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Part of The Circle: Vol. 33 No. 2 - September 18, 1986

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Volume 33, Number 2

Marist College,. Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
September 18, 1986
Debate is Off, but officials deny. pressure
by
Julie· Sveda
right-to-life leader Lee Klimek.
While Baird claims college of-
College administrators have ficials were reacting to pressure
postponed indefinitely a week-long from members of the Catholic
series. of events focusing
_on
the Church, administrators maintain
issue
.
of abo~ion, according to that they postponed the events
Gerard Cox, vice president for stu-
because biographical information
dent affairs.
on Klimek was not received in time.
The events, sponsored by the
-
"There was absolutely no
College Union Board and schedul-
pressure," Cox said. "We may still
ed for the week of.Sept.
22,
were have the debate, and we may still
to include a series of lectures and
have the saine people we were'sup-
a debate between Bill Baird, a well-
posed to have.''
.
known pro-choice advocate, and
He said that biographical infor-
'The Fish'
Did it get·away or was· it done away?
by Michael McGarry
play ball, added Tarantino.
What's not clear, ho_wever, is
It's the Marist version of_the old
whether the· college intended to
story about the fish that got away.
destroy the piece o,: just move it.
"The Ftsh" sculpture, which was
.-
:-:
-~eoriginal
plan was to remove
removed from the front '?f Chain-
.
:
The Fish in one·piece and put it at.
pagnat Hall in. August,
is
lying in
another JocatJon on campus, accor-
_
two pieces next
_to;
the new athletic
ding to Tarantino. But when the
fields
·behind.
the Gartland Com-
sculpture was stored in a shed next
mons Apartments. But how it got
to the terinis courts ii-was damag-
_
••.
~~_re in that.condition:~~ a.taleJg

ce4,·,_bfo<Vilild,~._,T11r_~~~~,.w,c1.~
.
--
itself
• .
.. ,.,
..
',c




,:
.

,-:-'
4
Somebody otlier
0
"-than••
stam·,
----;~~~:~~J~w:~~~~~;~~;it~~~--Y~~~~~w~~~~~t~•
FJSlier, was
-.
composed
-
of:
'two·
.
and put
the fm.i.shing
-
to~ches· oti:;
..
girders, twisted into)he shape
of

it," said Tarantino.

_,
·.,:

the
•Christian
symbol for the fish
Security, however. has no record
:c
aii<finooijted
on.afoot high cement. of any vandalism
taking
place,
~c:•;
pedestafhl fronfofChampagnat•s

cording to Assistanf Director:,of

main en!,rance;
~-For~-
years,
.
the
Security
.Roland
Quinlan. ''lt was
.
-
scuJpture was a traditicinalgather-
removed,
0
Quinlan said, "as part
ing.
place fofMarisf students;
-
_ '
of their ~odeling
C>f
the front
.
Anthony-Tarantino, director of
patio over ther~."

facilities, said -the sculpture
_was
Longreen Construction CC>.
-removed
for safety reasons. "The
removed the fish.in' on~ pieccfbut
Fish
.
was
.
removed,,.
_Tarantino
-
then took it immediately to its pre-

said, "at the request of the Fair~ sent location, according to Lou
view. Fire
·
Department.
They

Gr:eenspan,

aq official

for
coilldn't geltheirhook and ladder
Longr~n; "Tiley (Lo~~een Con-
up against Chanipagriat.••

-
structionworkers) burned iroff at
The front of Champagnat was the base~ chained•it'to the buillc of
also remodeled to provide more
the
-
loader
arid
dragged it down
grass so students could lay out and
there," said Greenspan.
,,.
Freshman· hospitalized
after failing from cliff
mation was needed two weeks in
advance. to allow for
-
adequate
advertising.
"Two weeks before it was to
take place we w·anted all of the
agreements set so we could deal
-
with internal promo"iing
and adver-
tising, and also for the Public Rela-
tions Office, so they could. deal
with the external communication,"
said Cox.
The biographical information on
Klimek, who is chairperson of the
New York State Right To Life
Committee, arrived on Thursday,
Sept. 11, two weeks before the
debate, and the day the decision to
postpone was made, according to
Frank Doldo, former CUB presi-
dent, who worked this summer to
arrange the events. Doldo resign-
ed his post

later for reasons
unrelated
to
the
debate
controversy ..
Members
.of
the student affairs
staff met twice last week to decide
whether the events would take
place as scheduled, according to
both Cox and Doldo. No students
were present at the meetings.
According to the
1986-87
Stu-
dent Handbook published by the
college, "Students are allowed to
invite ail(J to hear any person of
their own choosing; however, it
mpst be made clear by the spon-
so_r(s) of the speaker ... that spon-
sorship of a guest speaker does not.
necessarily imply approval or en-
dorsement of the view exprt:Ssed."
"The debate, as planned, was to

Continued on page 2
.
N~
th~
Gartland Commons last
wffk,
the "f"asb~•
was found
flouncierhig
ajnic(dle
rubble
:e·
',
. .
~f Marls( coostrilction.
-
(Photo
._I>~
Mark Marano)
FJSher;who refusedfo comment, Chess Set, which consisted• of
was.run over with a six wheel truck
.
was.
told
·her
sculpture was van-· • several two to three feet high chess by
·construction
workers, according
dalized • and wouldn't
be
used· any
-
pieces situa_ted
in various. ~ositlons to Tarantino.
more_; accprding
.•
to Tarantino.
on a cement chess board; was also
.
Marist-- had not planned to
removed this summer.
remove The Chess Set, Tarantino
-
• 'Slie w~n't:happy b_ut
we had no
choice;-'' said Tarantino.
-
Another'sculpture of Fisher's~ The

said. "The intent was to leave The
This sculpture,-·which also was Chess Set ihere, but there was no
located in front of Chanipagnat,
way of repairing it."
Dir~ctor of post office resigns;
harassment complaint lodged
by Bill DeGennaro
his home in Highland.
Alfonso's conduct, alleging sexual
Security met Buss at the gates of
The
-
employee, who did not
harassment.
by Bill
DeGenoaro
the waterworks after receiving a
Daniel_ Alfonso,

director of return to work at the post office
According to the President's Na-
Freshman Chris Buss was in-
cal]
from a resident assistant in
postal services at Marist College, after the incident, said ~he alerted
,
tional Advisory Council on
-
resigned during the first week of administration officials of Alfon-
Women's
Education,
sexual
jured Saturday night when he fell Marian at l
t:
45 p.m., according to
the semester after a female work-
so's conduct and was told· not to
harassment can be classified under
from a cliff 200 yards north of the Quinlan.
study employee at the Post Office discuss it. Administration officials
,
four headings: (I) sexual crimes,
(2)
Marist campus on the banks of the
"I was walking down a hill, it
complained she was verbally
told her Alfonso had been
forced sexual relations by threat of
Hudson River• acco rd ing to forked, and I picked the wrong
harassed.
"dismissed," she said.
punishment, (3) explicit sexual pro-

Roland Quinlan, assiStaot director way," Buss said.
"It
was
dark and
- Marc Adin, director of person-
The complaint was filed on
position at times backed by the
of safety and security at MariSt• I didn•t really see what was
nel, initially refused to speak with Thursday, Sept. 4, and Alfonso promise of a reward or (4)_ any
Buss,
17,
who suffered a broken ahead." He estimated
his
fall from
The Circle, but issued a statement resigned on the afternoon of Fri-
crude, verbal sexual suggestions or
left shoulder, a one inch laceration the cliff at about 50 feet.
through his secretary. "Danny
day, Sept.
5.
jokes directed at the student
on his left ear· and various scrapes
Alfonso resigned· for personal
Marist College Security said it
because of his or her gender.
and bruises on his body, was
Buss, from Springfield, Vt., said
reasons and he has no
.comment
was called to the post office on Fri-
One female student employee of
discharged from St. Francis he was "hanging out" with friends
after that,"
Adin's secretary, day at 4 p.m. "Security was call-
the post office who asked not to be
Hospital on Monday, according to when he decided to walk home
Stacey Davis said.
ed, we walked over there, but our
identified said Alfonso had verbal-
a hospital spokeswoman.
alone.

Reached later, Adin would services were not needed," said Joe ly harassed her several times but
Students walking along the the
The report filed by Security did
neither confirm nor
·deny
~01n- -
.
Watei:s, director
.of

safety and
she had never filed a formal
railroad tracks heard Buss yelling not indicate if alcohol was involv-
plaints had_ been made concerning· ~s~ufity ;·.
:
:
:
:.

; •••
;;
:
:
'.
: :

• • : .
- -,
complaint.-
.
_-
,
·
for help and assisted him to the top ed in the incident, according to
Alfonso's-conduct,

.
Sour:ces.who•wishcifto remain
.
>Ait_other· •
:
female
student
of the bluff.
Quinlan.
Alfonso would not comment
on
unidentified. said

otli~r female
• •
employee

who claims she was
..._
...
_________________________
~~
his resignation when contacted at employees had complained about
-
Continued on· page 2
,.
Homecoming 'divorce' -page 3
No computer boss - page 3
,.
)
•I
















































--Page
2 - THE CIRCLE - September 18, 1986
---------::=============:::::::::::::::::::::
Lecture
·
__ .......
___ ..;.._
______
___
Continued from page
1
be strictly closed to Marist
students, faculty, administration
and employees," said Doldo, who
added that the Public Relations Of-
fice would not have been· needed
unless the event was open to the
public.
Baird, who could not be reach-
ed by The Circle this week, told the
Poughkeepsie Journal that Marist
officials had said they were under
pressure to cancel the debate.
A faculty member, who asked
not to be identified, said,
"I
heard
before the semester started that
pressures were being brought to
bear by some Catholics of the
Marist community to prevent the
debate from being held." He said
he did not know whether such
pressure caused the postponement.
This past summer, when Doldo
was planning the event, he had
presented his ideas to Deborah
Bell, assistant dean of students.
"Deb Bell told me that I had the
approval of Vice President Cox as
long as it would be a balanced
debate," said Doldo.
"All
1
wanted was
a
legal and
ethical debate. Both Klimek and
Baird had agreed not to bring
religion in to it," said Doldo.
"I
wanted it to be a week of
understanding about a public
issue."
Because a large majority of the
student body at Marist is Catholic,
Cox said, Marist is still associated
with the Catholic Church.
"I
wouldn't say
the
association was
just in the past. The present student
body is predominately Catholic,"
Cox said.
.
.
.
MARIST WINTER
INTERSESSION
January 5 - 21, 1987
(January 19 holiday)
LET US KNOW THE
WINTER COURSE
·YOU
WANT
,
'..
.
1. by signing request sheet in Marist East
(by Adult Ed office)s Donnelly (by
commuter lounge) or at the Fishkill
center
2. or call the Adult Ed office,
extension 221.
Classifieds are
BACK,
and The Circle
has~got them.
Tuesdays from 1 to 2:30 p.m.
Fridays from 10 to 1 p.m.
..
in Donnelly,
stop by and drop one off!
Just $1 for up to 20 words!
Marist was founded by the
Marist Brothers religious order, but
in 1969 an independent nonprofit
corporation was created to run the
college. An estimated 80 percent of
the present stuaent body is
Catholic.
th!tut::.~
~!~:~Jo~~:C:~~:s
~;;~---~-
-~""""!'--.--~---°".
_'""!_•.~---•-•.
• .. -·• ••
_-.,•.

••
•.
••.,
.-- ..
•--.-.--~-.-.•··
1-""'--
··--,:-.l,
.. .,,;.~,.~
... -~,-~-,.~
...
~,
,7,.,,~---~---~-·-"."'._.~---~
.. --
~-~--<~,~:!"'
__
~.
-.-~
,:-.~. '""!_
~-------------~
postponed.
"The
even·t was·
••
,..

·,•'..:-.'._.•.:.,,•.
-·:'-•:'.">~:\.;
..
":·.
i
·""'.:.-;-->-<-·..._;_.,;.~·,
...
:-,;,•
student-sponsored. The purpose of
the week is not to say abortion· is
good or bad, it is to create a greater
awareness," said Student Govern-
ment President Peter Prucnel.
"College is a place for open
debate. Marist has no right to
destroy this," said Gina Disanza,
president of Student Academic
Committee.
"By debat1ng it
doesn't mean that one condones
something. It just means that one
is willing to look at an issue
as
mature adults."

According to Cox, the issue of
abortion will still be dealt with at
Marist, but rather than stand
alone, it will be a part of a series
dealing with human sexuality.
"This will be a larger series. We
won't try to do it all in one week,"
said Cox. "It may even carry over
into
the spring semester."
"We were going to be spending
one week dealing with abortion in
no context. With a more complete
series, we'll be placing it within a
context and dealing with it," said
Cox.

