Lavin, an assista.nt professor ot'
criminal justice, has been granted
sabbatical time in the spring of
1986
.
to complete a legal and
cultural analysis on the ancient
Irish Brehon Law (the legal
system of the Celts).
the· straw tliat broke the camel;s·: wasn'.t really involved; This may, Midngoff. A sabbatical is a of publishing it in a business jour-
back," added Marfa Powers, vice however be incorrect, and, to. be, period of absence with pay for rial.

He also hopes to develop a
piesidentofCSL:·;,'
:.:
._;
<
.
ho11:e.st!
the possibilty exi~ts that. study, and/or
travel. Faculty research proposal on executive
.
,~·-·
-
•. \ ::_
·:?::-·:'>,.::::~:'
'.·.•:.
,-_

we
:-did,;
not ~ave•
.
the.
,fac~

nego!iations h,ave deter~ined a
.
s~lection, depe~ding on necessary

Lavin's plans include travel to
<:
Crecca;;:explained.:
:.that:>the:
st~ai~h~---
•·
·•
_·.·
•.·

:
.

>

c~rtam number of.sabbaucals ~o contacts established.
Dublin, Ireland. She expects her
d,~~oi:i-~e>:}~~~.t:.ll
res~~a~!9ri;
t?~}l~p~_
~~~ed. that_·~he pv~~-
.
brawarded~achy~~t
~
..
·" .. ,
.f
. ,
'.
Thi~ W.ill,.al!ow
hill.l to work in_. research to cnh~11ce
the ~ourse she
frpm·.
,Rom.ano;/s•:who,~,ltas,.-;~een:.::.SJ~~l~~}':*•~.J?r-:t~~r,tr,~urer.
s
•>·.·
Carola1_1,·an
associate pr?fessor
...
compliance wuh a company on a
._
teaches at Manst -
History
.and

t'reasurer;~ifice m.id~_February/arid

J~.tg~~tion}j~
.bee,!l_:SO~f~t-~
bY;.,.;
of ma~hematics, last apphed for.
.
method for
•.
improving
.
ways of
Political Culture of Ireland -
,
riot'
froni
Vkf
President Steveii
:i
nc:,t

_J)!}rsumg:,
die
..
~a~!~[
,-:.~n~
·
sa.bbaticat in 1978 to prepare for
:
selecting and hiring executives.
and is hopeful that soine of her
·
LoDestro/:who·· was\awayfroin·;
further;;.·•··
.•


•.
·-:,·:
'
.
//:

• :

hisJfook,. ''APL. for
·the
Liberal':
Gjla, an assistant professor of
works will be published.
.
schooi for<.five weeks
<due-
to
••
• H~ a~~ed
_t~at,
PrI,?,l-to
.the
A~ts,'' which continues t~ serve
i
accounting, has been granted sab-

Miringoff, an assistant pro-
.. ··
illit¢ss. was ari oversigh~.:
::



.
: •.
_.:
heai-m~, no ~em~er _?1/CSL.
was
.
as text for the Introduction to: batical time in the fall of 1985 for
fessor-of political science, will go
/ .,,
·.

·, ,·.,
: .•.
>.,:=_
:
..
ablet°'speakpubh<:f,mregardsto
ComputingcourseatMarist.
the development
_of
an:interna-
on\ sabbatical half-time of fall
·,
'ilt was

an: oversight
on
·the
..
the; trial', be6iuse
·•
it
coul~ have
• :
Carolan is . expanding the.
in-
tional component in Marist's
1985 and of spring 1986. He will
p~rts · of the> offjcei:s (not
.•·.to

defamed_
.the
ch~racters of the troductory_ text. this semester to 4ndergraduate
.·•
accounting pro-
still conduct classes at the college.
realize) that Roger
,did
·not
take officers mvolved.,:,
.include mathematics to the im-
gram~·
•·
.•
.

.
I.
office un~i.L. Feoruary/~
·,:_::said
'
.;
·,
.
.
.
.
'
••
:

.
'. ·,
portance
·or.
grammar' rhetoric
Gila plans to visit
'
foreign
Ci:ecca,
'.
•~'I'o'.CSL's; kri9\Vlege;
\/.
,Rep~rt111g
on· this article.·.·
were:··
and logic in computer· program C,P .A. offices, and conduct both
_Steye
came<, b~ck
·:
to school

Amie' Rhodes,;/Bonnie Bede and writing.
.
,..
.
formal coursework and research
.
}~wards the e_nd
.ofthe
r8:ffle
so he Lou Ann Seelig./·
.·.
..
,
..
Chase, an associate professor to integrate foreign conceptual
/.
Not
for .seniors· only
....
•·,·
:
'.,.:.-.~-~:pashw~
years lmt-Which'you've

theri becomes a perfectly ~ilid. mind
/YOU,
but llfirst," as in: if
.
, ._
.
.
.:
:i,
,:, :'i
:,'.:
; ;
thus far appeared underqualified

resume item: Part-time radio
·an-·
·
you start from' the bottom, this is

/J:iaveyou
got your.resuirie'done
·-
for.)
•··. •
.
.
.



~ouncer, specializing
'in
promo-
the fifst you will.come to.) Don't
yet?
.
i
.
.
'i"".~',
'<
·
.:'

,
••:
.;_
.
. •
..
,
.
Recent studies have shown that
.tional
campaigns.
·
pass t~at chance up.
; (
Ifyou're
a
seriior, th.at question'.~
:aboti(80
percent

of an· resumes

~. ••

~
.
Unscrupulous? Maybe. But im-
may sound
a
bit· repetitive,to Y<?U
'.>
have sciine .inaccuracies in them.
.
ln~ccurate

Well, sure. But im~
.
,
pressive.
)fr
now; sin~eit is th,e third most\. The other
·20
percent are for peo~ presswe.

.


:
· .....
It always looks good to have a
frequently ~ked behind Think
pie on unemploytnent. The point
.
As a r~cent college gr~duate! a few academic honors. Here's a
you'll gradu,at~?. Wld What's:· tht:
:
Is.th.is: it's
a
c~ld. world out there,
..
prospectiye employer w!11

be m-
.
