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Part of The Circle: Vol. 32 No. 9 - April 24, 1986

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:Lacrosse undefeated
Volume
32,
Number 9
Maris( College; Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
.
.
. .
.
.
.
I
College -
names
·-
.
-.
·..
I
-_gr~d spea~·er-
-
I
by
Regina Rossi
•• . University, where he received his
bachelor,'s degree in business ad-
Marist College has announced ministration in 1930. He earned a
that Charles Henry Dyson, a cor-
docto~ate of Jaw degree from the
• poration executive, will be its 1986 New York Law School in 1973.
Commencement speaker. •
· In
1
addition, he serves as ctiair- •
Marist had a verbal committ-
mart· of the board
of the
ment from Dyson in-February, btit - Westchester Medical Center Foun-
was unable to make a final con-
datfon arid is on the .Board of •
fii-mation until this week because .,Directors of Coinmon Cause, ir
he had been traveling out of the /public interest lobbying group. •
country, ~aid Emily Burdis, direc-'
"Dyson's achievements as a
tor of public information, in a' leader in the business world com-
staten1:ent released this week. . • bined with his strong interest in the
"Dyson was selected because, of community-make him a fine exam-
- his distinguished career in business pie· not only for our business
and because of his commendable students • but for all • of our
• record of community servicewhich students,'• Burdis said.
,.
includ~s an active support_ of
•.
Dyson began his business career
education," sh~ s~id,
,
.
in 1932 working for Price,
Dyson, 77, ,will recei_ve an<Watei:-house&Co.,agroupofCer-
honorary doctorate of law degree . tifie<f Public,Accountants in New
at the graduaticm ceremony. ·•
York City. •
. . .
. -~•-
_ . .
page
12
He
is
the chairman ~f the board
·' In-1941, he was-a.consultant to .
. 'oftheDyson~Kissner:Corporation,
the
-::secretary
:.of
War _in~ ,. -
.. . .
,
- .
ff .... ___
}:
:iJ~~;~Wt1?t~W;~t~~,:-g:t~-~l.~f~~:it~i~~~i~~f\Jt;Ath9:~%
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,-,, • .
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·~mWUfln:(Ul'ifig..,_...cbinpaiiy'retiJ.1j}())':--'Treasury:i.>cp1lrtfficnf"at"tlfc"'Btc:t~
'!''"";'"-:"',~:":r·B.arbeme°":~·c:·-ct/
•.
:
'':·.~-~-•,,.,~J~yon,
.J•~.k:~
·.~no,• nd•
Jim ..
s~_llan ..
of:;~m•~•.
Pox
Dog
.
· . • Me 1s·also chairman ementus of·.• dent of Textron, Inc .• in 1946;:Hc . :,: < :·;.·.: • .: •.
,.,,,
... • <-
-'<:---
••
Laune Barraco)
,. the board- oLtrustees
-Of
-Pace , : <-
c>·,,,:Conti~ued'OD
next,page' ,•
• - ••
·malKiilg
politics:·.
Humphrey, Reagan, JFK/ '.~nd·_q
-candfd}i.te
n.amed MUrray •
,,,.,~
'
...
,-~;'
·:.
.•-:
:➔ ~~~'.
·.~
·:
-~·.:
by
Carl MacGowan
.
·,
~7oday's
.Congress_ has
become su_bservient.-·to.
other·
branches oJ: govemnient and
submissive to speciaJ interest
groups. Many ·of .our,, con-~.
-
• gressmen have become tirefl and.
complaceni ..
They
are either· un-
willing· or unable to deal with
ihe complex problems•oftax
reform,· pollution andforeign
policy.-" ._ .

_
.
- -candidate·
Dennis Murray,
_ 1972


Sounding like a cross between
John F. Kennedy and Abbie .
Hoffman,·25-year-old Dennis J.
Murray ran for Congress twice
. in the early 1970s, losing both
times but earning experience
that he says has been invaluable.
lm'l
recent interview with The
Circle, Murray said that he
might consider a return to
politics "sometime," but that
he is satisfied with his current
employment and plans to stick
around for a while.
"Sometime is a long time
off," said Murray, a registered
Democrat.
"When
I
.
was
younger, I took a narrower
perspective-that the only way
to change things was to run for
public office ... Clearly, that bur-
ning desire has left me."
Murray's
politjcal career
began in his teens when,
as
a
siudenr leader at Mt. Carmel
Hi~h School in California, he
was
invited
by
state
Assemblyman Jesse .. Big Dad-
dy" Unruh to join Youth for
._ Kennedy. Just· months later,
Murray metthe future president
at
.
the _ 1960 . Democratic
Convention.
After. graduating with .a
degree in polit:ical science from -.
Cal State Long '3each, Murray
joined Vice __
President Hubert
Humphrey's presidential cam- •
paign and worked as an
• organizer; advance man. and
spee_ch
writer. While Humphrey
was stavirig ·off a stiff challenge
from Eugene McCarthy for the
Democratic nomination; Mur-
ray shot through the rank a11d
file to become a leading Hum-
phrey campaigner.

Shortly after Humphrey won
the nomination, said Murray,
· he and the vice president sat
_
down with Jerry Brown-then
an aide to McCarthy and later
the governor of California_.:to
settle the democratic party dif-
ferences over the Vietnam War
that threatened to break up
Humphrey's White House bid:
When Humphrey lost to
Republican Richard Nixon in
·, the November ballots, Murray

became
a
special assistant to Cal
State.: Lorig • B,each President
-
. Steven Horn. Murray was later.
.: elected
by
the Cal State alumni
association • to serve on • the
·. : board of trustees of the state
college system; ·Among his col-
ieagues on 'the board was theri
• :califorriia
Gov: 'Ronafd
Reagan.
Murray said ·that while he
• didn't always agree.with Reagan ,
on educational matters, he-sid-
ed . with the governor on his
most controversial position: his
restrictions on student protests
. ·~t Berkeley-and ocher state col-
lege campuses. • _·
• •~It was a very confronta-
tional period in California at the
time," Murray said.
"I
felt the
disruptions at the campus were
wrong. They were not a part of
the mission of the college. And
I guess
I
agreed with Reagan on
his handling of that."
In 1970, Murray was elected
to the Democi:atic State Central
Committee in California. Two
......
f
A remnant of Dmnis Murray's 1971 congressional bid.
years later~ he was asked by the •
party to run in the 32nd Con-
gressional District against Rep,
Craig Hosmer,.
• .
. •
Hosmer was·running'for his
11th term in Congres~ and was
expected to win· handily. After _
• winning- .. the
Democratic
primary by 7,000 votes; Murray
mustered only 32 percent of the
vote • against the Republican
Hosmer.

Murray said part of his poor
showing was due to Democratic
presidential candidate George
McGovern,
who-
.. was
thoroughly trounced by Nixon. -
''It wasn't a great time
to
be
a Democratic candidate," Mur-
ray reflected. ~-•Democrats
lost
seats all over (the nation) due to
, McGovern's candidacy ... He
just was not a popularly receiv-_
ed candidate.
"I
was opposed to the war,
but I wasn't opposed to the
military ..
.l
didn't seem to fit in
with the extremes of the two
parties. But l knew _full
weli go-
ing into the election that no one
was going
to
'defeat Craig
Hosmer in the election."·
Murray
ran
again
for
Hosmer's seat when the con-
gressman retired in 1974. This •
·time, Murray was defeated in
the primaries by Lakewood
Mayor
Mark Hannaford. Mur-
ray lost by less than 3,000 votes
out of 28,000 votes cast.
Murray contends that his
first-hand political experience
Con~nued on nut page
College
-may
renew
Canterbury •
by
Christian Larsen
. The Canterb1,1ry
Gardens apart-
ment complex may again be utiliz-
ed· .as off-campus housing for
students during the fall 1986
semester,
Steve Sansola,
director of
housing, said early this week.
• - - The Housing Office has still not _
determined if the need
to
utilize
Canterbury exists, Sansola said,
·but he • acknowledged that the
school has- contacted Canterbury
about renting apartments for next
semester.
.
The college h_as signed no lease
agreements, he added.
A
·secretary ·at the apartment
complex, located_ five miles from
campus
in • the
Town - of
Poughkeepsie off Route 44, said
Marist had contacted the apart-
ment manager but would not
elaborate on the extent of the
discussions.
The
move
would affect transfer
students and students now living in
college housing with the lowest
priority for housing, Sansola said.
Housing priority is determined
by
points awarded on the basis of stu-
dent activities, disciplinary record,
. year of study and academic record.
He added that the college intends
to re-establish regular van service
between the campus and Canter-
bury if the apartments are utilized.
The college will announce
whether the apartments will be
_ necessary later this week after of-
ficials determine
how many
students have registered for college
Continued on next page








































































































































Speaker __
Continued from page 1
was also vice president of Burl-
ington Mills Corporation

and a
consultant to national companies.
Dyson also served as a colonel in
the U.S. Air Force and was
decorated D.S.M. commander,
Order of British Empire.
One of Dyson's four children is
Robert Richard Dyson, a member
of Marist's board of trustees. Bur-
dis said this makes his selection as
Commencement speaker "even
more appropriate."
Brother Patrick Magee, F.M.S.,
and Alice and Martin Provensen,
of Staatsburg, N.Y., will also
receive honorary degrees at the
ceremony.
.
.
..
Magee, a life trustee of Marist
and a graduate of the class of 1947,
will receive an honorary doctorate
of humane letters degree for his ser-
vice to the Marist High School in
Chicago, which he founded.

The Provensens will receive a
joint honorary
doctorate
of
humane letters for their work
writing andillustrating children's
literature for over 40 years.

Housing __
Continued from page l

housing for the fall 1986 semester,·
Sansola said.
.

This semester, the college mov-
ed all but four of the 57 students
who lived in the Canterbury apart-
.
ments last Jail
to campus and
discontinued van service to the site.

Sansola said in Decemb~r that
the college moved the students tci
improve the quality of academic,
social and mentor support for those
then living off campus. "There's a
lot more going for them (on cam-
pus)," he said.
Mµrray ______
__
iContinued
from
pagel
;,,/;.
-~~~
hirh better ·~this c~~ent job.
"I
think understanding politics an_d.
public policy helps you as a college
president,"· he said.
But
as
for his future in politics,
Murray said a run against Rep.
Hamilton Fish (R-Millbrook) is out
of the question.

.
"I
don't feel
I
have the roots in
this area and I think Ham Fish has
done a wonderful job in this area,"
said Murray. "And I'm sure the
professional politicians will line· up.
for that seat (when Fish retires)."
Oddly enough, a poll iaken
-by
the Poughkeepsie Journal last sum-
mer to determine the 10 most "in-
fluential" residents of Dutchess

County showed Fish and Murray
tied with businessman Jonah Sher-
man for eighth place. But Murray
dismissed the poll as inaccurate,
since it surveyed only 20 individuals
in law, business and county
politics.
"The fact that I was rated eighth
only proved the fallibilty of the
research in the poll," he said. "The
only reason I'm recognized is that
I'm president of Marist College,
and there is some recognition that
comes along with that.
"It's nice to be included, it's nice
for Marist College, but since we're
sitting in
an
educational institution,
I think we have to call that (poll)
what it was."
At least for now,·Murray said,
he is not interested in any position
besides president of Marist. While
he didn't rule out a return to
politics, he said he has no urge to
throw his hat into the ring .
.. Right now, I don't feel like I
belong in either party," said Mur-
ray. "The
compromises one
must
make in the
party
make me
uncom-
fortable. The
only partisan politics
I get involved in now-on the state
and federal levels-are those that
directly affect the school: the
stu-
dent financiaJ
aid and other
fun-
ding that are of interest to Marist
College."
·
.
'
;

.

.
'~--·.:.
~,___..,
_/';
.
·.,,✓··~
~-I,,...✓,,,.----_
:_,
-SUMMER
':·--.
·
.•

,•
I
-DEPARTU.RE·
PROCEDURE
.1986
••
All students must leave their residence hall by
2
p.m.;·saturday,-May
10,
1986.
Any student who has his/her last final exam earlier than Saturday is.expected
to leave the residence hall by
11
p.m. that saine evening.
_
.
.
.
·-
.
·•·
._
.-
,,,_.
Permission to remain ih the residence hall beyond the night of your last final
, ,
exam must be obtained from the Housing Office by 4 p.m. Friday, May 2, ,·
1986.
•.
i
.
Th~ last rneal of the semester will be lunch on Friday, May
9.
Those students
scheduled for an exam on Saturday, May 10,.will receive' dinner on.Friday
and breakfast on Saturday. Special meal tickets must.be picked up in the'
dining hall office.
On
.9r
before May
10,
all beiongings
must
be taker/tiome a~d rooms must
be cleaned. Anytning left in the rooms will be discarded. STORAGE SPACE
IS NOT AVAILABLE ON CAMPUS. Summer storage arrangements can be
made directly through Arnott. Storage Company, 4~2-1594 ..
.
.
Failure to.follow check-out procedures listed below will affectyour housing
status for the Fall
1986
semester.
...
•••
;Please
remember to: '
..

·.
·: /
..
vacate your
-r~o~
:_n -t~e-
9,ay
qf
_y~ur
.la~(tina(e~a;,:;~-,:

.
.
..
,
..
.
.

<.2:
Leave your room in good condition.:
,
.
·' :
3;
Sign the Residence Hall Exit. Inspection Card.
....
4.·Returning your room key to Donnelly Hall; Security Office, after you
. .
vacate your room.




-·By
May· 2nd, trash bags
·will-be
distributed by the R.A._'s/U.C.'s to each
·'
·resident.



