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The Circle, September 19, 1985.pdf

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 31 No. 2 - September 19, 1985

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,~eptef!1pe/19, 1985
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:-; by
:tav~a:ne
c . .-Williams-i;•:.;;_:~:
,
'\><'. / men ts, betwee.n ; 8 a.in> and. 3: 15
«Security is as good
·~~
it'~. ever
./ : ;;:>Ma.dsi,:¢ollege
••
may'.~
proyide·;
",p:nt
th~~ day; according .to ~teve· been," he :said.
.
": finaitciaFretribution • for students

Sansola; director
of.
h~>i.ising;.
':1 .. .

:
Anothei: issue discussed was the •
affecte,fby)he.\atecbmpleti9nof.
,i',The:resi~eni staffassisted tile·· absence ·of house phones··.in the
){the)Gai:cten·~Apartments, .said • students.c;l!iringtheevei).ii:lghbur~.
'garden apartments. Murray
_said
,;, ManstPresidenfDemilsMurray at. : along-with· members of security, , the apartments were not designed
,l:•ani6p~n··stui:tent·,fonim
·held. last:
::,sansohi
said.}i,;:·:
-.·;. ~-,/ '. <: ,.
-··
to accommodate house phones·arid
,.
~
week
in the Theater
.·\,:,:,;;t
:•,1 · ;. ,
·./:'',.Apartments five and seven, the
that they would . not be installed.
/ ,<'~We,,wiU·con·sider·sorne
typfof~,las(.to
be completed;_!shoiild be
• In response to a suggestiQn.'that •
;._:;fifianc~itl·readjiisiirient;·tqr,;.:th<.>se
-Je;idy
by Sept'.. 30: according· to • the main Marisi switchboard be
, (:students '."whoJfave·.been
most in-:.· Gerard Cox, vice president for stu- • open 24 hours, enabling ga_rden
':;
,conveniehced;!.\,Mtirra:y"said/t!\.
;.:ct,ent
-affairs .. 'These were delayed
apartment residents t9 rifak~ caHs
·:'.\·,'..Miiriay,;'adcled\tfotf;he'·agreed
::J>.e:cause
they. are·w9eel;chair ac-. into, the . campus phone/system,
,:_/whh;fa/s~ggestiQri;.
f~om\Stude'nt •
C
ce_s!;ible:
!,lparti:nents.
and .,require.;. Murray said the college would look
(}
.Body:Presid~nt·SuU!ntie..Ryan•t~
<
specially d~_signe~
appliances, Co,(.. into expanding switchboard hours.
·<-::form
a·comm.ittee·of-students
and ·\'said.,:_: '':, '·. ·.:.
.',
\ ..
·
~• :· , :
..
\ ' Off-campus callers can currently be
r,\;adrribusfrators d<f~work': out• the.)·:,. Apartments six and eight will be\ co·nnected to the college's internal
:-deiai1s··'.
of.'siudenF refurids. The,:·'finisfiedin the Fsection andlaun- '. • phone system from. 7:45 a.m .. to
:::
: committee will begin\\'.ork after
all. ,.,
dry service
.wiU
be ·available for aff
9:30 ..
p.in., Monday through. Fri-
·:,st~dents
are.in permanent housing,<. apartments by Sept .• 20; Cox. day, and from 8:30 a.m.to 5 p.m.
• Murray said .. · t·'. •
·Y.
;•i"
,. :
,,:,:;'>
added. ·: .. •. . .
;,,
..
,> • • • . .
on·weekends .. •
. , · · •. / . ..
.
• ·,<According to Mur.fay;Jhe coin-::::<
AT&T
w~s 'to install telephone.. . . In an emergency, Murray said,
/imittee wil.Loonsider
both:the degree:· :jacks iri the apaitinerits earlier this .. students living in
,
the Garden
'i
ofithe:~ inconvenience, 'arict•::,the
_,,··week.:Oiiginal
delays _iri
this'hook.- ••• Apartments should call .the regular
·1
·,1
•.
I
1·c
.
:~
•.
,,;
• I
I
.1
;I
:1
:::c_~academic·and:1>hysfoafpressuri
·;,up occurred because AT&T did not
Marist phone num.~er; 471-3240,
/'thatV!.~I>la.ceciup_Qiithestudc:nts·
... imfi:leclfately,
l!'ave all the necessary
·:
and ask to be putrthroughto the
·, affe¢ted;
{:5'~/,'.': ::,:~.:}:;;
1 :.;.•.
:
•.•
?~uipmerit f()r the installation, Cox

special emergency·Urie
in the securi-
;)_}.'.;:;.24.:studcnts,haa
moved iritoiF. :said: : <.:<.
:;.,-,
..
:,
'.-
.
, .· ·.·.
· .. ·. ty· office. •
• . .
.
{(se~igri}}ip;#n~n~s:;Cl~e/~-~r§J!$h
.) . }~:i:~ference to st~de~_1;concer1_1s
'. • Anot_her
,subject d_isc~sse~
at die
'XJ6:ur
a:s
of~pt.11 :,F,section·
ai)art-
<
:,b_out North ·End sec~r.1ty,
l\1urray .: . forum,
1
w~s .
the · d1stnbut1on ; of
\.

. .
.
->,m~lif(fiye thf<>Ugh;~ight
,o/-c;re
p<>t : ;~aid:
.~ha.t·
a ;to~n ••
pobceman :has f:. st~del_lts.
c,hsplaced
;by. the ~ousmg
•.
: .
1
~,;··,
•• •

...
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~
:complet~d.~ .o( Sept. ,!6. -_,_...,·_;;."•
. been,-p~troll~ng
the ~~e_a,
at mght . shortage.J.<'actors mfluencmg the •
.
• : • •
..
t ' . .': :.,·:: :. ,:_.
;,;s,.'<'!~-i,i£'A;J
'trfit~~{~~fi~e.~~n§~C;J§PIJ.nel,~,;.~dit_!fat:'.w~--fO!J~ge"-h_a__s:incr.~~~,«:.'!::;,
.pl~~ell}erit
~ of·· _.'stu9el)(S;~:Jp·::!-~~
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Jie~~1soine:.!~~alln.~fr.e~o~te:;_b~.:/·~ts~~ec4qo/,Patrol~!here;
:ftie~e a~e-.,~·.
T?.w.rh<>Uses,
KirlrHouse, <:n~- . : ._
·:·: .:.
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:'t'.◄
::e
::,:,
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,z
.~itltt_b~·e~paiision·
of'ca~~iis~·~rs.Q{~ce_ !J!°~~fe_ty
!lJld/~ . ,:-,~
/
US}ll~
~11.eg~
!13~t~n~~ t[l.1cks
tc,>
·-_also plans for ad~1tlo[J.al
lighung m· • pa~na(H3:ll an.d _N.orth
Road. m-
: • -~, • ; - )
:.: .. ,_·-: ' -
': ,., .· . Security li~Jncreased )be
.~ize'.
of, the ~cu~:_staff
'•~~J~e·
: , •.
'::Jr~pc>~:t.~~Ir-,belongi~gs
from·the ·: ·N~rthEnd par km¥ lots,. Murr!lY
.
i. ·
·
Continued ori. page 3
:

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-~\,t~;(s:,:•:;
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•;-i·-"·' ,:'}:~:/
....•.
·
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, f
by Donald R~ ~dwiri~ :
0
;
thi
1
(]ainp11s
(:enter, and coyers/all:
' • • ':> ..
,::.:,' . :.-.·. ::·.:· •
>::<
the·
area
south
to
the McCanri'
)'.~ttitr~dp,~riiwJ~Mr:~~!.~:8e~t
7
f:t?{r·_:(fe:'..
:.p/:-.:.,·.t:;··
.. · : ~of three supervisor ·positi()ns
to die .:
~
,,;-Th~ su~eryis<_>r!.
Wh_o
ce>ve,rs
:the
>college's secutjty st_!lff
anaatqt~:
cc:ntral. ~ecte>r,
lS.~So"r~~()Il~Ible,
/reorgan4;ation ,of the staffls nigbf-::. f?,tcoreraie of.th_•r~<?f,ID~
~t Il}ght'.,'
. µi:ne.
c9~~r,age
•.•
Jfl?,}t§-'<c:\:;?i=?throih?ti%
0
~~~~t~J~fhe
:'
O:·
..
:Joe Waters,\director: of safety .. :.hours·on:alm)an'd7:a:m;forfire
,
··.·.·.·.·tan~
secwi~,._said
the;decision
tq
in;:·/ siifety;· sfuce tlle only pefsoµ 11sua1~.
~
";.c::rease
the.security staffw:as based • ·lyawake ist~ecl(:!iksecurity,'' said
.
·;
on a'_defmite
need~ with.the Gai:den •. Wa.ter:s
. .<'It's tbe.irrsf tiine it's ever.
'.'.Apart111ents.
and tl]e; anticipated : been done/'·
....
:>·,
:°Lowell '-Thomas Center·._
creating .. A~~rdi~g_to · Waters, the addi-


:\~t1ch
·in?,regrou
nd·to covef;· :,' •· tion·of the,' night supervisor has-'
.3}.'::.Two securi(y guards were~p.ro- helpecFcreate~better ·communica-
·~ . ·'t
inoted. to)upervisor ppsitions,
apd . •.
tion with·.
tlie. residen~. directors.
.··.•a-former:security employee ·was

:
··.:.,.:_,
• • • '
0 , .
·._-

~,hired
as
the.third new supervisor~·
."We
have ~.better_relation~l;!ip
--:·waters 'said. • -
• • •

with the .housing residence d1rec-
,
• ·•c: ·•·•·
, ,. :~·_- tors,"-said Waters; "because they.
:" .• :The
increase
in the security staff are being (old of
anything
that hap- •
focuses'on the night shift, with an pens.during the Ilight."

• • added p;ttrol 'supervisor and. two
full-time guards now responsible • In addition to the north sector•
for patrolling assigned areas of the . • security guard, there is also a Town
camp~s. .
of Poughkeepsie policeman sta-
.

tioned at the Garden Apartments
Waters said the campus is divid- temporarily, said Waters, until the
ed into three sectors; with a full-
fire atanns are hooked up to the.
time guard and a student guard • Dutchess County Fire Alarm
patrolling each.
Headquarters.
The nonh sector includes the
Garden Apartments, Marist East,
the to~nhouse area and the water-
front area by the boat _house. The
central sector includes an areas,
• east to west, between the north en-
trance of the college and Donnelly
Hall.
The
south sector begins with
"He is there from I
J
p.m. until
7 a.m. with a campus security
radio, Security," said Waters.
"He's there during these hours
because they're the most dangerous
hours, when the students are
asleep."
.
.~
.·_-·,::.
• t,f
DavHlako~eelil <. _ . :
.
• Acc~rding to MikeStuto; pr6moiiciris manager;
»C
',.
For those.ofyou
'wtio
areifred of listening to
the station wants, " ... to .have everything related
.
•.
the same old ini.lsic
day after·qay ,'fyfafist may ha.ve : :to nmsic on campus related to New Rock 92." .
·-: the'aµsw.er fo•your probJeni .:- New Rock .92. -·
..
••
.. ·•, To.help acco~pHsh this, fr~e advertising is of-
·,. Formerly known~as;WMCR, 91;9 MaristJ:ol- . -·Jered_to all club presidents. : .
.
.
. ..
. 'Jege
Radio,Jhe'sfation they has not only changed . .
Stuto also has-plans to promote the station by
. its·name;· q~t_alsoJias a new. managementstaff,: a , •.·
• • pos~ing a weekly bulletin board of the stations top
_-
•.
tighter pr_o~am:ming
::f~~at-2emphasizing new • •.. · 25 songs ev~ry Sunday night after the top 25 show,
··.-music and· a staff:dedicated'to
·upgrading'.'-the:-
;.,-"as
\Veil-as
listing new records and up and coming ·
station.:
~
·
.,, , ,
,•.>>>'
·,
>
. ·:._:.·; . . .
· releases .. , , . >>
. ,
.. . . .
.. .· .
·\:~ '.A_c~ording
to Derek
c~
Simon,-nitisfo'dfrector
/ :
-~.
More ainbitfous plans are also in the works, ac~
-'. tlie~hange.begarflasiJast.year,wlleri
WMGRdedd.: . •• ctirciing to Simon,' wlfo is.promotions·director for
, .ed to move
away
ff()m_jlle-riiain
.: stre.am of
.•
top . . nationa}altentative musk at Polygram. Records .
f-i, 40 radio.:The reason for this
was
the laclc of unifor:-• • The station hope.Ho sponsor conc~rts
at
the Mid-
i:JriiiiyJn
the'milsic' the '.station was-playing.' :.,.. • . Hudson Civic:,: ; ,Center; a_long'.with
album and
, . ''
."We
waiit a solidified format where people will • · poster· giveaway_s
from niajo(artists.
0
,
,~
• • identify New Rock 92 as a new music· station on
. This year's staff has met some resistance from •

~
the: cutting eqge of the imislc industry;'' Simon
• listeners; mainly because of the negatiye publicity
.,. saicL:'•': .: .): •.. .'':; :
'
• .:

:
· ·: ••. .
generated by lasfyear's niusi.cal :_;c
output; said

Sheehan.' Now, however; the . staff is more
, ''The purpose ·of college ~adi9 is to provide an
dedicated arid receptive to change, allo.wing for a

alterriative to
• commercial radio.arid to break
smooth transition into the new inusic·format. •
i~ • new bands/'
~aid '.fim Sheehan, general
'~The obstacles are people not knowing the music
manager. "We wer~.'playjng Tears for Fears last
we play, because iC s. new," Sheehan said, ~'but
February and I:Ioward Jones and Depeche Mode
through repeated listening they will become'.familiar
before anyone else,"·he said.

.

with it and turn to us for new music.". . ··

The change in th~ station;s name is
a
symbol of
Record companies, the major promotional
the change in music format, according to Sheehan.
source of music aired by . radio stations, have
·He hopes that such a symbol will help to establish
been very cooperative by providing : • • free records
the fact tliafthe station· is playing new music.


Qr posters this year, in part due to New Rock
,-
"The fo~at," Simon said, ~:'is
progfessive alter-
92's growing reput~tion and it s listings in the Col-
native. New Rock 92 is the place to tum to if you
• lege Music Journal. The CMJ is a
place where
want riew music."·
. •


record companies and radio stations can look to
This year's goals for· the station are small: to.
see what is being played by college stations around
establish New Rock 92 as the new music station on
the country.

-
campus; and to provide a public service to the
•. New Rock 92 is fighting to establish itself as the
Marist community, according to Simon.

alternative to·commercial radio by playing the
"New Rock 92 offers service to all clubs at a
music usually passed over by the profit contro\ed
minimal cost," S~mon said. uwe have already
statjons; said Simon.
.
.
worked at last Friday's Community Unity Barbecue
"We are basically a non-profit station," Simon
and last Saturday's Nuts and Bolts mixer, and more
said, "all we want to do is build a loyal following
. such events are planned for the future."
of listeners."

This year is also the first year the radio station
"When listeners tune to 92, they'll get a lot bet-
has been allowed to take paid advertising, which
ter station that's a lot more solid and consistent
they hope will help them become recognized in the
musically," Sheehan said,
0
and consistency is what
co.mmunity
by offering air time to local busin~.
gets listeners."
<?
• ·/.~
























































































'
_,
--.page
2 - TflE <;IRCLE
~.
s,ptf!111ber:19,·/t98!f- .... -------
....
---llllllllll------
........
llllll!lllillllllii ___
i.l!li ___ _
.21/.l)rofr
,, ..
,
....
,.
,·,,••
....
,
. ···••·
.
.I
Jbi~!{~~iif
f
.••···•·
at
--Marist::.
by
Shaaron Barriaga
.•
.
.
.
.
Marist College has added 2fpro-
fessors to. its full-time faculty this
:
semester. The
.total
number of
faculty members now stands at
::
121.
·.
The total number
.
of faculty
members is increased
·by,16
o·ver
last year's 105. The' new/ faculty·
members by division are:

Arts and Letters
.
_:_Phillip Cohen, English. Cohen

received
:
his Ph;D. from the
University
·of
Delaware·
·and

p'reviously-
taught at Columbia Col-
\. lege ~n South Carolina.
.
,
_
•.
-.

>.


·.:..,.Marguei:,te.~efferon,
English
..

Hefferon received her M.A; from
Western Connecticut State Univer.:
sity and previously taught at Ohio. -
State University:
..
.
~
Virginia Marquardt, arL Mar~
quardtreceived her Ph.D. from-the

.
the University of Maryland, Col-.
'lege
Park. She has taught at Pratt
Institute,

l'viercy
·•
College and
CUNY Baruch, among others.
:__Laurence Montalto, arL M!)_n~
.
talto received his Ph.DI. from New
.York
University.
Montalto
organized. the
_First
Street Gallery
in New.York City.

-Beverly
.
Schneller, English.'.
Schneller received
·
her master's.

degre in English Literature froill
:
the Catholic University of America
..
where she taught composition and
_short
fictio.,ri.


>
1
_
.
.


-James
A, Springston,
.
com-
munication arts. He, received a
master's degree from Wayne State
University in .Qetroit. Springston is
·•·
a member of the•Michigan Speech

Coaches
.Hall
of Fame and coach

ofthe Marisfdebate team.

'

:-·,
11
~\~j~;~it,~--•:·~~~~f
g;:{•····
philosophy. Birmingham
received
-
'
her M;A. froiriDusquesne Univer~
-'

sity, Pittsburgh arid has taught
at
Point Park'College in Pittsburgh.

• -:-Sus~i:l
.
K. Meyers,
.. _
political
:
science;· Meyers is
_a
doctoral Can-
di.date in social science at Syracuse

-',. >..
University .• She

taught several·
:
-,
courses in.nonviolence, as.well as

\
contributing to research
.in
.
en-
• viroiunerital law and mandated
.
public
'
participation· while at:
.
Syracuse~
:
'
:
.

.. _
.
O'

._
,~.\;
.-e,
t
'.'c'
.
-
~i;~~
<,.;. . .
;·,_2,::;")tr:;:,,-~-
•.
••
•.
:.:._constance Elko,"matheriiatics .•
••
--.
Elko received her Ph.Di from·the.
·•
University of Notre. Dame:-::Her

most recent tea~hing pqsi_tio11
was
•;
at:Vassar College.
..



__
•.
......
StuaitB._ Gree_nfield,
cpmputer

..
science; Greenfield haSa master's

degree
)it
:
~lectri_cal_
engineering
·
-
(roiri the City
<;c,Heg~
o_f
~¢W.
York
.
_an~
was a
.f
~rmer, associate pro-:-.
f~r
at Ulster County Communi-.
ty
College ..
-•~
i' -.
,
. .
,
.. : .
.
•.
: •
:•
-Marvin
J:Haas,-:computet
science. Haas has an M.S; in cor-.
porate management from Stevens
Institute-
of
Technology and has

previously taughiat Ramapo Col-
.
lcge,Pace University_and
Fairleigh
Dickinson. University.
..

" :
, .
..:..,,.Barbara Van

• Itallie,
mathematics. Itallie has
a
master's
degree_ in
.mathematics
education
from SUNY New Paltz. Her·most
recent teaching position· was
.
at
Dutchess· Community College.

-Victoria
Ingalls,
biology. Ingalls
recently completed her ~tion
research in zoology at the Univer-
sity at Massachusetts,
while
teaching there as well.·
-Richard
J.
McGovern.
mathematics. McGovern has a
Ph.D. from the University of

Pennsylvania and held teaching
positions at SUNY New Paltz,
Bard College and the Florida In-
stitute of Technology.
-charlene Rinne, nursing. Rinne
received her M.S. from Seton Hall
Continued
.on
page 3
·EA.SE
-HELP~
US
SCHED
..
·
·
......
-COURSEs:·you·
WANT
NAME 0~ COURSE DES~D
,_:-.
,
. . -
,; :0::::.~6%_~
T
}~,
•••••
:·.Loci•_.

ti,)ceepsie~.
'•··:<
·:~·:
_-.,~~~-:~_•:
.•
Please return
-
to£ School of Adult
_Education,
Marist East_ 2so·
--
or
Office
-
of the
Regi_strar
:µonnelly

:.






























































































































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·
Septetnber
19,
·1s,s
-
THE
CIRCLE·
Page
3 --
Xi~Y:~ij;\'j~~)¾\.Qst
-~i.11,-11.e-.
·-•
••


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•.
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range',You. can't
lo~k·at
your'.' People's lifes~yles/wiil change;''
