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The Circle, April 18, 1985.xml

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 30 No. 19 - Apirl 18, 1985

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_Apill
18, 1985
:/1M8F1iSt;,to
'ihOnor
s
Illith-
r:;;;i~~ai,ei-
ii 3fd·rizo;,,as ~inlier·
-:~·,_~-
-, :·uy
Willi•rit'H~re: : :
.
..
.
Post. He

w'as recently named
.·' ".:..,
::;.,;, /Y, -·. :'.';:'.'/;,:·;',
C>'Iic-
j •
:> . .
.
education editor~ . ·•· '"'"
.. . ..
··
..
'. }/,:;;Jfoward K'. Smith,'. retired ail~ . <The • selection . of·. Smith ·was)
\)cfioima:n
for ABC News, has been·.''; made}by. a.
a:.
coritiniUee .of: seven ,;
.J'riamed
.Uiis:'year's'recipie~t
of '.people, ••including· Sevareid ,:and ·•·
:-~·Marist'sLowen
'Thomas
Award • Lowell Thomas Jr., said Lahey, • .
; '·}tcf be presente~fat·Jhe',Helinsley •···.
; )Tho~·as~·,wh<;>
. died- in "1981!.
.•
.•
• ·::Palace in New York City, on April. gaye ht~ last maJor address as the
•;:26'
.. ;c-~~<.> . .
>
·:
\·•>
·'..
keynote speaker at M~rist's 1981 ; .
. : <-The award. is,,given to· com~ . commenc~m_ent
'· exer_c1ses, when • •
.
. mtinication :, leaders> who , have
he also received ' an ·honorary
. :'.Iifade: sigriificanC contributio,n to . degree from Marist.
.
: <''the field and have lived up to the
· Known mostly_ for his work at
;,,higf/statjd~fdsi\o(/broad~a~~er
-.
ABC,;
·.smith _:w~s ' als_o

t~e •
. '..Lowell •;Thomas·· ·, according , to
moderator .for· tw_o . pres1denual
}.):.Jqhn Lahey, yice,pi:e~ip¢nt9f c91<
S'
debat~s: the.
fit~~-
~ennedy-Nixon
-.-~Jege
iid-..;aI_l~ein~rit.
Pa,st ·recipiepts,
:.:
. d_ebate
. m
:-19~0.,
, .and·. the -
Carte!:
, (hiive<been i·Eric ·sevareid ·and:.· Reagan deb_ate;n 1980. .
,
.
';'.WalterCronkite.·
; ;:,' ·,.":
'(': '

J;

'. : .. :
Nijmerous
·-awards
hav<::
. been
_
··•
:._.
:/In/'addition' _ t~/the,
·Lowe~l: •· be~tow.edupori,Stnith,.incli.tdirtg_a· •• ~n 1941, h~ejoi!)e~
CB~_as a v.:ar
·,/·Thomas·· Award;;; the .
1
':':Aluninic:/fe.tbbdy.:A~ard an~ an ·.
Emmy
·C,
correspondent and re~amed _wuh .
:,·
::.Communication
Arts Internship ; award_Jor the docum_entary pro.,_·: the. networK,•':·
for
('20_·< y~ars .
. '.:..:-:Awari:lwiU,be
presented.to 1980 .·gram«The,
J;>opulauon Exple>-\,Throughout the-.\\'~r he covered
,: /giaduafe,I>~vid 'Ng .. The award is sion_,•• as_: Well as
twd
-DuPo!lC;;_:/e>u,rdifferent
;ar~1es, as;weil as
, .:,giyen~oa,:grad1;1atewhohasmade. Com~ent9:ry
awards,
. s1_x:::.);.th~
Nuremberg _War Cnltles
./.
}< '.
:
'.);significantrprogres~ in-hi~;c,ri her-·
.
Ov~rse!'-s
P~~ss c:l~_b,,11~ards,
~n~: /_:'._1'~1als.
In.
!
946, • Edv.:ard
R:·
Mu
r-
t• : .
• :;:c~reer.~Las.t.Y£~fs' recipi~I!t .w~ :
p ;'
ho!l~ra~y, doctorate,s. _ fro"!-J:~I?~ appomte~. ~m!th his sue-
/
\':'...
••
-
• \Allison, McCartliytwho works m, .umvers1ues m th~ U._S:.;,'.
, ,. ·_,:
.,..,..
cessor as <;:BS
s Chief European_.
1
t :: (·.,; :·
:-:·.p_~blic,rel_~tiq_ns}or
Wt\~C-!elevi_--:
. .'··,:: B~rb-May:_12; 1914;, in Ferri-.: :Corre_spo?~ent.
.
. •
. .-: : : //
h: .. ;:
•.
~·sioninNew,York::·,,.,-:::,·,,-.· .'•.·
day,.La;·, Smith graduated_.from - ,. : Sm1th-Jomed A~C
m
1961 to
.
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··rk:.;'tpost~~,...one:>:tniohth--,-'after··.
Rhodes.--Scholarsh1p, to-.Oxford •.·· telev1S1on::progr~m·
called ."News

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idulH&h'::lsfa~iieneralfa~sign;'&{l/rl:i.~~fs_if
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h~·served.as,co-ancliorman
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1984' Ng was'.sent·to'Cliiria where· }.'.United '.Press and -lateF-the: Ne~.•: .:'-In. ai:td1t1~n
'to. reportmg- _the
. '
~t'"_·•.·y~i~i.\"'':.t.'.,:~~~::~~¥g,~~~~hJ~:~i~}~\l}~~t~'~
;fi•~,;
:•:.ries:o~th~

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Editor's note• staff members :of The Circle
men·were among the brightest ano most articulate
h1 ';

••
,

\_,·~:r:.:t.>:·'.1'.:;-,'.:';_·.;--./.'.,-_'.;
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·;·,;:::·:>:t,'-5·-
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Christin~ Demp~y. Lou Ann 'Seelig,. and· The .·,·1 have met. Although The Monthly is_not directly.
J,<
.
By.Mal'Y
~.!
W.~!!': -~-~:·~:-::,
--'0":'.';6~}t.i<;i_
1
f.
9f
:_req1;1jr~?l~,1lt.s
J~om;,_t1te_
·-:;-;_Circle adviser- David McCraw visited Green.
tied to·tne college, some oqhe men on the staff
F . .· .-: : :
::?,/\:(:ft:,~w,.:·;'::~.
: •
>, :: ;: ;:·;:-~
l·'?hbU$l_~g·
~!f~ce; ~,mp~s .i<c.c~:.,~t~{
.-~'.
"!•!en
·,
J~orrectional ·_ F~~iiity ·. to . ll!eet. with '
are taking' courses and ea~ni,ng
a d~g~ee. . '
'.
~:t::
.
' . : . : :,·
ILthts~p!.otclits~ d?~S n_Qt;
~e~\:./~?~) ~erv_1c,es_:_
,.a~d, col}e~e' ~t:~::
,:l
·~~nibers. of
!Jte'
~ontb.ly ,.,9i:e}ln H•~~n•s. ~ews
. . .
"Puf any one of them
m;.~
thre~-P•~ce:
SUit, and
'.
{tr,:;
r ,_;,
sp~~!~9,~!}tY.e.F:'B~Y.-
gp•~~!~!le,sJet,~J~y•yfs~)vt,
11
~21:•s,tih S~~
1
C?r
q~S.\
't
m_agaiiile, tq·exctiang~idel!s about then: coinmon
you'd never k11,ow
he was ~. convict! .. I ~houghL _,:
'f(: : : :::bY},,:t,~es ~~~w,•~t.~~~
1
-9?; :,:~-~n~O!
\f.re~i~e~t;:}
1111
:
M~!Ph.Y ha&,--,b~en
:L.
intere_st~
See!ig's 8:CC()UDtfoUows:.
' :"~( ..•
·:.>:'
,· .
i But I couldn't-sp~ke' th_~
une~sy feeh~g_that these ..
:-,, --: •
:
1

WeeJc·,: w1_ll,;:-,~e
.-•.
cancele~;.,:--.m-
• given t_he
hg
and-_must.meeLaU --:;''
y,,.t•.~,,:,:-:i'
:
_ .. :·:> .-. ,.~; ::"';, ..
:
>' . :
.·:
> . ._·
. men.had done•somethmgliomble
1n the past.
~T
•.
: '. .:·,
:~tv.i~~~!S~~~l',~ft:iciP,~t!Ii~.::
in/j!_l:~:;.~_t_he_:
_rj9µir~!9f~-~~~:·
9.r
:/~~
-~e~i_a,,r
.•. ' : \ ,:::Thirt~~n
.iro1(g~tb{c1a~ked shut .behind.·
US on\
One o(ttie student~prisbn_ers
who was waiting.· in .
f :·"~
: :
.

}',~v.~µ,,t~!J.t~~~!!~Jr1:n!]._
grad,ll~!H?A:•
•:
~,_a~
~iJ.l f~c~,P.e'!.~~!,~-;;:,?
'.·.<'--ft{ • ·:
-'.:!
th~: hiilf':mile ··-\Valk' ihrO:i.igh
. echo big .'cement • . the Marist offi<:I!
s~id later:·'
!It's good :fo_r
people :
t;·;-.••• ·: '!1:!.~,W~t~~-•,~!re~t~~
~t:
1~':~~r~.k~::::"Ib~'g~!d~l!H.~~~J~!·~J~l_l?,~S;~-::;_
?:nalh.v~yS:Jeading toid~epjhto '"the"inside;''' as: .like you to come and get to kriow l,IS
a
!Jtd.C::
You·'
• '-: '···
• .•
;·t~f,S?f~11Jg~-t.Q\ye,rr~.r~
_5::ox~-}~~~--
•,.,;~
. ; _t~~;~l;l_s~.
tnttft<>~~am_
a,fµll:-:, jJ;(prison'is cal!ed byinmates,;
:-,?-}:: ·:,). . .
. . • find out we~rejust people. We just made Of.le •
.. - , • • :j .o.f•St~g.em
~f!~•.rs
... - :
S ,. , ;• .. ,.

••. day
!
1quor ·h,~c;,1:1s~l~
0
!ti.
t~e ~
0
Jn;·
,t';"A
Jew corrections officers smiled,as we passed
mistake. That's all.,,


, 3 .:
~:/~t/t.D,.¼~!-!i:ti._/fu~s~ayf.;
~<?]l~g~:\<>f
,J:>ou_ghkeeps~~;
;: ",i,/!:' ::-,,:;
:: ·'.-:'
i
:
\ through ·checkpoint after checkpoint, but per-
·· · · .
'
r. ·
···•
- ·
·.
'·:aq~!l,n.J,S!~~-~9.~t~:.,<>u,tlp1eq.
~.P.~.c1Q~
'/;'.c;7.
hqt19r
m-'IW
~~/s~ry~d.:_~n.
,ll'
' :;
sorial :warmth dqes. not peryacie '.(3feen .•
Jiaven
• ••
'
f:havf.
to
adlllit, I was very -taken by the in~
>~-~1aehn~,s.;:'.t~.~~,:,:!9~\~~rl()f,£Ja~s
_.CO!J~rol!~<i:~r~il;;wl)_~r~~r;!he,,~t-:
·) Cor~~c(i_onaIF:acil,it~.,-'.:,'<,:··,-.,
:::'~ -. ~-.. . mates' eloquence and the t_fagedy of imprisoned
<:
..
WR!Jld,h~"~;,t~in:1;~~%4fl.~.<J.r#~r-
f<>r ,Hll!lC~ c11;1d
.e?<
1
!s..ar,emRmt?re_<i.:
• ·.:
-•·.{·.•:•At
·1he
.end of the half1mle of cold ·concrete 1s a · minds;· ·But you·. don't•. go to · Green Haven for

:
tJte;c~ll~&e.t<>_~~fH9.ll:~1y,ert1:i_~r;p:,t:,:
;,Jh,~•.flass
}Ill!~l .W()Vl~~
Pfr\
?
floot of classrooms. resembljrig Marist. East an~I"
stealing b,ubble gum. and
Y<>U
don'.t get ,25 to life:
:-,.;,acce>rd_i~g
W
.)"errr:Man~1. ass1s-
-~.s<>nne}:to,•~e~~
t~~hq_uor;_?nd 19.,,
.{f'
:ttiecoHege's_Green·Haven
division 'Offices. • •· ••.. · _for kicking a·d?g·~ :·


tan(' c.9Qrdmator
•• of c9.Ilege ac- ~~sure that min<>rs
are notserv~~.
c
-.:-:::
c
When
we.
arrived '.the prisoners.were busily··
.
We dicl learn 'a lot
fr~m-
~ch other; If nothing
;, tivitie,s.<:· . : :. : ·:-:, ::':.:

":
••
,;
'
:·:-'.the,: ~las~ m~st ·,pn?v1df.
::
swe~l)irig
ttie:meeii~g, rooni and arranging the·,
.
else,I learried: that inmates are humair beings •
·, ,~The gu1dehn~ ·ar~ a combma- s~udents; \ st aff,_;-
.~tr
1d :,>_ad-. '.,t furniture Jor,us. Warren Harry: Green Httven. -. w_ifh fee!ings arjd thoughts just Iike,i~'e people Qn.
• ./; ., •

>< ' : '. ·: < •
•• . mi~isJritt6rs,~;.\\'_hocagr,e_e
n9t_. to
<,_
studentgoveriunentpresident; whi)was there as
a •
the outside. Their-. .world .has become the space<.


-dri_nk,
.to (?V~~see
the ev_enL
~
'· •
~
cL
link for the Green Haven students, apologized for
behind th,tenormous stoqe. walls topped with gm~
-1•.·n:·.
,:s'<:1•d"'-
··.e·,
___
.....
_
·
.. ·'
.·:
.•
foo_dmust beserve.diill,day_.
.•.
';. not being 'ready and welcomed ~s with a broad
turrets, thet damp, cement hallways filled with
•• • ·'."'."7
ne> kegs C>r
:beer b!)~tles wlll . :: smile.

, . .
• :" • . . • • •
,
·echoing. footsteps and. rooms· closed "Yith iron
-
• •
• • • • • - • • •••
• ••• • ' •
',be allp\Ye<;I.bythe_dver}s
~~g_e~j':
;.'
-~ • ·Members·· of the staff came in, introduced,
bars. And, like people·everywhere, they are learn~
. ·Th·. ·e'
":._•·:A··,
·r"c;
..
,
I

•• • : . ..:,,.
the' tra,ditiona~ early_~orning;
• themselves with a polite handshake and began
• ing to make the best oftheir situation.
.
..
:, ..

•••
· • • •
. : \;.I


f
.
w,ake : }IP,? JJ;lllS~.
·J~%F.i
my~lve
~king us about The C_irde.
-
· ·. . · .
At 11 a'.in. the men had to leave us. It was time
damag~ to t1te.~C>rms.,
-:·• ' ' : ·-. •
We exchanged copies of our newspapers and
to count the prisoners, and we, too, had to leave.
Su~ Rya;n :,·
takes office
_-· .. page 3
Editorial:
Apartheid·
and Marist
-page4
Murray's plan
considered
-page
7
•.
• ••
~
_R1\!er
Day DJUSt
_h:we
spe,cific
.
began to discuss staff orgariizatioQ. • • •
1 •
The men again :politely shook our hands, smiled·
openmgand closing hourS/··

>.
,
·The
Circle, I explained, is made up of students
and scampered off to be ·cou_nted--:---:
,like
elemen-
Murphy is • optimistic about
..
0
who have a professional interest in journalism.
tary school kids to homeroom.
1.
i ..
meeting the guidelines. He ~aid. he
•• The staff changes ev.ery year.

We again trekkedthe half mile t1'rough echo-
has already applied for
a
liquor

The Monthly, Editor Larry' White explained, is
ing chambers on our way to the 01:11side.
1· · felt
license and submitted
a
proposal
, a group qf men assigned
to
it as a job. They have
happy. to have met the inmates and was even
to the administration "to show
:_ no real professional· interest in /journalism and
tempted
to smile, but we were passed by a man
that it's going to be an outdoor:
most are serving life sentences.·. • -

being escorted through the hallway by a correc-
function that's going to be con-
He explained that The Monthly is subject to ex•
tions officer. Neither was smiling as the inmate
trolled enough where . the . liquor
treme censorship, although not all prison publica•
• slid his shoulder against the wall.
board is going to permit wine and
tions are; before the paper is published the prison
Thirteen electromagnetic gates later, we were
beer in that area."
administration demands to see it and may censor
out of the prison and could again see the 30-foot
Manzi raised concern about the·
any part.
_
stone walls that separated the '.<inside" from the
amount oftime left in before the
I realized then that they hadn't asked us there
"outside." Uooked atthe gun towers, then at the
event. "There's still the question
to· gain insights on reporting techniques.· They
rolling hills surrounding the facility. And I realiz-
about time. can the senior class·
just wanted someone to talk to.
ed that the men· we had just shared time with
organize thi~ all before River
After only a few minutes, I forgot I was sitting
might never see the fields which surroun~ this
Continued on page
11

among convicted murderers and rapists. These
Green Haven.
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;
.
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THE.
c1RctE.<~,,,~<11r1._
smith
, •• :.
()Pf!n·~,J•P~tS"
_
Conihiued
froni
page
1
.


:
'

...

_.
'.
news, Sniith has written
·three
books: '.'Last Train from Berlin,"
".The State of
,
Europe"

and
"Washington D.C.'.' Presently
Smith is' lecturing and accepting
selected television assignments;.

Both awards will be presented
at a $40 a plate luncheon hosted
by Marist College President Den-
nis. Murray and CBS. News 'cor-

respondent CharJes_Osgood.
SAC plans_,
, tolreofgiiiiize
By Jeannine Clegg
:.

:.
l
The Stud~n·t Acad~mic Com-·
(mittee
may undergo restructuring
.· b,efore the end of the semester; ac-
:' cording to 1984-85 SAC president
/
PatrickHadden.
.
.
..
.
.
.




Hadden said the consideration
came after the failure of the com-
.
Qlittee's maJor event, "Take a

·
Prof to Lunch" an8 the·. CSL's
; suggestionto mike some changes.
/
·
Hadden attributed· the failure
/
of the organization's. major event
to "a lack of interest on the part
of committee members."

'fTony
Phillips (CSL presicfent)·
came up with the idea that SAC as
it is cur,rently structured needs to
be examined,,;

Hadden said
..

Hadden said that the restructur-
ing would involve making the

SAO
constitution more specific
because the current constitution is
.
too broad.
Diner &•··R.8st8ur811t

-
,
.


•,

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Fresh Seafood - Steaks,·
·
Chops.- Cocktails
• .·.Baking
Of".'
Premises
~how yo_'ur
college
lb·arid.gif{tJ
;

FREE Glass
of Bee,·
. •.. •
·!

with
your
meatt
••
7%
·01SCOUNT

.•
.J>hillips suggested several. ways
of restructuring the-· committee,
-:::
••


:
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<;_194·_wAs14'fN,GTON
.STREET·,.:
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(Next Jo All· Sport' A:short Vialk,from
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.
\:!e:understood.by,themajority.o(
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•··
·

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• · · • ..

