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The Circle, October 4, 1984.xml

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 30 No. 4 - October 4, 1984

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----·.
Page 2
~.THIE
C_IRCLE:•o:.~_c_,._4,_1_9_,4_·.
:--':::::::::::::::::::::::::::.-:::::::::::::::::.::::::::::::::::'
-::·
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continued from page
·I
<
:
.
.
· be~~ ~ond~~t~d
-ci~e
t9
:c·h~;~~s
of
an
NCAA
violation.<:::.·.·
' .· •·.
·
>,,
Murray stated that
_the
player,
·/involved.
in the all_eged incident
did not ~ccept
·any'
benefits
'of-
fered by Perry.
If
the player ·had
accepted any benefhs; he '.would
have been. declared_ ineligi6le· to
.
play basketball
.until
an
NCAA
.
investigation was conducted.
.
<
'.'We do not-believe'.tbe player
.
pifrticipated
·-
in· any violation,"
.Murray said.· ''.The. vioiation was
by the coach and the player did
·
_
not participate:"
··
:
·.
·
·
·
·
After meeting ....
jth lhe players
,
·
twice·', before
·:
Friday's>. -an-
·
...

nouriceinent; Murray· said that all·
.
. 11 scholarship members of the
tea·m plan t.6 remain atMarist. ·
''_They aU: seem
to
.be
in li~rnng
spirits and realize this is an ob-
·
..
stade_. to. be
'_Qvercome,
'.. Murray
_.said.·
'.They. are
·turning
an act-.·
, v~rsirial
.situatiqn
into a pqsi~ive
.
one. Thefare ready to go on·with
., . the season.,,. ·.
:,.:
.
..~·.
. .
.
Murray also said that full-time
:
assistants
.
John Q11attrochi
.and .
··
Jim Todd
will
be retained, as will'
-
.
part-time. assistitnt'. Mark
Cook
and academic ·.:advisor:. Bogdan,>
. Jovicic. ''We. are.committed'::ioc
them-and have,assured.theni thaf:·
they:· should proceed
:
with
.their '
duties," hfsaid.
::;;-:>-::·::·
t'·-·>·;:::.:::.:
.,
Murray· also· said that he
:ex
0
:
pects to name a succe~sono Perry··
,
. ~•within
,a·
week.'': •~Obviously
there's
concern ·that<a :quick·
1111111
11111
.t
.
.
'.

.
.
..
.
.
·.·
...
...
decision is not one that
·
can be.
.._ _ _.
,
·
J!f
~~;i/tf
J1f
ii~~\,!}\i'..
·
'
TheGieater
N8WY01k
Blood
Program
·
and
we
intend to·get someone here
-
New
York Blc::iof:1
Center
I
American
Red
Cross
. to move the program along,". ·
.
·?:
.
,
Yi/
.
--/f~.J:~t;~~<>,fJ~s~?eu;J~;
..
~~?~f:
·//,
;.;:.W-~ttnesd~:y,
OcJober
_
10
,

..
·
·,, ,
Kmgston,•.nat1ve s
·controvers1al
•·:,,.-·-
..
,
-,,·,::•
·•
·
·
·
• ·;-
·
-
.
·

· - ·
··
·
·
'
.··.
.
.·::{six~iriori_tfr',stay
at:Madst';:·Perfy:i
·'J>:::<\<F.IRESIDE
LOUNGE.·.·.
··'
.
:;
,,:.,.-/L~~ife~l::t~
0
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a'·-a'·'"~.:.;;,.;,•.:,,,.-,.l••-g&"'°"-'fi~-nl•'i'J
t:<.,:t•'c'~poo.sored-by.
El.
E
..
..
,
.
·.
·~
.•
..
•··:
:·;i?r.~;tl1~tl{i1~~~~tli~~it~{f
{
.-~~€::!M~ri:.m;%f,B~~t~T>f~:-~.:,·::·
..
_;p{~y:·;.;::
-~
:;
,::tr-.r·
replaced
J
qn 'f>etro; who afterJ
8
_'.:
.
years· as head of the Red Foxes:.
resigriect·to' become the
.,fulHime··
athletic
·directer.
Petro;
:who
_was

forced··• to. choc,se hciwee11'.
~eiiig:
coach or athletic• dii:ecior: wheri
:
the college decided to separate the··
two positions last year, has since
.
.. taken the·post ofathl~ticdirector
..
· at' th¢ JJniversity
.
o( Alaska at.·
Anchorage. .
-
..
.
.
...
:
Perry was chosen by a 14c
member
.;
search
>.committee.
composed. oL faculty· members/
·
··.
·
·
-_..
:-,
i"'
.
~

·•i~~~@i--
-
-
trustees. a·nd alumrii, and headed

by
.
Marist
alumnus
Thomas
•·
·
Mckiernan: The ex-Marist coach
_
__was
•the
first_ to apply
for
die job
-
.
·_
and the last to be interviewed and·.·
'
\Vas· intc=rviewed
·
in• b.oth
-
·EUrope
·
·
·
-
and
'the.
lfnited Stat~· during· the
·:·
search:
·
·<
>>
'
·
;, ,'
.
.
.
. . The firsttwo nioridis on the job
were busy ones foi'Pefry,
He
was-•
on the recruiting' tr_aH looking for
-
potential· pfospects>to help hini
·
with
'
his·. big
'plans:.
for<·the
'. program'.
"If
we are going to be a
legitimate Division OneJeam this
gym· (McCarin · Center) -won't be ·
.
sufficient,"
he
.
told The Circle
·
last year.· "We~ should get to
, ·about6.,000
seats.'!::,_--·.
:
.c->-
·
.
<The
remainder of Perry's term
·
was marked with controversy, as
.
.
there was a big turnover in the
·
athletic
administration
·
at
.
the
.
·.Jaines
J.: McCann Center. The
·
school currently has no
_
athletic
,
director
.
and,
.
because of this
recenfsituation,
Marist no longer
has a basketball coach.

··
·
····•~It'
.,was
'.
one of the· most
·
thorou.gh search processes
-
I've·_-
ever. seen,.,
.~urray
..
said
of·
.
Perry's
~iring.
·
:!There ~ere a
-wide variety of rec.ommendations
for Perry and .they al~ays gave
him the highest ratings."
.
·
.
.
·
Mui:ray said that Perry was no
longer. on the c~llege payroll
_
and
that· there would
be
no separate
administrative
o( judicial action
taken against the coach.·
·
. trench
onion
or
c··
.
. .. ·
,
.
soups
of
the
day • : .. on chalkboant
'.
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cup.:
.
tbowi
..
lo~giallwllyd.:,;: .• :.'
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·
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chef'ssal.ad
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c:hlllw/roll
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burritos ••.
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ham & cheese
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sliced
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Delivery:
sta~te.d.
bct ..
:~1:~i,·~~b'.~jf
-·it's
·not•
too:
late
.to/ordef::.a.'•

N~w•
,Yo(k ·
:Tin1.es{
s'tJbscrip~
.
tion.
..
··
..
:
•_·
·
·
·
·
-.
·
·
,
·
··
\
'
·Late· subscribers
/·w
i
11
,r
n:ot
/i5'~:
: ·
:
penalized.:Fbf~ea:Ch'
is:sci"~·'.rtoi
•.
"i
received,
20~.:wi1l·oe},tal(ef(o,if·:\.
·.
the
subscriptidh:prJc~·~·:'.<_
·.;\t'
..•.
.·_:
SPECIAL:'cAN,f
PUS!·PRIC.Es1\r:·
·
·:Fall.-
semester ...
~,:.<\;$1'.0~·ao'.··
.
..
~pring
·:-~emeste'r:;•\:·:·.·.:~!$t5~60:·
·Fu
II
-
Year ....
~
.•
·.
~
..
·
! .·
..
:~.$i6~40
~
:
Plac~
or~er.~
tb,rooghJ··
•·
·
_Jane
M~·Precuch
··
.
.
·
..
··•
Box
.c.;593
o'r':
·:-
i
.
·.
i·~
•Townhouse,.e
..
s·e.xt.,·8-112/'.::
·
"It's·
.just
-
unfortunate,'-'
·
Murray said. "You mighc even
,
classify
tmlfmciaent
as>
tra'gw.
~
1
.
7
'-lil.
•· __ , ·•·•·
•·
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.
,.
.
·
·
Oct.4,·1984~THECIRCLE,Page3
__
_
.i.ij_f!~S~lltl~~-§)li~iiji;.:m~ge
;fbi{\Y
es.tern
.·.walkers
;
.
~)' I>~iSY,
l\faxey
..
. .
. .
.
imrri~diate a~ea of th~/intcr~cctiori
.. \
can~ot
·auow
that.'.'
,
T~~ril~s J3uilding to
·
design a
according. to the DOT, they tend
...
3r(':'-
i/;
>:.-\<
::· ,., .
: .
·
<:/:.
.
;-
~as alr~dy.~een lo~~re4
rrom'4Q:,·,i·
·.J<?f
'\;Va.~cfrs,
-
.director
.of.~ sjdewalk
,.on
Waterworks Road,
not to be
.
used. In addition,
/':')P·Cc,f!~C_r~.::
for;_,.the.
,safety
.of·,
mph to 35.mph:-Thearca affected
.. tsecunty,
. said• he
·
feels that a
.
and that th~. college would assume
Waters. said, that an underpass
:
·
X:;,:::~t.~~ent~
·.
and ,faculty who .must
.·:·
by- the lower.ed 'speed limit runs
)'dangerous
situation exists because· all costs, but could not say when
would create security problems
.:_
cr:9s~·.Route:9 ~o attend ~lasses in
_
_.···(roril·:
the
<·
Hudsorf.:•>River
-\students.d<?
not wait for the·walk
,
the project would be undertaken;
and
a"
guard would have to be
·
.
·Ma_n~t
~.ast has prompte~ college.· Psychiatric
..
Center entrance, just
__
·_
light.
ult
will· be even more·
..
Waters said' that other alter-
hired.
·
..
·
officials .to call i~ the Department
'
north'-of the intersection,' to the:
..
dangerous
in
.
the· winter when
.
natives. which. the college has
The college is not considering
•.
0
~.''.":1:ranspprta!•on
·
(DOT). to-. arterial
_highway,·
south: of the
··
there is ice on the road and:. considered

include
-
hiring
a. using buses to transport students
;
rev1~w the s1tuat1on...
,
·
. .'
..
;:
>
rvtcCanri. Center, Fitzpa'trick said;
,;
vehicles.will not be able to stop as
crossing guard and building an
to and from Marist East because,
::'.
Since_.the college began holding'·
/Bufronswhichallowstudents
to<·readily;'~ he said;
-;·
.· .·
·
..
·
·
·
··
·
.
:overpass.
or an
_underpass
at the
according to Waters, "that would
-
cl~sses-111_
the buHdiitg last spring,:
control the, traffic. signal have.
_:'
Waters said that he had written
intersection.
only create more traffic."
.
,-_
:·t.~e
st~eam·.or· students coming
.
been installed at the four corners
:
the DOT requesting.that signs be.
According to Waters, hiring a
Waters said that students may
·
i,
alld goi~g to and ~~om ~lasses
_has :-
of:> the i11tersection; -When
..
th~
·
p~t up before the light' on the
crossing guard is not feasible
use the parking lot at the south
·
created. a· confusing Jumble of
·
button
.
is ·pushed,-::-all traffic,
:
south and north sides of· the
because it "would cause liability · side of Marist East but that
,
.
·_p~de_s.tnan
a~d vehicular traf~c
~t
·
except that which canturn. right
intersection
.
"a.s a warning to
problems
if
there is ·an ·accident."
parking is prohibited in the circle
·th~_intersect1on'
_of
Route 9. and· on-red,. is stopped, ac.corrl,ing to
..
motorists
tha~ students. will be
He said; ''.We could riot just have
at the front of the building. The
the college's north campus
·en-
Fitzpatrick.
•..
.
... '
·
·.
'
(:
1

..
crossing."
·· · .. .
. .
a security guard. We would have
college "will eventually be giving
trance;
College officials had originally
:-.
The college is also looking into
to have some sort of official
out tickets" to cars parked in the
..
<'/:':;: /:
.
proposed
•··
that
dhe·
'sig11a:I
••
.be
.•
constructing sidewalks on Water
police officer."

·
.
.
circle, he said .
. .
;·,A ..
l~wer
:speed
limit, coJ-
modified so that all vehic.ular
:Works
Road, which runs from·
Building an overpass
·or
an·
Watersemphasizedtheneedfor··
,.
·
struction
of
••sidewalks,·
a·nd
·'
a
.
·traffic
:•.
would·
·.be·
stopped
·-.by
'the··•north
·
entrance
.-past
Benoit
underpass has ''been pretty much
students
to use
·
caution when
mo!iified_-'
traffic
signal are
-so111e
..
pressing.:. the
..
=
button.
·
This,
;
and
:
Gregory Houses,
to help
r·uled out" because the idea was
crossing the intersection and said
of the
·
measures
that college - however, was not allowed by_ the
=
make: crossing
.
the intersection
not recommended by the DOT,
that
.
the
situation
"is
not
officials hope will help to alleviate
.-DOT.
.

·
. .
.

.
easier,
c
according
to
Edward
.
Waters said.. He added that the
unusual." '' A lot of colleges and
.
the problem.• .
:.
.
.
,
··-•
•''There:
··.·is'
·
tremendous
··
Waters;·
·vice
president· of
..
ad-
.
passes would
-
be .. "enormously
universities have this situation -
';.':-·J,\cc<:>rding
to Bill Fitzpatrick, a
c_ongestion ,. now.· during
peak
,;,ministration
and finance.
'
· cosdy" because they would have
where
·a
road
goes right through
..
safety aiid'tfaffic engineer at the•.' hours,". said Fitzpatrick
..
''That
·!
Waters said the college will.ask
to be made accessible: to han-
.
the campus.
·1
am· hoping that
l)QT,• the speed.limit
in the
:would.double
the traffic.
:We 'the.
architect.
of
t~e
Lowell· dicapped
students
and
that,
studentswillbecareful,"hesaid.
Mt
i:J11iOJjC/11}tJJ,~;d~~"/4t(!s:

.···
·
. .
·
·;
·.·•··.:b·.··_,.Q,.Y'
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...
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'~•.•.··.·.•.:·c;_·
..
:·.:.f>•·.·.;e·~.•g··gn.iiC~~.····
td-flj~ke,·
br~ak
it
.
-
.
.
vote: )?ased
;ri:
)ht
i~_iorii,atio~
3:
ding to Miringoff.
..·
. ·.
• ..
.
they haye on the candidates. He
':
.
Miringoff said that
'he
believes
.
,:·"·Ainei:icaiis
·.
will
,be
tuning· in
said that to choose the· right pers
'..
that the best way to. choose a'
,
'their,television
sets on Oct;
7
.to
.sonJor
the job,
or
president one
..
president would be to have.six or
'1
...
w_atch the first debate between
·must
''go beneath all .the hoopla
;i
seven debates of one-to-one can-
'..,!·'.
·
presidentiai
,
candidates·:, Walter
a~d pomp and circumstance.''.
:
,
didate discussions,
.
making
·
the·
Mondale and Ronald Reagan ..
·,· ...
-,:
Unforttin~t~ly',
..
~oine pe~61e
'.
deba~es less a~tific!al and. more
;
..

