The Circle, February 6, 1986.pdf
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 32 No. 2 - February 6, 1986
content
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Af t~r~Maris.t:~
-Retrospe_~tive·-
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·Lo~~ii:-Tii6fua:s
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in ••
drinking'
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:ct·e_~tli-
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Marist Coilege, Poughk~epsle,:f!.Y~
StU.9eri-ts
_;pfess
-·
;a:paftheid
issue
by Bill DeGennaro
•
Concra and th~ m~mbet'sof the:
coalition are pursuing two different
f
..
,
.
.
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The Progressive Coalition
.
at
means of educating the students at
Marist College remains a~tively in-· Marist concerning· apartheid and
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valved in its quest-to educate the
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divestment.
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student body on the different issues
'An apartheid awareness week is
!
.....
of apartheid.
•
.
•
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being planned· for. either the last
Last weekend, several students
·
week inFebruary orthe first week
from Marist's Progressive Coali- • in March.· Concra has
.
already
tion met with students from nor-
received commitments from facul-
theast colleges at Trinity College in
.
ty members to give.speeches on the
Hartford, Conn. The focus of the
·economics
• and
•
history
-of
conference was to. learn strategies
apartheid.
. • -
.•
on how to increase pressure on col-
The coalition is also circulating
·
leges to divest.
.
38_petitions. "Basically,''.
.Concra•
.
:
,
Apartheid, South Africa's policy
.
said, "the petitions say that we_·
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:
•.
of racial separation; has recently
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want the administration to make a
become a subject o( major debate
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pbsition statement ori their feelings
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Volume 32, Number 2
l
·
.....
f
lt c?lle~~s ~nd universitie~-~ro~nd
ab~ut ,}nv~st m~_nts in_·. Sou th
•
.·-·<
Keeping"tbe•issue
alive: tli~ough this sign and other effort~, members of.Marist's Progressive·
,·
.th!!·
:na~io~.
St_ud~nts . opposi_n_g Afnca.
• •
'.
_
.
,_.'
~-
·
. .
··:·.>_:coalition,
which is fighting apartheid, h_ave
maintained their
,message
si_nce_early_last
semester.·
.
ap~rthe1d ar~_ pressunng their
•
C~~cra s~,d t_~e_,
P.r~g~~s~i.ve
_·
-::.~.:-<The
sigl!JIS paintt~ on the·backof the,Sunoco_st~~ion_near the_Gard~n·-Apa~~!'!ts~·,:
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schools to divest t_hemselvC:~-of Goal~t1on will_ cont1i:1~:.;to ho!d.
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-CoalitionarMarist~ the conference
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pose
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us about·,
•any_thirig?':
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It
!_s-·'··
tiy
·Regina·
Rossi_,
: (
·-:>o:,·.·_/,i;,)
·>
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Falanga sai_d
t!t: center has· had,\·_ students;
-fa~anga
,said.~om~-lised.-
-,
~was
successful·. in
-
educating
_the
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·necessar}',
•
lJecause we'.•all
·_reed
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:'..· ?'.·,·-/problems
findn1g disk storage space
.
:ot,he_r
peopl_e
s acco~nt_~
m
o_rd~r
_to •
_.
_
students on apartheid and divest-·
•
learn about~pattheid, and_ diye§~-
·,
Technwal'Pt?l:1l_eT-~
~~d~'!11s~~e_
>·
for, the SMS ac,counts. The cen_t_er
:
~tor~ m°-re:mformat1on, s~mettmes
•
.,
.
.
meilt in particular. "We were able
.
ment,
<that,.
we· hear
,
different-.
_haveresult~,d?!_I,
tl:i~ ehmmat10n of
.
has alse> had
.J?roblems
managmg
._
lockmg. ou~· _!he account
5,
actual
to bring back material for the peos
•
opinions/'.
·"-
.
ii:
.
<S:
-::
•
>
-
some ~M.S:c9~1>t!teraccounts,,_ac-
.·
the
-:·
expandn~g number of CMS
•
own_e~
or losmg the
.owner
s files,
•
.·
pie here,an·d_\Ve
learned
the
names
.
__
:_.
C,oncra n9te~t_hat t!il!_meetivgs,
,
c<;>rdi1:1g
to. J~IIleS
:·Falangq,
a~tmg_
'.
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acce>un~S;
hf-S~l~:
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,
.
.
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he saici:-
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of.some people who
'Yill
be al>le to
w_hich
ofteni~ttract as many as_40t director pf:t~e Comput~r C,e~i~r
'.
/:e
Infor1:1auo~. 1n· fhe
•
MUS{CB .
:
~lso, some stude11ts
were m1~us-
.
.
. _
_,
•
:,
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heJp· i.is/':'he
'said.·.
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_or
50 people, may devote atten!1on
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~owever,·
-C:MS
\
~~counts
·_re-·
•
system 1~
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e~s1er.:
to, store be~ause 1!1g-,
BIJNET,
_·.
a telecommumca-
-;~;:;
,;s,,
i:
-<-<
'Concra.
•while
coiicemed. with
..
ahd.debateto·such topi9s
_as
~r.e~i- qmrecl f~r certam ~ntmg and com- .· permanem cl1sk
storage space 1~_us- tl<>n_s
network·· used to ·exchange
.·,
•.
•
•
,· ·-,,
_th~
issue,o'f racismfo South A(ri~ ••.
,,dent::Ri:maJcl_Reagall'~•
£~ri.trov·er-., put~r_cou~s_esp~vfrti:it]b~?!~moy,:
:
1
ed
_orily
~h;riAfilejs ~a.ved;
In
_the
;s~~ol.~rly
·
work ~etween ·. univer-
.
-i~ .
tfoiibled
_and
disc~ura.ged
/by
{
sial/ "Star_ -Wii!~;'-:'~efe11se·~'.,.:'-~~
i
e<.t~,
Falan~~ s~~d:
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~MS syste~;
~<;11
account requires
_s1t1es,
_Falanga saJd.
.
.
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·:
what he labels. as radsin here at
:
North Ireland's attempt to
•achieve . • .The
mamreason f(?r. the change pre-allocated,
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permanent space.·
'·
Al~hough BITN,ET: 1s designed
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_-Marist>:
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self~rule.
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was the.Computer Center's inabjli-
Unlike MUSICB; stor;ige work
for
~nlyfor academic purposes, some
.·_{:
''WhiJe_,~-e"do
·have
a black stti-
-
•
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_tori era stressed that divestm~nt
.
ty. to.· keefl up with the_ t~chnical.' CMS' i~ performed
.inamially
by
•
students used it fqr social purposes,
.
:
:derihinion
'and
a.black: fraternity
:-
is a complicated issue. "People
·•
demands of the rapidly growing, Computer Cent_er staff_ members.
.
failed "<:hatting,'' he said. Some
"at
Marisf
T
find
it
discoui:agli'1g must be educated first
if
they are system~ <'H had exp·anded beyond
•
Another-reason for the elimina~ users also s_ent.
copyrighted pro-
•
::th~t
ther; is· not one black pro-
.
goirig to_beable toinake_a decision our means. of contr~Uing.
it;'':.
tiori of accOU(!tS.was
''proc!!dural
grams over }he
,system,
.another
::-
fessor
on campu~,,; Concra sa_id:"
'.
about divestment," he
~aid.
Falanga said.
' -
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misuse"
•.
of CMS by several
.:
; · •
,Continued on
page
9
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•'CSD
to.•reWS.e·-Studertt
r(!f)tlyfflent
p!an,;
::i·delays
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cailsed--:by
c;qmrn_tttee_.-.-conlu.sion.
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Marist•·:wants
'ne_w--.J1earing
i~
or Bennett · College money
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by Gina Disanza
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forced to place72 students i_n
tern-
-.
administrators,
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Marist's
.~hief
by ~hri,stian Morrison
.
he said, because "even though
,.
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_.
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,
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;
·.':_p_orarytiousing:
All
residents.wc;re
-
finani::ial Offi~er-A_nthony-Cam-
,
-...
"
,·.,
•
·•
.
they're not a college,'they're from
After almosc·thre~ mon.thf
of
\'.moved
__
iri by'.the. beginning-.:
of-
_pilii
and cox:~·_and
t_hat she will be
L~w;ets'fe>r Ma~ist want
t~
re-
the same village and represent;"
'.delays,
the.financial readju~tment
'·October,
._,
.
:
- ·-·.·.
-
:
,._
taking over. as chairperson.· She
·
open a hearing to get part of
a
gift
although to a
·small
degree, the
-
proposal
..
for students
:
inconve-
:
::
After some students. had
ap-
~
alsq said she hopes
·a
new proposal
,
that
h?s
already beeri given io three same kind of interests as Bennett
"niencedby
housing problems is be~
·
proached Ryan the
.first
week1n• 'Can.be drawn up by.the end·of this
'.area-schools,
according to Anthony
·did.".·
•
ing revised, s~id Council of Stud~rit
:_
*ptember_ about c~mpensation for • week'.
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• Cernera·, acting vice
·pre•sident
for
.
Since Marist didn't know about
Leaders President Suzanne ~yan.
•
students. mconvemenced by the
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Currently the c.omm1ttee com~ -college advancement.
the hearing-,)~s lawyers are now
The drafted proposal
'Yru;
never temporary ho.using shortage, Ryan prises Ryan, Inier-House·council ·: -13arcl College~ ~ace. University taking steps to see if it can be re-
presented to the administration as
'
formed a committee to draw up a President Brian Wicenski, who- . ·aridMillbrook-I>·rep
School were all opened, Cernera said. He said he
planned; Ryan's letter-to the editor proposal.
.
,
,
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previously chaired the committee,
awarded. shares of $340,000 in
_
couldn't- spedfy what those steps
in the Nov. 7 issue of The Circle
.
Vice President for Student Af- and seniors Christian Morrison and
donations made to the now-defunct are at this time because of the
said the proposal was to have been fairs Gerard Cox said he was disap- Robert Haughton, Garden Apart-
Bennet( College in Millbrook, N;
y.
-
delicate nature of the case.
submitted to the. cabinet on Nov •. pointed that the proposal~aking
ment residents who started a peti-
·Bard
and Pace each received
The state Attomey·General's Of-·
12.
so Jong to reach the administration. tion to i::ompensate inconvenienc~ $166,250 in shares, while Millbrook flee published legal notices in the
•
Ryan said the proposal is now Cox said he wanted all read- ed students.
•
Prep was awarded $7 ,S00 under a
Poughkeepsie Journal and the
going
.
to be rewritten because a justments made on the spqng bills.
.
The proposa! called for each stu-
settlement
·approved
by state
Taconic Newspapers
·
about the
clause requesting compensation for
•'This_is an issue where the stu- dent in the F Section of the Garden
Supreme Court Justice Albert
hearing, but according to Cernera,
·
inconvenienced
freshmen
in dent leaders have to stand up and Apartments to receive a full refund
Rosenblatt on Dec. 17.
no one at Marist read them.
cramped housing conditions.is now
•
say, •we are to blame'," Cox said. of the per-day room charge for
Rosenblatt awarded Bard its
•
Cernera said he feels Marist has
unnecessary because the college has He added. that the administratio_n each day SJ?Ci:tt
in alt~rnate housing. share because the college «was
been shortchanged ... At the time
alredy made an adjustment on their normally would have created a task The remammg residents of· the closest in character and profile and that Bennett College dosed, Marist
spring bills. Also, some of the force to study the s\tuation, b~t Garden Apartment~ would r~ceive region" to Bennett, he said, and Coll«:ge played a significant role in
financial requests in the proposal Ryan informed President Denms a $75 refund for mconvemences because like Bennett, Bard is a helping to keep the legacy of Ben-
were unrealistic she said.
Murray at September's housing caused by
-
lack of security and
liberal arys college. Pace was given nett College alive."
In September: the F Section of forum that a student committee maintenance, !nadequa~e fire alann
an equal sum because that college
When Bennett closed, Marist
Marist's new Garden Apartments had already been created.
systems and interruptions caused
absorbed faculty and students from
took approximately 90 of its
was not completed on time for the
Ryan
said that the present com- by incomplete construction in the
Bennett.
students, eight of its faculty
opening of school. The college was mittee will be enlarged to add some_
Conlinued on
page
2
Millbrook prep received $7,500,
Continued on page 9
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--P11:ge
2·--T~E CIRCLE - February 6,' 1986.
. ·
Contiit11ed
from page 1
.
:area.·
:,:
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Students . · living
·in • the
Townhouses, North Road apart-
ments and Champagnat Hall who
were assigned an extra roommate
during the alternate housing period
would
receive
a
$25
reimbursement.
The plan also included restitu-
tion for freshmen who were tripl-
ed up because of a lack of housing
in their area. However, Cox said
the affected freshmen have already
received
a
credit on their spring
-bills.
''.The plan
to
refun<!_Jreshmen
has been i'n effect for several
years," said Cox, "so it was very
easy
to
make the proper adjust-
•
/
ment to their
.bills
for the spring
semester."
Ryan and Wicenski met with
Campilii last week. Campilii said
he was willing to provide guidance
in the reworking of the proposal.
"I
will provide them with direc-
tion and alternatives but I will not
write the proposal. I believe it
·should
come from the students,"
he said.
.
.
.
Campilii added that he had not
seen the original proposal. The new
one will be presented directly to
Murray.
•
According to Ryan, one of the
delays was that Wicenski wanted
campus-wide endorsement of the
proposal before presenting it to the
administration. Ryan said Wicen-
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ATTENTION A.EE STUDENTS!
.
~.
..
.
As
of Fe·bruary
·3r·d,
.WE
,_
:_BEGA·N
ticketing andtowitlg alFSttldent ca'rSpark-.
ed in any lot, Ilotdisplaying aMaristCol+
.
Iege car fegistratioll sticker, otl the leftrear
.
bumpef, and thoseinega.llyparkedirt
i:lie
.
.
·)
_,·
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·
.
••
following· lots:
,
ski distributed approximately 40
endorsement
forms. to
•
!HC
o·.
. .
'
II
.
'
G
t
h
.
A'
~~~esr:~~:~~~s
.• ;i;s:rd~ve still not
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Wicenski said another problem
was that-no one on the committee
F.
.
G
_.,.
.
A'
.
~~/i:a~!~ls~~:k:i~ou~cda~~p;;;
orta1ne,_. reystone·.
·
rea,
demands.
·
~;;.i;~::::::::::::::::.
..Park~ng:••At~~r'.Q~lji,ncl.•.Gh3lm
p~gftat
•
ing for the moon," ·said Ryan,
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ing
used in the reworking of a more
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feasible
plan. •
•
•
•
"The people in the F Section (of
the apartments), especially
F-5
aitd
F-7, were without a home for over
six weeks and they deserve compen-
sation," said Ryan. ''As for the
others, how can you pufa price on
•
lack of security or maintenance?''
While
.
Ryan said· she is unsure
•
•
what revisions will be made on the
proposal, she added that there is a
possibility that compensation for.
the students in sections D;. E and
G, whose apartments were com-
pleted
on time, would be so small
that
it could block administration's
approval of the whole proposal.
:
Wicenski said the committee was
.
also delayed because it could
no('
•
ly. Wicenski said the committee
:
needed•io know exactly how many
•
days each student-
was.·.
inconv.e-
.
nie'!ced, bef9re a· J~r:·atriount
:or~.
compensatioµ could be deterinjnect
•
But-the residents of the. Garden
.
Cost of ticket
"ls
$25.00, towing charges,
i/$45.00,
Plus $10 . .ooa. day storage foreach
.
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Apartments, especially those living··
•.
in
·F-5
and F-7·who spent 43 days:
in alternate housing, are upset
•
about the delay in.their refunds.
:.
.
...
-.
·
:~~~rm
amazed itthe_lack'ofcom.::.:
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.
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munkation:
·not
-~niy
:between\
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.
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students: and, administration,
-
but
c
.
also
between
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students
.
and
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suidenJs/~. said senior":Qavid
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:::th.e·.,,E1nal
:-wE1tten.-:·
1
warn~1ng-·.•that
:you:._;{~-
:;xi~-)>tf
1
\···J111.
·.•
•··
t'~C~ft
~
~.o;\iifi~rtk·.-.·.}t0ii··
."··
10
r.·•·~···,yo·JI.j'
·•.-··.·•···.~.r
•
Margalotti
<>f
Occ;anport, N.J.,
an
F-5 resident.
"I
signed
the
petition
in November and haven't-heard a
.
_
word
about it ·since~" • .
•
•
• • •.
•
•
•
··Senior
David
Rakowiecki
•
of
Cranford, N.J.~ also of F-5; said
be believes
•
the administration
should
take
more
·action. -
.
-
·
•
•
.
"The student
.
representatives
shouldn't be co111pletely
to blame/'
he said.
•
"The administration
·
shouldn't sit back and wait for a
proposal ..
Why
are they (the acl-
ministration) always in a reac~
tionary position?"
·1·0·QC
·~r,~
,1.,0.JAH-.
b'oope:rit.tiOl1..:
.•
;
'"•
,·
•••
•
-
•
•
:
..•. ·•··
.
;-
••••
·· ,._
..
.
~
.
.
"
.
.
.
-:Joseph_
J.
---waters·.·
·Director
.Safety
& Security
.
-
..
•."'
..
:,..,.
~);::·t::·)>:
•
'
a
February 6, -1986. - THE CIR~LE - Page
3---
...
,~.
.
'
.
Weather to dictate
center·'
s
-
conipletion
A fouMtory greenhouse? No, just a prot~ctive covering.attached
_to
the· open walls of the
Lowell Thoinas building to warn\ the interior enough for workers to pour cement.
•
.
.
·
·,
\
(Photo by Marc Marano)
SenioT is gUiding~light
f
orsoa[J opera faithful
by Mary Ann Dolan
.
but it turned. out to be rewarding
and a lot of fun," says the 21-year-
old from Oceanside, N. Y.
When fans of' the soap opera
. •
Mullen says starting the club
"The Guiding Light" want to get
.
from scratch took a lot of work.
an inside scoop on the show, there
Mu.lien's responsibilities include
are two places they can turn: CBS writing and-designing bi-monthly
_at
3 p.m. weekdays and Marist
newsletters and one journal per
College.
•
•
year.
,'
-~Maristis
the h~trte: of the
.
He says the club has ov~r 700
, ·Guiding·
Light. fan club and
•
its
members, both in the United States
:">5prcsident,,
senior
',•C,hris
•
Mullen ..
•.'
llno;Cariada'. Each
.pays
$12 annual
•
J,Mulleri says his iriter_est
in the show
•
dues, which covers the expenses for
..
•
began through Kathleen Kellaigh;
•
..
•.
the publications ..
•
'·1\_(ellow
church-memtierwho later,
•
•
•
, •
becameacastmemberoftheshciW
•.
•.
Being the fan
·representative
takes tip
a
lot of his free. time,
Mullen, who at the time was in
•
Mullen says·. He answers· all fan
the eighth grade, was invited to the
.
mail, which.ranges from IO letters
•
CBS studio to watch the taping
of
_.
a week to
JO
letters a day. Among
the sl_l9)V
and realized
"this
iswhat
•
the letters he receives are those that
'I.want.
to do.'•_':Mitllen says he was
•
as_k
Jor information an~ th_ose
that•
.· ,
....
·fascina~ed
by the prnductionaspect
.•
.•
voice an opfoion.,.
.
·:oftheshpw
•.
·:\~·'>·::-'
..
•
~
••
~~-
'
<;
...
:
.•
••
At the ti~e. the shbw didn't have
'.a
ran'·dub. But in November 1980;
••
Mullen
.
received _a: letter
of
'authorization
to start the club from
'theshow!s
producer, Alien Potter.
;"Starting
a fan clup wa;,; diffic1:1lt,
•
'
.
~uHen-~~pl~in~ that his h1g1est
C
challenge as president is to organize
the annual gathering of the
_club
members and ihe cast of the show.
"This'evem is the epitomy of fan
clubs: Everyone comes to see the
stars," says Mullen~
Mullen adds that he enjoys his
work as fan representative but has
wanted to change the name "fan
club" many times. "I don't like the
connotation of screaming and
•
obsessed fans ,associated with fan
clubs," he says.
Through his work as p~esident,
MuUen- had
the
opportunity to
.
work as
an
intern on the
show
for.
the fall semester. The senior says
it was.a great learning experience.
"I was able to meet a lot of great
people:" he says.
'.'It
was more· fascinating work-
ing with Gail Kobe, the executive
producer, and Robert Kochman
and Linda
.Laundre,
producers,
than working with tue actors," says
Mullen.
•
•
·
.
. .
As an intern, Mullen did a lot of
office :wofk .. ~'But it was
really
in-
teresting• oecause
l
learned a lot
about the show," says the senior.
On the last show before his·in-:·
ternship was over, Mullen had ihe:
opportunity to make a "cameo ap-
pearance" in one of the scenes.
'by
Julie Sveda
Depending on weather condi-
tions. the Lowell Thomas. Com-
.
municalions Center should be com-
pleted by January 1987, according
to Edward Waters, vice president
•
for
administration
and finance.
''Everything
is in order now. The
only kicker is the weather," Waters
said.
Construction of the center has
been mired·by complications and
delays since its groundbreaking in
May 1984.
Among those complications was
the discovery of an underground
strec\rri. This led to changes in the
proposed site of the building and
design modifications to increase the
building's support.
Although the original estimate of
the center's
cost
was $3 million,
that figure has grown lo $3.5
million, Waters said.
•
Waters added that the college
has already begun making decisions
about later construction details in
order to save time and money in the
future.
"We
arc working with architects
on details
such
as floor tiles.
Though these things arc con-.
siderably down the line, we'll get
a leg up on that
so
(here are no fur-
ther delays/'
said
Waters.
Currently, a plastic covering
i~
being put up
section
by
section
to
keep the inside of the building
warm.
-
Waters
said
this is necessary
because concrete cannot be poured
--
below
a
certain temperature, and
•
the heal must be maintained while
it is drying.
Cox.: New meeting rooms
roposed for campus center
by Regina Rossi
Campus Center classrooms
248 and 248A may be converted
into conference rooms for stu-
dent clubs and organizations,
according to Gerard Cox, vice
president for student affairs.
Cox said he has
submitted
a
proposal to eliminate classes in
the rooms in order to free them
-
for student use. "The issue of
space needs to be addressed,"
·Cox
said.
•
If
•
the
classes
can
be
·eliminated,
the rooms could
•
possibly be renovated to create
smaller. seperate office rooms
•
•
and a genera'! meetin!i room,
Cox added .
The two rooms are currently
divided only by a sli~ing door.
This can be opened to create
one large room. The rooms are.
now used for meetings at night,
but are often less than half full.
In addition, construction is
now underway on the new
faculty dining room, to be
located on the first noor of the
Campus Center
..
Cox said he· hopes the dining
room will be completed soon
after spring break, which is in
March.
•
"The faculty for a number of
years have been asking for place
where they could meet and eat,"
Cox said.
,.,-The
dining room will utilize
space
•
formerly occupied by .
Special Services. Cox said the
space was ideal because of its
·
proximity to the kitchen.
Space problem
(
studied
by Regina Rossi
The college i~ currently at~
tempting to solve the Special
Services program's space pro-
bl_ems, according
to
Gerard
•
Cox, vice president for student
affairs.
•
.•
Cox said he has met with con-
cerned
students
and Diane Per-
•
·riera,·-director:
of special ser-
•vices,
10 "explore together some
longe range solution
to
meet
-
their needs."
•
Special Services recently mov-
ed from the ground noor of the
Campus Center
10 an
of-
fice on the first noor of Cham-
pagnat, recently vacated by the
health service, The health ser-
vice is now located in Bierne ·
House.
•
. Special
services
students and
staff
members have complain-
ed that the new office is 100
small.to accomodate wheelchair
.
students and that ii eliminates
the ~.tudents' privacy.
iFloy,d
Alwon: Still leading, the charge for cih~nge
:
,
,
.
··•
.
; Editor's note: Marist's 8,300 aluin-
Ma'rist that· year.. A kid from
people who were telling them how
of testimony showing that his ac-
,vard'Bounci.
_; ni represenhdiverse group of men
·
Brooklyn, !'1;Y ., Alwon.was only. to think," he said.
lions and writings proved he lived
·.'••A'Iot
of people became irivolv
0
;,and woinen; l'his is the second in
.
the second child from his family to
.•
But Alwon challenged authority
according to Christian doctrines
.
ed iri helping others in the '60s _:,:,
;a
Circle series
that
looks at some
·a11.end
college. He was a French
enthusiastically. Hewasoneofthe
and beliefs.
--'
there was·'an energy inspired by
..
}
Ma_ris\~
fr~«!_l!a,t~
.
a11_d:
the, pat~s
•
'!'~}.<?,r
who _sp~nt.his)1:1n,ior
re~r}IJ
'.
leacjers o.f JhoughJ,
,A<;tioii',
1
Com~
..
..~lw,on ,wrote
a
,fo_ur-pafr;series
.•
Keririedy and others," Al won said.
•
•
~
their hves anil careers have taken.
:
1
Pans st,udymg auhe Sorbonne:anci
,:
m.unic~tion;'-
'.a
:.<;~QJRUf
grqup _Jtithfd '·'Thdughts,oniJ>~cjjjsm" for
'-
"The \Var
on
Poverty, the
·Peace
1sincelea·vinicampus:someoftite
-·-·'
•••
,
,.•
••
···-
•
dedicated to raising
.the
con-
TheCircleinl96!J.lnithespoke
'Corps··
•
• : people· to be featured here· have
'\
<'·
.
sciousness
_qr
the students. It was
eloquently about his r~spect for life
'.
goite on Jo, suc~ess:; in· busi~ess;
,
•
·a·
tt-e·:
r
··
--
,
.;'
,
not.only; thewar it protested, he ex-•·
.and_
hisiou.trage anc! sgrrow 9ver its
:
these things
·showed
it was
·a_n
im~
•
·~others
have mild~careers in soci~I/
-
..
J
1
J}
'/
plained; thi group also boycotted
.-··senseless
destruction.
,
·:.
~
por1an1 value.to help others. The
'.
services,)he media and elsewhere.
ma· r··
,•s·t·"
the A&P for selling grapes after
"I am thoroughly consistent to
•
reality ,ve need to deal i,vith now is
0
They come from a variety of classes
Cesar Chavez tried to unionize the
my_ own beliefs which allow
_for
a • that the pendulum is swinging away
; and majors. Collectively, what they
migrant workers who hanfesied
rig}lqmd '.-Vrong,
a
good and evil,"
•.
from that."
; have in cominon is Marist -
and
them and violence erupted
in
the·
he ,vrote. "Baskally, ••
it comes
But his own deep conviction that
'their
own interesting stories.
watching French students rip pave-
fields.
down to a question of values. On
.
man must· help man and not hurt
ment from the streets to hurl at
"I helped bring more than one
what do you place your highest
him has never• ,vavered. And his
,
by Sue Hermans
police during the 1968 riots.
way of thinking
10
the campus," he
value. Man, human life, that is my
•
college experience working with
!
>
They were singing "revolution"
recounted,. "and
changed the
highest
value,"
the articles
•
special-needs kids influenced him
.
They are nearing 40 now,·those
..
with a capital "R" over there, ac-
limited perspective of many of the
explained.
so strongly that he made it his life's
: Marist students who protested the
f.cording·to
Alwon_, btitthe protests
students, who were good people.
"Some of the football jocks-
work.
.
, U.S.' grO\ving'involvement in Viet- •'on Marist's campus were much
but who weren't brought up to
and my colleagues on the crew
He described the boys he works:
;
nam and confronted the Marine
more benign.
question what others told them."
team -
were upset 1ha1 I would
with at Walker, which is located I 2
•
:
recruiters who came on campus to
..
,
Al won,
:38,
talked about the
Alwon's rejection of the conven-
have thoughts that were different,"
miles outside Boston, as "!'.ids with
.
"sell the war" to the college kids.
'mood
of Marist 17 years ago in a
tional beliefs of his peers and his
Alwon remembered. And he recall-
a
lot
of rage, which is understan-·
.
But in 1969, other issues also ex-
recent telephone.interview from his pacifist convictions led him
to
app-
ed being perplexed by their will-
dable; they have been hurt and
'
isled. Trouble brewed over the new home in Needham, Mass. He is
ly for and win conscientious objec-
ingncss to fight in a war they did
hated and unwanted, and in. the
•
policy allowing drinking in the now the assistant direcfor at
tor status in his senior year. He
not understand.
way of the parents' getting their
•
dorms, the dean of-students look-
·
Walker Home and Sch<iol, a live-
argued that he objected to warfare
The Selective Service board re-
needs met.''
ed for a way to prevent River Day in facility and day school for
because he believed it was wrong to
quired Alwon to perform alternate
Some of the parents are junkies,
and students expressed dissatisfac-
troubled boys ages six to 14.
kill, and that his religious beliefs
service in exchange for being
prostitutes or in prison. Many of
tion
with
the
new
Core
"Marist students then were very
precluded- military service.
granted C.O. status, so he began
the children have been sexually or
requirements.
much for motherhood and apple
He appeared before a Selective
working
with
brain-injured
physically abused, and are often
7
••
Floyd·· Alwon
was
a senior at
•
·pie.They
were not challenging the
Service review board with 85 lctters
children in a program called Up-
Continued on page 10
T
.;,
I
..
,
I
•
~i
-:t-:
r
-
.
t·
·'1
'I
I
I
I
I
I
!
I
I
•
I
I
/
__ . ogJnlqn
-
--
'
-~
.·
•
.
,._/
•.
In -The Aftermath·
The number of eulogies written about th~ tragic demise of the;_
Space Shuttle Challenger and its seven United States astronauts
•
has been overwhelming - even Marist President Dennis Murray
has released a statement concerning the event. This is deservedly
so.
•
.
•
•
We feel there are no new words we can write -
no wayfor.
us to express the sorrow we, as all ,Americans, felt on -Jan. 27:
Suffice to say, our hearts are with the victims' families.;.
•
•
·
There is, however, one comment we would like to make.
"Sensationalism"
is usually linked with television network
coverage of such a drama, because networks tend to get maximum
mileage out of every story. We have all watched television
reporters treat stories of sadness· and disaster in. a most un-
humanlike manner. When th~t happens, any semblance of coin-
·passion gets lost.
,
.
The shuttle tragedy was an exception. The networks showed
respect for the first time in years -
respect for NASA, for our
nation's leaders, for the astronauts' families and for the American
public. There was no criticism and no scapegoat searching, just
a deep regard for the loss of human lives. Instead of assaulting
viewers with opinions, the ne_tworks waited with us for any sign
of.hope, and then mourned with us over the loss.
'
In those frantic minutes immediately after the explosion: the
news anchors kept the nation calm as the first scattered informa-
tion came in. We must admire the extreme professionalism it took
to carry on in the. face of such despair.
_
..
.
_
Although this may not signal an end to network- "sensa-
tionalism_," we respect the networks' decision to treat the space
shuttle incident with kindness and sincerity. It was a path well
-
chosen.
-
The A waited Settlement
·:.
.:.AND
IN
THis
·coRNER
.. .-.
Kill
the.:
d~ath
p~nalty
.
-
.
.
by Carl MacGowan
Christian faith, this is fine
if
one powerlessness
that spawns murder
•
is willing to shut the Good Book at and crime in the first place. If peo-
•
Since I returned from my intern-
Exodus 21, 23-25, grow_ a beard·
•
•
pie feel
.
out of control, be they
ship, many people have approach-
and take to wearing ~skullcap at
--
dwellers of
_
the inner city or
.
ed me with kind words for this col-
politicill revolutionaries, they fre-
·•
umn. Obviously, this calls· for
~
.. -----------..
queritly take to violence to fill that
drastic action. Yes, I'm afraid it's
•
void.
·1
know,. the old "environ-
time to dip into the Controversial
.
the·.
·re
a I
ment determ,ines behavior" gam-
Subject bin and see if we can shake
bit,
•
right? No,
I
'dori't
think en-
•
tnings up around here.
o·.
I d·.
vironment
determines
behavior'
'
Here's a sure-fire.cross-burner:
.w
r
.
,.
since not
_every
inner city kid is a
When anticipating the b_eginning of a new school
year,
students
capital punishment. A lot of peo-
, drug addict and not every rich kid
•
naturally expect a few changes and surprises. But 72 Garden
pie think the death penalty is a dan-_
~
.. _________
_,
•
bec~mes the president of a bank.
