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Part of The Circle: Vol. 29 No. 17 - March 29, 1984

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r_
·• Volume
29,
Number
17 ; ..
·.-:
,••
Mar/st
College, Pouglliceepsie,
N.
Y.
·.,
.~, '.·.,
·:•''
.
.
.
.
'
,
'°Mal'.ist
·:-g'c>eS.
western-

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by
MichaelT. Regari
..
It
was impossible tq publicly . ed reaciion to the first week of
. _
announce the· move to Western . classes in Marist East, as Waters
.Marist College, currently leas-
any . sooner because of the coin-
prefers to call the new addition
to
ing
s;·ooo
square feet of space in
plex negotiations that were in-
the
campus. ·
''I
am · totally
the ·Western publishing .building,
volved in reaching a leasing agree-. und<;rstanding of the move/' said
,viii expand to 23,000 square feet
ment,
.
according · to ... Waters. . Eileen Taylor Appleby, professor
as pf August l, according to Ed-
"There were several parti~s in-
of
social work, · _'_'but the noise
ward
p.
Waters; vice preident for
volved in the negotiations
in-
outside of the classroom was dif-
administration and finance;
eluding the lawyers for. Western,
ficult.to teach over."·
.
With three classrooms, an of-
which is based in Wisconsin, the
_
-The noise probl~m'': was · at-
fice and space for the art depart-
. · 1a\vyers
for
the proposed buyer,
tributed to the installation of fire
ment already in use, the addi-
Richard Zirinsky, who has an of-
doors,
according
to - Anthony
iional 18,000 square feet ·will
fice in New York but is based in
Tarantino,· director of physical
· mean the addition of at least six
CaHfornia,
and the represen-
plant. ~•we were forced to wo·rk
more classrooms and an undeter-
tatives of Marist," Waters.said.
while class was in session last ·
mined :amount of office space,
The Registrar's office; which·
week ·because of the fire codes·
said Waters:
had to decide -which classes to
which had'to be met;'' he said. _
The agreement,
which was
move, had also been aware oft he .. Members of, the maintenance
completed on March 12, _is a
forthcoming -- changes.
"I'd
staff had been working fonwenty
three-year lease, with the option
known of the.negoti~tions for the
straiglit days to complete the re-
to renew for another three years,
·move- for a. while,>' said Ross,
quired work on the building, ac-
ac~ording to Waters. "This move
''.but the decision to implement i_t · cording to Tarantino
and were·
should
not
be construed · .as
immediately after spring break
finished as· of last_ Friday. "The
something we are just throwing
came relatively quickly." .
move was decided on short notice
people into on a - temporary
The Registrar's office· attemp-
and we were still waiting for sorri~ ·
basis," he said.
ted to keep freshmen classes in · of the materials to come in. My-
The suddenness of the move ap- · . Donnelly _and-move three upper
men have been starting work at
5
pears to.have surprised most peo-
level courses from each time slot,
a.m. to try and get done before
pie on campus. Students were told
according ·to Ross. Some classes· class starts each day," he said.
March 29, 1984 :
in their last class before break if··. N'!,ld not be mo~ed fo~ specific
:-Wat~rs sees gre~t potential .for .
they would be moved.
~
. letter
reason~, though .. Certam classes · the future of the building. "Once :
was then sen! home dunng the
couldn t _be moved b~cause they
other.corporations and industries
_
·
. -.
.
,
week of sprmg break· by the
showed films or were m labs, and
begin to move into Western
w · • -
·
h ·
Registrar's office informing them
Western
'didn't
have
. the
students will have the unique op:
earing -
A
Studendt~ lm~rc th upM _S_tht
·
·
f
T · "
·ct
R
·
venue·
1sp
aymg
e
ans
of the change,
according
to
ac1 1ues, sa1
oss.
·
portunity to interact with the
'
·
c
II
b
·
t th
·s,
Elizabeth Ros.~, registrar.
Graduate and adult education
business
world
in the same
th
.
P
O
!gke' Danner ad . e
N •
· ·
I
·
- -
e
atnc s
ay para e m
ew
Despite these effort_s, many · c asses were also.moved to create
butldtng · where
they
have
y
k
C-t
(Ph
t
b .
students were still -unaware of"the · a balance iIJ the building, said
classes," he said.
.

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ange, •.•.
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n.se,\1en now_w at-: ....
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Jlr_anJ_t.r.!9--f~lt-
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_e. S~J!1e Wc!.Y· • :__, , ." ·--
'
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. . :
.
.
'
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people . .werc;: talkmg ab.out. wh~n
overall-presence_
of
Manst_
m the·' ··''.'fhecmove'.·:wi1L.be beneficiai\for.?:~~-.
:_,0;,_~•-·.
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they· said they had class over m
building, so we diversified the .. the students·, the institution;· the ·.
·
Western,''. said Maureen Keenan, -types of classes we moved as · educational: system, and-·the in-
a freshman finarice major from - much as possible," she·said. . . . dustries that are involved " he
Lake Rorikonkoma, N. Y.
It
was also determined that the
said.
'
' dista~ceto
get •to some of their
OIJ;
and.there are bareiy endugh
classes; Such is the case for those
chairs for everyone. We practical-
students and, - faculty members - ly have to skon top of each other.
who'have
had,their
classroom·s:. Besides- that:it smells,;' he said.
The reason for the move during
fine arts area would be n~eded by
. the middle of the semester stems
the computer center, and so the
from-the lack-of time there was to
entire•ar't clepartm·ent was moved,
install the $2.5 million worth of.
·
saidWaters. "One of the fine arts
,. equipment received: rrom IBM,.
students came to -rit~
_and was very
· &Mi/vers
,;
'have
:mixed reactions
according to Waters. ·"The
COJl_l-
unhappy about being moved over
··puteLcent.er \Vas asked to back Jo-Western.
I
tried to explain to
. track from Sept. 1 _
lb
determine · her that the new area would pro-
by
K~vi~
Sc~ulz ..
changed to "rooms, in the old
refer.ting _to_
the peculiar odor of
· Western Publishing·building.
·
the building.
·
·
·
: After one week in their ne"w
· Marist maintenance crews are
classroom, '• som·e - relocated
currently making modifications
·-students · have pointed out the
on the building's interior. Senior
· disadvantages of meeting in the
Bob Davies, a political science
old warehouse.
·
major, said that the noise was
, the latest possible time they could . vide' an excellent ~pportunity to
begin working on the grarit," said
interact ~with the facu!tY _. and -
Upon • return
from ·: spring
Waters; ''and it was decided that · c,;-_eate
a
new spot for ·· the art · break, ·many students have found
they would liave to start. right
department;'' he said. ·
-
that they must cross a'·busy in-
. , away/'
One faculty member had a mix-
• tersection and walk twice the
Mark Sullivan, _a sophomore
· very distracting.
majoring . in accounti11g said:
· ."I don't think it's conducive to
!'There are · no 'clocks, no win-
·a classroom atmosphere, It's hard
· dows, there!s always noise going
Coai)inued on p~ge
9 ..
~Pub Nighffight;
-R.A. isinjured~
Tw·o Mar'ist .. students
are
. awaiting. disciplinary. action after
being involved in':a.fight-at
the_
pub last week, which i"esultedin.
one student oeing injured.
_ .
-
John
Petacchi,
'-freshman
.
residence:. __
assistant,.
reportedly
·· suffered a broken nose wheri ·he
was thrown: to the_ ground_ by
Steven Gen"iile,-ajunior at Marist: '·

:->
The two participa11ts gav~ con- -
meting accounts of the incident, ' · ·
According to Gentile, one ·of-•
his'two .frie11ds,•who,~ere:visitirig,
from• home, ,bump.ed~arms_ \VJtlf
·
.. PetacchL Words were exchanged
between the tWO, and when Gen~
'
tile· tried to .httervene, he said; '
>Petacchi hit hiin in the ear .. , · .·
. •~1 was just defending myself,"
Gentile said.-"After-he-hit
me I
just grabbed him and threw him
· to the ground. There was no in-
. tent on my part to hurtJohn;?
he
said ... --.
_
: ·.·
.
· __
_. Petacchi, however, denies hit-
·
ting Gentile. "I didn't swing-first.
They _kept provoking me but I
told them I wasn't going
to
. 'fight,"
pe said._ "The three of
~ontinued on
page 2
Phil1ips, :
Mor~,_
-lmperati
win_·•
-· by
Kenneth
F.
Parker Jr.
.· By
~
,IJ:!~fgin of about 80 votes, Anthony
Phillips 'l.ipset'.ehallenger Mark Zangari for the
_ position of'siudenr body president in elections
r
earlier,. this week for· the 1984~85 Council of
Student 'Leaders:
· ·
·
.'.
In two other·races, freshman Paul Moran was
_elected lriter~House Council president by nearly.
. :60
votes over Oina Coniglio arid Darryl lmperati
_ _. was re-elected to the post of Commuter Union
·president, ·capturing 86.7 percent of.the"'vote.
Imperati's opponent was Jeff Basch·. ·
·
· , In two.
uncontested races Patrick Hadden
became.:· the · nex! ; chairman
of
..
1he Student
Ac.ade.mic Committee·.· and ·Andrew. · Crei:ca
president oi'.the College Union Board.,· .
< ·:
Fii1al. \'Ote tallies \~ere· no! available at press
. tiinc>·
_ . , During the campaign for student body presi-
def!t,
.
Phillips
st~essed
,
__
the -importance
of
: having an intelligent and honest relationship with
the administration. PhiHips-said he felt the move·
ro Western was nor publicized enough to the
' students.
·
·
·
Phillips also said he wanted the regulations for
a townhouse party permit re~eyaluated, favored a
new, two-system meal plan and called for revi-
sions in parking:
- ·_. .
-
-
_ ·
"There is not enough parking for commuters
and residents. Also, the winter par~ing regula-
tions must be re-evalwned, '' he said.
·
Phillips. also vowed he would maintain -close
communication
wfrh . the Council of Student
, Leaders and would see that all members-know ex-
: actly what is goii:ig on at ·alrtimes.
.
While also campaigni~g z;ngaii cited numerous
_"little thirigs" whi_ch ertect many people that he
would change. Zangari said he would want ex~
panded library hours; a bus service for resident
students on holidays, telephone. recordings for
cancelled classes· and an expanded commuter
lounge. He.also expr_essed concern about students
crossing a busy intersection to get to classes in
Western Publishing. '·
·
.. •~His only a matter of time.before-there is an
accident involving students crossing Route
9
to
the Western Publishing building.
I
am calling for.
security between Route
9
and the
.
Western
building and also a bridge built over Route
9
so-·
students can have a safer walk over/' he said.
Five of the candidates , ran under the title
"Students in Action for Action." They'included
Zangari, · Crecca, Hadden, ,Coniglio and Im-
perati.
·
. · According - to :Zanga.ri, who organized the
group, the ticket was very representative of the
students on campus. -_· :
·
"The student~ are experienced, have connec-
tions_ with the administration because of that ex-
perience and they will have litle or no time spent
in the transition period," he said .. -
The transition period begins immediately after··- -
the election during which the newly elected of-
ficers learn rheir P(?Sirion.
·
Maris(pol/sters
· make Newsweek
by
Carl MacGowan
The reputation of the Marist
College Institute of Public Opi-
niori continued to grow last week
as Newsweek magazine published
a story_ about t_he six-year-old
polling service.
. ...
_•The story, which appeared in
the magazine's March
26
issue in
the education section, was titled
"The Student Pollsters." The ar- --
tide pleased the institute's direc-
tor, Dr. Lee Miringoff,
who
· described himself in the article as
- the "Howard Cosen of Dutchess
County."
Because ofthe institute's con-
sistent accuracy in telling it like it
is; the results
()f
Marist polls have
app_eared in numerous publica-
tions, -including Newsweek and
The New York Times. Since the
article
in Newsweek hit the
newsstands, Miringoff has receiv-
ed inquiries from Time magazine.-
as well as NBC and ABC.
"We were very satisfied with
the coverage," said Miringoff of
the article. Miringoff said he was
particularly glad · that the story
focused on the students who con-
~uct the polls and on "how the in-
Continued on page 2
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Page 2 ·
THE CIRCLE· March
29,
1984
Newsweek-
continued from page 1
stitute fits into the college as a
whole."
.
The publicity generated by the
article adds to the institute's
credibility, said Miringoff, just iq
time for the New York State
primaries. A new poll surveying
voter preferences for the remain-
ing 'Democratic candidates
-
Jesse Jackson. Walter Mondale
· and Gary Hart - is to be released
this week, Miringoff said, which
ATTENTION
.
.
SENIORS
"places Marist at the center of na-
tional attention."-
. "The students of Marist are
really making news," said Mir-
ingoff,
adding
that
media
recognition of the institute should
increase as this election year pro-
gresses.· "We expect a lot more
excellent
coverage
over
the
following weeks," he said.
If .
you··/
have any color snap-
shots·
from
-
Freshmen,·
~h::i~~~~~:dm;:~h~n
I walked
Sophomore or. Junior Years
Fight---
away. After one of his friends
that yo_u
would l'1ke··to'
appear
grabbed me
I pushed him away,
and before
I
knew it
I
was on the
·1
n the yearbook' plea·
se - put
floor with my nose bleeding."
Chris Stempsey, a senior, and
~
.· anemployeeofthepu!J,sawGen-
your·name and address on the
• 1ilc and his friends bothering _
Pctacchi.
"I
wasn't working, so
I
.
back and send them to The
1urncd to get a bouncer who was.
When
I turned back Petacchi was
Reynard c/o R·1ck
0'
Donnell
ori the floor holding his nose," he
,
.
· -

