The Circle, September 12, 1985.xml
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 31 No. 1 - September 12, 1985
content
Volume 31,
.Number
1
Marist College; Poug~keepsie, N .
.Y.
September 12, 1985
72
await cdmpletion of _apartment compl~x
-
•
-
Strike, desigil problems blamed for delay
by Laverne C. Williams
A late start,
_a
labor strike and
•
changes in design plans all con-
tributed to the delay in completing
Marist's new Garden Apartments,
according to Marist housing of-
-
ficials and the contractor for the
project.
_
•
Five of the six units were com:
pleted by Sept. 1, but the six.th, the
-
F Section, is still not finished. The
delay has forced the college to place
72 students in temporary housing.
The 72 students have been told
that the F Section will be ready for
.
.
Sansola, was that the accommoda-
tions for wheelchair students were
-
not satisfactory ..
· .
•
Ramps needed to be installed,
and doorways needed to be extend~
ed. Also, according to Eberhard,
plumbing and bathroom fixtures
had
to
be changed to meet the
needs of students with
•
physical
disabilities.
•
Eberhard said. an additional
delay was caused by
_Marist's
re-
quest for a change in the heating
•
and. air-conditioning units in the
apartment.
·-
.
occupancy later this month.
According to Eberhard, poor
Weekly job meetings were held
subsoil also caused a change· in
_
between Marist administrators and
design plans. Originally, there were
Eberhard Builders Inc;, the con-
to be three buildings in the com~
struction company for the project,
plex; however, because of poor
but Marisfofficials said they were
.
ground conditions, the engineers
not told until Aug. 28 or 29 that the
had to redesign the the entire layout
F Section would not be finished in
of the buildings.
time for the start of school.
Also, the project got off to a
Fred Eberhard; president of
•
slow start because of a delay
in
get-
Eberhard Builders, said that early
ting a building permit from the
__
A
workman continues construction on the new Garden
-Apartments.
(photo by Laurie Barraco)
-
in August Marist officials had been
Town of Poughkeepsie, Eberhard
niade aware.of the possibility that
said. College officials had hoped to
some of the apartments might not
have the per!"it in Octob~r' bu~ it
be completed on time for students'
:was _
no_t issue~
.
until
mid~
JII'---------•-
---•-
---•---
________________
..;.. _______
...,
_
arrivaL
.
___
-
<:
~
7
:_
_ _
November, accordmg to Eberhard.
_ •
_
.
___
.
._
._
__
_
_
__
_
__
_
. _
_
.
.
•
_
_
•
•
·;:
-~ou.siggstaff-madephonecalls_,-
~~r!!ihirsci~~ifg~st?.~~-~t?.\
.••
__
!:{t1fg_~st--frosh plas$,
.causes
overcrowdzng
.
1~ri~~'/J;
1
tb!in
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~~
ih~·fJnf;,~;lJ~~-
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'.We're
uricter'tfjefonftc,1~6f'J:fre
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·.
·.,-
..
delay
..
__
_
•
_ ...
-
·._
weather," said Eberhard:·'.'By·
byDouglasl)ntton'
_
.
-'•<
.:··:.·students.
"Admissicinsis·anart,'hotascience,"
.
Angered by the delay.and fore-
_
December "'{e 'Yere froze out."
-
•
•
Daly said.C'The preference is to have a few too
ed to move into already full hous-
.
-
Problems_ with subcon!rac:;tors
Marist College is·currently working on a solu-
many students matriculate than not enough."
•
ing units, many of the 72 students.· fo~ s~ch thmgs
•~-
plumbmg and
.
,
tion to the overcrowding in Leo.arid Sheahan halls
..
There are approximately 750 freshman students
assigned to the F Section express~ p_amt!ng
also croppe~ up. "I ~ave
•
caused by the largest freshman
class
in the college's
enrolled.
_
ed. their dissatisfaction through a
_
to give them
·(Marist
officials)
.
history, according to Steve Sansola, director of
-
..
Sansola said that the resident assistants and men-
p~tition to college Pre~ident De_n- a1_1swers,
but I also have~~ coo.re_
housing._
;
.
.,
-
_
.
-
•.
tors are "sensitive to th: special circumstan_c:s»
•
•
ms Murray demanding partial
.dmate
subcontractors,
said
According to Richard Brennan, Leo/Sheahan
__
caused by the overcrowdmg and are emphasizing
•
refunding of housing fees.
Eb~rhard: "Sub-contractors don't
.
.'
residence director, 35 two-person rooms were hous~
•
programming in-the freshman
_·dorms.
The pm-_
One of the reasons for the delay
always come when they are suppos-
·
•
ing three students aqhe beginning of the semester,
grams include sessions on time
•
management,
in completion of the apartments
-
ed to or they don't bring_eno~gh
but as of Monday, eight
·of
those rooms had been
•
develop_ing
space_ and developing relati_onships.
\1/aS
a
seven-day strike last month
m~?·
,
.
-
.
,·
converted back· to doubles.
_ •
~!though t~~Y say they are not excited about
·
by sheet-rock workers, according
.
·~heres
.~o ip.uch constru,~tlon
-. ·-
The date students.submitted their dorm deposit
their current hvmg arrangements, many freshmen
to Steve Sanso la, director of
m thi~ area, _said Eberhard,_ that
_
_
regulates which students aie relocated from a trip!-
say that so· far they have been a_ble
to adapt to the
h<>using.
-
_
,
.
there,~
_a
terrible manpower shor-
-
·-
ed room, Sansola said. "The last student
to
pay
_'li~itc:;_d
space.
-"It
hasn'~ really been b_adt said
•.·--
..
Another reason, according to. tage.
-
.,,.._
·-·his·
-
dorm
dep.Osit is the Oh~ relocated,'' he said.
Mike_ B~ogan, a Leo resident from Huntington,
•
• • •
An unexpected high yield:from the freshman ac-
. __
N. Y. "The only problem is the room's built for
•
Ex-radical
•~--
Witl le~iure•_
on-success
by Kenneth
F.
Parker Jr.
.
.
Former activist and well-knowri
•
business entrepreneur Jerry Rubin';
will speak tonig!1t at 8 p.Dl. in the
•
.
Campus Center Theater ..
·
•
..
Presented free by
·the·
College
Union Board, Rubin's talk will be
titled "How to Be a Successful
Young Professional."
Rubin first gathered national at-
tention in the 1960's by organizing
young people against the Vietnam
War.
.
His anti-war tactics included ly-
ing
in
front of the tracks
to
blocl_c
troop trains, organizing the na-
tion's first anti-war Teach-In and
mobilizing
15,000
people to march
on the Oakland Army Terminal.
Rubin also helped plan the
demonstrations in Chicago during
the Democratic Convention in
1968. Meanwhile he joined forces
with Abbie Hoffman to create the
Yippies.
-
•
..
Today, Rubin has little in com-
mon with Hoffman or the political-
cultural climate of the 1960's.
·Jerry
Rubin
Rubin is currently promoting his
idea called "business networking"
in which professionals meet in a
social environment
to make
business contracts, discuss careers
and exchange conversation.
He is founder and president of
the 500 Club, an organization of
entrepreneurs, executives and pro-
fessionals. Rubin is also Vice
President of the League of Baby-
Boom Voters, a non-partisan.
organization whose purpose is to
.
explain and promote the interests
of the baby-boom generation.
cepted this semester created the exceptionally large
two people."
_
-
class, resulting in the overcrowding, according
to·
"It's been alright except for the space," srud Joe
---
,
James Daly, vice president of admissions and
.
Eriole, a Leo resident from East Greenbush, N. Y.
enrollment, Yield is the percentage of students ac-
"But I still haven't unpacked most of my stuff."
-
cepted to the coUege who actually attend.
Daly said' that he does not foresee any problems
·--
According to Daly, admissions had calculated a
next semester when more students are matriculated.
-
resident yield of about 30 percent for this semester.
•
"There will probably be only about 25 resident
The actual 34 percent yiel~ caused a surplus of
students added for the spring semester." Daly said.
Maher 3.ppointed actiilg VP,
bllt the search
'COntinu_es
by Anthony DeBarros
Dr. Julianne Maher, dean of the
school of adult education at Marist
College, has been appointed acting
vice president for academic affairs.
Maher will hold the office until
•
a search can locate a permanent
replacement for Dr. Andrew
Molloy, according to a memoran-
dum issued Aug. 29 to college
faculty and staff from Marist Ex-
ecutive Vice President John Lahey.
Molloy resigned the position July
31.
A search conducted this past
summer by a Marist committee was
unsuccessful.
"The search committee recom-
mended three candidates who met
for two days of meetings with
myself, Dr. Murray (Marist Presi-
dent Dennis Murray), members of
the administrative cabinet and
some faculty," said Lahey. "As a
result of the meetings, there did not
emerge a strong consensus.that any
were as strong a candidate as the.
job deserved.
"The search was done relatively
late last year, so most of the good
candidates had already made com-
mitments to their institutions,"
Lahey said. "I think we could do
better in reopening the search now.
We'll attract a better pool of peo-
. pie."
The college will readvertise for
the position before the end of
September, and Lahey said he
hopes to
·secure
a permanent vice
president for academic affairs by
the end of the fall semester.
However, he said a more realistic
date would be July of 1986, since
many candidates would not be.
available until then.
Maher, who was a member of
the summer search committee, said
she will seek the permanent
position.
"I
made it clear that
I
would on-
ly take the acting vice president for
academic affairs position if I could
be considered for the permanent
job," Maher said.
Lahey said Maher could become
a candidate in the new search. "She
was not a candidate for the search
that just ended," he said. "Depen-
ding on how she performs, she
could become a viable candidate.
I did not place any limitations on
that."
Maher will still hold the position
Continued on
page
2
'
I,.
.I
11
. I
.,
j
.I
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I
--
Page 2 -
-
THE CIRCLE - Septemb.er
_
12, 1985
Housing
~o~ti~ued from page 1,
,'.,_
-~~-
•
The student petition drive was not immediately clear how many of Haughton. "It's the people whose
started by senior Christian Mor-
•
the students had taken the option~ space we're invading."
rison, chairman of the College
Morrison, the organizer of the
Union Board's lecture committee.
According to Sanso la,· Housing
petition drive, said be wanted to see
.
A for.um under the direction of
decided to give the students the op-
students
'compensated
for the in-
the Council of Student Leaders was tion of going on the meal plan in convenience. "I feel that students
_to
be held Tuesday at 9:30 p.m. in
order to "reduce· the stress and
aren't getting what they paid for,"
the Theater to allow students to
pressure" of having 12 to 13 said Morrison. "The fact that it's
voice complaints. Student leaders
students using one kitchen unit, as working out OK for some students
planned to address such issues as
is now the case in several of the does not excuse the school from
the completion date for the apart-
townhouses. Normally, 10 people paying financial retribution."
ments, the security measures on the
Jive in a townhouse.
Morrison also said he thought
north campus and the added ex-
that Housing should be giving
penses incurred by students forced
Students. who have permanently
students reports on the progress of
to live in temporary housing.
assigned housing also said they work on the✓Garden Apartments.
The 72 students, who will be
-
were inconvenienced by having ad-
"As of Friday, Sept. 6, noon,"
housed in 12 apartments when the
ditional roommates.
said Sue Ryan, CSL president, "All
-
F Section is complete, are being
"It
shouldn't have happened,".
72 students who are supposed to be
housed in a variety of accominoda-
said Jim Ban Cura, a senior from in the Garden Apartment complex
tions. Of the 72, 27 males and 18
•
Middleto~n.
•
N. Y. "They're
have not been notified as to the
females
are
living
in
-
the
disrupting us having extra people specifics of the housing situation.
Townhouses. The remainder of the
here."
Their patience and understanding
•
students are temporarily residing in
is being taken advantage of."
-
the Kirk House, Champagnat Hall
"It's not only the people who are
"We're not inciting riots here,"
and North Road houses.
inconvenienced because they're not said
Ryan, "We're
simply trying to
In
interviews, students complain-
in their permanent housing," said solve
:the
problems."
ed about the late notification and -----------------------.
also their
temporary
living
quarters.
"Why weren't we notified earlier
in the summer?" asked senior Rob
Haughton, business manager of the
Campus Center. "I was working
__
here all summer and no one men-
tioned anything until I came back
from vacation the last week in
August."
Chris Potenza, a junior from
Pearl River, N.Y., said: "I'm liv-
ing out of suitcases. I have no desk.
They (housing officials) told us to
come up light, so I brought no
cooking utensils."
"We're living out of boxes. We
have no desks. It's not a study at-
mosphere," said Carol Lethin, a
·junior
from Babylon,
N.Y.
Others
complained
about
crowding. "It's an inconvenience
to
everyone," said Chris Colvin of
Glen Falls, N.Y. "The cooking
area is not large enough for 12
girls."
•
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Fun
Way
with
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.
.
.
Sell Evant~ CosmeUcs at your conve-·
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classes, after· classes,
on weekends or in the evening.
Call Evante Cosmetics at
(91'4) 957-2049 8:nd ask for Yvonne
_ -
__ -
or write
- _
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-·-StO
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-
Open
.24
Ho·urs
PALACE.
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Breakfast - Lunch - Dinner
Fresh Seafood Steaks
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-
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Show your college ID and get a
FREE Glass of Beer
with your meal!
7%
DISCOUNT
194 WASHINGTON STREET
POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK
(Next
to All Sport.
A short
walk from Marist)
All of the 72 students were given
-i~n~P!~~h
0
t~~Ig_galf~wt~~e%e~~;
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
__
:
____
:_,.=
eat in the college cafeteria: It was·
yp __
_
Continued from page 1
of dean of the school of adult
education in addition to her new
-
responsibilities. -
As acting vice president for
academic affairs, Maher will be
re_sponsible for the overall piann-
ing,
_
managing and directing ' of
academics at Marist, as well as
supervision of the five divisional'
chairpersons, Lahey said.
Maher said holding both posi-
tions at once will not cause a con-
flict. "I think it's manageable,"
she said:" A Jot of groundwork has
been laid for the fall semester. We
w_ould hope to have a permanent
person named by January, but it
might be necessary to do it for the
full year. I'm going to try it and see
_
what happens."
•
Maher said she plans no major
policy changes, but does feel
_
strongly about campus intellectual
.life and· student involvement in
academic affairs.
"I encourage more student in-
volvement, and I want to
work
closely with students in setting up
speakers and activities," she said.
"I appreciate their input. The col-
lege is enriched by them."
Molloy resigned as vice president
for academic affairs to return to
full-time teaching. He
is
a pro-
fessor of chemistry at Marist.