Newly installed CUB President
Linda Imhof said that she plans on
meeting with the faculty to get their
input. "I think the issue is very im-
portant, and it (the events) will
happen.
It
is not being cancelled by
any means," said Imhof.
Baird runs a Long Island abor-
tion and birth control clinic. Three
U.S. Supreme Court cases bearing
his name dealt with legalized abor-
tions and teen-agers' rights to abor-
tions without parental consent.
Resign ___
_
Continued from page
1
harassed by Alfonso in May said,
"I also experienced harassment,
but I
felt it fell
into
the grey area
where nothing
could
be proven."
Alfonso, a member of the Ulster
County Legislature, came to
Marist
in
1985. He was replaced by
John
Pollack, the former assistant
direc-
tor of postal services.
ARMY RESERVE
OFFICERS'
TRAINING CORPS













































--~--------------------------September
18, 1986 - THE CIRCLE
- Page
3--
H omeco ming ~divorce' splits students, alums
by Elizabeth Geary
Because no football game is
scheduled for the traditional
Homecoming weekend, Marist
alumni and Marist students will
celebrate separate Homecomings
this year, according to Terry Man-
zi, club and organization adviser.
The students'
Homecoming
whi~h will feature a football gam;
agamst St. John's University,
is
scheduled for Sept. 27 while the
alumni
·Homecoming..'.....minus
a
football game-is set for the tradi-
tional Columbus Day weekend,
Oct. 10.through 12.
The change in Homecoming
plans came about because the Stu-
dent Activities Office wanted the
·2
charged
in bar·
drug raid
by Ellen D' Arey
Two former Marist students
have been arraigned, and one con-
victed, on charges
'involving
the
possession and sale of cocaine, ac-
cording to _Town of Poughkeepsie
court records.
John J. Corrigan, a former
Marist student, and John R. Mar-
son, a May 1986 graduate, were
among
IO
people arrested this sum-
mer by undercover investigators
and charged with selling cocaine in
Town of Poughkeepsie bars, police
said.
Corrigan, who withdrew from
classes this semester, was charged
.
with~cnminal ·controlled'su bstance •-

possesslon·and criminal controlled

substance sale, according to the
town·court clerk. Charges against
him were later reduced to criminal
controlled substance possession.
Corrigan was sentenced to proba-
tion and spent one weekend in jail.
Marson
was charged
with
criminal possession and sale of a
controlled substance. His trial was
to be yesterday.
Corrigan and Marson were ar•
rested

after
undercover
in-
v_estigators visited every bar in the
Town of Poughkeepsie and pur-
chased small amounts of cocaine at
five places.
M~rist re<?pens
registrar search
by Len Johnson
Marist will· begin interviewing
applicants for the job of registrar
this fall and the position should be
filled by the beginning of the spring
semester,
according
to Marc
vanderHeyden,
academic vice
president.
The
-position
has been filled on
a temporary basis by Associate
Registrar Rosemary Malloy since
August
1,
when Registrar Elizabeth
Ross left Marist to become registrar
at The· New School of Social
Research in New York City.
Because Ross left late in the sum-
mer, there was very Jittle time to
solicit applications for the job
before the beginning of the fall
semester, vanderHeyden said. And
although Marist received 25 ap-
plications, vanderHeyden decided
more time was necessary to make
the right choice.

"I believe that with such a
crucial job we are better off taking
our time," he said, "particularly
with such a competent acting
registrar."
Because the registrar's job is so
difficult and includes many respon-
sibilities, vanderHeyden said, fin-
ding a suitable applicant is not an
easy task. "It's a high pressure of-
fice where you cannot afford to
Continued on page 9
.•
celebration on a weekend with a
scheduled home football game, but
the alumni wanted to maintain the
Columbus Day tradition. The foot-
ball game scheduled for Oct. 11 will
be played at Iona College.
"Because of the home~and-home
arrangements, you're guaranteed
that every other year the game is
played away," said Elsie Mula,
assistant to the athletic director.
The Alumni Executive Board
wants to hold alumni Homecoming
the same weekend every year. "We
want the alumni to be able to plan
at least a year in advance," said
Susan Rexer, director of alumni af-
fairs. "The board wants to be con-
sistent so that on every Saturday of
Columbus Day weekend, people
know they can head on over here
and see their friends," Rexer said.

To give the students a chance to
celebrate a Homecoming weekend
with the traditional football game,
parade and floats, the Student Ac-
tivities Office planned the
separate
weekends, according to Manzi. .
"We designated the last weekend
in September so the students
could
have the traditional Homecoming
celebration," said Manzi.
There will also be a pep rally the
Friday before Homecoming. A
theme was to be determined at a

meeting last Tuesday. The game
will start at
1
p.m.
Even students who are of legal
drinking age will not be able
to
at-
tend alumni events involving
alcohol. "It's
too difficult to
Fly
in' Frisbees
Sophomore Dan Garcia, above, is intent on throwing the
Frisbee far, while Dave Barret, below, attempts a between-the-
legs catch.
(Photos by Mark Marano)
Imhof becomes head of CUB
by Julie Sveda
Linda Imhof has taken over the
position of CUB president, after
the resignation of Frank Doldo at
the start of the semester.
According to Doldo, his resigna-
tion was the result of academic pro-
bationary terms.
"Because of
a
bad semester I had
to accept terms which meant not
being involved with extracurricular
activities," Doldo said.
According to the CUB constitu-
tion, a student must have at least
one year of experience on a com-
mittee or
as
a chairperson to hold
the office of president.
"l feel Linda will do an excellent
job in the position. She has very
energetic and responsible chairpeo-
ple who will provide ac1ivi1ies for
the whole student body 10 enjoy,"
said Doldo.
Although
the programming
for
the whole semester was done this
past summer, Imhof said that CUB
will begin 1he planning of next
semester's events.
Among her plans arc more
events being held in the River
Room, a ca;toon festival and art
contest.
Doldo took over as CUB presi-
dent when Sue Ryan resigned last
May.
separate administratively," said
Rexer. "It's one thing when three-
fourths of the students are or age
but it's another if only 5 percent
are."
Rexer is concerned that students
will not like the new alumni pro-
cedures. "We're all in this together
and I hope the students don't take
it too negatively," Rexer said.
The reaction from many students
to the separate Homecoming
weekends has been negative. "I'm
going anyway," said Mike Savage,
a 21-year-old senior.
"I
have a lot
of friends who have
already
graduated, and it's ridiculous to
think that l can't hang out with
them during alumni weekend."
"l know a lot of seniors are
upset, especially the ones who are
21,"
said
Theresa Ruotolo, presi-
dent of the senior class.
"I
think
it's beneficial for us to talk to the
alumni just to find out what it's
like the first year out of school,"
Ruotolo said.
Career Day, sponsored by the
alumni in the spring, is designed
specilically for that purpose, accor-
ding to Rexer, but Ruotolo said she
does not think that a1mosphere is
the same as Homecoming weekend.
"It's like a classroom situation,"
said Ruotolo. "During Homecom-
ing
weekend,
you're with friends
who are going to give you a little
less biased opinion than alumni
who are specifically chosen to par-
ticipate in Career Day,"
said
Ruotolo.
College reaffirms
policy on drinking
by Denise Wilsey
Although
one student
was
dismissed from campus housing
and another withdrew from college
after violating Marist's alcohol
policy at the start of the semester,
college officials say they have not
increased penalties for students
who break campus drinking rules.
"We have not changed the
alcohol policy or enforcement of
the· policy," said Steve Sansola,
director of housing. "We are
following the same procedures and
guidelines as last semester. We
review each case individually.
There are usually a number of dif-
ferent factors involved in making
a disciplinary decision on each
case."
Question of a crackdown was
raise~ in the wake of the Aug; 30
-
,:cJncli:lent.in
which·a·•male
senior
was
dismissed from
his
residency area
and a
female
freshman
voluntarily
withdrew from Marist after discus-
sions with housing officials, San-
sola said.
Housing officials did not release
names of the students.
The freshman was taken to St.
Francis Hospital after drinking
heavily at a small party in
Townhouse 8- 7. Sanso la cited one
of the violations
in
the senior's
dismissal as providing alcoholic
beverages for a person under 21,
New York's legal drinking age.
State law prohibits anyone from
purchasing
for or providing
alcoholic beverages to anyone
under 21 years of age.
The senior appealed to Assistant
Dean for Student Affairs Peter
Amato. The student now resides in
a

Canterbury Apartment, off-
campus Marist housing.
According to the college hand-
book, dismissal from a particular
residence is a response to a third
violation of residence norm or the
single violation of a "serious"
norm.
According to Sansola, one inci-
dent may be viewed as multiple
violations of policy and may war-
rant dismissal
from college
housing.
In a second incident Sept.
5,
a
freshman girl spent the night in St.
Francis Hospital after drinking
heavily with upperclassmen in a
Gartland Commons apartment.
The incident is still under investiga-
tion, according to Sansola.
There were about 25 cited viola-
tions of the alcohol policy in the
first JO days of the semester, San-
• sola said.
·
..·t•
,4.ccordins.
•·
to.
-Amato,
..
_all.
reported• disciplinary
problems

since the start of the semester have
been alcohol-related.
Marist's alcohol policy states
that students can consume alcohol
in those buildings where students
are of legal age. These include such
north end buildings as Gregory
House, townhouses,
Gartland
Commons, North Road housing
and Canterbury Apartments.
The south-end
housing, in-
cluding Champagnat Hall and the
freshman areas is alcohol-free.
Parties can be held only in cam-
pus housing where all residents are
of the legal drinking age.
Currently,
there
are
no
townhouses where all residents are
21 and there are only two apart-
ments in the Gartland Commons
where all residents are of the legal
drinking age.
Computer post remains
vacant after 15 months
by Diane Pomilla
Fifteen months after the resigna-
tion of Cecil Denney, Marist con-
tinues to search for a director for
the Computer Center.
According to Ed Waters, vice
president for administration, fin-
ding someone qualified for the
position has been difficuh. "We
are looking for an excellent in-
dividual," Waters
said.
"Our stan-
dards are very high."
Waters
said
Marist has con-
ducted two searches for a new
director.
In
the first
no
one
accep-
table was found; in the second, two
candidates
were
selected,
but
neither wanted the
job.
The college has placed adver-
tisements in The New York Times
and contacted people in the com-
puter field, he said.
The Computer Center is current-
ly being run by Waters and three
computer coordinators,
Harry
Anderson, Wendy Whitely and
Paula Trimble.
The job of director was
left va-
cant
in
June 1985 when Denney
took
a
job at the University of
Texas
Medical
School
at
Galveston. Jim Falanga held the
position of acting director until
February 1986 when he resigned to
take a job in priva1e
industry.
Waters said he handles the
budgeting and finances of the
Computer Center while the coor-
dinators operate the center on a
daily basis.
The coordinators refused to
comment on the hiring of a new
Computer Center director.
Anderson, who has a B.A. from
Maris! and is currently pursuing an
M.S. in computer
science,
is the
manager of
systems
in
the
Com-
pulcr Center.
He
has been with
Maris! for six vears.
Whitely, operations manager of
the Computer Center, has been
with Marist for seven years and is
attending Marist currently
to
get a
degree in business.
Trimble, programmer analyst
with the Computer Center, has •
been at Marist almost three years.
y-•
I
I



































































