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The Circle, September 11, 1986.xml

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 33 No. 1 - September 11, 1986

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Volume 33,. Number 1
Marlst College, Poughkeepsie,
N_.
Y.
September 11, 1986
Construction of The Lowell Thomas Communications Center remains on schedule for a
January 1987 opening.
···
/I •

·-'
86 .enrollme:nt sets
record for c~llege
'
,•
'
.
.
..
·.
·,.
.
.
'.
by
Ami AUawadhi
academic• vi~~ j:,residenc. ''Stu~

::~'-•
1
:


··derit's·feel.bettCr.:hfa
J)lace.WJliCh
The largest number offreshmen
grows than in one ,vhich stagnates, • /
in the college's.history, 755, began and when one grows. it inakes it/
classes at Marist College last week, easier t9 be engaged_
iit b~t~erJ~af
according to James Daly, vice ning,'.' said vanderHeyden/wlio·1s
president foi: admissions ~nd • in his first year.at the· college(.
enrollment -planning.
. .
. • Of the freshmen, 656 are
Ji
vi rig
While the size of the freshman on campusand
99
are co·mmllting,
class .is up only slightly over 1985 compared to last year's figl!res of
... :- - 752. freshmen. enrolled-' l~t • 625 residents·and 127 commuters,
: September -
Marist's overall according ·to. the Admissions
. ·enrollment continues to climb. The Office.

;
l

' total· .• number
of •. fullstinie
·with the increas~.d enrollment,
- equivalent students is a record the Housing Offic~;has been forc-
2;901.
.
.
. •
.
'ed to provide .. m:ore off-campus
_ .1-,ast fall; that figure; was ·at housing and
(<>
increase
·the
2,8Q7, according·to the Office of freshinan'areasf'



-the ~cademic Vice President. Both
''Essentiall/the large class has
full.:'and part-tiine students are in° also caused • some • tripling in
eluded
in
the calculation offull-
freshman buildings and quads in
time equivalent.
.
. • . Marian with placement of some
The college
also enrolled 180 new female • freshmen -in first • 'floor
T
. h
b ·
1d
·
·
'L·
d I
transfer students this semester. In Champagilat,'' said Steve Sansola, •
. ··om.
as
...

1 .. 1ng
.. o·.
n
.. ·SC·
..
,:.1
..
·:1
e.-..
u.
·.
e,'
September ·t.985, 200 transfers directoriofhousing,Lastyear,on-
f:.\'

entered the college, according to
ly upperclassmen
• lived
in
t
·
·
·
· ·
·
·
the Ac:lrajssfons
Office.
. ~- Champagnat. .
.
. .
~~~·
b ..
u
...
·
t
.fund
...
ing,q
..
uest
...
i ...
_on
..

..•.
s ..
re111airi,,
foJ~::.:~;:n~u~b;o~Ji'e;!~t~
:g;;!:~~o~~~tu~!;:~t~=;~~:~~:
~.
.
·. .
·· ..
· ·.
.
.
. . .. . .
. ..
.
·collegealnJ984, the freshman class· tain off-campus housing, according
~'t
<' •.· .- • . .
: .
i

·
:' . •


:. :
>
·
.\Y.··
-:•.
> .. , ·.
·
- ·< • ·_ • ; : ... •. .";:.
,.:.

.........
nmribered 679;-. ·: •
..
·,
..
to Daly.
"I
understand(the hous-
~•'""_-•..
..
by BID
:~~~11,ro
•. . ·.•.
... ' _ ..
e~t!~~~~~~~t~~S0
JpµI
1
p11;:tJ:i~
col: .:
;tp~
t;l~pr¥.
11
,ct1Q,Itf,ciµo/-,t~
)'e/~--... _:
,'Fheincreased enrollment·is not . ·ing situation),·and•I'm unable to be
if,

·-- •
•.
--.
'.·

•· • :···'
,
..
"<'• /;, .• ..
-l~•has managed toraiseonlt$2.(i .. ly operational".Until•the.,begmn.ipg,·•·
··, .·., , • •· .• ·-•.,, -- -•.·.-·
~t•, ·~.,,-
·----
• • -- ••• • . •
• ..
• .·., .. ••
.

~f":
• remains on scheduleJ_ou:January
accomlllo_datc
i;:lassrooms,:faculty ourselves/' Ribaudo said, ~•so
..
we
_
_
t: ..

-_~!Ir.i~~~!1Jtit~:e%1~~a~~;::
{;1~r1tf~:rg:;~~r~tr;~;

~--a~~~t~t~~:i/:
.-
-'
iv~:W
..
·,totz,ttacts
_given
-
~;,;L.
then1satastandstil1,accordmgto· __ tions facility,;1s;focated?near.the:. eqUJpment-,w1ll-req\llfetheworkof: .
• . . . .
.
:: . ··• .·
•.
. . •. •
• ..
-.
~~t
..
:!;;~;~,;if;itt~r:riSf·.
ad-
;~:~~~~~:~i!~t::t~~~r:~~.
•••
tr:ttc~=.d~l~ti~"J~,~~:e·..
:
.• ",{O
:Mtirist
employees
~r.
· . . .
;:A:rithonyCemera,
Vl~pres1dent facility mMay
__
of.1983,_the actual,
Ongmally,-the··Thc:m1as:center
••


-
- -
-- •
·


.. ·
·
~
:,:,•,·.q~··~.·.·.,_'._~,:.··
..
···.:
.......
:
..
,•'
:·:··.·,.
,'·le>r'college
advancement, said the
start
·of
construction
.was·delayed
was,also to betlie new,site:.·ofthe • • • :, ,., >
••
• ··•
, ••
'
,,;.,:-
J;ol•-was;not
:aJ>leJo
raise ·any ·until November of 1985 after.pro-·• .BeirniMedia.Center:Ribaudo.said. ·:--'}6fJ.~.~S~~f:i'.r ... :,
,
money
this
~ummer
inits.efforHo
blems>with its foundation·were • 'due
to
a .decision made
this
sum~"., . :.,. ·,.
.
, . :
0
:t :· ,
'
"; -. . .
~
'
I
.
male~
th~ Thom¥ 'Ce~ter . fully
discovered/\'·, .••. •
•• . . ,.
·mer by. the<riew Acadeip,ic.:Vice .
AJter. alm.o~t:';t:Y~:and·.;a--h~f;of-!lcgotiations,
the: college's
.'operaticmalby:January. ·•··
.. ·· ·... .
.Frank. Ribaudo, di~~~.tor of
Pre,,j.dentMarltr~d¢i:Heyderi~tije ... ·
.
·Jecretane~ s1g!led.a f:inal.£on~r!i~!:d!J~ng~_the
summer;
... '.'We
have: severltl proposals • media • .' and . •• ·instiuction·a1 ·aein:ieMedia·eentef willcontiitl.ie
:!
·,,
.
A.lse>.thi,s
su,mm.er,
ine
~Q,!ll'<i
pJ tni~!~ 1mp9s_ecl
a ~ontract s.ek,
.which"
are 'Otlt"
~t. vadolis • fu_n~iitif • tecllndl9gie~{
sai~ ih:e iitedia,cenfor to 'ope_rate
:qtit
-'qf
th~~L1brai'y~-~
·.•
..
<·t~~n,ient
~i.1
the' faculty: aftet~negp,!i~t~ts;for tile
f
acuJty.
an4
a.d~
agencies/'
Cemer~ said .... But .\Ve will. niov~Jnto th_e new. fatjlity in . '!Thif
mcans
we~have to cover •
, lllln~tration wer~~mtble
to~e.a.cli.~
~8_!,:~m~~t;
.!hefacu]ty ~ef{!S~

ar~}.till'~\V_ajtiiig
for• word f~om· .• laJ.~P~ni~,t:·i)r -~arly J~nu~ry.: : tW:o
l>µiidings'.~tlJesame staf(»
• to Slgri a.~aster:agree~en~; l>~tJildl\llrl.~a_I;con_tr~cts
~~re l~Ued •.
those:fi~~n~~·•• .. ·.

.•
-~ .
~1tingpi:obfoffi!.Qqrailsf~gaI1d , RiJjajjdo sai_d;;:.•~_It'~soirli!obe·a .••
..
T~~;~~~~Y$ltif;sal!l!r)ncr~ mthe, s~cre~~es ~appr~yed con-,
_, _w,JµIC?'the
t(jta} cost ofbuddmg

m_stalhng
t~C?,
.St!'~lOS'.
equ1pmenJ;
: little more
'difficl.ilt.;to
pte>yide'the
.
'"tr~i::.t:~Y~
th~!Jl; ~: l:i;l~~e_ o,_f,~.§.~e,r.c.ent
,retrQ.3:ct1ve
.. ~o July
J,
·•the
·Th9mas·
center has been
Ribaudo sa1d he (loes,.not.expect . same.kiiid'of.service:~• ·,.\.·:, . : , .,::)98.J_;}1.n,d;Jh,~11}lf):.~ulditi_o_n,iµ.,4.5P.Cr~~.fr~m;~~~~),!1,986:
l"he
'.·

.'/:.i.:
....
· ·. :
: ••
> •·.·
.. ···· •
· ':
.However,R,iiiaudo·~~:leaving~
.,1~ci:case.,f~Fth~,~~ondyearofth~ce>11,tract;1s.$.P..er~e!J~for_July
•.
:M...
.
a:r,1··s·t ..
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e. .ts.Pa.·.
r
....
···
...
t....
"f. ·•
..
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f.
m... on ...
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...
·
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y
.. ·.:·.
t~e
J3ei
... :
rne\~e4~ Ce
..
':!fet:jp
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9
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..
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!'·cco.·.·.·.·.·~
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a·,.·_1~.!
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9a.th.•
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o
.. ·.
alfi.eh.
e~
..

...
a r.~~.res
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e.
ntat1~.
e o.f .the
..
·,
:
·
• · ·-
· •. :-
..;'- • ..
'"
'
·
. L1brarymayonlybetemporary;
secretai:1es.-}1,11~0:°t
,--:,·,,;
:.'.
.
.;
.
.· :·.•-•.
. l;r'
·Om'
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·e·
·n.'.
n""
:.·e'
···t·t::c·.
_-o·:1:1~·
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e.·"c,.g•·,···
e· :'
-'.f.
·u·.
:.'
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..
:d·.:
. '
, -·,
..
su~~Seqly;!ea~niuuf~~
~f •
su~n:r!!e:ddii~rita~~~~~!;;r~ia:c~dii~1alJ~tfu:V;!>::~r:::
. 1\~
,< •• .· •. .
.
.··• ·. . . •
.•.

.
,, <. • .• .

.
,
. . _
the;c~~(eFh~re
!~
on.ly all expen-
employe~ and health A~nefits:f~r full~time e~ploy~~s. .· . _.
::
. ,
.
. .
.
.
.
, _-. . . , ,:, .
_
. < :: :
me!}t, he 5a!d. . In
SlX
~on,ths t.l!~
:
A full-time e~ploy_~
IS
now defined as one who works 30 hours
by Leil,,!«>h~~on
. ..
...
..
_J\~cor:dmgto Ce!'11era,:th_e
~tate_ .ne\V. aca~e.i:ruc
~1ce
.•
pres1dent,wdl
. a wee!(, Thisw!ll male¢ more·peo.pl~
eli!?ble for the.bene(its than
• -:
.•
.
:~ .
: ...... · . .
• ,
t\ttomey (}ep.eral S· . Office .~ad as~ess tpe s1tuatu;~n
from Hie view-
under the pre,VIQUS
37
.5
hour re9mrem~nt.
• .
_
. -
A
Dutclies,s~,<::ounty
Judge:jlas • agreed to notify Manst about the
J>?lDt
of ,~he media center and the •
.• In December 1985, the Secretarial Clerical Association affiliated
~warded_Marist~~h¥~of$340,~
Benne~t ·heating. Th,_e,Attorney Libr_ary. . . . .
. . . .
with the C?mmuni~tion Workers
oJ
Ame~ca,~ocal l120~ just
,m donations left to the n_ow
defunct
Gen.eral's. Office .announced the
Ribaudo said he _does not know.
after. Vassar secretaries also elected to affiliate with the national .
Bennett College,
~
• .
hearing ·1hr()ugh legal n9~ices· what wjllh beThcom:e

of the empty
union; •
.• •
. .
• ••
. •• • .•
. Dutchess County Supreme Cqurt
published· in · the Poug.i:iiceepsie space in t e. omas center created
..

V
assat and Manst are the only two private institutions ever to
Justice Albert· M; Rosenl>la:tt Joumal ..
and-Taconic Newspapers, by_the decision toleave the Beirne
affiliate with the \.uiion, according to Galleher.
. •
_
awarded· $30 000 to Marist in a• but<the
notices were overlo()ked by center in the Library,
·
0
One of the great accomplishments of the contracds that we
decision handed down in lateMay,
Marist officials:
. Admiriistrator:s tlti.s week were·
now have a grievance and arbitration procedure," Galleher said.
ending a lengthy squ~bble oye~
Marist ~rgued that it was entitl-
un8:v~lable t.
0 .
comm~p.t on the
''If an infraction of the contract or unfair labor practice occurs,
who the rightful-r:eC1p1ent
of the: ed to a share of the money because ?ec1S1on_
to keep the Beirne center_
we don't have only the ~ollege or union to go to. We have.the
funds from the Millbrook, N.Y.,
k

• I 90 Be
m the Library and the extra space
America.
n Arbitration Association as a thir.d ob.
J"ective
part,
v/'
"it too on
1
JlpproXImate
y
. n-

Id ·
·d • h Th
,.
college would be;

·nett students and several of its
it
wou provi e m t e
omas
"Seniority was very important to us, but we had to let go because
• The remaining $310,000 will be
faculty jnembers and adopted the
center.
we had to get the best for themost people," she said. "We ai:e
divided among.Bard College, Pace
colle~~"s fashion. design P.
rogram
There are still no concrete plans
pleased with the results of the contract. A lot of our employees
University, Skidmore College and
when' Bennett closed in 1977.
. for allocation of space in the base-
will gain the respect we were looking for for a long time.,,
the Millbrook Prep School.
/
ment of the Thomas center, accor-
The faculty refused to agree to the contract that was imposed
Marist' s money will be pla~ed in
Bennett was. a private two-year ding to Edward Waters, vice presi~
by the board of trustees, according to Faculty Executive Commit-
a ~cholarship fund, according to
~ollege for women l0atted 15 miles dent
.fot
~dministration and
tee Chairperson Wil1iam Olson.
Anthony Cernera, vice president
r:ortheast of Poughkeepsie in the
finance.

"Faculty members who chose to signed their individual contracts
for college advancement.
Village of Millbrook.
In April, Vice President for Stu-
and will abide by them," Olson said.
The Bennett funds became the
In making its claim, Marist deni Affairs Gerard Cox said he
.. Among the faculty's other grievances were its claim that the
center of controversy last January
argued· that f~culty member
would like the basement to house
"school's student-faculty ratio creates unwieldy class siz~ and that
after the money was awarded to
Donald Calista, one of the instruc-
the offices of The Circle and The
expenditures for scholarly research are not enough·for faculty to
Bard, Pace and Millbrook, but not
tors who came to Marist from
Ben-
Reynard, and studios for WMCR
fulfill a mandate for research and writing handed down by Presi-
Marist at a December hear-
nett, had received a promise.from and MCTV.
dent Dennis Murray last December.
.
ing. Marist chaUenged the deci-
the state Attorney General's Office
Waters also spoke of m~ving
Marc Adin, assistant vice president for personnel, was
sion in court shortly thereafter on
that the college would be notified certain faculty into offices of the
unavailable for comment. Adin was·the chief negotiator for the
the grounds that it was not inform-
directly about any court hearings • new Thomas center by early
administration.
ed of the hearing.
about the money.
December.





















































































































































































































··Pool
'.·hours·
~XP(l.1ided·

by,Paul Kel_iy:

··op~n
s~iniming, hours for the
/Mflrist
community atthe McCann .
Center. have been increased
as a
.
_.
resu,lt of a new plan instituted
by
-· ••
/Malist.
Athletic Director Brian
.
/
C9lieary ..

~..


•.·
.
·
. :
...
••
·
...

.•
The: pool is
·now·
available' for
open swimming
.
Mon,d11y·:
thiu •
WednesdafS-10 p.m; and. Thurs~
day.7:30,.10 p.m;
.




•.
.
.
The plan was formulated~

1
result of
a,
campus-w!de,
su.ryey·
.1
regarding pool availability issued
by Colleary last' December; The
results showed that avast majori-
ty o,f those polled said they felt the
pool was not available enough for
swimming, especially in the. even-
3,000 college
students
·rea.d·
The Circle· each week,
and
they are all
potential
customers.
1
ing, Colleary said.
.

· ( I
·\1·'
/
.
so~~e
J:7r!v~~~/
0
!~:t tt~
~~~

