The Circle, March 20, 1980.xml
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 24 No. 6 - March 20, 1980
content
Special Election Issue
s.
·
G. President~
.
'
Rivers vs. Raimo
•
• '
• .
••
.:.
.
.
•
·
·
'
'
•
'!'
.
'Rivers: ''l.Jhity''
·,
·
Raimo:
· t
~
•
·
,By
Joe Schatzle
Henry Rivers, student Body presidential
·
by ~obn Arnold
.
·
"The main
·
thing is student•~ rights and
what the students need and want."
·
_
.
;
.·
candidate;
is
asking
.
for
.
unity.
\
On
:
·
a
'[P
·r'?
·
_
campus
of
two-thousand. people one would
·
;~
,(
think
this
was a tremendous task. But not
· ~
.
.
according to Rivers.
·
-
_
!
~
:-
;
.-
This is how Jim Raimo s~ed
:
µpJu{
-
.,
.
._
·
decfs~on to pursue
.
the
.
post
,
:
of
/
~tua~rrt
·
:
;.'.
-
govemment president. -.
·
·. .
.
"There's been
a
lot of things that have
happe11ed at this sciiool that have affected
.
· Rivers is convinced
.
that "the students
of
Marist College possess the power to unite
·
as
_
one
,
and utiliz~ that power
to
make
Marist the place
·
to
be;" He insists,
.
·
however, that
:'
'the concerns; ideas,
problems and suggestions of the students
never leave the
.
dorms, the gym, the
·
cafeteria~
--
"The
~
students," he continues "discuss
,
··
many
issues
amongst
-
themselves
.
And
~
·
many
constructive
·
ideas come
.up
,
for
.
making
.
Marist
.
better.
;
But these ideas
never get accomplished because we're not
_
'
·
,
unified.'·' Rivers says he would like to do
.
something about the
-
problem.
-
~
'Once the studeI)ts get unified," he says,
"once they get together, then we can start
to make improyement."
.
And Rivers
himself
has suggestions, both original
,
Continued on page 1
·
Jim
Raimo
-
the
.:__
students
-
adversely because nobody
·
stuck up for their rights,"
·
says Raimo,
who
seems
·
eager to accept that respon~
sibility . as the
· •
primary
·
student'"
representative.
_
.
·
.
. .
"The .
.
a~tration sees wh?t they
think
is
good for Ma
'
rist College, as does
.
the faculty, anqthey vote to
·
inove toward
·
.
that goal, but they're not ~tudents.
,
They
,
don't know what the students like, what the
_
students want, what the students need; The
onlypeople who can give that kind of input
·
··
are the students," says Raimo.
·
The
-
20
year-old junior from Sands Point,
Long Island says his experience
with
various extra-curricular activities should
.
give him a distinct
·
advantage
·
over his
_
Continued on page 1
·
Shineto
·
run unopposed
·
•. '
by Tim.Breuer
: ·
Harry Chapin·-instead of the
.
lesser known·
.
.
.
.
.
bands they have had in the past.
.
·
"I think I kn9w whatl am doing, I have
Shine
·
has been the C.U.B
.
film com:.
·
been involved in student activities since mittee
·
chairman
for the past two years.
·
·
my freshman~ year and
I
have the most Some of the films that he has alrea.dy
-
experience in C.U.B. events," says Tom obtained for next semester
,
include, "Tpe
Shme who
is
running unopposed for the
.
Rose,"
"10,"
'.'The Electric Horseman,"
position of C.U.B. president.
_
. '
·
and
-_
"Kramer vs. Kramer."
:·
.
·
.
·
.
\
The duties
:
of
.
the C.U.B. president in-
_
Along with the filfns that Shine has
. cludl the averseeing
·
of all C. U .B. chair- obtained, he would also like to "stan-
.
pers~ns and the
'
designµig of all the student dardize" nights for events. Much
·
like this
.
_ activities. •One
,
of the biggest concerns, semester, Shine would like to keep the
Shine would like
to
see a better relatiort~
ship
.
between the fine arts committee and
·
·
-
.
the C.U.B. He feels that there has
been
·
;
problems with this
'
-committee because
·--;
people kept leaving the committee.
·
·
/
Shine says he
is
pleased with the C.U.B.
·
lecture committee and the lectures that
.
1
have been hel<:l in the past. He· plans to
'
continue to work with
_
the lecture com-
mittee much like
this
year's president
is
doing.
.
.
.
_
Shine, who
is
running unopposed, is not
·
-
unfamiliar with student government.
,
·
says Shine
is
the concert committee.
"I
mixers on
'
Friday and Saturday and keep
.
would like to
try
for a big concert and see
if
the movies on Sunday nights. He
,
feels that
that works, instead 'of trying
·
smaller_ this practice
is
good because
if
the events
ones," says Shine. He mentioned that he
·
are on standard nights1then people would
was look,ing for an entertainer such
·
as know when the events are
·
happening.
,
Besides b'eing the C.U!B. film chairman,
·
Shine has also occupied a spot on · the
student Academic
.
Com,mittee (SAC).
·
(
THE
CIRCLE
.
.
-
·
.
Marist Coliege~ foughke(!epsie,
N.
Y.
Volume 24,
Number
6- March 20, 1980
No C. U. Candidate
SAC: Arcuri lone candidate
·
·
By
Jim
Townsend
running for
me
-
president.
·
who is
running
for the president of the
SAC.
.
·
·
.
·
.
..
.
.
.
_
.
Cann says he is pleased
wi~
the quality
Th~re 1S still no candidate for the
,
of the candidates for the positions and says
_
pooition of Commuter Union p
_
resident in
·
the race for Student Government president
.
;
th_e Student
.
Government elections which
•
should be a close on
·
e.
.
·
-
-
-
.
Ar~uri,
,
who was the interhouse council
representative for Gregory House last
·
year, has been very involved in campus
activities since entering M.arist two years
.
ago. She has served as a tutor at
.
the
learning center, an academic aide for
~tudents in the special services, and a
will
·
be held next Wednesday, and Thur-
"I hope that the students
,
come to the
·
sday;
.
March 26 and Tl
·
~ys
.
Joe Cami,. .various campaign nights and learn more
Student G<>ve~ent p~eside~t.
.·
_
.
.
.
_
·
abouteach
of
the candidates," says
.
Cann.
Cann
:
says he was disappomted
m
the There are three scheduled times when the
-
.
number
of
people who applied for the candidates
-
will
.
talk and the students can
p
_
ositions
:_that
were open. _"N~t. enough . ask q!Jestions. They are scheduled for
p~ople came forward, th..e positions are today
m
the free slot on Sunday at 9:30 in
chall~nging
.
b11t there
•is
:
no
'
selection
·
of th~Fireside Lounge !ind Monday at9:30 in
~ndida~s
to
ch0?5e from,"
:
says
_
Cann.
-
the Leo Stone ~unge.
.
.
-
·
-
·
_
.
Three students
.
are runnmg
·
for the
Cann says
his
goal for the number of
Student~overnm
_
ent presidency and
_
thre_e students voting is
1000.
"Last year we had
,
ai:e
·
·
.runrung for the Interhouse Councjl onlr500 people voting and it showed the
-presidency
but ~ther than those there 1S
·
vanous strengths that the candidates
only one person running
-
·
for C.U.B. had."
•
.
·_
.
-
.
.
·
.
pr~ident 8:nd
,
Stu<;lent Academic
.
Com-
The voting will take place between the
nuttee president.
.
-.
.
.
hours of
~
next week.
•
The booths will be
.
.
The
.
students. running
for
Student set up in D01melly Hall and "the cafeteria.
Government. president are
.
