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Part of The Circle: Vol. 30 No. 21 - May 2, 1985

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•.
by
John
Clements
The
Town of, Poughkeepsie
planning board approved the pro-
posed site for the-Lowell Thomas
Communications·
Center
last
week,
allowing . official con-
struction to begin. .
The site is located at the in-
tersection of Waterworks Road
and Route 9.
The two-story U-shaped struc-
ture which will facilitate
3S,000
to
40,900
square feet of communica-
tions and • computer
science
classrooms. and facilities at an
estimated cost· of. $3 • million, ac-
cording ,to
Edward
Waters, vice
president of administration and
finance.

· A completion date has been set
for September
1986.








































































































































































































































---•
Page 2 •
THE CIRCLE.
Mey
~,-1886

.
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.
the lives of as many students as he
:
woulf like to be; but as long as

seniors graduate • and
·freshmen·
replace· them, Marist
.
will
always<
be part of- his wheel. "The kids
help keep me young/'
.said
Hig--'
s .-
,:
gins;.
·«My
heart. will ,always be
••
\\;'.ith
the studeQt body.J'Hkeep:oQ.
-··


fovingMarist tilltheday;t~i~:?-'-;>:
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...
?:•~•;•:.'/,'h'
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{ty~•·
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the·."beginning:~of..:,River:.'_!Day
.".~"-·:.1x;
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:-·:
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ii'.i'.;f
;i:!:;::Jl
'ched
'.·
from-
~Marist'' :Easi
"'.{()
;tfie
.,~
·•.',;.'
·,.
;;::
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(: ·,
AU·s~u_gents:
~"~-~Xpectecl
.fo
leave -theirf'esidence· 6altby/\
river.i·About'
c,7ooi·sfoaerits
'<tobk
··:·
:
::,-:i;nrr.
::,r1.i,•,:11:09
lPn'::fr.lday,,·lMay!_l'.IO,'.198510Ai1Y''Studenf
Who
1
}has·'.-,V
0
part'in:thc-actual River,Dat~saitl
··:,·:
-:
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,,,
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;.~;

~-:':
,_hisltier(fast;firiaf',Ef~t!!~fJh~ij~fri~ay'ifexp,~q~-~a:Jp\l~,~v~LW
W~ters. Securitr took pictures of
:.:·.

.....
:.~·.,
,::.1.a:',.-the
residence tiall by'~ 1:00 p.m. that
·same
evening
.•
:',_~------,
students who\att~nded.Riv,e~ D,ay,
..

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for identificatjon:purposes.
4
hese'

.c,~

·,Per_ml.,ssiol"!
_.to,
:.,rem,
ai.r:t
..
-.mi
th.
e ..
residence ha_
IL beyond th.e
,_·,i.i
pictures will
b(
turned 9ver to
',\!
,
~-
Dean Cox;.said Waters·:/::
..
::.•.,:,.-.},
.
nig~t
·ot,Y.9:t•r)~~fJin~Jh~~~ti:(must
bE:l
obtained from· that,':)
I;
Wa'.ters'°'.'i~i~:)hat•'·1tre::--
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Qf,fi_9~:by~5.:QQcP~m~Jfri~ay{Mays'3,
·1985;--
',-e·!,:}t/:
·
;
mosphere atthe:nvcr'was'much.
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..

..

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i
.cahiiei
::ihati·::·otiie'i-\
y~·Ms~•;_l/•1{
~:,:
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\···.The:lasV-meaLo,t
0
the'.:-se)ne_ster
.w111:
be l(fnch:·91i''Friday;::."'.C:
/

wasn't,
.·a
meail~spiritecL crow~;
~{.>i··tMay·-10:-Th~Barge/Dell 'wiUreinalh
6pei1.-unfif5:'00'pJ1L·onj,••;
(

.
proof.is thadhe students let
;.
,;

:,
.
:/_
.'
me walk througb','ilie
0
crowd·'takl'
'.
ing P.iCtures,
"-said Waters>.:·''·:
':
,
Acco;di~~.
~i-~~
):~~~er~:.::);;;:;
.
..

Marist students
.were·.
brought
to
•.
,St.
Francis.HospitajJand ti'.eated
:t:'
>/<,
"jir?r.~!~?t,~?~~ejf).i?{\l1~~1<
• •
,
,.
,
Murphy sai4·.tie
felt'J~.iyer,:l)ay

•.
was successful
as ,a>whole
iri:
that.·
r

'
rio
one. was seri~usly hurt.
/'.To
my'.knowledg~ this was the best'
• :
/
'. .:
u•----rL!,_
·.·,:\:
will'affect1yoµrh9usingstafos.forthe'Fa1L1985Semester/:i-

, .-

River
I>ay.
jn
'.resp~ct
to
)nj1.1ries
.•


·,
That
was
the main
·reason
why. I
tried to have
a
sanctioned River
Day
in
the_ first place, to ensure
ito one:was, seriously
..
htirt;":said
-:·-:::\ '
..
'
Murphr.
·


.
:
.
.
··
..
·-..
.
.
--,
/
-
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'
co'ndn~ed fr6m page;l4
c;.
0
,:_
.
'and
then
~s
sp.orts editor,
:I;'tended

to like this area'nitich
1
rilore':".
:.::

'..
While 'at Duquesne:·1Bordas
'got


a feelforhis·cufrentjob.·a~'ari.in-,
.tern at the. University
·9f
l'.itt-
sburgh
:
Sports
Information
:
Department. and as
a
.
part~time

employee. o(Uriited Press Inter-
••
national; coveri~g ~u~h'iocal pro~.
•·
fessional sporting
.
teams ..
as the
.
.
.
Pfttsburgh Pirates arid Steelers·.
'.


'
••
C
~
'The practical. experfonce thatl
got

in
:those
two
..
areas
'really
helpe~
,me
a_ lot,''. ~aid: Bcmfas,·
"It was:the work ~hat 1
·,did
with
..
Pitt and
the
U~ited'Pr~s
thl3.t

convinced me I wanted something
'
in the area
.
~f sports infoi:ma
0
.tion.".

·._
;

:i
\.:

•.
·,
.
",-
·.
:
For. the coming sporting,year,
Bordas said, he is arixious·to take
on the next season and the work
that it wlii involve;
','I
learned a
lot
of
things this year'that I hope
. to improve ori. and iron. out next
year," Bordas said
..
CIThis year
••
was fun,
.but
the chailenge of the
job is to constantly improve on
your work

and that is what my
main goal is."
MENTAL
NEA-LTN

3:.:Signih9Jlie;r~$id¢nce.hallexifilisp~ctioh·
c'ard
.anttre~'-.'/
--~~ ...
-._·
,
.•
tµrnin·g·
yqur'
rooo:d<ey
to
the
·Residen"ce
Dltectodifter.
:.
- -':.'.
the room is-~vacatecf.
·
-
' --
:-'·
.,--:
·_.,
-:<:
·:
: .
--·
:,·-•
..•.

.•
j_;,>\(:.:c:·:/','.;/\:/;)<-::·•
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·•·.:·
:.·••:
..
,.·.t
'/··:·:·:·:::.\;:'::::-\c:(r:.}if:,::''(/
.
:\.Tr.ash
b:ags wU!. be distr,ibl.ited by the RA/s/U.C.'s.fo
·each(')
·.,· >;fr~side11f
by
·May
3rd>
••



••
·
••
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·_:·:··
_\·.,.:,·:,':.:::•:f.::-~_:\,
..
:_
.,.C).N:-~e:EHALF:.OF'ALL·itH'e:;-.
:R_ESIDENCE
HA~L:STAFF,

,
.
WE WISH YOU A
.-

:
-
SAFE AN[) ENJOYABLE'_
SUMMER!!
SEE YOU
iN
SEPTEMBER!
MONTH~~~~-----------------~
. '
.'.:
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May
2,
1985-THE CIRCLE-
Page 3
• ···:-:-;-~---~lJ-
••
1·:1/:- · . .- •
~
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,-..,Y,Yr·.·
. . •·:.-·:.
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·.,":.·~:,,···
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-~/·. ::-'·:··:.~\-..
,
.•
·,byDa~~eyen,on ,. ':.;;.;:

; '.
:setting':bacl(~n-:the·waiiPand
I
?·.·
·j:
·,x.::')\:;,,.-.,;,J,,;,:-•).;:
:::
·:>\·,·;;dropped
rii:y
notebook.and pencil
:
·,
Walking across the Marist cam-. ·:·in the.process. ,
.
, .

•,:cc".,•.·/ .' ··, ..
·:pus-::.may ·--seein<,short., -and ..
:' , ThencamethehiJI.
•• .:-'.:t,:··
• ..
.
_
easyLuhtil,,y,oil/can_: no longer-' • • 1:never noticed the hill·between
V.:~k\:J';:'.;;--,
:: ',:-:.:?:-.•:/::':,.,,,_;;_:':.
~
.Mariari and Donnelly, until
f
was •
'·.•
1s part ofhand1cap. awareness in the wheekhair. . •.. ..• <·>
0
• •.••
• day".onA~r!t23; several ~tud:nts. .,. This didn't ~eem like a••big hill, .,
. : ~~~:facajtY. f!lem,ber~
~~nt time . but it kept'growing. The.~arderl- _·
• • m
••
.wheelchairs · J~ymg ·: to
.
ex~? pushed, the larger the hiU got; but
.. peri_ence
what_the disa~led person • we fin.ally got up it: :, :.' : ;

·_hast
°-
8-~-thrq~~he.v~ryd ar- ··:
/Another.
problem '
~e
;:
eri-

:
.\ The g~al· of
:the
event was ·to
countered was • th·e elevator in •
·' make people'.:.more.
aware
o(
the .• Donnelly Hall ..:.. yes; there is,'an.
: <iiff!ciilties fo·~eing <iisabled and• elevatofin Donnelly. Located op-·
· i
to.sensitize·stµdents ,and faculty posite ·the> coffee:, shop, ·'the.
: t9ward . treating
handicapped
elevator is very hard to get ·into;
. ~tu~ents • a~ "real';'. peop~e/· said :. the dqor.Js extremely heavy and
•. Ju.mors : ~ue .Jar~s~ • : an~ . Pat
·
. the:· bu.lkyo::
gate: on- the elevator
_N1chpl_s;
who:or~an1zed
_the day as .• •
niusf
b~ shut all
t_Ie
way for the
·:Par~,of a_pu~hc ;relations· class- elevator to move;.;;', ••,··:'

··-project.
:.c;,;.•> ·.'-.·,
., •. ·:: ;, : . .-, ,. '•.· : . : .. • .~ ... -,,~ ,·', ,,- ,: :' •
• ..,-
••
,-; •
.
··/.: Diane
i.
~eit~ir~/. dir~ctor
;,6L,:
:·:·Jones ~~cfMufrar we~t into the •
.· • •· special • services, said ..
the· idea of. elevator. first,· b~t when they got
<·having. st\l~eQts take an active j.!o the_ bottom _floor, they forgot .
.
. p~rt in _9.rganizing·::
a :,handicap . to close,Jhe gate:a,;n~
•the:el~~ator
awarenes_s-_day·· says;· ~ome_thing ' wouldn t go baf.k,~pr,: •
·<,~,j ,
,
.
. : . positive abouLthe acc:eptance of • -l got o~t of t~e wheelc~a1r and.
· :the handicapped. .
• •

walked downst~rs_. ltd~n,t.~now


•·. •

·,
·
·. -· what! would have done 1f:ld1dn't •
··-Fhad tlie·opportunity to·t~~~: have•ihe.option.ofgetting outof.
• the_.campus in a wheelchait<
with, the chair.
<
i ,, • '··
.
. .
Madst "president Dennis Murray "wheels himself aware" with· freshman Brian Jones
• (Front
I)
on Handicap Awareness Day. At rear are seniors .Bruce Johnson and Dan
Meyerson. The day was designed by the Office of Special Services to increase understanding·
of the wheelchair students' everyday ordeal.
. (Photo by Maureen Ryan) • ,.
'
Brian· J 9ncs; a'frcshman,. who has
• : Finally -I . gor do:..;.,n
the stairs
',:~-~onfined
to ·a:Wheelchair-all
'.
...
· and ·headcdback to.the obstacle
,
- his,> hf«:, ' and Dennis Murray, • ' course; but . every incline and Jone
5 '
ability -
both physically
Willy Hare, a junior, echoed •
"Days like this· are good," said
: president of.r.1.uist
(;~liege. •·. ·, bump stariedtaking its toll on my and spiritually.
the same point. He was once con-·. Hare. "I had to learn what it was
_ :L
My
·
• first
-;:
exposure •. to
the. hands and arms.
_ •
Everyone I talked to had the fined to a wheelchair for two •
• .wheelchair
,\Vas
an obstacle course ' ' •. "l.'m tired, and I work. out same comments :... they saidth~y • months after a dune buggy acci-
like_
the hard way. I never noticed·
•.
• , in: ~Iiicb'-'
l
kJ1:ocked down . the~ three times' a week," said Mui-ray
. .
.
. .
dent and said ·even getting a drink .. • people in wheelchairs before the
·-'_tohbe~tc._au.·crlbes
~.~d
.. cou_l~n.'J
get __
~ver 0111l~swaybac:k._
.' .. '
were more aware and had a·• ofwatertooklongerthanusual.·
accident,now
a reminder."
·
·
· ·
J
h
'd h h d
greater respect for handicapped
•• _,._ • •.
<
:,_·,ralso tore.half the skin off of
• ones ten
Sal
e a .an un-
students after participating in'the•·
·-·H·.
·o·
n.:·
·,o
...
·.·
rs·.
for ·awareness
my righHhumb trying'to steer the , fair advanta~e ~use,:, M~rra~ • event;

• • ••• .
j
• .
.

_
_ chair: .
.
,·:
,
. \ .
.
and_ I w~re m . _tan,ks. Jones
_
_·· : •
·:,
~
After ''mastering'' the ob.sta~le . wheelchJ.11'
. weighs;: about
·
1S
Sister Eile~n Halloran', assis- .
. c<>urse,
,I was ready to tour the' pounds, Vl!hde
ours y;ere at least tant. campus minister, said she.
Eight students and faculty ~~~::~;~t::~i,oJt;!~[~~:~~~~
•. :.¼pu,sinth~'Yheelc_~~r.
~,, : :·- '••30t~:.~:; was interesting as well .. tried to ~~:rkj}~>ir .offic~ i~; a. ~:;bi?
';;:Cf~no~C::v~~e~he
~[~
Learning
Center;
John
_
..
• .. he-first~roblem_-enC<>l!n!~red,_
as informative. Jones -,was. the_ wheelchair; but'found· it' wasn't • Wednesday on behalf of the • Pagliarulo, professor; Elizabeth
,.
7
,,..,_.,
__
'.,_:.::~8:5a~ruckpar~ed_m~etruddle
perfect guide, showing us pro-
d •.. -
11.
h.
disabled, both
;:·inseryic~
... · ·:
; . •·· /_.o(.th,e .w8!}cway.~yManan.Hall. . bl_ellls·
the disabled_have· getting

con usi~eta,f. ec_ air.
.
. a!Jd_
·:}n
.
heightening campus • Ross, registrar; ·Katie .Silberger,
- ·
:
:}one~ · ~dy ,w.eny
on
the:
~rass, , around t~e campus, but keeping a
Sophomore Dan Hutto said awareness_
through their sensitivi- : assistant cataloguing librarian;
•· . _::~
around
t~i~,·~~~~~-~~~' bacto~!o, . posi~!veattitude about it; > . , · : ever:r.thing'tqok rriuchiorigenlian
.ty ••
~
• • : • ;
• •

Laurence Sullivan, counselor;
'
-
,-,,::t~eVl!~k.
:·.,
<
< ,:--
>' ,·-":--''.-
-
0
;,,At the end ofthe tour;'Mtitray, . usual' to ac:complish in ·a
The re~ipients qf the cer-
Brother Joseph Sacino andPaul
;: ._•·.•··
M1.1r~ay,an,d}
:b~~.s.cm1e,tr:~u9!~,_;
said h_e
:hascgreat adrriiratfon for , __
wheelchair.

tificates. wer~: <:,regory Brennan,

Raynis, a junior.
~
?itfl~{t~~ii~~;"~~~
;!~!l~·e1Vi§ley·
'!~~~t~:if
:-~~ect=~~t
• C
~to_r's n9te: 1'be third.annual IA>w~ll
.J:hom~ • first:r~cipie~t ot/th~ aVtard to have no vowels in

·
-
\

• ·

••
'
Awargswerepres!ntedat~e,HelmsleyPalacein
hislastnarrie."i

_
.··· •. .
.
.
byGinny\\\'aiteand
·:
.
with students\ O:lltside of class.
•.
Mamliattan
on April_
26; 'fhtfoUowinJ is a per-

·Marist President Dennis Murray· then read
Maria Gor_don
• •
Not only should faculty advisors
s()nalaccountoftheday •. ·. "
s ··
h'
• ·· •• •· -·-..:· k
• .·
d
d
• • • •
b
h
___ ·
·
i--.~:,
.;,,
·.
c. ,:
,._ ,, .
.
m1t s 1mpress1ve uac ground and presented
atten stu ent acuvmes, ut t e
: byL<>u-AilnS~Iif.:-,/>
,\~:;;; •,, •
..
__
.:
~im·_with
thc{smaJJ
bust ofLoweJJ Thomas,which
On May 18, approximately 500 faculty as a whole," Zangari said.
: < · .
·
< ,:
.
, . .-,. ,; . ·, , . •
,
. ..
.
1sthe award.
.~ ,
•·. · ..
_
. ··..
_
seniors will be saying their last
;.: Ridi~g;, ': c.harte~ed 1?u~:jhrough;-mJa~1~wri
• • ")Smith{Jeaii and disdnghishedlyig~~y.
gracious-
• goodbyes to Marist College with
A few seniors said students are
Miu1hat!an,
~ one of the ~u~~ts. at, thr 1-o~ell· ----ly_ th~~ke!i-Mun-ay for'theintr 9!iu~tion. ''Funny, .· some regrets, but looking forward paying a lot of money and their
:
,Thon,ias
J\.
w,ard Iun~heo~ sa1~, 1s a b1thke bemg . .
J.
rememb_er
my_
life as beirig
o_ri~)orig
s9ries of -
to the future.
concerns about the community
._:~nelep~ant
.. Your sheC!fSIZ~
~o~mands_respect
... , , ...
malapropisms~ faux pas.an,d: outright mistakes~?·-
-
/, .This graduating class .has seen • should always be heard.
''.,~Pntd you p11ll UB)n_. front of the Helmsley . he said,
.
• .. __ .,_:___
·, •
.
''miuiy :,changes. during its four
"The . administration should
·:'Palace, _M:ii<lifon'.
Avenue and ,Fiftieth Srreit, .•• • "_HC!
said he was honored to receive-an-award·.:..
.. years. Marist received a computer· not make Marist a money-making
,where· some ofthe gues'ts' ~rs cost as mtich as • named'for a man like LowelLThoi:nas. ''That
grant;-: fionr_JBM;{the
Lowell • proposition but rather more of a
;:,thatbi.is:~)/' \/· --.;:·.
_}_
..
/;. /_
.
'·: , • ........ -_'. gr~t ma~ _ju_sthapp~~s
to have.been
a
friend of
Thomas Ceni:ei ·was ·begun;_ the
place for ~ollege students, where
·,:,;·. 'fhe'.:30_,..oi;~o
of
0
us w:horode from:_Mar1st
got
mme,"hesa1d.·..
>-_,;c-
>·>• ·-.:.
. : •..
.
Townhouses were builiand ·tne·· .th\! emphasis is on education, not
• 'pf~ t~e bufa~ tJie s_id~·entrfince
of the.brownstone
·
. .-Several
quick arid wifry.liriefll!,ter;-Smith
ended
garden apartments were. started. • money,,,. said Ursula Winter of
!,ud~mg, passC!d thro~g~r scrolled; wr<>ughtiron his acceptance speech and left the podium. . . ..
The Western Publishing building Fort Lee, N.J.

gates into a· sniaU courtyard of·sparkling-'tree~
~
• Almost immediately afte! _Smith
concluded, the
became Marist East, and the
Receiving the most criticism
and ~nt,C!red
the cryst~~ ~n9 gold-leaf decor of the , crowd began to dispers~ ~nd··the ·waiters began .
men's basketball te'am entered the was the Registrar's office. Many
111ult1-leveled
lol;>by
•. ' • ,
.
. . ,
. clearing away silver . pastry dishes and china
NCAA Division
I. •.
seniors said that the criteria for
-~o!hing at the Helmsley Pa\ace. seeniedto be • plates. During the shuffle; I wiis introduced to
-
Thirty seniors asked about their
graduation was not made clear to
. left '!_°:done.
Even the _elevators were decorated
, another Maristahimnus and joun~alist; E_d
Lowe,
reflections_
on life at Marist gave them. They said the problem is
with goldleaf fleurs de hL · ·.·
.. ·
. ·..
columnist for-Newsday; • : .. ,. • - • . •
their opinfoil of the college and
not how many credits to take, but
Award recipient HowardK. Smith a_rrived 30
He said he enjoyed coming to·the luncheon
offered advice to all those who
fulfilling
• graduation
re-
ininutes after ,we did and was immediately sur-,

. every_
year despite ·some adverse feelings about
are staying behind.
quirements. According
to
Zemba,
rounde,d b~ Ne~ Y~rk and Pou~hkeepsie media • communication arts:·as a college degree. "The
Many· seniors "said the impor-
the number of people not
people .. Fifteen· ~mutes of mterv1ews ~ere·
fµture of the languag~ is_with the English ma-
tant thing ·for underclassmen to
graduating could be decreased if
roµ_owed by
I-~
minutes of photo opportunity.
Jors,tthesaid. "Communications is teaching you
do is to get iiwolved •• According· the criteria was presented clearly
Smith stood with .Charles Osg~od of CBS news, .· how to hold a. microphone while while it takes
to Mark Zangari, of West by the faculty advisors •.
• who was to be.the master ofceromonies. They

you away.from the reading and discussing and
Caldwell, N.J., students should
• Although ·students may know
• were joine_d
by a r~luctant Qavi~ Ng, recipient of
arguing you.should be doing in college." . . ,
be involved in academics as well what courses to take towards
the alumm a":ard m_
communcat1ons and recently
Then he said to me that when a person first
as clubs and sports. "You don't
graduation, these classes may not
named.education editor (?f the N_ew
York Post. _
starts in the communications business, h~ meets a
have to become a member to be
be available. "I wanted to take
_Lunch in the pale green banquet rooni began · lot of famous people, and finds out that they're
involved. All you have to do is Elementary German but couldn't
with a smoked fish plate, f?l!owed by a main dish
not really all that different fr~m anyone else. •
show up at the events,'' said because a class I needed for my
of veal iµarsala and fetuCCim
alfredo, then desert
"Then you become a ·cynic,•.
he said. But after a
Zangari, who is president of the
major was in the same time slot,"
of fresh berries, petit fours and coffee with
while, yo.u accept people as they are. 'Then you
college's Student League.
said Sheri Stevens of Miller
cream.
.
.
.
. . .
·
-
start to love people."
.
.