_
Apartment residents returning this year found a very unexpected
dy idea, but I'm nqt so_
sure. Per-
b
ball
B
t • f
• k
But if yo~ gro~ up in
~
place w~~re
•
· . h
ld h
•i • •
,
sonally I prefer torture as the best
ase_
,
games. u
1
one e~ps the dommant recreational act1v1ty
surpnse. t ey wou
ave to temporan y hve
m
someqne else s
' f .
d t
.
-
•
.
.
_ readmg, one may eventually arnve
is crime
-y'
ou're more 11·kely· to fall.·
-
•
h
.-
means
or
e errmg cnme.
-
1
M tth
5
38 39 • hi h J
-
-
•
'
•
-
ome.
•
·
.
:
..
. ..
·.:,
.:··
-~-,"\'"··,
..
•.
--~PCf!a!lYJh,ipgs·likehangirigpeo-·
a __
.
~
.. e'!( •
-
:
,m,w c .. , esus in with t_ha_t:zM_ost,people
don't
..
,.
••
But there wa~ hght at the_
e~~ ~f the tu~mel -
'!r
!o 1t see~ed. ,·
.
pl_~:·!>r:.t'1,e~~~l~:,-:bcatirig::them,
...
~~Y.S.: -
·.X
°-~}1,Yf-,~-~ar4}lj~~~_!l_l:-
•./·_~ant.:_}~._try,.t~;.beatath~i!":._
enviro!1-
.~
'·-·
-~~·
=•.-·,'.-
St_udents dec1d~d to take 1rut1at1ve.
Semors Chnstlan-tviomson
.
_
wit~~
~ow~:bars·and:_
ma_king
them • .m~nhdi;nf
ent,, ._Anhcre
8
for. an
_e_y
1
e, __
~
::.
,~ent-':--V'h!l~_e~_er-
the.envrronment
,
dR
.
-·
H-
-
.
.
1·
c
-
f"
.
-
..
--
.h
••
h •·--·-·1······d-'···•
·--
·b--.
toot or a toot•'
ut-what say-. is
butaremorecontenttorollow·
-
.
an ; O?ert aughton sta~ed a pet1~10n
appea mg 10r" manc1al
;
wafe, .,}t e1rt
.~ve '10nes·-,
~aten;
j
to you is:
·offef:no.resistance
to in-
-
•
.
.
.
-
11
;-
restitution to all students mconvemenced."
Chin.~~~-
-~ater
tor:ture ll~s
-been
--
•
jury .-When.
a person strikes you on· ~long.
•
·• -- •
•
·'
•
--
•
Morrison and Haughton joined forces on a com_
xnittee with Sue
___
bk_ll~-.yn
tod,w.ork;
as'. h~ye cigdar.ettde
_
the right cheek,'..'
·
and
l
gues_s
y_-_ou_
-
-
If
w~
accidentally execute an in~.
.
.-
R
"d
-
r·
h-
-
-d
b d
dB.
-
w·
k"
.
.
urns an , m more auvance an
.
k-
- -th -
.(B
h
.•
----
h ,
-
-
-
-
-
-
yan,pres1 entot
estu ent
~
y;an
nan
1cens 1,pres1-
•
enlightened sodeties;i;dectronic
now
.<:
..
rest,_ yt_e_way,t a_t~
·nocentperson,that'sjustarisfr,we-;_
-
den! o~ the Inter-House Council, to draw up a
-
proposal for
stun,guris:
..
_;
__
,
\
,_;.-.·'.:::<:',;
,-,-
.-:-,;.-
_
th~.lasu1me:you-~ e"'._er
see scnp-
have
_to
accept.· Hey,· riothing's
-
•• •
.-
'
•
restitution.
_
_
_
_
However,
b
-_some-
Constit_u~
-_ture_g~oted
m_fh1s
col~mn.)
:
perfect:']f
you~re the one·\\'earing-,_
·
·
·
fu
-
-
,,.
.
-
the electr.odes;
you wouldn't
be
so)_.
_
Marist saw positive results of their efforts-
students leading
tionru. abnor:m~ ·tyi torture is!lo~
;
,
'
The death penally
is
a·deierrent.
benevolent::
Besides.{theotitrage
we
_
·_.
-_
students constructively.
_
.
_
permitted wtthm/ ~~r. bo'!ndanes.
.
Sure
it's a deterrent to
·middle~class.
feel for the· killing of _inno_cents
_
if
.
•
But somewhere between its drafting in November and now, the
~uch are the hmitauons of . peopJe_who
may,b~ <c<>nsiderlng
the.-: what this is all about; isn't it?
•
-:
proposal "lost its wind...
•
ems
ocr~cy.l
f
.
-
.
.
_
..
- -
:
murder of' their next door • - Or is)t?
• •
•
Th
.
.
.
-
.
d . If
_
0
we re e
t
wtth capt!al:pu!llsh~ neighbors, buUt doesn't apply to •
.
.
.
_
.
_
-
e committee, it seems, tnppe
1tse up.
.
_ _
ment. Because
of space lirrutauons •
_
r
h
•-
---·--
_.. ·
· d h - --
.
•.
lthmk the mam reason so many
Wicenski, who "chaired the committee, said he ~ant_ed full cam-
I can't d~ withevery ttr~inent i~
~~rrj~
wof~
a:itc':::l:u~.
\
edo~
.
'.peOJ?le
Hke
..
:.t~e
idea . of _capital :.
p~s _endo~sement of th~ proposal before present~ng 1t to the ad-
favor of 1t, ~ut I ~an scratch the
tliink too.many killers go arc,und pumshlllent is; that thet like t_he
•
mm1strat1on, Forty copies of the proposal were given outto IHC
surface, startmg with:
•
thinking~ "Gee whillikers,Tcould
!dea of a. pubJ1cly-s_anct1<med
kill~
-•·
representatives, but no copies were returned before Thanksgiv-
go to
the
chair for doirig that!'.' The .:. mg.
·More
than_
~-~ew
people haye
ing and only some
were
recovered before Christmas. Some copies
It coslslo~ much
to
keep a killer
_
~eal mes~g~
of_
the t;leath pemtlfy
..
:,•.call~'for execut10!1s_
t~ pe tel~VIS~.
still have not been gathered.
_
_ _
.
jailed for life.
_First
of all, this is a 1s ~hat_ kilhng solves yroblems,
-
~~ five,
-perhap,s
m pnme
•
tt~e.
_
.
Ryan said the_c:ommittee was formed quickly· and carefully yet stupid argument because it_puts a which
IS_
a lesson any drug mer~
• _And
now,;,~ere
~
your host,_V,mce
·
·
·..
·
..
.
·
.
·
' ..
.
price on a p_erson's
~ead. We just chant, mafioso, or
-gang
member·
--_
McM~h()_n!
.•
.
;
••
_
_
_
.
~,
?O
one
01!-
the,~omm1!tee has t~e. financial background to assist don't do that here in America. Let .. would agree with ..
•
•.
_
:
J\.fter all, ifwe believe in "an eye
m preparing a financially reahst1c proposal.
.
me rephrase that:
Supposedly
we
for. an eye,'.' how ~ome no one
Now the proposal is being rewritten and the administration has don't do that in America. On the
Even
if
it's ~ot
a
deterrent, it gets
wants to rape a rapist, steal from
•
yet to see iL. _
_
..
__
_
•
_
•
·__
_
other hand, comparing the in-
certain killers of/the streets for
··a burglar,
~PY
c,n a;spy, or dtive
•
Derrick Wynkoop, finantjal board chairperson, sajd he was sur-
carceration of a prisoner to sending
good.
True enough in a physical df1:1nk,?a°.d
-sm?sh
1nto
__
a df1:1nk
· d
h
h
-
-
k d
b
h
-
·
0
h
·
h
.
a kid to Harvard is absurd; there sense, but in a spiritual context, this dnver.
.
Not blood-curdhng
·
pnse t at. e was not
as
e
t9
eon! e_committee. t ers
W_ 0
•
are certain benefits that one cannot doesn't mean
·a
-
thing. The
enough,
I
guess; not enough like
_
offered ass1~tance were told that their help was not needed._
_
enjoy _ such
·as
a:
single room, authorities got Billy
.the
Kid, and
watching ''Red Dawn'-' or ''Delta
Gerard Cox, vice president fofstudentaffairs,
said }le warned
••
structured recreatjon periods~
well- no one ever Jteard of him again,
·-
Force.•
1
•
_:
..
•
-~•-
• - '-;
<
the committee that the prop9sal would go nowhere without an
•
balanced meals, etc.
~
if one at-
•
right'? Not quite. We
.all
fondly.
• Some people like J~ think that if:;,
-·
administrator to present it. Until last week,
·Ryan
had not ap-
tends college ~nstead of prison.
remember-jesse
James, BoD?i~
and
'
you're.~gainst the death pe11alty,
proached an administrator about presenting the_ proposal.
Letting a murderer live is not/air
Clyde, Al Capon_e,
Jo~n Ddhn~er you don
.t
want the law proJ>:rly_cx-
.
. .
h
-
·
to the victim.
There's an assump-
and even Gary Gtlmore:The pomt
ecuted, That's not tr_ue:
I thmk the
Ryan and W1censk1_
said they wanted to ave tlte proposal com-
tion that execution goes
·hand-in-
is the criminal may be eliminated
,-.
law should
'be
executed
•
plete and ready to be used
as
a negotiable tool before approaching
-
hand with caring for the deceased: b~t crime lives on.
'
•
administration.
Something Hke: One can show no
In fact, execution tends to make •
•
..._
When Ryan-did go to see Business Officer Anthony Campilii,
greater respect for one's friend legends of iis victims. Sacco and_:
C
·
1•
the proposal was not a priority at the meeting. "The last five than by killing for him. I always Vanzetti, for example. Or Julius
.
orrec
IOil
minutes of the meeting were in relation to the proposal," she said.
heard different. More like: There and Ethel Rosenberg. Then t~ere's
Time is understandably a factor in the initial delay of the pro-
is no greater thing one may do for
Socrates and the_ aforementioned
sal
,
1
•
R
"d h
.
d"d h
.
.
1
a friend than by killing oneself. Or
Mr. Nazareth.
•
Last week's Viewpoint writer
po
s comp euon. y~n
sat
t e committee 1 ave to wait u~t•
something like that.
Well, we've gotta do something.
John Anderson
was
incorrectly
all the students moved m to the Garden Apartments to deternune
An eye for an eye, a tooth/or a
Now we're really getting desperate. identified. He is a senior in com-
Continued on p2ge 5
tooth.
A favorite of those in the
It's
this same feeling of - munication arts.
THE:
Editor:
Denise Wilsey
Senior Associate Editor:
Douglas Dutton
Associate Editors:
Anthony
DeBarros
CIRCLE:
Paul Raynis
Laverne C.
Williams
Senior Ecfrtor:
Gari
MacGowan
.
•
News Editors:
Julia
Murray
Tom McKenna
Christian Larsen
Arts
&
Entertainment Editor:
Ken Parker
Sports Editor:
_
Brian O'Connor
Photography Editor:
.
Business Manager:
Laurie Barraco
Lisha Driscon
Advertising Manager:
• Advertising staff:
Cartoonist:
Faculty
Advi~r:
Mike McHale
Gary
Schaefer
Ben Ramos
Don
Reardon
David McCraw
Member of the
College
Press Service
,
I
(
\
I
vieWP-_C.;;;;:;;.l_.:.;;;.i..;;r;...~..;;1;...t.;._·
_·
---------·'February
6, 1986-
THE CIRCLE - Page 5--
Co Ilege life: An inside perspective
: by James E. Pitt
•. to prison they had not even finish-
·any. one of nine separate blocks.
ed high school, and most of their
Since Marist is not recognized by
' Filled with intense emotion and ,: "education"
was obtained f~om ... the prison as an assignment,
·pride, a· group of men attir~d in ·, the University of Street Life.
students must work at other jobs
black robes over green uniforms . Nevertheless, this scenario has been
during the day or eventually be
march silently to the tradition,al
repeating since 1980. •
. . transferred out of the facility. Be-
:tune "Pomp and Circumstance"· •
The Marist College Program in
ing forced to work all day for
·anticipating
a long awaited nio-
G.reen Haven (MIG) has been a • wages that cannot exceed $1.55 per
ment ~· the conferring· of their
vehicle fllr prisoners to, among
day leaves very little studying time.
•.degrees. The college faculty, alum:-
many things, self-actualize. Ac-· Lack. of study• time coupled with
'ni, students, anqguests attentively • quiring a college education behind
the haphazard housing assignment,
look
on. Some of the family· the wall takes a lot of fortitude and
creates
quite a problem
for
members of the graduates cannot
dedication, to say the least.
students; nevertheless,· students
• control the tears streaming from
To make things difficult from
must
contend
with
these
their eyes.
the start, MIG students have no
conditions.
·, These men are all pris·oners. of
special housing • area like other ·: • In their living quarters, students
Green Haven Correctional Facili-
st.udents in the instituti9n. From 6 • 'are confronted with an assortment
ty and th,eir degrees come from
p.m. to 9 p.m. students come from
of problems. Studying for most
Marist College. What is amazing is all areas of the prison to attend
begin at approximately 10 p.m. An
that when most of these men came
classes. Their housing area may be
immediate problem is that most
non-college inmates are unsym-
. pathetic to the demands placed
upon the.student.
While trying to study, a student
must
tolerate
simultaneous
• shouting in English, Spanish,
• Italian and French. Then a student
•
will complain, "Hey can you keep
the noise down?" The normal
response is, "If you want peace and
_, quiet get a transfer to a cemetery!"
.
.
It is also common to be born-
. barded by the musicians and dee-
• jays who obviously did not make
• it on Broadway, each sharing their
musical heritage with the entire
gallery. Tape decks blast at. ex-
tremely loud levels, and as usual,
all at the same time.
The weekends that all students
look forward to are even more
outrageous. Football, basketball,
or
baseball
are
temporary
substitutes for the music. The ex-
citement is uncontrollable and you
will begin to wonder if yoµ are at
the actual game or if the entire
gallery made parole.
"I think the college program is
a good opportunity for a prisoner
to make a positive step in the direc-
tion of change. The biggest pro-
blem I've encountered is that the
prison, overall, opposes any pro-
gram· that proves to benefit the
prisoner and doesn't materially
benefitthe prison itself. This is a
fact even though the (prison) ad-
ministration superficially appears
to be helpful."
Most students have expressed the
same opinion as Joseph. Prison
guards are more hostile toward col-
lege students, more often than not
going out of their \yay to cause any
inconvenience to sttllients and staff
alike.
One instructor informed me that
she was not permitted to bring a
newspaper in to share with her class
because it had not been cleared by
'security,' (whatever that means).
Another instructor was not allow-
ed to enter one night because he
had come a few minutes late due
to car problems.
Later
he
discovered that the clocks in the
lobby were always kept fifteen to
twenty minutes fast. Even more
drastic the New York State Depart-
ment of Correctional
Services
(NYSDOCS) has created a policy
Finally, the weekend movie is
called and now you can stay in and
study in relative peace. At least you
would like, to, but you have been
running so much all week that you
must take advantage of a peaceful
two hour siesta. Well, you can
always stay up until 2 a.m.
studying.
• to prevent Marist College tutors
from receiving monetary compen-
sation from the college for their
dedication and hard work.
Let's also consider the student
who has been preparing for an im-
portant exam all week. On the.day
of the exam receives two suspicious
looking letters. One from a relative
informing him that his wife - that'
he hasn't heard from in over two
years:*:is seven months pregnant;.
The other.from his lawyer inform-
ing him that all appeals have been
exhausted· and he need not look
forward to a retrial.
After getting around. all the
above you are faced with the prison
guar,g who is full of envy and in-
timidated by the educated and
streetwise convict (whom he will
never trust). He believes this inmate
should be picking cotton instead of
going to college and trying to make
something useful out of himself.
The problems still exist, but there
are stiH those men, courageous, ..
persistent, and committed to pur-
' suing their goals.
Unfortunately, some are deter-
red from their quest, which· is
uriderstaridable when they have to
tolerate the circumstances that a
repressive and hostile environment.
such as prison fosters. Motivation
•
and support are necessary to keep
the drive alive and the spirits up.
Marist college must remain cogni-
zant of the problems students face
and be more willing to sit' down
with prison administrators
to
ad-
dress pertinent issues, instead of ac-
cepting. the oppressive policies
thrown at them.
last semester here, .ind our loiig
0
standing-memories· of Marist will
be, by and large, shaped by what
occurs over the next four months.
I asked Joseph, a senior, to com-
If
Marisi waits rriu~h ionger. they ment on the college program. He
won't l:ie dealing with stiidents; but said:
James E. Pitt is a student in the
Marist College Program in Green
Haven.·
..,
letters
1
Restitution
Toth~ editof:
..
.
• Here • we are again, back at
beautiful Maris(on the Hudson.
- ·For so~e·_of us this will be' the
But it seems Marist is intent on
le'aving us ·with _a bad (aste iii our
• collective mouths. Out
a(
the
Garden Apartments things haven't
changed much. We were greeted
with the luxury of cable when we
returned from Christmas break but
there is one thing still Jacking inFS
and in the vocabulary of the Mari_st
administration - ·restitution. • ,
,
.
,
.
-~
, • Settlement
_____
c_o_nt_in_ue_d_f_ro_m_p_ag_e_4
th~ eiact number of days students·were inconvenienced. Also,
both Ryan and Wicenski said they had demands frorri other job-
related and personal reponsibilites.
'. in addition, administration did not come Iooking·for progress
reports. It ·was almost as if administration thought that without
a· formal prop.osal, the requests would go away. Administration .
should have assured the progress of that proposal.
But despite the lack of progress to this point, the reality is that
_, the proposal does have to be settled.
. .
Some students involved have already left the school for intern-
ships or other reasons. They now have to be located when the
proposal is completed and approved. Also, seniors have to be com-
pensated in a physical check becuase this is their last semester at
Marist and will have no more bills to "adjust."
All this leaves us with some serious questions. Why was the
committee allowed to be formed without experienced assistance
for the financia1 part? Wh)' didn't Wicenski pu~h mo~e to ?et the
signed proposals back? When did Ryan and W1censk1 decide the
proposal was asking for too much? How did they determine it
was unrealistic when the proposal has not been submitted to the
administration yet? Why did they wait until February to rework it?
Perhaps the most significant of all -
Why wasn't this made
a priority? Why wasn't this done?
alumni'. What's worse for a col-
,
lege's public relatfons than angry·~-------•J--------------------------
students? J\ngry alumni.
.
And· people wonder about stu-
dent apathy at Marist: Why, some
ask,· don't students care 'about
anything? _The reason· i~,' the'jo-
called "student" apathy is jusi a
reflection of the administrations at-
titude to,vard students. The con~
tinuous vacillating on tfre· lssue of
restitution is a classic· example of
Marist brushing us offagain;with
the resultant attitude being, if they
don't care about us, we don't' care
about Mi,uist. • •
Now it;s not like we're asking for
the world. We paid extra to live in
the Garden Apartments and could
not move in on September 3. All
we ask is that we receive restitution
comm~nsurate _ with the time we
were "inconvenienced," based on
the formula proposed by the stu-
dent representatives.
•
Marist blew their biggest chance
at sidestepping the entire· issue over
the Christmas break. They could
have credited our tuition with the
amount of restitution and gotten
clea11Iy away without paying a
dollar in cash. The only problem
with that now is, most of us are
seniors and there isn't going to be
a next semester's tuition.
So, until we receive this restitu-
tion, we will continue to write these
letters to The Circle. And President
Murray must be just as sick of
reading these as you all must be.
The Residents of
FS
Continued on page 8
'
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You Leave Your Hallmark
.
.
on the Lives You Save.
BUY
Unicef Greeting Cards
Call 1-800-228-2080
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Pag"
6.
THE CIRCLE.•
F.ebru~,Y
6,
1986--'·-·:,_·
-
by Ken Parker
Lately in the world of popular
music; it seems what's new is
what's old ..
As rock~n'roll moves into its
third decade, its past is coming
back to haunt artists and listeners
alike .. Revivalism is in. And with
the help of
MTV,
new audiences
are being exposed to an ever-
growing variety of songs-, in-
strumentation -and fashion from
decades gone by.
Two types of revivalism ·exist.
First, there is artist who re- .
records the songs ofa particular
ar-
tist or time frame. In this case,.the
artist acknowledges the pioneer(s).
Then there is the artist who sounds
like he is re-recording the songs of
particular artist or time frame. In
this case, he is ripping off the
unacknowledged pioheer(s).
It is difficult to determine the ex-
act origin of the revivalism trend.
The.Clge OJrevivali.Sin
In terms of marketing, it is a
brilliant idea: re-expose styles that
• have gathered just the right amount
of dust to an already-familiar au-
dience. Too little dust and we tend
to· remember why we discarded
them in the first place, too much
and remembrances tend to get that
golden, but- "hands-off" glow.
pelling the album. T_he
Broadway
The Dream Academy's "Life in ••
showed anything, it was that a note
Album has-yet to yield a single as
a Nor_thern Town" may be the· can only be played so fastand one
popular as the. ones that helped to
quintessenti;ll revivalist record, at
can only scream • so loud; Once
sell her: previous albums. All she
least so far. The record's obvious rock's .. outer boundary of revolt. •
~
.. -----------..
• psychedelic and '60s instrumenta-
and anti-establishmentism has beeri '
tion even includes lyrical references presented,. it would• seem there is ·,
The probable answer· is that it
wasn't anyone's original idea (a
.
characteristic als<J of the music).
~
... __________
_,
Revivalism has developed slowly;
needed this time out was a straight
from ihe realization of the yuppie
forward title and album cover
culture to pop songs in advertising.
(depicting Streisand on a stage with
But regardless
of
where
sheet music at' harid). ·familiar
• revivalism began, the chilling fac- . songs presented by a familiar voice.
tor that' makes it a topic worthy of - . How much easier could it be?
discussion is that revivalism sells • • Paving the way for Streisand was
records -
a lot of records.
Linda Ronstadt's huge success with
This week's number one album
her 1940's tribute album, What's
on Billboard magazine's ToplOO
New. That album's follow-up,
is Barbra Streisand's, The Broad-· Lush Life, was also quite sue-
way Album. Streisand has hit the
cessful. This triggered other artists
top of th_e
album charts before, but
to attempt similar projects -
it was the result of a hit single pro-
r~vivalized revivalism, if you will. .
to John Kennedy and The Beatles. nowhere else to go.but back. •
It is number sixteen this week, ac-
· It is a thin line. between-
cording to Billboard. To a less -- revivalism and a heart-felt expres- . :
· popular
•
degree, the Chesterfield sion of a distinct music!l sty!e. _But
Kings and the Mosquitos also bring - regar~less · of the motive, 1t. 1s • a··.
back exact traces of '60s garage
creative dead-end.
rock.
- Revivalism:. signifies a ·sort
01
How long can all this continue?
quiet death .. to progressive rock/
.The race seems to be on in an at- • While it is not meant to be intend-
tempt to cover those styles which ed that popular music as
a
whole .
have yet to be re-done. Linda
is creatively dead,- the extent to
• Ronstadt is in the studio recording, which certain forms of the past are
of all-things, a country album.
being accepted should be a sourc~
The urge· to present old or
of concern.
established music forms indeed
Styles that were once dead and -
seems to be sp_reading. But it
buried have returned.-It's as if yotir
spreads like a disease. If all that is
pare'nts are getting the last laiighi.-
left are re-hashes of old styles, can
And according to my definition of •
it be said that popular music has
rock'n'roll, that's not how it's sup-_
reached it's creative peak? If punk
posed to end.
'D.dwrt
·and-~out'
-is· a real dow-ner.
by
Maria Gordon
looking for a cure for all her
migraines. His daughter Jenny is
anorexic, and his son Max is wrestl-
ing with his sexual identity.
"Down and Out • in Beverly
Hills," directed by Paul Mazurski,
loses its comic and satiric edge by
portraying too·many stereotypical ,-
characters and by beating us to
death with the themes and
messages.
The movie does have an excellent
cast. It does have something to !)ay,
reel·
impression~-
• says it many times.
. .chooses to leave, qut dog food is
telligent and likes to go arotmct"giv~:
.. Dave feels he can lessen his ghilt no longer as _appetizing as. it was .. ing advice. Who is he? If he's this
by befriending Jerry, the bum, and before. He goes back.
•
talented, why is he in the streets?
giving him a c_hance
at a new life.
Dreyfuss, Midler and Nolte play
In the end,· the. truth might· have.....-
But Jerry does not necessarily want their characters to the hilt, but they
been nice. He gave people what
this life. He believes in total .· don't interact well. Dreyfuss is
they wanted,· and that's the only
freedom with
no.
commitments to neurotically. perfect
as the· guilt-
real truth he knows or lets us know.
land or people. Jerry spreads this ridden, middle-class businessman .
"Down and . Out in . Beverly
philosophy to everyone in the out to save the world. He has
110 •
Hills," is slightly enjoyable. The
Whiteman household.
interest in materials, ht: only wants
laughs are few. Nolte's character is
but do it subtly. The mark of a
good satire is that the audience gets
the message through the puns and
then draws their own.conclusions
about the pfoblems being depicted.
He relieves Barbara's tensions to be happy.
• •
• •
left undeveloped. There are real
_ through sex. He liberates Carinen,
pro bl ems
surrou·nding . , the ·:
~al•----••----"'
the maid, through sex·andI\1.ar;xist:
Midleds brilliahta.sth~epitome
homeless. They sleep in streets, beg.
i.
Now that we have touched on_· _·
literature.
Jle
gets" Jenny to eat .. of II1iddle~class· prejudfce> and
and eat food mea~tJo(dogs. Dave .. '.
.
the._f?,mi.1-Y,'.~P,,~(?bl~nis,:.
i~w·~ks ihe -•,::'r~l:iro\i~~:~~i!f-Atw,Ici~~;J~ir-f
_~,~p;
~
,Wff.~<?l
y~e,:,,,
.c~w~~r~a,ti-v,~
•.
,i-~~P.~t{;:,fho9;s~
-i?·•
i
h.~IP.,:
R b-~~~it~•\lh-•·-"tM\
si
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;~
social. problem, a bum,,_played by -,-gets,Nfax'tO 9ow,e:out of.the closet .. f1c1al; yet socially-·consc1ous~.
She,. '·abounhe r~st? We ,all can't afford
,
. In "Down and Out. .. ", ·we aren't
allowed to think for ourselves, feel
the way we ,vant and, in the end,
we feel confused.
Nick Nolte. This vagabond has lost. ;-i'abotfr'his h~niosexWHty; \Vhaf is. ..plays the
diz.zf
hotisewife'andi ·next
••••
to.
take: in'a street ..
person:: / . < .: :,
his will tolive and decides to drown
this doi,ng::rorDave?
0
:
;
·c->
-
_ to the dogs,,receive~'riiost of the ·_·
•
•
himself in the Whiteman's pool.·
·At
fkst;:h~ .enjoys having Jerry
laughs, -Also, Evan Richards is
Although _Dave does' the ad:
Dave goes down to save him and
arouncL·A psychiatrist teils Bar-
great as Max. He is funny; yet
mirablething, it
is
unrealistic in toe
• Dave Whiteman, portrayed by
Richard Dreyfuss, lives in Beverly
Hills
and owns a hanger-
manufacturing business. But~ Dave
is not happy. Barbara, his wife,
played by Bette Midler, spends
most of her time and his money
the problems begin.
· hara.that he is liv.irig fre.er through
sincere: a ·true adolescent.
day's society when people like Bar< :
From the beginning, we realize
this vagrant person.
C
That soon
' Nolte plays Jerry Baskin as far
bara say;
"I
do my charity work''
that Dave has a problem other
dt:in
changes; As his family becomes . as t_he script
wiU
allow, but there
three times a week.'' Real·helpfor. •
his family. He suffers from pangs
more , accepting :
of
themselves, . are too· many unanswered ques~ • the -homeless can be .neither in-
•
of guilt over his luck, fortune and
Dave becomes moretense.,On New· tions about Jerry:·All we know are · dividual nor sporadi·c. This film·
business. -If you did not get that
Year's Day, Jerry is given a choice, lies; He.does play classical piario. , doesn't leave us \Yith_
a_ feasible·
from his actions, don't worry: He
either leave or take a j()b. He
He grew up in Brooklyn; He is in- : solution, ,or a funny movie.
It's more thiln
'iust a ··book'
by _Julia E. Murray
a lot of useful information about
the.do's and don'ts, it also contains
There's a Special Report on
a few regulations guaranteed to
television, the radio stations are
have you snickering in five minutes
playing every song you've ever and hysterical in ten.
hated and your friends picked to-
.
For example, did you know that
day,.of all days, to go studious on
only ten percent of your walls may
you. You're bored; frustrated and . be covered with posters-and pie~
have nothing to do except (ugh)
tures? It's about time you got out
homework. What can you do to . the old tape m_easure
and calculator
cheer yourself up?
• ·-
to make sure you're not violating
Not only may you cover only ten
percent ofthe wall, but the posters
and pictures "must be so affixed to
the wall that only one surface ofthe-
the.
Other
m_urray
The answer to that question-is
a~y regulations. That picture of .
simple _:_ read yollr Studenf ' Mom and Dad and Sis may be dear •
:•"'llllllallllll■_■_■
__
------■----••-"
Handbook. .
• • • to your heart, but if it puts you
'ii .
.
? _ -·
~
• • ,,
·
•
All right, now that you've had
over the limit you're just going to .. matenal ~s exposed_. Sh~w me .a
your laugh, think about the idea.
have to break it.to Mom gently. '..:.P~rson~ith a post~r that,1s multi-
While the handbook does contain
They've got to go.
·
• dimensional and I
II
show you
a
• •
•
person who walks into walls a_lot.
• One final
word of
advice about
posters:
"Nails, tacks,
paste, tape,
etc. may not be used to fasten ob-
jects
to the wall."
Face it people,
if you
want
to have
posters on your
walls, you're just
going
to have to.
. hold them there yourselves.
Lest you think that posters-are
the orily things that are a matter of
: concern in your room, here's an
: additional
tidbit
concerning
elec-
• trical
outlets: "All electrical
equip-
- ment when being used
must
plug
directly into the • wall or floor
outlet."
I
defy you to show me a
ceiling outlet on the whole campus.
On to the next batch
o( in-
teresting rules. Attention all entry.
officers! Did you know that you
'. are .. prohibited from identifying
a
-guest or a st_!1dent
to a third party
~
other than ~uthorized staff?"
• Sorry guys; Dad's jtistgoing to-
have to meet your best friend after
you ,graduate,· unless,· of course,
you .. want to arrange -· a • secret
meeting off campus. Just don't
spread theword around, the walls
have ear_s. .
•
Let's press on to matters nearer •
and dearer to inost of our hearts.
Did you know we have a ·dress
code? That's right, though I must
admit it's. not'terribly strict. All we
are required to wear for classes is
"a clean pair of slacks; a;clean shirt
or blouse and footwear." Not too
tough, ·provided ·you_ can fincf a
washer that rinses the soap out and
a
dryer that takesless than three
days tQ adequately dry your
clothes. If you find one, let· me
know.
• •
, In case you couldµ't find a dryer
that worked well enough and you
have developed pneumonia, make
sure you drop bytlealth Services
on: your way to the emergency
room, just to let them know you're
dying and won't be able to make
your ll:2S. Remember; "cer-.
tificates of illness to verify a6sence
from classes will be issued only if
the student reports to the college
nurse at the time of illness."
• All things considered, the Stu-
dent Handbook isn't a bad piece of
literature. It is not only useful, but
entertaining as well. Now if you
could only remember what shelf
_ you_ µsed itJo line.
• .: -: •
by Anthony DeBarros.
,, The_ only thing keeping me.-'
• .. warm at this Arctic,.wasteland • •·
we call school, is a healthy d.9st:-,,
•
of-·rock-'n' roll .. Here's what·
''Music-Notes" has its eye on ;-,
this week: ._ . • . .· -.
•
_ .:._ 5150
is the name
of
tlie new :
-··Vail.Halen_Lp:Th·e•rt:Jease
date·f •
has been pushed backto March,-.'
· with a tour to follow.
-It
was·t
produced. by Eddie·-.
V.H.:-and ·;
·new singer Sammy Hagar; with
f
help from Mick 'Jones. of\.·
Foreigner. Incidentally, "S1S0';\, ..
is a police code in
L .. A~
mean:-:-::
ing "maniac on theloose." . '\;
- On a related topic,
David::
Lee Roth
is prac;ticillg with his ;
new band and.working on his;'~
• debut feature·· fil1,11, "Crazy:r
From ·The. Heat." Roth enlisted::i
- former. Zappa guitarist Steve
i
Vai and Talas bass{st Billy\
Sheehan for the project.