--Page
4 - TH_E
CIRCL.E
- September
18, 1986-----------;_--;.,:-_-_-_-_-_-_
-_-_;-__:.:._-::._:_:_:_:_:_:_:..=_:,.::.,.::...::,...::,._:_:.,::_:__:_
-~
Canterbury residents air
housing complaints
A Marist graduate
gets nice surprise
by Cl.M-~·
Hlavaty
.,
~
.
Security problems, as well as a
shortage of supplies, have started
the year off on a bad foot for many
residents of the Canterbury Apart-
ments, Marist housing located off
of Route 44 East in Poughkeepsie.
Although there are. I 06 students
currently living in the apartment
complex, the college rented enough
space to house 160 students, said
Barbara Hynes, the assistant direc-
tor of housing. As housing spaces
open up on campus, Canterbury
residents may move if they want.
"So far, we have had seven re-
quests to move back onto the cam-
pus," said Hynes.
Forthose students remaining at
Canterbury security, or lack of it,
is a major concern; Although the
students housed there pay the same
amount for room and board as
those living on campus, Marist
security is not present at the com-
plex. Some students have express-
ed discontent with this policy, say-
ing they feel they deserve equal pro-
tection for equal money.
"We should get the same securi-
ty," said Unit Coordinator Jerry
Romanelli, a senior from Farm-
ingdale, N.Y.
Already four female students oc-
cupying one Canterbury apartment
reported three incidents of prowlers
Gregory residents protest;
they want out of meal plan
being sighted within one week.
One of these students, who ask-
ed not to be identified, claimed that
early one morning a man was se_en
peering through the bathroom win-
dow at her. She was not able to pull
down the shade for privacy because
her apartment, like some others,
has not yet had window shades in-
stalled· in the bathroom
or
bedrooms. According to the hous-
ing office, the shades for these
apartments are on order and are to
be installed soon.
Reporting the incident to police
or fire officials was delayed
because Canterbury residents did
not have phone service due to a
company strike. Unit coordinators,
who live in the apartment complex,
do not have campus phones.
Despite residents' frustrations
with living conditions, some find
benefits to living there. The apart-
by Beth-Kathleen McCauley
stranded that far off campus."
ments are considerably more
"We're finally upperclassmen," .spacious than· dormitory rooms.
Ten juniors living in Gregory
said Ring, "but living here is just
The apartments consist of a living
House are petitioning Marist to
like being a freshman all over
room, dining area, kitchen,
allow them to drop the meal plan
again."
bathroom and two bedrooms.
-
a move that would require a
This past summer students living There are usually four people per
change in college policy.
in Gregory were permitted to use
apartment, which some students
Gregory residents are on the
the kitchen during a two week said they prefer to the number of
meal plan because the kitchen
period when Marist and the
people living in the townhouses or
f
cafeteria were host to the Marist
the
Gartland
Commons
acilities in the building are for only
Brothers' centenn1·a1
celebrat1·on. a
t
t
minimal and occasional use, accor-
par men s.
ding to Steve Sansola, director of
The situation was only tem-
housing.
porary and the students were urg-
"I'd rather room with three
"This policy is based on the fact
ed to
work
co-operatively
to
other people than with six or ten,"
that the kitchen can't take every-
uphold fire and safety standards,
said Dawn Moraski, a junior
day use,,, said Sansola,
according to Sansola. Also, two
transfer student from Orange
staff members and a resident assis-
County Community College. Her
The IO out of the 34 students Iiv-
tant were living in Gregory for ad-
roommate, Judy Polonkay of
ing in Gregory requesting the
ditional supervision.
Mahwah, N.J ., said she agreed.
"I
change said they would prefer to
"During that time," said San-
.love
living
here, but the school
use the kitchen occasionally and
sola, "maybe only 20 or,so.used the
do~sn'.t seem .to notice us, l[°they
supple1:7ent off-campus
dining-for--
--ldtchc_n
...,~ecause~-.stud~is·,
!:"Cro
,.-paid.more
attcntion•to
iJs;j°'(ould
cafeteria use
but cannot afford
dropping
m
and
out."
be great."
both.
by Mike Grayeb
The last thing
Marist
graduate Carl MacGowan. ex-
pected after paying nearly
$40,000 for his education was to
receive a $588.50 refund from
the college.
But on August 25 of this year,
he received notification of such
from D' Arcangelo & Co. of
Poughkeepsie, a firm that
audits student accounts in the
Business Office at Marist.
"The envelope was marked
'This is not a bill' so I was hap-
py
to
see that,"
said
MacGowan. "But the real sur-
prise came when I opened it and
the slip said that Marist owed
me $588.50."
MacGowan, who graduated
last spring, said he thinks the re-
fund came because of some late-
arriving financial aid to the
school in his· name.
"It
was probably my New
York State TAP (Tuition
Assistance Program) and my
dorm security deposit that I
never
claimed,t'
said
MacGowan.
Jack Cina Jr., a certified
public accountant from D' Ar-
cangelo, agreed. "In many
cases, it is outstanding financial
aid or deposits that lead to the
refunds;" said Cina.
Cina said the firm annually
audits approximately 170 to 200
out of about 3,000 student ac-
counts. A computer prints out
the names of all of the students
and the CP
As
randomly choose
the accounts to be checked, he
said.
"In many cases, we find a
zero balance owed to the
stu-
dent,"
Cina
said.
"Alnios.t •
Sansola said he believes the
students' request is a sensible one,
but granting their request could
prompt similar requests from
others, and the kitchen is not
equipped to meet the needs of the
entire house.
~C(f(fC(f(((~~(~f((f(f(tC(CC(C
"To be consistent with policy,"
said Sansola, "I don't have an
option."

Allison Ring of Staten Island,
N. Y., has presented medical con-
firmation to Bill Marx, manager of
dining services, stating that she is
allergic to two grains, corn syrup
and assorted fruits and vegetables,
but Marx said he feels her needs
can be adequately met.
a
C
('
(
f
C
(
(
···"""'°"""
, ~;
Cf'( tJU
f
f
t (
C C C
<
t
t
C
<
C C C C
t
<
t
t
<
C ( C ('
never do we find that the stu-
dent owes the school more than
is on his bill."
Marist is required by law to
have an annual audit, but the
law does not specify how many
accounts have to be checked
according to Cina.
'
Anthony
Campilii, chief
finance officer at Marist, said
any student can request to see
his account and get a copy of it
from the Business Office at any
time.
At the end of every semester
the Business Office determine;
who
will be returning to Marist
the f?l}~wing semester, said
Campilu.
"If
a student is not coming
back, we send any dollars we
owe them directly to their ad-
dress on record," he said. "As
far as students are concerned
the audit by
D'
Arcangelo's i~
like
an
extra assurance because
we update every account at the
end of every semester."
For that reason, MacGowan
would have received the refund
sometime this summer even if
the auditing company did not
choose to check his account
Campilii said.
'
MacGowan said this was not
the first time he has had a pro-
blem with his bill.
"During the Spring 1986
semester,
I went to the
Registrar's Office to drop a
course, but the person there ac-
cidently added the course to my
file," said MacGowan. "So the
• school kept sending me a bill for
takirig 21 credits when I was ac-
tually taking
15."
That problem was eventually
reso~ved, he said. "The system
is .'as'."
corifusea
,as
we. are, ..
. MacGowim· said.
• "Just being in the cafeteria is a
.temptation to eat the foods I'm
allergic to. I went through all the
proper channels but I'm still being
denied," said Ring.
rt
11~~~
.t4tliu
M
The residents have decided co
bring their case to the lnterhouse
Council to formally petition hous-
ing for their request.
Failure of the students to pay for
the meal plan could result in their
being dropped from registration.
The deadline for payment was
Monday.
The process of being deleted is
based on prior payment history,
and each case is judged and handl-
ed separately, according to Judy
Ivankovic, bursar.
The students say most of their
anger regarding the situation stems
from being placed in Gregory in-
stead of the Townhouses.
Lisa Plumer of Queens said: "In
order for all of us
to
stay together
it was either live here or at Canter-
bury. None of us wanted to be
YWCA
TEEN WE.EK
OCTOBER 12-18
.1-iee
'Z)~
pl,
tk
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7Uflt4
fQUf#/14
Thurs., SeRt. 18 • Jack Daniels Party
SeP.t. 25 • Wendy's Party • Oct .
.t. •
Bacardi Party
I
DISCOUNTS with
.MARIST
ID
-
.
.
. .
19 & ·'20 $4.00 ADMISSION • 21 &
over
$1.00 ADMISSION • ·
33 Academy
Street, Poughkeepsie,
NY (914)
471-1133












































































,.,.
••

•,r
f•'

•·•
'•

19 new professors·
join Marist
f
acuity
by Anu Ailawadhi
employed as a certified public ac-
countant at Arthur Place and Co.
M·arist College has added 19 pro-
in Albany.
fessors to its full-time faculty this
.
Ann Davis, economics. Davis
semester. The total number of
received her Ph.D. from Boston
facµlty members now stands at
College and has taught at Marist as
130.
an adjunct professor.
Last year the faculty numbered· SOCfAL/BEHA VIORAL
121 at the beginning of the fall
SCIENCE
semester. The new faculty members
Daniel Lockwood, criminal
by division are:
justice. Lockwood received his
ARTS and LETTERS
Ph~D. from SUNY at Albany.
George Blake Armstrong, com-
Lockwood joins Marist after serv-
munications. Armstrong received ing here for one semester as a
his Ph.D. from Michigan State
visiting instructor of criminal
University and taught various com-
justice.
munication courses at both the
Spencer Rath us, psychology.
undergraduate and graduate levels Rathus received his Ph.D. from
of Michigan State.
SUNY at Albany and is a New
Douglas Cole, communications.
York state licensed psychologist.
Cole has had extensive professional
Sara Sabatelli, social work.
experience in commercial television Sabatelli received her M.S. W. from
and radio, as well as in advertising
New York University. Sabatelli is
agencies as a producer, writer and
also the new field coordinator for
announcer.
the Marist/Green Haven Program.
Judith
Saunders,
English.
Sabatelli is a New York state cer-
Saunders received her Ph.D. from
tified social worker as well as a
the University of California at San
New York state certified bilingual
Diego and has taught for the past
school social worker.
two semesters as an adjunct in-
Adele Weiner, social work.
structor
jn
the Marist/Green Haven
Weiner received her M.S.
w.
from
Batt.er u
n
!
.
.
Se tember 18, 1986- THE CIRCLE-Page 5
;______________
-------~···~•·•·
;,____________
-·-·····-·••
His stance may seem unorthodox, but this garden apartment resident
appears to have hit at least a double.
(Photo by Mark Marano)
program.
Continued on page 9
'Y
Carmine· Porcelli,
fashion
·r------::::::::..:.:.:::::.:,..:::===================================
design.· Porcelli received his B.A.
QUESTION #2.
in fine arts from Parsons School of
Design. Most recently, Porcelli
held the positions of managing
director and president at Albert
Capraro Ltd.
HUMANITIES
Richard Atkins has been ap-
pointed the new chairperson for the
Division of Humanities. Atkins
received his Ph.D. from the
University of California. Prior to
joining Marist, Atkins served at
Elmira College as acting vice presi-
.dent for academic affairs and dean·
HOW
CAN
THE
BUDGET-CONSCIOUS
COllEGE·STUDENT
SAVE
MONEY?
•• ' of'fac~lry:,,:for{th.ej)i\st~hvo
Y~i#t-
·:

..
:.
·••,
·"
David
,
Reynolds';-"' history~ ... •

:.~~,.-:--
Reynolds received his Ph.D. in
Chinese.history at the University of
Wisconsin at Madison. Prior to
joining Marist, Reynqlds held
teaching positions at
.Hobart
and
William Smith Colleges and China·
Christian College.
Scott Myers, paralegal. Myers
received his J.D. from Rutgers
University School of Law. Prior to
joining Marist, Myers was a super-
visory attorney at Shain, Schaffer
and Rafanello.
Mario Moussa, philosophy.
Moussa received his M.A. from
SUNY at Stony Brook. Prior to
joining the full-time faculty at
Marist, Moussa taught philosophy
as an adjunct instructor.
Joanne Myers, political science.
Myers received her Ph.D. from
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.
Prior to joining Marist, Myers serv-
ed as the assistant director of the
Governor's Task Force on Fort
Drum, where she provide9 on-site
technical assistance to prepare for
the expansion of Fort Drum.
SCIENCE
Patricia
Stumpf,
nursing.
Stumpf received her M.S. from the
University of Colorado. Stumpf.
joined Marist last January and had
previously taught nursing at the
University of Rhode Island College
of Nursing.
MANAGEMENT STUDIES
Wellesley Bowdish~ business.
Bowdish received his M.B.A. from
New York University. His previous

teaching positions were at Hofstra
University and Wagner College.
Ismay Force, business. Force
received her M.B.A. from the
Hagen Graduate
School of
Business at Iona College. 'Force
joins Marist's full-time faculty
after two years of teaching in an
adjunct capacity.
Bruce Swenson, business. Swen-
son received his M.B.A. at New
York University. Swenson has had
more than 13 years of teaching ex-
perience and his
most recent
posi-
tion was at the Adelphi University
School of Business
..
·
a)
...
~
over
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.~
--~.:,:Otif'.~f~state:calls~during
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b)
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Don't buy textbooks
when
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iustfine.
Save 40% off AT&T's
weekday rate on out-of-state
calls during evenings.
Count on AT&T
for exceptional value and high quality
service.
e)
-
Hang around with the richest kids in school; let them
pick up the tab whenever possi_ble.
If you're like most college students in the western hemisphere,
you
try
to
make your money go a long way. That's why you should
.
know that AT&r Lon Distance Service is t ri t choice
:fi
you~
/4
~
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.
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Ever dial a wrong number? AT&r gives you
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To find out more about how AT&r can help..§!lve
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Brian Nagle, accounting. Nagle
C>
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received his M.S. from SUNY at

------------------------------------------------'
Albany. Previously, Nagle was
111
t

























































op1n1on
Page 6 - THE CIRCLE -

September 18, 1986
Can't we· be friends?
Violence is uncalled for -
and among friends it's
unexplainable.


