The Circle, September 23, 1982.pdf
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Part of The Circle: Vol. 27 No. 3 - September 23, 1982
content
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· · · • · ' • - ·
.
Faculty
deOateS addition of
ROTC·
program,.;
by
Su~an
V~ssall~ .
. . . . - •
, ·.
,
~uence
:o;
~~u~ses will b~ offered .on cam- · suf~cient fo~ one person, a ~adet referen~e all.•ideas. "Some of the finest ~olleges, such ·
The .Marist faculty'. last ·week _held the._·. pus by military-personnel to students·who __ library and.storage sp3:ce for uniforms.
as Princeton, have R.O.T.C.,'' said Siegel.
first in a series of debates over the issue of wish to enroll in the program. ·. • .
.
·.· .. A separate-classroom for each ·of the "It's important for our Army to have a
whether to allow the Reserve Officer Train- . The courses. are Military Science I, II,
four-year groups being taught once or knowledge through liberal arts."
. _ing Corps to use campus facilities. .
III, and IV. Fundamentals of Leadership twice. }Veekly-would also be required, but
)Vith regard to the idea that R,O.T.C.
: .The faculty is to issue a recommendation
and
Management,
Lana
.
Navigation, :· used . only without interf~ring with the contributes to. ·the unrest of. the world to-
by Nov.
1
to the college board of trustees,
Military History, Applied Management schedule of regular classes, Siegel said.
· day. Siegel said, "I'll take· my uniform off
which will have the final say on the matter.
and Office.Management are a few. of the
. Some faculty · questioned how the tomorrow. I've seen war. I want to getrid
·
D\scussion at Friday's faculty collo" · courses that would be available.· ·. ·
military presence on campus would fit into of the_ Army budget and put it into more
quium centered on whether R.O.T.C.'s
. Additionally, there are scholarships the Ma_rist community.
..
.
social programs. But· so· far no one that
presence would change the atmosphere or
available through the program. ·
·
·; · · · :_
, "I-.. have questions about the .'ap-
speaks out against us has come up with a
image of Marist.· • -,
·
·:-This is. an_, extra curricular activity,
pq:,priateness of R.O.T.C. at Marist," said better solution that we can trust and feel
Proponents of the program argued that
whjch, Cox says would serve only the Assistant Porfessor of Political Science secure with.''
the·issue was one of freedom of choice for
students who want to become part of the Carolyn Landau. "I don't feel it relates to
Siegel assured the faculty that no
students making decisions about their
R.O.T.C. program. No academic credit our mission statement." Landau says she military maneuvers would take place on
. educations.
·
·
will be given for these courses.
feels that, for Marist, a stance in peace campus and that students in the program
"It's an option that should be available
Marist would serve as a R.O.T.C. exten-
when the world is threatened would be a would not have to wear their uniforms only
to students," said Dean of Students Gerard
tion center of Fordham University, where, , more important image to project.
.
when attending the military classes ..
• Cox.· "R.O.T.C. has a Jong tradition in
according to Siegel, students in the Mid-
Paul Peterson, a Marist student and
Students at Marist have not yet had the
society, and it's. hard to deny the impor-
Hudson area now have to travel to if they R.O.T
.C.
would · have on campus. "we opportunity_ to voice their opinions on the
tance of the civilian officer.'•
want to be involved with the program.
don't change the atmosphere," said Seagel. subject of R. O. T. C. According to Council
According to the porposal presented to
There is a concern for. the amount of «We enhance it."
,
of Student
Leaders
President
Joan
the faculty at the end of last semester and
spilce · the program would require,
He said that he felt allowing R.O.T.C. at Gasparovic, literature on R.O.T.C. will be
explained by Col. Herbert Siegel at the col-
However,· according to the proposal and
Marist would Jet the outside world know distributed and a forum will be held around
· Ioquium, through R,O.T.C. a four-year se- · Sie~~l, all thatis ne~ded is an office space
that the college was open to expression of
Continued on page 7
Volume
27,
Number
3
Marist dedicates
a week to
the _
underprivil~ged
~y
Chris Dempsey
Ma.rist College, Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
September
23,
1982
r~,.::.::.::;.;_:·;:;~;r.~;t"!;JRaef~6tltfJe@fat2~fJ!~\½
0
i~fi~:
'
week in November to fight world hunger. ;-:~
According to anthony.Ceniera, e~ecutiv~
director of the Bread:for.theWorld Educa-
tional Fund, as well as executive assistant
to the Marist College president,· World
Hunger Week is scheduled to take~ place
Nov.·
16-23.
Theweek
will
provide oppor-
. tunities for students and faculty to b~come
educated about and act _
against· world
hunger" .
.
·_- .-
... -.-· ·•·
·
· ·· .
.
One of the highlights of the week wiU be.
Oxfam Fast Day during which students on
the meal plan will sacrifice one rneal, while
SeBers sends the money saved from the fast
to
the deprived.
·
..
The fast day, which is scheduled for
Thursday, Nov.18, win be followed by an
Interfaith Thanksgiving Service in the
chapel on Monday, Nov. 23.
Red-FQxes.
take oj:Jener
C
A good second effort .helps Marist on its way to a 20-15 victory over St.
Peter's Saturday.The team plays St. John's at home this Saturday.
(Photo by Kyle Miller)
Another ·anticipated event for Hunger
Week, which is still in the planning stages,
is a briefing on W()rld hunger to educate the
students.and fllculty::on the. subject. Dr.
Milton. Teichman, .a· professor of English,
who attended . a briefing on the world
hunger problem, said he recommends at-
tending this event. Dr. Teichman said he
.. _
;i~so;~~;;:;~e~~:."~reat~yinformed"b~Poug·
hkeensiepoor·~s· tru··
gg.11·ng
.
.
to survive
An additional proposal
for.
Hu!)geJ
·· •·
_ ·
'Y.
1
•
··· • • .
•
•
....
.
.
·
-
Week is a workshop for for Core teachers,
·
so that plans may be made to incorporate
by Bernadette Grey
information on the World Hunger problem
into the Core curriculum,
.. A middle-aged man rocks his shaky
Although not scheduled during Hunger · green chair back and forth in the waiting
Week; th~ Seventh Annual Crop Walk for room at the Department of Social Services
. World Hunger is still another example of in Poughkeepsie. His sports jacket is
Marist's effort . to aid the deprived. The wrinkled and his graying hair needs a cut.
·
f h
lk
·n
b
I
He is chain smoking. .
.
participants o t e wa w1 try to eat ast
"Mr. North," calls a young female
year's earning oU
747.45.
·
employee from behind the filmy, glassed-in
Janice · Willis, . a
member of the reception desk.
sophomore · class and co-chairman of the
The man stands up, glances around at
Social Action Committee, likes the idea of the eight other people sitting in the waiting
holding a week-long hunger project. "It's room and walks up to the desk.
really important to put these events in the
"I've been looking for_ a job all day,"
span of a week. Otherwise, students tend t0 North says. •~1 don't want to be here. I
put off their attendance plans for 'the next want to work."
time,' which doesn't always come," she
Like everyone else in the waiting room,
said. .
· ·
·
North is depending on welfare for survival.
The Rev .. Richard LaMorte, assistant About 30 people come into the Dutchess
dean of students, said he believes it is good County Department of Social Services each
to start with a project which requires a . day to apply for welfare, an administrative
minimal amount of personal extension, assistant at Social Services said. The·ma-
which could be increased later. LaMorte jority of these applicants live in the city of
said he feels that this hunger project is a Poughkeepsie, he said.
"good keystone" with which to start.
Although Dutchess County has a
relatively low poverty level, social agencies
in Poughkeepsie are having a tough time
dealing with the plight of the poor in this
area, according to local agencies.
"About
600Jo of the total welfare cases in
Dutchess County are concentrated right in
Poughkeepsie,'' said Social Service official
Bart Carlson. ·
Out of the
1,750
families receiving
Aid
to
Families with Dependent Children in Dut-
chess County, nearly 1,000 live in
Poughkeepsie, the administrative assistant
said. There are
500
Dutchess County
families receiving Home Relief and 300 of
these families live in Poughkeepsie, he said.
Yet the population of Poughkeepsie
represents only
150Jo of the county's total
population, said an official from the Dut-
chess County Department of Planning.
"What most do not even hear about are
all the people just above the maximum in-
come level for welfare," said the Director
of Dutchess Outreach Mary Keeley.
. Keeley, who works out of the Trinity
United Methodist Church .on
South
Hamilton Street,
provides emergency
assistance, technical assistance and ad-
vocacy for. the needy
of
Poughkeepsie,
whether or not they receive welfare
benefits. "We are primarily advocates for
anyone that needs help," she said. .
.
Judy Brown, an employee at Citizens
Referral on Mill Street, also helps the poor
of Poughkeepsie ... even if they are not eligi-
ble for welfare. "It really hurts when a
family comes in $2 over the welfare line,"
she said.
·
Keeley said that her Outreach Satellite
Center helps more than
100
Poughkeepsie
families per month. They give food,
children's clothing, · and furniture to
Poughkeepsie families who cannot afford
to buy these items themselves.
.
Families are either referred to Keeley's
office or they walk right in asking for help.
The Satellite Center can provide food for a
family up to three days and then the family
can't get any more assistance for 2 months,
Keeley said.
Citizens Referral is another agency in
Poughkeepsie struggling to help the poor
Continued on page 4
41'. -~ ... ·• .,. '·
.-4
►
,
.
---•Page
2 · THE CIRCLE·
September 23,
168
The easy way
out
.
The "gut" course is not a phenomenon
tions
.
And the dollar signs keep crossing
particular to Marist College. Students of
your mind:
$4430
per Year for tuition;
$441
every school get to know very quickly which
per course;
$14.70
down the drain every time
teachers they can snow and which classes
you sit through one of those classes.
·
·
·
they can cut and still pass.
The problem is that for every student who
Many students register for these courses
honestly hates wasting his time and money,
because they know they can do a minimum
there are ten who will he the first to sign up
amount of work and still get by. That is the
for that same class next semester. We will
reason why there are so many gut courses
never get rid
'-
Of gut courses, and gut pro-
·
:- because year after year, students sign up
fessors until we make the decision not to
for them as an easy way out.
take the easy way out.
·
If you enjoy spending
$441
per course to
We don't have to wait until the end of the
simply "get by," then that is your
.
own
semester to voice our
.
opinions. If you are
.
·
choice
.
But what about the students who
angry about a class, go to the chairman of
_
would really. like to get. some sort of an
the department and let him know h<;>w you
education at Marist? You sign up for a
feel. Spread the word around so that your
.
course that sounds interesting, only to find
.
-
classmates don't get
·
stuck in that class
·
_
out after three class
·
es that you are learning
next semester. We pay the salaries here,
absolutely nothing because nothing is
and Marist isn't going to give us an educa-
demanded of you
.
The class is boring, there
tion. That is something you have to do on
All l~lters ~ust be typed triple space with a 60 sp~ce margin
,
arid
s~b~ltted tc
i'
;he
.
Circle office no later than 6 p.m. Monday. Short letteis are preferred. We reserve
_
the
·
right to
edit
all letters
.
Letters must be signed, but names may be withheld
_
upon re-
.
_
quest. LeUer
s
wi.11 be p
_
ubUshed depend
i
ng upon availability of space
•
. __
: _
_
·
Townhouse accessibility
Dear Editor
:
.
I find
it
hard to believe that Ed
Waters,
-
vice president of
·
ad~
mm1stration, actually believes
that the townhouses B-7 and C
-
1
meet all wheelchair accessibilities,
and that everything is within the
guidelines of the
504
law.
-
-
I also believe that problem here
is the definition of accessibility. If
Mr
.
Waters had attended the
.
meeting with President Murray
,
·
Dean
Cox,
Dianne Periera, Brad
Weber arid the involved students
.
at Marist, he would have know
that Linda Glass did not
.
make a
statement that, "an elevator is the
only answer.''
:
·
Linda Glass
·
is only looking for
a logical, sensible, cost efficient
way of getting froin the kitchen
and Jiving room area to the
bathroom and
-
bedroom areas of
. the townhouses
.
(possibly an elec
-
.
fric
wheelchair lift from the com-
.·.
_
mon area to the downstairs area
·
would be the answer .
.
But Ed, to possibly believe that
a
100
ya
r
d trip around the outside
of a building, on a motorcross
.
trail in the dark and dead of
winter, in an electric wheelchair,
· justto go to the bathroom is total-
ly logical and
·
within the limits, is
totally
_
ridiculous!
·
·
Also Mr. Waters, not a single
.
person
is
inescapable from
becoming totally disabled at any
time of the day. I
.
pray to God
that this external locus of control
-
(or Fate) does not happen to you,
or for that matter, anyone,
because having a person of your
logic saying
,
"This situation is
totally within the gu
i
delines,"
might also say that it is
_
totally
logical to place an outhouse and a
. -
terit for Linda
·
Glass to live in.
)usf so
·
torig as it's accessible
,
it's
o.k.!
.
· Therefore,
Mr. Waters,
chall
e
nge you to follow me in an
electric wheelchair for a short
-
portion of any
-
day and time of
your choice. Theri, · Mr. Waters,
you can go back and re-read your
architectual designs that look so
good on paper
.
Only this time
don't tell Linda, a psychology
major,
·
'
to check them over
because, hopefully, you will have
gained some valuable knowledge
and insight on this problem.
Emery T. Giovannone
C-122,
473-4348
Thanks
is little or no work required outside of atten-
.
your own by
-
finding out which teachers real•
ding class, and attendance doesn't even
ly teach, and then supporting them by tak-
_
Dear Editor:
·
·
definitely be our best 1,ear ever.
seem to matter
.
To those of
·
us who care,
ing their classes
.
Last week
'
s Junior Class mixer We'd also like to thank Chris
this is a very frustrating experience.
Getting a degree at Marist isn't difficult;
was a resounding success. This Barnes and Jay
·
Stone,
·
·
the
So what do
.
you dor You swear that you
getting an education can be. Let's get rid of
success was due, no doubt, to the WMCR D.J. 's, for keeping the
will never take that teacher
·
for another
the gut courses and the "cake" classes so
·
inany people who.volunteered to
·
place hopping, and Bob Laforty,
course again, and that you will tear
.
him to
we carfcallourselves
_
educated people, and
; :
help. In particular
,
we wish to Paul Beckerly, and his techni-
'
shreds
,
when
'.
it's
"
:
time
·'
.
for
'-
teacher evalua•
.
. ·
notjust typlcal
,
Mariststlidents
.
·
.
_._·._
'
·\
,
.- -
<.
:
·
..
-:
.
>
thank
.
Rich Dougherty, · Chris
.
dans, who helped to keep things
.
.
·
..
·
;
:
·
•
•
.
--.
.
·.
· .
x
\.;
,
:
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::
.
:)
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~~~gJht
L
iti:;:
-L
~~;::~.~;;;rJii~~
.
,~:nn:~g
Fi;::;,~~~~d
1~1~t!~dtti!~k
·
Maris! is
'
not
,
imln
/
urze
::
•:
.
:
·.·
..
_.
-
- :
~fi[a'p~ti:~~i!i;:~d~~i;
·
'
~;~~~~;J;!~1~1~eit~~~;;fr~
·
·
Meisner
,
Steve Hedderton; DAn we'd
.
like to thank all of you. We
The clap. There
·
~re over
72,000
reported
The key ~ympfom of syphili~ ls
°i.
1sually a
cases of venereal disease in New York
sore that will appear on
.
the point of sexual
.
·
alone.
·
·
contact.It may go away afterawhile, but the
.
Marist is not immune to syphilis and
disease remains withoutoroper treatment.
.
gonorreha. So many students realize thatit
The symptoms
-
of gonorrhea are different
•
Hartman, Pa
t:
Larrabee, Tana
·
hope everybody had a good time!
·
Massaro
·
,
•
Neil
Rohr,
Jim
~cDonald,
.
Keith Griffin,
.
Tom
Cavanaugh
,
and Bob Davies. (we
:
·
hope
·
:
_
that we
·
didn't
.
·
forget
•
,
.
anyone) With such
.
spirited and
·
enthusiastic
·
people,
,
this will
The Jun
i
or Class Officers:
Chris Molluso
Mike
·
Hayden
Barbara LaDuke
·
Karyn Magdalen
·
is a danger they face every time they take
.
for both men and women. Men will usually
part in any sort of sexual activity. So many
•
experience a burr:iing sensation
.
. during
·
students dismiss it as
·
something that could
·
urination
.
Most women have no symptoms;
.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
never happen to themselves. So many
an examination Is nec:essary to discover
·
·
students could be walking around campus
gonorrhea lnwomen.
·:
:,
_
_
· _
_·
.
_
right no~ with a_n untreated case
.
of V,D.. .
Syphilis and gonorrhea left untreated can
·.
_There 1s
~
fair amou_nt of
,
sexual act1v1ty
.
,
cause mental illness, heart disease, blind-
on the Man st_ campus, that s no sh~ck to
O •
ness, and st~rility arid possibly death
:
·.
anyone who l1v~s _here. The trouble 1s that
·
If you think that you
_
might
·
have
-V.D:,
-
-
Next
-
Week
·
-
students are still 1gn~~ant to the fact that
treatment is a relativly easy process. If you
any type of sex1:1a1 activity can spread V.D.
want the location of a local clinic
,
call 1-800-
.
Until they figure a way to c~re V
.
D
.
523-1885
.
Treatment is simple and always
altogether, there are only two options for
confidential
_.
.
·
·
,
.
those
· -
who are sexually active.
·
One is
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
prevention, the other is prompt treatment.
V .D. gets
·
around; even on the Marist cam-
CLASSIFIEDs
.·
·
·
•
·
.
Sometimes V
.
D. is hard . to prevent
pus. So if you even suspect that you have
because many times your partner won't
V.D.
,
make a mature decision and go to a
even realize that he or she has it. Sopreven
-,
local clinic before you spread It among a
number of other people.
·
tion, other than totatavoidance of sexual
If Marist students are ready
:
t
_
o
_
ta
_
ke part l
_
n
activity, is difficult.
.
.
.
'.
All students at Marist that have been, or
·
sexual relations, they should also be ready
to take care of themselves and others that
·
are planning to be, sexually active should
·
they have come in contact with.
have a familiarity with the symptoms and
treatments of V.D.
Take the chance and go down to the clinic
The symptoms of Gonorrhea will usually
if you have any of the symptoms .. If
.
you
.
•
.
.
on
Sale Thtirsdays
.
·
-
in
·
the Cafeteria
show up 3 to 5 days after contact where as
don't go down for yourself, do it for another
the symptoms
·
of syphilis will show up
Marist student whom you may be with and
anywhere from
10
to 90 days.
care about. Do it before it's too late.