·
The debate
fa
a crucial event for
choose their, president solely on
:::
ongoing. He said this -.you_ld
pl_ac~.
t
..
· ·
both campaigns, and,'because it is
.
his
·performance
and. appearance . a greater emphas!s on the i~.s~es
J_·
•·
·•
.·.
a show; one line could make. it or
\
on
,
television,· Miringoff
·
sai,d.
:
rather than on the personahlle~.
·

,
break it for either candidat~; said
·.
However·" the bottom issue· is who
;
However, he added, the pubhc
C
. ·
Dr. Lee Miringoff, assistant·
.p,ro-·
· ·
·.
'
· ·
·
b
.
b
d
-
"th
th t
·
.
·
J.
·
is
going to do the best• job,: riot
::
may_ ecome ore
:w1
a pro-.
1
.· ·.
fessor.
·of 'political
science: and
.
who.looksthe'best·on
camera, he

cess .
.
:.:-
·
·
·
·
'·.
j
··
..
dire~tor of
!h_e
Ma~!st !nstitute for
added.
,:,
,
Commeritiri'g
0
·n
the importance
~
·
Pu~hc Opim~n.
I~
s not only
.
.
,
.
.
..
· ..
·.
<
;
·:
of the debatefor·the
democratic
t.. .
_•who
s.ay~ t~; nght thmgs but h~\V,
.....
·
A,
maJo~ change.was_ m,ad,e
•.
n\
:.
:candidate,
Mjri~gqff said, ''Mon~.,
~
·>
. .-:
<:.·•-·.:_they
s::i.y
1t,

..
he.11oted:
..
·:•·
•i·:
_;; ..
·-;•··
.'.·
:,_:
theupcom!ng q~ba}e compa~ed,,o
tda,le·
definitelY,::ii~eds
:jhc:.•.
debate-~
~·,-.
:\t:\'r:;·,.:y,r:-f?r:st\l(l,epts;~I!!-11,n.mg,,?
~a~c:h
·,,_
..
,J?cl~t'.·
.
pre_s1dei:it1al-,
..
~f:.bates.,
Cat.he
A,
righ('riow
,to.'make:·
this:.'face'\vin:"··~
~,'.i;•,:_/,':
't·:,>;)~~::-~ebate,:,Mmng?ff:sa1:g_:,F~e;t;t.rad1~1on~l}:,nestOsOpe
~cp.a~efors··•·
..
,
11_ab,e'froifr
his pedpectiv~.•·
:-:.'.· }~
~
• ....
•,
,·:•:'
aware: of. the facMtiat
•all,v1e.wers
·
,:.-mat
..

was:. dropped"·for.
,a·:
more.
·
...
-:c.·
'··1•
·:-c•>-.·:'·:-:!.':<··:;
,:. _.,
::.
,
·
..
1
, :
..
_
..
:··._.are
being appealed
·to'
ju'st,_like a
's~ructured•:
discussion:
'where
a
'
··,.
~'Although_'peopl~. agree
,with
.
.
,
. ..
·
·,
TV commercial for McDonald's.
-
panel of four journalists
,will
ask
Mondale on· the issues,, the
·per-·
.,
. ·...
.
-
·
Stui:Jents should try io get a·sens.e·

the·· can9idates
·.
question's
..
The ··soria: of Reagan is so'sfrorig tl!ai
F•
:

of .what:the·candidales
are really
,
structure· will less~n the
chances

Mond~le's·had
a tough time pier
0
·
j
>O::
· ·
.
.
·
saying about the issues.'•··,;\;:.-.>·
/
of
either candidate making a com-·
·
cirig
·.
the· popular: image·· of, the
;\
{\•
··
..
·
Miringoff
11oted. that. people·
..
ment tha(could Jiurt him, accor_.
..
p:-esi~ent," Miringoff said.
<:
•"~;€1,lllp~~.·riiecf
ia.cep.ter
mQve$
.
to
.•
solve
staffing
..•
problem
,:~;·:·::,-._·
'
,,
.
'
.
'
'
·--,.:-
.....
..:,
'
'
_;
.
-
'
.
.._
.
.
·,
..
;-
·..
·,
•'
·.
.
.
.
.
'
,,
;
.anocate
the m·one; to the m~dia
funds
was
:
r'esubmitted
and
prnf~~sor of communications.
their own time, usually between
,...
center. from the college's
.con-
reviewed atthe end of September,
. The
Beirne-Spellman
Media
classes," said Ribaudo ..
• . .
Th~
'.:
IJeirne-Spellman,
:Media
. .
tingencyfund.
.
.
.-
....
•.'
.
,
..
the cabinet saw the need for extra
'Center
owns and operates
ap-
Ceriter has been granted'$8,500 to
.
.
Contingency
funds'
.
are. used.
funds and made the allocation.
proximately $300,000 of ecjuip-
hfre
·a
full~time media clerk in
.an
':
·
·
primar_ily for. unforeseen
·
cir-.
Since the college opened jn
ment,
including
.
a
teievision
effort
-
to:
curtail·
·recent·
cumstances atthe.college, such:as
•.
September, the media center has -studio, radio production area and
.,
,
understaffing
problems,,, accor-
· ·
the:( fire. oh North
·Road;;
said.
been under criticism by several· a fuil control room, which serves
i
:· . .-:_
::_L:
<fdi~g.
'to ..
Anthony:·. CampHii~
Campilii/a memberof:President
faculty members because of the
primarily the communication atts
f:.;
-->-
':
·
::biisines.s
officer:
.of
Marist Coi-

..
·Murray's
cabiriet. «The need·for
·
·.
subsequent delays in set-ups and
classes.
.
I
:<...,·.<
.
lege:
.·'>
,
·<·
·,
.. ,
:,:
..
<
·>·
-
,'
:
an additional employment allocas
service of audio visual aids, caus-
Most problems were caused by
.
;- ·
·:
:/.:
'J:he
:
decision . to
add
·
;an .
tion was
·recognized
·1asL:spring,
ed by the staff shortage.
a
·
lack of
·staff,·
according to
:
·/
..
,
employee came ~fter several pro~
wheri the school budget was done;
"I
waited.a half-hour for some
Frank Ribaudo, director of media
I.
\,:·
.les_.sor.s_
com~l_ained.·abo·u
...
t: del~ys
·:.·'·
bti_t•~
..
th. e.
r-·m. att_ers
...•
had ... hig.her
.equipment
to be set-up for my
services. Ribaudo said that there
.
:
mmedia services for classes ...
,-,_::·
·
·::-pnonty at that ume, ' said
Cam-·.:
Tuesday
night
,
cla_ss, which
were
not_ en'ough
full-time
,\~
Preside_nt Dennis Murray, and·: pilii.
....
···.·..
.
'.,_ /. ·,

.
.-disrupted
the class' schedule,"
employees or student aides to take
·
·
his c.abinet voted. last
-
week
·
to
i :-,.
When the req~est for additional
siiid Au~u~tine Nolan;. assistant
equipment reservations or man
the substations in.• Donnelly or
.
Marist East.
.
..
s~tftifiiY
ugwten:ea.
;·f
O.f
this
Weekefict
..
:
by
Douglas Dutton
the campus, and the rule req~iring guests to the
·
·
'
.
·
·
· -
·
residence halls to have guest passes.
.
.
·
Homecoming. '84;
.
the annual alumni · and
Special rules for the weekend include a
5
p.m.
Ribaudo said that the situation
·
became so critical that the media
cen_ter could not take equipment
reservations
for
two
weeks.
·
"Instructors
were left to set up
and operate the equipment on
Ribaudo
a-lso
·
noted
that
transporting
materials· to and
from Marist East, by crossing
Route 9, was a
.
problem. Now
Mai:ist East has its own substation
that is fully equipped with audio
visual equipment. .
.
Lastweek a memo was issued
by,
-t.he
media center reinstating
:
full service to all areas of the col-
:
lege, including Marist East.'
Faculty members are now re-
quired to call th~ media center
.
three to five days in advance to re-
quest equipment. The media staff
will arrange for a student to set-
up and operate the equipment
during the class .
·continued
on page
8
student event set to take place this weekend~
~ill
deadHne on Friday
for
obtaining weekend guest
be
marked by ·
stricter
campus security than
in_
.i
passes and a ban
on
townh.ouse or other private
past"years,
according to
th.e:Rev. Richard
·A.'.
parties
for
the weekend,-according to the
hand-
LaMorte, assistant dean of student affairs. .
.
.
out.
·
.
.
'
'

.
Eagan to lead class of '88
,
One event causing the tightened security is the
.
·
Activities for the w.eekend for students will
alumni tailgating party in.th_e
McCann fieldhouse begin at· 8
·
p·.m. Friday with a bonfire and pep
parking lot, an event where alcohol is present, rally at the McCann field, featuring the new
said LaMorte.
.


,
.
·
·
....
·
.

,
Marist druin corps,' the football team and
.
"The· number of
problems
seems to increase
.
cheerleaders, said Mark Zangari, president of the
each year, but what we cio to stop them doesn't student league, the group sponsoring the event.
increase irt' proportion,"
·
LaMorte said in
·
This
will be followed by "Feed Your Face,"
a
reference to
difficulties
caused· by students at-
"food festival"
in
the cafeteria from 9-11 p.m.
tending
.
the · tailgating party along with the The pub will be open only to Marist students, and
alu·mni.
·
·
·
alumni and faculty may attend a cocktail party
in
In a hand-out for all Marist students, LaMorte the Fireside lounge.
outlined college norms and procedures that wiH
On Saturday, there will be a homecoming
be in effect for the weekend.
·
parade beginning around 12: 15 p.m., originating
the hand-out reminded-students
of the need to
·at
Marist East. The parade will be made up of
carry Marist I.D. at all times and to present it if
floats from various Marist gr~ups and will be
.
approache,d by a college official, the regulation followed by a l :30 p.m. M~ns~ vs. Brooklyn
against alcohol consumption in outside _a~~ o_f C,olle~~
!<X!t?~!I
~a.~~•.~~~~1:1
!~~~:
•·•·•
..... ,
u-
• , .... f-
..
t-.•~--
..
•-•.•
...
•.•J:•
...
•-ar:•..,:~.~-~-""•••••~
..
.-.r
..
~~
.
...-.•_t;1;_.s--_,.._1_,.;,,:-
.,."=.r.fl'_.,._1_•.!
_.,._
•.
/.
...
__
f"_
.....
-~

,
, ...
.,. ••
._.,-.
...............
.
_by
Amie
Rhodes.
Tim Eagan, of North Babylon,
Long Island has been elected
president of the
class
of 1988
following
elections
held
last
Wednesday and Thursday.
Tony Phillips, president of the
student
body
said
that
193
students· voted
·
in the election
.which is roughly 300/o of the class.
·
<Cit shows a certain amount of
.
apathy, but
it
really wasn't too
bad because they knew they were
.
only voting for one office/'
•••
).?~jlJip~ifl!l9.:t.~
...
Jp.i,J)ls,_is.e...P~
that won will do a good job and
the ones who lost will stay in-
volved which is a good attitude to
have."
Also elected to office was Joe
Esposito of Mahopac,
N.Y.,
who
ran unopposed for vice president.
He said, "I'm
very proud of
Timmy .for winning and I think
we'll be a good combination
which will benefit the class."
Katherine
Perry
and
Glen
Middleton,
..
who
·
also
ran
unopposed were elected to the
positions
,
of
secretary
and
tre_;l*r~r.,,J~~!i)o'tjY.;. ,:•,·,•.•-·
















































































































































































































































































..
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4 · THE Cl~C~~-
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.
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, ?Toh
OctttiJ/6~h:--:·s6~;cJ;{·-~
·
.
Marist- College Crew_ Team:-· butchessMall;Fishk-ill.·,_:-
-.?--:,/::
. members.
·.
wjll
be · collecting
·
On October 7th -:S_hop~_Rite,
pledges·•·
for th~· 2n~
_Annual
- ·
Rou·te9,:HydePark:::
•·
<\'.<
::.,•\."'.-
Americail Cancer Society_
0
Marist
·
..
Kershaw; a junior· at Marist,
.
College Row-A~
Thon
for
the next
·_·stated:
that/ the actual Ro\V-~~
two Saturdays at Jocal shopping·
,Thon
will
takf place at the South
centers.· '
··
':
._
·• .
·
·
·
..
·
:.
i
Hills
Mall on Friday;
::~October
_,
According
.to
Ed

KoC:h and
--
12th; Saturday, October
13~~
~nd
Clinton Kershaw, co-chairman'of
..
Sunday, October 14th. There·wm~
.
this
'year's- 'event, .
crew team
.
be
_continuous.
rowing·
()n
lhose·
members will
·be
.located
at
the.
.
days during the regular.-business
-
following shopping· areas from
hours of the mall.,
·:
'
•·,
·
.
-
.
.
-. -·.
-
·
·
-
-
-
.
.
10:00.AM until 4:00 PMio collect
.
Allproceeds fromthis event are ·_
With all· the action· in·_
Marist basketball
-: .people
wanted to. eat later in order to attend
pledges
for each mile rowed:'
·
'
.
.
tax deductibledonatioris arid will.
•·
last· week, it's natural :that
·the_
spotlight
.
a game, chances are they wou_ldn't know the
·
· on
.
September
_
29th
_
-
be divided equalJy
•between•
the
.
·
,
would be on the men's team, but the college
·.
women
,
were. playing•
.
because
·
Marist
.
Waldbaums,
_
Route
•·
9;
·
Grand
Dutchess
.
County Unit· of
_the
·
··shcilild:
have
·noticed that its women were
·
doesn't advertise for them.·
If the women

union;
·
Imperial
_Plaza;
Shop-
·
American cancer Sodety and the
·-doirig'
·something>
ernbarrassirig:. selling
.
·.
:.wantadvertfsirig,
the
·players
have.to. hang
·
Rite, Nine Mall
-(All
in. Wap~-
·
Marist College Crew Team::
__
.
raffle
.
tickets
·
to raise money for their
>
the:signs thernselves.
.
·
· ·
· pingers
,
Falls); ~nd Adam's
·
.
uniforms. Not surprisingly, Marlst didn't pay.•
',,
-'.'f~e.
~rum:. is _t~at Marist .clings to ,a
Fairacre Farms,'.< Route · 44,
_
,
• TerriKip
--,
·
·
much·, attention. to· its wo'men athletes. It
:_
~hauvm1st1c
.
attitude
·.··
towards
..
womens
Poughkeepsie.
.._._.<
(;rµsade Director
·.
\\
seldom does,
:.·;:, :: _._,
-:,
..
,
·
...
·.
._:
·.
.
·:->
_
·_sports:
that they don't count and people
.?
'i\::·
Btif.ifMar.isf
wasn!t embarrassed l:>y the·,
:
.
'Ar'.?rt'tP~Y
t,o ~ee_the'!l.
,
·
·
·· ._
.
.'.
_
__
.
.
·<{::,_>:
_
•·
,•

);\raff!~
·_ti9k~ts;)f
~l_1oi.1ld':r:a.ve
Obee_n:·
1r
its:_{>,./(
BLlt
,·th,e
.•ta9t.
_is•
th~t.
women's
_sp9rts
do
__
·:-;:
°D
<.·)
,
.
. ·
:/
>:
.
:
,-.
·
·1re'Iana
:
..
:.