Jim Raimo,
"I
hope s_tudents care about the elections
and
-
Henry- Rivers, while Colleen Fraz- and vote" says Cann .
..-
zetta; ~il Renrick, and Matt Chandler are
·
-
IJsa
Arcuri
- ,
,-
secretary for
·
the-
·
History, Political
Science, and Criminal Justice department.
She was also one
of
the members . of the
·
Pep· band which performed at the home
basketball games.-
.
·
·
·
.
Arcuri ~~Id
like
to see a serise of strong
.
-
commurucatJon between the student body,
·
the SAC, arid the faculty. "The SAC is a
vital
link
between the-, faculty and the
·
students," says Arcuri.
·
-
·
·
_
·
Iµ order to get the students to know who
.
there
·
representatives are and what they
are doing on
.
the committee, Arcuri
·
says
·
she would like
·
to see
·
a newsletter
·
published by the committee ..
.
•·
Arcuri sees some of the major problems
.
_
facing the SAC as
·
being the extension of
·
Jibrary hours, an exploration
·
of the
in-
,
temship program, and a proposal which
·
a
·
1
m
-
·o
,
-
.
·
,
'
"I
haven't seen any evidence of progress
being made by the Student Academic
_
-'
Committee
,
(SAC) since I have been he.re
would require the bookstore
-
to publish a
booklist two weeks in advance of classes
.
l'I
·
feel the students should have
·
the op~
port unity
-
to find other
.
places to buy their
·
b<>0ks at a possible cheaper price. This
would also avoid the pressure that is on the
stµdents
.
and wo~ld avoid the long lines
that al'¢
_
in the
.
bookstore,,,_says Arcuri,
·
who
is
running 11nopposed for the position.
closest rival· f 9r
.
the position,
·
Henry
_
fifth
·
consecutive semester.
_
and they serve such an important purpose
Rivers. "It's given m~ a chance to meet a
~-elected, ~
-
~o planito initiate some
· :
to th~
_
~o)lege comm~ty. 'Qiat.is
~h~
_
main
·
l~t
_
of
-
the ~ople _on ~s ca~p~ who
make. ,
~Jor -c!ta~~es
.
~
,
cuITent campus• prac-
:
reason why
I am ru~~•
I want,to fm.d ou~
a lot-of dec1S1ons.lthinkit.1S in;lportantto tices;
His·
firstofficial act:-would be
to
whilt the SAC can do, say~ L1Sa Arcun
have~a~
;
working relationsb:ip
:
with
;
:
these reofganize
~'
sfodent
•
· government!
"
He·
;·
,.·
·
'
· ,
·
.
•
people/'
.
·
.
· ·
·
,
.
,
,
,
:-
--
-
:
>
'
c
;
'
_
proposes the
-
establishment of
a
student
-
·.:
.
,
_.:
·
. .
.
·
·
·
·
·
·
_
<
C~eritly, he~ a niem~r
_
of both the
--'
se~te;corilposedoffiv
_
em~~bersof each
0a
·
-
·
r
·
-ee
-
r
,
,
:
s
··
;
e
'
·
m
'
·
,
•,
·
n·
·
·
a
·
r
to
·
··
·
r
··
..
.
d
·,s
•
a
·
'
b' led
JUD1or
..
Class Ring Committee and the
.
class
-
plus the present
-
council of student
·
\ . ,
·
.
_
_
.
·
·.
!
·
•
•
·
.
·
.
·
·
.·
·
··
·
•
--
·
_
·
Planning
·
_
Committee
.
.
for Parents' leaders. Each class would Qave at
_
least
Weekend.
·
:
In addition, he
-
functions as one~ommuter and one resident among
its
Resident Coordinator of
.
Benoit House,
..
repr
_
esentatives,
·
thus p
_
roviding the
·
chainnan of the political scienctfcltib, and desired "student input,"
-
·
which
-
~imo
·
a ~ember
of
the
Marist crew--team for the' considers essential
to
a college's success.
·
Rivers
.
By John Arnold
_
disabled population;
Al
Sindone from
'
,
the
_
.
, ~fice .Qf
•_
V ocatio~al Rehabilitation (OVR)
Quadriplegia, blindness, hearing im-
m
'
Poughkeepsie
will
speak on
·
the topic,
pairment, mobility impairment,
•
epilepsy; "OV
_
R ... What is it?"; and Mrs. Ruth~Ellen
·
a:nd
cerebral palsy are just a few of the_ Ross; a representative of the President's
disabilities that some members
'
of our Committee on Employment of the Han-
.
community must learn to cope with during dicappe<l, will
-
.
talk
·
about the future em-
.
their lives. Perhaps the most difficult task ployment outlook for disabled persons.
ideas and those he's' overheard just
_
sightful; he calls the one a.m. curfew set .fadng such persons in
"
their attempts at
The afternoon
.
segment will consist of
·
·
.
listening to other stuc;Ients.
.
·
·
by administration
of
special functions
.
living
-
normal and productive lives is
-
the
.
small group sessions, which· allow par-
.
"For ins~ce,'' he says
"I
feel that the. "quite ridiculous" and
-
the one guest limit
.
obtainment of ga~l employment. That
·
ticipants the opportunity
·
to speak with
~ ~ctivity
_
ought
.
to be seriously
·
~•quite
ridiculous
.
He
'
promis~,
if
elected,
problem will
·
be the subject of an all-day i!ldividual company
:
and organizational
questioned by the
-
students.
If
a strong io do all he can to correct these problems.
seminarsponsored
:
by the Office of Sp
_
ecial representatives about employment op-
.
'
·
·
base
of
power existed something could be
,
-
'
.Services
·
anq scheduled
_
for nex~ week.
·
.
portu
_
nities.
·
.
_
_
,
done. We pay
-
thirty bucks and still have to
Also, . he_
.
feels "~e college desperately
·
.
.
The
_
_
second a~ual Ca
_
reer Seminar
.
for
.
-
Companies
·
which
.
will
be
represented
pay foi: admission to basketball games,· need_s infll'Illary ~~nsion."
All
night the
:
Disabled will be held on 11tursday mclu~e Texaco/
-
Dutc~ess Bank, IBM,
:
CUB
·
movies;· and·. footoall gAnies?
·
It
:sez:v1ce,
:
be~r ~acµtties, lar~er staff and
.
.
,
:M,arC!J}_
2?
from
9
A.M,
;-
to_
4
,
P.M;
c.
at the Merrill-Lynch,
·
Northwestern Mutual
doesn't:inake
sense:",
.
-
_.
,
.
.
_
transportatio~
.
.
m · emergencies. are his
James
J.
McC~nn Recreation Center.
_
The Insurance,
.
Alfa-Laval. Separator_
Com-
"'
Uivers caribe sarcastic as well
-
as in- biggest concerns;
,.
,
·
·-. · · . . .
·
__
.:
~erriinarwill·consistoJbothaniorningand · pariy, _and Western Publishing. Several
·
· ·
·
.
.
· ·
, , ·· ·
>
.
\,
.
an afternoo~
.
se_ssion.
-
;.
'.
.
· .
.
?th~r-i:epresentatives have yetto confirm
·
The· morrung segment of the program invitations. Representatives of
·
,both the
·
will
feature three
·
spealters. Charles UnitedStatesandNewYork. Civil Service,
-
9iglio,
.
representing Marist's Office of as well
_
as social worker Betty Otis will
-
Willie
··
Wof1ka :
.
.
.
.
.
..
-
·
~
.
.
.
·.
·
'
-
.
·
.
.
.
'
.
.
.
.
..
,
Ch©colate
on
Sta
'
ge
·
•
".
.
'
.
•
I
•
~
·
'
.
•
.
·
•
•
•
•
-
.
.
··
-
:-·:_.