HISPANIC
HERITAGE
WEEK
SEPTEMBER
15-21
Petiti.ons For
-
The
Candidacy For The.
Positions
-
of
Clas·s of 1'989
·President
'
.
Vice. President
Secretary
Treasurer.
are available in Rm. CC268
Student Government Office
beginning September 8
through September 14
Bections are Sept. 28 & 29
Get involved in
Student Government!
COLLEGE UNION
_BOARD·
PRESENTS:-
-
•
,
Jerry Rubin.-
Radical of
the-&0's
and
_
''How to be a
·Young·
Professional:
_Join
the
Yuppie Revolution''
.
.
-
-THURS.,
SEPT. 12th
MARIST
COLLEGE-
TH
EATER 8 P.M.
Admission is Free
.
,
.
.
September 12, 1985 - THE CIRCLE - Page 3-_-
M ari st
•
plans change. in college alcohol policy
by.
Donald R. Godwin
Because of the eventual i~crease·
•
in Ne_w
York's drinking age, a new
alcohol policy is being considered
at Marist according to Peter
Amato, assistant dean of student
affairs.
,
This summer Gov. Mario
Cuomo signed a bill raising the
legal drinking age in New York to
21. The law will take effect on
December 1.
Marist does not stand alone con-
cerning its incomplete alcohol
policy, according to Amato.
"It's
important to remember that all
•
New York state colleges are grap-
pling with the decision of whether
to go dry or not, and no one has
made it," he said.
•
Although a final policy has not
been developed at Marist, Betty
Yeaglin, director of• college ac-
tivities, believes Marist is a l<,>t
fur-
ther ahead in its planning than
other schools.
"Before
school
started,"
she said, "many schools
hadn't done anything as far as
planning a committee or looking
for solutions."
Marist has assigned a committee
to look for solutions, Yeaglin said.
The committee is being called the
D-Day committee, which stands
for either "drinkers" or "dry," she
said.
The committee will be made up
by the Council of Student Leaders,
which will make recommendations
to the administration and the
New housing director
named; open-door
.·_
policy for· students-
by
Brian O'Keefe
resident director at Plymouth
State College in Plymouth, New
Hampshire, and was director of
student life at Thomas College
in Waterville; Maine, from 1983
to 1985.
During a summer of major
changes in the Marist ad-
ministration, a new director of
housing was appointed after
Robert Heywood left in July for
a position ,at Pace University.
Describing his new job at
.
Bronx-born Steve Sansola
Marist, Sansola said, "I'm cer-
was appointed in August. He
tainly challenged by the job."
has earned three college degrees,
He added that he hopes to gain
including a master's of profes-
extensive use of computers, and
•
.sional
studies degree from
get involved in campus issues:
SUNY N
P
I •
1981
"I need to get used to the
:
•
ew a tz
m
✓-
•
•
•
,,
h
. d
Concerning
his style
•
of
syStem,
e sai •
•
. :
...
.)eadership,.Sansola said,
'.'I'm
..
__
....
His personal interests are top-
..
:~
:..::::.willing
to listen:andJearn:of stu~:.
:,::,
ped
,by
rec!"ia~i~!J:~
.
.'~I)n a~ o:ut~.·
.
••
• .
dent needs. I want to keep an
doors man," he said.
A
recent
: •
open-door policy."
.
bike trip across Europe arid a
Sansola had previously work-
hike through the Alps show his
ed at three colleges in the areas
love for the outdoors.
of resident life and recreation.
.
.
As for the people that he has·
From1978 to 1980 he was field
encountered at Marist, "they've
cabinet where final decisions will be
made, said Yeaglin.
Decisions that have been made,
according to Yeaglin, are the clos-
ing of the pub and the elimination
of alcohol from all student events
•
once the drinking age is increased.
"There will be no drinking room
with alcohol at mixers, house din-
ners or whatever," she said ..
A dry campus is undeterminable
at this point, according to Amato.
"Until all the information is in,"
said Amato,
"I
cannot say if the
entire campus will go dry, but I'm
inclined to think that it would not
go totally dry."
According to Yeaglin, the
townhouses and the Garden Apart-
ments are niixed in ages ranging
from 19 to 21. "This is the pro-
blem: Can the 21-year-old be per-
mitted to drink alcohol," said
Yeaglin, "without giving it to the
rest of the people in the house?"
Statistics from Y eaglin show that
on December 1, there will be 300
resident students who are 21; by
March 1, 400 will be 21, and 478
who will be 21 by May I. There are
1,800 resident students.
The new drinking ag·e will also
have an affect on those who make
•
their living from selling alcoholic
beverages.
With the closing of the Pub,
John Cummins, pub supervisor,
will be leaving Marist. "I will be
leaving the company (Seiler's) by
choice," he said. "I took the job
to run the pub and without the sale
of alcohol here, my job is finish-
ed."
Local bars near Marist will also
feel the impact of the new drink-
ing age. Skinner's, on Route 9
across from Marist, predicts a 25
percent reduction in business accor-
ding to owner-manager Chris
Turek.
Beginning Sept. 23, the Pub will
hold a series of "dry" nights, ac-
cording to Linda Imhoff, chairper-
son of the cabaret committee of the
College Union Board.
Featured will be a variety of stu-
dent talent and professional per-
formers. Refreshments will be
available.
The shows will be presented by
the cabaret committee of the CUB.
Those interested in perfoming or
joining the committee should write
to Imhoff at P .0. Box 3-706.
·Marist
to sponsor
debate
team
by Fred Dever
For the first time in 20 years
Marist College will field a debate
team, which will be under the direc-
tion of James Springston, newly
hired director of debate.
All students are free·to join the
team, according to Springston.
"There are two requirements," he
said. "You must be a Marist stu-
dent, and alive and breathing."
An
exhibition
debate will ten-
tatively match President Dennis
Murray and a faculty member
against the British national team
Sept. 25 at 7:30 p.m. in the Cam-
pus Center Theater .
..
,. ~--
--springston---said
'nc~nopc"S
•
\.'nc
•
•
debate will draw attention to the
new program and help him in
recruiting team members. There are
work supervisor. at Dutchess.
been supportive to me here", he
Steve Sansola
•
currently five students signed up
for the Marist team.
Community College.
.
said.
,
"It
feels like coming
.
In 1981, he was hired as 'a
home."
(photo by Laurie Barraco)
:Marist
Abroad students
·cited
at lun·cheon
by
Brian O'Keefe
A luncheon in the Pub last week
celebrated the return of 18 Marist
Abroad students and the departure
The event, held o_n Friday, was
of 24 juniors and seniors attending
•
organized by Dr. Jeptha Lanning,
various colleges and universities in
•
director of the Marist Abroad Pro-
.
Europe.
gram, Cicely Perrotte, MAP assis-
••
-·
·
·
tant, and Elizabeth Jaycox,
MAP
·
More
.parl<ing
spaces added
secretary.
Marist has acquired additional
the building, Waters added.
parking in the north lot' of Marist
The college began conducting
.
East for students and staff using
classes in Marist East, formerly the
the building,
·according
to Ed
.
•
Western Publishing building, in the
\\'aters, vice president for finance
Spring of 1984. The school now
and administration.
.
•
leases enough space for 24
Waters said that the owners of
classrooms. Marist also leases
.
the building have allocated 75
•
space for faculty and staff 9ffices.
spaces to be used in addition to
Marist's adult education pro-
those in the south lot, which is
gram; ROTC classes and the Art
located across from Skinners on
program are among those housed
Fulton Street. The north lot is ac-
in Marist East.
cessible from Route 9.
Of the 24 classrooms now used
.
Students and staff using the
for Marist students, 11 were add-
south lot should avoid using spaces
ed this summer. There are also
allocated to Roe Movers and must
IBM classrooms located in the
not block doors and entrances to
building.
Two Marist students are depar-
ting for Italy this month, as well as
eight to England, eight to France,
four to Ireland, and. one each to
West Germany and Iceland.
Five students returning from a
year of study in England, five from
Ireland, six from France, and one
•
each from Spain and Italy made up
the Marist Abroad 1984-1985
contingent.
The luncheon allowed· returning
students to discuss the experience
with those beginning their journey.
"I got rid of some fears by talk-
ing to people who have been
there," said Laureen DeJong, a
junior from Northport,
N.Y.,
heading to University College in
Cork, Ireland
.
"I'm more excited than ever
after hearing how exciting it was
from them," added Christine Hart,
ajtiziior from Cooperstown, N.Y.,
•
who will be attending University
College in Galway, Ireland.
Karen Crouse, a senior from
·
Milford, N.J ., will spend a year at
L'Etoile Institute in Paris, and
describes the experience of going
abroad as "a liaison between tex-
tbooks and the real world," and "a
major step" in her life.
Marist Abroad will hold an in-
formational meeting in October for
students interested in participating
in the program
during the
1986-1987 academic year.
According to Springston, Marist
took a giant step to get recognition
for the college when the sports
teams went Division One, but uns
til now recognition for academics
has been lacking. "The debate pro-
gram will help highlight the
academic and cultural aspects of
Marist," he said.
Starting in October, the Marist
debate
.
team will compete with
other colleges across the country.
Springston comes to Marist from
the University of Michigan at
Fl int, where he started a debate
team that won the Michigan col-
leges' state championship three of
his four years there.
Springston said debating is not
that difficult and
·almost
anyone
who learns to be a good pursuader
will be successful, and he compared
debating to being a salesman.
"We're salesmen, and we're sell-
ing ideas," he said.
Springston's goal for the Marist
team is to win the national cham-
pionship competition for first-year
teams. "I don't see any reason why
we can't go all the way," he said.
LaMorte leaves; Amato, Bell fill posts
by
Brian O'Keefe
Since the promotion of Dean
Gerard Cox to vice-president of
student affairs last spring, and the
departure of the Rev. Richard
LaMorte, chaplain and assistant
dean, this past summer, two new
assistant deans of student affairs
have been appointed: former men-
tors Peter Amato and Deborah
Bell.
LaMorte was appointed pastor
of The Immaculate Conception
Church, in Amenia,
N.Y.,
on July
I by the Archdiocese of New York.
"I had indicated to the Diocese
that within the near future I would
be open to pastoral appointment.
... I chose to remain in the Dutchess
County area," said LaMorte.
In 1976, LaMorte was hired
as
the college chaplain, and in 1980 he
was appointed assistant dean of
student affairs. His re-appointment
seems sudden even to LaMorte.
"I had expected to leave Marist,
but I hadn't expected it to occur so
soon," he said.
Bell, a mentor at Marist since
1982, and Amato, at Marist since
1980, are dividing primary areas of
supervision in student affairs.
•
Bell will head Campus Ministry,
Counseling,
Health Services,
Special Services and the Mentor
program, while Amato wiD super-
vise Housing, College Activities.
Upward Bound and disciplinary
procedures.
"We're working on a personal
development center - a combina-
tion of Health Services, Campus
Ministry and counseling. The three
departments will work together ar-
ranging two or three developmen-
tal programs a year," said Bell.
Moderations in the Housing
staff are also planned by the new
assistant deans, said Amato.
"The resident assistants and unit
coordinators will be receiving an
ongoing, professionally organized,
practical
training,"
Amato
explained.
Amato and Bell are optimistic
about both their new positions and
their staff .
"The staff has just been doing
a great job in the face of some dif-
ficult situations," Bell said. "They
are making a great effort."
"We're on an up-swing," said
Amato.
..--~......----~
... ---
....
~..--------..-
.......
_.
_______________________
-
-
---
•• '•·
\
'••.'I·•
•
••.
'•
'•
'.•~
• '.,'
,·•
• \
~
\'
•
\(
I•••
'
-----
•
.
.
\
--Page
4- THE.C/RCLE-September-12, 1985
Growing pains
A new school year has begun at Marist. Among
forced to accommodate extra roommates feel put
other changes, we h_ave
our biggest freshman
out and frustrated. because of cramped condi-
_•_
class ever, an expanded Core/Liberal Studies
tions. Even the students able to.move into their
program, more full-time faculty and a restructured
apartments are hindered because they.have no
administration. But these positive signs of pro-
phones, no cable hook-up anddifficlJlt laundry.
•
grass have been temporarily overshadowed by
conditions.
,
,
the delay in the completion of the new Garden
A positive result of the sitliation is the intiative
Apartments.
.
_
stuc!ents have taken to act. Organized- student·
----··•·-
.:..-,.,
.••
·-~--·,"~-
--_,c
..
~'-'
,~•v--:;·-··,--:,_:__-
.. ~.;:_ ••
;._,".,.,.
--·
oomplaints-.help~ convince the. college to pay~
Many students greeted the announcement of
•
for the initial phone jack charges, proving t~at the
•
the new apartments last year with enthusiasm.
administration will listen if students speak up
The apartments meet a definite need at Marist;
responsibly and not recklessly. The petition Cir-
nea·rly all resident upperclassman can now live
culated this week appealing for "financial retribu-
on campus yet still have
the
freedom that apart~
tion to-all students who have been inconveniencs
•
ment living provides. The idea is attractive to both
ed for any length of time" due to the current hous-
present and future students and represents· a
ing situation is another example of Marist
-
commitment by the college to better living con-
students speaking out on issues they feel strongly
ditions for its students and a more close-knit
about. Hopefully, constructive student action is
campus.
the beginning of a new trend on campus.
But by failing to insure that the apartments
Marist's reputation is constantly improving
were completedontime, and by failing to inform
academically. It can now compete with a higher
affected residents more than four days in ad-
class of schools than ever before, which benefits
vance, Marist has created disillusionment where
Marist students past, present and future. But
there should have been content. Students from
Marist must nqt let growing pains like the current
the incomplete F Section find it difficult to read-
housing problem qestroy the faith the students
just to a ney., semester because they have such
of today have in its ability to follow through with
uncertain living arrangements. Some students
its goals.
•
-
Is
..
it too
-late?
The general consensus amongst the students
who either graduated last May or who were able
to attend the Commencement ceremony for the
Class of 1985 was that Commodore Grace Hop-
per was a lot more interesting speaker than most
-students
had expected her to be.
•
.
But Hopper's ability as a sp_eaker has little to
do with the whole commencement planning issue
in recent years, or the housing planning, or the
Lowell Thomas
Communications
Center
planning.
•
.
Has the administration begun bidding for
speakers around the nation, or around the world?
Has the administration begun asking members
of the Class of '86, or of '87, who they'd like to
get as a speaker?
The past few years have seen senior classes
with no idea of who their commencement speaker
would be until weeks before that (hopefully)
memorable day.