said.
According
to · Petacchi
no
charges· are being pressed. "The

police told me that things like this
happen all the time and it. would
.- oe-uscless to pursue the matter,"
}:/ tiJ1:~[2cision
concerning·
'. disciplinary ac1ion will · 1101 be
made · un1il a hearing is con-
ducted, ·said Rober( Heywood,
All ·P_hotos:-_-._··_·tha_t
are used, cannot be
di.rcc16r of housing.
.
-
_
According 10 wirnesses, Gentile
f
·
di
and his friends were seen bother-
re urne • .
; : .:jrig_,o\her ..
J~eople in the pub the
t.>.~a-me;-nighL Genti\e denied being
•,
.. .,,nv'o\v~a"'fo•
·1:i:ny
-otner
-•disri1f
0~-
. ba.1,:ces'Thursday;evening~,;1--,•!·
,.,:,;
·-·
The
American
Council
of
Independent
Laboratories.,
/,
473-1576
PALACE
Diner·&·
Restaurant
Breakfast • Lunch • · Dinner
Fresh Seafood·-Steaks -·chops
Cocktails - Baking on Premises·
Show your college ID and get a
FREE Glass of Beer
with yo:u, mea.l!
?%DISCOUNT
194 WASHINGTON ·STREET
POUGHKEEPSIE, NE~
YORK
· . (Next to All :Sport.·_A
short-walk
from
Marlst)
•i_\;j~j~~\:::_-· ·.•
..
a,
:. ,
-~;_~•,·
~-
~
• ··;;••,\\-~/:.//~'.\~
•_;·'._;_>:,.>:/.~'r~<,:,_,••
•:•·:t.---,~-:~;,'·
'
1
Auxiliary
announces :;cholarship
awards for
1984-85.
.
A.C.1.L.
is ah association of
over two hundred .of the nation's
independent
laboratories
operating in all major fields of
scientific analysis, research and
testing. Each year the Auxiliary
presents scholarship grants to
women·
students to help further
-their
studies
in appropriate
scientific
fields.
The
award
minimum equals
$750 .
ANY STUDEN·T-WISHING TO.RESIDE-IN COLLEGE HOUSING--·
--.FOR
FALL 1984SEMESTER
MUST:
. The
scholarship
award
requirements are as follows:
The candidate should be a
wornan. in her junior year or
above in an accredited college;
she must be majoring in· any of
the physical sciences: Physics,
Chemistry, Biology, Engineering,
or Geology; three (3) copies of th·e
following items must be mai_led to .
the Scholarship Chairperson by
April 15, 1984:
the candidate's
name, home address and college
address;
transcript
of college
grades; a brief resume of her .
activities in ·college, including her
field of study and her future
plans; two
(2)
recommendations
· from faculty members of the
college she is presently attending;·
information
on
any
other
scholarship or grant aid she is
now receiving; information as to
where the award should be mailed
·(Please note: all awards will be
sent directly to the college in-
dicated).
All
replies should be forwarded
_to:
Mrs: Blakelyn D. Albright
A.C.l~L.-Scholarship
Chairp-
erson,
..
SUBMIT A $7'.5.00 ROOM REQUEST
DEPOSIT
THIS D_E.POS_IT
MUST BE PAID IN THE BUSINESS;.OFFiCE
~y
A_PRIL
2, 1984 ..
·THIS DEPOSIT IS
·NON-REFUNDABLE._
. You-must show a depo_sit
receipt and have regist~red for fall
.se_mester
classes tq request a room for the
1984
f~llsem·ester.
The date on which you pay your deposit will-be used t_o
break
ties in the room request priority point system.
.
.
WATCH FOR ADDITIONAL ROOM REQUEST INFORMATION
IN THE
CIRCLE
2001
Pine Drive
,
. Lancaster, PA
1760
I
...
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March
29,
1984 · THE CIRCLE· Page
3--•
Dorm visitation policy gets mixed reactions
by Peler Colaizzo
The housing offkc has initiated
a new policy, requiring visiting
students to leave their IDs with
entry
officers
upon
entering
residence
halls,
according · to
Robert Heywood,
director
of
housing.
Bef9rc this new rule, which
became effective
after
spring
break; students only had to sign
in to the residence halls if they did
not live there.
Now visi1ing-
s1uden1s must both sign in and
leave their IDs.
Students may pick up their IDs
upoi1 leaving the building. At the
end of their shift at 7 a.m., entry
officers bring all IDs not picked
up· to the residence director, ac-
cording lo Heywood. These· IDs
may be obtained the next day,
Heywood said.
Any unauthorized
overnight
stays "would have to be address-
ed," he added.
· Guests of students must still
obtain a guest pass and ~vait at the
entry officer's desk for the host
student, according 10 Heywood.
. The guest must be accompanied
by the host in order to enter the
building, he said.
Heywood said the reason for
the change in policy was that
stu.dents were not signing in pro-·
perly. "There was no active step
being taken," he said. "With this
system we can better monitor .
when people leave the building.''
When asked why the switch was·
made in the middle of the
semester, Heywood said there
were concerns about the system
because
students
were
not
cooperating.
Platt::to· step
down;
no successor chosen
by
Eileen Hayes
Dr.
Richard Platt, chairman of
the Division of Arts and Letters,
has announced
his ·resignation
from his post as chairman. Platt
said he will continue to teach in
the Communication Arts depart-
ment after he steps· down July 1,
1984.
Platt said his decision was
made
for
several · reasons.
"Because
I've
been
an
ad-
ministrator for seven years,
I
feel
I can serve the institution better
and be more satisfied with my
position as a member of the facul-
ty,'' he said.
Platt would not comment as to
whether his salary had anything
to do with this decision.
is so large and diverse it creates
problems for the administrator to
. operate the division and make
plans for the future," he said.
Platt said he has two criteria
for his job -
productivity and
satisfaction. He said part of his
decision
included
not
being
satisfied with what he was doing.
"However, growth in productivi-
ty was significant, although not as
much·as I would have liked," he
said.
.
As of yet, no one has been.
selected to be Platt's successor. A
meeting is planned for tomorrow
with Academic Vice President
Andrew Molloy to address the
division about this process.
"There were all sorts of people
in the buildings
that · didn't
belong,"
Heywood
said.
"Students were waking up in the
middle of the night to find in-
truders in their rooms." .
Entry policy ai other colleges
and universities varies, according
to
Heywood. "Some schools do
not have any (entry policy) while
others have locked doors 24 hours
··a day," he said.
Heywood said that the rest of
this semester will be a "trial
period" for the new system. Al
the end of the semester the system
will be evaluated and may be
modified.
Heywood said he does not
think the new policy at Marist in-
. fringes on individuals' rights. The
-idea is 10 provide a safer environ-
ment against intruders, he said.
"There is no reason for it to be
a hassle," Heywood said. "The
only people it should bother are
people who don't belong in the
building."
While Heywood said that a
safer
environment
would
be
created, entry officers noted pro-
blems and troubles adjusting to
the new policy during his first
week.
"It's
a
big hassle,"
said
freshman Jenny Cook, an entry
officer in Marian Hall. "A lot of
people are reluctant
to
give IDs.''
· When asked if the new policy
made the building safer, Cook
said:
"If
they signed in before it's
the same thing. If you know
who's in the building it shouldn't
make a difference."
Tom McCauley of Fairfield,
Conn., an entry officer in Leo
Hall, said the new system is com-
plicated. "There have been pro-
blems with lost and mixed-up
IDs," McCauley said.
"It's a good idea because it
keeps track of who is in the
building, but it's a lot more
work," McCauley said. "No one
is
used to it yet. After a few weeks
it should be alright," he said.
Student reaction to the change
in policy was mostly negative.
~
"I think it's a bad idea because
it's a big inconvenience 10 leave
IDs," said freshman Paul Kelly.
"Putting them in a file makes us
like digits," he said.
·
"It violates our rights because
the ID card is our property," Kel-
ly said. "\Vhat are they going to
do next, ask us to leave a
$5
deposit -
like a weight key? It's
our
ID."
All areas of the division have
grown since Piatt became chair-
man three years ago. He said that
. some restructuring may be.needed
to make it easier to accomplish all
things in the division. "Because it
Platt has been at Marist for
eight years. Ii:i his secoJJd year he
was elected chairman of Englis)1
and · Communications
Depart- ·
mem. When the department grew,
the Academic Vice President ap-
pointed him division chairman.
Welcome. Back!
Tony Bellantoni, left,
and
Frank Sciaretta after their 200-
mile run . for the disabled. _See story on page 8. (Photo by
Christine Dempsey)
~
Just· a drop in . the bucket
~
Mondale delegate-reflects:
lo..
by Kevin Schulz
. It's open house at Marist College and prospec-
tive students and their parents are meeting many
· of the well-dressed administrators and professors
in the upper concourse of Campus Center.
But where did all the buckets go? And where
are those filthy little throw rugs? Those are ques-
tions a current Marist student might ask.
. A prospective student might ask why there are -
so many coffee stains on the floor. He certainly
wouldn't be too impressed to find out that they
are not coffee stains but tar-stained drops of
water leaking through the roof above him and on-
to his brand new suit.
The once treacherous trek through Campus
Center has ·been···simplified with the recent pat-
ching of the roof, but some leaks still remain as
Anthony Tarantino, director of Physical Plant,
awaits budget approval for a new roof.
"The problem is with the skylights," Taran-
tino said. "They have a poor design."
Tarantino estimated that a new roof for Cam-
pus Center could cost "in excess of $50,000."
The budget must be approved however, before
any-action is taken. ·
"The probabilities are that the administration
will want to replace it," Tarantino said.
According to Betty Yeaglin, director of college
activities, the roof has leaked for at least five
years.
"It
has leaked ever since I've been here,"
Yeaglin said. "The roof was under warranty
when I complained, but it expired while they (the
roofing company) were in and out (trying
to
repair it)."
.
· Yeaglin said that the skylights were supposed·
to be replaced last summer.
"The money was in the budget for them, but
they (the roofing company) kept putting it off un-
til the weather was bad," Yeaglin said.
The recent repairs to the roof were·made by a
company other than the original company which
put the roof on. · Some leaks still remain,
- however, and the buckets looking like a poor
man's spittoons also remain.
.
'.'I'm
worried
about
somebody
falling,,,.
Yeaglin said. "I've been out there with a mop
myself to clean up."
The Campus Center roof is one of many leak-
ing roofs at Marist, but Tarantino refused to
comment about them.
Things
look_ good
in NY
by John Albinson
Registered
New
York
Democrats will have the chance to
vote for their favorite man in the
upcoming April 3 New York
Democratic Primary.
The three candidates voters will
choose from are Walter Mondale,
Gary Hart and the Rev. Jesse
Jackson.
· ·
Dr. Lee Miringoff,
assistant
professor of political science at
_Marist, is currently conducting a
survey of N.Y. Democrats to
predict who will be the winner at·
this, year's Democratic Conven-
tion.
Miringoff's last survey, which
focused on the New Hampshire
primary, landed him a full-page
article in the March 25 issue of
"Newsweek."
Fredica
Goodman,
vice-
chairperson
of
the
Dutchess
County Democratic Committee
and also in running as a Mondale
delegate, said she believes Mon-
dale's chances of taking the New
York primary are "very good."
Goodman also said she believes
the turnout
for
next week's
primary
"would
not be very
good." She said that through her
dealings with registered voters she
feels that the turnout will be poor,
probably less than the projected
30 percent of all registered New
York Democrats.
Goodman, who is running as a
Mondale
delegate
in a slate
delegation made up, by law, of
two men, two women, and one
alternate, (either male or female),
works with the 21st Congressional
District (Dutchess Cou~ty). She
said that with all the legal changes
the primaries have gone through,
a person "really has to go out of
his way to educate himself about
the primaries."
Grant. reductions Will force closing of refugee program
by
Catherine DeNunzio . '
The ·Refugee Assistant · Pro-
gram (RAP) at Marist is expected
to terminate by early July because
of the reduction of grant money
allocated by the State.
"It seems in all probability, ac-
cording · to _the information
available, that the program will
have to be phased our by the first
of July," said Brother Richar.d
Rancourt, director of
RAP.
There
has been no formal confirmation
of the State's intention to discon-
tinue this program, which serves
40 refugees.
Although
RAP subcontracts.
space from Marist, the college
does not fund the program.
"Marist doesn't feed any money
into the program,"
said Ran-
court,
"but
we've been well-
received."
The Refugee ·Assistant Pro-
gram
started
at
Marist
in
February of 1981 after Brother
· Joseph
Belanger became suc-
cessful with his experimental pro-
1.!ram in which students .tutored
~rea refugees. Then a grant was
given by the NYS department of
Social Services in Albany.
- Brother Rancourt was given the
position as director, responsible
for organizing and implementing_
the program. "The main purpose
of the pr9gram is to ha~·e the
refugees ;l.ltain, as quickly as
possible, economic self-reliance,"
said Rancourt. Teaching refugees
English is the fundamental ap-
proach used.
For the past three years the
NYS department of Social Ser-
vices allocated the RAP at Marist,
the only program of its kind in the
:v1id-Hudson Valley, S60,000 per
year to operate. After evaluation
this year, it has been determined
that the program is not as vital to
the Mid-Hudson Vallev as it has
been in the past. "There is no real
need fm: the progrnm because of
the lack of new refugees in the
area. We've already
accomplished
our goal of making the current
refugees
economically
self-
reliant," said Rancourt.
Teaching English is not the on-
ly activity the RAP is involved
with. According to Brother Ran-
court, the people who work in
RAP also help the refugees by
taking them to doctors, helping
them find employment,
giving
them health advice, reaching them
home management and several
have also served as interpreters.
"A major goal for us is to help
refugees ease the assimilation pro-
cess into a new country,"
said
Rancourt.
The majority of refugees aided
in this program are Vietnamese,
but there are also Laotian, Cam-
bodian,
Polish,
Czechoslakin,
Haitian and Cuban refugees who
benefit from
RAP.
Aside from the director, Brother
Rancorut, and his assistant Rita
Stein, RAP's personnel consists
of Marist students who are on the
work-study program. Twenty-five
students arc on the payroll which
is funded by 20 percent of the
grant money and 80 percent of the
college's work-study
allocation
money.
\
1
·,
·--------------





























































































--•
Page
4 · THE CIRCLE• March i9, 1984
~~
So
1
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z.
No
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s
~
o'Y'\£..·
%ct· 1.J--L
be.t.ll
~lssj,J&--
"i'i>o
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~tJt>
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5-->jS
1
....
so, \ s
it.,
M..~
+cu...lf:_
W<s~"
Pul>l~.;~
i
S .Sc UCSE
To
$/(.\..nJ€>LS?
11
Warehouse m·aterial?
"They're tearing down the blackboards in
·
that point on, the class would be meeting in
my classroom," on~ Marist faculty member
Western.
said frantically into the phone.
·
surprise!
"What?"
Little surprises aren't always wise -
even
"Maintenance
workers just finished walk-
if
they
.are
not particularly bad news. Sure,
ing into Donnelly Rm. 248; they took the
·
some students who have to attend classes
blackboards right off the walls!"
at Western don't mind the trek across Rt. 9;
Surprise!
nor are all of them bothered° by the hot, win-
-
The above phone call, which was made a
·
dowless classrooms. But who gives the ad-
few weeks ago, is only one example of the_
ministration
the right to pull this quick
lack of advanced notice that wa_s given· to
space
"solution"
out of its hat without con-
some people at Marist about one of the
suiting those who would be affected? For·
_
school's biggest changes yet -
the move-
·
example, the ~e,irne NJedia_
Cen_ter was only
ment of classrooms to an off-campus loca-
given a few weeks to move AV/TV equip-
tion, the Western Publishing building on the
inent across the street and to make new
.
_
other side of_Rt. 9. Room 248 was magically
plans for servicing tht building -
all of this
·
,.
transformed
into a computer room. And,
.
in addition to_continuing its service in Don-
much to the dismay to Marist art students,
·
r:iel\y Ha\l anq ttfe ljbraiy.,
_-;
,.
..-.:..
:
,
·
.:
who are dissatisfied- with the conditions
in
'
·
Sin·ctf Y{hen do· th~se: i'apidlfmultiplyih~f
Western Publishing,
the e_ntire art depart-
·
.
machines
take
priority.
over
..
students?
ment was also moved out of Donnelly Hall
-
_
Anyone from outside
·
the Mari st_ campus'"_-•-
to make room· for computers. How long were.
:
would f_ind it a~little strartge that students,
th_ese changes in the planning stages?
·
·
·
·
whose
'primary
purpose at college is to at-
The Circle had as little luck as a.nyone
tend classes, are shipped across the street
.
e_l_se
when it came to finding out about the
_
to an empty building to learn, while·.com-
change ahead of time.A Circle reporter was.
puters take their places iri Donnelly Hall.
denied such- information.
One Friday after-
And all the while ridiculous-looking
modular
·_
noon, the day after the original story ori the
. --
trailers continue to take up space in two of
renting of Western Publishing was publish-
Marist's already-overcrowded
parking Jot_s
._
:_-.-·,
.ed,
a reporter checked in a_t the appropriate
serving as offices that would much better·
office for the latest information on Marist's
·
·
provide for campus needs by being part of
a
plans for the building. She was told that the
,
regular t.:,uil_ding.
. .
· .
·_
_
_
-_
-
.
_ _.
entire situation with the Western Publishing
Life is sometimes like a game of chess,
building was
"still
in negotiations,"
and that
·
·
M~irist. You have to think before you move.
there was no news to
tell.
Ironically, in a
-
But
·
other times
it's
not -
try com-
class the following
Monday, the reporter
municating you intent.ions to get feedback
and her classmates were informed that from
before you jump.
·
Vote
.
.
.
:
-~
.
.
.
.
.,
.
-
Hurrah for the people who finally got out
this
.year.
and registered to vote for the
Presidential elections.
.
-
The increase is overwhelming, with much
of the success due to the efforts of the Rev.
Jesse Jackson. As a result of his campaign,
a surprisingly large number of blacks in the
·
South. have registered, many for the first
time.
·
Rev. ·Jackson deserves an unmeasurable
amount of praise for raising· the political
consciousness of so many people.
_
But do we
·necessarily
need role models
coaching us on to take advantage of the
basic rights in our lives? We, as America,ns,
can't be very responsible if we choose to ig-
nore the rights given to us at birth -
rights
which don't even exist in some countries of
The
.
:
'
Circle_
Editor
Associate Editors
.
Sports Editor
Senior Reporters
the world.
.
Jhe right to vote even exists at Marist,
whether it be in class elections or by means
,
of absentee ballots for local, state or na-

