The Circle, December 11, 1980.xml
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 25 No. 11 - December 11, 1980
content
••
,,., College
PoughkHpale, N.Y~
NeedaJOb-.
'ByLo,rettaKe~nedy"'.'
~
in the program. Their jobs range from
·
·
·
IBM i!1 Fishkill to the area banks. The pro-
Next semester the students will have ac-
gram 1s open to both commuter and resi-
cess to the Job Location and' Deyelopment
dent students. "All one needs to do is fill
Program available in the Campus Center
out art
application," says . Koloski.
(Room 180). _
·
· Available jobs are posted on
a
bulletin
Carolyn ~?loski, directo~ of the pro-
board _ in -the. career placement office.·
gram, says, The program 1s open to all
Students are free to come in and 'browse.•
students regardless of financial- need."
. The program is partly a. referral service
"Basically, the program c·onsists of off- - explains Koloski, although they often try
campus job placing while 'trying' to imple~
and place students in accordance with their
ment- on campus-jobs as well." The pro-
career.
1
"Hopefully more major related
gram does not place students after gradua-
placing will be presentin the future," says
tion; they must be in the process of com-
Koloski. She also hopes that the students
pleting their education.
·
will take advantage of tliis program.
Thirty-five students are presentlyinvolv-
Gl~betrotters Are Coming
Drakeford
~Resign&
by
Tom Hassett
wants to go. That place is coaching. He has
coached· basketball and football at
Mari;t
has,
yet to· officially announc~ · a
Poughkeepsie High School and saw that his
replacement 'ror the position of Residence coaching was creating a conflict with his
Director of Champagnat Hall for' next duties in Champagnat Hall.
The world renowned Harlem Globetrot-
.semester after the resignation of Anthony
"I pref~r coaching;'' he says in response
ters ·wm bring their comical brand of
Drakeford. Drakeford has been Resident to-what made him decide
to leave Marist. .
bas_ketball
'
magic to the Marist College Mc-
-Director since September of 1979.
As well, he says,
"The school district job is
Cann Center on December
1s:·
Drakeford officially resigned
as·
of an eight to four situation,-which allows me
Starting time for the. event, which is -November 19th from the position. He said, to have the rest ofthe evening to myself.
_/sponsored by the Marist College athletic
"The Residence Director is a
24
hour )ob
In response to whether he had any advice
department; is 7:30 p.m;
Jn
addition to the
because you never know when they want .for .the person that would replace him as
familiar Globetrotters on-court antics, area
you.
0
He explains that the job locks him Residence Director, Drakeford says, "Not .
fans will see a half~time • variety - show
into a. postthat .warrants him to· accol!nt really, because the job is one of trial and er-
t«_
.
_._
fea
__ .t_u __ r.ing. _t_~e Dr_· oguett5.~ _wh_o_
w._m
per_Jo
__ rm . forhisactions·atalltinies. ·
/ · . ro_t· 1_-can'·t.tell them_
wha_· t to expect.!' __ .He·.
:'1 ,_ a most _unusual hat tossmg routine,
w
azyr, , ·
Drak~fo~~ is. taki~ on
~
~s~!_ion with
~
expl~med that one
can
prepare
for the Job
..
,
·t·<>.~~;
o_(,:~hti~9rld_:~,-mosfj,;,c~!ti_ng hand., the Poug_llkeeps1~.~~~~ p1~tr:1ct
!
~agnet __ buqhey don't know. th~job until.they
see
_
;
:
\
. / .. ,,;giilan~fS' . .and:,Bl!-ITett:·F.elker,:,,:a\.~ri~liant
,
. sch~l_prog_ra~-~-
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-
~.;,:
In-a final statement Drakeford
says,.
"I
-
~
~'- ing
humot
an<l juggling'skills .. ·. -,:;:::-_ -
0: ,;
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s'c;h~~~dj,s~,;t;!,jJifs!iy~.(~e·feels:~a([havc:'no-reareis
·ibo'utlcavina;-ff
islim«Ffor...:: .. :.:.:: ____
~
.
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,.:. ,•. _.,~-To~
Ol~betrot!ers:have played more
than.-,~
hi~
_fie,l_d
.~f~
~~~
c.
:wtU·.~~~:·
.
~u!f~~~~li~r
me·tQ's§'~Tifuft1?
-
~<>"clsew~ri.t~•?'
1
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:.'..1S;000gaines·in'97countriesbeforemore~
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:~>-·>~·?·
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:::·:_:=· ____ :-- · ·,
.7S,000
-
people set m' -Berlin's-
.
Olyrnp1c-..
:~- ·
. . -
t.J,~--
-
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· , ... ·
..
. :,Stadiu_f!lin-1951.Last·yearmillions·more.:'
, . .
--
-:
•
,,,,,
,,,,
,
., .
.
- saw the Globetrotters on tour 'and on televi- -- : The
·
Committee on
Institutional• mathematics anderi~ineering rotthe 1981 ~. -
sion .. :
. -. :.' ... ·
.
~- -
, . -.
· Cooperation has -::·established three- : 8_2 acad1:mi_c year.
0
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,
, _
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.The. Globetrotters popularity :is;• not
i
fellowship progr
_
ams ;designed )o increase. ··· The ·.·• Committee on, Institutional
limited to one 'country or-one ·continent; ; t,ie representation of.members .. of minority
Cooperation (CIC)is the academic consor-
-
• They have:amilzed: basketball
fans.
w~'j-ld.:
>'
gro~ps among tho~e who: hol_d doctorates . (ium of the- Big Ten· universities_. a·nd the
' ·. wide 'and are popular in small towns as well·'
.
_
•. _
in
!Ile
social sciences; humanities, naturaL-,
-
University of Chicago; all _l.9cated in _the
- as large cities. The Globetrotters-have per.: \sciences, _mathematics and engineering. _
·
-.
c
MidwesL Fellowships· inust be used at one -
~formed in 11).0rethait 1,600 cities in the
--~FlindedbygrantsfrointheLillyE~dow-
.
oftheCIGuniversities. - .
United States ..
-
<'
.. _
. __ . . - _
ment; · Irie., The Andrew W .. Mellon Founa . _ , · ,T.he feHowships provide fuH tuit/on plus
-.. Tickets for
the
.event
·
are .now ori sale at· dation and The John D. ai:td Catherine T.
a ,stipend of at least
$4,500
for four
. all·- Tjcketrori'i
.
outlets
·
, · Mid~Hudson Civic:
MacA,rthur .·Foundation_ that'- total n:iore - ·.academic years, provided of course that
the
Center, Abrams Musicji:i Kingston, Sears. than: $3 _ million and .from -;tdditional .. F;ellow_s make nor:mal progress:towai-d,the
in
_
Wappingers Falls, Lloyds. in Mid~ ':'.resources of)he affiliated universities, the _ Ph.D. ' . ·
·
·
·
'
dletown, an~· the· Mccann Center at':_ program
will
provide 25. fellowships in the
<
Anyone who- has or
will-
Teceive 'a
· Marist. All seats must be reserved in. ad:. ~- social sciences, 10 in the humanities, and at
bachelor's degree by September 1981 is
vance. ·
·-
·.
·-
···., ... least
0
25
in
·
the. natural· ·sciences,
eligible to apply forjlle 1981 competition:
, - - ~ - - - ~ - - - - - - - - - . ; ; . . . ; . . . . . . . , _
......... _ _ _ _
"'!"" ____
.;... _ _
.,;.._..;.._·;.;.. ...
-_
..... ...;'
... ·;_
:
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
,..
Graduate. students at universities
,
·other
than those of the'_CIC::may also apply.
, Students are urged
t9 apply as early as
. possible iri the fall; application,deadline is
· January -15,- 198L
A
one-step procedi.ire ·
~ombines . application for ·the fellowship
with· application for admission to. any of
the CIC universities on a single form. ·
Anyone desiring detailed information
abou~ the fellowships program should write
to: CIC Minorjties Fellowships Program,
Kirkwood Hall 111, lridiana Universi1v,
Bloomington,Indiana 47405. . - ·
·
. _ -
~
.
•
-
,
• Until February
J, 1981, prospective ap•
plicants from outside Indiana may call'l<lll-
free between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00·p.m. EST .
>
:
'
.\/
:·: ~=
I
-':}t
'
:;t
- Mr. C~mpllii banding Gu;
-
Nolan a~cfi Peggy McGovern check for $638.00 raised on Nov!mber 20th f!)r
Ox~
fam World Ha~est Fast. Seiler's d_onated
96C
for each meal that was d~nated.
-
.
.
I •
--for information or application forms .. The
number is (800) 457-4420.
:· Now -in
its. fourth year, the CIC
Feliowships Program in the social sciences
, makes awards in anthropology, economics,
geography,
history,
political' science,
psychology, and sociology.
·
·
The. humanities fellowships are available
to students seeking doctorates in American
studies; art history, classics, comparative
· literature, English, German, . linguistics,
music, philosophy, , religion, Romance
languages, and Slavic languag~.
·
Fields covered by the natural sciences,
·
mathematics and engineering program in-
.·
elude chemistry, biqlogical
·
· sciences,
· agricultural sciences, physics,
and
. geol,ogical sciences. We welcome inquiries
concerning specific subfields.
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photography editors
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advertising ma~~ger
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uslness manager
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McCa'rthy
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C~~is Mc\/~~ty
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Michael Chung ·
Suzette Erriersoii
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Charlie Lamberta
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Thomas Rooney
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JlmHage
M~ry
K8f,lan
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Mcindoy.
Short
letters are
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We •~serve'
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all letters
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but '?°m" may
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Thank-you
··
:,
Dear Editor,
.
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Graham, Mike
.
.
The officers of the Class of
'83
Skrodanes,
Ed
.
Cardo
.
za,
.
.
!Jim
>
· would like to extend
.
9ur gratitude
Grifferty;
·
Janet'
· '
McNamar:a;
:.
·
·
to all those who donated their
.:
Terri SuUivan, *\Vil!ie
, '
C
_
l~re,
·
timeartlenergy.into making this
.
·.
,•
T9
_
m
·.
Hassett;
·
_
~Charl~eM,ur9~
.
past Friday night's mixer
:
both
a
:·
Theresa Su_llivap,
~
_
Gr.lee TeJada,
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social
·
and financial success.
·
It
.
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*Dan Trotta, *Ray
:
Vladez
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s;:
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was because of your help that it
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>
*A special than~s.,to those
~M
.
~\
.
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staff:
.
Mau Cole, Judy DiScipio, P~ter Fredsall
;
Monica Flnneg~n,·Tom
·
:
was such
:
a
.
successful event.
·
stayed and cleaned up.,WE cer-
Hassett, Lisa Marchesano,. Mary Alice Russo, Deborah Valentine, Chris
: Thanks!. .
.
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.
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tc\inly appreciate your help\
.
:
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·
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Hogan, Eddie Giltenan, Denni~ Martin, Barry Lewis, Theresa Sullivan, Dawn-
Bob Aufiero
·
Donald Gately
· ·
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... ·
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' ' Sincerely, •
Marie Sturtevant, veronica She_a, Ohrls Egan, Anne Marie Calonlta,
.
Chris ..
•Diana Kaeser' Tom Shannon'
. ·.
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"Schatzie,l1Chris,
<-
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*Peter
· .
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Aqu;ffedda,
·
Kathy
:
.
·
·
Af.lJson,
.
~d La~r~e
-
/
r
f
Ff"ee
at last
o.:,;,
.
E,litor:
/
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..
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.
.
Stinid
\He.Ung of respectiri
r
.
On Friday December
12; 1980
·--~
·
everyone with
•
his hard line per-
-
~
,
· · Marist College will lose another
o
,
sonality. Tony
_
also coaches two
·
.
,
;...
.
.
. :
·:~r
fi
.
ne
.
adminis
_
trator. Tony
varsity
.
SPOJtS
·c
at Poughkeepsie
r
.r
.
:
·
Drakeford, Residen,tDirector of
:
High
School (footQaU
aiid
paskct~
r
_____
__:._,--_____________
__;_ __
....;___;____; ________
.;__;...;_._;_
·.
Champagnatforthe past year and
/
ball). His tea01s
·
.
have compiled
.:.
r
a half, will resign to take on a job
'
.
wiri after :Win; a
·
Drakefordfc:am
·
,
Th
·
k
h ·
h
·
· ·
d
th h
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h.l · h
·
.
·
.
d
.
.
- •
d
.
•
.
. . .
·
:
·
,
as
.
facilitator .for the Poughkeep~
:
_
:wiU · aJways be in the running
foe
.
:
,
. .
e eyc
.
ams,t e
.
p~s!ers,~.
:
.
es arp
.w
1et ec!oW. watche
.
1tsbdem.$hai;-pe
.
sieSchoolSystem
;·.
·.:_,
.:,
:
;
,,.:;
·
thechampioriship:Thefollowing
..
i
umforms are
.
all
·
very
·
ruce add1t1ons t~
.
the
.
.
:
•
•
_
POP.~d
.:
.
h1_s
.
Jumpe~s
.
Jrom
.
th_e
.
·
corner,
:
·
·
· Few
:
·
people
·
realize
:
Othe·
·
ac
~
/
would like
:
to wish
\
J'onythe
·:
best
basketball games-bunhey are nQt wha~ is br'."
.
.
:
•
· ·
DeWmne nppe~
:
down the
:
r:ebounds; while
.
· ·
·
:
complishments
.:
that
.
'.
Tony
,
';
has
,-
.'
;
~f_
luckjn
;
his
.
rie:w job, and c~n-
ingiilg
the .(ans to
·
th
;
e McCann
·
9~nter
,
The
.
. ',
.
Crotty
_
drib
_
ble~in ct.n,d out
.
of~s
.
opponep~
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·
.
·
maddor bo~h ~~ristand. a
i<>
t
o,f
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t~nue?
·?
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:
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i
~nt
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r
_
the
,. , ;·
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,
players are .. F:or
soc
a
:
pe
_
rson, one can't real~
,. :
:
:
.
:
The te;µn
· _
as
·
a
wh
_
ole .lc;,oked
·
great. _
_
But
.
that
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J:>ou~hkeeps1e
,
area
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Hasler
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to make it to the Basketball Hall of
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trance inro this season ~uly
was
an exciting
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yea,. They
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·
That's DedicatiOn
As the semeste; ~nds, everyone
·
o~ the Cir-
cle staff sits back and sighs,
_
tired and weary
..
and elated and proud.
·
Although Loretta can
stop singing "All My
·
Life's a Circle,"
Marybeth
_
realizes she won't becQme a school
.
marm with her red pen, and Michael can
move his bed out of the Mccann Center,
there are others who spent late nights in the
Circle office giving of their valuable tim~.
-
~
·
·.
·
·
:
Chris Hogan, Chris Egan, and Jim Town-
, .
.
send (affectionately
.
J.T.), form~r editors
.
of
the Circle, were present
for
the compiling of
.
. every issue with dedicated concern and all
Jheir eff ortsto help. Witltout them, things
never would
·
have gone so ·smoothly. Our
roaming canformen, Chris McVeety and
·
·
··.·.
Mike
-
Chung, pr~ented
.
the best
-:-
of their
talent. even when
.
a last minute picture was
.
·
needed.
.
- •.
,
.
·
.
.
Thanks,
·
guys. Real d~dicatioQ. is not only
doing the job when one has to, but continu-
ing to be involved
·
even whe
·
n he is not for-
mally. recognized. We
·
tiave
.
•
always been
·
aware and
.
thankful for your
-
help~
·
·
.
.
·
·
·
·
·
Merry Christmas!
-T~eCircle
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:
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oic~-,,.b~r
·
11:
1980.
THE
CIRCL~. ,,.~.
5
_
-
---
.
..
·
.
·
·
.
. '.
.
';·
··By.l'homas
Hassett
_
..
_
_
:
•
-
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-.-
.
·
_
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•
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...
.
Ori the firs
·
t
:
·
day. of Chri~tmas M
·
;~ist gave to me
·
a good m~~l in the caf eteri,a.
··:
,
On the: second day
·
of
~
Christmas Marist gave to me- two of my second
semester courses.
·
.
· :
.
· .
· -
.:
. :
-
·
·
.
·
·
·.
,
.
·
:
.
:
·
·
·
·
.
~
·
';
On
'
the, third
'
day of_Christ~~s
_
Marist gave to
me
thr~e finals in a row .
.
.
·
On
the fourth day·of'Christnias Marist gave to me four term papers.
0
- -
•
•
•
On
the.,fifth
.
:
day ofChr
_
istmas t.-1aris~ gave to
.
me five teachers testing.
·
·
.
·
,
.
:
.·
Ori the sixth
-
day of ChristmasMarist gave to mea vicious Kris Kringle
.
, :
On
:
the seyenth
.
day of
.
Chri&tmas Marist _gave to me the bill for next
.,
.. seniester.,s tuition~ .
.
:
.
.
-
.
. .
.
·
')~i:l
:
the eighth day
of
Chri~tmas Marist ·gave to me two to a room at
·
c
:Sh~ahan
_
/
.::, .
. ;
:,·
..
,
-
.
· •
.
\
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.;
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-
·
.•
. ·
_
...
_
··
.·
.
·
On tlte.ninth dayof<:hristmasMarist gave to methe Red Foxes Winning.
-
On
~he tenth day of ChristmasMarist gave to me an elevator working.
,
,
Ori
•
the
,
eleventh day
,
ofChristmas Marist gave to me twenty-four hour
:_-
silence.
:
·
-:
.
.
·
· :
.
··
· · ·
·
·
·
On the twelfth day
of
Christmas Marist gave to
rrie
a
whole month off. Hur-
t
·
..
.
.
. .
ray,
..
-
.
Faculty's desires
By
Ju~y
DiSciplo
.
Santa's elves may be keeping tabs on
Marist students this season, but other
,members of the Marist community are also
being watched as well. Their Christmas
wishes are sure to brighten the holiday
spirit.
Robert Kaminski, soon to be assistant
Resident Director of Champagnat Hall,
.
would like a trip to Bora Boar
.
.
·
Although Mrs. Pat Comeau,
.
Secretary
of the Campus Center, would also like a
vacation from the ice and snow, her choice
is not as remote. She will settle for a
.
trip to
Bermuda.
·
.
"All A's," responds Dr. D.A. Drennen,
and his students are sure to · share his
Christmas wish.
Mr. Laurence Sullivan has an
,
interesting
wish, "Always to have my first name spell-
·
.
ed correctly."
· ·
·
.
Gregg Finch, Director of Dining Services
answers, "A new kitchen."
On
.
the more sensitive side, there are
several people who share the wish for peace
and security over the holidays. Mrs. Angela
Katopis, a receptionist at the Business Of-
fice, would like "peace all over the world."
Dr. Italo Benin, Mr. John Ritschdorff,
and Mr. Joe Waters share Katopis'
Christmas wish.
Dr. Eugene Best is more specific and
would like to see "an end to the raping and
killing that is going on in El Salvador and
other parts of the country ... "
Although Christmas is just around the
corner, some people still have not made up
their minds as to their wishes. Resident
Director . of Champagnat, Anthony
Drakeford responds, "I have no idea."
As Santa checks his list this season, it is
hoped that he will not be so "wrapped up" '
with Marist students' Christmas presents
and overl<>ok other members of the com-
nmnity.
Student's Wishes
By
C
,
hris Campbell
fice that can tell me exactly about a 'liberal
art' is."
Once again its that time of the year.
This question, when posed to the Marist
Time for hanging lights,
.
searching for
athletic department, brought out responses
presents, buying a
·
ti:ee, and most of all,
like "more :wins, more points" and "na-
time for asking Santa for
:
something
tional recognition." Barry Jamison a
_
_
_.
.
·
.
.,
. -:
·
·
_,,,__
special. Scime 150 students were polled on
senior basketball player said "I'd really
·
ranged from very serious to quite the
Marist." Andrew "Crickett" Homola, a
~
You Want For Christmas'?" Their answers
like to bring Maureen Morrow back to
• .
fi
outrageous.
.
junior and Marist soccer goalie, added "I
ii
·
. .
-
that ever important question
·
"What do
like more playing time
,'
buf most of all I'd
.·
•,. .
., .
. :
. .
.
_
• . \
}
~
.
,,._.J
About 600/o of th'e students polled asked
sure would appreciate a smaller goal
.
.
.
·-
..
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~
·
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·
.
·
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i.
·
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. -
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,
,·
·
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.
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.
·-
!~:re!.~!:~~a~~~i:~:fc~~~~ettu:
s~~)~
bet;~:~~~dents,
·
SOm~ 300/o!
.
.
spoke of
·-
.
...
'
.
·
.
.
·
·
.
.
,.
.
.
.
·
·
· ..
·'
..
first." Jim Hage;
a
junior, responded a lit-
"I'm not greedy, I'll take a
·
"2.0" and
tie greedily,
"I
want aHfe size train of my
Susan "Duby" Dubatowka, a senior, add-
very own, so I can be the
·
conductor."
ed ."Cum Laude sure · would
be
nice at
Some
5%
of the students responded to
graduation."
