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The Circle, November 7, 1985.xml

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 31 No. 7 - November 7, 1985

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i.lltCrnegoji~ti,OflS.
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Negoiiatingl'7amtfor the Marist

:'pl_ete
.sJand~tilL''
'.Jhe
:~diTlij,istra=:.
by Briail O;Keefe

;.
.
administration and:the S_ecrehfrial

tiori negotiating team incJicaied tq_
• -.
.
.
'_Clerical
AssQciat~<>n
hayc agreeclto
..
us that a media~or was tfi~ohtyway_
, ... ,c.::..._
.. ':
Most or the locks in the Campus
;
.•·call
iffa>federalmidiator:to_.tryto
>_
poferiti~L ·.movement,-: cou.ld
..
be~
Center·are.,currently peing·chang-.

.
.
.
set de salary n·egotiations for: SCA
:_;•n,iade,"
Galle~er said;::-·'.:'/:
\.
>:
ed in the wake of the theft last week' •
. :
member clerical· workers:
:
>:, .
,_
.. •;
0:The
administratioit)s final offer
of
a
safe'
from
the Office of
·col~
,
'.·.The
two. negotiating team·s and
,.
\\'as a (wo-year ton.tract in which
._,..,1.ioi,..1,1,...,
.... ....,....,._..

lcge -Activities.
.
__
.:
the·. mediator froin the
,
Federal.· there would be a 7 .5 percent in~
""".,..."""',,.
: ••
The safe contained keys to Cain-
•.•
:
• .•
Mediation arid Conciliatioii Service
.•
crease
·across
the· board the
·first
pus· ¢enter offices and.classrooms
--
••
·:
-~iri
Albany were due to have met year arid a
6
percent increase these~
and approximat~ly
$1
~000,
accor~
-

..
,;:/yesterday.
at· 1-p.m. for
-the.
first. cond year. with·an additional'pay
•·
ding to Betty.Yeaglin; directo_r
of·.·

time·.

·· .
.
...
.
•.
.,
•• •
increase
for
-•
certain

senior
college activities.

• •.
o-i'
The SCA, a bargaining unit for
·
employees, Burdis said.·
·•.
The
··Town
qf_Poughkeepsie·_:.-:-
Marist's clerical workers, has been
-
..
The increase for
·the
ffrst year~-
Police are continuing their in°

• ,
negotiating with the administration would be split.up to a 4 percent in- •
vestigation of sever'al leads. Police

:.for·
a· new
-
contract
.
since the.

crease retroactive to
·July
..
1

and

..
have not yet detennined. whether

previous one expired in the begin-

then
:an
additional 3.5 percent from..
students were involved, said Detec-
. -
ning ofJuly.



Jan
t:
to June 30, 1986.' The in-·
tive David Howard.
.
• .

••

::'
.
.The three-person administration
-
crease for the ~econd year would b_e
:
. '.The
stolen safe was located in the


Iiegotiating'team had delivered its
3
pei'~ent on JulyJ, with the second.
.-
'assistant diredor's office, which is
)
~
• •

'final
offer to the SCA negotiating
3
percent added ~n Jan;' l, 1987.
-
one of three-rooms in·the college
-n

-team
bee
29. ln response to that,
:.

Galleher.said thaqhefinal 9ffer.
activides_
office. Ii was replaced by
-n
...
:
the
.-SCA;
'negotiating
·_ieam
-
re~
.:
~as
-disappointing
-and
that
:she.
-
an
'plder.safeJate
l~st week, accor-.
)

'quested·
0
a
federal mediator-last·
'believesthecollege"i::ould
afford a·
ding toJ'eaglin.
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SCA-, still•
:wantecl.:
to: conunue

.

$~A members was
_9allecl
.iq
p.In.
,'.
''./':"\:t.he
end of the show
.wheiflhe
band:Glynnys;Kynys,demasked.'
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- .
,_,
'.·
;
;negqtiaiiqg
'.soleif
with··'.
the
•'.adi
_:
.JasL:
Wedites~ay_:
t~}:
aH_o.~Si~·e·:•
??t}\i~~~me.'nirif':oiiietibaii,f~~iioie;'~sfudenibalid:p_rQhiijiJed_~i~•\'
-
~_;iy:have_,~-a~;Pnm.s:al!.ov~r,J~;·~r".:
:-_:
. ..
.
' •••
:\
-
-· •
·ministration

Galleher said.

••
_
.
members·to voice their op1mons-to

• - <-:--frorii-playiog-oo
campus. The band·was escorted to an exit after
-
·.-.: .
-fice,,accqrdmg
Jo Hqwar~.
··: -·_,.
:::,

.
-
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•.
-~

The
·scA'
~egotiati_ng
u:am-later
; •
l.'.ontinued
-.~~.
next
p~ge}·.
.
:·;'.-:-"
piug~_.w.ere
·-p~J!~d
-~n·d
tem·~ers flared:::(Photo·
by Mike-_Patulakf

:~.-)}~f
migir1al
!life
wa,s discovered
. \_.;~
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::_.
__
/t'~\:Co?tmu_~~-~n~e,xtpage·
;;·byChri~liari
Larsen
ly roufpeople; he said.:.:
_
•••
,
'
•,



•• •

'

suggestfon:and. s~lf-relaxation.
·:-:'.;
''sock
_it:
to
me
Keri,'\and the
:


-




..
Acc'ording to the
_Gene
Fee, a
_Sleep.
••
_
.-

-.- •
'
(Sorr'y"folks;Ono_
mysticism or:
,
~
.-.
subsequent
kissing
:atia~ks
by;'
·:.f;Ni~e.'
Marist
.students
from·
·
resident-of' C-7; a meedng took
·_
·.
He: requests the.audience's.
..
guru worship here) ..
• • .'.'._ • : ••
hypnotized
'volunteers'
a·galnst.
'Townhouse
C-7
-
are currently
plac~
:bet\vee11
·some
of th~ C~7
.
silence before he faces the 24 of
.The.:
12 students had to sit

the poor people they
\Vere
sitting
;- ,_
awaiting- a_ final· decision from-
residents, Cox, Sanso la and Q_lher
:-
us°)m stage:
sleep.
We ar~.in~. •
straight up-with their feet firm-
next to in the•audience.

Gerard Cox, vice president of stu-
staff-members last Thursday;"
structed to block out allnoise
.·_'
·Jy
plaittedon-the gi-·ound;·
with
:-
./ In past sho~s,yc:>l~nteers
had•
dent_ affairs, on. possible eviction
:
. ·
''Our
-.-stories
.differed
heavily._
.•
<
except his
voice:sleek-.
:'~ :
C
>
palms. Jace up. iri
.
their. laps..

:
also been
'iii:
·search.
of lost • • because of alleged infractions, of_, with theirs ·•.-~said>.Fee.
"It
was

.
A
helium balloon is now at-
..
,.
Relaxatlon occui-n;d from the
-. ,
bellybuttif.ns< aild
<
making:
collegej>°C>Jicy,
.,.
=~-
.
'
_ ,
-
·
more like
·}-debate-than
anything
i
'tached
to oifr:left wrist/in fact,/'
,.
_
feet up;as'Weber
.counted
slow~
: '.
• :speeches
to<~on_vince:
th~,
au-
. ·
The:_stll_~en~s
~aid they. we~e. to else." Others at the meeting ~imld
_
'.our··
'entire
arm
-
is" a ·heii~m
:,

ly from one'to IQ, plantinghyp~
..
dience:totserid video.:gam~s·',fo/_
..,
have been informed oft~e de~ISIO0
•••
not be reached
for
comment._.:_
"balloon·
andjs rising in the;air:
.
·,
notic suggestions in
'ihe
stu_.
outer
fyf
ongolia.

..
. ••
__
,-'"
., .
• •
last' ~onday, but they are S!lll oc-
-
.
T_he
students had·earlier appeal:
. 'sleep,J)ur
rightann is ma.de of··
dent's heads. "You're becom-
·.-
.
In
-a
different- part_of the:·
cupymg the townhouse pendmg the
ed their
·eviction
to the college
•.
stone and is siiikirig to the floor:
/.
ing sorelaxed that your'.skin is.·
.
·;
.
show··weber demonstrated:his
O
finaLdedsjo11; Cox could not be
Judicial Board and
·to
Cox. Both
sleep; sleep,'s_leeep.<

-. :
..
·•·_·

's_aggirig
from your bories,'
1
.
he
.
ESP-;bitit:fb,yijr~fpic~i~fou(
.
rea~~ed
__
for-~omment on why the
appeals were originally denied.
~
0
_
So
·there·we·were
before an
said: Lovely· thought isn't it?
_"'a
word
"from·.·one
of
·three
_
dec1S1on
has not been made.
_
Residents of the townhouse said
audience of approximately· 3()()
.

After the students were hyp-
• ..
Agatha £hristie .books that
:a
Vi_ol~tions
of coll_ege
policy were~
_
lasi week that they were refutil}g
.
_-
students looking like lopsided·:
notized (you could tell.because
studeni"chose~··•~::::··:._":,;,i··:(:-./. citeq:\11 co11necti?n with a party
·soine
~fthe alleged infractions ..•
Frankensteins in mid-walk from
•. they were all slouching), they
·: Next'-
a
student from the ·au~:
thattookpla~e Oct. 5 at C-7. Four

Sanso la however said that the
the waist up •• : ••
: ;
•.
.'".'C:


were .•. asked ·to. imagine
dience;Joe, com~ up'anci picks'
. infractions were alleged: failur~ to
college·wa:~
not looki~g at the allege •
.
Ken Weber, a certified hyp-
-
.
themselves at a horse race; at a
a number oin
_o(a
bag of'IOQ:
regist~( the p~~ty_-with housing;
ed infractions ind!vidually. "One
.
notist and the man responsible
funny movie and an ice cream_
,
different numbers. Weber who
. •
chargmg adm1ss1on
at the door; the
.
infraction leads to another and the
for our ridiculous positions;us:
licking contest. Imagine
·how·
is not-lo-oking;·tells Joe t6·pick
·.preseit~~'_of
a min?r at the !?arty; whole thing builds,''.
_he
said ..
ed this method to choose 12
.
.:
••
their reactions ·must have look
0

one of the novels arid read the
and the mapprppnate behavior of
.
The C-7 residents have also
fin.al subjects from. the Marist
.
ed! What self-respecting Marist
top
line oflhe pagcfnumber that
a studenttowards housing officials
claimed that.they \Vere denied "due
College student audience on
student would actually take part
matches

the number in.- his

,
out~ide
.
the

front door of the
process" in their appeaL The col-
Tuesday, Oct.
·29
at· 8 p.m.

'in such an affair?

pocket. After instructing Joe to
townhou~e.


-
.
.
.
lege's student"handbook states that

His show comprises memory
.
-
Here's a clue: T_h~_~ame
kind
think oflhe longest word in the

According
.to
Housing Di17ctor students must be informed of viola-
power, ESP an~ .the hypno~ism
that think they

a.re' Bruce
top line, Weber. guesses a. few
Steve Sansola, the student~ will_
be
tions within 24 hours_after the _in-
••
of 12 student voluteers from the

Springsteen· (he sang "Glory
letters and then.-the entire word:
placed in alternate campus housm_g cident. The residents said that
••
audience:
-

·-
Days" and "Barri in
:
the
"opportunity."
·_
in the Canterbury Apartme~ts if
although the party was on a Satur-
\Veber, who is certified by the-
U~A'..'), or martia,ns explaining
Weber also demonstrated his
evicted. They will also be spilt up
day, they were not informed of the
.
UCLA School of Medicine as a
.the
reproductive system. with
memory powers, with the_ au-
• because each apartment houses on-

alleged infractions until Tuesday.
clinical hypnotherapist,
has
three sexes. We are also.talking
.
dience's help,"
,- .

been to Marist seven times, and
about people who would swear
With the numbers one
'to
20
has hypnotized ove~ 500 college
on a stack of Bibles that their
already
_
written
·
on
.
a
audiences across the country.·
names were Shredded Wheat
chalkboard, Weber got a stu-.,
.
After Weber gave.his creden~
(a.k.a. "Wheatie") and Pop
dent volunteer, Carol, to write
tials to the audience, he em-
Tarts. I wonder what navor it
·
·
.
Continued on next page
phasized that
·hypnotism
was
was'?

M-urray press
_confere:qce


page.5
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--•PB;fJ~:2
-
..
THE Clll,~LE -
Novembe/7~.
1985
Sec·retaries·: -.;,:::·
..
'
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• 1MPORT
ANf
f.~''
, ••
-
Continued from page I
the elected ·five members of their
negotiating· team, Galleher said.
The SCA has 60 full-time members
and 20 part-time ones.
The secretaries are requesting a
one-year·contract·with a
9
percent
increase in s·ataries across the board
and a longevity clause, which
would provide extra compensation
for senior employees.
.
.
"We don't want a two-year con~
tract because next year we would
not be able to try for all the things

we have already
dropped

in
negotiations. We would be locked
in for two years,'" she said.
Speaking for the administration
negotiating team, Burdis said that
on a yearly negotiating basis, next
year's negotiations would have· to

begin in March and that a two-year

contract would be more practical.
"It~
is a complete draining of
resources and time and negotia-
tions are taking so much time at
.this
point,"· she said.

Safe __
_
Continuelf rom page I
~issing al 8:20 a.m. Oct: 28 by
Marion Terralavora, the secretary
for the. college activities office.
Security was called about 9:15 a.m.
after· Yeaglin arrived.

The office had been locked up at
12:40 that
,morning
and the safe
was seen in the office at that time,
according to the security report.
Howard said the theft definitely
took place after the office had been
dosecl for the night.
No intruders were reported seen·
in the building,during that nigh!,.
according to the security
:report.
:.·.
The beige safe measures two
.
cubic feet arid weighs more. than

300 pounds.: "it took about five
·peopl~:
to
M.qu~
t~,e ,office.:T'1:Y
must havewheeled 1t out,'' Yeaglm
·-:
···--,S~~~i:·Z~,~~demp·~~~~i:1~:::
~tore college acuv1t1es-money. and

usually inch.ides cash-from
·the
can-
dy counter and.game room· and coi-
.
_
lected money.from club events;ac-

cording to Yeaglin.


..
• ..




If anyort·e has any information
·
about the case, Howard can be
contacted at 485-3670. All informa-
tion will be kept confi°dential.
Weber __
_
Continued from page 1
words or phrases that the au-
dience

chose· next to every
number.
,


.
As
an
example, _pne person in
·
the: audience
wrote
,_-
"18
Freshman Burgers" and Weber
s4bsequently asked the most'.·
logical question:_ "Does that
come with anything
011
it?"
.
First, the audience gave
Weber
IO
of the numbers and he
gave the inatchiQg object." Then
, •


the audience gave Weber theob~

ject and he gave them the mat-.

ching number
.
before Carol
•.
·
..
could point to it,_ and finally
~Veber. recited the entire·
:list
·
backwards, without looking at
the board and telling every joke
.

he made in between.
,

At the talk_ Weber gave after
the show, he said thatthe most
.
.
difficult part of memory
·,vas
not remembering and joking.at·
the same time, but to.forget the
numbers and phrases from
previous shows.-


Weber summed up rhe enrire
experience in one phrase: "\Ve
don't know what the next se-
cond will bring - that's the.fun
of it."


