The Circle, September 30, 1982.pdf
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 27 No. 4 - September 30, 1982
content
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It.alian vote Carried
Cuomo,
Miringoff says
..
.
.
:
u.s:
·
Attorne~Paui Currant~
·
capturethe
.
Koch, ~horn Lehrman
'
felt would win the favor: h~wever;
·
~ccordi;g to Mirlingoff.
by M~ttbe~ P~ Mcinerny
Republican Party endorsement.
primary.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
With Alfred DelBello winning the primary
_
·
··
Th
.
e
.~s
.
leeping.
_·
•
0
;a
.·
nt'
·
'
awoke last
·
Neither victory came as a surprise to
"The city (New York)'is overwhelmingly for lieutenant governor, the party ticket is
o-
Miringoff. Through the Marist College
democratic. Cuomo
·
should win
-
handily
,
now
.
·
composed of two Italian-Americans.
Thursday for Mario Cuoino
/
--
.
·
poll, conducted by the
·
Public Opinion In- . there,»
·
Miringoff said.
·
"This
-
leaves This is "a little thing that doesn't get you
.
·.
That giant; as Professor Lee Miringoff
·
stitute,
·
tlie professor was able to see that
Lehrman
.
to
.
work on the ·upstate votes.
He
offon the right foot," the professor said.
referred to
·
it,
·
was
·
the Italian-American
•
Lehrman would have no trouble. The
(Lehrman) has to appeal to a large portion
vote; which allowed Cuomo to pull off his
·.
Cuomo-Koch race was· different.
·
of Independents am Democrats to be sue-
upset over New York City Mayor Edward
.
·
The poll showed Cuomo only 3
.
percent
cessful againstCtiomo," he added.
·.-
Koch for
the
Democratic nomination for
behind Koch, and
he
'
was gaining
·
grourd
Lehrman has called Cuomo a member of
governor.
· •
.
-•
·
.
•
•
.
•
fast. "Polls are able to create momentum,
.
Governor Hugh Carey's establishment and
The Italians, one of the state's largest
.
sort of a slingshot effect," Miringoff said.
is demanding that a businessman is neede
.
d
.
. Lehrman's strategy will change, but he
has promised
to
continue spending the
same amount of money as he did in die
primary
to
defeat Cuomo. That figure is
believed to be anywhere between
$7
million
and
$8
million.
ethnic groups, combined with the catholic,
.
This slingshot worked to Cuomo's benefit.
·
to do the job, not a politician.
·
black, women and labor vote, were the key
"Cuomo's 'nice image' started
·
to
·
But Miringoff believes there is an irony
in this primary battle, according to Mir-
~
develop with time; His personality wore
here.
In
the primary campaign, Carey en-
The Marist College Public Opinion In-
stitute
.
will conduct its second poll of the
election year this week.
ingoff ..
'.<
',
.,
•
.
·
·
·
.
well in the campaign," Miringoff said,
dorsed Koch, disassociating himself with
.
!'-low
·
.
Cuomo;s coalition will face
"He got to be the front-runner."
.
.
Cuomo. This allows Cuomo the opportuni-
Results will be released Oct.
5.
.
businessman Lewis Lehrman's mon~y in
Lehrman has claimed
.
that he can beat'
·
ty
.
to ward off any charges oy his opponent
this November's race for governor.
·
either Democrat, but his
.
strategy must
relating to the present administr
.
ation.
Working with Miringoff are the assistant
director of the institute, Barbara
Carveilho, and various students.
Lehrman
.
thoroughly trounced former
change now that Cuomo is in and not
· .
Not everything is in the Democrat's
Volume
27, Number 4
Mar/st College, Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
Sept~mber 30, 1982
·Marist
-
clo~es
.
Park
.pf
ace,
·
puts ,students-in new
.
sites
by
Christine Dempsey, Alice O'Keefe
and Brian O'Keefe
Heywood explained.
When questioned about the living condi-
.
.
tions at Park Place, Heywood said, "Dur-
!
ing the
·
summer, the building started to
f
' .
Marist College has terminated its lease
deteriorate and the owners had no plans for
with Park Place, an off-campus housing
renovation in the near future." On the
facility, in Hyde Park and as a result has
.
.
whole, Park Place residents found their
been relocating
·
Park
-·
Place
·
students to
.
rooms less
.
than
·
desirable, although some
.
Champagnat and other
'
off-campus apart-
were
upset
about losing
'
ihe
singles to which
ments.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
they had grown accustom,ed;
.
. ;
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Accor4ing to R<>!3~rt Heyw<>od, Hou~i9g
_
,
0
:
Johll
McPary;
:
a
:
soi:i~oniQr~)raii~f~r stu~
.
.
>,:
.
.
,:
·
Director
·
the decision
.
to close Park
•
Place
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to
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anst St\1 ents,came
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a
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at
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liick'ohttid~nflnteres~:j1\;living ilier~
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liviniftherci
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kind
of
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s • ·
.
ofthe'-'37 ~~\ldents
'
origirially
:
ass~gn~dJO
said.
·
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.
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Mari~i1~~
:
.~t~i~~.~
-
its
le~~ ~Ith Park
,
.
Place; an
off-aimpus iiou:SIDg
•·
·
·
Park Place mMay,
,
only 16 mov~chn.
·
Although most· of the Park ~lace
:
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"Over
:
.
half ?f
those'
ass
_
igned
_
students
students preferred t
.
o be
.
relocat~
;
Aff7
_:
·
the
rtioV~;
.
but he w~s
.
h<>thercd by
.
the t~e
·
residences,
they were !aced with the recurr-
dtdn't want to hvethere,so we decided th~~
campus
.
.
to such
:
apartments as
·
He
_
ntage,
....
..
·
at which
.;
'
it
:'
occurred.
,.•
•
''It's the re-
ing problem of 3:housm~ shortage.
.
the pr~b!em
·
had to be addressed,
Georgeto~n, Manchester, and ~anterbu.ry,
·:
.adjustment;"
Peter said; .''and
.
they· only
To deal with· this ne'!
.
problem,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. .
.
McGray 1s haJ>PY to be movmg to
.
first
.
ave us a few days notice.,,
..
:
.
.
.
··
•·
··
Heywood a_nd ~aM<_>r_te complied
_a
s~t of
.
.
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·.
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·
.
.
·.
~oor Champtagf~camat
wpbuesre11·~ee !::els be~~ be $_uwn finding
.'
,
themselves
.
with empty
..
~rioristyhpol mths. spec1f1cal Uy fotr tnhicas mstpt~~-
more a par
'?
.
l
•
•
.
rooms
.
Heywood, 'Gerald Cox~ Dean
.
of uon
;
.
C O
ars
.
lP,
e~p _opnen
O
.
•
'
.
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
.
Many freshman students from first flo<?r Student Affairs and Fr. Richard LaMorte,
extra-curricular a~1vitte
.
s,
.
and
.
.
spec1~l
T.
'l_
T's
artwork
Cbam~gnat are
.
angry that, because oftb!S; Assistant
Dean
~fStudent Affairs, met and
health
.
and ~cadem1c reasons 'Yere cond1-
-
~
V
'.: ;'.:
,
.
re~locat1on p~rcess, they had to leav.e therr sentout
·
s'urveys asking
·
·
tbe other off
~
·
~ions f<:tM!htch off-campus rCl!1dents were
.
,
.
;'<:·,•-/ ._
..
.
friends and move
.
to vacant rooms
m
Leo
:
campus
·
suidentsif they would like to conic
·
consid1:red for on~campus;~ousmg.
·
••
by
· .
B
::
:'
rl
:
~
.
'.
.
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:.~~
.
-i
.
e
•
.
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\·
y.·
·
.
and Sheahan Halls.
.
.
.
.
.
.·.·
back and live
cri
.
campus. After receiving
But, as Heywood said,
.
No ma!!er what
a
·
Freshman Peter De~1gg1, ~ho had. to more po
·
sitive replies than
-
available
.
you do, it doesn'
.
t please everyone.
:
Six
new
colot television sets have
been
purchased by Marjst and
will
:
be
placed in
.
.
the lounges
:
of Champagnat, Sheahan
.
and
·
Leo Halls.
·
.
·,,;
· ·
-.
· ·
··
·
. ··
·
•.·
·
:
:
According to Resident
·
•
Director
·
Jim
>
Raimo;
·
the
-
television
sets,
:
which co~t
.
$3,000~
were
bought with money raised
.
by
the Inter
House
Council and private dona~
·
tions raised by Rev. Richard A. LaMorte,
·
·
assistant dean of student affairs.
·
. -
_
-
·
"Fr; LaMoi"te initiated the idea of put-
tmg
:
televisions• in.
·
the· Joung~,". Raimo
said. f'lt'sj,an of his efforfto improve liv-
'
..-_
ing. oo_n~iticins
.
~or ~h«:=
.-
~tud~nts in
.
the
'
residence halls."
-
.
::,.
:< ·
,
-
..
,.
::-
·· ..
.
·
.
Raimo also said
th:kthe
college has pur-
.
chased twenty~six prints at a cost of
$4.SO,
to be
:
hung in yarious places throughout the
dori{is.
·:;'
•
.
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·
.
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.
·
-
.
·:·
:
--
• •
·
The televisions
·
and prints
'.
are now being
held
.
by maintenance and will
be
placed in
the dorms
in
the near future;
·
.
· ·
.
.
·
Resident Assistant Dawn-Marie Sturte-
vant thinks that the televisions are a great
idea •
.
•
·
.
,
"I
think it will bring more people into
the lounges and will promote unity in the
houses," she sai_d.
.
·
·
·
Director of Housing Robert Haywood
says the telev~sicins
will
have some son of
protection from theft.
-
·
-
"We're not exactly sure how they'll be
protected yet. We may put them in metal
frames and we may possibly use chains or
'
.
alarms," Haywood said.
.
·
"I
think it's a great idea as long as peo-
ple don't abuse the privelege,'
•
'
·
said
sophomore football player Dan Spuhler.
"I live
in
the suite off the sixth floor
lounge. I don:t want to be woken up at
l :30
.
in
the morning before a football game.~nd
tell someone to turn the T. V. down, he
added .
.
... ·
leave Champagnat, said he did not rmnd
.
.
·
•
CulillaryOperis
11ew
dining
rOolll
·
·
·
.
··
.
~
.
by
Andrea
Holland
said.
.
.
.
.
however one
exception.
"We
.
can
.
Cohen said that as part of the final
choose to go
·
anywhere in the world,''
·
.
The Culinary Institue of America is
term, students work first in
·
the Escof-
said Fenner.
·
now featudng
a
new dining room which
.
fier Room and then the American Boun
~
All externships must be approved by
is open to
.t
he public.
'
·
_ .
.
.
·
·
·
ty Room. They do all the cooking he
the school, but placements usually are
··
The American Bounty Room opened
said,
as
well as being placed
j.n
positions
not difficult, said Fenner· The Culinary
.
on Aug.
2
and offers its patrons plush;
such as maitre de, captain and front and
helps place students almost anywhere
_
comfortable
.
surroundings and
back waiters. There are five stations
.
41
.
they want to
·
go. "Switzerland takes
reasonable
·
prices.
. ·
.
. .
-·
·.
each room, orie waiter assigned to each,
,
more students than any other place,"
.
.
.According to Scott Coh~n, who is
he said.
.
·
..
·
·
.
.
said Cohen.
,
finishing bis last term at the CJ.A., the
-·.
Working in the dining rooms is part
·
Upon graduation, students rarely
·
·
·
American
·
Bounty Room features an a la
.
of a class. The morning class runs the
··
have difficulty
in
finding jobs. There is
·
·
carte menu. making meal choices
.
and
.
lunch shift, arid the evening class runs
a Graduating
-
Office on campus wbich
.
:
~
pricei
·
more varied:
•
'Customers have a
·
·
dinners, he said. There is
·
always an
in-
aids students in locating job
·
oppor-
·
choice of
a
full meal or spearate items,".
structor present to oversee the students
·
tunities. "The Culinary name is so
he said.
-
and to evaluate their performance
.
If
famous," said Cohen, "there is a IOOOJ'o
·
.
Prices in the American Botmty Room
there are any major problems
·
the
in-
placement rate among students after
range anywhere from $8.95 to $15.95
·
structor will
.
step in, "but normally the
graduation."
for an entree.
_
Other choices
.
s
.
uch as
.
student has to handle it," he said, "it's
The atmosphere on campus is very
soup, salad, vegetable and dessert are
just like a job."
professional. Students are trained in all
separate on the menu. "You
can
have
a
The Culinary runs on a trimester
aspects of the culinary arts and are ex-
.
very nice full meal for about $20.00,"
basis. There are five terms
.
lasting fif-
pected to perfonn
as
if on the job, said
said Cohen.
teen weeks each. According to Mark
Fenner.
..
The Culinary is known for
its
famous
Fenner, a first-year student, third-term
The dining rooms are run in a very
·
Escoffier Room located
.
in the same
students go on
an
externship. These are
relaxed fashion
to
give patrons time to
building as the American Bounty
similar to internships at Marist in that
enjoy the setting, food and
·
service.
Room. Both rooms serve lunch and din-
students· are placed in positions for
"The service is slow," said Cohen, "but
ner and are run by Culinary students, he
"han~s-on" experience.
'
There is,
it is meant to be that way."
Inside
the Circle
.•·
The Classifieds are in ..................... p.6
Marist computer gets a babysitter ........... p.3
Chance previews
-
. . . . . .
~
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . p. 3
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--•Page
2~
THE CIRCLE·
September 30,
1982-----------------------------•
_
.
.
•
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-------
The good and the b~d
Last Thun;iday the College Union Board
clubs are going to be involved in the parade,
sponsored a student-talent coffeehouse. It
so there certainly won't be a large number
was a huge success;
of students building the floats. How many
The performers all had a chance to
students will care enough to watch a parade
display their talents to the rest of the stu-
on homecoming weekend?
dent body. The audience had a chance to ex-
·
·
·
Where's the money going
.
to come from
·
perlence first class entertainment without
anyway? If we, the student body can obtain
any admission. An extremely large crowd
money in order to make floats for a parade,
showed up. The program was run well, with
why can't we take the money and put it
no technical flaws. The only negative factor
towards something that we can benefit
in the entire event is 'that perhaps the
more from? The money
·
can be allocated to
fireside lounge isn't big enough anymore.
clubs that need a little more money. The
CUB and Ted Perrette deserve a pat on the
money can be used to finance many more
back for putting on such a successful event,
excellent activities as the CUB coffeehouse
an event that cost next to nothing to put on
.
and CUB mixers, which have both proven to
When money is tight in club allocations,
-
attract and entertain the student body. The
this is the type of event that deserves a
money can be given to a charity, it would be
cheer from the student body.
·
better to have the money donated to The
·
Reade
rS
·
·
Writ~
.
.
All letters must
be typed
triple space with a 60 space margin, and submitted to.ihe
;
'
·
Circle office no later than 6 p.m, Monday. Short letters are preferred. We reserve the
.
•
rl ht to edit an letters. Letters must
be
signed, but names may
be
withheld upon re-
.
q~est. Letters will
be
published depending upon avallablllty of space.
:
·
_
_-
.
Sharing Thanksgiving
DearEditor:
foreign
student
for
the
·
Several foreign students, both Thanksgiving recess are asked to
men and women, have expressed
.
contact
Bro.
·
Joseph
L.R.
•
the desire to spend the Thanksgiv-
Belanger,. Foreign
·
Student Ad-
ing recess with an American fan}i-
visor.
ly, so as to fully experience this
.
unique American holiday. Per-.
Bro. Joseph ~.R. Belanger
sons interested in
·
hosting
·
a
Cafeteria
·
bumps
-·
.
Dear Editor:
.
.
_
· . '
What
.
I
·_
..
cannot
·
handle,
.
I am not a person who is easily
·
however,
-is
going
to
the cafeteria
upset. Growing up
..
in
·
New
·
arid being' expected to
'.
balance
·
Zealand, I slept through several
plates, bowls, glasses~ silverware,
native uprisings and a tidal wave.
napkins; food and drink
·
on a tray
As an Operating Room Techni-
that has a
.
bump in the middle.
cian, if I didn't scrub for half a Wharis that bump? -How did it
dozen emergency cases before
·
get· there? Do¢s
.
.
every · tray
.
have
lunch I considered it a wasted
one? Is this the first fiendish step
morning. Now, as a Residence in a Communist take-over?
,
-
;
_
·
.
.
Director at Madst,
I face
the most
.
We can put.a man on the mbon
harrowing of all situations _ in-
and get students
to
study with at
teraction with college students -
least the same frequency: why
with hardly a shudder. In short,
I
can't we have
~
flat tray to
·
eat
am
a
man who has "laughed at
from?
·
death, sneered at doom, and
Sincerely,
chuckled at catastrophe" (what
Michael Bowman
movie is that line from?).
Residence Director
R.O.T.C. forum
Dear Editor:
A vital issue has arisen that
concerns the possible installation
of a Reserved Officers Trl!.ining
Corps program hereat Marist.
The Council of Student Leaders
has organized a forwn
to
discuss
with students the impact this
.
R.O.T.C. program may have on
·
our campus.
j
::1:h::
-'
students'
.
opinion
·
regarding
R.O.T.C. at th,e Nov.
1
board of
trustees meeting, where a final
decision wiH be
_
made. It is im-
perative that we have student
feedback concerning this issue.
Again,
the Council of Student
Leaders wishes to stress your at-
tendance and participation in this
vital issue.
Another event Is being organized for the
United Way rather than have It Invested In
Mari st student
:
body on homecoming
floats tt)"at
will ·
be
.
destroyed -after
.,
the
The forum
will
be held on Tues-
day, Oct.
5,1982
at
4
p.m. in the
, ,
.
theatre:
Alt
students
.
and faculty
Joan Gasparovic
C.S.L~ ~resident
.
,
•
•
Dave Skrodanes
C.S.L. Vice President
·
. ·
· ':·
;;~;:r1of%~cf/°ritoc~~t
Jj~!7f
gbin~
0
t~
•
.
. ,
.
parade.
.
-
,
,
,
,
·
have a parade! Money is going to be
Lets
_
have mqre ~offeehouses,
'
and less
allocated so clubs can make floats for the
·
·.
foolish displays for homecoming weekend.
are urged
to attend
..
.
.
Th~
-
c.s;L.
wHi
present
-
the
'
>
..
parade. How many students are going to be
There are better ways to spend our money!
.
as excited about the homecoming parade as
Can't we au get Into the homecoming
.
·
.
.1niramurals
Dear Editor:
·
formation around campus, and
.
Are intramurals for
all
Marist
·
sufficient time. And
if
the staff of
were excited about the coffeehouse last
spirit without floats? I'm sure we can. Lets
week?
save the money that would be invested In
··
._
College students???
-: ·
.
.
the
·
McCann Center
-
that
,
I
,
had
Allocating money to build floats for a
floats, so that nexttime
we
are told '"Sorry,
In regards to the flag football
asked hadn't known
.
what-was go-
intramurals, it seems to me
.
that
.
ing on, what else was I to assume
the office in
.
charge has become
.
but that the season had
:
ncit yet
homecoming parade gets a big BOO! Who
there isn't enough money," we'll have it sav-
are we trying to impress anyway? Only a few
ed away,
lax in their advertising for the
fall
b!!gun.
•
_
:
;
,
Another
.
boring weekeil.d?
event .
.
For this present season;
·
.
·
Although these m>ints, were
there were no posters
in
the Don-
brought
.
-
up to the
·'officer
in
.
nelly
-
area or in the
.
Commuter
charge, Glen Marinelli
~
lif failed
.
.
Lciurige. ,-the ar
_
~ inost k11own
.
to see
·
my reasoning
·
a
·
ria
·
stated
to the commuters who make up
:-
that
'
he
·
could ncit alter the
nearly
;
fialf of the Marist popufa~
schedule. five
..
days before the
tion. :Fiuthermore, there was no· games werf~lated to
f?.egi~
,
·
I was ·
announc"ement.in thid:ircle. This
·
:
:
,!:y,en.
r:efused after Lc,ff.ered to
.
We've been here for a month already -
doesn't it seem longer than that at times?
And another weekend is just around the cor-
ner
.
Oh, no -' what is there to do?
The football game is away this weekend,
but there is a mixer Friday night; that should
kill a few hours. I could always stand on line
at the Pub for an hour_ or two, ·or hit
Renaissance, the River Station, Skinner's ...
.
·
Saturday
1;11
sleep until noon or so; that
will take care of half the day. But there's
nothing
.
scheduled for Saturday night!
What's wrong with this place? They just
don't schedule enough events to keep me
busy around here! Why do all the other col-
leges always seem to have thousands of
p·arties and
_
dances and all sorts of ac-
tivities?
.
Maybe I'll go home -
again. I don't think I
·
can face another boring weekend. I'll see
familiar faces, people I know, and I can go
out
.
to my usual hangouts. I won't have to
Co-Editors
The
·
Circle
Associate Editors
Sports Editor
Advertising Manager
Business Manager
News Editor
'
.·
deal with the prospect of finding something,-.
to do around here;
·
•··
·
.
·.
·<
tt
****
•
'
•
• •
#
•
A typical Mari st weekend? Half the
act; or rather failure to act, is
·
.
spend my time in arranging
.
a
new
school goes home, while the other half
clearly unfair repres@ntation
.