:.:,:)-'.
-.:-.:_
..
:
.'"-:--
~
-...:)/-;:
..
·
.
.
.
.
._,:,·.-:·
,.9~a!:''-{'.r:1:'S~Ic,
,,;.:!9.n_oran_ce,
·:'.h~'Nexe,r,
._,..the./'·· count ahd:;people .do, pay to watch them •. : ,.
,,
__
.
~-·
..
<<:,
,·_
·
.....
,
.,
·.
,
,.-
.:-
-
.
.
:
,
..
,
-·~
/
'·,,·
,;••;_.-_.,
··,
~
·"::,,
-; . .
.
.
.
·'.·,·college
·never
-evenJ
.. blushed,.- b·ecause
.
it-
,·,•
:Montclair
State in New Jersey for instance··
-
,.-·,
;
'.
•.
.I
: ..
'.
,.
-;:
:
,., _..-
......
·:·
,
..
, .•
,.,
,,_,.. ~-

...::..:~s,,,,~·-s·,.,
........
.,,, • ..,
.•
,.;._,
.•..
·,c -
.. , -
•-'-"
.
::\:
noticed n~thi~·g.~ut of the ordi~a~:·
··.
::-_,-:,
·;
·
i/-.-ha~f:

w~men's
·basketball.
team that_ con:·.-,_ pear.E~itbr:
:· :;:
: /·. :·,.·:·\·:-·
.: .
·,_,-_-·
:which·in_cludes
ro_und-tip:
airfa~e.:
,
·
·:
-
:,
:·:,·.:
~egIr:inm9.--t~I~
year,;
Manst
.
wof'!le.~ s
..
-·:-
,sistentl
·sells
out.-their
-
gym: Marist has_-~:-.-~-
Fro~_·.
·oec~m~er
,,
27,
__
·
\984
._
gr~1;1nd
_;:_tra!1W9~t,
-·_bre3:kfast,
-: -. .
.
·
.
bask~tba11·-1s-ent1tle~Uo all th_e t?e~ehts qf
: . .-.-beaten-~ontclair.
:-
" / .. :-_
.
. .;.-
-~-/:.~
..
:·,.:_
:··_-
· '.
thr~mgh_:'Jari'-!afy;
13;--.1985,:
Stat~:;·. accoiµmo~a~~o_ns,.t~eater.
t1c~e~,
·
:.
·.
·
_:
the:fl!C::.4-.A.;.and;·On·paper:~hey:Jt~e:,exaptly;_:
-~
;::
:
.>,
:'
•.:
;.
··
>:'>
.,
;-:
--:-·;
·
:>F:',
:,
,:.,;··,,
··
.:·-_.Umvemty :_-of
,,'.New
:·:York::'.:at <:,and
all prograrr-related.fe~s.
,:,-·:'.~:-
',._:
·
·• ::-equ_al:t6.the
rnel'I
..
So·
Why:w~r_eij'.t\thffmen -:\\:.
This year, perhaps the wol'!"enha"e. me>re
;
·._
Oneonta
:will
s·ponsorthe,•ninth
,
:_
<:..:.Applicati9ri(.'.and:·,,·program
-: .-:
·
· .
.
.
·.
seW(ittraffle
tick~ts?
Because th!:3fhave th~;;\
'.ofa
chanqe_ than ,tt)ey'_v~
~'d ,n t,t:i,,pas~;b~t ' Iris~:
·,
-§ttid!es.
:,Irite~se_ssion
•.••..
!ri
:::;-information
:~re
:available
-_from
:
'.
.
:
,, Red F,o><
Club;:_bo.osters
_from the l,ocal area_;:
··.•}hey
_suffer- from
.
_th~
- :a,dm1r11~tra.,tIe>n
s
_- .Jrela~d,· .This
y~ar•s··cou~ses
~•ll
..
:Qan Casey,: En$hsh_
Dep~rtrnent,
:: ,
_
..
to·
raise money tor, them. The
.Marl
st m~n-

._.
sh,orts,_ghtednes~. ThI_s;_year
,s -wo,rn~n
ha_ye
•·
·
:1>e}nsh
praina (2 s~h.) and C,aelic
:JiUNY,
-.
Qneonta,,'•;~X(/13,8~0
: . '.:
·
don'.t have to demean
-themselves;-They ·
..
·>good
scholarship~. and_
~
tearn e>f; quah~y
:Sport,
(2•· s'.h.)
.. Both: are SUNY·.
·(607)
432s7088
•.
Apphcauon.:s
~dl
:::
'/.
_
·.
·
don~t:-. have
,
to
.
worry
·
about
.m9riey'_
-for
.-:·_.·.
players, but· they're·. work_inQ.)IJi~~
_an,-
u~"-
_-:
·
,.approved;'
Both:a~e approved for<
,~e
acce1>ted
throtig~ October 3
~
:/,.:i\.
.···
-.
unifprms. Th.e
·Red-·
Fox Club•• (llakes sure
,: •.
derpald ~oach anda part~tIme a5-s1~ta.nt;so
. ·
U.S. GovernmentU:>ails.
':;>/·
/··\,{:
/ -
·
>•-·
>,.,.
·/:
:::
•'->".;:_:;::_::-
:
,
th.eir.needs are·met: men StJpportme_n.
/,
: ..
;,:
their-. incentive may
:not•~e
there.
·It<rnay,
, ..
:
'
..
Costiqf the 1984.-85.-
program·
/
·_.
.
·
>
:,
.,<c.·
.:
.,DariCasef
.
.
·,
The womerr don) havEf a booste,r club
-'never
be until · the college ·readjusts its .
for SUNY students
is
$925;,
··
.
·
Program Director
.
because
Marlst
idoes11A't
.d
..
thitnhk •t~ey')tl
.·•
:thiMnki~gt
...
·.·d.
-
,-:--
.
_t,,t_l_t
..
d
___
.·adJ·ustment
·
·
_·'-.',:i_f
__
~_/\_,;;;-;:_·_::_i
__
·
produce any·
·revenu_e;

n
.' _
ey, uon
<
~_r:Is
:,
nee s
:
an

~
..
_
ue
.
.
,
.
.
·.
t:~~u:~c~J
}~
8
pl~~s!h~~~e~o;eearJa~:t~~
-:,;(:~hr~o~~~=t~h!pri~~eg~nii~!
~:ve~1~:
_
.
_
.
_
.-
::
<\/;,i_·-:::'.>}:·i:·{Al::s}_t
'::::
·
5:30 p,m., while tl1e potential spectate>r~
:
.sense·:to
>~~
embarrasse~
0
1f its
:women
:_ .·
.
....
..
w:~
~•ling di,nner. But then,
even
If these
'athletes_~,
.. to sen r•m:t•ckets.
.
·!j~1!;:&ci;::1~;i~~:{
Ji~~~~F.;t~iiiijl~~:li'if:
·s·
o·:
_.
'b
..
·e·:

·1~

-::g·
...
_·_t:
t,;;;;·o•··
..
:'·u··,,_,g•
-:~r··._·s·

lhe
_Nattoµal
Stud~nt Campa1gn_··;:_St11dent·.'Asscidatioil;S::The_'.•.D.if-':.-,:,·
•.
.
·::
·
..
• ,
.
'• .....
·
...
··
'
. ::
__
·_
11
·
..
_-
....
·
.
·ll
.
..
·
0
foi'cVotefRegistr;1Jion,.-(NSCVR)
/•ference:
American·Associatforiiof-'"'
'·.
_
_
.
_ ..
.
_
.
:
.
,is·
organizing
::.sinfoltaneous
::University.ii\\'omen,
:'~
Piibltc.
_•
,
.;
•:
/ <

·.
.
-.
:
.
· ·

f <?~tipts

on:
.
the
: ,
Pr~sidential.
··.·,_Citizen,
_
·
-
D.~i:nocr·11~y
·
.rroject;
.-.:
·
·
,
...
~·;·~
_
..
_
_
_
·
...
· ~i:
...
_-,
.
...
:
..
\·-.
:
..
_
:~
~
---
~
eJect1ons.at
ove_r
100
campus~ on
<---'~u\>li~_--:,_·C~tizen,-::_~EnvirPnlllC~~~l,"<
·
;
JOhf! Rosowski was22.years· old when·he
.•
'
perc~~t fewer. al9o_hol-~elate~

a_u~o~~~-il,e
.
:
/!ct. 2.1._
:,.:
.-
_.t·•
_:'.:'
::~<--
~.
,:
.,
·./Safety,
:
an~:.-.}~~::::S~,i!1.r:~!1:\,
died.That's riot much' older than most of the
·
·-fa,tah_t1es.
Th,at ,s an
,,mpr_ov~m~nt,C
.... _.
:.
..
-.--•_
...
The. ~mpus.
_d_ebates,,
coUecc
_,
Foundation:
y,
--:--
'::,
---
:-:·,
-
:
,
eo le readin
this;editorial.
But' ttie sack
.·.
:,···.
;<·
~
---..
,.,
.....
,.
.·•,_
:.
,,a.·_•·•,:<.
tt~ely title~ .''Sh<?wdown
'84,''.
.
!he Nat1onal-,St~dentsC::~~~
~esf thiO
-·.
aboir John's death is. that it was
'<
;
But_
-
its
-
n.ot. enough.
--~_nt1\
we. come, !o
I
wdlbe held 1mm_ed1ately
befor~
.or .
pa1gn
fo~
Voter
_Reg~st~~tion.
i~•a
:
_
so serisefuss· it did not have to' ha
·
•en.
.
understand·. that.· hu_man
·
hfe
.
,s. W?rth
·
more . after
· ..
the :, nationally
:_.
televised
_._
.
non-partisan <?rga~iati_o!l
_w!uch_,
.
:.
· ·. _
.
'.
.
. ,
.
.
.
_.
·•
·•:
-
P~
• -
_.
.
.
·than
a beer,run ~o a ~ell ?r a joy-r.'de af~~r a
de,bate between Walter Mo?,dale
_;_
conducts v.oter reg1strat1on
and
:
H_e.
v.,as killed. last. ~aturday mgh_t,. Just
·_
·
P?,rty,. ~eOJ?ll:3
w,11 still_ die. If _a liberal
.art~·
___
.
and_;·
.
R'!nald
Reag_an.
·. The·•··•
-voter education camp~igns acro~s
north
.,
of_
·-:-
the
.
~anst
._•
ca'!lpus,
.-
'
m
.
an·
··
education Is. ':"hat
'!'8-
are geHI~g. at_ Marlst,
._-_•
·,
Pres1dent1al
,debate
wdl also b~
·.
the country
..
-A·•
proJ~t
.•
of. tile
_
..
automobile
_accident
.wh,c.h
·
involved
one of the. things It should teach.us Is the:-·
airecf"on· large screen televisions student-directed· Public
~Interest
·
someone drinking and driving.
:
·
.
value of human life; the i111portance
.?f
each
·
·
during the"events.
:· •
-
-
· ·
.
Research Grou·ps
: .
(PIRGs),
.
Until we realize. that something
this
one of us.
; .
.

.
_
,
<·
'fhe
·
..
_canip~s deb_ate~. will._ NSCVR
was
,0
founded:
•.
this
horrible can happen· to us, things will not
The fact is that a large percent of alcohol- _ featur~ prom1!1:ent.
md1v1duals February at a ~onference of 1~00
change; indeed, they will more than likely
related acci_dents involve people within the
.
,
analyzmg campaign issues
sue~
3:5
student l~ders f~om42 states.
•:
.
get worse.
·
·
·
college age. level. If lives are going to
..
be
t~e arms race,_
the economy, c1v:1
.
Stu~!nts
-~.
mtere~ted , 1:!
·
.
.
:
.
.
.

.
.
spared then
it
is we who must take on the
nghts, the enVIronment,
women s
orgamzmg
.
~howdown
·
84
The laws against c,jriving w~ile intoxicated
respon~ibility
of ensuring other people's
.
issues,
and educat!on policy.
.

debates at their campus should
are on ~he books, _an~ they v~_done some
safety. If we decide not to and our friends
Co-spons~m with N~CVR of
.
contac~NSCVRat617-357~~16.
good. Since the drmkmg age m New York
are killed. we will have no one but ourselves
. the debate mclude ProJect Vote,
·
State was raised to 19, there have been 25
to blame.'
·
·
·
Southwest Voter Registration
Education · Project,
·
Human-
Editor
Lou Ann Seelig
Photography
Editor
·
Margo Kuclch
Cartoonist
:The
Alsocl1t1 Editors
-
Brian Kelly
Senior Editors
Christine Dempsey
Business Manager
PaulRaynls
John Bakke
Circle
Kevin Schulz
Amrtlslng
Manager
Viewpoint Editor
Pete Colaizzo
Sports
Editor
Ian O'Connor
Faculty Adflsor
Johri Richard
_NSCVR
Laura Reichert
Laura Reichert·
BemleHeer
David McCraw
-·---~~-~-----;--
==-=·
-=~-=·
=========,;;;;;;;;;;;.~;;;;..;;;;;.;,;;.iiiii.iiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'iliili·----iiiiliiiii--·
_,....,..
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i:
I.
.
'••
•'
:-1·
..
···.·•o·
·.· - :',
·:N··
.···.·· . .
OTct·•p984·THEC/~C~_E-Page5
....
,
.
•'
.
'
..
.
,,
:
·,
·,.._
':
··.
.
.
~
by
Lewis Eisenberg
.
.
..
.
..
·
.
A sriloker: on the other hand,
The smoker;
·on
the other hand,
a_nge~
has been directed atthe hus-
.
· :_·
·
:,:

_
··.
:
·

( ·>·:
·:
:"~.:
.;
.:,
:
cilh eat ran~i(i chicken salad in the
··,s
always content because he.never
·
band,
·
but now
·
it's magically
•:
.
Cigarette srnokiilg is
like·
sen:
.
:
world's greasiest spoon with com~ tastes the glop his old lady puts on
transferred to his cigarette. Her
ding a letter .. to: lung disease:·
,
plete impunity. He· knows that. the table ariyway. Boiled shoes or
mind is awhirl with possibilities,
deliv,ery
..
might· take a while/ biit
just a fewdrags on his trusty weed
-~filet'of
sole are all the sanie to his
not of infidelity, but of how to
·
it's· guaranteed to. get there'e.ven~ is iike having a license td practice taste buds, which like those
_an-
keep that ash from falling and
tu_a,lly
.•.
:
What.·. rri_ariy
•'
pe~ple
..
tactical. warfare on
·any
bacteria· noying seat belt· buzzers,· have
burning the carpet, the sofa or the
overlook,
however;<. is
,
tha.t
.
foolish' enough· to
'
enter"' his long been
·.
disconnected .. The
dog. An adept smoker, with a few
'
smokers
.have·
m·ariy advantages
..
mouth. Even,the exhaled· smoke
'smoker
is happier. f()r it, and so is
abrupt turns, can emotionally ex-
snap judgments, and in the non-
smoker's case iCs "goofing off."
But
·
·
when the boss· sees an
overflowing ashtray,
a· secret
smile flickers in the corner of his
managerial heart. He thinks, "ac-
tivity."
·
· If
the butts are hurriedly crush-
ed, he thinks, "dedication."
If
there's one cigarette that's burned
all the way down without being
touched,
he thinks,
"promo-
oyer
_no.n-smok~rs.
And if there
· .
has health value. This is why non-
.
his wife.
haust his spouse in a short time.
isn't' a pioiec_tive halo. of tar a~d
smokers, embarrassed to ask for
·
c
She'll
.
forget all about the wig,
nicotine around your head at this
help but knowing the:y"' need it,
·•
·
Another
important
domestic
happy that her home hasn't burn-
min_ute, you're running the risk of
always sit
.ne;xt·
to large groiips
·or·
use. of

smoking is· to
·
a'{oid
·
ed. down, and they'll both trot
i:ui11_ing
yot1r. heaJth, breaking. up. smok_efs in· resfaurarits
:'and
try· to
··.
answering
·
·
embarrassing
..
·
ques-
·
happily off to beddy-bye.
your marriage, and losing· your
look like they're
noi
br.ea'thihg.
tioris.,Say, for example, your wife
..
Meanwhile, the non-smoker is
job. No kidding;
.
.
·
.
·
asks
you
where that blonde wig in
spending a hot night in the back
At'home food poisoning. is not. the back-of.the car came from.
If
seat of a Toyota with that blonde
.
You can always
.tell
:who
.the
.
a major· concern. But burnt,
you're a'-non~smoker, you'll pro-
wig.
nori-sm~kers are at
a
restaurant.·
soggy or just plain bad tasting
bably pa11ic and tell the truth'. But
Smoking is also an easy way
to
.
Tbey}re the ones· who. push the
.
food is.: Here
-again
_the
non-
all
a
smoker has to do is reach in-
let people know you're busy, and
gravy off their blue' plate special
··
smoker is at a serious disadvan-
to his shirt pocket for a cigarette,
it comes in very handy at the of-
_and
firid montfrold lamb. Thetre
..
tage,
·
While his ultra·-sensitive light up and inhale thoughtfully
.
fice. While non-smokers might do
the ones who are afraid of germs.