...
\ :\\
1
b,ri'"'.:

comµiunity swimllling groups that
N
\_J:.
pre\'.i<>usJy
occupiedthe pool dtir-
·
•.ingthesehours.Ye.t,,Collearysaid
·o·
..
J NIGH.
T.
E
,··
F .d
.'

th~t'eaclt~f~f~lu
..
~$:~St.~'s;,
,.'

••
.

.
.:
;.,.
'V~fy·
r1
,ay-
SLColumba~,:;•.Hoty:•
::Tn~llY;
'-I<-
.
.
,.

.
. ,
·,'.···

~·, :
:••>·
.

,
.
.
Millbrook.'•and;the Marist,:S\Vlin
r
,
st·
ti
·.
,
T

"
• ·
·'·
·


·.
c1~bfwere';f:>ff¢i'~•Other::optioi:ii'
I
.
ar ng.:
'1
()morrow
'.'

·
such·as Saturday;swim:hoiiis/:·
.. ::
,.



· .,.

..


··
v-'
·
•• • ••

·

·•
• ..

tii>h!}a~~1~t:r:-t~:re~:
0
~!1lrti;
1


;9
:p~m:
... •
3:''ii:'~Dl~•·•;
• ••
..
clubs got approximately 70 percent
of
what they had before, and I feel.
that ,ve're still honoring the five
.. community groups.'.'
.

Colleary also said
.that
the rais-
ing
:
oL the drinking
'age
last
Deceinb'er: play~
a
1
major role'in·
the alteration of;the hours~
."Ttie.
kids needed things· tp/do; .and I
thought this.wouldhelpi'·he said .

C_olleacy
..
aisq
·~~
that
lie:.wiuite<(;
to
·eliminate
ithe
,
stigma·ttha.L
Mccann was,stricdfa.,havcri'rt'oi

,.
those·inVolied·· in',Manst'athletic•
·teams::
He:11oied
·a'iioM'p°arty'for• .

·.
tfte
stµdentslast ~11ttirday.
a:s
an
ex~
• $1.
·Admission

·
u·Sitl.etrack~d''
T-Shirt
:Raffles
.amp~e)>f:thj~i~"! ·~tt~!ude. i.,.:'
.•
'-
..
~,,~._
.•:_:!1-•,t•r•
..
.
•.,'111\•,
~-~
...
,
.
.;._
•c•·
,
..
,
....
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1•·
.•.
·•,
·""-:•.,
......
""',
. .-
..
_
...
_
"'"',,
,""'·
•,•.•
..
~·-.,;••,·•-··•·.•,
.
.,;'.
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....
,:
"":.;,;,:.;..,
,
.....

}oi~~:r:~h!;c11~do~~~;-:~;
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'.

''.:
:)'.
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tr?:;~;~;-~/~~:,:~~.
~,~r~.
t
t
~
.~.ff
tt
<\<:'.:t
:~?·~·-<.<".<.
/
~tre,~: lt~~es fo~ a ix:tt¢r student·
.
.
.I
_
hfe;
-
-he.
satd.

·.
·
-._
..
·
-\ •

~
·
..
!·::.
;-
:,::,
:.:--\
'
..
·.Ennoll
..
:
';~.
···.\:~~~~.~~:•'t~~J~g~:~~·s'/ft\::-:
..
•·
.•

..

......
.
-spe~fic~
.(b'ut):'there.
will
~e
incen~

•••

.•
tiresi
:d~y¢loped :
thi~.,
Y.¢~r
·for
students;
ifor
them to secure alter-
native housing,'' said Daly;
;
.

.
;
j
Daly
agreed
with vanderHeyderi
•••
thaLMarist had
to
.gfow';
«In-
dividua.lstudent tuition would have

·
·
ind·eased;
and
.the
services we'now
havb would have
.been
far
·1ess;''

.
paly
1
s~~;
.
•• ··•
••
; '
)\ \\/.:
. •
D~y winted out that some.~ther
'colleges/.
are facing
:
!911der-
ertrollriierit and rev~nue shortages,
..
r
9rdng
i~~in
te)
·cut
servi~~iq
ili4~


•;·•
,<'
students!'·.
,
.
,
.
.
..

, ·.

·.,..
·
.

''The goal is ii.ot'to increase the

size of the freshman class but
to
in-:
.
·
crease
iii~ siieJ~fthe applicant'pool

so that we
can
become more selec:C
tive,!' iaid Daly .•.
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: ;


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..
A.J.JJe.··~
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The increase in• the number of
students. at Marist
·college.
should
not, affect

the
.
quality
;'of
the
classroom expc!rience,
according to
vand~rHeyden. f'\Ve have. to be
careful riot to associate quality with
sma:U
1
numbers/' he .said .••..
.
\Vjth the increase in students,
contracts were renewed to lease
a'partments
.
at. the Canterbury
apartment complex, located five
miles from Marist.

The transportation service that
Marist had discontinued last year
has been reinstated for the J05
students who are currently housed
there.
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La4ia "~ ~· lfwt
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St«/ld
AIWkaU
t4
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7~

DISCOUNTS
with
PIARIST

I.I:>.
-:
21
&
over
$1.00
ADMISSIO" wi-th MAR.IST
1.D.
.

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,
··-19
&.
20 $4.00
ADMISSION
with
MARIST
tp.
33
Academy
Street,
Poughkeepsie,
NY (914)
471-1133
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Septembef
11, 19,B~ - THE CIRCLE -
Paqe
3--
'"'-,""-
. /yfq,t},~t
Br0f/Jf{1il~
.1:)/iij{J:l
centetllli'al
celt!bratio
n
by::;~-~O:m~~;~'.
•·

,
_
.
-
.
·
;~
-~;~l/~~)~#i~;-:1l{f
1{·
;::ri~~~i}~:
iait~ iri
o~/
:.
,:
i<:
·
...•
v~iio~s-h1Jni~~si6n~ ~es·i~n~<l
.•
f~r
f.'.,<
:·:·>:.: /
•·
,
...
-';
_by'"'~he,\:R_ev.:.:¥.~feW?:'·,9~'111-
-••·,'Jlowev!r,.thebr9thers~eby:noj:
the ~~casion. The opemng_con~
,
.
Thb, pu.r summer'
·marked:
the
pagnat,
\~ho
recogn~ze.d•
the need meai,s

hmited to_,, the

Nor_th.
.
vocation was attended by President
treginnilig'<>f
ay~~lorig centennial-
_fora
r!ligiOllS
e<lucati<>ri-aniong·the
~erican ~ontine_n~
al~ne: ~ari~t-
~nnis ~urray

as well as Gerard
·•
celebr,atjon o,f the foundins:oftbe
.
po9r.,m
:France
.. 11'-'.1886,:
seven run schools arepr~11t nfcountnes
Cox, vice-president for student
• Marisi Brothers' North Ainericari
.
Marist Brothers arrived in Canada

such
as
Pakis_tan, 1ridia
.:
arid· Sri affairs.

Province. To start the' festivities,
.
to establish the· North American Lanka, to iupne a few: According
..
_
MaristCollege was the setting for
Province. By l~l i;.;the growth of fo Brothedoseph Belanger, a 1948
Today,candidates for the Marist
a
reunion of over three hundred
the-order enablcli them to establish
-
Marist graduate as well.as a pro-
.
Brotherhood do not have to study
.brothers,
most of whom received a second provin~
T
The_
Province

fessor
·or
Freri_ch,
~Ube college, t~e uJ_ider
.
the broth.ers' in college.
. theii' religious fr_aining at M~t
of the United States of America.
brothers are the.top educators
m
Rather. 'candidates pursuing en-
· .•
College;

_·_.
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:
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• •
••


Austraiia, and are a leading force trance
.:
to:_ the
.or~er .·of.
~arist
.
During the weekend

spanning

Today~
over threc-htiodred-'and~ for the integration of schools in the. Brothers may apply
-
after gradua-
August 15 to August 18, 1986,'the. tweoty-:Cive. brotllers and
_cari-
Republic of.South ~frica:

tion from the four-year college of
brothers gathered· to

discuss the
didates teach in schools in fourteen
their choice; They will reside with
past,
'present
andfuture of these~· states·. The Marist Brothers seekto
• •
C>ther highlights of the reunion, Marist brothers for a two to three
· cond largest congregation
.
of
emulate their fo:under, Cham-
weekend included a sendoff for. year period during which they have
brothers in the Roman Catholic
:pagnat,
through commitment to missionaries traveling to Liberia, the.option to leave or continue.
.
Church.
h_ard work, a simpl~ li(estyle and an honorary degree ceremony, and
Following this period of intense

Mc:tr.ist
r~calls
R~P.h~el.
M\ark

>

"

''

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••
• •
Last'.~Jk,\~.6lleagu~.: stuclerits ~d friends of Ralph Mark recall-
ed
,the
teacher and:radio talk show host they called "Raphael." .

.
Marlc;:60;',died)uly 14 after suffering a heart attack at his home

irr Staa~burg;:N,_;YJ
· •
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.•_.

.