,
/
thi_s question with Marist College in mind.
.
.
..
Probably the one response that could be
Michael "Crowbar" Wiese, a junior satd,
.
shared by all came from Bil Renrick, a
"
"Better on campus housing to encourage
·
senior, who said "I think the return of the
.
.
students to stay on campus." Charles
hostages and just peace on earth would
Lamberta,
a
junior, said, "A registrars of-
make this Christmas perfect for ev~ryone."
Dorms Decor.ated
By Alexandra Corcoran·
Christmas has officially
.
a!.rived at
Marist College. How can one tell? Well,
there are numerous signs that s
,
uggest the
arrival
·
of Christmas. For example, the
twinkling lights that brighten dorm room
· ·
windows, and the decorations one places
on his door. Yet, the most obvious sign of
the holiday arrival is the traditional Kris
.
Kringle.
.
.
.
·
-
Kris Kringles are when students in their
houses get together and put their names in-
to a hat, (boys in one, girls in another).
Each person then picks a name out of the
hat and proceeds to give that 'name' little
surprises
.
Of course, to get these little sur-
prises you must perform
a
little chore. But
there is more to this than meets the eye.
First, you do not know who your kringle is
until the end
·
of the week, and sometimes
the little chores are quite 'interestin.'
Senior Cindy Davis had this to say about
Kris Kringles. "I have done them since
~
was a freshmen and have loved doing them
everytime. I have done things such ~s sing-
ing Christmas carols in
·
odd costumes and
giving long, embarassing
-
speeches in front
of a Jot of guys. But it was all done in the
spirit of fun."
·
This year will be the
.
second time Elis
Morris will do Kringles. "I had to do a
number of things like dancing in the Cham
-
pagnat lobby. But that was a fun type of
embarassing," she stated. Sharon Stevens,
a senior at Marist, said,
"It
is an excellent
way
to
break the tension of upcoming
finals." In recent years, special times have
been set up so everyone can do Kringles
together.
.
It
seems that this year, people on campus
are a little slow in getting Kringles on their
way. But at Gregory House Monday night
the spirit was there. As everyone in the
house sat around, Mike Moore had to dress
up as a reindeer and sing the "Twelve Days
of Christmas." While he was doing that,
Eugene, also of Gregory House, had to say
"yeah"
everytime
someone
said
·
'Christmas.' They had captured that 'fun'
Christmas spirit.
Interested in an editorial position on the Circle for
next semester?
If
so, please
·
co:r:itact Loretta Kennedy,
Box C~262, before 12/15 for details.
I
I
I
.
1
--Pa,el-THECIIICLE-D.cember111NO
·
.... _,,;, ..... _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
__
·
.
'
.
·.
.
.
.
.
,
..
.
---
.
I
.
·
Chf'istian Faith
Clnd
-
the
Draft
Paul Christian·
was a
member
·.
of the
Trenton State
College Pro-Life Committee
as
an
_
undergraduate. He
has
been
':
Nor:.
t!t-5t
Regional
.
Coordinator for the
Na-
Uoff:tl
Youth
Pro-Life
Coalition (NYPLq.
He
ts
presendy
a
member of
Pax
Christi
the International
.
Catholic movement fo;
Peace, and
Prolifers
·
for Survival,
an
anti-
.
•
nuke
pro-life
group;
.
·
·
-
.
· Christian
received
his masters from For-
dham
University and is
a
campus minister
at Trenton State
.
College in
New
Jersey.
He
.
has
spoken
many
times on
pro-life issues in
the U.S.A. and Europe. He is also
acer-
tified draft counselor for the Diocese of
Trenton. Campus
Ministry invited him on
campus to speak on issues of Pro-Life
on
November 12.
·
'1._.Clulslla•
\
registration for the draft in his laststate of
the union
•
address, the Bishop's Ad-
ministrative Board of the United States
·
,
.;
·
Catholic
·
conferencc
has
published a
.
state-
·
..
v
i
1/:~
.
1/,:;•-
-
~
-
·
.
_
~
-
.
:
nient which includes the following: "We
.
·
·
regard this question in
all
its dimensions
as
a
central
·
c1ement
·
-
in Catholic teaching on
the morality of war. First,
we
support the
right of conscientious objection
as a
valid
·
·.
.
_
~
.
moral position, derived from the
.
gospel
~
-
.
and Catholic teaching, and
.
recognir.ed
as
.
well in the
U.S. civil
law
.
"
(Feb.
15, 1980)
·
..
As a
·
matter of fact, the Catholic Church
.
·
. - . . . - - . not only peilliits coQScientious objection
. (as well as
military
service) but has
called
..
for government recognition of selective
_
. ··
conscientious objection, that is, oJ)jection
.
:
~
-
:-
,..
_._
to a p!lflicular ~ar without being opposed
.
~
. ·.
· · ·
to
·
aµ war. This option is not recognized by
.
.
.
___,,_.--.
·
\
·
,
· · ·
· ,
"
,
·
·
·
the
'
t:J.s
:,,c
and
·
:
CO's will not
be able
'
to
· "Oh,
the
times, they are a changin',"
~ - - -
-
~
.
..
.
.
.
'.
·
:---1
...
·
·
·
"
·
:•,.-
vafida
_
te such
~
a claint if future draft
laws
Bob
Dylan wrote a fewyears
·
back. Those
·
· •
·
·
·
,
··
-followpastpatt~rns.
.
.
famouswordsappearedintheSignalacou-
: :
·
·
\.
·
~:: ~.
Fortunately, the Catholic Church has
pie of
weeks
aao
.
in connection with
.
the
·
~
·
•
·
, ·
·
·
·
·
··
··
~~
:
.
".'t
:
,
n~t
been
caught ~pping i,iis time.
•
During
successful
·
march
·
·
on
the
Statehouse
'.
by
,
··'
·
the
60s
arid
70s
~
the Catholic Church
was
Trenton
State
students •
.
As
I
walked down
·
ill-prepared
·
to assist its many members
State Street that Monday it ocoircd to me
were conscientious objectors during the
world
;
"it seems right that laws
'
make
who,
·
through strongly held moral and
that iridccd. this is true,
.
but not all for the
time that they were a persecuted minority.
.
_
humane provisions for the case of those
religious beliefs," opposed participation in
better.
.
The conversion of the Roman Emporer
who for reasons of conscience refuse to
the military.
·
Once
again
this fall
·
.
I
·
observe with
Constantine began a process that
merged
bear arms, proidcd however,
.
that they
This time around, the Diocese
of
TreO::
·
sadness. young adults being required by law
the Catholic Church and Roman State
.
The
agree
to
·
serve the human community in
ton,
·
through the Department
·
of Social
to register for
-
a possible draft. Many sign-
concept of a just war
·
developed during this
some other way • .,
·
Concerns, has established a network
pf
26
ed up without' serious consideration of
time. There were clearly defined limits
.
to
Every Pope in the lifetime of most col-
trained and certified draft
·
counsellors to
what the implications of a draft could be.
.
what could
be
considered a just war and
·
lege students today has spoken out strongly
assist those who requ~t help. In fact, it
. Many others (we don't know exactly how
Christians could not fight in a war that was
against the injustice of war. Paul VI stated
seems
·
tha
.
t
.
the tables are
.
-
now reversed -
many since the Selective Service System has
unjust.
.
·
it most succinct!y in his address to the
many students have remained uninformed
not released any figures) did not bother to
The low point of the Catholic Church's
United Nations
-
on Oct
.
4
,
1965 when he
and even apathetic in regards to the very
register without considering the seriousness
teaching on war saw the development of
declared, "War, never again.,, The
..
real pos~ibility of a draft i
_
n_ the nca:r f~tur~.
.
.
of their failure to comply .with the new law.
the Crusad~. Almost all rules were thrown
·
Catholic Church teaches that total war with.,
.
. ,
The history of con~c1en~ous obJection
·
1s
·
The maximum punishment for convicted
,
out the
.
wmdow; ~ven non-combatants . modem weaponry can never by ~onsidered
-
as long __ ~s t~e draft'ltselfm. the U:S~ The
.
.
offenders is a $10,000fine andfive yeat{it!,
.
could be slaughtered
10
the ~ameo
_
f
_
God;
.·
\.
.·
·
.
..
.
·
just,
:
·
:'
):'.'·:•··•
··•.
:
•:
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•
.
,<
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.
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.
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d~a!t
_
rt(?~
.
1n
.
N?'
.
l.'ork
•
•
city dllnng
_J
lte
.';o
:=:
.
.
.
prison.
. ·
·
.
·
·
.
.
Fortu1;1ately, the _Cathohc Church
:
has
·
,
~
Th~
·;
ca:tholic Church
•
also
·
·1eaclies
·
tlia
f"''
c1.vil-:We,r
,
were·not
'
ovcr
•
beer: Tradi~onal
~ · --
·
_·,
,
.
'.
:
-..
.
,
0 ••
I
am
one of the more fortunate ones; I
.
.
.
no! kept the_ "crusade mentalit)'.;~• The of-
or~ers
'
given by a
·
superior which are im
~
<
)),',
.
!11e
pcac,e
~hurc.hes s
_
11
.
ch
_
~s the Men-
·
'·
r
.;
missed having
to register for the old draft
•
fi~1al. teach1!1g _on war
,
and the con-
·
moral cannot be followed. Pope
-
Pius
XU
n~~tes and 9µakers ha.:~e always c;,pposed
·
by only a couple of months and am above
sc1en~1ous _obJect1on, has come
.
very close to
said it as early atJ9S3:
'"~
~There is no righ
J
•
/
I?1!
1
t
.
ary se~ice.
·
the registration age in the new law. But I
full-circle mthe past few decades.
·
to order
a11
·immoraract; there.exists no
·
·
.
. .
.
.
.
.
remember well the many draft resisters and
right
for this at all, no obligation
and
no
.. ·
!ODAY• THE CAT~OLic:;
Church 1s
deserters of the last decade arid a half-tens
THE CATHOLIC
"
CHURCH
did l)ot
permission to perform an immoral acteven
<
domg more for thos~ of its membfrs who,
of thousands of whom chose to move to
provide much support for conscientious
-
if it
.
is
·
coinmanded; everfif refusing to act
for r~asons of con_sc1e!1ce, feel obligated to
Canada or elsewhere rather than fight.
objectors during World War
ll.
In one nQw
_
..
brings the worstpossible personal harm...
refram fro~ service m the ar~ed forces .
.
..,
FOR MANY OF
these, this was the only
option they had (besides jail) to military
service because they were not prepared to
document claims as conscientious objectors
(CO's)
.
Their lives have been
·
chariged
forever, and some will never returri)o the
.
United States.
·
The official teaching of the- Catholic
Church on
war
and conscientious objection
has not
.
been uniform. For the first 200
years, one could not
.
be a soldier and
.
a
Christian at the same time .
.
_
All Christians
New Club
.
by
Peter
FredsaH
famous case, Franz Jagerstattei:, an
(Address to the sixth -International Con
~
~-
Hopefully, ot~er church~ wdl
i
d~
..
the
Austrian
:
Catholic, was executed by the
gress
Of
Penal Law: Oct. 3~ 1953;)
.
_
~sme. (The Umted Methodist Church!
,
for
Nazis for refusing to serve in Hitler's ar-
Of
-
course, there is ample biblical prece-
examp}e, has ~?ne on record as. opposing~
mi~s. He firmly believ~ that the war 'Yas
dent in· the Judeo-Christian tradition to
pe/lcet1me m!!•tary dra_ft, saym! that 1t
~m~ust but even Cath~bc Church ~ffic1als
substantiate the claim of a conscientious
could lead t~
·
una_uthonzed ~ar_. )
:
·
·
ms1ste~ he had no
·
nght to ~uestion the
objector. The fifth commandment
does not
.
.
As at~active
~ rt so!,!nds, it will nev~r do
mora!tty of the war he was bemg forced to
..
say,
'
"
_
thou shall n
_
ot kill
'
unless . .'
.
"
.
Jesus
to walk mto an mduct1on cen!ef
a~~
Sl!lg ,a
fight
10••
.
.
·
preached love for one's enemies arid ref us.;;
.
few bars ..
0 ~
·
Ario Gutbne s
Alice s
. As
wuh many other issues, Vat1~n
U
-
ed to lead a Jewish revolt against
·
the
,
R~sta~rant
·
:
1f you
_
find yourself a con-
..
was~ eve!1tthat saw.a clear change me~-
Roman occupiers.
~
"
. ·
.
.
...
sc;1ent1ous
,
obJ~t<>r;
.
;.
<
.
.
.
·
,
.
.
phas1s of the teaching of the Catholic
·
·
·
.
.
.
.
·
_
·
.
·
·;;_
,
(lfy~u are mter,~ted m seeking more in-
·
Church
.
"Moreover," declared the
·
·
con~
.
SINC&
.
PRESIDENT CARTER
;
an-
formatie>n (?ri
'
CO ,;laims,
·
please feelfree to
.
..
stitutio~ on the Church in
..
the ~odern
.
ilollD~
.:
Ii.is
intention
.
_
to
:
reinstitute
:
coilta~t~llfkWegg, P
.
O
.
731
·
·
·
Among the new organizations offered by
Marist this year is the Criminal Justice
By Marybeth Kearney .
arrived,
.
J·ust as I_'ve
fl
.
nal
..
l
.
Y ~e~~rized
.
my
·
.
·
club,
·
formed recently
by
.
Senior
.
Irene
in the Pub on Halloween ... and shaving my
Bolan at the suggestion
·
of Dr.
_
Barbara
schedule
.
Alth0tigh trying to catch
-
Qi>
.
on
legs in the l
_
!>u
.
nge by the Chri
,
stinas ~ree
..
(for
There was nowhere to park the car, a
four
.
teen
weeks
of work in th
.
e
.
one that 1·s
all
t
)
Lavin. An attempt was made last yea
·
r at
·
·
·
.
o see
• ·
'
.
.
,
,.
·
long wait for the elevator, and so many
left, reminiscing about the
_
past
.
sem
.
est
.
er is
E
·
M ·
·
C 11
·
such formation, but the effort failed due to
~
h
·
B · d
"
d
ven
.
anst
·
o ege Itself
is
probably
new 1aces everyw ere. ut 1t
1
n't matter;
muclt better for calming anxiety
;
-
.
,,
..
·
·
sm·1
·
·
th
·
·
·
Th ffil' ·
· h
a Jack of organization, according to Bolan.
once
all
the suitcases and boxes were mov-
Th
.
.
···
• mg w1
memories;
.
ea • iatton wit
Bolan clearly spell
.
ed out the clu
.
b's ob-
·
·
·
·
e picnic
wi
th frisbees,
·
clams aod a
the Carey Arboretµm ..
.
a~I the
_
sports teams
ed into the room, I wouldn't have to repack
·
MilleFtruck .•. parties at the river ... the first
· h
f
1
·
jectives: "We want to provide people with till finals. And that was a long·
_
time to
I
I
.
b
h
11·
.
.
wit , success u • wmning seasons ..
.
new
more information about the field
·
of
s ave ever oug
t; ••
te
_
mg mom I needed
·
dormitories; .• the largest
·
freshman class
Criminal Justice, and to act as a supple-
coo:·so I thought. Christm
..
as and exams
a hat to go to the mixer .. the Phi Tappa's
ever ... evenbetterfoodmthecaf ..
:
.
.
-
ment and to reinforce what is
·
1earned in
getting a fraternity house
i
.-;Simon Sez pop-
As my
·
111ind continues to wander
·
1
'm
classes
.
,,
.
Bolan felt it important to point (my favorite combination) have ~uddenly
.
ping
rnr
balloons.'..not recogniz
i
ng anfone
.
already looking
·.·.
forward
.
to
.
the ring
out that non-criminal justice majors would , - - - - - - - ~ ~ - ~ - - - - - - - - . . . . : - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~ ceremeny, St. Patrick's,
·
River Day, and
find joining worthwhile, adding, "We
graduation. But that's so 'far away. Or so it
would welcome anyone and everyone
.
"
seems ••.
·
·
Nobody can learn too much about it."
However, the club's functions seem
especially pertinent to those in the field
because the organization does attempt to
provide students with word of job
possibilities.
The club intends to sponsor speaking
engagements by experts in the Criminal
Justice field, ·and possibly films related
.
to
Criminal Justice issues. The club now has
twelve active members, and the program
.
advisor
._
is Mr. ~obe[l Carney.
.
.
e4eaden,y
Wl~E
&
,
LIQUOR
26 ACADEMY
ST.
PO'IEEPSIE, N.Y. 12601 ~
-
_,,.._,,,.
Tel. 4S~ -
4SS
_
O
·
,
I
•,
..
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·
'
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,
•
Don't let all those eyeglass prices
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·
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-
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;
Instead, Jook Into the value and selection at
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::
.;l.
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2NDPAIR
OFEOUALORLESSEF.WALUE)
·
··
·
:-
''
:.
~~:~
,
,
-~:
BAlJSCH
'
a / ~ ~
cbNT...cTS-$89
·
Our
contact k·ns
pric'-'
inclmks
'-'x.ttnination.
and one
·
year follow• up can:.
NO~ ~ALID IN C~NJUNCTIONWITH ANY OTHER DISCOUNT
OR
SPECIAL OFFER.
·.
Amertcan Vfstoll Centers
·
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';~
,
f
':•
,
:·sKINNERS
·
t~-:
·
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.·
·
.
·
·
• - - , .
.
-
.
.
·
·
GOOD
TIME!
.
·
-
·
LO
.
OK FOR OPENING SOON
-
·
serving lunches &
.
drinks -
.
IWANTYOU
TO·THINK!
we hope that other people
.
.
·
•
Join us 1n our concern
about Marist
.
College
IF YOU ARE-
.
- a sophomore or Junior
- male or female
- with
a
2.5 cum
- interested in the quality of our dorm life
Be A
.
Part of The '81 • '82 ... Residence Staff!!
For information and registnltion contact:
the Office
of
Assistant Dean
·
or
Student Affairs,
Room 266,
Campus Center
Deadline: 19th December
Thank-You
';
_
,
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byDawn~MarleSturtevant
·
'
·
.
their
.
talent.in
.
many styles. There
was
·
·
.:
:
~
-·
.
.
·
,
·
·.
::;
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·
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.
·
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: ·· · ,
.
.
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'
.
"
classical inusic,' folk,· jazz/and of course,
.
:
_
·
On~ of the ~~y
:·
ru~~tiori~ of the'ieafo;' again; in a
.
~if~ere.nt way, .to ask
·
q~es~ions,
·
.
·.';
.:
·
··
.
.. ·: The '_Valls _of Do!1nelly's _Fine Arts Center
rock. The studen!5 :picked the music th~y . ing- Center, located
-
in
.
the
·
Lib'rary,. b~hirid !In~
_
to
-
clarify
_
p_?mts •. ~- .h~Jps ~e;tbt~~t
:
f
·
were v1br~tmg with music on December
felt they could perform the best
.
and 1_n
.
the
'
circulation desk, iflo provide ·student
g~m copfidence.m
5~
•~co~
~ a_
;it
.~
.-
~nd. Thats the day Dave Heckendorn's
soqie
,
.
cases •they· arranged the
·
.music
-
.
tutors for .fuJHime
-
or
·
part-tinie students.
~ s
.
m~ll group of-pe~p ~: .
..
.
~ ~ar e~ 1
!1-
~
.
.
;(
'Theory and _composi!on'
,
class held their
themselves. Two of the selections played
->"'
who need ~•extra'.' help
·
in
·
their ·studies.
s~mester a s
_
tudent-requests this, th~ 1:ietter
.
~
concert 'Music Madness.'
were composed by Dave Heckendorn, on
.
a
·
This is done in four different types of ses-
h~s/
_
her
.
_c~an~ to~~ Pat;t of a _sma group.
.: ;:,.
. Heckendorn's ~lass meets on Tuesday
cJassical piece and
'
the other ~jazz piece.
-
. •:
·
·
sions: the one to
·
one,
.
the
'.
small group,
_
the
._
:
:-
As ~•th t~
_
e one
to
one sessio~, tutet:5 ~re
.
·
mgh!s from~:~ till l~:00._(They 1!1eet l~te
. .
While the concert had a big turn-out {At'
,
.
_
_
drop
'
-in, and the large study group.
, -
~
:.
_
<.
expe
_
~ed_!9 c?me
_
prepare~ an~
.
to
_
~o
.
~1fy
_:_~
.
at.mght s~ their music will not mterfere
-
fe_ast 100 people attended) Moore feels ver-y
.
,
.. One to
·
one: This session has
·
one tutee
·
tutor 1f a meeting will be ~ssedh.
.
-
·
,
.
:·
:.
_
with other classes.) The class gives many
strongly that the music on campus doesn't
~
,
for one tutor:
·
It is approxfoiately an hour
:
Drop-In:
•
!he n}lme
..