·
·ON
BEHALF OF· ALL
'THE
·
·RESIDENCE-.HALL
STAFF,::_
•.
-
WE.WISH YOU A.
••
SAFE
:.AND
·ENJOYAB_LE
SUJ\IIM~R!!.
SEE.YOU IN SEPTEMBER!
·.>...
.
..
~-~•'.· .. ~;)~•~·./.
·•.:j_ •
...
,.·<_~;
._,.·;.-·~.-1,::..:-'..
• •

..
·.,·
..
.-.'
!_•~•_·.:.•
•.
~~.:~"::i.·:tv-:"1',.,
.:;;;:.:..,L~:,~;
·.

If
you
have
Jt
least
two years of college: le,ft,.
.'
you.can spend six weeks at-
'
our
Army_ROTC
B~~ic
.
:
Camp·tbis
summer
and
eat:Jl
·_
_
-
_'.
approximately~$600~
·,
<
•. -
.
••
•:,;~~~~!Yl~R&~,~ou.
.
Year Program
th~
fall and
.
r~eive µp ro:
~
1,000
a
year.
·
·
But the big payoff
-_
• .
happens on graduation day.
_
That's when you receive
an officer's commission.
So. ge~ your body in .
shape· (not to mention.your
.
bank account).
Enroll in Army ROTC. For
more information, contact
CPT. Luftman, Marist Col-
lege 914-471-3240 Ext. 528.
ARMYROTC.
BEALL
YOU
CAM
BE.

~
I
1/
l
.
ii
.·.·t-
.
.
.-.
r.
;
I

i
i












































t
--"-:-------------------------....,;,..;..;.
____
,;__April
24, 1986 - THE CIRCLE
-
Page 3--
.
A-:f
arist is· partiCipate in journalism
.
~
.
.
.
.
.
teleconference
by Lynn S. Maffucci·
.
This

Saturday· Marist College
and about 150 other schools will
participate in an international
videoco11ference

to discuss "The
Role of the Broadcast Media· in
Reporting Major World Issues,"-
.
which will be televised live via
.
satellite
1
according
to Robert
-Sadowski,
Chairperson of the Divi-
sion of Arts and Letters.
The event, sponsored by The
Christian Science Monitor, will
have panelists at each • site .
The chosen broadcast sites are:
Vienna/ A~stria; Ditchley

P~rk~
England; Brasilia, Brazil; Tokyo,
J11pan;
and Boston, Massachusetts.
Boston will be the videoconference
hub since all participating schools
will telephone their questions from
all locations to there.
In Vienna they will dis~uss "The
East-West Confrontation;" in Dit-
chley Park, "Ambient Violence,
Low-level Conflicts and Ter-
rorism;" in Brasilia, "Relations.
Between Countries of the Northern
and Southern Hemispheres;" arid
in Tokyo, "The Uses and Misuses
of Science and Technology.".
'86 Stl.ldents' Day
.pull~
crowd of. 250
by Kathy O'Connor
-
to answer questions and give advice
for career planning.
Approximately
250 faculty,
According to Suzanne Ryan,
students and alumni gathered in the
former student body president, this
Mccann Center fast Tuesday for
was the first college event that
Marist's first Students' Day.
students had the opportunity to
The keynote speakers of the pro-
play a major role in planning. "In-
gram were Howard Mills, a senior - volving students is very impor-

studying political science, and
tant," she said. "It should be done
William Kuffrier, an alumni of
again."

.
.
••
Marist who graduated in 1968 and
• ••
Julianne Maher; acting academic

.
who is now the vice president of
vice president, agreed that much of
Citibank in New York City.
the credit for the success of the day
The speeches, about the shared
should be given to the students who
bond in their lives-Marist, began
volunteered time and work.
at 9:30 ~-m. and ended at 11 a.m.
According to several professors,
The audience then moved to Don-
the Student Steering Committee·
nelly Hall to attend various
had a lot of responsibility in handl-
workshops.
ing the activities and should be ap-
The workshops were instructed
plauded for its work.
by bo_th Marist professors and
Michele Brittelli, a junior, liked
alumni and gave students an op-
.
the switch from Dean's Convoca-

portunity to learn from profes-
tion Day to Students' Day. Brittelli
sionals who share a common
·
said: "I think that.the new format
background with them.
made the difference in the amount
.
.
Although there were 22 different
.
of people that attended. The
workshops offered, many dealt
workshops were more geared to the
with the theme of Students' Day -
students/'
•.
.
.
.
~
college, knowledge and jolis:
:-
-



Although there were people that
:
--
·
-.-;.:t::,~~:Jh1t,.~o.tkilrops.~e.1[eryone"..'.
·.:Jo.i:>k:a<ivaritage
·ortlie
time
.off..and

.:
:
crowded into the halls,of Donnel-
.
the nice weather to picnic on the

ly· for free- sub sandwiches
·and -,
lawns, 2:35 p.m. proved· to be a.
soda. Alumni from various career
reversal in.-the spirit of the day.
fields metwith interested students
Classes resumed.
At Marist, large screens will be The Monitor's overseas correspon-
set up in both D243 and D245 to dent; and Eugene. Skolnikoff,
watch the event, which will be director of the center for interna-
.
telecast from I to 3:30 p.m., and tional studies and professor of
there will be a discussion afterward political science at MIT.
for those interested. All questions
Confirmed
in Vienna are:
called into Boston will be condens- Elizabeth Pond The Monitor's
ed into one question, which will Bonn correspond~nt; and Dr. Hans
t~en be ~sked by the host at a par-
-
Blix, direct9r general, international
tl~ular site. No one except the host atomic energy agency.
will b_e able to talk_dir~ctly to the
In England, The Monitor has
panelists,_ Sadpwsk1 said._
confirmed David Anable, manag-
Accordmg to The Mom tor, the ing editor of The Monitor; Lincoln
panelists confirmed t_o participate
Bloomfield, professor of political

m J_apan are: Edwm Newman, science, MIT; and Brigadier Ken-
media ~ommentator; Takashi Oka, neth Hunt, defense commentator
Speaker
:Mkbaei
Mc.Alister discusses Alcoholism and the
Children· of Alcoholic. Parents as part of Students' Day last
.
week. (photo by Laurie Barraco)·
on BBC.
Among the confirmed in Brazil
are
Georgie
Anne
Geyer,
"Washington Week in Review,"
syndicated columnist; and David
Willis, The Monitor's senior inter-
national television correspondant.
Anchors at the hub in Boston, all
from The Monitor, are: Rob
Nelson, editor of television broad-
casting; Earl Foell, editor in chief;
Richard Nenneman, director of
publishing; and John Parrot, editor
and senior executive producer/
broadcasting.
Earrings:
The
guys
tell us
why
by Julie Sveda
Some like diamond studs, others
gold balls. Some buy them, others
borrow them. Some did it a long
time ago, others are just doing it
now.
Guys-a lot of them-are wear-
ing earrings these days .
Doug Williams, a senior at
Marist, said he had wanted to get
his ear pierced for a long time and
finally decided to do it in January.
"l think it looks good. I like it,"
Williams said.

While Williams did it on his
own, some guys, like Rich DiBona,
did it in a group.
"Me and four other guys decid-
ed to get it done last October," said
DiBona, a computer science major.
"None of them wear
·earrings
anymore though, because their
parents made them take them out.
I asked my parents first. They told
me not to wear it in the house, but

now 1 do."
,
Wi\\iams, a communication arts
major from Newton, N.J., said he
doesn't understand why people,
especially parents, don't approve.
Continued on page
10
How student AcademiCColllmittee fell on hard times
by Anthony DeBarros
been for the.past year virtually non-
ding interviews with past SAC
existent.
representatives and administrators
.
When Patrick Hadden was Stu-
The SAC was originally design-
close to the .group.
•.:
den~ Academic Committee presi-
ed to be the students' voice in
Patricia Clark, who was elected
dent in 1985, he thought having on-
academic affairs. In its early days,
SAC president last April, resigned
ly
12
members in the organization
the SAC sent its representatives to
from the position in October to


reduced its
·effectiveness.
faculty meetings. (It still has one
devote more time to an internship.
When Gina Disanza took over as
voting member on the Academic
Amy Price became the SAC's ac-
the SA C's new president earlier this
Affairs Committee, which deter-
ting president, but only in a limited
month,· she discovered:· things·


mines academic· policy at Marist.)
·
..
capacity because·of her continuing
hadn't gotten much better. In fact,
. :
But over the past two years, stu-:
.
-·~uties as Council of·. Student
she found, her organization had
dent representation at faculty.:·- Leaders secretary.
.

••

only one member~a junior nam-

meetings has nearly ceased~ and the
: .::

In its constitution, the SAC is
ed Gina Disanza.
SAC has done little except send

defined as having three

student
While Disanza hopes to put new
that representative
to AAC
representatives from each major
life
into
the
SAC,
·
the
meetings.
department/division, two student
organization-potentially
one of
Most of the SAC's ineffec-
representatives from each non-
the most powerful and influential
tiveness has been due to its small
major department/division, two
student groups on campus-has
-and
unstable membership, accor-
represent:ativP.s
to the AAC and a
chairperson.
Ho\Yever, according to those in-
terviewed, Price and any alternates
she chose to take her place at AAC
meetings have been the only active
SAC members this year.
According to Marist Vice Presi-
dent for Student Affairs Gerard
Cox, Price has attended most
meeiings of the Academic Affairs
Committee. Cox said students have
been consulted on such academic
changes as minus grades and the
Dean's List requirement change.

But during an interview last
month concerning minus grades,
Acting Academic Vice President
Julianne
Maher
questioned
whether students really had any
Montero no~ can call some of her time
by Sue Hermans
. Eleanor Montero graduated
from Marist in l 971 with four
young children at home and an
ambition to teach high school
English.

In the 15 years that followed,
she earned a master's degree
and a Ph.D. and returned to
Marist to develop the Learning
Center and eventually become
director
of
the
Writing
Program.
And she: seems just a little
surprised that the balancing act
she performed for so long as
mother, student and teacher has
finally come to an end. Her
children now range in age from
23 to 28.
.. I
wish
I
had been able to do
some things differently,"
Montero said in a recent inter-
view in her Marist East office.
"I didn't spend as much time
with my children as I would
have liked.
"When they're small, they
after
marist
need
you and want you and
look- up to you. Then, when
.
they get to
be
12,
suddenly they
act like they don't need you. But
even after they're teenagers
they
need you-it's
different,
though. They need to know
you're around."
But
being
around wasn't
always easy while Montero pur-
sued her undergraduate degree,
first at Dutchess Community
College, then at Marist. And her
doctorate work took her away
from her Poughkeepsie home
for long stretches of time while
her kids were still grmving.
She said there were few
women on campus when
she
started at Marist, and she was
the only woman in most of her
classes. Although the college
opened the day division to
women in 1968, the atmosphere
was unmistakably male.
"Men opened doors for me,"
Montero said, "but if I got a
better grade, they didn't like it
a
bit/'
But Montero said she liked
the small, home-like at-
mosphere and the
relaxed pace
or the ca(l)pus then. Now, she
said, the atmosphere is more
frantic and faster paced, and
there is a push for a more
business-like running of the
college.
"Even with the student ac-
tivism on campus, the at-
mosphere was different-if
students were upset about
something, the faculty gathered
and tried to help."
After graduation, the bottom
fell out of the teaching profes-
sion, Montero recounted. She
received one offer of a job at a
junior high but turned it down,
knowing there would be others.
There weren't.
Unable
to find a job,
Montero
_went
on to earn her
master's at New Paltz. In 1978
she was hired
by
Marist
full-

comment on that decision. She said
no one ever told her students had
been consulted.
Patrick Hadden, a 1985 Marist
graduate who was on the SAC for
two years, said he had no less than
12
active members on SAC while
he was president, and he considered
that a bare minimum.
Cox agreed that the group lack-
ed a good cross-section of students.
But he claimed that student govern-
ment representatives can't really be
faulted for SAC's lack of effec-
tiveness. The problem lies with the
student body's general apathy
toward student government and
students not giving enough thought
Continued on page 10
her own
time to develop programs for
the Learning Center.
She also worked from 1976 to
1982 to earn her Ph.D. from In-
diana University or Penn-
sylvania. There she entered a
new program in composition
and rhetoric which allowed her
to study off-campus during the
school year bul required her
10
spend her summers on campus
at the midwescern college. She
recalls her kids sometimes ask-
ed why she had to spend the
whole summer away.
And now that she can call a
bit more of her time her own,
Montero said she would like to
do something more creative
than writing theses and doctoral
dissertations. "I would like to
write fiction,"
she
said .
"Maybe
this summer."
-.
























































