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Part of The Circle: Vol. 33 No. 6 - October 30, 1986

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page-3·
Volleyball is hot -
page 11
...
Volume 33, Number 6
Marist College, Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
October 30, 1986
Marist pf of awaits treason trial in Uganda
by Julie Sveda
Dr. Andrew K~yiira, a MMist
professor, pleaded not • guilty to
treason charges in a pre-trial hear-
ing last week in his native Uganda.
Kayiira, who is on a • 1eave of
absence from his teaching position
at the college, has been held in a
prison in Kampala, the capital of
Uganda, since his arrest earlier this
month, according to Dr. Barbara
Lavin, a professor of criminal
justice at Marist.
-
"He went back knowing it was
an unstable political situation,"
said Lavin. "But he is deeply com-
mitted to the process of com-
promise and negotiation, political-
ly. It is this commitment that ab-
solutely convinces me he is inno-
Commuters
(.i_.
r•--and
...
,MCCTA
.,~_,;-
•• _ _.
•.·.-..-,·. •,
·• ,:
·.·
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,_.-
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• go for blood.;
by Anu Ailawadbi
The woman cringes as the man's
silhouette comes closer.· He sinks
his teeth into her bare, white flesh.
The curtain falls.
The play is the Commuter t.J.nion
prodQction of "Dracula;'' the first.
theater production at
Marist .
not
sponsored by the Marist College
Council on Theater Arts.
MCCT
A
has· helped the Com-
muter Union since the start of the
project and members of its board
are involved in the production, ac-
cording to John Roche, the presi-
dent of MCCTA and "Dracula"
cast member,
One of the goals of the produc-
tion is to increase unity between
commuter and resident students,
according to Mare Fakler, publici-
ty coordinator for
MCCfA.
"This
is the open door which will •
hopefully lead to other campus ac-
tivities," said Fakler.


Shelley Sousa, coordinator of
special proje~ts for MCCTA, said
she was thrilled when the Com-
muter Union approached her. She
Conti~ued
oii
page~2
-
cent of his charges."
Last February, a new govern-
ment was formed in Uganda under
President Yoweri Museveni, a
known socialist. Kayiira, • who
taught criminal justice at Marist,
had earlier returned to Uganda and
became minister of energy in the
new government.
Kayiira, - an ·advocate of a
democrat_ic
form of government, is
a member of the Banganda tribe,
according to Lavin. Museveni is the

1eader. of a rival tribe, and Lavin
claims that • could have caused
Museveni to be afraid of Kayiira
gaining too much power or in-
fluence in Uganda.
"Kayiira is a very charismatic
person, and people are drawn to
him," said Lavin.
In total, 17 were arrested on
these charges, including Kayiira. In
the pre-trial hearing last week, all
pleaded not guilty.

Kayiirais charged with having an
illegal supply of arms.
Kayiira is currently being held in
a bare cell, without a bed, blankets
or toilet facilities in Luzira Prison.
Human rights groups have visited
him and are trying to get him bet-
ter conditions, according to Lavin.
According to reports from
Amnesty International, suspected
political opponents of the Ugandan
government are reportedly sub-
jected to torture and many have
disappeared. But the State Depart-
ment has noted that there is some-
hope regarding this case, since
those arrested are still alive, accor-
ding to Lavin.
The State Department also said
it is well aware of the case because
of the many letters and phone calls
it has received about Kayiira, and
it has let the Ugandan government
know of the publicity here about
the case.
"It has been very effective. Most
people are operating quietly on
their own. Students have written
and • called congressmen," said
Lavin. "Now that congressmen are
involved _it is a positive step. The
State Department has urged the
Ugandan government to insure due
process and a fair arid impartial
trial for him."
Kayiira's wife, Betty, and six
children have left Uganda and are
now in Nairobi, Kenya. They will
be returning to Poughkeepsie in
Members of the cast of "Dracula"
in
a rehearsal
earlier this week. The show will be per-
'. formed tonight and tomorrow night at 8 inJJ1e T,beater.
(Photo by Tim Curry)
----------------------------------"
College corrects housing code violations
by Mike Grayeb
Marist College has corrected irre
code violations that were found in
the five houses it owns on North
Road, Town of Poughkeepsie Fire
Inspector
Don Murphy said
Monday.
Marist added a fire escape and
covered some wooden paneling in
the hallway of one hou~. In
another house, a doorway was add-
ed to a bedroom to provide an ad-
ditional exit. An old buried tank
was removed from the outside of
another home.
Although all of the hazards were
corrected before the start of the
semester, the issue of the houses'
frre safety has been raised recently
by students living in the buildings,
which are located directly across
Route 9 from the college.
Murphy conducted his inspec-
tion of the houses in August after
the Fairview Fire Department,
which serves Marist and the sur-
rounding area, lodged complaints
about possible infractions.
In correcting the violations,
Marist installed new lighted fire
alarms, but residents in at.least one
of the homes say the new devices
may be too sensitive.
The alarm has gone off four
times since the start of the semester
because of steam, not smoke, said
Barbara Todd, a 21:-year-old
senior
who lives at 65 North Road.
Todd explained that on one oc-
casion, the frre alarm went off
when steam from the bathroom
showers filtered into the kitchen.
On another occasion, Todd said,
the alarm was triggered by the
toasting of Pop Tarts.
Steve Sansola, housing director,
said the complaints from the
residents at 65 North Road were
forwarded to Joe Waters, director
of safety and security, before the
midterm break.
Problems with sensitive alarms
last fall prompted the college to
replace the devices in the then-new
Gartland Commons Apartments
"'after a series of faJse alarms
brought fire trucks to campus
almost daily.
Marist purchased the houses at
63, 65, 71, 73 and 77 North Road
between 1981 and 1984 and con-
verted them for student housing.
In September 1984, a fire exten-
sively damaged the house at 63
North Road. The fire was blamed
on faulty wiring. None of the four
student residents were injured, and
the house
has
since been
refurbished.
In a related development, new
alarm boxes, with glass covers,
have been installed in Champagnat
Hall.
three to four weeks.
"It
has struck me how deeply he
affected people on campus. People
remember he was always generous
and kind," said Lavin. "Dr.
Kayiira was the kind of person we
all would like to be, the kind you
would treasure having as a friend."
Museveni's coalition government
overthrew Tito Okello. Before
Okello, Milton Obote ruled for
eight years. ldi Amin was dictator
in the 1960s and 1970s.
Kayiira was a minister of foreign
affairs under Obote. He came to
the United States on an education
leave and received his Ph.D. at the
State University of New York at
Albany. He was a professor at
Marist for three years before he
returned to Africa.
2nd student
-attacked
.••
-
•.
,
..

·-;_
'_:_'.
..
,
:-
.
iif-·Itorinifory--

by Bill DeGennaro
A Highland man accused of rap-
ing a Marist College freshman two
weeks ago is scheduled to appear
in the Town - of Poughkeepsie
Court next Wednesday.
Michael J. Gallo, 20, was charg-
ed with first-degree rape, a felony,
and was arraigned by Justice Paul
Sullivan. Sullivan released Gallo on
$1,200 bail.
Gallo appeared in the Town of
Poughkeepsie Court on Oct. 22
before Poughkeepsie Town Justice
Ira Pergament but the proceedings
were postponed until Nov. 7.
Gallo, who is not a student at
Marist, was visiting a friend at the
college and was introduced to the
victim at a party on the first floor
of Sheahan Hall, according to Joe
Waters, director of safety and
security at Marist.
Gallo, accused. of raping the
19-year-old in a dormitory room at
approximately 12:40 a.m., left
campus and was arrested later that
morning, according to W~ters.
After
interviews with the victim
and . other Marist students, the
• Town of Poughkeepsie Police, who
worked in cooperation with Marist
Security, were. led to Highland
where Gallo was arrested at 9:30
a.m., according to Detective Sgt.
James Burke.
The victim was taken to St.
Francis hospital and examined, ac~
cording to Waters. •
This was the second attack
against a resident of Sheahan this
semester. A 26-year~old man, also
not a Marist student, was arrested
for sexually assaulting a-female on
the second floor on Sept. 27.
After students of Sheahan were
able to obtain a description of his
car, Kevin Keegan was arrested ap-
proximately . 45 minutes later on
Route 9 in Livingston, Columbia
County,
and
charged
with
burglary, sodomy and driving while
intoxicated.





















































































--Page
2 -
THE
·c1RCL::,E~-:.,:O~c=to:::b::e:,r~·
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·~19::B:;6:..::::::::===··
=·=·•::
..

====:-:::==================
Dracula __
Continued from page
t
said
the

play
is a major
undertaking.
The original plan was to produce
"A
Streetcar Named Desire," but
since the only week the theater was
available·
was
Halloween,
"Dracula" seemed better suited to
the holiday, according to Alayne
Gilbert, "Dracula" producer and
treasurer of the Union.
Although "Dracula" is being·
sponsored by the Commuter
Union, there are orily a few com-
muters actually involved with the
production: Gilbert, Fakler, Frank
Colletta, director, and Lucille
Budd, cast as one of Dracula's four
wives.
Colletta also directs his own
theatre group, Apple Blossom Pro-
ductions, and was the assistant
director for MCCTA's production
of "Dark·of the Moon" last year.
The show opened last night, with
.
additional performances tonight
and tomorrow night at 8. Ticket
prices are $1 for students, $2 for
faculty and staff and $4 for the
public.
Polls __
_
Continued from page
3
Miringoff. •~The voters may just
vote for O'Rourke because they

don't like Cuomo," he said. "The
issue is whether you like Cuomo or
not. His critics want to know
whether his accomplishments
match his record."
As far as the election for senator
is concerned, Miringoff views
Republican
candidate
Al
D' Amato, the incumbent, as the
likely winner. He is running against
Mark Green, a Democrat.

Liberal Party candidate John

Dyson of Dutchess County has
dropped out of the race and thrown
his support to Green.
Hear ALL the Marist College Football Games

LIVE
ON
C
R.A./U.C.
HOUSING POSITIONS

The Housing Office is presently acceptng
applications from students who may be in-
terested in a position for the spring and/or
Fall semesters.
REQUIREMENT
- 2.5 CUM/Registered minimum 12 credits
- No major disciplinary history
- No internships beyond six or more credits
- One year in residence
- Commitment to regular in-service training
Applications may be picked up
at the Housing Office
Room 270
·.·
...
campus Center:;•.•
_:
.. ,.-.·
·.,,;.{_J· ••
•.•
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.
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.
:·. ·:.•··.~:·.--
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.•.
.
.

•.
H~~- much do y
k

ow about
~
u· really
ohol ■
Ale
\
Aw.aren8ss

k - Nov. 2-6
;
~

\
.
.
.
A week-.
challeng
~~,~dule of events wilrbe
..
--
-_
. ted to enlighten, educate,
-
ain you.
Watch for
ng of films, dis·cussions,
·AA
meeting
&
mocktails offered
during the week, along with free T-shirt giveaways on·
ay-Wednesday
nights!
An additional 5 t-shirts will be given to the first

drawn· with the
correct answers to the following questions:
1. Alcoh9H-~~
-
easy to spot (T or F)
2. A c

<
less intoxicating than
!
F)
3. If yo·
>~-"'"~king problem, where
o1~.,
.
uld you go for
help
/,;;,it.,
~
.,,...;
'
-

~~ £!1·~
4. List
__
s:1:-
,
a hangover
,
t.~.~~

,.,
r:_

._ ~-
/
5. How
-
,--
-~~1.,
oes it cost to go through
. .
. .
. . .
. .
. .
.
.
.
.
. . .
. . .
. .
. . .
. .
.
. .
.
.
.
..
. .
Answer and return with your name and address to the box in Student
Government Office by Nov. 5 - Drawing Nov. 6
~
...
--
...
,
....
~~














































I
J .••.
:
l
.
October 30, 1986- THE CIRCLE - Page 3 --
Po 11s
indicate Cuomo is favorite· in race
by Diane Pomilla.
.
Mario Cuomo, a Democrat ser-
ving his first term as governor of
New York state; continues to be the
favorite in ··next week's guber-
natorial election, according to Dr.
Lee Miringoff; director of the

Marist
.
Institute
for Public
Opinion.
The election, which will be held

Tuesday, appears to promise. a
decisive victory for Cuomo over his
Republican opponent, Andrew
O'Rourke; according to polls con-
ducted by· Marist and other
organizations.