~f
,
·
t 1s ~~!ion
.~·
talented students the_ opportunity to lea~n
get recognized. He feels Heckendorn's
·
in-
:
. .:.
in duration
·
and is on going during
:
the-
describes_ its
_
function.
A
:
tutor is
·
..
'on
:
:
how to arrange music and to play music
fluence has helped and that he 'has been· an
·
semester The tutor and tutee mett weekly
hand!'
.
for a set amount ?f time
_
{one
~~
-
~~o
;
.
along with others
.
·
innovator'. ~ut ~till the music does not
_
get
'
(usually ~t the same time on.the same day),
·
_
hours) at thes~e d~y, time aI1;4 placee~ch
:
.
The co_ncert was a sort of tes_t for the · the recognition 1t deserv<:_s. Patt of the pr~-
.. ·
and continue to do so either until
tlie
end of :
.
week. The tutor 1~ u~ua]ly ad~pt
_
at t
_
utQ~m~
·1
--
_
stu~ents m the class. It .was their oppor- . b~e~ }
.
e~~s
.
to
be the 'red tape' the mus1-·
·
·the semester or until the tutee
·
feels confi-
several courses w1thm_a_department, o~
_
the
·
,
·
>
tumty to show ~hat they have learned. For
.
c1ans
,
~ve Jo _de~l wit~ in order to get
!1 :
·
dent enough to study independent of the
same_cours~ tau~ht b~ different professors.
~
some students 1_1 was a
_
first. "Many _have
r?om t~
.
pract1ce m. This leaves the 'mµs1-
..
.
tutor._.,
.
.
_-
,
.
·.
-·
·:
.
..
'
:
:-'
.
.
.
·
Th1s
·
s~ss10!11s des1~ned for th_e studef!t
.
. :
...
.
.
never ,played m: front of an audience
~.
c1ans.d1scouraged and.frustrated.•
·
._
This type
·
of session
'is
meant for the stu-
.
wh
_
o _has sp
_
t;c1fic questions on ass1gnme~ts,
:,.
,
before stated Mike ~oo~e,
.
a m~mber of
·
.
As!de fro1!1 these problems, Moore says
-
.
·
.
dent who needs more intense skills training,
.
_
r~dmgs
·
~r
.
cla
_
ssro(?m concepts that only
•
:-.
the cl~ss. Moore; alpn~ ~th ChflS No~ak
'Marist Music has.co
.
me a long way.
_
' Some
•
and
is
interested in !'Il~re than just passing
:;_
ri~e o~cas1onally. A student may come to_ a·
:
.
.
was given_ t_he respo
_
ns1b1hty of arranging
.
of these advances mclude an orchesti:a that
.
"
the course. The tutee niust request this ear
-
.
.
·
dr
.
<;>p-m
_
once a~d neve_r need to come agam
~
and ,orgamzmg 'Music Madness.'
'
.
'
played for 'Cabaret' and the formation or
_
;
ly in the
'
semester
.
:
as
ff
takes time to learri
::
or
,
,
JUS!
~
come mterm1ttently
8:5
the nee<L
..
. While •~usic Mad!1ess' was t~e students'
a
.
pep band
-
t?
.
play for
_
the basketba}I
\
:
and utilize theskilis being
ta.11ght
:J .
:
·
-
:·/:
.
.
:'
ar_i~~s; Al.though attendanc~. •~ kept for
\
:
-
:
chance to display their progress m class, the
games. According to Moore, "the must-
..
No one fo one sessions
.
will
'
be·
·
set up
;_
tQese
,
se~sI<;ms (f~r
·
our o~n rec~rds}
-
the
,
.
members of t~e 3:udience got an e~joyable
. .
cians are looking ahead for a 1:>righter
<
after mid~terms,
·
unless the
,
tu
tee
·
is a
. .
tu tee n~~d
·
n~t
.
"s1gn:up'.' •~ adva~ce: ~e
::··
_.
afternoon ofmus1c. The students displayed
year . ."
.
·
··:
fresliman·with
'.
mid:semester
.
1ndices below
·
•
tute
_
e~s c,rllyrespons1b1hty
JS
to lmnt
.
·
~S
•·
i.900
and has been recommended by a pro'-
.
.
qu.C?.stions, ~o thatt~e tut<>r
.
_need nc)t spe11d
_;: ·
Mari st Perfor,rns
.
Hande
.
l's·Messiah
·.
i
·.
· .
fe~~-tut~e•ii\;~t~n~ible
ii:
co~in~
.
t~
::;:
~
0
;;tet~o1.~i!;:r::rt~r:~~~n't:ns~:~g::
t
.
·
·
·
:
,
.
·
:·
,
:
.
·
·
. .
.
.
·
..
each session prepared wit
.
h all necessary
tumty } 0 do the sam~.
.
. ,
·
·
.
·
·
.
:,
.
. •
got the ch,~nce to sm~ 1t after aU ~~ese
_
books and
-
materials,
:
having
':
com·pleted
.
/
L~rge Group:
This. session 1s.~ery qiuch
;.
_
r;~earsal~, says Bonme B_lan_char_d, b~t
";
readings <>r
.
assignments
:
At no
.
session will
.
.
bke
.
the
,
small group except
(1)
1t s open to
:
By
Dawn-Marie
Sturtevant
·
·
Staff
Writer
·
J
m look1~! forward to smgmg
_
1t
·
again-
::
h
,
omework or ll~sig_n
.
ments be d_one
~
,
•
· ...
,
_.
.
·
<
.
~l
_
.
ftudents, whether they are ~urren~ly be•
;:
·
On December
·
7,
.:
the Marist College
.
next year. Many of the members of the
.
,
:
Tutee must call m advance if. he/she will
__
mg tutored or not,
(2)
no previous sign-up
:
,
Singers participated
.
in singing Haridel 's
•
~ingers
-
wer~ mov~d by
.
the. perf ~~mance
i
'}
not be able to make
-
~)rieet
_
ing
;
If
tutee fails
.·.
is necessary, (3) ~Cs only held
.
before )~rge
;
·
•.
'Messiah' at West Point.
.
.The Singers
.
_It
was an mfred1ble e~p~ne!lce, . accor-
·:
:
to do this
.
on two occasions, tltey
;
are denied
exa~s i1nd
.
orlly !n a
·
fe~, chosen courses,
,:
..
(directed by Dorothy Ann Davis) were one
.
dmg to
_
Veromca Shea. Smgmg with 300
·.
the services
of atutor-fortheiest of the
-
.
(4)
It
runsJong~i::m duration th~ any other
:
of seven groups participating. Other choral
other voices you could feel the vibratic,ns in
:
semester.
·
·
,
.
-
·
·
-
.•
session,
·
,
(5)
..
alth<;nigh there are
.
many
,
.
groups included the Villanova Singers and
the chapel."
··._
·
.
_
··.
.
_
:
.
Small
group:
This type of session has
stude11t;;, que~!ion~ are encc,uraged .
. ·
·
.
.
.
,
\
the West Point Choir.
.
•
·
between two and seven tutees for one tutor.
.
As with eyerythmg, however, none of the .
The 'Messiah' is Handel's most sue-
.
Singing at: West Point was only one of
\
It is also atioui'an houdn duration; in-
sessions
:
can IJelp: ·.you to be successful
'
cessful.and well-known work. It is compos-
.
the
-
many ev
·
ents·the ~arist Singers have
;_
creasing to 9~ minutes or2 hours before ex- .. · unle
.
ss
·
you are
_
motivate~
.
to learn .
.
11nd
'.
•·
ed
of
various verses from the Old and New
·
_
performed and they still have more to go
:
ams. Tutees who are in
:
the same course,
.
pr~pared
t~
,.
work. No tutor
.
can or
:
,
~111 do
Testaments. The sections sung at West
··.
before the semester finishes. After singing
)
with the same professor
.
meet weekly with
.
your work fpr you.
:
You a~e
:
ultimately
Point were from the Advent and Christmas
at St. Francis hospital onWednesday, the
,
::
the tutor to discuss readings, interpret class
responsible for your own suc~ess. ,
: :
. .
,
•
:.
· _ ,._
.
sections.
!ast performance
·
on
·
.
thei~ schedule_ is
:.
notes and understa
_
nd the
..
major concepts
yo~
.
-
':'ln take adv~tage of any.of ~he
.
-·
The Marist College Singers have worked
.
Lessons and Carols' (a Chnstmas serVJce)
,
covered :n class.
,
:
: ,·
;
.
.
:
.
,
..
,
c-
.
.
_above
:
slJllply
..
by coming to the Learrung
hard in preparing for the event. They haye
.
o!l the 14th of Dec~m~er. The M~risf.., A small group session is aimed
·
at the stu-
.
:
~enter o~ calling ~xtension 300 for fur!1°1:~~
:
practiced for.more than three months with
Smgers pla_n to make smgmg the 'Messiah'
:·
dent who needs •~something extra" J?esides
.
;
.
_
_
mform_at1on .
.
·
•
.
•
.
,
_
•
- .-.
· ·
.
.
·.
:
.
.
~
._
alot of extra rehearsals. "I'm
·
glad I finally
at West Pomt an annual
·
e".:~ri~.
.
regular class meetings
.
A
time to hear· it'
-
·
:-
.~
·.
.
.
~'."1 Florist
.. Garden Ce~ter
:
.. ?:I
J~I-
Y#.i~J{
't;.;r
1
.
.
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··
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QUEBEC
-
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anspo
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rtatio
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to
8.
fro
,
m
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*6 ~ighJs
·
L~dging
,
·
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5
:
o
_
CJyslJnl}lllited
Skiing;
·
:
..
*
>
Mont. Ste-Anne,-Quebec
*
/'3
,
Ful!Meals~a Day
.
·,
.
t
:
(excepf.}i-i.
dinner)
-:
:
*
.
*AIITips&Tax,
.
-
.
.
l92Wa,lung
t
onSh . .
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,
471
•
5700
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Paughk . .
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e
,
NowYo,k
12601
1G : .
Trip Date~ Dec. 28. 19808
*
_
.
":VulluP,rtheo
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nDin,r"
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.
.
JGfto
4, 11, 19 1
*
.
·
Ji*
Ca//
Chris:
25/H17N
*
·.
~ - ;***************;****
--
..
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,
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•
.
.
-
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.
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...
.
'
···
1
Col11muter
Christiµas·
Party
·.
Fri. Dec.12
9:00-1:00
Free Admission
·
Free Food
Cash Bar
New
Dining Room
•
!
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December
11, 1980- THE CIRCLE- Pago 1 1 - - -
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$~imming
.
.
outlook
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:
,'} ·. ByMlchaelMcCaljhy
.
·
::'
: : ..
:
.:-\
_<
>/
-The two
.-
big
;
questions surrou
.
riding the
:
.. /
:
Despite a very young squa~ that features
have participated in championship events.
:
.·
t>
/t
:}
:f;
'/•/:
/,::.
••i(
C:
/>/
:>
,:•:;,,
·
.
::,
.
-
:
??:·
~
:
'.
'
'' ·
;: .:·
·
·
.
,
Center and its maintenance are:.
l)
Why do
:
ten
·.
freshmen, five sophomores and only These veterans
will combine their talents
/i:'.
~
·
,}.
'LetGeorge:Do
~
It,
•~
·
.is
the
,
fa~ilia(call
/;
jhe
:.·
raqu~tbali
'.
co.uris
.:
~ways
'·
look
'
dirty?
·;/
one senior,
·
Coach Larry Van Wagner is op~
..
with a large crop of freshmen who will play
. ;
:.~·
<
around theMcCiinn Center wher
t
some odd
.·\
and 2) Why
;
does the foof.leak?
.'
Chehirie is
·
timistic that his Marist
·
swimmers and a major part in the team's efforts .
.
.
~,
>
/
job
needs
fo
b
·
e done
/
And
'.
i:noi'e often
:
theri
:
,
-
_
infoniiiitive
:-
.'
_
on
/
both
.
'}
'The
'
racquetball
..
divers can improve on lasfyear's 3-6 record
Among the newcomers are th·tee excep
-
/:, .
n:ot;
·
.
George is
.
·
the
;
~nly
guy
that
can
do i~
>'
.
·
coµris
:
afe
:
ni>Ldiriy,
'
they're
·
j1Jst
:
worn.
,
:
and°
.
·
·
·
seventh
.
place
··
finish
.
in the tional divers who all have the ability to
)
<3eoige ·
.
:
Chelurie,
:
·
that is
·
; the ;
(
McCann
0:
That floor-has beeri down
:
for
3
.
years now
,
:
Metropolitan Swimriiirig.Conference.
place in the top .twelve in the conference,
:
ceniei.:building
·
siii:>ervisor
;
,
Chehine's ap
;;
.
:
.
: '
arid the
.
way it
:
wea-rs it appears to be dirty;
·
.
.
> .
Van Wagner, who is starting his fourth
.
according to Van Wagner. Steve Maniaci,
peat~nce
'
is one of.a gian who'.~ ~xperieiiced
:
·
ActifallyHt's deaned
·
3
:
times a
·
day.~'c-Arid
·
,
season a
_
s
,
Marist
'
Coach; sees a realistic Robert McCarthy and Rich Berger
wi11
all
.
.
\
lif.e
.
to !~efullest.
'.
Jqrough'his matured face
;,
~
t_he i:oof!
:
"T~e
'
firstreport was that it
was
·:
goal for this year
.
to finish at .500 or better
·
.
help to make Marist tough in the diving
.
·.
, :;
,
and raspy, rnggedtype voice;hC:Speaks of
>
blackb
_
irds pec~ing
,
holes
in the roof,. but
-
>
and
~
to place in the top four teams ·at the events
.
Maniaci is called the best diver ever
·
·
. '
his
·
'
varfo
'
us
·
·
duties
:
at
.
th.e McCaon
·
with
:
a
;
'.
;.
thaf
was
wrong.
:
The problem is
·
:
actually Metropolitan
..
Conference Division
B at Marist, and should be among the con
-
.
·
·
.
·
serise
:'
of
·
pricie
:
•.
''I
,
do aitJhe setups
~
ancl
:
'
,:
lhat.'tli'e chemical that the
:
roof coating
·
is
.:
Championships. The· team fin
i
shed seventh
·
.ference leaders. McCarthy is unusual
.
.
: ;
preparatfons:fe>f the different
.
events'at the
:
·
•
made of has
a
tt:ndencfto expand and con-
..
out of 12 t
.
eamslastyear.
·
because he
·
will be entered in both diving
'
:
:·;
center/'
::
says
C:
Chelune.' "Things like
'
a
· <
tract in the heat.ind cold.We have rioleaks
:::
·
The reason fodhe optimism is the fact and swimming categories for the Red Fox-
:,_.~
:
basketball game
/
the
-'
circus we
·,
had here,
:
.
in the summer, but
in'
the wiriterit does."
.
that most of last Year's team is returning es. These three divers
will improve together
:
:
:
the
:
:
.
Royal
·:.
L
_i
ppaion
..
stalli
_
on
.
·
show';
:
the
.
:
Chelµne said thatJhe
·
school is in the pro-
·
'.
iritact plus the addition of several talented
as they gain collegiate experience
.
':
Globetrotters,
my:
men and
;
I Jiave to set
:
ce_ssof taking bids from roofers to redo the
.
·
and highly regarded freshrnen. The one
Other key freshmen are Robert
·
Vializ
·
·
·
.
tllat all up. \Vhen the sfi.idents go homeJor
·
:
>
roof; a.nd it is hoped lo be taken care
-
of by
majc,r loss is diver Dan Trotta who placed
(freestyle and intermediate), Jim Qelarede
.
.
the
:
hoijdays,
we've
·got a pl~nnhow,... an
·
·
next year:
: :
,
.. ;,
.
·
• ·
,
· .. .
.
·.
·
· : ..
in two diving events at the championships (sprint freestyle), Chris Sausto (freestyle
.
. O:
·
IBM :.luncheon and s·ome other· e.,,ents
;-
<
Another aspect
.
of interest for a man
.:
last year.
, .
.
·
and butterfly), and Paul
·
ZurNieden
q
:
scheduled that ,We'll work on.,,
:
·
.
~
._
;
,
·
-
·
who's been at Maristfor six years and
-
the
·
. ·
Leading the way for the returning
(breaststroke and freestyle). Van Wagner
·
·
But·afongwith setups and takedoV'{ns of
.
:
Mccann center
'
sirice iLopenea
.
would be
players is junior
.
Steve Cronin who has been
says Vializ should place in every event he
McCarui
:
apparatus comes the obvious loss
.
:
the
.
changes he's seenJn
;
tl_te athletes and the
·
called the
·
premier swimmer at Marist for
swims for Marist'.
•
·
ofavailability of the center to the students,
.-.
school in general...!'Wheri the other schools
·
·
the past' two seasons. Cronin has figured in
·. .
Van Wagner ses five schools as being
;:
arid ChelurieJs aware of that.
·
••1
.
hate
.·
to
~.
ar~ struggling
·
for
.
students, we're gonna
·
every championship event in which he's
contenders
·
for the regular season con-
h_!lye to close
i
the. fielclhouse
:
because the
!
have'em," says Chelune;, "The kids have been involved, and
.
expects to continue his
.
ference
championship:
Manhattan,
other
:
eveiits
~
h11ve to be planned, but it's
a
more pride
•
iri_ the place now
,'
· and the
.
impressive
·
performances this season. His
Ramapo, C.C.N.Y., Adelphi and
L.1.U .
.
'.
~ecessity,'
.
'
.
.
·
says
'.
•C.helune
;
.
0
"Some
.
kids
:
:
athletes
,_
present themselves
.
a
lc,t neater
•
·
specialties are the freestyle and butterfly
However, he emphasizes that the key in-
.
·
fome
:
do~ here
'
.
and they want
to
_
kri_ow
:
than they
.
did."
.
.
....
,
,, ·
,·
>
'
-
·.
··
events.
.
.
dication of whether or not their season is
·•
why they
·:
can't use the gym
:
at 5:09 when
.
.
..
,
:-
Chelune seems to be quite content'in his
Another key returnee is sophomore good will be how they perform at the cham-
.
'
the game isn
i
t
:
until 8:0(): But sometimes
work now. He, in the past.year; sponsored Mark Travers who makes the backstroke pionship meet. "We have several quality
.
. :
::
tfie
'
visiting team
.
will want to come 'in and
: ,
two athletes in the row-a~thon,isa full pay-
his speciality. Travers was in the Marist swimmers who can help us in a champion-
'
get tliefeel
.
ofthe hydi:a-ribs
3
hours early,
ing member of the 20-20 club and spon-
program for only six weeks last year
·
ship meet situation as opposed to a dual
·• .
·
andyou
,
have
to
·
accomodaie.them.,, The
·
sored a marathon runner, and he's always
,
because he was a transfer student, but still
meet situation. Any college program that is
i
hydra
-::
ri!)s
/
:j'he
.
·
trade
:
riame for the
:
'.Nilling· to
·
do
.
more
.
for the students.
"I
contributecl heavily by
.
placing in two
serious about the athlete has to use the ap-
hydraulic backboards
· ..
ar
.
the
:'
McCa.tin,
·
·
-
guess I've got my whole life wrapped up in
backstroke events in the conference cham-
·
proach of performing well at the cham-
-
·
·
represent an fotei:estirig story in the1t1selves.
:i-
the: school
iiow, '
.
'
says Chelune.-
.
'
,
'Butllove
·
pionships.
.
pionship meet. We'll put more emphasis on
.
Chelurie was
,
able to save the college some young people
:.
Sometimes I might seem to
Junior Kevin McGuirk and
Ed
Kennedy
peaking for that championsh.ip
.
"
.. ,
,.
money by
·
bradng steel plates
>
on both of.
:
be a.little ro~gh on thenfwfien.l yell, 'Hey
.
are two other experienced swimmers who
·
the game-boards so that they can't be mov-
get off that;' but
,
it's j
_
ust
a
refl~x. I want . .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •
.·
.
ed
.
radi
.
cally during a game, while the
·
the place
'
in great shape
.
s~
when a student
·
·
..
.
·
,
.
hydra
:.
rib cc,Jtlpany wanted
.
.
~
considerable
.
brings his mom and dad in to se
.
e the place,
.
.
.
:
a
_
ntotirit of money to do it
·
t~emselves.
-
·
.
.
·.
·
he can be proud of it."
The final numbers
MARIST
COLLEGE SOCCER STATISTICS (18 G1m~1)
·
Anal
Record
18-2
-
:;.':
::?
)tt
<
?
··
~
-<.•
> .·
.
.
,.>
:
: ·}
':
·
.
.
,:
:
,
'.>
.
<
;
.
< -
~-
.
: .
.
.
-·
,
. ..
'
. .
\
.
•
·
..
.
.
Mallat 4 va. Fordham
2
·
2 OT
Mallat 5 ..
.
Pratt
0
.:
:
c'
,
'
'
Howard
s
"Doc" Goldman,
.
head
.-'
coach
·
·
pearances
·
in
:
the
•
:
NCAA
·
Division
.