good one: Selected for inclusion
deal ~n River Day?'

<:
'
· --,:"-
:
·
so.~ WhY gc;t
:caught
behind? If

ter~ted
m
your educati<;mal ex:-

in the college's biannual-academic
. · i.M~st
oLth,e,gr~d)liltjng class tQitt's.the way theganie is played,· pene1!-ce
•.
Always mention· the performance
·recognition
listing.
e~ther has been,_js;'orwi.11
oe busy
.•
fine; We're up tothe'the task.
I>ean s ~
1
.
st• whether

you were This means you got final grades in
o'ntheirresumeseven~youread
,
.Eventhemostminoroversight,

ever ~n
It
or not. JuSl put do;n
themailtwiceayear.
this.
:,The
resume is
,.a
source of exaggeration or inaccuracy can be
.
Dean
s
LiS
t• If_ chiillenged, y
Mendacious? In a word, yes.
·
great frustration and concern for.

played
.
to great advantage in a
••
that ~ou
_meant
the
_college
had
a But impressive.
many, but it doesn't have to b~ if·· well.,written resume. . Let~s say, Q~an s ~1st•
Who paid the
.
tuition -
Your
you keep a few basic principles in
.
f9r instance, that you worked one

Misleading? Granted; But im-
parents? A relative? Yourself?
mind.

summer at an airport and part of
pressive.
Congratulations. You've been at-

.
.
.
.
.
.

your job was. putting air in the

Likewise with graduation infor-
tending school on three privately
:
As difficult as it may at first
••
airplane tires. That's a(rcraft
mation: always say with honors, funded scholarships, Since these
seem to put the ideal . resume maintenance.

On your resume:
regardless of your status. Gradua-
are very exclusive, you'll want to
together-,- do you type it or.get it Entry-level

aerospace engineer,
tion is something you indeed are give them good, exclusive names.
typeset, what color paper should responsible
.
f~r
air-pressure
honored to be doing - or at least A. word of advice: make one
.of
you use, etc. -,- we'Usoon see that calculations
··with
regard to
you can pass yourself off as being them a "memorial" scholarship
it's a simple, albeit creative, pro-
takeoffs and landings.
honored, or your parents will be of some sort. It sounds good.
cess that any' imbecile or Marist •
~
so in fact there is some honor

Insidious? Doubtlessly so. But
graduate can master. Before we
Exaggerated? Perhaps. But im-
there somewhere and you might impressive.
.
begin the workshop, every~dy
pressive..

as well put it in the resume..
There are other tricks as well.
please get paper, a pencil, and a
Never underestimate the power
Deceptive?, Arguably ·so. But Be selective with the personal in-
shovel.

of
the carefully constructed
impressive.
formation you include. If your
(Underclassmen should pay at.- phrase. Assume you once won a
Those unfortunates at the bot-
hobby is model airplanes, put
tention here too: the priceless. bits radio calJ-in contest, and that the tom of the academic heap have a down aviation. For coin collec-
of information to follow just station used a recording of you unique opportunity
to very ting, use international finance. If
might make the difference in get- screaming with joy to promote its honestly say they graduated in the it's sex, put down interpersonal
ting that summer job under the contests. (Listen up, you Com-
tenth percentile· or in the first
awareness encounters. If you just
GoldenArchesyou'\'.e wanted the munication Arts majors.) This-
.
quartile. (Not "top quanile,"
like to drink until you're sick (and

"l will be conducting research
on a book I hope to write on
Governor Mario Cuomo," Mir-
ingoff said.
you know who you are, out
there), list it as alcohol rehabilita-
tion volunteer work.
Magniloquent? If you say so.
But impressive.
References
are
a
tricky
business. Being an English major,
I personally use J.D. Salinger and
Kurt V 6nnegut because chances
are good that neither of them will
answer if someone tries·to write to
them

for a recommendation.
Besides, who knows? Maybe
they'd have nice things to say
about me.
Don't use mine, though. Find
your own. It's not hard. Let's say
you're a business major. Malcolm
Forbes is well-known and pro-

bably inaccessable to anyone
who'd hire you, and Lee Iacocca
is another. (Don't use those
names if you're applying to
Forbes
magazine or to Chrysler.)
Unfounded? Possibly. But im-
pressive.

When you get all this done,
you'll be all set. Oh, one more
thing: when you put in your ad-
dress and phone number and so
forth, always include a Telex
number. Just make one up. It
looks good, and nobody uses
Telex anymore anyway.
Fraudulent? OK, OK, true. But
impressive. Very impressive.





























































