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Volume 35, Number 20 Marist College, Poughkeepsie, N. Y. April 27, 1989 Who gets how much at Marist? a by Bill Johnson available. schools but have increased at a The salaries of Marist ad­ much slower rate than those for slated for tomorrow President Dennis Murray earn­ ministrators are far above the na­ senior Marist administrators. by. Kevin St.Onge President Jeff Ferony. The hearing ed $120,000 for the fiscal year tional averagefor all four-year col­ Salary increases for top-ad­ will fociis on what TKE charges is 1987-88, down from $143,500 the leges but come closer to the ministrators have varied from 9 The Judicial Board decided last bias on the part of several CSL previous year, according to the col­ averages of salaries at colleges with percent to 17 percent annually in Friday to hear Tau Kappa. Ep- members deciding the case. The. lege's Internal Revenue Service budgets comparable to Marist, recent years, according to the IRS siloh's appeal of the disciplinary hearing is scheduledfor 2:45 p.m. forms. surveys show. documents, while faculty salaries sanctions taken against it two in Campus Center 249. Murray, in an interview this Murray's salary in 1987-88 was have increased 3 percent to 7 per­ weeks ago. Pat Reilly, current TKE presi­ week, would not explain why his 64 percent higher thanthe national cent on average. - After investigating incidents of dent, said CSL is biased against salary dropped 16 percent in average for presidents of four-year Full professors at Marist earned alleged misconduct -by TKE TKE' because five CSL members 1987-88 year after it jumped 34 per­ colleges, $73,226. The national an average of $43,500 in 1987-88, members, the Council of Student belong to Sigma Phi Epsilon, cent between 1985-86 and 1986-87. average was obtained through a 2 percent higher than average at a Leaders voted unanimously to another fraternity on campus. Murray earned $107,000 in survey by the College and Univer­ private four-year institution, accor­ remove two TKE officers and ban Possible conflict of interest con­ 1985-86. sity Personnel Association. ding to a survey by the American all group activities for the rest of cerns also focus on two members Murray's salary is determined by However/another CUPA survey Association of University Pro­ the semester, including the display of the Judicial Board. Bob Lynch, the board of trustees in consulta­ of private universities with budgets fessors. Marist professors earned 3 of fraternity colors. assistant director of college ac­ tion with an executive compensa­ of $34.1 million to $83 million lists percent more than the previous In addition, TKE is required to tivities, is also a member of the tion expert. the average salary for college year. revise is recruiting process and board and has recommended that Because Marist is a non-profit presidents at $110,000. Murray's Marist associate professors earn­ postpone recruiting until January he should not participate in the institution, its tax documents are salary is 9 percent higher. ed an averge of $35,500 last year, 1990. TKE's probationary status hearing. Jim Springston, director available to the public. The IRS The college's total expenses for 10 percent higher than average and has been extended until September of debate and-faculty advisor to Form 990 contains the salaries of 1987-88 were about $36.9 million, 6 percent more than the pres'ious 1990, when it may apply for a full Sigma Phi Epsilon, is another the college's highest-paid according to the IRS Form 990. year, according to the survey. charter. .. member of the board and has said employees and other information Faculty salaries at Marist have The typical assistant professor at The Judicial Board will meet that he will hear the appeal. pertaining to college finances. The remained higher than average Marist earned $28,200 last >car, 6 tomorrow to hear argumenis.from ..The Judicial; 'Board initially 1987-88 form was the latest faculty salaries at comparable Continued on psqe 2 TKE representatives- and - CSL "•"•.. "-."•' ' Cbhti'nu&d bnipagc 2 10 winners take home program the cash by Ed McGarry bfacey Denise DeCiccso funorganizersd cut, he said. s Students eligible for financial aid Ten people went home $20 Faced with losing half its fun­ can receive tuition credits of up to richer last Wednesday night ding next year, the Marist com­ $500 per semester for working up after winning "The $200 Guess munity service program is trying to to 10 hours a week in the communi­ Joe Bello's Five Favorite Songs find other sources to fund the pro­ ty, according to Koshin. Of The 1980s Contest." gram that grants tuition credit to This year 45 students earned tui­ Bello, a former Marist stu­ students who perfom community tion credit in 70 placements, accor­ dent who now attends-Temple . service. ding to Koshkin. Some students University Jn Philadelphia, For the past two years, the pro­ -worked both semesters and three awarded the money after the ten gram has received U.S. Depart­ students who did not qualify for people,were able to guess four ment of Education grants of aid volunteered. Students who do of his five favorite songs of the $36,500 to $38,000, according to not work the full-time schedule of decade. the program coordinator, Phil 10 hours a week earn credit Before the contest, which was Koshkin. The Fund for the Im­ accordingly. - held in the Theater, the au­ provement of Post-Secondary But Koshkin said fewer students dience of about 100 people and Education was designed to get the will be able to participate next year a dog was given a list of Bello's program off the ground and is not because of the smaller budget. 30 favorite songs of the past renewable after the second year. Only 40 placements can be of­ nine years to choose from. In addition to the FIPSE grant, fered with the funding that is now Along with these choices was the program received $13,500 from available for next year, Koshin a list of "important emotion- Marist and $10,000 from the Gan­ said. The college is pledged to con­ triggering events in Joe Bello's nett Foundation this year, creating tribute $13,500 a year, he said, and life," including memories of a budget of about $61,500. he expects the Gannett Founda­ Marist College, a trip to The program's annual budget tion's $10,000 grant will be California and his senior year in allots $30,000 for tuition credit and available again. high school. This nostalgia was $3,000 for transportation to the The grants office is trying to intended to help the audience . site, Koshin said. The rest of the secure funding from other sources guess, the five songs. money goes to administrative fees, to replace the government money, he said. Bello also provided hints by mostly salaries for the program's speaking about each song as it was played in the background. Former Marist student/personality Joe Bello, now a senior The longer Bello spoke about at Temple University, gave his audience of 100 people more than Water main break leaves each song, the greater the a show — it was also an opportunity to win $200 by guessing chance it was one of his five Bello's five favorite songs. Ten people each took home $20, favorites. out of Bello's own pocket, by naming four of the songs. Champagnat high and dry Bello twice jumped off the (Photo by Rob Jeannette) stage and once pounded his fist by Chris Landry The problem began when a water on the floor to stress how much without alcohol. Double, "Everybody-Wants To Rule The World" by Tears for main south of Champagnat broke he liked a song. Bello teased the anxious A break in a water main outside at about 2:30 a.m., creating a small The generally enthusiastic crowd by first naming his sixth Fears, "Til I Loved You," a duet with Barbra Streisand and Champagnat Hall early Monday geyser, Hall said. crowd applauded and laughed through tenth favorite songs as morning prompted a five-hour Maintenance workers from the at Bello's antics as it tried to the audience chanted, "We Don Johnson, and "Sara" by Starship. shutdown of water on the South Office of Physical Plant decided to decide which were his favorite want the money." End of campus, according to wait until later that morning to turn songs. Bello, who was visibly ex­ Charles Hall, Sheahan Hall's off the water and fix the pipe, Hall "It's great to see all these The Theater was mixed with hausted after the contest, said residence director. said. he was happy with the turnout people come out and promote shouts of excitement and disgust Students in Champagnat, Students were able to shower at college activities," said senior as Bello finally listed his five and how the show went. Sheahan, Leo and Marian halls "I'm just glad it's over," the McCann Center. Mark Rahikka. favorite songs. went without water from about Officials from Physical Plant Rahikka, one of the ten win­ They were: * 'Turn Your Love Bello said. "Now I can become 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. last Mon­ a normal person again.. .at least were unavailable for comment this ners, said the event proves that Around" by George Benson, day, Hall said. week. college students can have fun "Captain of My Heart" by until my next idea." P*9» 2-THE CIRCLE-April 27, 1989 April 27, 1989- THE CIRCLE - Page 3 I di(or\ Nutv: AIIIT I L'u-nls, M:J'. :i^ Itvtv.r(.••>. :i / r— > After class Martin t o I ht (. irtlt. summer through The Institute on Political 12 i Registration deadline is May 5. For in­-"Alcholics Anonymous meetings on campus Professors Fashion majors to show their best Parent's Weekend Journalism and the Institute on Com­ formation, call 336-4747. in thelLbwell Thomas Communications by Denise DeCicco Center:- Fridays, 11:45 to 12:45 p.m. in parative Political and Economic Systems . Events for this semester's Parent's at Georgetown University, Washington, td m&rcli: ^Scholarships • room 201, and Saturdays and Sundays, 1 The Grand Ballroom of the Weekend include Saturday's President's >-tcr2"p.m.7ln room 208. Meetings for Adult D C. Courses, lectures and internship op­ Cup Regatta — the second-largest regat­ •'"' ~"lr \ /^ "y~~ Radisson Hotel in Poughkeepsie [y Children of Alcoholics are held Mondays portunities are part of both programs, to be ta in New York — on the Hudson Rivera I, Mental Health Students (/'• held June 9 to July 22. For information call with grads will be transformed today into a v jWrftffSCampus Center, room 269, from 5:15 beginning at 7 a.m. A brunch with presi­ Students planning cafeers/n mental Donna Cassani at (202) 293-5092. glitzy showplace for the fashions of dent Dennis Murray begins at 11:30 a.m. health related human sfervicd f(elds|iare Wto 6:15 p.m. \ ; by Karen Wirmusky- tomorrow - •-- .. in the New Dining Room. The cost is $6 for eligible to apply for the Edna Airnes Men­ Entertainment :;- The third annual Silver Needle". parents and non-board students and $2 for tal Health Scholarship, a $2,000 award by | Summer Travel In an attempt to .provide .-Fashion Show will display more,. students on the meal plan. Reservations the Mental Health association in New York more unity between faculty: : than 60 pieces of apparel from 26 Summer in London Experimental Theater are required. At 2 p.m., an informal state. Applicants must be residents of New members and graduates, Marist fashion students. ""Uuniora'nd senior college marketing and The performances of seven plays writ­ residence hall open house will be held. York and in the third or fourth year of;col- selected faculty will be marching. For. the first time, all of the communication majors can work and study ten, directed and performed by students Contact the Housing Office for details. The lege or graduate school. For applications, for the first time with students designs will be for sale, ranging in in London, England this summer in a pro­ will take place tonight and tomorrow night "Junior Ring Ceremony" will be held in the call the Mental Health Association in Ulster in their major at the May 20 ; price from $250 to $1,500. The gram through the Fashion Institute of in the Theater. "Festival '89" is open to the McCann Center beginning at 7:30 p.m. County at 336-4747. Deadline is Sept. 8, Commencement, according to; tablecloths at the show, which were Technology, New York. The program public and admission is free. with a reception and dance immediately 1989. Edward O'Keefe, commence­ also designed and made by Marist begins July 8 and ends Aug. 11. Total cost Simon 'Sez* following in the cafeteria. The reception ment committee member. fashion students, will be on sale for for tuition, room and board is $2,400 plus A contest format of the game "Simon and dance are sponsored by the Office of Business students The Commencement will be $150. airfare. Interested students should contact Sez" will take place tomorrow at 2:30 p.m. College Activities. The National Black MBA Association an­ held in the Lowell Thomas The show begins at 7 p.m. and nounced the addition of three $3,000 Dr. Arthur Winters, chairman of F.l.T.'s on the Champagnat Mall. This event is be­ parking lot, the first time out­ will feature appearances by some of Lectures and Seminars graduate school scholarships for minority Advertising and Marketing Communica­ ing sponsored by the Office of College side since 1980, and will include America's top designers, who will graduate students in a business ad­ tions Department, at (212) 760-7705. Activities.