"Cuomo is popular in the state
..
and has been effective during the
last four years at defining issues
.,
and in
·establishing
an effective

relatio11ship
with the voters,"
Mir-

iilgoff said. "They see him as a
strong leader, and he has made his

positions on issues very clear."

The governor's strengths lie in
his strong value commitment, his
traditional views on religion and
the family and an unusual blend of
progressive values and pragmatic
.
approaches,
according
to
Miringoff.
"Cuomo is pitching a shutout,"
said Miringoff. "The last
.
poJl
showed him ahead 65-18.".
Miringoff considers Cuomo's
popularity, and what. has proven
until recently to be a. quiet cam-
paign against an' unknown oppo-
nent, as the primary factors leading

to the governor's· success in the
polls.
"The electorate doesn't know
much about O'Rourke," Miringoff
said. "He has centered his cam-
paign on Cuomo's unwillingness to
debate. He has no clear issue
identity."
Cuomo has since agreed to a
debate scheduled for Saturday, but
O'Rourke has declined to par-
ticipate if a minor-party candidate
is included.

.
O'Rourke,' 52, a conservative
Republican, is the Westchester
County executive. He has received
tepid support so far from the
.
members of his owri party, let
alone the voters, according to
Miringoff.
Cuomo's popularity in the state
rests on• his four years in office.
Elected in 1982, the 54-year-old
Democrat from
:
Queens has a
notable record. He approved the
raising of the legal drinking age
from 19 to 21, presided over the
growth of more than 900,000 jobs
in the state and has increased state
aid to public schools by almost $2
billion a year.
Much of the campaign has· been
taken up with a controversy over
debates. The governor initially said
he would not debate his.opponent
unless O'Rourke disclosed the
names of clients his law firm has
represented.
O'Rourke.refused to do so, and
Cuomo eventually dropped the
condition, clearing the way for
Saturday's debate.
Now, though, the debate is once
more
in
question
because
O'Rourke does not want to share
the stage with Lenora Fulani,
gubernatorial candidate of the tiny
New Alliance Party, which has
been accused of having anti-Semitic
views. Cuomo has said Fulani
should be included .
A fourth candidate, Denis Dillon
of the Right to Life party, has join-
ed with O'Rourke in declining to
participate in any debate that in-
cludes Fulani.
The debate, if held, will have on-
ly symbolic value, according to
!',joifi ____
..._.
Continued on page
2
Lee Miringoff
Students

organize to air academic concerns
by Len Johnson
working to reestablish itself as the
voice of student academic concerns

After the virtual collapse of the on campus. The SAC, a branch of
Student Academic Committee last
.
student goyernment, represents the
year, President Gina bisanza is student body on the_ faculty's
putting the pieces back together.
Academic Affairs Committee and
Once one of the most influential investigates academic issues raised
student groups on campus, the by students.
SAC fell into ruin last year after the
Student representatives have
resignation of its president early in been appointed to the five of the

the fall seinester. Unable to find·a college's six academic divisions,
new leader, the group began to and Disanza is a voting member of
dissolve and ultimately ceased to· the AAC, which sets academic

function.,_ When Disanza was· policy at Marist.

elected last spring, she was the on-.
Over the past two years, SACjn-
ly member of the·SAC:
· ..
:_,:
i
. .
-v,olvement in faculty. committees.
• ·But
now the
SAC
is:back. on i-'"5

..
and meetings has steadily declined;
;
·
.
feet; according to Disanza,"and is
,
leaving the SAC unrepresented in.":
many academic decisions.
pointed to study the progress of the
"For the most part, the faculty Lowell Thomas Communications
has gotten used to little or no Center toured the building site
response from students. But it's not earlier this month, she said. "There
that they
don't
welcome it. They're were a few things that we were
perfectly willing to provide answers unhappy with that we want to bring
as long as we ask the questions,"
to the attention of the administra-
she said.
tion. There are a few questions we
The SAC is currently looking for want answered," she said.
a student representative for Social
The SAC is also working to
and Behavioral Sciences, the only reschedule the cancelled debate bet-
division not covered currently. "I
ween abortion opponent Lee
want to make sure that every com-
Klimek and pro-choice advocate
mittee the faculty or administration Bill Baird. The debate, which was
create to look. into an academic scheduled to take place last month,
issue has a student
.o.p
ii," Disanza , became
._a
.center.·
of·. controversy
said.,.,,-·
.....
~-
..
':,~\.·
;-:.._,
,:.
_when.itw~_C_l!ncc;Ued_by
the_ col~
f",.
'spe_ciaJ.-.:stib-:i:;o~ittee'\~p- lege officials, who cited technical
Pink yoU're hot, red you're not
problems in arranging the event.
Baird, however, claimed that of-
ficials were responding to pressure
from conservative Catholics on
campus.
The committee held a special
meeting to discuss the debate and
decided that "a debate of any kind
is an academic tool, and hearing a
debate is an academic experience,
particularly when the issue discuss-
ed is controversial," she said.
The SAC has written to Gerard
Cox, vice president for student af-
fairs, and he has assured them.that
the issue will be dealt with, she
said'..
·--
- -· ·,. --~

-
..
category, winter and summer cols
ors, cool..

by Michael McGarry
FOR
THE
BEST.
l:{orizontal stripes for tall peo-
Pastels such· as light blue and
pie, vertical stripes for short peo-
pink are examples of summer col-
pie.
If
summer is your season, ~~by ors. Apricot and aqua belong to the
-
pihk will bring a glow to your face.
·:
spring group, orange is in the
You can find-out the colors which autumn group and red is a winter
make·you look your best by talk--
color.
ing to Marist senior Beth Willems,
Wearing the_ proper colors can
..
a color consultant.
make the 'difference between look-
Willerns, a. business marketing
ing good and looking your
best;
ac-
major from Carle Place,
N. Y.;
cording to Willems.
"If
you always
works for the C.W. Design Com-
wear 'your' colors you're going to
pany. For $40; her clients get ad-
have a halo, a white glow about
vice
.on
color· coordination, skin
your face," said Wmem,s ...

care and nutrition. They also·take

Willems trained
in
California for

home a color packet, literature
the job. ".I had
to.
be "trained by a
Beth. Williams
about-makeup application, ~nfor-
certified instructor and

I took
(Photo by
:Mark
Marano)
ination about line and design in
classes at the corporate centerin
.
clothing and . an outline of their
Carson California."
hard time mixing arid inatching col- •
body used to match clothes to body
,
An interest in.- makeup and ors.
It
also helps with what styles
,
prQportjons.
• •
.
.
.
.
.fashion
led Willems to discover col-
they should wear;'' added Willems.

·•
The system, developed by Lisa

or
·
consulting. She used to sell

Willems thinks her color system

Nichols-.Davis,
matches colors with
·
makeup for Amway an_d learned

is•the best on
-the
marker. "The
•.
their seasons and matches_people
to· about color analysis through com-
lady who developed the system us-
tlieir seasons by skin ton~. People
pany seminars,
ed color therapy Jo
·help
autistic
with yellow skin undertones_ are
A lot of people think color. children,'.' said.Willems. "She had
"warm" and, people with blue
anaiysis may only be foi: women


all this knowledge about colors so
undertones are
0
cool." Autumn
butWillems says no. '.'It's good for
·
her mother asked-her to develop a
and spring colors are in the warm
guys because they generally have a fail-safe color systein/'
Some call new cleanup rules a washout
by Elizabeth Geary
Students
living
in
the
Townhouses and Gartland Co_m:.
mons are unhappy with a new
policy requiring them to clean
public areas there.
The new clean-up rule, im-

plimented by the college this fall,
resulted from complaints by
Gartland Commons residents last
year that they were_ not re~eiving
the same housekeepmg services as
residents of the Townhouses.
Before the completion
of
Gartland Commons last year, the·
college Housekeeping Service pro-
vided cleaning_ services
to
the
Townhouses. Public areas of the
townhouses, as well as kitchens and
bathrooms were cleaned on a week-
ly basis.
But
.
Gartland
Commons
residents complained that they
§hould get the same service as the
Townhouses because they paid
the same $1,160 housing fee each
semester.
Under the new policy, the Col-
lege Housekeeping Services cleans
only
the
outside
of
the
Townhouses, and the outside,
stairwells and laundry rooms of the
Gartland Commons Appartments.
"It's a step toward teaching the
students
to
be on their own - to
be individuals," said Anthony
Tarantino, director of facilities.
Each residence is supplied with
cleaning supplies

such as mops,
buckets, brooms, dustpans and
garbage bags, according to Taran-
tino. "This was a way for the col-
lege to say we will provide the
students with some costly items,"
said Steve Sansola, director of
Housing.
The present cleaning arrange-
ment will remain unless there is an
expansion
.
of
the
College
Housekeeping Service, according
to Sansola.
Continued on page 10
DEFENSE
AGAINST
CANCER,
SEE
YOUR
DOCTOR
ONCE
A YEAR
AND
HIM
.ONCE-A
WEEK.
I
AMERICAN
~CANCER
f
SOCIETY'
{
l
/
,
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_______
o
____
p...,-
__
1_r_~_1_·_1_c_:_1
__
n
___________
p
8
ge
4. THE CIRCLE - October 30, 1986--
-----------------'!------,
The Kayiira case
The arrest of Dr. Andrew Kayiira in Uganda has brought events oc-
curring across the world home to us.

The situation in Uganda
is
one we could hear about any day
In
class
or on the news-except now, we're all involved.
According to Dr. Barbara Lavin, the response of students, faculty
and administrators has been tremendous. But it can't stop now.
The letters and phone-calls that many at Marist have taken the time
to send or make have increased the government's awareness of
Kayiira's case and shown the Ugandan government the resp~ct and
high regard so many people in the. U.S. have for him.
Kayiira's family is gone from Uganda. Now, it may be more impor-
tant than ever that our friend and professor knows we are behind him.
If you have sent a letter or made a phone-call, do it again. Or, if you
had not found the time before to make the effort, set aside some time
today.

The many miles that separate Kayiira from Marist may make it seem
like his situation is unreal - but it is very real. Kayiira is a part of Marist,
a part we must all help to bring back.
To the Editor:
letters
Abortion debate
Furthermore, I do not know.
if
Baird's charge that the ad-
COIJ.EGE
PRESS.
SERVICE
students, we provide additional
hours after midnight during
midterms and finals periods.
Watch for the schedule of addi-
tional times for finals this year
from
December
1 through
December 19.·
ministrators fear a New York Ar-
Althought we are short of staff
facilities available on a drop i.n clout by helping elect a Congress
basis.