II
,:
,
)r
ot
'
tiic
~arist
:
Coilege Socce
.
t team for the
./
playoffs (1978; 1980); ·Marist..achieved the
.
~
;~·
;{
:
Jast
'.
l7'x~ts
r
~asJ,ee11:.riaJ11~4
;
b~
.;
~is;P~ers
}-
§CAS9,h~mp19nship
ln
-
197~ w\l_c:n Doc•~
.
.
Mallat ha. New Paltz
1
Keane
3
YS.
Mallat
2
·
2 OT
Mallat 5
n.
Southampton
3
Mallaf
1
va.
St. John's 0
Mart1t
2 va, S. Conn
.
State 0
Martel ha.
Seton Hallo
•
'+:.
;
/ff:
i2
J
~T:~l;t;f
t
!
_
-J
1~f t:
;
f
;!1!
~r1,~l
.
·
·
.t\
~,•
.
~;:r~
1
_
grr~~1r:;~~fs~:T-l2~ie:~
;;~::c:~
·
.
:
::
·
:
.-
Mallat 2
n,
Fairfield 1
·
Marf1t4 va. Pace 1
.
.
:-
-
Mallat
.
3
.
vs.Slen~0
.;.
-"'
·
'.
·
~
/
._,
;,..
,
.
, ..
:
...
,.. ,;.
.
.
.
..
.
.
,
,
·:.
,
.,
:
.
,
.:
Ma!11
.
t 3Ja,
,
R
.
P.I, 1
Mallat2vs.Kl119aPolnt1
;
·
·
· ,
'
·
,
.
.
•
·
Martfit2n
;
Unfonf
»
·•,
-
~-
·
i-::-::::•:
The 1980
.
season
•
was
:
a• spectacular one
•
his
.
firstmaJor champ1onsh1p.
:·
> : :
.
·
•
:
•
·
,
.
Mallat
.
ha.
St.
Peter's
0
.·
·
·
.
Mal1st5
vs:
Manhattan f
·
·
•
.
·\
/ir
J
oi'fr<>!dffia~;~
ile(!F'ox Club
;
witlta perfect
('
:
'
Having pla~ecl l!liclfield while at Co~
~
_
: .
•.· ;, .
J-0
·
record
iq
.
.
conference
·
.
play,
·
a
.
16~2
:
tlan
_
c:lState lJmvers1ty, Goldman stresses a
·
•
· ,
·
Mallat ha.
N.Y.U
.
2
.
.
So. Conn
.
Sta
ta
.C
vt
.
Mallat 1
.
•:i
(
o\'.ei'all record;
a:
N~w York
-
State ranking
<
controlled and finesse game. He relies on
·
/ · .
.
,
of first in Division
fl,
a national ranking of
· .
his
-
team to pass wi:ll and mo\'.e quickly on
_
,.
eighth iii the nation in Division 11,
·
and
·
a
thefield,ffisplayingmorestyletharipower.
:· .. :
·
-:
post-season
:
playoff. berth in the
NCAA
. ·
Doc
graduat~d
·
fiom the state university
·
::-'
.
'
.
:
·
.Division
:
11 championships.
'
:
·
•
..
.
:
:
,
-_
..
': -::
>
.
·
.
·a
with
·
a
_
B.A
,.
·
in physical educationarid wenr
::
·
·:
·.:>/
·
:
\
overt.l!e years
;
Goldman has compiled a
}
.
to
.
l11diana
,
. lJn~versity
:
to
_
obtain
·
his
,
•
\;,,
l20-106-18
:
re~ord. Since 1975
.
Goldman's
'
'
Master's Degree. He coached
'
at Plymouth
.
· :.
bootei:i have compiled aiiamazirig 79~22-3
.
•.
.
State University;
:
N
.ii.,
for six years
•
before
..
~ecord; which
.
included berths in the ECAC
.
arriving at-Madstwhere he staiiedthe soc-
·,·
.
Championship finals
.
(1976, 1977). and ap-
,.
cer program:
·
.
.
. · ...
:
.
~
-
~-
-
-
.
'
:
.
.
,
.,
-
;
{:'
;]/
"~
S
.
oec;r
A~1
!
~t,~s
·
--
TaamStatlatlcl
TotalShots
·
:
Shots on Goal
.
Qoalla
Savaa
·
'
Goala
ComarKicka
lndlvldual Scoring
..
Jullo Roatran
·
RaulVarna
·
Oyvlnd
L■raHn
.
Bob
Cooper
·
Edt-caon
·Tom Homola
..
Tilnllldahl
··
Bob
Santoc:hnlk
·
Scott
StraLi11
BUI Cooper
.
DaveJaco
.
JoeVaall..COZZO
·
Chartl■ P-ra
-
-
--
Rich leClnanl
·
KnutRoald
,
-
JoeBllboa
JohnOoff
Matt !,.OV9Cclllo
Marl1t
Opponents
491
217
.
289
142
• 121
219
51
21
129
..
.
Goals
·
Aaslata
Points
8
11
27
9
f
19
8
3
18
a
2
10
-
4
2
8
3
2
7
•
1
7
3
1
.
7
2
.
3
·
a
2
2
5
·
2
.
1
5
2
-
1
4
1
2
3
1
1
3
1
1
2
0
2
1
0
1
1
0
1
·.
:
:
:i}
Th~
;
+n::stati
s~~er
.
Co.nf~rence
·
A.1(
~
:
,
p~;ition~rid.l~d thiRed
,
Foxes sc~ring ~ith
:
Star
,
'.feam
.
has
.
been
announced with the
..
nine go~s. This year Larssen
·
was moved to
..
.
,
~onfefence
·
~hampion .~arist
.
College, pla(:-
: ...
a
midfield
.
j,o~!!i<>n and
·
contributed
-
eight
<
_
i~g
two players on the first
.
team and two
·
· goals and Jhr~
,
assists
.
for
·
a third place
· .
·
,
on the second
team:
Marist players selected
·
ranking ·among
<
Marist's scoring leaders.
·
·
.'
for
'
this
_
honor
·
.
by opposing
•
·
coaches in-
~.
Marist will uildou~tedly be in a strong posi
0
Goal Tlndl119
QamH
Shots
SaVII
Goals
Pct.
clude:
:>
:
Julio Rostrain
:
:
(First
:
Team-
tion for the 1981 season with Larssen retur-
,Midfield)
(
Ed Isaacson(First Team~Back),
·
ning
.
:; • ,::
-
. · ,,., ..
'
·
":
-
.
·
:
·
·
·
_
··
: .
.
.
:
Knut
·
Roald (S~rid Teant-B
.
ack), and Oy-
•
·
:
.
The other selection to the Secorid
.
Team
.
.
virid Larssen(Second Team~Midfield).
·
c
and
•
ail.other°
~
.,.
aspect
·
of
Marist•s
·
}
,
Julio
Rostriim, a senior from
·
Newburgh,
.
.
'.
'Norwegian Connection/' is
.
Knut Roald,
.
.
NY,Jed
:
the entire Marist squad
·
this year
·
:
a sophomore from Oslo, Norway
:.
Rariked
..
:
·
with eight
.
goals scored
.
and c;leven
-
assists -third o~
.
las~
:
yeaf s squad with
.
three goals
•
for a total
-
of
;
27 points .
.
Coach Howard
and two assists
;
Knut
.
tallied one goal and
Goldman states, ~
-
• Julio is
.
a plyer that has it
orie assist for a total of three points
for
the
/
Andy Homola
18
AndyLarocce
•
Heinz Wermhold
1
Paul Palmer
1
Non.QoalfeS.qa
124
103
21
,830
I
I
0
1.000
2
2
0
·
1.000
1
.
1
0
1.000
a
I
0
1,1)00
alH
·
He
·
i~ quick ~nd .has excellent
:
ball
COi}-
:
.
1980 campaign. This is deceptive, however,
trot He
:
was instrumental in leading thts
with K[!lj,t playing
a
·defensive back .Posi-
·
year's squad to the NCAA playoffs."
tion. From that position;
- .
this talented
·
Although this
.
represents the conclusion of
·
Norw:egi~n helped ~ontrol opponents to on
_.....
Rostran's career for the
.
Red Foxes,
l)c
is
ly 142 she>ts
~
·
-
on goals
as
oppo
.
sed to
Dancersize
.
being considered
as
a prospect for the 1980
:
Marist's total of 269 shots on goal. As with
Senior Bowl Soccer Classic.
.
·.
Larrsen, Roald
.
is
·
also an underclassman
·
·
Also displaying
·
outstanding ability and a
•
which bodes
·
well for future Marist coil-
.
A team that has been organized by
First Team selection is Ed Isaacson, a
tests.
. .
.
.
• •
M ·
c
11
Junior back from Bayport, NY. Having a
Marist, 16-2 overall" and 8-0 in the Tri-
·
anSt
O
ege has attracted more par-
good knowledge of
.
_
the
_
·
game and the
State Soccer Conference, displayed one of
ticipants than the football team. "Dancer-
1
·
•
h ·
bes
h"
·
h ·
I
cise" was recently organized under the
·
.
str
.
ength a
.
nd
S""
.
ed ri
_
eeded
to
comp
_
ement
·
t eir
tseasons ever t 1s year wit a tota
·
y -
r
·
8 ·
d.
·d l
I
'b ·
h
·
leadership of Anne Marie Calonita and
·.
it, Isaacson:
.
displayed
·
consistently strong
Q ·
I
m
1v1 ua p ayers contn utmg to t e
defens1·v. e performances
·
'
during the 1980 - scoring effort.
Lauren Devlin. Calonita and Devlin decid-
T
ed to organize the class because there were
season. From
.
his backp
·
ositio
.
n, Isaacson
..
.
As Champion of the
ri-State Soccer
"'
I
"'
·
M · d "'
d
·
D. · ·
,ew women
·
sports activities at Marist.
tallied four goals and t
.
wo assists for a·tota · Con,erence
anst · e,eate seven 1VJS1on
(F ·
·
fi
ld F dh
M h tt
··
Most women agreed 'that it is necessary for
oOO poi
_
nts:
.
.
.
·.
•
.
.- ·
·
.
·
.
•
..
. •
.
·.
' .
•
.
.
·
I teams
air 1e , or am,
an a an,
·
·
d
S
·
p
•
Se
H
ti
d
s
some sort of exercise in order to burn off
·
Selected to
'
the Second Team, Oyvin
N.Y.U., t.
eter
.
s,
ton
a ,
an
t.
h
1
h , )
d
D" · ·
·
II
(P
)
t ose extra~ ories put on
by
the delicio
_
us
Larsse~,
·
a
·
soph
.
omore
·
from o
.
slo, Norway,
.
Jo n s an one
1v1s1on
team
ace .
.
f
.
,
I
D. · ·
II
ca etena food~ So far. dancercise has been
hascontr,·buted
.
con
·
s1·stently stalwart per-
Although current
Y
a
1v1s1on
team,
.
·11
b
·
D" · ·
I
succ~sful. It has attracted more than
95
formances
·
51·nce
-
his arrival at Marist in
Marist w1
.
e competing on a
1v1s1on
I f
h
fi
·
·
1981
girls_ The girls are so enthusiastic that most
.1979. Although onJy
.
a freshman last year,
leve
.
_or.t e 1rstt1meeverin
.
_
.
-
of them invested in a special shorts and tee
Larssen immed~ate~y assumed a starting
shirt outfit which advertise 'Marist Dancer-
cise.'
The classes are held in the McCann
dance room on Wednesday at 9:15-10:15
and Thursday at
8:00-9:00 p.m. New par~
ticipants are always welcome to come down
.
and shape up while learning some dance at
the same time
:
.
"We just felt it was
something we wanted to do for ourselves,"
said Calonita. "But we obviously weren't
alone." Devlin agreed. "It's so much fun,
and we're really doing something positive
for ourselves. So come on girls, Dancer-
cise!"
..
...
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.'
THE
\
CIRCLE~
_
Deftmber11,
1NO
-
.
-
-
·
-
-
-Gagel'S
:
:tak8 3(d straight
;_
,
-
tiy
Mike
Md:arthy
·
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.
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g'!ard SJ?Ot smoothly and Steve Eggink and
·
-_
:
t\,
:
Oil Padilla were also tough underneath the
.
,
,
..
.. -
rjms. The most imj,oniiif~ubstitution for
·
;
·
••
,
.
-
• -
The Marist Red Foxes upped their season
record
fo
3-l
by running over Pratt Mon-
day
·
night 89-55. Pratt,
.
.
who was one-half
ltour late for the
game
and suffered a
Barry
-
.
'Jamison technicalfoul shot as punishment~
was never in the contest. A combination of
tough board. play and
·
~nside scoring
_
from
Bill Dewinne and Steve Smith and the out-
side shootir;ig of Dan Sharpe paced the first
•.
half, with strong, once again, rebounding
.
help from Moose Timberlake, the newly
named captain. Marist ended the first half
with a 16 point cushion, 44-28.
,'
_
The second halfshowed the entire bench
contributing to the blowout; Tom Crotty
and
·
Tom Meekins both played the poin!
·
spectators at the
.
game was
,
the celebrated
return of scoring threat Todd Hassler, who
played the
·
Jast six minutes
·
of the game,:
·
scoring six and assisting for nine more. The
•
game represented a
·
well balanced
-
scoring
'
•
effort from Marist, the first of its kind.
Dewin
_
ne Jed the
-
team with
-
17 points, Steve
Smith had 16 and Eggink added
12 .
.
Dewinne
.
also Jed the team with
.
10 re-
bounds, while Smith and Timberlake had 7
.
each
.
The victory moved the Red Foxes ln-
to first place of the Big Apple Confei:ence.
.
Marist meets Pace Wednesday and Dowl-
.
.
_
ing Saturday niglit, both at home
.
·
.
-
•
Timberlake
named
·
Anthony
'
''Moose••
.
·
'
Ti;b~rlake, a
.
6'8''
an exhibition contest
·
against
'
the P~r- ·
.
·
transfer
·
.
from Brevard
·
.Junior
,
College
tuguese National Team; Timberlake tallied·
(N:C.), has been selected by his teammates
14
points and 11 re1>?unds, while in the
as captaiil of the 1980-81.Red Fox
,
Basket-
:
season
·
opener
.
against Northeastern
.
ball team. Although a new
.
member of.the
-·
.
Timberlake amassed 9 P?ints and
,
17
.
_
re~
team, Timberlake has displayed the leader-
bounds. Most reeently Timberlake talhed
.
ship qualities necessary for a successful
24 points _an~, 12_ rebounds in tw~ "come
·
.
campaign this year.
from behind
.
wms over New Paltz and
Timberlake states, "The most important
Manhattanville,
.
.
.
.
.
aspect in assuming this role is that I lead by
Although the
.
season 1s stdl young
·
example on the court." He continues, ."We
Timberlake describes this year's goals as
·
have the. talent,
·
personnel, and
·
the
winning
.
the Bip Apple Conference and
coachin1fneeded for a successful y~r. My
quatify~ng ~or th_e NCAA Division
.
~I
role wiU be to bring these factors together,
Championship. With successful efforts m
togetherness,is the theme for this year and
.
unifying the team these goals
.
could very
its my job to hetp
·
coordinate that.•~
.
.
well be within the grasp of this years'
Red
Timberlake's example on the court has
·
Fox Squad.
-
already shown him to be a team leader .. In
.
· '
·
:
ATHLEt'E
.
.
·
•
-
·
~
..
.
·
·
·
1
/
OF
"Moose'~
Timberlake'
sinks
another.
'
)
fl
_
,m,n,
H•1
·-
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,
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-,
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···
"
.
.
.
·
.
·
third year pJayer. :Army displayed excellent
.
·
·
,·
·
=
l5utside shooting arid ball-control. A big
·
'
:
The Marist Women'~ basketball team's
downfail to the Marist cause was Pam
.
record fell to 2-4 with
a
defeat at the hands
.
Green's 4 early fouls,
·
because a recent pro-
of Army,
.
by
a
whopping 82-44 on Satui'-
,
blem
:
ror the
·
team
is
the containing of
day, Dec. 6 at Army •
.
, .
.
.
,
.
• ·
Army's predominantly tall team. Laurie
I
THE
· .
0
We just didn't get the
·
rcbounds/' said
Hiebenak
.
led Marist's scorers
.
with i2
Helen Salmom, a 3 yeai- veteran of
·
the
·
_
points, and Powers
·
had 1
o;
Melissa Miles
.
sguadi "We were getting one shot,
anci
one
paced Army ~ith 15.
.
shot only,'' .addec:I Patty
·
Powers,·
another
r
.
•.
WEEK
.
I
.
STEVE SMITH
>
/-
·A_nd so the drama is ended. With 6:17 to such rawdtent, and such fan support, not
go in the game against Pratt; the banner shoot?
·
·
,.
waving, foot stomping crowd got what they ,
·
''I just didn't feel
g,"
said Hasler.
"If
wanted. Todd Hasler, 6'3" shooting guard you don't feel sood about your shot, but
from Forrestville, Ct. was entering the you shoot it anyway; you can't hit.
If
I'm
game; Hasler, who had not
·
seen a minute's
·
not gonn~ hit my shots,! should.n't be tak-
tinie in the team's preceding three games,. ing them
.
:
Letthe o
.
ther guys shoot, I'd only
wasted
_
no time in electrifying the
.
crowd
be tak~ng away from them."
with two sparkling assists and, later sank
But somehow, for so,!lle reason, the
three buckets (one a patented 25' jumper Hasler story changed. "He came
.
alive in
that hit al)net) to help Maris! ice the game.
practice, "-said coach Petro. ''He started to
But why did it take so long to answer the
-
shoot the ball, and shoot it well. Whether it
people's plea? Hasler, who as a junior was his riding the bench or seeing the team
holds Marist scoring
.
records and was the
,
win
..
some games without him, I don't
starting guard for
-
two years in a row, was
know, but he just started to play like he
now riding the bench. Why?
can. And we can certainly use the best
.
shooter on the team on the court."
"Ii just seemed like Todd's heart wasn't
And if he was used this time
·
just to
,
init," says coach
.
Ron Petro. "He'd go to satisfy his legion of fans that would be
practice, buf he just felt like he lost the feel
·
.
reason enough. Banner after banner and
for shooting the ball .
.
Cdon't know if he cheer aftei:cheer called fornothing but Mr.
wasn't practicing enough on his own
.
or
Hasler's aj>'pearance
:
Was it the fans desire
·
what, but he just wouldn't shoot. Todd has
·
that made Petro change his mind about
always been the best shooter on the team, I
.
playinS:Hasler7"'Who knows, maybe that
mean the guys unstoppable. But if he won't
·
just did ..y9rk on my subconscious
·
a
·.
bit,"
.
shoot ... "
'
But why wouldn't
a guy
with
said Petro. "Just rriavbe/'
.
.
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wJrti~11-~;
\
J3askethan
:
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.
·.
:·
·
.
_
.-
i1li~~
,
-
-
H<>f
;i:ta ·-
A
~ 1 :
oo
~
~
··
'
.·
'
.
'
-
1\1:Jn's:
·Bask~tb~It
·::
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S~J.
~
:Q6wling -
JI E
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g: 00
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IS
25.11.1
25.11.2
25.11.3
25.11.4
25.11.5
25.11.6
25.11.7
25.11.8
,,., College
PoughkHpale, N.Y~
NeedaJOb-.
'ByLo,rettaKe~nedy"'.'
~
in the program. Their jobs range from
·
·
·
IBM i!1 Fishkill to the area banks. The pro-
Next semester the students will have ac-
gram 1s open to both commuter and resi-
cess to the Job Location and' Deyelopment
dent students. "All one needs to do is fill
Program available in the Campus Center
out art
application," says . Koloski.
(Room 180). _
·
· Available jobs are posted on
a
bulletin
Carolyn ~?loski, directo~ of the pro-
board _ in -the. career placement office.·
gram, says, The program 1s open to all
Students are free to come in and 'browse.•
students regardless of financial- need."
. The program is partly a. referral service
"Basically, the program c·onsists of off- - explains Koloski, although they often try
campus job placing while 'trying' to imple~
and place students in accordance with their
ment- on campus-jobs as well." The pro-
career.
1
"Hopefully more major related
gram does not place students after gradua-
placing will be presentin the future," says
tion; they must be in the process of com-
Koloski. She also hopes that the students
pleting their education.
·
will take advantage of tliis program.
Thirty-five students are presentlyinvolv-
Gl~betrotters Are Coming
Drakeford
~Resign&
by
Tom Hassett
wants to go. That place is coaching. He has
coached· basketball and football at
Mari;t
has,
yet to· officially announc~ · a
Poughkeepsie High School and saw that his
replacement 'ror the position of Residence coaching was creating a conflict with his
Director of Champagnat Hall for' next duties in Champagnat Hall.