Each year an administrator can be heard citing
THE:
Editor:
Associate Editors:
CIRCLE:
the amazing difficulty the college has in getting
the big-name speakers to consider Marist-
but
•
the intensive seafoh has never begun till after
Christmas. Looking at the recent "searches" the
.
administration has conducted, it might be wise
to start now. By January most speakers will be
•
booked for the following year. In fact, we should
already be on the hunt for the Class of '87's com-
mencement· speaker.
Dean of Admisssions James Daly recently said
Marist is competing with schools like Fairfield,
Cornell, Holy Cross, Boston College, and
Villanova for student enrollment. If that's the
case, then the commencement speaker should
be a big draw.
Marist has got to start somewhere. Even if
housing completions and the Lowell Thomas
Center are landing months or years off schedule,
a dynamite speaker could really get the ball
rolling.
Denise Wilsey
Sports Editor:
/
Douglas Dutton
Photography
l!:ditor:
Paul Raynis
Mike Regan
Senior Editors:
Laverne Williams
,
....
All letters must be typed triple space·
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 the right to edit all
letters. Letters must be slgned,"but
names may be withheld upon re-,.
quest. Letters will be published·_
depending upon available· ·space.
•
Respect
To the Editor:
I AM MAD AS HELL, AND I
AM NOT GOING TO TAKE IT
ANY
MORE!
As a paying
customer of Marist "College," I
am insulted at the way I was just
pushed aside. I demand respect!
Forty thousand dollars worth of
respect!
If the Mon~ Mongers. of this
college want to run it like a hotel,
_
then do so. Just don't run it like a
delicatessen! Stop trying to fit ten
pounds of horse manure into a
five pound bag.
If
this was the
Marriot Hotel the people working
in the Admissions Office AND
the Housing Office would have
been fired. Who works there
anyway? Moe, Larry and Curly?
Ship_ up or ship out! Get
those
students out of their "tem-
porary" rooms and into
their
paid for apartments. Reimburse
•
them for their trouble! How dare
you charge them for their in-
convenience. I don't care what
.
happens to me. I am lost in the
bottomless pit of Canterbury
Gardens (by
_the
way, thanks for
• informing me of my loss of
housing. It was very professional
of you). Just do them some
justice!
The students of Marist are just
as bad. They mope around
frustrated saying, "This stinks,
but what can you do about it?"
Well, I'll tell you what·you can
do. Publicity ... BAD publicity!
If
some one sat by the North En-
trance of Marist with a tent that
has "Marist Housing" written on
the side of it, you'd see some
action. You'd
·have
housing so
fast
·your
head would swim. A
picket line would have the heads·
of this. school falling off their
Ivory Towers. No school
·wants
bad publicity.
Now listen you people who
have our money. Take some of it
out of your Swiss bank accounts
and spend some of it on us. For
Pete's sake, build the Lowell
Thomas Center already. Enough
is enough. I do not care what
President Murray-. said
.
at his
student press conference, the
Center has not only been in the
•
planning stage for six months.
.
Try since 1976! He said it alright,
just look at the video_
tape. Come
on Guys, this is not funriy
.
anymore. Do something! For
starters, just treat us students
with respect.
Thank you,
John P. Anderson
·
Student government
To the Editor:
Student Housing. We all know
that is a_problem on the campus.
But it is not the. only problem.
Student governmen_t has ,-, ;id-
•
dressed-the students' concerns.on
this issue to the administration.
However, student government is
more than an avenue to vent your
angers about housing.
It can and will be the tool for
the students to accomplish goals
and objectives to make your
environment a sound. and en-
joyable
investment • and ex-
perience.
,
•
If
you are
-not
already familiar
•
with the"
•
stticlent •• government
office, it is
-located
in- Campus
Center in Room 268. Student
government. There is a solution
on campus.
Council of
Student Leaders
Battered women
To the Editor:~
For four years Grace Smith
House; a shelter for battered
women and their children has
been able to provide emergency
protection and help to victims of
domestic violence. for four years
•
battered women
.
in Dutchess
·county
have been able to say
"no" to yiolence and threats of
violence in their home. For four
years battered women and their
children have been able to stop
the abuse and say "yes" to taking
control of their lives.
In July of 1981 Grace Smith
House opened its doors to women
in Dutchess County who had been
.
battered in their homes. Since that
time 498 women and 657 children
have sought safety and support at
the shelter. Also over 3,100 calls
have been received on the 24 hour
hotline.
Many women
.
come to the
shelter with different experiences.
Some have been beaten, others
threatened with weapons, some
have been emotionally abused
·
and most have every part of their
lives controlled by a person whom
they love and are dependent on.
Some women come with specific
plans on how
they
are going to
change their lives while other
women need the safety of the
shelter to take some time to look
at her alternatives. •
Women who come io the·
shelter receive help and suppon in
various
•
ways. Individual
and
family counseling is provided.·
Assertiveness Training is offered
to help understand and
.
express
her own feelings. A women has
the chance io explore her feelings
and
•
to
connect with
others
through a weekly Support Group.
A Problem Solving Group also
meets weekly to discuss and
.
practice
problem
solving
techniques. Women with chidren
participate in a Parenting Skills
Works hop to discuss issues such
as being a single parent and the
effects. of domestic violence on
children.
The shelter continues
its
committment to providing ser~
vices through the use of volun-
teers. In the four years ap-
proximately 140 volunteers have
provided hot line counseling,
•
child care, advocacy, shopping,
painting and meeting with ex-.
residents.
Sandy Peterson
Volunteer Coordinator
Brian O'Connor
Business Manager:
Leisha Driscoll
Laurie Barraco
Advertising
staff:
Christine CoMn
Teresa Razzano
Car1 MacGowan
Faculty Advisor:
David McCraw
~-------------------------------------~-
-------~----------------------September
12, 1985 · THE CIRCLE• Page 5
Sound
barrier
Summer
of '85
The Real
World
Change
in the
south·
-by Kenneth F. Parker Jr.
Welcome back to the Sound Bar-
. rier. I will share writing duties with
Bill Coleman again this year.
If you spent the summer in
Poughkeepsie you know the music
scene was virtually nonexistent for
the first time in recent memory.
With The Chance now just a
memory and the Mid-Hudson Civic
Center upholding its title as the
most-underused-facility-in-North-
America, one had to cross the Hud-
son to Middletown to find live
music. Because of its size, the
Orange County Speedway was able
to offer such arena-sized per-
formers as_ Huey Lewis and The
News, Foreigner
and Bryan
Adams. On a smaller but no less in-
tense scale, tht; Ramones finally
returned to the area with a perfor-
mance at Middletown's newly
reopened Rock III club.
The best kept secret in the area·
continues to be The Towne Crier
Cafe. This summer Richard
Thompson and Kate and Anna
McGarrigle were among the wide
variety of talent featured at the
Hopewell Junction, N.Y., club.
by
Carl MacGowan
In the northern end of Soweto,
there's a converted shebeen left
behind by its ·former owners.
Where
once the black un-
derground drank the spoils of
their looting, now a satellite dish
rests atop the rickety structure as
the bustle of enterprise is emitted
from below.
Look inside and you will no
longer
find
disenfranchised
victims of apartheid. Instead,
you'll
find young men and
women who have come to terms
with their fate and given _their
. lives· over to the elements. Y ou'II
find • them stuffing • . envelopes
• merrily, and talking excitedly of
their newfound subsistence.
"Oh, give me a home where the
state police roam and the jails are
crowded all day," they sing while
shoving one letter after another
into the starched white envelopes.
The letters are from a certain
American religious leader who
had recently. taken an acute in-
terest in the welfare of the un-
But without doubt the two most
noteworthy events of the summer
were of gigantic proportions. They
were so large and noteworthy that
they helpe~ popular music become
increasingly acceptable by all age
groups.
July 13th's simultaneous Live
Aid concert in • London and
Philadelphia was arguably the
largest ·musical event of all time.
As
everyone must know, the concert
was held to raise money for
African famine relief. Nearly $50
million is the total to date with
funds still coming in from the
1-800-LIVE-AID
pledge line as well
as from new projects such as the
new Mick Jagger and David Bowie
"Dancing in the Streets" single
released two weeks ago. The song
and video were both premiered on
the giant
video screens
in
Philadelphia. I was able to attend
Philadelphia's end of the Live Aid
concert and will discuss the event
in a future column.
This summer will also be
remembered as the season Bruce
Springsteen
became BRUCE
SPRINGSTEEN! By becoming a
household name, he has attained
derprivileged • -
as long as the
underprivileged did not live in his
country. The letters were ad-
dressed to his fellow Americans,
which may rightfully make one
wonder why a group of in-
-dust r i o us
Africans
were
assembling the mail; it seems,
however, that the religious leader
could find no one in his own land
willing to take on the task.
Among • the workers
were
Khalid W omato and Biko Nelson.
They went about their jobs
_quietly, until. Biko stopped to
look fondly at a copy of the
minister's Jetter.
"Makes me proud to be a
SOtilh ·African;"
he • said,
preparing to quote from the
document.
"'It
is time· for the
Christian world to recognize the
significance
of
the
Botha
government's move in cracking
down on the wave of hysteria that
threatened a Communist takeover
of the South African regime.
Instead of damning the govern-·
ment as if it were an enemy, we
should
praise
such
efforts,
the level of acceptance predicted by
critics nearly ten years ago. What's
surprising is that it has taken the
public this long. And in case you
doubt the impact, look at what is
'being worn this semster.
It
seems
Bruce has replaced that dreaded
alligator.
_
.
Other highlights of the summer:
- Madonna showed she didn't
always act "like a virgin" with two
parties more than willing to fight
over the materials needed to prove
it to us.
-
In a related event, Bob Guc-
cione Jr. put Spin magazine on the
newsstands, showing Rolling Stone
how it's done, or in other words,
how they used to do it.
-
Creem magazine announced
it would fold after its October
issue.
-
• Bob Dylan released his
pathetic
"Empire
Burlesque"
album, making everyone wish he'll
go back
to church
asking
forgiveness.
-
1985 also seemed to mark the
return of the album artist. These
are artists who can put their album
in the top 30 without the aid of a
hit single or video. The Talking
however brutal and inhumane,
for its success in restoring nor-
malcy to a troubled land,'" Biko
read.
"I hope this works,'' he said.
"I'm tired of turning on the news
every night and seeing those crazy
Americans sitting around gettin'
arrested in the name of black
independence. How can they
decide what's right for us?"
"That's right," Khalid said.
'.'We know what's right. Someone
should tell those people that we
don't want their sanctions. We
want their money. Praise the
Lord! Praise the Reverend Jerry
Falwell!"
. '."It
is _not enough
to
cease
disinvestment,"'
said
Biko,
reading again from· the sheet.
"'We must begin a program of re-
investment promptly,
if
not
sooner, to beat back the tide of
dissent and atheism and restore
basic Christian values.'''
"The man speaks the truth,"
said Khalid.
"I
want not to
breathe free. I wish only
to
work
for IBM."
Heads, George Thorogood and
R.E.M.
are among a growing
number of artists who benefit from
good press and word of mouth to
reach the public.
- Squeeze follows up on its pro-
mise and reunites.
- Husker Du signs with Warner
Bros.
- Once the most listened to sta-
tion in America, WKTU again
changes
its format
and is
transformed into "92.3 K-Rock."
-
And who among us could
forget the great cola crisis. In case
you were in a foreign country or
spent your summer in line for
Springsteen tickets, Coca-Cola
changed its "'formula" and an-
nounced new Coke. But due to
consumer backlash, Coke decided
to bring back the old formula call-
ing it Coca-Cola "Classic" while
keeping the New Coke as well. In
the meantime, ·Cherry Coke was in-
troduced and a line of Coca-Cola
sportswear and fashions were
marketed.
So until next week, grab what
you can of our dwindling summer
and keep rooting for that subway
series.
"And
you shall, for our
destinies are rooted in the liberties
bestowed upon all men, regar-
dless of color: the liberty of
usefulness, of productivity, of
economic prosperity.
If
these be
the liberties of oppression, then I
am one who wishes
to
be op-
pressed!"
"And Bishop Tutu can dance
along to Pretoria if he wants; we
shall not follow. His is the voice
of isolation and struggle. But we,
we are the victors, the conquerors
- we are the masters!''
"We are the world!''.
"We are the children!"
"We
march,
MARCH
to
Pretoria, our heads held high for
all to witness!" cried Biko.
· "Filled with the spirit
of om
oppressors and always to gain
from our losses!"
"Here is a true spirit," said
Khalid, holding the letter aloft.
"One who understands. Let all
who live bend to their knees; let
all who prosper accept the whip!''
Khalid and Biko looked at each
other, smiled and returned to
their work.
•
FUNHOL~ET
NS
ESSA VS NEEDED
Saturday night,
September 14
$3.5~ pitchers of Bud
&
Mich
Just a five minute walk from
Canterbury Gardens
Hop the van,
see
the band, be a
part of a happenin' clan ...
Funheads Unite!
The Circle's Viewpoint page
•
IS
a
forum for opinio·n and commentary.
Readers are invited to submit essays
on politics, the arts, world aff~irs a11d
other-concerns.
Contributions
should be 500 to 700
words, typed double-spaced. Include
name, address and phone number.
Send Essays to Mike Regan
C/O THE CIRCLE
.
'
('
--Page,
6 - THE CIRCLE - September 12, 1985
Marist names Colleary to take A.D. position
Brian Colleary
(photo by Laurie Barraco)
by Sue Blazejewski _ _
_
• The search for the new athletic -
director ended 'this summer, as
Marist College hired _ Fordham
graduate Brian T. Colleary to the
post.
Colleary comes to Marist from
Iona College in New Rochelle,
N.Y., where he was associate direc-
tor of athletics.
He began his career with col-
legiate athletics at Iona in 1979 as
the head football coach for its Divi-
sion Three program and director of _
intramurals. He initiated six ·new
recreational teams and developed
a Nautilus Fitness center.
In 1982, Colleary was. appointed -
assistant athletic director, and he
was responsible for administering
a $1 million budget for 17 Division
One teams. He also supervised dai-
ly operations of the athletic facility.
In addition, while at Iona, Col-
leary was the site chairman for
several major tournaments, in-
cluding the first round of the Na-
tional Invitational Tournament in
1983, National Collegiate Athletic
Association
Division
Three
women's regional championships
in 1983, East Coast Athletic Con-
ference regional swimming meet in
1982, and the Metro Atlantic
Athletic Conference women's
championship in 1981.