^. ^ . _, , _. Catch a Rising Star other changes along with the ad­ serve on the program's advisory ministration or management studies. For dition of the faculty to the board or as judges for the awards. Chemical Dependency The College Union Board is sponsoring applications, write the NBMBAA at 111 Summer workshops march. The students' creations will be Mental health groups in Ulster County a performance by guitarist Mark Rust next East Wacker Drive, Chicago, III., 60601. in Washington worn by 12 professional models on are sponsoring "Breaking the Chemical Tuesday at 9:30 p.m. in the River Room. This year, each graduate will Connection: Exploring Treatment Issues in be allowed to invite six seated a traditional fashion stage, com­ Journalism, political science and For information, contact the Office of Col­ Chemical Dependency," a day-long Support Groups guests. Last year only four plete with runway. economics students can earn credit this lege Activities. seminar at the Holiday Inn in Kingston May Marist College holds confidential guests per graduate could be • Carmine Porcelli, Marist's direc­ seated. tor of fashion design, has section­ Also, because graduation will ed off a dressing area for models Salary- be outside, additional guests can to minimize last year's backstage Marist student Leslie Leontzwich (left) gets advice from top designer Bob Mackie (right) Continued from page 1 stand during the ceremony. Last confusion. in preparation for tonight's Silver Needle Fashion Show. The annual event will be held at percent higher than average and 7 year, attendance was limited to More than 650 people packed the Poughkeepsie's Radisson Hotel at 7 p.m. (Photo by Robert Kirk) percent more than the previous 4,000 people. ballroom last year, leaving standing gram's advisory board will attend sional designers. The designers are year, according to the survey. Coppola's Restaurant If rain is certain, graduation room only. It was the first time the a black-tie dinner to be sponsored the "absolute top here in designed a , line of price- After Murray, the next three will be held in McCann Center, show was held at the downtown in part by the Galleria shopping America," he says. conscious" clothing. highest-paid employees of Marist in but it will be a shorter ceramony Poughkeepsie hotel. mall and Hudson Valley magazine. Each of the 14 seniors in the Proceeds from the show will go 1987-88 were as follows, according with a limited number of guests. Designers include Marc Jacobs, Students in upper-level fashion show will display four to six pieces. to creating a merit scholarship for to the IRS document: 10% discount for Parent's Weekend If rain begins during the designer for Perry Ellis. Carolina design classes have been preparing They are responsible for the entire fashion design students. —Vice President for Academic ceramony, graduates will be • Herrera, Michael Kors and Bob for the fashion show since last design process — from coming up Students can purchase tickets for Affairs Marc vanderHeyden earn­ acknowledged by major instead Mackie, all of whom head their September. They have worked on with an idea and doing sketches, to the show from the Public Relations ed $75,000 last year, 17 percent of individually. own design companies, will also their designs nine to 12 hours a day actually creating the piece. Office for $5. General admission more than the previous year. Chief April 28 - 30 Before students pick up their attend. and seven days a week. They also During the creation process, tickets are $25. academic officers at all four-year caps and gowns they will be re­ Awards will be given to the returned from winter intersession students met with designers and A free dress rehearsal at the colleges earned an average salary of Limit one per check quired to sign a contract pledg­ outstanding design in each a week early and stayed through models in New York City to get Radisson on April 27 at 1 p.m. is $52,513 last year, compared to ing there will be no alcohol category: summer, spring, fall and Spring Break. their work critiqued. open to all students. $80,000 at colleges with budgets Present coupon comsumption during the resort. Porcelli says students have a Other student-work on display Anyone interested in purchasing comparable to Marist, according to Good for lunch 2 minutes North of ceramony and security will Later, the students, parents, CUPA surveys. "very unusual and very exiting" will come from 12 underclassmen, a design or tablecloth can contact or dinner Hyde Park Shop .Rite when ordering strictly enforce the policy. designers and the fashion pro- opportunity to work with profes­ who have worked on a project that Porcelli at 471-3240 ext. 124. —Former Vice President for Ad- on Route 9 "By not enforcing the policy, ministration Edward Waters, who we are really cheating students retired from that position last that want to have a dignified semester, earned $69,100 last year, 229-9113 commencement," said Donna Kids leave their mark on students 18 percent more than the previous Berger, executive assistant to the Editor's note: The children's Rhinebeck, N.Y., and Cardinal Steve. these eight to 15-year-old kids left year. The average salary was academic vice president. names in this story have been Hayes in Millbrook, N.Y., left a After Steve discovered! the students a little weary. $50,000 for all four-year colleges Graduates and parents will changed to protect their identities. very special impression — both on Hamilton, a criminal justice major "I wonder if they're as tired as and $78,000 for comparable receive letters explaining the that sheet and in the hearts of 111 from Baltimore, Md., didn't ac­ I am right now," said junior Laurie colleges. policy prior to the by Karen Cicero Marist students and faculty. quire that skill in her childhood, he2 Barnett from Newburgh, N.Y. —The vice president for admis­ Commencement. Students, who were on hand decided to teach her. Some, however, dreaded the end sions and enrollment planning, Last year, some graduates A short trip to a table in back of from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., made a dif­ But Hamilton's not that fast off of the day, knowing it would signal Harry Wood, earned $68,900 last Exiting Procedures For Spring 1989 Semester made noise and sprayed cham­ Marist's River Room last Friday ference in the children's lives and a study. "She's still not good at it," a close to new friendships. year. The average salary for admis­ pagne, trying to get the speaker marked the beginning of a new learned a lot about themselves, said Steve said. "She only got it aroundi Nicole DiLella's buddy — or, as sions directors at all four-year col­ to finish early. This year college friendship for sophomore Liza Dr. William Van Ornum, the day's three times." she calls her, "my little sister" — leges was $34,800 last year. The officials are hoping it will be Colombo and 8-year-old Paul. faculty coordinator. Other activities which con­ wanted DiLella to follow the van average salary for the same job at Please be advised that the residence halls will close at 6 pm on Thursday 5/11/89 for summer vacation. Lunch different. •Paul — who wasn't too happy to "They realized that handicapped tributed to a carnival-like at­ back to the Astor Home. colleges comparable to Marist was will be the last meal served on May 11. "The last thing that anybody be there at first — grudgingly dip­ kids are not so different from mosphere on a sunny 65 degree dayy DiLella couldn't and during a unavailable. wants is a confrontation with ped the palm of his hand in green themselves," said Van Ornum, included a petting zoo, a clownI long, teary-eyed goodbye, 9-year- In addition to his annual salary, ALL STUDENTS MUST VACATE THEIR ROOM ON THE DAY OF THEIR LAST FINAL EXAM. Begin students," said O'Keefe. paint and pressed it against a large, whose son has Down Syndrome. with balloons, pony rides and thei old Debby hugged her friend and Murray also lives in a home own­ Another thing that will be dif­ white sheet. "Everyone built a relationship that Fairview Fire Company's firetruck. promised to write soon. ed and maintained by the college to plan your departure arrangements now in order to avoid travel complications. Your immediate departure ferent this year is that there will He smiled when he saw his hand­ he or she will take home and Denise Becker, the Psychology and drives a college-owned car. not be a Baccalaureate recep­ print join about 20 others on the remember." ' Afterwards, DiLella, a freshman directly affects students that still have final exams and the ability of student and professional residence staff Club president, said she knows all[ fromMontvale, N.J..reflectedon These and other benefits are com­ to complete their work and begin their vacation plans. tion, due to last, year's low at­ sheet — a souvenir for the Marist Now, when sophomores Eileen the activities, held in the River mon among college presidents, ac­ tendance. The Baccalaureate Psychology Club's eighth annual Jones and Christie Ingrassia hear what spending time with Debby Room and in the back of Cham­[ meant to her. cording to a CUPA survey. ceramony will held in the Lowell One to One Day. "Lean on Me" on the radio, they pagnat Hall, were a big hit with the "I'm not ashamed or embarrass­ You must make an appointment with your RA/UC to indicate your time of departure and to have your room Thomas parking lot on Friday, "He's so cute," Colombo, a say they'll always think of their kids and the students. "In my heart, there's an emp- ed of my salary; I think I earn every inspected prior to that time. Your residence area must be swept clean. All assigned furniture and appliances May 19, at 5:00 p.m. psychology /special education ma­ buddies Anna and Jackie. "For once, they were away from tiness,'' DiLella said. " I know that penny of it," Murray said. "If peo­ About 700 students will be jor from Mahopac, N.Y., said. For the first time, Anna played their problems and it let them be I did good but I'll never be able to ple want to make what a college must be cleaned and in there proper location. All garbage must be taken out to the dumpster in your area. graduating along with honorary "We're having a great time." Bill Winters' 1972 tune in three what they're supposed to be — see her again." president makes they can apply for DO NOT leave trash in your room or the common areas. Windows and curtains should be closed (windows degree recipients. Paul Rinn, a Columbo and Paul weren't chords on the River Room piano. kids," Becker said. "Everybody here complains the job — or be a Big East basket­ locked) and lights turned off. U.S. Naval hero and a 1968 alone. More than 40 mentally and But Toni Hamilton's the one After a while, the countless ball coach." about things being so bad," she graduate of Marist, will be the educationally handicapped who learned how to hula hoop — baseball pitches, soccer matches said. "Being with her takes the self- Murray said Marist faculty and L Commencement speaker. students from the Astor Home in sort of — thanks to her friend and jumprope competitions with sympathy away." administrators could make much Prior to inspection, a key envelope will be sent to you through your P.O. Box. The key envelope will be labeled more in other professions and that with your name and residence area. When departing campus after your last final exam, the student should the college has to pay competitive place his/her College issued key(s) in the envelope, seal it and return it to his/her RA/UC or Residence Direc­ salaries to keep good people. tor. If you are unable to find a staff member, please slip the key envelope (with the keys) under the door of For some,some. Marist isnisn't t justjus\ an alma mater your Residence Director. Students that do not return their College issued key(s) within 72 hours after the close Editor's Note: This story is part arts degree in 1986 -and began a student. Heart Association were great lear­ of the semester will be billed $15.00 per key. of a continuing series highlighting working as a freshmen mentor For Delgiorno, the transition ning experiences. But the oppor­ TKE tunity to work at Marist and re­ the lives of some recent Marist soon after. was a little more unusual. Continued from page 1 If you have rented a refrigerator from College Rent-A-Fridge, a representative will be here on Friday, April graduates. young Michos, who also teaches public He worked as an admissions in­ establish his ties with the college speaking and oral interpretation at tern during the first semester of his was something he could not pass agreed to consider two points of by Kathleen Oremus alums TKE's appeal: CSL's voting pro­ 28, 1989 to pick-up the refrigerator. You can return it from 9:30 am-ll:00 am in front of Leo Hall and from Marist, is used to making transi­ senior year and this experience has up, he said. cess and the authority of the col­ 11:30 am-l:00 pm in front of Champagnat Hall. Graduation usually marks the tions in his life. He said he left a helped him to understand his cur­ lege to regulate the display of last day at Marist. for most successful acting career in Los rent position. - Even though he did not live on fraternity colors. The group has Cars WILL NOT be permitted to drive up to the buildings on the south end of campus due to fire/safety students. Norman, director of alumni af­ Angeles after re-evaluating its value "It was a very strange transition campus, Norman involved himself especially taken issue with the order But for some recent graduates, fairs, graduated from Marist in in his life. — mainly because as a student your in campus life as the Marist Col­ not to wear its. TKE jerseys on concerns. The last van shuttle to campus will leave Canterbury Apartments at 6:00 pm on Thursday, 5/11/89. Marist is not only their alma mater, 1986 with a degree in communica­ "I was so immersed in it and role is just so different from that lege Red Fox for four years. He campus. it is also their employer. tion arts and had held two other now I'm so far away from it; it's of a college administrator — but, also worked as student ground- As of Monday afternoon, the REMINDER, ALL STUDENTS MUST VACATE ON THE DAY OF THEIR LAST EXAM. Please consult Chris Delgiorno, Jim Norman positions in the area before retur­ a strange thing," said Michos. the internship was sort of a skeeper during the school year and Judicial Board chairman, Bill and Terrence Michos have all ning to Marist four and a half Michos graduated from Dut­ preliminary go at what it would be summers at Marist. Saroka, said the board would not your RA/UC or RD and the April 27,1989 issue of the Circle for further details regarding exiting procedures. returned to work at Marist after months ago. chess Community College in 1975 like to work here," said Delgiorno. Students residing in the Townhouses, North Road, Gartland Commons, and Canterbury Apartments will receive graduation and all three agree that Norman said he was always com­ and returned to Poughkeepsie to . "It was something I had to work Norman said coming back to consider the display of fraternity work at Marist was exciting letters. the Marist community made the fortable with his teachers outside of pursue his bachelors degree at at before I was fully comfortable a more detailed check-out procedure booklet to assist them. The final exam schedule will be available in the the classroom so his position on experience. TKE was punished for alleged transition easier for them. Marist in 1984. with my new position. Registrar's Office, located in Donnelly Hall. Delgiorno, a 22-year-old com­ campus