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The Circle, November 15, 1984

Media

Part of The Circle: Vol. 30 No. 8 - November 15, 1984

content

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·: ~Y;Lo1_1,AnnS,eeUg
/;'.·,i··:
.i)/?>:
~tir1}nt1y···orianizing·\.ih~,;)ri~de':\and that ~ny·evalu~tfon'wotil~'bc.
;.,/ •,•.:;(;;,'(:};.:!;
:, /-t:·.
·<:;( ..
'!(:/,':;'··
.Jayout''.of
',the•'.
conuinuiicaticins::\ done·only·,ir :a::Jarge ..
'number of -
})/I'fre:'.,prC>posed,;:
s'iifdenf; apart~
}.i
building
jvitfr
the,.
~cl
vice
;of:
ex~.' '.;_
sfodents' approached him on .the
':' ment\:0111plex
:will
cost' a tcitah of
:··:
peris<in the' cominunicatidn ·arts' .·.··.subject.
:' ;:)'.'
. ': ': ; ' ' : : \,;(.
'·< '.: .
.
$4 miliion~ $},,mi!Hon more than/;'.fields;'/ .
> ,\
Lo.

.,
x,;
.· <
>
::•
:,\!,·
ii•'
< '·.
,:.
M urra:/said that he -recognized
: _·was: originally:,repo~~ed. 'in'. local:)};;
.He'-ai~cf'S:aiµ
ihat;
althotigh' the
.
':, t~e '·::
pos~ibi~ity, Jor
i"a .·:
C0'1f.lict
.
·;new,spapers; :according;
to
"Marist)>sugges·tions-;from
'the ' profes-.· -;: ~etween· L~Morte.~_sr_oles.'.But,
he
; ~q.llege:,Pre~id_c:m
DennisJ::I\'lur-,·)sionais')\'1!~· w..eigh_heav,iJy•in.
the. ; said; \'.Tc{say,therejs an inherent
',ray:.
::;f;)':/i((f,
,'/)l\:'•':·
1
,.;of,·,,•
·,·:/J,oBege's:'clec::isio~s aliqut orga~iz- .:· :difficulty· there,
·:l
Jail to·'see that·
/:, ,TJ.i~ji;osrofJht;,complex;'fwhich J.:jng•the building's ·,space, stµdents : •. as a·case/~
i'', ,
<: ,· ·
:Y
'.{ :
=:,th~
co_ll~ge
pl,~ns
,to
con,str\,ICt
on:a i?',may have
·;the{.oppohunity.
input . ·:- The .. con~em over'
,an•·,
apparent
·,'.site~ehind the.,Dutches.s
~ahk;Jn~\-::
some\ide~si:,'
~f.
would·. hope that
O:••·
ouaHty ,between· .t,;aM.orte!s
.. two ·
>c::!ud~($3/inillid11;foso·n_sfruc(
th~_:jvh,er<(:the
0
:·s(u~en:ts /would 'be. \ roles on ciunpus:was_raised in
two .
(: complex'. its'elf :.and 'an:.iidditional.\ spedfically idrivolved;. ·'that·. the, · ... recent' issues of :rhe C:ircle.-..
.
.
_' SCmmi'on'.fo' buy ihe.Iand/JMur-·
i\:
stu'dent{wouldhave'some input;'' .. ,:.-:ruriling'
to .
'other·. campus
:/(:taf.-'.s~id);iiday(at widc:srangirfg·, : he said:;··'..:.: :•· .
,
..
·
_:.
issues/Murray commented on the.
~kt{-.
.
press
i'
conferenc'e wjtli';-,
student : . , Murray 'added, . however,
-·,
th'e . recent•; break-in that occurred
t.~;v
,,·.
·, ·.
jotirnl:ll,ists.:,
·.·I,:
, :,;:;~;
;.:':":
:
:/_;
"/:
c<;>Jlege
~ould not.a:c·commod-ate
-~Nov ..
1.
He said, ','I wfll ask_ that
;\.::'
·, .
:
·
i{;" · ' " · ·
·
·
•ii'i{\;
•t·:•
·,
·
aiphe, requests
·for.
space m the ·

· t4e · <:ntire circumstance~ that led
{(f.
.
. . .
: .
e ~par_t
1
en~s
-~j ' .
e. t~1
~ 0~ new center .. : "There_ was . ~hr_ee · up to this event b.e reviewed."
•:
,,,': .
·
a Site nex_t
to an gt. en
!
0
e_c? , . times as much.request for space as
· · ·
· · ·
·
· ,
~1;::
.'· .
··Iege for'.,,ne\V.
athletic f\~lds.'.m·.
a · we had s ace ;'.he said: .. -.
·,·
·
... · .. -· ·
, . ,
,
i~- .,-·
·
.~rap.t_.from t~e-~_cea_nn.
Founda-
.
When~sk;d about·s· ace iri the
In_cre_asmg
t~e secunt~ on cam-
!!(;· ·
,
uon:. W~en _ques,u~ned abouphe
center for. media. clubs
P
5
.pecifical-
pus
1s.
?Qe poss_1bl~
solution to the
18
·:-
co~pleuon date :of; t~e P,ro~osed ly· the. television':· arici':radio sta.,
potenual recur!enc.~ of
~ break-
•:i/ ,,-
-proJe~~-',
'M.urray.;_sa1?;
"I.
feel . dons Murra ··said ;_·••Definite! . ·•m, M~rray sa~d,_· provided the
}; ,. , _ ,