••
-
that shares
.our
views.
Paula Wolf Trimble

Today's student activism reflects
User Services, Computer Center
••
the. conscience of our
-nation
.•
Millions of people oppose the
!iflllS
build~up, apartheid, intervention in
Central America; cutbacks in stu-
.
Voting-
To the Editor:
. .
dent aid and other social programs
,I
read with interest your article
on Baird and some thoughts behind
the indefinite postponement of his
debate with Klimek. You mention-
ed that a recorded telephone con-
versation included a comment that
five Marist Brothers• on campus
were furious that Baird was invited
to debate.
If
the five Brothers on
campus refer to the five Brothers
on the faculty, I suppose then that
I am
.
one

of those furious in-
dividuals. Not so! I am not
_furious.
1
chdiocesan ruling that bans from
in the Computer Center, we still
parish-sponsored events speakers
want to provide Marist students
who oppose church policy is really with the best computer services
so. In my view· it would seem possible. If you have
a
comment,
unlikely that such a ban would ex-
suggestion, or complaint, you are
tend to colleges, particularly if a
..
encouraged to contact
.
the Help
college supports democracy in
Desk or Student Aide Staff. Some·
education; To take a few words
of the positive·results acheived as
from the Rev. Theodore Hesburgh,
a result of student suggestions and
It's rare that single· even.ts can
and new levels

of racism and
change the course of world history.
discrimination. On these issues we
It's· rarer still when students can
share. the senti.ments of the over-
play an important role in such. whelming majority of the U.S. peo-

events. The Nov. 4 elections.
can
ple. It is the Reagan administration
fundamentally alter our future. In'-

arid its
,supporters
that are out of
deed, these e)ec,tions
can dete~ine':_ step \vith the people of our coun-
wheth~r ~here !S
_a
future
at
all..
try
and
·the
world
....
••
.
Votmg provides the oppo_rtum~

.•·

For
six
years students have been
t~ for .stude~ts t~ make ou! vjews
··.'
ta.king: it
·on
the chin. puring the
known on vital 1.ssues
/acmg. Jhe
,
Reagan presidency tuition has gone
country.- We· ca~ also
-give.
them
.
up 34 percent. Every year we fight
-
president of Notre Dat)le, such a
cooperation are having the system
••
ban would present a "serious
available on Sundays

and PC
threat" to the "historical institu-
Quite. honestly, no one at any._
.
tional ac~?emic .. Jte~p.o_~l}ind
time before the scheduled debate or
autonomy
of tlle·,.Amencan


after its cancellation ever asked me schools.
for my opinion about the debate,
.
Fi_n~lly,
I _respectfully
~ecline_
to
_

Practically all

my information
•.
pa~uc1P.ate m an event m which
about this event comes from local
Baird take(s) on all five Brothers
and the college newspapers.
in a debate." If the debate is


--

• --

Continued on page
5,
,
• •
•:.~
•:
';'/"
~-
-~·
• .,_
a,'::
the·.other
murray·
I
see
no reason to be furious. As resch~duled for next semester; I
a teacher of ethics,. we always w~uld prefer ~o-hea,r
Bai~d deb~te
·
welcomed frank and open discus~ Khmek. M~thmks 1-ll wnte a bnef
.
sions of the major issues surroun-

note to Baird to !hat effect.
ding this topic. Another debate is
Bro. R1~hard Rancourt
Wherl the.· gOing gets boring
.
.
:
'
'
.
.
not an espedally novel experience.
Mathematics Department
by Julia E. Murray
Interns
One of the frequently heard_
complaints about Marist that peo-
ple inumble, moan and sometimes·
scream, is that they're bored.
"There's nothing to do here," they
whine, reaching for· a Kleenex as
their friends haul out the violins .
To the Editor: •

Please share the foUowing infor-
mation with your
·student
body.
The National College Internship
Service;NCIS, of New York assists
undergraduate
and
-
graduate
students to obtain individually
designed internships in their major
fields during Summer 1987 and
December/January
Intersession
1986-1987.
Placements
are
available in New York City, Long
Island and Westchester. Early ap-
plication is essential.


Write or call: National College
Internship Service, 374 NeY( York
.
Avenue, Huntington, New York
11743, (516) 673-0440.
On campus information
is
available through the Career and
Internship Placement offices.
Roberta
L.
Netupsky
Director·
Nonsense.

Computer hours
There are plently of things to· do
at Marist, if you just look in the
right places. Don't ask me why, but .
some people actually expect the
school to provide entertainment for
us-as though we were paying for
it or something. They're so busy
scanning and shredding
.
their
Weekly Happenings that they don't
ever see all the fun activities going
on right under their noses.
To the Editor:

The question David Hinds pos-
ed in the Oct. 9 edition of The Cir-
cle, "What prevents the Computer
Center from being open 24
hours?" is a perennial issue here at
Marist. Beside the problems of
staffing and the potential of van-
dalism with all night operation,
there is a certain amount of work
that has to be done when the
system is "down." The backups,
which must be run with no users on
the system, are the foremost con-
THE:
CIRCLE:·
cem in this area. They provide pro-
tection in case of malfunctions ef-
fecting the system, for example, the
recent power problems we have had
which have disturbed some of our
disk storage. Among the other
things, we have to do during this
time are running the accounting,
DASO management, software and
hardware maintenance, testing,
and software
and hardware
installations.
In an effort to serve Marist
If
you're the athletic type, you
can have loads of fun running
around Donnelly trying to find two
clocks thaf say the same time. And
when you're done with that, if you
ever are, try to find one that says
the
correct
time. Just remember,
Odysseus thought he'd have a short
trip, too.

The elevators in Champagnat are
also good for hours of enjoyment,
if
you keep on riding up and down
until you can get from the first
Editor:
Julie Sveda
Arts
&
Entertainment
Editor:
Associate Editors:
Bill DeGennaro
Viewpoint Editor:
Julia Murray
Photography Editor:
Sports Editor:
Paul Kelly
Advertising Manager:
floor to the Itlnth withou~ stopping.
This activity has two requirements,
however; a strong stomach anda
-real
love for the scent of cheap.
col_ogne.
..
.
_
One activity which may take a
great deal of time, or very_ little
time depending on your luck, is the
ever-popular Toilet P,aper Hunt.
As
we
all know, the dorms are con-
stantly in short supply of this item,
which they obviously don't con-
sider important enough to keep on
hand. J..ikewise, Donnelly and
Marist East also suffer from similar
shortages, and the junkies on the
North End have been going cold
turkey this year. Obviously there is
a hide-and-seek
game
going on that
no one told us about, but with a lit-
tle persistence we will

triumph.
Then, with our trophies held high
above our heads~ we will all march
down to Mccann and throw them
on the court during a basketball
game, as Mother Nature intended.
For those. of yoti who prefer less
active activities, you can always en-
joy
.yourself
in the privacy of your
own "home" by lighting matches
and holding them under the smoke
alarm, just to see how many it
takes to set it off. This tends to be
a frustrating past-time, however,
u·nless you·· have a spritzer bottle
foll of water to spray at the.match,
thus creating the steam necessary to
set the alarm off. After all, no
Marist smoke alarm is going to ~e
fooled by a little-bitty
.
old fire;
steam is where it's at.
If you're creative at all, you
can
always experimerit with making
party hats and paper cups out of
the flyers people slide under your
door, provided you haven't already

papered the walls with them. Ac-
tually though, the sport for the tru-
ly creative is roommate-abuse~
which combines both· the finer
points of sabotage and terrorism
against small furry stuffed animals.
For example, try hiding your room-
mate's bed, then tum !lU of her
possessions upside down and hang
her stuffed animals, then she can
break the world's record for
. highest blood pressure.
I also have one last remedy for
boredom, but I hesitate to suggest
it for fear someone out there might
take me seriously. Since we are all,
however, presumably adults, and
capable of recognizing a joke when
we see it, I'll give it a shot. Do your
homework.
I
said
l
was just kidding.
Gina Oisanza
Classified
Manager:
Gary Schaefer
Len Johnson
Business Manager:
Jennifer Cook
Mark Marano
.
Faculty Advisor:
David Mccraw
Mike
McHale

'.·t







































__________
v.;·
;..
.
..;;i;._;;e:::;..._W=-=-P--O
__ i_n
__
t
______
October
30, 1986 · THE CIRCLE - Pages--
O
f
ivy and education
by Len Johnson
"I guess ivy doesn't stick to For-
mica," a cynical friend told me as
he glanced up at the tower of
Champagnat Hall one day last
summer as I gave him a tour of the
Marist campus.
He's one of those people who
goes to a big college in Boston with
a big football team and a big supp-
ly of jungle-qualityivy encrusting
a plethora of stately •old stone
buildings in which God., education
and fine spirits intermingle with a
brand of snobbery that could only
be appreciated by one who has the
audacity to continue to· consider
himself a fan of a. baseball team
that hasn't won a World Series in
68 years.
I have to admit, his comment hit
a nerve. I've never been one to be
taken in by the image of a thing or
of a place, but" since I've come to
Marist, I've often looked at the
crooked puce walls of Donnelly
Hall with something less than
pride. The ever-flooding sidewalks
and the insurmountable speed
bumps never did much for me
either.
And let's not mention Marist
East. Even the maybe-soon-to-be-
completed Lowell. Thomas Com-
munications Center has done little
to boost my pride in the physical
plant of the institution.
I started losing myself in the self-
pity that people who don't feel
gQod about their lives indulge in so
often. Here I was, a struggling stu-
dent with hopes and aspirations for
the future that were being shot to
hell by a school with a deficit of
ivy-supporting structures. And I
began to generalize the ivy short-
coming to some other shortcom-
ings of Marist that I had so often
heard myself and others complain-
ing about in the past.
But as the curtain fell on yet
another Dean's Convocation Day,
I began to realize that this institu-
tion is only what we make of it. We
love to complain about things here,
and some of us even complain
about all the complainers, but what
we don't do is /;land up and face
our problems.
the Student Academic Committee,
The Circle and other campus
groups are readily available to act
as the students' voice on campus.
But they can help only if we get
involved.
None of us has the right fo sit
around and complain about this
place while doing nothing actively
to improve it. Marist is not MTV;
it is not intended to amuse a bunch
of semi-lucid adolescents with
minimal brain-wave activity. We
make this place what it is; it doesn't
make us.
No, ivy doesn't stick to Formica.
The cost of communicating
Too many of us {me included)
are content to sit by idly complain-
ing about all the things this school
has done to destroy our dream of
the perfect American education.
We passively hurl insults at our col-
lege from the safety of our little
rooms, as if Marist College is an
entity in itself, acting totally
responsible for our own content-
ment. And we are arrogant enough
to criticize people who have the
courage to get involved in campus
activities.
But the people who put up those
buildings weren't concerned with
that; they were concerned with pro-
viding the foundation for a good
education.
by Peter-A. Prucnel
Did you know that Marist
celebrated Peace Week during the
first week of October, or that
Saturday the College Union Board
had a horror film festival till
6 AM ? I didn't think so.
• One of the major year-to-year
challenges on college campuses is
how to "get the word out" about
planned· campus activities.
For example, how many of you
realized that the Commuter Union
is presenting "Dracula" this week
or that the fraternity's blood drive
is next week? Does anyone know
that if you plan to live on campus
next semester your $75 deposit is
due by November 14 or are up-
dated on Dr. Kayiira's trial?
Increasing communication to the
student community is one of the
Student Government's main goals
for
this
year.
With
an
undergraduate population nearing
Continued from page 4
administration attempts to impose
deep cuts in student aid. The funds
axed. from these and other social
programs
is diverted to the
astronomically expensive arms
build-up. This includes Reagan's
Star Wars program that will cost an
• estimated 1 trillion dollars over the
next 5 years.

Today we have real possibilities
to end the nuclear arms race. But
by their actions in Iceland the
Reagan administration has block-
ed this process. As Rep. Ed Markey;
of Massachusetts said, "The presi-.
dent has sent the world a message
that he does not want arms control
and that he has put his faith in the
stardust moonbeams of his Star
Wars fantasies."
Eighty percent of the people of
the U
.s:
support a nuclear test ban.
The House recently voted for a
moratorium on
all
but the smallest'
nuclear explosions. A majority also:
opposes Star Wars. The 18-month
Soviet moratorium on nuclear
testing means a historic agreement
is within reach.
The administration can be com-
pelled to reverse its disasterous
course. But to do this, we need a
change in the political balance in
Congress. This November, we can
do that, by electing a pro-peace and
pro-people majority to the U.S.
Senate.
What we do from now until
Nov. to ensure a maximum turnout
of the 12 million possible student
voters
can
make the difference.
We, the undersigned past and pre-
sent student leaders urge that every
effort be made to inspire our
friends and fellow students to vote
against candidates who support
Reagan's policies.
Nov. 4 is a chance to serve the
cause of peace and to reverse
Reaganism. Let's do all we can, for
our generation and our . planet,.
We're sure we can win.
Brenda Davenport
Southern Christian
2800 students -
20 per cent of
whom commute -
campus-wide
communication is not an easy task.
However, in an academic institu-
tion which boasts its "excellent"
communication arts curriculum,
why are students so poorly inform-
ed about activities and events? Stu-
dent Government would like to
know.
No one can solve a problem


before identifying what is wrong
with the system. Help us, as well
as yourselves, out. Student clubs
and organizations use our activity
fee money to publicize their events.
If student groups are not com-
municating with the campus effec-
tively, then we're wasting our own
money.
Peter A. Prucnel is the student
body president.




But what we don't realize is that
Marist is only what we make it. We
stand around complaining, but we
don't get out there and do anything
about it. The student government,



IMPORTANT!
And if we can only realize that
fact, and stop damaging ourselves
with our own negative attitudes,
maybe someday blue Formica high-
rise dorm towers will be a sign of
fine institutions
of learning
everywhere.
Len Johnson is a junior in com-
munication arts and editor of the
Viewpoint page.