Are s
_
chedule
.
His justification: I had
sta
d ti k
·
·t
t
I t
f
·
1 1·
d
not commuters part of the Marist
·
a team last year and should
.
have
·
on itii~ay
~~e~
;h~~e~k~~d fs ~:e:.e ieve
coJUni~nity? Then shouldn't
.they,':··
known better. I djd ,have
.
a
-
team
·
W k
·
1
It'
t th
j
b
f
be treated as such..
.
.
.
. '
·::
.
_
:
·
>
.
last year, and therefore-I had been
c.u.t
~ru~,a~~fii
0
~:nera~
fc,
0
ente~tafn ui.
.
Although the office in
·charge'
'.
looking for
'the·
necessary inf
or-
.
We're all
.
supposed
_
to be developing in-
_ ·
-
of intramurals stated that. there
·
mation to have
.
one-again.
fr
I -·
dependence during our college
.
years;·
·
·
w_as
_
a
~ig
_
n in the Mccann Cente~,
.
someone
·
wlio
'
iiad pi'e~fously peen
doesn't that include learning how to make
.
there
_
was no information
-
for'
,
.
'involved-.in
the
""
eveiit
:~
.• : liadn't
our own fun? No one can force you to be
sigri-llp. at the front desk:(wh~.r~'.
.
had the chiµtce
·
to
get
·
a
roster in,
bored; only you can let yourself be bored.
there had been last year).
·upon
··
:
how could
:
someone·. who had
·
Why don't we try to make this weekend
my th~rd inquiry at this deslcc;
r
.
,
never done it
-
before
.
·
have a
different? Maybe there aren't a lot of ac-
:
·
was told that the rosters had to
.
chance'?
·
·
.
tivities planned for the weekend.So; instead
'
h~v~ been already .in
.
(This_ ..ya~
.-
•
·
.
Will the lntramu~alChampion
f
1 •
Cu
B
r . .
·
d
eight
school
days
after
-
.
this year truly
be
the champion?
0
r~ ymg ,on
· · · ac ivities an
sports.
·
u
_
nder
_
graduates began· and
.
three
Because of the
·
un
·
fa1·r
·
represen~a-
events, we II have to make our own fun. The
weekend is invaluable to college students;
sc
_
h9ol da~ after graduates began
-
tion of the Marist Commuter, no
It's the one time we get to
.
relax with our
·· .:.;_ hardly enough time to put
one will ever know ... ·:
, .
.
.
friends. Have a good weekend, and don't let
together'a team and
be
adequately
•
Edward
P'.
Ke~nedy
yourself be bored.
·
prepared to play.) In previous
116
Academy Street
years there had been sufficient in-
-
Poughkeep
_
sie, New York
Rick O'Donnell
Patti Walsh
Karen Lindsay
Lou Ann Seelig
BIii Travers
Jim Barnes
Adrienne Ryan
Advertising Staff
Classified
Reporters
EIieen Hayes
Cartoonist
Caroline Krete
Lisa Crandall
Kevin Shulz
.
.
.
Meg Adamski, Bernadette Grey,
Carol Lane, Matthew Mcinerny,
Ivan Navas, John Petacchl,
Richelle Thomas, Brian Kelly,
Andrea Holland, Sue Vasallo,
.
BIil Flood, Karen Magdalen,
•
_
.
,
Brian O_'Keefe, Allee O'Kee!e,
.
.
.
t:tolly ~raeel, Richard Copp
Sports Photography Editor
Developing P
.
I:totography Editor
News Photography Editor
Jeanne LeGloahec
Kyle MIiier
Christine Dempsey
Copy Editors
.
• Michael Ward, Sandy Olson
Jacl_< D'Orlo, Gina Franclscovich
.
Lisa Crandall, Judy Knox,
Mark Amodeo, Adam Their
·
.
Kathy Q'Connor, Ken Bohan
.
Paul
.
Crowell, Joe Pareti
.
John Petacchl, Dawn
.
Ollver
.
. .
Pa_t Brady, Barry Smith
Ted Waters
Faculty Advisor
Dave Mccraw
.f
I
· - · - - - - -
-
- - ~
-
-
·
- - - - - - - - - ~ - -
---._♦--------♦
--------------•
. . .
11•11111!1----~-..------~-~
-
~""
-
~
-
-.
.
.
----... ----....
.
.
.
.
.
.
_
.
_
September 30, 1982 · THE CIRCLE
-
~ Page
3--
C
0-o p internShips offer students placement
Ii:iterships
.
taken by Marist students
-
dur-
ing their academic careers have become a
growing interest, arid the new
_
Co-op inc
ternships are playing a major role
.
.
At a Co-op internship meeting last week
in the Fireside
·
Louge,
.
Project Director
James Maness, along with Academic Vice
President Andrew Molloy, Development
·
Specialist Julie Primavera, coordinator of
internships Bob Norman, and two student
interns, Graduate
.
Ginny Luciano, and
Paul Zurneiden explained how vital taking
an internship can be for your future career
goals.
-
What makes a Co-op Internship dif-
ferent from other Internships is that the
placements are paid for the work they do.
Students may choose to be · placed up to
three times during their academic career.
-
Certain requirements must be
.
met before
.
an
internship can
be
taJcen and they were
explained by Julie Primavera. The first
·
qualification is that you must complete 60
credit
·
hours or more to apply. You must
•. also possess a grade point average of 2.5 or
above (3.0 for Management Studies
students), and be a matriculated degree
candidate. Ms. Primavera's recommenda-
tion was,
"If
you are eligible, you should
plan ahead, put an application in and come
speak with us." She also said, "Going for
an internship is very competitive, so be sure
this is what you want." She also recom-
mended that you speak with your division
and faculty advisor to make sure you are
·
eligible.
A
student taking an internship will be
graded on a new system this year, which
utilizes the pass or fail method, no letter
grades will be given, just a pass or fail
grade. They felt the need to change the
grading system because they didn't want a
grade unusually enhanced or damaged, by
taking an internship. Students would be
graded on their performance by submitting
weekly journals and papers.
Academic
.
Vice President Andrew
_
Molloy who has worked with the Co-op
program tor the past
10
years said he,
Computer_ gets
,
'babysitter'-
by
Grazia
,r,.
LoPiccolo
In addition the unit will automatically
·
telephone those in charge and will tell them
·
Some call it a squawk box,
·
others a that the computer is down, Denny said.
babysitter for the main computer and
.
some "It's like having a person here watching the
a sophisticated answering machine.
computer 24-hours a day .... little brother
Whatever it is called, this computer unit, watching big big brother,'' he said. The on-
recently acquired by the computer center of ly thing the computer unit cannot do is take
Marist College, will provide innumerable messages from the caller, headded.
services to the Marist community, accor-
Marist acquired the unit in September,
ding
tci
Cecil Denney, director of the com~
-
after several requests from the computer
puter center.
science department, said Denney. "The
"The Major service the unit will provide department wanted some type of an
to the user is that of an answering answering machine so that commuter
machine," said Denney. "If a person students could call
to
find out the status of
wants to know if the computer is up, all he the computer. In our search we came up
has
_
to do is dial
·
(914) 485-5040 and he will with this specific unit," Denney said.
"believes in the Co-op program at Marist.
A student
·
is tested at a time where we can
get an evalutation on what we can per-
form." He later commented, "We can
walk away with confidence with what we
have learned:"
·
The Co-op program has 43 students plac-
ed presently in locations ranging from IBM
and NBC, to the Dutchess Bank. James
Maness said they hope to place 75 students
in Co-ops this summer. The main problem
Maness stated was, "That there are 200
companies who wiil employ students, the
trouble is finding the students:"
Bob Norman commented on the success
of many Marist students in
•
the working
world. He said, "Out of 22 Seniors that
had internships last spring, 16 were hiroo
after graduation." Mr .
.
Norman also com-
mented on the fact that they had more
facilities than students and that they were
geographically spread out. "In the most
part," he replied, "We can send you in the
area you want to
20."
He recommended
that students, "Think before they act. A
student should have the desire, extra-
curricular activities and the proper courses
behind him before applying. Also talking
to a student in the internship your applying
for, is helpful."
Graduate Ginny Luciano, now employed
at WPDI:{ and WEOK, local radio stations
in Poughkeepsie, talked about her intern-
ship, that later landed her a job at the same
place. She said, "An internship develops
confidence. It's all you put into it -
you
get so much more than you would from
straight Liberal Arts courses." Paul
Zurneiden, who had a Finance Internship
at NBC this summer stated, "I had a fan-
tastic internship, that
resulted
in a fantastic
job offer. I'm really for Co-op intern-
ships."
·
If you want to apply for a Co-op posi-
tion, stop by the Office of Cooperative
Education and fill out the required applica-
tion. The office advises students to plan at
least a semester in advance for Co-op
placements.
.
t
l
hear a
·
computer synthesized
·
voice telling
-
The unit has a limited vocabulary of 400
him
.
whether or not
_
the main computer is wor
.
ds.
·
For example, it cannot pronounce
running." .
.
.
the days of the week. "It's hard for people
Denney. added that the unit does a lot
to
get
used to the idea of having a computer
Students at
work
•an the computer center
·_
.
,··'1
_
. . .
more
_
_
thari a regular answering machine. talk to them, but it shows where the com~
.
. . ·
.
.
.
.
,
•
•
:
_
c
::
.
'
:.
'
-
The uni
_
t
.
is
.
programmed to
.
monitor
.
the
.
pu
tei
-
technblogy"is]joing; ~:
said Denney
;
.•
__
,.
,
-'-C
;
•,
-::,
'
"
';
'""
•"'~"'",.,,_";.,,,,...,_'<(
,;;;,""-'
•
·
·-
,
'
•
-"'.'f"•·'-',
=
s:•
;.:.
c,
s
•
,"•;ir,;:;,;
;
.;,
~,
<;;: ..
c:c
,
--
y,:.i::t
,~Z'.
~t!.'c
"
,
::"!':"
'.~
•
!,f
f:
:··.::,
-
-,
;
_
;.
•
'
"?'-
':·
-
~-
--
"?J
.
:.
·
•
· '
,
,,_
--:
:••:
•
0
>:
•
~
.
-:;
.
'/
':
',
' ·
.
.
:
;
,
:t
iJ..
.
.
main computer
;
"The
'
uniHs
"
programmed'•
•
:
:,:
'
Denney
·-
explained that different units
.
The co~puter cen~er
IS
also considering
_
!hIS
mac~me,
It has
Che
·
pocencial of domg
, ,.
'
..
to monitor the main computer: If the
"
unit
·
could be added to
this
device. For example,
·
programming the u~1t to tell t~e caller ho_w
!t,"
~e said.
. .
.
doesn't receive a specific . response, _
_
it
;,1
unit for smoke ~etection. At t~e first sign
many stu~ent terminal_s are in use, said
Th1_s computer umt 1s a relatively ne_w
changes the message stored
m
the umt," · of smoke or fire, the machine would
Denney,
Most machtnes are not very machine and there are ~bout 500 of them in
said Denney.
.
-
~utomatically notify the fire department.
smart, but whatever we can imagine for use throughout the Umted States.
Friday:
-'·
On Campus:
Saturday:
Sunday:
Monday:
On
Campus:
Tuesday:
On
Campus:
Wednesday:
On Campus:
Thursday:
On Campus:
CUB Mixer- 9 p.m . .
FIim -
"ExcaUber"
-
7:30p.m.
..
. ·
·
·
_. L
On
Campus:
Soccer vs. King's
Point
.
·
Freshman Parents
OnCampus:
-
CircJe
·
·
K
In-
stallation Dinner
Film -
"Excaliber"
7 p.in. and 9:30 p.m.
Soccer vs.
RPI
3:30
p.m.
W o m e n ' s
Volleyball
vs.
Manhat•
tan7p.m.
Auditions for MC-
CTA's original
·
produc-
tion 6:30 p.m.
Women's Tennis
vs. New Paltz 3:30 p.m.
Soccer vs. C. W.
·
Coffee House 9
p.m.
The Chance:
The Roches
Brandy's Two:
The Chance:
Post 3:30 p.m.
CUB
Golf
·
Touma•
meot (Raio date)
·
•
.
Women's
·
-
Tennis
·
.
w. Purchase 3:30 p.m.
.
Day
The Chance:
·
Robert Gordon
Brandy's Two:
8084
·
The Chance:
TBA
Brandy's Two:
8084
Nutrition
Fair
Auditions for MC-
CTA 's original produc-
tion5 p.m.
New Beat Music
Dance Party
The Chance:
Bud Beer Blast.with
Blotto
Lady
Cousins:
Communter Union
meeting
1 p.m.
The Chance:
Cousins:
Brandy's Two:
Powerhouse
St.
Francis
-
Orleans
Brandy's Two:
Starfire
Mid-Hudson Civic
.
.
Center:
Hospital
11
a.m.-4 p.m.
Last day to sign
up
for
Intramural raquet•
ball and co-eel volleyball
Bardavon:
Last
day
-
to report
P
/NC and drop'
classes
without
academic penal•
ty
·
Andy Gootch
Cousins:
Sticky
Fingers:
Rolling Stones Show
Champagne Ball 9
p.m •
.
Chamber Music
Society of Lincoln
Center ensemble 7:30
p.m.
The
Chance:
The Chance
The Chance will present Blotto on Wednesday night.
If
you haven't seen Blotto yet, this show is a must. Blot-
to bas been featured on MTV, and they are composing a
new video project that will Include fo~tage taken at a
re-
cent show at The Chance. Blotto combines humor and
music
to
create an extremely entertaining show.
• Next Friday at The Chance, The Greg Allman band
will perform. Tickets are being sold In advance for $10.
The show should prove to be of interest to all Allman
Brothers fans.
.
.
.
.> .
..
.....
,
;
..,,i
..
,~
.
,,. ..
•
.
.:
_
,..
,
_,;
~
•
.
..
' •
.J
#
.,
,
...
.,
-
·
......
•
t· _
.-
.
~
:
··
~
-
•
•
Monday
Night
Football San Francisco
.
vs.Tampa
On
Campus
Tie one on at the CUB mixer this Friday. If you wear
a tie, you get in free. ff you don't, pay
so•.
The featured
band is the Gabis Brothers.
Reservati~ns for the CUB Dinner Theater can _be
·ma
.
de starting Monday, Sept., 27 in the cafeteria. Neil
Simon's "Chapter Two" will be presented on October 8
at 8:30 p.m. am there will be a buffet style dinner.
Tickets are $8 for students with a Marist College I.D.
and $10 for guests or faculty and staff.
Brandy's Two:
Northern Star
Cousins:
The Hurt:
New
Wave Dance Rocle
Steeplecha~
Mid Hudson Civic Center
On
Tuesday Glenn Frey, former guitarist and foun-
ding member of The Eagles, will be at the Mid Hudson
Civic Center. This is the first solo tour Frey has done.
Frey has penned such tunes as Peaceful Easy Feeling,
Heartache Tonight, and his recent hit The One You
Love. Tickets are
$9.S0.
I
'
r
.
►
--•Page
4 • THE CIRCLE•
September
30, 19112
Admissions
:
policies
.
aim
•
,I
•
• • •
·,
to avoid over,crowding
·
By Bernadette Grey
help~ alleviate so~ of' the h~u
-
sing p~o-
. blems as has the acquisition of three houses
Marist College is in a period of rapid on North Road, Daly said. The Lowell
growth, but there will never be more Thomas Communication Arts Center, now
students than the school can accommodate, in the planning stages,
will
.
prevent the
according to James Daly, dean of admis-
overcrowding
.
of Donnelly Hall, he said.
sions.
·
The center will
be
built "in the foreseeable
"There has never been any intent to pack future," he said.
this college and there never will be any at-
Daly noted that only
a
handful of col-
tempt to pack this college;'' he said.
leges have been building dormitories and
Daly said he understands the concerns that at least one school in the area has clos-
with Marist's growing population but that ed per year over
'a
ten year period.
•
"students should not be in a panic about
Marist has also been raising its admis:
enrollment."
·
sion standards, the Dean of Admissions
This year, niore students accepted said. The SAT scores have been raised over
Marist's offer of admission than expected, one hundred points
in
recent years and it is
he said. '' Admissions is more of an art than now much more difficult to get the Room
a science because we are dealing with peo-
and
Board
Scholarship, Daly said.
pie," Daly said
.
According
to
"Shared
Prospective Ap-
The Admissions Office has been working plicants' statistics, there
has
been a signifi-
out plans and making estimates that will . cant drop in
_
the number of high school
avoid any overcrowding problems, Daly graduates in recent years. "At the same
said.
time, applications to Marist have doubl-
Daly is concentrating on increasing selec-
ed," Daly said.
tivity, attracting more commuters, and ad-
Statistics have also shown that Marist's
ding buildings to the campus, he said.
number one competitor is Syracuse Univer-
The Marist Institute of Public Opinion is sity, Daly said. "What we have over
helping de_velop a policy to attract Syracuse is size. Freshmen do not even get
freshman cmnmuters, which would help near a computer terminal in Syracuse," he
keep housing J?roblems to a minimum, Da-
said.
.
.
.
ly said.
,
Marist is unergoing great growth while
Only 85 freshmen this year are com-
other schools are faltering, Daly said
.
"We
muters, according to Daly. "I would like to are coming into a very difficult time in a
say that we could increase that," he said.
strong position," he said. "This should be
The opening of the townhouses has a strong indicator to (Marist) students."
Frosh, families
to
gather
·
The Omega Society and the Student Af-
fairs Staff is sponsoring the Second Annual
Preshmen Parents Day
·
Oct.
2
outside the
McCann Center at
1
p.m. The rain date wilt'
be Sunday
.
According to the Rev. Richard LaMorte,
.·
assistant ~ean, this student-run even~
will
be an informal way for parents to meet
freshmen and their families.
·
Students will also be in charge
·
of the
barbecue, for which grills and food have
been provided by the cafeteria.
Core faculty members, head coaches and
college executives are invited to attend
.
.
Although no major addresses
will
be
given,
:
President Dennis
.
Murray will
welcome freshmen parents.
There will be group games such as whif-
.
Freshmen are allowed t~ inyi~e their im-
fle
.
ball,
,
volleyball,
.;t
ug-of-war,
.
three-
.
mediate family.
.
.
. .
·
..
· _
·
_
·
..
:
. :
.
.
.
.
legged face and Frisbee. Students
-
will
pro~
·
':':'
Uist'
yeifr
,"'
at'tlie
'
fj
r
s
·
t
Fieslimen Parents'
vide musical entertainment later in the day. Day, 738 people attended.
·
a
·" .
. .
-
-
.
..
.
-.
·-
;13(1
~
~-
Wait.
you guys. the Molson party is tomorrow n
i
ght.
BREWEOA.""IOBOntEO lSCA."'W>A
.
R'Tlported~MartSt1'fmpr,rcngCo. Inc. C,r~at~
(
~
-
NY
.
'
·.
PRESIDENT: SJR. GREG LUNA
·
_
CO M
_
M
UTE_R
.
.
.
HAPPEN I N
'
GS
····-.
wE
-·
DRIVE
·
TO ACH
,·EVE!!!-
➔
,
.
.
.
R
_
ESIDENTS ARE WELCOMED!!
·
·-
Meetings every Friday 2:'00
0249
·
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=
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Best-Kept Secret On
_
Ca
_
mpus
-
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>
0
.....
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m
R.O. T.C. AV!
or
NAY!?
C
m
·
AGENDA
CAR
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POOLING
LOCKERS
Q..
Q..
ftl
COFFEE MACHINE
COMMUTER PROBLEMS
CLOCK
.c
...
m
>
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CCI
.c
==
LIBRARY
.
.
_
,
,
ff
***********************************
.
SOCIAL
EVENTS
_-
WINERY TRIP/ SLEEP
-
OVER
-
NEW
-
PALTZ PLANETERIUM
&
MORE!
.
DINING HALL HOURS
Monday thru Friday
.
.
Full Breakfast. .....
~
...... 7:30 a~m.-9:00 a.m.
·
Continental Breakfast ....
~
. 9:00 a.m.-9:30 a.Ill~
·
·
·
Lunch ..... ~
·
...
~
...... ; .. J0:45 a.m.-1:15 p.m
~
·
Dinner. ..
~
.......
•
....... 4:30 p.m.-6:45
p.-m.
Dinner Friday ..... ~
-
....... 4:30
.
p.m.-6:15 p.m~
Saturday
·
·
Full
,
Breakfast. ....
·
......
~
.8:30 a.m.-9:30 a.m.
· :
continental Breakfast.
·
... ~9:30 a.m.-10:00
a.ni.
:
.
Lunch ........
.
...........
l l
:30 a.m.-1 :30 p.m.
'
Dinner ..........
·
.. : ...... 4:30 p_.m.-6:00 p.m.
Sunday
Brunch ...
.
·
•
.
•
·
~ ....
.
•..
.
>
;.;;
.11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m.
:
Dinner . .-
~
: .. ·: . ....
<
·~ . / ..
·
~
_
.
4:30 p.m:-6:30 p.m.
Pub Hours
:
Monday thru Thursday;_
.
~ ... 8:00
.
p.m.-1 :00 a.m.
Frid~y ..
.
• , : ·. :. :
':
~
--
-.
~
.. ; . ~
:
_.
_
s;
·
oo_p.m.-2:00 a.m.
* :
;
.