taste buds cry out for culinary
·
as if the quest~on is of great in-
more work
.than
smokers, the
They.-have
to
b~, becau~e
·their'
genius, his
'wife
thinks Eggs Ben-. terest to him. The, exhaling in a
boss can't
possibly notice a
..
patlietically cleari_: lungs· are.; a
diet is sonieone)Vho· fought
in
the thin, sincere stream in the best
wastebasket
full of crumpled
.
·
ilatui:al,breedin·g ground for food
.
Revolutionary,
.War.
He can't
.
Hollywood tradition, he looks
papers or a typing blister as he
·
PC?:t~?rii~g
:.and
.
other·· diseases.·.· win, and the only thing he'll'ever
around frantically for an ashtray.
flies through the office between
Poor"de~ils;
· ·.
.
~~~By
put in his sto_mach is ulcers/
Up· until this point, the wife's
·
golf games.· He only has time for
tion."
·
The non-smoker, on the other
hand, is never promoted because
·
he show neither the smoke nor
·
fire that bosses love to see. Only
the janitors who empty ashtrays
'
appreciate a non-smoker,
and
even they think there's something
'
a little weird about anyone who so
flagrantly disregards his personal
well-being. And makes no butts
·
about it.
.
.
Lewis Eisenberg teaches Fiction
.
·
workshop,
and is an adjunct
·
faculty member who lives in New
Paltz.
byJ.
Cummins·
more money has been directed.
because of the cost.)
any lessons about peace were
towards the arms race. Does that
learned. Confused wasn't the cor-
.
·
: We can assume that these
Can
I
_talk at you for a couple
scare anyone? There seems to be a
rect word to use a minute ago.
·
·
· k h
·
things were acted upon not by
of minutes?
If
this year'.s electio_n tendency to thm t at the U.S.
1s
I'm actually scared because so

Reagan, but by appointees on the
is the first one you'll be.voting in,
-coming
out of an economic
administration.
But
Reagan
many
.
blind followers of the
I think you should stop and con-
.
slump. Big business is doing very
himself has been involved with a
government are now of voting
sider
·the
candidates a bit before
well-these·days, creating jobs·and
age.
.
.
·
few other issues such as religion
·
_you
pull the lever ...
·
·
funneling
profits·
into
·
the
Perhaps there's less to lose in
and· abortion, which I feel go
Sometimes people vote for the
economy. But low and middle in-
beyond the realm of politics. Now
this election than in the last two.
lesser of two evils. Sometimes
come families are still caught in a
No, there's exactly as much at
·
·
·
if you are
·
religious and are
People vote for_ a ca·ndidate'_s_pro- situation of little
.
or no extra
stake!
Freedoin
of
thought,
··
·
·
a_gainst abortion yo·u may feel
mises.
:
Mostly, though,
people
capital.
.
As usual the rich get ·
freedom of religion and the right
··
h
h
d h
.
richer and the rest
of.
the. country·
th at
..
Reagan
·
is
right· ori

th e to be able to surv·1ve at a finan-
.
vote, t e way t ose aroun
t em
money. you know,
1
kind of
vote..
stays the same. Reagonomics pro-.
·
.
.
. .
.
about
cially
·acceptable
level are
·
the
.
·
· •
·
........
Before
I
go on
l
would like to vides the
.
greater
.
benefits. for
rem em ~er
.
some
th
mg
backbone of America.
I
can't help
.
·:._.-
;R-~Q.
~,~-~g_._.
·
..
·
;>:.::.~~~a~~~:i:::ov::i;~,r!:~n:~~t~:;
_-.••~f~~:::~!:~:;
..
ttr~t.~-;~;
t:~1~~~-~~it;1:1r;i,,:i\s~;~:~~.;~:~.~;;~:-_.-;
~~-c!e~:\ 1~a~n!~a~:~c~rfce~~~~
.i! ...
,
... ·• -
-
-

•'
.':'".-f.·.··
--··o··
·
.
:_'
:: ·.
't·.
.
·
·,
:·:.
:
muc~d:chan~e ohf a
·chtar°ge
m
·
t~e .
·:
The economy'
1s not the only_
.
·:1
know a couple of people who··.
~th~~~~t~sair:
i~
r;;~crn
d;:!;~8:
·
·\:a
.
OU
..
.':
.,·.:,••:,.
-.pres1
encrmt
enef
_our year·
issue wh~re-Reagan ups~ts_me.
:_workintheJusticeDepartr1entin
·.·.MORE
YEARS.
·
·.··
.
·,
.
<
'-_:.
...
·
·
But Ic,b,v!ously don t•l!ke R~agan ~urnan nghts, and the disregard
washington;.D.C.Offtherecord,
.
·
.. .
::
.
.
.
or the_prospect that hell
_be
m of-
.
for them
.
by the
current ad-
.
two of them at different tirnes,
It
all comes down to the con~
.
R.
...
:·.
..
. .
...
,. ".,
.fice
untit
1989.
·The_,purpose
of ministration ppses a great threat:.· meiltioned
·.
that
.
the word on.
cept that you should think before
..
·
..
·
ea
.
·an.:

this
:':ranting"
is simply to show: Does anybody
..
remeinber. the
Capital Hill was that Reagan was
_you
vote. And if you've got a lit-
that there really, may be· some
:.
school
.
lunch scandal. of
a
few
out of control. l had to ask why
tie time you might even read up a
·
flaws
in
this adrh!nistra!i6n that
.
years ilgof Reagan. proposed to
and how: Their response was that
.
little on what the candidates say,
sh9uld make us thmk}w1~e abo~t
·
_rnake
catsup
a
vegetal>le for the .his age was the factor;
·simple .
and what the incumbent really has
al!owing Reagan_ to contmue his free school lunch j:>rogram, this
..
seni}ity.
I
don't know if I'd go as
done, compared to what he says_.
.
....
reign.
:_·
·_.·•
·,
~-
..
·
>•.,
·

.
cutting the cost ofthe lunch. (Can • far as to believe that,·but some of
Iri
high school a history teacher
•·
-:
,·.·.·
Reaganomics is_
a word that ~as you picture a smallbowl of catsup · the man's comments and actions
once told me that the American
become ~- part of the Enghsb
on
a plate with a peanut butter
are definitely questionable:
public votes with their stomach or~
language
m
the pa~t
·four
years.
and jelly sandwich?)
I'
b't
f
d
1
thought
their groin. Although the analogy.
·.
What exactly does it.mean? Ob-.
·
··..
.
.
,
.
m
a
1

con use ·
.
.
is a touch vulgar, I've always
.
viously it is the economic' policies
-
,
Now about Social Secunty_pro-
the lesson~ that th
e
w~r m _Yiet-
believed that it rings
·true.
Let's
-:-
which the Reagan administration_.• blell}s? Lots of olde,r Ame_ncans_
·-nam
taught us would suck with us
try another two this time. How
.
has instituted
•.
But. how has this
.
·are
finding it hard to .survive_ on. for many. years: Well, the.re has
about the mind and the con-
..
affected the people of the nation?
.
the s~all
_
allotment they receive.
been
.a
draft ag~1!1
for a while and

science.
·
·
.
w·en we know. that a lot' of (You must have heard about dog
certamly the m1htary tone of the
:
··
·-;
·
'
·
d.
l
·
d
't
t that
j. Cummins
w_·
orks at Marist .
.
budgets J:iave been. cut;
.~Qd
~har ,food going on those mner p ates government
oesn
.
sugges
~-
.
.
.
.
.)
'··It's
1984.
It's the year
of
"Big
Brotherly"
.
importance
which
also happens to contain another
Election Day. Millions of· people
will flock to the polls with the
belief that they are electing a man
to the most powerful democratic
office in the world. Americans
.
casttheir ballots with a feeling of
authority as their opinions
-
are
·
recorded. The voters leave the
booth with the thought that their
vote is directly giving
a
man the
presidency
of
the Un.it~
.States.
The president and vice-president,
however, are not elected by the
·
people. They are given the office
by a group of special Americans·
..
,
known as the Electoral College.
This group, which may h~ve had
a
practical purpose dunng the
early years
of
this nation, is now
an archaic institution that should
.
be ~boli~he.d.
.
.
.
nineteenth amendment, on Aug.
The
.
Electoral
College was
26,
·
192Q,'
tlle United
States
established.in Article 2, Section 1
.
Constitution
·.
has· guaranteed
of the Constitution: "Each state
every citizen the right to vote
shall
__
appoint, in such maqner_ as
regardless of race or, in this case,
sex.
.
Jronically,
·
-this
same
the legislature thereof may direct, ·
f l
l
h
document
prevents
.
the same
a number o e ectors.equa tot e
.
citizens· from: voting for their
· ·
whole number of Senators and
h · h h
president. The people have the
Representatives to w ic. t e st:He right to vote for their respective
may
:be
,entjtled in Congress."
members
of
the
House
cf
The founding fathers wrote
·
thi_s
into the Constitution because they
Representatives. The seventeenth
felt that the average
_American
amendment gives the people the
was
,
riot
.
educated
.
enough
.
to
righ~
.
to vote directly for the
choose the right men for the only
senators of their respective states.
A person's right to vote for his
two nationally elected positions in
local, state and national officials
the country. That may have been
has been well established. It is
true
200
years ago, but there is no
ludicrous
for this
.
nation
to
.
successful politician- who would
maintain the Electoral College to
support that position
·today.
The
vote for the president and vice-
average United States citizen has
long sin~e reached a level of
president
education and sophistication to
The El~toral College is simply
make a well-thought out decision
not a good way to choose. It has
about
who should
lead the
twice shown
,
itself completely
country.
unrepresentative of the. people's
Since the ratification of the
desire. In
1876,
Samuel
J.
Tilden.
received over
250,000
more votes
than Rutherford· B. Hayes, yet
Hayes won the election because he
received one more electoral vote
than Tilden. Twelve years later,
Grover Cleveland received almost
100,000
more votes than Ben-
jamin · Harrison,
yet Harrison
won the election. because the
Electrical College awarded him
dozens· more electoral votes. The
main problem with the Electoral
College is that it awards the votes
unproportionate to the popular
vote within
each state.
For
example,· if
.
Walter
Mondale
happens to win by just one vote in
New York State, he would most
likely get all of the state's
41
·
electoral votes. It's possible for a
presidential candidate to win a
simple majority in just I
1
key
·
electoral
states and win the
election even if the opponent won
every single vote in all of the
remaining
39
stares. The Electoral
College is obviously a ridiculous,
inequitable
way to elect
a
president in ourmodern age.··
In the weeks.to come, the media
will be flooded with messages that
will try to get you to vote one way
or the other. The candidates will
be out on· the campaign trail
asking pecple to vote for them.
They would both say that the
American people have the ability
to make the choice that is best for
the country.
The government
should give the people the true
power to make this choice. We are
now in a highly technological,
well educated society. It is an
insult to our intelligence to
maintain the Electoral College
and allow only 538 special people
out of a nation of a quarter
billion to vote for the president.
It's
1984.
It's about time that the
American
people
told
"Big
Brother"
that we demand the
right to vote ..
Gary
Davis is
a
junior majoring
in communication arts.





















































































...
".
-
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_.
.
.
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',
This
Week
\ ~egirini;s'. T.h~i~d~;:
:.bet:"
4. · , The Towne- Crier. Cafe starts
Court will bri~~ a c~llectio~ of . : is free:
T~~
~h~t~{is h~ridi~ap'.~c-
. the musical review ''Don't Bother : . off- their· w~ekend· entertainment ..,,
traditi~nal; Irish_·. mu~ic
t~\
J~e· \ ,ce~~i,bl~
~~\:lj~~-
pe,i-f1r~~~e
~iU
• l\.ie,.
I Can't :,Cope,,,
:·will
·be ,
Friday
a_t
9:3() ,p.m. ' with )he
Towne;.Cner; The. five Member
bnnterpreted ,fo,r ttie deaf.~iFor
; presente~iby .Carole.Peterson and. ,. gr_~up C:'est
W,hat?!
1J1e. quintet
group represepts.: ma~y, different. ~. moreiQformation caU257·246/.
the Queen Ci_ty Stage Co.mpany. features originaljazt,
classical; . backgroundli' which tliey -have
.in}:·.
'c ;\
on·;weanesd·ay, soprano 'Elissa
. _Although ;this ·musi.cal com.edy . blues, and Latin music influences! corporated into their music. The
Bowen will be featured at a :free
- lean~ towarq,-._Gqsp~l,
style,.: ro,ck · ... They,: haye ·· been . perforqiing
perfo~mance
is;
af'8:~0;p.!:_Il.\Th_et~
~rio<>nJi_n\e'.P9oncert_
at ·the ~~rst
,. and: jazz ,infl,uences,,,can also,,be · regµlarly ih''New :York' City and
cafe 1s located -~t ~6_6
.~:~~~al?-.. Eva,n~e~~!+utheran Churclj! in
• · , ·. , ri;
..,
•· , "
-
~~
found,
:Th~,
,~h<;>w'
takes. place,. aL the:Ndrth~ast. .
· '" · · "''
,. Rd .• Hopewell J~ncttq~.: ;
~
,
·<-
,. ~.
;J>pugfikeeps1e.She also playsahe
·.·._-
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the LCouriiy,.,Fa!lsi ,'.J'heatre,. on ·:,' ... ' ' ,;•; \ ',. .. ; ; · :, ;':
:·~.
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Also on Sunday, The College at·' . 'piano·andwill play Arias andl'Art.
.
,,_1:._.
.
Thursday, Friday,. :arid. Saturday ·, .Luj'(;ollins'vviU be 'pei:form'ing New Paltz will be presenting . sorigs>· . ·
,
::
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. .
~
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..
•,. ,:<' : . .-·:,. -· · ... , , .
·-.
,at_8:15p.m.
Au
tickets.are,$8 and. iat"theT~\Y~_eCriei:on·~~tiirday
at
"Smile. Pretty. Nancy Jane."
Continuing until Oct. 21 is(the
musiff'-
:,·
.,,
"•' :,
•reservations can.be made,by.call- .' ?:3()
:p~m;
',He(~usic
coml,iries This comedy/drama provi~es au-
. Designers'
Showcase
84lat
..
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' '.
·.•.··.·_·.::._
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· Tickets. aie . also-~:. traditional ..•
·. and _contimporary ·· · di~nces,
r~tq
.
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~itty; ,ins,ig~t;i~iq ; ..
·
![Grasnfe!e!_"f~C\
t!st*~· is. iocatcii in- ·
·
· .,
·. available:i~· ,P~~giikeepsie:
at.the
•·
folk ·sounds'and she;.often 'play~ "one woman's bfe is 1r-chsabled ' Rhinebeck; . New· 'York . ~nd
Catherine Street Cen'ter arid.Hair
throughout Ne.w Englari<i_._
Thfs
·:'Y~ll1~n·-Jn
an, ~1:,l~:~~QI;ld/'
T,~_C:;,,:
s~~9":'.£~Se'..h<?~~s{iarr~:M.on~ay~
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Today; ..
Further,JnfQrmation
-
will be·.herjecorid appearan~e at :'performance will beat 8 p.m.im., suadayHa.m:Ap.m:•aridFnday
473-1914;-.
··:.O:
: .
<
''the cafe. On'·Sunaay,
Midniglit
theParkerTheatreandadmission
-Jla.m.-Sp.m ..
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·ti
Lecture:
Color
Presentation by
Beth Williams -Fireside
-> ·
9:00
p.rn.

, · ·
.
'
Film:
"La
I>~lce Vita" :
, DonnellY 24S
.
Free -: 7:30
p.in.
Party:
Alumni Coctail
·Party - Fireside
8:00
p.m.
it
th~:
_T~\\'Oe·
,Crier
Cafe- 'C'est What
, : original jazz music
>.
(cruisers"
and ;'.Monty ·
'Python.and
the
HC>Hf:.'
• -· Grail;,_~ Theatre .: '
_8:30 p.m. ·
·
Homecoming Dan,ce ~.
(Senior-and Alumni ·
Only) - Cafeteria ·
· 9:00 ~:01,
. Sc~ndal ~ill be. appear,
ing this evening at· ihe
. Mid-Hudson
. Civic
·center,:.
At
·
the To·wne Crier
Cafe
~
Lui Collins -
traditional and contern-
.
pory.folk ~ounds .
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·/Paltz~
"Smit~ Pretty,
..
:Nancy
Jane"'8 p.m.·
at Parker Theatre ·. ·
admission - Free •.
To~ne Crier.Cafe::
Midnight•
Court
Irish music .
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(N,x~ to All Spol't.
A
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Oct. 4, 1984
~
THE CIRCLE· Page 1--
lristiring·
count might well prove discourag-
riot."
?
ing, so how about if we just skip
. Granted, we haven't h~d a
. • Y,ou wouldn't know it ·from it?).
·
·
good,
·bloody,
call-in-the-
. loo½ing around, but this place is a
And just what · is excluded?
National-Guard riot here in, well,
real :danger . zone .. The pitfalls : Among other things, · suicide.
a long time. With that in mind,
have. nothing to do with passing (Also "attempted suicide or inten-
one might argue that the riot
,outin the;l'ub, either -
they're · tionally · self-inflicted · injury.")
clause is ofno real concern.
all around us. J'his
L
know not
Known as the "Mid-December"
Nonsense.· It's the minor riots
from any. unfortunate.experience
clause, this one means that if you : that concern me.· We all know-
(ah,.God forbid) but.from ~.quick cash in your chips before finals,
how crafty these insurance com-
reading of the '~1984-85 Accident' there won't be an extra thousand
panie~ are
-"-c-
even a little squab-
Insurance_ Plan for students of waiting at the cashier's window.
ble can be called
a
riot
if
it will
Marist College.".
·
'
("If
your life ain' wuth nu thin' to
save a few bucks. And what of
. It's a not-foo-official-lookifig · you, it sho 'nuf ain' wuth no
our riot-related medical bills
· document, , though ; · the . ever-
thousand dollas t' us/')
then? Are we to lick our wounds
present.college seal makes_a1i ap-
Cosmetic
surgery
is . not
and pay for them as well?
peararice: on the front (you know covered. Remember that. cute lit-
Even allowing that River Day
, ..;..,._-
a
nondescript squiggly swirly · tle 'nosejob you wanted? The new
could be a bona fide semi-riot,
·thing a11d·some. Latin:
-adore ·a
chin you've had your eye on?
how about smaller uprisings? At
; labrador).
On the inside, it's more · Looks like you'll be paying for
it
what point does a band of surly
. downto_business. .
.
.
,yourself.
sophomores at Skinner's become
:- Here~s the good news: .It seems .-- In addition, «normal pregnan-
roitous? Who is to say?
, the nice· people down. at Atlanta
cy" is excluded. There is no
And when does the brouhaha
International
Insurance ; Com-· . definition of a normal pregnancy,
become an act of war? This too is
pany,_ for only six dollars, have
and it is unclear whether abnor-
important, for we are also on our
agreed to spring for
up
to
si;ooo
malpi:egnancies mighfqualify for
owri' when it comes to. injury
to·coyer expenses on .each acci-
the 1,000 bucks. For the overly , :•r_esulting from . declared
or
'ctent•you have·untilnextAugust
cautious·(ofoverly
adventurous;
undeclared
war.· or. any: act
. 30/
Sickness·
is ·
iri no uncertain : according to one's perspective on .. thereo:C,,,. : .
__
·. ·.. . . · ,
..
·
:terms exchidecLAppareritly; .the _the.• matter) • there i~ something
.
;_
>
It's
the same ·problem . again.
under~riters'·ha've 'been )hi:ough' ·called'a "Maternity Care Benefit ··.D~clcired :wars are ·~a~f~(o· pick
''the cafeteria.-:'
:·>:, :-'· .,_. . . ·.
Rider/'
<
••
.. · ' _·
..
out, .what'.. with uniforms. and
, .. , But' no matter:' Accidents: .are : ' No mention is made ·of· any ' ta.iikdincf pfanes and '1uch. ·But
tfre 'issue, and it. might seem that a.· paternity clauses or benefit riders,
what about the many undeclared
· par~icularly
_:.
· 'accid~nt-p'rone :; which mtist be obtained; it seems,
wars? The war on poverty? The
· freshmimclass (to pick a class at
separately. Y_ou might want to
war on crime? The war of the
: i;ahdom) .·. ,could
keep,._
those·' :check with the Good Hands Peo- · world_s? The, war on herpes? Who-
·'southernersdashing,'off checks an: pieaboLit'this pne.
·_! , :,:
. '·.:' i
will help .Mmst-'s victims of the
: year~' '.~Sprairi'aii,lde\ip. thaih?" .. -Anblher·'
'.vie-don''t-'care
war on herpes, if not Atlanta ln-
'_th~y,'dsay._:··'Y~Y
shq' 'nilfi,e_pay' : cat~gory i.i~ :~nythin_g'' _resulting ternational?;
' '
j
i : :

off~:., . .S~lly ~"!1e,,:,: ~hatf
ma. ·,from.
drug,
add1ct1on_:• or
Compelling.questions, indeed.
checkin! lioi:>k?.'.'.,,. ·. , . .• · ' . . ·· ,alcohohsm.• Tough break, .but ap-
If we, as Marist'Students, become
... I(only'it_were· so'.'':Actually, ·1. pare11tly"the uilderwriterf have
witting
or
lin."'.itting casualties of
,imagine
'the:f
sayi:'Not
·sa
damn beento River Day as welL .
these unofficial and unendorsed
fast,
Yarikee:"·or'soniething Hke
These exclusions, despite:their
conflicts, I'm afraid we will be
.that. "Y'all didn't read the
exclu-
remark.able understanding of the . out . in
the
cold.
(''Well;·
sions."
Exclusions? Ah, those.
mqst popular extracirricular ac-
y'ought'n't ta have been inna wah
Of, course, you didn't reaily ex- · tivities at Marist, are good ones.
;zone/igna
first place, ya fool
:P,~SJ!JO
..
b~ tht1t
easy.·
'.I'll~.
P..91!~
··-
_S.adly,.
though, o~lter. l~ss _justified Ne'Y.:,gr~ahs.
GimminY,t!;~)
._ ·
fnas:
·•moie)f;fatches
thrur:·-'Mrf:to9es have crept;
ip:◄ Fof)nstance,
·· ..
Scf(C<>J?~ider
t~is:zfafr\warning
~Malet•s·
'f_i~e\group.
of\receivei:s ,'t~i,r!:! is this innocent enfry:'<.'in-
and be careful. Six bucks doesn't
·(many moi:e;.in fact, but an aciual
jury, due. to participation. in a
buy all that much these days.
_,
.
'
.
,
__
.-,
·-
•·,
...
'
·.•.•·
-
.
'
;•
,
...
Sitcon1 politics
left unfulfilled.
.
Like
President-turned-hippie
,
•••••
Reagan, Flower Child Walter
~:.And·now, here's your host of
Abbie Hoffman
is in semi-
Mondale
has
expressed
an
"Texaco Star Theatre," Ronnie retireine:nt and Jerry Rubin is now
eloquent plea for peace. When the
,Reagan! . ·
•...
· ·
..
.
,.
a stockbroker, but they must be , campaign aides for Gary Hart
.· i'Hey, did you hea.r the one pleased with the current crop of
and Jesse Jackson asked for a no-
about· Konstantin
Chernenko
anti
0
war activists.
first~use of nuclear
weapons
bombing the U.S.? It was a dud!" ·
Ro1_1ald Reagan
has · been · plank. in the Democratic Party
·c•
'LAUGHTER·,"
"AP~
particularly noteworthy of late.
· platform, Mondale's aides struck
PLAUSE")
·
Once ii' "warmonger,"
he now - the idea down. And -wasn't it
But seriously, folks, Pr!lsident extends the olive branch of peace . refreshing to hear Gov. Mario
Reagan's
famous joke . about
wherever he goes. Lebanon,
Cuomo telling the country that
blowing up the outlawed Soviet Nicaragua, El Salvador -
don't
the Democrats like a good fight
Union was in extremely poor
be fooled by the presence of anti-
just as much as the ne~t guy?
taste; How can he pose an ef-
aircraft
weapons . and
.
sub-
. fectively
credible
deterrent
machine guns; these implements
defense when he's telling jokes
are the essence of peace. With
about it? Reagan's remark was every can of spilled blood, we get
just anqth~r electio_n
year promise_ a safer, more tr~nquil world.
Is Leroy still alive or is he hung
FORGOOD??
Quote of the semester: "Life's
one giant keg."
Thank you
Cammie.
There's broccoli flying all over
this campus... Five now JJSM?
Are we even?
prompt our actions by Your
inspiration and to Forward them
by your help so that every, prayer
or work of ours may begin with
You and with You be completed.
Through Christ
Our Lord, Amen
Maria G. Rabasco
Member of the SCA
They are weird, don't talk, have .
shifty eyes and hold up the wall. GROUND-FLOOR
BUSINESS
What sport do they play?
OPPORTUNITY -
for energetic
students to develop profitable
Happy Birthday, Thom! I miss business while at school and
you so much already. All my love, continue after graduation. Call
Paula
266-4289.
------------
Doug, Alvin, and Ken,
PRO-TYPING
Letters,
Please take care of my honey reports, term papers, research
However, it is clearly Reagari
who stands . on the moral high
ground in the war for peace. His
calls for- implementation of the
. Peacekeeper missile, the space-
based laser. weapons, and the
deployment of Cruise and Per-
shing missiles in Europe are all
. causes for a war-weary world to
rest
easy.
And
Reagan's
belligerent proposals for arms-
control talks lend the proper dose
of blatant hypocrisy necessary to
keep the peace.
Ronald
Reagan's
"Make love, not war."
motto:
ThesealumnidinnetS
would
be
betterif
theyseroed
Molson.