·
Co-Editors
Rick O'Donnell
Business Manager
Adrienne Ryan
Faculty Advisor
David Mccraw
Patti Walsh
The
Faculty
Advisor
David Mccraw
Copy Editors
Lisa Crandall, Judy Knox,
Associate
Editors
Ka
r
en Lindsay
Reporters
Meg Adamski
,
Bernadette Grey,
Mark Amodeo, Adam Their,
Lou Ann Seelig
Carol Lane, Matthew Mcinerny,
Kathy O'Connor, Ken Bohan,
Circle
Ivan Navas, John Petacchi,
Paul Crowell, Joe Pareti,
Sports Editor
Bill Travers
Richelle Thomas
,
Brian Kelly,
John Petacchi, Dawn Oliver,
Andrea Holland
,
Sue Vasallo
,
Bill Flood
Pat Brady, Barry Smith
Advertising Manager
Jim Barnes
Classified
Kevin Shulz
Cartoonist
Ted Waters
j
,
,
.
_ _
.
.
_
.
. _
.
.
September 23,
1982 · THE CIRCLE· Page
3
·
- - •
Planfled Parenthood discusses pros and cons
.
,.
·'
.
'
.
,
,
,
.
..
.
.
. .
by Susan Vassallo
.
·
-
:
:
·
'•·
Good decision-making and a mature at-
titude are the basic ingredients needed in
the area of human sexuality, according to
Judy Henkle, a planned parenthood
representative.
:
On Wednesday~ Septemb~r
i3,
th~ Social
Work Association of Marist College spon-
sored a seminar with planned parenthood.
"Our aim is to provide services of human
concern," said Association President Terri
Tobin.
.
Henkle's discussion was based upon her
·
model
·
for sexual decision ·making. The
mod~! _incl~ded both sides of a~ questions,
· starting with deciding whether or not to
engage in sexual activity. Pros and cons of
.
.
·.
Lot
·
blocked:
.
.
-
in response
.
'
'
'
:
to
v
·
andalism
.
.
by
B
_
rian Kelly
Marist College has put up a
.
gate across
the road leading to the river, blocking the
passage of cars to the parking lot.
The gate, which cost $1,000, was .erected
because the parking lot was "being used as
a meeting place for abusive people," said
Vice President Edward Waters. The Mc-
Canfl'Foundation paid for the construction
of the gate.
"We were spending $4,000 a year clean-
ing up all the broken glass and repai~ing the
damages done by vandals,"
_
Waters said.
·
"We put up a fence and the vandals tore'it
down; -we put garbage cans in the parking
·
Iot
•
•and
J
\vithin one day they
'
were in the
•
river.
Something
JUSt
had
to
.
be"dori"e. ''
,
::.
·c:
'
_
The fence, which is located
'at
the
.
south
end of the parking lot, will be replaced next
year. The Mccann Foundation will pay for
the fence and also for landscaping that will
be done in the area.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
each possible decision were presented.
"If
there was anyone present at the
seminar thinking about becoming sexually
active," said Christina Casciato, "this
meeting may have influenced their deci-
sion. It opened our eyes to what we have to
face and the possible consequences of havs
ing sex."
.
·
·
·
·
.
. ·
Henkle pointed out that one needs to be
sexually active, and it is important to have
a good feeling about yourself.
The various methods of birth control
and their effectiveness were described and
related questions were answered. "She
layed out the facts," said Karen Williams.
"She gave you options."
Henkle made it clear that if you ·can't
face making the decision "what if" you're
not mature enough to have sex.
Chorus
·
to perform
"Everyone thought of the seminar as a
·place to have some laughs," said an
anonymous male freshman, "but it m
·
ade
me realize
I
have to
be
more serious and
more careful."
Melinda Gant said the seminar made her
· thirik about the fact that it. may riot be your
friend in trouble; it could be you.
·
Dean of Students Gerald Cox said that
Marist students needed an open forum for
ideas, and a
·
full spectrum should be
· presented to the students. He suggested
that aside from planned parenthood com-
ing to speak, we would also invite alternate
groups such as Birthright.
. Henkle said the discussion was excellent
and .that she would like to. come back
again. She said she could tell both by words
and by body language that she was getting
through to the students.
The Social Work Association has in the
past sponsored such lectures on battered
women, the psychological effects of crime,
and Viet Nam Vets. They also publish a
newsletter.
·
·
"The purpose of this association is to
promote social work knowledge, values
and skills among the members of the
Marist Community and the surrounding
areas," says Tobin.
Social .Work Views will soon be publish-
ed, which will include such information as
hotlines for suicide, mental health hospital
locations, human services and more.
The social work department at Marist is
awaiting its accreditation by the Middle
States Association in October.
The Siinon Boltvar chorus from Caracas, Venezuela, will perform at
7:30
p.m. Saturday
in
the Marist College theater. The chorus will be joining
the
Marist College Singers as
part
of the Choruses of the World festival. Marist
_
stu
·
dents will be admitted free.
~
•It
was getting very difficult an~
dangerous for Marist to use the
.
area for
special events such as alumni receptions
an::::;:1::c::·;~:::e::es::;egewanted
Marist junior to
·
receive marketing award
the parking lot to be an asset to both col-
lege students and towns people. The
by Patti Walsh
original purpose of the parking lot was for
Marist junior Tom Welsh has
.
been nam-
the possible expansion of the Pougnkeepsie ed one
.
of 12 students nationwide to receive
waterworks, which owns the land
,
the Miller Marketing President's Award
'
.
'We don't wantthe iot to
h~
a d~nger to
for campus representatives.
·people, but would rather see it as a park-
Welsh, from Monroe, N.Y
.,
will
·
go to
like area," Waters said .. He also said that
·
Milwaukee
•
th is Saturday to accept the
while cars can
.
rio longer drive d
_
own to the
.
$
lOOO
award.
river, there is a parking lot next to the
:
,·
The 12 regional winners are chosen from
waterworks building, which may be used.
a field of
500
campus representatives of the
Miller Brewing Co. across
.
the nation.
Winners are chosen each semester, and the
award is
.
based on
a
point system .
.
According to Welsh, his job is to be the
"eyes and ears" of the Miller Brewing Co.
on the Marist campus. Welsh
.
said the
award was based on sales of kegs, Miller
promotions and campus sales over the last
semester
.
According to Rob Ryan, the college
coordinator of Miller activities at River
Distributing Co., the job of a Miller
campus representative is to put marketing
principles into practice. Ryan also said that
man
'
y campus representatives are hired by
Miller
after graduation.
Welsh, a business/marketing major, is
now in his third semester of representing
the Miller Brewing Co. on campus.
Welsh said that he tries to promote the
Miller philosophy that students can drink
responsibly and have a good time.
Friday:
Saturday:
Sunday:
Monday:
Tuesday:
Wednesday:
Thursday:
On Campus:
.
Vivian Cord Anti•
queShow, Mccann
The Chance:
Marshall Crenshaw
On Campus:
Vivian Cord Anti-
que Show, McCann
Football
vs.
St.
.
John's•
1:30
p.m.
Soccer vs. Fairfield
-11 a.m.
Choral concert
7:30p.m.
TheCh1mce:
Warren Zevon
Mid-Hudson
Civic
Center
:
·
"The War
of
the
Worlds" and "When
Worlds
.
Colllde"
11
a.m.-S1.50
On Campus:
Vivian Cord Anti-
que Show, McCann
The Chance:
Blotto
The Chance:
Monday
Night
Football • Bengals vs.
Browns
The Chance:
New Beat Music
Dance Party - Live D.J.
The Bardavon:
Swedish
.
film
-
".Elvira Madigan"
8:00
p.m.
The Chance:
T.B.A.
On Campus:
CUB Golf Tourna-
ment
Film - "I Never
Promised You
A
Rose
Garden"
Coffee House• Stu-
dent Talent
The Chance:
Jonathan Richman
and the Modem Lovers
The
Bardavon:
Chamber
Music
Appreciation Seminar: -
7p.m.
.
I
--•Page 4 · THE CIRCLE· Septe,nber ~3, 1982
Student from Indllndfinds.
Marist friendly and 'sweet'
:
THE HAIR
·
SHACK
·--
-
_
by
Andrea Holland
Marist College will not only be saying
goodbye to students travelling abroad this
year, but will also be welcoming an abroad
student from Ireland.
·
The Institute runs on a three term, .or
trimester session each term lasting eleven
weeks, he said.
Unlike courses at Marist, the Institute
structures its
·
courses on a lecture and
tutorial basis. Tutorials
.-
are lab ex-
John Hough, from
·
Limerick, holds an
periences, guest lecturers and review ses
0
associate degree in marketing from the Na-
sions; "Tutorials are used to expand on lec-
ti?nal. I nstitut_e for Higher Education in
·
tilre notes and homework," he said.
Limerick. He 1s here for only
.
one semester
·
.
,
to earn credits towards his bachelor's
. ·
• .
G,regory House has been Ho~gh s ho~e
degree also in Marketing.
·
·
:
-
·._
·
'
for
"the
past two weeks. He said that his
'
.
.
.
most interesting experience has been
He will fini~h at the Ins.titute in_ April,
meeting so many ·rriendly people. "They
after compleung a thesis
.
relating to
have been so friendly," he said, "they all
marketing.
"If
anyone has any bright ideas
want to come back
to
Ireland with me."
for a topic," he said, "please come for-
ward.''
According to Hough, courses are more
intense rn Ireland because of the amount of
time spent weekly in each. Classes are one
hour in length and meet for a total of four
"contact" or class hours per week.
I .
located at
49 Academy Street
Ample Customer Parking
Ope11 Daily 10-6
No Appointment Necessary
454-9984.
IS
nowopenfor
Monday
•
/I
.
.
/} , .
.
f
-/-hru h-'id/
I
/I.
---
~ /
1 - f d ~ P ~
11-u
·
~
{1&_,
~
/~~~~
-------------------------------------September 23,
1982 · THE CIRCLE· Page
5, _ _
Around the world
by Eileen Hayes
This week, the world mourrteci the death
· of Princess Grace of Monaco. Grace Kelly,
the former· movie queen, · died in an
automobile accident on Tuesday.
It
is believed that Grace suffered a stroke
while driving and her car ran off trhe road
down a 120-foot ravine.
.
Princess Stephanie, the daughter of
Princess Grace and Prince Rainier, ·was.
· also in the car. She was hospitalized with a
: hairline spinal fracture. She was not able to
attend her mother's funeral on Saturday.
This week the world was the .scene for
violence and . turmoil. In Lebanon, this
week, President-elect Bashir Gemayel, and
25 of his followers were killed when ap-
proximately 440 pounds of explosives were
blasted in their Christian Phalangist party
· headquarters in .east Beirut.
It
is presumed that leftist Moslem forces
who never · accepted his election were to
· blame.
Following the assassination, Israel sent
· its troops into west Beirut. This ended the
cease fire agreement which led to the
Palestine Liberation Organization's
evacuation.
The skirmish left 38 dead, with the
Israeli army imposing its rule.
Prime Minister Menachem Begin and
Lieut. Gen. Rafael Eitan, and Israeli Chief
of Staff gave no indication of withdrawal.
In other violem;e, Sadegh Ghotbzadeh, a
defender and former leader of the Iranian
Revolution, was executed by a firing
squad. He was convicted of attempting to
overthrow the Government and kill the
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.
Closer to _home, the Reagan Ad-
ministration ·· and Congress have bee~
battling spe_nding cuts. The Administration
refused to cooperate cin making defense
spending cuts that were agreed to in June.
In other issues, the HoUS\: and Senate
ap.propriation panels. struggled to reduce
. the $210 billion budget for the military by
$8.7 billion. President Reagan still wants
the full amount for military spending in
1983.
It appears inevitable that not one of the
13 spending bills· for the fiscal year which
begins in two weeks, will pass in time. This
means that an omnibus bill, which will
continue spending at the current rate, will
temporarily get Congress out of their jam. "
It seems that the combat will continue
until· Congress adjourns to electioneer on
Oct. 8.
On the lighter side of the news:
While most. people d,ream of having a
million dollars; a thief in Chicago has only
three weeks. to successfully. achieve his
· dream.
On Oct. 11, 1977, the First National
Bank of Chicago was robbed of a precise
$1 million, with no sign of a forcible entry.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation has
had only one suspect. The suspect was the
only employee of the bank who refused to
take a lie detector test. He was under
surveillance but gave no leads.
The case is still unsolved, and the statute
of limitations ori prosecution ·for· ·the
original crime expires in a few weeks. At
this time an arrest is not probable.
If
the thief is caught after the deadline,
the most he can be prosecuted for is tax
evasion and interstate transport of the
stolen money.
That's getting away with a million
dollars!
For Tony Cernera,
caring is- essen
·
tial
t>y
Grazia E. LoPiccolo
educational publications including •
1
)\'hen
l
was.Hungry,"
'.'A
Hungry_World" and
"Hunger ·and Global Security.'' He said
Miller times
:n:iT~
Life
''Must
be·
a
T1'9eShn,an.''
/
t
\981 Beer Brewed by Miller Brewing Co
M1lwau1<.ee
Wis
A~thony Ce;nera's life chariged the day
he · brought a portable heater to an old
woman.
that his motivation for writing on world . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
hunger is to educate people and show them
It was his first visit to a parish in
Harlem. He was 16-years
0
old. While he
was there, a woman called the parish
asking for a heater to keep herself and her
grandchildren from freezing. He brought it
to her: The woman told him that she and
her daughter took turns at· night fighting
off the rats. Back at the parish he witnessed
the baptism of a 16-year-old girl and heard
the Bible reading: "When I was hungry you
gave me to eat arid when I was thirsty you
gave me to drink."
Cernera, now executive assistant to
College President Dennis Murray, said the
events that. took place 15 years ago
prompted him later to get involved in the
problem of world hunger. '_'That day
something inside of me was triggered off
that said: 'This is something that ought not
be and that I would like to do something
about' and somehow it was related to
God," said Cernera.
"I consider myself an incredibly wealthy
person and not because of having a lot of
money, but because of the experi~nces that
. I have had in trying to do somethmg about
·world hunger," said the 32-year-old
Cernera.
Cernera, who describes himself as a
simple, ordinary I~alian _guy fron:i . t_he
Bronx said he sees 1t as his respons1b1hty
to
get' involved because he has. been give_n
so much in his lifetime, especially by his
parents. "My parents have loved me
unconditionally; I know in my ~uts that I
am a good person and that · I am worth
something. I feel good that is a direct result
of them," he said. "I feel so overwhelmed
with how much I have gotten that I want to
share it in the little ways that I can."
Cernera's involvement with the problem
of world hunger began while he was in
college.
At Fordham University, where Cernera
received a Bachelor of Arts in ~istor_y _and
Theology and a Master of Arts m Rehg1o~s
Education, he and a few friends began a
soup kitchen that fed abou! 100 men. T~e
soup kitchen lasted for five years, said
Cernera.
Cernera has also written several
how to· respond. "People can make a
difference, but most people feel powerless
in the face of world hunger, and when you
feel powerless about things you usually
don't respond," he said.
Prior to coming to Marist, Cernera was
executive director for Bread for the World
Educational Fund, · an organization with
40,000 members that tries to educate
people on the problem of world hunger.
Now that the organization has moved its
headquarter to Washington D.C., Cernera
is
associate
coordinator
for
the
organization in the New York area on a
volunteer basis.
· ·
Cernera came,to Marist in December of
1981. He said, although he likes and enjoys
his job he is not rule_d by iC "Five years ago
I decided that the most important thing was
to live a full human life and not to be
defined by one's job. Tony Cernera is not
defined by the fact that he is executive
assistant to the President of Marist
College," he said.
Cernera said that people who define
themselves by their work or their success
feel good only when they are successful and
have material goods. He said the goal is to
feel good because you are you. "For a
person that doesn't feel good about
himself, all the wealth, success and power
in the world doesn't do him any good at
all."
Cernera, upon graduation from college,
taught religious studies and was chairman
of the same department at Aquinas High
School in the Bronx. Cernera said he has
looked forward to this semester because he
is teaching Introduction to Philosophy in
the core program. "I am a teacher at
heart," said Cernera.
Cernera also teaches adult education
courses on various books of the Bible in
local church programs. In the Spring of
1982 he conducted the Lenten series at
Marist.
Cernera, together with his wife and
newly-born
son,
has
moved
to
Poughkeepsie from the Bronx. He said that
on the weekends he loves to cook a good
Italian dinner. "My eggplant parmigiana is
not to be equaled anywhere," he said.
Ouali'+ySotdwic/2
,lv/eals
af
mos/:
Reascnab/e
Prices
ez>
SALADS
~
.SOF"t
DRINKS
!CE- C.ReAM
Op:nNgh-lly
7:3.Epm-
j:O!-
om.
--•Page 6 · THE CIRCLE· September 23;
1982·-----------;-.;:-.;:-.;:-.;:~-.;-.;-.;-.;-.;~~~~~~-.;-.;-.;-.;-.;~--•-••-----:_~~~~=--:.:.:.:_:_:.:_:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:,:
Marist filling classrooms ,
.
.
.
·Council of:·
student
Leaders
:
·
.
.
around· the glob-e·
by
Richelle Thomas
This year, 19 students, with majors rang- ·
ing from business to_ communications to
Office Hours ·
Fall
1·.ga2:
The bar was crowded as black tobacco
fashion design, will be traveling to Ireland,
smoke and Spanish conversation filled the
Spain, England, Italy and Paris.
air. Veronica Shea sat at the bar with her
"The program has also broken into a
Spanish "mother," the woman who, along
new territory _
Iceland,"
Lanning
with her family, opened her heart and.
declares. "We will have someone studying
home to the Marist student.
there at the University of Reykjavik. We
The woman placed an order. but refused
established · new links with two more
to tell Shea what the order was. The
universities and have regained contacts
bartender, who also served as cook, put
with another after an eight-year absence,"
something on the grill to fry. Within five
he says.
·
minutes, the bartender slid the plate in
Lanning mentioned the possibility of
front of them, piled them high with strange students traveling to nearby areas to reduce
objects coiled around sticks six inches in
expenses. Mexico, Canada,. Puerto Rico
length.
and Latin America are good prospects
if
"She kept urging me to taste the food in
there is student interest, he says.
front of me," Shea recalls, "but I wanted
To prepare students for their year
to know what it was first. Pig's tail?,''·
i"
··abroad, orientation sessions on cultural ad-
asked.
justment, . financial planning, academic
"No," Shea's Spanish mother answered.
programming and travel tips are con-
Joan "Schatzie"
Gasparovic
CSL President
Dave Skrodanes
CSL Vice-President
Dawn Oliver
SAC President
James Galvin
IHC President
Bernadette Cosner
CUB President
M
10-2
10-12
11-1
T
w
Th
F
3:30-4
6:30-9
10-2
10-12
10-12
2-5
9-10
12-2 ·
9-10
11-1
11-1
10-12
"Try it."
ducted.