~~~
,,,j.'.-
.,.'./,\
\
....
~:
by
Gina Franciscovich_
nan sai~ .. ··· . .
.
>
:
;,'.{\?{: ,.
• The team is sched.uled to play at'.,
Mari.st's newly formed rugby . least five games'.this semester and
club • won its first game,: 7-3, •• may schedule two more., accor-
agairist Hofstra at Van.Cortlandt
ding to Brennan·.
. •. ,.•.. . ..
Park in. The Bronx last week.'. .
.
. ·
Like
_;other ··c1ub
:>
sports,·
the.
The Westchester R.11gby.
Club
rugbyjeain is' fµnded through the "
arranged the match, accordmg to
studen( activity' fee and has had

~;tarist's
i
_club : capt~in ·:and· :.i\s ch_ar.ter
approved by the Cbtin-.
Jounder, B1U Bfennan." Brenner, -cH.ofStuden1Leaders: .. •• .
.
who is from 'Jeffersonville,- has . .' : Brennan said fcfrmation of the
played rugby forseveral years .. :

•• •• club. was held up while he and the
Motivation seem,ed to be, the,· other organizers waited·fo'r CSL
. /
key tQ last Saturday~s victry, aca ' approval. •~we had 'to wait for a


••
!
cordingt~ Br«!nnan.-: : . • ,. . . .
..
· budget .to be approved and for in"·
, :Kudzai <."Kambarami,
• a
surailce . clearance',''. Br~nnan
, freshm~n • from • 2:imbabwe, • said:· :: ,::

.
· :•,;.,
:. ..
• ·,
.. - '
played A _key role 'in the scoring
.
,: Currently,
: there. • are ' 4
7
against Hofstra. Jeff Friedman of. :-'
members on the roster", according
Huntington also played a good
to Brennan. • , ...
•..
. .•

...
game al.though he wa~ :knoc~ed
"Our main ·p~oblem is getting
unc~nsc1ous on a play m the first
guys out. to practice," said club
halL_
.
,, '
member Phil Boyle,
' :
The.rugby teai'n practidng on the fieid.~ext to,tite''u:t»rth:entrance
to'campus/Th~
0
team
On·· defense, .. Tommy :-1oran
With·an 80~minutelong game,
defeatedHofstralastSaturdayJ,-3 . ..
>:
·,.
.. • ,: .•

•.:•
,' • ·•· . ·:
','>· :·
·'·
;,,
:_.< ....
was a standout, accordmg to
including two 40-minute halves of
•:·



" '
(pilot~ by°Maureen Ryan),.''··
Brennan'. • . .
.. •
_
non-stop running, practices are .
.
. . .
••
.. :/
/!:;(· ;.
' l Mar!~t ·wH~h
pild itu~bi~s
' essential for building up stamina; ••
game, "Kambara~fsaid;
ruffian•~ . :~alrie
'
played·; by a •.. was afraid:it would be laughed off.·•
. I
a umm. earn, . e
• ue ug
Y
according_
to Boyle.
. . . • .
· Kambaraini also. said it< :was • gentl.
em.an_·.'.'.
:.
:,c;;. _
.• _,_:
.•·
,•: ...... -. ··_'.the field la_
st,Satiirday. :.;
H.e
recall~_
.
.->.
Club n!!xt Saturday .at Van Cor-
.
T_ha adJustment to the rigors of .. easy
to
train Americans to play
' d

tland_Park.
. .
,
.·. .
the game has been easy for Kam-
the
game
because , of. its.·. • Frey's experience has been a·,- e .·• a'· sarcastic\, comment:: he •
This game should . pose. a, bara.m
..
i,
·
w
.. ho· h.
as_
.. played
... an.d _similarities
to. fo.otball..
_
:_: ..
plus:for the·team,:-Bremian said.' • overheard'from·Hofstra's bench:
h Jl
i
h
"Rich is good on· the ball.' Good
"How.'. are we gonna tell • our
~rea~er c a enge or t e team, ac~ • coached rugby for inore than
Rich Frey, a club member who
experience· shines through;" said
girlfriends
we
.
played : these
co~?mg, to Brem:ian.
. .
l
se~~n ye~rs,in ~imbabwe,
·,
.
has played_ for several years with:: Brennan/;
• : .: :,;
guys?...
' .
'
.
The . expenence · we,, gam,-
1-: am ... .trymg

to_._he~p out
the Outlaws Rugby c;Ilib·in New ,;. Because··the te~m 'was just·of- ·,
"And.then we won!" Brennan
1
thoug~ •. 1s the key factor, · Bren-
teaching guys the. basics of the .York .City, called the sporF ••a· ficially getting started/Brennan·
said.