• ··'.
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·:•t:.·:·
• ,:_·:,.,.•,::-.
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siu'dentj·on campus.l>y'm~ki°ng·itl;-.·"
..
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...

work more visible
to
the students.
:
:
Junior Patty Clark,: the newly~
elected president of SAC, agreed
,
.
with Phillips and noted that gain-
\._
ing: ~tudent)l}.terest

Ii}ay· be•_her
·:,
bigge_~t
problem. ~s l)r~sident._
.
:_.
~
·•·
\\h;
~u~p~~~'of's.~C i~ ~o repre-
sent
·
the
\student·
body in all

academic deci~foris of the college

.
SAC
.
members act as student
representatives. at department and-·
.
.
diyisional
:faculty
meetings. But
.
th~· representatives usually have
.
riot attended department or divi-

•..
sional
,
IIteetings. 'According to
Hadderi, it isJhe responsibility of
SA!C. members' to find out when'

departments
meetings·
.•
ai-e

sclieduled:: However, not

all the
me'mbers of SAC

are aware: of
th'is responsibility, according
fo
CI~rk>
,
:
..
' .•
•.

,
Hadden said that because of the
organization's academic orienta-

tion, students are not interested-in
it. He said he did not have a solu.::
tion to the problem of no student
.
interest
_in
;the
committee.
'

Dr.~ohn Scileppi, chairman of
the Aqdemic. Affairs committee,
suggested several: ways'the
\SAC
could become a, more 'effective
·
grotip:
.
by working
.
more closely
.
with mentors and
,
college

clubs
:
related
:
to
:academic-
disciplines,\

... :
.
realizing its
own
power in making
,
recommendations to the AAC
and
•.
by
·surveying
students·
through .written
,
questionnaires
-
concerning· academic issues.
SAC meetings are open to any
student. However, meeting limes
have been publicized only four
times during the past year. Had-
den said the publicity was not
helpful because only one new
member
'
was gained by the
publicity, he said. And although
meetings are open to any student,
minutes from past meetings were
not immediately available upon
request because Hadden said he
keeps
.
meeting minutes at his
home.
,
No SAC meetings have been
held since February.
.•
•n
A R I S T
Let
J
&
B l:10RD PROCEsspm
-~f-iv~~E
··
...
·,
··:,-.:::.

Term
.
Papers.,

~
Reports
.>_
.
..

Essays

,.:.


:
.
.RE!searctf Papers

:
Lett~u
t~
·p:::;:ce:i~;
Employers

_
l_lJ,l t;ork
l:ay
P.e Revised·
ancY
Updated
esuaes
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
.•
• •
$.S. 00
.epQrts,
Papers
and. Letteri
.•...
$2.00
per page
For Prompt
anc Professional
P.esults,
Give us a
Call
at
471-9109
,.
..
,
..
,,
.
; .· ~-\:/{/}
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College(Activities'
Office.-..,:~--
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Chairpers·ori
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PLAciE:~Donn~11YHaU
..• '.,..-







































































































...
I•
~pr.
11,
1985
~
THE
CIRCLE·
·Page
3--•
=-
&\J~!§~~*t~CSL
gap
.,
":·
Suzanr:i~·
>.Ryan;
'/.th~ :-:._~e~ly_
-;:;;:The
oihei(newly electeC:LCSL
:::rent
CSL'presigent Tohy.Phillips.
a'complete representation
'of
.the ·1•m not afraid to speak up, and
_,:

c~ecte,i:l\.f~~ii~il_i,'(.')f,\-,St':1.d~~t.
•.
:.menib~°fs
fare:·
.Cllr_is~opher
:.1cc<;>rdi'°g
to Phillips,· many dub
classes," she said.
:.


my vice president, John Brelesky,
L,ea~er~ l?{C;Si~ept;
: sar~
,she
wdl
>·
DeSauteU~, College.U,nion Board
.
presidents and students refuse to
Other plaris Ryan is considering will take that role too," said
. ,
crea\e progr,ams;and s~ak oilt !b
.:
president;. ~ri_a~ W!ce_nski,
_l~ter~
\
intetact with the co~ncil.
_
.
.
.
include monthly foruins with col-
Ryan •
.
.
fight a lack. of student interest m
House Councd president; Patricia
' . , .

...
'
.•
•·


.
lege administrato~s much like
She also said she doesn't feel
.
.·.,:~~L>;?f.\·•t;3f:'~a;~.\,q;if'
,:?f:·.<·
'· (· >'Clark·:,,studeni
Academic:. Co_m~·
One program Ryan is consider~

MCTV's recent "Meet the Presi-
too young for the job. "Many


.,,
.•
·-
...
_Ryan;
'~
.. sopho~ore· political.:: mittee president; Harry·carleton,
._
ing·."as part of the fight against dent," a CSL lecture series "so
people have questioned my age

science· ~aJOf. from Oyster
·Bay,.·.-.
Com.muter_ Union president;. and
•.
the. lack of campus participation». students are more aware ofissues
and that I'm only a sophomore
.
won the pt;,s1t1on
over opponent
.
Janet Groom,. Adt:lt

Student

is a
·senate.
to provide student
• .on
and off campus;'' and
·chang-
but I know I'm experienced and
.
~h~istopher· Clement~, 593-347;·. Union president ....
:
.•

•.0
·.,-:·.

representation for the new coun_.- ing the CSL meeting times from can combat existing problems,"
m:-studcnt: govemm_ent elections
·•'
''Students have been,vei'y
.dif~
...
_cil;
she·said:
'
the current 8 a.m. to lunch or din-
said Ryan
..
-
'earlieithismonth
..
,
:
..
:,ficultwith
tliecouncil,!'·saidcut-
.:·
.• ·
.
nerhours,'Ryansaid.

... ;
;,:

·:
...
,-
.·.
'./
..
:_.,,,,.;
•.
,,\.,·.·.
·

•.

·•
.
Previous student governments
!
Ryan said she will also use her

"I talk," said Ryan, "I listen

!-,~~t~!S
i
a.n
O
'.'.9~11S'~till-'-
?,;.~:~~~~~e!:::~.~J~~:~:,
.
~.~o::
:;,:n~h\ri:~a::~•:,d,~~~:
~~t~e•
I take that extra step to
:=._reqlJ:estedi<to·=~Prot~st-.
---
Seminar, stresses· self-protection
By Denise Wilsey
.

.-P·.
f~o_:
.P-
,_,
__
o_-.·~.s_·•
ea
ai.
d_'i_-
crits
__

.
..
.
.
.
...
--·
.
.
.
. .
_
.
Marist students shoilld· take responsibility for
.
.
. .
.
·_
their own safety on campus by using both com-
..
By Janet McLoughlin~
;
:
:

students and that the banking in-
mon sense safety measures and by supporting the
.
· ..
·:J
:
• :
•• ,

•·:
.
. .
•.
dustry was looking to
·puU
out of
. student government's proposals to upgrade
:Leaders
·,
oF'college
student. the loan program iLthis restric-
.'·
Marist security, according to Detective Tom
groups are.
·urging
more Jetter:
.'tion
was placed ..
: . '\.
.
.
;.
.
Mauro, who spoke at a seminar for Marist
writing and phone calls\vithin the-
·,.-·;With·
the ·new iric·e>me limit,•'.
:
students last week.·
next: two weeks to
,Washington
··
families that exceed anincome of
:
Mauro, of the Town of Poughkeepsie Police,
representatives to help vot~.-down
·:
$60,000 or more will not be eligi-

••.
and Jean Cravens, director of the Crime Victims
,-
.•
the
·1986_'.budgef.'for
fecleral'stu:
.,·.ble-.foi·
-a··Guaranteed
Student·.•
~
Counseling Service at St. Francis Hospital,
·ad-
'
dent aid,
,.·
.,
:
::·
.. : ·, .
::·:
Loan regardless of family size or,;
:
dres~ed about 35 students in the Fireside Lounge
'.

>:•
As it stahds, the
'House
of. nu,mber eiuolled in a

post-
-;
.
on ~he topic of assault.



:
Representatives
:·and-':Senate
isec9ndary
education:
.. ,
.
.

The housing office and counseling center spon-
.
,repu~lkans.
reach~d
;
3:
•.
·
com-
••
Pow~rs
,~~id
'thai.
an.
$S,OOO
• :
sored the seminar with the help of SA VE ..:.....
a
...
pr~~use that ~ould 1mpos~ a$370
:
limit' on· the federal aid programs
:
••
group of students agaidst violence who have
:-
m1lhon cut m • s~uden!
_.aid
... J'h_e
,
is restricting for students who at~
.
formed a committee to help educate students
Guaranteed Stud~nJ Loans• would


tend. higher=priced schools. and it
abot1t violi;nt crime on campus.
·.:
...
be~~-t_by $200 m1_Ih_on
and there-_

also discriminates against private •

SAVE
1
was· formed after··two assaults on cam-
.,.
mammg $170 mllhon would
.be·
schools.

pus. The first assault occurred on March 19 out-
.~

·cut
from other
:federal
aid
-
pro-
~.-



...
-
··
,-·.'\
·-~·
-~
···:·
--

~
:.-~
·
:.
side Ca'inpus Center as a student was leaving the
:
·.·grams,
according to Ken Powers,
_. :
The limit on feder~I ~id pro-
·••Pub.In
the other incident, on March 25, a second


,
assistant director of financial aid.
·.·.grc1ins
;-'Yill-
: also< restrict

the

woman was assaulted in the basem·ent

of Cham-
:
::'
In addition the two groups
.chances
of a· student from a low-
.•
pag'nat HalL':
.
.
.
.
.

,
agreed
,
'on::
a '. $60,000 adjusted
,
or moderate-income family to at-
,

Neither woman was seriously injured. No ar-


·gross
income limit with an $8,000

tei:id a h_ighei:-priced
s~hool.
.

/..- •
rests have been made.
..
•.
cost of attendance limit on federal


schatz·said that'Rep. Fish and
·_
(
The Council of Students Leaders has prnposed

At· the seminar, Mauro gave safety tips fpr
avoiding assaults. According to Mauro, a studertt
should not walk
.
alone at night, especially in
scantly lit areas. If it is necessary to walk
unescorted, students should hold their keys
securely in the palms of their hands with the tips
extending between the middle fingers as a defense
tactic, Mauro said. Mauro added that a student
should stare directly at any suspicious person and
hold the key in view.
Mauro said he could not advise a student to, if

assaulted, either fight or flee, as that is an in-
dividual decision. According to Mauro, a student
should do something unpredictable, such
_as
fake
a fainting spell or scream. Mauro stressed the im-
portance of immediately reporting any assault
to
officials.

Mauro said students'must continue to raise a
concern about security on campus and initiate
changes before something else happens. Mauro
suggested that SA VE help to set up a service to
escort students on campus.
Cravens spoke about the programs available to
.
assist crime. victims emotionally, financially and
:
legally. Cravens said that 24-hour service is
available through the hospital emergency phone.
,

Roberta Amato, director of the counseling
center; said more seminars are to be planned for
the future. "I was very pleased with the seminar
.'an.d
I
think there is a real concern being generated
among the stuclents. We would Hke to keep this
-.
:_:}
aid.of grants and loans, according
..
members of the Senate and Con-
':
..

':
steps to the administrationto upgrade security a.s
.•••.
,:
·?
to: Tpnf'.Sch~iz,: Iegi~lative
'assis~\.
gress·'?i>ted to -ha,ve a· Needs
;Test_./
.
a
resilltnot only,qfthe_recent assaults, but also of

's/~
,\
t.an(:t9},Rep;.Ham.iltqn~Fish;'.:Jr:\ that·.·
..
_
wo.uld show
:
a
,
st1;1dent's(:
..
a growing concern about the issue of safety on
•_,,.·
;,::
1
•:f:m™'llbt'ook)ltTli'erori
··ina1·t
to,;-;::;;ew·
ibilit ;for-aid:instea:n:oJJhe'i...t•:'<
':"'cam·
·us:.-:'filo·
·osals'ii'idud
·'an
assessmeiif
·of
an···

.:
..
:-r~;~Sfat\\vlft~:ilTi4';oocf.~in1W~~iJ?\:o.~?ffirilitift8"(mi·j70ro~lt?•
?cfJFi'ffifJ/y:·1bbI,r~na:~n··~2rea'se'ot'·1ig1rting·
·on
,
..
•:
·
federal aid,on a family'iricome,. on federal aid:,·
,
.
.,-•• •.
campus.
,
!

'i.ip:ai1d hopefully address otfier topics \ikeiroom

sectirity," Amato said.·,

• •

::»<=i·-:-:\,
cehing"of·$3'.i;500;:S.chatz
Sakt
:
':-.:. ••.•
Wheri ~sked if there was, any
-~~----·-------------------------------------'
< \
t\\<
;:
~?.,~ers
C
explained that:.· t_he<
char.ce for the J9~6 budget to
,
.. •.
.
-.

.
.
"''\:.,::,;:.
<>r:!g_1r.~l-·p~opo~ato!;$3i;~Q0.1Ils_:~hang~fo!thebe11efit_ofs~~dents,.;
V
.

..
necessitate
f
rther
elections
,i~;i
{"Ii[~r!~ttJ!i!~H{l;1.~:}~;!~lJ:'Jt}'.tJ;1{,~j'~~ti·
>

acanc1es
••

I •
u

Spring f
ev¢r:·
Senior Craig Harrigan pots his spring fever to constructive
nse. Meanwhile, his friends ... (see photo pg. 9) (photo by
Maureen Ryan)
lly Ginny Waite
. -

1
sibkday. "I want to get the.class.
r
·:
Although class elections were involved on this early so that it
~-
h_eld
April 1 t9 3, elections.will be will be a fun day for all," said
·:
-
held again on Monday and Tues-
Mueller.
.
:'day_
for four unfilled positions,
Events and fundraisers that
'.;
according to Council of Student
Mueller said-he is considering in-
:.c-Leaders
President
Anthony
elude a class of '86 calender and
·
Phillips.
.
.
. .
·.·
garage sales before each break for


..
·•-
The four i.mfilled positions
.are.

students to get rid of things that
class

of '86

vice. president,'·. they

never have space for.
secretary and treasurer and class
'.
Mtieller,said he would like to get

of '88 treasurer. There will be a

the class i_nterested in a time cap-
forum tonight for the class of
'86,
sule

and
possibly
..
working
iii room CC-248a and for the class

towards
.
creation of a senior·
of '88 in room CC-248.

garden.

~
.

,
..
/Phillips
said petitions
,for
the
Gina Coniglio, a fashion mer-

class of '86 vice-president will not
chandising major from Paramus,

be a~cepted since there were two
N.J., will be the new class of '87
candidates runnirig for the office
president. Serving the class with
.
in the first race. The candidates,
Coniglio will be vice-president
Michael,· Murphy
and
John
·Theresa.
Ruotolo, a computer
McGuiness, received the same
science major from Fort Edward;
,.
number of votes
iti
the original
secretary· Doris David, a com-
-.
race. Both candidates will be
puter science major from Plain-
speaking at the forum tonight.

view; and treasurer Thomas

Dan Biglin, who ran unopposed

Hanrahan, a finance major from
.:

for
class of '86 treasurer, resigned
the Bronx.
,
last week. Biglin-said he resigned
Coniglio said her biggest goal
7
so
he could apply for the treasurer
for next year will be to have a
-~
p_osition on the CUB;
directory of the junior class

,
Re-elected class of'86 President
printed. "Everyone is going to be
·
Miclrael Mueller, a Communica-
so spread out over campus and
~
iion Arts major from Kings Park,
also in the Poughkeepsie area. I
think the directory is needed
to
give the class unity," said Con-
iglio.
_
No definite plans for fun-
draisers have been made, accor-
ding to Coniglio. "I'd like to have

a mixer
·or
two and as many other
fundraisers as possible,'' Coniglio
said:
••
Roger
Ardanowski,

psychology· major from Tar-
rytown,. will be the class of '88
president for next year. Peter
-Prucnel,
an,. accounting. major
from Norwood, N.J., will serve
as vice-president and
Susan
Trach, a French

major from
Hunter,
will be the
class
secretary.
Ardanowski said he will be
working all year towards class
unity. Activities he said he plans
to have are
a
·
car wash, an

Oktoberfest mixer, a raffle, and
several class trips to possible spor-
ting events, concerts, and to cities
such as Boston and Philadelphia.
"I
·want
to see the class get in-
volved.
l'd
like to see monthly
meetings and produce a monthly
newsletter. I'm looking forward
to getting started," Ardanowski
said.
:.
said lie ran. for class president .----------------.,__-----------~
••
again· because he would like to
keep the unity going ·that he
.
established this year among the
·.:
class.
.
:
~
Mueller said that with the in-
.:
creased campus housing for next
;
year, security should be improv-
-~
ed. He also said his first goal is to
-:
find someone to give free self-
.
defense lessons.
.
.
•.

River Day will be another big
Election results
The following is a list of officers chosen in the recent class
elections;
Class of 1986
President ..............................
Michael Mueller
Class of 1987
President ................................
Gina Coniglio
Vice President.
.........................
Theresa Ruotolo
Secretary ................................
·.
Doris David
Treasurer ............................
Thomas Hanrahan
Class of 1988
President ....................
:
.......
Roger Ardanowski
Vice President ............................
Peter Prucnel
concern· for the class of '86, ac-
.
cording to Mueller. Mueller said

he wants to start as early as
. ~ovembe~ on a proposal which
------------·------.-,
••
-
••
•••
•••

-----·-.~--
_, .--__
__., would prom·ote a safe and respon-
Secretary ..................................
Susan Trach
'
',,i'
/
~
-t\,i
{
..
'



















































































. i
.
/

,.