"Seeing_that I wasn't going to be able to
"I recommend it for anyone, not just
George Fleming
NTSO President
2-4:30
10-11
2-3:30
10-11
5:30-6:30
avoid the situation, I took a stick and
language majors," says Amy Ruggiero
bravely sunk my teeth into it. The taste was
who went to France last year. "I feel like
something like pork, but very powerful.
I've rriade the most of my college educa-
G_reg Luna
2: 15-4 12:45-2
12-3
.12:45-2
'What is it'?" I insisted.
tion," she says.
" 'Pig's intestine'," came the reply.
If you have been thinking about going
'Ugh'!"
abroad, Lanning offers some advice.
This . is just a small example of. the
"Consider .the idea only
if
you conceive
cultural differences a person is exposed to
yourself to be responsible, mature and in-
in another country, according io Shea, who
terested in new and different educational,
spent a year in Spain on the Marist Abroad
social and cultural experiences. Be sure to
Program.
give it serious thought,'' he says.
The Marist Abroad Program is open to
Monica Finnigan spent last year in
CU President
Kathy Shea
Financial Board Chairperson
Grace Teyada
9-11
CSL Secretary
2-6
1-3
1-2
3-5
9-12
9-12
11-1
3-5
students of all majors who want to study in
Ireland.
"It
was a very worthwhile ex-.
a foreign country. Generally, a 3.0 grade
perience," she says.
"It
was one of the best
point average is required, but according to
years of my life."
CSL - Council of' Student Leaders (Student Government)
SAC - Student Academic Committee
fHG - fnterHouse Council
CUB - CoUege Union Board
Dr. Jeptha Lanning,. the director, par-
The Marist Abroad Program
will
be con-
ticipation in. clubs' or activities can be
ducting information sessions during the
taken into consideration. It is. customary
fall semester for sophomores and during
for students to go abroad in their junior
the spring
.
semester for freshmen, accor-
year, Lanning .says, although sophomores
ding to Lanning. Applications. will be ac-
and seniors have gone.
cepted for reviewing next month,
. . . ·
NTSO - Non-Traditional Student Organization
CU - Commuter Union
In the past, students have attended
Interested students can contact Dr. Lan-
CSL Office - Campus Center Rm. 268
universities in countries such as England,
ning, 213 Fontaine; Program Assistant
Ire/and,
Italy,
Kenya, Ghana, Scotland and
Cicely Perrotte,
.
230 Donnelly; or::Betty ..
,
• -
:r-C~LJ:xt. ". 2C:»6.
CUB Ext._ - 203
Japan. ·
Cox, the secretary, 223 Donnelly.
J_;, •
;
Tuesday
Ladies Night
Ladies Drink
FREE.
Thursday
_
Night
COLLEGE
·
NIGHT
Free Admission with College ID.
FREE DRINKS 9-10:30
Friday and Saturday Free AdmiP Aon before 10 p.m. with Valid Col~ege
1.D.
Dress Code
33 Academy Street
Sunday Night Party Night
Free Drinks for All
8 •10
p.m.
Live Entertainment
6 Nites
.a Week
Free Parking
Poughkeepsie
Wednesday
Nickel Night
Every Other
Drink
5c
All Night
Proper I.D.
471-1133
---------------------------------September 23,
1982 • THE CIRCLE -
Page
1--
Music
··
expert traces.
'
.
.
.
'
.
.
.
.
.
.
career of t
-
he Beatles.
by
Meg Adamski
Burnsworth.
·
Early rock 'n' roll influenced the Beatles,
"They were the first popular rock 'n' according to Burnsworth. As the decade
roll band
•
-
to write their own material,
to rolled on, their music changed. Their music
address a rarige of serious subjects and to
became more sophisticated and in February
embrace influences from Dylan poetry to of 1964, it moved in a new direction with
Indian classical music," said Dr. Charles the movie "Help." The group began to
Burnsworth, professor of music at
·
State
·
experiment with their style at that time.
University of New York in Oneonta last The speaker discussed the technical aspects
week during his lecture about the "best of the changes and improvments in the
loved rock group the world has ever
-
Beatles' music, The music became in-
known," the Beatles, as Burnsworthe put creasingly complex.
it.
..
.
_
The song "Yesterday" was a first for the
Burnsworth traced the beginnings of the
Beatles.
"It
was their first solo recorded by
.
Beatles to John Lennon's pub band,
-
the a Beatie.
It was their first
to feature
Quarrymen.
Paul McCartney joined musicians who were not Beatles themselves
Lennon and the Quarrymen were reduced
and because
_
George Martin {their
to the duo, the Wurt Twins. With addition
producer) used orchestration on the
of George Harrison, the twosome evolved
record," said Burnsworth. Also it was the
:
into Johnny and the Moondogs. In 1959,
first song that was not able to be
·
bass player, Stew Sutcliff, joined the group
reproduced in concert.
a11d the
_
name
:was
changed to the S
,
ilver
The_ sounds of the group became more
Beatles. Drummer Pete Best joined within
novel, noted Burnsworth several times
a year. •
·
•It
was with this lineup that they
throughout the speech. George Harrison
began to pay their dues, and
_
learn their
began experimenting with an Indian in-
craft,'' said Burnsworth.
strument, the sitar, in songs like "Nor-
"Just
prior to the first recording
0 Love
wegian Wood," and the album "Sergeant
Me Do;''
a:
couple of personnel
·
changes
Pepper's Lonely.H_earts Club Band."
had beeit made within
.
the group. Sutcliff
"The lyrics of their
songs
from 1965
left in order to go back
to
art school and a
onward had become complex and abstract.
new
_
drummer, who had occasionally
.
The greatest value of these later Beatles'
subbed in the group since as early as 1960,
lyrics is that they can mean different things
replaced Pete Best. His name was Richard
to different
·
people," said Burnsworth.
Starky, better known as Ringo "Starr,"
Some examples are "A Day In The Life,"
Burnsworth said.
"Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds," and
_
"Early rock was rebellious music. No
"Eleanor Rigby."
_
·
other group produced the excitement both
Burnsworth explained that "Let It Be"
physically and musically which symbolized
was the last album the Beatles released.
that rebellion as much as did the Beatles,"
This album
·
was unique because
·
it was
said Burnsworth. The Beatles captured the
released after the break-up of the group.
·
·
spirit of youth in the
'
60's and
'?O's.
Actually, "Let It Be" was recorded before
Burnsworth explained the influence the
"Abbey Road," said
.
Burnsworth. "Abbey
Beatles had over the young people of the
Road" was the Beatles last all:mm to
time and he noted that the Beatles' music
recorded. "Let It Be" was recorded with
reflected the social unrest. in the late 1960's
only one take; which is unusual.
and early I 970's. The album "Revolution"
the song "The Long and Winding Road"
.
reflected the problems on the' nation's
..
w_as the Beatle
_
s
.
last song. released~- Burn-
college campuses as well as society's unrest
·
.
.
swcirth implied "thatJorthe Beatles/ii really
with the Vietnam War; according
_
to· was a 'Long and Winding Road:'
PIZZA.JlIA..>
-
Del,
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A State University of New York professor discussed the rise of the Beatles
iri
·
a lectiire
·
last weekat Marist.
Smyle is- new veterans
-
counselor
by
Andrea Holland
Mari st College senior Alex Smyle
.
has
filled
the
position of veterans counselor
vacated by Russ Hesselton.
Smyle worked as a co-counselor
_
with
Hesselton last year
.
and is presently
working with Eileen Shaw,
.
veterans
coordinator.
According
to
Smyle, veterans, their
spouses and children of deceased veterans
are all eligible to receive benefits. He works
directly with the Veterans Admini
s
tration
making sure any problems are solved and
benefits
are
received, he said.
"There are only 16 graduate and 33
undergraduate students who receive
benefits at Marist," he said, "but they all
must be taken care of.''
Students must be registered under the
continuing education or undergraduate
program to receive benefits, he
said.
A veteran himself, Srriyle said that the
benefits help students
to
continue their
education. "If it weren't for my benefits, I
wouldn't be able to finish," he said.
Smyle has been a student at Marist for
the past three years
.
He will graduate in
December with a -Bachelor of Arts in
Communication Arts
.
Recently, the Non-
Traditional Student Organization
awarded
Smyle its schlarship. "l filled out the
application, and I got it,
'.'
he said.
Smyle said he enjoys his new position
because it's quiet and the Veterans ad-
ministration runs on a good measure of
efficiency.
_
"Rarely any major problems
arise, and I get
to
meet a lot of people."
·
ROTC -
continued from page I
the
-
first week in October with represen
-
tatives from R.O.T.C. as well as faculty
members opposed to the program to pre-
sent both sides of the issue.
·
Gasparovic said she thinks the R.O.T.C.
program would be worthwhile because it
would afford the student a choice and add
financial aid. "To shut the door would
make a decision for all the students," said
Gasparovic. "If we don't want it after a
year of two, we can get rid of it.
·
"Our main goal right now," said
Gasparovic," is to get
·the
students aware
of program itself and the possible implica-
tions it could have on campus."
Dean of Students James Daly said that
students have applied to Marist and then
decided not to come because there was no
R.O.T.C. program.
"We
don't need
R
.
O.T.C. to maintain a
sizable
class,
"
said
Daly. "However,
it
does offer students
another option."
Siegel said he came to Marist in response
to students involved in the program.
"Students at Marist are motivated and
responsive," said siege!. "I feel comfor-
table here at Marist with the students, the
faculty and the administration." Siegel
said he didn't feel comfortable at State
University College at New Paltz, where the
program was recently rejected.
The board of trustees will vote on the
issue at its November meeting.
Circle
meeting
_
Sunday -
7:00 p.m.
Rm. CC168
:~
\
'
•
((
·.
•t .
.
\
~
b
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'
+\.
"
·
•
.·
'
·
.
,,,,
·.
•
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.,
.
·
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-
.
Page 8 · THE CIRCLE· September 23, 1982
British student· gets
close
look at media -
by Carol Lane
.
nationalities there are in New York, New
A Communication Arts student -from
Jersey and even in Poughkeepsie from
England traveling
·
to
Philadelphia for an
what I've seen." "I think that is one of the
internship, spent
·
· last week at Marist
reasons why you have such a variety of
College
studying
the
·
media
in shopsandfoodstochoosefrom,"shesaid.
Poughkeepsie.
·
Alihough structu"red
.
differently . in
"The stopover in Poughkeepsie is sort of England and America the feelings toward
a
personal
enrichment,"
Audrey
the media are still the same she said.
Honeyman, a third-year student at Trinity
"People have a universal attitude towards
and All Saint's College in England, said.
the media. People have a sort offeeling of
Honeyman's week consisted of a day aura about the media. They want to be
spent touring Marist's campus visiting such
involved with it."
.
places as the Audio Visual Center. Visits to
Honeyman had not visited
•
America
.
Poughkeepsie's WEOK and WPDH radiq
previously. "This is my first experience of
stations. And a day spent in
.
The Culinary
being abroad," she said.
"I
was rathe,:
·
Institute of America's Learning
·
Resource
disappointed in New York when we landed
·
Center where she visited their video sec-
at John
F.
Kennedy airport. The city
tion,
sound
recording
studio,· and
looked very industrial and worn out.".
photography and graphics department.
Honeyman is in her third year of
.
a
Honeyman, visiting America for eight
.
bachelor of arts degree.
It
is a combined
weeks, will spend her last six weeks at
-
TV
degree of Communication Arts in media
station KYW in Philadelphia where she will
with Public Media degree. Each year, of
be workin2 in either the TV promotion
the three year bachelor's degree, the
department or in ad\'ertising sales.
students go out and do an "attachment" or
Honevman learned of Marist College
an internship.
·
·
. .
,
throu2h· Ma;ist Coll~e student Tom
Honeyman spent four weeks at The
Hassett. H::ssen spent last year at Trinity
Financial Times in London her first year.
and All Saim"s Collefe. Thrnugh Hassett,
She then went on to work for six weeks at a
she met
Di;e.:ior of
~farist .-\broad
Yorkshire video production company
Pree.ram
Jemha
Lanninc who with Bob
during her second year.
Norman a~d DireClor -
oi
Continuing
· While working on each attachment each
Education Bill Anderson, ananged her
student must keep a day to day diary and
stay
.
"It
was a unique opponunity that I
write a report upon completion o
_
f the
just couldn"t afford
10
miss.·· she said.
attachment.
Honevrnan said she wanted
to
see how
The size of each.class at Trinity College
the media in the states were organized. She are kept small "We only take in a limited
said there is more organization in the states
number of people in each major," she said,
:
·
because it is bigger. She also said there were
"so they
-
are catered to personally."
.
more independent radio and television
The housing facilities at Trinity College
stations in the United States.
are handled differently than those at Marist
She said the people differed in England · she said. First-year-students reside on
and America. "There is definitely a great
campus. Second-year-students have the
.
cultural difference," she said, "The people . option of living on campus or at off
here seem to be more relaxed, less formal
campus housing arranged by the school.
and friendlier. I get the impression that the Third-year-students do not have the option
s
tudents are more socially oriented here: of living on campus.
The American way of life is very much
Honeyman said she is undecided, as yet,
geared toward human comfort and en-
..
about what country she
will
live and work,
joyment."
·
ih
upon graduation.
"I
am open to see
.
.
.
· ·
She
said American
life
has
-
more variety
.
where
the
most
suitablejob
,
and people are~
"I'm
impressed
·
with
how
.
many
·
for me.''
·
6 CRANNEt ST. POUGHICEEP$1E, N.Y. 12601
·
PHONE ( 914) 473-19916
-
~~~~
~·~·~
~
-
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Gma!l?C!mmi?Nm%l
'.
.
limAW:tMa:1
·
@IBir;t1
I
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__
-
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DIRECTIONS TO THE CHANCE FROM MARIST: Take Washl
_
ngton St. Into downtown Poughkeepsie. At Fourth Traffic Light (Mansion St., op-
posite City Hall) turn left. Go past two traffic lights. Turn right on Catherine St. Go past one more traffic light and tum left Into the large Myers
Parking Lot on your left. The Chance Is adjacent to that lot and can be seen from the center of It as you face south. Total distance from Marlst
campus Is approximately 2 miles.
.
.
.
.
TOUR GUIDES NEEDED
To show prospective students
, and
-
their families the Marist
·
·
ca
·
mpus
_
.Tours will leave daily
at:
.
.
.
10:00
12:00
2:00
4:00
-
-
1f you'd like
.
to help out,
,
please
call Sue Grunenwald
_
in the Ad-
missions Of.fice
at ext. 227.
•
-
•
.
•
•
.
•
~
;.
c
>·.-- ..._
~
,'
•
...-.
••
"•
,
.,•
'
•
.
,
.
•
.
.
. I
:
:i-
.
\:.
:
(
~
_--
~
f
:\._:.;~;.:~
--.
:
-
-:
:t
·
..
·
•
.
.
··~-
~
:".~-
-
i
-,.
-
..
,
.
-?
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t-:-:-~
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·
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-
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~·
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:r
:"
:--
eptember 23, 1982 ·
THE CIRCLE·
Page 9 •·
- •
An excellent haircuttery.
Now featuring CELLOPHANES, the new non-
peroxide haircolor/conditioning system with
unlimited colorchoices and excellent sheen.
~AIRCUTTfRS
$2.00 Off
With Morist 1.0.
Serving
Marist College
_
Since 1975
3 Liberty St., Main Mall, Poughkeepsie
454-9239
-;
;•.
·.
.
By Appointment Only
ufhe
Ultimate
Night
Club"
,.
.
Thursday -
September 23
Friday -
October 1
Sticky Fingers
Route9
Equinox
·
·
.
·
with
.
a tri_bute to Black Sabbath
Friday -
September 24
"Rolling Stones Show"
Franke and the Knockouts
-
plus Balan~e
Saturday -
September 25
Dave Edmunds
of Rockpile Fame
Wednesday -
September 29
The Slam
New Wave Dance
Thursday -
September 30
N.Y.
Flyers
Hard Driving Dance Rock
-
Saturday -
October 2
Starfire
Saturday -
October 6
.The Hurt
"New Wave Dance Rock"
Thursday -
October
7
Steeplechase
The Best of Rock and Roll"
·
*Every Wednesday and Thursday
OPEN BAR
from
9-10
Hyde
Park Plaza
229-9413
Hyde
Park
•
.
t
--•Page
10 •
THE CIRCLE· September
23,
1982
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Colagrossi',s teturn
boosts wonieil' s tenrtis
·
by
William Flood
moves well," stated Ccilagr~ssi.
'.'If
we can
better her serve she will be tough to beat."
There is a secret at Marist College that
.
· _
Four of the next five positions are filled
everyone should be let in on. Marist Col-
with freshmen. Denise Bagarose, Josi
.
e
lege has a talented women's tennis team.
Trapani,
·
Michele Pisano, and Christine
.
Starting fresh with their new h
·
ead coach, O'Dwyer are 3, 4,
5
and 7
_
respectively.
Nancy Colagrossi, the Foxes have already
·
"The key to the team's success is whether
shown potential for
a
promising season.
the freshmen girls can respond under the
Colagrossi, a
I 9
.
82 graduate from Marist,
pressure," said
·
colagrossi. "The sooner
was the women's m.imber one singles player they adjust,
·
the sooner winning will
last season.
become a habit."
.
.
The number six player is sophomore,
A young team
wi
th three sophomores Chris Carey. As the other veteran on the
and four freshmen, their st rengths will im-
team, she will be used strickly in doubles
prove over the next two or three ye~rs
~
·
·
.
.
.
.
·
· .
play,
·
according to Colagrossi. ''.Chris
The Foxes
.
number one
.
play
'
er
·
is
.
knows and enjoys doubles." Her partner is
sophomore Cindy
·
Krueger.
·
Krueger did
·
Baragose, and they
will
fill the number two
not play last year but is a real surprise
:
this double slot.
·
year. "Cindy will win alot of matches this
·
·
Connie Roher, a senior, named captain
year,''
.
said Coach
·
Colagrossi. "She's
·
by Colagrossi, will see both singles and
smart and has powerful s
.
trokes," she
_
said.
:
doublt:s actio!\ this year. "Connie is a good
Krueger is also on the
.
number one doubles
:
leader
:
and
.
has a great attitude for this
team, where she teams up with Kathy
·
·
squad,?' Colagrossi said. "Plus she loves
Mulligan.
.
the game.';
Mulligan is the number tw9 player for
Colagrossi said
:
there are two words to
·
Marist. "She's a great baseline player and describe her squad, "young and talented."