Vetera
Day
.•.·.
.

..
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
;
.
.
.
:
.
.
.
.

~.
~
':::.·
Wil'.lter weather'l)Srki:riQ

:·-:·.•:
..
..
_.,.
..
,
.
..
NO PARKING ALLOWED IN TH~ FO~LC')WING
LO.TS·
MIDNIGHT
-TO
7:00 A.M·.
-
N_OVEMBE~ 1,
-1985
TO MARCH 31,
.19·s·s.
a) Ben~oit
-
-in
the.~fi_rst
.thr,.e
rows on th~·South'.
Sicle·.'-:
b)
CJ,a·mpagnat:~·:or.,::·the
:s_outh/East
Side.
c) Donnelly - Airof-[)onnelly.
-
d) McCann - All-of Mccann.
e)
:Sheaha·n
---~---
All of
'Sheahan.
/
..
tlO
- -
.
...,.,_
.

._
.
.
.
-
·
PLEASE REFER TO
.
MAPS
-
Any-Cars not displaying
:_a
Marist College Bumper Sticker or
:
Guest Pass will be towed out.

y
~ur· car· wiU be
:towed
at· owners expense.
:'
-~-
-~
......
'·~


71:~~~i)'~f
;,i'/Xf
'.
\:;C~sr:
.•• ·•··.·•····
• ..
.
.
.
-:::',;:.:••''->:$4;'.5.-·
-·:_Tow_
Charge,-·
Plus
-Tax

_plus

$10 per day storage

.and
$2s· ticket
THANK
..
YOU· FOR YOUR COOPERATION.,
.
;-_
-·.··.
-
'·:
.

'
..
.,

.
.-
•:
._,
.;:
·- ..
:
"$:'

_.;;
--~-
.....
:::.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:

·_·-_·:_
MARIST.SECURITY; DONNELLY·:201_,
TEL~ EX. 282
.
.
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..

•.
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November 7, 1985 - THE CIRCLE - Page 3--
M
Urf
ay
fields· QuestiOns
at
pre~s conference
by Denise Wilsey
;'. Although space on the first floor
of the Campus Center will be used
f9r a faculty dining room, students
will benefit from the current
renovation and reassignment of
campus offices, Marist College
President Dennis Murray said at a
press conference with student jour-
nalists last week.
.i'
Murray said that by moving the
chaplain's home from the ·Byrne
• Residence to the Kirk House, more
space was opened up for student
·services. _Health Services and the·
Counseling Center - now located
in the Campus Center - will soon
be housed with Campus Ministry in
Byrne, located behind Champagnat
Hall; to form the Personal
Development Center.
. "I recognize that student space .
is a big coricern and that not
everyone is in agreement with the •
decision, but we can't just.look ·at
• the one•area. This is in the best in- ·
terest of the whole campus," Mur- •
ray said quring the press con-
ference, at which· he answered
qu~stions on a range of topics, in-
cluding the future of the library,
the Lowell Thomas Communica-
tions Center and expansion ·or the
college.


Murray also pointed out that
when the faculty dining room is
completed, the students will· have
_the private dining room in the ,
cafeteria to use for meetings or
other club activities.
"Actually, the students are get-
ting more and riot less space with
the development ceriter. The move
was to their benefit," he said. The
·
North
end-_._
·
/land named
after trustee
by Brian O'Keefe
: The Board of ·Trustees voted
unanimously last Saturday_ to
honor John J. Gartland Jr., an ac-
- tive member of the Board of
Trustees for the last sixteen years,
by naming 20 acres of land north
of th"e townhouses Gartland Com-
mons, according to Emily Burdis,
director of public information;
.
.

.•
/
The land houses the new garden
apartments and .athletic fields. A
patio and smaU grey ·stone wall with
a
commemoration. plaque will ·be
fonstructed on the bluff.·The pla-
que, overlooking . the river; will
honor Gartland an:d •• his . ;ife
Catherine, according to an advanc-
ed committee report.
Gartland was chairperson of the
Board of Trustees. from 1972 • to
1974. He has been chairperson of
the Building and Groun& Commit-
tee since 1979. "Mr. Gartland has
been very generous to Mari st," said
Burdis, "Hlj has donated money to
every major building project in the
past dec~de."
Gartland is president of the
McCann Foundation and .is an at-
torney at the law fir:m Corbally,
Gartland
and Rappleyea
in
Poughkeepsie, according to Burdis:
He was directly involved with many
gifts to' the college, she said.
A date, for_ the dedication
ceremony has not been seL
The apartments have not
.
been
re-named formally, accordirig'to}
Burdis. ''The area of land is beirig>
named/!
The new apartment complex,
which . houses over 3Q0 up-
perclassmen,'was not completed at
the beginning of the semester. _The
last of the residents to move in were
12 students from apartments F-5
and F-8 on October 11, according
to Steve Sansola, director of •
_ housing;
faculty dining room will be located
where the Counseling Center , is
now.·
Turning to other subjects, Mur-
ray said that plans to upgrade the
Maris! College Library are continu-
ing. This year $300,000 has been
allocated for acquisitions, accor-
ding to Murray, who said that
whe_n he came to.,!he college six
years ago, the allocations budget
was $5,000.
Also, the school is in the process
of obtaining a new director of the
library, who Murray said should
work to improve communication
between the library and faculty and
students.
Murr.ay noted
.
that when the
Lowell Thomas Communication
Center is complete, the Beirne
Media.
c;=enter and faculty offices
Fall fun
for communication arts will be
moved there, opening up_ space in
the library and Fontaine for more
book storage or study space.
In longer-range planning, Mur-
ray said, the college is looking in-
to the possibility of building a
• separate library facility, but no
decision has been made.
"I'm
not satisfied with the
library facilities," Murray said .
"We have· a lot of work to do in
that area. As a young and develop-
ing institution, we .did not devote
a great deal of attention to the
library in the past. But we arc stu-
dying the area and the need for
space much more closely now.''
When asked whether there were
other specific plans to continue to
expand the campus, Murray replied
that a decision would have to be
made about whether to continue to
rent space at Marist East or to build
a new major classroom/faculty
center.
Murray also emphasized the con-
trolled growth of the. campus. In
the five-year plan for the college,
there is a 3,000-student enrollment
cap on full-time students, and Mur-
ray said he expected minimal
growth in the next three to four
. years .
"Our policy has always been to
maintain a small college with all the
aspects of a larger college. That has
been our uniqueness, our distinc-
tion," he said.
-
• Murray stressed that academic
quality will continue to be a fop
priority for the college. "The con-
cept of quality is key in indicating
our degree of success," Murray
said.
Students Chris Douglas and Allison Hughes enjoy the end
of unseasonably warm Fall weather in front of Champagnat _
Hall.
(photo_ by Mark Marano)
A.>)o'urney· back to kindergarten and youth
by Anthony D_
eB_arros

of the things they need for the next twelve
the Iriagic word -
"Frankenstein." The
things to challenge the others!'
years of their education· are happening.
children learn numbers, counting and days
. Besides what they learn in the classroom,
At 9 a.m., the first yellow school bus We're setting foundations,'' she said.
of the week by i;oncentrating on a large
the children also take art class and go to the
creaks into the cul-de-sac of Hyde Park's
¥
orange calendar.
library. Here much of what they learn is
Netherwood Elementary School, with wipers
McDill says that the first day of school in
"I like to get them established in a
reinforced.

September is probably the biggest hurdle to
routine," said Peeling. "How we sit, how
The excitement mounts as the children
flick_
ing· drops of rain from i_ts windshield.
• • f
1
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· , · •
h.
Th
bl
get over, and although it can be exc1tmg or
we do things. It gives them a feeling of
rea 1ze 1t s ttme to go ome.
ey ;,cram e
B~t the ov~rcast sky does little to dampen.. the children, they fi_rst must learn the rules
security:•~ •
about, putting their chairs up on the tables,
the enthusiasm of the kindergarten students . of good behavior.
. The type of learning that goes on in
getting their coats, having their shoes tied by
running - instead of walking - down the
"They don't know anything the first day,''
Rooms·! and 2 can seem like the most basic
a friendly reporter and getting in line for the
corridor to Room I. Eil~ne Peel!ng watc~es._:. -said McDill. "They pick up so much in so
things in the world for someone of college
trip back to the waiting t:>uses.
them pour in and guides the~r mommg__ short a time, but y~m alwa~s hav~ to k
7
ep
age, but forchildren, they are brand new
Peeling feels it is time to commend the
routine.
. -
:
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,them on target. Praise them 1f they re dom_g •·"concepts; The alphabet,. numbers, shape
day's exceptional.student. "There's someone
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really like how Patnck put all his thmgs ·.·.something good, and discipline them- 1f_

identification, color identification, basic
here-who usually has a hard time being quiet
away and is all ready to go,'' she says. The· they're not."
·material manipulation and.patterns are some ·in class,'' she says to the group, ·"but I want
late-comers scramble_ to follow suit.
_. Peeling, in her second year ·as
a
of the new ideas the children are taught.
you to !<now that Tony has been especially
., By 12:40 p.m., the sun is shining while -:_,kindergarten teacher, agrees that reinforcing
super today." She hands the boy a small
·Betty McDill similarly directs the action as , good behavior eases jitters and ·speeds
• So~eri~es ii proves to be too much. While
piece of blue construction paper with the
her afternoon kindergarten session gathers
.
learning.

struggling with a particularly difficult pro-
word "wow" on it. He wears an ear-to-ear
in Room 2.

• ' "A lot of them come in hesitant and
blem, the babble of voices reaches a crescen-
grin.
-: Today's Jetter is "H,'' McDill says; as she. -scared, so they need that positive reinforce-
do. ''Boys and girls - boys and girls - stop.
The children head down the hallway and
; arranges games, l~ons and books. Her_, I!lent,'' s~id Peeling. "Just getting them to • What does 'stop' mean, boys-and girls?"
the classroom is quiet once again. Peeling
students place toy houses, horses anq :-,. sit straight at the table and eat can be a ma-
asks Peeling,
looks around at the room, which according
helicopters on a shelf -
part of. -their •. jor probl~m, so they have to feel like they're •
Besides loud talking; the bane of every
to her, was hurriedly assembled two years
homework assignment.
·
.

: growing inside."

teacher since· Aristotle, McDill and Peeling• ago. "It's makeshift, but the kids don't
_ "I don't waste a minute,'' says McDill, a· •.·. Peeling points to'one green-gray wall with
are also faced.with a problem of a different
knor 01at. They just know someone is here
·1&-year kindergarten:teacher. "I like to do '·a mo_ntage of student names. Along with
sort.
'
who cares," she says.
everything in a multi-sensory way, and every
each child's nan:ie is one positive attribute,
"The. kids have an incredible range of
Mc Dill smiles as she watches her young
second has to be planned."
such as "pays attention;" or "has a cute
backgrounds,'' explained.McDill. "They go
pupils climb on the yellow buses. "They're
~
In the educationaLprocess, kindergarten
dimple."
• . •
•• • . from the 3-year-old level to the 6-year-old
so free and natural,'' she says.
"I.
like
is where it all begins. So it is no wonder that
"That's the first thing '!'e worked on," she
level. Some have two years of nursery school,
teaching, but the more I teach, the harder
both Peeling and McDill think getting a good
said. "It's _our 'I'm special! board. It ma~es
and for others this is their first school
it gets. It takes a lot of patience and energy,
start . in kindergarten is important for
them .~eahze they each have somethmg
'experience,"
and I put in a lot of hours that nobody
youngsters. It is also no surpnse that both
good.
>
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Peeling agrees there is a large difference.
knows about."
teachers strive to establish good habits by
Peel.mg begms her mommg . rout me by
"Their attention span and what they can
The buses round the final curve and disap-
thorough planning and rewarding jobs well
gathenng her 23 student~ on a large, scuff-
handle is quite different with each child,"
pear dqwn Nether-wood Road. Mc Dill turns
done.
. _
ed orange rug. She then picks two helpers for
she said. "When we do something like
and says: "I've always known I wanted to
:- "Responsibility and good work habits
the day.
.
language I start out with something easy for
be a teacher of small children. I'm obvious-
start here" McDill said. "This is where all_
She next takes attendance, and gives out
all of t~~m, and t~en I move on to harder
ly not in it for the money'."
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As the Alcohol Policy committee is in the process of creating a new
Marist .College Alcohol policy, students should remember that the
school must act within the parameters of state law. V\lhile policy cari. •.
be compromised, the law can·not. And the law; well ... -· .. :: :, • : ,.
Raising the drinking age alone will not solve all problems of alcohol,
abuse. It may just be complicating the situation. When working to ad-
dress one set of problems, a change in rules may irievitably create
another set of problems.

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• · •. •
. According to a recently published article in the Chronicle of Higher
Education, the push for a national drinking age of 21 has come in •
response to research, most no_tably, research at the Unil(ersity of
Michigan, where it was shown that. increasing the drinking age. can
reduce alcohol-related traffic deaths by as 111uch
as 31. percent. The .
movement has acceh,~rated in recent years due to the efforts of such
grassroots organizations as Mottiers Against Dr_unk Driving.
.
The article also points out some conflicting statistics. Montana and
Massachusetts showed an increase in the number of young drivers
• killed after they increased the drinking age, according to Dennis C.
Roberts, assistant dean of student life and director of residence life _
at Southern Methodist University. -
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As the drinking age increases lives will be saved but '"underground"
drinking is likely to take off. It will be difficult for colleges to provide
controlled settings such as a college pub. Few students are actually
legal to drink and new and efficient identification systems would'have
to be instituted.

.
Heavy consuming will then take place in private settings with clusters
of "underground"
partiers going off campus-often
in cars. With
alcohol being illegal under 21, officials say many students drinking
illegally with alcohol-related injuries may be more reluctant to use col-
lege health facilities, and those with severe drinking problE:_ms
will be
less likely to seek counseling.
Like all other schools in New York, Marist will soon find itself under
the new state drinking law. In the last two years, 18 states have rais-_
ed the minimum drinking age to 21. Legislation requires states to adopt
a drinking age of 21 by Oct. 1, 1986, or could lose millions in federal
highway funds... .

.
_
With aspects of both arguments to consider, many students have
two similar reactions to the upcoming increase. They are defensive
about losing their right to drink and frustrated about what the implica-
tions of the change will mean in their social lives -
adjustments.
While the administration can control policy they have little or no con-
trol over the student adjustments. Nor should th~y.
·
Rather than trying to help students understand and adjust to this
change, the Administration must first look to the law and its liabilities
as top priority,ln dealing with this issue, the administration must be
the parent anc notJhe friend.
.. Rules .must be· documented and standards set.
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The Real
World
Lower: the.
drinking
gge<
•.
• '.):
'r
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To date, th'e Alcohol PoHcy Committee that comprises the college
by Carl MacGowan
_ _
: becomes adult and, happily·,; - was. a st1rrmg occasion, as the
administration·imd student leaders, was formed in late October to deal
.
.
••
-:-..,
,. Hollywood has provided us with
underclass
of Maristsociety was led
with
.the -heed
for policy::charige .• The administration. has attempted
As every Marist student realizes, :•. one;. · ... _.