tional elections. In order to vote in the latter
elections, you must first register. Marist will
be doing us a favor on Dean's Convocation
Day.
- _
__
Voter registration
has_ been chosen as
one of the human rights topics for the day.
But,· as the saying goes, you have to be
there_ to win. All eligible
_students
will have
the opportunity
to register for absentee
·
ballots on Convocation Day -
that is if you
~on't use the day as an opportunity to sleep
in.
Take advantage of something
Marist is
"giving"
you.
_
_
Afterall, your vote is our future.
Christine Dempsey
Cindy Bennedum
Mark Stuart
John Bakke
EIieen Hayes
Jane Scarchilll
FrankRaggo
Photography
Editor
Photographers
Viewpoint ad!•or
Cartoonlst
Readers
.
Write
All
letters
must.be typ~d triple :space with
a
60 space margl~, and sub~l_tted lo the
Circle office no later than 1 p.m. Monday. Short letters are preferred.We reserve the.
right 10 edit all letters: Letters must
be
signed, but name~ may be withheld ~pon
request. Letters
will
be
publlshe<J
depending upon avallablhty of space.
·
·
,
Protests dismissal
To the Editor:
I, as
a
student am again being_
put to the test of endurance by the
Marist College Administration.
How now? the reader asks. Well,
I
am a resident of North Road.
_
·
Our fellow student, housemate
and friend, Patrick Larrabee,
who was the unit coordinator, has
been dismissed. With
much
thought
I
tried to understand
why.
I
would assume a major part
of his responsibility as unit coor-
dinator would be
_to
maintain the
houses on North Road. Also to a
general degree help out their
-
oc-
cupants
with
assorted problems
and whenever necessary help
them seek out the help they might
need.
·
·
Of course
I
have kept no log
book on How or When Patrick
performed such functions, but
I
can
say
very
honestly he spent a
lot more time than just his on du-
ty
hours. The maintenance re-
quests were there, maintenance
iiself was not. Therefore I cannot
be led to believe he was dismissed
for neglect of duty. This would be
both unreasonable and laughable.
Why was he dismissed? Why
weren't the occupants asked their
opinions? Better yet, who was the
Residem Director that dismissed
him?
I
have never met the R.D;,
nor have I ever seen her on North·
Road. How could
she
dismiss so-
meone she had not
-
observed at
work?
-
Did she compare the ratio
of maintenance requests per occu~
pant with other areas of campus?
How
about
comparing
.the
number of household damages
·
witli previous years of North
Road residents? What about the
·
number of complaints made by
neighbors
from
-
previous
semesters? Why
not
ask
·
the
neighbors what they think?
l
anticipate very
.
favorable
answers to these questions. So,
why was Patrick dismissed? In
search for answers
lam
Jeremiah J. Acunto
Junior/Resident
North Road
EDITOR'S NOTE: Three other
North Road residents have writ•
ten letters to.the editor protesting
the dismissal; they
..
are Stephen
Lavelle, John Welch and Charles
Olsen.
Mixer
Dear Editor:
·
I would like to thank all the
dedicated members of the Class
of '85 who worked at our mixer
Saturday night. Your continued
support
is
greatly appreciated.
Also special thanks to Carol
.Graney
for "chaperoning" and
.
Gene Robbins for a great show
and Mr.
Marist
for
break-
dancing.
Sincerely,
Roger Romano
Junior Class President
Canonization
Dear E_ditor:
_
. _
- .ManyMarist.alumns,
students,
·
.
faculty, and staff have received a
.
.
Marist Brothers and·Marist Col-
lege .
-
packet of- information on
.
the
·
In
the name of the Marist
worldwide move to have Blesse_d
·
Brothers I want to thank all
.
Marcell_i11•_Ch_a,mpagnat.~nonize<l-.-.'
::
students,-:
faculty;_,.and->staff·:;for:
,:-.
~:-
--:
"i1f
1985;
on the occasion of the
theirtime and interest. Tlfose whb
·
.

General_ Chapter of the· Marist
·might
wish to have copies for.
Brothers·. The packet also con-
.
parents and friends tiiay'.:obtain
:
ta ins hi_storical
·
information on
more from me.
:
··
·-
·
·
·
·
the Marist Brothers in the· world
_
-
_
Fr:aternliµy,
_
and in the United States, as well
Bro. Joseph L.R. Belanger,
·
as a sreet of information on the
·-,.
·
fms
JV needed
·
-
Dear.Editor':
_
·
good
·enough
to
'play_
·varsity
-
A few years back, Marist Col-
·basketball
a chance
10·
play J.V.
lege dropped. there junior varsity
-
basketball.
Believe
me the
(JV) basketball program. They.· pressure on.the players would not
dropped it because Marist switch-
_
be as great. Not only would they
ed into the Division I level from
~-e"njoy
·
the
·game
more,
.
but
·
they
the_ Divis.ion 111°-level. The. pro-
probably would
_
enjoy. school
gram should be put back into the
.
more as well.
_
_
.
.
·
program here at Marist. This way
l fa J. V. program were to arise
boys with lesser talent would be
here at Marist, some high school
able
to. play organized ball at the
players might come here just to
college level. Mr. Petro wouid it
·
play J. V. basketball, then they
-
be possible to get a JV team
could try out for the
J.
V. team. I
again?
·
·
am not saying they'll come here
-
-.
If this team was initiated, it
Just
to play basketball. but it
would help the· s_tudents on
-
the
might help them make their deci-
te_am
enjoy college more. A few
sion to come here.
.
years
back this school did have a
.
If they had a.J.V. team here it
J.V. and Varsity basketball team
.would
help the freshmen piayers
but back then they-were Division

·
and
·
the transfer students who
lll.
\\!hen• Marist changed•-·
to
would like to try out for the team._
Division l, they dropped the J.V.
·
lt
would help them make friends
program. Now to play basketball
easier and make them more
.
·
here one has to be on a scholar-
familiar with the school system:·
·
ship. That means you have to be a
The players that were on the-team
great player to-play here. This is
·
·
the previous years would make
unfair to the. guys with lesser
life easier for them by introducing
taient, who still want to play
them to their friends and helping
organiz~d college basketball. If
them adjust to their new life at
they
installed
a J. V. program this
Marist. Not only would_
it help
the
would
enable the guys who aren't
Continued on page 8
Jeff Kiely
Business
Manager
Jeannie Ostrowski
Margo Kuclch
Keith Brennan
Advertising
Manager
Sean Kenny
Hans Schweiger
Joseph Cruz
Circulation Manager
Cathy McGarity
Richard Copp
Christopher Serafini
Faculty
Advisor
a woman iri Maine
----




























On·
flllf
f)'
Women and chesty men
: by Chris Mullen
Socialization is the process by
'which the human being becomes a
·person and functioning member
·or social groups. Socialization is
'very powerful, and essential- to all
-individuals;-· it· internalizes
for
· each individual, sets of norms,
· values
and
perspectives.
Role
acquistion particularly sex roles,
· (which are ascribed
identities)
·-have become an important part in
shaping all modern Americans
· into the individuals
which we
·have· become. Internalizing -these
gender· demands is not all that
healthy.
Not only does it set
certain
behaviors,
but it also
hinders-and
even stops
people
·You've got
to have
.Hart
from . doing certain . things : or
acting certain ways . .This is where
ari
understanding
of
the
usefulness
of. the concept
of
androgyny
(the integrating
of
positive aspects of both sexes into
a mature, .. well
0
rounded-. adult)
becomes important.
· Sandra Lipsite Bern, author of
the essay "Fluffy
Women and
Chesty Men," has been striving to
develop
"a
new standard
of
psychological health for the sexes,
one that removes the burden of
stereotype and allows people to
feel free to express the best traits
of · men
and
women."
Her
research suggests that 50 percent
of us think and act like "typical,"
stereotyped females or males, 15
. by Jeffrey DeSantis
Gary
Hart
offers
America
"new ideas for a new. genera-
tion."
Hart
is committed
to
America's traditional values, but
is impatient
with -yesterday's
politics.
Unlike Walter Mondale, who
sold out to special interest groups,
Gary Hart refused
to
take con-
tributions
from special interest
Political
Action
Committees.
This brave stance had left his
campaign in a precarious finan-
cial situation until his success in
New Hampshire.
!_urge you to be an "American
with Hart"
and vote for Gary
Hart on April 3.
Don't cake my word for it, look
how he stands on the issues. Just
what does Hart stand for?
In foreign affairs,
Hart will
emphasize
diplomatic
and
·· cconomic•-rc\ations ~in ,.protecting
America's
vital interests, rather
-than relying on the military. Han
· would
end covert· and
overt
military involvement in Central
America.
:percent are either effeminate men
or masculine
women
and
35
'percent appear to be what is
· called
"androgynous"
-
corri-
•fortable
with
both
typically
:'ma'sculine and typically feminine
:behavior. She states that unless
·we are part of that androgynous
percent,
our
behavior
is un-
necessarily restricted.
high ·anxiety,· high neuro11c1sm learn
from
its mistakes,
and
and low self-acceptance
during
correct things.
This An-
drogyny allows the individual to
be both: tender, assertive and
yielding, masculine and feminine.
Thus,
androgyny
allows
the
individual
to
be free to express
one's true self (a mixture of one's
results
form
his
(her)
socialization).
This
would
be
ideal for society and the in-
dividual in that they would both
be able to develop and cope more
effectively with diverse situations.
She continues to siate and sight
examples
why traditional
sex
typing
is
unhealthy.
"High
femininity
in females
usually
results in high anxiety, low self-
,<;_steem, and low self-acceptance.
rnd although high masculinity in
;males has been related to a better
psychological adjustment during
adolescence,
it often results in
··adulthood. Furthermore,
greater·.·
intellectual development _has quite
consistently correlated with cros_s
, sex-typing:"
· Positively,
our
modern society is slowly changing
our gender expectations. With the
recent "women's lib" movement,
women are considered more equal
to ·men. There are fewer sex role
distinctions
than
in
previous
years.
But
women's
attitude
changes
are
not
enough,
a
liberation of men is needed also.
Male chauvinism must not exist if
the sexes are to be equal.
It is my wish that the an-
drogynous person will eventually
prevail.
Hopefully
society will
"There is little evidence that
new
economic
program
to
covert operations
have altered
revitalize ailing industries and to
Nicaragua's
policies ... the ques-
encourage
growth
industries.
tion assumes military aid is the
Hart's
economic
policies
are
only way to exert influence in
"more entrepreneurial,
more ad-
Central America, when in fact the
dressed to the siructure of the
best way is through economic
economy."
. assistance," Hart said in a recent
He introduced the Community
interview in News,veek.
Assistance and Revitalization Act
Hart wants a long term restruc-
10
stimulate
small
business
turing of NA TO so that American
development and create inner city
allies "pick
up more of the
jobs, which will help American
obligations
of
land
defense
cities.
... while the United States picks up
more of the air and sea respon-
sibilities."
Hart opposes the building of
complex weapons, such as the Bl
bomber in favor of increasing
Hart supports equal rights for
women and has proposed
the
Comprehensive Economic Equity
Act to remove sex bias in in-
surance and tax laws.
conventional forces. Hart had the
Gary Hart has a strong record
courage
to filibuster
the .
MX
of environmental support. He has
missile.
·
been a leader in the fight against
Gary Hart supports the nuclear
Reagan's cuts in the EPA funds
Christopher
Mullen
is
a
sophomore communication arts
major. This essay was wrillen for
a sociology class.
calling for the largest reduction in
sulfur-dioxide emissions.
Hart worked
in the Justice
Department and the Department
of Interior (special assistant 16
Secretary
of
Interior
Stewart
Udall) in the 1960's. In 1972, he
managed
George
McGovern's
presidential campaign.
Gary Hart was elected to the
U.S. Senate in 1974 and reelected
in 1980, bucking the conservative
Republican tide. He serves on the
Senate Armed Services, Budget,
Environmental and Public Works
Committees.
freeze
and · has · proposed •-a·• and. Interior
Department
pro-
world\\'.ide_ ~an on the production
.: grams. He has worked to expand ·
of . \?}uip1_11~t11-
:·io. g_9P_.!1'e __
arms~ - federal. r.esearch ass1stance _. for.
race where-]~ starts .. ; . .-"-: •-'•""-:--:
re"ne:wab\e\~riergy sources -and is
-a
Hart
Is
op p_o s e d
to
. leader-in support of solar energy.
"My fundamental
values are
those of the Democratic Party: a
commitment to a society commit-
ted
to
equality and justice and op-
portunity. But the great leaders of
our time were transirion
figures
who understood that
to
achieve
those va\ues. you h;i.d _to. be. ex-
perimenta\ and bo\djn pei:iods of
·.change,·A.nd.
that's_,what· we're
. in."
Reaganomics - and . has
voted
Hart· worked to strengthen
the
against
every
aspect
of
Clean Air Act in 1977 and is
Reaganomics. He has proposed a
cosponsor of a new acid-rain bill
-Jeff DeSantis is a senior major-
ing in history and communication
arts.
Will
'WarGameS';
soon
b►
a
re,ality?
by-Jennifer Nash
.
Computers have already been
be detrimental : to • the · mental
incorporated
. into
many
high
health and welfare·or our culture. ·
-Games, 'a•movie about a· reeh~age . was almost too late.
,·;
boy who,'by the use of his-home
No one knows what the·-tu:ture
computer; managed to get into a
brings. All we do know is that the
program of games, among them
use of computers is growing at a
Thermo-nuclear
War. He began
rapid pace, and we have to be
to· plan, then· suddenly realized he
careful that computers do not
was· putting the entire world in
override
man's
existence.
The
danger of destruction. The game
cons eq u e n·ces
co u Id
be
regisfered on· a large government
devastating.
Computers
could
computer, . which . informed
the
end up controlling man, or worse
U.S. ,that Russia was planning
to
yet, man could allow the com-
attack'. It was discovered that the
p111er to wipe him off the face of
computer did not know the dif-
the earth. People could become
ference qetween games and reali-
nonentities, without ·even realiz-
ty; it had no conscience. I think
ing it. The technological race will
the main lesson of this movie was
continue, without a doubt, but
to inform_ us that we can never re-
will we remain in it?
We have entered the ageofthe
computer.
The impact of this
technological advancement can be
. ;Felt everywhere,
in all profes-
.sions. The influence of computer
,technology
is evident in' many
.dimensions of society, from the
. phenomenal
feats of. facilitating
· .space exploration to the pi:act.ical
:·tasks of processing checks and
producing
mailing
labels.
The
computer revolution promises to
free man's mind, just as the in-
dustrial revolution. freed man's .
muscle: But does man really want
his mind freed? Will man be con-
trolled by his dependence on the
computer?
.
Our culture uses language for
• purposes
of
communication.
Language brings unity and order
to
our existence. A major part of
our socialization
process is the
learning
of-
one
or
more
languages; language is the stepp-
ing stone to knowledge. How then
.
could we p_ossibly socialize if our
;·.
language was extinct, and the on-
.' ly languages utilized were BASIC
and FORTRAN?-
-·. If we incorporate computers in-
to- every aspect of our lives, we
·, will have no social interaction
whatsoever. People would not be
· able
10
interact with other people;
: instead, they would have to deal
with cold, impersonal pieces of
machinery. But, people need peo-
_, pie. We feel comforted when so-
meone refers to us by name,
rather than by number.
Social ·
. welfare, an integral part of our
cultural system, would become
very depersonalized thr6ogh the
use of computers, and could ever
· .: become
ineffective.
-: ...
-
-
~


