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The Circle, April 17, 1986.pdf

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 32 No. 8 - April 17, 1986

content

.
M()yniban visit
·
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page 3
V,olume
.32, Number _B
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Marist College; _Poughkeepsie,
N. Y.
April 17, -1986
.
.
.
Teachers cut
hOurs,
ref
use·
o.verrid·e cards
-Action comes
during
negotiations
by Carl MacGowan
The Marist faculty last Friday·
voted 48-0, with two.abstentions,
to initiate a protest against what
faculty leaders termed the college's
• "unreasonable demands.'' upon
,professors.

The fad.dty"members agreed not
to sign override cards for students
·-1J·:-.i1rrested
.
',.
,.

at·JBM
site~
by .Douglas pum,n
/-/r1t.irt~i~i!~~-@~1J~ihi~lf#f
1
i
:-;,cru,afii]:t},\'oJ:fi;eril;J.Ylari~F~~r~::~
:;
_,arrested:
las.t~W~~Q!,ti_tii,'.g'.~:pr:o"
:: ~;

:le~t at the
.113,Mi~&J~@f;adj~;-

,
• -~e·rittotlleimairim~l'jµJ~.Gi
7,:: ;
• ty_of.Poughkeepsie,"c:,:';(li}:-:f:
•.·. /
.··•.•••·
Cindy Lemek; ?'.ifj~\l\W~n.~ ••
arid· Joe·Concra, a seriior;-were •
both arrested and charged with
·_disorderly conduct_. Jhe t\Vo
• were part of· a demonstration
last Thursday during whi_ch
pro-,.
testers chainedthe.fronfdoorof
seeking to enter a class already fill- ·
The two sides have met at least - more scholarly .work represent
ed to its limit.
• • •
once a week since last month. to • "unreasonable demands"·on facul-
ln addition, teachers w·ill spend
discuss next year's faculty salary,
ty members, Olson said in a press
no more than their contractually re-
but are still a few percentage points statement released by the FEC
quired eight hours on campus out-
apart, according .to. Marc Arlin,. Monday, noting that administra-
side.of class time. This includes of-
spokesman for the administration· tion has not provided thein with
• flee hoi.u's and attendance at open • negotiating team. The • faculty's
additional compensation and time
house events and any other school- .,.
current contract expires June 30,
off.needed to meet the increasing
related activities. .
.
1986. ~,
-expectations.
The job action comes in ·the
Prompting.the job action-are two
Olson said in !1n interview last
midst of contract negotiations bet-- issues:· Marist's high ratio of
week thai the faculty is taking "two
ween the faculty -and the ad-
students to faculty and pressure
specific actions against two specific
ministration. Contract talks began
from the college for more research
problems " in hopes of calling at-
last • month.
by faculty, according to · William
tent ion to inc~eased class sizes and
Olson said the job action is "an
Olson, professor of history and the
an overload of work due to the new
attemptto persuade the adininistra-
chairperson of the Faculty Ex-
mandate for scholarly research.
tion to be more serious about the
ecutive Committee (FEC):
Adin, speaking for the ad-
negotiations."
Large class sizes and the push for
ministration, criticized the faculty's
decision. "We're disappointed in
the faculty," said Adin, assistant
vice president for administration.
"I'm disappointed that the facul-
ty has chosen to take its disagree-
ment with the administration out
on the student body. I don't think
it's in the best interests of the in-
stitution, nor the students."
In· the statement, the facuhy
claimed the Marist's student-
faculty ratio is
22
to
I
and is higher
than that found at all but one of
17 northeastern colleges used by
both the faculty and administration
for comparison.
The list of 17, which includes
Continued on page
2
Students disappointed
~with:OThoffias_:.w.o.es---
~
~-> -·
--
-
i\i.
lili
1
t~l~~~!~t~~j~~f
lf
i)i~~f
~!1~~~cici
.••••.•
"
1'
:~J1qns Ce~!er seem_to be,:ke~pi~g 'thaf:'the'.
Thcimas .·. Cenier's
• ,:)'
s_,pac~ •. • ~l~h.:; -!h,~.,-'.
bu_ildmg
S • •
classrooms: • faculty offices and
f)i
\: COn!itrucU_O~--
.,· .':' •
c..
'

computer rooms will oe ready by
1
W
<'·· ·'
StUdJntSmterviewed r;centl~ by • January, they revealed last week
·,,·.1._·.i.-
..
-. '.fhe
·Fircle
exp~es~ed disappoml-. they may
faU
short in raising funds ·
1
lll_<:nt·
and

pessi_m_ism
about _the
to bµy equipment for the planned
Ji
~tur1ate':1
~-5 m_1lhon
com!Dumca- .telepfoduction facility.
/,::¼
.. t10ns bmldmg, after learnmg that
the buiiding· may ·not be • fully
operational
by it_s: scheduled
January 1987 opening date because
• the .building shuf_'*iici sat in .
;'ffon1:;of-the,entra11ce
.•..
·< .
·:
· ·,.tlfe·~
i'3
·-\vere;
arrested
iafter.··
:refusing to remove'. the·
diafo :
'J
ofinsufficient -funding.
.
. •~When
I
came here as a prospec~
• • tive freshman, all they talked about
. Communication
arts major
Tony Santiago said he is also
pessimisticabout the future of the
building. "I'm a sophomore, and
I ttiought
I
was going to get a
chance. to use the buiiding, but ap-
parently I'ni no(" he said.
''It's
just another major mess-up of the
from the door, polite said>The' •
protest toof place arourid qoori,
when many IBM employees are
• was the Lowell Thoirias building," .
said Howard Mills,
a
senior
political science major. "They said· college:''
__ • • . _ .
: Transfer Michael O'Looney, a .

moving in and out ·-of.., the_
: building.
.
' :::,
.- . :·:
Each of the 13 pleaded inno-~
cent and will be tried
as
a group;
on May 2. Noel Teppei:,'
.
a~-
• Poughkeepsie - _lawyer,:
.i~·
representing the ·group fr~e of
charge. .
,_

-~
"-,.?, •
>
. Tepper. said his. def ease will -
be based on two major points:
why the group was ther~ and the
circumstances surrounding the
demonstration.·"They were not
there to cause a publi~ disorder, .
but to bear witness to ·what they •
feel to be an evil,''. Tepper said:·
• He added that .the group
"wasn't disorderly-they were
very orderly" and . that they
acted in symbolic ways, express-
ing their first ammendment
right to free speech.

Concra said tf!e protest was
held to decry IBM's involve-
ment with South
Africa.
Demonstrators
handed out
literature charging that IBM
supplies computers to the South
African government.
IBM officials have repeated-
ly denied ·selling equipment to
that government, adding that it
has only 1,900 employees in the
country, most of them South
African blacks.
Tepper said he is providing
his services at no cost because
the group's belief sounds like
something that needs to be
brought forth.
.• A meltlber
of
the
Japanese
E
·· ·
w ·
National Debate Teain presents
. ast
VS~ .
'est
hiscaseatlastSanday'sMarist-
Japan debate.
•".
c •
(photo by Laurie Barraco)
• it would be in full use by my junior
year. The thin·g that disgusts me is
.
that they've never once bee_n
• honest .. They knew the the pro-
.. jected completion dates were not
realistic; but they still published
them."·
John Kiselik, a communication
arts major, agreed: "Once again
the students at Marist College are
facing a Marist myth. I hope that
, junior majoring in communication
arts; agre~d that students have been
misled. ''I'm really-disappointed,"
he said. '.'I w~s led to believe that.
, the building was
10
be open in the
fall of '85. That was probably the
biggest reason
I transferred here."
. Freshman Christine Borkowski,
also
a:
COfI!mUnication
arts major'
: Continued on page 13
.
-
.
.
c~'Check
of nigh_t--cla$srs
stirs controversy
.
~-
••
'
,
• The
two-week survey
showed a
total of 17 instructors who
were not
.. Some Marist faculty members
in
their
scheduled
classrooms
when
•• -have
raised
concerns
about a recent • the checks
were
conducted.
Only
• -. unannounced : check .
011
night , two of the classes had been official- •
classes
:and:
a_ memo
circulated
ly canceled by the instructor,
accor-
. arriong • administrators last • week
ding to a memo sent to Maher by
listing the instructors who were not
Charwat.
holding their classes at the time of •
Maher released the text of the
the check.
memo to The Circle after the con~ . •
by Denise Wilsey
A staff member from Adult
tents of it became known to some
Education, Ellie Charwat, did
faculty. The names of the faculty
sweep checks of classrooms at 8:45
had been eliminated from the docu-
p.m. for two weeks to detennine
ment given to The Circle, and it
which rooms were empty at that
could not be determined how many
time, according to Julianne Maher,
of the instructors were full-time.
acting academic vice president,
While Maher said copies of that
who authorized the checks.
memo were intended only for the
Charwat surveyed Donnelly Hall . divisional chairpersons, Roben
the week of March 17 and Marist
Sadowski, chairperson of the Divi-
East the week of March 24. A final
sion of Ans and Letters, released
check of Marist East was con-
copies to at least some divisional
ducted on April 3. Night classes are
faculty listed in the memo.
scheduled to meet until 9:10.
Some faculty members have
complained that such a check by
administration is unprofessional,
and
they
expressed concerns about
what would be
done
with the list.
While it was
not indicated in the
memo, Maher
said in an
interview
this week that she authorized
the
checks at the·request of the divi-
sional chairpersons. The
chairs, she
said, were free to
use
the survey
results as they saw fit.
The checks were initiated after a
few full-time faculty members and
students complained that Marist
• East and Donnelly seemed empty
by 9 p.m .. said Maher.
Two divisional chairpersons con-
finned that the the need for a check
of night classes had been discuss-
ed at a meeting of the chairpersons'
council, which is composed of the
five chairs and Maher.
While Maher said she had not
discussed the survey results _
with
any of the divisional chairs, she
said the checks did not indicate that
early dismissals were a widespread
problem.
William Olson, chairperson of
the Faculty Executive Committee,
said the handling of the memo, as
well as the check, was an issue of
concern for faculty. He objected to
the release of the memo to anyone
because it did not indicate who
authorized the check or who re-
quested the survey be done.
• Releasing the memo without that
infonnation "was a significant pro-
cedural oversight and a profes-
sional irresponsibility," he said.
In addition, Olson said that
because the memo was vague about
what the results meant, he was con-
cerned that it might unfairly imply
that faculty members were being
Continued on page 12











































































































































































.•.
--------------
'I
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__
Page 2 - THE CIRCLE - April 17, 1986
Contract __
Continued from page 1
schools as large as Syracuse Univer•
sity and as small as Quinnipiac Col-
lege in Connecticut, is composed of
schools that resemble Marist in stu-
dent· body size and programs
.
of
study or that traditionally compete
with Marist for students.
To bring the faculty-student
ratio more in line with other

schools, Olson said, division
chairpersons have requested
a
total
of 15 new full-time faculty, but the
college has cut that request to eight
or nine.
Responding to the FEC state-
ment, Adin said the college plans,
for the first time in several years,
to hire no new administrators this
fiscal
·year
while hiring as many
new full-time faculty
as
the budget
will allow. The number of new
.
faculty
will depend
on anticipated
tuition income, said Adin.
"It would be great to have a
faculty-student ratio of I to 15 or
I to 12, but half the student body
wouldn't be able to come to Marist

(because of increased· tuition
costs)," Adin said.
Adin later disputed the
.FEC's
,
statistics. The correct student-
faculty ratio, he said, is 13.9 to I.
Credit hours, instructional hours
and part-time faculty

must be

figured in, Adi1_1
said.
He added that Marist ranks in
the top third among the
17
schools
in salary for faculty.
NEED A SUMMER JOB?
THE HOUSING OFFICE NEEDS 2
HOUSING ASSISTANTS FOR 15
WEEKS/40
HOURS
WEEK
·@
$3.35/HOUR, ROOM AND FOOD
ALLOWANCE PROVIDED.
·
REQUIREMENTS
l)
NO MAJOR DISCIPLINARY

_-HISTORY
.
2) ABILITY TO WORK INDEPEND-·
ENTLY
3) COMPUTER SKILLS ·HELPFUL
4) FLEXIBLE WORK SCHEDULE
APPLY BY TUESDAY, APRIL 22
AT THE HOUSING OFFICE
CAMPUS CENTER ROOM-271
••
'.
.•.•.
;··1·,.,

.
·_-
..••
·"""··-..
.,.......,._
...... -.:,,h_~_,

c,,.
·•·
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l
OQQ
.
-~
.·•
.


~
.
.
.
-.
...____,,_,

~-
LIFE AFTER· CLASS!
-
THE COLLEGE UNION BOARD
BE A PART OF IT!!!!!
With an annual budget of over $50,000 col-
lected from student activity fees, the Gollege
.
Union Board puts on a broad range of events
at Marist. Have a say at what
.gets
programm-
ed with your money - JOIN TODAY!
.
.
-
••
The C.U.B. is now accepting
'applications
for the following committee chairperson
positions:
.
-·CONCERT
-
SOCIAL COMMITTEE
-
PERFORMING ARTS COMMITTEE
-
CABARET COMMITTEE
-
VIDEO COMMITTEE
-
FILM COMMITTEE

• •
·
·•.;_·
_:
•.
~
LECTURE COMMITTEE


• -
~· MARKETING COMMITTEE .. -··
- ·sECRETARY·_
,.·•·.,,
.
.-:-~.,-:-,,
:., ::,,-::;
~.

·,

"T 1_.

! •
,,:
-TREASURER
The FEC's other complaint
stems from a statement made by
President Dennis Murray last
December indicating that Marist
faculty members should conduct
research and publish scholarly
writings in addition to their regular






• •







• • • •
Pick up your application today in the Col-
.
course loads. The requirement is
I
• • •
0

not listed in the Marist Faculty
.
ege ACttVttteS ffice.
.
',1
I
·,.
I
.
.
.
ti'
Handbook, but, said Olson, "Mur-
ANY QUESTIONS? SEE YOUR
YOU MAKE
~
~!~a1~~1t~/~h:~!rid~:o~~~u.~5.t.
RA'._
~g~1~°c.1__i~Fli~,~HE

··-.·.T•·:·•H_
E
__
,·,·:·DIFFERENCE_!
.
- ,
.
.
Olso_n
said the college has ref us-
.
.

,.•
.•
ed to discuss financial assistance.to,
; -,~

help professors fulfill the .r~q~ke:--.
r'
--.--'!!""'~;;;;;;;;;;.;:;:::;;;;;;;;;:::~~~::::::;:;;:;~~~~_;_::;::;:=,:::;;;=;;:::=======:::======"=''
=·="
="=t
:/cn;u;!!',e;to::it~~:;;tfn!°~'~~~~•
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,,•
<
\,",-,
0,••••••••
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,?,»_•
•••

,.:.,:,,:,-,,•.'
A,;t
,;:,,:,
.•••~

,;
r
••--• ',\(,'
said, the faculty believes Marist
8
OIN
O
lJK
E.AMILY ,
•::i
should maintain its mission as a

teaching college.·






,
"The faculty is supportive of
.
.
.:

.

_
.

scholarly and professional develop-
.
ment, but that requires resources,"
ONLY
1/2 MILE
NOITH
Of THE
MID~HUDSON
BRIDGE
•.
t
...
said Olson. "When you're sitting
down to start a book or a paper,
CHEVRO.LET
INC

you can't do that when you have
.
.
• •
I

.



:
or11
i
1w
these other responsibilties.

:

"I
think he (Murray) expects
:
I
· ·· •'--'.-,
~
0
~~Pi~~~~~;is~~~~!;~~c:~it!:!~
·: ·
....
_
:.
·-at?
~-(i·f:_·,
·~:
::-'._~:\.';
:
..
• :~·,::
growing evidence that it is increas-
-Whff•
S11cc.,.
.

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• '
••
~

-








ingtheprofessoria\\oadatprivate
•toul#l#1nswwn•.
:
·' •
••
·"
.-

-·-

••
schools."
:

Olsonsaidthecollege'sfinancial
s~-LE'
'S.
·_.
=
s·11·
.LE'S
support for scholarly research by

••

•.

faculty is inadequate, given the new
:
. .
.
.
.


:

.

_
emphasis on scholarship.
.:
t~!)~i~~F;o;f~?:!:i;
SER VICE

!
·.SERVICE
professional development. ':'Our


P~R
T,'S
position·is
that the $100,000
P~RT,'S
.:
··
·
·
·

available for. professional develop-
. •
.
_
.·_
:




:


.
ment is, at this point, sufficient,"
:
:-
_


At:s~~!ied
that the college is
LE~S1NiG :
.
L··
:E.'
A_·
·S'J'JlfiG
moving away from its traditional

:
:./t.
,i1
~
1
mission of teaching. "It's still a
.
.
.
:
DI
-'L'J'Y
R'V'N""
AL··
S
l£aching college and it always will
:
'.1-1.
LJ
-D,
.i.
LI.
be a teaching college, at least as I
6 9
·
2
.
9 7
:
0
understand it," said Adin.



l •.
· _
.
l
: GD·I •.80
.0
According to Adin, the faculty
:
is seeking a raise of between 9 and
• • • • • • • • ••• • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
10 percent, while the college's latest
offer, made last Thursday, was
5.38 percent.
Olson noted that the college's of-
fer is less than the percentage in-
crease agreed to this year by the
maintenance staff. Maintenance
recently accepted a 5.8 percent in-
crease, according to Adin.
However, Adin said he expects
the final agreement to surpass the
raise granted to maintenance.
"We're still in the negotiating
process," said Adin. "The last of-
fer was an offer in progress. The
negotiating process is always
.
developing. You can't freeze it at
one point and say that this is where
we are and this
is
where we'll stay."
·aoUTE.9W
HIGHLAND,
NEW YORK
I am descended
from the family
of
David; I am the Bright Morning Star
Rev. 22:/6
·----------------------------------1





















































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-------------------------------Apr/I
17, 1986 - THE CIRCLE - Page 3 __
·Moynihan-assails·.
LaRouche group at seminar.
• •.
by Jeannine Clegg
especially
Democrats,
not to
dismiss
"LaRouche-ites"
as

A political
faction· of the
"kooks" and said to take their
Socialist Worker Party led by Lyn-
political ideas seriously.
The

don
H:
LaRouche Jr. is becoming
senator blamed the group's rise to
a threat to the stability of the
power on the American j:,ubli~)
Democratic party, said Democratic
disinterest in politics. "Because we •
Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan last
are not a political people, they
Saturday at a Marist College stu-
(LaRouche-ites) look like anyone
dent seminar.

else in the primary," he said.