M
arist_ alum comes
-
striding
.
home
by Bill Tra,·ers
Mike l'vlorris, from the Marist Class of
1981, will be coming back east this
weekend
10
participate in the National 40
Kilometer Championship
·
which will be
held Sunday in Long Branch,
NJ.
.
·
Morris is a member of the U.S. Olympic
Racewalking Team and
c
urrently trains at
the U
.
S.O.C. Training Center in Colorado
Springs, Colo. His 1982 accomplishments
include being National SK champion,
All-
American at 20K and 50K and is a member
of the New York Athletic Club 20K and
50K National Championship Teams.
In addition, Morris has received the
ESPN Unsung
-
Athlete Award,
.
has com-
peted for the U.S.A
.
in West Germany
against Norway, Sweden, Great Britain
and West Germany, placed fourth in 20K
:.race at the National Sports Festival and
,
.
..
~vas nominated for "Fa
_
ces
-
in the.
,
Crowd"
111
Sports Illustrated.
·
Morris is now sponsored· by Kangaroo
Shoes wl1ich pays for
.iH
.
travel expenses,
footwear, travel bags and
.
sweat suits. This
summer he
will
be going
'
.
'
to camps on
Kangaroo's
All
Star Team~
..
.
Morris has improved his time in the 20K
by over four minutes in less than one year.
His
·
improvement has propelled him from
10th best in the U
.
S. to number four.
A picture of Morris appears in the Oc-
tober, 1982 Naiional Geographic as an
il-
lustration of computer analysis of athletic
performance.
"Mike epitomizes
..
the
·.
American
dream," said
Dick
Quinn,
.
assistant athletic
.
director
.
"he is a hardworking,
.
.
small
-
town
boy
.
from a loving family- that has made
it
·
big:;'
.·
·
-
~
I
.
BELONG
.
TO
THE
··
··.·
11ARIST
•·
MUNCH BUNCH
.
Commuters·
&
Residents:
.
·
Save 101,
·
Check
-·
out coupon
booklet. Good in
-"
·
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
Coffee. Shop
·
,
Deli
·
.
and Dining
Hein
Purchase
-
of
booklets
ltlay
be m,3de in
.
Food Se
·
rvice
.
Off ice
:
.
·
>
:
,· ..
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
'
.
.
-·-
-
.
·.
.
.
'
.
.
.
.
.
.
·-
.
DRINKS-FOOD-MUSIC 11 :00
..
a.m.-4:00 a.m.
-
·
SANDWICHES 11 :00 a
·
.m.-8:
_
30 p.m.
Rte. 9 Poug
_
hkeepsi
,
~
914-473-4725
·
\
·sCiarettatakes
3rd
.
'
-
.
,
.
·.
·
.
·
:
'
.
ir! wh'eeldlfair gq,nes
.
by
Theres~
Sulliv~
'
n
'
'
Yri~'re allowed. three lifts. You should
·
·
-
.: .
•
.
·
·-
know how far you can push yourself."
·
-_
.
Frank Sciaietta .ttaveled a little this sums
·
·
.
:
:
Evidently, hf knew
.
After seven days of
·
inei-.
-
The Marist College
·
sophomore spent waiting
,
Sciaretta lifted 352
.
S pounds, 17
·
·
a few day
s
in Minnesota and a week in pounds more than he lifted in the Nationals
.
-
,
Halifax, Nova Scotia, where he placed two months earlier. The man who won the
. :
third in the weightlifting competition of the
·
0.S
;
Nationals placed second in the Pan
:
7th Annual
·
Pan American Wheelchair American Wheelchai
r
Games, lifting 363
· ,:
Games.
pounds. A man from Mexico lifted 418
Eighteen countries competed in athletic pounds, qualifying him for first.
events such as track and field, swimming,
According to Sciaretta, some of the
basketball, rifling and weightlifting
.
The
.
other countries had a disadvantage because
United St~ies pla~ed fir~t, bringing
_
home
··
their wheelchairs were technologically in-
-
100 medals . mo_re_- than
.
second place
·
ferior. "They were competing in chairs that
-
Canada. Mexico f1mshed third.
·
the Canadians and Americans hadn't com-
.
This was Sciaretta's first Pan American. peted in in 10 years
.
Their chairs were
competition
;
"Usually you
.
expect to bomb pitiful,"
.
·
he
·
said. "America has the best
ciut," he said. "It was fantastic -
:
cloud technology in chairs. It makes me glad I
nine! It's a good feeling beating out other live here."
_
countries.''
In spi~e of the fact that the United States
·
In order to qualify for the Qames,
.
entered the Games with an advantage, the
Sciaretta competed in the Nationals
,
held Oames were not televised in America, as
·
June 23
~
27 in Marshall, Minn., where he they were in Canada. Sciaretta said he
-
came in second. This qualified him for the hopes the Wide World of Sports will cover
seven-man United States team.
the Games within 10 years.
·
This summer, Sciaretta trained three
Easter Seals, Wheelchair Sports Fund
•
;
·
•
-
·
>
•
_<·
-
·
··
•
·
_
-
---.
~
,,,
.,
-
.
-
~
-~~-~
'It
. •
7
.
·
-;
,
_
times weekly. "My coach planned out the and the East Meadow, Long Island,
.
whole
,
thing on paper ahead of time .
.
Fire Department backed Sciaretta.
Frank Sciaretta, who placed third in the Pan American wheelchair games .
Cross couf!,try team 3rd at Wagner Invitational
out by running together most of the way,
•
day. The team had seemingly taken its first
according to Mayerhofer. Sophomore Jim step toward gaining experience, but head
. Led by
·
the strong running of sophomore
Hegarty, 28th, and freshman Pete Pazik,
coach Bob Mayerhofer said he still did not
d
20th, were the other Marist scorers.
know what to expect from his squad as they
by
Ken Bohan
John Lovejoy, _the Marist harriers place
prepared for the start.
third in a field of 11 teams Saturday at the
At the three-mile mark it appeared that
"Fairfield was basically a dual meet
Wagner College Invitational in Staten
Lovejoy, running in fifth place only IS yds.
between us and New Haven," Mayerhofer
Island. LoveJ
·
oy finished seventh, covering
behind the leaders, might win the race. "I
said. ''This was a bigger race with much
the 5.2 mile distance in 27
:
20.
thought I had a good shot but I let them get
better competition.,, He pointed out that
Siena College won the meet with a low
too far away," Lovejoy said
.
"Then th0se
he noticed a lot of new faces on other
score of 37. Fordham University placed se-
two guys (Fordham's and Siena's top men)
squads meaning that other teams, like
cond w
i
th 47 poin
t
s
·
and Marist was next
·
really took off
.
" Lovejoy finished 25
Marist, had rebuilt their squads with new
with 78.
seconds behind the winner
.
people and lost key people to graduation.
·
Seniors Brian Hanley and
.
Mike
The team's first race was already behind
With these factors all present, Mayerhofer
McGuire, who finished 12th and 13th
them going into the Wagner meet, having
said, just prior to the race, "I just didn't
respectively, ran well and helped each other
.
competed at Fairfield the previous Satur-
·
know what to expect.''
Mayerhofer said that the team had really
worked hard all week in practice and was a
little tired going into the meet. McGuire,
agreeing, said, "My legs felt really dead on
the hills today."
"It'll be nice to see Siena and Fordham
again in three weeks," Mayerhofer said. "I
think we'll be much more competitive
then
.
"
The Marist harriers are competing at
Notre Dame tomorrow in the Catholic
University Championships
.
Last year the
team placed ninth in a strong field. "l
think we can run as well, if not better, than
we did last year," Lovejoy said.
CAPUTO'S
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Out
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Delivery s
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tarts
at
5
p.m.
Delivery FREE
.
with Purchase
of
·
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-
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-
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.
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ONE FREE TOPPING
I
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caputo's -
across the
'
st/ee
'
t from Mari~t
~
· I
·•·--•
.......
-
-
..
--•Page 12 -
THE CIRCLE·
September 23, 1982 _
. . .
. .
_
.
.
.
.. _
.
.
. . .
.
.
.
.
· Mari
st
downs
St.
Peter's
in
conf
erert~e
opene~_
by John Petacchi
- The Marist Red Fox football .team got its
season off on the right foot this past Satur-
day with a 20-15 victory over St. Peter's _in
front of a season-opening crowd of 914 at
Leonidoff field.
·
'
The Foxes will put their 1~0 record on the
line this Saturday when they take on the
· :Redmen of St. John's at· 2:30 p.m. at-
Leonidoff -in another Metropolitan Con-
ference clash.
·
·
Marist ran up 335 yards in total offense,
more than twice that of St. Peter's. Ron
Dimmie,. last season's leading rusher for
Marist scored· on touchdown runs of one
and three yards while grinding out 115
yards on _the ground .. Quarterback Jim
Cleary scored the o_ther Marist touchdown ..
Red Fox Coach Mike Malet seemed very-
pleased •with his team'sperformo:!nce.
''We
really feared St. Peter's and we-knew they
were a lot better than last year," Malet
said. "Overall, we're ~ery happy, b_ut we're
going to have to play_ a lot better. this Satur~.
day if we want to beat St. John's,'' he said.
Malet cited the fine work of the offensive
line which enabled Clei,try to throw for 102.
yards and scramble for another 60. on the
ground.
.
.
Marist opened the scoring seven minutes
into the first _quarter as Cleary scampered
over from the one yard line after Tri-
captain .Brian Sewing had recovered a St.
Peter's fumble at their 37.
With just under two minutes remaining
in the quarter, St. Peter's got on the board
with a quick touchdown strike from
quarterback Ed Flora to Steve Nowicki,
good for 41 yards and a tie at the quarter,
6-6.
.
Marist quickly lost the ball to start the
second quarter as· Dimmie fumbled a
Cleary pitch, and St. Peter's took advan-
tage of the turnover, .making good on a 29-
yard field goal, but the Red Foxes
retaliated° quickly.
On the first play of their next possession,
Marist moved 66 yards, down to the St. ·
Peter's two yard line as Cleary found War-
ren Weller wide open downficld. Two plays
later, Dimmie rambled over from the three
yard line to put Marist up 13-9. ·
A
Steve Scro interception and a Chris
Jim
Cleary()) gets set to pitch to running back Ron Dimmie in Saturday's
20-15
victory over~t. Peter's.
(Photo by Kyle Miller)
Vaught fumble recovery prevented any fur-
ther score from St; . Peter's, and Marist
took their four point lead into the locker-
room.
After a scoreless third quarter, Steve
Boecklin intercepted a Flora _
pass at St.
Peter's 45 yard line, and Marist was back
in action.
Cleary found Dimmie for 13 yards after
scrambling to avoid a sack, and then found
Michael Strange open for another 8 yard
pick up down
to
the St. Peter's 22 yard
line. After bursts by Jim Dowd and Lan-
don Gray up the middle, Dimmie scored his
second touchdown on a run over the right
side to put Marist up 20-9 after the conver-
sion.
T~~
interceptions, one by John O'Leary
and Boecklin's second of the game,
thwarted St. Peter's comeback effort, but
with 20 seconds left to play in the game,
Flora finally found Nowicki for an 11 yard
touchdown pass making it 20-15.
St. ·Peter's tried an unsuccessful onside
kick and Mari st ran out ihe clock· on their
way to their second straight season opening
victory over St. Peter's.
·
"Our defense played outstanding," said
Malet after the game. "I think we showed
great improvement since the New Haven
scrimmage, and the attitude of the players
was just great,'' he said.
Maleuees this Saturday's clash with St.
John's as a very tough game, with St.
·John's· already having played twice,
beating Fordham, 14-9, and losing to
Wagner,-48-7.
"We need to sharpen and fine tune our
offense and we will be working on that this
week in practice," Malet said.
Extra points:
Marist Football Coach Mike Malet also
praised the Marist cheerleaders for being
able to get together on such short notice
and do a fine job cheering last Saturday.
"The entire football program is very,
very happy that the cheerleaders could be
with us," Malet said. "Their cheering and
moral support added a lot to the entire at-
mosphere of the game, and I personally
· thank them very much for their effort," he
· said.
Marist b<Jot~tsfllll tO F'o,:dhllm
,s
comeback
:
~
by Ivan
V.
Navas
The M.arist College soccer- team's first
· Tri-State Conference match ended a 6-5
loss to Fordham University Saturday. J_ohn
Shannon scored· Fordham's winning goal
with seven minutes left to play in the game.
The game, played· on Fordham's home
turf, was marked with hard play by both
te,!.mS. The ejection of Ian Arscott fqr
violent conduct allowed Fordham a one-
man advantage during the second half of
the game.
l:.ate in the second half, with 18 minutes
. left in the game, Fordham came from
behind to score two goals and tie the game.
· Shannon scored his first goal on a header
to make the score 5-4 Marist. With 18
minutes remaining Fordham's Otto Con-
stantini scored his second goal of the game
to tie the game at five all.
·
.
· Shannon then capped off the game by
scoring the winning goal for Fordham with
under seven minutes left.
dham within one.
Marist produced all the . scoring during
· Diaz scored his second goal of the game
the first half scoring two goals early in the :_. to make it 4-2. Constantini answered back
game. Tito Diaz scored his first goal for
for Fordham by scoring the first of his two
Marist on a assist from Mark Adams. Two goa,ls to make it 4-3 Marist.
minutes later Mark Adams scored for a 2-0
. What eventually was to be Marist's last
Marist lead.
· goal was scored by Wayne Cargill making
Despite the lead, Marist had trouble con-
it
a5-3 gam!!.
.
. .
trolling the play o the field. A-Jackofscor-
In a previous game, Manst convmcmgly
ing opportunities showed as Marist had on-
defeated Ne~ Paltz 6 to
O
on Wednesd~y
ly eight shots on goalio Fordham's 12.
_.
Sept. 16.
. ·
.
.
·
Fordham . th_reatenecJ to score several
Early in the New Paltz game Marist had
times in the first half. Hienz Warmhold, trouble scoring but pulled through by tak-
however, made key saves to hold Fordham ing a 4-0 lead to the locker room at
to no goals.
halftime.
In the second half Fordham's offense
Scoring for _Marist in the first half was
took control, since Marist was without one Tito Daiz with a 20 foot shot. Wayne
man due to an ejection. Fordham: sco"ied Cargill had two goals and a assist, while
· six goals during the second half... , _ _
Mark Adams put the fourth in at the end of
Marist took a 3-0. lead when Adams the half.
,
_
_ scored on a penalty kick four minutes into
The second half produced more goals for
the second half. Shannon scored two goals Marist despite . pressure put on by New
in less than three ·minutes, bringing -For~ · Paltz.
Ian Arscott got a goal from the
left side of the net to make it 5-0. Tom
Murphy scored the final goal of the game.
Mark Adams had the assist.
Date ·
Opponent
Sat. Sept. 11 - St. Francis (N.Y .)
Wed. Sept. 15 - New P~ltz
Sat. Sept. 18 - Fordham•
Tues. Sept. 21 - So: Conn.
Sat. Sept.
25 -
Fairfield•
Wed. Sept. 29- Siena
Sat. Oct. 2 - Kings Point
Mon. Oct.
4 -
R:P .I.
Wed. Oct. 6-C.W. Post
Fri. Oct. 8-N.Y.U.*
Wed. O~t. 13 - St. John's*
Sat. Oct. 16- St. Peter's*
Tues. Oct. 19- West Point
Sat. Oct. 23 - Seton Hall*
Wed. Oct. 27 - Pace•
Sat. Oct. 30-Adelphi
Wed. Nov. 3- Union
Sat. Nov. 6 - Manhattan* ·
Tues. Nov. 9
°
L.I.U.
*Tri-State Conference Match
Loe
H
H
A
A
H
A
H
H
H
H
H
A
A
H
A
H
A
H
A
Rally
and_
volley·
by
Bill
Travers
students need a little direction.
If
they're
•••
Birscia, Laura · Cross, Nancy J ennierich
going to cheer at the game they might as
· Marie Piccone is now in her. second year
and Pat Sampson.
It's_. going to be the biggest thing in
well do it right." .
.
· as coach of the Marist women's volleyball ,
"Many of the new girls playing -for
Poughkeepsie since John Donovan.· There
Rumor has it that former B-Guido's -team. She wasn't very pleased with the · Marist have a Jot of volleyball experience
is no reason to keep it quiet any longer.
members will be in attendance to help lead . results of last year, when the team "lacked -behind them," said Piccone. "We have
On Saturday, December 4 at 7 p.m. will · the rally. There is a lot of entertainment · a lot of experience." Piccone sees her team
plenty of hard hitters and our team has
be the first B-Guido's "Be There or be
picked out for the e,vent including an ap-
gaining that experience this year and winn-
· much flexibility with very talented setters."
Square" Basketball Beer Blast and Rally. It · pearance from King Tut. Quinn would not
ing the championship.
The women opened up their season last
will be held at a place to be named later. All
release the names of other special guets but
· Marist is currently in Division B of the
week and lost two matches to Vassar Col-
those that attend will take the festivities·:._ did assure thai Warner Wolf and Mary
Hudson Valley conference. The top two
lege and Williams College in a Tri-Match at
over to the McCann Center where the Red
Albert will not be there.
teams at the ~nd of.the season will move to
Vassar. AgainstWilliams the.Foxes Iostthe
Foxes open their home schedule of NCAA
"People who go the rally and buy a cup
Division A next year, with the low two
best ofthree9~15, 11-15 and 11-15. Against
play.
of beer will be rewarded heavily," said
teamsinAdroppingtoDivisionB.
Williamsthelosswas0-15, I5-8and7-15.
Last season the Foxes lost some crucial
Quinn. "The students that fail to attend
"The goal of our team this year is to get
«We were a little timid in the matches
home games that forced thPm out of the
will feel very left
out.
Th~re will be
out of Division B;'' said Piccone. "There is
last week," said Piccone. We definitely
Metro-South playoffs. "We can't afford to
giveaways, _prizes and special speakers."
no reason to think that we can't do that,
weren't out-classed. Neither. team was over
lose home games this year," said Dick
"The thing that makes college different
barring any unforeseen injuries or set-
our head."
Quinn, assistant athletic director. "We
is the fans/' said Quinn. "We want to get
backs."
.
"Our problem right now is getting the,
need the support of the fans."
everyone together to make .sure the fans are
Returning from last years squad is Jody
key play at the right time," said Piccone.
"Last season some the students got real-
as good as the team."
It
is going to
be
big-
Johnson, Janice Willis, Kathy O'Conner,
"It's just a matter of pushing a little
ly involved in the games," said Quinn. "I
ger than Convocation. We might even take
Tanya Whitehurst, Linda Peter and Hilary
harder. It all. comes down to experience,
have all the confidence in the world that
attendance."
Palawsky. They are joined by newcomers
and we will improve tremendously as the
they know how to cheer,_ but I think the
Confused? Stay tuned for more details.