At Marist .College, the athletic
director has as one of his main
functions coordinating and direc..'.
ting all intercollegiate, intramural
and recreational programs for the • including a member of the College
college. Tltis list includes 15 varsi-
Athletic
Business
Managers
ty sports and three club sports in
Association, National Association
which both men and women
of College Directors of Athleti~s.
participate.
American
Football
-
Coaches
Another of Colleary's expected • Association; and the New York
functions includes managing the • State Coaches Association.
McCann Recreational Center, a
Marist officials are excited to
7-day-a-week facility open to the
add Colleary to its staff of profes-
community as well as students and
siorials. "Marist is very fortunate
staff of Marist College.
to ·have Brian Colleary as our
Colleary will also act as promo-
athletic director." said Dean Cox
tional liaison with the Dutchess
about Colleary's appointment.
County community by working
"He brings to Marist a very im-
with the Red Fox Booster Club, . pressive list of achievements and a
supervising fund-raising efforts, • high degree of professionalism. -
and enhancing the image ofthe col- . Marist's student athletes and our
lege in the community. •
athletic program should .prosper
Colleary is actively involved in - under Mr. Colleary's direction,"
several professional associations,
said Cox.
SPORTS
Meri_ rtinners win at· Fairfield;
new women's team _tak·es ·second
It
was a day of firsts for Marist's
cross country teams at last Satur-
day's Fairfield (Conn.) University
Invitational meet.
For the second straight year, the
men's squad won the meet, this
year by an overwhelming margin.
Eleven Marist runners were among
the top 15 in the meet.
The meet also marked the first-
ever running of a women's cross -
country team for Marist, and the
lady harriers finished a remarkable
second in their inaugural race,·
In the men's race, senior co-
captain Pete Pazik defended his in-
dividual title. The Utica native
completed the 5.92-mile course in
31 minutes, 35 seconds. Rounding
out Marist's top seven were:
freshman Dave Blondin, fourth in
32:54; sophomore Glen Middleton,
sixth in 33:08; senior John
Clements, seventh in 33:13; senior
co-captain Christian Morrison,
eighth
-
in 33:32; freshman Bob
Sweeney, ninth in 33:37 and
freshman Curt McDermott, tenth
in 33:46.
"Our goal was. to win the meet
after discarding our top seven run-
ners' places," • third-)'.ear coach.
Steve Lurie said. "We would have
done that."
'
Junior Jean Clements led the
way for the women's 5,000-meter
event, finishing fifth in 20 minutes,
53 seconds. She was followed close-
ly by freshman Helen Gardner of
Rochester, who placed sixth in
20:56. Rounding out the women's·
squad were:· Jennifer Fragomni,
tenth· in 21 :24; Stacey Renwick,
22rid in 23:24; Mary Ellen Faehner,
24th in 23:43 and Pam Shewchuk,
28th in 24:32.
The men's and WOlllef\'S
teams
• travel to West ·Pointtom'brrow.
/tt··•c,,,-,--,-ka,.~4,
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ret--u;:r-rii:ng,,.,-s-ta·rters·:t,o···lead'.t,::'·
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.,.,•·,
~} volleyball teani ·agilinSt Vassar
by
Paul Raynis
_ ten years of experience, and the
leadership that Head Coach Vic
VanCarpels said carried the team
through a lot of seemingly no-win
Rooters to face.Monmouth_
will be out indefinitely.
The losses have not broken
by Brian O'Connor _
The Marist soccer team will
the.coach's optimism. "We've
play its first home game ofthe
lost no sen iors (to graduation), -
season this Saturday against
and we have seven seniors
Monmouth. Game time will be
now," said Goldman. "We just
1 30
have to beat teams like Hofstra - -
:
p.m.
The team lost· its first two
to stay competitive in New .
·games of the year, to Syracuse
York."
by the score of 6-0 Saturday and
Expe-rience and defense--are
to Hofstra 2-1 in a game played - two strong points the Red Foxes
last Wednesday.
retained from last season. The
The phantom of not scoring
defense is led by seniors Jim
early led to the, 2-1 defeat
Bride and
.Bill
Tholen. Bride
against Hofstra.
was named Tri-State Con-
"In a 90 minute game we
ferenee Co-Back of the year,
played well for the last 30;" said
and Tholen, the goalkeeper, had
Howard Goldman, in his 23rd
a :762 save percentage and six
year-at the helm:
·shutouts. .
•
__
Goldman; who·needs seven·
. _more:victories:to
i:e~ch
t~e _200
• On'offense;returning·forthe, -
_ career win mark, said that the . Foxes are DetekSheriffand Jjm
- teamliad
a
poor first half and': McKeri1fa· combined
with
ended playing catch-up soccer.
newcomer Mark Edwards, the
• - During the game, senior back - trio will try to improve Marist' s -
Andy Ross injured his knee and
total of 20 goals last season.
.
..
.
Last year's outstanding season
may only make things tougher this
year for the Marist women's
volleyball team._
sophomore Patty Billen are faced
with
..
rebuilding the team and
holding up Marist's newfound
volleyball reputation at the same
time.
situations.
•
-------
An unknown at season's start
last year, the team and its eventual
24-4 record can no longer sneak in-
' to
most of its matches.
As the women's volleyball
season opens tomorrow with a 7
p.m. match against Vassar College,
returning starters Marie Bernhard,
a senior, juniors Kathy Murphy
and Sheila O'Donoghue,
and
As champions of the Hudson
Valley Women's Athletic Con-
ference and the ECAC's . Mid-
Atlantic Division Three for • the
I 984-85 season, there seemed no
stopping Marist's best women's
volleyball team ever.
- '3ut with graduation went three
starters:
Loretta
Romanaski,
Laurie Leonardo - and Jodie
Johnson. The three took with them
Getting
ready
Marist football players get
ready for first game of the
season against SUNY Maritime
on Saturday night. Game time
is 7:30 at Stitzel Field
in
Poughkeepsie. Last years team
finished
3-
7.
-
(photo by Maureen Hickey)
Van Carpels, who came to Marist
last season after. coaching at
Vassar, is the first to point out the
differences this year's team will
have to reckon with.
-
• "I
lost three top players and
r,nost of my bench," he said. "And
with only two freshmen trying out
so far, I've had to move the ex-
perienced players around to make
up for the position needs J've got." _
- The team has also been moved
up to an • ECAC Division Three
open conference, in which Van-
'carpels it will face even stiffer
_competition than in years past.
'"We'll be playing many more
teams; like Penn State and
·Newark/Rutgers, where there's ac-
tive recruiting and even scholar-
ships," said VanCarpels.
-, With only one full week of prac-
tices before tomorrow night's _
opener, the returning starters ex- -
pressed concern over pulling the
team together in such a short time.
. ''Half the learning for this team
will have to take place during the
games,"
said Bernhard,
of
Bayside, N.Y .. "We were used to
each other last year, and we
basically knew where people would
be on the court. It's going to take
a few games for them to get used
·to
game-time pressure."
Murlhy, of Coram, N.Y., seem-
ed equally hesitant about the
season's quick start.
"I
think we should have been
able to come up earlier to begin
practice," she said. "We didn't
begin practices untillast Tuesday,
and we won't even have a final
roster till three days before the
Vassar match."
VanCarpels said he won't really
know where the team's headed un-
Continued on page
7
• by Da~ Pietrafesa
-fM radio this year. You can
catch all the action with
Bob
_
The Marist community will
Norman and Ron Lyons ... Brian -
have an exciting upcoming - _
Colleary-'
is the schooPs new
.
basketball season to look for-
. athletic director. Collearycomes
ward to. The team will be play.;.. _ to Marist after a sucessful reign
ing
OQ
the road ag~nst Big East
~tloria .. .
Paoline Ekambi,
the
powers
St:.-· J_ohn's
and -
F-r:e.nch star· .o--f-the women's
Villanova.
The schedule in- -
chides also ·the debut ap-
basketball • team, is currently
pearance of Marist at
Madison
playing for the French National
Square Garden.
Marist will· be
team in the European Cham-
playing Fairleigh Dickinson
pionships. Ekambi is expected
_-
University in the first game of
to return
to campus· on ·-
a doubleheader that will see-Big
September 20 according to her •
East rivals St. John's and
Head
Coach
Pat - Tor-·
Syracuse_ battle it out in the
za ...
Lacrosse sophomore goalie
nightcap ... Second-year Marist
Cbristopbor Reuss
ended first
hoop assistant
Jim Todd
will be
last year in the nation for divi- -
• joined this year by·
Bogdan
sion one goalies in goals com-
Jovicic
on the full-time level.
pared to shots percentage ... The -
The Yugoslavian native, who
men's basketball team improv-
served as part-time aide and
edits foreign connections over
team academic advisor a year
the summer by recruiting 6'7"
ago, has taken over the slot left •
Peter Krasovec
of Hungry and
vacant· by the departed
John
7'0" •Borudy Bourgarel of
Quattrorchi.
Jovicic has become
Guadeloupe. -The addition will
a valuable man in the Red Fox
give the Foxes a 'frontline se-
program. He is partly responsi-
cond to none in the ECAC
ble for the arrival ·of all five
Metro...
The
women's
foreign members of the squad,
volleyball team will open up its
including blue-chippers
Rik
1985 seas~n tomorrow night
Smits, Miroslav Percarski and
against cross town rival Vassar.
Rudy Bourgarel.
Taking over
Head Coach
Victor VanCarpels
Jovicic's previous duties will be
and his team are coming off a
a
familiar face to Fox fanatics,
24-4 season, a season that in-
Marist grad
Steve Eggink.
Last
eluded a Hudson Valley Con-
years team leader and one of the
ference championship and a
finest free-throw shooters in the
ECAC Division Three Mid-
nation, "Eggs" will be on the
Atlantic Region title. After leav-
sidelines this season as a
ing the Hudson Valley Con-
member of Head Coach
Matt
ference this year, the team will
Furjanic's
staff ••• Marist hoop
face a much tougher indepen-
games wil1 be heard on Fame 98
dent schedule.
. _ · ..
·_ .
•
.
•
•• September 12, 1985
~
THE CIRCLE- Page 7
•
Saturday marks start
Of
1985 football season
by Dan Pietrafesa
• The Marist College football team
will open its 1985 season Saturday
night -at 7:30 against SUNY
Maritime College at Stitzel Field in
Poughkeepsie.
The season opener last year was
the first game for Maritime as a
Division Three team after making
the jllmp from a club team, and the
team's inexperience showed as the
Foxes totally dominated the game.
The Foxes used a massive runn-
ing game (247 yards) to romp the
Privateers 33-7 in the season
opener.
Marist Head Coach Mike Malet
hopes-that the team's ground at-
tack will control the game again
this year.
• • "We have the talented running
b·acks to control the tempo of the
game,'.' said Malet..
A:
victory like last year's will not
be easy.according to Malet.
"They will be a very tough op-
ponent," Malet said. "They will
bring to the game a I ,000 rusher
from last year and a strong veteran
defense."
. The Foxes are coming off a
disappointing 3-7 season which
resulted from the lack of offensive
punch. The team was shut out four
times and· were held to a
touchdown or less in three other
games.
The offensive problems for tqe
Foxes began in the second game of
the season when quarterback
James Fedigan injured the thumb
on his throwing hand and was forc-
ed to sit out the season after play-
ing well in the first two games. ,
Marist players at practice for upcoming season.
(photo
by
Maureen Hickey)
Fedigan was replaced at quarter-
back by freshman John Cannon
who was relatively ineffective last
year, according to Malet, but Malet
still has confidence in Cannon.
"He was thrown into a difficult
situation and his performance was
hardly a true test of his ability,"
.. " said.Male!, .~'.JLJ.~Il!filY.
.~.I!cl).9hn
play up to their. expectations. we
should be
OK."
The strength of the team was the
defense last year, and the. defense
looks strong again for this season. •
Peter Moloney and Franklin Davis.
Despite suffering a leg injury late
last season, Moloney looks ready
to perform as well as last year when
he was named to the All-
"lt
will be a good defensive Metropolitan Conference team.
unit," Malet said. "One of the bet-
Senior free safety Franklin Davis
ter ones in J;)ivision Three."
led the team with four interceptions
. . Five starters will be returning in-
and was also named to the All-
eluding captains
~seail"
'Keenan/ • Metropolitan Conference team.
Meeting For
·For Interested in
Working on The
Circle
WRITING
PHOTOGRAPHY
• Circle Offic·e
in Camper
Center
Sunday
:_ 7:00 P.M.
Keenan is a linebacker who loves
to hit, and he showed that last year
. when he finished second on the
team with 106 tackles.
The schedule for the upcoming
season differs a bit from last year.
Marist will no longer play Ramapo,
Brooklyn and SUNY Albany while
. Siena and .. Fairleigh
~
Dickinson.
University at Madison have been
added to the schedule. Other games
are scheduled against St. Peter's,
• St. John's, Iona (Homecoming),
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute,
Pace and the U.S. Coast Guard
Academy.
"This is a very competitive and
~oµg\). schedule," said Malet, _
Volleyball
Continued from page 6
til after the first ten-or-so games.
In addition to the returning
starters, he said, he's looking to
veteran players Maria Gordon, a
junior, and Theresa Gannon, a
sophomore, to move into more ac-
tive roles for the team.
VanCarpels also said he's look-
ing forward to the play of
Marianne Casey, a sophomore
walk-on, and freshman Donna
Krucinski.
As for the poor turnout of
freshmen, VanCarpels said he
thought that perhjips last year's
record intimidated some students
from even trying out.
"I
can always use more
players," he said.
O'Donoghue, of Rutherford,
N.J.,
said this year's team is cer-
tainly different, but that she's
determined to carry on where last
year's squad left off.
"It's going to
be
a real disadvan-
tage right from the start because
we've had so little time to prac-
tice," she said. But now we're ex-
pected to do well. The school ex-
pects us to do well, and other teams
will also be expecting something
out of us. We're just going to have
to work twice as hard."
This year's schedule also includes
longtime rival Siena, Iona, Skid-
more,
Western
Conn.,
and
Brockport. In all, VanCarpels said,
the team will play 45 matches.
Following Vassar, Marist's next
match is Monday at Russell Sage.
The first home match will be
Thursday, Sept. 26, against Siena
and Ramapo colleges.
Tomorrow night's match will be
at 7 p.m. in Vassar's Walker
Fieldhouse.
Petitions Available
For The Position
of Judicial
Board Member
Available in CSL
Office· from
Sept. 8th through
Sept. 14th.
...
.
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Page 8 - THE CIRCLE - September 12, 1985
•
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\******************************r*:*1*********
~
I
..
I
.Number
1
Marist College; Poug~keepsie, N .
.Y.