Before a group of 35 Marist
.
Students
who attended
the
.
students and staff, Moynihan
seminar said they agreed· with
.
described
the faction
as a
Moynihan. Senior Paul Campbell,
totalitarian group which is armed,
a 21-year-old political science ma-
violent and "fiercely anti-semitic.".
jor, said he· felt'Moyni)lan's con-
He
said. it now has a substantial• cerns about LaRouche and his
following.
followers were justified.
·.·The
rccent·Democi-atic nomina-
.
..
''I'm not a Democrat,, but I

tic_m
of two LaRouchecbacked can-
think a party has the right to define
didates for lllinois lieutenant gover-
and uphold its.principles," he said.

nor and secretary of state indicates
Campbell "claimed that LaRouche
the extent of the faction's power,
and his followers are using the
Moynihan said.·

Democratic party name as a means
"I say to you that if this con-
of getting people to vote them into
tinues and we can't get these peQ-
office.
.
,
Marist Institute for Public Opinion
(MIPO).
Without
identifiying
himself, Moynihan asked the
respondent questions including one
which rated his own performance
in office.
Moynihan later admitted that the
respondent was unable to rate him
because she did not know who he
was.
The results of the half hour poll
based on
21
completed surveys
gave him 66 percent support of his
performance in office. Moynihan
said with a chuckle, "In the last
election I got 65.5 percent (of the
vote), so either I am not getting any
better or I am not getting any
worse."
pie out, it could be a de"'.astating
Before the seminar, the senator
national blow to the Democratic
surveyed a Dutchess County resi-
party ," he said.
dent by telephone as part of a
Moynihan warned Americans,
simulated poll conducted by the
Lee Miringoff, director of the
Marist Institute for Public Opinion
and the senator's host, said he was
pleased that Moynihan took an in-
terest in the MIPO. He added that
in the future he hopes journalists
and political figures like Moynihan
will consider Marist a "stopping
off point" when in New York
state.
Sen. Daniel P. Moynihan (photo by Laurie Barraco)
Splat!·
-When
survival gamers
Classes pick new leaders
by Elizabeth Geary
and Michael Graye b
bleed;· it's paint, no(_·blo_ot;l_
• •

•.

·



Marist underclassmen re-elected
:
: ;-: ; _; : ; _
_.
• _'. _: J?eople from all walks':l:>f
life. "We get all kinds of
two class presidents to second
groups. We attract a lot of corporate businesses and
terms and promoted a vice presi-
The whistle sourids;:the·'charge.begiiis:ana two: • colleges. About 25 percent of our business comes
dent in elections held last week.
teams of hungry warriors embark on a mission of
from corporations."
Current freshman class President
kill or be killed.

Braun insists that the game is totally safe; at
Kathy Turner and sophomore class
They leave from flag stations on opposite ends
worst, injuries from a day's battle might consist
President Roger Ardanowski won
of a field and engage in comJ,at in a thickly wood-
of a couple of small welts from getting hit by paint
solid victories over opponents Judi
ed area. One by one, the casualties leave the field,
pellets. "It's like getting hit by a raquetball," he
Baker and Ken Radigan. Junior
but they do so under their own power, because in
said.
.
Theresa Ruotolo, who is currently
by Christian Larsen
raising and unity as two of his ma-
jor goals for next year's juniors. He
stressed the need for early plann-
ing in such matters as the ring
ceremony and the 1988 Com-
mencement speaker.
One money-making idea is a car
wash, to be held next Fall. "l 've
known groups who have held car
washes and netted profits of
around $800," he said. "Then we'll
have the money to put on a good
show during our senior year."
••
this instance the nightmare of war is not real-it
For $36, participants can play six games with a
her class' vice president, topped
has been transformed into a game with the help of
break for lunch in between. The six games run a
Mark Kohlmaier in the other race.
Along with continuing the class
CO2 pistols and paint pellets.'
full day, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. For trigger-happy
Elections for the incomimg
"supplement,"
a publication for
.
"It's like a grown-up game of hide and seek,"
combatants, extra pellet_s and CO2 are readily
freshman class wi\l be held in the
the class of
\988,
he a\so p\ans on
.says
Jerry Braun, owner of the National Survival··. available.
.
,
Fall.
starting a newsletter
for com-
:
Game New _York.area facility in Plat!eki.1},
~;Y.,
According to a NationaL~uryival Game,press :.
-
.O!p~r_f_re_sh_m~_T).
"'~n~er~,l~ the
.
tnu~~r_s. h~ said._"f~\~
~~ \~
_\;.c~i\.
:;., about
30_
miles ~outh o! ~oug2k_:ep_~,e:_:_._!!,_
s _not _____
release, .there are over 2oo')5layingiieldfthrongn{)uT"..,, ~-~:<elect1ons;~-:he\d-.,Apr_11---
8-•
••
a~d
9:
·.
them
a~_re~tt:?.f:~\?
5
_om111·g
e~·en~r:
,.~.'9tol!nTe1t~'WJ';~cnittf~t~rle.wlto
arefool<a., , •. the' United States, ·Canada
·and
Europe:·
Soil
th-" - •••
J?Ann_
·F1\1ppone;~v1ce-pres1dent;·
;· he
·a~deij.
·-
_,·.
\ \.,
;
.


• 1ng for thnlls an~ a good.time:
_
.
.
Africa sites are under negotiation.
J~ll Se1d~an, secretary; and Jen-
_ Ruotolp, a computer science ma-
Braun and business partners Ron-·and Joe L1-
•·
M
N
hA
.
d al
.
mfer Peifer, treasurer. All ran
Jor from Fort Edward, N.Y., also
·
quore bo_ught rights to the game from the National
.
.
.
0
~.t::
...
ort
m7ncan
-
e ers sponsor sanct!on-
unopposed.
emphasized Commencement plan-
..
Survival Game Inc~ last April after readi.ng an ar-
Cedhleag~~
plha"f,
whhilcdh
1
lead~ tohthe.,N
1
o
1
r!h American
Other sophomore
.winners:
Bob
ning saying
·she
has already begun
·
• 1 b t th
d


··t

N
amp1ons 1ps e
ate m t e ,a


•. •

Uc ea o~
e ~~me,~n expenenc,~g
I
at a ew
.
·-.
.
·
_
.
-'··
, :···,
.. :
·
_
.
Bush,
vice president;
T'?m
!ooking into rhe proce~s of secur-
Hampsh1re fac1hty. I fell m.love with the game,
.
Charles Games, one of the games mventors, said·
Chambers. treasurer· and Manon
mg a speaker. She
wr/1
also en-

and I decided to bring it to New York," s~d Braun.
!~aq~e ~rst such comp~tition in June of
1981
_was
McBride, ;ecretary. '
_
courage s1udent inpur on senior
In the game, members oftwo competmg teams
everythmg we hoped 1t would be-challengmg,
Junior winners were: Kathleen
week, she added.
try to steal the opp_osition's flag and return it to
exh!lirating a_nd fascinatingly r:flective iJ? both the
_ Murphy, vice president; Elizabeth
School spirit is also high on her
=
their o~n flag stat10
1
n. The ~rst team
-to
return
·
~ar10~s-ways 1t was played an~ m:the various ways
Reisert, secretary;
and Brian
!ist of priorities, she said. "There
,
home wl!h the others flag wms.
m which the men who played it lived. The careful
, Gallagher, treasurer. Reisert beat
1s only so much you can do abour
~'
Upon arrival;: competitors are handed goggles,
played it carefully; the shrewd played it shrewdly;
out Rob Durso in a close race
apathy," she said, "Events must be
i
a CO2 pistol and"~·il_n-I
l{e.J}eis:-Ga~;
offi<:_ials
lead
the aggressive-play~d it aggressively."
.
. _
while the o1h~rs ran 'unopposed.'
publicized more and talked up
-:
the would-be warnors.to,a:flag staUop;\\!.lier.e.they • There are
11
playmg fields at the Plattekill fac1h-
Ardanowsk1, a sophomore from more so the students become
.
join up with between
;·30
and'8Q;ma!e,,.a~(tiemale
ty, all offering a different approach to warfare.
Tarry1own, N.
y.,
cited fund-
interested."
teammates; the whistle blows
ancl
the <>fficials
cut
"Depending on lhe weather and t_he size <:>f
the
the fighters loose.

'
group, we switch fields regularly:" said Braun.
''This game is fantastic," said John Ray, a stu-
.
The game has been condemned by gun control
dent from Ozone Park,
N.Y.
"I
love shooting peo-
groups, but Braun insists that "the people who c:on-

pie. It's a great way to get your frustrations out."
demn the game are the ones who haven't played
.
People can come as individuals or they can enroll
it. Once you've played the game, you realize that
teams, and, according to.Braun, the game attracts
it's nothing more than a good time."
Columnist fi11ds his rewards
.
making ordinary extraordinary
by Sue Hermans
Ed Lowe admits there may be
one job more fun than his: mak-
.
ing
$3
million a year playing sax-
.
Since 1977, his two weekday and
one Sunday column have detailed
the everyday problems of ordinary
people. Lowe has received awards
ophone in an enormously sue-
~
.. ""'----------...
cessful jazz ban~.
But for now, the i967 Marist
graduate seems happy enough to
have his byline appear three times
weekly in the pages of Newsday,
a
Long Island newspaper with a cir-
culation of over half a million.
Lowe's popular feature column is
also distributed twice weekly by
United Features Syndicate.
"You can profit by and maintain
your integrity in a craft that is ab-
surdly fun, sometimes exciting and
·public,"
said Lowe, 41. "You are
praised for what you do every day,
as long as you maintain a certain
degree of excellence. There are
many
rewards
above
your
paycheck."
after.
mar"ist
for his ,vriting from the New York
Associated Press, the American
Society of Newspaper Editors and
the Columbia University School of
Journalism.
Lowe visited Professor David
McCraw's "Journalism"
class
recently, and during a rapid-fire,
off-the-cuff hour and 20 minutes,
gave his blueprint for success in the
field:
"You
have
to have
passion-and
compassion. You
have to believe i! is more important
to pry the truth out of people who
would otherwise hide it than to just
report the news."

He said a good reporter has to
be aware of his ignorance. And he
has to be courageous and self-
confident enough to ask: Is the ob-
vious thing I assume
to
be the
truth, the truth? A journalist, he
said, has a right, even a respon-
sibility, to doubt.
"Ed Lowe, kid from Amityville,
beer
drinker
from
Marist,
represents
2
million people who
could not be there," Lowe said.
"The responsibility of judging,
choosing and accurately finding
out what they should know is enor-
mous and rewarding."
Lowe majored in English at
Marist and earned a teaching
degree which helped him put bread
on the table in the years while he
only dreamed of writing.
Continued on
page
4
Marist faculty approves
academic honesty policy
by Julie Sveda
Marist recently enacted its first-
ever academic honesty policy, ac-
cording
to
Vincent Toscano,
chairperson for the Academic Af-
fairs Committee.
The new policy was not a result

of "a crisis with dishonesty on
campus," Toscano said. Instead, it
had simply been omitted in the
past, he said ..
He added that it would remain
consistent with the college's past
dealings with academic honesty
problems.
"It
is a clear statement of the
college's expectations," Toscano
said. "Essentially, it contains the
same rules as any grievance pro-
cedure. There are certain appeals to
go through to ensure that people's
rights are protected."
The policy consists of three
statements. Part A, which will be
printed in the 1986-87 college
catalog, explains the standards and
expectations of academic honesty
at Marist. The last two parts, to be
printed in the student and faculty
handbooks, deal with more specific
issues, such as the grievance policy.
The text of the new policy asserts
that the college "presupposes the
scholarly integrity" of its students
and should "meet fundamental
standards of honesty in all phases
.
of their academic activities."
The faculty at Marist had never
before collectively endorsed an or-
ficial policy on academic honesty.
Toscano explained. This policy
statement was 1he culmination of
three years of work of both the
Standards and Operations Com-
mittee and the Academic Affairs
Committee, he said.
The Standards and Operations
Committee is made up entirely of
faculty, while the Academic Affairs
Committee
includes
faculty
members Toscano,
Augustine
Nolan and Michael O'Callahan, as
well as student Robin Li1tk.
Toscano said the college utilizes
the Modern Language Association
Handbook's
definition
of
plagiarism: "repeating of another•~
sentences as your own, adopting a
particularly apt phrase as your own
or paraphrasing someone else's line
of thinking in the development of
a thesis as though it were your
own."
The plagiarism policy also pro-
hibits students from gaining acces~
to another's computer account and
stealing programs or "mousetrap-
ping" data bases.
,
..
''I
,,
Lt



































































__
Page 4 - THE CIRCLE - April 17,
1986---:::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;
Parents Weekend· :set
by Hector Mota
Parents Weekend will begin on .
Marist competing against 15 teams
in "one of the largest Regattas
we've had at Marist," said Larry
Davis, crew coach.
April 25, and its activities will in-
clude Festival '86: Short Plays by
Students,
the President's Cup
Regatta,
the
Junior
Ring
Ceremony and reception, and a
dinner dance.
On Friday night, Festival '86 will
present six short plays in the Cam-
pus Theater beginning at 8:00 p.m.
under the direction of Gerard Cox,
dean of student affairs.
This year's plays are "A Tangl-
ed Web" by John Anderson,
directed
by Peter
Prucnel;
"Engines Heat" by John Roche,
directed by Mercinth Brown;.
"Beginnings" by Teresa Lantos,
directed by Steve Pinto; "Drug,
Sex and Rock 'n' Roll" by John
Bakke, directed by Paul Rezza;
"The Gatekeeper" by John Ander-
son, directed by Joe Podesta; and
"Lifeseyes"
by John Roche,
directed by Rita Ramirez.
Saturday's activities will begin
with the President's Cup Regatta at
8:30 a.m. at the waterfront, with
On
Saturday
• at 6:30
p.m.; the Junior Ring Ceremony
wiH be held in the chapel, follow-
.ed by a· reception in the Fireside
lounge. According to Assistant
Dean of Students Deborah Bell,
awards will be given to two men
and two women in the areas of
sports and community service, and
one award will be given for the
highest cumulative average. Accor-
ding to Bell, a·t least 700 people at-
tended the event last year, and they
are expecting the same amount this
year.
Later that evening at 9:00
,
a dinner dance will will be held in
the cafeteria for parents, students
and· staff. The dance will ac-
comodate 435 people, and no
alcohol will be served due to the re-
cent change in the drinking age and
the college's new alcohol policy.
Parents weekend will conclude
with a mass in the chapel at 11: 15
a.m. Sunday.
One
·to
One is
today
by Anu Ailawadhi
One-to-One day, sponsored by
the Psychology Club, will be held
today in front of the Campus
Center between 9:45 a.m. and 2:00
p.m.
This is the fifth annual One-to-
One day. It gives Marist students
the opportunity to help disabled
children from 'the Poughkeepsie
community by being their host for.
a day on the campus.