Marie Barnard, Dina Charles, Stacy
season goes on."
27.3.1
27.3.2
27.3.3
27.3.4
27.3.5
27.3.6
27.3.7
27.3.8
27.3.9
27.3.10
27.3.11
27.3.12
.,.
__
•-.-:~
'·:.:.::~
r·• ~-
;.\.:
. . . . . . . . . , , ,
... ~,:.. ••.••..•• , · ·
• . • • • .
1
•
.. · · - : • - · - · • · .
~-•·"••··•.• .. ; , . . . . . .
' •• ,.- •.• :~ .• -,
, . . . . . . .
, . .
,
...
· · · • · ' • - ·
.
Faculty
deOateS addition of
ROTC·
program,.;
by
Su~an
V~ssall~ .
. . . . - •
, ·.
,
~uence
:o;
~~u~ses will b~ offered .on cam- · suf~cient fo~ one person, a ~adet referen~e all.•ideas. "Some of the finest ~olleges, such ·
The .Marist faculty'. last ·week _held the._·. pus by military-personnel to students·who __ library and.storage sp3:ce for uniforms.
as Princeton, have R.O.T.C.,'' said Siegel.
first in a series of debates over the issue of wish to enroll in the program. ·. • .
.
·.· .. A separate-classroom for each ·of the "It's important for our Army to have a
whether to allow the Reserve Officer Train- . The courses. are Military Science I, II,
four-year groups being taught once or knowledge through liberal arts."
. _ing Corps to use campus facilities. .
III, and IV. Fundamentals of Leadership twice. }Veekly-would also be required, but
)Vith regard to the idea that R,O.T.C.
: .The faculty is to issue a recommendation
and
Management,
Lana
.
Navigation, :· used . only without interf~ring with the contributes to. ·the unrest of. the world to-
by Nov.
1
to the college board of trustees,
Military History, Applied Management schedule of regular classes, Siegel said.
· day. Siegel said, "I'll take· my uniform off
which will have the final say on the matter.
and Office.Management are a few. of the
. Some faculty · questioned how the tomorrow. I've seen war. I want to getrid
·
D\scussion at Friday's faculty collo" · courses that would be available.· ·. ·
military presence on campus would fit into of the_ Army budget and put it into more
quium centered on whether R.O.T.C.'s
. Additionally, there are scholarships the Ma_rist community.
..
.
social programs. But· so· far no one that
presence would change the atmosphere or
available through the program. ·
·
·; · · · :_
, "I-.. have questions about the .'ap-
speaks out against us has come up with a
image of Marist.· • -,
·
·:-This is. an_, extra curricular activity,
pq:,priateness of R.O.T.C. at Marist," said better solution that we can trust and feel
Proponents of the program argued that
whjch, Cox says would serve only the Assistant Porfessor of Political Science secure with.''
the·issue was one of freedom of choice for
students who want to become part of the Carolyn Landau. "I don't feel it relates to
Siegel assured the faculty that no
students making decisions about their
R.O.T.C. program. No academic credit our mission statement." Landau says she military maneuvers would take place on
. educations.
·
·
will be given for these courses.
feels that, for Marist, a stance in peace campus and that students in the program
"It's an option that should be available
Marist would serve as a R.O.T.C. exten-
when the world is threatened would be a would not have to wear their uniforms only
to students," said Dean of Students Gerard
tion center of Fordham University, where, , more important image to project.
.
when attending the military classes ..
• Cox.· "R.O.T.C. has a Jong tradition in
according to Siegel, students in the Mid-
Paul Peterson, a Marist student and
Students at Marist have not yet had the
society, and it's. hard to deny the impor-
Hudson area now have to travel to if they R.O.T
.C.
would · have on campus. "we opportunity_ to voice their opinions on the
tance of the civilian officer.'•
want to be involved with the program.
don't change the atmosphere," said Seagel. subject of R. O. T. C. According to Council
According to the porposal presented to
There is a concern for. the amount of «We enhance it."
,
of Student
Leaders
President
Joan
the faculty at the end of last semester and
spilce · the program would require,
He said that he felt allowing R.O.T.C. at Gasparovic, literature on R.O.T.C. will be
explained by Col. Herbert Siegel at the col-
However,· according to the proposal and
Marist would Jet the outside world know distributed and a forum will be held around
· Ioquium, through R,O.T.C. a four-year se- · Sie~~l, all thatis ne~ded is an office space
that the college was open to expression of
Continued on page 7
Volume
27,
Number
3
Marist dedicates
a week to
the _
underprivil~ged
~y
Chris Dempsey
Ma.rist College, Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
September
23,
1982
r~,.::.::.::;.;_:·;:;~;r.~;t"!;JRaef~6tltfJe@fat2~fJ!~\½
0
i~fi~:
'
week in November to fight world hunger. ;-:~
According to anthony.Ceniera, e~ecutiv~
director of the Bread:for.theWorld Educa-
tional Fund, as well as executive assistant
to the Marist College president,· World
Hunger Week is scheduled to take~ place
Nov.·
16-23.
Theweek
will
provide oppor-
. tunities for students and faculty to b~come
educated about and act _
against· world
hunger" .
.
·_- .-
... -.-· ·•·
·
· ·· .
.
One of the highlights of the week wiU be.
Oxfam Fast Day during which students on
the meal plan will sacrifice one rneal, while
SeBers sends the money saved from the fast
to
the deprived.
·
..
The fast day, which is scheduled for
Thursday, Nov.18, win be followed by an
Interfaith Thanksgiving Service in the
chapel on Monday, Nov. 23.
Red-FQxes.
take oj:Jener
C
A good second effort .helps Marist on its way to a 20-15 victory over St.
Peter's Saturday.The team plays St. John's at home this Saturday.
(Photo by Kyle Miller)
Another ·anticipated event for Hunger
Week, which is still in the planning stages,
is a briefing on W()rld hunger to educate the
students.and fllculty::on the. subject. Dr.
Milton. Teichman, .a· professor of English,
who attended . a briefing on the world
hunger problem, said he recommends at-
tending this event. Dr. Teichman said he
.. _
;i~so;~~;;:;~e~~:."~reat~yinformed"b~Poug·
hkeensiepoor·~s· tru··
gg.11·ng
.
.
to survive
An additional proposal
for.
Hu!)geJ
·· •·
_ ·
'Y.
1
•
··· • • .
•
•
....
.
.
·
-
Week is a workshop for for Core teachers,
·
so that plans may be made to incorporate
by Bernadette Grey
information on the World Hunger problem
into the Core curriculum,
.. A middle-aged man rocks his shaky
Although not scheduled during Hunger · green chair back and forth in the waiting
Week; th~ Seventh Annual Crop Walk for room at the Department of Social Services
. World Hunger is still another example of in Poughkeepsie. His sports jacket is
Marist's effort . to aid the deprived. The wrinkled and his graying hair needs a cut.
·
f h
lk
·n
b
I
He is chain smoking. .
.
participants o t e wa w1 try to eat ast
"Mr. North," calls a young female
year's earning oU
747.45.
·
employee from behind the filmy, glassed-in
Janice · Willis, . a
member of the reception desk.
sophomore · class and co-chairman of the
The man stands up, glances around at
Social Action Committee, likes the idea of the eight other people sitting in the waiting
holding a week-long hunger project. "It's room and walks up to the desk.
really important to put these events in the
"I've been looking for_ a job all day,"
span of a week. Otherwise, students tend t0 North says. •~1 don't want to be here. I
put off their attendance plans for 'the next want to work."
time,' which doesn't always come," she
Like everyone else in the waiting room,
said. .
· ·
·
North is depending on welfare for survival.
The Rev .. Richard LaMorte, assistant About 30 people come into the Dutchess
dean of students, said he believes it is good County Department of Social Services each
to start with a project which requires a . day to apply for welfare, an administrative
minimal amount of personal extension, assistant at Social Services said. The·ma-
which could be increased later. LaMorte jority of these applicants live in the city of
said he feels that this hunger project is a Poughkeepsie, he said.
"good keystone" with which to start.
Although Dutchess County has a
relatively low poverty level, social agencies
in Poughkeepsie are having a tough time
dealing with the plight of the poor in this
area, according to local agencies.
"About
600Jo of the total welfare cases in
Dutchess County are concentrated right in
Poughkeepsie,'' said Social Service official
Bart Carlson. ·
Out of the
1,750
families receiving
Aid
to
Families with Dependent Children in Dut-
chess County, nearly 1,000 live in
Poughkeepsie, the administrative assistant
said. There are
500
Dutchess County
families receiving Home Relief and 300 of
these families live in Poughkeepsie, he said.
Yet the population of Poughkeepsie
represents only
150Jo of the county's total
population, said an official from the Dut-
chess County Department of Planning.
"What most do not even hear about are
all the people just above the maximum in-
come level for welfare," said the Director
of Dutchess Outreach Mary Keeley.
. Keeley, who works out of the Trinity
United Methodist Church .on
South
Hamilton Street,
provides emergency
assistance, technical assistance and ad-
vocacy for. the needy
of
Poughkeepsie,
whether or not they receive welfare
benefits. "We are primarily advocates for
anyone that needs help," she said. .
.
Judy Brown, an employee at Citizens
Referral on Mill Street, also helps the poor
of Poughkeepsie ... even if they are not eligi-
ble for welfare. "It really hurts when a
family comes in $2 over the welfare line,"
she said.
·
Keeley said that her Outreach Satellite
Center helps more than
100
Poughkeepsie
families per month. They give food,
children's clothing, · and furniture to
Poughkeepsie families who cannot afford
to buy these items themselves.
.
Families are either referred to Keeley's
office or they walk right in asking for help.
The Satellite Center can provide food for a
family up to three days and then the family
can't get any more assistance for 2 months,
Keeley said.
Citizens Referral is another agency in
Poughkeepsie struggling to help the poor
Continued on page 4
41'. -~ ... ·• .,. '·
.-4
►
,
.
---•Page
2 · THE CIRCLE·
September 23,
168
The easy way
out
.
The "gut" course is not a phenomenon
tions
.
And the dollar signs keep crossing
particular to Marist College. Students of
your mind:
$4430
per Year for tuition;
$441
every school get to know very quickly which
per course;
$14.70
down the drain every time
teachers they can snow and which classes
you sit through one of those classes.
·
·
·
they can cut and still pass.
The problem is that for every student who
Many students register for these courses
honestly hates wasting his time and money,
because they know they can do a minimum
there are ten who will he the first to sign up
amount of work and still get by. That is the
for that same class next semester. We will
reason why there are so many gut courses
never get rid
'-
Of gut courses, and gut pro-
·
:- because year after year, students sign up
fessors until we make the decision not to
for them as an easy way out.
take the easy way out.
·
If you enjoy spending
$441
per course to
We don't have to wait until the end of the
simply "get by," then that is your
.
own
semester to voice our
.
opinions. If you are
.
·
choice
.
But what about the students who
angry about a class, go to the chairman of
_
would really. like to get. some sort of an
the department and let him know h<;>w you
education at Marist? You sign up for a
feel. Spread the word around so that your
.
course that sounds interesting, only to find
.
-
classmates don't get
·
stuck in that class
·
_
out after three class
·
es that you are learning
next semester. We pay the salaries here,
absolutely nothing because nothing is
and Marist isn't going to give us an educa-
demanded of you
.
The class is boring, there
tion. That is something you have to do on
All l~lters ~ust be typed triple space with a 60 sp~ce margin
,
arid
s~b~ltted tc
i'
;he
.
Circle office no later than 6 p.m. Monday. Short letteis are preferred. We reserve
_
the
·
right to
edit
all letters
.
Letters must be signed, but names may be withheld
_
upon re-
.
_
quest. LeUer
s
wi.11 be p
_
ubUshed depend
i
ng upon availability of space
•
. __
: _
_
·
Townhouse accessibility
Dear Editor
:
.
I find
it
hard to believe that Ed
Waters,
-
vice president of
·
ad~
mm1stration, actually believes
that the townhouses B-7 and C
-
1
meet all wheelchair accessibilities,
and that everything is within the
guidelines of the
504
law.
-
-
I also believe that problem here
is the definition of accessibility. If
Mr
.
Waters had attended the
.
meeting with President Murray
,
·
Dean
Cox,
Dianne Periera, Brad
Weber arid the involved students
.
at Marist, he would have know
that Linda Glass did not
.
make a
statement that, "an elevator is the
only answer.''
:
·
Linda Glass
·
is only looking for
a logical, sensible, cost efficient
way of getting froin the kitchen
and Jiving room area to the
bathroom and
-
bedroom areas of
. the townhouses
.
(possibly an elec
-
.
fric
wheelchair lift from the com-
.·.
_
mon area to the downstairs area
·
would be the answer .
.
But Ed, to possibly believe that
a
100
ya
r
d trip around the outside
of a building, on a motorcross
.
trail in the dark and dead of
winter, in an electric wheelchair,
· justto go to the bathroom is total-
ly logical and
·
within the limits, is
totally
_
ridiculous!
·
·
Also Mr. Waters, not a single
.
person
is
inescapable from
becoming totally disabled at any
time of the day. I
.
pray to God
that this external locus of control
-
(or Fate) does not happen to you,
or for that matter, anyone,
because having a person of your
logic saying
,
"This situation is
totally within the gu
i
delines,"
might also say that it is
_
totally
logical to place an outhouse and a
. -
terit for Linda
·
Glass to live in.
)usf so
·
torig as it's accessible
,
it's
o.k.!
.
· Therefore,
Mr. Waters,
chall
e
nge you to follow me in an
electric wheelchair for a short
-
portion of any
-
day and time of
your choice. Theri, · Mr. Waters,
you can go back and re-read your
architectual designs that look so
good on paper
.
Only this time
don't tell Linda, a psychology
major,
·
'
to check them over
because, hopefully, you will have
gained some valuable knowledge
and insight on this problem.
Emery T. Giovannone
C-122,
473-4348
Thanks
is little or no work required outside of atten-
.
your own by
-
finding out which teachers real•
ding class, and attendance doesn't even
ly teach, and then supporting them by tak-
_
Dear Editor:
·
·
definitely be our best 1,ear ever.
seem to matter
.
To those of
·
us who care,
ing their classes
.
Last week
'
s Junior Class mixer We'd also like to thank Chris
this is a very frustrating experience.
Getting a degree at Marist isn't difficult;
was a resounding success. This Barnes and Jay
·
Stone,
·
·
the
So what do
.
you dor You swear that you
getting an education can be. Let's get rid of
success was due, no doubt, to the WMCR D.J. 's, for keeping the
will never take that teacher
·
for another
the gut courses and the "cake" classes so
·
inany people who.volunteered to
·
place hopping, and Bob Laforty,
course again, and that you will tear
.
him to
we carfcallourselves
_
educated people, and
; :
help. In particular
,
we wish to Paul Beckerly, and his techni-
'
shreds
,
when
'.
it's
"
:
time
·'
.
for
'-
teacher evalua•
.
. ·
notjust typlcal
,
Mariststlidents
.
·
.
_._·._
'
·\
,
.- -
<.
:
·
..
-:
.
>
thank
.
Rich Dougherty, · Chris
.
dans, who helped to keep things
.
.
·
..
·
;
:
·
•
•
.
--.
.
·.
· .
x
\.;
,
:
,j
::
.
:)
(
::
-
:
;
:\
>; .
,1;::
-
;
:
:
.
-:
\:,
_:
,
·
.
'":
J
{
:it
;,~;;t
Ji;-
(
;\
.
\,:\
]
/~
i-:{/
1
t
)'{ .
.
~~~gJht
L
iti:;:
-L
~~;::~.~;;;rJii~~
.
,~:nn:~g
Fi;::;,~~~~d
1~1~t!~dtti!~k
·
Maris! is
'
not
,
imln
/
urze
::
•:
.
:
·.·
..
_.
-
- :
~fi[a'p~ti:~~i!i;:~d~~i;
·
'
~;~~~~;J;!~1~1~eit~~~;;fr~
·
·
Meisner
,
Steve Hedderton; DAn we'd
.
like to thank all of you. We
The clap. There
·
~re over
72,000
reported
The key ~ympfom of syphili~ ls
°i.
1sually a
cases of venereal disease in New York
sore that will appear on
.
the point of sexual
.
·
alone.
·
·
contact.It may go away afterawhile, but the
.
Marist is not immune to syphilis and
disease remains withoutoroper treatment.
.
gonorreha. So many students realize thatit
The symptoms
-
of gonorrhea are different
•
Hartman, Pa
t:
Larrabee, Tana
·
hope everybody had a good time!
·
Massaro
·
,
•
Neil
Rohr,
Jim
~cDonald,
.
Keith Griffin,
.
Tom
Cavanaugh
,
and Bob Davies. (we
:
·
hope
·
:
_
that we
·
didn't
.
·
forget
•
,
.
anyone) With such
.
spirited and
·
enthusiastic
·
people,
,
this will
The Jun
i
or Class Officers:
Chris Molluso
Mike
·
Hayden
Barbara LaDuke
·
Karyn Magdalen
·
is a danger they face every time they take
.
for both men and women. Men will usually
part in any sort of sexual activity. So many
•
experience a burr:iing sensation
.
. during
·
students dismiss it as
·
something that could
·
urination
.
Most women have no symptoms;
.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
never happen to themselves. So many
an examination Is nec:essary to discover
·
·
students could be walking around campus
gonorrhea lnwomen.
·:
:,
_
_
· _
_·
.
_
right no~ with a_n untreated case
.
of V,D.. .
Syphilis and gonorrhea left untreated can
·.
_There 1s
~
fair amou_nt of
,
sexual act1v1ty
.
,
cause mental illness, heart disease, blind-
on the Man st_ campus, that s no sh~ck to
O •
ness, and st~rility arid possibly death
:
·.
anyone who l1v~s _here. The trouble 1s that
·
If you think that you
_
might
·
have
-V.D:,
-
-
Next
-
Week
·
-
students are still 1gn~~ant to the fact that
treatment is a relativly easy process. If you
any type of sex1:1a1 activity can spread V.D.
want the location of a local clinic
,
call 1-800-
.
Until they figure a way to c~re V
.
D
.
523-1885
.
Treatment is simple and always
altogether, there are only two options for
confidential
_.
.
·
·
,
.
those
· -
who are sexually active.
·
One is
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
prevention, the other is prompt treatment.
V .D. gets
·
around; even on the Marist cam-
CLASSIFIEDs
.·
·
·
•
·
.
Sometimes V
.
D. is hard . to prevent
pus. So if you even suspect that you have
because many times your partner won't
V.D.
,
make a mature decision and go to a
even realize that he or she has it. Sopreven
-,
local clinic before you spread It among a
number of other people.
·
tion, other than totatavoidance of sexual
If Marist students are ready
:
t
_
o
_
ta
_
ke part l
_
n
activity, is difficult.
