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The Circle, February 2, 1984.xml

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 29 No. 11 - February 2 ,1984

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Marlst ~allege, Poughkeepsie,
N. Y/
February 2, 1984_
. Marist gets largest priVa.te giffinits history
by
Kevin
Schulz
ware will be available for us~ dur-.'
-
. · ing the coming fall semester:·
Marist College will be receiving Murray said, "We hope to make
$2.5 million worth of computer
this
equipment
available
to
equipment in a grant from IBM, students and faculty on a 24-hour
according to an announcement
basis."
_
·.
. made by Marist President Dennis
··Much of the new equipment
J. Murray at a press conference
will be placed in the Lowell
last Wednesday..
Thoinas Center upon completion._
. Included in the grant are an An architect has been chosen and
IBM 4341 Model 12 Processor,
groundbreaking is scheduled
for
100
computer terminals . and 40~; this spring, b~t, acc~rding_ to_.
personal computers and software.
Joh.n Lahey, vice. president for
• The new processor
will
increase . college advancement , the . con~
Marist's current storage capacjty struction of the building could
by 500 percent.
take up to
18
months.
' .· Murr·ay expressed his con-
· U~tH t~at tim~, the compute~s ..
fidence that the gift, which is the _ and termma!s will be placed m
1
t ··
th
ollege's history
sever~! - Donnelly.
first-floor
Ii...,_.._._
a~ges m
e . c
. , • classrooms and an expanded com-
will g~eatlf improve Man_st s puter center, Lahey said. The
President Dennis Murray at press
r~putauon m computer apphca-
final.· details·
for
the .expansion,
conferen. c~. .(Ph.oto byJeff Kiely)
tIOns.
· however have not been determin-
"When (people) thin!<"
of .small ed.
'
· ·
·
·
• .. pany," Bitanti said. "IBM sup-
colleges that lead in the academic
IBM Communications ·Product . ·ports the . concept of continuing
use of computers,.
I
want (theqi) Division . President. James
A.,
'education,"
to think of Marist," Murray said.
Bitonti, who is also the chairman
·:.·According• to Lahey, the ap~
- "This equipment grant will allow of Marist's Boai:d of Trustees, · proximately 25,000 people in the
Maristto attain its goal of becom- · cited the college's.important rela-
Mid-Hudson· Valley . who are
ing a.national leader among small tionship with the ideals
of
IBM as
employed by IBM represent the
colleges in using· the computer as· · a reaso11 for the generous gift.
highest concentration.· of IBM
·an instructional tool." . . ..
·. "Continuing education is im- . employees in the world . .He said
.The new equipment a°nd soft-
portant _to _the:health of the com:. : that Marist}s a "major resource
CSL withholds ·.:--
.
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by Paul Raynis .
Concerned with the validity of
the more than · 500 instructor
evaluations filled out. by students
during finals week last semester,
the Council of. Student Leaders
had chosen not to release . the
resuits ofits questionnaires to the
student body.
.

CSL . officers .·decided· against
· their original plans to put limited '
editions of the results on reserve
at four locations on campus when
problems arose in their. effoi:ts_to
_ get_m'onitors for their evaluation
. desk in Donnelly Hall..
.
Without· constant monitoring ,
in providing higher education in and processor will be set up in a
· the area." .
netwcii:k which will allow theni to
Thousands of IBM employees . communicate with each other.
are trained through Marist's adult · Every major building on campus
education program and many .-··wilJ be conn~cted to the system, .
courses at Marist are taught . by

and even students and faculty
IBM
employees.
.
with home computers will even-
Murray and other college of- · tually have access to the computer
ficials
_
expressed · network.
hopes that computers
will
be used .
Murray said that'computer net-
fo:
courses other than ·computer . works in the information age are
science ones as well. . •.
·. as important as railroads and
.'.'A
major· goal of the in- · highways were in ·the industrial
stitution · is the integi:~tion of . age. He also emphasized' the
technology and the ·liberal arts,"
significance of the unification of
Murray'_. sa.id. ".We want · to
computer .. science
and
com-
graduate students who are not on"
munications.
ly literate in the traditional sense, , "The integration of these two
but technologically literate as
areas, which will be housed in a
well.".
novel way in Marist's new Lowell
. Edward Waters, vice president
Thomas Center, will .make the
for finance and administration,
Center one of the most advanced
said, "Although we offer well ac-
facilities of its kind in the world,"
cepted programs in business and
Murray said.
computer science, Marist expects . Richard • Linu·s .Foy, Ph.D.,.
tq remain primarily a liberararts
former president of Marist, and
college. With this in mind, my
holder of trhe first .endowed chair
people see their job as one·of pro:. . in Computer Science at Marist,
viding the liberal arts faculty with · said that in the ·. near future
the computing
resources they
"everyone will have (a personal
need to· explore ne,w avenues for
computer) and know how to use
the t.ransfer of knowledge.".
it. Within four years computers
. The new computers! · terminals
will be like a light switch.'•
Co_~ops shrink
_c,oi:nputer staff.
,,._,,,:
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.. The Computer Center is 'fin-
• ctirig it increasingly difficult to
.
meet the needs arid. expectations
. of the Marist user commt1nity, ac-
.: ;oi:ding to staff members.· · _
· . ·1n
a ,
recent newsletter Cecil
,·Denney, _computer center. direc~
·tor,'
said ·that increased demands
and a.·. reduction of staff · have
· caused . some
policy
changes
within the center.
These policy. changes/ which .
will · mainly
affect
the
ad-
ministrative users of the computer
'and·• will have· little effect on the
students, were designed to .allow
the _center to "be more effective
with our existing staff levels,"
said Denney
fo
the newsletter.
.Trustees a~d members of the administration list~n to President Murray speak about •the .
·
· award.
(Photo
by
Jeff
Kiely)
of. the filling · out, of. evaluations,
the CSL hadb:o way to insure that
thef orms weren't misused.
. ...
_ "There could· be people stuff- ·
..

ing · bcixes·, and
things/Hke
that,''said James Barnes;College ·
. Union Board presidenk Barnes
·•
. . .
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-
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illJ ·.
center ..
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wo.·rke
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s
>dismissed·
..
· He also said that "we analyzed
our own job · performance
to
determine how to be more pro-
ductive."
_ ~iaffing in the center became a
problem when three of the student
employees accepted co-op posi-
tions with IBM for this semester.
Frank Degilio, who had provided
a major part of the technical sup- _
port for.the center; is working in
Kingston on a computer graphics
project. Rick Ridgeway, who had·
prov1ded main line support in ad- .
ministrative
programming,
is
uon of a teacher s effectiveness,
.. .. . ··
..
J:JJ
.
.
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iva· m·

>t.
-h·
·o· u•,
O·h·
·t· ·t·
0. l..e·
. . s· to·
le.n·
current question of their vali~ity:
·
J-• . . . . .·.
A
1
·
. . ·

>,
.
.
t::, .
.· .· · ·
.
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·
. · •
. .
' "What I hope people realize 1s
·.
· · · ' · ·
..
. . • -
·
·· ·
· .
_ .. · . . .. .• •
·
that this is a very tough area, and
.•
by C:arl MacGowan
of security to "too many students
from the Copy Center staff. Terry.
that we can't reveal information
-hanging ,aroµnd.';
However,
Abad;aseniorwhoworkedinthe
which
we ·. feef~ isn't
strong
More than
a
dozen student Doscher said he employed "some_. Center last summer, wasinform-
enough," said Barnes. "You're
· employees· were fired early last real good students'' who "bent , .ed of the new rules two days after
looking at people's tenure, their
month after concern was raisefL'over backwards." ::
· ·arriving for the intersession. She
· jobs, and all of that. You've just
about· the security of. the Marist · Anthony V. Campilii, business
said she was told that Marist had
got to be careful."
·
College Copy Center.
officer, said he wasn't. worried .• ·done research and found that
Despite the flaws ·in the evalua-
:. According to Andrew Molloy, about the integrity of student . other
schools
don't
employ
tion process, the CSL. officers
dean of academic affairs, concern · employees; · but- "more· perhaps
students in their C9py Center.
have found patterns in the evalua~
about a "breakdown of security"
the peer pressure of students
· "I had comeback with the no-
tion of certain instructors, and
was
.
expressed' after· the-
faJI ·
working in an office." The access
tion that I would have a 25-hour a
hope to make those patterns
semester; There was; said Molloy, · to serious information, said Cam-. . week job; and I was out of a
·known. to the administration, ac-
"reason to believe final exams pilii, may tempt some students to . job," _said Abad.
cording to Barnes.
.
· had. been circulated" before exam take advantage of their position
"There have been some faults
week.
"not necessarily for themselves,
in the testing, but we've found
Under the new policy, students but for others."
·
· that a number of teachers were
may not be employed by the Copy
C.ampiJii said the· college con-
constantly i:nade · reference· to,
Center or use the center to make·: tinues to place high value in stu-
with consistently- _positive or
copies of personal documents.
A -
dent employment because of the
, negative
evaluations,"
said
copying machine has been placed on-the-job training it provides ...
!
Barnes. "We're
recommending
in Donnelly·Hall, adjacent t_o the don't'Jmow of many schools with
that· those names be submitted to
Commuter Lounge, for student as many students in as many sen-
the division heads, and that we let
use.
· ·
sitive positions as we do," he
them deal with it."
. Al· Doscher, manager o.f the said.
·
continued on page~
Copy Center, attributes the lapse
Fourteen students were fired
Doscher now has only a three-
person staff, but they have ex- ·
· panded their hours· to com pens
sate..
.
As
'for hiring students for the
Copy Center in the future, Cam-
pilii said, "Anything is possible."
Doscher said he would welcome ·
student
employees again and
regretted the firings.·
."It's a sad situation," he said.
. working in Fis.hkill on
a
to.ol
automation . project. · And · Tom
Curley, who had given significant
SUPJ~ort
to the system staff in the
center, will be working with
Ridgeway on the tool automation
project.
.
.
·
The result of these changes is
· thee loss of two full-time staff
positions in the Computer Center.
David Kehoe, an administrative ..
programmer, wasmovedfrom his
position to an assignment internal
to the center. This-ch~nge placed
the burden of administrative pro-
gramming on the shoulders of.
Chris Renten.
Denney said that with the re-
cent grant from IBM, the center
would begin to focus its attention
on the implementation of the new
continued on
page 2
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Page
2 ·
THE CIRCLE·
Ft1bruary
2,
1984
·
~!~~~t~li.',,-",
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,··•·•
-·•··•
.
Modeling its questionnaire and
·
·
evaluation system in general after
. ;
·
·
''Seate," the Student Course and
.
•··
Renaissance
Pub
Teacher Evaluations,
from the
State University
.of
New
.York
at.
Buffalo, the CSL is looking into .
making
the . evaluations. more.
commonplace at M.arist.
·
"Our ultimate
long-range
plan
is to set up a class, similar to what
the state university did, and have
students write up these q~estion-
n~ires,' administer them in the
classroom with the teacher's per-
mission, and then publish· this
data in.a booklet that could be ac-
.

cessible
to
everybody,"
said
·
Barnes.
If
the class doesn't come into
being,
.
the CSL will just work
toward administering the evalua-
·
tion forms in the classrooms with
the
permission
of
individual
teachers, according to Barnes.
•.
Barnes added that at first there
would surely be apprehension.
"But' we've· found with schools
who are already doing this that it
eventually became the norm for a
teacher to allow the administerlng
of the forms in his class," he said.
CSL officers pointed to the
specifics
of their evaluation ques-
tionnaire as a possible aid in
boo-sting f~culty cooperation.
Keith Galanti, CSL president,
said that the questionnaire wasn't
designed
·
to determine good or
bad. He said he considers it more
of a method by which a student
can see which teachers Were found
by other: students to· exhibit the
teaching style that best suits his
preferences.
.
.
.
·',
.
-';
~·-::.
.
:
.
'.·
.
.
"Our evaluation questionnaires
are designed to get an overall pic-
ture of the teacher,. from types of
.
lectures to the teacher's use of
·
.
I,
qooks·; ot'hO\V his tests, relate; to
·
.
\vhat
wits
learned;,"
said
G!ilil_.~.ti.