Marlc'had worked
as an
adjunct instructor of broadcasting at-Marist

fonhlee'_years and had also worked-for WEOK Broadcasting Corp.
for nearly
25
years where he co-hosted
a
daily talk-sho')V.
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!4_~~w_10_~--_-!i:::i_'ft!°.s'tft_dl_~---~-

__
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• t:aaic_d_h:~
__
:_~~- !~_l_a·~~JY.
-~_·a:i
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J_::
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old junior from: Ne\V
_Windsor;
N. Y.
:
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'.~He saw ~roilg and tried to-make it right," said Mi~hael H ·s,
.·.
e?(ecutive vice presiden,t c,f WEOK,
_
in a telephone interview earlier
this week.
,

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''RaphaePs talk show was yerypopular because the people of Dut-
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ches·r County really loved' him
:and
'trusie4,
_him,
u
said Harris· ..
!
'He
,
Raphael Mark

could be bestfri¢Iids-withpoliticians.but stillpress them on the air.
.
,
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when'.they,wei{wfong;·:and the: people admired that.'' .
.
.
Scn~e
'said
it was his tireless dedication to helping others that is best
.
.
Robert Sadowski, chairperson of Division of Arts and Letters, said
.
recalled;·
·


·
he was vecy'sadderied-_by
the news'. .
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"Rap}lael,would spend all the time!in ihe world with a student to
'':llike a·pe_rsonwith
a g~ sense ofh\llllor, and Raphaelbad that:
help them improve," said Tim Sheehan/a 20-year-old senior from

A(thf~~
tiJl'.l~.:•he
\\'.~ yery co1:1cerned
wit~'the Marist student and
~arwinton,. Coon.
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the LoweU;Thomas·Center,"·said.Sadowski;
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·.Mark
had spent much of his bfe·mvolved-m numerous c1v1c ac-
_··,
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Derek: Sirn911;,a.2();.year~oldjunior
arid.geoerat'manager:of2am~.
'
tivities,'.including'the Boy'Scouts"of America, I.:iteracy Volunteers of
:
:pus
radio 'station
WM
CR,
agreed. '.'Everyone-at-:
WMCR ~will
really,.;. :,\metica ilni:l?the, DutcheshYouth
.·Board.--..
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miss:Rap}J~et liis
kno.wleage
of radi<>,'
and,
~ote
iinpoitantly;liis
'. _. ·-.' ':C>~ie'
of
MarWs;~ri'My
projects
wa,s
ihe
:l:fudson
River Sloop Cfoa_r-
.
...
_llpinari.
,n~tur~~
_were.
outstanding.''
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wate~(a
,~pilig1U_o
h_e]p
cl~' up
(th~
H11ds?il Riv~i\
i-
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:,:
.
-·".\Vor~l-With
Raphaelw~ 1m1ong
the best educauonal CXJ):Cnences

.. \frc:>f~or,f.a"Q\
PelC,olle
's.aid
~e had aJ1.ard t1me·tfYlng
to fl!ld the
-:of:mylife/!•saidSinion.,.
,,_-:,:--.•,.--.:-,
,. ••
•.
-

':•::··.
'righlwordHoaescribeMar~.:·
;
::_'._
J·.-
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'O~~er
• :stu~ent~
wh~. had R_aphael,
as a teacher· echoed those
_ •
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~-'Raphael.was
a. dear· inan,
·and
I l~ved ~m. a tot," said DelColle.
sentiments.

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!'He
was a very gifted man who was a mover rod a shaker, and I
• •.~Rilphael
·loved
wiiat·he_ was doing witti his life, and he waritecl
think tlie world is a poorer place now that-he's gone.''
,
us tolove:what we're doing," said Michelle O'Connor, a 20-year-old .
·
"It.was· a life that was·far too short, and we will all really miss
·junio(fi:oi:n.Garnerville,
N.Y.
.
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hiin," said-Sadowski.
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Marist

board
a11Pt6Y¢S
partial
19iv'eStment.
•.
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-._.:.t·

:bf:EJlinJ)'Aic)'
and._:.
.-
The boird als6 directed the col~ divested money iii".South Africa. )'ear's Dean's Convoc~tion be
Ju,lla
E/Miimy : •..
lege ad.ministratio~ ~o,e:levelqp
pro-' Yfrwe.did not have'anymoneyih-
devoted todiscu~ions of education

:;
: •



·

gr~~o('·'9!1~~w.:_~u~~on
and

veste4.fu'a rion-signaiory company'. and.
outreach
programs,''
.The:
Marist ci11e~e
iboard
·of
pqbticaLaction
~9.•
furth·t:r ~x1>ress
i
·an.i'glad
tha(w.e will not-purchase However, she stressed that no deci-
.
religious training, the candidates
take :vows and are ordained into the
Marisi Brothers. For the following
five years, each man takes an an-
nual
,vow,
ad'!ancing deeper into
his commitment.
.,
Pait of being a Marist-brother,
Belanger said, means "getting in-

volved with people,
-
instead of be-
ing too involved with things." In .
.
addition to the pursuit of religious
edu~tion,
the order seeks to
rehabilitate drug users and juvenile
delinquents, and helps the disad-
vantaged. minorities, such as the
Lokato Indians of South Dakota.
The Lokato Indians have been aid-
ed by the Marist brothers for the
past
-
twenty-five years.
Frosh get
fir~t glance
of Marist
by Beth-Kathleen McCauley
.
.
,
. That first and crucial week for
incoming freshmen is over, and
Marist's class of
1990
finally has an
idea.of what college life is all about
and what lies ahead of it.
"The freshmen
as a whole
are really friendly,'' said Leo Hall
resident Ted Bundy, of Revere,
Mass~,."and so far the RAs seem
pretty cool."
.
John
'.~einhart
of Mineola, N .)'.,
however; said he felt he is constant-
ly being.watched by the RAs.
"The RAs follow you around,"
said Reinhart. "You can defiriite-
ly tell they don't trust us."
~am Argenio of Philadelphia,
Pa., said
'_even
though there have

been many scheduled freshman ac-

tivities, he still has been bored from
time to time.·:••Ttte' activities are
fine," said Argenio. "It's just get-
ting • everyone enthused and to
participate!
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.
The
CoJiege Union Board dance
lastSaturday night
was
a good op-
p9rtlinity
ti:>-
'.meet·
~op\e_
O'\}\Side
t~e,
dorin; said Robert Flaherty
of •
.
Woodbury, Conn,
:



'·'The band was good but t~at's
because they are from Long
·
Island,''
.
sa~d Bill Carney! of
Bayshoi:e, N.Y.


Freshmen have already formed
opinions on the aca_demic
life.

"My biggest complaint is Marist
East," said Elaine Steele, a Marian
resident from Oakdale, N.Y. "It's
way.too far to walk/'
.
.
f]aherty also said he felt. the
classrooms. were overcrowded and
that'the seato;
in the rooms were too
small.


tnistees approv_ed.
this summer. a
the college:s firm belieftb~t apar~: ariy morlil/~ Conc'ra s,id;

sfon had beeri made.
-.partial~ve.strnerit
ofsfoc_ks.in
com~

theid.in South Africa must end.'';
,·_ Tlil:l Pr9gressiv,~ Coalition ~as
.J.:::-:·
·
::
~.
:.:·
-.
. .
.
P~!es
~oing business
'in'
_South'
•.
These progr~
will
be planned for: formecl last yeafas a teaction to_
c:
-9t~er
•.
~o_111:mittee,:~~~bers
m-
The subject of the cafeteria was
eagerly discussed;· and most
students expressed dissapointment.
''During football the food was
Afnca.
.
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the current academic year..

.
•.
apartheid;_ Its initial goal
·was
to
c!~4~:-
:
~1:1;a.~~«;:·
-RYa!?,,:
,.
student
:•·:
.'Jpe/
college's
,
in\iestme~t
.
.
,
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._.
,

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:.
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... ¢ucaieihe'campus and to·question ; ,repres~n~atzye_;_:
:;R9~c_c:,.5
Bal~ll •.
.
manager
was
dir¢ctei:l
t<fdivestof
Th:e boarg s recomm~ndat1ons
.
.
M~rist's moral and financial stlin-
fa~~lty\ _repr~s.enta~1ver
Robert
,
stqckin·ariy ~o;t:npany
tltai is riot \Vert base~ on the. finqmgs ~f a

dirig in South Africa, according to Wr!ght,. ad1;11m1st~ahon
repres~n-
a signafory<of-the Sullivan Prin~ ~pt1s~wide comllllt_tee
estab~s~-
:
the group>



tative; Cl_1f Wilson, trustee
ciples,
:a

code
of·
ethi.cs' for
edJas_t year. to consid~r
-~,fans!
s

St1sa~ Roeller Brown/the com-
repres~ntauve; D<?na_ld
Brown,
;
!)usinesses w.ithdealirigs in South resl?onse. to South Afn~- s racial
mittee
,
representative
.
from the
al~mn! representative, and Br_ud
Africa. He was also'instructed not pohcy~


president's-cabinet, said the board
Hopkins •.
'
community
to pure~~- a~y stock in a· non-
According to Joseph(;oncra, a
statement was niade "on princi-. repr~entative.
signatory company doing business leader of the Marist Progressive ple.'' She added that the subjectis
Last spring, the Progr~sive
iil_ South
_Africa,
·which practices. Coalition, the board's statement
prominent on this year's agenda for

Coalition and
_
tile Black Student_
racial segregation under the policy was misleading.
_
the college.
Union sponsorl¾i
an anti-apartheid
of apartheid:

"It makes it seem like Marist has
"It
has been suggested that this
march and rally on campus.
.Marist
hires 3 new residence· directors
by Diane Pomilla
Three new

residence directors
were hired this summer to fill posi-
tions vacated in the Marist Hous-
ing Department.
Each new person has had some
housing experience either as a resi-
dent assistant or a r~idence direc-
tor at another college.
Susan Dorr, 23, from Ridg?field,
Conn., is the new RD of Cham-
pagnat Hall replacing David Yoz-
zi who left Marist to go to graduate
school.
. _
Dorr, who majored in English at
Eastern Connecticut State Univer-
sity, was a resident assistant for
.
''I chose to be an RD for
three years.

freshmen

because I think I can
She said she hopes to make the
have a strong positive impact on
students feel as comfortable as them. The first year in college is
possible in their surroundings.
"I
very important," Henry said.
enjoyed my job as a resident assis-
Henry said she wants to help
tant," she said. "I hope 1 can pur-
make. life more enjoyable for the
sue
a
career in counseling. This students. "RD's don't want to be
position will be good experience.''

seen as disciplinarians. That is our
Katie Henry, 24, from Pleasant-
least favorite job," she said.
ville, N.Y., replaces Marguerite
Kathleen Flynn, 24,. from
Pakozdi as residence director of
Philadelphia, Pa., has the respon-
Leo Hall.
sibility of beirig residence director
Henry was resident director for
for both Sheahan and Marian
two years at Pace University and halls.

has a B.S. in education from·
"Marian and Sheahan each have
Rockford College and a master's

less students than Leo. I am the RD
degree. from Fordham.,

• ·• ,
of both
-
so we have· m(?re equal

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distribution," she said.
Flynn holds a B.S. in computer
systems management from Drexel
University and was a residence
director for three years.
Her office is located in· Marian
Hall, but she says she visits
Sheahan every day to be available

to the students.
"l
would really like to stay with
Housing," Flynn said. "So far this
year has been very pleasant."
Marist has a total of five resident
directors
including
George
Dioguardo and carol Graney, who
handle duties on the North End of
¢ampus .
okay/' said one Leo Hall resident
who didn't wish to be identified,

"but as soon as everyone else got
·
hefe it got really bad. I've
been
eatin,1,(Apple
Jacks for dinner." -
David Connolly, of Bingham-
ton, N:Y., chose to go to Marist
because of its Special Services pro-
gram. He praised the work of the
office staff.

"They don't treat us like
children," said Connolly. "They
will 'provide the services but they
expect you to take responsibility
for your work.''
Flaherty expressed some discon-
tent in the facilities for the han-
dicapped.
One complaint expressed by
Steven Maloney. of Bayshore,
N.Y.,
was that freshmen can't have
cars on campus.
"It's very hard to socialize off
campus without
a
car and then
there is nothing to do here," said
Maloney.
"The school got us a bus to go
to the mall," said Flaherty, "then
it didn't even show up. No one ex-
plained anything to us.''
Reinhart seemed to have the
right idea about the new ad-
justments and freshman year in
general: "l guess I'll just have to
wait it out. It's got to get better.''





























































































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o.· ...•.•..
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·.·-·.·•····.n:
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Page 4- THE CIRC~E- Sept~in~r 11,
1986-.
_.
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------------------·

---·-------------·-·

-------~-
..
. Room ..
_for changes
~
. .
'
.
Administrators have commented positively about the Class of 1990.
being the largest freshman ctass:in Marist's history,-butMarisUs not
adequ·ately prepared to accommodate· these students with proper
housing.·.··
'
. _-.,: ..
. .,.
. • ••·•·
•.. -.
.
..
For a large ,majority of students at· Marist, the campus isnot just
the place in which they study, but It is also their .Mme for eight months
out of the year. The housing.ofstudents is.perh~ps one oflhe most
• important.areas the school deals with, in ·that _it is responsible for
creating·.an environment in Whi(:h the.student may learn_and·grow .
.
A n.um~·.
r of freshm~n. struggling.· with
.. the. di.fficult. a~justment of
..
starting ollege, have been placed in inexcusable .situations.
•.
I
..
·-.·

. . .
'
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•.
Ffooms in both Sh!,lahan and· Marian Halls that were designed fo_r
two
~nd thr.ee students are holding an extra person. Freshman girls
-• were ,placed in. thawest wing
ot
the first floor in Champagnat Hall,
a tf~aitionally sophomore.dorm, and several males were temporarily
plapedin the.basement of. Sheahan.
.-·
.