The world renowned Harlem Globetrot-
.semester after the resignation of Anthony
"I pref~r coaching;'' he says in response
ters ·wm bring their comical brand of
Drakeford. Drakeford has been Resident to-what made him decide
to leave Marist. .
bas_ketball
'
magic to the Marist College Mc-
-Director since September of 1979.
As well, he says,
"The school district job is
Cann Center on December
1s:·
Drakeford officially resigned
as·
of an eight to four situation,-which allows me
Starting time for the. event, which is -November 19th from the position. He said, to have the rest ofthe evening to myself.
_/sponsored by the Marist College athletic
"The Residence Director is a
24
hour )ob
In response to whether he had any advice
department; is 7:30 p.m;
Jn
addition to the
because you never know when they want .for .the person that would replace him as
familiar Globetrotters on-court antics, area
you.
0
He explains that the job locks him Residence Director, Drakeford says, "Not .
fans will see a half~time • variety - show
into a. postthat .warrants him to· accol!nt really, because the job is one of trial and er-
t«_
.
_._
fea
__ .t_u __ r.ing. _t_~e Dr_· oguett5.~ _wh_o_
w._m
per_Jo
__ rm . forhisactions·atalltinies. ·
/ · . ro_t· 1_-can'·t.tell them_
wha_· t to expect.!' __ .He·.
:'1 ,_ a most _unusual hat tossmg routine,
w
azyr, , ·
Drak~fo~~ is. taki~ on
~
~s~!_ion with
~
expl~med that one
can
prepare
for the Job
..
,
·t·<>.~~;
o_(,:~hti~9rld_:~,-mosfj,;,c~!ti_ng hand., the Poug_llkeeps1~.~~~~ p1~tr:1ct
!
~agnet __ buqhey don't know. th~job until.they
see
_
;
:
\
. / .. ,,;giilan~fS' . .and:,Bl!-ITett:·F.elker,:,,:a\.~ri~liant
,
. sch~l_prog_ra~-~-
-}
_
t
lS,_a f~e,:a\lr•-f~~~- ·Whal h~p~~_.,;., ;,·-',"
a:':
.
;,_
·>-·
_.,
,
,
: -.,_
.. ,
~.""
i'JJl·JU100et::V'lttlt'.1l
~fvt'n11mc:el'COrnbitt-~!Q.;;..tbili.rJ~,:-~mea.:.l\t~d},$~f~8~IOJl:,ID.~-
-
~.;,:
In-a final statement Drakeford
says,.
"I
-
~
~'- ing
humot
an<l juggling'skills .. ·. -,:;:::-_ -
0: ,;
::.,~;?
:f
~t~~
s'c;h~~~dj,s~,;t;!,jJifs!iy~.(~e·feels:~a([havc:'no-reareis
·ibo'utlcavina;-ff
islim«Ffor...:: .. :.:.:: ____
~
.
~>
,.:. ,•. _.,~-To~
Ol~betrot!ers:have played more
than.-,~
hi~
_fie,l_d
.~f~
~~~
c.
:wtU·.~~~:·
.
~u!f~~~~li~r
me·tQ's§'~Tifuft1?
-
~<>"clsew~ri.t~•?'
1
·i:\.'f
5
:-:
,
-.
_-
.
.:·:
:.'..1S;000gaines·in'97countriesbeforemore~
·
-
- · :_. _
_
;, _
-
·
~.:'-,,;"';.-;
'-
::-;.
-
--i-· ,· __ .;
.
~· .
.:::-;::··:;:
.'
:"?:"i:-~:''.--·· ..
··
·
,./-
.
,?·-:';.,_·_·,,;:•:_.-:'_
..
,.· . • '
·
,
·
:::.9t!~:~~l~~~~d'!!~t~~~~::~~~r.. · -:
~
-~-~
:
: -
-·:;-:~-M,n,i'rihi.:etd&rariis ~;·:
:~>-·>~·?·
;
:::·:_:=· ____ :-- · ·,
.7S,000
-
people set m' -Berlin's-
.
Olyrnp1c-..
:~- ·
. . -
t.J,~--
-
--
~Ii-
· , ... ·
..
. :,Stadiu_f!lin-1951.Last·yearmillions·more.:'
, . .
--
-:
•
,,,,,
,,,,
,
., .
.
- saw the Globetrotters on tour 'and on televi- -- : The
·
Committee on
Institutional• mathematics anderi~ineering rotthe 1981 ~. -
sion .. :
. -. :.' ... ·
.
~- -
, . -.
· Cooperation has -::·established three- : 8_2 acad1:mi_c year.
0
:
•
,
, _
'<
> .... ·
-
.The. Globetrotters popularity :is;• not
i
fellowship progr
_
ams ;designed )o increase. ··· The ·.·• Committee on, Institutional
limited to one 'country or-one ·continent; ; t,ie representation of.members .. of minority
Cooperation (CIC)is the academic consor-
-
• They have:amilzed: basketball
fans.
w~'j-ld.:
>'
gro~ps among tho~e who: hol_d doctorates . (ium of the- Big Ten· universities_. a·nd the
' ·. wide 'and are popular in small towns as well·'
.
_
•. _
in
!Ile
social sciences; humanities, naturaL-,
-
University of Chicago; all _l.9cated in _the
- as large cities. The Globetrotters-have per.: \sciences, _mathematics and engineering. _
·
-.
c
MidwesL Fellowships· inust be used at one -
~formed in 11).0rethait 1,600 cities in the
--~FlindedbygrantsfrointheLillyE~dow-
.
oftheCIGuniversities. - .
United States ..
-
<'
.. _
. __ . . - _
ment; · Irie., The Andrew W .. Mellon Founa . _ , · ,T.he feHowships provide fuH tuit/on plus
-.. Tickets for
the
.event
·
are .now ori sale at· dation and The John D. ai:td Catherine T.
a ,stipend of at least
$4,500
for four
. all·- Tjcketrori'i
.
outlets
·
, · Mid~Hudson Civic:
MacA,rthur .·Foundation_ that'- total n:iore - ·.academic years, provided of course that
the
Center, Abrams Musicji:i Kingston, Sears. than: $3 _ million and .from -;tdditional .. F;ellow_s make nor:mal progress:towai-d,the
in
_
Wappingers Falls, Lloyds. in Mid~ ':'.resources of)he affiliated universities, the _ Ph.D. ' . ·
·
·
·
'
dletown, an~· the· Mccann Center at':_ program
will
provide 25. fellowships in the
<
Anyone who- has or
will-
Teceive 'a
· Marist. All seats must be reserved in. ad:. ~- social sciences, 10 in the humanities, and at
bachelor's degree by September 1981 is
vance. ·
·-
·.
·-
···., ... least
0
25
in
·
the. natural· ·sciences,
eligible to apply forjlle 1981 competition:
, - - ~ - - - ~ - - - - - - - - - . ; ; . . . ; . . . . . . . , _
......... _ _ _ _
"'!"" ____
.;... _ _
.,;.._..;.._·;.;.. ...
-_
..... ...;'
... ·;_
:
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
,..
Graduate. students at universities
,
·other
than those of the'_CIC::may also apply.
, Students are urged
t9 apply as early as
. possible iri the fall; application,deadline is
· January -15,- 198L
A
one-step procedi.ire ·
~ombines . application for ·the fellowship
with· application for admission to. any of
the CIC universities on a single form. ·
Anyone desiring detailed information
abou~ the fellowships program should write
to: CIC Minorjties Fellowships Program,
Kirkwood Hall 111, lridiana Universi1v,
Bloomington,Indiana 47405. . - ·
·
. _ -
~
.
•
-
,
• Until February
J, 1981, prospective ap•
plicants from outside Indiana may call'l<lll-
free between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00·p.m. EST .
>
:
'
.\/
:·: ~=
I
-':}t
'
:;t
- Mr. C~mpllii banding Gu;
-
Nolan a~cfi Peggy McGovern check for $638.00 raised on Nov!mber 20th f!)r
Ox~
fam World Ha~est Fast. Seiler's d_onated
96C
for each meal that was d~nated.
-
.
.
I •
--for information or application forms .. The
number is (800) 457-4420.
:· Now -in
its. fourth year, the CIC
Feliowships Program in the social sciences
, makes awards in anthropology, economics,
geography,
history,
political' science,
psychology, and sociology.
·
·
The. humanities fellowships are available
to students seeking doctorates in American
studies; art history, classics, comparative
· literature, English, German, . linguistics,
music, philosophy, , religion, Romance
languages, and Slavic languag~.
·
Fields covered by the natural sciences,
·
mathematics and engineering program in-
.·
elude chemistry, biqlogical
·
· sciences,
· agricultural sciences, physics,
and
. geol,ogical sciences. We welcome inquiries
concerning specific subfields.
,I
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·
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assoclate
·
ectltor
·
...
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.
· sports editor
,
photography editors
· '
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advertising ma~~ger
.
.
\
~·
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.
!J
,
uslness manager
.
·
.,
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distribution manager
.
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cartoonist
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fac1JIW°advisor
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Lor~tta Kenii~dy ...
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Marybeth Kearney
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McCa'rthy
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C~~is Mc\/~~ty
:
·.•:
Michael Chung ·
Suzette Erriersoii
.
-
Charlie Lamberta
.
Thomas Rooney
·
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M~ry
K8f,lan
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Short
letters are
P'.•
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We •~serve'
.
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all letters
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Thank-you
··
:,
Dear Editor,
.
.
.
.
Graham, Mike
.
.
The officers of the Class of
'83
Skrodanes,
Ed
.
Cardo
.
za,
.
.
!Jim
>
· would like to extend
.
9ur gratitude
Grifferty;
·
Janet'
· '
McNamar:a;
:.
·
·
to all those who donated their
.:
Terri SuUivan, *\Vil!ie
, '
C
_
l~re,
·
timeartlenergy.into making this
.
·.
,•
T9
_
m
·.
Hassett;
·
_
~Charl~eM,ur9~
.
past Friday night's mixer
:
both
a
:·
Theresa Su_llivap,
~
_
Gr.lee TeJada,
-
social
·
and financial success.
·
It
.
-
*Dan Trotta, *Ray
:
Vladez
'
,,
:
:
s;:
'
<
.
was because of your help that it
·
.
>
*A special than~s.,to those
~M
.
~\
.
-
staff:
.
Mau Cole, Judy DiScipio, P~ter Fredsall
;
Monica Flnneg~n,·Tom
·
:
was such
:
a
.
successful event.
·
stayed and cleaned up.,WE cer-
Hassett, Lisa Marchesano,. Mary Alice Russo, Deborah Valentine, Chris
: Thanks!. .
.
.
.
.
.
..
tc\inly appreciate your help\
.
:
·
.
·
.
Hogan, Eddie Giltenan, Denni~ Martin, Barry Lewis, Theresa Sullivan, Dawn-
Bob Aufiero
·
Donald Gately
· ·
·
... ·
·
-
' ' Sincerely, •
Marie Sturtevant, veronica She_a, Ohrls Egan, Anne Marie Calonlta,
.
Chris ..
•Diana Kaeser' Tom Shannon'
. ·.
·
"Schatzie,l1Chris,
<-
~::::::::::::C~a:_m:p:b~e~II:, ::::::•
·
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·
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.
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-
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•
.
_
·
•
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*Peter
· .
.
Aqu;ffedda,
·
Kathy
:
.
·
·
Af.lJson,
.
~d La~r~e
-
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r
f
Ff"ee
at last
o.:,;,
.
E,litor:
/
.
..
.
.
.
Stinid
\He.Ung of respectiri
r
.
On Friday December
12; 1980
·--~
·
everyone with
•
his hard line per-
-
~
,
· · Marist College will lose another
o
,
sonality. Tony
_
also coaches two
·
.
,
;...
.
.
. :
·:~r
fi
.
ne
.
adminis
_
trator. Tony
varsity
.
SPOJtS
·c
at Poughkeepsie
r
.r
.
:
·
Drakeford, Residen,tDirector of
:
High
School (footQaU
aiid
paskct~
r
_____
__:._,--_____________
__;_ __
....;___;____; ________
.;__;...;_._;_
·.
Champagnatforthe past year and
/
ball). His tea01s
·
.
have compiled
.:.
r
a half, will resign to take on a job
'
.
wiri after :Win; a
·
Drakefordfc:am
·
,
Th
·
k
h ·
h
·
· ·
d
th h
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·
h.l · h
·
.
·
.
d
.
.
- •
d
.
•
.
. . .
·
:
·
,
as
.
facilitator .for the Poughkeep~
:
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:wiU · aJways be in the running
foe
.
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. .
e eyc
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.
p~s!ers,~.
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es arp
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1et ec!oW. watche
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1tsbdem.$hai;-pe
.
sieSchoolSystem
;·.
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·
thechampioriship:Thefollowing
..
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umforms are
.
all
·
very
·
ruce add1t1ons t~
.
the
.
.
:
•
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POP.~d
.:
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h1_s
.
Jumpe~s
.
Jrom
.
th_e
.
·
corner,
:
·
·
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:
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people
·
realize
:
Othe·
·
ac
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would like
:
to wish
\
J'onythe
·:
best
basketball games-bunhey are nQt wha~ is br'."
.
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· ·
DeWmne nppe~
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down the
:
r:ebounds; while
.
· ·
·
:
complishments
.:
that
.
'.
Tony
,
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his
.
rie:w job, and c~n-
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the .(ans to
·
th
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e McCann
·
9~nter
,
The
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Crotty
_
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maddor bo~h ~~ristand. a
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· _
as
·
a
wh
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·
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shQw aHve
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in the stands; It began Saturday
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prove futile onceagain.Jfdia
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evening when 2 baririers were flashed among ·
:
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With
.
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minutes
·and
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17
·
seconds ori °the
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the students reading
:
"We want Todd
·
" and
.
:
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clock
'
·
~
Todd
.··
''Free"
·
liasl~r took
.·
off
·.
·.
his
.
<:
1S
:
no
t,
~ue to Tony alon~,
·
bec.ause
.
f
R.~ru:1ck,
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Sara~
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thefinestudentso(
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C::hampagnat
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Franco,
,,
Ma,rg1
,
·
Mons
,-
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G~rtha
<:.c:
:
·
.:>
·
.
Dont Ignore 44 .
.
·
Soon a~terwards there
":arm
-
up andtook:h1s plac~ on the c~urt
;
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,
,
•
.
-·
~ke
'
pridejn
:
tlieir btii~ding
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pointsand3 assists.NotbadJor6mimites
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Just
.
who is this Todd person? He
•
is a
.·
·
N~ithisisnotat~ai-j~rkc:r
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ofa,
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ngvie!
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member of the team this season and has been
·.·
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is
areal
live
situation
,
Tnereisa merriber
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No.me.
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~_--.
.
.
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.
for the pasttwo. His ·name jsTodd Has~er;
:
;
the basket~a,irs
·
quad~ha{Js Jusr"as
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as
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Heh w
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freshdma
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super~tar~brdeakibnlg
.
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of
111s
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ea!111_11at~~ y~Ht
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he hf_as
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tfg:r~/i~:ato~ the ~:!shsi.{t~r:~1:1 s~:So:
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but hopefully he is back for good. His en..:
·
,
Hasler
.
to make it to the Basketball Hall of
·-'
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trance inro this season ~uly
was
an exciting
ii
Fame this
yea,. They
ju~
want
to ....
rum
.
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......
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.
.
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·
·•
•.
•·
·
·
·
·
·
·•
.
.
·
That's DedicatiOn
As the semeste; ~nds, everyone
·
o~ the Cir-
cle staff sits back and sighs,
_
tired and weary
..
and elated and proud.
·
Although Loretta can
stop singing "All My
·
Life's a Circle,"
Marybeth
_
realizes she won't becQme a school
.
marm with her red pen, and Michael can
move his bed out of the Mccann Center,
there are others who spent late nights in the
Circle office giving of their valuable tim~.
-
~
·
·.
·
·
:
Chris Hogan, Chris Egan, and Jim Town-
, .
.
send (affectionately
.
J.T.), form~r editors
.
of
the Circle, were present
for
the compiling of
.
. every issue with dedicated concern and all
Jheir eff ortsto help. Witltout them, things
never would
·
have gone so ·smoothly. Our
roaming canformen, Chris McVeety and
·
·
··.·.
Mike
-
Chung, pr~ented
.
the best
-:-
of their
talent. even when
.
a last minute picture was
.
·
needed.
.
- •.
,
.
·
.
.
Thanks,
·
guys. Real d~dicatioQ. is not only
doing the job when one has to, but continu-
ing to be involved
·
even whe
·
n he is not for-
mally. recognized. We
·
tiave
.
•
always been
·
aware and
.
thankful for your
-
help~
·
·
.
.
·
·
·
·
·
Merry Christmas!
-T~eCircle
:
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:
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oic~-,,.b~r
·
11:
1980.
THE
CIRCL~. ,,.~.
5
_
-
---
.
..
·
.
·
·
.
. '.
.
';·
··By.l'homas
Hassett
_
..
_
_
:
•
-
~
-.-
.
·
_
_
=.
-
' .
•
-
-
'
•
.
...
.
Ori the firs
·
t
:
·
day. of Chri~tmas M
·
;~ist gave to me
·
a good m~~l in the caf eteri,a.
··:
,
On the: second day
·
of
~
Christmas Marist gave to me- two of my second
semester courses.
·
.
· :
.
· .
· -
.:
. :
-
·
·
.
·
·
·.
,
.
·
:
.
:
·
·
·
·
.
~
·
';
On
'
the, third
'
day of_Christ~~s
_
Marist gave to
me
thr~e finals in a row .
.
.
·
On
the fourth day·of'Christnias Marist gave to me four term papers.
0
- -
•
•
•
On
the.,fifth
.
:
day ofChr
_
istmas t.-1aris~ gave to
.
me five teachers testing.
·
·
.
·
,
.
:
.·
Ori the sixth
-
day of ChristmasMarist gave to mea vicious Kris Kringle
.
, :
On
:
the seyenth
.
day of
.
Chri&tmas Marist _gave to me the bill for next
.,
.. seniester.,s tuition~ .
.
:
.
.
-
.
. .
.
·
')~i:l
:
the eighth day
of
Chri~tmas Marist ·gave to me two to a room at
·
c
:Sh~ahan
_
/
.::, .
. ;
:,·
..
,
-
.
· •
.
\
'
; ·
:·
.
~
.;
.
-
·
.•
. ·
_
...
_
··
.·
.
·
On tlte.ninth dayof<:hristmasMarist gave to methe Red Foxes Winning.
-
On
~he tenth day of ChristmasMarist gave to me an elevator working.
,
,
Ori
•
the
,
eleventh day
,
ofChristmas Marist gave to me twenty-four hour
:_-
silence.
:
·
-:
.
.
·
· :
.
··
· · ·
·
·
·
On the twelfth day
of
Christmas Marist gave to
rrie
a
whole month off. Hur-
t
·
..
.
.
. .
ray,
..
-
.
Faculty's desires
By
Ju~y
DiSciplo
.
Santa's elves may be keeping tabs on
Marist students this season, but other
,members of the Marist community are also
being watched as well. Their Christmas
wishes are sure to brighten the holiday
spirit.
Robert Kaminski, soon to be assistant
Resident Director of Champagnat Hall,
.
would like a trip to Bora Boar
.
.
·
Although Mrs. Pat Comeau,
.
Secretary
of the Campus Center, would also like a
vacation from the ice and snow, her choice
is not as remote. She will settle for a
.
trip to
Bermuda.
·
.
"All A's," responds Dr. D.A. Drennen,
and his students are sure to · share his
Christmas wish.
Mr. Laurence Sullivan has an
,
interesting
wish, "Always to have my first name spell-
·
.
ed correctly."
· ·
·
.
Gregg Finch, Director of Dining Services
answers, "A new kitchen."
On
.
the more sensitive side, there are
several people who share the wish for peace
and security over the holidays. Mrs. Angela
Katopis, a receptionist at the Business Of-
fice, would like "peace all over the world."
Dr. Italo Benin, Mr. John Ritschdorff,
and Mr. Joe Waters share Katopis'
Christmas wish.
Dr. Eugene Best is more specific and
would like to see "an end to the raping and
killing that is going on in El Salvador and
other parts of the country ... "
Although Christmas is just around the
corner, some people still have not made up
their minds as to their wishes. Resident
Director . of Champagnat, Anthony
Drakeford responds, "I have no idea."
As Santa checks his list this season, it is
hoped that he will not be so "wrapped up" '
with Marist students' Christmas presents
and overl<>ok other members of the com-
nmnity.
Student's Wishes
By
C
,
hris Campbell
fice that can tell me exactly about a 'liberal
art' is."
Once again its that time of the year.
This question, when posed to the Marist
Time for hanging lights,
.
searching for
athletic department, brought out responses
presents, buying a
·
ti:ee, and most of all,
like "more :wins, more points" and "na-
time for asking Santa for
:
something
tional recognition." Barry Jamison a
_
_
_.
.
·
.