Fights in several bars in Poughkeepsie, the abuse of people at
off--campus parties and the harassment of people on campus say
a lot about the character of the student body at Marist.
Realistically, one cannot say these incidents will never occur.
A hot and crowded bar filled with people who have been drink-
ing is a breeding ground for a barroom brawl, but the tension
and hostility among Marist students are becoming increasingly
larger and increasingly unhealthy.
When local bars have to clear the occupants and lose their
.
business for the night because of an abundance of fights, as was
done this past weekend, isn't the situation out of hand?
When a female sophomore sits helplessly at an off-campus party
and watches her peers cheer
as
they repeatedly bang someone's
head into a window until it goes through,
as
she did the first week
of school, shouldn't one wonder what is happening?
Marist is a college composed of a diverse group of people -
people with different ideas and beliefs and even people with con-
flicting ideas and beliefs. Welcome to the real world.
Are violence and cruelty the things we will take with us when.
we graduate from Marist?
Now consider the fact that many people base their opinions on
one experience or enco'-lnter. The recent involvement of Marist
students in violent and cruel acts is lowering the surrounding
public's opinion of the Marist student body.
They, too, have had enough.
letters.
Government interns
To the Editor:
Each year the New York State
Assembly offers 150 full-time in-
ternships for college juniors,
seniors and graduate students.
.
The semester-long programs
~egin in January with a .. 1reek
of
orientation
to
state goVefoment
and the legislative process. In ad-
dition
to
attending regular classes
at the assembly, session interns
work directly with assembly
members.
They draft bills, research and
respond to questions from people
in the member's home area and at-
tend meetings and hearings held by
assembly committees. The end
result of total immersion in this ac-
tive work-learning experience is
firsthand knowledge of state
government, the legislative process
and policy-making.
state on issues ranging from DWI
to toxic waste and taxation.
Session Interns receive a semester
of credit from their college and a
$1,200 stipend from the assembly.
Applications
and supporting
materials for this program
must
be
submitted to a
designated
liitfson
officer at the applicants' college
before Nov. 1.
Graduate scholars serve as full-
time professional staff to assembly
leaders and receive $9,000 stipends.
Applicants
_
for the Graduate
Scholar Program apply directly to
the Assembly Intern Committee no
later than Nov. l for the program
beginning in January.
Further information and ap-
plications are available from the
Assembly Intern Program, 829A
Legislative
Office
Building,
Albany,
N. Y.,
12248,
(518)455-4704.
WHAT
HAPPENED?
I
WA'& RECALISRATING
THE' LA~ER
~oPE ON
THE INFRARED
~URFACE-
To ~RFACE AHT1-PER®oNNEL
UNIT,
ANP
THoMPaoN
vJAa ENTER1~G
'"6
LAUNCH
VARIASLE&
INTo
THE
ONBOARD MJCRoPRoCE~ioR ...
the other
murray
,,_ WHEN
THE
§VCKER§.HI,
U~
·WITH
CLUB&!
: ./QiJ!Y(hS'.·:ot
..
te.aah.,ipg~
..
,,,,;,,,,,
:
:
.,
.:
'
•·:."'.;
··,
.....
,. :.•-
~
...
t:
--:
.. _.,-:
.,
.
-·~-:
·.::
·'~---•~t

.•
\I
.,
,'.
~?
·-1~·
.
;,::'"
by
Julia E. Murray
make sure you don't leave before
they write on'the board, wouldn't
It happens every time. You perch
.
your rose-colored glasses firmly on
your nose, swearing that this time
you know exactly what to expect,
only to find yourself sobbing on
your desk an hour and a half later,
with just one thought running
through your mind: Why me? Why
do I end up with all the graduates
of the Joseph Stalin School of
Teaching'?
they tell you about the time they
they write it so you could read it?
varnished the cat. After all, no one
-Myth: Professors don't like
else will listen to these stories any
assigning papers any more than
more, particularly the cat.
you like writing them.
-Fact: Professors adore assigning
-Myth: "You're in college now;
k f
it's up to you
if
you skip a class .• , papers; they love to thin o you
staying up until
5
a.m. doing
-Fact: Committing murder is a something for their· clas_s, par-
less serious crime than skipping a
ticularly if you fall_asleep in clas~
class with the average professor.
the next day and they can wake you
Do you think they enjoy reading a
up pretending to
·
be insulted.
list of the same names day after
Besides, if you weren't doing a
day? Why else do they require a
death certificate (your own) if you paper, you might be wasting your
Session interns do research and
are exposed to the views of groups
and
individuals from all over the
New York Staie
.
Obviously it's too late to save
yourself this semester; you have to
serve the full 15-week sentence for
the crime of gullibility, but there is
hope for next semester if you just
remember the

10 biggest myths
about professors,
.and
what the
truth really is.
miss one day? Going to class isn't
time sleeping, or something equal-
just a good idea; it's the law;
ly disguSting.

·
Assembly Intern Program.
Photo workshop
To the Editor:
Northlight
Photography
Workshops of Montgomery,
N. Y
.,
will offer a series of photography
workshops this autumn for people
wishing to learn more about color
nature. photography. Several field
trips are scheduled to explore our
area's unique natural settings.
On Oct. 11, from lO a.m.-5
p.m., there will be a field workshop
in the Shawangunk Mountains'
Monhonk Nature Preserve, in
Ulster County.
On Oct. 18, from 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
there will be another
field
workshop in Harriman State Park
area of Orange County. Following
these workshops, on Oct. 30, from
7:30 to 9 p.m. there will be an in-
door review/ critique meeting held
at the Museum of the Hudson
Highlands,
in Cornwall-on-
Hudson, N.Y.
Participants will be working in
THE:
CIRCLE:
beautiful physical surroundings of
fall color, while learning about
concepts of visual awareness an<,t
the attitudes necessary to produce
a creative photograph.
Also
covered will be the techniques us-
ed to achieve an aesthetically valid
photograph, such as proper film
exposure, purposeful composition,
understanding perspective, rear-
rangement of subject using various
lenses, inte11sification of color,
previsualization, perception and
implementation.
A tuition fee will be charged for
the various workshops and early
registration is advised. For a free
packet of information
about the
workshops, write to: Nonhlight
Photo Workshops, R.D. 2, Box
472, Montgomery, N.Y., or call
914-361-1017.
Brent McCullough
Director
-Myth: Professors like students
who ask questions.
-Fact: .Questions mean an inter-
ruption of the all-important flow of
thought, and could signal the end
of the professor's chance to tell you
that great little story about the time
his brother-in-law fell in the swim-
·
ming pool: Besides, questions also
mean that at least one student not
only is
,
awake, but :understands
what the professor is saying, and
there goes the prof.'s reputation as
all-knowing.
-Myth: Professors will dismiss
the class as soon as all the material
for the day
is
covered.
-Fact: Very few people can resist
a captive audience, and teachers are
no exception. Did you ever notice
how they always close the door,
muttering some excuse about
noise? All they really want to do is
Editor:
Julie
Sveda
Arts
&
Entertainment
Editor:
Associate Editors:
Bill DeGennaro
Viewpoint Editor:
Julia Murray
Photography Editor:
Sports Editor:

Paul
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Advertising Manager:
-Myth: Professors schedule of-
-Myth: Professors understand flee hours so that you can get a
that you ore ioking more than just
hold of them more easily.
one class, and will schedule exams
-Fact: Office hours are schedul-
accordingly.
cd for the sole purpose of driving
-Fact: It's no·accident that you
students insane. The gnashing.of
have three tests and two papers due
teeth and the banging of heads on
on the same day; all your teachers the door of the supposedly empty
got together the night before the
office are music to the ears of your
.semester began to plan the best
professor as.he hides in his closet.
method of driving you insane in
-Myth: Professors like cancelling
under a week. Pretty good
classes as much as you like not
guessers, aren't they?
going.
-Myth: Every book a professor

-Fact: The only professors who
orders for a class
is
necessary.
cancel classes are your friends',pro-
-Fact: Any time a teacher orders fessors. Your own professors will
more books than he has names, the
snowshoe or crawl to class if
chances are pretty good that the ex-
necessary.
cess books are going to end up
-
-Myth: Professors are only
"where the dust bunnies roam."
human.
-
·
-Myth: All notes written on the
-Fact: Are they ever late for
board are important.
class? Once they get there, do they
-Fact: Notes written on the
ever leave the class to go to the
board are primarily for artistic ef-
bathroom? Are they ever sleepy in
feet, which is why they draw all an 8: IS? Can they stay awake
those little circles around things through their own lecture
,
on
and then connect them with ar-
Renaissance Lit in Albania? Does
rows. After all, if the professors ex-
this sound like a human being to
pected you to take down everything you?
Gina Disanza
Classified
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_______
V_._i_·_e
__ W
____
.-1p..,_;._(..;;;:;..1_.;;.i..;;r;..1,.,;..t~-
------September
18, 1986 - THE CIRCLE - Page
7--
Wh ere you stand: A time to decide
by Robert Hatem
Believe it or not, there comes a
time when all people must decide
what it is they believe in. This is,
_
however, often lost in a setting of
mass diversion. Even when the par-
ties are over,· the bars clo~ed, the
keg run dry, we are still able to
vegetate
in
front of a television,
partying- behind closed doors and
asking everyone what there is to do.
All.this only aids in a vane attempt
to avoid serious thoughts that we
find too undesirable to deal with.
But when we finally stop mak-
ing jokes to impress friends and
lovers, we should ask ourselves
what we believe. This involves the
difficult task of looking at the
world around us and asking where
we fit in. Among terrorist attacks,
nuclear accidents, Reaganomics
and Don Johnson fashions, do we
really hold an opinion that
we
have
decided to believe in? And ifwe do
have
_these
beliefs, what do we do
about them?
Well, most people do believe in
something; After all, we react to
starvation when it is thrown in our
face. Live Aid proved that some
people do want to do something
about starvation, but what is the
popular response?
Most people decide to throw
money at the problem. If countries
are starving we throw money, if
Nicaragua has problems we throw
money, and if people can't find
work or housing. we .throw still
more money. This is not, however,
taking a stand. It is a way of
soothing our conscience while not
really getting involved.
Personally, I am perhaps the
greatest lover of the power of
money seen in the history world,
but part of that love is the realiza-
tion that money is not a cure of its
own. It is the easiest commodity to
obtain, and the one we most easily
dispence of. It is a very easy
substitute for getting involved.
Before insulting the stupidity of
this article, just give your mind a
chance to think. Right this moment
millions of people are suffering in
our own country and abroad. In
South Africa, millions of people
are being tortured every day. Some
of it is a physical punishment -
people are dying everyday. Some of
Some new questions
for our religions
by Eugene C. Best
as venerable as Christianity, exist
side by side with Christianity, and
it is financial, with the non-whites
being unable by law to achieve a
better standard of living.
Worst of all, it is mentally op-
pressive, with an entire population
being told what they can say and
think, when they can move and
never being allowed to express
themselves in any way that is not
approved
by
the
central
government.
"l
don't really give a shit that
some black guys got it rough in
some country halfway around the
world." That's probab)y the way
some of you ar~ thinking right
now. But you shduld be concern-
ed. In the real world, Rambo won't
jump out and save everyone.
When a country with nuclear
capacity, such as uranium-wealthy
South Africa, becomes unstable the
rest of the world is dragged in.
When a government can maintain
institutionalized
oppression,
despite world attention
and
pressure, then what great safety
jacket do other countries have from
a similiar development?
"That shit can't happen here."
If you don't think it can, ask the
Japanese Americans who were
Editor's note: The following
have not been significantly weaken-
book review of "No Other Name?
ed by their struggles to resist Chris-
A Critical Survey of Christian At-
tianity. What is the meaning of
ti tu des To war'! . · the .
w
o_,ld
_
these religions in the providence of
Religions,"
by
:Pm F. Knitter, was···· 'O<>d;•--the
.. Father ofAesust--Andl.
:~
written
by
Eugene
C.
Best, a pro-
what is· the
meanfng
·of
Jesus for
fessor of reUgious
studies at Marist. these and countless other religious
The title is a teaser. The teaser:
traditions? The new perspective for
what is the meaning of Peter's
these questions is the shift from
statement about Jesus (Acts 4,.
J
2)
classicist consciousness, from the

that "there is no other name under
Platonic and Aristotelian world
heaven given among men by which
view, to a historical consciousness
we must be saved?" Since the
and a scieQtific world view, a shift
meaning seems obvious and has
which affects more and more
always been understood as such in
Christians as they think about
the Christian tradition, why raise
religious matters. An understan-
the question? The obvious niean-
ding of this shift in perspective is
ing of course is that Jesus the
crucial for an understanding of
Christ is the one and only Savior· Knitter's concerns and conclusions
of all humans.
in this book.
Knitter develops his argument in
ten sequential, carefully reasoned
and well-balanced chapters. After
examining the strengths and
placed in American detention
camps during World War II. Ask
why they were forced to sell all
their possessions within a 48-hour
period, and then placed behind
barbed wires, into overcrowded,
dirty barracks by order of the U.S.
government. Ask your leaders,
presidents and congressmen why
we aided a Marcos, or a Shah, or
a Duvalier.
"We had to do that, the real
world means you play hardball and
sometimes we've got to support
those kind of people." So what if
your government thought you were
a threat because your belief in your
freedoms limited them too much.
We all say proudly that we have a
freedom of the press to help pro~
tect us, but why can a William
Casey, director of the CIA,
threaten to enact censorship power
over the press unless they "shape
up?"
Do you agree with what J've
said? Do you disagree'? Why? For
one moment, think.
How much do you know about
these issues, and how have you
worked to change what you think
is wrong? "Hey, I'm only one per-
.
,
.
·,
~~e~
~
'\
I
T
...
son." Yeah, so was Gandhi, and
Hitler, and Nelson Mandella, and
Pinochet.
If nothing else it is your duty to
learn of these things; to educate
and be educated.
Despite all else, that is the pur-
pose of the Marist Progressive
Coalition. It's not primarily a ques-
tion of divestment
or non-
divestment, nor one of pro or anti-
Reaganomics; It is an attempt to
educate and react. The Progressive
Coalition is a matter of allowing
your mind to do more than look at
an issue and say its too complex.
Next time you see a red or black
cloth bracelet, or protest signs, or
a demonstration, don't just laugh
and insult and make jokes. Listen
and decide on the merit of what's
being said and where it is you
stand.
Take the first step towards a real
education and decide what it is you
believe in before someone gains the
power to command what it is you
may believe in.
Robert Hatem, a senior, is a
member of the Progressive
Coalition.