•• '··>\·--.
--Pag~
4 • THE CIRCLE - Aprl!. 24, 1986
campus
inquirer
CentrlltAmeTii:a stirs Iocaiactioll
Looking back on your
years at Marist, what
made it all worth it?·
Casey Marra, senior, com-
munication arts.
Rolling rocks at
Renaissance.
Robin Little, senior, business.
I've learned more than I ever im-
agined about dealing with so many
different types of people ..
Carol Szczepanski,
senior,
psychology.
The family-like at-
mosphere was beneficial to me. •
Maria Savino, senior, business.
The people.
long
fasting
friendships
and cheese sticks.
by Hector Mota
The Spanish Club at Marist, the
Mary Knoll Peace Center and· the
Spanish Club at SUNY • New Paltz
: are organizing activities to bring
about
increased
community
awareness of the problems in Cen-
tral America.
Each year the Spanish Club at
Marist sponsors "Central America
Week," providing the Marist com-
munity with various speakers, films
and slide presentations, said Fran-
cisco Morales, Spanish Club presi-
dent. On April 22, the Spanish
• Club held a lecture concerning the
political situation
iri Central
America.
Missionary
Mike Gable from
the Mary Knoll Peace·center said·
he has b~en publicizing the Central
America issue since 1982 by writing
letters to congressmen, showing
films and holding lectures featur-
ing Central American refugees who
share· their personal experiences.
"We have to· create increased
• awareness of the Central America
problem, particularly in regard to
Nicaragua, in the Poughkeepsie
area," said Gable.
Since the 1970s, Central America
• has been involved in civil wars and
has maintained- teJati_ons with
socialist countries. Cable said that
the Central American problem is a
serious problem that the American
public must be made aware ofand
become involved in.
Gable · said · that churches in
Poughkeepsie have given refugees
from Central America food,
clothes, shelter, and in some cases,
the opportunity to learn English.
New stud_ent plays
.
.
find home •
at Marist.
.
.
by Regina Rossi
Sex aritl Rock 'n' Roll," directed
by senior Paul Rezza and written
. "Festival '86: New Short Plays"
by Bakke, who had several P.lays
·is the title of this year's experimen-
produced at Marist
last
year.
tal theater presentation put on by
Because this show is produced by
the members of Vice President of
the Theater Workshop class, this is
Student" Affairs Gerard Cox's
the first theater experience for
Theater Workshop class.
many of the students. The only
The production, which opened
freshman participating•is Brown, a
last -night and will be performed
political sciece major, who explain-
tonight and tomorrow night in the
ed her interest simply: "I love
theater at 8 p.m., consists of six theater."·

one-act plays written by three
Ramirez, a communication arts •
Marist students and one Marist major, said, ''It's beneficial to the
alumnus.
class, because it gives them the
Senior John Anderson and
chance to directly observe their
junior John Roche have two plays play being molded from nothing in- .
each to _be performed. Junior
to a:real.play!! >
..
• ,, ,:
Teresa Lantos and.John Bakke, a
Prucnel, _director,.of
,'.
1
A Tangl-
member of the class of 1985, have .::ed·Web," said;-c'.'1
1
,think the pro:
one play each in the line-up. . • duction and the class give hope to
Anderson's plays.:...."
A Tangled people who want:to write plays and
Web/' .. directed ·by sophmore Peter
who want to direct plays."
Prucnel, 'and "The Gatekeeper,"
Rezza, director of "Drugs, Sex
directed
by sophmore
Joe
and Rock 'n' Roll," a satire of
Podesta-are light-hearted looks at
aspiring rock ·stars,.· is very en-
a reunion between two old friends
thusiastic about his play and· the
and ·a inan trying to get· past St.
production in general. "My actors
Peter into heaven, respectively.
are great and the p~ay is going to
Roche's plays are more serious be great/' he said.
in nature. They are ·"Engine's
The performers in "Festival '86:
Heat," directed by freshman Mer-
New Short Plays" are: Ted Wood,
cinth Brown, and "Lifes' Eyes,"
Mike Banahan, John Clements,
directed by junior Rita Ramirez.
Brian O'Connor, Kathleen Ger-
"Beginnings," directed by senior mann, • Mike Melkonian, Maggie
Steve Pinto and written by Lantos, • Johnson, Robert Fazio, J .R. Mor-
deals with two former college rissey, Patrick,. Cancroft, . Mike
lovers meeting again for the first O'Brien, Mike. Murphy, John
time in three years.
.
McGuinness, Chris Gagliano,
The only play not written by a Lauren Arthur, Kelly Colligan; and
current Marist student is "Dru~s.
Odette Dixon.
• •

• • • •
•Student Ushers needed -
for graduation .
.
••
•·
• Volunteers needed for
freshman orientation~
• • •
• For information,
please contact Deb Bell
at the Student Affairs
Office, Room 266 CC.
-
He added that human rights and
we are able to hold many ac-
religious beliefs are being violated tivities,'1 said Duval ..
in Central America, and this is ·_ • From April 8-15,.'the Spanish
what is currently motivating many Club at New Paltz held a Ceii(ral
religious organizations to give help America week-the largest in the
and attention to those who need it. -· Dutc!J_ess
County area,
Duval said.
"We are getting worried because "We had lecturers from almost all .
not much attention is being given the· countries· in Central America. •
to problems
in
Central America,"
We had books for sale, maps,
he said..

traditional clothes, many pottery
Gable said that in the coming items from the region and two
years, he hopes to see more. bands that played music from Cen-
Ai_nericans yarticipating in the .·
teal
Ame~ica:," said D1;1val,_
,.., ,
dnve to brmg peace to Central
According to Duval, m the c<>m-
America. As it stands now, most ing year the club plans to hold
activities are sponsored by local ano_ther Central Ameri~
W~ek,
religious groups, said Gable.
and the students who participated
According to Gable, one reason • are eager to help again.
• •
for lack of awareness in • the
"The situation in Latin America
Poughkeepsie area may be that
is
a serious problem, and we as
there
isn't
a large Hispanic popula-
representatives of a Hispanic
tion. "Other communities are able organization feel ol:>ligated to do
to do more than this organization
anything • that will _
contribute to
• because they have more Hispanics peace," said Duval.
involved in the problem of Central
Duval said that within the last
America," he said.
two years, the Spanish Club at New
According to Arturo Duval,
Paltz has been collecting funds and
president of the Spanish Club at
seeking speakers for other schools
SUNY-New
Paltz,
the problem and churches as well..
.
in CentralAmerica is a major con-
"Our club is very happy to see
cernfor _the Spanish 9lub and for
other
religious
and
college·
'th" ·community in geI,1eraL
.' , ,
organizations,lnvolved in getting
• "Due to .our· large. Hi~panic this problem publicized. We are go-
population and t!Je • amount" of
ing to keep the Central America
funds we receive from the school,
issue abreast," he said.
ethereis
·a
~
titute
for
e
_-.
Subscribe
to The Wctll
Street Journal,
and enjoy student savings of up to $44. That's quite
a
bargain,
especially
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Tuition
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----------

























_______
,__ _______
..;...
_______________
April 24, 1986 - THE CIRCLE - Page 5--
Skinner_
's
removes legs after/ acuity. protest
by Mary Ann Dolan
The removal last month of the
artificial legs from the windows of
Skinner's was in response to
~
let-
ter that was sent to the owners of
-. the bar •
and restaurant by Marist
• faculty incensed by what they view-
ed as a sexist depiction of women,
according to Charlene Rinne, assis-
tant professor of nursing.
• The letter was written after a
meeting of approximately thirty-
five faculty members, mostly
women, that addressed women's
issues on - campus. During the
meeting, many people expressed
. opposition to the decor of Skin-
ner's, according to Rinne.
In a recent phone. interview,
Skinner's co-owner Ed Beck said:
"We didn't understand, after five
years of service to the college, the
suddenness of the letter. We don't
want to have bad relations with the
college, so we took the legs out of
the window." The restaurant is not
planning any future changes in the
interior decor, according to Beck.
·Rinne and
other
women
members of the Marist faculty op-
posed to the c;lecor
and theme of the
restaurant addressed the issue by
writing a letter to Beck and Chris
Turrek, who share ownership of
the popular bar.
The letter, which was signed by
82 members of the Marist com-
munity, expressed dismay about
the public image of women
presented by the restaurant, located
on Route 9 across from Marist
College. _
of women presented
in the
restaurant environment."
The authors of the letter also
protested the "tacky calendar art"
on the interior of Skinner's.
_Student disc jockeys revolve
arollnd-.music and _,studies
According to Rinne, the letter
was sent because of the restaurant's
close proximity to the college and
its service to the students, faculty
and guests of the college. The let-
ter mentions that many people have
been offended by "what they, and
we,. perceive as a cheapened view
The letter suggests that the bar
owners change the theme of the
restaurant, and perhaps propose a
contest for a new idea in decor. It
also comments on the excellent
food at the restaurant and hopes
that the letter is taken "in the
positive vein in which it is offered."
To date, the letter has not receiv-
ed a written response since it was
sent March 3. Beck said he would
not respond, adding that he feels
the removal of the legs from his
business should be enough to
satisfy the critics.
by Gina Disanza ,
While some Marist College_
students are slaving away at a fast
food resturant or department store,
there are six who make their money
• talking to people they hardly ever
see.
.
Seniors Tony _ DeBarros, K.en
Parker and Bill Smith, junior Tim
Sheehan and sophomores Mike
Grayeb and David Schifter have
--voices familiar to many people in
the area; yet few of these people
know them personally.
in Poughkeepsie, said he has been
interested in radio since he was lO
years old.
"I
used to spend lots of time
listening to DJs, and learning to
talk up records," he said.
"Radio was always something I
was interested
in,"
agreed
Sheehan. "When I was six, I told
my mom I wanted to be a priest so
I could talk into a microphone."
Parker, who works at WVSG-
AM in Cornwall, N.Y., said he has
•. always loved music, but did not like
"listening to a bunch of stations
whose only difference was the per-
son talking."
When these students go to work,
they trade in their textbooks for
headphones and their notebooks
• for microphones. They are prof es-
"Unfortunately, radio is not
sional disc jockeys.

allowed to be the creative medium
The six, all Communication Arts
it can be," he said. So, he decided
majors, began their careers before
to become a DJ to try to change the
receiving their degrees, breaking in-
situation.
• to the highly competitive field of
"I've played some strange stuff
radio one step -ahead of the
on my shows," he said, "and my
competition.
.
general manager has called me a
Some of them have used college few times to complain. But he does
radio as a springboard, but others
quite a bit of traveling and while
got their taste of being behind a
he's gone WVSG becomes the on-
microphone before they even - ly. AM station which _dares to play
entered college. --
the •Ramones."
Sheeh8!1,
who works for 1~95
FM . /:: And when :they do get to meet
~RKI)
m_panbury,:;9),nl_1?}
1
1_l<k"
~ttieiri.listener's;reactions
are mixed.
lt~A!'-1
affih~te WINE, h~ ~n a • - • Sheehan arid"
sd1ifter both said
disc Jockey smce he was
10
eighth ·
their fans expected older men, not
• gr~?e.
_ .•
• _ .
. . _ .
_ college ~tudents, b1,1t
DeBarios ex-
When I was !n Jum~r _ high. pressed disappointment at some of
school, WSNG--(m Tornngton,
his fans'-reactions.
fonn.) had,?; weekly show called __
"It's
r~~lly dej:,ressiJ?g," said
}een Talk,_ expl3;1ned
Sheehan.
DeBarros, "when ·people walk up
I used to nde my bike down there
to you arid say, _
, I really didn't
and watch the DJs. When. they
think you looked like'that.'"
needed someone really quickly,
they would call
me
to _fill in:"•
Three of the disc jockeys are cur-
Like Sheehan, DeBarros became . • rently working at WMCR, _
Marist
_ a discjockey prior to entering col-
College Radio. Smith, who was last
Iege, starting at his high school
year's general manager, said that
radio club in tenth grade.
.
his position gave him an opportuni-
"There was really no supervision_. ty
tci
lel,lrn how to deal with peo-
there, so it was hard to know if
pie, specifically other disc jockeys,
what I was doing was right,.but it
a
management staff and an ad-
was a good start." said DeBarros.
ministration. He said the changes
·
made at the station over the past -
• Aftef graduating high • school, _ ty,,o years, including the addition of
DeBarros went to Dutchess Com-:- program logs and a set format, will
munity College and spent two years make it closer to commercial radio.
• at - WDCC, Dutchess College
Radio. In October; 1983; he was
"The station is coming along
hired at WEOK AM in Poughkeep-
slowly," said Smith, another disc
sie and in the summer of 1984 was jockey with WPDH, "but it has to
• hired by its FM affiliate WPDH.
get a frequency license because the
Like other college students, the -------------
• six -face the -problem of juggling
• school
work
. and . job
responsibilities.

• Most of them have weekend
shifts, so their weekdays are free
and the air time does not interfere
with their studies. .
But Schifter was forced to
budget his tii:ne. He is a full-time
disc jockey and news reporter at
WKIP,
an AM station
in
Poughkeepsie.
"I
have to section my time very
carefully," he said.
"I
can't go out
during the week and I do school
work whenever possible. But, un-
fortunately, I can't give school
100
percent.''
Schifter added, "I often find
myself coming home at around
midnight and having to be up very
early for classes the next day. It's
rough,
but it's
worth it because
nothing
beats
practical
experience.''
All of the disc jockeys' love for
music and radio began at a very
young
age.
Grayeb,
who works for 98 Fame
Resumes
Term Papers
Reports- - -
Let Me Type
Them For You!
s1so;page
Call: Jeanne Boesch
229-7441
(days, evenings)
students will ·take it a lot more
seriously and will do a much bet-
ter job if they are going over the air
and not just on cable."
• Grayeb said
WMCR
enabled
him to get experience in using the
equipment and provided him with
discipline and a general knowledge
of radio.
Sheehan added that the station
is a good place to develop voice arid
style, without having the fear of be-
ing fired for making minor
mistakes. •
As for their futures, some plan
to continue in radio, but others are
looking forward to careers in other
media.