"This allows these (disabled)
kids (an opportunity) to get out for
"I always aspired to write," he
said, "but it was a function of my
parents' generation-who
lived
through the Depression-that
if
you had a dream that was out of
the ordinary, like being an artist or
an actor or a writer, first you ought
to get a real job, as if those were
not.
"My
belief-or
crippling
disbelief-was that the son of a cop
from Long Island could not be a
writer, and I acted accordingly."
After college, Lowe taught
English at a junior high on Long
Island. But it was always in the
back of his mind to write. And, he
said, if you dream the dream,
a day and do things which they nor-
mally don't do, and it_ allows
Marist students interaction with
them, which is good experience for
those students who want to be
special education teachers," said
Bill Wright, president of the1
Psychology Club.
There will be arts and crafts,
. games, sports events and lunch for
the children.
There will be 40
children all under the age of seven
participating, and the activities will
be limited to the abilities of the
children in the group.
sometimes things happen that force
you to live it.
At 24, with the .birth of his se-
cond child only days away, Lowe
walked into the editor's office at
the now-defunct Suffolk Sun and
bluffed his way into a reporter's
job.
. He spent two and
a
half months
at the ailing paper before it folded
in 1969, but having articles in print
gave him the exposure
and
credibility he needed to pursue his
ambition in earnest. The job offers
came in, including one from News-
day.
Lowe . explains that writing-.
obituaries was his least favorite
Mike Barker talks through hi~ hat(s)
by Shelly Miller
-If you have a hat you want to
hang oil to, you'd better not wear
it around Mike Barker-he may
just rip it off your head and tack
it on his wall.
Rest assured it would be in good
company, for the Marist senior has
a collection of over 100 hats which
he proudly displays on all four
walls ·or his bedroom.
• Although all the hats are
baseball style, the collection is
strictly general. Barker collects hats
of professional sport teams, college
teams, cars, motorcycles, com-
panies or "whatever I can get my
hands on.".
"Actually I would consider this
a pretty modest collection com-
pared to other people's. People
that
collect
stamps
have
thousands," he said. "And it's a
real practical one too. What can
you do with a thousand stamps? I
use my collection every day."
But one cannot acquire such a
useful collection overnight. It took
Barker years to realize the impor-
tance of having enough hats. His
ultimate goal is to equal the collec-
tion of the man who inspired him,
he said.
"I
used to be just a person with
a lot of hats. In 1983 I only had
25," said Barker. "Then I saw a
man from Syracuse on the news
who had a collection of 300. I was
so impressed with him. He really
prompted my decision to start col-
lecting seriously."
Collecting hats has become a
way of life for Barker-you rarely
see him without one on. When he
began his collection he used to wear
a different hat everyday, but now
the collection's sheer size precludes
that.
assignment at Newsday. He dislik-
ed having to call someone who had
just lost a family member and ask
a lot of questions. But until his own
father died, he said, he never
understood what it meant -to the
families
to see those
few
paragraphs in print.
He read his father's obituary
A hat for every occasion ... and more: Mike Barker's
townhouse room is like an equipment room for a pro ball club, •
only a lifetime more creative.
(photo by
Mark Marano)
"I
.have an elite 10 or 15
I
wear
all the time," said Barker. "My
favorite is a black-- corduroy
Syracuse hat. I wear it the most
probably because it was a gift, I
like it and Ilive there."
But
even
an avowed "hat freak"
knows when a hat is inappropriate.
For example, Barker would never
be seen wearing a hat in church or
in an elaborate restaurant..
"I'm not tacky about it," he
said.
Such a life, however, is· not
without pitfalls.
"I'm going bald and I also have
a wicked receding hairline," said
Barker. "It's
kind of like a
Catch-22. I wear hats because I'm
going ·bald, but I'm going bald
because I wear hats."
Barker also fears that his com-
pulsion with hats is beginning to
run his life.
"It's at the point now where
everytime I see a· store that sells
hats I have to run in and see if they
have any good ones," he said.
His obsession has even begun to
affect his school work, said Barker.
One day he was marked absent in
a class because he d_idn't wear a
hat. He said theteacher<was so us-
ed to seeing tiim.wfrli'one'on:Jhat:·
he didn't notice him
whlio,.ifone':'::
But will Barker's preoccupation
with hats ever end? "I told myself
I was going to stop when I got to
100 but I havn't stopped yet," said
Barker. "I'm probably going to
keep going-at least until I beat the
record."
:)HERE'SAN"IDEATHA~-
-.;·:.
COULD MEAN ...
countless times, he said, and every
·
,-1
~~~~~heva~~;?mpo1t~::_t,, was
,
- AAQNcy/1L'.:l/:.·'·~:\1
"I was always proud of having
~
/,V,J .•' :,
l:'J;' ,
I~;·
· ; ... ,,
done those· things with compa~-. I
_ • _ ,:•,-_,_,:
·O•·_
u-.
R'P-
·o· _ c.-
-KE.-·
-.·r-
1,
sion," he said of his journalism,'
I
~ ,,·::' -

career. 'Tnever realized the degree
to which.they were important; You
I
I
have-awesome-power."
n----ta---------'------------'-----'---t-1
ATTENTION COLLEGE
1

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·(~CIICh-4;,(~tS

_.,.,,..,,,,..,,-
........
......_,
:....-_,,.,,,,,.
---
---


---



























































l.
---------------------------------April
17, 1986.;. THE CIRCLE· Page
5--

Maris
t
to honor. Edwards
at
Thomas banquet
,
by Chris Gagliano
Douglas Edwards, CBS news
correspondent, will receive the
fourth annual Lowell Thomas
Award from Marist College, at a
banquet on April 23. at the
Helmsley Palace in New York City.
The Lowell Thomas A ward was
established in 1983 to recognize an
outstanding individual in the com-
munications industry whose life
and. work reflect the imagination,
courage, ambition, and humanity
of Lowell Thomas. Previous reci-
.
pients of the award have been. Eric
Sevareid, Walter Cronkite and
Howard K. Smith.
Also being honored at the
Helmsley Palace will be Gigi Bir-
das, 31, who will recieve the Alum-
ni Commu·nication Arts Internship
Award. The award is given to a
graduate who has made significant
progress in his or her career. Last
year's winner was David Ng, who
works as the education editor for
.
The New York Post.
Edwards-begaq his career travel;
ing throughout Europe and the

Middle East covering the German
post-war elections, setting up
coverage for the Nuremburg war
crimes trials, and covering Soviet
rumblings iri the Middle East.
When Edwards returned to the
U.S. he became the anchorman for
"The CBS Television News." Two
years later he became television's
first evening
·news
anchorman, with
a news broadcast which was even-
tually retitled, "Douglas Edwards
With The News." The broadcast
was a nightly, IS-minute newcast
which lasted for 14 years. The
A
-toast
to spring
It was all smiles and the best of Spring fashions at last Satur-
day's Spring Formal.
(photo by Mark Marano)
by
David Schifter
further traffic congestion to Route
9.
Developers of the proposed

"You can drive down Route 9 on
Poughkeepsie Galleria mall hope to a Saturday afternoon and· sit in
have the two-story shopping facili-
traffic for a half-hour. Imagine the
_ty open for business in 1987.
effect another mall would have,"
:; While opponents, of the mall said Rosemary Emery, chair-
:have vow~d;to c,bntij)uel~fr fight,
\\'.Om.an of the Save Our Town
·the
developers say they arefuoving.
<'Gommittee,
an
..
organization of
ahead as planned; The mall is~to
l?.e
~-:
~oca)
.residents
fighting th_e
;mall.
built one mile north of South Hills
'
-
Republican members of the town
Mall on Route 9.
board have.been facing q·uestions
Last month, by a 5-1 vote, the
from the State Board of Elections
Town of Poughkeepsie Board pass-
concerning donations
received
ed a resolution clearing the way for
from the mall's developers during
construction of the Galleria.
last fall's election campaign.
The two-level mall will feature
According
to

incumbent
I 00 stores, a variety of restaurants
Democratic town supervisor, Ann
and a IO-film theater, in what is be-
Buchholz, Republicans should have
ing called· a sophisticated setting,
realized the size of the mall
according to mall developer Bob developer's donation was in excess
Ungerer, who hopes to have the
of New York state's contribution
mall completed by 1987, pending
limit.
site approval.
Buchholz, an opponent of the
Opponents of the project have mall, was out of town when the
complained that the mall will bring vote on the Galleria was taken.
Some opponents of the mall
have suggested that the site be us-
ed for residential construction,
noting the shortage of. housing in
Dutchess County.
"There is a lack of affordable
housing in Dutchess," said Coun-
ty Planning Commisioner Roger
Ackley. "The planning board has
:
been against the mall proposal

from the st'art."

Mall developers in accordance
with fire safety laws have agreed to
furnish the New Hamburg Fire
District with a $350,000 ladder-
equipped fire truck. The fire
depanment has said that with its
current equipment, it could not
adequately fight fires at the proP,os-
ed mall.
Developer Ungerer is confident
the mall will win site approval, but
the Save Our Town Committee
plans to continue opposition to the
mall. "We haven't begun to fight,"
Emery said.
broadcast won the George Foster
Peabody Award for Best Televison
News in
I
956.
Edwards then went on to the
CBS weekday afternoon broad-
casts, an assiinment he currently
holds with ·'Newsbreak."
Ile
currently anchors the CBS News
headline service, and the award-
winning Sunday morning series
"For Our Times."
On radio, Edwards' voice could
be heard on such broadcasts as
''The CBS World News Roun-
dup,"
"The World Today,"
"Newsmakers," "CBS Views The
Press," "Wendy Warren and the
News" and, since 1949, the annual
Christmas·special, "A Trip To The
North Pole." These shows were
broadcastat different times during
the l940's and 1950's.
Edwards was also active in
broadcasting politics by covering
many conventions,
elections,
in-
augurations and in I
952,
the cor-
onation of Queen Elizabeth 11 in
London. Edwards
also
interview-
-
ed public figures such as Eleanor
Roosevelt, Adlai Stevenson and
Herbert Hoover.
The other award winner, Gigi
Birdas; is now the manager of
editorials for \\'CBS radio. She
first got involved with CBS through
an internship in her senior year of
school and spent a semester work-
ing in the newsroom and accompa-
nying reporiers on assignmenls.
After gr·aduating in 1977 with a
B.A. in Communications Arts. Bir-
das beacme the news coordinator
for WCBS.
Besides being the Manager
or
Editorials, Birdas is also the pro-
ducer of "Lets
·rind
Out," the
sta-
tion's weekly newsmaker inrervie\1
program. One broadcast entitled.
"The
Goetz Case" was honored
with a 1985 Olive Award fo,
Outstanding Achievement in Local
Broadcast Service.
Since Birdas was appointed
Manager of
Editorials.
the star ion
has been awarded with The New
York State Associal<:d Pres\
Broadcasters'
Association first
place for best editorial and the New
York State Broadcasters Associa-
tion Radio Award for Outstandinu
Drunk and Drugged Driving
Editorial.
Among the I
SO
guests expected
to attend arc Charles Osgood,
Harry Reasoner, Andrew Rooney.
Morley Safer, Mike Wallace and
Dan Rather, who will present the
award
to
Edwards.
Subsaibe
to
The Wall Street Journal,
and enjoy student savings of up to$~. That's q~ite
a bargain especially when you consider what
1t
really !epresents: Tuition for the real world.
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__ op1n1on
The Cloud
Even in its infancy, on a sunny spring day the Lowell Thomas
Communications Center is certainly an imposing sight. Its
gleamimg metal framework and solid concrete walls seem to sym-
bolize Marist's reach into the future. But the darker, cloudier side
of the school must not get lost in the Thomas center's shadow.
Stale negotiations between the Marist administration and its
employees are dulling much of Marist's team spirit. But more im-
portantly, students themselves now feel the effects of escalating
tensions stemming from problems in group negotiations.
The faculty have gone into a slowdown as a tactical tool to pro-
test contract disputes. They are refusing to sign override cards
and have drastically cut back the number of hours they spend on
campus.
The faculty has said its dissatisfaction is rooted in a heavy
- . workload, bolstered by the administration's expectations of in-
creased responsibilites without increased compensation.
Another group of Marist employees, the clerical workers, has
been without a contra_ct for almost a year now.
The Secretarial Clerical Association's affiliation with a national
union and a unanimous faculty vote for job action are more than
simply tactical tools for contract disputers.
They are public statements to the Marist community.
While both the administration and the groups
involved
have
adamantly expressed frustration with the situation, the effects of
the friction, while subtle at times, manifest themselves among the •
Page 6 - THE CIRCLE-April 17, 1986 __


MON:
fiRE
_
DRltL
tUE :
ri
~
l)Ri
LL
WEO:
riRE
Df?i
LL.
.__.-=I."
f
i
m:
opJu,
s:OO
Ao_
z:
3:
~E
pRi
LL-
4:
o
FiRE
DRiLL
z:
SoN.°
FiRE
Dl?ill
4:
4SA.!f
HA
~GN4f
H
All •
1
students.

'-'!""------~~--------------------~-----~-'
Some students have listened to teachers slam Marist policies
or decisions in class. Snide comments or rude words from
frustrated members of otir community have given students reason
to wonder how the quality of services and education they are get-
ting is being affected.
_

The administration has said it does not have the money for re-
quested increases. Yet an executive faculty dining room is pro-
ceeding as planned.
It's time for Marist to regroup and re-examine its priorities.
Without the cessation of internal problems, there is no way this
school can continue to be an institution on the move. It may in-
stead find itself in reverse, with the students dragging behind.
'
by Carl MacGowan
in here at Bobby's World of Booby
Traps. We can get a war for you
SALE! BARGAINS!
BUY • custom-tailored to suit your own
NOW!! filled the windows of the
personal needs. Now, take you; for
little shop on Connecticut Ave.,
instance. You look like a man who
just a few blocks from the White
wants to get.things done fast and
House. The president was taking
neat. Correct."
his afternoon stroll, just him and
"Weh-hel, I suppose you're
his dog and 23 Secret Service right. But, you know, it's so hard
agents.
to .~nd
~
~oo~ war these days." _
. They popped into the store, _
a
_
ft
am t like, the old days, I
"N~gotiable. Non-refundable. The
price is right.''
An uncomfortable pau~e grew as
the lights seemed to dim and the
traffic noise slowed to a passing
drip of a water faucet. The presi-
dent waited with dignity, looking
-down at the salesman, He began to
ask foi: the final price when the
salesman· answered him first.
. small chime rang.:ollerhead.·,Thc •.
_
_.·k.nQ.w.
l3up}leu:;.__s
ple_t1t)'.,.0f:.g0,od
-;,:,;,-':t1.ourJceys/?!;
""' ;!.__;
:,·,;,., •.
-..:;placcwas.crammedinto;spacenot,,'
,,_.
j'J"''
J'"
V,"''""•'"•"'.·"·
.;;,,,J"J?,ai;agul"t.: ...
,,-.,,,
i ,s,·;j
HUii
.
,much bigger than a concrete block;

-
-
"Your keys. I askonly for.your
the shelves rose seemingly to the
the re·
·a
I
keys, and you will grant to me the
top of the eight-story building and
privilege to offer or deny you en-
Immaturity
were stuffed with egg crates, card-
·wo.·rl
d:.
trance to your home, your car,
• board boxes tearing at the corners
_
plane and boat. When it is in my
and oil barrels.
interests, I will feel free to enter
To the Editor,
I, as many other Marist students,
was impressed by the active way_
in
which a campus organization, the
Progressive Coalition, pushed for~
ward to be heard. This group is try-
ing to break the Marist College
bubble and bring world events and
conflict into our hands.
I
admire
them for the platform they've
taken and the directness with which
they've approached their objec-
tives. They stand for ideas in which
they truly believe, or at least this
is the message I have received when •
I read about them or saw the group
in
action. That is, until the other
day.
This group of mature, open-
minded,
forward-moving·
in-
dividuals ruined what they started
by engaging in a very immature,
rebellious, high school activity -
vandalism. Before their march· on
April 4,someone spraypainted
"Divest" .and "Apartheid Kills"
on the streets and on Gregory
House. This is really unnecessary!
Everything the group is trying to do
was washed down the drain! Van-
dalism, in a much smaller way, is
-no better than segregating blacks or
war in Central America. They've
got my credit for trying; but lose
my respect for not behaving as a
mature, good-for-Marist group.
Name withheld upon request
As the commotion moved
~M-------•--r
your home, inspect your safe-·
toward the cash register, a strange-
material out there,
if
you just know deposit box, • extract from -your
ly round man appeared from a
where to look. Give-you a hint:
estate that which I deem necessary
back room. "Howdee doin'," he
heard of the little country of El
to continue our business. I ask on-
sort of asked. "What can I do for
Platano."
ly for your keys."
..
you."
The president looked puzzled.
"You mea1,1,
tl!af§,{n.Ypy.jµst
"I'm in the market for a war,"
"No. I haven't. Where is that?" .·· Y{aI,I_tmy,
~ey,~JJ:!~Y.d,h_at_,rf.'!a~ly
is
said the president.
"Six doors down, from •Cape .'~-q~rg~g._.It's.~_.<!_e~l/~·:•'
, .. , .
"A war. Well, you've come to
Hom, left at the filling station,,few-·.,r,,The pr~ident fished through his
the right place. We've gotwars,·all,: steps toward,the,waddling.free in
pockets for his. keys, which he
kinds of wars. We got wars of at- • the middle of the Oceanic River,
finally found in the left breast