. ·"Participation rounds out the
Place.
The awards were presented during coffee, and
After our brief talk, he limped off, suffenng
college experience," said Linda
Seniors said Marist may have
the acceptance speeches were short: Ng seemed · from a case of gout, caused, he admitted by a
Zemba of East Hampton.
many problems, but has just as
somewha! emba~ed
at all the attention. Last
great deal of good living.
Although the social life is im-
many beneficial programs. "The
year, a friend ofh1s told me, be sat as an unnotic-
It was now 2:1S p.m. and the bus was not
ponant,
according to many Co-op/Internship program gets
ed reporter at a back table.
scheduled.to leave until 3. But the weather was ·-· seniors, academics should be the
the student out of the books and
. He thanked Marist Pro!CSS?.r
Robert_
Norma~,
warm and sunny and many of us took_
short walks
main priority. By taking the most
into the working world to get
director of the commumcauon arts mternsh1p
around the block, which includes the rear of St.
challenging teachers and classes, necessary experience," said Craig
pr~am, !or the_opportunity_to break in to pr~
Patrick's Cathedral and the Pan Am building:·
.
students get the most out of their
Harrigan of Smithtown.
fess1onal JO'!rnalis~. Ng ~tt!'lbutes ~uch of. his
Just before 3, we boarded the bus once again to
education, said Joe Pezzulo of
Other programs • praised by
success as a 1oumal1st to his mtemsh1p at Umted
muscle our way across midtown and back to
Glens Falls.
seniors were the· liberal arts pro-
Pr~ Internation3:I, where he worked during his
Poughkeepsie. Before I got on, I took one last
Apathy is not just a problem
gram and the Marist Abroad Pro-
seruor_
year at ~anst_. .
.
.
look atthe sparkling trees. They were lit with str-
among students, but among
gram.
Ng rs the third reap1ent of the alumm award m
ings of tiny white Christmas tree lights • Two .
faculty as well, according to some
Most seniors surveyed said they
communications, but, Osgood quipped "he is the
hours later, we were back in.Poughkeepsie:
seniors. "I feel that the faculty could bear all of Marist's pro-
should become more involved
Continued on page 10


















































f
It
/

:/;if
fJ.sL-~~efi
tsb~Iil~?'
; /
i:. • ·• •.
·
<
-:',:::\~;·:th;:,bv.":,'i-r;::•:,._·t:::
.
1
,::::.: -.·
.•..
·.·, .-,_,-·,..,,:(,·,>;•:
i·i·.,::_::·-• .• ,,::~)'. ....
. _. ,'.'.';'Ther~~-~~-a
•,~tl~gi~l
~ho had . tl~;'girl' ~as·.·becorne;-/i
.look \f9r-:
.
,: _
..
a _Iitt)e.:c!,lrl
nght.-,mahe·middle,of • ward to· her,-ongoing maturity.•.} •. .• . .
•· ~er
:r
f9,rehea~>J>\Vherf.:
she , was· . Joolc fojward. t<iher takirig all that··.·. . •

.. gc;,od,
.•
~he.· ~as, : very,': very • gcmd
•.
.··.·she
i~:and
:l'ld~irig
tq it. \': :"'?i'.:-'·:
: :,;
• an!} ;when}she ,w~s:_bl'ld,:she
was • _·,ithave,_beeh.:ritoved:this.Year.:_by
• hprnd,. ':'·/'.:: ;:;'::::·,,
\/Ji
h : : . ::. ·,' ·,
1
. ::. '
the inieresLthe·:~commriiunit:t
lias
... ; :, That was niy. ~avorite nursery.
had' in Tlie· CircJ¢/Jt '.s;exc!dng
w . :
.· rh}'.me
when·
l
was Jittle>It is also
.hear people disd.1ssing

an ,artide .••
. the way I will remember The Cir- . they've read
:
iind.:;gratifying;,_;to
-
cle .. · ::
-<
• •·
r _.:
,: > ,;
'./'
!.\,;ti} /.
i<
:·:·hear: peopl~.;
C<>"1P.lain/{vhen:~~e
• :· Whe_n
J . •
J.opk .bask: ·over••·.
this•. ,· ..
·don't• print an· issue :on a~y, giveri
year's issues, I see'the solid news >week. we:woi.ild:'never be·ableito -'
stories,·•
th.e thoughtful
i
editorials
judge ourselves withoutfee4back. : ; .•
and the w1uy colunms.' 1:aJso: see, ·. ·. :. In part~ any little giifis' f<m~ed
the. misspelled words; • the · dull • . through the eyes of an the peopk
headlines. • and , the .... outright •. in her life:· she realizes.her poten-
•·mistakes in content. .
.-')·>·••
<.
tial _by, reacting ito the outside
More importantly, I -see a little .· • world, . •·
·
.• >
·
.. ,
-
>,:·
•.
\.
"
·'.· ·: ·:
girl who has doTTe
a lot•ofgrnw~: : :
1
YJ'd
lik~
t6
tha~k all burre~ders
ing up and.has.a lot ofpptential.: ;; •.
for.
ttie•support:an~ criticisni'they .:
' -The Circle has coine a lbngway, • have offered this year,' Whhout
iri the four years·I've been 'here£ I.,, responsive/'. responsible readers;:
remember·:a· __
time when; ;despite
··.The
Gir_cl~.'
could ;'not. grow·_ano •
.. the price;. no one would read, it,; • would,"
r'em'aiiiachild forever;·:.
• andl'm proud:to have,oeen_a.pa'rt .. :) 'go( tc;'._.~nci~'.
the little· girl .
•·of'. its, evolution ·Jnto~sqmethJng· • \vhen. she :_~as:
just
'b'eginnirig
.
to·.·
people can't wait to read. \·
:,:u•.•·\: '.
toddle/She and.I have· grown up a
• Like the :little girl, Tlje .Circle. Joi:in thelast:four>yearsiNow she .
tries.new things;·sometimes.fails • is ready fo;ruri arid
I
look forward
and sometimes succeeds
..
J
t isim~ .. to theday when she will fly.· : '. : •
••porta1.1t
not that . the little girl
: Uule .girl, :,Lwish you. luck.
•• f~lls, bu_t that s~estands up a~d
Run. Pl.ay: ,:Lea{n
to.
fly'. A~d
--,··/ i0
h~~d~
\Y,~
,_
~~e
;~:
·.o.:
~'.;r
.~e
~d
j
:Jo'·:}
o _
f~ •
9
r~d~ ~-t-/ot1?L· .-
_ 1
~
sf,!/
5oft~'.'3€,f
c..
tOf'/5/ar.~'(_;
rhes,~~'.:/ .·
.·•
.. :·;,·,,·,
_:•:·'._·
!

'

~
~'
t..
. •• ·, .; :
.
.tne~ agam, gro~mg from each ex-
when you. fall, stand up and try
penence. ::
,,
,_:.
.
. .•· ::
..
,
again. Hold. oµ
w
the Httle girl,
-'·.One; thing,-.that has ,,11lways but look ahead at the adultyou
., fascinated:,m~ about karriing is
can be.
,
..
• • •
• •

- that:.·the: more' one.:,knows, ,the
', It's been wonderfu!·k~o;ing
more he knows thereiseto,learn.
you.
. .. , >Love;•
• All
letters must be typed triple ~·pace··
·. with a
60
space margin, and submit-.
ted to the Circle office no later than 1

p.m. Monday
.. Short letters are prefer-
red. We-reserve ttie right to edit
all
.. letters. Letters must be signed, :but
. names i:nay • be withheld upon' re- ..
quest. Letters • . w/11
•. be. published •
depending upon available . space.
of
that'editiorial refuse a $30,000
a year job with IBM because they.·
do business in SouthAfrica?

• •


' Monica M. Bechtold
· Theatef pr(?test.
. While tam. 'proud, of_whauhe lit-
• • · • Lou Ann
ii_:.",
'.

':_:'._,'.:.
.··.r·
.~·
• T}:leater •
r~ply:
meant to offend anyone •.
but' the
.
<
rather. large population. of white
. . :• .. :i ,
bigots that reside:on this campus. ,
To the Editor-:\
· · ,.,.
., • .
-
: . ,; •
·sieve EastWood 'was< kirid
,> In essay after essay, Carl has
enough to sha~e with me a copy of
spoken out against what he vfows
his' letter 'to the Editor re: his
asbeing unjust and wrong in the
short play._:····..
_ .
.
'world.- In his articles, Carl has
To the
Editor·: • :· ...
-:.:.
'.
Alt.ho_ugh
_thel"e-~eems·
to' .be_,
nO
shoWn ''deeP ,•_
s·ym.pathY_·.·:>
and
: Last week, MCCTA·and Dean explanation of the director's not
concern
'fof
our country's.• poor
Cox_'s. Exper!ment<rheater dass
infofming,Steve that his play,was
and, PO\\'.erless.-
For example, 'he
•-~--11111----~----•--------•llllilllli-iw.~--~
.
wer~,-s~_a~~d
• to iprod~ce eight , d!opp~d,
jt
\\'.ould have~~een:.all •. has on many oc~sions· sti:-ongly
'. stu~e~~-wnften. on~cact •~18:ys
/pr : .. ernbarrassmentt?Jhe \Vrl(er,and. . . deno~nc_e~.
: P~esideJ?:t Reagan's
< ,
()nlypurs·
"no k~gu clau~/came into:effect, th~ir. ,
,Festiv11l_
'85.
u
Only seven
.•.
to:the .players to ,aHow .a perfor~, • '.llnfam domestic pohcies. as· they.

;: '
:
.
· 's
· ..
,
·
·, :,
·
· ·
-
·
· ·
, .This · clause· allows•, the· dite to .. ''. :w'e_ie
~rformed~: f;_l:
':/':/}/<·
''•'.i/\)i1artce
of"·
a':
pl~y\tliatf;~asn,:o(:(.effect•~' lioth: i:"'.hite )
0
and·~~bfack
:}'
:To
the
.Editor:'
.i
'
carry on)y bottles. or. caris. to'· the .1'/' ••••
,_
;
·~; '
'·f;; ·'
:"
~\:: :•,::•
, :·re~dY:<;E#li
play
.during ih~.final-' \• Americans;_:Hisi(lesire'for
a:fruly'
• Since. our decisions to attend traditional
- site.· .. Obviously ·,
·
_ My play,. Th_e9ourt,ma.rtialof-· stages-'of:rehearsal. was subjected_,
:-:free
and.fair:"America cannot be:

this·•·••
small ·{·.private ·•·
..
college, ...
enough, this. clause ·makes sense James T. Kirk,'!:.w,asscrappe~ at
i<to
the.same•criteriafor.determin-
/questioned;'.\'):
··.:
> ..
•>'·•··••
.',
'>·.
frequently we have heard' the becau_se
how many times do you. . . l~ st -~me
.. ":'eek -b~fore . O~lll~g
.(irig
~eadir,iess; •.
, . · ...
'

'
.
.
. ·
...
··
.
..
;
.. ;: •
-
. • .•·
..
,.·.·
• -; .
. •
. . • ; .••. -· •.
• ' -•
...
•..
• •
.•
•. snide comm'ents and jeers as to get sick of seeing empty kegs lying ::mght, Apnl
24, __
Pro~le
111

,is,.\,
I_ r~gret
0
that:the director
.was'.
,_1.:._:
.K;ilQ~ing
Cad· for;:a1m9st two
· our. enrollment and, on occasion, around. Glass bottles --and .•
cans '. n~body; bo\hered
!
0
t_ell
me ab?ut .:.
_rio~
in more frequent contact With
:'~;s.c:rnes~er,s"has;allowed.
m<?
to,. see •
as to. our existence. Furthermore,
are easier to clean up, probably t~is u~tll, at curtam time, ope~ng , Ste,ve
(and Steve with the directorF;-,t~~~ '-he, is': a, bright,.honest and
· many of us have encountered at because glass doesn't preak and mght;,I,aske~ Dean_
Cox _what
was< so, that_ script problems mighLf s~ilc~re·
person; While not.ahvays,: ,._
.:..•
least· one unfortunate soul whose cans are easy to find in the bushes happen~ng .with my play• -. ··••
... / • • ha.ve'.
b.een resolved • earlier iri 'the',• -agreeing with his pqliticalviews,
t::-.~'
..
vocabulary
lacks the . word and the river. Eventually, the "~o . In fact, ever since I accid~ntally. process.· _ .
.,.


' .:~!f~l ~~~t<;arl}s ahuinan ~ein(of _:
.. •

"Poughkeepsie.". ·Conveniently keg" clause faltered and the ebte. fourid out, shortly after mid-term . On beTTalf of .. the_ theatre,:_~d~~~mt
•--·an_d.
w~ll-~eamng ir:i,-
.,
located on our sta!ely_ sl~ce
(!f ··
were fo~ced to carry kegs to the break, that .iny-play had been

worksho~_5,l_~ss,
I !~µuo-thal!k
_: stmcts. !leis~otmanyway.guilty
· · J:Iudson, ~ur ~!le institution _is _ s~cred site.
· • .-
_
chos~n for production,. nobody. ,,, al!-tho~5_,st~dents,. p~re~ts and • of !he .stl!Y
c~arg~ tha~ h~ h~b~rs
. lmked to a tradition thatthe .Ohio . , Down • at· the site, police ever bothered to 1nclude
me
iii the·-:_fnends.~ho att.en~~d F:esuv~J:ss:; ._
.. a~1m~~i ty
y~_ward ' raciaL.
•.
. States, the Penn . States, nor: the protecte~ . Jhe elite ..
_I.
D?ted. an
..
p_roclucHon-proc'.esi;arau}r1
:was
,
:.Ne_verb~f,or~
!iaye:~e, i,,e.en.~b.l.etB
/: Illi~~i:itte~_;
~t S~IJ?,S
:·th~t <::~l's·./ :
UCLAs can equal. Our umque . officer aiding. a certam River-Rat
·-::-never,
asked
:fo
attend auditic:nis. ;_ do, so; many•.pl11ys'.'.m~progress
by· ...
-
oitly cnme m • writing the article .•
·.
tradition, <ieeply iriibedded· into .
(M.2)
•~ith:her,grog::ife:•valiantlr.-:: rievedold aboufrehearsals nevef ,-::~ur
·o.wn
.•
y_oung:
play\vri~ts \vith .. ::
*as
·
to :gr<>s~ly
overestima~ecthe ·, ·: - •
tb.e .·hearts __
of its ,suppO!!~rs,. :is·')5!9.lc~a-swig•ofs9i:iie
rabid canine·\update4on.pro~ess'or.pf~biems\;~~~9he~-~~_us!~t~c,u~iences. \;
;y•·-:•
in.telµgen~e
:'
of).sqme.('Qf.'\hi!.·~·· •
. va,l!.l,~,s_o:highl~·t~~!
9nly.a,Jel,~~:.protectjng .lte~: fro~.-. a ,~rHous_·_:,with:
_th~·.·~r~uctii:>rti.
ne\'e1/fold
i<,:•.:'/:.(····.·,/·,;_:i
-~-
·$il}cerelyy.ours,'.;
J!:2d~rs.:•
..
·'.'./"_'\,'.,;C\*.tii/~/;}
i
0
,,{
•.;•:/>
. few ,_111a?,'·part!ciJ)a!~;'
Throu$l_l .fat~. B11t;,to.givi;tlie,m_en
m bl11e <who the, act_<>rs
--~~re;·;;~-~~~Y.i:\\:i;{/'
'.'i:,:>/.
yera,rd:1._f?ox{ :. >.I, ~~".~'.~fNd.s()~~,,gr_~t_t'.llija}:'(
.ce~i~, . ~nctions,_ .· even ~ur their du~, no one was mJured. '; - .,whoever_
th~y we~e;~th~r-w~ren't ;, .. :\ :

:>.:
'i
. ,
.,<C;:
solil<><1uies
,m ~e pastj bt1! tl!es_e
a~m~rus,tra~ion.
want~d an. }n- . Lo~kmg. b~ck! .. th~
.
-ehte eve~ usmg theJ>roper fin;uized• .....•
B'acks
Carl
,
letters take • .the. ~tJ<?r
s~eer
VItationrbutwastu_rneddowi:i.In
(es~1ally the semor eUte) had vers1onofmyscnpt:co''
·< • , ...
c;--,,,c',
,:
··••
~,,.-<;·•'.
;
••
-
"''
••
fact, th~ only outsider permitted their chance to express their joy -- ,.
: • -.
.
• .
,
• . ·.• • .· . •
..••
• •
• - • . .
_
stupidity.
·::1
advise;·\he /thr~-
to
.attend_
was Amtrak,'andshe
about' the\year's
end.
It also.
,_F_or
~e· _i11co_n~enience
-_and_,<TotheEditor:
,
,,·
,people~ho~~iciou~lyassaulied
was h~rtily·welcomed (~lthough enabled many to unwind before disappomtment -• incurred •by
>
I am_ g_reatly disturb~ _by tpe
''
Cad toreframm the.future-from •
. spor~d~cally)'. :, ~.or ; the·.· elite, tltehnsl~ught of finals~ Thanks to • _friends .. ~nd t!teir '. gu~ts,
:~}J() ;
yic,~o·u_s
~-~~tacJc~ :\_Oil _,; c,rl,/.: !11.aki~-:tx:~~>.~t,:,<r:Igiefjerk'!;
penrutt~ to_ atfend our tradition,
the elite, the tradition ·will _carry • planned, .·or .. mdeed, ··.·made .. : a
J
Ma.cGo)Van
s·: character. m 'last
~
.-1udgeme11ts
·-'.:atiouL'.'
another·, in.:
t~e melody lmgers on...
. .
. .· on, at least until next year. Maybe ·_
SPC<rial
effort t<>
ce>Ine-frorn
points
'c(
w_eek'cs
_Cir~I~~
'Tµ~ : r,espo~~~ t_o.; : . d!vi<Jual.
~-
1,f
t_hey-_foi~.o~
·'spy.
• a~;
·_Last . Tuesday,_ · _the de~i~ted
·
· by then a .mighiy • redwood•will on and off campustoseetheplay,
'· his. article, •
.. Parti':1&
·With •.•
..
t~e.
·:.~~.they:
m1ght.·:poss1~ly•
avoid•··
·: ehte were the Texans fighting at : stand in the center of. campus. and
for
the humiliation and insult .. Poor/' sho..y.a co~plete·Iack-of '' making complete fools
<>Ut
of
the Alamo,· the 69 Mets, the That ·would be .a· hit with our . that I have suffered throughout- ' understanding of.both·:carl and:;_ th,emselves··,by
:'futilely trying to· •
. French \storming the bastille'. F. ~nine· friends! Oh, but we won't this . _aborted· production,
.
I his P~liti~ phil<>sop~y:<.-< ;' ·' •. ruin_
'the
r~putati<>n
• of• a good·
Scott Fitzgerald and John Belushi need it; we now have curbs.
demand an apology and·.an ex.,. . ·-•-;;Jt
is ob~ous,to anyone who has::: person. •

..... : , -

would have been proud. Attempts.
James L. McKenna planation
from-
MCCTA, • .read _any of-his o~hei"essays that


·• CharlesThorilpson'.
were made to squelch the

especially director Bernie Heer.
Carl was·, criticizing typical white
tradition that .has become an
I·guess it was just too much to
middle class attitudes concerning
integral part of Marist culture. At
E.d'itorial reply
expect professionalism from an minorities and welfare recipients.
first,
security
and
police
· · •
-
amateur ·_-theater group.· Sour

~ewas doing·a spoofon what he
prevented the elite from carrying To the Editor:
• grapes? Maybe. Rut, I didn't
correctly sees as white hostility •
~on their tradition. Threats of
This letter is .reference to the ·think it was too much .to expect a !oward minorities living' in • the.
imprisonment carried. overhead. editorial in the April 18tbi'ssue of little common courtesty • from mner city. His sarcasm is evident
Then, after allowing students to The Circle. I would like to know • fellow students. •
to any remotely intelligent person
pass toward the sacred site, the just one thing. Would the author
Steve Eastwood • who takes the time to read the
complete article. Carl in no way
i
Assault victims·
.

'
.
.
.
To the Editor: '
• Many of the students are aware
of the two recent and unfortunate
assaults on campus. But are they
Continued on
page
10
THE:
Editor-In-Chief
Lou Ann Seelig
Senior Editors
C.nrlstlne Dempsey
Advertising
Staff
Bernie Heer
John Bakke
Associate. Editors
Brian Kelly
PaulRaynls
• Cindy Bennedum
Denise Wilsey
Bonnie Hede \
News Editors
Cart
MacGowan
Cartoonist
Laura Reichert
CIRCLE··
~Editor
Ian O'Connor
Amie
Rhodes
Graphics
Beverly Morlang
Photography Editor
Maureen Ryan
VJewpolnt
Editor
Pete Colaizzo -
Faculty AdYlaor
David McCraw
•·
Business Manager
Laura Reichert


































































:,··srhe-
·-
·:·t
by
Carl
MacGowan·:
·.:!.
;. ;.\/;/
••.
'.
Preferably to die in the process.
tion that the poor have it made ig-
'
.,
'
• •
,



•·,
:-
, •·,
·
.,..~·. •

"
·so.-Economists
.-speak
of an "ac-
nores the fallacy that this is a na-
.
·
\
I~~gine. my surpri~e· las{i~ek.

ceptable;, unemployment rate of
tion of plenty.
.
•.when;
after a year· offretdng.that
about seven percent. That's.where
Because
the
conditions
·
someone may.s_uspect
n1e of being l came up with the absurdity that
presented in the column in ques-
a Communist,
:I
found out- th.at the unemployed ar~ ''serving their
tion do not exist, the message that
.I'm really a Fascist.,>;.,
..
: ..

country."
::;:'
the poor need more help than ever
.•
Really,

folks,:. you. thought I
.
,
And while the enticement to ac-
is dialectically confirmed.
·.
was serious? Cathedral
.
ceilings?
·
cept the offer of a free trip to my
I pass through
iboth
the Bronx
·Brooks.:. :Brothers ·.suits?··:
A execution is.
·overwhelming, .
I and Harlem a couple of times a
.
"welfare, mother'.':· buying
.
out
prefer to think· that
.
most poor
year to and from my home
.
on
CBS? .
. ·:;
:
:>.tc:'
. ..
.
.

.
.
people would understand what I LONG ISLAND. The image of
<.·':
Be assured, you
.will
hear from
was saying. • ·•·
At
,
.
least
..
Alvin
new apartment buildings hovering
··mylawyers'.;,,. __
.:;,.
:, • ,
·
.•
understood. Thanks Al.
·,·.
.
over the decrepit tenements never
becomes stranger and ever more
"unreaL" Real~life murders and
horror
··•
stories
are
"unbelievable," even though they
really happened. Tragedies are, as
always, "senseless," as if they
should make sense - like a novel.
.
The strangest fiction can't com-
pete with the front page. Like kids
who believe Mr. T really can lift
an eighteen-wheeler, many other-
wise intelligent people can read
the creation of a• warped mind
and judge it to be real.
-last.
~
.
·:
:_'
'
..

.•
,.
Whilel must adniit that I am·
•tcould
quote statistics al!'day:
escapes my attention. Some stick
flattered, in
:
a
perverse. kind of
20
-million·
people below
·the·
of-
.
their noses
irito
the Daily News; I
·
way,
,by
being equated with Ar~ ficial poverty line, according to
notice the old·people leaning out
Perhaps "Partying With The
chie Bunker, Hitler and Mussolini one study; 16. percent of the na-
of their windows, staring at the Poor" should have been set
in
the
in the course ofa single sentence,
tion is poor by government stats.

world outside.
.
real Taj Mahal, rather than a
word·
,
!still wonder how I offended peo~ But numbers don't tell the ·real
.
•·
So why didn't I say this in the reasonable
fascimile. Perhaps

pie who should have appreciated. story ..

William F.
Buckley's
first place? Because, after 18 . Marla Jackson should have had
"Partying With.The Poor;'~ I was.·'. pseudo-inteJlectual condescension Manifestos
before
"Partying,
260 kids, instead of 26. Or 2,600.
riot making fun of the poor; I was doesri't say anything; l'Partying
•With
The Poor," I figured the Maybe the Cadillac rancheros
..
making furi
·
.. •
of'
..
the'· arrogant
With The Poor'.' was not intended
Marist community had gotten the should have driven a Rolls.
:
middle-class_..::...
people who look,
to be any
."type
of re·pordng.". idea that my neo-Nazi days are
.
,
talk and walk like me.
.
•·.

That's why it's ori the Viewpoint over.