September 12, 1985
72
await cdmpletion of _apartment compl~x
-
•
-
Strike, desigil problems blamed for delay
by Laverne C. Williams
A late start,
_a
labor strike and
•
changes in design plans all con-
tributed to the delay in completing
Marist's new Garden Apartments,
according to Marist housing of-
-
ficials and the contractor for the
project.
_
•
Five of the six units were com:
pleted by Sept. 1, but the six.th, the
-
F Section, is still not finished. The
delay has forced the college to place
72 students in temporary housing.
The 72 students have been told
that the F Section will be ready for
.
.
Sansola, was that the accommoda-
tions for wheelchair students were
-
not satisfactory ..
· .
•
Ramps needed to be installed,
and doorways needed to be extend~
ed. Also, according to Eberhard,
plumbing and bathroom fixtures
had
to
be changed to meet the
needs of students with
•
physical
disabilities.
•
Eberhard said. an additional
delay was caused by
_Marist's
re-
quest for a change in the heating
•
and. air-conditioning units in the
apartment.
·-
.
occupancy later this month.
According to Eberhard, poor
Weekly job meetings were held
subsoil also caused a change· in
_
between Marist administrators and
design plans. Originally, there were
Eberhard Builders Inc;, the con-
to be three buildings in the com~
struction company for the project,
plex; however, because of poor
but Marisfofficials said they were
.
ground conditions, the engineers
not told until Aug. 28 or 29 that the
had to redesign the the entire layout
F Section would not be finished in
of the buildings.
time for the start of school.
Also, the project got off to a
Fred Eberhard; president of
•
slow start because of a delay
in
get-
Eberhard Builders, said that early
ting a building permit from the
__
A
workman continues construction on the new Garden
-Apartments.
(photo by Laurie Barraco)
-
in August Marist officials had been
Town of Poughkeepsie, Eberhard
niade aware.of the possibility that
said. College officials had hoped to
some of the apartments might not
have the per!"it in Octob~r' bu~ it
be completed on time for students'
:was _
no_t issue~
.
until
mid~
JII'---------•-
---•-
---•---
________________
..;.. _______
...,
_
arrivaL
.
___
-
<:
~
7
:_
_ _
November, accordmg to Eberhard.
_ •
_
.
___
.
._
._
__
_
_
__
_
__
_
. _
_
.
.
•
_
_
•
•
·;:
-~ou.siggstaff-madephonecalls_,-
~~r!!ihirsci~~ifg~st?.~~-~t?.\
.••
__
!:{t1fg_~st--frosh plas$,
.causes
overcrowdzng
.
1~ri~~'/J;
1
tb!in
1
~~
ih~·fJnf;,~;lJ~~-
·;i.\
,._--,
'.We're
uricter'tfjefonftc,1~6f'J:fre
,~~,
,,,:,7,·c·•C·/,/,:,,w,--:;,;•:+:,
;f~~:-;::!:•-·,·
;,,.; -~:
-•··
·"::: ,·:_'::
:,,~
;::::
•• ;'.?
'✓-.
:
.:~,~~~•~:\~,,··:;_:,s.,..;,!,~;
·-:~~~'±.:~1;:,_
-j,~·~:::.:':~·'._·
.•
~.~~0
-.
'
:
-._.-_
·.
·.,-
..
delay
..
__
_
•
_ ...
-
·._
weather," said Eberhard:·'.'By·
byDouglasl)ntton'
_
.
-'•<
.:··:.·students.
"Admissicinsis·anart,'hotascience,"
.
Angered by the delay.and fore-
_
December "'{e 'Yere froze out."
-
•
•
Daly said.C'The preference is to have a few too
ed to move into already full hous-
.
-
Problems_ with subcon!rac:;tors
Marist College is·currently working on a solu-
many students matriculate than not enough."
•
ing units, many of the 72 students.· fo~ s~ch thmgs
•~-
plumbmg and
.
,
tion to the overcrowding in Leo.arid Sheahan halls
..
There are approximately 750 freshman students
assigned to the F Section express~ p_amt!ng
also croppe~ up. "I ~ave
•
caused by the largest freshman
class
in the college's
enrolled.
_
ed. their dissatisfaction through a
_
to give them
·(Marist
officials)
.
history, according to Steve Sansola, director of
-
..
Sansola said that the resident assistants and men-
p~tition to college Pre~ident De_n- a1_1swers,
but I also have~~ coo.re_
housing._
;
.
.,
-
_
.
-
•.
tors are "sensitive to th: special circumstan_c:s»
•
•
ms Murray demanding partial
.dmate
subcontractors,
said
According to Richard Brennan, Leo/Sheahan
__
caused by the overcrowdmg and are emphasizing
•
refunding of housing fees.
Eb~rhard: "Sub-contractors don't
.
.'
residence director, 35 two-person rooms were hous~
•
programming in-the freshman
_·dorms.
The pm-_
One of the reasons for the delay
always come when they are suppos-
·
•
ing three students aqhe beginning of the semester,
grams include sessions on time
•
management,
in completion of the apartments
-
ed to or they don't bring_eno~gh
but as of Monday, eight
·of
those rooms had been
•
develop_ing
space_ and developing relati_onships.
\1/aS
a
seven-day strike last month
m~?·
,
.
-
.
,·
converted back· to doubles.
_ •
~!though t~~Y say they are not excited about
·
by sheet-rock workers, according
.
·~heres
.~o ip.uch constru,~tlon
-. ·-
The date students.submitted their dorm deposit
their current hvmg arrangements, many freshmen
to Steve Sanso la, director of
m thi~ area, _said Eberhard,_ that
_
_
regulates which students aie relocated from a trip!-
say that so· far they have been a_ble
to adapt to the
h<>using.
-
_
,
.
there,~
_a
terrible manpower shor-
-
·-
ed room, Sansola said. "The last student
to
pay
_'li~itc:;_d
space.
-"It
hasn'~ really been b_adt said
•.·--
..
Another reason, according to. tage.
-
.,,.._
·-·his·
-
dorm
dep.Osit is the Oh~ relocated,'' he said.
Mike_ B~ogan, a Leo resident from Huntington,
•
• • •
An unexpected high yield:from the freshman ac-
. __
N. Y. "The only problem is the room's built for
•
Ex-radical
•~--
Witl le~iure•_
on-success
by Kenneth
F.
Parker Jr.
.
.
Former activist and well-knowri
•
business entrepreneur Jerry Rubin';
will speak tonig!1t at 8 p.Dl. in the
•
.
Campus Center Theater ..
·
•
..
Presented free by
·the·
College
Union Board, Rubin's talk will be
titled "How to Be a Successful
Young Professional."
Rubin first gathered national at-
tention in the 1960's by organizing
young people against the Vietnam
War.
.
His anti-war tactics included ly-
ing
in
front of the tracks
to
blocl_c
troop trains, organizing the na-
tion's first anti-war Teach-In and
mobilizing
15,000
people to march
on the Oakland Army Terminal.
Rubin also helped plan the
demonstrations in Chicago during
the Democratic Convention in
1968. Meanwhile he joined forces
with Abbie Hoffman to create the
Yippies.
-
•
..
Today, Rubin has little in com-
mon with Hoffman or the political-
cultural climate of the 1960's.
·Jerry
Rubin
Rubin is currently promoting his
idea called "business networking"
in which professionals meet in a
social environment
to make
business contracts, discuss careers
and exchange conversation.
He is founder and president of
the 500 Club, an organization of
entrepreneurs, executives and pro-
fessionals. Rubin is also Vice
President of the League of Baby-
Boom Voters, a non-partisan.
organization whose purpose is to
.
explain and promote the interests
of the baby-boom generation.
cepted this semester created the exceptionally large
two people."
_
-
class, resulting in the overcrowding, according
to·
"It's been alright except for the space," srud Joe
---
,
James Daly, vice president of admissions and
.
Eriole, a Leo resident from East Greenbush, N. Y.
enrollment, Yield is the percentage of students ac-
"But I still haven't unpacked most of my stuff."
-
cepted to the coUege who actually attend.
Daly said' that he does not foresee any problems
·--
According to Daly, admissions had calculated a
next semester when more students are matriculated.
-
resident yield of about 30 percent for this semester.
•
"There will probably be only about 25 resident
The actual 34 percent yiel~ caused a surplus of
students added for the spring semester." Daly said.
Maher 3.ppointed actiilg VP,
bllt the search
'COntinu_es
by Anthony DeBarros
Dr. Julianne Maher, dean of the
school of adult education at Marist
College, has been appointed acting
vice president for academic affairs.
Maher will hold the office until
•
a search can locate a permanent
replacement for Dr. Andrew
Molloy, according to a memoran-
dum issued Aug. 29 to college
faculty and staff from Marist Ex-
ecutive Vice President John Lahey.
Molloy resigned the position July
31.
A search conducted this past
summer by a Marist committee was
unsuccessful.
"The search committee recom-
mended three candidates who met
for two days of meetings with
myself, Dr. Murray (Marist Presi-
dent Dennis Murray), members of
the administrative cabinet and
some faculty," said Lahey. "As a
result of the meetings, there did not
emerge a strong consensus.that any
were as strong a candidate as the.
job deserved.
"The search was done relatively
late last year, so most of the good
candidates had already made com-
mitments to their institutions,"
Lahey said. "I think we could do
better in reopening the search now.
We'll attract a better pool of peo-
. pie."
The college will readvertise for
the position before the end of
September, and Lahey said he
hopes to
·secure
a permanent vice
president for academic affairs by
the end of the fall semester.
However, he said a more realistic
date would be July of 1986, since
many candidates would not be.
available until then.
Maher, who was a member of
the summer search committee, said
she will seek the permanent
position.
"I
made it clear that
I
would on-
ly take the acting vice president for
academic affairs position if I could
be considered for the permanent
job," Maher said.
Lahey said Maher could become
a candidate in the new search. "She
was not a candidate for the search
that just ended," he said. "Depen-
ding on how she performs, she
could become a viable candidate.
I did not place any limitations on
that."
Maher will still hold the position
Continued on
page
2
'
I,.
.I
11
. I
.,
j
.I
I
I
--
Page 2 -
-
THE CIRCLE - Septemb.er
_
12, 1985
Housing
~o~ti~ued from page 1,
,'.,_
-~~-
•
The student petition drive was not immediately clear how many of Haughton. "It's the people whose
started by senior Christian Mor-
•
the students had taken the option~ space we're invading."
rison, chairman of the College
Morrison, the organizer of the
Union Board's lecture committee.
According to Sanso la,· Housing
petition drive, said be wanted to see
.
A for.um under the direction of
decided to give the students the op-
students
'compensated
for the in-
the Council of Student Leaders was tion of going on the meal plan in convenience. "I feel that students
_to
be held Tuesday at 9:30 p.m. in
order to "reduce· the stress and
aren't getting what they paid for,"
the Theater to allow students to
pressure" of having 12 to 13 said Morrison. "The fact that it's
voice complaints. Student leaders
students using one kitchen unit, as working out OK for some students
planned to address such issues as
is now the case in several of the does not excuse the school from
the completion date for the apart-
townhouses. Normally, 10 people paying financial retribution."
ments, the security measures on the
Jive in a townhouse.
Morrison also said he thought
north campus and the added ex-
that Housing should be giving
penses incurred by students forced
Students. who have permanently
students reports on the progress of
to live in temporary housing.
assigned housing also said they work on the✓Garden Apartments.
The 72 students, who will be
-
were inconvenienced by having ad-
"As of Friday, Sept. 6, noon,"
housed in 12 apartments when the
ditional roommates.
said Sue Ryan, CSL president, "All
-
F Section is complete, are being
"It
shouldn't have happened,".
72 students who are supposed to be
housed in a variety of accominoda-
said Jim Ban Cura, a senior from in the Garden Apartment complex
tions. Of the 72, 27 males and 18
•
Middleto~n.
•
N. Y. "They're
have not been notified as to the
females
are
living
in
-
the
disrupting us having extra people specifics of the housing situation.
Townhouses. The remainder of the
here."
Their patience and understanding
•
students are temporarily residing in
is being taken advantage of."
-
the Kirk House, Champagnat Hall
"It's not only the people who are
"We're not inciting riots here,"
and North Road houses.
inconvenienced because they're not said
Ryan, "We're
simply trying to
In
interviews, students complain-
in their permanent housing," said solve
:the
problems."
ed about the late notification and -----------------------.
also their
temporary
living
quarters.
"Why weren't we notified earlier
in the summer?" asked senior Rob
Haughton, business manager of the
Campus Center. "I was working
__
here all summer and no one men-
tioned anything until I came back
from vacation the last week in
August."
Chris Potenza, a junior from
Pearl River, N.Y., said: "I'm liv-
ing out of suitcases. I have no desk.
They (housing officials) told us to
come up light, so I brought no
cooking utensils."
"We're living out of boxes. We
have no desks. It's not a study at-
mosphere," said Carol Lethin, a
·junior
from Babylon,
N.Y.
Others
complained
about
crowding. "It's an inconvenience
to
everyone," said Chris Colvin of
Glen Falls, N.Y. "The cooking
area is not large enough for 12
girls."
•
Earn Money the Easy and
Fun
Way
with
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Cosmetics·-
.
.
.
Sell Evant~ CosmeUcs at your conve-·
nience - betwe_en
classes, after· classes,
on weekends or in the evening.
Call Evante Cosmetics at
(91'4) 957-2049 8:nd ask for Yvonne
_ -
__ -
or write
- _
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-
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Ho·urs
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-
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with your meal!
7%
DISCOUNT
194 WASHINGTON STREET
POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK
(Next
to All Sport.
A short
walk from Marist)
All of the 72 students were given
-i~n~P!~~h
0
t~~Ig_galf~wt~~e%e~~;
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
__
:
____
:_,.=
eat in the college cafeteria: It was·
yp __
_
Continued from page 1
of dean of the school of adult
education in addition to her new
-
responsibilities. -
As acting vice president for
academic affairs, Maher will be
re_sponsible for the overall piann-
ing,
_
managing and directing ' of
academics at Marist, as well as
supervision of the five divisional'
chairpersons, Lahey said.
Maher said holding both posi-
tions at once will not cause a con-
flict. "I think it's manageable,"
she said:" A Jot of groundwork has
been laid for the fall semester. We
w_ould hope to have a permanent
person named by January, but it
might be necessary to do it for the
full year. I'm going to try it and see
_
what happens."
•
Maher said she plans no major
policy changes, but does feel
_
strongly about campus intellectual
.life and· student involvement in
academic affairs.
"I encourage more student in-
volvement, and I want to
work
closely with students in setting up
speakers and activities," she said.