Satu~day
.
.... : ...•...
~
..
·
. 8:00 p.m.-2:00 a.m. *
l
.
\
.
-
:
·
.
·
*Fo_od
_
served from 2:00 a.m.-3:00 a~m.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
·.
.
,
Deli Hours
.
_
Ivlpnd
_
ay
_
thru
.
Thursday
.-.
. ~
-
-7:30 p.m.-1 :00 a.m.
Friday ~nd Saturday ... :
·
.. :
·
.7:J(fp.m.-1:00 a.m.
\ , . .
,..
•
1
;:,
..
•
'
·
~
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~~-...-------ilMllililMlllliMilillllliliiaillliliMIIIIIMil,IIMililllilillllllll ...............
_ . .
. . . . . . . . . . .
. _ .
.....
_ _ _ _ _ _
......, _ _ _ _
....,; _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
...;.-
·
.J
l
-
.._~-~~-~--~-~---------------------September
30, 1982 · THE CIRCLE.
Pages--.
Specializing in 'be.,;ing' brings us closer
by
L~uis
C;
Zuccarell~
'
•
Specialization is
-
~ pra~tice which cari be
.
•
helpful and efficient
-
when properly
employed
but
, ·
quite
.
destructive and
wasteful
_
\\'.hen
·
_
applied
.
carelessly
_
and
Forum
·.
thoughtlessly. Many of us associated with a
_
people. Instead of interacting with each
field of study come quickly to recognize the other as
·
whole people, we interact on the
.
a~ti~ici
_
ality and
_
narrowness of many bases of our specialties, apropriately tagg-
-
d1sc1plmary perspectives
.·
We
··
become ed by titles and positions -
professor,
aware of the need to
·
transcend our special-
R.A.,
student, secretary, coach, mentor,
ty, to see it in wider terms and to approach
etc. I'm sure there exists at Marist a com-
by so doing, a more human and wholisti~ puter label for each of our specialties -
appreciation of our discipline. Failure to machines respond well to these types of
move out beyond our
.specialization
can categories -
but no label or tag for the
lead us
to distorted or incomplete
.
most important
-
thing we
'
share -
our per-
.
knowledge -
it can lead us to error and sonhood.
-
.
failure.
This problem, or should I say challenge,
·
What is true about specialization in
academic disciplines and
'
in performing
tasks can also be true in terms of the roles
we assign to ourselves and to others. We
may, some of us, feel most comfortable in
our specialized definitions of ourselves and
of others. We may be unwilling or unable
·
to go beyond these definitions to see whole
should be of particular concern to a college
which says so much about its sense of com-
munity and about the importance of blen-
ding, living and learning -
lofty ideals but
hard to achieve if structures and behaviors
underscore only our specialized roles and
do not provide sufficient opportunities for
tis to explore and appreciate our common
humanity.
·
If
mentor, faculty, counselors and
students share the enterprise of furthering
academic learning, they should at least
know each other; talk to each other; plan
together and work together.
If each takes
his/her slice of the learning pie -
unaware
of each other; nurturing stereotyped im-
ages of the other; each a specialist in
his/her own right, on his/her own "turf"
-
if this occurs, then the cause of com-
munity, of living and learning, of being
human, takes a step
.
backwards.
If
faculty are the teachers, student-
personnel workers, the social directors
police and
parent-substitutes;
ad:
ministrators, faceless bureaucrats; all ably
assisted by an army of hired hands -
all
kneading and molding a faceless mass of
objects called students -
if that's what the
modern army of university specializations
boils down to, then the hope for communi-
Housing director
·
outlines phone policy
By
Richelle Thomas
The
_
use of
·
private t~lephone~ for
students living on campus may be possible
in some cases, according to director
-·
of
-
dormin which certain rooms, that were
For students interested in getting phones,
wired for telephones in the past still have a telephone company representative of-
their wires intact. Phones can be installed fered the following information:
in these rooms only. In the other rooms of
ty is dim indeed.
It is encouraging that Marist has always
aspired to avoid the trap of exaggerated
specialization and that often enough we
have been able to move beyond our labeled
roles and see the transcending humanity
which can vitalize us
in
our search to iden-
tify and live by those values most consistent
with our dignity as human persons.
_
Yet these are not easy matters to deal
with. How quickly
the
novel approach of
yesterday can become routinized and
trivialized by institutionalizing it. How
easily can our student activities on one side
of our campus become totally separate
from the activities going on in the
classrooms on the other side of the campus.
Specialization that strips coaches and ad-
~inistrators and mentors and acti~ity coor-
dinators and students too, of their roles as
educators, and constricts education to
.
classrooms and to the professional teachers
who work there -
ultimately, such
specialization strips us of opportunities to
grow as a community and to live and learn
about each other and with each other.
One of the great things about teaching at
Marist is the feeling that one has many
partners in the work. As long as we are
humble enough to acknowledge our limits
·
and secure enough to welcome others to
help us do our work, Marist will be a place
to celebrate life -
life in its noblest values.
And it will
be
such a place for all the varied
persons who choose to enrich this place by
"BE-ING"
here, together, for a portion of
their Jives.
Louis Zuccarello is an associate pro-
fessor of Political Science.
·
housing Robert Heywood.
·
.
There is no set'
·policy
on the use of
private telephones, although no phones
may be installed without approval from the
housing office. Students living in the
townhouses are
-
permitted to have phones
in their bedrooms because phone jacks
have
:
been ins~alled. Heywood stated,
.
"No
·
new hook-ups can
be
installed in the dor-
·
Champagnat, Bruce·Tv, the cable servic~
If there is currently a phone jack in the
used the "feed lines" the telephone com-
room all that is needed is
a
telephone that
---Correct1· on--·
pany would have used. According to can be plugged in. Phones can be picked up
Heywood, Leo and Sheahan Halls were at a local Phone Center and the telephone
.
never wired; Benoit and Gregory Houses
company
will
tell customers the date the
mi tori es."
·
·
·
·
·
were wired but they no longer are.
phone will
be
turned on. The connection
charge is $34. A deposit of $100 is required
It is technically possible for any room on for new customers who have never had a
campus to
be
wired for a phone but there
is
phone listed in their name and two forms
a college
·
policy which states there can not of identification are necessary.
be
any "wires running on the outside of
Residents with questions concerning
Because of a typesetting error,
last week's s~ory on Planned
Parenthood contained an inac-
curacy. The story should have
read: Henkle pointed out that no
one needs
to
be sexually active,
and it is important to have a good
feeling about yourself.
·
.
.
.
-
rooms." This policy is a safety precaution,
telephone service can contact the Housing
,--C~u.r;,;r.;;e~n~tl;;;,y.C~h;:am~p;;:a;g~n~a~t .,:H.:,a:1:,1 ~i~s ~t:h:e.,;o:n:1_:Y_,;.
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J
--•Page 6 ·
THE CIRCLE·
September
30,
1982
CASO
·
·
makes comeback
C.A.S.O., the Community Action Social
Organization, it planning a comeback at
Marist this semester after a one year
absence.
Now a graduate student at Marist, Velas-
quez felt that the growing Hispanic popula-
tion of Marist was in need of a social group
that could. extend themselves and their
culture to others. After Velasquez's
The club, which started in 1977, is an
graduation in 1981 the club died and didn't
organization whose main function is to in-
resurface until last semester when she and
form and educate people about · the
Garcia (iegan making plans to bring it
Hispanic culture through meetings and
back. They are currently working on get-
social events such as cultural dinner
ting the meetings and social calendar
dances.
·
organized.
,
Carlos Garcia, vice president of the club,
Along with the cultural socials.the club is
explained that C.A.S.O. differs from the . active in community service. The members
Spanish Club in that it extends to a wider pay visits
io
homes and institutions, talking
range of the Hispanic population rather with the residents and entertaining them.
than concentrating on Spain specifically.
. Garcia hopes to get together with other
Garcia stressed that the club is not only clubs in putting together the social events ..
open to Hispanics. All interested persons He acts as a "Iiason man" between the .
are welcome.
clubs and Marist population. He hopes to
Edith Velasquez,• president of the
organization, helped found
it
five years ago
along with a group of Marist students.
Now a graduate student at Marist, Velas-
quez felt that the growing Hispanic popula-
tion of Marist, Velasquez, president of the
organization, helped found it five years ago
along with a gr9up of Marist students,
Ransom note: I want ten million dollars for
the return of your dog?
Petey - You can drink the soda, but I want
the ice cubes - Baby
Cookie, Someday! Someway! I love your
sweats, let's play some solitaire.
RRL
"Ow boo wow bwow oo".
sMr. Weekend
Tim,
Dee,
and Deb-
welcome
to
.
Maristland!I'm glad you're here!
Lynn, I didn't want to tell you, but I'm
madly in love with you.
Love "A Friend"
Leave Pooee Alone!
Champ: Read Cosmo often?
Fish: Tvarski Me!
Cookie, thanks for teaching me how to
play cards. I had loads of fun.
Bob
Babs, Husseyface, and KTB- you're miss-
ed!
Mike Finnen: Keep the monster movin',
wrap it up in plastic, and give it as a birth-
day present!
·
R.
Carol, You, Me, and Bruce. Three's com-
pany!
bring them together through the various
events.
Board members include Grace Velez,
Maritza Solano, · Susie Balutis, Hector
Mota; and Julia
Moret.
,.
Garcia says that the club currently has 25
members and is hopes to expand.
IFI-ED6
-
·
Bob, Did those beers really cost
$25?
·
Leo First
Mike
&
George, Out music has made its
mark. Ted
To my friends -Thanks! Patti
Mike, make her pay for it, if she wants it so
much!
·
Alison,
don't·. worry
we : haven't
forgot ... yet!
, ·-_. -,
1
'.
1
,-r: ·
,
Congradulations Lo.uAnn . and' 1Pa
Quarters champs of the week . .- ·- .
Will the real WMCR please stand up. Ed~
die Powers and Company, Where are you?
A little ditty about Tim and Diane, two
young lovers tryin' to get as drunk as they
can!
Rick
"Yo Adrienne": Happy Birthday a little
early!
Your Buddies
Sheila, I mean Shelly, or is it Amelia: Stand
· still for a second!
You guys on Balding throw nice parties,
· but who is going~out with the doll?
DDD- I don't care what you say. You will
always be the cutest boy on campus-- Your
little girl
,
.
.
Our House is a very very drunk house.
Kaie: You're a sexual DYNAMO!
Larry, . Aerosmith may have Rocks, but
We want B-Guidos, We want B-Guidos; · Springsteen has balls!
We love Tony! He's or man.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Signed everybody
Nise: How's the mustache coming?
c4eademy
WI-NE
&
LIQUOR
26 A.CADEMY ST.
PO'llEPSIE, N"Y.12601
-Tel. 4S~ -
41.~o
I
-
BELONG
_
TO
THEMARIST
MUNCH
BUNCH
Commuters
&
~esid8nts:
Savel0%
Check out coupon
-booklet.
Good
in
·
Coffee Shop,
·
Deli
and
-Dining Hall
Purchase
of
booklets
.
may be made
in
Food Service Off ice
I
I
I
1
i
---------------------------------September 30, 1982 ·
THE CIRCLE·
Page
1 - - •
Marist
·
expands again with two more houses
. Marist has purchased two more houses,
located on North Road, this year. in an at-
tempt to· alleviate the current housing
crush, Robert Heywood, director of Hous-
. ingsaid;. ·
"There is no more room to expand on
this side of Route nine," Heywood said,
"This is a good way to meet the need of in-
creased enrollment," he said.
In addition to 63 North Road, which the
college owned previously, Marist purchas-
ed
65
North Road and 71 North Road in
August of 1982.
Twelve students are currently ·residing at
71 North Road, which has three apart-
ments.
65
North Road has two apartments.
Four girls were assigned to each apart-
ment at
65
North Road; however, the
upstairs tenants, a couple with a six-month-
old child, are still living there. Con-
sequently eight students are living in the
downstairs apartment which consists of
two bedrooms and a · finished basement ·
converted into two bedrooms. Heywood
said that by early October the upstairs
apartment should be vacant.
resident advisor wouldn't have the same
role, " he · said, "There is more in-
dependence, and with that more respon-
sibility."
The status of North Road students is like
that of the students living in Manchester or
Canterbury apartments Father La Morte,
(Assistant Dean of Student Affairs) said.
"They are resident students in college
sponsored housing," he said.
.
"They are. treated no differently than
anyone in the residence halls, including
discipline, " Heywood said.
Resident Director Barry Jameson is
responsible for discipline at the North
Road facilities.
"People over there will have to exercise
responsibilities,'' Father La Morte said,''
if
their lifestyle becomes a problem the first
persons to notice are the neighbors, and
they will call the police and the housing of-
fice with complaints," he said.
"The college doesn't want to force out
the upstairs tenants," Heywood said," but
wants to work with them in relocating.''
· - At the present time a permit is not re-
quired for a party
en
North Road as it is
with the townhouse facilities. The idea of
requiring permits
is
being discussed, Father
La Morte said. The last two parties they
had were rather large and the police were
called, he said: "There will definitely be
more rules
in
terms of parties," La Morte
said.
Two houses were recently purchased by Marist.
All of the students located at North
Road are female. Security was the reason
for more girls being placed across the street
Heywood said.
It_
is closer to campus, and
the parents were concerned about the safe-
ty· of their children living off campus he
said. Mary Ellen Muzikowski and Martha
Sanchez, residents . of 71 North Road;
agreed.~ •-~Our parents said if we were plac- ·
ed off-campus, we would not be returning
to Marist," they said.
·
There are no resident advisors stationed
on North Road. Maureen Tynan, is the stu-
dent liaison for North Road. Tynan, who
lives at · 63 North Road with three other
students, works for the housing office. Her
job is to keep the lines of communication
open between the students and campus,
distributing· information · and reporting
maintenance concerns.
"It is the same principle as a resident ad-
vis.or but just a different name," said ·
Heywood. "In that type of environment a
"We don't want to make the off-campus
facilities
·
a carbon copy of on-campus
facilities," he said-.
There is no security coverage on North
Road.
If
there is a problem the Poughkeep-
sie police should be called, La Morte said.
Marist College security, if called, will res- ·
pond, he said.
Some students dislike living off-campus.
"It's better to be on-campus where the ac-
tion is, " Mary Ellen Muzikowski said,
''You can't see what's going on over here."
· "I feel alienated," Martha Sanchez said.
The students had to install their own
private phones aro house phones are also
being installed.
Most of the students seem pleased with
the facilities. "We love it, " two residents
of 71 North Road said, "We have our'own
ki~chen and so much more room," they
·said.
.
The Students were given the option of
being on the meal plan of off it.
There are some maintenance problems.
The front doors of both
65
and 71 do not
lock properly according to the residents.
Smoke alarms have not been installed and
the window leading to the fire escape is
broken in 71, the residents said.
"Although we've asked for one, we still
have not received a dining room table,"
Maryanne McGuiness, a resident of
65
North Road said. "We eat off a little cof-
fee table," she said, "and they refused to
give us locks on our bedrooms."
"The houses were purchased late so
t'1ere are some loose ends," Heywood said,
· "but we are working with them on it."
"This was a new idea for students this
fall, " Heywood said, "I think it will be
very popular. It is like paying for a single
room on campus but getting an apartment
_and a little more independence," he said.
A Housing Committee has been ap-
6 CRANNEl ST.
P0UGHK£EPSI£,
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pointed by President Murray to study the
housing situation and make projections for
the future. The committee is made up of
Robert Heywood, Dean Cox, Jim Daly,
Anthony Cernera, excutive assistant to the
president, and Anthony Campilli, business
officer.
The committee would be looking into
purchasing more houses, not necessarily on
North Road, but preferably within walking
distance of campus, Heywood said. If
other houses across North Road become
available I think the college would look in-
to it, he said.
"That would be a cautious move,"
Heywood said, "but the way Marist is
growing it tends to indicate it will be
necessary."
The three houses on North Road are con-
sidered a part of the college and these
facilities will be utilized as long as there is a
need for housing Heywood said.
If
not for
housing they could eventually be used for
other p~rposes,
.
~uch as for offices, he said.
..
...
,,
t
,•
--•Page 8
·
THE CIRCLE·
September 30, 1982---------:.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
A day in the life
.
of a Marist intern
~Y Susan Vassallo
While most students are rising each mor-
ning between the hours of
9
a.m. and noon,
Chris
·
Blood, a Marist senior, is already at
work. He is doing an intership with IBM
.
Blood's day begins at
6:30
a.m. He has
to be at the IBM Poughkeepsie plant by
7:30.
When he arrives, he finds a list of
assignments waiting for him on his desk.
Blood has been assigned to the Manufac-
turing Process Control Department.
·
It
is in Blood's department that filming
of a board line takes place: this is where
computers and circuits are built .. "When
there are a lot of defects in a certain area of
a computer," said Blood, wefilm that area
and it gets turned into an instructional tape
which is then sent out to
the
people using
·
the computer to explain the problems."
Blood said that h~ was a little
'
unsure of
his abilities at first but when he got to IBM
he became more confident.
"It
isn't as
hard as
1
thought it would be. Marist
taught me a lot of the basics,"
said
Blood.
"Sue
Lawrence
'
s Television Production
courses and Scott Badman's Broadcasting
technology course have helped me tremen-
dously," said Blood. HI,! said Badman's
class, which is no longer offered, introduc-
ed him to materials such as operational
manuals. "They are imperative to my
job
,
" said
Blood
:
According to Blood, it was the lack of
.
available, worthwhile, upperclevel com-
·
.
muncation courses that caused him to look
into an internship. He said Bob Norman
·
was most instrumental in helping him to
.
obtain it. "The man
·
is great," said
Blood,
"He
really cares about the
students."
In order to be accepted for the intern-
ship, Blood had to go through an interview
with a representative from the
IBM
Person-
nel Department and the Manufacturing
Process Control Department. He competed
with two other students. "I feel I won this
internship because of my experience and
knowledge of the communication field; my
extra-cirricular activities and my sufficient
index," said Blood
.
·
Blood said he will feel a lot more secure
and confident going into the working world
because of his internship. "Without an in-
ternship, chances of getting a job after
graduation are lessoned a great deal," said
Blood. "They're looking for well-rounded
people outthere. After a good education at
Marist, an internship is what rounds you
•
off
.
"
.
Blood said the
impressiveness
of IBM
·
and his knowledge of the equipment he is
now familiar with will be very helpful to
.
him
in
attaining his career goals
.
As he ex-
plains it, "Without this internship, I would
feel like a small child in a world of adults."
Interhouse council election tallied
by
Richard Copp
the residents of House Three.
•
Freshmen winners for Leo Hall include
Last week marked the end of a hectic Patricia Reilly and Wanda Allie for House
campaign trail for
)
aspiring candidates all One; Patrick Patterson and Joe Tortorice
over the Marist campus as the results of the for House Two; and Kate Huggard and
.
Interhouse Council elections
·
were an-
Michele Irwin for House Three.
nounced
.
.
Freshmen Andrew Crecca and Patty
Rounding out' the Champagnat Hall Whiteman are representing Sheahan Hall,
council
are
Mary Schroeder,
Brian. and Mark Zangariand Jim Murphy are the
O'Keefe, . and Maureen Ryan for House winners for Gregory House.
One; Lori Isler
.
and Cindy Krueger
.
·
The
·
~nterho~se Council'
'.·
members for
-
.·
·
representing
·
House Two; and Grace Benoit House
'ard
Townhouse'sA, B, and C
.
·
,:;
;.
Oaflagliera
.
ndDofina
:
·
cashirc w~'r:kins
'
.fo,:
•
:
"
,
havexec to
be
ar_i
.
nounced
:
·.
-.:t::';
:
:
;
:-:-... .
Tom
Welsh
Campus
Rep ..
Tuesday
.
.
Ladies Night
Ladies
.
Drink
FREE
Thursday
.
Night
..
COLLEG
·
E· NIGHT
.
Free
Admission
with College
.
10.
FREE DRINKS 9-10:30
··
'
.
.
''Mi-tst
be.
a
·
freshman.'~
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•
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Beer Brewed
Dy Miller Brewing
Co
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M,lwaukee. Wis
.
(
·oi
-
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Wednesday
·
Nickel Night
E~ery
.
Other
Drink
5c
All Night
.
Friday and Saturday Free Admission before
10
.
p~m •
.
with
_
Valid College I.D.
Sunday Night Party· Night -
Free Drinks for All
·
8 -10
p.m.
Live Entertainment 6 Nites
.
a
·
Week
.
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Dress Code
Free Parking
Proper I.D .
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,
33 Academy Street
Poughkeepsie
471-1133
; , Knights of
Columbus_ · .
.
Marcellin Champagnat ··Council No. 5679 ··
.C~ngrat_ulations to the f ollo~ing Oatholic gentlemen ~n the
completion of their First Degree into the Knig~ts_ of Columbus:
Richard C. Frey.
Patrick K. Larrabee
James J. Murphy III
Eugene H. Robbins
Thomas A. Cavanagh
Michael T. O'Brien
Robert J. Scherr
Robert G. Weinman ·
Scott T. Damrners
Antliony J. Bellantoni
Jeffrey A. Friedman
Mark V. Zangari
Keith M. Griffin
Michael T. Gillgan
Patrick E. Goodspeed
Paul V. Malley
Paul G. Lettera ·
Thomas G. Murphy
Ignatius Spera
Fraternally yours,
Philip K. Boyle
Grand Knight
HYDE PARK ARMY-NAVY
·
Route 9, Hyde Park, New York 12538
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Any Purchase
1
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through October 31st
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with Marist
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You
Lovell! ,-
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8:00 P.M.