un,e~sy at e;fn p,roJ~ct1?g a date." . the pians· are ~ci-hav~ the
TY
sci-
st~de~ts , ar_e w1lhn~ to,~
go along
·~'-t,
• . :
.
He ~d(ieq, _I
_1u_st
d?n t k~ow_ al! , tion in the.·, Lowell . Thomas · wnh tlg~.tened security.
,
1:;_>
·
:,the ¢v~ntuahu~~ _tha~
~h.at pr?Ject :·~;Center.-'.', He. added;, :'There is .
.
H~
went on. to say · that. t~e
;,'fi ,,'.
.
'..
'·J~~lddnV.?_lve. ,.He .. also, pom_t~.d~·:;
room ·c;'in 'the .-·
Lowell 'Thomas
l\'.l,anst caI!lp~s. ~ltQo!,lgh
It . IS
,;,,,,;-
.
;.,
,ounhattheapartmentproposai1s·
c~'
···r··th
.·d.
t't·
•:r·t·
.. somewhat.1s9lated_fromthec1ty
··"· .. ,
...
, ,,
....
_,·
. .
. . . .
,.
enter· or
era 10s a 1on.1 1 1s
f
p
hk
• ·.
·
II ·
-l:.·
:•·
,:;
·
..
·
·.
-comple~ely
;. 1J1d<:J?e!1dent;,.,9f:
the·. ''ctecidtiii'that it should be th.ere." · • 0
~~~
feeps!e, JS·~· ~ma
d
city
;:'i;,:_i."/::·{
· :
,'·Low~WThonras·.Cepter:~n~f'_;h~s....,
.(Murra
·stresseo,·
however,·that·:·, unto·:: !~sel ... and that stu ents
\~It
r.i···:' '•, ,
..
,: .
....
!!P.t\H!l~
,~o, ~o. -~i~q ·th!!.:'.d~.l~YS.,
l~
:;\1,e:cbli~ ye
is.
folloi;in: ihe'advice _-:
__
s~o-~t~·;
._l?,e
:•.!!_n~Ol!~age~
.. to .. take
4:ii;,,·
··:,:

., .. . •
,
·,It · · nstruct
'
...
,,z .•.
f
i ., .,
~·~
~·.,
0
··,t.J·"•
1,.
_g_
h''. •'
·•··:--·r
•· · . .-
common.:sense precauuons,, such/
, .. ,,.1:,,,.
: . ,; ,
, -
•• ~-·,. ,.,,,,,.
o .exper.ts'an uat ,1n•t e case,o ,, .. ;;. • .. ..,,,, -· •
...
; .·
,
i
• .-
.:
• ·,
d
,J'si;v-
:·~n
~:,
;::~:.;•.
M'Hf!"";_
~{
t'ti'e;,,-a,;.d·"1"o"s':t'a~•r1"o·n,1.i
... t~~e·r"·e"·a·r"e·~rn
... ,a
.. •. ~,,_;.:'
f!S.
lock mg,, the.Ir doors; .
to.
g.uar
"l"
,..
. .. ,, ,..

,,,,,,.:z,..
. " '
,r
l
,,,.,,
11
'
1;1y,_,,,,r, ,, •• ,,-,_.,.~ ••• - , ...... _,'
··r
b
k '
.._t'M
;, •

,~'. •;._._
~
.::~:;:7:;ix;f,+
P';.
1
;Jl~!::
;~tf!:Fi#?.f~;-.r;:;~r
..
'.fJ.f1i•UiiftJ'rft§_~?;;~~lJ~if~~:,}~E;j~~~b
atd:lli
o.
~
-tfiefft\!jfill~ali{~g~,s'"r&f?!ti~~ifli"tit~.,Wil~ff~it/1·\l.!
against.: tn'e:recurrence~o )a.: rea •
.
' i
'~-<
•' : ·'-'
1
,
,(s)J:1Deiiitis
1
Muriay
considers
... questioniposed
afFriday~s.press·t·.;,
•·,;cbmmti
'tici?rfirtfs-Bmiaiflt"::~,
·,;,• '· ,
•,C,"·,t'":,
· ..
·• . '.
!, -:· ,,·
' · ·~. · ·;.
:'-'fri-':;;,::·~'.-,:;:·,:,'
,,_9,.;
i · .....
,
,u·
', ·;,
,,
\·,.
\,:.
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/:~.:1;;1,COnreren~e:i
~;~:[;:.t~fi:~~ti/:d::~>~~::}~,~.'
~•i·~~;;.~,~f.:::f:;'{(~·::;;-J_,':f:-::~;}\~'~.:,.,•
:!:.~
:<<'.:/!:
.;
··,!,r-:·.~1~--
1~,~"d~
r-<,•
''c.t:
r~:~ ,~ .. ·
f
n~~-•• J' ._
! -~:
,1s
..
,5-~~:pu~;A,\}h.~.
~-d~~d!'t
,-
l(,(~e ·
..
·:
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./ ..
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, , ,.,
..
,.· ·
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••

• • ,.
"
·:'
• .-'. •
' (
11
T
b ·
M'•.. K • h)
-· ,,.
as. e~n... ,e aye ~.coupe m()n,
·
ulumately want to move it
to
the
.
·
"'
...
,. ' ,, ·: "·--··. ,.
· ·. '
·
··
1::•;_.:
..
-<{'.,··•·:::._.,,_-.,-.:,.
,·":.i,,··,'•
.. : .. · ·:,;
>.,:··
..
·:·.
·.',.P,O.~,Y•.
argo_ uci~ ·, "'·ths'::ctuetoacoinbmationofpro.-./···.i•
•.h·.
'lib'·
f
·t"
·
"......
.
·
!W~~i',f
,~Kt'Y1%t;f
M,!}f
'xiittn;}S
i';!Si¥11,.!:;)!rt/:sc'.\2I'f!f
:j"f
;.,if
l~i01/42t!r;i'.5)f
t~}
,It,f
itf
,;,~t~r~;ij}~ry!]if
t{iJ~.
t.~1~;~}~01.:1~~;ff
1~r}JJ?f.~
:,,;;
'.i•\•.'Jii-;::,::•"
·.
· ...
ft.·.
a
...
· .
c.
ul.
t.sr
:-.-::near,,;;,¥,.\
j
o.
·.,;,
t ..
e .:);·.
i ,'
'··
'
;;>/_Murrny,added. q1a~. ;desp1t~ the>. pat'entkonflict• between· the; roles . looking out for other students
i%f:-:•::,.
·
·:·<
.,.?;
'; .. : ,·: ., ,;, :.
J.rrt .....
'i, ':,,.
.~,-·:'.'?3:,/:<
..
",•":·
-'._'.;,;:,:':.:'.'
:::;
,
~
.'.::.
'diffictilfies}h~:· c·onege· has· had·:'. of ihe'.Rev. Richar4 LaMorte i3S . being willing to.help...

i&t:,:\/\,. .
·._,-';·•··
. ..-,
..
---·· ·"
.:--:·'
·· · ,· ·· ,• }· ·
;,>'?--.'·Y,:\t~:.·
:: ··,:-•.,
.,:;,with).ll~: s1t_e.
of tl:i,e.?,,ew co~~:
'ass~~tantd<:anot:student.~<lndcol
0


When asked about Marist's
M:!_<..
·.
nn·:. Q.A.D::E,
\·s•::
.:t'-1:;1:;f;.1,i·;re.
:,.
:
··.'
;':
!!l~Il!Ca!I()~~
'cen!~r,,- · _Th~--ar- ..
,.
Jegecha~la!n· ... · ...
,
.
_
·
· plans for Western Publishing
:,:r.::r
':
'\J
.
'.
·vV:IX.:D,
.. .. .
:li:.u:'.lt-;UJ.> . ''
',
,:
..
:· .
chu,ect
IS
std! conVJ?Ced.that _that '
i
''If
this JS a concern that JS felt • buiJding, now Marist East Mur-
J~,Ej)••
· ..
:'.:;1;~J-~~~7f
~•
1:·
?:I
it)l1.ltJittir;~i~;t~,~.l;~,i.~i~tJ¥J~i~iit~if
':lf
lf
{;~\1rt{{{iritf
~ti~i:i;
···
..
1;1
;r.~t~fr:f
!:~
0
~!t
E~;i
,.,.. .
.
.
,
, ·-~' ····••,.·. ·,.,,.,, -.,·,
•· .. --:.•.
•. ,,i,v.:
,thes~,five,:areas.,.natural
sc.1ence;•
,. , ...
,'!,•',;/·:'111.~•~1
..
:,fit,.,,.,,,;-,::.,,. -·•:·
.,
!,>--...
Murray: added ·•·however ··that.<• that for time being ·••we .should
-:·
·, ' .. ·:' '. .
.
. . : . , :::
; Th(,
..
fact;tlt}'.
...
;~ill
,;
'Vote next';\ s~cja(s~ien,ce:~shi_stqry\\1~i~~,t~r~
;·Yi
<;9#.ii~ti}~g,:,·oiif
't11~ ·.
~uj:>je<=!i
::
;.,the s,tu~e~.ts·
.,he: knois /;re: in ': continue to maintJi~ ·.·
long-term
,;:.·:,.(' ' .
' m~:mth,on~ ·pr<Jpos.tl that ·r91.dd .· .. a.f!qmc:lth~f!lat!C~:
.
·\;;',
._,,·; , :.' ,_M:urr~r sa1d,)hat'.the c:o,Hegt!
IS
:
genera)·· :supportive>of_ LaMqrte
:'
lease'situations.'(
•i
:
.
-

1
C'.:;::
.
+~rt&£~f
j1Nl~1f
~,,;Ii;1t~ii?~f
;if
i70nr.:~1
f
;;.,,,.z,;c:ii
'>?'
.§! ..
f
>.
ii
•.
•· ...
· ·..
>
i .·.•
>
..
·. · · · • . ·.
· .
}?;,f·\.:,;:
:;
/the>: f~culty'f.1cac1~mic, ,ii,\ff~irs''. l~Il~!J.age·:,fq_ilf b_e\~no~.ea'-;~~:
:fFz:e.tn.arn..
. ·.•
.
a"'J)erso.n
Q
l-exne
rie n.
ce .
.
. ... ,,
,.C,ommmee, wouldtreplace
the ;·;sub.st1tutemtermediatecour~es·m·
·. · .;.,,:-,,;,'.·::
..
,, .. ''
,,,, , . ;_ )•
·
·····
·;< .-:

•;_<

•···
,Y · · - · · ,
\\.
,:·cl!rrent- CORE,'butwould,_nor';2ttieJanguagefor:;upio'.six'·orthe.·
" . ·;,;..~.-.,,·\·
'
,. ::·
.
'
>! ;\.
;_c~a!1,8C·requirements
for ,sfuclehts 7/crJaits '.in·, tli'e·:.second. group
of :
:r~r
~-<>tigl~s
Dut,~on
'
suicide;: another was; klHed 'by ,
·
founder, bf the. Ulster. County
. '.
:·.
n ..
ow.en
...
rnlled._at.
Ma.r.i.s.t.
':: · ..
••·.•·.-.'.''.':',,'·.·
.. ··d.i
..
s . .tr.
i.but.iv.e
.. cou
....
rses
..
· a.·b
.. ove
..
:_-
..... .·
. .. . . ... .. .
'
.
'
·, ';
·police;
and others were involv'-
~chapte.r oLthe
VV,A,'
hanged .·
\' ,,:.If
passed, the.newrequireinents ':,;.~Alsc{
tind'er jhe 'pfoposal;' no
·
\_'.1riiag111'~
beirig'in a f~ti~tit~
.· ed ·in auto accidents involying
. himself in the Peekskill jail
wiU gointo.l!ffect.with
.next
·year's·'!. students:w,;mJd·be exempted
from .·
·
acqidentonce or ·twice. a day;. · ·:either drugs or alcohol.·,.
.
0
after ·being.,. arrested· on a
freshman, class. '. . : ,·
::<, ·...
.
·., .
takihg-atle/isforie writirig course.
. seven :days
a
,.week,.for a y,ear
- Although Adin's group is an
.
charge of disorderly co·nduct
..... ~:The
/program··
is'
still ,
b~ing· :;Students' placing )iighest 'on tl).e. ··
·
of youfJife: Then iniagine,that.
extreme example, it is not uni-
last December. Jerry Serino,
.
. . ·modified· by· tll~ AAC) which ~i_s<
fr~hman placement. exam would
.'. the :.person : killed ·was sitting·
que .. Studies.· have · shown that
pri:s.idem
· -of the Mid-Hudson
·
._takirig'suggestions
.from faculty, · take'a ne'!V
honors writing cQurse.
·
right nex(to you in thc:!'driver's
combat exposure in Vietnam is
chapter of the organization,
·. the Student AcademicCommittee .· Currently; those students.are not· -; seat, andjust happ(!ned to be
associated with increased ar-
shot himself in•early.October.
and the: mentor staff;·
,A
faculty ·: required to take
a
composition
. one ofyour b.est friends.'
'
rests · arid convictions after . Although . accurate statistics
meeting will: be held tom'orro\v
to
course. . · .
· .
:
. .According to Ma~c Adin,
. dis~harge, arid that alcohol use · are hard to find, Adin said the
review and discuss ·th,e
>proposal,
·
, Other students would ~e placed ·. . director of personnel at'Marist ·
tends. to. increase with· greater
suicide rate is about 25 percent
. accordi,ng to John .Scileppi, AAC
in either College Writing or
.
and a Vietnam veteran, that is
combat experience. For these
· higher than normal for Viet-
.. chairman and associate professor .. Rhetoric of E~posit,ion, according
how ·it felt· to be in combat in
veterans,
readjusting
. to ·
nam veterans.
. ..
. of psychology. A vote is expected · to their levels of competency, as is
Vietnam.
civilian life can take years._.:
Adin recalls that the feeling
early in December. .
_
·. now.the case,. Students assigned to
«Of the 120 guys I went
• -'.'lt took· me probably five
he had when he first arrived in
As it-now stands, the proposal
College ;Writing
in. the first
over with in 1968, 18 .came
years to really recover from
Vietnam was pure panic. "I
. calls for students to take:
semester ·,would continue to take
back.'!. said Adin. "For the
Vietnam," • Adin, · who was
was stationed in Germany, sit;
.
· · • -
CORE 101 (Introduction to· Rhetoric in the second.
wou.nded · twice in action,
ting in a coffee shop, when
. / ; jPhil?sophy) . and CORE
l02
As for the _capping course,
fiiS
t six months there, I cried
remembers. He said he bounc-
some MPs came in and told me
(Ethics).
AAC members said it would be
at night. For my last six, I
ed around for a few years until
I ,vas going to Vietnam," .Adin
believed . that since I was still
.- At least one writing course.
designed to link the student's
finally pulling his life together. ·
said. About four. stops later,
alive, I was immortal."
-
One course from each of
study in a major
to the broader
He has been at Marist since
Adin was there, dressed in the
these seven areas: natural science; concerns of the liberal arts.
Veteran's Day was Monday,
I
98
I.
same clothes he was wearing in
social science, history, literature,
Currently,' students take
21
to
and again America honored all
While Adin learned to cope
the coffee shop.
fine
arts,
mathematics
anJ
30 credits to satisfy CORE
of its soldiers, past and pre-
with the Vietnam experience,
Adin said his first job in
philosophy/religious studies.
continued on page
7
sent. But for the "'eterans of
soine who didn't have turned
Vietnam was to load body
The next issue of The· Circle
will appear Dec. 6 ·
Vietnam, the honor doesn't
to suicide. In the past
11
mon-
bags for transport. When ask-
take away the pain. Adin!s
ths, two leading members of
ed if he felt like running away,
story serves to illustrate the
the. Vietnam
Veterans
of
Adin
said,
"There
was
personal impact the war had
America. an organization to
nowhere to go."
on the men who fought it.
help veterans, have taken their
... I'm
not
really
bitter
Adin said rhat<>fthe
18
men
ov1,ri
lives in the Poughkeepsie-
·anymore," Adin said,
0
but I'd
who returned from his infan-
area.
rather die than go through it
try,
four have committed
Karl
Lerchenmueller,
~gain."









































































































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>i·,,;The;maii:'in'•?the}Roman·~·coUar,·,!,aclmirustration.aske,tiiimlto~taket:;-/5aid,:
!\o\tteoipting.•to',
coordinate' :,·' -: ..
.
,.,:,-,.,_ I(, -
:
;C
:··:•sits/,belund:--itte·::aesk:tin~'.·h1s'·ad~
1
·-:
;tlic" positioii-of assi$lanticieai10rFa~_;:ihat-:-'
time'.''ana·--•give';.a.,.,-,,
sense:
of: ': ., ·, · ·:••
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·
·•ministfative>. office\
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in-:.'::perman~~t /': ~asit\t:}l,,~Mo,;_te?/direction 'that ·'Noilld b~ valuable.
.
',_:. ter~Ji~g;
~~
{of.
~aP.Cr~\\'.9"r~:;a~d-'.-';~isctiss~;',
this<"',
pcissibJl!iyf·w,Hh \·' for.
t~~
gro\Vth ..
~f
student_s
.i!1'
~h~
. rehg10'1s ;:1t1:ms
: -:-::, an~.: frankly_ .,•officials of. the. "-rchd1ocese; and · ..
·. context of th~. values of -this
m-
,
- discusses.~:._his
;-fife:, as .\ both ·.a
: ·
fellow priests before deciding to
stitutiori,.
l
feel
·is a ·.worthwhile
Cath_oli¢'chaP,l_a~iia~d.an~ssi~!a~t-;_acceptttieoffer~-:: .;:
0
_>,,'
·.
:;.
--~ask:" .: : / ·' ...
·"
·
dean of stl!denraffa1rs: ,7:,
:
::1;:-:~
:· : ,
\!tOne _.··
of >the_ thmgs . w_e
->
What bot~ers. him• verr
~~~h,
; n
don't sayl'm less of a pnest
established atthe lime was that 1t:
>.
LaMorte said, 1s the poss1b1hty
because.· of -it;~• . said the , Rev .. - would, be critical that there be · . that some students might feel that
' Rich#cU. \aMort~.
/"f.-
think ·--~ore :than ·simply one person in .they could not come to him for
. there's.
i
c
7
~~~iri
· ~acrifice t~at has .•...
Campus . M~nistry,'' :
·
he· •• said. .
.
.. co:u:nseliI~g
_.·or.
confession b_ecause
·. to be.ma~e 1,n
takmg e>n:.the
role~f:: !'That'was'the
reason for hir.ing he 1s assistant dean. He said that
. · assisiantdean.;.itcould
appear
tp:;
:~iister· Eileen·. so that the services he is unsure about how to get·this'
. c~it}i>romist::"th~
r<>le·
of pries~·on
:'\,f
Cainpi.Js 'Ministry would not . across to the students and he feels
: campus:" :.•.•
'.,• ,
'i ': ,,., __
·. .
-
suffer/'
Sister Eileen Hallora·n
that he needs to. be reminded
Lal\1orte ha~ become the cent~r . has,been-the:assistantdirector
of
occasionally that this is an area
' of. a/c'ontr~:v_e_rsy)oh ~he· Mari~t Campus'Ministry since the-fall of · that he has to work on "from the
.campus ~h1ch wa_s ~parke~ by a ..
198,1-./
;'
< ,
< ...
..
\ , , • ',.
point of view of being more
cartoon (The Cii'_cle·..,..;
Nov ..
1 : -
Hctwent on• to say that the
conscious of · that relationship
. i~s.ue)
_-:, a fa$~1es~
caricature of_ a
•,_
question .of -~is:: two roles . on
with students ~nd not ¥e.tting ;so
pnest with a'Manst rule book-m
·.
campus . confbctmg. has always.· caught. up
m admm1strauve
one. hand/ a·Holy. Bible in lhe' been~,a:nd shciuldalways· remain,·.· details." -
either_ ·and
a
caption- that rea?: ,·:
a
question fo be asked by students.
"Anyone who works with me
''Ca~'j,aig~ I.ssue
'84,
Separation
and _;idminisirators: Every year,
knows that the mosL important
ofChurch'aiid.State/•.-,>.,
'~. .} ·011··1he· anniversary of· his or-
thingto me is my being a priest,"
·
~-•My;evalua,tion
·ofthe cart<>on dinaiiohandat
the time just prior_ . he said, referring to the idea that_
··is.
that_ we
fah
_put: any •person .. to.schoo.l opening; he said he goes _ students might not confess to him
between'. those·two' books,'' said
>
·away '::alone . to··. ask· .. himself. for fear of that information being
LaMorte;
"l
believe. that you,, whether: he.· is. doing, the .. right . used against them.
canno~ i:eally, separate out\your .. ·thing .. "Whether people: want
fo' .
<'If•
a person knows anything
·,
value 'system .-
your religious : beHeve that.
I seriously. ask the . about the sacrament of penance,".
·
value· sys_~em-;
if you h·ave one
-c:-
question •or riot;·
i
can'( control
he _said, "they°would realize that
J
fromwhatyoµdo/'hesaid.
:
that,".··.;
...
;
,y·.:·;-:':
the issue o'f confidentiality is
''The_'·analogy that is being . · His :aiiswer: to himself-. has·:· critical.'"However, l'mn·ot naive
ma~e isi~a.ppropriate. Thi~ is not_ -· obviousiy , been_· affirmative,
· enough t<> believe that given the.
·. an ·issue of, church and. state.
If
.because - he continues
·.
in both, attitude most people have about
· the caft~qn
·,was;_
at~empting to·:· capacities.
·•~MY,
job.
'as
:·assistant _the sacr~meni of. penance, they
Rev. Richard LaMorte (photo by Christine Dempsey)
deaL~_1th' my-dual role,'·that•~ a~, dean of student affairsis basically
could conceive· of a person not
.
diffeienptory;
thafs Aofchurch ·. a managerial function;. I coor-
using that information.»Hewent
·. .
;
- \
.
. · .
.
.
and :sta.te, Tll.e clo~est thing- that

dinate the'_work:of o·ther.people,"
_on to ~sert t~at if· he knew
_d1f_f1c~lt
one t!l Jet acro~s., In
:1-,aMorte said ~e atte~pted m
· can come to· an; analogy was. he said. ''.Laon't
feelthat .my anything of a rule infraction by
domg
It,
I blew 1t:
..
· •. . ·· \ ·
this .ser?Ion to brmg the issue of
_elimin~t~d 'by_ l\1arist'_when the. _position as assistant dean· at all
way of the ,\confessional
or
He ad~ed tha_t 1fhe h_ad 1t to.do
separatl(~n of ch~rc~ and stat~, a
Marist order sold the college.'' -·
.
. counteracts my functioning as counseling, he would completely
over agam, he would leave t~at
term_ which he said 1s lately bemg
·: Assigned.to.Marist,~i$ht years
chaplain in thistegard: seeing
to
removehimselffromthesituation
part of the sermon - o?t.
,If ·.
apphe? hap~azardly, down to t_he
ago- by the._Arc_hclioc~e o.(;~ew _
_-itth_ar there· :are ·services for the . administratively;\ ·in reality, he
exan_iples confus~, t_hey re !lot
level
m
which. we are _now m-
·York , at,: Marisfsi'?request,
Cat~oli~ populati«:>n . _and 1hat
said, ,. his · 'onl~ , ,disciplinary
help1n_g.
If
they al!~n~te, that •.s a
volved. He said he "'.•s~~d to
.LaMorte:came,,to th~ ..
_collegetp. there afe sacr::tt11erits
_for Jhe
responsibilities are non_.resident
real
-~ro~lem,
: ~e_ said .. stress. that t?e re~pons1b1hty _of
· · scrve_as,Catholicchaplail}>Four
..
,catholi(populatiori;''.
>:·> ... - , students;The·· residents he· said,_··. "Speakmg m p~bltc 1s·.~ very .. •· blendmg one sbehef s_ystem with
.years ,l.ater:Aust, before··the :fall,.:':
In/
addition~·. to ;.Campus
are dealt with by the director of .·. powerful, ~~ecanous posiuon t<:1 · the norms _of_
t_he _societal group
•;term
bega.n/thcf assi~tant, ~ea.n'9f._
:.-
Ministry;
_i;Lal\1orte's).fl,!nCdons. ,.housing:.
, ·,
->~<<
_
J
'.,{ _ ·.·
·•·•··
.. ·.· . ·
be}." at
~.!.1Y
time... \ · . -
.
t~a.t. you hve
m _
IS
the. respon-
.•.
s~uderit:Caffair_s,
,Jef! .;Yl.1arist,,:an~
>cincJilde.,f.coorainatjrig\i)! ~_ealth<' ,
Zi'LaMorie
.:.:
made'.:;;,
the,:\Circle :
•"'i :..
~Y.f
s,tyl~ -_
pf
-p~~.chmg has , s1~1hty
,?L~ve~one, ,not Just
o!
a
:;;I.;llll,1Qrt~\Y:~}ls!{~JQi~k-fcinJlje'.(;¾Sfr_yic~s"'at1drtli~~es~~eii~~fs~ft:{':i,-;~riofo1",:jfjf;~topii\'of(a:;"f~ceritti~ll!.w,,~~11,een-:!?.:t~\~}~fld,~s.e.,~,,t<>•:,';;lW~t_;
__
;J,cJ,!s~g~eew1t!1.th.e
notion
..•
:::f~l!~tti~tt~£~~ri1tt~tt~~\-~t:ttftJ:t
0
l::t~W~11:,it
&.ttJ~~
0
.:'?t~i1~t~i~:;~:
11
1°!
0
f
u~t~huJ:··•.,r~;,rtit).·
;,!!1lia:ci~~~~~o~~~~~~i'1 ';
!~hf
~;;h:~:i~~~~~dt~~~~l~
~e~;
~
t!lat time hf haQ. also_been.serv~ng .
"If
'\VhaUhey
~!lY
is true; that
people, · he said.
"I
taped that . ~
7
e be1_ng
dealt _with here: . a~d
the1~ Job at
LB.¥;,
here and their
·.as_ '. coordmator
. ?f

Campus
75 percent_ of a stm:le~t•s. time is particl!la~ one (sermo!)) because I .. _ how •.s the fO•~\~~empbf1ed
m
church over the~e. . .
. M1mstry for.two years.
spent outs1de .. ofthe •classrooms; · knew 1t was
~
hot ticket and a
the settmg we rem. . .
continued on
page
9
"..·{__
·.'>·-::
-
Sinokers-·
..
-.
.;g/
Y~iit·•>UR•
. l,fr.·4{.rJ~Y:i
·.'
. by.
~ickAbbagliato '"
·_-->~<::-·:'-
~--:-.-::-/:-.</.:-~'.\:
,=-·~-
::~
' ..
·:<•
· .
··
- , CT
oday, millic5ns
i.
of
\
~igarette: •
smokers. wiH;aueinpLto kick the ·
.. :-habit by-taking p~rt·iil
a
riati.on-
. •."wide< c.~1-eb1ation
••-ca:Ued •· the ..
. "Great· American --• Smokeout, "·
, which :··{is
>
spoIIsor.ed : by
i
the ,
_American Cancer Soci~ty. ; "-
\'>·-~:
: For those smokers who weren't·
aware ofthe·Smol<eout until ·now,-. ·
:.-· · . ."thete is still enough time left
in'.
the day to make a sincere effort
fo:,
- quit/'
,
~ccording , to ·• Carnlyn .
Heilweil; program director of.the
Dutchess· County' Unit ·of. the -
_. American Cancer Society. · ..
>The.American
Cancer Society
Today ·is the Great -A~erica'n' Smokeout when many
smokers try to kick the habit. -
.,.. ·
· has designated on.e day out of the ·
· ye~r · fo.r · ~mokers · to .~!te_mpt to
Smokers who. have taken part
qun smokmg b~ca~se it 1s a fun
in the Smo_keout during its eight
way to_ encourage· people t_o do · year history -have traditionally
someth1,ng that ther: normally
quit smoking on their own. But
wouldn
~ do on their o~n and - last year something called "adopt
because 1t serves as a remmder of
·
the
iH
effects that cigarette smok- . a · smoker" was added to the
ing has on one's healtll_," said
Smokeout and stressed by Larry
Heilweil.
'
·
..
Hagman, TV's Dallas superstar
· Ii
is estimated that, out of the
and national smokeout chairman
52 m1llion cigarette smokers in · in his founh consecutive year.
this
country, . approximately
Hagman urged ex-smokers to
121,000
will die this year from
adopt. their friends who· still
lung cancer caused by cigarette smoke and '.'provide them with
smoke, according to a fact sheet
lots·
of.
sympathy
and
published
by the
American
understanding" to help them sue-
Cancer Society.
cessfully endure the Smokeout,
. ThepurposeoftheSmokeout
is 'according
to
the
American
to persuade people who par-
CancerSociety.
.
,
ticipate to continue their effon
The "adopt a \moker" theme
toward quitting.
"If
smokers see was such a success last )'.ear that
that they can quit for one <iay, the American Cancer Society is
then they may have som.!: incen-
planning to encourage people to
rive to quit for two, three and so
do the same in this year's
fonh," Heitweil said:
Smokeout, said Heilwei1. ·
(photo by Margo Kucich)
The
promotion
of
the
Smokeout in Dutchess County is
Heilweil's ,,responsibility.
She
· said, "It is my job as program
director to concentrate on getting
rriaterials out to as large an au-
dience as.possible:"
Over 100 public schools, small
b~sinesses, college campuses, and
hospital staffs in the Dutchess
County area have been contacted
by Heilweil and her staff.
Marist, which is among the list
of colleges that were notified
about the Smokeout, will be tak-
ing pan, according to Anthony
Phillips, student body president.
"We will be hanging posters
. around .the campus
to
promote
the Smokeout and encouraging
faculty members and students to
use the "adopt a smoker" method
of quitting." ·
S.f\.C plans.
to Study
adj\lrict-f acul
ty
\use
. by Nick Abbagliato
' The Student Academic Com-
mittee is looking into the college's
increasing use of adjunct faculty,
,1
according to Pat Hadden, ·com- '
mittee chairman.
• ·. Hadden has announced that the ·
SAC will invite students to a;
· meeting to discuss the topic and!
will survey student opinion about
the use of.adjuncts. The date of
· the meeting
·
has· not yet been
determined. ·
The. SAC, which is part of the
student government, represents
students in academic decision-'
making at the college.
Since
1981,
the number of ad-
juncts at Marist has risen from
85
to a current total of
140
while the
number
of · full-time
faculty
members has increased from
80
to
105,
according
to
Andrew
Melloy, academic vice president.
Hadden· said SAC became in-
terested in the issue after students
raised concerns about the inac-
cessibility and poor teaching of
some adjuncts.
. Because part-timers are not re-
quired to post office hours,
students have complained about
problems in reaching adjuncts
outside of class, according · to
Hadden ..
Hadden also raised questions
about the teaching ability of some
adjuncts. "Some of them know
the subjects very
well
but may not
be able to get through to their
students,"
he said.
. Asked about the complaints,
Molloy
acknowledged
that
students' access to adjuncts is
,,
sometimes limited,
but
said,
"Generally speaking, most part-
timers make a sincere effort to
devote time to their students
before and after class.''.
Molloy .stressed that most ad-
juncts bi:ing a "real
world"
perspecti~e
to
the classroom.
"Because' of the fact that they are
specialists they have practical ex-
posure and can present a valuable
perspective of , their expertise to
their students,'' he said.
He did say, however, that ad-
juncts may initially have pro-
blems conveying their practical
knowledge ,to students, but. that
the administration expects new
teachers to gradually improve.
'., Molloy praised adjuncts'
will-
ingness to work with the division
heads when teaching problems
arise. "The teacher usually tries
to remedy the problem
and
become a better instructor,''
he
said.
The
adjunct
facul1,y out-
numbers the full-time faculty
about 40 percent, and Molloy said
that the number of adjuncts is
much higher than he would like it
to be. He also said that in the next
few years he hopes that the ad-
ministration
can
bring
the
number of adjuncts to a more
reasonable balance with respect to
the full-time faculty.
The desired balance, accQrding
to Molloy, would be approx-
imately
2S percent adjuncts and
75 percent full-timers.
Molloy noted that the college
has already begun moving toward.
a more desirable balance.










































































































































































































































































































































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'ilsi{J!i'
>::.
:e9_titled_.
?Jim,
.Murphy
·.··Defends•
•'(R9~er
:.R,<>.Ill~no,iSte~e:L,oqestro;
.-:·
:-:.
_
·.·
.\
Record as President of the Senior:.· Ten. Haugh;
>Preg
· :Luna,'\an~
.;c·
·
·::::·
..
~lA~tJ~fi:t(?V~;~~:
..
;':)~it~ni.
·
..
;t;s···:\
:roY;f~~·~~cLl;~;~t::~1i~
i~~r1•-:.:.··:
.:••··'
:'
lettero::'to
:'.
Mfl,:
Murphf
·
for'
·
the
still hav~ the ittiriutes:fi:om,those.·'·::',
~:,
..
~.uti~
~~tiJ~t;f
~'..if;f
:i~i~ti~~tt~_;:,·;:
:ti
0
!~~n1I-ht~!s;t~
0
tid)t:;":·::·•::_•
.
.
_would--;:)Hke:;;:
to
,·•,a~dr.~ss].\the·.:
year, Mr.'}w:turphy;
arid~~hy
,h!is
<,:.:
statement
.you
made·.regarding"tlie
:•·
·:no,
.one\been
··.•
informed.
or·
their
'
'.
..
:
,.. · ·
:
class;"
of\
JS'.S
a~tiv]tie~_((or
.th~
;:
P.rogres~·
if, 1n
·ra~t;
~hey
a~eb~i~g
:
'. _,
·

s1.1pposed

~.tck of),. ~.llqng
'{our'..~-~
held?/.',:,.,/.::-::
,.,1_:,:·::-'i;.,.,f/
.;.
'.'.
·i,·
,;>,:
...
..
·:
•junior.year.:
As':las( year'.s
'dass,/;_;:•·,you:say
th.at you
·have.''afofof:···e

.·.
secretary(Idi'n'assure.
yoii:tliat•
i(;.\other:,:;.•resporisibHities·>
.an!i
j
tin~••::
:·'
...
we
-had
riot
held
any' activities
+
.
......
corifroHable··:,.circumstances
....
,,·:

·
as you's'o ridicu!ciusly
stated
~\ve.-<
"7el(ldont'
m~e'.
tq
be the.first to
:/'.c•·.·
·
-would
not have b~eri.v9ted'!class
··telf:.yoli,-:-but\\Ve•alL.haxe••other
''.-
:
.
. .
.
.
.
..
:
:
of
.the·.
yeai:/': a
:fact'.;you(
ai:e.:
commitmehts::'.,:-Jfi;;you.
;'.
didn't·
..
·.·
·
·
g
L1
.
·
..
obviously unaware
of.•
Our ac~;
..
intencht.o
m.akeJime~for.,-t~is'job,
.•
·
.<, ..
.
c::F
":,:,
·
tivities forJast,year include.
what:; why.qic:I
yo~;fig~t so har_dJo
getit
,
.
:
,
.
.
..
.
.,{ritr::
~:~%6~~~~
!~i/t~cd~:'.1~
::.:?r:~:i\Ji~
Pf
h'~f
?i~#~,l~{;i~itei~:
.
.
.
-
. s:,;t·.

-~:,
'


.gr
.t·_.n·
.
~-
n..
.'
..
n· u· m:_..
:
b.
e·r:
-
s
~.·.'.
.
Marist; various mixers;
.and,
fund
:
'
-last ye~r<were
no( p~rfe.ct;,btiCwe .
.
raisirig activities such as tbe ca·ndy
::,:Aid
try,, pur
.besLa!ld.:w<>u~d
~P~
·
;,
cane
sale.·
w_e· placed'-a. heavy:·· prec_i~te
the-respe~t rightly.due to·:
.

...
:
.'.. .
./
...
(:
..
·
;:./
:••:.
.
.
·.··
.
·. \.
, .:·<;,.;-;.

..
:•:i-',
.... .-_.
,
' .
.
.

emphas_is
ori
i_rivblving
c,o~rri.uters
..
;-r
ub·s.
Plc:aks:
d~1''ht~uidld_folirself
Ul)
,"

·
·
'"
.
•·in·()ur',dass
activities;_
apppihting,
··
y k11oc.
mgot ers own:;.~;:·~'>:'
Without really thinking twice about it;
-:
··
.. The system exists for a reason, and those
G~eg:
Lima
as
a'n officer·
for
this/,':,, .Lefs·: have,
·a:-::
new~ star~-on
.
President Murray made an. excellent point

who know how·to use it get the results they
purpose~·
We a(so ma,ita'ged
to
.end,._
.
uniting this clctstari_d
•_making
ou_r
>··
_.
last Friday. He said that
,he
WOl_\ld
loo~ into··
.':~,'.Hant
The
key
is organizatl9n_..
'.
.
,
,-· ;'
the
•year
with:·the largesttreasury
·'
senipr
ye!a(the besty~ar.
ever.
:
;'.'·
:· ·
·
students'
concerns. abou.t
.~r..
L,.aMprt~•s
.-:J,.
:;.·.J11e.
!3tu.dent
:Q<>ve.rnment,,
~or>Jnsta_nce,
,
,
of any of the four classes;-?
..
:->',
.
· .•·•
..
;
.c:
;:
:
Sincerely,
..
roles if.
"a· ·
large
··.
number
:
of· students"
·'·
from
its
.Campus;Center
o_fflce, ex.lsts to
.act··
· ..
As for this
year,)
'would
'hardly·_./
...
·
<:
')\)
;--
:::
tori Isler
..
brought
ltto
his attentipn. Like any ef_fective
.
as
a liaison betwee·~
Jtje
studel)tS arid•the·
.
.
call your.Ciplans
-.·for
;various
'.
·
.-.
::
:
.' ..
,.
·
Class of.-1985
·
~t!d;~t ~:
':::~~\~~~l~~~~;~i-~~
~~~~~'.~a~~.·:_·.
f~:!~~~t~~w~~v~r~~~~toft~~~~sn~bri~~1;i.
,
..
'.
·
..
·
:~.
· .:
·.
.
.
:
?.\
.''.
:.
··.':·
_
..
::
'.·./'_._:'.
~-·,_'i,<>~
..
·
.
dom cor_nplainers. B~t he also·kno~s that
he .
givef! proble_,111,
itls the officers' ?,~ty
t?
take
.
.
::-_
·>·
< ......
/:..:
.-·:
Murphy·
I'L,
..
:':~.'
..
~·~:.<·:
··:.'
...
·'.
....
_.
·~····
...
cannot ignore the strength of a united b.ody.
action.
:
·
·
·:· ..
.
.
:
·
··,
.'
.
,-.~
,
.1.:
".. .
.,
··:
•.
. .-
..... ·
,·, ..
,
-
, •

. •

._·
·:.
·
..
,
·
....
_.,
.
:
,
-, , ••.