"I appreciate their input. The col-
lege is enriched by them."
Molloy resigned as vice president
for academic affairs to return to
full-time teaching. He
is
a pro-
fessor of chemistry at Marist.
HISPANIC
HERITAGE
WEEK
SEPTEMBER
15-21
Petiti.ons For
-
The
Candidacy For The.
Positions
-
of
Clas·s of 1'989
·President
'
.
Vice. President
Secretary
Treasurer.
are available in Rm. CC268
Student Government Office
beginning September 8
through September 14
Bections are Sept. 28 & 29
Get involved in
Student Government!
COLLEGE UNION
_BOARD·
PRESENTS:-
-
•
,
Jerry Rubin.-
Radical of
the-&0's
and
_
''How to be a
·Young·
Professional:
_Join
the
Yuppie Revolution''
.
.
-
-THURS.,
SEPT. 12th
MARIST
COLLEGE-
TH
EATER 8 P.M.
Admission is Free
.
,
.
.
September 12, 1985 - THE CIRCLE - Page 3-_-
M ari st
•
plans change. in college alcohol policy
by.
Donald R. Godwin
Because of the eventual i~crease·
•
in Ne_w
York's drinking age, a new
alcohol policy is being considered
at Marist according to Peter
Amato, assistant dean of student
affairs.
,
This summer Gov. Mario
Cuomo signed a bill raising the
legal drinking age in New York to
21. The law will take effect on
December 1.
Marist does not stand alone con-
cerning its incomplete alcohol
policy, according to Amato.
"It's
important to remember that all
•
New York state colleges are grap-
pling with the decision of whether
to go dry or not, and no one has
made it," he said.
•
Although a final policy has not
been developed at Marist, Betty
Yeaglin, director of• college ac-
tivities, believes Marist is a l<,>t
fur-
ther ahead in its planning than
other schools.
"Before
school
started,"
she said, "many schools
hadn't done anything as far as
planning a committee or looking
for solutions."
Marist has assigned a committee
to look for solutions, Yeaglin said.
The committee is being called the
D-Day committee, which stands
for either "drinkers" or "dry," she
said.
The committee will be made up
by the Council of Student Leaders,
which will make recommendations
to the administration and the
New housing director
named; open-door
.·_
policy for· students-
by
Brian O'Keefe
resident director at Plymouth
State College in Plymouth, New
Hampshire, and was director of
student life at Thomas College
in Waterville; Maine, from 1983
to 1985.
During a summer of major
changes in the Marist ad-
ministration, a new director of
housing was appointed after
Robert Heywood left in July for
a position ,at Pace University.
Describing his new job at
.
Bronx-born Steve Sansola
Marist, Sansola said, "I'm cer-
was appointed in August. He
tainly challenged by the job."
has earned three college degrees,
He added that he hopes to gain
including a master's of profes-
extensive use of computers, and
•
.sional
studies degree from
get involved in campus issues:
SUNY N
P
I •
1981
"I need to get used to the
:
•
ew a tz
m
✓-
•
•
•
,,
h
. d
Concerning
his style
•
of
syStem,
e sai •
•
. :
...
.)eadership,.Sansola said,
'.'I'm
..
__
....
His personal interests are top-
..
:~
:..::::.willing
to listen:andJearn:of stu~:.
:,::,
ped
,by
rec!"ia~i~!J:~
.
.'~I)n a~ o:ut~.·
.
••
• .
dent needs. I want to keep an
doors man," he said.
A
recent
: •
open-door policy."
.
bike trip across Europe arid a
Sansola had previously work-
hike through the Alps show his
ed at three colleges in the areas
love for the outdoors.
of resident life and recreation.
.
.
As for the people that he has·
From1978 to 1980 he was field
encountered at Marist, "they've
cabinet where final decisions will be
made, said Yeaglin.
Decisions that have been made,
according to Yeaglin, are the clos-
ing of the pub and the elimination
of alcohol from all student events
•
once the drinking age is increased.
"There will be no drinking room
with alcohol at mixers, house din-
ners or whatever," she said ..
A dry campus is undeterminable
at this point, according to Amato.
"Until all the information is in,"
said Amato,
"I
cannot say if the
entire campus will go dry, but I'm
inclined to think that it would not
go totally dry."
According to Yeaglin, the
townhouses and the Garden Apart-
ments are niixed in ages ranging
from 19 to 21. "This is the pro-
blem: Can the 21-year-old be per-
mitted to drink alcohol," said
Yeaglin, "without giving it to the
rest of the people in the house?"
Statistics from Y eaglin show that
on December 1, there will be 300
resident students who are 21; by
March 1, 400 will be 21, and 478
who will be 21 by May I. There are
1,800 resident students.
The new drinking ag·e will also
have an affect on those who make
•
their living from selling alcoholic
beverages.
With the closing of the Pub,
John Cummins, pub supervisor,
will be leaving Marist. "I will be
leaving the company (Seiler's) by
choice," he said. "I took the job
to run the pub and without the sale
of alcohol here, my job is finish-
ed."
Local bars near Marist will also
feel the impact of the new drink-
ing age. Skinner's, on Route 9
across from Marist, predicts a 25
percent reduction in business accor-
ding to owner-manager Chris
Turek.
Beginning Sept. 23, the Pub will
hold a series of "dry" nights, ac-
cording to Linda Imhoff, chairper-
son of the cabaret committee of the
College Union Board.
Featured will be a variety of stu-
dent talent and professional per-
formers. Refreshments will be
available.
The shows will be presented by
the cabaret committee of the CUB.
Those interested in perfoming or
joining the committee should write
to Imhoff at P .0. Box 3-706.
·Marist
to sponsor
debate
team
by Fred Dever
For the first time in 20 years
Marist College will field a debate
team, which will be under the direc-
tion of James Springston, newly
hired director of debate.
All students are free·to join the
team, according to Springston.
"There are two requirements," he
said. "You must be a Marist stu-
dent, and alive and breathing."
An
exhibition
debate will ten-
tatively match President Dennis
Murray and a faculty member
against the British national team
Sept. 25 at 7:30 p.m. in the Cam-
pus Center Theater .
..
,. ~--
--springston---said
'nc~nopc"S
•
\.'nc
•
•
debate will draw attention to the
new program and help him in
recruiting team members. There are
work supervisor. at Dutchess.
been supportive to me here", he
Steve Sansola
•
currently five students signed up
for the Marist team.
Community College.
.
said.
,
"It
feels like coming
.
In 1981, he was hired as 'a
home."
(photo by Laurie Barraco)
:Marist
Abroad students
·cited
at lun·cheon
by
Brian O'Keefe
A luncheon in the Pub last week
celebrated the return of 18 Marist
Abroad students and the departure
The event, held o_n Friday, was
of 24 juniors and seniors attending
•
organized by Dr. Jeptha Lanning,
various colleges and universities in
•
director of the Marist Abroad Pro-
.
Europe.
gram, Cicely Perrotte, MAP assis-
••
-·
·
·
tant, and Elizabeth Jaycox,
MAP
·
More
.parl<ing
spaces added
secretary.
Marist has acquired additional
the building, Waters added.
parking in the north lot' of Marist
The college began conducting
.
East for students and staff using
classes in Marist East, formerly the
the building,
·according
to Ed
.
•
Western Publishing building, in the
\\'aters, vice president for finance
Spring of 1984. The school now
and administration.
.
•
leases enough space for 24
Waters said that the owners of
classrooms. Marist also leases
.
the building have allocated 75
•
space for faculty and staff 9ffices.
spaces to be used in addition to
Marist's adult education pro-
those in the south lot, which is
gram; ROTC classes and the Art
located across from Skinners on
program are among those housed
Fulton Street. The north lot is ac-
in Marist East.
cessible from Route 9.
Of the 24 classrooms now used
.
Students and staff using the
for Marist students, 11 were add-
south lot should avoid using spaces
ed this summer. There are also
allocated to Roe Movers and must
IBM classrooms located in the
not block doors and entrances to
building.
Two Marist students are depar-
ting for Italy this month, as well as
eight to England, eight to France,
four to Ireland, and. one each to
West Germany and Iceland.
Five students returning from a
year of study in England, five from
Ireland, six from France, and one
•
each from Spain and Italy made up
the Marist Abroad 1984-1985
contingent.
The luncheon allowed· returning
students to discuss the experience
with those beginning their journey.
"I got rid of some fears by talk-
ing to people who have been
there," said Laureen DeJong, a
junior from Northport,
N.Y.,
heading to University College in
Cork, Ireland
.
"I'm more excited than ever
after hearing how exciting it was
from them," added Christine Hart,
ajtiziior from Cooperstown, N.Y.,
•
who will be attending University
College in Galway, Ireland.
Karen Crouse, a senior from
·
Milford, N.J ., will spend a year at
L'Etoile Institute in Paris, and
describes the experience of going
abroad as "a liaison between tex-
tbooks and the real world," and "a
major step" in her life.
Marist Abroad will hold an in-
formational meeting in October for
students interested in participating
in the program
during the
1986-1987 academic year.
According to Springston, Marist
took a giant step to get recognition
for the college when the sports
teams went Division One, but uns
til now recognition for academics
has been lacking. "The debate pro-
gram will help highlight the
academic and cultural aspects of
Marist," he said.
Starting in October, the Marist
debate
.
team will compete with
other colleges across the country.
Springston comes to Marist from
the University of Michigan at
Fl int, where he started a debate
team that won the Michigan col-
leges' state championship three of
his four years there.
Springston said debating is not
that difficult and
·almost
anyone
who learns to be a good pursuader
will be successful, and he compared
debating to being a salesman.
"We're salesmen, and we're sell-
ing ideas," he said.
Springston's goal for the Marist
team is to win the national cham-
pionship competition for first-year
teams. "I don't see any reason why
we can't go all the way," he said.
LaMorte leaves; Amato, Bell fill posts
by
Brian O'Keefe
Since the promotion of Dean
Gerard Cox to vice-president of
student affairs last spring, and the
departure of the Rev. Richard
LaMorte, chaplain and assistant
dean, this past summer, two new
assistant deans of student affairs
have been appointed: former men-
tors Peter Amato and Deborah
Bell.
LaMorte was appointed pastor
of The Immaculate Conception
Church, in Amenia,
N.Y.,
on July
I by the Archdiocese of New York.
"I had indicated to the Diocese
that within the near future I would
be open to pastoral appointment.
... I chose to remain in the Dutchess
County area," said LaMorte.
In 1976, LaMorte was hired
as
the college chaplain, and in 1980 he
was appointed assistant dean of
student affairs. His re-appointment
seems sudden even to LaMorte.
"I had expected to leave Marist,
but I hadn't expected it to occur so
soon," he said.
Bell, a mentor at Marist since
1982, and Amato, at Marist since
1980, are dividing primary areas of
supervision in student affairs.
•
Bell will head Campus Ministry,
Counseling,
Health Services,
Special Services and the Mentor
program, while Amato wiD super-
vise Housing, College Activities.
Upward Bound and disciplinary
procedures.
"We're working on a personal
development center - a combina-
tion of Health Services, Campus
Ministry and counseling. The three
departments will work together ar-
ranging two or three developmen-
tal programs a year," said Bell.
Moderations in the Housing
staff are also planned by the new
assistant deans, said Amato.
"The resident assistants and unit
coordinators will be receiving an
ongoing, professionally organized,
practical
training,"
Amato
explained.
Amato and Bell are optimistic
about both their new positions and
their staff .
"The staff has just been doing
a great job in the face of some dif-
ficult situations," Bell said. "They
are making a great effort."
"We're on an up-swing," said
Amato.
..--~......----~
... ---
....
~..--------..-
.......
_.
_______________________
-
-
---
•• '•·
\
'••.'I·•
•
••.
'•
'•
'.•~
• '.,'
,·•
• \
~
\'
•
\(
I•••
'
-----
•
.
.
\
--Page
4- THE.C/RCLE-September-12, 1985
Growing pains
A new school year has begun at Marist. Among
forced to accommodate extra roommates feel put
other changes, we h_ave
our biggest freshman
out and frustrated. because of cramped condi-
_•_
class ever, an expanded Core/Liberal Studies
tions. Even the students able to.move into their
program, more full-time faculty and a restructured
apartments are hindered because they.have no
administration. But these positive signs of pro-
phones, no cable hook-up anddifficlJlt laundry.
•
grass have been temporarily overshadowed by
conditions.
,
,
the delay in the completion of the new Garden
A positive result of the sitliation is the intiative
Apartments.
.
_
stuc!ents have taken to act. Organized- student·
----··•·-
.:..-,.,
.••
·-~--·,"~-
--_,c
..
~'-'
,~•v--:;·-··,--:,_:__-
.. ~.;:_ ••
;._,".,.,.
--·
oomplaints-.help~ convince the. college to pay~
Many students greeted the announcement of
•
for the initial phone jack charges, proving t~at the
•
the new apartments last year with enthusiasm.
administration will listen if students speak up
The apartments meet a definite need at Marist;
responsibly and not recklessly. The petition Cir-
nea·rly all resident upperclassman can now live
culated this week appealing for "financial retribu-
on campus yet still have
the
freedom that apart~
tion to-all students who have been inconveniencs
•
ment living provides. The idea is attractive to both
ed for any length of time" due to the current hous-
present and future students and represents· a
ing situation is another example of Marist
-
commitment by the college to better living con-
students speaking out on issues they feel strongly
ditions for its students and a more close-knit
about. Hopefully, constructive student action is
campus.
the beginning of a new trend on campus.
But by failing to insure that the apartments
Marist's reputation is constantly improving
were completedontime, and by failing to inform
academically. It can now compete with a higher
affected residents more than four days in ad-
class of schools than ever before, which benefits
vance, Marist has created disillusionment where
Marist students past, present and future. But
there should have been content. Students from
Marist must nqt let growing pains like the current
the incomplete F Section find it difficult to read-
housing problem qestroy the faith the students
just to a ney., semester because they have such
of today have in its ability to follow through with
uncertain living arrangements. Some students
its goals.
•
-
Is
..
it too
-late?
The general consensus amongst the students
who either graduated last May or who were able
to attend the Commencement ceremony for the
Class of 1985 was that Commodore Grace Hop-
per was a lot more interesting speaker than most
-students
had expected her to be.
•
.
But Hopper's ability as a sp_eaker has little to
do with the whole commencement planning issue
in recent years, or the housing planning, or the
Lowell Thomas
Communications
Center
planning.
•
.
Has the administration begun bidding for
speakers around the nation, or around the world?
Has the administration begun asking members
of the Class of '86, or of '87, who they'd like to
get as a speaker?