schools and colleges, and every
For one thing, they depersonalize
-:student is being reminded of the
our rel:;itions with others, forcing
'importance of understanding and
us to work through impersonal
using the computers and word·
medium. In addition, there is the
processors. The: idea
IS
already
question of misuse: How are we
there: that someday teachers will
to determh1e the level· of power
be ·replaced- by computers. How
each programmer can attain with
sad
to
think that our children,
the use of his mind and .the com-
.warm peings, will be'taught by an
puter?
It
would not be impossible
· impersonal machine, unconcern-
to
find' out private information
ed with effort arid emotions, only
and business company's
secrets
interested in facts,' riglii or wrong.
by using the computer.
This . wo·uld certainly
alter the
· But worst still is the fact that
!;Ocialization
process
of
our
computers, like· man, are fallible
children,
alienated
from adult
and
can make mistakes. Everyone
role models in the education pro-
seems
to
hold the notion that
cess.
'"·
computers are perfect. But how
The computer will replace peo-
could they be when a fallible be-
ple.
It
will put people out of
ing invented_ t~em? A prime ex-
work, because it can do the job of
ample of this is seen in
War
ly completely on the computer.
It
doesn't understand about limits,
and
the
preciousness
of
hum3nism, and when man tried
to incorporate
that element, it
Jennifer Nash is
a
sophomore
communication arts major. This
essay was written. for a sociology
class.
man, quickly and efficiently. The
------------------------------------------
others, who do not lose their jobs,
will be given new jobs -
pun-
ching keys, entering information,
and
programming
computers.
Because machines of the future
are going to take away jobs from
. humans, we will no longer be able
to value a person by the job he
does. We will have to value him as
a person.
There are positive aspects of
technology, as many are quick to
point out. Technology can help in
the healih fields and medicine,
quickly- telling us what drugs are
unsafe for a particular _person.
Computers ·can also save time,
space, and paper.
It
is much
easier _to program all the informa-
tion info one small computer and
have it at your disposal within a
· matter of minutes, instead of hav-
ing to spend countless hours leaf-
ing through files and papers.
However, computers can also
/'
The Ad Hoc Committee on Writing Across the Curriculum,
In cooperation with The Circle, is pleased to announce
..
The Marist College Student Writing Awards
1983-1984
A competition open to all Marist students
Eligibility:
Written work of any type -
including essays, research papers, poetry, short
stories, and nonfiction articles -
composed during the current academic year may be
entered in the competition.
..
Submissions:
Each entrant should submit a single example of his or her work and a letter of
recommendation from a professor familiar with the entrant's writing ability. Both the writ-
ten work and the letter should be sent to David Mccraw, Box C724, Marist. Include name,
address, and class.
Awards:
Awards
will
be presented in four categories: junior/senior
literary. writing,
junior/senior nonfiction, freshman/sophomore
literary writing, freshman/sophomore non-
fiction.
Deadline:
All entries must be received by April 1, 1984. Winners will be announced later that
month.
..
-
·,
'
I











































·:....-.;•:,·
:~!(~-.
. ;:.
_:j,1_
I.,
--•Page·6.~
THECIRCLE-M11i~h
29,
_1984
________________________
....... _____
~-
111111
-~-•
cli. This clunker hardly put Bar-
·
cake (or banana some might sug-
"Newhart;, and "Family.Tics"
-Good
tube
'
bad tube
Thrilling
Music,

mime
and·
trivia
Thursday
11 a.m. Free
Slot Film
Series:
"Miracle at
Lake
Placid"
D245
-
11
a.m. Lecture:
"Kissinger
Commission
Report;" Panel
Discussion
Fireside
5
p.m. Meeling:
Council of
Student Leaders
Candlelight
8
p.m. Bardavon
David Gordon
Pickup Co.
Tickets are S6,
$7 and S8
9:30
p.m.
Friday.
11:30
a.m.
Lenten Program:
"Journey to
Easter"
Byrrie Residence
3:30
p.m.
"Lecture:
John Scileppi,
sponsored by
lhe Psychology
.
Club-Fireside
7:30
p.m.
,
film:·
·
"Plan
9
From
Outer Space"
Admission
SJ
wilh Marist I.D.
Theatre
9
p.m. Air
Band Nite:
Dining· Room
The Chance:
h)·
Richard
(;opp
.
barn Eden
10
sharne.
_
·
.
•.
gcst).
Takii1g its
·
cue_ from
also make the list in a tic_ for
se-
lr~
the rush to beef up flounder-
_In.
fourih place is "We
.Goi.
It./
Disney's.·.• "Th~
·
Barefoot
·•
Ex~
1:"ond
and third. "Newh:m'' is one
ing schedules, quality more often
Made."_ Nc,,·comer Teri Coply

ecutivc," this sliow about a talk-
··of
the funniest half· hours on
than
1101
is sacrificed for quantity. ·•. played yet
,anoiher
dumb blonde': ing orangutan· i~ Washington,
television
_because
·.of·
Bob
Sad but true. One genre type the
in a flip version of. "Three's Com-
.
D.C. showed us Just how low a
·
Newhart himself and his crazy
big three rely on heavily for high-
pany; ': Copl)•'.s innocence wasn't
desperate netw<?rk would go for·
clan at thcVermont Inn especially
rating numbers is the ever present
all that.bad
10
.watch'
(neither was an idea for a series.
.
.
Steven Kampmann ("Kirk") and
situation comedy.
·
Coply), but a weak supporting
On a brighter note, the five best
Julia
Duffy
('-'Stephanie'').
Comedy has been a part of our
·
cast and inferior stories that many
series
of the season were all fresh,
"Family Ties" goes beyond the
viewing since the early days of
times just were not funny turned
diversified and funny. In fifth
sugary
sweet "Brady
Bunch"
television. and this season there
this show into a big bore.
place is
·a
relatively new series
style
domestic
·
sitcom,
and
·.
ccrtainly'has been no shortage.
It
called
"Night
Court."
Harry
.delivers
a sometimes hilarious,
was an easy task
10
pick out the
"Jennifer
Sltipl Here"
and
Anderson plays a young judge in
sometimes moving slice of family
worst.
I quickly found c;leven "After M*A*S*H" rank second
New York City, where he comes
life.
comedies
that
are
almost
and third respectively. Ann Jillian
in contact with a colorful assort-
deplorable
to watch,
but to
showed us how dull a ghost can· ment of clJaracters. It's still
choose the five best· comedies of
be. She concentrated more on her testing the waters, but this show
the year proved difficult indeed.
wardrobe than on the comedy
has the potential to make it, and
I
In the category of the worst
potential of her show. "After
hope it does.
comedies of the year, ranking
M*A*S*H" was the most awaited
Dabney Coleman as "Buffalo
fifth is "Just Our Luck," a stupid
show of the season as well as the Bill" is in fourth place. The.
show about a hip genie (T.K.
most overrated. All the hype was stories are probing, the show
Carter) out
10
spruce up the life-of
for nothing. "After M*A*S*H"
within a show format works, but
a boring. weatherman (Richard
sunk in all respects.
·
the strong supporting players led
Gilliland). The scripts were dumb
-
As the worst:- sho,v of the by Joanna Cassidy make it all the
and the acting was painful to wat-
season, "Mr. Smith" takes the more worthwhile.
by Bill Coleman
SOMEBODY'S
-
WATCHING
HIM-Within the next few weeks
he prepared to make a trip to your
local toy stores.
If
you haven't
already anticipated, the likeness
of Michael _Jackson has been put
into posable plastic. Also due will
be
the
Michael
Jackson
microphone which comes com-
.
plete with a white glitter glove.
And, no, the dolls do not come
with hair replacements. As
of
a
few weeks back, the presses of the
Guiness Book of World Records
were halted to inciude Jackson's
"Thriller"
Ip ,vhich has become
the biggest-selling Ip by a solo ar-
tist ever. Jackson's royalty take in
the U.S. is $2 per Ip sold and has,
since the
release, made $45
million in worldwide sales for
himself.
The release of THE -Jacksons'
"State Of Shock" Ip has again
been postponed (since January)
because of the continued chart
reign of Michael's "Thriller.,,
Phillip Lynolt is slated· to play
the role of Jimi Hendrix on a
film
biography
for one-time Who
manager,
·
Kit Lambert,
titled
"Hope
I Die Before I'm Old."
UNCUFFED-Does
. anyone
really know if the Police are
breaking up? From the looks of
their solo plans and post-tour one
would think not. As solo artists,
Stewart Copeland will be direc-
ting a film on the sport polo;
An-
dy Summers
will collaborate
again with Robert Fripp for their
sound Ip together. As a group, a
live Ip is due out during the mon-
ths of summer and a tentatively
scheduled new studio Ip by the
year's end.
.
" 'Y' because we like you" ...
Rhino Records has finally releas-
ed two of Annette Funnicello's
most
·sought
after !p's, "Beach
Party'-' and "Muscle Beach Par-
ty."
,
BANG YOUR HEAD?-This
could become a distinct possibili-
.
ty with London's newest trend in
music -
"Metal Music" (a.k.a.
Foundry or Scrapyard rock). Ed-
die Van Halen may be one up on
As the
'
top comedy of the
season,- "Cheers,"
of course, is
by far my choice. Anyone
,vho
has-seen· this gem needs not even
ask why.
The sitcom format is here to
stay
with us, but as long as we can
find a '.'Cheers" in the pile,
I
guess we can put up \yith all the
"Mr.
Smiths"
_surrounding.
it.
Then again there's always HBO ...
phenomenal guitar licks but one
could bet that neither he nor his
counterparts could strike
·a
note
..
from
·
such
contemporary
in-
·
struments such as: sheet metal, oil
drums, lead pipes, electric drills,
hacksaws,
and
jackhammars.
"Metal" bands to look out for-.
SPK and Test Department.
.
EASTER
BASKET-Mitch
Easter should be smiling these
·
days. He is currently in the pro-
cess of co-producing the newest
from R.E.M., a critically acclaim-
ed band whose major-label debut,·
was "Murmur."
·Easter's own
band, Let's Active, is finally·
receiving a considerable amount
of airplay on A.O.R. stations and
Continued on page 10
Tonight in the Fireside Lounge
in the
area
this week. Tonight at
,
$16 for the evening performance.
The Arkansaw Bear· will be per-
at 9:30 p.m., the Political Science
the Bardavon, the·David Gordon
For more. information
·on
both
formed at the Vassar Institute, 12
_
Club
will
sponsor Trivia Nigh!.
If
Pickup Co. will be appearing at
8
events, call (914) 473-2072.
Vassar Street, Poughkeepise, on
rrivia is
what
you're
good
at, then
p.m. David Gordon blends dance
Tonight,
·
the
Chance
will
Friday; March 30 .and Saturday,·
stop in for some fun.
·
and theatre into a unique art form
feature Robert Hunter. Modern
March 3
I,
at 7:30 p.m. and Sun-
Tomorrow night, March 30,
using>_a
co.mbination:~~of
EnglishwillbeperformJngonFri-
day, Aprill at 2 p.m. For infor-
and also on Sunday, April
I,
a
pho!ogra,phic"irnage~,videos-and .. day. They will be featuring songs·
mation/reservations,
call 471-
·
.
film
wil\
be presented titled<'Plan
.HvordS('
The
·:company
·:has.
;aps:.-,
:_
from
.
their album "After
.
the
·.
9339.
_
.
·
9
.From
Outer Space''
_at
1:30
peared
on
pub\ic
.te\evisio~
and•
':~Snow;''
including the hit single,
.
p.m. in the Theatre: Admission is
has-been touring America since:
"l
Melt With You.'' On Satur-
The Mid-Hudson Group of the .
$1
with MaristI.D.
·
1980. Tickets are $(i, $7 and $8.
day,:-
'.60's·(olk
star
_Ario
Guthrie
..
Sierra Club will
·holdhs.9th
Art-_:
·
On Saturday, March 31, at 9
.
Also at the Bardavon, on April
and. his hand, Shenandoah,
,will
nual Square Dance
on
Saturday:
p.m., Comedy Cabaret will. be·
I;
.
is
M umenschanz.
·
beappearinf.

night, March 31, at the St. James:
held, featuring Jack Gallagher in
Mumenschanz is
a
fabulous and
Church. on Route 9, in Hyde
.
theNcwDiningroom.
-fa·mous
mime''
troupe
..
A Marist College senior has
Park.Ticketsare$4atthedoor.
There· will· be an AlcohoL
Mumenschanz, which has been
'.
been awarded
a
role in an upcom-
·
For more information, call Chair-•'
Awareness m·eeting this Monday;
performing for· over a decade,
'
ing production of The Arkansaw
man,
·s111
Collier
·at
(914) 297-·
April 2, at 5 p.m. in the Pub.
opened on Broadway in 1977 for
·
Bear, a· play to be produc_ed by
:
5901
:-·
.
.
On Wednesday, April 4;
a
lee-
a three-year
run.
The three
Community Experimental Reper-
Finally, on Wednesday,· A,pril
ture will be held on the topic of
members of the troupe enact fast-
tory
·
Theatre
(CERT),
in
4,
the Mid-Hudson Civic Center·
Social Work
in the
..
Fireside
paced sketches µsing
.contortious
·
Poughkeepsie. Aiannah Molloy
wiH_be headlining Indiana rocker,:
Lounge.
costumes- and masks. There
will
plays the part of the mother of a

John Couger Mellencamp.
be two shows at 3 and 7 p.m.
young girl who must come to
The show starts at
8
p.m.
Off-campus
events
Tickets are $10, $12 and $14 for
·
terms with the if!lpending death
Marydale Dolezal'
.
.
There's something for everyone
the first show; and $12, $14, and
of her grandfather.
·
and Gina Disanza·-
Saturday
6:1S p;m. Mass:
Chapel
9 p.m. Comedy
Cabaret:
Featuring
Jack Gallagher
New Dining Room
Sierra Club:
9th Annual
Square Dane~
The Chance:
·
Ario Guthrie
and Shenandoah
Sunday
11 a.m. Mass:
.
Chapel
·
3 p.m. Bardavon:
Mumenschanz
-
Tickets: $10,
·
J
$12 and $14
5
p.m. Dinner:
Inter House
Council Awards
Pub
7
p.m. Bardavon:
Mumenschanz -
Tickets: $12,
S14
and S16
7
&
9:30
p.m.
Film:
"Plan 9 From
Outer Space;''
Admission
Sl
with Maris! I.D.
Theatre
Monday
Noon Mass:
Chapel
3:30
p.m.
Student
Development
Committee
CC270
S
p.m. Meeting:
Alcohol
Awareness
Pub
9:20
p.m.
Meeting:
·
Marist College
Television (MCTV)
CC248A
9:30
p.m.
Meeting
WMCR- CC248
Tuesday
Noon Mass-
:
Chapel
Wednesday
Noon Mass-
Chapel
5
p.m. MCCTA
Board Meeting
Pub
5:15
p.m.
Meeting:
·
Inter House
Council
Candlelight
8
p.m. Lecrure:
Social Work
Fireside
8
p.m. Mid-
Hudson Civic
Center
Here's the beef.
Trivia Night:
Sponsored by
lhe Political
Science
Club
Fireside
Modern English
~
; ·_.
"After the Snow"'
• ;
7:30 j,.m. Meeting:
·
Circle
K~-
CC24S-
John Cougar
Mellencamp
Pub Nite
WMCR






