All of the blame can not be placed in the laps of the Housing Office.
The individual areas of the college that provide service to .the student
body must work •in conjunction wit.ti each _other:
. , • . •
, Maristprides itself on its small size and family-like atmosphere, yet ..
even' most families: realize when the time comes that its home just is·
not11arge.
enough to accommodate its members.

/ • /Marisf i~ a community that is designed for a. smaH riumber·ot

membera: This very characteristic is one of the features that draw pro-
spective students to study here.
.

Cramped living conditions, students who, are not given the best
possiple se~ice for whjch t~ey pay .. and.the idea of giving students
incentives tp Hve off campuswiU'eventuallyl
1
destroy wbat the Marist
College_community i& all about..
: .
.
,
Offering ~tudents incentives to commute
lo
Marist will deprive the •
stl!dents of.a full college experience .Unlike tije ma~erial
that one learns
in class and often forgets, it is the experien'ce ~f living at Marist, be-
ing an active member and part of a unique community, from which
one learns and grows.


J
COU£Ge
PRESS
SERVICE
Chatripagnat resident who values a• .. obtafni11g pernuss1on to publish
between one and • a. half to four· Anderson and Paul Del Colle,
were
hot shower to· the•
transfer
who
student information. • .. ·"
.
years.··
mentioned most frequently as in-
needs to take another writing
The'pig winners in spcial events
The most interesting informa~ structors who took the time-to be
course or two because the credits
were theatre trips and music events, tion, however, bas
to be the. both caring a11d interesting.
were not accepted~
_,
follo'wed closely. :.•by dinners,
students' choices for courses·most
Humanities
Without. challenges, ho\V ••
.~ . speakers, clambakes and picnics.
enjoyed and· instructors recqm~
John White
0
history
letters
there really be any measure of sue-
Family events elicited the smallest . mended. :rhe reason'for iµchiding
Laurence Sullivansreligious
studies
~
.. __________
,
cess and accomplishnieni?J'frfnot . null!ber· of ..
votes> ~;
.
• • •
these questions was siniple;·,Adult
Eugene Best-religious
studies
Stu.
de.
nt voice
defiµing success as bejng :'the· best
~pparently many aduJt studen~
students. often- look 'for different
Micliael • O'Callaghan,religious
_student
J~.
t~e,cl~~c
O(t~,e.
~~t- .. feel a lack of «space" at M~st.
things_iribothcoµrses and instruc-

sti;:iam.Ol~ri-hiiitdry •
• \

halfbackontheteamorthebestac-
0•
50
'
- f h.
·
'.
tors than/ do '.the:fraditional.
·a1
n:."• •
h•i· • ·h· ·•
• \
,. ,

. . · . · •. ··
,
~

;.
;; ·, .. -, • -·.
- • - , ver · ~rcent•o
t ose respon-
.. · .
".·
.
. . . _ . .
. . . ..
It •
o ucnm~p 1 o.~op y
._-
To
the Editor: _.:
•.. ·
..
. !Oii}Il,the.i:>lay'.•Eash·on~
$~~~~s.
dingexpr~cfadesii:eforanadult
. _stl;J.de11~•.1;~~~,rccotn~;~~a.t,1<?ns.. ..
Mailagem~n~-~~lidles
. On lbe~~l[ o.f the n:iany SJudent
IS
l>~ec1.
on t~~. best _all.
1n:d.1v1~ual.

stji9~11t-Ioti~e~.
The
wheels. iu:e i~ • ~nqt,'.: _be:
: guaranteed,. smce,; w.e . , "),EmanueLC.arr.eas,busmess
. : . , "
~ovemment Jeaders, I war.roly and ..
~
•-~~•
i
q.o~,:
~h~~h~f
.9!
.,nq_t~,_t~~
c-.
motion.~bri ';this:.f ASU President • dori~tillways
..
agree 01i.)"ha~ma1<¢s, ·: .• ls~ilY,;f~r~.e-J;i~s\n~~fr,,·~
: .. , , ..
,;
.
enthusiastically-~elfonie everyone ...
c~all~?g~ 1s'.acc~mp!1shea.:9o~the
Giry,_Gta#4{has
met wi,th Dean, sorri~thing •,\VorthwhUe~·:brit.
they
:Franl(S~ Fehce~(j~smess
.
_l>ac;_k.1t9),~C:(9~.~1'll~l_1~_
,of
anotll~r ••
.••.
~~,-, .•
Al~
~9:~'Yh~re
__
we'.~~~.
~°,~
..
·.
JUliAAricJvlilhetJo
discuss this and . may.'be ;usefu1.·.as.
a ·guideline. for
. B,rot~er.
Jo.s~P~:Sa~!nc~;.b1Jsmess
acade~\cyear.,;_: . •. ; ; . . . • • • . .
m
w~at,<1,ir,e,cU~A,W.e.¥e.!ll9"}ng.
·· ·
.. other
&>rife~
.of th.eadult studerit
coAIW'lieh'·._selech·tihoil.'
..
\ ,._.. / ,d.:d
.•
·
{it'fn!:11~:::i:1~
0
;~iing •
.
For; most_,· th1s~-S~p_t~mber
_1s,
;t·_ A~cf,.~~en;YQU
~~al!eng~.
Y~1:1rst!l~,.
• _.
populatiqn ..
,(/,\\/.'' -, :_
{f:·
,
.· .
• •
.. ) .
oug, t ~. quesuonnaue .. 1. .
Oregory.Kilga,riff
~ortomics
. rett1rnto the Nan~t ,~ollege. cam~

you ~tablish the ,dlf.C!Ctu;,_11
•.
•, '.}· . • .•· .•.. ,"S~udi~ remain Wgh ()11th~
listoL
not.ask..which courses we.re ta~ght·
Ray Gila~accolititfug
. •