has not changed that Michos said the student to "It's a very supportive com­ "It was kind of a kick my first misconduct involving theft in con­ relationship. day back on campus and seeing nection with pledging activity and munication arts graduate, began employee transition was easy and munity here, professionally and in "I've found most of them seem everybody again, saying 'hello' and vandalism and the violation of the You will be notified by mail of your Fall housing assignment by August 11,1989. This year, all priority point working as assistant director of ad­ natural, not only because of the terms of the student body, so the to have no problem seeing me as a people asking, 'What are you do­ college alcohol policy during a club missions two weeks after he support he received from Dean supporthas really helped me to get totals (except Campus Involvement) will be re-calculated after the Spring 1989 Semester. The Residence Halls fellow employee rather than a stu­ ing here,' and answering, 'I work meeting in Donnelly Hall. The in­ graduated last May and said he was Gerard Cox and Dr. Jeptha Lann- through the transition and to make re-open for returning students on Tuesday Sept. 5 with classes to begin on Wednesday morning. pleased with the results. dent," Norman said. ing, but also because of past ex­ it a successful one." here,'" added Norman. cidents occurred in February and "This is definitely the best job "I jumped right in and I really Terence Michos, 35, graduated perience as a college church group Norman said his previous jobs March. I've ever had." love it," Delgiorno said. from Marist with a communication counselor and recent experience as with the March of Dimes and the Page 4 - THE CIRCLE - April 27, 1989 Canterbury Jam' to rock park this weekend April27, 1989- THE CIRCLE- Page S by Mike Vukobratovich with Unit Coordinator Phil Karpel ing and Residence Life, said '60s folk music, Bad News, a rock The concert will make it a little bit to make the idea an event, said Karpel, and according to Fren­ band that won the last Battle of the better," said Christine Tolle, a College makes long-distance switch Free food and live music — Frenchman. chman, it has been fairly suppor­ Bands and First Time Users, who sophomore Canterbury resident. every college student's dream. Frenchman and Karpel organiz­ tive of the concert. "Anything that play everything from Bob Dylan to by Stacey McDonnell Callers must dial the prefix carry the long-distance calls from gress to curb a&d regulate rates for Dreams will come true Saturday at ed the jam to showcase Marist stu­ we've needed they've given us," he All students are welcome to at­ the 77 on-campus pay phones. the future. the Canterbury Garden the Police. 1-0-288- before dialing the number dent's musical talent and to change said. Besides the music and food, tend the Canterbury Jam and are and user code in order to switch "We didn't think the switch In March, the National Associa­ Apartments. stereotypes about student life at encouraged to bring their parents. Students who use on-campus pay "Housing is a little worried that basketball courts and a baseball phones have had to dial an added back to the AT&T lines and use would affect the students too much tion of Regulatory Utility Commis­ The first Canterbury Jam will be Canterbury, according to (the concert) will get out of hand. Van service for on-campus students because the quality and service are sioners passed a resolution calling held at Overocker Park behind field are also available for those prefix to use their AT&T calling their cards. If they do not know Frenchman. , Because it's Parents Weekend they who don't want to just sit down will be available at 12:25,1:25 and This week this code, they may not be transfer­ as good, if not better, than that of for more strict guidelines and Canterbury from 2:30 to 6 p.m., 2:25 p.m. in the Donnelly Hall cards since the college decided to "Canterbury is almost a dirty don't want it to turn into another and listen to .the music, said switch to MCI for its long-distance red to the AT&T lines because the AT&T," said Mulvey. "Not telling regulation of rates for the alter­ featuring three Marist bands, food word. We're having (the Canter­ River Day,", said Karpel. parking lot. alternative company operators do the students about the switch was native carriers. J Frenchman. Debbie phone service in early April. and refreshments — all for free. bury Jam) to give Canterbury a The Canterbury staff not have to give the prefix to the an over-sight on our part, though." Some consumer activists have The concert, billed as "an event According to Karpel, the concert "People seem to be very en­ The switch was prompted by the better name and give students a discourages students from bringing is a way to give something back to callers. ., Consumer activists say they fear voiced concerns about billing con­ by the students, for the students," more positive outlook towards life thusiastic. I hope the positive higher commission rate offered by alcohol to the concert, said the people who have to live at response turns into a positive day. gets hers MCI. During the first "week of April, that calls over the alternative com­ fusion. They claim callers may is the brain-child of Canterbury at Canterbury," said Frenchman. Frenchman. panies' lines will be subject to believe they are being billed by the resident Jason Frenchman, a senior Canterbury. We just want everybody to come Marist will receive 15 percent of the federal government began The $600 cost of the project has The three free amateur bands are "I don't think living at Canter- by Mary Strieker allowing alternative long-distance outrageous rates because the fees proper company if they have call­ from Yonkers, N.Y., who worked been funded by the Office of Hous­ out and have a good time," said all revenue from long-distance calls Easy Wind, a cover band that plays • bury is that bad in the first place. Frenchman. made through MCI, according to carriers to provide services for 1.7 are set independently by each long­ ing cards from alternative carriers I don't know why I dislike million pay phones in the Bell distance carrier. such as MCI or U.S.SDrint. Debbie Gibson so much. Is it Christine Mulvey, manager of v telecommunications. The college network. / . ; According to Mulvey, rates are Mulvey said the college was her hair? Her clothes? Her Marist officials investigated a now about the same among the assured no problems would arise in music? Her youth? Yes. received 15 cents a call from AT&T regardless of length or distance, switch to MCI, an alternative- long-distance carriers. However, using calling cards from other But it has more to do with the carrier company, in mid-March to steps are being taken by the Con- companies. The Campus Crossword fact that she is Debbie Gibson. said Mulvey. by Carolyn Kirkpatrick This icky teeny-bopper has become the symbol for youth — Student work or electric youth, if she will. She writes her own songs, Actor offers ACROSS directs her own videos and ob­ takes stage 1. Genesis song: " on the 22 . th„„„.e season. 40.. . Rather; news reporter viously picks her own wardrobe. vivid view The Marist College Council on Corner" 23. Evil being-causes bad dreams 41. Method I guess people find these ac­ 26. Makes car run 43. by jury Theater Arts and Gerard Cox's 4. Roschact's personality tool complishments worthy of Theater Workshop class are spon­ 8. Baseball team 30. Ecology 46. Relax strained relations praise. But her songs, videos of lit great 12. Te -1 love you (Spanish) 31. French coin 50. Hoarse soring "Festival '89" this week in 13. Infinitesimal amount 33. Pair 51. Swollen lymph gland and fashion statements are, at the Theater. 14. Many (colloquial) 52. Help the least, obscene. 15. German 53. Strike from court record The performances began last 34. Equal Rights Amendment Deb must be mocked or we by Robin Martini night and will continue through 16. Runs Batted In (pi) 35. World 54. -eyed will live with a future generation 17. Italian for unusual 36. Musician's job 55. Into three tomorrow. Each show begins at 7 18. Prisoners 37. Epidermal tissues of fibrous . 56. Lead in "Working Girl" of giddy girlies who think the Conrad Pomerleau stood on the p.m. 20. The external ear protein 57. Past tense of are meaning of life is, "Don't edge of the stage. The audience was 21. Type of VCR tape 58. Cereal "Without Humor," a comedic 39. Home: jazz singer worry, be happy." Their quiet, waiting. They listened for representation of film noir, was lipstick will get brighter, their Pomerleau — dressed as author written by senior Chris Meyer and DOWN hair blonder and their hoop ear­ Edgar Allan Poe — to recite the is being directed by senior Rich rings bigger. next line of "The Bells." Sabol. Meyer also penned "A Bite 1. Three Wise Men 20. Throw baseball to batter 39. Soap These cutesy blondies will "The bells, the bells, the bells — to Eat," the story of a hamburger 2. Faith ending to prayer 41. Psychologist; applied quantitative laws 3. That which is a model 22. -pis; Too bad (French) turn our youth into empty- To the rhyming and chiming of the flipper who turns into a werewolf. 4 23. Humble to psych, processes: and headed boobs who think saving bells!" His voice rang out, im­ Order-determinate of IQ 24. Standard plot of land 42. Reconcile Junior Rosemary Bianculli will 5. EX: Temporal/Frontal parts 25. Clamor 43. Slower gait than gallop the aerosol can is a worthy itating the sound of the bells. direct this play. of brain cause. The next generation It was all part of a two-hour per­ 6. Harrison Gray -Am. journalist 26. Livestock home Junior Jennifer Schiffer is direc­ 27. Border 44. Italian for copper won't be radical or rebellious — formance last Thursday evening in 7. French for mass; crowd 45. Egyptian nature goddess Edgar Allen Poe was at Marist last week — sort of — to ting Meyer's "The Game." The 8. Our favorite college 28. Cause of severe impairment they'll just be queer. the Fireside Lounge where 14 play tells of a game between two 9. Vigorous spirit 29. Exercise system: mental self- 46. Fall guy perform in the Fireside Lounge. The Poe look-alike, is really 47. North Atlantic Treaty Organization We don't need to physically students and one faculty member opposing teams. 10. Ripped control and well-being abuse Deb, but she needs to be gathered to see Pomerleau act out actor Conrad Pomerleau, who recreated the life and works of 11. Ancient Greek portico 31. Alcohol Syndrome 48. Spanish: stripe the 19th-century poet and short-story writer. Senior Elizabeth Callahan wrote 19. Avenue 32. " Man"-portrays an M.R. man 49. Direct publication put in her place. Why can't she a biographical sketch of Poe's life 38. Accommodates 51. Bend head in reverence (Photo by Rob Jeannette) "A Dog's Life." The play follows be like all the other white female and recite many of Poe's works. the escapades of a talking dog. flake heads, do her nails and "Poe in Person" was a character Senior Lisa Meo is the director. -dream of having-Jon Bon Jovi's presentation of a 39-year-old Poe ing him permission to resign from and the American Shakespeare "Straight Up" is the story of a children? Then we could just ig­ speaking to the audience as he ' person who believes he may be an nore her. would to a guest in his own home. West Point. Festival in Stratford, Conn. Pomerleau bore a strong alcoholic. The play was written by Sure, her records are selling The stage was sparsely furnish­ Pomerleau has also appeared in Christina Lawless, the president of better than ' 'The Satanic ed as a 19th century room, With an resemblance to Poe. He wore a suit traditional to the era, and his hair films such as "Kramer vs. MCCTA, and senior Jennifer If you are receiving an education loan, Verses," but we can put an end oriental rug and a chair next to a Kramer," "The Amuyville Hor­ Peifer is the director. to this. table that had a few books, a cigar was styled in nineteenth century fashion. ror," "The Marathon Man" and A death caused by drunk driver you may be able to get All we need is a pair of lime box and a framed photograph of and the relationship between a high a woman. Beth Goffe, a freshman from several Woody Allen films. green bell-bottomed polyester His well-trained voice, which he school principal and one of his slacks, with the stiff seams in Pomerleau silently strolled on Queens, said: "It was like a rein­ carnation. He was excellent." used to quickly change characters, students are the focus of front! We scribble her initials stage, never looking at the au­ sophomore Jamie O'Hara's "We dience. He kept his eyes lowered After the show, Pomerleau said thrilled many in the Marist au­ inside the elastic waist with the dience. "I felt like jumping on are Companions on a Journey." B€RTieS message, "This is the real Deb­ and sat down. Then he began he found an interest in Poe's works at age 19 when he decided to read stage with him and reciting 'An­ Sophomore Michelle Bessey is the RESTAURANT & BAR bie Gibson. We found these in reciting "The Raven." play's director. When finished, he preceded to Poe's "The Tell-Tale Heart" in the nabel Lee' along with him," said the trash outside her house. Andy Moraitis, a freshman English Senior Rich Sabol's "Ordinary Deb's a nerd." tell of Poe's life from his. birth to basement of his parents' house. Pomerleau said he started per­ major from Hyde Park. "I thought Travel through Time" will also be Tuesday Record sales will cease one year before his death in 1849. performed, with junior Kathy $500 » Pomerleau recited other works forming "Poe in Person" in 1976. it was the real Edgar Allan Poe up Live Jazz with Evidence. The band starts at 9 p.m. altogether. Debbie Gibson Pomerleau, a professional actor, there on stage." Schaeffer directing. The play posters, buttons, hats and t- by Poe such as "Annabel Lee," focuses on the perception of time Wednesday "The Cask of Amontillado" and lives in New York and has perform­ The show was sponsored by the in tuition credit next semester in return for helping shirts will be destroyed.. ed at the American Place Theater College Union Board. as people grow older, Sabol said. Progressive/Alternative Music Night -' True, our youth will then a letter Poe wrote to his father ask- local non-profit organizations. Ministry, The Cure, Depeche Mode, Siouxsie & The Banshees REM etc have to live with the fact that 18 years old & over admitted with valid I.D. DJ Scott starTattt p.m • they laid down their hearts and souls to a phony. But the next Your assistance is needed in the areas of: Thursday time some blonde bimbo skips into the music scene, they won't CSL honors clubs Berties brings a double treat to everyone over 18 be so gullable. Auction Night: Collect Berties Auction Cash in order to bid on cruises trios Unforunately, my plan does - Data Processing stereos, videocassettes, and much much more P * not solve all of our problems. at annual ceremony - Childcare Laches Night: Ladies drink free from 10:00 p.m.