.
:i
7
SearChfo[ ne1'VcA.D~.·
may,cohtinue.inio earlySuminet':·
----
· ..
''>•.
·.
,'
· ..
·t
";t··
.,·:·:-:--<.-

'.·.,
•·,'
i_,·\·,
..
_···
• .. •
. .'-
,:,-
. ..;·:
•-\·.1·<
•••
.. ••
·,.·!

._,_-
··;:.'.'-•,
.~·;_.
>>"·.·;,-'.·;<·_'··.·.-_.
by.Rosemary
Olsen
' ,'/
: : the University of Alaska in 'An-· rentjobs duririg the school year.::·, '.'The, person· who' occli~iel. the .·• positiori in terriis of our -r~fatio~~
' .
'
'' . '
ch?rage. After~a~Anit!al se,rc_h ' .. ; ''Not to :·say we weren'f 'in~: position hasthe resonsibilit
as
a:·
'
shi with
·other
cone· es:,,. ' : ' ·.• "'
..
Th~ sea:ch for a n_ew Manst
faded to locate a· cand1date,.who ' terested " he.·· said.' ~·-'They were " ·
• '· • •
.,,,
cl
a··
·
p
< '.'
- •
Y_.
'

• ', •
p · •
•. • ·
g ' •. • •: '.-,·:· ·, ·
athletic __
dir~ctor ~ontmues, • ~ut . was both available and qualified, .. unabletri'.rhak~thebteak." :::_
\.· •
.
:~feiftr~\a
ire~t~r •.
0
~t
1
!.;~r •.
"
• Mula.added that th_e
'college:is .
. •
theposmon1snothkelytobefill-.
thecollegewasforcedtore~open
· •.
·
-
.-. ,;
...
_.
.
. ,: .,· ..

p_g __
ms,
esa! •·, .e·,fortunatethat-Someoj1ewas:wdl-·:
••
ed before the· summer;according, •• the search ... · ,.: ·-', . : .".·:,'-:, ·· ...
,: ·
0 ,
;
Dr. Howard Goldman;:the ac:-. ,;. P.t.h~~~on
is __
~~
~~P,
0
~H~~t.hl~~~
..
M~~tdh

,ing to- step in and''.'take'up_' the. '. •
G
d
·c
d
f
d
.
'·.
·
,,
ti·ng'•A'thl
t"

t
.•
d h
1··
e--:commumty··m
t e
i - -' l"''k· ..
~:t ~-
•••••

.n •• • •
to
erar
ox, ean
_o
_Stu_
ent
.. Cox blames the timmg of the ,'
:? .
e !c .irec or,-ag!ee t_ a . Hudsori·ai'ea
.,,
,.
,,
;·,i

.. ., ; •' _ "· • ,
-S
ac •• •.~;.,~
.. :--.
1 • ,:· _- •'. ;' •/ • ,;--,,.;_--
,
affairs..
·. ·
· .·
·
searchforthe-college'sdifficulties'. .. !heu~i~g:~~t~esean:h,~s,.a~
1~:.:.,
..
,·Q
d.
·:···,·.·'•'· •
•.
, ......... ··,.:·,Priqr_~o·;i:i~s.d~partufe./~~t~o,:.
•.·

Thesearchbegani~lateA~gust
•. in filling the slot. Some' can-. portantfactor;.but'he~eclm~dto
-: for·fl ~:~:;er
at.wetic_dir~tor_:~~erved:.~,s ~bqtti ~th~t;~if_.'<!i!~ctox,:
'.
,
..
of 1984 after Ron P~tro_ resigned
didates have dropped out, saying.· ~omment on-whether he thou~ht ,_-the.poit ... _,:,, '?r~---~tr~)~<?(,?~.
•.
and_,h~aq,':llen's
,b~s_ket9.~I
1
co_a~h.
~-,
. •
to become the athletic director at
they are unable to'leave their cur-
the scho?l-. could __
be _workmg.
El .
'M
1 .
·,
.d •••
• .•
.•
W,hen tht:.~ollege-achrimistrat1on .,
__ .. •
..
·
.
•.
.
.,
.

faster to fill the position. , .
.,
. ,.
-
.
. sie
,uha, • • ahl ll?mdi~t/:A~
1
~e
.>'
decided fo separate the jobs at the • •
,
, .
. ... : . ,. ·.
...
'.
.
assistant tot eat
euc~ irector,..
d. f h
983'84
b.