.
'.
..
':!Calling
tf:lis year's Co.u_ncil.'.9f-\
_t~r·m
from.just April~t<>
April_.'/
...
: .. •
Marist. ~as alr~ady ~nnounc~d

Student Leaders a potential ('agent·:,:•
.
'

• •

, '
·'•:
.
• ..
,


••
•.
the Pub will close ~fter Thanksg1v-
,ffor
change,''.
·Suza:rine.
Ryan,
.slu-
·.}''f.
Ry_an
feels st1;1den~s_sh0tllcl
spea_k
·
·.
ing vacation. Ryan said CSL will
V_.9eilt
b'ody:·president, s'aid inaking
:
.out
if
a c.a!llpus:
·iss~~ concerns
..
try
to
come up:with some alternate
>':Marist
students more' aware or.'the
..
thtmi, ¥,~km~ stl:!dents a_w~~e
th_ey
,

social activities for: students. Again,
:>voice·
the/have.on campus will be
:>~ari
ha~e a V<?tce_-m;_
5tudentaffairs
Ryan would not comment on ex-
.
:.one
ofCSL's major goais ..
·:c)
,

1S<?ne,~f-~yan'.s~~als
for th
_eye.ar
••
actly w~af CSL has in mind
:.,
/
...
_<

'

.
;-
f
< :;
·, d.
·;
;_.
''I dort;t'thlnk
we
have true (stli-
because no'definite plans have been
·
)
;~J!:,.t;::t:~t
t~da
;f!rinf~!.
··.
cteih)
r_e~r~sentation,'
'.

said._llyan.
.
.
set:
'.'.alternate
social ·activities Hor\
.~rw~.have_to
be w~H!nforpied of
••'

'
•,
'

>-=-students·
once: the ~ub <:loses,-are·.

~h~
l~Sll~
su_rro~n~mg
us, I m here.
.
..;We'll ha~e to

make sure
-the.

:
also priority' items
fo{
cs1,.:ihis:,
tto;hear
the student's pr<>ble!11~
and_- Pub
..
can still be a facility students
;
>·
·
-•·.
.


,
......
•·:
:.,.
"<'
... ,
\.pass
themalongt~t.headmm1stra-
...
can u.se;'; Ryan said. "It's a reali-,
'.
-~7cst.'
.is·'ca
'bocty'\fr'.;\,tU:dent'
\tidn.,,
:
.
..
.
. :
,.\
.:

:},:
.•
: -~
,
,
:
ty we all have to deal with. The
/
cirgantzation; ·acting:, as\:-a
g'?~
-~
\·,·;Although.
she
~s
-~ot
positive
_it~-··
question is hc:>w
to make it inore en•
,
,
between'for Marist adininisti:ation.: coul~ happ~n this_ year, one way. joyable."·
::'
and students; lfls comprisedOf the<
·CS~
IS
wor~ng.to getmores!udent
. ; '
:,,
Student
.Academic-
Committee,
..
c-1:epresentat1or1
ts the_fof~3ct1on
of
.
Upon taking office in April,
.·, College Union Board, Inter-House astude11t senate. Ryan W?l!ld not
.•
Ryan said!she would "c_reate pro-
••
Council;'
:J\(iuJt'
Student
-
lJnion,
•.
comment_ on ~~at ~or!111t
would grams and speak out"
to
fight
::
·commuter Union
.
and Ryan, stu-

t~~e; b~cause 1t
lS
s~11l
1n th~ plan~

apathy among studertts. When a •
dent government p,residenL
-
m11g
stag_e
and nothmg defirute h~
delay in the construction of the
Sue Ry~n, president of the student bodr.
(photo by Bryan Mullen)


"'"
.·,
..
, .,.,
,
,.•a
:.-:

:
.been
decided. However, Ryan said
,
Garden Apartments forced the
::
:CSL
leaders will no't only be
'it
would niake CSL more effective.
_
relocation.of 72 students to other
plaiming for the curr_ent
academic/..
•.
C~L'.s effectiveness_~ be put !O
.
campus housing, CSL set up a

year; theywill also be thinkingJor·
.
the test when the dnnkmg.age
_m

forum with President Dennis Mur-
••
the future, said Ryan/a political New:.York
Statifrises to 21 on-Dec,. ray so students involved could ask
.. science niajor from Oyster Bay,
.
L
:
••

>'-'
·
,'
'
L ~-
> ·•
.

.: ,(
: •
.

questions. Ryan said the housing
:
N.Y~
' .·.'
:.,
•··
•·
·
..•••.
--
........
''Wsgoirigtobeqtiiteayearfoi'
::,forum
was a "good example" of
_;
~•CSL
this
year.is going to.be an
••
CSJ/'. saicf Ryan. "We!i'e
.,faced/
how students can use their voice
to

agent
.for
_change,''·
she said;· withUtedrinking~gegoing•up,~d
··-letthecollegeadministrationknow
::
•~We're thinking short range and
the. possibility of· a dry campus.. what they are concerned about.
,
.


...
.
'
.
-
.
.
.
Ryan encourages students
to
come to CSL· meetings. They are
held every fyfonday at 7:45 a.m. in
the Candlelight
·
room in the
cafeteria.
Ryan· hopes· her administration
can bring about some positive
change. "Tony (Anthony Phillips,
former student body president) laid
a lot of groundwork. 1 hope I can
pick it up and take it five steps
more," she said.
But in the long run, Ryan said,
it will be the students themselves
who make things happen on
campus.
"It
all depends on the students.
Only together
can
we make this
work."
/f)-fesht!Jeh$ize··up{heirfitst
two weeks.of college
.
:~,:._:'_.·
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..
,
.-:,
.
.
.
, .•
'
.
-
••
-.
by Fred Dever
.
.
.
.
room
in Leo ~r a quad in'.the bases about the
.housing
situation," he
said: "The social life is what you
The anticipation and_curiousity
•.

merit of Sheahan.ffall.«They.gave
said. "In fact, some students have
make it. It's tough getting into bars
. ¥e-·o\'.e.ri•,the-accep~ance.lett~rs.· ustheoptionoflivingina·regular·
requestect that. they stay: tripled
but there are other.things to do.
.
from colleges have.long been dec1d-
•.
room in Leo but. we wouldn't get

because they.have established.good You just have
to
leave your room,"
,·,\.ed
oil;:npw a new way oflife has,;a desk or·dr~ssir. It was a choice.· relationships.with theirroomates.".
_she
said, "go walk down the hall
,
·:,,b"egu~
:._f
!Jr-·
t~e
••llup_dreds

:oJ·
~C-,WithoutiI(c:h~i~e,
''Kat.dell_;said;.
:--
-,
Like
all
freshmen college classes,

and hang out in someon~ room:'.'
•.

fres~men., who·
-
chose
·-
to

attend
:
. ,:
Greg Brennan; residerice
director
,,
.
this dass is expl6ring the' riew social
Meghan Collins, a computer
:':
Manst College.
. .
.
;

>
.
for
·Leo
arid Sheahan; said
.that
and academic atmosphe'res that are
sciel).ce
major from Lake George,
'['·:Borne
members
,of
this year's-
,
therds one quad in the basement open to them.
..
}
_.,
.
.
N.Y., said the activities fair dpwn
':;\t4.~sl!~.,,~l!f.~~-·-wei:i;.,,.rei:e~tJy.,,_.i.s~-:..,-
of-Sheahan,and W triples-in
·Leo - ::•-,-Rhonda
Nova~-;
~a
0
psychology·
-.-
at Mcbanri Center helped her,;ge(:·.
: )
ed for
1the1r
1mpress1ons·
of their,
.
arid Sheahan.
: :
••

• .

major from Spotswood, N.J., said ,involved with various organiza-
·
'\:
first.tw.<>
weeks as coHege stude.pts.
>
-/Hassan
Lewis,,a nursing major
.
that orientation prepared her.to ex-
.
tions.
"I
signed up for intramural
·
··:
>·
..
Beca~se o~the·l~c~ of hm.1smg, from· Maybrook, N.Y.,'.said that
pect hard academic requirements.
tennis and ski team but none of
·_::
·~:me
of the first_
adJustments Tan.Y the rooin in Sheahan is _adequate
·:
'' After orientation, I was afraid co. them have started yet, so I guess I'll
~;
f~e.sli~en have had to deal ':'1th 1s for ft>ur, a_n_d
it is full~ fum~s,hed

~ome here:Things th~y said made, have to search for more things to
:
Hvmg m overcrowded roo!Ds m Leo and carpeted. "Even
1f
they told
.
1t seem tougher than 1t has been. "
1
do."
>and
SheaJ:ian haHs.

.• :
.
. .
_ -.
ine I could have a. room in Leo I
.
Since the majority of freshme~
Anthony Gabriel of Glen Cove,
...
According to Jeff_· Kardell;
·a
wouldn't take it. I'in comfortable
are not old enough to get into bars,
N. y
.,
said that working in the

>>freshman
from. West-:vood, N..J.,
dowii. here," Lewis said.

they have had to find other alter-
cafeteria helps him meet people


th_e college noufi~d him the mght
,
..
,Brennan
said
·that
the rooms in natives in socializing.,
..
while earning money.
"Time
stands
!)efo.re he mov~d !n
that
he. wo_uld Leo. and Sheahan, are just tern-
Tracey Drake, a criminal justice
still here. My job breaks up the day
and
gives me a certain tim_e
schedule to go by."
With some 750 members, this
year.'s freshman class is the largest
in the college's history.

Brennan said this is his second
year
working with Marist freshmen
and nothing has happen!!cl,ci~t.of
the ordinary-just the normal pro-

blems: home-sickness, loudness
and alcohol.

·"I
don't see any dodo-birds
walking around here. I really think

the freshmen class will make a ma-
jor contribution to the campus.
'
They have a lot of enthusiasm
and
a
sense
of community develop-
ment," Brennan
said.
be given a choice between a tnple
pcirary. "I have had no complaints major
,
from Fayett~'ville, N. Y.,
I
·
•.
·
·



:
.
F_~~~·
ty ......
________
c_o_n_ti_nu_e_d_fr_o_m_p_a_g_e
2
:-··
R
__
Ubin 's ideas change with iim.···.
e
\
~niv:~~ity:1s~o;ir;~~~~::ug!!
t1a~1!~~~1~;!da~~a~~~nt~~!~!i:;

..
Rockland Community College as a
,
of Massachusetts.
b;
Brian O'Keefe

trastto his "Yip~ie;,_
days of the
He asserted that Hart was the
-
Frrim Yippie
to
_Yuppie,
they

'60s when he was. opposed to
.
Yuppie candidate. "Mondale
say.
•.
. .
.
.
-.:·
.·-.·
·.
.
:capitalism
and lielpedJead the
was despairing,t,he said. Final-
,
Jerry Rubin has come
a
long

Youth International Party. "I
.,
ly, Rubin credits anti-apartheid
••
way from i,~irig_-an·
~cti_vist
of
wasn't a stonecl~out. hippie.,,.!
.
demonstrations held. on college
the 1960s: Being a leader ofan
·. •.
was a hard working organizer,"

carrip1ises,
forthe sanctions
.the
antl-Vietnwrtmovement
·ror
oneJ>'. Rubin said.':, '.'l. wanted
-
the
>united
States\ government has
generation, and the,promoter of

system to change. I was right
placed on South Africa.
• •
self-success· for- an_other keeps·:
•.
and I
was
wrong."
.•
Rubin predicts the Soviet
this· 4&:y~ar~old
inan busy on
--·


Ru.bin's strongest stance
-in-
Union and the United States will
·
the college lecture <;ircuit.
.
.
the '60s was against Vietnam.
become
.allies
"in our lifetime;''
Rul,in's , Coll¢ge; Union

"Vietnam was· a'crime.visited
and that there are Yuppies in
Board-sponsored lecture, held.
.
tipon the youtl, of:America," he

Russia. "Ideology and macho is
last week in the Campus Center
...
said. C<Ameri_ca,
was on the

holding it back," he ~aid.
Theater, was titled «How to Be
.
wrong side,-. with the wrong

Rubin, who went from ac-
a Successfuf Young

Prof
es-
-
°idea;
and never would
-
have
tivist of the '60s to procurer of
·

sional. ''
-
The talk was a
.trans-
won.The same thing could hap-
the "me generation" during the

decade J9ok at politics, the
pen in Nicaragua!'
.
'70s and the Yuppie king of the
lifestyle

of young upwardly
..
Three years ago, Rubin gain-
.
'80s, said he was right in every
mobile professionals, and the·
ed recognition for his business
decade.

development of American
"networking" after a stint as a
''The 1960s were a time of
-
youth.·

successful Wall Street banker.
confrontation. The 1970s were
..
What is a Yuppie? Rubin
He and his wife Mimi greet
.
a time for self awareness, and
dismissed trends linked with
nearly 6,000 guests at New
achievement is for the 1980s,"
Yuppies as "silly and irrele-
York~s
.Palladium.
night club
he said. The 1990s will be a time
vant."
_;ni,~

Yuppie lifestyle

every Tuesday night. The par-
ofCCpeace,
consumerism, being
basically_'· inc!udes positive"-· ties attract people
.from
the
and meditation."

h~th,
inale-(emale equality,

fields of banking and advertis-
He also projected that there
.
self-reliance, entrepreneurship,
ing. It is his Business Network-
.will
be a Yuppie president by
1
and ambition, he' said. He
ing Club's sole venture, he said.
1992.
defines the term as young, up-
··
Turning to politics,.· Rubin.·
"You're already a Yuppi~ in
wardly mobile professionals,

challenged President Reagan's
college," he said when defining
and a·result of the Baby Boomer
"macho" image. "He's not so
where the Yuppie age begins.

generation.

'Rambo'."
he said. If Gary
"Yuppies go from 15 to 50."
A
_
Chicago
newspaper
Hart had been nominated on
To those that poke fun at
reporter coined the phrase
the Democratic ticket in 1984,
Yuppies. "you can only satirize
"Yuppie," to refer to Rubin
he added, the presidential elec-
something that's powerful," he
and his.followers. It was a
cori-:
tion might have been different ..
·.
said.
·
certified nurse.
-Joseph Fielding, business ad-
-?Barbara
Sadowski, computer, ministration. Fielding has a Ph.D.
science. Sadowski has a Ph.D.
in sociology. from Fordham
from the University of Maryland
...