trition/wars of the world/ conven-
turn around, spin in place, bend
pocket of Secret Service agent no.
tional
wars/unconventional
down, reach the ground, stand up,
15. He hurriedly handed the keys
wars/crusades/revolutions/insur-
sit tight, and fire."
to the salesman, who clasped them
rections/terrorism/
• guerrilla
• "I'll have to look it up on the
and said:· "Now, your belt.''
wars/chemical wars/genocide/Ii-
map._ But tell me, what's the situa-
"My belt?"
quidation/pacification/
upris-
tion there?"
.
_
"Your belt.''
ings/coups d'etat/civil wars/moral
"Nothing. That's what makes it
"But you said ... "
equivalents of war/invasions/ in-
perfect for you. You can create
"Your belt.''
cursions/conflicts/police
ac-
your own war. You look like a
"But my pants will fall down,"
Hey, Maytag man
tions/training
exercises/cold
creative gentleman; you can just
the president confided.
_
wars/star wars/lukewarm wars/of-
make one up as you go along, add
"Precisely. Your belt, if you
fensives/wars of
100
years,
.100
details and local color, leave your
please.''
• To the Editor, •
Where, oh, where is the Maytag
man? As one of the 600 or so
residents of Champagnat Hall, I
have often pondered that question.
These periods of deep thought
usually take place when I do my
laundry. The Maytag man, so lone-
ly for he has no work ~o do. Boy,
if he only knew!
Four of the six industrial-size
dryers in Champagnat are, and
have been for about two months,
in need of his assistance. If he on~
ly knew that 600 people depend on
those dryers every week
to
dry
their
clothes. Would the Maytag man, so
THE:
CIRCLE:
noble in his ways, let those people
down? Who is keeping this infor-
mation from him? In my quest to
fin~ the answer to this intriguing
question, I was given a name. That
name I will reveal to you now. That
• name is Sherman, the man whose
company supplies the equipment to
the school.
Mr. Sherman, you are a member
of the Marist Board of Trustees,
and I know you get this newspaper,
so could you do me and the rest of
Champagnat Hall a favor -
tell
the Maytag man ... soon.
Jim Magura
Champ. 403
days or six days/ shows of
own special imprint on your very
The president paused and con-
strength/wars of national pride and
own personal war."

sidered: Is it worth the honor and
honor /we gottem all. Anthing you
"Gee, sounds terrific; How
integrity of the office to drop one's
want, no questions asked. We got _ much does it cost?"
pants? But what of the people of
wars for the heart and wars for the
_
"How much are you willing to
El Platano who would be facing the
mind. All shapes and sizes and 39 spend?"
predicament of a red tide lapping
flavors. Just tell me what you
"No price is too high," said the
at their shores, fed by a mad dog
need."
president, his confidence building.
and a flake?'? Indeed, the good
. "Weh-hel, I'm really looking for
"Name your price.''
name of the USA was at stake. The
a war I can truly call my own.
"The
price
is
modest,
president
whipped
off
his
Something I
can
look back on with
reasonable-a nominal fee. Neither belt,handed it to the salesman,
a
~mile, knowing that it was mine;
too high, nor too
low.
Just right.
turned and strutted into the street,
something that others will cherish Affordable. ReaHstic." The shop-
s~raight to the White House.
and remember me for; one I can
keeper now leaned on the counter
tell my grandchildren about when with his arms crossed beneath his
I'm old and gray.''
massive frame, looking pensively at
"And that's what we specialize the president as he closed in.
That night,
the president
declared war on El Platano, with
his pants down.
Editor:
Denise Wilsey
News Editors:
Julia Murray
-
Tom McKenna
Advertising Manager:
Mike McHale
Senior Associate Editor:
Douglas Dutton
Christian Larsen
Asst. Advertising Manager:
Arts
&
Entertainment Editor:
Ken Parker
Gary
Schaefer
Associate Editors:
Anthony OeBarros
.
Paul Raynis
Sports Editor:
Brian O'Connor
Cartoonist:
Don Reardon
Laverne C. Williams·
Photography Editor:
Laurie Barraco
Senior Editor:
Carl
MacGowan
Business Manager:
Faculty Advisor:
David McCraw
Usha Driscoll
Member of
the
College
Press SeMce






























Vi
e
w
p_o
__
i_,_-_l_t
___________
Apri/
17, 1986 - THE CIRCLE - Page
7 __
National gun· control legislation
now
by
Ken Parker
If you think the NRA will be
Last
week the House
of
quieted down because of the recent
Representatives approved· a bill
vote, think agafo, The NRA will
making it easier to buy, sell and
not be finished until every existing
transport firearms. The bill also
restiction on firearms is revoked.
preserves the Federal ban on the in-
Considering that nearly 10,000
terstate
sale of pistols
and
Americans are killed in handgun
handguns.
crimes each year (about 25 han-
stricter the law, the lower the
availability of firearms. The less
availability, the less violent crime.
. It's as simple as that. However,
because no national gun control
measures are in place, the slaughter
continues.
Despite claims to the contrary,
dgun murders per day), the last
To give an idea of how bad the
the decision was not a victory for
thing America needs is exactly what
handgun problem is, considerthe
proponents of gun control. In reali-
the NRA wants - looser handgun
following data: From 1963 to 1973
ty, gun control forces can claim on-
laws..
.
there were 46,121 Americans kill-
ly one major achievement. That is,
Currently, it is legal in some
ed in the Vietnam War. During the
the vote to retain the Federal ban
states to purchase handguns while
same
time
period,
86,644
portion of the bill is proof the Na-
in others itis not. It is a well known
Americans were murdered with
tional • Rifle Association can be
fact that many criminals obtain
firearms in the U.S. About
80
per-
defeated, something many . have •• their guns by purchasing them
cent of these were killed by han-
'feared was impossible. Still, this
legally in one state and committing
dguns. As impossible as it may
not a time for a victory dance,
murder in another. John Hinckley
seem, more Americans were killed
rather a time for gun contol sup-· purchased his handgun in Texas
by Americans
than
by the
porters to reassert their forces.
and used it in Washington, D.C. lt
"enemy."
The NRA is one of the mosf
is conceivable, and often the case,
One of the NRA's many weak
• powerful fobbying groups today.
that murders are committed even in
arguments 'is the claim that it has
•. Their
stranglehold
on
states with the strictest gun control
not actually been proven that gun
'Washington has been the leading
measures.
control legislation is a viable deter-


factor in -the failure of effective gim
- Therefore, national legislation is
renno crime. In 1983; England had
control legislation to be passed. For
needed.
four handgun murders, Japan had
· last week's vote, the NRA spent
The strictest gun laws in this -92 and Canada had six. These
$1.6 million on an extensive lobby-

country are in .the Northeast while ·' countries have strict firearms laws.
. ing and advertising campaign.
the. weakest are in the South. The
Co~pare these with America's
10,000 yearly casualties. Gun con-
trol works.
Firearms have been as American
as apple pie ever since the first set-
tlers arrived. Later, guns were con-
sidered a standard household item
to be used for hunting, self-defense
and exploring "the frontier." On-
ly within the past century, with the
increase ofimmigration, urbaniza-
tion and a diminshing frontier, has
the unrestricted possession of
firearms, particularly handguns,
come into serious question.
America's
love affair
with
firearms runs long and deep. One
of America's
most legendary
figures of the twentieth century is
John Wayne, a man who vowed to
put a bullet in the chest of every
Native American who got in his
way. Certainly the media, with
television shows such as "The
Equalizer" and heroes such as
Clint Eastwood, only serves to en-
force the idea of the gun as a sym-
bol of manhood and righteousness.
ln order for gun control ad-
vocates to succeed, they must begin
to take the initiative. For too long,
gun control advocates have played
catch up to the NRA's congres-
sional threats. It is time for gun
control followers to start their own
fire, rather than spendii1g their time
defending
against the NRA's
flames.
Of course gun control advocates
have tried time and again to get the
attention of Washington with little
success. In fact, the recent altering
of the Gun Control Act of 1968
took 18 years to accomplish.
But at the present time gun con-
trol advocates have an advantage
they rarely get a chance to use.
That is, the issue of gun control is
back in the news. It's in the
newspapers and on television. Now
is not the time to retreat and think
up new tactics.
They must
capitalize on the salience aspect and
push Congress now for tighter gun
control legislation. We cannot wait
for the NRA to cause a stir in
Washington. We must create our
own,
now.
Ken Parker is a senior com-
munication arts major at Marist .
• , •••
••
•. ·Tne
Ji'Jat
1
p·-~p-
o·:I.·n·
·t·m··en·
.t
,·.:f1
•ln
of Lowell Thomas
by Ann Jotikasthira
I read an article in The Circle say.-
students;
but what about the class
. ,
ing that the Lowell Thomas Com-
of
1986'? .•
We are nearing the end of the
munications Center is scheduled to
Many·
of us came to Marist
semester and graduation for the
be opened in January 1987, but
because we were told it was an ex-
class of 1986. In March 1982, a lit-
would not be totally operational
panding communications school;
·tie over four years ago, I remember
because of a lack of funding. I
the major attribute of which would
coming to Marist College for the
thought back to four years ago,
be the Lowell Thomas Com-
... ·::·_·'
,
-fir.st: time. for Operi .House; .
I
h~d -. when I began to hear all the talk of _ munication Arts Center.
l
was very
written ori my adm_i~sio,ns-a~\Jlica-
...:•.a~completed building>I felt·very •:-,:'disappointed.'.:.,,:, •
...
11::,·J
""·.c,,
. tion Jh~t I \VOUlcf
majer"m com-~.:.:
-'dis_illi:isioiled
abo'finhese'uqfultiJl- ,.;.,. ~Another; -major., -item "'W,hich
.. niuiiication·arts' .... , ,.,., ·' ·
•. ed promises, so I decided to do
causes my skepticism towards the
The most outstandirig feature of
some research into the matter'.
center. is the fact that IBM gave
the speeches and tours of the day
The Lowell Thomas
Com-
Marist a $2.5 million computer
was that Lowell Thomas,'the late
munications Center was originally ' grant. Now the "communications"
radio announcer. and commen-_ to be opened by Fall, I 985.
center will be half filled with com-
tator, donated a large sum of
However, in December 1984, after
puters! J might understand getting
money to Marist to build a center
complications

over the building
more computers if there were not
for communication arts. At the
site, it was still not known when
enough already. But what about
time, this was the up and coming
construction would begin. After
the entire computer center, the Ex-
major at Marist. All the students
approval of the site by the Town
ecutive Presentation Facility and a
in my major were told that this
of Poughkeepsie, the completion
computer room downstairs in Don-
,:•tgreafm'Ciimment for the expansion
date of the center was moved to
nelly'? Isn't this a little ridiculous'?
ti
o'f
1
eorii'fui,niieation-:A'rts'would be
January 1987.
Even
though
it
seems
comple~ed · before' we gradu_ate'd. ·''.' :-1
f the center-is completed by the
unbelievable now, the Lowell
On April 10; 1986, approximate- ••
>
latest,proposed date,. it, will benefit
Thomas Communications Center
ly four years and one month later,
current ,,communication
·arts ... probably could open by January
April foolishness: Fire •
alarms
by -Diane Pomilla
April is the cruelest month, once
wrote poet
T.S. Eliot. I think he
may have had the right idea. Here
we all are in the beginning of April
and it seems like insanity· is the
norm on campus.
they don't really care about other
people. Well, I think you had bet-
ter start caring. Fire alarms are
There will be people '
who will read this and
laugh because they
don't really care about
other people.
mature, and rational people. As
students, we have to look out for
- each other and not pull false
alarms.
Also, I think that the administra-
tion of the dorms should get
serious. It is unfortunate, they say,
that everyone must suffer, because
one person pulls the alarm. Don't
dismiss this as a prank. It's not
something to be overlooked. The
residence directors need to for-
• m~late a clear plan for preventing
1987. I sec the actual construction
From a public relations pcrspec- .
as I walk to my internship and
tivc, was it better to tell incoming
classes every day. However, it is students of the coming of this
still very vague as to when the
"great wonder" than not to speak
building will be fully equipped.
of so-called proposals until there
There is not enough funding to buy
was some movement'? l think not.
equipment needed for a planned
l would rather be told the definite
telepr_oduction facility .and other . facts~ not·a series of assum-ptions.
communications areas.
- To the'- 'dommunication
A.rt\;
Also, no on~ knows whell;,th.e ,, &tudents•i)f the c\ass of
\9&1
and
Beirne Media Center will be mov~ beyond: Good luck!
ed into the building and there arc
no specific plans
to
move com-
Ann Jotikasthira
is a
senior
com-
munication clubs in either.
munication arts major af Marisf.
As I write this, we have had three
fire drills in a row, in Champagnat
Dorm. The person(s) who have to
prove how much power they have
by getting us all out of bed at ap-
proximately 3:00 a.m. may be a
therapudic move. As for the rest of
us, we are sick of it!
false alarms. I know at other.----------------------------.
schools they don't condone such
Why do people have to act so
cruelly'? You· may think doing this
is funny, or makes you loo)s really
great in front of your friends. Well,
let me tell you that after a while
people are not going to think any
of the fire alarms are real. I've had
friends sleep through the noise
thinking it was another false alarm.
One night, as it has been proven in
the past, the alarm will go off and
it will mean Champagnat (or any
other dorm) is on fire. I don't want
to see anyone die because they
don't respond quick enough to
leave the building.
There will be people that
'will
read this ~Y
and laugh because
nothing to joke about. I remember
an incident that occurred the begin-
ning of the semester which could of
resulted in many deaths, had there
been a real fire.
Someone slept through the fire
alarm in Champagnat and when
she was finally awakened by her
resident assistant, the girl left the
, building by the side exit of Cham-
paganat. Since there was no securi-
ty guard at the door, and the alarm
had been shut off, and several of
us assumed we could go inside. We
realized that this was a mistake
when no one else was let in to the
front entrance of Champagnat
Hall. If there was a fire, this
mistake could have been fatal.
Such errors should not happen.
We all have to be responsible,
actions. For example, I have a
friend attending Cazenovia Col-
lege·. In the past they had a very
serious fire where several girls were
killed.
Ever since, their policy on
fire alarms has been very strict.
They instill the concept
of
seriousness in their students about
fire drills.
What is it going
to
take at Maris!
for people to stop acting so
foolishly'? Do you enjoy being
jolted out of a night's sleep at 3
a.m. because someone thought it
would be fun to pull the alarm? Do
you need to see a few of your
friends dead before action is taken?
WAKE
UP MARIST, the body
you save may
be
your own.
Dine
Pomilla
is
a sophomore
F.a&fi5lt
major.
at
Marist.
The
Circle
welcomes any com-
mentary on the subject of your
choice.
All essays should be 500 to 700
words and are due on Monday,
April 26.
Please send all contributions to:
Laverne Williams
cl
o The Circle













--
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____________
page 8 - THE CIRCLE - April 17, 1986 __
The Replacements: A band to call.Your own
by
Ken Parker
. This week's column is directed at
the student body. All others can
read on to "The Other Murray."
Sorry, folks.
Now listen up. There's this band
called the Replacements. Radio's
not playing them, MTV's not play-
ing them and Congress hasn't
banned them yet, but not since God
gave us the Ramones has a band
come along which so expertly com-
municates the joys and pains of
adolescence.
rave on
what a mess on the ladder of suc-
cess/Where you take one step and
miss the whole first rung."
"Bastards of Young" is a sort of
modern day "Baba O' Riley"." But
while the Who sang about a
"teenage
wasteland,"
the
Replacements have actually lived
through it. All four of the band's
• members are under 25 with one still
in his teens. The Replacements hail
from the seediest depths of Min-
neapolis, Minn., also the home of
that Pririce guy.
The Replacements spent their
early days on the independent
Twin/Tone label, resulting in a
series of goofball albums and
assorted singles. Of particular note
is Sorry Ma, Forgot to Take Out
the Trash which has to rank with
Ian Hunter's
You're Never Alone
with a Schizophrenic as best album
You know, it's odd. Rock'n'roll
title of all time.
is said to be the music of youth, but
After trashing their way through
rarely does it address specific
four albums on Twin/Tone, the
On the avenue of inspiration: left to right: Bob Stinson, Tommy Stinson, Chris Mars, Paul
Westerberg.
(photo courtesy of Twin Tone Records)
. adolescent concerns. Most bands
band signed a major label deal with
attempt to be the second coming of . the Warner Bros.-distributed Sire
the Beatles rather .than represent
·Records. That deal resulted in
Tim,
who they really are. What the
the Replacements' major label
Replacements are is nothing less
debut. The album plays down the
than the most exciting and impor-
roudiness and experimentation
tant rock'n'roll band to come along
found on their previous work in
in, well, too long.
favor of a more focused and com-
and Hank Williams standards.
about them.
But while effectively representing
Simply by being themselves, the