• b.· :;·



·
•. _··.·:;,.:~~:~~/ti~
t~;s~d~~;~~::t~~~
~'.:9~fd~;r~~~~;Jitift~~g~o°Ii~fcf~·::--:
;~asoh,··J~;~/ ~pt;d :to
~~t~_
t~
1
~
..
,_.;~
_
____
....,.-
..
·.·
...
•_.,
..
--·how• much
•time
.they want, to r:permanaitt._'.
.•.•....
'· _ _i .•

•.•
~.,·.-:· ,~'.1-?·P~~.t;:
••

...
··; .. :. ·-._
..
·.·•·-··
..
·•->"·-..
;spe11d,''·he said .• ·: •·':. ;,
'
'.:··. ' ::,:
/''I'
th.ink, ;"'.e::r~:
~~t-iri:
aj/~~;\::\U9dei·"►~ti'~'s.:
d_i~ectio~·.:
tlie .••
-,
~>
Goldm.1:111
emphas!~ed _
the:!
.. 1m-"; llwkward pos1uon by not having ••.·,
athletic program ·.was. upgraded: ,
portance of. thepos1t10n and the , an, athletic 'direct·or in- office:". froril,Division Three to Division 0
by Ian O'Connor
Local Cable H)put on ''fox
; With tiie'departure.~f full~ . Fever." The half-hour filni
dme·basketball•assistant
John.·
was the first of its kind for the
.Quattr'occhi/
Marist
Head
:.'station and· Marist basketball,
Coach
MatfFurjanic
has- ap-
and was hosted by spo'rtscaster
pointed team.academic advisor ..•
Dean Darling ...
It looks as if
Bogdan Jovicic
to. fillthe va- •. • Marist could be hosting the
cant slot 6n an interim basis .. · ECAC Metro BasketballTc,ur-
• 10 vi c i c,. _a:-nittive
• oY:.
-nament
once again-next year._·
:Yugoslavia, was. brought to
Robert Morris and Loyola: also ..
Po,ughkeepsie by former Red·: . put in bids to host.the tourney,·
- Fox mentor
Mi_ke
Perry
to help
'but the Foxes should.have the
out primarily with the Euro-
• inside track. Robert Morris's

·· pean • players.
Jovicic
is
new gym might not be ready
.
credited with· the landing of
until late next year,. while this
fellow countryman
Miroslav

year's action at Loyola. drew
Pecarski,
who·wm be a major
dismal attendance. Marist did·
. forcein the paint fq_r
the Foxes
a fine job .with the games last
_\\ next ._
seaso.
ri.;-;A.
lso _ gone is
.s_eason,
and will probably get a :
part-time •:a·ssistaht •
..
Mark
second shot ... Look for Marist .
·.Cook,
who worked 'in the
to
get out of the ECAC.Metro~
Wichita State program before
within the next three·-years .•
arriving at Mari_sc!.Fox fans
The growing program needs to
can point· to the SU!=Cess
of'the - ., get into a· more prestigious
ViHanova .Wildcats · as an ex-
local conference, like·· the
ample of how far Marist has
MAAC
with St. Peter's, Iona
come in four years on the Divi-
and LaSalle ... Pace Univer-
sion • On_e level. In terms of
sity's lacrosse squad pulled out
point spread, the Cats had a
of last Saturday's scheduled
toug~er time with Marist in
contest with the • Foxes at
November than they did with
Leonidoff Field. The Setters
NCAA
tourney powers North
. were stricken with a sudden
Carolina and Memphis State.
• case of chicken pox and other
Without the convincing home
assorted injuries that left them
defeats at the hands of Utica
depleted. Marist took the
•. and Cornell, the Foxes might
forfeit win, which left the
have found themselves with a
squad with a 4-0 record going
bid to the National Invitation
into action this week. The
Tournarrient ... The surroun-
Foxes will be taking on
care:with which it.must !Je'Jilled .• Mula'said. '"lt'sa very ttilporta~t,: Orie.
·
.. :/
•'
. ... .
• ,
For.
fldck~y•·
t ...
·stJl
1
tl~B\i~ii!tf
~il
1
i1',l:'i;'J('
,•.·: •.. _.. . :·'-> . -~·
.; • ._-·:---
'.
·_.
: ·:.:
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-:_:::_~-
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_-.
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'._
..
-:r
,_:;
?·:·:_
..
:;~;·_:_~:-_:
-:.,
_'.~-_-.-_:'.>::··:-);.
it was
a.
ltjpg.
clifn15JC)/1lW~
:f.ijf)'.
...