University.
His most
.
recent
She was an associate professor and
teaching position was at Adelphi
the director of the fyficrocornputer University.
Center at the· University of•·
-Mary'
Howard,
finance.
Houston.
Howard received her M.B.A. from
-Christina
Vertullo,
the
University of Rhode Island and
mathematics.
Vertullo has a
most recently
_was
a faculty
-
·master's
degree in math education
member' at the University of
fromSUNY New Paltz. She was a
•·•
Delaware.
full time faculty member at Marist
from 1977'to 1980.
Social and
Behavioral
Sciences
-Janet Larkin, special education.
Management Studies

.

Larkin is a doctoral candidate a
••
-=-Ami Davis, economics.
-Davis
SUNY Albany. She has served as
has a Ph.D. from Boston College ,an adjunct professor at Marist and
and prior to her appointment at
Mount Saint Mary College.
HO
using
________
c_o_n_ti_nu_e_d_fr_o_m_p_a_ge_l
cludued the male/female ratio and
kitchen and bathroom facilities. ac-
cording to Sansola.
"What we try to do is locate the
areas on campus that can best ac-
commodate that ratio of male and
female with minimal impact," San-
sola said.
On current freshman housing
and admissions control, Murray
confirmed
that there was a
miscalculation in the number of
.
students expected to attend Marist
this fall.

"There's always some tripling to
start the semester because there's a
shakeout of students," Murray
said. "A lot of that tripling is
eliminated within the first two to
three weeks of the school year."
"If
students still end up being
tripled in, and it's a possibility
some may, then there's a financial
readjustment already built into the
program that automatically goes to
them," Murray added.
\
·,


























































































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' •• Toda/Fo~~der'~ Day,'commehl~;at~ th·~·date
~~ri;i}~iv~
. ed its charter; the. docu_rrient which ~rtifies :the· college: and ,,
• defines its functions, priveleges and purpose~
_On
this celebrated/
date, we should r~flect upon the history of Marjst and its con-
tinueq_ mission to serve those in needthrough education .. ·•· .
The college, founded
.
iil
~
1905 by the .Marisf Brothers, a
religious, teaching otder:that originated in·France, _has
conUnual-• •.
ly demonstrated.its commitmentto education. The original house •
of stud_les,

novitiate; Saint Ann's Hermitage, evolved_ into •
• Marian ,College, a 4-yaar college where Marist Bn;>thers
were '.
trained to be teachers,

. . .

·:
In 1960, the nanie was changed to Marist College to help it. ,
develop its new identity -
a college that was academically .
similar to many other colleges, but distinguished for its communi-· ::
. ty service, Since the beginning of the college, Father Marcellin • •
Champagnet, fqunderof the order, wanted the.Brothers
to
care
.
for those people not cared-for by others. For example, in the
pioneering years of the. college, Mari st Br~thers taught the blind
and Y(ere

oriented toward. serving the elderly, those with .•
disabilites and the poor. . ;
..
.

.· .
.
• ·.
.·· . • .
Marist has been recognized through the years for its service. \
• In the G0's and 70's, Marist received more government funds. ,
/
for community programs than any other college in
New.
York, •
·next to Columbia,-because of thfil college's devotion to communi-
ty assistance. . ·• . .•. , .:
t
,-
..
••
•• ·.·
As
a:
reminder of its purpose/the collegehas a Mission State-
ment, a document that defines tl:le college's philosophy and
.reason for existence. The first of six goals listed on the State-
ment is to develop a college community with "an appreciation
of its history and traditions and a commitment to the contem-
porary significance of that heritage."

•.•,Marist
has worked towardachieving that goal. The Cham-
pagnet heritage of service can be seen today in the college's.
programs such as the special services prograni/services for the
disabled, prison programs, the community/psychology program •
and the pre-school.


.
.
Marist must continue to remember its heritage today in obser-
ving the Mission Statement and supporting service-oriented pr~
grams because service is the very foundation upon which the
_college originated.
Letters
Ronnie gdes ·to
School
-.
·.
.
speech,Reagan stopped by North
presidency~ ;Johnson.
Lyndon
· .:,·. ·
Carolina State University for a .. Baines ,Johnson: Right; Reagan
by Carl MacGowan
Around this time last year, the guest lecture on "Howto succeed '. described Johnson'.s ''Great Socie-
great political discovery was that
as president without actually doing :
.
tyt' anti-poverty progr_ams as
C'an
,
.
college. students. had shed their anything.":Thes~hool's b~ketb~
. inflationary binge that threw
1•
radical cloaks and· were planning to . arena, home of the NCAA cliamps ,; milli~ris into poverty:,_•
<
< :_,
,
} , .
: .•

•.\·;.,.,,t>
. .::.
• Election· correction
i·-
.
;~~:r~~:
0
~:!~:~:~r~tr~t~~
:~y~::~6~;';,t~f~~t:~it~rn:
br.hi~-;~~-~;~1b~c
p~og~~ •.
.
..
.
. . . .
. . .
.
. . . . .
.
. .
.
planning ,t'? vot~ at all).. . ·_.
_:
.' . .::
classes.> Reagan .didri
't : care, rhe ... R~agan '.claimed. th~t hiJ t~ ·cuts··~--•• ·:
~
.•••
To the Editor: .- . .

.
.
> •
Septe~ber 19, 19,85,
.Camp~igning , .
., .... : .... · .. •·· . •
....
,
.. •. ·.· . ·. returned to'coliege for, a reasoii;' ... ha~e. • c,~used/, PP.v.~r,ty
·,19
·-dl'.qp
; .:,:,;.,
... There..~.:Was:-"an
.. error,.,jn-...
the • :will.begin.on,Septe~berc2Q. ,1985. ..
...
How ..
1
~.lt;
~Om!!
peopl~
-~ked,
.
'
.-::•
v~, \( • '·:,
< . {. ;•/
~
\. -· '!faster and
fafth~r
than
it'had
'iri •
/'September
12, 1985.
'issue
_df
The : . The:elections; which will be held in· that r~bunctio1:1s;'?t:nery kids a~e ' '~-I:.ast,year's successes at.Bowling
r
over
io·
years:•(·Poverty.\ii,Fdrti'p
Circle. The Elections for the Of- .. Donnelly Hall and Champagnat· . ~heermg on ,a :gquidfather-figure ·Green· and other schools had ·a ;: last'year, but oniy afte(Reagan's·'
ficers for the Class of
1989
and • Breezeway, onSeptember
25
arid
,
like Ronald Reagan?
. · _ ;
definite,.positive effect on the cam-";' policies were<credited
witfrraising .
Judicial
Board Member are
September 26, •
· Ayt:ar, la~er, ~Id double-R is
paign. The White HouseJigured
'.poverty
toJfii
h1ghest)evels since _
scheduled for September ,25 and
Interested students should come · ~afe!y : withm .. hi~· lam~·. duck • that if Reagan could manipulate , 1965 iril982 and 1983: Lastyear's •
• September.26insteadofSeptember
.
to the CSL office in CC268 to
pre~i~ency, but s~ill makinf the. student opinion in favor_ of tax· poyertyratewasstillhigherthanat
28 and Septe111ber
29-as stated in
dedaretheircandidacyandobtain
p~liticalroundsas!fhewerem!he
reform-Jike he won their support
any:time during.the Nixon, Ford
.
the paper'. I would like to take this
information;
.• .
•-··

. • · middle ofa campaigrt.Jie's trymg ··.fora second term, Con;ress would· and Carter years.,:,
L.
opportunity to re-emphasize the
. :Th_ank
rou
for 'your considera-
!?
_con':ince
Jhe,forld tha~ his _tax take note and take act~on.
:
.
.
i
. , .. ••. , .


: ;
i.: .
: ,
dates.
t1on m this matter.
.
• simplification plan will save
"M • .
1
·,,
.. h .. h. · • d
Reagan alsodaimedJhat the ciir~
Petitions are available in the Stti-
Sincerely yours,
America from the godless commi~s
. • . arupp ate is t e pg t wC>r
• " rent tax system has
·created

•tliefn-
dent Government Offices until
The Council of
-
or at least from Democratic

not '.'convmce;'~lt)~ot;~eaga_~•s; •. credible _shrinking_
pay~heck._"
0
By
Student Leaders gairis in· the_ House
and
Senate in • st~le
to
pr_ese~!
a ~e logically· In .. this; µe imi:>}i~d
tha(workers lllak.e
Commencement·
1986 .. · ·

,
this ~· 11:e
Wf'S.
ass1st
¢
by_~ eli:c~ :dess, money nowadays .. Not tnie. ,
. It used to be that Reagan's road
t~omcdevl~)D the aren~ thl:lt en-...
~. Those who·.aie _employed at the
shows had some value
as
unintend-•. couragesJansJ<> ye~ th~irJ~ud~t , saine job· they had; say, JO years ·•
Septemb_e
__
r
16, 1985. commencement speaker until the
ed comic masterpieces; those-were '. at basketball games, !fbe 9b1ect.is ·/ ago make,m9re·money~·even-af!.er.·
Class of-1985 had· one. Although

the -good old days when Reagan

t!'
m~ke :so much pms~ that ,a req,,_ taxes.,But the sttideiits atNC State·: .
T"
h Ed"
our first .choice, Lee Iacocca has .. said trees emit niore pollution than

hght is lit at_ maximu~ voluIDC:.
J
don't know t_~at
:
because they •
' •• :
0
1!}espd~~~\o the C~mmence- • declined our invitation, the class is .factories and that smog on _the
So,: t~e ~Id~.-went. along ~ th
i'
ha\leri't asked their parentsabotit
mentSpeaker editor that appeared awaiting a response from its second : L.A. Freeway had come from Mt; -Reag~ul
s
·
gam~,: • • ~~realllmg \ it'.'. They dori~f need. to '.ask their
• last in The Circle, the Class of 1986 choice, Alan Alda.
Saint Helens •. • •
wh~ever tbeykn.e~ th~r_w;ere
sup~. ; parenis; becatise·Ronme told them
·
No·w··Rea·, ··s
di
die·
posedto.·ButwhenReaganasked.
· ..
··.·
. ..
·
.....
·,,:.· __
,.,,,.; •.
• .. _.,
has one thing to say, "It Is NOT
•• As representatives forthe Class

. . ,' ... gan
1
sa Y pre -
·· · "· ·• , · · . •·.
. -
.
· . ·
.
· · ·· , ·
so. c, " ·.•
·
·
· •-··
· , ,
·
·
·
.,
T ' L' • "
• of 1986 we realize the most feasi-
table. Hevowednocompronuseon
If _we
__
w.an~
aJax'code, tbaUs -;,,:·._wh~n
;:tb."e
~iivetage studenf
· . ..
:
~~st::~r;~ dass officers ~greed ble way to get ''Big Name"
.
: South Africa, butlast weekordeted
•:fairer and simpler," t!J:e stude~~-\erripJoy~ loolcs
at
his paycheck;
he .
'.that more could be done to get
a .
speakers -is to begin early. The
-~
sanctions • against' the apartheid . 1,ody, appttrently ~C?nfu,se9,bY:_t~is
-:-··:'sees
a
·number
for: total payan'd
'a
··,wider . variety of possible coin-
Class of 1986 is an entity thafcould ••

regill_1:e.
Ju~t like he's always -done complex·. an~

~eightr- qu~~c:,n, ·:- ·1owerj1uml)er•
for ilet"pay ...
The,
·mencement speakers. In February
not afford to waste time waiting for.
,
-......
when. he tned to ?ll:_ck
t~e tren~s, · · respon!ied tenta4vely ••
_So,.
R~agan • •: average ·srudent is ,shocked by this· ··
·of 1985,· the class officers con-
the • Marist Administration. to' • he_ ended up givmg .. m while departed from :his. texf_a.~d
as!<-e~
t
'!il'i.qedible shrinking paycheck;''
ducted a poll asking class members organize what we are confiden(wfu . · re"'.'f!ting
. his sctj~ts_ to accept all
!?e students ' t~ yell l~u<ler
- sp •: How~ he asks; am
I supposed to gef
to list their top
5
choices for com- · be a most memorable day.
credit while creditmg._no
__
one el,se.. •
·
th05e gentl~~en ~mi l11.dies.of
~~~
>
a decerit· thing, to.
wear·
on only ..
.
.
press back ~ere can he:ir you too.- • $123 a week'? •
::Pc~:_ tf;~ict'ih.~~!fJ~
1
w1~ •
Michael Mueller ,
Ov~r the. sum"-1-~r,
,.Sylvester_< •. 1Jie red light was
li_t
prgmP,tly
•. , ,
.. ,: . . . , . ... . .
. '. •• _·. .,.
Daniel H •. Biglin Stallone's \'Rambo" character was . The students have. learn~ from. , · This.is the audien~ R~gan was
presented to the Administration in
· .Dina Marie Chiappa • inevitably associated with :Reagan's their Grandpa Ron that what is im- .:· appealing tc:,: the ·audience· that
April. However, the Class of 1986
• Class· of 1986 Officers talk-tough foreign policy, . ~ven . •·port.antis not the issue or the argu-_ f
le
nows -~inpJhing·'.· and .·.•.·.
yell~
could not begin its search for a
(1984-1985) • before Reagan embraced theherok · _ ment,·but the image presented to· .. vociferously.Hekn.ewhecoul_d de~ '
Correction
A Circle story last week misidentified
the residence director of
Leo and Sheahan balls. His name
is
Gregory Brennan.
· An item