Recently, DeBarros accepted a
full-time job for after graduation
and left WPDH last week. He said
that while he loves radio·, he felt as
if he was being obscured by the
station.
"People always associated me
with WPDH and I kind of lost my
identity outside of the station," he
said. "But I would like to go back
into radio as a sideline someday."
Parker said he would also like to
stay in radio as a second job, but
not a full career. .
-
,.-
"I
would like. ·to remain- at
WVKR
(Vassar College Radio)
where I do substitute work, so I can
keep my interest in music active,"
he said.
Schifter, who has worked in
• television since he was 15, and
created Manhattan Cable's week-
• 1y•show
"Spotlight on Teens," said
he would prefer to return to his
original field of interest.
But, regardless of their future
plans; they·all said they enjoy their
work.
"The best thing is having access
to records and all sorts of other in-
formation when it first comes
out," said DeBarros. "It's exciting
to report things - as they are
happening."
Sheehan added, "A lot of my
friends think I'm crazy to give up
my Saturday nights to drive fo
Danbury, but I really don't con-
sider it work, and hey, with a
Saturday night show, I wind up
playing music for a lot of people
at their parties."
Marist Night - Wednesday
12 oz .. Drafts - soc
Pitchers - $2.50
103 Parker Avenue
Poughkeepsie, N.Y. 12601
(914) 471-9442
Formerly Working Class
You're
Invited
ALL Circle members
are invited- to attend the
Circle A wards Dinner
May 2 -
4:30-6:30 p.m.
in the
River Room
Please R.S.V.P. to
Denise Wilsey .; 471-5848
p































































________
a pinion
Why·:
wait?-.-
Time's up.
.
.
.
Almost eight months after many Marist upperclassmen returned
to campus to find that the new apartments they were to live in.
were not completed, the students,
many
seniors, have yet to receive

·compensation
for inconveniences
-from
housing problems.

In addition to the delay in completing the garden apartments,
students living in the complex had to deal at some point last
semester with problems including: no laundry facilities;. no
telephones, including pay phones; inadequate lighting; no han-
dicap parking; no television reception; and a faulty smoke alarm
system.
.
No doubt it took almost seven montJts for a student commit-'
tee to draft and submit a financial readjµstment proposal. But
with the proposal submitted to Chief Financial Officer Anthony
Campilii about three weeks ago, there is still no administrative
response.


. .
/

What is the administration waiting for? Is the postponement
a deliberate intent to kilhime until summer and then maybe dull
student interest in the compensation?
The proposal's actual request should not have surprised the ad-
ministration or delayed the decision. The content of the proposl
was detailed in The Circle, Feb. 20, 1986.
·.:-
·page
6;: THE
Ci


'-4986-··.
--
/
./

I
!
In addition, when Sue Ryan, student· body president, said in
February that the proposal needed to be rewritten to make it more
a~ceptable to the administration, she added Steve Sansola, direc-
tor of housing and Gerard Cox, vice president for student affairs,
to the committee and sought guidance from Campilii himself.
7'Z
.
,
- •
This strategic move should have saved some time.
LETS
/JV/l tJfflaJS.
With the clock ticking away, what will happen if the administra- "--------------------------------------~
tion now refuses the proposal? A refusal at this point, even if it
came out today, would leave little time for student leaders to push
The ·gang of·many
·
for the current plan or to formulate a new one.
Furthermore, if the proposal is approved, the amount can not
be settled on a semester bill. Checks or cash will
.be
a must for
by Carl MacGowan

nections with the White House to
schedules devoted to the promulga-
foreign countries and defense con-
tion of popcorn music. Orie hopes
graduating seniors.

.
·
.
The idea of student/administration "negotiations" leaves a bit-
ter feeling - especially when progress is stalled. The Marist ad-
ministration had best realize -
time's up:

Someone asked me a few weeks

tractors. Right now, his mission is
the trend toward over-saturation
ago who I think is the number one
to get Congressional approval of
succeeds in driving MTV and its
evil figure in America today. That
the B-1 bomber for the strategic
imitators tb.

obsolescence, thus
is, one - ju.st one - person who
defense of Lockheed International.
sparing us
'from
another four-
does more to screw things up than
You're right, it's not legal. But this
.
minute esc_apade of women chain-
anybody else.··
'
•.
.
ed to. burning stakes with our
Clearly, .thls is impossible to
lovable. super-singers jumpscutting
·1etters
answer given the severe limitations
th·
e rea··
I
across:the,beach in 4/4 ti~e; ins
...

of the
questiori.Am~rica"is
built on
.


p
• • •
·.:i·Wi~ft;§!~:~ij}_~.~~~{tJr!~~oricert
~~:::r::::!~\~ih~~1~~::1!i::;~
.
WO
rl d
":f
0~b~~1;f'¥,1:;tI;lr'
estate
one very privileged individual. In
developer whose credo is "Let
America, everyone is, in one way
them sleep on the cement." Better

or another, culpab.ie for the sad
known as the owner of the New·

Terrorism hits home
state of things.
is the Reagan era, man, get with it!

Jersey Generals, his real bag is tak-
However, let
·us
not be so smug
Peter Ueberroth.
Baseball's new

ing over low-rent buildings all over
To the Editor,
I
am writing as a response to the
article in The Circle last week on
Gifford A. Anderson .. The article
told of a very talented c·abbage
·
Patch
Kid. As
a parent of cine these
special kids, I was pleased to read
about him.
Just this weekend though, my
child,
Brandon, was kidnapped by
two drur.ken terrorists. They left
only his shoe. After much sear-
ching I found the terrorists and
demanded my kid back. They told
of my son's grim death. He was

as to suggest that we Americans are commissioner is intent on politiciz-
Manhattan,
•.
throwing out the
·
decapitated and lost both arms and
.
devoid of class disti~ctions·and t~at
ing the game,
as
if its current status
tenants, completely renovating the
legs. The did return the· other any. of us can; nghtfuHy claim as an adjunct of Wall Street were
joint and re-opening at monthly

ho
h
Y
pnvJlege to pubhc b_etrayal of our 'not enough .. Ueberroth seems to
room charges of stratospheric-pro-
s e, owever •
f 11 • • •
N

'
• •
d f
h" k h
A
• '
h

T

b 1·
A

Gifford
Anderson
really
e ow c1t1zens._
.
o,
H
s a sa
~ct t m
e can save menqt s yout
portions. rump e 1eves menca

bl
B
do
U
rk fff

that only certain of us are permit-
by making tarred-and-feathered
is for the rich, and all others live
resem es my ran _n. n
I
e
1
-
ted this. honor:

stool pigeons of ballplayers who
·in
Hoboken.··.

ford, my Brandon will never play,
Id
•t· b
·b t
th
·d
d
d
b
B
••
Ad
H

h
11
walk, talk or get a chance at a col-
.
f
on su ~end e o any
eorty. once use
rugs; sure, an
·may
e

ryan
ams.
e w o te s us
lege education.
o an orgamze
c<;>nsp_1racy
.
o
he can end drunk driving by mak-
sentimental tales of "Heaven" and
1
make a plea to all those who destroy the country wit~ nght-wmg ing sure they all play sober, too.
the "Summer of '69"also reminds.
hate Cabbage Patch Kids to think

claptrap. Rather,
~
believe there's
John Singlaub
The leader of the
us in the process of why the history

their actions through. And I beg
a
loose ~nderstandmg amon~ th~se
.
World Anti-Communist League
ofCariadiiul music begins with Neil
parents to keep a close eye on their ~eop_le
l!st~d below that !heir mis-

doubles as
.
Reagan's s_urrogate

Young· and
.
ends with Joni
kids.

s1_on
m hfe ts
_to
exclude one and all
MacArthur in Central America.

Mitchell.
so that they· can scrape up the
While Congress still haggles over
Lee
/acocca·Apparently, he real~
A concerned spoils; more an
as
yet-undiscovered aid to the Nicaraguan Contras,
ly is going to run for president:just
and grieving mother
strand of ESP that binds these peo-
Singlaub and his cronies serve as
check out Chrysler's riew ads. The
pie together in an improbable
advisors to the Contras and supp-
guy thinks that because he can get
.A
wonderful
day
scheme to take over.
ly arms and whatnot from their
Congress to bail out his corpora-
Following is a list - an enemies
.
own, personal caches.
tion, he can parlay that into

list, if you wiU - of people who I
Menahem Golan and Yorum
abolishing
.
tile United States'
To the Editor,
_
I am writing in order to· special
thanks to the more than 70 Marist
College students who showed up to
entertain the "special" children on
the Psychology Club's One-to-One
Day last Thursday. It was a cool,
rainy day and I expected a much
smaller and less enthusiastic group
when I arrived in front of the Cam-
pus Center that day. Although we
had fewer children than we had ex-
pected because of the inclement
weather, it was a wonderful day. A
special thanks also to Sharon San-
THE:
CIRCLE:
consider most at fault for the cur-
Globus
The men who brought us
$2,000,000,000,000
debt. Besides

tandra, who brought
a
pony for the rent state of

the nation. The
such classics
of
the modern cinema
that, Iacocca is really annoying· in
children to ride; the Texaco Cor-

honorees
·are

placed in no· par-
as Delta Force and Invasion USA
his role of the CEO who does it all.
poration, who
·donated
a helium ticular order and have not con-
now bring you Sylvester Stallone in
And so are all the other· CEO's
tank; the Marist Choral group, sented t9 their appearances herein.
Cobra,
in which Sly fearlessly
foliowing his lead.
who provided wonderful entertain-
Patti LaBelle
Or, more precise-
wipes out crime with the aid of his
Everyone who voted for Reagan
ment; and especially to the ly, her agent. How this screeching machine gun and a pair of real
in 1984
Kind of a broad classifica-
members of the Marist Psychology non-talent
can
get onto Carson, the mean shades. Wow, like, don't he
tion, but more justified than
Club who organized and managed Apollo Theater special, Live Aid, • look better when he's not playing
another tired vitriol about Reagan
the day's events. When I am asked "Sun City," and herown·TV varie-
Rocky? And wouldn't it be great
the war-monger,· the actor, the
what I think of college students
to-
ty showwith no discemib_le
~ase of
if we could have a Stallone or a
puppet or whatever. That Reagan
day, I have no reservations about popular support seems only ex-
Chuck Norris patrolling all our
won once might have been a fluke;
saying, "They are great!"
plainable by, at the very least,
streets and airports?
but winning twice indicates that it's
Dr. Linda Dunlap payola.
• Music videos Somewhat related
the American public that has crack-
Ad •
M • p
h I
Cl b
Michael Deaver
Reagan's former to the last entry, but distinct in
eel
up. As someone once said, the
Visor, an st syc
O
ogy
u
publ"1c
relat·1ons
speo·a11·st
.now
bea
f h A

I
I
that, unlike TV and print ads,
uty o t e mencan e ectora
Continued on page
9
makes a nice living selling his con-
videos have entire progamming
.
Continued
on
page 8
Editor:
Denise Wilsey
Senior Associate Editor:
Douglas Dutton
Associate Ed"rtors:
Anthony DeBarros
Paul
Raynis
Laverne
C. Williams
Senior Editor:
Cart MacGowan
••
News Editors:
Julia
Murray
Tom McKenna
Christian
Larsen

Arts
& Entertainment Editor:
Ken Parker
.
Sports Editor:
Photography
Editor:
Business
Manager:
Brian O'Connor
Laurie Barraco
Lisha Driscoll
-
Advertising
Manager:
Mike McHale
Asst. Advertising
Manager:
Gary Schaefer
Cartoonist:
Faculty
Advisor.
Don
Reardon
David
McCraw
Member of
the
College
Press Ser,ice






















































.,....----
y
i
e.
w
p_c_:_·~~.·-i.
...
r
... ,_.
_t_· -
..
·.-
..
---------April
24, 1986.- THE CIRCLE - Page 7--
B LOO DY FRENCH!
by John P. Anderson
was not for the United States, the
it if we are ''A #1?"

.
bloody. French would be eating
All we. asked of the bloody
ll
is·sad tb think that-at a time
.
sauerkraut instead of croissants!
French was
to
fly over their coun-.
in history when. the United States

Not only did we save their butts


try. That'.s ii, .What kills me is that
and France should be in good stan-
once
...
but TWICE! At the end of
.
we even had to
A$K!
I dout,Jt we
dings. with each other; there is a
WW II, DeGaulle made it sound
needed an.invite to land on Nor-
strain in their. relationship. The
like THEY won the war for US!

mandy Beach: Those ingrates. Fly-
tirrie for rejoicing between the
Who are they kidding? And the sad
ing around

France may have
countries comes as a result of the·· part is they still believe it!
resulted in losing. an American
Statue of Liberty's 100th birthday.
The problem with the French is
plane. Not directly, but the added
The timerof strain is
·a
result of
that they resent us. I don't know
miles may have put an extra strain
France's· decision not to let us fly
how many stories I've heard of
on our pilots. Bloody French.
over their air space enroute to
people returning from France say-
An argument for the French is
Libya.
ing the French were downright
that they are afraid of more ter-
How soon do they forget! If it
nasty to Americans. Can we help
rorism. How much more could
t

MI.N

EXECUTIVE
...
SUITE
they get? Italy let Abu Nidal go,
and he thanked them by shooting
up their airport. I hope the French·
get. thanked from Kadaffy in the
same way.
Our "allies" said that we should
have gone a separate
route.
What ... are they kidding? We turn-
ed our cheek so many times that we
were getting rabbit punches. We
tried for economic sanctions but
our "allies" and
the
French
wouldn't agree to it. s·pineless
wimps. Hitler promised not to start
aggression."Peace in our time
...
"
my -. When will the Europeans
learn?
Colonel Kadaffy,
Qudaffy,

Ke~afy, Keddaffy (whatever, the
idiot can't even spell his name) is
a cancer. When you have a cancer,
you remove it. Well, Colonel
Whatever is a colon cancer on the
butt of the world and should be cut
out.
.But
then again, is Colonel
Kadaffy a threat? Is the Colonel
really that agressive? I mean, if he

was really ambitious he would have

made general by now, - don't you
·
think?
Back to the
subject
-
World
.
War Three has started. Just as
Vietnam was a totally new way of
fighting to us, so is terrorism. The
time is
10
fight fire with fire. I have
heard people say that we should
have not killed Kadaffy's daughter,
we should have kept her out of it.
What, are they kidding too? It's
about time Kadarfy learned of
heartache (if he has a heart). How
many son.; and daughters has he
killed? How many mothers have
cried for their dead sons? I'm just
sorry she
was
adopted. I want his
own flesh and blood destroyed. He
should have.been with his
family
anyway. What kind· of a leader
works out of a stinking tent?
The bloody French should have
stood behind us. We stood behind
them. Maybe the time
is.
ripe for
isolationism. Then they will be
sorry. How many billions do we

pump into other countries just to
have them stab us in the back? The
Europeans, and the people of the
United States, are allowing these
rinky-dink countries
10
hold us
hostage. People are afraid to
travel. These lame excuses for
humans have us trembling. Those
idiots were bathing in oil before
WE showed THEM what to do
with it. They probably would have
started feeding the stuff
10
their
kids before long
..
And just look at Libya,'s
flag
...
it's green. GREEN! No
stripes. No stars. No design.
Nothin'. Just GREEN. they don't
have enough brains, or creativity,
between the whole lot of them
to
come up with a decent flag. We're
fighting a boring country!
I may sound a trite mad at the
whole situation. Wcll...1 am! It'!.
time we put a stop to this! I am
behind President Reagan 1000/o
on
this issue. I would have been
against going to Nicaragua, but if
my country asked me to fight Libya
I'd go in a minute. Kadaffy is a
nut. God forbid he ever got hold
of a nuclear device (or brain
cells),
he'd really be dangerous.
In the meantime, I believe we
should boycott all French goods.
Stop drinking French wine!
Stop
buying French goods! Stop French
kissing! (Well, maybe I'm getting
carried away) Stop· the other
French
stuff!
We have
10
show the
world who's boss.
Bloody French.
John P. Anderson is a senior
.
communication

arts
major
at
Marisf College.
~

.
.
.
.
~
-Thoughts
on Students' Day·
Christ's Message Can Change
by
Ann
Jotikasthira

•.
·
..