_, ....
_Page
4 • THE CIRCLE·
Apr■-1~;.1985

I
Pp
CT~-~·_


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eve.nfs,
7Aey
so..,d·;•:•
''Wh<-f
c...J::io.-,:,._-f
ro/le~-
sk,.,_f:nf<:'
!ne.;15_c..,'cl.
Marist's haild in apartheid .
, •.
1
;;
:::/;~.-i~~~;·:\·t~·!.;
..
1/:.~
;:\r:~·'.-:~:~·~?//:./:,~r
~:~\{:":.~.:.,
-
=All'letter~ niust be typ~ trlpJ,. space:,}
. -~--
with
a ·so
space~_margln{~nd·subml_t•
)/
i<·ted tothe·cIrcie'offlcerio lateftlia~.1t>
:: ;
,j
'p;m. Monday'.
~hort letiers:ar~ pref~r-t :_
" • red. We reserve, the -rlghHo edlU~II_ ,:
. ·letters. ·Letters ••
inusf be' slgned;but·-<:
names-~_may.··.be
-·¥1'.lthtiel~-::uP(?r;t.;
re-~:"/;
.• quest. :Leit~.rs':.;w,IJI
,_;
beX
p~bll~M~.t, :
-·. dependln_g
upon av~Ua~le·: ' spa.ce:
'{c:.·'
.
.
':.<·-':..;~
....
-.
"t.
..
::
~':,'.:)p;i~~-:
..
~
.
. '
:
~.:•:i.
·:-· ·
.
.-' • -;.
,. '
.._Fight
c_uts~·-;-:?-
,
.-

.- •
t;_, ·,-
'."
••
....
_·,.:::
~
..
, .'.
Dear Edit~r,
·-
:-. . •';·.
,
_-
-. __
,,ting)together • t_he la~(: piec~
·_
..
, _ . As a :child, my parent~ impress-
toward iny ·_
college· tu1t10n, . the
ed ,upon me the importanc_e of
·
anxiety;· the· frustration;
_th~·
rage.· ·-
striving . 'toward , academic . ex-
and the helplessness
are upon me
cellence throughout ··my formal • again \ thariks ,.
to
:
President
. education io,defray,:the .cost .of
Reagan's reducticms. :N6~; Jhe'.
college _
tuition. Srirpassin~:'
ni¥
_
.,
goals.
~
strive to>/ea~~;,,ppear •
fellow
students academically._ . _unattamable. His
proposed
• seemed
the:oniy
WllY
tclat~a~n
the
.•
redu"ctions
:clOJJd,_
iny f~t~rf and
financial assistance
I
needed to at~ • the futures of those thousands of
'tend. the coliege or"my_ choice,. - students struggling with me. :::
-
Mari st College. , In a_ddition
to:
.
Seeing those around me suffer
working two.job~ through9ut.the
->
because they cannot c_ontinue
an
summer a fuli-time.job .over my ;- education arouses

anger, and
Chrisim~s. , and :
-
spri~g
<
recess,
.. -. oftentimes, despair. ~ttidents . -
• Marist . .College_:'
a_war.4ed
Jne ,
_a_:.
should be permitted to attend the ...
scholarship for:ex·c!'.llenc~
in __
high,
coll<,ge of tht;ir choice. Further-
school • and
..
I -. rece1vecl ,, _a:,.. more, state colleges cannot· be
Guaranteed, Student :-Loan.
(GSL) .. •. forced . to accommodate . -the
.• which enabled me "to finallymeet:;_.:' volume of students forced· to -
- the cost of college tuitfo'n-.I must .. ·1eave· private colleges. My pur"
._i
-state here, .
I.
underst~nd: this.· is ;a • pose. is. to -alert the _
public as, to

loanwhi_ch{\Vjll_repay.
,;
,,-. ,,-

how many students, friends, col-
. .Of the, _3,000:.;undergraciuate-'
leagues, .brothers, sisJ~rs, sons,·
students at Marist,.approximately, ·and daughters, etc., wlil be af-
.
2300
of
them.wil!'be affected-l>Y, fected. Either directly or indirect-
President Ronald Reagan's pros. ly, you or someone you know will
posed reductions in student finan-
undoubtedly - be a_dversely af-
cialassistance, The totalaid cuts
fected. To fight this (if you have
at Marist alone·:will. be :nearly - not-already done so), please write
$3;920,000 including Supplemen-
to your congressman and/or
tal. Educational·•· Opportunity
Senators -Alfonse D' Amato and


b·ei,·eves
,·n •,ts, s·o·
-calle· d ·· Ju· de_
o-_c·
hr,·_stian_·. Grant.(SEOG), GSL, and federal
Da_niel P., Moynihan
in
The ·debate over American business in-
awards·.
c:.i
.
,
,.1·.<:: -
-Washington
and request they
turn
terests in South Africa has become heated •• _ herit~ge; a_ phrase It uses as one. of its •
These:figui:es represent .an ac-
down Reagan's p_roposals. · _ ·
on one side supporters of these interests
biggest sales pitches, it should declare tt:,e
curate picture for m
9
st schools
,
·_
In_ this age o_f_
domestic. ~nd ·
claim t~at ~ithout
American money the •
1
money it ~as received from th~ co!11pany ill-.
\\'.her~_up
__
tq_
7
:5°7~_of
t~e st~qc;:nts
__
, fore1g
11
_,,competition,. •amb1uon __
country s blacks _would suffer more than , gotten· garn, a~d- call for-
IBM s
divestment
will be· affected.
A
large part of • and'
.:pers~ve.rence
: .. s~ou_lcl._._;,be.~---"··
they_ do now. On the other, opposers feel
.from South f\frrca. ,
.
this, statistic :are-my peers'."-
per~ rewarded,beca:use,:in·tu'rriicthdn~;
·
·
~hatiAnierican". investment is there f?r the.
This, however -i~--fa.r_from
likely. -President ... so11al.
friend·s· at -~aris_t_ a~d:,-at J~~tiv_e
_:for/you~g -~~erii::a_r_stto:
rnte~ests of whrtes only, and that profits are
Dennis Murray .said at a .recent news con-
. otllercolleges.or ~mver~_1t1es.:,-
-,
-
~,::.c~!;;
1~.--.a,js,ti:~t1;1g~£;:·,s~~~f,·.:<W,i:!_'
comrng fr?.m
th
e· s~eat of an ?PP~es~ed_ -: ference that·Marisfs
relationship_with
IBM .. _:_
_,As
;:_1-,
F!}.dei:s,t~
nd.~:.fr~s~$1en,t¥
_
~o.r~-l~~-
1
.e~\;1.!!~;t;lV,fi,!t.~.t:-•§J~.t~~i·
_
• P~~pl_~--
qoo~
!1'
0
r_f
1
l~~gme~t:f.",~~\~_':lg~q_tt~
: wouic.1
···ndr d1ahg.e··:1n;~a,:1y··.:way,-_
(i:a{1ip~li,:,g:·.
• R_~a~ap's,:--
P,i:~w~se_~:'.i•!~q_il~W?,1!~.•-
-~!![~!Jt.tffiit$IT!:3JmI~~.~~zJ~eJt~~!~,.
tne latier:_<;>P_!n_t~n~--·

-, : :
;_·i
r
·
.. _,
h -.
':< -,;
-
'· .
how~sadlydependeht·
on
the'!COrilpany_the·:;

my st~t1gg\e~-tp
be~tef,_~y
~educ_a-
_.· PJa_~s.~tqt!<>fi.1orrp'.'Y.··,,,..-.;::•-,·•t·
0
-'t_r:>
:.
··Man
st, rf rt rs,~o.
truly lr_ve
outw,tiat rt_
c~Us

college has become·,:· -~
//
__
•.
___
<;
,:
__ _
,_
tion seems
fuule; Aftt!rfmally,\1~-,
:oe
.<
-
:
·
James
L
McKenna
_(per!'ciPS,hypo9r_1t1cally)
rt~~
Jud~<>~Chr_r
st ran ,.
•--
Murray also said_ at the conference that
Hert!ai;ie; m~st ~ake~
a sen,ous _look.a.!·W~,t
<'
he felt divestmen~ was not the way to go. He
,
·
y;,
role rt rs,playrng
,n
suppot1.rnQ aparth~, d: • • : said we· should persuade
our
e.lected ·of-
·
·
·

IB~,
a c<;>~
pany from whr?h Man st has
ficials to do something about human rights
To the editor;
,-serriester'arid"my situation _would-1
rec~rved mrlhons of d_oll~rs rn gr8:nts and
in South Afri_ca. He is.right, but only par-
.
On March;.28; myname was •
be
haridied:.'':by·hc>t':pu(suingthe.
eq~rpment? has extens!ve interests rn :3outh
ti a.Hy.
,President Re>rtald ReaQari has~ po)icy , . br9_ughtup)~ The Cir~le.edito_rial _ ma~te{ any further."
I
think a.
_
Africa. It rs the leading .U.S. supplier of
ofconstructiveengagementrnSouth,Afnc~,
-' asking,the-q.S.L.whyJwasask~
:publicapologyis)norei~Hne.·
•'.\ ,
computers t~ the country, control
I
mg more __ but it has done nothing to further.the cause : . ed to resign
mY
po_sition
as SeJ?io.r.

• After four years oCservi~e-{o
f ·
th8:n one-third of the market there. The
of human rights. Obviously,: U.S. political
• Class Treasur:er.
s1_nce
I-had Just . my school and three y~ars as<,
• Uni.tad States government ':)Utlaw~~ the sale
statements a~e notenough. If. human rights
_
-.-.
taken. _office -this: ~emest~r:
,The _ Class President; I deserve beiter
,
_
.of
9omputers to South Afr~c~n m11tta!)' and
are to beconie a reality in South
Africa, , .
Jette(t received from the CtS.L.--. _ than this. I think-that p:uttirig my
police ,n 1978, but IBM offrcral~ adfl'!lt they
another course of action must be taken.
President ,.charged -::-
me : with:., name up for impeachmei:iunaae
0
have no control over where their equipment
American.businesses musf stop supporting
. "repeatable·-• incidents - • this ' your case··in'.trying•:to/impeach,,
may end up. •
• -

_ • -
• - - - ,. • • - •

• •
•_.academic
year wher~in e~tablish-- two othei:'class
officers all the,ies·s .
"We· would not bid any business where
oppr~ssron •• ,, .
.
,
• ed procedures' have.'. not: _bee!!-
, ciedi~le; . :•:'.::
':::
t.'·.:;:-:;?:t/(,,
,,
we believe that our products are going to be_ , Some· argue that' American divestment·
followed:"' ,·_
'_:·'.'-!
i . _ _.:·
_,,
//\
The fact remains'that -I should .
used to abridge human rights. Howeve~,
YI~
--
from South Africa would hurt the blacks
Iri
·the : fC>Uow
~P

s_tory':
the
.
have never received a'lettei: a~lcihg,
do not see how IBM or ariy other computer
much more than the government. If. this is
follo\Viilg''week,_."t,h;e,
<::'.~-~:

~9f -
formyresignation:
- '''.'.' ·:·-
?·/:;
manu·fa'cturer .can guarantee that they will
so, why did the South African government -
_ mitted they_
were wro_ng·m_
a_sk1"1-g. , It iwasn't ju~t . a
11
.
"OVEJl~·
:
__
not be, The facts of the matter are that we
make supporting
divestment
a .crime
me:to·_resign
and adrnitted/'_th_ere·
., SIGHT,!'
it
was··
A •
BIO;._
do not know and cannot control the ac_Uons punishable by imprisonment
or
death?

was· a'· good •chahc'e·:the .-facts_ MISTAKE.·· -
of 'our customers,"
said IBM Chairman·
IBM proudly claims that 50 percent of its
weren!t straighc"'_c:s:L
Presi.:.
• •
Frank Cary.
_.
,
_ -

_ -:
• • South African employees are black, but that
dent Tony Phillip~ tolci
J;be Circle
W,hile a~ first glance this statement may
Is no great shakes 1n··a country whose
• that
·there
was an/'oversight"

make IBM seem supportive of the human
population is only 20 percent white; The
·_ that"l ·had just taken office this
rights movement in South Africa, it is
company announces with pride that - it

• - • • •
'


-.. . --
; Sincerely, _
, • , . Roger Romano
.
Treasurer, Senior Class
essentially a contradiction. Cary first says
adheres to the Sullivan Principles, a set of
.
Research abroad
the 'company would do no business with
guidelines that ensures bl~cks equaUty in
anyone violating human rights; he then goes • the workplace.
This is mere tokenism. •
on to. admit the corporation has no control
Those same • blacks still
go· home to
over whether or not IBM's computerl? serve
segrated villages and must send their
to support the racist regime there.
children to segregated schools: •• _ •
And support it the company does. South
How can Marist condemn something as
Africa's Interior Department has used IBM
minor· as. cohabitation
wnen it ignores
computers
to
prepare • ."racial
identity
• Christian ethical norms of human rights and
cards," documents used to brand blacks as
distributive justice? How can it justify such
non-citizens and keep them on the_fringes of
a close relationship with IBM while at the
white society.

same time it so proudly proclaims a firm
The South African Defense Department,
base in Christianity?
,. responsible for the deaths of thousands of
The answer is simple: it cannot. It seems
blacks, has used IBM _ computers for a
that Marist's Judeo-Christian
heritage is
variety of purposes. The list can go on and
nothing but a facade, behind which lies just
on.
another secular college desparately trying
If the
Marist
administration
really
to gain a ~ame for itself.
THE:
Editor-In-Chief
Lou Ann Seelig
Senior Editors
Anoclate
Editors
Brian Kelly
PaulRaynls
Bonnie Hooe
News
Editors
CIRCLE:
Spotts
Editor
Ian O'Connor
Vnpofnt
Editor
Photography
Editor
Maureen Ryan
BuslnHa Manager
,..
..
• • Dear Editor, -
States and
.
other- countries
--
The United States Information
through the exchange of persons,_
Agency" (USIA) and Institute of • knowledge and skills>-They are
International Education
(IIE)
to--
provided under the. terms of.the
day announced that the official
Application forms and further
opening of the 1986-87 competi-
information for students current-
tion for grants for graduate study
iy enrolled in.Matjst College may
or research abroad in academic . b~ obtained from the Fulbright'
fields and for professional train- - Program . Advis~r.
Maurice
ing in the creative and performing - Bibeau, who is located in Fon-
arts is scbeduled for May 1, 1985. taine 202. The Deadline for filing
It is expected that approximately
applications on this campus is
700 awards to over 70 countries
s
16 1985
will
be
available for the 1 98
6-
87
ept. ,
..
Walter Jackson
Study Abroad
Programs Division
academic year:.
• •
between the peopl~ of the United
Christine Dempsey
Adnrtlalng
Staff
Bernie Heer
John Bakke
Denise Wllsey
Cindy Bennedum

Carl MacGowan
Cartoonist
Laura Reichert
Amie Rhodes
Oniphlca
Beverly Morlang
Pete Colatzzo
Faculty
Adrisor
OavtdMcCraw
Laura Refchert



































































































-~-/::,:---"'_'{i_:::;·:_,·
..
-.\~'
·.·~'.
·. ···,,:;.J:·~-:·,'.·;,.',;.1,:_-·.·.·~-:-::--:·~·.-:-,:_,·:6.<>.··.•.
··,
..
:
...
;;:,:._,~·:'.
.--
0


}\ByCarl:r.tacGowan.}(:\'•;•;Jf:<>:>)
two aren't really
·surplus; :they.•·
Or, as Paxton P~ruvius put it,
:/'·\;:.l,:
:
..
,
: ,

,
••
"'·. :·,,
:.;.;r~,<;--.:'-'."
-.i
were scrounged up by Chico; who

"If
everyone was nch, who'd be
{-;'.:~,:Every
time Igo horn¢;:l,~al.ce it
thangs
out behind the local- em~ poor?"
~:
..
a
po_int to' see my'frieri,~s ,i_!i:
the.
__
:
b~ssies untiLthe leftover goodies
The host, an ex-junkie n~med
:

·_
shims.
As
fa{
as I'm concerned,
'
are dumped in the trash.

· • ••
Tobias

Saroyan, pointed out:
''.:
they

throw,.: the
·•
best
'·.
parties


"The Feds assume an acceptable
·anywhere.


·And
h's·~mazing what you ca~ unemployment rate of 7 percent
.
.

buy with food stamps nowadays.
~
about where it is now. By not
After seven weeks or whatever

Th

• bl h
t I t 12

ey
.mvana
Y
av.e a eas

taking jobs, we're. serving our
.. .
.
.
.
.
.
of eating food
'with
more grease steaks on the grill, a couple of piz-
country."
:·_:
\_>p_·_
:,_:_ar,_/_iy1_
'1}g·

·
-
:_
••
~~t~ntfu'~h~6\~d:~~e~~
:~u~t!;
:~ .i:;::ecl:C~~~srrc;::t::itt~!J
,
·
·
'
stuffed w_ith onions or' stuffing
variety of drink_s
.
this side of
.:·.
'i' /
-With\
' •
.
.
:,
.
:
..
:~~
ritJ{f:J~r
:'or,
11:~1ti~Jr;
'
.•
ru:t;~o;e;~ ;!~~r:.s·
'All
thi~ for
_._..
--~-
..
-~·
~-·-
_
_.
_
_.
..
_-
_·-
._.
. ,.·:
....
Cov.~red,witb':_leftov~rs;·sittin&·at
..
'.·
./
__

t·h··e_
>:p·
"·o·'
·or•

.•
_"
table~.wit~ pa_p,er
placem~tS:lfSed

:The
apar_tment_where·our little

,
·.:. .
.
.
.
.
..
·:
.

.
'-
for
-,;·_·
poht1cal
campa1gnmg;
•.
·
·
.·.·.·>,

•'.:_·.
·
,·,:·
/',•·
·.,·,wonderingifthechairJamabout
·
Easter bash was held was· im-
.

••
to
.
sit on· will either be, covered niaculate. Don't let the exterior
••.
·.
with cold tomato sauce or else tip
tenement facade fool
_you,
for in-
...
.
to the back left when_
I attempt to
. •
side of
·these
seemingly humble
recline after choking
.
down
.
a
.
dwellings
_·.
are
,
veritable' Taj
·potato
and having to currubberiz-
Mahals. Cathedral ceilings offset
ed main courses with a plastic
'.
smartly by Victorian furniture
.
knife, l firid.
a.
meal! with the
.
and Art Deco wall patterns; gold-
-
:
,
inrier-city. slickers is the perfect
plated bathroom fixoires, you
.
way lo.relax:




name it. Closets full of the latest
.
Parisian fashions and

Brooks
·
Brothers suits .•
:

·
· .
You· see, these friends of mine
-
• •
are
welfare
·,
recipients,

and
·everybody_,.
knows
·•
that
the
When I ask the people how they
.
unemployed and
,
disadvantaged
can afford all this with what
have it all

over us middle class seems to be a pittance for a mon-
folks;
thly stipend, they always answer
.

in more or less the same way:
Yes, indeed, a good time is hact'. "It's a growth industry," Harle-
by all. Food is "catered," as they quin Sampson (not his real Iiame)
put it, by the· United· States once said. "Only we don't want it
Government: surplus grain grown to grow too

much. Or
,
else
by· farmers who ar:e now out of everyone will want a cut. And
business, surplus cheese, surplus there's only so much room at the
wine and hors d'oeuvres. The last
,
top."
,./
.
'.
·,
There's a game played between
these welfare junkies and what we
figure must be "normal" life. By

day, they wear their Sunday worst
and complain about the· way the
cops and the politicians
mess
with
their lives. At night, however,
.
"they're getting down while us
middle-classers are snug in the
thought that we've got it made
while

the
·bums
in

the South
Bronx are going to bed hungry .
They deserve it,-we think.
But our worst fears are for real:
There's somthing fundamentally
haywire about a country that
preaches free enterprise and pull-
ing

yourself
up
•.
by
your
bootstrap, yet dishes out billions
·
of dollars worth of food and
hard-earned tax dollars to people
who sit in the sun in the dead of
winter even as suburbanite~ strug-
gle to meet the
mortgage
payments. Sickening, ain't it?
It's them who've got it made! I
figured that one out when my car
broke down in Harlem a
while
back and an '83-Cadillac pulls up
with an offer of help. The driver
. ·pays
f~~
a com-~lete tune-up and a
new battery. Keep Florida. I'll
spend my breaks in society's
hellholes and I'll never look back.