..
;;;; ~1ia,cd -:~~•,.·persO~
)EJW~{:.,
;W!kt:•/,a;d;·
statistics. ','I 'didn't -have all the ·-:Trabulsh< ,C'We :· were.:, serious '··
, -. Rob Trabulsi finally ~ade
1i
to· talel)t; but l'had
a
good sei;ise 'of .: ~nough,Jo play
.well,
but we_.also
?
the head of.the class. -
:,
.; \' : :'
·,
C .
scoring/'., h~' s,aid ..
~·r.
had Jo work. ·.: ha~
,::a•~
ielaxed la:tti~de
about •
' .. After going··seven· years as a , harder than.a
guy
ljlceMcI>onalC,;-;; ourstjyes:~/: ;/ ·;,,:':~:.
·'+-\,::
:_ • .
somewhat overshadowed .hockey . but it paid offiri thefong·ru~'.'-'
cC
'?/
Trat>ulsi's contri~utloris. to. the ••
player, ::Ti:abulsi'·was the leader :·:
·'
Throughout tile'
past :'-four-:: tea]ibwent .beyond •scoring, a.c-.<
, . and co-captain of the 198~85 Red ··years;. Trabulsi has had.·his share<cording
to.
his teammates .. '!Rob ;-:,
.
FOX!=$.
Th_esenior left wing led his · ..
· of memories-.mostly fond ones.: :, ·.was:~ our •.leader: and•.··. most '·
· i~
in scoring and came within a .; ''My ·.biggest ·tQriH_
was· ·wh~nil. :/ aggressive player,~• saidliriemate.'
po11)t • of , winning, the Empire _ scored five~
goals in one game as a ·-· Tim· Graham:: .'-'He led with 'his :
Division scoring tiUe. •
-: _· \
sophomore," Trabulsi' said, He.
0:
aciic>ns
both' on and'off the ice/'
:
: But
it too~ until his _seili~r y~r
'
• '
••
' •.

... _· ' .• ' • •

;' "·co:ca~iain Crai~ Thie~ agreed:> •
for. Trabuls1 to be recogmzed, as
,
I
.
di dn, t h
_
II ·
Rob will . be_ a .•
lngger. loss. than
.
,
the best. l:le ~ttended St. Mary's
.
.
.- • . ,

aye a ..
McDona!d.~us-:
he co~Id ct~~
so
High School in Manhasset, where
~
thetalent, but I had a
many things; • said rh1er.
He
his team won the Nassau County

·d
• :
f ·
(Trab~lsi) was
,~Y.
far our best all-
Championship
three of · four
?OO
sense
O - SCor:.
around pl~ye~. •
.
: ; ..•.
years. "I was never · first in
1ng.'
,:rabu!s1wdl be gra~_uatmg t~is
scoring at St. Mary's," Trabulsi
_____________
spn_ngw1thabachelor.sdegreem
said. "And my first three years at
busmess finance~ and hopes to •
Marist, I ended up second each
said that his other. big moment
~ecome a financial stock brok~r
year."

was his first game in a
Red
Fox • m the ~ear fu_t~~e.
As far
2$.
his
The only player in Marist
uniform. The Foxes lost 8-2, but
hockey fuJure. I may ~lay m a
hockey ever to amass more points
Trabulsi contributed by scoring
f~w mens leagu~, and m so?De.
than Trabulsi is Jim McDonald.
both goals in his college debut.

P.•ck-up ~ames,
h~ said.
And Trabulsi wound up fewer
• Since then,
Trabulsi
has
Hockey ~II ?,Ot be takmg up a
than 10 points shy of McDonald's
contributed as much to Marist
lot ofmy time.
.
career total. In his four years at
hockey as anyone. He was one of
He may. not play _any _maJor
ding community got a chance
Knickerbocker
Conference
,
.. -4-,-
to
review the highlights of the
power New York Maritime at
"
. -......,
past hoop season this week, as
home this Saturday.
Marist, Trabulsi scored 80 goals
the few four-year players that
hockey agam, but dunn, hi~ four
and collected 82 assists for a total
Marist has seen, and he said that
years here Rob Trabuls1_
cbm~d
of 162 points.
every game was exciting. "I had a
the ladder to the top of his teams
lot of fun these last four years.
class. And he had fun in the
·~.,____
___
_,
Overall, Trabulsi said that he
Every team got along together,
process.
~




















































































































'
I
l
.• ,
,,
••
!-
,
-~---.::
·,:
·
·
·.··'
·:,.
·
,_,,.
:
:,
••
,·· ···

Api.4,-1985•THECIRCLE-Page.11--
;
l"):::0m~;ist',Jt~~

ti~~§f2Ii(tiiil
f
irsf h()me
!meet.···•·•····
••
I
t\')i}i~~~I~
]B}ii1?t{:;::~1·~~i
1
~{Iir~iilt·

..,.,y_.·.·.·•····
••••
'. •

·:
·:-seasoiiSaturday,.the
Marisfcrew. Guard .. ,"'The ·:race,,Jelt: pretty'.
':,_\•.
:·i
~
r,
j

-
'
:,
·,
:'I
A
,J
j
il
.,_,,.."
.
·
..
::<
jcil,ved
t~. a}ec;on~:-place Jirii~h inf good. \\' e' kept-
~~-r
'st~olc_es
'long
.:'
>:··
races

With'- the·
:·coast
Guard· and
·.controlled;·.,
said ...
Margo
.. ,
: \;
A~ademy~
..
-Lowen
University and
.•
Herley,
;a
member
of.
the women's
,
.
<,
Manhattan toi!ege
.:,,.
:•,:;
·
.'
~:•
-
:valsity
four.
o:'.
-.
>;.: '-
:~:
..
·
.-