.
.
. ··
.
,
•
:·
'
·J
. -
.
·
...
_
By-pavidM~tz
: .
-
answer many que,stions from ·_the· begin-
ning. "I was always being asked,fhow are
The
backdrop was lowered,
"
the,. sets you going
_
t9 reproduce this?' 9r 'how are
were rolled onto the stage, and the
·
Oonipa-
Y.OU
going ~o do
,
that?'
.
but
_
I've had con-
Loompa~ waddled·o11t"from the wings to J~den~,e in 01ir ~hnical
·
peopl~ aU the
rehe~rse
·
once
•
again
_
their
:
:
setie~•
-.
of
·
. tune.
_
·
As
las~ ~ute
0
prep~ratiQns went
rl)yming
·
lfues.
:
The Loomp~s
·
lines
will
..
on
_
around her, Laypor:t
_
co~ided,
''l t ~
serve as narration for hundreds
.
of school ~ t the sets a.n~ tt,ie te~hnical"aspects are
children; as they
~
,c~~e t~
:
-
M
_
~rist
-
n.ext
. :
gou~gto be
·
_
really ~~at, and four sho\\'.s
week
;
_
to
.
:
·
see
':•
"Willie
-~
W<>
.
h.k~
.
.
:
and
.
tl}e ~re alreacly sold-out
.
_
.
;
Chocolij~ Factory."
:;·
-·
>
·
_.
,
.
· ··
'-
.
~a.Y
.
_,
DeCesare plays the
.
title r?l,e of
-
;
.:
/
~'Willie
.
Wonka ... "
.
a. story that
-
follows
..
Willie
:
Wonka,
·
owner of a magnlflcent
ffie
,
adventures . of
4
:
riatighty:
·
children;
.
a
· .
choc9late
\
_factory,
:
jvhil~
:
:-Andy.
Claflin
hefo
'
\
Charlie,'.· and. their
,
host
.
with
.
his
plays , .. Ch~rli
_
e'';-~ild Mike McCarthy pla_ys
Ch9Colat~f Factory, ,is· direc~
:
d
_
by
:
.Dor~ ,
"Grampa-J~t
'
\ '.
·
<
>.
: ... ,
:-·
·
· -·
_
. -
'
Layportandproduced by
•
Bri~~ Lambec~;
.
pte
·
cu~m g~s up
._
on ','.Willie_Wonka'
,
'
.
.
.
._
:
.
:
/
'I'm :n
·
ervous
·
a:nd~
.
rm
;
exc1ted;'
.
~
:
-
-
sa,id·
·
,
thisM011day
.
at 9:00 a.m., for the first
.
oO5
. .
tiiyporg
'.
9f
f
h~(f,~~t
:-:
experien,ce
__ ·
a
_
s
,
·
a
:
pe~onpaiices
·
·
inc;h1din~
·
~~rist
.:::
~gl!t,
·
dir~cl9r
!:
•
·
!•J~
..;.
I~me<l
::
a
<
lot
'.
-¼-:
spe_rtt
·
_
,
fnd~y
,
a_t
z:oo
p:m.
_
.With
,
the
:
-
m!lgic
C?!
•
'
-
'Spring
,
;
0
Br~''
,
\
he're
__
/
1.1
_
r:
Jl!e
· :
.
~eater
.;
llllilgma~on;
<
~'\\'.lllle
.
_
Wonk3.'
\
,
sh~uld
_
-
--
-
~
palritjfig
,
b'ackdr<>p~.~
-
•
?
c:·
;.
:
·<
\
.
.
_
:
.
-
.
-
·
:
.
another.111 a long_:lin~. opda~t C~~r~11:~
~:
)
J&~~
;
~~~
:
f:o:J~~
;
~a~Y
:
Q.~~~fl~5-, -~11
_
d
'.:''
!~~~
-
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:
,
~~~~~~
-
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'
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;
:
-
: _.
::
:
;
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'.
:_
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-/
:
Continuing
,
Educatiim,
will
discµss what
·
also attend.
·
,
..
•
.
·
.
continuing
·
education
.
has to offer
.
the
.
_
.
•
~=~~:~~ts
_:
,~
;-
~t~~
<
bul
~
mar~li
~~
-
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;
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.
•
-
-
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....
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Page 2- THE CIRCLE -MARCH-20, 1980
THE
·
CIRCLE
Readers Write
--
All letters mu••
be
typed triple space with o 60 space morgu,, ond •ubmitted lo the Circle
office no lot er thon 6 p.m. Monday. Short letter• ore preferred. We re•erve the rightto edit
oil letters. letters inust
be
signed. but names may
be
withheld
upon request.
letters
wm
be
publi•hed depending upon ovoilobillty of
spoce..
·
Thanks
editor
ossociote editors
sports edifor
photography editor
advertising manager
.~usiness· manager
contributing editor
layout editor
copy editors
distribution manager
Jim Townsend
Loretta Kennedy
Bill'foylor ..
, Chris-Egan·
Ke~in Keliy
Chris McVeety
Tom Navarra
John Bulterffeld
Wanda Baniak
Dave Powers
MaryAnn Mulligan .
Nancy Zaccario
Jim Fiora:
. . Dr. Louis Zuccarello
Academic ·vice President
Ma~t Coll_ege
Dear·Lou:
·
On behalf
of
the facility, the
- Faculty Policy Committee ex-
tends to you its warmest wishes
·
as you prepare to relinquish your
role as Academic-Vice-President
and· Dean· and resume vested
faculty- status as Associate
· Professor of Political· Science,
~t
is
the ~animous opinion of
this
comnuttee . that · in . your
fairness, honesty, wisdom, and
judiciousness.
It
has
been a
· forward-looking one, uniquely
combining firm structure and
compassionate outlook.
.
· We are--naturally reluctant to
see your. administration of
this
office ena. However, we are also
happy that
"this
decision best
serves your personal and
professional interests · according
to your choice. We welcome you
tojoin. us again. as a che~J}ed
colleague.
- .
-
Cordially yQurs,
Peter O'Keefe
>
Bill Perrotte
,
'.fed Prenting .
..
·
Carolyn J,andau
Greg K~gariff
Staff: Micha~! McCartliy,--:iohn Arnold. K~ren Flaherty,•Joe·Schatzie' Dave Metz- Ti:
Breuer, Jim William,son, ·oaro Ward, Rory Ferguson, ·Phil Le G~re, ·Kenneth Fr;nch
Joanie Mayone.
·
•
'
· .. tenure of office you have -given
wholehearted · and distinguished
service. Speaking for the faculty,
we 'feel that your leadership has ·
_b~n.eminen~y characterized ·bY. ·
Endorse·menf
-Faculty Advi~or - Marguerite Culp_
To the E-ditor:
'.'-gttidents around a, Jentraf.theme
Af!er
3
3-4
years here at Marist
and l~d. t~e student. b<><!Y .,\!ith _
·Let's
Vote
College; · we .. · the undersigned,
determination anq. -· dedication.
after
dedication and involvement, We can say.
this
because? we
throughout these years, loqk
ourselves have been student -
-
sadly upon graduation. We do so
leaders and we see outstanding
because of the relationships that · qualities in Mr._ Raimo and Mr.
were· created. and because of
Shine. For those who don't know::....
what we gave to Marist and what - them
this
letter might influence·
Next Wedn~sday a~d_Tliursday the-;lec- ,
tions for the student goverrinient positions will
be taking place. There are many qualified can-
didates ·for the positions of the Council oL
Student Leaders but the fact is,
if
the students
_
do not vote; then nothing can be ac- ·
coriiplished.
I•.