-
: The-
Marist · College Communica- ·
tions Board is now accepting ap-
plications Jor the foil owing posi-
tions:
General Manager, WMCR
Chairperson, MCCTA
Editor, Reynard
Editor, Circle
Editor, Mosaic
President, Marketing and Advertising
President, Marist College Singers
Deadline date for submission of applications is :
April 11th. If interested in applying,clarification of
qualifications and responsibflities as .well as ap- ·
plications for these positions can be obtained from
the College Activities Office.
ATTENTlON:
M.C.C.T.A:
members
in-
tere.sted in running for posi-
tions on the Executive -Board
-.should check the theatre door.
Only
those members who hold
or
the title of· Journeyman
Ma~ster are ~lig)bi~ to run ..
If
you have any'.
quest,on_s
please
come to our next board
meeting
Wed ..
April 4th~
5:30
in
tfle pub or ~ontact 'Alannah at
ext. 6108.
·
..
·----..
Column
One
by
John Bakke
You can· say what· you want
about Marist's computer science
program, its picturesque location
on the banks of the Hudson or the
overabundance of distilled spirits
on campus. It's still the Judeo-
Christian heritage....,.. that panacea
for all that's evil in the world -
that really sets this place apart.
1 can remember looking at col-
leges during my senior year in
high school, listening to admis-
sions people boast about some
new
library
or
classroom
building. "That's
all well and
good," I would say, "but tell me
about
your
Judeo-Christian
heritage."
Well, of course, they just look-
ed at me, knowing that I'd struck
their Archilles
heel,
knowing
they'd lost another freshman to
Marist's enviable religious tradi-
tion.
Much as I admire our Judeo-
Christian heritage, though, I must
admit I've always wondered how
such a devoutly Catholic bunch of
guys like the Marist Brothers
managed to J udaize it the way
they have. So I asked a Jewish
friend of mine what he said when
people asked him how he could go
to a school with such a strong
Catholic legacy.
"You mean you never heard of
Brother Cohen?" he said.
Indeed I hadn'L But I felt com-
pelled to find out as much as I
byG.
w·alsh
sometimes
wonder
why
anyone expresses their intentions
anymore, since usually the minute
they come out of your mouth is
that things start to go wrong.
Take spring break, everyone's
intention was to-go-to Florida and
have a wonderful time and be best
buddie$ forever right? Let's be
serious: Most of us didn't even
get there and spent the week at
home doing fun things like dean-
ii:ig gutters or changing the kitty
litter Mom (and the cat) saved
from Christmas.
Those that
went sometimes
didn't make it straight through
and had to stop at tourist traps
like the Cherry Hill Rest. New
Jersey has never looked so good.
Why go to Daytona when-you can
sit in an all all-night diner and
play trivial pursuit with truckers
from such exotic locales as Cag-
gsville, South Carolina? The real
trivial pursuit was trying to find
intelligent conversation in a cafe
that makes the Port Authority
look like the Culinary.
Those who finally made it to
the beach are now spending time
in either of two places, the George
Hamilton home for the undertan-
ned or at the Sloan Kettering
Clinic for L_auderdale Leperosy.
A word to the wise: Next trip
don't take along anyone with bad
breath or anyone who believes
that natural body aromas are sen-
sual; they are better off left at toll
booths.
Having the best of intentions
doesn't only go for vacation plan-
ning -
we've all seen the effect
they have on school work. It's
gettting pretty hard to explain to
Mom what Kamikazes have to do
March
29,
1984 · THE CIRCLE· Page
1--•
Brother Cohen?
could about this almost-forgotten
Marist Brother, the man who put
the Judeo- in the Judeo-Christian
Heritage.
History has neglected Brother
Cohen, and the records pertaining
to his life here at Maris! are sket-
chy at best, as if his remarkable
contribution
to this institution
wasn't
all
that
important.
However, when you consider how
unenthusiastic the other brothers
must have been, his efforts were
nothing short of incredible.
So you can imagine how thrill-
ed I was, in the course of my
search through the college ar-
chives, to come across his diary.
The old book is in terrible shape
-
the binding is falling apart and
some of the pages are missing.
Parts of it, are in Hebrew ano
others are simply illegible.
But the readable sectioris are
fascinating, a literary portrait of
a man blazing a trail for Judaism
here at Marist.
"February
16. Brother R -
forgot to get Kosher wine again,
then got upset when I complain-
ed. As though it were my fault.
He's a lovely man, but he should
know about this sort of thing by
now.''
"August 24. Cardinal J -
paid
us a visit today. What a fuss
everyone made! You'd think it
was the second coming. I greeted
him with 'Shalom' when I was in-
troduced, and Brother D -
was
mad at me. I must be more sen-
sitive to his feelings."
"November
25. Carved the
turkey again this Thanksgiving.
Made a mess of it as usual. but
Brother G -
had insisted I do it.
He's convinced all Jewish clergy
are adept with knives."
"September 27. Had to fight to
get the day off. 'I don't care if it
is your kupper,' he said.
'Yorn
Kippur,' I said. 'Whatever,'
he
said. I suppose each of us must
bear his own cross."
"July 9. My turn to read aloud
at Mass. Just for fun, started with
the Talmud and got a good laugh,
except from Brother D -.
Mc
and my silly sense of humor.''
"March 4. Have decided to
give up pork for Lent. Taking the
easy way out, but it makes up for
last year's sacrifice of gefilte
fish."
"December 25. The day of mix-
ed emotions, as always. Joined
the party for a while and had a
few cups of egg nog. Then a few
more. The orphans loved me as
Santa. 'Ho, ho, ho,' I cried, han-
ding out the presents, 'Happy
Hanukkah!' "
What a guy. Brother Cohen
may never have a dormitory nam-
ed after him, but his legacy lives
on in Marist's Judeo-Christian
Heritage, a pervasive spirit that
endures from the foundation of
Greystone to the tippy-top of the
cross on the Chapel roof.
Good intentions
with Financial Management. She
didn't believe the laundry money
· line, either.
Maybe it did sound a little fishy
when you asked her on Wednes-
day to send up two rolls of nickels
Federal Express in order to arrive
by Friday night. My mom spent
six hours looking through a New
Paltz phone book to find Joe's
laundromat. But what's to argue
about? The point is you tried and
finals are still five weeks away.
We've
all
tried the activities
route also. It didn't seem too hard
aLfirst to attend meetings and to
volunteer for everything from
flower selling to dogwashing.
The hard part came ,vhen all of
these activities fell on the same
weekend as the Find A Floosie
Formal at Oneonta.
Which is
more charitable -
,vashing 30
poodles singlehandedly or helping
a coed find the shoe you have so
carefully_ hidden in your room?
Sorry, but for most guys and
girls, washing a golden retriever
just doesn't cut it. My commit-
ment as a Marist tour guide stop-
ped after one day. I fell over a
curb
while trying
to lecture
parents
and
try
and
walk
backwards at the same time.
After recovering enough to stag-
ger to Leo, I managed to get the
whole crew stuck in the elevator.
So what if Jim Daly hates me and
I'm on social probation for driv-
ing 30 people into claustrophobic
paranoia -
that wasn't my inten-
tion. Nobody seemed to care, and
they shredded my application for
an admissions internship.
Diets are the best vehicle for
good intentions and the worst of-
fender of honesty. After the spr-
ing break starvation
fiasco, I
know a group of juniors who are
David Mccraw
attempting to write a book on
Miller Lite for Fitness. The big-
gest promise a dieter makes is the
final binge and then the journey
into starvation.
Okay, I'll eat anything I want
until Sunday and then it's back
to
the three sesame-seeds-a-day diet.
I don;t know how far you weny,
but I tried that diet last year. I
started on Friday, Dec. 31, and
ended my binge on Sunday, July
12. I couldn't help it. I was on a
. roll (actually it was more like a
cheese danish). But I really did
think about stopping eating or
running a marathon twice a day. I
even got as far as getting into my
sweats and running a mile to the
nearest Carvel. Well, you didn't
want me to drop dead on the first
day did you?
Letter writing is high up on the
list also. I never seem to ·have a
pen, paper, stamp or address at
the same time. By the time I get
them all together, the stamp is
ripped, the envelope is licked, and
then the letter is the one I wrote to
my third-grade
teacher asking
why mommies get so mad when
puppies don't go on the paper.
Not writing doesn't stop me from
cursing my mailbox either. My
friends should know I was going
to write a letter, they should at
least answer it.
Writing is what brings me to
the end of this column; and I was
going to end this with a real win-
ner -
no, really, I swear it! This
last paragraph was going to be Er-
ma Bambeck, Marvin Kitman
and Winston Churchill all in one.
But then my pen ran out of ink
and by the time I found another
one I sort of, well, forgot what I
was going to write. I was really
going to throw in a good one, at
least I intended to.













































\'
..............
·
·,
---
)
--Page.8-
THE CIRCLE~
March
29;
1984
Students Jinisk,2()0..,rflil<t
tPek.',
by Paul Raynis
They left Boston's Prudential
Square amidst the wind~deadened
applause of only a handful of
pe9ple .. · ·
.
-..
Five days and 200 miles later,
the scene of their arrival in the
Marist· cafeteria was very much
the sarne. Aside from the small
group that formally welcomed
. them back to Marist -
President
Dennis. Murray, 'Gerard
Cox,
dean of student affairs, family·
and frieRds of the two, and a
few
local ne\vsmen -
nobody seemed
to realize ,vhat Tony Bellantoni
and Frank Sciaretta had just ac-
complished.
which they say
.
is "the least· we
defect, co~ered the distance- in 'an
can do for such a beneficial pro•
ultraslighi · wheelchair· ·custom:·
gram."
.
. . . .
made· for athletic use and donated
In fact;· the two said it was
to Sciaretta by a Rhinebeck com~:
simply another
of. the many . pany-that.builds such chairs; ··,
obstacles. that :they had ,to Jace in
Sciaretta said that the planning·
their effort ·to promote Special
of-the route itself, which passed·
Services.· The • program · provides
through.· many .. small.•·towns -in.
test-taking and note-taking aides;
Massachusetts -: before ... reaching:
attendants;
and
an·y other
the New Yorkborder at Hillsdale,
assistance handicapped
students
was another factor toward• ,the
may need in order to function
limited response to their effort .
more equally in the college en- ..
i.
:'.'.The~e
,were
so. many_. oukof-:
vironment.
·
,_, the_:way fO~ns with small_popu_Ja~';
And like the rain, snow, heavy
tions," he said. "At times, we'd
winds and steep hills that 'tested · pass through five towns during
them most of the way,.a sense of
one ten-mile stretch."
·
loneliness was something
they
. Bellantoni,.
a
sophomore
also had to work around.
. business/marketing
major, said
"Finishing this thing meant too
that the lack of loudspeakers or
much to me to let things like that
banners on the van that accom-
get' me down," said Sciaretta;
a
panied the runners. seemed to
junior computer science major
create misunderstanding
among
from Levitt own, N. Y. Sciaretta,
many people that they passed.
unable to walk due to a birth
Continued on page 11
But for the two members of
Marist 's Special Services pro~
gram, it would have taken far
more than a plague of no-shows
to
stifle
their
Boston-to-
Poughkeeps}e fundraising
trek,
----More
letters----
Continued from page 4
players out, it would help the
school morale. I know it's not big ·
time co11ege basketba11, but it
would do more good than the
school would think.
'No matter how much· an in-
convenience a J. V. team would
be, it is not fair to the boys who
still want
co
continue to play
organized basketball. Basketball
is a fun and great game
to
play so
why don't we start a new J.V. ·
·: basketball
team
not only for
the
:·athletic elite
but for Marist Col-
lege as well.
Tom
McNamara
One to.One.
Dear· Editor:
l would like to express my
·e
thanks,and :gratitude, .on behalf
.cof,the,P,sy~ho\ogyJ:\~h; for;y_our
, t
houghtfu\ness, in Yegard 'to~your
. article
on
One
to
One day in the
March,}st Circle, This the 3rd an-.
nual One to One day will be held
on April 27th and we need more
volunteers to be hosts for the day.
We currently have in excess of fif-
ty children who would love
to
come but without volunteers we
arc severely limited. Here is a
glimpse of what_ is in store for
hosts who work that day.
In looking back at last years
event it can best be described as a
day spent brightening a childs life
ing worthwhile,
but we need
volunteers to be hosts or run ac-
tivities. If you wish to help
brighten a childs life oil April
27th ~e urge you to contact Dr.
Scileppi .at the Psychology office
in Donne11y l04. Thanks again to
the Circle and those clubs who
will help make this day more than
just reality.
Sincerely yours,
Michael Ward
Coordinator
One to One day ·
Cabaret
On Saturday, March 31 at 9.
p.m. in the New Dining Room we
will
be hosting an evening of fun
and frolic with the COMEDY
CABARET. Jack Gallagher, The
Amazing Johnathan
and Mike
McDonald will juggle, tell jokes,
pu11 some rabbits out of hats and
much more. The Comedy Cabaret
· does ·promise to be an enjoyable
evening. An old fashioned ice
cream
parlor
with root
beer
floats,
chocolate
shakes
and
banana
barges will definitely
satisfy any sweet tooth.
Tickets will be available at the
. door_ or ca11 ext. 279 Thursday
Dear Editor:
from
12-5 p.m. Faculty and staff
.. · It
is often said that there is not
tickets are $1 and student tickets
are 501>:
·
enough interaction
between· th e
We are looking forward to see-
faculty and students. outside the . ing you there.
classroom. As the academic year
_ Sinc~rely' ycm~s•
con:ies to an . end,. the Coll~ge
,
· · ' ·
··
·
Susan Brunner
,\}nl()~ Boai;d ,1S d~_mg ~on;iethmgi:, , '.':. :_ . . . . CUB.Pei-formin
.
", ~9 ·
,el_l.~Ol.~r.;w,e
;,,th!!,,!1l~~,t'11_,
pJ -~
~~e_i,;,!/;:~>:--'i'ff:~-¢.t'~-'<?·\'falr'ist:\i!u'i'
~i:so~;,
·_facu\ty-studentrelauonsh1ps.,
.,.,.,..,.:'··:'·':-:--·
--
•··
,,.,,P ,.,:
. 1111!~.::..i•.
.
For more information, please complete. the- coupon
f
~
below and
forward
it to:
Reverend Jerry
Dom.
Glenmary
Home
Missioners, Box 46404, Cincinnati. Ohio
45246.
.Name__,,....,.----------,-------,Age
__
_
• College ___
__;;__ _______
YearofStudy __
_
Address ______
__:_
____________
_
City ________
.
State ____
Zip ____
_
Telephone~.J---'-------------,---,--
~
Al RCU.TTf;RS
$2.00Off
With Morisf 1.0.
c
Come visit
The Cuttery,
where we've been
setting.
hair
cutting
tTends
f
OT
over
·
· ten
yeaTs.
)
Serving·
Marist College
Since 1975
For
men, women
The Cuttery
and childTen, it's
is
located at
The Cuuery fOT
3
Liberty StTeet .
the
very best in
in
Poughkeepsie.
professional
Stop
by
OT
haiTsryling,
shampoo,
call
us at
conditioning,
perms,
914-454-9239.
body waves,
cellophane .·
..
. ~Olo/f~gs,
ana·~-~are:
..
·r:~·:tt•n:·~
...
,~:i:~
!i,
~.::-f!
?,v:,•,.,;
· with love, entertainment
and
basically a great time. These
children who are "developmen-
tally delayed" are in need of a
will·-:
be
heJd,-,--()Jl
· speciai day with older people in a
close, friendly atmosphere away
from their usual happenings. As a
host one supplies love and the
,pay-off is a hug from your new
friend who will always remember
that day at Marist.
_
As coordinator
of this years
One to One day I am amazed at
the enthusiasm displayed by Dr.
Scileppi and all the club members.
In keeping with this enthusiasm
several organizations have given
of themselves to help- make the
days events spectacular.
These
organizations
can
only
help
enhance our days events with
their willingness to participate.
We are deeply indebted to the:
MCCTA for their puppet show,
MCTV for their video display, the
basketba11 teams for, sports ac-
tivities, the Social Work Society
for support through volunteers,
and all those special people who ·
have volunteed as hosts. We will
be in touch ,vith all these people
to let them know the specifics of
the days events. A special thanks
to Sue Dolan for her help with the
Social Work Society's. involve-
ment and the pupp~t · show ar-
rangements.
Since the March. 1st articl~ in·
the Circle we have received ten
more applications and we hope
this article can yield·: the·
_same
Wednesday,·
AJ)ril
4th
·and
Th.ursday, · April, 5th·
A candidate forum will be held on
.
,