.-
,.• ··.,
,','
•• '·.·.
_.
..
:
.•.
-~
_:.~·,,.-_,
.,_
:·-:·
The-.w~men's.'oovice'crew piac-
..
:

~aHY
..
.J?~v1~;
--~~~d
,cre~:c~~ch;>
·ed
:secorid,)osirig
to Coast Guard
;;,
said,
,-~~;(_wa_s,,.l)le!lsed::
-w:1,t)_l}t~t::
\Academy.
-Vicky
Davis; coach of
:
.
::•
team's'. performance.
,/'The/teaµi
:;
the
:_.w·omen's;
·novice'.,
crew team ,
• . .:~.·_,dicfveryWell;
toihe e.xt~ijftl)_~t:we\said,'.~'l;'was'verY:pleased. They·,:
' f
~ad, aJoqess Water_thne tlia,~,f
t_he·
'/pulled
out infrontof Lowell at the
• r,::
J11ost
of the other crew teallls
-we
:
1600: meter mark and had. an

.. _·
,;·.-.r~ced
~1;1,Sa~ur.day!••s~idpa~is;··7
:q_utstanding
sprint;•~---./
.
.'-!_.<.::·,_·.
••
·,
';, ._,,_Dav1s;si11~:'h.1?:1.s)o9~1ng
_for7:-~o>Ttie men's.,riovice
,<;rew
also
.
.
:,
:-'Ya~d,
t_o_a
prod1Jct,1v.e
se~son~.
Tile:· placed secorid,Josiiig to LoweH's


',
•.
¥.iu{st
_cre~.~~eaL~arih~tfaii';~nd)juriiof
varsity:,;Patrick:-Hari_cock,
.
_was
;~om,peu.t1~e:
wuh J.9w.~ll ~nd/ coach of
,the
nieri's
·novice
crew,

_:
·the
C:oast Qua,rd
'Ac.id,~iJ)y!
:7•i'7·
±:,~
·said"
the:
foam
:rowed.
very well
..
/ ·

-:
·,
.':
~',\\'1:·tan}1eafl.~welL;W~Jus(.::· •~Tqe(piille~ hard_ th~oug~ out_·;:
..
••
_ne;d_~,httl~
more.w,uir
,~1~~•
;·h_~·::
the race. We Just hav_e
to work ot.1:t
• .
:·sa1~,>
W~tc:r. tn,n_e
·1~-cr~t!~~l_;
.f\s.r:a::couple
of technical bugs/'
•.
••
>

..
..
,
longaswehavegoodwatercondh-'•Hancocksaid
.•
-....

-
.
·
••
.
•··:tions.'a11ct:~11~ugli·water
time:":e,\.:. Over, the, s~ri~g: break,crew

.
shb\lld-dq-yery-well anhe Prc:s1-<·•members
tool(a 25-hour
·bus
ride
::
dent's C:~p,,Re~at~a_as
w~t!~
~~~--/t
9
\Melbourne,
F\~·• whe~e they
--~~~V,uls
•.
'
• ,
..


• ·::;-·
,
-stayed
at the:Flonda Institute ?f.

.. :
,
....
The
-~anst
rne11 s
_
hglit~J~~!'it_: Technologr, f(?r a wee_k to
.-get
m

,
eight
.
fimsqed second, lo!img, to:, shape for the 1985 season.
·-.

Marist crew'.competing
at its home opener on Saturday against Coast Guard, Lowell and
Manhattan colleges. Marist finished second overall, behind Coast Guard.



1

(photo by Brian Mullen)
-!
,-''
Lowell's ··heavr,~eig!:it eight~·;:
l;d
;-,:·:
The te!uit w~r up at ~:3p a.m.
.

Kpch, cox,swat!l

of.·~hc:> m~n. s
:•
each day to run; hft weights-and
..
lightw_eight<-' eight;
: ,,
_said; •
row twice a day on. the Indian

haven't haa a chance to row m'uch
on the Hudson,.. said freshman
• Linda Reip;
..


.:
"Everything except-for our sprint River.


·
was really good, ~onsidering: the
.
''The .time devoted io rowing.
Strict· rules, including
a
10
am(?unt of water time we had and

really
.
helped
.
us
.
becaµse we p.m.curfew and a ban on parties,
,.,_.
.
. were followed during tht: stay_ in
Florida.
.
Although there were stricf niles
and the team had orily four hours
at
.the
beach, team members said
the trip.was a positive experience,
as it helped them get acquainted
with their teammates.

"We got to know everybody
better," freshman Jill Anderson
said.
£i1Grosse>team Startssellson\.with'3-game
win
streak
.
,_·._.:'!
_
by-Miciuiel
Rob~rt Murphy

United States ,:Merchant Marine
;'by
defeating New J;>altz,.City C_ol-
6-3.
~dvantage and then wra~ed
Earlier last week, Marist shut
··
·:>"''-··_.·-.
·•-<•
...
Academy on·Monday~.Qi.leens:'lege·ofNewYorkandKnicker-
upthegamewith,sevengoalsin
out CCNY 21~0 in the home
-The
:
Marist

lacrosse
team
.
College yesterday and New York hocker Conference
.
rival Kean,

the final
·period.
Kean could
opener at Leonidoff Field March
:l
·
jumped out to a quick sta1:ton the
,
Maritime
·here .
on
._-·Saturday._.
13~6. After trailing 3.~o at the end
.
muster only three goals.
.
25
..
1

sea~ol'r last w~ek, winni~~· iJffifst
_Results.of
tll_e
the fir~~-t~o _games of the first' quarter in the Kean·
/
,
Leading scorers for Mari st were
Leading the romp of
CCNY
·i
-
three games of the.spring ca~-, were_notavallableatpressume.
game, Marist stormed back. The
sophomore Tim Dunn with four
were freshman J.R. Morrissey
"i
.
..
;
.p~ign
and picking·up _a.fourth vi~-
..
The forfeit came
·1ast
'Y«;e~end Red Foxes held Kean,s~oreless for·

and .junior Jim Checca, who had
(five goals),
_Checca
(five goals,
). . _,~.
.
_,
:
torybyforfeit;,··
.
·
~->:·-.,i_;
·::·,_ :
__
~hen;Pace was _unable_to;field_a, thesecondandthirdquarterwhile
threegoals,

two assists), Dunn (four goals,
t
.. ;
.,
: ,
..
·'.
_.-.
_.,l'hl:_
~ed Jox~s _c~: ~n!? tl.)1_s.
te~in~.l;.-~!J?!r
i~,the}t.~.~~·,:~~t;.R!t !heY.:i~~red_
9n.six oc~asi_l?~s._
Go-\..
.Last
year, Kean beat ~~rist 9- • two assists)and junior Tom Daly

·.':::
·<,:
-~;e~
___
\1(1~~-
~
~~~~--s,~h~~~-1:~/?i,~
.-.-~~~e~
_w~~
th~~_rJr~t.:_~~e.gan.?e.s_
.mg
10!~::t?·~.~ou_r_th;
Man~t held_a_; \ 6,-_