.
.
.
'.
All students at Marist that have been, or
·
sexual relations, they should also be ready
to take care of themselves and others that
·
are planning to be, sexually active should
·
they have come in contact with.
have a familiarity with the symptoms and
treatments of V.D.
Take the chance and go down to the clinic
The symptoms of Gonorrhea will usually
if you have any of the symptoms .. If
.
you
.
•
.
.
on
Sale Thtirsdays
.
·
-
in
·
the Cafeteria
show up 3 to 5 days after contact where as
don't go down for yourself, do it for another
the symptoms
·
of syphilis will show up
Marist student whom you may be with and
anywhere from
10
to 90 days.
care about. Do it before it's too late.
·
Co-Editors
Rick O'Donnell
Business Manager
Adrienne Ryan
Faculty Advisor
David Mccraw
Patti Walsh
The
Faculty
Advisor
David Mccraw
Copy Editors
Lisa Crandall, Judy Knox,
Associate
Editors
Ka
r
en Lindsay
Reporters
Meg Adamski
,
Bernadette Grey,
Mark Amodeo, Adam Their,
Lou Ann Seelig
Carol Lane, Matthew Mcinerny,
Kathy O'Connor, Ken Bohan,
Circle
Ivan Navas, John Petacchi,
Paul Crowell, Joe Pareti,
Sports Editor
Bill Travers
Richelle Thomas
,
Brian Kelly,
John Petacchi, Dawn Oliver,
Andrea Holland
,
Sue Vasallo
,
Bill Flood
Pat Brady, Barry Smith
Advertising Manager
Jim Barnes
Classified
Kevin Shulz
Cartoonist
Ted Waters
j
,
,
.
_ _
.
.
_
.
. _
.
.
September 23,
1982 · THE CIRCLE· Page
3
·
- - •
Planfled Parenthood discusses pros and cons
.
,.
·'
.
'
.
,
,
,
.
..
.
.
. .
by Susan Vassallo
.
·
-
:
:
·
'•·
Good decision-making and a mature at-
titude are the basic ingredients needed in
the area of human sexuality, according to
Judy Henkle, a planned parenthood
representative.
:
On Wednesday~ Septemb~r
i3,
th~ Social
Work Association of Marist College spon-
sored a seminar with planned parenthood.
"Our aim is to provide services of human
concern," said Association President Terri
Tobin.
.
Henkle's discussion was based upon her
·
model
·
for sexual decision ·making. The
mod~! _incl~ded both sides of a~ questions,
· starting with deciding whether or not to
engage in sexual activity. Pros and cons of
.
.
·.
Lot
·
blocked:
.
.
-
in response
.
'
'
'
:
to
v
·
andalism
.
.
by
B
_
rian Kelly
Marist College has put up a
.
gate across
the road leading to the river, blocking the
passage of cars to the parking lot.
The gate, which cost $1,000, was .erected
because the parking lot was "being used as
a meeting place for abusive people," said
Vice President Edward Waters. The Mc-
Canfl'Foundation paid for the construction
of the gate.
"We were spending $4,000 a year clean-
ing up all the broken glass and repai~ing the
damages done by vandals,"
_
Waters said.
·
"We put up a fence and the vandals tore'it
down; -we put garbage cans in the parking
·
Iot
•
•and
J
\vithin one day they
'
were in the
•
river.
Something
JUSt
had
to
.
be"dori"e. ''
,
::.
·c:
'
_
The fence, which is located
'at
the
.
south
end of the parking lot, will be replaced next
year. The Mccann Foundation will pay for
the fence and also for landscaping that will
be done in the area.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
each possible decision were presented.
"If
there was anyone present at the
seminar thinking about becoming sexually
active," said Christina Casciato, "this
meeting may have influenced their deci-
sion. It opened our eyes to what we have to
face and the possible consequences of havs
ing sex."
.
·
·
·
·
.
. ·
Henkle pointed out that one needs to be
sexually active, and it is important to have
a good feeling about yourself.
The various methods of birth control
and their effectiveness were described and
related questions were answered. "She
layed out the facts," said Karen Williams.
"She gave you options."
Henkle made it clear that if you ·can't
face making the decision "what if" you're
not mature enough to have sex.
Chorus
·
to perform
"Everyone thought of the seminar as a
·place to have some laughs," said an
anonymous male freshman, "but it m
·
ade
me realize
I
have to
be
more serious and
more careful."
Melinda Gant said the seminar made her
· thirik about the fact that it. may riot be your
friend in trouble; it could be you.
·
Dean of Students Gerald Cox said that
Marist students needed an open forum for
ideas, and a
·
full spectrum should be
· presented to the students. He suggested
that aside from planned parenthood com-
ing to speak, we would also invite alternate
groups such as Birthright.
. Henkle said the discussion was excellent
and .that she would like to. come back
again. She said she could tell both by words
and by body language that she was getting
through to the students.
The Social Work Association has in the
past sponsored such lectures on battered
women, the psychological effects of crime,
and Viet Nam Vets. They also publish a
newsletter.
·
·
"The purpose of this association is to
promote social work knowledge, values
and skills among the members of the
Marist Community and the surrounding
areas," says Tobin.
Social .Work Views will soon be publish-
ed, which will include such information as
hotlines for suicide, mental health hospital
locations, human services and more.
The social work department at Marist is
awaiting its accreditation by the Middle
States Association in October.
The Siinon Boltvar chorus from Caracas, Venezuela, will perform at
7:30
p.m. Saturday
in
the Marist College theater. The chorus will be joining
the
Marist College Singers as
part
of the Choruses of the World festival. Marist
_
stu
·
dents will be admitted free.
~
•It
was getting very difficult an~
dangerous for Marist to use the
.
area for
special events such as alumni receptions
an::::;:1::c::·;~:::e::es::;egewanted
Marist junior to
·
receive marketing award
the parking lot to be an asset to both col-
lege students and towns people. The
by Patti Walsh
original purpose of the parking lot was for
Marist junior Tom Welsh has
.
been nam-
the possible expansion of the Pougnkeepsie ed one
.
of 12 students nationwide to receive
waterworks, which owns the land
,
the Miller Marketing President's Award
'
.
'We don't wantthe iot to
h~
a d~nger to
for campus representatives.
·people, but would rather see it as a park-
Welsh, from Monroe, N.Y
.,
will
·
go to
like area," Waters said .. He also said that
·
Milwaukee
•
th is Saturday to accept the
while cars can
.
rio longer drive d
_
own to the
.
$
lOOO
award.
river, there is a parking lot next to the
:
,·
The 12 regional winners are chosen from
waterworks building, which may be used.
a field of
500
campus representatives of the
Miller Brewing Co. across
.
the nation.
Winners are chosen each semester, and the
award is
.
based on
a
point system .
.
According to Welsh, his job is to be the
"eyes and ears" of the Miller Brewing Co.
on the Marist campus. Welsh
.
said the
award was based on sales of kegs, Miller
promotions and campus sales over the last
semester
.
According to Rob Ryan, the college
coordinator of Miller activities at River
Distributing Co., the job of a Miller
campus representative is to put marketing
principles into practice. Ryan also said that
man
'
y campus representatives are hired by
Miller
after graduation.
Welsh, a business/marketing major, is
now in his third semester of representing
the Miller Brewing Co. on campus.
Welsh said that he tries to promote the
Miller philosophy that students can drink
responsibly and have a good time.
Friday:
Saturday:
Sunday:
Monday:
Tuesday:
Wednesday:
Thursday:
On Campus:
.
Vivian Cord Anti•
queShow, Mccann
The Chance:
Marshall Crenshaw
On Campus:
Vivian Cord Anti-
que Show, McCann
Football
vs.
St.
.
John's•
1:30
p.m.
Soccer vs. Fairfield
-11 a.m.
Choral concert
7:30p.m.
TheCh1mce:
Warren Zevon
Mid-Hudson
Civic
Center
:
·
"The War
of
the
Worlds" and "When
Worlds
.
Colllde"
11
a.m.-S1.50
On Campus:
Vivian Cord Anti-
que Show, McCann
The Chance:
Blotto
The Chance:
Monday
Night
Football • Bengals vs.
Browns
The Chance:
New Beat Music
Dance Party - Live D.J.
The Bardavon:
Swedish
.
film
-
".Elvira Madigan"
8:00
p.m.
The Chance:
T.B.A.
On Campus:
CUB Golf Tourna-
ment
Film - "I Never
Promised You
A
Rose
Garden"
Coffee House• Stu-
dent Talent
The Chance:
Jonathan Richman
and the Modem Lovers
The
Bardavon:
Chamber
Music
Appreciation Seminar: -
7p.m.
.
I
--•Page 4 · THE CIRCLE· Septe,nber ~3, 1982
Student from Indllndfinds.
Marist friendly and 'sweet'
:
THE HAIR
·
SHACK
·--
-
_
by
Andrea Holland
Marist College will not only be saying
goodbye to students travelling abroad this
year, but will also be welcoming an abroad
student from Ireland.
·
The Institute runs on a three term, .or
trimester session each term lasting eleven
weeks, he said.
Unlike courses at Marist, the Institute
structures its
·
courses on a lecture and
tutorial basis. Tutorials
.-
are lab ex-
John Hough, from
·
Limerick, holds an
periences, guest lecturers and review ses
0
associate degree in marketing from the Na-
sions; "Tutorials are used to expand on lec-
ti?nal. I nstitut_e for Higher Education in
·
tilre notes and homework," he said.
Limerick. He 1s here for only
.
one semester
·
.
,
to earn credits towards his bachelor's
. ·
• .
G,regory House has been Ho~gh s ho~e
degree also in Marketing.
·
·
:
-
·._
·
'
for
"the
past two weeks. He said that his
'
.
.
.
most interesting experience has been
He will fini~h at the Ins.titute in_ April,
meeting so many ·rriendly people. "They
after compleung a thesis
.
relating to
have been so friendly," he said, "they all
marketing.
"If
anyone has any bright ideas
want to come back
to
Ireland with me."
for a topic," he said, "please come for-
ward.''
According to Hough, courses are more
intense rn Ireland because of the amount of
time spent weekly in each. Classes are one
hour in length and meet for a total of four
"contact" or class hours per week.
I .
located at
49 Academy Street
Ample Customer Parking
Ope11 Daily 10-6
No Appointment Necessary
454-9984.
IS
nowopenfor
Monday
•
/I
.
.
/} , .
.
f
-/-hru h-'id/
I
/I.
---
~ /
1 - f d ~ P ~
11-u
·
~
{1&_,
~
/~~~~
-------------------------------------September 23,
1982 · THE CIRCLE· Page
5, _ _
Around the world
by Eileen Hayes
This week, the world mourrteci the death
· of Princess Grace of Monaco. Grace Kelly,
the former· movie queen, · died in an
automobile accident on Tuesday.
It
is believed that Grace suffered a stroke
while driving and her car ran off trhe road
down a 120-foot ravine.
.
Princess Stephanie, the daughter of
Princess Grace and Prince Rainier, ·was.
· also in the car. She was hospitalized with a
: hairline spinal fracture. She was not able to
attend her mother's funeral on Saturday.
This week the world was the .scene for
violence and . turmoil. In Lebanon, this
week, President-elect Bashir Gemayel, and
25 of his followers were killed when ap-
proximately 440 pounds of explosives were
blasted in their Christian Phalangist party
· headquarters in .east Beirut.
It
is presumed that leftist Moslem forces
who never · accepted his election were to
· blame.
Following the assassination, Israel sent
· its troops into west Beirut. This ended the
cease fire agreement which led to the
Palestine Liberation Organization's
evacuation.
The skirmish left 38 dead, with the
Israeli army imposing its rule.
Prime Minister Menachem Begin and
Lieut. Gen. Rafael Eitan, and Israeli Chief
of Staff gave no indication of withdrawal.
In other violem;e, Sadegh Ghotbzadeh, a
defender and former leader of the Iranian
Revolution, was executed by a firing
squad. He was convicted of attempting to
overthrow the Government and kill the
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.
Closer to _home, the Reagan Ad-
ministration ·· and Congress have bee~
battling spe_nding cuts. The Administration
refused to cooperate cin making defense
spending cuts that were agreed to in June.
In other issues, the HoUS\: and Senate
ap.propriation panels. struggled to reduce
. the $210 billion budget for the military by
$8.7 billion. President Reagan still wants
the full amount for military spending in
1983.
It appears inevitable that not one of the
13 spending bills· for the fiscal year which
begins in two weeks, will pass in time. This
means that an omnibus bill, which will
continue spending at the current rate, will
temporarily get Congress out of their jam. "
It seems that the combat will continue
until· Congress adjourns to electioneer on
Oct. 8.
On the lighter side of the news:
While most. people d,ream of having a
million dollars; a thief in Chicago has only
three weeks. to successfully. achieve his
· dream.
On Oct. 11, 1977, the First National
Bank of Chicago was robbed of a precise
$1 million, with no sign of a forcible entry.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation has
had only one suspect. The suspect was the
only employee of the bank who refused to
take a lie detector test. He was under
surveillance but gave no leads.
The case is still unsolved, and the statute
of limitations ori prosecution ·for· ·the
original crime expires in a few weeks. At
this time an arrest is not probable.
If
the thief is caught after the deadline,
the most he can be prosecuted for is tax
evasion and interstate transport of the
stolen money.
That's getting away with a million
dollars!
For Tony Cernera,
caring is- essen
·
tial
t>y
Grazia E. LoPiccolo
educational publications including •
1
)\'hen
l
was.Hungry,"
'.'A
Hungry_World" and
"Hunger ·and Global Security.'' He said
Miller times
:n:iT~
Life
''Must
be·
a
T1'9eShn,an.''
/
t
\981 Beer Brewed by Miller Brewing Co
M1lwau1<.ee
Wis
A~thony Ce;nera's life chariged the day
he · brought a portable heater to an old
woman.
that his motivation for writing on world . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
hunger is to educate people and show them
It was his first visit to a parish in
Harlem. He was 16-years
0
old. While he
was there, a woman called the parish
asking for a heater to keep herself and her
grandchildren from freezing. He brought it
to her: The woman told him that she and
her daughter took turns at· night fighting
off the rats. Back at the parish he witnessed
the baptism of a 16-year-old girl and heard
the Bible reading: "When I was hungry you
gave me to eat arid when I was thirsty you
gave me to drink."
Cernera, now executive assistant to
College President Dennis Murray, said the
events that. took place 15 years ago
prompted him later to get involved in the
problem of world hunger. '_'That day
something inside of me was triggered off
that said: 'This is something that ought not
be and that I would like to do something
about' and somehow it was related to
God," said Cernera.
"I consider myself an incredibly wealthy
person and not because of having a lot of
money, but because of the experi~nces that
. I have had in trying to do somethmg about
·world hunger," said the 32-year-old
Cernera.
Cernera, who describes himself as a
simple, ordinary I~alian _guy fron:i . t_he
Bronx said he sees 1t as his respons1b1hty
to
get' involved because he has. been give_n
so much in his lifetime, especially by his
parents. "My parents have loved me
unconditionally; I know in my ~uts that I
am a good person and that · I am worth
something. I feel good that is a direct result
of them," he said. "I feel so overwhelmed
with how much I have gotten that I want to
share it in the little ways that I can."
Cernera's involvement with the problem
of world hunger began while he was in
college.
At Fordham University, where Cernera
received a Bachelor of Arts in ~istor_y _and
Theology and a Master of Arts m Rehg1o~s
Education, he and a few friends began a
soup kitchen that fed abou! 100 men. T~e
soup kitchen lasted for five years, said
Cernera.
Cernera has also written several
how to· respond. "People can make a
difference, but most people feel powerless
in the face of world hunger, and when you
feel powerless about things you usually
don't respond," he said.
Prior to coming to Marist, Cernera was
executive director for Bread for the World
Educational Fund, · an organization with
40,000 members that tries to educate
people on the problem of world hunger.
Now that the organization has moved its
headquarter to Washington D.C., Cernera
is
associate
coordinator
for
the
organization in the New York area on a
volunteer basis.
· ·
Cernera came,to Marist in December of
1981. He said, although he likes and enjoys
his job he is not rule_d by iC "Five years ago
I decided that the most important thing was
to live a full human life and not to be
defined by one's job. Tony Cernera is not
defined by the fact that he is executive
assistant to the President of Marist
College," he said.
Cernera said that people who define
themselves by their work or their success
feel good only when they are successful and
have material goods. He said the goal is to
feel good because you are you. "For a
person that doesn't feel good about
himself, all the wealth, success and power
in the world doesn't do him any good at
all."
Cernera, upon graduation from college,
taught religious studies and was chairman
of the same department at Aquinas High
School in the Bronx. Cernera said he has
looked forward to this semester because he
is teaching Introduction to Philosophy in
the core program. "I am a teacher at
heart," said Cernera.
Cernera also teaches adult education
courses on various books of the Bible in
local church programs. In the Spring of
1982 he conducted the Lenten series at
Marist.
Cernera, together with his wife and
newly-born
son,
has
moved
to
Poughkeepsie from the Bronx. He said that
on the weekends he loves to cook a good
Italian dinner. "My eggplant parmigiana is
not to be equaled anywhere," he said.
Ouali'+ySotdwic/2
,lv/eals
af
mos/:
Reascnab/e
Prices
ez>
SALADS
~
.SOF"t
DRINKS
!CE- C.ReAM
Op:nNgh-lly
7:3.Epm-
j:O!-
om.
--•Page 6 · THE CIRCLE· September 23;
1982·-----------;-.;:-.;:-.;:-.;:~-.;-.;-.;-.;-.;~~~~~~-.;-.;-.;-.;-.;~--•-••-----:_~~~~=--:.:.:.:_:_:.:_:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:,:
Marist filling classrooms ,
.
.
.
·Council of:·
student
Leaders
:
·
.
.
around· the glob-e·
by
Richelle Thomas
This year, 19 students, with majors rang- ·
ing from business to_ communications to
Office Hours ·
Fall
1·.ga2:
The bar was crowded as black tobacco
fashion design, will be traveling to Ireland,
smoke and Spanish conversation filled the
Spain, England, Italy and Paris.
air. Veronica Shea sat at the bar with her
"The program has also broken into a
Spanish "mother," the woman who, along
new territory _
Iceland,"
Lanning
with her family, opened her heart and.
declares. "We will have someone studying
home to the Marist student.
there at the University of Reykjavik. We
The woman placed an order. but refused
established · new links with two more
to tell Shea what the order was. The
universities and have regained contacts
bartender, who also served as cook, put
with another after an eight-year absence,"
something on the grill to fry. Within five
he says.