·
Indeed, rascism

exists in the
page.
,
Is satire dead?
greatest. country; in the
.
world;
In my colu~ns, I don't reflect
Here's the problem: In this, our
When·
,
Curmudg·eon'.s
Manifesto
returns
next year
(tinder a new title), the method
,
There are probably, millions of

reality; I refract it, breaking it in-
crazy world,
the
distinction

barroom
prophbts'
.(some
of
to its essential parts and throwing between reality and fantasy is in-
•.
whoin work in the Department of
it back together
·until
it makes creasingly unclear. Watching life
Housing arid Urban Develop-
some sense. We can't take the is like watching a movie written
ment) who, believe that
,
welfare statements of a Ronald Reagan at
.
by some providential computer
recipients. are undeserving of
face value, we have to determine
.
programmer or a senior White
financial aid and should be left to what he really mearis and what
House official. There has been a
fend
.••.
for
themselves
in a the. ramifications of his words push by mass media "art" to im-
.
will remain the same. This ex-
perience has been a good one. I
look forward to more. Thanks to
everyone who wrote letters (or
spoke to me personally), either to
slander my family tree or to de-
fend my sainthood.
Spencerian economic

strategy.
are. Similarly, to accept the no-
.
itate reality, even as reality
Marist's invisible
·students
:,!
• '
>,·/· -\:
by
Warren Harry
are· available;· sources at the
James Davis Jr., a class of '82
.
.
Marist

Green Haven Program
Business·
Administration

With an of the· media .hype
.
Office
estiinate
that
.
ap-
graduate, continued his educati<?n
surrounding the Goetz' case, the
proximately 600: members of and
obtained
an M.A.
m
issue
·of.
crime)s re_vitalized and
Marist's. student body attend .Theology from/ the New York
.
••
refueled for the. cameras,' riote
.
Marist extensions in six . local

Theological Seminary program at

'pads,jind
·recorders ,of
scores of
state,
federal/:,
or

juvenile
Sing Sing Prison. He is currently
°'journalists
fo
1hrill and
:
inform
-
corrections facilities arid various

studying to further his education
.niiUiori~ of citizens>Our. opinions
area Job
.
Corps
.
sites.•· W:ho
_
are to obtair{. an.· M.A. in Divinity
_-,.~p.1,!ceq1lrjs··;'cr,ime.
'.~r~:
-~~l!i.~d,
/\tlie~~Jie9plef
;,;;;:{;;:.:/\~/~t:::..~,-
,
~!ucli7ffr?~
N;Y\I:~:·.whil~ ..
:,he
,
,sQftened,
har~ened; changed; and·.-:,.·•._They
'"are··
t_he·
·maJonty,:.qf
p1ck~_;,·up
:
myaluable

practical
·•
/the-,s··
sad··:--irony;::of:;'~:an
·::'this·
·.·:Marist's:HEQP;
and nearly all·of
:experience

working

with the

opinionatirig is tnat few ofus are
;its·
'minority;
students .• They are prison Chaplain.
••
knowledgeabl~
··.•enough
..
,
about
••·
convicted>felons, most of\yhom
Charles Lanier Jr_, a class of
'crim_e to make any. opinion not
Hved iri irietr~politan Nf:W York
..
'84 sumnia cum laude Political
steeped'in our emotions.-.
Just look

City ( area • lower class

neigh-
;,
Sciencegraduate, expects to leave
at the Dip flop the media has dorie

borhoods prior to incarceration/ Green Haven shortly to pursue an
:,
in
:
its· Goetz·
.r_eportage
,:from
Many statements maybe made in M;A; in -Sociology, with its rich

Deceinber to
.now, ·'and_.
the
.
response to the question:."iW,ho. Social. Work

concentration,
re~ti~tant subs~que?t
•.
general
:
are these pe9ple?'\~epe_ndin ~n offered at Nappanoch Prison by
.
sh1ftmg of public thmkmg away.

.what;
values; soc1ahzat1on,
.and
SUNY New.Paltz.
from
Goetz the "hero" to Goetz
economic
-Class,•
pers.onc¼l
and
• Edwin EUis, 'a '81 magna cum
the "troubleµloner and suspect,"
social' P,erspectives one holds;
...
laucte· Business Administration
.
if you

need

yerification

of this
·:
however,_ all things considered, a
:.
graduaie;
•.passed·
the Law· School
•·•
trend; The media as propagandist
simple statement of fact is
that
,
Adniiss_ionsTest in the
summer
of
is highly evident in its handling of· they are students who. were J983
-and
.
only
·awaits
parole
Goetz.


convicted of seriou.s
.property
release
.before
he.' can
.attend
..
c;.
o
11
ceagainit didn'ti-ealistkaHy
and/or predatory crimes,
.usually
masters

study
,
at·.
Yale

or
ipr_esent
th_
e· stciry: the_.
und_edyi_·ng
:.·
five or.mor..e years prior to their Columbia'. He has been accepted
\imprisoninent.
at both-schools; And·two.former
,
reasons arid resporisibiltiies\vhich


A different view
-
Marist Green Haven students are
/'are.
the interacting va'i'ial>les.
that
·
New York State and national
• ·now
.
licensed by the
.
New·
.York

••
;_•bring.
·
victim
' 'a
nd
·perpetrator·
recidivism statistics indicate tr hat
.
State Bar to practice law;

.

togetherin their savage moment
1

:
of.,
.
greed, loss,
.
and mutual .incarcerated college graduates are
George
.
Winfield
eft Manst
,'·dehurrianization,:·:what
..
:
they
.
'.
the a~solute

lowest:-,
-~ecidiyist
·Green
.
Haven c1nd went
?~
to
..
rushed to print'was
a
story.
~This,.;
..
P~r_c:1:1~1!<:
.
~La~l cnmma~ of-
graduate from: the_ prest1g1ous
.
herd
;-style
type of' myopic .jour-
.-
fe~ders. released from prisons.

Georgetown University_
S~ho~l of
·,nalism;
inightvery
weir
be··one
Th!s_ f~ct stro~gly suggests that. Law! and, Jeffrey S011th. Je!ft
cause: of the fundamental failure·
.~anst
s extens10!1
graduates have
-M.anst
(]reen Haven . tu atten.<!,
ofcrime prevention efforts by our
different world views, values, and

and graduate from, first Vassar
society
•.
ari<i world.-•·.
What. this
go~ls _than those they stn1ctured College, then Yale Law.School.
could ·mean on·· a micro level
tlm~
lives through.on the day they
There are many more former
ho~ever, is inore i_mportant t~
heard ,t,he words •;You're under. and current students of ~arist
each of us because if the media's

arrest.

.
~reen Haven ~ho exe~phfy the
handling of the entire Goetz case
, Teddy H~ywo_od, the· class of (m~ academic
.
ach!evements
.
is any indication of normal media
82 ~aled1ctonan . who
n?w typical of .New Yorks schools
coverage of crime stories-we, as·

coordinates the entire Tuto~mg .and._on June 14, 1985, 13 more
,
consumers of news, may. be the
.
Pr_?gram at Green Haven,_ 1s

a M31nst
.
Gre:n Haven. graduat~s
victims of an on-going pervasive
...
pnme example_ of the quality of J01_n
the f~mtly <;>f
Manst Alum~1.
and
.
dangerous

f;aud
.
and

alumnus ~ans~, Green 1:{aven With the mcl1;1s1on
of a _two year
ramifications of which render.the
pr~uces.
Tee
.
as he 1s af-
Computer SCI~nce <?ert1ficate,. a
term "Orwellian"
synonymous
f:ct1onately

known, has . coor-
B.S. program 1_n
Soc1ology/Soc1al
·th th
h •
.. 1 d of the dmated the Green Haven Literacy Work,

and
a Pubhc
Ad-
f
· ·,,
e P arse
an
Volunteers of America program ministration concentration future
rWhat.does all this have to do
f?r four and a half y~s,
has graduati~ns
a_t Ma!1st Green
with Marist's
·invisible
students,
s1multaneouslr been a tra1~er for. Haven will be mcrea~mgly larger
you ask? Well, everything and
the Alternauves
to
_
Violence as more and more mcarcerated
perhaps· nothing is· the answer to
program over th! past three ye3:rs, students ~nd them~elves through
your question because the in-
and has contmued the sign the education expenenc~.
visible students referred to here
language _course ~e first. el?--
So. \_\'hat does. al! th1~ h~v~ to
are all men who attend Marist
~ou_ntered ma Manst class m his do
with
Mans\s
mv1S1bfe
College while serving sentences in Jumor. year to s1;1ch a_ level of students, you ask. ~ell,
!
II

state
prisons
(euphemistically
pr?!ietency that h1s_semces were answer
you~_ q~,eshon wnh
called
correctioa1al
facilities
utd_1zed by the pnson. staff to ano~er question.
Can you see.
today)
assist another. man at his release us a httle clearer now?"

consideration hearing before the
Warren Harry
is president of
Wboa1'thesepeople?
parole board. And Tee· isn't the·
Marlst
.
at.
·Green-
.Haverz.
Although no official numbers
exceptional.
.
student govemmenL
The Circle
announces
its
staff· for 1985-86
Editor-in-chief
Denise Wilsey
Associate Editors
Paul Raynis
Laverne Williams
··noug
Dutton
Sports Editor
.
·Brian
O'Connor

·
Viewpoint Editor
Pete Colaizzo
Arts Editor
Ken Parker
Senior Editors
Ian O'Connor
Carl McGowan
i
.,





























































































































































































































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m~;.t1aunted~:
~~N1ghtshift/!~
,and'.
the.~·third/f a•
:-.;
is
,-

some
_!:
serious;···~:
suspensefut.--;_:·.w,1~s;';lie:,1s.aol<t
that",he'. ~111,
get:·-~,:·
-

--
..
-.
-
·
·-
.house.
and tlie
:~oller_.~~~t~r.:.two\
iicwital~h~ritte'nfcxpressly;:fodis
i
·.;•storytclling
·going
'on:
In~the·':first~;~·
?~ihe~·g~jl;~'.th~
\;gtjld/~atcJi.:i,'.~d
::

••
,;
_-


of th~ most popular att~ctions ar~:'·star:•:Drew.-J3arrymor~;j11c"
ih-rcc·::•
story ,
a
'man·
·-played·
by· :James·
;--.ev~rything:!':Ani?ther··neafgagt?-L;-·
.
-


'
:.
any-amusement park?>
1
_'i
·'•i
:
.
_:r,
·scparate,'.j~lois''ari·:conncct~
•.
t,y.:-:-~woods
''dcspe;ate
to quit smoking'•.
i·/:
Finally.;tne' catfwhich, has_,beeri:.

.
·:·.:.'.
And_:._
-:Vhere·~·
_wo~ld
·,
au.th~r-}:tite ~resenct_on1 ~t;~w~icli:t~ites
-
::gets·
m~re than
'he
~~rga.!n~
·,·f~r·:r':
sli~~-~l~\i!_l;v~l~~
'-,.~~·.:i~~e.-•:~t~~(
//
•.
Steven King be if J>.Cpple.
d1dn t a mmor "role"·
m
the,.first,two
-;;,when
he joins an "orgamzatJon•.~·'.
;:,Jwox~t<>p~_;·~o~es·,
,;:pnmarY;,:<
.
H~e that surge of adr~nalin _at- and becomes most.;i~po_rt~nt,in
:.:·to:
help hini
·:1:,reak.')lle·:'habit:_
::'
f<?,r~_e\~~ai~~t'(,apj'~vil.,)>rese~c~;:
,-
t~tnable ?nly on_ a dark, ra1n_y the,o_ut~o~e otthe thmi. On_e.?f
<Th~,Y'll
help<him:· ~ll· fighti,
~Y
::h~dmg:m:.~he,roo~\9t~,l1tfI~:~1~!rl,
,
.
mght whtle -read mg
·
one of his the mce things.about the film. 1s its
·:
.
.'threatening _to· break· his legs,_,_h1s
,;
,
pre_w ~a~fY,!ll<>r~:.::
:/_:-::·:-.;,r:\;t{f
l••::(
,

h~~ror novels? One· shudders t9 spoofing on previou~ S_teyen-King
>:.wife's•·
legs, in· short the; legs of,:·,
..,:,"T.~fst_oqcr~re
,t.1s.ht~_y
.<=<?IIlpoSf
___
_
thmk.

.


: •
·;
.
·•

.
films. ~njhe,1opening.sequenc~,

:,an>;o~e.nearllnd,~eartoh,irn.
1
An~•:; e'1:·.,r,:c:J
9u_1~Jcly~:_pa~~•\~I_l~i;t~.e~\:
·_
.
. U1_1f<>rtunately,
the ~aJonty of , the. maJor character,·.the cat;:1s .. he
.;:,1s
,. constantly.'/
u'nde.r
.;::
play.-off~~e._bas1~
tea.~s.--~•itlnn
,us,:
:· •
his. work has suffered
.m
the tran-
first
,chased'
by' a drooling, rabid ·surveillance Jn case there are:any
/·all,
The
_la~t
tale.ts especially hor~,

,
••
sition from pag~ to screen. One
;
St: Ber11ard ari(U1en ncarlyjun
·:}'slip-ups}''
Some of the- most
••
rific~t~--p~re11,ts;J
··should
.:t~ink;j
<
·
n~d only menttoll some ?{the
over by a car.th_at·lo.oks, nofsur-

·:suspenseful-
segments"--
off
the_. ~'!.~~-•t leads th~n_i-_to
_the ~o.n-
•-
•.
latest attelllpts at adaptation to prisingly, Jike '.'Christine.','.·. In
,;movie
occur
.when.,
the smoker
-clu~1onthar,not.
ev,erythmg
..
1n-:a
,·_
remember ·that the films forget· fact, it has a bumper sticker thaf',1 'reaiizes
>there-•ireally'
.'are
eyes/:.ichild's_;fo9ni:ifsi1t1ply a:fis~en(>
'
the spe~~at nuances
_of
fear that' proclaims,
:
"I'm pure, evil; rm:,}
:everywhere;
wJiching him
at'
:all
:
oQ~~t: ~nild_'ti~agi~ati_oiL_;~_iligi::
,
.-
.
·,
King draws from his reader. Only Christine".: just in case· ariyone
;,
times';··:-.
:1··
J
·
c,-,:
,._:,-/
.>
,

>I
\
:::.· :· :.
is a·recogniied inastefiii the. art9[:/


/:.,;
.seldom.·_h~,s
th~•vie";;~·.had._such missed\,
.th~
-~:rt:s,ernblance.
/_
The:; se,concl.··
part· of
:the
·.film,,•.·
horn>.f:~nd
:i(~s:
#'}~e·achieve? ....
:.
ple~sure. Cats Eye 1s the latest Characters

al~o
•··
read. &<Pet ;,_
concerns
a.
man (RoberF-Hays)
ment for aJtlm to.~pture at}east .,
,
in a. succession of aue1!1pts and Semetary!'.. in:'bed
·and ,;w·atch

_\V}!o
mus(walk-'-around'. a\:very
.,'
some_
,of':
th!l(:ai"L•-,Than~ful!r:
'~
:
..


.
'
th~nkfully,
,t,his
f>Re_Jares much ~·The Deatl
,Zorie•~
on tele:visfoti;
;
_high
and-narro,,dedg~· on
a
very
.
!•c;~t•s Ete":does NstJhat.
,:\
/'-::cH·
.
.
-._-·
..
-
:·•-•,•
-•:·
.

.:-~.!•·.--'.
~
_c,
.,·-:-_··•:-;:•.
__
-;\o·-·-:··t·--·•1_•.•:<··,
-··-•··-?·_.-;
.'.faJkiflg··
With,.
R.E.M.
.
.

SPORTS PHOTOGRAPHY
>
by
ienriethF
;;P~~k~~;
Jr;B
'.
again .\,/ent>cto'
the·: b~nd for. its
;}
openirtg:" ac_L;:
This
fois''
h~lped

previou~ efforts/'.
--~ccording
..
to

·
·

,..
·;_.
• ·
·
,:: ' ,·
••
distinctive. bjend·. oCgititar based
·:
bands such as' Jason and'the Scor-
Stipe.
·


,·.
"·

..
:.
•. ·• ·
-•
·:·
• '.
·-
.•
:'
The mem~~:r~f°itEJ\f
refuse

'
pop and left handed lyrics.
.
·:.;
••
>-~~:e(sjind
:Tife
'Repiac~inenis·land'
~:;-,:
·~w_e'.ve·.~xp,uid.~d
-~';.bit;'t_sa}'s
•• , .·
to take the traditional path to sue-

'

·,

:

'
'
·-
.,,.
••
majors
:laoel
record
-
deals
·with

Mills.
'..'There
are
}n_strumeiits
oil
,
:
,
,
·
. .
. . .
.
·
,
Btit critical . success
:
does riot
EMIi

·



·
d

h

lb
h


Id •

cess.
come free; It often
,times
puts
·.·-

_
...

Amenca an -.Sire Records t e new.a um
t
at you
,wou
n
t

:
They do not sing Pepsi jingles,
I
.
·
·
··
f
·
·
·
..
..
respectively.'':'.·.:,:\,:'':
>
",:.
·
'hear
on othe(R;E.~Lrecoi'ds
. .'-'
.
release extended dance mixes of
·
arge amounts
O
.press1._1re
op ar-
·.-
·<~.
·>i:·
.·:,
· ',':
•~.:·.·.
·
,
.
.-·:,:
:

__
.,-,·_
.,
'
Fables
of:1J,e Reconsirui:tion
••

their records or sing on your copy
.
tists with expectations rising after
. ,
Says Stipe_:_
"There
are so ~a~y
.
was recorded in London with
-Joe

of"WeAretheWorldY:
al~~m.
'
·,
·
••
·...
·
·.
.,
great ban.ds o_ut then~ but due to
Boyd- working
\as
, producer:
"I guess you
,had
to sell a cer-
..
.
.
:
We trr n.ot ~o let i~ effe~,t u~. •
:
the-nature of the
.b_usines~
they're
.
Boyd's previous· effo'rts fodude
••
tain
-number
of records to· be at
says bassi_SL
M_ike
.Mills.
··
What
:
c!<?omed
t~
n~ver get
:
a~ywh~re
·
work with Richard Thom son
that recording session. It would
r~ally happ~ns is ~hat the_expefta~,
·;·
W
1th0ut
·som~:
h~lp;:
r.
th10k It's
:

and Jimi Hendrix.:..
·•

p
·
have been fun, but they wouldn't
tmns get bui~t up
111
-
e."'.eryone
else,
.:
great• t? be
10
•_
a: posiuon
._to:
do
. •
Boyd's London
'studio
is a far,
••
have asked me anyway," said
not us. We Just let thmgs happen_
-
.so_met~mg
abouot.''
:; ::
>:'
.
.
ci:y.
from R.KM.'s
.
home. of
R:.E;M. lead vocalist Michael natu~.ally. and do the· b_es~ we··
'Being
on the:·road allows the

Athens, Ga; The.band feels that


.
·stipe
in a telephone interview last
can. .
•. •
-
••




.
{band
to; collaborate~·
on:,
n:ew
·Athens'
..
out~of~the-way

1oc:ale


'week.
.
_
.

•••.
.
While
,many
·
young
·.~li.
nds
··material.
Working p:>llectively, workstotheiradvantage.
,>::.-::';

·Butthat's ~'ot to say· th~ barid
·
choose
to
work as~n op~mng_
act • each song is credited to the band
<'If we lived in New York or
goes unnoticed.
:
for
m?re eSta~lished arllS ts, as <!:·whole.,
.
.
.
·...
.
- .
.
Los Angeles we
.
would be more
R. E.M. 's 1983

debut
·
e. p.,


~p!;~~ltt:
:ai~ea;::ii~fi~tten
i;
••
''We·· do i( tl)at-
wa~:-
to
·avoid
affected: by ~~~teve_r's popula~,"
ChronicTown,
got critics talking
theyh di' eth.
wnsh
.
s.
one or two of.us gettmg.all.the
.·•
says
.Mills.
In
..
a place hke
and college radio listening. Later.
,
ea m
eir
O

• • OW '.

writer's royJities. and·•-cr:edit,"
·•
Athens/we can pick: and'choo·se
that year. their first Jull-length
:. ·
..
"Opening for other bands is says Mills. '.'And in reaiity
it
is a
.
from wha.t is popular because it·.
album,
Murmur;
received even
.
,
just not the way to get your
_music •·
four-way.process.''.
...
-
.
• .

•.
_
.
doesn't hit us
_over
.the
headiJ)ur
,
.
more praise arid college.-airplay.:

across,'';says Mills,
."Sure
it gets
.
'.~The
,
band
,./will
.
sit down
'_influences;
iht:refore~ are a little
So
much in fact,. thar by the.end
·.
yoit
·exposed
to a,:lot oLpedple,
together. and bring
·ou(different
_:
more sµbtle.than they would be if,
of the year
it
was voted the top
.,
but most of the time they.are peo- ' ideas,.. says
.-,Mills;
-
'.'Michael
;':
.,weJiveci.some\1/here
else/'.:/
.:·;L
album of the year by the critics of

pie who aon't care. If.youive:got (Stipe) doe~ most of the Iy_rics
_and

·.<,·.R.E:M/s';.·;hu'mble ,_\,existence
,
--,


:RollingStone:The
band was also>. a hit, then people know:who you
·•
tcige~her we wcirk
.•
out
th_e
:ar~ ·,'.ti0Wever;.ma:fbe)hi:eate11ed/Last
:·.
0,
.•.•

voted_: best·
·new:· .group:-\They
:··
,lli:e:-But
for·a·,band like':uinvhdse
·rangements;''.::•(: ..
-'J.
_._
.
:.
i,'{:_;:::;
/
year•Reckoning
b(oke _the iop'.for-
_.
c,.;'.:,reff!Y.~Pitm!i~~;,a~c,ol~~¢s.::.as;~,el~/tf;t~s.:·-~re•;'~r~~~!9P,t~;9ji~nt~c.h;(t9:.Jt,tt,fs\~efiµi~~JYV,~A~~i~tg~u,~:>j:\!ji~t).~~h~~~~tidp.~s,:tji<>y.~~o~f9_f
-
·
,

from
M
us1c1an;
:The
V
1Uage
:V
01ce
· /'
work as an
:openmg;_actdvould
·
be
1,
_thmg,
!',,adds.
Supe ..
< :·;,
..
·.
·
,:
..
:
,
;:
,
.,
;·'
·,
srnaH
-
c:lubs:and <>nt_o,the
stage~.
o_f

:
__
._a.nd
_t
__
he_
l~teTrousei-.
Press,:'
:.\,·i.':~·.
:t,,


c~mrii:rprodu~dve:
~~
:,;;:
!isi:,_.))i:,,:;\:l:
J.:h~;i:_lev_evis~,~gsJll~t
..
S'?,l!!Pf.,i~e.,'
4
\m<>:r~.'n.ii:qi_~.l!l·~si~e.9
,".en,pes.;;:(,:<
·:
:
:
Last•yearthe band followed up.\.\'.
:Whde.·On·;
toiJi;> R;RM:,,.wilJ
.c.'..
th~> ~an~ts.Jq_r_thco~J~g,::a!bµm
.·:;,./,:So.'.~_t:sp1te:tll.t:,t!*,·ofjfi~tr
se-
.
-
theidirst album
-with
Reckoning;
,
often fake lesser
,
known
.
bands .
Fables of the;Recoµstr"ction
will
.'<
cond album, R.E:M; may soonbe

••
'their largest sellerto date: Credos
·
under its
.wing
to
.serve
as,
iheir
.'
·be'
,
'.'a
little., different.,. from
::·more
than
ajustaMurmur.!:':-;;
/
'.
.
.
..
-
..
~.:.
.
.
.

.
.
.
.
.•
.
.•
·•:...

.


'
.
:-.
.,:
'
·.•-
-~

•'
·,•---:
"
..
·--~~~]Ili~:;EAT~R~
''.
.C.
0 '·,·
..
·
,!
:~
Red
Foxfootbali by Debbie Ryari (Sept 27, 1984)
\
: •·
.•
'··
:·..,..
;~~l~-~~;i~~neliness
Go
0
~and in. Hand; Many~lderlySay~• by M~ri~rinc <:ons~riti1100(Dec.
13,
1984)
.
..