All SEATS RESERVED S,.SO.
TICKETS
ON
SALE.
"'ow
..
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Tacllets
Anil1ble
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dt1 llill-H1dso1
Civic
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Office alld all
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for
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454-5808 _ ..
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• To
CHAIGI
Tlcltets with
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VISA
or
MASTERCARD
ctll
at-5165
September 30~ 1982 · THE CIRCLE - Pages--
Post Office problems:
missing mail, no boxes
by Lou Ann Seelig
· Dealing with the campus post office this
_ year can be annoying especially if you're
one of the many people who has no. mail
box at all.
·
There are 1352 mail boxes on campus
and 1309 people licing in campus housing
whose mail is handled through the Marist
post office. Each club and several teachers
also use the campus post office and boxes,
but this is not the reason for the shortage of
boxes.
The problem is that about 150/o of the
1,352 boxes do not work. That leaves ap-
proximately 1150 boxes for the 1152 on-
campus residents and
157
off-campus
residents that must pass through the post
office every day.
· Walter Wegiinski, full-time employee of
the post office, said that the situation is
very confusing. There simply are not
enough working mail boxes to go around,
according to Weglinski.
Business Officer Anthony
Campilii
says
that he and others are looking into the pro-
blem, but·nothing will be resolved concern-
ing the box situation until next year.
Even those people who do have mail
boxes have troubles. There are cases of
misplaced paychecks, missing pictures and
week-late magazine deliveries. People in
each townhouse share one box, but they are
not the only ones. Some people, especially
those at the end of the alphabet, have one
box for two or three people.
Mix-ups are frequent and are usually
resolved, as in the case of a missing
paycheck. Senior Veronica Shea said she
was expecting her last paycheck of the sum-
mer to be sent to her at Marist. She finally
recei:ved it--opened after it had been
delivered to junior Veronica O'Shea, "For-
tunately she was honest enough to return
it,"
said Shea.
Junior Patti Walsh said she is still look-
ing for a set of pictures that were delivered
to the wrong box and returned to the post
office. Walsh, originally assigned a
townhouse box, is now an
R.A.
in
(Sheahan) Hall. She said her photos were
(delivered) to the townhouse box and
returned to the post office, but somehow
they have been lost in the shuffle.
Sophomore Jan Willis had the Sept.20
issue of
Time
delivered on Sept.
13
and the
Sept. 13 issue delivered on Sept. 20.
Possible solutions are welcome.
Chance to hold benefit for child
The Chance in Poughkeepsie, with the
help of
WPDH-FM,
is sponsoring a benefit
concert for 6-year-old cancer victim, Eric
Zimmerman of Dutchess County.
Young
Eric's affliction may be at-
lributed to his father's service in Vietnam,
where he came in contact with the defoliant
Agent Orange, according to sponsors.
Vietnam Veterans of America: Mid Hud-
son Valley Chapter organized the event.
Performers will include
NRBQ,
Robbie
Dupree, Larry Hoppen of Orleans, Levon
Helm, formerly of The Band, and other
surprise guests.
Tickets are only $5. The fund-raiser will
be
held on Sunday, Oct. 3 beginning at 9
P.M.
-·.
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Page 10 · THE CIRCLE• September 30, 1982
_
.
· 15
of f-campuS
students
to
·
relocate
·ill
dorms
by
Ivan V. Navas
Director Of Housing Robert A.
Heywood has given permission to 15 off-
campus Marist students to move on cam-
pus after they filled out request forms for
on-campus housing.
A priority system was used to determine
which students would
be given the . first
·chance
to
move on campus, said Heywood.
According to Heywood, a-list of factors
were drawn up with the help from Dean Of
Student Affairs Gerard A. Cox, Assistant
Dean Richard A. LaMorte and Heywood
·himself.
These factors took into account whether
a student was a returnee or new, ·a recipient
of a scholarship, employed on campus, a
participant in on-campus activities (e.g.
clubs, sports), as well as any special cir-
cumstances (such as being handicapped).
Off-campus students received request
forms for on-campus housing from student
liaisons at their off-campus residence last
week. Students completing the form then
could give them to their student liaisons or
hand them in directly to the housing office.
Figures given by Heywood show that 161
students lived off-campus before he allow-
ed some to on-campus housing. A total of
32 students were involved, but only 22
spaces were available for occupancy. Thus,
IO of 24 male students and
5 of 8 female
students will be given room on campus.
Heywood also said that a housing com-
mittee appointed by Marist · College Presi-
dent Dennis Murray will be going over last
year's priority system used for housing
students.
,
Factors to be covered will probably be
the projected enrollment, attrition rate and·
. next year's housing sites, according to
Heywood.
face a few inconveniences: Problems are
found in housing maintainance, separation
from the rest of the student body, and bus ·
schedules, as well as a delay in the delivery
of furniture to apartments.
·
·
Paul Damin, student Liaison at Park
Place, said that room were insufficiently
cleaned upon arrival at the site.
He also
said that leaks in faucets and a
leak
in the
· floor of a shower stall exist.
Recalling her first impressions
cif
being
off-campus, Cheryl Frazier of Georgetown
apartments said she was dissolusioned. "I
was angry for being put so far away, as it
was a real inconvenience to go by bus,"
said Frazier. "But the accommodations are
nice."
According to Heywood; Poughkeepsie
Furniture delayed delivering all furniture
to apartments because its supply ran short.
Sonny Rincon of Canterbury Apartment
disapproved of the bus schedule and ques-
tioned about the . use of buses for
transporting students. "Busing .is no real·
big problem but they should make 30 or 40
. minute intervals so you can get off campus.
faster," said Rincon. "They should also
use vans instead of buses.''
Bus schedules reveal that bu.ses leave
from Marist approximately at an hour and
a half intervals. As for the use of buses,
Heywood said that their use is on an ex-
perimental phase.
.
Heywood said that students have given
·· both positive and negative reactions to be-
ing off-campus. On the positive side there
is the fact of being away from campus and
the sense o"f independence. The main
negative aspect seems to be the isolation
from friends who live on campus.
DATE:
Tues., Oct. 5, 1982
TIME:
4.
p.m.
.PLACE: Theater (Campus Center)
ISSUE:
The installation of an: ROTC. p_rogram_ .
.
at Marist.·
All students and faculty are urged to attend . .
CELLOPHANES
~AIR C.U TT
f;
RS
Off~campus students say they are
'
satisfied with living off-campus but tpey do
~
..
·
····•
·
•·
···
·· CLASSIFIEDS
Tom Finnigan, student liaison and
Canterbury resident said, "H's alright.but I
really like to get on campus." Gail Jiles of
Park Place agreed. "It's nice but
it is lonely
as well as quiet," she s_aid.
. ~
t
I
On Sale
Thursdays
3 liberty St.,
Main Mall,
Poughkeepsie • 454-9239 • By app't only
HThe Ultimate ·Night
Club''
Friday -
October 1
Sticky Fingers
"Rolling Stones Show"
Saturday -
October 2
Starfire
Saturday~ October 6
.
.
..
:--
.
.
.
The-Hurt·
· "Ne~.Wave Dance Rock"
·.,
Tllursday :- October 7
.
Steeplechase·
_
The Best of ''Rock and Roll''
Route9
*Every Wednesday and Thursday
OPEN BAR
from 9-10
Hyde Park Plaza
229-9413
Hyde Park
---------------------------------•September-30, 1982 •
THE CIRCLE·
Page 11--•
Marist hooters
uP
.recOtd. ·.
ifiij
.
with
5-0
wiri
·
over FairfieldP{~i-~:-,:::·:::>f
by~
ohn Petaccbi ·.
The Marist soccer team evened its record
at 1-1 in the Tri-State conference last Satur-
day with a
5-0
whitewash of Fairfield at
Leonidoff field..
·
The Red Foxes,
2-3 overall, will be at ·
. home versus Kings Point this Saturday at 1
p.m.
Marist was led
by
freshmen Mark
Adams, who.~cored twice and assisted on
another goal and Wayne Cargill; who add-
ed a goal and an assist.
Red Fox Coach Howard "Doc"
Goldman said his team was in control
throughout most of the game, but· they
didn't really play up to their potential.
·'.'It took us a little time to get on track in
the first half," Goldman said. "We had
control of the game, but we didn't play as
well as it appeared. Our ball control was
poor - we played better while losing to St.
Francis and Fordham," he said.
Bob Cooper opened the scoring for
Marist on an assist from Mike Terwilliger.
Mark Adams followed with his fourth and
fifth goals of the season. Wayne Cargill
scored his fifth goal of the season in the se-
. cond half, the fourth consecutive game in
which he's scored a goal or more. Tim--
Buchanan finished the scoring with his se-
cond of the season, late in the game.
John Malatestinic, making his first start
in goal this season, got the win.
"They relly didn't pose any threat to us,
" said Goldman. Fairfield managed only
two shots on goal throughout the entire
game.·
·
CLASSIFIEDS
t)uy .. .
~ell .. .
On Sale
Thursdays
in the
Cafeteria
Marist's
Andy
Ross fakes out Fairfield defender.
lrish
·
.women's hoop star
to
·
play for Marist team
by Holly Sraeel
Many students on campus this year
traveled great distances to study at Marist,
but none had a longer _ journey than
Fresshman Una Geoghegan, a twenty-year-
old native of Dublin, Ireland. Geoghegan is
attending Marist on
a
basketball scholar-
ship.
Geoghegan, a 5 foot 8 inch guard on the
"Under-l 9's" Irish team, was on tour in
the qualifying rounds of a tournament in
the United· States when she was asked to
take part in the All-New England camp in
Connecticut.
'
The program is part of the Irish
American Basketball Association. This
organization seeks to place young talented
athletes into American schools to study, as
well as to improve their game.
· Geoghegan was spotted by a coach at the
All-New England camp. He offered her the
chance to attend school in the United
States. Geoghegan accepted because
basketball is a competitive sport among
college playlers in this country.
scholarships available to athletes according
to Geoghegan.
Geoghegan, playing basketball since she
was 8 years old, has always played for fun.
It's now getting highly comptetitve among
players, she said.
When asked about coming to Marist,
Geoghegan replied, "I had a few inhibi-
tions at first, but my coach Sue Deer and
assistant coach Mary Zuvic were very
helpful. They made me feel very at ease."
Questioned about goals for her first
season at Marist, Geoghegan said firmly,
"Court time and gaining position on the
team. I have a lot to learn."
_
Geoghegan's future aspiration is to play
on the Senior National team for Ireland in
the 1984 Olympics. Geoghegan feels she
could be well on her way
to
achieveing that
dream. She said it was made possible by
families who belong to the Irish-American
Club, an association that helps students to
develop their athletic and academic skills in
the United States.
Basketball is different in Ireland. The
game is played-as a
club, rather
ihan
as a
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ . school-oriented sport. There are no college
Geoghegan's abilities and desire to play
malce her an asset to the Marist Womens'
basketball team. "l have a love for the
ganie. I .
always .
look
forward.
to · the
season,'' she said.
r---------------------~
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ONE FREE TOPPING
1
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with_
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Poughkeepsie, N.Y.
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--
·
Page 12·
THE Cl~CLE • September
30, 1912·~--------~..;.--..;.----~----------~
111111
- -
Foxes ·fall to St. ·John's lclte
driv·e
34-29
by
John Petaccbi ·
The Marist football team will take a
Metropolitan Conference record of 1-1 into
Iona tomorrow night after suffering a 34-
29 defeat at the hands of St. John's this
past Saturday before a crowd of 1,137.
•
St. John's quarterback Todd Jamisoll · ~- :-, '
accounted the 222 total yards while scoring
.:!-
. twice, including the winning·· touchdown
with si~ minutes left in the game.
. .
Marist found themselves down· by 22
points early in the second quarter as the
Redmen came out strong
· ·
"We can't give up 22 points to St. John's
1
in the first quarter and expect to beat
them;'' said Marist Head Coach
Mike
Malet_. !'It takes you a while to get use<i to a
Todd Jamison. He's
a
great qu~erback.
Jamison proved that as he galloped 36
yards for St John's first score, just thtee ·
minutes into the game .. The Redmen were
·successful on a fourth and seven situation
as Jamison took the ball on a keeper
around the right side for six points.
Marist was unable to move the ball on
their first possession, and after a punt St.
John's was back in business again. This
time it was
Mike
Graziano who·. got the
Redmen on the board with a 15 yard run.
St. John's got good field position after a.
weak Jim Van Cura punt and a facemask
penalty against Marist on the return. Two
plays later, Graziano made it 13-0 and a
two-point conversion upped the· score to
15-0, after one quarter~
·
Marist did have a few chances in the
.,.
quarter. After a fake punt, in which John
•
O'Leary picked up a Marist first down, the ·
Paul Malley scores on 65-yard pass reception in Red Fox loss.
Red Foxes moved down to the St . .John's
.
15 yeard line. On fourth. dowri
a
John
Hegeman field goal attempt came up short.
33 yard line as linebacker Pete Maloney
In the second quarter two Jamison com~ recovered the fumble for Marist. Cleary
pletions set a Nick Casa two yard returned the favor on Marists' next posses-.
touchdown run, making
it
a 22-0 bulge.
sion, fumbling deep in St. John's territory
The Foxes took the kick at their own 32 to kill a Red Fox drive.
,
yard line, and just. as. they did a week ago
But once again, the Red Foxes found
against St .. Peter's, . struck quickly, as . themselves in the right place at the right
Cleary and tight end Paul Malley con-
time. This time it was Bill. Wiegand who
· ·• nected on a
,6S
yard : toilchdow.Q pass. pounced on the loose pigskin for; Marist as
Malley foundhiniselLwide open in the St.
they took over at the Redmen 40. ·
John's secondary after a good Cleary fake
Maiist moved the ball down to the eight
pulled the defense in. Cleary then scored on · yard line, b1# Ron Dimmie was unable to
the two-point conversion. .
.
. pick up a first down, and another, field goal
The story of the second quarter for St. attempt by John Hegeman was wide, as St.
John's was fumble .. After Marist . kicked John's took over again.
off, the Redmen lost the ball on their own
On their third cons_ecutive possession, St.
Women bomb·
Bard,
face Sienna next
John's fumbled. Wiegand fell on his se-
again, this time for a 23 yard touchdown.
cond fumble recovery, and this time Marist
Marist took the lead for the first time in the
took a9-vantage of the turnover.
game after John Germain kicked the extra
Cleary hit Warren Weller at the St. · point, 29-28.
John's 12 yard line for a first down. On the
St. John's started on their own 15 yard
next play Cleary fumbled but recovered
line and drove 85 yards, on the ground,
himself. With five seconds remaining in the
chewing up time and gaining yards before
half and Maristj'\}st five yards away from a
Jamison i=apped the drive with an 18 yard
score, Cleary did some fancy footwork and
touchdown
run
to put St. John's ahead to
· scored Marist's second touchdown on a
stay, 34-29.
·.
scramble. Weller, the holder on extra point
Marist made one last effort, with four
tries, took the snap on. the conversion and
minutes left in the game, but t!Jeir drive fell
scored easily to pull Marist within six, 22-
short on a fourth and 13 situaiion.
16 at the half.
According to Malet, Marist had its ups
St. John's jumped out to a 12 point lead
and downs, but he felt they should have
. courtesy of two Nick Ragusa field goals.
won the game.
before Marist could generate any offense in
"We played well at times, and we played
the third quarter.
poorly at times. We played a terrible first
Finally, with 40 seconds remaining in the
quarter and a great third quarter, but we
third quarter, the Red Foxes managed to got beat and we should have won,''. he said.
. by William Flood
ing win over Bard, and had special praise
score against a tiring St. John's defense. A
St. John's had 341 yards in total offense
for second singles player Denise Bagarose.
pass interference penalty against St .. John's
and Maristhad297 yards. .
. ',· · .
The Marist College. women's tennis team_
kept up its winning ways by downing Bard.
College· 6-1 last· week at Bard's home
courts. Leading the . way for the . Foxes
were first and second singles players Cindy
Krueger and· Denise Bagarose. Both won
easily; Krueger 10-f and Bagarose 10-1. .
After the .completion of
·
singles . play,
Krueger· and Bagarose teamed up in
doubles and demolished Bard's number
on,~ doubles team 10-1.
Nancy Colagrossi, head coach of the
~oxes, was very happy about the convinc-
by BUI
Travers
Last year John Lovejoy got caught up in
it all .. No wonder. It's not always that a
cross-country runner can race with the
best. The National Catholic College Cross-
country Championships, at Notre Dame
University in 1981 was secondary to him.
This year it was different.
"I was only a freshman last year," said·
Lovejoy. "I went around wide-eyed and in
awe of the whole situation of being around
and running against future Olympians. The
race was not the. upper-most thing on my
mind.".
Each year the Marist cross-country team
makes the journey to South Bend, Indiana.
Only the top seven runners with the best
times, at the time of departure, take the
trip.
As
a freshman, Lovejoy had to work
hard to be one of the top seven, so getting
there was half the work.
This year as a sophomore, Lovejoy is
,one of Marist's top . harriers. It was ap-
"Denise has been improving with every
gave Marist the ball at the Redmen 21 yard
Ron Dimmie led Marist in rushing with
· day of the season, and this great improve-
line. Cleary kept the ball and· picked up 60 yards on 10
carries
and Paul Malley had
ment showed in.today's match,'' said the
nine yards
ori.
a sneak, and Ron Dimmie a· big day with three receptions for 103
coach. "She really played a great match to- · scored his third touchdown of the season
yards and two touchdowns.
.
day."
from 12 yards out. The twospoint conver.,
Malet expects tomorrow night's clash
In other action, Kathy Mulligan was
sion attempt was unsuccessful and Marist
with Ior:ia to be a tough one, considering·
upset 10-8 and Chris Carney won a
trailed by a Jouchdown; 28-22.
Marist won last year, 15-13, and Iona will
squeaker 11~10. In thelast singles match of
Th~ Ma,nSt defens~ took co~trol on ~t •. be looking to avenge the loss, the Red
the day,. Connie Roher looked impressive
John s next possesSl0n · as Bnan Sewing ·, Foxesbave one less practice day this week
in her 10-8 victory.
_
picked off a Jainison pass and Marist was··. also.
·
·
'
The one other match in the victory for
right on the doorstep again. A Marist
"It's going to be that much harder to get
Marist was al0-2,romp by the squad's se-
penalty put the ball on the St. John's. 27
ready," said Malet. "We have a lot of tired
cond doubles team, Josie Tropano and
yard line and, after a run by Jim Dowd,
guys and rm hoping they'll be ready to go
. Michele Pisa:no.
Cleary found his tight . end Malley once
by Friday.''
·
·
parent that he. wo.uld make the top seven.
. This time around he concentrated more on
the race.
·
•~1 went to the race with a lot more
business-like.attitude this year," said Love-
.joy. "I was still in awe a little bit but I
knew what to expect. The whole area is so
impressive. The school and town go foot-
ball crazy and the school spirit is tremen-
dous."
Obviously the seven members wanted· to
bring back a little of that spirit. When they
arrived in South Bend, the first place they
· raided was not the l~cal watering hole but
the Notre Dame book store. They bought
up all the hats, shirts and post cards they
could find. But, there still was the race.
The runners had run the course (five
miles on the campus golf course) on
September 23 to familiarize themselves,
and returned the next day for the Cham-
pionships at 4 p.m.
·
"I was not ready for this flat course,"
On the run
said Lovejoy. "I'm used to -running the
hills of Poughkeepsie. My legs are used to
running up and down the hills. This course
· was like a five-mile sprint."
·
Lovejoy nevertheless finished with an
outstanding time of 25:59, 38th of over 125
runners. "I was impressed with the at-
titudes of all the runners," said Lovejoy.
"It didn't seem like any one team was out
only to win.
It
was more like a 'see you at
the finish' type of thing."
Overall, Marist finished 10th out of 21
schools. Mike McGuire finished 62nd at
26:30, Brian Hanley 64th at 26:31, Pete
Pazik 75th at 26:40, and Jim Hegerty 81st
at 26:52. Freshmen Mike McGlintock and
Mike Murphy finished 107th and 117th at
27:S0 and 28:24, respectively.
·
This pleased coach Bob Mayerhoffer,
who was unable to make the trip.
"Finishing in the top half is quite an ac-
complishment," said Mayerhoffer. "We
did a lot better than I thought we would.
We were running-against some of.the top
Catholic · schools and we really held our
own."
·
Lovejoy is now excited for the rest of the
season. "I always try my hardest when I
race," said Lovejoy. "But I think I will be
trying a little harder now, since seeing all
those big runners. It has a big affect on me.
I really get inspired and now I am psyched
for the rest of the season.''
Mayerhoffer hopes that his whole team
can stay psyched for the rest of the season.
"It's taught having an important race so
early in the season," said Mayerhoffer.
"Sometirµes when runners reach their peak
it lasts for a few weeks. We are looking
ahead towards the New York State Cham-
pionships and the ICAAAA Champion-
ships in Boston. They are both a month
away."
Lovejoy will run in those upcoming
Championships, but he will also be think-
ing about Notre Dame next year; to run
· with the best one more time.
