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The Circle, February 28, 1980.xml

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 24 No. 5 - February 28, 1980

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Zuccarello Announc
_
es Resignation
Resumes full-time faculty status
By
John Arnold
Dr. Louis Zuccarello, academic vice
president, has announced. his resignation
from the administrative post he has held
for the past five years. Having ac-
complished much of what he set out to do
in
his
administrative· capacity, he will
resume the position of full-time faculty
member, effective June
30, 1980.
. "I've satisfied·myself," said Zuccarello,
reflecting upon
his
past achievements as
Dean and acaden).ic vice president. "I've
always enjoyed teaching and program
development work and I think that I would
have more opportunity for that as a faculty
member.· It's really a personal life
decision that I think all of us have to make
at sonie point in our lives."
Through Zuccarello's efforts, Marist has
received state approval for a paralegal
studies program, a bachelor's degree in
professional studies, a · master of arts
degrees in psychology . and . in business
administration, and new majors in fine
arts and computer. mathematics. He •has
also been responsible for the development
of a graduate public administration
program and a inajor in social work.
Zuccarello, who will probably
be
on a
semi-sabbatical in the fall,
will
return to
the faculty as an Associate Professor of
Political Science.
The former . chairman of the History-
Political Science . depa_rtment and a
member of the· college community since
1966,
Zuccarello says . the prospect of
. leaving the administrative limelight does
not concern
him;
"To me, that's never
been very important so I don't feel any
discomfort in making
this
kind of a
·decision."
·
Zuccarello expressed enthusiasm about
returning to the classroom on a full-time
· basis. The most satisfying aspects of
teaching, he says, are "the closer in-
teractions with students and the con-
tribution to the learning experience.
"That's what I started out to do many
years ago," said Zuccarello. "I've been a
teacher all my life, and I think a successful
·one at that."
·
·
Dean Zuccarello
who
will
resume.
faculty_
status
·convocaticir\
dOY
a
by
Phil
LeGar~
The purpose of the colleges' first official
Convocation Day according to President
Murray was to bring the students together
to let them know something of the fine
tradition, heritage· and philosophy of the
school which they attend. He describes the
hopeful effects that the meeting had and
will continue to have long and short term
goals. "First, he said, it is to give the
Marist communitv an immediate un-
derstanding of . the parameters and the
context in which we live and learn. Second,
to broaden this understanding so that as
graduates they will be able. to present this
understanding in a better way." ·
The first speaker to take the stand was
Dr. Louis Zuccarello, academic dean.
Zuccarello. commented on the gathering
along the same lines as President Murray
and stressed the importance of the -
meeting so that the Marist community
could begin to interact in more.meaningful
ways. Zuccarello was then presented with
a Presidential Citation for six years of
dedicated service to the college.
Dr. Richard LaPietra presented the
audience with .a speech oil the historical
background before and after its founding
Dr. Casey. speaking at Convocation
Day.
Committee formed
·
A search committee, designed to find a
The committee will subinit a list of three
replacement for the position of Dean of
to five candiates for the position of Dean to
Student Affairs has-begun revie'wing the
Murray. Murray wm then conduct ad-
resumes of the applicants. according to a
ditional reviews and consultation . which
memo released by
Dr:
Louis Zucc~rello, . · will lead to the selection of the Dean;
academic vice president.
.
The
committee includes Janice Casey,
The · committee was appointed by assistant professor of English, William
President Murray after consultation with
Perrotte, assistant professor of Biology,
leaders of various segments of the college . Sue. :Vassallo, freshman class ·president,
community.· .
Diane Perreira, director of special ser-
The committee, which has three
vices, Rev. ,Richard LaMorte, head• of
.students, two teachers,. and two ._other
campus Ministry, Steve Hopson, president
in
1945
as Marian College. Dr. LaPietra
spoke of Champagnat's unique approach
to the liberal arts education; that is
educating "the hand and the mind." He
I
also assured the Marist community that
the tradition of education has ·been well
, kept.-
Professor Thomas Casey -of the
philosophy dep·artment says that,
"Education is treated not only as in-
tellectual adventure but a moral drama as .
well at Marist."
Dr. John Kelly, assistant professor of
economics described the liberal' arts
education as· nothing less than the total
education of man. He stressed his concern
for students enrolled in liberai arts to
become value concious as well as broadly
and liberaly educated.
Kelly felt that the New York State
Education· Departments interpretation of
a liberal arts education as "anything but a
.how-to-do course of study."
·· .
Casey then spoke about the value of the
core curriculum at Marist. He says the
core curriculum can expose the student to
all areas of human experience and, most
importantly, providing the student with a
chance for a value confrontation. Joe
Kennedy, a sophomore resident, agreed
with Casey. "Marist has taught me to look
into myself and to discover what my real
values are. This
is
something everyone
should know about themselves. I don'1
know if I could have gotten this type of
educatiqn any plac;e else" says Kennedy.
· Associate professor of philosophy,
Xavier Ryan then spoke about man's
journey thr~ugh life and his need to
examine tradition, practicality, and his
ideals to avoid getting confused when
deciding upon a career or deciding on
one's own values.
After the talks by the various metnbers
of the panel, students were asked to report
to rooms designed by their major field.
Several students expressed
their
dissatisfaction with the meeting due to the
lack of student participation. To this,
Murray stated, "This meeting was in-
tended to serve as an introduction
to
Marist College. It will be used as a model
to build upon in the future."
Murray says he was pleased with the
turnout and hopes to expand on it next time
by, also having a question and answer
period.
Dr. Italo Benin summed up the whule
idea of a Convocation Day by saying, "for
the first time in the history of this college,
we are. pulling ourselves together."
. members of the community, is headed by
of Circle. K; and Tom Shine, committee
Mr: Laurence Sullivan, assistant professor
h~d of:'.the Colleg~ ,union Board. Ann
of Religious Studies and a member orthe ·Campion/personnel officer,".'willalso.be a',.
couriseliilg staff.
· ·, · · · -.
· part.of.
th~·~earch
commit~e . .'::.; ..
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editor
associate editors
THE
CIRCLE
sports
ed
i
tor
photography editor
advertising manager

business manager
contrib
_
ut
i
ng editor
layout editor
copy editors
Jim Townsend
Loretta Kennedy
Bill Taylor
Chris Egan
Kevin Kelly
.
Tom Navorro
·
John Butterfield
Wonda Boniak
Dove Powers
MoryAnn Mulligan
Nancy Zoccorio
,:
\
.
distribution manager
j;iri
Fiora


.
.
I
.
.
.
·

.

.
··
.
.
·
Staff: Michael McCarthy. John Arnold, Karen Flaherty, Joe Schatzle, Dove Metz
·
,
,
Tini
·
- ·
Breuer. Jim Williamson, Dara Warl:f,
.
Rory
.
Ferguson, Phil
le
Gore
,
.
Kenneth Fren~h;
Joanie Mayone.
,
Faculty Advisor - Marg~erite Culp
·
·
The/Circle will not
_
be pubiished for the
.
next two weeks _
_
_
due to midterms and the sp~ing break.
.

\
.
·
_
Readers
-
Write
All letters mu>t
be
typ,,d triple 1poce with a 60 space ma
r
gin • .;;,d submitted ta ;he Circle
office no later
t
han 6 p
.
m
.
Monday
.
Short letten are p
r
eferred
.
We reserve the right to edit
all letters. letter$ inust
be
1
i
gned. but
noines may
be
w
i
thheld upon request, letters will
be
l)llblished depending upon availability afspace.
Disappointed
Dear Editor,
.
and
·
to possibly retract a
I
am
very disappointed
to
see scholarship, b,ecause
of
his or her
so many talented athletes here at own personal feelings toward this
Marist that'are,.for one reason or person? I would consider _that an
another, not participating in the
,
injustice to the
·
individual,
.
not
sport for
.
which they have only as an athlete, but as a
·
:
received a scholarship to play. student as well.
It would be a

Hopefully they did
·.
not· come ·to shame for one of these students
to
·
Marist solely
to
participate
in
lose
·
a chance
.
at a
·
proper
·
athletics; but I'm sure that had a
education because of the
·.
vin-
significant
.
bearing
··
on each of
·
dictiveness of one coach. Besides
their decisions as to which
in-

that, with the
·
losing records most
stitution
·
they
.
would ultimately of our teams
.
have had
,
this past
attend.
·
·
·
.
·
year, we cannot
.
really afford to
Why, then, should a coach have
·
lose any
of
our best players .
.
·
.
such a power as to ~e away the
·
-
Sincerely.
chance for an individual to
.
utilize
MaureenKe
.
nney
·
his
or

her ability
.
as an athlete,-
.
·
_
·
Challe
.
nge
,

.