WINTER WEATHER PARKING
NO PARKING ALLOWED IN THE FOLLOWING LOTS
MIDNIGHT TO 7:00
A.M. -
NOVEMBER 1, 1986 to
MARCH
31, 1987
a) Benoit - in the first three rows on the South Side.
b) Champagnat - on the South/East Side.
c) Donnelly - All of Donnelly. •
d) Mccann - All of Mccann.
e) Sheahan• All of Sheahan.
PLEASE REFER TQ
MAPS .
Any Cars not displaying a Marist College Bumper Sticker or Guest Pass will be towed out
You car will be towned at owners expense.
COST:
$55 Tow Charge,
Plus Tax $5.25
plus
$1 O
per day storage
and $25 ticket
THANK YOU FOR YOUR
COOPERATION
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT: MARIST SECURITY
DONNELLY 201; TEL. EX. 282
--
..,,--,
r•
Leadership Conference
'--------------------------------------------------...!
·I
j
l ·-































etcetera
-------------------------------Page
6 -
THE CIRCLE - October 30,
1986--
Editors Note: This week Black
on White has been turned over to
guest columnist Derek Simon,
general manager of New Rock
92.
by
Derek Simon
In these days of "sophisticated
musical production," one wonders
where the integrity in ·music has
gone. Is i~ in the highly textured
pop sentiments of A-HA? Certain-
ly not. Is it held within the blatant
witticisms of John Parr? Also
doubtful.
But fear not: there is always a
young gallant to rescue us from the
throes of musical despair. Or •
maybe there isn't... Sometimes
answers come from unlikely
sources. Sometimes the answers
have been right in front of us - for
a very long time. Enter Richard
Thompson.
reel
impressions
'The Color
of Money'
by Janet McLoughlin
"The Color of Money" is right
on cue when it comes to acting and
creative directing, but plotwise, the
film falls short of entertaining its
viewers.
A sequel to the 1961 film, "The
Hustler," Paul Newman recreates
his role as
Fast
Eddie Felson, a one-
time pool great turned pool hustler,
and he's simply magnificent in do-
ing so.

Newman has charisma and com-
plete control over his character
throughout the film. He's one of
the major assets to the film-his
performance was acting at it's best.
The other half of the duo, Tom
Cruise, who plays Vincent Lauria,
a toy salesman who hooks up with
fast Eddie for some fast moves, is •
electrifying.
Crusie knows how to light up a
screen whenever he's on one, and
does so in one particular pool hall
scene. Like in his film "Risky
Business," Cruise once again gets
the audience going with a little
dance number, but this time he
keeps his pants on .
. Cruise very effectively portrays
his character, a flaky kid wlio en-
joys video games and has the
chance of earning big bucks by
pool hustling. He's taken in by all
those dollar signs and his ability to
become a great pool player, all
thanks to Eddie.
The problem
that existed
throughout this film is that it led
viewers to believe something spec-
tacular was goi~ to happen and it
turned out to be a big letdown.
Thank God for strong acting.
Another shining performance was
by Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio,
who played Carmen, Vincent's
tough, but level-headed girlfriend.
Playing
against
two
of
Hollywood's top actors, Mastran-
tonio gives a strong performance
and turns a not so big role into a
memorable one.
Martin Scorsese, who directed
the film, gave us a quality actors
and creative choreography in the
pool halls, but that wasn't enough
to hold one's attention. The film
dragged
on . and
was .very
monotonous.
Newman and Cruise
are
the driv-
ing forces behind "The Color of
Money." You can appreciate the
fine acting jobs done by both, but
don't expect too much from the
storyline; you'll be disappointed.
Richard's daring adventure
While music progressed (perhaps
regressed) to its present state where
songwriting is an undefineable art,
Thompson is refreshing. One can
only speculate songwriting is so
undefineable due to lack of exam-
ple. This certainly can't be at-
tributed to lack of effort on
Thompson's part.
Followers of Thompson's career
are well aware of his rich musical
history. His uncompromising
music has always reflected a broad
range of styles and sounds, with
roots in native Celtic music and in-
fluences from decades of popular
music. Let us venture back to the
dark ages, a time when about half
of those reading this column in-
habited the earth. It is 1967 and
Thompson has formed the distinc-
tive Fairport Convention. Their
originality, folk purism and rock
'n' roll punch earned Thompson
the critical acclaim he so greatly
deserved as a songwriter. Thomp-
son has been with us a lifetime,
black
on
'
white
astonishingly untapped. Even Time
magazine, probably not the most
musically astute bunch of fellows,
realized with the release of Thomp-
son's Across a Crowded Room in
early 1985, that he was "a musician
of formidable gifts." Kind of
makes you feel like you missed the
boat, doesn't it?
Thompson's latest offering, Dar-
ing Adventures,
is twelve tales of
love lost and lust found. They are
all, says the_
composer, "a group of
short stories that can each stand
alone." The new album is
as
much
a new step forward for Thompson
as it is a showcase for his familiar
lyrical bit and bracing humor.
Thompson's already critically ac-
claimed guitar . work has never
sounded better; his vocals likewise.
Thompson's
humor
is in
wonderfully sarcastic form on the
album's opening track, "A Bone
• Through Her Nose." This track
displays Thompson's
blatant
dismay for pop culture, citing that
the song's subject "gets her clothes
from her personal friend; Coc.o the
Clown," and "her boyfriend plays
in Scritti Politti." "She's got
everything a girl might need," says
Thompson," but he relents, "she
hasn't got a bone through her
nose." It is reported that Sammy
Hagar could only stand there with
his mouth agape upon hearing
Thompson's revelations.
Perhaps worthy of the greatest
attention on Daring Adventures
though, are the stark ballads
"Missie, -How You Let Me
Down;" and "Long Dead Love."
"Missie".has Thompson recalling
a lost love with "one more night of
running my mind over lost em-
braces" and "the shape of you is
still in the bed there next to me."
In "Long Dead Love," Thompson
tells us of a !ove lost -
it's "bet-
ter our footsteps divide and our
memory grow old again." Alarm-
ingly haunting.
Thompson holds a sensitivity
that is rare among today's
songwriters, and we
can
only thank
God he has the means to share it.
Car sick
by Kieran
Alex
Murphy
My parents had clearly defined
objectives when they set about rais-
ing the twins and me. So just about
every other weekend they would
drag us off to another museum or
monastery or aquarium or zoo or
arboretum or home of a notable
figure. I went through various
stages of my perception and affini-
ty towards these expeditions. When
I was nine it was all still an adven-
ture. When I was fifteen it became
a drag.
Now I look back upon forays in-
to culture and new experiences with
wistful nostaglia and the realization
that what took place llere was
nothing less than self-contained
domestic anarchy.
The will of my parents to instill
a logical, Socratic consciousness
along with a broad purview of the
world around us led to certain ten-
sions. The result.of which was what
my father in dismay would call "a
bunch of real characters." He still
refers to the twins and myself as,
"a bunch of real characters,"
although now it is with good-
natured resignation. But, you
create your own hell and then you
have to live in it.
The other most frequent catch-
phrase. in his father-hood lexicon
ATTENTION
SENIORS!
Senior Portraits
for the REYNARD
(Marist Coll~ge Yearbook) will be .taken
during the week of Nov. 10 -
Nov. 14,
1986, in Room CC 269.
Portraits will be scheduled during the
following times:
Mon., Nov. 10
Tues.,
Nov·. 11
Wed.;Nov. 12 •
Thurs.,
Nov. 13
Fri., Nov. 14
9:30
a.m. -
5:00
p.m.
11:30
a.m. -
7:30
p.m.
9:30
a.m. -
5:00
p.m.
11:30
a.m. -
7:30
p.m.
9:30
a.m. -
5:00
p.m.
Please schedule your appointment in the
Activities Office.
was the now classic, "What is
this?!" (And then he would insert
whatever incongruous exaggeration
lateral thinking
on a descending
elevator
popped into his . head) When we
were young he wielded this line
with the agility and swiftness of a
samurai. When the twins and I
would be· fighting about seating ar-
rangement in the back seat of the
car,
(in,
this specific .instance the .
fighting was playful) he would wait •
until the timing was perfect • and
then with the flawless father-like
inflection, playing-up the absent-
minded annoyance-look, he would
say: "What is this ... midget wrestl-
ing?! Get in the car for chrissake!"
Here is a sampling of what went
on in these trips when I was nine
and the twins were seven.
The twins, by the way, are frater-
nal - Jana and Jerome. At seven,
they both have almost white-blond
hair and teutonic blue eyes. You
could have seen them on any
number of Hummels at a bavarian
tourist shop. They had matching
angelic/demonic smiles (depending
upon which light you caught them
in) and more often than not mat-
ching Bosco-mustaches.
Thinking back to what was load-
ed into the back seat of my Father's
candy-apple red 1971 Volkswagen
square-back points to former
priorities. From coloring books to
model dinosaurs to dolls to toy-
guns it was all so important to us.
My mom explained to me once that
we were exiting the period when
everything had saliva on it into the
period when everything had a ·
peanut-butter-jelly-crayq/a ~nnidge ,
on it.
• • ·- •

My sister had
a
very - good
memory as a child, especially with
words to songs. Yes she could
'remeberize' a song in two or three
listens. Her favorite song was "Be
Kind to the Animals in the Zoo."
Because it was her favorite we had
to hear her sing about 80 or 90
times in rotation with her other
favorite songs.
"Be kind to the animals in the
Zoo," was sung to the tune of the
Continued on
page
7
3Juipurttb ~truiuu
i,tthUi
llttlJ prwtrr lib.u
a4k
trim.
lwmp
&
hnlin.,nd
W.-Gtontwoy
Marist College
Bookstore
Campus Center
Open Mon.-Fri.
10:00-4:55
We're more than just
a bookstore
I
·I




