:-.::Bar<ia~on Leads theWayfor'Arts in Poughkeepsie" byRoseHazel1on (Jaii:31~ 19~5)
·: • •

:
:<. ,
.
...:.
Morrison runing at Van Cortlandt Park by Don Reardon (Sept. 27, 1984)
-,. Crew by Bryan Mullen (April 25;' 198S)
:'
f.-··
:-
.Wham! Zap! Pow! Collectors Arc Hot for Comics" by David Rakowiecki(Jan;
Jr,
1985)

••
-----:
",Alone: Night Shifters' Topsy-Turvy World" by Rosemary Olse~{May2,
·1985).
'.·,.:°"f:
-
.••
,..,,.

,.·

•.
:.'.
_::-(,N:CAMPUS
FEAfuRE
-~
...
~·-:'.
---•-


·•.
,~.
_,,
·
...
--
:~.~
~-
~.:.:-.

.

,-:__
"Vie~.:..APer~onaiEx.;crience"
t,yDouglas oJito~-(Nov~ 15,i9~),
.·•
-:=
..
<:
">:.:.

.
.
_;-
··•·
NEWS PHOTOGRAPHY •
• · : :

1.·
,
_:;_
Portrait of L~is E~nb~g'by. R~se Hazelton (D~. 6, 1984)
·
,
- Flea market by-Gary Jugert (Feb. 21; 1985)
,
. •

~
/\ir bands by Mike Patulak (April 4, 1985)°
COI;.UMNS
.
.
'
-:. "In Search of ... Common Sense" by Ian O'Connor (Oct. ll; 1984)
- "1984 Revisited" by Carl MacGowan (Dec. 13, 1984)


- "Buddy Holly: A Tribute" by Kenneth Parker Jr. (Jan. 31, 1985)
- "A Real Lemmon" by John Bakke (April 18, 1985)
SPORTS
#
- "Marist Junior Pushes the Distance" by Joe Didziulis (Nov. 15, 1984)
_.
·
·

•·

- "For Hoclcey Star Rob Trabulsi, ll Was a Long Climb to the Top" by John Cannon (April 4, 1985)
- "Rowing on the River. The Tradition Uves On" by Michael R. Murphy (April 25, 1985)
- "The
Challenge of a Triathlon A waits Student This Summer" by Michael S. Mueller {May 2. 1985)
r-
·•:
·
- "Shcl,y Sperling 11t
Marist: A T,ragedy Remeinbcred
0
by Denise Wilsey and John Bakke (Feb. 21, 1985).
'.""'.
"'The Case of the Derelict Door Almost Closed" by Julia Murray {March 24, 1985)
.....
•••
...
~-

..
·
_._,·.
_;-.··:
~-
·,
.
.-
.
.-·-.-·-~_-•:-~--·
....
-.':'--_--.-.·"
...
·._
.••..
\
NEWS
~p~~TING
.... "Dnvlwis
Drinking at Marist Prio~ to Fatal Head-On Collision" by Bonnie Hcde (Oct. 4, 1984).
·.:._
"lntniders'Arrest Raises Security Concerns" by Paul Raynis(Nov. 8, 1984)
•.
.
·,
.

.
.-
"Leo Residents qtught in Phone Credit Fraud" by Denise Wilsey (Jan. 31, 1985)'

IN-DEPTH REPO.RTING.;_

-CoveragcofMilcePerry~~b~i;~O'Connor(Oct.4,0ct.18,
Nov. IS, 1984)
:

- Series on Adult Education at' Marist by William Hare (Feb. 21, March 7, March 28, 1985)
..
-!'Director's Firing Raises Concerns for FD Majors•~ by Denise Wilsey (March 28, 1985)
REPORTER OF THE YEAR
- Bonnie Hcde
- Ian O'Connor
- Denise Wilsey











































































































































































.
,.. .
i
· .. _.;•,;:_i),,?;,.;;/;;:.•;>';.:,ii'i'.~".'•:.::f:·.1'~;_.,.i;~i:'rl·'.;.f;:i~;;;~;{.;,,,-;,:;
..
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;:-<•,
::,;.-.,,
....
,.:-,,,
•.
''.-'
..
;
.,.
•·.···
AOOSEVEL T 1, 2. 3 & 4
Rte 9. Hyde Park CA9 2000
ACRES OF FREE PARKING
~t.e~rfe:-~\:~~p~:tiia.~
'
,,
..
:

~
.
:
► •
.•
·.:
,.
Fcell(),y
gnidtjatesc::
·~
;S[I.:~;~
1
;:1ri1~i~Ii~A~f
~~iI~0::;ItJl!
·;·Wlth.Matthew.Broderick':·
. ...7:05-&<9:15
.\:;:>\·":•,::·, •
lty_JohnBakke
·•
· _.,
·--
·_-.
·
··
-,

__

.··:-"
·
HELtfdVEA•'••·
··
:,
,-:,.• ..
,
..
, ;·
· .;: •
<(;,.;::/d~~,#;~~)iionda;,,·Ap;il
}:JiJ§t:p~,;~~~Irj.~';;~9~~/?
,f
Jf
£;
ii!#fm~i.
.
Bop'pei,
·
takes
<m

and • Jack
..
•·

-
·
-HELD-·OVER'
·:
:.-_:-~,.--:·_.·.:
·-
·:
·
'J:,einmon
can'( make it,
_there~s
..
~;-
oe·sp~rately
-s~·e~i-~g
:s·~s_~~
iPG~~~~
'
•.
,'J!;,ar,:,,~~C:':,;~rmist!::tl
✓::!~ar,
• ••
-
.i._,
With· MADO.NNA-1:25 & 9:25.
' •
"
·
:seems
a shame to
·_wczste
a:
per-
.

• •
••
fe_ctly

good speech, oneJ spent
.
•.'.••·
'·f,-Ei.])
OVERf

hours·/working. on in
,lieu .of
· ·
·
·· ·
·

schoolwork.
Here,
-then,
is

my
.

Woody .Allen's
.
·.
.
.
'speech<IO
the graduates,' whi~h
.
·-,
~urple;:A,qstfof
Cairo
--
:
1::Ur':!taJ:~'ft:z:e:,~:,'sle~~~
••


7:3·0
&
9:30.


·
on.May 18/asyou choose.
,
,
!::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::
J
fellow-graduates, we stand at a
..
-
.'.
point in.time unlike any.other.
·It
:
has
never been May_
18; 1985,
EARN·
FREE COLLEGE CREDIT
.
!.
••
.
'.
.
:
.
.'·
.
··._
..
-
..
',
.
·.'
_·-.\
·:.-
.
While wo_rking in:a-summer camp for
emotionally hand_icapped;
and learning
.disab_led
children.
-
Need waterfront,-bunk, education
-
-and
·spe~ialty
c:t>unseloi"s.
-
1

before,and ifnever_will be again.

Let us count our blessings. Let us
.
then divide by two, square the
result and multiply it by
pi -
this
will
give
us the circumference of
our blessings,· and it is a com-

forting number tci know in times
of personal crisis such as this,
though

if you know the area or
even the volume of our blessings
you are in pretty good shape.

Why is today a time of crisis?
The answer to that is really too
obvious:
because
we
are
graduates. College is history, and
.
from now on we will be held
accountable for our actions. Is
this progress? Perhaps, but then
again perhaps not. Either way, it
is a crisis for many and though
.

dressing in robes,
.
and ~earing
strange hats with tassels alleviates
the tension aJitile by allo~ing us
~o sneak champagne bottles in
unnoticed,
_the
costumes in and of
-
,
, ,:
1
1
-
,-themsel_ves
do

not-. change our
.
Are we more
'educated
than we
off. Probably there wm be a scar,
:_ si\U;atipn'.'.any._.For:example,
were w~re,
..
say,
,'yesterday?
Less
too, due to the failure of
:;:;
·f
notftinder_;sedation;°<~ven·'now
l
'.,:educatcdtbanwewi\\
be:100.
years
..
medicine. lt's always
_
like
.
that.

would
be
ina·pan.ic
...
?,:>:':,, :--.<,:,

from nc:>lfl,~'Ah,;but.we will all
Where do we turn for help?
:
•~---!iill-lllli•••-•••••••-••••--
-'
>~j-And·
iso.
l should
be:
,Today,
•• be
-deaq
;JO(),
years from now,"
Where do we go for guidance?
All
'
each" one of us stands at a
••
you say, but that begs the
too often, it is a bartender. Surely
-·,,stu·,o·e:N·TS;·
·-1r'S·•
..
vo.U•R··:tt"'IVIE
__
:
'.,/i
-
:TO':EARN:_ix_
.I
t
,. ,
.
.
·.
,._.
('
..
·.
.
..
.
.
. .-
.
:.
I
_
_ <
Ma~e
th.e.
extra rnoney.:>
_·you
heed'for next'se°rnEisfer.---
\''.:AII

office
and industrial

·:_<·
~skills
·.needed·
..
,_•,
:_.
·
.

_,.-
·.-·--:······-··=·•,;;~-------#··,····~···
.. •.
-
-·.·
.·,·.·
.
,
...
...
.

:
.......
::_,-
~---
,,
Go_od·
pay ra~e·~--
·oon't
wait.
c·a11
f()t~ar, appointment.·
M.·A:
N P
O
W E R
Temporary Services
,
44 Haight Avenue
P9ughkeepsie, New York
(914) 471-5623

·crossroacl;
At least it seems like a.· question: In that case, what's the
the thoughts of Rousseau offer
, 0
cfossroad, though.it- might be a,,
.use?
Jt~s,just a matter of time,
.
more than those of a-bartender,
/cloverleaf
or a fork in the·road.
which as we all know either is of
though the nagging rumors about
(-'
n•s.
an intersection in any case, the. essen~e or !S . money.
Rousseau's inability to mix a Tom
.\and
it presents us with a· choice: Whichever it really is, it works Collins properly are no doubt

Do WC
continue do~n the path
·or
..
ag~ins~ us, and ev~n
•.
the ~Ost
responsible for his recent un-
irresponsible frivolity that we've
.
edu~ted people can t make time
popularity on college campuses.
beeri on for
~·years·~
a
path
·that
--'
stan~ still.· However; l know a
However that still leaves Flaubert

leads
.to
a life of abandon btit few_,young
women who can speed -
who made one hell of a
.·_.
perhaps
:_
·
also
.,
to
>
spiritual
-.
it up a litle, and a few professors
Screwdriver, it is said -
and
: :
enlightenment'?
Oi-
do we take the
:
·who.
'b~lance
.
thi!1gs out by

countless others.
·_
•.
other road·. the one of continued slowing 1tdown dunng lectures.
-
·Philosophy
is not for everyone .


,
·advancerri~nt,

or
senseless·
•.
'
And. what is education, reaUy? Nor is professional wrestling. Nor
maturity?· it's_ a tough choice. After four_years, h~w many
~f
us
is Marist.
It
takes a certain kind
·Perhaps
it's wisest to consider the can explam. the difference bet-
of_person to make_it throughfour
'exampi!i·of
Thoreau, who chose ween existentialism and the idea years at Marist, and you are all of
to wait for a ride and go wherever that life is a bowl of cherries'? Not
that kind. You are eager, but not

the ride was going.
many,- I would bet. And even if
to study. You are ambitious, but
Ah,
_
but where_ are we. going?
.yoµ
could, who would want to
not at the expense of a good time.
More importantly, where did
we
listen?
A
very great philosopher You
are
trustworthy
and
come from? For much of the class once summed it all up
by
saying,

responsible, but not on weekends .
.
of
'85,
the answer probably is
"Life is hard, and then you die."
_
You are interested in the hap-
__

Long Island on both counts, but
This, of course, is nothing new.
.piness
of others, but wouldn't Jet

:that
is not What I am talking
We all are mortal, but all too
their misery get you down, either.
about. What I am talking about
often our mortality is just an
Yes, you are cut out for this
_
_-is"
What is this all about? What is
excuse for not going out on world, and soon you will be in it
,

the'mcaiiing"of
life?
Why
is man
Friday_ nig~ts; Is this, then, w~at
_
up to your necks.
.
··
born just to suffer and die? These·· educat1on

1s all about? I think
With that thought in mind, let
.
are
good
.questions.

How many
not.

me say that if there was one thing
peopte·are
not
wearing
anything

No, education is a search for
of true value l could leave with
under their robes? That is another
one's place in the world around

each and every' one· of you, it
good question, and one which can
him, preferably a place· with a would be 20 bucks. Instead, let
best be answered by- taking a
great view. To forsake the view is me offer a few final words of
stroll under the bleachers, but
not to forsake all comfort,
advice. First, always respect the
please waii until I am finished.
though, so we turn to science for
noble dignity of the human spirit,
.
Other good questions
.
for the
the answers, and see that it has because the bum you don't spit on
college graduate are: How many
failed us. For example, it. may might someday be able to buy and
tears are in a 'bucket of tears?
soon be possible to clone small, sell you. Second, Jive each day to
\Vhy is there always a parking
multi-celled

animals,
_
but it is the fullest, because you've got one
space right up front after you've
unlikely that in our lifetime we less left than you had yesterday,
parked in the back and walked the
will be able to clone, for instance, and soon you will die and rot
rest of the way? Is it possible to
Brooke Shields. Naturally, it away. Third, remember that
cheat in the game of life, and if
would be an expensive process, today is the first day of the rest of
you can, who will catch you and
the government would want to the week - it may not sound too
what is the penalty?
put an entertainment tax of the consequential now, but wait for
There are as many ways to look
cost of cloning your own, and the weekend and you'll see what I
on a college education as there are
there is a moral question involved mean. And fourth, always lock
noodles in the average plate of
- namely, Would your girlfriend your car doors at night.
spaghetti. This is a fact. For
appreciate it? - but even so I am
-
Fellow graduates, the future
some, graduation is a beginning;. a bit disappointed.

stretches out before us like a
for others, an end. But an end to
But is the failure of science any minefield. Dare we step forward
what?
Can
we really say that we
more disappointing than the with the bold ignorance that has
are educated people now that we
sudden appearance of a wart? In been our trademark'? Yes, but you
have our degrees?
yes,
we can,
the overall, yes, but not to the go first.
but will that make it so?
-
individual who has to have it cut
Thank you.
,
'
.,
'-.I
I




























·I
i
'
•• Junior
Dina
Cerchione·
,
re~ei_v~s
•.
her ring at Saturday_.:.,
.
.
evening's
• Junior·,
Ring .
Ceremony,
the. climax .. • .fo ·. •:
Parent's Weekend.
.
• The ceremony was held 'in
the . chapel . and rings • 'Yere -'

presented by· Dr. ·Andrew•
Molloy and the junior
-class
officers.

Awards for sportsmanship, •
community /·service· • and-
acadernics were awarded by
Dean Cox. The went to the
following;
,
• .
.
• .. . .
.
• Sportsmanship:,. Jim. Bride,
. Marie Bernhardt, Paul Raynis;

Community

Service:". Dina
Chiappa,
.
: Michael

.Mueller;
·
Academics: .Gregori, Licht.

The ceremony also featured ••

the Marist Choir
and a class of 1986 slide show:.
(Photo by Mike Petulak)
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FORIEW:&RADUATES
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r)~~~~
..
•7·•,··
I
-·.
-:-
.
/"•
.
'•
-)
'."/::°:'}·:
■-■'
-------------------------------------------------

•.
·;: .
Time:; 1 r:p'.mi.Wtiile'rriost ofus
:<\fSorrie:
find· the
:effect,
of
...
the1f.
,:.a:m:
s1tuat10n s1m1lat:.1solat1on
1s
\ar~
\Wiitd.ing}dow~.;:
fo_r;
:a.
go9~
t
work.itjg.ho~r.~--9.11
t_heir
soda(a~d:
•::~;;r~'i:factor:·
~•My}ri¢rids
find it
··'·night's
:·steep/CMike
Ruseskas

i~
;-
family live~ aptoblc:m::->-':{t
::;Y:,;;\,./-~if.ficult-
:to
·:do_
::anythiftg
·from
; .
just awakening to.begin his
day/:-;.
,,
:
Jeanine: Byq1e/ Ma.rist
:
coffee:
·,
twelve, to ~ighi ·on my. nights off
'
>
E.usesKas/a junioi:.at,Marist~is
¥
shop cashier, wo·rkedJ0 p;tn;'t~ 6.; arid. my wife·.works the four
:to
one;_of:Jlie elite groupiliat: keeps·; a;m:,-a( ihe· Plaza .Pi11ef in·: New
.;
(welve shift/'·>;'<
·,

••
..
·
'/
thirigsJt6ing after·
:hours--~--
'the:•:
;_I~altz.'f~t~
year: '.~I never:_
had any
-
·:·
Because
~of;
:
the·.
_di(fer~nt
l
night workers.


....
·
.
:
ume.tQ,myself," she said; •~My lifestyle, most agreed- that m-
.
'.'·
•••
Ruseskas stocks shelves

from
...
Jrierids·would all be going out arid.·
..
dependence and· self-reliance are ';.
.
• 12· a:.m. tili 8:30
·a.m.'·at·
Shoprite/ l'd.be\voi:king.":
'

:··:,:

•• '
,;,;
...
:

notable: characteristics- of
.night'
:
..
, ·
-in
W,appiiigers Falls;::.i-
,
:•i;
:
·
;:,:::-:
\:_:::;,
Byrrie
siid :what.she·hated inost

workers~

.


.•
<
..



-:\-_


. •
._
•. •·.
Judy peo·
is
a'
conunuriity men~
,j-
about_·.het)1~urs
was '-'being there._
:
;
_William:
-Colen_ian;
a· night ~isc
taL health
·nurse
at~ St. Francis
:. ,
when
J
knew everyone
.
else. was Jockey ~t. the mghtclub Berties,
'Hospitaffroiri·
Ia:m.'tiU 9·a.m.
,.:::);
,out}1avingJuii:"···
'
>
r:; ,,;:~·
.
said::, h~ _thinks
...
these

are
\
.
:

Chiicl(/Godfrey
..
,
and: Byron"/:,· Rus_e_skas
said that. socially. he
·charactenst1cs
·
people alr~dy
;
Mathifon'dispatch and.drive taxis
:
feels out of touch, as JI1ost people- have; which mak~s the~ more apt
•.. fron{5 J).m::tiU5 a.m;
:
•·,:-."
·.::..e'.


don!t work the hours he qoes: On
:i
to take on. a. mght Job. Callo,
••
:
Btid'tegardiess of who tliey are' 'nigh.ts ,off he does'go out··with
_-'ho.wever,
said
.
these:
are
arid what they do,
_night
workers
·_.
frien~s.'. but C'they au have to be

c_haracteristics
which arise out of.
• ·
say simifar
.things
on the pros.an~
•.•.
up'early in the morning."
:
..
·,
io ' •. .
necessity.
.
.·.
_
..
.
·world·
consofthehourstheykeep.;_.-,:·,•,
.
.Graham said he has no rela-
.,
"At-night we're out.of touch
.-'.''-'.'You're·
180
'degrees
from.-the tionships

with

day
.
people.
with a major percentage of peo-
fest ofthe world,',' Peo· said: "It
.
''We're
:
on·· totallY.
.
different
'pie,
so we really have to use our
seems }ikc_aU
you do is work and schedules,''. he said ..
\.
.

.
,

own resources,"
·he
said. "M_ost
sleep/'. ·'
/.-, ,.

<
.
,

;
·
Peo

agreed, calling relation-. ofthe agencies areri'topen and we
·Hank
Graham, who works on
••
ships with day.• people
:"non-
•·
have to work with the little that is
Chuck Godfrey and Myron Mathison "stalk the night" at

..
Chariot Taxi.
the Marist.'.College.housekeeping existent,". and~ emphasized the available."
.
. . :
.
·•
-staff
from 10:30>p.m. till 7:15 feeling of being cut off and alone.
The police, he said, are a source
.
a.m:,' • said. the physical
·
ag-

• •

j

of security and help especially at

justrrients

ai:e the most difficult
Lieutenent Joseph' Callo of the night when resources are limited.
.
part_ cifnight-hours>"Youfwhole -Town
:or
Poughkeepsie.~ police

"The public calls the police,"
•lifestyle.
is
'turned
around,''. he

works the 11 p.m; to 7 a.m. shift
·
Callo said,
0
Who are we going to
.
said~-"I
·eat.dinner
at
..
breakfast

every third week. He pointed out call - God?"

time -
there is no lunch the unusual family habits which

anymore. It's
.just
not the same go along with switching shifts and
Jean Bowles, who works the 12
thing."
.
.

working nights.
-

.
_-:
;
.
.
midnight to 8 a.m. shift at the
Ruseskas said the only physical
.
·
·
"I go home in the morning and
·
Hudson River Psychiatric Center
adjustments
·he
had to make were see my. daughter Tiffeny for
·
15 as· a therapy aide, shared. Cailo's
_-
to "go:outand buy shades for the·.· minutes before she goes to school· feeling of responsibility: She said
ed during dark hours than any
other time.
"We have to be much more
wary and on our toes because of
••
that," he said.

John Brinckloe works the night
shift at the- Hudson

River
Psychiatric Center and is also an
ori-call emergency medical techni-
.
• ciim and instructor. He agreed
that
either more frightening
things tend to happen at night, or
things seem more frightening
because it's night.

•.
officers and all agreed that it is
more pronounced at night.
"The bond is strengthened out
of necessity,'' Deputy Sheriff
Springstead said. "With
the
nature of the complaints, there is
a strong need for your fellow of-
ficers."
Bowles again cited. the limited
staff on the psychiatric ward's
third shift, stressing the need for
fellow workers in· the event of an
emergency.
Lieutenent Callo noted the
understanding among the officers
of those who work the night shift.
windows and an- air conditioner .•

and I go to bed,'' he said. ''I
that psychiatric problems

are
"At night there seems to be
You.do have to leamto live with a;,::.;.sometimes
think I should be coma hard enough to handle in the

mmoorree
odfeapcrehsasniocne
tointh1_Pnekopanled
at-
"Certain work, like paper-
lot less sleep," he said on a more·;~ing home at a regular time like.a daytime when
there is plenty of
work, just can't be done after a
..
,_,'
serio.us note .. "You find that._: re_·_gularfathe_r/'·
••

staff
around. 'But
at
night we're
tempt things," he said. "Also,
, f
• ·
understaffed -you really_
have to

'most
major.· accidents and fires
point - the mind just won t
__
unc-

tion," he said. "And that's o.k."
be able to depend on yourself. to pappen at night and have more a
handle what
·comes
up;••/.
·-
. chance to become serious before
Mathison talked about the
:.