. J
To the students.
·
.
.
running for S.A.C.;
c
~
u.,
and
me
.
.
Marist studentsJ1ave the dght
.
P~idents are good,
.
but are
.
..
to elect
·
the
·
.
best
·:
candidates to
-
:
running
·
:
unopposed.
·
They
:
are
·
-------,-.-:---:-----------,---'---,---'.:.._--,-----,---------...;_-..:;,..;.,__
·
hold
·
office
·
'.
next year. The solid candiates and are willing to
-
·
G
·
·
·
·
..
d
J
·
b
.
proble!}l)S
.
not enoug~ students
accept the ~llenge of, an
_
op-
. .

oo
.
. .
.
.
.
0
.
\
are runrung
to
hold office on the
_
.
ponent,The victory over a strong
\
.
Council of
.
Student
-
Leaders ..
I
•'.,
,-,
candidate -will
.
make the
'
new
;
·
.
·
\
.
believe most stuaents
·
··
·
are
.'
leaders a lot
·
better
.
- - - - - ' - - : - - - - - - - - - - - ' - : - ' , - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - qualified to do
a
good job but
As
a reminder, it-is a duty of
Cltange, ~ny people are oft~~ sceptical
they are the closest friends with;
.
haven't come forward. Enough' each studentto exercise
his
or
whenever
,
son,eone or something
'
enters
·
their
·
If the tournaments
·
and interhouse
.
tour-
,
good students have come forward
her tj.ght to vote.
.

·
.
·
to
rurt for Student Body
President
Thankyou;
JoeCann
·
President of Student Body
life which
will; in some way, alter the course of
naments get underway,
·
another type of unity
and'
.
College Union Board
it.
.
could possibly evolve. The lounges might once

Pr-esident
>
The few students
That
is
th~ way that many people reacted
to
again be filled with people from all the houses
'-
the idea of the Champagnat House Council to
rooting for the representative from their house
Election
try
and
:
fix the lounges and make them a more
·
.
to
win.
livable pla~ with a more friendly atmosphere
':
True, we
will
get tit~ same people as always
To all Marist students,
students running for campus
that can be
·
.
shared by everyone. Ideas of ping-
·
, involyed in these type!,
of
:
games
.
but maybe
Last week was the first time
·
I
.
offices.
It is very important to
-
pong tables
.
and
·
tournaments, along
i
with
. ·
their
\
influ
_
ences
,~IL
get
µte
_.
9ther
,
people
,
.
to
.
,
attempted to write a
-
letter
,
to the
.
.
.
know what
·
issues each candidate
·•
possible
'
·
backgammon
·
tournanierits
,
came
.
. .
.
take
.
a
·
-
beite;
·
stand
:
aiid
'i
get
.'
oui
i
arid
;
,ieUri~
.
·
··
Circle
:
Believe me
·
if was
a
j
,~ry.
.
:
.
i
stands
·
fe>r
(
Tllis
_
-
~n
_
,
;
b~
·
v~ry
froiri the House Cou
n
cil:'
'
.
, ..
'
.
. .
..
'
,
..
V
.
,
, '
.
·voiv~cL ·Mayb
'
e)f
'
we
,
.
siart
.
at
die
lforise
·
and
~.
:
.
difficult
task
;
.
The
:
resp~~s
-
~,_ffC>Jjl .

.
.
'
lt~~pfut~
'
SE:le.cting a
:
c~ndid'te
.
-
.
Peoplifagreed with these ide
_
as as possible
;
floor fovels we can
·
react to the more serious
·
JelJ~:W
-
·
students
'
was .very
.
en
7
-
f~r.
-
these offices and for holdiilg
.
I
cotiraging. l\1,any
.
students
.
a~
.
Jhese students that are elected
.
~ay~ to make t~e lounges more enjoyabl
.
.
e b
.
ut
probl~m ofcampiis
_
involv~meilt.
_-proached ine expressing
-
the
accountable whe~ they are in
·
1t took a while before anyone
·
would do
.
It
is a far-fetched idea of away
.
to get people
same feelings I had about Marist
office.
·

·
anything to get these ideas off the ground.
involved hut at least it
is
a start towards
and student involvement
.
_
The second important event we
Then,
WI
_
'.th the help of the Resident Adviso
_
_
rs
l
·
·
creating a sense of unity that the school once
We students can do much
·
more
can participate in is the election
in each of the houses,
;
these tournaments got
:
had.
.
.
·
··
·
··
· ·
to help one another. The Circle
is
itself.
It
is very important for
going and soori the former dormarit lqunges

,
.
Ping-pong
·
tables
.
and
.
backgammon tour,
.
an excellent vehicle of expressing
EVERY Marist student to
.
the places where people passe
_
d through
.
on .
naments
_
are a start by the House C.o
_
uncil to
·

_student feelings and problems.
exercise his or her
.
rightto
.
vote.
,
-
Any student should feel free to
If
a large amount of students vote
their way to the elevators, was filled with the
get people involved
·
and so far it has worke~,
write the Circle
·
with any con-
we
will
have elected officers who
noises of ping-pong
_
games and people par-
maybe even more activities
can
he scheduled.
cerns they might have
.
The
have a
-
strong backing. These
. ticipating in the backgammon ti>urnaments.
So
.
congratulations and thank you to the
·
Circle is looking for this student
,
officers can then stand up .for
The lounges are now some
\
place
.
where
Champagnat House
.
Council for proposing
input and the Ma.rist community
'
student's rights
.
arid
·
say "The
.
people can go and socialize
_
with
,
,
other people
something that would work to
.
the benefit of
·
needs it.
.
.
students
·
really do give a
·
damn;''

h
·
·
-
·
We as students can also do a
Please make sure you
·
vote in the
m t e house and not just the people on the
the
:'
students and actually carrying out the
great
.
deal for ourselves by
,
.
campus elections and let's show
.
floor, or
'
even more specifically
/
the people
proposal.
·
·
participating in two very
im-
support for one another
:
_
•r------~-----~-------------•••-----•--llllil
portant events
;
One~ is attending
.
.
·
·
.
Since~ly,
!
·
1
any of the three up-coming
Jim Raimo
SPEAKING Of
.
MARISJ·
ti&
Marist candidates forums for
SC>
MR.
60WER.> 11
5Ef_MS
.
Yov
.
l>IDtJ'T
AT~ND
'
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z.f.
CoNVOCATtc~,i
~OPE Yo\l
!(NOW
ZAT
rr
Vi!..L
G,o ON
'fouR
RfwRo
>
ANP
ve
VlLL SE
.
~Ef:.PI
>-,Jr,
A CL.OSe
.
.
E.'{e
oN
:
You· A
\/£Rf
Vfl(f
Cl.OSI! E'/~:
.
:
'
·-
.
' ' . . ,
.
· _
:,._
Clarification
.
.
-
·
·To the Editor:
.
.
.
proc~ss or the decision not to.fill
·
.
I wish
to
clarify sev~_ral points
,
the position,
:
it ~s not possible
··
in the
.
lead
.
article written bY:
.
~or
.
Ine
t?
give hun
,
any f~rth~r
Dave Powers in the Febru~ryl~. ·
_
information.

At ~aL point. I
..
1980 issue of The Circle
.
for
which
suggested
Mr
.-
Powers speak with
I
was
interviewed. Some of
·
the
Dr. Zuccarello, Dr
.
.
Lahey; D,ea!}
facts, while ba.sically correct, are
'
.
1

'Cox, ~rof~ssor . Maness;
;
and
.
.
badly jumbled:
.
Tl)e statement in
..
_
others
,
It
ts
apparent that
.
·
t~e

·
.
.
which I
.
supposedly
.
·
made
.
only
_.
other person w~o was
:
i,n-
. refererice

fo
President Muri'ay•s
..
.
terv1ewed was Dean Cox
'. .
It
feelings
·
oii
·
the Internship