•'

to its prnvider'_s
to l:>ow, kneel and
-to be fair and open with the student body by allowing studentrepresen: . the campus is ·s_ch!!d~led
:.to , die;{ • • 1 ask you: • When was the first
genuflect _; however drunkenly --'-
tat)ves to b~ on th1f committee'. Committee members have dr\:i.fted_~l')9
.,
preci~eiy~(hree'_weeks
-ri:om)oc:lay,,. •. time .you paid ·adult' prices at .the . in .•:than ks
?'
for ·,their:, ·day's
·•:· suom,ttea;,a propo~aL : . ·::~~---
. :· • ,,. . • •
• '· '. . •
.
,, ·• ... wh'en. -Thanksgiv~ng vacation .. _ !JlOVies?
Eighteen? No. Probably
nourishment: ;
-
.';c •
.. .
In adopting the policy; the_administratron should take a hard!rn~ ap~ ... begins:,When the holiday weekend 12 or ,13. You pay adult prices at
<· • •
·proach in realizing its liabilities. Students in turn, sh_ould realize that , is over, . New . York state's. new
12, and can'tsee adultrriovies un°
Rh;er Day
_has
traditionally been
.a
changein the alcohol policy ne~d not warrant a changein their total_ • ::drinkin°gage of,2li~ set to take ef-
ti! 18 (o·r whenever Dad buys a,
a inodicum· of community'- har-
• college experience..
•..
·:
•-
f~ct. To hon,or
1
the·occasion,
Marist .. VCR). Thus, 12,
r
submit, is the • moriy;
a
civic-minde_µ
enactment of
will close the Pub arid make the en~ true advent of adulthood and
the generosity that typifies the
tire c~mpus ''.dty:"
'

should be applied to every drink-
Marist student, the oneness
shared _
This is, of course; an outrage, as ing age law .in the nation.
··by the brothers ·'and sisters of.our •
the Pub will become even more of
Think of it, the bar business will
great institution·. This year, -as: in
.. a ghost town thanjt's been the last boom with taverns set up on the • the past, River-Day was an awe-
. two years. I twill be a legacy in its
campuses
of high schools and even - inspiring,-.· ..
touching, ,romantic,
• own time.
.
.
junior high schools. But why stop
spirited affair in which students
': But more· than that, the adult
there? If it's that. good for the
demonstrated - their :ability
to
Letters
Mari st 'cir<;us'
community has once again con- ·c economy, make the drinking age 8, _ organize and carry. out a safe,
spired to deny young people certain when Catholic kids get first Com-

friendiy, joyous program of events
rights that should be afforded all
munion. (Every religionprovides
a
without havirig ·it • rriarred by
To the editor: .
on campus. Marist continues to , Americans; they are taking away neatexc.use.)
Or 5, when kids go to
charity. .
-.-
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,
The administration of Marist • boggle ,the mind.
our. Constitutional right to get kindergarten. They can't learn to
The undercurrent of protest
College has much in co_mmon
with
This brings me to the point of
wasted, and we shouldn't stand for
tie shoelaces any more, due to
the subtle appeal for the right to
the cartoon • Family
Circus.
. my letter. Recently, while travers-
it. (Maybelean alittle farther into. Velcro: so they can learn to drink
drink--: was made powerfully and.,.
Whenever the children in that car-
C
ing 'the ·Marist mountain range I •• the toilet~. but.that's about it.) --~ instead. You have to start them
compellingly iii a constructive' and.
toon do something wrong cries of
had the exhaust pipe on my car _ • .. • As ·has
..
been correctly noted,
early,] say. • ·
thoughtful· forum of action• and
- "not me" or "I don't know" can surgically removed by one of these • 18~y_ear-'olds
are permitted to join
·1ustbecause
the law is going in-: . conscientious sincerity. Lo .and
be heard. Walk. past Gn:ystone so called speedbumps. I was not
the Armed Forces and vote; but
to effect Dec. 1 does-not mean we
behold, our leaders·o,f tomorrc>w, •
sometime. Those same cries can be speeding, in fact I was extra careful
they can't drink. One sage put it
should give up the fight; it means
carrying ori the great_traditioh-as •
heard eminating from inside. The_ ·because my car rides low to the
succinctly: "lf)'m
• old enough to
it is: time· to begin to call for
a flicker of Bic in ·the maze of a
buck might have stopped on th,e ground. Speedbumps·are suppos- ·_ die for my country; I should be old: changes". in. the law. ·we're •· dank purgatory: '
• .. ,. ::;-·
• • President's desk but at Marist it
ed to allO\v you to cross them _at . enough to drink for it:" •
• -
Americaris! We want our beer!

River Day proved eloqueritly and
•• just keeps getting passed. At t_he • five ·miles per hour. Why is it • Thisisa matter of consistency in
In conclusion, let me point to on-
monumentally that there is hope
student forum concerni'ng . the
necessary to come to a complete
the law, anci the law is sadly incon-
Iy
the most obvious sign that
for our movement. With leaders
Garden Apartments, President
stop on these speedbumps'?
When
sistent ori:this point: You can drive
America is ready to fight to lower - willing to stick their necks out for
Murray had only one answer. He
I brought· my complaint. to- the
at 16; you can drive drunk until·
the drinking -age: River Day -
, the righteousness of the cause, we
would turn to his cohorts and ask, school's-business
officer;-Anthony
your .licensejS reyoked; but you
when the Marist student bod gets
can
restore the legal drinking age
"What are we going to do about
Campilii, I was dumbfounded at
can'(drink anddrive:until you're
to act out its fantasies and nearly
to pre-kindergarten,
where it
that?"

his response. He. told me the ad-
21 >There's obviously something
perfectly emulate the everyday ' belongs and where it shall stay.'It
Why can't the members of the ministration had made a·''campus
wro-ng here. • . · -
• ,
behavior
of
the . Marist
is only right and fair that our na-
Marist administration stand up like wide decision'' not to acceptdaims
. _.,When
does qne.become
an adult
administration.
tional and state leaders be moved
men and take the blame for their
for damage caused-by the speed-. __
and, . ·therefore, responsible for
I was honored and privileged to
by the example of Marist's River
shortcomings?
Rjver Day is
bumps.
If
it was a· "campus wide • one's own acti_onsr In the Jewish have witnessed the first few hours · Day to take action now. And here's
another example of the short-
decision" why didn't:they notify. ,faith, boys and girls become men
of last week's grand event before
hoping River Day is made an oc-
sightedness at ·Marist. The ad-
those of us on campus?
_ •
and women at 13; in Shakespeare's returning to Manhattan. Once
casion to be held each half-
ministration preferred to send us
Secrets
are well and good in their.. time; unm.arried girls were old
again, my sources tell me, River
semester, even each month, until
• out into the community, risk place, but when the secret affects ·_maids at 18; in our time, we send Day-did justice to the aspirations
beer flows freely throughout the
countless arrests for DWI and all of us, we should be let in on it. • 14,;year~old murderers to adult
and high ideals of the senior class,
land.
• possibly have people killed as a Mr. Campilii also informed me
prisons. Surely, there must be a
thus surviving its transition to the
Who says you can't have it all?
result instead of facing the issue
Continued
00
page
8
uniform age at which one truly
fall semester. I can only imagine it. •
So have another beer. On me~
and letting us use an alternate site
THE:
CIRCLE:
Editor:
Denise Wilsey
Associate Editors:
Douglas Dutton
Paul Raynis
Michael Regan
Laverne C. Williams
Cartoonist:
Don Reardon
Arts
& Entertainment Editor: Ken Parker
Sports
Editcm
Brian O'Connor
Photography Editor:
Laurie Barraco
Senior Editor:
Carl MacGowan
Business Manager:
Advertising staff:
Faculty Advisor:
Lisha Driscoll· •
Christine Colvin
Teresa Razzano ,
David Mccraw



















































































































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.,.November
7,,
1985 - THE CIRCLE - Page. 5

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·
. Women's
.P
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<~
llightS
,
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,
...
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.WOajeri'B
rights
ate
human rights

by Georgia Katsilianos
formula or dne with iron', or:if the

woman in the business world? Let
society are horrifying. Did you
This may come as
a
shock, but
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little one was really going· to
·them.
be kindergarten
school
know that if ERA were
10
be pass-
not all women who have created.
'.·
·-what
i_s this '.'women's righ_ts•~-. outgr_ow Carters before they had
a
.
·teachers,
nurses, and secretaries,
ed;
WC
.
might
.
have
coed
strong careers are clones of Alexis
.


.malarky?
In a·n age where crises are
;
chance
to
wear" out. Wasn't ihat
.
not'.
-college
professors,
brain
bathrooms?! And then there is the
Carrington Colby .. Speaking of
;
as common as
.a
Friday•night.at
enough? Why be bothered with
..
surgeons, or corporate presidents.
whole issue of the armed forces. I
which,
I have always
been
:
Rockwell's, the last thing we need
such mundane tasks as budgets or
If you give them an inch they will
have been told numerous times by
fascinated by the fact that, on
; ,is
a
division of the se~es. What ever
family decisions.
AH
a woman had-
.
take a mile, as the saying goes.
male friends and acquaintances
television, a powerful business man
,
happened to the·--good
.Qld ,days
to· be concerned
.
with was:-'_her Before you know it, a woman will
that they would
·just
as soon
is merely living up 10 his full
~
.when
mom knew her place and_ dad
chiidren. And.if junior turned out
-
.
be running ·ror Vice President of
.
remove their male parephernalia
"male" poteniial when he destroys

~
ruled the home? Is·this an issue that
to be a juvenile delinquent, well
the United States, or something else

than have a woman fighting nexi
someone's life or acts ruthlessly. A
,
even deserves:discussion?-
·•mom~
you should have picked-
equally ludicrous. Imagine that.
to them during a war. This is
woman with power, in colloquial
Traditionally, women ~ere "in
Pampers instead.
As for the Equal Rights Amend-
understandable. After all, if there
terms, is merely a bitch.
:.:charge"•
of child-rearing. They

' -
ment, well, it's a cute idea, but
was a war going on, I would stop
But,
enough
with
1he
'. were the ones who had to deal with
Many 'irien feel threatened whe~
come on! Who needs equal rights
to inquire as to what the sex of the
stereotypes. One· last point re-
.; such complicated tasks
.as
which
a woiriari is assertive. And so they
when women have men to take care
person
who is shooting
the
mains. Women's rights are not on-
:
brand of diapers was more absor
7
-
should. After all, who ever heard
of them. Besides, the drastic
bazooka next to me is. Wouldn't
ly rights for the female gender, but
:.>bent,
whether to buy regular baby
of anyt~ing as ridiculous as
..
a
changes which would
_take
place in
you?

on a much broader sense, they are
-In
the social structure, women's
human rights.
·In.
a nutshell,
roles have altered amazingly. Like
women's rights advocaters are
a new bacteria, there is a new breed
stressing the importance of self and
of woman slowly festering. Label-
of identity. Know who ypu are and
ing themselves as "woman libers"
what you wa_nt. But 111ore
impor-
they perform such degrading tasks
tantly, realize that you can be
as balancing their own checkbooks
anything .
-A
view·
·a1··63··
.•
by
Jean DuCiffe
phrase I cannot comment on and
· •
when shared. I quote from a book
.
remain printable •. Yet ther.e is
..
called "Women & Success: The
Just daring t~ break the subu·i~ already, a· growing 'movement of
Anatomy of Achievement.": "As

ban wife 'station wagon', 2.4
young couples opting for
a
slower
the husband of a successful and

children mold was a daring move
..
tempo and
a
chance to enjoy life
liberated woman and the father of
·in
my day, but an article in the New
rather
_than
success.
two bright, liberated children; let
York Times Su
nd
ay Magazine sec-
._
To swing back to the other side
·
me put to you my conviction that
lion, by Betty Friedan, reinforced
of the-scale;
,to,
the ·majority_ of
·
no other institution on earth can
my convictions, and we moved to
-
.
New York City, where I embarked
women; you find· that economics
sustain and delight two human be-
on a second successful career. Now
..
have• been· the dominanf factor;
ings so fully and for as long a

that I look back at .the history of
·now
women's.rights. This woman
.,
period as a modern, loving, shar-
the women's movement
(I
am, first
lias

no:·_options, she must work;
ing monogamous marriage."

then come honie, clean house,
Today's young woman faces a
of all, amazed at how much of to-
-
d'
d
t •
rut
much more complex world than I·
day's history was, for me, current
_prepare
mner, an ge ma
I
e
events). I find that while the move-
of that quality time with her child·.
did, and I hope that a

strong
ment opened
_
new professional
I was raised in the "be a good
women's movement suppor_ts and
fields for worn.en, it liberated only
girl and get married" era, but I was
counsels.her but, and.here my age
f the I Cky Ones I had a
1
·1re
shows, being successful isn't the
those women whose grit, drive and
one
O
u

,,
ambition would.have made.the at-
partner whose supportive love was
only answer. Equality begins at.
d
in no small way responsible for my
home,
and
sharing
makes
.tainment of goals a certainty un er
.
successes. Since his death, l have
.
everything easier - and. more

~~Y

c~~diti~ns.
:
.
.
. '
retired, because bringing ho~~ the
pleasurable.
.
.
.

,

.
making their own decisions, and
It is tiine to rid ourselves of the
leading their own lives. And there
sterotypes and prejudices which
are even those few who, in the
have prevented both men and
social sphere, will perform such
women from reaching fulfillment.
foreign acts as initiating an in-
So ladies, if construction is the
troduction with someone from the
thing that strikes your fancy, in the
opposite sex. Worse yet, they may
inimitable words of Rocky Balboa,
even take him to dinner and then
"Go for it." And to the gentlemen
proceed to pay pay for the meal.
of this world who prefer cooking
What is this world coming to?
to football or needlepoint
10
And so, these are the basic prin-
mechanics,
I relay the same
ciples
which
people
occupy
message.
Society
will
not
themselves with when discussing
deteriorate; the family institution
the issue of women's rights. Very
,
will no1 become obsolete. Our
few stop to consider such "inconse-
children will not walk around in a
quential" points as fulfillment of
sea of confusion because daddy is
personal goals, self-esteem, identi-
a ballerina and mommy a Sumo
ty. To sorrie people, women's rights
wrestler. If anything, they will, for
or wQmen's liberation is symbolic
once, receive the best of both

of everything which a woman does
worlds.·
not:
-have:·
independence,,,
in-·
Georgia Katsmanos
is
a com~
;_1~
J::
.,
....

i
te\\igence;'~~ert~:v.ebehavior; desire_
rnuniciltiori
'a'r~s·maji.fr
;tnd--~junfor
...
for po,ver, s11ccess.··
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••
,
••
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;
'
Unf~rtu~ately' tod~ys. statistics
:.
trophies, Qf S\!~cess just. isn't fu~
••
.
jean DuCiffe is.enrolled in the,
show that over 50
%
of-the.women
.. -
anymore. Achievements
.are·
best

Maris( Schooi of Adtilt
-~ucation.
in'this country w0rk, arid very few,
i"

-----------llll!l----------------------------------------------1
ofthein in the rarified atmosphere

• Thehgethi oil the ground fl~rin our unde~tiate officer
■Jimiors
earn more
lhan
$1900 during one ten-week
of
:an
\IPWardly mobile career.
commissioning
program. You
could start planning
on
a
career
summerses.5ioi1
••
Most women are mired in a boring,
::
like
the
men
in
this ad have.
And also have some grea1
.