••
•/;·
'
thefre spotted."
,
cooperation between the night
Bowles said it's frightening
~to
.
.
Because of all the
/ ,difficult
taxi drivers and the police.
k1_1ow

that_ she_'s. basically alone aspects
.
of· working ~ights, a
"We're the watchdogs of the
with the s1tuauo~, but fear, sh~
..
special. closeness or camaraderie
neighborhood," he said.
"If
the
)~i,d,. is ~'-
!t~~~-
:wi~~-,.,working
:
s_eems to develop_ among those
E~~~c;a:~~~:~o
~~~~
some
thing
.,J;J?;-:1."
£~!+~~~~1%Ji~i}ithf
;iJr
olb/1:>i~~Jtliifi~o~i~T€
iJ~•,~
breed·
The reasons for keeping a
;,~~,,
~?iiii""."-'!:.~~~Y~illed~r9(;{'~"'~,_a~,.'~r,'~:n_~i'•/.q~
..
:-~_-·a.J.·
fiaternit~:il
i'
,P~o·.
said."

schedule.so
opposite from the rest
.•
.
'.f"-
',,
..
d,;1ve1/
M:ath1so11.sa1~.
:"You
take
,:
"There's a closeness between us.'.'
of society differ.
,t{:;:•,
yotir1ifei~ your;_han!is
to makea
;/
Ruseskas
;said
that, where fie
Personal choice: "I'd rather be

"·"
\,,
-.:}iriiis,;'.~!;;-,

.
.
.
,
.
• • . :":.
.


works the riight crew
_is
"a special
home days with my children,,,
: .,.
,
Bo~p
,Mathtson
and dispatcher group lumped into one, no matter

Bowles said.
::§Cl~Jrey_
a~ree~ th~t thw~ are
__
what.department they work for."
,'
Necessity: "I couldn't go to
-~<:>~e:
mus,gmgs ,11d {Ob~enes
_at
He men.tioned
.
the friendliness
school full time otherwise,"
.•
p1_gli!
an,d_the
taxi service 1sdrawn
..
which,develops between the night
Ruseskas said. "Besides, it takes
1_11to
tL·
·•
•..
.
.
.
.
.
.
crew, and those
·few
people who
·years
to get on (day shift)."
,/
~•We're a personal_
delivery ser-
shop during the late hours

But there are those who don't
./vice
forthieves," Mathison said.
·•·
·,

really seem to know why they do
.
.::.
:
,••·
.
.
..
'
.
.
·.
.

.
·
.


:
;
·:-. ;::,
.-
.?;.-'
0
i/Because
of the notably higher
Those involved in law enforce-
it. As Mathison put'it, "We hate
'
,;'.::·
<
Cof~ee aod a
Pf!lYer:
a T?wn
°~
Pough~eepsie_ pohce~an
.:
./
crimerate, Lieutenent Callo said ment said that a camaraderie or
it but we love it. I guess we'd miss
.
~-.
-.,:
gets
~eady
I
o_r
patrol on the
night-shaft.

.•.
•.
·_:
.
'.
;:
:
...
:'
_.
: ,\
:'_:,
:·:::.}/i
y
t~a't-niore'_police officers are kill-
bond usually exists between police
.
it if we weren't doing it.,'
t~Qfe
tft(ln)usrXtftJ/:{St
In
the
Mullson
Valley
by
Barbara
Jluby.
.
learn how wine is made and. try:
)

;
The Maritime
Center'
•.
in
water is not usually too deep, but
well as rides and games of chance,


:<
-


samples. Munster saidthere are
Kingston, is a living museum to
.
there can be some strong currents,
he said.
:: If Y?u'rcdooking f?r a place_to_·

more wineries in Ulster
,.C:~uµtythcia:ting
with relics of stea~boai~
••
so Munster rec_Qrpmends
tubers

•The Ulster County Youth Fair
liye'th1s summer that s filled.with than any county east of tlle
..
Roclcy:' and other river traffic Munster-.vear·
-·snealcers
to
cushion
in New Paltz will also be held in
lot~ ~o-f.
cultural 'and
:
re~re.ation~I-'-
:
MMniains.:.: ·_::.:.::..:.~:
__
:._
__ -,~- -:-·-:-:·,;;.-said::.Dlsier

also.
-h~

· a
.
boat
themselves :against rocks.
August. Munster said the fair will
:acuv1ues,.-the-:-Hudson
:Valley 1s .. The home of Franklin
c
D.
:
restoration shop which makes and
.
.
Tours are also available in both
be a livestock and crafts fair.
;

the: phlce t~ be,
:~CCoJdin~
to iwo
;
Roosevelt
..
and the Van~erbilt
.•••
repairs

boats.
Dutchess has
.
counties. A driving tbur

of in-
Ulster wi"ll
·
be holdi·ng a fun-
>
county officials;·
••

-_-
.
:-

··_-
• ..
Mansi9n are the biggest attrac~
·
·several
boat launching sites. Din-

teresting sites in Outch~s County
Th~most popular attractions 1.n
:
tipns
···in
, Dutchess -County.·.,; ner· and luncheon cruises are
encompasses the- five\ area col-
draiser for the Statue of Liberty
•.
Ulster County are.·the wineries,
_'.
Richard.Mitchell, direct~r of the
••
available· to those who want to
leges, historic -sites, old homes in June. It will be a gala celebra-
accofding to Joe Munster, dir~-
••
Poughkeepsie Chamber ofCom.:

spend so.me time.on the Hudson,
.and
estates _ inc_ludiilg Lowell tion with games, boat rides and a
tor of the· Ulster County Pubhc
merce,

_said
these

Hyde

Park
according to Mitchell. Hudson

Thomas' home in Pauling, Mit-

parade, he said.
lnfor.matfon Office~ There are fif-
,
h_omes bring in visitors Jroin all
,
River ,
:
cruises leave both the
chell said.
Dutchess and Ulster also have

• teeri wineries. along the. west coasr •• over the state. Both can be seen
..
Kingston
.and.
Poughkeepsie bar-
.
:
Walking tours of. the historic more relaxing ways to spend those

of-th,e Hudson where visitors can·
·for
one admission orice. he said.
bors.
·
'

••
.
.
.
district in Kingston, stone houses

lazy days of summer -
in lakes,
.T:eichillan.
shows
iartwork
For_: those who want
·
a
more
in Hurley and the oldest street in
river beaches and parks.
uplifting summer
.
experience, America, in New Paltz, are
.
.
The
Esopus
Creek,
the
there's hang gliding
..
and air
available, Munster said. There are
Ashokan Reservoir and KingSt0n
shows.
.
.
.
also bicycle tours of the area, he· Point are among the places to pie-
With two Ulster :County
said.
nic, swim and fish in Ulster. Hik-
by Tom McKenna
ships of form iil space, color and schools of training - in EUenville . A trip to Woodstock to visit the
ing in the Catskills is also very
t:
line," he said.
and Ker_honkson -
hang gliding artist colony is worth the trip, ac-
popular• said Munster·
An exhibit of 16 paintings by
Teichman,
who has par-
is increasing
.
in. popularity,
cording to Munster. Besides hav-
Matist
:
..
professor
.
Milton
ticipated
in·
.
group
shows
Munster said.
ing a variety of art shops and
Teic}lman began l~t Sunday in previously, and whose art was
• The aerodrome in Rhinebeck • studios Woodstock has a creative
the
;_
Marist's Gallery Lounge, first shown at the Woodstock Ar-
has airplane shows Saturdays
music studio and theatre -
the
highlighting the artist's work over tists. Association 20 years ago,
throughout the summer. Mitchell Woodstock Playhouse.
the the last 20 years.

_
said he gets a very good feeling said antique flying aircraft -
in-
"When people say there's
Teichman, who has had an in- from having his art displayed.
eluding a replica of a Wright
nothing to do in the area, I say go

teres.t in painting since he was a
"I see my work in a fresh way brothers World War I fighter
to Woodstock," Munster said.
teen-ager, introduced the exhibit when it hangs together in a large make up the aerodrome. This
"There's always something to do
to the public Sunday afternoon at place," he said. "I can see the dif-
show is entirely different than
there."·
a reception in the Campus Center. ference in style in a fresh way, anything in the county, he said.
The Dutchess County Fair is
and I can see the changes in style
• Tubing is another growing probably the biggest special event
He~described his style as non-
·overtheyears."
sport in the Ulster County Cat•
in both counties, according to
objective, having no subject mat-
Teichman's work will remain skills. Visitors can take a train
Mitchell. It's held every August in
ter; "I'm interested in rel~tion- • on display until May I 1.
ride up to Phoenicia then tube on
Rhinebeck and has agriculture
._ _________________________
.... the Esopus, Munster said. The
and ans and crafts exhibits, as
Camping; picnicking; swim·m-
ing; hiking, and fishing can be
done in Rudd Park in Millerton,
Baird Park in Pleasant Valley and
Norrie and Mills State parks in
Staatsburgh, Mitchell said.
"If
you can't find something to
do, you haven't looked enough,''
Mitchell said.
For
more information
or
brochures contact the Ulster
County Public Information Of-
fice, Fair Street, Kingston or the
Poughkeepsie Chamber of Com-
merce,
Washington
Avenue,
Poughkeepsie .
·- .
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'· :-: :. by Julia E. Murray.·.
• • If expene1_1ce
1s.
the best. te;a~h.!P>:.m~k,e,:
µs_:
~~ .. a!l t~~ w~r}(so·:-that_' required .to' submit designs,• b~fr:" \V<>rk~ out::'. ':1'·'
,·/:-;/;tf{-:-<?'t,tJ'
.'sofue:of-"thi.N•i:iendlies'tYthcY,:
have
The.· _Fashion ••
Sho~casct,,~s +V-1.ereal\yJ~t,sa1~Bl'.lSSo~·.;•\ \.eve!}'on~·. is: ~vit~ ,to_;_S\l~~lt .•··'.:',~lt'~;.more\.-da,n_~/tliis·:year,f ·ever\ met; ,,·••Marisf;.\if•·~/sniall.
.
. prov1dmg st'!dents with an : ~-. _

·_
'. 0J;hc ·; w,ork.i
:-:·of:·
',
~S;
/,
stud~n~.

·.·•
~es1~s; • (?~her d~1gn cl~s~
are. \
~ilich looks' ~.tte~.Jmd .. is. • a: I~(•· school../
'I ':
•.am
•.
:iclosef.'}to
Ymy
. cellent education. . . . •
~
/ ·,, :

des1gners:is
fc.1:i\lr~ 1n
_t~c:spo,,
·:
mvolved
m
othe!_.llS~ts.:_of~
t~~-·. more, fun ·to ~o;•~_saij:I
Thew~
fr
(i::,
.housemates, than ; anyone· ·.in'•
the • .
The. S~owcase, held last_·.
mght< -~_'_Jotal
,,?f
~-·o,r:·79
J>e~pl~:
~re _-show; ·.Thc·Ja~~°.11.r~~b~ti~ns. :.: ;' ·.~t;_$_3,.Sg
Ji~~~~ ''f~t\~he_:'
sh:o\\'./ worl~ .. They are·my family;·~!:'sa!d
, and torn~ht at 8 p.m. m: .t~e ;:,,t~vo~y~.-•~
.}~c:·p_rod~ct1_0~,
m~
·
and_ L~yout class_
is,:~~~bn:SJ~" :· are more ,expensive. than :·other - Mark:Sudol ofRutherfor(!; N.J. :'.
• •
. theater,
_1s
an annual event
m
·.
1:l~<;hng
set d~1gners;,t1cket
sellers . busmess ep.~tof the·~how, ~uch
~
• cai:ripusactivities,'.but
Brisson and". , ,.·;
. .,-
,-,~,,:>;.{:
··;;<:"
·,·y:
• ;··~:
D'<X--·,.-:
·\ /.;: _
..

.•.
which fashion students have the
..
and ntoclels;
s3:id Brisson;,ic,,,....:_:,,

public;ity; an~ ·onc_ofth~ dr~viing Thew.·both feel',the ·sb'oifjhvel(\
:\!'We complaiii~d.~·fotb~r\\ihen
•• ..••
. cha_nce to n~t only ·display· the·· ...
·
r'/ :
J;h~ . desig~ers ·: eac~ ha~,, to cll_lsscs
• i~
_llandJi11g
a)J,_o,f,
!9~
s~~.-••·
w~rth'the mono/;·
'.\\<.
:''//St':t>i,:
iit"came·riS,ht
do~n.t"o it;
~tr
had. to
fruits· of . their . labor,, but als~ ,to.·.:·
su~m1t::
a . design seyera.l
. months pro~
• c~vers •
..
and related •a.rt-• ..
0
The show • is. more. expensive. :c: . adlllit : that ..
• .we • ~ked :.1t_:.
here;''
,{'learn ~ashion sho~ .. pr~l!Cdon,
pri?~:
~'?
.
~e sho~
<r~~-
•fashion • wor~! J.:lriss~~.
said,,\~
F\ ·:
'.~_::'
butconsidering)he wotk ijiyohicd ;'. .
'M,ri ..
Maiino:'\of; ·)!_log"mfield,
'.
acco_rdmg
JO
Conme,-Bnsson~
• th_~
:
i
des1~1l·.-mstructors
-re'Y),ewed
and • . • To !1~~-ll
~~of~s1ontV
t?u~h to.. and c~pcciaµy:
hil,\V
·expc';l_Siv'e
KlS .•
G~~n;;·said.. . , ... ·: ', .·
.. ;,,:~ •~
i .
president o!the ~ashion Clu~·.';'"
:.::: eleµ~ually .'.~cc~pted,-,.all ;,_sub,- tll~ ;,sh<?Wi
a.: co~m.etol<>g!st
• and, to, produce;·it's ,well. w,o~h.·•the.i· _'.·_:_/·. •
•,.

.,; ; ;,;;-
:<:.
~:.
• "The professors are,there .. to
'c
,JD1ss1ons,
said Nicole Thew~_vic~ hairstyhst,;have. been·. hired t_o money/'saidThew.

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Continued' fro
Ill
page
-'&-.'
i":
.+· .. '. .:
•.•.
:' ·.
\. spending', while, vehemelltl}'..
point_ • .

Due to tlie n,i,ture of Bev's. main
"Whe~
'·you • think. back' to. last • ' started • to :·string: up: our} friend ; '. •.•
• / , .
• '"·;'· • ,, ·, : ;:;;_ ,. <,.out-,Mondale's plans .to .:raise poirit ~weak
and lac)cing. in .. Monday,· yoti'·mighf remember; Carl MacG,owan a~d_dt;IQOks-as
aware - of

the•: way the· . ad- .'·taxes; Uke mostAinerlcans -Bev, • substance;,,;.;.
sbe' :felt it
·
was that
1,
was there' for 'the.Jetter.:· though it's,up to ·u~.to-put:a ~top
..
__
.,.~inis.\ration_ :;:·~anal.es•.: these.:· you bought.it;. Do you· beli~ve in •.•
~ecessary·io.personally attack inc writing .. ;'' How .unfortunate that< to·this.Nevef.befo~e ha~e we seen··
. s1tuat1ons'?
Wethmk not.
. - . ·. Santa Claus too'? .. • ,
• . .. to'clevate,the status ofher letter. , a senior in college is eitherlacking :: su~h\
a.
gr~t.: mi~tindcrstan~ng. ·
As on •. inost; ,· small .college • • • Ronald Reagan is. pushing for .. ••
I'll
'admit ·that • I .fried ·to·. inalce in .. basic reading:: comprehension : regarding_
anything in :fhe Circle,· . ·
campuses, g~ssip_tr~vels
through : cuts i_il
numerative, worthy social myself look good ip my essay; but skills or is too careless to ·get' her<. that it makes us worider where •
the grapevme . quickly. These'. :: programs while. c_ontinuing ·t~ I
wasri'.t:
exactly "proclaiming niy facts straight, before she. sends a those who<wishOto
doiCaiHn; got •
rumors have. caused not on~y , mcr~s~ the ,defc:nse
budget. Th~s . candidacy for sainthood to the letter Jo a newspaper.Joi public their high school_diplomasi ,.. •
.
more speculation about the ac~ual • "chipping away" .at the deficit Marist coini:ritinity;" Perhaps my . consumption.Though I ·suspect .
.
The' Curmudgeon's ,Manifesto.
,incid~n~sbutalsomoredamage>to will.do little to.reduce it while tendency·
towards
self-
the latter is the case,·l wouldn't· of April,18,>entitled '.'Partying•
, the v1ct1ms.
The two wome~ have )eav1_ng. the• !as~: to ,the· next righteousness - in . my ' essay want
to
hire such a person for a· with the Poor;'~.is satire pure.and ·
suffered enough already, without • President. _This 1s .what ·I mean originates • from the · genuine professional position if I were an • simple. For those of you who are
the validity of their cases being p_ay._me
now or ·pay me later. frustration : I felt this fall employer..
,.
·'
·

· ·,. •
unfa~iliar
with , this Uterary
challenged. It seems to us that • Whoever is elected . .in 1988 will • whenever . 1 tried
to
get
,cI'm· sure that· Miss Morlang device, satire is,a huinorousform
instead of the assail~n! being •• almost .certainly have _to raise Reaganites, like Bev,
fo
honestly • disagrees
.with
aU'that I've ,said of c_ommentary:
where sometimes
prosecuted, that the v1ct1ms are taxes. to get the deficit under evahiate · the issues; ·or from 'the . above, so in closing this letter I the literary form of parody is used
being persecuted.
lt
should be up control, only
it,
,~ill be worse. · frustration Heel now because I've would like to extend an invitation to an extreme. Such is the case
to the.police to, investigate the '·Mondalewantedto·doitnow;but
realized that.mostof'iny'peers
fo
her: Bev, you;are invited to with Carl's column. It.is quite
situation and not up to the victims contrary to what Bev has been led only care abounhemselves. For stop by my . townhouse· '(B-7) evident fr.omthe ·start.that the
to prove the exp~ience true to the
to/
beUeve by the
!
61Great some reason , • Bev equates my anytime in the next week and
.
Manifesto -in· question is: an
colfoge.


.
Manipulator;': hewould not-have
.
voicing concern, about • certain . engage

me .in a face-to-face :e,caggerati,on to· ..

a ridiculous
_
... T_he
administration should stop ''tried, 'the heck· out.
of:
middle-_ issues with . bei~g • self-serving. debate over any issuei; you wish;;:· degree, lampooning·· the.··•
Archs
trying to worry about protecting · income , •:families.'.~- • . Instead
Accuse me
of
whatever you like at which jime I will ''liappily ex~"· conservative ·position that. the
'the : coUege's ' reputation,. and,
'Mon.dale's
truLjncreases would Bev,;btit don't worrybecailse
ru ••
pose·you for the fool'yoli- truly poor are living extr,vagantly at
instead, start worrying about .the have caught; up :with _
the ·giant never accuse you ofbeing logical.
·
are! ·•
the expense of the middle 'class.
safety of ·its_ student~. We do,,, c~rporations ·,that" pay·.fittle. or . : ··fa the final paragraph·of'Miss • _'
o:
•.
_:
•-y,.:
Sincerely,··. Tfie.column•is written •in•·such a-·.
however;
apprec1a te
.
the
nothing in. federaLtaxes. at this Morlang•s:e'ssay she-wrote "You ••
· • ChristianJ. Morrison .broad,-· burlesque\ manner/ that •
upgrading , of·. security • im- :'.tiine·.
I
could go oil.for aco~ple of. were· rigll.t/Mt;_ Morrison;
l
do
-

• .,_,,,;,
Classof 1986

those who are· cultivated•·enough
.
. mediat~ly. followmg the-second
pages:apout all· this, but surely. nof:recall-your•presence. afthe'
• .,, ·.,.-- _ ·: >,::·· • ·' ·:·· •
to· appreciate this. not:so:.subtle
' ,assault. '·But; . was th~ extra : inisinfoi:med_
Miss; Morlang :gets;':-letter.:wridng' 'assembly:''.
l
.feel
'. --~.
,
.
Carr is: OK· ,
> :{
_style·,
C8J1!10t
"iniss'_'its'.'very
-se~f-_
protection provided becaus_c
ofa;Lthe_ point: .Hey; Bev; how_'s
itJeel•>; badly for Bev.for An addition to :,, .....
r
?· ;-• . • , •
·
·-;,· ,_.
:·'.· ..
debasing manner. ·.:;,
r:.
0
:0:", : ...•.
\T~i~}!~~1?~i{xR~i!ti~I!~)\1~it%fii~'i£-f;1It~\i"f:!~l!~~'l)fG!~~.}
• the ·attacks? It seems to us that
an)'.time a situation arises which
interferes with' the. college,
it is .
either' caµght :in the bureaucracy
.. of the ; college · or completely :
',
forgotten, • ,·
.
·, . ' ·:
-: We
had the misfortune of being
present directly after one of the
victims returned from her assault.
It is upsetting
to'tis,
based on both
her physical and emotional states,
how the credibility of such an
• • occurrence : .. can-. possibly be
questioned.•··· • •

·:•
. •
!
Names withheld by request
.
·.
':''

'
.. Reµgan d_
•..
eceivecl) "·.
. -!

"•'i •,.
.
,- .
. To the Editor: • : •.•
-.·
·.:. This-letter is.long overdue; ;b_llt,
• a
letter you published •on Marc~-
28 from Beverly ~orlang ·_
is·
. deserving of a response from me. ·
Bev's. letter was ::.written
>
in
-•
r~ponsel to a· viewpoint; essay. I
.
wrote entitled· "Who •Cares?''
that .• was ··published
''.fo
•·-,.
the
. February 28 issue of The Circle;,-•
; • Aside • from publicly debasing
me,\ the mail( point .. of'. Miss
Morlang•s letter· was , that if
• Walter Mondale was .-President
right. now, he would be "taxing
the heck out •. of· our middle-
income •
-families.'''::·
For • some
reason
-Bev·
seems to think that
middle-income families would be
shouldering all of the taxburden if
Mondale was in • office. I would
like
to
inform poorly r~d, in-
nocent Beverly.
of the facts.
Right now, the United States is
faced with trying to reduce the·
federal deficit that , we have
amassed. Two ·of, the ways to
reduce such a deficit are to either
cut federal spending or to raise
taxes. This places the U.S. in a
pay me now or pay me later
situation.
Walter
Mondale
wanted to raise ; taxes and pay
now. Instead he paid for· his
honesty and integrity.
Ronald
Reagan·
deceived
most folks by
saying
c-
he could substantially
summer.Housing is a~;li~~le· f_or
Marisi.s.tudents ~ho ate: •

• •
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"A.TTENDING suNi_lVIER
SCHOOL
0
,

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PARjlCIPATING'
IN
INTERNS~;.~'~\,,: .•
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··,_·)NORKING
ON
CAMPUS
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·.Xir
~u;,\nler'~;~a·e~;;':'i,i
hi"h~tii~in:f
eo
Hi-,i\f
~i;~i;;1i~:OQ;er:~~rt~~}f
Elin;g6f
•·
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• The··cafeteria-will r_eop'en,on Frlday,-May:10,"J~85_::
Price~:w,ill· p~:availa.ble:at·thattin,e/~-::.

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Friday, May 11, 1,98p. _
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Mini Session I, Campus Employment, Internships• 12:00 noon to 5:00 p.m~
Monday~' Max 27, 1985
• ,
•• • •
••
Eve;ing cia_ss.Session - 12:0~ no6rrto 5:00
p.m.
S_unday,_
Ju·ne·2, 1985~
•· -Mini S~ssion II - 12:00 rioon to 5:00 p~m. Monday,·June 17, 19~5
M_ini Session 11r12:oo noon·to 5:00 p.m. Monday, July 8, 1985. •
Students registered for summer housing must.vacate their current rooms on or before
May 10 as scheduled.
Storage space
is
not available on ca_mpus prior to summer check-in.
reduce the deficit by cutting•-----------------------------------------------
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----------------------------------------------May
2,,1985-
THE
CIRCLE-~
Page
11--
•.,s.·.,,i.

, . ,.-.,v,
c., ...
' .. byCltiistlanl.arsen .•
;<'
i,...
, . not relyirig on ..
any gear;just your .. :This ~ethod marr.ed and damag- ,
• < ; ·:,: , <"':
;';;,;.,:;'.-
>\, , :--..,.,,_: -physical·and'mental abilities:
If's
_c:d;the
.cliff and with the ti:eineri-.
~: Tlle-:·ohly:."thing: that 'stands :.for experienced·people who know .dous, growth, in ·pqpµlarity that
beiweer{·you and. the' top of. the: exactly.·: What their-, limitations • cliiilbiilg has undei:gorie; the cliffs
mountain is
a'
sheer-face ofrock, '· are/~ / < ·,., ,
·;·
.. · ·•·-; .:, . h~ve
to
be pr~~eryed:" . . . •· .
ominous ..
and forbidding. To the:_·,~ ·"Shawangunk. Rock 9Iim1's;'.;
.·--
'.}ori Ross, ari ,area. instructor,.
climl!er''•
ii'
beckon's
'to
be' ·con- a:cJimbirig guidebook writtenJor • said,'iha(it's possible to buy ,the
quered):~;'..,;-j:, '·:.~ <. ::_.
>·., ·
th!! region,, Jist_S'over .S~0_'climbs equipme!1cthat i_s i:i,eeded
:to
get
••
,.,
..
N~~~(?il~~'.'t~e=~.(S~_re:~.o~·c~_D<iU.~r-:·~"t~~~-.-r~n·~,~~-
a>~c,l~
.r~~~-·:s-~
,~;:·(started,
1n·
the ___
sp~ort
__
for
._un_der
\i
:is the prim~rY)'r!<>tI\'.&Uon,
su~cess .
.5'.13:
base~pn th,e.1r
d~g_r~e
of d1f-
0
$_300
•. The basic, e9uipment. con-
Js;attairied, only through proper" ficulty.\Clim~s that run •fr()m 5;5: sists. of .a .rope which, would. run
skijl·'.;<strategy and
:'-ultimately~
up·usually require a rope but.as· around $100, ·a set offive. beans
phylkai stamina:.:
,.'r,
;_•>: .. >('Roberts . described~ • rifore' ·ex~·, which would run around $25, a
. Rock, climbing· is
a
sport that~ perienced climbers will frequently set of shoes which would run •
, has has:grown immensely,.in the .·
takes;.0111
,some- more . .; difficult ,around
$70,
and a harness which
.. United-States: during
,the
past
10 •
climbs with a solo climb.
. ,: ... •• would run around
$15.

' . years ·in terms of popularity. and . : Roberts describ~d a difficult • . Most importantly, said Ross,
. the. ;pioneering coL .. equipment.
,
climl.l, in a region of Shaw:ang'µnk !t's import~nt to.hook up V.:ith
an
:.,. Much 'oJ th~t growth _has t~k.tm
<
known.as Mohonk,t~at was·rat!!d ; m~t,ructor ,c__o~..
a~ exp~nericed •
,.· place:in :the Shawangunk· moun-: '·at·
5,.8;
He said that•althoug!l.'he ·c11mber
foqmual_mstruction. He ..
• taiiis of New Paltz. . /:: :r::,
;,,· •
:; w_ould
·approach it with a rope for . added that atte:mpting the sport
• .. ,,::Tom. Shawyer, a~ianger at the_: a· free.climb, it.was done a~
a
solo. 'W}thout proper instruction could
'· Mohonk :preserve/said that the climb:Robei:is':.also said,. ip. fact, , be very dangerous. ·..
.

.
area now attracts 15
io
20 times . that he had seen .even. more dif.:
Rosie Andrews, an ins_tructor
in
• the:number·o(people that· it :aid ; ficult climbs done solo.
J ;
the_ area, maintains that although
10
years ago/ Each year some , .• "To do this climb with no pro- the sport may seem risky, it is ac-
60,000 climbers. ascend the cliffs tection is a whole other different
.tually
very safe if it is done cor-
of Shawangunk, making it one of thing. I guess it takes a certain ele- rectly. .
the top three climbing regions in merit of insanity,': said Roberts. .
"There are relatively few ac-
\ . the- country' next.-to Boulder iri • ''Physical stamina is always the cidents in the area, and fatal ac-
• Colorado
and· Yosemite 'in deciding -factor. The skill '. and cidents are very rare. When you
California., • ·;
• • • •• • • , physical stamina ~f John.Stanard consider how many climbers are
,
A
characteristic
of
the was amazing. He wasn't bulky in out there accidents comprise a

~
Shawangunk cliffs that malces the 'build, but he was capable of pull- very small percentage. Overall, I
region • so , unique .: is . the ing himself up adiffwith a ~ne-. believe that climbing is very safe
overhangs, which are places in the armed pull-up. The ideal build for as fong as you don't get careless,"
• • side of the cliff where the, rock a climber is to be thin and wirey ,'' . she said.
protrudes.
said Roberts. John Stanard is a •. Tom Shawyer, a ranger at the :
:,"The overhangs are:one thing veteran climber who pioneered ~oh~nk preserve, said that a/
that makes.·.
this region so unique many of the climbs in the ~egion. chm bing related death occurs at /
and. so poptdar. :it's .something
.
: The initiaLstep.in a climb with Shawangunk once. ~very five;
that people can'.t experience in the rope is a process called leading, in years.
. . · .·
. .
.
----·---western part of the country," ~aid ' which a climber will approach a
Ross said that . for him and
•• Lowell Roberts, a graduate stu~ rock
.
with • square steel cubes other climbers, . there are great •

dentat Rutgers who's been cliinb- known as. 'beans' and begin to personal rewards that come from
- ing:in the region for
10
years. +i· . climb the rock. These beans are taming a mountain and pushing
; YAl .. Diam on~; ari •. experien~~d placed in cracks on the cliff as the .yourself
t? -
your physical and •
•·
climber . and
:employee
of Rock: climber ascends the 'rock. A rope mentallimits .. •
.
.
-.

.
and Snow'in.New.Paltz; a cUmb,-.. isrun from the-harne~ss .of the : , ''Ther~atr~mendous feeling of'.

.irig):enter jn t~~·r~gi,oJ.1;:sa_icl
. .t~af';c;limber .through aJoop:at'tached • •gratification, Jhat ·come~.:.
from.:··
;''Cihere,arfflireediffereiiFfoimsiof','tcPilie~fieanHf':ifat'ia'cheifit~':tlie'completiiig.a1climb:;;I{doit'.inore,:-
.:;
·fock'cliiniH[lg:'free:
aid arid solo.

·• harness·•
of
~a
second icUmber :.oii' for· personal
·satisfaction,
not for '
•• Jr ...
in.,
.free:
''climbing,
\
Dialliond ''the ground, who: creafos tehsion •· thrm~·secking.
The excitement arid •
• sai~; you ~e pr~pelling yourself ,.on fhe. ~ope for. t~e ~limbe~ 'by . th,~'.sense of accomp!ishm:nt are
up. the ;cbff.t1s1!1g cra£~s:.~an_d
:-PUllmg"1t t!trougl_i
:his .~arness. ~Ways t~crc, especially ·1f you
wedges
m
the _chff; -the rope 1s , When the climber reacheHhe top
.
know you ve done a really profes-
there only for protection, .· • · • .
, of,'the cliff, a beari is established _sional climb ,with .alot of grace
: In another type of
•climbing
at the.top for subse~uent cHmbs. ?-nd style.'' , , -' .
. ,
called 'aid ~limbing' the ropes are
:
"Leading ..
··gear· •••
has • gone

~oberts see~ his ~limbing ex-
used for advancement as well as through
tremendous
-· ad- penence as bemg boded down to
protection because a free climb is . vancements in the last ten years,» bare elements.
too difficult. •
_
'.

• : ·
,
•• •• said Diamond. ''Now climbing
"The whole thing eventually
Rock climbing at New Paltz Shawangunk cliffs
,, -
.
: ~Solo . climbing,''_ _Diamond equipment in\'_olves
wedging' into boils. down . to strategy and
·•· said involves no ropes at all.

.• cracks in the .,..cliff. ,The. old stamma, Using cracks, led8.es,
.'.; :; "Solo climbing is so pure, it's methods involved hammering holes, overhangs and anythmg
(just you against the rock. Your petons into cracks in the cliff. else that can propel you up the
cliff. ..
,
.
"It's just something that gets
addicting and the country up here
is'So beautiful.
I
guess that's part
of what makes it all so rewar-
ding."
9-~n.etiC
englneering causes.· cdnflict of ethics
bf Rose Hll;Ulton
••
through gene-splicing techniques: , • more
greedy
and
always ., Benin suggested. "The knowledge
. .·.
.
..
.
Ethical. concerns, however, dissatisfied?"
then does not belong to the
<:
,{Your· cells/may n,ever 'be··the.
'regarding-
future applications of
:<
The second basic value of. scientist, but it belongs to those
• ·same
.. · ,if /iscientists <perfect
·genetic techniques ::and-: values • technology is the spirit of control , who paid him. -
. like the
"designerienes."
.\, ·-,·. - .• supporting this resear<;h, are the and manipulation, according to
military," he said.

Although "designer genes" is a. :s~bje~ts
.
of • controversial
Benin·. He said that the origin of
Benin added that if technology
·term
-used.·
lighUy.·_to·•·
refer ••to-.d1s~s1ons b_etw~n supporters of, this need_,to ~·control
-is really a· is not in the hands of theinilitary,
• genetic :.: engineering,
-_the • genetic. en~neenng and_
·non-
need to have power over nature then it is controlled by big cor- •
• tec~ology is a serious issue for supporters. •
· •
.
and over mankind.

· :• .• .
• porations, and these corporations
•. scientists and philosophers..
.
- Dr. Geo!~e. Hooper, c_hamnan . ' But, Benin said, the question of
are not interested in improving·
•.
Genetic . engineering . is a of ~he Div1S1on of Science at . who will control this technology is
man, but improving productivity,
.
technique. of m<>difying
genes to MaJ?,st College,
~
and ~r. Jtalo • the danger
behind
genetic
hence profit.
· produce desired features which Bemn, a Manst
phtlosophy