A
large number of, st1:1dents united f~r,. one
The student government,
.~owev~.r~
is n?t
:
..
='</,._
.
· .
~::
·
:·_::
:_-
....
,.
.
·
-~
..
'::·
_-:
.'
.
·· :.;,·.:·':.
-
..
·.::'.·_.";<_:
'.
:./\?
· ·.
~:
,.
·
cause could
.change
a.gre~t many dec1s1o_rys_ the only answer.
· . -:·
:'.
:-_,.:.
,,_..
. ., _
...
·.:
~~·.:
•,
•c:
.:,.\~,i.
tr.,. "
..
_Tp
th.e
Editor:
·,"
;:;
:-:".:·

....
-'
-_...~;-<
<
:~ ~;
For the pa~t three year~}-was
·
.
and enlighten
a
great many minds
..
'j'
.
:.
.
: •.
,
...
:.
Two·,
,-years
f.,
ago;-'_.:
when
-··sqme
-:.-act··~--··-,
...
·-':-1·:
a:m
:.writing
.'•this·.
•.letter ·
in
-~.--~president:
of:
our:/clas's,:
·f·
cared
·.
.
~
:-':'·
..
Fr:1UaMorte's,
~ase
'.is-
..
_only;
ah. ex~mpfe.:
';.\:-.
\minisfrators·
~
suggest~ci,:,,turnlng'.:\G,regocy
,_·.·:-'•,.f.:clefense.;::ot::::jhe
f:.ac~usation\
·bf,:.:
_then
and I-care
ii9w.
'Jim·i offere_d
·
..
·.
.
...
· : :
rerhap(:.
in.'::
ttiE:;)i~a!~
::fi~~lysi.s
J
_-H1e·;.
!~J,y
'.·:,.:/:fio·u.~~:·\~~~f-:fre~t2¢~i1.'
-~no.~~i!W;,
:{
t!J~-:t.-~1:-:;:~:
;.:
~i.i~!.~jlt-~~i~r;:c1~fi>I:esidi~~.)ini:<:·
y9_u•'ziif
..
con~rat.u.!~ti~ns'.-.{h(
first_·~
.. ·.

_
,.
·
-
.
rsolated complaints that have been
:vorcea
" ·:
students hvrng there got.together;
.wrote·let·
·!
,
·
Murphy,-thaf'"the <::Jass
of.1985-::':
.day::
oC schooL:~nd
--"I11Y
:'total-
-,.
·
...

··
..
·•
··•
::
are nothing mo.re than· Idle chatter; flerhaps:
'::
;;
t.ers• to,· key
.
adi'Tliril.strators
..
and
q~etitiOQ!:!d
·
,:/:>i~
idfotter:•thai{iCever:
\vas
:iil}the
f
~;suppo1J
6f
0
tli~'-
classi-and'
I
•·said:!
:~,
·.f
\k\ ·
.
:.
even
.
if· tttose
.:voices
.were·
.•
unjfj~d·\.there
,>,i?against
tt,e.·suggestiori;!Jhe tesµlt;i,yas·that,_:·~:·
·_:·
paiCLast'
.yeiir:
our
'das{.didri'.t;
:.:,JyotiIWhel1fyou:\Vith
a'nyih~ng
you/::\:-:::::,::
·
·
·,
wou ldn ';t
·be•«=:
noug
I)
of
..
them
··to.
m.atter:.
Buf!:\t:'.bot~
;.grege>r:yi~~d:
13.e_n,e>.lt'.}-t.ou~~s':t~mllln~d
:;:\.
-.·
· •hol~
:~~Uyhiesi
'.'/';::i•~:!_:\c/:,)?t://C:needed}.~(tltis:;_cs,i~i'.;
h6ld.S;:.tryie.;-\
).\[:,, :.,

hasanyone.ined to bring them together?
·.,
·.":
upperclassman

housmg .. Unified studE!nt.
r•
·,
.,i._::)1m,Ydon't·th!nk
yClu)1avf.!·to
-;.:'.
toc!ay);;,f:reven
:
wrote.,;.a.
•-letter,\\.;::•;-::"•,
·
·
·.·
..
The point
·
is
--
that too
.
many
'Mari
st
·
-
.
voic.es made th.e difference.
~'._..
: .
;:,·
,,,_;,.:,,•i
,:.;;;r:::
.::.defei_-id
you~seJf-by~d~i11¢anlng'the
::,Jtskirig,
the
:dass:
w:
suppor~:::yo\i
·:::;:,'.\<;.
,
.
stude~ts· complain without doing anyt~ing,.;•··
EvE!ry,aqri'\i.rii~trator
•f_rorn
President.JV~.:u.r·.:\'.·•
,:::wQt~
'.of:Ias(Y;e_a,r•~
cJ.~~fe>ffi<:ttsr
:)-aft~f·~~·U'!~sµaljeJ~ction,i,~e~u~.e
.)\::I:~:::
'.
about rt.
;
·•·.
··:
··:.
:
: '
'
.
'
'.·
.
.
., ·•
....
<·
;.
·'
r~y/dqwn_ kn8VJS
:
that:: real, PO"\.'e,rr:
1!~!3
<!":,:c
'.<_\:Qb~_19u~ly;_:,r.<>P:.d.td\n.~i:-:~o,r,9t1r'::
Lfelt,~t ~as nece~~~ry
fo,.rthe
class
'.U(CS::
:
.
.
Whether they're complarnrng about the
:
,.
.
numbers; Mans.t students tend to. c~n,pl~•n
"'>: ,
homework-m·:check!ng•:up
on.:the
·
•\
t9 llmte t~:t:ITlake·1t
<>tir:.bestye~r
~
.,>-.:;\·>
administration
..
or
the
.
food. service;;
_the
~~:r:
a]ot:What they don't·$.eem.to realize
ls:thaf
<c'
\
number
ofactivHiis'i>'erformed;by::·,
\
yet'
-Jhe
.-
l~ttet
_.
,,,-as-dated-,iSep:
. :''·' ,-(:-::
·
stu?ent~.iust.don'_tsee_ni to.,.want•~:0,}~ke
any:),;·:
if
:::they::·
..
unjfiep\to· qe.conie,
'~hat•~••1arge
,

>
~lle;jiiQ,io(c.la,ss··la~(,~y#ar;,~~i9p·
)•:te.ll!~~<farid\yas·.never:}e~~':by::>
,
·{'\,
1.
actro!l
t9
remeqy
any s1tul'lt1on;_
"\·,
;•.;;:·:
> ;:::
::·;,>
number" that.President, l\1urra:Y.
referred. to,
·
·
tn£1clerj~lly
~as,".ote~_:/.'<;:l11sr.9f(\
the
~e.~~o~
class; A!._t~e
!•lll~your'·/
\'.'i:.,;
•.
.
Or 1s
Jt
~h.at they
just
,don'lknow\how?
:.··
··
. ..
/
t~ey. could be
;the,ones:llll'lkrng
-the.
cf~ci~
:
.: ~h~,.Y~f:/'.,;:~~
Jiot}o<>;_~a_g
for.;a::\fI,~a~o.n1.!1:~.8r!Jot~~ry1m~tp.~_J~tter:.::+r.:~<f,:
.
·•
'f'hat s the qase, then they, need an-
••

s,.ons. at Marist. There
Is
strength
,,n.
c
class
,••t
held
NO
ac"""~-
F•,,
WU
the
?t
facto,
·
J
,m:cl'm
-•
~
..
:A,·tacit
..
·
Tom?rrow
·n1g_ht
a: gro1:1p
pt.
more.than
,~9-
.··:
,•·.A.lP.h~•.
Ch_l m~rn~~r~; qt~ef q~oc:ts.tµd~nts,S;"_.,\·\"all;
:.the
,'.;~:est;ring•.~ererµonyi:i~
...
,J
1
a"e,!p,
..
\Vnt~
~,)e.t.te~;h~.~;t~~iout:rc.:/>:
°'
of· M am,f s national
·
honors
.
stu~e~ts w,
II
i,, .
:top>
:fh1,3re
..
seefTI~,
to·
be~~, h 1gh:scho9l·li.~~
,;"
·<
~a;risfColl¢ge history:?/}'.'\:
h~i
:,::;,
·
w~e1_1_
•/fal,!ie
\a~c_µ§atip~~,
·,
.,re
y;_,//t,

·
..
¥~~5~
t~r:J~rit/~~~~t
·~t::.·r
tJ
.
~w~re8Jt>:
';.'
.~l_!'?-~~.-~~.~!?~-f~l~;J~t~A!~:~~ft~\~~~:~t_h;y.
·
,·.,~':t:
j_l_fuf}ft~-~~}G~a~X~'',~
'.
';Bt>tiif
·.••;'
~:~f
~~
I
bu'tii~d~g~~!(\.S~1-t~};:\\/{i.:
·
from
·ariy
·othecstudents:-·ttiey're:·Js(like,
'
/":>
But;:-!10·.rnatter;;
While.,the· college;is: out-:\-
·'.;,C,rms,e'
w_a_s.
a good:.e~~nt-a1?d·
I
...
.:. ·.··.
·
·. · :.::---,-:~•,;·,~:-:
..
-·--.-:·;':
·;·''',.·-·.:_~".
·
· ·
..
eve. 6n~felse. their.oril
differe·nc~
'is
that•
..
·
promotm_g _athletic. prow~::is
..
0
an,c1
,rni!fiorJ<-
_co~~f!itll!at~ypu
on rt;_·,~ut
s1.~ce
..
•··
.
Jim; I. \V~n~:~~•t!mp~as1zrthat.
:(\'.:
.
tor
'Xhatever reason, thly have excelled in
.
dollar bu1.ldrngs~
·the
h9no~s students·w11.1
b~
.
.
then •th~ ~l~~tJias b:~W 111act1ve.
·<.
all
L
h~ye_
~n.:~111d
IS
.~h~·
class
...
-.-\\.'.
.
their studies.·~:.
:''
"'..
·
<>,
,
;:.
.
,
/
\(:-
:
.
quietly m~king a differe(lt s~atem~~~-:
,/
/:.X~:"
..
,fo~.exa,~ple,
0!Jqemo,r
{lm~twa~
:
.beca_1J.se
11_1.
~u~_first
~hrfe-y~rs
at(<:;,;>;;
..
For the most p·art,. they ar:e a modest
.
. ·,
\/Vhr
1e.
t~e out5.l9e.world '~ hearing about
.
.
:. :
_~.ob~~<>~_sly,
th.r9\\'.~
•to~eth1;r
at. t_he Mans~
)~aH
w~~t}>1½'Y-'."-
;~i·t;·
>
'L ':-'
gro!-JP·
Th~y probably. won_'t talk inucn;ab9ut
.
·.
cqnstruc_tron. an.d. hrgh~scorrng
'te,ams,
the:
.
:
i~~t
e';}YEl~t:ie~i~~\~~:
f~st
.time,,:;
h:f~,~2t~t".1:'n1?::c:
:,,1:;·:;;,_-;:;10::-:.·,.
:_,
:,, .'
,/:
..
therr grades, and. t.herr reticence has ~Pr.ead
..
Vf?!ry.
best- _students,_ some of
·
~he_m ~lso
;
, .·
·
Y
· ·