27.4.1
27.4.2
27.4.3
27.4.4
27.4.5
27.4.6
27.4.7
27.4.8
27.4.9
27.4.10
27.4.11
27.4.12
.......
.
.
.
..
...
.
.
.
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.........
,
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It.alian vote Carried
Cuomo,
Miringoff says
..
.
.
:
u.s:
·
Attorne~Paui Currant~
·
capturethe
.
Koch, ~horn Lehrman
'
felt would win the favor: h~wever;
·
~ccordi;g to Mirlingoff.
by M~ttbe~ P~ Mcinerny
Republican Party endorsement.
primary.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
With Alfred DelBello winning the primary
_
·
··
Th
.
e
.~s
.
leeping.
_·
•
0
;a
.·
nt'
·
'
awoke last
·
Neither victory came as a surprise to
"The city (New York)'is overwhelmingly for lieutenant governor, the party ticket is
o-
Miringoff. Through the Marist College
democratic. Cuomo
·
should win
-
handily
,
now
.
·
composed of two Italian-Americans.
Thursday for Mario Cuoino
/
--
.
·
poll, conducted by the
·
Public Opinion In- . there,»
·
Miringoff said.
·
"This
-
leaves This is "a little thing that doesn't get you
.
·.
That giant; as Professor Lee Miringoff
·
stitute,
·
tlie professor was able to see that
Lehrman
.
to
.
work on the ·upstate votes.
He
offon the right foot," the professor said.
referred to
·
it,
·
was
·
the Italian-American
•
Lehrman would have no trouble. The
(Lehrman) has to appeal to a large portion
vote; which allowed Cuomo to pull off his
·.
Cuomo-Koch race was· different.
·
of Independents am Democrats to be sue-
upset over New York City Mayor Edward
.
·
The poll showed Cuomo only 3
.
percent
cessful againstCtiomo," he added.
·.-
Koch for
the
Democratic nomination for
behind Koch, and
he
'
was gaining
·
grourd
Lehrman has called Cuomo a member of
governor.
· •
.
-•
·
.
•
•
.
•
fast. "Polls are able to create momentum,
.
Governor Hugh Carey's establishment and
The Italians, one of the state's largest
.
sort of a slingshot effect," Miringoff said.
is demanding that a businessman is neede
.
d
.
. Lehrman's strategy will change, but he
has promised
to
continue spending the
same amount of money as he did in die
primary
to
defeat Cuomo. That figure is
believed to be anywhere between
$7
million
and
$8
million.
ethnic groups, combined with the catholic,
.
This slingshot worked to Cuomo's benefit.
·
to do the job, not a politician.
·
black, women and labor vote, were the key
"Cuomo's 'nice image' started
·
to
·
But Miringoff believes there is an irony
in this primary battle, according to Mir-
~
develop with time; His personality wore
here.
In
the primary campaign, Carey en-
The Marist College Public Opinion In-
stitute
.
will conduct its second poll of the
election year this week.
ingoff ..
'.<
',
.,
•
.
·
·
·
.
well in the campaign," Miringoff said,
dorsed Koch, disassociating himself with
.
!'-low
·
.
Cuomo;s coalition will face
"He got to be the front-runner."
.
.
Cuomo. This allows Cuomo the opportuni-
Results will be released Oct.
5.
.
businessman Lewis Lehrman's mon~y in
Lehrman has claimed
.
that he can beat'
·
ty
.
to ward off any charges oy his opponent
this November's race for governor.
·
either Democrat, but his
.
strategy must
relating to the present administr
.
ation.
Working with Miringoff are the assistant
director of the institute, Barbara
Carveilho, and various students.
Lehrman
.
thoroughly trounced former
change now that Cuomo is in and not
· .
Not everything is in the Democrat's
Volume
27, Number 4
Mar/st College, Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
Sept~mber 30, 1982
·Marist
-
clo~es
.
Park
.pf
ace,
·
puts ,students-in new
.
sites
by
Christine Dempsey, Alice O'Keefe
and Brian O'Keefe
Heywood explained.
When questioned about the living condi-
.
.
tions at Park Place, Heywood said, "Dur-
!
ing the
·
summer, the building started to
f
' .
Marist College has terminated its lease
deteriorate and the owners had no plans for
with Park Place, an off-campus housing
renovation in the near future." On the
facility, in Hyde Park and as a result has
.
.
whole, Park Place residents found their
been relocating
·
Park
-·
Place
·
students to
.
rooms less
.
than
·
desirable, although some
.
Champagnat and other
'
off-campus apart-
were
upset
about losing
'
ihe
singles to which
ments.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
they had grown accustom,ed;
.
. ;
>/
.. •·
i<
..
:
Accor4ing to R<>!3~rt Heyw<>od, Hou~i9g
_
,
0
:
Johll
McPary;
:
a
:
soi:i~oniQr~)raii~f~r stu~
.
.
>,:
.
.
,:
·
Director
·
the decision
.
to close Park
•
Place
·.,
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:•'>
?·
to
.
anst St\1 ents,came
,
a
.
01,ll
·
~~US~
;
O
,3,
,;:•
/
at
~
ttie
'.
timc"of
,
liis
'.
fotervieW
t
<li~
,
not':(mJOY
c
,
'.:
<
; •,
·
liick'ohttid~nflnteres~:j1\;living ilier~
~~~
()ut
:,c
liviniftherci
/•
:
•tf
:
gof
kind
of
·
]onely;
'.'
he
-
,
:
.
.
·
·
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:
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.
,
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,
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.
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.
,:.·
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'"·f:;
>\
::
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:,_
;
,\
:·:
:
.
.
s • ·
.
ofthe'-'37 ~~\ldents
'
origirially
:
ass~gn~dJO
said.
·
:,-
.
:
.
', ..
,
, .
-
':
·
: ::
·'
:'
'
i ':
:
..
..
;
::
'.
:
:'
Mari~i1~~
:
.~t~i~~.~
-
its
le~~ ~Ith Park
,
.
Place; an
off-aimpus iiou:SIDg
•·
·
·
Park Place mMay,
,
only 16 mov~chn.
·
Although most· of the Park ~lace
:
_:
..
.
•
·
·
·
.
·
.
.
.
.
..
<
·
:
..
·•
·
.
.
.
·
.
"Over
:
.
half ?f
those'
ass
_
igned
_
students
students preferred t
.
o be
.
relocat~
;
Aff7
_:
·
the
rtioV~;
.
but he w~s
.
h<>thercd by
.
the t~e
·
residences,
they were !aced with the recurr-
dtdn't want to hvethere,so we decided th~~
campus
.
.
to such
:
apartments as
·
He
_
ntage,
....
..
·
at which
.;
'
it
:'
occurred.
,.•
•
''It's the re-
ing problem of 3:housm~ shortage.
.
the pr~b!em
·
had to be addressed,
Georgeto~n, Manchester, and ~anterbu.ry,
·:
.adjustment;"
Peter said; .''and
.
they· only
To deal with· this ne'!
.
problem,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. .
.
McGray 1s haJ>PY to be movmg to
.
first
.
ave us a few days notice.,,
..
:
.
.
.
··
•·
··
Heywood a_nd ~aM<_>r_te complied
_a
s~t of
.
.
·
_
'.
_
1
·_.·
. ·
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... .
-
.... · .
.
.
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.
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.
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.
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·
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.
.
·
.·
·
s•
_
.
.
.
e
·
.
.
.
s
·.
·
.
.
.
·
.
.
·.
~oor Champtagf~camat
wpbuesre11·~ee !::els be~~ be $_uwn finding
.'
,
themselves
.
with empty
..
~rioristyhpol mths. spec1f1cal Uy fotr tnhicas mstpt~~-
more a par
'?
.
l
•
•
.
rooms
.
Heywood, 'Gerald Cox~ Dean
.
of uon
;
.
C O
ars
.
lP,
e~p _opnen
O
.
•
'
.
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
.
Many freshman students from first flo<?r Student Affairs and Fr. Richard LaMorte,
extra-curricular a~1vitte
.
s,
.
and
.
.
spec1~l
T.
'l_
T's
artwork
Cbam~gnat are
.
angry that, because oftb!S; Assistant
Dean
~fStudent Affairs, met and
health
.
and ~cadem1c reasons 'Yere cond1-
-
~
V
'.: ;'.:
,
.
re~locat1on p~rcess, they had to leav.e therr sentout
·
s'urveys asking
·
·
tbe other off
~
·
~ions f<:tM!htch off-campus rCl!1dents were
.
,
.
;'<:·,•-/ ._
..
.
friends and move
.
to vacant rooms
m
Leo
:
campus
·
suidentsif they would like to conic
·
consid1:red for on~campus;~ousmg.
·
••
by
· .
B
::
:'
rl
:
~
.
'.
.
~.
:.~~
.
-i
.
e
•
.
'
u
\·
y.·
·
.
and Sheahan Halls.
.
.
.
.
.
.·.·
back and live
cri
.
campus. After receiving
But, as Heywood said,
.
No ma!!er what
a
·
Freshman Peter De~1gg1, ~ho had. to more po
·
sitive replies than
-
available
.
you do, it doesn'
.
t please everyone.
:
Six
new
colot television sets have
been
purchased by Marjst and
will
:
be
placed in
.
.
the lounges
:
of Champagnat, Sheahan
.
and
·
Leo Halls.
·
.
·,,;
· ·
-.
· ·
··
·
. ··
·
•.·
·
:
:
According to Resident
·
•
Director
·
Jim
>
Raimo;
·
the
-
television
sets,
:
which co~t
.
$3,000~
were
bought with money raised
.
by
the Inter
House
Council and private dona~
·
tions raised by Rev. Richard A. LaMorte,
·
·
assistant dean of student affairs.
·
. -
_
-
·
"Fr; LaMoi"te initiated the idea of put-
tmg
:
televisions• in.
·
the· Joung~,". Raimo
said. f'lt'sj,an of his efforfto improve liv-
'
..-_
ing. oo_n~iticins
.
~or ~h«:=
.-
~tud~nts in
.
the
'
residence halls."
-
.
::,.
:< ·
,
-
..
,.
::-
·· ..
.
·
.
Raimo also said
th:kthe
college has pur-
.
chased twenty~six prints at a cost of
$4.SO,
to be
:
hung in yarious places throughout the
dori{is.
·:;'
•
.
<·
:.-
'
·
.
..
,
··
0 , :
• , ,
.
·
-
.
·:·
:
--
• •
·
The televisions
·
and prints
'.
are now being
held
.
by maintenance and will
be
placed in
the dorms
in
the near future;
·
.
· ·
.
.
·
Resident Assistant Dawn-Marie Sturte-
vant thinks that the televisions are a great
idea •
.
•
·
.
,
"I
think it will bring more people into
the lounges and will promote unity in the
houses," she sai_d.
.
·
·
·
Director of Housing Robert Haywood
says the telev~sicins
will
have some son of
protection from theft.
-
·
-
"We're not exactly sure how they'll be
protected yet. We may put them in metal
frames and we may possibly use chains or
'
.
alarms," Haywood said.
.
·
"I
think it's a great idea as long as peo-
ple don't abuse the privelege,'
•
'
·
said
sophomore football player Dan Spuhler.
"I live
in
the suite off the sixth floor
lounge. I don:t want to be woken up at
l :30
.
in
the morning before a football game.~nd
tell someone to turn the T. V. down, he
added .
.
... ·
leave Champagnat, said he did not rmnd
.
.
·
•
CulillaryOperis
11ew
dining
rOolll
·
·
·
.
··
.
~
.
by
Andrea
Holland
said.
.
.
.
.
however one
exception.
"We
.
can
.
Cohen said that as part of the final
choose to go
·
anywhere in the world,''
·
.
The Culinary Institue of America is
term, students work first in
·
the Escof-
said Fenner.
·
now featudng
a
new dining room which
.
fier Room and then the American Boun
~
All externships must be approved by
is open to
.t
he public.
'
·
_ .
.
.
·
·
·
ty Room. They do all the cooking he
the school, but placements usually are
··
The American Bounty Room opened
said,
as
well as being placed
j.n
positions
not difficult, said Fenner· The Culinary
.
on Aug.
2
and offers its patrons plush;
such as maitre de, captain and front and
helps place students almost anywhere
_
comfortable
.
surroundings and
back waiters. There are five stations
.
41
.
they want to
·
go. "Switzerland takes
reasonable
·
prices.
. ·
.
. .
-·
·.
each room, orie waiter assigned to each,
,
more students than any other place,"
.
.
.According to Scott Coh~n, who is
he said.
.
·
..
·
·
.
.
said Cohen.
,
finishing bis last term at the CJ.A., the
-·.
Working in the dining rooms is part
·
Upon graduation, students rarely
·
·
·
American
·
Bounty Room features an a la
.
of a class. The morning class runs the
··
have difficulty
in
finding jobs. There is
·
·
carte menu. making meal choices
.
and
.
lunch shift, arid the evening class runs
a Graduating
-
Office on campus wbich
.
:
~
pricei
·
more varied:
•
'Customers have a
·
·
dinners, he said. There is
·
always an
in-
aids students in locating job
·
oppor-
·
choice of
a
full meal or spearate items,".
structor present to oversee the students
·
tunities. "The Culinary name is so
he said.
-
and to evaluate their performance
.
If
famous," said Cohen, "there is a IOOOJ'o
·
.
Prices in the American Botmty Room
there are any major problems
·
the
in-
placement rate among students after
range anywhere from $8.95 to $15.95
·
structor will
.
step in, "but normally the
graduation."
for an entree.
_
Other choices
.
s
.
uch as
.
student has to handle it," he said, "it's
The atmosphere on campus is very
soup, salad, vegetable and dessert are
just like a job."
professional. Students are trained in all
separate on the menu. "You
can
have
a
The Culinary runs on a trimester
aspects of the culinary arts and are ex-
.
very nice full meal for about $20.00,"
basis. There are five terms
.
lasting fif-
pected to perfonn
as
if on the job, said
said Cohen.
teen weeks each. According to Mark
Fenner.
..
The Culinary is known for
its
famous
Fenner, a first-year student, third-term
The dining rooms are run in a very
·
Escoffier Room located
.
in the same
students go on
an
externship. These are
relaxed fashion
to
give patrons time to
building as the American Bounty
similar to internships at Marist in that
enjoy the setting, food and
·
service.
Room. Both rooms serve lunch and din-
students· are placed in positions for
"The service is slow," said Cohen, "but
ner and are run by Culinary students, he
"han~s-on" experience.
'
There is,
it is meant to be that way."
Inside
the Circle
.•·
The Classifieds are in ..................... p.6
Marist computer gets a babysitter ........... p.3
Chance previews
-
. . . . . .
~
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . p. 3
.
..
·':
•
J •
•
,' ~-
•
_..
, •
'
._
.-
-
--•Page
2~
THE CIRCLE·
September 30,
1982-----------------------------•
_
.
.
•
. _
..
_
.
-------
The good and the b~d
Last Thun;iday the College Union Board
clubs are going to be involved in the parade,
sponsored a student-talent coffeehouse. It
so there certainly won't be a large number
was a huge success;
of students building the floats. How many
The performers all had a chance to
students will care enough to watch a parade
display their talents to the rest of the stu-
on homecoming weekend?
dent body. The audience had a chance to ex-
·
·
·
Where's the money going
.
to come from
·
perlence first class entertainment without
anyway? If we, the student body can obtain
any admission. An extremely large crowd
money in order to make floats for a parade,
showed up. The program was run well, with
why can't we take the money and put it
no technical flaws. The only negative factor
towards something that we can benefit
in the entire event is 'that perhaps the
more from? The money
·
can be allocated to
fireside lounge isn't big enough anymore.
clubs that need a little more money. The
CUB and Ted Perrette deserve a pat on the
money can be used to finance many more
back for putting on such a successful event,
excellent activities as the CUB coffeehouse
an event that cost next to nothing to put on
.
and CUB mixers, which have both proven to
When money is tight in club allocations,
-
attract and entertain the student body. The
this is the type of event that deserves a
money can be given to a charity, it would be
cheer from the student body.
·
better to have the money donated to The
·
Reade
rS
·
·
Writ~
.
.
All letters must
be typed
triple space with a 60 space margin, and submitted to.ihe
;
'
·
Circle office no later than 6 p.m, Monday. Short letters are preferred. We reserve the
.
•
rl ht to edit an letters. Letters must
be
signed, but names may
be
withheld upon re-
.
q~est. Letters will
be
published depending upon avallablllty of space.
:
·
_
_-
.
Sharing Thanksgiving
DearEditor:
foreign
student
for
the
·
Several foreign students, both Thanksgiving recess are asked to
men and women, have expressed
.
contact
Bro.
·
Joseph
L.R.
•
the desire to spend the Thanksgiv-
Belanger,. Foreign
·
Student Ad-
ing recess with an American fan}i-
visor.
ly, so as to fully experience this
.
unique American holiday. Per-.
Bro. Joseph ~.R. Belanger
sons interested in
·
hosting
·
a
Cafeteria
·
bumps
-·
.
Dear Editor:
.
.
_
· . '
What
.
I
·_
..
cannot
·
handle,
.
I am not a person who is easily
·
however,
-is
going
to
the cafeteria
upset. Growing up
..
in
·
New
·
arid being' expected to
'.
balance
·
Zealand, I slept through several
plates, bowls, glasses~ silverware,
native uprisings and a tidal wave.
napkins; food and drink
·
on a tray
As an Operating Room Techni-
that has a
.
bump in the middle.
cian, if I didn't scrub for half a Wharis that bump? -How did it
dozen emergency cases before
·
get· there? Do¢s
.
.
every · tray
.
have
lunch I considered it a wasted
one? Is this the first fiendish step
morning. Now, as a Residence in a Communist take-over?
,
-
;
_
·
.
.
Director at Madst,
I face
the most
.
We can put.a man on the mbon
harrowing of all situations _ in-
and get students
to
study with at
teraction with college students -
least the same frequency: why
with hardly a shudder. In short,
I
can't we have
~
flat tray to
·
eat
am
a
man who has "laughed at
from?
·
death, sneered at doom, and
Sincerely,
chuckled at catastrophe" (what
Michael Bowman
movie is that line from?).
Residence Director
R.O.T.C. forum
Dear Editor:
A vital issue has arisen that
concerns the possible installation
of a Reserved Officers Trl!.ining
Corps program hereat Marist.
The Council of Student Leaders
has organized a forwn
to
discuss
with students the impact this
.
R.O.T.C. program may have on
·
our campus.
j
::1:h::
-'
students'
.
opinion
·
regarding
R.O.T.C. at th,e Nov.
1
board of
trustees meeting, where a final
decision wiH be
_
made. It is im-
perative that we have student
feedback concerning this issue.
Again,
the Council of Student
Leaders wishes to stress your at-
tendance and participation in this
vital issue.
Another event Is being organized for the
United Way rather than have It Invested In
Mari st student
:
body on homecoming
floats tt)"at
will ·
be
.
destroyed -after
.,
the
The forum
will
be held on Tues-
day, Oct.
5,1982
at
4
p.m. in the
, ,
.
theatre:
Alt
students
.
and faculty
Joan Gasparovic
C.S.L~ ~resident
.
,
•
•
Dave Skrodanes
C.S.L. Vice President
·
. ·
· ':·
;;~;:r1of%~cf/°ritoc~~t
Jj~!7f
gbin~
0
t~
•
.
. ,
.
parade.
.
-
,
,
,
,
·
have a parade! Money is going to be
Lets
_
have mqre ~offeehouses,
'
and less
allocated so clubs can make floats for the
·
·.
foolish displays for homecoming weekend.
are urged
to attend
..
.
.
Th~
-
c.s;L.
wHi
present
-
the
'
>
..
parade. How many students are going to be
There are better ways to spend our money!
.
as excited about the homecoming parade as
Can't we au get Into the homecoming
.
·
.
.1niramurals
Dear Editor:
·
formation around campus, and
.
Are intramurals for
all
Marist
·
sufficient time. And
if
the staff of
were excited about the coffeehouse last
spirit without floats? I'm sure we can. Lets
week?
save the money that would be invested In
··
._
College students???
-: ·
.
.
the
·
McCann Center
-
that
,
I
,
had
Allocating money to build floats for a
floats, so that nexttime
we
are told '"Sorry,
In regards to the flag football
asked hadn't known
.
what-was go-
intramurals, it seems to me
.
that
.
ing on, what else was I to assume
the office in
.
charge has become
.
but that the season had
:
ncit yet
homecoming parade gets a big BOO! Who
there isn't enough money," we'll have it sav-
are we trying to impress anyway? Only a few
ed away,
lax in their advertising for the
fall
b!!gun.
•
_
:
;
,
Another
.
boring weekeil.d?
event .
.
For this present season;
·
.
·
Although these m>ints, were
there were no posters
in
the Don-
brought
.
-
up to the
·'officer
in
.
nelly
-
area or in the
.
Commuter
charge, Glen Marinelli
~
lif failed
.
.
Lciurige. ,-the ar
_
~ inost k11own
.
to see
·
my reasoning
·
a
·
ria
·
stated
to the commuters who make up
:-
that
'
he
·
could ncit alter the
nearly
;
fialf of the Marist popufa~
schedule. five
..
days before the
tion. :Fiuthermore, there was no· games werf~lated to
f?.egi~
,
·
I was ·
announc"ement.in thid:ircle. This
·
:
:
,!:y,en.
r:efused after Lc,ff.ered to
.