Their recent appearance at The Ritz
The best way to explain the
the concerns of youth is a noble art,
Replacements offer an honest alter-
plete approach.
in New York opened with Kiss'
Replacements is to let the lyrics do
it may in the end prevent the __
native to corporate rock's idea of
The band is legendary for its live
"Rock'n'roll Ali Night."
the talking. Consider these:
Replacements from even moderate ~.
a what a rock band should be.
If
performances. On any given night
In the Musician interview,
• "The only exercise you ever get
success in the marketplace. Seems •
Bruce Springsteen sings for the
the band can perform nothing but
Westerberg went on to say, "Our
is the shakes."
few kids today want to hear how
working class, the Replacements
hardcore interpretations of their
biggest influence is probably AM.
"If being afr_aid is a crime, we
bad things are; they'd rather escape
represent every misplaced kid in
songs in twenty minutes then
radio from '72 to '76, one of the hang-side by side.''.
with Duran Duran or Mr. Mister.
America.
depart, leaving confused fans to
worst periods in all of music. We're .
"Everybody wants to be special
If the Replacements do succeed -
The Replacements'
musical
wonder what they've just seen.
not afraid to acknowledge the stuff here/They call your name out !mid
in being the next big thing, it will
themes run the spectrum of youth.
we grew up on, like the Jackson and
clear /Here
comes
a
be on their own terms. The world
That is, they encompass humor,
In an interview with Musician
Five and Brownsville Station."
regular/ Am L the only one who
will have to find the Replacements.
heartbreak and frustration. These
magazine last year, Westerberg
Hi hli hted b Bob Stinson's
feels ash~med?" .
They aren't likely to come knock- .
themes have been tackled in rock
said, "We don't like to feel we have
drop~in~ of Jis. guitar,. ,the..
But p01~nant lyncs are only half .ing on your door, unless the(!'e out ___
.. --·
·before-certainly;:.;_1l1e_,
~a,_(lj!;sJ: :.
!P_e<>,E_l_e
Pl:gg~d_:-_~-«:._h~'ie.f~n
at ~ll
Rep'
lacements''1'anuacy apJ>¢e.t1¥.:: !he patt)e m•any so~g:-Wh'!-~-~akes
· of beer.,
__ .. , _
·· .
1:.,:n;,_::;,,•,
rockabilly recordings were teenage
• ·costs.
We
definitely nave.
l:y,ses in- , . ori "Saforffay
'Nigh't
Uve'' wa:s
'the . ·:
~.he
Repl:1-~e11~s ,s~s:i;ee<l,,"-~ygll~
-.v: . !h1!.lfutur~ q.f.~rn,~~ijc~n!J>:1
confessions- but rarely has it been
to childlike behavior; 'probably
most exciting portion of the show; . Just. an mterestmg novelty_ i~ tile -· relies on the. talents of Westerberg.
done so well.
more than most people. It hurts us
wh·
i"ch so-me·
may arg·ue is
noi hard
mus!C- The son_gs_
on. their two
Youth fades fast and _Westerberg,
The Rep! e ent
a
Paul
sometimes. We don't put on a great
alb m
r.
and L t It
Be
b
fl t
acm
s
re:
showe·veryni"ght.·lt's·p•·robablythe toaccomplishthesedays.
prev1ol!s_
.. u s;
im.
e
alrea~y25,_mu_st egm_tore_ec
Westerberg, vocals and guitar;
.
.

__ .. are-some .of the catchiest songs
new issues m hts songs if he is to
Tommy Stinson, bass; Bob Stin-
long way around tl!e barn as far as
Whtie the Replacem~nts have a:-
committed to vinyl
in
quite a while. remain credible.
son, lead guitar and Chris Mars,
success in big terms, but I'm not
quired a definite following, there 1s
On those two albums . the
_
drums.
sure we're exactly after that. If \\'..~.---also
a
contingent ~f music fans
Replacements approach suchtopics
·Wes_terbe~g
remmds me of t~e
While the Replacements accen-
••
had a choice, we~d. Ji~e-to·be· the
who feel t~e bal!d is a_ group of
as music videos (which they've
~me person m every class who sits
tuate the trials and tribulations of
bigges[Jtmateur band
m
the world.
over-rated 1mbecdes, evidenced b_y sworn never to do), suicide (they
m
the back of the . room and
the adolescent experience to in--. --Wifalf agree there's nothing duller
the drunken louts who a~tend their don't promote-it) and androgyny.
answers only one que_suon all year.
credible detail, they dq so without
than a professional musician."
shows. A common music conver-
In addition "Left of the -Dial"
But that answer 1s the most
get!ing cerebra[
s~tion piece is sharing personal pays tribut; to college radio, the
memorah,k one .,~f}h~,.J_g;~i~n,--;,;
In the anthemic "Bastards of
On other nights they will include
v1ew.s on the band. Se~ms most Replacements' only musical horn~ semester.
, ,'--·,,;
...... ., ;.,,,.:,,
,, .• :--.
Young" Westerberg sings: "God,
cover versions of Kiss "classics"
music fans have something to say these days.
. .
> _--: , .,_ -,-,,,
,n . H°.Qf~Y.-,~?-!}he,.,,~p.1,~~
7
~ert~_-:
·:
by Julia E. Murray
The scene opens in a large televi-
sion studio filled with restless peo-
ple, all scaring intently at the clos-
ed stage curtain in front of them.
Suddenly, a voice is heard from
above.

• "And now folks, it's time for
your favorite game show, the one
that turns your hair gray and sets
your teeth on edge! The one
guaranteed to send you to a
e/:All
?New·Rock
92~ll
/tairimen(for the'.
;;;;:on,Saturdayth_
;
wi"1
ceJe~r,aJe
_th~
~
.
Pick a ro()m,
psychiatrist ·at least three months
before your parents thought you
• needed one! It's time for Resident's
Roulette, with. our charming hosts,
the housing staff!"
The curtain opens to reveal a
large, smiling group of resident
assistants, unit coordinators, and
resident directors gathered around •
an enormous roulette wheel. One
of the RD's steps forward and
begins to speak.
"Calm down, folks, everyone
• who's qualified will get their turn.
In order to be a contestant on this
show you must be registered for at
least
12
credits, have paid a $75
the other
murray
room deposit and be willing to
sleep in a closet (assuming we have
room for you). I'm sorry .but all
you seniors and. commuters- will
have to stay in the audience and
just watch the fun." A heartren-.
ding groan is heard from .the studio
audience. "Too bad."
"And now, for our first contes-
tant, a young lady from Long
Island. Mary Gullible, come on
down!"
Mary jumps from her seat and
runs to the stage, dragging another
girl with her. The two-stop, gasp-
ing for breath, in front of the first
RA.
"This is my friend, Patsy,"
Mary says shyly. "We want to
room together, so would it be all
right if
we
spin the wheel
together?"
"Why sure! As
a
matter of fact,
we encourage all our contestants to
bring their prospective roommates
with them. We refuse to guarantee
anything else, but you ·do get to
pick• your roommate. Now why
don't you two step up to the wheel
while our emcee explains the
rules."
Mary and Patsy walk quickly
over to the wheel as the emcee pulls
out a three-foot-long piece of paper
and begins to read.
"Each contestant, after having
paid the appropriate fees and hav-
ing signed a waiver absolving this
show of any responsibility for draf~
ty rooms, • broken
washing
machines and obnoxious roomates,
is allowed to pick three numbers on
the wheel. These numbers,
representing the various large and
luxurious living accomodations on
campus, must be chosen from the
correct group for which the contes-
tant is qualified. The contestant is
assigned to a particular group by
pulling a number from a hat. All
group numbers were posted prior
to the show."
The audience, all slightly gray at
the temples and two years closer to
retirement, shift restlessly. The
emcee notes this, but does not pace
himself accordingly.
.. Each
group
number
signifies ... Each contestant is allow-
ed one pull at the wh~l .. .l f t~o
contestants are. competing at ttie
same time, each is allowed one
pull ... Last of all, any accusations
about the wheel being weighted are
completely untrue, but even if it
was, who ever said life was fafr?"
• While several members of • the
audience run up on stage and drag
. the emcee off, microphone still in
hand, Mary and Patsy choose their
three numbers. Mary pulls the
wheel and waits breathlessly for it
to stop spinning, while Patsy puts.
lier head between her knees after
trying to read the wheel. The wheel
finally stops and
Mary.
is a loser.
"Benoit 205!" she shrieks. "But
we wanted to be in the Garden
Apartments! That's where all our
•friends are going to be!" ·
"I
wouldn't bet on it," says one
RA soothingly. "Now cheer up
Mary, Patsy hasn't taken her turn
yet. Come over here, Patsy, and
give it the old college try!"
Patsy wobbles over to the wheel,
gives it a shove and accidentally
throws herself on top of it. As she
spins helplessly around, Mary sobs
loudly and the RA explains to the
audience that falling on the wheel
means an automatic triple.
"Too bad, girls. Better luck next
semester. Remember, you only
have to Jive there for one semester,
just four short months, only one-
third of a year. That's not very
long, now is it? And now, stay tun-
ed for 'Add/Drop Bingo'!"



































U .• Alabama.Thrcatcns To
Expel Cross Burners
UA Pres· .. Joab Thom~s recently
said he'll expel all students he
found were involved in a cross bur-
ning in front of a cottage about to
be occupied by members of Alpha
Kappa Alpha, an all-black sorority.
"The university.simply will not
·tolerate this kind of, behavior,"
Thomas said.
Two students were arrested at
the scene of the fire.
VA
is current-
ly preparing to charge the students
with violating the student conduct
code.
••
Most Governors Put Education
Funding At Top Of
Their BudgcfLists
But -a . National
Governors
Association' survey·recently found
that the majority of governors
don't think they'll be a\)le to get in-
creased funding measures through
their state legislatures.
Congress Gets Bill To
Exempt Student Aid
From Gramm-Rudman
The "Higher Education Protec-
tion Act," introduced by Rep.
William Clinger (R-Pa), would ex-
.
.
empt all federal student aid pro-
grams from the automatic cuts
mandated by the Gramm-Rudman-
Hollings budget balancing law.
Clinger expected· the House to
start debating the bill this week.
NAIA May Start Testing
Athletes l•or· Drugs, Too •
Fresh from a victory to gain con-
trol over the finances of the Na-
tional
Association
of Inter-
collegiate
Athletics,
NAIA
presidents recently said they want
to start testing athletes at member
schools for drug use.
The only constraint, they said,
will be if member schools can't af-
ford the tests.
Prof Says Indecision A Great
Virtue In Multiple~Choice Tests
Test scores tend to be higher
among students who change their
answers frequently on multiple
choice tests, a recent study by
Texas A&M Prof. Ludy Benjamin
has found.
Palm Springs, Lauderdale
Start Picking Up The•
• Spring Break Pieces
Palm Springs, Ca., officials said
they'll hire "four times as manv"
police to help prevent spring break
riots next year.
This year, about 15,000 students
descended on the town, rioting,
assaulting others and causing
thousands of dollars· worth of
damage.
Some behaved "like absolute
wharf rats,"
police Lt. Gary
Boswell said.
In Florida, four students fell to
their deaths from hotel balconies
during the three-week-long break
season.
A Winter Park, Fla., man has
started a group called FLAP to en-
courage people to leave Florida.
"The best thing about college
students," said founder Jim War-
nke, "is that they eventually go
home."
Notes From All Over:
Florida
State U. Chancellor Charlie Reed
and U. Florida Marshall Criser
both suggested recently that college
freshmen should be banned from
varsity sports teams to give them
time to adapt academically to col-
lege ... Virginia Military Institute
recently
agreed
to
award
posthumously the diploma it refus-
ed to give a student JOI years ago
after the student criticized VMI
leaders in a graduation speech.
From the College Press Service
BilOk
]Jacks beat backs
MOUNT .PLEASANT,
MI
dre. "Your abdominal area is
"I've never seen a backpack with
(CPS) -
With Nautilus machines . thrust·forward, and your shoulders just onestrap," he said. Yet that's
in the school gym,_.salad
barsiii the
are brought posterior."
the way most students wear them.
cafeteria-and·sfuoke-free areas in
"Then a kid will carry that
"Rather than taking the time to
every student lounge, it might seem
backpack for six, eight minutes
throw both straps on, they just
college
life has· never been
across campus to his next class."
throw on one," he added.
April 17, 1986 - THE CIRCLE - Page 9 __
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COUPON GOOD THRU APRIL 17th
I
The l::.Jnited Colors of Benetton are on
display for the first time in Dutchess Coun-
ty. Come in and see our eye-catching
clothing
at the South Hills Mall in
Poughkeepsie.
Benetton, the world's most
recognizable fashions
healthier.
_ _ ,
.
,Y,~
,c,
ln_other,.~ord,s_,.
he's gqt, lll~~y ,;: ; But. even a properly. balanced
Bu~1-o~:..ienterprism~,
professor!
posfure wbiJe,car-rying
•a ..
mega--load •
,,1pack·
1
~a(i~Qe·ap,o,b1~~;t:of
t)).e
.our;~;
c-;
has recently found a
·new
health
of textbooks, and according to
of-shape.student.
••••
-,.
• •
hazard on-campus:
. Sendre, "there're bound
to
be lots
So Sendre recommended a com-
C,()<)lt)C•CC:,C>C'.C()C,C,C:()CJt:ce:c:~C(;(.·C
(;C~•(.(
.. ' •• ',. ..
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.
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•(_,.
It's that. book-laden backpack
of repercussions."
plete work-out program weight
you've _ been hefting over one
Besides knock~down shoulder-,- • machines; adding that exercises for
shoulder all these years, said Ron
a drooping shoulder caused by con-
flexibility are equally important.
Sendre,
a Central
Michigan
stantly wearing the pack slung over
But if all this seems like more
University professor of sports
one shoulder -
backpacks can health consciousness than-one can
medicine.
cause swayback, shoulder tension,
handle, another study offers a ra-
"Knock-down·shoulder" is on-
headaches, even nerve damage.
tionale • for. at least one "bad
ly one of the maladies Sendre
There is a simple remedy:
habit."
ascribed to the overuse and misuse
~•Lighten the load is the best ad-
of the'popular boo
le
packs seen on
vice I can give," the professor said.
every ,A,merjc;m. campus.,- . .
~
• , .
But if one's credit load demands
How
cim
the innocent backpack, • carting 30 pounds of Organic
symbol of outdoor lifestyles, wreak
Chemistry texts, the Unabridged
_ such devastation on unsuspecting
Works of Shakespellrl! arid a jum7
• college students?
bo box of Crayolas for Art
IOI,
'' A
heavy backpack changes
Sendre suggested wearing the pack
your center of gravity," said Sen-
the way it was designed to beworn.
Cigarette smoking may enhance
students' ability to study, a group
of British scientists said.
The reseachers
found
that
:~nicotine, either from cigarettes or
/pills; increased concentration by
eight percent and keep minds sharp
for up ·to a half hour.
Docs dodge defe.Jise furids
by Jim Schwartz
WASHINGTON, D.C. (CPS)
-
A
majority of the nation's
physicists opposes the controversial
Strategic Defense Initiative, usually
called the -"Star Wars" project, a
recent national survey of 549
physicists indicated.
During the last year, almost
3,000 professors -
many of them
physicists -
have signed pledges
not to take SDI research funds.
But SDI's research chief said
that, despite surveys and petitions,
his office has had no problems
distributing the research money.
The Union of Concerned Scien-
tists, an anti-Star Wars group that
often takes stands on social and
political issues, commissioned the
nationwide study conducted by
Peter D. Hart Research Associates
Inc., an independent polling service
in _Washington.
"We selected physicists (to ask
about SDI) because they are closest
to the necessary technology.'' UCS
spokeswoman Ellen Dudley said.
By a margin of 54 percent to 29
percent, the physicists said SDI is
a mistake.
But James Jonson, SDl's
direc-
tor of science pf
technology,
dismissed the survey as a poll
of
people who wouldn't know
much
about
the
necessary technology •
anyway.
"It's aimed
at
people
out
of their
arena,"
he
said.

Jonson
said engineers
and com-
puter scientists -
people more
familiar with applied technology
than physicists - would have
been
better able to judge whether SDI
weapons
eventually
can be
workable.
Sixty-three
percent of the
physicists who said they know
about the new kind of technology
SDI would require described the
program "as a step in the wrong
direction for America's national
security policy."
UCS's legislative analyst Charles
Monfort hopes to use the survey to
help convince Congress that the
scientific community generally op-
poses space weapons.
"Most people on Capitol Hill are
• lawyers and businessmen, not
scientists," he said, adding the
politicians who have not made up
their minds on the SDI "will give
it (the survey) some weight."
. With
federal
funding
for
research getting increasingly scarce,
the temptation to accept SDI
money has risen.

During the 1986 fiscal year, Ion-
son will award about $100 million
in research grants, with more than
$60 million going to universities.
And \Vhile large numbers of pro-
fessors at the Massachusetts In-
stitute of Technology, Cornell,
Princeton, Michigan State and
Il-
linois led the way in refusing to ac-
cept SDI funds, lonson is not too
worried about finding scientists to
take the research grants.
He said his office received 3,500
proposals for research projects this
fiscal year, but only could fund
about 400 of them.
"Nobody (who has applied) has
refused a dime from us," he said.
And of the raging debate about
the weapons, lonson said, "The
controversy underscores
the
need
for research."
a
e
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.
.:•.
.,.
--Page
10 -
·
THE CIRCLE - April
-17s
1986
_
New student gov't leaders discuss their goals
Student Academic Committee
Commuter Union
by Ann Jotikasthira
.
by Diane Pomilla
He said commuters have to par-
ticipate if they really want to be
part of the college.
Newly elected Student Academic
Committee President Gina Disan-
za said she plans to make the SAC
an active part of the Council of
Student Leaders office after
four
months without an official leader.
Disanza, a junior from Dover,
N.J., ran uncontested in the SAC
election two weeks ago and took
office April 15.
SAC, a branch of student