•·,
CSL· leaders
said'-that
pending
the response
bS,'the
.faculty
and
.
administration
to
the
CSL's
evaluation
·
system, any further
advancements
are
simply
possibilities.
.
Commuter
Union
President
..
Darryl
.
lmperati
said
he
:
freJsl
however'
that
de~pite
ltS:.
drawbacks,_ this year's evalu.ation
set-up is
a
worthwhile beginning.
"This is just a precedent case.
It may not prove itself until next
semester, or even next year," he
.said.
"This
is just a start. I think
it's a good start too."

j.
·,
·.:
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,;
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continued from page 1
equipment.
Denney said that his request for
more personnel has not been fill-
ed by the administrative Cabinet,
bvecause they are waiting for the
new. equipment
·
to be in place
before they decide what area's in
the center
to
staff.
,
"This grant has opened the
door for dozens of opportunities
·.

in: computing that the Cabinet can
pursue, and the staffing of the
center depends on which oppor-
tunities are chosen,"
·
said Den-
~Y-
.
.
Denney said: "We are in a fair-
ly
standard · development
cycle
which includes the shift of per-
sonnel. We are maturing as an
organization and in how our data_
processing develops.''
Denney said that Marist is at a
transition point between
.
control
of the computer and the integra-
tion of its users, which is a phase
in all data processing growth.
·
The integration
of its users
means that the Marist community
would become more adept at deal-
ing with ·problems that before·
needed the attention of the Com-
puter Center.
He
said,
"Our
conclusion
centers on gaining greate~ control
on the way problems come to us
and in having
·users
become more
self sufficient.,,.
··The
Circle
.
.
..,·.
Staff
•····
...
WUl<meet
.
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at
1-
p.m.
Sunday
.■
.In
cc· 1as.
.
.
VARAZZANO
BLVD.
'486-9278"
Monday Nights -· 9 p.m.
di
4
All Bottled Beer $1.00!
Shots $1.00!
Wednesday
Nights - 10 p.·111..•
til
4
All Bar Drinks 99~
New-members needed
Happy Hour 4 7 p.m.
Monday
thru
Friday!
Reduced Drink Prices
for
_
adverti~ing,
.pno_tography,
writing
(Proper. ID Required)
J

·:.an·d:_..r~porti'ng.:
.
CLASS: OJI
1985.
&.
1984
JOlN.YOUR.OLYMPIANS:
...
:·:_:·:
_·:.·:
·.
·AND·GO··FORJOSI
ENSGOLD·
$2SOFFALL
14KGOLo· RINGS·.·
See Your Jostens
Rep.resentative
for details ofJostens
~
P<!}'lllent
Plans.
D.ate:
February 13 - 17, 1984
.
Time:
Monday-Thursday 9:30-4:30; Monday & Wednesday 6-7
p.m.; Friday 9:30-2:00
Place:
Donnelly Hall
·
·
·-·--<
a-,., ....
~......,_,u.......,.,.
Q5e9
JOSTENS
lS THE OFACIALAWARDS SUPPLIER
OE THE 1984 Oll'MPIC
GAMES.




















































_________ liliil.._
....
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Februaryz 1984.~
THE CIRCLE•
Page 3
'.(,DUB,
>With
dlbdU'e (CSpect,
~,
~
··.
,to
.J)resentROdneY.
Dangerfield
l
···.
by
Kenneth F. Parker Jr.
·
Jickets for the Dangerfield ap-
pearance went on sale Jan. 9, and.
On Friday, Feb. 10 at 7:30
-all
were promptly sold within
~
·p.m.,
Marist College· will present
few hours.··. However; because
..
Rodney Dangerfield in
the
first of Marist's 300 seats· were already
two co-sponsored concerts at the
·
reserved for students, they were
Mid-Hudson Civic Center.
·
able to sell those tickets exclusive-
The co-sponsorship is part of a
ly to the returning students begin~
contractual agreement
signed
in
ning on Jan. 24.
late
1983
between the College
·
Twenty students dressed in
·
·.
U:nion Board
·.
and
.
the Mid-
Marist T-shirts will act as ushers
·
Hudson Civic Center.
.
.
and receive free admission. The
·
··
The
upcoming
Dangerfield·
students are
.
members of t~e
show continues the Marist custom.:. C.U.B. and the concert commit-

of presenting a concert each year.
tee.
··.
"Last year we had 805 perform
Because tickets were already
~
on campus but
.
the setting just
printed before Marist chose t~is
~
wasn't right,'' said concert chair-·. event to co-sponsor, however, Its
,_man;
Rick O'Donnell.
·
~ame does not appear on the
,
O'Donnell
·
believes that this. tickets.
.
·
and future
·
concerts will allow
Rodney Dangerfield,
60, is
students to see the big names
know for his "I get no respect"
Marist cannot accommodate.
routine.
·:
Out of an allocation of$6,600,
Dangerfield regained his cur-
.,
the concert committee is· using rent popularity through Miller
$2,500 for each concert.
.
Lite Beer commercials and has
..
The
·
remainder of the agree-
since
made
numerous
ap-
ment calls for bus transportation
pearances
on
the
"Tonight
from the Donnelly parking lot to Show," won a Grammy award
the Civic Center
discounted
for best comedy recording, open-

tickets and 300 pri~rity-reserved
ed his own New York nightclub,
seats.
'
and starred in the films
"Cad-
dyshack" and "Easy Money."
He has been on· the cover of
Rollin·g Stone
·
Magazine,
was
.
written up in Time magazine, and
·
his trademark red tie and white
shirt were put on display at The
Smithsonian
Institute
in
·
Washington; D.C.
Because of the demand, a se-
cond show was added at 10:30
·
·
p.m. on the same evening.
Tickets for the 7:30 p.m. show
·
are available at the Marist theatre
box office. They are specially
priced at $14.00 and $11.00 with a
.Marist
l.D.
Tickets for the 10:30 p.m. show
may be obtained at the Civic
Center box office.
O'Donnell said the act for the
second concert has not been
decided on yet, however, he
would prefer the second one to
occur later in the semester .
"We could have co-sponsored
the upcoming Adam Ant concert
but we felt
it
was too close to
Rodney," said O'Donnell.
If
all goes well, O'Donnell
hopes to renew the agreement and
continue co-sponsorship with the
Civic Center.
I
Rick O'Donnell, College Union Board concert committee
chairman, who arranged Marist's co-sponsorship with the
Mid-Hudson Civi_c Center.
(Photo
by
Keith Brennan)
Fishkill· extension.· center begins operations·
by
Catherine DeNunzio
·
in industry and civil service.
main campus and easier for adults
.
"This is one direction that a
to adapt to.
The Fishkill Center, Marist
small liberal arts college mµst
"Part of the image
is to make
College's
newe
st
extension
take in order to succeed in the
working
professional
adults
·
·
program,
has begun its· first '80'
"
·ct
B b
s
comfortable in an environment
·
semester of classes.
s,
sai
O
ommer,
It
officially
opened
on director of degree and certificate
they're used to," said Sommer.
December 15, 1983 with a ribbon
programs in adult education.
"It
"We've had significant interest'
cutting ceremony attended by Dr. suggeSts significant growl h-"
·
in the Fishkill extension," said
Dennis Murray;
president
of
Located in the Dutchess Mall in Sommer.
"Approximately
500
Marist College.
·
.
.
Fishkill at the intersection
.of
Rt. 9
people have mailed in the business
The main purpose of the center and Rt. 84, the new extension
reply coupons,'' Sommer went on
is to attract students from the conveniently serves people that
.
to say adding that there have been

..
· )·.
·
.-.,,
southci:n
pa~t ~f Dutchess County
would .. , IlC!t,:·:·,~f>J:~a.l!Y.-~;·
~tt~nd,
numerous
.
t~lcphonc calls from
·
·
,
·""'· arid',:surroundiiig
"areas;·.'targcting"·Marist,-,accordirig:to'Soinmeri;He
· · people
---inquiring
about
the
adult-.students and professionals
said it's more accessible than the
Fishkill facility.
"There is nothing else down
there to serve the people," said
Sommer.
The idea of going off-campus is
not a new one for Marist. Courses
have been and are presently being
taught in hospitals, prisons and
some high schools.
"The significance is not that
we'.re off campus so much as that
we h'ave constructed this per-
manent site," said Sommer·.
The
major fields of study
at
the
·
new
.
center
include computer
science,
business,
paralegal
studies and accounting as well as
courses in Marist's
graduate
programs.
Professional
workshops also meet daily.
The extension consists of two
large classrooms equipped with
computer terminals; a conference
room and a work area with video
equipment and terminals which
are linked to the Marist main
frame computer.
'.'The· present extension is
a
pilot project. We're watching how
this works then we'll take it
,from
·
there," Sommer
said.
-Freshmen
size up
first term:
at.·
Marist
Studies sh()W
·alcohol
by Holly Sraeel
·
·
The first semester at Marist had some great moments -
and
some not so great ones -
according to · some freshmen in-
.
terviewed last week by The Circle.
.
.
.
·
·
.
Leading the list of disappointments concerning the college
experience of many of the freshmen was what they saw as a lack
.
of stimulation in the
·academic
program at Marist.
·
Many students said they felt unchallenged by the scholastic
work load during the fall semester.
·
.
.
;'
·
·
·
.
..
"Academically, Marist is not challenging enough. Generally,
the people aren't really stimulating," said Jim Traub, a Com-
munication Arts major from Newton, Conn.
·
"I found the school to be very unorganized curriculum-wise.
The work is really urichallenging and·not at all stimulating; and
the course load is light," said Steven Warner, a Communication
Arts/Fashion major from Fort Collins, Colo.
~
Many freshmen also said they feel they have been misled by the
administration to believe that Marist is a highly competitive
school, but some students are not in agreement with the declared
level of higher education.
.
·
·
.
"It's easier than high' school," said Robert-"Moose" Gilbert,
a criminal justice major from Mystic, Conn.
·.
"I thought people w.ould act more grown up. Some people act
like they're stiHin liigh school. I thought the work would be more
difficult then. it-actually is," said political science major Dana
Forlani, East Chester,
N.Y.
·
According to many students,
.
the. upperclassmen went out of
their way to convey a feeling of concern for the freshmen.
:
"I loved it. The
'people
are really friendly," said Marta
Powers, Nanuet,
N.Y.
·
·
.•
"It was a great experience. I love all the people here. I would
recommend Marist to anyone," said Katen Bruso, New City,
N.Y.
Addressing the social life question, many Marist freshmen said
that they were pleased, for the most part, with the social li_fe on
and off campus.
"I think the social life is great. Everyone is friendly, and
there's a lot of things to do," said Pisamai Jaigla, a fine arts
major from Rye, N.Y.
.
. ·
Though some freshmen had negative thoughts about the fall
semester, many said that they hope things will come together by
the completion of their first tear at Marist.
"It's a great experience to get to go away to school, both
academically and socially," said Sean
·Dougherty,
Canterbury,
N.H.
.
"If
you get your priorities straight and learn to balance
time,
you can get a lot done and ~till have time to socialize.
It pays to
get involved,'' said Powers.
.
.
.
a. Problem for
.
teens
by
Gary A. Davis
This year, like many previous
ones, a single, easily attainable
drug will cause the death of over
20,000 teenagers and begin the
sickness and death of millions
more. This deadly drug is alcohol.
The
National
Council
on
Alcoholism says that drunken
driving is the leading cause of
death
among
teenagers
and
estimate that 3.3 million drinking
teens between 14 and 17 may
develop serious alcohol problems.
The
N.C.A.
reports that the
average age a child begins t_o
drink is 13, with 31 percent of
high
school
students
being
alcohol misusers and'-15 percent
being problem drinkers.
According to the N.C.A., an
alcohol misuser is a. person who
gets drunk at leas.t five times a
year, while a problem drinker is a
person who drinks at least once a
week and has more than five
drinks per occasion.
In addition, the N.C.A. states
that alcohol is so common in our
drinking
society
that
most
teenagers do not realize that it is a
powerful drug and many devleop
a drinking problem.
The
National
Institute
of
Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism
reports that there are more than
twice as many male teenage
drinkers than female.
Every teenager that drinks,
however, does not become a pro-
blem drinker. Experts point out a
number of factors that cause a
person to develop a drinking pro-
blem.
Majorie Schratz, a psychologist
at Marist College with alcohol
counseling experience, said that
teenage drinking
is a "very
serious"
problem
in
the
Poughkeepsie area as well as the
nation .
Schratz said she feels that the
problem is caused by an inability
·
to interact with others. "Alcohol
is used as an excuse to avoid
socializing with the opposite sex.
It
can· be frightening for
·some
people, so they drin!c to avoid the
fear," she said.
Schratz went on to explain that
a drinking problem usually starts
in an immature person who has
not worked out his or her identity.
She called this process individua-
tion."
During the process of in-
dividuation, the person's suscep-
tibility to peer pressure should
peak in high school, allowing the
person to become an individual
and not a member of a group,
,
Schratz said.
N.1.A.A.A.
studies have found
that the drinking behaviors of
peers has the strongest influence
on the adolescent use of alcohol.
Sehratz stressed that a person
who fails to complete the in-
dividuation process and allows
others to control his actions will
remain immatur.e and therefore
may develop a drinking problem.
Laurence Sullivan, a Marist
College professor who had been a
professional
alcohol counselor
for I
5
years, agrees with Schratz.
"A problem drinker is someone
who cannot handle awkward feel-»
ings about himself and others
or
the opposite sex and drinks to
block out their problems." he
said.
Sullivan, who holds an alcohol
counseling
certificate
from
Rutgers University, said that a
teenager's home environment is
an important factor in whether or
not the person develops a drink-
ing
problem.
"Children
of
alcoholic
parents
are
perfect
targets
to
·
become
alcoholics
themsleves," he said.
Bonnie Kavner, administrator
of the Alcohol and Substance
Abuse Service of the Dutchess
County Department of Mental
Hygiene: said she thinks most
teenage alcohol problems are
family related.
Kavner,
who
agreed
that
teenage drinking is a serious pro-
blem, did not know if Poughkeep-
sie area was better or worse than
the
rest
of the nation, cited
statistics that show a much higher
rate of alcoholism for people
from families with an alcoholic
member.
The
N.I.A.A.A.
found that
parents were a strong influence on
their child's use of alcohol. A
study discovered that
59 percent
of all teens with at least one
parent who drunk regularly were
moderate
to
heavy
drinkers
themselves.
Kavner strongly noted that
alcohol is a dangerous drug that
can kill people when it is misused.
"We have people that come here
for therapy who are dying from
alcohol," she said.
Kavner added that teenage pro-
blem drinkers who go through life
with unresolved problems will
probably die from alcoholism in
their40s.
Raphael Mark, an instructor at
Marist College and one of the
founders of the Dutchess County
Mental
Health
Center
in
Poughkeepsie, said that teenage
drinking is a very big problem. He
also
said
that the problem in
Poughkeepsie is no worse than
continued ~n
page
7






























