-Like many other organizations that ha~e .
students as leaders, the stuqent government
has come under criticism of both students and
administration. The criticism-. by the ad--
ministration can be dealt with by the members
of the student government but
·
much of the
criticism that has come from. students conies
from the students that do nottake part in any ·
of the activities.
_ ·
The student government'positio_ns are the
only positions where the students.can actually
have a say in the dealings of the school and the
administration. They are our voice in the
- school, but
if
we do not . take the , elections
seriously, the only say that we have iri. the :
school can be~destroyed.
.
L
· · ·
-
· ·h · ·
-
·
'f ·d
· ·- -
~
·
Marist gave to us.
· _
·
yon; for_those who do know them
.· . astyear,_te \urnoutoSt
u
ents votmg for
UP.on leaving this remarkable
this letter
is
not necessary. -
therr repr~sentativrs was poor. Althm1ghthe .
institution, .we would like to see it '
Jack Oehm,
people that:·. were ele_cted to the various ;_:: ... contil}ue as
a
place of learning ·
Pete McFadden
· positions_. were competent,· they_ ·were ooly • and growing. ,_"With . all ui:i- ·
--,--c-:-Jcie Cann,
chosen by a small cross-section of the student : -derc:Ja~sm~n · supportmg .this
_
Don Ball
population.
·
·· school:It
.will
become, an even
JohnShanmin
-
·
./
· greater placeto be. We feel that
Patti McGhee
Jiin Raimo. and
Torn
Shine,
if
John Deluca ,- _
There have'been three dates set aside ~so.ihe
. elected ~resident of the· Student
'Jim Doherty
_
.
. , .· .·.
_ .· ..
.
. .
_ Body and -PresidenLof C.U.B.
Kenny Sullivan
students'-can liste11
:10
the candidates . .They:·_ - respectively-
will
_rally . the·
' Keyin Kelly
iu:e:J\1arch .20
.
in Donnt:lly 245 11LlJ:20,
0
' · ·
•r-·-----~· ..
· _______________ ..... ...;._ ..... ..,.
__ Sunqay.March 23 ~:the·,Fireside Lounge
-
at
9:30 p.m., and Marc_h 2'1 in Leo Stone
Lounge at9 :30: ._
·
· ::. · .. ·--
1; _ -::
<"' · .. ·
- Th,~-~ .dates arejust as intp~rtanta~the
voting; They will give the students a cliance
to
· · meet the candidates and d_iscussthe issues on.
campu,_s.
It
is
the duty ofthe students to at:~
tend at least one of these sessions and liste1fto
· _ the candidates and inen vote.
The elections are very serious and should be
taken so by the students.
It
is our voice
in
th~
action_s of th;school and we should.pick ,the
best pe_Ison to represent us.
>
· So, attend the. candidate._s nights and show
that you are_interested in the representation
by voting next week;
·
-_ -- Park Discount B¢verage~
-~t.9·HydePark . _
229-9000 .
- P_abst Loo·se Cans
ColtSilver'D~luxe ·,-
...:..
,
..
$5~39
-.case
case
$l.25- --~
6 pack·
O,IC: .~;i)KJJD~
"'G~i-lfWE.~-'1'·
(l.ep.u,.y
-r,o,Jf:
'TJ\A,-: R\~T~_sr1c
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S~so~'1_81l1 ·
1
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6-AMf.
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60-T
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MEN.-1-,.
l'~O
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p,,u;,
1,.:us.
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'(Oil
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'(01$-
Al,(, • .·
1-e:1".S
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·, t~'..: .: ~-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - M a r c h
20, 1980-
THE CIRCLE-Page3 -
UPCOMING· CUB~- EVENTS
THU
.
R.
MA-R.
20 CUB SOFTBALL LEAGUE
.
:
.
:_
/
ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING
.
..
.
-
·
TIME: 9:30
P.M. PLACE: CUB OFFICE
-
· .
-
.
.
.
.
.
ALL PERSONS WISHING TO ENTER A
;-°'
_
_
.
TEAM MUST BE PRESENT
-·
TH
.
UR.
M
_
~R.
20 CUB COFFEEHOUSE
..
TIME 9:30-12:00 FIRESIDE LOUNGE
/
~
- ·
.
.
-
-
-
"CAMPUS TALENT"·
-
·
·
_
·
-
·
:
..
_
__
·
·-
THUR.MAR.27
:
CUB
,
COFFEEHOUSE
·
,
-
..
TIME:
'
9:30-1
·
2:o
·
o FIRESIDE LOUNGE
.
__
.
·
-
_
_-
:
- ·
.
.
ENCORE PERFORMANCE
,-_
"RAYMOND AVENUE RAMBLERS"
· -
·
·
--
-
-
_
·
.
SUN.
MAR.
30
-
CUB
FILM
_
·
__
-
.
,
.
·
.
,
.•.
.-
~
-_
·
TIME: 7 P.M.
&
9:30 P.M.
·
-
-
-
.
._
·
-·
·
·
-~-
·
.
COLLEGE TH EATER
--
..
·
·
-
-
"IN LAWS' ALAN ARKIN
&
\
~·'
;
·
·
· ._·
_ .
.
PETER FALK
.
.
.
_'--
-
·
~-
·
·
ADMISSION $1.00
_
- --
-
-
-
MON:
-
·
MAR. 31
--
CUB PERFORMING AR
-
TS
·
·
·
·
-
·-:
_
-
.
.
-
TIME:8:00 P.M
-
. COLLEGE THEATER
·
·
:
"T~ ARTBERRY· MIME"
.
-·
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.
.
.
.
'
.
.
.
.
--
-
.
··
·
.
-
.
-
ADMISSION FREE
<-;
<'
S
.
•
-
~ · ·
-
•
•
•
M
'
ON.-,MAR.
··
31
·::ClJB
;
&
HOUSING
-~
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_.,,,.,
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...
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....
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PRESENTS
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RO
.
LLER
"
SKATING PARTY
.
,.
.
..
.
•
IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING "MIME"
FURT
_
HER DETAILS SEE
-
DEAN
-
KELLY
.
TRANSPORTATION·TO BE
.
-
PROVIDED
.
·
j
EASTER
VACATION
Shamus's
New-York
PUBLIC :HOUSE, ,,
MaristAIUmni
, -·and
RESTAURANT -
Jini8arnes·'68
·-
-
.
.·
.
.
-
.
.
\
OPEN TIL 4 AM DAIL
y
~•-
FINE MUSIC•":: APPEARING
Morch 6, 7, 8 •
COLLEGE AGE
·
Morch 13, 14&15
BANDS WANTED . .
Morch 16
&
17-
.SPITFIRE·
MUTTS
ST.PATRICKS
. ' DAY PARTY
Downstairs Club
· D~nceable
Rock
,·
For Sum·m
Morch 20, 21
&
22
N.Y.U.
er .
Morch 27; 28
&
29 .
SHIP.OF FOOLS . .
Low Room Fee · ·
April 3, 4
&
s
CRACKED SALL
v
PUB MENU
AVAILABLE DAILY .
' You
Keep :-: .
~~~::~t
a: ;
~
~E:J~ON
The Door Charge
.
·
'April 2~;
2s·
&
26
·
EPSILON
Bring
Your ·· ·· • . ..,·· ....... -• ...
·- ____ __,..;.;....,;,...,.
Following
-<- ...
MAKELARGK
. FEES
r:·rREE
PARTYR
FORA
{)_CCASI
..
.
-SPORTS'PIIONE
:On>y
a dime
o,
iess ror
()UI
customers
,
1
If\
212. 516
and
914
area~
Long
d~ranc:e eJ~nere
<
A
DIAL•IT
servic;. . .
·. oJN~YorkTe!eJ>hOO•
/
,
DJ
PLAYING.YOUR
FAVORITES UPSTAIRS .