You
can
take free cMlian
flying
lessons

poorly paid,. going nowhere job,.
advantages
like:
.


You·re
commissioned
upon graduation

unrewarding
on every level.
k1y,
J
k ·
1h
M
·
Co
.
Another sad statistic is that women


f.arning
$100
a month during the school year
If
you're
looking
to move tip quic
_
, oo
11110
e annc rps
,------------------,

undergraduate
officer
commission-


comprise the largest grouP._Hving
in
■ Asa
fn:shman
or sophomore,
Jti
.
ing
program.
You
could

fi
••

poverty, and child care is a
youco·
uldcompleteyourbasictrain-
t
#nmin.-.m
shambles.

••
ingduringtwosix-weeksummer
an
II,•
U'F..
~:~~7,=~t:re
~-:

_
_'
The single most illlportant issue,
=g~sess_earr;
0
;orelhan $HOO·
••,p
qm~f.,ftW.•~
JWre/ookingforafewgoodmen.
'since
we are living in the United
u~
..
~
I
States, is mo·ney. Women must be
on an equal pay basis with men,
good, safe child care must be rriadc
available; as.. \Veil·
as. equal oppor-
tunities

for advancement.

The
-
.
_women's
rights mov~ment ha:s _fail-

ed to point 0\lt that
'while
all the

bright• arid talented women have
breezed through school and secured
their first job at a wonderful,
career-sized
·salary,
'in
any of the!Jl
••
stay in \vhat is known as '_'midd~e
management," a treadmill for their

·middle
years. I don't doubt the im-
portance of wome!l'~ r_!gh_t~,
but I
must question their pnonues.
.
'

Don't misund~rsfand, l believe
that

ali womeri should have a
marketable skill, and the security
of knowing that they can support
and
sustain
themselves,
if
necessary. I don't think that all
facets of the problem have been
resolved yet_ Look at tqday's
"fulfilled superwoman" -
she is
dependimt

on the availability of
services, or, to use another ~hrase,
hired help, to care for her child and
home (I wonder how fulfilled the
hired help feel). She speaks. of
•~quality time" with her child, a
-::.:;
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL
CAPTAIN DONOHOE AT 1-800-342-2408
I,
••'
.-.




















Page·6 "'..
THE
CIRCLE·•.Noveinber-7,·,1985<--.
_.-;.')"'-:-
.--~~.,.,,~,
~
...
,(: ..
:,
.
··:

·Helping Beatle faris
'

'come together'
by Kenneth 1-·. Parker .Jr.
The Beatles may never reunite
but that doesn't mean their fans •
. can't. And thanks to Mark Lapidos '
·they do.

Lapidos
is
producer
of
"Beatlefest," an annual nation-
wide convention for fans of the
Fab Four.
"Our conventions are celebra-
tions of the.Beatie phenomenon,"
, said Lapidos in a telephone inter-
view earHei: this week.: : . • •
Beatlefest touches down in New
York, Chicago and . Los Angeles
one weekend each year with an
• average of four to six thousand
- people attending each weekend's
t,vo ·shows. - .. · • .•
. ''We anract fans-of all ages to
our'shows," Lapidos said; "We get
original fans and second generation
fans - ·ones· who. never sa\v The·
.
Beatles on The Ed Sullivan Show'
' and those that did." ·,_

A typical all-day Beatlefest con-
sists of screenings of all The Beatles
major films; an art gallery where
fans contribute original paintings;
sculpture and _other art forms with
a Beatles theme;
a
panel discussion
led by music· journalists,: disc
jockeys
and
people • closely
associated with The Beatles; as well
as special guests.
"Probably· ou( most popular -·
guest -was Paul McCartney's
brother, Mike," said Lapidos.
"We have also •. hosted . Harry
Nilsson, as well as film producer
Walter Shenson, who worked on
'A Hard Day's Night.' "


• While none of the ex-Beatles
have attended a Beatlefest, Lapidos
• has met all four on separate
occasions.
"When I met each one for the
first dme,
i'
found them to be very
open and easy to get to know,"
said Lapidos. "They really destroy
the m·yth of how stars usually act.
-. They
make
you
feel very
comfortable."
"They were quite at ease when
• speaking about their days together.
The ide;i that they do not like to
mention their days as Beatles is a
._-myth.· ,.- , ••
"George Harrison told m
1
that
while .he and the other three .spent
their solo careers trying to break
out from under the shadow of The
Beatles, they remain very proud of
what they accomplished. The idea
of being typecast as a Beatie.does
not bother them as much as it once
did,". said Lapidos.
Beatlefest began as Lapidos' idea
in 1973 -
tlie same year as the
tenth· anniversary of The Beatles'
landing in America.
"I decided I wasn't going io let
the anniversary pass without a
celebration," Lapidos said.
"So I wrote John, Paul, George
and Ringo asking their opinion
about a celebration. I didn't receive
responses from. them so I did the
next best thing, I went and knock-
ed on one of their doors," said
Lapidos.
· . .
.
The door Lapidos
.chose-~to
knock on belonged. to John
Lennon.
"Harry Nilsson answered and
welcomed me in. I met John and
described to him my idea. Lennon
said, 'Sure, I'm all for it. I'm a
Beatles fan,too,' " said Lapidos.
The first Beatlefest was held
November of 1974 in. New York.
The event· was so successful that
over 1,000 people had
·10
be turn~
ed away.
..
Once word of the ·annual
celebration spread, Lapidos said he
received letters from Beatie fans
• across the country requesting that'
he bring his production to· their
city.
.
,
"After that initial response, I
decided to do it again the foUow-
ing year. Since then Beatlefest has
gotten larger and more extensive,"
said Lapidos.

Today, Beatlefest is his full-time
job.
.
• Said Lapidos: "The Beatles are
very special to me. When you put
'Meet The Beatles' on your turn-
table it sounds as fresh today as it
••
did then. This is the best job I could
• have."
-'Krush Groove'
by
Janet !\fCLoughlin
· _ plays the
roli
of Sheila, a struggl-
'Prince's pr~tege, i~ier glittery rise
_
....
_ '._.._Jilg
singer trying to make it in the :que costumes.shines in her peifor-·
•. , "Krush Groove,'\the late~t rape <"._Big
Apj:,Je; and' gets her chance • mance of·. ''Hojiy -Roi:k."'. J"his •
pin' film to open in_ the area, is ; with a littl~ help from her co-stars.
number wilrhave you dancing in:
more annoying than ·entertaining. . • .While rappin' is a talent, it'snot
the aisles.
• ..
·-
... _·
This hour and 3~ minute
~
'mov_ie'' . always meam-for th_e.
scre(!J!.·
Not · . cAnothef ·eye-catching .. • mtisica,1.
is more appropriate as
a
Saturday.· all rappers 'ar~ aciors,-·and that's· number comes formthe gfoupNew"·
night concert on MTV,. for. it f_ails .. clearly :expr~ssed iJJ. this . film. ••
:Edition singing their latest hit; "My
to present -a strong plot.·
... .
•-Michael Schultz; the director of the
Secret.''..This 1980's version of the,

Besides a lack of plot, another
film,. (ails to develop a· cast with . Jackson 5 ai:e truly a· bunch of•
flaw presented in ''Krush Groove''...:.· strongacting:abilities: The rappers
talented young men. . . •. .
is the use of rappin' terms .. For in- • ':cari rap;. but they.can't act. -
.
:
. Unfortunately, <'Kru~h Groove'' •
stance, -"Krush. Grnove'J is slang : : • There is one exception, however, • is only positive ,vhen it comes to the·
for the ultimate -sound,. ~'death"._ in the casting of Blair Underwood,
musical numbers;and even some of
means everything is under contr9I;. _ who plays Russell Walker, the prn-
those tend; to· .get loud and very
. and "breakin' out" is translated to

rooter of'.'Krush Groove." Being }epetitious .•. -
.·· _ . .•
leaving. The use of subtitles would -• -his :debut role, Underwood . is
As far as the rappers go,ithe Fat
have been appropriate in this case, _ outstanding·
considering
th_e ''.Boys supply us with a fairly com~,
because . at times-.it was • hard -
fo
material he is forced to work with.
ical scene called,- "-All Y
oti'
.Can.
understand the dialogue: ; ' -_,
C
;
With his handsome.· Joo ks arid ·-Eat." Here we have the pleasure of
·• "Krush Groove" is a ·struggling -· talent, hewiH be someone you can ·seeing these t~ree fat boys_
gorge on
record company that promotes rap
pla°' on se-eirig in _the, future.'' ••
_
• food in
a
Times Square _fast fooq '
performers. This film featm:es Kur-
• • •
.. - ·;
jojitt: While this scene cari provide
tis Blow, RUN-DMC, and the Fat
, ·sheila E. is exceptibnally-eriter-
some humor, italso gets
a
bit out
Boys as the rap performers,
. taining when she's performing, but
ofhand. Schultz plays upon their
managed by Blair Underwood, a • as far as her acting ability, she's
fatness top much- throughout the
newcomer to the screen. Sheila E.
neither impressive nor convincing.
filin. ·
,.
-• ., Schultz supplies us with a very
.
·feeble
attempt at a story that is sup-
• . posedly based on the reality of
Russell Simmoms, who inspired the
cliaracter of Russell Walker. But
and/or to the college; and poten-
not all the blame goes to him, after
tial for future achievemenf.
all, he just directed the material..
Top seniors to
be
honored
The Office of ·student Affairs
has mailed ballots to faculty, staff
and presidents/chairpersons of stu-
dent organizations and classes re-
questing nominations of students
scheduled to graduate in''January;
May and August 1986 for Who's
Who Among Students in American
Universities and Colleges and the
National Register of Outstanding
College Graduates.
The criteria to be used in selec-
ting nominees are academic record;
participation and leadership in
academic and extracurricular ac-
tivities; sen,;ce to the community
A committee of faculty, staff
Ralph Farquhar is the screenwriter,
and students will review all names
arid he does not develop an in-
submitted and will, then, recom-
depth plot for his viewers. He
mend those most representative of
presents us with on-the-surface
our student body.
material that can't be saved by all
Students who would like to be
the rappin' in the film.
considered for nomination may.
There has yet to be a decent rap-
contact faculty or staff members· pin' • film made, and "Krush
who know them well and ask to be
Groove" is no exception. While the
included on their ballots. Students
soundtrack will have you up and
should also ask the leaders of clubs
dancing, the movie will have you
or organizations in which they have
heading towards the door. "Krush
held active
membership
to
Groove" may be chillin', but it sure
nominate them as well.
ain't fulfillin'.

·.-·.;
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••
.•
The Other
Murray
.·•,

::Baillng-

yourself
'out
•,
.
.

'
by
Juiia E.
,Mur,ray
.
'
.
'
:totaliy• uri·~~~cci~ddeath of your
Sometimes excuses just
.aren't
<.''.
"·'·.
:
. .-.
• ,:<-.
.':
.:::>

roommate. Contrary
.to
popular
enough.to get you out of hot water,
·
·
t
Every sem_esteryou dread it, a·nd
•.
opi_riion, this situation is not
.
so now it's time to get really

e~e~y semester you have to ~o it

grounds for the jmmediate granting devious. Go on the offensive. Start
.:
ag.i1n:
_t-lo
matter how many omes · of a 4.0. As a rilaner of. fact; ihe
-
..
reminding them of all the times
you_ ~aye:y~ur. roo111wa.te
~ell y_our
_
entire e~erit would leave you_ so
they told you that grades weren't
p_aren_ts
you re at the hbrary (or the
.,
traumattzed you couldn't possibly important, only effort. Counter all
computer room), sooner or later
-
worry about siHy exams. The only
mentions of an elder sibling's sue~
you have to go.home and face the
problem with this lie is that it re-· cess with, "You always loved
Grand Inquisition. There's just no
.
quires a foreknowledge of bad

_him/her the best, didn't you?" Re-
way lo a\loid the pairi of explain-
·grades. Your parents wilJ not buy

mind them where you got your •
ing. bad mid-term grades to_your
it if you say you simply "forgot to
·
brains from. At the pinnacle ·or the
parents.

.
.
.
mention it" when you were horne
.
argument, scream, "I'm adopted,
>'-"-While
having to come up with· a
for break.
-

that's it, isn't it? You afraid to tell
good explanation is inevitable for
You could always say you were
-
me until now, right?"
,.
mo~tof us, it's not always easy to
deathly ill during mid-term week
-


think up a nice·creatjve Ii_e.
Telling
.'
so ill, infact, that. your
R.A.
in:
Sad though it is to say, some
the truth would see_!ll the easiest
..
sisted you go to the hospital, but,

parents just don't respond to offen-
·solution;
but you have to consider
•.
brave soul that you are, you ref us-

sive measures. For some strange
yq~r parents. Can you imagine the_
• -
ed; Instead of getting the proper
reason they may still feel they have
-qistr~ss.you would cause them by.·. medical attention, you stayed in a right to expect you to do well in
telling them that they spend
your room to study, then passed
·
school, considering the fact that

roughly $9,000 a year for you to
.
out during the test. The only pro-

they are probably shelling out the
_drink,
eat pizza and sleep? Think

blem with this lie is explaining why money for it. The only thing to do
of thejr delicate hearts ..
_
.
,. •
• :you
didn't die. I wouldn't worry
·
now is to send them off on the guilt

'.'After:
casting_ aside the' foolish

about it though, because if your
• •
trip of their Jives. Offer to stay in
-
_.
idea
pf
being honest, yoll are I!!ft
..
folks d_on'tbi.ty it they'll probably

your room ~uring all ofyour vaca-
:with,innumerab!e
optiont If you.
·;
kill you.·•

-
···._.