'
• -
Speaking of movies, .,
Queen
is writing the soundtrack ;
for "Highlander,'' .. starring!
Sean Connery. It'si due in
March.
-
Blue • Oyster cu·u•s
new
record, Oub
Ninja
is out. Look
for
a
B.O.C.·totir soon:
••
That's it for this week. Until
• next time, remember these.
words from Triumph's Rik
Em-
mett: Music holds1he secret, to
know it con make you whole.,.
....
.
·Pentagon,
EducaJion Dept.
.
· ,
Officially Join ·
•
• •
To Find Nonregistrants
•·
::
,.
.
~
Local prosecutors had rules the
.
woman was taken advantage of,
but not raped. ·:
•
•
• • • . . •
•
Day wants the students fried ori
U.S.
:_,
Education
.
Secretary-
felony rape charges.
William
Bennett last weekformal-
.
·
N.C.A.A. Raises Grade··
.
,
Requirements For
•
·
Freshman Athletes
•.
ly gave'the Selective Service
a
list
of the
.five
million student aid ap:
pticarits;. which the Selective Service
will use-to help.track down men
•
who
,
failed to submit military
At its New Orleans con~ention
registration forms when they turn-
.
last week, the group agreed to
•
ed 1.8.
·: ·,,
make freshmen enter college with
••
:
By comparing lists ·or applicants
a
•
2.0 high . school GP A, plus
and people: who have signed up,
•
•.
minimum scores on either their
Bennett,noted he'd also be·helped
SA Ts or ACTs in order to play on
in
enforcing the 1982 law denying intercollegiate teams their first
•
clean bill of health last week.
Fisk's current debt is $890,000,
down from $3.9 miliion in 1983.
•
• _But
private college problems
continued at the same time:
Trustees voted to close both
George Williams College in Illinois,
struggling under a $10 million debt,
and St:-John's College in Kansas,
which had only 215 students left.
Yet officials gave the struggling
Antioch School of Law two more
months. to find new financial
•
backing.
Australian College Clips
Phone Connection To UCLA
student
aid
to students who haven't
.
:
·year.
.
registered.
:
Black educators had argued the
..
Telecom, the Australian phone·
.new
standards,
·which
in August
company; has found the phone on
Sa~ oi~go State Asks D.A .
..
To Prosecute Frat Members.
.
will start to be phased in over a
the Wagga campus of the Murray
.
•.
two-year period, effectively will
Institute. in Australia on which
keep black athletes out of college.
students went on a free interna-
SDSU President
·Dr.
Thomas
tional phone spree in late fall.
Day has asked city prosecutors to
Fisk Return To Favor, But
In six hours, students called
reconsidertheir decision not to pro-
Tb'ree Other Colleges Wobble
counterparts at UCLA to compare
secute three members of the Pi
class customs, a former classmate
•
Kappa Alpha fraternity.
An accrediting agency gave Fisk
..
in Alaska, and several residents of
.
The members allegedly raped a
University, the·Tennessee· school_: Miami to discuss "Miami Vice."
•
female student who had falled un-
.whose
dire fiscal woes nearly fore-
Telecom says it has
_fixed
the
,,.
conscious after drinking too much.
•
ed it to close and pushed it. into
phone, which now won't work un-
at a.fiat party;
'
"probationary~• status in 1983, a
til customers feed it 20 cents.
.
.
.
-
,.
.
"
·Freshmen
want-money, success
'-'
LOS ANGELES, CA (CPS):-'-:'-
'.·.
Recent surveys by the College tion's current and future needs."
College students increasingly are
··Placement
Council; Michigan State
Astin was surprised
to
discover
•
interested in' money, but they'll
and Northwestern
all found
students' social attitudes are goi,ng •
make it as businesspeople, not
•
American businesses plan to h_ire to extremes -
sometimes in op:
computer scieritists or engineers,
•
fewer engineering and computer
·
posite directions.
acc'ording to UCLA's 20th annual
science majors th~s year.
.
Seventy-three· percent
.
of the
survey of new college freshmen.
But Astin said students' declin-
freshmen oppose increased defense
The proportion of
freshmen
ing interest in high tech is all• the
spending, up 12 perct.at from three
•
planning to major in computer
more remarkable considering the
years ago; and 73.3 percent - four
'
science and pursue computing
emphasis secondary schools place percent more than last year - say
.
careers has dropped by
50
percent
•
on computer. education.
He
the wealthy should pay a larger
•
in just two years. Only
4.4
percent
.
speculates: that as students become
share of taxes than they do now.
of the Class of 1989
·aspire
to be. more familiar with computers in
But conservative. attitudes· are
compute(
•
.
progra111mers
.·'
or.· high school, they are less incMed
.
equally strong; Almost half of all
::
ana~r~,~s·;,
,~?~Pl;lr~p,_
t~'6:tpe~cefi~~:';~e>
tj~f,si.ie}~-.cis
~-~a~eer,
and\n1_ore
_' .,freshmen:
think
;'.~qmos~xuality
.
.
•
1ast·ye~r. and 8.Spercent
m
1983~
_·.
mchried tov1ew 1t as.a tool for use should be outlawed, and a record
, .~:.
Peclining: interest'iri computer'
•
in other fields ......
_.
low - 2L8 percent
'"7'.
warit mari-
-_.careers
J)arallels_dwindling
interest
'
Among the~200,~0 freshmen
•
juana legalized.
<
•
.
··
in engineering. Ten percent of. s.urveyed riatioriwide·, business a·nd
By contrast, almost 53 percent of
r~spondents
plan to pursue
..
teaching drew the most significant
1977's freshmen favored legalizing
engineering careers, down from 12
•
increase in interest.
•
• ••
•
marijuana.
·~percent
two ye~n; ago..
The proportion
of entering
And while the Class of 1989 said
•
"Taken together, this decline in
·students
aspiring to business
the rich should pay more taxes,
_
student interest in technological
·
careers -
an area showing rising members would like to
be
among
•
careers stands in stark contrast to
interest since the 1970s - increas-. them.
the gr~wing national concern for.· edlo an all
0
time high of 23.9 per-
Seventy-one percent of the
••
•
increasing technological training in cent, more than twice the propor-
freshmen say "being very well-off
our schools arid colleges," said the
tion recorded in the 1972 survey.
financially" is "essential" or "very
survey's director,.UCLA Professor
•.
_
For the third straight
year,
important."
.
Alexander Astin.
elementary and secondary school
.
About the
.same
.number
of
•.•
The decline, however,
.
cor-
teaching· rose slightly to 6.2 per-
students agreed with the.statement
•
•
responds
•
with
•
diminishing
cent: although Astin said we still that "The chief benefit of a college
demands for-engineers in the job
have a long way t9 go before there education is that it increases'c, ..
;'s
market.
•
. -
-
•
•
•
are enough te~chers to meet the na-
earning power.
-----------
-----,
~~---~-r::::=-===---=--~--'--._:_,,..-_,
✓.,_
-
R~-
- I
.
-
.
•··
•
~--
•
•
:.
•
•
----.:__~
J ~-
•.:,·
.
•
•
.
D Nas~ati
From $334.00
Fro·
m
• •
$
49
411111111111J
9
_
0
~
u.iii
□
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(Cancun,Puerto Vallarta, Acapulco)
·
□
Bermuda
.
-··
From $324.00
.
•
•
·
.
·
I.
'
□
i:.t:
Lauderdale
From
$324.00
Chotelonly$164)
•
.
•
•
I
-
I
,
□
Daytona-Bead~
From $339.00
Chotelonly$17•0
.
.
,
••
:
I;
0
London/Paris
From $499.00
I:
•
--
All pric~sindudr
i
nights :otel. round trip air transportation and Colll'&l' Weeks
1.
I~
activities. Based on quad occupancy. Call for triples a-nd double supplements.
•
1
,
Airfare Supplements
Bahamas- ($40.00 Boston. BWl.l'hiladelphia. SI00.00
. ;
Chicago or Cleveland) Rermuda-($100.00 Chicago or Clevelandl
•
I
Fr. Lauderdalr.;__1S.'>O.OO
Boston. Philaddphia .• 8WI. Chicago. Cle\'t'landl
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•
Daytona Beach-($40.00 Boscon. Philaddphia. Chicago & Cl,•vd,1nd. S20.00
from
BWI)
•
•
I
..
.
..
.
--':EBJE.'2;s
....
College Weeks
□
March 0 I • March 08
•
0 March 22 - March 29
0 March
2!1 -
April
05
D
April
05 •
A11ril
12
0
:\pril 12.· :\pril 1!1
,
501 l\fadi~on A,-.-nue
Sc .. • 'forlc. S.\'. 10022
.
212-355-4705
□
March 08
•
March 15
D March
15.
March 22
l>estinalinn _,;__;.;__ ____
-- ______
Departur,· Ci1y_·
----------
-----
1
,
·o
Sounds Good. rm ready <o part\· and enclose SSO d,l.'posi1
D Rush me more information
~am~ ____
__:_
______________
~_,:,,.fe
_____________
_
Addrt~s
_ _:__..::_ ___
~---------,;:-:-
..
--:------"------------
.
Stal~-·_·
________
21p _____
_
Cil}' _____
_;_---,--,---~----:---
-
-
~ ~
----
~
---
~ ~
-
-
--
-
-
-
--
-
-
~
--
-
Februa 6, 1986 - THE CIRCLE - Page 7
APPLICATIONS ARE NOW BEING
ACCEPTED FOR THE FOLLOWING
POSITIONS FOR THE
SPRING
·1986
SEMESTER:
-
personal care aides/attendants
-
library/academic aides
•
-
notetakers
-· scribes
-. test assistants
-· tutors
-
typists/transcribers
-
Please stop by the Office of Special
Services, C1 35, for an application.
r
1
iiosiiN~•,
•
Sl'ECIAL
l•1·s.o'O
I
L--~~J
COMPLETE LINE OF
'OAmiii4"'-1
•
11.0NDE
I
f
MIGNLIGHTS
I
l(w/foll method)I
APPOINTMENTS
ONLY NECESSARY
FOR THURS.
& FRI.
M£1US
I
'
t10.oo ·,,
GIid
vp
~-----~
EVENINGS.
PRODUCTS
49 Academy SI. Pok.
486-9883
Monday lhru Friday
10-6.
Saturday
9-5
NOTE: longer hair or
_tinted
hair may
require addt'I charge
[Ri
Shown
at
1:00, 7:10, 9:10
ROBLOW. m
Shown at 2,00, 4,00, 7i20, 9,35
BARGAIN
MATINEES
SAT.
&
SUN.
All SEATS
1
2.50
OW PLAYING-THE
0
ILM YOU
OARE
NOT MIS
...
on:
than• mO'llte - an ~motional suf'ge
ln1
a mumph of blinding brightness. It should be
against the law not to••• 'The Cok-· "
.' ..
r,...,..,·flllo(;.J\01--
!Fr-iiJ
.
{'R.~~~~I
Sun.
to Thurs. E
•
Sat.
&
Sun. Mat.
Undeniably Dis
N
•
wn Matinees On
:50,4:35
•
Present this ad
and receive
$1.50 off
regular
adult admission.
Coupon good
•
thru
Feb. 13.
f
t>
·~::,
'
.1
I
j
'
j
• ..
I
f
,.
.ill,,
.:.~.··-'.·Pag'tf;B-THE.~iRCLE~·i:i,Biuafy·'6;~i~,"i!•
...
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.···-~---
·.•
...
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•
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'•J'•
·.·:•
\.;:J
·.
,J)J:':.•
•
l!::i
.•
·
...
,.··
by Lisa Ash· .
•
•
m:
a federal incoine tax r~ttir~.
retu~~-
,
.·. .
..
•
•
.
_
.
.
•
•
-The
~~1oos· is a new stud~ri(:
~If;ou
~o .not'm~~rid}ou owe
-The
1040EZ form is for the
-Student
Joans are never tax-
"fast form". in New York.
If
you
the government :money, .YOU)ue·.
The deadline for filing your. in-
come tax return is April 15 and, ac-
cording to District Manager Myr-
na Ross of H & R Block,
a
stu-
dent's requirements for filing in-
come tax
is
no different from
single person with
'no.
dependents . able. :When~ou begin to pay back· file this .form, the state will figure
.
subject ,to
•
i
the ·appropriat.e
•
who has a job and no deductions;
the iritereston a·studeilt Joan, this
your taxes for you.
• •
·
.
·::
•
penalties.
'·,
.·.··
,·
... ,
, ..
:,
.
.
::
•
however, many students cannot file
•·
may'be
.considered
a deduction.
..,.:..1_r
you are a senior and you get
-Finally,
when
·you·
:do·
not
•
•
-
•
this form and do not realize this.
·_:_Don't.
)jlink
.
you
.
can
a job far from
,your
- current
.
know wha~ to do
_when.
fili11g·in-
-~.
automatically claim yourself as ex-
residence, it is possible. to have a
come tax returns, find someone
-A student who has unearned·. empt just because you
are
a stu-
deduction for moving expenses.
who does know:·
·.
:
..
,
...
anyone else's.
..
Many students think they are dif-
•.
ferent under tax laws just because
they are students, but, said Ross,
"This
is a great misconception."
income
such
as interest; dividends,
dept. You must file a tax. return_if
-If
you
.do
not file an income
Assistant Business: Officer;,Ed
and/or tnlst income probably can-
·•
you meet the first requirement.·. tax return and the government
.
Frija said he has the l040EZ. arid
not file the l040EZ or the I040A
Note: The pe~alty for filing a false
owes you money, you have three
..
•
the 1040A forms, with-insfructiori
•
form and should consult someone
exemption is .a $500·.fine:
.
.
years to file in
'order
to re~rieve booklets, which sttident.s can,i,icl<
familiar with. the forms and their
-A
New York State tax return
•
your refund.
•
up from the Busi{!ess O~(ice.
;,
•
Ross, whose office is located· in
:
Poughkeepsie, gives these tax tips
requirements.
'
does not have to be filed if you do
-If you are an undergraduate
not earn moriey in New York.
receiving financial aid or have a
-In New York,
if
your gross in--
scholarship, this has no bearing on
.
come exceeds $3,350, you must file
for students:
.
·:
-A
single person under 65 who
has
a gross
income of $3,430 must
.
Letters:··:;:'.
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·continued·from page 5'·
Ropny"·
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how you file your income tax
:.
a state
tax
return.
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To the Editor:
·-rl-J-~-S-A-MM~
l
.·t
••
·As
1
read Carl MacGowan's
·.·,,:•:_'
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-e,·
--~!,_
Ej~·rie-_t-_
essay,
"Reagan is a Wimp,".'! was
,
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:wondering
if he.·had registered
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for the draft when he
•
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Y,OU'te
wo.
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tor}
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became eligible on his eighteenth'·
•
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birthday. If so, it sounds as
.if
he
•
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Thpt'slwht yop•re; In_
90i1,ge}
·
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..
.
is
anxious to participate in
some
-·-rvou•re-mt»k~-O)'flnve-stmeiff-+
J
overseas, military action against
;
wnlvoJr-fufur~..St~y~b-ttte-ri~hf-t
I.
Qaddafi that could occur through
•
•
!
trcick.lMai<iml,ze
fhathnv~stmen'.
Don't
I,
.
,Reagan's use of special military
.
.
forces. Carl MacGowan stated,
mess up youf hea,:
~-
~tay
~ftlad of
(h~L-
..
:
"We
need a leader who's not afraid
'
d_ mdetrtJOl1:iSl.
c:".fi5?i§.
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.
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Auditions Open lb
.All
For Participation:
to use his military .... Who dO"esn't
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twice about using force in a
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•.•.•
'desperate
situation. We want areal
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!
•
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·•.
!
•.
Send
"Heart
Balloon.Message,
m~~~·real man truly a ma~
,vhen:·'
--------
/
f
to
your °friend $2.00·
,
•
·he
sends millions
of men to do bat-
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Delivered with. a
Song
$'2.50
tie? Reagan is obviously trying t9
.
-.-h.!~!§'11
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prevent the
connict which Carl
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Contact.
a
·Marist
singer or. order
•
MacGowan supports. To remind
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·
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Mr. MacGowan, presidents are
•
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A
p\Jblic ,/e,vice\mess~ge
trom
•b!l
tl!!W Y!µ.!s..§14"!
i
•
e
Mus·t
be prepa1·
d
·rece1·pt
g·1•ven
elected
in this country to prev,eri'(·.
>
: •
l
?\lcohohsrn
and
lcoh~I
Abu•o and/Your c;ampuf new,.,aper.
.
.
•
.
.
.
.
•
•
.•
wars,notprovokethem.1'd·think·.:;.·
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.
To
the editor:
On behalf of the Adult Student
.
Union, I'd like to
welcome
the
•
adull
students
of Marist. Whether
• ·
you
are
a returning
student or com-
.
ing to classes for the firsttime;;inay
.
:
your
experience at Marist be
all
you
~wish
it to be.
Undoubtedly you're busy. Most
of the adult students work
and
care
:
for
families
as well as
attend
class.
•
It
seems
there is never
enough time
• to do.
,vhat
needs to be done; and
•
'here
I arri asking
you for some
of
,
1
that precious time.
:·
There is an organization on cam-
pus geared to meet the needs of the_
•
adult
st'udent.
The Adult'Student''
·
-
Union holds meetings on
alternate
:
Thursdays in The School of Adult
.
Education at 5:30 p.m. Th'e next
.
meeting is scheduled for February
7. We need your input at these
.
meetings. This.is the, organjza~ion
•
,
which represents you ori the Coui1-,;
.
cil of Sfudent Leaders. In order
to
•
express
the needs of the adult stu-·
•.
derit;\ve need'to know what those
needs are. The meetings are
infoi-~
•
mai,'c_Irop-ins·are welcome'. Come
to the. meeting
·and;
let
your
voice
be he~rd. \Ve need·you!
.. •
..
•
, ;~;
.
Sincerely,
•
Canrizu M. Lyon
.
-
G
·.}
.
1836~1986
©
1911
$tat9ot
T
..
a1
.
One
~eek
only, save on the gold
ring
of
your
choice.
For Complete d,etails, see your Jostens representative at:
JOSTENS'
AMER.ICA"S
COLLEGE
RING'"
....
,
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'
..;..~---------------------------------------February
6, 1986 - THE CIRCLE-. Page
9--
G~nter~l,l!I,Y.<Use
~to
b~,
determined,
by
need
.•
·by
David Scbifter
,
.
. • •.
• •
/Sarisola said.
-.
•
housing office had trouble making
Sansola said. This decrease ;nables
••· ,•, -·· '- :.'.\ • .. ·<.<• :
•
•
:_
f
~
•
< ..
Canterbury, which is located five ·room available·ror the number of • the college to offer more on-·
The decision fo use the
.Qmtcr-. •
.
miles from campus, housed 57. students who required housing. Ac-
campus housing. .
•
The four remaining residents of
Canterbury will have to find new
housing next semester; either on
campus or independently, accor-
ding to Sansola.
bury Apartments for Marist Col-
Marist students. In their attempt to
cording to a five-year plan in effect
Most of the students who were
lege students next.semester will de-
house all resident students on cam-
until 1988, the college will aim to
of legal c!rinking age were moved
pend on the • total • number of pus, the college has made accom-
keep enrollment at no more than
to the north end of campus where.
·students: needing housirig, • accor-
modations for most of the students
3,000 full:ti~e students.
alcohol is permitted. However, all
He believes a'student living off-
campus cannot receive the quality
of academic, social or mentor sup-
port available to those living on
campus. "Students generally like
living on campus," Sansola said.
"There's a lot more going for them
• ding to Steve Sansola, director of who have been living off-campus,
students
could
not
be
housing.
.•
, . •·• • . • ··according to Sansola.
•
• Sansola said there is currently
accommodated.
• The determination will be based • Four students living
in
orte unit
room on campus to house students_
"We have two or three juniors
.on the1nimber of new students the
have decided to remain at Canter-
who are residing off-campus. He
or seniors who we had to place in
college
will
be qousing and from • bury with college permission. One
said this is because enrollment fi- . Champagnat
Hall,"
he said.
• • enrollment predictions ·made by the . condition was that they provide.
qures are always larger in the fall • Champagnat is a non-alcohol area.
there."
''. admissions office.
-'
their own transportation. Buses no
semester.
---------------------------
....
:·· f'We·wm look afour currenfstu- .. longer travel between Marist and
"During the course of the
deil(capacity and decide whether Canterbury. "
semester people withdraw du_e to .
it is appropriate to lease or _rent
the . In November 1985, Marist Presi-
academic,financial or any number
apartments to _Marist students,"
dent Dennis Murray c\Dnounced
the
of reasons. And this is normal."
SUNY
sued over death
•
.
by Maryjo Murphy
dorms on the weekends, because
the college has an obligation to pro-
The parents of a 17-year-qld
tect as well as educate its students.
SUNY-New Paltz freshman who
While college officials refused to
died in his . _dormitory room last
comment on the case, citing a lack
semester have filed a notice to sue •• of.information about it, Eaton said
the state of New York.
the college is not planning to
. • The suit was filed in December
change • its alcohol policies in the
after the Ulster County coroner's
• wake of either the death or the
report said that Frank Freeman, of
lawsuit.
Spring Valley, N. Y., died of acute
Cody claimed Freeman probably
alcohol poisoning. According to L.
would not have died if someone in
David Eaton; dean of student life .• authority had been.on duty, saying
at SUNY-New Paltz, Freeman died . that there must have been noise and
in his sleep last September after
commotion sufficient to attract at-
drinking in • his dormitory room . tention. But Eaton said that, .
with friends. .
because the· students were behind
The suit charges the school with
•
closed doors, and no inappropriate
la.ck of education on alcohol and
behavior seemed to be going on,
its aftereffects, and.a lack of super- . there was no heed for a resident
vision in the dormitories, said. • assistant to check them.
Thomas J. Cody, the attorney
__ The school's alcohol policy has
representing the student's father,
been in effect since 1981. The
Herbert Freeman.
•
policy permits students legally old
In a telephone interview from his . enough to drink to have alcoholin
office in Pearl River, ·Cody said . the dorm rooms. However, alcohol
there should be more control in the
is not allowed in common areas,
. such as the halls, ,Eaton said.
Students who violate this policy are
penalized with fines, he added.
Eaton said the college did not
• fail in . its responsibilty to the
students. "College is an adult liv-
ing, learning experience," he said .
The freshman year is the worst
time in a college student's life, said
Cody. "It's his or her first thrust·
into the world, and it's scary," he
said, adding that freshman should
be kept separate
from up-
perclassmen because of the ad-
justments associated with freshmen
year.
There are no dorms at SUNY-
New Paltz specifically reserved for
freshmen.
"Freedom evokes many respon-
sibilities," said Eaton. Reflecting
on the incident, he said: "People
• do die from drinking alcohol. It's
reality."
• • Since the case is in its early
stages, Cody was unable to predict
its outcome.
Nightclub
.aims <to.
reopen
i?'!if~tiJj!t.:~::
•
f§~~l;3~;~t!E'.
··
£,;~?tr~:9!:!:!f&·~·~:
chance: ' • -
.
• •
sation piece,"
"I promised myself I would not
.The popular Poughkeepsie
•
·•
The Chance received national
wait more than six months to open
. nightclub, closed in May I 984 due - recognition due to the hundreds of
The Chance again," says Francese.
to a fire, is scheduled-to re-open by • performances by nationally-known
But insurance hassles forestalled
_: June 1, according to owner Peter artists. The careers of many artists
his goal.
• Francese,
.
. • .•
_
including Duran Duran and Cyndi.
"There have been delays in set-
• Major demolition ~ork has been Lau per were . fostered on the
Hing the claim with my insurance
completed and actual reconstruc- . nightclub's· stage. Because of its _company,..-says Francese.
~
tion of the nightclub will begin next Poughkeepsie
location,
The
Francese said he has liquidated
week, •
Chance served as a stop for many . some property and personal assets
• Although nearly two years have artists.on their way between Albany_,_ in order to fund the reconstruction .
. • separated The Chance from its and New York City.
The owner claims he has taken his
patrons, public support has re-
Francese said there will be a few, insurance company to court
mained high. Readers of the changes when • The. Chance re-· because of the settlement problems
Poughkeepsie. Journal voted the opens;
• ' and delays. ·However, Francese
• The Chance the bestplace to hear
"We will feature strictly major· claims the court date and settle-
' live music in a «Best of Hudson and nationalacts," said Francese.' ment could take three to four years
Valley;' readers' poll last
year,
even "This time around there will be no
so he decided to go-ahead with the ·
•. though it had been closed more video nights or college sponsored -, project himself.
than a year.-·
• ·.·.
e:vents. We will strive to become .
"I decided I could not wait that
"The support
we
h~ve received· more of ari entertainmentcenter or . long," says Francese. "I've already
.
from th~. people in the area is mini-theater.
•
waited long enough."
. Bard_··:_<_,._
••
_'._,
_____________________
c_o_n_ti-nu_e_d_r_r_om~p-a_g_e_l.
. to act in a financially prudent man- .
ner and with good judgement," he
members and
its
entire· fashion . correctly; the attorney general pro-
design program, In addition,
yided proper notice, and the hear-
Cernera said he feels ''absolutely" _ mg
~n~
procedures were p~operly
that Marist compares much more admmistered. The !aw provides for
closely to the type.of institution no further h~anng. We were
Bennett was than.does Bard.
.
g~anted ~?m:thmg we_cannot now
In a telephone interview Bard • give up, sm~ Bots!e
11
~-
President Leon Botstein said his . Cernera said
!Vf
ar!st is only tr~-
school will oppose any legal action mg ~o protect Its nght to a fair
- Marist might take to re-open the heanng, not take money away
hearing.
.
fr~!° ,Bard. .
. .
"By the law if we understand it
It s not hke this IS a grant
'
awarded
to
them that we are try-
ing to get a part of. We are not try-
CMS--
_Continued
from
page l
violation.
But the account elimination may
not be permanent, Falanga said.
"We intend to look at it for the Fall
Qf 1986," he said. He added that
more accounts could be available
at a later date after the Computer
Center finds the best way to
organize the disk space and· to
manage a larger number of
accounts.
ing to undercut them," said
Cernera.
Botstein said the important ques-
tion to ask is: "What was the
donor intent?"
"The state has a responsibility to
do its very best to fulfill the intent
of the donor. ·That's the criterion,"
he said.
•
"That's Leon Botstein's opinion
and he is certainly entitled to it, but _
I disagree;'' Cemera said.
.
Bard has no choice but to op-
pose, said Botstein. "Marist's
board of trustees and administra-
tion should be responsible enough
said.
CIRCLE CLASSIFIEDS
ARE BACK
On sale starting tomorrow
. in the cafeteria and Donnelly
Choices That
Make a Difference
-''THE JUNKIE PRIEST''
Fr. Dan Egan
TIME:
7:00-10:00 p.m.
PLACE:
Campus Center Theater
TONIGHT
Sponsored
by:
·The Personal Development Center
•-
I
i'
)
J
-<~.-
t
-,~-
{
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•.
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Tuition•·cut·••set·;\;8,t
·Bit~
·
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\•--~--->~-:-.:._::_
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·;\.::·---:.~-<-'··:\:~:.~-
by Len Johnson
home state, provided they maintain . benificial at ~arist,-:-.
.
.. ,.;,·
r
a."B" average.at ~ai-d. Students · ,"Their. program. is
..
~eally: a
Bard College in· Anna11dal~.
..
living more than 400 miles from the . marketing. techriiqtie/' she. said,
N. Y .,
has announced a scholarship
scho.ol will also-receive the cost of., '·'It's an attempt to draw attention
program that would offer certain
.•
o·ne· rnund-trip
traris'portation
•
to the school through the mass
•
public high school seniors a reduc-
ticket. each year.·
.
•
...
•
media."
.
..
,
.
.
.
.
.
.
cd tuition,
.
.
Bard will also cover any finan-
Atkin also said that the Bard
Seniors in the top ten of their
cial aid which students in
.the
pros • program is too exclusive because it
class are now eligible for a $14,550 gram would have qualified for at
is Hmited to top students. "We
per-year education al Bard for the
their local public college.
make a variety' of scholarships
price of a public college education
The program,·which will include. available to top students· as well,
in their own _state, according to a
art
undetermined
nu.mber., of
but we want. to put our° money
Bard press release.
students, is. funded
:
totally by
towards those ,vho need it most,"
The program was devised by
trustees and will not raise education
she said.·
:
Bard College President Leon Bots• costs to other students.
•
tein in :;in attempt' to address in·
"We feel that America's· top
Atkin·also said that such a pro-
creasing ·i.;ompetition between
students should have an affordable
gram would be difficult to ad-
publk and private
schools
for top• private education made available to
minister fairly, and that many
students.
.
•
•
them," said Bard Director of
students might resent not being in-
Under the new program, which
Public Relations Tina Green in an
eluded in the program.
'
will begin this fall, students .who
interview last week.
Asked if a similar program could
qualify will pay only what they
Marist Director of Financial Aid
9e incorporated at Marist, Atkin
would pay for tuition, room and
•
Karen Atkin expressed doubt over
said,
"I
wouldn't warit to
·be
the
board
a1
a public college in their• whether such a program could be·, one to administer it."
:
.
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..
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~.
t
.
···"'
AI
umnus
______________________
c_on_t_in_u_ed_r_r_om
__ P_ag_e_3_.
violent, verbally abusive and sex-· an offer to a troubled family -
a
an exploitative way, but
w
come
ually provocative, Alwon.said.
way to provide an incentive not to
look at the won_derful things that
. ''.The hardest part is recruiting
have so many children," Al won ex-
are happening."
.
competent people. Ones who want
plained. "Funds should. be provid-
•
•
Alwon. described his work and
to work with kids who don't say
·
ed so a woman can have her tubes
similar treatment programs as
thank you,".he said. "The parents
tied if she wants to after her third
"reactive,
_doing
what we have to
are often ungrateful, too."
•
unwanted kid."
•
to keep the cities from burning."
"The kids assume you are the
•
On those days when Alwon is
He would rather prevent the c_on-
•
ones who· took them away from
tempted to give in to discourage•
ditions. t_hat
·create·
society's
their homes. As bad as it was, it
ment, he remembers the boys who
problems.
.
.
.
was their own real home," he
•
come back and let him know· their
"The political convictions and
explained.
years at Walker were good ones.
idealism are still there, but we-have
After many years of struggling to
That makes him ready to do it all
to look at the economic realities of
.help
people who are unable to.help
over again, but he would like some
America,"• he said-. "It means
255
Main Street,.New
Paltz,
New
York 12561
Rt.
9W,
Milton,
New
York.(5
Mins. from Marist) •
:,,--,·
• 255"4578
795-2326
'*Free.Trial
Session·*'•
,
~
.
'
'
·.,
.
'.
'
Buy: 1 0 Visit Package
:
..
Get: 5 Free Visits
·tor:a
friend:.
• •
·*
Offer· good !hn.J 2/1_4.,
20% STUDENT
_"0/SCOUNT-:.
themselves,
Alwon's
idealism
_help.
changed tax structures and more
llnot·F'F.
seems more firmly rooted in reali-
''We need to challenge young
•
socialistic economics; and a greater
f"EATURING
.
>- .
, ,
1
.
.
ty no,v than it may have been at 20.
people· and get the better ones to
percentage of. income going to
.
•
SYSTEM··.
TANNING BEDS,
_.
And he acknowledged that if reality
help us do thinking at all levels,"
taxes. Since Reagan took office
·
··-rhe.
Most. Tnisted Name
as he describes it sounds uncom-
he said. ''The press and television
we've .triple<.l defense spending
;
11
Tannin
11
.
monly harsh, perhaps he is just be-
..
_
shows should take a closer look at· while cutting social ser.vices. It;s a
•
~.,..SC:·\.
STEREO HEAOPHONES,
a
• COOLING FANS
•
ing more realistic than people want
the reality oqhe settings -
not in
hell of a statement."
·
·
.
t
..
S· A
•
·•
• '·
:,
"
to hear.
•
•
•
,
'>....,;.'
------'-----------------------------------------------.---------------------•
"As the poor struggle to get their),
'
•
• .,
·
,
·
·•~To~:~:tfi~~~?F~!:i~•··
.•
......