Oh, one more friend of mine
l'd like to introduce to you.
You've heard of welfare mothers?
Marla Jackson is the welfare
mother superior. Twenty-six kids
.
by the same husband since she
was 14 years old. Her children she
calls her "investments."
"It's easy," she says. "I crank
'em out and the government just
hands me a check for each one .
My husband is on disability, I
pick up the food stamps --: that's
quite a pile of IJloney. The thing
J
tell people is to spend it
-wisely
.
IRA's, stocks, bonds, there are all
sorts of loopholes to take advan-
tage of.
. "Right now, I can foresee.an
upward trend in the market,
despite
.
the Ohio bank crisis,
because of the good news from
Japan concerning the opening up
of their domestic market to
American goods. This will result
in a stimulated economy and con-
tinued low inflation.
"Personally, I am very excited
about the possibility of purchas-
ing CBS stock. There is great
potential there."
I asked her if she was going in
with Ted Turner on the CBS deal.
"No,"
.she
replied. "I'm com-
peting against Mr. Turner."
.
'discovered,
a
'
member
.
of
,
the by Hopper.'.s nurse, who herself
>)'Commodores'.')•
is,jri her early·_ fitsjn
wi(t~
_our
computer science
:\i$Os,;.
the oldestacii~e officer in the': program by virtue of being a whiz
,··"
Navy/H:opper, it· seems, ""as the at • both •

..,Ms.
·Pac-Man"
and
::,-
creator: of•:no(
:only'
'the·
Cobol; "Donkey Kong.·~ She currcntl~ is· .,
.
:
·ccnilptiter
language, but the
;first
in training on "Donkey·· Kong

practical··• computer
.
compiler
as
/Jr.'! and. expects· to
be·.
proficient
,-,
·A.·.··..
·
:
1
·
..
well.
Suddenly; the rri_agnitude
of e~ough by May-18 to fill in for
_>
'.
•..
'.
tea
:
.
Marisf's virtual coup in gett!ng
_yopper
if necessary.
•.
··.
.
_
:
Vl(ETNAM·
__ -T-EN
YEARS LATER


-
.

·-
.
Hopper became app~r~nt.
.
. .
-
✓--
_
.. -
J

.
h

I
h
h
I
.
·_:.
Lemmon.:.·.:
.
.
-.:
Perh.aps i~w~
-~~ily
Burdis
und~i!tood e:Verythi~gou(i twas

.. ,
_.



Madst's director of.public info.-
home preparing· "Marist
.
loves
mation,: 'Nho best· expressed the
.
Hopper and the U.S. Navy" but-
campus~wide. euphoria.-
~•We
are
·
tons
for
··
the
•.
graduation

very

pleased to
.
get
,
~f
wcifuan ceremony),
I
got
a
can from the
:;

Maybe
:
it's
just • ine,
_
but
speaker with a computer sci_ence

man identified as the next prefer-
soII1ehow
I just can't get as ex-
.
background," intoned Burdis in red candidate.

died as all the other seniors seem
.
the page~three Circle article that
'to
be about the selection of Com~
:
brokethe big news.
// · .•
•••
"Bakke? This is Jack Lemmon.
'··modo·reGraceMurrayHopperas
,
. _
.•
~
.-.
,
••d.,,.
d d. E
••.
1
What's the story with Marist's
this-s;_-year's

Commencement
:,
..
Verypl~s~ • m ee •

mi
Y

commencement? I t~ought I was
speaker;.-·;:_:
"
.
'
:.
,
·; ..
,
:
,,_.,
:~
.
•.
has, a way ~1th understatement.

in the running, and now I hear
.
>:••bid
;
"y
0 ~-
hear? Did.;'. yo~.,.:·,' Commodore Ho_pJlC~'s
~om- they've got this !:{opper wo~an.'~

··hear?"
I
was
asked repeatedly,.' p~ter back~o1md. ties_.
m
·nicely
.
"That's
Commodore
Hop-,,
,.and.
of course the first time 1 •. wit~ ~fr.,co~puter
:sc1~nce.
pro~
-
hadn't
·heard, so 1
.was
fold: gram,
;contmu~d
Burdis, barely
"I know, I know •. Commodore

/'Commodore
Hopper is_
going to c~ntrollu1g_ lte~self (or so
_we
Grace Murray Hopper. Believe
b_
e, atgradtiation!"
,.
:._•---~-!~~!
~~!!!
_
_ip~gme).
••••
.
me, I know the name. Every time
·
·
·
·
I get some interest in a decent
·\_
Li11da, wllo was ol:wiously get-
/
'
.Well; it· certairtly does. Who
.
speaking engagement at a little
.
tm_g
a great deal of pleasure from
..
better to tie in with our computer college, Hopper comes along and
bemg a~le to b~eak the ne~s to so- • science program tlian Hopper?
· •
aces me out."
~eone,}•:atc~edmy face m seem-. And more importantly, who bet-
~ng. anuc1pat1on of s~~e sort of
.
ter
to

reflect

our
strong
.''Well
gee, Jack .,. but she ties.
Jubilant

fra~s,figtJrauon
•.

None
humanities~based
.
iiberal
arts
.
in ~ell with our computer science
.
_-y,as
forthcommi.


.
.•
. .
.
tradition than a:owoman who for· prdgram.''
'
·.,
"C~mmo_do~e
·!l;opper,
JohA.'.'
•.
years, has

developed
·coding
fm:
"But I was great in '.Missing,'
sh~ said, still w_aiung for the m-
machines?·


-

and what about 'Mass Appeal'?"
ev1table recognition that would
.
.
.
__
.
.
he said, almost pleading.
send me
·-dancing·
across· the
,
Who indeed? The college ad-
'
hallway.
"The
Commodore Hop-· ministration, though, in its finite
per. At
our
graduation. Couldn't
wisdom, has anticipated just such
you just
die?" - ..
.
a short-sighted objection.

.''If
I was hit by a truck, yes," I
said, feeling a bit foolish. Who
was this Hopper? ~hy hadn't I

.•·
heard of the name? Why was Lin-
da so excited? I decided to fake it.
"Oh,

you mean
Com'modore
Hopper," I said in what I imagin-
ed to be a very convincing man-.
ner. "Yes, yes. Of course. The
guy who took Lionel Richie's
place, right?"
"Oh, honestly, John,"
she
said. "You're
always
-joking
around."
_
...
Am I?"
Am I? Why didn't I
know about this Hopper person?
Some investigation was in order,
and here are the findings.
.
~mmodore Hopper (not, as I
.

If
you remember, Marist first
approached Jane Pauley, NBC
newscaster and more importantly
the wife of someone who would
have been a good speaker (Garry
Trudeau), and Diane Sawyer of
CBS, apparently because so-
meone gets the two womeif con-
fused. We're lucky we didn't end

up with Connie Chung.
These two fine members of the

news media, sadly, were
other-
wise busy -
most
likely
lunching
with neighbors.
This opened
the
way for what is now known
in the
inner administrative circles
as1he
"Hopper bid.''
The offer was accepted at
once
"Yes, yes, I thought you were
great in that, but there's a pro-
blem with your matc~irig up with
one of our programs of study.
You see, there is no drama .
department. Have you any idea
how many times we've had to
turn Laurence Olivier down?
Finally, he just stopped asking."
"Olivier, my foot. I was in the
original 'Odd Couple,' for crying
out loud."
"Jack, believe me. If there
were anything I could do ... "
0 Yeah, sure. Well,

thanks
~nyway,-" he said, and hung up as
I thought that it might be only for
the lack of a zoology department
that Marist hasn't engaged an
organ grinder and his monkey for
the occasion .
•.
Nearly ten years· ago,
on
April 30,
·1975, th~ city of Saigon fell, marking
the official end of the Vietnam War. It
marked the end to a tumultuous
p~riod in the history of this country .
But. f9r some, the war and its ef-
fects sti:11
linger in 1985 -
ten years
later.
\
On April 25, the Viewpoint page of
The Circle will recognize the ten-year
anniversary of the end of an era by
dedicating the entire page to the sub-
ject.
The Circle welcomes submissions
frpm anyone-who was directly or in-
dfrectly involved in the war;
E_ssays sh_ould be typed, double-
spaced, 500-700 words. Send to Pete
Colaizzo, c/o The Circle, by April 22.
'
I
'J
I
i,
I
':~~-~
•'ti
)
1,
j
)













































































,
-
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.
'
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·,
:~·
--•
P•r,•
6
~
THEiCIRCtE • Apr.18,-1985
, • •
• -
• :> ----•
.:.,,
1
• ,.
~·>~·-<-:<.:: ·-·~~
... _ :-,
' ..
~' ~,::·
·-0.'?·;·:
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.. "~-;-,;_;
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....
/
1
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..
_,~;;_·~.-\·,·{_}_ri.:~i.:,·_.·
__
;_;~_-_
...
_:,,,·1,:,•.l;_:~.'-:.:.·
___
~.,~;:_~_~~.'.'.~}t_.';:,~_
..
J:.~-:.t,;:-.·~~--~~2~:_·_·,.r
__
,.· _·.
•--~-\-
·:.:!'~
:) r_.:.
r:::~
-
..
;.\\/-:
::i

• _By
K~n;it11
F.
~--~ke~'i~)\\
, .:
approa~h :._··an~
• .t~h1;_11qu~
'.{:~~~\_q~~;
he-w1lfs¥~iecii
jn_.~,kmg)JIS
~
:
..
!h~.
~v~i:a~e·faµ
1fn(?,th_kely
to .run
3-: . .. ·
>.-.
· • • ~-' -• ''/ ·:,-.__
•. '., >'
r·-,t
·_
·f•'i
/ii: •
; :
rooted
In
rock !n'• rol~. ~1thJ_yr1c~
:{.-a,~d_1enc~
a'.w.~r~,.9.(tije
!SS~~s
~or~ .. ,;,
J_nf9.
e~the1}of,Jliec,t~o.
~~C<_?~df_~gr:::
·• :·
• . The late '70s_'saw nse to a style that represent. the', human:rex-,,. keenly. than·:tliose who' take:!'the· ,;. at, sa)'., K-Mart-;.-i•'.Ol:;,,'f
:: ·?-
1
;;,-._,i;.;,
:::
~
•.• , :
of .:
music.:
:called : •minimalism. perience. ·His lyrics'deal_ not.with~•:iwnole-• worldi" is-~ damned,.~,
;:ap.""_-·'.;
Also :w<>rking
·against-hini~is ;a (
~
. Thos~ . wllo_ fi!sC pioneered '!he . the outside, •~or:~d
_an~.
how: i~. !n~:-.:_'p~oach/?;
1 ;'.
(:_,:;;;,:~-
\f
;Y,_::'._.i'."'..
·.;·
·-'\..:: ~·
~rit!sh·-?~~~t.t so,.-thick;: that;
~f-:
i(>
.
'
style •did so 111
reacuon to the high fluences people
·but.rather•
with\ .-.:.
Many-of: the characters ·m • hts
,;
,were·(,a
:~disease;.~he-~
would,:rbc-,. ·
;· technology. and super-recordings . how people mentally- !;lnd.1
emo~
.
songs ar~ in"thanime·9f_their lives·'.·
:qu'arantinedf1~
~:tH~-.~-:i~t~?i[,\;i~\~i~~:
..

cif :thattinie~


• •
, tionally make sense of the day-to-'., in which tli.ey
try
fo make sense of.· •
.. :.;A.thfrdcpioblein'for:hhn-;is"·ex.:."l-:
A treasure
named·
Artists such· as Laurie Arider~ day world; Through
a
blend of of
:°s
the world.that-they have· just been' -::"posuie~;;"-Currently/\.:Bragg·:•.
tait.i ;.:-·
son, ·• 'Philip . Glass. 'and· The philosophy,. humor· and story-
thrown·iilto: His concerns ie".~r ::,-'seem
(o;~q~rate'biµy' the coll~ge?-·
Ramones created music that· used • telUng, Bragg -• sends
.•
out· lyrical. not those· of teenagers (~oming :of ;(radio; market;, Also~: except[ f 01'.:
at:,_ •
as • little· ·instrumentation and statements that ai:e as.sharp and•_ age)·or'. of adults (zzzz)but:those•?tvery:~smalFieview'.:iii\'tfie.c:Village}/
•.-
technology as possible, choosing biting as • the ele~trfo guit~r • riffs who a~e.
h:t:ve
grow.n:ti:I'
,a~dJou,iid\'.
r~1ce;{_tlifrp~Ic!~t~~s7,
afa;wh?lef.
,
..
instead to ·challenge the listener to that fly· around .everywhere and that- bfe 1s not the Joyride tliey . • has not- p1ck~d
·up on him.· Let's :
• . use personal interpretation· and back up his singing,
• -.· thought it was. His" characters d~ • • hope.Bragg ,foes not get lost iri the ~-
imagination in place of studio
Consider this passage from
'!
A -_ not wapt to be ·childr~it' an~ore _: shuffle
Qf
·•.hype
•. given/ to {
Billy -
B~agg,
/
I
_
'Oesperately
Seeking-
-Susan'
gimmickry.. .
_ . . ___ New England/'
-·a·· tale ·.of, nor do theywantJobe filed_µ~~er·: ,:A,m~i'.ica~§;;;~~~)-ga~age·}
ban.ds .:_ •
_
Whiletoday many of those who unreturned , love: : "l _ saw,, two: ,''adult.•~
•.
:
:',:':;;,:if"·:
·;:"·\•,,
••
tf("_'."/-,•(wtii~h
is .''.the·next big ttiing'.!); /:
r
< •
first-·__ experimented


with ·.shooting stars last,rught s~·lwish~
-'~'.Despite_Bragg>s·charm,
·several \>::·But Bragg seems.the ki~d ofar,._~,:~:

minimalism have giyen in to sonic ed on ·the~; but- they were only :· things stand in_ the{ waY,_-~f'.hi~
':--;tist•.w'10.
will not compro~ise his}, ..

·-
added instrumentation in ··the sateUites. Is it wrong
.to
wish on a_chieving·
even•
a:.
moderatelsized_:.
;style' fof,fame and .'fortune/He/
_
•.
hope of.reaching a wider audience space . hardware? I· wish • you ' following ,in -the United.•.
State~: ••
.• appears to view,\vhat he does as·a .~ .: ..
(without --much . success), an cared.''
.
.
. • ' · _ First is a·'major.'. label recording : creaiive,expressioi(:arid;if,people'.i
E_nglish_man
~am~ Billy __
Bra_gg
oi:i~
'.
of th,e _Iµ<>St
·._
satisfyill:g co~tra~t::
~,r,~.i&'f
}\".!-?.-.•~
~lJ:!µ~_S;
i:
Hice it,, ~hc:tf,allcJ!.t,7.-:.~ei~er.;~r
Q~'.~-
has arrived with simply his voice • quabt1es about Billy Brag~; 22, 1s .-"L1fc=~_s_~,R1ot_W~t~:~PYV~.•;~PY~l
'';: <;an1t
call th~tJ?ragg1ng;
::,,,•>:,•'.-:·v•'.·

and electric guitar to show that that he does nof attempt to tackle· • and • "Brewing

Up -: with • Billy
.
:. : : OF NOTE:
:
Bragg's second<
minimalism is alive and well and issues that are beyond his reach.: ,J3i-agg,''. ca~ be foilnd:in the:hn< _albtim.', ,·· "Brewing . UP.::?' <is':;'
that, in some cases, less is more.
He'll tell .you. his stance·_
on an • port bins ofsome record
·sh.ops
-in•---•,
available from· CD;Presents Ltd.,•--•
At, first"listen, Bragg may ap- • issue by relating it to a personal. the_ area, iilcludiiig-:Record':Gity ·-'.1230 Grand:Ave.·Si:Jite·531:: San)
pear to be a pseudo-folkie; Yet his experie_nce. And in that techni-
and Cardinal,Puff.at::Vassai/ptit
'Francisco, CA; 94133~ .:. ,.
--:.

'
'

'

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'

'


'
..
'.
.•
._-

-··
, • -
.,
;..
.• '"'
,,
_-

»

. .
'.
'
• ,.,
.-
.
'·_
..
-· ' •.
•. By Beverly Morlang
•as far as Madonna is con'cerhed,: :
why
theY~ajc'i:$4"t<>
~~f(;/i:
~:ff:·:'.}
hef~elf'·t~-b~
;hit°o'~\he
ijJd~
j~;.~(
·
but I know now that first impres-:
<
Thf plot· .begin~ with· Roberta_,'. i~g her memory right out.

• ; .
. .
-~ • When· I
first
heard • of
_ '.'Desperately Seeking _Susan,"
my· first, heartfelt reaction was,
"Blechh. ". My second reaction
was a reasoned explanation to my.
friends .who were going to see the
movie of why I·_
intensely dislike
Madonna (after all, the gall • of
anyone who would name herself
after the mother of Christ). •

'· But then the·reviews came out
ptaising the film as a· bright,· fun-
ny
and unJque comedy. _I could
wait no long1:r. I had to find out
for myself, arid maybe I've_ been
too hard on this Ma,donila person.
• sions should be heeded;'.
.
.
.,reading the ; perso_nals·,_::columrt
• -~. J"he plot. seemed so. familiar/
"Desperately Seeking Susan" . from_· the.,
paper{
·[_Afr,
Jid .: titled ,·: an,ct tlien it hit .me; it came .right
is a confused comedy of errors in~ ''Despefately;:/Seelciµg:·,f.$usari''.:;-)oui of an episode
e>f
.''Gilligan's
-
volving two women: RosaiinaAr-
{ah,·yes; thetiUefcatches-liereye;< Island." What a novel id!!a:

··•-
?
quette as Rob_erta,
_ a frustrated; She decides·.
,t°-/.vi~rl,~~5-ly
:Jive:; t,; ·_Of course, Robert~ •s ~mrie;i~ if·
bored housewife, ~nd Madonna
throu~h:t~~.l~".~~,o(S,usan.ind_~er
., cured by ,another· whack on .the:
. as a half-baked weirdo wh~ runs boy.fn,end, J1xµ,,·,t~:'\P~opl~ )h~ . h~ad, but 'by then it's to~ late-:'-
afoul of t~e mob'. Arquet~e 1s cute d?esn t even kl}o~~ .,-,.-•.. - ,, '. -
the mob doesn't care. Neither, for
as. the 'Y1fe. Madonna
!s
really. ·: She even go~_s.::..so;
far_·:as to. that matter; ·did:); The· film's·
quite .b~heva~le
a~ the weirdo (not fol!ow ~usan,~roupd and.bu~ her
hokey, soap~operii:sentimentality,:
. s~rpnsmg Judgmg from her weird Jacket, :~h1ch • S~san h~s __ besides· being tinfunny~•also.made
videos).
.
. . .
.
__
.-, t~ade~ m for 8:n eve°: we1rd~q~a1r the:.<: s·ioryliii.e ":~-completely
But th~ re~l crm:unal here
1~
the . of ~oots. The Jacket 1s ~he ~urnmg unbelievable:,·._: ... ; .

plot, which 1s so screwed up and
pomt because Roberta·1s mistaken
•• • ':
>::: . , '
principally unfunny that t_he au~·_ for~Susan by_ everyone, including
• _Unfo~tunately, "Desperately
• I'm St!ll not sure whether1 have,
-
dience is left to ponder upon what the mob. Roberta- doesn't_. help_, ,See.!dng,Susan" left me desperauf •
_ it has just seen. And everi worse, ·matters w~~n sh:{oo!!shly allows'-·
):,r
s~e,k,i~g,
a!l ~xi~.,. "' '.:, . , ... ,
.:t
Thursday, April 18
9:30 a.m.
"The Wizard of. Oz"
Theatre
••
12:00 noon -
Mass: Chapel
12:30 p.m. :
"The Wizard of Oz"
• Theai:re
3:30 p.m.
·ucrosse n. Skidmore
Away
S:00 p.m,
Social
Work Recognition
Pub

5:00 p.m.
MCCTA
Bomfmmlng
Can~lelight
S:l0p.m.
.
Evening Prayrr: C~apcl .
6:00p.m.
_
:
Computer
Oraanlzlillon
Review
Session
Leaming Center
7:30 p.m.
Film:
.. Invitation au Voyage.,
No
admission charge
9:30 p.m.
Sophomore Pan1:
.......
Sponsored by
Champagnat House Coundl
Dining Room
9:30 p.m.
Stad<at Acadffl.lc
Commltttt
CC269
-Friday, April 19
··9,30 a.m. •
Josten•• ttpresenlatlve
in Donnelly_
until :
2:30 p.m.
J:OOp.m.
Communl1y Unity Barb«ue:
'~ThiS one"s far you"

ftaturing
the band
"Touch" sponsored by : .'
the Student
uague
'
McCann Fields,
.
-
: •
No admission charge
,
5:00 p.m.
•.
Mcrv-
Mm's 1ennls vs. Drew··· •
• Channel 8
7:30p.m. :.
Film: "The Big Chill"·
CC249 - Admission
SI ";th
Marist I.D.'
7:30 p.m.
"lnvltallon au Voyage"
D24S
No admission charge
Mm·s Tennis:
ECAC Metro
at FDU
Tndo: Rutger s relays
Sa111rda)'
Aprll lO
0
6:ISp.m;·
·:
.• Mas.,:
_Chapel
_ • 9;00
p.m. .
:
• Cultural dinner dance:
sponsored by
ilsu • •.
DiningR~m
• AIIDay

Admissions
Open House
Campus Center
Sunday,
April 21
11:IS a.m.
_._-.
MW-Chapel
2:00 p.in. • :
Dinner: Slama _-•
Phi Epsilon • Pub
,
,
7 &.9:30
p.m.
FIim: "The Big Chill'.'
\\:fr··
;~~,--.--.;I
.. ,·,,,-~"'"'''·"'
1l")' 3
·-:.,.,,s,:-,'-:..c,:.i;·••.,,,~~~·:·-:e:_:;,,·~~}'"',:,J.~"•.
it1)J[
~~1~'.~~1t4t~··
• -12:00 ·noon
-
,
Mus:
Ch~pcl
_3:30p.m:
. Mtn·s lennls
· • vs. Qu\nnipia~ ..:...
CC249
_ _ _ .
.
Admission $1 with Marist l.D .. 7:00 p.m; -
,

_ MCl'V: Mca's lennls ,
_ 7:00 p.m.
vs. Siena -
The Allemate
Channel.8
Byrne Residence
7:30 p.m.
.Film: "Paisan"
D245 _
- No a~mission charge
7:30_
p.m.
Meeting: Circle
K
_CC248
• •
8:00 p.m. •
Mmlna:
..
. Champagnat
House Council
• CC269
. All Day.
AdlOlssloos
()pm
Hoose
• Campus Center
7:30_p.m.", -,c>
• ' S:JS 'p~m.
.· _
) Film: ,"Paisan"•
· M_eet1n1:,t1.11cr-Ho~. .
D245:- No admission_
charge
.