·
minutes, the bartender slid the plate in
Lanning mentioned the possibility of
front of them, piled them high with strange students traveling to nearby areas to reduce
objects coiled around sticks six inches in
expenses. Mexico, Canada,. Puerto Rico
length.
and Latin America are good prospects
if
"She kept urging me to taste the food in
there is student interest, he says.
front of me," Shea recalls, "but I wanted
To prepare students for their year
to know what it was first. Pig's tail?,''·
i"
··abroad, orientation sessions on cultural ad-
asked.
justment, . financial planning, academic
"No," Shea's Spanish mother answered.
programming and travel tips are con-
Joan "Schatzie"
Gasparovic
CSL President
Dave Skrodanes
CSL Vice-President
Dawn Oliver
SAC President
James Galvin
IHC President
Bernadette Cosner
CUB President
M
10-2
10-12
11-1
T
w
Th
F
3:30-4
6:30-9
10-2
10-12
10-12
2-5
9-10
12-2 ·
9-10
11-1
11-1
10-12
"Try it."
ducted.
"Seeing_that I wasn't going to be able to
"I recommend it for anyone, not just
George Fleming
NTSO President
2-4:30
10-11
2-3:30
10-11
5:30-6:30
avoid the situation, I took a stick and
language majors," says Amy Ruggiero
bravely sunk my teeth into it. The taste was
who went to France last year. "I feel like
something like pork, but very powerful.
I've rriade the most of my college educa-
G_reg Luna
2: 15-4 12:45-2
12-3
.12:45-2
'What is it'?" I insisted.
tion," she says.
" 'Pig's intestine'," came the reply.
If you have been thinking about going
'Ugh'!"
abroad, Lanning offers some advice.
This . is just a small example of. the
"Consider .the idea only
if
you conceive
cultural differences a person is exposed to
yourself to be responsible, mature and in-
in another country, according io Shea, who
terested in new and different educational,
spent a year in Spain on the Marist Abroad
social and cultural experiences. Be sure to
Program.
give it serious thought,'' he says.
The Marist Abroad Program is open to
Monica Finnigan spent last year in
CU President
Kathy Shea
Financial Board Chairperson
Grace Teyada
9-11
CSL Secretary
2-6
1-3
1-2
3-5
9-12
9-12
11-1
3-5
students of all majors who want to study in
Ireland.
"It
was a very worthwhile ex-.
a foreign country. Generally, a 3.0 grade
perience," she says.
"It
was one of the best
point average is required, but according to
years of my life."
CSL - Council of' Student Leaders (Student Government)
SAC - Student Academic Committee
fHG - fnterHouse Council
CUB - CoUege Union Board
Dr. Jeptha Lanning,. the director, par-
The Marist Abroad Program
will
be con-
ticipation in. clubs' or activities can be
ducting information sessions during the
taken into consideration. It is. customary
fall semester for sophomores and during
for students to go abroad in their junior
the spring
.
semester for freshmen, accor-
year, Lanning .says, although sophomores
ding to Lanning. Applications. will be ac-
and seniors have gone.
cepted for reviewing next month,
. . . ·
NTSO - Non-Traditional Student Organization
CU - Commuter Union
In the past, students have attended
Interested students can contact Dr. Lan-
CSL Office - Campus Center Rm. 268
universities in countries such as England,
ning, 213 Fontaine; Program Assistant
Ire/and,
Italy,
Kenya, Ghana, Scotland and
Cicely Perrotte,
.
230 Donnelly; or::Betty ..
,
• -
:r-C~LJ:xt. ". 2C:»6.
CUB Ext._ - 203
Japan. ·
Cox, the secretary, 223 Donnelly.
J_;, •
;
Tuesday
Ladies Night
Ladies Drink
FREE.
Thursday
_
Night
COLLEGE
·
NIGHT
Free Admission with College ID.
FREE DRINKS 9-10:30
Friday and Saturday Free AdmiP Aon before 10 p.m. with Valid Col~ege
1.D.
Dress Code
33 Academy Street
Sunday Night Party Night
Free Drinks for All
8 •10
p.m.
Live Entertainment
6 Nites
.a Week
Free Parking
Poughkeepsie
Wednesday
Nickel Night
Every Other
Drink
5c
All Night
Proper I.D.
471-1133
---------------------------------September 23,
1982 • THE CIRCLE -
Page
1--
Music
··
expert traces.
'
.
.
.
'
.
.
.
.
.
.
career of t
-
he Beatles.
by
Meg Adamski
Burnsworth.
·
Early rock 'n' roll influenced the Beatles,
"They were the first popular rock 'n' according to Burnsworth. As the decade
roll band
•
-
to write their own material,
to rolled on, their music changed. Their music
address a rarige of serious subjects and to
became more sophisticated and in February
embrace influences from Dylan poetry to of 1964, it moved in a new direction with
Indian classical music," said Dr. Charles the movie "Help." The group began to
Burnsworth, professor of music at
·
State
·
experiment with their style at that time.
University of New York in Oneonta last The speaker discussed the technical aspects
week during his lecture about the "best of the changes and improvments in the
loved rock group the world has ever
-
Beatles' music, The music became in-
known," the Beatles, as Burnsworthe put creasingly complex.
it.
..
.
_
The song "Yesterday" was a first for the
Burnsworth traced the beginnings of the
Beatles.
"It
was their first solo recorded by
.
Beatles to John Lennon's pub band,
-
the a Beatie.
It was their first
to feature
Quarrymen.
Paul McCartney joined musicians who were not Beatles themselves
Lennon and the Quarrymen were reduced
and because
_
George Martin {their
to the duo, the Wurt Twins. With addition
producer) used orchestration on the
of George Harrison, the twosome evolved
record," said Burnsworth. Also it was the
:
into Johnny and the Moondogs. In 1959,
first song that was not able to be
·
bass player, Stew Sutcliff, joined the group
reproduced in concert.
a11d the
_
name
:was
changed to the S
,
ilver
The_ sounds of the group became more
Beatles. Drummer Pete Best joined within
novel, noted Burnsworth several times
a year. •
·
•It
was with this lineup that they
throughout the speech. George Harrison
began to pay their dues, and
_
learn their
began experimenting with an Indian in-
craft,'' said Burnsworth.
strument, the sitar, in songs like "Nor-
"Just
prior to the first recording
0 Love
wegian Wood," and the album "Sergeant
Me Do;''
a:
couple of personnel
·
changes
Pepper's Lonely.H_earts Club Band."
had beeit made within
.
the group. Sutcliff
"The lyrics of their
songs
from 1965
left in order to go back
to
art school and a
onward had become complex and abstract.
new
_
drummer, who had occasionally
.
The greatest value of these later Beatles'
subbed in the group since as early as 1960,
lyrics is that they can mean different things
replaced Pete Best. His name was Richard
to different
·
people," said Burnsworth.
Starky, better known as Ringo "Starr,"
Some examples are "A Day In The Life,"
Burnsworth said.
"Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds," and
_
"Early rock was rebellious music. No
"Eleanor Rigby."
_
·
other group produced the excitement both
Burnsworth explained that "Let It Be"
physically and musically which symbolized
was the last album the Beatles released.
that rebellion as much as did the Beatles,"
This album
·
was unique because
·
it was
said Burnsworth. The Beatles captured the
released after the break-up of the group.
·
·
spirit of youth in the
'
60's and
'?O's.
Actually, "Let It Be" was recorded before
Burnsworth explained the influence the
"Abbey Road," said
.
Burnsworth. "Abbey
Beatles had over the young people of the
Road" was the Beatles last all:mm to
time and he noted that the Beatles' music
recorded. "Let It Be" was recorded with
reflected the social unrest. in the late 1960's
only one take; which is unusual.
and early I 970's. The album "Revolution"
the song "The Long and Winding Road"
.
reflected the problems on the' nation's
..
w_as the Beatle
_
s
.
last song. released~- Burn-
college campuses as well as society's unrest
·
.
.
swcirth implied "thatJorthe Beatles/ii really
with the Vietnam War; according
_
to· was a 'Long and Winding Road:'
PIZZA.JlIA..>
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A State University of New York professor discussed the rise of the Beatles
iri
·
a lectiire
·
last weekat Marist.
Smyle is- new veterans
-
counselor
by
Andrea Holland
Mari st College senior Alex Smyle
.
has
filled
the
position of veterans counselor
vacated by Russ Hesselton.
Smyle worked as a co-counselor
_
with
Hesselton last year
.
and is presently
working with Eileen Shaw,
.
veterans
coordinator.
According
to
Smyle, veterans, their
spouses and children of deceased veterans
are all eligible to receive benefits. He works
directly with the Veterans Admini
s
tration
making sure any problems are solved and
benefits
are
received, he said.
"There are only 16 graduate and 33
undergraduate students who receive
benefits at Marist," he said, "but they all
must be taken care of.''
Students must be registered under the
continuing education or undergraduate
program to receive benefits, he
said.
A veteran himself, Srriyle said that the
benefits help students
to
continue their
education. "If it weren't for my benefits, I
wouldn't be able to finish," he said.
Smyle has been a student at Marist for
the past three years
.
He will graduate in
December with a -Bachelor of Arts in
Communication Arts
.
Recently, the Non-
Traditional Student Organization
awarded
Smyle its schlarship. "l filled out the
application, and I got it,
'.'
he said.
Smyle said he enjoys his new position
because it's quiet and the Veterans ad-
ministration runs on a good measure of
efficiency.
_
"Rarely any major problems
arise, and I get
to
meet a lot of people."
·
ROTC -
continued from page I
the
-
first week in October with represen
-
tatives from R.O.T.C. as well as faculty
members opposed to the program to pre-
sent both sides of the issue.
·
Gasparovic said she thinks the R.O.T.C.
program would be worthwhile because it
would afford the student a choice and add
financial aid. "To shut the door would
make a decision for all the students," said
Gasparovic. "If we don't want it after a
year of two, we can get rid of it.
·
"Our main goal right now," said
Gasparovic," is to get
·the
students aware
of program itself and the possible implica-
tions it could have on campus."
Dean of Students James Daly said that
students have applied to Marist and then
decided not to come because there was no
R.O.T.C. program.
"We
don't need
R
.
O.T.C. to maintain a
sizable
class,
"
said
Daly. "However,
it
does offer students
another option."
Siegel said he came to Marist in response
to students involved in the program.
"Students at Marist are motivated and
responsive," said siege!. "I feel comfor-
table here at Marist with the students, the
faculty and the administration." Siegel
said he didn't feel comfortable at State
University College at New Paltz, where the
program was recently rejected.
The board of trustees will vote on the
issue at its November meeting.
Circle
meeting
_
Sunday -
7:00 p.m.
Rm. CC168
:~
\
'
•
((
·.
•t .
.
\
~
b
r.
'
+\.
"
·
•
.·
'
·
.
,,,,
·.
•
;
.,
.
·
..
~
-
.
Page 8 · THE CIRCLE· September 23, 1982
British student· gets
close
look at media -
by Carol Lane
.
nationalities there are in New York, New
A Communication Arts student -from
Jersey and even in Poughkeepsie from
England traveling
·
to
Philadelphia for an
what I've seen." "I think that is one of the
internship, spent
·
· last week at Marist
reasons why you have such a variety of
College
studying
the
·
media
in shopsandfoodstochoosefrom,"shesaid.
Poughkeepsie.
·
Alihough structu"red
.
differently . in
"The stopover in Poughkeepsie is sort of England and America the feelings toward
a
personal
enrichment,"
Audrey
the media are still the same she said.
Honeyman, a third-year student at Trinity
"People have a universal attitude towards
and All Saint's College in England, said.
the media. People have a sort offeeling of
Honeyman's week consisted of a day aura about the media. They want to be
spent touring Marist's campus visiting such
involved with it."
.
places as the Audio Visual Center. Visits to
Honeyman had not visited
•
America
.
Poughkeepsie's WEOK and WPDH radiq
previously. "This is my first experience of
stations. And a day spent in
.
The Culinary
being abroad," she said.
"I
was rathe,:
·
Institute of America's Learning
·
Resource
disappointed in New York when we landed
·
Center where she visited their video sec-
at John
F.
Kennedy airport. The city
tion,
sound
recording
studio,· and
looked very industrial and worn out.".
photography and graphics department.
Honeyman is in her third year of
.
a
Honeyman, visiting America for eight
.
bachelor of arts degree.
It
is a combined
weeks, will spend her last six weeks at
-
TV
degree of Communication Arts in media
station KYW in Philadelphia where she will
with Public Media degree. Each year, of
be workin2 in either the TV promotion
the three year bachelor's degree, the
department or in ad\'ertising sales.
students go out and do an "attachment" or
Honevman learned of Marist College
an internship.
·
·
. .
,
throu2h· Ma;ist Coll~e student Tom
Honeyman spent four weeks at The
Hassett. H::ssen spent last year at Trinity
Financial Times in London her first year.
and All Saim"s Collefe. Thrnugh Hassett,
She then went on to work for six weeks at a
she met
Di;e.:ior of
~farist .-\broad
Yorkshire video production company
Pree.ram
Jemha
Lanninc who with Bob
during her second year.
Norman a~d DireClor -
oi
Continuing
· While working on each attachment each
Education Bill Anderson, ananged her
student must keep a day to day diary and
stay
.
"It
was a unique opponunity that I
write a report upon completion o
_
f the
just couldn"t afford
10
miss.·· she said.
attachment.
Honevrnan said she wanted
to
see how
The size of each.class at Trinity College
the media in the states were organized. She are kept small "We only take in a limited
said there is more organization in the states
number of people in each major," she said,
:
·
because it is bigger. She also said there were
"so they
-
are catered to personally."
.
more independent radio and television
The housing facilities at Trinity College
stations in the United States.
are handled differently than those at Marist
She said the people differed in England · she said. First-year-students reside on
and America. "There is definitely a great
campus. Second-year-students have the
.
cultural difference," she said, "The people . option of living on campus or at off
here seem to be more relaxed, less formal
campus housing arranged by the school.
and friendlier. I get the impression that the Third-year-students do not have the option
s
tudents are more socially oriented here: of living on campus.
The American way of life is very much
Honeyman said she is undecided, as yet,
geared toward human comfort and en-
..
about what country she
will
live and work,
joyment."
·
ih
upon graduation.
"I
am open to see
.
.
.
· ·
She
said American
life
has
-
more variety
.
where
the
most
suitablejob
,
and people are~
"I'm
impressed
·
with
how
.
many
·
for me.''
·
6 CRANNEt ST. POUGHICEEP$1E, N.Y. 12601
·
PHONE ( 914) 473-19916
-
~~~~
~·~·~
~
-
M f i ? ~
Gma!l?C!mmi?Nm%l
'.
.
limAW:tMa:1
·
@IBir;t1
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.
.
----
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__
-
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·-
MATT'S
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$4.99
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·-
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COORS
.
12
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$3.19
Six P~ck
MILLER
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C·O·M·l·N·G · ·
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Robby
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DIRECTIONS TO THE CHANCE FROM MARIST: Take Washl
_
ngton St. Into downtown Poughkeepsie. At Fourth Traffic Light (Mansion St., op-
posite City Hall) turn left. Go past two traffic lights. Turn right on Catherine St. Go past one more traffic light and tum left Into the large Myers
Parking Lot on your left. The Chance Is adjacent to that lot and can be seen from the center of It as you face south. Total distance from Marlst
campus Is approximately 2 miles.
.
.
.
.
TOUR GUIDES NEEDED
To show prospective students
, and
-
their families the Marist
·
·
ca
·
mpus
_
.Tours will leave daily
at:
.
.
.
10:00
12:00
2:00
4:00
-
-
1f you'd like
.
to help out,
,
please
call Sue Grunenwald
_
in the Ad-
missions Of.fice
at ext. 227.
•
-
•
.
•
•
.
•
~
;.
c
>·.-- ..._
~
,'
•
...-.
••
"•
,
.,•
'
•
.
,
.
•
.
.
. I
:
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.
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:
(
~
_--
~
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--.
:
-
-:
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·
•
.
.
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~
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-
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~·
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:"
:--
eptember 23, 1982 ·
THE CIRCLE·
Page 9 •·
- •
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October 2
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•
.
t
--•Page
10 •
THE CIRCLE· September
23,
1982
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Colagrossi',s teturn
boosts wonieil' s tenrtis
·
by
William Flood
moves well," stated Ccilagr~ssi.
'.'If
we can
better her serve she will be tough to beat."
There is a secret at Marist College that
.
· _
Four of the next five positions are filled
everyone should be let in on. Marist Col-
with freshmen. Denise Bagarose, Josi
.
e
lege has a talented women's tennis team.
Trapani,
·
Michele Pisano, and Christine
.
Starting fresh with their new h
·
ead coach, O'Dwyer are 3, 4,
5
and 7
_
respectively.
Nancy Colagrossi, the Foxes have already
·
"The key to the team's success is whether
shown potential for
a
promising season.
the freshmen girls can respond under the
Colagrossi, a
I 9
.
82 graduate from Marist,
pressure," said
·
colagrossi. "The sooner
was the women's m.imber one singles player they adjust,
·
the sooner winning will
last season.
become a habit."
.
.
The number six player is sophomore,
A young team
wi
th three sophomores Chris Carey. As the other veteran on the
and four freshmen, their st rengths will im-
team, she will be used strickly in doubles
prove over the next two or three ye~rs
~
·
·
.
.
.
.
·
· .
play,
·
according to Colagrossi. ''.Chris
The Foxes
.
number one
.
play
'
er
·
is
.
knows and enjoys doubles." Her partner is
sophomore Cindy
·
Krueger.
·
Krueger did
·
Baragose, and they
will
fill the number two
not play last year but is a real surprise
:
this double slot.
·
year. "Cindy will win alot of matches this
·
·
Connie Roher, a senior, named captain
year,''
.
said Coach
·
Colagrossi. "She's
·
by Colagrossi, will see both singles and
smart and has powerful s
.
trokes," she
_
said.
:
doublt:s actio!\ this year. "Connie is a good
Krueger is also on the
.
number one doubles
:
leader
:
and
.
has a great attitude for this
team, where she teams up with Kathy
·
·
squad,?' Colagrossi said. "Plus she loves
Mulligan.
.
the game.';
Mulligan is the number tw9 player for
Colagrossi said
:
there are two words to
·
Marist. "She's a great baseline player and describe her squad, "young and talented."
M
arist_ alum comes
-
striding
.
home
by Bill Tra,·ers
Mike l'vlorris, from the Marist Class of
1981, will be coming back east this
weekend
10
participate in the National 40
Kilometer Championship
·
which will be
held Sunday in Long Branch,
NJ.
.
·
Morris is a member of the U.S. Olympic
Racewalking Team and
c
urrently trains at
the U
.
S.O.C. Training Center in Colorado
Springs, Colo. His 1982 accomplishments
include being National SK champion,
All-
American at 20K and 50K and is a member
of the New York Athletic Club 20K and
50K National Championship Teams.