,,~fo~r···JotN·•·oun·a--~,1-1111'·ty;,-r,·
...
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"V..'e've become a two class
•
•
•
•
•
',·/''
'·''-
society - the rich get richer and the
poor have children who rape us and
steal from us," Alwon lamented.
"We don't have enough jails;
forget rehabilitation, the aim is
•
containment."
.
• Bui he does not have us confr~nt
sodety's problems without offering
some solutions.
,
"We
need to find ways to extend
.
..
Gifts
•
hit high
.
NEW YORK, NY
(CPS)
.
:Coporate
generosity to colleges_:, •
·motivated
either by kindness or
ii'.':
suspicion thartax breaks for: gi\i.·.
-ing
may soon dry up
::C..
hit record'·
.
levels last ·year, the Council . for
'.Financial
Aid to Education.,
•·.
i(CFAE)
says ...
,
.,
,
. · , ..
:
:
A huge 150 percent jumpin•gifts-
·
in-kind helped push total corporate
contributions:to education to $1.6.,.
;billion
in 1984, up 15:2 percent
•
•
from the-year before,: the council ,
;reports.
' '•
•
•
"
•
·-
·
•
:,
The council, together
_with
The
!Conference·
Board,: anri_tially
surveys the· giftagivirig habjts
•
of
·Fortune
500
companies. For the
:third_.~onsecutive
year,. they found
,educatiori
receiyed.38_:,9
p<;rcent of
lall
corporate 1onations.
.
• .
,
An increasing pr<>P.Ort_iori
ofthe
;gifts
_:_ just over one-fifth -
is
:company
products and other pro-
;perty, explains
•
Linda Cardillo
'Platzer of The Conference Board.
. Property donations jumped 200
_percent;
company· products 15()
;percent
and
securities
100 percent.
;
Computers comprise·an increas•
·ing
amount of property·and pro-
•
:duct' donations, Platzer says.
'.
•
Several years
ago,
Apple' Com-
·puter
pioneered the practice
·of
donating co~pllte~s
to
schools and
.
colleges as a way to start students
:using their produc;ts, and, the com•
:P~ffY
hoped, to,
keep
them buying
A}!les after_ tl\ey gradu~ted_.
•
..
,.,
.
:
•
1955
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GRAND~PRI
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'
.•
'
.......
.-
13a$Ketbrawl!
~ounded Hk~--
.. Beat _up Bailey" fill-
ed the already-te~se air at McCann.
'.
•
A~~oU:n~er into headset, and
• -
•
it
did happen much the way I
.(;,
'
·by
.
Q.rian:
O'_Connor
/
·•.
herice to. the ears· of listeners all
·
•
described it, except Smolka wasn't
over the
-valley:
~The Foxes are
•
..
floored by McCants, nor was the
_
down 75-64
•
wffn-jµst under two
rest of Wagner's bench. Skirmishes
arid a half minutes left. Bailey has
..
broke out all over the court;. This
..
been hot for Wagner in the second
is how it happened, to.the best of
,_
·-
half, arid with
•
.the way this is go-
my knowledge.
_·
•
\
i.
ing the crowd of 2,701 is beginn-
·
Smolka
had.: words.
-
with
.
ing to dwindle. The Foxes are hav-
Mccants on the inbounds. As
.
ing their troubles, the guys on the
McCants turned away, he shoved.
floor seem frustrated. It's an in-
Smolka, a 6'7" senior forward, in
..
bounds pass for Wagner - and He>ly
·
the face. Smolka pursued,· Bailey
hit McCants in the face
·and
all
heck let go. Wagner's coach, Neil
Kennett, led his men onto the court
,..
thursday
morning·
quarterbac~:
,
•.
much· the-· same way Teddy
Roosevelt went up the hill with the
Rough Riders, although Kennett
never really yelled charge.
.
There were
•
shouts, coaches
._
holding players, officials getting
.
Co~v
!
Wagner.!s Dave Smolka said
caught in the middle, piles of
something· to Ron McCants and
players and personnel. Wagner's
McCants decked him! The Wagner
Largest
Agbej_emisin
.
kicked
bench is clearing and they're all be-· Mccants, people tumbled all over,
ing decked by the Foxes!"
•
but Marist got in good shots, too.
A ringside seat: last Saturday's game against Wagner raised temperatures and fists as both
benches emptied for a brawl.
•
(Photo by Mike Patulak)
Well,'that's the way the.fans -
I thought I saw Mark Shamley put-
.
the ones who stayed -
at the
ting on boxing gloves, but my mind
McCann Center wished it would
was clouded with the excitement.
have been this past Saturday. The
•
• Anyway, it kept on going. This
game was dragging; Marist was· wasn't one of those five-second
.
missing· shots, Terrance Bailey
jobbers, then say we're sorry.
wasn't. Wagner was controling the
Security guards and Poughkeepsie
pace ·or the game and eve~y Fox
police got in the fun. There was
follower was getting, let's call it,
more shouting and more tumbling,
d
~players
fell to the floor, bombs ex-
e
gy.
.
.
After all,- the Punk Den had
-
pl oded in the background
-
and if
nothing to tape up to the wall after
.
you really listened, you could hear
those three consectutive alley-oops
"The I 812 Overture."
early in the first half. People were
The fans went, needless to say,
He was treated and released
from St. Francis Hospital
•
for a
split lip and possible concussion. It
is still unclear how Van Drost was
leveled. The hope of finding out
was nixed when cable Channel Ten
stopped the tape for the melee.
What was Channel Ten thinking,
frying
to
seperate sports violence
and television? Haven't they ever
·seen
the NHL?
looking for a reason to cheer, to
wild. They had their reason to
Marist lost the game 85 to 81,
root and to generally get down-
•
cheer. Thankfully, nobody storm-
but not really to Wagner, they lost
right ugly. Sure the Marist 'fans
-·
ed the court. The referees couldn't
.it
to Bailey. He, as they say, went
kindly applauded when Bailey
even break up the players and
off. The nation's leading scorer put
broke the McCann Center scoring
.•
coaches. It would've went beyond in 95 in two games. Kennett said
·mark
of43 points, (he h'ad46at the
.
ugly fo gruesome. If that's·what
that B_ailey could've had 60. He
gam_e's end) but he's ?n the other_
.
comes next.
was 18 of 26 from
-the
line and
,
...
team.
. ..
. .
•
.
..
.
•
The cheering quieted when the missed the front end of many one
:\:
Tiiose eager-to-cheer fans found
·_
:
smoke finally_ cleared
•.
What
_\Vas
and ones.
.a
reasonto get up and get ugly_Jeft
was Wagner's Andre Van
.
;;when
the game
0
of basketball turJ1;,,
.:J?rost,,
-__
l:l_
6'P'
jµni9r guar~, fac
7 .
The loss \Vas due to Marist f?ul
"ed
to
1
basketbfawi,Everyone rose;'\·(down· oil. the cotir_t:
1t
.took:some
·<tro!-1ble,
being ou~~p~'ysicaled
•
on
ili.uch·like they.do.for the'National
_
·•·
time before;'on his second attempt,
,_•the
inside and rom!)ed by. Bailey.
.:Anthem
bufeVen faster. Clench-
·Va·n
Drost left the floor, more ap
0
The Foxes had no outside shooting,
-ed
fists' arid shouts that to me
propriately, the ring.
•
•
with apologies to Carlton Wade
who hit some late in the game, to
balance the attack. Bring back
Steve Eggink! A faulty inside game
without the backing of outside
shooting will not win games.
Fans don't like to watch their
team lose, especially when they
know the team is good. They can
get mean.
Kennet, who
·was
as angry as
Matt Furjanic (or is that Herb?),
received no technical foul as Fur-
janic did during the game. Tim
Beckwith got one, too. Mccants
and Smolka got ejected for
fighting.
Kennet would not let the writers·
talk to Bailey or anyone after the
• game. The police, five cars of
them, escorted Wagner to their
bus.
I
was among the faction of fans
that was rooting for a sort-of
miracle come back, not t~e all-out
.war.
It wasn't much to ask the Fates.
considering I had asked for 40
points for the Patriots a week prior
and got nothing. Well, the Fates,
this week gave me the cor.1e back
for which I had asked, but it seems
I forgot to ask for a victory, too.
The Red Foxes gave Wagner a
fine run for my money. After the
brawl, Wagner and Kennet thought
they had it wrapped up. But ·Maris!
cut an
I
I-point Wagner lead at
fight time, to a three-point deficit,
with 42 seconds lcfl. It was really
something to cheer. The eff on was
commendable.
I was still cheering the Marist
_players on during the ride home.
Rea\\y, ask the guys \ deafened.
But the Foxes did not get a needed
win.
This column was reported with
assistance from Dan Pietrafesa,
who was sitting ringside.
·-women
swimmers improve
Monlllouth· stops_1ady hoopsters
.
.
_,
:,.
by Michael
J.
Nolan
and the 400 medley relay. Karen
•
by
Be~ Ramos.
.
..
·surge
had them behind 22-19 at
.
bounds and was a key force in set-
Oitizinger set a school record in
_
.. • •·.
•
.
•
•
.
•
.
.. .. ,
halftime.
-
.
ting up the Red Foxes under the
The Marist College women's
the 100-yard freestyle, Nancy
•
The Marist. wom_en's bask_
etball
.
•
..
.,
..
:; _·._
swim team has improved despite
Champlin in the 200 freestyle,
_.
basket.
team was swept away by Mon-
:
.
-
.
a worse· record then the last two
and Lisa Burgbacker set a·
mouth. College's
second-half
The sec~nd half, h~~~ver, was
Head Coach' Patty Torza said
years,
according
to Jim
school record and qualified for
orislaught last Sunday, falling
to
•
~II Monm!'uth. The visiti!lg t~am
sheexpectstheteam,plaguedwith
Billesimo,
women's
swim
theNationalQualifyingmeetin
.
the conference leader 56-44 at the
.
•
•
n~c~~ased
1
~s lead by 9_ pomts
JUS
t
injuries thus far, to come on strong
- coach.
three-meter diving .
•
-McCann
Athletic Center. The loss
·;
four minutes into the ~econd half,
•
in the season's se<;ond half.·
The swimmers are faster this
·•
dropped Marist's ove'ratrfecord to
-
-
and Marist wasn'tgetti~g th~ inside
The team has posted a 6-5
year, said Billesimo. "We have
s~13;·and its conference mark t<>'·.: shots that ha~ kept them.alive ear-
..
••
~'We're
a
bette·neam than our..
_
record compared to last year's
top
competiJors
in
_
each
_
3
_
5
;
• -,.
,
,
_
:
,.
'.
ly on.
• .
..
_
..
:
.
,_.
.
_
-
.
record indicates,''·she said. "We've_
-
'6-2-1,
but the team has upgrad-
_
stroke," he said. "We can back
.
.
lost several close··games. I
_think
ed its schedule and now faces
these swimmers up with second
;
Befo~e Sunday's game: the Red
.
Senior Mary Jo Stenipsey had a
>
we'll pull out of it.'_'
.
better co111petition.
-
and third place finishes."
•
.Poxes_
had beeQ.tiedfqrJifth place
:-
g:¢i~;high
_11_
ret,ounds;and
·~~
the,·.
•
, ....
Marist's ne~t four $ames
_wiil
be
The team broke five records '
The season's close is March 7
··:
in': the·_ Metropolitan Confere~ce
team s._ lead
1
!!g scorer·
,wi
th 12
•
away;
this weekend while competing in
after ihe ECAC Swim Tourna-
,,
·,: with Queens college." --~
·_.
·.points.Freshman
Jacalyn O~NeH,
• •
.
•' .·
.
.
,the.· Women's. Metropolitan
. ment, but Billesinio said he
;
) · •
·>
--· • •
: :_:_<:·:
-
•
•
•
•
-
and· senior Paoline Ekambi had 8
The game was
J>OS
tponed
'from
· Swimming and Diving Cham-
hopes this season will be the ad-
, . .
_':-•
Marist. domi~atei most· ~f- the
-
•
and
-
7
•
·points~
respectively; and
;
Iast Friday~ when Monmou th
·
pioriships. School records were
vent of a strong established pro-
_.
• '.
<:_first
half,
,but
,f
la_te Monmouth
•
-juni?r :Jennifer Gray
:
had
.
10 re:-
:
developed b~s problems.
•
broken in the 200-yard freestyle
gram that is respectable.
~-~x½~~t¥~~tir-filf
>>···
..
··s~t,,:='.E;
:2i·c•'~~~~~:.~~:--~•·i,
•.
'I0Jf
;~;.~;t
:~~,:.;~;~~~~~
..
_ •
~c-·are·many
a<;nvitie,s
off~-_·,
-,_'
Another r~n
·why
intramural .·_
games: would a!Iow, students, to : : '. four meet( remairtirig ·and_ the
.
half hour daily work ·out.
· -
_ • ·--. for-
·both
"men
and _
women. The
-
participation increased is because
•
work together and have fun, Lynch
most cjiffic.iilt part of _ the
The team has also impro\'ed
• 'following
are some
of
the activities
••
of
_
a
heightened-. aware~s
_
of
• _
said.
Games such as
tubing, water
-
·
1
·
.
h
·
with the times they. record. The
••
--~-·-available • this ,semester: tc~
.-·_h,ealth/
Lyri~h :said;: ''.Th_ere are<· volleyball, softb~U~ tug of war and·_ -
~c~~l
~a~_et:~~r.
inen's
speed of the swimmers as· a
•
,··volleyball;
five-ori-fiye basketball;·.:
some
·.phenomenal· athletes at
:
mattress races would be scheduled.,
varsity swim coach, said the
whole has increased, he said;
•
,coed·
bowling, raquetball tour-
Marist," he said.
•
•
•
••
• -
'
-
•
·_
·_
•
•
.
.
•
•
team should win thrceorthe last
"The times posted are the best
:-'n~erits
and coed indoor and
out-
'
•.
The
teams
nmto
a
set
schedule,
'
four meets and finish two meets_
in the team's history," said Van
.door
tennis. Other activities such
as
• :.
•
•
lntramurals are not limited to
•.
and everything ends up in touma-
under
so
percent.
Wagner.
field hockey, softball, Olympic
•.
students only. They are also of:'.' ment· play. Lynch praised the
•
The team is improving, said
•·
tearn' handball and aerobics are. ferecf to-staff members and the
-
MaristComputerSocictyforthcir
Van Wagner. There are 17
Van Wagner, who has been
proposed for this semester.
adf!linistration.
~ffon in keeping statistics-for the
swimmers and divers compared
coaching the Marist College
•
·-
intramural program.
to 13 last year, and· there is
men's swimming team since
There has been a huge increase
in· student participation in in•
tramurals, according to Lynch.
Lynch believes that incentives such
as shins and trophies for the win-
ning teams are factors in the suc-
cess of the program. There may be
a trophy case to hold intramural
trophies, Lynch said.
Intramural Director
Mike
Malet
greater commitment to the
1976, has intentions of moving
and Lynch have many goals for the
According to Lynch, intramurals
team, he said.
-
to a Division One program that
program. One goal is to· have a
is a good way to make friends.
With no seniors on the squad,
offers scholarships and is more
sport which women could solely
Students have
to
be into it and en-
the ream is looking
to
increase
competitive, he said. He said he
identify with. Since many women
couraged to come out and play,
its talent and post more vie-
feels he can successfully coach
have shown interest in field hockey,
said Lynch. The success of the pro-
tories. ..The team is making
at a more competitive level.
it may be .offered this spring ex-
gram depends not only on par-
headway in attracting swim-
The team will compete in the
elusively for women.
ticipation, but also on good sport-
mers," he said.
.
Metropolitan Swimming and
Another goal of the program is
to have dorm competitions. These
smanship, Lynch said. "Student
Van Wagner said the team is
Oivjng Championships on Feb.
spirit can drive the whole pro-
categorized by commitment.
22, and finishes the season with
gram," he said.
.._ Oyer a two week training pro-
the conference tournament.
.....
..
!.,
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n
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' ••
Rik Smits sets to.sinkone for .
the Foxes last weekend in.a fail-
ed comeback attempt :against
Wagner..
. .
(Photo by M~~e Patulak.)
\.
,
COllleS
to
Marist;
EfVin
dUO
must
oe
haltecl
by Dan · Pietrafesa
. 81-80 overtime win over host· . Percarski had 11 points and 10
Fairleigh Dickinson University.
rebounds.
•. Long Island University will o~ce
i'.DU was leading by 19 at the half.
The Marist highlight in the game
again have two brothers inthe star-
The Foxes will have the height
was the three alley-6op plays to
ting)ineup this.Saturday at 3 p.m
advantage up front with the Jones'
Smits, Percarski and Mccants.
at the McCann Center, but this duo • standing only 6-5. That advantage
Kennett called time out to change_
are guards and not for~ards. . ..
showed in the earlier meeting last
his zone defense from
a
3-2 to a
The Ervin brothers, Andre (21.l
month when both Rik Smits and •• 1-3"
1. . • •
··.
•• •
•
. • •
.
ppg.) and Mike
(10.4
ppg.), wiJl be
Miro Percarski both topped 20
"I didn't do anything against
•.hereto play at guard; but Rod arid
points in the Marist 8Q-73 victo,ry • them," said Kennett. "Largest
Carey Scurry will not be starting at ·•· at LIU, the first Red ·Fox victory
Agbejeminsin and Dave Smolka
forward. Carey, theniost domi- •• ever-at the horrie of the Blackbirds.· did. We went to
a
1-3-1 to take
• nantplayer in the conference the_, .
.
·
. . .
away that pass away."
.
past few years, is now playing with • •
Wagner _85 Manst
81 .
.
Marist 59.FDU 57 .
the Utah Jazz.
•
. Terrance Badey scored _46
p01!1ts
· The ·Ervins· are .half the return-
and grabbed 12 rebo_
unds m leadmg
• Ron McCants buzzer beater
h S h
k
. lifted the Foxes to victory after a
ing players from last years veteran
t e _ea aw s to victor}.'.:
time out w_ith 38 seconds designed
team that finished third in_the con-
• •~Everybody thinks l'm crazy
a final play that had four guards
ference. Andre scored 30 ma los-
when I tell them about the kid,"
in the game. Marist had two guards
ing . cause . in J:1n1c1~ry
against
·Wagner coach Neil Kennett said.
at the top of the key .and two on
Manst, while Mike JUSt became
"You· have. to see him. And he
the wings
00
the final play;
. _eligible
to play this ~e~ester. This • didn't even play :well."
,
may be t~e only team m the. con-
Everyone else associated with the
ference with less court experience
Wagner team -also agreed that
than the Foxes. •
Bailey did not play well.
.
•
Marist head coach Matt Furjanic
Talking about brothers playing
said that he used everything-deferi-
up front, the Blackbirds will have sively to stop •Bailey, but Bailey
two non-related Jones' lip there.
responded by scoring.
•
Freshman center Greg Jones (15.1
, . ·,
.
·. ppg. and 9 rpg.) has been named
Largest Agbejeminsin (19 points
ECAC ·Rookie .of the Week four • and
i
1 • rebounds) hurt the Foxes
times in .the past eight weeks while even more with his work under the
junior Bob "Refrigerator" Jones
boards;· ·-
.
,
(6.4.ppg, and 3.5 rpg.) as the. top
• However,Ahe Foxes did outre-
man off the bench scored 14 points bound the Seahawks-47-43. Smits
.. in the closing two minutes of .. paced theteam-with26.points and
: regulation in leaaing his team to a
16 boards .while :frontcourt mate
. > ' ' .',.
,
' . ;- ;' , '-\·.
=-;.,-':'
,
• The Foxes·were down by eight
with 3:15 when they scored the next
11 points to take a 57-54 lead with
59 seconds left. The Knights scored
on a three. point play by Jaime
Latney with 40 seconds remaining.
Marist shot 70 percent from the
field but 28 turnovers and 5-18
from.the charity stripe negated the
super-performance. FDU shot on-
ly 35 percent from the field but was
17-21 from the free throw line.
Smits (16), Percarski
(10),
Shamley (15) and Mccants
(11)
- scored in douJ:,le figures for .the
Foxes. •
fO>C'
trail
by Dan Pietrafesa
Congratulations
.
Lisa
Burgbacker
on qualifying for
the,National Qualifying meet in
the threesmeter diving event,
Her · performances
in the
Metropolitan
• Conference
·:swimming and Diving Cham~
pionship .at Hofstra in the one
, and three-meter-dives-are both
school records. The women
broke five school records in all
at the meet...
•
•
Indoor track· coach
Steve
Lurie
feels that his team is a
strong contender to win the
• NewYork Collegiate Track and
Field .Championship...
-:
1--The
Marist win at FDU was
• coach.
Matt Furjanic's.
100th
career· victory ... Rik Smits· is
16th
in
the nation in field goal •
percentage at 61.7/. .. My 20th
birthday wiUbe one that I will·
never. forget beca9se I witness-
ed the
Battle • Royal
between
Marist and Wagner in the most
:bizarre game ever. Poor of-
ficiating led .to the start of this
misfortune which resulted in
some bruises for members of
.. both teams, but Wagner's head
coach
Neil · Kennett
and
Ter-
rance Bailey
are at much fault.
. Kennett was really upset with
the brawl because "it let them
back in ·the game,'-' but he led
his team out . on the ·court to
•
duke it out While Marist coaches
·JilJ~Ifrtci(,~;e;p~~f;ljJiffJri-Spatk
fz.~'<:Jtey
··1earn
•
were able to hold back- their .
• ··•pl;iyers until that_pqiiji .. Bailey' • '.•·
•· delivered his .second:.punch,c;>f
'··,
-
,:.:~.
,
.
by Ken Foye
.third;p~riod o~tbu;st bythe R~d
game~ f9r intending·
io
'injure
,!in
Marist co-captain Craig Their.
. · . .. . ,
Foxes·told the story. • •
.•. 'opponeni..
provided .more good news for his
1986 has been an exceHent year
Marist scored three third~period •
uwe played very'.well
in the third
team by announcing that·an earlier
so far for the: Marfst ice l)ockey goals. in its .first game of the
period, "_Lucey-said
afterthe-game. '.game against C. W. Post at Nassau
team - the Red Foxes having won
1985-86 season to ·defeat King's
"We've never played that well '·Coliseum was awarded to.the Red
three·games in a row since the new
Point, 4-3.
.
before."
, Foxes by forfeit. Post won the
• year began, with two victories com-
• After the visitors took an-early
.Bil! Drolet .-'-· who was. nearly • garrie, 6-3, but was later caught us-
ing last .week.·
. . •. • 2-0 lead, the Red Foxes scored five
benched for disciplinary reasons by • iJig ineligible players.This decision
While the Chicago·Bears were •• times for a 5-2 advantage but.let it
·coach •-.Jim Peelor. • -
scored . and Marist's two victories last week
. pounding .on the. New . England • slip away fro01 them:·,After two .Marist'sfirs(two,goals; both in the
give the Red Foxes·. a)-3 overall
Patriots in New Orleans in Super : _-periods.of
wild/wide.:open·hockey, fir.st.period, and assisted on three •record, 7--2 in .the Metropolitan
Bowl XX, the Red Foxes were hav-: the-teams were deadlocked, 5~5. - • others Jor five ··total. points. Tim • Conference.
·
the day when he sucker punch-
ed· Ron Mccants, Earlier he had
words with Tim Beckwith On
the way to the _locker room at
the ·half. This was denied by •
. Kennett. Why dido 't Bailey get
thrown out for j:)eing the third
man in the fight, or Kennett get
•• one technical for arguing? Why
was Smolka allowed to stay on
the bench after being ejected?
Bai!ey's skills on the floor are·
second· to none
.in
the con-
.ference,··but his attitude may
ing a tougher iime in New Jersey:,.
But the· Red Foxes dominated
:i
_Graham/(2 ,goals;
I 'assist) and
against William Paterson. ButTil!l
the final ·rrame;-outshooting.King's : Keith Blachowiak:(l'goal; _2
assists) •
slow ,down his track towards
NBA
fame. After things cleared
,Last Sattirdaynight:'s homedate
• up, Marist did ·have-its oppor-
Graham's second straighthat trick 'Point 25-1 l'in the' la~t period and :': each I:iad•a
.hot stick as well for the
gave Marist an 8~6 ~etrtjpoHtan ..• scoring five.goals. N.eil,Lucey led
>
Red 'Foxes; :Curt .Hawkes scored
i
Conference victory:-- .
Maris.t -with four
thii-d~period.c✓ .t!}eremainingMarist-ioal.and.also
with -the
·Culinary
Institute was,·
tunities to~win it but failed to
cancelled;:Marist was scheduled to
, convert on its chances ..
.!
hope
face Montclair State last night at
you had the opportunity to read ·
. In ·a home garrie,IastWednesday •
•• goals, the most by a Marist player ,'Chipped in an ~sist. . ::' ':·
••
..
. night, ·Maj-Jst d_efeatt;clJh~'.U.S. , in:one game-.this season. Marist
> ,
It ~as·a wild, fast-paced game,
Merchant Marine Academy (King's goaltender Greg·Whitehead played '·. one which \Vas fun for everyone~
Point) for the second time this .year anot~er strong game/stopping 42
cept the goalies. Marist finished
. by a 10-'6 count. As in. the previous • . shots while ;allowing • five goal~ with 67 shots on goal while King's
.the Mccann Ice Arena.
.. Journal·. sportswriter
John
• The Red 'I-oxes' next game is on
Bakke's
column on his orie on
Wednesday nightathome.against
one . game with . Rik Smits.
Metro .Conference foe Fordham:
.· Bakke's made up rules and
The gamejs scheduled. to start at
humor made the story well
meeting between the two-teams,_ a,' before being ejected ·tate -in ·:the • Point produced 49 shots.
9:30 p;m.
•
•••
•
•
worth reading.·Bakke is a 1985
graduate, of Marist ... Former
Marist freshman ·Bob Francis is
;Indoor trickrllnn,:~rs,Work.irig:as .. a ·team·
:.•---·
-, , --. _,
-_.:··
. ,;.
.
,,,._
- : :-
-.••.
_-
-·:.
• -.
.~:-.-. , ••
-~c
•
..
-
•
. -
-..
-·:
.·transferring.to another school.
Look for hirri to go to Boston
University where his high school
.
.
..
--
~
.
.
. .
.
.
The Marist- indoor track team
, fared ,well at tw_o meets this ·past
·.· weekend, ..
.• . .
.
..
· .•
·: • At the .. 15th Annual ·Princeton •
Relays in New Jersey onSunday,
the· men's team placed second in
: the·classified distance medley with
:.a time of 10:27.86. Columbia
• University • took first place· at
·. 10:'18.57.
Rounding out the top five
. was . Philadelphia Textile, Rider
.College and DrexeIUniversity.
Peter Pazik, a senior, ran the
final mile leg of. the medley and
finished 3:06 ahead of the runner
•
for Philadelphia Textile. Garry
Ryan, a sophomore, notched a
seasonal best for himself in the •
quarter-mile leg. Ryan hit I :59. 7;
he is· the first runner this year to
break the two minute mark. Marist
. broke that mark only five times last
season.
• coach just began his first season
··as
a coach .... -
• • -
~
Senior· .Don· Go4win . kept the • the Union and Siena teams. with
Canada, Unive~sity
of.
Rocheste't
pace moving in the !talf-mile and ·, tiITles of ,10:59 and 11:0~.7 -and·St. Laurence at
Sf.
Laurence ____________
...,..
Don.Reardon, ·running with foot : respectively. • •• : •. • '
,
.on Saturday.
.
In'
·tramu
.. ra·
ls
trouble, put in a
3: 14.4 in the three • • Pazik won .the 1,000 with . a -
On Feb. 15, Marist goes against
•
• ••
quarter-mile ..
••
'-2:37.8, his.personal best. Lurie ex-
approximately30 teams at the Col-
k •
·. · ·
·
· •
plained that Pazik had. never run
legiate Track Conference at Yale.
lck. off
Coach Steve Lurie was pleased
the I ~000 and was unsure of· the
Lurie said that Yale's· track; is·
with the team's output and said : pace; "He just followed along and
reputed to be the quickest in the
by Maryjo Mul'J)hy
there is marked improvement. "We • had enough to pull it out; he won
Northeast. "Last year our four
are a couple of weeks ahead of
by 20 meters," Lurie said.
fastest times came on the Yale
where we were last year," he said.
For the women,· Mary Ellen . track," he said.
The medley ran a 10:39 at
Faehner finished third in her
Princeton last year..
category, fourth overall in the
As for the squad's ·outlook,
Running at Union College in the
Adirondack Association Athletics
Congress. Championships, Marist
won the two-mile relay. A time of
8: 15.6 by Dave B.londin, .Christian
Morrison, Godwin and Ryan beat
Union by over 15 seconds and rival
Siena College by 21 seconds.
Marist also won the distance
medley with a 10:38.2, Pazik, Mor-
rison, Reardon and Godwin beat
400-meter race. She hit her season- • Lurie said the players are maturing
best time with a I :06.6.
in the sport. "We are growing and
Paul Kelly ran a 9:26.2 in the
getting better. We are acting as a
team," he said. "There is more
3,000-meter.
ct· •
1•
d
· l
r
Last week at the Cardinal
isc1p me an mutua support aor
Classic, Pazik, who had not run in-
the guys aod girls."
door since Janaury 1984, broke a
Lurie singled out Pazik for his
• meet record in the 3,000 with an
fine running this season. Lurie
. 8:34.8.
said: .. I think Pete may
be
the best
The indoor team has five
ie-
senior athlete at Marist. He is the
maining meets this season. It runs
best distance
runner
in the
against
Queens of Ontario,
conference."
More and more Marist students
are blowing off steam in the same
way. Instead of being physically
destructive in letting out their ·ex-
cess energy, many students· are
heading to the Mccann Center for
intramurals.
To participate in intramurals,
one need not be athletic; )ust
enthusiastic.
"We try to meet the students'
needs. Now that the ~rinking age
has gone up, tlfey need some
outlets," said Bob Lynch, assistant
director of intramurals.
Continued "" page 11
•I•
.
,.
;
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Af t~r~Maris.t:~
-Retrospe_~tive·-
:-
·
...
·:On:i:tac!Ic~L:
••
•
,-
• ••
·Lo~~ii:-Tii6fua:s
·
-
-~-:
siJN.Y
:.'s"ued·,
in ••
drinking'
upc1£!~
.
,
-·.
.
:ct·e_~tli-
•
•••
·-
•
•
Marist Coilege, Poughk~epsle,:f!.Y~
StU.9eri-ts
_;pfess
-·
;a:paftheid
issue
by Bill DeGennaro
•
Concra and th~ m~mbet'sof the:
coalition are pursuing two different
f
..
,
.
.
.
The Progressive Coalition
.
at
means of educating the students at
Marist College remains a~tively in-· Marist concerning· apartheid and
•
valved in its quest-to educate the
•
divestment.
.
.
.
,..
-··
r
.·
••
-:T
I
X
student body on the different issues
'An apartheid awareness week is
!
.....
of apartheid.
•
.
•
.
being planned· for. either the last
Last weekend, several students
·
week inFebruary orthe first week
from Marist's Progressive Coali- • in March.· Concra has
.
already
tion met with students from nor-
received commitments from facul-
theast colleges at Trinity College in
.
ty members to give.speeches on the
Hartford, Conn. The focus of the
·economics
• and
•
history
-of
conference was to. learn strategies
apartheid.
. • -
.•
on how to increase pressure on col-
The coalition is also circulating
·
leges to divest.
.
38_petitions. "Basically,''.
.Concra•
.
:
,
Apartheid, South Africa's policy
.
said, "the petitions say that we_·
••
:
•.
of racial separation; has recently
•
want the administration to make a
become a subject o( major debate
••
pbsition statement ori their feelings
'--·
·r·
____
,
\
,;:
Volume 32, Number 2
l
·
.....
f
lt c?lle~~s ~nd universitie~-~ro~nd
ab~ut ,}nv~st m~_nts in_·. Sou th
•
.·-·<
Keeping"tbe•issue
alive: tli~ough this sign and other effort~, members of.Marist's Progressive·
,·
.th!!·
:na~io~.
St_ud~nts . opposi_n_g Afnca.
• •
'.
_
.
,_.'
~-
·
. .
··:·.>_:coalition,
which is fighting apartheid, h_ave
maintained their
,message
si_nce_early_last
semester.·
.
ap~rthe1d ar~_ pressunng their
•
C~~cra s~,d t_~e_,
P.r~g~~s~i.ve
_·
-::.~.:-<The
sigl!JIS paintt~ on the·backof the,Sunoco_st~~ion_near the_Gard~n·-Apa~~!'!ts~·,:
_··<·
• ...