We've been here for a month already -
doesn't it seem longer than that at times?
And another weekend is just around the cor-
ner
.
Oh, no -' what is there to do?
The football game is away this weekend,
but there is a mixer Friday night; that should
kill a few hours. I could always stand on line
at the Pub for an hour_ or two, ·or hit
Renaissance, the River Station, Skinner's ...
.
·
Saturday
1;11
sleep until noon or so; that
will take care of half the day. But there's
nothing
.
scheduled for Saturday night!
What's wrong with this place? They just
don't schedule enough events to keep me
busy around here! Why do all the other col-
leges always seem to have thousands of
p·arties and
_
dances and all sorts of ac-
tivities?
.
Maybe I'll go home -
again. I don't think I
·
can face another boring weekend. I'll see
familiar faces, people I know, and I can go
out
.
to my usual hangouts. I won't have to
Co-Editors
The
·
Circle
Associate Editors
Sports Editor
Advertising Manager
Business Manager
News Editor
'
.·
deal with the prospect of finding something,-.
to do around here;
·
•··
·
.
·.
·<
tt
****
•
'
•
• •
#
•
A typical Mari st weekend? Half the
act; or rather failure to act, is
·
.
spend my time in arranging
.
a
new
school goes home, while the other half
clearly unfair repres@ntation
.
Are s
_
chedule
.
His justification: I had
sta
d ti k
·
·t
t
I t
f
·
1 1·
d
not commuters part of the Marist
·
a team last year and should
.
have
·
on itii~ay
~~e~
;h~~e~k~~d fs ~:e:.e ieve
coJUni~nity? Then shouldn't
.they,':··
known better. I djd ,have
.
a
-
team
·
W k
·
1
It'
t th
j
b
f
be treated as such..
.
.
.
. '
·::
.
_
:
·
>
.
last year, and therefore-I had been
c.u.t
~ru~,a~~fii
0
~:nera~
fc,
0
ente~tafn ui.
.
Although the office in
·charge'
'.
looking for
'the·
necessary inf
or-
.
We're all
.
supposed
_
to be developing in-
_ ·
-
of intramurals stated that. there
·
mation to have
.
one-again.
fr
I -·
dependence during our college
.
years;·
·
·
w_as
_
a
~ig
_
n in the Mccann Cente~,
.
someone
·
wlio
'
iiad pi'e~fously peen
doesn't that include learning how to make
.
there
_
was no information
-
for'
,
.
'involved-.in
the
""
eveiit
:~
.• : liadn't
our own fun? No one can force you to be
sigri-llp. at the front desk:(wh~.r~'.
.
had the chiµtce
·
to
get
·
a
roster in,
bored; only you can let yourself be bored.
there had been last year).
·upon
··
:
how could
:
someone·. who had
·
Why don't we try to make this weekend
my th~rd inquiry at this deslcc;
r
.
,
never done it
-
before
.
·
have a
different? Maybe there aren't a lot of ac-
:
·
was told that the rosters had to
.
chance'?
·
·
.
tivities planned for the weekend.So; instead
'
h~v~ been already .in
.
(This_ ..ya~
.-
•
·
.
Will the lntramu~alChampion
f
1 •
Cu
B
r . .
·
d
eight
school
days
after
-
.
this year truly
be
the champion?
0
r~ ymg ,on
· · · ac ivities an
sports.
·
u
_
nder
_
graduates began· and
.
three
Because of the
·
un
·
fa1·r
·
represen~a-
events, we II have to make our own fun. The
weekend is invaluable to college students;
sc
_
h9ol da~ after graduates began
-
tion of the Marist Commuter, no
It's the one time we get to
.
relax with our
·· .:.;_ hardly enough time to put
one will ever know ... ·:
, .
.
.
friends. Have a good weekend, and don't let
together'a team and
be
adequately
•
Edward
P'.
Ke~nedy
yourself be bored.
·
prepared to play.) In previous
116
Academy Street
years there had been sufficient in-
-
Poughkeep
_
sie, New York
Rick O'Donnell
Patti Walsh
Karen Lindsay
Lou Ann Seelig
BIii Travers
Jim Barnes
Adrienne Ryan
Advertising Staff
Classified
Reporters
EIieen Hayes
Cartoonist
Caroline Krete
Lisa Crandall
Kevin Shulz
.
.
.
Meg Adamski, Bernadette Grey,
Carol Lane, Matthew Mcinerny,
Ivan Navas, John Petacchl,
Richelle Thomas, Brian Kelly,
Andrea Holland, Sue Vasallo,
.
BIil Flood, Karen Magdalen,
•
_
.
,
Brian O_'Keefe, Allee O'Kee!e,
.
.
.
t:tolly ~raeel, Richard Copp
Sports Photography Editor
Developing P
.
I:totography Editor
News Photography Editor
Jeanne LeGloahec
Kyle MIiier
Christine Dempsey
Copy Editors
.
• Michael Ward, Sandy Olson
Jacl_< D'Orlo, Gina Franclscovich
.
Lisa Crandall, Judy Knox,
Mark Amodeo, Adam Their
·
.
Kathy Q'Connor, Ken Bohan
.
Paul
.
Crowell, Joe Pareti
.
John Petacchl, Dawn
.
Ollver
.
. .
Pa_t Brady, Barry Smith
Ted Waters
Faculty Advisor
Dave Mccraw
.f
I
· - · - - - - -
-
- - ~
-
-
·
- - - - - - - - - ~ - -
---._♦--------♦
--------------•
. . .
11•11111!1----~-..------~-~
-
~""
-
~
-
-.
.
.
----... ----....
.
.
.
.
.
.
_
.
_
September 30, 1982 · THE CIRCLE
-
~ Page
3--
C
0-o p internShips offer students placement
Ii:iterships
.
taken by Marist students
-
dur-
ing their academic careers have become a
growing interest, arid the new
_
Co-op inc
ternships are playing a major role
.
.
At a Co-op internship meeting last week
in the Fireside
·
Louge,
.
Project Director
James Maness, along with Academic Vice
President Andrew Molloy, Development
·
Specialist Julie Primavera, coordinator of
internships Bob Norman, and two student
interns, Graduate
.
Ginny Luciano, and
Paul Zurneiden explained how vital taking
an internship can be for your future career
goals.
-
What makes a Co-op Internship dif-
ferent from other Internships is that the
placements are paid for the work they do.
Students may choose to be · placed up to
three times during their academic career.
-
Certain requirements must be
.
met before
.
an
internship can
be
taJcen and they were
explained by Julie Primavera. The first
·
qualification is that you must complete 60
credit
·
hours or more to apply. You must
•. also possess a grade point average of 2.5 or
above (3.0 for Management Studies
students), and be a matriculated degree
candidate. Ms. Primavera's recommenda-
tion was,
"If
you are eligible, you should
plan ahead, put an application in and come
speak with us." She also said, "Going for
an internship is very competitive, so be sure
this is what you want." She also recom-
mended that you speak with your division
and faculty advisor to make sure you are
·
eligible.
A
student taking an internship will be
graded on a new system this year, which
utilizes the pass or fail method, no letter
grades will be given, just a pass or fail
grade. They felt the need to change the
grading system because they didn't want a
grade unusually enhanced or damaged, by
taking an internship. Students would be
graded on their performance by submitting
weekly journals and papers.
Academic
.
Vice President Andrew
_
Molloy who has worked with the Co-op
program tor the past
10
years said he,
Computer_ gets
,
'babysitter'-
by
Grazia
,r,.
LoPiccolo
In addition the unit will automatically
·
telephone those in charge and will tell them
·
Some call it a squawk box,
·
others a that the computer is down, Denny said.
babysitter for the main computer and
.
some "It's like having a person here watching the
a sophisticated answering machine.
computer 24-hours a day .... little brother
Whatever it is called, this computer unit, watching big big brother,'' he said. The on-
recently acquired by the computer center of ly thing the computer unit cannot do is take
Marist College, will provide innumerable messages from the caller, headded.
services to the Marist community, accor-
Marist acquired the unit in September,
ding
tci
Cecil Denney, director of the com~
-
after several requests from the computer
puter center.
science department, said Denney. "The
"The Major service the unit will provide department wanted some type of an
to the user is that of an answering answering machine so that commuter
machine," said Denney. "If a person students could call
to
find out the status of
wants to know if the computer is up, all he the computer. In our search we came up
has
_
to do is dial
·
(914) 485-5040 and he will with this specific unit," Denney said.
"believes in the Co-op program at Marist.
A student
·
is tested at a time where we can
get an evalutation on what we can per-
form." He later commented, "We can
walk away with confidence with what we
have learned:"
·
The Co-op program has 43 students plac-
ed presently in locations ranging from IBM
and NBC, to the Dutchess Bank. James
Maness said they hope to place 75 students
in Co-ops this summer. The main problem
Maness stated was, "That there are 200
companies who wiil employ students, the
trouble is finding the students:"
Bob Norman commented on the success
of many Marist students in
•
the working
world. He said, "Out of 22 Seniors that
had internships last spring, 16 were hiroo
after graduation." Mr .
.
Norman also com-
mented on the fact that they had more
facilities than students and that they were
geographically spread out. "In the most
part," he replied, "We can send you in the
area you want to
20."
He recommended
that students, "Think before they act. A
student should have the desire, extra-
curricular activities and the proper courses
behind him before applying. Also talking
to a student in the internship your applying
for, is helpful."
Graduate Ginny Luciano, now employed
at WPDI:{ and WEOK, local radio stations
in Poughkeepsie, talked about her intern-
ship, that later landed her a job at the same
place. She said, "An internship develops
confidence. It's all you put into it -
you
get so much more than you would from
straight Liberal Arts courses." Paul
Zurneiden, who had a Finance Internship
at NBC this summer stated, "I had a fan-
tastic internship, that
resulted
in a fantastic
job offer. I'm really for Co-op intern-
ships."
·
If you want to apply for a Co-op posi-
tion, stop by the Office of Cooperative
Education and fill out the required applica-
tion. The office advises students to plan at
least a semester in advance for Co-op
placements.
.
t
l
hear a
·
computer synthesized
·
voice telling
-
The unit has a limited vocabulary of 400
him
.
whether or not
_
the main computer is wor
.
ds.
·
For example, it cannot pronounce
running." .
.
.
the days of the week. "It's hard for people
Denney. added that the unit does a lot
to
get
used to the idea of having a computer
Students at
work
•an the computer center
·_
.
,··'1
_
. . .
more
_
_
thari a regular answering machine. talk to them, but it shows where the com~
.
. . ·
.
.
.
.
,
•
•
:
_
c
::
.
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-
The uni
_
t
.
is
.
programmed to
.
monitor
.
the
.
pu
tei
-
technblogy"is]joing; ~:
said Denney
;
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,
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main computer
;
"The
'
uniHs
"
programmed'•
•
:
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'
Denney
·-
explained that different units
.
The co~puter cen~er
IS
also considering
_
!hIS
mac~me,
It has
Che
·
pocencial of domg
, ,.
'
..
to monitor the main computer: If the
"
unit
·
could be added to
this
device. For example,
·
programming the u~1t to tell t~e caller ho_w
!t,"
~e said.
. .
.
doesn't receive a specific . response, _
_
it
;,1
unit for smoke ~etection. At t~e first sign
many stu~ent terminal_s are in use, said
Th1_s computer umt 1s a relatively ne_w
changes the message stored
m
the umt," · of smoke or fire, the machine would
Denney,
Most machtnes are not very machine and there are ~bout 500 of them in
said Denney.
.
-
~utomatically notify the fire department.
smart, but whatever we can imagine for use throughout the Umted States.
Friday:
-'·
On Campus:
Saturday:
Sunday:
Monday:
On
Campus:
Tuesday:
On
Campus:
Wednesday:
On Campus:
Thursday:
On Campus:
CUB Mixer- 9 p.m . .
FIim -
"ExcaUber"
-
7:30p.m.
..
. ·
·
·
_. L
On
Campus:
Soccer vs. King's
Point
.
·
Freshman Parents
OnCampus:
-
CircJe
·
·
K
In-
stallation Dinner
Film -
"Excaliber"
7 p.in. and 9:30 p.m.
Soccer vs.
RPI
3:30
p.m.
W o m e n ' s
Volleyball
vs.
Manhat•
tan7p.m.
Auditions for MC-
CTA's original
·
produc-
tion 6:30 p.m.
Women's Tennis
vs. New Paltz 3:30 p.m.
Soccer vs. C. W.
·
Coffee House 9
p.m.
The Chance:
The Roches
Brandy's Two:
The Chance:
Post 3:30 p.m.
CUB
Golf
·
Touma•
meot (Raio date)
·
•
.
Women's
·
-
Tennis
·
.
w. Purchase 3:30 p.m.
.
Day
The Chance:
·
Robert Gordon
Brandy's Two:
8084
·
The Chance:
TBA
Brandy's Two:
8084
Nutrition
Fair
Auditions for MC-
CTA 's original produc-
tion5 p.m.
New Beat Music
Dance Party
The Chance:
Bud Beer Blast.with
Blotto
Lady
Cousins:
Communter Union
meeting
1 p.m.
The Chance:
Cousins:
Brandy's Two:
Powerhouse
St.
Francis
-
Orleans
Brandy's Two:
Starfire
Mid-Hudson Civic
.
.
Center:
Hospital
11
a.m.-4 p.m.
Last day to sign
up
for
Intramural raquet•
ball and co-eel volleyball
Bardavon:
Last
day
-
to report
P
/NC and drop'
classes
without
academic penal•
ty
·
Andy Gootch
Cousins:
Sticky
Fingers:
Rolling Stones Show
Champagne Ball 9
p.m •
.
Chamber Music
Society of Lincoln
Center ensemble 7:30
p.m.
The
Chance:
The Chance
The Chance will present Blotto on Wednesday night.
If
you haven't seen Blotto yet, this show is a must. Blot-
to bas been featured on MTV, and they are composing a
new video project that will Include fo~tage taken at a
re-
cent show at The Chance. Blotto combines humor and
music
to
create an extremely entertaining show.
• Next Friday at The Chance, The Greg Allman band
will perform. Tickets are being sold In advance for $10.
The show should prove to be of interest to all Allman
Brothers fans.
.
.
.
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Monday
Night
Football San Francisco
.
vs.Tampa
On
Campus
Tie one on at the CUB mixer this Friday. If you wear
a tie, you get in free. ff you don't, pay
so•.
The featured
band is the Gabis Brothers.
Reservati~ns for the CUB Dinner Theater can _be
·ma
.
de starting Monday, Sept., 27 in the cafeteria. Neil
Simon's "Chapter Two" will be presented on October 8
at 8:30 p.m. am there will be a buffet style dinner.
Tickets are $8 for students with a Marist College I.D.
and $10 for guests or faculty and staff.
Brandy's Two:
Northern Star
Cousins:
The Hurt:
New
Wave Dance Rocle
Steeplecha~
Mid Hudson Civic Center
On
Tuesday Glenn Frey, former guitarist and foun-
ding member of The Eagles, will be at the Mid Hudson
Civic Center. This is the first solo tour Frey has done.
Frey has penned such tunes as Peaceful Easy Feeling,
Heartache Tonight, and his recent hit The One You
Love. Tickets are
$9.S0.
I
'
r
.
►
--•Page
4 • THE CIRCLE•
September
30, 19112
Admissions
:
policies
.
aim
•
,I
•
• • •
·,
to avoid over,crowding
·
By Bernadette Grey
help~ alleviate so~ of' the h~u
-
sing p~o-
. blems as has the acquisition of three houses
Marist College is in a period of rapid on North Road, Daly said. The Lowell
growth, but there will never be more Thomas Communication Arts Center, now
students than the school can accommodate, in the planning stages,
will
.
prevent the
according to James Daly, dean of admis-
overcrowding
.
of Donnelly Hall, he said.
sions.
·
The center will
be
built "in the foreseeable
"There has never been any intent to pack future," he said.
this college and there never will be any at-
Daly noted that only
a
handful of col-
tempt to pack this college;'' he said.
leges have been building dormitories and
Daly said he understands the concerns that at least one school in the area has clos-
with Marist's growing population but that ed per year over
'a
ten year period.
•
"students should not be in a panic about
Marist has also been raising its admis:
enrollment."
·
sion standards, the Dean of Admissions
This year, niore students accepted said. The SAT scores have been raised over
Marist's offer of admission than expected, one hundred points
in
recent years and it is
he said. '' Admissions is more of an art than now much more difficult to get the Room
a science because we are dealing with peo-
and
Board
Scholarship, Daly said.
pie," Daly said
.
According
to
"Shared
Prospective Ap-
The Admissions Office has been working plicants' statistics, there
has
been a signifi-
out plans and making estimates that will . cant drop in
_
the number of high school
avoid any overcrowding problems, Daly graduates in recent years. "At the same
said.
time, applications to Marist have doubl-
Daly is concentrating on increasing selec-
ed," Daly said.
tivity, attracting more commuters, and ad-
Statistics have also shown that Marist's
ding buildings to the campus, he said.
number one competitor is Syracuse Univer-
The Marist Institute of Public Opinion is sity, Daly said. "What we have over
helping de_velop a policy to attract Syracuse is size. Freshmen do not even get
freshman cmnmuters, which would help near a computer terminal in Syracuse," he
keep housing J?roblems to a minimum, Da-
said.
.
.
.
ly said.
,
Marist is unergoing great growth while
Only 85 freshmen this year are com-
other schools are faltering, Daly said
.
"We
muters, according to Daly. "I would like to are coming into a very difficult time in a
say that we could increase that," he said.
strong position," he said. "This should be
The opening of the townhouses has a strong indicator to (Marist) students."
Frosh, families
to
gather
·
The Omega Society and the Student Af-
fairs Staff is sponsoring the Second Annual
Preshmen Parents Day
·
Oct.
2
outside the
McCann Center at
1
p.m. The rain date wilt'
be Sunday
.
According to the Rev. Richard LaMorte,
.·
assistant ~ean, this student-run even~
will
be an informal way for parents to meet
freshmen and their families.
·
Students will also be in charge
·
of the
barbecue, for which grills and food have
been provided by the cafeteria.
Core faculty members, head coaches and
college executives are invited to attend
.
.
Although no major addresses
will
be
given,
:
President Dennis
.
Murray will
welcome freshmen parents.
There will be group games such as whif-
.
Freshmen are allowed t~ inyi~e their im-
fle
.
ball,
,
volleyball,
.;t
ug-of-war,
.
three-
.
mediate family.
.
.
. .
·
..
· _
·
_
·
..
:
. :
.
.
.
.
legged face and Frisbee. Students
-
will
pro~
·
':':'
Uist'
yeifr
,"'
at'tlie
'
fj
r
s
·
t
Fieslimen Parents'
vide musical entertainment later in the day. Day, 738 people attended.
·
a
·" .
. .
-
-
.
..
.
-.
·-
;13(1
~
~-
Wait.
you guys. the Molson party is tomorrow n
i
ght.
BREWEOA.""IOBOntEO lSCA."'W>A
.
R'Tlported~MartSt1'fmpr,rcngCo. Inc. C,r~at~
(
~
-
NY
.
'
·.
PRESIDENT: SJR. GREG LUNA
·
_
CO M
_
M
UTE_R
.
.
.
HAPPEN I N
'
GS
····-.
wE
-·
DRIVE
·
TO ACH
,·EVE!!!-
➔
,
.
.
.
R
_
ESIDENTS ARE WELCOMED!!
·
·-
Meetings every Friday 2:'00
0249
·
·
=
...
Best-Kept Secret On
_
Ca
_
mpus
-
·-
>
0
.....
-c,
m
R.O. T.C. AV!
or
NAY!?
C
m
·
AGENDA
CAR
-
POOLING
LOCKERS
Q..
Q..
ftl
COFFEE MACHINE
COMMUTER PROBLEMS
CLOCK
.c
...
m
>
m
....
CCI
.c
==
LIBRARY
.
.
_
,
,
ff
***********************************
.
SOCIAL
EVENTS
_-
WINERY TRIP/ SLEEP
-
OVER
-
NEW
-
PALTZ PLANETERIUM
&
MORE!
.
DINING HALL HOURS
Monday thru Friday
.
.
Full Breakfast. .....
~
...... 7:30 a~m.-9:00 a.m.
·
Continental Breakfast ....
~
. 9:00 a.m.-9:30 a.Ill~
·
·
·
Lunch ..... ~
·
...
~
...... ; .. J0:45 a.m.-1:15 p.m
~
·
Dinner. ..
~
.......
•
....... 4:30 p.m.-6:45
p.-m.
Dinner Friday ..... ~
-
....... 4:30
.
p.m.-6:15 p.m~
Saturday
·
·
Full
,
Breakfast. ....
·
......
~
.8:30 a.m.-9:30 a.m.
· :
continental Breakfast.
·
... ~9:30 a.m.-10:00
a.ni.
:
.
Lunch ........
.
...........
l l
:30 a.m.-1 :30 p.m.
'
Dinner ..........
·
.. : ...... 4:30 p_.m.-6:00 p.m.
Sunday
Brunch ...
.
·
•
.
•
·
~ ....
.
•..
.
>
;.;;
.11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m.
:
Dinner . .-
~
: .. ·: . ....