government which acts as a liason
between
administration
and
students, focuses on
.
academic
issues. SAC representatives sit on
the Academic Affairs Committee,
grades and the new Core program.
a group of faculty and ad-
According to Assistant Dean of

ministrators which deals with
Student Services Debbie Bell, the
academic issues.
SAC gives students a voice in the
"The first and biggest job (of the
academic affairs of the college.
SAC) is to restore the position as
"The SAC maintains a close
a major force on campus -
to let
relationship with faculty, division
people know it's there," said
chairperspns and the academic vice
Disanza.
...
president," she said.
_
"Lacking the leadership, the
Disanza said

she wanted, to
SAC basically fell apart,'' Disan-
.
become president of the SAC
za said. "It's not so much the

because she said she believes it is
resignation but
-the·
inability to. necessary for
students
to have a say
replace (the president) officially.
.
at Marist.
..
.
.
They (SAC) was not made aware
.
• .
"I came out of nowhere with no
of the issues as if the SAC president· experience. I really believed in the
remained."
necessity of the SAC -
it needed
As SAC President, Disanza is help and I chose to go through with
also an officer of the Council· of
it," she said.

Student Leaders and will attend the • Next semester, the SAC will hold
...
meeting's to· discuss
..
and·
..
~~ie on: publicized meetings in the Campus
issues of student governmenL'•·--~-----'Center.



• •
A major plan for next year, ac-
"The SAC is open to all students
cording to Disanza, is to establish
and
there
are
·no·
·real
re·-

very firm lines of communication
.
quirements," Disanza said.
• •
with new Academic Vice President,

Membership applications will be
Mark vanderHayden who will start
..
available in the next two weeks, ac-
his job July I.
.
.
cording to Disanza.
Disanza said she also plans to
The new SAC officers who will
hold meetings with division

work with Disanza are: Vice Presi-
chairpersons and to start working
dent. Denise Wilsey,. Secretary
closely with the administration.
Carol-Ann Catucci and Treasurer'· •
.:
:.~The SA..C.snould
.be
:there:so .,
Detrik·•Wynkoopi,.who·:wm also
i
"that
students have
,a
,say.
on,.the
.
serve
..
as the finantj;ll
boar<)
academic policies and issues that
representative.
••
,;-;-
.., ·'
, .
faculty and administration are ad-
Since the resignation of Patricia
dressing and evaluating as well as Clark last November, Amy Price
to see that the students'. best needs has been the acting SAC president.
are being met by working to find Price was to hold the
·position
on
their views," she said.
an interim basis but was not replac-
Disanza said she is planning to ed due to lack of student interest
bring four specific issues
to
the
.
in the position. According to Price,
SAC: the Science of Man program,
Clark resigned because she did not
a student survey on concerns and
have enough time to devote to the
needs to be addressed, minus
·position.
·college
Union Board.
by Joseph O'Brien
Suzanne Ryan was elected presi-
dent of the College Union Board in
an uncontested race March 26. She
took office April 15.
She said she wanted to switch
positions because she is interested
in programming activities and
events for students.
While she hasn't announced any
specific changes she would like to
make as C.U.!3. president, Ryan
said she is approaching the position
with new ideas.
"It's boring, every year we s¢e
the same old events. I would like
to kill the limited perspective that
students have about C ..
U.B. and
what we have already
.done,"
she
•.
said.
Ryan said of her responsibilty as
a student leader, "I must act as a
representitive of what the students
want and it is in that aspect that I
can act as a student leader. I feel
that a student government should
be concerned with issues that effect
the students, whether it is apartheid
or parking."
Ryan said to be successful,
C.U.B.
or any organization
representing students, must receive
feedback and support from the
students.
When asked whether the fact she
was the only candidate for C.U.B.
president is
a reflection on the
level
of
student interest
at
Marist she
said,l'lt says something
about
the
system. h's roo confusing."
As president of the
Council
of
Student
leaders Ryan said she
worked
on a
plan to
revise
the con-
--,-------------·------------··
••
Sue
Ryan
stitution of the student government •
so that it can better meet the needs
of the growing student body at
Marist College. Ryan said that
within the current structure of the
student government it is very dif-
ficult to make changes and no of-
ficial revisions have been made yet.
Current C.U.B. president, Chris
Desautelle, who will be graduating
this spring agreed, with Ryan. He
said the lack of student involve-
ment is the result of students not
being aware of what is happening
with student government rather
than apathy. He was also in favor
of a new constitution which would
help the government more
erfe1:-
tively represent
students.
In student elections held last
week, Norman Clancy was elected
to the position of Commuter Union

president for 1986-87. He ran
unopposed.
Clancy, a sophomore from
Poughkeepsie, has never held a
.
school leadership postion, but he
said the opportunity to be Com-
muter Union president will. be a
good experience.
Clancy isn't sure yet what issues
he'd like to approached next fall.
"Right now I have no concrete
plans," he said. "I'd like to do
something about getting a bigger
lounge or better parking."
Although a large percentage of
Marist students are commuters,
few are· members of the Commuter
Union
according
to
Harry
Carleton, the current Commuter
• Union president.

"Out of 940 commuters on cam-
pus, only
15
belong to the· Com-
muter Union,". said Carleton, a
senior from New Windsor,
N.Y.
"Commuters have to be ag-
gressive," Carleton said: "Instead
of complaining about a problem,
try do do something about it.-Get
involved."
The Commuter Union was form-
,
ed in 1973 with the goal of getting

the non-resident student involved
with campus events.
As· president, Carleton sees
himself as a bridge between the
commuters of Marist and the
administration.
"I
see myself as a trouble
shooter,"
he said.
"I
attend
chance to voice their opinions. On-
meetings and represent the school's
Jy members of the Commuter

commuters."


Union attended said Carleton.
The Commuter Union· tries to
The Commuter Union sponsored
keep the non-active commuters
Tri val Pursuit Night last semester
aware of campus events by mailing
to get more commuters involved
out.
••
a monthly
newsletter.
with campus events. Carleton said
,
,
the event attracted about 35 people.
Carleton said he will be training
.
The. organization
,
also held a
.
Clancy in the following weeks and
commuter forum in· February so .. prepare him to take over as the.new
.
that• commuters could have a
president.
_
.
The Cir:cleJs
looking
~-YOIJKMOvt~:-~·:·/.\;:.~~-~
!-~~l;:J)~!~!
foll~~ing


.
.
.

.
. po~1t1onJ1.f~~~~~~&,lt{~~



'•',
4
-·~--~--~·-.--._
....
;_~·:-
...
}"!i~
!News_
Editor •Arts and Entertainmenr.-Ed]tof
-.Photography
Editor.
•Busihe·s_s\Manager

•Cartoonists
~
_
..


•P-hotograpD~rs

Please
return
responses
·to P.O. Box
C~857.
. • :_.-
•.
:
.::
..
.
: .:
.
:.,;_.:_~~;~.ii:'fi'.:•~L
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t·-~~'f'G'•J:;
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QUITTING.
IT COULD
BE
THE TEST
OF YOUR
LIFE.

























































I
::..:=====--~-==-----~--:~=---=---------=--=--Aprll
17, 1986 - THE CIRCLE· Page 11--
Excuses.~ Marist profs have heard 'em all
.camp\.lS
~nquirer
What are your thoughts
about the

'86 baseball
season?·
Tom Daly, senior, communica-
tion arts. I would like to see a sub-
way series,
and
if
Darryl
Strawberry lives
up
to potential he
will lead the Mets to the series.
Mike Masterson, senior, com-
munication arts. I hate the
Yankees.·
by Shelly Miller

"Professor,
Here you will
find our papers. We both had
Excuses, excuses, excuses.
pressing appointments in the city.
We've all tried at least one.
You see; we are actually interna-
Maybe the dog ate the paper or
tional bankers. We just do this stu-
your kid sister flushed it down the dent stuff in our spare time."
toilet. Perhaps a meteorite hit you •
"OK, you don't buy it.The truth
on the way to class.
is,
we
overslept.
We're
Mari st College professors have roommates-it
happens. Sorry."
heard them aUthrough their careers
Division of Arts and Letters
and some recently shared their Chairperson
R·obert Sadowski
favorites. Here are a few:
recalls an alleged case of amnesia
"Dear
Mr. M., I was unable to keeping a student from class for a

attend class today because
_my
week. The student claimed he lost
she wrote the note with?
. Robert Vivona, assistant pro-
fessor of mathematics and com-
puter science, once had a student
who said he couldn't take the final
exam because he had
10
be in Paris
for a week. For proof, the student
brought Vivona a bottle of 1927
Bordeaux wine.
"I
never checked it out," said
Vivona. "Once I got the bollle of
wine I felt I didn't have to."
mother and sister had-tickets for 'his memory and didn't realize a.
.
Assistant Professor of Com-
the Phil Donohue Show, and I week had passed.
munications Paul DelColle said he
wanted to watch it to see if they
Another student even got his
is disappointed with the quality of
would get· on camera or. perhaps
mother in on the act. He brought
excuses he has received this year.
ask a question-they
didn't."
in a note from her saying he
"The creativity has been very,
Two other students took a more couldn't turn his homework in
very low," he said. "If I'm given
novel' approach and decided to
.
because there wasn't a pencil in the
change their identity for the_day.
house. But what do you suppose
Frat. holds blood drive
today in
by Ben
Ramos
Campus Center
elbow. But this pinch can save five
lives.''
Campus fraternity Sigma Phi
One
.
out of every ten people
Epsilon will sponsor a blood drive
entering a hospital will need blood
today
from noon to 5:30 p.m.
since blood is used
to
treat many
in the-Fireside Lounge. Donations
illnesses such
.
as_, caricer, he.art
will be taken in co-operation of
disease,
gastrointestinal
tract
a very original excuse my inclina-
tion is to be merciful."
But Assistant
Professor
of
Advertising
Albert Stridsberg
received
an
excuse that was the
epitome of originality. An M.B.A.
candidate called him the morning
his thesis outline was due and said
he couldn't hand it in because he
was in Jersey
City
and he Josi his
left shoe.
"To this day
I
don't know what
the shoe had lo do with it and why
it prevented him from turning the
paper in,"
said
Stridsberg.
"It
wasn't so much of an excuse as it
was a disappearance. That was the
last time I ever heard from him.·•
.
Hud~o11 Valley Blood Services.
diseases, . ~nf,t injuries
/including
~
~
f~t,least
200 dono~·w1U'b.e)1eed.::..~'!bfirns:.
' -

••
-
.........
.);
"':.,:
,
~
•.
-_
:
:
-
..
,ep..
to reach Sigmafs
'goat·
of 50
• -
Celebrating a Decade of Rock & Roll
·i
i'p1nts
r~ ::·-:'
Only ten percent of the blood re-
.,·.
'Si~~;
'r~culty response to donate
mains whole. The rest is
·broken
has been poor in the past, Martino
down into five other components.
sent out letters to each urgirig them
It takes 25,000 pints of whole blood
to participate.
to make enough cryoprecipitate, a
·
Sigma Phi Epsilon has been
preparation derived from fresh

sponsoring a blood drive every year
human plasma that has been frozen
since
1981.
Derrik Wynkoop, one
and then thawed, for I hemophiliac
of. Sigma's 33 members, said:
for
·1
year.
"There's a need for it. We like to
The Hudson Valley alone rec
do community things and it gives
.
quires 300 pints of blood every day
..
us the opportunity to spread our
of the. year. A. continuous and
·
name around."
• •
..
steady supply is needed since blood
More than one-third of the blood
is perishable.
.
.
.
.
.
~
supplied to area hospitals. comes
When asked why Europe has no
from Europe, which does not suf-
problem with blood donations,

fer from a blood shortage. Less
Povol said, "They have had wars
than ½of the people in the greater
in their own backyard and they

New York area donate blood.
consider it a civic duty, like voting.
Hudson Valley Blood Services,
It's a family thing and it's a part
which wilt'conduct the event with
of community life."
the help of the local Red Cross
Povol said,
"There
is no
Chapter, appreciate the fraternity's
substitute for human blood. When
involvement,. said Joyce Povol, a
you need it it must be there. And
spokesperson for the HVBS.
the only way it will be there is if
Rock
&
Roll Phone 471-WPDH
"We are so thankful when the
people donate on a regular basis.
----------',,;,;''ll!ll·.,'""!11_.,._.
kids get involved because it leads. It is, as we say, 'the gift of life."'
'
Lisa
DiGiacomo,
;]uoi'l.!r,
t,:;;:to
an a<!plt_~~J,teness
of the need •.

_
. :he brothers of Sigma will par-
business. I hate baseball be'.H\:ti's~
I
(;•Be~_t
o[i;ilJ;Jijey1re·lis1f1.lly,;'.aJine
,_,
u9pate a~ escorts for donor~ as
have to wait up later to
-sl!e
s°(ar
:";-:succ~s~;~•
.fpvri.~isajgti:
,4;t:-"'
~rt
-
:::~:
weJI~~ pe m charge of-preparations
Trek
·
"The procedure itself," she went
and the final clean up.
.
.
.---·
-,,""
on to say, "is quite safe and it on-
This chapter of Sigma Phi Ep·-
Robert Saunders, junior, com-
munication arts. l am a Yankee
fan, and I am looking forward to
a great season.
Dao Bastian, junior, computer
science. Don Mattingly
will bring
the world championship
back to
New York
this
year
for the
Yattkees,
·
ly takes one hourto get in and out.
silon was started in 1979. The

The blood removal itself is just like
original (national) chapter was
if you were to be pinched on your
started in 190 I.
Our warehouses here at the
Back- Ya rd .tleclm
II
ir.

Books on
Government.
Printing Office
subjects ranging from
contain more than
l6,000
different

agricu:ture, business, children.
Go\•ernment publications. Now
and diet to science, space
we've put together a catalog of
exploration. tran:sportation. and
nearly 1.000 of the most popular
vacations. Find out what the
books
in
our inventory. Books like
Government':.-books
arl'
all about.
Infant Care, National Park Guide
For your
free copy
of our new
and Map, The Space Shuttle af
bestseller catalog. writ!'-
forVeteransand
Post
Office Box
;nooo
Work, Federal Benefits
93?
New Catalog
Dependent:;;,
and
T/11!
.
Washington. D.C. 2001:J
Bestsellers
-
:
'
0w~,,
Marist Night -Wednesday
featuring:
Peachtree Schnapps
T .:.shirt Giveaway
P .T. Shots - $1.00
12 oz. Drafts - 50c
Pitchers - $2.50
103 Parker Avenue
Poughkeepsie, N.Y. 12601
(914) 471-9442
Formerly Working Class










I
i~
I
i
(
I
,,
(.
A
----
Page 12 •. tHE.CIRCLE:-_Aprll.17, 1986 ......
...;....,;...
_______
...,..
____________________
_
Frosh yellr:Expanding mindS-and waistlines.
by Regina Rossi
ing," said. Powers.
I was going through a change in my life. good nutrition and less fat.
·
.
She said the freshman's problem lies in a . When J was depressed, I'd eat."
"It's not necessarily the food as much as
The year is nearing its end and it's time
new social life that causes them to eat more . Janine gained 30 pounds her freshman
the snacks that do it to us," she said. •
for the freshman to sit back and take a look
than they did in the past because, "in· the year. She said she ate constantly because she
She added that she had never heard of a
at what their first year in college has
United States every major social event is was homesick and food was a comfort.
school where there weren't complaints about
produced.
around food."
the food.
They've gained new knowledge, new
One major part of socializing for freshm n .
"l
would get care packages from home
Another factor involved in cafeteria eating
friendships and new experiences. •
is centered on drinking, which affects weight with stuff like chocolate pudding, Doritos,
is the availability of food: Powers said, "At
They've also gained something they didn't
gain as well.
.
potato chips, and when l couldn't decide on
home we are not presented with so many
count on -
the "freshman 15."
Powers explained, "If I were to drink just • one thing I'd eat it all," she said.
choices and we don't have any will-power."
According to Nutritionist Cathy Powers,
three beers a week more than what I was us-
Marie also talked about the common com-
Morian said, "There is so much food at
MSRD, at the Culinary Institute of America
ed to drinking, I would gain 10 extra pounds
plaint of cafeteria food. "The main dishes your access, so if two items look good in one
in Hyde Park, freshmen can gain as much· over the course of the year.
lt
doesn't take
were so unappetizing I'd have to eat
night, you'll eat both,"
.
as 25 pounds in their first year at college
much and over time it can really add up."
something, so l'd have a bowl of cereal and
All three girls mentioned the lack of exer-
because of poor eating habits.
'' Another
reason
we eat is for
then go back to my room and order pizza. • cise of the "freshman 15:'' Morian said, "In
"It
all has to do with nutrition, ultimate-
psychological reasons," Powers said. "We
All
I
ate was junk food."
high school you had mandatory gym classes,
ly," Powers said.
eat certain foods because they make us feel
Kristi Morian,
a freshman
from
we don't have that here."
She said that although we all have the
comfortable. These are usually high-calorie Bridgewater, N.J., who has not gained any
• Powers said the reason why men don't
ability
to
choose good meals, public opinion
foods."
weight this year, said "since you can't go
worry about the "freshman 15" as much is
and misinformation tend to lead us away
Janine and Marie, two sophomores whose make yourself a sandwich like you can at
because their activity level is usually higher.
from that.

names have been changed for this article,
home, you eat all junk food and
l
think the
Marie found one more reason why she ate
"People have said for years that pasta is
agreed with this reason.
food in the cafeteria is more fattenirig then