·:
-'.,
..
-
schools to divest t_hemselvC:~-of Goal~t1on will_ cont1i:1~:.;to ho!d.
_
..
_·;,;:::;"'•:.,:'-''"·.·:·
...
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..
,-
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.;.;-.·
-.-.\·.-.·
..
,
.-.~;. ::
...
(Photo,by-LauneBarraco).:
·.,·-.
_,
..
,
-
-
'holdings
in- companies
:,that·
·do:·
nieetmgs ·once a- week;-,,and
=that.:.
··:
:--~:bi>•.c-:~.',-~,,
:-:
-'
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.
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,
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:i~~~1ff~~;'ii1!Jitffi~~~itig_~yjipt;.;;_'1!?~<Jr0?tetrts•_ievtrJ:tr!i1!/:::ift·M~·:-1u~e,~~-::~
-::-"~--::~.,--_
---~-~-
·_,
-
.;t
•
-CoalitionarMarist~ the conference
,
pose
__
us about·,
•any_thirig?':
_
It
!_s-·'··
tiy
·Regina·
Rossi_,
: (
·-:>o:,·.·_/,i;,)
·>
:::.>
Falanga sai_d
t!t: center has· had,\·_ students;
-fa~anga
,said.~om~-lised.-
-,
~was
successful·. in
-
educating
_the
.•
·necessar}',
•
lJecause we'.•all
·_reed
-
t~
0
_.'
~<
'·
:.
:
-:'
/".
\:'
::':\
~
:_\::
-'.<
·>
•:
:'..· ?'.·,·-/problems
findn1g disk storage space
.
:ot,he_r
peopl_e
s acco~nt_~
m
o_rd~r
_to •
_.
_
students on apartheid and divest-·
•
learn about~pattheid, and_ diye§~-
·,
Technwal'Pt?l:1l_eT-~
~~d~'!11s~~e_
>·
for, the SMS ac,counts. The cen_t_er
:
~tor~ m°-re:mformat1on, s~mettmes
•
.,
.
.
meilt in particular. "We were able
.
ment,
<that,.
we· hear
,
different-.
_haveresult~,d?!_I,
tl:i~ ehmmat10n of
.
has alse> had
.J?roblems
managmg
._
lockmg. ou~· _!he account
5,
actual
to bring back material for the peos
•
opinions/'.
·"-
.
ii:
.
<S:
-::
•
>
-
some ~M.S:c9~1>t!teraccounts,,_ac-
.·
the
-:·
expandn~g number of CMS
•
own_e~
or losmg the
.owner
s files,
•
.·
pie here,an·d_\Ve
learned
the
names
.
__
:_.
C,oncra n9te~t_hat t!il!_meetivgs,
,
c<;>rdi1:1g
to. J~IIleS
:·Falangq,
a~tmg_
'.
-
acce>un~S;
hf-S~l~:
:
.
_
.
,
.
.
·
..
•
~
•
-
he saici:-
..
:,··
.
, ..
·.
.·.
,.
,
·•
.
_
.-
•· .
_:
of.some people who
'Yill
be al>le to
w_hich
ofteni~ttract as many as_40t director pf:t~e Comput~r C,e~i~r
'.
/:e
Infor1:1auo~. 1n· fhe
•
MUS{CB .
:
~lso, some stude11ts
were m1~us-
.
.
. _
_,
•
:,
:.:_
heJp· i.is/':'he
'said.·.
,,,_';;::;
'.'< '·
-
_::_
_or
50 people, may devote atten!1on
,,
/
~owever,·
-C:MS
\
~~counts
·_re-·
•
system 1~
••
e~s1er.:
to, store be~ause 1!1g-,
BIJNET,
_·.
a telecommumca-
-;~;:;
,;s,,
i:
-<-<
'Concra.
•while
coiicemed. with
..
ahd.debateto·such topi9s
_as
~r.e~i- qmrecl f~r certam ~ntmg and com- .· permanem cl1sk
storage space 1~_us- tl<>n_s
network·· used to ·exchange
.·,
•.
•
•
,· ·-,,
_th~
issue,o'f racismfo South A(ri~ ••.
,,dent::Ri:maJcl_Reagall'~•
£~ri.trov·er-., put~r_cou~s_esp~vfrti:it]b~?!~moy,:
:
1
ed
_orily
~h;riAfilejs ~a.ved;
In
_the
;s~~ol.~rly
·
work ~etween ·. univer-
.
-i~ .
tfoiibled
_and
disc~ura.ged
/by
{
sial/ "Star_ -Wii!~;'-:'~efe11se·~'.,.:'-~~
i
e<.t~,
Falan~~ s~~d:
.:,,
•
·(·•· c
~-
•
•
::'
_·
..
.:, ..
~MS syste~;
~<;11
account requires
_s1t1es,
_Falanga saJd.
.
.
.
·:
what he labels. as radsin here at
:
North Ireland's attempt to
•achieve . • .The
mamreason f(?r. the change pre-allocated,
•
permanent space.·
'·
Al~hough BITN,ET: 1s designed
-
•••
- ' ••.
_-Marist>:
:,
>
•
:·
·.
·
:·
',
·,
.
:·--
_
self~rule.
•
_,..
::
":.
··_ ~-
,;:
,
'. ,-:;
,
,.
was the.Computer Center's inabjli-
Unlike MUSICB; stor;ige work
for
~nlyfor academic purposes, some
.·_{:
''WhiJe_,~-e"do
·have
a black stti-
-
•
..
_tori era stressed that divestm~nt
.
ty. to.· keefl up with the_ t~chnical.' CMS' i~ performed
.inamially
by
•
students used it fqr social purposes,
.
:
:derihinion
'and
a.black: fraternity
:-
is a complicated issue. "People
·•
demands of the rapidly growing, Computer Cent_er staff_ members.
.
failed "<:hatting,'' he said. Some
"at
Marisf
T
find
it
discoui:agli'1g must be educated first
if
they are system~ <'H had exp·anded beyond
•
Another-reason for the elimina~ users also s_ent.
copyrighted pro-
•
::th~t
ther; is· not one black pro-
.
goirig to_beable toinake_a decision our means. of contr~Uing.
it;'':.
tiori of accOU(!tS.was
''proc!!dural
grams over }he
,system,
.another
::-
fessor
on campu~,,; Concra sa_id:"
'.
about divestment," he
~aid.
Falanga said.
' -
•
misuse"
•.
of CMS by several
.:
; · •
,Continued on
page
9
.
•
-
•
.
~
•
..
.
.
;
.
.
•'CSD
to.•reWS.e·-Studertt
r(!f)tlyfflent
p!an,;
::i·delays
..
cailsed--:by
c;qmrn_tttee_.-.-conlu.sion.
'
•
'
-
•
•
>
••
Marist•·:wants
'ne_w--.J1earing
i~
or Bennett · College money
.
.
.
•
~.
.
--···:
..
;
..
.
•
::
-·
-~·;/
•.
.
_;
.
•
.
by Gina Disanza
.
•
forced to place72 students i_n
tern-
-.
administrators,
..
Marist's
.~hief
by ~hri,stian Morrison
.
he said, because "even though
,.
.
.
_.
.
,.
..
,
_.,o,c, ..
;
·.':_p_orarytiousing:
All
residents.wc;re
-
finani::ial Offi~er-A_nthony-Cam-
,
-...
"
,·.,
•
·•
.
they're not a college,'they're from
After almosc·thre~ mon.thf
of
\'.moved
__
iri by'.the. beginning-.:
of-
_pilii
and cox:~·_and
t_hat she will be
L~w;ets'fe>r Ma~ist want
t~
re-
the same village and represent;"
'.delays,
the.financial readju~tment
'·October,
._,
.
:
- ·-·.·.
-
:
,._
taking over. as chairperson.· She
·
open a hearing to get part of
a
gift
although to a
·small
degree, the
-
proposal
..
for students
:
inconve-
:
::
After some students. had
ap-
~
alsq said she hopes
·a
new proposal
,
that
h?s
already beeri given io three same kind of interests as Bennett
"niencedby
housing problems is be~
·
proached Ryan the
.first
week1n• 'Can.be drawn up by.the end·of this
'.area-schools,
according to Anthony
·did.".·
•
ing revised, s~id Council of Stud~rit
:_
*ptember_ about c~mpensation for • week'.
-
'
•
':·
.
.
. •
• Cernera·, acting vice
·pre•sident
for
.
Since Marist didn't know about
Leaders President Suzanne ~yan.
•
students. mconvemenced by the
-
Currently the c.omm1ttee com~ -college advancement.
the hearing-,)~s lawyers are now
The drafted proposal
'Yru;
never temporary ho.using shortage, Ryan prises Ryan, Inier-House·council ·: -13arcl College~ ~ace. University taking steps to see if it can be re-
presented to the administration as
'
formed a committee to draw up a President Brian Wicenski, who- . ·aridMillbrook-I>·rep
School were all opened, Cernera said. He said he
planned; Ryan's letter-to the editor proposal.
.
,
,
•
•
•
•
•
-
previously chaired the committee,
awarded. shares of $340,000 in
_
couldn't- spedfy what those steps
in the Nov. 7 issue of The Circle
.
Vice President for Student Af- and seniors Christian Morrison and
donations made to the now-defunct are at this time because of the
said the proposal was to have been fairs Gerard Cox said he was disap- Robert Haughton, Garden Apart-
Bennet( College in Millbrook, N;
y.
-
delicate nature of the case.
submitted to the. cabinet on Nov •. pointed that the proposal~aking
ment residents who started a peti-
·Bard
and Pace each received
The state Attomey·General's Of-·
12.
so Jong to reach the administration. tion to i::ompensate inconvenienc~ $166,250 in shares, while Millbrook flee published legal notices in the
•
Ryan said the proposal is now Cox said he wanted all read- ed students.
•
Prep was awarded $7 ,S00 under a
Poughkeepsie Journal and the
going
.
to be rewritten because a justments made on the spqng bills.
.
The proposa! called for each stu-
settlement
·approved
by state
Taconic Newspapers
·
about the
clause requesting compensation for
•'This_is an issue where the stu- dent in the F Section of the Garden
Supreme Court Justice Albert
hearing, but according to Cernera,
·
inconvenienced
freshmen
in dent leaders have to stand up and Apartments to receive a full refund
Rosenblatt on Dec. 17.
no one at Marist read them.
cramped housing conditions.is now
•
say, •we are to blame'," Cox said. of the per-day room charge for
Rosenblatt awarded Bard its
•
Cernera said he feels Marist has
unnecessary because the college has He added. that the administratio_n each day SJ?Ci:tt
in alt~rnate housing. share because the college «was
been shortchanged ... At the time
alredy made an adjustment on their normally would have created a task The remammg residents of· the closest in character and profile and that Bennett College dosed, Marist
spring bills. Also, some of the force to study the s\tuation, b~t Garden Apartment~ would r~ceive region" to Bennett, he said, and Coll«:ge played a significant role in
financial requests in the proposal Ryan informed President Denms a $75 refund for mconvemences because like Bennett, Bard is a helping to keep the legacy of Ben-
were unrealistic she said.
Murray at September's housing caused by
-
lack of security and
liberal arys college. Pace was given nett College alive."
In September: the F Section of forum that a student committee maintenance, !nadequa~e fire alann
an equal sum because that college
When Bennett closed, Marist
Marist's new Garden Apartments had already been created.
systems and interruptions caused
absorbed faculty and students from
took approximately 90 of its
was not completed on time for the
Ryan
said that the present com- by incomplete construction in the
Bennett.
students, eight of its faculty
opening of school. The college was mittee will be enlarged to add some_
Conlinued on
page
2
Millbrook prep received $7,500,
Continued on page 9
.
,,
.-·,,
--P11:ge
2·--T~E CIRCLE - February 6,' 1986.
. ·
Contiit11ed
from page 1
.
:area.·
:,:
•
·
Students . · living
·in • the
Townhouses, North Road apart-
ments and Champagnat Hall who
were assigned an extra roommate
during the alternate housing period
would
receive
a
$25
reimbursement.
The plan also included restitu-
tion for freshmen who were tripl-
ed up because of a lack of housing
in their area. However, Cox said
the affected freshmen have already
received
a
credit on their spring
-bills.
''.The plan
to
refun<!_Jreshmen
has been i'n effect for several
years," said Cox, "so it was very
easy
to
make the proper adjust-
•
/
ment to their
.bills
for the spring
semester."
Ryan and Wicenski met with
Campilii last week. Campilii said
he was willing to provide guidance
in the reworking of the proposal.
"I
will provide them with direc-
tion and alternatives but I will not
write the proposal. I believe it
·should
come from the students,"
he said.
.
.
.
Campilii added that he had not
seen the original proposal. The new
one will be presented directly to
Murray.
•
According to Ryan, one of the
delays was that Wicenski wanted
campus-wide endorsement of the
proposal before presenting it to the
administration. Ryan said Wicen-
•:
...
-.···
•
/·
.
~
·-~
ATTENTION A.EE STUDENTS!
.
~.
..
.
As
of Fe·bruary
·3r·d,
.WE
,_
:_BEGA·N
ticketing andtowitlg alFSttldent ca'rSpark-.
ed in any lot, Ilotdisplaying aMaristCol+
.
Iege car fegistratioll sticker, otl the leftrear
.
bumpef, and thoseinega.llyparkedirt
i:lie
.
.
·)
_,·
•..
·
.
••
following· lots:
,
ski distributed approximately 40
endorsement
forms. to
•
!HC
o·.
. .
'
II
.
'
G
t
h
.
A'
~~~esr:~~:~~~s
.• ;i;s:rd~ve still not
••
•.
o_
•.
nn e.
y'
.•
·.·
.
·
..
a
.
e: .
0
u s.e
·
..
·. .
r ea'
Wicenski said another problem
was that-no one on the committee
F.
.
G
_.,.
.
A'
.
~~/i:a~!~ls~~:k:i~ou~cda~~p;;;
orta1ne,_. reystone·.
·
rea,
demands.
·
~;;.i;~::::::::::::::::.
..Park~ng:••At~~r'.Q~lji,ncl.•.Gh3lm
p~gftat
•
ing for the moon," ·said Ryan,
.. .
•
,.,
.
·ho•
,.,.~:,
•.
..;,.,
.•
o
'.
~.,,
i
~.:
.
.-
'··,I.",:•.·:·.:_,,.·.:.,1.•.·i~.:_:·,···:·:
..
::'···:·<.··:.:.•.;.·.·_':.:_·•
..
'
...
··.·.·.•_
..
_,·
•.
/.:
•
•
.
.:
••
··,:
:.•
::;:.·:·
>:;.:·,
,.•.:.·
••
,•
.-,:.,:,·
•• • •
''·''buthissii\\a·guide\inethatis\,c---
---~--~•vM•·,o•.os··~~~--,.
'..
,: .. • :.,,,
:-:::;·?.:::;<_"\'.
r-
.
'.
•··
.•
·>./.e:.
,
ing
used in the reworking of a more
. ,
.;;n
: .
•
·, .·.;
feasible
plan. •
•
•
•
"The people in the F Section (of
the apartments), especially
F-5
aitd
F-7, were without a home for over
six weeks and they deserve compen-
sation," said Ryan. ''As for the
others, how can you pufa price on
•
lack of security or maintenance?''
While
.
Ryan said· she is unsure
•
•
what revisions will be made on the
proposal, she added that there is a
possibility that compensation for.
the students in sections D;. E and
G, whose apartments were com-
pleted
on time, would be so small
that
it could block administration's
approval of the whole proposal.
:
Wicenski said the committee was
.
also delayed because it could
no('
•
ly. Wicenski said the committee
:
needed•io know exactly how many
•
days each student-
was.·.
inconv.e-
.
nie'!ced, bef9re a· J~r:·atriount
:or~.
compensatioµ could be deterinjnect
•
But-the residents of the. Garden
.
Cost of ticket
"ls
$25.00, towing charges,
i/$45.00,
Plus $10 . .ooa. day storage foreach
.
,_,
:
...
:;:~d-~y_,·.::Pltis
tax.:
·.··
...
_
..
-
~-
-
.·
....
-._
....
··'·
.
~/-~
·-·~
.
'.-~---
.
,....
-
Apartments, especially those living··
•.
in
·F-5
and F-7·who spent 43 days:
in alternate housing, are upset
•
about the delay in.their refunds.
:.
.
...
-.
·
:~~~rm
amazed itthe_lack'ofcom.::.:
•
.
.
.
:
·:
munkation:
·not
-~niy
:between\
: .
..
; •. i
.
:
..
students: and, administration,
-
but
c
.
also
between
·•
students
.
and
·.-'
suidenJs/~. said senior":Qavid
.i :. ,....
...
'·-•/
:
•
, ....
·:.:.:_: •. ·,:
"-:
•
'/
- ./
:;-.
·:· ••
·:
:··
..
- •.
;-c:~./-·
.•
:,:
..
··_
.
~
/
./
-
.•
~-
·.. •
'.
·::.' :
,·: :: . .-
~
::;:::-::~;f
h1-s·-
..
1-s
:::th.e·.,,E1nal
:-wE1tten.-:·
1
warn~1ng-·.•that
:you:._;{~-
:;xi~-)>tf
1
\···J111.
·.•
•··
t'~C~ft
~
~.o;\iifi~rtk·.-.·.}t0ii··
."··
10
r.·•·~···,yo·JI.j'
·•.-··.·•···.~.r
•
Margalotti
<>f
Occ;anport, N.J.,
an
F-5 resident.
"I
signed
the
petition
in November and haven't-heard a
.
_
word
about it ·since~" • .
•
•
• • •.
•
•
•
··Senior
David
Rakowiecki
•
of
Cranford, N.J.~ also of F-5; said
be believes
•
the administration
should
take
more
·action. -
.
-
·
•
•
.
"The student
.
representatives
shouldn't be co111pletely
to blame/'
he said.
•
"The administration
·
shouldn't sit back and wait for a
proposal ..
Why
are they (the acl-
ministration) always in a reac~
tionary position?"
·1·0·QC
·~r,~
,1.,0.JAH-.
b'oope:rit.tiOl1..:
.•
;
'"•
,·
•••
•
-
•
•
:
..•. ·•··
.
;-
••••
·· ,._
..
.
~
.
.
"
.
.
.
-:Joseph_
J.
---waters·.·
·Director
.Safety
& Security
.
-
..
•."'
..
:,..,.
~);::·t::·)>:
•
'
a
February 6, -1986. - THE CIR~LE - Page
3---
...
,~.
.
'
.
Weather to dictate
center·'
s
-
conipletion
A fouMtory greenhouse? No, just a prot~ctive covering.attached
_to
the· open walls of the
Lowell Thoinas building to warn\ the interior enough for workers to pour cement.
•
.
.
·
·,
\
(Photo by Marc Marano)
SenioT is gUiding~light
f
orsoa[J opera faithful
by Mary Ann Dolan
.
but it turned. out to be rewarding
and a lot of fun," says the 21-year-
old from Oceanside, N. Y.
When fans of' the soap opera
. •
Mullen says starting the club
"The Guiding Light" want to get
.
from scratch took a lot of work.
an inside scoop on the show, there
Mu.lien's responsibilities include
are two places they can turn: CBS writing and-designing bi-monthly
_at
3 p.m. weekdays and Marist
newsletters and one journal per
College.
•
•
year.
,'
-~Maristis
the h~trte: of the
.
He says the club has ov~r 700
, ·Guiding·
Light. fan club and
•
its
members, both in the United States
:">5prcsident,,
senior
',•C,hris
•
Mullen ..
•.'
llno;Cariada'. Each
.pays
$12 annual
•
J,Mulleri says his iriter_est
in the show
•
dues, which covers the expenses for
..
•
began through Kathleen Kellaigh;
•
..
•.
the publications ..
•
'·1\_(ellow
church-memtierwho later,
•
•
•
, •
becameacastmemberoftheshciW
•.
•.
Being the fan
·representative
takes tip
a
lot of his free. time,
Mullen, who at the time was in
•
Mullen says·. He answers· all fan
the eighth grade, was invited to the
.
mail, which.ranges from IO letters
•
CBS studio to watch the taping
of
_.
a week to
JO
letters a day. Among
the sl_l9)V
and realized
"this
iswhat
•
the letters he receives are those that
'I.want.
to do.'•_':Mitllen says he was
•
as_k
Jor information an~ th_ose
that•
.· ,
....
·fascina~ed
by the prnductionaspect
.•
.•
voice an opfoion.,.
.
·:oftheshpw
•.
·:\~·'>·::-'
..
•
~
••
~~-
'
<;
...
:
.•
••
At the ti~e. the shbw didn't have
'.a
ran'·dub. But in November 1980;
••
Mullen
.
received _a: letter
of
'authorization
to start the club from
'theshow!s
producer, Alien Potter.
;"Starting
a fan clup wa;,; diffic1:1lt,
•
'
.
~uHen-~~pl~in~ that his h1g1est
C
challenge as president is to organize
the annual gathering of the
_club
members and ihe cast of the show.
"This'evem is the epitomy of fan
clubs: Everyone comes to see the
stars," says Mullen~
Mullen adds that he enjoys his
work as fan representative but has
wanted to change the name "fan
club" many times. "I don't like the
connotation of screaming and
•
obsessed fans ,associated with fan
clubs," he says.
Through his work as p~esident,
MuUen- had
the
opportunity to
.
work as
an
intern on the
show
for.
the fall semester. The senior says
it was.a great learning experience.
"I was able to meet a lot of great
people:" he says.
'.'It
was more· fascinating work-
ing with Gail Kobe, the executive
producer, and Robert Kochman
and Linda
.Laundre,
producers,
than working with tue actors," says
Mullen.
•
•
·
.
. .
As an intern, Mullen did a lot of
office :wofk .. ~'But it was
really
in-
teresting• oecause
l
learned a lot
about the show," says the senior.
On the last show before his·in-:·
ternship was over, Mullen had ihe:
opportunity to make a "cameo ap-
pearance" in one of the scenes.
'by
Julie Sveda
Depending on weather condi-
tions. the Lowell Thomas. Com-
.
municalions Center should be com-
pleted by January 1987, according
to Edward Waters, vice president
•
for
administration
and finance.
''Everything
is in order now. The
only kicker is the weather," Waters
said.
Construction of the center has
been mired·by complications and
delays since its groundbreaking in
May 1984.
Among those complications was
the discovery of an underground
strec\rri. This led to changes in the
proposed site of the building and
design modifications to increase the
building's support.
Although the original estimate of
the center's
cost
was $3 million,
that figure has grown lo $3.5
million, Waters said.
•
Waters added that the college
has already begun making decisions
about later construction details in
order to save time and money in the
future.
"We
arc working with architects
on details
such
as floor tiles.
Though these things arc con-.
siderably down the line, we'll get
a leg up on that
so
(here are no fur-
ther delays/'
said
Waters.
Currently, a plastic covering
i~
being put up
section
by
section
to
keep the inside of the building
warm.
-
Waters
said
this is necessary
because concrete cannot be poured
--
below
a
certain temperature, and
•
the heal must be maintained while
it is drying.
Cox.: New meeting rooms
roposed for campus center
by Regina Rossi
Campus Center classrooms
248 and 248A may be converted
into conference rooms for stu-
dent clubs and organizations,
according to Gerard Cox, vice
president for student affairs.
Cox said he has
submitted
a
proposal to eliminate classes in
the rooms in order to free them
-
for student use. "The issue of
space needs to be addressed,"
·Cox
said.
•
If
•
the
classes
can
be
·eliminated,
the rooms could
•
possibly be renovated to create
smaller. seperate office rooms
•
•
and a genera'! meetin!i room,
Cox added .
The two rooms are currently
divided only by a sli~ing door.
This can be opened to create
one large room. The rooms are.
now used for meetings at night,
but are often less than half full.
In addition, construction is
now underway on the new
faculty dining room, to be
located on the first noor of the
Campus Center
..
Cox said he· hopes the dining
room will be completed soon
after spring break, which is in
March.
•
"The faculty for a number of
years have been asking for place
where they could meet and eat,"
Cox said.
,.,-The
dining room will utilize
space
•
formerly occupied by .
Special Services. Cox said the
space was ideal because of its
·
proximity to the kitchen.
Space problem
(
studied
by Regina Rossi
The college i~ currently at~
tempting to solve the Special
Services program's space pro-
bl_ems, according
to
Gerard
•
Cox, vice president for student
affairs.
•
.•
Cox said he has met with con-
cerned
students
and Diane Per-
•
·riera,·-director:
of special ser-
•vices,
10 "explore together some
longe range solution
to
meet
-
their needs."
•
Special Services recently mov-
ed from the ground noor of the
Campus Center
10 an
of-
fice on the first noor of Cham-
pagnat, recently vacated by the
health service, The health ser-
vice is now located in Bierne ·
House.
•
. Special
services
students and
staff
members have complain-
ed that the new office is 100
small.to accomodate wheelchair
.
students and that ii eliminates
the ~.tudents' privacy.
iFloy,d
Alwon: Still leading, the charge for cih~nge
:
,
,
.
··•
.
; Editor's note: Marist's 8,300 aluin-
Ma'rist that· year.. A kid from
people who were telling them how
of testimony showing that his ac-
,vard'Bounci.
_; ni represenhdiverse group of men
·
Brooklyn, !'1;Y ., Alwon.was only. to think," he said.
lions and writings proved he lived
·.'••A'Iot
of people became irivolv
0
;,and woinen; l'his is the second in
.
the second child from his family to
.•
But Alwon challenged authority
according to Christian doctrines
.
ed iri helping others in the '60s _:,:,
;a
Circle series
that
looks at some
·a11.end
college. He was a French
enthusiastically. Hewasoneofthe
and beliefs.
--'
there was·'an energy inspired by
..
}
Ma_ris\~
fr~«!_l!a,t~
.
a11_d:
the, pat~s
•
'!'~}.<?,r
who _sp~nt.his)1:1n,ior
re~r}IJ
'.
leacjers o.f JhoughJ,
,A<;tioii',
1
Com~
..
..~lw,on ,wrote
a
,fo_ur-pafr;series
.•
Keririedy and others," Al won said.
•
•
~
their hves anil careers have taken.
:
1
Pans st,udymg auhe Sorbonne:anci
,:
m.unic~tion;'-
'.a
:.<;~QJRUf
grqup _Jtithfd '·'Thdughts,oniJ>~cjjjsm" for
'-
"The \Var
on
Poverty, the
·Peace
1sincelea·vinicampus:someoftite
-·-·'
•••
,
,.•
••
···-
•
dedicated to raising
.the
con-
TheCircleinl96!J.lnithespoke
'Corps··
•
• : people· to be featured here· have
'\
<'·
.
sciousness
_qr
the students. It was
eloquently about his r~spect for life
'.
goite on Jo, suc~ess:; in· busi~ess;
,
•
·a·
tt-e·:
r
··
--
,
.;'
,
not.only; thewar it protested, he ex-•·
.and_
hisiou.trage anc! sgrrow 9ver its
:
these things
·showed
it was
·a_n
im~
•
·~others
have mild~careers in soci~I/
-
..
J
1
J}
'/
plained; thi group also boycotted
.-··senseless
destruction.
,
·:.
~
por1an1 value.to help others. The
'.
services,)he media and elsewhere.
ma· r··
,•s·t·"
the A&P for selling grapes after
"I am thoroughly consistent to
•
reality ,ve need to deal i,vith now is
0
They come from a variety of classes
Cesar Chavez tried to unionize the
my_ own beliefs which allow
_for
a • that the pendulum is swinging away
; and majors. Collectively, what they
migrant workers who hanfesied
rig}lqmd '.-Vrong,
a
good and evil,"
•.
from that."
; have in cominon is Marist -
and
them and violence erupted
in
the·
he ,vrote. "Baskally, ••
it comes
But his own deep conviction that
'their
own interesting stories.
watching French students rip pave-
fields.
down to a question of values. On
.
man must· help man and not hurt
ment from the streets to hurl at
"I helped bring more than one
what do you place your highest
him has never• ,vavered. And his
,
by Sue Hermans
police during the 1968 riots.
way of thinking
10
the campus," he
value. Man, human life, that is my
•
college experience working with
!
>
They were singing "revolution"
recounted,. "and
changed the
highest
value,"
the articles
•
special-needs kids influenced him
.
They are nearing 40 now,·those
..
with a capital "R" over there, ac-
limited perspective of many of the
explained.
so strongly that he made it his life's
: Marist students who protested the
f.cording·to
Alwon_, btitthe protests
students, who were good people.
"Some of the football jocks-
work.
.
, U.S.' grO\ving'involvement in Viet- •'on Marist's campus were much
but who weren't brought up to
and my colleagues on the crew
He described the boys he works:
;
nam and confronted the Marine
more benign.
question what others told them."
team -
were upset 1ha1 I would
with at Walker, which is located I 2
•
:
recruiters who came on campus to
..
,
Al won,
:38,
talked about the
Alwon's rejection of the conven-
have thoughts that were different,"
miles outside Boston, as "!'.ids with
.
"sell the war" to the college kids.
'mood
of Marist 17 years ago in a
tional beliefs of his peers and his
Alwon remembered. And he recall-
a
lot
of rage, which is understan-·
.
But in 1969, other issues also ex-
recent telephone.interview from his pacifist convictions led him
to
app-
ed being perplexed by their will-
dable; they have been hurt and
'
isled. Trouble brewed over the new home in Needham, Mass. He is
ly for and win conscientious objec-
ingncss to fight in a war they did
hated and unwanted, and in. the
•
policy allowing drinking in the now the assistant direcfor at
tor status in his senior year. He
not understand.
way of the parents' getting their
•
dorms, the dean of-students look-
·
Walker Home and Sch<iol, a live-
argued that he objected to warfare
The Selective Service board re-
needs met.''
ed for a way to prevent River Day in facility and day school for
because he believed it was wrong to
quired Alwon to perform alternate
Some of the parents are junkies,
and students expressed dissatisfac-
troubled boys ages six to 14.
kill, and that his religious beliefs
service in exchange for being
prostitutes or in prison. Many of
tion
with
the
new
Core
"Marist students then were very
precluded- military service.
granted C.O. status, so he began
the children have been sexually or
requirements.
much for motherhood and apple
He appeared before a Selective
working
with
brain-injured
physically abused, and are often
7
••
Floyd·· Alwon
was
a senior at
•
·pie.They
were not challenging the
Service review board with 85 lctters
children in a program called Up-
Continued on page 10
T
.;,
I
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,
I
•
~i
-:t-:
r
-
.
t·
·'1
'I
I
I
I
I
I
!
I
I
•
I
I
/
__ . ogJnlqn
-
--
'
-~
.·
•
.
,._/
•.
In -The Aftermath·
The number of eulogies written about th~ tragic demise of the;_
Space Shuttle Challenger and its seven United States astronauts
•
has been overwhelming - even Marist President Dennis Murray
has released a statement concerning the event. This is deservedly
so.
•
.
•
•
We feel there are no new words we can write -
no wayfor.
us to express the sorrow we, as all ,Americans, felt on -Jan. 27:
Suffice to say, our hearts are with the victims' families.;.
•
•
·
There is, however, one comment we would like to make.
"Sensationalism"
is usually linked with television network
coverage of such a drama, because networks tend to get maximum
mileage out of every story. We have all watched television
reporters treat stories of sadness· and disaster in. a most un-
humanlike manner. When th~t happens, any semblance of coin-
·passion gets lost.
,
.
The shuttle tragedy was an exception. The networks showed
respect for the first time in years -
respect for NASA, for our
nation's leaders, for the astronauts' families and for the American
public. There was no criticism and no scapegoat searching, just
a deep regard for the loss of human lives. Instead of assaulting
viewers with opinions, the ne_tworks waited with us for any sign
of.hope, and then mourned with us over the loss.
'
In those frantic minutes immediately after the explosion: the
news anchors kept the nation calm as the first scattered informa-
tion came in. We must admire the extreme professionalism it took
to carry on in the. face of such despair.
_
..
.
_
Although this may not signal an end to network- "sensa-
tionalism_," we respect the networks' decision to treat the space
shuttle incident with kindness and sincerity. It was a path well
-
chosen.
-
The A waited Settlement
·:.
.:.AND
IN
THis
·coRNER
.. .-.
Kill
the.:
d~ath
p~nalty
.
-
.