the Fox Trail column last week reported that the
Marlst men's basketball
team will be playing at Madison Square
Garden for the first time this season. In fact; Marist bas played
there before-against Montclair State several
iYeatS
ago.
.
·/
• character who re-foughtthe Viet-
the media. It doesn't matter if the' ; pend on them arid, even though •
nam War. Finally, in a Labor Day • argument is shoddy or if you don't .. Congress says tax reform won't be
speech in Missouri, Reagan said he
really !!8fee with the argument, just, . passed this year, the students came
was speaking C'in the spiritof Ram-
as long as the press is shown un- • . through. ,

. :..

•. -: .
"'
bo •' while. pushing his tax plail. • .
wavering. support where. there is .
If we start early, maybe we can
Cutting taxes is in the "spirit of
none.
. .
. • •
. .
get
Reagan to speak at Marist's .
Rambo?" Then whose spirit is
talc-
Reagan went on to .exploit the
.
Dean's
.
Convocation Day next
ing care of Nicaragua'? '.
students' absence of historical· spring. The ~heme ~u14 be "Hey,
Shortly after the . ~issouri
awareness by rewriting the Johnson.•_ let's pick a fight with Nicaragua!"

.
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THE:
Editor:
Associate Editors:
CIRCLE:·
Denise Wilsey
Douglas
Dutton
Paul Raynis
Michael Regan
_Laverne
C. Williams •
Sports Edfto~
Photography
Editor:
Senior Editor :
Cartoonist:
Brian·
O'.Connor
Laurie
Barraco
Carl MacGowan
Don Reardon
Advertising
staff:
Faculty Advisor:
• Le_isha
Driscoll
..
·
Christine CoMn
Teresa Razzano
David McCraw
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C
.,
·; .I>.·
,.,
~-,
'',r'••"••·
'
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•' '-
POINT
· BftCk?Frorri·
Abroad·
Experien~e-s.:·:
pf
,exposu,re;
.,
.
<
the
door of understanding
.
:,
• ir'

• .
by
Brian
O'Keefe \. ·:
.

t\\'.O
most popular television shows
. • by
Michelle Irwin .' •
. .
c:
There are -many reasons .why l
in Europe.At least 100 million peo,
· 0\
Asl sat at my favoritecafe off
studied 'abroad' last year; ButT
pie watch those programs each
Boulevard St . .Michel and ordered

came
back with. more reasons to
week. :


the usual expresso, I realized this'. • . retufe there.· •

• The tabloids don't help with
:t~~ren~::.~s:n=:
~:;~~~
T~~·re's.
a
big world. ouf there.. • ~i:ric:ni~~tft~'
g:s;fp~ps of
Could life ever.· endure. a· more
And
youcan
begin to look at _it iri
.
.
.
are a species alone. So Europe can
• gawk _at us, envy our wealth, and
strengthen a misunderstanding. But
we can't let them.
It's not all that bad.
Cultural differences are not easy
to guage. Qf course, it depends on
how ·one looks at it.
stereotype of the typical American .
Then • of course, it becomes
necessary to erase the stereotypes •
that Americans have of Europe and
it's people. All Parisians are not
nasty and the British don't sip tea
all day.
• ultimate satisfaction?.
a different way. World view. What'
·What is it like being an
~
The· .Seine> flows ~carelessly
:is itF-Living in and. traveling • "American" -
a "Yank" or
So what _can we do? Interaction
. t>eneath the numerous bridges,
_.'through Europe, I experienced _a_ "bloody colonial?" When one lives with the Europeans was the best
Awareness is the key. We can
learn a lot from the peoples of the
• world. What they have to say.
What they have to offer. The big-
gest part of living in a foreign coun-
try is the people. You can reap the
treasures of their history and !earn
of their land, like you could never
do from a textbook.
.. Sacre Coeur glows from her.
unique insight into what America • in a foreign country, one has to try • solution. They'll never know us any
• hilltop, and seen from everywhere • is all ·about - and about what the
hard to understand the conscience better than after spending time with
• is the ominous steel structure, the , youth of America is all about; We
of its people.
• us. Understanding makes it better.
EiffeITower. Yet, these are only
,areacountrysoyoung-btitthere
OK.
So
it
sounds
like.
the • remarkable results of the .. are. some :cultures many times our
philosophy. It is.
fasciriating people who inhabit this
age that do not fully understand
city.
It
is the people themselves who·· who.we
ar~
or wh~t Yfe
ai:e: Peoples .
Europeans _have their complaints
made my. Parisian experience in-
• in __
develq~e~;nat1ons have,tro_uble about America. About how mariy
credible and unforgetable: •
.
understandmg whatAmenca 1s all
missiles we put in their yard. About