In addition, Morris has received the
ESPN Unsung
-
Athlete Award,
.
has com-
peted for the U.S.A
.
in West Germany
against Norway, Sweden, Great Britain
and West Germany, placed fourth in 20K
:.race at the National Sports Festival and
,
.
..
~vas nominated for "Fa
_
ces
-
in the.
,
Crowd"
111
Sports Illustrated.
·
Morris is now sponsored· by Kangaroo
Shoes wl1ich pays for
.iH
.
travel expenses,
footwear, travel bags and
.
sweat suits. This
summer he
will
be going
'
.
'
to camps on
Kangaroo's
All
Star Team~
..
.
Morris has improved his time in the 20K
by over four minutes in less than one year.
His
·
improvement has propelled him from
10th best in the U
.
S. to number four.
A picture of Morris appears in the Oc-
tober, 1982 Naiional Geographic as an
il-
lustration of computer analysis of athletic
performance.
"Mike epitomizes
..
the
·.
American
dream," said
Dick
Quinn,
.
assistant athletic
.
director
.
"he is a hardworking,
.
.
small
-
town
boy
.
from a loving family- that has made
it
·
big:;'
.·
·
-
~
I
.
BELONG
.
TO
THE
··
··.·
11ARIST
•·
MUNCH BUNCH
.
Commuters·
&
Residents:
.
·
Save 101,
·
Check
-·
out coupon
booklet. Good in
-"
·
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
Coffee. Shop
·
,
Deli
·
.
and Dining
Hein
Purchase
-
of
booklets
ltlay
be m,3de in
.
Food Se
·
rvice
.
Off ice
:
.
·
>
:
,· ..
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
'
.
.
-·-
-
.
·.
.
.
'
.
.
.
.
.
.
·-
.
DRINKS-FOOD-MUSIC 11 :00
..
a.m.-4:00 a.m.
-
·
SANDWICHES 11 :00 a
·
.m.-8:
_
30 p.m.
Rte. 9 Poug
_
hkeepsi
,
~
914-473-4725
·
\
·sCiarettatakes
3rd
.
'
-
.
,
.
·.
·
.
·
:
'
.
ir! wh'eeldlfair gq,nes
.
by
Theres~
Sulliv~
'
n
'
'
Yri~'re allowed. three lifts. You should
·
·
-
.: .
•
.
·
·-
know how far you can push yourself."
·
-_
.
Frank Sciaietta .ttaveled a little this sums
·
·
.
:
:
Evidently, hf knew
.
After seven days of
·
inei-.
-
The Marist College
·
sophomore spent waiting
,
Sciaretta lifted 352
.
S pounds, 17
·
·
a few day
s
in Minnesota and a week in pounds more than he lifted in the Nationals
.
-
,
Halifax, Nova Scotia, where he placed two months earlier. The man who won the
. :
third in the weightlifting competition of the
·
0.S
;
Nationals placed second in the Pan
:
7th Annual
·
Pan American Wheelchair American Wheelchai
r
Games, lifting 363
· ,:
Games.
pounds. A man from Mexico lifted 418
Eighteen countries competed in athletic pounds, qualifying him for first.
events such as track and field, swimming,
According to Sciaretta, some of the
basketball, rifling and weightlifting
.
The
.
other countries had a disadvantage because
United St~ies pla~ed fir~t, bringing
_
home
··
their wheelchairs were technologically in-
-
100 medals . mo_re_- than
.
second place
·
ferior. "They were competing in chairs that
-
Canada. Mexico f1mshed third.
·
the Canadians and Americans hadn't com-
.
This was Sciaretta's first Pan American. peted in in 10 years
.
Their chairs were
competition
;
"Usually you
.
expect to bomb pitiful,"
.
·
he
·
said. "America has the best
ciut," he said. "It was fantastic -
:
cloud technology in chairs. It makes me glad I
nine! It's a good feeling beating out other live here."
_
countries.''
In spi~e of the fact that the United States
·
In order to qualify for the Qames,
.
entered the Games with an advantage, the
Sciaretta competed in the Nationals
,
held Oames were not televised in America, as
·
June 23
~
27 in Marshall, Minn., where he they were in Canada. Sciaretta said he
-
came in second. This qualified him for the hopes the Wide World of Sports will cover
seven-man United States team.
the Games within 10 years.
·
This summer, Sciaretta trained three
Easter Seals, Wheelchair Sports Fund
•
;
·
•
-
·
>
•
_<·
-
·
··
•
·
_
-
---.
~
,,,
.,
-
.
-
~
-~~-~
'It
. •
7
.
·
-;
,
_
times weekly. "My coach planned out the and the East Meadow, Long Island,
.
whole
,
thing on paper ahead of time .
.
Fire Department backed Sciaretta.
Frank Sciaretta, who placed third in the Pan American wheelchair games .
Cross couf!,try team 3rd at Wagner Invitational
out by running together most of the way,
•
day. The team had seemingly taken its first
according to Mayerhofer. Sophomore Jim step toward gaining experience, but head
. Led by
·
the strong running of sophomore
Hegarty, 28th, and freshman Pete Pazik,
coach Bob Mayerhofer said he still did not
d
20th, were the other Marist scorers.
know what to expect from his squad as they
by
Ken Bohan
John Lovejoy, _the Marist harriers place
prepared for the start.
third in a field of 11 teams Saturday at the
At the three-mile mark it appeared that
"Fairfield was basically a dual meet
Wagner College Invitational in Staten
Lovejoy, running in fifth place only IS yds.
between us and New Haven," Mayerhofer
Island. LoveJ
·
oy finished seventh, covering
behind the leaders, might win the race. "I
said. ''This was a bigger race with much
the 5.2 mile distance in 27
:
20.
thought I had a good shot but I let them get
better competition.,, He pointed out that
Siena College won the meet with a low
too far away," Lovejoy said
.
"Then th0se
he noticed a lot of new faces on other
score of 37. Fordham University placed se-
two guys (Fordham's and Siena's top men)
squads meaning that other teams, like
cond w
i
th 47 poin
t
s
·
and Marist was next
·
really took off
.
" Lovejoy finished 25
Marist, had rebuilt their squads with new
with 78.
seconds behind the winner
.
people and lost key people to graduation.
·
Seniors Brian Hanley and
.
Mike
The team's first race was already behind
With these factors all present, Mayerhofer
McGuire, who finished 12th and 13th
them going into the Wagner meet, having
said, just prior to the race, "I just didn't
respectively, ran well and helped each other
.
competed at Fairfield the previous Satur-
·
know what to expect.''
Mayerhofer said that the team had really
worked hard all week in practice and was a
little tired going into the meet. McGuire,
agreeing, said, "My legs felt really dead on
the hills today."
"It'll be nice to see Siena and Fordham
again in three weeks," Mayerhofer said. "I
think we'll be much more competitive
then
.
"
The Marist harriers are competing at
Notre Dame tomorrow in the Catholic
University Championships
.
Last year the
team placed ninth in a strong field. "l
think we can run as well, if not better, than
we did last year," Lovejoy said.
CAPUTO'S
-
RES
.
TAURANT
.
&
Pizza Take
Out
11
·
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1
.
1 to 2
·
weekends
Close
:
d Mondays
Delivery s
.
tarts
at
5
p.m.
Delivery FREE
.
with Purchase
of
·
$5.00 or More 473-2500
r---------------------~
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-
-
-
I
I
.
I
I
ONE FREE TOPPING
I
I
With
I
I
I
I
Large Pie Purchase
I
I
I
I
I
I
Expires 9130/82
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I
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~---------------------~
·
caputo's -
across the
'
st/ee
'
t from Mari~t
~
· I
·•·--•
.......
-
-
..
--•Page 12 -
THE CIRCLE·
September 23, 1982 _
. . .
. .
_
.
.
.
.. _
.
.
. . .
.
.
.
.
· Mari
st
downs
St.
Peter's
in
conf
erert~e
opene~_
by John Petacchi
- The Marist Red Fox football .team got its
season off on the right foot this past Satur-
day with a 20-15 victory over St. Peter's _in
front of a season-opening crowd of 914 at
Leonidoff field.
·
'
The Foxes will put their 1~0 record on the
line this Saturday when they take on the
· :Redmen of St. John's at· 2:30 p.m. at-
Leonidoff -in another Metropolitan Con-
ference clash.
·
·
Marist ran up 335 yards in total offense,
more than twice that of St. Peter's. Ron
Dimmie,. last season's leading rusher for
Marist scored· on touchdown runs of one
and three yards while grinding out 115
yards on _the ground .. Quarterback Jim
Cleary scored the o_ther Marist touchdown ..
Red Fox Coach Mike Malet seemed very-
pleased •with his team'sperformo:!nce.
''We
really feared St. Peter's and we-knew they
were a lot better than last year," Malet
said. "Overall, we're ~ery happy, b_ut we're
going to have to play_ a lot better. this Satur~.
day if we want to beat St. John's,'' he said.
Malet cited the fine work of the offensive
line which enabled Clei,try to throw for 102.
yards and scramble for another 60. on the
ground.
.
.
Marist opened the scoring seven minutes
into the first _quarter as Cleary scampered
over from the one yard line after Tri-
captain .Brian Sewing had recovered a St.
Peter's fumble at their 37.
With just under two minutes remaining
in the quarter, St. Peter's got on the board
with a quick touchdown strike from
quarterback Ed Flora to Steve Nowicki,
good for 41 yards and a tie at the quarter,
6-6.
.
Marist quickly lost the ball to start the
second quarter as· Dimmie fumbled a
Cleary pitch, and St. Peter's took advan-
tage of the turnover, .making good on a 29-
yard field goal, but the Red Foxes
retaliated° quickly.
On the first play of their next possession,
Marist moved 66 yards, down to the St. ·
Peter's two yard line as Cleary found War-
ren Weller wide open downficld. Two plays
later, Dimmie rambled over from the three
yard line to put Marist up 13-9. ·
A
Steve Scro interception and a Chris
Jim
Cleary()) gets set to pitch to running back Ron Dimmie in Saturday's
20-15
victory over~t. Peter's.
(Photo by Kyle Miller)
Vaught fumble recovery prevented any fur-
ther score from St; . Peter's, and Marist
took their four point lead into the locker-
room.
After a scoreless third quarter, Steve
Boecklin intercepted a Flora _
pass at St.
Peter's 45 yard line, and Marist was back
in action.
Cleary found Dimmie for 13 yards after
scrambling to avoid a sack, and then found
Michael Strange open for another 8 yard
pick up down
to
the St. Peter's 22 yard
line. After bursts by Jim Dowd and Lan-
don Gray up the middle, Dimmie scored his
second touchdown on a run over the right
side to put Marist up 20-9 after the conver-
sion.
T~~
interceptions, one by John O'Leary
and Boecklin's second of the game,
thwarted St. Peter's comeback effort, but
with 20 seconds left to play in the game,
Flora finally found Nowicki for an 11 yard
touchdown pass making it 20-15.
St. ·Peter's tried an unsuccessful onside
kick and Mari st ran out ihe clock· on their
way to their second straight season opening
victory over St. Peter's.
·
"Our defense played outstanding," said
Malet after the game. "I think we showed
great improvement since the New Haven
scrimmage, and the attitude of the players
was just great,'' he said.
Maleuees this Saturday's clash with St.
John's as a very tough game, with St.
·John's· already having played twice,
beating Fordham, 14-9, and losing to
Wagner,-48-7.
"We need to sharpen and fine tune our
offense and we will be working on that this
week in practice," Malet said.
Extra points:
Marist Football Coach Mike Malet also
praised the Marist cheerleaders for being
able to get together on such short notice
and do a fine job cheering last Saturday.
"The entire football program is very,
very happy that the cheerleaders could be
with us," Malet said. "Their cheering and
moral support added a lot to the entire at-
mosphere of the game, and I personally
· thank them very much for their effort," he
· said.
Marist b<Jot~tsfllll tO F'o,:dhllm
,s
comeback
:
~
by Ivan
V.
Navas
The M.arist College soccer- team's first
· Tri-State Conference match ended a 6-5
loss to Fordham University Saturday. J_ohn
Shannon scored· Fordham's winning goal
with seven minutes left to play in the game.
The game, played· on Fordham's home
turf, was marked with hard play by both
te,!.mS. The ejection of Ian Arscott fqr
violent conduct allowed Fordham a one-
man advantage during the second half of
the game.
l:.ate in the second half, with 18 minutes
. left in the game, Fordham came from
behind to score two goals and tie the game.
· Shannon scored his first goal on a header
to make the score 5-4 Marist. With 18
minutes remaining Fordham's Otto Con-
stantini scored his second goal of the game
to tie the game at five all.
·
.
· Shannon then capped off the game by
scoring the winning goal for Fordham with
under seven minutes left.
dham within one.
Marist produced all the . scoring during
· Diaz scored his second goal of the game
the first half scoring two goals early in the :_. to make it 4-2. Constantini answered back
game. Tito Diaz scored his first goal for
for Fordham by scoring the first of his two
Marist on a assist from Mark Adams. Two goa,ls to make it 4-3 Marist.
minutes later Mark Adams scored for a 2-0
. What eventually was to be Marist's last
Marist lead.
· goal was scored by Wayne Cargill making
Despite the lead, Marist had trouble con-
it
a5-3 gam!!.
.
. .
trolling the play o the field. A-Jackofscor-
In a previous game, Manst convmcmgly
ing opportunities showed as Marist had on-
defeated Ne~ Paltz 6 to
O
on Wednesd~y
ly eight shots on goalio Fordham's 12.
_.
Sept. 16.
. ·
.
.
·
Fordham . th_reatenecJ to score several
Early in the New Paltz game Marist had
times in the first half. Hienz Warmhold, trouble scoring but pulled through by tak-
however, made key saves to hold Fordham ing a 4-0 lead to the locker room at
to no goals.
halftime.
In the second half Fordham's offense
Scoring for _Marist in the first half was
took control, since Marist was without one Tito Daiz with a 20 foot shot. Wayne
man due to an ejection. Fordham: sco"ied Cargill had two goals and a assist, while
· six goals during the second half... , _ _
Mark Adams put the fourth in at the end of
Marist took a 3-0. lead when Adams the half.
,
_
_ scored on a penalty kick four minutes into
The second half produced more goals for
the second half. Shannon scored two goals Marist despite . pressure put on by New
in less than three ·minutes, bringing -For~ · Paltz.
Ian Arscott got a goal from the
left side of the net to make it 5-0. Tom
Murphy scored the final goal of the game.
Mark Adams had the assist.
Date ·
Opponent
Sat. Sept. 11 - St. Francis (N.Y .)
Wed. Sept. 15 - New P~ltz
Sat. Sept. 18 - Fordham•
Tues. Sept. 21 - So: Conn.
Sat. Sept.
25 -
Fairfield•
Wed. Sept. 29- Siena
Sat. Oct. 2 - Kings Point
Mon. Oct.
4 -
R:P .I.
Wed. Oct. 6-C.W. Post
Fri. Oct. 8-N.Y.U.*
Wed. O~t. 13 - St. John's*
Sat. Oct. 16- St. Peter's*
Tues. Oct. 19- West Point
Sat. Oct. 23 - Seton Hall*
Wed. Oct. 27 - Pace•
Sat. Oct. 30-Adelphi
Wed. Nov. 3- Union
Sat. Nov. 6 - Manhattan* ·
Tues. Nov. 9
°
L.I.U.
*Tri-State Conference Match
Loe
H
H
A
A
H
A
H
H
H
H
H
A
A
H
A
H
A
H
A
Rally
and_
volley·
by
Bill
Travers
students need a little direction.
If
they're
•••
Birscia, Laura · Cross, Nancy J ennierich
going to cheer at the game they might as
· Marie Piccone is now in her. second year
and Pat Sampson.
It's_. going to be the biggest thing in
well do it right." .
.
· as coach of the Marist women's volleyball ,
"Many of the new girls playing -for
Poughkeepsie since John Donovan.· There
Rumor has it that former B-Guido's -team. She wasn't very pleased with the · Marist have a Jot of volleyball experience
is no reason to keep it quiet any longer.
members will be in attendance to help lead . results of last year, when the team "lacked -behind them," said Piccone. "We have
On Saturday, December 4 at 7 p.m. will · the rally. There is a lot of entertainment · a lot of experience." Piccone sees her team
plenty of hard hitters and our team has
be the first B-Guido's "Be There or be
picked out for the e,vent including an ap-
gaining that experience this year and winn-
· much flexibility with very talented setters."
Square" Basketball Beer Blast and Rally. It · pearance from King Tut. Quinn would not
ing the championship.
The women opened up their season last
will be held at a place to be named later. All
release the names of other special guets but
· Marist is currently in Division B of the
week and lost two matches to Vassar Col-
those that attend will take the festivities·:._ did assure thai Warner Wolf and Mary
Hudson Valley conference. The top two
lege and Williams College in a Tri-Match at
over to the McCann Center where the Red
Albert will not be there.
teams at the ~nd of.the season will move to
Vassar. AgainstWilliams the.Foxes Iostthe
Foxes open their home schedule of NCAA
"People who go the rally and buy a cup
Division A next year, with the low two
best ofthree9~15, 11-15 and 11-15. Against
play.
of beer will be rewarded heavily," said
teamsinAdroppingtoDivisionB.
Williamsthelosswas0-15, I5-8and7-15.
Last season the Foxes lost some crucial
Quinn. "The students that fail to attend
"The goal of our team this year is to get
«We were a little timid in the matches
home games that forced thPm out of the
will feel very left
out.
Th~re will be
out of Division B;'' said Piccone. "There is
last week," said Piccone. We definitely
Metro-South playoffs. "We can't afford to
giveaways, _prizes and special speakers."
no reason to think that we can't do that,
weren't out-classed. Neither. team was over
lose home games this year," said Dick
"The thing that makes college different
barring any unforeseen injuries or set-
our head."
Quinn, assistant athletic director. "We
is the fans/' said Quinn. "We want to get
backs."
.
"Our problem right now is getting the,
need the support of the fans."
everyone together to make .sure the fans are
Returning from last years squad is Jody
key play at the right time," said Piccone.
"Last season some the students got real-
as good as the team."
It
is going to
be
big-
Johnson, Janice Willis, Kathy O'Conner,
"It's just a matter of pushing a little
ly involved in the games," said Quinn. "I
ger than Convocation. We might even take
Tanya Whitehurst, Linda Peter and Hilary
harder. It all. comes down to experience,
have all the confidence in the world that
attendance."
Palawsky. They are joined by newcomers
and we will improve tremendously as the
they know how to cheer,_ but I think the
Confused? Stay tuned for more details.
Marie Barnard, Dina Charles, Stacy
season goes on."
27.3.1
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27.3.12