.
·:·
.

.
Students_' Day, a !.cries of lectures and workshops on college,
knowledge and jobs, was held on April IS.as a replacement for
·oeari's
Convocation Day. There were good points and bad points

to this five-hour activity.

-
The speeches in the Mccann Center, which lasted for one~ and-
a-half hours, were a waste of time; The general theme for the day,
as suggested by the keynote speakers, was the advantages of a
. _liberal
ans education.

.
.
.

Howard MiUs, a senior majoring in poHtical science, spoke of
.

hisjourney from being businessa·oriented to well-rounded through
..
the Core/Liberal Studies program and through campus activities ..
Even though his manner of speaking was excellent, his
'speech
taught me nothing· new. Perhaps this was because I am a senior
·•

and have experienced the many facets of Marist College. However,
even
before I was a freshman, I knew the advantages of becoming
involved at schoor and being-informed about the world.
:
I do not believe the speeches were necessary in a liberal arts

college, where,
.through
the Core/Liberal Arts program and elec-
tives, a person can~ot become .too technical. The speeches would
have been beneficial to high school seniors who have to choose
between a four-year-college and a technical school, but there is
no reason for students who are already in college to sit through
this part of the program. There were less than I 00 students in· the
McCann Center at this time. At first I was upset that students seem-
ed apathetic, but after the speechl!S,
I realized that they were smarter
not to attend.

.

1 was happy to see that many students attended the workshops
_ in Donnelly. Unlike the introductory speeches, the workshops were
useful and interesting. I attended
"If
I Only Knew Then ... ," hosted
by David McCraw, assistant professor of communication arts. Five
young alumni discussed life in college and the real world, based
on questions asked by McCraw and the students who attended.
I felt a little depressed when the alumni spoke on what they should
have done in college. It made me feel that it was too late for me
to change my experieQces, and made me think about what
I
could
have done at Marist if I was serious with my life over the last four
years. However, the seminar was
very
beneficial to me because
when I graduate in May, I will have a better insight into what it
is like to be a young professional.
I think that workshops should have been repeated so that students
could have attended more than one. Next time a Student's Day
is
held, there should be more of these types of workshops instead
of the speeches in the McCann Center. Students would be more
likely to attend for the entire day, and this program would benefit
everyone.
Ann Job1'asthira is a senior communication arts major at Marist
College.

~
~
Editor's Note: The Foilowing
is
a book review of "Catholic
Thinkers in the Clear:· Giants of
Catholic Thought From Augustine
to Rachner. by William A. Herr.
by Eugen~ Best
A context for understanding and
evaluating this superb book may
well be some statements from
Vatican ll's document
"The

Church in the Modern World."
That document distinguishes bet-

ween the message of Christ and the
way it has been expressed with the
help of th_e ideas and terminology
:of
various peoples and clarified
with the wisdom of philosophers.
And it says that the church,
sent
to
all. peoples with the message of
Christ, is not bound in expressing
.
it to any particular way of life or
any customary pattern of living.
Herr implicity challenges the
assumption that the· message of
Christ was the same yesterday as
today and will be the same forever.

He summarizes the thought and
work of the great Catholic
theologians of history in the light
of the intellectual
challenges
presented to them by their cultures.
He shows how these great
theologians translated the message
of Christ from one world view to
another. His point is that an
awareness of Catholic intellectual
pluralism and diversity
in
the past
may help one be more tolerant of
the rich intellectual pluralism and
diversity in the
church
roday.
The book consists of 20 chapters
and
deals not only with Catholic
theologians
but
also with Plato and
Aristotle,
pre-Christian
philosophers.
They shaped the
Greco-Roman-European
world
views into which St. Augustine,
and
later St.
Thomas
Aquinas,
translated Christ's message. And
the Platonic-Aristotelian
world
views have shaped the Catholic
preaching about Jesus' message un-
til some great twentieth century
theologians tried
10
re-translate the
message in terms of a modern
scienli fie world view.
Herr starts
his intellectual
journey· through history with a
chapter
on
Tertullian,
a
paradigmatic figure of religious
fundamentalism, and on Clement
of Alexandria and Origen. Ter-
tullian opposed critical reflection
on the meaning of Christ's message
and insisted that the Bible by itself
contains the answers
10
all the pro-
.
blems of. the
ages.
Clement and
Origen, rejecting these presupposi-
tions, freed the future Catholic
tradition from being cound by such
fundamentalism and showed how
philosophical
and
scientific
speculation can be used to translate
Christ's message into another
world view.
Next,
Herr
shows
how
Augustine
translated
Christ's
message into Platonic terms. These
terms included very negative at-·
titudes towards the human body
and sexuality, and became the
foundation of the church's official
teaching on birth control. Perhaps
a reason why
so
many lay Roman
Catholics reject such a teaching to-
day is because they no longer think
and live by such a Platonic world
view even if and when trying to
think and live faithful to Christ's
message.
Not all Herr's chapters can be
mentioned here, though all are im-
portant for the sequence of his
story. Herr devotes three chapters
·
to Aristotle and Thomas Aquinas,
and concludes these chapters in
sentences which reflect the lucidi-
ty of this thought, the limpidity of
his style, neatly summarizing his
whole
argument.
Herr writes that
what Aquinas did
"was
to take the
soundest philosophical
system
available.~ a controversial, highly
suspect one -
and
- the most
enlightened
scientific
ideas of his
time and use. them
10
explain the
contents and implications of faith.
That is what Augustine had done:
that
is
what every
great
theologian

.
does. That is what Thomas would
be doing were he alive today - to
the uller consternation, no doubt,
of many Thomists."
Herr-'s final chapters deal with
efforts made by major twentieth
century theologians
10
translate
Christ's and the church's message
into a contemporary world view.
This book can easily and pro-
fitably be read by
.the
non-
specialists. Though it deals with
profound
philosophical
and
theological
issues developing
through history, you don't need
10
be a philosopher or theologian or
historian to benefit immensely
from the rich intellectual banquet
here
spread
before vou. Each
chapter abounds with imaginative
reconstructions of the past and
delightful vignettes. Not all vigner-
tes are central to the argument but
they make for pleasant reading.
The specialist reader will regret the
absence of footnotes and an index,
but the non-specialist may not. A
final word of caution: Just because
the book is so easy and delightful
reading, you may not at first be
aware how mind-blowing and
horizon-expanding
ir is. Be
prepared to go back to ir again and
again, to appreciate not only what
happened to Christ's message
through the ages, but also what is
happening to you and your own
self-understanding as a Christian.
Eugene Best is a professor of
religious studies at
Marist
College.
I




































































etcetera
--------------------~-----------Page
8 ~·.THE
CIRCLE -April 24, 1986----
The
··true
sign Of ·sucCess
by
Ken Parker·
Platinum albums are nice.
Wealth estimated in the millions
of dollars sure is fulfilling.
Even a football stadium filled
with 50,000 scr:!aming fans is am-
ple adulation for even the most
egotistical.among us.
rave on
down in magic marker their devo- lean economic times, the hiring of
tion to Led Zeppelin. Right above a few anisitic mercenaries is much
this creation was another music fan cheaper than offering payola to
who communicated his admiration radio programmers.
for none other than Waylon .J:enn-
Perhaps the best way to prove
ings. This wall is probably the on- graffitti's promotional potential is
ly place in America where acid rock

to look at the failure of other
and country music can peacefully modern day methods.
co~exist.
.
Buttons: The button has made a
Historically, graffitti has always big comeback as of late. Unfor-.

been the method of choice for emo- tunately, most are too small to
be
tionally hysterical fans. The earliest readily identifiable and tbose too
of caveinen offered hyrogliphics to big tend to cause spinal problems

show their pleasure with prehistoric among wearers.
stone pounders.
Muzak: Now here's a seemingly
With. so much riding on a f~w

foolproof idea. That is,· transform
strokes of paint, it's surprising so the hardes_t
of heavy metal into easy
many record companies have been listening tunes which Grandma can
But let's face it. If you're an ar-
removed from the graffitti issue. shop to. Before you know it, the
tist and your name isn't spray-
There are many effective forms of entire family will be wearing Iron
painted on a wall somewhere, you
promotion at the disposal of to-
Maiden apparet Despite muzak's
cannot
truly be considered
day's record company. Never- novel approach, such music has
successful.
theless, the public notoriety which received increased social castigation
The· Concert T-Shirt: This has
developed into a very com-

monplace item in American socie-


ty. People can now tell . total
strangers they wasted·$22.50 to see

Wham in a megaseat arena; The
major drawback here is that t-shirts

are not worn everyday while graf-
fitti's lifespan is much longer. Orie
of the keys
to
successful promotion
is high visibility.
The social significance of
modern daygraffitti has yet to be
fully addressed by the scholars of
today. What many fail to recognize
is that graffitti is'-the ultimate
rock'n'roll actionto take when in
need of making one's point known.
Most citizens despise graffitti
and call those who perpetrate such
deeds "social menaces." This plays
right into rock'n'roll's"my parents
don't understand" mentality.
I'm impelled to make such a
comes with graffitti cannot

be in recent years and its future is not
statement after observing the scrib-
underestimated.

clear at the present time. However,
Ainerican artists must stand

blings etched on a po5t office
Graffitti artists tend to ask the dental industry is lobbying hard firm. Threats to the rights of youth
brick wall near my home. Someone reasonable rates
..
And in today's to keep muzak alive.
even got to the
·
judicial phase
recentl}'.
when New )' ork City tried
.
.to
pass a bj)J outlawing graffitti, as
if that would. prevent it. But the
youth of Ame.rica must
.not
aJJow
themselves to be
'thwaned
in the
pursuit of artistic pleasure'.
.
Besides graffitti's promotional
_
advantages;orie must not overlook
its impact in the field of public opi-
nion. It's often
the
case that one
spraypaintcd comment will·

stir·
others to
·add
their own personal
touch. These can be evaluated with

findings in other cities to un~over
the musical direction of the nation.
••
So the next time you feel you
cannot

make it until the next
Motley Crue concert, do what the
hip, upwardly mobile teenager of
today is doing. Choose your
favorite writing instrument and
proceed
.with
caution. Just don't
tell 'em you read it here.
had gone to great length to set
. . .

.
.
.
.
• ,
To be, Or not' to be, announced
by
Julia E. Murray
.
He looks just like everyone else,
no strange clothes; no weird
hairstyle. He goes to his classes,
does his work and then goes home,
always seeming perfectly normal.
Not even his best friends know he
has a secret identity. He's the
mysterious Professor TBA.
,,
Though at the beginning of each
registered for one of his classes,
and you most certainly·.wm be at
least once in your four years here,
the other
murrav.
semester there are reported
keep
an eye out for the following

sightings of the professor, no two symptoms
'in
your. professors:
desriptions are exactly alike. Some
-Severe

exhaustion.
say he's short, others think he's
Remember, this man is signed up
tall.
Some say young, others old.
,
to
teach
163
courses nextsemester,
. Some say he's a
'?ane\
of la~~hs,
,
.
,
.and
he's probably teaching at least
.
others haven't been
·able
to stay·" that many this semester. He's un-
.
awake long. enough to tell. All doubtedly in a deeper coma.than
.
agree, however, that he was the last
.
his students.
•.
·
.
·
·

one they suspected
·of
being Pro-,
••.
-New shoes,eilery day, Prof.
fessor TBA.
.
TBA teaches as least seven or eight
Even though there is no concrete classes at one time, and all that jog-
description of him,-there are cer-
ging from class to class is bound to
tain
'tell.tale
signs that will even-
wear out the old shoes. His shoe
tually give him aw~y.
If
you are
.
tree
is
probably bigger than Imelda
Marcos'.
were handed in. Try multiplying hours. In his spare thirty seconds,
-Plastercastsandaneckbrace.
163classesby25studentsperclass
when he doesn't have a class to
You can only jog across Route 9 to
and then divide by the number of
.

teach and no student has requested
Marist East so many times

in a
hours in a day (after subtracting the
to see him, Professor TBA haunts
class period without getting hit by number of hours he works each the Registrar's office, begging for
a car, as we all know

from
day). By the time you've come up
more classes. It's not his fault that
·
experience.
.

with an answer, Professor TBA
he has incredibly lousy timing and
-Babbling in class. Face it, the
leaves his office just before you get
man teaches everything from
·
.
there.