about~
the money we lavish in. About the
There exists an attitude of ap-
.
.. . .
. . • way we talk and the clothes we-
preciation which ·is evident in the
• The media have a lot to do with , wear. • Americans . can even be a
food, the wine/ the art,. and the·
it. The ·weekly happenings irt the •. form of entertainment: the hordes
awareness of the environment.
Carrington household gain a lot· of tourists that have'tlocked to the
Aftemooris

spent in a cafe seem
more attention than yours or mine. • Eiffel Tower,- the Colliseum and
The world seems a lot smaller
now. When one can go to Italy for
the day from Munich or take a day
trip to Paris from London, the
mesh of culture and understanding·
can be awesome.
_
There is so much toJearn from
traveling to another land. Of
course, you.feel free. To walk the
land of the Old World and greet
her people is an exciting experience.
The best part about it is erasing the
It's only narrow-minded and
harmful to be unaware of other
points of view. To open the doors
of understanding, experience is the
key.
Brian O'Keefe is a senior major-
ing in ·communication arts and
studied at Trinity and All Souls
College in Leeds, England.
almost a sacred ritual. Two or three;
"Dynasty''· and "Dallas" are the
Bucki_ngham
Palace the past year
hours are devotedto absorbing the
surroundings .and observing the .,_ ____________________________________________________
_
foot traffic. People do not hesitate
to
express their curiousity of
. others. A blatant stare is not to.be
considered rude, but merely an
• acknowledgement of your presence
Cqming home
i
.··arid a mental inquisition
as
to your
• by
Michael Regan ..
with students, faculty, staff and ad-
all we want, but in the end, we . from the everyday problems, no
purpose.

• .. . ,
.
·; The first weekend that I went
minisfiators that care about each
chose this school. Change can
matter how big, and take a look at
<, ..
Time was
a.
concept that .was
fiome>during myfreshman year
I
other.
I
would !have. gone to
sometimes be painful, but the
the Marist you chose. Michael
, ,regarded -with enjoyment rather .. no'ticed how different things were
ariother college if I hadn't gctten. changes here are positive. As the
Regan is a senior majoring in com-
: than haste'. People, for the .. ino.st
aro. uh_d_.Ym_
y .hou_
se.
My
parents
.
that feeling when 'I visited during
saying goes, "no pain, no gain."
munication arts and studied at Ox-
pilrt,
.'.did, ~ha~ -t.hey•:wei:e
· doing
• • ·•d. di · 1


1 h"d • m·
y
sen1·or year of high cchool It
I_f_
...
you have_ a chance, step· a_
way· ford Univers1·ty
last year
.i:._e·
.. ca·_·_~u·s·_e'.·tn'e"y,".'
__
w'.an'·_·'t_e···c1_
..
to·'-'_
o•·1·t.·.·Th
...
i·_s
__

.. ·seeme to sp ayaprev1ousy 1-,
••
.
• .•
..


u
.
u

deir sense of·wisdom
fo
the deci/' ·becomes very'easyto geMangled in
.------ll!-9-~---•----------1111--•
ti(
ex~mplified .. by,: the. paint#s;
sicins they made. Even niy_
younger the every day affairs that surround
-musicians,· and wr_.it_ers
th_
at:ar_
"e_·.
I
d.
l
• ht fall th
·broth~r and sister had: sudden y ·. us, an
soon
we ose s1g o
e
heaVIly
s·catterea ihroughoutParls.
''gr_
own up!'._.
·_in thos_.-e_
first two • good things, the things that made
There is an ,attatchment._between
h
• h fi
l
I'
weeks that
I
spent ,at' Marjst. I us come ere mt e 1rst p ace. ve
th_
eirpartici_ pation •_and
purp· ose.
·


d • ·1
f
• • • h

cotildn!tcunderstand whypr-even
no ice a oto posltlvec angesm
1 fotiIId. myself challenged fo
:ho\V these .clianges too~_J,)lace.
In ··the first few weeks, changes that I

·d ·
• · d a1·
the end_ th_
oligh,·. I_.
realized that I think make Marist a better place to
question my pre_ eternu_
ne__
v u_ es
1

h
l
Th
·r
1
d
·
•·
A Am •
· w_·
·_as
the o_
n_
e who h_ad
ch'anged. Go_- go. to sc oo . . ree o my
c
asses
an.. motivauons. . s .
encans,


M • E
d
·f ·
1
w.e
are. encouraged _to. be >high
ing away to. college ~ad given me are m
anst ast, an as aras
·

f
·a
n_ew_·p·
ercep_iion/'bf_.
thi_._ngs
_at_ can tell; it has changed quite a bit
•• achievers bythe pres_
sures rom our
·
h fi ·
h
all
society. Often, we are 50 involved
home; and suddenly everything smce
t
at trSt semester w en we
· •· ·
· ·
· h" • •al· h.
·
·
t_
ha_t_
I_ com_
plaine_d about while_
J

complained about having to cross
m. pursumg t
IS
go t atwe rare-
.
I .
h .
a
ly_ take the time to question.its
wasgrowing·updidn'tseemsobad;
route 9to get to
c
ass. T e rooms
weaning ..
:._....
. . .
_
. ·. .
Well, iri aMse~se,
nfow Ib;tp
c()ming _hblaavek.baallrdnewdfurfnituhre,
nt
ewf·
E
h
bal ·

• hom_e_
to_ an_
s_.t
a ter __
. emg_a.
wa_y
c o
s an .. a • res coa o
• uropeans . ave a,
ance
m
·
T. hf ll I · d
b ·
their knowledge of life. They, for -a year, ,?and truthfully· my
pamt. rut u
Y,
use to e_sort
• ·d
d. h
al·
perceptions of th_
e place_
tharl I_eft of embarressed to tell my friends
un e_rstan
__ t eir_
perso_n__
mterests_
h all
·r
1 ••
· -·~
• ... d
h

• f • h
as~a so_._ph_om_ore
h_
ave
__
. ch_
anged
..•. _I tat..
o ·my c asses were m :one
._
• a~
t_ e ..
· ••
1
..
ntere_
sts o • ot ers.
.
-
1
·
·
·
E
·
Ii

f

spent my junior year. studying at
bw dmg. The Garden Apartments


• . conomics,. art; po _tics, •• ashion
Ox_·
ford Unive_rs_ity
and now_ al_l cif • niay_not be done.yet, but when they
·• and religion are among num~rous
. subjects enter~_into cop.versations. the·. pro9lenis. _that -l ,complained are;·. the majority: of students that
Th • ,
·
d
eali

.•_abo_
ut as a so_
p.
hoinore do_
nit seem come here will live on, campus.
.. eu
s
was a broa er r . zat1on
.
_ rather than
·a
·concentrated one,
as terrible as
I
really believed they
Juniors and seniors for the most
which Ifound·at tim~ to be
anig-
were. Tm not trying to say that
pi,trt
had to find a place to stay off
riorant approach.·.
:::,:;/a-a-~:'--:.,
thos~_problems have gone away;
campus vvhen lwas a freshman. It
..
.
, .
. . . . . .

• actually·I think there have been a
gives the whole scJ100I more .of a
.
·, Upon returning te>Marist; I
ain
few more added on, but what I see · college atmosphere. The point is
;-. confronted with , the -; question·,· • at Manst now is what I saw when • that
as
Marlst College grows, so
..c
"Have you changed?" How could
I decided to come here four years grows the future or' the students
I have avoided change? 'A mind
ago. Mari~t is ,still a sinall school who study here. We can complain
• always expands. It is enriched by
e,cperience. Previ~us ideas ar never
deleted, yet - combined with ex-
posure
provide
a .
stronger
understanding of the self and the
world in which we exist. None of
us are stagnant in
tim~.
Michelle Irwin
is
a senior major-
ing in Fashion Design and studied
at &mod in Paris last year.
. ESSAYS NEEDED
The Oct. 3 ·_.
Viewpoint page will • be
dedicated to the subject of world peace.
Readers are .invited to
submit
essays
by Friday,
Sept. 27
Contributions , should · be · 500
words, typed doubled-spaced.
name, address. and phone #.
to 700
Include
Send
Essay to: Michael· Regan
C/0
The
Circle
Petitions For· The
Candidacy For The
Positions of
Class. of 1989
.
President
Vice President
Secretary
Treasurer
.
Judicial Board Member
are available in Rm. CC268
Student Government Office
beginning September 8
through Septer:nber 19
Campaigning September 20
Elections are Sept. 25
&
26
Get involved in
Student Government!












































































































































f''
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:.-:·:;<::;_··.·:·
by Kenneth F. Parker jr.

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their way,· refusing
to
take the

Thorogood. proved h{_can bridge
GEORGE
THOROGOOD

traditional paths in favor of a more·· that distance and'then some.


AND
THE

DELAWARE
•.
basic and direct approach t~
.the
Thorogood i~ oft~n,~riticiied by
DESTROYERS, SOUTHSIDE
.
music business .• That they have
.
blue. s
.•
arid.·· rockabilly

·P·.urists
JOHNNY AND
.THE
JUKES -
brnken through to large audiences

because
, ·
of

•.
his
•i
·outgoing,·
SEPT. 7 -'- MADISON SQUARE

is a
·credit
to their business ap-
·
GARDEN.
.

proach as.· well as their musical.

celebratory nature. Perhaps they
feel that all blues·musicians should


George Thorogood's emergence. e·xp·ertise

·
·


· sit on a stool in the middle of.
a '
as a major rock'n'roll. star is one
..
When Thorogood and company.