·: EYERY WED.,JRI. '
·-- ·-:·~ sAr.-"·
':r:
Tuesday-AudiUon.
Nfght
Sunday-Ballad Singers or Duo's
Wanted
. 21 Years
of
Age
froper Attire
.
~ ~ - . : t . - , J , 1 / , f f i & i ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ , ~ ~ ~ ~ : , - , , . . ' : . "
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'-
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24.6.1
24.6.2
24.6.3
24.6.4
24.6.5
24.6.6
s.
·
G. President~
.
'
Rivers vs. Raimo
•
• '
• .
••
.:.
.
.
•
·
·
'
'
•
'!'
.
'Rivers: ''l.Jhity''
·,
·
Raimo:
· t
~
•
·
,By
Joe Schatzle
Henry Rivers, student Body presidential
·
by ~obn Arnold
.
·
"The main
·
thing is student•~ rights and
what the students need and want."
·
_
.
;
.·
candidate;
is
asking
.
for
.
unity.
\
On
:
·
a
'[P
·r'?
·
_
campus
of
two-thousand. people one would
·
;~
,(
think
this
was a tremendous task. But not
· ~
.
.
according to Rivers.
·
-
_
!
~
:-
;
.-
This is how Jim Raimo s~ed
:
µpJu{
-
.,
.
._
·
decfs~on to pursue
.
the
.
post
,
:
of
/
~tua~rrt
·
:
;.'.
-
govemment president. -.
·
·. .
.
"There's been
a
lot of things that have
happe11ed at this sciiool that have affected
.
· Rivers is convinced
.
that "the students
of
Marist College possess the power to unite
·
as
_
one
,
and utiliz~ that power
to
make
Marist the place
·
to
be;" He insists,
.
·
however, that
:'
'the concerns; ideas,
problems and suggestions of the students
never leave the
.
dorms, the gym, the
·
cafeteria~
--
"The
~
students," he continues "discuss
,
··
many
issues
amongst
-
themselves
.
And
~
·
many
constructive
·
ideas come
.up
,
for
.
making
.
Marist
.
better.
;
But these ideas
never get accomplished because we're not
_
'
·
,
unified.'·' Rivers says he would like to do
.
something about the
-
problem.
-
~
'Once the studeI)ts get unified," he says,
"once they get together, then we can start
to make improyement."
.
And Rivers
himself
has suggestions, both original
,
Continued on page 1
·
Jim
Raimo
-
the
.:__
students
-
adversely because nobody
·
stuck up for their rights,"
·
says Raimo,
who
seems
·
eager to accept that respon~
sibility . as the
· •
primary
·
student'"
representative.
_
.
·
.
. .
"The .
.
a~tration sees wh?t they
think
is
good for Ma
'
rist College, as does
.
the faculty, anqthey vote to
·
inove toward
·
.
that goal, but they're not ~tudents.
,
They
,
don't know what the students like, what the
_
students want, what the students need; The
onlypeople who can give that kind of input
·
··
are the students," says Raimo.
·
The
-
20
year-old junior from Sands Point,
Long Island says his experience
with
various extra-curricular activities should
.
give him a distinct
·
advantage
·
over his
_
Continued on page 1
·
Shineto
·
run unopposed
·
•. '
by Tim.Breuer
: ·
Harry Chapin·-instead of the
.
lesser known·
.
.
.
.
.
bands they have had in the past.
.
·
"I think I kn9w whatl am doing, I have
Shine
·
has been the C.U.B
.
film com:.
·
been involved in student activities since mittee
·
chairman
for the past two years.
·
·
my freshman~ year and
I
have the most Some of the films that he has alrea.dy
-
experience in C.U.B. events," says Tom obtained for next semester
,
include, "Tpe
Shme who
is
running unopposed for the
.
Rose,"
"10,"
'.'The Electric Horseman,"
position of C.U.B. president.
_
. '
·
and
-_
"Kramer vs. Kramer."
:·
.
·
.
·
.
\
The duties
:
of
.
the C.U.B. president in-
_
Along with the filfns that Shine has
. cludl the averseeing
·
of all C. U .B. chair- obtained, he would also like to "stan-
.
pers~ns and the
'
designµig of all the student dardize" nights for events. Much
·
like this
.
_ activities. •One
,
of the biggest concerns, semester, Shine would like to keep the
Shine would like
to
see a better relatiort~
ship
.
between the fine arts committee and
·
·
-
.
the C.U.B. He feels that there has
been
·
;
problems with this
'
-committee because
·--;
people kept leaving the committee.
·
·
/
Shine says he
is
pleased with the C.U.B.
·
lecture committee and the lectures that
.
1
have been hel<:l in the past. He· plans to
'
continue to work with
_
the lecture com-
mittee much like
this
year's president
is
doing.
.
.
.
_
Shine, who
is
running unopposed, is not
·
-
unfamiliar with student government.
,
·
says Shine
is
the concert committee.
"I
mixers on
'
Friday and Saturday and keep
.
would like to
try
for a big concert and see
if
the movies on Sunday nights. He
,
feels that
that works, instead 'of trying
·
smaller_ this practice
is
good because
if
the events
ones," says Shine. He mentioned that he
·
are on standard nights1then people would
was look,ing for an entertainer such
·
as know when the events are
·
happening.
,
Besides b'eing the C.U!B. film chairman,
·
Shine has also occupied a spot on · the
student Academic
.
Com,mittee (SAC).
·
(
THE
CIRCLE
.
.
-
·
.
Marist Coliege~ foughke(!epsie,
N.
Y.
Volume 24,
Number
6- March 20, 1980
No C. U. Candidate
SAC: Arcuri lone candidate
·
·
By
Jim
Townsend
running for
me
-
president.
·
who is
running
for the president of the
SAC.
.
·
·
.
·
.
..
.
.
.
_
.
Cann says he is pleased
wi~
the quality
Th~re 1S still no candidate for the
,
of the candidates for the positions and says
_
pooition of Commuter Union p
_
resident in
·
the race for Student Government president
.
;
th_e Student
.
Government elections which
•
should be a close on
·
e.
.
·
-
-
-
.
Ar~uri,
,
who was the interhouse council
representative for Gregory House last
·
year, has been very involved in campus
activities since entering M.arist two years
.
ago. She has served as a tutor at
.
the
learning center, an academic aide for
~tudents in the special services, and a
will
·
be held next Wednesday, and Thur-
"I hope that the students
,
come to the
·
sday;
.
March 26 and Tl
·
~ys
.
Joe Cami,. .various campaign nights and learn more
Student G<>ve~ent p~eside~t.
.·
_
.
.
.
_
·
abouteach
of
the candidates," says
.
Cann.
Cann
:
says he was disappomted
m
the There are three scheduled times when the
-
.
number
of
people who applied for the candidates
-
will
.
talk and the students can
p
_
ositions
:_that
were open. _"N~t. enough . ask q!Jestions. They are scheduled for
p~ople came forward, th..e positions are today
m
the free slot on Sunday at 9:30 in
chall~nging
.
b11t there
•is
:
no
'
selection
·
of th~Fireside Lounge !ind Monday at9:30 in
~ndida~s
to
ch0?5e from,"
:
says
_
Cann.
-
the Leo Stone ~unge.
.
.
-
·
-
·
_
.
Three students
.
are runnmg
·
for the
Cann says
his
goal for the number of
Student~overnm
_
ent presidency and
_
thre_e students voting is
1000.
"Last year we had
,
ai:e
·
·
.runrung for the Interhouse Councjl onlr500 people voting and it showed the
-presidency
but ~ther than those there 1S
·
vanous strengths that the candidates
only one person running
-
·
for C.U.B. had."