• ::E...
CT\~·
COLLEGE
PRESS
SERVICE
Knitter persists with the question
because he judges that a theology
of the worfd religions is desperate-
ly needed today. He thinks the ob-
vious meaning of the above passage
and others like it obstructs genuine
interreligious
·
dialogue.
And
perhaps, as history reminds us with
regard to other scriptural passages,
perhaps the obvious meaning here
is not. the 'true meaning. Take
Josue's poetic remarks about the
sun standing still, for example, and
the stories about our first parents
Adam and Eve. New questions
raised from new perspectives
.
qualified and clarified what had
previously been traditional but
non-critical understandings of these
passages.
·
weaknesses of various popular at-
titudes toward religious pluralism
(e.g., "all religions are relative,
essentially the same") and of dif-
fering Christian attitudes towards
pluralism (i.e. evangelical, mainline
Protestant, Roman Catholic), he
argues for a theocentric model for
religious pluralism. What is distinc-
tive of Christianity is not that Jesus
Christ is the only son of.God, but
that Jesus
as
Christ and son of God
truly
·
reveals the Father.
Why
major in English?
Can there be new questions from·
new perspectives about the mean-
ing of "No Other Name?" Knitter
shows that there are and suggests
"that all the 'one and only'
qualifiers
to
the
various
christological titles pertain more to
the medium used by the New Testa-
ment than to its cores message."
His book is worth reading for a
better understanding of the new
questions and new perspectives
raised by (along with the complex-
ities of) interreligious dialogue,
whether or not you agree with his
suggested answers.
The new questions are raised by
the fact that, for the first time in
history, the Christian religion is
engaged in a dialogue with other
major religious traditions. These
and other religions, like Hinduism,
and Islam,
have
traditions
-·-
·-----
...
-
...
Knitter claims that since the early
part of this century, an evolution
which some call a "Copernican

revolution"
has been shifting
Christian consciousness from an
ecclesiocentrism to christocentrism
and now to theocentrism. Perhaps,
the path he explores involves such
a shift in consciousness, but he
himself admits that the path must
win greater approval from the
"sense of the faithful" before it
can be called a valid Christian path.
The present sense of the Christian
faithful in America includes a
resurgence of biblical fundamen-
talism. The present sense of the
American Catholic faithful, as
recently published studies suggest,
inclines them to pray first to Jesus,
then to Mary, his mother, and on-
ly thirdly to God the Father.
Reading Knitter's bo.Jk, you are led
to wonder which of these three is
the valid Christian path.
by Diane Pomilla
When I entered Marist in the fall
of
1984,
I was excited by my new
classes. I had been accepted

into
the communication arts program,
and felt pretty impressed . .! felt this
would be a good major for me. I
wasn't sure at the time what I
wanted to do with my life as far as
a career. I knew I wanted to write,
but I was also kind of drawn to
television and film.
I took the usual intro comm
classes that a freshman takes:
"Public Speaking," "Mass Com-
munication" and "Interpersonal
Communication." I did well in all
these and felt that I was going to
breeze this major. Then l heard the
murmurs of "bogus major " and
"easy major." 1 began to wonder
if communication arts had been the
right choice.
At that time,
I
had decided to
minor in English, which I thought
would
supplement my communica-
tion degree and improve me as a
writer. I found that I really liked
English, and it was challenging. I
• struggled with the courses in my
freshman year, but the results
seemed worth it. I was amazed with
the works of Chaucer, Milton and
Dryden. These are names I may
have never known if I hadn't taken
English literature.
The
following
year,
last
September, I grew discontent with
my comm arts major. I didn't feel
that the requirements were strict
enough. After all, 10 classes in any
upper level division didn't seem so
tough. And, although a lot of the
writing classes are dual for com-
munication arts and English, I still
liked the courses in the English pro-
gram better. I switched my major
to English with a writing concentra-
tion, and now I am satisfied.
The point of all this is just to
open your eyes to one fact
l
and
many of my comrades of our
former major have discovered; you
will get more "training" as a writer
as an English major. The English
writing major requires you to take
two classes in upper level literature,
and
6
in upper level writing classes.
The other requirements include
"English Literature I and
II,"
"American Literature
I
and
II,"
"Introduction to Linguistics" and
"History of Literary Criticism
I."
As any educated person knows,
one cannot be a true and accurate
writer with out studying those who
wroce before him. Imitation and
practice are the keys to success as
an author, and unfortunately the
communication arts program lacks
the emphasis on literature. I am not
putting down the major, because it
is good if you know what you want
to go into (such as radio or public
relations). But, if you want to be
a writer and get the proper educa-
tion you'll need to create lasting
written art, then maybe the English
writing program is for you.
Something to ponder before it's
too late.
Diane Pomilla is a junior major-
ing in English.
























_______
e ___
t_c_:_:_e
_____
t_._e
___ r·
_C_]
_________
Page 8 - THE CIRCLE :.-September 18,
1986--
U2 heads for road; Boston back
by Eric
Turpin
Once again, I'm back to harbor
good news about the world of rock
and roll and other miscellaneous
tidbits that come my way. The big
news this week is the Irish band
U2's announcement of a major
world-wide tour for the next year
and a half. The tour will start next
month in Europe, and come over
to the States shortly afterwards. A
U2 spokesperson has said that the
band will play stadiums and other
large
venues which will lead to even
more popularity for the band.
Have you noticed that Duran
Duran guitarist Andy Taylor has
been making rounds outside of the
band? In case you haven't, or just
haven't ·cared (which is awfully
easy to understand), the a'uburn-
liaired
•guitarist
has been playing
with the likes of Belinda Carlisle,
Dale Bozzio (Missing Person's
drummer), and Robert Palmer.
Andy has reportedly replied that he
isn't too thrilled with his Birm-
ingham buddies, but Duran Duran
is still a very functional band. By
the way, if Duran Duran is so in-
tact why has Andy.signed a seven-
record contract deal with Atlantic
records. Hnunm .......
Speaking of new acts getting
recording contracts, Charlie Sex-
ton's fifteen-year-old brother, Will,
has· reportedly signed with MCA
records. The name of Will's band
is-·K.ill. Let's hope that Producer
reel
impressions
Keith Forsey doesn'tget a hold of
Will, or once
.
again we will be
tormented with another Billy Idol
record. I have nothing against Bil-
ly, but I only like to hear one Billy
black
on
white
Idol, not a whole slew. If you don't
believe me just listen to Will's big
brother.
Boston has
again emerged
on the music scene with its third
release, this time on MCA records.
~Extremities' combines·
drama and.strong acting
by Janet McLougblin
Much of the credit goes to Far-
Wanting desperately to get help,
rah Fawcett.
Shedding
her
she realizes there is no possible way
Based
on
William
"Charlie's Angels" image, Fawcett
for her to prove attempted rape.
Mastrosimone's award-winning
gets down to some serious acting as
"They lock me up. I get out. I get
controversial stage play,
Ex-
Marjorie, a woman victimized by
you," the attacker says, laughing
tremities
is a combination of in-
the same guy twice.
at her. She knows he is right.
tense drama and strong acting.
Able to flee her attacker the first
Scared, she begins to dig a grave
The movie is intense because it
time, Marjorie fears that he will
out in her garden to bury him alive.
touches upon a very sensitive sub-
return to finish the job, which he
When Pat and Terry, Marjorie's
ject, but with a unique twist. The does.

roommates,return
home from
• acting is strong
-
because. the
.caste.
-:
,
By spraying_hirnjn th.eJa~ with
; •·

work,:i they: find:,a.,badly~bruise<t
worksso·well
against each other;·
bugspray,.Marjorieisableto
break
·Marjorie'
in a,;skimpy
·black·
they make sparks fly from the
loose, tie him up and place him in
camasole, and a badly-beaten in-
screen.
her fireplace, creating a jail cell.
truder. They are alarmed at Mar-
jorie's irrational b~havior toward.
the attacker. "No one talks to the
animal" Marjorie
says.
Terry, on the other hand, is the
hysterical one. She prefers to have
a drink and a cigarette over rational
thinking. She is responsible for get-
ting the anti4ote, but Marjorie
gives her a time limit; if she isn't
back in time, or she brings the
police, he dies.
;
The only thing Marjorie wants
from her assailant is a confession:
·
a fact-for-fact recurrence of what
happened the first night in her car
and at the house that day. She vows
that until he confesses,-he stays
locked up. Since he ref11SCS
to com-
ply witbher demands, Marjorie
becomes furious and goes after her
attacker in a blind rage. She finds
a knife; the same knife be used on
her. She begins torturing him until
be breaks do\VD
and admits to the
attacks.
Marjorie, relieved this whole
ordeal is over, sinks to the floor
next to the attacker while Terry and
Pat get some help.
Throughout the film, Fawcett is
exceptionally powerful.Her role as
a young woman determined to
make a man pay for what he has
done to her, comes across so clear-
ly. She is so. convincing that you
find yourself really getting involv-
ed in her situation.
James Russo, who starred with
Farrah in the off-Broadway pro-
duction of "Extremities" as well as
;
the film, is rough and rugged, and
a bit comical to lighten up the in-
tense drama.
The supporting cast was another
plus to the film. The roles of Pat,
played by Alfre Woodard, and
Terry, played by Diana Scarwid,
are a funny twosome
because
they
contrast each other so well. This
characterimtion gives the film a bit
of flavor.
With it's intense plot, strong ac-
ting, and good characterizations,
"Extremities"
was
one of the bet-
ter movies to be released this sum-
mer and it is definitely worth
seeing.
The single "Amanda," has already
took off and it looks like the
album was well worth the wait.
Part of the reason that the Boston
album took so long was a series of
legal battles that were raised by
both Boston and their original
record company, Epic records. In-
cidentally, Epic claims that they are
currently mixing their own material
for yet anotbe_r Boston album,·
regardless of Boston's new com-
mitment to
MCA.
Joan Jett's fifth album entitled
"Contact" should be with us in a
few weeks. Jett is currently work-
ing on ~e album with producer
and longtime
friend
Kenny
Laguna. Jett will also co-star with
MichaelJ. Fox in a feature film
called "Light of Day." Be on the
lookout for the new Pretenders
album which is currently being
mixed and mastered
up in
Woodstock,
N.Y.
And one last word of caution, if
you have tickets to see a concert in
Hartford, Conn., and the show is
at the Civic Center, be sure to call
and find out if the show is still on;
there is a maintenance strike going
on and shows are being cancelled.
lateral thinking
on a descending
elevator
A boy and his fish
by Kieran Murphy

I'm sitti~g in the waiting room of my ichthyologist looking at
the obtrusively inoffensive decor. The paintings on the wall have
the well-balanced composition of a valium precipitated Mondrian.
-
Maybe I should take my losses here, at least I don't have to look
at crushed velvet prints of Jesus, Elvis and the crying clowns.
Anyhow, the reason I'm here is my goldfish (Carasius Aratis)
bad an untimely accident. Sebastian had convinced me to coach
him in aquatic gymnastics. This all started when I took him to Sea
World. Ever since then he's been stricken with blind ambition -
jusfaching for a Broadway sleighride. All I hear now is, "Sharnu
can do this," and, "Shamu wears this," and "Sharnu has lunch
with Elvis Costello every third Monday in mackerel season."
I'm not ab.out to break his spirit and tell him there are a thou-
sa~d other Carasius Aratises just like him all looking for that big
break. So, I went out and bought little hoops and a high jump
(although I refused to get the pyrotechnical attachment), a little
sailor's hat and sunglasses, a little beach ball and a tiny fish sad-

·:
:-die-:
-Sebastiar{
demanded a: fiftysgallon:drum :of, Tetra
'Min
pro-
-
tein pellets·~ which he ended up getting'-'-' in.spite of my argu-
ment against it.

I suggested an audience might find novelty in an animal act that
does not harp_ on this stimulus-response bit. I proposed the
transcendence of behavior modification in the dancing-bear genre.