.,
. -:
·
·
_,,,__
special. Scime 150 students were polled on
senior basketball player said "I'd really
·
ranged from very serious to quite the
Marist." Andrew "Crickett" Homola, a
~
You Want For Christmas'?" Their answers
like to bring Maureen Morrow back to
• .
fi
outrageous.
.
junior and Marist soccer goalie, added "I
ii
·
. .
-
that ever important question
·
"What do
like more playing time
,'
buf most of all I'd
.·
•,. .
., .
. :
. .
.
_
• . \
}
~
.
,,._.J
About 600/o of th'e students polled asked
sure would appreciate a smaller goal
.
.
.
·-
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.
·
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!~:re!.~!:~~a~~~i:~:fc~~~~ettu:
s~~)~
bet;~:~~~dents,
·
SOm~ 300/o!
.
.
spoke of
·-
.
...
'
.
·
.
.
·
·
.
.
,.
.
.
.
·
·
· ..
·'
..
first." Jim Hage;
a
junior, responded a lit-
"I'm not greedy, I'll take a
·
"2.0" and
tie greedily,
"I
want aHfe size train of my
Susan "Duby" Dubatowka, a senior, add-
very own, so I can be the
·
conductor."
ed ."Cum Laude sure · would
be
nice at
Some
5%
of the students responded to
graduation."
,
/
thi_s question with Marist College in mind.
.
.
..
Probably the one response that could be
Michael "Crowbar" Wiese, a junior satd,
.
shared by all came from Bil Renrick, a
"
"Better on campus housing to encourage
·
senior, who said "I think the return of the
.
.
students to stay on campus." Charles
hostages and just peace on earth would
Lamberta,
a
junior, said, "A registrars of-
make this Christmas perfect for ev~ryone."
Dorms Decor.ated
By Alexandra Corcoran·
Christmas has officially
.
a!.rived at
Marist College. How can one tell? Well,
there are numerous signs that s
,
uggest the
arrival
·
of Christmas. For example, the
twinkling lights that brighten dorm room
· ·
windows, and the decorations one places
on his door. Yet, the most obvious sign of
the holiday arrival is the traditional Kris
.
Kringle.
.
.
.
·
-
Kris Kringles are when students in their
houses get together and put their names in-
to a hat, (boys in one, girls in another).
Each person then picks a name out of the
hat and proceeds to give that 'name' little
surprises
.
Of course, to get these little sur-
prises you must perform
a
little chore. But
there is more to this than meets the eye.
First, you do not know who your kringle is
until the end
·
of the week, and sometimes
the little chores are quite 'interestin.'
Senior Cindy Davis had this to say about
Kris Kringles. "I have done them since
~
was a freshmen and have loved doing them
everytime. I have done things such ~s sing-
ing Christmas carols in
·
odd costumes and
giving long, embarassing
-
speeches in front
of a Jot of guys. But it was all done in the
spirit of fun."
·
This year will be the
.
second time Elis
Morris will do Kringles. "I had to do a
number of things like dancing in the Cham
-
pagnat lobby. But that was a fun type of
embarassing," she stated. Sharon Stevens,
a senior at Marist, said,
"It
is an excellent
way
to
break the tension of upcoming
finals." In recent years, special times have
been set up so everyone can do Kringles
together.
.
It
seems that this year, people on campus
are a little slow in getting Kringles on their
way. But at Gregory House Monday night
the spirit was there. As everyone in the
house sat around, Mike Moore had to dress
up as a reindeer and sing the "Twelve Days
of Christmas." While he was doing that,
Eugene, also of Gregory House, had to say
"yeah"
everytime
someone
said
·
'Christmas.' They had captured that 'fun'
Christmas spirit.
Interested in an editorial position on the Circle for
next semester?
If
so, please
·
co:r:itact Loretta Kennedy,
Box C~262, before 12/15 for details.
I
I
I
.
1
--Pa,el-THECIIICLE-D.cember111NO
·
.... _,,;, ..... _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
__
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---
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I
.
·
Chf'istian Faith
Clnd
-
the
Draft
Paul Christian·
was a
member
·.
of the
Trenton State
College Pro-Life Committee
as
an
_
undergraduate. He
has
been
':
Nor:.
t!t-5t
Regional
.
Coordinator for the
Na-
Uoff:tl
Youth
Pro-Life
Coalition (NYPLq.
He
ts
presendy
a
member of
Pax
Christi
the International
.
Catholic movement fo;
Peace, and
Prolifers
·
for Survival,
an
anti-
.
•
nuke
pro-life
group;
.
·
·
-
.
· Christian
received
his masters from For-
dham
University and is
a
campus minister
at Trenton State
.
College in
New
Jersey.
He
.
has
spoken
many
times on
pro-life issues in
the U.S.A. and Europe. He is also
acer-
tified draft counselor for the Diocese of
Trenton. Campus
Ministry invited him on
campus to speak on issues of Pro-Life
on
November 12.
·
'1._.Clulslla•
\
registration for the draft in his laststate of
the union
•
address, the Bishop's Ad-
ministrative Board of the United States
·
,
.;
·
Catholic
·
conferencc
has
published a
.
state-
·
..
v
i
1/:~
.
1/,:;•-
-
~
-
·
.
_
~
-
.
:
nient which includes the following: "We
.
·
·
regard this question in
all
its dimensions
as
a
central
·
c1ement
·
-
in Catholic teaching on
the morality of war. First,
we
support the
right of conscientious objection
as a
valid
·
·.
.
_
~
.
moral position, derived from the
.
gospel
~
-
.
and Catholic teaching, and
.
recognir.ed
as
.
well in the
U.S. civil
law
.
"
(Feb.
15, 1980)
·
..
As a
·
matter of fact, the Catholic Church
.
·
. - . . . - - . not only peilliits coQScientious objection
. (as well as
military
service) but has
called
..
for government recognition of selective
_
. ··
conscientious objection, that is, oJ)jection
.
:
~
-
:-
,..
_._
to a p!lflicular ~ar without being opposed
.
~
. ·.
· · ·
to
·
aµ war. This option is not recognized by
.
.
.
___,,_.--.
·
\
·
,
· · ·
· ,
"
,
·
·
·
the
'
t:J.s
:,,c
and
·
:
CO's will not
be able
'
to
· "Oh,
the
times, they are a changin',"
~ - - -
-
~
.
..
.
.
.
'.
·
:---1
...
·
·
·
"
·
:•,.-
vafida
_
te such
~
a claint if future draft
laws
Bob
Dylan wrote a fewyears
·
back. Those
·
· •
·
·
·
,
··
-followpastpatt~rns.
.
.
famouswordsappearedintheSignalacou-
: :
·
·
\.
·
~:: ~.
Fortunately, the Catholic Church has
pie of
weeks
aao
.
in connection with
.
the
·
~
·
•
·
, ·
·
·
·
·
··
··
~~
:
.
".'t
:
,
n~t
been
caught ~pping i,iis time.
•
During
successful
·
march
·
·
on
the
Statehouse
'.
by
,
··'
·
the
60s
arid
70s
~
the Catholic Church
was
Trenton
State
students •
.
As
I
walked down
·
ill-prepared
·
to assist its many members
State Street that Monday it ocoircd to me
were conscientious objectors during the
world
;
"it seems right that laws
'
make
who,
·
through strongly held moral and
that iridccd. this is true,
.
but not all for the
time that they were a persecuted minority.
.
_
humane provisions for the case of those
religious beliefs," opposed participation in
better.
.
The conversion of the Roman Emporer
who for reasons of conscience refuse to
the military.
·
Once
again
this fall
·
.
I
·
observe with
Constantine began a process that
merged
bear arms, proidcd however,
.
that they
This time around, the Diocese
of
TreO::
·
sadness. young adults being required by law
the Catholic Church and Roman State
.
The
agree
to
·
serve the human community in
ton,
·
through the Department
·
of Social
to register for
-
a possible draft. Many sign-
concept of a just war
·
developed during this
some other way • .,
·
Concerns, has established a network
pf
26
ed up without' serious consideration of
time. There were clearly defined limits
.
to
Every Pope in the lifetime of most col-
trained and certified draft
·
counsellors to
what the implications of a draft could be.
.
what could
be
considered a just war and
·
lege students today has spoken out strongly
assist those who requ~t help. In fact, it
. Many others (we don't know exactly how
Christians could not fight in a war that was
against the injustice of war. Paul VI stated
seems
·
tha
.
t
.
the tables are
.
-
now reversed -
many since the Selective Service System has
unjust.
.
·
it most succinct!y in his address to the
many students have remained uninformed
not released any figures) did not bother to
The low point of the Catholic Church's
United Nations
-
on Oct
.
4
,
1965 when he
and even apathetic in regards to the very
register without considering the seriousness
teaching on war saw the development of
declared, "War, never again.,, The
..
real pos~ibility of a draft i
_
n_ the nca:r f~tur~.
.
.
of their failure to comply .with the new law.
the Crusad~. Almost all rules were thrown
·
Catholic Church teaches that total war with.,
.
. ,
The history of con~c1en~ous obJection
·
1s
·
The maximum punishment for convicted
,
out the
.
wmdow; ~ven non-combatants . modem weaponry can never by ~onsidered
-
as long __ ~s t~e draft'ltselfm. the U:S~ The
.
.
offenders is a $10,000fine andfive yeat{it!,
.
could be slaughtered
10
the ~ameo
_
f
_
God;
.·
\.
.·
·
.
..
.
·
just,
:
·
:'
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··•.
:
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•
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,
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.
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.
,
.,
.
.
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>,s
..
<:•,
-
•
d~a!t
_
rt(?~
.
1n
.
N?'
.
l.'ork
•
•
city dllnng
_J
lte
.';o
:=:
.
.
.
prison.
. ·
·
.
·
·
.
.
Fortu1;1ately, the _Cathohc Church
:
has
·
,
~
Th~
·;
ca:tholic Church
•
also
·
·1eaclies
·
tlia
f"''
c1.vil-:We,r
,
were·not
'
ovcr
•
beer: Tradi~onal
~ · --
·
_·,
,
.
'.
:
-..
.
,
0 ••
I
am
one of the more fortunate ones; I
.
.
.
no! kept the_ "crusade mentalit)'.;~• The of-
or~ers
'
given by a
·
superior which are im
~
<
)),',
.
!11e
pcac,e
~hurc.hes s
_
11
.
ch
_
~s the Men-
·
'·
r
.;
missed having
to register for the old draft
•
fi~1al. teach1!1g _on war
,
and the con-
·
moral cannot be followed. Pope
-
Pius
XU
n~~tes and 9µakers ha.:~e always c;,pposed
·
by only a couple of months and am above
sc1en~1ous _obJect1on, has come
.
very close to
said it as early atJ9S3:
'"~
~There is no righ
J
•
/
I?1!
1
t
.
ary se~ice.
·
the registration age in the new law. But I
full-circle mthe past few decades.
·
to order
a11
·immoraract; there.exists no
·
·
.
. .
.
.
.
.
remember well the many draft resisters and
right
for this at all, no obligation
and
no
.. ·
!ODAY• THE CAT~OLic:;
Church 1s
deserters of the last decade arid a half-tens
THE CATHOLIC
"
CHURCH
did l)ot
permission to perform an immoral acteven
<
domg more for thos~ of its membfrs who,
of thousands of whom chose to move to
provide much support for conscientious
-
if it
.
is
·
coinmanded; everfif refusing to act
for r~asons of con_sc1e!1ce, feel obligated to
Canada or elsewhere rather than fight.
objectors during World War
ll.
In one nQw
_
..
brings the worstpossible personal harm...
refram fro~ service m the ar~ed forces .
.
..,
FOR MANY OF
these, this was the only
option they had (besides jail) to military
service because they were not prepared to
document claims as conscientious objectors
(CO's)
.
Their lives have been
·
chariged
forever, and some will never returri)o the
.
United States.
·
The official teaching of the- Catholic
Church on
war
and conscientious objection
has not
.
been uniform. For the first 200
years, one could not
.
be a soldier and
.
a
Christian at the same time .
.
_
All Christians
New Club
.
by
Peter
FredsaH
famous case, Franz Jagerstattei:, an
(Address to the sixth -International Con
~
~-
Hopefully, ot~er church~ wdl
i
d~
..
the
Austrian
:
Catholic, was executed by the
gress
Of
Penal Law: Oct. 3~ 1953;)
.
_
~sme. (The Umted Methodist Church!
,
for
Nazis for refusing to serve in Hitler's ar-
Of
-
course, there is ample biblical prece-
examp}e, has ~?ne on record as. opposing~
mi~s. He firmly believ~ that the war 'Yas
dent in· the Judeo-Christian tradition to
pe/lcet1me m!!•tary dra_ft, saym! that 1t
~m~ust but even Cath~bc Church ~ffic1als
substantiate the claim of a conscientious
could lead t~
·
una_uthonzed ~ar_. )
:
·
·
ms1ste~ he had no
·
nght to ~uestion the
objector. The fifth commandment
does not
.
.
As at~active
~ rt so!,!nds, it will nev~r do
mora!tty of the war he was bemg forced to
..
say,
'
"
_
thou shall n
_
ot kill
'
unless . .'
.
"
.
Jesus
to walk mto an mduct1on cen!ef
a~~
Sl!lg ,a
fight
10••
.
.
·
preached love for one's enemies arid ref us.;;
.
few bars ..
0 ~
·
Ario Gutbne s
Alice s
. As
wuh many other issues, Vat1~n
U
-
ed to lead a Jewish revolt against
·
the
,
R~sta~rant
·
:
1f you
_
find yourself a con-
..
was~ eve!1tthat saw.a clear change me~-
Roman occupiers.
~
"
. ·
.
.
...
sc;1ent1ous
,
obJ~t<>r;
.
;.
<
.
.
.
·
,
.
.
phas1s of the teaching of the Catholic
·
·
·
.
.
.
.
·
_
·
.
·
·;;_
,
(lfy~u are mter,~ted m seeking more in-
·
Church
.
"Moreover," declared the
·
·
con~
.
SINC&
.
PRESIDENT CARTER
;
an-
formatie>n (?ri
'
CO ,;laims,
·
please feelfree to
.
..
stitutio~ on the Church in
..
the ~odern
.
ilollD~
.:
Ii.is
intention
.
_
to
:
reinstitute
:
coilta~t~llfkWegg, P
.
O
.
731
·
·
·
Among the new organizations offered by
Marist this year is the Criminal Justice
By Marybeth Kearney .
arrived,
.
J·ust as I_'ve
fl
.
nal
..
l
.
Y ~e~~rized
.
my
·
.
·
club,
·
formed recently
by
.
Senior
.
Irene
in the Pub on Halloween ... and shaving my
Bolan at the suggestion
·
of Dr.
_
Barbara
schedule
.
Alth0tigh trying to catch
-
Qi>
.
on
legs in the l
_
!>u
.
nge by the Chri
,
stinas ~ree
..
(for
There was nowhere to park the car, a
four
.
teen
weeks
of work in th
.
e
.
one that 1·s
all
t
)
Lavin. An attempt was made last yea
·
r at
·
·
·
.
o see
• ·
'
.
.
,
,.
·
long wait for the elevator, and so many
left, reminiscing about the
_
past
.
sem
.
est
.
er is
E
·
M ·
·
C 11
·
such formation, but the effort failed due to
~
h
·
B · d
"
d
ven
.
anst
·
o ege Itself
is
probably
new 1aces everyw ere. ut 1t
1
n't matter;
muclt better for calming anxiety
;
-
.
,,
..
·
·
sm·1
·
·
th
·
·
·
Th ffil' ·
· h
a Jack of organization, according to Bolan.
once
all
the suitcases and boxes were mov-
Th
.
.
···
• mg w1
memories;
.
ea • iatton wit
Bolan clearly spell
.
ed out the clu
.
b's ob-
·
·
·
·
e picnic
wi
th frisbees,
·
clams aod a
the Carey Arboretµm ..
.
a~I the
_
sports teams
ed into the room, I wouldn't have to repack
·
MilleFtruck .•. parties at the river ... the first
· h
f
1
·
jectives: "We want to provide people with till finals. And that was a long·
_
time to
I
I
.
b
h
11·
.
.
wit , success u • wmning seasons ..
.
new
more information about the field
·
of
s ave ever oug
t; ••
te
_
mg mom I needed
·
dormitories; .• the largest
·
freshman class
Criminal Justice, and to act as a supple-
coo:·so I thought. Christm
..
as and exams
a hat to go to the mixer .. the Phi Tappa's
ever ... evenbetterfoodmthecaf ..
:
.
.
-
ment and to reinforce what is
·
1earned in
getting a fraternity house
i
.-;Simon Sez pop-
As my
·
111ind continues to wander
·
1
'm
classes
.
,,
.
Bolan felt it important to point (my favorite combination) have ~uddenly
.
ping
rnr
balloons.'..not recogniz
i
ng anfone
.
already looking
·.·.
forward
.
to
.
the ring
out that non-criminal justice majors would , - - - - - - - ~ ~ - ~ - - - - - - - - . . . . : - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~ ceremeny, St. Patrick's,
·
River Day, and
find joining worthwhile, adding, "We
graduation. But that's so 'far away. Or so it
would welcome anyone and everyone
.
"
seems ••.
·
·
Nobody can learn too much about it."
However, the club's functions seem
especially pertinent to those in the field
because the organization does attempt to
provide students with word of job
possibilities.
The club intends to sponsor speaking
engagements by experts in the Criminal
Justice field, ·and possibly films related
.
to
Criminal Justice issues. The club now has
twelve active members, and the program
.
advisor
._
is Mr. ~obe[l Carney.
.
.
e4eaden,y
Wl~E
&
,
LIQUOR
26 ACADEMY
ST.
PO'IEEPSIE, N.Y. 12601 ~
-
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Tel. 4S~ -
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-
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SEE
WHYAMERICA
,
-LOOKS
TO
us..
·
'
.
.
,
•
Don't let all those eyeglass prices
and
gimmicks
·
,
·
you've bee.!' seeing-blind you to real quality and value.
-
-
·
.
'.
;
Instead, Jook Into the value and selection at
'.
...
American Vision Centers-where America always looks
·
.
for the best In profe
_
ssional vision care.
.
-
You'IMind the frames you're looking for in our
·
famous
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at our famous low prices.
·
..
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And you can look forward to fast, reliable service
~1
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·
_
'.
.
Now-50'6:0ff
on
·,
e,ewear
:
:-
. ...,
-
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mttplete...,
.at ........
prii:und
>.·_
:
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,
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aet• . .
,_., . . . . . . .
.,...w~
·
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(WHEN PURCHASED TOGETHER S~ME PRESCRIPTION
.
•'. "
·
·
,
·
: .-
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·
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2NDPAIR
OFEOUALORLESSEF.WALUE)
·
··
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:-
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,
,
-~:
BAlJSCH
'
a / ~ ~
cbNT...cTS-$89
·
Our
contact k·ns
pric'-'
inclmks
'-'x.ttnination.
and one
·
year follow• up can:.
NO~ ~ALID IN C~NJUNCTIONWITH ANY OTHER DISCOUNT
OR
SPECIAL OFFER.
·.
Amertcan Vfstoll Centers
·
.
';~
,
f
':•
,
:·sKINNERS
·
t~-:
·
·
.·
·
.
·
·
• - - , .
.
-
.
.
·
·
GOOD
TIME!
.
·
-
·
LO
.
OK FOR OPENING SOON
-
·
serving lunches &
.
drinks -
.
IWANTYOU
TO·THINK!
we hope that other people
.
.
·
•
Join us 1n our concern
about Marist
.
College
IF YOU ARE-
.
- a sophomore or Junior
- male or female
- with
a
2.5 cum
- interested in the quality of our dorm life
Be A
.
Part of The '81 • '82 ... Residence Staff!!
For information and registnltion contact:
the Office
of
Assistant Dean
·
or
Student Affairs,
Room 266,
Campus Center
Deadline: 19th December
Thank-You
';
_
,
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_Jazz
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byDawn~MarleSturtevant
·
'
·
.
their
.
talent.in
.
many styles. There
was
·
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classical inusic,' folk,· jazz/and of course,
.
:
_
·
On~ of the ~~y
:·
ru~~tiori~ of the'ieafo;' again; in a
.
~if~ere.nt way, .to ask
·
q~es~ions,
·
.
·.';
.:
·
··
.
.. ·: The '_Valls _of Do!1nelly's _Fine Arts Center
rock. The studen!5 :picked the music th~y . ing- Center, located
-
in
.
the
·
Lib'rary,. b~hirid !In~
_
to
-
clarify
_
p_?mts •. ~- .h~Jps ~e;tbt~~t
:
f
·
were v1br~tmg with music on December
felt they could perform the best
.
and 1_n
.
the
'
circulation desk, iflo provide ·student
g~m copfidence.m
5~
•~co~
~ a_
;it
.~
.-
~nd. Thats the day Dave Heckendorn's
soqie
,
.
cases •they· arranged the
·
.music
-
.
tutors for .fuJHime
-
or
·
part-tinie students.
~ s
.
m~ll group of-pe~p ~: .
..