-~uncil
...,. Candlelight
7:30p.m. • .
ucta~: _: Crcati~e
writing in technical
-
fields: sponsored by
the
Literary ~etY

_: •
Fireside
8:00p.m.
Board MMtlaa:
BSU-CC270 ..•.
8:30p.m.
Gospel OJolr R .. esnsl
N~
Dining Room
9:30p.m.
l'llbNl&)II
9:4S p.m.
Medlng: .
Student League Chairs
CC270
---,~------•--
~~
.
_.-
~
.
,8;00 p.m.: -•~. •
• Rnlew-Smioa: ·
.. Intro
to Pascal

. learning"_Center
9:30p.m.
MMtlar,··
Black Student Ur.ion·
CC248A •
9:30p.m .
;Mtetlar,
Mcrv.:...cC248
9:30 p.m.
Mffllaa: -
Communitation Ans Society
CC269
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ROOSEVELT
1,
2, 3
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4
Rte q_ Hyde Pork CA9 '2000
ACRES OF FREE. PARKING
. DISCOlJNTMATS
SAT.
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'.)'.:/·suN.·,At.'2:00
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Woody
Allen's,:, , .

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ROSE~OF.-CAIRO··
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· ffowmqch.love,
se,c,.fun
·and· ./
,- friend.ship
ca~-~ persoIJ
ta~e?, ·
They're·elgh( oidfl"iends
~lio
haven't ~l'.l·ead1()ther/
since the.sixties; 5,earching for something they've lost


A_nd
finding all they need is each other.

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COUMa.
l'ICTURES
l'resenls
A.CAASON
PRODUCTICNSGR<X9.
Ll:0.
l'ROOOCTIOl'I
d
A U\\llfNCE
MSIWI film
'
.
MTHE
BIG
CHILL~

.
.
10M
BERENGER
• GLENN
CLOSE
• JEFF
GOLDBLUM
• WILLIAM
HORT
• -
.
KEVIN
KLINE·
MARY
KAY
~LACE·
MEG
TILLY
• JOBETH
WILLIAMS
=CAROL UTTlETON
~~$.JOHN BAILEY
~LAWRENCEKASOAN&
,
• BARBARA
BENEDEK
~MARCIA NASATIR
AND
LAWRENCE
KASDAN
.~:~~~MICHAELSHAMBERG ~~LAWREN~~~~~-
..
@
FRIDAY, APRIL 19TH
7:30
p.m.
SUN,DAY, APRIL 21ST
7
&
9:30
p.m.
$1 Admission with College
1.0.
l .
.
• Api.18,
1985 •
THE CIRCLE•
Pagd
1--
·Murray's:·plan: Cal)lpu·s reaction
,
.
''.
, .. By
Rose Hazelton •
According to philosophy in~
':''i/'•'
:,:,1•'.:
:,
,
:,?, , ,.:., '_, , ·
structor· Thomas Casey, ·the. col-
Marist College President Den•
lege needs· greater administrative
nis'J:,Murray said in a recent in-
centralization in the areas·ofplan-
.
, , terview thauesponses to his pro~ ning and policy. Ca_sey
pointed to
.• poi(ed · execufrye
.
.restructuring
the areas of increased enrollment,
,, ha~e·ranged from s,!lort and s11c-• bu~get, and academic programs .
. • cirict statements likeC,great idea'·'
.
"I
have no substantial reserva-
• to >·te~gthY. memos suggesting· tions about the proposed plan ex-
complct~ly different a_lternatives. • cept that I might \wish it had come
: "My job is to suggest what is
I
earlier," Casey said.
.
best for Marist College; and my ;
Academic Vice P,resident An-
• plan reflectS:that thinking," Mur-
i
drew Molloy said that an ex-
ray said;, ··,.

.
• ecutive vice president would be an
The . memorandum. of .March
asset to the structure because the
14, .198S,- stated. that. Marist's , Marist community would have ac-
growth and complexity called for • cess to someone in charge when
an alternative executive structure' the president is not available.
incorporating a new officer, an
"The executive vice president
executive· vice president to serve represents the president and bears
as the -coordinator for internal
the responsibility of making deci-
operations, as wen' as changing
sions in the president's absence,"
the "Dean" positions· of student
said Molloy.
, affairs and admissions a·nd,enroll-
Another Marist administrator
menf to "vice president" posi-
said the change would not affect·
tions. •
her department greatly.
. The.
vice . presidents • for
Financial Aid Director Karen
academic affairs; student affairs,
Atkins said that her department
and administration· and finance
will be reporting to Vice President
wiU report to the executive vice James Daly instead of Dean
president, while the executive vice , James Daly. "And there has
president and vice presidents for
always been real support from
admissions and enrollment and . • him,"
Atkins said. "Change
· college advancement will report
tends to bring good things."
.
to the president, according to the
In contrast, Marist Computer
memorandum.

Center Director Cecil Denney said
,. In · recent interviews, • • some the proposed structure reduces the
Marist adminstrators and faculty
center's ability to influence • and
members agreed that an executive participate in the college's future.
vice presid~m p9sition is an asset
"Marist claims to have • com-
to the organiz~tion, but most said
puter technology as a key element
they felt. the' plan demotes the
in the strategic plan for the
academic _,;affairs office
and
future. However, the reorganiza•
isolates the president froi:n faculty
tion seems to ignore information
inpu~·•-_;
,


management as a resource," Den-
ney said.' • .
, .
Molloy said that the proposed
plan . implies a demotion for the
academic vii;e president position.
'.'My
own perception is that the
office has been demoted .. I'm
disappointed • in· the proposed
structure that the academic vice
president no longer reports to the . •
president,." said Molloy.
. The mission of a college is to
promote academics, he said .
"The academic vice president has
to work closely with the president
to implement this mission."
But Murray said the academic
vice president will continue to be
the chief academic officer of the
college. "In no way is this posi-
tion demoted,"
Murra~ said.
"The
reorganization
will
strengthen this office," he added.
• Joann Trimble, associate pro•
fessor of computer science,. and
Dr. Eugene· Best, assistant pro·
fessor of religious studies, also
noted.. that the proposed· plan
isolates the president from faculty
input. "The plan is removing
faculty one step further from the
president," Best said.
Another concern shared by
many administrators and faculty
members is· that the offices of ad-
missions and· enrollment and
academic affairs will not work
together in the new structure.
Molloy said that the proposed
structure doesn't preclude the two
offices working together, but the
plan doesn't promote it either.
"But whether the ·communication
will break down depends upon the
individuals, ''·said Molloy.
]3X~ilientor
joins· foreign service

.. By
:'.f~ra
Scanio~
.Rex
he's wanted to do since he was 15.
Patterson,
former - freshman
is doing· what . mentor, left Marist last Decembe_r
\
.
.
\
APRIL.ACTIONS FOR
PEACE;JOBS
&JUSTICE
*
Friday,
April
19-Multi-Faith
Se.rvice
*
Sunday,
April
21-Training
Sessions.
for Monday's
Events
*
Monday,
April
22~Lobbying
al Congressional
Offices
on Capitol
Hill
Hon-violent
CiVil
Disobedience
at the
White
House
MARCH
&
RALLY
WASHINGTON,
DC
SATURDAY, APRIL 20
Buses
reave
from
NYC
pcrnts
at 6 AM.
retumi~
that
evening.
R011nd
trip ticket
is
$20
Clpa,flfttlllltllT ~Ac""'5.22IU1!1$Ll1Tt10011 • Fo-"""oOlo.-_
2l22lH990.2426167,2421040.673-ISGa
.IIICRSS
If
P!OIE
::tw¥tl0~~
...
~AC1ie,'ls
C;llrnt
;;,.,,...,._00~10w~ocror,,.,,.21:111>
;,1_..10_.,
l.lct:ty,,,g. --~~onAul22"<1
"'Here'U.,,..~101'etl~11,eAp'f-
GStOO
-:sso
,.,$25
os,o nss
I
!()Iller
$ __
~~Nc,-fll0t'"-~4CCP~C,,1:rf"l(J'f~
♦-
to -work as a foreign service of•
ficer for the U.S. State Depart_-
ment.
. _ .. _ .
.
.
.
.
.
He leaves for his first assign-
ment - th_e
Philippines :_ today.
"l'rri
happy to .be in East
Asia," he said. "But I· would
have,preferred China because of
my training
and educational
background:" Patterson speaks
· Mandarin
Chinese
and
has
studied Chinese culture.
During the year and a half he is
in the Philippines, Patterson will
be a vice consul officer. He will
represent the U.S. government by
providing services to Americans
overseas and by ' issuii:ig non·
immigrant visas to qualified
Phili.ppinos.

But the consular work that Pat-
terson will be doing is not the only
type of work foreign service of-
ficers do. The foreign service is
divided into four branches, or
"cones." An officer can work in
the consular
cone, the ad-
ministrative cone, the political
cone, or the economic cone. Ac-
cording to Patterson, each officer
is usually assigned to two or three
of the divisions before they can
specialize.
Patterson became interested in
a career with the foreign service
when he was a sophomore in high
schooJ. He explained that his Ger·
man teacher at Poughkeepsie
High School "recognized that I
had a tale!'lt for languages, and
noted my interested in history and
politics." She suggested the field
oi diplomacy.
Also this year, Patterson won a
scholarship that sent him to Ger·
many for the summer.
"I enjoyed the exposure to peo•
pie different of cultures," he said.
For Patterson, getting into the
foreign service was more diffecult
than making the decision. There
are several steps that everyone
who wants to be hired by the State
Department
must go through.
The first is a written exam
which tests areas of knowledge in·
eluding history, economics and
American culture, according to
the former mentor. This test is
given once a year.
If a person passes the written
Continued on
page
12
·~·
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. By Mi~~~e,
'Scot,
Mueller)\{
.r:
nQton!y'con~erned
with
ae:a,demic
: gr~at assc:t to: the student.s,.
!~I
pro~·.,\
t
res_h~~l}ou~{ p~~~~:i~e''·:rhent
/' t~'\~o'~i~a.~s'.)find','.~}nt_~r~eiijiit-;:!
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bably wouldn't have seen,Amato ,,•tors,wereh1redaspartof.thepro-

before, .a ,·student's.
·situation'
,:' Wit1{;1~~liii~irt11r~e
weeks,ieft he said,' ,for social'. arid , personal • if
:he'
had: a·it office'. somewhere':· gr~m: T.he remainder-or,ihe class,\'.·:hecom~'giave~
1
f/:'{:.: '· ~/.~ :,.:':{_;·.:
•':··. • •
in. the/se.~ester,:'.college officials guidance.'· .. ·,. ; •
,
:, :".~. ·
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'.
else.,,.; . •
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\. ' another:~~. f~eshmen~ ~~je''.fal\<l.:tj,s~¢iAf ~orm~,'in:th'e·freshnian
-~:;
~.
project·that fewer
'.than
120Jo of
,'.'Freshman can see the1r:men-
. After meetmg with the mentor;': . domly ·h~use~:and .. we~e not:part,- ·: resideilce.halls·coricerning. noise,··: • ",.· ·: •· ,. •\
the freshman class will not return ·•· tor for any:reason,'~ !illlato said, Reardon .said he .''.woke up'\fo a ..• -of the prograrn'.J;<.:>{r:•
,
\ :({:,>/·alcohol,} room:.• c9nditions•: and.:; '.·
.
to Mari_st}'.:ollege
as sop~o~or~s- : "whether it ?ir~ct.ly or in~ifectly , fot of th!ilss:!_'A01ato·.
wi!l ·s~·ow , ..
'·"A··' ·,
d: \"::.•
~"
ih :
i_ '.
:::r
i<_:
it''J;::\di~c~pli~~\are:~s~n,: ,s ;_
an_ot~er:?· .••
, The· sh1~h
• . fres~man _r~t~n!IOO relates to0t_he1r:!1fe
at _the c9ll,e~e.''. you spec1fict~10gs·
th~t win h~p- ,
LaJ~fte,
1
i~:~i.arii
o~l·n
;r..s~~" .. ·,~et~r.re~t
~()
_at!rltl~n'.
:.'7: :: \::.;:/::{
•.
;
'
rate,· college officials said, ·is. due
Freshmen , mterv1ewed· cited • pen_. to you. 1f your. acadermcs . d. t Aff . • '"Th k' .. t • •th ' • ·•. . , 13 · .. ·t·h
•. f urf.
1980 Sh ahan
·.,
in parf::to'•the freshmari·'.mentor several reasons why the inentor .•• slide;'' Reardon said. "He:really , e.n ·. ai~st····h'
··, -~ ..•
,e~:•t
1
~:pr,!t,:,ti'
1
·
1
Y,,,
.C:,
!l.
o '"rt·ed·
·
'.i, · :,.
"'at ·
• prograrrt; which·.
is compietfiig its program >made
a
difference in • shows a genuine .interest: in his. • gft
11
r~t·.
h el1?:8r~."'fh.
11
t~9-~-:.':
r""!l
~,;,r'l:lli :t\f~ye ••
,, '/.M·~·{' .. ·.•
'; ••
• sixth year::,: .
.•.
::->
·
their freshman year. • •
.·,.;.
.
• students and Lthink ~hat)nspires . • s .. 1P es;
is
J
te_w~~·- ,e nthe!l~
• :Hresll•blllan:~~~ih.
en~~•d~
1983
ap~~: ;'
• o:,.,:,;
, , .•. • •
.
.
.
.
.
. .
people."
:
., ... ,_;· ,.
.,. ; . toL~? . stu en.
I?.
is o.r, e~... a
e~,met .~t 1r ..
m
. :
,:
Th~; Marist freshman rei:~ntion
"Having_ a mentor clar}!ies a · Both fr~shmen agreed that.the . a~ea. • • . . ·; .
!.
'
, : • • ;
i: ;, :.
Io· add1t~qn
J~
,the five ,resi~ent .
rate hasHricreased from<650Jo in lot of . thmgs . freshma1;1
: ~on'L
·
counseling· a mentor prov\des Js .: . }'h~ me.ntor~ ~re ~so re~~o.nsi-
•r.
p:t.entor~,
,.a' c~~:m~ter _and>o{f~ :
.
1977-'78/t<>'
.•
its • current level of understand," said Jeff N1co~1a
o.f , necessary for adjustment into the • bl.e, for· co01m1ttmg academ1caUy, carnpu~ mentop are ~lso avada~le >' ·, • ',. •
87:7iOJ.o'.,
an increase of 22~'72oro,
• Bell!1)ore:
~ gr~at d~al otmf~r-
collegelifestyle.
.
..

i •.· .
weak ~tudents (below J.7 g.p.a):
for.themcreasmgstudentbody.'.•'·<
Retentior( rates•· of siiniiari'size
mauon, N1cos!a. said; ,rang~11g
.
"Everyonds in the·same boat
--•--•--•--•-------•--••llli-•--~---
schools :wcfre
unavailable for com-
fr~m ~cade_m1cs to • h9,1:1smg
: when you come here,'' • ;said
parison., ,:; ·
• •. , ,
pomt~:
is avadabl~ fromJhe ~en-
Nicosia . ..
"By
putting freshman
: .. /
"There?is• no· doubt the mentor • to!s. A ment~r kdls rumo~s, • he • into their own dorms·and offering·
./
progran(has had a positive°:effect sa1,~-


. •
.
• help if" they need it· shows the
on
!
fr_eshman · students,'.'. :,, said
I would have been
10
a dif-
school cares if the students sur-
Peter Amato; one of five 'resident • ficult situation nqw,'' said; Don· vive.,,,
. ,
.
: •• .. · ' • . • •
•.
mentor~;-/'The figures prqv.~ that Reardon. of Hanover, ~ass:; "if : .• Before the mentor progr~in was
a freshman is. in need of'.many a mentor weren't avadable for .initiated, freshmen were random-
suppqrtservicesduring the·c·rucial me."
. .
ly placed throughout the dqrms,

first yeat/'