pus;_for C),hers'~/~•s
m,?nth lll~S

. For_thl!;stu~e11~
g~ye~~ei:it ..
~~~ Pfi.oriti~for .{l~lllt_
stt1dent,s~
as i}.,-
•.. . byJh.e1;p~~fesso~~:
r~Ollllll:en~_ec:I, .··. .-::
•·
·.
Aris.and ·LeUtrs ...
the st~u:t
1
of
~ ne:,v ~';}r'.l~ulupi
ata , _d1r~t1on
1sJ~~a~~" l,~)!J~lcii;tg
...
lustra~ed;;oy,Jhe .33;:,p'ercent
wlio • • nor•.41c{
1~~:k.
wlli~h ms.truct<>r,had
.,Doliald:A:nder~ofEnglish
''
new school; and for a ha~dful, t\1~ ..
•.··
fo:ry,:i.r~:to,,a.
year op,_et~
7
r
c:9m.~
-

..
would 'participatein:study'. groups
tau$hJ_th~
cours~ th€:y were'.recolll-
P,aut DelColle'.'(:onununications
fall se~ester
is.
~he,_las!.steP.JO'w.tr<ls
.• ,m11m~t~.~~h
bette! ,v~1b_1hty,_and 'arid the 25 percent Who o/O_Ul(fuse ,IDC!~din,g;
pne cour~e and profess?r
Casimir 'Norkelhinas-Russian.
and
a·DeCC!ffipC!r_~rad~!l!,O.~.<
'.\, :.(\
..
bett~r-'r~presentat1on o,f-,the:true tutors"; nventy percen(:oLtlie'
-~erec<>ns1stently-recomme~ded_in
°~:an''o~-fu
.: . ·.•.·· ..
,
For ev~ryqne, \th~rpe~ Y~.r
:1~
a .
-
Manst student'.
I
h1,tve
challenged women . who -·responded, felt the
JUS! . such.• a •.
manper. The•. S~v1
7
t •
James'Sim.
-~~.-fo.n-co
....
m.inuru.
·cations
challenge:.whethertliis year.IS so-
myself and you have challenged
.
need for
.
a:womeri;s · Center on-
U111on.,:I"oday
. W~th, I?r, Cas1D1Jr . Gcrald'.Brooks~ominunications
,
· ..
m~?n~;s ~rsfqr.,Ns;}ast; :~hC:ther

me •• -N~w • -I _chaHe,ng~.
rou! l .. · campus. '
> ·.
•. . ': ..
~

J
< ·. . , . -.;
N~rk~li~as
was
!efer_r¥ to
as
J'in~
Computer
S~en'ce/Matbematics.
res1~ent
1
\fr
\co~u_ter;_
~hether • chal!enge_ every_-_mempe_r
0~
the

• By
far;·
the.l~gest response __
t
9
.
!p_rrn~~1ve,1' ulf!Sl)I~mg_
?,
and
·Lynn Doty-'matheniatics
. . . · ,
f
flClllty ~ftnber or admm1strator; . 114ans! commum~y to. estabhslt a •
~y
ques~i~n
was
to that of activi- . •. fmb~ ;. <. •_·.·..
;
-: ; •••.
· .. ' .· ..... ·•·
John DeGiHo-computer
science •
whethe~ • ~.· offi~~ secretary or a
d1~~10n: ~thlevc~y _ or. extra-
ty. •. fees;:
.Fully;,
88 percent . of
. _v,ri-iety
1s th_e.
sp1~ of;hfe1r col~
Brother Donald K,elly~m-~the~tics
sports c~~ch ... tW~ year
0
-:':'
as every . c~mcularly, financ1~y or ~oc1al; • t~pon~e~ts wishecl,lo:know\vhere • lr~e too,. as showt1:bY t~e courses
Social
and, Behavioral
~
year_•~
a chal~enge.
..
.
..
Iy, and, of course, academ1ca1Iy. their: activity· ftiitds·-were going.
_enJ()y~d:}>Y
..
the, :_a<i~lt·_students.,, .
i~:~
ii~t!~t:~~o~
• .•
For me as the student body pres1-. Have a good seinester! .
.•
This' matter continues
to•
be .of
c~~tl\'e}~hote>gyaphy; : I11terper-,
Margaret Oold-social-~oi'k,
dent, it js the ch~lerige to ~e,the;
!1eter
A.
P~cnel
prime interest to the ASU and we
s~n,~·;Cornmum~ation~;_'.W~rld
Dorothy Hill:Earle-social
work
"~<>:-betw;en"
for,students apd. ad~:
Student ,Body President
hope tc>release
'm.fomiatiori on tWs . V1e-:vs
·and·
y
alues;
:
~USlf!-CSS
ru,id
·
Science _ . , . ·
m1mstrat10~. As llook towardthe
mauer shortly.

Soc1~ty; Real 13,state Title an.d
Samuel Mirto-science
.. ,;
next eight ~nd n~ne weeks,
·1
see.
Adult students
Twe.r,ty-five
.· percent
_of Search; Self, St?ry, and Culture;
Vincent Kotchar-science
. many meet1pgs
• 9n • my •.
calendar
. respondents expressed interest in an .
!l;lld
•Pers<>na},
History,
at1~
~uca~
· Respondents took the opporturii-
al!1ongst th:e footbal! games, - To the Editor:;

early evening chapet,service. The
uonal };xpenence-w~re amo~g the
ty
to make suggestio~
'and.
oom-
m1dte~ ex.~s apd _holtdays
.. For
Over ihe summer,
a
question~ . college chaplain, the Rev. Benedict mc,st _popular:. Also 11Jent1_0;11ed
. ments. Suggestion~ included, cen- •
me, . the. challenge is. not to get
naire was developed by The Adult
D' Alessandro, has been contacted
were. Persu~1qn, BroadcasttP,g, tralizing events; having ausecl:book
wrap~ around ~ll the J:!aperwork . Student Union/ and was mailed to
and a meeting wiU be arranged for
Pu~li~ Speakmg, Psyc~ology_
ap.d • exchange, establishing carpools
and t1me•·spent :on ummportant
overfivehundr'edofMarist'sadult
early in the semester.
Re!igion,
Accountmg,
1~2:,
and enlarging the evening course
concerns to the student body.
students .. But the tally has peen
.
Philosophy of Women, Personnel
selection.

Although student goveniment is
completed - Cln the returned
Students who expressed.
i
desire
Administration,·Financial Manage-
As witQ any orgaajzation, the
the voice of the student communi~ questionnaires.
; .
_,
.
• . to become involveowith. ASU have
ment,
j
'Scuba· and Skin Diving,
ASU ••
runs on the e_nergy and
ty at Marist, its leaders .do not
Among the topics addressed by
beeri·contacted personally by mail
Mass Communications, Human
cooperation of its members. While
always represen_t the true Marist
the questionnaire_.were .choice 9f ·· and/or phone. Thank youaU. We
Geography, Political Thought I &
many respondents wanted to come
student, which is the final challenge social events; courses enjoyed and
need interested; involved members II, 20th Century .. America and
to $ocial events, few were willing to
of my position:;to remeinbe_r
that
professors to recommend:-

if we hope to flourish asan on
cam-
Writing for Radio_ and T.V.
spend time setting up these events.
I, too, am a-student and I must.
• Di'scussion had been raised dur-
pus organization:

. Adult students commented that
Activities are fun and helpful, but
represent and speak for the true
ing ASU m~~tings as to the
• . Some personal information on
the instmctors they were recom-
cannot be accomplished by the
Marist student.

.
feasibility of
an·
adult student direc-
the responding students proves in-
mending were "caring," that ,"she
same_
few people all the time. Please
For the 'students, the challenges tory, so we addressed this idea on • teresting: 75 percent were women,
is dynamite," tbat "he knows sub-
come and get involved with the
cross the spe~rum ranging from
the questionnaire. While the vote
$2 ·
percent
were from the
ject well."
ASU. Meeting times will be posted
the new com~uter having to plan
ran three to one in favor of the
Poughkeepsie - Wappingers area,
Instructors are listed in groups
in classroom ~uildings and the
for heavy traffic along Route 9 to
directory, the project has been put
and although some had been
according to tl;teir division or the
Library.
the student who has changed his on hold for the present, while we
students at Marisc for ten years or
courses they regularly teach. Three_
major for the second time to the
search for a satisfactory method of
more, most had been attending for
instr"uctors, John White, Don
THE:
Editor:
Julie Sveda
Arts
&
Entertainment
Classified
Editor:
Gina Disanza
<.
Manager:
Associate Editors:
Bill OeGennaro
Viewpoint Editor:
Len Johnson
Business Manager:
;
CIRCLE:
Julia_ Murray
Photography Editor:
Mark Marano
Cartoonist:
Sports
Editor:
Paul Kelly
Advertising Manager:
_Mike
McHale
Faculty Advisor:
.
.
.
'
.......
.
.
. .
,.,
'
...
'
...
·,
.....
Carmen Lyon
Adult Student Union
I
Gary Schaefer
/
Jennifer Cooke
Don Reardon
David McCraw































































































































































-~--
.....
-·~
Vi
e
w
J)_t_C_J
__

.....
i_.·
_n_~_._t_._·
------
September 11, 1986 - THE CIRCLE· Page 5
'•, ... _
tfanSfer student still·
·appr¢Ciates··
Marist.
•.
by Donna Hood
pay $_10'.000
a year.to
an
institutitin
.
in the first place>Wtiether for pro-
.
·
maiiy
_of
us coriside:i
to
·be a•joke;
grams, location,·
size
or reputation,
-One
ev~ning last summe/i'{~;
Something is defmitely \VTODg
here .. something
.drew
e.ach of.
US·
to
into ~other Marist student at a
Of course; Marist does have its
·
Marist Co.Hege. Something made
.party
and e~plained_
to him that I
.
problems~ For ex.unp_le,'
there ltave this particulal"college
seem promis:
was transferring. When he heard
been inorestuderits admitt.ed;tban

ing°and worthwhile. Maybe after
where I would
be
going
this fall; he
..
can·:possibl.f
be
·~oused
J~
~y
.•
.•
bei1.1g:herefor
a
year or two, some
• laugiiecfalniost enviously and said,

humane fashion: Need I mention
of:
llsfost
sight of the promise and
"So how does.it feel to be going to
the lack of hot water ;in Cham-
opportunity which drew us. here
a
real school?"

pagnat? Or wa.tting on ihree-ho,ur
,
initially.
Pardon ~y naivete, but I. was. lines· at the-Registrar only to find
.
Perhaps my praise of Marist
not aware Marist College was a
you need·
ari

override? ½n4 bow
seems a bit contradictory in light of
pseudo-school.
.
.
.
: .
many professors will acfu~ly sign the fact that I have chosen io leave
The· more I· thought about
-his
one? I'lli silrel could go on arid on. the college/but consider the reason
comment, however~ I realized that
.•
At tisk oflosing face~ however,
I ~hose to leave Marist in the first
was the attitude_ of many Marist
I wo_1,dd
like to say that IJikeMarist
place.
.
students. To many~. Marist )s a
College. :ro me, Marist is a very
Like ~any _freshmen, I entered
joke; it is l\ota real school..lnfact,
"real school.»
college with a general idea of what
I can't reinembei: the last time I
At some point, Marist must have I wanted to do -
career wise ..:...
heard a student say

something
been real to each one ofus. There
but with no definite direction. I felt
positive about Marist. Imagi.ne, we
is some reason each of us chose it the liberal arts core program at
Marist
·
a.nd
..
the arts
by Deb· Kearney
Those students who do take -
studio· arts will find the ~•studio"
AtManst, the computer signifies

(two adjoining rooms-in Marist
,
'
\
.,
Maristicould help me fin~ a more
specific direction, which it did. The
two years lspent studying and liv-
ing at
1
Marist, the courses Itook,
and. the people I came in contact
with helped me find a more definite
direction. J\lthough.pursliing that
direction m~s leaving Mafist, the
school achieved for me a
·
fun-
damental goal of higher education.
Marist may. not be Harvard, or
Stanford, or Yale, but it is a very
"real" and ver; reputable college.
The fact that all sixty of the credits
which I attempted to transfer were
accepted by my new "real" school
.
proves this.
Reputation aside, however,
Marist is only as real as its students
consider it to be. The opportunities
are there and the education is there,
but if it is not taken seriously by the
students it won't be taken serious-
ly by anyone else. After all, the
students are the college.
At the end of four years
at
Marist, you will walk out of· the
McCann Center with a very real
degree - a degree which took a lot.
of hard work and close to $50,00Q,
to • achieve. Something brought
each of us to Marist College, and
hopefully that belief in the school
will have survived: But if it doesn't,
and you haven't made Marist Col-
lege a real school for yourself,
you've wasted a lot of time, effort,
and money. And that, my friends,
is no joke.

Donna Hood has enrolled
in the
School of Public
Communications
at Syracuse University.


••


·-
••••

-
·progress,
expansion and the future/ East) with outthe kindfof benches
.
In
a schocilso permeatechvith com~ and tables necessary to handle
v·.
.

.

nt •
0
.
pa e '
puters, i.sthere room for a more worksinprogress. Whiletakinga

1ewpo1 IS y ur
g .
traditional, liberal, fine sort of sculpturedass, IJound myself not
education and attitude, one that exactly pounding and forming a
I
f
h
-
} •
t
lendstoacollegeasenseofbeing
.mass_of,clay.Nordidtchiselaway
you
ave a comp a1n ·Or
versed iil both the· tec.hnical
o~ prac-
,
at wood· or gr~ite;

I was to deal
1
!~~:!::ttli:kn~~~JJ!!~t~t1
_,;jtti~:·~~~!~:&~rf~dnt:t:~·~-.
·c·
om·ni·ent"
that you

ant to let the
leisure'time
:and
higher teaming?' printmaking, welding, fiprig
·(for·
/

..
,
-
,

.


The theater, dance, ~usic and·fme. cl~y
.or
::ceramics)·
or., sculptii;ig;:
.
.
arts':should be·.moreimportant'"to' W.hen'lchose.todothis"semestei-'s
.
i/
·r·
e·.
s·t·
• of·t.he M.
·ar1
..
st Cornmun·
1·1y·
a.college lik'e-M:arisb:
,:..
.
:-CL
'.
\\/Of~.iri_hanging pap~r,J f~Und
1/. •.
.
.
.

••.

.
.

••
.•
. .
-
:Mansfspends ;
a,
g~eat
deal;
.of--
:'nowh~te
t<>
hang_ the work; saye. a
..


I
.
•tinie-
and::moneypromoiingJhe
:largepjpethatran in~o the·ceiling.
·k.
.
..
·.
b.
.
. .
..
f.
'

'
f.
.
programs:it:."offer~~-,Hcld\high
,MyiIIUnediateinterest,wasriot,tq'·

no·
w· a·
out
.
'I·t
s
yo·
·ur

rum
abov~/the'.~head.ar~.the
•~omput~r
..
/s~<>v(.t~e";w<nk;Jt
W.35,;_to,h,a,ve·.a:
. .

• ·
·
·
',
• •



·

.
••

scie.n.c.
e.
',•,b
...
us
..
in.ess;.,.an.d1co.·_mnirinica.
·"

.
.:;pla
...
ce.
t.
o hari.g:i.·t:.w
..
h.
J.l
..
e.·trm~~~d.
i_t



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.


• •




_tfons:prpgr~s~,;;A"dife~i~com1>li:-.,~T1-te:1.(afmti.~S/:·;w1tat*~n.har~iy,_

•,:•
•.
'"::···:\.·,.A;·.
··.:J:1·~1··.s.":s:,,.u.·.··.
·e:_·
;s···
·.,:·•·-·
··.,.·.·
..
-r·•a··

.
.
·
.·g··.·1•n·
g·.
·rr·.
o·. m·.
',,:·•i·t·he.
meiit fo;these scinietinies:
teclinitat:
•··'call-;ai
sttiaicf
.'.\are
~usea.
fot"all
'··

:,rt
,
ana,,ilieo"retiiai
lll'eas:
could
be'
one
,
levels'.ofdia\\'.i~g
and painting arid


·

\

'.
~6'rri!~Jitit~~a1:f~f~~t~t):~11~:~w~:~~~-hi;t~>-
Water.·
.
'
'.
tem.~p·-era
t
~i:r
e
in Cha.,
lTI -
in
T:Y,
c\vork-may'.:wanLto
gQ
'~pa~itYt<t·$t9.re:tatge,'sc\llp{hre
.
,
.
.
.
1
beyond/video·•into.(actual
film.
:(anything
Jarger/than,.a
:bread:
'.

••

.
·AJ..
\
.
h . d .
s
·.\
h

work;:The.pr~t,.I~nfh~r~i(that:t!t~
;.~A~~~t).
-HO~:~o~·a'department
••
·.P·
·.,
...

·
..
·.•g.n.
·at
t.
o
·
11
1
par.t.. e'
...
1
Ill
Out
.
"cinem~tography~• chiss'::has;.n,o('..
treateclJil<~;an
!lf~er_!h_oughtt~tjv;e
..
f#ri
on·~e Registi-ar'.sooard•.iiiilie
··

iir;an atittosp~erernl<e this
·orie?,
:,
..
years eve attended MatistAi(is-•.
~'.J9A~tC.fl}!lil!l,l_Q~s:ations!'school,:

A·fr1tl
·ca
.''duai

usted". as ''Comm/Fine

a.·.'.
darkroom·
:for
photography
.
.



•••
.Arts'!);
).'et.
Jt
and
>many
other should
not
have.to. be the last closet
class~: are.
_eyii•.;pres~itt
in:, the as~igned:
••
!11;
~ari.st:, E.ast,. !h~e

. ..

··11·
In·
·e··
·m·
b.ers
Of.
the
.
M ar1·
st
catalog; :rhe excu_se•of:.~•a
lack of. ar~astA.~.tmportantk_
'.
,
..
.

sufficieili:-student. interest''.
.does
.::
:
l··feelc
personally that. the' fine,st
nCit,:seein>sufficient
to a
.student
wayfo·attracfnew
students
to:tiie"·


'
-S"

;,
-
wiiow<>uldliketoseemoretheater,·. 4ifferent:finearts:lltMaristis:to·
.
·:•c:.·o·.
mm··
..
·Un··
1··,.-t'
·y,.
ar·
·e
1·.·nv,
1·ted to send·
music and studio arts courses

giy~full eyidenc~ :t~a(~hey exist,

offered.
function-andj:irovide·stimulatlon
to

1






a lofof.students'." This will not be


h • 5 00 7'
oo·
d V •
• t t
';H~-climat~
here'·at:Mansi ac~·
,accolllplished
by leaving:the pro-
.
e1r_
· ·

.
~
· ·
!
wor
.
1ewpo1n S 0
tually
..
s~ms to

be

stifling the
.
motion
·,
of these

programs. on
growthofagroupofartstheyfeel·
paper.-Themore visuallyevident•
L
·
J
h
-
._
free to promote to naive incoming tltey .u'e, the more attention they
e
fl
· .
()

fl
SQ
fl
. freshnie~. Wor.ks of art_
from pain-
.
wiU
get. We need a good studio for
.
.
tirigs to the large, steel and concrete works-in-progress. We need
...
a

sculptures:.are methodically being galleryto show accomplishments of
.
c/· o·
The


rcle .·
removed from: yiew qn

campus the existing program; We rieed•art
(and replaced~ by;;;?) There have and drama on campus. (Every of-
been no student ~h9ws {save a small flee at Vassar College is brimming
one organized by students and Dr. with art • work). Marist should
MontaltQ in the library)

since I·• reverse its attitude that the arts are
have attendedMarist. The "gallery secondary to all else and.start pro-

lounge"
of Campus Center;
nioting itself by taking pride in pro-
designed expressly.for hanging art; grams that have great promise.
hangs none, save the promotional
, "canvases" of a business meeting
this summer.
Deb Kearney is a senior studying
communications.
1
&1WR~
UNISEX
HAIRCUTTING
FOR GUYS
AND GALS
1-----,
=::·:-.:-·-
I
N£Xus•
•,;,
I
v~
I
I
COND!TtO!ClNGJ
.'1Em
,u111
I
L•..,1:9.C!J
113~•
THURSDAY
& FRIDAY
EVENING
IY APPT. ONLY
49 Academy St. Pok.
MON. 12PM - 5 PM, TUES.
THRO
SAT. 18-6
NOTE:
lonQet'.
hair or tinled hair may requife lddt1 charp. NO APPOIITMEIIT
NtCESSAAY
1'.


























































































































































































, .. ..---

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-~ ......
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-----
Pagt, 6. - THE.ClllCLE • Sept•m."-r:11,- 1986.-----,-
......
................... ______
...., ______
.....,
.......... .....,
_____
_
'•.
'll~¢·
lf..is/1,
lJfl.<l
ofhe:r
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(ftc{iJlltrJJsL..
.
.
.
. .
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JA:
redi.Ji(>f,stifulilel';
;
,

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·told/thcrcfaiibe'oril:foJic;rcasoni

··b·.•
..,:.:z:..
·y·····
f
·
·.
··
y.
u
.•
.,
llttaY:·
:,:'.:·.
re
wh
thefish\disa:·~:AsWeait:
.
Y.~~~---
-.--"
~
.
Soon~r"_o~.l~i~rF~v~J·~r~~~.
'
•·t
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;<e·
•·
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···t·h·:

_.'r·
··~nlw,aill,Y.Y:t;gue;~~~ls',hiiy~~
/
0
I1ilriY:icars~a·mJsician',I•,_:
•.
regardless ofquality,' is abandon-
'
.
'
• :_

.
• •
.•
'
tons; oL stuffY.;sta~u~' of,
d~~
'
havc·aiwaysfound that the sum~
ed
·in
favor· of the "new and,im-
mu·
rra·
y
benefact.ors ~d-~ustrious alw,nru,.
••
metis the mostexciting, and in,
proved" versfoil~
and Marist is cer,-
,
•..
_
_
·_.
___
.'
_
·..
_
_
b~t m~em
,arf:
~s
-~~.·
~ell~_Y<>}l
.'
fluential period of the year. The
tairily,
:no
,
'exception>
Whiie. the
may not
·kno~
this,J>u,t Man~t
IS

-
summertime
.'makes'
the

best
freshinan-'rilay
riot notii:e
too
·many
~·---------,
no~
••
officially~
a
1
(
lvy._
~gu~
•.
music; the:besi concerts, and.the
differences fr~#'when they. were
•.
-

·.
·
-
school,. and ~eve got _th~_ivyto
~teve~ts~.

..
here for orientation, some of. the
aJ?,d
tq~~chiin~~-<>fth~,
~?rnr,tands.
·:
Pr<>ye it •. This; summer, m t~c
•·
..
:
This,
,,,
year

_
was
.
no,_
"old~tiiners,''·otherwi~ knowo·as
.
I.admit.it's a litile annoymg at first, ~re~tes.t.s_e<;r~y,
th,ey started so.me.
.;ex~ptitj~-::-:whjJe.-
the
..
~umrpei:
upperclassmen·, have
been
st~ed
but it
gives
thefuonitors something·. 1,vy.
gn~wmg
~n
Qne of
t.Jt~
garages,'

teinps
.
~ere: relatively-
,''cool,''
by the· ''improveme~ts''.

which.
_
to
snicker about
and
it helps_niaiii- on. No~
,Ro~~;
,and:
Jl
s almo~t,
__
·there
were
a
number ofacts that


were· ma~:
..
on__
camp
..
_u_s
··ov_
,er_·
.•
..
)he
_
taiµ the G(?mptitef
qnter's rej>uta~ readyforunve1lins.. Naturally
i
th,~.
'.',st~td'
uP, the s~agf"'.itbtheii
••
summer.f~theircriesofwoclcan.
tion·as:the_larges(supplier for-the fishh_ad_togo-heJustw~ul~ !fit
tc,md
:performan~es,
·Van
oniyrepJythatthereisareasonOfor
Psychiatric Center..


-
:

.
tbe,im,ge.
l.~oul_dn.t, worry
_Halen,:'.
_fr~nt~<t
by San11ily
evecyt~iftg.·:,\:.·.,
-
,:,
. ,/.'
_-_,
,.While,
all
.these
changes_ were thQt1~;- l>ecause_
as
soon ~. the

Hagar;sold·outto aµdiences~all
.
,

Take; for example;
Oi~
new fire
'relatively
minor,Cthere
was one loss
.
.otherJvy
µ:ague<
,
scMols find:
over
:
the world while their
·
alaniilsysiems which were
_install-
.
suffered over
.
the suininer
·which.