. Average Med Student.
Graduates $30,000 In Deb~
The grads' debt, by far the big-
gest of all kinds of majors, is nearly
double the average of 1980, a new
American Medical Association
survey found.
Theology Prof Says Notre Dame
• Punished Him For His
Homosexuality, Atheism
Some 200 N. Carolina-Asheville
Students Face Suspension
Prof. William Storey, a founder
of the university's theology grad
program, says he retired in 1985
because administrators cut the size
of his classes soon after publication
of articles in which he confessed to
being gay and an atheist.
The 200 students failed to com-
ply with a new state requirement to
show proof of measles immuniza-
tion this fall, so "we have no other
choice than to suspend them," Stu~
dent Affairs VP Eric lovacchini
said.
Storey recently displayed a letter
in which theology Department
Chairman
the Rev. Richard
McBrien specifically said Storey
could teach only 12 grad students
a term.
"The only problem is I'm gay
and I had the nerve to admit it,"
Storey said in announcing he'd fil-
·this
week
by
Gina Disanza. and Eric Turpin
Now that the World Series parties are over (love those Mets!)
and midterms are out of the way, it's time to get back into the
social swing of things. Halloween weekend looks to be filled with
lots of fun events for everyone.
On-Campus
Tonight and tomorrow at 8 p.m., the Commuter Union gets us
into the spirit with its production of Brahm Stoker's
Dracula.
After
the performance on Friday, if you venture down to the cafeteria,
the Student League will be there sponsoring a
Halloween Mixer.
So, pull the old horse suit out of the closet and head on down ...
The foreign films this week include
Paisan,
the story of Italy's
liberation, on Thursday and Friday, and
Open City,
a portrait of
the misery of Rome during the German occupation, on Saturday
and Sunday. Both films will be shown in D245, beginning at 7:30
p.m. each night.
Saturday night at 8 p.m., the Marist College Singers will spon-
sor a
Collegiate Choral Festival
in the Theatre.
Finally, on Sunday at 7 p.m., there will be a lecture in the Fireside
Lounge to kick off Alcohol Awareness Week.
Off-Campus
On Saturday at 8 p.m., the Hudson Valley Philharmonic
Chamb~r·opens it's 1986-87 season at Skinner Hall, Vassar Col-
lege. Tickets are $8 each and can be ordered by calling 454--1222.
• "~,
·suriday/br:
'Eugene
·c·
Be~t. associate· professor.
of.
tepgious
studies, will narrate the
Twelfth Ann~al Interfaith Music Festival
at the First Presbyterian Church. Thishow will start at 4 pm. and
will feature a number of choirs including the Agape Children's
Choir and the Voices Of Faith Community Gospel choir.
...
.ii
ed formal complaints against Notre
Dame.
College Footbal TV
Revenue Drops Sharply
Apparently because of a glut of
games on TV since the Supreme
Court in 1984 freed schools to cut
their own TV deals, national
broadcast and cable revenues to
schools fell from $74.2 million in
1983 to $52.7 million this fall, a
Wall Street Journal report reveal-
ed recently.
U. Colorado Bans Drinking
In Dorms, But Waffles On Sex
After making 21 drinking arrests
in one weekend - compared to 27
all last year - police said they'd in-
crease alcohol patrols in the dorms.
But after considerable protest
about wording in a handbook that
banned dorm residents from
"sleeping together (or) going to bed
with another person," the campus
dorm council voted to rewrite the
rule to suggest sex is okay if it
doesn't upset others' privacy.
Average Student Has About $123
A Month In
'Discretionary Income'
A Simmons Market Research
Bureau study of student money af-
fairs also found that about half the
nation's students have credit cards
and spend the most money on
clothes, beauty aids, music, candy
and books, in that order.
A Boston promoter, meanwhile,
recently held a "College Fest" at
which 65 companies displayed their
wares at nearly 100 booths, hoping
to gain an entre into what popcorn
salesman Ken Meyers called "a ma-
jor market in Boston."
Notes From All Over:
The hous-
ing crunch at Cornell College in
Iowa was so bad that two freshmen
were temporarily housed ina,spare .
room in President David Marker's·
house ... U. Florida law student
Wendell Whitehouse, .so frustrated
about campus parking problems, is
trying to form a student firm to
build a student-owned garage next
k
to campus ...
Car. sic ·
Continued from page 6
------------------------------
"Stars and Stripes Forever." You
know it. John Phillip Sousa's
"Stars and Stripes Forever," Ba da
di-di da ba-di da. In this march the
trombones play a staccato riff
followed by a call and answer from
the brass section to the woodwinds
and then there is a ritardando
before the big finish when the
chorus kicks in. .
Anyhow, my sister used to pour
her heart and soul into every one
of her performances. The 83rd per-
formance had the same volume and
intensity as the first. My brother
and I would join in most of the
singing and we were also what one
would describe as tireless vocalists.
My parents loved to hear us sing,
but this was something else we
would push to excess and finally
pervert. Because of the greatness of
the reward for our singing, one of
us would eventually get the bright
idea of going solo. Not to be out
done, the other two would com-
pete. The family snapshot, then, is
of three separate children singing
three separate songs, each digging
in for that audience approval.
It would last an inordinate
amount of time before my father
would say, "What is this ... The
VonTrapp Family?!. Give a man
some peace and quiet!"
.
I don't care what sociologists
and psychologists have to say about
behavior patterns of children being
conditioned by their environment.
At this age, more than any other,
there exists primordial motivations.
For example, Jerome and I used
to furtively thread the seat belt
through the back belt-loop of my
sister's pants and then buckle it.
Janna would eventually ask my
father to stop the car so she could
go to the bathroom. We'd stop; my
mom would get out to escort Jan-
na and find her still sitting in the
car. Peremptorily, my mom would
ask Janna to "come along."
After struggling, using every
muscle in her little girl body to get
out of the· seat, a modicum -of
frustration would have overcome
her and intercept any rational
thought. By this time Janna would
have put it together that Jerome
and I had something to do with her
being pinned to the seat. But when
you're seven and your mom is
glowering with growing impatience
and you realize too late that you've
been set up, the pressure is of the
world crashing in on you.
Now Janna would start to cry,
big-litle-girl-tears. With her lips
flushed and trembling she'd at-
tempt to explain in a hysterical
non-stop flow of words what was
the trouble. My mother, concern-
ed and puzzled, would catch the
word "seat belt" and ascertain
what Jerome and I were giggling
like jackals at.
These brilliantly deft boyish
pranks were a priori. There is no
way we could have thought of all
the stuff we pulled. It was
knowledge from a muse. Besides,
it can be proven by cross-cultural
analysis.
I think Freud did
something on this when he did his
"Totem and Taboo" study.
He found that Mother-in-law
jokes are universal and I would at-
test so is the primeval sprightly
devilment of children. I'm convinc-
ed that in a motif of parallel
universes, at the same time when
Jerome and I were carrying on this
tom-foolery, there was an Eskimo
family talcing an educational trip to
a caribou preservation and two
brothers were tying their sisters
' long pig-tails to the runners on the
. dog sled.
,
My
sister was not the innocent in
this area, by any means. Janna's
favorite ploy arose when the car
was stopped along the road-side
and my father was tinkering with
the engine. As my father stuck his
head inside the mouth of this
candy-apple red monster, my sister
would clambor over into the front
• seat next to my mom, She would
wait until everything was quiet and
then lean on the horn. The honk
startled the bejesus out of my
father every time. And being the
bookish, professorial type, chances
were he'd slam the back of his head
on the hood.
This is standard Jerry Lewis ac-
tion, but ff you could have seen the
raw look of outrage on my Father's
face as it subsided after clashing
with my sister's impeccably struc-
tured pure and inquisitive act, it
was magic. Leaning out of the win-
dow on the driver's side she would
ask, "Is the motor broke Pop?"
':No the motor isn't broken,
honey. Try not to honk the horn,
O.K.
Janna-dear."
"It
was an ac-
cident." "I know."
She could also be cruel in her
remarks. When we were_ driving
and passed anything of significance
my father would say, "Look at
that kids, that's the ... " and pro-
cede to elucdiate on whatever it was
for our edification. You figure
since he was the only thing between
us and child-labor; we would have
pretended to be interested. But with
the gall of condescension Janna
would say, "Wow Pop ... that's
mind-bottling."
Then the three of us would fall
about ourselves in fits of laughter
and my dad would say, "You guys
are a bunch of real characters."
HYDEPARK
TRADING CO.
Custom Made
To Order:
14K Gold
Sterling Silver
Leather Apparel
Repair Work
on all
Leather Goods
&
REPRESENTING
. THE FINEST
I
AMERICAN
I
CRAFfSMEN
Jewelry
~~~~~•~~Jl
Frye Boots and Mocasins Available
Store Hours: Mon.-Wed.
&
Sat.: 10-
Thurs. & Fri.:
10-8
Next to Radio Shack, Rt. 9, Hyde
Park
229-7900
1-lAIRCUTTt;RS
$2.00 Off
With Marist 1.0.
Every Monday
and Tuesday
Come visit
The Cutlery.
where we've been
the very best in
professional
hair styling, shampoo,
conditioning. perms,
body waves. cellophane
colorings, and more.
Setting hair cutting
trends for over
ten years.
Serving
Marist
Since
1975
The Cutlery
is located at
3 liberty Street
in Poughkeepsie.
Stop by or
call us at
9/4-454-9239.
"CLOSE ENCOUNTERS 0F
THE SEXUAL KIND''
Featuring the
lmprov Group of Abrams and Anderson!
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1986, 9:30 P.M.
Fireside Lounge
Sponsored by The Student Affairs Divsion
J




















--Page
8 - THE CIRCLE· October 30, 1986 --------------------~---
..
-:.'":.'":.'":.'":.~~~~~~~~::,.::,.::,.::,.::_
Cheap ways to look your beast
POSmONS
AVAILABLE
by C.M. Hlavaty ·
Once again, that time of year has
crept up on us. Children and adults
alike are carefully choosing their
wardrobes for that oh-so-special
night.
Yes, it's All Hallow's Eve again;
the day we all looked forward to
as kids. The day on which
we
could
scour the neighborhoods
for
bagloads of goodies and dress up
as anything we wanted (or at least
anything that met with mom's safe-
ty and respectability standards).
Now that· we are adults it's a
whole new ball game. Adults may
now dress up for work, school or
play, with less regard for proprie-
ty than ever. Flirty French maids
abound, as do daring devils and
bewitching witches.
Makeup
has also gained
popularity for Halloween night.
"3-D Makeup" is manufactured by
Funworld and is available in local
stores such as CVS in the South
Hills Mall.
It
can turn anyone in-
to a deformed, hideous ghoul for
a day. Anyone may purchase this
inexpensive ($1.29) water-based
mixture and enterge appearing as
if
half of his face is melting away -
oh, if mom could see us now!
P AAS, the brand most famous
for transforming everyday eggs in-
to pastel works of, art, also
manufactures colorful makeup to
brighten anyone's Halloween. This
package gives artistic license to its
customers for a price tag of $2.99
and can also be found at CVS.
mall.
Costumes can be rented from
area stores such as On YourToes,
Fun Services at 393 Main • St.
Beacon, In Disguise located in
Kingston and Marlu Costumes in
Port Jervis, which has over 16,000
costumesin stock. An average ren-
tal costs $25 to
.$30
plus.
AREAREPMANAGER
Earn
salary,
cnmmission and
Colleges sidestep
enrollment decline
Hair spray, available in seven
basic and four glitter colors at
Sears Department Stores, can
transform a brunette into a glitter-
ing gold bombshell or a fuchsia-
haired punker. Prices range from
$2.98 for the colors to $3.49 for the
glitter sprays manufactured by
11-
lusionaire. Both wash out with
shampoo, for those of us who
choose not to remain "in costume"
for the following week.
People now have the freedom to
be a·nyone or anything imaginable
this Halloween. Some ideas include
King Henry the VIII, a harem girl,
a scarecrow, an indian warrior,
Rambo, a flapper from the '20s