-midnight The likes of.Kylie Minogue, Samantha Fox and the ever so by Dennis Yusko Olympics and was a very en­ - Education wishy-washy Madonna still thusiastic bunch. All of this must be reckoned with. The Council of Student Leaders counts," said Jennifer Peifer, stu­ - Public Relations Nor does it solve a problem awarded some Marist organizations dent body treasurer. "The senior, Friday of a more personal nature that for their work on and off campus junior and sophmore classes just - the Homeless did the normal amount of class Ultimate Happy Hour in the civilized world from 4:00-7-00 D m I can't seem to get ridof . at its awards dinner on Sunday. - the Elderly SpeciaUy pnced sandwiches at our deli from 4:00-6:00p m Please, don't let me be In the annual event, CSL granted activities." misunderstood. I am glad, some awards for the club of the year, the Peifer said the addition of the - Cultural Events Late Night Fridays - the party to end all parties - beginning at 10 p.m. people choose to read my col­ service club of the year and the sports club award was done Saturday umn. I am glad a few people class of the year. The ceremony because the CSL wanted a special - Hospital Services also saw the addition of a new category to recognize the growing Late Night Happy Hour 1:30-2:30 a.m like my column. I am even glad ... and much more! some people disagree with my award — the sports club of the amounts of some of the sports at Classic hits from the 50's, 60's, 70's and 80's opinions. year, which was awarded to the- Marist that are recognized as clubs But Geez Louise, is it really volleyball squad. rather than teams. Groups such as J6ffrey C ratCd #1 necessary to hail me down at The club of the year, awarded to hockey, wrestling, rugby and rac- Applications are now being accepted for Community SreVit^ '•"«** - MusicMachine 2:30 a.m. on a Saturday night the Commuter Union, is given to quetball each have club status. Service Program fall semester placements. Hurry: at Skinner's to discuss the ar­ the club that has produced and held To win an award, you must win tistic integrity of Guns 'n' the most successful events during the majority of seven votes. The only a limited number of placements will be available! •Please remember: Must be 21 & over for admiuance on Friday & Salurday Roses, and bow I must give the year. presidents of the Resident Student them a break?? The service club of the year, Council, the Student Academic Where do you folks get off given to both the Psycology Club Committee, the Commuter Union Call: Phil Koshkin Berties- 9 & 11 Liberty Street telling me I'm too opinionated and the Social Work Club, is given and the College Union get one or I'm "ridin' on a high to the group that has provided the vote. The vice president of the stu­ Byrne Residence (Right Off Main Mall in Poughkeepsie) horse"? I'm just a silly female most services to the Marist and/or dent body, the student body Ext. 201 For further info call 452-BERT trying to get by. Why don't you the local community. treasurer and the student body go pick on somebody your own This year's class of the year was secretary also get one vote each. In A new method of curing size — like that babbling buf­ given to the class of 1992. This a tie, the student body president hangovers being tested? No, it's foon Wes Zahnke? Or better award is given out to the class that would be the deciding vote. Spring the Gyro, featured on campus yet, how about Mr. I-know- has done the most work. The name of each of the honored daring last weekend's Spring everything-about-everything "The freshman class held a fun­ clubs will be placed on a plaque in Fling. Paul O'Sullivan...? draiser, took part in the freshmen the Office of Student Affairs. flung (Photo by Bob Davis) editorial Page 6 - THE CIRCLE- April27, 1989 viewpoint April 27, 1989- THE CIRCLE - Page 7 Closed meeting Marist's forgotten values and 'moral fraud' by Bro. Joseph L.R. Belanger Park)! They would experience a of all education of the will. Students who whored in the calculation? No, No! Is this South world of exhilirating love and joy Not only education, but also 1960s also fought for peace in the Africa? Is five percent dictating to hinders justice Allow me some final reflections and mutual respect, the result of religion, is out at Mattress College. world, for civil rights and equal 95 percent? No wonder these on recent articles in The Circle. deep faith and pre-marital sexual About 10 percent attend Mass rights. And they didn't look for animals drive out half the Tomorrow, the Judicial Board will meet to review the process First, of all, congratulations on abstention. weekly, and some of these regularly adult approval. The animal freshmen! Should not Marist rather by which the Council of Student Leaders voted to punish Tau parts of the April 13 editorial. You Unfortunately, \ like the poor scoot out at Communion. Lent has students of the 1980s (there are change or drive out the animals? Kappa Epsilon for alleged violations. tf had the honesty to state une­ children of Lebanon and Northern lost ail meaning even just as a time human students, fortunately), sur­ A third and last sentiment must The board has decided to close the meeting to the public, ac­ #&* quivocally: there is open promiscui­ Ireland and El Salvador who have to strengthen the will; so have New rounded by massive illiteracy, be mentioned. That is stupidity. cording to board Chairperson Bill Saroka. Saroka also says board ty on campus, and the administra­ never known peace, the defeatists Year's resolutions gone?by the homelessness, and poverty, are Every administrator knows that members will decide at the beginning of-the meeting whether to tion does not care. It should care have never known anything but board. Campus Ministry struggles fighting only for their genital rights just plain stupidity is becoming — if not morally, at least financial­ mutual abuse and promiscuity. To allow a reporter from The Circle to be present for the proceedings. to get a handful to help the and adult approval. more of a problem daily. The ly! Only 56 percent of the students believe in the inevitability of pro­ homeless in January and the Let's be honest, Council of Stu­ refusal and thus the inability to The first of these decisions is wrong; the second should be who start at Marist graduate! One miscuity is to recede into animality. migrant workers in May. dent Followers — if you really think. It goes back to will power, unnecessary. of every two coeds who start never It is this defeatism, of both the Easter is all about empower­ want to fight AIDS, you don't sell as Pascal said: "The most impor­ First, the board should not expect to satisfy the members of m&n>eNlo*£&YPTo»BeMLfiof finish. students and the administration, ment. Christ has given us the power condoms in the Bookstore which is tant factor in intelligence is the TKE by deliberating on the appeal if it does not allow the frater­ A T£KAS OH MfijJ WHO TtiENtVTlT The causes are complex, but the which has cynically labeled us Mat­ to do good and resist evil. Try closed most of the week. You in­ will." I believe the Bookstore op­ nity to hear the proceedings. HtM Mo* OIL d#t/h/t& V£firTt//&s// moral fraud at Marist surely is a big tress College. praying — morning and evening stall vending machines or you work tion is the result of infantilism, but The members of TKE have the right to hear how the final deci­ reason. Of course, if other paying Such defeatism has its roots in a and at dinner; try Holy Mass and through Health Services. Who's it could also be the result of just sion on their appeal is reached. animals and humans take their lack of faith and a lack of educa­ Communion, the Rosary and Visits kidding whom? You want con­ plain stupidity. Throughout the TKE case; CSL has closed its meetings. Now ~rWAT€H AS m HotdS, vfi place, why care? tion. Aldous Huxley once defined to the Blessed Sacrament. It could doms in the Bookstore merely as a In any case, it must be clear to an intellectual as a person who TKE is charging CSL with bias because five members of the coun­ Surely the most tragic sentiment change your life — even save it symbol of explicit adult approval all that in every Fall semester there M 6 in the condom debate is the sense discovered something beyond sex. these days! April 21 — feast of St. for promiscuity • must be blunt AIDS and pro­ cil belong to Sigma Phi Epsilon, another fraternity on campus. M%1'J A"* T*eS "J?*"to GST A "**"*«»K0C4AL of defeatism expressed.by many — Apparently, there are too few in­ Anselm of Bee, father of One Student Follower argued miscuity discussion mandatory for "abstention is not a viable option." tellectuals at Marist. Scholasticism, the reconciliation of with me that the Bookstore solu­ all faculty, student services staff, The question remains, if TKE was allowed to sit in on these The lack of options is the end of When I was in college we struggl­ Faith and Reason. Education and tion was primarily for the freshmen and students. meetings, would the Judicial Board be hearing the appeal now? Dtsmu* ToHufATexAHewteMew human development. Would that ed with William James' four basic religion are only for the mature. who have no cars. Is this the Have a good summer. Walk with By allowing TKE to sit in on its meetings, CSL may have shown these defeatists could spend time rules for training the will. Today This leads me to note a second message we give freshmen — calm­ God. that the membership of some of the officers in another fraternity r+fi£O0/L tAt t/TKA HORROK /T ' with the thousands of Taize and students ignore both James and his sentiment in this debate, and that ly pre-meditated date rape? Whor­ Bro. Joseph L.R. Belanger is a had no bearing on the outcome of the deliberations. TH€ M#JS£ (TH/cf CQt*\*TT*£ Focolare teens around the world voluntarism. A permissive society is infantilism — the need for adult ing not through passion and Marist Brother and a professor of The Judicial Board should learn from this mistake. (some of them right here in Hyde has no truck with education, least approval. weakness, but through cool French. Secondly, any viable news media on campus should be allow­ d£C*0SS THAT, ALTHOUGH Ht ed to report on the meetings rather than on a brief synopsis of the proceedings when they are complete. & The tour The practice of briefing a reporter rather than allowing him V* Clfc** U"*UM*J$ Of fy Must MCMtetffS Rock Responses to gather information first-hand only makes his task of understan­ to end ding and reporting on a subject more difficult. all tours CUB needs student cooperation Who wanted her here, anyway? Also, by allowing a journalist — whether he be from campus by Thomas Nesbiit \ by Wes Zahnke radio station WMCR, Marist College Television or The Circle — * '&&&&&{? A/terser. >^ by Mark Miller I'm sure that everybody is experiencing the same annoying ringing in access to the meeting, the board could assure the college com­ O.K., so it was River Day last A group of 60 students worked for almost 20 hours in preparation the ears from the Joan Jett concert last Friday night. Right. munity that its decision is impartial, fair and well thought out. Friday. I took part...but in for this year's spring concert with Joan Jett and the Blackhearts. Just The attendance was pathetic and could mean a setback for future spring Opening the meeting is the best decision for all concerned; in quite a special way. I'm sure the over 500 people attended the show, marking the worst loss ever for a concerts. this case, the entire college community is concerned. If you can't stand the heat... Admissions Office will love me Marist concert. Yes, the College Union Board had a concert and almost Obviously no one gave two turds for Miss Jett. for it too. no one came. Why was there no interest? Are we, the Marist community, too by Paul O'SuIlivan There are several reasons why this concert wasn't as successful as it sophisticated for Jett and her leather get-up? If Rakolta is concerned with You see, early in the morning Are we too cheap to spend $8 for a ticket? Or is there a lack of com­ what her children are seeing at 9:30 I happened to be over by Don­ should have been. Students were obviously upset at having to pay $8 for Turn on a television these days, thinking nelly where I bumped into a tickets. The contract for the concert blocked our use of radio adver­ munication between the students and the College Union Board? letters p.m. on a Sunday night, I would I'd like to know why CUB decided on Joan Jett and why there wasn't and you will see nothing but hew between suggest she check out an episode of rather lost-looking, cute young tisements. The advertising.that we did .have was put up late., Marist shows. Thereis "The New Dating : lady and her mother. students are chronic complainers. All of these reasons being valid, the more input allowed from the student body. i. "G.I. Joe" on a weekday after­ It's pretty ridiculous when you can't get a good crowd of students at Game," "The New Munsters" the the lines noon. She will see all the villains "Excuse me, do you know last.reason perhaps encompasses all of the rest. , ,.,•• • new "Mission: Impossible" and so CUB had narrowed its choice down to four possible acts. Contrary an on-campus concert. have Russian and German accents, where the Admissions Office is? The proof is right there — no one wanted to see Joan Jett. Therefore, on and so on. • and all the heroes are WASP males I'm supposed to b§ taking a to public Opinion, 'James Tay/b'r was not even considered as he was way It's bad enough that television by turning the channel. but of our price range. Our other three choices: Kansas/Night Ranger, someone flubbed. Condom story was wrong who talk "good American." tour." •> . I'm not pointing an accusing finger at anyone, but merely suggesting has always been a vast wasteland, If enough people agree with her The truth is that there is very lit­ "A tour? Why, you must be Meatloaf and Zebra, had all played in the area recently and thus would To the editor: • were