~~~t
:pc~etr*cd'
their
.
r!1llks.
~y.
·_
albµoi;.s
~ SO;
·stayed_
~t
_nuii_l~r:

ed'in'the·iiouses on North
Road.
has ~n.kee'nly re,t-~d
'
stroiigly
·
ditching the mbdert,1 art, they II
one· for-most ofthersummer.
These system$, whi_ch·ar.e'the
same . prote sted •• I

am. speaking, of staf! buyiJ.ig
ml>deni art just tog~~
Other bot
·events
iriciuded
·the·
as. the ones
·originally 'put
in the
course; of ciiµ-dear_ departed fis~.
._tid
of _µs. Naturally_ Yle'U have_
to
·Amnesty
_
International
.c
9~~
_.
Garden Apartm~rbs; do not res-
• T~e fi.s~.
has long
bet:r
regil!ded
as
.
get some to cc,mpete, so ~e ~hou!d
spiracy. Of Ho_pe
,-Tour;
·This
.
.pond
to
_smoke··ano
flam~, but
them~Jorl~<hnark~f.M!lf!stCol-
have_ th~·:fish b~c~
_withm.
six
tour was· organ~d-·.by/t~e:
steao:i After-all. any-'idiot.knows.· lege~the. ~-~~er,,of the social _a11d ~onths ~-t the. latest~.
: .
...
.

.
Americaii fa,~ti~fa:or Amnesty
.
tliadf the kitchen. tablds ori.·firc.-.

:
~ultur~
·life
~ere;
._After
_al_k
1Sn't
..

.
• .Let me leave yo~.w1th one final
international; aJi
:orgarii~tion·
'it's·
about time,
to
head for. the
that
_Ylh~r~
,Simon
Says is ~layed puzzle that
YQU_
can
.unc:l~>Ubtedly
which bas been working tciJree
-

d
9
or; but
'J
bet you. had noJd~
every SpJ?~8 Weekend? It. 1s al.so

:figure _out
i
yo~rself. . P1ctur~

a

politicalprison~rs for. 25 years.
/
/
·,
how hazarddus·the·steani from the
the ~efi~tiye sym~ol-of not only bedroom with two, door;s,
.o~e.
of
The shows featiµ-ed some of the-
·.

shower can
be.
1

mean; you_
get
all
our·. Chnst1an
-
htmtage
1
but•· our
.
t~em. perfectly· normal ~nd .(unc~
biggest names in_ internatonal
i
_
wet and.•.you.f skin· wrinkles ~d
alcohol-r~la~ed ~en~enc1es
as. 'Yell.
.
llqnal, the
.
other· off~nter.-_ ~d
rock music: toda,y
;-
Peter
_

your hair-gets•mussed.''Thisjs no.
-Althou~~-th~r~-
1s ~. ru~~r that
:
-~
1mg cro.o~edly. Whi1:h dooi;.-w~
Gabriel; U2, and the reformed
.
.

gamewe'replayfug, this is seiicfos;
IBM;_:was}~OllS_~.~ey
kidnapped•
·
m~t~~ over the s~er
and _'VhY
.
Police headlined a two week
Speaking. of games, did
·yoµ•
(~sl;lnapP,ed.) him a11d brought does. 1~
lead m~o th~;k1tchen sn~k?
U.S. tour. to help create an
.•
know that's
;lVhy.
they put in-the
him to the IBM Countl1'. Club, we Face it folks_, the
.
new.
8!1d
im-
awareness of .the functions of
,-_··.

i
How about all the "gold
albums that hav~ permeated the
charts over the summer?· In case.
you aren't fainiliar

~th "the-


icrm; a gold'album is one that

has sold
a
lialf• niillfon
copies;-,
.
It's rifreshing to ~.variety
of
different acts·. making g(?ld
status· these
.
days .. The
Rap
.group
Whoudini has 4one
it,
·
becoming only ibe
.second
Rap


group· to acco111plisb.
this
·
feat
..
( the
..
first ·beiµg l,lµN DMC).
Along with Whoudini, • a few

newcomers. have'..attained
_tlie
lev~l(of gold.: INXfk Robert
Palmer,•·
.The:.
Pet
.Shop
Boys,

The Pretty in
Piilk'·
So,undtrack,.
_featuring
OMO.

and the.

Psychedelic Furs; and.the new
supergroup GTR:


..
As ~.e. moye
·~ong.
irito
)he
.
fall~look forward-to someinore
of the bestfo•music tours when
.
the wildman himself David Lee·
Roth comes this .way in: early
new sidewalks. by
:
the
cbapei?
hav~ been un~ble to receive oonfir~ proved" Manst's warranty Just ran
Amnesty International.
.
.
That's right folks, Marist is the on-
mation._But, 1f the truth w~~e
to be out.
, ____________
..... ____________
_,
October;-




ly college with both'·
a
beginner's
:
.
·_
and
·
an
_
interinediate.
'
level
•.
hopscotch board. You don't have
:
to play in the street anymore;
·we've
hit the bigtime frow.:

_ .
•.


Another change people may not
have been aware of until they saw
••

the heartwarming me$liagel'CODE
NOT AUTHORIZED"

was the
reassigning of computer passwords
reef<

-itnpressi.ops.:
.•

,!


.
.•~-
,·.
'.:.
___

·,s·:,-
-:-d·.
,b-
·:.:_
·M:
··;
-
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by. Maria'.Gordon
-
.
\
'
'_:·.·.:_·.
>>
/'
':{_'/'.;.:_~;·,:
'./\f:_;;":.,i;:·.·
..
·::\:::':
:_··-·
• • -
_.
Soll11::ti111efa;simplefi1¢
~an_~y
scf:iriucli~
;aJi~t;_after
a,suiniri';(Of:
.
·'.':-\liens·'.'
:'.-~-'Elight'
>qt:._
:the.·
•.
}:
~:;~dt~{::~:~f
{fj]-};;;~~;;f.
-
..
change: which
'brings
tiS
back·
down.
to'.earth/1,
·/':
·,:
.-
::•->·;·:_·
'. •
:aasi&i"~t,~_Stepi~ii
Kitjidiqvella
. .

(
aric.t,.?
dfrei~efl
:by;\
,Ro~ ••
R~i_nef,

.. ''StanctBy
1
Me?~~s
with Joss ot_

i~ri~~il~\~ll the
.1~5Q'i-Al!hougJt·


audiences· may
•.be
borecLwith this
theme,. the;
film·
t6ros·: out to be •
...
simply 'wonderfuLL,
>
:
':>::_._.
,

.
t
.
The
StOQ'
q'~
~J~6.
;Qor4on
:
LaChaiice; played
,by>
Rich.ard
.
Qreyfuss;
_is
writing
-about
Labor

Day.weekend 30.years ago>Using
a ~tory.within,
a,
story framework, •
.
the writers: R~ynold Gideo~ ~d

Bruce Evans present two views of
',
life; firsi-·tiirQugh
,the
CY~
of_
• ;
12-year-oldG,;,rdi¢ and hisf~ends,
',
..
Chris, Teddy. and Vern; and se-

:
cond, through 42-year-old Gor-
i,
don's narration of the story.

Gordon is writing about he and
j•
his friends setting out to find the
; ..
'body
of R_ay J3rower, another
••

12-year-old who was killed by_ a
:_

train. En route,' the boys discuss • .
:
their friendship, their dreams, their.
. • prQblems and the all-important
• .
question "What is Goofy?"
Between the dialogue, which at
times seems\ beyond the boys'
.t·
.years,
the expiCSSive
camera work,

the scenery which is as expressive
<·
as the boys, the soundtrack of
:
golden oldies, and the narrative
:

,
which'.so brilliantly directs our feel-

ings, "'Stand By Me" makes the
\• audience think, feel and remember
what it's like to be 12 years old
again.
This is a film written by adults
about children, but it is amazing
how well Gideon and Evans
remem6er youth. The movie may
not be action-packed or out of the
ordinary, but it makes us reflect
and reason, which is the movie's-
QUESTION
#l.