• Hooper said, however, that
are perm~nent and inlleritable. . '. professor, addr~sed some _of
•·
-Jfth~ tech_nplogical
forces·
while greed and power may
:This ·•:
modificadon . is· ac-
these . concerns m recent m-
are not
_.
humanized, ·and the
somehow play a part, other values
complished . through • gene-
terviews:
de.velopment remains in • the
are really at the heart of science.
spli~ng, :which is thejoining of a : The<'myth <?f pr~gress" and •
hands oif· . those who h_
ave
"Science is
a
human activity that
DNA segment, a
gene,
to a contr«;>l
or !11ampulat1on
of m3:n
has really benefited mankind. The
bacteria molecule, called plasmid, and his enVIronment are the b~1c
military or corporate power,
geneticists are concerned about
to form a hybrid molecule known values of technology, according
then the last stage of mankind
the ability to alleviate genetic
as
recombinant DNA,. a protein to Benin. "Progress has. become
will be ari ultimate classification
defect."
• .organism. The recombinant DNA the god at whose alter we are
of masters artd slaves.
Hooper added that scientists
is reinserted into the ba~ria cell, • willing to sacrifice anything."
·
_
Italo Benin .
are
responsible people
who
have
and because a bacteria cell
has
its
He explained that the
"myth"
the same obligations to society
own nucleus,
it can reproduce is the belief that all changes are
engineering - .
not
the risks of •
and to their families
as any
other
-
very large quantities of "altered for the better. He acknowledged inadvertent side
effects.
group c,f professionals. He cited
cells" through cell division.
the benefits of technology in the
"For
instance,
we do Jcnow
that
that
it was
the scientists who first
Because gene-splicing is a direct medical field, and the world of
the most advanced technology of
called
upon the community to
route for attaining desired genetic commodities currently available any field belongs to the military. examine
the
ethical
issues.
traits, • agriculturists
and to man.
.
The first application is always
Although technology
does
• molecular biologists have em-
But Benin asked: ."Does
destructive -
of course, it's create problems, Hooper said,
ployed this technique in their technology, however, ulumately . called self-defense," said Benin.
applied sciences move faster than
research, . and pharmaceutical make man a better human being?
Consequently the scientist who other
human institutions
can deal
institutions have currently market Because '!'.e have more an~
more
engages in the research
has
no with.
"The
knowledge
impacts
insulin,
which is produced commodities are we happier, or
control over the application, different groups of people in a
more negative way depending
upon their beliefs,'' he added.
Scientists work within the
accepted forms of behavior and
• take necessary . precautions to
insure future generations, Hooper
said.· "But the alternative," he
said, "would be to play it safe
and work with what has worked
before."
• "One can look
on
the negative
. side or on the positive side. I see
genetic t~hnology as providing a
. better way of life. In the long run,
man will benefit more from this
research than if we did not pursue
it."
Benin agreed that genetic
research should continue but,
only if an international legislation
is established whereby no scientist
would be in the service of the
military or the big corporations.
"If the technological forces are
not
humanized,
and
the
development remains in the hands
of those who have military or
corporate power, then the last
stage of mankind
will
be an
ultimate classification of masters
and slaves," Benin said.
In contrast, Hooper said that
genetic technology applied to
human behavior could lead to a
more peaceful society.
I
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righteo~s):}ndignati?n, h~ve ever·
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R·ESI
DENT.
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read
,prev1ous:c::olumns
by Carl.:
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They are,,:perhaps'.· some of· the,,
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most liberal writing~ put out b)'a :
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,college
newpap~r smce 1972 •. If_
•UNIT.:,·l':J-'0·-·

RD'INAT·
·O'R·'''

one reads but one or two of these
.

.
.
.
.
.
,'
"·
.
,
.
,
.
.
.
,
•. .
.
.
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o~heredition~. oftheManifesto,it·
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··1··10.:
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becomes quite clear that· Carl·
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MacGowar{riot only sympathizes
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"'.ith
_the __
po_or but is.vic!ously

>FALL,:1985
SEMESTER?•·°':-:-':·
~ft:;::.
!~tir~~;d v~~Y
t::
10
c~ri~
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troversi61Manifesto.
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Ca~r/e!~~t i:h;r:6n6~t-::hi~-
lf:'.$.0/
please::;c:9ntact.
t~e
:Rt=lsi~
::i!~J~!~~~riri!~tt!;t~~~:::-
thint:
Dfre'c~f
ors}I
isted.
below.'-by
~~
0
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0
~!;~~~rit
.:
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cind
a
y/
May.6th f of.
pas
it i'<5hs·
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'tli~~h:~J~~eUf~'.oJ
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i n:.Jhe:··toliciw.fng
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Bren n·a_:
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Nl,~r~:a_,::~-·-:•:.'.·}.

,~:~6!a~'f:·t!r:1fie~J~~~J
:G_
eorg···e·Diogu~rd.
o
~
Chan)'pag~at
he does not think that the poor

,
are living like-ihe Rockefellers.
Carol Grane,
·y·
..
North
·1:nd
_:
·_·-
He wrote
a
satire which made fun
of the right~~fog· mentality which

••


·i'

••


espouses th~e
•.
ideas. Nothing
:,
more, nothing iess.

.
:;
.. '. ,·,

'.

·
Finally, to the individual who

..
made a death'threatto our friend;.
-
. we' would simply like to r·emind
• ..

•.
you that such thi:eats have a nasty·
·
habit of coming back to haunt the
.
threatener.


Joseph R. Didziulis.

-
David M, Margalotti
:fyfarydalc
Dolezal
·.
.
Edward
F.
Flynnf
David Rakowiecki

Eric Garcia

••·
.
Timothy Sheehan
.

Jeffrey.Goldstein
:.··''
.,
Michael O'Connor

.
••

Christian Morrison
: •. , .. .

Mark W. Ciesinski
'
.
'
.

'
.

..
,~!m~:t~~w~~,>"

,·together,!
without';,.· in'terruptfon,·
.
:.
and when tht kite was· finished/.
.
.
-.
Jeff; s s'mile'·exiinded. fromieafto:·,
'
; '
ear.i Later' when the kite
: ·:under-'.·
·
. ,
,-,th'e
·confrol
6f:V1ni:ent,
.•
fie\v'111
the\
>wind
and 6ver the little boy, his
'
'
expression ~hanged
from
joy to
wonder.,
\

,:
••

·

After lunch; a firetruck. from
R~ql~ir~r11er1ts:
.··

...;. 2.'5'.cum·

~:.J'~o:-rnaj_or
disCiplinary

':
t,
isf c,ry
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.
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.
.
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No-·in·ternshi_ps.
beyond
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the Fairview Fire Company arriv-
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:
250
_.
M'arist East.
~-
-..
,:,:>:-•.-:··;
-
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.
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balance is
drie l5efore·the'fi:rsf

~-
.

.
'
·-
:_:.,
:-
:
st.op
··DY
/today,
and,/pickitlp
•·
y6rif°.

copy,of
:the.•
summef
'cathlog'i1e~·
·
..
.
.
.
,,
.

,
.•
'
.
·:·:
,.-:
.
,,.
·,
..
.
.
ed which initiated a
-stampede
of
children .. Jeffimmediatelyclimb-
ed aboard the truck with th~ other
.
. .
.
.. .
.
. .
.
,
.
.
.
.
r~;'\~f:!::~,~~~~i!f:~:1?~·,;
.}
'fit
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••

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·•_
.
.
,~
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,,.,
,
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,
:'<:
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:.-
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:-:"'.·1
·':;:,2:
...
·'.:'_,:
_.·
•..
,.
: : '.'·_
.>:<\:rI;
ba1lo6'.ns;'~_ith
he}ilimf~µppjied-J,y~
'~··
·::t;,~f
·::.~.OP]1'.Q•
..
:a,i:·,., .:atl11
..
Y::(::\NiQU.
__
:
'Lf
_11,\::e.
·:;:tQ
...
:\:
cou~:-·
.
the Tt;xa~()\~orporati6n, a.lrived.
,::,_
.•
·-..":
'":,t>
;;_
·'\\·>
)/:.:~
•;:·
_:,,
-: -~ ,'
'.:·,
<>'.'
.;
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•.
?~~:~:::~~:::::•::~:··.
·.·
··gra
tUlatei
..
·~11
•••.
of·•.tlie.

l\lI~rist,
.Stllddrits
..
wl-f~!{
··-~~::;:f:1:~;_~~•;;.:~;;'tt11:
t_1-_·_:g:_.
__
'.·_::~-W-lr··_g·~r_:_·_:.adua_:-
·:te_'
~(
ail.d:·,;_.-·1_·.
·n_
..
_
••
_
e_ir fflh
__
i
__
il_._·_ies·
·-w_~.•-_1_·.1_
..
_l.·:·
____
·.•
• But all'good things musi· come
.
.
-
·
-
~s~;r~1.~r.~i};r~::i1r::
i-eceive
·cl
cOm_
..
·.•
plitnentarY
.
Chariipagri.e
SeveraL children~ began to
-
cry .•
··
·
..
• •
wheri leaving. their friends; but
'1·.
...
.

·:
.
·-"t'
Jeff hugged and kissed Vincent
r-
_
oas •
and stepped up the
:stairs
of the
bus without shedding a tear.·
,
Professor Linda Dunlap, who
advised the program said, "The
worst thing

have noticed is the
sometimes

unhappy faces of the
students after the children leave."
Although,
according
to
Dunlap,

this reaction has been
common over the five years the
program has been operating, she
said the students are always pleas-
ed with the results. Vincent·
agreed.
',"I
had fun," she said.
"Our
personalities
matched
perfectly and
WC
just hit it off
from the very start.''
Reservations are suggested and would be
• greatly appreciat~d.
/
·:'\.._
'












































































































































































































·.
,,'•\•
/

\
......
,
........
11111111!1..-,.-.
....
~----~~------------llllllill---.---------------May
2, 1985 • THE CIRCLE·
Page·13--•
.·.>~t.f)iiiCiflbfi',;f-(fM~tI§t'?liits·;fiigli
,
••
}Feitialegrads
can find
pads
• \
by';•~~a#rt~-~k~
.
;,
;',
:'.
)j
/
i.:
.
.
·
i
h~~~
~t\;~;n
gr~~i_rig'~ubsta~tially :,
/~f
Mari~t College i~ its grad·u~te~:
-.~Y
Bonnie Bede





,:-/i;ft\:,:~tPf.A:,'·i.(,:,,;;}-·>,>::/'.',~'.,
in
·recent
_:years~•'the.
iiumber of.\.according, to
.Daly;··
''Satisfied
·::(After
graduation many Marist women will head to New York
·
..
:!h~'nii~~e<of
applica~i~ris':for
·:•~tuqents
·:.
attending
::~arist
has
'
students are the best
.recruiters,".
,Cfty to_ look for a job, but they may find the search for an af-
.
fr~shm~n admission·.
to)
Marist
·,
been
·growing
steadily.
"The
.
he said.
.
.
fordable apartment and·a compatible roommate to be a job in
:,'College
has risen forJheJourt~_,,-_p~pulation has tripledin the last_·.) Dutchess Coinrtrnnity College·.
itself..
,
.
.
'._
.
con;se~ut(y~
Y.tar/~hile the si~fcif_ . eig~r years,_"•· Daly.· said,:
.
"ancl
:
h~~
r~ceiv_ed
17 percent fewer ap~: •
..
'According to Linda Carrol, director of Linda. Carrol's
·:
the ~reshm,11.clas_s
•-has:re~a1_ne.d
,;:hou~mg
. w!ll. have doubled,
..
by

phcat1ons fQr
_·the
fall. semester,··._
Roommate Referrals Inc. in New York, this does not have to be

relat1v~ly
:
·stable,
;,accor~mg
to. Septem~er, m a three to four year

according to
.
Director

of In-
the case:

•.

.

.
.
.

..
JamesDaly,d~nofadmisSi<>ns._.
period."
· ..
,
...
:

.....
stitutionalResearchAnnWeeks ..
··Her
service meets, interviews and screens all women who
:.:,
.<
·:,•·t'.T9if·n.iak~s:f9t:hig~er)ele~s
'-''ii
Daly said some reasoris for the
.. ::
Weeks said ihatat this time last

·apply,
whether they are women who already have an apartment
•.
..
•tiv,itY:Jpr\;¥afis_t;''/.[)aly
:·said.::
,x:
growth
•.
·
i~
'·,
that
>rdai-ist
<
is
;
year,
•DCC
was
down 2f percent
and wish to ffod someone to share expenses, or women who are
. ,
. •
.:

:
''.It::s
F
ge_~ti_11g,,;~9r,e·.,!IJ>P,li,cations,
.,:__·sttategicallyAoc~t.ed
inNf~
·York.>
in freshman
Oapplications,
but by
.
looking.for both.
.
•.
but n()t mcreasmg the.size of:the
.:•
state due to its· 'prox1m1ty to,, the time schoolstarted it was less
''We make certain that the individuals meet our qualifications
f~~~h~an:cui~s-·to'.·any_(sigW_~can,t.>'.
M~nhattan; lnterst~t~ ~4;· and the
.
th~li a 5.percent drop;
':

•.
.
.
.
.
and the apartments are located in desirable areas," Carrol said.
·
i·.-
degree:'.~--<:'-,
l":: •

.. ·,:
-:-. :.'.\
.''
.
.:. •.:
:: . .
New York State Thruway;;



:
,
:-'.
'.'The decline. is
.
deceptive
A one-time fee of. $110 is charged at the time of registering
•;···;,;Th~rejxep~)3;~()():applicati_o:ns;
·_;)
'.'This
is,a growth·area/~·.I>aly'.:,-because DutchessJs.·open admis-
·with the service and applicants are usually placed within two to

.w~ich
js-aboutlS percent',higher.

said.
'/''A
premier
.company
'is
,·sioris",''.
Weeks' s~id.
:-
0
Dutchess
three weeks.

:_tha~\l!l~L:·.year's
,2,764·.'.
applica",C'.located in, the Hudson
.,.Valley
:-.)
.accepts
appHcations uj, to the first
"We advise you to come into our office with four to six weeks
tio~s;<I)aly)aid; :•-'ther~Js room':· IBM/ These·roads are
.becoming
O
we·ek° :
i
of
i-,:-
,
classes.••
on your hands,
·in
order to be more selective in choosing the most
_.for·,
'675:>,
foi/7()0
·oincomirig
;:
the
_crossr9ads
of:t~~:;Northeast:.
\
-i,
No one· at Vassar College was
suitable apartment and roommat,e for your needs," she added •
.
,
.
fresJu!lcr,
-:Hn J~e
.Jall;
of 1984;
,,_.lf84:
_is-
the. riortb_ern'
tingroad of: available for. comment on its ap-
•.
-
..
:t~ertpv~.i:t::~s~rr,es~men.
'. '
.
:
';
·
..
:·.tl)e
Metrop<>Htan
area:•~:.
·r·\\.
;,·'·)
plkati~ns
for.·. the upcom!ng
.··.·:'
:
.
Ih911~~
_:'}~~//f~~tllan
".
~l~ss,
:
·':;
:•A,~Clthe;
.r.easo,n_
f
~~\:t~1e,
g~<;>Wt~
:-.
~~mester
•.•
et.AsslFIED6
:'):
...
::•i<~.:,•'.~.
~-_:t
.:'/tf\
~~"<''?
:r,·~
?·>··
--~---\~~\··:
-.:,,-=;~
~f".{."\.i-:
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~.·~/.->,,:::
~:-;--J
~
: ~·:·:
';~·.>
_.: ;:. ")?;
-: •
••
'·.,
-_.;
·,

-~ •
• •
.·•..
..·
/\7.
;~
,X
:·.":
;~
·.:.::
f
''.

..
-~
..
:._
:: •
/ /rQ
au my professors who put up''
'knci,\V?
(Remember: P_ay-b~ck
is a:

To the Seven Dwarfs:
.
:
'
•"
••
with ine for
4
years • Thank you

b
• • •


).


i
·
·,



Love yo\1, I'll miss ya\ visit.


c:
and
l
do appr~iate your support· MaryLou and Janine, too bad
I
Snow White.

.
• ,;
and guidance (Zucc, Miringoff,
•didn't
.
know.

you
two·
.P:S.
Prince Charming, oh wow,
.La~dau, you too McC::_raw).
Love,

sqorier·.;.hope we never\Iose the
you too!.

JaneP.-

• -·

furialtogether.Paul
•·
:

:
.
.

· ··
·· • · ·
,
·



Anyone looking to share•· an
The trip at North- Rd
:has
been· To Heal -- At times
l
wondered
.
'apartment
in Poughkeepsie this
fun.
I
pope_the next stop for all of ''.Why"
l
chose Marist.' After
:summer,Contact
Amie 471-4088
you.·. graduates'.is
·a:
.bigger
and
·four
years
of
hanging with you,.(
-or
Bonnie at ext. 6~104.
••
better adventure. Love to
..
all, Deb
..
know I made the

right choice.
Amato,:·
"
! ,
:·.,,
Love ya, Bona. .
.
To the dudes of 3rd Floor Leo:
you've turneda very painful year
-

..... Let's ~EAR A GREAT CHEER To
·
the girls of 71
••
N.

Rd.;

into a smile
.
.for me. Thanks for
for the DAD VAILS t.his year;
.
everyday was an experience -,-
standing by me ... Scoop, Tom,
CREW WOMEN, MEN and thanks for the memories
&
lots
of
Garn', Halinski, Spo', all of you.
,
Coaches,
• :We~r~

goiri for

the·
'•.luck
to to yoii'guys! Love, Rosa
Please stay in touch when I move
GOLD;
.
especially,_ to, those
.
T. h
..
·
f
h.,
·w·
.
d f
to the
o
d

awesomevarsiiy'.wom·en_'-:,
..
'
• .
-,
:
o.t e cast o
t
e
..
tzar o Oz,
I
.

ar ens.·

• ...
••..

·
·
.
·
,
· ·
.
·'

.. :
..
had a ball my pretty's! Thanx!
In friendship, "RA-nus."
...
N9body·liked that stupid looking·.·. Love the W.W.O.T.W.-Marie.

S.P.: I know I'm a poop more
• •
..
treean}'\V_ay.;';'

.
'
Ds:· stay
,
t~ned
·ror
next/ often than not
...
but remember
• 1979 Cruparo Berlinet!a, Red,

year.:.you're more of a turn-on
/he
~o?d •.• hopefully
I'l~
be "me"
3~5-Y8,
,..
4-speed, • pos1,: A/C,
.
than
-the
26-year-old. A young
/agam
m the Fall. Bear with me.
,,.
cqnsole,
·,::
cloth
:.,
interior,) new
.:,''Reform"er.

,
1
._L_o_ve'--,_P_R
__
---'--------'--
,\Dunlop_GT~Qualifier.s
60's~.KYB


/ •
•];·}:!~~~ri~f.:'.~~~f:~-.~j7fu~r~js:~~-~~~
• ~,-
.•.•...
·

..
·
< •• -·-,.:-~---.
,;.
•••
,~-'
,
••
,,•.~-


:•,.
maculately·mamtained.:.Must· be
]io:urs·
•.·

·:'
. ,·.-:
'473~:15'76
:··.

se·en:
::>MINT.'.
CONDITION'.·
.
1
.
' ···of.iginal
.:-.
owner. Only,$5995.00.
./

,
221-:029!i(H)
454;:6558(\V);
';.:--,:;L'.

~.:
:
.if~
any.§rif
~
has
,·any-
pictures
..
of
:.:
~--sprjng'.'.-'~pe>rts;··,
..
par~ies,
:
:5pring_

·::.:.::~
break; hollse pictures or any otlier
..
::
·:
.
:
spr~hg.
ev~rit to. be considered
.
for

•• .'
:
the
:1985
·Yearbook
:supplement,·

•. :
put· your· naine
&
address
·•On-.·the
••
;
•. back of each. picture· and put
jn,

.;;_.catnp_µs,
¢aif
CC-843.oi- give
.to
;'.
r.iarieat,71:N~J1}j Road;
,:-,'.'/:);::/
..
t;
,HeYRosc,.?/'
..
·
.···
t,
.':··\·::·::·
i:
:
>-·
-:
..:<
>)A
toast•to the f-uture •~La Rosa
··,:1
l1'il~iifj},
•.
':
:.
'I'a.ria,

••.
•·,'
)<
.
..
.
..
.
.
.
...
.
<
..

/•<)
J~a'.r!lcsf<>ralways being•th~i:e
...
-:·
.
.
for.
·me;
.
!\know
.
that we will'
i .
alwayi{reinain friends!j couldn't.



..

i>f ~adc
}Lwitlioui
youf
Watch
• ·st
·
·_Lunch
· Dinner
.
_::.

.
Fresh Seafood - Steaks
-
ou~ for the Ir~h curse-. Half-pint!.
.
:
.

.
.•.
If you ever need
a
_friend,.
!'In
.
;dwa:y~
.
there) Road-trip!
~
Love~
~ol (Vera)_.'.:
..
''·:;>'.:··.·"-,_.:<
:':'
::,:_

:-··
·:ctioP~i:-qqckt,~Jls

·
-.·
--Baking on Premises
.
To
,the
guys a.t.13.,·North. 2nd
• ..
fl0<>r:..
:
.
.
':'. _..
:-
_;_·:•
·" •
·:: -~-
_.\,
·::

: ,It
ha~ b~n gr~t living next to
.
.
you guys: You are
.
all terrific

people and
very
special friends. to
.
me:
Thanks
..
for all of. th~. good

tiµics

.•.
and . especially
the
.
menjories. Anyone want to slow.
dance'?
_Please
keep in tciuch!

.
Love~ Col
To my house-mates (Heal, Rcisa;
Tamato & Willis),
.

.
.•
Thanks for adding
.
that hap-
piness and sunshine into my life.
This last semester has been the
1.?est
for me and you are all the
reason why. I hope that I
·have
brought as much laughter into
your lives as you have into mine!
Good luck! I'm going to miss you
all. Love, Col
.
Show
you_r
college
ID
and
get
a
FREE Glass of
Beer
.with
your meal!
--7%
DISCOUNT
194 WASHINGTON STREET
POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK
G.P.
Rumor
has
it
congratulations are in order.
(Next to All Sport. A short walk from Marist)
Happy
Father's Day. D~
Meg
--■·-·-·•·---· ■-
111111
·-
ii'-·•·■----■·•·_,-■-■•■--■-•·------·
For more information, call or write:
51 E. 42nd Street
Suite717
Linda Carrol, Director
Linda Carrol's Roommate Referrals New York, N.Y. 10017
(212) 972-9899

AP.PLICATIONS ARE NOW BEING
AC.CEPTED:FOR THE FOLLOWING.

POSITIONS FOR THE
1985-86 ACADEMIC YEAR:
personal care aides/attendants
libr~ry/academic aides
..
.
.
.
~
.
.-
.
notetakers
scribes
tes~ assistants
tutors
-_typists/transcribers·
Please stop by the Office of Special
:
Services,
.CC181,
for an application.
Th1:1rsdayNighfParty
''Sp~n·d

Night With''
.·•91
:.1:···•··•·.·
•..•
s·. •·

I
:R·.
·
...
E
.
.
-
~
.
.
.
~
t
•••
·:
,
.
·.;
.

·:·
.
.
G
S
50 cent
·Bud
DraftE
PR1NcE -
'RoMANr1cs~
N
,
·.
.
··•
E
T
..
8-11.p.m.s
s2

0 Ad
A
1.00 Bar Drinks~


m.
'~
8-1
f p.ITl. ·
HUEY LEWIS· RUSH·
Come
out and party tonight
Band starts at 9:00 at:
mack~•
Puti
528 Dutchess Tpke. Poughkeepsie

ROUTE 9 (S) to 44/55 Church St., Exit 44/55 1
mile to fork, stay left onto 44. Go 3 miles, it's on
the right.
486-9212
.

























































































































































;;:
-.'1.··f·'~.
J .:,.
:.-,
........
..
·:1
_-
~~
-
r.·:~/
~
.••
I•
I
'
:t
.~-
.
b;:
·:,'_
·,
I
by
John Cannon

play," You~g said;:'
'.'We
w~re
.
kind of surprised that we··beat_
.
After splitting two gaines last
·theni
so handily.''
:,



week, the Marist lacrosse team
,_

II\ last Wednesday's loss to.:,

headed into its final week of the Dr~w ,' the Foxes were. outplayed.;
season
·with.
an impressive· 9~5 Malet saidtha(Drew
was
one
of:
record.
• /
.,·
•.. :·.
-;
_
the top·. f9µr.;
·teams<
on this,.'
The Red'Foxes faced Hartwick .. season's sc\ledule..' '.'.T.hey are
a
i
College•,. Monday,
..
before win-
sophisticated,·.',,
well-coached•·
ding up'their season with' a c_on- team/'
_said
Malet.'' "We really·
:
ference
·
game
,<
yesterday
:
at
did not play,up to our potential.''
_
:_

Southampton .. Results. of the con-
Drew
.
seemed· to confuse the

te~ts :were not,availablc-at press Foxes'on.afew occasions; a~cor.:/
time.

,;-
..
,..
>-
-
cling 1ci:Y:oung. ''We started off
L
__
-·Last,
S_aturday_;,.
the:. Foxes slow.and played too defensively,':
·•
tro,u~c.ed
-{?owh.~g
-
17:3 at
Young said.
·«i:hey
came at us
.;
Leomdoff
f
1e_ld
;
after ;losing: to with a lot
of
big~stick rides which
-'

Drew Umvemty
"·
12~6

last

confused us.". A big:stick ride is
~ednesday:·

•:c :-:
,.•,

whentheoppo~itl~teamcomesin~.
,-
In the v1<:tory.,over
.DowbJ!g,
to your end with 1ts.defensemen;
/

Ma~i_st
spurtedtoan_,8:-1
leadaJter-c The. deferisemen
.
have:.· bigger ,.
r
t:}t~!ZJ::JtW~~r3;
!~:::
l~1it
1::i;ir!:t:;~
!
.•
.t~'M·
f;•~~ils
..
~.-~'.··~~~¢~
f
ri;;;;;~ii/~
~;~Ji~~;,;~•:•~~;,'
. ·
I
'andJ.R.Monissey,eachtallying
·Asfat.as'thelaxers:
overall~
,
..
.
J ..
·-,•.''
.,
.....
,.
.•;;·
...
_
_.
:•:.,'-<·
._,
:-<~>.;',
--
,•:.·:;.,-::,\:'.,'.:.'.,'..i
I
.
four times.·,:
: ,:
C
'

-
••
season's. performai:ice i_s
con¢c=rti-,
·,:
33·.· goals an'd. seven
assists
(40
:
Easte~. weeke~d-·
h~rc
,in
order; to
.
iiiis, s~on
:~nd
ha~e"a
lot
i:,fg~d
-

Coach' Mike
·Malet·
had praise

e~, Malet ~aid
..
,thiu;
this year's
:..
pofots),;
:·while.
teammates
·:
Tun


imp_rc;>vc·
,;-
their
;.
:'
overall· play
/r
\
players
·who:
:
w.ant
'
to
>\viii;•
',;o)ie\
.
'
..
~;~e t!di:t~~
:~~::::1~
:::a:
.!:::-~rt:;~~~~Il#i~h}~~ei~
/
~':t~~:t!E~
gt~~~~,.ei~~
each
•••
~~:i
~.:t~=~:f'!~r~itntt~
.:
}~~{.'i).'.:~,}\}r:;~\''.)~i.!{t\:}Ml}


·1·'
play ~s
a
't~am,"
said Malet. ''It
us beat four;teamS'th1s year w~o
_: .
<·
v
:::

..

•.•.
;, ,:.
: :
..
,.
beginning of:the season~ scf the/'·,
...
•~The
.:-,!)iggest·/.thing
'>:this
;c.
was probably our_l,est team effort beat us last y~r/'.hesaid>
:
, ·•··
,
:

Malet
.emphasii~_'the.amoimt
.•
itarctwork has paid off.'~
\j•:
>:
·0:
sea~on;''•.Malet<sajd;
;ccis
that:we
<',....
'
all year."
..
••••


.
: Overall scori9g has been im~
.;
of work his team has;put in this
,
.:
In' concluding; Malet pointed,: havc.:guys'_.on

this·:tteairi'C:who
.•
...
-
J

Juriibr~idfielder John Young _presslve this seas<>n,as;the Poxes
,
season.···:"We~ began __
:practicing
out
.tJiafthis:year's
eiltii~, team·, violently hate io·lose;·These:guys
':
-
'
•.
said that the win
was
pleasing to

have outscored their. opponents ·, Feb/·',!
..
outdoors; because\- we
will return-. next season· because·:
will
take: themselves-;
to
·another--:
·- --·· ···.-:···
everyone
•On

i
the
.':
team.
259-137 t~ro~gh 14 games. Daly,
.
coulqil't get tiine in the gym. The
-
there' are no, graduating seniors:

Ieve}ihordcr to
win:;
Th~t~s'.b~eii
'
-
·"Everybody.
got
.a
chance to anattackman,leadstheteamwith
)cids. spent
'sprl,ng
_break and.- '.'Wehaveimproved·ow:program

th~key/?.,.
_
,.:

.·•
High
WindSSt~p,r,egittt3:

}Job.
BOrdaS.~-
Xhe'.'in~n\h~tdifrJ./,
··•··

•.
··s::j~~~uea
thej"z:if::~i:i:~.~i~:
·•.•th~•··
11:f
ws·
ti!.f
l~'.~q.1~ir,~i~f
tiff
t}t;i;;i~:,:
.....
President's Cup
-~egatta.
here
-,
race--of·~th~
--Reg~tta
by.
a.
byMkbaelR~ber(r.t:urj,by.
>··:
.
.
are iriting'.M'.eekly7pi:e~s;rel~'es.:\'r~gul#·seasori;.cl_i11mpiqn~hip:andc;.i\,J-\.
:
'
.
Larry Davis
,uncc:rtam
-on-how
:m
.
the
.
run.nmg.
,,
oLJh1s ra~e
,:,; \basketbaJI
,game
than. Ju~t .the,.40_:'::ctm&:
µew,s,,ikeepmg and
,,up~a~mg;:,,:/1Men1s
basketball·is;tµe:b1g,sport
:\j
o..
he sees
.his
t~am. performing in
'.
when

Mantj?tta~;• coaclf
Tom·
?-
<,minuteiof,
pi~y:·Jusf asJc:24-year~:-.>,-:sj;4rt-;-''Statislics;'tde$igiiing'.'f
pr8
7
:•(:/.~er~;~(Matist/~~
in)"~cl~panm:entl
1
\.
;
its last tw.o meets:
,
•• .:
:

•.
-.;
·Delaney:
prote~t~d:;' the•:r~ce
:-
"
':
oid Bob Bord~s::
~~i?:~•\:'.-,
'.<, ;
)'.
_i
granis ~lid
.rrii::dia-:-gui~es
·an~
i>fo-
'C
lias;tpJfe'iiY!are
ofthafahd
give
i.t/:·
: •.
~
:
./;The-
..
t~am
,;has.
its
•lw.o:
.•~-because
he felt his_team g<>toff
•.••.
'.
;,Bord~s·;
,who
is finishiilg_up:his,;:niotiiig::_ya_tio\!s:Marist··
sporting;-1,th~
j>r~~f?atten~i~n,'\:'J3cfr~as
{/
._.:
weeks;
-
.
,;,,<·•
;-' .
-
;,-t:"<
-
,

;wasn:t
-
nee~ed ~~c1:1use
th,e
:·-
:
both a challe11gc
an~ aso,urce of-
..
:;::;,;YK,~ts:
t<:>~~h;.so~et1~e~;
w~
,;.
meatfs
·a1bt:ofJon8hotirSfofBor:::-c-C:.'.'c•
'i
-
- .
T-he
..
tea
...
m w.tl·l··
tray':l to
..
Lak.e
-
margm
.of.
VlC.t?r·y:
;.:'_Vas
Jarge_
.
e··.n.joyrnen
..
t.
<\"."·(.'•{;;:'·.;·••·:::.;
•.
•·.·-·:,,<::·'>nO
..
_t ~p!e.1ghtr10·.·
·
..•.
fiv·l··.·.t.yp
.•
e o.J.Job/
::\.'das)/~.JJ.ind.tha.·
.ti
..
t
ca.'
..
n:b·e·
difficult·,·J·:.·\;-;,;
::'
•.
;·:.
Waramug,

C~nnect1c~t-next
.
enough so t~at
.
Manst would
.
'.
_
:
Jay_-WllJ1ams,
·.Manst's
,sports
.,·
~a~~
.i.3or~.
f
~There
are.~ le>t.
_';If.;·.
af'iimei with:an
·of:the·
fiaveliiig
5'! .
_
.
,
Sat'!rday for
.
~
to~~h ~eet
have won the race anyway.
-
.
information:di~ector fro_m 1~81
to
.:
w,~~kends·.~~v~lved,
and YO)l.f!~~
_:_·
that the.team·does,r• s'aid Boi"das:
:_:
~
••·
.. ,
'.
ag~l~St
,
Itacha,
\
Tnmty
.
and .•. Manhattan: won the protest
1984, left last summer for a Job 3:t
-
!
,yourself:
\\'.Ith
_
always_.
so~eth~ng.:i
·!'For
me it might'. mean doing my-,.
., :
,
, •
!
W1ll1arr.is
~oUeg~~. and the · and a _re-ro'Y
was ordere~. but
Fairfield University .•. ;
·;
:
-
.:th~}
Cc!,n
~e done.'.~ -•'
.'
.:"".(;/
• ,·,"work
·on.:the' road wliile we.:are
_•.

~
.
i
fol!owmg._
•.
w~ek
\head
-.to
the wmd
..
did. not. permit the
.. _
The Marist Sports Information...
·.·"Bob
.!_s.
a seven~days-a~w~e~:
·>-'.'-traveling
to a game·and
or
putting
:·-.
.
i{1
PhiladelphI8;

f 9r
>the,
J?ad
r~ce
t<;>
ta~e place.

Department 1;1nder.
the' ~irecuon
.
1 s_-.hours-~~!:lay
type_·
~f ·'VOr~~!!
,·•·;}.
the
-tiriie
•in
on
•the
·weekends.·
But
••
.
. ·-
..
:!,


'
_
of
,
~~r.das
;
1s._
.. _respo_nsil~le
for
..
:_
sa~d _Janet_.
Lawler,:, ~h~•--M,a~?~~
::
tliis is'.what I eri)oy ~oing.'''.
::~//'.-·;-
:-
.
•.
.
\
''
.
·.•pubhc1zmg
the.Red.Foxes'
13,,,bask~tball,.secretary.,·
He.s,.,a,
...
•·· .•
·'.
__
.,
.•
,
...
,;,,-.: .·.•.
_
_.,

: .;· .' _:· ---.,,.
men•s· and
women's
.
inters

perfeciionis,(ancf r~lly
·p~ts
..
ljis,/:':t-.~· (983 __
:gr~~~at~~-:fr~~:.
-P~--
>
·.
~-~
·.
ii,
__
.-

.'
•. •• .
-:-:·collegiate

varsiW sports;.-which.:;· enefgies irto h_i~j,ork.~';;:'·
<::
':,:.:.
H~~~n~
~~~er~ttY,~J~~-:t
~~~~,m
..
:
__ --.

}

·:-
. ; :~-


..
range"frcmi. football' to
-woni~n~s
-::•<To
f:lelp:~iiti
wiµt t~~;w~r~I~~.d_;{)
,Jqur~~li_~m,J~or~as;~?Jfi_i
~J~_-,f1_r~t:).-._,'.
0

.•
:_
J
---------.

vbijey6all~;:'.'.;
,:--:·,ct{
·:i;\:,F:'!t'--
'.:;·lJor~as,·
uses;~p~ge.11t.•m_ten1:r.fr?pj;:_:~~1J.1o~l\8.~-tl_l~:~illtll9ur~~s}~v.:f(::
'\:.•i'..
'.j
<:--
AlJ areDiviSi2,!l Orie programs;·

Manst. '.'The mternsh~Jp mak~,1~·j.:::,:?.n::9tJlle~a~~~P.Ort~,
brQ11~~t1!'g;:>r:.:.: •,.

/
either
·-scholarship
-
.or
,
non~ a lot-more efficent around here;~
·/._
~
:thougtit·
1.
~o-~l~t l1_ke,-A>·.
do::
••.

, ;
.scholarship,':·,
except'·.• football,
Bordass~id'.
:• ....
'.
-
:
.
:
.. :.

,,
1
'.i
:,.,,}h.f'},·bµt
I f,o~ndJh_a.~.as
).~~~e,;,:.
- .-
~'.
by Ian
o•c
.
.
the Foxes·
..
~With
-no
seniors
·which
remains at Division Three.?;'

With·'the:recent:success of.~he:>inore
•and,
piore-
.mvolve4
,.
~.1t!t
.:>•
,
·
..
<
:
·
graduating; Head Coach'
Mike
,
Some
_of
th_e duties that Bord~
.
'men's -
,1:iasketball
team,
,which(:_Writi11g
_f_or
our ~c~o~l)t~f~J:lilper;(··
_!..
t··.
The Marist iacrosse tea~,
.
·
Malet
will be
.
in the envious

and his office are responsible for
.
won the E9AC Metro ~onferen_ce:
.
·:
:,_
.. " - -
- .
Contn~_ued
~n p~ge 2
.'
1
·havingjustcompletedits1985
positionofhavingallofhis31

••
-,,

"")C·:,
---
..
-
;.
1: ...
,·,·:·,·

-
~t\~,
·\··/.::/:'.·'
•;
campaign, can boast of'having
.,·-_
laxnien. back.next season.And...
.:;.:::
•.
:
•'·

.
•, •

'·...
..,.
~.
.
Ii
,~~tt~~
1
i~~~§i~~~~~~~
•·•~~:i'f
I'~}~lf
~t,<f
~i~
!R!!:rn<
!i
·,..
,
~~c;:t~~~- tut::~:s
~~ji;:~
::r~~
~~~:~~!:t~:~v!:1::
by Michael Scott M.ueller
.
!;Ther;