_
-

•.
·.
'
tionssothey won't be embarassed
have a yen for travel, )lbw is the
. /
My personal favo_rite in the line

by your uneducated presence. Tell
petfecttime io explore the world.
••
of excusesis not terribly olU (com-
them you did the best you could,
:Visit exotic Iarids; meet
··exciting
..
pared to the· others), but is more
considering that you were forced to
r{ew
..
people;
-learn
all about- a
••
believable than most:"The com-
live so far away from those you
foreign culture, but first_inake sure
,
-
puters messed up." No matter how
love (sorry commuters, this last one
y6u write home for money before-' much your parents push you to
won't help you much). Tell them
grades are in. ·
.
.
.
.
take a computer course, most of
you spent all your studying time
~
Ifthe nomadic lifestyle is not for
them harbor secret doubts about
.
writing letters home (then tell them
you, we're back again to the idea
such
'"_new-fangled
gadgets," so
the letters got lost in the mail). Start

of a creative lie. Let your imagina-
·
they are not overly surpr_ised when

to cry. In short, be merciless.
tion

soar, but remember, the lie the computers fail to work correct-
One of the aforementioned

must be semi-believable.
..
'Iy;
especially after they receive two
methods should work for you, but
'..
An
excellent, though drastic lie or three notices from the Business if all else fails, I hear Australia is
would concern the sudden, and
..
Office about over or under-billing.

very nice this time of year.·
..
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..
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·':J(i~t:~

:fig
lS.
-
:/1S:~>

-ng
1S
-~·;;1sn
-
It.
-~-

'•.
~-

'.
/
by_ Christine A'. Klein
:"
<,
discovered. it means line.
. . .
-
me any major embarra~sments. But
'
:.
{
C
_.-.-,

•'
, '

'


:
'

.
'
-
:-
The'supei:mark_et
is an ideal place
a fellow American student went
... ,~,~
It may b_e called "English,'! tiut-
for language problems. Cookies are
down to the supermarket looking
..
•.j1_eopl_!!··rrom
ihe U
.s.
and the
·u
;K.
• .called
biscuits, andbfscuits are real-
for "Fluff" tq go with peariut but-

:'.freally;.:do
.not,
speak,: th~•-same'.' Jy crackers. Crackers; though, are

tei. In England, fluff is really the
.:
_..J~nguage.
: >:


.•.
:,
,._
;,
.
:
<:,
stHl crackers; While: choosing my
.
word
for
girlfriend. You figure it
..
'
<,,
\iPersorially,
l
prefer American
'
biscuits (cookies) I came across a
out.
·
:_.
English; SiJre,-1,may;be
a little bias~,
.
·.bra.nd
called
'..'Digestive;"
They can
Probably the worst thing I've
:
.
-
·
_.
ed/but'at
least:w_e:know-~what
to.
:
be boughU11.aifferenl' flavors, but
had to deal With is getting used to
•••
~
.
;c_~ll
our English. What do you call.
-1
decided not to'buy them at all. 1

a greeting. Instead of· asking,
·c
:the;English·
spoken in the U.K.?
could only picture them containing
"How are Y!,m?" or "How
.ya
:
,
British English or English English?
-
extra gastrjc juice_ or' something.
doin'? ," the British ask, ''Are you
•.
\.(et
me explain some differences.
·
As far as beverages·go, Iemon~de all right?" At first I thought I look-
.
When in London, I had to take the
is really I~inon sqda which tastes

ed deathly ill, but now I just answer
<si.ibway.
Only I discovered that a
more like Seven.:up.
i'
figured
"good." And contrary to popular
:
subway is really an underground

".Limon"· would taste like Sprite
belief, "Cheerie-o" is not the most
.:walkway
arid the ''underground"
but it's more_. like American
popular way
to
say "So long.''. It's

is the subway. (They're·also called
·_
lemonade with c;arbonation, I had
«Cheers." So, cheers until next
.
tµbes.) -Next; I had to take a taxi;
no idea whl!t Cok,c:;
'Y0uld taste like,
week!



and saw,a sign which read "taxi

so I just tioiig~t Pepsi.



·
queue." I thoug~t "queue'; was
:
At leastCcan
say that these

t_he Frerich wor:d
.for
taxi, bu~ I
.
language barriers have not caused
Christine A. Klein is a junior ma-
joring in communication arts·.
;Affirmative
action
.
j
· to
be discussed·
.
.. ;
CCEqtial Employment/ Affir-
mative Action: The Law and
Higher Education" will be the
topic of a speech at
4
p.m. Mon-
day by Santiago Rodriquez, affir-
m·ative action officer at Stanford
University.
The speech, open to the public,

will be in Campus Center 249.

Also this month, the college Af-
firmative Action Committee \\ill
hold two open meetings for Marist
personnel to air their concerns
about affirmative action. The first
meeting will be at 3:30 p.m. Friday,
Nov.
15,
and the second \\ill be at
11:30 a.m. Wednesday, Nov. 20.
Additional information about
the meetings is available from
Eugene Best, affirmative action of-
ficer for the college.
NHI
LIVE AT CIAOS
Sat., Nov. 9th
44 Plaza, Pok.
A AVE-MINUTE
WALK
FROM CANTERBURY
GARDENS
:
November 7,

1995 - THE CIRCLE ;. Page 7
COMMUNICATION ARTS·
·FALL
1985 CO-OPS/INTERNS
MANDATORY
INFORMATION MEETING
Thurs. Nov. 14
Beginning at 7:00 p.m.
I
Fireside Lounge
PROFESSIONAL
WORD PROCESSING
DATA STORAGE - LETTER.QUALITY
Repor_ts - Theses -, Manuscript_s
Resumes -
·Cover
Letters·
Mailing List/Merging Capabilities
• Maif-Ins Accepted
297-2449
Compu Word & Mailing Services
60-All Angels Hill Rd .
-:-Wappingers
Falls,
N.Y. 12590
;t~~:r:
(J/?tfI:';\~;:.:',,;i1t(::\L;_}:L
.
Attention Residents
The Student Government Com-
mittee on Financial Readjust-
ment for Housing I nconvience
has met. They have drafted a
proposal that needs
-
your en-
dorsement.
Your lnterhouse
Council Representative will be
soliciting your support this week.
Please
.see
letter to the editor for
other pertinent details~
Thank You
for your consideration
in this matter.
The Financial
Readjustment
Committee
',;













































































































































'
>'
..
..
,.
.,.
..
~f.i:§)
.).lr
.
'
.......... Page-8· - THE· CIRCLE - November ,7/,1985
L~.tters-_
..
,._·

_________________
:_._c_on-ti
....
nu-ed_ri-_o~-"
P_~g-~:4
:
nie~c~ •• h~s rriet. arid. dr~w;
up"
a
proposal to be submitted ~o
'the

.that
in the l~~t year and a half since
Chrisiii1e Klein & Pat' Nichols,
• this decision was made there have
:
Trinity
&
All Saints College,
• Cabinet on November 12, 1985.
be_en a number of. stude11ts_ and
..
Norwich Hall,
,
staff members whose cars have
Brownberrie Laite,
•••
, •• The charge of this committee was
bec::n similarly damaged. Obvious_~ Horsforth, Leeds LS\85HD
ly the problem still exists but Marist
:
England









prefers to ignore it.
~: .,: :"'
..
:
.
Phone 44-532-581-128


l was: told the speedbumps are_

Lee Malecki & Kieran Murphy,
there to protect Marisi students.
I

War_
rington· House ..
am a student btit
I
feel victimized,
Manchester College,
not. protected.
lf Marist really

Mansfield Road,
'
·:,
w·anted to protect us it should do

Oxford
bX13TD
•• .
something about our. having to

England
cross route.nine. Maris! claims it
would riot be feasible because of
Tracy Petajosoja
&
Cheryl Tras~.
the cost. A friend of mine was hit
• •
Pendle College, Rm C-9
&
Rm B-12,
by a car on route nine recently; she
·
University of Lancaster.


would not agree:· Let's face it, the


Bailrigg, Lancaster LAI
4YU.

administration does not care about
England
••

the students. They care about. the
Phone 01144-524-65201
ext.
4047
tuition dollars
we
represent: The
administration would be wise to

Michael Tuu.



tememb~r that today's students are
58 ·shanboley Road,

__
tomorr_ow's

••
alumni.
,_.
Also
Whitehall,
·
Dublin 9;.

;
-
remember that unhappy alumni do
1
1
d
-
not donate money to a school that

re an

jerked_the~r chains for fouryears •.
:':
Ann Sweeney,:
Keep Jerking us ar~>Und beca~se
Amite! "Galaxie"
FJF, •
you guys are reaching your high
18, rue de'Soulucrc,
water mark and
I
really do
not
care
67085 Strasbourg, CEDEX
to address the hou~ing inconve-
niences· which
developed
in

September as an outgr~Wth·of in"
completion of the F section of the


• Garden
Apartments;
.
and' to
establish financial retribution for

all students involved.

The members of the committee
are Brian,.Wicenski;
·Robert·
Haughton,·. Christian· Morrison,
and Suzanne Ryan. They represent
students affected as well

as ihe
Council of Student Leaders. Incor-
po~ated withlnter:Hotise Council.

-. representatives, the Committee is
asking for your endorsement and
support of the proposal as well as
your comments and criticisms.
•. The proposal made by the Stu-
.
dent Government Financial Read-
justment Committee is as follows:
If
you are a resident student in
Leo, Sheahan, Marion the rooin
fee is $1000 per semester. Chain-
pagnat, Benoit, and Gregory are
also $1000 per semester. The for-
mula-· for. readustmen1 is. $1000
what happens to:Manst once I get
France
.

ou1 of here, and that day can never
.
come soon enough.
Mark Ciesinski
Class of I 986
John Griffiths,
Cameron· Hall,
Royal Holloway
College,

divided by 104 (days per semester)
if you resided in· a triple not af-
fected by the non-completion of the
&
Bedford New
Garden Apartments. Using that
number, you multiply by .33_3.
That amount is your~adjustment.
Abroad
..
Egham Hill,
·
Egham, Surrey TW20
OEX,
England
If you are a resident student of
the Garden Apartments (F-section)
who resided in the Townhouses,
To rhe editor:
Roman Reyes,
Champagnat, or North Road, the
The Marist Abroad Program
Pensionata Sacro Cuore,
room fee is $1075 per semester.
(MAP)
is
proud
to
acknowledge
Via Rombon 78,
You divide the

days in the
the
twenty-two students who are
20123, Milan.
semester (103 days) into $1075 and
studying in Europe this year.
We
Italy

multiply
that amount
by the
announce the addresses of the
Sincerely,
number of days you were incon-
students who are siudying overseas.
Cicely Perrotte
vienced by the rion-completion of
Phone . numbers
are listed if
Marist Abroad Program
the F-section.

available,
Programs Coordinator
For, the. residents
of the
The Marist community is en-
Townhouses and North Road it is
~
•. · •
'
.
~
' •
:· \
·~
---Dlller-;
&:_.Restatl'rant··,
;._
..
.
.
.
..

Breakfast -:, Lune.fl·
-

Dinner
.
·Fresh.Seafoocf--.Ste·aks
.-
-
>,
Chops - Cocktails-'
:
Bakintf
on
Prerriises
Show your college/D·a.nd get
a
-FREE Glass· of Beer
-··
with your-meal!

7%
·olSCOUNT·
194 WASHINGTON STREET.
POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW.YORK