--•Page4-
THECIRCLE-Februar,2,
1984---------------------~----!'~~~~~■
-----
·
··
·
·•.
·
..
·
··
··
Readers
write
.
It's February, and college students from
'
all over the nation have returned to school
after Christmas
break to continue
their
studies -
well, at least some students have
come
back to study. Apparently
many
~
students at Marist have instead chosen to
i
cheat their way through college.
·
,;
'
It's, easy.
The cheaters
simply
get
someone who works in the copy room to
steal copies of tests for them. Then they talk
themselves into believing that they're not
cheating because they don't have the test
answers ... yet:
-
.
·
I
thought we were in college, not grade
school. Test-stealing
is immature, not to
mention unfair to students who pore over
books for hours rn preparation for an exam.
Cheating is also sheer"fo.olishness. Taking
courses at college is not required by state
law, as is attendance at elementary school
and high school until. age of 16; rather,
college can be thought of as an investment
in learning that students have chosen to
make. Cheaters
.are
short-sighted
to pay
$8,000 a year to deny
·themselves
·.
an
education.
In a broader light, stealing
anything
shows an extreme lack of moral character.
As we know, Marist College has riot been an
instituti'on
that encourages· this kind of
degradation of indi_viduals. By getting away
·
with cheaUng, students were lowering the
standards of the whole college.
.
..
.
Those, of you who have been unable_,to ..
r_esist the temptation to look at stolen tests
before they are officially distributed during
the examination
period .will perhaps now•-
think twice about what you did. Such peop_le
.
not
_only
need a better lesson In the subject
matter of the stolen exams, but they need a
lesson in life. Cheaters do not hurt their·
instructors,
and, except for getting better
grades then classmates who worked harder,
,,
they· do. not actually hurt. other students,
because they have attained less knowledge.
Students
who
steal
tests
are
hurting
thems.elves mo~e than anyone else.
.
· ··
Swindlers,who are making only a minimal
,,
effor.t ~o learn at ~arist~hould-get
out now,
before they waste more time and money.
All letters must~
typed triple space with a 60 space margin, and submitted to the
Circle office no later than 1 p.m. Monday. ShOrt letters are preferred. We reserve the
right to edit all letters. Letters must be signed, but names may be withheld upon
request. Letters
will
be published depending upon availability of space.
.
Heroes
To the Editor:
Heroes for a day. Who are
they? Unfortunately we don't
.
know their names but we would
like to thank them in this column.
They deserve
some recognition.
Our story is a common one -
that of forgeuing to turn off the
car lights after commuting to
Marist on a foggy winter morn-
ing. Upon noticing that the car
ba11ery
was dead, one friend call-
::
ed on another for help. On so do,
.
,.
ing she found out._that her car's
battery
\Vas
also dead. So the
real.
~-
rescuers were
two
Marist
~:
Maintenance employees, who did
,;
the job well and with a smile.
•'
!!
Thanks again!
~
Maria Carvalho
;:
Theresa Mueller
ROTC
Dear Editor:
College sophomores who were
not enrolled in Army ROTC dur-
ing the first. two years of college
still have a chance to enter the Ad-
vanced Course during their junior
and senior years. The ROTC
Basic Camp, held each summer at
Fort Knox,
KY,
is a six-week
course of intensive training which
prepares students for the final
two years of the ROTC commis-
sioning program which is now of-
fered at Marist College.
.
.
The six-week course-is describ-
ed by the Army as tough, deman-
ding, and challenging
c:'-
but
'·realistic. •·
Before graduating;
students learn
.
how to read a
military map; how to use a com-
pass; rifle marksmanship with the
Mc16 rifle;
fire
the M-60··
machinegun
·
.
and
.
an anti-tank
weapon;
.
rappel; do tactical
maneuvering; and acquire con-
siderable experience in drill and
ceremony. Equally
important
during the
course,
they learn
leadership
skms
by actually
leading. They are also in excellent
physical condition by the end of
(
the six weeks.
~
,
Certain advantages go with at-
~
tendance at the Basic Camp.
i
Students are paid about $670 for
~
attending, as well as
...
their
transportation to and from camp.
Free room and board is included.
Students won 450 two-year
·
scholarships
.
at the 1983 aasic
~
Camp. ROTC scholarships pay
t
tuition, an allowance for books
and supplies, certain academic
··
and lab fees, and a $1000.
per year
subsistence alloWance
each.
year
,:
the scholarship.is in effect.
•"·
There is no military obiligation
incurred by attending
.the
camp,
although the emphasis is on sen-
ding students who have a sincere
desire to become Army officers
on graduation from college or .
university.
Additional information on how
to apply for the 1984 Basic Camp
is available by calling Major Bar-
bara Wingate at 212-295-3533
(collect) or Captain Lance Luft-
man.through Dean·cox's office.
.
,
ArmyROTC
1
Check cashing
Dear Editor:
·
1
am pleased to announce
that
effective January 24, 1984, the
Business Office will cash checks
on both Tuesdays and Fridays
from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Check
cashing is only available during
_
·
the academic year.
.
The check limit remains $50.00
arid only checks made by parents,
immediate
family or the student's
own check can be cashed.
.
No
third party
checks can bet
.
approved.
·
..
Checks returned
.
by the bank
'
for insufficient funds, stopped
·
payment,· acc·9unt
·
closed,: etc.
:;
result.in
a $5.00
fee and revoca-'-
tion of check cashing privileges
.
for
'the
entire semester.
·
Edward Frija

Business Office
Ski
jump
To the Editor:
Many of you remember the
,
thrill of.watchi~g the Olympic Ski
Jumping at Lake Placid four
-
years ago. And'. now that it's time
for. the Winter Olympics, once
ing tournaments in New England;,
All summer long, extensive work:
has been done on the jump struc.::.
tures and
·on
the landing hill to;
modernize it and
make
it safer,:
·
.
which in turn should attract more'-
Yearbook?
·
again, you are. probably wishing
the
skijumps. were in the United
States in February, rather than in
Sarajevo; Yugoslavia. Well, it
..
first~rate jumpers. This
·moder-
nization should make it easier for;_
the jumpers
to
go longer
•...
distances. As
a
result, we hope·
Marist prides itself on its Communi_cation
Arts program. It has one of the most ex-
tensive internship
programs in the state,
working in cooperation with IBM, and NBC
and ABC television,
The community
is
eagerly
awaiting
.
the
construction.
of
Marist's Lowell Thomas Center. We're also
eagerly awaiting the· arrival of
last
.
year's
yearbook.
It's one thing to be faced with a minor·
publication
delay, but it's an entirely dif-
ferent matter for a "yearbook"
to be a half-
year late. We can understand
that there
were staff
problems,
resulting
·
in three
different editors for the one book. But the
hardnose
fact
is
that·
those
missed
deadlines should have been met, with no
exceptions.
·
An editor does not put the entire yearbook
together himself. Rather, he presides over
his
staff,
which
-
actually
carries
the
workload to produce the yearbook.
During the times of the editor troubles,
,..
.
that staff shoulg have been strong enough
·
to persevere and carry the load on its
~
·
may not be the Olympics, but you
shoulders.
will have the opportunity to see
Evidently, since we have not yet seen the .
top amateur ski jumping right in
1982-83
Reynard, the staff was unable to do ·
your own back yard in Salisbury,
this.
Connecticut, on February 4 and
Is this a demonstration
of the kind of
5.
professionals Marist is sending out into the
working world? This type of incident should
not have ever happened, and someone had
·
better make sure that it never
does again.
In
·
high school, this type of conduct for
a
staff
to display would be unheard of.
It's even
worse when it happens on the college level.
Not only is this scandal a reflection on
the staff, but it's also an embarassment for
the entire college.
The Circle staff finds itself faced with a
deadline almost every week, and· always
manages to have the paper on campus on
Thursdays, whether there are problems or
not. The yearbook staff publishes
one
book
per year, and it couldn't succeed.
There's only one last thing to say: it better
be worth the wait.
·
This will be the 58th year of the·
·
running of the ski jump competi-
tions, with the Salisbury Invita-
tionals on Saturday, February 4,
and the United States Eastern Ski
Jump Championships on Sunday,
February 5. The Salisbury Winter
Sports Association is quite proud
of the fact that the United States
.
Ski Association has designated
.
the John Satre Hill in Salisbury as
the site for running the U.S.
Eastern Championships.
Some fifty jumpers are· ex-
pected to compete on the newly-
• renovated ju_mp hill in what has
·
become one of the best ski jump-
·
this year a new hill record will be
established, breaking the 217-foot
record jump made by
.
Walter,
Malmquistin 1977.
·
Admission charge:
·
.
$5

for
.
adults and $1 for children each
day. Adults wishing to see the.
·
jump both days may buy a two;,
day ticket for $7 50; there is no
discount for the children's tickets.
·
The
Snowball Dance
is planned
for Saturday night, February 4, at
the White Hart Inn. Dancing
wiU
·
begin at 8:30 p.m., with music
provided by Larry Stone's -Band
"The Night-Riders," and the cos~
is a modest $5 per person .
Everyone is invited to attend
and meet the jumpers and enjoy
a
.
pleasant evening
of camraderie
and dancing.
See you there!
Salisbury Winter
Sports Association
Editor
Christine Dempsey
.
Photography Editor
Jeff Kiely
Calendar Editors
The
Circle
Associate Editors
Sports Editor
Senior Reporters
Cindy Bennedum
Mark Stuart
John·Bakke
EUeen Hayes
Jane Scarchilli
FrankRaggo
Photographers
Margo Kucich
Keith Brennan
Hans Schweiger
Joseph Cruz
Cartoonist
Christopher Serafini
Cathy Houlihan
.
Peggy Hasson
Business Manager
.
Jeannie Ostrowski
Advertising Manager
Sean Kenny
Circulation Manager
Cathy McGarity
Faculty Advisor
David McGraw










(
--.;
· February
2,-1984 •
THE CIRCLE·
Page 5
Announcing a new
Circle feature ...
Beginning next week, this page will
serve as a forum for essays by students,
staff and faculty. The Circle invites all
readers to co·ntribute essays on politics,
the arts, education,. world affairs and

other areas of concern.
' Contributions should be 500 to 700
• words. lnclu_de name, address and. phone
number with essay.
Send essays to Richard Copp.




