with a gangster escort, Raggedy
Ann and Andy, a Keystone Cop
and his prisoner (complete with ball
and chain), the Ace and King of
Hearts as well as Antony • and
Cleopatra.
• free travel Position involves
management of area campus
reps for a national college
travel and marketing firm.
Approximately.20 hours per
week, ideal for senior or
graduate student.
CAMPUS
REP
Earn
commission and
free
travel
Market ski and beach
tours on your campus.
PRINCETON
(CPS)
· -
American colleges have not yet suf-
fered the long-expected "great
enrollment drop" of the 1980s -
mainly because they have learned
to sell themselves better, the Educa-
tional Testing Service said earlier
this month.
Some public colleges now spend
an average of $30 per student on
recruiting. • Private colleges may
spend as much as $500 per student,
the testing service report said.
"An unprecedented marketing
and recruiting effort by the na-
tion's post-secondary institutions
during the first half of the decade"
has helped avoid an enrollment
drop, which was predicted to be as
high as 20 percent, said Hunter
Breland, testing service researcher.
Four-year public colleges have
boosted their recruiting budgets by
63 percent or more since 1980 -
more than double the inflation
rate, he said.
For most schools, the recruit-
ment push is a fight for its survival,
said Leroy Twilley, admissions
director
for Western Illinois
University.
"In
Illinois last year, we
graduate,d s~me· 138;331
high
school students. Figure that about
one-half of those go to college.
Next year, we project about
138,900 students. Then the slide
begins," Twilley said.
"In 1991, we'll be down to about
119,951 graduates. That's quite a
drop,"
Twilley. said. "College
enrollment is closely allied to high
school graduates."
Gerald Bowker, admissions
director at the University of Ten-
nessee, said he believes the new em-
phasis on recruiting is here to stay.
"Colleges really need to work on
developing their image, regardless
of whether
we
are in good times or
bad times.
It
doesn't stop because
last year was a good year," he said.
So admissions directors are com-
ing up with advertising campaigns
like Twilley's Western Illinois U.
"Western Advantage." Last week,
Twilley hosted a banquet for about
100
potential ·students, and is
preparing a mail campaign.
"We are doing everything from
buying mailing lists from national
testing companies, sending letters,
inviting people to college activities,
college. tours, high school visita-
How
to start
your
law
career
6efore
you
start
lawschool. •
Start with the Kaplan LSAT
prep course. After
taking
Kaplan. thousands oflSAT
students score between 40
and
48.
And those scores
give
you
the best shot
at
getting ihto
the
school of your choice and going
-
on to the top firms or
c&rKiiiiii
STANUY
H KAl'\~fOUCAJlONAI. C!IIITllllrt>.
WHITE
PWNS
...... 914-948-7801
POUGHKEEPSIE
..... 914-485-2002
STAMFORD
......... 203-324-7706
tion, telemarketing,
etcetera,
etcetera," Twilley said.
Such campaigns, regardless of
the testing service's findings, don't
• always work.
The University of the District of
Columbia last wec;k announced an
enrollment drop
df
1,000 students,
the latest in a seven-year slide.
The slide has cost the university
about a quarter
..of
its student body,
despite a $275,000 marketing
cam-
paign desigened to stop what
university spokesman John Britton
calls "The
hemorrhaging
of
enrollment."
Fake blood, deformed noses,
twisted false teeth and applicable
fur are all available for those of
you who yearn to be different for
the day. Afro wigs are also to be
found in a variety of assorted col-
ors, including a rainbow-colored
one which guarantees to bring out
the
clown in its wearer. These can
be purchased for $9.98 at On Your
Toes in the Poughkeepsie Plaza
Staple costume ideas include the
Playboy
bunny,
Dracula,
Frankenstein and his lovely bride,
a circus clown or a devil.
Budget-conscious
trick-or-
treaters may create their own
disguises. Good places to start sear-
ching are the Salvation Army shops
or vintage-clothing stores, such as,
The Endless Attic at 279 Main
Mall, Madame Bovary at
5
1/2
Garden St., Poughkeepsie and
Repeat Performance at the Hyde
Park Shopping Center.
Call Michael
DeBoer
at 914-
682-1795
or
write to Amer-
ican Access Travel, 141 Cen-
tral Park Avenue South,
Hartsdale,
NY 10530
CALL
TOLL PREE
(800) 992-3773
Dorm
·oesk
Security-·-
$4.00/Hr.
I
Security is nnw hiring Dorm Desk Security for Leo, Sheahan, Cham-
pagnat and Marian Dormitories.
Shifts available: 5:00 p.m. to 12:00 Mid
12:00 Mid. to 6:00 a.m.
5:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m.
5:00 p.m. to 1 :00 a.m.
The above, depending on day of week and dormitory involved.
Interested students (Seniors, Junior and Sophomores') may apply
at the Security Office, Donnelly Rm. 201, starting Monday, October
1986, at 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. throughout the day and week.
Applicants must have and maintain a "C" average or above, and
not be on any form of disciplinary probation.



















---------------------------------October
30, 1986 • THE CIRCLE - Page
g __
r--------------------------------~------------------------~
-I

I
: READERSHIP SURVEY
:
I
I
I
The. advertisers of· The Circle
I
have taken a growing inte.-est in
how the student of Marist think
I
and act._ The following is a ·gues-
1
tionnaire to help determine this.
I
This has never been done before so
I
cooperation would be deeply ap-
priecated. Please complete the
form and drop it off at the Post Of-
fice. Thank you for your time.
1-What is your age?
2-Your sex is ...
Male or Female
b) Off-campus
6-Do you have your own
transportation?
Yes or No
7-Wbat is your favorite night of
the week to go out?
8-Do you drink alcoholic
beverages?
Yes or No
The Circle, do you read regularly?
I
a) Viewpoint page
I
b) Sports
c) The Ads
I
d) The Classifieds
I
e) Campus coverage
I
f)
Etcetera page
g) Editoral .page
I
h) other
I
• 13-Do you use the following,
I
when offered in The Circle?
I
a) Coupons- Yes or No · •
I
9-What is your favorite bar?
b) Specials at Bars- Yes or No
I
a) Renies
c) l.D. Discounts- Yes or No
b) Let's Dance
I
tj~~~
14-D
h
I
3-How much money do you
d) Skinner's
o you ever ave trouble get-
spend each week?
e) other
ting a copy of The Circle?
I
a) 0- $10
Yes or No
I
b) $11- $20
10-Do you read The Circle?
I
c) $21- $30
a) Weekly
15-What is your favorite radio
d) $31- $50
b) Bi-monthly
station in Poughkeepsie?
I
e) Over $50
c) Monthly
a) WPDH
I
4-
Are you from?
d) Semesterly
.
b) WMCR
I
a) New York City
.
11-What
would you like to see
c) WVKR
b) Long Island
more advertising of )n The Circle?
. d) 98 FAME
I
c) Upstate New York
a) Bars
e) _K 104
.
I
d) New Jer~ey
b) Clothing-Stores
O
other
I
e) Connecticut
c) Hair Styling Places
16-Are you employed during the
I
f)
other
d) Food-related Places
school year?
..
5-While at school, where do you
e) Campus Ads
Yes or No
•. .
I
live?
0
other
·
17~1f employed is it?
I
. a) On-campus
12-Wbich of these features in
FuU-time or Part-time
I
~----------------------~---------~
Marist debaters
·shine
by Beth-Kathleen McCauley
Springston. ''They paid the boys a
in Los Angeles.
lot of attention and asked them
"We would have a tough time,
TheMarist College debate team
about the subways and things. It
but the judges would know us and
reached the semi-finals at a tour-
was a big ego boost."
• learn to pronounce ~he college's
nament last weekend.held at Nor-.
"The mostimportant thing was • name," said Springston.·.
them Illinois University,- but was
that we had a good. time," said
Marist was also chosen to host
eliminated by Wheaton College,
Buckley .. "Doing weU was great,
the Northeast Regional. Touma-
Which is currently first in national
but came in second."
• . .
. ment March 7 and 8.
. .
debate team rankings.
:
The team is looking ahead to
According to Springston, "This

'sand
Deadline for ~o-ops
Internships
October 31, 1986
Apply at
Field Experience Office
Donnelly Trailer-
• I
i
I
I
\
I
Marist reached the semi-finals
tournaments in Boston, Mass., • is very exciting for all of us. Marist
with a record of four wins and two
N·ew Orleans, La., and if the team. was chosen-clVer
all the big schools
~9l~:rr~~WJ~~tfCf1:~a~.
_ -.~E~t-ell, the national to~~-:~,~nt ·tJh1J:~~o~\i~c~~~i~~~B~~t·.
_,__-
_______________________________
.-'
.....
eighth out of 29 teams.
.
• Wheaton was undefeated after
the initial rounds and was ranked
first.
Marist is currently ranked eighth
regionally and, according to James
Springston, director of debate, the
team is just out of the top 40 out
of300 schools nationally.
The subject debated at the Il-
linois tournament was that improv-
ed United States relations with the
Soviet Union is a more important
objective theri increased military
preparedness.

Springston said he was pleased
with the team's overall perfor-
mance, especially the work of the
two freshmen debaters,- Mike
Buckley of Forest Hills, N. Y., and
Dom Giombetti from Guilderland,
·N.Y.
• "Even though we di.<:ln't
win I'm
real proud of the way we earned
points," said Springston.
Maristwas the only team in the
tournament from the East Coast, •
with most teams coming from the
Midwest.·
"They were real surprised to see
a team from New York," said
Books to cite
top graduates
• The Office of Student Affairs
has mailed ballots to faculty, staff
and presidents of student organiza-
tions requesting nominations of
students scheduled to graduate in
1987, "Who's
Who Among
Students in American Universities
and Colleges" and the "National
Register of Outstanding College
Graduates."
The criteria to be used in selec-
ting nominees are: academic
record; participation and leader-
ship in academic and extracur-
ricular activities; service to the
community and/or to the college;
potential for future achievement.
A committee of faculty, staff
and students will review all names
submitted, and then recommend
those most representative of our
student body.
CONFUSED.
?
•••
\\
All current resident students wishing
to reconfirm their college housing for
the Spring 1987 semester, must be
pre-registered for at least 12 credits
($pring '87) and do the following:
1) Submit a completed room recon-
firmation card and -
·2) Pay a
$75.00
advance room
deposit to the Business Office by
November 14, 1986
Do not bring the deposit and/or card
to. the Housing Office
The Deposit is Non-refundable
Any questions? See your Ra, UC,
ARD, RD, or stop by the Housing
Office.
...

































--Page·
10 • THE CIRCLE -· Ot:tober 30
1
19B6 ·
.
'
College • tougher • on protesters
.
.
'
~
.
.
. .
·d~spite increase in 'divestment
BALTIMORE, MD (CPS)-
In
recent weeks
Desiree
Gran, a Johns
Hopkins graduate student, has
been picked up bodily by police,
'dragged by her feet across grass
and concrete, dropped into a pad-
dy wagon, handcuffed and pushed
into a cold, metal cell, where she
was kept in solitary confinement
for nine hours.
Her university then charged her
with
trespassing,
loitering,
disorderly conduct and disobeying
a police officer.
JHU President
Dr. Steven
Muller says his administration -
which last week dropped the
charges against Gran and 12 other
students arrested for ·defying a
campus ban on building "shanties"
meant to symbolize .poverty in
South Africa -
actually is grow-
ing more lenient toward anti-
apartheid • protestors.
But, if recent events are any in-
dication, students joining a round
of nationwide anti-apartheid pro-
tests scheduled for hundreds of
campuses this month can expect
rougher
treatment
.from
authorities.
"It seems that in a number of
cases college officials are getting
tougher on protestors," observes
Richard Knight of the American
Committee on Africa (ACA),
which helps coordinate campus
anti-apartheid efforts nationwide.
Texas, Yale, Illinois, Utah,
• Missouri, Indiana and Dartmouth,
among others, are all striking "get
tough"
poses toward
anti-
apartheid students who, up until
last spring, could count on
demonstrating without much per-
sonal risk.
At that point, administrators
began sending police. to break up
protestors and their "shanty"
.. yiU11ges

f
o.r.th~ Ors~
:tilJle,,o(t.en.
pn
the grounds the flimsy structures -
none too swrdy and frequently the
Clean_· __
Continued from page 3
Many students interviewed call-
ed the new arrangement unfair.
"It
was so mucneasier not hav--
ing to worry about- cleaning the:
bathrooms. Now we have to go out:
and buy all the cleaning supplies,"