'
It would be the matrix of a society -
two parties engaging in a
symbiotic relationship for the intrinsic value of their art. Wouldn't
the man on the street find this refreshing?
Sebastian, invariably, had a strong opinion on this. He said: "I
know a thing
oi:
two about showbiz and let me tell you, these peo-
ple spend their hard-earned money to be entertained. They don't
want any new-fangled literary theory or some spaced-out direc-
tor's apocalyptic visions or an autonomous goldfish; They want
big laughs, cheap thrills and a catchy melody."
I conceded on this point, but I sensed the whole thing swing in-
to a Frankenstein compendium when Sebastian wanted to hire a
"voluptuous young assistant for the act."..
I thought I was standing firm on this one and next thing I know
I'm on line in the classified office with an ad he typed that reads
as follows:
',
Wanted -
Attractive young lady for aquatic gym~
nastic duo to funcpon in a
performing
capacity. The
applicant must have graceful composure, fluency in
at least one romantic language, a degree in marine
biology and heaving big bazoomas.
When I returned from placing the ad, I decided to set things
straight. I tried to couch the admonishment by explaining my posi-
tion, but it came out harsher than I intended.
.

"Sebastian you don't even help out with the groceries, or do
the dishes or anything," I said. "How
am
I supposed to absorb
the debts for this ... this venture."
Then he gets this glazed look in his eye (which is very subtle con-
sidering he has no eyelids) and I can feel an anecdote about to take
place. With a condescending cadence he starts in.
"I
remerqber this particular afternoon when
I
was a youngster
back in the pond with my faotlly. My mother was going out, she
turned to my dad and said, "Don't eat the kids, I be back in a

while." She was a real kidder, my mom was.
My Dad figured it was time for us to learn about the real world ..
In the pond there was only one common hatred. And this hatred
was neither unjustified nor malicious in. the larger
scheme
of things.
This faction that bore our hatred lacked any remnant of ... " and
he pauses here so I catch the next word which is, of course the
theme of today's parable, " ... integrity."
When the water was undesirable this faction migrated to the land
and when the land was inclement they migrated to the water. They
carried the most despicable title of the entire animal Icingdom. They
were called the ... amphibians. And you, you are an amphibian.
You're fickle, indecisive, weak-kneed ... ," I was going to offer the
adjective - spineless - but Sebastian was wound pretty tight just
then , so I thought better.

"You don't want to starve for your art, but you still want the
fame and fortune. Well it won't be on my coattails, Mr. Amphi-
bian, there's someone out there who will crawl and bleed to have
his name in lights. And that someone is me."
We started training and things were going well. Sebastian was
getting substantial thrust and good trajectory on his jumps.
However, I noticed his "Competitive Attitude" degenerating into
.._ a Pathological Warp.
Coatlnaed oa Dllft
10 ...





















Nationwide Enrollment Dipped
· Two Percent Last Year
The much-anticipated but long-
delayed start of a precipitous
decline the U.S. college enrollment
may have finally started last fall,
when undergrad enrollment fell to
10.8 million students, the College
Board's census 'of 3,023 campuses
revealed recently.
Earlier U.S. Dept. of Education
and education association estimates
• were that enrollment had remain-
ed stable or declined only slightly
from fall 1984 to fall 1985:
Demographers have been predic-
ting that, with fewer 18-year olds
in
the
population,
college
enrollments would decline annual-
ly until 1991.

But the scene was actually a
violent rape of student Katherine
Hawelka, 19, who died a few hours
later.
Police arrested a suspect two
·days later.
Bishop College Head Says
He'll Quit
If
Budget Isn't Cut
Comer J. Cottrell, acting chair
of the Dallas college, says he's so
frustrated that he may quit if the
board doesn't endorse his budget
plan, which includes suspending
the football program, slashing the
operating budget by a sixth, halv-
ing the number of people on the
board and hiring a full-time
fundraiser.
Salaries Up, But Job Offers
Down For Spring Grads
Engineering, computer science,
social science and business ad-
ministration grads got fewer job of-
fers last spring, but starting salaries
for most majors were up an
average of two percent during
1985, the College Placement Coun-
cil reported recently.
Biggest percentage salary leaps
were for humanities grads (IO.I
percent to an average $19,296 a
year), economics grads (eight per-
cent to $22,404) and social science
grads (eight percent to $19,980).
Petroleum engineers still got the
highest average starting salary of
$33,000 a year,.the CPC found.
HYDEPARK
TRADING CO.
CUSTOM MADE
TO ORDER:
14k Gold
Sterling Silver
Leather·Apparel
Scrimshaw
REPAIR WORK
ON ALL
LEA11iER GOODS
&
JEWELRY
REPRESENTING
THE FINEST
AMERICAN
CRAFTSMEN
David Nocller, Proprietor
BARKER'S-SHOPRITE PLAZA RT.9
229-7900.
Penn State Keeps Invitation
Open"To Donald Regan
Bishop currently is about $6
million in debt, Cottrell says.
Penn Suspends Lab Workers For ----------------------------..
Shipping Heads Across Country
The Student Executive council
asked PSU to find a different
speaker for its Sept. 13 fundraising
dinner, citing the "insensitivity" of
the White House chief of staffs
past comments that women cared
more about fashion than arms con-
. trol and that they wouldn't be will-
ing to sacrifice new jewelry pur-
chases to help end apartheid.
But PSU Pres. Bryce Jordan
replied, "I think we'll go ahead
with it just as it's planned."
Clarkson U. Guards Witness,
But Don't Stop,
Rape-Murder of Student
Brown Mails Fundraising
Videotape to Alumni
• The university
hopes the
15-minute tape, which dwells on
the school's tradition, will increase
the average gift per donor to more
than $200, the lowest in the Ivy
League.
Cornell recently sent to wealthy
alumni tapes of their children
graduating from the school.
Yale has also started sending
tapes recording the progress of
campus construction projects to
alumni who donated to the
projects.
U. of Pennsylvania's
Med
Center dropped Dr. Martin Spec-
tor from its staff and suspended
two lab workers in a probe into the
sale of heads and body parts from
the med school.
The lab workers reportedly said
they sold cadaver heads for $150
each and arms for
$65
to Spector,
who • then allegedly sold them to
research labs around the country.
Emory Bribes Students
To Move Off Campus
About 12 upperclassmen have
Drinking Age Hike Sends
taken Emory U.'s offer of $1,000
Students Across the Border
to move off campus and make
Security guards Donald Shanty
room in the dorms for a record
and Kim Avadikian thought they
Bars in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico freshman class of 1,250 students.
had stumbled on two students con-
recently reported serving huge
Housing chief Joe Moon says
sensually making love by a campus crowds of students who crossed the
now too many upperclassmen want
arena recently, .and declined to
Rio Grande from New Mexico to take the offer of money or
WAIRCUTTI;RS
$2.00 Off.
With Marist I.D.
Every
Monday
and Tuesday
Come visit
The Cuttery,
where we've been
the very best in
professional
hair styling, shampoo,
conditioning, perms,
body waves, cellophane
colorings, and more.
Seuing haircutting
trends for over
ten years.
Serving
Marist
Since
197.5
The Cuttery
is located at
3 Liberty Street
in Poughkeepsie.
Stop
by
or
calf us at
914-454-9239.
. intervene.
. .
,
.
$tate. _and Texas at El Paso to
relatively cheap housing in an
_,, • ..., ,,; ;'/I-have seen students having-sex
~r~(;a~;;
1'.exas:.-.,
new,it21-y,ear
0
old• , lapartment complex the-Atlanta col-,-----------------------------
. in unusual places before,''· Shanty minimum legal drinking age faw;-, lege·-
rented to handle the
dorm·
r'
-----------------------------~
said.
which went into effect Sept. I.
overflow.
Loan woes may be ahead
WASHINGTON, D.C. (CPS)
-
Nearly 4 million students na-
tionwide may have trouble getting
student loans soon, a bankers'
association warned last week.
The interest rates students pay
on new loans will rise while many
banks, says the Consumer Bankers
Association in Washington; D.C.,
may simply stop making student
loans if Congress approves a pro-
posal to cut a special government
allowance the banks get for mak-
ing the lo~ns.
"Many banks may just get out
(of the student loan business) com-
pletely," says William Clohan, the
group's lawyer.

it had already made to Marine
Midland Bank.
But even Marine Midland of-
ficials are· not optimistic. ''The bot-
tom line," says bank official Greg
Lancaster, "is some banks are go-
ing to say 'Why are we in this?"
About 13,000 lenders are in the
Guaranteed Student Loan program
now, Clohan estimates.
Their worry is a provision, ap-
proved three weeks ago by • a •
House-Senate conference commit-
tee, in the proposed Higher Educa-
tion· Reauthorization Act that
would cut the special allowance
banks get.
ten years ago, Kidwell recalls,
"Congress was literally begging
lenders to come in."
"The incentives enticed them to
come in, and build improvements
in the system," he says.
Congress, the Gramm-Rudman
balanced. budget Jaw and the ad-
ministration have all helped whit-
tle the incentives down over the last
five years. The bill now before
Congress
would
share
the
allowance from 3.5 percent over
the T-bill rate to 3.25 percent over
the T-bill rate.
Advocates of the reduction see it
as a way to help cut government
costs and balance the federal
budget.
"Yes, the department would like
MY PLACE
PIZZA
&
SUBS
HOT
OFF THE
WIRE!
Across from Marist
Next to Skinner's
Mon.-Sat. 11-11
Sunday 2-11
473-7313
*
$1 off w/Ad
*
"Students are going to have to
l_ook very hard for an institution
willing to loan them money," adds
Bill Kidwell of the National Educa-
tional Lending Center.
To encourage banks to
make
marginally profitable loans to
students, the government has let
the banks take an allowance
amounting to
3.5
percent higher
than the rate the government
charges for Treasury Bills:
to see the cut (because) it would ....
::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~
make the cost of operating the GSL
program that much less," says a
Department
of
Education
spokesman. "The total cost now is
$3-billion ·a year, which does not in-
The last cut in the special govern-

ment allowance in March, 1986,
convinced California-based Securi-
ty Pacific Bank to stop making stu-
dent loans. The bank sold the loans
Profs---
Continued from page 5
Adelphi University. Prior to join-
ing Marist, Weiner taught at the
Westchester Social Work Educa-
tion Consortium.
COMPUTER
SCIENCE/MATHEMATICS
Onkar Sharma has been ap-
pointed the new chairperson for the
Division
of
Computer
Science/Mathematics.
Sharma
received his Ph.D. at New York
University. Since 1979, Sharma
taught
computer
science at
Moorhead State University.
Joseph Bergin, management in-
formation systems. Bergin receiv-
ed his Ph.D. from Michigan State
University.
Banks say they cannot make a
profit on student loans without the •
allowance.
When the GSL program began clude the loans themselves.''
Registrar
______ ,
_c_on_t_in_ue_d_rr_o_m_p_ag_e_3
make mistakes."
Besides being the campus r!!cord
keeping office, he said, the registrar •
is responsible for organizing over
800 course sections.
The Registrar's Office last week
estimated that between 2,000 and
3,000 transactions were recorded
during the add/drop period.
Asked i( the absence of the
registrar caused delays during
add/drop, vanderHeyden said "I
haven't heard any complaints. I'm
sure it made for a harder time for
the office staff, but they've
weathered the storm admirably."
Advertisements for the position
will be placed in The New York
Times and the Chronicle of Higher
Education, vanderHeyden said,
and applicants will be interviewed
in November or December.
The position
of assistant
registrar is also empty, and ap-
plicants will be sought for that job
soon after the registrar's position
is filled.

Home of Rock
&
Roll
Rock
&
Roll .Phone 471-WPDH





























......
--Page
10 -
THE CIRCLE-
September 18, 1986 ____________
.....,
_______________
_
cam~us
inquirer
• Matt Skiko, senior, communica-
tion arts.
I'm disappointed. It was
a nice place to pass the hours. A
bigger disappointment than the loss
of The Chess Set.
Sue Ryan, senior, political
science. The removal of The Fish
was disheartening but the Joss of
The Chess Set has left • me
distraught.
Karen Wilson, senior, business.
The Fish was ·like the gathering ..
place for hanging out and having
fun. 1 can't understand why they
took it away.
Are
you denying
yourself a better shot
at grad school?
You may.
if
you fail to take a
Stanley H. Kaplan prep course.
Kaplan has prepared over
1
mil··
lion students for exams like the
I.SAT.
GMAT. GRE
and
MCAT
Call lfs not too late to do better
on your grad school exam.
!KAPLAN
STANllY
H.
ICAPI.ANEDUCATlONAI.ONT!RIJO.
OOITT
COMPETE
Wffii
/1.
KAPLAN SlUDENT-BE ONE
WHITE
PlAINS
...... 914-948-7801
POUGHKEEPSIE
..... 914-485-2002
STAMFORD
......... 203-324-770&
How do you feel about the removal of
'The Fish' sculpture outside· of
·champagnat Hall?
Photos
by
David Ausmus
Jeff Friedman, assistant football
coach.
The removal of The Fish
was sad because it has been there
throughout my years at Marist.
Kari
Nicodemos,
junior,
business.
I'm so upset! It was so
. cute!
Janice Meunier, junior, accoun-
ting.
The Fish was a conversation
piece, however, the removal of it
didn't phase me.
Kristen Grenzhauser, • senior,
Spanish;
It's a real sha01e the ad-
ministration felt The Fish was un-
fit to be part of the Marist scene;··
Murphy---------c_o_n_ti_n_u~_f_r_om_p_a_~_s
One morning he jumped the second rung of the high jump with
such momentum that he slammed into the other side of our
olympic-sized goldfish bowl. That•s when I rushed him here, to
Dr. Pynshon's.
• In the waiting room ; just as I throw down a copy of Highlights,
Sebastian emerges from the operating -room with the nurse and
a fiberglass cast on his lower dorsal fin.