Reel
.
.
Page
6-THE CIRCL.E~-
February
2, 1984
------•----•------------~---.-!'...■.~-~--
- by
Tom Fisher
c_ruises along at a satisfying pace. · daughter's wedding.
progressively
-
changes ' from a
_ The things that don't work are
."Sudden-- Impact" is
a
movie
humble nerd with one friend to a
''Scarface;"
a remake· of the - when DePalma tries to hint at the
that caters to the audience that
self-confident
- stud · with - a
1932 Howard Hawks' classic, is · original version (the "World i~ pays to see it, anct' nothing m~re.
rebellious nature. · Arnie tran-
1mpress1ons
certainly _ not as good as the __
Yours"
motif and. Scarface's
This is the first Dirty Harry film
sforms his car from ·a decrepit ·
original, out. its entertainment
overpro_tective,
inc_estuous-
that Eastwood directed himself.
rust~bucket to a classic beauty.
level _ is - highly
-
explosive.· -Al
devotion towards his sister seem · As is usual with ·his style, the film
The car possesses Arnie, until he ·
Pacino is a power-hungry Cuban
to have been thrown in only for
is a tight work, devoid of useless
is overwhelmed by it and loves it
refugee from under the Castro _ effect
and
are
not
fully
scenes, and sticks only to -.yhat is
more than his ·parents,friends or
regime, who falls prey to dirty
developed). "Scarface"
is pure
necessary to make the story work.
his new girlfriend, Leigh.
'Scarface'
.and more
dealings once he arrives in Miami.
escapism, as are the next two
If
you
can
live with
the
Anyone who does anytliing
Paci no has given better per-.
films I am reviewing this week.
overabundance
of . helicopter
against "Christine or Arnie is soon
formances, and probably would
shots, Eastwood's direction is
faced with the fury of Christine's
have had better luck with the role _
Sudden Impact
satisfactory.
vengeance. Jealous· of Leigh,
-if-
they hadn't
changed_ the
Dirty
Harry
is
rapidly
Eastwood's
last
film,
Christinetries'tosuffocateherat
character from Italian to Cuban.
becoming one of those characters
"Honkytonk.
Mari,"
was a
· the drive-in while Arnie is out of
Thursday
Lecture
Sassy
songs
"Human Rights:
·The Baby Jane
DoeCase" ·
Dr. Thomas
ff.
Murray, (Associate
for Social and
Behavioral Studies -
Hastings Center)
D243 Ua.m.
Men's
Basketball: ·
vs. Fairleigh
Dickinson
8p.m.
!'
We all know he's had more ex-
that people expect to hear from
personal effort and a box office
the car-. Later, a bunch of bullies
perience
playing
Sicilian
every couple of years or so, like
flop.
"Sudden
Impact"
has
from school wreck the car, only
gangsters. So in this film;Pacino
James Bond, Rocky Balboa and
becoine the top-grossing Dirty
to be chased dow·n one by one by
creates his character by stuttering
Superman. His methods are a bit
Harry film to date and has - the angry Plymouth. -
- his English and. using the "F"
questionable, his ideas somewhat · restored Eastwood to the number
Director
John
Carpenter
·
word wherever possible.
individualistic,
·_·but
Harry
one position as a leading box-
("Halloween,''•.
"Escape
From
Director
Brian
DePalma
Callahan has become one of
office attraction._ A couple of
New
York,"
"The
Thing")
succeeds in giving the film a rich .·filmdom's
most beloved folk
times in the film, Clint challenges
creates an old-fashioned suspence
· look. The · plush settings are
heroes.
. punks to "Go ahead, make my
drama that· does not depend on
beautiful to look at, both before
- For those of you who don't
day." Well, "Sudden Impact".
gallons of blood for effect. The
Friday_
Film:
and after the blood is splattered_. know, Harry is portrayed by Clint
was just what I expected,· and it
special effects are quite good
across _the screen. The_ film's
Eastwood. In "Sudden Impact,"
made mine.
(Christine
rejuvenates
herself,
carnage is not excessive in oc-. his fourth outing, Harry mµst
self-repairing any 4amage - she ·
currence,
but
what
is there
find a vigilante (Sondra Locke)
Christine
suffers - along the way). The
delivers a fatal shock to the nerve
who is systematically slaying
Arnie
Cunningham
(Keith
soundtrack features a well-chosen ·
endings._
The
now-famous
members of a group who raped
Gordon) has a new girlfriend. But
selection of fifties'. tunes, with
chainsaw_ sequence
is almost
her and her sister years ago.
she's not your standard blond,
some original synthesizer music
guaranteed to leave your stomach
Along the way, Harry has his · brunette, or redhead. "Christine"
_by Carpenter.
tied in square knots.
usual run-ins with other assorted
is Arnie's
new car, a 1958
As a movie, "Christine" is in
"Scarface" is not a perfect film
vermin, taking out five potential - Plymouth Fury with a jealous
no way a lemon and is.my favorite
and is more like an epic comic-
crooks in a cafe single-handedly,
disposition that would outshine
Steven King-inspired film to date.
book fantasy than anything else.
and later verbally coercing a
that of the average girlfriend.
This is a used car that is worth
But the movie has. a lot of spunk,
homicidal mobster to a heart
"It
seems ·nobody likes my car
investing in, so watch what you
and the close to three-hour length
attack in. the middle_ of his _ these days," mutters Arnie, who
say about her.
'
by Bill Coleman .
new dimensions not discovered on
"Touch".. is one of those· !p's
the band's first
·u.s.
release, · that one can listen to a number of
Wekome·back! Before you buy
"Sweet Dreams (Are Made of
times and find something'new not
another Ip, the latest releases This)." (Their first Ip is titled "In
noticed
before
each
time.
from
Eurythmics
and
The
the Garden" and is available as a
Eurythmics are nominated
for
a
Pretenders should be immediate
U.K.
import only).
Grammy this year as "Best"New
adds
to
any
music-lover's
Ms. Lennox's vocals are ac-
Artist" but will probably lose out
collection. 1984 promised to be a
,
cented by· the often overlooked
to the overwhelming popularity
good year musically, and if -!p's · instrumental wizardry -of Dave
of co-nominees, Culture Club.
such as the following continue.to
Stewart, who also doubles as· But . since "Touch"
is more
grace our turntables, I'll be more
producer. Stewart and Lennox co-
polished and moving
than their ·
than happy to attest to· the
wrote and arranged all of the lp's
.last outing, I'll keep my fing~rs
statement.
. material, which -ranges· from the
crossed until '85.
"Touch" from Eurythmics has
ballad-like auras of -"Who's That
The long~awaited Ip from The
been available as ah import for
Girl?'.' and -"Her·e Comes. the· Pretenders,
- "Learning
- to-
some two months now :but:has.
Rain'Agai1_1_"
(the current sirigle)
CrawI;'
1
is·
also one of those
just recently,been release9 her~ in
to the instrumental and' vocal
albums that establishes itself after
the U.S. ''Touch" does just ~hat- - hooks __
of_ "Cool
Blue" 'and
- the first listen. lt,has been two
the title implies: Each:of the s_ongs "Aqua" to the Caribbean_ fl~vor
years since The Pretenders' ''I"
reaches and grasps an abundance
of "Right By Your Side."

; album was released.
As most fans -
of emotion and passion backed by
"Touch"
is what
I call
know,
the
group's
past.
some beautiful
and haunting
-progressive
and
exl)erimental
productions were halted _by the
rhythms.
Please do not ·me
music to be savored in· style~ deaths of bassist Pete Faendon
Eurythmics with many _ of the '. production andexecution. Credit
and guitarist/keyboardist
James
other synth-pop grqups in the
must also be given to Eurythmics'
I:-Ioneyman-Scott, along with the .
market, as this Ip displays talent.
bassist Dean Garcia (he enjoys · pregnancy
of
. lead
Lead_ vocalist Annie Lennqx, some good riff~ of "Cool Blue,"
vocalist/guitarist/songwriter,
best known for her cropped red '. and "Paint a Rumor'') and string · Ch_ryssie Hynde. As expected,
hair
and_- charismatic
video
arranger/conductor
Michael
most of the lp's underlying
performances, "takes her voice
to
-Kayman.
·
themes deal with these topics ..
Bardavon.
its selection of humorous and
The Bardavon in Poughkeepsie-
touching songs from the 850-tune-
presents"Some Like it Gole, The 'catalog of Mr. Porter .. -
·
Sassy Songs of Cole Porter,"
- Ticket information is available
;Satur?ay at~ J?,m.
.
- through the Bardavon Box office
T~1s
cnt1cal_ly
acclaimed·
at 473-2072. Reserved seating:
mu;,1cal revue, direct -from New $10, $12", and $14. Students half
York, , features
the Woolley
price'
·
·
Sisters, a fictional 1940s-styled
·
singing .trio. These three funny -
Mid.;Hudson G ands
and sexy ladies -sing a unique-
collection of Porter- favorites and
Society
.
The Hudson Valley Gilbert and
rare and unpublished songs.
Sullivan Society, now in its sixth
Called "the best of Cole Porter
season of bringing quality theatre
Revues" by the New York Po st, productions
to
the
greater
"Some Like
It Cole" is·unique in Hudson valley, will present the.
Jerome Kern-Oscar Hammerstein
musical
"Showboat"
" as its
second production ofthe 1983-84
season.
This well-known musical will
be directed by Rose Mastrovito
Navara and Margaret Clapp,
both of Poughkeepsie.
Auditions for "Showboat" will
be Friday, at the Old Main
Auditorium, SUNY, New Paltz,
and
Sunday
at
the
First
Presbyterian · Church,
Cannon
Street, Poughkeepsie. Both calls
will be at 7:30 p.m.
Call backs for actors and
Last year a pre-"Learning
to
. Crawl" single, "Back _ On The
Chain Gang b/w My City Was -
Gone," was released to satisfy
and remind _the many fans that
Ms. Hynde and remaining band
member,
drummer.
Martin
Chambers, would still carry on.
So .here · it is, ·the new Ip
featuring new recruits, guitarist
Robbie McIntosh
and bassist
Malcolm Foster, and eight new
tracks besides the previous single.
"Learning to Crawl" picks up
where "I" should have left _off.
Falling·-
into
·
t_he . __
popular -
sophomore
jinx
following
· a
~
successful debut Ip,
-"II"
had its
moments but did not ·seem .to
carry - ( on . some, n.ot all of the -
tracks) the sharpness and blatant
humor that encompassed the first -
album.
' . "Learning" manages to retain
the "impact" but also blends the
band's
talent - into
a com-
prehensible Ip· wi~h a purpose.
Cuts such as "Watching The
Clothes,"
the
recent . single;
continued on page
7
dancers being considered· will be
on
Wednesday at the Old Main·
Auditorium, SUNY New Paltz,
also at 7:30.
·
_ Dates ot the production
will
be
June 1 through 3 at the Bardavon
in Poughkeepsie and June
8
and 9
in Kingston.
_
All interested persons· should
. come to auditions for · a con-
sultation· or auditionwith the two
· directors. Anyone wishingfurthei
information· should
call
462-1721
or 255-8111.
·
- Cathy Houlihan
and Peggy Hasson
"Shampoo"
Admission SI
with Marist J.D.
Theatre 7:30 p.m.
Saturday
Women's
Basketball:
vs.Wagner
5:30p~m.
Sunday
Mass:
Chapel
lla.m.
Monday
Meeting:
Fashion Club
C248 9:30 p.m.
Tuesday
Coffeehouse
Fred Schmidt
Mixer:
Cheerleaders •
Dining Hall
9p.m.
Mass:
Chapel -
· 6:16p.m.
Men's
Basketball:
vs. Wagner
Sp.m.
Film:
"Shampoo"
Admission SI
with Marlst J.D.
Theater 7 p.m.
and-9:30 p.m.-
Meeting:
ClrdeX
CC248 7:30 p.m. ,
WMCR
Fireside












































