couraged to communicate to these
Refunds
recommended that they receive $50
~~~~~'.~~~-~~'.~;fro~a~~;el~.~~~-;
To the <!ditm:
'.

. .
'
.
.
~~smfJg
t~f
h>~~e~~~d
r~~f\~a;~,:
Next.
to. All_
Sport'
:A
short walk from Marist) ••
•. co\d' ,vai.er'to-a-weary sou\/so is

..
\
:,
Th~
Stud!!.nt (i_over~m~nt (:_9m" .,C the. other._ members
.
of • the
:\,
.. ,f>
, --
i ;.,,
0
:.

,,
<-· ,, ,
<;;
• good news from. a far' country''·::,: mhtee on·Fmanc\a\R~ad1~ strqept,.:'"Townhouses and North\lpa,d,who
:;,,; ,:;;:;:.
:.
,r·';/~:-\;,:;~,.:(-\
•..
(Proverbs, 25:25),
formed due
_10
housmg
'tnconve-
,-

Continued on page 9
'::_1.:
_.
• •

..



MAP is initiating. the selection
procedures
.r
or-:111e·acadetrtic year
I 986-1987. Over fifty students at~
tended an informational meeting in
.
Ocrober. Any sophomore or junior
who
.
missed this meeting,· and
wishes to be a candidate for next
year should immediately contact
Mrs. Cicely Perrolle (Donnelly
2308).
The deadline for-·completed ap-
'plications
is Dec. 2.
Dorianne Apice,
c/o Pamiglia Puliri,

Via Marconi 47.
Firenze, ltalv
Phone 055-5.74623
Denise Baldwin,
4rue Ramus,
75020 Paris,
France
Phone. 331-358-6924
·
Connie
_Brisson
&
Nicole Thew.
Foyer l\.1arguerite
Mignard,
2, ViUa de la Reunion,
47 rue Chardon Lagache,
75016 Paris,
France
-
Karen 81Jtkovich, Laureen DeJong
&
Chris.tine Harl
:"
Rosedene"
.•
IS,
Rahoon Road
Newcastle, Galway,
Ireland
.
Phone 091-22701-(messagcs)
Karen
Crouse
&
Tracy Shipley
Foyer La Vigie,
7, rue Poulletier,
75004 Paris,
France
Phone 01-354-13-90
James Fedoryk & Sean Morrison,
·Residence Lanteri
7, rue Gent ii Bernard,
92206 Fontenay-aux-Roses,
France
Tom Heer
bei Familie Weist,
Aufkircher str. IS,
77700 Ueberlingen,
W~t Germany
INTERESTED IN. A RESIDENT ·ASSISTANT-
.OR
-~UNIT.
COORDINATOR POSITIO.N
-
FOR
• -THE
·,
SPRING
..
1986.~

__
SEMESTER?
-
I
.
~,

.
_,.
......
__
APPLICATIONS_
ARE DUE IN:.lHE":·1--1dUSING··OFFICE:
.
.
.
-~-
'.
·,
.
.
.
.
.
.
...
.
.

.
~
...
. .,.·
;

...

'
• . •

.
•.
BY.4:00
P.M~; FRIDAY; NOVEMB:t;R
.1_5,·
1985--
.
.
.
.
.
.

,
~
'
.
.
.
.
.
.
'
...
.
~
·'i.,.'
-~
_.,
RE-QUIREMENTS.:
2.5
CUM/REGISTERED MINIMUM
12
CREDITS
NO MAJOR DISCIPLINARY HISTORY
NO INTERNSHlPS BEYOND SIX OR MORE CREDITS.
.~

-
'
'
.
.
-
.
.
ONE. YEAR
·IN
RESIDENCE
COMMITMENT TO REGULAR IN
7
SERVICE TRAINING
...
:~
I
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···-'""".
'.
'.
ailil~i...-------------------------------
November
7,
1985 - THE CIRCLE - Page 9•_•_
-•
9B~giStf0r
iinsw~;;.
·big
regiStration

questions
....
~.
.
.

.
.
.
.
..
>:·
__
,· .
. •• ..

by'
Stie
Hermans.
enrolled_[irst in. th_e courses they
·A.
This is.the
five
day period at
f(i-,· ..
:,
.:·.·,.
.
,
need. Students who are closest to
the beginning of the new semester
:i
t--!_ov.
Tl marks the beginning
·o(
graduation, who have declared
that also serves as the final
-
i!!gistration
weekf•fc,(.sprin'g.
•s~,
.
their majors, and/or who arc tak-
.
add/drop peri9d, Ross said. There
•.
~Ja~si,:s,;_an~:=.~~~i~trar---:EUzabi,:th
__
'.
in~ courses\in
·.sequence
tiave
·.
is no priority and, Ross added, for

.
R.oss hc1s
th~ ans_wei:s
t? som.e of.the,
,
priority. '.
:;. /.,..
. •
students who failed to register dur-
questio~s- students·,ask:most.
''Ac-
·-:-
•.
Q. What is add/drop?
.
. .
.-:
ing the
.early
registration period;
¢ording to
'Ross;
registration can be·
.
~'.
A. This is the time when students

there is a
$25

tate registration .fee.
~j~pl~--~-f!,d,
pro~~em~free_
if som.e .. can-, presumably clear. up· any
':-
Q.
I
am a junior majoring in
6asic. guidt;linef~r~Jo_llowed.
•.
•·
registration. problems before they

communication arls. Why didn't
I
_
~j
~--
--~-
"'·
·."_
..
~_
• -
-
·::·-
•.
••
•.. .
.-
.
.-
leave fo~r-h~m«:,
ROSs
said: Ab(>ut.: get into the communication cOurses
.:£
Q. What 1s early registration?.·
two weeks after the conclusion of
:,
I
needed this semester?
;(
A,. This is the period from Nov_-· early registration, students will
-~·
J"he usual reason for .being
_
II to·• ~0':' .. 15
_.
"'.hen· returning
receive 'prihtouts telling.them what
:
shut out of needed courses is not

..
5!udents are expected to register for
·
.• c.·courses
they are registered for, and..
.
having officiaHy declared your ma-
.
spring cl_a_sses.
It is at this tirri~ on-
..
when the add/drop period will'be.

:
jor,
•.
according to Ross.' 'Students

.
IY
that th~ priority SY.Stem
is in ef-.
Ross said that the add/drop period·
:
think that because they've taken a
..
feet. EarlY, registration also allows
:
has been lengthened to_ a whole
.
lot o_f courses in a discipline it's

_·s}tidcmts
tq
take advantage of the
week, with
·shorter
hours, instead
.•.
automatically
considered
.
to
be

add/arop period in December, said
'
of just th~ee days_as in previous
'their
major," shesaid. lfyou have
Ross.'•·_.

-~-
•.•·:
.
>~- :·
..
·
·

;_
::
:;_
·'yeats/Ross
stressed that there is no
:,
decided on a major, make sure you

''.
Q .. W~at is the priority_
system?
.
.-
priority for any~me during this

have filled out the correct forrri
~;)·,A;
During early regisfration, the
..
period'...;.. registration is strictly on
,
from the registrar's oflice and have
priority system allows students who.·
.
a first-come, first-served basis.
had it signed by the division
·
rtieet certain requirements: to
·be··.
,
:Q;
\Yhlifis late registration?
chairperson
before
..
registration
~
'
.
'
.
'
.
.
..
.
.
.
.
~.
:·.
~..:
begins, Ross said.
.
.
Q. I'm not sure which courses
I
want to take -
why can't I just
wait until the beginning of next
semester to register?
A. There is no priority system
during late registration, so even if
.
you are a
senior
who
still
needs a
number of credits in his
·
major
field, you will have no belier
chance of getting the courses you
need than any other student, accor-
ding to Ross.
Q.
I
was shul out of a course
I
really w11nted
to take, and it won'.t
be offered again until spring of '87 .
What can
I do?
A. One of the purposes of hav-
ing the add/drop period shortly
after registration is to allow the
division heads and the academic
vice-president a chance to deter-
mine if there is
enough
student in-
terest in a particular course to
justify
adding
additional sections,
Ross said. Then, if more sections
are added,-students can register for
the course during the add/drop
period in-December.
Q. I'm a freshman -
don't I gel
priority for anything?
A.
Yes. A freshman taking
courses in
succession,
such as Core
10\ ,and Core \02, has priority as
long·
as
he registers with the same
teacher in the same section, said
Ross. "But if a freshman decides
to change teachers or sections, he's
taking his chances -
he loses his
priority," explained Ross.
Q. Is there anything new this
year
I
should know about?
A. "There is now a parallel series
or required courses-
the old
CORE curriculum for returning
students, and the new Core/Liberal

Studies curriculum for freshmen,"
Ross said. Be sure to check the
Co.urse Adviser for your re-
quirements, she added.
:Maloney

resigns as Mari~t director of alumni affairs
~-
.
••
~
. .-
:
.
.
.•.
.
_.

.
.
-
.
.-
~
.•
.
.
.
-
..
/

.
.
.
.
.....
..
.
:
.

~:b/fio~:ld
a.:
God~in
dir~~tor of alumni relations. He
for four years, he said.
•;


~
'.decided
to leave fylarist after being
_
Maloney also said that under his_
t
.•
After 10 year~ on the Maris·t Col~

cont.icted by. an executive recruit-
direction, the Office of Alumni Af-
lege campus, Bryan
.
Maloney,

menCfirm, he· said.
fairs has accomplished a great deal.
<director
.of.
alumni. affairs,··has
"I
was asked to consider
_the
"I
feel the alumni association
resigned to take a similar position
:
position, and it was an excellent op-
·
has taken on an identity
and
an
:·at
Manhattan College in Riverdale,· portunity for professional advance• organizational structure," he said.
::
N. Y.
ment," Maloney said. "I made the ''Through the ah.:mni news we've
:'
Maloney, 34, left Marist Nov. 1 decision to take the position on given a real identity to the Marist
)o
become Manhattan College's Oct.
17.
It was·a difficult decision alumni, we've layed a solid foun-
to leave Marist."
'
dation for the alumni association's
Marist will be starting a search
future, and we've helped the alum-
·
._·A·:
p'
__
·a·
...
-·r-.
1·m·_
-
·f·_
..
n·_ts'
·
for Maloney's replacement, accor-
ni realize they are important to
.
ding to Anthony Cernera; acting Marist."

:'.
·
.
•·

•.
·.-'
.·_-


••


vi~e
:
presfden't
for

college
Activities such as Homecoming
_.!

•.
b
advancement.
...
arid r_egional
alumni_chapt_ers,
arid
-:to
get ca le
-·Maloney, a Marist gr'aduate, has an annual calendar of events, help
'.
.
,
...
:
..
a::, .
.
.
.
.
.
.
spent almost: a third of his life at bring alumni in contact with the

;,
.
..
.
---
: •.
the college. He has been director of
.
college and provided
..
the.
_oppor-
+.
-
.
TT,T
ets
.
·.
:alumni
.affairs
for-
the. past
.four
tunity.Jor
his
:accomplishments,
J.
or
,
:
Y
,
S
;:
y_ears, assistanl_dire_ctor.ofadmis-
:said-Malone)':
•"-
'
••
,
•••
,
.·:c-;:,·
•••
,.
.
..
i.,.
.
>
s1ons. for two
-
years· and·a ~tudenL
... •;.,Maloney
said there are regional
·
..
:
......
~>-
:.:,
-\·;:·.;.
."·'by
Shaaron· Barriaga
••

:.,
_.
..
Marist alumni chapters in various
parts of the country.
"When
the
basketball team played in Boston,
we held a reception for those
(alumni) in the area," he said. "We
informed them of what the college
is doing now and what it
'II
be do-
ing in the future."
Cernera said that until the direc-
tor of alumni
affairs
position is fill-
ed, he a·nd other members of the
staff will be responsible for carry-
ing out all alumni plans for the
year.
Marist will place
advertisements
for the position in the Poughkeep-
sie Journal and The New York
Times, Cernera said. The college
will also send letters to all alumni,
notifying them of the position.
••
"h's
'desirable·
that
·the'·positioh
be filled by a Marist graduate,"
Cernera said.

According to Cernera, any can-
didate for the position should
possess strong interpersonal and
organizational
skills.
These can be
demonstrated through reference
checks, interviews and past events
they've organized.
MARINE
CORPS
BIRTHDAY
••
/·.


~-
-~.
After

_months
.
of.. meetings,;
.
Business Officer Anthony Campilii


and Bruce -TV service manager
*
*-ATTENTION
.
ALL
-
Ralph Teller have decided. to con-

••
nect
the Garden Apartments main

·
:
TV
cable
to
the exist_ing cable on
campus.

-
_
.
.
,
_:The
other poss_ibility
.,vas
to in-

'.
stall a seperate TV antenna for the
.
.
••
Garden Apartments.
·
{
No date hll$ cunently
.been
set
for
the installation of the cable ..
'
·:
The apartments
have been

without cable service since the
.
beginning of the school year.·.

-.:\
Garden Apartmentstudents are
.
. •.
not happy with the delays,'accor-
..
ding to senior Jim Mullen, campus
..
representative
for
.
Bruce

TV.
·:
Cheryl Frasier, a a senior from the
.
,
Bronx, said; "It is unfair that

.
e~eryon~ else on camp~s has TV
• ..
a_nd we_
don't."


--~_efunds--
.
C~nti~~ed'from page
8
°·:
'bad:
the. extra
occupancy.
The.
·committee
is also recommending
.that all the residents of the Gar4en
Apartments receive
$75
for the
·--
ma_intenance
and
-
security
inconveniences.
.
-
The Financial Readjustment

Committee has attempted to repre-

sent all the resident students
and
improve the relatfonship among the
members of the college communi-
ty and address the student needs
and concerns.· By your endorsing
~his proposal and showing your
support in this matter you are ex-
ercising your right to retribution.
We,-as the committee, urge your
support and are available to answer
questions during our office hours
posted by the Council of Student
Leaders office (CC268).
Thank you for-your considera-
tion and support in this matter. •
Suzanne C. Ryan
President
Council of Student Leaders
NON-RESIDENT STUDENTS
**
ANY.
·NoN~RESIDENT
STUDENT
-INTERESTED
IN.CO.LLE.GE
HOUSING FOR THE SPRING 1986
-·sE-MEST:ER
M.u·sT COMPLETE
GA
NON-
REsIo·ENT ROOM
'REQUEST
IN THE: HOUSING
q:F-Fl:Q.E,
ROOM
27.1,
CAMP.US CENTER BY
NOVEMBER ·14,-,
1:9&5.
PRESENTLY, NO SPACE
IS AVAILABLE. HOWEVER, A WAITING LIST IS
BEING MAINTAINED.
ANY QUESTIONS?
STOP
·B-Y
THE HOUSING OFFICE












































































































--•Pagtj'
10 - THE C~RCLE
- November 7, 1985---~----..ll!l!II----•-~--
.... -•-• .. •
.
.,.•_.
• ...

... •
...
•a.• .. •-
..

..

.. • .. --•
.. •_
... •,
..

... •---•----
...

•.
,
-~.
7
_
....
__
Carn,pus. Theater
·hit.
by . '.Darkof:the
Moorlli
by.
Catherine McHale
.
"Dark of the Moon," Marist's
fall semester production, opens
tonight at 8 p.m. in the Campus
Center Theater.
Set in·the Smokey Mountains,
"Dark of the Moon" is a fantasy
about a boy played by Jim Fed-
digan, who falls in love with a
beautiful young hillbilly girl played
by sophomore Allison Hughes. The
plot develops around the theme
that witches cannot marry humans.
Director Terence Mikos does not
classify
"Dark
of the Moon" as a
musical. "It's a play with music. In

a musical, songs are sung to further
the story," he says; ".That's not
like everyday life. People don't
.
normally break into song. These
songs are a part of the characters'
lives. They are an extension of that
character," said Mikos.
The cast works at hammering
nails, painting window panes, or
laying down cables for the lighting
crew. Some draw models
01
trees
with crayons to use later in building
the actuatset. One member sits at
the piano and entertains the entire
crew with music not from the play.
Mikos sits in one of the seats fac-
ing the stage. It is difficult Jor him
to concentrate on anything other
.
than what is immediately going on.
Questions concerning set construc-
tion come from the stage, interrup-
ting his responses. Sometimes he
will jump from his seat; moving
quickly to the other side of the
theater to judge a certain_effect

from another angle.
"One of the key elements was
.
·&
trying·to cast people from all walks

and was cast in the CBS mini-series


of life," said Mikos. The people in-
"The Contender,'' which. aired in.
volved are v~ried, he says; adding
1980. For three years he worked iri?
that there are members of the ad-
.
the production of "Grease,"·both
•:'

ministration, commuter and resi-•
--on
tour and on Broadway. He was'.
dent students contributing to the
·.
involved in the • Dutchess 'Com>.·

>·production.