The past few years have seen senior classes
with no idea of who their commencement speaker
would be until weeks before that (hopefully)
memorable day.
Each year an administrator can be heard citing
THE:
Editor:
Associate Editors:
CIRCLE:
the amazing difficulty the college has in getting
the big-name speakers to consider Marist-
but
•
the intensive seafoh has never begun till after
Christmas. Looking at the recent "searches" the
.
administration has conducted, it might be wise
to start now. By January most speakers will be
•
booked for the following year. In fact, we should
already be on the hunt for the Class of '87's com-
mencement· speaker.
Dean of Admisssions James Daly recently said
Marist is competing with schools like Fairfield,
Cornell, Holy Cross, Boston College, and
Villanova for student enrollment. If that's the
case, then the commencement speaker should
be a big draw.
Marist has got to start somewhere. Even if
housing completions and the Lowell Thomas
Center are landing months or years off schedule,
a dynamite speaker could really get the ball
rolling.
Denise Wilsey
Sports Editor:
/
Douglas Dutton
Photography
l!:ditor:
Paul Raynis
Mike Regan
Senior Editors:
Laverne Williams
,
....
All letters must be typed triple space·
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 the right to edit all
letters. Letters must be slgned,"but
names may be withheld upon re-,.
quest. Letters will be published·_
depending upon available· ·space.
•
Respect
To the Editor:
I AM MAD AS HELL, AND I
AM NOT GOING TO TAKE IT
ANY
MORE!
As a paying
customer of Marist "College," I
am insulted at the way I was just
pushed aside. I demand respect!
Forty thousand dollars worth of
respect!
If the Mon~ Mongers. of this
college want to run it like a hotel,
_
then do so. Just don't run it like a
delicatessen! Stop trying to fit ten
pounds of horse manure into a
five pound bag.
If
this was the
Marriot Hotel the people working
in the Admissions Office AND
the Housing Office would have
been fired. Who works there
anyway? Moe, Larry and Curly?
Ship_ up or ship out! Get
those
students out of their "tem-
porary" rooms and into
their
paid for apartments. Reimburse
•
them for their trouble! How dare
you charge them for their in-
convenience. I don't care what
.
happens to me. I am lost in the
bottomless pit of Canterbury
Gardens (by
_the
way, thanks for
• informing me of my loss of
housing. It was very professional
of you). Just do them some
justice!
The students of Marist are just
as bad. They mope around
frustrated saying, "This stinks,
but what can you do about it?"
Well, I'll tell you what·you can
do. Publicity ... BAD publicity!
If
some one sat by the North En-
trance of Marist with a tent that
has "Marist Housing" written on
the side of it, you'd see some
action. You'd
·have
housing so
fast
·your
head would swim. A
picket line would have the heads·
of this. school falling off their
Ivory Towers. No school
·wants
bad publicity.
Now listen you people who
have our money. Take some of it
out of your Swiss bank accounts
and spend some of it on us. For
Pete's sake, build the Lowell
Thomas Center already. Enough
is enough. I do not care what
President Murray-. said
.
at his
student press conference, the
Center has not only been in the
•
planning stage for six months.
.
Try since 1976! He said it alright,
just look at the video_
tape. Come
on Guys, this is not funriy
.
anymore. Do something! For
starters, just treat us students
with respect.
Thank you,
John P. Anderson
·
Student government
To the Editor:
Student Housing. We all know
that is a_problem on the campus.
But it is not the. only problem.
Student governmen_t has ,-, ;id-
•
dressed-the students' concerns.on
this issue to the administration.
However, student government is
more than an avenue to vent your
angers about housing.
It can and will be the tool for
the students to accomplish goals
and objectives to make your
environment a sound. and en-
joyable
investment • and ex-
perience.
,
•
If
you are
-not
already familiar
•
with the"
•
stticlent •• government
office, it is
-located
in- Campus
Center in Room 268. Student
government. There is a solution
on campus.
Council of
Student Leaders
Battered women
To the Editor:~
For four years Grace Smith
House; a shelter for battered
women and their children has
been able to provide emergency
protection and help to victims of
domestic violence. for four years
•
battered women
.
in Dutchess
·county
have been able to say
"no" to yiolence and threats of
violence in their home. For four
years battered women and their
children have been able to stop
the abuse and say "yes" to taking
control of their lives.
In July of 1981 Grace Smith
House opened its doors to women
in Dutchess County who had been
.
battered in their homes. Since that
time 498 women and 657 children
have sought safety and support at
the shelter. Also over 3,100 calls
have been received on the 24 hour
hotline.
Many women
.
come to the
shelter with different experiences.
Some have been beaten, others
threatened with weapons, some
have been emotionally abused
·
and most have every part of their
lives controlled by a person whom
they love and are dependent on.
Some women come with specific
plans on how
they
are going to
change their lives while other
women need the safety of the
shelter to take some time to look
at her alternatives. •
Women who come io the·
shelter receive help and suppon in
various
•
ways. Individual
and
family counseling is provided.·
Assertiveness Training is offered
to help understand and
.
express
her own feelings. A women has
the chance io explore her feelings
and
•
to
connect with
others
through a weekly Support Group.
A Problem Solving Group also
meets weekly to discuss and
.
practice
problem
solving
techniques. Women with chidren
participate in a Parenting Skills
Works hop to discuss issues such
as being a single parent and the
effects. of domestic violence on
children.
The shelter continues
its
committment to providing ser~
vices through the use of volun-
teers. In the four years ap-
proximately 140 volunteers have
provided hot line counseling,
•
child care, advocacy, shopping,
painting and meeting with ex-.
residents.
Sandy Peterson
Volunteer Coordinator
Brian O'Connor
Business Manager:
Leisha Driscoll
Laurie Barraco
Advertising
staff:
Christine CoMn
Teresa Razzano
Car1 MacGowan
Faculty Advisor:
David McCraw
~-------------------------------------~-
-------~----------------------September
12, 1985 · THE CIRCLE• Page 5
Sound
barrier
Summer
of '85
The Real
World
Change
in the
south·
-by Kenneth F. Parker Jr.
Welcome back to the Sound Bar-
. rier. I will share writing duties with
Bill Coleman again this year.
If you spent the summer in
Poughkeepsie you know the music
scene was virtually nonexistent for
the first time in recent memory.
With The Chance now just a
memory and the Mid-Hudson Civic
Center upholding its title as the
most-underused-facility-in-North-
America, one had to cross the Hud-
son to Middletown to find live
music. Because of its size, the
Orange County Speedway was able
to offer such arena-sized per-
formers as_ Huey Lewis and The
News, Foreigner
and Bryan
Adams. On a smaller but no less in-
tense scale, tht; Ramones finally
returned to the area with a perfor-
mance at Middletown's newly
reopened Rock III club.
The best kept secret in the area·
continues to be The Towne Crier
Cafe. This summer Richard
Thompson and Kate and Anna
McGarrigle were among the wide
variety of talent featured at the
Hopewell Junction, N.Y., club.
by
Carl MacGowan
In the northern end of Soweto,
there's a converted shebeen left
behind by its ·former owners.
Where
once the black un-
derground drank the spoils of
their looting, now a satellite dish
rests atop the rickety structure as
the bustle of enterprise is emitted
from below.
Look inside and you will no
longer
find
disenfranchised
victims of apartheid. Instead,
you'll
find young men and
women who have come to terms
with their fate and given _their
. lives· over to the elements. Y ou'II
find • them stuffing • . envelopes
• merrily, and talking excitedly of
their newfound subsistence.
"Oh, give me a home where the
state police roam and the jails are
crowded all day," they sing while
shoving one letter after another
into the starched white envelopes.
The letters are from a certain
American religious leader who
had recently. taken an acute in-
terest in the welfare of the un-
But without doubt the two most
noteworthy events of the summer
were of gigantic proportions. They
were so large and noteworthy that
they helpe~ popular music become
increasingly acceptable by all age
groups.
July 13th's simultaneous Live
Aid concert in • London and
Philadelphia was arguably the
largest ·musical event of all time.
As
everyone must know, the concert
was held to raise money for
African famine relief. Nearly $50
million is the total to date with
funds still coming in from the
1-800-LIVE-AID
pledge line as well
as from new projects such as the
new Mick Jagger and David Bowie
"Dancing in the Streets" single
released two weeks ago. The song
and video were both premiered on
the giant
video screens
in
Philadelphia. I was able to attend
Philadelphia's end of the Live Aid
concert and will discuss the event
in a future column.
This summer will also be
remembered as the season Bruce
Springsteen
became BRUCE
SPRINGSTEEN! By becoming a
household name, he has attained
derprivileged • -
as long as the
underprivileged did not live in his
country. The letters were ad-
dressed to his fellow Americans,
which may rightfully make one
wonder why a group of in-
-dust r i o us
Africans
were
assembling the mail; it seems,
however, that the religious leader
could find no one in his own land
willing to take on the task.
Among • the workers
were
Khalid W omato and Biko Nelson.
They went about their jobs
_quietly, until. Biko stopped to
look fondly at a copy of the
minister's Jetter.
"Makes me proud to be a
SOtilh ·African;"
he • said,
preparing to quote from the
document.
"'It
is time· for the
Christian world to recognize the
significance
of
the
Botha
government's move in cracking
down on the wave of hysteria that
threatened a Communist takeover
of the South African regime.
Instead of damning the govern-·
ment as if it were an enemy, we
should
praise
such
efforts,
the level of acceptance predicted by
critics nearly ten years ago. What's
surprising is that it has taken the
public this long. And in case you
doubt the impact, look at what is
'being worn this semster.
It
seems
Bruce has replaced that dreaded
alligator.
_
.
Other highlights of the summer:
- Madonna showed she didn't
always act "like a virgin" with two
parties more than willing to fight
over the materials needed to prove
it to us.
-
In a related event, Bob Guc-
cione Jr. put Spin magazine on the
newsstands, showing Rolling Stone
how it's done, or in other words,
how they used to do it.
-
Creem magazine announced
it would fold after its October
issue.
-
• Bob Dylan released his
pathetic
"Empire
Burlesque"
album, making everyone wish he'll
go back
to church
asking
forgiveness.
-
1985 also seemed to mark the
return of the album artist. These
are artists who can put their album
in the top 30 without the aid of a
hit single or video. The Talking
however brutal and inhumane,
for its success in restoring nor-
malcy to a troubled land,'" Biko
read.
"I hope this works,'' he said.
"I'm tired of turning on the news
every night and seeing those crazy
Americans sitting around gettin'
arrested in the name of black
independence. How can they
decide what's right for us?"
"That's right," Khalid said.
'.'We know what's right. Someone
should tell those people that we
don't want their sanctions. We
want their money. Praise the
Lord! Praise the Reverend Jerry
Falwell!"
. '."It
is _not enough
to
cease
disinvestment,"'
said
Biko,
reading again from· the sheet.
"'We must begin a program of re-
investment promptly,
if
not
sooner, to beat back the tide of
dissent and atheism and restore
basic Christian values.'''
"The man speaks the truth,"
said Khalid.
"I
want not to
breathe free. I wish only
to
work
for IBM."
Heads, George Thorogood and
R.E.M.
are among a growing
number of artists who benefit from
good press and word of mouth to
reach the public.
- Squeeze follows up on its pro-
mise and reunites.
- Husker Du signs with Warner
Bros.
- Once the most listened to sta-
tion in America, WKTU again
changes
its format
and is
transformed into "92.3 K-Rock."
-
And who among us could
forget the great cola crisis. In case
you were in a foreign country or
spent your summer in line for
Springsteen tickets, Coca-Cola
changed its "'formula" and an-
nounced new Coke. But due to
consumer backlash, Coke decided
to bring back the old formula call-
ing it Coca-Cola "Classic" while
keeping the New Coke as well. In
the meantime, ·Cherry Coke was in-
troduced and a line of Coca-Cola
sportswear and fashions were
marketed.
So until next week, grab what
you can of our dwindling summer
and keep rooting for that subway
series.
"And
you shall, for our
destinies are rooted in the liberties
bestowed upon all men, regar-
dless of color: the liberty of
usefulness, of productivity, of
economic prosperity.
If
these be
the liberties of oppression, then I
am one who wishes
to
be op-
pressed!"
"And Bishop Tutu can dance
along to Pretoria if he wants; we
shall not follow. His is the voice
of isolation and struggle. But we,
we are the victors, the conquerors
- we are the masters!''
"We are the world!''.
"We are the children!"
"We
march,
MARCH
to
Pretoria, our heads held high for
all to witness!" cried Biko.
· "Filled with the spirit
of om
oppressors and always to gain
from our losses!"
"Here is a true spirit," said
Khalid, holding the letter aloft.
"One who understands. Let all
who live bend to their knees; let
all who prosper accept the whip!''
Khalid and Biko looked at each
other, smiled and returned to
their work.
•
FUNHOL~ET
NS
ESSA VS NEEDED
Saturday night,
September 14
$3.5~ pitchers of Bud
&
Mich
Just a five minute walk from
Canterbury Gardens
Hop the van,
see
the band, be a
part of a happenin' clan ...
Funheads Unite!
The Circle's Viewpoint page
•
IS
a
forum for opinio·n and commentary.
Readers are invited to submit essays
on politics, the arts, world aff~irs a11d
other-concerns.
Contributions
should be 500 to 700
words, typed double-spaced. Include
name, address and phone number.
Send Essays to Mike Regan
C/O THE CIRCLE
.
'
('
--Page,
6 - THE CIRCLE - September 12, 1985
Marist names Colleary to take A.D. position
Brian Colleary
(photo by Laurie Barraco)
by Sue Blazejewski _ _
_
• The search for the new athletic -
director ended 'this summer, as
Marist College hired _ Fordham
graduate Brian T. Colleary to the
post.
Colleary comes to Marist from
Iona College in New Rochelle,
N.Y., where he was associate direc-
tor of athletics.
He began his career with col-
legiate athletics at Iona in 1979 as
the head football coach for its Divi-
sion Three program and director of _
intramurals. He initiated six ·new
recreational teams and developed
a Nautilus Fitness center.
In 1982, Colleary was. appointed -
assistant athletic director, and he
was responsible for administering
a $1 million budget for 17 Division
One teams. He also supervised dai-
ly operations of the athletic facility.
In addition, while at Iona, Col-
leary was the site chairman for
several major tournaments, in-
cluding the first round of the Na-
tional Invitational Tournament in
1983, National Collegiate Athletic
Association
Division
Three
women's regional championships
in 1983, East Coast Athletic Con-
ference regional swimming meet in
1982, and the Metro Atlantic
Athletic Conference women's
championship in 1981.