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·
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Developmental
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sell
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Cou'ld.- ypu
_Hudson_
B,:idge
the
Mid-
s_omeone?-
H,ow about
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detergent or real estate?
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INTERVIEW TRAINING:
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Info In.
CDC,
Donnelly
Modular Ext. 547
I
F.ebru11-,,_2,
1984 · THE CIRCLE· Page
1--•
'Family Ties' deserves support
by
Richard
Copp
Steven
and
Elyse
Keaton
(Michael Gross and Meredith
Baxter~Birney) live in· Ohio with
their
three
children,
Alex
(Michael J. Fox), 18; Mallory
(Justine
Bateman), · 16; and
Jennifer (Tina Yothers), 1
L
He
works . at a public
·
television
station; she·in real estate. Sounds
simple enough.
But "Family
Ties" far exceeds in quality over
other
simple-minded
family
sitcoms
.
such as "Gimme
a
Break" and "Mama's Family."
Leftover flower children Steven
and
Elyse
have
somehow
managed to raise three extremely
conservative children in what
seems to be a hilarious flip
version of the generation gap.
Alex keeps stock market prices in
his
wallet
and
pictures
of
prominent businessmen over his
bed; Mallory craves lip-glo·ss and
phone calls; and Jennifer sees
herself as well-rounded by playing
baseball and taking ballet. The
characters are fresh and funny,
·
~nd now in its second season, the
show does not seem to be running
out of iaeas ..
In perhaps one of the best
episodes to date, Alex needs to be
"flawlessly prepared"
for up-
coming_ final exams that could·
determine his chances of ac-
ceptance into an Ivy League
college. To ready himself, he
begins popping diet pills, but his
endless energy - which he chalks
up as
his "natural
boyish
exuberance" - finally brings him
down. This show was hilarious
throughout and made its point
quietly without preaching.
Although most episodeds tend
to focus on the kids (especially
Alex),
Michael
Gross
and
Meredith Baxter-Birney, two fine
actors, have their moments, too.
As
a
long-time fan of Baxter-
Birney, I love to watch her timing
and delivery, which enhanced a
recent episode dealing with the
separation of Elyse's parents.
Unable to accept the fact her
mother was dating, Elyse became
a nervous wreck, losing complete
control,
.
throwing around wild
accusations and driving her whole
family crazy. Any lesser actress
may have carried the part too far
and lost all sense of credibility,
but Baxter-Birney carried it off
brilliantly.
"Family Ties" is not overly
sentimental mush.
It does not
remind one of the sugary sweet
family sitcoms of the past like
"The Brady
·eunch"
or "The
Partridge_ Family." Instead it, is
bright,
witty, with fine per-
formances and decent scripts.
Although not quite in the class of
"M*A*S•H"
or ·"Cheers,"
"Family Ties" is a wonderful
show compared to many.
Although, at times, "Family
Ties" falls into the middle of the
ratings heap, let's hope NBC
recognizes this little gem
-
and
keeps it around for a while. I say
yes to "Family Ties."
Sound--------------
continued from
page
6
having a good time in the studio
"Middle of the Road," and a
-
"Now the reason they're
favorite of mine, "Time the
here ... "
Avenger," show that the band is
•For those who have extra$$$$
definitely working·
--
in synch to
·
to spend, the current 12" single of
_
create music with both a message
"Here Comes the Rain Again"
and a beat. As the lyrics to "Time
includes an excellent live version
the Avenger" suggest...
of "This City-Never Sleeps" from
"Nobody's perfect, not ~ven a
the "Sweet Dreams" Ip. The
perfect stranger ...
-
-
import of The Pretenders' "2,000
Nobody's
permanent,
Miles" single includes a live
everything's on Joan here,
version of. the song "Money"
Even y9ur wife and kids co11ld performed at the US Festival.
begone n¢xt
ye,ir.'::
·-
·-
,.,..
' '
·
Over the intersession, I had the
Can you hear th'e whistle blow,
pleasure of seeing The Motels at
it sounds like
the Mid-Hudson
.Civic
Center.
,
Time the avenger ... "
Despite the bad sound quality of
which sounds like an awareness of
most concerts performed at the
the band to death and life's many
C.C., the concert was very en-
faults in general.
.
·joyable. The Motels perfor01ed a
From those upbeat cuts,- the
few
of the lesser-known tunes
band slips into the "countrified"
from their first two lps, "The
sound of "Thumbelina," a cover
Motels"
'
and
"Careful,"
· in-
of the
R&B
classic ballad, "Thin
eluding
"Kix,"
"To·tal Control,"
Line· Between Love and Hate,"
"Celia" and" Danger." But the
and ihe powerful slow rocker, "I
most response was extracted from
Hurt You."
the audience by those tunes
"Learning to Crawl" is a great
featured on their last two lp's,
Ip that will certainly please the dry
"All Four One" and the current,
"aural~' palate of the Pret~nders'
"Little Robbers."
many fans. Chryssie, Martin and
The· stage was designed as a
the two new members have kept
golden road angling upward just
up to their original style of rock
like the cover of "Little Rob-
-
while managing to incorporate a
bers," with each musician in full
-somewhat melodic overtone to
view of the audience. The show
many of the tracks. Each of the
began in
_total
darkness while the
songs sound as if the band were
P.A. blared the theme from
"Mission Impossible" and then
the band began the I
½
hour set
with "Mission of Mercy."
I must say that I was quite
impressed with the band as a
whole,
_
because the members
seemed to perform
for
the
audience (whose consensus was
that this was a good show). The
band included: Marty Gourard
(keyboards,
sax);
Michael
Goodroe (bass); Brian Glascock
(percussion); Guy -Perry (guitar};
Scott Thurston (keyboards, sax);
Craig Krampf (drums); and the
golden-throated Martha Davis,
who also played some licks on the
guitar.
_
The audience enjoyed. Martha
Davis and became most involved
in the classic numbers, "Only the
Lonely,''
''Take
the
L,''
"Suddenly Last Summer," and
the current single, "Remember
the Nights."
Covers of
the
"beach
party
bass
line" of·
"·Ti;-agic Surf" and the Carribean
rhythms of "Apocalypso"
had
our whole row itching to get out
of our seats.
·
·
Overall, The Motels put on a
good show and the audience
enjoyed them very much. The
band returned for two encores,
which concluded an · enjoyable
concert.
Alcohol------------
continued from
page 3
anywhere else.
Mark said he and a
·group_
of
.others
started the Mental Health
Center because they felt there was
a· definite need to provide help to
people with drug addictions.
·
He said he also feels that the
teen · drinking problems come·
from the family and friends and is
amplified by the media and its
advertising of alcohol. "We are
told that we are a man if we drink
because drinkjng has· a macho im-
age," he said.
Mark pointed out that the best
way to prevent teen drinking pro-
blems is to provide a better
understanding of what alcohol
can do to the body when it is
misused.
·
For this reason he said he
started
A.D.A.P.T., Action Drug
Abuse
Prevention
Training,
which is an organization that goes
to area
-
schools to inform
--
the
students of the possible dangers
of alcohol and other drugs.
·
·
Mark noted that it can be dif-
ficult to get young people
.
to
believe that the future dangers of
alcohol truly exist. "The young
future. It is usually when you're
40 and over that you believe that
troubles can exist," he said.
Sullivan, Kavner and Mark
agree that education is the best
way to prevent teenage drinking
·
from becoming a problem.
Sullivan
pointed
out
that
children of alcoholics need special
attention in an alcohol education
program.
He also said that people should
be cautious about getting others
to drink. "An appeal had to be
made to the young people who
create the impression that you
need to drink to have a good
·
time,'' he said.
, Schratz questions the effec-
tiveness of educating only the
young. "I think we have to
educate the whole population. We
must address the programming
that glorifies drinking as a way to
solve our problems,'' she said.
Schratz said
·that
the only way
to reduce the teen drinking pro-
blems is to change the attitude of
society. She said she thinks that
the current public emphasis on
physical health and the awareness
change.
According
to
Schratz,
the
drinking age should be raised
even though it will not completely
stop teenagers· from drinking. "If
you want to drink you will find a
way to do it, but it might deter
certai_n groups from drinking un-
til they are older, when they can
better handle the alcohol," she
said.
Once a person has a drinking
problem, it is difficult to cure,
Schratz noted. "Statistics show a
success rate of only 30 percent for
alcoholics who really beat their
problem.
The
person
will
cooperate at first, but start drink-
ing again after they begin to feel
better," she said.
Sullivan said there is no short
and simple way to cure a drinking
problem.
"If
you ever go to an
Alcoholics Anonymous meeting,
you will hear the people say t_hey
are recovering alcoholics because
it takes an entire lifetime to
recover," he said.
.. -------------------------•
don't believe that there is a
.
of the problems with drunk driv-
ing could bring about the societal
·
Sullivan stressed that the only
way to cure a drinking problem is
to
stop drinking and never start
again .
""'!


























































































































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....
~
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·:
I-:'•.
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. I
:t
f
··'Life
-UP
north
DAS BAR accepts ali" sorts, all
It's
.
not too
·early
to plan for
kinds,
etc.
Open
late
on
spring break! We have
·
many
weekends.
·
·
.
affordable ideas for your travel
by G. Walsh
·
who even though the names
andJ. Fahey
change door to door, live in every
single
·townhouse.
For mercy's.
the silk blouse she lent you for the
semi-formal was drip-drying on a
wire hanger!! Her. parents were
extremely generous to the house
and donated the bar, television·
and living room
rug
·
-:--
all of
which are now in her room, until
the savages she Jives with learn to
treat them properly.
Hey Chris,
plans. Free campus delivery/free
Was it bodyheat that set the alarm
passport photos with purchase.
Remember how the slow, warm
sake, we'll call them Felix Unger,
summer· days of your childhood
.
Oscar Madison, Mommie Dearest
used to bring you and the rest of
and Party Animal:
off the other night?
Call Encore Travel, 485-5800, 24 ·
hours a day.
the kids on the block together to
·
We all know Felix. He (or. she)
sit in the heat on Mrs. Clemons'
·
is the one who bawls at the_ sight
(the
-neighborhood
nice old lady)
of fuzz bunnies in the corners of
stoop and wait for the Good
the linoleum floors
·
and eats
Humor man?
spaghetti in rows of 10 instead of
For all those who helped out at
the C.U.B. mixer -
THANK
YOlJ!
Eileen and Jane
P .S. Special thanks to the cleanup
crew: Jim B., Paul N., Timmy
D., Tim C., Katie B., Peter
R.,
Andie G., and anyone else we
might have missed!
Clifford -
Do up the Dude! Love
- The Dudettes
Paul
·
-
I heard Zodiac's was
"thumbs up!"
The girls from
Joes.
You
.
used to chat about how
uncounted· piles. Felix never has
things would be when you grew
quarters
·
for laundry;
he uses
up. You would have_ your own
them aU to bounce off his freshly
Good Humor truck, at least
10
made bed.
·
.
Party Animal :- need we say
more? She can't understand why
·
you weren't cordial to the njce
·
townies she brought home at four
.
Watch out Marist, Fun Hole
Jimmy -
Cliff and I will always·
Blues is on the way!!!
love you, even if oells ring.
, ·
- ·
puppies (whom you would never
Oscar Madison,
·
by tradition,
have to feed or walk; Mom would
lives with Felix. They satisfy
come over and do that), and you
Security's
monthly
attempted-
would all live in the same house.
murder list .. Oscar's excuse for
Nothing could be happier.
keeping his o·r her clothes on the
· ·
Saturday morning for you to meet
-:- the one she had her arm
around.was called Mad Dog and
drove
.
a Harley. Party Animal
likes Jack Daniels on her Crispy
Crunchies in the mprning,
or
afternoon,·
or
Wednesday,
Yes, Fosterface, raisins really do
come from the sun. Bob, sup?
Love, Liz
--'--------'----'
Sue, Let it snow! Let it snow!! Let
it snow!!!
·
Yourroomie
K.M.,
Give me back the scissors!!
.
-Renee Noel
The Cocktail Waitress
Rick, "WE SMELL CASH!!!!!"
How'd it get in the skivvies,
though?? Love, The 1st floor.
Sheahan
Now you have had the chance
floor is the lack of closet space.
· to live out that dream in .the
He'll swear there i~n•t a fungus
townhouses
-
and
you've
pile on his desk -
its a tunafish
realized that you were probably
sandwich he's been saving for a
suffering
from
heatstroke.
friend. This friend transferred
Perhaps they should have named
freshman year.
them
Habitrails
instead
of
Mommie Dearest (or Daddy
Ray, How's your male nurse
.at
townhouses.
Dearest) runs the household -
the hospital? Now we're all out to
.
Maybe, just maybe, it is just
not by the
·
fair election of- the
do Community Service.
one teenie problem disrupting
housemembers, but by her temper-
The 1st Floor your fantasy. Maybe, just maybe,
·
that no one is willing to challenge.
.
whichever comes. first. She iried
to make
_up
for her behavior by
bringing back a present from
home. So what if she stole the·
.
pool table?
·
Whatever
the
situation,
Sheahan Guys it is your nine other housemates.
She is the one who woke you at
3
townhouse life may not be the tree
house life you envisioned as