I.
.
.
.
Tuesday, April 3rd: at

p.·m.
_ill
CC-249
' results. A day of this magnitude
takes hours ofplanning,
it
all be- , .. _______________________________
,_. _______
..;. ____
~------.1
.I
·,
I
i















__
... _______
lllili111111
... _ ... ._ ____
..........
_ .... _____________
March 29,
1984 · THE CIRCLE• Page
9--•
MCC.T A .
will make· kids ·smile with 'The Frog Prince'
by
Catherine
DeNunzio
attend the play . throughout. the
... ·
w~ek are going to be in for quite a
· The Marist'College Council of . show. "I think they'll enjoy it,"
Theatrical Arts will .present 15 Serafini said. "We try to have a
performances
· of ·"The
Frog
good sense of humor because we
.Prince," April 9.- 15,
for
children
want
them
laughing.
from
in the tri.:state area arid. the Marist
beginning to end."
community.
"The Frog Prince"
tells the
.:::
.. According to · Chris . Serafini,
story of a prince who turns into a
· director of the play, the 4,000
frog and then tries to get a
children
who are expected to princess to kiss him and tran-
sf orm · him back into a prince.
"It's an old fairy tale with several
hundred versions· and I adapted
it," said Serafini.
.-
Serafini said he has spent the
past year rewriting the script to
make it fit within the space
available on stage and the varied
personalities of Marist's actors.
"One
thing we do with the
Children's Theater is to make it
our own show,"
said Serafini .
"We let the actors mold the
play."
During the performances,
the
actors will be spending a lot of
time interacting with the children
in the audience and from the
stage. · "We'll do anything and
everything to keep the children
involved," said Serafini. "We've
even let the schools know what
Christialls .observe Luther's birth
by
~anet
Lawler
Sixty
worshippers
gathered
together
Sunday
night in the
· Marist Chapel to read Scripture
. and raise their voices in hymns for
. an ecumenical service celebrating
the 500th anniversary of Martin
Luther's birth. ·
The service was c_o-sponsored
by the Marist College Campus
Ministry,
Religious
Studies
Faculty: Division of Humanities,
and · the
Lutheran
Clergy
of
Southern Dutchess County.
__
The guest speaker, Professor
Eric Gritsch, Ph.D .• discussed the
life and beliefs of Martin Luther,
the 16th century Roman Catholic
priest
whose
objections
to
elements
of Roman
Catholic
practice
began the movement
known
as
the
Protestant
Reformation.
Professor Gritsch, a graduate
of Yale University, has written
several
books
about
Martin
Luther's life and times. His latest
book is entitled,
"Luther:
in
Retrospect."
Martin Luther preached that
God only asks for trust and faith
alone from mankind -
a deep
trust from birth to death, ac-
cording to Gritsch. Luther said
one must be a proper religious
student, believe in the grace of
God, and that forgiveness could
not be bought with money.
·
Professor Gritsch said Martin
Luther's
belief · in a merciful,
nurturing
God
was like the
relationship between new parents
and their infant.
"You
take
this ·newborn
home,"
Gritsch said. "Raising
this child will be very costly. The
child may contact anywhere up to
fifty-five genetic diseases. There
is no guarantee this child will
grow up
to
even like you as
parents,'' Gritsch· said.
The congregatio·n, mostly filled
with older adults and married
couples, listened attentively to the
analogy about God's relationship
to mankind.
"Well, God feels the same with
His
children.
There
are
no
guarantees about the outcome.
Therefore, God became a child to
be like us. He experienced our
lives."
The service also included the
hymns "O God Our Help is Ages
Past" and "A Mighty Fortress ls
Our God," as well as spiritual
dialogue
between
Professor
Gritsch and the guests attending
the Christian unity celebration.
·Reaction----------------------
songs we'll be singing so the
children can sing along.''
According
to Serafini,
the
actors will . ask questions
and
encourage
the
children
to
respond. "It's really a challenge
for the actors,"
said Serafini.
"Each show will be a little dif-
ferent. They'll be getting constant
feedback from the audience."
The cast is made up of frogs
and peasants singing and dancing
throughout the entire play. "The
most difficult thing for many of
the actors,
at this point, . is
learning to dance, sit and walk
with flippers on," said Serafini.
Lisa Maggio, costume des·1gner,
and Beverly Morlang, make-up
director,
along
with
several
fashion design majors, have been
working hard to make the actors
look · realistic,
according
to
Serafini. "The frog make-up and
costumes look fantastic; people
have said it looks like the frog
version of 'Cats',"
said Serafini.
"Lisa and Beverly really seem to
be on top of the situation."
Continued from page 1
Serafini also complimented his
Assistant
Director
Nancy
Keschinger, Producer Jean Marie
Magrino,
Assistant
Producer
Tom Greene, as well as all the
others working on the play. "It's
suffering from growing pains."
looking good," said Serafini.
students are being manipulated.
ministration and Alan Moore and
he said. "Something
had to be
~
"They disrupted classes at mid-
Norman
Olin,
assistant
pro-
done."
For Marist Night on Friday,
to study with the buzz saws and
D
·ct
M
c
·
h
b
·11
semester and they did not inform
fessors of art, would represent the
av,
c raw, assistant pro-
April 13, eac cast mem er w1
hammers making all that noise,"
d f
d"
f
r
· ·
·

us properly,"
Hyer said.
"I
concerne
acuity, accor mg to
essor o
commumcauon
arts,
be given
two
comp 1mentary
Davies said.
"d
·
d.
·
·
Th
organized a sit-_in (to protest the
Hyer.
sa1 , "I thmk the a JUStment 1s
tickets
to
give
away.
e
Gene Robbins, a junior art ma-
d"ff" I
,,
d
f h
· k
·11
b
move) but I was told by Waters

. · the 1 1cu ty.
remain er o t e uc ets w1
e
jor, said that the noise was so bad
.h.

. h"
Id b
.
Some faculty members
said
On the positive side Mccraw
sold at the door on the night of
d
th t h. professor cancel
t at everyt mg wou
e m
h
h
d
d th
d f
'· ·
one ay
a
is

d
,,
t at t ey un er stoo
e nee
or
pointed out that the add1uon "br-
that
performa1.ce.
"Everyone
ed class. Robbins also pointed out
. or
8
r ·
.
d
h
the move, but also expressed
ings diversity to the campus • •
gets tired of doing scenes over and
that there is poor ventilation in
h yer p~i.nte. out,
1
.
o;e~~•
some dissatisfaction.
Director of Security Joe Waters
over again. Marist Night is their
·the classrooms.
t ·~dt
ehverythmg is noht a Ing t. h de
Dr. Richard LaPietra, assistant
sa"1d that students "compla"1ned
ff
d
sa 1 t at p otograp y c asses a
f
f
.
·ct
"I
.
.
chance to let o
some steam an
"Most of the rooms don't have
to be cancelled last week-because
pro essor
~
chemistry, sa1 ,
about the walk at first, but
11
make fun of the play,"
said
windows and in the ones that do
the darkroom
in Donnelly had
resented b~1?g uprooted from_ my
seems they're adjusting to it pret-
Serafini. "We just sit back and let
the windows don't .open," Rob-
been dismantled.

clbassrohom.
1
He also. cow"!plamed ty well."
_
the actors have fun."
bins said.
; Hyer said she is now hoping to
a out . ot c assrooms m
estern.
Some students agreed that they
All art classes have been moved
hold a forum to clarify the situa-
_L~P1et~a recalled t~at the ad-
just have to get used to their new
"If
you're
going to Marist
~
· across -the street where Robbins
.. . .. . .f
.
1
-

.
d. -
d.
.. - mm1strat1on. had considered ren- .. ·_ classrooms
·Davies
said "It's like
Night, it might be nice to see a
Sal.d -there -1·s.
more ·space,. but no
uon
or al concerne
stu ents.
'ting space in the building in the
· d
I
'
regular
performance
first
so
..
w
d A·
d
·

p
·
any
new
eve opment·
not
gallery to display their works.
aters an
ca emic ice resi-
past
"but
there was always
th"
·
·
1
'
you'll understand
the humor a
dent Andrew Molloy would be
'
.

every
mg
is
gomg
O
go
f •
· Deborah Hyer, president of the
h
d
enough space. I thmk the school 1s smoothly right from the start "
little better," said Sera im.
;.a_r_t_c_l_u_b_,
-s-a-id_t_h-at_s_I:i_e_f_e_e_ls-th_e
__ p_r_e_se_n_t
__ t_o
__ re_p_r_es""'e_n_t_t_e_a
______________
· ________________
_
STUDENT OPERATOR -
position available in Computer
Center no experience necessary -
computer science major preferred
but not necessary -
MUST BE
COMM.UTER _. prefer freshman
or sophomore -· -
some night
hours: Apply through Financial
Aid.
. .
GregF.
• Your days are numbered ...
Scrunchy:.....
Keep your blue eyes open.
.
..
. Sputnik
"I'm burnin' up .... "
1984 may see. the resurrection
of HELLRAZOR. But we need a
bassist or lead · guitarist to play
non-commercial
heavy
metal.
Contact· Ed Flynn, Champagnat
603,
ext.
I 16.
Bill, James and Griff,
Cute Briefs!
We're waiting for an encore
performance.
The 2nd floor
· Dino'Dan...;..GETOUT!!!!!
Patrice -
We saw you Saturday
night crawling across Route 9.
Bill and Kelly -
How about a
truce? Kelly and Donna
Denise-
When
is our
Honeymoon?
AND
stop with the Post marriage
affairs.
Your husband Jeff
Jeannie 0. -
So, I'm broke ..
.l
still love ya!
Thanks for being such a honey!
Marta
T,R. How big are your t--s? I
heard
Mt.
Everest
. doesn't
compare! Don't worry about it,
you're young, you'll get over it.
"The 7."
The guys on the 4th really· know
how to throw a party.
-
To the girls on 4: "Get out of
town"
Wat to go" Jerry's Kids" three in
a row.
'
Little,
. "your pounding."
I want to
. party with you. · .
Benoit boys,
Thanks for lase night. See you
next Wednesday. ·
Love, Anna
Molina,
Wanna play PASSOUT??
Dino.Dan-The-Man,
I'll take a free set of sheets as
cornsolation for the broken PR
· machine!
AnnieM.
Santa, Ray, Joyce, and Stacey;
We love you, too. Hold the fort
until we get back!
Love, Lou Ann & Ryann
Dear Dr. Lanning,
Was it Paris or us that was so
hard
to
leave? We had a great
time!
Three French Hens
Christine,
We always knew that you were
fast but isn't
75
a little
100
fast??
,
.
.
.
·.-
··-.
.
Lowen,,
Celebrate Spring - Take drive
to Rhinebeck. Look at Asia and
listen to some Martial Music!
ATTENTION ALL MAP-ers:
TACKY
SOUVENIR
CON-
TEST TO TAKE.PLACE
AT
SEPT. BANQUET. The search is
on. (We dare you to top a light-up
Eiffel Tower.)
Kel, .·
Here's to a preview of next
semester!
Us
Joyce,
Galway was a great crack - next
time let's take the long way home!
Thanks a million - P
To MS. Christine Dempsey,
Congratulatio·ns.
Since we're
not there, David owes you a
dinner.
John,
The Paris
Correspondents
When you score your first goal,
I'll reward you with dinner!
Love, Chubby Cheeks
P.S.
Sorry
about
the
BAD
MOOD on Sunday Night!
Kelly,
Rumor has it you have a nice_
set -
guess friends are always the
CFCCCB,-
Here's to breaking your own
record and to the rest of us trying
to set some.
CFCC AM and KS
Dear Sue, Lynn, Carol, Katie,
Cindy, Andie, Adrienne, Linda,
I want you all to know you're
the ones that made my Spring
Break so super. "Thanks Easter
Bunny, Bak, Bak,"
.
·, Much Love, Eileen
1983 Reynard Yearbook will be
distributed on Friday March 30,
at the Campus Center.
Senior portraits
for the Reynard
will be taken April 15-17.
· Attention All Student Groups:
Don't forget this spring is the
time for Marist ever popular
"Booze Cruises"
Need a D.J.
Contact Bob, Bill, or Kelly in
Townhouse B-5. The best in the
business and real cheap.
Donna B-3,
Just want to know are you a
true redhead?
Next Door
·Kel,
last to know~
·
Cool Annie and
What was that new dance step
the Future Roomie
we saw you doing at Joe's?
Sudsy,
Wanna share a bag of M&M's?
Barna,
No
more
towel-whipping
please?? It's almost as bad as
ET!!
Bruised arid Abused
Dan,
Thanks for the compliment, I
didn't know you ever noticed.
Kelly
John,
As a friend you're a definite
GOOD ANSWER! But please no
ET.
The Smile
Maryland,
Here's to hooking up
l guess my membership has
been suspended for a while.
Washington.
Bill,
Where's Mark?
Mark,
From now on I think
I'll
lock
my bedroom door at night!
AnnieM.
P.S.
I
thought
I
was having a
nightmare!!
BBTS,
If
you see VFXC at Fairfield
this weekend tell him I said Hi but
remember, mum's the word on
what I've been up to lately.
BBTT
Cindy,
I'll meet you at Caputo's
at
3:30 · Saturday - might as well
make it two wasted weekends in a
row.
Kelly
Donna,
Thanks
for entertammg
my
new "friends."
I'll see you at the
PJ
party.
My Dearest Roommate -
Next time you decide to invite
4
nice looking guys home - why
don't you stick around for the
fun?
C.B.
With My Undying Thanks
D. Michelle
Who ever heard of Turtlenecks
in the Middle of Spring?? Isn't it
a little warm for that
Laralina-
From an
Interest.ed Redhead!
Get psyched for a wild weekend
filled with unending surprises!
Happy 21st Birthday Buddy!
Love, Donna
Grace, Bon, and Kerry,
Lads, Lads, What's the Crack?
Ah, Sure you know yourself.. ..






