.
by Carl MacGowan
Christian faith, this is fine
if
one powerlessness
that spawns murder
•
is willing to shut the Good Book at and crime in the first place. If peo-
•
Since I returned from my intern-
Exodus 21, 23-25, grow_ a beard·
•
•
pie feel
.
out of control, be they
ship, many people have approach-
and take to wearing ~skullcap at
--
dwellers of
_
the inner city or
.
ed me with kind words for this col-
politicill revolutionaries, they fre-
·•
umn. Obviously, this calls· for
~
.. -----------..
queritly take to violence to fill that
drastic action. Yes, I'm afraid it's
•
void.
·1
know,. the old "environ-
time to dip into the Controversial
.
the·.
·re
a I
ment determ,ines behavior" gam-
Subject bin and see if we can shake
bit,
•
right? No,
I
'dori't
think en-
•
tnings up around here.
o·.
I d·.
vironment
determines
behavior'
'
Here's a sure-fire.cross-burner:
.w
r
.
,.
since not
_every
inner city kid is a
When anticipating the b_eginning of a new school
year,
students
capital punishment. A lot of peo-
, drug addict and not every rich kid
•
naturally expect a few changes and surprises. But 72 Garden
pie think the death penalty is a dan-_
~
.. _________
_,
•
bec~mes the president of a bank.
_
Apartment residents returning this year found a very unexpected
dy idea, but I'm nqt so_
sure. Per-
b
ball
B
t • f
• k
But if yo~ gro~ up in
~
place w~~re
•
· . h
ld h
•i • •
,
sonally I prefer torture as the best
ase_
,
games. u
1
one e~ps the dommant recreational act1v1ty
surpnse. t ey wou
ave to temporan y hve
m
someqne else s
' f .
d t
.
-
•
.
.
_ readmg, one may eventually arnve
is crime
-y'
ou're more 11·kely· to fall.·
-
•
h
.-
means
or
e errmg cnme.
-
1
M tth
5
38 39 • hi h J
-
-
•
'
•
-
ome.
•
·
.
:
..
. ..
·.:,
.:··
-~-,"\'"··,
..
•.
--~PCf!a!lYJh,ipgs·likehangirigpeo-·
a __
.
~
.. e'!( •
-
:
,m,w c .. , esus in with t_ha_t:zM_ost,people
don't
..
,.
••
But there wa~ hght at the_
e~~ ~f the tu~mel -
'!r
!o 1t see~ed. ,·
.
pl_~:·!>r:.t'1,e~~~l~:,-:bcatirig::them,
...
~~Y.S.: -
·.X
°-~}1,Yf-,~-~ar4}lj~~~_!l_l:-
•./·_~ant.:_}~._try,.t~;.beatath~i!":._
enviro!1-
.~
'·-·
-~~·
=•.-·,'.-
St_udents dec1d~d to take 1rut1at1ve.
Semors Chnstlan-tviomson
.
_
wit~~
~ow~:bars·and:_
ma_king
them • .m~nhdi;nf
ent,, ._Anhcre
8
for. an
_e_y
1
e, __
~
::.
,~ent-':--V'h!l~_e~_er-
the.envrronment
,
dR
.
-·
H-
-
.
.
1·
c
-
f"
.
-
..
--
.h
••
h •·--·-·1······d-'···•
·--
·b--.
toot or a toot•'
ut-what say-. is
butaremorecontenttorollow·
-
.
an ; O?ert aughton sta~ed a pet1~10n
appea mg 10r" manc1al
;
wafe, .,}t e1rt
.~ve '10nes·-,
~aten;
j
to you is:
·offef:no.resistance
to in-
-
•
.
.
.
-
11
;-
restitution to all students mconvemenced."
Chin.~~~-
-~ater
tor:ture ll~s
-been
--
•
jury .-When.
a person strikes you on· ~long.
•
·• -- •
•
·'
•
--
•
Morrison and Haughton joined forces on a com_
xnittee with Sue
___
bk_ll~-.yn
tod,w.ork;
as'. h~ye cigdar.ettde
_
the right cheek,'..'
·
and
l
gues_s
y_-_ou_
-
-
If
w~
accidentally execute an in~.
.
.-
R
"d
-
r·
h-
-
-d
b d
dB.
-
w·
k"
.
.
urns an , m more auvance an
.
k-
- -th -
.(B
h
.•
----
h ,
-
-
-
-
-
-
yan,pres1 entot
estu ent
~
y;an
nan
1cens 1,pres1-
•
enlightened sodeties;i;dectronic
now
.<:
..
rest,_ yt_e_way,t a_t~
·nocentperson,that'sjustarisfr,we-;_
-
den! o~ the Inter-House Council, to draw up a
-
proposal for
stun,guris:
..
_;
__
,
\
,_;.-.·'.:::<:',;
,-,-
.-:-,;.-
_
th~.lasu1me:you-~ e"'._er
see scnp-
have
_to
accept.· Hey,· riothing's
-
•• •
.-
'
•
restitution.
_
_
_
_
However,
b
-_some-
Constit_u~
-_ture_g~oted
m_fh1s
col~mn.)
:
perfect:']f
you~re the one·\\'earing-,_
·
·
·
fu
-
-
,,.
.
-
the electr.odes;
you wouldn't
be
so)_.
_
Marist saw positive results of their efforts-
students leading
tionru. abnor:m~ ·tyi torture is!lo~
;
,
'
The death penally
is
a·deierrent.
benevolent::
Besides.{theotitrage
we
_
·_.
-_
students constructively.
_
.
_
permitted wtthm/ ~~r. bo'!ndanes.
.
Sure
it's a deterrent to
·middle~class.
feel for the· killing of _inno_cents
_
if
.
•
But somewhere between its drafting in November and now, the
~uch are the hmitauons of . peopJe_who
may,b~ <c<>nsiderlng
the.-: what this is all about; isn't it?
•
-:
proposal "lost its wind...
•
ems
ocr~cy.l
f
.
-
.
.
_
..
- -
:
murder of' their next door • - Or is)t?
• •
•
Th
.
.
.
-
.
d . If
_
0
we re e
t
wtth capt!al:pu!llsh~ neighbors, buUt doesn't apply to •
.
.
.
_
.
_
-
e committee, it seems, tnppe
1tse up.
.
_ _
ment. Because
of space lirrutauons •
_
r
h
•-
---·--
_.. ·
· d h - --
.
•.
lthmk the mam reason so many
Wicenski, who "chaired the committee, said he ~ant_ed full cam-
I can't d~ withevery ttr~inent i~
~~rrj~
wof~
a:itc':::l:u~.
\
edo~
.
'.peOJ?le
Hke
..
:.t~e
idea . of _capital :.
p~s _endo~sement of th~ proposal before present~ng 1t to the ad-
favor of 1t, ~ut I ~an scratch the
tliink too.many killers go arc,und pumshlllent is; that thet like t_he
•
mm1strat1on, Forty copies of the proposal were given outto IHC
surface, startmg with:
•
thinking~ "Gee whillikers,Tcould
!dea of a. pubJ1cly-s_anct1<med
kill~
-•·
representatives, but no copies were returned before Thanksgiv-
go to
the
chair for doirig that!'.' The .:. mg.
·More
than_
~-~ew
people haye
ing and only some
were
recovered before Christmas. Some copies
It coslslo~ much
to
keep a killer
_
~eal mes~g~
of_
the t;leath pemtlfy
..
:,•.call~'for execut10!1s_
t~ pe tel~VIS~.
still have not been gathered.
_
_ _
.
jailed for life.
_First
of all, this is a 1s ~hat_ kilhng solves yroblems,
-
~~ five,
-perhap,s
m pnme
•
tt~e.
_
.
Ryan said the_c:ommittee was formed quickly· and carefully yet stupid argument because it_puts a which
IS_
a lesson any drug mer~
• _And
now,;,~ere
~
your host,_V,mce
·
·
·..
·
..
.
·
.
·
' ..
.
price on a p_erson's
~ead. We just chant, mafioso, or
-gang
member·
--_
McM~h()_n!
.•
.
;
••
_
_
_
.
~,
?O
one
01!-
the,~omm1!tee has t~e. financial background to assist don't do that here in America. Let .. would agree with ..
•
•.
_
:
J\.fter all, ifwe believe in "an eye
m preparing a financially reahst1c proposal.
.
me rephrase that:
Supposedly
we
for. an eye,'.' how ~ome no one
Now the proposal is being rewritten and the administration has don't do that in America. On the
Even
if
it's ~ot
a
deterrent, it gets
wants to rape a rapist, steal from
•
yet to see iL. _
_
..
__
_
•
_
•
·__
_
other hand, comparing the in-
certain killers of/the streets for
··a burglar,
~PY
c,n a;spy, or dtive
•
Derrick Wynkoop, finantjal board chairperson, sajd he was sur-
carceration of a prisoner to sending
good.
True enough in a physical df1:1nk,?a°.d
-sm?sh
1nto
__
a df1:1nk
· d
h
h
-
-
k d
b
h
-
·
0
h
·
h
.
a kid to Harvard is absurd; there sense, but in a spiritual context, this dnver.
.
Not blood-curdhng
·
pnse t at. e was not
as
e
t9
eon! e_committee. t ers
W_ 0
•
are certain benefits that one cannot doesn't mean
·a
-
thing. The
enough,
I
guess; not enough like
_
offered ass1~tance were told that their help was not needed._
_
enjoy _ such
·as
a:
single room, authorities got Billy
.the
Kid, and
watching ''Red Dawn'-' or ''Delta
Gerard Cox, vice president fofstudentaffairs,
said }le warned
••
structured recreatjon periods~
well- no one ever Jteard of him again,
·-
Force.•
1
•
_:
..
•
-~•-
• - '-;
<
the committee that the prop9sal would go nowhere without an
•
balanced meals, etc.
~
if one at-
•
right'? Not quite. We
.all
fondly.
• Some people like J~ think that if:;,
-·
administrator to present it. Until last week,
·Ryan
had not ap-
tends college ~nstead of prison.
remember-jesse
James, BoD?i~
and
'
you're.~gainst the death pe11alty,
proached an administrator about presenting the_ proposal.
Letting a murderer live is not/air
Clyde, Al Capon_e,
Jo~n Ddhn~er you don
.t
want the law proJ>:rly_cx-
.
. .
h
-
·
to the victim.
There's an assump-
and even Gary Gtlmore:The pomt
ecuted, That's not tr_ue:
I thmk the
Ryan and W1censk1_
said they wanted to ave tlte proposal com-
tion that execution goes
·hand-in-
is the criminal may be eliminated
,-.
law should
'be
executed
•
plete and ready to be used
as
a negotiable tool before approaching
-
hand with caring for the deceased: b~t crime lives on.
'
•
administration.
Something Hke: One can show no
In fact, execution tends to make •
•
..._
When Ryan-did go to see Business Officer Anthony Campilii,
greater respect for one's friend legends of iis victims. Sacco and_:
C
·
1•
the proposal was not a priority at the meeting. "The last five than by killing for him. I always Vanzetti, for example. Or Julius
.
orrec
IOil
minutes of the meeting were in relation to the proposal," she said.
heard different. More like: There and Ethel Rosenberg. Then t~ere's
Time is understandably a factor in the initial delay of the pro-
is no greater thing one may do for
Socrates and the_ aforementioned
sal
,
1
•
R
"d h
.
d"d h
.
.
1
a friend than by killing oneself. Or
Mr. Nazareth.
•
Last week's Viewpoint writer
po
s comp euon. y~n
sat
t e committee 1 ave to wait u~t•
something like that.
Well, we've gotta do something.
John Anderson
was
incorrectly
all the students moved m to the Garden Apartments to deternune
An eye for an eye, a tooth/or a
Now we're really getting desperate. identified. He is a senior in com-
Continued on p2ge 5
tooth.
A favorite of those in the
It's
this same feeling of - munication arts.
THE:
Editor:
Denise Wilsey
Senior Associate Editor:
Douglas Dutton
Associate Editors:
Anthony
DeBarros
CIRCLE:
Paul Raynis
Laverne C.
Williams
Senior Ecfrtor:
Gari
MacGowan
.
•
News Editors:
Julia
Murray
Tom McKenna
Christian Larsen
Arts
&
Entertainment Editor:
Ken Parker
Sports Editor:
_
Brian O'Connor
Photography Editor:
.
Business Manager:
Laurie Barraco
Lisha Driscon
Advertising Manager:
• Advertising staff:
Cartoonist:
Faculty
Advi~r:
Mike McHale
Gary
Schaefer
Ben Ramos
Don
Reardon
David McCraw
Member of the
College
Press Service
,
I
(
\
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vieWP-_C.;;;;:;;.l_.:.;;;.i..;;r;...~..;;1;...t.;._·
_·
---------·'February
6, 1986-
THE CIRCLE - Page 5--
Co Ilege life: An inside perspective
: by James E. Pitt
•. to prison they had not even finish-
·any. one of nine separate blocks.
ed high school, and most of their
Since Marist is not recognized by
' Filled with intense emotion and ,: "education"
was obtained f~om ... the prison as an assignment,
·pride, a· group of men attir~d in ·, the University of Street Life.
students must work at other jobs
black robes over green uniforms . Nevertheless, this scenario has been
during the day or eventually be
march silently to the tradition,al
repeating since 1980. •
. . transferred out of the facility. Be-
:tune "Pomp and Circumstance"· •
The Marist College Program in
ing forced to work all day for
·anticipating
a long awaited nio-
G.reen Haven (MIG) has been a • wages that cannot exceed $1.55 per
ment ~· the conferring· of their
vehicle fllr prisoners to, among
day leaves very little studying time.
•.degrees. The college faculty, alum:-
many things, self-actualize. Ac-· Lack. of study• time coupled with
'ni, students, anqguests attentively • quiring a college education behind
the haphazard housing assignment,
look
on. Some of the family· the wall takes a lot of fortitude and
creates
quite a problem
for
members of the graduates cannot
dedication, to say the least.
students; nevertheless,· students
• control the tears streaming from
To make things difficult from
must
contend
with
these
their eyes.
the start, MIG students have no
conditions.
·, These men are all pris·oners. of
special housing • area like other ·: • In their living quarters, students
Green Haven Correctional Facili-
st.udents in the instituti9n. From 6 • 'are confronted with an assortment
ty and th,eir degrees come from
p.m. to 9 p.m. students come from
of problems. Studying for most
Marist College. What is amazing is all areas of the prison to attend
begin at approximately 10 p.m. An
that when most of these men came
classes. Their housing area may be
immediate problem is that most
non-college inmates are unsym-
. pathetic to the demands placed
upon the.student.
While trying to study, a student
must
tolerate
simultaneous
• shouting in English, Spanish,
• Italian and French. Then a student
•
will complain, "Hey can you keep
the noise down?" The normal
response is, "If you want peace and
_, quiet get a transfer to a cemetery!"
.
.
It is also common to be born-
. barded by the musicians and dee-
• jays who obviously did not make
• it on Broadway, each sharing their
musical heritage with the entire
gallery. Tape decks blast at. ex-
tremely loud levels, and as usual,
all at the same time.
The weekends that all students
look forward to are even more
outrageous. Football, basketball,
or
baseball
are
temporary
substitutes for the music. The ex-
citement is uncontrollable and you
will begin to wonder if yoµ are at
the actual game or if the entire
gallery made parole.
"I think the college program is
a good opportunity for a prisoner
to make a positive step in the direc-
tion of change. The biggest pro-
blem I've encountered is that the
prison, overall, opposes any pro-
gram· that proves to benefit the
prisoner and doesn't materially
benefitthe prison itself. This is a
fact even though the (prison) ad-
ministration superficially appears
to be helpful."
Most students have expressed the
same opinion as Joseph. Prison
guards are more hostile toward col-
lege students, more often than not
going out of their \yay to cause any
inconvenience to sttllients and staff
alike.
One instructor informed me that
she was not permitted to bring a
newspaper in to share with her class
because it had not been cleared by
'security,' (whatever that means).
Another instructor was not allow-
ed to enter one night because he
had come a few minutes late due
to car problems.
Later
he
discovered that the clocks in the
lobby were always kept fifteen to
twenty minutes fast. Even more
drastic the New York State Depart-
ment of Correctional
Services
(NYSDOCS) has created a policy
Finally, the weekend movie is
called and now you can stay in and
study in relative peace. At least you
would like, to, but you have been
running so much all week that you
must take advantage of a peaceful
two hour siesta. Well, you can
always stay up until 2 a.m.
studying.
• to prevent Marist College tutors
from receiving monetary compen-
sation from the college for their
dedication and hard work.
Let's also consider the student
who has been preparing for an im-
portant exam all week. On the.day
of the exam receives two suspicious
looking letters. One from a relative
informing him that his wife - that'
he hasn't heard from in over two
years:*:is seven months pregnant;.
The other.from his lawyer inform-
ing him that all appeals have been
exhausted· and he need not look
forward to a retrial.
After getting around. all the
above you are faced with the prison
guar,g who is full of envy and in-
timidated by the educated and
streetwise convict (whom he will
never trust). He believes this inmate
should be picking cotton instead of
going to college and trying to make
something useful out of himself.
The problems still exist, but there
are stiH those men, courageous, ..
persistent, and committed to pur-
' suing their goals.
Unfortunately, some are deter-
red from their quest, which· is
uriderstaridable when they have to
tolerate the circumstances that a
repressive and hostile environment.
such as prison fosters. Motivation
•
and support are necessary to keep
the drive alive and the spirits up.
Marist college must remain cogni-
zant of the problems students face
and be more willing to sit' down
with prison administrators
to
ad-
dress pertinent issues, instead of ac-
cepting. the oppressive policies
thrown at them.
last semester here, .ind our loiig
0
standing-memories· of Marist will
be, by and large, shaped by what
occurs over the next four months.
I asked Joseph, a senior, to com-
If
Marisi waits rriu~h ionger. they ment on the college program. He
won't l:ie dealing with stiidents; but said:
James E. Pitt is a student in the
Marist College Program in Green
Haven.·
..,
letters
1
Restitution
Toth~ editof:
..
.
• Here • we are again, back at
beautiful Maris(on the Hudson.
- ·For so~e·_of us this will be' the
But it seems Marist is intent on
le'aving us ·with _a bad (aste iii our
• collective mouths. Out
a(
the
Garden Apartments things haven't
changed much. We were greeted
with the luxury of cable when we
returned from Christmas break but
there is one thing still Jacking inFS
and in the vocabulary of the Mari_st
administration - ·restitution. • ,
,
.
,
.
-~
, • Settlement
_____
c_o_nt_in_ue_d_f_ro_m_p_ag_e_4
th~ eiact number of days students·were inconvenienced. Also,
both Ryan and Wicenski said they had demands frorri other job-
related and personal reponsibilites.
'. in addition, administration did not come Iooking·for progress
reports. It ·was almost as if administration thought that without
a· formal prop.osal, the requests would go away. Administration .
should have assured the progress of that proposal.
But despite the lack of progress to this point, the reality is that
_, the proposal does have to be settled.
. .
Some students involved have already left the school for intern-
ships or other reasons. They now have to be located when the
proposal is completed and approved. Also, seniors have to be com-
pensated in a physical check becuase this is their last semester at
Marist and will have no more bills to "adjust."
All this leaves us with some serious questions. Why was the
committee allowed to be formed without experienced assistance
for the financia1 part? Wh)' didn't Wicenski pu~h mo~e to ?et the
signed proposals back? When did Ryan and W1censk1 decide the
proposal was asking for too much? How did they determine it
was unrealistic when the proposal has not been submitted to the
administration yet? Why did they wait until February to rework it?
Perhaps the most significant of all -
Why wasn't this made
a priority? Why wasn't this done?
alumni'. What's worse for a col-
,
lege's public relatfons than angry·~-------•J--------------------------
students? J\ngry alumni.
.
And· people wonder about stu-
dent apathy at Marist: Why, some
ask,· don't students care 'about
anything? _The reason· i~,' the'jo-
called "student" apathy is jusi a
reflection of the administrations at-
titude to,vard students. The con~
tinuous vacillating on tfre· lssue of
restitution is a classic· example of
Marist brushing us offagain;with
the resultant attitude being, if they
don't care about us, we don't' care
about Mi,uist. • •
Now it;s not like we're asking for
the world. We paid extra to live in
the Garden Apartments and could
not move in on September 3. All
we ask is that we receive restitution
comm~nsurate _ with the time we
were "inconvenienced," based on
the formula proposed by the stu-
dent representatives.
•
Marist blew their biggest chance
at sidestepping the entire· issue over
the Christmas break. They could
have credited our tuition with the
amount of restitution and gotten
clea11Iy away without paying a
dollar in cash. The only problem
with that now is, most of us are
seniors and there isn't going to be
a next semester's tuition.
So, until we receive this restitu-
tion, we will continue to write these
letters to The Circle. And President
Murray must be just as sick of
reading these as you all must be.
The Residents of
FS
Continued on page 8
'
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BUY
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Call 1-800-228-2080
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Pag"
6.
THE CIRCLE.•
F.ebru~,Y
6,
1986--'·-·:,_·
-
by Ken Parker
Lately in the world of popular
music; it seems what's new is
what's old ..
As rock~n'roll moves into its
third decade, its past is coming
back to haunt artists and listeners
alike .. Revivalism is in. And with
the help of
MTV,
new audiences
are being exposed to an ever-
growing variety of songs-, in-
strumentation -and fashion from
decades gone by.
Two types of revivalism ·exist.
First, there is artist who re- .
records the songs ofa particular
ar-
tist or time frame. In this case,.the
artist acknowledges the pioneer(s).
Then there is the artist who sounds
like he is re-recording the songs of
particular artist or time frame. In
this case, he is ripping off the
unacknowledged pioheer(s).
It is difficult to determine the ex-
act origin of the revivalism trend.
The.Clge OJrevivali.Sin
In terms of marketing, it is a
brilliant idea: re-expose styles that
• have gathered just the right amount
of dust to an already-familiar au-
dience. Too little dust and we tend
to· remember why we discarded
them in the first place, too much
and remembrances tend to get that
golden, but- "hands-off" glow.
pelling the album. T_he
Broadway
The Dream Academy's "Life in ••
showed anything, it was that a note
Album has-yet to yield a single as
a Nor_thern Town" may be the· can only be played so fastand one
popular as the. ones that helped to
quintessenti;ll revivalist record, at
can only scream • so loud; Once
sell her: previous albums. All she
least so far. The record's obvious rock's .. outer boundary of revolt. •
~
.. -----------..
• psychedelic and '60s instrumenta-
and anti-establishmentism has beeri '
tion even includes lyrical references presented,. it would• seem there is ·,
The probable answer· is that it
wasn't anyone's original idea (a
.
characteristic als<J of the music).
~
... __________
_,
Revivalism has developed slowly;
needed this time out was a straight
from ihe realization of the yuppie
forward title and album cover
culture to pop songs in advertising.
(depicting Streisand on a stage with
But regardless
of
where
sheet music at' harid). ·familiar
• revivalism began, the chilling fac- . songs presented by a familiar voice.
tor that' makes it a topic worthy of - . How much easier could it be?
discussion is that revivalism sells • • Paving the way for Streisand was
records -
a lot of records.
Linda Ronstadt's huge success with
This week's number one album
her 1940's tribute album, What's
on Billboard magazine's ToplOO
New. That album's follow-up,
is Barbra Streisand's, The Broad-· Lush Life, was also quite sue-
way Album. Streisand has hit the
cessful. This triggered other artists
top of th_e
album charts before, but
to attempt similar projects -
it was the result of a hit single pro-
r~vivalized revivalism, if you will. .
to John Kennedy and The Beatles. nowhere else to go.but back. •
It is number sixteen this week, ac-
· It is a thin line. between-
cording to Billboard. To a less -- revivalism and a heart-felt expres- . :
· popular
•
degree, the Chesterfield sion of a distinct music!l sty!e. _But
Kings and the Mosquitos also bring - regar~less · of the motive, 1t. 1s • a··.
back exact traces of '60s garage
creative dead-end.
rock.
- Revivalism:. signifies a ·sort
01
How long can all this continue?
quiet death .. to progressive rock/
.The race seems to be on in an at- • While it is not meant to be intend-
tempt to cover those styles which ed that popular music as
a
whole .
have yet to be re-done. Linda
is creatively dead,- the extent to
• Ronstadt is in the studio recording, which certain forms of the past are
of all-things, a country album.
being accepted should be a sourc~
The urge· to present old or
of concern.
established music forms indeed
Styles that were once dead and -
seems to be sp_reading. But it
buried have returned.-It's as if yotir
spreads like a disease. If all that is
pare'nts are getting the last laiighi.-
left are re-hashes of old styles, can
And according to my definition of •
it be said that popular music has
rock'n'roll, that's not how it's sup-_
reached it's creative peak? If punk
posed to end.
'D.dwrt
·and-~out'
-is· a real dow-ner.
by
Maria Gordon
looking for a cure for all her
migraines. His daughter Jenny is
anorexic, and his son Max is wrestl-
ing with his sexual identity.
"Down and Out • in Beverly
Hills," directed by Paul Mazurski,
loses its comic and satiric edge by
portraying too·many stereotypical ,-
characters and by beating us to
death with the themes and
messages.
The movie does have an excellent
cast. It does have something to !)ay,
reel·
impression~-
• says it many times.
. .chooses to leave, qut dog food is
telligent and likes to go arotmct"giv~:
.. Dave feels he can lessen his ghilt no longer as _appetizing as. it was .. ing advice. Who is he? If he's this
by befriending Jerry, the bum, and before. He goes back.
•
talented, why is he in the streets?
giving him a c_hance
at a new life.
Dreyfuss, Midler and Nolte play
In the end,· the. truth might· have.....-
But Jerry does not necessarily want their characters to the hilt, but they
been nice. He gave people what
this life. He believes in total .· don't interact well. Dreyfuss is
they wanted,· and that's the only
freedom with
no.
commitments to neurotically. perfect
as the· guilt-
real truth he knows or lets us know.
land or people. Jerry spreads this ridden, middle-class businessman .
"Down and . Out in . Beverly
philosophy to everyone in the out to save the world. He has
110 •
Hills," is slightly enjoyable. The
Whiteman household.
interest in materials, ht: only wants
laughs are few. Nolte's character is
but do it subtly. The mark of a
good satire is that the audience gets
the message through the puns and
then draws their own.conclusions
about the pfoblems being depicted.
He relieves Barbara's tensions to be happy.
• •
• •
left undeveloped. There are real
_ through sex. He liberates Carinen,
pro bl ems
surrou·nding . , the ·:
~al•----••----"'
the maid, through sex·andI\1.ar;xist:
Midleds brilliahta.sth~epitome
homeless. They sleep in streets, beg.
i.
Now that we have touched on_· _·
literature.
Jle
gets" Jenny to eat .. of II1iddle~class· prejudfce> and
and eat food mea~tJo(dogs. Dave .. '.
.
the._f?,mi.1-Y,'.~P,,~(?bl~nis,:.
i~w·~ks ihe -•,::'r~l:iro\i~~:~~i!f-Atw,Ici~~;J~ir-f
_~,~p;
~
,Wff.~<?l
y~e,:,,,
.c~w~~r~a,ti-v,~
•.
,i-~~P.~t{;:,fho9;s~
-i?·•
i
h.~IP.,:
R b-~~~it~•\lh-•·-"tM\
si
1
;~
social. problem, a bum,,_played by -,-gets,Nfax'tO 9ow,e:out of.the closet .. f1c1al; yet socially-·consc1ous~.
She,. '·abounhe r~st? We ,all can't afford
,
. In "Down and Out. .. ", ·we aren't
allowed to think for ourselves, feel
the way we ,vant and, in the end,
we feel confused.
Nick Nolte. This vagabond has lost. ;-i'abotfr'his h~niosexWHty; \Vhaf is. ..plays the
diz.zf
hotisewife'andi ·next
••••
to.
take: in'a street ..
person:: / . < .: :,
his will tolive and decides to drown
this doi,ng::rorDave?
0
:
;
·c->
-
_ to the dogs,,receive~'riiost of the ·_·
•
•
himself in the Whiteman's pool.·
·At
fkst;:h~ .enjoys having Jerry
laughs, -Also, Evan Richards is
Although _Dave does' the ad:
Dave goes down to save him and
arouncL·A psychiatrist teils Bar-
great as Max. He is funny; yet
mirablething, it
is
unrealistic in toe
• Dave Whiteman, portrayed by
Richard Dreyfuss, lives in Beverly
Hills
and owns a hanger-
manufacturing business. But~ Dave
is not happy. Barbara, his wife,
played by Bette Midler, spends
most of her time and his money
the problems begin.
· hara.that he is liv.irig fre.er through
sincere: a ·true adolescent.
day's society when people like Bar< :
From the beginning, we realize
this vagrant person.
C
That soon
' Nolte plays Jerry Baskin as far
bara say;
"I
do my charity work''
that Dave has a problem other
dt:in
changes; As his family becomes . as t_he script
wiU
allow, but there
three times a week.'' Real·helpfor. •
his family. He suffers from pangs
more , accepting :
of
themselves, . are too· many unanswered ques~ • the -homeless can be .neither in-
•
of guilt over his luck, fortune and
Dave becomes moretense.,On New· tions about Jerry:·All we know are · dividual nor sporadi·c. This film·
business. -If you did not get that
Year's Day, Jerry is given a choice, lies; He.does play classical piario. , doesn't leave us \Yith_
a_ feasible·
from his actions, don't worry: He
either leave or take a j()b. He
He grew up in Brooklyn; He is in- : solution, ,or a funny movie.
It's more thiln
'iust a ··book'
by _Julia E. Murray
a lot of useful information about
the.do's and don'ts, it also contains
There's a Special Report on
a few regulations guaranteed to
television, the radio stations are
have you snickering in five minutes
playing every song you've ever and hysterical in ten.
hated and your friends picked to-
.
For example, did you know that
day,.of all days, to go studious on
only ten percent of your walls may
you. You're bored; frustrated and . be covered with posters-and pie~
have nothing to do except (ugh)
tures? It's about time you got out
homework. What can you do to . the old tape m_easure
and calculator
cheer yourself up?
• ·-
to make sure you're not violating
Not only may you cover only ten
percent ofthe wall, but the posters
and pictures "must be so affixed to
the wall that only one surface ofthe-
the.
Other
m_urray
The answer to that question-is
a~y regulations. That picture of .
simple _:_ read yollr Studenf ' Mom and Dad and Sis may be dear •
:•"'llllllallllll■_■_■
__
------■----••-"
Handbook. .
• • • to your heart, but if it puts you
'ii .
.
? _ -·
~
• • ,,
·
•
All right, now that you've had
over the limit you're just going to .. matenal ~s exposed_. Sh~w me .a
your laugh, think about the idea.
have to break it.to Mom gently. '..:.P~rson~ith a post~r that,1s multi-
While the handbook does contain
They've got to go.
·
• dimensional and I
II
show you
a
• •
•
person who walks into walls a_lot.
• One final
word of
advice about
posters:
"Nails, tacks,
paste, tape,
etc. may not be used to fasten ob-
jects
to the wall."
Face it people,
if you
want
to have
posters on your
walls, you're just
going
to have to.
. hold them there yourselves.
Lest you think that posters-are
the orily things that are a matter of
: concern in your room, here's an
: additional
tidbit
concerning
elec-
• trical
outlets: "All electrical
equip-
- ment when being used
must
plug
directly into the • wall or floor
outlet."
I
defy you to show me a
ceiling outlet on the whole campus.
On to the next batch
o( in-
teresting rules. Attention all entry.
officers! Did you know that you
'. are .. prohibited from identifying
a
-guest or a st_!1dent
to a third party
~
other than ~uthorized staff?"
• Sorry guys; Dad's jtistgoing to-
have to meet your best friend after
you ,graduate,· unless,· of course,
you .. want to arrange -· a • secret
meeting off campus. Just don't
spread theword around, the walls
have ear_s. .
•
Let's press on to matters nearer •
and dearer to inost of our hearts.
Did you know we have a ·dress
code? That's right, though I must
admit it's. not'terribly strict. All we
are required to wear for classes is
"a clean pair of slacks; a;clean shirt
or blouse and footwear." Not too
tough, ·provided ·you_ can fincf a
washer that rinses the soap out and
a
dryer that takesless than three
days tQ adequately dry your
clothes. If you find one, let· me
know.
• •
, In case you couldµ't find a dryer
that worked well enough and you
have developed pneumonia, make
sure you drop bytlealth Services
on: your way to the emergency
room, just to let them know you're
dying and won't be able to make
your ll:2S. Remember; "cer-.
tificates of illness to verify a6sence
from classes will be issued only if
the student reports to the college
nurse at the time of illness."