a
child, but it will provide soine
great collegiate memories, as well
as

some
truly
incredible
characters for a novel.
B-5,
We're alive and back, minus
Or maybe its just four people,
a.m. appearing demonic, because
1: but a new recruit. Let's keep up
r-------------------•----~.,;.
_________________
.;..
_____
.;...
___
_
our name.
Lindy,
Let's make this semester the best.
I'll
miss you this summer. Our
Paris.
Me
To: Valerie, Maureen, Jeannie,
Jeanne,·
Conriie,
Maria,
Christina, Lisa and everyone else,
Thanks
for making my 20th
birthday so special! I love you's!
Love, Janet
·
To Mario Andretti,
Thanx-for
the. ride from Joe~s.
l''m
glad we made it home alive.
Speaking about being alive -
·
have you recovered from your
Saturday night "trip?"
Red-
We wanted
.
the pasta;
-
thanks.
From Tfte Deal
+
1
Sr. Eileen- We thought
your
calling was spelled n-u-n, not n-o-
n-e (as in how many letters· have
you written us?). We're waiting!!
-
The OUIE's, Paris chapter
Yo, Tim- Score me some goals,
OK? Remember, Big Sister is
watching you!
is
IT TRUE
THAT
RICK
O'DONNELL IS DEAD? IF SO,
PLEASE
SPRINKLE
HIS
ASHES OVhR PARIS.
Janice, Next time you're in town,
drop in for somechips and potato
dip. Bland goes without saying.
Three French Hens
Janice,
Your sister called;
there's
a
bumper crop in Idaho!
Walsh
Bruce,· Remember
the Maine
{Potato, that is!)
·
Ryann
To ali my Yiddish friends abroad-
So, how are you ... anyway?
·
Ryann
To my friends at Marist,
Miss you all a lot! Beware,
September approaches!_
Love, Ryann
Welcome Back Marist! Call for
the Feb. Encore Travel News.
Look- for our monthly "Salute-
the-State"
contest. Win a trip,
posters or state products. Encore
Travel, 316 Main Mall,
48S-5800,
24 hours a day..
·
To my favorite rug beater,
Have a wonderful
time this
weekend and don't do anything I
wouldn't.
Love, Annie M.
89usch
&
Lomb
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New-purchases only • Limit one p~ir per ~ustomer· •_ Cannot be used in conjunction with other discounts or. special~
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This
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On
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I
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first
pair)
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of co~:::.
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~--=--~-,.-------------------~----------------------
New Residence Director Carole Graney.
---------~~----Ff!bruary
2,
1984-THE CIRCLE-
Page.9 --•
Marist ·students aid
Appalachian families
by Tim Graham
Eighteen Marist · students spent
one week of their Christmas
vacation assisting. the poor in
·Appalachia.
The students sp~nt the week at
Nazareth
Farm,
a Christian
mission in Center Point, W. Va.;
· caring for elderly and mentally
handicapped families who were
unable to care for themselves.
possible. These families do not
know any other way of life, but
when you see the way they live it
makes you appreciate your life a
lot more."
The families live in a poverty-
siricken area in the mountains of
West v·irginia. They lead very
simple lives due to their low
incomes.
North: end gets new director
The students started the day at
7 a.m. with a quick cereal
breakfast. From 8 a.m. to 3:30
p.m.
they worked
at
their
assigned jobs.
Some students
worked in the farm kitchen
preparing the meals, while others
went· to the families' houses to
clean and fix things, or whatever
they could find to do. At the end
of the day everyone would go to
afternoon Mass. Dinner would be·
served around
5
p.m.
"The families' incomes are
basically the disability checks they
receive from the state. They were
on
welfare
but
President
Reagan's cutbacks took that away
from them," Sr. Eileen said.
"The government systems do not
support or provide the way they
should."
by Michael Lowen
' Being the only woman living
with 32 men may be a dream ·to
some women. To Carole Graney
it is only part of her job.·
· Graney is the new residence
director of the north end · of
campus.
She replaces
Barry
Jamison;·who left in December to
pursue other interests:
·
Graney is a Hyde Park resident
who recently graduated
from
_Houses, Canterbury and Man-
chester apartments, Benoit and
Gregory
Houses,
and
the
Townhouses.
In reference to
problems that· she faces _she said,
"There is nothing I can't deal
with." Graney said she wants to
unite the campus more than it has
been in the past.
Graney also said she wants to
set up. a series of resume and
interview workshops
for
the
students,
and
to send . out
questionnaires
to· north-. end ·
residents, giving them a chance"to.
get involved.
Graney worked. on· the Oswego
Dorm Council for three years and
was the head orientation guide in
her senior year.
herself. "Things come up on this
job,•Graney said.«People call at
all hours."
Graney said she hopes to work·
with Betty Yeaglin to arrange
· parties for north end residents
and said that "as long as policy is
followed
there
will be no
problems."
· A problem
last
semester occurred when students
younger than the drinking age
attended parties. "The drinking
age is the law and Marist must
stick to it," said Graney.·
"After
a long, hard
day
everyone is exhausted,"
said
"It
was a very sobering ex-
perience," said Paul Raynis, a
sophomore from Rockaway, N.J.
"I expected it to be a bad
situation, but being a part of it
makes you realize just how good
your own life is."
Richard Greer, a freshman from
"I would definitely do it again
Nanuet,
N. Y.,
who
helped
if I had the chance," said Ray
organize the trip.
"We
en-
Burns, a junior from Huntington,
tertained ourselves in the evenings L.I.
"It
was a wonderful ex-
by sitting around the fireplace,
perience."
talking and singing. We had to
"I would like to do this every
entertain ourselves because there
was nothing to do in town."
year, but fund raising
will
be a
. problem. This trip was sponsored
. Oswego State College. She. came
to Marist in the summer of 1983
·
as · a replacement
to •. Kelsey
Marcheska,- a secretary in the
housing
office,. , who
was
pregnant .. : She .··
worked
as a
secretary under Robert Heywood,
director of · housing, scheduling
rooms ..
Graney likes Marist and said
that her adjustment has been an
easy one. "Oswego was a large
school, spread out and distant. At
Marist everybody knows everyone
else; it's easier to meet people,"
She was aided by Jim Raimo,
she said. ·
According to Sister Eileen · by
the
Friends
of
Marist
Halloran,
assistant
campus
program,"
Sr. Eileen said. "I
minister,
"It
was a positive ..
ex- . would also like to start this type
perience.
We learned
about ,· of program in the Poughkeepsie
others, but we also learned a great · area, program that would consist
deal about ourselves."
·.
:· of student volunteers visiting the
"It
was a worthwhile ex-
elderly, hospital volunteers, and
perience, you get a lot out of it"
several other similar activities."
said Greer.
Q.raney majored in accounting
'. in 'college but· likes her new job
because she gets to deal with
people,. and it allows her to do
!'different"
things which
an
former residence director of the ·
Graney plans on staying for a
freshman dormitories. "Jim was
while, she noted that Jamison's
a
big help in training me, and he -departure in mid-semester had an
introduced me to lots of people,"
unsettling effect on the north end.
she said.
. .
. .
. ;_
·

"It .·
wilL:
be . good ,-for> ,the
Graney's. · office ·
)s . ..
neatly . ,tudents to. have :someone. per-
arranged
-\vifif'
'.6oth"""Jamison's"'''-tiii"nent:
{'if"
ltke
ft'tf'~aa&"'·som'e
· Greer has been on several
. similartrips and said, "Each trip
has always been an exciting ·ex-
perience, you learn more about
yourself than you thought was
;; "eight-five job" could not offer.
·
Residence director, Graney is in
charge
of
the North
Road
files and a new set organized by
:onsistency," said Graney;
TONIGHT
Rare F«>,otage
of the Beatles/Full Concert Sound
F~bruary:
3_rd &4th
5th
6th .
7th&8th
9th
10th
11th
15th
16th
18th
19th
22nd
24th
25th
Jqe Piscopol/2 shows each night,
·9&1i:30
-Maqc"Br_others Video Festival
.. Video: To.nimy .
,Shanana/8:00 · show
Video:. Beatles
The Roches
NRBQ
·. Grand Master Flash/2 shows, 8
&
10:30.
Rat Race Choir
~
Blotto
Three Dog Night
· Girls School
Phoebe Snow
Spyro Gyra
For concert information and chances
to
win free tickets to sh·
ows at The Chance, listen to WMCR every day. JfMCR
where the Red Fox Rocks!
We accept·Visa, Mastercard &
American
Express. You can
charge tickets for any show by phone. For information & din-
ner reserva,tions call 473-7996. .
·
·
·
Your ~rganization can rem TheCi,ance}oraparty·orspecial
occasion. Call for details.
'.3 ·
You can obtain a calendar, just send a self-addressed stamped
envelope t~ The Chance.
........
------------------
....
Stanley
·a:
Kaplan
TheSlllart
•MO·--•;~,
. .
'VE;; ■
PREPARATION FOR:
·GMAT • LSAT •
.GRE-·
_.·-~~~.-H.
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KAPLAN
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CENTERLTO. ·
Classes
forming now. For_
more
information call,
914-948-7801
10· Mitchell ·p1ace
White Plains, N.Y.
MCR makes
new changes
in '84
staff
by
Cammie Steffich
The Advertising Director and
Business Manager of
WMCR
have resigned, causing various
changes in the management staff.
"I made a large commitment to
Campus Ministry and could not
fulfill
my
obligations
to
WMCR,"
said Mike Regan,
former
business inanager
of
WMCR
.
No replacements have been
found for the two open positions,
but
General
Manager
Bob
LaForty
has
appointed
sophomore
'Bill
Smith
as
assistant program director.
"The job of Program Director
is too hard for one person to do
properly," LaForty said.
After one semester as General
Manager, LaForty was planning
to resign due to the 9verload of
work that was being thrust upon
him. "Not many members of the
staff were willing to work hard,
which left the burden on me,"
LaForty said. However, after
careful consideration he decided
to stay on.
Program Director Bill Rand
said he feels the problem with the
management staff is a lack of
communication. "I find it very
ironic
that
we're
all com-
munication majors and no one is
communicating." Rand said.
Rand also said heis thinking of
resigning. "I'll see how things
work out and make my decision
in about two weeks," he said.
. LaForty said he is hoping this
semester will turn out better than
the last. "I'm looking forward to
the return of Paul Palmer and
Paul Murnane from their in-
ternships. '·-They'll • be student
advisors and management, which
will help with the work load," he
said.
........







































