"We even have
a
pro-
munity College· production
,
of·
fessional dancer, Odette Dixon,
"Dark of the Moon•~ 13 years ago;
...
choreographing,''. said Mikos. • •
· •
"We are trying.
to
do. things
Mikos came to study as an· technically
.
without· a
-lot
'of·
undergraduate at Marist in May of
money," said Mikos. "There has·
1984 after working as a movie,


been a lot of. development. l de-
stage and television actor, and is in· mand a lot from them, and I hope

his final semester. He had a lead
that I've stretched their acting abili
0
role in the 1979 film "Warriors,"·
ty," he said ..•
Marist professors· satisfied Withriew gradirig SYStetn
by Maria K~nzler
M~rist professors interviewed
said Dr. Jeptha fanning, associate
Eileert Taylor Appleby, .usistant
he is not sure that minus grades are

last week were generally satisfied
professor of communications.
professor of social work, agreed.
the solution. "lthink that the new
.
When are minuse~ a plus? They
.

can be when referring to the
Academic Affairs Committee's
decision to add minus grades to the
student evaluation system, accor-
ding to some professors at Marist.
with the decision to institute minus
Some professors $aid the minus
"The minus grades give students a
policy represents ah attempt·
:10

grades because it allows them to be
grades are fairer to the students.
clearer picture
of.
.where they
bring a
.measure
of precision
to
·a
more accurate in evaluating student
"ll
affords students more slots in
stand," she said.

process
.
that is not. susceptible lo,

perfomance.
"It
will enable
the grading," said William Joel,
The new college policy, which
such precision;'' he said::·.:.
,~>
teachers.to come to a more exact
assistant professor of computer
becameofficial.onMarch25; 1985
.
Dr. MarJorieSchnltz;°,clssociate:.•
assessment of the student's work,"
science.




and went into effect this semester,


professor of. psychology; .~id np(:
Honor s.ociety to inr;luct. stud~nts

significantly lowered the grade
.
see:a need for the change.either:
: •
point index. A B + , formerly worth
The system was accurate as it was;
/
3.5 quality points; now ear~s 3.3
she said.
"I
understand 'that they
points;
c
+
and
D
+ now earn 2.3
(AAC)
changed
it
to accommodate

d I 3

• I A B
the handful o_
f s.tudents who appiy
plaque for my money," he said.
thony
De Barros,
Kimberly
.
an
. pomts respective y; -,
.
-
d C
d
••
3 7 2 7
d
J
7

to medi.cal school," she said. "The
As to what being a member of . DiCapua, Eileen Digan, Gina
an
- gra es earn . , . an
:
b)' Steye
De\'ito

11
·d



• 1·


minus grades make

applicants
.Alpha
Chi, The National College
Alpha Chi can do for a Marist stu-

DiSanza, Scott Fe in, Davi
qua tty pomts respecuv ey.
H




Id

L
d

more co.
mpetitive.':
onor
·Society,
will recognize
dent, Coniker said that it can make
Fisher, Maureen Fuzgera , Susan
,.
ower gra_ es may. encourage
.
students who have sustained a
a prospective job employer take
Freeman, Isabella Gaillard, Maria
students to work harder, according
cumulative average of
3.6
or higher
notice when hiring.
Gordon, Joanne Greaves.
to some teachers. "A student who
at their annual induction ceremony
The honor
society
is co-
Nancy Hakanson, Andre
.
D.
would have formerly received a C,
Last year's AAC chairperson
John
Scileppi
and • fonner.
Academic Vice President Andrew
••
R. Molloy ,vere not available to
comment on Schratz' st~temenL .
to be held in the Campus Center
educational and· comprises 240 Haman, Margaret Heaney, Robert
would be more affected by a C-
later this month. Family, friends
chapters that promote academic ex-
Huber, Marie lsernia, Margaret
mid-term, and would be more apt
and current members of Alpha Chi
cellence and exemplary character
Kearney, Kenneth Kellerman, Jerry
.
to do something about it," said
are invited to attend the ceremony.
among college students.
Kemmerer, Kennetli Knapp, Elaine
-
Davip Klein, adjunct instructor of
Most teachers agreed that they

The students will be honored for
ALPHA CHI INDUCTEES
Kolor,
Erin Mabey,
Denise

fine arts.
will need to re-evaluate their
their outstanding achievement and
Diane Adams, Paul Aiudi, Lisa
Mackey, Dawn McCarey, Dennis
The new policy will also create grading system to adjust.
"I
must
,viii become members of Alpha
Marie Barnhardt, Barbara Baulsir,

Morgan, Dawna Motise.

,
mor_e
discriminatory criteria for the rethink my approach to gradi.ng
Chi, according
to
Charles Thomp-
Frank Bellacicco, Michael Benesh,
Clarice o:callaghan,
Thomas
Dean's List, according to Robert and set new guidelines," said
son, a member who was inducted
Kei1h Blachowiak, John J. Calio,
O'Connell, Lisa Olemus, Andrea • Vivona, assistant pr!)fessor of math
-
Mauri.ce Bib~au, •. assistant pro~
last year. Dr. William C. Olson,
Kevin Callaghan, Paul Campbell,
Orzechowski;
Kim . Palermo,
and computer-science. "Last year,
fessor of Spanish.:
· •
• '··
·"

associate professor of history, is the
Suzanne Cardascia, Toni Ciarfella,
Shawn Paquette, Elizabeth· Reed,
there were hundreds of kids on that

.
.·..
•·
.
faculty sponsor of Alpha Chi.
-
Anne Collins, Denise Contursi,
Shanley· Ritter, Edward Roberts,
.
list," said Y_ivona.
·"It
deflates the.·
.
The new.evaluatjoh policy does
.
;
"Mr. Olson started Alpha Chi
,
Antonio Coppola,
-Jon
Crawford,
-
Cynthia Scofield; Nancy Stewart,
. •
prestige the honor carries,.''
.
.
/,.-
,~
not dictate numerical values to the
0
\Jecause hefelnhatsmart
students
Patricia<.
Croissant

Bruce
··ccheryl.
Trask,
:·l'vl.ary
Werner;
- :Dr.
Richard La~ietra; professor· minus grades.ta-
.is
s.till

up to
••
;;,.i.\~-.~
..
....:
..
t
..
,;-:,~~-~y_eJE_;.)}~b~~l!,\!i.;,.,r~s...qg~J~<i
....
~t
..
...,..C\1.nnil)g\')~!Jl,.;,,;,J
j..:/,,!,::
. ....
,;_..,;:;:;,:
~:I:r?-c~yY"!.e~t;
.~t~~et~i}kins;
~e·n~:;
.••

of ch,emistry; said
,_th~re·.is•a
need·/teachers tC>
ma~~ their pwn, grading··

·
Manst," Thompson said. Richard
Nancy Daly, Doris David, An-
)dy
Worthmann, Wilham Wright.'·
1
for
·a
tougher grading system~ but

scales·:
,
•••••.•
,.
., •
,,.,-••
,
--

.:;.
,.
'
•.
Coniker, whois also
a
member of.



'


the honor society, said that it is the
,,
.••
,.,"'
,,
.•
,,,.,.
,. • :.:,
-
•.
only recognition students receive
for academic excellence. "Students
will receive ribbons at a ceremonial
dinner," he said.
"
Charles Thompson said he felt
he didn't get an adequate awardfor
maintaining a
3.6
cumulative
average. "We had to
·pay
$15
in
order to be part of Alpha Chi. I ex-
pected to receive a certificate or a
.
Are
you
denying
.

yourself
..
-a
netter shot ..
.
atgradschool?
..

Okay. it may be
too
late to
get a 4.0. But ifs noJ
.too
late to
try to do bet~er on your
LSAT.
GMAT.
GRE;
or
MCAT.
For
that.
there·s
Stanley H. Kaplan.
.
No one has
prepped
more'·
students than Stanley H.

Kaplan. Our test-taking tech-·
niques
and educational
.
.

programs have prepared
over 1 million students.
So whatever grad school
.
exam youre taking. call us.
Remember.
the
person next to·

you during
your exam
might
have taken a Kaplan
cow-se.


KAPLAN!
S'W-l!fY
"· K.Al'IAN(OJC.IJ;()NA!
((Nl£R1ro
The
world"s
leading
test
prep organization.
ENROLLING
NOW
For information
on
.

local

schedules call
days, evenings or
weekends
.
(914) 948-7801
'
A Gaihering-
Plac~f or
OQod
Food,'Fine.Bp(rits
and,m.ak-
ing ·new Jrien9s.~.
0

South Avenue

:'
Po_ughkeepsie
471-1771
Full
.lunch
and

dinner-.
menu
Free~
delivery on
phone-i11
oraers
,
.
..
Never--,.·
Jvbover
Ch8.rge·
'Always:
~$t.MU:GS
.
,,.,.
..

:"-··
Mon-Ff i.: ~,ryou can'. eat lunch
:
~
:.
: :-
.-;--
buffet only
s3
99

.-,
-:·
...
,4.
---
...
Mon~Sat_:
all·the crab legs,.salad
·
--
·
.
·
·;
-
. ·
. <
.
'.
&
bread· you. can eat
.Qnly
sg~g
·Frt···&:sat:.-FUU
Buffet;Drnner

• only·
St0
99

.

·-.-:··
Mon·& Thurs: football.on.TV
&

1 O~
buffalo wings
·
·.:...
I
I





























































































.
.
,
'.-
-·•"',>il••-··'·>--·
~
••

..
:..•
...
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••
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--··
.-
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...
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.
.-
••
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-··.
·-· ·:-:
••
-
..

;
•••

••
•••
•••
,;..--,.~,·--•O•'•:
·-·

-· -···-~
·-·
·-·
-·. -··-·: ---·-•·
----··
iiilil111··.-
...
:··-•.
-·--------·-·,
.•
..
--
...
••
••
···-•.
-.•
.....
-
·-·
·-·
·--·
.••
i•iov~mbei
7,
·
19s5-. THE CIRCLE - Page· ,,._. --
.•

t
:
-
.•
·!;.
_,.
.
-:.·.
·•,·
-
•.•·
.·'·
.
••••
..
J,f?:iJineli
SWililmers···psych··.·
u]Jfor new seasofl
'fli:·>
...
·t·'.!"·
•.
:,;!·<.~:,~--
'.. ·:..;;~,
'
,
'
,.
.
.
/
:.
,
Editor's note; This.week,Tht>
Cir:-
.
"_Being that this year'! only have
sets, and work on niaintaini°ng·our
cleis.reviewingthewomen'sswim-
·five
upperclassman...:.. out of 22
endurance level."

mlng·iearn. N~~• issue_
we'll
do
tlie
:
competitors
--.-c
I really don't know
"Over
intercession,
.we

go

meni~,te_am
..
>:::
,;.
·.;.'.'
.
.:_
. .'how.,weH
my incoming freshman
:
through mental training for seven-
••
·!o
,-
.,.,:.;;:,
-,. ~,-. ;,.
·_;

·:
_
..
wilf
do,''
-he
__
said. Yet, Bil_lesimo
.
consecutive days; this involves
by
llill
DeG~nnaro.
,.c:

.... :
.
.
'-has
confidence in the five freshman
.
relaxation techniques, visualization
:.,
,
' ..
-,-
'-
_., .
.
..

-.
he has
recruited
th)s
year.-He'said:
.
and.
listening to motivational
.
••
While
,
th_e Marist
C9ll!,!ge,
..•
"The five girls I recruited as
tapes," he said. This is an attempt,
women's, swimming.·:team is cur.-

freshman were standouts in their
according to Billesimo, to educate
rehtly., 13~ :3-)
-in
_its
tw<? years of
.
,pr~gram~.
in high ~chooL .One in

his
swimmers
on why they do
ccr-
competition;
.-they'
hare expecta-

_particular.,
Kerry Silk, has the
_
tain things during both practice and
iionrf or
c,1
s"a~pn of greater gr(.)wth
:
potential of being
a
finalist in four
competition.
and success. Although, this, years.
'.
iridiv_idu<!-1.events
in our conference.
The idea of recruiting is to
.
women's swimming team· is ex-
,
championships."
.-
Billesimo an importan·t aspect of
periencing a full squad bf young,'
.
Bi_llesimo,
.a
graduate
of
the team's success in the future.
motivated.' and
0well;
conditi(.)iled
•.
Springfielc( College; who has been
•~
As you can see we
are
a fairly
swimmers; Coacfi' Jim

Billes.imo
·

coaching
11-ie'.
womeii'.s swimming
young team, and we are trying to

can_'J be certain
.o.f
ho~ suicessful
~team
from it's start tliree years ago, build on our program. There was
the· t;~m\vill.be'in)he
upcoming

..
utilizes aj1raciice schedule
_which.
no recruiting
·done
for the 83-84
season of eleven dual meets:


-
promotes· both· endurance
-and.
season, and· we still finished sixth
••





••
••

'.
':
•· •
:
precision"· workouts .. He
.said:
in our conference; The ideal thing
by· Dan Pietrafesa and
..

·
/
Brian O'Connor
-
Football team linebacker Peter
Moloney was named the ECAC
Division Three South Piayer of the
Week for his perfo_rmance Satur-
·:."Basically,
three
·out
of·five days, is for ihe program io recruit for
.'
we do a lot of quality ,vork, That
itself. We have good
academics
and


is,
·ho,v
-well
and how··quick\y, as
facilities, and I think that just the
compared· to' getting info the pool
..
name Marist is helping us recruit
and doing an extravagant
·amount

students," he said.
of yardage. The other two days
.-
With the tcam'.s difficult

we'll do some longer
-swi1t1ming·
~
schedule,
Billesimo 11as two dif-
.,.
..
.
.
Soc.certeani
-splits
two;
-fini_shes··
season Saturday
day in the Pace game. He had
13
by
Ellen Ballou
Zarb. Bill Tholen tended goal for
tackles, a fumble recovery and an
the Foxes.
interception ... Football team punter
The Marist soccer team winds
Marist battled back Saturday,
Frarikliri Davis broke the Marist down its season this week. The
beating Manhattan 5-1. The Tri-
record for the longest. punt. His bootcrs were scheduled to play
State Conference game was the last
66-yard punt against Pace broke his Farleigh Dickenson University
.

road contest for the hooters. Each
previous and school record of
62
yesterday in the first of their two
of Marist's five
goals
were
scored
yards
established
in the Siena
game
final contests. Both were home
by Kevin Segrue, Jim McBride, Jim
a few weeks ago ... The seven in-
games and· East Coast Athletic
McKenna, Derek Sherri ff and

terceptions by the football team League matches. The Foxes will
Mark Edwards. Allowing only one
Saturday.is a school record for the conclude their season Saturday
score was goalie Bill Tholen.
most in a game.,. The squad ranks. against Loyola at
1:30
p.m.·
.
Marist's final road
record stands
in the top ten nationally in Division
. Marist lost at home to
.
ninth-
at 5-6 and they are 9-10 overall. In
Three for points given up in a

ranked Long !!;land
4-1
Oct.
30.
the T.ri-State Conferen.ce the
game
...
The .football team
~will
,
Marist's fone goal was scored by
,
_
booters stand·at
4c3
a'nd
are2-3
in •
dose out its most successful season.-- DerekSherriff and assisted by Joe.,·.·. the ECAC Metro C:onference.
Saturday in New London, Connec-
_ferelll goals for his team. He said,
"What we arc looking to do is to
have each of o'tir girls swim their
personal best in each of their events
at our championship meet. As a
team goal, we're looking to move
up a
slot
or two from our last
'•year's
finish.·•

Date
College
Ph1ce
Time
Nov.
9
Metropolitan Relay
Carnival
A
Nov.
II
Brooklyn
H
7
p;m.
Nov.
15
New Paltz
H
7
p.m.
Nov. 18
Marymount/lona
H
7
p.m.
Nov. 23
Montclair State
A
I p.m.
Dec.
6
Queens College
A
6 p.111.
Dec.
10

Hunter College
A
7
p.m.
Jan.
17
RPI
A
7
p.m.
Jan.
21
.
College of
St.
Rose
H
7
JU)1.
fan.- 31
Metropolitan
Championships
A-
Feb.
27
ECAC
Championships
-
STUDENT FORUM -
cc
249
Nov. 12, 1985
at 9:30 p.m.
Come address the
Council of Class Officers
.
on any issue
Get Involved
ticut, against
_the
Coast Guard
Acadeiny. It has been a total team
effort that has led to this great

season
...
Nov: 18 has been agreed
~*,ATTENTION

upon for the men's pre-season
hoop game against the
·Partisan-·.
B~lgrade team of Yugoslavia
...
The_.
men's basketball team has looked
superb in practice ancl sho-uld pro-
:
.
vi.de much excitement in the up-

coming season. The team started·
using the 45-second clock in prac~
tice last week.This new NCAA rule