.... ;-:.·
Reardon explained thatthe fact In 1978, Leo Hallbecame the first
Aniato· s.aid that mentors. are that mentors live in the do.rms is a
freshman dorm, housing
289·
S'fJNy
sf.uilents unite:·
!
FiiFJ,fnifV drir,kingiage
By Gin~
,~nciscovich
cording to sources • at • Senator
• Representatives of SASU base
. _ . .
Frank Padavan's office. • •
their opposition to the bill. on
.1
. ·
A group of students at: SlJNY
. Sterlirig recalled a ''lobbyday"
some very conflicting· statistics.
New Paltz.is continuing the.fight where members of SASU met Sterling claims thafof the 19 and
again~hhtproposed bill t() raise with assemblymen in favor of the 20~year-olds who drive, over 99
the drinking age to 21 iri' New change and tried to c.orivince the • percent have never been involved
~
• , York Siate.
.
) .;
assemblymen of their • point of . in an alcohol related automobile
L
1
SASlJ,':.the Student Associa-
view. SASU is arranging another • accident:
, , tion o(the State Universify/• has lobbyday
·tci •
be h'eld in. Albany
·~
• I
.
taken ori its own most effective • this Tuesday. Buses win transport
• •· • •
means; .persistent petitioning and .students .from. state utiiv.er:Sities st erHng also claimed that by.
lobbying 'efforts; to fight the pro-
who wish to rally againsfthe pro~ raising· the. legal age· to 21 ,: the.
inth·e·r>
COMMUNITY
SERVJCE
COFIPSJ·.
·sERVE:

.•·uvE:
'BENEFITS:
.,
';'
.
..
I
C
~
inner-city
children
arid families;·
homeless
t>e.r-,
so.ns
. • •
• •
/
ecumenical.
community·of
csc·volunteers

p~r~onafa~{professi,onal
growt~.:stipen~,
i ••
• ho~sing'and
~ealth
insurance • ·:: .• ••

COMMITMENT:·
one~year
program·or
summer
program
• Please
contact:_··:
COMMUNITY
SERVICE
CORPS,·
CATHOLIC
CHARITIES
OF.
SYRACUSE
1654 W;
Onondaga
St
Syracuse,
NY 13204 ,
. (315)
424~1804
' '
.
.
.
.
goverrimen.t_'.'will;
not.· necessa~ily '
, '.·
posed-cha·nge of-the state's,legal posedbilL ..
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·.•·
'.Assetiib~yin~n•
~iephe~;·Sala~d •
.• be .~~;
1
it
J~:.~~~'ci;;
·ti~ed
••
td
th/'

· Kathamie
ambs.EN'I'REE~·
:. , .
...
~n~wee~~that'p~yQu~~~
1.
SASUi:.h.~lped.
defeat ..
the.-pros an.cl Glenn Wap:~n .are.am~ng tlJe ..

privilege· of drjnkiilg ar.e sud,denlyf
- posed:billd~st year through/·its·efa., state repr,es7n.t~~.IV~S
~~o v.~~~?;!11:.
banriedirorii\bars;- they'·wm'jils(-
1
.
·,
forts;'::\-'ad:oip'ing ·•·to</ ~lected

: favor
pf.
ra!smg · tlte. drm~i~g ag~ ·: drinkiri their carst'iSterlirig said/:'.
·' · d_elegaJ~/: Chris
'
SterH'rig;
a .
w~en ltC<1I1_1e
b«!for~
the A~~.7.Tbly

·.•
President
Reagan's
proposal to
..
·.·••·freshm.~!i'.at
SUNYNewPaltZ.
!asst
Y
1
eard,
.•.•
•• d.
·w. .
·b ..
·.·
.-·
. h. adopt a nationwide drinking age.
,_
:.•.,-,
._.
a ~
0
.,.-_a_~
_
-~
--_-~rre~:·:
~s~~~µc_
_ o_f 2l -i_s··supj:,Orte~LbY
the fede~a1--
.
. . · :?:<
';./
.·•·•
.•
'/'.;!/: •
of their suP.port of theb1U,on the go".ernment's
:threat
.to . reciuce
Governor • Mario Cuomo/ has
c~mespondmg .· de~re3:se_,:,m.
~ ac- .. federal highway funds .. Sterling.
given )op:priority to rai~ijigthe·
c1~ents w~e~ the drm~mg ~geyvas. ·calls
thi:S . threat . "federal
drinking ?ge. The issue remains at
raised from 18.to19 m New:York

bla kma·l ,;: ·::
a 50-50 chance or·.
passini{, ac~ . State.
C
I •••
':
•.
\\~-·_:·_'::
,P&ilickiffg about tlif1t resume?--·
'
1
Tiitze htl$n
't
rtJn out -
yet,
;;~>'
B)f,i~(Rul>f
<\,'.
".The resume is· a ~arketing
emphasize the resume without .
,
: •
::::·:\/,

...
;
.: . ...
• i;{:.


tool," he said. "Present yourself. looking-at ·what really goes·_irito

:Gra.d.li,ating
,: seniors ;:,. who as·· someone they want to hire. • getting the job," he said. "The •
haven~f}_siarted )ob hunting Of; Aim· at their needs, what: they're .. resume is
.
to get you that inter-
'.haveri't;fbiind the job they.want looking fot.''
:
• , ..
.)j,::.'
. view. Thisis your calling card,":
stiH have(time 'to get 1(:good
Although

many large :·~om- .he said.-



resume\jogether, • accorqing to panies have already hired, tli.e per- •-•---•-----•
. Ray WeUs,<director
of
the:qareer
sonnel they will need for the
·next
.. Devel<>pment
Center at Mai:ist.
year, Wells said it's nottobJate
• · ••
: ···r;
• • •