•'\'
-~,;.:·
•r
·,
I
J
--·
,
Page
10 ·
THE.CIRCLE -February
2, 1984
Switil
teams
both a(/4-2r
·
divers' Streak
·now
iit(3.7
by
Michael
R.
Murphy
The Marist College men's swim
team extended its overall record
to 4-2 and remained undefeated in
the Metropolitan Swimming Con-
ference with a 68-31 victory over
Brooklyn College last Wednesday_
afternoon.
Freshman Chris Chudzinski led
the team with victories in the 200-
and S00~yard freestyle event and
anchored the winning 400 medley
relay. Also winning for Marist
were freshmen Fred Dever ( 1,000-
yard freestyle), Fabrice Cuadrado
(200-yard
backstroke),
Vinny
Olivetto (200-yard butterfly) and
sophomore
co-captain·
Pete
Asselin (50-yard freestyle).
Chudzinski,
Cuadrado
and
Olivetto have already set school
records for their evems this year.
Sophomore
co-captain
Dave
Luber extended Marist's streak of
dual-meet diving wins to 37.
Luber won the three-meter dive
with a 162.0 score and took the
one-meter dive with a score of
163.8.
Men's Swimming Coach Larry
Vanwagner · said that he was
pleased with the victory, but that
there is still a lot of work before
the team can achieve its main
goal. "We are looking to win the
Metropolitan
Swimming . Con-
ference
Championships
held
February
23, 24 and 25 at
Hofstra," he said.
Van Wagner said· the team is
working hard towards the cham-
pionships.
"We· brought ~back
everyone two weeks early over in-
tercession and . they were in the
pool four and a half hours a day,
six days a week,"
said Van-
Wagner.
The team was sixth in the con-
ference's _B. division champion-
ships two years ago with a
3-
7
record and third last year, ·going
5-4.
VanWagner said he thinks The
City College of New York is the
team's main competition for the
title. "It's
going
to be a tough
one, but
I
think we have a chance
at beating City College," said
Van Wagner.
Four more dual meets are on
'this ·year's schedule, culminating
with the metropolitan champion-
ships in- February. The team's
next
meet
is
Wednesday,
February 1 · 'against Ra~apo Col-.
lege at Maris!;
.
Meanwhile,·
the
first-year ·
·women's swim team finished its
dual~meet season with a 4-2
record after
a
65-.34 .victory, over
Brooklyn College on January 20,-
. Head Women's
Coach.· Jim.
Billesimo said he thinks the
women's program· has- been very
successful. '.'for a first year pro-
gram with no recruiting we haye
done quite well. We have 18 girls
on the team and the majority are
freshmen. .The
future
looks
good," he said.
The women's final competition
of the season is the Metropolitan
Swimming Conference
Cham-
pionships on Feb. · 3-5 at For-
dham.
Led by junior co-captains Mary
Marino · (freestyle
distances),
Maguerite
Brophy
(individual
medley and
backs1roke) and
rreshman Lisa Ferenczy (50-and
100-yard freestyle), the women_
hope to finish in the top five at the
championships.
"For the first year,
I
would be
happy if we placed in the top five,
give or take a place,"
said
Billesimo.
Search-----------------
continued from page 12
Joseph S. Bettencourt,. Jr.,
James E. Daly,
dean of ad-
"There
aren't
many
head
associate professor of biology.
missions.
. coaching jobs opening up
in
the
Donald Brown,
Poughkeepsie
·
John
J.
Griffin,
assistant
Northeast,"
McKiernan
said.
attorney,
Moran,
Spiegel,
"The Marist job is a hot item.,,
Palmer, Pergament
&
Brown;
professor of economics.
In
reviewing
applications,
Thomas Buggy,
Westchester
Thomas Meekins,
1984 co-
McKiernan said candidates won't
IBM and Red Fox Club member.
captain, Marist men's basketball
necessarily be required to have
Brendan
T.
Burke,
1968 team.
Division
One
head
coaching
president, Marist College Alumni
experience, · but
"should
be
Association, manager, personnel,
Jack
Newman,
president,
someone· who · has
exhibited
ABC, Inc.
Poughkeepsie Avis Drive'N Park.
proficiencyincoaching."
Janice,
Casey,
assistant·
''We'. are looking for someone
professor of English...
·Henry.
W · •
.
Pletcher,
"h·.·
·11 b b
h
h ·
d
G
d
c ·
d
i'·
f
-,d·
Poµgllkeepsi_t:> physician,
ob-
.w o
_w1.
, e. ot . a coac .. an , .
era-:_,
.. ·ox,.,
ean:.o .:..s~u ent-

.d
1
administratcll';' . and
who
will affairs. ,_:
stetncs an gyneco ogy.
represent the goals of Marist," -
·
McKiernan. said. "We also want
someone who could better our
record.''
TESTPREPARATION
·
SPECIALISTS
SINCE
1938
Filr
lnfonnaUoil
About
Olber
Pennaiient
Centers
.
In
Mare
lban 120
Major
US CIUes
&
Abroad . _:
. Poughkeepsie·
classes forming.
·now. Call
.•
9·14~948-7801
,for more .
information. · .
Outside NY State. Clll TOLL
FR££: 800•223-1712
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.