..
·
.
of the most- surprising-,and yet

performed at the Ulster Perform-
,
Sla_ge
and carry
.out
a 30 mi_nute

m.ost predictable success stories
·or
ing
.
Arts . Center (UP AC) in guitar _sol_o. What many
.
fai~ to·
the:. the
1980s; Ever since Kingston, N.Y., last Dec.
1,
those . recogmze is that Thorogood bnn~s
Th O Ood's fi st lb
a d fi

t •.•
·11
d
·1
sed one of the·. youthful energy and zesttq rock s •
.
.
or g
u
a um n
..
1rs ma en ence w1 nes
,
basic forms. Rather than ripping
touring in 1977, he arid his band,
last ~m~ll hall app~aran_ces the off his influences; he pays creditto •
the Destrovers, have done things ~and 1s lik~ly t<;>
make m q~nte some
.
them. Although he did not this par~•.
Continued from page
7
,
Butthere are two questions' you
.•
shouldn't ask Colleary, Thefirst-is:-
''how'd you doin. the golftourna>
ment for Marist sports people?" I
think he got kicked off the course

armind the third hole. The second:
"when do hot dogs go on sale
for.
two for a dollar?"·He just doesn't
know ... yet.


With time, Colleary will grow in-
,,
to the position; iron out any
wrinkles, accomplish all that needs
to be done; and hopefully be able
to answer all questions: I'm
sincerely wishing him the best of
luck with his new job here at
Marist.

time. Whll~ his cult
_audience
has
:
ticular evening,-Thorogood often
been gro'Ymg. stead.1ly
• exposure brings
.
on stag·
e with
.
him such
such as his unannounced perfor-..
.
• l
· •
·d
··a···
·
mance at Philadelphia;s Live Aid

m_asters as
.Bo
Did~ ey an
,
-~'.
:
concert and a handful of well done Kmg. Also, by covermg tun~ ~t-
videos has put Thorogood over the . ten by Chuck Berry, Carl Perkms.
top and into such venues as· , ~nd others, h~ pt1ts royalty checks
Madison Square Garden.

mto ·, the madboxes,

?f some .of
T.h
1
a r om a small
to
alarge
rocks best. early p1oneers-,-the
.
e e P r.
.
.
.
. .
same ones
,that
are too often
venue seems to have its benefits f~r forgotten by the music 'industry.
everyon
7
but the fan. The band s
.
Thorogood brings basic rock'n'roll
manag~ment can fill more-se~ts,
.
back to a young audience.

the artist can play to more,people
<
.
•: .
,,
..
.
..
_.
...
.
.
.··
.....
- jn_fewer number of daysand:ob-
..
~-Southside Johnny and the ~ukes
viously more money is to be had by opened the conceit and. wen(over:·
alL To the performer it represents very well which isn't· surprising
the near impossible
;challenge
of considering they have le>ng
be~n.a

performing before throngs ofpeo-
favorite in··
.the.
New
..
York-New
pie, some of whom can be.up,to·a Jersey area>Eyer since the band

full b!sketball
.
courfs distance first landed

recording coritraci,
away without losing the intimacy of thanks to help from Bruce Springs-
a small concert hall. This night, teen and
·steve
Van Zandt,
• Southside Johnny and the Jukes
S
t
·
have produced tight, danceable··
po
f
S
.
_________
._c_o_n_t.in_u_ed_fr_o_m_p_ag_e_
7
_
records highlighted
.by
Southside ·
·
Johnny Lyon's bluesy tenor. Un-
over DiPetro and Leslie Perritti in
min~tes, 22 ~econds o\ier the five fortunately, they. have not been
first doubles;

mile course, For the women, Helen able to expand beyond a cult ati-
..

The Red Foxes will
/play
home
Gardner. finished 16th in 20 dience the way Thorogood and the
tomorrow at 3:30 p.m.,· against

minutes, 22

seconds
.
in a
.
five Destroyers have. Still, Lyon always
Bard College.
' :

kilometer run.
'
-
.
'
.
C.
'
'
acts
as
ifhe has just hitlhe stage
',The.
cross
·country.
teams• rim· for the first time· displaying the


.
toniorrow. agains! Alfred. College
.,c
same
...
youthfuF
..
~ne.rgy·
.
thaJ,
.
.
and . : Rochester
·:o
:at
Rochester. -; ,Thorogood does.·,..
.
..·:



Cross cou.nfry.
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Cariyou
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.· affordtogan:mle.;;:;.:
.-
withthelSAT;. GMA1;::.
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\.
Probably not. Great grades
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may
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be
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Score~playapartAnd:.:,
..
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that'!}howStanleyH.~pla[l,;_;
.;:

~an help. • ·,_
.: •. •.·
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. •.
Th~ Kaplan cour~ teach~~,
_
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t~st~ta~ing tec~niques: r~viey.rs
,,.,

course
subjects,
and
increases
:
• •
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the odds that you'll do the best
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you can do.

,:
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~.

So if you"ve bee1,1
oulof

school for a while· and need a
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Take Kaplan. w_hy take
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career? -
·


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~-
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The
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ENROLLING
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For information on

local schedules call
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For more information
'' contact
Captain _Lufthan,
Marist College
914-471-3240 ext. 528
..
,
.
















































l
: .• _.i

~
::::.::::.:::::.:::::::.:::::::::::::::------------
September 19, 1985 - THE CIRCLE - Page 7 --
Qp~ep:--~4-'HQUrS

::473~1$r6.
7ftforsciay:·Mornfttg
Quartetba'ck ·


, __
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r~ady
to dig in
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&
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SeafbOd·.:_~.
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WASHINGTON•·_STREET-
POU,GH.KEEPSIE,
NEW YORK
..
.
.
-
.


.
.
•'
(Next
·to AU Sport.
:A
sho_rt
walk
·.from
Marist)i:
. by Brian O~Con~or
Basketball ' team into Madision
: . Taking a new 'job can have_ its
Square· Garden to play. NCAA
<
problems and rewards: If you step
Division I semi-finalist St. John's,
• into the.wrong job at a bad time . to ~step up the team's exposure.
you'll probably have your share of
After two weeks of Colleary being
. problems. But if you take the right
at the post, Marist was on St.
.. job at 'the right time -
look out.
John's schedule -
at Madison
• The office of athletic director has
Square Garden.
. a new nameplate tacked to the
Now d_on't get the idea that Col-
door. It-reads Brian Colleary,...:.. leary has become Furjanic's slave,
and Colleary look out. .

doing everything to make the
Tryi!lg to put into words what. basketball team look good. Col-
makes a person right for the posi- . leary is in charge of all the sports
tion is difficult. But after only_
three
at Marist.
months of ho,lding the position,
He's been to all the fall sports
Colleary can let the facts.speak in-
scrimages. He's watching and get-
stead ofm~. Actually, I'll let Men's. ting a feel for the new position.
. Basketball • Coach Matt Furjanic
He has experience .;_ he was
say it, because he summed ifup the
holding the position of associate
best. Furjanic said he spent four
director of athletics at Iona Col-
months trying to get· the Men's
lege. Try to forget they're a big
1--JAIRCUTTI;RS
. $2.00 Off
With Marist I.D.
Every
Monday·

:and
Tuesday
Serving
Marist •
Since
1975
· ( .• Tt-11: CUTTI:~-,,
)
Come visit
. The Cutlery,
where we've been
. setting hair :cutting
: .....
//
trends for over
· tenyears.
\
\
- ✓:'
/
For men, women •
The Cutlery
and children, it's
is located at
"The Cutlery for
3 Liberty Street
the very best in
in Poughkeepsie.
' professional
Stop by or
hair styling, shampoo,
call us at
conditioning, perms,
914-454-9239.
body waves, cellophane
. colorin?.s, and more.
-
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.
.
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.\
.
;
.
;
.
rival. Colleary will have to shift his
school loyality 180 degrees, that's
all.
Colleary has plans and ideas for
sports at Marist. There's talk -
let's call it extremely-early, pre-
plannirig talk - about new fields,
a new look for tickets, and possi-
ble expansion of a certain athletic
• facility. If the basketball team sells
out all of their home games, Col-
teary did mention "expanding to
accomodate." Remember, it's all
talk.
,
There are plenty of Marist sports
questions -floating in the air on
campus. Most of them can be
answered in time by the athletic
department. So let's give them
time.

Continued on page 6
by Dan Pietrafesa
The hoop scoop of the week is
the shocking news that freshman
Reggie McNeil
of Baltimore will no
longer be attending Marist. In an
interview
done
with
the
Poughkeepsie Journal,
McNeil told
the Journal that he did not want to
play basketball anymore. McNeil
came to Marist from two time na-
tional champion
Dunbar High
School
where he averaged 10
points, five rebounds and three
assists a game as a starter his senior
. year ... Morning news man and
sports director for
WEOK/WPDH
radio stations in Poughkeepsie
Mike Breen
will join
Dean Darling
jn handling color analyst chores for
• Marist College athletics with the
Colony Sports Network.
The
24~year old New Rochelle, N.Y.,
-·. native Breen will work
on
15 events
including 12 men's basketball
games, one football game, one soc-
cer contest and an· event that has
yet been determined. Also, he is
working as a producer on the
weekend and as a sub during the
week for New York City's newest
sports-talk radio show on
WNBC
(660 AM), Sports Night with Jack
·'Spector.Previously,
Breen work-
.ed as an analyst for
WFUV FM
radio in covering Fordham Univer-
sity's basketball, football and
baseball games ... Former Circle
sports editor
John· Bakke
is now
working. with the
Poughkeepsie
Journal
as a sports writer ... Dr.
• Larry
Menapace
will be a volunteer
assistant coach of the men's basket-
ball team ... By the way, the men's
and women's basketball teams
begin practicing
on October
15 ... The 1985 Marist football team
contains_ 18 players· from_ Dutchess
County. These 18 pl;iyers include
the three
Keenan·
brothers
Chris,
Sean and Brian,
quarterback
Jim
Fedigan
and
Chris and Tony Run-
za.
In
Brief
Women's tennis
The Marist women's tennis team
lost to Fairfield University on
Saturday by the score of 7-2.
The only bright spots for Marist
in the Fairfield match were vic-
tories in singles action by Alison
Brock and in doubles by Joelle
Stephenson and Paula Stinson.
The women's tennis team blank-
ed the College of New Rochelle 9-0
and lost to Vassar College by the
same score in action last week.
Against
New
Rochelle,
sophomore Stephenson defeated
Susan DiPetro
64,
2-6, 7-5, in first
singles play. Stephenson teamed
with Stinson for a 4-6, 6-0, 6-3 win
Continued on page 6
(
.
























































































































































































'
......
•.•
~
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-...-page
B -
-THE.
C/RCLE
0
~·septembe,
..
19,· 19B5
•••
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.
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by~
Ple~esa
· j<:, ·
..
:<,,
'.'/.:,
i
.
.
were iilju~ed in the contest/I:-:<::·
~~·game.-':
'Both-'.
Jin{:Fedigan·:and
,
-M~itime
..
:at
-~Stitzel·
Field;""-in Maritime 11. Theextritpoint'miss,.