said Tim Mellitt, a senior from
Waterbury, Ct., who ~as lived in
a Townhouse for twc,years.
Diane Rossini, a senior com-
munication arts major who lives in
Gartland Commons, said, "I don't
think it's right because we pay a iot
of money to.go here."
Tom McCauley, a senior finance
major from Fairfield, Conn., who
has lived in a townhouse. for two
years, said they should put a halt
to the present ·cJeaning system
because it doesn!tdo much good.
"What's the' purpo~ of cle:aning
that elongated·window in the 'front
door?" said McCauley.
target of violent vandalism by
movement opponents - posed in-
surance risks for the. schools. ,
Now, administrators seem Jess
shy about breaking up the protests,
often explaining it's necessary to
maintain campus order.
The ACA's Josh Nessen says it's
because students themselves are
tending to use more violent, con-
frontative tactics in recent years.
The crackdowns,
ironically
enough, are coming as more
schools - about 50 so far this year,
the ACA says - are selling shares
in companies that do business in
segregationist South Africa.
Recently, for example, Harvard,
Bucknell and Southern Cal voted
to sell all or part of their South
African holdings.
At the same time, Missouri ar~
. rested' 17 protestors. It was the first
time UM had ever brought
• trespassing charges against pro-
testors, says Maj. Jack Watring of
the campus police.
Nearby, Illinois refiled trespass-
ing charges against 16 students in-
volved in a campus protest last
spring. Yale suspended four. •
Dartmouth - which refused to
give diplomas to five protestors last
spring -
is imposing stricter
disciplinary rules to try to minimize
litigation with students, spokesman
Alex Huppe says. •
The Circle
is looking
for photographers.
Contact Mark Marano
cl
o The Circle
P .0.- Box
3-857".
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GRADUATES-
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Oct. 30-Capt. Video Party
Nov. 8 • Becks Bier Party
Nov. 13.; Eagle Snacks Party
DISCOUNT ADMISSION
with MARIST 1.0.
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r
i
'
i
f
t
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-----------------------------October
30, 1986 - THE CIRCLE - Page 11
Walk-ons: Looking for a shot at Division
I
'by Paul Kelly
. The alann rang Oct. i5 at 5:26
a.m.

·_.
It rang even earlier for Brian
Gallagher, Ernest McFadden, Matt
Schoenfeld, Derek Sheriff, Pete
Brown and Chris Gilbert.
The annual sadistic orgy known •
as walk-on basketball tryouts bad
begun.
This year, tryouts had a different
complexion than previous year's
editions. The hoop· hopefuls were
given three days tp show their
wares as opposed to other years'
one-session tryouts.
Day One began at 6 a.m. It was
still dark when the walk-ons
descended to Mccann. Amidst
warm-up shooting, Gallagher, a
senior, mumbled, "Now I know
definitely why I didn't join crew.
I hit the old snooze button a cou-
ple of times."
The six hoopsters began the red-
eyed session by listening to a lec-
ture from Assistant Basketball
Coach Jeff Bower. Bower, nattily
Lady
spikers
on a streak
by Don Reardon
attired in a Marist sweat top and
gray pants; appeared to have had
as much· sleep as all six hopefuls
combined.


"If
yoti make the team, you
don't get a scholarship. I want you
to understand that," said Bower
realistically; "But once you make
the team, you're a member of the
team, not a walk-on."
And with that statement, all talk
subsided, and the sound of basket-
balls
began
to reverberate
throughout the nearly-empty gym.
The players were subjected to a
• plethora of drills each day, and im-
mediately one thing became clear.
The gym is Jeff Bower's classroom.
Bower treated each session as if
he were teaching the game to alien
lifeforms. The players appreciated
the schooling. "It's the first time
I've done drills since high school,
and it really helped,"
said
Gallagher.
The first morning ended as the
hopefuls sauntered sleepily back to
their beds. Despite the burden of
having to rise before the sun, all of
scoreboard
the players believed in themselves .
and what they were doing.
Schoenfeld, a sophomore who
walked on last year's 19-12 NCAA
Tournament squad, placed it all in
perspective.
"I
was on the team last
thursday
morning
quarterback
year when we won, and I know all
of this work will pay off."
Day Two saw Bower and Assis-
tant Coach Tim Murray shift the
time of tryouts to 8 p.m. That
move was a popular one with the
players.
"I
was much more awake to-
day," said McFadden, a senior.
The competitivess of the drills
and scrimmages increased on Day
Two. Despite the obvious hoop
combat that was occuring on the
floor, the camraderie amongst the
Hofstra 3, Marist
0 (10/25/86)
Hofstra
2
1-3
Marist
O
0-0
First Half: I.HOF, Fedorowicz
(J.Galluzo)
2:17;
2.HOF,
Fedorowicz (C.Galluzo) 9:29.
Second Half:
3.HOF,
C.
The Marist College women's
SOCCER
Galluzo (Doyle) 24:33.
volleyball team easily defeated Iona
St. Peter's 2, Marist 0 (10/11/86)
Shots on Goal: HOF 14, MAR
Saturday afternoon at the McCann
Marist
O
0-0
9. -
Center as it upped its regular
St. Peter's
1
1-2
Corner Kicks: HOF 6, MAR
5.
season record to 18-5.
First Half: l.SPC,
Kearns
Goalie
Saves:
Joe
Mad-
Coach Vic VanCarpels said the
(Mayer) 1:27.
-den(MAR) 11, Mazzilli(HOF) 8.
game was the Red Foxes' best all-
Second Half: 2.SPC, Kearns
Marist 4-10.
around effort this year as they
6:32.
WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL
made little work of the Gaels,
Shots·on Goal: SPC IO, MAR 7.
Marist def. Quinnipiac (10/24/86)
defeating them in three straight
Corner Kicks: SPC 7, MAR 3.
Marist def. Iona (10/25/86)
games, 15-5, 15-6 and 15-10.
Goalie
Saves:
Joe
Mad-
Marist 18~5.
Marist will challenge Manhattan
den(MAR) 9, Pane(SPC) 8.
MEN'S
&
WOMEN'S
and Bard tonight at 6 p.m. in the
Marist 4-6;
CROSS COUNTRY
McCann Center.
Hartwick S, Marist 2 (10/14/86)
Tri-Meet
vs. Columbia
and
The lady spikers played in New -·
,Hartwick
3
2~5
Delaware at Van Cortlandt Park,
. .,...
.. York.a&.l!i!}_St
Lehman and Hunter
Marist
.
I
1-2
.-_ . : •
Bronx, N.Y.
(10/24/86)
Tuesdiiy' aiidho°sied]%wllng''anif-:'7'7ff~::J:;'frsfHa1ff
EHAR; Meyef(Mif:;,-" - - Delaware
20;Marist·_43-
Brooklyn last night. Results were
chell) :39;2.HAR; Cushion 17:32;'
Columbia
19,-Marist 44 •
• u~available at press time.
3.HAR, _
Rees 42:28; 4.MAR,
Delaware 20, Columbia 3_5
• "We haven't been playing at the
Charles Ross (Gerard Sentochnik) •
Men's Individual
competitive level we'd like this
42:49.
Results (5.0 miles)
·year," said VanCarpels. "Hopeful-
Second Half: 5.HAR, Rees
I-Fred Ernst (COL) 25:28.5;
ly this game indicates we're mov-.
(McCarthy) 20:28; 6.HAR, Rees 2-Don Reardon (MAR)
25:51;
ing toward.a peak."
• _
27:32; 7. MAR, John Gilmartin
3-Marc Weisburg (DEL) 25:56;
Peaking has been a difficult task
34:45. Shots on Goal: -HAR 12, 20-Steve Brennan (MAR) 28:05;
for Marist as they have suffered 27
-MAR 5. Corner Kicks: _HAR 5, 24-Jeff Nicosia (MAR) 28:28;
ankle injuries throughout this
MAR 0. Goalie Saves: Joe Mad~ 27-Bob Sweeney (MAR) 28:40;
season, according to VanCarpels.
den(MAR) 8, Harrison(HAR) 3.
33-Marc Mabli (MAR) 29:11;
VanCarpels said sever;il of the
Marist 4-7.
34-Steve Pierie
(MAR)
29:32;
ankle injuries are being caused by
Seton Hall 3, Marist 2
(10/18/86)
42-Bill McKenna
(MAR)
32:48;
out-of-date equipment being sup-
Seton Hall
1
2-3
43-Mike Carey
(MAR)
33:26;
plied by Marist. ''Our nets have
Marist
1
1-2
44-Alex Swingle
(MAR)
no time.
broad metal bases -that seem to
·-First Half: I .SHU, O'Kelly
Albany State
catch players' ankles," he said.
(penalty kick) 4:03;
2.MAR,
Kevin
Invitational
(10/25/86)

"Hopefully they'll be replaced."
Segrue (Kudzai Kambarami) 33:15. Wome~•s Team Results (18 teams)
• :- Perhaps Marist's most successful
Second Half: 3.SHU, O'Kelly
1-Mtddlebury 69; 2-Southern
coach over the past three years,
17:48; 4.MAR, Jim McKenna: Connecticut 75; 3-Trenton St. 88;
VanCarpelspraisedthementaland
(penalty kick) 28:13; 5.SHU,_ 4-lthaca
90; 5-Queen's
213;
physical efforts of co-captains
Matischak 35:59.
13-Marist 310.
. Kathy Murphy and Patty Billen in
Shots on Goal: SHU 10, MAR
Individual Results (5,000 meters)
• the destruction of Iona.
5.
Corner Kicks: MAR 5, SHU 2.
I-Dorcas Denhartog
(MID)
'
"Kathy and Patty control the
Goalie
Saves:
Joe
Mad-
17:14; 2-Virginia Zaleski (TIN ST)
··,game," he said, ''and teamattitude
den(MAR) 11, Higgins(SHU) 5.
17:29; 3-Paula Brunetto (S.CONN)
.is dictated by how they perform."
Marist 4-8.
18:02; 38aJennifer Fragomeni
_ ; Billen modestly ignored her own
Fordham
2,
Marist
1 (10/22/86)
(MAR)
20:09; 48-Annie Breslin
effortsinthegameandsaidthevic-
Marist
O
1-1
(MAR)
20:26; 61-Helen Gardner
tory was produced by team effort,·
Fordham
1
1-2
(MAR)
20:46; 126-Theresa Sat-
-:Jn
particular the labors of freshman
First Half: I.FOR, Rooney tiano
(MAR)
22:57; 129-Pam
phenom Allison Vallinin'o.
(Filipovits) 10:42.
_
_!,hewch~-~ . (MAR)
23:31;
• VanCarpels echoed Billen's sen-
Second Half: 2.FOR, Rooney _.137-Pemse
Spmetta (MAR) 23:57.
timents. "Allison is our most
(penalty kick) 20:02; 3.MAR, Fran_,_
_ .
FOOTBALL
., physically gifted athlete, and she's
Payne_ 33:57. _
• :
~~risp4,
Iona 20 (10/11/86)
·-played well all season,· but she
Shots on Goal: FOR 8, MAR 3 .. Man~~
10 17 7 0-34
along with the other players needs
Corner Kicks:_
FOR 5, MAR 2. Iona
O
14 0 6-20
. to improve upon the communica-
Goalie
Saves:
Joe
Mad-
:-MAR-Bill Rose FG 27 MAR-Ed
_.tionthatoccursduringthegame,"
den(MAR) 7, Knuth(FOR) 2.
·:Christensen 11 run (Rose kick)
,
he said.
Marist 4-9.
MAR-Sam Lanier 28 pass from
Fox
trails
_______________
c_o_n_tin_u_ed_r_ro_m_pa-ge_12
now averaging 147.7 yards on the
• ground per contest ... A power
failure at the outset of last Satur-
day's game against Siena forced
WKIP
radio play-by-play an-
nouncer
Ed Weir
to broadcast the
opening minutes of the game from
the Financial Aid Office
in
Donnel-
ly Hall.
Weir
resumed his duties in
the press box when electricity was
restored early in, the second
quarter.
MEN'S
BASKETBALL
A photograher from Sports Il-
lustrated was on campus last week
taking photos of the Marist
hoopsters for a possible spot in the
publication's college basketball
preview issue. One of the portraits
featured 7'3" center
Rik Smifs
fall-
ing backwards into the McCann
Center pool in unifonn ... Smits
was tabbed a pre-season All-
America
selection
by
the
prestigious Street and Smith
basketball
magazine.
MEN'S AND WOMEN'S CREW
The men's varsity
heavyweight four was third of the
16 Dad Vail boats entered and the
second· varsity lightweight eight
registered seventh out of 12 Dad
Vail
second
lightweight
eights ... The men's and women's
crews raised more than $3,800 in
the fourth annual American
Cancer Society/Marist Crew Row-
a-Thon held at South Hills • Mall
Oct. 10, 11 and 12.
players was surprising. "We're not
on the team, but we are a team -
a team of walk-ons,"
said
McFadden.
Oct. 17, 1986 -
D-Day was
upon the walk-ons. Friday's 8 p.m.
session was the culmination of the
dreams of six young men, all try-
ing to achieve one goal.
The sacrifices involved were
tremendous, especially for McFad-
den. His friend was getting married
the next day, and he was going to
be late for the bachelor party. So
what, you say. McFadden was an ••
usher in the ceremony.
The players each had their own
method to stay loose for this, one
of the most important days of their
athletic lives. Sheriff, a junior,
stood on his head after stretching
lightly. "That's what happens
when you have a square head,"
said McFadden of his friend.
Gilbert, a junior, talked about
the World Series showdown bet-
ween the Mets and the Red Sox.
Schoenfeld, sitting alone against
the bleachers, gazed without ex-
Jon Cannon (Rose kick) MAR-
E.Christensen 6 run (Rose kick)
IONA-Proudian 41 pass from
Dillulio (kick failed) IONA-Pullen
27 pass from Dillulio (Dillulio run)
MAR-Rose
FG
27
MAR-
E.Christensen 5 run (Rose kick)
IONA-Singleton
25
pass from
Dillulio (pass failed)
Rushing:
MARIST,
E.Christensen 35-212; Paul Ronga
12-34; Jim Fedigan 2-10; Curt
Bailey 3-5; Jason Thomas 2-4; Joe
Nowak 1-0; Cannon 6-(-22). Iona,
Proudian 8-38; Knox 4-13; Rattiner
3-12; Dillulio 8-(-1); Bennett 1-(-1).
Passing: MA RIST, Cannon
2-8-2-42; Fedigan 5-9-0-100;
Thomas 0-1-0-0. Iona, Dillulio
10-28-2-178.
Receiving: MARIST, Lanier
2-66; E.Christensen 3-36; Steve
LoCicero 1-26; Howard 1-ierodes
1-14. lona,~Singleton 3-43; Prou-
dian 1-41; D'Agostino2-34; Set'a
pression at the far bleache~s.