·
·
· ·
s
·
JS
very,>:
··:_!,hope
an,
,sent()rs
readmg'.th1s:
throughout the college. Marist doesn't pro~
:
..
athletes; ..-.:
111 be provrng that Mans_t 1s still a
_
~~~~~or~t;~f
the ~lumm danc~-
..
letter_-will
'join•·together
and
.help·
mote the fact that many students excel.
·
,:
.
,
place whe~e you can get an e~ucation.
·
·.

...
,
,
.
..'~.:
.,--
fk.e
nd

1n ~eller,al:,
·
,-..
~ake. our s_!!ni:or
year tile.·.
best
.
.
.
.
.
.
. 1.:
.
· ·,;
Looking back on last. week's before it's·
'too
fate.
Thi~
)s
our.
----------------\.C
..
·
o.
r'i:·e.
ct_i.
on
.. ·_··...
.
.
articJe,· it is obvious•
that
··due.·t<>
...
seni~r

year,
•.
we
~
need
\every
.
your unavailability; the
..
senior
~senior's
help to make ifthe best.·
.
\
·
: . .·..
.
.
.
.
class has·
"no
say in oufsenior
The fate. of the class
is
in: our
Last week's stbry on Senii5r class did not have any input /mo
.
Murphy ha~ n~t attended
aii.y
of
.,
por:traits this year," ~ccording
to
harids.
Class Pr:esident
·
Jim Murphy the. decision, Murphy r~porided the three meetings held
.
due to ·. qui: yearbook editor. Since this is
contained an error. It should have
.
that
·
although Tony
'
Phillips,
our last -year and OUR yearbook,
·
;
,-
read:
presidenrof the council of student per~onal
·
conflicts with the
·
we
should have been more active.
·
·
When asked why the senior leaders had been
·
involved, meeting limes.
in this.
:
,
:•:
:
.
Editor
Lou Ann Seelig
Photography
Editor
Margo Kuclch
Butlneu Manager
The
Associate Editors
Brian Kelly
Senior Editors '
Christine Dempsey•
Paul
.Raynls
John Bakke
Circle
Kevin~hulz
Adnrtlslng
Manager
Sports
Editor
Ian O'Connor
,.
Viewpoint Edl_tor
Pete Colaizzo
Faculty Actflsor
. Si~~~r~iy

·
.
.
.
-'Roger
Romano
President of
the
Class of 1985
September1981-May1984
Laura Reichert •
·
·

Bernie Heer
David McCraw






































































































































































































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~i
Texa~··s.ocialist
.... _,
__
ciiJi~~i~fa~~i~eg·~~~i-~~ia~:~~~~~;'
i-:':·
w·he~: th'~:i~a~e; ~f Vietnam is
··
·
.
·
raised,
:.
the Administration : is
.
.
"the,>field'.to.
•the ;bJack/;marble;
quick to point out little details in
.
displaying the names ofhundreds·
·
·
Central
.
America
that
don't
..
of
·niousands.
or·•comrades who
.
·
·
·-
·
·
correspond
to
·
Southeast Asia.
•.
;:·Jiad
•;
died
in''; Vietnam;
,;,Their·.
.v1•
et:n·
_.-
am··.••·
.
Because the American advisers
as~ignmen(fa
"t6
stand:. w~tch 24
.
;·hours
a
'day
over the memorial : a .
.
..
.
·
_-:
.
.
._.
.
.
,
.
·
can't carry guns, they reason, the·
,.

·
' Th
·
·
}
analogy is all wrong. But there are
.::
reminder'•
that
·
we·· all· are
.
,
.
e segue
so many other similarities bet-
re~ponsible for· th?se lost lives

·
h
·
·
1
· ·
.,and·
for the· prevention of.·further
,.
.
ween
t
e two regions: Jung es;
_.::1osses.·':·,<'i'•i.:>,,.
:::·-
.. ,~
1
,_;_
,
.'>·
-
-.
0 ,,

,-·:
••.


pfoud;·
nationalistic
people;
,
,-:,
:i:T,he
statue Rf three·•soldiers
,.
Salvad()ra!1 elections, in ~hich tne
oppressive
·
American-backed
:_unveiled<
at-:' the
,.\'ietnam
outc,o~e ~as pr~determ1_ned and
regimes, etc. El Salvador and
..
tMemorial
last·Friday could have
-P~ftic1pat1on.:
mandato~y-,. was
.
Nicaraguadc;>n't have rice paddies
._.
=been;
iri this·age of'revi~ionism,'a
hailed by Reagan as a tnumph of
thatwould impede the progress of
.
.
.·.
phony depiction of heroes vie-· d~~9cracy.,
~.owev~r,
;
-~h~
American troops; they've got hills
"'-torious>-iri.:
a
noble
cause.
N19ar~guan elecuons, m w~1ch to do that.
_
.
However, all
:credit
goes to the
.
the outc_o~e .\Vas predetermmed
There are three obstacles left
·
<:
veterans
.
who
.'chose·,
the
_:
con-
·
afld partJ.~JPatl_on
man~atory, was
that may delay our sending troops
:

troversial;.
nonstradhional
·
called a
··
Soviet-St
Y
1e sham. In to Nicaragua:. Thanksgiving,
'
I
monuments'
',to
;
represent
the each case, the
.
perc~ntage of.' Christmas and the presidential
United
:states'.
·only
loss in its
.
pee>ple_
w~o voted was higher th an
inauguration. It's not good policy
milit~ry
.history.
..
.
,
th e
.
p~rcentage of l?eople
.
who
to celebrate when people are being
The
·
dedication
.of·
the. statue
voted
m
our own elections.
·
.
shot and mutilated to death. On
comes at a time when the tension
:
The:
Central
. A_mencan
the other hand, the Pentagon may
that heralds an imminent conflict
revoluuo_ns are
_very
simd~r to the
be confident enough in its forces
is upon us
·once
again .. All the revol_ution
in
co~unental
that they would convince the

ingredients
for
.
a
·
sequel
to ~me~ica.
The
colomsts
were
president that an overthrow of the
··Vietnam
are· here:. a third•world
·
fighting
.
England

an~
were
Sandinista government could be
revolution, a Marxist government
support_e~ by France, which hated
.
accomplished quickly and with a
aided by_ the Soviet Union,• CIA
,the·
Bntish
.and
.st00~ as the
minimum
of
pain
between
_
covert operations, warnings that
world's other '!laJor· power. In
Thanksgiving and Christmas. The
the loss of one nation will lead to Salvador, Amen~a plays the role
White House would then get in
.
a series of nations falling over lik~
.
of Engl_and, fe~dmg off a _popular
gear and bombard us with the
·
, ·
dominoes.
:'
· ·
_
·
.
·
.
revolution; w~1le the Soviets play
kin4 of slick propaganda
that
One element·· is-· missing
_
this France. In Nicaragua, the roles
·
won the election and convince us
time: popular. support. Wf; know
are rever~ed.
.
that a defeat of the Communis_ts
·
now that an oppressed people can
.
In their ~esperate attempts . to
would· be like an extra present
overcome shortages of manpower
rally
pubh~ support
for . m-
under· the tree. Remember the
arid firepower
to outwit
the
volvement m Centra! ~mer~ca,
good times we had in Grenada?
mightiest of nations. we,
of
all
the.
Reagan
Admm1stratton_
Well...
·
people, should understand thisf in
·
argues that as S~lvador goes,_ so
light
·of
the triumph of
.farmers
goes
..
our
.nat10nal
secunty.
All it takes now is an incident
.•
over.. tlle greatest military
of
the Yester~ay
·
N!caragua, tomorrow
similar to• the
.
Gulf of :ronkin
.
_
E.ighteenth··-.~ Century:• in·, the
the
.
ann:xat1o_n
..
of
·
Texas by
~ttack 20 years ago. A ship sunk
'
American Revolution.
_,:·
··
Commumsts
msurgents .. Some
m
the harbor, a plane shot from
·
< .
:-
:
·
:
··.
.
..
'
.
.
·,
· ·
·
-:~-
,.,,,.
.
<:,
day, •~·Dallas~•
·.will-.be,.broadcast
~
the sky f1Ild _let the games J:,egi_n.:
, .
,
..
-,.,
,,Jfhere.1s-.,nonetheless
,another.
,
·
·
·
_,
...
·
-•.•.
:-
·
-
·
;··
·
-,_
,
,''
i~cfo.roihat'c:oµid
cor_np~nsaiefoi'
.
,
'-,
.
.
tlie. public· s_kepticism
:;of.
war in
Central. America.· As, in)l964,'
A,.me'rica
.
has
·
overwhelmingly-
appr<>yed an._incumberit president
a11d
·grante,d
him foifr mo~e years
Heaven--on
··Earth
by Lewis Eisenberg
People get so all fired red in the
face about so many things, you'd
almost think they was serious
sometimes. Like when ol' Henry
Ford cranked the first Model-T's
9ff
.
the
assembly
line,
for
example.
Why,
the horseless
carriage was supposed to destroy
.
the American way of life, doritcha
know. Ruin God's earth. Stuff
like that. No kiddin'. You can;
look it up in any good history
book. There were demonstrations
and marches and a lot of soulful
howling.
.
i
A dozen years later everybody
was crazy about cars. lt was the
same thing with football too .. And
the same thing'll happen with
nuclear war, you watch.

See, the real reason behind all
this Freeze fuss is that people
don't like change. Never have and
never will.. Because no matter
what it is -,- a new president or
movin' to a new town .,...-_
change
takes a lot of gettin'used 'to. And
then nine times out of 10,it turns
out to be almost the same thing
you started with anyhow. It's a
_kind
of bad practical joke on the
human race, in a way. Not to
.
mention a colossal waste of time
and energy. And money, too; of
course. That's why folks are all
up in arms about nukes: they
smell changes, and big: ones, and
they rightly don't want to be
made fools of again.
But the· truth is that nuclear
war's more of. a real thing than
Coca-Cola.
Yessir. No way it
can't'- help but change people's
.
lives; maybe even more
..
than
.
;,•.
-
.
.
.
·"':
:
•..
.
football and cars. No kiddin' .
And not in ttie way that all them
doomsayers
and
pinkos
and
worrywarts'd have you believe,
neither. Uh, uh. Real good ways
that'll make your life a better
place to Jive in.
·
Like·havin' a real, nice healthy
tan, for instance. See, one thing
nuclear war'II do is create a whole
lot of radiation; which
is
the
scientific name for the stuff that
comes from the sun and grows
crops and taris people. There
couldn't be no life at all without it
and so it only stands to reason
that the more we got the better.
But that ain't the reason it's
good. The real reason is that this
radiation's
man-made,
which
means its specially designed for
folks like you and me, and you
don't
even
have to go outside
to
get a tan 'cause it works rain or
shine,
even
indoors,
for
everybody, regardless of race,
color, creed, sex or age.
Kind
of
democracy in action.
And, you know, when people
have a nice, healthy glow on their
skin, they almost always feel
better. It's a fact. And when folks
feel better, they almost always act
kinder and do a whole lot less
fightin',
kick in',
screamin',
doublecrossin', backstabbin' and
carryin' on. Sounds crnzy maybe,
but if_ we can just get enough
people all over the world tanned
at the same time, we just might
have ourselves a heaven right here
on earth.
·
It's something
to
·
shoot at
anyway.
i
Lewis Eisenberg teaches a
Fictio~ \Vorksh~p at ~farist.
.. :-of
public service .. Leist week's
election
of.
_Ronald,
.
·
Reagan
.
·
probably
.
was. not an ele¢toral
-:•.
:·mandate
dor.
war,, but Reagan
may think
so.
· '
•.'.
·
, ··:

·,
._
..
·
·
·:·:;
__
He. prorhised
·in··
198_Q
·
that the-_
-:-Un_itecJ
St~te~_would.nplonger l>e
fhe Residence
~al,l.s
wHI c:lose at 1,iloQ' p.m. on Wednesday, November 21, 1984
and-reopen-at
12:00
noon on Sunday, November 25, 1984. The last meal served on
·
-~edriesq~y,-the
21st
will
be·iunch and the first meal served on Sunday the 25th
will be dinner.
·
-
·
- .
·

-
·
.
.
·
.
<
kicked, around by countries·. like_

fran and Libya. J(he
is.
to
keep:
·.
'
I

.
:.that.
promise, and maizitai.ri
·his
.
AH
valuables shouid
be
taken trome during this period. The College is not liable
·•_:friendsliip.witli'Defens¢.se·cretary
for stolen pro
t
.
.
.
¢asp~r,-weinberg~r.
Reaga_n.
will.
'
.
·
.
·
..
__
per
Y ·
.
,
-
.
· .-
:
. have. t9 do'.niore)han_appJogize
,.
.
.

.
-.
.
,
.
·
.
.
.
·
·
1

,fpr:how-to
ina~iial~ th at inform
Th
____
e fol_
lo_.
Wing' are the o_
nly accept_
able rea_s
__
O_·.
ns f_or remaining
o'
n ca·
m' pus dur·,ng
..

·
:
pro-American,~
.guerrj)Jas
__
·.
of the
h
fatestinpsychological
warfare.
.
t
IS
penod:
'
. :
'
'.
'
'. ,·
'
: .
.
.
'
'
:
''Psichologicaf
....
Operations in
_Guerrilla
Warfare'' is a_ beauty of.
a
:'
Miinual.
~
Part
i
instrhctioil-
booklet;
-
part. rieo-Declaradon of
Indeperiderice,
·--:
the'
.:_
manual
:_
d~s.cribes_
the 1<11eutrali:zat_ion"
of
·
government officials,· reminds the
.
reb:els
.that
''even in war, it is.
possible, to smile, laugh
.
or
.
greet
people" and concludes with ari
.
exhortation to move toward "the
realization· of the goals of our
,
movement,
·
which
are:
God,
.
homeland
and
·
democracy."
,.
When Reagan said that the author
:
of
the
primer
·would
·
"be
removed,"
I· wondered
what
methods of removal the govern-
ment would employ,
·
.
·
And
·
now Nicaragua
is im-
porting MiG jetfighters from the
Soviet Union.
·
Well, if a
·
super-
.
power with a histo~y of in-
terfering
~ith
your
national
affairs were trying to overthrow
your country, what wo_uld yoll
do? For some reason, having
American military advisors in El
Salvador and a military school in·
Honduras is perfectly legitimate,
but Nicaragua is supposed. to be
an angel and leave itself without a
military.
Another
double-
standard is the elections in El
1.
Athletic Commitment
2.
·1
riternship/ Employment
3.-Unreasona_ble Distance From Home
Sh:ouidy(?~ belie_ve :that you fall.into one of the above categories,-please co~tact
the Housing Office before November 16th, 1984.
·
No one ~ithout authorization will be permitted to remain on campus.
The last person vacating the room must:
1. Unplug ail outlets
2. Empty all trash
_3.
Close and lock all windows
4. Defrost refrigerator (leave door open) this doesn't apply to the Townhouses or
Off Campus apartments.
·
,
.
FAILURE TO FOLLOW THESE PROCEDURES OR TO LEAVE THE ROOM IN A
CLEAN CONDITION WILL RESULT IN THE LOSS OF PRIORITY POINTS FOR
THE FALL 1985 ROOM SELECTION.
.
.
Have a Safe and Happy Holiday!
Salvador
and Nicaragua.
The
---------------------------------------------------..1

··
1
?_·'"'.·
.
,,
·,
l
I

!
i
4
l
~
l
i
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l



















































q
~ar,e
6-THE CIIJCLE
~
Nov;
1:s/1984 _ _
__
· __
·. _
._
_ _ _
. . ·
·:>:,
-._
.. :--'
. by"BillColemari;
;-:::-'
:·:_\\
, .. ,' . ,, . ,., ..
F.G:TJ-1. 's}'"Two}:
Tribes;:. /,projec't's foch.iding,-motion picture :; . .-·,:•welcome)':-:''ro':··
Tiie'.,';Pieasui:e'
r:f:.,· '.
:
0
r
,:':;;
:·; ':', ·
::i·' ·
·;',_,··\r::'.:
. (.~ .
(great:'· video!)\has-.''solci\ahnost·:~\\voi:k, ·/collabc>ration'· with
.a
new_:.,:·
Domeu includes
.the.
two singles,-·_1
': . .
·.:
:;l,_:t,·
PUTTING. THE PROTEST-IN. ' one-and~a
0
hlaf;miUi6tf singleS: .or:.t·
g
r'o
u_
p
;,::),,,·P:r.e'f
ab
\{{°~pr'
0
u
fr/
'.'Relax,'': ; .·and. }:'T~o ·•::
Tribes'.'. ; ·. •.:.
POP i~.·Seems :,_tci
-the''resurgance \
its
anti-war tra~k.i;/.;:?.'-1
:;_;,i;~ft\'i•
:e/SW9ON>:')i '_'and
~Work:'wnti:,p~\·, ·along·_:
with covers/of. ':'Born- l'o ,: · •
<
i.}
of many. overseas: artists: These>
1,
Dubliri'~' U2'.saju):~ies jt_s_'t,lYricf('.;:furik
sgen~ral; George-Clinfori ,oh,;~·-~un','._\and,
;\'.D<(Yoµ :Kno:,v.
:Th~ .. · .
(:,
messages of heayy''.subject. matter . -with references:that:owelfon;war'{his
nex(albiuni.'/:
'-:;<
..
<·.
(c1,;3;;r:.:..
·:.Way:To SanJose?~t-it/i,),:,
':?,);,; ·_
:, _.;:·
·.'. f
.
are heard·:· mosi,,recently; in t~e . and : :'terroris'.m
~\:Jfr:lr
N~t'itie(h'
:::ji>,·styl<¢?u_hdh· f~f~hcornins Ip .:,
3:'.?t~~
t,:~,\
'1\(/f
t\~pr.t:::c':
\; ..
1
\-
:

latest from Culture Club;.Frank1e

Ireland; The group's current.·
f11t;
· -:
tS'Slated:_to
include'close to twenty •
.. Movies'. tlie game::~_.So
mentioned>· , ..

M'
· ·' • ,
. . ·
Goes To Hollywood; and u2.·
· ·.·
... /'Pride'(ln The Name
of
Love)'' is) tracks:-;_\::'.;·'.
,•::·.:•;,·c,\:~
\:i:/·;,; ··.·
_
..
··
befoi:'.e' o'ordon' Sumner
:Jaik/a ::;::
'·;
·
. U_ S_-
..
1
c ·,·
.
C~lture Club_ rhet~rn~cl t,o th~ : 'aK_
~ribulte t~dthe,,Iallte
Mharti~.-l..uther
:. :
:,:.'',)'Sk~ff;:arid:!~ka,t~;,,t
·
·.
That's·
>:''Sting'.'i'()fd/thle'J~~iiceh•,;~ire~~y,:~::,,,
-:-.
.
, music ·scene Wit 1tsal)t1-war
:
mg. net enta Y,. t. e tit e song
~
'the'narrie' of.various members 'ot: : has feature .-.roes
10:
tree: new/
.
video,
film
Ree-I


"The Wai-'Song;"Just so nobody
of the
·
new·.· Ip, :. ''The. Un-:, 'ttie
'grdiip;\Ma:dness,:and.
ttidr.-':: films,.-:'.!Dune/' : ',',The'., Br_ide/1;_
misses the message, lead singer
forgettable Fire" is a name lifted
friends·
.::_who.:·,,
have• signed '\to
.
and · "Plenty/',
Guitarist, Andy
Boy George recorded the chorus
from a painting
-done,
by_ the , Maditess'.'new,label Zarjaz:'<. ·.
_
._.·
_Summers is hard 'at work writing .
--, "War is stupid, People are
victims ·of,.the
atomic_•bomb,·"
FRANKIE::.sAY<·:_
Frankie:·::a
film inwhich-be'Uact:and'
. stupid" ..,.... in FJench, Spanish,
dropped on Hiroshima. · · '· ,_ .'. -· Goes . To :·Hollywood's
long-
compose
•,;th'e \· music_.· :;,His·
~er~_an, and J_apanese for release-·
HYPE~~ACTIVE! -: Thomas
awaite~·lp is_~-double Ip seHi?g at
continued on page 7 .•
. m each respective country.
, _Dolby· will be busy with future
a · special pnce, The Ip titled,
·
. by Bev;rly Morlang
learned
from · ·. his · p~e".i6us
·
a;~ nbt ~olng to' believe hi~: J.he : chara~l~f~ are _'totally. worthless,
-
,
.
mistakes.
.

. ·
plot moves ponderously on from
even the . supposed hero is so
A
ifew years agp, ..
a ftlm was .
"Body Double" is a revamped~ '. .
.
,
.
swpid that you. begin:.10 hope he
1mpress1ons
released that could not have had version of Hitchcock's
"Rear
there and the _only mystery tojds>
will be 'murdered with
a.
power
better timing, for its director that Windo~.",
Only • the
n'e\1/er why· the·: characters·: .haven't'
·
drill as well.
·
is .. The. film, "Dressed to Kill"
version contains much more gore, . realized '-.yhat:S go!ng to happen
'Yiis declared a murder mys\ery sex and much, less suspense. The
It is,• Jinally, unfortunate
that·.
'Body.
classic and its director, after the·
·· f
k
· .' BriaD' De. Palma. be compared
r_
ecent,
unfortun.ate
death
of storyline-concerns an out-o -wor .· like everyone in the audience did.
.
.
, .
,,
actor who stays at the mountain
within the first f1·ve
minute·s oft he
with . the "master ·'of . suspense; .
Alfred. Hitchcock, was declared
· k
· Hitchcock,
at ·. all. · Hitchcock
Hollywood's·,«new
Hitchcock,"
man·sion
of
an
un nown
movie. ,
Double'
as '1f H1"tch·cock h1·mself cou' Id· be benefactor.
Nightly,
he peers
.
.
. .
d ·
di
· f -- h · , becaine a mast_er by not being
_so
replaced.
_ _
,
I
.
: the
A mttte y,
some
o . t e .
through
a
te escope _at
camera work is fine but on the
heavy-handed.He also didn't feel:.·_ ..
Now, De Palma 's latest of-· ritualistic sex show of a gorgeous
·
· d ·
it was :necessa_ry to c_.·
opy some_one · : , .. __
·:
f ·
· 0 t to
O
whether De
,
·..
·Th
f
. .
b
tly whole,
De
Palma
over oes
.
.
. . ...
enng
IS
u
pr ve
neighbor._.· _e .' un
IS
_a rup.
everything. His moving camera
_else's ideas 'and_ camera' 'angle~- . ·.
Palma has lived up to his previous
ended when the sexy ne1ghbo~ _
1s
_
and his deep focus shot_s become
expectations; and he has. "Body
Double" is as predictable and m.
ur·dere·d
··w·1th.
an ele·
ctr1·c dr"tll
·
bl
d h"
·
·
·
·
·
too noucea e an
ts rotatmg
insipid as the director's earlier and our hero is, of course, the . camera,
during a particularly
film.
It
is also more tragic because·' witness, He , tries to inform the
unbelievable
love
scene,
is
De1: Palma
has obviously not· police_ and w_e_all know.that they __

h"
l
h
·
Th
.
_ . .. , : . . , .
.
. not mg ess t an nauseating.
. e
.
.
.
,-
·.
,
·.
'.
:'
:·.
'.•·
.,
'
which, it seems, De Palma feels
. obligated to_ .do since he cannot
· out-suspense the '.'master" on his
own. -Too bad. someone hasn't
told hiin to try being original. _
This
Week
by
Leslie Weston
students and senior citizens.'
rockabilly: Rosalie Sorrels will be · poetic
vision . of
Napoleon's -
; The Towne Crier Cafe begins
playing Sunday night at-8:30 p,m,
career'' from his schooldays to
Jan Opalach, Baritone, will be
its weekend entertainment with
at the Cafe. She plays traditional
his military tri.m:nphs, of his love
performing tonight at _the College
Sally Rogers and also the'Double
folksongs and one critic says,
affair wilh Josephine, and. of his··
of New Paltz. This renowned , Decker String Band, Friday njglJt
,
"she infused her material with desire to conquer and rule the
· ·vocalist's
progra,m ,Jnclu~es
at ·9:30 p.m; Sally Roger~, per-
gripping
emotional
strength:'' ·. world. ,· The , film uses
!1
three- .
. Schubert's
"Schwanengesang,''. .· forms·
traditional
and- · cori-
She has appeared at the Towne
camera,
three:.screen · process.
Ravel's "Histor_ies Natu.relles, ;;· .. temporary folksongs: and ballads . Crier manv:times.
invented by dance.
Music
. arid
.
.
Debussy's "Fetes_ Galantes II;" .. while playing the guitar, banjo, or
A special 25th anniversary
The college
. •
and three songs by·: Gounod.,, ,1dulciiper, The· Double : Decker
·concert will be held this weekend . · will also.be showing '.'.The Sting"
·
Opalach
has .. performed -·. all ,Stri•ng Band plays· 'the . old~time
at · the' UPAC . in Kingston on· .. this :'."eek
end. Fans shouldn'fmiss
around the world and will be in
'Southern~style
country music of
Saturday and at the Bardavon on
:
Robert Redford
in this film
the Old Main Audito'rium at 8 the. l
9iOs
and 30s-and 'also· mixes.· Sunday. Both . performances. wiH .. Friday at 7:30 p,._m.
and _S1:1nday
at .
. p.m. at the College tonight.
.
, . in some ragtime tunes;_ country . ·begiri · at 8 p;m,· The Hudson · 7 and. 9:30 p.in;~ itf the· Theater:.
.
i.
Student Dance· Concerts_' wm_: blues, .mountain •·.ballads,· ~nd·_·. Valley, Philharmonic
Founding ' Admission is $l•withMarist LD. ·_.·_ .
.
'
dan·ce·''/
also be. held ·a~ New Paltz this
Victorian popular._.
. ._
... _._
._
_ ,
. Director _Claude· Monteux "will '>,.The Marist !26llege Singers-wH!'•-·-
. _ .
weekend •. : ]he), ,.~o.ncer.ts.:.
,~m
..
;.;;,
..
-,:wo:, di(f~re(}t~ per.f or.iners{~Wt . :re\UtA,;t~ -·~~o_nduct,;(
tli~ir.Hudson-,;- :_be~pr~enting'.a
..
(:oUegiale
.Gh~rab;,;,-.,,;:;,,:.:c;.<,,:.~
_ feature, ongmal -choreography by .·; also be playmg on-Saturday. mght\ :valley.;;.;. P-htlharmom<;.,.•
·
The. , ,FesJ1vaJ on•S~turday at 7:30 p.m.
·· .

__
.~ ·
·Thursday
Film: "The Garden
· of the Finz1-Continis"
in Room 245 Donnelly
7:30p.m.
Film
&
Discussion
. on Hung"r ·
in CC269; 5 p.m.
Presentation: "The
Estrangement'of the
Humanilies
· in
· Education:
A Hermeneutical Task"
by ltalo Benin
in Fireside Lounge,
· 7p.m.
·
Jan Opalach, Baritone
at
the College at New
Paltz in the Old Main
Auditorium,
8
p.m.
Exhibits: In
a Stream
of Ink and Heritage
of Greece and Rome at
College at New Platz
Galleries
.·' ~he stud~nts and :faculty: The> at· 9:30 p.m, Patrick Sky i~ a
p~ogram includes /works
by . iri ~fi'e Theatei;(Tnereis
nc~ ad- -
·,. dances include._.ballet;
1
modern ·songwriter ,who ._tdso _.plays
..
__
a.; Berli()z,:.Faure
and .. :HctY~P-.· (!lis~io~feetqt_his_mµsicalevent'.
dance and:jazi. The concerts
"'.ill.:·
variety of traditional instrume1,1ts
.. ·Tickets are$9, $11 and $15. ,
•:
;<·:t
On, Sµnday, ,Campus: Ministry
be held iri the McKenna_ Theater · In addition to Sky will be the
'< .:
Also at the Bardav_on is the film
is ·sp_qnso:r_i.ng-a
cqm:ertfeaturini
at 8 p.m. on Friday and Saturday,
·
contemporary country music of
"Napoleon"·
on . Tuesday .at 7 ·. Bright Morning Star.The concert
and
2:30
p.in.
on . Sunday. Tom Mitchell. His musi<; draws · p.in. This .1927 Fren_~t( filin is
.
wjll be held in·the Theat_er at 2
Generaltickets are $3, and $2 for .
·
from country-western, swi!lg an9
,
director Able Gance's ''sweeping
Friday
Film: "The Sting"
' in the . Thea'1er, 7:30
p.m.
Film: "The Garden of
1he Finzi-Continis"
in Room 245 Donnelly,
7:30p:m.
Ari
show , opening
reception
in Fireside Lounge.
4:30p.m.
25th
Anniversary
Concert
of the Hudson Valley
Philharmonic at UPAC,
8p.m.
Student Dance concens
at the College of
New
Paltz
in
the
McKenna
Theater,
8
p.m.
Double Decker string
band
and also Sally Rogers
al The Towne Crier
Cafe, 9:30 p.m.
Exhibits:
In a Stream
of Ink and Heritage
of Greece and Rome at
College of New Paltz
Galleries
Salurday
Sunday·•
251h Anniversary
Con~erl:
''Bright
-Filip: "State of Siege'' .
in Room 245 Donnelly
7:30p.m;
concert a1 the Bardavon .
Morning Star in t~e
8 p.m. ·
:r11ea1er;2 p.m . . :
StudentDance concerts.
. a11heCollegeofNew
Paltz in the McKenna
Theater,
8
p.m,
Patrick Sky and Tom