<
·~ . / ..
·
~
_
.
4:30 p.m:-6:30 p.m.
Pub Hours
:
Monday thru Thursday;_
.
~ ... 8:00
.
p.m.-1 :00 a.m.
Frid~y ..
.
• , : ·. :. :
':
~
--
-.
~
.. ; . ~
:
_.
_
s;
·
oo_p.m.-2:00 a.m.
* :
;
.
Satu~day
.
.... : ...•...
~
..
·
. 8:00 p.m.-2:00 a.m. *
l
.
\
.
-
:
·
.
·
*Fo_od
_
served from 2:00 a.m.-3:00 a~m.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
·.
.
,
Deli Hours
.
_
Ivlpnd
_
ay
_
thru
.
Thursday
.-.
. ~
-
-7:30 p.m.-1 :00 a.m.
Friday ~nd Saturday ... :
·
.. :
·
.7:J(fp.m.-1:00 a.m.
\ , . .
,..
•
1
;:,
..
•
'
·
~
•
,
.
~~-...-------ilMllililMlllliMilillllliliiaillliliMIIIIIMil,IIMililllilillllllll ...............
_ . .
. . . . . . . . . . .
. _ .
.....
_ _ _ _ _ _
......, _ _ _ _
....,; _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
...;.-
·
.J
l
-
.._~-~~-~--~-~---------------------September
30, 1982 · THE CIRCLE.
Pages--.
Specializing in 'be.,;ing' brings us closer
by
L~uis
C;
Zuccarell~
'
•
Specialization is
-
~ pra~tice which cari be
.
•
helpful and efficient
-
when properly
employed
but
, ·
quite
.
destructive and
wasteful
_
\\'.hen
·
_
applied
.
carelessly
_
and
Forum
·.
thoughtlessly. Many of us associated with a
_
people. Instead of interacting with each
field of study come quickly to recognize the other as
·
whole people, we interact on the
.
a~ti~ici
_
ality and
_
narrowness of many bases of our specialties, apropriately tagg-
-
d1sc1plmary perspectives
.·
We
··
become ed by titles and positions -
professor,
aware of the need to
·
transcend our special-
R.A.,
student, secretary, coach, mentor,
ty, to see it in wider terms and to approach
etc. I'm sure there exists at Marist a com-
by so doing, a more human and wholisti~ puter label for each of our specialties -
appreciation of our discipline. Failure to machines respond well to these types of
move out beyond our
.specialization
can categories -
but no label or tag for the
lead us
to distorted or incomplete
.
most important
-
thing we
'
share -
our per-
.
knowledge -
it can lead us to error and sonhood.
-
.
failure.
This problem, or should I say challenge,
·
What is true about specialization in
academic disciplines and
'
in performing
tasks can also be true in terms of the roles
we assign to ourselves and to others. We
may, some of us, feel most comfortable in
our specialized definitions of ourselves and
of others. We may be unwilling or unable
·
to go beyond these definitions to see whole
should be of particular concern to a college
which says so much about its sense of com-
munity and about the importance of blen-
ding, living and learning -
lofty ideals but
hard to achieve if structures and behaviors
underscore only our specialized roles and
do not provide sufficient opportunities for
tis to explore and appreciate our common
humanity.
·
If
mentor, faculty, counselors and
students share the enterprise of furthering
academic learning, they should at least
know each other; talk to each other; plan
together and work together.
If each takes
his/her slice of the learning pie -
unaware
of each other; nurturing stereotyped im-
ages of the other; each a specialist in
his/her own right, on his/her own "turf"
-
if this occurs, then the cause of com-
munity, of living and learning, of being
human, takes a step
.
backwards.
If
faculty are the teachers, student-
personnel workers, the social directors
police and
parent-substitutes;
ad:
ministrators, faceless bureaucrats; all ably
assisted by an army of hired hands -
all
kneading and molding a faceless mass of
objects called students -
if that's what the
modern army of university specializations
boils down to, then the hope for communi-
Housing director
·
outlines phone policy
By
Richelle Thomas
The
_
use of
·
private t~lephone~ for
students living on campus may be possible
in some cases, according to director
-·
of
-
dormin which certain rooms, that were
For students interested in getting phones,
wired for telephones in the past still have a telephone company representative of-
their wires intact. Phones can be installed fered the following information:
in these rooms only. In the other rooms of
ty is dim indeed.
It is encouraging that Marist has always
aspired to avoid the trap of exaggerated
specialization and that often enough we
have been able to move beyond our labeled
roles and see the transcending humanity
which can vitalize us
in
our search to iden-
tify and live by those values most consistent
with our dignity as human persons.
_
Yet these are not easy matters to deal
with. How quickly
the
novel approach of
yesterday can become routinized and
trivialized by institutionalizing it. How
easily can our student activities on one side
of our campus become totally separate
from the activities going on in the
classrooms on the other side of the campus.
Specialization that strips coaches and ad-
~inistrators and mentors and acti~ity coor-
dinators and students too, of their roles as
educators, and constricts education to
.
classrooms and to the professional teachers
who work there -
ultimately, such
specialization strips us of opportunities to
grow as a community and to live and learn
about each other and with each other.
One of the great things about teaching at
Marist is the feeling that one has many
partners in the work. As long as we are
humble enough to acknowledge our limits
·
and secure enough to welcome others to
help us do our work, Marist will be a place
to celebrate life -
life in its noblest values.
And it will
be
such a place for all the varied
persons who choose to enrich this place by
"BE-ING"
here, together, for a portion of
their Jives.
Louis Zuccarello is an associate pro-
fessor of Political Science.
·
housing Robert Heywood.
·
.
There is no set'
·policy
on the use of
private telephones, although no phones
may be installed without approval from the
housing office. Students living in the
townhouses are
-
permitted to have phones
in their bedrooms because phone jacks
have
:
been ins~alled. Heywood stated,
.
"No
·
new hook-ups can
be
installed in the dor-
·
Champagnat, Bruce·Tv, the cable servic~
If there is currently a phone jack in the
used the "feed lines" the telephone com-
room all that is needed is
a
telephone that
---Correct1· on--·
pany would have used. According to can be plugged in. Phones can be picked up
Heywood, Leo and Sheahan Halls were at a local Phone Center and the telephone
.
never wired; Benoit and Gregory Houses
company
will
tell customers the date the
mi tori es."
·
·
·
·
·
were wired but they no longer are.
phone will
be
turned on. The connection
charge is $34. A deposit of $100 is required
It is technically possible for any room on for new customers who have never had a
campus to
be
wired for a phone but there
is
phone listed in their name and two forms
a college
·
policy which states there can not of identification are necessary.
be
any "wires running on the outside of
Residents with questions concerning
Because of a typesetting error,
last week's s~ory on Planned
Parenthood contained an inac-
curacy. The story should have
read: Henkle pointed out that no
one needs
to
be sexually active,
and it is important to have a good
feeling about yourself.
·
.
.
.
-
rooms." This policy is a safety precaution,
telephone service can contact the Housing
,--C~u.r;,;r.;;e~n~tl;;;,y.C~h;:am~p;;:a;g~n~a~t .,:H.:,a:1:,1 ~i~s ~t:h:e.,;o:n:1_:Y_,;.
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J
--•Page 6 ·
THE CIRCLE·
September
30,
1982
CASO
·
·
makes comeback
C.A.S.O., the Community Action Social
Organization, it planning a comeback at
Marist this semester after a one year
absence.
Now a graduate student at Marist, Velas-
quez felt that the growing Hispanic popula-
tion of Marist was in need of a social group
that could. extend themselves and their
culture to others. After Velasquez's
The club, which started in 1977, is an
graduation in 1981 the club died and didn't
organization whose main function is to in-
resurface until last semester when she and
form and educate people about · the
Garcia (iegan making plans to bring it
Hispanic culture through meetings and
back. They are currently working on get-
social events such as cultural dinner
ting the meetings and social calendar
dances.
·
organized.
,
Carlos Garcia, vice president of the club,
Along with the cultural socials.the club is
explained that C.A.S.O. differs from the . active in community service. The members
Spanish Club in that it extends to a wider pay visits
io
homes and institutions, talking
range of the Hispanic population rather with the residents and entertaining them.
than concentrating on Spain specifically.
. Garcia hopes to get together with other
Garcia stressed that the club is not only clubs in putting together the social events ..
open to Hispanics. All interested persons He acts as a "Iiason man" between the .
are welcome.
clubs and Marist population. He hopes to
Edith Velasquez,• president of the
organization, helped found
it
five years ago
along with a group of Marist students.
Now a graduate student at Marist, Velas-
quez felt that the growing Hispanic popula-
tion of Marist, Velasquez, president of the
organization, helped found it five years ago
along with a gr9up of Marist students,
Ransom note: I want ten million dollars for
the return of your dog?
Petey - You can drink the soda, but I want
the ice cubes - Baby
Cookie, Someday! Someway! I love your
sweats, let's play some solitaire.
RRL
"Ow boo wow bwow oo".
sMr. Weekend
Tim,
Dee,
and Deb-
welcome
to
.
Maristland!I'm glad you're here!
Lynn, I didn't want to tell you, but I'm
madly in love with you.
Love "A Friend"
Leave Pooee Alone!
Champ: Read Cosmo often?
Fish: Tvarski Me!
Cookie, thanks for teaching me how to
play cards. I had loads of fun.
Bob
Babs, Husseyface, and KTB- you're miss-
ed!
Mike Finnen: Keep the monster movin',
wrap it up in plastic, and give it as a birth-
day present!
·
R.
Carol, You, Me, and Bruce. Three's com-
pany!
bring them together through the various
events.
Board members include Grace Velez,
Maritza Solano, · Susie Balutis, Hector
Mota; and Julia
Moret.
,.
Garcia says that the club currently has 25
members and is hopes to expand.
IFI-ED6
-
·
Bob, Did those beers really cost
$25?
·
Leo First
Mike
&
George, Out music has made its
mark. Ted
To my friends -Thanks! Patti
Mike, make her pay for it, if she wants it so
much!
·
Alison,
don't·. worry
we : haven't
forgot ... yet!
, ·-_. -,
1
'.
1
,-r: ·
,
Congradulations Lo.uAnn . and' 1Pa
Quarters champs of the week . .- ·- .
Will the real WMCR please stand up. Ed~
die Powers and Company, Where are you?
A little ditty about Tim and Diane, two
young lovers tryin' to get as drunk as they
can!
Rick
"Yo Adrienne": Happy Birthday a little
early!
Your Buddies
Sheila, I mean Shelly, or is it Amelia: Stand
· still for a second!
You guys on Balding throw nice parties,
· but who is going~out with the doll?
DDD- I don't care what you say. You will
always be the cutest boy on campus-- Your
little girl
,
.
.
Our House is a very very drunk house.
Kaie: You're a sexual DYNAMO!
Larry, . Aerosmith may have Rocks, but
We want B-Guidos, We want B-Guidos; · Springsteen has balls!
We love Tony! He's or man.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Signed everybody
Nise: How's the mustache coming?
c4eademy
WI-NE
&
LIQUOR
26 A.CADEMY ST.
PO'llEPSIE, N"Y.12601
-Tel. 4S~ -
41.~o
I
-
BELONG
_
TO
THEMARIST
MUNCH
BUNCH
Commuters
&
~esid8nts:
Savel0%
Check out coupon
-booklet.
Good
in
·
Coffee Shop,
·
Deli
and
-Dining Hall
Purchase
of
booklets
.
may be made
in
Food Service Off ice
I
I
I
1
i
---------------------------------September 30, 1982 ·
THE CIRCLE·
Page
1 - - •
Marist
·
expands again with two more houses
. Marist has purchased two more houses,
located on North Road, this year. in an at-
tempt to· alleviate the current housing
crush, Robert Heywood, director of Hous-
. ingsaid;. ·
"There is no more room to expand on
this side of Route nine," Heywood said,
"This is a good way to meet the need of in-
creased enrollment," he said.
In addition to 63 North Road, which the
college owned previously, Marist purchas-
ed
65
North Road and 71 North Road in
August of 1982.
Twelve students are currently ·residing at
71 North Road, which has three apart-
ments.
65
North Road has two apartments.
Four girls were assigned to each apart-
ment at
65
North Road; however, the
upstairs tenants, a couple with a six-month-
old child, are still living there. Con-
sequently eight students are living in the
downstairs apartment which consists of
two bedrooms and a · finished basement ·
converted into two bedrooms. Heywood
said that by early October the upstairs
apartment should be vacant.
resident advisor wouldn't have the same
role, " he · said, "There is more in-
dependence, and with that more respon-
sibility."
The status of North Road students is like
that of the students living in Manchester or
Canterbury apartments Father La Morte,
(Assistant Dean of Student Affairs) said.
"They are resident students in college
sponsored housing," he said.
.
"They are. treated no differently than
anyone in the residence halls, including
discipline, " Heywood said.
Resident Director Barry Jameson is
responsible for discipline at the North
Road facilities.
"People over there will have to exercise
responsibilities,'' Father La Morte said,''
if
their lifestyle becomes a problem the first
persons to notice are the neighbors, and
they will call the police and the housing of-
fice with complaints," he said.
"The college doesn't want to force out
the upstairs tenants," Heywood said," but
wants to work with them in relocating.''
· - At the present time a permit is not re-
quired for a party
en
North Road as it is
with the townhouse facilities. The idea of
requiring permits
is
being discussed, Father
La Morte said. The last two parties they
had were rather large and the police were
called, he said: "There will definitely be
more rules
in
terms of parties," La Morte
said.
Two houses were recently purchased by Marist.
All of the students located at North
Road are female. Security was the reason
for more girls being placed across the street
Heywood said.
It_
is closer to campus, and
the parents were concerned about the safe-
ty· of their children living off campus he
said. Mary Ellen Muzikowski and Martha
Sanchez, residents . of 71 North Road;
agreed.~ •-~Our parents said if we were plac- ·
ed off-campus, we would not be returning
to Marist," they said.
·
There are no resident advisors stationed
on North Road. Maureen Tynan, is the stu-
dent liaison for North Road. Tynan, who
lives at · 63 North Road with three other
students, works for the housing office. Her
job is to keep the lines of communication
open between the students and campus,
distributing· information · and reporting
maintenance concerns.
"It is the same principle as a resident ad-
vis.or but just a different name," said ·
Heywood. "In that type of environment a
"We don't want to make the off-campus
facilities
·
a carbon copy of on-campus
facilities," he said-.
There is no security coverage on North
Road.
If
there is a problem the Poughkeep-
sie police should be called, La Morte said.
Marist College security, if called, will res- ·
pond, he said.
Some students dislike living off-campus.
"It's better to be on-campus where the ac-
tion is, " Mary Ellen Muzikowski said,
''You can't see what's going on over here."
· "I feel alienated," Martha Sanchez said.
The students had to install their own
private phones aro house phones are also
being installed.
Most of the students seem pleased with
the facilities. "We love it, " two residents
of 71 North Road said, "We have our'own
ki~chen and so much more room," they
·said.
.
The Students were given the option of
being on the meal plan of off it.
There are some maintenance problems.
The front doors of both
65
and 71 do not
lock properly according to the residents.
Smoke alarms have not been installed and
the window leading to the fire escape is
broken in 71, the residents said.
"Although we've asked for one, we still
have not received a dining room table,"
Maryanne McGuiness, a resident of
65
North Road said. "We eat off a little cof-
fee table," she said, "and they refused to
give us locks on our bedrooms."
"The houses were purchased late so
t'1ere are some loose ends," Heywood said,
· "but we are working with them on it."
"This was a new idea for students this
fall, " Heywood said, "I think it will be
very popular. It is like paying for a single
room on campus but getting an apartment
_and a little more independence," he said.
A Housing Committee has been ap-
6 CRANNEl ST.
P0UGHK£EPSI£,
N.
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PHONI (9U). 473-1996
.
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pointed by President Murray to study the
housing situation and make projections for
the future. The committee is made up of
Robert Heywood, Dean Cox, Jim Daly,
Anthony Cernera, excutive assistant to the
president, and Anthony Campilli, business
officer.
The committee would be looking into
purchasing more houses, not necessarily on
North Road, but preferably within walking
distance of campus, Heywood said. If
other houses across North Road become
available I think the college would look in-
to it, he said.
"That would be a cautious move,"
Heywood said, "but the way Marist is
growing it tends to indicate it will be
necessary."
The three houses on North Road are con-
sidered a part of the college and these
facilities will be utilized as long as there is a
need for housing Heywood said.
If
not for
housing they could eventually be used for
other p~rposes,
.
~uch as for offices, he said.
..
...
,,
t
,•
--•Page 8
·
THE CIRCLE·
September 30, 1982---------:.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
A day in the life
.
of a Marist intern
~Y Susan Vassallo
While most students are rising each mor-
ning between the hours of
9
a.m. and noon,
Chris
·
Blood, a Marist senior, is already at
work. He is doing an intership with IBM
.
Blood's day begins at
6:30
a.m. He has
to be at the IBM Poughkeepsie plant by
7:30.
When he arrives, he finds a list of
assignments waiting for him on his desk.
Blood has been assigned to the Manufac-
turing Process Control Department.
·
It
is in Blood's department that filming
of a board line takes place: this is where
computers and circuits are built .. "When
there are a lot of defects in a certain area of
a computer," said Blood, wefilm that area
and it gets turned into an instructional tape
which is then sent out to
the
people using
·
the computer to explain the problems."
Blood said that h~ was a little
'
unsure of
his abilities at first but when he got to IBM
he became more confident.
"It
isn't as
hard as
1
thought it would be. Marist
taught me a lot of the basics,"
said
Blood.
"Sue
Lawrence
'
s Television Production
courses and Scott Badman's Broadcasting
technology course have helped me tremen-
dously," said Blood. HI,! said Badman's
class, which is no longer offered, introduc-
ed him to materials such as operational
manuals. "They are imperative to my
job
,
" said
Blood
:
According to Blood, it was the lack of
.
available, worthwhile, upperclevel com-
·
.
muncation courses that caused him to look
into an internship. He said Bob Norman
·
was most instrumental in helping him to
.
obtain it. "The man
·
is great," said
Blood,
"He
really cares about the
students."
In order to be accepted for the intern-
ship, Blood had to go through an interview
with a representative from the
IBM
Person-
nel Department and the Manufacturing
Process Control Department. He competed
with two other students. "I feel I won this
internship because of my experience and
knowledge of the communication field; my
extra-cirricular activities and my sufficient
index," said Blood
.
·
Blood said he will feel a lot more secure
and confident going into the working world
because of his internship. "Without an in-
ternship, chances of getting a job after
graduation are lessoned a great deal," said
Blood. "They're looking for well-rounded
people outthere. After a good education at
Marist, an internship is what rounds you
•
off
.
"
.
Blood said the
impressiveness
of IBM
·
and his knowledge of the equipment he is
now familiar with will be very helpful to
.
him
in
attaining his career goals
.
As he ex-
plains it, "Without this internship, I would
feel like a small child in a world of adults."
Interhouse council election tallied
by
Richard Copp
the residents of House Three.
•
Freshmen winners for Leo Hall include
Last week marked the end of a hectic Patricia Reilly and Wanda Allie for House
campaign trail for
)
aspiring candidates all One; Patrick Patterson and Joe Tortorice
over the Marist campus as the results of the for House Two; and Kate Huggard and
.
Interhouse Council elections
·
were an-
Michele Irwin for House Three.
nounced
.
.
Freshmen Andrew Crecca and Patty
Rounding out' the Champagnat Hall Whiteman are representing Sheahan Hall,
council
are
Mary Schroeder,
Brian. and Mark Zangariand Jim Murphy are the
O'Keefe, . and Maureen Ryan for House winners for Gregory House.
One; Lori Isler
.
and Cindy Krueger
.
·
The
·
~nterho~se Council'
'.·
members for
-
.·
·
representing
·
House Two; and Grace Benoit House
'ard
Townhouse'sA, B, and C
.
·
,:;
;.
Oaflagliera
.
ndDofina
:
·
cashirc w~'r:kins
'
.fo,:
•
:
"
,
havexec to
be
ar_i
.
nounced
:
·.
-.:t::';
:
:
;
:-:-... .
Tom
Welsh
Campus
Rep ..
Tuesday
.
.
Ladies Night
Ladies
.
Drink
FREE
Thursday
.
Night
..
COLLEG
·
E· NIGHT
.
Free
Admission
with College
.
10.
FREE DRINKS 9-10:30
··
'
.
.
''Mi-tst
be.
a
·
freshman.'~
/
_
_,,
..
.
:·
. .
.
.·
.
•
:--,
.:·
~
·
..
'
I
<1981
Beer Brewed
Dy Miller Brewing
Co
.
.
M,lwaukee. Wis
.
(
·oi
-
·
\'
:
_
.
·
.
:
.:
•
.
·
.
. :-:-
Wednesday
·
Nickel Night
E~ery
.
Other
Drink
5c
All Night
.
Friday and Saturday Free Admission before
10
.
p~m •
.
with
_
Valid College I.D.
Sunday Night Party· Night -
Free Drinks for All
·
8 -10
p.m.
Live Entertainment 6 Nites
.
a
·
Week
.
.
.
.
Dress Code
Free Parking
Proper I.D .
.
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·
'
,
33 Academy Street
Poughkeepsie
471-1133
; , Knights of
Columbus_ · .
.