wondering whether his dream
would come true.
The session went smoothly, as
each player prepared for ground
zero -
the moment Bower an-
nounced the selections.
Bower reflected on his three-day
experience.before the tryout. "It's
hard (to select the players who are
invited on the team) because I
know how much they want to make
the team," he said. "They're giv-
ing a great effort, and my hat is off
to them."
9:29 p.m. -
The moment of
truth had arrived.
Bower and Murray _sat the
players in a circle behind the
basket. Bower began what was to
be probably one of the most dif-
ficult speeches of his life to this
point.
_
" ... We're looking for which guy
would fit in the Marist system -
who would fit with who. So, we're
going to invite Ernie and Matt to
Continued on page 12
2-27; Pullen 1-27;McPherson 1-7.
Marist 3·.2.
RPI 42, Marist
7 (10/18/86)
No results available.
Marist 3-3.
Marist
28,
Siena 13
(10/25/86)
Siena
0
0
0 13-13
Marist

0
7
21 0-28
MAR-Ed ·christensen 22 run
(Bill
Rose
kick)
MAR-
E.Christensen 6 run (Rose kick)
MAR-Jason Thomas 19 run (Rose
kick) MAR-E.Christensen 17 run
(Rose kick) SIE-Eisenburg 9 run
(kick failed) SIE-Young 4 run (Rip-
chick kick)
Rushing:
MARI
ST,
E.Christensen 30-229; Mark Burl•
ingame 11-52; Jon Cannon 6-32;
Jason Thomas 4-23; Paul Ronga
3-17; Bill Kelly 4-5; Sam Lanier
1-3; Joe Nowak 3-2. Siena, Young
15-20; Welnhofer 3-10; Small 2-8;
Mastan
2-6;
Eisenburg 3-4;
.Whit-
man 1~2.
~~Mi,
..
Steve Sansola
ATTENTION ALL
NON-RESIDENT
STUDENTS
Any
Non-Resident
student interested in
college housing for the
Spring 1987 semester
must complete a non-
resident request in the
Housing Offic·e, . Room
270,' Campus Center by
November 14, 1986.,
• Limited
space
is
available. However, a
waiting list is being
maintained.
ANY QUESTIONS?
STOP BY THE
HOUSING OFFICE



























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p
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Page 12. !HE CIRCLE·
October
30, 1986 --
Christ ens en sets· record as Marist wins 28-13
by Paul Kelly
Ed Christensen is writing a book.
It is tentatively • titled "Marist
Rushing Records-My Way."·
The 5-11 junior tailback galloped
a school-record 229 yards on 30
carries
and
tallied
three·
touchdowns to lead the Red Fox~
to a 28-13 triumph over Siena last
Saturday.
Before 1,825 fans at Leonidoff
Field, Christensen became the first
Marist player ever to amass
1,000
yards on the ground as his 1986
total now stands at 1,034 yards.
The Red Foxes (4-3) will hit the
highway once again as they travel
Saturday to Pace University to face _
the Setters in a 1-p.m. matchup.
Last season, Marist downed Pace.
12-3 at Leonidoff Field.
Christensen's rushing effort
marked the third time this season
he has scampered for over 200
yards in one game. His 229-yard
performance -severed his . own was the culmination of a lot of
record of 212 yards, set earlier this hard work."
campaign against FDU-Madison.
After a scoreless initial period,
·Head Coach Mike Malet con-
Christensen opened the scoring for
sidered last Saturday's contest to
be
the Red Foxes late in the second
crucial considering the 42-7 drub-
stanza.when he rambled 22 yards
bing the Red Foxes experienced at into the end zone. .
the hands of RPI two weeks ago in • In the • third period, the Red
Troy. "It
was
a do-or-die situation, Foxes stretched their lead to 28-0.
after the way we got beat last • Christensen scored on jaunts of
6
weekend," said Malet.
and 17 yards, and starting
Malet attributed the victory to sophomore quarterback Jason
proper execution, yet said he felt Thomas scrambled in the end zone
the team could have been more sue-
on a keeper from 19 yards out.
cessful against the Indians. "We
did what we were capable of and
Malet was pleased with the per-
executed well," he said, "but we formance of Thomas, who finish-
didn't blow them off the face of the ed the game with 41 yards via the
Earth."
Christensen's
performance,
however, was
a
source of happiness
for Malet. "Ed played his best
game to date, and the guys in front
did _a great job, said Malet. "It's
a tribute to everyone involved and
Harriers tripped up
against tough foes
in NYC·and Albany
by Dave Mandy
After 12 days off, the Marist
men•s·i;ross country team ran into
trouble last Friday on the rugged, -
5-mile Van Cortlandt Park course
in New York City, finishing third
in a fri~ineet against Delaware and
Columbia.

_
who have done this."
Reardon was followed by juniors
Steve Brennan (20th, 28:05) and
Jeff Nicosia (24th, 28:28), Roun-
ding out the Marist field were
sophomore•.Bob_ Sweeney (27th,
28:40) and ·freshman Marc.Mabli
(33rd, 29:11).'
-
, ·
-
air on an efficient 3 for
5
perfor-· _
mance and junior Jon Cannon,
who ~nibined rushing and passing
for 88 yards of total <?ffense.
Thomas_ will get the startmg call
this Saturday against Pace, accor-
ding to Malet.
"They (Thomas ,and Cannon)
both did a good job. Jon settled us
down and played probably his best
game to date,"· said Malet.
Siena mounted its only offensive
threat in the fmal period on respec-
tive touchdown runs of 9 and 4
yards by quarterback Pete Eisen-
burg and halfback Tim Young. The
Indians' ground game was held to
ju~t 50 yards by the Marist defen-
sive corps.

. This Saturday, Malet indicated,
the Red Foxes' defensive secondary
will face a stiff challenge from
Pace. The defensive • back~ eld
allowed 156 yards passing agamst
Siena, whic\t dismayed Malet.
"The pass defense could have
been tighter, and the secondary will
have to play better," said Malet.
Marist will attempt to diversify
its offensive setup Saturday against
the Setters, according to Malet.
"We've got to throw the ball more,
especially on first down," he said.
On Oct. 11, the Red Foxes
defeated Iona 34-20.
Delaware celebrated an· im-
pressive 'Victory,
.defeating Colum-
bia 20:35 and the Red Foxes 20-43.
The women's team ran at the
Albany -State Invitational last
Saturday. The squad finished 13th
in a field of18, well behind first-
place Middlebury. ''They ran into
a buzzsaw," said Head Coach
Steve Lurie.
Leading the pack of the women's
race at Albany was Dorcas Denhar-
tog of· Middlebury, who raced
through the 5,000-meter course in
17:14. Denhartog was the NCAA
Division Three national cross coun-
try champion in 1985.
Fund_ rowing
The varsity crew team earned a total of $3,871.25 during the
fourth annual American Cancer Society/Marist College Row-
A-Thon Oct.
10 through Oct. 12 at the South Hills Mall. Shown
The men are preparing for the
New York State Collegiate Track
& Field Association·· Champion-
ships· Saturday. Th~ lady harriers
will travel across town to run in the •
Vassar Invitational, also Saturday._·
Last Saturday, Don Reardon led
the Red Foxes with a second-place
finish. He covered the treacherous
course in 25:51. Reardon became
the sixth Marist harrier to break 26
minutes at Van Cortlandt Park.
''When .you consider the tradi-
tion at Marist that's
a
pretty good
job," said Lurie. ''There have been
so many who have run, and so .few
Sophomore Jennifer Fragomeni
was the first Marist finisher, plac-
ing , 38th with a time of 20:09.
Following Fragomeni were junior
Annie Breslin (48th, 20:26). and
sophomores Helen Gardner (61st,
20:46), Theresa Sattiano (126th,
22:57) and Pam Shewchuk (129th,
23:31).

·. - .
. _ -

Lurie said he is looking for Rear-
don tp place a111ong
the top five
finishers at the state meet Saturday.
"Reardon has had
a
very consistent
- season," he said.
The meet, _ hosted by SUNY
Geneseo, will wind down the
season for most of the Red Foxes.
But Reardon will also compete at
the NCAA District Championships
at Lehigh· University Nov. 15.
Wade ends stay at Marist
by Paul Kelly
Carlton Wade, a sophomore
who was
a
m~mber oflast year's
basketball team, withdrew from
classes last Thursday.
Wade, 20, plans. to transfer to
Salem College, a ·100-student in-
stitution located in Salem, W.Va.,
according to Marist Sports Infor-
mation Director Bob Bordas.
Wade; who started 15 games last •
season for the Red Foxes, could
not be reached for comment.
The Clairton, Pa., native was
declared academically ineligible to
compete for Marist this semester.
He was also on indefinite suspen-
sion from the squad pending the
outcome of a trial for his alleged
involvement in the theft of former
Assistant Coach Jim Todd's credit
card last May.
- The 5-11 guard averaged 7.9
points and 1.2 rebounds last season
for the 19-12 Marist team which
saw action in its initial NCAA tour-
nament. Wade also paced the Red
Foxes in scoring on five different
occasions last winter.
Walk-ons
Continued from page 11
practice tomorrow ... "
And
.with
that statement, Matt
Schoenfeld returned and Ernest Mc
Fadden entered the world of free
Reeboks and Madison Square
Garden. For Brian Gallagher,
Chris Gilbert, Derek Sheriff and
Pete Brown, it remains battle-worn
hightops and blacktop.
Schoenfeld was jubilant. "It
feels great," he said. "I just achiev-
ed a goal."
On the other side,
Brown,
a
freshman, tried to parlay the ex-
perience into something positive.
"I tried my
best,
and there's always
next year," he said.
And with that, Pete Brown walk-
ed away and stared intently into the
air at nothing.
• here are Tony Sima, John Cronin, and Tony Maio.
Icemen cometh in game action
by Ken Foye
After almost three· weeks of
practice, preseason aerobics and
settling a debt from last year's
budget,. the Marist ~ollege ice
hockey club is ready to hit the ice
for its season opener tomorrow.
The Marist icemen will travel to
Long Island tomorrow to face off
against C. W. Post.
Four key players were lost to
graduation from last year.'s squad,
including Metro Conference first
team all-stars Tim Graham and
Keith Blachowiak. But, with an im-
pressive
mix
of newcomers and
veterans , the Red Foxes will look
to improve on last year's successful
10-6 record.
Jun1or
goaltender
Greg
-Whitehead returns after carrying
most of the team's net-minding
burdens last season. Freshmen
goalies Ralph Cassella and Jim
Stanton have looked good in
preseason practice sessions and
may ease Whitehead's workload
this season.
The team's biggest weakness last
season was its defense. The Red
Foxes gave up nearly six goals per
contest. Rick Race, Tom Nesbitt
and Scott Penoyer are the only
returnees to the team's corps of
defensemen which co-captain Craig
Thier and Blachowiak to gradua-
tion. Freshmen Mike Dunn .and
Mike
Lutolv
will
see plenty of ice
time this season guarding the blue
lines.
Last season's weak defense was
Skid goes on for soccer
by Michael J; Nolan
The Marist
soccer
team (4-10)
is currently on a six-game los-
ing streak following two losses
last week at the hands of
Hofstra University, 3-0, and
Fordham University, 2-1.
In those six games, the Red
Foxes have
been
outscored 19-6.
To make matters worse, the
team faced nationally-ranked
Long Island University yester-
day. Results were unavailable at
press time.
The Red Foxes. have been
particularly troubled during the
second half of contests, being
outscored 22-6 over the 14 final
periods played this season.
Although the season has been
disappointing, according to
Head Coach Howard Goldman,
the team has faced tough com-
petition over a schedule in-
cluding four nationally-ranked
teams.
Goldman said the team -
should have beaten Army,
Monmouth College and St.
Francis (N.Y .) College, but he
added, "It's a young team
that's still learning."
offset by the work of the squad's
forwards, who helped the Foxes
average n_early
_ seven -goals . per
game. Co-captain Graham (32
goals last season) will be sorely
missed, but eight returnees will try •
to make up for his loss.
-
Bill Drolet, Steve Melz, Mike
Medwig
and John Blake were key
skaters last season who return
along with Dean Kustas, Jon Ur-
ban~ Rob Goyda and Jim Coyne.
-
The team -opens its season with
four road games before playing at
the Mid-Hudson Civic Center
against Siena College Nov. 14.
Besides tomorrow • night's game,
the icemen will travel to play
Albany State Nov. 2, the U. S.
Merchant Marine Academy Nov.
5
and SUNY Stonybrook Nov. 8.
fox trail
by Paul Kelly
FOOTBALL
Junior tailback
Ed Christensen
was named
to
the ECAC Division
III South Honor Roll following his
212-yard rushing performa11ce in
the Red Foxes' 34-20 road victory
at Iona on Oct. 11. It marked the
second
straight
week
the
Rhinebeck,
N.Y. native was
bestowed the honor. after last
Saturday's record-setting 229-yard
effort against Siena,
Christensen
is
Continued on_ page 11