.
~ ~ar e~ 1
!1-
~
.
.
;(
'Theory and _composi!on'
,
class held their
themselves. Two of the selections played
->"'
who need ~•extra'.' help
·
in
·
their ·studies.
s~mester a s
_
tudent-requests this, th~ 1:ietter
.
~
concert 'Music Madness.'
were composed by Dave Heckendorn, on
.
a
·
This is done in four different types of ses-
h~s/
_
her
.
_c~an~ to~~ Pat;t of a _sma group.
.: ;:,.
. Heckendorn's ~lass meets on Tuesday
cJassical piece and
'
the other ~jazz piece.
-
. •:
·
·
sions: the one to
·
one,
.
the
'.
small group,
_
the
._
:
:-
As ~•th t~
_
e one
to
one sessio~, tutet:5 ~re
.
·
mgh!s from~:~ till l~:00._(They 1!1eet l~te
. .
While the concert had a big turn-out {At'
,
.
_
_
drop
'
-in, and the large study group.
, -
~
:.
_
<.
expe
_
~ed_!9 c?me
_
prepare~ an~
.
to
_
~o
.
~1fy
_:_~
.
at.mght s~ their music will not mterfere
-
fe_ast 100 people attended) Moore feels ver-y
.
,
.. One to
·
one: This session has
·
one tutee
·
tutor 1f a meeting will be ~ssedh.
.
-
·
,
.
:·
:.
_
with other classes.) The class gives many
strongly that the music on campus doesn't
~
,
for one tutor:
·
It is approxfoiately an hour
:
Drop-In:
•
!he n}lme
..
~f
,
·
t 1s ~~!ion
.~·
talented students the_ opportunity to lea~n
get recognized. He feels Heckendorn's
·
in-
:
. .:.
in duration
·
and is on going during
:
the-
describes_ its
_
function.
A
:
tutor is
·
..
'on
:
:
how to arrange music and to play music
fluence has helped and that he 'has been· an
·
semester The tutor and tutee mett weekly
hand!'
.
for a set amount ?f time
_
{one
~~
-
~~o
;
.
along with others
.
·
innovator'. ~ut ~till the music does not
_
get
'
(usually ~t the same time on.the same day),
·
_
hours) at thes~e d~y, time aI1;4 placee~ch
:
.
The co_ncert was a sort of tes_t for the · the recognition 1t deserv<:_s. Patt of the pr~-
.. ·
and continue to do so either until
tlie
end of :
.
week. The tutor 1~ u~ua]ly ad~pt
_
at t
_
utQ~m~
·1
--
_
stu~ents m the class. It .was their oppor- . b~e~ }
.
e~~s
.
to
be the 'red tape' the mus1-·
·
·the semester or until the tutee
·
feels confi-
several courses w1thm_a_department, o~
_
the
·
,
·
>
tumty to show ~hat they have learned. For
.
c1ans
,
~ve Jo _de~l wit~ in order to get
!1 :
·
dent enough to study independent of the
same_cours~ tau~ht b~ different professors.
~
some students 1_1 was a
_
first. "Many _have
r?om t~
.
pract1ce m. This leaves the 'mµs1-
..
.
tutor._.,
.
.
_-
,
.
·.
-·
·:
.
..
'
:
:-'
.
.
.
·
Th1s
·
s~ss10!11s des1~ned for th_e studef!t
.
. :
...
.
.
never ,played m: front of an audience
~.
c1ans.d1scouraged and.frustrated.•
·
._
This type
·
of session
'is
meant for the stu-
.
wh
_
o _has sp
_
t;c1fic questions on ass1gnme~ts,
:,.
,
before stated Mike ~oo~e,
.
a m~mber of
·
.
As!de fro1!1 these problems, Moore says
-
.
·
.
dent who needs more intense skills training,
.
_
r~dmgs
·
~r
.
cla
_
ssro(?m concepts that only
•
:-.
the cl~ss. Moore; alpn~ ~th ChflS No~ak
'Marist Music has.co
.
me a long way.
_
' Some
•
and
is
interested in !'Il~re than just passing
:;_
ri~e o~cas1onally. A student may come to_ a·
:
.
.
was given_ t_he respo
_
ns1b1hty of arranging
.
of these advances mclude an orchesti:a that
.
"
the course. The tutee niust request this ear
-
.
.
·
dr
.
<;>p-m
_
once a~d neve_r need to come agam
~
and ,orgamzmg 'Music Madness.'
'
.
'
played for 'Cabaret' and the formation or
_
;
ly in the
'
semester
.
:
as
ff
takes time to learri
::
or
,
,
JUS!
~
come mterm1ttently
8:5
the nee<L
..
. While •~usic Mad!1ess' was t~e students'
a
.
pep band
-
t?
.
play for
_
the basketba}I
\
:
and utilize theskilis being
ta.11ght
:J .
:
·
-
:·/:
.
.
:'
ar_i~~s; Al.though attendanc~. •~ kept for
\
:
-
:
chance to display their progress m class, the
games. According to Moore, "the must-
..
No one fo one sessions
.
will
'
be·
·
set up
;_
tQese
,
se~sI<;ms (f~r
·
our o~n rec~rds}
-
the
,
.
members of t~e 3:udience got an e~joyable
. .
cians are looking ahead for a 1:>righter
<
after mid~terms,
·
unless the
,
tu
tee
·
is a
. .
tu tee n~~d
·
n~t
.
"s1gn:up'.' •~ adva~ce: ~e
::··
_.
afternoon ofmus1c. The students displayed
year . ."
.
·
··:
fresliman·with
'.
mid:semester
.
1ndices below
·
•
tute
_
e~s c,rllyrespons1b1hty
JS
to lmnt
.
·
~S
•·
i.900
and has been recommended by a pro'-
.
.
qu.C?.stions, ~o thatt~e tut<>r
.
_need nc)t spe11d
_;: ·
Mari st Perfor,rns
.
Hande
.
l's·Messiah
·.
i
·.
· .
fe~~-tut~e•ii\;~t~n~ible
ii:
co~in~
.
t~
::;:
~
0
;;tet~o1.~i!;:r::rt~r:~~~n't:ns~:~g::
t
.
·
·
·
:
,
.
·
:·
,
:
.
·
·
. .
.
.
·
..
each session prepared wit
.
h all necessary
tumty } 0 do the sam~.
.
. ,
·
·
.
·
·
.
:,
.
. •
got the ch,~nce to sm~ 1t after aU ~~ese
_
books and
-
materials,
:
having
':
com·pleted
.
/
L~rge Group:
This. session 1s.~ery qiuch
;.
_
r;~earsal~, says Bonme B_lan_char_d, b~t
";
readings <>r
.
assignments
:
At no
.
session will
.
.
bke
.
the
,
small group except
(1)
1t s open to
:
By
Dawn-Marie
Sturtevant
·
·
Staff
Writer
·
J
m look1~! forward to smgmg
_
1t
·
again-
::
h
,
omework or ll~sig_n
.
ments be d_one
~
,
•
· ...
,
_.
.
·
<
.
~l
_
.
ftudents, whether they are ~urren~ly be•
;:
·
On December
·
7,
.:
the Marist College
.
next year. Many of the members of the
.
,
:
Tutee must call m advance if. he/she will
__
mg tutored or not,
(2)
no previous sign-up
:
,
Singers participated
.
in singing Haridel 's
•
~ingers
-
wer~ mov~d by
.
the. perf ~~mance
i
'}
not be able to make
-
~)rieet
_
ing
;
If
tutee fails
.·.
is necessary, (3) ~Cs only held
.
before )~rge
;
·
•.
'Messiah' at West Point.
.
.The Singers
.
_It
was an mfred1ble e~p~ne!lce, . accor-
·:
:
to do this
.
on two occasions, tltey
;
are denied
exa~s i1nd
.
orlly !n a
·
fe~, chosen courses,
,:
..
(directed by Dorothy Ann Davis) were one
.
dmg to
_
Veromca Shea. Smgmg with 300
·.
the services
of atutor-fortheiest of the
-
.
(4)
It
runsJong~i::m duration th~ any other
:
of seven groups participating. Other choral
other voices you could feel the vibratic,ns in
:
semester.
·
·
,
.
-
·
·
-
.•
session,
·
,
(5)
..
alth<;nigh there are
.
many
,
.
groups included the Villanova Singers and
the chapel."
··._
·
.
_
··.
.
_
:
.
Small
group:
This type of session has
stude11t;;, que~!ion~ are encc,uraged .
. ·
·
.
.
.
,
\
the West Point Choir.
.
•
·
between two and seven tutees for one tutor.
.
As with eyerythmg, however, none of the .
The 'Messiah' is Handel's most sue-
.
Singing at: West Point was only one of
\
It is also atioui'an houdn duration; in-
sessions
:
can IJelp: ·.you to be successful
'
cessful.and well-known work. It is compos-
.
the
-
many ev
·
ents·the ~arist Singers have
;_
creasing to 9~ minutes or2 hours before ex- .. · unle
.
ss
·
you are
_
motivate~
.
to learn .
.
11nd
'.
•·
ed
of
various verses from the Old and New
·
_
performed and they still have more to go
:
ams. Tutees who are in
:
the same course,
.
pr~pared
t~
,.
work. No tutor
.
can or
:
,
~111 do
Testaments. The sections sung at West
··.
before the semester finishes. After singing
)
with the same professor
.
meet weekly with
.
your work fpr you.
:
You a~e
:
ultimately
Point were from the Advent and Christmas
at St. Francis hospital onWednesday, the
,
::
the tutor to discuss readings, interpret class
responsible for your own suc~ess. ,
: :
. .
,
•
:.
· _ ,._
.
sections.
!ast performance
·
on
·
.
thei~ schedule_ is
:.
notes and understa
_
nd the
..
major concepts
yo~
.
-
':'ln take adv~tage of any.of ~he
.
-·
The Marist College Singers have worked
.
Lessons and Carols' (a Chnstmas serVJce)
,
covered :n class.
,
:
: ,·
;
.
.
:
.
,
..
,
c-
.
.
_above
:
slJllply
..
by coming to the Learrung
hard in preparing for the event. They haye
.
o!l the 14th of Dec~m~er. The M~risf.., A small group session is aimed
·
at the stu-
.
:
~enter o~ calling ~xtension 300 for fur!1°1:~~
:
practiced for.more than three months with
Smgers pla_n to make smgmg the 'Messiah'
:·
dent who needs •~something extra" J?esides
.
;
.
_
_
mform_at1on .
.
·
•
.
•
.
,
_
•
- .-.
· ·
.
.
·.
:
.
.
~
._
alot of extra rehearsals. "I'm
·
glad I finally
at West Pomt an annual
·
e".:~ri~.
.
regular class meetings
.
A
time to hear· it'
-
·
:-
.~
·.
.
.
~'."1 Florist
.. Garden Ce~ter
:
.. ?:I
J~I-
Y#.i~J{
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QUEBEC
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L~dging
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CJyslJnl}lllited
Skiing;
·
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Mont. Ste-Anne,-Quebec
*
/'3
,
Ful!Meals~a Day
.
·,
.
t
:
(excepf.}i-i.
dinner)
-:
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*
.
*AIITips&Tax,
.
-
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l92Wa,lung
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Trip Date~ Dec. 28. 19808
*
_
.
":VulluP,rtheo
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.
.
JGfto
4, 11, 19 1
*
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·
Ji*
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Chris:
25/H17N
*
·.
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--
..
.
,
..
'
•
.
.
-
~~~~~~--
.
"
,
...
.
'
···
1
Col11muter
Christiµas·
Party
·.
Fri. Dec.12
9:00-1:00
Free Admission
·
Free Food
Cash Bar
New
Dining Room
•
!
'.:;~
i
jf/~:
.
.
,
•-\:L:\
_,_
.;
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;
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.
December
11, 1980- THE CIRCLE- Pago 1 1 - - -
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.
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outlook
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:
,'} ·. ByMlchaelMcCaljhy
.
·
::'
: : ..
:
.:-\
_<
>/
-The two
.-
big
;
questions surrou
.
riding the
:
.. /
:
Despite a very young squa~ that features
have participated in championship events.
:
.·
t>
/t
:}
:f;
'/•/:
/,::.
••i(
C:
/>/
:>
,:•:;,,
·
.
::,
.
-
:
??:·
~
:
'.
'
'' ·
;: .:·
·
·
.
,
Center and its maintenance are:.
l)
Why do
:
ten
·.
freshmen, five sophomores and only These veterans
will combine their talents
/i:'.
~
·
,}.
'LetGeorge:Do
~
It,
•~
·
.is
the
,
fa~ilia(call
/;
jhe
:.·
raqu~tbali
'.
co.uris
.:
~ways
'·
look
'
dirty?
·;/
one senior,
·
Coach Larry Van Wagner is op~
..
with a large crop of freshmen who will play
. ;
:.~·
<
around theMcCiinn Center wher
t
some odd
.·\
and 2) Why
;
does the foof.leak?
.'
Chehirie is
·
timistic that his Marist
·
swimmers and a major part in the team's efforts .
.
.
~,
>
/
job
needs
fo
b
·
e done
/
And
'.
i:noi'e often
:
theri
:
,
-
_
infoniiiitive
:-
.'
_
on
/
both
.
'}
'The
'
racquetball
..
divers can improve on lasfyear's 3-6 record
Among the newcomers are th·tee excep
-
/:, .
n:ot;
·
.
George is
.
·
the
;
~nly
guy
that
can
do i~
>'
.
·
coµris
:
afe
:
ni>Ldiriy,
'
they're
·
j1Jst
:
worn.
,
:
and°
.
·
·
·
seventh
.
place
··
finish
.
in the tional divers who all have the ability to
)
<3eoige ·
.
:
Chelurie,
:
·
that is
·
; the ;
(
McCann
0:
That floor-has beeri down
:
for
3
.
years now
,
:
Metropolitan Swimriiirig.Conference.
place in the top .twelve in the conference,
:
ceniei.:building
·
siii:>ervisor
;
,
Chehine's ap
;;
.
:
.
: '
arid the
.
way it
:
wea-rs it appears to be dirty;
·
.
.
> .
Van Wagner, who is starting his fourth
.
according to Van Wagner. Steve Maniaci,
peat~nce
'
is one of.a gian who'.~ ~xperieiiced
:
·
ActifallyHt's deaned
·
3
:
times a
·
day.~'c-Arid
·
,
season a
_
s
,
Marist
'
Coach; sees a realistic Robert McCarthy and Rich Berger
wi11
all
.
.
\
lif.e
.
to !~efullest.
'.
Jqrough'his matured face
;,
~
t_he i:oof!
:
"T~e
'
firstreport was that it
was
·:
goal for this year
.
to finish at .500 or better
·
.
help to make Marist tough in the diving
.
·.
, :;
,
and raspy, rnggedtype voice;hC:Speaks of
>
blackb
_
irds pec~ing
,
holes
in the roof,. but
-
>
and
~
to place in the top four teams ·at the events
.
Maniaci is called the best diver ever
·
·
. '
his
·
'
varfo
'
us
·
·
duties
:
at
.
th.e McCaon
·
with
:
a
;
'.
;.
thaf
was
wrong.
:
The problem is
·
:
actually Metropolitan
..
Conference Division
B at Marist, and should be among the con
-
.
·
·
.
·
serise
:'
of
·
pricie
:
•.
''I
,
do aitJhe setups
~
ancl
:
'
,:
lhat.'tli'e chemical that the
:
roof coating
·
is
.:
Championships. The· team fin
i
shed seventh
·
.ference leaders. McCarthy is unusual
.
.
: ;
preparatfons:fe>f the different
.
events'at the
:
·
•
made of has
a
tt:ndencfto expand and con-
..
out of 12 t
.
eamslastyear.
·
because he
·
will be entered in both diving
'
:
:·;
center/'
::
says
C:
Chelune.' "Things like
'
a
· <
tract in the heat.ind cold.We have rioleaks
:::
·
The reason fodhe optimism is the fact and swimming categories for the Red Fox-
:,_.~
:
basketball game
/
the
-'
circus we
·,
had here,
:
.
in the summer, but
in'
the wiriterit does."
.
that most of last Year's team is returning es. These three divers
will improve together
:
:
:
the
:
:
.
Royal
·:.
L
_i
ppaion
..
stalli
_
on
.
·
show';
:
the
.
:
Chelµne said thatJhe
·
school is in the pro-
·
'.
iritact plus the addition of several talented
as they gain collegiate experience
.
':
Globetrotters,
my:
men and
;
I Jiave to set
:
ce_ssof taking bids from roofers to redo the
.
·
and highly regarded freshrnen. The one
Other key freshmen are Robert
·
Vializ
·
·
·
.
tllat all up. \Vhen the sfi.idents go homeJor
·
:
>
roof; a.nd it is hoped lo be taken care
-
of by
majc,r loss is diver Dan Trotta who placed
(freestyle and intermediate), Jim Qelarede
.
.
the
:
hoijdays,
we've
·got a pl~nnhow,... an
·
·
next year:
: :
,
.. ;,
.
·
• ·
,
· .. .
.
·.
·
· : ..
in two diving events at the championships (sprint freestyle), Chris Sausto (freestyle
.
. O:
·
IBM :.luncheon and s·ome other· e.,,ents
;-
<
Another aspect
.
of interest for a man
.:
last year.
, .
.
·
and butterfly), and Paul
·
ZurNieden
q
:
scheduled that ,We'll work on.,,
:
·
.
~
._
;
,
·
-
·
who's been at Maristfor six years and
-
the
·
. ·
Leading the way for the returning
(breaststroke and freestyle). Van Wagner
·
·
But·afongwith setups and takedoV'{ns of
.
:
Mccann center
'
sirice iLopenea
.
would be
players is junior
.
Steve Cronin who has been
says Vializ should place in every event he
McCarui
:
apparatus comes the obvious loss
.
:
the
.
changes he's seenJn
;
tl_te athletes and the
·
called the
·
premier swimmer at Marist for
swims for Marist'.
•
·
ofavailability of the center to the students,
.-.
school in general...!'Wheri the other schools
·
·
the past' two seasons. Cronin has figured in
·. .
Van Wagner ses five schools as being
;:
arid ChelurieJs aware of that.
·
••1
.
hate
.·
to
~.
ar~ struggling
·
for
.
students, we're gonna
·
every championship event in which he's
contenders
·
for the regular season con-
h_!lye to close
i
the. fielclhouse
:
because the
!
have'em," says Chelune;, "The kids have been involved, and
.
expects to continue his
.
ference
championship:
Manhattan,
other
:
eveiits
~
h11ve to be planned, but it's
a
more pride
•
iri_ the place now
,'
· and the
.
impressive
·
performances this season. His
Ramapo, C.C.N.Y., Adelphi and
L.1.U .
.
'.
~ecessity,'
.
'
.
.
·
says
'.
•C.helune
;
.
0
"Some
.
kids
:
:
athletes
,_
present themselves
.
a
lc,t neater
•
·
specialties are the freestyle and butterfly
However, he emphasizes that the key in-
.
·
fome
:
do~ here
'
.
and they want
to
_
kri_ow
:
than they
.
did."
.
.
....
,
,, ·
,·
>
'
-
·.
··
events.
.
.
dication of whether or not their season is
·•
why they
·:
can't use the gym
:
at 5:09 when
.
.
..
,
:-
Chelune seems to be quite content'in his
Another key returnee is sophomore good will be how they perform at the cham-
.
'
the game isn
i
t
:
until 8:0(): But sometimes
work now. He, in the past.year; sponsored Mark Travers who makes the backstroke pionship meet. "We have several quality
.
. :
::
tfie
'
visiting team
.
will want to come 'in and
: ,
two athletes in the row-a~thon,isa full pay-
his speciality. Travers was in the Marist swimmers who can help us in a champion-
'
get tliefeel
.
ofthe hydi:a-ribs
3
hours early,
ing member of the 20-20 club and spon-
program for only six weeks last year
·
ship meet situation as opposed to a dual
·• .
·
andyou
,
have
to
·
accomodaie.them.,, The
·
sored a marathon runner, and he's always
,
because he was a transfer student, but still
meet situation. Any college program that is
i
hydra
-::
ri!)s
/
:j'he
.
·
trade
:
riame for the
:
'.Nilling· to
·
do
.
more
.
for the students.
"I
contributecl heavily by
.
placing in two
serious about the athlete has to use the ap-
hydraulic backboards
· ..
ar
.
the
:'
McCa.tin,
·
·
-
guess I've got my whole life wrapped up in
backstroke events in the conference cham-
·
proach of performing well at the cham-
-
·
·
represent an fotei:estirig story in the1t1selves.
:i-
the: school
iiow, '
.
'
says Chelune.-
.
'
,
'Butllove
·
pionships.
.
pionship meet. We'll put more emphasis on
.
Chelurie was
,
able to save the college some young people
:.
Sometimes I might seem to
Junior Kevin McGuirk and
Ed
Kennedy
peaking for that championsh.ip
.