is a lot more
.
to ~y'::
-Burge;
'Kin~:
~d
~~tch e~~,~~ne
::_:
.
a. superb initial campaign for
cancelled due to wind pro-

.
.
.
.
training than ·just the physical.·• else eat- a Whopper an? shake
the Red·Foxes and should earn
blems''. The gathering wm re-·

By l~nd. By sea; By·foot. And. ·workouts," said Murphy. ''I have·· while. I
•·.eat
·a
salad
.and.·-drink
post-season
.honors
as the top
• main
as·
one of this school's
by the<end of. ihe • Rochester
:··.to
f.
control'. my diet and., my
water,'' he said ....

·7, :,.-
•.
':-1
..
.':
netminder
.
in the Knicker-
top sporting events ... The col-
triathlon this August, Michael

especially· ~Y
_
mind. A race like·_
..
Murphy's men~l preparatioµ_is
bocker Conference: His teain-
lege will be offering extended
• ·Murphy
wiU have utilized all three
•.
this is 75 percent mental.''
•·
parallefto the 13.1-mile nin in the
mate, junior attackman Tom
_
athletic facilities next fall with
'.
modes of transportation in one
,
His diet/'the first part· of the
..
race; it is long,. quiet and
.alone.
Daly, also
·recently
appeared in
the firiishin.g of the new fields
race.
.
.
preparation for the race, is simiJai< "I~ read my running magazines
the national statistics as one of
behind the bank. The fields,
.-
The 21-year-old Marist junior
to
the
:56-mile
biking event-·: every night for about·
an
hour
the top
'ten
scorers (average
which will be used primarily
from
·Fayetteville
is currently cyclical. "My diet is
a
continual.· before I go ,to sleep," Murphy
goals per game) in Division
for intramurals and not team
training to participate in his first
process that! carefully monitor. I
said.
·
_
.