•
.
·_
.
-
.
.
·
.
pr~ident 8:nd
,
Stu<;lent Academic
.
Com-
The voting will take place between the
nuttee president.
.
-.
.
.
hours of
~
next week.
•
The booths will be
.
.
The
.
students. running
for
Student set up in D01melly Hall and "the cafeteria.
Government. president are
.
Jim Raimo,
"I
hope s_tudents care about the elections
and
-
Henry- Rivers, while Colleen Fraz- and vote" says Cann .
..-
zetta; ~il Renrick, and Matt Chandler are
·
-
IJsa
Arcuri
- ,
,-
secretary for
·
the-
·
History, Political
Science, and Criminal Justice department.
She was also one
of
the members . of the
·
Pep· band which performed at the home
basketball games.-
.
·
·
·
.
Arcuri ~~Id
like
to see a serise of strong
.
-
commurucatJon between the student body,
·
the SAC, arid the faculty. "The SAC is a
vital
link
between the-, faculty and the
·
students," says Arcuri.
·
-
·
·
_
·
Iµ order to get the students to know who
.
there
·
representatives are and what they
are doing on
.
the committee, Arcuri
·
says
·
she would like
·
to see
·
a newsletter
·
published by the committee ..
.
•·
Arcuri sees some of the major problems
.
_
facing the SAC as
·
being the extension of
·
Jibrary hours, an exploration
·
of the
in-
,
temship program, and a proposal which
·
a
·
1
m
-
·o
,
-
.
·
,
'
"I
haven't seen any evidence of progress
being made by the Student Academic
_
-'
Committee
,
(SAC) since I have been he.re
would require the bookstore
-
to publish a
booklist two weeks in advance of classes
.
l'I
·
feel the students should have
·
the op~
port unity
-
to find other
.
places to buy their
·
b<>0ks at a possible cheaper price. This
would also avoid the pressure that is on the
stµdents
.
and wo~ld avoid the long lines
that al'¢
_
in the
.
bookstore,,,_says Arcuri,
·
who
is
running 11nopposed for the position.
closest rival· f 9r
.
the position,
·
Henry
_
fifth
·
consecutive semester.
_
and they serve such an important purpose
Rivers. "It's given m~ a chance to meet a
~-elected, ~
-
~o planito initiate some
· :
to th~
_
~o)lege comm~ty. 'Qiat.is
~h~
_
main
·
l~t
_
of
-
the ~ople _on ~s ca~p~ who
make. ,
~Jor -c!ta~~es
.
~
,
cuITent campus• prac-
:
reason why
I am ru~~•
I want,to fm.d ou~
a lot-of dec1S1ons.lthinkit.1S in;lportantto tices;
His·
firstofficial act:-would be
to
whilt the SAC can do, say~ L1Sa Arcun
have~a~
;
working relationsb:ip
:
with
;
:
these reofganize
~'
sfodent
•
· government!
"
He·
;·
,.·
·
'
· ,
·
.
•
people/'
.
·
.
· ·
·
,
.
,
,
,
:-
--
-
:
>
'
c
;
'
_
proposes the
-
establishment of
a
student
-
·.:
.
,
_.:
·
. .
.
·
·
·
·
·
·
_
<
C~eritly, he~ a niem~r
_
of both the
--'
se~te;corilposedoffiv
_
em~~bersof each
0a
·
-
·
r
·
-ee
-
r
,
,
:
s
··
;
e
'
·
m
'
·
,
•,
·
n·
·
·
a
·
r
to
·
··
·
r
··
..
.
d
·,s
•
a
·
'
b' led
JUD1or
..
Class Ring Committee and the
.
class
-
plus the present
-
council of student
·
\ . ,
·
.
_
_
.
·
·.
!
·
•
•
·
.
·
.
·
·
.·
·
··
·
•
--
·
_
·
Planning
·
_
Committee
.
.
for Parents' leaders. Each class would Qave at
_
least
Weekend.
·
:
In addition, he
-
functions as one~ommuter and one resident among
its
Resident Coordinator of
.
Benoit House,
..
repr
_
esentatives,
·
thus p
_
roviding the
·
chainnan of the political scienctfcltib, and desired "student input,"
-
·
which
-
~imo
·
a ~ember
of
the
Marist crew--team for the' considers essential
to
a college's success.
·
Rivers
.
By John Arnold
_
disabled population;
Al
Sindone from
'
,
the
_
.
, ~fice .Qf
•_
V ocatio~al Rehabilitation (OVR)
Quadriplegia, blindness, hearing im-
m
'
Poughkeepsie
will
speak on
·
the topic,
pairment, mobility impairment,
•
epilepsy; "OV
_
R ... What is it?"; and Mrs. Ruth~Ellen
·
a:nd
cerebral palsy are just a few of the_ Ross; a representative of the President's
disabilities that some members
'
of our Committee on Employment of the Han-
.
community must learn to cope with during dicappe<l, will
-
.
talk
·
about the future em-
.
their lives. Perhaps the most difficult task ployment outlook for disabled persons.
ideas and those he's' overheard just
_
sightful; he calls the one a.m. curfew set .fadng such persons in
"
their attempts at
The afternoon
.
segment will consist of
·
·
.
listening to other stuc;Ients.
.
·
·
by administration
of
special functions
.
living
-
normal and productive lives is
-
the
.
small group sessions, which· allow par-
.
"For ins~ce,'' he says
"I
feel that the. "quite ridiculous" and
-
the one guest limit
.
obtainment of ga~l employment. That
·
ticipants the opportunity
·
to speak with
~ ~ctivity
_
ought
.
to be seriously
·
~•quite
ridiculous
.
He
'
promis~,
if
elected,
problem will
·
be the subject of an all-day i!ldividual company
:
and organizational
questioned by the
-
students.
If
a strong io do all he can to correct these problems.
seminarsponsored
:
by the Office of Sp
_
ecial representatives about employment op-
.
'
·
·
base
of
power existed something could be
,
-
'
.Services
·
anq scheduled
_
for nex~ week.
·
.
portu
_
nities.
·
.
_
_
,
done. We pay
-
thirty bucks and still have to
Also, . he_
.
feels "~e college desperately
·
.
.
The
_
_
second a~ual Ca
_
reer Seminar
.
for
.
-
Companies
·
which
.
will
be
represented
pay foi: admission to basketball games,· need_s infll'Illary ~~nsion."
All
night the
:
Disabled will be held on 11tursday mclu~e Texaco/
-
Dutc~ess Bank, IBM,
:
CUB
·
movies;· and·. footoall gAnies?
·
It
:sez:v1ce,
:
be~r ~acµtties, lar~er staff and
.
.
,
:M,arC!J}_
2?
from
9
A.M,
;-
to_
4
,
P.M;
c.
at the Merrill-Lynch,
·
Northwestern Mutual
doesn't:inake
sense:",
.
-
_.
,
.
.
_
transportatio~
.
.
m · emergencies. are his
James
J.
McC~nn Recreation Center.
_
The Insurance,
.
Alfa-Laval. Separator_
Com-
"'
Uivers caribe sarcastic as well
-
as in- biggest concerns;
,.
,
·
·-. · · . . .
·
__
.:
~erriinarwill·consistoJbothaniorningand · pariy, _and Western Publishing. Several
·
· ·
·
.
.
· ·
, , ·· ·
>
.
\,
.
an afternoo~
.
se_ssion.
-
;.
'.
.
· .
.
?th~r-i:epresentatives have yetto confirm
·
The· morrung segment of the program invitations. Representatives of
·
,both the
·
will
feature three
·
spealters. Charles UnitedStatesandNewYork. Civil Service,
-
9iglio,
.
representing Marist's Office of as well
_
as social worker Betty Otis will
-
Willie
··
Wof1ka :
.