I'
,,-:.•'
--•.
Page 10 •
THE CIRCLE• March
29, 1984
Marist Brothers want founder canonized
·
IF YOU WANT
TO WORK
WITH
PEOPLE
...
·
CHOOSE
A MASTER;S
DEGREE
IN SOCIAL
WORK,
THE
MOST VERSATILE
DEGREE
FOR A
CAREER
IN THE HUMAN
SERVICES.
by TerQ· Abad
The
Marist
Brothers · arc
currently conducting a worldwide
movement to canonize Marccllin
Champagnat,
founder
of
the
order.
Blessed Marcellin Champagnat
founded the Marist Brothers in
-1817. There arc now 7,000 Marist
Brothers
worldwide
in
70
countries. In the United States,
there are 400 in 25 schools around
the country.
There arc worldwide mailings
being conducted by the Marist
Brothers
asking
prospective
petitioners for signatures which
will be sent directly
to the
Brother's chapter in Rome, ac-
cording
to
Brother
Joseph
'Belanger, assistant professor of
French.
Brother
Cornelius
Russell,
assistant professor of accounting,
Brother
Richard
Rancourt,
director
of
Marist's
Refugee
Assistance Program and Belanger
arc coordinating the movement at
Marist. All three belong to the
Marist order.
According to Belanger, there
were
l0/l00
pieces of literatun-
mailed..,."'io
Marist
students,
alumni, faculty, and staff asking
them
for
support
for
the
Sound_.;....__
Continued from page 6
their E.P ., "Afoot" is moving tip
the U.S. charts. Unfortunately,
however,
one
of Easter's partner
bands (and one of my · favs),
Pylon, has decided to call it quits.
QUITTING TIME FOR THE
BOSS-Bruce Springsteen ·is put-
iing the finaltouches on this long-
awaited album set for a possible
June release.
·
·
·
, ,> ,,;", •
Recomm~nded Vi~yt
~\i"\ng\>ersons
. "Rhyme and Reason••
Rct\\n
_,_.
·
·
uLove L\fe.,
locJackson
_
.. ·:,
"Bcidy
and
sou\''
King Crimson
"Three Of A Perfect Pair"
1hc The
"Soul Mining'"
I.auric Anderson
"Mister Hearibreak"
S.S.Q.
"Playkcab"
:0.lanha & the Muffins
"Mystery Walk"
Ye,
"Leave
It"
(remix
12")
Thomas Dolby
"The Flat Earth"
Thompson Twins
"Imo rheGap"
.
Nena
"99 Luf1ballons"
Jah \\'obblc. the Edge:& Friends
"Snake
Charmer" (EP)
Talk Talk
"Its My Life"
Let"s Active
"A fool" (EP)
Cuhure Club
"Miss Me Bundi
It's A Miracle" (Remix
12")
38 honored __
Thirty-eight
Marist
College
students
will be named
in a
national
publication
which
recognizes
outstanding
young
leaders,
according
to an an-
nouncement made by Gerard A.
Cox; dean of student affairs.
The new edition of "Who's
Who
Among
Students
in
American
Universities
and
Colleges" will recognize these
students
for
their
academic
achievements,
service to their
community
and
leadership
potential.
The
thirty-eight
students named are:
Timothy L. Allen. Maria I. Azzolina.
James R. Barnes. Monica Mary Bechtold, ·
Laura Bertolozzi, John
C.
Ber7.al. Chervl
A. Bowering. Kathleen T. Byrne, Goergc
B.
Colby,
Frank J. DeGilio, Richard
M . .
Doughcr1y, Donald R. Eustace. Amhom· J.
Formato, Margaret E. Frekund, Robcri
R.
Himzc, Joanne l\l. Holdorff,
Man· M.
Hussey, Lisa A. King. Caroline R. Krell,
Barbara M. LaDukc, Karyn A. Magdalen.
Joan M. Marlin, Martha M. l\lcConaghy,
James
M.
McDonald. Kyle Miller. Alannah
E. :O.lolloy, Richard F. O'Donnell,
Henry
E. Ruiz. A!/ricnnc
M.
Ryan. Jane
M.
Scarchilli. William E, Schulll. Eileen
:0.1.
Shaw, Roberr Shaw. Kathleen A. Shea,
Grace Tejeda, Patricia
C.
\\'alsh, Edu·ard
t..
Waters and Thomas S. Wcrmu1h.
These
smde111s
will
receive
recognition awards at the. Marist
College
Council · of
Student
Leaders annual dinner April 8.
canonization.
These will then be forwarded to
Brother Paul Ambrose, the U.S.
coordinator for the movement in
Chicago. Ambrose was the third
president of Marist College. He
will
then send these petitions to
Rome.
Originally Brothers Belanger,
Russell
and
Brother
Nilos
Donnelly, had taken the project
on themselves. But according to
Belanger, Dr. Dennis. Murray,
president of the college, offered
his support.
"Dr.
Murray ex-
pressed interest in the project and
referred me to· the Development
Office,"
said
Belanger.
"It
started from there."
Belanger said that he.has gotten
great support from the college.
Working
with Chris Lapham,-
public information director, and
Bryan
Maloney,
director
of
alumni affairs,
we got mailing
privileges through
the Alumni
office, and Chris helped with
writing
and
rcv1s111g the
literature," said Belanger.
Belanger sa1c1 that the Marist
Mission Statement reflects what
the Marist Brothers arc all about.
"We see needs and try to supply
them," said Belanger. Belanger
said, "The Marist Brothers have a
good spirit." We're not looking
for pats on the back or glory, we
just do our job." .
C.
D.
C
..
CAREER
DEVELOPMENT
CENTER
ON-CAMPUS RECRUITING
Thursday, April 5 .............
: .... ,. Profesco Corp.
financial planning/insurance
Tuesday, April 10 . .....................
Lincoln Hall
·
child care workers
Thursday, April 12 .. ...... First National Supermarkets
retail mgmt.
Thursday, April 19 . ..........
· ........
Kmart Apparel
retail mgmt.
Tuesday, April
24 ...................
Mandee Shops
retail mgmt.
Thursday; April 26 .... -.....
: .....
Robert Mark Realty
·
·
real estate sales
IMMEDIATE SIGN-UP
·
FURTHER INFORMATION
AVAILABLE IN: .
. ..
CDC, Donnelly Modular Fac:ility
Ext. 547 ·
• TJIE
TWO-YEAR
PROGRAM:
/{."!II
lwt"I'
a baccalaurmtc
d,'J!tW,
fill'
1ico·
}i-ar
/>m·
gram i., the quiclit'st
ruuti-
Ill
thl'
McN.-r
ll[ .
Soeial Work
dt'/!Tl'<'.
• PART-TIME/fVLI,TIME
PROGRAM:
111i,
pmgrom
lri/l
{Jf!mtit_wu
tostudyparl-tim,;
ot-rr
an l'.ttcnd<'d
period
prior
to
bt·
6
1·1ini11g
full-
tir1w
stud,: \'ou 1ri/l
,'am th,· M.S.
II'.
de11n•e
in
:1
to.;
.n•~,x
• ONf,:YiAR ADVANCED
STANDING:
Tm,
-<<'mes/er.<
part,time
follom·d
by t1m
.scm-
csll'r.<
fu/1-timC'.
Open
to <'.tp<!ricnccd
social
u·omcrs
andgmduatL•sof
accn·ditcd
baccalau-
Tl'at,•
pmgmms
in social
ire/fan:.
ADELPHI
School
of Social
Work
20 Maple Street
· Poughkeepsie,
N.
Y.
CAU TODAY
FOR APPUCATIONS
AND/OR
FURTHER
INFORMATION
471-3348
• l'ART-T/1\fESTUDY:
\'oumaytakeupto
tudt1' cn:dit,
a.~ a
parl-tim,•
student
lx'{oll'
appl)ing
for matriculation
in mw of the abot-c-
111t•11tfrm,·d
dt·Jin'<'
programs.
• • ,\ ba;cafciurl!at,•
d<'/!11'1'
is
a
pn;Tl'quL,ite
for
ailmis.,ioll
lo CIIUr.<t'S
and programs. ,:·
• SUUJVANCOU,\11'
SATEUlTEl'RO-
Gll,L\I: />art-tinw
cour..cs
an• nffrn•d
on Sat•
unfa_\~ at Sul/imn Cowlly Ciimmwiity
·
Co/l,•g,•.
· • APl'UCA11ONS
AND REGISTRATION
MATEWALS,
coun.~eling
and infonnation
011
our Open
Home is amilab/e through
the
. Hud~o,1
\'a/le:,-
o{fin•: .
''Hey guys where-are you going?': ''Didn't you hear? They're accep-
ting applications_ to be a RES{DEJVT ASSISTANT.
I'm going to the
Housing Office to get an ·application before lhey 're ·a/I gone. "
J _.....:..,_·
---· -- -
_.
•t~ii~, ;
1 :ilh
rd,
' 1'(~·.;:·/;
·:!'.
-~~';l:J~~)
,_;
.'
.
.•
.-If you are interested in
helping. us impro_v~ the
dorm _life at ~ar~st, join
us-.
Apply by-·April
20, 1984 ..
.
.
Applications
are to be
dropped off in Housing
by.
5:00
p.m.
You must have a
2.Sruni
and -have lived on cam~
pus for 2 semesters~
JOIN
US!
BE AN RA.
























:=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::---•"-----------March
29,
1984 • THE CIRCLE· Page 11--
Th
U
rSd
ay
Morning Quarterback
John.Bakke
·-THE
OFFICE
OF
·AD-MISSIONS
The good, the ba·ct and~


"Into every day some rain must
fall," sounds close enough to an
old proverb to satisfy my pur-
. poses here. The point is that
nearly every situation will have
good · as well as unfortunate
aspects.
So it is with the · current
upheaval in the athletic depart-
ment brought
on by
Mike
Perry's
ascension
to
the
basketball
pos111on and
Ron
Petro's
corresponding_ move on full-time
athletic director.
Perry represents a turning point -
in the basketball program -
the
administration
and
board
of
trustees' all-out commitment to
try to push Marist into the athletic
spotlight.
It is, to at least a certain
extent, an effort that should meet
with success.
·
The program here is. most of
what the optimists would like to
think it is: one with. a staggering
amount of potential, considering
its brief Division One history and
the modest size of the college. The
Red Foxes could, within five
years, be averagiQ.g
5,000
to
6,000
per-game attendance if the facility
is expanded to accommodate that
many.
And Perry could help make it
happen. It will take a few con-
ference championships
and a
couple surprising, top recruits.
The first was ready to happen
even without him; the second
looks promising because of the
new coach's European contacts.
The potential for area support is
also large, and Perry's colorful
personality
and
established
reputation iri the Kingston area
should help in this area.
The bright sides are obvious;
the
less
attractive
ones
correspondingly less publicized.
For one, Assistant Coach Don
Kelbick has not been retained by
Perry and has therefore coached
his last game here. This isn't
unfair -
it's all pare of college
coacliing, and was by no means
unexpected -
simply an un-
fortunate
development of the
switch.
Dick Quinn, assistant athletic
director, is another Marist em-
ployee you probably won't be
seeing next year. His job is being
dissolved because Petro's is now
that of full-time athletic director.
Somehow, one full-time A.D. is
an improvement in manpower
over a part-time A.O. and a full-
time assistant A.D. Must be the
"new math" ...
And more changes are in the
offing.
With
several
other
dissatisfied McCann employees
looking to leave Marist after this
year, the casualty count is likely
to rise to four or more. Only time
will reveal how extensive the
department's growing pains will
b~
.
is currently acceptin.g
applications for the
Admissions Co-Qp in-
Ed·ucational
Administration.
Skaters cite ice time as downfall
dnteres·ted juniors should submit let-
ters of application and a resume to:
· JAMES-DALY
Dean
Qf
Admissions,
No later- than MQnday,
.Aprff
'2, 1984
.
by
Peter Colaizzo
the largest allocation of any club
on campus. This year's budget of
Throughout
the
1983-84
$6,750
was increased
$2,330
over
season, the Marist's men's ice
last year's, according to Quinn.
hockey team said a lack of prac-
The budget allowed for
$1,200
tice time was the major factor in
in travel money for vans, six pre-
the team's poor performance:
season practices and six in-season
The Red Foxes, who finished
practices, according to Quinn.
their season earlier this month,
· Regarding the lack of ice time,
had a
1-16
overall record.
·
Quinn
said,
"The
difference
According to Assistant Athletic
between club and varsity status is
Director Dick Quinn, however,
great. Ice hockey
is
an expensive
the team itself is to blame for the
sport and they have to fund-raise
lack
of
ice time. · "They're
in order to get those extra prac-
definitely not helping their own
·tices. They ;ire not doing any fund
cause," Quinn said.
·
raising·."
·
Quinn
prepares
the team's
Quinn added that in order for
budget and submits it for ap- · the team to attain varsity status, it
proval of the Student Activities
must raise money. "They have to
•office, since hockey i_s a club )show that they are viable at a club
• '.'.sport.
_ .
.
.
· .
level
first.
.
.
. .
.
~-
..,. ________________________
_.
. Quinn noted that the foam has -~ "Tne:_ski'team raises money for
IMPORTANT DATES
·-
....
·.;.
'
.
.
.
.
.
ROOM· REQUEST PROCESS
April 2
April2-6
· April 12
April 16 -19 ·
April 25
1'
April 30
'EA,ll
1984
Advanc·e Room Deposit ($75.00) due i·n the Busjness
-Office,
. ·oonnelly,
by
·5:00 p.m. April 2, 1984.
·· · ·
·
Early Registration for Fall 1984 - All Resident Students Must
Be Registered For At Le~st 12 Credit Hours.
Publication of Priority Points, Lists will be posted by House.
-
(6:00-9:00 p.i,:t.) Director of Housing will be available in Hous-
ing ·office: t_o·Ar,syv_er
Questions or Concerns reg·a.tdfng Priori-
ty Point Statu$.
._ ·
·
·
'.
Room Recfuest Process takes place at House. Meetings.;
10:0Q_p.m
.. Exac_t locations will be a9vertised· in each hall.··
Roommate Priority Points averaged and posted by House.
themselves," Quinn said. "This is
what the hockey team should do.
It would strengthen their case.''
Head Coach Jim Peclor said,
"It
is unfair to the guys. They're
in college and it's difficult to get
them to do it (raise money).
"They should have to work for
some of it but it is partly the
school's
responsibility
too,"
Peelor said.
Although the
tea□
did not raise
much money in the past, it is
already planning several money-
making ventures for the upcom-
ing season, according to junior
Rob Caldiero.
In the fall, the team is planning
to put together a program to sell
at games, according to Caldiero.
This
wiU
generate money from
advertisers. Also, the team is
planning to ask parents of players
to donate money to the club: . '/
Reflecting on the past season,
Caldiero said, "We played better
this year than last year. We were
in a lot. more close games this
year.
. .
.
''The roster mixup is good in a
way because now we realize what ·
was wrong for next year," he
said.
"It
will never happen
again."
200 Miles_
Continued from page 8
"People weren't clear as to why
we were out there," he said. "I
. was running for ·something
I real-
ly believe in."
- Sciareua· said he had gotten a
similar feeling while he was on the
road.
"A lot of people honked and
waved," he said, "but a few
others told me to get the hell off
the road."
Bellantoni and Sciaretta said
that for next year's run, which
they both plan to take part in,
they hope to change the route in
order to pass through
more-
populated areas.
The two also said thai instead
of relying on contributions from
individuals, they would look into
large companies as sponsors.
"Trying to get donations from
students is tough," said Sciaretta.
"They usually don't have the
money to give."
Funds raised through the run
have yet to be tallied, so Bellan-
toni and Sciaretta said they're still
unsure of how well they fared.
But
Sciaretta
said
that
regardless of the outcome, he sees
the run as a great way to make
people aware of the Special Ser-
vices program's presence ·on cam-
pus.














































































































































































i
i
I
/ ';
.
I
:
)
':
.
!
~-
~
...

i
!,
-?.
~
/~~'::
(
:H
l
J&f
,4).
;
·,,;~~~
!,
,;.
-
..
·
..
~·European
.•..
Coacli·.··•RefrY··
is
·feti-O's···•successor
The two-month process of hiring a new·
·
had·
a
l~sing season:. His career win-loss day
of
my life," said Perry at the press con-
·••
Ron has been working on this program
basketball coach came to an end when the
record is408-158;
.
.
ference_ where his hiring was announced
·
for years," said Perry. "I just want to con-
college announced its. selection
.
of Mike'.·
Assistant Coach Al Skinner will.remain
March
15.
"It's a great situation .. I'm very
tin tie what he has started."
.
.
Perry, a
·
native
.,of
neighboring Ulster
·
as one
of
Perry's assistants. Don Kelbick,
impressed with what I've seen here and
·
Prior
to
1982, when he began in
·France,
County, to fill the position,
;
..
·
. ·
·.
the other assistant under Petro, was not
.
\vith the people I
'II
be work_ing
with."
.
Perry coached the Swedish team at the 1980
·_Perry
was the first coach to apply for the
..
rehired.
.
·
.
.
Petro called Perry "one of the luckiest
.
Olympics in·Moscow and, from 1975-1977,
.
job, and the la.
suo be formally interviewed
Perry has not yet selected his other assis-
men in the United States today" and ex-
..
the. basketball team at Ulster Community
M ·
·
I ·
·
H
·
d
f'd ce ·
h"1s
·
ccessor "I
College. Perry a
..
lso has bee.TI
in charge of
by
anst's se ecuon committee;
e was
tantcoach, "I have·-a few people in inind
presse
.
con
I
en
m
su
.
not·
considered by many to b_e a leading
but I'm going to wait a few weeks. I'm on
know Coach Perry will continue to repre-
national basketball programs in West Ger-
.
candidate until the final stages of the selec-
.
clou<;I
nine right now," he said;
.:
sent our philosophy of concern for our
many and Saudi Arabia.