~ould _seem that
,
~esponsil}le
position is
·
completely
inac- ·
JOU!11alism would require tha
t
the
curate. At
.
no time in my con-
art~cle should
.
have been del!l.yed
versationwith
Mr. Powers did l
untiLthe factsw~re ascertamed.
·
attribute anythirjg to Dr. Murray. Since that was not dpne, _it !s
~
no
Indeed I have never discussed wonder that
,
the_
-
article
,
1s
-
mac-
the iss~e with
him
and have no
curate. As one person on campus
knowledge of
his
feelings on the
who
·
had
,
_li!tle, i~ any;
·
~-
subject. In any event, it would be
v~lvement w1f:b. the
)nU;~ship
highly unl~ely that_any member
Director position,
,
1t
_
1s
·.
un~
of the administrative staff would
.
for~una~ t~t so
·
much
.
of
..
the
-
publicly criticize the presid~nt of.
_
a_rtic,le
IS
11ttr1b~te~ to me
;
I~ th
_
e
.
.
.,
.
the institution much less do soin
·
.
future
l- wou)d recommend that
.
~
.
an interview
:
~ith a'reporter. And
· ·
"".hen
,
Th~ Ci~cl~is dealin&
,
'Yiih
.
at no
·:
time
·
in ~y
_.·
conv
_
~i;sa.tion
,
_
cqµiplex issues such as
_
th1s
_;
,
all
._
·
with
Mr .
.
Powel'.S didJ
·
specify
the fa
_
cts . s~
.
ould.
be_
gath~red

·
that
.
I
:
was
:
''up~et
:
over
·:
th
_
e
·,
ai:l~
.
·
..
rather
i:
than
;
assul!lption
_
s
:
pad
,
e
ministration•s
·
decisiori.!1
-
.
:>.
: :' ~
--
·.
.
based
-
~n a smgle mterv1e~.
::
· -
.
·
.
When I inet:with Mr
>
Powel'S'I
<
.
.
·
.
·
.
.'
',
Sincerely,
supplie~
;
hi111)vith
>
:
background
.
.
.
:
Pat~ic~
j;
Lenri~~~Ul
~ / 2

.
·
n,
, i ~ ~
'
infor~atfon otrtpe su_bject
_
9f tne
. ·
.
..
.
·
··
..
Directe>r
.
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.
·
u~ ~~
-
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:
;
.
:
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.
Interriship
,;
Difector'
;
i
Ncit
\
having

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,
,
;:
D~ve
_
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.
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,1
Presidentiql hopeful speaks
by Joe
Emmets
Jim
Townsend
Karen Flaherty
former actress and ambassador; was foreign aid should
be
used in our country,
announced to
be
his running mate in remarking, "charity ~gins at home."
another vision: "Out of a clear blue sky
·
Badgley feels that President Carter has
that name just came to me one day while I "good ideals" and
is
"shooting from the
Donald Badgley of Poughkeepsie, who
is
was walking."
hips." Badgley says that the country needs
seeking the Republican presidential
Badgley says
,
he favors placing women his style of leadership. He says that
nomination, says he "would like to lead the in half of the government offices.
''It
is "people act differently with leadership
country through the word of God," in a · most
important that the
woman
is
uplif-
that doesn't strike back."
speech, sponsored by the political science

ted," he says. The presidential hopeful
"Laws are lies," says Badgley. "What
club, in the Fireside Lounge, February 22.
says he does "not necessarily believe" in they give you, they take away from me,
Badgley, who announced his candidacy the Equal Rights Amendment, saying the and what they give me, they take away
on May 7; 1979 in Augusta, Maine, says he provisions of that amendment are included from you. This serves to separate us." He
w_a~
gu!ded to run ~or the presidency in a in the original Constitution.
also says the Constitution should
be
v1S1on m
1968.
.
.
·.
:,
·
._
·.
Badgley, who opposes draft registr~tion, reviewed~ for
·
"some things need
.
,
·
He
,
·
says
.
another stran~
.
.
occurence
·
stated he favors a foreign policy based on changing."
was when, while walking
three miles in an _
"turning the other cheek.'' He also called
..
He says- election laws are the "most
Iowa snowstorm, he noticed the. end of his for decreased
·
defense spending and said archiac."
With
present
election
shepherd's staff had broken off.
-
the use of "fighting words" such as procedures, "The little guy
is
not allowed
.
·
'!lwas heartsick," says the retired in- "blackmail," "traitor" and "hostage" to speak and participate," he says. He also
surance salesman?'My tradition had been worsen foreign affairs
·situations
stich as accused the media of "brainwashing" the Don Badgley speaking
in Fireside Loonge.
·
broken." He says he then realized that just those involving the American hostages in public in choosing candidates.
·
The major
as
.·the
biblical David had been first
..
a · Iran.
.
-
- ·
media organizations "don't cover the
shepherd and then~ king,this incidentwas
.
Badgley
·
says there is a need to cut back candidate whose only staff
is
the one he
an
.
ome
_
n that he himself wou!d no l?nget
_,.
on
.
_government
spending
.
and business carries with
him," he says_.
bea shepherd, butthe C:o~tO'
_
!_Pres1denf. regulations
and
"do away with
..
Badgley,
-who
says his campaign is
Badgley a~o says ~?ifley~empie~Black, bureaucracy;'' He also says resources for
funded by credit cards, has traveled 35,581
miles in all 48 continental states, mainly
.
Public Relations Class
-
by bus, since announcing his candidacy. "I
felt, as I traveled around the country and
visited people, that our biggest problem is
we don't know how to live together," he
,
By
David Metz
work we did was successful," Taylor said
·
with a smile.
·
sai~litical science club president, Jim
"Our main effort was to publicize the Raimo, organizer of the event, feels that it
The concept of a Convocation Day lends event," Dee Acampora said. "The object was a very
.
good experience. "He could
itself toa good deal of labor. Although it was to get students to
.
understand what have discussed the issues
.
more; he was
may have looked smooth and easy from
Convocation
-day
was all about, rather than more of a preacher type. He did not give
the bleachers in Mccann Center, there
is
a
have them view it as something that was specific answers but I really have to ad-
group of students who will tell you that it mandatory," added Acampora.
·
.
mire him because he is actually carrying
only ran well because of.hard work;
.
Aproject the size of a Convocation Day his campaign out," says Raimo.
Augustine Nolan, professor
-
of Com~
is certainly a group project, but as the
Raimo says he thoughtthe turnout of the
municatio11s; teaches a PubUc Relatio
_
ns
·.
~emester continues, the groups will break students was "good" but adds that he was
·
class
.
on Monday and Wednesday af-
up and each individual
will
have a solo disappointed at the low turnout of faculty
ternoons. Temporarily working ~der project to work on. "I want them to work and administrators. "This was a chance
Linda Dickerson,

Marist's Public together toward an end goal; and then as for students and faculty to get together but
.
Relations Director, six of Nolan's students they get a feel for i~, branch out to do an only a few.faculty members showed up,"
·
did·th'eir
-
best
to
·
run
convocation
Day.
.
·
individual project,'' Nolan said.
says Raimo.
.
"We w_orked at getting the students
-
to
-
T_he o~er two groups are _still pla~ing
Badgley ended his talk by answering a
_
feel they wanted to
-
go
·
rather than feeling
·
-,
t~e1r
·
proJect~;
,
One
.
Gro~p
15
.
_pl~nnmg
-
a
-
question on what he would do
if
he lost the
-
f61:"ced

to go,''
say~
Bill:T~y:lo.r/one of:t}le
,-'.
Fire Pr~v~ntionpay
.
:which
Will mclmie_a
.
.
electiori'\
';
Badgley
.
answered;
·
"I haven't
1
-;
soc!:z:'.Wewrote'rai:lio'):·eJci.i$~S~
'
disfribiitedt.
·
1ecture::~n~
,:
a -
·
film,i
s
and the other
!s
.
really thought aboufit."
,
·
flyers; and
pi.lfupposter_~, all
ill
an attempt· ·• sch~duli~g·
.
an. Energy
·
Aware_11es~
_
Day m
_
·
to make the students
·
aware: 1 think; the
·
con Junction with Texaco.
.
Grif.fin lo
.
oks at Marist
Griffin originally worked in the banking
industry. He worked at the Chase
Manhattan Bank in New York City and at
.
the Federal Reserve Bank of New York for
7 years before deciding to teach.
Griffin got his teaching career started
by attaining his masters of business_ ad-
ministration (M.B.A.) at New York
·
University. Griffin
.
decided to use his
business backgrqund to teach economics.
Griffin fee1s that economics is the key to
the business field ..
''l
feel to really un-
derstand business vou
·
must understand
economics. Economics is what makes
business operate," says Griffin.
As
a
John
·
Griffin, assistant professor
:
of former bank employee, he has a practical
economics, feels that Marist's
·_busif!ess
background for
-
his teaching field .
.
·
..
-
-
program is "excellent." He also
has a good
Griffin feels that this semester's
.
opipion toward Mari~t Colleg~ as a wh~l~. . gra?uating bµsiness majo:s ~11 do well in
Stated Griffin, "I think Manst College 1s their efforts
·to
attam Jobs after
an
'institution
that continues to
.
develop