what she did. "Before you get here, you're
-fattening, when actually it's the sauces and
Marie, who gained 15 pounds as a
food at home."
told you're going to get the freshman 15, so
seasonings we put on it that make it fatten-
freshman said: "I was depressed because I
Powers said it is not the food as much as
you figure you're ·going to gain it anyway, •
~
was away from home for the first time and • it is a ~atter of choosing a good meal for
so you might as well eat."

Checks--------------------------
..........
Continued from page 1
irresponsible.
Maher said, however, the memo
. was intended only for the chairs
and clarification of the memo was
not necessary because she was
simply relaying information
they
had requested. "The way I choose
to communicate with my staff is
my business," she said.
Maher added that follow-up
questioning of listed faculty and in-
terpretation of the data were the
responsibilities of the individual
divisional chairs.
Original complaints about early
dismissals were focused on adjunct
instructors, rather than full-time
faculty, Maher said. •
Brother Joseph Belanger, pro-
fessor of French and one of the in-
structors listed as not being in class
at the time of the checks, said while
• , ; • he believes the. chairpersons have
\/\?
\he
rlgh_t and
even
th~ ob\igati<;m to. :
, ,·.• • .kJl,OYi..,.W.hen-s.\a..s~..M..e.;Ji01.--,\u:mg.
• 'conducted properly, he did noL.
agree with the method • of the •
survey.
"This grade-schoolish approach
is not ·the way you . deal with
mature,. intelligent people. This is
not even the way you deal with
students. We are supposed to be
the epitome of professionalism and
education.
We are. down to
methods of police-state,'' he said. •
Because his class is a semin.ar on
thesis writing for Science of Man
students, it does not meet every
week.
While the faculty may object to
the checks, Maher said that the ad-
ministration had to do something
to verify the complaints.
"It
is
clearly the reponsibility of ad-
ministration to monitor classroom
activities to make sure classes. are
being conducted when they are sup-
posed to be," she said.
Olson said the FEC, which is
made up of the elected represen-
tatives of the faculty, does not have
plans to take issue on the checks.
The
few
faculty members listed in
the memo who received a copy of
it do not want to put their com-
plaints in writing for personal
reasons, he said.
Some of the faculty listed in the
memo are not tenured, Olson said,
and they are concerned about get-
ting their contract renewed for next
year.
Olson said he is not surprised
that the checks were made.
"I
wish
these people (administration)
would spend as much time helping
the students as they do harassing
the faculty. The administration,
especially
under
the acting
academic vice president, has
developed a certain adeptness for
this. We are grateful we have a new
academic vice president coming
in,"
he said.
Responding, Maher said: "It is
my professional responsibility to
ascertain that students are being in-
structed as they would expect to be.
It is in defense of the students that
administration monitors all the
academic affairs on campus. If this
was
not done, that would be pro-
fessionally irresponsible."
KMO
·u·
.". •.
• ·,
_- ':·::,
---=---·.
-.
.
.
.
·-

.
'
.
"-
.
"' '
""'
'

"''
.


The College Unjon Board
WOULD LIKE TO THANK EVERYBODY WHO CONTRIBUTED TO OUR
SUCCESSFUL YEAR. WE APPRECIATE ALL YOUR HELP. HERE IS ..
SQfy1E.:~.

,·:,,'1
OF WHAT WE HAVE DONE THIS YEAR.
SEPTEMBER
*WELCOME BACK DANCE
*DENNY & LEE MAGIC SHOW
*JERRY RUBIN LECTURE
*STUDENT TALENT SHOW ·.
*BARBARA BAILEY HUTCHENSON
*FILMS: SPLASH, BLUES BROTHERS, ZELIG
OCTOBER
*HALLOWEEN DANCE •
*DR. HENRY JACKSONLECTURE-APARTHEID
*FEED YOUR FACE
*MARTY BEAR
*SQUARE DANCE
*KEN WEBER, HYPNOTIST
NOVEMBER
* JEFF CESARIO, COMEDIAN/SINGER
*SEXISM IN THE MASS MEDIA LECTURE .
*BAND NIGHT
*COMEDY CABARET W /RONDELL SHERIDAN
*STUDENT TALENT NIGHT
DECEMBER
*COUPONS AND CONSUMERISM LECTURE
*COMEDIAN TOMMY KOENIG
*A CHRISTMAS CAROL PLAY
*TRIP TO PARAMUS MALL
*CHRISTMAS DANCE
JANUARY
.
*WELCOME BACK/NEW YEAR DANCE
*IMPROV BOSTON
*FILMS: SIXTEEN CANDLES, FOOTLOOSE
FEBRUARY
,>'..
, ...
i ':
*I. SPY LECTURE
*MARDI-GRAS WEEKEND
- *BURBON STREET
*GAMBEL FLING
*LECTURE ON NUCLEAR POWER
MARCH
*MIME TRENT ARTERBERRY
*DINNER THEATRE W/NEBRASKA CARAVA
*BATTLE OF THE BANDS W /MOUNT ST. MARY
APRIL
*PAUL STROWE IN RIVER ROOM
*SPRING WEEKEND
. *LINGERIE PARTY
*CAMPUS SKATES
*SIMON SEZ
• *SPRING FORMAL
,
*BARRY DRAKE
ALSO PLANNED
*SMALL POX DOG IN RIVER ROOM
*GREG GREENWAY
*BROADWAY TRIP
*AMERICAN PICTURES LECTURE
*COMEDY CABARET
*STUDENT TALENT NIGHT
MAY
*MAYFEST
*FOOD FEST /FEED YOUR FACE DURING
FINALS WEEK
THANK
YOU
ALL """""""""'""
ARE YOU INTERESTED IN JOINING THE C.U.B.'?
STOP BY THE COLLEGE ACTIVITIES OFFICE, AND FILL OUT AN INFORMATION CARD.
GOOD LUCK TO NEXT YEAR's BOARD!!!














































Sp(!aker warns students
..
abouteating disorders
by Regina Rossi
Because eating disorders such as
bulimia and
anorexia
affect
such
a
large percentage of college women
they can be considered
an
epidemic, according to Dr. Ray
1.
Schwartz.


"We seem to be seeing more
bulimics now than anorexics," said
Schwartz, who is a clinical therapist
at
SUNY New
Paltz.
During a lecture held last week
in the campus center, Schwartz said
12 to 25 percent of college females
are bulimic.
Bulimia is the binge-purge
disorder. A person will consume
massive quanities of food then
pl'rge oneself either by self-induced
vomiting
or through the use of
laxatives - often consuming 40 to
50 of at a time.
Anorexia is a total avoidance of
food,
.
a sort of self-starvation
which causes abnormal weight loss.
95
·
percent of
anorexics and .
bulimics are female, according to
Schwartz.
.
"Bulimics and anorexics are very
similiar in how control becomes
very important and in how they use
food as a channel for control," he
said. For instance, he said, an-
orexics like to be around food to
. ·show
how in control they are by
:
not eating it.

"Schwartz said people with these

diseases are generally perfectionists
who set very high goals for
themselves. "Every day they face
their own imperfections because
every day they fail-it's impossible
not to," he said.
They
are
usually described as the
«good little girl," who always does
well, plays the role of peacemaker
of the family;· takes on all the
responsibility within the family,
always looks pretty, never talks
back and doesn't get angry.
Anorexics and bulimics usually
come from an upper-middle class
family in which independence
doesn't thrive, where every'one is
overly involved with every one else,
Schwartz said.
He said anorexia and bulimia are
similiar to each other and they bear
similarties to alcoholism as well.
Bulimics experience a
"'narcotic
effect, he said, which usually
results in a hangover.
"If
you
substituted the food with drink, it
would be exactly the same as
alcoholism," Schwartz said.
An average binge episode for the
bulimic would last l hour and 20
minutes and 5,000 calories are con°
sumed. This would occur an
average of
11
times a week.
Bulimics, unlike anorexics, do
not lose weight. They usually stay·
average or slightly above average
weight. This makes it hard for so-.
meone to see the disease, although
they do experience some severe in-
ternal medical problems.
.
In annorexia, the disease even-
tually becomes very visible. There
is a 25 percent weight loss, accor-
ding to Schwartz.
Aside from the medical effects,
there are many psychological ef-
fects to consider.
"Bulimics· 1ive in a world of
guilt, shame and fear that is
SQ
detrimental the depression can
become suicidal," Schwartz said.
Anorexics become obsessed with
food, appearance and weight.

"They are fighting for people to
appreciate
them.
The
feel
frustrated, depressed and scared."
lt is possible for a person to have
both disorders. Schwartz explain-
ed there is a 25 percent overlap of
people who go from anorexia to
bulimia.
Treatment
for these
eating
disorders can take anywhere from
ten weeks
to
a
number of years, he
said.
"In treatment they take the good
little girl and put it to rest," he
said.
Schwartz also said group treat-
mentfor these people is much more
effective than individual therapy.
"The sense of relief from not be-
ing alone is so powerful and the
support for each other makes the
power of the group phenomenal."
The first thing you have to do
when dealing with someone with an
eating disorder is to decide you care
enough to take a risk, according to
Schwartz. Then you have to con-
front them and basically just let
them know that you are there for
them if they decide they need help.
Boom in compact disc sales
niay
spell doom for vinyl

: by Lisa·Ash.
• '--All'ai~'.,in Wa-'j5pin~r Falls-:::rfob
~syit?in
is•
0
:ri~erwhelming,
said
Loni, said the CD player ac;ounts
Sorice.
-
.
Bye-bye, LP ... Hello, CD?

.
The prediction is that in about
•.
ten years, compact-disc players.will
• make the turntable obsolete; say .
-
local stereo retailers.·
/'.
.
·
Introduced to
·the
U.S. market
about three years ago, the CD
·_
player is outselling the turntable at
\
a ratio of 10-to-1, according to
(
Tony Sorice~· manager of· Sound
~
Odyssey_ in Wappingers
·Fa_lls.
. •
Sorice· said the sale of the CD
player is astronomical but was
unable to supply an actual percen-
tage of
·CD
players. sold as com-
pared to the turntable.
The.assistant manager of Action
:Reaction
__
·continued.
from page l
.
echoed
O'Looney's
feelings.
"I
think they hyped this
building up
to be more
than it really is,"
she
said.
The Thomas Center
was
proposed
in
1981,
but problems
with its foundation
delayed con-
struction
until November 1985.
Mark Ciesinski, a senior major-
ing in communication arts, said the
building has
fallen
short of
his ex-
pectations. "I
think they
over ex-
tended
themselves,"
he
said.
"They're
trying to
satisfy
too
many
-
people with this
building.
They
should
of stuck strictly
to
communications-now
it's barely
that."
Sophomore Christine Reilly
agreed. "I
think that since they
promised it as a communications
building they should have more
facilities
for communications
students," she said.
But
Grant
Hettrick,
a
sophomore majoring in com-
munication arts, showed less con-
cern than the other students.
"I
think
the
whole
thing
is
ridiculous," he said. "I've lost
hope in it by now. If it goes up, it's
a
bonus."
for about 7 to 8 percent of all sales.·
There
is
·no
wear, tear or scrat-
in stereo equipment.

ches on the disc and over an hour's
Loni said-the big buyers of the worth of music can be recorded so
CD player are young people. He there is no need· to flip the disc
explained that older people usual-
over. Most importantly, the only

1y have the typical stereo system sound heard from the disc is the ac-

set-up, with a turntable and about tual sqund recorded. There is no
200 albums. It is too expensive for outside noise or hiss, and there is
·
many people to start over with the greater dynamic range-.

CD player, said Loni.
Radio Shack salesman Dave
Dahlstrom said for every turntable
The remarkable success of the

Radio Shack sells, Radio Shack
CD player
is
due to the mechanical also sells
a
CD player
.
·
nature of the player as
:well
as the
The cost of the CD player ranges
disc, said Sorice.: A: lazer

oeam from about $220 to $600. Compact
from the CD player reads informa-
discs range between
$14
and
$20.
tion encoded digitally on the disc. There are about 4,000 discs
The advantages of this type of available on the market today.
•Student Ushers needed
for
·graduation~
••••
• Volunteers needed for
freshman orientation.
• • •
• For information,
please
·contact
Deb Bell
at the Student Affairs
Office, Room 266 CC.
April 17, 1986 • THE CIRCLE - Page 13
/11crea.se
Your OJ1por11111itiesfor
/:'111/1loy111l'III
11 _.tll'h'1'•1
\l\h
fl
•1.-.
.-.,,
,_,,..,,l'-'
,,_.,,
,
1,a.,,.,., .... I"'''""
l•ot th,
llr\.11,
·1" ,.,.
'"'"
.1•1.. \l•of.•l
1·,,.1.,1\l\1111.,i
''""
,,.JJq,:1
•I
1/llf
-.11,.,,11111,t
11,.
11
,,
,to. ~.
1
r, •r
1/11,
...
fl,.,
A Complete Nutritional Program
Designed to:
.

Promote a typical weight loss or 10-29
excess
pounds per month.

Naturally help to curb the appetite.

Naturally help to cleanse the system.

Burn excess calorics.

Supply needed daily nutrients.
Your Local
is
Carolyn L. Johnson
(914) 452- 7569
Sales Reps Wanted
-
Lose Weight and Make Money
.,,,
ATTENTION
RESIDENT
SENIORS
RESIDENT SENIORS
WHO WISH TO RE-
MAIN IN COLLEGE
HOUSING
DURING
SENIOR WEEK MAY
10-18 MUST REGIST-
ER IN THE HOUS-
ING OFFICE BY 4:00
P.M. FRIDAY, MAY
2, 1986.
THOSE
RESIDENT
SENIORS WITH PER-
M ISSI ON TO
RE-
MAIN
IN
THEIR
RESIDENCE
MUST
VACATE
THEIR
ROOM BY 12 NOON
SUNDAY,
MAY
18,
1986. ESTABLISHED
CHECK-OUT
AND
CLEANING
PRO-
CEDURES
MUST
BE
FOLLOWED
AND
ROOM KEYS
MUST
BE RETURNED TO A
HOUSING
STAFF
MEMBER
BEFORE
DEPARTURE.·
.
\























:-,"-

I
/
4k-✓
0.
1\i
.
.co!
fi::_;
<.
,
,~rt
~
:~;~=-lj
,'"'_~-~-
·v
.
!
I
Peter
Pan
The Marist Children's Theater production of "Peter Pan"
filled ttie house with local schoolchildren for two shows a day
all last week. The children laughed with the likes of Peter Pan
and Tinkerbell, and shivered and sneered at the captain and
his hook.
Photographs
by
Laurie Barraco
~
r
















---------------------------------April
17, 1986 - THE CIRCLE - Page 15--
S o You're thinking about doing crew?
.
'
-
.
h:,\'
Brian O'_Coiin.or
captain Paul Raynis. ''It's usually
• •

20 to 30 degrees colder at 5:30 a.m.
The alarm . would go. off
than when most people wake up at
sometime close to 5 -
a.m.; that
8 a.m." With temperatures like
is. You would have a half hour to
that, Raynis, and everyone else,
get to the river. At certain times
does his best to stay in the boats.
through the year you'd be· beating
And the temperatures are not the
the sun to the Hudson.

. only thing to trouble these early
• The practice would last an hour
risers. It is difficult to row when
• and 20 minutes. That's nothing
wearing gloves, they aredumsy. So
compared to lacrosse;basketball or
no matter the temperature; rowers
any other sport on campus.
don't wear them. Your hands just
But there's a catch. There is no· get callused.
_
_ _
rest -
few times where the coach
The· cold is another. problem.
stops to talk, no time to ~atch your
You bundle up to stay warm, but
breath and no time to stand and
once you start rowing you start
stretch.

sweating. Then you have to tear off
Standing is out of the question.
the layers of clothes and throw
Anyone who has taken a dip in the • them in the bottom of the boat for
pre-dawn Hudson in the middle of
an early morning washing.. .
March can attest to that.
And that's not all the problems.
"The first day we went out this
When the oars hit_ the water con-
spring it was 10 degrees,'' said crew . stantly, the .water ends up hitting
• you. You get soaked -
plain and
simple.
Yet another problem is the wind.
The crew members agree that the
thursday
morning
quarterback
Hudson River is the windiest of all
_ the spots that Marist rows at, dur-
ing the Fall and Spring seasons.
Tired, wet, wind-blown, cold
and callused -
that's what's in it
for you tough guys and girls that
think you're crew material.
Well, what about the races, they
couldn't be that bad? Row one or
two races and go home, right?
. Wrong. A race day starts on a
Men'.s tennis splits, now at 4-2
by Ken Foye ,
The Marist men's tennis team
split two away decisions last week,
defeating Bard College 9-0 last
Monday but falling to Ramapo
College of New Jersey, 8-1 on
Wednesday. The team owned a 4-2
won-lost record entering.this week ..
Tlie._Marist netters play at home .
this
. afternoon.
..
. against
Fairleigh Dickinson at-3:30 p.m. on
the courts behind the. Campus
Center_:
0
A~:,}iome~at.cli:,~
against
~Ql)l¥;~~w;fialtµ,n:Monday'and
,·;:d'',•'11'.·
¼~-i.,-·
........
··.;.
__

':!' -••
a::r9aa~m~etmg at·· Siena. College
yesterday:also were scheduled for
this week.. .

In the shutout victory over Bard,
only seni_or
captain Ron Young had
a tough'. match. Young, the Red
Foxes. number ·one seed. won the
first set against Bard's
Ali
Ghani
6-3, but Ghani came back to easily
win the second ·set 6-0. The
deciding third set went to a
- tiebreaker, which Young won to
clinch the 6-3, 0-6, 7-6 victory.
The other singles matches were
not nearly as close as Young's.
Marist singles players Max Sand-
meier, Jim Roldan, Kevin Blinn,
Rich Spina and Joe Guliani breez-
ed to straight-set victories.
Thel,Marist idoubles teams of
Young-S~ridm~ier, Blinn-Guliani,
and Spina~Chris Silvera also won
in straight sets.
The loss to Ramapo College of
New Jersey told a different story,
however. The 8-1 Joss ended a
Marist winning streak of four
straight matches. The Red Foxes'
sixth-seed player; freshman Spina,
was the only Marist winner against
Ramapo.

"I thought our guys played
. well," coach Gerry Breen said of
the match against Ramapo. "The
other team was just better than we
were." Breen also commented that
the team is. in good health right
now, as pre-season injuries to
Young, Sandmeier, Guliani and
Silvera have healed.·
The Red Foxes will take part in
the Metro Conference Tournament
this weekend, April 18th and 19th.
Four singles players and a doubles
• tearn will represent Marist at the
tournament.
The Metro Con-
ference, acco·rding to Breen, con-
sists of the saine schools that com-
pete in the ECAC Metro Basketball
Conference.
Saturdav at 6 a.m; and lasts well
into Saturday night. The crew team
has. and will have every race at
awav locations this season with the
exception of the President's Cup
Regalta.
When you're not racing,'you'rc
rooting your teammates on to vic-
tory. And when you're not rooting,
you're watching other teams for
technique. There is at least. a half
hour between the times one boat
would race.
So the race is over, what next?
It .starts again on Monday. In ad-
dition to the water workouts, there
are land workouts which consist of
running five to six miles a day, run-
ning up 15 hills and a little
weightlifting thrown in. Just
to
keep you in shape,_ of course.
With all the working you would
be led to believe this is a musde-
head sport. It is musde, but it's a