used. _" but at least it was an original assessment, no one will watch the not have attracted many people. This led us to choose Joan Jett and the better ways to enhance the selection process. tle on television that is truly going to meet me," I said (I Why not make out a list of a few possible acts that would be feasible This is in response to the story Having condoms on campus is wasteland. Now all we get is "The show (except bums like me) and it suitable for children. That is unfor­ lied). "I'm scheduled to give all Blackhearts. . that appeared in the April 13 issue one issue on our agenda, but it cer­ Wasteland: a New Beginning." will be canceled. The free Every year students criticize CUB on their choice for a concert. to get here, then poll the students and give the job to the winner? tunate, but parents who allow their tours today." May I burn in It seems that CUB went for the name brand instead of the best possi­ of The Circle concerning condoms tainly isn't the only one — it just But, just like you can't censor marketplace of ideas works, if you children to watch anything they hell. However, we allow all students at Marist the right to participate in that and the Students for Student's happens to be the most sensational. television because of its poor quali­ give it a chance. The Constitution decision-making process. If the individuals who don't exercise that right ble product. want on television and then com­ "Really?" An article last week said Jett was picked because she had three Top Rights group ("Condom policy ty, you should not be able to cen­ does not, and should not, judge plain that it is in bad taste are be­ "Really. Why don't we start spent as much time helping CUB as they do complaining about it, the The very headline of the article sor it because of its poor taste what is tasteful and what is not. apathy problem at Marist could be considerably lessened. Ten hits and was the best show for the money, according to CUB Presi­ tops agenda for meeting"). I am ing naive and silly. the tour with a little bus ride dent Tom Nesbitt. . upset with the slander and sensa­ is totally misleading. The condom either. Unfortunately, some It is illegal to yell "fire" in a It is impossible for a parent to over here." Sixty students who gave of their time so that you could have a con­ tionalism of the article, and I want policy isn't even on the agenda for mothers and religious leaders seem crowded theater (unless, of course, cert, made me proud to be a member of CUB. After the show was over, I ask, "The best show according to whom?" Certainly not the students. know what a child is doing 24 On the way over to Canter­ Facts don't lie. The attendance was horrendous. to set the record straight about it. the forum. The main concerns will to have forgotten about that. there really is a fire in said theater). hours a day, but a parent who bury we discussed with the they spent the next three hours cleaning the McCann Center in prepara­ be housing and the Library. The ar­ A new wave of censorship It is not illegal to yell "penis" in tion for the next morning's Hoop Shoot charity event. That commitment I'd like to know what our other options were. I think we all want to selects a baby sitter without at least driver LL Cool J's new haircut know. Our group is an informal ticle gives the impression that we started a few months ago, when a crowded cathedral. It is in poor getting a reference from a friend is and the Yankees' chances of deserves your respect. are putting condoms ahead of Terry Rakolta, a Michigan taste, and whoever does it will pro­ With the help of the Concert Committee, this concert ran extremely Let's bring the power back to the people. organization which meets to discuss just asking for their children to be keeping their manager for Let the students decide who they want to see, not some board of pro­ problems facing students. These housing and academics, and I feel homemaker, was offended by the bably be pelted with crucifixes and cared for by a punk rock-crazed longer than half a season. well. For the most part, those individuals who watched the show were as if my intelligence has been content of an episode of "Mar­ whipped with rosary beads — but very happy with it. To me, then the concert was a success regardless of grammers in their ivory tower. problems include prices in the juvenile delinquent. Rather stimulating. Wes Zahnke is a junior majoring in communication arts. Bookstore, permission for a stu­ insulted. ried... With Children." Rakolta it is not illegal. It is the same situation with When we got there we Continued on page 8 dent mural on campus, the new wrote to some of the show's spon­ But the real thrust of Rakolta's television. If a parent does not have discussed, the speciaL perks Poughkeepsie residency law and I realize the very word "con­ sors, who subsequently pulled their argument was not so much that the the time to look in "TV Guide" Marist offers for Canterbury the forum being scheduled for May dom" draws attention, and has, in advertising. show offended her taste, but that and see what a program is all residents, the three Cs — Cold Student leaders in a time of questioning 1. a way, made our group pretty It is good that Mrs. Rakolta felt she was afraid her children would about, then perhaps he or she water, Cold rooms and your famous lately, but that's not the she could petition a show's spon­ see it. should never have become a parent very own Cat. by Gerard A. Cox pressed in our campus press under many others. this essentially Judeo-Christian The article said our group "is kind of fame I was hoping for. This sors and get some action. It is not "I'm not a radical. I'm not a in the first place. The girl was allergic so we the rubric of discussing relevant in­ The college has a specific history: group was not formed to create good that a Michigan housewife heritage. And we admit to the ap­ organizing an open forum for May prude," Rakolta said. "I just want • Television is not a baby-sitter hung out and waited for In New York City, this week, stitutional issues. a definite moment in time when it pearance, now and then, of traces 1 to discuss the availablility of con­ problems for the administration. can have so much power that she to be able to turn on my TV with and it is not a vehicle for a-par­ another van. It was late. celebrations will commemorate the The forms of challenge provid­ began, under specific cir­ Our goal is.to work with the ad- can decide what the rest of the a degree of safety about what my of the riches bequeathed to us by doms on campus..." Although I ticular moral viewpoint. It is an We arrived back at Marist inauguration of our first President, ed by the establishment of a student cumstances, for special reasons. Its the Marist Brothers and the discussed the idea with Dean minstration to improve com­ country can watch. children are going to see." entertainment medium and should and headed down to the George Washington. It seems pro­ government are many: functions, beginning was the fulfillment of a munication and to end apathy I just happened to see that par­ Catholic Church. The tenets of Gerard Cox, we agreed that our Is the Federal Communications be regulated as such. cafeteria. She thought I was per that New York City, which financial management, judicial dream. Catholicism are not only part of the time would be fairly limited — on­ among students. ticular episode of "Married...With Commission a baby-sitting service? kidding. served as our first seat of govern­ review, programming and com­ As narrow as the definition of its Children." It showed men wearing All we need now are some shows history of this college, but are in­ ly about two hours. There are more Are we all supposed to watch "Mr. that are actually entertaining. Then However, she was impressed ment, should be allowed to recreate munications networks and systems. original student body was, the tegral elements in the religious important issues that need to be'ad- I'm sure some of you are saying garter belts and stockings, among Rogers" and "Sesame Street" our we'll be all set. that the school had student that very special moment in the na­ In the broadest of strokes, these are dreamers' dream was more univer­ other things. Personally, I thought entire lives? education of the vast majority of dressed first, such as housing and — "Housing? Isn't that a dead paintings on the walls. .One tion's history and to celebrate the the primary areas of challenge sal. In time the student body our students. the Library. issue?" The answer is "no." Not it was pretty tasteless...and pretty point for Marist. I pictured one occasion. given to students elected to office. became more diverse, establishing hilarious. •Corrections It would be dishonest not to ad­ until places like Canterbury fade of the McCann scoreboards Within this same week, we will Administrative staff and faculty a pattern for diversity which con­ mit freely to this heritage. The When the reporter came to inter­ away. As for the Library; how This only proves that what some In the story titled "Few show for seminar on job hunt" which ap- lighting up...or is Colleary tak­ experience a governmental change who work with student leaders tinues to this day. Although the view me, I told him I was the one people find offensive, others find moral code of the college reflects many of you have gone to the peeared in The Circle last week, Robert Norman, associate professor ing those with him too? of our own. The students elected to have the responsibility to challenge college was originally designed for the college past which persists into organizing the forum, and I made Library to discover the books you amusing. It comes down to a ques­ of communications, was incorrectly identified as Augustine Nolan, While in the Campus Center positions of responsibility in Stu­ and support these leaders, just as the training of religious educators, it perfectly clear what topics would tion of rights — if Rakolta is suc­ the present. The campus is not a need aren't there or are in storage? assistant professor of communication. In the story titled "Condom we stopped at the Bookstore. dent Government for 1988-1989 the leaders in turn have the respon­ the later transition to an indepen­ moral vacuum; the college com­ be discussed. The impression that cessful in getting a show taken off policy tops agenda for meeting" which appeared in The Circle April The mother really surprised me. leave office and the newly-elected sibility to challenge and support dent, secular institution never in­ I get from reading the article is that the air, it violates my right to see munity is not amoral. Those of you suffering from 13, the editors made an incorrect inference as to the subject matter "Do you sell condoms?" student leaders assume the same each other and their fellow cluded a renunciation of either its We might do well to end this it was already written before the apathy may be asking: "What can that show. If that show is not taken of the forum. No discussion of condom distribution has been schedul­ "Excuse me?" students. educational philosophy or view of off the air, I can still watch it, and responsibilities. The process of portion of our discussion by reflec­ reporter talked to me and that on­ ed for the meeting. "Condoms. You know, those transition is simple; the substance It is important to understand the the religious nature of man. ly those quotes that fit the article Continued on page 8 Rakolta can voice her displeasure ting on a few words from the past. rubbery things." of transition is great. meaning behind the concept of This heritage is an essential ele­ We began by talking about "I KNOW...but...uh, well, Imbedded within the ceremonial "challenge and support." One way ment of the historical sense that George Washington. Let's hear no. The school doesn't of transition are those symbolic to reach this understanding is to every student leader must have to from him. He wrote: Editor: Michael Kinane Sports Editor: Tim Besser Faculty advisor: David McCraw approve." gestures which spell the principles think about what "challenge and serve well the college and its "Let us with caution indulge the "And what happens if my and practices of student govern­ support" is not. It is not the prac­ students, which includes its alum­ supposition that morality can be Managing Editor: Ken Foye Feature Editors: Karen Cicero daughter gets lucky?" ment, which are to be passed on to tice of searching for the least com­ ni as well as its present scholars. maintained without religion. TH€ "Well, I guess she better not the new officers. mon denominator, or the line of No alteration of the description Reason and experience both forbid Chris Landry get lucky. At least not on this least resistance, or the most News Editors: Bill Johnson It seems especially appropriate to of this institution of learning has us to expect that national morality campus." Which, of course, is reflect on what student government popular position. ever described the college as can prevail in exclusion of religious Use Martin Photography Editor: Lynaire Brust Business Manager: Elizabeth Elston a rather stupid statement. and leadership mean on this cam­ It is grasping the opportunity to anything but value-based, having a principle." Steven Murray Maybe- the Brothers have pus. In the process we may, I hope, demonstrate one's understanding very specific heritage given to us by Therein lies the basis for the stu­ CIRCl£ taken; a vow, but we sure as hell clear the air of fuzzy ideas about of the context that makes this cam­ its founders. In short, we persist in dent leaders' historical orientation; ^ '„' Cqntinued on page 10^ pus, this cbllege, different from the College, which have been ex­ adhering to the finest principles of Continued on page 8 Page 8 - THE CIRCLE- April27, 1989 April 27, 1989- THE CIRCLE - Page 9 r Jett energizes Continued from page 6 Letters small audience1 Preparing for an add/drop campout I do that would accomplish shows on Broadway just before ed literally hundreds of details and by Kevin St.Onge by Jo-Anne Prokopowicz anything?" The first step is simple. coming to Marist. Boy, you are provided leadership. Express your concerns and come to right Mary — she has no talent, I especially thank these Despite low crowd turnout, "It's bogus!" Barton Steinhorn, the forum. It's time our generation and is a true definition of Psychology Club members — Joan Jett and the Blackhearts 18, a freshman from New York Ci­ started making things