Mitchell at the Town
Crier Cafe, 9:3() p.m.
Collegiate Choral
Feslival in the ·
Theater, 7:30 p.m.
Exhibits: In a Stream
oflnk and Heritage
of Greece and Rome al .
College at New Paltz
Galleries
·
Film·: "Th;
Sling" in
C_offeehous~:·fack
the
.
.
·Cohen - co.median
Theat_er ~-
&
9:30 p.m.
Fireside,
8
p.rn.
· Film: "S~are of Siege"
in· Room 245 Donnelly
7:30p.m;
"The Many Moods of
Fashion" opening
reception at the
Mid-Hudson Ans and
Science Cente~, 2-5 p.m.
Student Dance concerts
at
the College at New.
PallZ in the McKenna
'Theater,
8
p.m.
""
Rosalie Sorrels at
The Towne Crier Cafe,
8:30p.m.
Exhibits: In
a
Stream
of Ink and
Heritage
of Greece and Rome at
College at New Paltz
Galleries
-· Exhibits:
In
a
Stream .
of Ink and Heritage .
of Greece a_nd
Rome at
· . College at New Paltz
--Galleries
.i
:,
Exhibits:
In
a
Stream
·
of Ink" and Heritage
of Greece and Rome at
College at NewPahz
Galleries























































:t:Fs~~r~t~i~:,\tlhi~etsi
ti ·
;t
V@t1atn1,:er<
Si!lgerS>'
"
•'
'
• J
,·,•.
I
ditec~_~d
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C,oy~~~~~x-well --
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l
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i
. 7;39.1).m:
-s·atuiday
N:ov.<·17
The
--.Theatre
· spo·Qsored
by
the·
Mar/st College Singers
ROOSEVEl-T
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Rte. 9, Hyde Park CA9-2000
_ACRES OF FREE PARKING
.
-- _-.-VISIT OUR.
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7:25
~
9:30
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·
Come in a11d
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Poughkeepsie Yarn Center
__
343 Main Mall
..
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.
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With
Marist
I.D.
471-4~49 -
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'
Serving
Marist
Since
1975
C
Ttil:- CUlTl:l?.,,
)
C'.t1!'le
visit
7
!.e Cu:cery,
where
we'11e
be.en
setting hair
curring
trends far over
ten :,ears.
For men, women
and
children,
it's
The
Curcery
far
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hair sc,ling, shampoo, •
conditioning,
perms,
body_
wa'-'l?S,
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Stop
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ar
914-4.54-9239
....
.,
..
Nov._
15,
1984 • THE CIRCLE·
Page
7 __
Barring none
·..
,·•
.
.
,:
'
'
'
.•'.·
and Cookie, who has a glass eye
once-weekly crowd.
, ,:;, :- : . ,', -
and likes to pop it out after he's
"So then it's your own fault,"
··· Those of; us who -insist on
had ·a. (ew too many. Also a
said my colleague and occasional
idealistic visions oflife often feel
'!regular,"
I often would buy a
drinking
companion
Milo,
put 'out _ by the world's many·_ rourid for the boys or, after a · discussing the problem on the
. inconveniences. Perhaps this has
hard day, would get one "on the
phone. "Let's go out drinking
something to do'with why.I have
house."
.
tonight."
-· never felt
·very
much at. home in
, The bartender ..:....
Skip, perhaps
: "What for?"
bars. ·
.
·
-
would be a combination of
"If
you have to ask what for
During · my _ pre-legal period,
Mark Twain, Sigmund Freud,
then there's no sense in going."
bars were romantic places. Or, · Henry
-Thoreau
and
Larry
"Fine," I said, and hung up.
rather, they seemed like romantic
Csonka. He would reason with , Milo is part of the five-or six-
'places,
because
my _own . ex-
the occasional surly brute who · times-weekly crowd, and knows
perience · with
them
was · by
disrupts things, calling a taxi for
his way around almost too well.
If
· necessity limited to those that
the cad and settling matters with
I were to attack the local bar
~idn't much care whom they let
the wisdom of solomon. And if
scene;
I
reasoned, better to do it
in.
that didn't work, he wouldn't be
gradually and without someone
. Then, just getting inside was an
averse to vaulting the bar waving
like Milo, who was in fact banned
adventure. I would stride up to
a nightstick and tossing the bum
from
two places
because of
the doorman and act surprised at
out on his ear.
separate
incidents
both
being challenged.lWith a flourish,
Skip would call me "Johnny" • reportedly
involving
airborne
I'd produce the evidence required
and know what I wanted when
I
barstools
and
some
sort
of
-
credentials once belonging to a
asked for "the usual." He would
chemical weapon he gets through
friend's 22-year-old cousin.
know the batting averages of
the mail from Mexico .
· "You're
Aldo
DiSantino?
every player in the major leagues,
A little less than an hour 'later,
Sounds Italian to me."
past and present, as well as any . there was a knock on my door. It
"That's 'a right," I would say,
professional football statistics as ._ was Milo.
"Are
you ready?
trying to look both impatient and
might be needed to settle an
You're not ready. Come on, get
a
little
Jess
Scandinavian.
argument.
· dressed. I'm going to give you the
"What's 'a de problem?"
And there would, I envisioned,
tour."
It was easy, putting up with
be plenty ·of those at Bronco's.
"I
don't know, Milo ... "
those little indignities, because I
We'd discuss_ politics, women,
"Whattaya
mean you don't
felt
sure there were better days,
sports,
current
affairs
(Stan's
know. After tonight, you'll be an
better bars ahead. Envisioning rny affair with his secretary, etc.)
authority on all the best spots in
taverned future, I saw a little
and, well into the morning hours,
town."
place named_ "Bronco's,"
or
the meaning of. life and whether
"Such as the police station?
something. similarly appropriate.
the- Declaration of Independence
Wouldn't it be better if
I
was here
Women would be welcome at
really meant·women, too, when it
to come down and bail you out
Bronco's, but would never want
said "all m'en are created equal."
like usual?"
.
to come.
Tip~y sort of intellectual stuff.
"Oh I sec,/ you're trying to be
There would be lots of wood
"Set/'em
up,"
I'd say, and
funny. Look, I'm an expert about
'(my preference being mahogany,
we'd drink until dawn. ·
this.
I
won't take no for an an-
though any rich, solid grain will
That's not how it is, and a
swer, so get dressed and we'll
-
do) set off by brass t_rim and
survey of the local bars will bear
go."
railings.
It
would be dark. Lazy
m~ out on this. Of course, it may
He didn't take no for an an-
ceiling fans would slowly cut the
be that I've given up too easily.
swer, either. We went. We saw.
haze of cigar smoke.that gives ihe, When _it comes to nights .out bar-
We almost conquered._That story
place its murky atmosphere, - ·
/. hopping, I confess exclusion from
will have to wait.
Thesame·crowd
would be by· the twice-or thrice-weekly crowd.
Next time: Passing the bar
eve~y -~i~ht: Rocco~- Stan, Lty
·
Often, I am not even part of _the exam -
nightlife nirvana. -
.·Sound_
.....
_~:--<·
.......
__
."""".-,-----------_,-. ----------------
continued_ frorri
page'
6
begi~· rehedr;als ,, in -December.
/RECOMMENDED VINYL:
description of the film claims a.
Waits' fans will remember his last
Torch Song - "Wish Thing"
"; .. cross between. 'Raiders of the
soundtrack
for
·
Francis
Ford
·
Prefab Sprout- "Swoon"
Lost ·. Ark'
and
'Arthur'."
.
Coppola's
"One
From
The · Depeche Mode - "Some Great
D_
rummer Stewart Copeland will
. Heart"
,
· Reward"
Fred Schneider's new Ip, "Fred
Ministry-
"All
Day"
be producing a film scfin Africa.
Mick_
Jagger may' possibly be
Schneider and the Shake Society"
"Everyday
(ls
Halloween)"
'is an Ip to listen for. Schneider is
"Import 12"
starring with Orson Welles in
"Satan and Eve." Welles would
the
male
voice
from
"The
O.M.D. · "Junk Culture"
play God,andMick _ the devil._
ultimate party band,"
The B-
Vanity - "Wild Animal"
· Also caugh_
t in the act is British
'52's. This Ip is
a
highly danceable
Malcolm McLaren -
·
·
record featur·1ng th·e· 11·kes of
. "Madam Butt_erfly" "12"
v o
cal i s t ,
N
i
k · ·
K
e
rs
h
a
w
•('.'Woul_-_dri't
h
Be Good") who is
fellow '52'er, Kate Pierson, along
The Ramones -
with Steve Scales and Bernie
"Too Tough to Die"
·_contemplating
several role offers. _
,: STRAlGHT--c FROM
THE
Worrell who recently toured with
Alphaville- "Forever Yours"
·•HEART _ Tom Waits
will
be
the Talking Heads.
XTC- "The Big Express"
working on a· Broadway show
"United States Live" will also
*
Frankie says - Every Wed-
called "Frank's
Wild Years"
be a new release from personal;
nesday night, dance to the best
·
favorite,
Laurie
Anderson.
new, alternative music in the area
based on a · song from his Ip,
''Swordfish· Trombone."
Waits
"Live" will be a specially priced
with D.J.,
Bill
Coleman,
at
\Viii
be writing both the book and
5-lp. set including all of Ms.
Bertie's, 9-1 l Liberty Street (on
the music for the show which will
Anderson's
work prior to her
the Main Mall): .for further in-
latest, "Mister Heartbreak."
formation call 452-3378 .
.
Core-·--------------
continued from page
1
requirements.
Under
the new
proposal, the number would be 45·
to 48, although students· would be
allowed to use the same courses to
satisfy both CORE requirements
and relate_d-fields requirements in
their majors.
· In addition, ·students would no.
longer
be
required
to· take
specifically
designated
CORE
· courses -
for example,
the
Meaning of flistory -
to
fill
the
requirement in a given area. Any
course in the area would satisfy
the CORE requirement. ·
Sponsor-5 said the new CORE
would distribute the requirements
throughout
the student's
four
years at Marist. At present, a
student can conceivably complete
the CORE in the freshman year.
Under the new program,
the
CORE would come to its fruition
in the student's senior year with
the capping course, according to
Robert
Lewis,
an
assistant
professor
of
English
and
a
member of the AAC
AAC would also like to see the
program increasing the number of
full-time faculty staffing CORE
courses, said Lewis.
Science of Man students would
not be exempt from the new
program as they are from the·
current CORE, but the Science
of
Man sequence would remain in
place, Lewis said.
Lewis sees the proposed ne,v
requirements
as
a
more
traditional approach to general
education.
"This
is not
in-
. novative at all," Lewis said. "but
ir is this unspectacular
well-
. rounded education
which
will
'bring more prestige ultimately to
Marist, as it has to other in-
stitutions
with
a
similar
philosophy.''
He called the proposal
"a
compromise document which is
marketable, yet provides students
with a better education."
.Psychology
conj ere nee on tap
by
Dan
Hutto
The Psychology Club is holding
the
annual
Psychology
Undergraduate Research Con-
·ference, or PURC convention on
Nov. 30 at Marist-to help high
school
students
learn about
careers in psychology.
The conference
will be
held
from 9 a.in. to 2:30 p.m. and will
include films, student papers, an
experimental
Jab,
and
guest
speakers. The "What's My Line"
segment
of the conference
is an
inter-personal
question
and
answer period in which students
· and professionals explain what
they do.
"It
not only helps students find
out about careers in psych; but it
helps the college's reputation as
well," said Lisa Krum, club presi-
dent.
Krum explained that one of the
club's goals was to become more
active and to build a good reputa-
tion.
·,
'
,







































































































































































































































































n:~1
.
·.
·}
✓·.
·f,
,.
--•P•g•8-THJ~CIRCLE.-Nor.15,1N4
.
.
...
1
---

FfitUre
::stUdents'ga'/flfiQ/li/ifl'g"i;'.;;:,·,
...
,
.,.
, ..
f~l'
eonege/of·:inett
Chbf¢~:t.,:);-~;}
·_
.•
~.-
..
-~·_,::·~·-~
•.
-·.,
;-:~·:
:'-,'
•.:~---,"··:•-;;._
~:·---:·
.•
1---~··•;"",..-.;_'.-_'._:"
..
. by Amie Rhodes
·
·!
.

·
·

·
Jolleges·
fo
,:iri~et
area
s.~~ents,
_.
prograril~ aie"\o; irilp:6h~iii, lt'.s
/
. according'
.
'to' :,
Bilr'. Anaerson;
an
.
invaluable
informational
'.
The pressure of the cro"'.d was
'director·
of graduate'ad,missions at
::'restiurce
·bothf
!)('
~he co,Heg!!s.and
,'..
, ..
.,
unbearable, yet still more tried
co
·
Marist. He added; '.'Many" kids in
·
for the kids," said Fitzgerald.
·
.
·
force themselves through the door
the·
_Hudson
Valley tend, to
.·be
>'
·
Paul Belliveau;:a Marisdunioi-:>
oftheMcCannCenter,
·.:
.
:·collegebound.They'alsotendto
:''who
watworkingJor
th~:_ad-,,
...
·.·
Somewhere
in·
-the
middle,
..
be very computer-oriented due to·
..
mfasions'ioffice at the fair,
.said,_:.
-
.·.
••··.•••
'' ' l!UCA~~NA~
,
'
,•'.{>
'
Angela Van Cleef,
11;·stood
theinfluenceofll3M."
.
·,
·
\."The:•,college
fai(is''gocid.ex-·.
talking quietly to her mother.
Kim Yes.sand Kristiz:t Sh~rrr,ian,
:
posure:
·
J(
gets both· the
..
com-
..
,
.
Despite the discomfort, there was.· seniors·
.from
..
New. Paltz
.High
·,
munity'
'and
other colleges in-
:
• .
1•

CENTER
.
.
11 •
a
sense
.of
excitement in the air as School, said. that
'tii'ey
had. come·
'.
volvea \vitfi'Marist'."
·He
said
that
Angela, along
·
with about· 500
to the·
fair·
because they had no
:
his job there was to Thake·
,sure
,iother
'high
.
-school
students,
idea where 'they.wanted, to go to·: t.hat
'e'>'.e~yihing
rap:si:hoothly and
,
anxiously awaited· the opening_ of . college. They. added tha.t every·
'
to·
poiht
kids
·in··
the right
'direc-
,ihe
gym doors.
·
..
senior in their school had gotten a· tion' .
.-·.
·
·
:
: ,
·
Inside,
.
more
.
than
150 ad-:
,
notice advertising; the . fair, and
.
.
··
Belliveau explained
·that
even
missions counselors from colleges
,
that. many of their_ fnends. and
,.
more colleges
}ia.d
~~nted
.tobe
all O\_'.er
the east coast hurriedly
teachers wer~ attendmg as welL
.repres~nteq ;a!
..
t.h~
.fair,.
but that
·
.
set up booths,
for this
;was
.

.K~thY.
-
~Hzgerald,
i
.an
ad:
,
there ~as
Slll!J>lY,
·:not.
-eno~gh
..
_::;
c'rEST.
PREPARATION
SPECIALISTS
SINCE 1938
.

..
.
Call
D~ys:
E~es
&
Weekerids
/·'
.
.
,
; ;
~
C
._._J,
._

••
.
,
:.,
, '<:
: : ,.:-'
948-78.0l
: :. ::'.\:
,>.
'·Poughke'epsie~·c1a~ses
For.'t1te·
..
::_·Ja~µazy_.Ex~m.
Fpr~g'.No~
· .'
Perm~nenl
Cenl~;;
in'Mo,e
Th1~
120
M1jo;
U.S.
Cilies·
&
A.broad·.
For inlormalion
about
olhercenlers
·
.
.
·'
•· ·
'
. ,
,OUTSIDE
N. Y. STATE
CALL
TOLL
FREE
80D-223-1782
,
.
In ~ew York
State:
Sta~iey
H Kaplan
Educational
Center
Lid.·:
.
.
Marist's
annual
College ;Fair,
·'
m1ss1.ons counselor for A9elph1
.
roo~.
There _art: peoplt: parkmg
which was held last Wednesday·, University, sai~ she thinks _that over. at ~anst
-East ~nd the
.
._ _________________________
..
evening from 7:30 10 9:30.
'the
colleg~ fair program, 1s a
Dutchess;· Bank,
.
and. we· are
·
•---•--•----•■
..--
.............
111!11---•

·
·
great expenence for the students.·· transporung
·.
them
·•
by
:
shuttle
,
. .
c -

.
Van
Cleef,
a
senior
at
She explained that from mid-
buses,t'hesaid:Headdedthatas
·
.
,
:
'
·.
-··
·
\
-
: ,.··
•.
,::
Roosevelt High School; said that
September to midsDecember each
many as
·.2,000
students'. were·
.
.
..
,,
she was very excited to be there.
'
year, admissions counselors are
✓•
expected.to attend.
.
.
.
"
.
·
.-.-.;...
,
'...,,
"I
came last year with my sister
very busy travelling to colleges
On her way out of the McCann
and that's how
.she
found out
and high schools all over the. Center, Joan Fall, a senior at.New
about where.she
·wanted 'to
go.
I\
country in. attempts
to recruit

Paltz High School, said tha.t she
:
Want to be a dance major so
I
1
·students.
· .
.
..
.
.
was glad she- had come.
''l
got-
came to compare.colleges and see
"In the past.five to.six.years,
some
•good
information
<about
which had the best program."
colleges have
·gotten
much. more. some of the schools," she. said.
iThe
purpose of the college fair
sophisticated
with
their
·
"And anyhow;
.it'.s
better· than
is: for. representatives
from
marketing, w,ttich is why these
doing homework!"•
Expeit
-to.
talk·-
on le.en
·suicide
UNISEX:HAIRCUTTING t'or.GU,YS-GA.LS
~
.
'
-=-
complete
line
of products
..•
.
Mon.-Thurs. 12:30-6; Fri..
&
Sat.
9-6
·
.
by
Dorrie Gagas
Christie, education coordinator at
tempt
·
has, failed,
the person

~--;;_..;
____
.;.;1·
r-----------,
·
·
·
·
··
·
··
the· Mental Health Association,'
usually agrees that living is much
..
SHAMPOO,• CUT
·1
l<:
BODY
.PERM'.:·
1
.
TheMentalHealthAssociation
therateofadolescentsuicidehas
better,''saidChristie.
'
.
I.&
BLOW STYLE
r,·,':WITH
CUTJ;
I
in Dutchess County, The Dut-
increased300percentoverthelast
"It
usually happens to people
•..
·
.
·.
$5·
·.:
· ·

..
·:
··
· ·
.
$1·7.
f
chess;County Guidance. Associa-
30 years, making
·it
the second
who dO welUii school, who ar.e
.
I
-;
Reg.
1
8.00

-
·
. ·
I.
I.Reg.
__
s30:oo.
·•
..
<· ·,
....
:
•.••
·
·
'
d th Ma ·s·t College Ad
·1
d"
.-
·
..
f d
h
·
·
.
'--------.-----I.ii-.-----
..
-.~~.·-.----~
...
····
uon !in
e
rJ
·
.
-
ea. mg
:cause··
0
:
eat
.
among
finanj::ially weHoffand who have
:
-
missions Office will sponsor a. young people.
·
. ";
,
·
outgoing personalities,"
Christie
.
Foil Highlighting .. .-
-_.:
.·>
..
:_.
~·.
;
·.
~--··
:_$1·s.oo.
two-part··
_progral11
.t~day
on--., In
1983,
,
6,000
·
to.
,10,000 .
said.
_
.
.
·
·
, ·.
:
·
Foil Frosting . ... ; ...
,•
...
-,.
·: .... .'
/>:':
;.-<
..
s2~;.oo
Adoles.cent
Depre·ss1on

and
adolescents committed suicide ria-
·
..
·
'.
',·
·::'·
·
·,. .
.
.
.
,
·
·
·
·
·
·
··
·
·
"·
·
,
...
•.,·
···
·
·
· ·
·'·
,
__
,
·
·
··
Suicide
.
in the Marist College
tionwide ..
·.:New·:.
York
..
state
..
·
..
S~e ~a1.d
:tha~
$13:g~b:un ~eels··•
.
Longer or
tinted
hair'inay
require adtl.:ctiarge·::"::·
';/
::,:
:.,
. Theatre.
.
..
,
·: •..
.:
.·.;
:
·'.
.-
•:
reported 94 adolescent s~icides(
,there
.8:re
de_ftri!t~ w~~mng ~l~ns.:
_-
49
Ac~deniy
st:
Pok.
486-98&fc:~11·
orW~lk'.ln.:}.:.::/.·/:':.
'
;
.
·.
Sa~~~i
;
. .:
Kla~~brtiri,
:-
.
;~edkal
.:·
Fqr
every,~uccessful
·att~mpt;-5o
.:
a~h~~~~e~ts,
:.~k~Sld~,rl?gth.
s~ipde
.\
..
··-----·-·'
•··
•.•
_.,_i,
.....
·
.·,
•.•.
·•
•..
·:
•..
·

.-·
.•
._,,_·,:.:
:-.;.·;;;.,.··.·.:·
....
'':'·i
._._.:,.•i
•.
,._,,·
.•
•::,_-
...
_,
__
.,.,,_
.
.,_:_·c,C.·,,_.,._r~_
......
:_,.-
.
\iiredoi-.
·Et~.·
Fo'ur\vj·n·
'cis"tiospi.
ia.l
..
,, to.100 atteinptsfa.ikd.k,,:-';.\·_,,
·(_.:,
·
..
-,}nd.
,.s·
t;
..
~~
....
,,-1,fd,~O~]nh,&,
! ..
,
·
...
~.,.~h,1g
..
nls
...
·.·,
{,
..
'
.,
·

....

•.
··
. .
.
.
"M
·
...
1
·.
.
.•.
an .ac11.nowe gmg.t em can
ep,,.pa~!llili1111•11■11111iiiii
111111
aiiii.lilllllliili11■11111i-.
11111
i..llliii1■11■11._ii■
1111
iliil•
in Katonah, ~.Y;; will, be the,::
..
doreb·young· woJ11en:attemlplt·;:"preverits1.iicides/':saidChtis:tie ..
>
guest speaker. Klagsbrun is· also SUICI e,
·
..
Ut
;more._m_en.
ac_tua_y
',.
·Accotding_to.severaI:pamphlets
;,:
'
··---•.,,,
.•
,,
..
,,,.,.,
the medical
·
consultant

to the
succeed, said C:h~isue. She said
available at the Mental
.
Health
,,:,.
.
o·.
vA·.
.
N
....
·c
cto'
....
;.
:·R·

··~:~.
,'.
.
Committee on Sudden".'-,dolescent

th e reason for. this·is. bec~use m_en
:
Associitipn
0,:jibrary~
.
warning~.·
. ·.·
·
..
:,·
.
:
. ·.
·
... ·
.. _

.
··a;;;.
'
..
-·~


...
·.·u.
·::_•
.•.
Death. i.n Westchester
County,
.
~eem_
to use meth ~ds such as-d~iv~

signs irichide
.an
actuaCsuicide
...
N.
y .-,
and is a renowned_e~pert on mg mto some th mg . or
'shooung
·,
'threa:t;
a pteyious s11cipfde
attempt,
,::
a_dplescent death
·and
smc1de. ~he.·· th emselves. T_~e SllrVl~~l rates for
..
'depressipn,
f!J?nges.·in
.be~avior
.··
...•
(1rsr part of the program, geared
_
th :~e meth0 ds 15 lc>w
·
···.·.
·
.'
·-
·.·.
·.
·
'.
and
.
arrangeinerits
for
..
a final
··
toward
·teachers,··
·,guidance
·,.
In 75 percen~ ofsu1c1de~, the
.
departure.
.
....
.
counselors; and school and men-
person has, actually · m~n}!on~d., .

.
.
.
.
·.
.
...
;
.
,
tal health professionals, will be that. h~ or she
,wants
to die, said
.
The Men.ta! Health_ Assoc1auon
held fro·m 3-5 p.m.1 The second
Chnst!e· ''That's why wesh<?uld
·
~as an. array of rn~ter1alsconcfrn~
,
-
.
part of the program is open
to
the be tak~n~ me~sures to prevent It...
mg SUICld~. They also have.,films
.•
public and will be held frorri 7-9
.
CJ:inst!e said ."?any young peos
on the subJect that are shown fre_1:
,
m Both
ro rams are free
.of
pie consider suicide because they
.
of charge.,·.
.
.'·
,.
.
:..
.
,
..
~ha;ge
.
P g
·
don't understand thatthe ~epress-
.
. "A
su1C1<:{e
·;
tQreat
..
should
:,,
·
ed period they. are experiencing
,
.
always be taken seriously: arid is
~
·
According
to
Eliza'beth
will: pass. "When a suicide at-
.
direct cry for help," said Christie:
·
Letters-:----------··
__
:.>:_,·:\:,._-:~:--------~~~
..
Study
day
ne~ded.
need~d f~r: ~ur voic~ as· a g~·oup t~
..
administration wants higher Q~is
be
.
heard.
Please
show. your·
from the. student body,
·as
the
support and·exert your power as a
minimum
requirement
for· the
Mariststudent.
·
·
Dean's· List has
.
recently bee.n
Dear Editor:
1
.
As every semester dfaws to a
-
close,
.students
face the inevitable
t
h e
_
dread e·d
:
,
fi
n a I •
·
examinations.
These
·e;icams
are
many times make or break for a
student'.s

:·cumulative.
j
average. ·
There is·a need for a day between
classes and. finals tQ regroup and·
Suzann Ryan
raised. I feel that this extra study
President,· Class. of 1987
·
time will prove most valuable.
t
.
• .
prepare for finals and going home
as well as the end of the semester.
The Class of 1987 requests
that
the
administration
of
Marist
College
fulfil(
this
need
by
allowing a day between the end of
classes
.and
the first day of
examinations.
We are taking the initiative to
change
the
present
academic
policy to one that benefits
.
the
needs
of the students
of the
Marist community.
We would
like to take this opportunity to
invite all the members of the
Marist community
to help us
implement this policy change by
signing our petitions that are
available
throughout
campus
(Donnelly lobby, cafeteria and
the commuter lounge). Your help
and
participation
are
greatly
•.Finals
•-'
...

Dear Editor::
.
~'
Si_iic~rely,
.
Christine H: Klein
Classof'87
Looking at this year's calendar,
. -
I noticed that finals
.
begin. on
·
Thursday, December 13. Unlike
the Midterms in October, this
leaves the student body without
even one day between classes and
tests.
II was difficult enough at
mids for one to adjust to which
·
classes had what
tests when.
I
am
assuming
that
in·
December we
will
continue with
chc
finals schedule of three test
'periods
a day. This makes my
point all the more important.
With one day off in between,
students will be
·
able to better
prepare for. the l)Os~ible three
finals the follo\\ing day.
Everyone wants to do
wen· on
finals. With one extra day and
two nights before
finals, the
possibility for doing better is
increased. It
is obvious that the
Dear Seniors and
Graduating Master's Candidates:
Do you plan to graduate in
January, May or August, 1985? If
so, make su·re your name is on the
Registrar's
list
of
.
potential
gradual~
·(posted
outside
the
Registrar's Office).
Have
you
turned
in your
Application
for
Graduation?
Absolute
deadline
for
May
graduation is Dec. 7.
To insure that important in-
formation reaches you, make sure
that your LOCAL ADDRf.SS
·
during the Spring '85 semester is
on file with us.
The Registrar's Office
:·,"··.Al.I
Re~id;~f~t
..
udt~t;La:r;{~q~if~1i{J
IJ:ldn;
·.
firm thei.r
·College.
Housin·g with a
$75.oo·
.'
Non-Refundable
deposit
'.
,_..,:.;:
_·.
.
.
'
'
.
,,
·-~~.\-~-J~f-~'·f:.-i;·._\.:·
i~-)>:_~-
.:-.:~_}.-
~~--;.-}
..