"General Chemistry" to "MOB"
Some say he's short,
'.
Obviously, this man is not going'
to "Journalism." With- all that
others think he's tall.
to be easy to find. He's.never in
muck crowding his brain, how can

one place for very long, so about·
'he
be expected to utter a coherent
Some say young,
a]lyou're going to see of him is a
'sentence'?
If you could only con-
.
'.
oth,
,e,
rs 'old .
.
Som,,
e
..
,
Sa".
blur iri an
afJ1l
cast and track shoes,

vince him that you have the same
.
J.
at least until you have him as a
,problem.'(·•;
.,.
:>
.•
,
'
.
h:e
..
'sa. b.arre
..
lo
...
if.
Ja.ughs;
,'
tcacher.Youmayhavealreadjhad
•• ~Writes numerous unconnected.
'·'
h'
..
·:'
'h·•·
·" -
·;
: 'b

.
'
-
.
·'himas·a'teacherwitho'frt-knowing'
'thoughis
on tlie bciardand circles

ot ers:·,'' alien. t
X
eeil
'
'iCThe
ncxfiinie'you'go tcFa'ci~s;
them.
See
','muck,"above.
able
..
to.
stay
·
awake
takeagoodl90katyourpfofessor:
.
.
-Paces continuousiy. With all
·

·
Could he be the mysterious Pro-
the exercise this man is used to get-
long enough to tell.
'
re·ssor
'TBAf
ting, if he stopped moving for more
than a minute and a half, he'd drop
dead.
-Always
returns papers to
students two months after they
rriay be finished grading the papers
for one class.

.
·
·
,.
·.
-Never in. office during office
r.
,
,
..

.·.
. .
.
"'I
:
music
~notes
A
lengendary performance•···
by Anthony DeBarros
,

Could it.be that school's end
is near:ingfTo keep yofrpointed
in the right
'direction,
'here's
rock. news from ••Music
Notes:"
by Maria Gordon
In the beginning, legends were
spread by word of mouth, carried
down from generation to genera-
tion. Then, people began to write
reel
impressions
'
'
continue>us
struggle between
good
is quite
a
lofty task to r~eate the
.
The special effects, costume and
and evil, where, in the end, good images that have evolved over years lighting·· were used effectively
triumphs. "Legend" is no excep- of reworking and retelling. Mix the throughout the film to juxtapose.
tion. •.
If
the
storyline
is

use of characters, special
·effects,
the good and the evil. The scenery
stereotypical, than it is the images
..
scenery, costumes; lighting, music, was extraordinary, Greek. Roman
and characters which make
.·the

editing and non-stop iinagination

and Gothic mythological symbols
.
story interesting and meaningful. ;md what you maycoine up with and architecture

flooded scene

Jack loves Lily. Lily betrays his isc- a
.
brilliant
••
piece
of after· scene. The, woods and

trust' out of innocence and.cliriosi- cinematography
.
parallel
to meadows were a drastic contrast to
ty.
•Because
of
her· actions, "the
"Legend."
the darkness of the underground.
order of the universe is upset," and
The music set the tone well. It was

darkness and evil rule. Jack, with
Tim Curry, of
0
TheRockyHor-
.moving,
mood-setting and always
the help of fairies. fights goblins ror Picture Show" fame, acts, as appropriate. Not a scene nor a line
and other supernatural bein~ to
.
well as looks like, the prince of. distracted from the film's main
-these
stories
-
down. Today,
•.
make everything right again. Jack
'
darkness. Mia Sara is ideal as
Li-
conflict of good versus evil. The
•'storytellers''
have another
is triumphant. The world returns to
,
ly. She portrays the beauty and in- cuts were quick aml the editing was
medium to work through: the
·a •
state of peace. where love, -. nocence of youth;
·Her
actions and effective. • Terry· ·,Rawling, the
movies.
laughter and beauty reign.
words bring that idea across. Tom

editor, and his staff pieced the film
Legends usually emphasize the
Sounds simple, but it is not. It Cruise is not given much to say as together so well that not a moment
this week
.
.
-
....
-
......
-
-
..
-
-
.........
-
..
-
.......................
_
.......
"
Jack, but he is given a few scenes is wasted and everything fits. 90
where he can show his ever- minutes of movie-watching never
.
developing talent. Otherwise,·most seemed shorter.
of his work is left up to the stunt
"Legend" deals with innocence
men. The group that play the and trust. We are tQld "to judge by
fairies are delightful, and offer what we hear, and not by what we
:
comic relief in this heavy, often see." That is notthe case with this
~olent, film. With the recent
em-
film. We judge by what we see and
phasis placed on ratings by the Mo- hear and we are not misled.
tion Picture Association
of
Director Ridley Scott and his
America
(MPAA),
it is surprising crew create a "Legend" that is
that it only received a
"PG" rating action-packed, symbollic and ar-
because of its violence.
tistic.
Gang ___________
c_o_n.ti.nu_e_d_f_ro_m_p_a_ge_6_
system is that we gef exactly what
we deserve.
This list is way too short, due to
.
the usual space limitations and
maybe a little too much Sunday
afternoon softball. Any further
suggestions, with reasonable
dO<:Umentation
and evidence justi-
fying the candidate's inclusion on
the list, will be welcomed pending
an independent investigation of all
submissions. Employees of The
Circle and their families are not
permitted to enter. Send three box
tops and the ~nclosed entry form
to:
Denise Wilsey
c/o
The Circle
- Raised on Radio is the title
of the new
Journey LP
,'releas-
.
ed by CBS on April 21. Vocalist
Steve Perry
,
produced
.
the
record. Meanwhile,
.drummer
Steve Smith and bassist Ross

·
Vallory are out of the band,
although Smith plays on some
of the LP. Journey used
Larry

London and Randy Jackson as
their replacements in th:: scudio,
but no word yet as to who will
go on the road with the band.
- Capitol releases a new
Paul

McCartney record on June
20:
Hugh
Padgham
(Police,
Genesis) produced the record,
and Pete Townshend and Phil
.
Collins appear on one track,
called "Angry."
-
"Stars" will be the first
single released from Hear 'n
.
Aid,
the group of
·
heavy
metalers who gathered last year
.
in an L.A.· studio to make a
world hunger benefit record.
Featured guitarists are Neal
·
Schon (Journey), Dave Murray
(Iron Maiden), Eddie Ojeda
(Twisted Sister) and Yngwie
Malmsteen. The album, which
is set for a May release, will also
feature songs from Kiss, Dio,

Quiet Riot and Rush.
..
-
Peter
Frampton will begin
a U.S. tour on June 22 to sup-
port his latest release, Premoni-
tion. Frampton will head to
Europe in July and come back
to the States in August. He's
planning to headline small halls
or
supponing a
major
act.



































,
i
Anti-Apartheid
Protests Inte!lsify
The American Committee on
Africa; which helps coordinate
. campds anti~apartheid efforts, said
more than 200 protestors were ar-
resteQ dµring demonstrations in 35
states during its "National Weeks •
of Actiori," which ended April 6.
The ACA counted 15 campuses
that ti41l("shantytowns" ·to syni-
bolize bl11ck
Sout~Africans' living
conditions.
Among the campuses where out-
breaks· occurred were: Reed,
Brown;' Rhode Island, Purdue,
Michigan, Wisconsin, Bostori,
Wyoming, City U. of New York,
Texas
A&M,
Iowa State, Kansas,
Congre~s Taketh'Away From
Aid, But May Giveth
.Again Soon
Congress recently agreed to a
plan that would cut $735 million
from the Guaranteed Student Loan
program over the next three years,
make banks issue GSL payments in
.small increments instead of in lump
sums and have banks .send GSL
. ch~cks directly to the colleges, Iiot
• students.
. But in the next two weeks, the
• Senate will debate two bills to give
back to Pell Grants and other. col-
l~ge programs the money lost when
the first'Gramm-Rudman cuts took
effect on March 1.
Washington and Utah, the ACA
U.
New Mexico's Lawyer
. said.
Refuses To Defend Regents
But, as in. 1985, the protests
Jn.
'Hail Mary' Suit
assumed
a
life of their own, and
continued beyond the
ACA's
The student film committee said
. design.
it would sue the regents for their ef-
forts to keep school funds or rooms
• Even after April 6, police trying
from being used to show the film
to dismantle shantytowns arrested
"Hail Mary."
students
at North Carolina,
University lawyer Joe Goldberg .
Wisconsin, Yale, Purdue ind, fo_r . sai5Jhe can't defend the regents,
the second time in· a week, at' whose anti~filin resolution, he said,
Berkeley.
was probably unconstitutionar.
• In mid-chaos, however, Indiana
In March, U. Nebraska officials
U. ·trustees voted to sell shares in
asked students not to show the
two•: ·firms that do business in
movie -
which in the process of
segregationist South Africa.
retelling the story of the Virgin
.
,
Mary in a modern· setting includes
several brief nude scenes - for fear
of offending legislators then
debating the campus' 1986-87
budget.
Rats Won't Desert Sinking
Northern Iowa Or
• Stinking Florida
• Northern Iowa, trying to accom-
modate budget cuts, said it has to
sell its whole rat lab, which scien-
tists used for experiments, but can't
yet find. a buyer.
Terrible, persistent odors led
denizens of a U. Florida classroom
building to suspect a chemical leak,
forcing fire officials to order an
evacuation·, costing about $4,000 .
Firefighters eventually found the
smell came from a dead rat decay-
ing in an air conditioning duct.
Notes
From All Over:
Union
College is running an anti-terrorism
clinic for students planning to
study overseas this summer ... Texas
Oov. Mark White, after forcing
huge budget cuts on state colleges,
recently called U. Texas' new
supercomputer
"the
new
Spindletop," referring to the giant
oil discovery that first put Texas on
the energy map ...
From the College Press Service.
College women aim too, high
(CPS) - Though college women • than -
men.
"The crunch will come when
know sexist barriers to their success.
And·
in a: separate ·study, Cal-
they find it hard to drop out of the
after college exist, they.still tend to , Berkeley work-and-family resear-
labor force" because of the need to
harbor career expectatipns that
cher Anne . Machung discovered . have two inco.mes to support a
don't take those barriers into ac-
that 40 percent of the college family, she explained.
count,
several
new studies
women surveyed expected to earn •• Dropping. out of the c;areers
lndicated;