ti~,irnrocess.
·.
,
.
.
.
.
.
The new coach is currently in France,
.
student,athletes," said Petro.
.
.
Perry said he would be recruiting Euro-
Marist
-
President Dennis Murray
-.said
where he is finishing his season as·coach of
Murray also praised the selection.
"He
is
..
pean players but that his would not become
P
·11 be
de
"ther
th e y a c n
s
d F
·
p
·
·
·
f
·
1
committed. to the concept of the student-
a "European team.''._ He said he thinks
erry w1
un r et
a. r e- e r
o -


ta e rancas1- ans, a pro ess1ona team.
basketball shou. Id be· entertaining and will
1ract or a "rolling contract" that could be
.
He ,viii return to Poughkeepsie and begin. ath.lete and understands the- history and
extended beyond three years.
.
a1 Marist next week.
.
.
..
traditions of Marist College/' said Mur-
try to build a team that lives up to that
In_ 18 years of coai:hing,.·Pe~ry has never
,
...
"This· is probably the ·most
_important
ray.
ideal.
··
·crewflew_-south.for
sprin:g
...
training·
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
-
.
this time of the year," he said.
progress as he'd
like
..
"There's warm temperatures and
-A probl_em that has put a strain
Sophqmores in top
5
The Marist College crew team
good water conditions."
·
on the tearri is the fact that the
has returned from a. week of
·
.Davis
also
sai_d that being in
docks have
yet
lo
be put in the
Spring: ttaining in Florida, ready
_
Florida gave the team the op-
·
river by the college.
.

·-
_
·
at D.cc·-road_ ·race
- just stat~ed s~rious training again.
lo tackle the rest of'the season.·
portunij.y to practice more often·•
"li's incon.venient because it
.
During the week of Spring
in the water.
means the crew members have to
Break, the team trained
..
at the
"Down in Florida, we- were
carry the boat along the river to a
·
Florida Institute of Technology in
able to practice in the water two
·
high school in Hyde Park to get it
.
.
.
I used this race to gauge what
-
Melbourne, Fla.
or three times a day," he. said.
.
in the wate_t:,'' Davis
said.
---
.
Coach Larry D.avis said he felt
"Up here, we can-only get in the
.
Marist
College sophomores
-
kind of shape I am in," said
Peter Pazik and Peter Colaizzo
Bohan.
''I
have got a lot of work
·
ran to
,
third· arid fifth place
to do

in the next couple of
invas very beneficial for. the team.
water·once a day.,,

,
Davis said he was told the
Fl "d t
·
·
St"1ll, Dav·1s sa"1d he feels the
docks would b_
e put in on
to.go to
on a o tram. .
.
.
respectively in the 15-kilomet<:,r,. weeks."
.
·race
in the seventh
.:
annual
Colaizzo said he was satisfied
Inaugural Run road race held at
with his fifth-place effort. "I had
Dutchess Community College last -planned. on trying to hit six
Sunday.
·
·
minutes per mile and in the race I
"It's a good idea to go south at
team is not making as much·
Wednesday.
·.
L~<;rosse season. nearing·start
for first-year coach Malet
Meanwhile, Senior Ken Bolian,· actually
_
went
faster,"
said
co-captain of the Marist'
:track
Colaizzo.
"There
were some
team, finished seventh in the 5.· really big hills out there and if it
.kilometer
event with a time of
weren't for them I could have
.
16:4
?..
·
.' .
'
·
..
. .
gone faster."
by
Tim.Graham_
_. •
....
forward to the season:
- that in order for the Red Foxes to
:
.:,
Pazik, from Utica,
N;Yi;
,was_
·
The three runners will join the
...
The Marist College lacrosse
.
Male!,
·who•.
played his
..
·
col-
.
have a fruitful campaign, they'.11 second
'in
the. open age
.
group
.. ·rest
:of
.
the Marist IIack team
ieam is looking for
.it:Jlprovement
..
legiate lacrosse at Cortland State,
..
have_ to rely on good seasons from
division with
a
time of 53: 17 while when
.
it
begins
competition
as its 1984 seasori begins.
·
is assisted by Phil Orzech, aJ983
the sophomores' and· from the·'
.Colaizzo,
of_ ~edar K_n?l!s,
N-?·•
sometime in early April.
:
Coinirig ,·orr a· disappointing.
gra~uate of. Providence ,CoHege .,y:ery
<•,imp~essiv~. ;.
g'roup . oC
:,;5~~t
0
~,~t~)~/~T~t
__
~~~,
1s,1
.°:t~~5h..
.. Approximately . 200 runners
season
in 1983,
.when
it
posted-'a
:
'and•-a
·four
0
year member.·orc
..
the'-.,: freshmen~c:,:,·•·'
·_;•
...
:
,:
.. :
..
.
· _,.,
:.:.-··.·
.
.
·

·
·· -·...
·.
·
·
·
·
-
··competed
in·r
h
e
combined'JsmiJe,
mediocre 4-6 record, the team is
"Friar's'•'·, lacrosse team. The·<
·Goaltending
should not be a·
•.1\Lt~.r~e.Man
st r~nners used s~kilometer and IS-kilometer:
.
,·anticipating
a:•
very succe~sflif·. players'-feelings about these men. problem. P.aul lettera has.been
'
the
·r.ace
as preparauon. towards
races. The race was sponsored by
season
:
..
·
· ..
·
.
.-
· :
.
:
c•.·;•·
·
were
<;xprissed
by Tom, Daly; a- impressive in practice and should
the o~tdoor track se~son. '.'I_
have
the Mid~Hudson Valley Road·
••W~ sho~ld do
;ell
ino.ur c~n~ sophomore attackman frorri West
-
follO\(up a brilliant 1983:season,
.
been ·hurt. for a while and have Runner's Club.
.
-
.
fererice/' said MlkeMasterson; a
Babylori;.L.I. "Both Coach Malet
where he was a second
0
team all-
sophomore
mid-fielder
from
and Coac~- Crzech ·care greatly : conference selection, with another
()': ~·
·r.
.
.
.
·.··
...
·
•·
·.
k
Somers, Conn.
''We
have a ver.y
·,
abo·u.
t.· the team;''
:,(>aly _
said ..
·.·.·
fine 5C:a.son._.-Ifh.e
s~~uld.fa_u
..
lt
..
~r.
,_
-.
.
-season··
.
wor
,
strorig attack which should proT
.. ·
'.'They're
•both
qt
remely
-ho\'.".~ver,
his shoeswdl be readily

.
·
·
.

·
·
.
·
·
.
duc.e
·a
fair amount
;of
•goals,''
;
knowl_edgeable' and are'. very, pa-·, fille<.f
;
bY'
either. freshman
:
Jeff

".
·
.
:
.
-. ::
·
·.··.·
. ·
-
·
-
·
~ast~t'sorisaid:
<
:·.•
.
·
_iient/~e•r~:a
ver~ yc>Uni_tea:m, Steig_e~w.ald
or sophomore Mike.
·
l
·
·.
d
:



Masterson'sc,comments
:were·-·
sopat1ence1svery1mportanL
1
',.:,
Melkon1an.-__
·..:...-·:: .
.
··a
'140a
r1J
1n
swing
.
ec~oed by first~year head Coach.
,
This is_, as D_aly said,
a
yery •
-_On
paper, Marist·~~s ~n_.
ims
/
C,
,
J.
·
·
:Mike
Malet.:''We've got a chance
Y0!,lng team havmg lost only two· mense
:.amoum
of
·.
tl)d1v1dual
....
·
-.

. ..
.·.
..
..
..
.
·
.
.
,
'for·
a fine season;
'.'Mater
said.
-
_seriiors
from
last
year',S)Sq(!ad.:/ialent.
_If
!he team.can puHi(aH
·-·i,;..
.
.
.
--._.
·p·:
.
,·,.
·_.--
·1·b:
..
·
·11·
..
:
··we
_are
a much improved· teai:n
_;_,Th~cbi.tlk
of this: rear's teain is
.
together it" will have a vefy good
:~-


.
.
.
O·.
0.
·.
.

.
·
.
.-.


am
.
o~e~ last
_year's.The
players·tiav~
.... _sopho_mores:.
:~s
:-it
s_iands now,
cha~ce of bringing h.o'!le the .
'
·.
.
•...
' ·_.
.
'
:
.•
.
.
.
.
'
.
.
.
.
.
. '
.

.·greatatutudesandtheyworkex-.
1hereareonlyf1ves~mors.,mdone·
.. Kn1ckerbocker>Conference
,
·
·
-
·
·
·
·

.

irerileiy hard. l'in. really lo~king
i)unior
o.ri
the roster:-That' means . C~ampionship.,
·:
·•
by Michael R~ Murphy .
':Petro
's:·
:Ca~eer·._ends.:_With
ifoss':to
1
LIU
·_·
..

i.
·'
Although the
.1984
collegiate
.,
,
.
.
,.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
,
·
·· ·-
•·

football season is still six inonths
by
Ian O'Coimor
Notre Dame ,vith an
.opportunity
.
wouldn't
fall
;
against
.·.
the
:
away, the Marist College footbaH
·
··
·•
·

·
.
to win until the last ihree orfour
_ mackbirds. the eventual to~rna-

team has already begun prepara~
: .
,
It
·
was a fitting end to a
minutes.
i
>
'··'··
..
ment champions.
. .
·
.
:
lions for itscompetitive season.
.
frustrating year.•
·
:
·
The Foxes had. many_ other:
-
·:~We
played we~l. against LIU,
.
·
Tl}e Red Foxes cannot practice
•'The
Red
'Foxes
had been
highlights.during their-first cwen-
.
b1,u
_we
just didn't
.hit
from· the
officially due to an NCAADivi-
eliminated from the ECAC Metro
1y ga_m~s,
After beating'St. Fran-
.
outside," Petro said. "We had.a
sion Three rule that prohibits
Conference
·
Basketball
,Tourna~
ds
(N:Y .)
on the road, the team
~
bett_er_
chance t<> beat them thllit
teams from practicing
.until
20
··
.ment .by
Carey
·.·scurry
ancl· his.
'•had
a 12a8
·,
record. and·· we-re
<
Robert Morris,di~.in the final."

c;l.ays
before their first game.
fellow Blackbirds from Long
amongst
'the
·conference
·1eaders.
So
.an.
up-and-down season
, •.Hoping
t; improve their l983
.
{stand University
for
the second
(y'Iarist.was making some noise in
which~was overshadowed by the
record of
,
3-6, a. significant
·
straight year. Marist was denied

·
Divisfon One, and looked strong
search. for Petro's
·
replacement
number of players
-
have unof-
-'
possible
'•
trip
·
to
...
·
the NCAA
going into ~he final stretch of the
had come to an end.
It
was time to-
ficially begun an extensive weight
playoffs, and was harided its third
·
season.
·
.
·
.

·.·
~--·
···
look back on the season; and to
·:
training program, according to
straight losing season since enter~
But then came the slide.·
·
. revi~w the progress of the pro-
Head Coach Mike Malet.
·
·
ing Division One.
.
The Foxes proceeded 10 lose six
gram over the past three ye~rs.
·
l_1's difficult to imagine ho~
a:
of their las! seven regular season
.
"Unlike
other schools, we
·_«Last
year_ we maybe had 20
los1n_g
seai;on can ~eally turn out
·
·games,
including heart breakers to
.
_
played all Division One teams on
·
percent of the team involved in an
to be a successful one;. But that's
Massachusetts,

Siena,
'·wagner
·
our schedule,,, Petro said. '.'We
.
off-seson

weight
.
training pro-
how,Ron Petro described his final
·.
and Loyola; Despite the luxury of
·
would
have-liked 10 have won 16
.
gram. This year we have 80
.per-
year as Marist's head baskeiball
having the conference tournament
or 17 games, but 1
-
feel this year_ cent of the team· involved with
.
coach.
.
.
at the Mccann Center, it looked .· was. a cuhnination of
_three
years
·
some kind of work, which the
Petro,who after.18 years at the
like
a
first-round·exit was.in store
coaching
staff
.
and
myself
- in Division One for us: The pro-
·
Id • b
h
·
b
"
helm of the Red Foxes is retiring
.
for the hosts.
.
..
.
.
h
II
cou n t e more app1er a out,
· ·to
become full~tii;ne athletic direc-
..
"Du_ring that· string of losses;
gralll as rea. Y arriv_ed."
said Malet.
.
.
.
·
tor, pointed to the-goals hineam
·we.
had
·
injuries,
,players·
wer~
·
·
And althougl) he's not return-
··
Malet said. he attributes the-
accomplished despite posting a
.
·_
tired, and we had· some personal
·
ing as coach, Pet_ro expressed con-
·
high off-season· turnout to two
J4~
15 overall reco.rd_.
.
problems," Petro said. "But we
,
fidence that the Red Foxes, with
factors: a new sense of conviction
~•We
beat a team we've-never
overcame that and played very· MikePerrytakingover,willmake
among team members and new
·
beaten before in LIU (during the
well in the tournament."
a very strong showing next year.
-
weight training equipment.
·regular
season), and we had a
.
Marist played one of· its best
.
"We have possibly ten players
·
_ "There is a strong commitment
great win
at
Robert Morris,
games of the year in the first-
returning,' with almost all posi-
within the team to improve each
brea~ing the 26-game winning
round defeat ot Loyola, a team
lions filled," he said. "We should
individual's
-
own
·
physical
streak. on it's home court,"· Petro
that had beaten the Foxes twice
be at the_ top of the league next
strength," said Malet. "Strength
·
said. "We won
'two
tournaments,
.
during the season. The next night,
year with the players we have and
played a very important role
·last
· and we were also able to play at
t_hough; the outside shots just
.
w_ith
two Coach Perry brings in."
·
season. We lost a couple games
because guys broke through our
tackles. And that deals with
physical strength."
The new weight training equip-
inent
.
was anonymously donated
to the football team, according to
.Malet.·
·
.
·
·
Malet said the weight training
·:
program is going well so far.
.
"Last Saturday we had 49 people
·
perform in a weight training test.
I was please~ with the results. We
even had three people bench press
.
over 400 pounds, which we have
·
never had before," said Malet.

The loss of six· seniors,
-
in-
·
duding quarterback Jim Cleary,
.
hurts the team, but .Malet said he
. is still optimisti\: about riext year.
"I have got to stress that there is a
.
strong commitment by
.the
team
.
to improve. We have the talent
and we are doing the work," said
Malet.
In relation to new recruits,
Malet said·there are 40 t~ 50 peo-
.
pie he is interested in. Heading
the list of top candidates is Sean
·
Joyce, a running back from Our
.
·
Lady of Lourdes High School in
Poughkeepsie.
·
.
Malet stressed the fact that it is
difficult to recruit with
a
pan-
.
time coaching staff, but he tries to
.
make the best of it. "l was hired
six years
·
ago for a part-time
coaching position. And that's the
way it seems like it is going to
stay," he said.
t