graduation; He stated that he did not know
with new and improving programs."
·
_
·
.
·
as mtichabout other piajors, but he feels
.
Griffin has been teaching here for 11early that the non-business majors will also do
15
years.He has seen ~aristgrow and
·
he well in th_eir efforts to find post-college
·
continues to have a positive attitude about
.
employment.
·
·
Marist.
·
·
.
·
Griffin's philosophy on Marist College
.
Griffin, a native
·
of
,
Elizabeth,
·
New can be summed up by his statement on his
-
.
Jersey,
·
attended
.
St. Peter's College in
years
of employment here, "Yes, I have
~
.
New Jersey.
·
·
·
~njoyed what
l
have been
_
doin1Z.''
'
.
,
.. ,
,.
C
• ,
.
.•
Students enjoying some activities in
.
their lounges.
' .
,
..
..
'
/
.
Fire
safety

seminar
by John Arnold
A
mini-seminar, focusing on the
problems of fire prevention and safety,
will be held on March 3 at 3:30 p.m. in
Champagnat Hall, Campus Center room
249
.
.
The seminar, which was set up by one of
the groups in the public relations class,
will be moderated by Mike Hackett, a
fireman at International Business
Machines
(IBM)
main
plant
in
Poughkeepsie.
The seminar
will
focus on issues such as
what to do
if
you ever woke up in a smoke
filled room, the quickest es~ape routes
·
from your house
iri
case of a fife, and about
the most :common mistakes
/th~t
people
make in the event of a fire .
Hackett will show a 12 minute film case
study, ashortslide presentati~n, and will
hold a discussion on measures
.
of
prevention, as
·
well'
as a
question and
_
answer period following the lecture.
I
,,
I



































































































































































































































































t
--====
--------------------------------------------
Page 4 · THE CIRCLE· February
28, 1980----------------------------------
---
Wake up, it's time for dinner
byLorettaKennedy
once a day."
·
·
.
Michael McCarthy
About one third of the students polled
said that they preferred to sleep with
SSSSH! It's the middle of the afternoon.
music playing.
.
The halls are
dark
and few stereos can be
Joanna
Cipolla
says "I can't stand to
heard. The dormitories seem deserted.
sleep with the radio on
.
because
I
tend to
Heavy breathing
is
coming from the
sing along with it and never fall asleep."
rooms. Where
is
everybody? They are
Her roommate Patti Trombley claimed
sleeping.
·
she loves
-
to sleep
·
. with the radio on
Yes. Marist students like to sleep
"because Hikeit when Joanna serenades
around. .. around the middle of every af-
me."
·
·.
·
·
·
temoon. Napping, it has been revealed in a
Most students said that they preferred to
recent study of fifty residents,
is
.
a major
put a record on
and
after it has played out
passtime here on campus.
i
they can fall asleep.-
··
·
·

.
The survey revealed that the average
·
All students said that they can fall asleep
amount of sleep
.
per night that a student
to mellow music; Pat Gahan says that Dan
.
_
gets is seven hours. However. the average
"Sprawls"
says that he sleeps only seven
Home seems to be the favorite place to Fogelberg
is
her
.
favorite to sleep to.
:.
·
'.
·
student also indulg~ in an hour of af-
hours a night but takes at least three naps sleep, according t<> the survey. Seventy
_
Judy Di.Scipio says
·
she usually sleeps
temoon shu_t eye each day as well.
per day. "Sprawls" claims, "I love to percent of the students sleep more soundly with the radio off
.
"Unless, of course, the
Mike Gullotta says
.
"I do a lot ~f nap."
.
'\
.
at home~.Yet, of the seventy percent, about Bay City Rollers or Foghat are playing."
.,
sleeping. Inapatleastoncea day for three
,
The survey_ r~vealed that most.students
.
forty percent
.
claimed
.
they
:
slept more at
·
Eileen O'Brien does not
.
use
·
an alarm
:
hours in the afternoon." When asked
·
why do more sleeping during the day
,
than they school.
clock.
-
She
·
says
that
she lets
·
the cleaning

·
he spent so much time sleeping Gullotta do at night.
"I sleep all day,''
0
claiins Mary
Dennis Gofffeels he
is
"more psyched to men wake her up every
:
morning. "1
-
~an
;
replied, "Because
l.
don't want
'
to do Alice Russo
.
When asked how ·she could sleep
·
here
·
than at
.
honie/'
·
When hear them
:
singing in the hallways
.
when
;
work."
.
.
.
\
sleep through the day's activities go~g on
.
questioned why;
-
he replied;
-''.because
you they are washing the floors. They sing
.
Naps are a common thing here at around her she stated,
C'lt
doesn't matter.if can never get enough sleep
_
here at night."
"0' Jesus all the
.
time."
·
She also added
i.
·
Marist. Fifty-four percent of the stu4ents there's music playing somewhere. I sleep
-
Mike Wiese
.
claims that he sees no
-
dif-
thamet.,,''th;ir
_
s
_
_
ing
_
in
_
__
_
g d
_
oes
_
n
_
•t
r
_
ea
_
_
llY
__
_
b
_
o,
,
_
ur
_
1
1
_,

·_
interviewed admitted to
.
napping once a
.
with
:
a pillow over iny
:
head/'
.
·
,
·
· -
ferenc:e in sleeping here or
at
home. He
,
day.
_
About
five
percent of that fifty-four
·
Joe Kennedy feels
.
the reason why he
feels
"It
all depends who's
.
with me."
·
.
. __
It appears that most Mariststudents are
·
.
percent also claimed tha_tthey frequenUy takes naps
~
!'because
sometimes I have
'-
·
"I sleep more here but be~er when I'm sleeping t:Qeir time away. "Why shouldn't
·
take two or three naps a day.
·
'
to get up really early for crew and
·
I
..
home." says Peter Bell.
"There's
_
less they?" asked Pan
i
Kucera, "as long as
One student, Bill Ciraulo, has acquired a usually tire out in the afternoon." "But
I
-
\
noise; so I sleep more soundly at home," their dreams are
·
good!"
·
nickname for his lengthy sleeping hab~ts. can sleep anywhere," he added.
he added. Bell also add~ that he
"spra~ls
_
'
) (~
·
-
MarlSt arothers to
celebrate
AnniV8rsory
-
by Jim T~wnsend
.
_
1
Dr. Tosc~
,
no,_ ?irector of
·
learni!)g
..
by President Murray on the "Heritage of
-in
the
-
library. Thi~ display
will
·
co~t,ain
.
; . ·
'
.
·
·
.
i
resources. Th1S1Sachanceto
,
recogruze
theMaristBrothersandhowitisstillalive
.
photographs of the

Marist
·
brothers.
,
.
Approximately 35

foriµe~
·
.
·
Mar~~t the ~ontributfons of-the Marist brothe~
,
~~
-
.
today
.
··
at
,
M~ris~
_
(;_o_ll,ege;''
·
-
The
:
Marist Dickerson says,
;
0
Jt
.
will depict the Marist
,
brothers '!ho
·
we
_
re involved; with Ma~~t. M
_
_
anst and als~ ~o the larger c
_
o~um~
.
•--
.
.
br::oth
_
ers provihciaLof thE(H1;1dson Valley brothers
in
three
,
p~ses of their lives. 'It
-
College· will be the gues~/ at the
)irst
says Tosca_no
.
.

·
·.
·
.
• ·.
-
.:
-
..
.
.
.
will then speak
-
on, «The History
.
of'. the will depict them as buil<Jers,
_
educators,
.
Marist
,
brothers f\istory
.
d;8r.
:
says
·
~da
·
There will
.
be a two
,
.
pa~
_
program}o
·
,
order
:
in
.:
the:
Hudson
,
·
-
Valley"
:
says
·.
and at prayer."
.
.
_
__
.
._
: , ..
_
Dickerson., director of pubµc1info
_
rmation.
celebrate

~e commemorat!on
.
ot
,
Manst Dickerson.
.
.
_
_
_
·
.

:
.
..
·
_
,
The
·
:
collectio~ will be
a:
perm
·
a
·
nent
.
To_day
.
t1s
.
tlle
.
75t~ a~v~rsary
.
o~ the
_
·
b_rothers h1stocy ~ay
,
says p1cke~son.
:
~he
:
.
-J?oughkeepSie ma:yor Tho~as Ap~poros
.,
coll~tion

.
-
It
.
.
WI~
,
.
aJs.o
_
be
,
the
.
study
_
;
.:if
.· -
Manst Brothers purchasing the pr~pex:ty f1rst P.art of
;
the program
f~
begut~t
_
3
_
,:iO
.
,

.
and
-
County
:
Executive
·
·
Pattison
:will

then
..
Man
_
ology~ which
lS
the
·
study of Mary ;
,
The
:
·
that is
.
Marist College
,
today, accordmg
-
to
p.In,
:
ID.
:
t
;
h~
-
cq~~l
.
and
~
m,clud~
:
aJalk
::
.
c1!1im
:
Februa~
:
:23
;
~s
,,
uM~ri~t
.-.
_
Bro~ers
:.
f.irnl_l p~rt
..
Qf
,
the
/
program
,
::will:
be
.
dhe
,
/
.
'

.
.
· T
-
··
.
,,
,
·
,
·
,

•/
·
.
.
, •.