for me. Remember to write. Love papers,
APA
style,
etc.
ya, Paula
Reasonable
rates.
Includes
It was during his speech to the
United Nations that old double-R
showed his true face. After all, he
doesn't always spend his time
lighting hot-foots
at Cabinet
meetings. At the U.N., Reagan's
words shone brighter than his
Teleprompter.
He closed by
quoting Thomas Paine: "We have
it in our power to change the
world."
National Beer Distributors and
A
PRAYER FOR UNITY AND spelling and grammar check. Call
«;:hris Clements, Pabst Representative
GROWTH: We pray you Lord to Bettyat691-7918.
.._ ______________
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Let the Revolution begin!
..
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:,·1.
_·.
.
•. page.8~
THE CIRCL~
~
O~t •
.,4,
19~4.-,.i~-~---.■..~111!!!!1---------------------------------
~
0~1~.~~~¥~~~~~
'
.
,.
.·:
.
:
.
.
.
'

,·.
·.
.
';
.
-
...
-
.
.-/!),.•
.-:•·.:.-
-~->--
..
?: :·.,.:--
:".·
-'.-~·.-:_:::-,
~
,,::~
~_..,.,.
·:·:::..._>_.
:."
?<~
'··::'
·:.--:-::-:·-<:
":···-)~;\>
\··
~
':.~:.:::-:?,·(>
:.
by
Donna
Piper·
.
.-...
·:
·· •.•,
;
·,,
·
.
pared. to any. other·· industry:._: .in'g·.~an'yihing
-.
the
,types
',of at~ .worke~ in.th~ pusi!]ess. field for a,'.<"_
staff po~itions
·and
.stud~nt}-peer ., ·
.
·.,-
. ·.
.
.
·.
·.·."They
say that
.the
energy· o'f. titudes.we are'ffoildlng in terms of.
'.
year, and therfw~s hfr¢d.at SU_~_r.--_
:.
counseling·
~ild:
aclvisorf:,:posi;,:•::.
·
Mari st· Colleges. has· two new
'
youth .is waste_d. ori youth;''.. he : · concerti'.
for•
one- another
:'wi!L
oe
;/
at
N,ew
:palii:'as· an:•_R:p. '.Purin'g'
._._'.,
tions; whUe/it
.is
also availabJe
to\/'.:
residence di~ectors this ye~r' both .
·_said_.
''I_
don'tkno~•ifthat's
~r.u~;
i;carri¢d
t>ff/_ainp~s·.
lJ:~d;_sta~
.~iih
:
~ei':seco.~cl_.y~ar~(~lwif~l_(z:;.~~~\:;:·a~f; st~:~e.~t\w~oi'J_r~nt~::ft?··W~)\
.·'
of whom said that the excitement
but Jt·'s.good to be
m
that en~1ron: ..
_
us all our lives/~•;
·
-~
·
..
,
..
,:
:·.
,... .
was_
a CQ!Jlplex
ci1re.~tor
,,~h.1ch:pu_t
,,;,;
t_ra1ned.
m.::Jeader~h!P-:
sk_i,lls.:
~he,·0:;
of collegdife prompted them to
ment. that's fast~paced, moving,.·_
...
As assistant:
io'
the:director of

her. in
'charge):if:•.fi~e
'.resjden~e<'!
said slieTs goin'g to·:tryfo_ start
1
tne\-
come ioMarist.
.
'
:
,c.:
,'
'
..
always investigating and. explqr-
.•.
housing;"
:Brennan
monitors the
i:
halls.· which housecl
'i.OQ
'stl.ide'nt's.·
i
sain~J)rogrii#i'. af.Jd~r\~,t
;be~ause;
'.:
G~eg Brennan)s
,tlte
R:O,
in
ing;'_'· .
·
' : :
.
···
>·
..
flo_w, of
inforni~tio.n
:;·from
:::each'. . .:._.
;~
:.'
:/.
_:'
·.,
._.
:
.
''s?!PC.
s()rt'of basic_train,i.ng
(isJ.
Marian Hall and Ellen Dolan-the
Because oLthe ·energy level,- residence halls'to the housmg of.:·.,
Dolan, who witnessed thebuth
·neededforallstudentleaderS;''-:~

R.D.
_in
Champagnat.
,
.
:
-
. .
.
Bren~an said ~hat
-
the st~dents
..
fice, ·currently/hr i~ working· ona
:,
'.of.
~~e
freshme_n
:.·
i>tpgr~m-> ~(.
,;
:
\:(
;(
'.
·::_;,'//··/·;-:·
./f·.'(\/-i\
:,;:.·.
. · ·
.Brennan,
~rom G~~f1eld, J;-1~.w
.
questi~n. new thuJ~s and don!t a.::-
·
computer· progr~m· to ~e~p solve> lvtanst

when, sh~"w~;
.a..
Ju~1or,
..
,
::-
·
l>olan· saicl;that:siiice:~.e( refoi-n';
·
..
Jersey, holds t~e pos1uon <>f,~s~1s-,.
cept_
t
1
~mgs_
as.readily as older_pe?•
_pr~~lems
m
t_he po~!, ~m~e
~hat
'.
ca!lle back t?:Manst o.ec~use,
s~~
.
· ..•
to Marist, she's seen:a-change:ln,
ta~t
co . the _director ,of_
-~ousmg
pie:
·
You h~ve to
-be
sec~re m wer~_.en~ount~red this
_semester.
:-said,,
.'.'I've_ alw~ys)ored
·Ml!-.~l~t._

:
the St~dents.: •~thbyfre'.inore
in-:
.
alol}_~
wit~ his R_.D.· pos1uon_. He· your personahty to operate m·that
.:.
He.· 1s
_also
· m · the
:
pro~ess ~of
_:and
I
.~eedeta ~h;mge ?,f.sce~e_r}'..·,,
,.·
volved;
·.moreicoriscientious·:
and
:.
received _h~s
.ba~helor'~ of sc1e~ce
..
_'
atmosphere ,because · you,
.,
are· decoratmg some of t_he
lounges on'
;
.
I
felqt
-~~~
tlm~?~
Wh.11~.
~~e
Wclf::
more serious
'.abou't
"their ·g;a·de5;:
d~gree.

seco~dary; e,duc~t_1on
'
_challenged·
~very
:d~y,
pe~son~lly
.'
c~mpus:
'
.,
/
. '•··
':
,\'
'.
,,,
..
_:
a stude,11Ptft;~.
·sh~_
wor~e,g
111_MC7
..
They h~ve
.great
enthusiasm
and'.·.
w1_th concent~auons m pohu~al
and professmnal!Y, hesa1d. •
.,
·
,.
·
Looking mto: the fuu~r~, Bren-.,
;Cann,
. was pr1:~1~e~t.0J Leo
,·.
spirit:
They
.have·a·
real-stylt:'10''.·
sc1_en~e
~nd_ h_1story
f~om Ea~ter_n
.
In
·the
short· ~1me Bre~nan
-has
,nan
_sai_d
he plans _to enter Maris~'s
,
.H~use_Coun~il
forJwo Y~l!,ts,
-~nd,
>_·them,"
she said ..
••
· •
·: ·

..
·:
..
:.,<''
'>'
2'
M1ch1gan Umversuy
m
1976; His
been-here; he said he
.believes
that. MPA program m January and
worked as a.resident assistant fc,_r_
·
·..
_;
..
.
·
·
·..,.
· ·
· .,

·;
•<
:;
.>
professional background ranges
·.
Marist's strong sense oftraditiq_n . stay
in
stud_ent affairs for,aUeast
··two
years.,
..
,..,
,
:
.
..
.
·.
.
_,_,·.:
'
..
·

:
...
from being a computer processor
·
and concern with values .. are
,it's
· five yea,rs .. He. ~ventually woul~.
,·,
·
:
.While
l!,i
l':lew,Paltz, I>olaq' sciid
·
The bi_~gest chang_e ·
~h~ ,has
to
~old in~. three
different
,
main benefits:
·He
said that this like. -_to
.obtain
a-'. high· a~-:-'.'.
s~e,.helped 10 deve_lop a pr,ogram
·
,.,.
seen, -howove~? sh_e
·s~id
_
1
~}n the_
teach mg posmons.
_.
concern results in Marist deman-
·
ministrative position in--the stu-
called_
SAMS;
Self 'Awareness and ·
.
grow.th of t~e; 1~st1
.tut1o~.,i
In
,th~ •·


Brennan.sai9M w~s drawn: to
'ding
more from its students than
derit:·•·affairs·•,·field,-
,;he
·said
... Mai:iagefu.eitt Skills
:worksh.op._:_
h<?.us!n9.
facihues-as_.wel_l.
as
t_he
-
.
Marist by the stimulation he gets
..
most institutions
.do
in terms, that
Residence
.Director.
Elleif:Dolan
·•
_.·•
Her
·.
·~claim
.
to
'fame·~-
at.
New
'.'.
.
~cade~IC. programmm~,- the,;SIZe
from working with young people.
the students have to "give a liUle. from
\
Long
,
Island/, gradu'ated-
'Paltz,
:SAMA
is. a six-day._inten:;
·!.,:
)~.P~~~~.me~~I/;
s_hes,
1~-..,
,
.

Ht;
said that th~
·en·ergy.
level ~t a
.,-
bit extn.1.
"and·.
be ,considerate of from· Marist in 198},vit~-a degree·. sive_
training program. It serves
~s
·.
.
.
. '·'
:i ...
.
.,
•·
..
~
...
college is "u·nbelievable" ·com-
people a·rourid them. If we're
do-
.
in _bu,s_iness/After
graduation·, she·_· a prerequisite to student housing
_
. Doialj
.explail!t:d
that the func~
·
tion of;.
a
resideiice'.director
:is·
...
three-fold;;!: SJ-ie said that the
.•.
R.l).:
must serve as'a role
·mbdel
-/
..
for. the'students;·
to
•setthat··their:
,-
environment is: :safe; ~lean and
Display-.·
remembiirs
old
·po't.own
by
Karen Crouse
The Job Location
&
Dev.elop-
ment Program (JLD) can help
you find an off-campus job. Most
jobs· have flexible, part-time
hours based on student class
schedules.
·
Currently partatime positions
.include
work
in
.sales
.and
marketing, data entry, ieaching,
retailing,
program
.•
planning,
recreation, manufacturing,
book-
keeping,
secretarial/clerical
and
babysitting.
;
.
·
1
ntcr'ested students stiould app-
Jy
at
'the
Career.
Development
Center iri Donnelly trailer.
,.
Starts' Frid_~
y
JSTRUN
AREA
SHOWJJVG!>:
·
TEACHERS(R)
With Ralph Macchio,
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YDE
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CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE
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"CoHege years are
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when stu_dents
·
and
'people:
learn·
a
lot aQOUt themselves. The
·

directorJs. there to help foster that
..
·
kind of environment." she said.
·
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f~r
Guys·-
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0
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Foll Frostmg ...............
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Lo_nger or tinte_d haJ~ may require adtl. charge
4~:Aca_demy
St:,Pok·.
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Wed. 12:30-6; Th~~s. &
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.. ,_. .....
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:·.,:,,
































































.•
·:· .... .-__
.. '..,.
_; "!'.
~
..
: . .-: -·
.....
'
. .,,
. . . · -
Oct. 4,
1984 ·
THE CIRCLE•
Page 9--
-i~~:
stu.aefl.t
:g'roUJ)
tI"ieS
to combat· apathy
.'
:i:,'-;:.•,f..0,,·.'·
.• ·'.~-,
..
,•,:.·' .· ....
,_, _,. ·:-
~

,,·,. ·:· ',; __
··_ ,, •...
_'•
,-. __
,1,_;·:-·~-
.·:.

:··.
- ... •- .,_.:_.•-:_- -,~:·:.•'
·, ,''•'·

_"·'
.
.
~
~tt\.~!.e
,~o~~,\>._;
·: :
:
, , :.. · ....
members , hav.e_.:..:)c~e~uled ,·
a ·
p.m.; CUB,
will host a '"Feed - John - Albano,'' MCSL's vke-
_:_::;;:t:-{
.;.;,:::
>,:,/:·
._-;.\
:·, '.: · ,.
·•
: ,,: , .:.
nutllber. of eyents, two.
·_of
which .'. Your Face Food· Festival" in the
president, _was parlimentarian of
enough that everyone sh_ould be
able to know each other, and the
Student League can be an asset to
· Apat_hy ts one: of those pro- · h~ve already, taken place." The
·
cafeteria';-; '-· .·· ,
:
.
. ·
·· ...
Inter-House
.-.,Council.
· Other
J>leiµs that ~vetyone.scems·to talk· . :first'-.was. the Activities Fair
<>n
-:
'· · · ·
· '
. ·
·
·.members. include Andy Crecca,
· 'abdut~\~uf.tj~t_hingjve_r ~_apperis":
September W,-and the·secorid,' the ... On Saturday, when t_h~
football_ . president· of CUB, and Karen
7
;arJ~a~t).mtil·~April J0/1984;•·· Commimity.Uniiy Barbecue; was
team .pl~ys_ 1:lrooklyn Colle~e, Chatterton, , president of Inter-
this."
.
In starting the organization,
Zangari said that after the con-·
stitution~ was prepared,
MCSL
members were in contact with
several administrators, including
President
M~rray.
The ad-
ministrators, he said, were all
very enthusiastic.
: W~t!n:
tlj_e:
Marist;'Co~lege ·student-.. held on'September 21
>:::
·'· : :- _·
...
··
MCSL
"'.Il
1 run the hom~~omi~g. House Council. .
.
League·::(~CSL)'was
chartered:'.:. Zarigari'said
that both-'went':parade
to th
e .
theme of· ManS
t .
,"Having
so· inariy student
:-wit~-!he)xpre~sjlurpos~ 'of com~ very
W<!.I\:
i
'.'Vf
e
had to ch~nge_
·
C?llege - Taki11g
It
to the Top,"
leaders involved makes. us more
bating that ~pathy, ·:;•;,
.!~.>:
·
,
_; ·: :· "
some of· t,ur. plans . for this
wi~~ an, emph_asi~
on growt~ alld . capable of handling activities we
·
,'/M~rk'.ZarigaH~ the president' of · sem~ster clue_
toJack of funds; but ·. spmt-;Za~g~n said that clubs and . take responsibility for,"he said.
· :. MC:SLrsaid. that. ~e sees
~
separa• . as long: as money_ comes ·in Jrom · ~rgamzauons. as well as. th
7
stu• · Tony Phillips,_ student body
-ti_on
s
b'e!ween \the . c]asses_>'.,of·.:
the ~hings.that
we
do;
\1/C
can c_ori-·. dent Jlasse~~~l -~~1e ~oat~t lhe - president, said he thinks MCSL is
· students; betweehcorhm~ters ·and tinue to. do more,'' he said. · :
·
. .· para e, an
a
e acu
Y ·
as a good idea and that Marist needs
·residents,·arid be_tween:·staff and ·_, This weeJ(end; MCSL will also
also been asked to march.
an organization like
it.
He added
:students;.· He··said:\''F"or
·a,:new
. be involved with homecomirig.ac- -·· Zangari said that one of the
that he feels it's going to be dif-
....
orgariization,
1t'~;
growing'
fasL
tivfries, Zangari said that working . best things MCSL has going for it
ficult to get it off the ground ..
. '.W¢'re organized·)and· working \together. with-the G~Uege Union
is that many of its members are.
According
to
Zangari,
· "This fall the support is still
there,. but it isn't enough,"
Zangari said. "People· have to get
involved."
"We're trying and we're going
to continue to try," said Zangari.
"We know it's not going to hap-
pen over night, but I hope
it will
grow."_
hard<to-:.bring . spirit- back to .. Board;.
MCSL. wjllsponsor. a ·pep· leaders · of..-·.
other
clubs and
membership is open to the entire
f\,farist/'.
0
->'.J··
,,; · :'
> _.·
• ·
·
·.
rally'on Friday* 8:PQ
p.m
at the
organizations; Zangari was presi-
Marist
community
and
that
·
· ·
· Zangari;'->of West .'Caldwell, Mccann- Center (ield.
It
will
in-
dent of the Communication Arts
anyone can join at any tiine dur:-
. N;J,.;
said.that although they are elude a bonfire and.appearances
Society and Inter-House Council.
ing the year. "Marist is small
.. working:· wi!h ·
a:
budget of only .. by t_he pep:barid, the ch~erleaders
. :· _$982.60 f?r- the: semester, MCSL · and the football . team. · At 9:00
~E&LIQU
. -. 26 ACADEMY SL
C:
.
:, PO'KEEPSIE, N.Y.12601,,,,_ _ _...,,,,_
...
-
Tel. 452-4110
·MARIST.
•.
'
-_-beaf
B,ROOKLYN:
···5(Je.OFF
ON<ANY':SIZE
P1zZA.PIE
~
·,: ·-
>·
_:sRla1'1:::··eie·~---.-
-L'11rge-
Pie .-.-
.
..
, Sicilian
Pie•:-. .
•••••
■·
.••
$'1.50<
........
$5.50
. . . . . .
.
. ·.
$6■-09
CAPUTO'S
PIZZA
Tel .. 473-_2500.
OPEN
SEVEN DAYS
· Dr. · Peter Pitzeie speaking ··
on "Intimacy: Friends-· and
Lovers" in the Campus Center
lasfTuesday.
·
(photo by Debbie Ryan)
_Students pack Fireside
for lecture on in'timacy
.
· by Bill Losey
Pitzele asked if. anyone had
anything on their mind that they
"Intimacy:
Friends
and
wanted to share with the au-
Lovers," a special program about
dience.
Some
talked
about
intimate relationships among col-
boyfriends
and
girlfriends;
lege students, was presented by
spouses,- parents, and problems
psychodrama therapist Dr. Peter
with college in general. "It was a
Pitzele last Tuesday evening in the
moving experience," one man
. Fireside Lounge..
·
·
said afterward. "People got very
Faculty and· students filled the
emotional about what they were
lounge to capacity in order to
saying."
hear Pitzele.'s · presentation on
Pitzele graduated from Har-
how
Wt;
care for ourselves · and
vard University with a B.A. in
how we develop and interact with
history and literature. He received
ourselves, others, and our en-
his master's degree in philosophy
vironment. According to Pitzele, _ from Balliol College at Oxford,
_the main reason he came to speak . and holds a doctorate in literature
. was that he wanted the audience
from Harvard. He · has worked
·· to learn about and explore intense
with alcoholics and drug abusers.
· relationships.
,
He is currently
Director of
.· One freshman in the audjence, · Psychodrama services at Four
.•. who -identified himself as 'Paul,
Winds Hospital in Katonah, Lee-
·. t~ld a stqry about a girl _he had
turer of Psychodrama at New
i-:mef
at .a local bar. He .tQld the. York University Graduate School
rtgroupihat'i{),oihered'.h1ni'.ihat
. of Arts and Sciences, and a
train::
· the girl did not speak
to
him after
ing consultant
for • Clinical ·
. · they had spent the nighttogether.
Pastoral Education Programs in
This was the· topic of conversa•
New York.
tion for over an hour, as Pitzele
. Pitzele's
presentation
was
had volunteers from the audience
sponsored by the -developmental
.
play thernles·or Paul and the girl.
programming group.
Participants of both sexes gave · Pitzele ended the show with this
their yiews oh how -they would
remark: "You know deep down
have acted if they were in the . inside what the truth is and how
situation.
After a brief intermission,
you feel. Don't ever forget what
really is the truth'.''
Singers plan. medievel banquet
An evening
of medieval adven-
medieval . · banquet
by college
t1ire, appealing to tlie "eye, ear
singers, faculty . · members· . and
arid palate",will be hosted by-the
students is a popular event. "The ·
:Marist College music department
Madrigal Banquet 1s the highlight
-· and its Chansonniers . singing of Marist's fall cultural season,"
ensemble on Sunday; Oct. 28, on
•.
said, Davis·. "The medieval at-
the ~ollege campus_, ·
·
. mosphere·
so · realistically
. . __
.The third annual "Madrigal · recreated by mariy members of
. Banquet"~
will·.
begin. at 5 p.m ... the Marist community make this
with a traditional Wassaili Bowl banquet a highly anticipated
and Boar's Head Procession in
tradition at the college."
the campus · Center's - Fireside
The highlight of the celebration
Lounge; transformed. for the oc-
will be a five-course banquet feast
casion. into . "Castell-
Cham-
of Wassail with hors d'oeurvres,. ·
pagnat." The public is invited to
Esau's
Pottage . (hearty lentil
·attend.: . ·
soup), Henne Dorre (Golden. Car:
. According
·to
DorothyAnn
damon
Chicken),
Mawmenye
Davis,·. Marist's choral director,
(Lentils and Lamb), Carrottes a la
this - annual· reenactment of a
Flarnande (carrots in beef broth,
butter and parsiey); and other
dishes
based
·
on
authentic
· medieval recipes including Flam-
ing Flµm Pudding.
The Marist Singers'. and Les
Chansionners
will
perform
madrigals and baletts from a
medieval· repertoire
including:
"The
Wassail
Song;"
"The
Boar's Head Carol;"
"Lirum,
Lirum;"
"Green Grow'th the
Holly" and "Nova, Nov~." The
dancers will also demonstrate the
Galliard; the Pavane, and the
,
Branle, popular dances of the •-
day.
A·,.
professional
. brass
ensemble will fill the hall with airs
and fanfares.
·-Buyer,
·western cancel deal.
- by Eileen Hayes
The
planned
sale
of
Poughkeepsie's
· Western
PubJishirig · plant
has
fallen
through, but Marist College will
remain as a tenant.
·
Richard
Zirinsky,
an
in-
vestment builder from New York
. City,
tentatively bought
the
building late last year. His
contract to buy the plant recently
expired
with him unable to make
suitable financial arrangements,
and the building is for sale again,
according to an article in last
week's
Poughkeepsie Journal.
,•
· Currently, Marist and Roe · "We have control over who can
Movers, Inc. rent space in the rent in case there is a conflict. We
building. According to Edward P.
would
not
want
a
noisy
Waters, vice president for ad-
manufacturer next to us," he
ministration
and
finance,
said.
Marist's lease is with Western
.
.
.
Publishing, and any buyer of the
Waters said_ ~anst wo!-11~
hke
building must adhere to the
to ~uy the budding, but 1t 1s not
contract. The lease is for three
their P!ans at t~e moment.
years with a three year option to
~~nst _East, as the Wester_n
renew. "Anybody taking over has
bmldmg ts now referred to, 1s
to take the building over subject
used for 13 c!assrooms, the art
to the condition to the lease,., he department rooms, and offices.
said.
Waters
said
the Western
As part of the lease, Waters
Publishing people have been very
said Marist takes care of the
cooperative.
"They
like us
grounds, and has the first right of
because we've raised the tone of
refusal on other possible tenants.
the building," he said.






















































































































































·--~c"""~~,.,..,...,.......,..._..,.....,,......,...
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.,
l.
Fox
fitiiif
iS·
on
·agaih·
·.
•.;
··
iafter•
Pefiy'S·id~Paril.lf
e
by
Ian
O'Co~nor
.
.
. .
.
..
. '
..
·Jim
+r~~df
~nd
.my;etr'~~rt/::
wif I
:~ee
w'ho
\vi!Lib/~~aHab~e)n.:
hired by Marist College and. we . such a short time.".
.·.
.
<.
,
.
·
·
,
With last
:
~eek's·
·
requested
wiU remain ioyat;,•: Quattrocchi-
·Former Red. Fox assistant Al
·:
resignation of Head Coa_ch Mike
<
said. ''We c1re very confident in Skinner, now aide
·at·
~h<?de
.
·
Perry; Marist
president Dennis•. Dennis Murray. I think he should
Island,
.
and former
.-Fa1rle1gh
..
·
Murray· intends to naine
.a
sue-
.·move.fast·
because. this. program. Dickinson
:
University·
:
.•
Head

cessor to the former European
.
needs leadership. The sooner the
.
Coach.Do!} Feeley ar~ reporte~ly

..
·
mentor
by the end of the week, he
.
better."
.
·:-:
the top outside candidates, be!ng
.•.
Said)ll a press co~fei-erice
Friday. .
-·.
Todd'
is
-th·e·
·ro~mer_·c·o11.imbia
corisid¢red.
·.
·.
~'
..
,
·
Perry handed in his resignation
University a~sistant who has been
:
. Murray
.
said · that a,
:se~rch :.;
Fri~ay. after
~- sollege.
in-. handling most of the recruiting
committee would'~o(be form:e~,
__
·
vesugat10~ led_ hi~ to adm_it to. responsibilitie·s under Perry: He
:
but that the s,earch f.or the
new-
.
.
allege~ v10latlon~
·.
of
,
Na!IO_!lal served for four years at Columbia
.
coach;
'.'Vould '
be
.
hand!~
..
·
by
Colleg1!-lte
.. Afhlet1c ~ssoc1auon
,
undet Head Coach Bi.iddy Mahor,
himself, pean of Students Gerald
.regulat101:1s.
s'
·
·.
·
·•
·
·
·. .
who resigned his post at the·New
·
Coi ahd··••key shpporteis'•': from
·
.
At.the c~nferenc~, Murr~y said
··
York City school last year:·
<;
·
theboard·of truste:s an.d the Red
that Perry s full-time assistants
,
Fox Booster Club.
·

·
.
'
·
John Quattrocchi and Jim Todd.
.
Todd suggested the idea. ihat
·
··

·
·
·
·
·
··
·
·
·
..
·
will remain at Marist,·as wiH part-
-Quattrocchi
and he could operate
..
··'Murray
said that the successor
·
time. aide
.
Mark
.
Cook
and:_ together
·t~
i-1,m the.Red Foxes.
~o.~erry ~~uld ~~t.behi!e~
mi
an.'.
.
academic advisor Bozdan Jovicic.
:
"We could be like co-coaches and
mterim basis, but that:the college
·,

.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. get the job done," he· said'.
"If
"inay:
riot
make a ~om~itri}ent
.
Murray
:
;aid
..
th~t
..
internal
the~ do wanrqne figur~he~d,.·
th.en '.
for
longer thari
one
season.,,, •. -·.
·
..
•·
.
'condidates·
will
b·e. considered for the
.
other· person
'
could
.
be· an
'
.. La~t.,
'.
s~ason; s

'
Il~tibri\~ii.de.
<
·•the
vacarit post.
••'t
\Vould ·say that
associate
'head
coach·:
·:·we :·
are
search
•..involved
•.·
a
...
J4~membef'
·
~
_
all of our opt~ons are openJO'us,
,,_
·
WtlliDS
tci·worl(
t'ogeth·er:,,
····~
:
~-
::
_-
;
c,Qrtirriitte¢-·:·
w_hich·
re_vie'w~~
t_-72.\/
. he
saii:L:
"We'knoW that we ·have
:
.
'
.
.


·
...
,, :
;
.
:,:
. :: :
.
: :.
formiiLapplicatiorts:--•Among·: the
.
'
th·e internal carldidates
'who·
can
. .
Menopace,.
,,:"'.ho
· .serv~d
·
~s
':'fina)jsts'·who
Perry"· edged: 'out;

ti
\he ·oo."
.
,
.
. ..
. '
academic••·. advisor
_for·:· the,. were· Skinilerf. Jim
:Farranago, :
.
OThe
J
mafo· intfrn~i':candiaates
basketball:
·.·
team
'
cluru_1g.·.
,Ron}
Virginia. aide; : Bob_,. fylcKillop;.
-.·
.are.
Qtiatt'rocchi, Todd ~nc(:pr.

Petr~'s reign; has· also oecome a
_f()i:mer
C0_<tCh'_
at eastern. po'Yer
':.·
Larry Menopace,
:fo
acad¢rriic
,
cand1d~t~t~
..
succeedt~e dep_~~!~d
.
Long
Isl~nd.
:
Luther~n
,
High
: ..
advisor fofthe·basketballteam.
·
Perry.
·
.
:
.
·
.
·
··
,.
·
·
'
.
Sc:hqol;; Jim Baron,· ex-Notre·.
··Quattrocchi,.:
is_.··
the former
.
•Murray.
sa1f, last
..
week_'Jhat
·
..
D~me:,
.assis!a.n_t;_'.
Kenny.
·:
Rensselaer Polytechnic ·111stitu_te
,.al!hoµgh
t~e
..
utt~rnal .. ,fan~idat~s
Wllha1115,on,
,Iona
. a~s1stant; and :'.
..
head coa,ch was hired. as Perry's
•w1U
be seno~sly
,cons1dere?,. _the
Dar~mo~th Head
.
Coach
•·
Paul
..
••
first assistant. He had:an,11,-12
colle_ge, may check t_he
l!Sl
~f Cornier.
;
<_, ·:
·.
'.::
·:.
,,
,:.
D~partedcoachMikeP~~'.~;:·,~/~1J·~~i~'~i~P~ris.
·
...
.-
~~~~~~
··~v~~\~11J;~~tt~r;b1::x:·'t:t;i~t~re:r-7~.~!-t·~~t_e,~
..
-~t\:."s~~r:r:Ji·:tf~$Jj/~~.•;;:J}~ixA)<
·.
·
-
.,_.
·::'·<)\\'::.:-.··.\•.::/,>'._._
·
·.-.-:·
...
:. '._:~·.:

:
·>;i.•·(:·.:·i:<'•<·\
.
·i ..
--
·
·· •
·.,
b
I
o·c··
·
..
· ·
·
·;
:
·.'.i.'.-.'.:
....
·
..
·.·.·.<.•_·,.·_:,~.
1
·.·
•.
~
..
:.·_.;.·.·.'·.:.\
..
__
·
.'····.·..
·
·
i'
.
. ..
y
an
..
on~or '· ·,'
.,,,':,.. .
.
.
:·'
.
;: ·
.·.•
..
, ·
.
.>.;
M~~;
·~ert~t;;s~·;~;:t/~~t;~Jr.
iiij
1J;/~~et/h~~-
~~ded
;he
..
-
~~k~·~-
·~,.·:~~~r:~~t?~~.~tsJ~~~tiJ!~rt:;;::r::.01:co:f~:f:
•~~\:~:~~t\·:\
~\-.
.
C'\-~erry,'.
after:2r:winrung·seasons'as
a:Jiead
·coach<in
programs:
:\
~-.
·•··
>·t·rangirig.from;,Ulsfer.
CouhtyJ::omniunity.,:CoUegeto'
the .1980····
~~

· ·
.·-,
Swedish
.Olympic
tearit; \Vas named Marist's new .coach
·in
:mids.·
I
\·;····
·.·.·.:-
..
C::.
<
:K1archtr~~ decisio,n
.i:ndt;d
a tw0;iponthsearc~. foi:,a,.sliccess~no,