happen "repulsive entertainment." Laurie Barnett, Denise Becker, rocked the McCann Center last ty, said of his impression of rather than letting things happen. Poodles are ugly and the story of Lisa Cerniglia, Steve Hoffman, USHERS Friday with its distinctive high Marist's add/drop system. Melanie Winters you blowing smoke rings — now Beth Mahoney, Marisa Manderioli, energy rock V roll. Students for Student's Rights that sure is journalism at its best. Maureen McGuinness, Kelly Reil- With only 100 tickets sold a Steinhorn and Jon Schodel, 19, To compare the time put into the ly and Nick Ross. The musical week before the concert, the a freshman from Princeton, N.J., show with the time it took you to talent of Rick Zinnanti and Bill College Union Board <— camped out last Sunday night to Not funny, Mary write that — that really is sad! Brinnier was also greatly NEEDED organizers of the event — an­ jockey for a position in the It is not only to you that this let­ appreciated. ticipated increased sales at the freshman add/drop session the To the editor: ter is directed, but also to the The gate before the show. next day. This is a response to Mary Circle for running that column just Essential behind-the-scenes sup­ Some 467 people were at the Strieker, who in last week's Circle one day before the concert. You port was provided by the Marist concert, according to CUB FOR President Tom Nesbitt — far Steinhorn only got two of the asked, "Who is responsible for are part of the reason why campus community, including Tony Cam- five classes that he needed for the picking this repulsive entertain­ events turn into expensive jokes! pilii, Anthony Tarantino, Joseph below predictions of 1,200 to this semester after registration ment? Are you dumb?" — referr­ As a wise person once said, "If Leary and the Security staff, Judy 1,500. earlier in the year.' ing to the concerts we have had at you don't have anything nice to Hessert, Seller's Food Service, Bet­ The small crowd didn't seem Marist. say, don't say it." Why ruin ty Yeaglin, Bill Eidle and Linda to bother Jett. She commanded Before the ritual — which is like COMMENCEMENT center stage slinking around in To your first question, Mary — something good for a pointless col­ Parks. a huge slumber party — the two I, with the rest of the College umn? I think the question should Gratitude is hi order for the Fair- her black leather pants, keeping anticipated about what it would be Union Board, choose acts from a be, "Are YOU dumb?" view Fire Department, Gretchen eye contact with the audience like spending the night in Donnel­ list of available groups. Leak and the Bowdoin Park Pet- then wiping sweat from her chin ly Hall. Chris Walch and spraying it into the front To your second question — yes,. CUB Concert Chairperson " ting Zoo, the Hudson Valley Mary, very dumb. Not for getting Stables and Tony Bown of Texaco rows. Joan Jett, but for working in Beacon, who graciously provid­ With plenty of room to "It's like waiting in line for real­ countless hours for a campus that One to One ed the helium tank and staff dance, the crowd moved to the ly great concert tickets, like for The does not get involved. Dumb for support. If interested, sounds of recent hits like "Lit­ Cure, only to find out that you're thinking The Circle would back the Jim McGuirk, program director tle Liar," "Light of Day" and in the wrong line," said Schodel. school's events instead of printing To the editor: of Astor Home, gave a good "I Hate Myself for Loving pointless columns just to "kill I would like to thank all those presentation on April 14. We also You." Schodel said the community col­ time." who contributed to the great suc­ thank to staff from Astor Home "She just kicked back and lege he attended last semester had Lines, paperwork and all-night campouts are often synonymous with add/drop. This Maybe you thought it was fun­ cess of last Friday's One-to-One and Cardinal Hayes Home, who please call relaxed," said Nesbitt. "It a more organized registration semester's add/drop period, as this hallway scene in Donnelly Hall suggests, was no excep­ ny, Mary — but I don't think it's Day, sponsored by the Psychology stayed with the children all day. showed she was enjoying system than Marist's. tion. (Photo by Lynaire Brust) funny when something that has Club. More than 100 students pro­ Dan Drogosch and Laura Wrege herself." vided an exceptional day for 40 She got everybody into the because everyone last semester real­ packing their sleeping bags, their The security guards just walked taken so long to accomplish is turn­ from Cardinal Hayes were helpful ly got hungry. The River Station favorite pillows, and most impor­ ed into a joke just to get a laugh. children from the community. in their planning efforts. act singing her 1982 number one Forms were sent out earlier at his around once in a blue moon, and Everyone had fun and there was Ext. 517, hit "I Love Rock and Roll" and former school, and priority was has 20 beers on tap so we will most tantly — besides the beer and the everyone really had a great time," I guess Joan Jett is a real joke, given to upperclassmen and then to likely go there," Steinhorn said. hors d'oeuvres — Schodel is going right? Really bad, right? Someone a great deal of spontaneity — due Faculty from Behavioral and answered a three-minute ova­ Steinhorn said. to the careful planning done by tion with her version of Tommy returning freshmen with the highest "After the dinner we are going to bring his box and some of his whose went platinum last Social Sciences publicized the event grade point average, he said. month, with two Top Ten singles Kristin Siebrecht and the by announcing it in their classes. James and the Shondells 1969 Steinhorn said although he felt Psychology Club. Kristin organiz- Linda Dunlap, John Scileppi, Marc number one tune "Crimson and from it. Someone who sold out five or sign up in Clover." 'It's like waiting in line for really the Registrar's Office tried their Continued from page 7 Halsted and Janet Stivers provid­ Steinhorn and Schodel were best to plan a more efficient ed extra help and support. Marchello — an up and com­ planning their great adventure last great concert tickets, like for The Cure, add/drop process this year, Leaders- I am grateful to Joe Canale for ing band who have a video on Saturday morning. They were mak­ freshman still get stuck with the his guidance in planning the event. MTV — opened for Jett. MTV 8:15 classes and other unpopular reason and experience forbid us to to think and want just like all your representatives attended the ing a list of necessities for the worst only to find out you're in the wrong line.' expect that campus morality can Joe's presence help to ensure that Room 266 camp experience they'll ever have courses. So he decided to camp out contemporaries." show. prevail in exclusion of religious everything ran smoothly. — the add/drop nightmare. once again. The writer was T.S. Eliot. The "We obviously lost a lot of principle. professor was Dr. George Summer. For those I have forgotten to to go to Shop Rite to pick up some favorite tapes. mention — let the smiles and joy money but it really was the stu­ chips, dip and some beer. Barton "I think that it is going to be But because you are leaders and So, effective leadership means dent's money spent through the "Last year they tied one of my have been in office or about to of the kids be your thank-you. The "First, we are going to go out for said that the line was a real party fun. Maybe we will go out and get knowing more than the melody to Campus Center student activities fee," said a really fantastic meal. Maybe we'll friends to the Xerox machine out assume a position in government, vans departed filled with children Iast_year," said Schodel. a beer ball and carry over our mat­ that popular tune everyone seems Nesbitt. go to the River Station or Coppolas in front of the Computer Center in I want to share a thought from a to taiow. Oi&y a few seem to know whose lives were enriched by then- -The two freshmen said they were, Donnelly. The place was a mess. tresses," Schodel said. man I came to appreciate as a poet the lyrics, the words, the substance, day of personal interaction with the and playwright, some years ago, that the melody is.all about. . students of Marist College. To the when I was an undergraduate. One students who gave so seiflessly of of my professors, a true scholar I hope each of our newly-elected themselves — THANK YOU! and fine educator, helped me to members of the Council of Student William Van Ornum develop an appreciation for this Leaders will make a difference. I __^ Psychology Department [ Beantown twentieth century man of letters. hope that each new officer, each AppI "Whatever you think, be sure it new editor, each new general is what you think; whatever you manager will make a difference. If RESERVE OFFICERSTRAINING CORPS want, be sure that it is what you my wish comes true, 1989-1990 will How Bostonians look want; whatever you feel, be sure mark much more than the start of ...And how New Yorkers that it is what you feel. It is bad a new decade, the last of the twen­ enough to think and want the tieth century. at life in New York... things that your elders want you to Gerard A. Cox is Marist's dean feel about 'up north' of student affairs. by Michael DeCosta think and want, but it is still worse Casey often jokes with her students from by Gifford Krivak Continued from page 7 •New York about their dialects and accents. sophomore from the Bronx, N.Y. "Since Apples — no matter which way you slice "They love hearing us say things like "Park 1921, the Yankees have won 22 World Series, CUB them —don't go well with beans. Many great rivalries are waged among and the Red Sox have won zero. Sure the Square,'" he said. American cities, but none can compare to the how much money was lost. However, unless we get full cooperation from For Bostonians, who affectionately refer Murray said that sports, however, is where Celtics have dominated in basketball, but this the entire student body, the prospect of having a concert next year looks .battle between "Beantown" and "The Big to their hometown as "Beantown," a crock New Yorkers and Bostonians draw the line Apple." is the Knicks year in the East." very grim. of brown, soggy beans outshines any apple, between the light-hearted joking about ac­ CUB is your representative. Together we can make a difference at including "The Big Apple," in New York For years, inhabitants of the Boston and "The people in New England talk as if cents and getting into some heated New York metropolitan areas have fought Marist College. The next time we give you a needs assessment, take it City. arguments. their teams always beat New York's," said seriously. That way, we can understand where you are coming from and Only about 250 miles separate the two over subjects ranging from which city per­ Dave Paige, a senior from White Plains, "If a New Yorker and a Bostonian are forms better ballet to which city plays bet­ provide you with the entertainment you want. WORK WITH US.. .NOT great cities, but ask any Bostonian or New arguing about sports, no one will ever win," N.Y. "They seem to forget that the Red Sox AGAINST US! Yorker and he'll tell you that they're worlds ter basketball. pulled the biggest choke of all time in '86 he said. "I've had some pretty big arguments "In New York, we have the Statue of Thomas Nesbitt, a senior communication arts major, is president of apart. with my friends but, they never go beyond when they were one out away from beating the College Union Board. There's a lot of local pride involved in the Liberty." Jeff Katz, a junior from Brooklyn, the Mets, and they blew it." that point." N.Y., said. "In Boston, they have a statue attitudes that residents have, according to But Murray saw the argument go beyond Steven Murray, a communications major of a man on a horse." Some Bostonians even go as far as rooting mere words. Sports seems to encourage people's 473-5467 fromStoughton, Mass., about 15 miles south "I was at a Yankees-Red Sox game at for the New England team just to avoid sup­ of Boston. "There is an attitude that both tempers to get a little out of hand. porting New York. have that there is nothing outside of Boston, Yankee Stadium when four kids wearing Red Sox hats started running through the "I think New Englanders sometimes root nbthing outside of New York," he said. "I hate the Boston sports teams," Keith against New York just for the sake of rooting •• "When I came here, people would ask, bleachers yelling at the Yankee fans," he Mascia, a freshman from Garden City, N.Y., said. "They were quickly swamped with fans against New York," said Coleman. "The BRUCE ROBERT SALON, INC. 'Why did you come all the way here to go said. "Growing up in New York you learn Patriots' fans hate the Giants just as much to school,'" he said. "They have this in­ throwing stuff and yelling right back at them. to despise all of them, but I hate the Celtics "They were really asking for it though," as they hate the Jets — and the Patriots rare­ Hair Designers fatuation with B.C. (Boston College) as the so much that if the Celtics played the Rus­ ly play the Giants." 