,
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,..
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'C ·.··.
:
---
''
History
.
Day'tm boihthe
:
to:w~
·
and
·
c1~y
'.
9f"''dedication
~
of
,
·the»display--:-.by"'the
~
.
-
Manst
if
PQughkeepsie.
•, -
:--·--
·
.
· ·.
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· \:
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provincial
.
..
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·
.
.
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.
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The second part
-
of
·
the
-
program, ac-
;,,.
/
All
-
students anci
<
fabuity
are
invited
-
to
.
~
cord~g ti{Di~erson;
~
begin a
_
t
4
pin.
·at_tend
·
th~
)
history
.
:
'
day'.
.
'
according
..
to
.
;;
·
·
and
will
include the dedication of a display D.1ckerson.
·
.
·
,
.
. ·

.
.
.
·
. ·
.
·
.
.
.
. •
.
.
.
'
.
.
.
·
Tombstone
In
front
of
McCann dedicated to tbe
'
Martst brolbers
wbo are
buried
-
there.
_
·
Roosevel,
;
Theater
-
-
_
.i
Rt. 9 Hyde
Park
_-
CA9-2000
.
·
Starts
Fri.'feb'.
·
29
Eiclusive
.
·
"A
Thinking Man's
Comedy"
GOLDEN GLOBE WINNER
. .
.
BestActor
·
.
·.
:
Peter
Sellers
.
·

.
.
.
a
story
Qf
ckince
·_c
BEINGTHERE
--
-
.
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.
.
.
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.
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.
,
.
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:
;
--
Relax
in an
Olde World Setting!
.
_
jOal\}Jf
'1
.
Sund~y
·
-
·
·
Brunch
·
"
·
>
12:-3
'
.
'
At~itude
.
·
-Adjustment
.
.
·
, .
.
lionrs
_·:
:
·-
.
···
.
·
.
4:30-7:30
:
'
Open
Daily
,
··,
from·
.
. ·
-
·
1 tAMc{AM

..
-.
_
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Cherelle finds
·
·
·
role difficult
By
Joe Schatzle
Barbara Cherello, lead actress in the
Marist College Council on Theatre Arts
(M.C.C.T.A.) production of Lillian
Helhnan's, "The Children's Hour," which
opened last Friday, says that her role as
Martha Dobie:,
.
a dark, deeply anguished
soul caught between what she was and
what society
.
would allow her to be, "Was
.
the hardest thing I've
~
ever had to un-
derstand and act
.
on in my life." For
Cherello;
,
the
.
road to understanding
·
her
character intellectually and then ''really
·
feeling what she felt-which is
.
what. an
actress must
.
do" was no easy task.
she is made to feel guilty for destroying the
life of the only person she's ever been able
to love."
Karen and her fiancee Joe Cardin
(played by Jay DeCesare) have broken up
under the pressure. Joe, like the others,
has made a judgement about Martha's
situation. And there is his doubt about
Karen. Martha's supposed guilt for doing
something she didn't do, based on a
distorted concept
·
of what she was,
destroys not only Martha but Karen too.
"And Martha can't handle this," says
Cherello.
_
"I feel that
if
I
ever met anybody like
_
that I'd just ha~e to hold them in my arms
and let them cry and cry with them.
Martha IS a doomed character. But I love
her," says Cherello.
.
.
Scene
from
"The Children's Hour"
"She has had to admit to herself that it
will not be the happiest day in her life when
Karen marries, as she has been saying
over and over. She not only feels self
hatred because of this; she feels worthless
because her school has been stripped from
her; and she feels 'ugly, and dirty' because
even she believes the aosurd in-
terpretation of her love that her per-
secutors have made."
·
"For the first few weeks of rehearsal,"
.
feels anything real arid at the same time
she_
<
continues,
"I
-
was
-
really frantic
.
.
with an ounce of beauty. I can imagine the
: because
I didn't understand this woman,
.
two of them drinking
tea
and gossiping and
what ~s making her do
_
what she was
it all meaning so much to Martha."
doing.-ldidn't see that she was a woman
The tragedy of the play became clear to
who was expressing what she felt in the Cherello once she'd understood what had
only way she knew how, and which just made Martha who she was, 2nd how what
happened to be
_
a
_
way
-
that nobody around she
was
:
.
so rapidly twisted and distorted
her could understand.''.
,
-
·
·
·
-
by those around her.
As
she says, "the
·
Martha Dobie's background and
UJr
deepest issue at hand in the play is that
·bringing gave Chei'ello the key to her
.
human nature destroys what it doesn't
problem, "Martha was raised by an ugly,
understand. And in the 1930's nobody
egotistical, pretentious, selfish woman;
understood lesbian. The play
.
is not about
her aunt. Mrs. Mortar was a show business
·
lesbianism. It's about the consequences of
person who was nevermore than a bit part
-
a lie."
..
·
player. ·She
:
must have treated an un-
·
-Martha ends up committing -suicide
.
wanted responsibility like a child with
because of a neurotic young girl. One of the
complete bitterness and disregard
:
I
.
can students at the school that she and Karen
imagine Mai,:tha shoved off into a corner have built, falsely accuses the two of
while Mrs. Mortar deluded herself that she lesbianism. The girl, (played by Theresa
was Juliet. She's an outcast, a lost soul; a

steegmuller) tells the lie about Martha to
wanderer andit's
·
impossible to
:'
.
expect
·
a
.
her grandmother, Mrs. Tilford, a self-
htimari being
to be
healthy; to feelloved
if righteous but well
'
meaning women
·
- she's
-
treated
:
like that.
-
·
·
·.
·
,
·
-
·..
(played by Marianne Harrison). Mrs.
"lt
'O"
is
:,
only
·
when
·
·she
'
•.
goes
o
-
to
Tilford proceeds to phone every parent of
college
/
Cherello says
·
,
,
"aild
;
meets Karen
.
every child at
-
the
.
school
'
and,
··
.
before
·
(played by Arlene Hutriaii) that slfEdinds Marlha
·
and Karen know what's hap-
an kind oflove,
;
It's the first time that she·
·
pening, '
f
an insane asylum breaks loose;"
•·
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forty-five limousines have arrived and
every

girl has been taken home
;
Says Cherello, "The key to self
righteousness
is
that it stems from really
believing you're rightabout something you
don't fully
_
understand. Mrs. Tilford isn't
an evil woman. What she does
is
evil,
though. She will have to live for the rest of
her life with the fact that she's spread a lie
·
that's led to the death of another human
being."
Martha Dobie was a character wh"
lacked self knowledge. This is what make;.:
tragedy possible. Cherello says, "mayb{'
Martha put too much faith in omelettes
and friendship, but she was doing nothing
to justify what was done to her. Indeed, shr
was doing good. Her life WAS working
.
It
is a sad commentary when someone like
Martha, who is by no means a strong
·
Cherello is not sure that Martha's human being, and who is without a doubt in
darkness can totally be understood, or that search
.
of herself in a way that most of us
it
is
important to pin down every little
don't have to confront, is destroyed by
detail. "What is important," she says, "is plain old ignorance."
the fact that Martha was made to feel so
Cherello feels that the theatre has the
totally worthless that she could shoot
power to
:
act as a "transcending ex-
herself.
·
Martha,
·
anyone capable of
·
perience.'r "Good actors can make people
shooting themselves, must feel like go_ beyond themselves.''
.
To her, the
nothing. And she was only trying to love
_
theatre is a place where people can
and be loved."
-
become rriore human, which
is
to say that
According .to Cherello it wasn't self
they only have to become more un-
revulsion or fear of the fact that she feels a
.
derstanding.
.
love for Karen in a wav different "from the
·
.
"The Children's Hour"
will
have it's
way women
:
have been loving women for
final performances tomorrow and
thousarids
'
of
-
years.'' "What drives her to
Saturday
:
night at eight o
'
clock and on
her death/' says Cherello "is the fact that Sunday at two o'clock.
·

·
.
.
-
,
.
.
.
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.·.




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....
/
Inquiring
Photographer
Question: Do you
think
the McCann
Recreation Center bas adequate ac-
cessibility to students?
'
.
Chris
-
Walion, Sr.,
;
No
.
-
It
seems
,
a~
-
though all the
_
scheduling
I
is
_
for the
'.
pub}icusage ancl
'
n~t t~e students to use
\
-
the facili
.
tv.