"
.. ,
,.
money by
·
bradng steel plates
>
on both of.
:
be a.little ro~gh on thenfwfien.l yell, 'Hey
.
are two other experienced swimmers who
·
the game-boards so that they can't be mov-
get off that;' but
,
it's j
_
ust
a
refl~x. I want . .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •
.·
.
ed
.
radi
.
cally during a game, while the
·
the place
'
in great shape
.
s~
when a student
·
·
..
.
·
,
.
hydra
:.
rib cc,Jtlpany wanted
.
.
~
considerable
.
brings his mom and dad in to se
.
e the place,
.
.
.
:
a
_
ntotirit of money to do it
·
t~emselves.
-
·
.
.
·.
·
he can be proud of it."
The final numbers
MARIST
COLLEGE SOCCER STATISTICS (18 G1m~1)
·
Anal
Record
18-2
-
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.
Mallat 4 va. Fordham
2
·
2 OT
Mallat 5 ..
.
Pratt
0
.:
:
c'
,
'
'
Howard
s
"Doc" Goldman,
.
head
.-'
coach
·
·
pearances
·
in
:
the
•
:
NCAA
·
Division
.
II
,:
,
)r
ot
'
tiic
~arist
:
Coilege Socce
.
t team for the
./
playoffs (1978; 1980); ·Marist..achieved the
.
~
;~·
;{
:
Jast
'.
l7'x~ts
r
~asJ,ee11:.riaJ11~4
;
b~
.;
~is;P~ers
}-
§CAS9,h~mp19nship
ln
-
197~ w\l_c:n Doc•~
.
.
Mallat ha. New Paltz
1
Keane
3
YS.
Mallat
2
·
2 OT
Mallat 5
n.
Southampton
3
Mallaf
1
va.
St. John's 0
Mart1t
2 va, S. Conn
.
State 0
Martel ha.
Seton Hallo
•
'+:.
;
/ff:
i2
J
~T:~l;t;f
t
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1~f t:
;
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.
·
·
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grr~~1r:;~~fs~:T-l2~ie:~
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·
.
:
::
·
:
.-
Mallat 2
n,
Fairfield 1
·
Marf1t4 va. Pace 1
.
.
:-
-
Mallat
.
3
.
vs.Slen~0
.;.
-"'
·
'.
·
~
/
._,
;,..
,
.
, ..
:
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.
.
.
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,
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,
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,
.:
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.
t 3Ja,
,
R
.
P.I, 1
Mallat2vs.Kl119aPolnt1
;
·
·
· ,
'
·
,
.
.
•
·
Martfit2n
;
Unfonf
»
·•,
-
~-
·
i-::-::::•:
The 1980
.
season
•
was
:
a• spectacular one
•
his
.
firstmaJor champ1onsh1p.
:·
> : :
.
·
•
:
•
·
,
.
Mallat
.
ha.
St.
Peter's
0
.·
·
·
.
Mal1st5
vs:
Manhattan f
·
·
•
.
·\
/ir
J
oi'fr<>!dffia~;~
ile(!F'ox Club
;
witlta perfect
('
:
'
Having pla~ecl l!liclfield while at Co~
~
_
: .
•.· ;, .
J-0
·
record
iq
.
.
conference
·
.
play,
·
a
.
16~2
:
tlan
_
c:lState lJmvers1ty, Goldman stresses a
·
•
· ,
·
Mallat ha.
N.Y.U
.
2
.
.
So. Conn
.
Sta
ta
.C
vt
.
Mallat 1
.
•:i
(
o\'.ei'all record;
a:
N~w York
-
State ranking
<
controlled and finesse game. He relies on
·
/ · .
.
,
of first in Division
fl,
a national ranking of
· .
his
-
team to pass wi:ll and mo\'.e quickly on
_
,.
eighth iii the nation in Division 11,
·
and
·
a
thefield,ffisplayingmorestyletharipower.
:· .. :
·
-:
post-season
:
playoff. berth in the
NCAA
. ·
Doc
graduat~d
·
fiom the state university
·
::-'
.
'
.
:
·
.Division
:
11 championships.
'
:
·
•
..
.
:
:
,
-_
..
': -::
>
.
·
.
·a
with
·
a
_
B.A
,.
·
in physical educationarid wenr
::
·
·:
·.:>/
·
:
\
overt.l!e years
;
Goldman has compiled a
}
.
to
.
l11diana
,
. lJn~versity
:
to
_
obtain
·
his
,
•
\;,,
l20-106-18
:
re~ord. Since 1975
.
Goldman's
'
'
Master's Degree. He coached
'
at Plymouth
.
· :.
bootei:i have compiled aiiamazirig 79~22-3
.
•.
.
State University;
:
N
.ii.,
for six years
•
before
..
~ecord; which
.
included berths in the ECAC
.
arriving at-Madstwhere he staiiedthe soc-
·,·
.
Championship finals
.
(1976, 1977). and ap-
,.
cer program:
·
.
.
. · ...
:
.
~
-
~-
-
-
.
'
:
.
.
,
.,
-
;
{:'
;]/
"~
S
.
oec;r
A~1
!
~t,~s
·
--
TaamStatlatlcl
TotalShots
·
:
Shots on Goal
.
Qoalla
Savaa
·
'
Goala
ComarKicka
lndlvldual Scoring
..
Jullo Roatran
·
RaulVarna
·
Oyvlnd
L■raHn
.
Bob
Cooper
·
Edt-caon
·Tom Homola
..
Tilnllldahl
··
Bob
Santoc:hnlk
·
Scott
StraLi11
BUI Cooper
.
DaveJaco
.
JoeVaall..COZZO
·
Chartl■ P-ra
-
-
--
Rich leClnanl
·
KnutRoald
,
-
JoeBllboa
JohnOoff
Matt !,.OV9Cclllo
Marl1t
Opponents
491
217
.
289
142
• 121
219
51
21
129
..
.
Goals
·
Aaslata
Points
8
11
27
9
f
19
8
3
18
a
2
10
-
4
2
8
3
2
7
•
1
7
3
1
.
7
2
.
3
·
a
2
2
5
·
2
.
1
5
2
-
1
4
1
2
3
1
1
3
1
1
2
0
2
1
0
1
1
0
1
·.
:
:
:i}
Th~
;
+n::stati
s~~er
.
Co.nf~rence
·
A.1(
~
:
,
p~;ition~rid.l~d thiRed
,
Foxes sc~ring ~ith
:
Star
,
'.feam
.
has
.
been
announced with the
..
nine go~s. This year Larssen
·
was moved to
..
.
,
~onfefence
·
~hampion .~arist
.
College, pla(:-
: ...
a
midfield
.
j,o~!!i<>n and
·
contributed
-
eight
<
_
i~g
two players on the first
.
team and two
·
· goals and Jhr~
,
assists
.
for
·
a third place
· .
·
,
on the second
team:
Marist players selected
·
ranking ·among
<
Marist's scoring leaders.
·
·
.'
for
'
this
_
honor
·
.
by opposing
•
·
coaches in-
~.
Marist will uildou~tedly be in a strong posi
0
Goal Tlndl119
QamH
Shots
SaVII
Goals
Pct.
clude:
:>
:
Julio Rostrain
:
:
(First
:
Team-
tion for the 1981 season with Larssen retur-
,Midfield)
(
Ed Isaacson(First Team~Back),
·
ning
.
:; • ,::
-
. · ,,., ..
'
·
":
-
.
·
:
·
·
·
_
··
: .
.
.
:
Knut
·
Roald (S~rid Teant-B
.
ack), and Oy-
•
·
:
.
The other selection to the Secorid
.
Team
.
.
virid Larssen(Second Team~Midfield).
·
c
and
•
ail.other°
~
.,.
aspect
·
of
Marist•s
·
}
,
Julio
Rostriim, a senior from
·
Newburgh,
.
.
'.
'Norwegian Connection/' is
.
Knut Roald,
.
.
NY,Jed
:
the entire Marist squad
·
this year
·
:
a sophomore from Oslo, Norway
:.
Rariked
..
:
·
with eight
.
goals scored
.
and c;leven
-
assists -third o~
.
las~
:
yeaf s squad with
.
three goals
•
for a total
-
of
;
27 points .
.
Coach Howard
and two assists
;
Knut
.
tallied one goal and
Goldman states, ~
-
• Julio is
.
a plyer that has it
orie assist for a total of three points
for
the
/
Andy Homola
18
AndyLarocce
•
Heinz Wermhold
1
Paul Palmer
1
Non.QoalfeS.qa
124
103
21
,830
I
I
0
1.000
2
2
0
·
1.000
1
.
1
0
1.000
a
I
0
1,1)00
alH
·
He
·
i~ quick ~nd .has excellent
:
ball
COi}-
:
.
1980 campaign. This is deceptive, however,
trot He
:
was instrumental in leading thts
with K[!lj,t playing
a
·defensive back .Posi-
·
year's squad to the NCAA playoffs."
tion. From that position;
- .
this talented
·
Although this
.
represents the conclusion of
·
Norw:egi~n helped ~ontrol opponents to on
_.....
Rostran's career for the
.
Red Foxes,
l)c
is
ly 142 she>ts
~
·
-
on goals
as
oppo
.
sed to
Dancersize
.
being considered
as
a prospect for the 1980
:
Marist's total of 269 shots on goal. As with
Senior Bowl Soccer Classic.
.
·.
Larrsen, Roald
.
is
·
also an underclassman
·
·
Also displaying
·
outstanding ability and a
•
which bodes
·
well for future Marist coil-
.
A team that has been organized by
First Team selection is Ed Isaacson, a
tests.
. .
.
.
• •
M ·
c
11
Junior back from Bayport, NY. Having a
Marist, 16-2 overall" and 8-0 in the Tri-
·
anSt
O
ege has attracted more par-
good knowledge of
.
_
the
_
·
game and the
State Soccer Conference, displayed one of
ticipants than the football team. "Dancer-
1
·
•
h ·
bes
h"
·
h ·
I
cise" was recently organized under the
·
.
str
.
ength a
.
nd
S""
.
ed ri
_
eeded
to
comp
_
ement
·
t eir
tseasons ever t 1s year wit a tota
·
y -
r
·
8 ·
d.
·d l
I
'b ·
h
·
leadership of Anne Marie Calonita and
·.
it, Isaacson:
.
displayed
·
consistently strong
Q ·
I
m
1v1 ua p ayers contn utmg to t e
defens1·v. e performances
·
'
during the 1980 - scoring effort.
Lauren Devlin. Calonita and Devlin decid-
T
ed to organize the class because there were
season. From
.
his backp
·
ositio
.
n, Isaacson
..
.
As Champion of the
ri-State Soccer
"'
I
"'
·
M · d "'
d
·
D. · ·
,ew women
·
sports activities at Marist.
tallied four goals and t
.
wo assists for a·tota · Con,erence
anst · e,eate seven 1VJS1on
(F ·
·
fi
ld F dh
M h tt
··
Most women agreed 'that it is necessary for
oOO poi
_
nts:
.
.
.
·.
•
.
.- ·
·
.
·
.
•
..
. •
.
·.
' .
•
.
.
·
I teams
air 1e , or am,
an a an,
·
·
d
S
·
p
•
Se
H
ti
d
s
some sort of exercise in order to burn off
·
Selected to
'
the Second Team, Oyvin
N.Y.U., t.
eter
.
s,
ton
a ,
an
t.
h
1
h , )
d
D" · ·
·
II
(P
)
t ose extra~ ories put on
by
the delicio
_
us
Larsse~,
·
a
·
soph
.
omore
·
from o
.
slo, Norway,
.
Jo n s an one
1v1s1on
team
ace .
.
f
.
,
I
D. · ·
II
ca etena food~ So far. dancercise has been
hascontr,·buted
.
con
·
s1·stently stalwart per-
Although current
Y
a
1v1s1on
team,
.
·11
b
·
D" · ·
I
succ~sful. It has attracted more than
95
formances
·
51·nce
-
his arrival at Marist in
Marist w1
.
e competing on a
1v1s1on
I f
h
fi
·
·
1981
girls_ The girls are so enthusiastic that most
.1979. Although onJy
.
a freshman last year,
leve
.
_or.t e 1rstt1meeverin
.
_
.
-
of them invested in a special shorts and tee
Larssen immed~ate~y assumed a starting
shirt outfit which advertise 'Marist Dancer-
cise.'
The classes are held in the McCann
dance room on Wednesday at 9:15-10:15
and Thursday at
8:00-9:00 p.m. New par~
ticipants are always welcome to come down
.
and shape up while learning some dance at
the same time
:
.
"We just felt it was
something we wanted to do for ourselves,"
said Calonita. "But we obviously weren't
alone." Devlin agreed. "It's so much fun,
and we're really doing something positive
for ourselves. So come on girls, Dancer-
cise!"
..
...
..
-
.
·
.
·:--t.
&
~,,.
_
I"
.\
-
,
'
..
.
·
.
_
.,,
,
...
.
.
.
,
.
,
I
:.
5
-
.
·.
,
·
,
.
,,,,..
<
- - Page12
.'
THE
\
CIRCLE~
_
Deftmber11,
1NO
-
.
-
-
·
-
-
-Gagel'S
:
:tak8 3(d straight
;_
,
-
tiy
Mike
Md:arthy
·
·
.
_
....
.
·
·.
..
-
.,.,.,
-·
·
...
.
.
.
,.
_.
•
-
-
.
.
-
g'!ard SJ?Ot smoothly and Steve Eggink and
·
-_
:
t\,
:
Oil Padilla were also tough underneath the
.
,
,
..
.. -
rjms. The most imj,oniiif~ubstitution for
·
;
·
••
,
.
-
• -
The Marist Red Foxes upped their season
record
fo
3-l
by running over Pratt Mon-
day
·
night 89-55. Pratt,
.
.
who was one-half
ltour late for the
game
and suffered a
Barry
-
.
'Jamison technicalfoul shot as punishment~
was never in the contest. A combination of
tough board. play and
·
~nside scoring
_
from
Bill Dewinne and Steve Smith and the out-
side shootir;ig of Dan Sharpe paced the first
•.
half, with strong, once again, rebounding
.
help from Moose Timberlake, the newly
named captain. Marist ended the first half
with a 16 point cushion, 44-28.
,'
_
The second halfshowed the entire bench
contributing to the blowout; Tom Crotty
and
·
Tom Meekins both played the poin!
·
spectators at the
.
game was
,
the celebrated
return of scoring threat Todd Hassler, who
played the
·
Jast six minutes
·
of the game,:
·
scoring six and assisting for nine more. The
•
game represented a
·
well balanced
-
scoring
'
•
effort from Marist, the first of its kind.
Dewin
_
ne Jed the
-
team with
-
17 points, Steve
Smith had 16 and Eggink added
12 .
.
Dewinne
.
also Jed the team with
.
10 re-
bounds, while Smith and Timberlake had 7
.
each
.
The victory moved the Red Foxes ln-
to first place of the Big Apple Confei:ence.
.
Marist meets Pace Wednesday and Dowl-
.
.
_
ing Saturday niglit, both at home
.
·
.
-
•
Timberlake
named
·
Anthony
'
''Moose••
.
·
'
Ti;b~rlake, a
.
6'8''
an exhibition contest
·
against
'
the P~r- ·
.
·
transfer
·
.
from Brevard
·
.Junior
,
College
tuguese National Team; Timberlake tallied·
(N:C.), has been selected by his teammates
14
points and 11 re1>?unds, while in the
as captaiil of the 1980-81.Red Fox
,
Basket-
:
season
·
opener
.
against Northeastern
.
ball team. Although a new
.
member of.the
-·
.
Timberlake amassed 9 P?ints and
,
17
.
_
re~
team, Timberlake has displayed the leader-
bounds. Most reeently Timberlake talhed
.
ship qualities necessary for a successful
24 points _an~, 12_ rebounds in tw~ "come
·
.
campaign this year.
from behind
.
wms over New Paltz and
Timberlake states, "The most important
Manhattanville,
.
.
.
.
.
aspect in assuming this role is that I lead by
Although the
.
season 1s stdl young
·
example on the court." He continues, ."We
Timberlake describes this year's goals as
·
have the. talent,
·
personnel, and
·
the
winning
.
the Bip Apple Conference and
coachin1fneeded for a successful y~r. My
quatify~ng ~or th_e NCAA Division
.
~I
role wiU be to bring these factors together,
Championship. With successful efforts m
togetherness,is the theme for this year and
.
unifying the team these goals
.
could very
its my job to hetp
·
coordinate that.•~
.
.
well be within the grasp of this years'
Red
Timberlake's example on the court has
·
Fox Squad.
-
already shown him to be a team leader .. In
.
· '
·
:
ATHLEt'E
.
.
·
•
-
·
~
..
.
·
·
·
1
/
OF
"Moose'~
Timberlake'
sinks
another.
'
)
fl
_
,m,n,
H•1
·-
.
i,
·
,
.
-,
·.:
>.
·
' · ' : •
-.
_
·
:
:
_
.
'.
~
·
:
~
·
~
}
:
.
}
~
:
-
'.
::
·...-,
·
;-c.
.
.
···
"
.
.
.
·
.
·
third year pJayer. :Army displayed excellent
.
·
·
,·
·
=
l5utside shooting arid ball-control. A big
·
'
:
The Marist Women'~ basketball team's
downfail to the Marist cause was Pam
.
record fell to 2-4 with
a
defeat at the hands
.
Green's 4 early fouls,
·
because a recent pro-
of Army,
.
by
a
whopping 82-44 on Satui'-
,
blem
:
ror the
·
team
is
the containing of
day, Dec. 6 at Army •
.
, .
.
.
,
.
• ·
Army's predominantly tall team. Laurie
I
THE
· .
0
We just didn't get the
·
rcbounds/' said
Hiebenak
.
led Marist's scorers
.
with i2
Helen Salmom, a 3 yeai- veteran of
·
the
·
_
points, and Powers
·
had 1
o;
Melissa Miles
.
sguadi "We were getting one shot,
anci
one
paced Army ~ith 15.
.
shot only,'' .addec:I Patty
·
Powers,·
another
r
.
•.
WEEK
.
I
.
STEVE SMITH
>
/-
·A_nd so the drama is ended. With 6:17 to such rawdtent, and such fan support, not
go in the game against Pratt; the banner shoot?
·
·
,.
waving, foot stomping crowd got what they ,
·
''I just didn't feel
g,"
said Hasler.
"If
wanted. Todd Hasler, 6'3" shooting guard you don't feel sood about your shot, but
from Forrestville, Ct. was entering the you shoot it anyway; you can't hit.
If
I'm
game; Hasler, who had not
·
seen a minute's
·
not gonn~ hit my shots,! should.n't be tak-
tinie in the team's preceding three games,. ing them
.
:
Letthe o
.
ther guys shoot, I'd only
wasted
_
no time in electrifying the
.
crowd
be tak~ng away from them."
with two sparkling assists and, later sank
But somehow, for so,!lle reason, the
three buckets (one a patented 25' jumper Hasler story changed. "He came
.
alive in
that hit al)net) to help Maris! ice the game.
practice, "-said coach Petro. ''He started to
But why did it take so long to answer the
-
shoot the ball, and shoot it well. Whether it
people's plea? Hasler, who as a junior was his riding the bench or seeing the team
holds Marist scoring
.
records and was the
,
win
..
some games without him, I don't
starting guard for
-
two years in a row, was
know, but he just started to play like he
now riding the bench. Why?
can. And we can certainly use the best
.
shooter on the team on the court."
"Ii just seemed like Todd's heart wasn't
And if he was used this time
·
just to
,
init," says coach
.
Ron Petro. "He'd go to satisfy his legion of fans that would be
practice, buf he just felt like he lost the feel
·
.
reason enough. Banner after banner and
for shooting the ball .
.
Cdon't know if he cheer aftei:cheer called fornothing but Mr.
wasn't practicing enough on his own
.
or
Hasler's aj>'pearance
:
Was it the fans desire
·
what, but he just wouldn't shoot. Todd has
·
that made Petro change his mind about
always been the best shooter on the team, I
.
playinS:Hasler7"'Who knows, maybe that
mean the guys unstoppable. But if he won't
·
just did ..y9rk on my subconscious
·
a
·.
bit,"
.
shoot ... "
'
But why wouldn't
a guy
with
said Petro. "Just rriavbe/'
.
.
-
•
-
<
'f}iiS
We~kln
_
SpQris
·
.
.
.
,
.
.
.
.
_.
.
.-
,.·
.
.
.
.
.
-
~
.
,
•
-
:'
-
-
.
.
.
.
.
:
.
.
-
.
· -
:
:
-
~}
:;
i•
·
wJrti~11-~;
\
J3askethan
:
;
_
:!
·
.•
.
·.
:·
·
.
_
.-
i1li~~
,
-
-
H<>f
;i:ta ·-
A
~ 1 :
oo
~
~
··
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IS
25.11.1
25.11.2
25.11.3
25.11.4
25.11.5
25.11.6
25.11.7
25.11.8