< '' • ··•· for graduating seniorsto'stahjob
. ::·•.·The:firsi·stepin resume,writing. hunting . .Jt mayb~ unreali~tic;.he
.
'.;is no(tti:sit.dowriat the tyi{ewriter ·said, for a student to get;thejob·
\::' ':jhfii:
,;;.
~·cta.self~evaluatioMi;Wells he really•
wants b"graduatton,~ but
1\/ .·:~~~
ri.ifderit slfould loo~.'af his
• •
J
•· ,,
• •
''· • ";:'al~t
'¥:skills/knowledg~/ex-

~~~~~ti!
1
~ti~~~~~~~1~taller,
·'·periencJ/l(extra~cu'rriculari ac-
•· .
.
.. ,
...

•. tiviiies/. 'to decide what he:wants
.
"Don't ~ake assumptions on
,.
·and what-h'e has to offer; B{con-
who's hiring and when to apply,"

\.
0
,centrating:;on interests and:'skilis Wells said: "Research the-corn-
.i:,·
1
~~qne:ca'tf{a~velopgoals
anci:6,bjec- pany. Theffill needs as thef~ome
• -,-tm\ies~·said.
'·.
l •
:1~1~, ·
up. But it ·depends on
hi>.~
in-
:" : ~:C:-,f'rnef~"are
two·basic formats for dustrious a student is to 'genhe
•• • :'resumes:~ :chronological, ?which job now. You have to ·make it
-
emphasiies work experieric~ and happen, not ·wait for it·to hap-
educatiori; and functional; which pen " he said;

l

• emphasizes skills, according
to
~ells enc~uilg'es students to
Wells. College students. t~rid to research companies and career in-
. use the· ·chronological approach, formation in the library beforein-
unless they are looking • for -a
spe·
cial_
job.· which requires special terviewing.-Students can look at
job· opportunity handbooks and
. skills.,
The
chronological resume
.

c
D
1
'is alSbOthe most·widely aeceP.ted d1rectones in the areer .eve OP-'
-
ment Center, as well as set up an
resume.to employers, Wells said.
ioterview with Wells to explore
\.,,iAlt~~hgh he· can tell students resume writing ;ind job hunting
. ,?what;to-put in· a resume,.· Wells techniques.
•:.
••
:, {:.'sa.id;k'helps students most with
The resume is an imi,Qrtant
• ·:;•"~~pr~n·
· ·
. :
tool in job hunting but students
:· :'V{(f~•{!~:~bat
you have to
say
and shouldn't take it too seriously,
:: , ~.how ypa_:say
it," he said. "That's Wells said.
the mos{crucial thing."
"Students
tend
to • over-
PREPARATION
FOR: .
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Classes In· PQ.ughkeepsle
Begln~ing Now.
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.•
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,,
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~-·
kltu'JU.lll'fl


-
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assistance
available.
$end
for
oui
ENTREE
calaklg.
or caR
New
)brk:
(212)
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Name ··
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Address...c·
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ail
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••
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,TRANSRER::-t
•.
t
, ..
PHAR_,
~
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:··
·
7
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:
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at-1Jcit,g}1Slanc1.i1n1~e~
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,
>,
lt'S vour life and 1rs time
to
mal(e
the smart
deCI-: •
.. slon. Our new trimester program ~Hows_
transfer ' .
students
to
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In 2,~
Instead
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Enter se,.,tember,
January
or:Niav.
T.ike·ttrtmes,. ·.· •
ters
per
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3
trimesters;:',;.:-:
enroll
In our. flexible work:StUCSV
program.
Mia: :, -'·
. winter exams are held
befOr:e
the noncsav
recess .' •
,prov1a1ng
a vacation break betore tne start of • · .
'the"-~~~::.:_:'.>::.
: ·,,:: •
..
• •
Our graaOcttes
find.that
ttie
first
years
employ-
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of
their
full 4
years·
•· tuitlOn, or more
masea
on
toaavs
average.~trv-
.
:, level
salaries
tor
pna~
graduates> •.
,
•. :
Gradilates
hola top
P0Sltl<>~
In community pnar-
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OR
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OFFICE:
Far
ll'lfOrmaCIOn
or
to~aseat.
call
C718)
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.,
·I
.
,
,.·· ...
1111111
•·· 1111
-- ........
___
lilli!i
__________
._~-------111111111--llllil-----~--•Apr~18,1985-THECIRCL'E•Page9
--•
··.,
..
_,.·
""'.,,.

..
·.••.•.
.
..
/
.
·;···.
.
Ne\JV:SotiridS
:ride the 0:itWaves
of Marist radio station
.••
>·.->\.:;):·
·_:_,
:
.•
·.•
.
..
•.
':·,.··<··.'•:·
.'
:::
:
... :.t.:•_:,->
..
;;
.....
~
.·•·

•..•
•.
.
.
8,Y
J:~~ -~~1:'enna
'.
,.
.

.

The::' programming
:
has been ':' ,and thr_ough
:
promotfohs,
•:Which
Del Colle to become involved.
station could not take the con-

•'\/i:•:
i • •• •
• "···
.

··
..
·
boosted because for the'firsftime
-
'were mostly by word of'mouth.
Del Colle said he and Mark
stant wear and tear. WMCR now
";Tune
int6 ¥arist, College radio
/·iii
its history; WMCR is
'receiving '
"We're 'trying to
.build
a
reputa-
gave the management staff advice
broadcasts from 7:30 a.m. to 2
.
WMCR
and,you'_U really.
~e~
-~n
~albums frQm.•majorrecord com-··· tion for.ourselves," he said. '_'We_ about structure and organization,
a.m.
earful; Through a new
.music.for-:·.
panies through a record service~

,
.
.want
the same respect The C1~cle and , said they
.•
tried to make
Lack of space is also a pro-
mat; new albums and the help of




•.:,,
.
·'
•• .
•.
·.,
:,


':: ·,:
,.
receives.''



themselves available to help with
blem, said Flynn. "We need not
.·,
faculty. members the staticirl has a.
:

.•
•Th~·.
station

receives albums
••
:.
,
The news department, run by particular problems:
oniy office space, but more space
"new sourid."
.
.
-
',
.
:
..
:
fro~ such

record labe_ls
;as
Col-.
.
Gary Davis;. a
·junior,
has also
This semester, Del Colle said he
·fora
production studio," he said.


,.


•·
umb1a! War~er Brothers( MC~,

char,ged

for the better, Smith
is trying something new b.Y,
allow-
"We have to have everything in
•••
••

••

;
The' statiort's new.fotm'at is
·an.
,
Atlantic and· A&M,
_Lack.eY
said •.. said;
.with
the biggest change be-
ing
·
the
.
management staff to
one place. We can't keep running
·,
.,iintelligent
mix'..' of.old and new

"W:'re _·
gettirif a lo~. of:. n_ew
:
ing added consistency. Every
recei~e credit, under an· indepen-
over• to
the
media
center
.

music that can;t be heard 01{pro-

music,
.and
we re also bolstering
news program follows
;
a certain
dent
I
studies title, for work done
everytime we need some produc-

fessional. stations;.:: said·· Steve· our older album library,''. he add-
format, which include( reporting
for
:
the station.
He stressed
tion done. That creates problems

Lackey,·WMCR;s music director.·
:
ed.
. . ·. .. .
.
.
.
~
.
, more campus news than before,
however, that this is just an ex-
for everyone."
t,~k.: ey··,<a:J:ri~io_
/,· said the foi-•
Bill·Sm_ith',
ge11eral 1Da!1ager
_of ·he said.



i
periment.

Currently, WMCR does all of
-
WMCR; said the station 1s rece1v-

Del Colle described his commit:
its production of commercials
mads_'siiriple.:The DJs must.play
ing a
ilot
or· support from its
According to the
.management
ment to the station. "We don't
and station promotions in the
,
lf;. songs
'during.
a . three-hour,.
:members;
particulary freshmen.-->
• •
staff interviewed, the changes be-
want to be seen as someone who
Beirne Media Center, and has to
:.'sh·
·ow,.
whic_
h. is five_ s.o
ngs per


·
·
·1·ng·
made1 ·n WMCR
uld
t.
·

Program Director Ed Flynn,


·

co
no
just says no. We want to show
compete for time in the studios.
1h
our'.



said.the station is-too:percent bet-
'ha'l!e
been done withoilt the help
that someone does care," he said.
Smith said though, the changes
<·.
"We're striving for a'c~hsista~~;. ter'this year .because of the new
'of
certain faculty members.
WMCR still has its problems,
and the progress in the radio sta-
·'cy
in. sound,".>:· Lackey: -said .. format. He also said more people
Dr. Robert Sadowski, chair-
however, with the biggest ones be-
tion outweigh the problems. The
•••
11
B


h

t

d ori
.
are lfstenirig to. the station, an_
d
man of the division of arts and
ing equip·
ment trouble and lack of
station has not yet reached its
••
..

•.
e ore,

w en you
.
urne
.
:
.
·
"W ,
• "
b •
• i:WMCR
you wouldn't know what talking about it.
.
.
.

letters, said he decided the station
space.
.
.
.
peak, he said.
e re
JUSt
egm-

•·to.
expect: ;The·'jocks jusf piayed
,
,
·J:'lynri
':::•said:'
:ihe
'.station
..
_has

needed ·to become more visible
Flynn said the station no longer
ning, but. if we keep going in the
•their·
favorite' tun·es. Now', we've

bec·oinc' more noticeable because arid . asked
division
faculty
broadcasts 24 hours a day,
same direction we could be there
'·got
tighter programming."
·of
its non- commercial format : members Raphael Mark and Paul
because the old equipment in the
in two or three years."
/Spring
is in the air,

-(cind·in:::_th~·-mind,
too
'i
'
-.
~

.
'
f~y
Tom McKenna
approaches, the students
-j:>ecome
;-
more ·cheerful· and, gradually, the
!:
Soon, the ~pringtime, with i\s

winter '.'blahs" disappear .
..
warm temperatures,' clear, skies,
f
'
.
Of course, students are· not the
budding leaves and:singing, birds
,.
only ones who follow this sort of
:will give rise to an incurable feeb
,:
..
trend,
.•
according
to
Amato.
jng inside every human. It's caHe<;I
r
"Most of
.us
tend. to feel op-
'''spring
fever."
.•
-:-
• :
timistic
_when
the good weather
.
:
While the symptoms vary, most approaches,'' she said.


.
.
.
.
;Spring
fever sufferers report an
However,

springtime is not/
.increase,_
in physical
..
enemy~,
_an
..
:·,always,.a

good time. of
,_year:
fof
~

;
unexplainable
.optimism,.,
apathy·.
··everyone.
Scileppi said the suicide
,,. and
ari unwillingness tci b<nnside:
...
rate tends-to rise during this time
'. :,
According to experts,
}spring . :of_year.
-, • . • •
:
, • ;
.
.•
0:fever's
causes range JroIJl just a
;..
A,ccording to Scileppi, a ~ignifi-
·,rnental','.'
reaction t_o_
-_the:·.nic~f
~·•cant
m~mber_
of_people associate
.
~w,e_ather,.
to'~ ;~1}~_111,1<:~l:ch~J!~t:)r
,;:,.,9,e1m~~s1on;}Y~th
~ni;.&ad,
·'Y~.ath_er,

.··.
·j~·e'brain:(:;'.'~:/;,~,::'c':,;;t:;:;/:;
7:;,,--:-~~0~·-:--7;;uc'ii"
'as
•.
flte\s'riow•:ahd.
·
rain·.•
·of~-
'?
:
br.
Johri:,sdieppi, ari asso.ciate
·:
•winter.
As
.nicer
weather ap-
....
}professor
of psychology ~t-lvl:arist
<,'.·
proaches,
<
our moodfdoe~ii't go
.

J~ai~
people clearly change as the
••
away and w,et~ndJl-_feel_lefrout.


;spring
~pproa~he$.
·.•
.
'.
. ·. ,
....
"Everyone
,else
seems happy, and
.i
Scileppi said the change is more. you're not,» he
said.
This situa-
'a .
physical: one than mental.

tion may lead a person with a
Scileppi said chemicalsinside the
..
serious
:
emotional problem to
.brain,
called endorphrines, cause

commit suicide, Scileppi added.
,

Jheupbeat feelings in~ic:lepi:;ople,
...
Of.course,,the majority.ofpeo-
½
••
He said the chemica,l, ~hic;h is.
·.
pie aren't thinking of suidde and
• ..
similar. to- ~orphine; is
'secrete4
'
depressioff,during the spring. In
by the !?rain, wh_en,
..
we feeLgo9d.. the case.
of
students,
.
many are·
/',When:.we
•feel..good,''·',Scileppi
'-jusr
thinking about

b~owing off.·
,said,
''it
makes usJeel better,'?
..
:
·;
..
that afternoon dass to go outside
Seniors Mark Giufre, Kelly Stith and junior Barbara Fischer are unable to do more than
relax in the sun.'(photo by Maureen Ryan).
·
.
·


•.
i
.
.
•.
,>
In
.
!11~-~jprii:ig';'_;
th<,) w~rhjlr~:\abd

toss
a'
Fr.slice: or softball
·performance
of the student
~:weath_er
and longer days
,te1J.tto
,:.argun,d.,..c,:·>r'
..
,
.-~_,.
,_·,
·;>·
••
depends on his performance the
.
'.mak~
'the
averjlge pe~s?,i'h~ppier))b~§till;-·
-Jqµ{t9,til.j>f
_:-five
'
i~s •
_previous
semester.
. .
..
;and
mpr~ pp~~at.:f!'ps._!~
~lie11.tl}e_
..
structor~)r;it~ry1ewed
sa_1cl
~hat at_-
, ·
"The pattern generally 1.s
1f you
--- ,
.
:chemicals
go to work and make us

tendancecis not'the niairi':-problem did
poorly
;'
during
. •
the
'
fall
-
•••
,feel
l>~tter than we really are, he
.
du_ring spring. The biggest pro-. semester,
.you
do well
..
in the spr-
said.'~;:>.

·'·
• ··:·:··
• •
·,
••
··.'
·'

oleiil is the s~tidents~;at.tit~de.
-;

ing;,• said Bentley.
'
'.
,t°
Cieijerally, the spring weather
'<Stephen
, Bentley,'
·-the
'up-
·
·,
Students are not the only ones

:tends
to
make both students and perclassman
-mentor,•.
said the
·
who suffer from the onslaught of
%e instructors more ch~erful; and
··.-students
: have· «trouble
:
concen-. nice. weather., "We're. (Faculty)
''iess
Iik'ely to want to be inside do~

trating on work when the weather not immune from these feelings
'i{lg
schoolwork. Roberta Aniato,

.•
is nice. "The students don't want during spring," Scileppi
.
said.
the director of the (:OUnselirig
ser-
:
to be stticldn a class, or fo a room
.
"Sometimes, we would rather be
vices;
:said
that, overall;

students
'
·doing
,
schoolwork.·
,
when
..
the outside enjoying the nice weather,

are happier during the spring,
·•
weatheris nice/' he said.>
,
·-,
too."


·,

She said:during th,e wiri~er the
.. -
Scileppi
:
said
..
that.· academics
•·:··Students
don't have to suffer as
·
stude#ts usually have
_a·
blea.~
..
usually go. down during the spr-
badly during the spring, however.
outloc,k. When the nicer·weather
ing, but Bentley said the acade~ic
·Bentley
suggested that the student
I
plari out his/her schedule, keep-
ing in mind that there will be
warm weather during the spring.
He said that students should
take their heavier course load in
the fall, and leave the lighter·
.
stu~ies,
•.
such as
.
electives and
CORE requirem~nts to the spring
semester. "Think about it ahead
of time,'; Bentley said. "It does
pay.off_;,
Incident reports inside and out-
side the dorms increase in the spr-
ing, according to Director of
Housing Robert Heywood. He
said that with the coming of spr-
ing and the nice weather, students
tend to be more active.
"It's more likely that a window
wm· get broken, or there
will
be
some other sort of damage to the
buildings,"
Heywood
said.
''There are long winters up here,
and when the weather improves,
people tend to have higher energy
levels," he said.
On a final note, Scileppi of-
fered some common sense advice
for everyone suffering from spr-
ing fever. "Our physical feeling
works hand in hand with our
mental feeling," he said.
"If
we
want to feel good, we should try
to keep a more joyful mood,'' he
concluded with a smile.

Student League, others . honored ·at CSL dinner
By Julia E. Murray
students of various majors, as beginning of exams.
well as becoming involved in the
A special recognition award

Though some may call it Big Brothers/Big. Sisters mem-
went to Campus Ministry for
.•
beginner's luck, Student League
••
bership
drive

within
the

their contribution to the college
seems to be off to a running start

Poughkeepsie· commuriity. They
·
~hrough such programs as Miss-a-
in its first year. In recognition of also began working with the Meal and Central America Week.
the work they have done this year, Dutchess Manor Home for the
"They have contributed_ greatly
the Council of Student Leaders

elderly, trying to bring some cheer. to the overal_l
community spirit of
named the Student League "Club
to its occupants.
the college,"
said Anthony
of the Year" during the CSL
Phillips, President of CSL.

Awards Dinner Sunday.
.
The
Communication
.
Arts
Society was also recognized at the
dinner, winning the title "Service
Club
'of
the Year." They spon-
sored lectures and activities for·
The title "Class of the Year"
went to the Class of 1987, who
were responsible for the Video
Mixer; the "Release Anxiety
Day" car smash and trying to
establish
a
"study day" between
the end of classes and the
A special recognition award
was also given to Terri Manzi,
Assistant Coordinator of College
Activities, in appreciation for her
work in the Marist community.
Gerard Cox, Dean of Student
Affairs,
and
Betty
Yeaglin,
Director of Activities, were given
,"Outstanding
Contribution"
awards at the dinner.
In addition to individual
clubs
being recognized, each club
president was also honored, as
well as all the members of CSL.
The college gave each member of
CSL a small clock with his or her
name engraved on
it, in ap-
preciation of their work for the
students.
CSL honored not only clubs,
but also individual students at the
dinner~ The
3S
students chosen to
be
placed in "Who's Who Among
Students in American Universities

and
Colleges"
were
also
recognized for their achievement.
Student League sponsored a
variety of events this year, in-
cluding the Homecoming Parade
and bonfire and the recent Easter
egg hunt. They are also spon-
soring the Community Unity
Barbecue which is being held
tomorrow for the entire Marist
community.
Money for event s such as the
barbecue has been raised through
a series of fundraisers, including
the Cruise Mixer and Family
Feud.
:,
<.


























































































































































...
j,
Lax tearti··
··at·
.7~3··
·•.traver§:1()·
•.
s1i:tcllfi.OfetlQ&ilfi{,
,
,
,

'
• .•
.•
rt·

·

.:
:,<,
,
••
?i
:.,\:<}i\;(CL
,."·,,
;//;\C·:.~;::rt:
t
ByMich11el
Robert ~urphy
recqrds just com·~ al;ng\v,itfrteiim:
•••
-in
,':oth,~~.:
~~rii;~;:
Ia~t
~ee.k,
''
nold
,~ith
f~u'r:goals'.j,uilioj;~i~~·::::
t~st :ro~)h~l:Rf'.
~~
f.f~Cf:.:':1'Y(tavt
·:'
.•.
play,'' said.Daly.
'.'More;inipor,
:
Ma_rist:~.fOPJ?C~
a·heartbr~aker to'.: fi:lder John Yo~ng, s?ppomore
•:_-six
g~~s:
..
e,
t;_o°'·
_ap
~~
..
~(!
..
o./·

The Marist lacrosse teani sports tantly.I just want u~ to. k~ep winn-
conference n.val'Montcla1r· ~tate,
·.
m1d~elder
..
Stcve-Wolfe.~~~,O~Iy.
,,
t~~m,
.ar~;
a~amsLf?rmi~able
.
O
P-:,
.
a
7-3 overall
.recprd

and is 2-2 in
ing this season:;,
.·;
.:
,
:
'.-
•••
,:
..
·
:
15-.11, last Thursday at ~eomdoff

all with two ioals.:
<-:
:'X
'•:
"ii
, ' '
:
ponents., ~e are g<>
111
~:,t_~:~,a,j~
to
the Knickerbocker Conference as
Marist Head Coach Mike Malet . Field ..
0;-,.•··
•. .
.
. ..
·',
....•.
••
.. ··•
IIMontclair
.&a-ye,
~s 3.,!ot, of,
:
play ?u.r,~!=~t.b~ll
Y.-~~-
/:fr::·_:;-;::·'.·
.·.
it enters today's contest at Skid- • said that·
·he· ·was
pleased with
'Goi~g into th~ firial·~~riodthe
',:trouble
d~ar~ng: t~e.·.ball
i
m. the
,.:
'In':_Marist;S
tllircrfg~~
.l~~,t'
more College.
.
.

Daly's as well.as the.rest of t~e
.
Red Foxes were leading 10-7. But fourth period causm~ u~ to mak,~. w~e~~,,t:,c:lefeat~<i.r,vfa~~a,tt~nyll~e.,
••


The Red Foxes won two of their
.
sq'!ad'.s performance ~p t?
·!his
.
_Moritclai(
exploded· for
:
t;ight

er~ors. that th~:: ~tI>',t~l~!~d
,~,~~
..
',
.12f
.,~_a·nor~~p~f
~-~f~~~}~,~t/;~~f;J
three
.games
last
••
week. The
..
pomt m the season_. 'r!om 1s J.u~t goals whilfthe foxes
·co~ld
9.IllY.,:
said.~o.ung.
·.,:
:
\:i'<;'·/
::,.
:>'
·
Oil
A,p~.•\9.~;:.i,>•~tr/,.•
~,;/:,?';F·
~t·o:.
highlight came. when
..
junior. at-
one of:the. m~ny

veterans who
>
manage one; giving the visitors
..
The,
..
Montc!a1r
.':g~n;ie
i
gaye
·.·
..
:
After_
..
t.~o
,
pen~cf:s,_the,;,Red:.:
•.
ta¢kmah Tom Daly set:
a
single- have mixed w1.th_
the, newcome~s. the four poirit winnirig advantage.
Marist its se~~nd lo~s
10.
the c~n.~
_,
.
Foxes,
.~e~e. ,·
lea~~ng;,.
~~3?,)
~.uL
game school po1rits record
:and
for a goo<i sohd team," sa1~


• •.
'
•• •
,:.,:.
,

Jerence,~imrnmg,th:eFoxeshop~s,
erup!edJc:>tc.~.".~.go~l~,m:th~)ll.1rd
tied the Marist. single-game goal
.
Malet. "And our play.so far this
.•.
'.'In
•the'
fourth· \Ye•:were
·both·,
for the conferenceuUe; '/There 1s
~period
sec~rmg the v1c_torr
as
.the.·
record iri the team's 12°6 victory season prov~s· it. Last season we
-
:
physically tired· and
.;
ine~tally
·,
still an outsid_e
s~it.fo( us
·at ,the,
.•
Foxes
:g~~s~_?Ptap,~~~t-~~r!At~1--r
:
~ver F,,airleigh Dickinson Univ~r-

were 5-6._
This year we ~re a!ready
.-
fatig.ued," said Malet. "Our m
7
x-
~onference.
-.
tit.le,
·
.
·s~1d_;:f1:1al~t;
.
s/2,:
;-.<;;·)~/-..:,
•·/
·
\/::::,:
,:~;;(,
/'.
0

\'.,::
s1ty Saturday afternoon.

.-
7 ~3
-1;~,e 1mproveme~t
1s
quite. o~-
perienced began, to. sho.w c_ausmg


•we
.:c.a01e
!nto. t\l!s s.ea~P:'1.
\Vtth
• ·
·.·•:.;Junior:
m.i~fie~d~r
M1l<;e:¥~st~r:-
'
•.
The West. Babylon native had v1ous;
.
.
.
.
. .
.
.
.
. us to make fundamental mistakes the goal of 1mprovmg our r(!cor.d son, sophomore attackman Tim·
seven goals to fie. the Marist
In: the FI>U:. game, t~e ~ed • that we
:
normally
.
would ;, not
\n-.
both the,:,' cohfere11ce'. and ' Dunn; '\Volfe ai1d. Da.ly each: ijad.
single-game goal record set by Foxeswerelead11;1g64go11!g.mto make. Up until last Saturday's
overall. We h~ve alr(!adydqne
twogoal~iritlie~~nning.~ffoit':',
.·.·
Lou Corsetti. Daly's two assists the_ second period wh~n . Daly
game against J<:DU
we played ten
.
that._ Now ~e; !ust want to ta½e
After
:
today's gam,e
O
against_
,
.
• 1
gave him the single-gam<!
record
•.


rec1eved a pass from. m1df1elder
.
lacrosse games in
:19
.days.
That's
...
one game at a time and try to wm
.
Skidmore·

the Red Foxes- have.
·
1
·Daly
said that he was happy .Todd Jesclit_is,and scored;- :~at.
·alot_oflacrosse,!'
:<
........
_,'°·each:''

:.· .,.-.
:seveiim9;~games,slat~d/wiH1tJie,:'
about the records, but that he has
.
started Manst s goal rush g1vmg
.

..
:
:
••
:
.
.'.
·•. •.
.

,
..


·
_.
Malet,.,al~o'.said. that.· the.·. r.e-. next
:.home
contest·. Saturday,
more important. things :in mind. the team a six-goal victor~ and a
Leading Mard,sft.
mldsc~rDmg
wAer~:
.
m···ai·nd·
er of the seas·on will be a April 27, against Dowlirig,


.
,''It
feels \great, but personal c9nferencl!_win.
sophomore nu 1e er
an
..
r
,
.

·.
. ',
.•• .
.
...
·.
• . ....
. .

...
·.
··Benefit·••·•·.11.'QtJp:•··touJtli¢'Y•····
·
a.Nidcann
suctess
.<

-., -:r
,· •
.
·
.
The men'.s ~arsity!ei,iht placed\,'
..
·,
.··
.
second losing
.to
·breicel.·Ac,;,of:;
..


Marist women's crew took two ding to Davis, the Marist
:boat<:
first~place

..

finishes

against

had trouble in the beginning. of:•·
Villinova University as the men the race, but ended with a fan~;'
rowed .. against. Villanova· and' tastic sprint and was able to pass

Drexel . College last ..yeektm.d in two o!her bo.ats fo.tcl~t
_~eco~d:·
r
,;:
.
Philadel hia


:


-: ,
·:

- ·'
'

• • ·• .
·~
• ·
.• '
.-'·
: ·· •
·
--~

.

Th

P
-

• ;


..
_.'
·t
..

r"
:.
·
·
d
'.·
The· men's varsity four placed.:

':
e
~ome~ s v~r~i Y our an
'.
third.· beating Villanova;

and':

.
v.:omen s no~,c~ eight
,boats
t~:,ok

.'men's
novice eight placed fourth
,f'.
•.
::· .f1~~t-place •
honors

agamS t losing
·1
0
Viliinova.and Orexel'.s Ni
.

_Y1llabnova.
Tbhe
fo
1
u_r
bohat tho?~_thhe.
and B boats.
_.
,·,~,
.
·• •
'./ .::,.,:
....
,
.':.
1

:··
:
•••
,.
race y two pat engt s,-t e e1g
t.•, _ •
,.

.
,

.....

s .. ,,>•.:.
·>::.,
• . ..-.

;;·
..

..
:
!
Won
its race by three. Dreckle had
-:·./
Davis s~id··the' crew'
:showe~H';-;
·._,
.
..,,_..~,,
H,~~Tti~~%
5
e~i~J~f~iff Ji:t{:i·1at:"-?}ii,7~t~sh~~1~{Ii{~t~i;;:ei;.J4;~;)L,L::'{}
~;c:•ed
second in itsrace:Head Coach
\
ing. schedule we've>had
(m·,:ar:> •

f
Larry· Davis said,
./'I:
don't think'
/number
::':o('·
yeclrs/';
:fhe
,:
said,z
\
>
:(ihatVillan6va
out-ro.wedus/Ws~, ''W,e're:racing sch~ols th\ltterid>
;. •
/justth\ltwer.ea~ly
did_11'how very\ tohav~ ~~<?tlllo~r~~tey}i~.e:~~an,:

:
..
well oui:selv.esl
·:We'.
sort
.or
·beat
.:-.
we:-have;,:and-;~e re.' COt11pe,u.t1ve,.
·
.':;:\:
otirsel~es ih.that'racelii:.,;:
;:
\·t::
',/withtherri'.t?(·,:·.:;.'.\\'.;~:}:\}\·.:f:?'
::Mari·si.·
...
··h:oJp·sier•si'1:sig1iI::tW8·t

·:t
1
;~1t~t~;0?,,:
1
,
11
f
~
1
1~i:fif
!;
illi~;\~~li~!t~1,',:
_
.•
.
Two
..
high
,.
schqol·

players
-:.::
t.wo. more,: player5:
,b_t;for_~
.
the:·:
·::
;'
.from
quality'.(·,school~
'•J1aye·;c··May:15;~ufo.ffidate;:aridileave'.:

··.t[~1ii~~~.;~i:
0
;.i:i
E~Jg~1i:r:;~,;Jf
iifi;1[§:~~£[;i~!iE;
·t~~f
1\i~}~lti~~
f
iiif
liliJi
,·.
chance to, see -the four Mari st
,
included
,the
four Madstse11iors d~nk$,
.. J(i,iczenski ~as even h.it~
,
Rmge and
,
Latm
·,-in
,
Cam-
a contendmg team.next season::,
seniors. -\ Ste"~ Eggink; Ted
'
on ~he
.·m~n•s.
~~sketball. team/: iing,.2q~f~?!ji:imper,s;'so.~~th:~ng:- bridge,'·· Mass:~~-
:'and
\·R'eggie:··~
'.'Theyf~rttw.qf&iea't[~t~letes:

Taylor,. Gil. Padilla and· Bruce
:
Manst semor Chns Metcalfe.and most ~·1:1
.
men ~onJdo.
:
''.
McNeil:
oe
Diinbar
·:-_;Higli':
::who.'.wiJl
ihave·'.ari·~immediate
.·"
g{~~~:i:J;~i:11~\
iJ!BI1~~f
i{,it~~~·,·
~itJf
§~f~
i#?£ii~~~
·r
·~Si~:r;i~!ili!;i:rl\ll!
lif
ii!il

_this past wee ken~
.in,
th~

A,;d~m

team consisting
'of.
f ~rmer· college . Tc,1v_ern
cut th~. defic1~.
to 60-50.,lis
;
_.
pound-: (oiW.ard 'Ffron{ftior-
•.
•..
A~sist~nt·
:coach
\Jin(Todd
Lavlor Fund
.Raising
··aasketbaU
.
stars·from the Southern Dutchess
.•
this game began to take the (orm:
.·:::
chester, Mass.•He·~verag~dJ0
_
agree~;
·~~We
·are
getting tw.o
...

Tournament,

•••..
.• -
-
'

••

area who won the
I.B.M.
Cham-~:. oftlje I:.,oyola game.in th~ EC::AC

·:>points;
10., reboun.ds and:4
·:
gooci-';
st_udent/ a'thletes)from·

.
,
..
A,d~m La~l~r.
.h·.
a.
0
·s~~e'nt~en

pionship

last
.
Thursday;.
and
..
~1etr~ Conference T_qurnament ..
}:
bl
9
~kecf,shots
·•per·.game
last
...
succes~fuL programs/~
:;,Todd ...
year old Roosevelt High School Anacondas,Kay~ Sp()rts,·
:.a:
t~m.
•:last•.~o~t.h,
:,but:_tl:i~
.big_:
~~n· ~or··,
..
;
season.
·::':-
His,<<jmpressixe;--;, said: ''Dunb'ar<was the nU!flber
:
'.
student who lost part of both legs which inciu'ded former Sie11a.
star·

Ana:cond,i't.ook ci-ver agam with'

·:
statistics
.
e~able'd . ~i~., t~(.b~·
<
orie: ~igh·.'schoor, team

i~. the
in an automobile.
!accident
last
Dan Terwilliger, last year's Con~ . the help of Roosevelt·I-1,igh
School.
ranked
,·:.within
•<the
Ltop
\25.·
,
country,' and Cambri_dge was
February.
tinental

Basketball Association's si::nior Erin Griffin (12 points).
·.·<'.

players in· Massachusetts; both·C in.the top 25."
,--:
·::
• >,··
·'


.
Fornier
Marist
r
star
Tim
Most Valuable
.Player·
Ralph
'··'
Eggink led Chic's Tavern with
'
junior and senior years;'.Ringe"

Furiankand To!Id sajd they
.
·.
Hoolihan,
a
dose friend of Jhe McPherson and his teammate

22 points while. Bruce_ Johnson;.
and Latin is
,the
high·school in::. are Ioolcing
U>
sign one ortwo
• :"-
Lawlors, came up with the idea of
from the Albany Patroons, Bruce and Ted _Taylor co!1tnbuted 18
which•. Georgetown>:.:AJI:-
players· sometime. this. week,·:,.;
starting the tournament. He then
Kuczenski.
.
and 15 pomts respecti':'ely.
.
·
America Patric_k Ewing
;at-
but. would nof disclose who
f
contacted Mark· Sinon who has
:.
"I had a real good time,"
.said
In

the . consolauon. game,
tended. Francis_'intends to
~a:'
,
they. were .. However; one likely
organized tourname11ts of this, on~-time
·~ew
Jersey·. Net
'arid
Scianna's used a. sec~nd half
jor in communjcatfon arts ..
:.·.
:·'·choice
is Joe Paterno,. a New
nature before. They in turn con-

J;>h1ladelph1a
76er Bruce Kuczen- ~urge to defeat Fue1cello s Truck~
.
McNeil, a 6-3 guard;
·
led
·
Jersey forward who is
.one
of
.
tai:ted Marist star and Hoolihan's
ski. "Ralph and I came down mg 99-84.
.
.
Dunbar to two
..
n~tional
:~igh
..
the most higl'!lY rated players
::
close friend Steve Eggink, who ar~ because it was for such a good
Jeff Holman, a graduate of
· school championships in his
'in
the New York Metropolitan
ranged for the tournament.to be cause;''
.;I
. .
M._I.T.?-led _Scianna's. with _32.
.
four years~ He averaged
..
10 area: Pat~rno has· said his
played at the McCann Center.
Chic's Tavern fell v1cum to points mcludmg some impressive
·
points, 5 rebo·unds
·.
and 3 choice is down to Marist, For-
The tournament was a success Anaconda-Kaye Sports 105-77 in . slam dunks forthe6'5>' guard.
.
:
assists this past season .. He
dham and the .University. of
as more than sixteen hundted
the ·Championship game in front
Sid Monroe and J:ohn Borden
:

plans to major in either com~ Massachusetts.
.
.
dollars was raised to help pay of 400 fans.
·
..
each had 21 points for Fueicello's
puier science or

communica-
Another possible recruit is
LawJor's medical ~xpenses.

The big men up front, McPher-
Truc~ing. .
,

tion ans.

Greg.
Poindexter
from
Eggink, Hoolihan
ana
Sinon, son at 6-9 (33 points) and the 6-11
Fnday m~ht s co_ntests t~rned
With last fall's early signing Gompers High School. in the
the three

organizers of
.
the
.
Kuczenski (34 points), proved to out to be high sconng affairs as
·
of
Tim
Beckwith
from
Bronx. Accord~ng to
.an
article
tourney, hope.to make this an an- r•be.too much for Chic's Tavern as both
Chic's
.
Tavern
and
Phoebus High School
,
in
in the Daily News; Poin~exter
nual event.
_
their team built up
·~
56-31 Anaconda-Kaye Sports squeezed
Virginia, Marist still has four
.has
picked Marist as his top

"This year was a good starter,"
halftime lead.

out close victories in front of 300
scholarships to offer for• next
choice to attend school ..
said Hooliha!).
0
Next year, we
TQumament M.V.P. Kuczenski
Continued on page
11 ._ ____________
,.
___
••

--------------~---


































































































































































,•,,·::-,;.·•··.·

.!.,~-
... ..,.
~~11!"1!1!111!-~
..
~-~-~---~~~
... ..;.~
...
~~~~
...
.;.-~-..;.~-----...;.Apr
.. 18,
1985. THE.CIR.
CLE.
Page·.1.1.
--
'
.-..
.-tsd·ay:
••.
-.r_
...
·ng-Q"t:1a··
.
<.
-~..
·.-