~_}.-·(}t·
<..
,
..
,/
...
<The
deposit
~and
a co,mpleted
Re>o.m
.Recon~
firmatioo Card
are
due in the
Business Ofl
:
fice
prior to December:
3,
..
1984.'
;:
•.,
·
..
·
· .···
If
yo4
.~iJ~:
jl<>t
.req~jrE~·~Coli~g~:~6,usiqg
for:'
the·SpJ[ng
J9~5
se'rnester, fill out the Roonf·
Reconfirmation
>·ca.rd;
·
accoidingly
and
return it to the Housing· Office.;:
.
'
.

--~
.
--
...
,
~
.
'.
.
·._
.
.
'.
.
.
Non.;Resident
students· Wh_o
are interested'·
in securing College Housing for the Spring
1985
·semester
mu.st
fill
out a Room Re-
quest Form in the• Housing Office, room
271, Campus Ce("!~er.
After December 3,
.1984
all
unfirmed rooms
will
be considered vacant.
If you have any questions or concerns,
.
please contact the Housing Office.























































































































































• ',~
' . ·- -· . ·, ' .. ':,.:...··
> -; ) _.'..
-',
.-:
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·i~.;.·
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'
Ji,
..
,)~;;:~):'~'~;L:;.;;.:.~Fi;;.,:,..i,..;,~
;•/;;
;:.,~;),:··~;:~;-~;
,;.~:!i:-.::,•:-,::~;>.,::.:..:~.;~~.'.",
;.i.:-,;~.~o·,._.,.-'!~·
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tlov.15,
1984
~
YHE
CIRCLE·
Page':
{~-
;l~J1;;1,lli/fl(!lt'leTOttlili/lif{JiJt'tlii':Coin/lUier
G:
ent'er
:;:':_\\\
i~it~fit}~\/;.
·>·/''-::/
,.'.'.\~~-
:.i?
·:
..
•.:>·;~'.'•'•'
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·: :
'F,' · · -. ·'
' ·; . . . . · ··
..
~·::
·,\_
·:
·>/ ~·
..
bY,JJ~""'~azelt~n
.: ;,'.\:·:::: ,~
.'::
~
: ~-. ·
.Computef'; Center1s·.;,f,1ecretai-y
;. ·· the studepts is ·to provide the the
doing of things," Denney said,
said. The problems that Denney
.,:.
·:.~'.·:J:
~.~i~ff.,;:·~:i:~~.\,r:•i:.ir-~,t'3:;'.:,:s.:.;/-;
i,J,;1:
/<?a~~.B~~nke:.~~
;'..,1_~~':ir,f
~): .. ·:1 ..
sqft~are · ·:.
µeeded.
t~ ..
use · t~e . "then it's very easy to not have . faces do not become a burden for
: ..
•·
.. ', , .. :' :''.'
. ..r~~a~~gent~~t~,
.}~:,:-n~t . f~~k~--~~,
D~nney, · :·w.h~-: .e~(ned ': ~is· ..
:~y~t~~--.: ·
0
••
:,

..

.
•.
,.
time to manage. But .if you _h~ve him. "They show up as exciting
( : '-','_',
:- ._
!iif~ !•?~;,ap,d_
~i~.,s
,~<>~
1.•~t;~~llmg,
,i:ma~t~r{s:'.degree i~·-·
mat~e111a~1cs:f
· ..
,
1~:.
f~r. co~p_ut~r .. ~aragement. ·. been the ,~o~r,,, he added, '. 'wh!ch
challenges to solve,'' he said.
;·.
,,~ut.i•hs~I.ik~,,~~hf,.Waj\,~ fQa_c~ • fro~/Kansas
State·:Umvers1ty;
•~or .·the administration,
Denney
!·have been most of my hfe, it's
Denney,
a
Poughkeepsie
· :,::;
~
-rel~t~,to.1a.,t.catnt§.?.:·~hayLd~·
'said/co'mputer :mariagemerit at. said; • '.'We
are.
basically
hard
to
let things occur.without
resident, with his wife and two
,.-here )s;,_~?i,}:o~~~Qtr~te.-
0~
1
the,~ Maflst::;jnvolves ·, a variety of · responsible across the board." . being ... the person who does the sons; applies this concept to his
, : -: }. ·,,,)'\;h<>,le_.!1S.~«:!-,ofso~~~~1!8}~>'''
"~~;<
respoiisil?,ilities. His job,he said,· ·· His.'staff writes the code, consults
doing."
own
life
as
well.
"When
:;·,
·:
:,: ';" i~jJ)l).e:.~n:.atmo,st 1magme Cecil;· is· to ensure thaFthe . computer··
with• administrators; and designs
something shows. up in life as a
·,
\,

...
-;, ..
,E:p~
11
n~y;,~ir~tof:~t th~ ~a~ist: · serves
tw~.
functions: to· support· the_ system to. meet. their needs.
Denney explained t~at he has
breakdown," Denney said, "one
·.~ompu~er., F~ntefrc'.f,~earmg · a the· academic :pfogram, . and to · "Basically, we have written all the ··faith in the abilities of the
l 6 . has the same opportunity to show
: s,~e.aJshi~t.~ith the wor~::_'.c<?ach''..
support administrative functions.
computer programs. for all the professionals
on · his staff to· it as a breakthrough. One doesn't
/Pr!n~e.~
°'
1111
,.~~~~~?f'~;t~•,l.~red
· ·'
J'.
!,(:
·
:-
·.::,
•;
.:•
, .
offices
cm'
campus,"
he said,
handle the technical aspects of
grow out of everything working
t1:1it._.':,::;·:·
'/' ·;/
;·/:'::'-
'' ·
·
·:> · '.'·
-:~:
:•
__
He- is;-~l~o :_responsible .~or a: •Hand' we have been responsible · computer management. He said,
out. Th'e stimulation in life. ac-
·c,rQn,~i.s.teamr~v~,ryone feelsh_!c~ :,t~ird gro~ppfus~rs
at. Manst -
. : for•having them interconnect (to "My job in supporting them is to
tually shows up in the break-
. a st11r. pl~yer'.<· He~e.;Jat, th.e. exte,r.naL:, users , such . as.·' ·the
transfer data from one base to · handle ·the . other communities
downs.".
SoTpt\~e~/.Gente.r)·
I
~
,treated·: Preventive Medicine Institute and
another)." .
(students
and
administration),
·
:J1kc:?:c1r
pers~n ,and-d\ot. :just a ··tlie ~ollup : Study;. a cancer ··
· ·
whose considerations
are .not
Denney tries to set an example
,, ,,srude11t,'' saicl:LaureeriAlleh;
a re.~earch::project, both·.or New
r:ienney admits, however, that
related-
to
the
technical
with his attitude. "Theexciiement
Junior at-MarisL'
•>·:•,
><~,;;'_,,-:.-:/'.
:C.York · City .. · Denney
secures
management can create a conflict
feasibilty:"
that I have is affecting a lot of
:· .. '/'fies,.
concerned; wit_h ; ~on~ · computer availabi~ity for all three - for him at times. Sometimes it's
Denney has a positive ;outlook
other people," he said, "which as
~ditions: of satisfaction, for every; groups;
·
hard to be. the coach and not a regarding his "team" and his job.
a manager and coach I try to do.
'. t:r_nplpy~~.
''.. comme~tecJ ; the_ ..
,
.
DemieY'.s' primary concern for · player.
"If
one gets caught in the · "l 'm very excited to be here," he
It's fun."
•.,
!•MafiStjuniOf-'pusheSthe •distance'

..... · ' . . .. ..
..
.
-'-. ··-... ,·, i . . ' . . .. . .
. .
. .
.
by
Joe Didziulis .
Maristi where he received much workout and a 20 miler at a pretty
The marathon's
winner Bill
· ··-
, . .
encourgament from coach Robert
good pace, and then
I'll taper."
Scholl, who normally finishes
-'.: ::Air'amateur is not, as current
Mayerhoffer,
Marist's
former.
As for the marathon itself,
marathons at about 2:15, finished
popular usage . would have
-it~ a
_cross country coach. ..
Colaizzo·said that the drudgery is
with a time of 2:30. "The only
;second-rate
,competitor.
:.An,
"When I came here,
I'
came similar to that of any other
good thing
I
see coming out of
.amateur: is someone• who does
with the attitude that I wasn't fit competition. However, he adds:
this is that
I
now .know that,
· somethingfor the fove.6fit.
to be a Division I runner. But "The one thing I enjoy at the
barring any major catastrophe,
I
'Pete Colaizzo is an amateur.,
Coach Mayerhoffer treated. me beginning
is : the relaxed at-
can finish anything I start."
\This Sundii'y he ran -his third · like all the good runners and, to mosphere. You don't have to bolt
Accompanying Colaizzo was
marathon,
the• Jersey
·
Shore
this. day,
I ·respect him for that.
out the first couple hundred
teammate Donald Godwin. "He's
Maiathon.
It
was here, a year - It's probably· the reason I'm still yards. I ended up talking with the
very helpful to have along," said
agci,
that'Colaizzo ran his first,26-
running," he said.
..
other runners at the starting
Colaizzo.
"I
would have been lost
• mile;-385·yard ra.ce in 2:54 . ., _ . .
But Colaizzo ·said he saw that line." '
without him. Someone running a
• But,the'20-year-oldjuniorfrom
he was not too successful at cross
· "The last
1.0:
kilometers of a
marathon
needs someone like
Cedar Knolls, N.J.,'didn't intend
country.· This, coupled with his marathon are absolute drudgery
Don to take care of the little
to
be a runner afalL "I started on
enjoyment : of
running
long · though,"
he· s_aid
.. "It's
like
things. He was with me at my first
:a
whim. I started because this kid
distances,
. led
him
to
try you'r.e
running
on
instinct. . marathon but he wasn't at the
said, 'H~y, you got Jong legs, you
marathoning. · ..... ·.
Everything. is is throbbing. It's
Penn Relays and he was missed."
could be a .cross
·country
runner.'
, He said .he wanted to run a not like you_ can feel one specific
I~ 1'the future, Colaizzo said he
.,.·SoJ ran for:cross_country and_I
.marath_on at this time of.year and· muscle .tension, _That comes not
sees himself continuing running if
was .. the·fifth mari·and
..
earned .a.,. to run it-close to home. So he ran only from the distance but from
his future job allows time for it.
·-virsitylet'ter," said Colaizzo .... _ · the marathon iri Asbury Park, pushing the distance. Both times
I
"My ultimate goal is
to
run in an
.":, ;,'),.,, . .
. .
.· _ .
. . ..
.
(·':Afterhighsi-:hool; wherehehn
.··•
N.J:;·and fini~hed78th in a field pushed the distance.''
ultramarathon,"
he. said
in
\:;',:i) ..
;;,,\:.:;;,:;;;;l~:
.,·
:<-<:::.~;
,··r::;:
~.c..:;;.:,~:.2~~c;ls-~·~.ng,'.£r,gss_
cOUl}lry_in)f!is.:'.:;~or:•
;.~bCll!,t,.~
2.~oqo _c<>~P~~~~_ors.
'.
Last· ~un~ay Colaizzo ra~ his
reference to the endurance races
<·
c".">:'.i'.'.?•
\;t;f~:T;':f~:r~.}:;;-:•t::,f°'.';f,"::'';_...,
··•juniof1frid ·seruor"years7°Coiaizzo:_'. ~everai-tnqnt.ll~ lat~r; he.ran:m th_e marathon". in- . a ... comparatively . longer than the marathon.
···
::t/':·:
';'i/·'",.:i~:~1T~f:T'P,e.tc:
Colaizzo:-:·;<;,:
c:.
:,:-:.::•;star'ted'
'ruiiin!f'cro'ss"
·counb:y:
at
.'
'Penji
•. Relays··· marathon : . and poor time of 3:31. This, he said, ,
,<;.cc,
, .: ,
·.,:
,,-, · • ·
:.: ·
· · ·
.
finish'ed
fa
2:46 :.,:
.. /'30th out of was due."in part to the weather. '
C~laizzo said :that he tries not
•·,,if.: •·
• ·
-:,
·,
·•
...
· ·· ..
··
·, •
·
•·.• -
-· . ··
· . .
···
.
':-some-1,000 runners. . ..
1
//.
·.
"It
was an
out< and
..
back · to take himself too seriously as
a
.
r\:_
•.
·,_:_:_.:_
..
·.i.·_
..
:,.····•·,t.:.~:'··~
'.
0 "'8'11
;24;
Hours .
:
>:
:t:
~4
73~
1-576
>
Colaizzo ,said he trains for his marathon. I went-out in
1: 19;
but
marathon competitor.
But, he
··.
),:'.~;:>: '';_.\,,·,•;_·_
., : ..
::
,,:
. •'" ... •.. .
m:::Jt~ri,~~
r~st r~i!n:
w
1
;e~~
·:a~e~
i~!~~n~~c~e~/~~:ii:
0
i~
~~~~:'J!;.i:;;i~!~•~:;b~~~r:f~~
..
·. ::
::
,.. ·
-~
~
< :..'.-
/
:and does'the rest b0raining with 30 mil~s per hou~. and it. was !a. So long as
I improve personally, it
·
· · ··
-
··
·
the. cross country team. ''Ex-
steady downpour,
he said. He
makes me feel good and I enjoy
.
·.·_,
.·-':.
~-_·_·
...
··.n.·_
.. -_-
..
A,.:.
1..··
A. .:
..
e·.
-.·
..
·-E.
'cept," he·says,' "lately I put in a··came
in•·
320th. out
of ap-
Jt. And that's
what
it's
all
..
E'•·
M
.
lot ofmil:a~~- I,put in one speed proximately3,000starters.
about."
LaMo'tte,------------
,':/~}j)
•.
;l]lil"ltt
:,.1titfttJStaura•ri1
·,.:t(:>·~~-
~~~
..
-·_
~
__
:.,<~::
· •..
-·-·
·;·.
--~--~_(;:>:~:-
.. :·
..
'_-
.' .
:-
.
..
~
·,
\Fresh··seafcfotf/steaks.
·~·ChopJ:·:,cBc.ki~fls.
· s·aki
ng
·6·n
Pf~rpl
ses
;
.,,..
~
.
:,
.-:-
,
.
.:·
.:
..
·.
.
.
Show
:Your
'colleg_e
·.1p
and get·
a
FREE Glass of
Beer .
.
with_your
meal!
7%
l)ISCOUNT
c~ntinued · fiom 'page
3 '.
·
assistant · dean,
but
only as
then I know I'm going there as the
._Unforttin.ately, · the
s~rmon
himself, a member of the com-
priest. I.also know I have feelings
- began to get quite heated and a munity.
of s~dness and joy when I'm
few
0
:people··walked out of .the.
there. Not because I'ni a priest,
inass while it was still in session.
.
'''.I
goto events because
I enjoy
but because there are people that
LaMorte said he was not of-
the events.
r
live here. Even
I've come to know that are
. fended by this. "That's the way though I'm not married, I do
leaving." .
; you learn.that you blew it.
l'ni
enjoy s6<;ializing. But I don't find
Father LaMorte said that if his
·not saying I'd
like to have it the easiest thing in the world to
role on campus became limited to
.. s~udents_walldng out on a regular
do, which I'm sure would amaze a
only the position of assistant
basis.
All
the more power to them lot of people, but that's true."
dean; he would leave this college.
for : having .felt· strongly com-
"I wasn't ordained a priest to
mitted enough to do that."
.
"I don't go to places and say
spend my life at Marist,,, said
<
LaMorte said that ·when he
'Richard, tonight you are the
LaMorte. "I ,don't see that as
attends an event at Marist he does
pn·est·.•.lf I'm asked, for-exa. mple, ·
·
I •
f h h II
· ·
,
negauve. t s part o t e c a enge
not feel as if he must necessarily
to gradu. ation where I'm asked to
f h
I ·
J'f
attend as either a pries~ or as
do the invocation or blessing, -
USA TODAY.:_ "The nation's
newspaper" - is now available on
campus. Call today for conve-
nient dorm delivery and save over
25'. Only $1.25 a week. Read
. USA TODAY,the newspaper for
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Circle -
K:
Meeting
every
Wednesday at 9:30 p.m. in room
CC-248 A. NEW MEMBERS
WELCOME!
Bklyn., NY 11242.
· The deadline for applications
for the Marist Abroad Programs
for 1985•86 is Nov. 30, 1984. If
you plan to apply, please pick up
your information
package
in
D223 soon. Also see Dr. Lanning
(F213) or Mrs. Perrotte (D230).
o t e way . view my
I
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money
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small
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See
Chris or Joe, Gregory 105, ext.
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sefi;~~er~~~~~gb;e~t~~c!:
PRO-TYPING
Letters,
reports, term papers, research
papers,
APA
style,
etc.
Reasonable rates. Includes spell-
ing and grammar check. Call Bet-
ty at 691-7918.
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332 Main Mall, Poughkeepsie,
has office and desk chairs as low
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SIO
each. Book cases and
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Call us at 471-7910 .
.
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(Next to All Sport. A short walk from Marist)
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.J
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I
i
I






































































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;·;,;·"·.:.:._·.,.t<'LJtF·
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..
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;.<~?t
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• • •. ,"
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uriay
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N6.
·
pett:3.It~~-$
..
fC>f-"·Pl~}1~~.tt{~~i;;q;~:~e~1~ii~-
·•·
.
·.
By
Ian O'Connor.·•··.
there's no chance·that any players
·
M:cCa.nn . Center : ., !ind \\fas
category of-' th.e· Yoffering:.;,-of-<
. :.
.
will face_. penalties. and, lose · primarily conducted· bi Dean:.of
illegalextra'.benefits'?. t6:a playej';·
· Concluding.• ·
a ·
six-week .·in-.. eligibility to play."
· _.
· : . .
.
•. . Siuderit
·Affairs
. Gerard . Cox. ·. . Murray said . the NCAA .
wiU
·
bf
vestigation
int'o :the:,, men's
Murray said .the investigation,
According to the president-, on~ of_· givei1.the college's finding{withfo:
basketball
program;.
-
Marist · which was initiated when Perry ..
· Cox's

respo11sibilities ; _was
·f
to · the)ye_ekand. said he: could':not
President Dr. Dennis J. Murray
resigned Sept. 28, was conducted · make sure that atrplayei:s· signed
~
comment' on• the · nature j>f, the
has announced that the college. at the request .of the National . form stating thatthey were.aware•· findings_until the NCAAreporied
i!;
will not levy penalties against any' :Collegiate Athletic Association.
_of NCAA :rules/: The
,NCAA .·
backto thescho.ol.>/.-
-,1 ,,: '.;',::_.:.
::f
current
.
coaches ·. or · players
Murray said t,heNCAA ~ske~ the _-r~quires aU scholarsh.ip athletes· to ··
:
"Until_I hear.from the·NCA:"-,. ;}
because of NCAA violations. . · college to review the entire men's.
sign such a form.·;·
·. . . .
. . . .. I can't discuss 1t;".Murray'.sa1d .. -.
,1
In an interview ,held . at his basketball program, and said the··
"Dean · Cox . met with, the
"I
believe that ;they feel th~ ad>
i:t
Greys tone office earlier this week,
investigation was j4st a, 'standard
. players to make. sure they were .. 'ministration has acted swiftlyand··
Murray.· said
that._ tl}e i~-
procedure.' ·
.
T
· ·
aware ofthe rules and ha:dsigned
appropriately, and that no-major
vestigation, prompted by NCAA .
"1"he NCAA asked us to review
the forms," Munay' saip. "He
sancti9ns · are
necessary. .The
violations committed by· former
all aspects·· of our' program to
spoke to the coaches, and I'm··: NCAA may send a representative
·Head Coach Mike Perry, found
·
make sure there weren't other
·sure administrators a·t McCai:m . here .to review what ·we?ve done,
that no one
1
involved in the. inappropriate
· activities
con-
were talked to .. He .wanted to
but I don't see them condticting·a
·
basketball' program but Perry
ducted," . Mufray
said: . "The . make sure everyone understood . ·major investigation.''
· .·•.·.
·'. ,;
·:_
broke NCAA rules.
·
·
review is·· done to make· sure .you · the rules."•
·
. . .·
Murray .. said, he · had .· read
."None·of.the players or, current . don't get into further problems · ' Murray refused to comment on· Perry's
.recent.statement
in The.'.
coaches were ~nowingly if1volved with the NCAA."
.
.
.
.
the number or exact nature of the
Circle. that he
·(Perry)
"probably.:
in NCAA violations,"
Murray
Murray said: the_ .investigation
violations that Perry committed, · commi_tted 40 violations,"· but:•,
said. "T~ere won't be any action
involved ~nterviews with players,
but said all violations identified in

. . .. • .· •· ,. ..· ...
taken against the coaches, and
coaches and.administrators at the
the college's report fall under the
-
. continued.on pagel. 2
:= · .
,
,:
,
ne·nnisMurray
.
Volleyball team finishes fineStseasOn -•
with i4:..4'i-eGOP'a
·
,·,
./-.·"
.
. .
.'·/
.
.
.
. ..
•:».· .
·.,,..
, .. :
.•..
- ;-...
,.::,,·
;,,;,,::.;_.,
. byBria.nKelly
next two
15-12 · ·a~d
16-14;
aided
a
st~ong comeback from a
The·Red Foxes
w~ii.t
into Sauir~: team aJso gained a.victoryby,for-
·
Sophomore Kathy Murphy
·was ·
6-0 deficit in the third game.
day'.s contest .after winning the
·fiet against MoliritSL Mary •.
;·<·· .
· / The· Marist Golege volleyball . the key player in the match; mak
0

One of the most importantfac-
Hudson Valley Women's Athl~tic
Three .·seniors '•01i"~·the . team;
team finished its best season ever ing a powerful game-winning sh9t
tors in the. match ·was Marist's
·.·
Conference. Tournament; against
Jodie Johnson, Laurie Leonardo,·,
':by capturing the ECAC'Division
in the third game.
.
.
ability to ef(ectiyely h6ld off Pat-
.
host Mercy College-·and Baruch
and captain Loretta Roman'asky
Three Mid-Atlantic tournament
I
. .
terson:s pow~rful serves.·
. .
CoHege last week: The.squad also'
played their final games -in'.'the
at the James. J. McCann Center.·
Maris.t clearly dominated the
.
Other key players in the tourna- · compiled recent victories against . tournament last week>\-·.:; ..
>
.
last Saturday.
· ·
·_-
·
match against/William Patterson,
ment wer.e Pa.t.ricia·BiUen, Marie . Vassar, Mount St. Mary, and · -,The Marist.College volleybflU
. After defeating Virginia's top· taking .all_ thr~e ga~es 15-10, 15- · . Bernhard, ·-Loretta· Romanasky
<
Marihattanville CoHege.·;
· · .·. team finished 5-l overaH in ihe
team, Mary Washington, and
12, 15-8. Senior co-captain Jodie
and Laurie.Leonardo.
·.: -
.
:--: Marist beat Mercy three games
.
ECAC; putting·.them
hi'
secorid·
New Jersey's· William Patterson,-
Johnson made some crucial plays,
According toAssistantAthletic.
to ondn,the,
finals, winning. the
..
place behind Mercy.College'., The
the Red Foxes raised its final
including
.
five
;
game~winning
Director !;?ick Qu!µn, Marisrheld
conference tourney for the first . team's
244 record, along with its
record to a very impressive 24-4. . spikes and blpcks. · ·
·
··.·
...... ·.·
.. ·• .
the . Nov. 10 ECAC tournament
·
time; , . ,
_,
'. ,: : , , . · · . .
. . .
.
·. .
.
league· and Mid-Atlantic •titles;
.
After losing .the first game to
·
· Another.big help to the te~_rn in
because the other two ;teams that · :• The,c Red Foxes took a recent:. represents)
a
-•
huge'.'..tumaround ·
Mary Washington . 5~ 15, Marist . the . match .was .. <:arol Barber,.· . comp~t~ •
v.ei:~
·
hilvi~g, .tfou~le : ··match against winless,_Vassar 15-
<
after, ~nishing':'with 'a
~l
t/ecord .
. back strongly. to take the
who, after replacing
.
Johnson,
i •
reserving a-.court at. their schools:

..
·· 10,- 13-15, · 15-2, : and ·l 5~5.
,The
c_.
last season •. :\.
,:,-,·_::;:,
•.-,:
•··::
;-/;.;
:f
· · · FJ~,:t:ii¥~1
1
~e~~t-W~fflifiti
1
1t~~~~t~Ri·):"i
-.

·•.·biI~i'.;i,.;
...
•·
...
'. .; .• ,\
,.:,
,AJXItl\~tdi.;tJh!ii·i,3fii/i/;~.,;;~~~;t.iiltf;
.
.
\
.
'
.
.
.
.
·.
Yugo~lavian club. bere tonight
-
-
. .
!
'

,
·;
by
Ian O'Connor
Marist basketball fans will have the opportunity to see the
European brand of hoops when one of Yugoslavia's best club
teams, Partisan-Belgrade,
takes on the .
Red
Foxes in an
exhibition c~mtest at the McCann Center tonight at 8 p.m.
. The Yugoslavian squad is on a one week tour of the northeast,
which will also include stops at Upsala, Holy. Cr-oss, Hartwick,
Bucknell, Mansfield State and Hofstra. ·
·
A three-time Yugoslavian First Division Champion and twice
European Cup Titlist, Partisan-Belgrade is led by the talented
.trio of Arsenije Pesic, Boban Petrovic and Miodrag Marie. This
front line measures 6-8, 6-9 and 6-8 respectively.
"This promises to be a very tOU8h game," Marist Head Coach
Matt Furjanic said.
"It
will give us a good indication of just how
much we have progressed in practice and will aJso prepare us for
what promises to be a tough early schedule."
Students with I.D. 'scan attend tonight's clash free of cl-.arge.
.,
,
·
~
.
:· :
.
:,
:··•;
'.provement ,: has · already . taken ( old Paolirie_. Ekanibi from:P,aris;7·
· .
.
' ;ExpedeQCe, ·. physjcal;::
.fimess;
place; according :to'Torza/is the
·:
'-Fr~nce:\anci · ..
ftesli.m,eh,:'
Marilee
and a. ~trnng!:!r-.
defellSe ~Ill_ ~~J~e,·;
•team's
defense>'
.<
,

.,.
,, . :}:·;:;-.
B.amf,~r!i
,;from,: pu~!Dor,e~ . Pa., ··•.
,
.
·.:!cJ:Y:JliC!(.)rS:
of:,s~cces~ Jor th;15;;:
'::
-?Defensively;.;We\\'.ant fo'play·:
'.and_;,
~ic.~ele_·: ~•c~e};:j {rp!Jl·'-.'..-.
sea.s9n;s. ,.· M~ns~·--: \V.o_me_n
s berter,<Urifortlifiately;Jast·seasori
..
S~ane.!ltel_eS,
l'l.Y~
·.
,;: :~,
..

'
-,J:fasketbalJ : team, . -a~cord1_I1g;t~
..
f
\Ve di<;ln't
pia.Y
th~·def~nsive
gaml.
:::·)~~o
\Vl_ll
be the ke,r pl.ay,e~~7
:
..
•;
,.: l-leadC,o;l~~ PatTorza;_;,,
:
.,
.••. ·•/we
•_ttfought'\we'
·could, -_1,·f~el;.
,t·
:;
..
Ba.~~d:;.pn,}~~t ••
Y~~r_'.s,
p~r:-:.,:_
r: ·
Last• y~ar ,s J>yerall 12~
1 ~•.
record ·: . however,' .. thaf .
1
this:·: ha_s
'.
ibeen
,,Jor1!1~n,ce,
th_e
.. one~. ,that., wIIJ..c,be.;
,
~!lS• a d1s.~pp9mt111ent
to TorZjl;··• reciift(;!~;'•We'·kriow'."7hat'.w~
have ··•defU1_!te .• fa£tors : ar<;<'_LJ.rStJla
..
. ..
·
..
·It wa_s.a;roughyear .. Every.oi;ie·. todo,'.':saidTorza;·:·.,;·,,··
i • .
•:i:
·'·.
Wmter~_:Lyµne,_Gnffin,_.P~o~i~;·.?·•.-
was adJu~pil~ to. alLthe,~han2;es
m ·•
/' .:
Experience
is
•another ·area.that . , Ekam~\•.X ~L\VJ.lTTJ.er,,all.~_:'J
~~~1e;
,
.. /
the.SUlff,., ~aid Torza .. w.e had a:
:Toiza
'$ays\she believes. will-be; a.;
.~har{i:•:,
~a1d/I;9r~t
·1~
Jo.~·WY;:•.•
go~d tean_i thou,gh, !i11d
I. k_now all.·~: strong poiriti.
::i:,;i
:J
.):,c~-j,_-:.:-:
,__;.:,:··;<-
f1v~/; st~rt~r~,, .::t_l_i~!
s,.
_st!n_::;:n<?t
:·._
we re. ~~mg .. now ...
w,1!~·
b1: .. mo~e .·' ···1·1nvery happywiththejea'm'.-.<defmife,-but_these,\VO~e.~.~•PAe