.
The ride home was silent. A few minutes before we get to the
house, Sebastian turns to me and.says: "I'm out of the running
for ten weeks, but I figure we can start training after Christmas."
I was so proud of him at that moment. Misty-eyed, I concen-
trated on the road. My throat muscles constricted, but I managed
to say, with some stolidity, "Why don't we go to the pet store and
see if we can get that pyrotechnical attachment for the hoops and
high jump."
US
~partmcnt of
Health 4 Human Services!
TEST
YOUR
SKILL.
.
,
.. _QUITTING.
IT COU,LD
..
BE. ,
THE TEST
OF YOUR·LIFE~
LADIES
& -
GENTLEMEN
...
*
C. U.B.·
proudly
presents:
.
.
.
''Catch A
Rising
Star''
*··
••
with
Comedian Wayne ,Kotter
and
A, Juggler
TONIGHT

Ill
the River Room
at
9:30
p.m.
• Free Admission
• Prizes
&
Giveaways







































---~------------------------se
tember 18~ 1986 •
.THE
CIRCLE· Page 11 --
Leave the
big guy
alone
by Paul Kelly
Once again, the dark and rumbl-
Ing clouds of scandal have en-
shrouded the walls of McCann.
Perry was head coach," said
Colleary.
The point here is not whether
Allegations were raised a week
ago that Marist star center Rik
Smits, the flagship of the Red Fox
squad, may be ineligible to play
college basketball this year because
of supposed acceptance of money
to play hoops at home in Holland.
Rumor and gossip have only gone
further .to accelerate this claim,
which has put a -damper on en-
thusiasm for the upcoming season.
thursday
morning
quarterback
Marist Athletic Director, Brian
·colleary,
confirmed that an NCAA
in~estigator was in Mccann last
week, and said that the p~rpose of
the visit was related to the short
and turbulent coaching tenure of
ex-head man Mike Perry.
Smits took any money or not. The
major item here is that once again,
our 19, 20, and 21-year-old players
are being thrust into a light by the
men with the pens that they neither
want nor deserve. Sure, you say,
playing basketball on a promising
young program like Marist's entails
all the trappings of stardom· and
.
fame with its trips to the Garden
and the promised land, the NCAA
tournament.
"The allegations had to do with
the time period between June, 1984
anq September, 1984, when Mike
Wrong. These are still kids play-
ing the game in the way Dr. James
Naismith envisioned it when he
:/·
Fall Schedules
FOOTBALL
September
·13 •
@ Dickinson

20.
·sT.
PETER'S
27. ST. JOHN'S
October 3 @ FDU-Madison
11 @Iona
18 @RPI
25 SIENA
November I @ Pace
8 COAST GUARD
Home games in CAPS
.
WOMEN'S TENNIS
September 10 @ Vassar
.
12 NEW ROCHELLE
16
@
RPI
18 BARD
20 MANHATTAN
22· @ Siena
24 LIU
27 QUINNlPIAC
29 WESTERN CONNECTICUT
October I NEW. PALTZ
4 @ ECAC Tournament

6 @ Fairfield
15 ST.ROSE
..
'

23 BRIPGEPO~T~':
...

~
·'.

·._
••
28
@
$UNY-Purchase
Home matches in
.CAPS
SOCCER
1:30 p.m
2:30 p.m.
1:00 p.m.
8:00 p.m.
1:00 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
2:30 p.m.
1:00 p.m.
1:00 p.m.
4:00 p.m.
3:30 p.m.
4:00 p.m.
3:30 p.m.
1:00 p.m.
3:30 p.m.
4:00 p.m
1:00 p.m.
3:00 p.m.
3:30 p.m.
9:00 a.m.
3:00 p.m.
3:00 p.m.
-3:00 p.m.
3:00 p.m.
September 6 SYRACUSE
I :30 p.m.
11 FAIRFIELD
4:00 p.m.
13
@
Monmouth•
1:30 p.rn.
16
@
Army
4:00 p.m.
20 ROBERT MORRIS•
11 :00 a.m.
24 ST. FRANCIS (NY)•
3:30 p.m.
27
.
@ St: John's
1:00 p.rn.
October I @ Siena
3:30 p.m.
4 @ Loyola (MD)•
Jl :00 a.m.
11
@
St. Peter's

1:30 p.m.
14 HARTWICK
3:30 p.m.
18 SETON HALL
1:30 p.rn.
22
@
Fordham
3:30 p.rn.
25
HOFSTRA
11 :00 a.m.
29
@
LIU~
3:00 p.m.
November I MANHATTAN
1:30 p.m.
5
@ FDU•
2:30 p.m.
9 ADELPHI
I :30 p.m.
·
•ECAC Metro Conference Game Home games in CAPS
WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL
September 12
15
17
19
20
22
25
27
VASSAR/RUSSELL SAGE
6:00 p.m.
RPJ/NYU
6:00 p.m.
@ Army
5:00 p.m.
@ Central Conn. St.
7:00 p.m.
.
29
October I
3
Tournament
@
Pace
@ Siena
@ New Rochelle/Molloy
@ Ramapo
@ W. Conn. St.
MOUNT ST. MARY'S/
SUNY-WESTBURY
7 @ Central Conn. St./Holy Cross
9 FORDHAM
10 @ Springfield Tournament
18
@
Vassar Tournament
21 ST. THOMAS AQUINAS
22 @ Skidmore/SUNY-New Paltz
24 @ Quinnipiac
25
IONA
28 @. Lehman/Hunter
29 DOWLING/BROOKLYN
30
MANHATTAN/BARD
November I
@
Skidmore Tournament
4 QUEENS/BRIDGEPORT
Home Games in CAPS
7:00 p.m.
6:00 p.m.
11:00 a.m.
7:00 p.m.
7:00 p.m.
6:00 p.m.
6:00 p.m.
6:00 p.m.
6:00 p.m.
9:00 p.m.
7:00 p.m.
6:00 p.m.
6:00 p.m.
1:00 p.m.
6:30 p.m.
6:00 p.m.
6:00 p.m.
9:00 p.m.
7:00 p.m.
MEN'S
&
WOMEN'S CROSS COUNTRY
September 6
@
Fairfield Invitational
13
@
Wagner Invitational/
ECAC Metro Championships
19 @ Rochester/ Alfred (men)
27
October I
4
12
18
24
25
November I
Rochester (women)
@
King's Invitational
@
RPI/Siena (women)
@
N.Y. Tech Invitational
@ Hunter Invitational
@
Siena/Colgate/Utica
@
Columbia/Delaware
@
Albany State Invitational
@
NYS Collegiate Track
&
Field Assn. Championships
IS
@
1C4A Championships &
NCAA District Qualifier
All
meets men's
and
women's unless
indicated.
10:30 a.m.
11:00 a.m.
3:30 p.m.
1:00 p.m.
4:00 p.m.
11:00 a.m.
12:00 p.m.
ll:OOa.m.
·3:30
p.m.
12:00 p.m.
1.00 p.m.
10:00 a.m.
first put the ball into that fabled
peach basket in Springfield, Mass.,
back in the
1890's.
Granted, college basketball is a
big-time business, and like any
business, it has its problems. But
it is still a game.
The major aspect of Marist
basketball is still the fact that these
are kids playing a kids game in the
limelight of a man's world. We
outsiders tend to place this fact out
of focus sometimes.
Let's face it, the major concern
for us Red Fox fans is not placing
the players under the microscope
any more than they already are -
especially after McCann was ap-

pearing to become a fairly tranquil
place where the team could concen-
trate on playing Dr. Naismith's
game.

Leave the big guy alone. He's got
more important things to worry
about, like his classes and becom-
ing an All-American.
SOCCER
Syracuse 6, Marist I (9/6/86)
Syracuse
4 2 -
6
Marist
I 0 -
1
First Half: I.MAR, Jim McKcnna
(penalty kick)
·1:47;
2.SYR, Owisany
(Dornau) 3:18; 3.SYR, Kolodziey
(penalty kick). 23: 12; 4:SYR, Kolodzicy
25:54; 5.SYR, M.orris 37:35.
Second Half: 6.SYR, Morris 3:58;
7.SYR, Dimiti-icliski
(Pascarella) 13:1S.
Shots on Goal: SYR 8,
l\1AR
3.
Cor-
ner Kicks: SYR S, MAR 2. Goalie
Saves: Joe Maddcn(MAR) 8, Whit-
comb(SYR) 3. Marist 0-1, Syracuse
1-0.
Marist I, Fairfield O (9/11/86)
Fairfield
O O -
0
Marist
I 0 -
1
First Half: I.MAR, Kudzai Kam-
barami (Fran Payne) 35:29.
Second Half: NONE
Shots on Goal: MAR 10, FFLD 4.
Corner Kicks: MAR 8, FFLD I. Goalie
Saves:
Joe
Madden(MAR)
3,
Kallio(FFLD) 13.· Marist 1-1.
Monmouth 3, Marist O (9/13/86)
Mai"!st . .
,.,
,
.o.
0 :-0
..
Monmouth
O

3 -
3
First Half: NONE
Second Half:
I.MON,
Sacco
(Wilson) 46:41; 2.MON, Wilson
(Russo) 71:51; 3.MON, Bajek (Sacco)
73:48.
Shots on Goal: MON 6, MAR 3.
Corner Kicks: MON3, MAR 3. Goalie
Saves: Joe Madden(MAR) 3, (MON) 3.
Marist 1-2.
WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL
Marist def. Russell Sage/Vassar
(9/12/86) Marist 2-0.
WOMEN'S TENNIS
Vassar 8, Marisf 1 (9/10/86)
Singles
Quinby(V) def. Joelle Stephenson,
Rik
Smits
scoreboard
..
..
~
.
.
1-6, 6-2, 6-3; Bishop(Yj • def. Sheila
Bradley, 6-2; 6-0; Br<iadbcnt(V) def..
Alison Block, 6-1, 6-1; Joycc(V) def.
Beth Ann. Saunders, 6-2, 7-6(9-7);
Bark(V) def. Jennifer Leonard; 6-2,
6-0; Carla Bcllollo(MAR) def .. Morris,
6-4, 6-2.
Doubles
• •
LeBaron and Cruz(V) def. Stephen-
son and Saunders, 6-1, 6-2; Venghiat-
tis and O'Bricn(V) def. Block and
Bradley, 6-3, 7-5; Sochurek and
Hoeft(V) def. Lisa Lavin and Laura
Murray, 6-3, 6-2. Marist 0-1.
MEN'S
&
WOMEN'S
CROSS COUNTRY
ECAC Metro Men's
Championship Meet {9/13/86)
Team Standings
.
I-Robert Morris,
45; 2-Marist;-66;
3-St. Francis(PA),
79; 4-LIU, 83;
5-Monmouth, 98: 6-Wagner, 136; 7-St.
Francis(NY), incomplete.
Individual Results
5.2 Miles I-Don
.Reardon(MAR),
26:12.S; 2-Mario Cooper(LIU), 26:43;
3-Steve Uhing
(RM),
26:48; 9-Steve
Brerinan(MAR),
27:59;
17-Bob
Swecney(MAR),
28:56;
19-Jeff
Nicosia(MAR), 28:59; 2O-Glen Mid-
dleton(MAR), 29:02; Steve Pierie
(MAR),
30:24; Marc Mabli(MAR),
.
30:36; Bill McKenna(MAR), 30:50;
Brian Savickis(MAR), 31:39.
ECAC Metro Women's
Championship Meet(9/13/86)
Team Standings
I-LIU,
29;2-Marist, 38;
3-St.. Fran-
cis(PA), 82; 4-Wagner,
.85;
5-Robcrt
Morris,
113; 6-St. Francis(NY),
incomplete.
Individual Results
3.3 Miles I-June Hcnry(LIU), 20:27;
2-Margarcl Nolan(LIU), 21:31; 3-Jean
Clements (l\·IAR),
22:03;
4-Jcnnifc:r
Fragomcni(MAR), 22:37; 6-Annic
Breslin(MAR). 22:54; 9-Hclcn Gard-
ncr(MAR),
·23:36;
17-Pam
Shcwchuk(MAR), 24:13; 18-Jcan Har-

ris(MAR). 26:55.
f'OOTBALL
Dickinson
31, Marist
7
(9/13/86)
Marist
0 7
0 0 -
7
Dickinson
6 7 12 6 -
31
D-Parsons recovers blocked punt in
end zone (kick failed)
D-Sticka 40 pass from Maloney
(Mack kick)
M-Howard Herodes
5
pass from Jon
Cannon
(Bill
Rose kick)
D-Gilbert 18 pass from Maloney
(pass failed)
D-Sticka 47 pass from Maloney (pass
failed)
D-Gilberr
28
pass from Maloney

(pass
failed)
Rushing: Marist, Ed Christensen
27-79; Mark Burlingame 10-35; Jon
Cannon 2-4; Curt Bailey 2-4. Dickin-
son, R.Wilson 21-83; P.Wilson 8-19;
Esmond
5-46;
Maloney 5-17; Birosak
2-44; Eaton 3-6; Balderston 4-20;
Smathers 3-16.
Passing: Marist, Cannon 7-14-0-72;
Jim Fedigan 0-9-0-0; Jason Thomas
1-3-1-2.
Dickinson,
Maloney
9-17-0-171-; Balderston 0-0-0-0.
Receiving: Mai-isl, Bob Brink 2-25;
Herodes 2-16; Christensen 1(-2); Sean
Keenan 3-34; Burlingame 1-(-2). Dickin-
son, Gilbert
4-59;
Sticka 3-96; R.Wilson
1-6; Smathers 1-10.
Marist 0-1.
All members of the Marist
Community are invited to send
their 500-700 word Viewpoints to
Len Johnson c/o The Circle.
-


























I
t
__ SROrts
.
Page
12 - THE CIRCLE - September 18, 1986 --
Failing to execute, gridders fall in opener
by Paul .Kelly
Ask Marist Head Coach Mike
Malet what the definition of execu-
tion is, and you won't get a
·
Webster's
Second
Edition
dictionary-style answer for the
meaning of the term.