-,
(t~q-goals, two.assists)'.

/'
••
l·:
,,.,::
...
·.:
:c::-··:
• ·
If
you have atleast
..
.
two. years of college left,
-
you can spend
six
weeks at
.
our_Anny
ROTC B~c
Campth.issummeranaeam
approximately
$600.
.
• -
And if~ q_u~ify.
you
can enter
the
ROTC 2-

Year Program this
fall
and.
~iveuJ't<>$1,oooa·yea~ ..
·
But the big payoff

happens on graduation day:
That's when you receive

an officer's
commis.sion.
So
get
your body in
shape (not
to
mention your·
bank account).
Enroll in Anny RITTC.
For more information, contact your CPT Luftman~ Marist
College, 914-471-3240; Ext. 528.
AIMYROTC.
BEALL10UCAN
._

-
--
The
:Maris{
College Co~muni¢a;

;:tiotts
Boardllnow·accepting
ajjZ

.
,
·.

I
.
.

··p/icationsfor
ithe·Jofl()wirzg·posi-_
.

;··
,'
!
'
,
lions:

.
.

Genera.I
Manager,'WMCR
Cljairperson; MCCTA •
-E_dit~r-,-Reynard


E(litor,
.~ircle
,
·
Editor, Mosaic:-
:
President/ Marketing·
&

Advertising"

President, Maris~ College
·_Singers
De(ldline date for submission of applications is·
April I 0th. If interested in applying, clarifica-
tion of qualifications and responsibilities as
well as applications for these positions can be
obtained from the College Activities Office.
.
;.you
live
may
·save
your.
life.
Youmayfinditsurpris-
ing that up to 600/o of all •
cancers can be prevented.
By avoiding
excessive ex-
posure
to sunlight, by not
smoking cigarettes, by not
overeating and by follow-
ing
a
diet high in fiber and
low in fat.
Thcbaulcisn'tovei-but

we are winning.
Please support
the
American Cancer Society.
{ AMSIICAN
CANCER
SOCIETY•
TNSswoe~n•~-"""
,.
-
-

















































.I.a:·.

r
"We.live in an age of instant
.
gratification, insta{lt ~nswers and
r~ults," said Towers. "When a_
young person

dQCSn't have a
.
quick fix to a panicular problem,
they become

depressed." - Most
·
problems, especially. depression,
take time to
work
out. There are
no instant solutions_,
Towers said.
-~
8
'
•.
f,
t
::;;:;i:i~i:ltl~:'f
J~·~
1
:,
···•·
'''Tfle
1
\l/i~8rd
·cn•··Ot';+<
' >

.
,;~:it;e•hi;di~;
•.


>

·•
._
...
.
The.
M·arist:\Col,.ge
·C.ouncil
/
·
· ..
:."
· •
.:.
-
·


o·ri
...
THeatre\Ans··
·: :


·
,
-~-----------------------------------~--