than v!~1J:>le
on
.the.
court, ~his .. 1 have.·Basically,·.ics· the·same .'theb~c~bo~€:,qf_t~eteam.
;:;;.j:
.
seas<>n.
-
••· ·• · ·, ·· .. · ·:
•.
·: ,.
: . ,
: team back. Ten , letterwinner~
·· lJi.is~ea.r.
~
toughes_t~con.fer~i;i;e
ror. sta~ters,.
}h~
""'.Omt;~
w~re;; returned.'
At
least . three· ofi the< .oppgnents >;~n ;·, .the_c<wom1:n,s.
' .
place~ o_n a weight co.nd1uonmg ,., starters
will,
be the· s~me;•; :said; ..
~
sche~ule, according to !orz~,-~_11l.
r,rpgra~ thr.oughout the summ~r .. Torza. ''We· are going· to:be ,more , b~ S_1ena,
... Monmout~,Fa1rle1g~_.
,~.
l ~vould 5.a.y
that at:le~s_t.
half of, experienced from fasf year.
_I'm'
; ·
?,1c~mson, ~nd .~agn~r <::<::>Hegf</
. the. te~111 _came bac~,
m
good
more ·.experienced,
and; we're
lwoul~.t?mk \V1t!J.the_people\Ve
.•
shape, • s~1d T9rza,-. ?he other. : going· to work . .-har:_d,
: ..
on . any . have the~e s a ~ood,J~~t th~.t v;e .
half.need~ to goJur:ther,,.~!Jt_t~ey
:
weakness we hao .. Everyone is . could :~eat all· t~~s: ,tea~s _and.>
have until .. ~ov,
·
Z6, ·,:oµ-r. fus.t : optimistic." ,., . . .
>, ,;_
.>
take ' first_ \~r. '.;~~<;tlfl:~.~•}.n<
_trye>. .
game, to.be m shape the way I ·
. · .....
i,::
<:;..,:,.\:'.'<<::.-'';'.,·
Cosmopohtan.:C_onfer~n~e,f said .:• ..
want. them to.
' We're de>ing . : Torza also says,she' fel:!ls·
that
·. Toria.'
· .;· " ..
·;
: ,·:
·;_:t>::::
>·.•
.
. everything possible now
to
see the.change from
AIA W to.NCAA
·-:overall, Tot-za: says'°:she-_f
eel(
thatthey°a~e_.'.'. ·.:, \''·
,>_·:._·
·
gives the wome~'s t~m·,a·great
very optimistica?o~rth~;c°.rnin~
. Inc add1uon
to· the,. weight boost.
. ~,,· ... , ~·
season.·;· -...·,
.·->·,, ; •'·:
'.'.'."·
..
:
\~ondj_t-i()ning
·:-.
~
prQgr~~~. --~·..the
-
·
· · ~'-·
8
<:~":·t · -
..
"J
"t}:i~nk
-we'll
~~-
-~:·qµiCk_-t~e~·pi,
women . work · out three days a
"NCAA
has give~"
,<m~
,
the·. · a . strong team
.
and th~ . besC
week on Nautilus·equipment and
opportunity to conipet~·wi th-th
e
.
defensive
team·:
Maris_( ever.
five.-days a· week in the gyms
"I
rest of the Division One schoo.ls· produced,";.said
Torza:. '.'Thaf·
· like a good, running, fast game,
with recruiting," --·said .Torza.
will win us ballgames. We're riot
but a controlled game,"
said
"Now Marist women's basketball
lacking•offensively; ·we've· always
Dorza. "You can't get that unless
will be able to attract more and
been a strong scoring team. We're
vou're in shape and I feel that by · better players. It benefits · the
going to .work hard and. keep
;our first game with Holy Cross we . athletes as well as the coaching. I
working hard.'' ·
,
:will be ready."
·
think it was a iood move." .
·Foxes lose (o .Albany, end tough··
season
.
..
by
Dan
Pietrafesa
Last · Saturday the Red Fox
· football team closed out the 1984
season with a 43-0 loss to
the
Great Danes of Albany State. The
loss was Marist's fourth in a row
and sixth in the last seven games.
Marist finishes its season at 3-7,
including a forfeit victory over St.
Peter's.
Albany became the fourth team
to shut out'Marist, the other three
teams being Iona, Coast Guard,
and Rensselaer Polytechnic
In-
stitute. In its other three losses,
Marist
averaged
only
one
touchdown per game.
Saturday's game marked · the
third year in a row that Albany
State scored more than 40 points
against Marist. The other two
.
losses were by scores of
48-0
and
48-7. Head Coach
Mike
Malet
said, . "We just can't · compete
agairist state colleges."
The Great Danes scored the on-
ly points they would need midway
through the first qu!lrter. when
freshman
quarterback
Jeff
· Russell took it in on a three-yard ·
run. Russell's plunge capped a 14-
play, 99-yard drive that made it 7-
0 after· Dave Lincoln kicked the
extra point .
continued on page 12










































































































