One. Daly has been the team's·
·
practice, will consist of at least
triathlon
by the end of this
have to watch what I eat day after
His reading is largely concerned
scoring leader for the most of
a
pair
of
softball
summer.
But
the
physical
day," Murphy said. "A few
with the sports of competitive
the season and also has a shot
diamonds ... Because of a re-
workouts are only one aspect in
binges here and there will throw
running and the triathlon, as is
of
gaming
conference
cent NCAA ruling, Marist is
the preparation for the grueling
.
offmywholedietcycle."
.
reflected by the subscriptions to
honors ... The lax squad will be
adding women's cross country
race.

Murphy limits his intake of i:ed
five running magazines that sit in
participating in the annual
to its program

next fall.
Like the three-event race, which
meat and highly salted

foods.

a Jarge milk carton in his room.
Alumni Game this Saturday at
Anyone interested in running
comprises ruMing, biking and
Foods high in fat, including milk,
_
"I think my knowledge of the
Leonidoff Field.' The contest
for the team should contact
swimming, Murphy's training
is
tend to build
up
the. amount of
competitive aspect of the sport
pits the stars of yesteryear
Head Coach
Steve
Lurie at his
also three-pronged:
physical
lactic acid in the body, creating
gives me an advantage over
against the current version of
McCann office...
workouts, a carefully monitored_ the feeling offatigue.
"
others," he said. "My reading
•-------------------------
diet and a lot of reading:
..
"Sometimes it's tough
to si_t
in
"
Contfnutd on page JS
,..

















































'{·
.'!l'l!llll!i!!l!lll!!lli!!l!l!ll■,ll!l!l!■-~~llllll!llllllll-1!11111
.............
-
......
----■--.--------------
...
----May
2,
19_85-
THE CIRCLE - Page
15--•
I
~•.•'•~.,,..,~,:;
... ~~:-:.tf,:"•:f,.ri"i'Jl
0
!"';~;~:;"~t:'!"',~~:.::,'i~•~';'O,.;~._;-~"'"c-:7.-..,f:';"'l!i"~\;,,,:i,_.•,-t•'"'•'.t-'t.;"'.::.,;';.t+'"'~,~-.•/'!.-,J';•,,,,_:~.~'l;,•~•f'•;:_.,.,;,.l."l..-~;~~
.. -:.-·...,,.,..,~ ..
,; .. .,_,~_;'"'·..!.:-,~-_..-_._~'t."°'"
.. ;,,_.~_3<."'-~ ~.:,•.~•,•.•,.•!
.
>··,..
: .
• ••
, ";_,-'; •.
~.
~.

.•
,,,<
• ,_ ... .,~-.· .• ,,,·,
- ·<:,:Thtitsda:Y-"Morning·
a·uarteroacktt:Y···<;·:,
-~-..
:\'.·-,<'~-:
·/,::.·:-:·1.~::
.......
-~~-::
,· ••
. ;:ii~tt?f\.:-,,,
'";'"
.,,,.x,,,/
..
c,J~ii~l~]f),~:~#{f
So

, ,
1
..
..
bY,lan O'Connor ::. •
·
..

•• •
-
and preparation, something has • .pear to be too serious. And! for
Whether it be a one-year proba-
deemed important by the college
• • .,
·,
:,;
.
/:i:
.
<./: ;-
. ·.. . . , . . quiedy moved -into the picture /some time no~; Murray has said .. tion for the basketball program or
(money) and the students (atten-
·:
·,.
·: r.-;,:;;
l~·At
:.lt( .1:.:::::~::;; •.
::'with'an aura of gloom,Hkea dar~ .,:.
he felf-"minor sanctions•:·would : the taking away'.of a couple of • dance). That meant that men's
; :
'::. _Springtim~;
for coiieg~ tiaslc~·t--~io~d:o~·
a· ~u~ny. day;~;This'
dark 'be , placed : a·g~inst
... the_;college , scholarships, I don't know;. To :· basketball usually took priority .
. _·,:
ball ·fans, is. always: a. fun time: . Cloud _comes m. th<:
-form.
of the. •.
because of ·Perry's .. actions. So me, Marist deserves nothing more • • over all else.
If
I was to start all
, , .. 1here!s ,'the.exc'item'ent-suiroun'~
;National c:Collegiate • Athletic . far, things seem to be going as ex-
than a scolding,. a slap on the
over again, I don't think I would
I
\1,' .-·, .:
ding:th~ sigti'ingiof~atforiatl::et~ ::"Aiisoci~_ti9rf.
My :gin (eelin~ • iells :-'
pected. . .'. ~-:-
··r
-! ;_-;: :·- -: •
,_-.<
wrist. I ju~t don't think that will
significantly change the amount

:(tets'of;lntent.by:nigh schobr'stars';t'rne £f!at,this org~9izati9n· is r~~d_y:<;
·r
~
B.l;ltJvhat'\Vorries
,:n.e
)s_
that no
be the case.
• • . . . . ,
• . of ink each squad received. That

. .;a
fl,~ffY\
p'f~o_ac~i.ilg,'cfia~ges~;~ijd:J.;i>'ra_in,
o,ho,ilt,P,af.a~~,;i}\:,t:.):i·:;•::·-.
:_one·
•.
se~~~:-C~,orried.
No ?:n~ is.- •. The NCAA ~ill meet w_ith is, until the college decided to
. . the.).i_s_ual'.;:op_timism,:that
·,exists?·'" It :.~as:slose'·to. a'. mo~th;-'!,g9'::
'tal\cmg .;;_about
.,:,
the ~-pos~iqle •

Marist officials m June. Dunng
alter its priorities. And I don't see
.
-:
• Wlieii:"oiie:Jeasc>il~
erids:and;ii10ves
:. wherL th~· , leiter.;:arrived,c
at~
ci'uf .(penaltie~.: .that could•.' be _l.evied.
, that. time, ·I'll probably be sitting
that happening
any time soon.
fare'.i.fiiade<:
tcS
~-eitshle)'that"\··the'' aoohte~.-The:'contents:oflheJet~. 'Thefo's no.'dciubt the· NCAA. has.. at home cautiously going through
'ifollo,Wingt~~s~n-is
a:'Htore~pi-B('
ter~;\VC~~/c~rtainly
~ot;~dras.tic
1
Q(·::beeh)cying_ to improve its image
the sports'pages of the New York
; ; speroiif one:J,i}
;t;.'.\.
~
!/:} ;•
".f:-:
\i;. }, frigli_f~l').iµg;
af
Ieasq1sJt read.'~n . :-as :-.a~
~tget ·: t<>ugh''.
·org~~iiation.
Post; just waiting for that one-
• •
-~...,-· '"r·i:"-;,·-,-
• ••• ,.-,.., ••••• .•,
'
•••
.,··Th. NCAA' ..... ·1 • ·'·t-:.,1
'' ·J ·1
k W' h·t St t • Fl 'd
·
· h.
·
·
62 • h
;{?-,,<'Jf'.:;'Sf:',-'':·::'.,::?:?,\:\:&,\:C.:::·•:
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.f, . ,, ,
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Y.:
""-!19-~ \:. ~s
_
;~ :· .
!C I
a• .. a. e,: on _a paragrap ~tory on pag~
wit_

·:,,
':Her.e,-at·Manst;, one·1cari sense·:· to mform.Jhe,c_ollege.'that,i
vie>la~: ~nd now, Tulane Umvers1ty, This
the -. headline,
"Manst
Gets

• :ihat~:f'ee1ing~:of'.'-opi:iriiism.
jA'.ftei:,ttiohs':had
.ti~'eii,.coinmitt~ctin
thc),gdyernhig b<>dY,likes
to. pick. out. • NCAA P_robation.". .
: fourt:'years;iof.:
competition iri .·ttie ·/basketbatrp'rograiri/as scllool of< ·::i;chools, e'specially the "outlaw.
•. And all the optimism and ex~
·)r~n,~~f.9,:tpi~~!o,n,qµejhe·~eri!s;?fi:c'f~lf/(h;if\J:
pr~,\tti\u.sly~):sc!J:c,ols;'~.
and ni~ke c~amples cif • cite,me~t wiiI_"s~ddenly
be replaced_
' bask~tball
1
1>rogram'.
has am\'.cd. • ·:acknowledged/;-:.and,,:<tb,aL
-tlle· ::them'. That's: why you'll nev~rsee: by a. sick feelmg of gloom and
. zfij#J(icl ~(?_x,es1~cJiievecithei_rJ'irsC>g~~er_nirii>
tbody's·,:,: i11fri,~tiori'S\-:ll
j,rogram :like, Kentucky or· In~ - despair~ The rafri wili conie down_
_ ;:.v.:irin\ngJ~as~:O?if;~
''whHe;·
i~9~
.•
--~o~ipit~,~~::wou!~:
-~o~n -~a_ke ·.a.:.:,:
dian~ ~n p~ob?ti!'Ji·.
The
,l'l<'.:AA
is . on that dar.
• •
• • •
. <the _;,ECAC, ·Metro,' Confere_rice
·, • dec1s1on
on·poss1ble
penalties .. · ... ,~ afraid of diese big-timers with the
_____
.. _______
_
::regulai:-'s~ason
irtfo;:and'have
trU·' •
'.:What:alf
of
this'
was
referring·. admirablerepU:tations. These in-
• · I'd like to take this opportunity
to thank David McCraw , Lou
Ann Seelig and the entire Circle
staff for their contributions to the
sports section during this eventful •
year. They've all helped··in ways
that don't usually show up in the
box scores.
'

. ~iY:
otitI(a\aedicatfd 'Jollowing-"of,: to/pf .cou~se,.
were the vi~lations. stit~tions',are .• j~st. too big, have . _
1.
-
··E
..
·.
p'"
.......
1•_,·l-0·
• •
.··g·_

·_u·.·
·. • -~-. '·· .. -
• ,,ra~s\)"jiurre~kori<~by(a:
waye:-~of
Lcominitted;'oy' for~ei:: !l~d:
f
OX
,:tcio mucltpower .. :, ,_
, •
..••
: •• ;· . . .
.
! .
;'.'-':Fox-Fever.
•),ff.-;,:
'
,,:>t;
; __
0::6,·
< :: : •.
m~ntof::: '.~ikcf>fe~ry: ;:'~ro111_1d
::\ ., ,Marts{.isthe type of.school that • •
. .
. . , . ,
.
. ,
l
: ·,_,
>: ~·· .. . , ,_- _; . •
. : .
,
.
August or September,-P,erry too~ .. can be. ma_df. an ex_aµiple of.
.
The .. NCAA,
'deeisi()nJn ·June
·, And,· although this may come
as ·a surprise to .some, I'd like to
thank Dennis Murray fol' bis can-
didness ·and • availability during
the rough times. ~t's no·secret that
Murray ·wasn't ·exactly- thrilled
with smile • of· the statements
printed in The Circle~ 'But he
never turned his , back on the
newspaper, and that's something
thlit'inerits respect.·; ' .,
· • · ·
! , .. •
'·With'-.
'this, l1eliiiid :-thein;<'the "on'cfof'his foreign play~rs'un' two... We'rif' newconiers"''to ,. Division ·
will eriihvhat
bas'
been
a'
bizarre
• . .. Mari st
, .,
faithful • can . now ••
-illegal
overnight trips to New One, and we're trying to
ni'ov·e
up
yeai: in Marist sp~rts. T!Jere was
:. r~istically dream of bigger:a.rid, York City, where he may or may the ladder rather quickly. Amon_g
th_e
__
foi~:ket~an
scanllaJ'ofau~umn,
'.;
b~tt~r'(hihgs fo~come_.::Rik~Smits pb(.have offered to·"-buy'.''tliat. othe.r things, foreign:playe:rs have
foJiowed by)b'.e.
tiasketball;glory
::
arid . Mifoslav Pe~fski will'--,
be player somf;~fothes~ .The ·co~leg~ beeri brotigfif:irr '!O 'speed tip thei
·,
of wlnt¢r/We haye gont(through
I
f
• • back next year and should. become fired·Pei:ry, 'investigated the'hoop process~ 'This. is isoinething··
I. 'feel' •
a
whole scho9t
y~ar
witijt>ut
'a 'pex-
t~~. of-the_ pest p~~y~rs tp,.~
.Efrid- P,i:?gr~mJa.r)ft.irthe:. ~~lat!<>ns; the NCAA really:;wants ·to; cut·
'.
m,,nen.~
,,bletlc:mr~tc,r)n ~fficl::
. son VaUey:has ever·,seen. And the. a!\d • sent • its' findmgs-·-to ··the back on. And we have chea_ted a
And one of· the finest ·women's
'·newlignees will be arriving'bli the·· NCAA ..
An
,'NCAAi:investigaior ·Httle, but have"done'Hothihg
·com-
teams . in this: scito6rs· history
••
·scene,' ·coinirii 'froni some· of~the irtei with 'Marfsri>re'siderit
Dehnis pai:ed; to'' other ·schoolf on our
practically.- ••• went.• '··unno'ti'ced
_t O~jhat it~!e; I _
w~ll
J~~ss the
a:~ign~.
ov!r.
to::
Brian·
O~Connor,
who • wm • assume the --duties of
sports editor next year. To
Brian,
here's hoping'that things will get a
bit:

calmer • • around · • here by
Sep!ember.
• i
: :
/natf"On'_s:
.
best • high~
-~chotW
pro~
M.,urray arld_
peiin:
or ~i_uclent
~f~
saijte lev~1;
Siill;'.j~e ,f.JCAAco~ld •. b~~use_ o'f ~lHhe
eX;t.r_a~~urri'~ular
. ·~::::::)~t~#-~:;
·.M.ari~(can~.
i\ci~')ect,-i!it f,Y,s q~r~~-ct~o~_oi:i-Fe?~~iy
~-tp •.
c9~~tru~·.thj(~s·.tryjng
t?.
gt:.t,
~o?: -·-a~\_yityi'
•.
'.' • _. . . . / .·1: • : ._ '. '_· •
•. • • witli." eastem powers;' and • that g1scu~~
\he college:s t'epor~.u:ntll big : too: ·.fl!St: Bun_1
'M~p~t· as· a:
·,
l1f
running The C,rclf s spo~s
alone is an exciting prospect/Just
the·.:, inaihil'an's'.-·receiit·' visit, lesson. to' the small· colleges with. sectio'n',.
I've been unfair ·at times
missing_ <>Ut
0!.1
'prep ~tar Joe nothipg, further hp9._~
7
en heard big aspirations_.,:·
.
.
.
.. . . ·. ;in the·amount
0
of ..
·cove~age given
v,,

-But'I guess that really'depends
Paterno .(to F.o~dh11.m),
1s
a step . from tl}e_NCM;,-:: ,. .. .:.
~
; ,,.
0
1 rea!ly-d~n:t)rust, the,-.Nf:M.
:to cert11~n
teams. Butth1s Is n_ot
an
on,,the NCAA. And that's not
:_._upward?,:,\
: :~ ·, :/: :: '..;, ':. \ .. ;:_
\. ':-So\whl!t's i.~.ally:botliering,_m~?-:-
~his,'.organizatio.t1
is '1i~e1Y._tcf
hit
:ap~fogf.
~~~lif
l}rled to_;
do,was·
s~¢et~~ng I'm very comfortable
But amidst-.
all of this. act1v1ty • After all, the s1tuat1on doesn't a,p~ Man~t harder than necessary.
:to place emphasis oil those sports
with.
1,.. . :•
-~ssis'ta~-t'io~~,ki~/-':,~uiet: -f'orbi!s
~~·-
~:::?tf(:jfiiiiiftrr-bJ:Mart:sTous1f
itlJa11

••
-•
Triathlon_-·_
...
Continued.on page 14
supplies me with information
. abo.ut training,'· motivation,
medicine and other competitors.''
:.·
'
,
.--(•::
by,Diin Pietnflisa.
~




•.
~
..

,,
'>.
:
.., Th~/;~re:
ih~
quiet riten. ancf ~omen :~f
Marist's basketball: programs-..,:...
the assis-

• •
'i
. .
. '..
.
,
. · ..
He has -also coa-ched the Jumor varsity
and varsity baseball teams .at Rhinebeck
and was the school's athletic director from •
tantcoache~: .. \c_:'.
'.78-81.
, ,
A.
nd
.. ~hiie they o.'rten.
W<>.
rk
in. the'shadow
) 'Babineau, who earned • a degree in
• physical education 'at Ithaca College~ -was
.oL,head coaches,. the assistants play• an•··· active last summer 'at women's basketball
essential,role in the. programs,_.:...;.;.
usually
:
campsiu Marist, Siena and.
the
Dolph
taking on hours thatri:v11fthose put in by
--

Schayes Carnp. •

• ·

the holders c:>fthe
topjop.;
• _
.
,: :·,.;;:-:>-,:
,,,.,, .· ,~ · ,
_

•• During the .. pas( season, the inen's
>;
The assistaritcoaches have a long}jst of
,
basketball team 4ad thr.ee assist~nt coaches
<
d11ti~~.
induding i:he one they are working
butis no\V down to one; .Tiµi
Todd ren1ains . liard'atiiow.:·recruiting.

. -·. • •
. after the resignations of J9hn.Quatt1:occhi

In a.receri't"interview,-Seymourexplained
·.andMarkCook,
.• ..
•·· ..
<: ..
·-:,·;,>:.·
••
••• '.-··---
•• • -·


:'°.The Women's basketball team~ has ·Jiad

. '.l~O
(assistant .coaches d4ring '.the; ~ast
,
HNinety:-five
·percent
of
<
seafon:.Cafrie.SeymourandKenBabineau.
what
J
know
l
learnedfrom
':
Todd,a·gradua.te of_Fitchburgh (Mass.) · · · .
.
· ·
·.
..
.
·· •

.
~tafe:.C<>llege,
_earned coach of thec'yeai
him . (.(im Todd). ]le gave
' honor_s'
a!ter coaching Fitchburg~•s Notre
nie the confidence 'to be ag-
Dame High School to the}dassacJmsetts.
-.
.
. :• . , _ . : _. • •·
·•
• State I>ivision Three title.
' -
,,
'
'
'gresszve, tough, and to dunk
He spent the fo~r years prior to coming· .
more/
• •
to Marist as the first assistant at Columbia
.



University," where· he was in charge of·.
-
Rik Smits
recruitin~ aµd sco~tin~.· •:··
,;._.;-~) t:, .. • .. : ..
.


.
.
• .
\:
.,
,
.
~
'
.
'
.
'
. Seymour has just completed her first •
year with the Foxes. She had an illu~trfous ·
playing career a.t Eastern Connecticut.State
University, where she was named team cap-
·tain and most valuable player as wellas be-
ing honored as a New England women's
basketball all~star.
• • - •
,
•. She has also spent
a
year as
an·
assistant
basketball coach at Eastern Connecticut. ·
.
~
'

how the women's program· goes about
recruiting.
In the fall, the coaches receive a list of
140 names of prospects who.took-part in
the Junior Olympics or camps . and are
entering their senior y~r of high school. •
The coaches then make phone calls to the
athletes to see if they are interested in atten°
ding Marist. •
• • Softball has also played a role i~ .!ter
coaching career. She coached varsity soft- .
If the prospect expresses an interest, a
ball for Windham High School in Willman- • member of the Marist coa~hing staff goes
tic, Conn.; in
J
983
and was also an ass is- _ to watch her play•
tant coach for eastern's women's softball
team, which won the NCAA Division
Three Championship in 1982. Before com-
ing to Marist, Babineau coached for eight
years at Rhinebeck High School, where he
. was named Bi-Valley Conference coach of
the year for his undefeated team in '81-82.
Another duty of an assistant coach is to
help players with their game on one-to-one
basis.

Todd's assistance comes· in intense ses-
sions of no more than 20 minutes. Todd
;ays that the players may become .bored
after 20 minutes.
These special individual practices have
been beneficial to many of the players.
~;Nirie~y-fi;e ~~rce;~/ of what I know, I
•••
learned from him," said Marist freshman
center Rik Smits. "He gave me the con~
fidence to.. be aggressive, tough,.

an.
d to
-"dunk more. He psyches me up."
_
.
\

_,
. While ~the • assi;tants said they e~joyed
their work, the job does carry' 4isadvan-
. tages - among them, a lack' of job:securi-
ty:
., An .
assistant coach is signed to annual
• contracts, while head coaches often get
multi-year contracts.
Todd is ·under contract to July while
Babineau and Seymour are currently work-
. ing without contracts,.
• •••
:."
But Head Coach Pat Torza and her
players hope to have ·seymour and
Babineau back next year.
"They've helped us a lot this year," said
Marist freshman Michelle Michel. "I hope
they will be around again next year."
A second disadvantage for an assistant
coach is that if the head coach is fired, it
usually results in the assistant coaches' be-
ing fired also.
That was not the case last fall, however,
when Mike Perry r~igned as head men's
basketball coach at Marist.
Perry's assistants remained and per-
formed well for Head Coach Matt Fur-
janic.
"They did a fine job," said Furjanic.
"They adjusted well to my system."
For some assistants, a lack of power can
be troubling, but Todd says that has not
been a problem at Marist.'
"Matt (Furjanic) makes me feel like a.
head coach, and that's important," Todd
said.
"It
gives
me credit."
Murphy said that reading about
other athletes gives him insight to
their lives - and the opportunity
to learn from their mistakes.
From his reading, he has
arrived at a philosophy
.
about
training that is roughly equivalent
to the approach he intends to take
to the lake where he will swim 1.2
miles as part of the triathlon.
"If
you don't control it, it will
control and overwhelm you," he
said.

The physical training needed to
compete in
a
triathlon is vigorous,
·• but Murphy claims the key is to
• not let it· control your life. "In
periods of intensified training it is
important to use your head and be
laid back," he said.
·.,·His workouts include daily
runs, averaging
SO
to 60 miles a
week; four miles of swimming a
week; bicycling, which he will
begin in June and will take him
100 miles a week; and the daily
crunch of 300 sit-ups a day .
"I do this training as a release
from daily pressures; that's really
why I do it," he said. But as a
release from his training, Murphy
will spontaneously skip a day.
"A lot of endurance athletes
are afraid to take a day off," he
said, "but I think that is what
enables me to keep on doing it
with out tiring of it."
As with much in life, Murphy
said, the hardest thing about
training is getting started. "I hate
rolling out of bed early in the
morning," he said, "but once my
feet
hit
the
ground
I'm
motivated."
For Murphy the finish line is
still far in the distance, but it is
something he has wanted to do
since he saw his friend compete in
the
lronman
Triathlon
in
Honolulu his senior year in high
school.
.. I have had 21 summer
vacations," he said ... I may as
well make the most out of the last
one I'll ever have."
·.









































































































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• L,l.'s H(',ttest BzmdS trOm
3:30
p:m,~6 p,m.
i • •

·00Ni1::'r.f1~s,i-r1:1E•FVN1··•·····
.'>.-,-,~-,~~~::.~~·-.•-~•-' .. ------~-
_·:.·-:
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- • -:c'.~rn_i~~tso~i~a:
·:~
•• : :~ . -_
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:DOSt~'T·--MISS
THE:YEAR'S;LAST-MIXER
.
_
. Fo·od Vendors
· · ·,
:
-..
.
---.• -
·
· . ., • ·
• ·- · . •
. . · . • -
,-

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·
..
· •

Beer&'..Soda{'Aiallable
.
__
, -;. ;_
from
9 p~m.---to_1
a.m._In _th~ Cafe.-._~-:$1
- - <
p·ain_t,,~caps
-

• •
.
_
·• ,
.-
·

• _-
Witf:I _Mu.sic
from the Women of :
.-
T-Shirt
Give-Aways •
·
• -
-
·

-
>
i;::~:!t
·.
.,111,~111111,

**********
EC,die Murphy & Dan Ackroyd
''Trading Places''
at
7:30
p.m. • •
$1 in the theatre.
3 TIME WINNERS
on
ED MC MAHON'S
"STAR SEARCH"
.
,
.
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'I