••
'
as much as their partners, and 13 many women now start can put the
#
• -_ -. ; _
In a survey of _wom~n·
who have
percent said they would
earn
more. women at a diStinci disadvantage
~;hc;.e..9.),~j\l~ni9.r~f
P.!:~.eJgr:.a.tJy~st·
.~ _-,
Mach~~~• f}~~n~
p~r~:n!, labor . upo~ return\rg t9 ~ork, she added.
, ,lAy~s, .K~(1~ _State;Prof. I;velyn • ,ma'rket staf1§t1cs,:~sa1d
tliese'h6pes , •:,: -F1(tycseve~. ~percent o_f_
• the
Hausmann found "most women
are unrealistic.
women Hausmann surveyed cited
initially think they will be reward-
. .
. family obligations as obstacles
to
ed mainly on the basis of merit,. but
The Berkeley womeQ expected ~o ; _greater career success. .
,
many of them realize later on this
take from five to 13 years off their
Even the Berkeley w9men who
is nottrue.'t
'
• .
jobs to rear families, though
expected to avoid'such troubles
Moreover Hausmann observ~d
Machung said interrupting careers
weren't sure how they would do it,
• about two~thirds · of-the wofue~
for full-time motherhood. will be
Machung noted. "Women are con-
surveyed felt women-.were as pre-
more difficult
than today's .. fused about p.ow to have kids and
judiced as ,- or more prejudiced • students believe.
continue jobs."
.Administrators get more money·
by.
Jim Schwartz
• WASHINGTON,.
D.C.
(CP~)
: -. College and university. ad-
ministrators . salaries _rose an.
average of 5.3 percent for-.1985-86,
a new survey reported.
Men's athletics directors averag-
ed 18.6 percent pay hikes, the big-
gest: percentage leap in academe.
Female arid minority
ad-
ministrators pay, however, con-
tinued to trail the average pay for
men and nonminorities in most ad-
ministrative positions surveyed by
the
College and University Person-
nel Association (CUPA).
Women do earn more than men
in two administrative positions:
deans of home economics and
directors of women's athletics.
"It's discrimination within the
system," said CUPA's managing
editor Carin Luke.
In all, women administrators
. make 43.3 percent less than their
male counterparts, the report
found.
Even minority chief executives
make an average of 2L8 percent
less than white college system chief
executives.
For all kinds of ·administrative
jobs, minorities generally earn 12.7
percent less than whites holding the
same positions.
Yet, as a class, all administrators
didn't get as big raises as faculty
did this year.
Recently, the American Associa-
tion of University Professors an-
nounced its annual survey had
found faculty pay rose 6.1 percent
this year, compared
to
ad-
ministrators' 5.3 percent.
The best-paid college officials
this year once again are med school
deans. Private med school deans
make an average of $135,,000 a
year,. while their counterparts at
public med schools make $102,682,
the annual survey of salaries found.
Deans of dentistry enjoy the
• next-best academic salaries, averag-
• ing $87,450.
Chief executives <>f public
university systems are only· the
third best-paid administrators in
the industry; getting an average of
$81,000 this year.
Last year, the chief executives
averaged ·only $71,000.
Ai
the other end of the salary
spectrum, the lowest-paid positions
are· alumni affairs
directors
($26,000), student housing direc-
tors ($25,624), chaplains ($25,651),
bookstore directors ($22,000) and
student
health
nursing
ad-
ministrators ($21,884).
Letters ________ ...
____________
c_o_nt_in_u_ed_fr_o_m_p_a_g~e·_6
Money
To the Editor,
The semester is winding down.·
For some of us there are only a few
weeks left of Marist College, and
we all agree there are some things
we won't miss about the school.
One thing we won't miss is the
snail's pace at which anything is ac-
complished. One thing we \\ill miss
is the restitution we rightfully
deserve, seeing as how Marist still
hasn't done anything about it.
As graduating seniors, perhaps
Dennis Murray "'ill palm off an
envelope on each of us, along with
the customary handshake. The
contents of that envelope? Why,
none other than our restitution. Or
maybe it will be enclosed in our
diplomas to be picked up the day
after. Or maybe Marist will agree
to an exchange of sorts. Instead of
paying us restitution, maybe they'll
let us use up an equal amount of
money by having carte blanche to
cause room damage. Yeah, that
last one sounds
like
a very good
idea at this point.
How about it? Just forget about
the cash;
we'll take
our frustrations
and restitution
out on our
apartment.
Residents of
F5
Audit
To the Editor,
Before the end of this semester,
we expect to send juniors a copy of
their degree audit for graduation.
It
is a computerized record of their
completed requirements, and it will
help them to plan their final
semesters at Marist.
Juniors are invited to attend in-
formational sessions, which will be
• scheduled, to acquaint them with
specific features of the new audit.
Please watch the bulletin boards in •
Donnelly Hall for times and places.
The Registrar's Office
R~!~Y!9~!o
4
BARGAIN MATINEES
SAT.
& SUN.
ALL SEATS $2.50
can
229.2000 for
movie Information
lust 5 m,nutes
lrom Pok
Official
Story
NOW
PLAYING
Lucas
Present this ad and receive
$1 .50
OFF
regular adult admission
COUPON GOOD THAU MAY Isl
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Every Monday
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Come visit
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body waves, cellophane
colorings, and more.
Setting hair cutting
trends for over
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Serving
Marist
Since
1975
The Cuttery
is located at
3 Liberty Street
in Poughkeepsie.
Stop by or
call us at
914-454-9239.
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"More People On Thursdays
than
Most Clubs Have On Weekends"
A VERY SPECIAL LADIES NITE ...
• free
Drinks for the ladies till 11 p.m.
• free
Tarot Card Reading
9:30 ·_ 1 :30 by ABRAXUS
• free
Prizes -·play SHOW BIZ
TRIVIA and win loveable.
stuffed animals
• free
Gifts to the hottest dancers
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ADMISSION ONLY $1.00
with Marist
1._o_. __
THURSDAYS IN APRIL
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required
·33 Academy
Street, Poughkeepsie,
NY (914) 471-1133.
I
I
I
!
'i
I









































--
Page ·10 :- THE .CIRCLE -,April _24~
19B6·--.;....---~------==========:;;;;;;::=====::;
Earrings _,
___..........,_.;,..~----------co_ntinu_ed
,, ____
om pa
........
ge
3

·11Ea_
..
~El"
"It's just like the way you dress,"
Roberts ~d. "I'm realistic enough • liis girlfriend, Krista Dopslaff,
Williams said.
"It
doesn't change
to realize that_ the real world is . a senior communication arts ma-
HE,tR .,
who you are aitd it's not hurting
waiting, so I might
as
well hav_
efun.
jor, sai_d
she likes Roberts' pierced

anyone."
' •
now."
.
- -
• _·:: • ·' ear and "told him after he got his
•.
.


·_

One senior, Ken Roberts, said he
Unlike most of the guys inter-
hair cut that it would look good."
decided to get his ear pierced last
viewed; Roberts' parents did itot
-
A 11
Jun .•
or·
s· -
January, at the same time that he
have a lecture to give -him when
-
However,
Roberts,
from
got his hair cut.
they first saw his left ear.
"After an internship at IBM, I
"My mother didn't say anything
Pownal, Vt., said
th
at one of
th
e
pa
rt ••
C
■.pat
•• n
g··.
was tired of seeing everyone look
to ·me when she saw it. She waited,
reasons he had his ear double-'
. _.
_

, •
the same and dress the same. I
and then wrote me a letter," said
pierced was a practieal one: "When
. .
.
.
wanted to do something difft:rent
Roberts, who sports two earrings
you buy earrings you get them in
••

t
~-e R ••
n __

and decided now was the time,"
in one ear.
pairs, so this way one doesn't go
to waste.''
SAc _______________
co_nti-nue_d
r_rom_.p_age~3
..
Ceremony·_
m_.._st
_
to how important their votes and
voices can be, he said.
Gina Disanza, the newly-elected
SAC president, agreed with Cox's
view of student apathy, saying she
thinks many students don't know
what the SAC is or what it can
do: •
"You pay $5,000 or $6,000 in
tuition here," said Disanza. "Peo-
ple complain about hot water and
seating at the Mccann Center, but
not too much about academic
policies. The people have to realize
that is what the academic represen-
tatives are for. The channel is
there."
Disanza added that she believed
too much work was being required_
of too few people this semester
because of the. SAC's lack of
leadership. "I'm sure that Sue (stu-
dent body president Ryan) and
Amy (Price) have been trying to fill
the gap," she said. "But their
responsibilities
lie elsewhere.
- Maybe students haven't realized
the full impact the SAC can have."
Both Cox and Disanza said that
in the coming _year they will make
a concerted effort to put the SAC
back on its feet. Cox said letters
will be sent to students on the-cur-
rent Dean's List asking for
volunteers. He said that it is critical
for SAC members to work with
divisional
chairpersons
. on
- academic policies.
But Disanza's job may be dif-
ficult next year because along with -
drumming up a full membership
for the SAC, she will also have to
rebuild the decision-making struc-
ture of the group.
More summer
jobs available:·
for area college students
by Mary Jo Murphy
For Hudson Valley college :
students, finding a summer job this
year will be no problem, according
to many area job placement
experts.
Many employers in Dutchess and
Orange Counties expect to add to
their staffs in the second quarter of
1986, according to the new Man-
power, Inc., Employment Outlook
Survey. Less than 8 percent of the
area employers surveyed expect •
staff reductions,
the survey
There are more temporary posi-
tions available in the summer and
winter months because more full-
timers take vacations and more
shoppers fill the stores, said Sean
Lee, manager of Manpower's
Poughkeepsie office, located at 44
Haight Ave.
-Manpower is a customer service
which provides employees to
employers in the Hudson Valley.
Manpower doe_s not charge _
the
"new""employee for finding him
or her a job," rather the "future"
employer pays the fee.
reported. -
_
_
"ln the Dutchess County area;
. During"March and April, when
, there are more jobs than workers," , --many college students had spring
said James Ross, a Ne'w York sta·te break, between 50:and 70 college
labor analyst. Since the youth students werit to. Manpower for
population is declining, the number assistance in getting a summer job,
of students to do minimum wage _ Lee said. "Some students getjobs
jobs is down, said Ross. Due _to
this that last all summer, 'but it's hard
trend, many employers have had to to say what's
going to be
raise their wages, he said.
available," Lee said. Compared to
In Dutchess County, employ-
last summer, Lee said, it will be
ment opportunities are predicted by easier for students to get summer
construction firms, durable and jobs, because area businesses are
non-durable goods manufacturers, doing extremely well.

wholesalers,
retailers,
and
According to Lee, students can
finance/insurance/real
estate
expect to find work in landscaping,
firms, the Manpower survey
truck loading, word processing, of-
reported. In the transportation and fice assistance and industrial labor.
public utility sector, employers an-
.
ticipate staffreductions, and other _ _At the S<;>Uth
Hills Mall on Route
industries should remain at their 9 m Wappn~gers Falls, many store_
present levels, the survey said.
~anagers said that the~;xp~cted to
Nationally, employers are op-
hire fo~ the summer. , We ll_pr~-
timistic about springtime employ-
bably hire, b~fau~e w~ re bus1~r m
ment between the months of April the_
summer, _
said Tim Doe>httle;
and June. Twenty-six percent· of assistant manager of the Foot
the more than 12,500 employers L<?cker. Otht:r stores -'Y~ich also
polled expect staff additions, and said they -would be hmng were
only 7 percent foresee cuts, the Benetton, Teepeedashery and The
Manpower survey said. In the nor-
Gap. All the store managers urged
theast, 26 percent of those polled students to get t~eir applications in
said that they would add staff, and as so~n as poss!ble.
.
6 percent predicted reductions, the
If
given a ch01ce between a high
survey reported.
school student and a college stu-
dent, most of the managers said
they would opt for a college stu-
dent . ."College students have a bet-
ter sense of responsibility," said
Leisa Schatz, . store manager of
Ben·euon: Also; _college·
students
are more reliable than high school
students, said Karen De Nino, store
manager of Tano.

Usually, competition for area _
jobs is limited to Hudson Valley
residents-but not at IBM: Com-
petition for a job at any of the area
plants is country-wide, the manager
• of college .recruiting
at the
· Poughkeepsie
plant
said.,
. "Students afMaristare competing,
<
with-,siudents from schools like ,-,
• Stanford
and Purdue,"
the
manager said.
_
_
_
However, IBM hired all of its
• summer employees in January and
February. Applicants who have not
heard from the company by March
31 should assume that IBM will not
be offering them employment this ..
summer, the manager said."
Finding a summer· job requires a
lot of time and effort, said Marge
Palmer, Mai:ist's coordinator for
job location and development.
When a student applies for a job,
he • she>uld market arid assert •
hjmself, Palmer said. For example, ..
a
student should go in person to in- -
quire about job op_enings,
because
it is easier for an employertoignore
a person making a telephone call:
Also, a student should leave a
• resume with an application. "This
makes the application stand out
above the rest," Palmer said.
After dropping off the applica-
tion and resume, a student should
follow up ,vith a ·phone call to the
emplqyer. This shows the student's
sincere interest in the job, Palmer
said.
meet at the·
-Ch~p:e1~-
_
at··:6:00
..
p~rri,.
-:
·19aa·-
cLAss
.REUNION·
MARIST
-_·
JULY 26
E
··-·_·.
ARD
-AT.TENTION,COLLEGE
1
ST{JDENTS AND
TEACHERS_
.• \
Work for the world's largest temporary service this
I
summer. Over 900 offices throughout the U.S.A.
I
-
• SECRETARIES
I
TYPISTS
I
WORD PROCESSING
I
D/E OPERATORS
I
RECEPTIONISTS
I
GENERAL OFFICE
I
INDUSTRIAL.
I -
- it-:~ToEEN~}6iEK
I
Will be needed for_ a variety of temporary job
~
assignments. A perfect way to save for next
I
semester!
I
Excellent benefit program including referral
I
bonuses and free word processing training.
I
Call for an appointment or stop in any Wednesday
I
from 9 a.m. - 3 p.m.
1
44 Haight
Ave.,
Poughkeepsie
1
I
471-56230.
L
MANnrAAJCn~
_J
--
.--VWYt;;;O
-
--
tr~A•RT'.'.[l>V<fS
---
---

-/
---
----
-





























}Ebe
~{iCle
:vs.
WMCR
~

~-~
~
,, .. '. :_ ~·,.
.< .. -.:': ·_:. " .•
'.·<.'
~-
•. -:-·
:.: . -.~ ..
.
by Bnan·U'Connor • ·.,.:~
1 :·.' , .• : • :.:resorted:Jo complaining and argu- •• and right as well as Carey coriverg-
·k: . ·.: ,
. . . : • ·,;;,
~ ~
•• :. :)11g the rules·: ffhey claimed that .. : ed on the ball. After the two
G~~en irass, ;gray sky'; mud ·ror
Editor/Columnist CarlMacGowan
fielders fell to the ground to avoid
the outfield and rocks for bases~
was pinch hitting for ·every other
an impending collision, Carey, the
that could meari·nothing.but:soft- .• rrian in:the lineup. That ·argument
only one left standing, stuck out his
ball. The boys and girls ofsuminer. did have a.solid basis. We would
black glove sharply, the way one
• met for the annual "Battle of the . ~.,~-iii---~---,
checks to' see if the stove is hot, and
Marist Mass. Media."
~
·\ ·- •• ' ... ',
'th

rsd

y· ·... . ; ·_
..
· .
'
'
robbed MacGowan of a sure dou-
What a battle
·1t
was·;' emotions •
ble;

and obscenities.flew high·.
• .. ••
..