-------------------------------...---•--.---~---~---~---.---ll!!llfN.f!V.';15,
191U ~,THfCIRCL~
·
Page
11
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1
day;'·rv10/h·ir1g·:,_:au·~~t~tst~r<J\;r:}_;):
..
:=·=\:
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:-~r~~:.
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,
c\{f
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i;i;f
~;,c!i}
}
?
·
.
Mau Fu,Jank
Jim To~~
Mo,k C•••
by
Ian OJ(:onnor·
. .
.
.-
...
big
year· could possibly convince ~ore·. this y·ear:. and we'll need
janic's statement only begins to
Fox
.uniform,
Smits is rapidly im-
:
;){i~/~W!{{~tu,aH);_
is
l6i~i:\i'
'Jr{e~~A
~Couts to. g~~b:ie ~n his
.
~t;~at~~;e ~rr;~~fn°s"Wi~ ·:he
.
~:s;,~;~s' t~
0
~~e ~~o;ti:~s~
~~~

r~;;!~;
at~d ~~snt
0
i\~~id:.e \~!1
1
~
·.
be
:'.a:
1}?84~'.8?

se;t~on
-Jor.
9ur
..

..
Although Johnson is a durable
outside,
Frenchman
Alain
senior. from Malverne spent a
.
freshman has only been playing
.·_
..
· _scho~W.f!O_en,'s
ba;s_~etbaff_
teartl,/;:p~rformer; he, wiH. get more than
Forestier'
is a long-range gunner.
.good
deal of last year as one of
basketball for a few years, but has
Ahh()ug~: J}te
,
sch~dule 1s
·
the
.
ample support from
.
fr~shman
.
y,,ho is a legitimate
·threat
to break
the top ten
·
re bounders in the
shown signs of becoming a real
:
touglles(.y'etdor the, Recl'Foxes;
·
:'Drafton
"Bat" Davis.
An All-
aity
defensive zone. One of three
country, before finishing 24 in
force for the Foxes. Turned down
...
\Vitli a_i..27::g~me
<i-egµlar :se~$ori'
~ity prospect ·from New York's
forefgners on the squad, Forestier
that category. Taylor, one of the
scholarship offers from national
·
slate;
i(s_going to be awfully_ dif-
·John
F.·
-Kennedy
High
·.School,
is an excellent leaper who has
·
finest defensive forwards in the
powers LSU and Fresno State to
·
·
ficul(fSi'- ~ht team .to receive any
<i:;>avis
possesses quick hands aitd
·.
thrilled onlookers
•·.With
..
some
east,. is Marist's "Iron Man,"
come to Marist. "Rik is really im-
:
moie.attention than
if
already has> feet
..
and
:
is
·
an
·excellent
high-flying dunks in practice. The.
averaging 34.7 minutes played per
proving and should see a lot of
in the pre-se.asori.The hoop squad. baHhandler. The newcomer, who 6-6 sophomore is blessed. with a
game last year. The 6-8 enforcer
playing time. ,,·Furjanic said. "By
just has onetougli act to follow.
.
averaged 20 points and_ 11 assists fine basketball body, but needs to
tallied 8.8 p.p.g: and I0.2 r.p.g.,
the time we get to the conference

';
Buf with oneJull month. of of
0
.
per game in his senior year, has
·
work on his
.
defensive skills.
and grabbed a season-high 21
games, he'll have a big impact."
.
Jicia!.practice just completed, the
looked impressiv.e
iit
workouts; A
.
For.estier averaged ~5. p.p.g. in·,
.
poards in a dual with Long
Walk-ons :_
"This
is
not an 11-
Foxes finaily Jciok ready to turn
·solid.
defensive· guard,
.·Davis·
high school, and should see·con•.
Island's Carey Scurry. Taylor has
man team," Furjanic said. "It is
everyone's attention
,back
to, the
·
sho·uld see plenty of action either· siderable time- as:
."instant
of-
a pro body, and another· solid
a 14-man team. Our walk-ons
will
playing·: court·;
'First~year.
Head
:
spellin~·- .Jo.h~son
.
~r
.
playing Jense" ,off the_b~nch.
.
.
.
year should make him a late-
contribute." Of the three walk~
Coach.Matt
Furjanlc
and his sta.(f alongs11;ie.
hm1.
·
.•
Dtaftqn's
(·'
Adding .valuable depth to the
round pick in the next NBA draft.
ons currently on the team, only
of Jim ,l'odd,
-John·
Quattroci:hi;
,
quic~nes_s gives us the flexibility_· wing position
,are
-two freshmen
sophomore Tim Murphy has a·
Mark
Cookand_academic advisot.
,we'l!.ne~d,
~speci~l.W against. th€: who played their high school ball
Starling in the paint with
.
year of experience. Junior Thom
Bogdan.·JQviclc,
ha_ve done a1_1
_ex~.-
.-press,'.'
Furj~n!c ·sai9 ..
~:I've
been: 3,000 miles
.
aw~Y
.
from
-.
each
Taylor should be 17-year old
Crosier'
·
and
freshman
John
celleiltjob preparing the team for
..
known_ to. pl~y. two smaH
·guarps
..
other
..
M,ichael
·Fielder,
a
-recrµit
,
Miroslav
Pecarski.
from
McDonoug~
are newcomers, but·
the Nov.:~4.opener
_\\'.ith_Fairfi~ld,,
together.'.'.. .,:
·
·,
·
.
,_-: ,
..

· .' · .
_.·from.
national. power Mater Dci
'.
.
Yugoslavia. At th,i.~
year's Euro-
Furjanic maintains that all three
and should:~njoy reasonable sue:-.
·
Wings·-:-.·
Leading .. the· wing·'. ,High,Schooi'in California,
:turned
..
pean ·.cadet Chainj,ioriships (for.. will play a role in the team's sue-.
c:ess-this
~eason
..
·. .,, .
· ··

,
,
...
:brigade,
is seni'or
.S(ev~·..-~ggiiik,
down football schohm)lip offers
17-year o\ds), Pecarski scored 34
cess this year~
.
.
'· ·
..•
~o;'\vi_tb,:the·contFover~y
o(t}Je,, the .,top: ret~rn.in~ scorer,·. w~o.
_from
UCLA. and USC to play
point~. a,gaii:ist F,rance. and :wa~
"When you're a walk-on, it's
.
past,,talpng_-_~.:
!,ack, s~at (fo~ ti}<:;
.
.'
aveq1ged. 115, points;. per . game_
..
_.hoops
·ar
Marist. The, rugged, ~-4.
:
nallled the fmest cadet m Eurnpc
tough because you don't know
·
time
:J:?ejng
~a.11_y~i'ly),:.
the fourth
last season. A team captain
·a
year
.
for,vard.
will
play both inside and
by
the continent's newspapers.
how. m.:-::h
you
_can
help che
..
·
·
year
-obDivisjon
,Qne gask~~l;ialJ
.
ago, ~ggin_k
.Is.
one-ofthe purest'.''. outside (or the.foxes,-and_ s\1ou\d
The slender forward ha,s
shown
a
team," the coach-said. "But l
'm
'
here-at.;,M~rist.i_s)'eady,•.tO.
begin.,
..
sho9ter~.- in the: easi.:
No
cine· be a, for~e with.llis power game..
deadly
_touch
from 10 feet; and.
very pieased \vith Tim, John· and
,
I've promised not to mentiqit)_he
'.
·knows his rangi, better• tltan, Fur~· '.,'Micha.eUsa yery goqd athlete;
_should
be a consist~ptinsi_de_scor-
Thom. They are all members of a
_
'.'
name
Mike Perry
in this
·article; ,.
Janie,
.
who saw_ Eggi11k's: bombs
-
and he'll. spell
1
aJot. of people;"
.
ing_
·.threat ... Pecarski.
·
is
:a
fine. Division
·One
ream, and
they
will,
...
)
·
·
··•
so I wor!'i~;~
S.'<~~
~\: .
.,.,...-<.,.~•'~~-
.e!l~]
~-cz..b_ti'L'.t!~.FJ.S:.~,,-
t~--g_a~~-
'.,I:,~rja11jct_sai~1:_

?11!~
y,~r~c!.ti}i.~Y..:
~-:~tqlet_<:
with good leaping ability~
get
a
chance
to
play.•,
l
,
.
,:.
,rlere[s,
m :P.Q.~1J1on-OYfpos1.tton~}:
h_ome{
coJ.ITt'
..
~l!l,fi.10,.S.\Sti_;~alLlasL
,._-,y,!Lhelp,,us
oo.t~)l)ns1~\c:an~
15ut-i·
,,
~n<;l
.w1ll take some of the reboun°
,.: :
.·,_a,;·.·.
: ·
·
I
,··Jqok.at'lhil"year's::veiiiQII
·or
the/:year:Tlie'Eugdie{Oi:egon-'riative;:
.si_de:''.
'
c.
.

·•
''

i
/
.
• '. . '
•ding
load
.off
Taylor. A ~uddingo'.'\.' OuUoi,k -
The team really
I·:
..
-Ruririing
Red
foxes:
;
·'•:·/,'<:··
_;:
;·>,
whci'
:·:
redshirted
:
·after
.
·his
o,
Fielder's
..
classmate,·,
Ken
..
star for the Red Foxes.
.
·,:c'U':
.
>,seems.,
t9.--_have put aside all
f
Poi'iitgu~rd
.,::.::.A
very familiar
•·
_sciphomol'.e
campaign, will·•likely Galloway,cogies from roots a lit-
B
k
.
.
f ·
h.'.ff'··;_.·:.
:•·--·di_~tractions;-/and
looks
ready and.
.
.
_face·
i_oJl).e ~.a/i~t faiJhf uf:wil\'be·.· ear?
c;one
of, the , st~rting w.ing tie cl<?ser
to'>home. The forw~rd
_
.
fr
rf
~n ;~n~~!l°s~n~ ~ehti~

eJ!~;.: .·. e~g~n.~•:.g~~-
o~ with the season:
f_-_;,_·
__
•.
.
occup}'.1ngtl,11s
spot fotthe (ourth
·
.·.
ass1~nme.nts;,
.'He
s

J_ust_:
a ~rear
.
from
· ·nea_rby,'
Onteora · High.
,~
1
dd
.
1

/
.
,
....
J,
1
,
-
FurJ~mc 1s·_a
wmner, an~ he ):l~s a

.••.
,
·year
0
irt; a
'r_q~_._·_
Jlruce·
"_Scooby''
:
••
-~utsade
s~ooter, ". FurJa~1~ said. .
;
School was: chos_en the Kingston
·
~arfs 's
~r~~
e,fne. ';f~:r~:~c~ 1~
qualttr
~-
st~ff surround mg ~11?.
c;
,}ohnson,
pr9l,_ably t~
7
best.g,u~rd
·
- Oppos~te
:Eggmk_
.
this seas.on· Freeman.tlayer
of the Year last
ward }rom W~st
~eW
~ork N.r
~ut c1-.w!ck_e~l-ea~ly
~~hedule
~i:;air-
.
in: Red,<F9x ~1s!ory,
.1s
returning_
:
should- be sophomore forward season, as he averaged ~4.5 p.p.g.
.
is
a
stron defenSfve
i.
fa
;r wh~
f1~ld, Vlllanova~•Ion.i. and Rider),
::/_Jor~the.fa~t,_t,1t11e
__
tq q~arterbac~
Mark Shaa,nley.
As-a fre_shman, aJJd senhe career scoring record
should s!e si
·rtific~itlY,
more
w1l_l
keep the_Red_f,ox supporters
-Jhe
_offensi".tattac~_;
Johnson_ led . Shan:itey started _14 games, and
.
at th~;school. Galloway has ~een
.
la in time thi\{\iicl·I~·
..
.
.
quiet for awhtle._
.
.
~'.
~s~,yea(s
·
t.e~m
~~.
~teals (67),
_'_'provided
needed .. help for _Jed
.
set back ,du~ to an ank!e in~ury,
~adi!I! who w1s tsranJ~~;a!~;
After a ~low_ start, the Foxes
.. ·,
a~s1_sts
(149) ~nd. qeld g?~! percepc·
:
-Taylor on the: bqards:-
_He
talhc~~-
7
.

but F_urJamc
_expects
the 6-5
Memorial Hi h Schobl has lookJ
should begin to roll_ by January
·::·. 't~~~.:(-~94)
1
_1md_
a~~o_:p9ppeg. in.
,:point~
ancq reboµnd_s p~r gan:ie,:
-fresh~an
·
to
·
be.
;
a
valuable
ed ood in pr!ctice ttiu; far. «Gil
and, hopefully, con!inue_ through
, ,
.
~ver)9,
po1~ts_
.P€:~
ga~e .. The:::.andwas,second on.th~ squa_d w1_th substitute:
"From' w~at we:ve
al}a s la s hard and is a oocl
.
March: I'd ~ay Manst will be 14-
.; ,;hgh.t~mng
7
9_mck nat!ve o~ \Yater-
•·.18
,_
blocked
_sh<;>ts.
The. White
:seen,
we know h~'s a g~od outside
role Y fa !r ,.
Fur'a.nic !aid.
·
13
·.
going into· the ~onf~ren<:e
:bury,
Conn;, established ~umself-
..
Plains product will be playing fur-· shooter;'' the coach said. ''He's a
"H , .P /
' h
;} s
. _
tourney, where they will will exit
-~~
.i.ii
All-E~sfc~~didate_early last
ther·from lhe hoop than he's used hard \vqrker and, by December,
··
side~.~ s own
e c · n core m
in' the semifinals, That makes for
~eason,after taking respec:~ed Iona_ to, but should still get his. share of he'll definitely help us.''
·
. a
·-J
5-14 overall record. and the
point guard Rory Qrimes to .the_ rebounds. "I've been. very im-
;
--
Post men -
"He's very quick
The last, but certainly not least
.
Foxes first winning mark since
· .~leaners:
Look'. for Johnson. to
·
· pressed with his°'hard
.-work
and
.
and a great
·1eaper..
We're coun-
.
of Marist 's front court players, is
entering Division One four years
:
open up a bit more:from the out-
100 percent. intensity," Furjanic
ting cm him for 12-14 points and
7-3
Rik Smits
of Holland. TJ-le ago. And with Furjanic, things
·.>:·s·id~wit_h
his improvel'.l j~~per:
J\.

said.
\'He'H
be:facing the basket_
..
11
·
rebounds· per game."
Fur-
.
tallest player ever
to
don a Re\
will just get bet_ter from there.
,,
.
Steve f;ggink
Bruce Johnson
RikSmits.
Mark Shamley
Ted Taylor
Soc~(!r tea!Jl finishes.1984 season with 9-7-2 record
by John Cann~n:
·
·
'
..
=
·•
selected i~ th~ Me;;o Confer~nc~ Colle~e. :~We played well ag;inst
.
playoffs last week, Goldman
·said
·
both teams, but that
J-0
overtime
It
was the longest, toughest 18- that he_ was pleas~d that the team
loss to Hartwick was the killer,"
game schedule that a Marist' soc, finished the y~r as one of the top
Goldman said.
cer team has had in quite some IO teams in . New York State.
Following the losses, the Red
time. .
:
.
·
..
·
. ·
. .
. ·
.
"Thai
was
a big accomplishment
Foxes' s~son turned around as
·
At the beginning
of
theseason
for us," he said, "becaµse most
the team went unbeaten in its next
Coach Howar~ 9oldl?Jan said teams we played against were up
nine contests~ One of those vie-
that he was hoping tc;>
wm at l!=<lSt to their necks in foreign talent-"
·
tories was an impressive 3- I win
.
sev~n games. The Re~ Fo~es
.
The season started as a tough
over Hofstra.
"That was our
fims~ed the
_1984
campaign wuh struggle, after the Foxes lost their
most important
\\iil
all year
the same record as last year (9-7-
first four gai:ites. Two of the
because it brought a lot of con-
2).
.
.
.
.
.
losses \\;ere to eastern powers
fidence to
the team,"
said
Even though the Foxes were not Syracuse·University and Hartwick
Goldman.
The Foxes unbeaten streak end-
ed with a loss to Pace, which was
soon followed by a 5-0 loss
against nationally-ranked Long
Island University. "After the first
60 minutes ~f that game (L.I.U.),
I thought that we had a chance of
beating tnem," Goldman said.
"But we got blown away in the
last 30 minutes
and
never
recovered."
··
With the season now behind the
Foxes, Goldman pointed to a few
weaknesses that the team has to
correct. "The shooting and at-
tacking
was
less
than
outstanding," he said. "We did
not have a single penalty kick in
18games.,.
Goldman said that the team
must improve on its offensive
game in order to be stronger for
next season. "\Ve need a striker
(scorer) who has the instinct for
reading the situation and scoring
the goal."
The Foxes netted only 20 goals
continued on page 12






















































































































































































,
ll
"
•··
·
cont~~i~
:
f~o:~'\1~~i/
1'·c(:.,,
·
,:
·.
·.With.
tf seconds
:rer'naining':in
· the Jirst
,,
quarter Albany
.
State.
•=
w,ent.out·fo
a'·t4-0'-lead
...
when.
'
Russell:
,threw:,•.:a
'·.sev_eri-yarcL
touchdown pass :to.
Scoh-
Lincoln ..
_
•.
The touchdown was-spaJked by• a:;
52-yfird
.
int~rception
·,
return by
·
Wayne Anderson. ·. ·,
,
,
·. ,, ,
.
·
.. ,·.
,_The Ma_rist offensfble\Y_Several
. ~coring opportunities
.
iri. the first. :
·.
;
half.·. The Foxes. Were inside
.'the .
··,,Great
Dane's· forty~yard Jfrte:six·
.
.
.
times(but were. unable'
to
come .·
,.
a~,•ay
With
_any
'pojrits;'
Albany
'
<State
also helped. the Foxes
by
.
•·'
c<:>mroittiilg
..
,~_fiy~:·
consecutive
.
·.·
punt's. Also; de°fensive
.back
-Jim
.
:.
Van_·.·
Cura._-recov~~ed:·
a_ Regelio.
.
to.·
.
.

',
...
:_:':.[);J.
:·Blll<Cole:fTlan
,
..
f{,':i}'i6m1be·;'E~ARD1NG"<?•?.·
.•...
Y:r}:}~ciu.StNd
.\-FOFf-:v1:1-Nt1t,{:_/
_.:·:
·
·:
·.-:._._,_
..
: -->1NTeRses-s1·o'ff\,.;·
>\:_
..
\·~-
··•
·:·••···•:111i~i~.~,::~';a4•);1.n~~W.\iat~~,;•.•·•··
.\e-::;::o;;.:
'.;i.:};.'.;::::_-;::).~\-
..

..
•:
.·...
..:._i
•,
;:'>t:::\.
'.'.i.<..;:;~•~/:'{f\·
·-All:thos·eJhterestediribeing
h.Qused
:on
::·ca111p'µs·\:_fbr:'th~•i·).98'5,;Winte'r>1.r1"t~r~~~~i/
·.sio'n··.•shouldcorri~:
to :the··Housir,g;·
..
of:-:/
·Aiqe•·iby/De'C!e'mbe((14;
·'19_84··.··1:0°{make:'··
Jhes'e
:a.rr~'hQeinents
.•.
:
· ..
•·
:
·:
i,/.\::\:.:'::
_/'
_,-
,_.,·:.:\::~·?:/\)-·'._.;/·
._:·_~·-_)\:i})
.
. -NO.:Fe>op<seRv1¢.~§·.w1LL)se:···
P.ROVIDED·•.DURING
.
...
_:
·
THE
WINTERjNTER.SESSIC>'N
.
.
.
,~
'
.
'
.
'
.
.
.
'.
•1,,
.the··
r9ofll
·
rate
Wi
;¥~~
ito~id~{
·
..
Th~
tof
~iJ
amount. covering the:··1er1gth
ottime
yo·u·-wnt

be
..
on
ca.rnpqs
mus(be\·pai~·)Q
t~e
:_Busfnes~/
'Office
pciorto thfffinalization,of-anylnterses-
·
·
sion
'Assfon_ment·
·
·
·
Re:sid~nce
.Hall
Check~lri:
Monday;
·January
1,
19~4
•. · 12:00
.Noon
-5:00
P.M~.,
Re~idence
Hall
Check-Out:

Friday, January_ tB,
1985
·.·.
by
J
1 :00 P_.M..
.
:,
.
Mitche!Humbleand intercepted.a
:(r~:tv
1
!-~at!~\>i~r·::\~~i~des·
tri.
,,
,
'.
:_;,/J./
·/
score;'',
•Malet
:'said,
>Hbut
·
iCs.
.·.
<9.1f'Libert
::st
·p·
. ..
hk
..
:::
tough, to score when, a
·freshman'·
- ·
: /
.
.
.
·t;
...
\
quarterback-is
'rurinirig'.,the
ort:c.__
.................... _ .. ._ ............. ________ •
.
.
. .
fense:i-think:_we'll be
a
loi:'beher:
p~~~1111~----------~-.■..111!111•-•--11111
..
1111•
... -- .. --- ...
•--•-•-•-•••••llili--•-IIIII
i-'
~
:-:~~~t:J:.trh~,t~sir~:ii;l.~i;~tt'!i~}:
'. ):
'...
'i
..
, .....
·
...
"it';~f~~b)~~t~t~:r~t~!'t~F
'f
/,·_._._'..;_•_~
..
_"_:_._:_·;_::_i.\_'._;_:_·•-:-.:_:;
__
:
__
/_:_,,.
,-_._:_·_.
_
_.
__
;_:_/_:..
:i
;.<

.
··_•
·.·.~away
with'_two fotichtt,owns
,in.
the'•
:


third
_qilarter/'the
,'
first;
oii'-
a
i.56~
.
·.
·•
yard keeper by.:~usseif arid these-·-
}'
c~nd;Whicli:•*as
:_s'et;
uifbya Jim
..
·/'• Valantino: interception at · ·mid- .·
,.
field;
·
on::
a;;_
f9\ir~y,uA,,ruw; bY· .
.
, ..
HaltbackHowardThomas.
;.,
->·
--
.
.
:
.The ·
finai:two· touchdowns. ~y
._.
·
the Great
·,Danes
were·· sco'red in
:
:.:e
the fourth·quarter::on·.riins-of
·one
·"
./.atic_l
'sixteen'_yar~s
~y,_secoi:l~Htrjng
;._
·
.
quarterback Anthony Nozzi,
·t::
:
.
, . .':.
Marist's
·
only b'right: spot was
..
.
·.
:/·kickoff._:irid/pilnt'.r,eti.ir~efr.Roy
:
.
·
···._.Watterson;
who
;broke:'thejeiufrii.:
.
·.
y~rdage seas~n:':.re~9rd
:;
qf_
220
i:
_·yards·
during tli_c;:'iam~:·'H,isJinal•·;
season JotaCcaine'.:t'o.J70 yards'·,
··with'
three'puntiieturns
for 29.,,:;
.
}'.ards.
'):!,/:
;//,'i(::/:/,.::)_:".:
<;·:·,
-:,···\
:
·,•.Albany
:,,Sui.t'ee:':fullqa¢kDa:v.e
:,
·••Saldini
rushedfof..162 yards on-34<
;
,·, .carries;
,brfoglng:his =~~son'
total',.;
··.
O
to:
f;oi7:
yar_ds:.:-.:thai:~
number."
\:_
broke the schdof'record·ort;o69-
':
:
yards set
of
T
<>~
£>.eBfois
in
t975. ·
:
·.
~-·
'
.
.
'
·
Mlltf
ttt:Y
•·
· ••··•
i
contin~~d fro~pag~
10
·
..
,<
.
~
·-
.
.
'
-
..
.
,
···said.he
"didn't know.~~hat Mike
meant.by that.''.'
..
u1
found it even ironic that
:
he'd say that, considering that
·.·
he's hoping to
·
coach at an.
American college again," Murray
said. "We'd
welcome him to
come forward apd inform us
about those violations."
Murray once again maintained
·
that Perry's forced resignation.
had nothing to do with a personal
complaint filed against the former
coach by a player, as The Circle
has pre\iously report'!.:I.
"The sole reason
.Mike
Perry
was terminated was
.
because of
NCAA violations," Murray said.
"And
that's it."
·
·
CC/Ci
?
:
. •
.·..
}Y ,
'
;
,

·.···
.
:
< \
~
: Yi:-'-?::::,..:::/::.--.:·.:.:.:-··:;·
...
.;:_.·:
:_._:_\'.·:JJ,'!y;~h_~v,e~tlie_._rigbtstiill~
,
...
·..
.
....
°f>,:
Ge~
~()U{~~reer'oftto.a
n~og'~tartiB<!~~M~·a
/;' / ':
nje[.'Ther~
;u\no'.qn~.Caillp~s
4rills:
Rliis;you .
yourself
amongst
the
best and stari off making
·
.
.
Manne
a\'.lator,
If
y91;1're
a· colleg~Jresh~~n;
:.
..
·
,
:-
rec_eive
$100
a ,!llOnth
during
the schQOI
year.
- .·

from $17,000
to .$23,000
a ·•
i'
·
.
.
·
.
·
..
~ophomore
or juni~r,
you could,qual!fy
for.~_ur
-
~
-'i
_Seniors
can qualify
for
the graduate
Officer .
:
.year.
See if you measure
up.
.
.
·
·
.
-undergraduate
Officer
Commi~ioning
~ro~·
.
•·
·
·..
·.
Comm~ioning
Program
an~ a!tend
training·
· ·
· :
-Ch<.-ck
out
the
Marine
Corps_
·
gl'l!ffi
and he guaranteed
flight
school
afte_r
gr;td-
·
·
·
aft~r'
gra~ualion.
·.
· . ·
·. · :
· ·
·
·-,
Officer
Commissioning
uati9n.
All
training'is
condu_dedduring
the sum-
·
·
This
is
an
~xcellent
opportunity
to pro~e
·
Programs
.
,
,
.
'.
.
:,•,:·
.
.
.
~
;
.
.
.
.
'