.-Aft~r
..
·shutting
··.out·xSUNY,>::,:Th_e)Foxes.
:wer~-scbeduled
:to'-.
Jonathon
·Cannon_
will·.:_6e··,a1ter~·
-
P.oughkeepsie/•
\
·;-'.·_-:,,;.
··.:.
___
,·:_::.

ed, atjd Marist led.13-0 going-into,>
.
M~tiJne·26-0._Satu~afnight~ the
''
;open
u1i~ai11si~he ~eacocok~ l~t
,
nat~.
as
tbey':were )n the
s~o~
• •
i'
/
'111~
t~
used a powerful
~~
}he lialf.J:

..
';·_
·:
_
'._
•· :
:\ .·,
)
Manst football_ ·team
:,heads
0
to_
,•year
butwereawar~ed-al-Oforfeit_
...
opener.
•ii•'.,
••
_,><:::'.,.::
.'.··:·;;>
mgattack(3Q0yards)outoftheeye
..
-.The.Foxes could have
_seen·
its.
Jerser,City; N.J,/t?~OlTO\~"~glii·,
_".ictoi;•:i
,:';;r;'.':·Y
~t·!;<a•:-;:
\;'?•::•
.•
-,-
:_':'B9tii(dJ<1.'~')'ine·jQb;••
·said
.
~~11ll~tiori,'as:!~ey'did
1as9:e~'in. Jead•.increase heavily in,ihe
·f~st
_to
play the_
Peacocks o(St; Peters;
.
:,-:.:
Manst He.~d foachMike Malet<: Malet~rNeitheforie is' ahead of the

>
ro,mp_1ng
~anti~e: 33-7
i

''•t
:<


half, but several fumbles and
t~o
;
•'.·.The
Pe~cocks \Vill'9pe~i~s198S_-,:_wasiqipr~~ecl)as~Friday_wi_th
the:··.other at:t'1is point:!~_;.,·.-:/:·':.~.-
_,::~\:MarisL~ew
th~: only_blo?d. it.
·_key,
penalties p_re'9'.ented
an·.early::·
season ;tomO!'fQ~; IJIB_ht_'1:tfter;·
a ·. _perform'8ce·.~rthe;I>eaco,cks 'in
;-, _Red
,Fox,
fans.~
~xp~cf;the
..
,neede.d•in.its
first_possession;:a 40

romp:
,
_ ...
, _ ·•
.-·-
.....
,
season
n1
w_hich its;footbaU.pro-
,
_theincrnnmage.agamst
Fairleigh
,
Foxes to· use.:a running: attack: to

Y!ll'd~
five play drive capped offby
.
·: ::
,. --<
• ·:
_,
• •
.
.
-
-
gram was ~cell~
a~~
.011e
i:im.e..
:.pic)cin~oii
lJru,versity~¥adis_ori
and • c~nti'ol •
.the·
Jei.ripo· of
:the_
game
::_

2_~-yard
toi.lch~o~n , pas~· to. Ed

.c-·,.:rhe
slopp)'. play ·ended
.~n
the se-~
,
St. Peter
~
w<1;5
de".astated m its·
•.
is rea,dyJor a ~~ugh c.ontest. «They
~~µse th_af s the.teain',s strength;•,
.Chnstensen:froID·
Jim. Fedigan •.
;.
,;
co11d
_hl!1f
asth~ F~x~. sco_red.two
••
.
·.
seas(?n opener lawy~

72~0
.
by
..
__
pl~ye_d
~ough,
.aggressive
football,''
.
_
according' to
.Malet.
\.:_
-,
>,:·,:
:,
~:
::,<•
:-:;:'.The
second touchdown was
,.a •
more times
.on
-
a._
rune:yard
.
pass•···
·•
!2atholic Uriiyt;t:5ity~·
~hich·r~iil(ed
~
'he·
sai~:y,
·:
:
-~-
<
'.. ·•
'
-
.
.' ·
;
_'
·
..
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·
0:
The
~oxes
opened
·up
their 20th·-_:_,
.five
r.ard run by ~ark Suraci' after
.
-~rom:C~non
to Howard H¢rod~
'.:.

m
th~ team's r~ster ~1~g cut d?wn
_
~
;

Tiu:_ 9uarterba~k- situation
:
will
=
season· of football Saturday, with
'.
-
'a
Br:i,an.
Ces~ i11ter.~eptiono
gave··_.
m t~e third- quarter ~d. a· Sura~
:,
to l9players after JSe1tllerq~~--<;>r
..
IJO~•·-~
c~clJlg~; foi;-toi.riorr~w!s
;~
.26~0:
shellackiiig3of.
sµ~y·.,
l\1an~t a-
,first:
d~wn
_on

the
,·run
1~
·the
fourth quarter;

.
-
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•..-

-
,
.·,
..
}Uarist:··11:b;oters_·_Jose·•-_
':'
TIJ~·~,~;~/t~~lii;J.~sfit~~~~e openerlast weekt~ Mo~mouth College.of
Ne;r
J~~y.
-The •
s~~~d._squ,~e~
~f.~
~ga~11~t
Ro~rt Morris. on Saturday."
.
.
• (photo by Michael_ Patulak) ·-•
··>~Qtt~i~~~(Wt1
f
i
-
takes~Jv:assar\
~_.
·I~t~l~~l~l~::~r
•.
,,-_:
,
The Matjst•-· C~llege
l
y91IeybaU

·-
.
!earn
,
def~~t¢f:)'assar.
:q<>llegf
in:;.
.
Its
'
-
~
first. ma'tch': of.the: season',
,,._

~-coming'off
)asi
season;s:
corifereiiJ
•'•
'
_·_;;t:::::._:::rr::':f
!~'\;.r}t·tttt[·{
-
}0-15; Mari st
came.back·
sfrong l:!S'
/
:they:·fook:
the:'next. three·'games,:
-
__
,
:
15-0
-
15~13
15~
a,,._.:,
:"i;.1>'

,.<
_'.
·
..
•.
·v;terans'Mari;·lk~h-atd,
..
Pat>:
ty Bilien ·and Maria Pordon.proc.·
--;_
duced excellent teaniworkin their
victory Friday
_night;·-

After coming
j,f(
their
:
~t
Co_ast Athletic

Conference first

pl.tc~ finish
-
last-· year,

the team_
hopes
to
have a winning
season
this·.
,
year.
:Coach
Vic Van Carpels has.
hi~ expectations for the squad this
-
season, hoping
to
take ~he title
again.

;:to
-MorlmOUth
~-·-·meet·
.
.
.
,
:
,,
.'
-:.:..
.-.
·,
•.
.
.
,_,:·:·,:'..
--~
•.

.
'..
-
•.

.
.
/'R:o:bert
.:Wfo:rris
..
-_-,·next·•.
·::=::·./·t:•/•:~./_'=-/.,.
..
··:_-
....
:··~,;:\<------·.:_
::_:·~ :
.. ··.:.
-_:.-
•..
_:.-~-:.·~·
-_.·
':~::.-··
-:._.-
-~-:
•.
_.,,.
·.•
..

by
Brian
O'Connor)\:-.-
•.
·_.-
•••
••
as they took Hartwick into over-
.
.
/the
Marist:soccede~m will irf--:· time buf f~H; 0-1.

-·-
.•
..
•.
_:_''
to better its record when they play • • Marist has been out-scored 11
~5.
·
·-;
at Robert Morris this Satu~day at
by its opponents so far this season.
.
l
:30 p;ni.
-
;
0~,:.
.
''.
_
i
.
;
,
,.
Goalie Bill Tholen has made 24
.
:,
'
·:
'·' '.•
·._
.
...
I
I


.
• .
.
.•·
..•

'<In action last week,the'Foxes fell'.: saves
'
and ~as a .686
,
save
>
1
-
tfrEasi Coast Athletic Con'ference. percen~age
m
fou.r mat_ches.
'
• ·-•
riva[Monrtiouth College.2:.0, The
•. ·_-.
Tije soccer team
hasi6
matches
•.
·
squad showed
a
,strong first half
remaining with the next four being

but was dominated byMonmouth
away; Nine of the scheduled games


in the second. Maiistis now 0-1 in
are
at
home.

I
the
·Ec:::Ac;
1-0 in the Tri-State.

!
Conference
and
1-3 overall.

Intramurals
:··. :·Th~:s'o~cer
squad pi~ked up its_

,
first victory of the seasonlast
week
.
by
Brian
O'Connor
;:·:with
a 4-1 defea!_ofTri-St~te C~:m-

The Mar_ist·
College Intramural
fe.rence::foe Farrfield Umvers~ty. Sports Program is starting its 1985'
.
,T_!!e
F,o~es
..
,s~ow~d
a .nevv
_
sp1,1rk,
••
season for co-ed bowling, flag foot-
,,.,
,wiih
-~o~s
Jron1
,fr~hnie!l
M~~
.
',baJ.l,
racquetball,·.-co:ed. soccer/
:;
~~\V:3f~S
-~n~
·r<,
11
~~ l{ainbar~t
,
three-on-three basketball and co-ed
1
: ,.
an_d
__
t~~
'.by
Junior
..
fovvard
..
Jim
..
volleyball.
,.
_
·.·'
_
1
':--·-
•:··,
\
:,'.·:~¥~K~~~,--~~l{_ennanowleads.~c: ;
The
-~earns
are,de~igned
fo
en~\-
f"
:-~~~r~tt:j1?J:-r::-rr
::t:.-.:
M~~~:~:~ii;~~~i:\
-
,,
,
/;-ye~t~r4ay
Ji.he
team
-.yafto play
--·
..
:to
_Bob
Lynch;/ the
.
intramural
:_
:,~

Hai:twicJ.c
College,\vhich'endedits
::·
director.

,__
_
_

.
.
'

• sea~~lD:
in the finar fouflast )'ear.
:
•.

Questions
can
be
answered at the
.
Manst proved. to be a wo_rthy_
op~
.
·,
Intramural Office at 471-3240 ex-
_
ponent in. their match last.seaso~', tension 329 from9 a.m.-to'9 p.m.
Monday, the volleyball team ,
headed to Russel Sage College in
Troy, to play a dual match with
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute,
and today they travel to West Point
to take on the lady Cadets. Their
.
first home match is against Siena
College and Ramapo in a dual
stand, on Thursday, Sept. 26 at 6
The voUeybaD team notched a victory in its
f"arst
outing of the season, besting cross-town rival, V~r
College.
p.m.--