goes into effect this year
•..
Th_e

..
volleyball·· team- closed
·out
..its
..
. .
regµlar season by winning the SkitJ-
-,
nfore

tournament

this
.
past

weekend. The Foxes showed their
·
d{pth as they changed
to
a
5~
l
o(f ense, due to the loss of two
•• ·s~irt.ers:
.They defeated Vermont,
,
Elmira and Russell Sage. The team
·-riti.ished
the
.season
at
31~9. The

tcfornament victory included a. win
-
over rival Siena, the spikers fiilak
:
Iy;avenged the loss to Siena earlier

in':the season
0
The team awaits the
..
official word of a possible bid to

.
th'e NCAA
.tournament.
The.;-

outlook is'
"good.;;
The
'Marist
/
:
wbmen's swimming and diving.
:
te'~ms Jost

the first meet of- ihe'.
s~on
to Vassar CoUeie, 86-54 ..
•.
T{tere was one bright spot for the
.•

·
water women. In her first collegiate
meet,

freshman
diver
Lisa
B~rgbacher bro_ke the Marist
re<:ords for the one and three-meter
.
d(ves. She tallied 217. 70 in the qne-
meter
and 218.-70 ·in the·- three:
meter. That's what you call starting.
otJt wi~h a splash
...
The men's div-·.
irig squad is headed for the Penn
State Invitational this weekend.
They take with them their consec-
tutive unbeaten streak that carries
back a few seasons ... The men's:
0::oss country runners • finished·
.
eighth out of:21 teams in the state
cbampion·snips
·ar
Rochester fast
weekend.
Pete Pazik
finished fifth
overall with a
time
of
25:40.
Don
Reardon, Christian Morrison,
J<>hn
Clements, Glen Middleton,
D,ave Blodin
and Mike
Murphy
ALL
RESIDENT STUDENTS
*
·;Ai~L-CURRENT
RES.IDENT
STUDEN'TS WISHING
Td
:.-RECON,FIRM
TH·EIR· COLLE.GE.-
HO.USING
FO~
IHI=
SPRING
1986,SEMESTER,
MUST BE
RRE~REGISTERED:.FO_R_-AT.
LEAST 12::-CREDITS
(SPRiNG
86)-AND dC)·-TH-E_FOLLOW[NG:·
·-~-::)l)-SU'3MITACOM.PJ
..
l=TED ROOM REQONFIR-
-<_:
_.
MATIQN-CARO::/\N·o:.
·
.-

.
..
;2)
PAY'A·
$75.oo·~A::r)VANCE
ROOM D-EPOSIT
TO
-
·JHE
BUSINESS
OFFICE
BY
.,·
:,··NOVEMBER·-1s,'.:1-9a5
THE -DEPOSIT 1s· NON-REFUNDA,BLE
ANY QUESTIONS?
.SEE
YOUR RA,· UC, ABO, RD
OR. THE HOUSING OFFICE
rounded
,out
the., finishers for. the
.. ,
- ,,.·
.
t
.....
•:-
:;:-~-
. .
. ,. •
.,
.. . ....
Foxes::.:
••
••

-
••
-
••

..--•----•-----•----••--•-•------------••••------1111
.....
.:.,






































































..,
......

-· 6y.Dan Pietrafesa
b_etJer'.'
When Ed c~rriesJhe ball,
. _: .: <-.-. :: • , :· . . . ... .
. . Mark
wiH
throw a good block to
• ' - ·: After defeating Pace 12s3 in the
lead Ed; and when Mark carries the
·, ·home'.season ·finale on Saturday,
ball, ~d will throw a good block to
-··:
'.the
Red·FO_x
fOotball·teain\vill
look·, Iead-:~ark. '~ -
~- _ ._:,,
:·.·_.,

- <-to cap ofL·a··successful season
WhileMarisi wjll have its runn-
• against. a Jough opponent· in the
ing .game, Coast Guard will have
• Coast Guard Academy .. _ : . .
the passing game going. ·
.'CoastGuardwillenterthegame
.. ·''They
o
have
·th'.e ,_most
,vith a deceiving
3-6
record; This
sophisticated passing game in Divi-
.\
should be .a tough game for the ·sion Three," Malet said. "They
r
Foxes.'Coast Guard was trounced
will throw and throw into the·
'.\
42-14Saturday byKings Point Col-
sfrength,ofourdefense." .......
.
•') .. ,
, lege, ranked fifth-nationally. The .. ThcFoxesarereversingtheti-erid-
1
, .
week before they Iostto Union Col-
of the 2-7 seasons, which, will be a
.,
: lege, ranked second. in the:nation. ·_.-great. irjbuie to this team,. accor-
1
>-. Both ·Marist ·arid ,·the. Coast,'' ding to :Malet'. ·_ .
• ·- • :, •
.!
·;;fJ;.·.
~Guard·.- have
played
SUN)'·
.
Two second-half touchcfc~\Vl!S.
i):

Maritime _ and; .• Rensselaer
paved the way for a·'12-3 Red Fox
~
• :·rolytechnic:institute. Coast Guard
victory oyef Pace:
• - •
1
• defeated Maritime 62~0 and RPI
The· win was the sixth\of. the
I

'2101;· while the· Maiist beat
season, the
most
for the Foxes·in
:
~
• Maritime 21-0 and lost to RPI
a season since
i
97t It was aiso the
,1
15-14. • . ••
. _
. ..:.•
first Red Fox vi~tory; without a
'
,::::_
Mari.st will enter the game with • shutout. • • ••

1
\·.·a 6-2.recofd and has five shutouts
.With the .•Foxes
do\vn 3"'t0
earlY

to its er.edit. The shutouts were • in the third- quarter, Christensen
t1
.•
recorded against SL Peter's, SUNY. did
a
down and. out along the
) __
,
son University-Madison.and Siena.· touchdown recepti~n from quarter~
•••
• - · Mari~f ·wide receivers · Ho~ard Herodes (88) and Chris
Cascone
(89)
celebrate with running back Ed Christe_nson
after
a score in Saturday's 12-3 victory over Pace;
• .. : •
,_
- -
.'. •
• • • •
_ - . (photo by Laurie Barraco)
<,
..
.
.
. .......
'
• 1
• Maritime, Iona,Fairleigh Dickin- . sideline
to grab a 45-yard
• .· The Marist offense will be Ied·on back Jim; Fedigan.
.
J ;
• ••
the ground by running backs Ed
The Foxes added. the ·insurance
Kevin. Ente'rlei~· se~en times and
1ine ·of scri~mage as the Setters on-
Teams
1 2 3 4 Final
~
1

.-
Christensen and Mark Burlingame. .touchdown early _in .the fourth
halting two Setter drives on-fourth
ly mustered 37 yards rushing in the
Pace
O 3.0
0
3. •
\\
Both transferred to -Marist this quarter on. a 10-yard c;lraw,on a
down plays. Defensive backs Jeff
game. • •
Marist
O 0.6 6 · 12
!J
:.
·.
season and have been a vital part
third and 10:Surlingame carried
Friedman and Jim Ross each had
Pacc-
34
_yard field goal.
; <'

-
of the offense.
. -: .
: •.• ·:· •• thc·ball -and a couple of Setters the-.
two
interc_ep·
tions .while. safety
"It was a full team effort," said
.,_..

·
· h
·
Marist-Christensen
45-yard
l . •
·"They have meant a lot to t e . last few yards ·into the eqd zonefor • franklin ·oavis and linebackers
Malet. '' According to bur coaching
F d. ·
d
1:,
pr __
ogram;". sa_-_id
Marist. . .Head. the score;
-
•• • .
P ter Molo.ney· and"'Sea·n Keenan
.
reception from
e igan (kicke
I~··
.Coach Mike M~Iet. "The blocking '· ·, TheMarjst defense sparkled ~Y ;:cou~ted for the others.
_ • • ~h!~;s~~:Ju1ci.t~e~~~;~:::e~~;
failed).
(
1
,
.
ability 6f both makes' them even • intercepting ~etter quarterback
The defensive line dominated ihe
proud· of the team."
Marist-Burlingame lO-yard run
~
..

~~}I~
C~ser
\{\;t/
'_t;
~rf\?.
_hqrses~o"' .it_~d~_lp_~_jColleg(:;iE9(\
~;•_r~fl,!~~a.!iit~
theii'theard the op--~. place
a
'ri~er
finishes
in
is g!ven ·a ·:·"--1y
Hall.~·-~ ?:".: •
__
-, .· :
-
, .,.
_.

C

;


those,unfam1har With the sport,
.
pos1te,finally_itwas approved and
point value;·seven poi11ts for first
. Knox said her m_ain
objective for
••
: •.
>, Rodney; Datig~rfield
·_-
~ertaitily • Knox.explained "'the equestrian
..
_ Jwas ecst.atic,'' Knox said. _.
place, five-for second and so cm , . the future is tp.educate the college
,<ctoesri't' get any -but the MarisL team is.a_,group ,of 14 riders
\;VPO
-
>,.The,team resides in Region :[in • down to one point for a sixth place
community on the team an9 what
. :'equestrian team. is gaining mote
take lessons as well as compc:tein • the· 1:H.S.A; arid conipetes .igainst
finish. Knox recently qualified for • it does. "I'd like to .set up an ex-
and more respect within its field:. Jnter1.:0Hegiate ' Horse
Show.· ,,·19 other schools ·slich as Drew,
the regionalsjn the novicedass and-
hibition to make the campus more
••. \i:r:~e!!~it~nt:;!~
it~e~,T~~~~
·_·.
-~-~K~°d1!:W.h~_n_
••
_~";?!fs-

__
a,td;:
~~?t-·i·
ii1;~r:;fes.ftl~i~\~?.~cke?t\
.
:
tir~!?'./1/~u r~present -~ari~t: in •••
;:t;.f
e°fs~f :· :~: s~~;s:·SLa:: Yf~
-
.
-
-
.: nox,
t
e teams 1Jun er, said_ : ~, Accordingto Kjjox;-theteam has<
-:
The team recently wound up the
homecoming_,parade arid loved
~frequent· response is,:
-•~The._what
'she·experiericed a lot of red tape in
.
'been improving sieaqiiy arid gain.: • fall season· after ·three' shows in~
··
_thern.
''. '

,team?''JoyceKilox,presidentof
theb~ginningst_ilges;-"lhadto~on- -· irt1Vmore,r~cogiiiti611; Last year
cludfog_ one at home ·at the:<
,
.
:
·•
... ·, .
.>
, cthe team,< hitf peen working
tact.Robert_
Ca_cchione,
the head pf .. Debbie .Jantzen; yice president of
Roseview Stable: Vincent finished, •. _
Jantzen 1s optimistic about the_
,
diligently tb establiSh the equestrian_ the LH.S_.A.; who then referred me· • the team,:qualified for the regionai
first and Knox fifth iri their respec- · future . of the · equestrian team .
.' team at M;irisL •


- to R~giria ~J!al' of Pace Uriiversi~ . -championships and went on-to the
tive classes, .,· •• ·_ . .· . '
.. "_Marist wiHbe competing morejn
..

'i',:
Kri6~. , e°xpiained. that ,
ail
ty," she'said>··· ';-:-.. · •
:na'tionals where slie·. faired very
: During the off-season the'te.im
upper level divisions like novice
.·. -equestrian.teamisadifficultccin-·
• ··_ . o: ~-
..• _.-·- ...
,
V{elL-.
. ....
,:-•:,
~
practices, __
according.to}--.Ron.-
an,dintermediate,".shesaid.
• cept to marke(in a. college
__
at~ ."Beforeateaincou1dbeforin~d~
_ ;>·•: __ <<,,
.· < . _ '·
•·. ·Esposito,thetrainerat
Ro-seview.··. -According to Knox, "A lot·of
_::·m<>sphere.
''It's ncjta traditional

she said; a gfoupof-dedicated and·.
.".We
1
re .inore organized ,and
"The girls work very hard ail year.: our,members have classed up and
• spe~tator sp_ort-like basketball or
>
interested riders had to be gathered :, c;on)petitive -now,'.'. • J.intzen said.
round and I enjoy-helping them im-/ are -,:gaining _valuable riding ex-
. -football,"

-·• -
and a_constituti6n formulated.and
"We~re',.:gaining the needed · ex-
prove any -way
f
can," Esposito
perience in competition.''.
.
-
.
. ,,j_>
,
0 .
submitted to the Office of College --.peri~nce and· exp_c,~ure
to esfablish .- said,·
i

••• •
•• •
J_ant~en a junior, added; '.'.The
:
: The-~questrian teani wasborn in - Activitjes"for approvat
z:<::;
> :
:~the team ·a~ a:viapl~ ~onteilqer:'
• The team also holds fundsraisers. equestrian team • .adds . another
the spring of 19.84
when· Knox arid
·•
,_
-. '.l'he c9ristituti9h ~as accepted . ; .~:
~ach • rider. ne~ds -28 "points in : : _
io
help cover .expenses and Tees. On ; • dimensi?!l to.ih.ear.~ay;
of
sports in_ ·
• a few· o·thei''.etithi.isiasiic
students
after
a
lot-of vaciHating·and inded- : iJheir particular class.to qualify for
Nov. 21, the team will hold a bake·.• . the Manst co~milmty. Thmgs can
: took the iniciativlafter watching a '. sioil. ''First-I neardit was going to • the regionals,iexplairted Knox_.
The
sale starting
at
lOasm. in Donnel~ : only get, b~tter _-;,




·,
~.
--
-~~·.,
-_
'-~: •• • .. '.
·.·-:·-:··•_:·--
~--··:.
:·.: .. ;_~----·-: ·-='·
>·;:•---_\:\:_~--·-.•:<:..~•-: .·._-_'-.·_:_:-
. .:..:,.•,
__
:.. .·_ -~ :_:_:_
. :·---_-.·
:;Thursday/Morning··
Quarterback.-
··•.··.
.
. AFOX
fallS?iri
the
Si8.iids

.
.
.:
Editor's • riote: The following .·
relax and enjoy the game. So you
sport ..• All that bon~ crushing,
,Thursday Morning Quaterback is '.
sit down. •
. .
•• ...
a guest column·by Michae_l,Carey, • :_.
Then you notice the cowbell.
.. a junior majoring in communica.-.
Okay._ Maybe-it's in case she gets
- ·helmet smashing and backside pat-
tirig;H causes even the mildest of
pe_ople - to - go banan~s. paint
th!;!mselves
-red and go without a
shirt in· 20-degree weather. (I
tion arts.
c
• •
-.
• •:
seperatea from her husband or

-_ something.
'Although I have been here three
years -no,v,
last·
Saturday
·1
did
something I had only done on one
other occasion. Last Satµrday, I at-
tended. a Marist Football game.
Upon reflecting, l realized ,vhy I
had only gone once before:
What is it about a football game
that makes grown men and women
recreate a scene.from "Dr. Jeckyl
and Mr; Hyde?" Sure; they seem
-
innocent enough. A nice gray-
haired woman
is
sitting . in . the
stands, giving the appearance of.so-
meone's grandmother. You figure
this is a safe place to sit - you can
_
.
• .should
note this did not actually
_: Then -play resumes. Suddenly· -_· happen Saturday~ bu tit_ very ·well
. this nice, middle.aged woman is
<,
could _have:)
• .

- • • ••
_
screaming at the top of her lungs • _ • -l know' what you're thinking.
at anyone who would listen: the
Who is this guy and what's his pro-
players, the referee, the Tans, the
blem? Well, let me set the record •
• trainer; the PA announcer, the guy
straight. I guess the only problem
selling hot dogs (although ·not two - I have is I am one of probably a
for
$1),
etc. I think you.get the pie-

handfull of football fans across the
·ture. As you look around, you
country who like to go and simply
notice that others who resemble
enjoy the game, without losing my
your grandparents and aunts ·and • voice for· four
10·
six weeks. For
uncles have turned into those peo-, some people I met Saturday, this
pie that cause you to cross the·street -· is a m~jor problen1.
,


in order
to
avoid walking directly
I seriously think the '.Detroit
past ·the~.
-
Tigers hired an of the Lioris' fans
I guess it's the nature of· the . to cheer them on in the 1984 World
Series. After they won, these fans . a knot to my' stoma.ch.
became disoriented, ·thought the ,
- It got so bad at one point, I-r.eal-
- Lions were the world champs and • . ly felt sorry for that poor Pace .
celebrated by trashing.Detroit. The
player they were picking on. After·
trouble is, that Detroit looked bet-
all, when. nature calls, aren't. you· •
ter after the World Series.
• • • more or less forced to answer? He
. - A cru;e like that is very rare in

s~mP!Y
,fouit_d
t~e ·nearijt _t~_~e;
and~ •
baseball; You would not see "Clara , w~ll;
~
J!.
sp~r~. any details.·•.,;,· •
3.nd-·
her
'CO\Vbell"
at a
ba5ebau • "
.... _
~
. •• .·
. . . :
.
.
game. She probably spends her
•• Manst won the_g~mel2-3·and
summer swerving to hit defenseless ·_ played an outstanding game. -I
squirrels. Then, as a - gust rolls ·. guess as I look b~ck, the .Red foxes
around, she gets out the
v·cR
and. should be proµd
to
have fans wbo •
the tapes of last season, polishes are thaJ loyal. They would pro-
the cowbell and pratices in front of
bab!Y die f<?r
the Fo~es. As for me,
the TV. The players have a pre-
1 thmk 1. will hang m th: shadows
season, so why not Clara?
for ;i while. But t~en agam, m~yb_e

_
I'll change my philosophy on wat-
. As the game grew on, I prayed
ching a football game in person.
that Marist w~uld win. I kept
After all, you only live once: But
thinking: What will these people
still, I gt:ess you haven'freally Jiv-
tum \nto ifwe lose'?" The thought
eel
until a middle-aged'women has
brought a.lump to my throat and
called you a wimp.