81 NORTH ROAD BELIEVE IT0R NOT,THIS GUY college to go to." Murray said. "They were lucky when securi­ sians I'd root for the Russians." POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y. 12601 BY APPOINTMENT ty escorted them out." Although hearing cheers from the fans in When Jim Horn came to Boston more Despite all the rivalry between the two New Yorkers also have their gripes about than 25 years ago, he was greeted with that Fenway Park or the Boston Garden may be the arenas Boston's teams use. "Look at the IS IN CLASS. cities, many Bostonians admit that they ab­ some New Yorkers' idea of torture, many same narrow-minded attitude. Horn, a solutely love New York City. Boston Garden, it's falling apart," said unplanned pregnancy? decisions to make? Excitement and adventure is the course descrip­ native of Wellesville, N.Y., a town about 100 have learned to hate and respect Boston fans Mascia. "New York's stadiums may not be tion, and Army KOTC is the name. It's the one col­ "I think New York is an exciting, wonder-, at the same time. the best, but at least they have air lege elective that builds your self-confidence, miles southeast of Buffalo, said he got tired ful place," said Casey. "I try to make it understanding all your alternatives of explaining that he was from western New conditioning." develops your leadership potential and helps you down there at least four times a year." "I hate the Boston teams because they're makes you really free to choose, take on the challenges of command. York. Horn said he loves New York because of Sports isn't the only place where New replace pressure and panic with Thereb no obligation until your junior year, so "When I told people (in Boston) that I was rivals with New York's teams," said Joe Yorkers find the Big Apple superior to Bean­ thoughtful, rational reflection, ^ thereb no reason not to try it out right now. the high concentration of art there. "I Monteleone, a junior from Garrison N.Y. for a confidential, caring friend, call us. from New York, they would naturally especially enjoy Manhattan," he said. "You town. "Boston has the worst pizza we're here to listen and to talk with you. assume New York City," he said. . "But I respect the fans because they are loyal America," said Mascia. "They cut it into lit­ can get anything that exists in the world right sports fans. Just as the Rangers pack in the tle squares. How are you supposed to eat a FREE PREGNANCY TESTING. Janice Casey, an assistant English pro­ there." fessor, came to Dutchess County in 1963 fans at the.Garden even though they haven't pizza if you can't hold it by the crust. You But a few Bostonians beg to differ about won the Stanley Cup in 50 years, the Red Sox just can't get good pizza outside New York." from Winthrop, Mass., a town about 10 the greatness of The Big Apple. B irtnright miles northeast of Boston. She too knows of sell out Fenway and they haven't won the Pizza's not the only non-sports area where Sean Murphy, a native of South Boston, World Series in more than 70 years." Boston is lacking — big time. ARMYROTC the local pride that Bostonians can have. said he has only been to New York City once 473-1300 "You can't see a Broadway play in THE SMABTEST COLLEGE "There's a golf course just outside of to see a basketball game. But they're still a little envious of the win­ Rrtklil 897-228S Boston known as "The Country Club" Boston, and you can't get a goo pastrami on Dowr PWtt S774151 COURSE TOUCAN TARE. "I liked it, I guess," he said. "That was ning New York teams. which suggests the arrogance we sometimes 10 years ago though, and I've never been rye," said Tom Hess, a senior from Teaneck, RtfHMk 75M324 "When it comes to baseball Red Sox fans N.J. "Let's face it: New York is the place Contact Capt. Stephen WhHtey in ME 301 have," she said. back." are jealous," said Frank Coleman, a TOIL FREE NUMBER 14M-MK0VE or at ext. 528 to be." Page 10- THE CIRCLE-April127, 198, April 27, 1989- THE CIRCLE - Page 11 3 candidates remain for placement post a day in Earn thursday by Ghris Walsh left to become, director of career students take an active role in plan­ The first 'national pastime' Ruggers the life .-services at the Culinary-Institute of ning their futures. morning The search for a new director of America in Hyde Park; "J*J.Y. while you quarterback by Rich Donnelly The Office of Career Development The director chosen will try to The director will be chosen by a cop N.J. and Field Experience has been nar­ aid students in the job placement search committee who will inter­ learn. - You've seen the two small goals sitting on Leonidoff Field, rowed down to three possiblfrcan- process while overseeing the ac­ view each applicant seperately. Manpower is looking for didates, according to.- Carol. tivities of .the office. This committee is made up of col­ and!, you've probabaly seen Dreaming students interested, in playe,rs^ running around with tournament Coogan, director of personnel:.". ';• ;The new director will also super­ lege representatives who will work earning great pay — plus' Baseball Coogan said that interviews will vise .the management and expan­ closely with the new director on a sticks hi .hand trying to throw a by Chris Shea • commissions. We offer. ball into the nets; • the dream be completed by the first" week in sion of-on-campus recruiting, daily basis. flexible hours. And valuable The rugby club captured first May and plans are to have someone develop relationships with • You may evert know that the place in the UPS Drew College In­ training and business at Marist game tjiey're playing is lacrosse. start by July 1, if not sooner. employers and alumni, serve as the Coogan said the individual hired experience. Plus free use vitational in Madison, N.J. last of dreams The search for a new director liaison, between employers, will possess strong interpersonal as of a personal computer. by Tim Besser But you irmy-not know the Saturday. began after Ray Wells resigned students and faculty, and offer well as marketing skills in order to origin of the'game or how it is by Wes Zahnke from the job in late January. Wells, career counseling and initiate and develop the career services program If you're a full-time student, Rambling thoughts while played. '»'!,-"••/< Drew, New Jersey Medical, and who had been at Marist since 1979, conduct workshops to help to its fullest potential. Sophomore or above, with wondering if Marist will be a bet­ Baseball is considered to be Seton Hall also competed in the After experiencing post-River at least a B average and ter place, in two years when a America's national pastime, but tournament. Day shock and withdrawal from Continued from page 7 are computer familiar, baseball team starts playing. according to a "Pictoral the weekend tailspin, I sat Tour History of American Sports," Manpower needs you as a Marist hammered Drew 36-3 in around with a plastic fork at­ haven't. Or are new freshmen Susie's mom murmured. I didn't move. 1 move forward, COLLEGIATE REP to promote If you had risked $20,000 on the original and most universal tached to my uvula and began now required to sign an quickly shut her up as the new the sales of the Easy Goer to place in Saturday's game of the American Indian the championship game. The Red risking life and limb for a lousy Foxes defeated New Jersey Medical to ponder. abstinence form, like the seniors Marist SWAT team brushed by Marist tour. IBM Personal System/2 Wood Memorial at Aqueduct you was the stick and ball game they for graduation? Looks like the would have walked home with a Lacrosse has evolved from a war exercise for North American 20-0 in the first round. New Jersey Always the intrepid thinker our foxhole. Tripping over a branch, I on campus. called baggataway. Indians into a popular sport in Canada and the northern United who knows no bounds, I was RAs will have some fun busts We moved closer to the whopping $1,000 in winnings. The game, developed as a Medical beat Seton Hall, which fell scream obscenities as I knock For experience that pays, States, (Photo by Bob Davis) to Drew in the first round, to take searching for truths. next year. festivities to notice a security over the guard. I expect poison­ Seems like an awfully high chance war-training exercise by North So, anyway...then she wanted call today. to take for a meager profit. hard with hair and had no minutes each are played in the third place. Here I am, practically a guard between us and our final ed stun-daggers to come flying American Indians, was played defined size. The Indians often senior, single and eligible, living to see the Library. I kind of ig­ destination — The BEER at me, so I can be locked up in How can 42-year-old Nolan from Canada to Florida and event of a tie. nored her and pointed out the Ryan throw a one-hitter in the ma­ hid it in their mouths which led According to The Illustrated In the championship game with five cohorts in a house on Truck. the WPDH Boombox later. OH NANCY LEIGHNINGER west to the Great Plains. Today to hitting the mid-section and Talmedge St., wondering what beautiful rock gardens dotting "Charlie Company on alert. NO! Not that! OFFICE MANAGER jor leagues. Most 42-year-old men it is a popular college, secon­ Columbia Encyclopedia, some against Drew, Steve Batta scored a the campus. head to release it. authorities say the game team-high 12 points for the Red direction my life is going to Let's move ahead!" So we Instead I discover...THE 44 HAIGHT AVE. would be lucky to one-hit a team dary school and club game take. Then, the fun began. OH sneak behind the guard, our TRUTH. The security guards of six year olds. played in the eastern United Today's sponge rubber ball is developed its name from the Foxes. John D'Angelo added six What is my American BOY, what fun. bodies tense, quivering as we were all cardboard. We didn't PQUGHKEEPSIE Does Rudy Bourgarel really States. Hotbeds of the game are roughly seven and three-quarter curved stick which reminded points and Tom Flavin, Andy Dream? Being a self-actualized Little Susie and her ma and tighten each blacked-up muscle. have anything to worry about. NEW YORK 12603 believe he will be drafted into the the Finger Lakes region, Long to eight inches in circumference French settlers of a bishop's Israel, Bruce Harris and Brian infant, complete with Mickey I went down to River Day. They Susie's ma happened to have (914) 471-5623 NBA? Ditto. for Miro Pecarski. Island and Baltimore, Md. and weighs fivet o five and one- crosier. They called the imple­ Cesca added four apiece. Mouse sheets and a short atten­ couldn't officially get in, of some of that stuff Arnold used And the tour had been going There will be 54 players chosen in A furious, bone-smashing af­ quarter ounces. ment la crosse. Lacrosse — the tion span, I don't think I'll ever course, so I had to sneak them in "Commando." so well too. MANPOWER the draft. It's doubtful they'll be fair, the idea of the game today The playing field today also national sport of Canada, was Flavin scored eight points to lead adopted by the Canadian calculate the proper fuel ratio in through the woods. We sat and quivered for a Mark Miller is a junior ma­ TEMPORARY SERVICES among the fortunate few taken. — as it was then — is to put the has a defined size and shape — the team against New Jersey for a space shuttle. "What is this, Auschwitz?" good half hour. The guard joring in English. Besides, the NBA already lias its ball into the opponent's goal by 60 to 70 yards wide by 110 yards Parliament in 1867. Medical. Batta added six points, After eliminating rocket quota of Marist players. passing or shooting it. long. The two six-by-six goals In 1856, the Montreal Justin Miese four and D'Angelo science from my list of choices, Lacrosse Club was formed and two. Rik Smits had a solid rookie The Indians played the game face one another 80 yards apart. I can now set my sights on other in a battering manner — The stick, or crosse, consists by 1860 rules of the game were goals. season and should be a force in the standardized with the Canadian As a warmup for the tourna­ NBA in the coming years. without many fixed rules. It re­ of a handle and a pocketlike, For the record I've also cross­ mains a rugged game, deman­ meshwork head in which the Lacrosse Association as the ment, Marist had travelled to ed out professional athletics, Regardless of whether or not the ding skill, speed and endurance, ball is caught, carried and pass­ governing body. The U.S. Inter­ Storrs, Conn., last Thursday to lion taming and brain surgery. Lakers win a third straight title this but the game that has evolved ed until shot at the goal. collegiate Lacrosse Association take on the Univeristy of Connec­ I'm not in a rush; life's been season, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar has into lacrosse has changed much Like soccer, only the supervises college play. ticut, which has been ranked as good to me so far. nothing to be ashamed of. They are since the day of the Indians. goalkeeper can touch the ball Although mainly played as an high as fifth on the East Coast this Meals are not being missed, still a better team with him than The Indians often had several with is hands, and no player amateur sport, lacrosse was year. The Huskies trounced the bills are paid on time, and rare­ without him. hundred men on a team com­ may enter the crease. Personal played professionally in Canada Red Foxes 26-3. ly is a keg tapped that eludes my Mets' lefty Sid Fernandez says he pared to the 10 men per team and technical fouls are given as by 12-man teams between 1920 reach. has lost about 20 pounds and he now. in hockey with suspension or and 1932. The Red Foxes will wrap up their I'm not the best guy in the seems to be pitching very well. Did Northern Indians used only disqualification, leaving the The next time you see two season Saturday at the Big Apple world, but I ain't so bad. you ever notice that Sid's weight one webbed stick per man, as is penalized team at a teams running around tournament at New York City's feiitt, tWs Sunday knotted ten­ and earned run average seem to the custom today. Other Indian disadvantage. Leonidoff Field with sticks in Randalls • Island. Among the 16 s/on was rising in my gut, like follow the same curve? groups used two sticks per man. The.game is divided into four hand, you will know that , teams expected to participate are it always does. The~bafl'the Indians" used had quarters of 15 minutes each. lacrosse's roots are deeper than Army, Hunter, Iona, Fordham and I hate Sundays. I get nervous Every Mets fan's heart must miss a deerskin cover, was packed Two overtime periods^bf five America's national pastime. [ Drew. and feel as if my world is cav­ a beat when Howard Johnson ing in. fields a grounder with runners in I look through the windows scoring position. at the world around me and get It's nice to dream, but the Knicks scared. aren't going to win the title this Poor families picking the gar­ Some long distance year. The Pistons are hitting stride bage to make ends meet, at the right time and seem violence in the housing project companies promise you the moon, out what you unbeatable — but don't count out on a frequent basis, and hatred the Lakers in Kareem's last hurrah. and resentment by the neighbors really want is dependable, being aimed at us, public enemy high-quality service That's Perfect ending: Kareem hits sky WHY NOT HA VE A PARTY!!! number one. hook as time expires to beat the The college kids are evil, ac­ just what you'll get when Pistons in Game Seven of the NBA cording to my neighbors. you choose AT&T Long Championship. Because we are fortunate to en­ Distance Service, at a cost Golf may not be great exercise, joy life and have an occasional that's a lot less than you but it is one of the most humbling COME SEE US