• All things considered, the Stu-
dent Handbook isn't a bad piece of
literature. It is not only useful, but
entertaining as well. Now if you
could only remember what shelf
_ you_ µsed itJo line.
• .: -: •
by Anthony DeBarros.
,, The_ only thing keeping me.-'
• .. warm at this Arctic,.wasteland • •·
we call school, is a healthy d.9st:-,,
•
of-·rock-'n' roll .. Here's what·
''Music-Notes" has its eye on ;-,
this week: ._ . • . .· -.
•
_ .:._ 5150
is the name
of
tlie new :
-··Vail.Halen_Lp:Th·e•rt:Jease
date·f •
has been pushed backto March,-.'
· with a tour to follow.
-It
was·t
produced. by Eddie·-.
V.H.:-and ·;
·new singer Sammy Hagar; with
f
help from Mick 'Jones. of\.·
Foreigner. Incidentally, "S1S0';\, ..
is a police code in
L .. A~
mean:-:-::
ing "maniac on theloose." . '\;
- On a related topic,
David::
Lee Roth
is prac;ticillg with his ;
new band and.working on his;'~
• debut feature·· fil1,11, "Crazy:r
From ·The. Heat." Roth enlisted::i
- former. Zappa guitarist Steve
i
Vai and Talas bass{st Billy\
Sheehan for the project.
'
• -
Speaking of movies, .,
Queen
is writing the soundtrack ;
for "Highlander,'' .. starring!
Sean Connery. It'si due in
March.
-
Blue • Oyster cu·u•s
new
record, Oub
Ninja
is out. Look
for
a
B.O.C.·totir soon:
••
That's it for this week. Until
• next time, remember these.
words from Triumph's Rik
Em-
mett: Music holds1he secret, to
know it con make you whole.,.
....
.
·Pentagon,
EducaJion Dept.
.
· ,
Officially Join ·
•
• •
To Find Nonregistrants
•·
::
,.
.
~
Local prosecutors had rules the
.
woman was taken advantage of,
but not raped. ·:
•
•
• • • . . •
•
Day wants the students fried ori
U.S.
:_,
Education
.
Secretary-
felony rape charges.
William
Bennett last weekformal-
.
·
N.C.A.A. Raises Grade··
.
,
Requirements For
•
·
Freshman Athletes
•.
ly gave'the Selective Service
a
list
of the
.five
million student aid ap:
pticarits;. which the Selective Service
will use-to help.track down men
•
who
,
failed to submit military
At its New Orleans con~ention
registration forms when they turn-
.
last week, the group agreed to
•
ed 1.8.
·: ·,,
make freshmen enter college with
••
:
By comparing lists ·or applicants
a
•
2.0 high . school GP A, plus
and people: who have signed up,
•
•.
minimum scores on either their
Bennett,noted he'd also be·helped
SA Ts or ACTs in order to play on
in
enforcing the 1982 law denying intercollegiate teams their first
•
clean bill of health last week.
Fisk's current debt is $890,000,
down from $3.9 miliion in 1983.
•
• _But
private college problems
continued at the same time:
Trustees voted to close both
George Williams College in Illinois,
struggling under a $10 million debt,
and St:-John's College in Kansas,
which had only 215 students left.
Yet officials gave the struggling
Antioch School of Law two more
months. to find new financial
•
backing.
Australian College Clips
Phone Connection To UCLA
student
aid
to students who haven't
.
:
·year.
.
registered.
:
Black educators had argued the
..
Telecom, the Australian phone·
.new
standards,
·which
in August
company; has found the phone on
Sa~ oi~go State Asks D.A .
..
To Prosecute Frat Members.
.
will start to be phased in over a
the Wagga campus of the Murray
.
•.
two-year period, effectively will
Institute. in Australia on which
keep black athletes out of college.
students went on a free interna-
SDSU President
·Dr.
Thomas
tional phone spree in late fall.
Day has asked city prosecutors to
Fisk Return To Favor, But
In six hours, students called
reconsidertheir decision not to pro-
Tb'ree Other Colleges Wobble
counterparts at UCLA to compare
secute three members of the Pi
class customs, a former classmate
•
Kappa Alpha fraternity.
An accrediting agency gave Fisk
..
in Alaska, and several residents of
.
The members allegedly raped a
University, the·Tennessee· school_: Miami to discuss "Miami Vice."
•
female student who had falled un-
.whose
dire fiscal woes nearly fore-
Telecom says it has
_fixed
the
,,.
conscious after drinking too much.
•
ed it to close and pushed it. into
phone, which now won't work un-
at a.fiat party;
'
"probationary~• status in 1983, a
til customers feed it 20 cents.
.
.
.
-
,.
.
"
·Freshmen
want-money, success
'-'
LOS ANGELES, CA (CPS):-'-:'-
'.·.
Recent surveys by the College tion's current and future needs."
College students increasingly are
··Placement
Council; Michigan State
Astin was surprised
to
discover
•
interested in' money, but they'll
and Northwestern
all found
students' social attitudes are goi,ng •
make it as businesspeople, not
•
American businesses plan to h_ire to extremes -
sometimes in op:
computer scieritists or engineers,
•
fewer engineering and computer
·
posite directions.
acc'ording to UCLA's 20th annual
science majors th~s year.
.
Seventy-three· percent
.
of the
survey of new college freshmen.
But Astin said students' declin-
freshmen oppose increased defense
The proportion of
freshmen
ing interest in high tech is all• the
spending, up 12 perct.at from three
•
planning to major in computer
more remarkable considering the
years ago; and 73.3 percent - four
'
science and pursue computing
emphasis secondary schools place percent more than last year - say
.
careers has dropped by
50
percent
•
on computer. education.
He
the wealthy should pay a larger
•
in just two years. Only
4.4
percent
.
speculates: that as students become
share of taxes than they do now.
of the Class of 1989
·aspire
to be. more familiar with computers in
But conservative. attitudes· are
compute(
•
.
progra111mers
.·'
or.· high school, they are less incMed
.
equally strong; Almost half of all
::
ana~r~,~s·;,
,~?~Pl;lr~p,_
t~'6:tpe~cefi~~:';~e>
tj~f,si.ie}~-.cis
~-~a~eer,
and\n1_ore
_' .,freshmen:
think
;'.~qmos~xuality
.
.
•
1ast·ye~r. and 8.Spercent
m
1983~
_·.
mchried tov1ew 1t as.a tool for use should be outlawed, and a record
, .~:.
Peclining: interest'iri computer'
•
in other fields ......
_.
low - 2L8 percent
'"7'.
warit mari-
-_.careers
J)arallels_dwindling
interest
'
Among the~200,~0 freshmen
•
juana legalized.
<
•
.
··
in engineering. Ten percent of. s.urveyed riatioriwide·, business a·nd
By contrast, almost 53 percent of
r~spondents
plan to pursue
..
teaching drew the most significant
1977's freshmen favored legalizing
engineering careers, down from 12
•
increase in interest.
•
• ••
•
marijuana.
·~percent
two ye~n; ago..
The proportion
of entering
And while the Class of 1989 said
•
"Taken together, this decline in
·students
aspiring to business
the rich should pay more taxes,
_
student interest in technological
·
careers -
an area showing rising members would like to
be
among
•
careers stands in stark contrast to
interest since the 1970s - increas-. them.
the gr~wing national concern for.· edlo an all
0
time high of 23.9 per-
Seventy-one percent of the
••
•
increasing technological training in cent, more than twice the propor-
freshmen say "being very well-off
our schools arid colleges," said the
tion recorded in the 1972 survey.
financially" is "essential" or "very
survey's director,.UCLA Professor
•.
_
For the third straight
year,
important."
.
Alexander Astin.
elementary and secondary school
.
About the
.same
.number
of
•.•
The decline, however,
.
cor-
teaching· rose slightly to 6.2 per-
students agreed with the.statement
•
•
responds
•
with
•
diminishing
cent: although Astin said we still that "The chief benefit of a college
demands for-engineers in the job
have a long way t9 go before there education is that it increases'c, ..
;'s
market.
•
. -
-
•
•
•
are enough te~chers to meet the na-
earning power.
-----------
-----,
~~---~-r::::=-===---=--~--'--._:_,,..-_,
✓.,_
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•··
•
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•
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•
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D Nas~ati
From $334.00
Fro·
m
• •
$
49
411111111111J
9
_
0
~
u.iii
□
/-Me::idco
(Cancun,Puerto Vallarta, Acapulco)
·
□
Bermuda
.
-··
From $324.00
.
•
•
·
.
·
I.
'
□
i:.t:
Lauderdale
From
$324.00
Chotelonly$164)
•
.
•
•
I
-
I
,
□
Daytona-Bead~
From $339.00
Chotelonly$17•0
.
.
,
••
:
I;
0
London/Paris
From $499.00
I:
•
--
All pric~sindudr
i
nights :otel. round trip air transportation and Colll'&l' Weeks
1.
I~
activities. Based on quad occupancy. Call for triples a-nd double supplements.
•
1
,
Airfare Supplements
Bahamas- ($40.00 Boston. BWl.l'hiladelphia. SI00.00
. ;
Chicago or Cleveland) Rermuda-($100.00 Chicago or Clevelandl
•
I
Fr. Lauderdalr.;__1S.'>O.OO
Boston. Philaddphia .• 8WI. Chicago. Cle\'t'landl
I;
•
Daytona Beach-($40.00 Boscon. Philaddphia. Chicago & Cl,•vd,1nd. S20.00
from
BWI)
•
•
I
..
.
..
.
--':EBJE.'2;s
....
College Weeks
□
March 0 I • March 08
•
0 March 22 - March 29
0 March
2!1 -
April
05
D
April
05 •
A11ril
12
0
:\pril 12.· :\pril 1!1
,
501 l\fadi~on A,-.-nue
Sc .. • 'forlc. S.\'. 10022
.
212-355-4705
□
March 08
•
March 15
D March
15.
March 22
l>estinalinn _,;__;.;__ ____
-- ______
Departur,· Ci1y_·
----------
-----
1
,
·o
Sounds Good. rm ready <o part\· and enclose SSO d,l.'posi1
D Rush me more information
~am~ ____
__:_
______________
~_,:,,.fe
_____________
_
Addrt~s
_ _:__..::_ ___
~---------,;:-:-
..
--:------"------------
.
Stal~-·_·
________
21p _____
_
Cil}' _____
_;_---,--,---~----:---
-
-
~ ~
----
~
---
~ ~
-
-
--
-
-
-
--
-
-
~
--
-
Februa 6, 1986 - THE CIRCLE - Page 7
APPLICATIONS ARE NOW BEING
ACCEPTED FOR THE FOLLOWING
POSITIONS FOR THE
SPRING
·1986
SEMESTER:
-
personal care aides/attendants
-
library/academic aides
•
-
notetakers
-· scribes
-. test assistants
-· tutors
-
typists/transcribers
-
Please stop by the Office of Special
Services, C1 35, for an application.
r
1
iiosiiN~•,
•
Sl'ECIAL
l•1·s.o'O
I
L--~~J
COMPLETE LINE OF
'OAmiii4"'-1
•
11.0NDE
I
f
MIGNLIGHTS
I
l(w/foll method)I
APPOINTMENTS
ONLY NECESSARY
FOR THURS.
& FRI.
M£1US
I
'
t10.oo ·,,
GIid
vp
~-----~
EVENINGS.
PRODUCTS
49 Academy SI. Pok.
486-9883
Monday lhru Friday
10-6.
Saturday
9-5
NOTE: longer hair or
_tinted
hair may
require addt'I charge
[Ri
Shown
at
1:00, 7:10, 9:10
ROBLOW. m
Shown at 2,00, 4,00, 7i20, 9,35
BARGAIN
MATINEES
SAT.
&
SUN.
All SEATS
1
2.50
OW PLAYING-THE
0
ILM YOU
OARE
NOT MIS
...
on:
than• mO'llte - an ~motional suf'ge
ln1
a mumph of blinding brightness. It should be
against the law not to••• 'The Cok-· "
.' ..
r,...,..,·flllo(;.J\01--
!Fr-iiJ
.
{'R.~~~~I
Sun.
to Thurs. E
•
Sat.
&
Sun. Mat.
Undeniably Dis
N
•
wn Matinees On
:50,4:35
•
Present this ad
and receive
$1.50 off
regular
adult admission.
Coupon good
•
thru
Feb. 13.
f
t>
·~::,
'
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by Lisa Ash· .
•
•
m:
a federal incoine tax r~ttir~.
retu~~-
,
.·. .
..
•
•
.
_
.
.
•
•
-The
~~1oos· is a new stud~ri(:
~If;ou
~o .not'm~~rid}ou owe
-The
1040EZ form is for the
-Student
Joans are never tax-
"fast form". in New York.
If
you
the government :money, .YOU)ue·.
The deadline for filing your. in-
come tax return is April 15 and, ac-
cording to District Manager Myr-
na Ross of H & R Block,
a
stu-
dent's requirements for filing in-
come tax
is
no different from
single person with
'no.
dependents . able. :When~ou begin to pay back· file this .form, the state will figure
.
subject ,to
•
i
the ·appropriat.e
•
who has a job and no deductions;
the iritereston a·studeilt Joan, this
your taxes for you.
• •
·
.
·::
•
penalties.
'·,
.·.··
,·
... ,
, ..
:,
.
.
::
•
however, many students cannot file
•·
may'be
.considered
a deduction.
..,.:..1_r
you are a senior and you get
-Finally,
when
·you·
:do·
not
•
•
-
•
this form and do not realize this.
·_:_Don't.
)jlink
.
you
.
can
a job far from
,your
- current
.
know wha~ to do
_when.
fili11g·in-
-~.
automatically claim yourself as ex-
residence, it is possible. to have a
come tax returns, find someone
-A student who has unearned·. empt just because you
are
a stu-
deduction for moving expenses.
who does know:·
·.
:
..
,
...
anyone else's.
..
Many students think they are dif-
•.
ferent under tax laws just because
they are students, but, said Ross,
"This
is a great misconception."
income
such
as interest; dividends,
dept. You must file a tax. return_if
-If
you
.do
not file an income
Assistant Business: Officer;,Ed
and/or tnlst income probably can-
·•
you meet the first requirement.·. tax return and the government
.
Frija said he has the l040EZ. arid
not file the l040EZ or the I040A
Note: The pe~alty for filing a false
owes you money, you have three
..
•
the 1040A forms, with-insfructiori
•
form and should consult someone
exemption is .a $500·.fine:
.
.
years to file in
'order
to re~rieve booklets, which sttident.s can,i,icl<
familiar with. the forms and their
-A
New York State tax return
•
your refund.
•
up from the Busi{!ess O~(ice.
;,
•
Ross, whose office is located· in
:
Poughkeepsie, gives these tax tips
requirements.
'
does not have to be filed if you do
-If you are an undergraduate
not earn moriey in New York.
receiving financial aid or have a
-In New York,
if
your gross in--
scholarship, this has no bearing on
.
come exceeds $3,350, you must file
for students:
.
·:
-A
single person under 65 who
has
a gross
income of $3,430 must
.
Letters:··:;:'.
...
•
,
·continued·from page 5'·
Ropny"·
•
"'
·:-
..
_
..
.,
--
...
--..
how you file your income tax
:.
a state
tax
return.
I
l
·1'.
I
.
:
·,
•
~}-~--•
.-
••
•
I
1'
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.
,
..
To the Editor:
·-rl-J-~-S-A-MM~
l
.·t
••
·As
1
read Carl MacGowan's
·.·,,:•:_'
-t-~.·
-e,·
--~!,_
Ej~·rie-_t-_
essay,
"Reagan is a Wimp,".'! was
,
1
V
Ii
Ii#
~
Kl:
I:
1
,
:wondering
if he.·had registered
•
1
•
•
·•
~-
!
r-llli\-lli'i--1
.himself
for the draft when he
•
.
.
J
Th~
ohe
Y,OU'te
wo.
1
.
rklng.
tor}
•• .
became eligible on his eighteenth'·
•
1
'
1
:i
birthday. If so, it sounds as
.if
he
•
.
l
Thpt'slwht yop•re; In_
90i1,ge}
·
•
r
..
.
is
anxious to participate in
some
-·-rvou•re-mt»k~-O)'flnve-stmeiff-+
J
overseas, military action against
;
wnlvoJr-fufur~..St~y~b-ttte-ri~hf-t
I.
Qaddafi that could occur through
•
•
!
trcick.lMai<iml,ze
fhathnv~stmen'.
Don't
I,
.
,Reagan's use of special military
.
.
forces. Carl MacGowan stated,
mess up youf hea,:
~-
~tay
~ftlad of
(h~L-
..
:
"We
need a leader who's not afraid
'
d_ mdetrtJOl1:iSl.
c:".fi5?i§.
-c:ro~·n,m.i
~-
m:rr:--..
·.
.
.
•
Auditions Open lb
.All
For Participation:
to use his military .... Who dO"esn't
•
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--~think
twice about using force in a
-+g,t-yqu-a;nY¥fh&f~,inli4bpuf
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l
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•
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•
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•.•.•
'desperate
situation. We want areal
1
l
l
!
I
t • , •
!
•
•
1
••
!
·•.
!
•.
Send
"Heart
Balloon.Message,
m~~~·real man truly a ma~
,vhen:·'
--------
/
f
to
your °friend $2.00·
,
•
·he
sends millions
of men to do bat-
1
i
I
s
1
Ml RI
T
1
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•
Delivered with. a
Song
$'2.50
tie? Reagan is obviously trying t9
.
-.-h.!~!§'11
; S
~.
1
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·
.
prevent the
connict which Carl
:
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.
!
.
l I
.!
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{
•
Contact.
a
·Marist
singer or. order
•
MacGowan supports. To remind
,-.......---.
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in.CCf65;
2/8
'.'."
2/13:
·
•
•
,_' :.\ ,. •
Mr. MacGowan, presidents are
•
•
•
•
.
i
• '
'
1
1
1
'·
1
•
I
,
•
•
~·
A
p\Jblic ,/e,vice\mess~ge
trom
•b!l
tl!!W Y!µ.!s..§14"!
i
•
e
Mus·t
be prepa1·
d
·rece1·pt
g·1•ven
elected
in this country to prev,eri'(·.
>
: •
l
?\lcohohsrn
and
lcoh~I
Abu•o and/Your c;ampuf new,.,aper.
.
.
•
.
.
.
.
•
•
.•
wars,notprovokethem.1'd·think·.:;.·
.,_."'··;;L.,>l;:.
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·.'_1''8;
7
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.
.
To
the editor:
On behalf of the Adult Student
.
Union, I'd like to
welcome
the
•
adull
students
of Marist. Whether
• ·
you
are
a returning
student or com-
.
ing to classes for the firsttime;;inay
.
:
your
experience at Marist be
all
you
~wish
it to be.
Undoubtedly you're busy. Most
of the adult students work
and
care
:
for
families
as well as
attend
class.
•
It
seems
there is never
enough time
• to do.
,vhat
needs to be done; and
•
'here
I arri asking
you for some
of
,
1
that precious time.
:·
There is an organization on cam-
pus geared to meet the needs of the_
•
adult
st'udent.
The Adult'Student''
·
-
Union holds meetings on
alternate
:
Thursdays in The School of Adult
.
Education at 5:30 p.m. Th'e next
.
meeting is scheduled for February
7. We need your input at these
.
meetings. This.is the, organjza~ion
•
,
which represents you ori the Coui1-,;
.
cil of Sfudent Leaders. In order
to
•
express
the needs of the adult stu-·
•.
derit;\ve need'to know what those
needs are. The meetings are
infoi-~
•
mai,'c_Irop-ins·are welcome'. Come
to the. meeting
·and;
let
your
voice
be he~rd. \Ve need·you!
.. •
..
•
, ;~;
.
Sincerely,
•
Canrizu M. Lyon
.
-
G
·.}
.
1836~1986
©
1911
$tat9ot
T
..
a1
.
One
~eek
only, save on the gold
ring
of
your
choice.
For Complete d,etails, see your Jostens representative at:
JOSTENS'
AMER.ICA"S
COLLEGE
RING'"
....
,
...
.
'
..;..~---------------------------------------February
6, 1986 - THE CIRCLE-. Page
9--
G~nter~l,l!I,Y.<Use
~to
b~,
determined,
by
need
.•
·by
David Scbifter
,
.
. • •.
• •
/Sarisola said.
-.
•
housing office had trouble making
Sansola said. This decrease ;nables
••· ,•, -·· '- :.'.\ • .. ·<.<• :
•
•
:_
f
~
•
< ..
Canterbury, which is located five ·room available·ror the number of • the college to offer more on-·
The decision fo use the
.Qmtcr-. •
.
miles from campus, housed 57. students who required housing. Ac-
campus housing. .
•
The four remaining residents of
Canterbury will have to find new
housing next semester; either on
campus or independently, accor-
ding to Sansola.
bury Apartments for Marist Col-
Marist students. In their attempt to
cording to a five-year plan in effect
Most of the students who were
lege students next.semester will de-
house all resident students on cam-
until 1988, the college will aim to
of legal c!rinking age were moved
pend on the • total • number of pus, the college has made accom-
keep enrollment at no more than
to the north end of campus where.
·students: needing housirig, • accor-
modations for most of the students
3,000 full:ti~e students.
alcohol is permitted. However, all
He believes a'student living off-
campus cannot receive the quality
of academic, social or mentor sup-
port available to those living on
campus. "Students generally like
living on campus," Sansola said.
"There's a lot more going for them
• ding to Steve Sansola, director of who have been living off-campus,
students
could
not
be
housing.
.•
, . •·• • . • ··according to Sansola.
•
• Sansola said there is currently
accommodated.
• The determination will be based • Four students living
in
orte unit
room on campus to house students_
"We have two or three juniors
.on the1nimber of new students the
have decided to remain at Canter-
who are residing off-campus. He
or seniors who we had to place in
college
will
be qousing and from • bury with college permission. One
said this is because enrollment fi- . Champagnat
Hall,"
he said.
• • enrollment predictions ·made by the . condition was that they provide.
qures are always larger in the fall • Champagnat is a non-alcohol area.
there."
''. admissions office.
-'
their own transportation. Buses no
semester.
---------------------------
....
:·· f'We·wm look afour currenfstu- .. longer travel between Marist and
"During the course of the
deil(capacity and decide whether Canterbury. "
semester people withdraw du_e to .
it is appropriate to lease or _rent
the . In November 1985, Marist Presi-
academic,financial or any number
apartments to _Marist students,"
dent Dennis Murray c\Dnounced
the
of reasons. And this is normal."
SUNY
sued over death
•
.
by Maryjo Murphy
dorms on the weekends, because
the college has an obligation to pro-
The parents of a 17-year-qld
tect as well as educate its students.
SUNY-New Paltz freshman who
While college officials refused to
died in his . _dormitory room last
comment on the case, citing a lack
semester have filed a notice to sue •• of.information about it, Eaton said
the state of New York.
the college is not planning to
. • The suit was filed in December
change • its alcohol policies in the
after the Ulster County coroner's
• wake of either the death or the
report said that Frank Freeman, of
lawsuit.
Spring Valley, N. Y., died of acute
Cody claimed Freeman probably
alcohol poisoning. According to L.
would not have died if someone in
David Eaton; dean of student life .• authority had been.on duty, saying
at SUNY-New Paltz, Freeman died . that there must have been noise and
in his sleep last September after
commotion sufficient to attract at-
drinking in • his dormitory room . tention. But Eaton said that, .
with friends. .
because the· students were behind
The suit charges the school with
•
closed doors, and no inappropriate
la.ck of education on alcohol and
behavior seemed to be going on,
its aftereffects, and.a lack of super- . there was no heed for a resident
vision in the dormitories, said. • assistant to check them.
Thomas J. Cody, the attorney
__ The school's alcohol policy has
representing the student's father,
been in effect since 1981. The
Herbert Freeman.
•
policy permits students legally old
In a telephone interview from his . enough to drink to have alcoholin
office in Pearl River, ·Cody said . the dorm rooms. However, alcohol
there should be more control in the
is not allowed in common areas,
. such as the halls, ,Eaton said.
Students who violate this policy are
penalized with fines, he added.
Eaton said the college did not
• fail in . its responsibilty to the
students. "College is an adult liv-
ing, learning experience," he said .
The freshman year is the worst
time in a college student's life, said
Cody. "It's his or her first thrust·
into the world, and it's scary," he
said, adding that freshman should
be kept separate
from up-
perclassmen because of the ad-
justments associated with freshmen
year.
There are no dorms at SUNY-
New Paltz specifically reserved for
freshmen.
"Freedom evokes many respon-
sibilities," said Eaton. Reflecting
on the incident, he said: "People
• do die from drinking alcohol. It's
reality."
• • Since the case is in its early
stages, Cody was unable to predict
its outcome.
Nightclub
.aims <to.
reopen
i?'!if~tiJj!t.:~::
•
f§~~l;3~;~t!E'.
··
£,;~?tr~:9!:!:!f&·~·~:
chance: ' • -
.
• •
sation piece,"
"I promised myself I would not
.The popular Poughkeepsie
•
·•
The Chance received national
wait more than six months to open
. nightclub, closed in May I 984 due - recognition due to the hundreds of
The Chance again," says Francese.
to a fire, is scheduled-to re-open by • performances by nationally-known
But insurance hassles forestalled
_: June 1, according to owner Peter artists. The careers of many artists
his goal.
• Francese,
.
. • .•
_
including Duran Duran and Cyndi.
"There have been delays in set-
• Major demolition ~ork has been Lau per were . fostered on the
Hing the claim with my insurance
completed and actual reconstruc- . nightclub's· stage. Because of its _company,..-says Francese.
~
tion of the nightclub will begin next Poughkeepsie
location,
The
Francese said he has liquidated
week, •
Chance served as a stop for many . some property and personal assets
• Although nearly two years have artists.on their way between Albany_,_ in order to fund the reconstruction .
. • separated The Chance from its and New York City.
The owner claims he has taken his
patrons, public support has re-
Francese said there will be a few, insurance company to court
mained high. Readers of the changes when • The. Chance re-· because of the settlement problems
Poughkeepsie. Journal voted the opens;
• ' and delays. ·However, Francese
• The Chance the bestplace to hear
"We will feature strictly major· claims the court date and settle-
' live music in a «Best of Hudson and nationalacts," said Francese.' ment could take three to four years
Valley;' readers' poll last
year,
even "This time around there will be no
so he decided to go-ahead with the ·
•. though it had been closed more video nights or college sponsored -, project himself.
than a year.-·
• ·.·.
e:vents. We will strive to become .
"I decided I could not wait that
"The support
we
h~ve received· more of ari entertainmentcenter or . long," says Francese. "I've already
.
from th~. people in the area is mini-theater.
•
waited long enough."
. Bard_··:_<_,._
••
_'._,
_____________________
c_o_n_ti-nu_e_d_r_r_om~p-a_g_e_l.
. to act in a financially prudent man- .
ner and with good judgement," he
members and
its
entire· fashion . correctly; the attorney general pro-
design program, In addition,
yided proper notice, and the hear-
Cernera said he feels ''absolutely" _ mg
~n~
procedures were p~operly
that Marist compares much more admmistered. The !aw provides for
closely to the type.of institution no further h~anng. We were
Bennett was than.does Bard.
.
g~anted ~?m:thmg we_cannot now
In a telephone interview Bard • give up, sm~ Bots!e
11
~-
President Leon Botstein said his . Cernera said
!Vf
ar!st is only tr~-
school will oppose any legal action mg ~o protect Its nght to a fair
- Marist might take to re-open the heanng, not take money away
hearing.
.
fr~!° ,Bard. .
. .
"By the law if we understand it
It s not hke this IS a grant
'
awarded
to
them that we are try-
ing to get a part of. We are not try-
CMS--
_Continued
from
page l
violation.
But the account elimination may
not be permanent, Falanga said.
"We intend to look at it for the Fall
Qf 1986," he said. He added that
more accounts could be available
at a later date after the Computer
Center finds the best way to
organize the disk space and· to
manage a larger number of
accounts.
ing to undercut them," said
Cernera.
Botstein said the important ques-
tion to ask is: "What was the
donor intent?"
"The state has a responsibility to
do its very best to fulfill the intent
of the donor. ·That's the criterion,"
he said.
•
"That's Leon Botstein's opinion
and he is certainly entitled to it, but _
I disagree;'' Cemera said.
.
Bard has no choice but to op-
pose, said Botstein. "Marist's
board of trustees and administra-
tion should be responsible enough
said.
CIRCLE CLASSIFIEDS
ARE BACK
On sale starting tomorrow
. in the cafeteria and Donnelly
Choices That
Make a Difference
-''THE JUNKIE PRIEST''
Fr. Dan Egan
TIME:
7:00-10:00 p.m.
PLACE:
Campus Center Theater
TONIGHT
Sponsored
by:
·The Personal Development Center
•-
I
i'
)
J
-<~.-
t
-,~-
{
i
:
,!
•.
'
..
Tuition•·cut·••set·;\;8,t
·Bit~
·
··, ...
'
-.
:-,
. -~
\•--~--->~-:-.:._::_
..
/.:
.•
·;\.::·---:.~-<-'··:\:~:.~-
by Len Johnson
home state, provided they maintain . benificial at ~arist,-:-.
.
.. ,.;,·
r
a."B" average.at ~ai-d. Students · ,"Their. program. is
..
~eally: a
Bard College in· Anna11dal~.
..
living more than 400 miles from the . marketing. techriiqtie/' she. said,
N. Y .,
has announced a scholarship
scho.ol will also-receive the cost of., '·'It's an attempt to draw attention
program that would offer certain
.•
o·ne· rnund-trip
traris'portation
•
to the school through the mass
•
public high school seniors a reduc-
ticket. each year.·
.
•
...
•
media."
.
..
,
.
.
.
.
.
.
cd tuition,
.
.
Bard will also cover any finan-
Atkin also said that the Bard
Seniors in the top ten of their
cial aid which students in
.the
pros • program is too exclusive because it
class are now eligible for a $14,550 gram would have qualified for at
is Hmited to top students. "We
per-year education al Bard for the
their local public college.
make a variety' of scholarships
price of a public college education
The program,·which will include. available to top students· as well,
in their own _state, according to a
art
undetermined
nu.mber., of
but we want. to put our° money
Bard press release.
students, is. funded
:
totally by
towards those ,vho need it most,"
The program was devised by
trustees and will not raise education
she said.·
:
Bard College President Leon Bots• costs to other students.
•
tein in :;in attempt' to address in·
"We feel that America's· top
Atkin·also said that such a pro-
creasing ·i.;ompetition between
students should have an affordable
gram would be difficult to ad-
publk and private
schools
for top• private education made available to
minister fairly, and that many
students.
.
•
•
them," said Bard Director of
students might resent not being in-
Under the new program, which
Public Relations Tina Green in an
eluded in the program.
'
will begin this fall, students .who
interview last week.
Asked if a similar program could
qualify will pay only what they
Marist Director of Financial Aid
9e incorporated at Marist, Atkin
would pay for tuition, room and
•
Karen Atkin expressed doubt over
said,
"I
wouldn't warit to
·be
the
board
a1
a public college in their• whether such a program could be·, one to administer it."
:
.
'
·.
..
•
~.
t
.
···"'
AI
umnus
______________________
c_on_t_in_u_ed_r_r_om
__ P_ag_e_3_.
violent, verbally abusive and sex-· an offer to a troubled family -
a
an exploitative way, but
w
come
ually provocative, Alwon.said.
way to provide an incentive not to
look at the won_derful things that
. ''.The hardest part is recruiting
have so many children," Al won ex-
are happening."
.
competent people. Ones who want
plained. "Funds should. be provid-
•
•
Alwon. described his work and
to work with kids who don't say
·
ed so a woman can have her tubes
similar treatment programs as
thank you,".he said. "The parents
tied if she wants to after her third
"reactive,
_doing
what we have to
are often ungrateful, too."
•
unwanted kid."
•
to keep the cities from burning."
"The kids assume you are the
•
On those days when Alwon is
He would rather prevent the c_on-
•
ones who· took them away from
tempted to give in to discourage•
ditions. t_hat
·create·
society's
their homes. As bad as it was, it
ment, he remembers the boys who
problems.
.
.