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Longer· hair or tinted hair may require additional charge. 1
1
I
49 Academy St., Pok
486-9883
CALL
OR
WALK-IN
I
Mon.-Thurs:
.10-6;
Fr1. & Sat. 9-6
·
.
:
·
I
~-----------------------·
The search
committee
will
make
a
recommendation
to
Murray, who will make the final ·
· decision on who the coach will be.
CAPUTO'S PIZZA
Gerard
Cox,
the deari of'
student affairs at · Marist, wa_s
unavailable for comment but did
tell
The Poughkeepsie Journal•
that the latest date for naming a.
new coach would be April 1 .
McKiernan said he hoped: a
final dedicion could be made by
mid-March, in order to give time
for the new coach to organize his
Tel. 473- 2500.,
recruiting plans.
·
The members of the search ·
committee are:
McKiernan,
·
committee
chairman
and
vice president,
director of the Energy Futures
Department of Drexel, Burnham,
Lambert, Inc. of New York City.
Robert
Dyson, ·
president, ·
,, WEOK
Broadcasting
· Cor-
poration.·
·
John Hanifin,
retired director
of patents ofIBM.
·
Financial
aid
notes
Applications are now available
for Army ROTC Two- and Three-
Year Scholarships.
These scholarships pay for tui-
tion and Jab fees, approximately
$150/semester
for
books
and
$100 month during the school·
year..
.
Students
who . have
not
previously taken ROTC are eligi-
ble for these scholarships.
For information and applica-
tions, contact Capt. Lance Luft-
man, Room 265 Campus Center,
ext. 528, any Monday, Wednes-
day or Friday.
Scholarship applications have
to be submitted no later than
March 14.
. Open Sl3ver1
C).ays
~~~--~-------~------~-~~~~~-~~~~~-----·
I
.
.
.
.
.
. .
. . , .. ··:. .
.
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...
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FREE
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TOPPING<
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on PIZZA PIE.
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Expires 2/8/84
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·---~------------------------------~--~
.
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•··•------•··•··
•··
•..-------al!l-----------~~-----
1111111
February 2, 1984 · TIIE CIRCLE ··.Page
11r
__
_
r
sPg_R_Ts,
Sti _RTS
BroW_o
1·e-ves·1e·am
Bill Brown, one of two walk~on players to earn a
spot on the men's basketball team, has decided not
to finish the ~·eason. Tim Murphy is now the only
non-scholarship player and has taken over Brown's
spot on_
the traveling roster.
,
·
.
Taylor
1.1th
.:
:
.
.
.

1n nation·
Ted · Taylor, · Marist's leading rebounder, was
ranked- 11th in the nation last week with an 11.6
rebounds per ·game average. Although his average
has since. dropped to 11.1, he was expected to
remain in the top 20 in this week's rankings. · ·
·
Track coach says
team can succeed
withoui scholarships
by J .R. Albinson
Lurie, whose personal track
record
includes
coaching ·at
As Marist basketball went Divi-
Manhattan
College, American
sion One, so did its track team.
University, Adelphi, and For-
But although Marist policy allows
dham, said he believes that runn-
for no track scholarships, Coach
ing without scholarship will not
Steve Lurie said he believes the
be a hinderance to the team's per-
. team will be able to run com-
formance.
petitively against the top schools
"Past coaches at Marist have
in the conference.
argued th.at the track team needs a
Lurie, who previously coached
scholarship program. I say,
'If
- · at schools that did grant athletic
you ·don't like the program, why
scholarships to their.runners, said.
did you sign the contract?! There
he is . finding coaching without
are some people who are upset
·scholarships much less stressful,
because rosebushes have ·thorns,
both for himself and his runners,
there are others who are ecstatic
"Say,
for
instance,
your
that thornbushes have roses. I
number three runner on a scholar-
look ·for the good, not the bad.
.• ship finds out he is getting $3,000
It's all in your perspective," he
· a year less than your number five
said.
runner. This type of situation is . . The firsi~year coach said he
going to create problems and con--
looks· forward
to·,
a - very good
··, flicts within the , team," Lurie
future for both the cross country
said.·
teams,. whose involvement he
Lurie said he too, is under less
plans to see rise from 15
to
about
stress as a coach. Coaches·.who . 45, and track,. where he .sees an
have .players on scholarship are
eventual membership of about 50
apt to be overly protec'tive, and · from the current 6-12. •
·
rightfully so, according to Lurie.
"Herb Elliott, possibly the best
"It may not be your money the
miler ever, said in his book, 'The
player is receiving, but that player
only limitations in the world are
is unaer your supervision, and it
the
limitations
you put
on
is your job to see that he lives up
yourself.'
I don't
believe in
· to the institution's expectations."
limitations."
·
Thursday Morning Quarterpack
John Bakke
.
.
No stone
unt·urnea·
I hardly know where to begin.
It's been a montli and a half
since
fall
'83 finals and the
departure of most of the campus
population. Since then a lot has
happened relating to athletics
here at Marist -
most of it
relating
to
the
basketball
coaching sit.uation -
and more
fun and games are on the way.
Marist College, regardless of
whether you realize it or not, is in
the middle of a somewhat major,
fairly
prominent
. nationwide
search for a new basketball
coach.
Now this isn't like trying to
find a new director of college
activities (you need a flamboyant
signature for that "approved by"
rubber stamp) or even, for in-
stance, a new president. We're
talking about a basketball coach
here, someone who could wind up
on ESPN or something.
suppose, or knights on horseback
riding into a forest, lamps held
aloft,
"searching"
for
the
dribbling equivalent of the holy
grail.
In fact, they won't be doing
much searching. The application
deadline has already passed, and
they've only had one meeting so
far. What they will be doing is
reviewing applications, looking
for the most qualified people.
And then, after they 'have
examined each hopeful candidate
they will . . . they will . .. recom-
mend a coach. Not choose -
recommend. The final approval,
as I understand it, still rests with
Dr. Murray.
.
With such a weighty task ahead
of it (imgine it -
recommending
a candidate), the committee has
naturaIJy been working overtime
to define its goals and priorities.
Thomas McKiernan, the com-
mittee's chairman, was quoted in
The Poughkeepsie Journal
as
The college has a Division One
saying that the new coach would
program, one with a good deal of
be
expected
to
bring
the
potential-.
Head
coaching
basketball · program to a level
positions at places like this don't
equal to that of academics here at
open up every day, so there are
Marist, (my apologies if that isn!t
quite a few people interested in
an exact quote; it's very close if
the job.
it's not).
.
.
And to show. just how im-
Let's see.:. out of every 1,000
portant
this position is, the
basketball players, how many
college has appointed a "search
might be offered a scholarship to
committee" to look for the man
play at McCann? Ten? Twenty?
to fill it. Kind of a posse, I ·
And out of every 1,000 · high
school seniors, how many might
be offered admission to this -
the school with the highest
academic standards of any college
in town ( on the west side)? Two,
three ... hundred?
·
Meanwhile,
apparently,
Murray has been looking around
himself. A Las Vegas newspaper
reported that he had contacted
Jerry Tarkanian, head coach at
the University of Nevada there,
about finding a candidate.
It's
all . very unclear what
exactly
happened
but
Tim
Grgurich
one of Tarkanian's
assistants and the former head
coach at the University of Pitt-
sburgh, has said he is applying for
the position.
Tarkanian's
team,
in case
you're
not familiar with the
current
AP
rankings
(and
shouldn't we all be), is sixtli in the
nation. This seems to indicate
that Grgurich is a very strong
position for the job, coming from
such a visible and successful
program._
Assuming
Murray's
hand-
picked
candid~te · supports
. Marist's concept of the student
athlete -
which is what I always
look for in a basketball coach -
the committee should have no
trouble
figuring out who to
recommend to the president.
What a great job.
Women's·
b-ball
rises to · 9-10
by Tom Crosier
The Marist College women's
basketball team completed a.very
successful mid-semester brea,k by
going from 3-7 to'9-10
tiy
winning
six of their last nine games.
·"'Most 'impressive
about ·the
Lady Red Foxes' latest surge is
thafifhas been done, for the most
part, . without the services of
starters Lynne Griffin and Val
Wilmer.•··
·
Griffin, who scored herl,000th
career point over vacation and
who will soon become the leading
scorer in Marist women's basket-
.ball history; is expected to be out
of the lineup until Feb. 1 with a
leg injury.
Wilmer
was sidelined
in-
definitely when she re-injured her
leg in practice last week. The in-
itial injury occured in a victory
over Long Island University.
But along with these untimely
injuries came some timely con-
tributions
by ursula
Winter,
Jackie Pharr and Mary.Jo Stemp-
sey. Timely contributions are not ·
tinusual for Winter, who leads the
team in scoring and rebounding.
First year Coach Pat Torza also
cited the play of senior guard
Joyce Iacullo.
· The Red Foxes have achieved a
4-3 league record by beating
Cosmopolitan Conference rivals
Monmouth, LIU, (in overtime)
· and Montclair St. Along with
non-conference teams St. Francis
{N.Y.),
Molloy and Brooklyn.
Their losses were to conference
foes Siena, Adelphi and Hofstra.
The next and last home game
for the team is Saturday, Feb. 4
against Wagner.
Una Geoghegan goes up for a
shot
during last Thursday:s
game. The team has only one more home game -
Saturday
against Wagner.
(Photo by Jeff Kiely)
NCAA------
continued from page 12
According to Quinn, there are
many factors
that
must be
considered before deciding what
teams will be added. Cost is a
major factor.
'If cross country, indoor and
outdoor track were added to the
women's curriculum, in one move
the eight required teams would be
needed instead of three new
coaches,'; said Quinn.
Quinn.
Steve Eggink, working against a press by Fairfield, passes to Tom Meekins.
met and only one coach would be
Field space also has to be
considered. Both Leonidoff Field
and the Mccann field are used in
fall and spring by Marist division
teams
and
intramurals.
"If
Leonidoff is used in spring for
something like field hockey, we're
not sure that the summer will be
enough time for the turf to
recover for the fall sports," said
To select the new women's
teams, Quinn said that first a
representative
committee
of
women students would be con-
sulted for· suggestions. These
suggestions would then be sub-
mitted
to students
and
ad-
ministration. "We will add the
sports
that meet everybody's
needs," said Quinn.
.,..I.,






























•·
-.
·,
Search Seffor·Peiro,s SiicceSsof
aS
coacn
··
..
by Ian O'Connor
,,
,
After consultation· with the
Board of Trustees and alumni,
Marist _
College President Derinis
J.
Murray appointed a 14-
member search -committee on
Jan.·
)2,
with the purpose of
recommending
a
candidate to
. replace current Marist Coach Ron
Petro;'-.
·
·
· _ Petro; who was given the choice
of remaining as either coach· or
athletic director, announced Nov.·
28 that he would step down as
coach at the end_ of the season to
become the full-time athletic
director .. ·
Marist alumnus and chairman of.- -- "Ron
,
Petro is an extremely
the --Athletic Committee of. the important part of Marist and he
. Board. of Trustees, is serving as · will naturally have a role in this
chairman of the - search com-
process," he said. ·
_
.
mitteei· --
The search committee, which -
. -The ·committee is made up of McKiernan said should receive in -
Marist · · faculty members and
the range of 75 applications for
alumni,· local ··
businessmen and
the coaching position;_ ~ill -have
one Marist player. .
its. next formal meeting on Feb .
"We .tried _ to have a · broad · 10, with an informal meeting
representation of people both on sometime before then.
·
f


and. off campus on the com-,
_
As the search gets underway for
mittee;'' McKieman said. "We
Petro's successor, many coaches
wanted.to include administration, - have. already announced their
alumni and faculty members." ·
intentions to apply for the Marist
Although Petro is not on the _ job.
panel, McKiernan said, «.He will
Known candidates ar~. Mike_
-. be of 'great assistance in helping Perry, the former- Ulster County
Thoma's F. , McKiernan, a -us with the selection process. -
· Community College coach who is ·
. <: '
now coaching a professional team . Gillen; in his fourth year at Notre
in Paris; Al Skinner, current
Dame, was quoted as ~aying, "I'd
Marist assistant coach; J. Donald
be flattered to be considered, but
Feeley, the former head coach at
I-haven't thrbwn any hat into the
Fairleigh Dickinson_ University; · . ring."
·
-
·
.
Wayne . Morgan, an assist~nt _
In_ the same -~rticle,
!im
Baro!l,
coach at Xavier; Dave Maganty, . a third-year Insh assistant, said
an assistant coach at Iona and the
he is interested in the position
former head coach at SL Francis
because Marist has "a very sound
(Pa.); and .-Brad McAlester, an
progra_m."
assistant coach at Manhattan
. McKiernan said he did not wish
College.
to· confirm that-any of these are
, While these ~candidates . have
candidates , because
he ·was
stated
their - intentions,
concerned
with
~•con-
speculation
continues
over
fidentiality."
whether
two
Notre
Dame
McKiernc.1n did say, though,
assistants will apply for the job.
·
that the Marist job is a very
In an· article published in
The
sought~after position.
·
Poughkeepsie
·
_Journal,
Pete
continued on page 10
.
.,·
Red· Foxes iake on
Fairleigh Dickinson,
Wqgner
this
week~
by John Bakke _
After an upset of last year's
conference champions
Robert
Morris on 'the road, the men's
basketball team will. be home for
two more ECAC Metro matchups
in tile next two days.
Fairleigh Dickinson University
will be at the McCann Center
tonight · at 8 o'clock,
while
Wagner will take on the Foxes on
Saturday, also at 8 p.m.
-The Red Foxes record currently
stands at 9-8 overall, with a 4-3
ECAC
Metro mark.
- FDU .defeated Marist 98-92 at
· _ FDU in double overtime on Dec.
· 5. Satur,day's game will be the
_ first of two against-Wagner this
. year. Marist beat Wagner twice
last season.
·. . .- ·
· With Saturday's win at Robert
Mo'rris, the Foxes broke a three-
game losing streak that included a
81-72 los~ at St. Francis·(Pa.) last
Thursday.
·
Only nine games remain on the
regular-season· schedule, and all-
are against cqnference opponents.
Five of those are at home.
MaristwiHtravel to St. Francis
•(N.Y.)
next~ Wednesday. The
Foxes beatthe Terriers easily, 79-
0
62,-at McCann on Jan. 10.
Saturday's game· brought three
Robert Morris winning streaks io
an end. RMC had a perfect 3-0
record over Madst going into the
game, including last year's 80-59
rout at
RMC. ·
Secondly, none of the teams
. currently _in the ECAC Metro had
ever_ beaten the Colonials at the
John Jay Center at
RMC.
Finally, Robert Morris had
won an incredible 26 consecutive
games at home and hadn't lost
there sfoce January 1982.
Steve Eggink, Tom Meekins
and Bruce Johnson are all coming
off two good games in Penn-
sylvania. In both games com-
bined, Eggink scored
36
points,
Meekins scored 27 and Johnson
23.
-Together, the - trio accounted
for 86 of the. team's 132 points
against St. Francis and RMC, or
just over 65 percent of the total.
Fairleigh Dickinson finished
last season with the third best
record in · the conference, and
figures to be a strong contender
for the championship in the
· conference tournament at Marist
- on March 8-10.
Mark Johns~n (15) guards
a
Fairfield playe; during Marist's two-point loss on Jan. 23. - _
-
· _ -
-
-
'._-
----
_
. __ (PhotobyJohnBakke)
Skatefstivictotle,s.·
..
·.eraSed
b(!Causeo.f,;late
rOster
Co~ch Ron Petro is hoping to
get his team back in top _form with•
the nexr two games. "Robert"
_
-
, Morris was a great game to win~
-,, · one . of the biggest in Marist
Victories at
home · against
ECAC Metro rivals such as FDU -
should increase the Foxes' home
court advantage over those teams
in that
championship
tour-
·nament.
While Wagner does.not appear
to· be a strong contender (they
.were 2-12 in the conference last
year), Saturday's gatrie is still an
important one. At 4-3. Marist can
earn a top spot going into the
championships by doing well in
,:,.
.
.
..
.
.
··•,•'
·-
.,
.
· by Peter Colaizzo
our record which
-
explained the
· 1os_ses,"
Graham said. "It Was the'·
The Marist men's ice hockey first tirrie anybody heard of it."
·
team·_ has relinquished its -first
Fairleigh Dickinson Univer-
th·ree victories of the - season -sity's hockey team forfeited all of
because of. an infraction of a their' victories because of the same
league roster rule. •
infraction.
Jim Pe~lei, head coach, failed .:..,: Members of the team were not
to turn in· ,the team's -final roster
sure w_hether Peelor had submit-
to·theMetro East Conference and ·_ ted an incorrect roster.
If.
the
the team forfeited their victories; - roster was simply handed in late,_
according to sophomore right - the decision can be appealed, ac-
winger Tim Graha·m.
cording. to junior center Rob
·
Caldiero.
Peelor, who 'returned from
vacation Monday, said the roster
got misplaced among other paper-
work~ "It's just_ a shame," he
said. "But the second half of the
."If the roster is found to be
legal, the league · should let it
slide," Caldiern said, referring to
a possible appeal.
,
season is still left and it looks
While- the appeal . is made,
··good._ I've got to be optomistic." -
however, the season will continue
The squad, which was 3-7 prior as scheduled .. "The league will
to the ruling, first found out --fine the team if we don't show at
about the decision
in
the Jan. 2i
any more games," Caldiero said, ·
New York Times, which -listed
Aitother penalty the team suf-
Marist's record as 0-10, according fered is that all of the statistics
to Graham.
from the first 10 games are now
"There was an asterisk next to nullified. Graham had 25 points
taken away while Caldiero lost 18
points and Al, Pette, senior . left
winger, lost 15 'points.
All
the team's losses are by. a
score of 1-0.
' The ruling couldn't have come
at a worse time, accordin·g_ to
Pette: "The team was really star-:
ting to come together and have
fun.
.
· · .
. · ...
"The _ toughest part : of - the
schedule is behind tis,,, he said.
"We would· have had a good
chance for the playoffs· but now
we have a very slim chance."
Graham said, "R~alistically we
· could still make_ the _playoffs, but
we have
to
w_in
mo$_t
of the games·
remaining." ·
. _
· The best chance the. team has
for the playoffs is if the appeal
goes through and the team.retains
its . vic~ories, ·acco~ding
to
Caldiero.
- "There's a 50-50 chance of it
-going through," C;,tldierosaid.
"If we don't win the appeal,
. though, we are in trouble.'·'
history," he said. -
·,
~
_ "But · now we go _back home,
where it's- easier to .win,
We'd
-struggled-before Robert Morris,
but with that win and a chance for.
- · two •wins at home we can get
rolli~g again."
_ these last nfoe games.
,New NCAA ·-,rule
to· bring
growth in women's sports
.
.
...
·.
.
.
~
...
.
by TerryAbad
,•
- -. The Marist College ___
sports
program will be affected by the
National
Collegiate . Athletic
Association's
recent
decision
requiring institutions in Divisions
One and · Two to sponsor a
minimum number of both men's
and women's ·teams.
Colleges were -required only to
sponsor a minimum number of
. ,programs for men before this
.
decision. --This new requirement
must be met by the academic yea-r
of 1988-89.
P:at Torza, women's basketball
coach, said she thinks compliance
will hurt some of the smaller
schools because the change will be
costly.
-
, T orza said the change will be
. good for Marist. "It will provide
a . diversity ·.· in
the
sports
program,". said . Torza.
"The
Marist female population is now
larger than the male and the
sports _ offerings· should reflect
this." ·
Ma.rist· has many different
_ options in complying with this
new rule, according .to Richard
·_Quinn, assistant athletic director.
·
-
One · option is to integrate
· women's skiing, which is ·not a
club sport, into the division sports
program. Field hockey, softball
and cross country are also being
considered to add to the women's ·
program. "Themle has only been
discussed generally," said Quinn .
continued on pagell