WHAT
IS
THE
RIGHT
CHOICE.·
,,

·'
'
'
.
'
'
'
..
FOR
MOST
COLLEGE
SJUDENT-S?
..
---
~.-,·:>:.:
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·_AT~T~-fc>.f~~~yd~.$t;~l)'5,,9.fi4P~%1h:»overf
: .....
, ,.:·,.
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.:
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7
:.~~~·
-·~:,
-,~
5~%:·off•v,eekday
rates~~•fout~_of..;stQ;e·calls·~~
--'~··'.v·
_,._,·:.:r:.
,,
Ii)
~ort~~·c>,fi~~
s~.J01~by:
.•
<
01!l86AT&T


· ,
h®-rs
of~nti,c partying~

.
•.
:

>
._
. ·
·
·• .. '
.
. ·

-

er AT~-~for excepti~narv~1.".e-Qnd:higli
q~lity
.
·_
.-
·_
••
'
·•

'
service.-
.:
d)
•.
AT&T~for:c9llecf,·
third-party anci
opjra~r~/
9~sist:ed
I0".'9
_di~nc~
c9lls~'.-

-
-
.
. . ~'~·-·
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ej ••
~~y
clasi:'tfitat
d-~s;:not"cdnflict'widf
~';Tl,e.-:LC)ve
Connection~~:-


·-
·
,
..
·
'
·

.
.
.
_.:_
;
,;
.
·
·
·: .
:
ff you picked
A,
Ca~d D; you're destined for gr~hhin~:
-
.
Like AT&r Long Distance Service. AT&l'
offe~so.many terrific· •
.
values;Lik.e
a_40%
to
over_
50%
disccmpfoffour day rate on night,
-
evening,'
ahd weekend out~of-state C;alls
..
••

· ··
-
Imagine what you'll dowith the
money
you could save.

Imagine what your parents.would do ifthey found out:'
·
·
-
Of course, you.can
·oourit
on AT&l'
for clear long distance

connections any pla~
you
calt And
Al'&J,'
gives you
immedia~ ~reditfor wrongnymbers ..

--·
• .
.
To
find out more about why you
should choose~
give us a call.
And if you picked Band E, call any-
..
.way.-YQU
could probably use someone
to talk to.
Call toil-free today, at
~
I
1
~~
222-0aoo.
_
AT&T
The right choice.
strong point: a return to feeling. '--------------------------.-----.-------
'
I
.•
-,
I
·
...
,
,,
I









































































































































































September 11, 1986 - THE CIRCLE- Pa e 7
:New,
llllln
••
at
hoop/
.JILelm

·_.;..::..
.
'~
.
.
:.
.
..

j,,.
Pau_l·
KeHy
·.

...
.
.
s~ii
·wti~•s.
s&ihg
to :ci'ojhe j~b .•
:
·;.
.
··.
.
.
.·'
;
t_h
..
Ursday·.
Also, there·is'morecommi,tme,nt
:
: Encircled)y pictures; trophies,
here and an·exceptional gr(?UP
of
'.
·and
other· various items of
.m
...
··.orning
·.·
.
kids liere;'' he)~id.
.
.

\memorabilia
there
·hangs.
on; t_he
.'-:Other
coacli'cs: could· have
·sat
:'wood~paiieled
walls
oL
Dave.
·q·u·.
art_e.
rbac··
k
backand becoinecomplacentdur<
j
Magarity's Mccann C~nteroffice
~
ing' this 'time· aiic(siinply, let the
•.
:,
a plaque that reads, "Don't Quit~"
McCarin.