··
....
,-'.·· ·
.::
:Ro,n·P,etro/whcrafter:J8
year(asJiead;_cpach',Qf the,R¢dJ:ox_es·,-
;.
/):'esigped
'.}~'-
~~votffult iiine:
~6;
~sj,osition
a~.
'at_hletic:
director;;_:
,
J
',;
·
·
Petro.
·has·
sind! lef('M:arist ti>::
becoriie':athletic director. at the
·
..
/iJJniversJtyipf:
N~k~
at:Ancp'~rage.·''.·
:_·/:·
..
\;?t>'.:\·
:
..
:
>.,:;:\/'

/:.

..
·
-.·
'::' :.
:.:·'A.gra<i\late.
of_.fyfarist ai:c~~riyal:SieQ°a

College; ·Perry,
.•
started·.' ,·.
;-.}.
I:iif college coa~liing careef
a(
Ulster:
in
·-1965'
after.'coachin'g
two'
C'.
'.'
:t~tti:
d~
9
Jt::~~tf~r~lWi~~f1tt~i~ttr:~ili1G~~~r
;;8~t-'.t
•~
:(.\hatio11aF.
iourn~~e_nLtwice;

Afterp'eing: gianted:a· sab]?atiCcll
:in.::\
.'.,
~./1973;
Perry headed overseas t.o coach the Swedish natioliaheafo:
·
:
·\:}.~Pe~ry}~tµf~¢~i~Jiti~~t:in•i975
arid
:¢oa~h.ecl:~nemore
sea~oi1·
.
·:
::
before:;"servirtg
ii.:
bri.efotiiit in Sa,µdi Ara,bic1:
:.Iii"-197.7
/ ~\Veden'
s :' ·

.
:
; ··.
·
·
:
:
natighal
·
basketbaILco'mmittee 'offered:
thi(coach-'
a-~confra~i; to·

..
··
·•·••
i·~····-
:f
:ii1i~~~~t\tf~t!?Jt~ftrt::~r1\•rtiij:tt~~'!h1~t:tty·:-;,;_
·
···.
-
.
-'.:
,':
Swedei{fin1sliedi{yecy res~ctabfo seventh
out
of
twelve'foams