/

?\
'.
-;:,
...••
. . :;
pst
0
P~sthDf
,
.:'r
.::
:};,y·1~ri'o"·~~"ut;
·:·
.
::.~J~{i~
lit~rally
e~J;;
'corner.
_cuir~ntly is~'t e~o~gh· ;born on
proxim~tely eight separate at-
almost any weather. In this in- •
-
,
·.,
:\:
; ::/,-~~'.s:~n::th~
·Jfo>·~J;~~o~
;pii~g
:'.).:::tfp}i:eritlAf
~1f:~;r:s
1
~J?
·,
:
.
:-1:~str
r;J/~e~::~:t~Ji\~Jn,g
• • ~:i~~{~s s::~~ia~~~~! !~h~~r.iSl
. •
~ti~~~!.i~:.
:a~:~~ef n~~Jir~!~ce.:
...
when you. hear the sound. 'A
·
,<.-···.
.
agiitable:

Despite:this.-faci, it· re-
::~ih,e
bank is being readied and
with:th.e inost recent failure



So these, in summary,.· are the
sharp crack
:echoes
in the brisk

'.
·,
inafoS:the pride•
of
tlidniddle-
will have baseball diamonds, but
.
coming about two years ago.
main
'.reasons
why baseball does
.
.
.air,
s~on to be followed by'a



class. And this is priniarily·a
.

they will be used for'intramural
While the lack of student
not exJst at Marist College. I feel

.-,
· ·
:··._
..

PierCi~S-.c.rr-·t,iarse~ds
·-c~iltS·:


:
•.
·
..
:rtiiddle."class
coll~ge/:~.
'~
--~.'·
..

...
_
·.
softball
·and
the like. The field is
mo"tiyation has been a main pro-
t.hat
-although
Goldman raises
,
down·the.spines.ofalL;--·.:::;:
••
:';
Baseball would seem:-to fit in

considered to
b~
too narrow to
blem area, the McCanri head
valid points, this schooljust has
::b.ailplay"¢rs,
past and. present.
. . .
:
quite nicely atMarist. Here,
we
accomodate a college'
·tearri.
also pbints to bad timing ori the
to do'. more to try and implement
!.It's the sound of bat meeting·
,,,,
,
nave a school very,concerned

•. : But, outside of wh~t the cam-
,
part of stud_ent organizers as
the sport. Every college com-
. :
balLit's the.cry,oft_he batsman:
.
.
with improving.its.iinageJn. the
pus. has to offer, there is another . anot,h~r ntaJ:or drawback.
parable to ours that has a

-'
being stung·by the tools of.his
.•
wodd of collegiate
·athletics,•
.
option. A Marist team could use
1
"In March we'd have students
baseball team faces all the same
:,:,tracle
..
;-,,:->i:
'.:
,
::>.~,'../:,.
·.
,',-
.•.
';~ainly
thro)Jgh the.rising Divi-..
a local park as its home tu~f, at
come and·askabout the
problems I've just mentioned.
'.'rJJ,rou·happento·~e.~,1.kiitg. '.·
.,·:
sign One.m~n's basketball.pro~
least on,a temporary basis. That
possibility of a team·, but there
Yes,··the interested students have
.
.
on
.the
.camP.US
of this
·-
.
,'.
.
, . •.
gram. Gertau~ly, the ~bse~c~ of
. .
seems to be a yiab)e alternative,
never was any buildup or
.
to play a major role (and survive
.

,Pq~gh~~eps1e
Sfho~l. ~nd he9:r.
.
;-
,
hat:dball.~etracts _f~o~ this 1m-
·: .·,
one that Goldman cites as a very
preparation/' he said.
:''People
the ."red tape" of starting a club
...
,tl_lat,piun(u!
,no.1~e,.1t
c~n be one
.·;.
age, a~_a g~~t maJ,onty_of col~
..
real possibility. Arid that's where always want to s.tart in the spr-
here}: But the college should also
..
5>f
ltl~my th10gs. Itsan·be
!~e.
..
leges
o/
1th
-'YeH~r
011nded pro-
.
the
AD,
says student initiative
ing. But the time to work on
.
do
Jts·part
by providi11g
·ample
'.


meet!ng of. two lacrosse sucks.''
grams
_do_
offer ~he spc:irt. And
.
has to take over
.

starting bas~ball is in the wiriter.
facilities and establishing;a fall
••
fighting.for a,loose ball. Or,..
·
.
we are situated in a,inetropolitan .
.

,
baseball season if the spdng


wiUi the new club 6n the scene,,
·area
kno~ri for producing stan~
..
.
"We've had meetings in th,e
i~~f:t
th e ~ime to get t:hings go-
weath¢ris just too harsh/;
••
..
;.it
ca.n'~ethe result of
a
coUision
douf pallplayers: Th~reare plen-
.Past_
to
,try
and start basebaU:and·
.
···.•

,
-
Marist does offer spo'r.ts such
,
Jhat"if commonplace in the game
tY'.
of high schoe>l
star~. w.alkiitg
35_
or 40 guys would come," he
:
Another obstacle that can be
as lacrosse and crew thaCmany
:<ofrugby.

Bui, if· you
.a.re
at all
-~
.
around on this campus. ,
.

.
satd recently. "Bµt when the

added. to the list are the seasonal
simjliar colleges do not. But
a
''::._f~miliai:.
with Mai:_ist
athletics;,

.,
Sowhy is th1nraditional·col-·.
fi_rst practice is·called only the
problems, the unpredictable
grea.(:part of American culture.is
'.
.
you know.it isn't thi: beautiful
..
Jege freezing out this tradi.tional
pitcher and catcher would show
'\'.Cather of March and April. A
missing here. And that just
.
.
•.
s.ou.n·d
ofou(national
pastjine
;
....
ga111e
Vfhich
so
ma11y Americans
~P·
!here has _t<?
be that in-
full season of 20 to 30 games
shouldn't be.
,

••
·
/
being resurrected foi: another


follow with a religious fervor?
1t1at1ve
and dnvmg· force. If the
would. have to be played in these
O~e day, this campui will

·•·
season. BasebaU is simply not
.
.
Well; according to interim


students wanted l?aseball badly
two months, which usually
headhat painful yet beau~tiful
·•
offered here.',··.

..

.. ··
..
.
athletic director Dr: Howard
enough they'd hav: it. There's
aren't very pleasant in the
sound ()f bat meeting baU·in the
:.
':To
.me;
the absence of baseball·
·''Doc"
Goldman
·the
main
:
no
hockey rink on campus but
Poughkeepsie area. Lacrosse, on
brisJ<-.spring
(or aut'umil)air.
.
at this college is almost siriftil.
....
reasons involve the lack of space

we have a successful club team.,,
the other hand, is a sporrwith a
And'~hat day will neY«!f
come
:
The
·game
is still America's
->
•..
and the absence-of initiative and
Goldman says he's seen ap-
lighter schedule and is played in
too soon.
•.
number one game, having
:s
_'.
.
••
timing on the part of the
·
·
.,_


••

••
••

i·;~u~~
~!j::f:i~~l~~l~~~~t!fi°ril
st11
~~~tt,\~e problem with space;
~.~nn.
ts.
..
'
tel.,·, a_
fYI:
de.
W.·
....
:_e·'
..
•····.-'at
~d...
b Y..
Jj
rew.:.·.;.'.:.·.:··.•-··.•···:,.
uni
ve ..

..
·,.r.
..••...
•·._··'S·.··
..
i
ty·
:
'.

a:nd basketball. The game is
Goldman maintains that there
.
By John Clements
.1..

. Young, 7-5, 2-6, 7-6 (10~8). Lovell shouid)e able to imp'ro~e on its
·\
~-
.
-
.
.
.
.
.

r.
···Free.Admission
:
:;;_.,,,;::
--~J.::.'~'
-
..
.:
..
-
....
:.-
..
·
..
;..
..
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••. _' .••
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·. .
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.•.
':
.MAR/ST
COl:LEGE
..
PICTURE LD.
..
__
·,.
·s~:::.11~~~
.•
..
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,.
/-.
.·.:
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f'.,
.
.

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0
oovvovvvvovovvovvvvv~o
0
LADIES
NIG~ -
Ladies
·m
fi.ee
lriil
11pm.
·

Rock ·n•·Rofl
TRIVIA'-
<Ner
50 prizes
33/ICN/06r ST~ f'000HKEV'SIE,Hf
;

. .
~nd Y<>~ng
came back after trail-

2-4 record, according to. Breen.
The tennis team was defeated at
mg 2~5

IJ?
the third set. "We got
College compet_ition
consists of
home by Drew University on
our confidence back and started
six singles and two doubles mat-
Saturday, 7-2. This week the team
playing well," said Young.
ches and are the best of three sets.
faces New Patlz away" and Siena
Marist·coach Gerry Breen said
The
:?,JCAA
uses no~advantage
at home, before traveling to
he. feels the Drew squad was scoring for match play. Ifa game
Farleigh DickinsQn University on
.
superior, but was satisfied with
is tie~/ at three points aU, the
Saturday·
for
the men's ECAC
the team's effort. The remaining
.
player recieving serve has·a choice

·
Metfo tournament.

part. of the season Marist faces
to where they want to receive the
· •·The
:
match.
:
against

Drew
relatively easy teams with most of. serve, and whoever wins the point
feat~r":dan exciti,ng doubles third
the
.
matches away, said Breen.
also wiris the game. Breeri says the
_set pebreak~r won btthe Marist
The1:e;should be some close mat-
no-ad:is a good idea, because
it
•.
.il~:9!:Q~or.g~..:A2~~!La.1!~ .~<?!!
.
-:.
..
~ll~s;,_~QITl!ng
;;
.uR_,.s2.:.
till!·
..
te~Il}
__
_f
~~~e,~J~e
playe_r
to_k~t?A t~_e_big
.pomts,,

f.-:f·:::·~
·=--...
.r:·~~.~~-~
..
'.,
....
--
.
•.
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.
..
.
.
1tstartr&·-.·Ffieiids
of,,,
.,·>··,_· •.
·,;
TheCiiCie:
·!;
'',
··/
Y
OJl
ar~

Co{di:tllY/4iJt_vited
tj:)
the
.1985!
C1rcle{d1nner
.
.

··.'.
L
·_;.,\-·.
\
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..
.
.
.
.
.
,,,-
:.
•<.:~::·
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-

.
4
p.lil ..
Sattirdaf
·+
May 4
.


The Pub<

·Awards
presentati~~ to follow
,..

-:------:--------
•.••
------,
I
·Please
retum·this form to Fontaine 216 or
. .
I
I
.
The Circle P .0. Box 857 by Wednesday, May 1. I
I
I
I
Name _____________
I
I
I
I
Campus Address,
___
__;_
_____
I
I
I
I
I
I
Meal Number ______
,$4.50
Non-Meal Plan
I
I
I
I
.
·
\:SI.SO
Meal Plan
I
'-------------
:.
".'·

••
~
-
:,
.
.
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-
----:,-.-
.
•_,-.;'?~,
...
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,-
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..........
.',."_';-:

.:1-1:2·ops
__
Conti:~ti~d from
pag~
io
:~
:.


fans ..
:::•·.

:,·
Both: games· were. close until
.
Chic'.s

Tavern and Anaconda-
,
Kaye

Sports broke thefr
-
games
wide
.;;open
in the final ten
,
minutes.
.
.,
,,, .
'
\
•'
In:the first game, Aniconda~
Kaye'_'.$ports
defeated
·Fii'eicello's
Tnicki11g 106-94.
• ·:.-~
·


.
.
.
··:
~
.--
...
.
·,Anllconda-KayeSpori~h~d
dif-.•:
ficultY,stopping the supet''.outside

shogtirig of Fueicello's Trucking,

but prevailed in the end due to its
supe~ior inside game.
:
·

'
KUcz1:nski
finished with a game

high
.}9
points while McJ>herson
·
co~tj/bt1ted 31 points.
,!_;~
:,-
:.
:
:,.'
J o)ni Borden was the. fueicelio
high scorer with 28 points' while
Troy Mackey chipped in 24;-
••
In the:nightcap, Chic;s" Tavern
defeated Scianna's
101>94~:'
Eggink led Chic's
Tavern
with···
28 points w~i~.: Taylor
.:
and
:\
Johns.on scored
~O
arid 1
!l°"
iespec-
t;
tively.
••

Billy

Daniels, a graduate of
North
.Carolina
A&T,
:.was
the


gam~~-~~g-~
scorer with 29 Points.
-
:·~
The
'··
following is the All-
Tournainent
Team:
.<Ralph
McPherson -
Anaconda~Kaye
SJ><?~S,_
·32
ppg. Steve Eggink -

.
)
Chics
·Tavern,
25

ppg;<Bruce
Johnson -
Chic's Tavern, 18.5
ppg. Jeff Holman -
Scianna's
32 points Saturday John Borde~
- Fuei~llo's Trucking, 24.S ppg.
Tournament
M.V.P.-· •
Bruce
Kuczenski -
Anaconda-Kaye
Sports,
36.5
ppg.
.
' lou~~ament

Notej-:
:Most
students on campus did
n&
know
of the tournament due to'.ihtdack

of publicity on
cam~Ms

result;.
)ilere
were ~;_fft-

students in attendance.,~..._,
...
_
:
·\'.-

,
••
·,
:/ .•
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i
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UniyersitfSchool or Foreigri~Ser-

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He said, hiscinentor' expedJncei'
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. }Y
acfylarist~also helpedJiim
'read1
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-'.<:.
plamed .. /Pat(erson started work-
:
··
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.


·.,··
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1
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-.:'.i
ingat Maris.tin Augu.
s(l 9.82(/i:
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.
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While•Pattersonadmits'that
his
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:C'(parents·are
worriediaboui•,'fhe'
• ;\.•;
\<:~ftft;'te~~:e[h~{~~~i-~a;:~fJ~~:.

,
irilf.fOrlt O.f~9~'(1iity•·
.','.
..
i
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.·.',._:_'.\:.:.
.
.

,
throughout. his education

also
.




'

• ••


'~,(
.•
-
helped him eritei:'the .foreign ser~

vice,
),L:'• /•:,. •
·
·
:
:
:,>':::.-
,:
, :
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•··
'
·•·:."i•'·
;
.
.-i;}:~{-,
}.:
.'.'They
:know
Jt's inipOrtarit to
•·
"me,
,and
.have,
been
/supportive;'!>
>,_;c:,h~said,'<<:
·}:>•t·
,
.,:~':'_.;,_·
:
:_::;·:,Although
:,'he·
:says
he,
.finds
·:·separation:from'.loved.
ones dif7
'ficult;< ·his
-•dob
':potentially:
'.'
:
d,angerous ana·
:tl!e'
govermrierit'
':::-:-.
bur,eaucracf. comP,leX,
..
Patforson

}
.:
says he gets alof9ut·or his career.·
..
,
Extensive travel
.and·
edikation.
'
/:
are free:. Work
.and
collegef are.
··)
·interestingfohim,
"And,"head-'
••if
Ju111iltirt;f
~jif
;;t;J,
:\::'.·Cferirian:and'.;Mariclarin.
'Chfoese;

:t
• ,::';, >,
''
",:•::
'he
,has,'a
chance to
'gersoiidiffhis:
}/
.\\,:,.
·
·
.
.
::
• ;?:';
plans:/) 'Seniors.
{still'
·hav~.,;ihe,
-
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<':> •
••
:,,
·.·.privilege
'of'calling'the
day/(.:he·
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;>I<
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:Ft;tt~t1{J/\/~cit{(~i;;:/
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odginally wante'd thKttie
:~allege
ft.
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.
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Wiv~:i~;~~fr::~~~rt~l~t~ii~~

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·maintain:co~t-~~!'.?.~~~-t~e;:~~~~~
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2
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..
change?;-.,1ts
-.noNt
1me
slamh~'
..
~ah,lL
1
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,
ga~e anymore;: ot on
YC
,s:t e.
~.
,,
1

.
tradition: of;River Day changed,.
-.~•-[,..
. .
·<but.
the~colleg~fis·;diff~re!}r;::the
·
•-1'

'•
..

society
.we're
livirigjn is different
~-
\
and
.
so
'are
-
the
New'
Yori( state
,· }
laws/' said Cox.
'
'
'
~
'
DAYLIGHT
SAVINGS
TIME
BEGINS
.
• APRIL 28
~··
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Al Meyers 718-343-6243
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