.
was their own real home," he
•
come back and let him know· their
"The political convictions and
explained.
years at Walker were good ones.
idealism are still there, but we-have
After many years of struggling to
That makes him ready to do it all
to look at the economic realities of
.help
people who are unable to.help
over again, but he would like some
America,"• he said-. "It means
255
Main Street,.New
Paltz,
New
York 12561
Rt.
9W,
Milton,
New
York.(5
Mins. from Marist) •
:,,--,·
• 255"4578
795-2326
'*Free.Trial
Session·*'•
,
~
.
'
'
·.,
.
'.
'
Buy: 1 0 Visit Package
:
..
Get: 5 Free Visits
·tor:a
friend:.
• •
·*
Offer· good !hn.J 2/1_4.,
20% STUDENT
_"0/SCOUNT-:.
themselves,
Alwon's
idealism
_help.
changed tax structures and more
llnot·F'F.
seems more firmly rooted in reali-
''We need to challenge young
•
socialistic economics; and a greater
f"EATURING
.
>- .
, ,
1
.
.
ty no,v than it may have been at 20.
people· and get the better ones to
percentage of. income going to
.
•
SYSTEM··.
TANNING BEDS,
_.
And he acknowledged that if reality
help us do thinking at all levels,"
taxes. Since Reagan took office
·
··-rhe.
Most. Tnisted Name
as he describes it sounds uncom-
he said. ''The press and television
we've .triple<.l defense spending
;
11
Tannin
11
.
monly harsh, perhaps he is just be-
..
_
shows should take a closer look at· while cutting social ser.vices. It;s a
•
~.,..SC:·\.
STEREO HEAOPHONES,
a
• COOLING FANS
•
ing more realistic than people want
the reality oqhe settings -
not in
hell of a statement."
·
·
.
t
..
S· A
•
·•
• '·
:,
"
to hear.
•
•
•
,
'>....,;.'
------'-----------------------------------------------.---------------------•
"As the poor struggle to get their),
'
•
• .,
·
,
·
·•~To~:~:tfi~~~?F~!:i~•··
.•
......
,,~fo~r···JotN·•·oun·a--~,1-1111'·ty;,-r,·
...
~:;.i-'J- ......
"V..'e've become a two class
•
•
•
•
•
',·/''
'·''-
society - the rich get richer and the
poor have children who rape us and
steal from us," Alwon lamented.
"We don't have enough jails;
forget rehabilitation, the aim is
•
containment."
.
• Bui he does not have us confr~nt
sodety's problems without offering
some solutions.
,
"We
need to find ways to extend
.
..
Gifts
•
hit high
.
NEW YORK, NY
(CPS)
.
:Coporate
generosity to colleges_:, •
·motivated
either by kindness or
ii'.':
suspicion thartax breaks for: gi\i.·.
-ing
may soon dry up
::C..
hit record'·
.
levels last ·year, the Council . for
'.Financial
Aid to Education.,
•·.
i(CFAE)
says ...
,
.,
,
. · , ..
:
:
A huge 150 percent jumpin•gifts-
·
in-kind helped push total corporate
contributions:to education to $1.6.,.
;billion
in 1984, up 15:2 percent
•
•
from the-year before,: the council ,
;reports.
' '•
•
•
"
•
·-
·
•
:,
The council, together
_with
The
!Conference·
Board,: anri_tially
surveys the· giftagivirig habjts
•
of
·Fortune
500
companies. For the
:third_.~onsecutive
year,. they found
,educatiori
receiyed.38_:,9
p<;rcent of
lall
corporate 1onations.
.
• .
,
An increasing pr<>P.Ort_iori
ofthe
;gifts
_:_ just over one-fifth -
is
:company
products and other pro-
;perty, explains
•
Linda Cardillo
'Platzer of The Conference Board.
. Property donations jumped 200
_percent;
company· products 15()
;percent
and
securities
100 percent.
;
Computers comprise·an increas•
·ing
amount of property·and pro-
•
:duct' donations, Platzer says.
'.
•
Several years
ago,
Apple' Com-
·puter
pioneered the practice
·of
donating co~pllte~s
to
schools and
.
colleges as a way to start students
:using their produc;ts, and, the com•
:P~ffY
hoped, to,
keep
them buying
A}!les after_ tl\ey gradu~ted_.
•
..
,.,
.
:
•
1955
·•.
GRAND~PRI
•
PACE CAR
..•.
,.;~
sre>c::i<.~>-
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RT. 9W HIGHLAND.
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-· Fun,,Performance-''
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Some Avoiloble'W,th':Air
Coiidition
..
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TAXES
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.,
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.......
.-
13a$Ketbrawl!
~ounded Hk~--
.. Beat _up Bailey" fill-
ed the already-te~se air at McCann.
'.
•
A~~oU:n~er into headset, and
• -
•
it
did happen much the way I
.(;,
'
·by
.
Q.rian:
O'_Connor
/
·•.
herice to. the ears· of listeners all
·
•
described it, except Smolka wasn't
over the
-valley:
~The Foxes are
•
..
floored by McCants, nor was the
_
down 75-64
•
wffn-jµst under two
rest of Wagner's bench. Skirmishes
arid a half minutes left. Bailey has
..
broke out all over the court;. This
..
been hot for Wagner in the second
is how it happened, to.the best of
,_
·-
half, arid with
•
.the way this is go-
my knowledge.
_·
•
\
i.
ing the crowd of 2,701 is beginn-
·
Smolka
had.: words.
-
with
.
ing to dwindle. The Foxes are hav-
Mccants on the inbounds. As
.
ing their troubles, the guys on the
McCants turned away, he shoved.
floor seem frustrated. It's an in-
Smolka, a 6'7" senior forward, in
..
bounds pass for Wagner - and He>ly
·
the face. Smolka pursued,· Bailey
hit McCants in the face
·and
all
heck let go. Wagner's coach, Neil
Kennett, led his men onto the court
,..
thursday
morning·
quarterbac~:
,
•.
much· the-· same way Teddy
Roosevelt went up the hill with the
Rough Riders, although Kennett
never really yelled charge.
.
There were
•
shouts, coaches
._
holding players, officials getting
.
Co~v
!
Wagner.!s Dave Smolka said
caught in the middle, piles of
something· to Ron McCants and
players and personnel. Wagner's
McCants decked him! The Wagner
Largest
Agbej_emisin
.
kicked
bench is clearing and they're all be-· Mccants, people tumbled all over,
ing decked by the Foxes!"
•
but Marist got in good shots, too.
A ringside seat: last Saturday's game against Wagner raised temperatures and fists as both
benches emptied for a brawl.
•
(Photo by Mike Patulak)
Well,'that's the way the.fans -
I thought I saw Mark Shamley put-
.
the ones who stayed -
at the
ting on boxing gloves, but my mind
McCann Center wished it would
was clouded with the excitement.
have been this past Saturday. The
•
• Anyway, it kept on going. This
game was dragging; Marist was· wasn't one of those five-second
.
missing· shots, Terrance Bailey
jobbers, then say we're sorry.
wasn't. Wagner was controling the
Security guards and Poughkeepsie
pace ·or the game and eve~y Fox
police got in the fun. There was
follower was getting, let's call it,
more shouting and more tumbling,
d
~players
fell to the floor, bombs ex-
e
gy.
.
.
After all,- the Punk Den had
-
pl oded in the background
-
and if
nothing to tape up to the wall after
.
you really listened, you could hear
those three consectutive alley-oops
"The I 812 Overture."
early in the first half. People were
The fans went, needless to say,
He was treated and released
from St. Francis Hospital
•
for a
split lip and possible concussion. It
is still unclear how Van Drost was
leveled. The hope of finding out
was nixed when cable Channel Ten
stopped the tape for the melee.
What was Channel Ten thinking,
frying
to
seperate sports violence
and television? Haven't they ever
·seen
the NHL?
looking for a reason to cheer, to
wild. They had their reason to
Marist lost the game 85 to 81,
root and to generally get down-
•
cheer. Thankfully, nobody storm-
but not really to Wagner, they lost
right ugly. Sure the Marist 'fans
-·
ed the court. The referees couldn't
.it
to Bailey. He, as they say, went
kindly applauded when Bailey
even break up the players and
off. The nation's leading scorer put
broke the McCann Center scoring
.•
coaches. It would've went beyond in 95 in two games. Kennett said
·mark
of43 points, (he h'ad46at the
.
ugly fo gruesome. If that's·what
that B_ailey could've had 60. He
gam_e's end) but he's ?n the other_
.
comes next.
was 18 of 26 from
-the
line and
,
...
team.
. ..
. .
•
.
..
.
•
The cheering quieted when the missed the front end of many one
:\:
Tiiose eager-to-cheer fans found
·_
:
smoke finally_ cleared
•.
What
_\Vas
and ones.
.a
reasonto get up and get ugly_Jeft
was Wagner's Andre Van
.
;;when
the game
0
of basketball turJ1;,,
.:J?rost,,
-__
l:l_
6'P'
jµni9r guar~, fac
7 .
The loss \Vas due to Marist f?ul
"ed
to
1
basketbfawi,Everyone rose;'\·(down· oil. the cotir_t:
1t
.took:some
·<tro!-1ble,
being ou~~p~'ysicaled
•
on
ili.uch·like they.do.for the'National
_
·•·
time before;'on his second attempt,
,_•the
inside and rom!)ed by. Bailey.
.:Anthem
bufeVen faster. Clench-
·Va·n
Drost left the floor, more ap
0
The Foxes had no outside shooting,
-ed
fists' arid shouts that to me
propriately, the ring.
•
•
with apologies to Carlton Wade
who hit some late in the game, to
balance the attack. Bring back
Steve Eggink! A faulty inside game
without the backing of outside
shooting will not win games.
Fans don't like to watch their
team lose, especially when they
know the team is good. They can
get mean.
Kennet, who
·was
as angry as
Matt Furjanic (or is that Herb?),
received no technical foul as Fur-
janic did during the game. Tim
Beckwith got one, too. Mccants
and Smolka got ejected for
fighting.
Kennet would not let the writers·
talk to Bailey or anyone after the
• game. The police, five cars of
them, escorted Wagner to their
bus.
I
was among the faction of fans
that was rooting for a sort-of
miracle come back, not t~e all-out
.war.
It wasn't much to ask the Fates.
considering I had asked for 40
points for the Patriots a week prior
and got nothing. Well, the Fates,
this week gave me the cor.1e back
for which I had asked, but it seems
I forgot to ask for a victory, too.
The Red Foxes gave Wagner a
fine run for my money. After the
brawl, Wagner and Kennet thought
they had it wrapped up. But ·Maris!
cut an
I
I-point Wagner lead at
fight time, to a three-point deficit,
with 42 seconds lcfl. It was really
something to cheer. The eff on was
commendable.
I was still cheering the Marist
_players on during the ride home.
Rea\\y, ask the guys \ deafened.
But the Foxes did not get a needed
win.
This column was reported with
assistance from Dan Pietrafesa,
who was sitting ringside.
·-women
swimmers improve
Monlllouth· stops_1ady hoopsters
.
.
_,
:,.
by Michael
J.
Nolan
and the 400 medley relay. Karen
•
by
Be~ Ramos.
.
..
·surge
had them behind 22-19 at
.
bounds and was a key force in set-
Oitizinger set a school record in
_
.. • •·.
•
.
•
•
.
•
.
.. .. ,
halftime.
-
.
ting up the Red Foxes under the
The Marist College women's
the 100-yard freestyle, Nancy
•
The Marist. wom_en's bask_
etball
.
•
..
.,
..
:; _·._
swim team has improved despite
Champlin in the 200 freestyle,
_.
basket.
team was swept away by Mon-
:
.
-
.
a worse· record then the last two
and Lisa Burgbacker set a·
mouth. College's
second-half
The sec~nd half, h~~~ver, was
Head Coach' Patty Torza said
years,
according
to Jim
school record and qualified for
orislaught last Sunday, falling
to
•
~II Monm!'uth. The visiti!lg t~am
sheexpectstheteam,plaguedwith
Billesimo,
women's
swim
theNationalQualifyingmeetin
.
the conference leader 56-44 at the
.
•
•
n~c~~ased
1
~s lead by 9_ pomts
JUS
t
injuries thus far, to come on strong
- coach.
three-meter diving .
•
-McCann
Athletic Center. The loss
·;
four minutes into the ~econd half,
•
in the season's se<;ond half.·
The swimmers are faster this
·•
dropped Marist's ove'ratrfecord to
-
-
and Marist wasn'tgetti~g th~ inside
The team has posted a 6-5
year, said Billesimo. "We have
s~13;·and its conference mark t<>'·.: shots that ha~ kept them.alive ear-
..
••
~'We're
a
bette·neam than our..
_
record compared to last year's
top
competiJors
in
_
each
_
3
_
5
;
• -,.
,
,
_
:
,.
'.
ly on.
• .
..
_
..
:
.
,_.
.
_
-
.
record indicates,''·she said. "We've_
-
'6-2-1,
but the team has upgrad-
_
stroke," he said. "We can back
.
.
lost several close··games. I
_think
ed its schedule and now faces
these swimmers up with second
;
Befo~e Sunday's game: the Red
.
Senior Mary Jo Stenipsey had a
>
we'll pull out of it.'_'
.
better co111petition.
-
and third place finishes."
•
.Poxes_
had beeQ.tiedfqrJifth place
:-
g:¢i~;high
_11_
ret,ounds;and
·~~
the,·.
•
, ....
Marist's ne~t four $ames
_wiil
be
The team broke five records '
The season's close is March 7
··:
in': the·_ Metropolitan Confere~ce
team s._ lead
1
!!g scorer·
,wi
th 12
•
away;
this weekend while competing in
after ihe ECAC Swim Tourna-
,,
·,: with Queens college." --~
·_.
·.points.Freshman
Jacalyn O~NeH,
• •
.
•' .·
.
.
,the.· Women's. Metropolitan
. ment, but Billesinio said he
;
) · •
·>
--· • •
: :_:_<:·:
-
•
•
•
•
-
and· senior Paoline Ekambi had 8
The game was
J>OS
tponed
'from
· Swimming and Diving Cham-
hopes this season will be the ad-
, . .
_':-•
Marist. domi~atei most· ~f- the
-
•
and
-
7
•
·points~
respectively; and
;
Iast Friday~ when Monmou th
·
pioriships. School records were
vent of a strong established pro-
_.
• '.
<:_first
half,
,but
,f
la_te Monmouth
•
-juni?r :Jennifer Gray
:
had
.
10 re:-
:
developed b~s problems.
•
broken in the 200-yard freestyle
gram that is respectable.
~-~x½~~t¥~~tir-filf
>>···
..
··s~t,,:='.E;
:2i·c•'~~~~~:.~~:--~•·i,
•.
'I0Jf
;~;.~;t
:~~,:.;~;~~~~~
..
_ •
~c-·are·many
a<;nvitie,s
off~-_·,
-,_'
Another r~n
·why
intramural .·_
games: would a!Iow, students, to : : '. four meet( remairtirig ·and_ the
.
half hour daily work ·out.
· -
_ • ·--. for-
·both
"men
and _
women. The
-
participation increased is because
•
work together and have fun, Lynch
most cjiffic.iilt part of _ the
The team has also impro\'ed
• 'following
are some
of
the activities
••
of
_
a
heightened-. aware~s
_
of
• _
said.
Games such as
tubing, water
-
·
1
·
.
h
·
with the times they. record. The
••
--~-·-available • this ,semester: tc~
.-·_h,ealth/
Lyri~h :said;: ''.Th_ere are<· volleyball, softb~U~ tug of war and·_ -
~c~~l
~a~_et:~~r.
inen's
speed of the swimmers as· a
•
,··volleyball;
five-ori-fiye basketball;·.:
some
·.phenomenal· athletes at
:
mattress races would be scheduled.,
varsity swim coach, said the
whole has increased, he said;
•
,coed·
bowling, raquetball tour-
Marist," he said.
•
•
•
••
• -
'
-
•
·_
·_
•
•
.
.
•
•
team should win thrceorthe last
"The times posted are the best
:-'n~erits
and coed indoor and
out-
'
•.
The
teams
nmto
a
set
schedule,
'
four meets and finish two meets_
in the team's history," said Van
.door
tennis. Other activities such
as
• :.
•
•
lntramurals are not limited to
•.
and everything ends up in touma-
under
so
percent.
Wagner.
field hockey, softball, Olympic
•.
students only. They are also of:'.' ment· play. Lynch praised the
•
The team is improving, said
•·
tearn' handball and aerobics are. ferecf to-staff members and the
-
MaristComputerSocictyforthcir
Van Wagner. There are 17
Van Wagner, who has been
proposed for this semester.
adf!linistration.
~ffon in keeping statistics-for the
swimmers and divers compared
coaching the Marist College
•
·-
intramural program.
to 13 last year, and· there is
men's swimming team since
There has been a huge increase
in· student participation in in•
tramurals, according to Lynch.
Lynch believes that incentives such
as shins and trophies for the win-
ning teams are factors in the suc-
cess of the program. There may be
a trophy case to hold intramural
trophies, Lynch said.
Intramural Director
Mike
Malet
greater commitment to the
1976, has intentions of moving
and Lynch have many goals for the
According to Lynch, intramurals
team, he said.
-
to a Division One program that
program. One goal is to· have a
is a good way to make friends.
With no seniors on the squad,
offers scholarships and is more
sport which women could solely
Students have
to
be into it and en-
the ream is looking
to
increase
competitive, he said. He said he
identify with. Since many women
couraged to come out and play,
its talent and post more vie-
feels he can successfully coach
have shown interest in field hockey,
said Lynch. The success of the pro-
tories. ..The team is making
at a more competitive level.
it may be .offered this spring ex-
gram depends not only on par-
headway in attracting swim-
The team will compete in the
elusively for women.
ticipation, but also on good sport-
mers," he said.
.
Metropolitan Swimming and
Another goal of the program is
to have dorm competitions. These
smanship, Lynch said. "Student
Van Wagner said the team is
Oivjng Championships on Feb.
spirit can drive the whole pro-
categorized by commitment.
22, and finishes the season with
gram," he said.
.._ Oyer a two week training pro-
the conference tournament.
.....
..
!.,
d
n
It
I"
'J
~·
\
'
il
1\
,1
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i
"
.,_
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'i
1.\·
i
11
~
~
~
d
\
__
_,.
;_
..
1
~
\
,I
i
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1
..,...
(.
t
·1
{
,·
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l
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~
~)'
ii
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:,.;:-.~_~·-.-~.:~
•
"(
:·_
> .:·:~
:·>~<
' ••
Rik Smits sets to.sinkone for .
the Foxes last weekend in.a fail-
ed comeback attempt :against
Wagner..
. .
(Photo by M~~e Patulak.)
\.
,
COllleS
to
Marist;
EfVin
dUO
must
oe
haltecl
by Dan · Pietrafesa
. 81-80 overtime win over host· . Percarski had 11 points and 10
Fairleigh Dickinson University.
rebounds.
•. Long Island University will o~ce
i'.DU was leading by 19 at the half.
The Marist highlight in the game
again have two brothers inthe star-
The Foxes will have the height
was the three alley-6op plays to
ting)ineup this.Saturday at 3 p.m
advantage up front with the Jones'
Smits, Percarski and Mccants.
at the McCann Center, but this duo • standing only 6-5. That advantage
Kennett called time out to change_
are guards and not for~ards. . ..
showed in the earlier meeting last
his zone defense from
a
3-2 to a
The Ervin brothers, Andre (21.l
month when both Rik Smits and •• 1-3"
1. . • •
··.
•• •
•
. • •
.
ppg.) and Mike
(10.4
ppg.), wiJl be
Miro Percarski both topped 20
"I didn't do anything against
•.hereto play at guard; but Rod arid
points in the Marist 8Q-73 victo,ry • them," said Kennett. "Largest
Carey Scurry will not be starting at ·•· at LIU, the first Red ·Fox victory
Agbejeminsin and Dave Smolka
forward. Carey, theniost domi- •• ever-at the horrie of the Blackbirds.· did. We went to
a
1-3-1 to take
• nantplayer in the conference the_, .
.
·
. . .
away that pass away."
.
past few years, is now playing with • •
Wagner _85 Manst
81 .
.
Marist 59.FDU 57 .
the Utah Jazz.
•
. Terrance Badey scored _46
p01!1ts
· The ·Ervins· are .half the return-
and grabbed 12 rebo_
unds m leadmg
• Ron McCants buzzer beater
h S h
k
. lifted the Foxes to victory after a
ing players from last years veteran
t e _ea aw s to victor}.'.:
time out w_ith 38 seconds designed
team that finished third in_the con-
• •~Everybody thinks l'm crazy
a final play that had four guards
ference. Andre scored 30 ma los-
when I tell them about the kid,"
in the game. Marist had two guards
ing . cause . in J:1n1c1~ry
against
·Wagner coach Neil Kennett said.
at the top of the key .and two on
Manst, while Mike JUSt became
"You· have. to see him. And he
the wings
00
the final play;
. _eligible
to play this ~e~ester. This • didn't even play :well."
,
may be t~e only team m the. con-
Everyone else associated with the
ference with less court experience
Wagner team -also agreed that
than the Foxes. •
Bailey did not play well.
.
•
Marist head coach Matt Furjanic
Talking about brothers playing
said that he used everything-deferi-
up front, the Blackbirds will have sively to stop •Bailey, but Bailey
two non-related Jones' lip there.
responded by scoring.
•
Freshman center Greg Jones (15.1
, . ·,
.
·. ppg. and 9 rpg.) has been named
Largest Agbejeminsin (19 points
ECAC ·Rookie .of the Week four • and
i
1 • rebounds) hurt the Foxes
times in .the past eight weeks while even more with his work under the
junior Bob "Refrigerator" Jones
boards;· ·-
.
,
(6.4.ppg, and 3.5 rpg.) as the. top
• However,Ahe Foxes did outre-
man off the bench scored 14 points bound the Seahawks-47-43. Smits
.. in the closing two minutes of .. paced theteam-with26.points and
: regulation in leaaing his team to a
16 boards .while :frontcourt mate
. > ' ' .',.
,
' . ;- ;' , '-\·.
=-;.,-':'
,
• The Foxes·were down by eight
with 3:15 when they scored the next
11 points to take a 57-54 lead with
59 seconds left. The Knights scored
on a three. point play by Jaime
Latney with 40 seconds remaining.
Marist shot 70 percent from the
field but 28 turnovers and 5-18
from.the charity stripe negated the
super-performance. FDU shot on-
ly 35 percent from the field but was
17-21 from the free throw line.
Smits (16), Percarski
(10),
Shamley (15) and Mccants
(11)
- scored in douJ:,le figures for .the
Foxes. •
fO>C'
trail
by Dan Pietrafesa
Congratulations
.
Lisa
Burgbacker
on qualifying for
the,National Qualifying meet in
the threesmeter diving event,
Her · performances
in the
Metropolitan
• Conference
·:swimming and Diving Cham~
pionship .at Hofstra in the one
, and three-meter-dives-are both
school records. The women
broke five school records in all
at the meet...
•
•
Indoor track· coach
Steve
Lurie
feels that his team is a
strong contender to win the
• NewYork Collegiate Track and
Field .Championship...
-:
1--The
Marist win at FDU was
• coach.
Matt Furjanic's.
100th
career· victory ... Rik Smits· is
16th
in
the nation in field goal •
percentage at 61.7/. .. My 20th
birthday wiUbe one that I will·
never. forget beca9se I witness-
ed the
Battle • Royal
between
Marist and Wagner in the most
:bizarre game ever. Poor of-
ficiating led .to the start of this
misfortune which resulted in
some bruises for members of
.. both teams, but Wagner's head
coach
Neil · Kennett
and
Ter-
rance Bailey
are at much fault.
. Kennett was really upset with
the brawl because "it let them
back in ·the game,'-' but he led
his team out . on the ·court to
•
duke it out While Marist coaches
·JilJ~Ifrtci(,~;e;p~~f;ljJiffJri-Spatk
fz.~'<:Jtey
··1earn
•
were able to hold back- their .
• ··•pl;iyers until that_pqiiji .. Bailey' • '.•·
•· delivered his .second:.punch,c;>f
'··,
-
,:.:~.
,
.
by Ken Foye
.third;p~riod o~tbu;st bythe R~d
game~ f9r intending·
io
'injure
,!in
Marist co-captain Craig Their.
. · . .. . ,
Foxes·told the story. • •
.•. 'opponeni..
provided .more good news for his
1986 has been an exceHent year
Marist scored three third~period •
uwe played very'.well
in the third
team by announcing that·an earlier
so far for the: Marfst ice l)ockey goals. in its .first game of the
period, "_Lucey-said
afterthe-game. '.game against C. W. Post at Nassau
team - the Red Foxes having won
1985-86 season to ·defeat King's
"We've never played that well '·Coliseum was awarded to.the Red
three·games in a row since the new
Point, 4-3.
.
before."
, Foxes by forfeit. Post won the
• year began, with two victories com-
• After the visitors took an-early
.Bil! Drolet .-'-· who was. nearly • garrie, 6-3, but was later caught us-
ing last .week.·
. . •. • 2-0 lead, the Red Foxes scored five
benched for disciplinary reasons by • iJig ineligible players.This decision
While the Chicago·Bears were •• times for a 5-2 advantage but.let it
·coach •-.Jim Peelor. • -
scored . and Marist's two victories last week
. pounding .on the. New . England • slip away fro01 them:·,After two .Marist'sfirs(two,goals; both in the
give the Red Foxes·. a)-3 overall
Patriots in New Orleans in Super : _-periods.of
wild/wide.:open·hockey, fir.st.period, and assisted on three •record, 7--2 in .the Metropolitan
Bowl XX, the Red Foxes were hav-: the-teams were deadlocked, 5~5. - • others Jor five ··total. points. Tim • Conference.
·
the day when he sucker punch-
ed· Ron Mccants, Earlier he had
words with Tim Beckwith On
the way to the _locker room at
the ·half. This was denied by •
. Kennett. Why dido 't Bailey get
thrown out for j:)eing the third
man in the fight, or Kennett get
•• one technical for arguing? Why
was Smolka allowed to stay on
the bench after being ejected?
Bai!ey's skills on the floor are·
second· to none
.in
the con-
.ference,··but his attitude may
ing a tougher iime in New Jersey:,.
But the· Red Foxes dominated
:i
_Graham/(2 ,goals;
I 'assist) and
against William Paterson. ButTil!l
the final ·rrame;-outshooting.King's : Keith Blachowiak:(l'goal; _2
assists) •
slow ,down his track towards
NBA
fame. After things cleared
,Last Sattirdaynight:'s homedate
• up, Marist did ·have-its oppor-
Graham's second straighthat trick 'Point 25-1 l'in the' la~t period and :': each I:iad•a
.hot stick as well for the
gave Marist an 8~6 ~etrtjpoHtan ..• scoring five.goals. N.eil,Lucey led
>
Red 'Foxes; :Curt .Hawkes scored
i
Conference victory:-- .
Maris.t -with four
thii-d~period.c✓ .t!}eremainingMarist-ioal.and.also
with -the
·Culinary
Institute was,·
tunities to~win it but failed to
cancelled;:Marist was scheduled to
, convert on its chances ..
.!
hope
face Montclair State last night at
you had the opportunity to read ·
. In ·a home garrie,IastWednesday •
•• goals, the most by a Marist player ,'Chipped in an ~sist. . ::' ':·
••
..
. night, ·Maj-Jst d_efeatt;clJh~'.U.S. , in:one game-.this season. Marist
> ,
It ~as·a wild, fast-paced game,
Merchant Marine Academy (King's goaltender Greg·Whitehead played '·. one which \Vas fun for everyone~
Point) for the second time this .year anot~er strong game/stopping 42
cept the goalies. Marist finished
. by a 10-'6 count. As in. the previous • . shots while ;allowing • five goal~ with 67 shots on goal while King's
.the Mccann Ice Arena.
.. Journal·. sportswriter
John
• The Red 'I-oxes' next game is on
Bakke's
column on his orie on
Wednesday nightathome.against
one . game with . Rik Smits.
Metro .Conference foe Fordham:
.· Bakke's made up rules and
The gamejs scheduled. to start at
humor made the story well
meeting between the two-teams,_ a,' before being ejected ·tate -in ·:the • Point produced 49 shots.
9:30 p;m.
•
•••
•
•
worth reading.·Bakke is a 1985
graduate, of Marist ... Former
Marist freshman ·Bob Francis is
;Indoor trickrllnn,:~rs,Work.irig:as .. a ·team·
:.•---·
-, , --. _,
-_.:··
. ,;.
.
,,,._
- : :-
-.••.
_-
-·:.
• -.
.~:-.-. , ••
-~c
•
..
-
•
. -
-..
-·:
.·transferring.to another school.
Look for hirri to go to Boston
University where his high school
.
.
..
--
~
.
.
. .
.
.
The Marist- indoor track team
, fared ,well at tw_o meets this ·past
·.· weekend, ..
.• . .
.
..
· .•
·: • At the .. 15th Annual ·Princeton •
Relays in New Jersey onSunday,
the· men's team placed second in
: the·classified distance medley with
:.a time of 10:27.86. Columbia
• University • took first place· at
·. 10:'18.57.
Rounding out the top five
. was . Philadelphia Textile, Rider
.College and DrexeIUniversity.
Peter Pazik, a senior, ran the
final mile leg of. the medley and
finished 3:06 ahead of the runner
•
for Philadelphia Textile. Garry
Ryan, a sophomore, notched a
seasonal best for himself in the •
quarter-mile leg. Ryan hit I :59. 7;
he is· the first runner this year to
break the two minute mark. Marist
. broke that mark only five times last
season.
• coach just began his first season
··as
a coach .... -
• • -
~
Senior· .Don· Go4win . kept the • the Union and Siena teams. with
Canada, Unive~sity
of.
Rocheste't
pace moving in the !talf-mile and ·, tiITles of ,10:59 and 11:0~.7 -and·St. Laurence at
Sf.
Laurence ____________
...,..
Don.Reardon, ·running with foot : respectively. • •• : •. • '
,
.on Saturday.
.
In'
·tramu
.. ra·
ls
trouble, put in a
3: 14.4 in the three • • Pazik won .the 1,000 with . a -
On Feb. 15, Marist goes against
•
• ••
quarter-mile ..
••
'-2:37.8, his.personal best. Lurie ex-
approximately30 teams at the Col-
k •
·. · ·
·
· •
plained that Pazik had. never run
legiate Track Conference at Yale.
lck. off
Coach Steve Lurie was pleased
the I ~000 and was unsure of· the
Lurie said that Yale's· track; is·
with the team's output and said : pace; "He just followed along and
reputed to be the quickest in the
by Maryjo Mul'J)hy
there is marked improvement. "We • had enough to pull it out; he won
Northeast. "Last year our four
are a couple of weeks ahead of
by 20 meters," Lurie said.
fastest times came on the Yale
where we were last year," he said.
For the women,· Mary Ellen . track," he said.
The medley ran a 10:39 at
Faehner finished third in her
Princeton last year..
category, fourth overall in the
As for the squad's ·outlook,
Running at Union College in the
Adirondack Association Athletics
Congress. Championships, Marist
won the two-mile relay. A time of
8: 15.6 by Dave B.londin, .Christian
Morrison, Godwin and Ryan beat
Union by over 15 seconds and rival
Siena College by 21 seconds.
Marist also won the distance
medley with a 10:38.2, Pazik, Mor-
rison, Reardon and Godwin beat
400-meter race. She hit her season- • Lurie said the players are maturing
best time with a I :06.6.
in the sport. "We are growing and
Paul Kelly ran a 9:26.2 in the
getting better. We are acting as a
team," he said. "There is more
3,000-meter.
ct· •
1•
d
· l
r
Last week at the Cardinal
isc1p me an mutua support aor
Classic, Pazik, who had not run in-
the guys aod girls."
door since Janaury 1984, broke a
Lurie singled out Pazik for his
• meet record in the 3,000 with an
fine running this season. Lurie
. 8:34.8.
said: .. I think Pete may
be
the best
The indoor team has five
ie-
senior athlete at Marist. He is the
maining meets this season. It runs
best distance
runner
in the
against
Queens of Ontario,
conference."
More and more Marist students
are blowing off steam in the same
way. Instead of being physically
destructive in letting out their ·ex-
cess energy, many students· are
heading to the Mccann Center for
intramurals.
To participate in intramurals,
one need not be athletic; )ust
enthusiastic.
"We try to meet the students'
needs. Now that the ~rinking age
has gone up, tlfey need some
outlets," said Bob Lynch, assistant
director of intramurals.
Continued "" page 11