_
,
_
,
_::
·.·
·
.;·:_
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·
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.
·
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·
,
'
·,.
-
.
.
.
.
.
Mike Gulotta,
Sr., All
four racquetball·
col!rts are booked up for the semester it
seems, the pool
is
infested by little kids,
the gym is accessible between
8
and
10
a.m. On Monday mornings the sauna is
packed with Culinary students. I guess
there is always the ballet room.
Tom Homola,
Jr.,
The sauna is a little -
too warm because there are too many
C.I.A. oeoole
iri
there. ·

"-
.
·/
'-/
-
·!
,
'
: ,
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if.J...~;M,6
:
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.
_
.
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Bob
Sentochnik, Soph.
,
J-
thi
_
~ · ~e
·:
·
Mccaim
.
Center
,
is not
·
utilize
_
d
.
e~ough
·
.
Sig~a Phi Convention
-
Nine Sigma
-
Phi Epsilon members at-
tended a convention at the fraternity's
Northeast Regional Leadership Academy
in Stanford, Connecticut.
·
Over 250 fraternity members from the
northeast attended the convention as well
regional representatives and a faculty
staff of national representatives.
,.
,
.
Presidents' of the various houses met
and
-
had goal-setting sessions to begin the
convention. Saturday was spent by most of
the members in workshops concerning
chapter operations, alumn!
com~
munications, and leadership and
organizational interpertations. The
evening was climaxed with an awards
presentation
.
Mr. William: Spire, president
of the Merrill Lvnch Investment Cor-
p!)ration, a graduate of_ Pe~ State and
.
a
·
_
member
·
of Sigma Phi Epstlon was the
guest speaker
.
_
_
_
-
_
.
-
-
Fraternitv chapters from schools such
as
Villanova University, University of
Massachusetts, Ma
'
ssachusetts Institute
.
of
Technology, Rutgers University, PeM
·
state,and Setonaall
·
were represented a~
.well as 33 other
,
schools.
.

., Marist); Sigm~J'hi Epsilon
.
president
;
Jim
.
Corbett
·
savs,
"The
_
entire weekenq
i
{
was
.'
inc
'
redibly· professional, ~th
!
th~
.$.
$-
leadership
.
and orgar:uzatiom1l y.orksh
,
op~
proving verv
_
interestmg. However, for all
,
·
.
the most valuable part
:
of
tne
convention
.
was the
informal
and personal interactiort
between all. of

the chapters in
:
toe
·
truest
definition of brotherhood."
,
7
-:✓
-
Newdeli/plzzerio plar1n~d
by
Michael McCartby
The pool section
of
the barn was made
-
school~ doing something to make it
:
a little
available to Finch through an agreer:nent easier
.
for us."
·
.
_
-.
._
·
. ·
with CUB Be~yYeaglin,
;
Scott
-
Carltoil,
Finch has many
_
other proposals
.
_
he
is
A
full scale deli-pizzeria will be installed

and Toni
_
Shine
/
that rooin was riot being pushing also. Already $25 mealtickets\~ill
in the pool room of the barn1ocated on tl~e used to it's best advantage.
_ ..
½;'
be sold for
,
$20
fo
'
:
the entire Marist
coin~
ground floor of Champagnat Hall, ac-
Students
_
are
:
:
also generally positive
.
.
munity;
·
and they
j
:E!h be used in the
,
c;afe,
_
cording to Gregg Finch, Food Service ab(?ut the idea; "I've seen it work afotper the rat; or the
.
deli
.
He
.
would
·
also like Jo
Director. The projection date is

March
16,
,
schools," says Tom Gillis, a soph<,im.ore make the rat
a
full scale bar with a limited
after tlle
.
recess. The deli
will
hold a
.
full
-
'
:
resident. ."As iong as Jlle prices'
:
are food menu, an~Jf coffee ·shop

the
·
riew
,
_ -
•· lin~
·
otcold
.
cutswhich
will
be solq by the
,
reasonable,_._ it's

a
.
. ·
gr~ilt
..
idea/'
-
,.Ann_ diniqg room
i
A;cor:nmuter.food
-
service
:
in
pound and half-pound, Subs
·
and~'!!alf-:subs
·
;
Huseman, ·'a
,
nother·J r~sjdent
·
:
sophQmore;j
,
J~onn,elly, or
:
e~~iltive: dining ·r
_
ooni,-
:
:
arid
_
.
.
wijf.also
_;
be sold~ Hot sa11dwic~ef
:
(~eat
~
,
also likes the idea. "Everybody has to send foo
_
d services
at
all Maristsporting eyents
-
-
·_
balls,
\
sausages and peppers, etc~) are also
,
out for food," says Ann.
"It
seems like the are
'
also in Finch's plans.
to
:
be sold.
·
·
·
·
·
·
'
-
·
·,
·
The pizzeria aspect of the deli is also full
scale
;
'
with different types of popular
pizzas being offered.
_
-
In addition to the prepared -foods, the
deli also will sell jars of peanut butter,
-
jellies
;
cookies, pretzels, potato chips and
candy
i
Six packs of soda will be sold, and
Finch says a license to sell six-packs of
beer
is
awaiting
administrative
legislation
.
There will also be an ice-cream
' freezer and cigarette machine available
for usage, says Finch.
Al Oldmixon, Manager of Board
Operationsfor the Food Service, said that
prices will be comparable to the local
retailers. "We'll go around to the local
_
delis and pizzerias
,
and use their prices as
a guideline. We'll either meet or beat.their
prices!' Both' Finch and Oldmixon feel the
on~ampus deli
.
will infuse money for the
college, through student employment.
- The tentative hours for the deli"are
10:30
a.m. -
2:00
p
.
m
.
, and
7
p.m.
-1:00
a.m. The
deli will be closed off from the barn with a
wall, and the back door to the pool room
will be used as the entrance.
-
1
LSAT •
MCAT •
GRt
GRE PSYCH • GRE BIO
<
:
'.
GMAl• DAl
_
•OCAT •
:
PCAl
:
·
VAT • MAT
.

SAl
'
•JOEFL
.>
·
-
NAT
,
'L
MED eos
-
ECFMG !
-
FLEX-• VQE
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'
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Noe • NPe_, -.
NLE
·
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~
-
~
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-
EoucA:rroNAL
.
CENTER LTD.
'
,
Test P.reparation· Speciali

sts ·
_..
:, -. -..
,
Since 1938
-
-
'
:
Foi-infoim
'
ation
;'
Please
-
Ca/I:
' '
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·
.
! '."'
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site
of new on-campus dell.
. Appli_cations
are- now being a~cepte~
_
-
--for
-..
tfre
.
.
_
ln
_
te~~ship
_
jn
_.
Hig~er
·
_
Edµcation
·
Administration: Sponsored
,
by
_
the
·

-
.
-
_
Admissions
-
Office.
_'.
_
·
~
•.
.
.
.
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.
:,_
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·
Fall
=
l98D
'·:\
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'
riior
_
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,-
Only
Co
_
ntact:
·
-
Jam~s
-
E. Da-lY,
-
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·
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Dean
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of
Adni_issions
.
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Greystone
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This
WEEK In
Sports

Hockey
March 2
·
10:45 p.m.
11:00 p.m.
10:45 p.m.
11:00 p.m.
11:00 p.m
.
11:00p.m
:
Intramural Roundup
March
5
March
16
ALL GAMES
AT THE
·
March
17
March 18
March 19
M ID~HUDSON Civic CENTER
..
Soccer
March 2
Track
Marchi
March8
r.farch 8 and 9
March 14 and
15
R.P.I.
Cortland State Invitational
Union College Invitational
ICAA
NYSCTFA
Champs NCAA Div.
11
WOM EN~S
-
RESULTS
.
(11 ~l2)
·
C.W
.
Post
84
Marist
.
West
Pciint
:
.
66
Marist
·
.
Marist
87
Ramapo
·
Marist
92
.
Patterson
Fordham
·
·
84
Marist

Marist
.
69
New York Tech
Sy
r
acuse
91
Marist
:
Marist
.
.
,
75
Co
r
nell
.
H
·
ofstra
·
H
.
.
M~rist
Marist
·
78
··
· .
Iona
·
:
UU
.c
.
/ ·
'
·
· ,- __
94
.:-,
c
i
Marist
'
· ·
,
':·
Malloy
•''
·'
.
' '
·
'
.
:,
_
64
''<
Ma
'
ris
(
·-'
54
62
66
69
66
62
63
54
.
53
67
63
' 7
'
59

,
·
.
.-
Marist
69
Russell Sage
St. Francis
67
.
Marist
Marist
70
Mercy
·
·
·
Mar
i
st
68
Manhattanville
Maris!
86
Dominican
Siena
89
Maris!
Maris!
78
Manhattan
Fairfield
.
73
Maris!
Adelphi
68
Maris!
·
·
Monmouth
119
-•
·
.
Maris!
·Maris!.
_
:
;
..
'
;
·
..
.
95
.
,
:;
.
.
;
U
..
New Haven.
·
• . · i . ,
.
··
.