At Marist .College, the athletic
director has as one of his main
functions coordinating and direc..'.
ting all intercollegiate, intramural
and recreational programs for the • including a member of the College
college. Tltis list includes 15 varsi-
Athletic
Business
Managers
ty sports and three club sports in
Association, National Association
which both men and women
of College Directors of Athleti~s.
participate.
American
Football
-
Coaches
Another of Colleary's expected • Association; and the New York
functions includes managing the • State Coaches Association.
McCann Recreational Center, a
Marist officials are excited to
7-day-a-week facility open to the
add Colleary to its staff of profes-
community as well as students and
siorials. "Marist is very fortunate
staff of Marist College.
to ·have Brian Colleary as our
Colleary will also act as promo-
athletic director." said Dean Cox
tional liaison with the Dutchess
about Colleary's appointment.
County community by working
"He brings to Marist a very im-
with the Red Fox Booster Club, . pressive list of achievements and a
supervising fund-raising efforts, • high degree of professionalism. -
and enhancing the image ofthe col- . Marist's student athletes and our
lege in the community. •
athletic program should .prosper
Colleary is actively involved in - under Mr. Colleary's direction,"
several professional associations,
said Cox.
SPORTS
Meri_ rtinners win at· Fairfield;
new women's team _tak·es ·second
It
was a day of firsts for Marist's
cross country teams at last Satur-
day's Fairfield (Conn.) University
Invitational meet.
For the second straight year, the
men's squad won the meet, this
year by an overwhelming margin.
Eleven Marist runners were among
the top 15 in the meet.
The meet also marked the first-
ever running of a women's cross -
country team for Marist, and the
lady harriers finished a remarkable
second in their inaugural race,·
In the men's race, senior co-
captain Pete Pazik defended his in-
dividual title. The Utica native
completed the 5.92-mile course in
31 minutes, 35 seconds. Rounding
out Marist's top seven were:
freshman Dave Blondin, fourth in
32:54; sophomore Glen Middleton,
sixth in 33:08; senior John
Clements, seventh in 33:13; senior
co-captain Christian Morrison,
eighth
-
in 33:32; freshman Bob
Sweeney, ninth in 33:37 and
freshman Curt McDermott, tenth
in 33:46.
"Our goal was. to win the meet
after discarding our top seven run-
ners' places," • third-)'.ear coach.
Steve Lurie said. "We would have
done that."
'
Junior Jean Clements led the
way for the women's 5,000-meter
event, finishing fifth in 20 minutes,
53 seconds. She was followed close-
ly by freshman Helen Gardner of
Rochester, who placed sixth in
20:56. Rounding out the women's·
squad were:· Jennifer Fragomni,
tenth· in 21 :24; Stacey Renwick,
22rid in 23:24; Mary Ellen Faehner,
24th in 23:43 and Pam Shewchuk,
28th in 24:32.
The men's and WOlllef\'S
teams
• travel to West ·Pointtom'brrow.
/tt··•c,,,-,--,-ka,.~4,
•••
ret--u;:r-rii:ng,,.,-s-ta·rters·:t,o···lead'.t,::'·
_
.,.,•·,
~} volleyball teani ·agilinSt Vassar
by
Paul Raynis
_ ten years of experience, and the
leadership that Head Coach Vic
VanCarpels said carried the team
through a lot of seemingly no-win
Rooters to face.Monmouth_
will be out indefinitely.
The losses have not broken
by Brian O'Connor _
The Marist soccer team will
the.coach's optimism. "We've
play its first home game ofthe
lost no sen iors (to graduation), -
season this Saturday against
and we have seven seniors
Monmouth. Game time will be
now," said Goldman. "We just
1 30
have to beat teams like Hofstra - -
:
p.m.
The team lost· its first two
to stay competitive in New .
·games of the year, to Syracuse
York."
by the score of 6-0 Saturday and
Expe-rience and defense--are
to Hofstra 2-1 in a game played - two strong points the Red Foxes
last Wednesday.
retained from last season. The
The phantom of not scoring
defense is led by seniors Jim
early led to the, 2-1 defeat
Bride and
.Bill
Tholen. Bride
against Hofstra.
was named Tri-State Con-
"In a 90 minute game we
ferenee Co-Back of the year,
played well for the last 30;" said
and Tholen, the goalkeeper, had
Howard Goldman, in his 23rd
a :762 save percentage and six
year-at the helm:
·shutouts. .
•
__
Goldman; who·needs seven·
. _more:victories:to
i:e~ch
t~e _200
• On'offense;returning·forthe, -
_ career win mark, said that the . Foxes are DetekSheriffand Jjm
- teamliad
a
poor first half and': McKeri1fa· combined
with
ended playing catch-up soccer.
newcomer Mark Edwards, the
• - During the game, senior back - trio will try to improve Marist' s -
Andy Ross injured his knee and
total of 20 goals last season.
.
..
.
Last year's outstanding season
may only make things tougher this
year for the Marist women's
volleyball team._
sophomore Patty Billen are faced
with
..
rebuilding the team and
holding up Marist's newfound
volleyball reputation at the same
time.
situations.
•
-------
An unknown at season's start
last year, the team and its eventual
24-4 record can no longer sneak in-
' to
most of its matches.
As the women's volleyball
season opens tomorrow with a 7
p.m. match against Vassar College,
returning starters Marie Bernhard,
a senior, juniors Kathy Murphy
and Sheila O'Donoghue,
and
As champions of the Hudson
Valley Women's Athletic Con-
ference and the ECAC's . Mid-
Atlantic Division Three for • the
I 984-85 season, there seemed no
stopping Marist's best women's
volleyball team ever.
- '3ut with graduation went three
starters:
Loretta
Romanaski,
Laurie Leonardo - and Jodie
Johnson. The three took with them
Getting
ready
Marist football players get
ready for first game of the
season against SUNY Maritime
on Saturday night. Game time
is 7:30 at Stitzel Field
in
Poughkeepsie. Last years team
finished
3-
7.
-
(photo by Maureen Hickey)
Van Carpels, who came to Marist
last season after. coaching at
Vassar, is the first to point out the
differences this year's team will
have to reckon with.
-
• "I
lost three top players and
r,nost of my bench," he said. "And
with only two freshmen trying out
so far, I've had to move the ex-
perienced players around to make
up for the position needs J've got." _
- The team has also been moved
up to an • ECAC Division Three
open conference, in which Van-
'carpels it will face even stiffer
_competition than in years past.
'"We'll be playing many more
teams; like Penn State and
·Newark/Rutgers, where there's ac-
tive recruiting and even scholar-
ships," said VanCarpels.
-, With only one full week of prac-
tices before tomorrow night's _
opener, the returning starters ex- -
pressed concern over pulling the
team together in such a short time.
. ''Half the learning for this team
will have to take place during the
games,"
said Bernhard,
of
Bayside, N.Y .. "We were used to
each other last year, and we
basically knew where people would
be on the court. It's going to take
a few games for them to get used
·to
game-time pressure."
Murlhy, of Coram, N.Y., seem-
ed equally hesitant about the
season's quick start.
"I
think we should have been
able to come up earlier to begin
practice," she said. "We didn't
begin practices untillast Tuesday,
and we won't even have a final
roster till three days before the
Vassar match."
VanCarpels said he won't really
know where the team's headed un-
Continued on page
7
• by Da~ Pietrafesa
-fM radio this year. You can
catch all the action with
Bob
_
The Marist community will
Norman and Ron Lyons ... Brian -
have an exciting upcoming - _
Colleary-'
is the schooPs new
.
basketball season to look for-
. athletic director. Collearycomes
ward to. The team will be play.;.. _ to Marist after a sucessful reign
ing
OQ
the road ag~nst Big East
~tloria .. .
Paoline Ekambi,
the
powers
St:.-· J_ohn's
and -
F-r:e.nch star· .o--f-the women's
Villanova.
The schedule in- -
chides also ·the debut ap-
basketball • team, is currently
pearance of Marist at
Madison
playing for the French National
Square Garden.
Marist will· be
team in the European Cham-
playing Fairleigh Dickinson
pionships. Ekambi is expected
_-
University in the first game of
to return
to campus· on ·-
a doubleheader that will see-Big
September 20 according to her •
East rivals St. John's and
Head
Coach
Pat - Tor-·
Syracuse_ battle it out in the
za ...
Lacrosse sophomore goalie
nightcap ... Second-year Marist
Cbristopbor Reuss
ended first
hoop assistant
Jim Todd
will be
last year in the nation for divi- -
• joined this year by·
Bogdan
sion one goalies in goals com-
Jovicic
on the full-time level.
pared to shots percentage ... The -
The Yugoslavian native, who
men's basketball team improv-
served as part-time aide and
edits foreign connections over
team academic advisor a year
the summer by recruiting 6'7"
ago, has taken over the slot left •
Peter Krasovec
of Hungry and
vacant· by the departed
John
7'0" •Borudy Bourgarel of
Quattrorchi.
Jovicic has become
Guadeloupe. -The addition will
a valuable man in the Red Fox
give the Foxes a 'frontline se-
program. He is partly responsi-
cond to none in the ECAC
ble for the arrival ·of all five
Metro...
The
women's
foreign members of the squad,
volleyball team will open up its
including blue-chippers
Rik
1985 seas~n tomorrow night
Smits, Miroslav Percarski and
against cross town rival Vassar.
Rudy Bourgarel.
Taking over
Head Coach
Victor VanCarpels
Jovicic's previous duties will be
and his team are coming off a
a
familiar face to Fox fanatics,
24-4 season, a season that in-
Marist grad
Steve Eggink.
Last
eluded a Hudson Valley Con-
years team leader and one of the
ference championship and a
finest free-throw shooters in the
ECAC Division Three Mid-
nation, "Eggs" will be on the
Atlantic Region title. After leav-
sidelines this season as a
ing the Hudson Valley Con-
member of Head Coach
Matt
ference this year, the team will
Furjanic's
staff ••• Marist hoop
face a much tougher indepen-
games wil1 be heard on Fame 98
dent schedule.
. _ · ..
·_ .
•
.
•
•• September 12, 1985
~
THE CIRCLE- Page 7
•
Saturday marks start
Of
1985 football season
by Dan Pietrafesa
• The Marist College football team
will open its 1985 season Saturday
night -at 7:30 against SUNY
Maritime College at Stitzel Field in
Poughkeepsie.
The season opener last year was
the first game for Maritime as a
Division Three team after making
the jllmp from a club team, and the
team's inexperience showed as the
Foxes totally dominated the game.
The Foxes used a massive runn-
ing game (247 yards) to romp the
Privateers 33-7 in the season
opener.
Marist Head Coach Mike Malet
hopes-that the team's ground at-
tack will control the game again
this year.
• • "We have the talented running
b·acks to control the tempo of the
game,'.' said Malet..
A:
victory like last year's will not
be easy.according to Malet.
"They will be a very tough op-
ponent," Malet said. "They will
bring to the game a I ,000 rusher
from last year and a strong veteran
defense."
. The Foxes are coming off a
disappointing 3-7 season which
resulted from the lack of offensive
punch. The team was shut out four
times and· were held to a
touchdown or less in three other
games.
The offensive problems for tqe
Foxes began in the second game of
the season when quarterback
James Fedigan injured the thumb
on his throwing hand and was forc-
ed to sit out the season after play-
ing well in the first two games. ,
Marist players at practice for upcoming season.
(photo
by
Maureen Hickey)
Fedigan was replaced at quarter-
back by freshman John Cannon
who was relatively ineffective last
year, according to Malet, but Malet
still has confidence in Cannon.
"He was thrown into a difficult
situation and his performance was
hardly a true test of his ability,"
.. " said.Male!, .~'.JLJ.~Il!filY.
.~.I!cl).9hn
play up to their. expectations. we
should be
OK."
The strength of the team was the
defense last year, and the. defense
looks strong again for this season. •
Peter Moloney and Franklin Davis.
Despite suffering a leg injury late
last season, Moloney looks ready
to perform as well as last year when
he was named to the All-
"lt
will be a good defensive Metropolitan Conference team.
unit," Malet said. "One of the bet-
Senior free safety Franklin Davis
ter ones in J;)ivision Three."
led the team with four interceptions
. . Five starters will be returning in-
and was also named to the All-
eluding captains
~seail"
'Keenan/ • Metropolitan Conference team.
Meeting For
·For Interested in
Working on The
Circle
WRITING
PHOTOGRAPHY
• Circle Offic·e
in Camper
Center
Sunday
:_ 7:00 P.M.
Keenan is a linebacker who loves
to hit, and he showed that last year
. when he finished second on the
team with 106 tackles.
The schedule for the upcoming
season differs a bit from last year.
Marist will no longer play Ramapo,
Brooklyn and SUNY Albany while
. Siena and .. Fairleigh
~
Dickinson.
University at Madison have been
added to the schedule. Other games
are scheduled against St. Peter's,
• St. John's, Iona (Homecoming),
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute,
Pace and the U.S. Coast Guard
Academy.
"This is a very competitive and
~oµg\). schedule," said Malet, _
Volleyball
Continued from page 6
til after the first ten-or-so games.
In addition to the returning
starters, he said, he's looking to
veteran players Maria Gordon, a
junior, and Theresa Gannon, a
sophomore, to move into more ac-
tive roles for the team.
VanCarpels also said he's look-
ing forward to the play of
Marianne Casey, a sophomore
walk-on, and freshman Donna
Krucinski.
As for the poor turnout of
freshmen, VanCarpels said he
thought that perhjips last year's
record intimidated some students
from even trying out.
"I
can always use more
players," he said.
O'Donoghue, of Rutherford,
N.J.,
said this year's team is cer-
tainly different, but that she's
determined to carry on where last
year's squad left off.
"It's going to
be
a real disadvan-
tage right from the start because
we've had so little time to prac-
tice," she said. But now we're ex-
pected to do well. The school ex-
pects us to do well, and other teams
will also be expecting something
out of us. We're just going to have
to work twice as hard."
This year's schedule also includes
longtime rival Siena, Iona, Skid-
more,
Western
Conn.,
and
Brockport. In all, VanCarpels said,
the team will play 45 matches.
Following Vassar, Marist's next
match is Monday at Russell Sage.
The first home match will be
Thursday, Sept. 26, against Siena
and Ramapo colleges.
Tomorrow night's match will be
at 7 p.m. in Vassar's Walker
Fieldhouse.
Petitions Available
For The Position
of Judicial
Board Member
Available in CSL
Office· from
Sept. 8th through
Sept. 14th.
...
.
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Page 8 - THE CIRCLE - September 12, 1985
•
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