.
.
.
.
..
-
·
~
.
.
.
·.
·
'
-
.
·
.
.
.
'
.
.
.
.
..
,
Ch©colate
on
Sta
'
ge
·
•
".
.
'
.
•
I
•
~
·
'
.
•
.
·
•
•
•
•
-
.
.
··
-
:-·:_.
.
.
. ··
.
,
•
:·
'
·J
. -
.
·
...
_
By-pavidM~tz
: .
-
answer many que,stions from ·_the· begin-
ning. "I was always being asked,fhow are
The
backdrop was lowered,
"
the,. sets you going
_
t9 reproduce this?' 9r 'how are
were rolled onto the stage, and the
·
Oonipa-
Y.OU
going ~o do
,
that?'
.
but
_
I've had con-
Loompa~ waddled·o11t"from the wings to J~den~,e in 01ir ~hnical
·
peopl~ aU the
rehe~rse
·
once
•
again
_
their
:
:
setie~•
-.
of
·
. tune.
_
·
As
las~ ~ute
0
prep~ratiQns went
rl)yming
·
lfues.
:
The Loomp~s
·
lines
will
..
on
_
around her, Laypor:t
_
co~ided,
''l t ~
serve as narration for hundreds
.
of school ~ t the sets a.n~ tt,ie te~hnical"aspects are
children; as they
~
,c~~e t~
:
-
M
_
~rist
-
n.ext
. :
gou~gto be
·
_
really ~~at, and four sho\\'.s
week
;
_
to
.
:
·
see
':•
"Willie
-~
W<>
.
h.k~
.
.
:
and
.
tl}e ~re alreacly sold-out
.
_
.
;
Chocolij~ Factory."
:;·
-·
>
·
_.
,
.
· ··
'-
.
~a.Y
.
_,
DeCesare plays the
.
title r?l,e of
-
;
.:
/
~'Willie
.
Wonka ... "
.
a. story that
-
follows
..
Willie
:
Wonka,
·
owner of a magnlflcent
ffie
,
adventures . of
4
:
riatighty:
·
children;
.
a
· .
choc9late
\
_factory,
:
jvhil~
:
:-Andy.
Claflin
hefo
'
\
Charlie,'.· and. their
,
host
.
with
.
his
plays , .. Ch~rli
_
e'';-~ild Mike McCarthy pla_ys
Ch9Colat~f Factory, ,is· direc~
:
d
_
by
:
.Dor~ ,
"Grampa-J~t
'
\ '.
·
<
>.
: ... ,
:-·
·
· -·
_
. -
'
Layportandproduced by
•
Bri~~ Lambec~;
.
pte
·
cu~m g~s up
._
on ','.Willie_Wonka'
,
'
.
.
.
._
:
.
:
/
'I'm :n
·
ervous
·
a:nd~
.
rm
;
exc1ted;'
.
~
:
-
-
sa,id·
·
,
thisM011day
.
at 9:00 a.m., for the first
.
oO5
. .
tiiyporg
'.
9f
f
h~(f,~~t
:-:
experien,ce
__ ·
a
_
s
,
·
a
:
pe~onpaiices
·
·
inc;h1din~
·
~~rist
.:::
~gl!t,
·
dir~cl9r
!:
•
·
!•J~
..;.
I~me<l
::
a
<
lot
'.
-¼-:
spe_rtt
·
_
,
fnd~y
,
a_t
z:oo
p:m.
_
.With
,
the
:
-
m!lgic
C?!
•
'
-
'Spring
,
;
0
Br~''
,
\
he're
__
/
1.1
_
r:
Jl!e
· :
.
~eater
.;
llllilgma~on;
<
~'\\'.lllle
.
_
Wonk3.'
\
,
sh~uld
_
-
--
-
~
palritjfig
,
b'ackdr<>p~.~
-
•
?
c:·
;.
:
·<
\
.
.
_
:
.
-
.
-
·
:
.
another.111 a long_:lin~. opda~t C~~r~11:~
~:
)
J&~~
;
~~~
:
f:o:J~~
;
~a~Y
:
Q.~~~fl~5-, -~11
_
d
'.:''
!~~~
-
~
:
,
~~~~~~
-
l
~~n~;
'
;
,
.
::
.
-\-_;f
;
:
-
: _.
::
:
;
·
'.
:_
·
J
__
.,
-/
:
Continuing
,
Educatiim,
will
discµss what
·
also attend.
·
,
..
•
.
·
.
continuing
·
education
.
has to offer
.
the
.
_
.
•
~=~~:~~ts
_:
,~
;-
~t~~
<
bul
~
mar~li
~~
-
~~._r.•~~k
;
~
:
~Y
~de
1n
N~~
.
.
•
-
-
..
_
,
.
.
.
....
.l
_
j
'·
.
;\
.
·
·
'
.
I
-
\,
Page 2- THE CIRCLE -MARCH-20, 1980
THE
·
CIRCLE
Readers Write
--
All letters mu••
be
typed triple space with o 60 space morgu,, ond •ubmitted lo the Circle
office no lot er thon 6 p.m. Monday. Short letter• ore preferred. We re•erve the rightto edit
oil letters. letters inust
be
signed. but names may
be
withheld
upon request.
letters
wm
be
publi•hed depending upon ovoilobillty of
spoce..
·
Thanks
editor
ossociote editors
sports edifor
photography editor
advertising manager
.~usiness· manager
contributing editor
layout editor
copy editors
distribution manager
Jim Townsend
Loretta Kennedy
Bill'foylor ..
, Chris-Egan·
Ke~in Keliy
Chris McVeety
Tom Navarra
John Bulterffeld
Wanda Baniak
Dave Powers
MaryAnn Mulligan .
Nancy Zaccario
Jim Fiora:
. . Dr. Louis Zuccarello
Academic ·vice President
Ma~t Coll_ege
Dear·Lou:
·
On behalf
of
the facility, the
- Faculty Policy Committee ex-
tends to you its warmest wishes
·
as you prepare to relinquish your
role as Academic-Vice-President
and· Dean· and resume vested
faculty- status as Associate
· Professor of Political· Science,
~t
is
the ~animous opinion of
this
comnuttee . that · in . your
fairness, honesty, wisdom, and
judiciousness.
It
has
been a
· forward-looking one, uniquely
combining firm structure and
compassionate outlook.
.
· We are--naturally reluctant to
see your. administration of
this
office ena. However, we are also
happy that
"this
decision best
serves your personal and
professional interests · according
to your choice. We welcome you
tojoin. us again. as a che~J}ed
colleague.
- .
-
Cordially yQurs,
Peter O'Keefe
>
Bill Perrotte
,
'.fed Prenting .
..
·
Carolyn J,andau
Greg K~gariff
Staff: Micha~! McCartliy,--:iohn Arnold. K~ren Flaherty,•Joe·Schatzie' Dave Metz- Ti:
Breuer, Jim William,son, ·oaro Ward, Rory Ferguson, ·Phil Le G~re, ·Kenneth Fr;nch
Joanie Mayone.
·
•
'
· .. tenure of office you have -given
wholehearted · and distinguished
service. Speaking for the faculty,
we 'feel that your leadership has ·
_b~n.eminen~y characterized ·bY. ·
Endorse·menf
-Faculty Advi~or - Marguerite Culp_
To the E-ditor:
'.'-gttidents around a, Jentraf.theme
Af!er
3
3-4
years here at Marist
and l~d. t~e student. b<><!Y .,\!ith _
·Let's
Vote
College; · we .. · the undersigned,
determination anq. -· dedication.
after
dedication and involvement, We can say.
this
because? we
throughout these years, loqk
ourselves have been student -
-
sadly upon graduation. We do so
leaders and we see outstanding
because of the relationships that · qualities in Mr._ Raimo and Mr.
were· created. and because of
Shine. For those who don't know::....
what we gave to Marist and what - them
this
letter might influence·
Next Wedn~sday a~d_Tliursday the-;lec- ,
tions for the student goverrinient positions will
be taking place. There are many qualified can-
didates ·for the positions of the Council oL
Student Leaders but the fact is,
if
the students
_
do not vote; then nothing can be ac- ·
coriiplished.