'
. . . .
.
..
.
..
_
.
,
:
.
MEN'S
·
RESULTS
(9-17)
.
.

..
.
54
62
67
67
50
82
36
70
46
72
89
.
c,
.
The intramural basketball tour-
nament
is
entering its fourth and final
week of round robin competition, with
four teams still undefeated. Thursday
March 6
.
is
the final day scheduled
before the playoffs which
will
begin
March 17, after spring vacation .
The co-eel racquetball tournament
is
scheduled to start Monday March
3,
.
and will conclude after a round robin
competition and a single elimination
playoff.
5 on 5 Basketball Standings
·
Division I
McCann
.
Rock Creek Crew
·
·
69ers
Chainsaw
Dazed and Confused
Cisco Stranglers
Valdes
Division
II
Last
Chance
Spectrum
Tar Heels
Deranged Buffoons
The Running and Gunning Foxes
·
The Wall
Phi Tappa
Kegga
Division Ill
·
Fighting Irish
Men's Eight
The Pilgri[Tls
Weezers
,
~-· ,
,
J
he Te~m to Beat.,. ,
Sig
Eiis
.
..
Running Red Retards
4-0
3-1
2-1
1-1
1
-
2
0
-
3
0-3
3-0
3-0
2
-
1
1
-
1
1-2
0
-
3
0-3
3
'.
0
·
·2-1
2-1
2-1
.
_
2-2
0-3
0-3
Games this
Week
Thursday
February 28
Fighting Irish
vs.
Men's
Eight
Chainsaw
vs.
69ers
Deranged Buttons vs.
Phi
Tappa Kegga
The Team to
Beat vs
.
The
Pilgrims
Running and Gunning
Foxes
vs.
last Chance
Rock Creek
Crew
vs.
Disco Stranglers
Monday March
3
The Wall
vs.
Phi Tappa Kegga
Dazed and Confused
vs.
69ers
The Pilgrims
vs.
Weezers
Spectrum
vs.
Tar Heels
Tuesday March 4
The Running and Gunning Foxes
vs.
Tar Heels
Chainsaw
vs.
Valdes
The Team to Beat
vs
.
Fighting Irish
Wednesday March 5
S
i
g Eps vs
.
Weezers
Disco Stranglers vs. Dazed and Confused
Deranged Buffoons
VS:
The Wall
Last Chance vs. Spectrum
Running Red Retards vs. Men's Eight
McCann vs
.
69ers
Thursday March 6
Spectrum
vs
.
Phi Tappa Kegga
McCann
vs
.
Chainsaw
Rock Creek C
r
ew
vs.
Valdes
. Running Red Retards
vs
.
Sig Eps
Last Chance
vs.
Deranged Buffoons
·
St. Michael's
61
Maris!
57
Maris!
71
:
_ Philadelphia Textile 67
Maris!
·
96
-
.
Hartwick
87
Lafayette
104
Maris!
87
Maris!
97
Fordham
91
Dowling
82
Boston
U.
117
F.I.T
.
Maris!
Maris!
Maris!
84
79
77
94
69
69
.
Bowling League
·
Southampton
91
Maris!
90
Loyola, Md.
Pace
107
Maris!
97
Maiist
Maris!
·
96
Pratt
54
Marist
Dowling
·
83
Maris!
58
Maris!
C.W.Post
83
·
Marist
58
Maris!
Maris!
79
Montclair
69
Siena
Fairfield
86
Maris!
79
Adelphi
Moilmo
·
uui
85
Marist
73
New York Tech
Rollins
.
'
89
Maris!
83
·
-
Monmouth
71
83
68
72
84
-
87
79
87
·
98
Maris!
Southampton
Pace
Pratt
sa'cred Heart
Maris!
Maris!
Maris!
Maris!

IZ
63
52
80
73
76
73
83
_
There are presently
14
teams in the
Marist College Bowling League at the Hoe
Bowl on Tuesday nights says Jim Gilligan,
president and treasurer of th~ league.
0
The league, which was started by
Assistant Dean of
·
Students, Gerry Kelly,
·
has
13
student teams and one ad-
.
ministrative team. Gilligan notes that
there is only one. girls team and one fresh-
man team in t~
0
league. The girl's team is
captained by Missy Thompson. There are
also
four
teams from the fraternity,
Sigma
Phi Epsilon.
Gilligan says the purpose of the league
was ((Lo have a great time for people to
meet other people." The league
will
run
for
10
weeks says Gilligan. The first week
was for per~onal averages and the second
week began the standings says Gilligan .
.
At the end of the ten week period there
will be
.
a dinner and trophies and t-shirts
given to the winners according to Jeff
Hohner, secretary of the league.
Qu
~···························~
~--------------~


'
.
.
-There was one correct answer for last
This week's question
is:
.

p
.
k
'

·
. .
.
.
.
week's quiz
·
questio
,
n, and that belonged
to
Name both the p_ltcher _wh~ th~ew the
!
ar
lSCOUllt
:
_
Mike Wiese who knew the right answer of pitch
Hank
Aaron hit for his h1Stor1c
715th •
B

.
:
Steve Patterson. Mike's name will go inter hom~ run, and the player who caught the

·
:
·
everages
.
.

a
.
box along with the winners from every- ball
m the bullpen.
.
.

:
·
week from now on. The nam,:?"drawn from
.
Put the answers on a
.
piece of paper •
R
9
H d p k
.
.

the box at the end of the year
.
will win
a
six-
along 'Yith _your name and room n_umber :
·
t.
Y
e ar
:
.
pack
of
Heineken courtesy of the Circle. and brmg 1t to room C-817. Deadline for •
229.;.9000
·.
·
·
·
·
·
·
· · entry is Monday night.
:

.--------....;.~------~-------------....;.-"I.:


'
'
Sportswriters
,
Wanted
· Contact:
·
Chris
Egan.,
·
·
..
..
·'
·
C;817l '
~
~-
.

.
: U.C. Cans


.
.
.
.
$.99
6 pack

: . Colt
45
Silver
$1.25
:
6 pack :




:: Utica
Club
Lite
:
·
:
$2.99/case :
:
plus deposit :
_
.
,
.
.
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TBADINQCO.
Adjacent to Barkers
Shoprite Plaza
Rt.
9
Hyde Park
229-7900
FINE
FOOTWEAR
.
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STERLING JEWELRY
LEATHER
APPAREL
Jewelry
&
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Repairs
~ /
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:
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~
Mon, Tues, \Ved,Sat: 10-6
Thurs, Fri: 10-9
·
Sunday: closed
~
.,