keg or 10 does not mean that we experiences a person can have. are mutants from another think. You can expect low long distance rates, 24-hour You notice there always seems to planet. Well, maybe... be an outside force that keeps the Parties all seem to blend operator assistance, clear Marist crews from winning. It's WEEKLY SPECIALS - COLDEST BEER AROUND together from Wednesday connections and immediate never because they didn't row fast through Saturday without much enough. rest. credit for wrong numbers. How many times can you And the assurance that Stanley Cup winner? The Mon­ LARGEST KEG INVENTORY - TAPS/COLD PLATES swing from the chandliers and virtually all of your alls will treal Canadiens, who are all but pour beer over each other's go through the firsttime . unbeatable at home. heads? Montreal Expos third baseman I tend to do my best thinking That's the genius of the Tim Wallach was quoted as saying while eating a can of Finast AT&T Worldwide Intelligent his team loves it when the Mets Pork & Beans, a panacea for all Network. lose. He better enjoy it now the problems in the world. because k looks like the Mets are They put things into perspec­ When it's time to starting to turn things around. tive for me and also provide choose, forget the gimmicks entertainment for my and make the intelligent Mike Schmidt's throwing arm THRIFTY housemates. choice-AT&T. has not come back following As the days go on and the surgery. The Phillies are going to kegs continue, we all are grow­ If youd like to know be hurt by him if they don't move ing up. more about our products or him off third base. Bad arm or not Sure, we don't want to admit services, like International you don't want him up with a man it, so we drown ourselves in 30 on and your team leading by a run BEVERAGE CENTER beers or so, but we're all Calling and the AT&T Card, in the late innings. growing. call us at 1800 222-0300. The Yankees are playing Seniors are shedding tears, mediocre ball, which is what they and juniors are watching their are going to play all season (at least reactions, knowing full well that 187 N. HAMILTON ST., P0U6HKEEPSIE until Billy Martin comes back to THRIFTY will be them in one year. manage). — PHONE 454-1490 Oh, I'm not going soft, just BEVERAGE- thinking a bit. Hell, I love Best wishes and a word of advice HOURS: Mon-Tues 9:30 am-8:00 pm swinging on chandeliers. for Brian Colleary, who finishes his Wed 9:30 a.m.-8:30 p.m. But, you know what I mean. last day as Marist director of ANDR0S Thurs-Sat 9:30 a.m.-9.00 p.m. After all, we're only here for athletics tomorrow. When you get DINER Sunday Noon-6 p.m. to Duquesne, find a better pizza (1 Mile From Marist College) four years, so live it up. AT&T t SIDETRACKED Keep your eyes and ears open joint. g BAR Poughkeepsie's Newest Discount and for goodness sake, don't The right choice. Any truth to the rumor Marist is worry if NASA doesn't come considering hiring ex-Kentucky t SKINNERS Beverage Center knocking on your door. basketball coach Eddie Sutton to Proprietor-Jon Urban Class of 82 There's always McDonalds. J replace Colleary? RT. 9 Page 12 - THE CIRCLE -April 27, 1989 Bourgarel Laxmen to enter win pair pro draft by Jay Reynolds With a year of NCAA With one game remaining in the eligibility left, former Marist season and two key wins last week, basketball player Rudy the lacrosse team still has a shot at Bourgarel has decided to to a .500 record. forego his senior year and enter The Red Foxes, 4-5, play host to the NBA draft, according to Knickerbocker Conference rival Associate Coach Bogdan U.S. Merchant Marine Academy Jovicic. Saturday after two straight Bourgarel, a native of historical victories last week — a France, spent the past year ser­ 19-1 rout of Division II Dowling ving in the French Army and and a 15-9 victory over Siena. It playing with a club team in was the first time the Red Foxes France. have beaten the Saints. Because no teams have "We're playing our best lacrosse scouted Bourgarel in France, his right now," said Coach Mike only chance to be seen by the Malet. "(The Merchant Marine NBA scouts will be at a pre- Academy) is a strong opponent and draft camp in Chicago the week it is an important game for us. We before the June 26 draft, accor- will have to play like we did ' ding to Jovicic. (against Siena) — execute the of­ Neither team has possession of the ball here, but the Marist laxmen were in control for "No scouts have seen him," fense, keep our composure and Jovicic said. "But they have play strong defense." most of *heir game against Dowling last Saturday. The Red Foxes won easily, 19-1. (Photo by Bob Davis) received information about how Against Dowling on Saturday, he has played." senior Peter Cleary set a Marist looked back, rolling on to the Del Ross led Dowling's offense, and (Siena) came back and went up record for most career points, 18-goal victory. taking six of his team's 10 shots by two. We stayed in our offense Jovicic said it is hard to tell registering his 200th point on an Cleary broke the record of Lou and scoring its only goal just 1:23 and ran it the way we planned." how the scouts actually feel assist just under three minutes in­ Corsetti who played football and into the game. Despite trailing 7-6 at the half, because they tend to mask their to the second period. It was the lacrosse for Marist from Against Siena last Thursday, the Malet said the team kept up its opinions. third of his team-high six points in 1978-1982. Red Foxes came back from a one- confidence. "(The scouts) don't like to the game. "(Cleary) has been a great player goal deficit and outscored the "The kids played the'game to speculate," he said. "Some hide Kevin Eversen (one goal, two for us for four years," said Malet. Saints 4-2 in the third quarter and perfection," he said. "They ran the their cards and play them on assists), Alex Messuri (two goals, "It's a fitting tribute to his ability." 5-0 in the fourth to earn the offense patiently and played great June 26." one assist) and Brian Hanifin (three -Marist outshot Dowling despite victory. defense." goals) each contributed in the win. stalling the offense so as not to run "It was a great step for the pro­ The five-goalfourt h quarter end­ The NBA draft is only two Robert Naylor scored in the third up the score. The Red Foxes fired gram," Malet said. "We knew if ed a fourth quarter scoring drought rounds long this year which period to give Marist its first goal 49 shots on the net to Dowling's 10. we played a great game we could that had seen Marist score only two -means only 54 players will be by a defenseman this season. "I've been on the other side," beat them. goals in the last quarter this season. drafted. Those not drafted still Eversen and Messuri each scored said Malet. "There was nothing to "The most important thing was Greg Kavovit and Christian King have an opportunity to be in­ a goal in the first two minutes of be gained by doing that (running that they (Marist) didn't get led the offense for the Saints with vited to a team's training camp. the game and the Red Foxes never up the score)." frustrated when we were up by one four points each in the' loss. V — / Crew nearly blanked at LaSalle Invitational by David Blondin in some unfair starts." don't. The men's varsity The heavyweight-eight capped a and ended up starting at 7:30 p.m., There were over 20 teams in the heavyweight-eight race had lights day of frustration for the Marist Marist again fell victim to confu­ Despite qualifying for every final invitational that had the qualifying on the finish line so the officials coaching staff which saw a number sion at the start, Davis said. but one, the Marist crew team came races in the morning and the finals could see who one," said Davis. of its boats run into trouble. After getting there boat lined up away with only one win, under less in the in the afternoon. The heavyweight-eight was the The men's freshmen-eight — at he starting line, the official told then ideal conditions, at the La Since the conditions worsened as last race of the day and began after Marist's only undefeated boat go­ them to back down and while they Salle invitational last Saturday on the day went on, the officials rush­ 8 p.m. with very little daylight left. ing into the invitational — was hit were, the official started the race, the Copper River in Camden, N.J. ed to get in all the races when The result was Marist finishing by the wake of an official boat that said Davis. Marist finished third "Some races we did well, others realistically they should have not last after being hit by a University was heading back down to the behind Rhode Island and Army. we did bad and some we just sort been held, Davis said. of Bucknell boat at the start. start, dropping Marist from first to The women's varsity-eight gave of got cheated in a way," said "It's sort of a lost cause," said Marist was pushed off-course and to fourth by the finish. Marist its only victory, winning Marist Coach Larry Davis. "A Davis. "Because of safety and had to make up the distance. One of the seats in the men's , easily over second place. LaSalle. windy day made it difficult to get fairness the regatta should have Though there is an official board lightweight eight boat came off the The women's varsity-four finished the boats lined up which pushed all been stopped, but then a lot of peo­ of protest, there is really no course track, causing its rower.to use on­ second to the University of Rhode the starting times back further so ple get mad because they didn't get of action when the officials could ly his upper body for the final 1,000 Island. that the last race was finished in the a chance to race their final. not see anything. Even if they did, meters of the race. Marist finished fourth and fifth dark. The last races were rushed in "It is a situation were you are there was no way the races could In the men's varsity lightweight in the women's freshman four and order to get them in which resulted damned if you, damned if you be redone, Davis said. eight, which was to start at 4 p.m. women's lightweight four. Netters rally r President's Cup past Pace For cycling, head to hills this Saturday by Rich Donnelly ple who belong to the club." are recommended for all rides. by Maureen Kramer by Mike O'Farrell Anyone over the age of 18 Paniers, packs that hang over More and more bicycles are may join. The annual member­ the rear tire, or backpacks are appearing on the roadways in The 27th annual President's Cup The men's tennis team rallied ship fee is $10 (for a single, or suggested if you plan to pack a Regatta will be held this Saturday and around campus, especially family) and. covers the cost of lunch. from a 3-1 deficit on Monday to now that the spring weather has on the Hudson River with a much defeat Pace 6-3. the club's newsletter which .is Rides are held at various smaller field than in the past. arriyea\ published every month except levels, from A to D, with A be­ Marist fell behind early in the With the ever dangerous match before No. 4 player Chris January. ing the fastest and longest and Previously as many as 12 to 15 Route 9 looming as a deathtrap After that, all rides — held D the slowest and shortest. schools came to Poughkeepsie for Trieste came back to defeat his op^ for cyclists, if you're looking to ponent 4-6, 6-4, 6-1 Coach Gerry every weekend and some An A ride would cover 100 the race, but this year only the do some serious or not so Wednesday evenings during the miles or more, travel at a rate University of Connecticut, Breen called Trieste's match "a serious ridingi n a safe way, you great comeback victory." spring, summer and fall — are of 17 to 20 miles per hour, and Lafayette, Lehigh University and might want to check out the free of charge except for the have one rest stop at about the Dowling are coming to town, ac­ After losing the first set, No. 5 Mid-Hudson Bicycle Club. Jamie Breen bounced back for a club's annual Century Ride — 50-mile mark. A B ride covers cording to crew Coach Larry three-set victory to tie the match at The only cycling club in the the club's big event. anywhere from 30 to 80 miles, Davis. immediate area has more than The Century Ride — which moves along at 12 to 15 mph 3-3 going into the doubles competi­ "In the past four years bad tion. Rich Spina also won at singles 260 members and is always up until five years ago used and has rest stops every 20 miles looking for more, according to Marist as it's starting location or so. weather forced two cancellations of for the Red Foxes. Erna S. Wilcox who along with the regatta. This year the Cham­ Marist completely dominated the — is scheduled for Sept. 17. It A C ride usually covers 15 to her husband Bill have been in offers rides of 25-, 50-, 62-, 100- 30 miles, moves along at 10 mph pionships in Albany are taking a lot doubles matches to earn the team charge of the club's membership of the competition away," said victory. Each Marist tandem won and 125-miles and starts at and has rest stops every 10 since 1979. SUNY New Paltz. miles. A D ride covers three to Donald Seals, novice women's in straight sets. head coach. "We ride all over Dutchess The rides may be done on 15 miles, moves slower than 10 Breen called the match "a great County," said Mrs. Wilcox, multiple speed racing cycles or mph and stops every so often. Although so few will be atten­ team victory," and he praised the "and we have weekends away in mountain bikes which have To join, mEfke the $10 ding it will still be a challenging efforts of Spina. Spina, along with Vermont and the Adirondacks. become increasingly popular membership check payable to race, said Rachel Farrar, a member Trieste and Breen, was a double "It's really a great riding during the past five years. MHBC and send it with your of the crew team. winner for the Red Foxes. group. We had 300 members The ride leader determines name (spouse, if any), address, However, this was the last match last year, but we live in an area the difficulty and length of the nine-digit zip code, and phone "We don't normally race these for the senior because he is having where a lot of people transfer. ride, and a sag leader brings up number to Erna S. Wilcox, 12 teams so it's hard to know what to surgery on his mouth, according to We have IBMers, teachers, doc­ the rear of the group. Helmets, Hudson Drive, Hyde Park, NY . expect," said Farrar. "I think we'll Breen. tors ... we have a variety of peo­ water bottles and biking gloves 12538-201S or call 229-5618. J do pretty well though."