Marcellin Champagnat ··Council No. 5679 ··
.C~ngrat_ulations to the f ollo~ing Oatholic gentlemen ~n the
completion of their First Degree into the Knig~ts_ of Columbus:
Richard C. Frey.
Patrick K. Larrabee
James J. Murphy III
Eugene H. Robbins
Thomas A. Cavanagh
Michael T. O'Brien
Robert J. Scherr
Robert G. Weinman ·
Scott T. Damrners
Antliony J. Bellantoni
Jeffrey A. Friedman
Mark V. Zangari
Keith M. Griffin
Michael T. Gillgan
Patrick E. Goodspeed
Paul V. Malley
Paul G. Lettera ·
Thomas G. Murphy
Ignatius Spera
Fraternally yours,
Philip K. Boyle
Grand Knight
HYDE PARK ARMY-NAVY
·
Route 9, Hyde Park, New York 12538
--------------~~--~--~,
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·
COUPON:
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10% OFF
Any Purchase
1
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through October 31st
I
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One
You
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All SEATS RESERVED S,.SO.
TICKETS
ON
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"'ow
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or
MASTERCARD
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at-5165
September 30~ 1982 · THE CIRCLE - Pages--
Post Office problems:
missing mail, no boxes
by Lou Ann Seelig
· Dealing with the campus post office this
_ year can be annoying especially if you're
one of the many people who has no. mail
box at all.
·
There are 1352 mail boxes on campus
and 1309 people licing in campus housing
whose mail is handled through the Marist
post office. Each club and several teachers
also use the campus post office and boxes,
but this is not the reason for the shortage of
boxes.
The problem is that about 150/o of the
1,352 boxes do not work. That leaves ap-
proximately 1150 boxes for the 1152 on-
campus residents and
157
off-campus
residents that must pass through the post
office every day.
· Walter Wegiinski, full-time employee of
the post office, said that the situation is
very confusing. There simply are not
enough working mail boxes to go around,
according to Weglinski.
Business Officer Anthony
Campilii
says
that he and others are looking into the pro-
blem, but·nothing will be resolved concern-
ing the box situation until next year.
Even those people who do have mail
boxes have troubles. There are cases of
misplaced paychecks, missing pictures and
week-late magazine deliveries. People in
each townhouse share one box, but they are
not the only ones. Some people, especially
those at the end of the alphabet, have one
box for two or three people.
Mix-ups are frequent and are usually
resolved, as in the case of a missing
paycheck. Senior Veronica Shea said she
was expecting her last paycheck of the sum-
mer to be sent to her at Marist. She finally
recei:ved it--opened after it had been
delivered to junior Veronica O'Shea, "For-
tunately she was honest enough to return
it,"
said Shea.
Junior Patti Walsh said she is still look-
ing for a set of pictures that were delivered
to the wrong box and returned to the post
office. Walsh, originally assigned a
townhouse box, is now an
R.A.
in
(Sheahan) Hall. She said her photos were
(delivered) to the townhouse box and
returned to the post office, but somehow
they have been lost in the shuffle.
Sophomore Jan Willis had the Sept.20
issue of
Time
delivered on Sept.
13
and the
Sept. 13 issue delivered on Sept. 20.
Possible solutions are welcome.
Chance to hold benefit for child
The Chance in Poughkeepsie, with the
help of
WPDH-FM,
is sponsoring a benefit
concert for 6-year-old cancer victim, Eric
Zimmerman of Dutchess County.
Young
Eric's affliction may be at-
lributed to his father's service in Vietnam,
where he came in contact with the defoliant
Agent Orange, according to sponsors.
Vietnam Veterans of America: Mid Hud-
son Valley Chapter organized the event.
Performers will include
NRBQ,
Robbie
Dupree, Larry Hoppen of Orleans, Levon
Helm, formerly of The Band, and other
surprise guests.
Tickets are only $5. The fund-raiser will
be
held on Sunday, Oct. 3 beginning at 9
P.M.
-·.
.
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.
....
,
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4
Page 10 · THE CIRCLE• September 30, 1982
_
.
· 15
of f-campuS
students
to
·
relocate
·ill
dorms
by
Ivan V. Navas
Director Of Housing Robert A.
Heywood has given permission to 15 off-
campus Marist students to move on cam-
pus after they filled out request forms for
on-campus housing.
A priority system was used to determine
which students would
be given the . first
·chance
to
move on campus, said Heywood.
According to Heywood, a-list of factors
were drawn up with the help from Dean Of
Student Affairs Gerard A. Cox, Assistant
Dean Richard A. LaMorte and Heywood
·himself.
These factors took into account whether
a student was a returnee or new, ·a recipient
of a scholarship, employed on campus, a
participant in on-campus activities (e.g.
clubs, sports), as well as any special cir-
cumstances (such as being handicapped).
Off-campus students received request
forms for on-campus housing from student
liaisons at their off-campus residence last
week. Students completing the form then
could give them to their student liaisons or
hand them in directly to the housing office.
Figures given by Heywood show that 161
students lived off-campus before he allow-
ed some to on-campus housing. A total of
32 students were involved, but only 22
spaces were available for occupancy. Thus,
IO of 24 male students and
5 of 8 female
students will be given room on campus.
Heywood also said that a housing com-
mittee appointed by Marist · College Presi-
dent Dennis Murray will be going over last
year's priority system used for housing
students.
,
Factors to be covered will probably be
the projected enrollment, attrition rate and·
. next year's housing sites, according to
Heywood.
face a few inconveniences: Problems are
found in housing maintainance, separation
from the rest of the student body, and bus ·
schedules, as well as a delay in the delivery
of furniture to apartments.
·
·
Paul Damin, student Liaison at Park
Place, said that room were insufficiently
cleaned upon arrival at the site.
He also
said that leaks in faucets and a
leak
in the
· floor of a shower stall exist.
Recalling her first impressions
cif
being
off-campus, Cheryl Frazier of Georgetown
apartments said she was dissolusioned. "I
was angry for being put so far away, as it
was a real inconvenience to go by bus,"
said Frazier. "But the accommodations are
nice."
According to Heywood; Poughkeepsie
Furniture delayed delivering all furniture
to apartments because its supply ran short.
Sonny Rincon of Canterbury Apartment
disapproved of the bus schedule and ques-
tioned about the . use of buses for
transporting students. "Busing .is no real·
big problem but they should make 30 or 40
. minute intervals so you can get off campus.
faster," said Rincon. "They should also
use vans instead of buses.''
Bus schedules reveal that bu.ses leave
from Marist approximately at an hour and
a half intervals. As for the use of buses,
Heywood said that their use is on an ex-
perimental phase.
.
Heywood said that students have given
·· both positive and negative reactions to be-
ing off-campus. On the positive side there
is the fact of being away from campus and
the sense o"f independence. The main
negative aspect seems to be the isolation
from friends who live on campus.
DATE:
Tues., Oct. 5, 1982
TIME:
4.
p.m.
.PLACE: Theater (Campus Center)
ISSUE:
The installation of an: ROTC. p_rogram_ .
.
at Marist.·
All students and faculty are urged to attend . .
CELLOPHANES
~AIR C.U TT
f;
RS
Off~campus students say they are
'
satisfied with living off-campus but tpey do
~
..
·
····•
·
•·
···
·· CLASSIFIEDS
Tom Finnigan, student liaison and
Canterbury resident said, "H's alright.but I
really like to get on campus." Gail Jiles of
Park Place agreed. "It's nice but
it is lonely
as well as quiet," she s_aid.
. ~
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---------------------------------•September-30, 1982 •
THE CIRCLE·
Page 11--•
Marist hooters
uP
.recOtd. ·.
ifiij
.
with
5-0
wiri
·
over FairfieldP{~i-~:-,:::·:::>f
by~
ohn Petaccbi ·.
The Marist soccer team evened its record
at 1-1 in the Tri-State conference last Satur-
day with a
5-0
whitewash of Fairfield at
Leonidoff field..
·
The Red Foxes,
2-3 overall, will be at ·
. home versus Kings Point this Saturday at 1
p.m.
Marist was led
by
freshmen Mark
Adams, who.~cored twice and assisted on
another goal and Wayne Cargill; who add-
ed a goal and an assist.
Red Fox Coach Howard "Doc"
Goldman said his team was in control
throughout most of the game, but· they
didn't really play up to their potential.
·'.'It took us a little time to get on track in
the first half," Goldman said. "We had
control of the game, but we didn't play as
well as it appeared. Our ball control was
poor - we played better while losing to St.
Francis and Fordham," he said.
Bob Cooper opened the scoring for
Marist on an assist from Mike Terwilliger.
Mark Adams followed with his fourth and
fifth goals of the season. Wayne Cargill
scored his fifth goal of the season in the se-
. cond half, the fourth consecutive game in
which he's scored a goal or more. Tim--
Buchanan finished the scoring with his se-
cond of the season, late in the game.
John Malatestinic, making his first start
in goal this season, got the win.
"They relly didn't pose any threat to us,
" said Goldman. Fairfield managed only
two shots on goal throughout the entire
game.·
·
CLASSIFIEDS
t)uy .. .
~ell .. .
On Sale
Thursdays
in the
Cafeteria
Marist's
Andy
Ross fakes out Fairfield defender.
lrish
·
.women's hoop star
to
·
play for Marist team
by Holly Sraeel
Many students on campus this year
traveled great distances to study at Marist,
but none had a longer _ journey than
Fresshman Una Geoghegan, a twenty-year-
old native of Dublin, Ireland. Geoghegan is
attending Marist on
a
basketball scholar-
ship.
Geoghegan, a 5 foot 8 inch guard on the
"Under-l 9's" Irish team, was on tour in
the qualifying rounds of a tournament in
the United· States when she was asked to
take part in the All-New England camp in
Connecticut.
'
The program is part of the Irish
American Basketball Association. This
organization seeks to place young talented
athletes into American schools to study, as
well as to improve their game.
· Geoghegan was spotted by a coach at the
All-New England camp. He offered her the
chance to attend school in the United
States. Geoghegan accepted because
basketball is a competitive sport among
college playlers in this country.
scholarships available to athletes according
to Geoghegan.
Geoghegan, playing basketball since she
was 8 years old, has always played for fun.
It's now getting highly comptetitve among
players, she said.
When asked about coming to Marist,
Geoghegan replied, "I had a few inhibi-
tions at first, but my coach Sue Deer and
assistant coach Mary Zuvic were very
helpful. They made me feel very at ease."
Questioned about goals for her first
season at Marist, Geoghegan said firmly,
"Court time and gaining position on the
team. I have a lot to learn."
_
Geoghegan's future aspiration is to play
on the Senior National team for Ireland in
the 1984 Olympics. Geoghegan feels she
could be well on her way
to
achieveing that
dream. She said it was made possible by
families who belong to the Irish-American
Club, an association that helps students to
develop their athletic and academic skills in
the United States.
Basketball is different in Ireland. The
game is played-as a
club, rather
ihan
as a
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ . school-oriented sport. There are no college
Geoghegan's abilities and desire to play
malce her an asset to the Marist Womens'
basketball team. "l have a love for the
ganie. I .
always .
look
forward.
to · the
season,'' she said.
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·
Page 12·
THE Cl~CLE • September
30, 1912·~--------~..;.--..;.----~----------~
111111
- -
Foxes ·fall to St. ·John's lclte
driv·e
34-29
by
John Petaccbi ·
The Marist football team will take a
Metropolitan Conference record of 1-1 into
Iona tomorrow night after suffering a 34-
29 defeat at the hands of St. John's this
past Saturday before a crowd of 1,137.
•
St. John's quarterback Todd Jamisoll · ~- :-, '
accounted the 222 total yards while scoring
.:!-
. twice, including the winning·· touchdown
with si~ minutes left in the game.
. .
Marist found themselves down· by 22
points early in the second quarter as the
Redmen came out strong
· ·
"We can't give up 22 points to St. John's
1
in the first quarter and expect to beat
them;'' said Marist Head Coach
Mike
Malet_. !'It takes you a while to get use<i to a
Todd Jamison. He's
a
great qu~erback.
Jamison proved that as he galloped 36
yards for St John's first score, just thtee ·
minutes into the game .. The Redmen were
·successful on a fourth and seven situation
as Jamison took the ball on a keeper
around the right side for six points.
Marist was unable to move the ball on
their first possession, and after a punt St.
John's was back in business again. This
time it was
Mike
Graziano who·. got the
Redmen on the board with a 15 yard run.
St. John's got good field position after a.
weak Jim Van Cura punt and a facemask
penalty against Marist on the return. Two
plays later, Graziano made it 13-0 and a
two-point conversion upped the· score to
15-0, after one quarter~
·
Marist did have a few chances in the
.,.
quarter. After a fake punt, in which John
•
O'Leary picked up a Marist first down, the ·
Paul Malley scores on 65-yard pass reception in Red Fox loss.
Red Foxes moved down to the St . .John's
.
15 yeard line. On fourth. dowri
a
John
Hegeman field goal attempt came up short.
33 yard line as linebacker Pete Maloney
In the second quarter two Jamison com~ recovered the fumble for Marist. Cleary
pletions set a Nick Casa two yard returned the favor on Marists' next posses-.
touchdown run, making
it
a 22-0 bulge.
sion, fumbling deep in St. John's territory
The Foxes took the kick at their own 32 to kill a Red Fox drive.
,
yard line, and just. as. they did a week ago
But once again, the Red Foxes found
against St .. Peter's, . struck quickly, as . themselves in the right place at the right
Cleary and tight end Paul Malley con-
time. This time it was Bill. Wiegand who
· ·• nected on a
,6S
yard : toilchdow.Q pass. pounced on the loose pigskin for; Marist as
Malley foundhiniselLwide open in the St.
they took over at the Redmen 40. ·
John's secondary after a good Cleary fake
Maiist moved the ball down to the eight
pulled the defense in. Cleary then scored on · yard line, b1# Ron Dimmie was unable to
the two-point conversion. .
.
. pick up a first down, and another, field goal
The story of the second quarter for St. attempt by John Hegeman was wide, as St.
John's was fumble .. After Marist . kicked John's took over again.
off, the Redmen lost the ball on their own
On their third cons_ecutive possession, St.
Women bomb·
Bard,
face Sienna next
John's fumbled. Wiegand fell on his se-
again, this time for a 23 yard touchdown.
cond fumble recovery, and this time Marist
Marist took the lead for the first time in the
took a9-vantage of the turnover.
game after John Germain kicked the extra
Cleary hit Warren Weller at the St. · point, 29-28.
John's 12 yard line for a first down. On the
St. John's started on their own 15 yard
next play Cleary fumbled but recovered
line and drove 85 yards, on the ground,
himself. With five seconds remaining in the
chewing up time and gaining yards before
half and Maristj'\}st five yards away from a
Jamison i=apped the drive with an 18 yard
score, Cleary did some fancy footwork and
touchdown
run
to put St. John's ahead to
· scored Marist's second touchdown on a
stay, 34-29.
·.
scramble. Weller, the holder on extra point
Marist made one last effort, with four
tries, took the snap on. the conversion and
minutes left in the game, but t!Jeir drive fell
scored easily to pull Marist within six, 22-
short on a fourth and 13 situaiion.
16 at the half.
According to Malet, Marist had its ups
St. John's jumped out to a 12 point lead
and downs, but he felt they should have
. courtesy of two Nick Ragusa field goals.
won the game.
before Marist could generate any offense in
"We played well at times, and we played
the third quarter.
poorly at times. We played a terrible first
Finally, with 40 seconds remaining in the
quarter and a great third quarter, but we
third quarter, the Red Foxes managed to got beat and we should have won,''. he said.
. by William Flood
ing win over Bard, and had special praise
score against a tiring St. John's defense. A
St. John's had 341 yards in total offense
for second singles player Denise Bagarose.
pass interference penalty against St .. John's
and Maristhad297 yards. .
. ',· · .
The Marist College. women's tennis team_
kept up its winning ways by downing Bard.
College· 6-1 last· week at Bard's home
courts. Leading the . way for the . Foxes
were first and second singles players Cindy
Krueger and· Denise Bagarose. Both won
easily; Krueger 10-f and Bagarose 10-1. .
After the .completion of
·
singles . play,
Krueger· and Bagarose teamed up in
doubles and demolished Bard's number
on,~ doubles team 10-1.
Nancy Colagrossi, head coach of the
~oxes, was very happy about the convinc-
by BUI
Travers
Last year John Lovejoy got caught up in
it all .. No wonder. It's not always that a
cross-country runner can race with the
best. The National Catholic College Cross-
country Championships, at Notre Dame
University in 1981 was secondary to him.
This year it was different.
"I was only a freshman last year," said·
Lovejoy. "I went around wide-eyed and in
awe of the whole situation of being around
and running against future Olympians. The
race was not the. upper-most thing on my
mind.".
Each year the Marist cross-country team
makes the journey to South Bend, Indiana.
Only the top seven runners with the best
times, at the time of departure, take the
trip.
As
a freshman, Lovejoy had to work
hard to be one of the top seven, so getting
there was half the work.
This year as a sophomore, Lovejoy is
,one of Marist's top . harriers. It was ap-
"Denise has been improving with every
gave Marist the ball at the Redmen 21 yard
Ron Dimmie led Marist in rushing with
· day of the season, and this great improve-
line. Cleary kept the ball and· picked up 60 yards on 10
carries
and Paul Malley had
ment showed in.today's match,'' said the
nine yards
ori.
a sneak, and Ron Dimmie a· big day with three receptions for 103
coach. "She really played a great match to- · scored his third touchdown of the season
yards and two touchdowns.
.
day."
from 12 yards out. The twospoint conver.,
Malet expects tomorrow night's clash
In other action, Kathy Mulligan was
sion attempt was unsuccessful and Marist
with Ior:ia to be a tough one, considering·
upset 10-8 and Chris Carney won a
trailed by a Jouchdown; 28-22.
Marist won last year, 15-13, and Iona will
squeaker 11~10. In thelast singles match of
Th~ Ma,nSt defens~ took co~trol on ~t •. be looking to avenge the loss, the Red
the day,. Connie Roher looked impressive
John s next possesSl0n · as Bnan Sewing ·, Foxesbave one less practice day this week
in her 10-8 victory.
_
picked off a Jainison pass and Marist was··. also.
·
·
'
The one other match in the victory for
right on the doorstep again. A Marist
"It's going to be that much harder to get
Marist was al0-2,romp by the squad's se-
penalty put the ball on the St. John's. 27
ready," said Malet. "We have a lot of tired
cond doubles team, Josie Tropano and
yard line and, after a run by Jim Dowd,
guys and rm hoping they'll be ready to go
. Michele Pisa:no.
Cleary found his tight . end Malley once
by Friday.''
·
·
parent that he. wo.uld make the top seven.
. This time around he concentrated more on
the race.
·
•~1 went to the race with a lot more
business-like.attitude this year," said Love-
.joy. "I was still in awe a little bit but I
knew what to expect. The whole area is so
impressive. The school and town go foot-
ball crazy and the school spirit is tremen-
dous."
Obviously the seven members wanted· to
bring back a little of that spirit. When they
arrived in South Bend, the first place they
· raided was not the l~cal watering hole but
the Notre Dame book store. They bought
up all the hats, shirts and post cards they
could find. But, there still was the race.
The runners had run the course (five
miles on the campus golf course) on
September 23 to familiarize themselves,
and returned the next day for the Cham-
pionships at 4 p.m.
·
"I was not ready for this flat course,"
On the run
said Lovejoy. "I'm used to -running the
hills of Poughkeepsie. My legs are used to
running up and down the hills. This course
· was like a five-mile sprint."
·
Lovejoy nevertheless finished with an
outstanding time of 25:59, 38th of over 125
runners. "I was impressed with the at-
titudes of all the runners," said Lovejoy.
"It didn't seem like any one team was out
only to win.
It
was more like a 'see you at
the finish' type of thing."
Overall, Marist finished 10th out of 21
schools. Mike McGuire finished 62nd at
26:30, Brian Hanley 64th at 26:31, Pete
Pazik 75th at 26:40, and Jim Hegerty 81st
at 26:52. Freshmen Mike McGlintock and
Mike Murphy finished 107th and 117th at
27:S0 and 28:24, respectively.
·
This pleased coach Bob Mayerhoffer,
who was unable to make the trip.
"Finishing in the top half is quite an ac-
complishment," said Mayerhoffer. "We
did a lot better than I thought we would.
We were running-against some of.the top
Catholic · schools and we really held our
own."
·
Lovejoy is now excited for the rest of the
season. "I always try my hardest when I
race," said Lovejoy. "But I think I will be
trying a little harder now, since seeing all
those big runners. It has a big affect on me.
I really get inspired and now I am psyched
for the rest of the season.''
Mayerhoffer hopes that his whole team
can stay psyched for the rest of the season.
"It's taught having an important race so
early in the season," said Mayerhoffer.
"Sometirµes when runners reach their peak
it lasts for a few weeks. We are looking
ahead towards the New York State Cham-
pionships and the ICAAAA Champion-
ships in Boston. They are both a month
away."
Lovejoy will run in those upcoming
Championships, but he will also be think-
ing about Notre Dame next year; to run
· with the best one more time.
27.4.1
27.4.2
27.4.3
27.4.4
27.4.5
27.4.6
27.4.7
27.4.8
27.4.9
27.4.10
27.4.11
27.4.12