lot more head. Strength alone will
not win a race. Ravnis said:
"It
b
a very physical sport, bu1 you still
have to think. If you arc not
gra1.:eful, power is useless."
Once a week each boat practices
in the afternoon to work on techni-
que.
John McErlain, a junior, likes
doing crew but stressed the amount
of effort it takes to do well.
"It
is
a commitment that involves a lot
of time," he said. McErlain said
the last few weeks conflict with
time to study for exams and do
papers.
With all the time and pain and
practice you would probably think
to do crew you'd have to be crazy.
The other day I tried 10 gel up at
5 a.m. They are crazy .
The last lap nears
·.for senior runners
by Beth-Kathleen McCaule1·
Conn., doesn't see graduation
as the end of his affiliation with
The Maris! College men's
the team.
"I'll
stay in touch
track team is losing four of its
with Steve Lurie and my close
members to graduation this
friends," said Morrison, "I'll
year.
go to races and maybe help
Co-captains Christian Mor-
Steve with recruiting."
rison and Peter Pazik, along
Morrison looks back on his
with Don Godwin and Peter
position of co-captain with mix-
Colaizzo arc leaving Marist
ed feelings. "It's been hard
after four years of dedication
to
sometimes," said Morrison.
cross country, indoor and out-
"We arc all trying to ac-
door track. The rest of the team
complish
something
and
as well as their coach are an-
sometimes I don't think the
ticipating the loss of their talents
team understands my position."
and strong influences.
All four students commented
"They hold a special place
of the unusual closeness and
with me," said Steve Lurie, the
comradery the whole team has.
men's track coach for the past.
-
"Running is hard work, and we
NeW90D.J..~rs
add. stre~gth for men's track
::r!e:;f;~
;~(~~
tr~f: t~~:
:~:et~~~~t·as:\tc~~i:;:~~; 1!~a~f

,:
by~~·~2!,cso~~2i~.;i>·,,.
c'-> '
wiU
add
!O
o~rhri~g~~~?ve m~d~ b_esi ti~e. and. sophomore Bm •
•. · in;~~:1;e:J
th
:i:ni~~tl!
h~;;
~:~~~f~~~m~-~~e:~~~t:;~~~is
~F:r ...
_es'h~m-=e.,.,,;,,,;.n··•·"'
s'
·c
1
0
1·t-t'~·""i,;A;
~1··1··e~n,.,
-~""y·
··1,:m~'~::~:1ry~~Fy
·-:tife~~~c·
it::Jt~th.'
K-cri.~ took ffeihg~
th
b ktnockikng
.;,..
"'\ioiiiiger'
team members as well -
Runn,·ng ·,n general '1s 1101
go-
Shaver • Mike • K~n·ried; · and
for~e was-to bejoiiled by freshman
~eetfi
11
~u;~ o
15
e~
m;~:
:
as .b,faging discipline to. a pro-
ing to be a college memory but
so_phoniore Vince Boden to~k·se
Rodney McRae a sprinter -and .,t:· nM e- .'
-mettehr,dseh~tor
d ns-
gram
that
was
not
as successful

condpiace in the fo
__
ur by 100,;m_
ete;
so_
phom~_r_
e Sea~ N_
o.ble_ a' high btant ?thrn
4
s?
0
n
9
n
8
o
,.c
ef tsthoutl
oor
as
it is currently. "I didn't
an active pan of
th
esc runners
.
.
..
. .
.
.
. ,
es w1
. . ,or our
pace.
1
.
1
h . .
lives they said.
"I
might not
run
relay and freshman Mike Carson ; Jumper, with the rest of the squad
Freshman Dave Blondin ran in
a ways agree w,!
1
t etr mpu_t,
with the same intensitv," said
threw. to· third iri • the.javelin and
at the Multi-way· Meet at King's three events; capturing fifth in the
but.
!
always hstened," said
Colaizzo, "but I won '1 'stop un-
fourth in the discus for. the Marist • College.
400 fourth in the 800 and helping
Lune. .
til I meet the right girl who tells
outdoor track team at the King's
Lurie said the team would come to ~ecure third in the two-mile
Colaizzo, _of Cedar Kno!ls,
me to stop running."
Inviiational last week. • •
.
before the individual athlete at the relay.

N.J., sees his :~liege ru~nmg
At this time next year junior
Head Coach Steve Lurie said the . meet_be~aus.e
t~; team \_Vas
capable
In the 110-meter high hurdles
career as a posiu_ve expenencc
Paul Kelly of Manlius, N. Y.,
Jl!!~fop11ances
were a new twist for
of w~nm?g it. . I_
de~mt~l~,expe~t Allen won the race with a personal
that has help~d
~
1
~
to become
will be the only senior and hopes
th¢,team,,,which has been perenial-
to wm; I m ant1c1patmg It, Lune best of 17 4 seconds
a more
disciplined
per-
to help his younger teammates
I
.,·~•, .... , .•• ~cl"
·:
" ·• · "Th"
'd



son
"I've had to learn
to
ystro~gJit, 1stance ~nnmg'.a.·
1s ,,.
sa1 . • . .
.
. .
In the 400-meter run senior Don
b ;
.
·r
1
d
as much as his predecessors
.,
.. ••
••
••
--,'··
•"· • ··' •
~
:i~.TI}e.t~•s.r.ie~tm~Us_Saturd~y
Godwin took third with a mark of
ua~~t
'!1Y
tlm~
1
.~ante
1
?
have.
,_,., ,, •• '/
at
·the.
Nassau lnv1tat1onal. m 52 3 Bl d'
fif
h
d Sh
run, said Colaizzo, I couldn
t
"From day one they took rne
,
Uniond~le
N
y •
• '. ohn Im whas
800
1
t an h. aver
goof off, I was forced to do my
f
t
. · .
1
. . .
. •. : ·.
was s1xt . n t e
, sop omore
work first ,,
under their wings and and
Ox
.
ra
I
At the mvitational last week Garry Ryan finished third with
, '
.
treated me as one of their close
.. •
.

sophomoreDonReardonwonthe
2:00.9, and Blondin took fourth
(?odwm,ofJ_erseyC1ty,N._J.,
friends," said Kelly, "I'm go-
by. Dan Pietrafesa
The Marist lacrosse team
plays today against Skidmore.
Gametime is 3:30 p.m. The
team entered Monday's action
at Dowling with
a
6-0 record.
The Foxes did not continue their
. overpowering romps but con-
tinued to win last week by con-
vincing margins. The team
could enter its final week of the
• season undefeated, but it will be
that final week when the team
will be put to the test· against
Kings Point and Maritime· ...
The news involving the men's
basketball team is slim. There
10,000-meter race with a time of place with 2:01.1.
b~heves t~at hts years runnmg
ing to use them as an example
32:53.3. Reardon qualified forthe
In the 100-meter race Kennedy
~Ith Man~t have been a gro~-
in my treatment of the rest of
season-end state championship
took· second with a time of 11.9,
mg exp~;1ence. Coach L~ne
my teammates."
meet, just beating the 33-minute and in the 200 Allen was second
·agrees:
Don has co'!le hght
qualifying time in· that event.
Kennedy was third and Shaver wa~
y~ars. He use
to
be afraid to put
• 'They
have
helped •
Also in the 10,000, sophomore. fourth.
himself to _the test. He ~as ~ake
bring this team along and have
Steve Brennan took second place
-In the field events Boden took
progres~ nght up to this wmter
set some good examples,'' said
with 34: 13.5. Glen Middleton,
fourth in the long 'jump, triple
and spr~ng."
Lurie. "They have left some big
an~ther sophmnore, took fourth,
jump and the javelin and • fifth in • .. .....
_•:.M:,:,o:,r•r_1•s:o_-n_-,_-_-o_-f_-:w_-_a:,t:,e•r_-f_o:,r•d.-.•:.■:..:.:.•s_-h_-o_-c_s:.-t.o:.•f-i_l_l:.._•_•:,:,:.:,:.:,:,:.:,:,:,:.:,~~-..
sen~or John Cleme?-ts secured fi_fth, the shot.
The women's team
sem~r· Pete Colaizzo t_ook sixth wasn't represented at the invita-
shavmg IO seconds off his personal tional.
The Dallas Cowboys
contact Frank Davis
by Brian O'Connor
.are some players that the team
Franklin Davis, a native of Peekskill, N.Y., received a letter ofinvita-
is currently interested in, but no
tion from the Dallas Cowboys of the National Football League.
lettersofintenthave
been sign-
Davis, a four-year member of the Marist College football team, filled
ed. The team is searching for
out a questionaire this month from the Cowboys and has been invited
that one outside shooter to help
to an open try-out in West chester County in May.
the attack
of next year's
Davis, a senior, said that right now he is concentrating <>n
his classes
squad .. _
for his upcoming graduation but is playing basketball to stay in shape.
Last Friday,
The Mob
down~
Football Head Coach Mike Malet recommended Davis to the NFL after
eel the
Queebe
to capture the in~
the close of Marist's season.
tramuraI five-on-five basketball
Davis, 23, played safety on defense and punted on the special teams.
championship, and the
Mutant
He holds the Marist record for the longest punt with a kick that went
Iguanas beat
McCrew
in the
68 yards this season. Davis broke the old record of 62 yards several times
volleyball intramurals cham-
this season.
"
pionship.
Get
ready to lift your
The general questionaire included queries into positions, averages and
feet because tomorrow at 7 p.m.
statistics. Davis put down that his punting average was
35
yards- per-
the intramural program will
punt ... But that,"
he
said,
"was
because
I
didn't have enough time to
hold
a
square dance
in
the
devote
to
punting because
I
was
playing safety."
McCann Center...
Davis said that he would like to tryout for wide receiver, the position
___________
.,. he played in high school.
..





























































































Ready
to ·return.
res man
ina of the men's te
a-serve at a recent practice. See stc>ry,.

(pb

·Page,:i6
;.,THE CIRCLE
.-;Aj,,11::111::1.986
__
:-~--La·et'osse
-.:.\vinis_-·
1
th_re,e
trelllainsund~feate'd
.
by .Paul ~-
.Raynis
undefeat~din conference play.
..

Cleary~ a freshman attackman
Freshman.scoring.machine Peter
.
from Freeport, N.Y.,-was backed
:
Cleary netted 12 goals and assisted
.
in the FDU win_ by sophomore--
.
on·. another nine a(_the..,Marist-,-Chris•·Reuss')7
saves. Reuss has
·_:
men's lacrosse team-downed Mont-
.
·,allowed
an average
..
of. only 4.6·
clair·State, Fairleigh Dickinson and • . goals·. per: ·game and
-has
a
.J44
·•
Dowliitg·.over the' past week to
season
--save·
•.
percentage,.
boost its record to 7-0..
.
.
.
Sophomore attackman Bill Drolet
..
.
Cleary, with four goals and three

aided the effort with two goals and
assists in last Thursday's 12-9 win

four assists, .and senior midfielder
.
over Montclair,. inatched the per-
John Young had two goals and two
.
formanceiri•Marist'sl4-8 victory
assists.>··-:
_.' •
••

.
.

over FDU Saturday._and·then did
Against'Dowling, Drolet again
it. again as t_he Red Foxes crushed • followed Cleary's
.hot
hand as he
··Dowling15-4
on.Monday. With 27
,
.netted
thre~ goals and had three

goals and30 assists-on the-season,

assists.

Frosh
.
attackman- Jim
Cleary's 57. total.points.have him· McCormick scored three goals,
·
ori a record pace with seven games •. senior. attackman Tom· Daly had
__
left on the· schedule~
.
·.two goals and assisted on one, and
:
,The,
.win over Montclair, a·. senior midfielder-Mike Masterson

Knickerbocker Conference match,
netted. two.
·
started the weeklong tear that kept

Marist was scheduled to face

Marist in
..
the· fight with
..
rival
••••
.Skidmore

at home today, and
SU~Y-Maritime.for dominance in
Stevens Tech in a home match this
the conference.··Marist. will face .Saturday. The laxmen will travel to
.
'-Maritime
on April 26 in an away
Kings Point MoJ!day and then face
match that many. players feel will
.Fairfield.at
home April 24, as they
decide the conference:champion-
-ready
themselves
·for
the year's
ship. fytai-ist
and Maritime are both
toughest encounter
:at
Maritime.
••

.

...
'.
..
-
..
~
.
'
..
'
.
-
'
Crew
·.will
.he
.·put
tO
the test in the
ri_~jtf/"ftjfif:z\l~t¥~~nils
--
by
Dan Pietrafesa
there. Marist from New
·
York,
,
.gest
meet on. the Hudson River. the next four weeks," said Davis. Albany State and OARS;.an in-
.
Trinity
from
Connecticut,
There are currently. 14 schools
The team is hoping the weather depentdent team, each finished
TheMaristcrewteamwillbeput
.
Georgetow·n
.from
,Washington
• -entered
in- the t_ournament in~· conditions will be near what they with 10.Teamsoflocalinterestin-
to its toughest test this weekend D.C. and Drexel from Philadelphia
:_·eluding
Villanova; Manhattan.and
were Saturday at the Skidmore In-
eluded Army and Vassar who
when they travel to Mercer Coun-
..
will compete in the new.facility that
Iona Colleges:
vitational when the team took six finished with four and.zero points
_ty
Pa.rk near Princeton,
_N
.J ., to
will be.raced ori
for
the first time
;
:The
following_:.week;
thC::-team
.
first-place finishes
-out
the seven r'espectively. There were a total of
·
take pai:t in a four team meet,
.
by_ the_ four-:teams
..

.
.
.,.
_
. •·
will have anoth!!r four-team meec·. events·in wjnning the .invitational
•.
IO
teams in the invitational.
.
",. <.
;,
>
''We've
_made~.
good
.
progi:e~s
·''
..
:rhe r~xes willseethei~J?ughest
: '.~&.aill~t
;some
:he~v~er:,co~petition,-
In Albany.
<
..
,.
.
.
.
'
•.
.
'
.

Th_e.
men
.won
four._£vents and
~
.' icii'/
each- week
H.
~aid· Marist Head

compet1t1on from the :rrr~uty,
men ·:
:ln:>\YJlhams;
Tr.~i:i1w,an~,.Ithllca
•.·

,.
The weatJ.ier;
was c~Jd
but
su_n!1y the women
·
took
two,_
Tht;..,ll,!~!1
/·~
'.
':~
.)>':
<;:oach
L~_payis;.~'Thls wee~11n<!:
;,at1d,the;:;aeprg~t(!\\'l}:-Wo111,e_n,,ac-
,:
-~?ll_eg,C.E{::-0,
;,,i~''·t}•;;,.
;;;;;,.,:,;;;;-,;
{la~t..~~thlJ'r·~~y.d.~~~-~rd.~~~,t~D~Y!Sd
•.. tp9k,.,,,fi,rs!~
. ..,,jn_
....
~tt\~p1Ya1istt:Y -
---
----
,
':'

:
• ·:
••
c'wiii"be'iiich~poit'
card':"11\ve'
do
co_rdiilg
·.to·Davis:,
•.
:,
•·:-,.::.'
~
:1:.'
"/'·'
.
: ·._
,-:
~
The-;gr_and
-finale.
w11l.
then_:take

-~-~DUt-t
ecor 1t101_1s
-~~r:
J!.
g_gQ
_
. lightweigfff;; novice;
:lightweight;

.•

··,,·well
the
rest,
of the
-season
will
. _
After:next-week-,-the
competition7splace foui: djiysJM~.r.
wh~!!
.!ltc;.J~---
_as
they can·get·for this time m the varsity four·.and varsity eight.
·:
click~ If noJ,,we. ~till have· further· gets.sturdier. The team will hostth_e
':
!ra_vel_s
to Phila?elppia t~ ta_ke
_part spring," said Davi_s.
•.

.
.
.. •.
.
The women took the .varsity four
______ -·---· --u;
go.''·

-

President's <;up Regatta_on.Apnl
..
-m},'t).e
Dap
·Va1l
Champ1onsh1ps.
.
!he Foxes finished with 18
.
by 1_8
s~_onds and the novice eight


Teams from four areas will be 26. ThePres1dent'sCupisthebig-
:
We.will bep11t t_Othereal test
,pomtsfor
first.place followed by by.Wseconds.
.:·.,
:
·-
__
Clashing_:
of
'heads-
__
••·.
has itiggers'
c1ppeal
.
by Paul Kelly
schedule;
.
.
.
. .
..
.
.
_
.
'..::

The Red Fox ruggers als9
_haye,.
.
"Give blood, play rugby."

responsibilities beyond th·ose .of
.
,.'.'Rugby
..• elegantviolence." Th~
·.
other teams at Marist. Becau_se'it:
·•·

•-
·,
are just a few of th~ descriptions
-,
is officially a club sport, rugby can~,
.
_.
attached to the sport whicli:is gain-
not be financed by, the athletic;
>
::·
ing popularity and campus recogni-

department.··
•.
_

'
.
• .
:
:_,
tion at Marist College.
•••

. .
Elsie
.
Mula, assistant' to. the:
·:
Rugby's origins trace back to
.
athletic director, said the. mgby·
;'.1823,-
when
-the
first- 9rganized
_._te3!11
has to. submit a t!udgei.pro~:
:·:'.
game was played at the Rugby posal for approval by Director of:

·;School
.in England. · Closer
:-to
College Activities Betty Yeaglin/

••
·home;
Marist's rugby team. was··: just like any other club.on qunpus,'-
..
organized in the Spring
of
J
984 as

She added that the athletic depart~.

about 20 students banded together
.
ment is tryirig to help-the-team in-·
to. try to establish the sport on
•.
any way it can within the limits of
.
.
··
campus;
the club format .. "We
_will
assist-
The novice squad rapidly prov-
'
them in getting what they need
as

ed that _it was not a typical first-
long as they have the interest,'' said
year program as it finished the
Mula.
:-


.


season with a record of 4-2. Many·
.
.-_
Each rugby team consists of 15
of the players attributed t_he
team's. players, with seven backs and eight
initial success to a hard working at-
forwards. The object of the game
titude. "The first· season we
is to either place or kick and
basically had 20 people who stuck
recover the ball, which is similar to

with it," said junior forward Mark
an obese football, over the op--


Kohlmaier, of Yaphank, N.Y.
ponents' end line on the field.
The team's initial success and
This is known as a try, and is
organization were major factors in
worth four points. Players may
their acceptance this year as
also kick the ball through the
members of the Metropolitan
uprights for a three point tally, and
Rugby Union, the most highly
a kick after a try is worth two

recognized rugby conference in this
points.
.
area. The Union, headquartered in
These characteristics of the game
New York CitY, provides schedul-
show similarities to American foot-
ing for the team and referees for
ball, but all likenesses end there.
each game.
The game has two halves of 40
The one element the team was
minutes, with hardly any breaks in
forced to do without last year was
the action. There is no blocking
home exposure. The lack of home
ahead of the ball carrier and no
exposure hurt the team's ability
!O
forward passing, emphasizing fluid
attract attention on campus. "'No
lateral and backward underhand
one knew about
us,"
said
passing.
Kohlmaier. This year the team has
A unique feature of rugby is the
four home games on its eight-game scrum. The forwards of each squad
~
Marist rugby ~lub battles for the ball in past body.:itJasting
play.(pho_to
by
D~n Reardon)
-
form the scrum by linking a~s
Many of the Marist players cited
and applying pressure while the ball different reactions to why they like
is thrown into the center of the the game. Some said they see ihe
melee in an attempt to kick it team as an outlet to the daily
backwards to the backs.
routine of school.
"It
was
"The scrum is total insanity," something new and different/' said
said Tim Bolton, a freshman for- junior forward Nino Lauriello,
ward from Smithtown, N.Y. "It's Syosset, N.Y.
like two herds of bulls going at each
Others liked the ga{De
because of
other with awesome power. It's its rough and physical nature.
great."
said
Bolton.
John

.. There is a lot of hitting, and I like
Wanamaker, a junior back from that," said Wanamaker.

Suffern, N.Y., joked about his
The popularity of rugby is in-
teammates who are in the scrum. creasing on campus, and a major
"It's where the big, slow people factor in this rise is the amount
of
are,"
said Wanamaker. •
contact that the game displays.
11
1
like the physical part of the game,"
said junior Mike Lang, of West
_
Caldwell, N.J.
Jeff Nicosia,
a
sophomore from
Bellmore, N.Y., said he liked the
fact that the players wear no pro-
tective padding. "The players are
sick as it takes guts to go out there
without pads," he said.
~~re are two home games re-
mammg on the Red Foxes slate.
Rutgers will invade on April 26 and
~ew Paltz will visit in a cross-river
rivalry on May 3.