hieratcliY· spoon-feed
\;,,
.
• ::ri'!ft]p~~!IE
·
·•
5:~~I~f
iti:l
Nil1J;it:fi?,i!:~l-:_-t~-i-i
...
f-q:'}1
1
\-~--•:f
::IV/:-•··•:·
..
_,/;
.

~~~~;;;;:~~;
[ii~~~~f
t~~
-
·~Me:-g(_:·K~~v-·&'~01-1·.~:~:.
·:
di for his life.
••
:
.


•.
·
Magarity had. to trav~lto such not-
Magari ty,
35,

became the

so-close·places as. Holland .

seventh head coach in the history
Magarity's: philosophy to the
of the Marist College men's basket-
game refl~ts the level of respect he
.,::iRlione
·.4'111.rW.RDH.ic.
w::;::S
J;;~::c-
.
.
Dave
""adty
\
-;~i~J:ttr?g;\~':;.~_'X
·,
.••
i •

••
;,, ,
••
•··••


j
·•··

,
-~'Y-oul"job
isto take·care of the _________
._ .. _._
.. _
.. _
.. _
.. _-_-_-:.,-_•_-:,-:_-:_-:
________
_,
set for season
ceeqiilg l\-fatt Furjank.
.
.
,'
,
kids that you recruit/' he not~d:
.
.
..
·
Tliefirsteviden·ce ofMagarity's
.
:
Hoops holds a lowerlevel oflm~
by Ken
·Foye
. ,. ·
..
,
.•·.
, •
devotion
to
the
work
ethic arid to pqrtance to Magarity
than
the ideal
,
.

.•

.•
;;·::_,;,
,';'
••• •.
,•
.. : \:_.,.;.
'!·"·
;:;_,i
··t·
:\th9~:\Y~0J1e._com,~
in~gt11ci
~Jh.:
_C>f
creat,!~g
'}~~:.t_otal·'.,st~d.entt:
.

..
•: c:
-if
i>til'.;_tetW'Jlm}·~~I~:.'
play~rs~
. -occurred·
during the'.exteiisive
quC$l
.:
,,.
athlete;
.
an·
..
,
att1tu,_de;,
:.«cx~remelY.
·•
:

•·.
will
'serv~~a(tbe:,t,ac~ne:ot:the
:,
/tor:~
~uc&ssor,
t<>
'FurJimie:during
::
••
_foreign
:'·tif::;thtf:~.~f,iin
:;
.floor
'Io~·

j

·MaristiCol~egf..,wonien's:,teiiliis
.
tht{s~<>rm}'Maydayidp:Mceapi'i:,_;
McCatinfor
~~ef;~lf•-~-.f
6~ple
<>.fl

te~nf~.
Jt_ kicks.·.
o.
ffth.
·e
....
1986 seaso_·
n
,
:
'._
'Maiarity
••
..
eft Jiis'j.<>b:~•a.'.
n
as
__
·sisi_·
.•
,
yea
___
rs,
..
H
..
e
'!?9~_n_W
~~_:
..
.
•.
p.
r_p~~ly'
t.ol
this.w~k~,

>·
·,
..
:

•:
.
.
tant a(forta-ail.d
was
iriun'ediately:, the fact that wlille. achmg at St.l
.

·-·.:-::.·.~---
...
'.flie
_Red
foxes
\Yere
sched.ule<i
!o
. •
coiirted
by
111_;~.ny_'
fop
·Diyision:·
1-
.•
Francis· (Pa.)~ his,J>1ayer(attaiiied;


play_ at V~sar'yesterday and,.wdl

.
schools': One of those ugentlemeil
.
a
graduation r~te
Q(99
percent,
.
'HOT.
I
OFFTHE
WIRE!·
take on' New Rochelle at
.home •
callers'~ was Maristarchrival·Siena
.
and amongst them, two went on to
·tomorrow.::
The results·. of
.
the
College.
It
appeared_ that he land-
becom(? doctors, and four became
Vassar match were unavadable at
ed the job at Siena,
:and
in
.·a

lawyers.·
.
.
.
. .
.
·
press time.
.·, ·.
.
blunder· similar
-to
the Truman-
Magarity•s·interest at MarisUs
···.Junior
capt:un Joelle Stephen-
:
Dewey episode in 1~.JheAlbariy.
not exch~siv~IY,him,g!ng.thesecond

son,> Marist's· ~ard_shitting first
.
·papers
reported thar·he:had lanti-
E9A<t;,ch3:InfJ!C?ns,~up_;ba~ne~
on
:.
seed, hopes_ to.p1clc up.:whei::e
she

_ed
thejob: •
... ··:
·'\'/,"'.
_
-;:·
_;. ,thepql~she~
walls of'.McGan.n;;He·

.
i
left
off afte~ he.r:strongJirii~h last.
.:
.~ontrary
to thlu: f~~t/ ~agari~y.
··.is
a r~:e'br~
~~
days,,ru.1
,h<ln~~
season. According to Co~ch T~rry
,
remembered the
,•offer
from his coa6h wh.o cares
1
about '.his kids
.
• :'
fackreI,

Stepheµson:. ,i~
,
..
''really

i
Jriend''at,Marist,' Brian>Colleacy~
·•·-fn
f·only
;_foi'-.ho~'many.:pressure
:,
psy~h~;,'
-:u.itho~.~-~
av<>i~J~e:··
_tli~
college'.s
a~hle~~>dir#tor'wh~m.
•.'
.
u_l ~ho~,th~fsj~~} b,~~;als? for
•.•.
~
~l'?\V,
-~-~~::~h~,-.~!1;4
_l~,t
:,Y~.ar:.'::.:;;,.:
.,-·,
.
he kp~w_Jr9m their day~; t9_getij~r
·:,;i
o~.
m~Y
t_ests.they;p~ and items
..
.
,
·
..
'-/the,
f'.oxes


J
nu,ni~r-r-t.wc:J',
s.eed,
• '
..
at.Jona; and took the
RC(I
Fox helm
.
· •
of
,~ote.
~hey
,
accompl,ish,
~ff the
.
--:ju.r,i.i~r:~he~~
..
~~4!ey;· retuills fr~JP.

in
'arf~leverith
hodt-' signing:

;'
':
..
court
·and_~afte(~~~uation.

.
..
Jasf
:}'e~'f'teaaj
.aft~.r.;
sp~.1.1~~g


Magarity; how~ver,
,discount~ . ·
Don't; ~orry
:p~_v,e;
the
-''..ki_ds"
• :
~~f~H1m,e,-:<>n.Jlie
.co~~,:'t0fS,P,~(:
·•
c.r?ri~m,~~w~n:hi~elf
ru.ict,
Ce>ls,,
.•.
W?n't:qt11i~.~flt~e s.e~on_d
b~nner
..
I
·Across
from Marist·
Next to Skinner's
Mon.-Sat. 11-11

.
.
.
4;73~73:13
.
..
f,~~~f;:.}~.J3.r~p~~tJ_9~_J<>~.fhi~:
~:'le~:rt:as'-_the:reas0!l'.'t!:iat:he.
got:th:C'."'.~~lhb~~
]a9g~f!g-.fr~~:
!_1!_~
.Jt~l;: • •
-~ ..

i"'
IIC:.ill---.liiiii"ll"
~f
._.
,
•.
·
'i\:/
:~i;::~:i
?~~:tJ~fi~J,i!~~t·tj°'~;~•:)1,Wrlgoiiif
tg,h~re,\t,per;~-,.•:
i:·!Jfter~,.<?f;·~c9~~W~t.~~ff~Y-.•~:

~::,,;.
:

p_layer;
,;()~ •
the: ..
t~
_last
·:seas(?ni
.•.
I•
.
hopes·:19.:-have an:: equ~Uy. goo.d
.

·:-·
.
. _i
::J~.t}tJl~-tt.~j:•~~~rr•
..
··LADIES
••
•.,:\Another-,,,retumee/·:··Beth
•Amt·
,
Sai,in4~r~~:t~LJu,ii,i<>r:;C:
wiil·
i_be\t!ie:
squaa'sfoiirih seed::Like Stephen.:
:so~;-
~a;~~~c~{h?~.t<>
et~~~)l
~e:-
.
•.
cc,nd-sti:aight,ear1y~s~on-·
s1ump.'.
.....
,
..
.
:
Freshrµ~::#npi(et °Leo:Iiard;·_
a

gradliate:~(O)ir. EadyofLcmtdes

.
. .

High S.chool iri-Poughkeepsie;will

.
~~lii~Wt;~i::·•.·
··•.··
''C._.
a···t·
·.c·
__
!:b:·•.
-A--_-
..
·_-·-.R:
•·s·
.1·n·
·_g\
·
S.tar-''
·'.
unclaimed
'atsfhe
nionient,
,\Viii.
be

_
filied
i,y·ori~·
of
the team'.s
.four
other, play#s';:Jwo
:of:
whom' are
retufoi11g:fr;on(lasf.y~•s squad..
·*·.
'
.
.
.
.
.
·:•
'Juruor
L!fiita'Mti-ri'ay;
maintya
·.


:
•.
:

.
:: >
doubles P.l~ye'dast,'season, played

:.
·.
..
.
.
.
.
.


in the'sixth positio11
·occasiohally
in
•.
•1985,
Mota Nelen·~lso.fettirns as
..
a ·possible
..
s,ixtn,
singles: player .
.
Two'-newcomers round out the
·
• _
worrien's't~ for>tiie
'1986
season~·
:
·Karla.Bellotto~:a·second~semester
freshman,;,
transfer student,

joins
.-
the teani'this
year
along with senior
Lisa Layin.
.
'Are you denying
.
yoUfSelf
a bett~r shof
at grad schoql?
You may.
if
you fail to take a
Stanley H. Kaplan prep course.
Kaplan has prepared over l mil··
lion studenls for exams like the
I.SAT. GMA.T.
GRE and MCA.T.
Call.
It's
not too late to do better
on your grad school exam.
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STANI.EY
tl
KAR.AN
EOUCA!lONAl
ClNTtR
OD.
OONT COMPETE
WT1li
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•,I
O
,
..
',•
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i
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TONIGHT

Ill
the River Room
at
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p.m.
• Free Admission
• Prizes &. Giveaways

















































































...
,r-'
{
,:
'
,,
'
'
:•
:'
~
/
f
r··
'1
,..j
-~
i
,
•.
~
Y,:'
t:I
!..,,
t-
1 • ...,
·'
'~->i
{.
• S0_·_0.·
__
r_,~_._t_Si
------1~1----------------.----------~--
Page 8 -. THE_
CIRCLE.-September 11, 1986 --
P
0.t
•.

Torza,
··resigns
as head·
cciitch·•

.
by Paul Kelly
'.'l_'m sorry-to lose a'person of
Patty's- caliber;'' Colleary said.
PattyJ'orza, the Marist College
"However, she decided that a
head. women's basketball coach,
inove at this·time was in her best
resigned'.tinexpectedly Sept.
L. ·
interest; I respect her decision and
According to a statement releas-
,vish her the best
.of
luck
in
the.
.
~
by Bob Bordas,Marist sports in-
future."
.
formation director, Torza stepped_
Torza could 1iot be reached for
.down to. "pursue a career outside
comment. CoUeary
~d that he had
• of athletics."
• _.· -
no indication
of
her future plans.
• Brian
Colleary,
'athleiid director
The.search fof-Torza'.s replace--
at Marist, said Torza quit because • ·merit-.
J,egall'-alm_ost jmritediately
of "personal ·reasons." He also
after her resignation was:announc-
saidthat he had talked to Torza the
ed .. Colleary _said
.thaf he hoped-to
'previous week· and noted that she __
• name a new coach iri approximate-
was ,very enthusiastic about t~e up-
ly two weeks .. Notification of the
coming season._
position opening has been sent to
every
NCAA
·Ssch~ol · and the
,classi_fied
section of The Ne\V York
Times, according to Colleary.
Torza, a 1973 graduate of
Southern - Connecticut·
State
University, posted a 40-48 record
in· her three. years at the helm at
Marist. Her • teams also· made
postseason appearances each of
those three years;
'Last season;' Marist was 12-17
overaJ], • and.
9-5.
in Cosmopolitan
Conference play. Despite a slow
start, the squad managed to qualify
fc:ir'
the conference playof(s.
.
Torza had an excellent recruiting
year; bringing in six freshmen to
The Red Fox football- team kicks
-
·. •
.
...
.
off opener against
IJ.!
ckinson
, By Dan Pie~fesa .
'
Allin Affuso of
:waiikill
and Tint' Flavin of.the
• :·

Bto~ _arC_·can~d~t~-
in·
th~ defensive b~ckfield .
. 'The Marist footbati'· team: enters. the~season • • ~he'.<juart~r_back:,situation
remains a qu~tfoii. -
opener Saturday at Dickiiison .College in Carlisle,
This season shows· the pr~encc of four. qu_arter--
Pa., on a I>Qsitive
note' aJter posting
a
7-3 win over
backs:. returning juniors Jim .Fedjgan of Lourdes
SUNY a(Stony- Brook Saturday ·at:Marist. . .
High-School in Pough~eepsie.alid Jo11 Cannon to
. The team is coming to its mostsucc:essful season
go along with newcomers Jason Thomas
_of
Wap-
ever underHead • Coach Mike Malet posting
a
&-3
pinger_ and .Fred
.Christensen
of Red Hook;.
mark in· 1985. The season included five shutouts.
The issue is
settled
in the offensive backfield with
Dickinson, coming off a
1-8
season, lost -five
Ed .Christensen and fullback Mark Burlingame.
games by a total of three points or less. The teain
-• T9e tight end remains. as -}Jerman Herodes of
returns 10 offensive starters and seven defensi~e
Poughkeepsie ..
starters. The game can be heard atWKIP 1440 on-,-
the AM dial with Ed Weir and Brian Colleary call-
~The offensive line remains intact with the likes .
ing the action. •
.. _ _
.
of-Sean Duffy;Phil
Madami,
Tom McKierman,
• Saturday's scrimmage answered a few q~estioris
Ari.dy:Jsracl arid guarcl J<>hn Schiavone, a former
for theteam in.eluding the rirob_lcm
in the .d~fen-
startei•at Syra~e- thilversity. •
.
, _.
_
,
sive,secondary that interct:pted
24
passes}~t y~r.

Her odes inay also ·see. some duty af punter, a
Mos(notal,)ly gorie is Franklin Davis who qu~er-
• posidori)eft :vacand,y.
I?~vis
(33~~ yar~ a punt).
backed ·thesecoil<:lary_
at safetyaild. ~ece>rded
~5 _ Enter_-frt:Shman.Mike.Maglioca.of -~sterdam,
ta·c•
kle--s Als·o ·gone are 'Jim :van Cura and Jeff
• who''.not oniv r",:, foi:111
OOOy.ar.d._sahis·senior
year
Friedri;an, • who r~or~ecl 62 .. ·and ••
54 /~~~les - •
liife#ne4
~.Jifa:t.~A~!h~~te
_hd°'~r~

iv~I,I
respectiveiyi·: ._,_-~,O:-:·: :-:.-\·, .,
•. /,/
• _·· atr!hepu,noo,gpos1t1on._,; ; .. -.-_·_
·.
'.

• =·.Thei:esi
of the defense.returns eh¢; Mark Sc~at-· . ~e
~~
spot ~1tt~e;s~U!1:dlasty~ want the
temaii
and
Brian CescaLM:ike
McQuire arid
LllJ"ry
field goal kicker's position whei:-e
,~ p~nna co,n7_
Cavazz:a
at
gtiar~
and liitebackers'.Seari
Kee11ru;i
and
verted six
.of l1 •
poinr after. attempts and missed
Stephen Whalen. ~ctuming noseguard;._C_h.ris
. • b6thfield
goal
attempts:,Stan Sarley.of~ourdes,
Keenan is a pre~season
Football News all-~tar.Pick.
Eric Crailicll of Connecticut and;:Bill • Rose -of
Poughkeepsie's .Jim Ross
rew~
as. the, o_nly. __
1
yv
0
bas.
hingtoµ~e a_re'
fighting· for the ~ghts t? the
secondary veteran. Brian K¢e!)-an
of HoP,Cwt:ll·_Jft.,
·fox trail
by
Paul' _Kelly
~~J
~t the.-Fairfi~ld
iii~tatloqal·
• . Saturday,;:.jThe me~~s.tea.n,.
0
finisb--.
The Marist men's and 'women's - ed .a disappointing seco_nd
oui'of
a:
•. cross counfryAeams opened their field
.of
9 'teams, losing fo New
.
.
.
• Transfer- Joins
: b-b~ll squad
by PaufKellf
Joey·
O'Connor,
a
6-4
sophomore point guard from
. ·Metuchen, N.-J., has enrolled at
Marist after transferring from the

University of Nevada-Reno and
plans to play riext year oil Marist's
men's basketball team, according -
to a prepared statement issued by
-_Haven·J48: .• The. R¢dfo~had
won the meetthepas_t two years; ...
Junior
-Don
Reardon won the the
5,92 mile race fo 32:09 ... Follow-
ing Reardon
was
junior Steve
Bre&-.
nan,
sophomore
Dave • Blondin,
junior
Jeff l'Jicosia
and sophomo.re
Bob Sweeney.
The women's team
placed third
in
a field of 9
teams ... Senior
Jean Clements
led
the way for the squad, followed by
sophomores
Jennifer Fragomeni,
Helen
Gardner
~
and
Pam
Shewchuk...
Rounding out the
field was freshman
Jean Harris.
bolster the·
Red
Fox roster. C6l~
leary said thai her departure would
. not _have a significant --effect on
these players, as they were 11ot en-
tirely familiar with Torza's·_.
coaching style anyway. ;
?-;
"We'.re young; and I ~ori;t know
if it has had a great effect.yet/'
Coll~azy sai~.
• •
·Marist Women's -·Assistant
Coach Ken Babineau is a candidate .
for the" position but c1mently h~.
a full-tirrie job as a teacher' ill th,e_
Rhinebeck _ school district • and
would have to forfeit that job in •
order to assume the head coaching
duties . at Marist, according to
Colleary.
Pat Torza
Booters drop opener p-1-;
Goldman remains optimistic
by· Don· Reardon
_ . .
.
more,t' he said ..
The Marist College soccer.teani
-Golcijnan saicl.that the team will
dropped its season opener 6-1 to • play very fast~paced, offensive soc-
Syracuse University Saturday at _ cer. C'hhink:we'll play entertain-
Leonidqff.Fiel~;.-but Head Coach ing soccer. We're going to go out
Dr. Howard ·aoldnian said he is there and try. to attack the other
pleased with his young team's pre-
team
offensively. We.will win more ,
season play and is optimistic the than we lose and we'll have some-
booters will better their 9-12 record fun while we're doing it," he said.
of last :year.

The champions of this year's
"We need to keep a • gQod ECA.C Metro Conference will earn
tenacious attitude;, Last
·year's
an automatic bid to the prestigious
seniors just didn't produce arid the NCAA. t?umaJJ1~n!,.
he _said
1
.
·•
- team -followed their lead " said
The chiefcompetmon In'.the con- .
Goldttlan. • • ,
• _ ·_ '_ . _ _· • ference
wi~
~me.fr?m t~rola ,~d
• The Red Foxes pl!lY Fairfield at
.
Long Island , µ?iversity, 1,csaid
4 p,m •. today af Leonidoff_'I<"ield: Goldman. ~•They re botll, s:tro~g
The-teain will-travel· Saturday· to
scholarship.programs, and~HJ is
. Moiln1outh and challenge Hudson
comprised't>rima,iily
<>f,sQ7"e,skm-
..
. Valley'.jrival
.•
Army ..
a'.t':West.
P?irit ed':for~i~~~hl~t~l!,_·.;,it
·1,;
'.l;,'.,
TilesdaW•;:; ·:,;i,t
t•
.•:,,;;,~r,
1
•1?
1
_
,_,:JuruorJoe:Madclenwillbest_ar~
·• ··_
:-_
Goidman said thai. the team.has . ting;in 'goalJ<>r~
the first time, said
•• been
doing a.different
type
oftrairi:- ·_.
Goldm~;u~~•U h,vfto learn fast .
irig·this s~C)n that has :enabled
:
because he: didn't. get-too many·
theni to-contr~tthe"
l>al.i
b~tter .:
'
niint1t~ Ia~t-year;. Yhe add~.
_
...
·:
."We're
playiilg:i'eal good con-
"
Manst's o.f[ens~ve
attack
WIil
be •
trol ball, but we need to get niucb • • lead by seniotJ.ini,McKenna alo?g
,qtiick~r. Althougll:\\ie hav_e:_some \Vith ~.
severa~
_· talentect
really fast guys, we C_!'Uld
use
rfew .. underclassmen,:said Goldman.
Sir-:L~nc.elot. says:
Classifieds are
-Bi\C·K
:
:_.

,
'
and The Circle
has .got
-
the~.
. Sports Information Director Bob
Bordas.
O'Connor, who became a
starter
at Nevada-Reno near the end of the
1985-86 season, is prohibited by
NCAA rules from playing for the
Red Foxes this season. However he
is eligible to participate in all prac-
tices this season according to
NCAA rules.
The men's and women's teams
will
be competing this Saturday in
the ECAC Metro Conference
championship at Clove Lake Park
in Staten Island.
Tuesdays from 1 to 2 p~m-.
"I
transferred to Marist because
• I wanted to be closer to home,"
said O'Connor. "Now, my family
and friends will be able to see me
play."
As a freshman at Nevada-Reno,
O'Connor averaged 2.4 points, 2.5
_assists and
1.6
steals per game in
23 games _for.the 13-15 Wolfpack ..
The Red· Fox football team
defeated SUNY Stony
Brook
7-3
Saturday in a preseason warmup
for their season opener this Satur-
day at Dickinson College ...
Dickinson finished 1-8 last
season, but five of those losses
catne by three points or less ...
The situation , quarterback is
still up in the air as senior
Jim
Fedigan
and jµ'nior
Jon Cannon
continue to ;battle for the top
spot...
/
Game time for the Dickinson
contest is l:30 p.m.
.
.
·Fridays
from· 12 to 1 p.m.
in· Donnelly, stop by and
drop one off! Just $1
for up to 20 words!
.
,
.
'
. . .
.
.
.

..
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.
-~.
<):,.;,,;,,>-
...
_
..
·.