He·wm probably say it was ab~
sent from his football team's inind
and actions on the gridiron as the
Red Foxes were trounced in their
season opener against Dickinson
College, 31-7. With the loss, Marist
now stands at 0-1.
.

The game, played at Dickinson's
Carlisle, Pa. campus, was not lost
on any one particular play or series
of plays, according to Malet. What .
was lacking, he noted, was total
team execution.

"We just didn't execute fun-_
damenfally ," said Malet.
Dickins·on
freshman quarterback
Sean Maloney connected with Red
Devil receivers four times in the end
zone. Malet lamented on the
·play
of his defensive line and secondary,
but was qi.tick n:ot to place the
blame on ·any one particular unit of
his team for the loss.
"There is no one person or one
area
·
of the football team that
-played
worse than any other," said
Malet. "The offense, defense and
special teams all did not execute."
Malet did·, however, praise the
efforts of the backfield tandem of
junior Ed Christensen and senior
Mark Burlingame.
"Ed had a fine game, and Mark
Burlingame blocked like a Mack
truck,'' said Malet. Christensen
·carried
the ball 27 times for 79
yards.
-
Marist's only score of the game
occurred late in the first half when
junior starting quarterback Jon
Reardon captl!,res-first place
as X-cou,itry teams fare· well
by Paul Kelly
An ECAC Metro Conference of-
ficial"walked up to Marist runner
Don Reardon and said that what he
had just achieved was something
that he could tell his grandchildren.

Reardon, a 20-year-old junior
majoring in communication arts,
had just won the inaugural ECAC
Metro Conference cross country
championship, covering the 5.2
mile course at Clove Lakes Park,
Staten Island, in a swift time of
26:12.5. Reardon's clocking was
only
-18
seconds off the course
record, and paced Marist's men's
team to second place behind
Robert Morris, 45-66.
. •
pia~~d· well at the
_meet,
finis~~ng
second behind LIU, 29-38. Leading
the way for the Red Foxes was
senior Jean Clements, who placed
third in a time of 22:03.
Sophomore Jennife.r Fragomeni
finished fourth in 22:37, followed
by junior Annie Breslin (6th),
22:54; and sophomores Helen
Gardner (9th), 23:36; and Pam
Shewchuk (17th), 24:13.
Head Men's Coach Steve Lurie
noted his squad's complete effort
as
a
major factor in the high finish
of the team.
"Everybody did
a
good job, all
the way to the back," said Lurie.
Women's Head Coach Deb Bell
could not be reached for comment,
but Lurie ·praised .the efforts,of
Clements
ana
Bteslirt; wJto 1:>otfl
hailfronf Staten· Island. This was
Breslin's first race since recovering
from a preseason knee injury.
;
esp_ecially
when you consider An-
{
nif
s
injury;" saj.~ Lµri~: .
. _
'.
~
·
Lurle.w'as gleaming ov~r the·per~·
:
forniance

of Reardon, who is
undefeated in two invitationals this
season, and who defeated many

scholarship athletes in this race.
Marist does not allot athletic
scholarships in cross country and
track and field.
"Don earned his way to where
he is now, and his confidence level
is building," said Lurie.
Reardon
.
mirrored
·
Lurie's
remarks when asked to comment
on the race. "I got to the starting
line, and said to myself that there
was no way that I was going to lose
that- race.''·.
.
.
.
_
.
.
,
,Lµrie
i'Y¥
,$q;qgic:k; t()_
J?OiI.J;~
~Ht
i}lat_
M~nsi
»:~f~t]3~f
<:emijm~li-
men's.-a
nd
,
women's team ac· t e
Cannon found junior wide receiver
Howard Herodes open in the end
zone for a 5-yard touchdown.
Malet was ·still-not completely
satisfied
·with
the play of Cannon
and the Red Foxes' two other
signal-callers, junior Jim Fedigan
and sophomore Jason Thomas.
The quarterback spot is still up in
the air, according to Malet.
"None of them grabbed the bull
by the ring or won the derby," said
Malet.
Offensively, Malet was pleased
with the play of senior Sean
Keenan, who was moved to tight
end from linebacker last week. All
three of Keenan's receptions were
first downs made on crucial third
down plays.
.
The Red Foxes play their home
opener Saturday· against St.-
Peter's. Malet said the Red Foxes
know the season is in their own
hands.
"We must play to our own
potential," Malet said. "There is.
nobody on our schedule that
we:
can't beat, but conversely there is
nobody on it that can't beat us. W~
know what we have to do."
Game time for the St. Peter's
contest at Leonidoff Field is 2:30
p.m. on Saturday.
Following Reardon
··
into . the
dWt~
was
junior
Ste9e Btettnan;
ninth'
iri
27:59;·
sophomore Bob
Sweeney (17th), 28:56; and juniors.
Jeff Nicosia (l?lh), 28:59; and
Glen Middleton. (20th); 29:02.

The· Marist women's team also

"Jeannie and Annie did well
upon their return to Staten Island,
meet.
"U
you

add up the. team
places
.
of the· men's and the
women's teams at the meet, we
were the best," Lurie said.
Don Reardon
_
~
~
Vic
··vanCatpels:
·-Athlete
Booters' plaY, slips.jl1
..
2nd half
makes it big as coach
by
Don Reardon
Marist College Women's Volleyball Coach Vic VanCarpels is
a versatile athlete and coach who is channeling his energies toward
a
difficult goal: improve upon last year's winning volleyball team
tecord.
••


'
_
.

.
.

_
.· .
.
._

The task
•is
not
an
easy one for third~yeat coach VanCarpels as
the team had
a
record of 31-9 last year.

·
_ _

•~W:e've
got many people returning from last-year.and-wmmng
changes people," said VanCarpels, 26. "Hard,work breeds suc-
cess in:
a
team.,,
VanCarpels, a Jersey City, N.J., ~ative,
is
no stripiger to suc-
cess in athletics.
As
a high schooler he ~chiev;d national honors
in baseball and later went on to St. John s on
a
b~ketball
scholarship.
·

·_
-
"Basketball just wasn't for me, so I went to
N~w
Pc1:1tz
t~ pl~y
baseball and received Division Three honorable mention, said
VanCarpels, who later played for a ~ston Red Sox dub team.
VanCarpels first became interested
m
volleyball as a student at
SUNY New Paltz when he learned internationally acclaimed Coach
William Odeneal was working with the men's program there.
by
Paul Kelly
goal.
The second half was a complete-
Soccer games last
90
minutes,
ly
.
dif(erent story as Monmouth
and the Marist College soccer team controlled the tempo of the game,
is having trouble ri:membering that beating junior netminder Joe Mad-
fact.
den three times. Goldman at-
Last week, the Red Fox hooters tributed the
.team's
poor second
split. a. pair o( games, losing to· half play toll sub-par job ofmarlc-
Morimouth in
.an
ECAC contest,
·
ing
on defense, and a breakdown
3-0, aJtd defeating Fairfield, 1-0. In
-
of the squad's concentration.
·both
,
games, Head Coach Dr.
"They either come out flat or
Howard GoJdman was not pleased they're not ready," said Goldman.
with his team's second half play.
Goldman did praise the all-
The team now has a 1-2 overall around play of his backliners, in-
record.
eluding senior Fran Payne and
Against Monmouth, Marist had junior Gerard Sentochnik. "Fran
complete control of the flow of played well, and Gerry is really
play in the first half, yet couldn't
coming along;" he said.
find the net. The Red Foxes
·had
Against Fairfield on Thursday,
many shots on goal, including Marist again dominated the first
blasts by

senior forward Jim
half, running circles around the
McKenna, junior midfielder Kevin Stags. Junior Kudzai Kambarami
Segrue, and freshman forward Joe scored the only goal of the contest
Purschke, sail just wide or over the at 35:29, when he headed a pass
from' Payne past Fairfield keeper:
Jim
Kallio.
The Red Foxes' second-half
stigma manifested itself,
as
F4'ir-
field c;1pitalized on Marist's stag.:
nantplay in the final 45 minutes,
yet-, could
.
not put
-
the ball by
Madden'.
••



Goldman credited Madden with
the shutout, and also praised backs
Payne and Sentochnik with their
stalwart defensive play. On of-
fense, Goldman gave high marks to
Kambarami.
''Kudzai played hard the entire
game," said Goldman.
Despite the victory, Goldman re-

mains concerned with his team's
second-half play.
"I
would prefer
that we play well the entire game.
We were lucky," he said.
.
·The team played local rival Ar-
my on Tuesday at West Point but
results were not available at press
time.
C'Odeneal was the man who introduced the sport to Japan back
in the late 1950's," said VanCarpels. "He also did the research
for the description of the game that you'll find in the Encyclopedia
Brittanica."

.
VanCarpels was picked as an All-East selection in voJle}'.ball
under Odeneal's direction and later helped New Paltz compile a
120-5 record as an assistant coach.
Lady net tepm aced by Vassar
by Ken Foye
"Of all the sports I've participated in, I'd say volleyball is
The Marist College women's ten-
(played) at the highest level," said VanCarpels. "I played for the
nis team, hoping to avoid a slow
Co-Sun club in Albany and some of my teammates were
start that plagued an otherwise suc-
O!ympians."
cessful season last year, was dealt
VanCarpels coached at Vassar College and then took the helm
a momentary setback by losing to
at Marist in 1984 where he has since helped the spikers compile
Vassar College 8-1 Iast Wednesday.
a record of 55-13 along with capturing the 1984 ECAC Mid-Atlantic
The visiting Red Foxes combin-
Conference title.
-
ed to win a total of only three sets
"They (the players) deserve all the respect they get," he said.
against the stingy Vassar squad to
"I'm amazed at the amount of respect we get from the school.
enter this week with an 0-1 mark.
We don't make money, we entertain, and we are treated just as
Marist lost a chance to even its
well as any other team."
record to 1-1 last week when Fri-
VanCarpels says he is not bothered by being a part-time coach.
day's home match against New
"I usually find time to shoot a couple rounds of golf in the morn-
Rochelle was canceled. A match at
ing or work on my tennis game (VanCarpels was also a ranked
RPI was
·scheduled
this past Tues-
tennis player three years ago)," he said. "I can .~tand another two
day, the results being unavailable
years or so
of
derailment of my career goals.
at press time.
VanCarpels says he had a successful recruiting year and is con-
The Red Foxes hope to have bet-
fident this year's team will achieve its potential.
..... ter tuck this week with home mat-
, ... ___________________
r-
ches today and Saturday. Bard
College will visit today for a 3:30
p.m. match, and the Red Foxes
host Manhattan College for a I
p.m. Saturday afternoon date.
The only Marist winner of the
day against Vassar, second-
semester freshman Karla Bellotto,
won in the sixth singles position in
straight sets
(6-4,
6-2). The Red
Foxe.~• first-seed, captain Joelle
Stephenson, was the only other
Marist singles player to test the
Brewers' netters, losing in split sets
(6-1, 2-6, 3-6).
Except for B<"llotto
and fourth-
seed Beth Ann Saunders, who lost
in straight sets despite taking the
se-

cond set to a tiebreaker, no Marist
singles player managed to win more
than three games in a set. The se-
cond doubles team of Alison Block
and Sheila Bradley were the only
Marist pair to give Vassar a
):lard
time in doubles, losing ~6, 5-7.
Despite all of these unpleasant
scores, Coach Terry Jackrel felt the
match was closer than the score
might indicate.
"They were a tough team, and
very steady," Jackrel said of the
Vassar players. "A lot of the games
went to 3-3, but then we would lose
it. There were a lot of close ones."
Four points are needed to win a
game and six games needed to win
a set in collegiate tennis.
"They
(Vassar) didn't
do
anything fancy," Jackrel con-
tinued, "but they were very steady.
They got the points when they
needed them."