..
}.
:i:_··......
}:·~~1:•~~~,~~Jf¾;f.:J.~;~1~.~r;:.ii;trt~\i~~~~r~.';'.,;;:
.,
.
;>b~mg
h1_rc::d:tcu::oac.fl,
S~de-J.'rc1n~1s-?ans, one .of France's;top,
....
"'.
professional.teams.· After two seas.onflri Paris~ Perry landed,the·:,
::
··.·.
Marist',:ipb.~::beiniichosehi·o~er
·~11
..
9th~r:,·
..
candidaies:::'in~·
the,
.
•.
._.
.~~a~~&:~flct,es~~~t:'<,</:
f
::·?\'.··:""L",.;:-.
·:
-:~/:"f:
0
,
't:tir:;:
c·;,(.
·.\ .
·.
Pete
Pazik strides ;o
'it
personal b~t p~rfo~lri.aric~
at Notre
Dame.
.
~
...
:
'
.
,;
'
.
MariSt•.
Cf
OsS-country
SQUad·illlJ)rO\T.e~
:at
Notr~:DiID.e
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
·-·
...
.
_-..
.
..
.
,.-
·.
'
..
·.
by
Joe
Didziulis
Fox harriers ran· person~! best
petition. We've been after them to
·
~~~~titJ~n th;{:~i~~:re>•
··
-
·
~{1{~ad
;efurns·:
t~
V~n
times for five miles.
get out faster and six.
_of
them got.
.
..
\But
he· is also looking at later
Cortlandt'Park.ncxt Friday to run
\:
i'-
After
running
two
fairly
·· .
The finishing order for the
out
iri
under five (minutes).'.' .
..
,
,
on
in
the
.
season · saying,
·
.a dualiqcet against
Arniy.
.
..
disappointing
meets at
Van
Marist seven were: Pete. Pazik
·
As an indication of his team's•
'.·'Everybody ran,:,great but we

<
The q\ierall
team
finishes were
Cortlandt Park in the Bronx, the
24th,
.25:02
(p.r.); Mike Mueller
improvement, Lurie pointed out
·
have: to improve a )ot to. beat
~
as ·
follows:''. Notre
·
Dame 57,
Marist
Cross· Country
team

61st, 26:03
.(p.r.);
Don Reardon
·
that those returning to the Notre
..
Sienain_thestatemeet.!'
.'
. Boston;College 81, Marquette 85,
traveled to South Bend, Ind., and
70th,
·26:J(>;
Christian Morrison
Dame meet had improved their.·
.
·
Third-year harrier- Morrison.
St. Thomas· 108, Fordham 144,
last Friday ran what coach Steve
71st, 26:17 {p.r.); Glen Middleton
respective
times
·
markedly.
credited the t~m•s go,od showing ·st. John's 194, DePaul 195, St •
.
Lurie called, "the oest team
79th, 26:28 (p.r.); Richard Bowne
Pazik's•time had dropped by 84
.
with a·ch;mge of strategy saying:
,Joseph's
211,
.Loras
258; Sienna
.
performance of a Marist team
80th, 26:30; Steve Brennan 116th,
seconds, Mueller's: by 87 and
"In talking amongst ourselves we
.
Heights 284, Canisus 302,
·Marist
':.
::/::!.'.
1
since I've
been here."
,
.
·. •
.
27:48. Marist
's
total points were
Morrison's by I03. Also, Lurie
all decided to go out and hit fast
305, Walsh 330, Detroit 330
At
the National Catholic Cross
·
305; host Notre Dame won the
said that the average finish time
2-mile and 3-mile splits and see
Holy· Cross 357, Gannon 434'
·
.
Country Championship. held at
meet with 57 points.
.
:
had. dropped from, last year's
what hap~ned from there. -And
Aquinas 474; Lewis 487,' Mer:
.
.
N<>tre:.Dame's
..
University Golf
Lurie express~ satisfaction for· . 27:08. to26:~l this _year,_
,
as it ~orked. out, if you loo~ed at
cyhu~st
.
~21, . Nlagra
650,
. Goursi,
Marist pJaced 12th out of
his team's.
performance saying: .
Co-captam Pazik sa!d he was
our times; oor·strat~
!)bVJously Creightorl
..
6S8; St.•.Francis 690
a field of·~
..
~<!f9µr9f;l~e.Red
'.'We are _gainjng in
..
this. com-, ''psyched Jo
.run
.agamst
good
worked."
Quincy708.
·
'















































































































.
·:,< ',
' .
'-•.::~,,-r'.-·,.~•-.~,,r._.,"1.,,,,,:~<-"'·'•:~,.11!.-~~.-~~~:~'-•
,_
~-~----~-·
.•·
~,;-~------~~------~-~-~---•Oct.
4, 1984- THE.CIRCLE·
Page
11 --
iE~~f
saay
MdrniritOJ~ft~tb~Jk
·
··•.·
·
.
.-··:-
_
_.,_;_;.,.-
..
·
..

..
J{t\·.,.•,.·
....
;::
......

..
: •.
4
...
:
...
c.
h_·
·._
.~
..
:,.·\1¥~.aStJ
.
f
har
~ever was·
.)f
t:~i~\
.·:
·:::~... .
..
.-,
-.
.
..
)::~;··~fl·iro-:£j~·~iH/i;/~-r./Y:.;i
:::';Ji~~-.:ir~\i('to~~~-~:
;~is
te~m outspoken mariner did not sit ~ell
.
~Fielder. of California,
.
and the himselfwaslurned in for:
·'
>:.•Jf}vas
.a
·s~_ory_:
t_tia'i-::wa's,:Sup-
Cwoulcf'run.'}iis
team
.would
dunk. .with. some of ttie Mccann. em-
disappointment spread.
·_The
fall
of Mike Perry has been
·
·::
·/:R?.s¢~.,t_o
ha~-~-a·:_h~ppy::"~ndi~g'.
f
:~~-
H_is;Jealll
'\,\fOUld
get. a bid_
to
the
ployees.
_No
one'.s job .was safe
,
.
·.
There was new hope,. though,
.
·. · - .
. .
.
.
:,.
·M1k~·-
P~rJ'Y-·
was·. supposed
to
.•
NCAA,. Tournament. This talk
.
and no one felt secure. A turnover
·
:as
three European recruits arrived aUributed to his alleged illegal
a'.-riiaki-;·Matis_(College>a•·vari·of.'.exdted-
the' Marist faithful
.as
.
was expected.'
.•.
over the summer~ Perry wasn't
'offering
of ex_tra benefits
(0
a
.
''.\~v:er{:Divfsion:
O!le . basketbaU"ithey.'Jelt, the savior had arri~ed ..
·
Then. came an article in the
.
bluffing. He did have contacts member of the basketball team .
.
:
:i:·:
farf_s'c,v.oca,~ulary'.':
Herwas' sup> Search
:
coiniriittel·
_chairman
:April
8, .1984, edition of· the
overseas as advertised.
· Perry
termed
these reported
·_
:
'-).PO$ed:
tciJ¢ad iJfo:R~d;foxes
't<f:T~,:m~as
·i
McKi~f!fan ·aqd . his·
..
Poughkeepsie Journal: Perry was
.
violations "inadvert
." It's not
_
'}_llat.fonal
i:>~orriih'e~·~.e.by
upsetting':
.fellow·
Red. Fox,Club/members
.-'at
the
_All
..
Sport.
•fitness.
and
...
Very late in the summer the
hard to see why the mentor didn'1
·t;;:YiJlariova;:,::;laking;'.,>the'_
ECAC
.
bearried.
1
with p~ide:,,;T!tey
·
had
Racquetball Club. and had a brief
inevitable
happened'.
Petro
·
know the· rules, considering he
.-.:.::.)\1~t,ro·(J'o~rµim~rtt;_and
bringing. madethepeople'.s choice./
./•.:

-discussion
with one
of· the
headed up to Alaska taking a
never
coached
under
the
·
:t:hi.s.}tjuad_:fo_the_;p~on:1ised
land of:'!_')B~t:_.~hile Perry!(talk
·.in~v•~d
waitresses. _"I hope _you're here
$64',000 athletic- director's post,
regulations of the NCAA.
It
is
..
·:::.:.We'~G~~:s:;:•/.
.. ,_. .
:
<. ·•::
.
the people, italso.2iused a,fo{of
.
when
I
?nng recruits: in,,, the
completing a major turnover in
.
hard to see though,· why Perry
::
:Wt;~~(,,~~1<.e;~e~fY
-~as
nor sup-
.·:pepple
to_ m()v,e,'.'·N~'m.ely;•
~on
coach sa~d. ,''Are_
ro~
working
~:re
a~~~~~~~n1~~~rt;k~~~erG~~~
didn't learn the_r~les, considering
,::;.}~~s_eq_._}.~,,~.t!?J.~te
..
NCC:A
,:Petro,
who after,l 8 tears as'head Saturda>:. Im brmgmg so~e
Don Kelbick, who were joined in
how active the NCAA has been
'.
· ';~l~gµlat_1~ns.
;·'


..
• •.
·
·

, ·
·
,
: •
of the Red Foxes
·was'.now
'shifted
...
pliiy_ers m
.
for brunch._ l'.d
.
hke
..
the departure·
_
by Sports
_.
In-
_
i!)vestigating violations in_ recent
.
;
.:.-,.L~st
~e~lq_~nnmmce,~ent that
.
io'
the post of fufl:time athletic t~,em
to meet you. You cquld help
.
formation DirectorJay Williams,
.
years.
.
. >
the M~ps.t_:h,~d bas~et~a!l co~cti:--_
director. Petro· resented,-the
·fact
me a lot.''.
.
_
_
.
.
.
.
'..
now at Fairfield.
_.
.
But the main question people
·
had r~!-~!lep:~n,der aan11mstr~t1ve:<rhat
·
his creationtDi~ision
-
One-.: A~-J~erry ~ent, on·· wtth
::
thl:
are asking is whether or· not there
.. ,;pres~~!~-.tnd~d_-tht;,
m?st. c~ntre>\.'basketball,
.would
be)iandled by
;1~terv1~w;.
he. talked a~c>Ut the
'
·
__
perry bro~ght in, his people,
.
was s?mething, else involved in
·
._:v.~~sial
:~!l'~m~nt_h:·pen?d
m
·!~e_,
,'.someo_ne
whi;>se sfyle:·-:_~as
.
so q1fferent ~uropean. more_s ~nd
·
and
a
natural friction was created
Perry's departure. Rumors
·
are
=;hist~fY.,,(?f,~f~ls::tcho~l
s at~l
7
t1C;/'different[rom his owri/it was no h.?w he._e~Joyed the lifestyle._ A
between the established McCaim : buzzing around campus; and they
. depart~e~.t~, -,~~

'.·
.
-.-
..
:
·
·
::·
..
-I<:s~cref
:that
>·Petro'
:'a-nd
·:)>erry
h1gh-rankmg .
.
ad~in~s(r~tor
officials and the new
·
arrivals.
keep getting uglier. It is the time
,.
Afte[ ~-.t~o-month nauonw1de: w~ren't'.
e~actly
;'
the
~best
::
of rep'?rtedly then made_a.l~nch da~_e There was a split in
.
the depart-
for the college to speak out and
sear<:h.
·:::;as.-
..
~ond~ct~d
;~:by,
:,the,
·
fr:iends_;H_was
jus~.a
_qi~!.tei:
of the with_
J~~
coach to talk_ 1~ over
m
ment and without an athletic
clear up this current misun-
.
Cfl~l.eg~-•.
I_>,e:rr.y
w_c1s
._hired,
..
tc:,:
,twq·
h~vmg: sever:ely• contrasting
.
the:
_SP!.~'~
of_ our ;school s Judea
director
·•
to
-
·
supply
·
strong
derstanding. It would be the wise
;,~uc;fe~'.~Cl~•Petrom~14,-March;,,;,.
5
tyles.<<'.-:
/.
''{
.
...'.-,.:'.. :
..
·<;--hnst1anhentageofcourse. · ·
:leadership,
things did not get thing to do, for this prqblem is
-
...
f}!f~
,.ras,
se!e~t~. <.we_L7l ot~er
'\<
-
"··.::
:.
·
:/.
\ :; .
_.,'.',-
·
··
-~erry
went to hit ~he recruiting
better •.
:
likely to linger. To get this over
:.,_/t,fC~!Jdi!l.iltes
1~-the-_mo_st
extens1yi.·:, Th~:-
;,~d~i_n~!rators
..
-
~~:.
__
the
-trails
hard, but at first, came up
with would enable the·basketball
·
· ::;:,~sear,ch~<jri
,: Martst_,'- history_.-/ t:,1¢Canp.
,C..e9ter.
ne:v~r:roll~~ out.a
empty~ He talked of landing 7-4
P~rry's
. outspoken.
manner
team to get on w1th its. season .
. ·
,
\/Although·
_many
..
insis'ted Perry·
·
,w~lce>me
n.iat ~or-I_>erry
.: Petro, was West German., center Gunther
continued
to rub people the
_
That should be top· priority right
·
'
.. fJfa,clte,d:into
~h~job after:Virgin.ia·
~ave~-Yl,o~al
maµ\\'.ho cl1!ln'.t
ma~e
·
'
·
wrong way. There was the day
now.
.
.
.
.
_.'
~;;assistant
Jim
Farranaga and th~n- wa".e~.:_Peopl_e.felt-
~~ure
m
tht:1r
..
Benck~ and
·French
stars Eric when he closed the curtain in the
This incident was, as Maiist
:
.:
;:/.Villanova
aide Paul Cormier wer~-

P?S
1~o_ns around him.· Bu~ P;erry
Fleury and Christian Garnier, but gym on some. women players who
president, Dr. Dennis J. Murray
·:
:~
{-Jast~second
jvithcirawals;
he was·: repres.e_nted
_a.shocking-change ,at.·
.
came up empty on all three. The were watchin~ the guys practice.
described it
"a
tragic event."
: .;
·';,:thfi:nan"to:begina.new
era.;.
·:
.
: __
the
:~cC_ann
:Center;
·He
e~ude_d
·.
semester ended with only two "Stay !'-way from my players," he
-
With_Mike Perry gone, it's up to a
·•
.. ·/-,/
As· soori as
..
P~rry ··lancled· in· self:c<>nf1cle~c.eand.·nev~r
h1d·t!s
·
domestic recruits signed,. Ken declared without a smile. There
group of 11 young men to hurdle
.
·'?
~.oughkeepsie; the: promises came
.
f~~hngs
.
on any
_
subJecL His
Galloway ~f
.Onteora
and
·Mike
was also the time he spoke aloud
this obstacle and
.
make the up-
.
:
//·,:
-.

·
·
·
-

·
·
··
·
-
·
·
·
in the Mccann lobby of turning a coming season a success.
major college coach in for NCAA
. Then maybe this story will have
violations, eventually what he a happy ending after all.
,.
..b~Jo~n:~•~non _
_
··.·· , , .
,.
.
...
··•
ended upa respectable 9"t2 team
,
<:)1arist
i_~
heading· into its non-
.·-.:~::~"!t~rsit:i~,;t/i~::~A~~1l:;{~_:?ab~e'/,i.th9s~.:#~fsiri:ii~iories'·
.•
·;.~1~ieir:if11ggt~;~to:~~hl~etf!~~tt.·:····--------~
..
··
and.
:s
C
John's
i
University

·the
._,
last_
,s~son,-.c_a~~'
at.
the~hands:--of.;·
Satur:day_,,. agamst·,
...
St.•
..-;
J o~n~s
..
:
,+
:'
:.
·
M.
a ··
1
,,
··en'·-
.:
·
'·,.-·-->,the
~ed_F9~es;/a~._HU ~efeated UnfVers1tyatLeonidofffield;
·
-··

}IS;
rn,
s_. soccer.c,;team
I~:'
.
Manstl.;.0 movert1me.-·
..
,.;c:,;:
'., ·
.. ·/.
,•
.
.
.·.
.
·.
·
.•....
·
..
->preparmgJor-1tsupcommgho.me,.:·-•
••.;•',
..
..-

-....•
·
<.·':·
A~dy;Ross
scored, the.lone_
.

..
/
ga(Jie against Hofstra
_University.·:<
·
This year, _t~e Flymg D,~tchmen
,
Manst ~oal a~ 22:2_1
·of
the sec~nd
..
·.
on Sunday.
·.
.
·
· ·
···
·
·
·
are led b:,:
_semor
co-c~ptams Alan
?
half,. ~Ith an assist. from
_Mike
,
Bodenstein, 1.1nd
·B111
Metzler; Terwdhger. St. John'., had
,taken.
.
·:J;
Marisi will_ entertain· ari
-.
im-
Bodenstein,
·a,
smaJf for'!Vard at·:
a
1-0
·
iead earlier in the second
:::.:
proving·.Hofstra team, which ha"s' 5'6',.netted-12
goals fast season
'.-half·
after the two teams· llad
..,
.
:J
str~11gtheri~d its soccer program
.
and. has led Hofstra in scoring for-:-
·
playedto"a scoreless first half..
.
·
<<pVer.
th,e past
'few
years; After a.'· the past two years. Metzler is

.
:,
The tie: agairist the
.
Redmen
by
Ia~
O'Connor
take the post he almost got last
....
As the
•position
of head
year ..
·
Skinner
·
knows
the
:,
coach of tL: the Marist men's
system and the majority of the
;,:·: ..
disinal.2~14 s~aso~ back.'.inf981;·,:
';
considered
.
to
be Hofstra's
-~
followed the
,·scoreless
,
tie ttiar·
,
:
·
:'>
theiFly_ing_D)ltchmen of Hofstra.
steadiest player. and
.
plays
·
the
:·J.1arfst'.and
st: Francis had played
.
; •),turned
rhe tides last ye~r' and
.
sweeper position on the.team.
, ·
• ·
1ast Wednesday: With the two ties

.. ·

.
.
.
..
'
.
.
.
.
.
.
_:>1as'tWeek:
the Red-Foxes moved
;;H(iv~:i,all
record
to
I4~2-ori the·
. ;
s~ason;·•
... ,
.
_.
t".-/l'he_F.oxes
lookto be he~din~ in
,
the right direction after.
a
shaky
star( this season.
·
•·
:
·•
.
..
, .·
C-c>a~h
.Howard
Goldm~n
and
·
the play~rs
,will,
be fookin:g
·
to
,continue
on their winning ways
.when
the Red Foxes-face Hofstra
;·c,n\Sii.nday
at. Leonicloff
·
Field.
·
·.
basketball team is once again··
..
players,
and
·
the
·.<ad-
open,_ two •internal candidates
,,,.ministration::·
would
·
-feel
should get a good look.-
. .
comfortable with him.' .• As the
·
·
Red Fox
.
assistants
John
.
search for:the new coach is on;
:-
Quattrocchi
and
Jhn Todd
are
.
.
the
:
seai-ch>.cfor

an
:
athletic
.
quality
coaches,
either

of
:
director' if now
·put
on hold .
whom
.
CL
Jld
·.
·serve as• a·
.Two
of the finaiists in that
stabilizing force as the head

department are
Dr;
Howard
man: .lfMarist decides· to take
Goldman,
_Red Fox· soccer
its s_earch oucs.ide the college,
coach and Matist A.D .. from
bet on
Al Skinner
getting the
1963-'76,
_.:
and
.
Assistant
'job.
··
·.
·
· .
·
·
·.
Athletic Directoi:.DickQuinri,
·
·
1
·•
'.
The former Fox
·.
aide
·
is
-
who's been here for
·a
little
·
currently at Rhode Island, but
m ore

than
·_
.
fo
u r
he might jump at the chance to
'
years.
~pam;e_ii~ejst
p;m;
·
' -
.
>'.,
:
·
,
-
·•'d/}da~r~.•·;e_a_:
·a_y_fi
___
o_r_K_l-.n-g-sm-
..
---en--·_;_----'
.<::··
.
:
·-
'
.,
.
.
.
,_
.
.
.
.
.
lfarzcy'
·10.otWork:
....
_.·
.
The soccer
team
battles
St.
Francis (N.Y.)
to •
3-3 tie last
week.-~·•-
...
(photo byMugo Kuclcb)
_{~_'.·;
.
...
·.
After being shutout
.21-0
by
Iona_ last Friday night the Marist
:college
football team looks
·
to
bounce back this Saturday against
Brooklyn College in this season's
homecoming game.
.
The Red Foxes hold a 4-2 series
·..iead ·
.over
Brooklyn
·
after last
year's 19-14 win, which should
please Fox
fanatics
because
Brooklyn is the only team on the
schedule against · whom
·
Mari'st
·
holds a series lead.
Another
.
encouraging fact for
Red Fox fans is. that this year's
homecoming opponent is 0-4 this
season.
However,. Brooklyn's
record may be deceiving. After an
opening day 14-0 .loss to Kean
.CoJlege,
they lost
·to
Pace, 3-1,
and Jersey City, 4-1.
The Kingsmen are a
p.ood
pass-
ing team with returning starters at
quarterback
in junior
Craig
LaCadre and at wide receiver in
.
Victor Willi~ms, but the bean of
the team's single back offense is
running back Jim Wilson.
·
The s'trongest element of the
Brooklyn squad, according to
Marist
·
Head Coach Mike Malet,
is the defense, especially 'the
secondary.
·
"It's an emerging program,"
Malet has said. "It's the first time
in five years that they. ~ave had
the same coach two years in a
row. It's a city school, and they
get a lot of athletes. They could be
surprising."
Last Friday at Mount Vernon's
Memorial Field Gael quarterback
·.
Jim Lombardi passed for one
touchdown and ran for another as
Iona white-washed Marist for the
second time in two years. Last
year
Iona
ruined
Marist's
homecoming by shutting out the
. Foxes 27-0.
·
·
Lombardi was 7-!7 with. 168
yards passing on the day and had
a
95~yard touchdown run called
back because of a penalty. ·
Marist junior Jim Van Cura ·
came
.
from the opposite side of
the line of scrimmage from his
regular cornerback position to
·
step in at quarterback for the in-
jured Jim Fedigan.
.
Fedigan underwent surgery last
Saturday for a convulsion frac-
ture of his thumb, which is a frac-
ture
that
occurs where the
ligaments are attached to the
bone. Fedigan will be out of ac-
tion for a minimum of four weeks
and possibly the rest of the
season.
Friday night Van Cura went
10-
19 with 95 yards passing and earn-
ed the praise of Malet. "He
played an excellent game con-
sidering
it
was the first time he's
played quarterback since high
school," he said.
Marist never made a serious of-
fensive
threat
and·
·
made
numerous mistakes on
.defense.
Malet said, "We just couldn't get
our offense in gea; and played
sloppy on defense."
The loss drops Marisr's record
to 2-2 going into Saturday's
homecoming game.·









































































































































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·.
,,:-:-.·
.
I
$1.00:otf.~ny
16" pizza.·
.

.
~x~7,J:'~f,~9~8~er
l)izza.
il!;
Fast, Free
Delivery
1
~,.
,r~.,~
618 Mai·n.
Street
·
.,___,~,.,}
I'
.
<t
~
1•
_
·
Phone:
473,9211
I
:-~-i'!"~
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