.
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-
I
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I
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_ _
. Page 8 • THE CIRCLE.
February
28, 1980
Hoopsters conclude losing seasons
Men
fall
to Monmouth
By Chris
Egan
· The _men's basketball team completed
its season with a
98-83
loss to Big Apple
Conference · champion Monmouth College
last Wednesday, finishing with
a
record
of
9-17;
. Rufus Cooper led the Marist scorers with
'XT.points,-while BillDeWinne scored
23
and
Steve Smith added
19.
Don . Wiley,
a
potential . All-American ·for .. Monmouth
. scored
27
points.
;
_ ·: .. ·
·
· Monmouth got off to a quick -start by
virtue ofits71:percent shooting in .the first
half,· and· flew to · a
52-34
halftime· 1ead.
Despite switching. to_·
a
pressing . man-to-
. man defense,·the Red.Foxes could not get
any closer than 82-7lwith
4:27
remaining
in the· game; .
. ..
. Head coach Ron Petro was. quoted as
saying ''after Monmouth got off to such a
good start we tried to cllange the tempo of
. the game but itturned against us. We gave
it· e"'.:ery~ing we had but our. defense just
MARIST (83)
Coopor 13 1-1 27. Crotty 00.00. DeWinne 103-
5
23,
Jamison
0 0-0 0. Mortin 4 1-2 9, Renrick 2
o.
04,
Smith9 l-219, Shelclon0 1-21, Word00.00.
Totals
38 7-12 83.
MONMOUTH (98)
Mozich
4
0-1
8, Cort&r 5 0-210, Sloir 6 1,2 13,
King 9 2-3 20, Wiley .11 5-5· 27, Taylor I 1-2 3.
frffmon
8
1,2 I 7, Clark O
0-0
0,
Geai O
0-0-
0 •
Totals-« 10-17 98.
Halftime-Monmouth
52, Moris! 34. Tolol louls.
Moris! 17. Monmouth 17. Fouled out, Cooper.
could_n't stop them.'.'• Petro also cited the
play of freshman Cooper as a key
to
_keeping the gaine from getting out of hand.
For Marist, which finished with
,a
4-7
conference record- for sixth: place; Mike
Martin and Mike Sheldon
;complete9
their
collegiate
careers;:
"It's .unfortunate for
·
botlrMartin and Sheldqn_that they hadJo
end the season with
a
loss" says Petro. The
9
wins
_also represented theJeam's highest
·
total smce the 1976-77 season.
. "
is~r brtr.
w,
-'cnow
0
<"~
rosts so:much
1
lnQ
P'!JdUC'tS
Q
. Women
split
last
two
contes·ts
·
By Chris
Egan
Behind a high scoring performance· by
Pat Powers, the women's basketball team
concluded its season Friday by defeating
the University or New Haven
95-89,
after
being
routed by Monmouth College 119-72
JastWednesday; The team finished with an
11-12
record.·
Powers poured - in
25
points leading
Marist past New Ha'ven while Lolita Silva
added.22. Lynn Eaton-Fogg and·Barbara
Torres each netted
15
points. The
95
points
:
scoredby the
Red
Foxes were the most
in
a
single game all _year breaking the
previous team hlgh
of
9'l
against ratterson
in December.
. .
.
· Maristtookthe lead at the start and held
on
to it until the
5:30
mark of the first half·
wheri the Chargers went ahead
29-27.
The
teams
p1ayed evenly throughout the
remainder of the half, ~nd Marist trailed
·
41-40 at halftime. ·
·
·in the second halfthe-teams continued to
· play ciosely, but Marist's offensive <!~ck
was too muchfor New Haven and the final
i
sc:ore was
95-89,.
snapping a · three game
losing streak for·Marist. · . · · -
.
. ·
. . ,uwe ended the_ season on a good note"
. says coach Sue Deer.
"I
was pleased with
·
the game, . especially the freshmen
-
who
. played really well/' She adds
"it was quite
a
.
difference from our · previous game
· which
I
don't· even wantto talk a:bout/'
.'.l'he previousg~mewas a 119-72-setback
IU~I
ii
t
.,
'
.
.
.
. .
;
"i:
MONMOUTH (119)
Collins 2 3.5 7, Mitchell 4 7-8 15, Domoroski 3
3-3
9, Strutz 6 4-7 18, Lasher 2 l •2 5, Gresh 3 4-5
10, Hook 8 5'6 21. Polerno 9 8-10 27, Murray 3 2-
28, Deflice02-22, Totals: 4039•50 119.
MARIST(72)
Eoton•Fogg
l 8-l l 10, Newhard l 1·2 3, Powers
7 .c-a·1s, Carey
4
2·2 10, Cruse
O
0-0 0, Salmon 0
0-0 0;
Govan
I
0.0 2, Torres
I
2-2 4, Krzeminski 5
2-4 12,Morrow 51·4 11,Green
I
0-0 2. Silvo0 0-4
o;
Totols: 26 20-37 72.
Halftime: 58,35, Monmouth .
MARIST
(95)
.
·
Eoton·Fogg 6 3.7 15, Newhard 0 2-2 2, Powers
9
7-12 25. Corey 0 2,2 2, Torres 7 J·3 15, Kr-
zeminski 3 5·6 11, Green 1 1,2 3, Silva 10 2'6 22.
Totals 36 23-40 95.
·
·
NEW HAVEN {89)
Poolillo 6 0-0 12, Crowford
5
o:o
10, Seymour 2
2-2 6, Vega 0 2-3
2, Holmes I 1-2 3, Pass<>nder 5
4-11 14, McNeil! 6 4-4 16; Mogoulos 7.12-1226.
Totals:
32
25-34 89.
· Halftime; 41 ~40. New Haven:' -
at the hands of Monmouth College, which
marked the worst defeat for the Red Foxes
this year. Monmouth grabbed the lead and
never relinquished
it
as it raced to a 47
. point victory. Powers scored 18 points to
pace
Marist.
·
Deer ,says "the season went well con-
.sidering the competitiveness of the
schedule and the players having·to adjust
to a new coach again."
·
·
-Eaton-Fogg, · the lone s~nior on the
squad, played her last collegiate game for
Marist. She finished the year with a 12.7
points per game average, and appeared in
every game for Marist
·steve
Smith
finished season as Marist's.leading.scorer as well as all time fresh-
man scoring leader. · . · · ·
Two
views
of
dismissal
Maureen Morrow, a junior who was a
make this team competitive on .the triea to grab total control which she thinks Murray
in
an effor(to r~lly some support.
member of the women's basketball team
Division Ilevel. ".
.
, .
.
is ilJlproper. She .feels Deer probably
Althqugh' µtere· hasn't· really beeri a
for three years, .was dismissed
fr~m
this .
Morrow ''is good. when she wants to be . sho_uld have . sought more .. input and check of the fans' opinions, many showed
year'sJeam by coach Sue_Deer with one
good;,andlneeded her.to be good all the · delegated mor~ .power ~o the players,
their support for Morrow during the.final
game remaining on the·schedule; Although
time'' adds Deer. -· _
-
·· . .. ··.
_.
·
· • ·espe·cially ·t,he upperclassmen who, have game of.. th~ year against-New Haven
both Morrow and Deer· agree there was a -; <Morr_o~ ·seems · con(uf3ed not'. only as to . been playing for two or three years.
Friday ,nigM at .the Mccann Recr.eation
difference ill. opinions;
·
there remains :the
.why
Deer,released her with only one game
What seems to upset Morrow most of all,
Center. .Banners were hung and · voices
issue·otwho·was·in the· right·_,,,.:
. · · ..
remaining ori th~(~ch~dule this year, but however, is the way Deer used her.power were heard protesting the decision to drop
According to Deer; Morrow~ failed .to
why she was released.at all.·She:says she as coach'to lake away Morr.ow's athletic Morrow from· the .team.
adjust. to, ~hat. she cal~ ·."my, ~tyle -.. of
didn't:· leL<up ·
,in·.
ariy. :games,'., despite .'.; sc~olarship ... '-'It's ·-not :tl!e-)mqney · that · . Deefsums up.her feeling~ on the matter,
, coaching," ·even: though she, ·was. given · · wJ}atever Deer miglifhave told
her.
to· the ; re~lly bqt~ers'm·e, it's tpe·principle·.of the:, by saying her players should no~ be· ''iri.;
. ample opportunity. "I wanted to give her'a
0

conti:ary. "I had irgo<xf: year:- Hiad my bad·'" thing:·she sh9uldn'f be able to.
a<>"
tha~;
·rt dividually-mjnded'' and should. ·sacrifice, ...
-~~nee ... '. and
.~he
jus~.
has11't qiade the.:. ~g~mes; but')h~t•s;o11ly:n~tural." ~-'.: : .... : ·~as ll!lj~stifi~d:".-_-: ,
-
·.
.·. · '. · .. ;, · ,
·
.. ·
..
·.-.for lht(goodof the team. Morrow says.the_\
..
,ad1us~ent;,,
__ _. .
. ·
--·-:
,·,
:
· ·.·
·: Morrow.realizes.there \\'.ere differences. , Tryll_lg lo fmda fr1endJy pair. of ears, . coach shou~d.notllave as much power:as ,
-· ;_, ;
_
~_er.says '.'.sh.e ~~s-~11~,the. auµ,iori~tive •· in ~W,l~~hi~~-be~w!i~~;ajl_f~l}.d,P,eef O\fer· :-·.;-~orro~i;h~f(pl~~q~-- ~eI';_~§e)tQ _atlll~~c ·· ))eer
.trie~:
to·: have.:: ' . •·. : , _. ' · .... '
:
· /approach. to coaching, and doesn't wanUo <
.
•·the extent of' contr.01° aicoac-:n·'should ·. have '• :.:d1reclor, Rom Petro, Jto;no :avaitshe says) · · :
0
• _
• • •

·
. ·; p{ayJlie,\Vay.-1 want:to' coachA!m
trying
to<:
:-:on
::.the:
teiiiriJAccoramg:
fo'.•
Morrow;lneer'..~;,aoo/plafrs;;)
id :.
1
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;,to;
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24.5.1
24.5.2
24.5.3
24.5.4
24.5.5
24.5.6
24.5.7
24.5.8