"It
was luck," Carey admitted
• We starte(with six players; and :'
rn Orn
Ing.:. .
after the game.
. only four of us ·were really Cirders.

t b. ·k ·
MacGowan had a few homers
Don't'askhrewheretherestofthe;-
q~O(
er ac ..

and.the rest of the lineup had a
staff ""as, tliey knew ~bout the·· '-lili••-------"'
harid in scoring·'the rims. Myself,
• game. Ah, we qidn't n~e_d the.':1:1
. . ... _ .
.
•..
.
•. l did alright; Trying to be modest
anyway.
. _,
• . :


- _all hit _alJ,d
sprmt ~ro~nd the d_ia- and gloatat the same time, I had
WMCR had
to pitch
to
rriond so quickly,
It
did seem ltke
more runs batted. in with •two
themselves and, we were lacking a. MacGowan was always· at the
swings ofthe.batthen WMCR had
right fielder. Even with ~hat they· plate.

the whole game ... : . · .. .
could not muster enough runs. We
. When winning pitcher, Editor
. The senseless drubbing went on,
brought no bats, no softballs,:.no Doug ·-D~tton (2~0), recorded the
inning after inning. I think WMCR
bases and barely enough -gloves to •• ·fi_nal
out
·or
~he seven-in~ing _drub-
had plans to air the game live on
play. The Cir~!ers, nat~i<:<;l
~ot on-- . bmg, _a·ce~am
\Yfv!C.Rbig:~
1
8.
~nd_ their ever-troubled airwaves, but
ly for our newspaper but for how • .;shortstop charged the mo1:1nd
aim-
they sensed the forecoming doom
: we go around, t1'e bases,-}Ve,re
not.• irtg
·tcr
u~~
.an until-then usele~s and decided against it:
at any advantage. •

- • • Louisville.Slugger. N9 names will
The final·score, for. those of us
be used;but his rhymes:with 'Save • who like to rub things in, was 17-5.
What The Circle team did bring
Manicotti. • Dutton'' also pitched
My ears still hurt from the crashing
to the Garden Apartnierii.~f'ieids~ The Circiers to victory last year. • of hits and the complaining· of
Sunday was. th_e winning ·spirit.
Eventually more players blew in
WMCR.
WMCR seemed to have·left theirs· , with the. wind and The Circlers
By the way; WMCR went on to
in Rockwell's the nighi--before: ":·soori qafenough to r~l!Y play. , lose.its third gamein•two days as
• Their rnineI"a1
spi.ri~ we~e;ti9.~~tch:
::;{~
~,~"1n~~wopld
c~oss~t~,~
.plate all ; they fell _to Sigma Phi Epsilon, in
to our fine ta!ent m the
:fi~lcl-and_'::
too often f9r ,WMCR to.~ount and . the nightcap of the double-hea~er.
:powerful hittiri'g display; The only
Circle fieldmg sparklers ~ould rob ' WMCR is winless this year ..
column on the board-that seemed
the opposition of.hits .. ·
.
WMCR can be glad for one
to run into double ~igits for·
°""
Buqhe defensive gem of the day
reason -
no one got killed. Dis~
WMCR was the error tally.
"
.... was. made by. WMCR second - band, you· deejays, disband -
or
• Unable to fight back-against an,-:. baseman Mike Carey.
Ona
pop the
stick to complaining, you're better
ever-increasing
lead, WMCR • .:.,.rightfield, the players ;frnm first
at it than at softball:
- .• .Junior Sheila O'Donoghu_e l~ts one fly for SMI in recent in-
t~mural
action. (photo l>y Laurie Barraco)
Tennis_'---
Continued from page 12
team made up for the losses as the
Red Foxes won in all the other
• spots.··

Juniors John Macom and Blinn
led _the Marist netters over New _
Paltzlast Monday. "Super" was
also the word Breen used to
describe the play of Macom, who
was a two-time winner against New
Paltz with a singles victory and a
doubles victory. Blinn also won in
both singles in doubles.
The Red Foxes were slated to
host the remain_ing
three matches,
with Quinnipiac College in town
last Monday, and Vassar College
on Tuesday. A home date with
King's College is set for this Mon-
day, April 28.
Last week's two victories
guaranteed the Red Foxes at least
a .500 record for this season.
Beware Of Are Ants
d
,,LAUGH
YOUR
~BUNS OFF
&-
STUFF YOUR
FACE!
3 N. Y. Comedians
JACK SWERSIE
LEE FIELDING
GLENN FARRINGTON
Ice Cream Sundaes
Banana Splits
Ice Cream Sodas
-
waiters & waitresses -
Friday, April 25th
11
In the
NEW
--
---....-.~
DINING ROOM
s1 Aamission
1 0
ffl C.U.a.
The United 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
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-
MISSION
TO RE-
MAIN • IN THEIR
RESIDENCE
MUST
VACATE
THEIR
ROOM BY 12 NOON
SUNDAY, MAY 18,
1986. EST AB LI SHED
CHECK-OUT
AND
CLEANING
PRO-
CEDURES
MUST
BE
FOLLOWED
AND
ROOM KEYS
MUST
BE RETURNED TO A
HOUSING
STAFF
MEMBER BEFORE
DEPARTURE.
...
















i'.
·(
by . Christin~· J. Petrillo
The Marist men's lacrosse team
exploded to a 6~.l lead in the first
quarter and held the gap to defeat
Stevens Tech last Saturday, giving
. the Red Foxes a 9~0 mark going in-
to Monday's game with . King's
Point.
.
The Jaxmeri also outlasted Skid-
more last Thursday, in a close
match that the Foxes eventually
• ·won 15-12. •
Two major contributors to the
• team's success are -freshmen at-
tackmen : Peter Cleary and Jim_
McCormick. Cleary prnduced a~
twci~game total of· six goals and
four assists while McCormick
• followed close behind with eight-
goais and two assists.
With 26 _saves in the past two
games, goalie Chris Reuss has re-
mained a stabilizing force· behind
the Marist·attack,
.
Sophomore ,Bill Drolet added a
total of four goals and 11 • assists on
. the week, and senior attackman
· Tom Daly _ had • three goals • in
pushing the Jaxmen closer to Satur-
day's clash • at·. rival SUNY-
Maritime.
Both Marist • and •
Maritime were undefeated in the
Knickerbocker Conference coining
into this ·week's action ..
.
Senior" defenseman · Paul Rezza
of Locust· Valley,
N.Y;,
said he
feels the team has a good.chance
• of winning the conference.

• "This year's team is the best one
in the three years. that I've been
· playing," he said, "and I think we
can make it to the finals." But the
players, Rezza.added, are not let-
ting success make them overconfi-
dent with the toughest games still
ahead.
"So far it's been great winning,•
but·
the next five games are what
will really count," said· Reuss, of
. West Babylon,
N.Y.
Marist is-scheduled to complete •
the home. portion. ot' its schedule •
against Fairfield at 3:30 p.m.
today;
Sophomore·.Todd Jesaitis said he
is very enthusiastic about the re-
. mainder of the team's games.··
"We have the talent and depth
to clinch the,Kriickerbocker Con-
ference title," said the midfielder
from Port Jefferson, N. Y .• who
had one assist in Saturday's game,
Crew.is O;ptimistic
for ::R·egatta
-victory
by Bill
DeGeimaro
events to· be· held,the team hopes
to race. boats of four and eightpeo-
The Marist crew. team will com-
pie, each with an additional person,
pete with 14 schools when it hosts • the coxswain. The coxswain is
The President's Cup Regatta on the
responsible: for. steering the ·boat
Hudson River, Saturday during . and directing the.rowers.
Parents Weekencl:
c'-
. •.
•• ,
'
While -the·. races include seven
.· LllSt · Saturday Jhe team placed •. boats .only, there could be up to 21
las{ in
a •
four~team meet· held in
boats on the river at one time, ac-
Mercer
County
Park . near . cording to·Davis. This is created by
Princeton,
N:J.

the seven. boats-from the previous
Marist Head Coach Larry Davis ·race and the seven boatfwaiting to
expects ViHanova, Manhattan and' : race. •
Iona Colleges to be Marist's
• ·Markers on·,both sides
·of 'the
leading opposition in its quest to • river will -determine . the starting
win the overall points trophy. He
line, and the Marist boathouse will
.
predicts Marist and Villanova as
mark the finish line. Markers on :
having the strongest chance to win.
the Poughkeepsie railroad. bridge
One on··one
by Dan Pietrafesa
The timt! ,is -perfect for
·the
,match• that·. may: decide. the
Knickerbocker Conference bet-
.ween the Marist lacrosse squad
and SUNY-Maritime on Satur-
. day at Maritime .. Both· teams
will .. enter .. ,the contest. with
. -undefeated c~9f~reriEe ·record~ •
and.the season,.will come down
. to that one gawe. If you liv.e in -
the :New .York/City area .and
· your going home:this weekend;
. you can catch-Jill • the action ,
Saturday at 1 p.m.-Maritiineis •
located near·. the .Throgs
Neck
Bridge ... . •

Sophomore Bill Drolet goes-stride for stride with a
Stevens
Tech defender during the Foxes'
12-5
romp
last
Saturday.
(photo
by Jeff DeMaio)

fox trail
The foxes Will see their 9-0 .
record be put to the test in the
final week and a half of the ·
seas.on with the toughest five
.. games of the season against
Merchant ..
·· Marine.·· Academy,
• Fairfield, ,Maritime, Hartwick
and;Southampton;~ .. ,.:_,
;;l
, ,.:; .
'., The biggest crew ·meet"
of the·
year on the-Hudson River in•the
President's Cup -Regatta
will
take place at Matist Saturday at
8 a~m. -Many .of the top-crew
teams in the Northeast will. be
present for· the extravaganza ...
Freshman lacrosse player
• Pete Cleary
entered Monday's
game· against the Merchant
Marine Academy needing only
three
.points
to tie the Marist
record . for most. points in a
season. He had 33 goals and
34
assists for a total of
67
points .
.The record is 70 ...
. 'H~d CoachJ)ea~ Smi~ of
01e JTlen.'s·pasJtetlJal!teamat
t~e -
University. of North
.
Garolina •
will be coming to Marist this •
weekend for a coaching clinic
tomorrow night ·and Saturday;
. ••
Contactthe Mccann Center for
• • • more information ...
Tennis follrth.in -Metro Conf .-
Beginning at 8 a.m., the Foxes will aid the boat's coxswain in
will also see competition from
steering straight. Each event will
Skidmore.·CoUege, St. John's
cover a distance of 2,000 meters.
University, SUNY-Albany, Ariny, •• The Thursday -following the·
Coast Guard, Vassar College,
President's Cup the team will travel.
Stockton State, U.S. Merchant
to Philadelphia for the Dad Vail
• by .Ken Foye·

Marist · also participated in the • play. "He wa:c; 'treeing'," Breen
Marine
Academy,
SLINY- . .Championship~.
.
.
Maritime; Fordham University and
"I'm iri a positive mood,. the
Union College.
. .
team's in a positive mood," Davis '
• Davis, in his fifth year as head
said. "Barring any unforeseen ac-
coach of crew, is assisted by his • cidents, it should be
a
successful
wife Vicki and Patrick Hancock.
season."

The Marist crew team currently·
-Last year ihe President's Cup
has
55
competing members,· both
was.canceled after one event due to
men and women._ In the 12 or 13 inclement .weather.· -

Metro . Conference Tournament
said of junior Roldan.
For a team that'was searching • this past weekend. Singles player. -
"'Treeing' means playing out of
for "a true.number-one.playern at -~Jim Roldan and the doubles. team
your mind. He beat some guys who
the start of the season, as coach
of Kevin Blinn and Joe Gulianfted
were really good players.
II
The
• Gerry Breen• ,put it/.the Marist , Marist • to a • fourth-pl~ce finish~ .. Marist pair of Blinn~Guliani also
men's·tenni~.teai:n·is
enjoying a fine •. Marist finished behind first-place., .:.made it to the semifinals in doubles
1986 season.
• -
. Monmouth, Loyola of Maryland_ • play.
. .. ·
The Red Foxes won both of their
and Robert Morris, according to
Against Fairleigh Dickinson. in
matches • 1ast week~ defeating
Breen ..
1


New Jersey, Marist's outstanding
SUNY-NewPaltzlastMonday 6-2
Roldan was "super" according· freshman Max Sandmeier suffered
and Fairleigh Dickinson 7-2 on
to Breen, as the Foxes' number
setbacks in singles and doubles
Saturday. The netters had a record
three player made it to ·the
play. But the rest of the Marist
of 6-2 heading into this week,
. semifinals in tournament singles ,
Continued on page 11
.
.
FqX ·runners
place
at Invitational
by Brian O'Connor
Sophomore Don Reardon took
second in the 1,500-meter run at the
Nassau Invitational in Uniondale,
N. Y., on Saturday. Reardon was
the highest finisher for Marist at
the meet with a time of 4: 10.4.
Senior Don Godwin placed third
in the 800-meter with a time of
I :57. 7. Classmate. John Clements
finished fourth in the 5,00().meter
with a mark of 16:09. Junior Paul
Kelly came in fifth in the
3,()()().
meter steeplechase clocking in at
10:26.9.
Christian Morrison, a senior,
finished two places behind Reardon
in the I ,500 with a time of 4: 17 .0.
200-meter and in the four. by
JOO-meter
relay.
Senior Peter Pazik, out with a
calf injury, was scheduled for tests
yesterday and is still questionable
for championship running in May.
Also, .sophomore Garry Ryan in-
jured his knee and freshman Mike
Kennedy hurt his ankle
at
the
Invitational.
With all the aches and pains,
Head Coach Steve Lurie said -
anyone from the team making the
championships is doubtful.
"I
now
know what Hubie Brown feels
like," Lurie said.
Sophomore J.R. Morrissey leaves a Stevens Tech player flat-footed as be sets to deliver the
MIi d~wnf"ldd. (photo by Jeff DeMaio)
Freshman Scott Allen hit 16.8
seconds in the I 10-meter high
hurdles, knocking almost a full se-
cond off since his last run. Allen
also decreased his times in the
The outdoor track team's next
run is Sunday at the Stony Brook
Invitational. The Multi-way Meet
at
King's College, scheduled for
last week, was rained out and will
not be rescheduled. The team also
runs in a night meet on Tuesday at
Union College in Schenectady,
N.Y.