I•.
-Like many other organizations that ha~e .
students as leaders, the stuqent government
has come under criticism of both students and
administration. The criticism-. by the ad--
ministration can be dealt with by the members
of the student government but
·
much of the
criticism that has come from. students conies
from the students that do nottake part in any ·
of the activities.
_ ·
The student government'positio_ns are the
only positions where the students.can actually
have a say in the dealings of the school and the
administration. They are our voice in the
- school, but
if
we do not . take the , elections
seriously, the only say that we have iri. the :
school can be~destroyed.
.
L
· · ·
-
· ·h · ·
-
·
'f ·d
· ·- -
~
·
Marist gave to us.
· _
·
yon; for_those who do know them
.· . astyear,_te \urnoutoSt
u
ents votmg for
UP.on leaving this remarkable
this letter
is
not necessary. -
therr repr~sentativrs was poor. Althm1ghthe .
institution, .we would like to see it '
Jack Oehm,
people that:·. were ele_cted to the various ;_:: ... contil}ue as
a
place of learning ·
Pete McFadden
· positions_. were competent,· they_ ·were ooly • and growing. ,_"With . all ui:i- ·
--,--c-:-Jcie Cann,
chosen by a small cross-section of the student : -derc:Ja~sm~n · supportmg .this
_
Don Ball
population.
·
·· school:It
.will
become, an even
JohnShanmin
-
·
./
· greater placeto be. We feel that
Patti McGhee
Jiin Raimo. and
Torn
Shine,
if
John Deluca ,- _
There have'been three dates set aside ~so.ihe
. elected ~resident of the· Student
'Jim Doherty
_
.
. , .· .·.
_ .· ..
.
. .
_ Body and -PresidenLof C.U.B.
Kenny Sullivan
students'-can liste11
:10
the candidates . .They:·_ - respectively-
will
_rally . the·
' Keyin Kelly
iu:e:J\1arch .20
.
in Donnt:lly 245 11LlJ:20,
0
' · ·
•r-·-----~· ..
· _______________ ..... ...;._ ..... ..,.
__ Sunqay.March 23 ~:the·,Fireside Lounge
-
at
9:30 p.m., and Marc_h 2'1 in Leo Stone
Lounge at9 :30: ._
·
· ::. · .. ·--
1; _ -::
<"' · .. ·
- Th,~-~ .dates arejust as intp~rtanta~the
voting; They will give the students a cliance
to
· · meet the candidates and d_iscussthe issues on.
campu,_s.
It
is
the duty ofthe students to at:~
tend at least one of these sessions and liste1fto
· _ the candidates and inen vote.
The elections are very serious and should be
taken so by the students.
It
is our voice
in
th~
action_s of th;school and we should.pick ,the
best pe_Ison to represent us.
>
· So, attend the. candidate._s nights and show
that you are_interested in the representation
by voting next week;
·
-_ -- Park Discount B¢verage~
-~t.9·HydePark . _
229-9000 .
- P_abst Loo·se Cans
ColtSilver'D~luxe ·,-
...:..
,
..
$5~39
-.case
case
$l.25- --~
6 pack·
O,IC: .~;i)KJJD~
"'G~i-lfWE.~-'1'·
(l.ep.u,.y
-r,o,Jf:
'TJ\A,-: R\~T~_sr1c
--r~tt
S~so~'1_81l1 ·
1
_fe~i.., fJ.J:;
lF_ ~
-
W11,1,
ge
@~
6-AMf.
l"1E
60-T
C()tJ-
flDaltS-JtJ
'fo\)
MEN.-1-,.
l'~O
tN; '/OU CA~
p,,u;,
1,.:us.
6P-lE
cxrr
IF _.
'(Oil
~IV6 -l'r
'(01$-
Al,(, • .·
1-e:1".S
.Crl:T .. - ,
o.u,-.
"fHf~
~D
SJ-IOIU 1'J\EM . wAAr, ·
.Yoih~e
f.iAoe'
OF~~
.
, .
'
\.
'
..
,
·, t~'..: .: ~-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - M a r c h
20, 1980-
THE CIRCLE-Page3 -
UPCOMING· CUB~- EVENTS
THU
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20 CUB SOFTBALL LEAGUE
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ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING
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TIME: 9:30
P.M. PLACE: CUB OFFICE
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ALL PERSONS WISHING TO ENTER A
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TEAM MUST BE PRESENT
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20 CUB COFFEEHOUSE
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TIME 9:30-12:00 FIRESIDE LOUNGE
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"CAMPUS TALENT"·
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THUR.MAR.27
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CUB
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COFFEEHOUSE
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TIME:
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9:30-1
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o FIRESIDE LOUNGE
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ENCORE PERFORMANCE
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"RAYMOND AVENUE RAMBLERS"
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SUN.
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30
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CUB
FILM
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TIME: 7 P.M.
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9:30 P.M.
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COLLEGE TH EATER
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"IN LAWS' ALAN ARKIN
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PETER FALK
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ADMISSION $1.00
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MON:
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MAR. 31
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CUB PERFORMING AR
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TIME:8:00 P.M
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. COLLEGE THEATER
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"T~ ARTBERRY· MIME"
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ADMISSION FREE
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ON.-,MAR.
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31
·::ClJB
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HOUSING
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PRESENTS
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RO
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LLER
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SKATING PARTY
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IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING "MIME"
FURT
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HER DETAILS SEE
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DEAN
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KELLY
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TRANSPORTATION·TO BE
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PROVIDED
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EASTER
VACATION
Shamus's
New-York
PUBLIC :HOUSE, ,,
MaristAIUmni
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RESTAURANT -
Jini8arnes·'68
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OPEN TIL 4 AM DAIL
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FINE MUSIC•":: APPEARING
Morch 6, 7, 8 •
COLLEGE AGE
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Morch 13, 14&15
BANDS WANTED . .
Morch 16
&
17-
.SPITFIRE·
MUTTS
ST.PATRICKS
. ' DAY PARTY
Downstairs Club
· D~nceable
Rock
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For Sum·m
Morch 20, 21
&
22
N.Y.U.
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Morch 27; 28
&
29 .
SHIP.OF FOOLS . .
Low Room Fee · ·
April 3, 4
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CRACKED SALL
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PUB MENU
AVAILABLE DAILY .
' You
Keep :-: .
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The Door Charge
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'April 2~;
2s·
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26
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EPSILON
Bring
Your ·· ·· • . ..,·· ....... -• ...
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Following
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MAKELARGK
. FEES
r:·rREE
PARTYR
FORA
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-SPORTS'PIIONE
:On>y
a dime
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iess ror
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customers
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212. 516
and
914
area~
Long
d~ranc:e eJ~nere
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A
DIAL•IT
servic;. . .
·. oJN~YorkTe!eJ>hOO•
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PLAYING.YOUR
FAVORITES UPSTAIRS .
·: EYERY WED.,JRI. '
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Tuesday-AudiUon.
Nfght
Sunday-Ballad Singers or Duo's
Wanted
. 21 Years
of
Age
froper Attire
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24.6.1
24.6.2
24.6.3
24.6.4
24.6.5
24.6.6